HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-05-08 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa"" ......... .,.. .......... ,.. ...... "" .......................................... "'!' ..................................... ":" ..... ""'~ .... ~ ....... ,.,.. ... '::'",,.,.,...,...,...,..:-::-.:c-;,.,-;;'lll .......... , .... ,..~ ..... '"'.,.._,...~~ ~ ·~--
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Flogging--ei-Girl~, 18
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OC{;1 Has 'Mail-in'
C·oast Students March
, By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of the 0 1llr 1"1191 S11!1
' ~t~e peaceful demonstralions are
planned t_his weekend along the Orange
Coast as student protesters eootinue to
register opposition to U.S. involvement
in Cambodia and the death or four
Kent Slate students.
Orange Coast College's Student NOn-
\Piolent Strike Committee scheduled a
march on the Costa Mesa Post Office
this morning where they planned to
bold a "Mail-In."
A spokesman for the group said they
had more than 1,000 lellers which they
intended to mail individually at the facili-
ty at 1500 Adams Ave.
"These letters are addressed to our
Congressmen and the Presidentt • he
said, "and they register our opositi0t;1
to Nixon's war policy," a student
spokesman explained.
A table will be sel up in front of
the post office to enable concerned
citizens to 'have available to them writing
materials and the addresses of their
legislators in Washington D.C.
'Ibe post office march is expected
to be peaceful as was Thursday's March
from QCC to the c.osta Mesa Air National
Guard Base.· ··· · · · ·
Police and student organizers eslimate
%,000 people took Ptrt in -the march
and rally held in a field near the base.
Oraa_ge Coas t
Weather
You may be able to outslee"p the
coastal cloudlne.u over the week·
end, and from then on it'll be a
nice day with fair skies and temp-
eratures in the temperate 60's.
INSIDE TODAY
Tlif!Jl'll be hissing the vUlaln
and cheering the hero Saturday
t1ight at Netbpbrt Harbor High
School . when an old' ttme me Jo.
drama goes on st.age for char·
itu. DetaiU in toda11's Wetk·'
~1der, ·
Mlllhltl ,,Ml ,.
Natltflll HIWI .. I Of•~ c-tY .. ,
The Costa Mesa police 'helicopter kept
watch from overhead as the marchers
walked from the campus to the rally
site. One observer said he could see
no patrolmen in the march area.
Five naUonal guardsmen listened frort'
behind the feilce surrounding the ba.!'
as four-student speakers gave shor
speeches on the war and the Kent Sta
deaths.
Costa Mesa -police said today lhf
intercepted three yoongsters with gu1
who were heading in the direction <
the march.
Three teenage boys were stopped i
the 2900 block of Mendoza Drive, headin:
in the general vicinity of the march,
at about 3 p.m. The boys told officers
they were looking for a place to shoot
their lwo rifles and pistol.
_--,,olice said they confiscated the
weapons rather than have the youths
carry them into the march and rally
area.
Leaflet activities by UC Irvine students
cqntinued joday . with .a Teach-in and
dialogue session sdleduled to start on
cainpus at 11 a.m ..
· Protest spokesman Doug Whitener
said, "We're trying to carry our dialogue
'o the community." He stressed that
he public was invited to the teach-in.
Another ·meeting· was set for 7:30
'clock tonight lit UCl's Gateway Com·
ions. Whitener said the meeting would
? held to get a consensus for weekend
ctivities.
By thi1 morning, the only activity
tanned for Saturday was a rock concert
t Cal state Fullerton.
On Sunday, the Movement for a
Jemocratic Military {MDM) has organiz-
ed a. march from the Santa Ana Marine
Corps Air facility to Sant.a Ana Memorial
Park.
~ m.arch, which is scheduled for
11 a.m. in front of the facility at Red
HUI· and Valencia Avenues, is being held
to emphasize the MOM demands to end
(See PROT&'lT, Page %)
'Witch,' Hippies Held
·-·---. ____ ,. --' In _Rape and Flogging
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Ignoring
thtiats they would be turned Into !rop,
police arrested a self-proclaimed witch
and three. "hippie drifters" for the cat-o'·
nine-ialls flogging 'and r11pe of an 111:-year·
9ld &!!! in . the J!.a!LJI ~'! Vf.a~ mUseu'rb. • .. ~ ' .·
two men grabPfd her and she began
screaming. Two policemen witnessed this
incident and arrested Patricia Hall, 18.
also known by the witchcraft name of
1nca Angelique; -William Rhodes, 24;
ruchard King, 29, and Peter Valenzuela, ... -.. ,.. .. •-, .. 18: . . ' .
The vicUm \\'8.5 descr1bed by Pollet!' "When we arrested the Hall girl, she
as a "hippie type with tattoos." She claimed to be a witch -a member
.told police it was the second time she of a Satan cult," an officer said. "She
had ~n raped ln the wax museum. threatened to turn the arresting officers
'Polfce gave the following a~t of into frogs if they didn't leave her alone." the incident :
Tbe victim ~ walking by the mqfepm Miss Hall and the three men were
w_Wt. her boyfriehd -just before dawn bOoked on Charges of aggra,vated rape
Tbursd·ay when they were putled inside and a~vated battery. Miss Hall slid
the building on Bourbon Street. Her she had ' been baptiz,ed · by a "biaCk
boyfriend was held • on the first floor " · .a._ First ~ ch r s in of the mwieum while she was taken pope m i.uc ..... ur 0 atan
upstairs. San Francisco. She has a whip tattooed
Officers described lhe place as "some on htr right arm.
sort of chapel -part of IOllle Satan The Hall of' Horrors caters to the
cult" that "reeked of. marijuana." h avy tourist traffic rdong Bourbon
I
....... ,.,.,. 2W' ,_,, , .. ,.
lt'M.11 Mtrbh• _..,, • OnO-o! the abduc191"1 raped lho ,gltl.. eel In. lho French-· ~~.-4'11e I
3nd 1b'n deman<red she live with hlrfl m containing wax '· figurea of T•ll•lllM • ' M 1111119" , .. ,,
WNIM• I
W!!Ut Wl'lll 11 W•-'• "''"' ,,.,. WllN H..n ... I
WMlttflttr ll·D
in the musewn . The girl refused and ghouls simulated tort~e device!,
wa! nagged with a cat-O'·nlne-talls. The opel),t?d la swrnmer .. -• ·-;.... '
victim finally agr'eed to live with th«i The ra vlcUm worked in the museum
ntan but only ii sl\e could return home during i openlng night and said 11hc
for a while. ra then. She promised at that
As she prepared to the '-!o:'.thc:'.",.r..-""'"-<Jt,. rapist "would pay for this,"
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Protes~ Coniin&e . . . .
•
__ On -~~_pg.e ~f0Qsj;
OCe Das. ·•!Jail-in~
Police Stand
Heavy Guard
On Statehouse
COLUMBUS, O!Uo (UPI) -Thousands
of college students, chanting "Peace
now," marched on the closed and heavily
guarded state capitol today to protest
the killings Of four Kent State students
by National Guard troops.
The students marched from Ule
Veterans Memorial Auditorium, about
a mile from the capitol, through part
of the doWTltown area and onto the
statehouse grounds.
A force of 150 Ohio Highway Patrol
officers anned with shotguns and riot
clubs ringed the building. About a dozen
patrolmen guarded a flagpole flying Ule
American and State of Ohio flag.
"Nobody's going to pull down that
flag or invade the statehouse," said
Ohio Highway Patrol Superintendent
Robert M. Chiaramonte. "We are not
goi'ng to be a punching bag for anyone."
Albert Gienow. state publiC w' or k~
director, ordered the building and all
state offices closed after a conference
with Chiaramonte.
A nearby building housing the Colum·
bus Dispatch and the Columbus Citizen
Journal also was locked, but the papers
continued to work.
A patrol officer was asked i! the
shotguns were loaded.
"Yoo're damn right they're loaded,"
he replied.
Col. J.E.P. McCann, administrative
assistant to the adjutant general in Ohio,
said the guard would carry weapons
loaded with Jive ammunition if ·they
were called to duty because or the rally.
"\Ve feel that when our ,people are
put in a dangerous situatJon we should
afford them the opportunity .lo protect
themselves." McCann said.
Four students were shot to death on
tHe Kent State University campus Mon-
day during a violent confrontation
between guardsmen and studen'ts pro-
testing U.S. Involvement in Cambodia.
Economists Say
Inflation Grows
H<Yr SPRINGS, Va. (UP I) - A report
Clrawn up fCJr the prestigious Business
Council pretllcted today that inflation
will continue at a rate of about 4.5
percenl this year.
It also forecast that interest rates
would remain high despite '!:S&i!Jg profits
,dntl :!lu~gls'ti~Opbm'ic' &etl\ilf1. •· • ·' ' ··
But1tHe report of the council's private
economists .. pre!(nled to the group's
Sernl·inr\ual meeting, pred lc"ted that
uncmpJOyment will "level off" at about
4.8 per~nt In the setond half of this
year and decline slightly In tho first
hair Of nfxt year.
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FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 8, ·1970
'IOI.."' HO. lit. 4 iacri:otts.• PAGES
Regains_ Sight
I • , •
'I KNEW GOD WOULDN'T. LET ME . DOWf<I'.
Ann Turner Can. Now SH What She Cooks
Medi~al Mira~le ' .
Blinded Girl, 15, Sees Again
T.JPTON, Ind . (UPI) -March 7, ~nn
Turner. 15, stared at the solar echpse
and was blinded. lier doctor said her
e'yes showed bum Inflammation and
scars, and she probably never would .re-
gain her sight.
T\)day she can see again.
Dr. : Samuel Thompson, a ?tfarlon tye
specialist .who first examJned AM after
the eclipse, said she had experienced ~
"medltal phenomenon."
When Thompson nm· looked at her
Ann'S1 mother, Mrs. Coy Turn'er. "lt It.JU
has the touch of God's hand Jn It..,.
Anfi 'ljad been corftitlUing her education
rat home. Wednesday night, her tutor,
Mn. Donna Renie, came for their usual
session. Ann said to her: "What a preUy
blfi ;y~ are wearing.''. will return 'to school' M9nday. Her
on. resUicuon· is to .tvoid .bright IUJl-
light.
"I 'knew 'Gocl .wouldri't let me down,"
ihe said.
' . eyes. ,he said, they .. s~wed .• ~tnOam. -• -,., · · ...
mati<Jri ·a'nd ·sea~: ·They sUH "ftave' sor\ie
scars. but Ann now has normal .w.n. 'Toro Pilot Lost 'l'honipson said, although he will ·examine
her periodically for the next year. · '
Thompson, said thjj girl IOl:!t' hec 1lght Ne . Catalin' a from stariog dite,111 at:the solar eclipse I ar,. . ' ,
March 1;·w).en •the :moon 'pa!9ed in ·front '
of tlte S1JO,.darkeni11githe skies ai'mldday,. ~.S. Matble; ·Navy ·and· €oast Guafd
Doctors warn against staring at,. such Air ail<J ~a Uriits conthjueJI their Rareh
phen.omena,· .because ·or · ~e · danger · tO ! tqdi.Y.:fori '4,51~ •.El 't9r~ .. ~~ pi~
eyes1ghl. . . 1 ' • ' ! -• ''Y'~)lll!'ed;out or tiis jet 'l'!lut'Sd'a'y )bortly
:
Wed~y. one daf: short .of l\liO fbef<ftd )t cr.,tled~to Q>e ocean about ·
months :afitr sbe watched othe·-«11~\ 111 ·~f16s iou!be ,of ,santa Ca.la~ / •
Ann cried.. .. "[ can see,-J can si*t'"lh:t h~ -• ~ • · · . r
mother '"•med 'lnl•"~ room'ahil ~alirfd · ~·ui-· -"··· • ' -: her 'l'ltll..,.b't !aC.-~iln!d' Iii ·hei: !J.naa, 1 ,,....,. Corpo 11!'1 en . aald Ca;t. .•
w "eptng' . ·-•1• •••• ;~~·~~ODle %J.'l.w~1 ll,v,.s ~, ~·r be!iei~Tifioi ,·. lif~·~j~~~ .. ~~~ hi!~~~1~~~·
the doctor: « 't)t. · n.atu:nu m s, d iilj control of the, plane. durinJ a
Asks 'Eqrial Ti'n\e', .
. \vASllrl'IUroN -:<Ai>>' -· aeiiio<riuc
National Chalnnan Lawrence F. O'Brien
tskett' the ihree ma!or t e'I e'v I 11 ion
networks today .to glvf! l'Ull coverage
of a major foreign pollcy tpeeth he
plans 'Saturday night In response to the
Nixon admtnl.stratlon'1 Cam bod I a
policies.
!amlllatl.zatlon !light.
, The spoke.5man said the pnot or a
. plane fll>jnrwltK 1Jle· downed •Crall ,.,.
ihe ~not 'and his paroehule go Into
the ocean after the I :• p.m. crash.
Three helicoptefi, two flx~-wlng craft,
thtee tracktng planes and a Coast Guard
·cutter joined In the seorth that conUnued
througfi the rUght.
The cause of the accident had nat
~n determined.
I I (
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! DAILY PILOT s ftldlJ, M.17 a. 1970
,
OAILY ll'ILOT ltl lf ,Jltlt
ANTI-WAR DEMONITllATOlll _HEAD FOii AIR NATION.AL GUARD UNIT IN COSTA MESA
Prevlou.11'1 UrMWtlcecl', Ovitt L1ttl1 ComtntMlcatlen1 Unit Becomt• Ob lt ct of Mtrch
Students to Get Votes From Page 1
PROTEST ...
On UCI Budget Board? all U.S. lnvol\·ement in Southeast ,..ala,
"murder on campus" and "all racism
and brutal.lam in the military."
Studcmts at Saddleback College and
(iolden West College planned no organiz-
ed activities for the weekend but a
Golden West spokesma n said they were
planning an event of an undlaclosed
nature on Monday.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of .. O."' Pllltt SllH
Jn addiUon to the rtlll>luUon ll'JPPOl1.lng
ltudent protest ~viti~ voted Wed-
nelday by the UC Jrvlne Academic
Senile, UC l ttudenll havt won othtr
11upport from their profeu«1.
Faculty member• approved "ln prln-
d ple" a motlon to make ttudent1 voUn&
mtmben cl the senate'• budaet com-
mlU4e.
The bud,.t committee b compootd
n( Ill' faculty mernbtrt who consider
ptttonnel for hlrlnl ""' pmnollon and r.,.,rt dlr~ IO Ibo chancellor.
Dr. Frocl llelnel, dean d pl>yllcal
GWC President
Charges Closing
May Be Mistake
BJ llUDI NIEDZIELHI ...................
Dr. R. Dudlly Boyce, prealdent ol
HunU ..... a.m•a Golden Wnl Colle(e,
'Mlurada7 told a ,....P d atudanb that
Iha clollnJ o( hla eollel• mllbl have
batnamblake.
"1 would never have caed thl• cam-
pua. Wt had t0me very Important
dlalotue arran1ed and 1 would rather
have b.d that dWoaut befon the campus
WU cloaed."
Ht n!tmd 1pedflcally to a rally
eaheduled for 11 a.m. '11l.ur1d1y in tbe
Clm.JIUI free speech area to evaluate
Prelldtnt Ni.ion'• Cambodia poUcy.
About IO confuted 1tudent1 had e1rller
cathtred. on Cltllpus in an attempt to
dila>ver why Golden \\'est , where no
incidents of viotence have occurred, was
abut down.
"The school is closed down lo keep
us from getting together and we just
have to figure out bow to get togelher,"
iaid one.
The.ir dilcuuion was interrup(ed by
Don aJd Filmer, the student acti vities ad-
viser, who told them they could not
meet on campus.
"I'm obliied to tell you that you
Mould not be here ," he 11id. "You
don't "eem lo understand that the
chancellor bas the right to close the
achoo! .and the chancellor h11 clOled
the school."
I
DAILY PILOT
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M~lfo,g El•l!f
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T.t1,•1n1 4tJ-44JI
I
sciences and budget committee chairm1n
told hi• colle1aues work on tbe com-
mittee hid ·lf"Ollnd lo a •top hecau&e
of a controversy over student mem-
beralp.
In 1989 tht Stn1te voted to have two
liudeaU erve In the commlttee:. They
weer not atven a forma l membe rship
whJch would have been In direct coo-
travenUon of the body's bylaw•.
"We',ve been 1oln1 along very -well.
making 111 our decl1lon1 o na consen1us
basls with the 1tudent1 pertlcl p1Ung,''
he told the profeuor1. "unUI a short
while ago when 1 fonnal vote was caUed
for.
"Obvklusly, the 1tudent.s e<1uld not
participate and three of ua on the com -
mittee refuae lo 10 on with the work
of the committee unUI we ha ve tome
lndfcttlon from this body that student"
wlll be voUn1 members In the com-
mittee," he llal.ed.
Dr. Reines told the .l<!nate their vole
"in prlncJple" -would be 1ufrlclen t ln-
dlcaUon of the IJ'OUP'• e ntlmen t In
have the studentl vole 11 member1 of
U>e ~ommlttee.
"The uNver1ltywkle rulea committee
can declare ua 1Jlfl:1l for such acUon, ..
he warned, .. but .another budget com-
mittee c1n be appointed in a trice If
that happens."
11\e two etudent membe rs, J im P11p:r
and John Payne have provided a valuable
input to the commlttee'1 deliberaUom,
he 11ld.
"I'm ju1t a1klng you to reaffirm a
decision you made lilt year. l think
it's lmport1nl. In the light o( all lhc
trouble and turmoil th1t is hitting other
campuae•, I just think it's import1nt
to do 1omething like thi!," he es:pl.ained.
About JOO striking students from Chap-
man College in Orange ~aid they planned
to march on the \Vestern \Vhite House
in San Clemente today at 1:30 p.m.
Chapman is one of the h!w county col·
leges which is remaining open in the
light of student protests.
Thursday, Santa Ana College w11
ordered closed lUltil Monday, leavlna:
Chapman, Fullerton College and Cypress
College lhc only Couniy institutions wh!ch
have not cl osed.
Studen ts, faculty and adn1lnlstrator1
al Costa ft1esa's Southern California
College are participating in a "Com-
munity of Concern for Col!egewide
Reflection on Respon sibi lity" a ft c r
regularly scheduled classes were suspen-
ded Thumiay.
County Welfare Program
Said Soa1·ii1g to New Higl1
By JACK BROBACK
01 IM 0.HY P'lltl Sllff
Court rulings liberali~ing public aid
for welfare cllentl, cou pled with a fa st
growing JK!pula lion, ha ve combined 1o
push Orange County's public assis tance
costB lo new highs during lhe first nine
months of the current fi1e 1I year.
\\'e\tare Director Granville Peoples ln
a "management· report" to the Boa rd
of Supervisors estimated th at Welfare
Department growth would be more than
ao percent thl• year.
Peoples pointed lo some bri1ht 1pot11,
l1o"'ever. The Food Slamp Pro$lram.
altbou&h underaolng rapid gJ"O'Wlh, is
operating smoothly, 11 Jn the county'1
Adoption S<'rvlce1. now In lta: third year.
The welfare director 111d the U.S.
Supreme Court. edict e 11 m I n 1 t I n g
residence requl~menL!I for aid, now In
Ill seeond year. ha• only Increased rl"Ci-
plent11 by I~ percen t, but he warned
or "major changes In welfare ad·
mln\1traUon In the next two or three
years."
The moil eo11lly 5egment or tht welh1re
program is that o( prnviding &kt for
f11milies with c:lependenl children, Peoples
said . This catet:ory averaged S,408 case.~
A month during the ye1r, Jnvoh-•lng 13,829
chlktrm st an average coat of $183.34
per cast. ·'
Thi1 toted up to a :13 percent Increase
ln cues and a four percent Increase
ln C'1Sh grants over the previous fisca l
year.
Another c1te11ory underioing 11 bli:
jump w11 11id lo the dl.t1bltd wh ich
is up 18 percent in r.11rch <lver June.
111111.
Peoples ~Jld OrOlngt County tX·
pcnd.Jlures compared favorably with
olh<!r counties with lht county accoun1ing
for 1 little less than 7 pcrctnt of thr
1tate caseload. but eo111 are under 3
percent of the slate rlgure.
As lo thl' food Stamp Pfogran1. in-
augurated jo the county last October
with 3,669 families participAling, It l"
now up to 8,700 participating families
aa of M11y I.
Almost all iamilies re rt if I e d
participated in October of 1969 with
this gradually dropping to 74 percent
usage last January. A big jump lo
almost 100 percent participation occurnd
in February, howevtr y.•hen the prn-
portiooa\e cost of ii.amps lo value
decreased sharply.
Stamp cosl and valur figures jumped
from 1165,223 (cost) 11nd $2611,000 value
in October to $4 14,345 and li34,236 In
I.he current month, Peoplts noted.
Adoption Services placed children \\'Ith
400 families to date this year. Duflng
the peat quarter 226 un~·cd mothers
reque5ltd aid and 224 wrre allo\\'l'l.l .
Lice ns-ed f05ter parent home" were
a great aid to the progran1, Peoples
!Bid, with 125-140 children placed on
a mori1h-t1>-month prr-adoplivc basis.
The tot11l \1lelf11re f)cpartnu~nl buclgrt
rnr 1969-70 i~ $J5.7 million lor the varlou~
progr111n.~ and $8.5 n1 illinn for 11d-
111inistra\i\·t' cost~ rn the past nine
n1on\hs $Z6.1 n1illion h;is hccn spent
nn programs 11nd J.S.2 million on ad·
minlstr..-illon .
Thrsr rigurra do nor inrludr l\11.'di-C11I
\\'hlch Is flnanc('d entirely by slate funds
:tncl has an Ml S 1nillion budgc1 for IJ1e
year.
Peopleli s•id there 11rr now 11hout 50
raaca pt>ndi11g in couns on welfare au~
J<'cls. lie c:ited 1u rrcen' cri ticitl dcclsion1
!h<' "mt1n·in·thc-ho1ne '' case In which
lhe 1·ourt.s nllrd tha! therti c·an bf' n«l
9lfJUOlPliOn or illpporl furnllhed by the
rnan. but research m11sl bf. c11rr11!d ou t
ID ak:ert&ln the actual inCt>r!le Of th<'
f1mily.
i\nolhtr rcctnl dcci 11ion by the U.R.
Suprtn1t Coor\ 1s causing t/"Ql1bl11 , It
requires t h~t for cvt'ry ptr.son to whom
11ld is termina\ed thrrt' niust be a fut~
hearin~ with legal advice. Thtre are
about 1,000 lenninations each month,
J1eoples noted.
Cambodia War Widens
Big gest A r1ns Cach e V 1icove red
SAIGO~ tUPl) -The United States
today sent al'IOlhtr battalion of l:JO ttoop1
tnto Cambodia where a aerla of a!Ued
operations have uncovered the 1reate1t
arms cache of the war. South~·est <lf
a&igon a fJotilla of JOO allied boats moved
upriver tOY.·ard Phnom Penh.
The operatlona 1n Cambodia brou1bt
A Vage retallatlon from North Viet-
namese in the northern reiiofts of South
Vietnam. They killed 57 civilians and
woundt'd a in shelling allach oo tht
cities of Hue and Tam Ky and batUcd
their w1y Into Tam Ky in strtet flahUn1.
The action cost thent 14 d~d.
It was the costliest night of Communist
attacks this year.
~1ilital')' ip0ke1men in Sai~n said 800
troops of the U.S. 9th Infa ntry Dlvt!lon
moved into the Parrot's Beak area 35
miles northwest of Saigon where a South
Vietnamese force destroyed the Ba Thu
au pply bltt and thtn wi thdrew. Thty
said the Americans moved in to prtvent
Viet Cooa from returnln1 to the area.
The allied operation IO far lw killed
nearly 4,000 Communist troops 1t • t'ost
of M Americans dead and 133 wound~
•nd about 200 South Vletnan1ese (lead
and 900 wounded. 'J'1e Americans lbo
captured 88~ prisoners.
UP I correspondent Leon D a n i e I
reported from "The City.'' a vulit Com-
munist corpJNe1 just across the border,
that Amerlc1n troops had found the
biggest suppllet of arms and-ammunition
of the entire war and U1at the counl
was still under y.•ay.
In Washlnlton, the Pentagon lold
Secrttuy of. Stale William P. Rogcriit
tod1y the oper1tlon1 have c1ptured
enough ammunition for the CommunJ1ts
to have <:onducled 719 small hit-run at-
tacks on South Vietnam~e cities. It
5aid UUi included 4,000 roundi of rocket,
mortar and recollless rifle sh!!lls plu~
1.000 tons of rice -enough to feed
4,000 troops for nearly a yeaf.
The flotilla of U.S. Navy and SOuth
Vietnamese vasell was moving through
the Mekon1 Delta en the Bassac RJver
which joins tht Mekong at Chau Doc.
J ta miles southweJt ol Saigon. The fl.DU Ila
Allen Says Governmen t
Funds Eyed for Bay Bu y
Fifth District Supcrvltor Alton E. Allen
expll'Kted Thur1day on hit proposal for
1 bond election to purch11t Irvine Com-
pany l111dl in the Upper Newport Ba1
area for • regional park, explainine
thal the cost to county tl.lpayus couJd
be as little 11 ORe-fourlh Of the total
lab.
Allen had proposed Tuesday that a
speeial committt'i? of county department
heads study the feasibility of acquiring
Mini-bus Wreck
La,vsuit Filed
F'lve Harbor Area tee ns1ers who were
i11jured, one of thtm critica lly, in a
traffic accident list March 25 near
·Parker, Ariz., have sued the occupants
of the mini-bus ~·hich allegedly struck
their vehicle for damages totalling
!490,000.
Listed as plain!lf fs in the Superior
Court action are Sharon Myers, 19, o!
3090 Trinity Drive, Costa Mesa; Randolph
L. Smith. 18, or 41 5 38lh St.. Newport
Beach; Ronald Plalfoot, 18, of 298 Rose
Lane, Costa ~1es.a; 1i1ark. A. Rdgers.
18, of 3810 Channel Place, Newport Beach
and Robert S. Allen , II, of 3801 Marcus
St .. Newport Beach .
All were occup1nt1 of a minl·bus in-
volved in a collision v.·ith an almost
iCentical vehicle on an Arizona highway.,
All five plaintiffs ar e represented in
the court action by the1r parents or
guardians. Named 111 defendants in Uie
Jawsu.it are Jay Leavelle, Robtrt S.
Le11velle Sr. and Nancy Smith.
Henrcdon jc~
the land through a November bond elec-
tion.
At that lime he e1 tim1ted the cost
of the property al "about m million.
"A su bstantial portion of th is L'Ost
~·ould be paid for by the federal and
slate governments," 1he supervisor aald .
Other regional parkJ in the county
are fi nanced under a formula of SO
percent or the funds from federa l
sources, 25 percent from the stale and
25 percent from the county, he explained.
At the $25 million fig ure for the Irvine
lands, the county ta1payer1 share would
be only fl.5 mllllon.
Allen's proposal Is a aubstitule for
the con troversial land exchange wllh
lhe Irvine Company throuah ~·hleh lhe
county would receive 460 1cres of Irvine..
oYrned uplands and islands for 157 acres
of county tlde landa.
F'inal consideratlo11 or the propoaal
"''all deferred to May 26 as only three
supervisors were prese11t Tuesday.
Wi sconsin Uni\'crs il y
President Quits J ob
J\1ADISON, Wis. (UPI) -Univer sity
of Wiscoasin President Fred Harvey Har-
rington announced his resignation today
as the 35,000-student campus remained
under siege from you ths prolesllng the
exteulon <lt the war Jn Indocuina. The
rerlg11aUon Is effective Oct. I.
"It may be unfortunate to .innoun(C
il at this lime," Harrington said, "bot
it seems best. 'Ve are in a serious
crisis and J am not running away fron1
It. This la not aba11donment. l wlll remain
as president in all respectl until Oct.
J."
-'
ltrt in 1Ls wake a stonn of conlro\•ersy
over the l1clt ol secrecy abOut It.I
mi~ions.
Informed sources said 11 \~ou\d not
cross into Can1bod1a before Saturday
niorn.lni;.
Ill e~·cry n11;>ve has been broadeast
to the Viel Cooa in advance, ancl hea\'Y
oppoeitlon wa• forncu't on the 4:> mile•
bct~·een Chau Doc and Phnom Penh.
The controversy O''er security delayed
ill deparlure, but repor11 today &aid
It ~·as nearing Ch.au Doc ~·ltb South
Vletname11e 10ldlen1 alona to protect it
from an1bu:1he1. U.S. and South Viet·
nam06e planes would be expected lo
pro\'ide air cover.
'.fhc heav lesl opposition was expected
at the Cambodian river crossing town
of Neak Luong. 30 miles belov1 Phnon1
Penh and 15 rn ilcs abo1·e the South
Vietnam ese border. Strong Communist
forces controlled the ferry crosslna-there,
and Cambodian troopt were reported
movinc slowly Into the area from Phnom
Penb to try to dislodge them.
Ncwpor~ Firm
Biiys Attractions
In Buena Park
Sale of two Orange County family
rcereaUon al\raclions, J\lovieland Wu:
J\tuseum and P11lace of Living Art and
!he Japunese Villa ge and Deer Park,
both in Buena Park, ~·as announced to-
Uay.
Purchaser is the newly organ lr.ed Rec-
reation Environments Inc .. (REi l of
Newport Beach. Seller was lhe creator
of the attractions, Allen H. Parkinson of
Scottsdale. Ariz.
Announcen1ent of the sale for an un-
(tisclosed sum "'as niade by Parkinson
and two RE! officials, E. James Murar
of Newport Beach. pre!lldent, and Edwin
D. Ettinger of San Clcmene, chairman
<lf the board.
Parkinllon. \rho said he aold the prop-
erty for reasons of healt h, first opened
the J\·lov ielund \\;ax J\tuseum in 1962 and
later added the Palace of Living Ari. a
collectlon of reproductions of famous
paintings done in lhree dimen1lon1.
The J apane se Villa~e and Deer Park
\\·as opened in 1968. The two alraction.s
110.,..· boa~! 1.5 million visitors a year.
~l urar noled that thr purchase mark"i
lhc second n1ajor Orange County recrea-
tion rntcrprise fo r llEI. The firm de-
veloped and operates Coto de Caz.a. it
5.®acre fan1ily saddle, hunt and health
cl ub, three miles east of the San Diego
Freev.·ay near San Juan Capistrano.
REI has three other California recrea4
lion projecls. h1·0 of them near Santa
Rarbara and a third on the Sa crament<>
River near Redd ing Jn northern Cali·
fornia .
The f1rn1 1s a nrw subsidi~ry of Great
Sou!h v.·csl Corporation (GSC). \\'illiam
D. Ray executive vice president of GSC,
saal today that assets valued al over S40
million of 1he Newport-based l\1accG
Corporation . another GSC subsidiary,
ha\•e been 1ransferrecl to REI.
1
!
HENREDON TRANSLATES THE SUITLE PROPORTI ON AND CLEAN LINE OF THE ORIENTAL INTO
AN EXCITING NEW COLLECTION FOR CONTEt.tPO ~RY HOt.tE!.-TRADE WINOS.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERIT AG::-E -----
N &WPO~T l !ACH
1727 Westcllfl Dr., '42·2050
OPEN P~IDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
LAGUNA BEACH
Profe,tlonal Interior 345 North Co1 st Hwy. 494-6SS1
Deal9nara Anllablo-AID OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
n ... Till "" MMt •f Of9lttl' Ce111lty 140·1 J•l
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Huntington Bea~h
~ D ITl·O N
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VOL 63, NO. 110, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1970 TEN CENTs
~udge Ready
To In struct
I:e agueJury
A weary Superior Court jury will today
take what is expected to be its last
weekend recess in the murder trial of
Arthur DeWitte League, accused of the
streetcorner· slaying of Santa Ana
policeman Nelson Sasscer.
Jurors heard testimony from the last
of a parade of defense witnesses late
Thursday and were then told Judge
Samuel Dreizen that they will receive
their instructions from his-bench late
today before taking a three-day weekend
break.
Final arguments from lawyers for both
sides will wrap up the courtroom act.icm
Tuesday and the panel will tben retire
to the jury room for its last act in
the three-month trial o£ the accused
Black Panther.
They have listened to testimony from
nearly 40 witnesses called by both sides
since the trial opened last March 12.
Among them has been the 21-year-old
League who denied from the witness
box that he shot and killed Sassctr
Jast June 4.
Chief Prosecutor Everett Dickey, for
whom this will be his last assignment
fo:-the district attorney's office be{ore
taking his jud&e's robes and a seat
on the Harbor Judicial District Court
bench, believes he has proved that the
Santa Ana Negro shot Sasscer in the
chest shortl y after the patrolman asked
League and a companion for iden.-
tification.
It has been alleged that the pair then
fled from the scene, leaving the dyi:ng
olficer in the roadway feebly calling
for the help that proved to be useless.
Dickey has been assisted by Deputy
District Attorney :P.1artin J. Heneghan
in the prosecution chore. League has
been defended by attorneys Robert Green
and Michael Gerbosi, both of whom
were appointed by Su;perior COurt.
Tricia Suggests
Students Write
··To Con g ressmen
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tricia Nixon
thinks antiwar students should write their
congressmen rather than close down col-
leges as a ronn of protest, say two
ycung women who visited her in the
White House.
In an hour-long meeting Thursday with
two Finch College, N.Y., students Miss
Ni•on "suggested we write to con-
gressmen and senators and tell them
how we felt ," reported Ann Holmes,
20.
''We told her we've been doing that
for five years," Miss Holmes said. And
one senator wrote back a scathing letter,
ending it "Thank you for your attitude."
f\.ilss Holmes and Missy Allen, 22,
are both juniors at the exclusive New
York City school where Tricia herself
graduated. The two students were among
same 100 Finch girls taking part in
an antiwar demonstration across the
street from the White House Thursday.
Miss Holmes said Tricia "seemed
.shocked" when ttiey told her million s
of American students don't trust their
government.
Miss Holmes said Tricia tokt them
she doesn't see any demonstrations. "She
doesn't look out the windows of the
White House," Miss Holmes said.
Later a White House press officer
said the visit was part of an ongoing
attempt to "keep the doors apen to
all inions and to listen to all tnlons."
Oraage Coast .-
Weather
You may be able to outsJeep the
coastal cloudiness over the week·
end, and Jrom then on it'll be a
nice day with fair skies and temp-
eratures in the temperate 60's.
INSW E TODAY
They'll be hissing tilt tnllain
· and cheering the hero Saturday
night at Newport Horbor· 11igfl
School when an old time melo-
drOma g~s on stage for char·
itu. Details in today's \Veek-
endcr.
... ,"" tt C11llernle 1 aitdl;lnt u, r
Cllnlfltll 11·•1
Cllftkl It Crn1wtN 1f
OMlll "'t!ICH I
t!eitwlll ''" 6 Pl111nc1 i.n
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1t11111r111h t•tr
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Wtrll H....., .. J w .. "' .. ' t•n
DAILY ,ILO'f SIMI 'lllte
ADVISOR TEL LS STUDENTS THEY MUST LEAVE CAMPU S
GWC 's Donald Fisher Seeks Compl iance, Not Confrontation
GWC Pre~ident Cl1arge s ,
Campu s Oo sing 'Mistake'
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
01 1111 EH!tr '1 .. 1 Sllrt
Dr. R. Dudley Boyce, president of
Huntington Beach's Golden West C.OUege,
Thursday told a group of students that
tbe closing of his college migbt have
been a mistake.
"I would never have closed this cam·
pus. We had some very important
dialogue arranged and I v.·ould rather
have bad that dialogue before the campus was closed." _ __...---
He referred specifically to a rally
scheduled for ' Il a.m. Thursday in the
campus free speec h area to j!Valuate
President Nixon's Cambodia policy.
About 20 confused students had earlier
r:athered on campus in an attempt to
discover why Golden \Vest, where no
incidents of violence have occurred, was
shut down.
''The school is closed down to keep
us from getting together and \\'e just
have to figure out how to get together,"
said one.
Their discussion 'vas interrupted by
Donald Fisher, the student activities ad-
viser, who told them they could not
200 Children
To Feel Squeeze
lnRoorn Shortage
More than 200 children are going to
feel the squeeze from a lack of
classrooms next fall in the Fountain
Valley School District.
District trustees approved tht ac-
quisition of eight relocatable classrooms
meel on campus.
"I'm obll&ed to tell you that you
should not be here," he said. "You
don't seem to understand tha~ the
chancellor bas the right to close the
school and the chancellor has closed
the school.''
Instead, the studenls marched up to
the administration building where Dr.
. Boyce .and Chancellor Norman E.
Watson, of the Orange Coast Junior
College District, bad 'been' in conference.
'ITy"ing to discover why the school
had been closed, they approached the
chancellor, who refered them to Dr.
Boyce for comment.
"'Closing the community colleges was
a matter of action by each individual
board. Dr. Walson is responsible for
his board's directive and took the action
lo rescind classes. We're just carrying
out y.·hat "re've been asked to carry
out.''
"When Dr. Watson called me to tell
me that the campus would have to
be closed, the first thing he said was
'Dud, we've been had," Dr, Boyce ex·
plained,
As of Thursday, no student demonstra-
tions were planned at the college. Several
student leaders however indicated they
would call for a rally Monday when
classes resume.
Cuhure Week Ge ts
Official Support
Thursday night to solve the problem Cultural Arts Week will not only be
on a temporary basis. alive and functioning next week in Foun·
Jack Mencken, administrator of lain Valley, It will be officia too.
business services, told trustees that 264 Mayor Edward J u s t fixed that by
students at Harper and Nieblas schools signing a proclamation declaring May
could not be housed next ytar because 11·17 as Cultural Arts Week, aod urging
of the Jack of buildings. all residents to take part in the se.veral
"We're waiting for stale school con-activities.
strucUon bonds to be S<1ld. It all d~fl$SJ"''~ -\
' Coast • Ill Protes-t
Students Plan to Show War Dissent
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of "'-~Ur Pl .. 1 SI ...
More peaceful demonstrations are
planned this week!nd along the Orange
Coast as student protesters continue to
register opposition to U.S. lnvoJvement
in Cambodia and the death of four
Kent State students.
In action this morning, about 100
Orange Coast College students, organized
under the Non-violent Strike Committee.
marched on the Costa Mesa Post Office
Cou~ty Board
Still Hassling
Over Testing
Pre-election fireworks broke out during
Thursday's Orange County Board af
Education meeting as board member
Don Jordan renewed his heckling of
county school chief Robert Peterson over
the cost of the annual Academic
Decathlon sponsored by Peterson's office.
Both men are up for ~lection this
year.
Dr. Peterson charged Jordan with
"harassment" in his repeated demands
for a report detailing man hours spent
by coun(y personnel in staging the event.
The decathlon, originated by Peterson
two years ago, involves ten achievement
areas covering a wide variety of
classroom subjects. Testing involves the
students' abilities in eopmg with both
written and Or81 questioning. ·
Last November's program featured 125
students from 27 schooll. The decathlon
is primarily supported by a nonprofit
foundation of business and .civic organiza·
lions.
Jordan said he was simply revltlng
a nquest be has been m~king in·
termittently since the first decathlon
in the fall of 1918. He emphasized that
he is not opposed .to the event as such.
He termed It a "worthwhile project."
Dr. Peterson · aaid his offke ls com·
piling a c:ost repof'f, on the 1969 ~ecathlon
which will be aubmitted "fairly soon."
He called the chore a "monumental"
one.
Business Good
In Huntingtori,
Bac k Tells CofC
Business was good in Huntington Beach
last year.
That was the message the city·s
economic development dlrettor William
Back delivered to a dinner ·meeting of
the Chamber of Commerce at the
Sheraton Beach Inn. Thursday night.
He reparted that the city's 1,198 outlets
Jtained in every quarter in 1969 and
totalled $143,472,000 in retail sales -
an increase of $27,071,000 over the
previous year.
Back got the figures from the State
Board or Equalizalion.
He told the chamber directors lhat
195 new businesses opened in the city
in 1969. Food stores and restaurants
accounted lor most of the influx.
The autamotive group made the biggest
gain In tenns o( · dollars with sales
$10,376,006 over the 1968 total~ General
merchandise and food stores were the
ne:xt biggest earners, improving by
$3,438,000 ancf n.m.ooo respectively.
with more than 400 tndlviduaJ let~ers
a<tpr~ed to congressmen and the Pres!·
dent.
The gr<lllP of about 100 sludents left
the ·occ campus at 10 a.m. for the
Adams Slreet post ofOc< building,. ,.,._
rying placards denouncing the 'flt in
Cambodia and the deaths of fOUf. Kent
State University students.
Bob Jennison, an OCC student, stated
that the purpose of the mail·in was
to impress the community w1th the con·
cem of the college studenll.
"By delivering tbeoe ~tters one by
one; people can aee that we all have
an ir)dividual cooeem in Ibis matter."
Students fonn.ed a llDgle line and
marched through the pool ofllce bulldlng,
dropping off a letter bolore moving on
to ptck up another. Aa each letter w a1
~. the $1udents llhouted out the
number. Other students atood outside
the · building chanting, "PO'f(el' to the
!See PROTEff, Pop J)
Shy But Shrewd
Students Question Valley Trustees
DAILY ,U,OT,,.... IW Ttrrr "'°lllt
G,AMl!SMANSH" IN FV
Rocholi, Jes-, 7
SiJ: shy little studenls f-Busliard
School played a len..Jon.packed · game
of 20 QUestiOllS with trustees of the
Fountain Vall<y School Dlstrkt at
Thursday's board meeting.
They were introduced individually to
the trustees, then a Bushard teacher
explained how "twenty q u,&;s t Ions••
becomes a tool of deducUve reasoning
in a second grade class.
Harold Brown, chairman of the board.
was asked to pick an objtct lh the
room for the students to discover. Once
be did, he settled back in 'his padded
chair and was deaf to ·the pleas of
fellow trust.ees to tell them what it
was.
On the first quesUon the six sttlderib
narrowed· the location 61 the object to
O)\e )lall or. the room. Then they p0pped
~s Ii~. ~1J~ Jt aq~are, row~, ~ tangular or triarigular? Is it mlde of
paptr? Is It metal glass or plastic?"
By the M:Venth question trualeel, ad-
mlnfstrators; the full sblr of teachers
from Bushard School, parents· and one
reporter were more involved thin the
ltlds, -ring what the object was.
~I tliis point the te~r · suqesled
the g&me be ·stopped as the minutes
Were ticking away,
"No. Keep on. I'm dying to knolf
What' it is niyself," interjected trustee
Dale Stuard. ·
1Time moved slowly, because each ques.
tlon llad to be approved by all six
youngsters before it was asked and one
stud10us you11g girl. Rochelle Jose, 7,
(See QUESTIONS, Page I)
Valley H~gh 'Earth Week'
To Have .Discuss ion, Work
Not satisfied with . just one ·day of
ecology observance,· Fount.aln .Vall~y
High School students. have called ·for
an "Earth Week'' May 18-22.
And they're not -just .going to talk
about the problems·of polluUon.
·To be included. Ip the events are a
bolj,e and paper drive and a field trip
to the Cle,Veiand NaliOnal Forest.to pJll1lt
young trees. . I11vitations have been sent to Pres.ident
Richard Nixon and other celebrities to
attend , the wtek·long anti-pollution drivt,
accQrding to Principal Paul Berger.
Billy Meek, an English teacher on
the Baron · campus, and head of the
Earth .Week contest COfJlmittee said, "'!e
plan to otfer prizes tor the best posters,
essays, photographs, sCience projects,
songs, poems and Industrial arts projects
that deal with lbe pblluUon of air,. water•
and land."
"The real success of lhese COfltests
depends on the mercJ:iants who are in·
terested in. pollution. We need donated
prizes. We'd like bikes to be the first
place prize& while any 'kind 'of prize
would do for the others," he added.
Fund raising activities, to ·be hudltd
by English teacher Dave Feyk, inclllde
an Earth Queen contest in which each
vote will be charged a penny. Students
abo plan to collect paper and glass
bottles fot sale to salvaae yards,
Feyk said he would be interested In
getUog in touch with poDutlmK-Onscloos
celebrities wbo would dOnale an hour
of their time to the Fountain Valley
project.
on. the June election (to raise OOM
interest rates}. 'Illese mobile classrooms
will take care of the problem tlnUl
we can build more school~," Mencken
suggested .
Cost of the eight temporary classrooms
was estimated at $34,000.
Witche.ry • Ill ·Wax Works
The Saturday following Earlh Week
lludents and 'teachers plan to apply
their funds by purchasing trees which
will be plahlid at ·c1ivela11d Naliol\al
Forest.that same day.. ,
In addition; they plan , fu .. t up,.an
ecology library center where students
and teachers will be able to find
materials relating to pollution and con..
Each mobiie, or relocatable classroom
-district ofllcials have not determined
wbich type to build -will house a
normal class of 30 students. "'
District adroinbtrators· explalnfd Urt.s·
morning that Harper. and Nieblas schools .
were chosen ·because they wo'41d~be the· rUost crowded. "We didn't want lo bus
the youngsters o'r set up double se.s!ioils; ~
said a school spokesman. . .
No estimate was made as to how
long the classes would be used~ "Until
we can build schools," Mencken shrug·
ged.
Chairs, blackboards and all normal
classroom equipment will fumlsh the
temporary fa cllltles. That equip1n<'nt will
then be shifted to new classes when
built. .
Mencken said tht ·disttict · stu~nt·
population tot11ls 9,703 right now and
l3 expected to reach 10,174 by next
Septembtr.
•
Girl, 18, Assaulted by 'Witch,' Tliree Hipp ies
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -. Ignoring
threats they would -be turned into ftogs,
police arrested a self.proclaimed wJtch
and three "hippie drUters" for"the cat--o'-
nine-tails noggi118:.and rape af an 18-ytar·
<1ld girl in lht Hall of ·Horrors • wax
museum.
The victim was described by police
as a "hippie type with tattoos." She
told police it was lbe second time she
had been raped in the wax museum.
Police gave the following act0unt 0£
the Incident:
The victim was walking by the museum
with her boyfriend just before dawn
Thursday when they were pulled inside
the 'bUilding on Bourbon Strett. Her·
boyfriend was held on the fil'$l floor
or 'the museum while she wa1 taken
upstairs.
Officers described lhe place as "some
sort of chapel -part of some ·Satan
cult'• that "reeked of marijuana..''
Ooe of the abductors raped the girl
and then demanded she live with him
in the museum. The ·girl . refused and
was flogged with a cat-0'-nlne-tails. The
vtctlm finally agreed to live with lhe
man but only lf she could return home
for a whllc.
As 5he prepared to leave the other
two men grabbed her and she befl'an
screaming. Two policemen witnessed this
Incident and a.rrtsted Pitrlcla Hall, 11.
also known by tbe witchcraft narne of
Inca Anf{elique: William RhOdes. 24:
Richard K·ing; 29, alld Peter Valenzuela,
18.
''When we arrested the llall girl, 6he
claimed to ·be a witch -a member
• •
of a Satan cult," an ofllcet'-' said.· "Sht
threate ned to tum the arresting officer.
into frogs if they didn't leave her aJone.",
'Miss Hall and the ·wee men were
booked on charges or aggravated rape
and aggravated battery; MIA Jlall utd
she had . boon baplt..a 'by a '"black
pope" In the Rlrst ctulrdl of .Satan Jn
~an Fronclsco. She has • !"hip tattooed
on her righl arm.
The Hall of Horrors caters to the
heavy tourist traffic alona Bourbon
Slreet In the Fl'f!!Ch Quarter. The
museum. containing wa1 fiJurts of
ghouls and simulated torture devkes,
opened last surrnntr.
The rape vlcUm ~ctrk@d In the musemn
during IL• operilng plghl' and . said she
w11s raped then. She promised at that
time the rapist "would pay {or this."
serVation. ·
Any citir.eo lnteresled In paTticipatlng
In the ecology obser\'ance with prizes
may' ,call F01111~'11 Valley High Sj;hool,
962-3301,. for further in£ormatloo.
TEACHERS' TEA.ht
OKa SETTLEMENT . " LOS ANGELES (UP!) -NegoUalon
for ·striking Los Angeles teadlers ~
41ccepted a settlement proposed tiy a
federal mediator and referred it to the
board of directon or the United Tt&Cben
of Los Angeles for approval
The proposal a!Jo was submlUed 11!
the board· of edu<atlon whfcll oclleduled.
a special meetlnc for Sunday to. COll!)dq
It. .._ 4
--
•
•
.. • ,.,. , ...
~ . V PILOT " F""'1, llV f, 1978
'
":Pilot Finds Only ~aY.
,.;r~ Fly at Laker Game
By PATRICK O'DONNELL
,.: . • Of tlM Da!IW Pl .. ! SU.ff
" \ WlfAT 00 AJRLJNE pilots and prtss photoaraphers have In common!
,lWell, J've never seen a newspaper photog rlying a jet, but Wedne5clay l'llght
•· . -et the Laker game I turned to the photographer beside me and asked who he
.1.1 • was working for.
~ •• "Western Airlines," he replied. Looking a little puzzled 1 wondered
aloud why a photog was working the NBA play-ofll for Wattm Airlines.
-;. . -
•
...
-'
"'No, I'm a pilot,'' he said, "and this is the best seat
in the place. The one l bought Is way up on top and J
can't see a thing .'' ·
* * * 1 a.sked how he got a pus to be under the bukel.
To my llD"prlae, be said he didn't have one.
It seems that several monthl ago be wu Lalking to
an usher near the Laker basket. dW'ing the warm up period
and when the game atvted, he sat doWn. 1be usher check·
ed all the other photogs, but didn't check him. Since then
he's been attending Laker games regularly and he ai:
. ways brings a camera.
He must be one of the belt known pbotoai at the P'orwn because be 11
never checked for proper identification.
What's more, he Is learning a lot about his adopted profession because
the phctographers from the wire services and daily newspapers talk about
U,eir work during the intermiuioo• and th.is is rubbing off on my pilot friend. . *' * * BUT .NEXT YEAR, if he doesn 't want to get. cau ght. I'll offer one piece
of advice. Of the 30 or so press photographers at the Forum I noticed he wa8
the only one carrying a transislor radio. He had it plugged into his ear and
ht would report to the rest of us what Chick Hearn was saying. Somehow, I
jhink Thia makes him stand out ln the crowd.
• But. being an airline pilot, he travels to many cities and there are 13
ofher NBA teams in the league. What about the ADA and profeasionaJ foot·
ball? A whole world is open to him.
> One thing hothen me though. WheTe could 1 pharof find 1 pilot'• uni-
..• form If he wanted to catch a free fUgbt someplace. Aw, It wouldn't work -or
··would it?
· Girl Says YES
·:'Edison Coed to Direct Job Service ...
By TERRY COVILLE
or "'-Daltr fOfllt Sllfl
• ~ f>,jpl Fuller, a 17-year-old junior 1t
Edi.'4>o"High School, 1ay1, .. Oh yes, I ··~d really be aettinc a job my1elf
·\ti&· 1ummer.'1
""-·'·lnltead, · sOe hll volunteered to help
9dter tttns· get llll'MIU job& ·11 director
ol 1he Huntington Beach Youlh Employ.
JUf.nl 5ervice (YES J.
·,~IJ~ tiUe Is "teen director." She w11
jiicked !or 1he pool by Hershey Gehri!,
·-.• ,...111 oountel<H' with lbt Orange County
Prtibalion Department, who is adult
'>!Ired« !or YES in Huntington Beach.
• "Kids need rponey foe college.. for
can. They want to dO .~~ We're
lry!ng to help !hell)," •Pall\ .. ya. .
1bia: is the &eCOnd · yeu fluntington
Beach has had a \'Es 'office. It is
ba..3li in the Ellis Avenue BaPmt Cbw'dl,
but is not a deno~ acpvtty.
"Laat )'tar ~ Y9\Ull jlt(lple came
to us for help. We .found jobs for llO
of them," Gehris 1akl.
This year the Yes office will cpen
nn May 23. It will be open from 9
a.m. to noon each Sat.ard1;1y during
8Chool. and the same hours Mond1y
through Saturday during the summer.
Youth who seek employment are in-
ylted to phone 847-6100 during the listed
hours aner May 23. They can thtn
ue Pam or another student volunteer
at the office for an tntervlew.
People wbo have Jobs available are
aU.ed to phone the same number. 'They
will not have Ui 110 in to the Office.
''We want ill'lY type of work available,"
Jl'1?1 eipl.ained. "Girls do a lot of
Mjsilting or !etretarial work, while
; ~ Of ·boys did yard work <1r found
: ~:u gu station attendants. we want JiH 'job possible."
ojout of the 180 job8 last ye ar v .. e
only had two complaints from
employeri ... Gehris added.
The YES office, a state and federal
project. is set up to serve youths 14·18,
--.
• .. . -..
DAILY PILOT
OllJfO,! COAIT ..UI LllHIMG COMt•"Y
l ol.ort N. Wo ld ' .............. ,,..~
..Jock R. Cutlot
T\0111•• c ..... a .....
1Jio,...1t A. M.,,,ii.;o•
Ni~ E.iMI'
'-. .Al .. ort w .•••••
At.odlle l•IKll'
H...tt .. t•• .._., Offk•
llt ll ••• ,h ..... , ........
M•lll1111 A.tll'••11 1 P.O. 111 1•0, •2641
Ot .... Offiut
l..-k.Jdl: m "'""" A-.. Cell• ~· ,. Wul .. ., $tt•• ~ teMlll .,1 WUI .. a...,..,._,,
1M ar-w-1 at .... Ill El C........ l•I
DAILY J'ILOT Sti ff PMtl
'KIDS NEED JOBS'
TMn Director Fuller
but no limlt on age has been followed.
"We found a job for a 44-year-<>ld
woman 'last year,·• Gehiis 'said.
Gehris fo<!id reqt.lests have already
started Lhls year. "Two-girls from Ohio
wrote lettel'l askJng ua to find them
jobs in Huntington Beach this summer."
Pam's job as teett. dl~or concerns
picking other volunteers to 1taff the
YES oflice, conduct interviews and in·
form the public about ·YES.-
"I took lt because I wanted to get
involved. I Ylil sick of sitting home
iTi the summer and doing nothinti ."
She wants to be an attorney and said
thi! gives her an oppoitunlty to learn
to work with peopie.
Gehris e.xplained the luct.eM of YES
In its first year in HUntington Beach •
"Ninety percent of the ·kids don't want
to make a, name or ca~ trouble. They
just want to get out and -werk, do
something."
"The YES program can be an a.uet
to employers And the community. by
de·1eloping an experienced work pool,"
he continum.
''I think lt says !!Omtth!ng for lh i~
town that "'e hid po riots at Golrif'n
West Col!ege or at last year's youth
rock festival ."
The kids keep coming b1ck for work.
ht said. Now he hopes the adults will
ketp coming back with work for them.
Wisconsin Unive rsity
President Quits J ob
MADISON, Wis. !UPI) -University
of W\KOuln President Frtd Harvey H.ar·
rin~ announced his res!anatlon today
u the 35,(KXl-itudent campus remained
under siege from youths protesting tht
extuslon of U1e war in Indochina. The
ruignatlon Is eUectlve Ort . I.
"It m11y be unfortun•te to anMUT'IC'f:
It at this lime, .. Harrington said, "but
It attms best. We are in 11 ~trlous
crisi! and 1 am not runnina away from
It. This-is Mt 11baridonmeat. T will rtmain
as president in an rtspects until Oct.
J."
DAIL 'f PILOT l l•ff Plltl•
State Voui
On itchell
Postponed
The State Senate this week delayed
the scheduled floor vote on appointment
of South Lagunan Clay N. Mitchen to
the State Board ol Education becauat
()f i111ufficienl vole5.
This was the assessment today by
11n aide of Senator Alfred Alquist (D-San
Jose), who Is opposing lhe appointment
cf Mitchell
Alquist, a candidate for lieutenant
governor, interrogated ?-.1ilchell before
the Rules Committee recently, but
J\.titchell won approval of the Rules Com·
mittee by a 4 to I split vote •
Th~· Alqulst aide 11ald because of absent
senators the pro-Mitchell forcea could
not round up the necessary %7 votes
to confirm the appointment.
However, the matter m8y be bf'Olllhl
up at any time ii the votes are rounded
up.
ANTl·WAR D~MONSTRATORS HEAD FOR Al R NATIONAL GUARD UNIT IN COSTA MESA
Previously Unnoticed, Quiet Little Communications Unit B1com11 Object of March
It would take 14 votes against Mitchell
to block his appointment and Alquifit
has been trying to round these up.
Normally. gubernatorial appointments
are rubber-stamped by the Senate wltb
little fanfare . 'Curious' Film Suspects
WinlO-week Trial Delay
From Page 1
PROTEST. • •
people, let's atop the war!'
The students walked back to the OCC
campus after the hour k>ng mail-in.
The Alquist aide speculated If tht
pro-Mitchell votes aren •t rounded up by
next week, Governor Reaga n ·mlght
withdraw the appointment. "lt really
isn't the Governor's appointment
tinyway," the aide suggested, "It's Mu
Rafferty's."
Republican aources have said that Raf·
ferty, state .superintendent « public in-
struction, lobbied strongly with the
governor to appoint the M-year-<>ld South
Lagunan.
Three Sl.anton theater officials involved
in the showing of the controversial
Swedish movie "I Am Curious, Yellow"
have woo a IG-week delay ol their
Westmmster Municipal Court trial on
charges of exhibiting obscene material.
Ordered this week to appear July 28
for furthe r court action were theater
manager Harry L. Meyer Of Stanton:
advertising agent Jules G. Landfield of
11ollywood and Daniel E. Ehrhnart of
Stanton.
The three men were arrested last
Dec. 22 in a raid which coincided with
Pla ye1·s Needed
For Valle y Team
Slo-pltch softball players are needed
to fill out a sixth team in the Fountain
Valley Parks and Recreation Dtpartment
summer league.
Anyooe interested in playing slo-pitch
i;oflball can phone the parks department
at 962·1424, between a a.m. and ~ p.m.,
weekdays.
Action start.a May 26 on the Los Amigos
High School diamond. Games will be
played Tuesday~ Wednesday i.nd Thurs-
day evenings at. 6 :~ p.m.
From l'flfle .I
QUESTION S ...
wiu ad1mant. about not wasting ques·
tions.
··can you play with it?" one youngster
:asked lor the ninth question. 'Yes, ...
was the answer.
T.wo little boys became excited. thi nk·
ing they knew what. it wa11. Muffled whis-
pers between them indicated it was the
photographer's camera.
Rochelle, however, refused to ask such
:a specifk quest.ion.
Adults in the room wt!;te. l!ure it was
the camera.
A vague question. designed to r<'veal
the camera produced a wave of shock
<iround the room when everyone learned
it wasn't.
Another question, "ls it clolh or
plastic?" -yes.
"Doe! it have a drawing on it?" -
no. This time ruling qut a plastic 11nd
cloth cat which fell under suspicion.
By now the entire room was buzzing
with excitement. Whispers of "what is
it?" spread: quick!)'. A few shrewd ad·
mbmtrators began guessing and writing
their aMWers on little sheN of piper.
"Is it brown, blue, green or purple?"
asked a voice. Yes .
Another youngster , narrowing the gap,
wanted to ask If it was brown.
Rochelle objttted. "The question Is
too specific," she said.
Everyone in the room slatrd darts
al her. She backed ttown .
Ye1. it ~·as brown.
The 16th question -"Is it only
brown1" -yes.
On the 17th question all teachers moved
to the edge of their chairs.
"Is it that little brown bag?" ask('(!
Daniel Grant, 8, the boy who had in-
correctly thought the camera.
A surprised photographer looked dO'o\'n
at hil'I feet. Stared at his brown bag
111.uffed wtth camera equipment.
"Y!fl .'' Fifty adults slumped back in
thelr chairs and. heaved a big i;igh of
relief.
Ted Towry, tht principal of Bushard
School , looked sheepishly 11 the trustees
and said falnUy, "f ll:new they would
get It."
"Yes. bul yoor finger s are bleeding,"
quipped Brown.
'Biafrau' Arrested
LAGOS . Niger1a (AP) -LI. Col.
Philllp Erfiong, chief of staff In B!sfra's
army who 11urrendered I he secc:ulonist
stile, has been arrtsll'd by military
author!Ues i11 Pon J-i&Tcourt, rellablt
80W'CCI said today.
·-
a similar descent by Newport Beach
police on the Balboa Theater in which
the same movle was confiscated. The
Balboa action will next come to court
ti.1ay 29.
Stanton officers interrupted their local scr~ning of the Sciindina\•ian bed
war1ner by sending a 16-year-<>ld boy
tn the box office to apply for admission
lo the theater. When the youth was
<1llowed to go in they followed him
an:J booked the three alleged operators
of the emporium .
The current court action has led to
;idoption by the Stanton city-·council
or an ordinance which empowers the
community to regulate the type of movies
being shown by local theaters.
A federal judge in Los Angeles Counly
recently issued a temporary restraining
ordtr which prohibits any further
~izures of the film or further arrests
for showing the movie in that area.
.
Huntin gton Broke~
Gets County Office
The appointment of David K. Jonei;,
::i Huntington Beach insurance broker ,
In the district one post of the Orange
County Municipal Water Di.strict has
been approved by the county Board of
Supervisor.I.
Jones was named to the four-year
lerm in lieu of an election inasmuch
a~ there were no other candidates.
He.nredon \cF
Today's post office demOfl.!tration was
orderly as was Thursday's march from
Orange Coast College's Costa Mesa cam·
pus to the Costa Mesa Air National
Guard Base.
Polict and student organizers estima te
2.000 people took pert in the march
and rally held in a field near the base.
J'he Costa Mesa police helicopter kept
\\'alch from overhead as the marchers
walked from the campus to the raJ\y
site. One observer said he could see
no patrolmen in the march area.
Five national guardsmen listened from
behi nd the fence surrounding the base
as four student speakers gave short
speeches on the war and the Kent State
deaths.
Costa ~1esa polic e said today they
Intercepted three youngsters with guns
v"ho "''ere heading in the direction of
the march.
Three teenage boys were stopped In
the 2900 block of Mendoza Drive , head ing
in the general vicinity or the march.
at about 3 p.m. The boys told offl~;ers
they: w4l'4 looking for a place to _.oot
their lwo rifles and pistol
Police said they conliscated the
weapons rather than have the youths
carry them into the march and rally
area. ·
Leaflet activities by UC Irvine students
continued today with a Teach-in and
dialogue session scheduled to start on
campus at 11 a.m.
Protest spokesman Doug \Yhitener
said. "We're trying to c&rry our dialogue
10 the community." He stressed that
the public was invited to the teach-in.
Swim Meet Set
For Huntington
Ten teams are poised for an Jn.
vitational swim meet sponsored by the
Huntington Beach Aquatic Club at 9
a.m .. Saturday, in the Marina IDgh
School pool.
Competitors "''ill represent teams ln
. the "B" class of the Orange COOJty
Swim Conference which splashes into
its regular season June 6.
Members of the Huntington Beach
Aquatics Club and HunUngt.o1 Harbour.
Sandpipers, Mi!lion Viejo, Los Coyotes,
Arth, Mesa Verde and Balboa Bay Club
·sw im teams-are set for Saturd1y'1 meet.
The public is il1vited.
Valley Rollllding Up
Kindergarten Kids
It's round-up time in the Fountain.
Valley' School District.
Kindergarteo registration at all of the.
district's elementary schools is scheduled
for Monday through Friday, ne1t week.
Parents should bring their prHCbool
youngsters to the nearest school.
I
HENREOON TRANSLATES THE SUBTLE PROPORTION ANO CLEAN LINE OF THE ORIENTAl INTO
AN EXCITING NEW COLLECTION FOR CONTEMPO RARY HOM ES-TRADE WIN OS.
DEALERS FOR; HEN REDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 W11tcllff Dr., 6-C2-20SO
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
{
INTERIORS
LAOUN4 BEACH "'~ ~rofesslon1I lnt1rior 345 North Coiat Hwy. 494-6551 ~togners Avell1bl.....AID OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL . .!
...... 'f•A kM M"' .to,.... C...,., 141•126)
--
Agnew Says .·
Ohio, Guard
Overreacted
WASHINGTON (UPI) -In the lleat
ol anger, National Guardsmen. apparently
"overreacted" and may, in a sense,
have bee.n guilty of murder in the
llhooting deaths ol the four Kent State
University studtJl.ts, Vice President Spiro
T. Agnew said Thursday night.
Agnew appeared on the taping of a
television show with David Frost in a
studio of K'ITV in Los Angeles only
a few hours after President Nixon
assured college presidtnt.! tbat ad·
ministration officials would mute hosflle
comments about college students.
Under questioning by Frost, Agnew
Mid he had great sorrow over the
tragedy in Ohio but added he felt the
guardsmen, most of them no older than
the students, acted in the ~at of anger.
Agnew said during the TV program,
which will be aired next Wednesday
night but parts of which were made
known in Washington, he felt there would
have been no shooting had not militants
hurled rocks and attacked t h e
guardsmen.
Pursuing the question, Frost asked
Whether there might not have been any
dempnstration had not students been
upset over the movement ol U.S. troops
into Cambodla.
Agnew replied that was possible but
suggested certain elements were ready
to riot over almost anything, including
the laigth of bair<uts.
Agnew was asked whether guardsm~n
might not be held responsible for
••mui'der" if it was established that no
shots were fired at them first.
''Yes, but not first degree murder,''
the vice president replied. ''There was
no premeditation but apparently an over·
reaction in the heat of anger."
Agnew said Ulat it was his heartfelt
npinion that "with. the young people
today rests the hope of the nation."
Frost asked him about Interior
Secretary Walter Hickel's, Jetter to Presi·
dent Nixon suggesting Agnew's speeches
had contributed to a lack of com·
municatlon between the younger people
and the administratkin,
The vice president said he did not
be:lfeve his "old friend" Hickel had read
his speeches and added that he believed
the opinion9 of younger peraons were
being heard.
"But the fact that they are heard
does not necessarily mean they must
be heeded," he said.
He said he did not regret some or
his "dynamic" .utter~ in recent
~. He said he could · not un·
derstand why some people took such
Offense at his "invective" in acceptable
English but found nothing wrong about
dissidents using fpur letter words tG
de.scribe the vice president of the United
St.ates.
Agnew :iaid he could not comprehend
why there was not olltrage at the stoning
of guardsmen, the cutting of fire hoses
and the burning or buiktings by those vmo deplored his straight talk.
Asked about his candid language,
Agnew reca1led that Sen. J. William
FuJbright had called him a .. smart
itleek" and Arthur Goldberg had termed
him a ''fourth rate hack J;K>litician." _
Agnew was asked ho'f he would like
to be remembered.
"As some one who did .-90nlething and
1tood for something," he ~Ued.
State Drops Ch&rges
ln Panther Shooting
CHICAGO (AP) -The state dropped
attempted murder charges today against
seven Black Panther party members
who were present duriag a shooti;Da:
in which police killed two Panther
leaders.
Two policemen and lout Putber
members were wounded in w h.I. t
authorities have described as a gun battle
Jntt.iated by the Panthers during a pre--
dawn raid on a West Side apartment
Oec, 4.
-
'I KNEW GOD WOULDN'T LET ME DOWN'
Ann Turner Can Now See What She Cooks
'Medi~al Mira~le
Blinde.d Girl, 15, Sees Again
TlPTON. Ind. (UPI) -March 7, Ann
Turner, IS, stared at the solar eclipse
.uid was blinded~ Her doctor said her
eyes showed burn inflammation and
scars, and she probably ne ver would re·
gain her sight.
Today she can see again.
Or. Samuel Thompson , a Marion eye
.specialist-who first examined Ann after
the eclipse, said she had experienced a
••medical phenomenon.''
When Thompson first looked at her
eyes, he said, they showed burn inflam·
mation and scare. They still have some
aean, but Ann wow has. normal vision,
Thompson said, although he will examine
her periodically for the next year.
Thompson said the girl lost her sight
£rom staring direcUy at the solar eclipse
March 7, when the moon passed in front
of the sun, darkening the skies at midda y.
Doctors warn against staring at such
phenomena , because of the danger to
eyesight.
\\lednesday, one <l<1y short of lwo
1nonths after she "'atched the eclipse,
Ann cried : "( can sec. I can sec!" Her
mother hurried into her room and found
her with her face buried HI her hands,
"'eeping.
"I be lieve it "'as a miracle, throug_h~_
the doctor or by natural means." sald
Ann's mother, Mrs. Coy Turner. "It still
has the touch of God 's hand in JI ."
Ann had been continuing her education
at home. Wednesday night, her tutor,
Mrs. Donna Renie, came for their usual
session. Ann said to her: "What a pretty
blouse you are wearing."
Ann will return to school Monday. Her
only restriction is to avoid bright sun-
light.
"I knew God would1J"t let me down.·•
she said.
County Welfare Prog1~an1
Said Soaring to New Higl1
By JACK BROBACK
Of tlll O.llJ l"llef '""
Court rulings liberalizing public: aid
for welfare clienUi, coupled with a fast
growing population. have combined to
push Orange County's public aS&istance
costs to new highs during the first nine
months of the current fiscal year,
WeUare Director Granville Peoples in
a "management report'" to the Board
CJf Supervisors estimated that Welfare
Department growth would be more than
30 percent this year.
Peoples pointed to some br ight spots.
however. The Food Stamp Pro~am,
although undergoing rapid growth, is
operating smoothly, as in the county 's
Adoption Servi<:es. now in its third year.
The welfare director said the U.S.
Supreme Court edict e 1 i m i n a t i n g
residence requirements for aid. now in
its second year, has only increased reci·
pients by 15 percent, but he warned
of ''major changes in welfare ad·
ministration in the next two or three
years."
The most costly segment of the welfare
program is that of providing aid for
fam.iUea with dependent children, Peoples
said. This category averaged S.406 cases
a month during the year, involving 13.829
children at an average cost of '$163.34
per case.
This toted up lo a 33 percent inc:reasc
in cases and a four percent increase
in cash. grants over the previous fis<:al
year.
Anolher category undergoing a big
jump was aid to lhe disab led which
is up 18 percent in r.1areh over June,
1969.
Peoples said Orange County ex·
penditures compared fa vo rably with
other counties "-'ith the county ctccounting
for a little less than 7 pci-ccnt of th<:
sta te caseload. but c:nsls arc under 3
percent of the slate figure.
As to the Food Slainp Program, in-
augurated in the county last October
with 3,669 families part.icinating. it is
now up to 8,700 participating families
as of May J.
Students to Get Votes
Almost all families cert i f i c d
participated in October of 1969 with
th.is gradually dropping lo 74'"' percent
usage last January. A bi.[! ju m p to
almost 100 J¥?rcent participation occurred
in Februa("y , howrver whl'n the pro-
portionate cos t of stamps to value
decreased sharp!~·.
Stamp cost and value figu res jumped
rrom $166,228 (cn<;I) <1nd $260 .000 ,-aJur
in October to $414,345 and $734.236 in
the current month . Peoples noted .
On UCI Budget Board?
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of "" DtllJ P'llef ,,.,.
In addition to the re.solution, supporting
litudfnt protest .activiUes 'voted Wed·
nesday by the UC Irvine Academ;c
Senate. UCI students have won other
BUpport from their profeason.
Fac:ulty memben approved 0 in prin-
ciple" .a mot.ion tO make 1tudf:nts voting
m"embers o{ the seoate't bUdget com-
mittee.
The budget committee is composed
,,r sil' faculty members who consider
personnel for hiring and promotion and
report directly to the chancellor.
Or. Fred Re ine•. dean of physical
sciences and budget committee chalnn.an
told his colleagues work on the com·
mlttec hBd ground to a stop because
or a controversy over student mem-
bersip.
ln 1969 the Sena te voted to have two
student! serve in the comm1ttee. They
weer not ,qiven a form&I m"mbtrshlo
which would have bttn in direct con·
travenlion of the body 's bylaw•.
"We've been going along very well,
making .all our decl~lons o na consensus
basW with the lludenta participatJna,"
'
he told the professors. -·until a short
while ago when ·a formal vote was called
for.
"Obvioosly, the student! could not.
partictpa.te and three of us on the com-
miUeie rtftlH t.o go on with the work
cl the cunmtUee until we have some
indication from this body that students
will be voting members in the coot·
mlttee," he stated.
Dr. Reines told the senate their vote
''in principle" woold be: sufficient in·
dication ol the group's :5entimenl f()
have Uie students vote as members of
the: committee.
"The universitywlde rule~ committf'e
can declare us illegal ror such acti(')n,''
he warned, "but another budget com·
mlttee can be appointed in a triC"c . lf
that h~ns."
The two student membeni. Jim "Pa1te
and John Payne have provided a valuable
input to the committee's dellberatlons,
he said. •
"I'm jusl asking you to reaffirm '"a
decision you made Jut year. I think.
it's important. Jn the lig11t of all the
trouble and turmoil tMt ls hitting other
campuses, I ju•t think ii'• important
to do ""'11!1hing ll,k• tbi1," he explaintd.
Adoption Services placed child ren with
4rJO families to dnl<' this year. During
the past quarter 226 unwed mothers
requested aid and 224 were allowed.
Licensed roster parent homes were
11 great aid to the program , Peoples
said, with 125--140 children· placed on
a month-to-month pre-ad.optive basis.
The total Welfare Department budget
for 1969·70 is $35.7 million for the various
programs and $8.S million for ad·
ministrative costs. In the past nine
months $26. I million ha s been spent
on programs and $5.2 million on ad·
ministration.
These flgures do not include l\.fedi-Cal
which is financed entirely by state funds
and has an $8.S million budget Jor the
year.
Peoples said there Are now about 511
cases pending In courts on welfare sub-
jects. He cited as rteef'll crltlcal dCC'lsioll"I
the "m!ln·in·the-home" case in which
the court.~ ruled Iha! there can be no
a.i;sumption of support furnished by the
man. but research mu st be cnrrie<t out
to ascertain the actual income of the
family.
Another recent decis ion by the U.S.
Supreme Court ls clluslng troubles. It
requires that for every person to whom
aid is terminate<! there must be it lull
hearing with legal arlvice. There ire
about 1,000 tern1JnaUon.""; each month,
Peoples noted.
. -. --
Fr td_.y, M_.y 8, 11170 H DAILY PILOT 3
Cambodia War. Widell$
~
I
l Biggest Arms CacJire Uncovered
'
SAIGON (UPI) -The United Sta/e>
today sen t enother battalion of 800 troqps
into Cambodia where a series of-allied
operations have uncovered the greatest
arms cache of the war. Southwest of
Oaigo11 a flotilla of 100 allied boats moved
upriver toward Phnom Penh.
The operations in Cambodia brought
sa,..age retaliation from North Viel·
namese in the norUlern regions of South
Vietnam. They killed S7 civilians and
wounded 82 in shelling attacks on the
ciUes ~f Hue and Tam Ky and battled
their way into Tam Ky in street.fighting.
The action cost them 14 dead,
lt was the costliest night or Communist
attacks this year.
Militllry spokesmen in Saigon said 800
troops of the U.S. 9th lnfantry Division
moved inlo the Parrot's Beak area 3S
miles northwest of Saigon where a South
Vietnamese force destroyed the Ba Th11
supply base and then withdrew. They
said ·the Americans moved in to prevent
\'ict Cong from returning to the area.
The allied operation so far has killed
El Toro Pilot
Lost at Sea
Near Catalina
U.S. Marilie, Navy and Coast Guard
;iir and sea units continued their search
today for a missing El Toro Marine pilot
\\•ho bailed out of his jet Thursday shortly
before it crashed in to the ocean about
15 miles southeast of Santa Catalina
Island.
f\farine Corps spokesmen said Capt.
Jack A. Chiaramonte. 28. who lives on
the ba~e with hls \\'ife and four children,
para<:huted fro1n his Skyha\vk after loos·
lng control of !he plane during a
familiarization flight .
The spokesman _said the pilot of a
plane fl ying with the downed craft saw
the pilot and his parachute go into
the ocean after the 6:30 p.m. crash.
Three helicopters, two fixed-wing craft,
three tracking planes and a Coast Guard
cutter joined in the search that continued .
through the night.
Asks 'Ec1ual Tin1e'
WASHINGTON (AP) -Democratic
Na tional Chairma n Lawrence f . O'Brien
<iSked the three major l e I e v i s i o n
networks today to give full coverage
of a major foreign poli cy speech he
plans Saturday night in response to the
Nixon administration's Cambodia
policies.
Some chefs
nearly 4,000 Communist tro6ps at a cost
of S6 Americans dead and 1$3 wounded
and about 200 South Vietnames~ dead
and 900 y,•ounded . The Americans also
captured 884 prisoners.
UP I correspornient Leon 0 a n i e I
reported from "The, City," a vast Com·
rnunist comp!ax just across the border,
U1at American troOPS had found the
biggest supplies of arms and ammunition
of the entire war and that the count
was still under way.
In Washington. the Pentagon told
Secretary of State William P. Rogers
today . the operations have captured
enough afnmuniLion for the Communists
to have conducted 719 small hit-run at·
lacks on South Vietnamese cities. It
said this included 4,000 rounds of rocket,
mortar and recoilless rifle shells plus
1,000 tons of rice -enough to feed
4,000 troops for nearly a year.
The flotilla of U.S. Navy and South
Vietnamese vessels was moving through
I he J\lekong Delta on the Bassac River
wh ich joins lhe ?>.'lekong at Chau Doc,
115 miles southwest of Saigon. The flotilla
left in it.a wake a storm of co~ov.$sy
over the-lack of aterecy · t • tt,"";
missio1n;. > • i ·,
Informed sources said it would not
cross into Cambodia before S~)r
morning. ' + ~ ' t ., Jts every move has been bmadef"irt
to the Viet Cong in advance, and bePy
opposition was forecast on the 45 mUes
between Chau Doc and Phnom Penh. ~ ; ;
The controversy over security delajfl(I
its departure, but reports today ~
it was nearing Chau Doo witb4Sol\dt
Vietnamese soldiers along to protte\ · il
from ambushes. U.S. and South'• Viet·
namese planes would be expected't;lo
provide air cover. · •. ·
The heaviest opposition was e~
at the Cambodian river crossing ~
of Neak Luong, 30 miles' below PhOOm
Penh and IS miles above the SoiAh
Vietnamese border. Strong Com.muilit
forces controlled the ferry crossing thtt8,
an d Cambodian troops were re~
moving slowly into the area from Pbrfcrril
Penh to try to dislodge them. ;
Ohio College Students
• March on State, Capiwl ,.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Thousands
()f college students, chanting "Peace
now,·• marched on the closed and Heavily
guarded state capitol today to protest
the killings of four Kent State students
by National Guard troops.
The students marched from lhe
Veterans f\.1emoria l Auditorium, about
a mi le from th e capitol, through part
of the dow,1town area and onto U1e
.statehouse grounds.
A force of 150 Ohio Highway Patrol
offi<:ers armed with shotguns and riot
clubs ringed the building. About a dozen.
patrolmen guarded a flagpole flying the
American and State of Ohio flag.
"Nobody 's going to pull down that
flag or invadi the statehouse," said
OhiG Highway Patrol Superintendent
Robert M. Chiaramonte. "We are not
goh1g to be a punching bag for anyone."
Albert Gieoow, state public works
director, ordered the buildjng and all
state offices closed after a conference
with Chiaramonte.
A nearby building housing ~ Colum·
bus Dispatch and the Columbl.11 Citizen
Journal .tlso wli• locked; bi\1~·111 j>apers
continued: to work.
•• patrol offi<:er was asked if the
shotguns were l~ded ..
"You're damn right they're I~,''
he replied.
Col. J.E.P. McCann, adminLW.a:tlve
assistant to the adjutant general in Ohio,
said the guard would earTy weapens
loaded with live ammunition if they
were called to duty because of the _rally.
"We feel that when our people _ art
put Jn a dangerous 1ituaUon we shopld
afford them the opportunity io prot.ect
themselves,'' McCann said.
Youienot.
are paid to cook
over hot flames.
So enjoy a flameless
electric kitchen.
A flamele ss, all-electric kltchcn is
one of the big benefits built into
every Medallion Home or
Apa.rt1ncnt. And that means"
a clean, cool kitchen.
A M cdallion Home or
Apartment can also mean
flameless electric: heating .. Clean
heat. It doesn't dirty your curtains
. or upholstery.
l
And flameless air conditioning
that cools and cleans the air you
breathe. Pure comfort for the
entire family.
And flameless water heat.
ing-without a pilot, without
a flue, without wasted space.
Furthermore, a Medallion Home
hiS ample wiring foe todays etectri·
cat applia.nc:es, plus provisions for
..
--------~----------·~· -·-
the electrical wonders coming up
In the all-clectrlc future. Meclilllon
Homes and Apartments are now
available in al! price ranges.
You can s~ why more and moft
people .arc choosing to live the good
clean lifc-clcctr!cally.lnc/wdinfd..,~ gs;
Southern California Edi«1n
I
I.
'
~ ..... ., .... 0e11J "*" stenl
~Dr. c.,,,11 .. Dey• told a London
irth control meeting recently she
vei ber 2-year-old daugbt.r birth
?-. · pills to prove to women the
· · e harmless. "She has suffer-
. ill effects at all ."' Dr. Deya
ber daughter, Sally.
'!:: • ·11-· l Rii:hud T. McAlll•ter o! Roches·
Jer. N.Y., says he decided to be-
s:ome a circus clown recently be-
fause he wanted his 12--year-old
'°n Michael ''to learn to accept
bter." "Michael is a midget.
iiSlod to· bide because he thought
D1e were lauihing at him," Mc·
ter· said. "Since l1e's joined me
• y act, he 's become a big ham."
~--. .
f:'....lackie Welts, a weapons collect-
tr from Derby, N.J .. was arrested
in Utica, N.Y., for the possession of
18 dangerous weapons -his col·
lection of switchbl&de knives which
ie was showing at a gun show. P~ ~ce said the weapons were confis.
i:aleit from the New York St.ate
~ Collectors Invitational Gun
lbow where they were on display. --• -' ' BUI Sm ith of London has success· luny petitioned to change bis last
iame, which he said was bringing
lim other people's mail and phone Palls. He is now Bill Brian-Smith.
:· • :-;pu).up pictures of film stars 1':iithryn Grayson and Esther Wil·
lllnls requested 16 years ago by
ichoolboy Davkl Cla rke arrived
week in Binningbam, Eng-
.. Clarke, now 31, received the
tographs in an envelope post.
PJ•lli<"1 Culver City, Hollywood,
~v. a, 1954. . ' :~ :-. . ~ -:--.
~:!'tro•i tough lntt:ri,Or (poliet:)
f!Jriaister Armando Artola-iays
~~t!I ort: tot:lconu in Pmi -
a.s -long a.s tht:y don't look likt:
~·· Ht: 1aid Fridat1 that re. ~ of a 1DOrld JUppit: confer-·
tnet: in November in Cuzeoo
wiere wrong. Ht: Sllid hit could
not ptrmit 41tCh an tvent, "But
1 a.m not going to de-ny en!711
(to P~ru) of those who come
with enough dollar&, and are
clean and welt rhaven."
• Cherll• M•y•n, o! Northfleet,
happily married with
ns, got a court letter re-
dering him to pay alimony ft a woman he bad never met. The lll1'r said he bad desert..i his wife
~ her two children and would
~Y.I! to pay her $21.60 a week . "If
!!didn't know my husband so well 4~ letter could have broken our
!age," said Mayers' real wife,
I. Said Northfleet magistrate
: "We simply sent the order
e wrong man.11
~ ~ . ~rt Walker Jr. of Lafayette
I . · apec!M U> get out of JaU in
to do aomethl.Dg -vote for ~~!,tot sheriff. Walker. 21, a ;J science student at Pun!ue
. rslty. WU arrested recenUy
OOnnection witt campus disor·
· and put In jail on $llllO bond.
&aer is running for the Democra-
tit: ~ nomination for TJppecanoo
<:lolmty Sllerlff in today'• election.
' ' .,
' r
. Commii.nists
In Protests
Says Hoov er.
. WASHINGTON (UPI) -FBI Dlr.dor
J. Ed1ar Hoover aaya Oommunl11t
elemenl.s anxious to try and force a
unila.teral American withdrawal from
Vietnam were deeply Involved w1th the
Nov. IS mass anUwar demonstrations.
}fis hardest-hitting teatlmony in years
-ciUcal of demonetratara, liberal
judges and the Black Panther Party
in partk:u.lar -·was made public by
the House Appropriatima r.ommitt.ee on
the eve of maaa demonatration Saturday
a:gainst U.S. involvement tn Cambodia.
"It was neither by accident nor coin-
cidence that the demonstrations held
in Washington and San Francisco on
Nov. 15, IMI, had accompanying anti·
U.S. dt!monstraUons in other countries
throughout the world on_ the same day,''
he said,· detailing various Comm unist
sessions abroad In the sit-month period
prior to the nJliu.
"The major emphasis in th e
discussions an those occasions was on
the need to keep massive propaganda
pressure in the fonn or antiwar
demonstrations on the current ad·
ministration in the United States to force
a unilateral withdr~wat of U.S. troops
from. Vietnam," Hoover testified.
Hoover said, "nie Black Pantfier Par·
ty, a black extremlst organization, con·
sisting for the most. part of hoodlum-type
revolutionaries, continues to be most
active and dangeroUs from an internal
security standpoint .•. law enforcement
agencies throughout the muntry are
wrongly accused ol harassment by many
well-intentioned but uninformed v.oices
echoing outright lies generated by the
lawless."
FCC Cuts Back
Network Shows
In Prime Time
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The F-al
Communications Onnmiuion has ruled
that the maximum .. amount of network
programs canied by most television sla·
tiOM must be limited to three hours ntlhUy starting in the fall of next yt:ar.
The eommission voted 5-2 Thursday
to make lhl restrict.ion effective Sept.
1, 1971. It would limit commercial
television stations in the top 50 markets
to three hours of network fare between
the ~ hours of 7 and 11 p.m.,
PD1'. . ..
Network reaction was swift in criticiz.
ing the ruling as likely to rHUlt in
poort:r quality viewing because or the
IImited reeources or local network sta·
tions in producing programs.
The Columbia Broedcaalin( System
aald In a statement that the restriction
would inhibit the networks from doing more in the field or news and public
affairs programming.
'Ille NatioQa.l Broadcasting Company,
terming the ruling "mbguided,'' aaid
the commission had n<>t given all aides
a full hearina: and ca!Jed f o r
reconsideration of the propou1.
The American Broodcastlng Company.
while asserUna: that h A:w no need
for the ruling, uid it could adapt to
it and might benefit from it.
Brown Files First;
Ha s Gotten $38,000
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Edmund G.
Brown Jr. bu raiatd $38,G for his
campaign for the Dem<KJ'ailc nomination
for Secre1orJ of Slate, .......-.ling lo a
pre-eloctioo report flied today.
Secretll')' ol State H. P. Sullivan said
Brown war· the first candidate to comply
with a new law r«iUb'inl contribution
reports from contenden fur major of·
fices. He nid the filing period was
today fbrou&h next Wednesd1y.
'SE RIOUS MISTAKES'
Democrat Harriman
Israeli Patrols
Hi t by Raiders
Ins ide Lebanon
By UnJted Prus lnternatlorial
Arab guerri!Jas operating in Lebanon
fired today on two Israeli army patrols,
woundMg six soldiers, a m i I i t 1 r y
spokesman said in Tel Aviv. He said
the Israelis returned the fire in the
sharp clashes.
The alt.acks came despite a warning
Crom the Israeli chief of staff that Beirut
and Amman must curb such guerrilla
attacks or face the co~uences.
A high Israeli military source reported
Thursday the guerrillas had greatly in-
creased .activities in Israel in recent
days .in an apparent effort to disrupt
Israeli celebratia.1s beginning Monday
of the 22nd anniversary o1. Israel's in·
dependence.
The military spokesman as.id in the
first incH:ten t this morning four Israeli
soldiers were wounded near Metulla in
the Upper Galilee and two more this
aftert100t1 in the Biranit region of the
Western Galilee.
lsr~~i soldiers in addition reported
surpr1 s1ng a group of Egyptian com-
mandos who had crossed the Sue.z canal
and were· planting mines on the hraeli
side. The commandos were said to have
fled back acrosa the waterway during
a cross-canal mortar bam,e.
Israeli warplanes went after Etyptian
guns on the west bank of tbe canal
in a IS.minute strike this momtna. Tel
Aviv said, apd all returned alfely.
Jobless Levels
In Steep Gain
WAS!llNGTON CAP) -'ll1e number
of jobless Americans climbed 300,000
to a total of neirly four mllllcxi in
April, pushing the nation's unemployment
rate from 4.4 to 4.8 pereent of tht:
labor force. the government aaid today.
"Employment gaim havt come to a
virtual standstill and unemployment in·
creased substantially,'' said the Labor
Department's chief employment analyst,
Howard Stam bl er.
"We've had no ga.in in employment
s.ince December,'' while the total of
unemployed hu climbed by 1.1 million
persons, Stambler a.kl.
The four-month incrtue in unemploy·
ment waa the steepest since early 1958,
• I
~
• ' .
r Hail, Hail to Bismarck
• .. ' • •• ·' • .. ). •
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But Most of U.S. Basks Und er Sunn y Ski.es
V.S. Sum,...r11
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•
Senate to Curb Nixon?:
Vote Set on Cambodia Funds Halt
-...
WASHINGTON, (UPI) -The Senate Leider Hugh Scolt (ll-P•.), lmmtdi1tely
wlll vote late ntl\ WNk -on lqislaticm urpd the Senate Foreign Relations Com·
lo hold President N!son to his pledge mJltee lo speed the blll to the Jloor .
U.S. tl'oolll will be w1th:irawn from Cam· senate Democratic Leader Mi ke
boclla by July t. Clionca of pa-e Mansfield endorsed the amendment and
are considered atroac. , said he war usured there wooid be
The amendment -whkb .:'fill be _at· a vote Thurlday or Frid~.
lodlOd lo the lonlp 111Ullary uJta bill Because the mJlllary aalu bUI would
-would uae the ~ powtt not take effect until JuJy 1, the amend·
over the purse to deny NlxC11 181 monet ment would not affect the Cambodian
for ....wnlnc\hllto!d fltMes ,...m<f-opmuoo between now and th•"' AM
forces in C&mbocila." Senate aidea sakl the word "retaining"
1bt ameodment w• offmd Thund11 mJcbt give ~ President aome Ietway
by Sens. Frank Cburcb (D-ldabo}, 1nd to con~ the operations for a few
John Sberm1n Oloper (It-Ky.). -wttka into July.
Dtmo<r ... , IUppc>r!Od by Republi<an Crurch and Cooper lllld tile bill woold
St. Louis Teamsters Vote
To End Trucking Walkout
By United Prea1 tnternational
A 37-<lay old walkout which paralyzed
the trucking industry in the St. Loo.is
:area technically has ended following a
vote by a margin of almost two to
one by Tean1sters Local 600 to return
to v.wk.
However, lhere were indications that
a back-to.work order may not be fully
complied with by the Teamsters. In
other parts of the country, truck drivers
continued to stay off their jobs.
The SL Louis vote was taken Thursday
at the open-air Municipal Opera In
!Uburban Fore.st Park, ~fo .• v.11ert: 2,689
Teamsters voted in favor of ending the
&trike and l,47S were against.
Donald Lane, Pr~ident of Local 600,
said the balloting has been ratified by
the St. Louis Board of Election Com-
mi.uloneri. No word was given by l<>cal
officials when a back-to-work order woold
be Issued in St. Louis.
The result of the vote drew a mixed
reaction from truck drivers. Some
cheered while others remained angry.
One member sakl. "It's far from set·
tied." Another sajd, "It'll take the Na·
tional Guard to get me back."
"Hell no," aaid another Teamster. '"I
v.·01\'t go back because I don't want
m:v head split .'•
The appro\'ed St. Louis proposal -
v.•hich had been worked out in the
chambers of U.S. District Court Judge
John Re'il:an -agreed that If the drivers
returned t.o work, all uµgation pend,ing
against Lane and tht union wquld pe
3lopped. Trucking finris had filed suits
totaling millions of dollaNI in damages
against the local.
At least 600,<XX> persons across the
nation have been idled by the trucking
walkout.
Lahorites Gain
In Britain Vote
LONDON (UPI) -Prime Minister
l1arold \Vilson's Labor party racked up
substantial gains in Thursday's last round
of local goverrunent voUng before Bri·
tain's impending general elecUons.
Political e1perts said the gains did
not appear sufficiently decisive to en:
courage Wilson to dl.ssolve Parliament
now and hold the election ht June.
The voting was for local councils In
342 towns and cities and 82 other urban
areas or England ind ·wales. Despite
the Labor gains, the Conservatives still
kept control over most larger cities.
Unofficial final resu lts showed Labor
had scored net gains of 443 council
seats and the Conservatives suffered
net losses of 327. The remainder of
the Labori te gains came at the expense
of independents. liberals and other
misct:llaneous candidates.
pvt the Senate on record off\d ally and
for the first time against the operaUon
in Cambodia and it would forte the
administration to change any plans it
mJght have to stay in Cambodia tn.
deflnitely or further widen the conflict
to provide protection for t.he Cambodian
aovernment.
It was not known whether the White
House would endorse it. A similar Jll'O'
posal by Church and Cooper last yut
lo deny funds for U.S. ground ccmblt
troops in Laos and 'Ibailand war backed
by the Whlte HouJe and it ~
overwhelmingly.
* * * Mc Govern Asks
Fr ee TV Tim e
For 'Peac e Bill'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Geor1t
McGovern (0-S.D.), said· today 'be: U f
asked for television time · to drUrb. ui>'.
support for an amendment desi~ to
forc e an end to the wU in IadoCbin&
within 13 months. 1
McGovern aixl nine other Senate and
House members said they wanted Jrte
time on the three major networb for
nationwide broadcasts. If turned down
by the networks. they said Ibey were
prepared to raise money for the
telecasts.
~1cGovern said he had asked for free
time from NBC for Tuesday and Wt1Uld
make similar requests or CBS and A!IC.
The amendment would prohibit the
eipenditure of fuods for the war in
Vietnam and Laos after June 30, 1171.
It would prohibit use of funds for
Cambodia 30 days after it became law.
McGovern said he was uncertain when
or how he would introduce t.he amend·
ment.
Democratic National Ch a i r m• n
Lawrence F. O'Brien al90 asked for
frtt television time for a policy ~
on the "Nixon adrninistraton's escalation
of the Vietrlem war into Cambodia."
The senator.I and House members su~
porting McGovern's amendmt!llt included
Sens .. Hatold Hughes (D-Iowa), Gaylord
Nelson (D-Wis.). Mark 0 . Hat!lekl (R·
Ore.). and Charles E. Goodell CR-N.Y.),
and Reps. Donald M. Fraser CD-Minn.),
Paul N. McCloskey Jr. (ft..Callf.), John
ConVers Jr. {0.Mich. ), Daniel E. Button
(R·N.Y.), ind Abner J. !'fikv• (0-ill.).
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Frldq, Ml)' 8, 1970 DAILV ~l f
Nixon Goes on TV Refwed Combat
Hopes to Cal,m Student Protests Army May Try 5 GJs
I WASllJNGTON . (AP) Nixon is upected to take
\Villi thousands of antiwar • conciliatory approach to the
protelten heading for a bur· • riedb' called demonstration ~n
the nation's capital, President
Nixon bu moved to ease the
crisit mountina over the use
of American troops In Cam-
bodia.
The President ocheduled a
newt conference tonight at 7
p.m. (PDT) -his .first na·
Uonally televised session with
newsmen since Jan. 30 -on
the eve or a demonstration
here expecte(t to draw tens
of tbol.uanda of protesters.
Even as the President
prepared for the news con·
ference at his Maryland
mountain retreat Thursday
night and today, demonstra-
tors were evident in Washing·
ton--on capitol Hill, near the
While Hll'Wle and on college
camptaes.
A Royal Fata
demonstrators, mostly young
people, lollowini the stance
he adopled 'lbursday when be
told 11everal college a n d
univeralty presidents the ad-
rninistrWm would aoften it!
ho>1.ile tone ~ t b •
dissidents.
Calls went out for the Salur·
day protest after Nixon an-
nounced a week .ago that a
joint U.S . .south Vietnamese
attack llad been mounted into
Cambodia.
Spurred by the deaths Mon-
day of four students when
Ohio National Guardsmen
opened fire on demonstraloT's
at Kent state University, pro-
tests llave swept many college
campuses, often resulting in
violence and ltudent strikes.
Leaders of the Saturday
demonstl'ation. have talked in
Princess Margeret is welcomed by Frank Sinatra
·on her· arrival at London's Royal Festival Hall. She
attended the first of two charity concerts given by
Sinatra to .aid tbe National Society for the Preverr
~on ot Cruelty to Children.
terms of up to 35,000 persons
for a protest in Lafayette
Square just across the street
from the \\'bite H o u 1 e ,
aJthougJ> officials say the
dis!enten will not be anow.d
that close. Jt was not known
whether the President will be
in Washington durinr the
demoostratlon.
Other reporU estimate the
crowd at close to 100,000
penons, posing a problem for
bolh government official! and
protest leaders planning steps
foe controlling the
demonstTaUon.
The rally leaders beld crash
training p r o g r a m s for
marshals to keep t b e
demonstration within i ts
stated nonviolent goal, while
the 2,0CJO.man District of
CollZmbia Natlonal Guard was
being piepared alon& with
Washington police.
There were indications U.S.
officials were leaning toward
relyjng on local authority and
the National Guard available
in the Washington are a
without drawing paratroopers
and Marines from other bases.
Officials said w ha t c v e r
military force is gathered pro-
bably will be kept as much
out of sight as possible unless
troubles develop requiring its
use.
The touchiest prob I em
revolves around the dispute
over the demonstration site.
Officials, saying the two-block
Lafayette Square is too close
to the \Vhite House for safety.
have ordered the park to be
cordoned off. creating a
demilitarized zore.Jike area a
block no rth of the executive
1nansion.
Protest organi zers had of·
fered Thursday night to com-
promise, giv ing up th e
Lafayette area in exchange
for the Elli pse south of the
Wh ite House. But the govern-
ment said this also was too
close and would be cordoned
off.
Earlier, the Justice Depart-
ment had offered use of the
Wastiington Monument
grounds several blocks from
the mansion, but t h e
demonstration leader.i turned
down that site.
lll•J , .......... DEMONSTRATION A REAL DRAG
Police Remove Girl 11t N.... York Pret11t
227 Colleg es Closed
As Protest W idens
By 'Ille ASSOCIATED PRESS
Some 227 colleges a n d
universi ties were closed today
in the widening protes t against
the war in Indochina a11d the
fatal shooting of four studer,i;;
at Kent State University.
Strikes and demonstrations
curtaited classes at hundreds
of others. _,
ln Washington. the vanguard
of thousands of students ex-
pected to participate in a·,1
antiwar rally Saturday began
arriving fro1n throughout the
country.
Most o( the can1puses te·
mained peaceful but violence
fl ared overnight at several
K'hools.
At leas! four yooUJs at the
State University at Buffalo
were hit by birdshot fired dur-
ing a police-student con-
frootation. lt was not im-
mediately determined who
fir<d the pellet!.
The incident. came as about
60 city police and 400 students
clashed in a tear gas and
rock-throwing melee. Two of
the injured students were
:~eated at a makeshift in-
!ir;r.ary.
National Guardsmen In
Cart-ondale, Ill ., hurled tear
gas and advanced with fixed
bayonets to rout large bands
of students at Southern Illinois
University.
They tcattered some 300
demonstrators from t h e
Illinois Central Ra i 1 r o ad
trec ks where they had delayed
the Pana.ma Limited
streamliner, New Orleans-
bound from Chicago, for 50
minutes.
The fl eeing students smash-
ed dozens of store windows
a.s they ran. They were the
nucleus of &Otne 1,200 prO-
t.esters who earlier sat down
in the int.ersedion of U.S. St
and Illinois 13 jn the downtown
sect.ion .
Dissident sluc!Onts at the
University of W~n clash-
ed witb Mad.isoa police for
the fourth consecutive night.
PLEI DJERENG. Vietnam
(AP) -The Anny said today
it is considering court-martial
s;roceedings against · f l v e
Aine:rcan soldleMJ who refUsed
to make • combat assault
into Cambodia.
The five Gia are members
of Ille 3rd Battalion, llh Infan-
by, •th Division, an outfit
tbat encountered he a v y
reslstanoe as it was flown
into a Cambodian landing zone
surrounded by well
camouOagejl enemy positions
t~'O days ago.
Five helicopters were down·
ed by memy fire, a company
commander was killed on the
ground and four soldiers wen
wounded. Other troop:carrying
helicopters were forced back
by the intense fire .
Informed sources said the
five men balked as they were
about to board helicopters for
an assault into the same lan-
ding zone the neit day.
* * * Bu y ing Tinte
111 Cambodia
NEW YORK (UPI) -Herb
Klein says President Nixon's
order ol U.S. troops into Cam-
bodia is not designed to kill
enemy &0ldiers so much as
It is to wipe out permanent
positions and important war
materiels.
Kie.in also said the move
was designed to buy the U.S.
time to increase South Viet-
namese stren&lh. to increase
the pace of peace talks in
Paris. and lo fac ilitate the
withdrawal o1 American
troops from Vietnam .
The Pres ident's com·
munications director said
Thursday he realized the Vlet.
Q:ing would retom to the a~a
once the Americans had left.
but that was the reason for
destruction of the
emplactments and equipment,
Klein explained.
Klein made his remarks
11lursdy night on ABC-TV's
"'Dick Cavett Show."
DISCRIMINATING
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AT
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Stability and Avoilabiljty of Principal. Mox-
i,mum Dependable Earnings. Ease of Trans -
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And Find:
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sufficient to, assure cont inuance of max i-
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1000 FAIR OAKS AVENUE
SOUTH PASADENA, CALIF. 91030
Area Code 213 Area Code 213
799-4143 682-1131
5% 1/.ito7Y2% CUITI~ Ann al CRTlflCATES
Pass Beak Rltl VAllOUS ._llS
& lllAIUI
•..
-
:}:·: Estate ••.••••.••••••••••••..••••••.•...• , . , •.•• ~j)~!)~ t~v~!;~~l B~0n°d0s'." .'.'::::::::::::::: :: : : : : :
::::::: Other Investment Securities .~ .••.•••••••••••••••
ii;i!1t qm~e0~~1d7~;,"l~d ~~dkEQ~ip~;r·~t.: -~~s· o~p;~.·
-:.:.:· ctation ••••••••• -••...•... • •...•...•........••••
134,203.01
715,000.00
3,498,707.88
789,714.4!
570,354.47
1,427,964.35
........ Secondary Reserve for Federal Savings and Loan !~:;::~ Insurance C.Orporation.,................ •• • •.• • •• • 734,588.70
:::::;:. Other Assets •• ~ • ._.............................. .. 507.88 ~:::~~: Total ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $71 ,669,175.33
.:
l,:.:i, .. ::,•.'t,' LI AB I LI Tl ES . Savingil Acrounts •• -. -•. -----.... -. -. -..• -....•• $60,593,893.86 -:~·:> Advances from F.H.t .B .••••••••.•• -• • • • • • • • • • • •• 3,048,000.00 ~~~::~ Other Borrowed Money ••••••••• ,................ NONE
~:~:::: Loans in Process ••••••••• •. -••.•.. -. . . • . . . • . • • • • 236,972.50 ::~;'.~ Other Liabilities................................ 177 915 51 '~ .. ~~.: .. ~.~.:.. Deferred Income ••••••••••••••••••••••••• • •• • • • • 17:,388240:.3
4
2
5 .,,. Specific Reserves ••••••••••.•..•.•••.•••••••••••
:·:·:::: General Reserves • • . • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 6 146 036 12 j~[~~~ Reserve for Contingencies .• -••..••••••••••••••• , • '191:2s9:00
~· Surplus .••••••••••....••. •·.......••...••..••.• 1,260,469.57
[ffi'\] Total. --...... -. -"iiii.iaiii" -. --... --.. sn,669,t 75.33 i::=:i
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Stnior officers were unable an allied camp ln the Ctntral
to convince the men to change Highlands near the Cambodian
lhelr minds. border.
"You .know how it is," one . One. tJt tbe ,men looked up
officer sald later. "It geta from his work, grinned and
time ~ go Into action, and fllahed . the "V" for peact
30me kids 1et teared, and sfCn with two ~en u Ult
suddenly you have • bunch . newsman wq ~#f of
of guys who claim they aTe the camp. • ~
CO." -cooodentlous ob-lp;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;ij l°'.i:"~U. Division spo11esman, PUT SOME
Capt. Bernard F. Mallett, CLOTHES ON ·':
mused _to_ 14<tl!.ify lhe ft•• MOTHER men until completion of an
Article 32 1n-.atlon, the
military equl•alent GI a grand
jury proc:eedinJ.
The Army preveoted a
correspondent r r o m In-
terviewing the men Friday,
although one of them ~ad sent THINK
word he wanted to "tell bis
story to the world." .
"You have no busintss tn
tiere, and r don't want you
talking to my men," a bat·
talion staff offlCtr said after
the men were located digging
trendies and otringing barbed W•"'"' ,..,
wire at the battalion's rear
headquarters at Plti Djertog, ........
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98C_.
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P•ckat • of hon d'MUvru with thla ••
Fresh Ronc:h ECJCJS ••• 49¢ doz.
• Fresh Mushrooms 59¢ 1/2 lb.
• • . -\
• .
l
--~~-~-----·-
• Dt\ILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
A Difficult Decision
The Huntington Beach City Council this '''eek voted
1o declare an acre of a future neighborhood. park as sur-
plus and sell it to the Boys' Oub of Huntington Beach.
In a city and a decade in which efforts are being
made to buy 1nore land for parks, it lakes courage to
sell part of one. even a s mall piece a nd even when the
cause is so obviously worthy.
It takes courage because the question can be raised
that surely no perk land can be considered surplus.
l:~veryone in the council chamber recognized thi!
question as they also recognized the merit of the Boys'
Club.
The organization presenUy has a clubhouse on
Yorkto\o,rn Avenue which caters to teen-agers in the cen-
tral and downtown area. lts value is undoubfed -refer·
enccs will be readily provided by the pOt.ice and parents.
The club \vanted to open a facility in t.Jie north of
the city to provide recreational services for boys there.
Financial grants that the group hopes to receive to build
a clubhouse depend on its owning the land or at least·
hoJding a long.term lease.
The city ~greed to sell on~ acre at the Sµ'.ringdalt
Street a_nd Heil Avenue p_ark site. Before voting unani·
mously in fayor of the action, the council adopted a poll·
cy governing the management of recreational land and
attaching several provisions protectinJ? the public in·
tercst in any sale or tease arrangements.
It could be argued that the Boys' Club transaction.
holt•ever well motivated, might create an unfortunate
precedent. Won 't groups like the YMCA. Little League
and the Boy Scouts, to name a ·few, come along with
sin1ilar appeals? Probably.
Councilman Al Coen came up wilb these argwnents
Woodsheds
'A re Difficult
To Find Now
·-~ I • ,, Hay~kaw~
\.__,....,._ _ _,~.L
One of the advantages or being a
parent today is lhal there is more iclen·
tific laformaUon available on early
childhood development tbaa evu before
in history, The young mother who reads
should be able to approach be1" first
born with the wisdom and relaxation
you formerly bad to have five children
to acquire.
Many theories about children hav e held
.r.way at one time or another. First,
1here is the theo-
Jogical belief whlch
tells us that babies
come to us full of
Original Sin. They
are inhabited by
nature with wills
that have to be brok·
en. so that the task
nf bringing up a
child is to exercise
or subdue the devil
within him. We
don't quite succeed!
Then there i& a less theological idea
about children -that they are formless
clay. They just aren't anything at all
until v.·e shape them in some way or
ether by the molding we give them-by
\Ilise counsel and proper restraints and
advice, and so on. Aid if you don't
keep at it comtanUy, they go out o(
a;hape.
l 'NDER TUE IMPACT ol psychological
behaviorism there arose still another
notion that the basic idea in bringing
lip children is eo9dltioning-lhal the child
should be faVOTably conditioned to good
habits and against bad habits, and that
the conditioning must be started very
early. This body of doctrine Jed to the
fashk>n which raged some 30 or more
l'ears ago of extremely early toilet
tr1inlng and rigid scheduling. Babies
\\"ould cry their hearts out, but if, ac·
cording to the schedule, it v.·asn't time
to feed them, you had to let them cry.
1'he li kes end dislikes \\•hich the child
\\."IS lo carry through life were fed
into him as if he were being programmed
like a computer.
Each of these lheories represents the
effort of people to deve lop U1eir children
according to the models ol human nature
which they have inside their heads. But
tach or them can also be described
as an activist theory, in the sense that
the. active doing of .something to the
cbUd i3 felt to be nettSsary if the child
is to erow up lato an acceptable cltiten
aJld tnpoyer.
Quotes
J.n1nl Jlewt, profe150r or Ea&ll&b 1t
tbt City Unlvenlly of Nt"" York and
editor ol Dissent, a soclallsl Jooraal:
0''"'9 life of the political terrorist is
oventhelmed by loneliness, not mtrely
beclu.se he ca• no longer trust com-
pletely friend or comrade, but becau~
be cult hhmelf olf from all movements
and ~mmimiUea 11 whJch choices can
be weighed.
.. St.Utnc everything on Ult act, h"
blcrls oCf all that 0>m~ before it and
all that comes afk'r. Decidins whom
10 smltt, he rtplact.S God. C'booslng
whom to punish. he replace1 lbe justice
1bt it JQOd or bad ) cl socit?:ty. .. AM aince tht connlcll or social
diwts mUBl be be1t to his will, he
1 eplacea h14tory1 too. The tcrrorill c.r-
rfet 1 moral burden only ILllU.I or
fa 1111Ucs would undertake -worst of
al~ fanotlca miltaklof lhems<lvu !0<
w.Jnta."
Dear
Gloomy
Gos:
J1untington Beach folks don't ob-
ject to having little children in our
neigh borhoods (Gus, May t). But
today's nursery school child is to-
mo~··s kindergarten child, and
our school has almost reached ca-
pacity and faces double sasion this
coming year. "Suffer litUe child·
ren ••• "
-J. c. "" .. .,.,,. ""*"' _.,.... ..i...., ---""' .... "' ..... ,, __ "'"' ,..,, "' _.,. .. '""'"'' °""' D<J ,lltt.
l'ilV LATE BELOVED molher·i~law
was certainly an activist in this seue.
She could never talk to htr grandchildren
without somehow inculcating a lesson
of some kind. She was unfailingly in·
structive, as if she feared that if you
let them do somethina unmanJ1erly or
naughty once, they would continue to
do it for the resl of their lives.
Sometimes in the splrit of play I
would violate good manners. I amused
my children very much once by laking
a great mound of jello a11d slurping
it dowa in one slurp. The children were
enormously impressed with father for
being abk! to do this. But the example
1 was setting them worried my mother·
in.law very much. She kept saying, "Sup-
pose the children do that at the St.
Francis hotel!" I said, ''Good gosh,
tbey'vt aot more sense than that!"
Thls idea that you always have to
be setUng an example or layiag down
a rule is a very burden.some way of
Joolcing at communicalioa with children.
NEWER THEORIES or child rearing,
mistakenly referred to as •·permissive."
are in part a reaction against activist
theories and in part are the result of
serlous scientific research. Pioneers ia
the study of child development have
tried in various ways to determine the
natural laws of childhood growth. ask.iitg
questions like: When dG they wake?
When do they slee p? Eat? Cry? At
what age do they sit up? At what
~ge do they wal k? When do they i;tart
piling up blocks. working puzzles? \Vhen
llG they start playing cooperati\•ely with
other children?
There were alsa experimeitts in ~.ihich
Investigators put dishes in front of little
children. fruit a11d sv.•eels and grount1
meat .and all sorts of things, and they
let the children choose for themselves
without tryin~ to decide what was good tor them. The investigi:ilors found that
instead or anarchy and indigesllon and
nutocratic infants. there resulted healthy,
happy babies \\'l\h a surprisingly orderly
pattern of needs and a kind of Internal
schedule or their own. a pattern that
could be studied and described.
AND 1-IOW DO CmLDREN dcv,lop
a moral sense. a sense or nspo111iblllty?
There are many studie!I such ai; Dorothy
Jlaruch's "New Ways In Disciplin<!'' and
r~riti Red! and David Wl neman's "Con ..
lrol.s from Within."
J am more than a Jittle t'OOcemed
.:iOOut I.he current attacks o n
''permi!slvt:•tsS" which Is blflmtd as
a root cause or 1tudent unrest and
violence. 1t1any people \\'rite ttnd tnlk
as ir there were only two altem111ive11,
.. per~ssiveness" 011. the one hand and
rigid external dlsc:ipllne on the othtr.
Actually the advocetes ol
''pennlsslve"ess'' 1111 po JI u I a r I y un·
dentood will find Jillie to suppart their
vicn in U>e WTiling11 of Benjamin Spock,
Amo.Id Gest.It and Frantes Ilg, or Bruno
Beltelhelm . \\rhrrea.~ the advocate of
the old.fashioned r:izor·slrop alKf "ood·
1hed are \\'hoppin' 8nd holJtrin ' all over
the place. It's difficu lt these da)·~.
howe\•tr, to find either razor·strnps or
woodsheds.
B1 S. I. H111k1\\ a
Pruidtnl
SU Frucitc:o Sttee Collea•
In support of the vole: The arrangement Is In the city's
interest since the recreation department can't provide
all leisure 1ervlces. and 2. the action need not be pre--
cedent·Setting since every application will be considered
separately.
It has been suggested. before, and this is a good time
to suggest it again, that a11 youth-oriented organizations
in the city get together. discuss their land needs and go
to the councll with a joint request.
'
First for Fountain Valley
The women's division of the Fountain Valley Cham·
her of Commerce has adopted the ambitious task of
bringing culture to the city. A week of. events -start·
ing Tuesday -has b een lined up for the city's fir1t
"'Cultural Week."
Schools Jn Fountaln Valley play the heaviest role,
with .,each one, from elementary through high school,
sponsoring some activity or festival on a particular day.
Other activities -liquid embroidery. stamp and
coin collections. German music, ballet and choirs -
\viii be placed in the community center. Special event~
such as the Mayor's Inaugural Ball, a pioneer picnic
a nd bus tours of the city have been set for the fin al
weekend of the aff air.
tt took a lot of effort to produce Cultural \Veek, es-
pecially sitlcc it's the initial program. Cilizens should
support the idea by taking a peek at some of the activi·
t ies. Programs listing events. dates and places are
available al city ball, 10200 Slater Ave.
'J/"'t takes care of the press, student unrest, Michigan Unio~ ·yak
' r. Spock, permissive middle class ]Jarl!llts, mirU3ters and tJuiNalumai
-CollllCil of Clunche&_ What's ]our 8ClieduJe for tomomiw'l' .
H
Interpreting ¥ arborough's Defeat in Texas .
A New Political Base for Nixon?
WASHING TON -Shudders ran down
the politically sensitive spines of a half
dozen senators up for reelection this
year with the defeat for renomination
or liberal Democratic Senator Ralph \V.
Yarborough in Texas.
It was a fair and square defeat ol
a three-term Democratic senator who
had aligned himself with the new pOlitlcs,
and Texas mt11y move on to implement
further its judgment on modern tUne5
by electing the Republicaa nominee, ltep.
George Bush.
M between Bush and the Democratic
nominee who defeated Yarborough,
fonn er Rep. Lloyd Bentun, Jr., there
is not much ideological choice. Both
wruld have been called moderately pro-
gres.1ive a few years ago and should
be called that now because they stand
agalnst the retrogressive elements who
condone or excuse violence and disorder
whether in the name of the new politics
or the old.
IN ANOTHER STATE another senator
finds himself fu approDinately the same
position as Yarborough. Sen. Albert Gore
or Tennessee, foe of the Vietnam War,
fae of Carswell and Haynsworth. and
friend oC the new politics, is in trouble
in the state where the old priori!les
still rank high.
But this is oot coofmed to the South.
In the North there are Dtmocrats who
Ri chard WilsQu
must measure the Texas results if only
for the reason that· Yarborough's hard
core o[ support, ethnic groups and
organized labor, did not put themselves
out to send him back h> the Senate.
That is of interest to Sen. Harrison
Williams in New Jersey, to Philip A.
liart in Michigan, Vance Hartke in ln·
<liana, Joseph Montoya in New 1'-1exico,
Joseph Tydings in Maryland, William
Proxmire in W~onsin, to name some
who are doing the new thing on the
basis o{ old political alignments which
1nay be crumbling.
The doctrine In the Nixon ad-
ministration is that the old alignments
ha ve crumbled and that this accoonted
for the election last year of Republican
J?overnors in New Jersey and Virginia.
Even more than last year President
Nixon is drawing a hard line between
himself and all the maoife!tations of
new thoughl in politics.
llE HAS 1~1PROVEO .every op-
portunity to emphasize the differe nce
betv.·een himself and the protesters. lfe
has unleashed. as tllC saying goes, Vice
Presiden~ Agnew to articulate i n
language with a high shock content the
views of those v.'ho are deemed lo be
the nev.· majority -those, it has been
written. \\'ho feel no identity with the
yo ulh culture, the hippie culture, the
drug culture. black or white racism. ram·
pant sex, permissiveness and condoned
racial and political violence.
These have been called by one of
Nixon's young geniuses in sociopolitics
"the great, ordinary Lawrence \\lelkish
mass of Americans from Maine to
Hawaii." Those not familiar with the
state of the television art may not know
that orcheslra Je.ader Welk, the king
of Squaresville, is now being given a
hard run by Mitch Miller. But , in any
case, the new majority doctrine has
it that Middle America is fed up with
es tablishment liberalism. phony revolu·
tionaries and freaky behavior and is
creating a southem·westem-suburban-
blue collar political base for President
Nixon wh«!re only before were the smugly
satisfied, well·to-do devotees of the status
que>.
TJIE TEXAS RESULTS certainly can
be interpreted that \Vay. Thought will
have to be given to the concept that
the new majority is rooted in the
Midwest and the prosperous corridors
of Florida, Texas. Arizona and California.
'fhe blue collar part of the new majority
is a little harder to comprehend but
perhaps it is true that what used to
be called the white backlash bas nol4'
become much more than merely a fringe
reaction, and has outgrown George
Wallace.
Whatever the explanation, Yarborough
failed to carry one large labor dominated
county in Texa! but that may not be
typical of the whole country. After all,
in the closing weeks of the last presiden·
tial campaign organized labor nearly
succeeded in defeating Nixon, and so
it cannot be proved that the old liberaJ.
labor.ethnic coalition of the Democrata
has completely fallen apart.
THERE WERE SOME signs that the
coalition was pulling back together again
on the Carswell and Haynsworth nomina·
tlons to the Supreme Court, and so
it was as far as the leaders were con-
cerned.
But the Texas results raise the quest.ion
of the foundation of the coalition crumbl·
ing under the weight of leaders who
have misjudged public reactions. It thi.t
is the c~ it is probably a mood more
than anything else. a feeling on the
part of voters that they do not like
the current liberal establishment iden-
tificalion. Some polls show that the
largest number of people now think ot
themselves as conservatives whereas it
\\·as formerly fashionable to be libera l.
Fav.ors Direct Vote for President
To the Editor:
Do· we usually stop to think as \l'e
cast our vote for president that we
are voting for a slate of electors, rather
than the cal'ldidate himself?
Do we stop to coruiider that undrr
the electoral college system a candida!e
with fewer \'Otes tha1 another can be
the winner?
Jn thls modern age, do v.•e still fee l
that a victory in the electoral vote
column should outv.·eigh a loss in the
papular vote column?
THERE ARE SEVERAL proposals for
change in our method of electing a
president advocated by various group'.'!
in the ·nation. There js debate over
v.·hether a plan best protects the iRterests
of large states or small states, or
minorities and ar the poor, or urban
areas or rural. V.'helher il preser\'e~
or hurts the tv.·~party system (and
whether that's goOd or bad~).
But only the direct popular election
or the presideJlt insures that the can·
didate with the most votes Is the winner.
ll is this factor which weighed heavily
in the eo111Clusion of members of the
League of \Vomen Voters -after a
t\\·o-year study -to support 11 con·
stilutiona\ amendment providing for the
direct elteUon of the pres.Iden!.
SUCH A PROPOSED amendment was
overwhelmlngly appro\'ed last year by
the U.S. llouse of RepresenlaUves and
~~-Bw George~~-.
Dtar Georae:
f"m an Jtdent feminist and think
American men are oltt.faMlloned !
In Holland women are on strike
saying they have the right to make
paues at the me n. \\'hy don't we
do this here?
ANGRY SUB
Dear Angry Sue ·
You mean rlghl here. fn a famlly
newspaper? Tsk! tlf'lcidentally,
does your letter Imply that I.he
men in Jfollend 3re aaalnst
oraanized strlkm In tltis case?
t doubt h.I
Mailbox '
' t
l.etters jrom readers art welcome.
Normally 1uriters should con vey their
messages iu 300 words or less. The
7·ight to co11dense letters to fit space
or elinii11ate libel is reseroed. AIL let-
ters n111st include signature a11d mai l·
ing address, but names may be witli..
1ield on request if :sufficietit r eason
i.o: apparent. Pot.try will not bt pub-
lished.
has just been approvrd by lhe Sena1e
Judiciary Committee. fl .. ow faces stiff
opposit ion in the Senate by proponents
of various other plans and the status
quo. It takes a tv.·o·lhirds majority to
pass lhe Senate and movt to the stales
for ratification.
If you believe that the vote you cast
for president should go directly to the
candidate or your choice, write nov1
to Sens. AJan Cransto• :and George
Radicalism
...
Pres Conunents
1'1ount Airy. a.td., Commun I t y
~t.porter: "Let's have more emphfl.sls
upon the f)reserv1Uon of the 'personal
liberty' and freedom of lav.·.abidlng
citizens, so that the stJf.rtspect or our
naUon may once ntore be established and
v.·e do not have IG C1>ntinue to hang our
heads In $h&me becauM! or the C1>ntinued
tolerallon of lhi! rabid radlcali.wn which
has betn sweeping the counlry."
Whal"• Ntw in HE"': "~fMlcal costs
are risl na al more than dl}llble the in·
crease In the CO..'it of living. Hospital dally
chargt?:s, excluding physician's care, have
risen from $-« In l!l6S to $70 this year aml
ire expected to go to $JOO by 1971 if pre.t-
eal inllaUon continues."
1Ylurphy. United Slates Se n ate 1 \\'ashington, D.C. 20510.
MRS. CARL BLACK
ltorst Cutustroplies
To the Editor :
l have a granddaughter v.·ith whom
T have made a pact. She docs my
typing and, in turn, 1 assist her v.·ith
her homc\\'Ork.
The o1her C\"eni ng, struggling v.•i!h
social studies. J asked her to li~t lhe
three worst catastrophes in the hi.story
of California.
lier list is as follov.•s:
1. The San Francisco earthquake. 1908.
2. The disastrous floods in northern
California, 1950.
3. The election of Governor Reagan ,
lOOti.
Out of the moulhs of babes •••
R. F. BUTTS
'Jtlakes ,,.o Sense'
To th~ F..ditor:
ll is extremely Interesting !hat lhe
Tb"!publican l'le nators are more concerned
v.•ith agreeing v.•ilh President Ni:o.;on on
the Cambodia situation than seeing the
new developments for what they arc.
Senator Cranston, D-Calif., summed it
up beautifully, ''It makes no sense at
n 11. ''
lfO\\"C\'er. President Nixon Is right
n b o u L one thing, to 11top American
i-oldiers fro1n being killed in Vietnam
ls to transfer them lo Cambodia. l
suppose It doe:; make a difference that
) oung men will die in another Asian
country.
MARY WILLIAMSON
011 Sllcka
To the Editor :
Ever since the big oU slick In lhc
Sa nta Barbara channel the news media
report all oil slicks no matter whtre
they hap~. Tbt really bad oil slicks
111re c1111sed by leaking oil wells drllled
Jn to Uie ocean Door. \Vhen a Juking
v.·tU causes an oll sllck lhlt kills wUdlile,
those that are concerned about such
things cry out in anguish and demand
that the government musl do .!IOlllething.
'However, these individuals never come
for\\•ard with any ideas on how they
<.'Ou\d help to eHminate wildlife-killinC
oil slicks.
OIL \VELLS ARE drilled into the ~art
floor because oil companies can convert
most of the oil they recover into gasolln•
\\•hich can be sold for a profit. Now
if there v.·ere no demand for gas there
v.·ould be no need to drill mO'St of the
oil v.·eUs that .are now being drilled
on the land or in the sea. Of course.
there is no possible way for ou.r modem
"Soclely to exist without the use of gas
but each concerned indi\idual could
reduce his or her use of gas lo a
niinimum.
NO"" I A~I NOT going to insult your
Intelligence by telling you how to reduc@
your use of gas, bl.It those or you ttiat
v.·111 at least try will gain much tiap-
pines.5.
In conclllsion. any individual that crle~
out in anguish ovtr each and every
oil slick and drives one or those high
performance cars has ant to be •
hypocrite.
HARRY B. McDONALD J.
-----
Friday, May 8, 19i0
Th< •dttorlat popt Of t h< Dally
Pilot 1t1ks to 'nfonn end 1Um·
ulate rtaders by f)Tt.rtnting this
t1e1o!pd:ptr's opiniom and com-
mentary on topicr of interest
and sfgnlfkantt, b11 providina a
forum for thf ctpre11Wn. of
our rtndtrs• opinion$. and by
prtstntino the diver1e view-
pofntt of infortnfd obitruer.~
and rpokt1mt-n on tDpk1 of the
day.
Rob@rt N. Weed, Publisher
I
I
\
A 'SPANISH DREAM ' -Preparing for· their first' inaugural ball
are' (left to right) Mrs. Mike Empting, Mayor Edward Just and
Mrs. Richard Wilhelm, president of the sponsoring Women's Divi· sion, Chamber of Commerce.
Dreams Come True
\Velcome to Oreamsville wil l be all Fountain Va\lev residents 'vhen
the Women's Division, Fountain Valley Chamber of Corrim erce, cli1naxes
Cultural Arts '\leek \Vith the city's first inaugural ball.
Carrying oul the theme of A Spanish Dream •N ill be the scmiforinal
affair taking place at 8:30 p.nt Saturday, !\lay 16, in the civic center.
Honored guests \Viii include l\1ayor and ~1rs. Edward Just and city
councilmen and their wives. Tickets will be $10 per couple. and reservation s
may be obtained by calling th e chamber office by tomorrow.
Serving as ge neral chair1nen will be Mrs. Gerald Hicks and Mrs. Eu·
gene Shefer, and assisting will be the Mmes. Larry Riley, hostesses; Alvin
Fonda. decorations, and Bobby Palmer, William Hayes, Donald Blakely,
Richard Wilhelm and Mike Empting.
Red linen tablecloths will be centered with cherubs holding red and
¥(bite roses and tae._ers, and from1 the ceiling will hang red and gold fans
adorned with red ribbons. One wall will be decorated with a Spanish mis--
sion scene painted by Mrs. William Dunn.
•
6men
JDDEAN HASTINGS, 642-4321
•r1c11r. M•r 1, 111' H ,. .. , 11
~' I
. " 1' ri h' '
Action ·
I University Women Swing Into
• Luncheon, inslaJJation of oificers and informal
modeling \viii comprise a \voman 's world tomorrow
jf she 's a member of the American Association of
University \Vomen, Huntington Beach branch.
The annual spring luncheon and in stallation in
the Meadowlark Country Club will begin with a
social hour at 11 :30 a.m .. and during the noon
luncheon, there will be informal modeling by rnem·
hers' daughters.
After lunch Mrs. Nonna Brandel Gibbs. incom-
ing president, will discuss It's a Woman 's World.
Being installed with Mrs. Gibbs will be the
Mmes. Robert lforner. president-elect; Michael
Roach and Donald H. Rowe, vice presidents; Stan-
ley Pincura and Robert Peterson. secretaries, and
\V. J . McGarrigle and Fred Davenport, treasurers.
Study groups \vi ll continue through the new year
with emphasis on ThL' Human Use or Urban Soace.
This Beleagured Earth: Can Man Survive? and The
Academic Community: New Look on Campus.
j
... ,
• '.
The use of space has primarily been concerned
with the development and growth of Huntington ~
Beach. During the past year members tried to ob-~
tain an overview of city planning by studying the
city's master plan. Top of the Pier, recreational and
industrial development.
The group hopes !f.o take action that would uti-
lize the outstanding community potential while en·
couraging complimentary industrial development.
Mrs. Michael J. Roach is leader.
Leading the group study of pollution has been ' ..
Mrs. William Taber, and speakers have included Dr. ~
Irving Bengelsdorf. science editor for the Los An-ll
J(eles Times. and Robert ,Jeffreys, en,l?ineer for the
Orange County Air Pollution Control District.
....
A PRETTY WORLD -Planning to travel Around the World In Fasbicm
are (left to right) Mrs. Joseph Exn~r, Mrs. Anthony .qajewski an,d Mrs.
James Laurin, members of Las Bnzas del Mar Auxiliary attending the
group's fifth annual benefit for Children's Home Society.
•
Goodbye, Humdrum
Fashion :Flight:
Leaving on Time
Bidding ban voyage to the humdrum and embarking on a tour Around
the World in Fashion will be members and guests of Las Brizas del Mar
Auxiliary of the Children's Home Society.
Travelers are scheduled to leave at 11:15 a.m. Saturday, May 16, and
the tMp will be the first to take o!I from ·the newly completed Airporter
Inn, Newport Beach. Adding to the international flavor will be luncheon
tables centered by hand-crafted Tevolving dol1s whose colorful costumes
will represent 16 fore ign countries.
Traditional national costumes of six other countries will be worn by
hostesses of the day.
Foll o\v ing a noon luncheon fashions to carry one around the 'vorld
but equally enchanting when worn on the locaJ scene will be presented from
13 area shops. Commenting on the styles will be f\-I rs. Florence Smales.
The preluncheon cocktail gathering will afford members and guests
an opportunity to view a specialized art displ~y featuring oils depicting chil-
dren exhibited by artist-members, associate and active. the Gerry Downs
Gallery, Westminster, and galleries of Master ol the Future, Coronado.
Mrs. James Laurin, general chainnan, has announced that an origin-
al oil painting will be among grand prizes which also \vill include a flOO
cash award.
Assisting with arrangements are the Mmes. Joseph Exner, accorn.
panist; James Ack1ey and Robert Isaacson, decorations; David Burney,
display; Ed Grey and Bud Maiolo, prizes; Clyde Story, hostesses; Larry
Kopriva. luncheon ticekts: Ed Lavalle and Fred Pedersen, programs; WiJ ..
liam Ponn and Ron Garland, publicity; Ponn, Garland and John McCJane,
drawings, and Robert Lindstrom and John Bjordahl, table favors. Mrs.
Arfthony Gajewski, president, also has contributed many hours to assorted
committees. ·
Proceeds Crom the major funding eVent will benefit Children's Home
Society, and \Vorld travelers (real or imaginary) who would like to help
children find homes through adoption are invited to call Mrs . Laurin, 968-
1417, or Mrs. Kopriva, 962·6229, for reservations before Tuesday, l\olay 12.
. .
• • I
"
" '
BACK TO THE BOOKS -Brushing up on study areas which wiU be contint.ied
are (left to right) the Mmes. Robert Horner, 'Norma Gibbs, Michael Roach and
Donald H. Rowe. new officers of the American Association of University Women,
Huntington Beach branch, who will be instaUed tomorrow.
Examining the academic community have been
Dr .. Julian Foster. California State College. Fuller-
ton . and Dean John ~hain linc. California State Col-
lege at I~ong Beach. Mrs. Ronald Coyne is leader of
this study group. ·-·c···· .u<,.,, .... ..,. ...-z,-em"""'1mli ... ,,...., -.~ .... ~"' ..., · ,...,,.,.,.,...,.i
Early Birds Real Cards When Asking for 'Timely' ¥-\dvice
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Illy wife· and
I are not people who let things go
till the last minute. We plan eveeytbjng
ahead and ll sure does save a lot of
headaches. This evening we were discuss-
ing our 1970 Christmas card.
In the past years we've always had
the names of our children on the card
along with ours. Our last chick left
the nest In January so our ne:irt card
\Viii have only ~ur nan1es. Should it
be Rose and Ja)' or Jay and Rose?
My· wife says the y,·oman's name. is
supposed to be firs t. I'm sure I read
somewhere that the man's name should
be first tr it Js shorter. Please hurry
your answer. -IMPASSE
DEAR ~1: I'm typing os fast n~
I cu ud J hope this rracbts )'QU
ANN LANDERS rfl
In llmt. There art only UO days till
Christmas. Tht wo1t1an·s namt sbould
appear first Ir lht ca rd is printed. If
the wife is signing lhe c1rd. she should
put htr husband's name flrst.
Aod while you're at It -please use
yo ur last name. Every year •rt receive
dozens of cartts -from Dick and Doro·
thy ??? Bob find Kathy ?? John and S11e
??? -ele., etc. , ••
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Jn a recent
collirnn you said a man could not tell
for sure if a ~·oman is a virgin. That
was one of the most terribl e statements
you have ever made. In the fir~! place
it is untrue, and In the second place
it gives the 11reen light to every girl
who thinks she can fool around and
pass herselr off as pure on her wedding
night.
l am eoclosing a clipping of a news
•
• si<ll'y from Reuters. Tho dateline ls You have a -1bllily lo your
Naples. This story reports that a JO.year. millions of-readen to mrad your state.
old bride who claimed she was a virgin ment at ooce. -NO F AlTH IN YOU
wa. legally banished by her groom. DEAR NO FAITB• JI all the old
The husband, a 3G-year-old fisherman wtve1 tales abeat virginity were lald
named Angelo, had heard rumors coi;i-end to end tJtey wt1ld rucb from here
ceming his future wife, Vincenzilla. Wb~ to N1pJe1. ta some Instances, it 11 pot1i-o
he asked her about the ru mors she ble to a~certaln virginity. In many cases
swore they were lies. On their wedding the "evidence" b nonexlste:n& or highly
night Angelo left Vincenzina because he doubtful. Ont of my medical consullant•
learned the rumors were true. t(lld me of two p11tlents wbo were
The following ~'eek, Angelo wtnt to ltchnlcally vlrgiu and prepant. Another
the church to get lhe marriage annulled . physicia n 11ld be bad examhtcd at lea1t
The Tribunal heard the case. Medical 50 young girl• who had ao clinical
evidence was produced which provtd evldeoct of vlralnUy yet he was certall
the girl had ceased to be a virgin the glrl1 were telling the truth wlttn
one ytar before the marTiage. An an. Uaey said lHy llld -IOI Ucl se11al i.
nulment was granted. tel"t'Ollrlt.
In the a.e tf Allgelo aH Mt bride.
the 1tatemeat Ulal • clrl ceated to
be a vfrgtn one year btfore Itel' wedcllnt
night ralse1 to m1ny medical question•
tltat the .. tria:P' was at best prepo1teroa1.
I've 11ld It before and I say It a1aln.
Churcbe1 should stick to moral and
1plrltual matters and illy oul ti
medicine.
\\lhat awaits you on the olher side
of the marriage veil? 11ow c11n you
be sure your marriage will work? Read
Ann Landers' booklet "Marriage -What
to Expect." Send your request td Am
Landers in care of tht DAILY PILOT en-
ch>Slfll 50 ffilts in coin and a ·Jona,
stamped, setf-'addressed envelope. 1·
l
Frida,, M11 8, 1970
'
Four Generations Get Acquainted
A recent gathering in the San Clemente home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald A.
Schmidt reached to the Midwest to join four generations of the family. Enjoy-
ing the company of young Christian Daniel Schmidt are (left to right) Grand·
mothe~ Mrs. Fred: ~emp, Mrs. Schmidt, and Great-.grandmother Mrs. Josephine
Venneillet. The v1s1tors are from Naperville, Ill.
Chapters Install
-.
Ceremonies Fete Moms
sped.at Mother's Day Beach. Serving as lundleon Auction on Monday, May 25,
preparations are being made chairman is Mrs. Richard will be completed when Mu
by Huntington Beach Xi"Xl ShetTod, assisted by Mrs. Carl Upsllon chapter meets Mon·
Pl. Mu Upsilon and Delta Beta Cook and Mrs. Stephen day, May 11 , in the Huntington
Epsilon chapters of Beta Mansfield. Beach home of Mrs. Dick
Sigma Phi. New officers will be the . Cooper.
Mothers will be honored and Mmes. Richard Freudenthal Seated will be the ~fmes.
new officers in.stalled when president; Stephen Vida, vie~ Terry Faff, president; Greg
Xi Xi Pi meets Wednesday, president; ~nald Shelton, Patchen, vice president; Don
May 13, in Guy Fawkes treasurer ; Keith Eckman and Parker and Stephen Bisset
restaurant. Jerry Rubi, aecretaries; Denis secretaries; Charles Beeker:
Presiding over the in· Terwey,. civil defense, and treasurer, and Dick May, civil
stallation ceremonies will be Kenneth Sutt.on and 'Thomas defense, incoming officers.
Mrs. Nonnan Nieberlein, West Robinson, council represcn-Appointed will be Mrs.
Grove Area Council recording tatives. Charles Becker, sergeant.at.-
secretary. Final arrangements ror a arms and parliamentarian,
During a business meeting Mother's Day tea on Saturday, and Mrs. Lynn S J a v e n ,
taking place in the Huntington __ M_ay'-16-',_an_d_a_S:.:wrun=::.:er::....:F.:lin:.:g~.:his.:' to:::.:rl.:an.:· _____ _
Beach home of Mrs. Kenneth
Moore, chapter members also
made plam for a rummage
sa1e taking place Saturday.
May 23.
Mrs. Nleberlein and Mrs.
Moore were honored f or
awards received during a
Founders Day celebraUon and
~1rs. Moore, the chapter's in·
coming vice president, was
named Girl-Of-the-year.
Ritual of Welcome was
given to the Mmes. Kurt
Staake, Bernice F i s h er ,
Richard Cauidy and Donald
Elvidge, new members, and
Mrs. John Moquin and Mrs.
Robert Shay presented the
program. •
Delta Beta Epsilon will
honor mothers and install of·
ficers during a l p.m. !un-
i· dleon Saturday, May 9, in ,
; the King'• Victoria, Long IF~ ' ':.It
Nora Hollar
June Bride
Nora Lee Hollar and John
Lawrence Lamkin have set
their weddlng date for June
27 in St. Olaf Lutheran
Church. Garden Grove.
Parents of the betrothed are
Mrs. Noreen Hollar of Garden
Grove and the late Mr. F.
A. Hollar and Mrs. Bonnie
Lamkin of Costa Mesa and
the late Mr. John Lamkin.
Miss Hollar is a graduate
of Rancho Alamitos High
School, Fullerton Jun i or
College and now is a music
major at California State
College at Fullerton. She is
a member of Beta Sigma Phi. • • ' Fashions The prospective bridegroom
Is a graduate of Estancia High
School and Orange C o a s t
College. He ls attending CSCF
and studying music. End Year
Spring fashions from shops
In Laguna Beach aYid San
·" Clemente will highlight the
final season meeting of the
" Monday Morning Club of
.,. Laguna on Monday, May 11,
in Hotel Laguna.
Ii Paintings and handcraft by
members also will be ex·
hibited during the meeting ac·
! cording to Mrs. Robert Carr,
: art chairman. Work should be
at the hotel by 10 : 15 a.m. [
lmtallaUon of officers wi ll! be part of the 11 :30 a.m.
program. New officers include
~ the .Mme$. John Casey, presi·
1 dent; William Glesehen, first
vice president: Calvin Gib-
NORA LEE HOLLAR
Future Bride
Cadettes Sell Goods
For Trip Back East
In July 35 Cadette Girl Scouts and Mro.
Hugh Turner Sr., leader of troop &55, will
take a cross country trip to Rockwood, the
national Girl Scout house in Washington, D.C.
The girls and their parents have been
working toward this goal for more than two
years. Each coed has had to earn $200 and
the parents $100 each.
Due to bus rates increasing the scouts
have the task of raising an extra $2 500 in only two and a half months. ,
Tomorrow the parents' auxiliary of the
troop will have a fund-raising rummage sale
in the Edison Co. parking lot on Main Street
in Huntington Beach from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
During the trip the troop will get to know
their country's heritage and see the govern·
ment in action.
Fullerton
Students
To Marry
Christine Marie Wits on,
daughter of Mrs. Patricia
Wilson of Costa Mesa. will
become the bride of Ronald
William Hauck, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Lowell Hauck of
Garden Grove.
St. James Episcopal Church
in Newport Beach will be the
wedding scene Aug. 15.
Miss Wilson is a graduate
of Cost.a Mesa High School
and is studying history al
California State College at
Fullerton.
The future bridegroom is
an alumnus or Bolsa Grande
CHRISTINE WILSON
Engogtd
High School and a physical
education major at CSCF.
Gown Fabrics
Include Taffeta
Horoscope
Cancer: Cycle High
SATURDAY can become reaUUes.
MAY 9 LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221:
Your personality undergoes
By SYDNEY OMAJlR chqe; mllfl}' comment that
ANES (Mar<h 21·April JI): you look Ilk• new person.
Stick to principles. Family Prosperls are brighter in
member may be adam&J'lt .social and professional artdS.
about makinc chanaes. But SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
you get your way through Shakeup indk:ated w h i ch
reuon and careful explanaUon causes you to bro a d e n ot motives. horizo111. You seek-and ob--
PISCES (Ftb. 19-Mareh 201 :
Good lunar aspect coincides
with emotional fulfillment.
Romantic evening in store for
you. Express feelings. Refuse
to be discouraged b y
associate, friend who whines.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BmTBDAY some wonderful
opport.uniUes are on horizon.
You get chance to make
known your special abilities.
Attending to details now will
free you for more creative
endeavors.
TAURUS (April 26-May 20): taln-i!ew allies. Be versatile,
Not IO!ldul to insist, cajole or have alternatives available.
issue ttmatums. Best results Give full play to intellectual
obtained by turning on chann. curiosity. Obtain answers.
You are surprfsed by mean--SAGrrfAIUUS (Nov. 22· To 11nc1 our ""'°'' lvckv fot vov lngful compliment. Member of Dec. 21): You discover facts 1n mon•t •net lovt, ordt• SYclt'leY
opposite 1ex e1presses desire concerning friends which could ~~~r·~nc1~:i11.::~ H~I::~;
to know you better. be startling. Don't cast first ~~r.,~ ,~C:"l:,.,1l.°v rir.tf, ~'°32J, GEMINI (May 21.June 20): stone. Take new knowledge G••nd Ctn!r•I $tat!on, New Yor~, '-::;·~·='·=·~:::;;"=· """"""""""""""" Don't be deceived by apparent in stride. Avoid forming con·i:
bargains. Heed inner voice. clusions based on impulse. Be
Your romantic ideas may reaSonable.
uncJergo revision. This should CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
not be regarded as setback. 19): Lie low. Play waiting
Quiet discussion accomplishes game. One in position of
wonders. authority has not arrived at
_CANCER (June 21.July 22): final decision. Avoid appearing
Changes occur in areas you overanxious, Special agree-
consldered permanent. Not ment is due.
wise to fight progr<ss. Cycle AQUARIYS (Jan. 20-Feb.
Is high, and apparent 18): Some may make
disagreeme11ts are due to unreasonable demands. Know
bommerang in your favor . when and where to draw line.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22 ): Study correspondence. Make
Light touch is best today. Ob-up your mind to investigate
tain hint from T a u r u 1 questions previously left hang-
message. Accent on how you ing.
co-operate with co-workers,1r,~~~~~~~niirui'NvPS~~~~~~~ members o1 club, group'.ll VIRGINIA'S~
organization. Display seD.5f oi humor for good resu11s. SNIP 'N ' STITCH SHOPPE
~~~ <,,1u~u;31,',1'\n~~d 3334 East Coosl Hwy. • Coron• del Mor.
makes you very popular. Pho no b 73-8050
Fresh start is good; loved
one deserves benefit of doubt.
Many of your hopes, wishes
Birthday
Date Told
The third birthday or Delta
Beta Zeta Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi will be celebrated
You're Invited May 11th
To attend • ipe,i1I f1te d1mon1lr•lion on two qu1lity ul'liqu 1
produch by Mn, C1rol Simon, Nam1ly !he "UNIQUELY YOU''
drt11 form, Thit form i1 more lik1 your body the,. any other
on tha m1r~1t. lt c1n g•in or 1011 ind111 a1 you dol Al10 Mr1.
Simon will give u 1• l1uon O" ee1y in1i•ll alion of bo!h uniq ui
poly11!1r •nd met1I invl1ibl1 1ipper1.
During lhii promotion, pi(k up your cart;f;,1ta for 1 50c:"
refund on 1 uniqu• tipptr foot.
FY Club
Hears New
Official
Fabrics in the new crop Tuesday, May 12, at 8 p.m.
ol bridal gowns include noaty in the home or Mrs. Thomas
types -fragile silk laceS, Ashbrook.
chiffons, voiles, organdy and Cake and champagne wlll
S1• You Soon !
VIRGINIA
The Fountain V a J I e y be served. Transferees and
Woman's Club wilt hear Mrs. light-weight linen. prospective members are P.S. A frt• dt1110"1tratio1t •+ 11 ,,,. •1td 2 p!Tl-Mo~d•y M1y
11th . Norma Brandel Gibbs, Hun· Silk taffeta also is in the welcome to contact Mrs.
tington Beach cOWK:ilman, running and looks especially Robert McAdams at 968-7823
speak during their general
1
. ..:•1t1tr~actiiiii'vieiiniihielirlioomiiiliaciei. iiiiillifioriad~dliUioinal~ln~formaiiiUi'oini. ·~===================ii~ meeting Monday, May 11, at ·
8 p.m. in the Fountain Valley
Community Center.
A report on the state con·
vention which took place
earlier this week in the
Sheraton Universal Hotel in
Universal City will be given
by . Mrs. Laurence Erwin,
president a~d Mrs. Wallace
Short, president-elect.
Hostesses for the evening
are the Mmes. John Waddell,
chairman, Robert Cardinal,
James Dick, Al Hackmeister,
Charles Keane, K e n n e th
Martz, Wilbert Pesek, Merle
Rupp and Jack Yamamoto.
Club Discusses
Baby's Arrival
The baby's arrival will be
discussed when members of
the Costa Mesa Chapter of
La Leche League meets in
the Newport Beach home of
Mrs. Ralph Benware.
The public is invited to the
gathering Tuesday, May 12,
at 7: 45 p.m. Further in-
formation regarding the club
may be obtained by calling
Mrs. H. W. Moore at 545-4359.
Soroptimists
Soroptimist Club of Hun·
tington Beach gathers at 12 :15
p.m, the second and fourth
Tuesdays in Francois
restaurant.
Get the BIG 6% at the BIG M
Everybody knows that NOBODY TOPS THE BIG M -Mutual Savlnga,
In offering the most In earnings to savers. MUTUAL
1% 2 Jtll ltrm 1ccoun~ wllh U,000 minimum
5¥4% 1 year term account, with $1,000 minimum
bens. secood vice president;
T. E. Kelly, third vice presi-
dent; Martl.n Gurn ey ,
recording secretary; Hallster
~ltins. corre a pond l n g iiilcretsry, •nd Frank Levins,
treasurer.
MORE BEAUTIFU L BY THE HOUR
Omega bracelet watches in 14 karat gold.
514% Somonths bonus accpunt, with SSOO minimum s AllJNGS
7!i% ctrtlllcott ol depoolt tv1ll1bl1, wllh $100,000 minimum ft W
If you 11'1 a Mutual Ssvtr, now la the lime to lnve1t 1ddftlon11! fundt Jn thett new ... Joan &UDl:i&lilll From left: $376., $260., $335. hlglHate account•. (Insurance hn been lncreaetd to $20,000.) If you are not• CORONA DEL MAR
Mutual Saver, now la the time to open your account •t The Big M-Mu1u11 Saving'" ,asr t•st.CO.tt Mlgl'lw•l"
T•lt~t15-)(110
ACCOUNTS NOW INSURED TO $20,0001 SLAVICK'S Senior Citizens
Communi ty Recreation
Center al Orange County
Fairgrounds ia the scene of
ectivtty w he n Costa Maa
lelfor Cltiuns meet II II
a.m. tvtrY Tuesday.
NEWPORT BEACH -644·1380
18 FASHION ISLAND
Wl8T AltOADIA
tl0Wltt0ut"-~010
TeltDllOlll •41~111
COVINA
::00 Nonl'I CIHllll Al'e!'!Vt
Talep!tolll ~)t..~7'
QLINDAL& m Nol'lfl Bl'llld IOltl ..... rd
l•l•pflont t.f2"41•1
~A8ADINA {Htffl Oflltt)
315 E•t ColortdO loul•~•"'
ltl1phont 4•f·23'~ Y-Clltl'f' ~ W.ic--ltftkAl!l.,ktl'if, M1dtf Clltr91, fM.
OP" ·Mo"'-f tlll4 Prlffy 111tU t1JO
(
: '
Fountain Valley Today's F filal
N.Y. Stoeks . '
VOL 63, NO. 11 0, ~SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CAtlFORNIA
,
FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1970 • . TEN CENTS
Judge Ready
ro In struct
Eeague Jury
A weary Superior Court jury will today
take wbat is expected to be its last
weekend recess in the murder trial of
Arthur DeWitte League. accused of tbe
streetcorner slaying O{ Santa Ana
policeman Nelson Sasscer.
Jurors heard testimony from the last
of a parade ol defense witnesses late
Thursday and were then told Judge
Samuel Dreizen that they will receive
their instructions from his bench late
today before taking a three.clay weekend
break.
Final arguments from lawyers for both
sides will wrap up the courtroom action
Tuesday and the panel will then retire
to the jury room for its last act In
the three-month trial of the accused
Black Panther.
They have listened to testimony from
nearly 40 witnesses called by both sides
since the trial opened last March 12.
Among them has been the 21-year-old
!...eague who denied from the witness
box that he shot and killed Sasscer
last June 4.
Chief Prosecutor Everett Dickey, for
whom this will be his last assignment
for the district attorney's offi~ before
taking his judge's robes and a seal
on the Harbor Judicial District Court
bench, believes he has proved that the
Sant.a Ana Negro shot Sasscer in the
chest shortly after the patrolman asked
League and a companion ior iden-
t.1£ication.
It has been alleged that the pair then
fled from the scene, leaving the dying
officer in the roadway feebly calling
for the help that proved to be useless.
Dickey has been assisted by Deputy
District Attorney Martin J. Heneghan
in the prosecution chore. League ha!'!
been defended by attorneys Robert Green
and Michael Gerbosi, both of whom
were appointed by Superior COurt.
Tricia ·Suggests
Students Write
To Cong r es.smen
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tricia Nixon
thin ks antiwar students should write their
congressmen rather than close down col-
leges as a form of protest, say two
young women who visited her in the
White House.
In an hour-long meeting Thursday with
ty,·o Finch College, N.Y., students :Ptlisl!I
Nixon "suggested we wttte to con-
gressmen and senators and tell them
how we felt,'' reported Ann Holmes,
20.
"We told her we 've been doing that
for five years," Miss Holmes said. And
one senator wrote back a scathing letter,
ending it "Thank you for your attitude."
~liss Holmes and ~!issy Allen, 22,
are both juniors at the exclusive New
York City school where Tricia herself
graduated. The two students were among
some 100 Finch girls taking part in
an antiwar demonstration across the
street from the While House Thursday.
l\1iss Holmes said Tricia "seemed
shocked" when they told her millions
of American students don't trust their
government.
Miss Holmes said Tricia told them
she doesn't see any demonstrations. "She
doesn't look out the windows o( the
Wh.ite House," Miss Holmes said.
Later a White House press officer
sai d the visit was part of an ongolng
attempt. to "keep the doors open to
all inions and to listen to all•o lnions."
Orange Coast
Weather
You may be able to oulsleep the
coastal cloudiness over the week·
end, 8nd from then on it'll be a
nice day with fair sides and temp-
eratures in the temperate 601s.
INSW E TODA.Y
They1J bt hissing U1e villai"
and cheering the hero Saturday
night at Newport Horbof' High
School when on old time melo-
dmma (}Ot:S on :stage for char·
Sty. Details in toda11's Wtek-
etlder.
... li..t H C••lf9n>r. t
(lle(tllftt U• t
Cl•t•lfllot Jl·•t
C111'1k1 tt (_...... . "
Dull> PfflltU I alll!Wl9! ,_ • ,!MM, )t.11
fhAK-lt
AMI L•"'"" 1J MIHM• •
"'"lllltt • MWln U.11
DAILY ,ILOT Sltff Pi.It'
ADVISOR TELLS STUDENTS THEY MU ST LEAVE CAM PUS
GWC's Donald Fish•r SHks Compl i•nc•. Not Confrontation
GWC President Charges
Campu s Closing 'Mistake'
By RUDI NlEDZIEUiKI
01 "" 0 1llY '11•1 51•11 '-
Dr. R. Dudley Boyce, president of
Huntington Beach's Gol<(en West College,
Thursday told a group of &'tudents that
the closing-of his college might have
been a mistake.
"l would never have closed this cam·
pus. We had some very important
dialogue arranged and I would rather
have had that dialogue before the campus
was closed."
He referred specifically to a rally
scheduled for 11 a.m. Thursday in the
campus free speech area to evaluate
President Nixon's Cambodia policy,
About 20 confused students had earlier
~ath~red on campus in an attempt to
discover why Golden Wesl, where no
incidents of violence have occurred, was
shut down.
''The school is closed down to keep
us from getting together and we just
have to figure out how to get together,"
said one.
Their discussion Was interrupted by
Donald Fisher, the student activities ad·
viser, who· told tbem they could not
200 Childr en
To Feel Squeeze
In Room Shortage
More than 200 children are ge>ing to
feel the squeeze from a lack of
classrooms next fall in the Fountain
Valley School District.
District trustees approved the ac·
quisition of eight relocatable classrooms
Thursday night to solve the problem
on a temporary basis.
Jack ~1encken, administrator of
buaineu services, told trustees that 264
students at ,Harper and Nieblas schools
~Jld not be housed next year because
of the lack of buildings.
meet on campus,
"I'll\ obli1ed tQ, tell · yoo U..t yoo
should not be here," .he 1aid. "You
don't <Seem to under!tand that ·the
chancellor bas the right to close the
school and the chancellor baa closed
the school."
Instead, the students marched up to
the administration building where Dr.
Boyce and Cbancellor Norman , E.
Watson, of the Orange Coast Junior
College Dislrict, had been in conference.
Trying to discover why the school
had been closed, they approached the
chancellor, who refered them \0 Dr.
Boyce roe comment.
"Closing the community colleges was
a matter of action by each individual
board. Dr. Watson is responsible for
his board's directive and took the actlon
to rescind classes. We're just carrying
out what we've been asked to carry
out..,
"When Dr. \\'atson called me to tell
me that the campus would have to
be closed, the first thing he said was
'Dud. we've been had," Dr. Boyce ex-
plained.
As or Thursday, no stu~ent demons!ra·
tions were planned at tlle college. Several
student leaders however indicated they
would call for a rally Monday when
classes resume.
Culture Week Gets
Offi cial Support
Cultural Arts Week will not only be
a\ive and funclionlng nert week in Foun-
tain Valley, it wllJ be olficia too.
MaYor Edward Ju.st fixed that by
signing a proclamation declaring May
11~17 as Cultural Arts Week, and urging
all residelts to take part in the severa1
activities.
Coast • Ill Protest
Student,s Plan to Show War Dissent
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
ot n. DMIY , .... ltltt
h-lore peaceful demonstrations are
planned this weekend along the Orange
Coast as student protesters continue to
register opposition to U.S. involvement
in Cambodia and the death of four
Kent State 1tudents.
In action this morning, about 100
Orange Coast College students, organized
under the Non-violent Strike Comffilttee,
marched on the Costa Mesa Post· Office
County Board
Still Hassling
Over Testing
Pre-election fireworks broke out during
Thursday's Orange County Board of
Education meeting as board member
Don Jordan renewed his heckling of
county school chief Robert Peterson over
the cost of the annual Academic
Decathlon sponsored by Peterson's office.
Both men are up for re-election this
year.
Dr. Peterson charged Jordan with
••harassment" in hi.s repeate<l demand s
for a report detailing man hours spent
by county personnel in staging the e\•enl
The decathlon, originated by Peterson
two years ago, involves ten achievement
areas covering a wide variety of
classroom subjects. Testing involves the
students' ablUties in coping with both
written and Oral questioning. ·
· Last November's ·program tea.tured 125
students-from . n schools, 1be decalhlon
Is primarily supported by a nonprofit
foundation of biainess and civic orcaniu·
tions ••
Jcrdan aaid be was simply reviving
a request be has been making in-
termittently since the first 'decathlon
in the fall of 1968. He emphasized that
he is not bppooed .to the event as such.
He termed It a "worthwblle project."
Dr. Peterson . said his .office is com·
piling a l'OSt report on the 1969 decathlon
which will be submitted "fairly soon."
He called· the chore a "monwnental''
one.
Business Good
In Huntington ,
Back Tells CofC
Business was good in Huntington Beach
last year.
That was the message the city'.!i
economic development director William
Back delivered to a dinner meeting of
the Chl\mber or Commerce at the
Sheraton Beach lnn , Thursday night.
He reported that the city's 1,198 outlets
~ained in every . quarter in 1969 and
totalled $143,472,000 in retail sales -
an ·increase of $27,071,COO over the
previoua year.
Back got the figures from the State
Board of Equalization.
He told the chamber directors that
195 new businesses opened in the city
in 1969. Food stores and restaurants
accounted for most of the Influx.
The automotive group made the biggest
gnin in tenns of dollars wlth sales
$10,376,000 over the 1968 total. General
merchandise and fOod stores were the
next biggest earners, improving by
$3,438,000 and $2,590,000 respectively.
wilh. more than 400 lndivklual letters
addressed to congressmen a.nd the Presi-
dent. •
The, group ,or about 100 students )e.ft
the 'OCC campus at '10 a.m. for the
Adams Street ·post offire building, car·
rying placards denouncing the war in
Gambodla apd the deaths of four . Kent
State tJniversity students.
Bob Jennison, an OCC student, stated
th&t the ptl?'p08e of the mall-in was
to impress the community with the con.
cem of the college studentl.
"By delivering these leUera one by
one, people can aee that we alt have
an 1ndlvldual cOnctrn in this matter!' ·
Students formed a single line and
marched through the pool offJce building,
dropping off a Jetter before moving on
to pick up anQther • ...A3 each Jetter was
dropped, the student.a ·slioutcd out. t.be:
number. OLher students stood outside
the building chanting, "Power to the
(Set PROTF.ST, P1ge !)
Shy But Shrewd
Students Question Valley Trustees
' O.t.ILY ,!LOT ,-... "' Tlfno•etwlllt
GAMESMANSHIP IN FV
' Roohollo JOI-, 7
"
Six shy little studenb from Bushard
School played a tension-packed · game
of 20 questions with trustees of the
Fountain Valley School District at
Thursday's board meeting.
They were introduced indivlduaHy to
the trustees, then a Bushard teacher
explained how "twenty q u e s t I o n s ' •
becomes a tool of · deductive reasoning
in a second grade class.
Harold Brown, chairman of the board,
was asked to pick an object in the
room for the students to discover. Once-
he did, he settled back in. his padded
chair and was deaf to tbe pleas of
fello\Y trustees to tell them what it
was.
On the Jirst .question the she students
narrowe& Die · location of the object to
o~ ~alf of the room. ~n they popped
questions like, "is it square, round, rec.
ti.ngular or tri1T1gular? Is It made of
paper? Is it metal glass or plutic?"
By the seventh quesUon, trustees, ad·
mlnistraton, the full stale of teecbm
from Bul!lbard ScJlool, parents and one
reporter were more Jnvolv~ than the
Jlids, wondering what the object 'Wat.
At thla point the teacher · suggtsted
tlie game be stopped as the mlnuttit
Were tickJng away,
''No. Keep on. I'm dying to know
What it ls mysell," interjected lruste•
Dale· Stuard.
Time mo\led slowly, bee.al.BC each quts-
tion had to be approved by an six
youngs~rs before It .was asked: and one
studl6us young girl, Rochelle Jeise1 71
ISee QUESTIONS, Poge !)
Valley ~igh 'Earth W ~ek~
To Have Discussion, Work
Not Satisfied with just ooe day ' of
ecology observance, fo4ntain Valley
High School students have called for
an "Earth Week'' May 18-22.
And 'they're not just going to talk
about the.problems of pollution.
To be included in the cyents are a
boUe and paper drive and a field trip
to the Cleveland National Forest to p~ant
Joung trees. ·
lnvilalions have been se'nt·to Preilident
RJcbaid NixoPI and other ctlebriUes to
attend the week-long antl·pollution drive, a<;cor~lf'\g to Principal Paut Berger.
Billy Meek, aR 'English teacheri on
the Baron campus,· and head of the
Earth Week contest committee said, "We
plan tO 1offer prizes for the best posters,
essays, photographs, science· projects,
songs, poems and industrial arts projects
that deal with the pollution of air, water
and land."
"The rea1 success of these contests
depends on the merchant& who are in-
terested 111 pollution. We need donated
prizes. We'd li,ke bikes to be the first
place prizes while any kind or prize
would do for the others," be added.
Fund raising activities, to be hatdled
by English teacher Dave Feyk, ·incl~
an Earth Queen contest in which each
vote will be charged a peony. Student..
also plan to collect paper and &lass
bottles for sale to salvage yards.
Feyk said he would be interested in
getting in touch with poUuUon-coRSCiou&
celebriUes wtio . WO!lld doqate an hour
of their time to the Fouf!taln Valley
project.
"We're waiting for state school con-
slrucUon. bonds to be sold. It all depends
on the. June election (to raile bond
interest rates). These mobile classrooms
will take care of the problem until
we can build more schools," Mencken
suggested.
Cort of the eight temporary classrooms
was estimated at $34.000.
Witchery • Ill Wax Works
The Saturday following Earth Weck
students and teaChers plan to applJ
their funds by purchasing trees which
will be planted at Cleveland National
Forest that 58JDe day.
In addition, they plan to set up an
ecology library center where students
and teachers will be able to find
materials relatlng to pollution and con-
se.ni"ation. Each mobile1 or relocatable classroom
-disbid olficials have not determined
which type to build -will house a
Girl, 18, Assaulted by 'Witch ,' Thr ee Hippies
norm.al class of 30 students. , NEW ORLEANS (UPI ) -Ignoring
llislriet administrators explained this lhfeat. they w0'1ld be turned Into rrogs.
morning that Harper and Nieblas schools police arrested a self.:proclaimed witch
were chosen because they would be the and three. "hippie drifters" for-UJe ea1-o'·
most. crowded. "We didn 't want to · bus nine-tails rloggi.{lg and rape of·an IS.year-
the.youngiters or set up double ses&oOs'." old girl In -lhc Hall oC Horron wax
said-a scbool spokesman. . . . muJewn.
No estimate was made as to how The victim was described by ~
long the classel would be used. ''Uritll · as a · •1hlppie type with' tatt909.••. She
we can build schools,'' Mtnckcn shrug· told polJce· it. was the seebnd lime she
ged .. " , . 1 ,. , : • • ·~ ~·beta raped In the wax museum. °"''"'• b~~ llM! all llOrini,t, P9lltt • 111•• the rollowing aC<OUnt of classroom equipment wUI furnish the ·~the incld(!nt :
temparary facllltie s. Thal equipment will The victim was walking by the museum
then be shifted to new classes when with her boyfriend just before dawn
bull~. Thursday when they wtte pulled Inside
Mencken said tht district student the bulldi113 on BourbOn Sti-cct. Her
population totals 9,703 right now and boyfriend was heltfi on \he first floor
is expetted to reach 10,174 by rmxt of the mU&Cum whlle she was taken
Stptember. upstairs.
•
Officers described the place .aa "some
sort of chapel -part of some Satan
colt" that "reeked of marijuana."
One of the abductors raped the girl
and then demanded she live with him
in the museum-. The girl refused and
was flogged with 1 eat-o'-nine-tailt. The
vlctlm .finally agreed to llve with the
man but only if ~be cOuld return home
for a while. • ·
M she prepared to l~1ve the other
two men grabbed her and she began
screaming. Two polictmen witnessed this
Incident and arrested Patricia Hall. 18,
111.!iO known by the witchcraft name of
Inca Angelique: WilJiam Rhodes, 24:
Richard KJng, 29, and Peter Valenzuela,
18.
"When we arre:sted the lfa\l girl, she
etalmed to be a wit.ch - a membfr
l
of a Satan cult," ·an offiee:r aald. "She
threatened to tum tbe arresting ofUctrs
into rrogs if they didn't leave her alone."
Miss Hall and the three men were
booked on charges of aggravated rape
and aggravated bat~ry. Misa; Hall uld
she had• been baptized !1Y • "blact
pope" In the First Churc:ti ,or Satan In
San FranciscO. She has a whlp tattooed on hel'·llgbt· ann.
The 'Hall of Horron· caters: to the
heavy toorlst tfalllc •'°"11 Bi>urbon
Street In the French Quartet.· TM
muJtum, containing 'wax fljure.s or
ghouls and simulated torture devlce1,
opened last ,oJ\nm... . '
The ripe Victim _worked In t.hc museum
during Us opening night an,d said she
was r.11ped P,en. She pfomised at l)'lat
1lme the r•plat ''Would pay lor this."
Any citii.en interested In participating
In the ecology observance with prites
may call Fountain Valley High School,
962-3301, for fuitbcr Information.
TEAC HERS' TEA~I •
OK8 SETTLEMENT
·ws ANGELES (UPI) -N'egoUalon
for:strlKin&'Los Angeils t.acb,... ~
accepted a settlement pro"·sed by a
federal mediator and refei J It to th.e
board of directors of the U· ~ Teachers
of Loi Anaeles for appro\~tl.
Tht proposal allo was submltltd to
the board of education v.···· ch scheduled
a rpttlal meetin& for Sunday to c:omldet
It
• I t1
•
I
"
. .
-"\.--
.,
.:I DAILY ~!LOT H
' .
·' I
<Pilot Finds Only ~aY.
.To Fly at Lal{er Game
By PATRICK O'DONNELL
ot ftll CW.Hr "'Ill Sl1H
;. .
\\'HAT DO A11tUNE pilots and press photographers have in common?
\\1ell, rve ne1•er seen a newspaper photog flying a jet, but Wednesday night
at the Laker game I turned to the photographer beside me and asked who he
• was working for .
"Western Airlines," he replied. Looking a little puuled 1 wondered
. . .aloud why a photog was working the NBA play--0ff1 for Western Airllne11.
''No, I'm a pilot," he said, "and this is the best seat
in the place. The one I bought is way up on top and t
can't see a thing."
* * * T asked how he got a pass to be under the basket.
To my surprise, he said he didn't have one. ·
Jt seems lbat .several months ago he was talking to
an usher near the Laker basket during the warm up period
and wtien the game started, be sat down. The usher check·
ed all the other photogs, but didn't check him. Since Ulen,
he's been attending Laker games regularly and be al·
ways brings a camera.
He mllit be one of the best known photogs at the Forum because he ls
never checked for proper idenUlication.
What's more, he is learning a lot about his adopted profession becaU5e
1.he photographers from the wire services and daily newspapers talk about
(heir work during the intermissions and this i1 rubbing off <1n my pilot friend.
* * * BUT NEXT YEAR. if he doesn't want tO get caught, f'll offer one piece
of advice. Of the 30 or so press photographers at the Forum I noticed he was
_the only one carrying a transistor radio. He had it plugged into his ear and
··he would report to the rest of us what Chick Hearn w•s saying, Somehow, I
_-think this makes him stand ()Ut in the crowd.
But, being an airline pilot, he travels to many cit.ie..c;: and there are 13
Other NBA teams in the league. What about the ABA and professiooal foot-
, 'ball? A \\'hole world is <1pen to him.
One thing bothers me though. Where could a pbotog find a pilot's uni·
form if he wanted to catch a free flight someplace. Aw, it wou1dn't work -or
. !oukl it?
. Girl Says YES
"
·:Edison Coed to Direct Job Service
By TERRY COVILLE
01 tM DlllY .. lie! Sllll
Pam Fuller. a 17-year-old junior at
·Edison High School, says. "Oh yes, l
illioold really be getting • job rn)'M!li
'ibis summer."
..... Instead, she has volunteered to help
, ~ teeiu get summer job& as director of the Huntington Bead> Youth Employ·
'lnenl Service (YES).
~ · tier title is "teen director." She was
lriCked for the post by Hershey Gehris,
· a youlh couneelor with tbe Orange County
1lrobaUon Department, who ii adult.
-director for YES in Huntington Beach.
"Kjds neejl money for oolk!se. for
·c:-ats. They want to do .som8lhlng, We're
·trying to be\p ·them," Pam says. ,
··'Ibis is the second year HunUngton
Beach has had a YES ·office. It is
ba.,..!Jtj in the Ellis Avenue Baptist Church,
but is not a denominational activity.
"Last year 334 young people came
to us for help. We found jobs for 180
of them," Gehris said.
This year the Yes office will open
M May 23. It will be open from 9
e.m. to noon each Saturday during
15Cbool, and the same hours MondJy
through Saturday during the summer.
Youth who seek employment are i!lo
\•ited t.-0 phone 847-6100 during the listed
}lours after May 23. They can then
ue Pam Of another student volunteer
8t the office for an interview.
People who have jobs avai13ble are
asked to phorll the same number, They
Will not have to go in to the office.
• "We want any type of work available,"
4'.Mn explained. "Girls do a lot of
1';i&ysltting or secretarial work. while
: :~t oC boys did yard v.'Ork or found
~)Ob! as gas station attendants. We Wlll'lt
any job possible."
"Out of ·the 180 jobs last year we
only had tv.·o complaints f r <1 m
employers." Gthrls added.
The YES office, a state and federal
project. is set up to serve youths 14-18,
) .
~
I
DAILY PILOT
OltANG!: COAlt PUll.15HJNG (OM~MfY
Ro~•rf N. w •• d
'"'•klent 1r.t1 l"llMI....,.
·J1clr JI:. Cv1l•v
Thom•• tc.,,.;1
Eili'Of'
l~o1111i A. M11rp~l"1
MflNtlflf Ef•I«
Alb11t W, l1f1i
M.OO:llh! Edllor
Hntl11tt•• h«ll Offlc•
17175 l11c~ lou11"'''
M11ili"t Adfr101 P.O. lo• 190, t2611
0111ef Offic.et
l .. Ul'I, 111.c.r.: m "°""' ,......,. COilt M .. ., ). Wu! 1•¥ Sltftl Ht-' llUt;ll' 2211 Win B!!llo• !'Oii_ ...
''" cic.-.11: :1111 No"" El c:....,11111 11. .. 1
DAILY ,.ILOT \ftff ,.,....
'KIDS NEED JOBS' r .. n Director Fuller
but no limit on age has been followed .
"We found a job for a 44-year-old
woman last year," Gehris said.
Gehris said requests have aJready
started this year. "Two girls from Ohio
wrote letters asking us lo find Uie1n
jobs in Huntington Beach this summer."
Pam's job as teen director concerns
picking' olher volunteers to stalf the
YES office, condm:t interviews and in-
fonn the public about YES.
"I took it because I wanted to get
involved. 1 was sick of sitting home
in the summer and doing nothing.··
She wants to be an at~ney and said
this gives her an opportunity t.-0 learn
to work with people.
Gehris explained f.he success ,oJ YES
In ita first year in llunti.ngt.on fSeach.
"Ninety percent of the kids don't want
to make a name or cause trouble. They
just want to get out and work, do
something.''
"'fhe YES program can bf an as~C'I
1-o employers and the community by
developing an experienced work J>OOl."
he conttnu!i!d.
"I think it says Mmething for this
town that we had no riots al Golden
West College or at last year's youth
rock festival. '1
The ldds keep coming ba:ck ror work ,
he said. Now he hapes the adu!tfll will
keep coming back with work for them.
Wisconsin University
President Quits Job
MADISON, Wls. (UPI ) -Universlly
of Wl8CX1Jllin President Fred Harvey Har·
rin{j:ton announced his rr.tlgnaUon today
as \he 35.0QO..studenl campus remalned
under a:iege from youths protesting· the
e'rte•lion of the "'lt In Indochina. The
r~ig11aUon is effectJve OCt. I.
"It may he unfortunate to announce
It al this tlmt," llarr\ngton said. "but
it f!letm• best. \\'e are in a i;ulous
crl.,is and I am not nmnine: awa,y from
h. Thi5 is not abandonment. I will re1nain
.u president in 1U rtspccts until Oct.
l.''
•
DAILY ~1LOT lll" IOMl9
Stare Vow
On Mi.tchell
Postponed
The State Senate thiJ wttk f!elayitd
the scheduled floor vote on appolnlment
or South Lagunan Clay N. Mitchell to
the State Board ti Education because
or insufficient votes .
This was the assessment today by
an aide 0£ Senator Alfred Alquist (0-San
Jose), who is opposing the appointment
(If f\1itchell .
A!quist, a candidate for lieutenant
governor , interrogated Mitchell before
the Rules CommiUee recently, but
f\1itchell won approval of the Rules c.om.
mittee by a 4 to 1 split vote.
The Alquist aide said because of absent
senators . the pro-Mitchell forces could
not round up the necessary 27 vote.'!
to confirm the appointment.
However, the matter may be broulht
up at any time if the votes are rounded
up.
ANTl ·WAR DEMONSTRATORS HEAD FOR AIR NATIONAL GUARD UNIT IN COSTA MESA
Previously Unnoticed, Quiet little Comm1i1nlcation1 Unlt1 81com11 Object of M1rch
It would take 14 votes against Mitchell
to block his appoinlment and Alqul!t
has been trying to round these up.
Normally, gubernatorial appointments
are rubber-stamped by the Senate with
little fanfare. 'Curious' Film· Suspects
WinlO-week Trial Dela!
From Page 1
PROTEST. ••
people. let's stop the war."
The students walked back to the OCC
campus after the hour long mail-in.
Today's post office demonstration was
ortlerly as was Thursday's march from
Orange Coast College's Costa Mesa cam-
pus to the Costa Mesa Alr National
Guard Base.
The Alquist aide speculated if the
pro-Mitchell votes aren't rounded up by
next week , Governor Reagan might
v.•ithdraw the appointment. "It really
isn't the G<ivemor's appointment
:inyway;' the aide suggested, "it's Mu
Rafferty's."
Republican sources have said that Ra!·
terty, state superintendent of public in.
struction, lobbied strongly with the
governor to appoint the 54-year-old South
Lagunan.
'J11ree St.ant.on t.hcalcr officials involved
in the showing of the controverslal
Sweetish movie ''I Am Curious, YeUow"
have won a 10-week delay of their
Westmcnsler Municipal Court trial on
charges of exhibiting obscene material.
Ordered this week to appear July 28
for furtlter court action were theater
manager Harry L. Meyer of Stanton:
ndvertising agent Jules G. Landfiehi cf
Hollywood and Daniel E. Ehrhnart of
Stanton.
The thr~ men were arrested last
JJec . 22 in a raid which coincided with
Players Needed
For Valley Team
Slo-pitch softball players are needed
lo fill out a sixth team in the Fountai n
Valley Parks and Recreation Department
Bllmmer league.
Anyone interested in playing slo-pitch
Rof'lba\I can phOfle the parks department
at 962-2424, betwee11 8 •.m. and S p.m ..
weekdays.
Action starts May 26 on the Los Amigo~
Hlgh School diamond. Games will be
played Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs-
<lay evenings at 6:30 p.m.
F'f"Ottl Page l
QUESTIONS ...
was adamant about not wasting ques-
tions.
"Can you play with it?" (lne youngster
asked for the nin1h question . 'Yes,"'
was the answer.
Two little boys became ex cited , think-
ing they knew what it was. Muffled whis-
pers between them indicated it Y.'BS the
photographer's camera.
Rochelle, however, refused lo ask such
a specific qu estion.
Adults in the room were sure it was
the camera.
A vague question, designed to reveal
the camera produced a wave of shock
aro1n1d the room when everyone learned
it wasn't.
Another question. "is ii cloth or
p!a.<itlc'?" --yes.
"Docs it have a drawing on It ?" -
no. This time ruling out a p!Sstlc and
rloth cat which fell under suspicion.
By now lhe entire room was buzzing
with e~citement. \Vhispers of "what is
i!'?" spread qui ckly. A few shrewd ad-
ministrators began guessing and writing
their answers on little sheets of paper.
"Is it brown, blue, green or purple'?"
asked a voice. Yes.
Anot1ler yotmgster. narrowing the gap,
wanted to ask if it was brown .
Rochelle objected. "The question is
loo Specific," she said.
Everyone in the room slar<'<t dar!$
11t her. She backed down.
Yes, it was brown,
The 16th question -"Is it only
brown'?" -yes.
On the 17th (luest\on all teachers moved
to the edge of their chllirs.
"Is il that little brown bag'!" ask<'d
Oanlel Grant, 8, the boy who harl in-
correctly thought the camera .
A surprised photographer looked dow11
At h\!t ftf':t. Stared at his brown bag
stuffed with camera equipment.
"Ye.!I." Fifty arlults slumped back in
their chair~ stnd heaved a big sigh or
rellr:[,
TM Towry. tlit principal nf Rushard
School. looked sheepishly at the lru!ltees
11nd said faintly, "I knew th~y woold
grl 11."
"Yes, hut your hngC"rs are bltedlng,"
quipped BroWll.
'Biafran' Arrested
LA(;os. N~grrta (A r ) -Lt. roJ.
Phillip Efnon~. chler or !ltnff in BiafrR'!t
army ""ho surrenderer! lhe sece!>Sionil'll
state, h::i ' hetn arre:oilt:d by mil itary
:iuth01"itle!t in Port ~larcourt, rt.liable
sources sairl today.
11 similar descent by Newport Beach
police on the Balboa Theater in which
the same movie was confiscated. The
Halboa action will next come to court
May 29.
Stanton officers interrupted their local
screening of lhe Scandinavian bed
warmer by sending a 16-year-old boy
to the box office to apply for admission
l.o the theater. When the youth was
;illowed to go tn they follO'Wed him
an:!-booked the three alleged operators
of the emporium .
The current court action ha.s led to
;idoplion by the Stanton city council
o; an ordinance which empowers the
community to regulate the type of movies:
being shown by local !heaters.
A federal judge in Los Angeles County
rrcently issued a temporary restraining
order which prohibits any further
seizures of the film ·or further arrests
for showing the movie in that area.
Huntington Broker
Get s County Office
The appointment of David K . .Jooes,
a Huntington Beach insurance broker.
fl) the district one post of the Orange
County Municipal Water District has
been approved by the county Board of
Supe rvisors.
.Jones was named lo the four.yeJ1r
lcrm in lieu of an election inasmuch
;:is lhere were no other candidates.
i;..-•. ~
Police and student organizers estimate
2,000 people took p~t in the march
and rally held in a field near the base.
The Costa Mesa police helicopter kept
watch fron1 overhead as the marchers
walked rrom the campus to the rally
site. One observer i;aid he could see
no patrolmen in the march area.
F'ive national guardsmen Jistene<I from
bchinrl the fence surrounding the base
as four student speakers gave short
speeches on the war and the Kent State
deaths.
Costa l\.1esa police said today they
!ntercepte<I three youngsters with guns
who were heading in the direction of
the march.
Three teenage boys were stopped in
the 2900 block of Mendoza Drive, heading
in the general vicinity of the march,
at about 3 p.m. The boys told officers
lhey were looking for a place to shoot
their two rifles and pistol.
Police said they confiscated the
weapons rather Ulan have the youths
carry them into the march and rally
area.
Leaflet activities by UC Irvine student.o;;
c<1ntinued today with a Teach-in and
dialogue session scheduled to start on
campus at II a.m.
Protest spokesma n Doug Whitener
said. "We're trying to carry our dialogue
to the community." He stressed that
the public \\'as invited to the teach-in.
Swim Meet Set
For Huntington
Ten teams are poised for an In-
vitational swim meet sponso~d by the
Huntington B.each Aquatic Club at 9
a.m., Saturday; in the t.1arina Higb
School pool.
Competitors will represent teams in
the "B" class of the Orange COUJ1ty
Swim Conference which splashes into
its regular season June 6.
Members of the HuntingtCln Beach
Aquatics Club and HuntingtCla Harbour,
Sandpipers, Mission Viejo, Loi Coyotes,
Arth, Mesa Verde and Balboa Bay Club
swi m teams are set for Saturday's meet.
The public is h1 vited.
Valley Rounding Up
Kindergarten Kids
It's roond·up time in the Fountain
Valley School District.
Kindergarten registration at all of the
district's elementary schools is sch«tuled
for Monday through Friday, next week.
Parents should bring their prHChool
youngsters to the nearest school.
I
HENREDON TRANSLATES THE SUBTLE PROPORTION AND CLEAN LINE OF THE ORIENTAL INTO
AN EXCITING NEW COLLECTION FOR CONTEMPORARY HOMES-TRADE WINDS.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 Wtstdiff Dr., 642·2050
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
LAGUNA BEACH
Proft11lonal Jnttrlo,. 345 North Coait Hwy. 494-6551
D••lcn•n Avall1blo.-AID OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
,.. ... Ten PrM M:• et o,_.. C••ltf Mt.126)
. --' . . , ,
New·port Bea~h
EDITION
Today's Final
"" N.-Y. Steeks
' ---,.-.
VOL 63, NO. 110, 4 SECTIONS, -42 PAGES ORANGE ·co~~. ·CAL1FO~NIA FRIDAY, MAY' 8, 1970 TEN CENTS
Judge Ready
To In struct
LeagueJuty
A weary Superior Court jury will. toda1
take what is expected to be its la4
weekend reCtss in the ~urder trial of
Arthur. J?eWltti-J.eague, accused of~
street1.'<>rner slaying of Santa, Ana
police'mari Nelson Sasse er.
Jurors heard" testimony from the last
of a parade of· defense witnesses late
Thursday and were then told Judge
Samuel Oreiien that' they v•ill receive
their ii\structions from .his bench late
today before taking a three-day ·Weekend
break.
Final arguments from lawyers for both
5ides will wrap up the courtroom ac\ioo
Tuesday and 'the panel will then retire
to Lbe jury room for its last' act in
the lhfee.roonth trial of the iacrused
Bl~t-Panther. ,
They have tbl9ed to testimotly from
nearly 40 wl~ called by bOth sides
&ince the trial opened last. ~ch· 12.
Among them has been the 21.year..old
• eague who denied from the witness
box that he . shot and killed Sasscer
last June 4.
Chief Prosecutor Everett Dickey, for
whom this will be his last assignment
fc'\. the district attorney's office betore
la!Qng his judge's robes and a seat
<ln the Harbor Judicial District Court
bench, believes he has proved that the
Santa ,Ana Negro shqt Sassce in the
chest sbortly after the patrolman asked
League and a companion for iden-
til1cation.
It has been aheged· that the pait then
fled from t.he scene, leaving the dying
officer in the roadway feebly calling ror the help that proved to he useless.
Dickey has been assisted by Deputy
District Attorney Martin J . Heneghan
in the prosecution chore. League has
been defended by attorneys Robert Green
and Michael Gerbosi, both of whom
wert appointed by Superior Court.
Senators Delay
Approval Vote
For Mitchell
The State Senate Utls ·week delayed
the scheduled floor vote on appointment
of South Lagunan Clay N. Mitchell to
the State Board of Education because
of insufficient votes.
This was the assessment today by
an alde of Senator Alfred Alquist (D-San
Jose), who is opposing the appoinbnent
of Mitchell.
Alquist, a cahdidate for lieutenant
governor. interrogated Mitchell before
the Rules Committee recently, but
li1itchell won approval of the Rules Com·
mitte:e by a 4 to I split vote.
The Alqu ist aide said because of absent
senators the pro-11-titchell forces t'OUld
not round up the necessary 27 votes
to confirm the appointment.
However, the matter may be brought
up at any time if the votes are rounded
up.
DAILY l'ILOT Siii! l'Mll
ANTl·WAR PROTESTORS FILE THROUGH CM POST OFFICE
The M•ilb•g Headed for W•shington Was Heavier Tod•y
Newport Firm Pu1·chases
Deer Park, Wax Museum
Sale·or two Orange County family
recreation attractions, l\fovieland Wax
Museum and Palace of Living Art and
the Japanese Village and Deer Park,
both in Buena Park. wa s announced to-
day.
Purchaser is the newly organized Rec-
reation Environments Inc.. (REI) of
Newport Beach. Seller was the creator
of the at.tractions, Allen H. Parkinson of
Scottsdale. Ariz,
AnnoUl"!Cement of the sale for an un-
disclosed sum was made by Parkinson
TEACHERS' TEA~f
OKs SETTLEMENT
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -Negotiators
for striking Los Angeles teachers today
accepted a settlement propo&~ by a
federal mediator and referred 1t to the
board o( directors of the United Teachers
of Los Angeles for approval.
The proposal also was submitted to
the board of education which scheduled
a special meeting for Sunday to consider
it.
and two REI officials, E. J runes Murar
of Newport Beach, president, and Edwin
D. Ettlnger of San C1emene, cllairman
of the board.
Parkinson. who said he sold the prop-
erty. for reasons of health. first opened
the Movieland Wax Museum in 1962 and
later added the Palace of Living Art, a
collection of reproductions of famous
paintings done in three dimensions.
The Japanese Village and Deer Park
was opened in 1968. The two atractions
now boast 1.5 million visitors a year.
Murar noted that the purchase marks
the second ma jor Orange County recrea·
lion enterprjse .for R~I. The finn de·
veloped and operates Coto de Caza. a
SJIOO-acre family saddle. hunt and health
club, three miles east of the San Diego
Freeway near San Juan Capistrano.
REI has three other California recrea·
lion projects, two of them near Santa
Barbara and a third on the Sacramento
River near Redding in northern Cali-
fornia .
The firm is a new subsidiary of Great
Southwest Corporation (GSC). William
D. Ray executive vice, president of GSC.
said today that assets valued at over MO
million of the Newport-based Macco
Corporation, another GSC subsidiary,
have been transferred to REI.
DAIL1' lllLOT Slllt lllltlt
MRS. RILEY AND f,\RS. REAGAN CHAT WITH FAIRVIEW HOSPITAL SUPT. TOTO
,I ••
< • -
.--·
Coast • Ill Protest
Students Plan to Shaw War ·D·issent
By JOANNE llEYNOLIJl'I
Of a.. IMHr ...... Sltff
More peaceful demonstrations are
pla.nned this weekend along the Orange
Coast as student protesters continue to
register opposition to U.S. involvement
in Cambodia and the death of four
Kent Slate students.
In action this morning, aboul. 100
Orange Coa~t College students. organized
under the. Non-violent Strike Con1mittee,
marched on the Costa Mesa Post Office
Allen Wants
Upper Bay
Plan Panel
Firth District Supervisor Alton E. Allen
e1t.-panded Thurlday on his proposal for
a bond election to purchase Irvine Com·
pany lands in the Upper Newport Bay
area for a regional park, explaining
that the cost to county taxpayers could
be as litUe as one-fourth of the total
ta b.
Alien had proposed Tuesday that a
special committee of county department
heads study the fea sibility of acquiring
the land through a November bond elec-
tion.
Al that time he esUmaLed the cost
of the property at "about $25 million.
"A substantial portion of this cost
would be paid for b}r lhe federal aJ!d
et.ate government&, .. th~ su~ said.
Other reglol\li pal'U '.itt ibO ·. C\Mltr
are flunced under a formula of 50
percent or the funds from federal
sources, 25 percent from the state and
25 percent rrom the county, he explained.
At the $25 mUlloo flgiae for the Irvine
lands, the county tupayen share would
be only '7.5 million.
Allen 's proposal is a substitute for
the controversial. land exchange with
the Irvine Company through which the
county would receive 450 acres of lrvine-
()wned uplands and Islands for 157 acres
of county tidelands.
Final con.dderalio11 or the proposal
was deferred to May 26 as only three
supervisors were present Tuesday.
Tricia Suggests
Students Write
To Congressmen
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tricia Nixon
thin ks antiwar students should write their
congressmen rather than close down col·
leges as a form of protest, say two
young women who visited her in the
White House ..
Jn an hour-long meeting Thursday with
two Finch College, N.Y., students Miss
Nixon "suggested we write to con·
gressmen and senators and tell them
how we felt ," reported Ann Holmes,
20.
"\\le told her we've been doing that
for five years," Miss Holmes said. And
one senator wrote back a scathing letter,
ending It "Thank you for your attitude."
Miss Holmes and Missy Allen. 22.
are both juniors at the uclusive New
York City school where Tricia herself
graduated. The two students were among
some 100 Finch girls taking part in
an antiwar demonstraUon across the
stretl from the White House Thursday.
Nancy Reagan
Sees Old Friend;
Tours Fair view
• A Costa Mesa woman today renewed
a 20-year friendsh ip.. with California's
first lady. 1'he meeting took place at
Fairview State HMpital:
Mrs. Nancy Reagan was prompted to
visit the hmipital In a recent letter (rom .
her friend Mrs. Bridget Riley, studenL
aL Golden West College training to be a
psychiatric technician. Some ol her clu-
ses are taken at the itate: hospital.
Mrs. Riley and Mn. Morgan were both
young actresses at MGM twenty years
ago and have corresponded ever sinct.
Fok>wing a brief chat with lhe hospl-
t1ill 's superintendent Dr. Anthony Toto,
on an extensive tour of the facillt)'.
Y.'hlle on the tour Mrs. Riley •Jimltted
that fltrs. Reagan made mor,e of. her
jcar1 at MG1.t thon she did. "She wa, a
star and J only had bit pans,~ Mra. Riley
laughed. •
\ ,
with more than 400 Individual letters
addrused lo Cllllll1<Slme!1 and the Pres!·
dent .
Tlje group ol about 100 sludenls leU
the OCC campus al 10 a.m. far the
Adams Slreet pcm office bulldlttg, car·
rying placards denouncing the war in
Cambodia and the deaths of four Kent
State University students.
Bob Jennison, an OCC 1tudeot, stated
that the purpose of the mail·in was
to impress the community with the con-
Newport Shores
cern of 'the college students.
"By delivering these Jettm one by
one, people can see that we all have
an individual concern in thts matter.•
Studen ts formed a single line ahd
marehed through the post office building,
dropping off a letter before moving on.
to pick up another. As each Jetter was
dropped, the students shouted out the
number. Other students stood outside
Uie building chanting, "Power to the
!See PROTEST, Page ll
Oil, Gas Rights
Bid at City Hall
A letter requesting oil and gas leue
rights beneath the Newport Shores
residential area was received at Newport
Beach city hall Thursday.
The letter writer, Halltead M. Pem·
b~oke, or Ontario, aald he is prepared
t6 submit aa appllcatlo11 fee and appear
before the city council bu~ he did not
say why he wants the oil rights.
Pembroke could not be ruched for
Newport's CofC
Women Oppose
-Coast Freeway
Tht 12 women who fOl'rft the board
of director• ot lhe Womtn'a Dlvtelon
of the Newport Harbor Chao!her of Com·
merce are unanimous Jn theft oppoaltJon
to Pacific Coast Freeway.
But after determining that Wednesday
they voted not to recommend lO the
men's chamber of commerct, but only
to let them know their feelings by a
resolulioo.
"We are the Adam's rib' or the main
chamber and we are .not goi ng to do
anything In direct opposition ," said Mrs.
Nona Hoffman, president ot the Women '•
Divis'ion. ·
The resolution will follow a vote of
the Women's Divi.sion general mem·
bership at a luncheon May rr. Mrs.
Jloffman said she Is certain the women
will vote to delete the portion or the
Pacific .Coast 'Freeway through Newport
Beach.
Buoyed by the unanimous vote of the
women directors, she aaid, . "Women's
intuition says, 'this ~pld not be.'
Women have the strength ol their con-
victions, to be adamant."
But the women dlrectori& want to be
careful not to irritate the men and
hence they will make no r~om·
mendation, even If th~ vote goes e:
Mrs. lloffman says It will.
"We are no longer second class
citizens, but I feel women are playing
thei r best role in a supporting role
to men," she said.
The board of directors of the men's
chamber three weeks ago passed a
resoluUon saying they agree with Ule
Newport Beiich City Ccuncil It ls time
to study design alternatives along the
adopted roule.
Dropped from their resolution was a
statement U!al the freewa.y ls needed.
Mrs. Hoffman said the men's stand
was not very deci.slYe and · perhaps the
women can help them make up their
minds by lettinl the men know how
women feel, but they are not going
to recommend to the men what to do.
Newpart Woman
First in Race
Newport resident Mrs. Mara K. Culp
and a mot.her of nine from 11ltnois have
tied for first In the Angel Dtrby •lr
race.
In the resulls · annoohcod Tbursdat.
officials of the aU-woman Toronto to'
Nassau race Mid Mrs. .Culp Ued wlU'I
Mrs. Marion Jaynf: of Palatine, 01. The
two women covered the 1,700 mlle course
at an average of. 210 miles per hoUr
in Piper Twin-Comanche · PtUJs. They
will split the: $2:,000 prl%e money,
Mrs. Culp. 28, of 2157 Vllta Entrada,
Is· a charter pJlot for Mertln Aviation.
One ol the top women r,nots tn· ·ttie
~ountry, 5he wu th~ ·w mier of the
1969 Powder Puff Detb)'. Mrs. Culp Is
one or Lhe few women in &he na~
to qualify as a pylon' racer.
•
comment today as he was in Superior
Court in an apparently related action.
Pembroke holds the oil and gas le111se
rights to land beneath Beach and Bay
Trailer Park, 7204 W. Coast Highway,
owned by Mrs. Mamie Hunt.
The court case Involves a suit for
trespass, Beeco Ltd. versus Hunt and
Pembroke, and a cross complaint, Pem-
broke versu! Banning (Hancock Barullng
Ill, pruident of Beecol.
At issue ia Mrs. Hunt e1]>8ndll'lg her
property by fillin& into the Santa Ana
River channel arta which Beeco claimt
II owos UUo lo.
JtOw this Hes bito Pembroke's desi rt
to apand his oil and gas ·Use rights
beneath Newport Shores homes is not
known.
N.,fpon Beach Clly Attomey Tully
Seymour said it appean to him lo be
j ''IOrrie move in a che!s game lo ac-
complish some end or which I am not
aware."
Mrs. Hunt just chuckled and said she
would leave it to the reporter to find
out.
Newport Shores Iles within the city
limits and it would require an amend·
ment to the city charter by Newport
voters (or oil or other minerals to be
extracted from beneath city territory.
Oeanup Weekend
Plannoo for CdM
The Corona del Mar Chamber of Com-
roerce is sponsoring a cleanup weekend
for the Corona del Mar area Saturday and
Sunday, May 23 and 24.
The idea is to !pring clean basements,
garages, awes, gardens and alley1.
. The . city trash collection crews· will
take large Items left at curbside such as
old fumitµre· or appliances. No dirt or
biiilding rriaterials will be accepted and
lte111B must be accessible and easily
handled -cuttings sod papers should
be Ued. in bundles and loose Junk put in
containers.
STOCK MARKET
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
drifted downward Jn slow trading this afternoon as tridtrs turned their atten-
tion to antiwar demonstration.! and tlst-
fights ·in Wall Slrttt. See quotations,
Pages 20 -21).
Ol'lllllfe Coast·
Weather
You may be able to ouUleep the
coastal cloudineu ·over Ole wttk·
end, and from then on It'll be a
nice day with fai·r Skies and temp-
erat~ ip the temperate 60's .
INSWE TODAY
' Thty'U be his.ring the vi llain
a11d cl1eering the hero Saturday
night at Nt1Dp<tr1 Harbor lllgh
Sclioot when an oJd timt' melo-
drama Qots on stage foi char·
ittl. DetoUs in 'todap'.r Week-
exder.
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llttt ~ ... fl T1lrthlloll M
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I ~------------------------------. ----
.. -~ .. ,. 't-DAil Y PILOT
. -·:. -. .
• •
' •
' -! "
•
•
· ·Pilot Fii1d s Only Way
' . (.
;<::ro Fly at Laker Game
By PATRICK O'DONNELL
..,. OrlM OallW l'lltt 11111
~. , WHAT 00 AIRLINE pilots and press photographers have in common?
... ~'ell. 1·ve nfver seen a newspaper photog flying a jet, but Wednesday night
.~it the Laker game I turnet:I lo the photographer beside me and asked who he
,_ .;was working for.
"Western Airlines." ht repl~d . Looking a little puzzled t wondered
aloud why a photog was working the NBA play.offs for Western Airlines.
~' ··No, I'm a pilot," he said, "and this is the best seat
in the place. The one I bought is way up on top and l
can't see a thing."
* * * T asked how he got a pau to be under the basket.
To my surprise, he said he didn 't have one.
:. ,-It seems that several months ago he was talking to
• an usher near the Laker basket during the warm up period
and when the game started, he set down. The usher check-
ed all the other photogs, but didn't chtck him. Since then,
he's been attending Laker games regularly and he al-
ways brings a camera.
lie must be .one .. of the best known photogs at the Forum because he Is
never checked ror JITOper identification.
\Vhat's more, he is learning a lot about his adopted prafession because
!he photographers from lhe wire services and daily newspapers talk about
their work during the intermissions and this is rubbing orr on my pilot friend.
* * * BUT NEXT -YEAR. if he doe!in't want to get caught, I'll offer ottt piece
fir advice. Of lhe 30 or so press photographers at the Forum I noticed he wa~
the only one carrying a transistor radio. He had it plugged into his ear and
)le would report to the rest of us what Chicle Hearn was saying. Somehow, I
• jjllJJk this makes him stand out in the crowd.
~ But, being an airline pilot, he travels to many cities and there are 13
other NBA teams in the league. What about the ABA and professional foot·
~ball? A whole world is open to him .
;:' One thing bothers me though. Where could a photog find a pilot'• unl-
•lorm if he wanted to catch a free flight someplace. Aw, it wouldn't work -or
~ lwould It? -.
CAL SCHAEFER, 3, GETS INTO THE SWIM
Pool Proofing at the Harbor Area 8oy1 ChJb
Wiscons in University
President Quits J oh
MADISON, Wis. (UPI) -University
of Wisco11sln President Fred Harvey Har·
rington announced his resignation today
11s the 35,000-studenl campus remained
9nder siege from youtru protesting the
:enerision of the war !n Indochin a, The
·1 ·g.,alion ls effertive Oct. 1.
•· ':may be unfortunate to announce
~ f ~his time," Harringt.on said, '"but
,.. ~ eems best. Vle are in a serious
crisis and J .am not running away from
It. This is not abandonment. I will remai n
as president in all respects until Oct
J."
.. '\
,.~ DAILY PILOT
.,. C~AlrlGE COAST PUl~IN(i. COM,.AN'f
Robetl N, Weed
f'tU'<IMI •lld Publl$"d'
Ed!IOf'
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7~0..,.1 A. Mu•p~;~,
M•,...ll"I Ed•l<lr
1\o"'-•• Forlu"' ••
N_,..-t a..cll Offlt•
2!11 Wtrf l•lba1 Boule•1rtl
M11lh11 Aidt111: ,._o, le1 117S, t266l
01 .. r Offk"
't•'-M-: l• Wut IU'I Strert
L. .. -Bt•tl': m For''' ..,....,,.. 1-<.,11!1flll0fl lfKll: 1'17S lttcll lolil"'lfd
St" Clemmlt; J0$ lil)t!~ £1 (11111,,. ll:MI J
'
Summer Swim
Program Slated
The Boy's Club of t.ht Harbor Area
is offering a i;ummer swimming and
pool proofing program for youngsters
nine months and oldtr.
The classes,, which are optn to boys
and girls. are being held from 9 a.m.
to 2 p.m. during the weekdays, according
lo Boy's Club Officials .
For registraUon information, call 543-
9387 or vi1it the ~lub at 594 Center
Stret"t, C.OSta f\1esa. New classes begin
fvery tw.o weeks.
Candy Drive Set
By Harbor Youth
Newport Harbor high school student'
w\IJ be selling candy throughout. Newport
Beach until May 18 in a driYe to raise
$3,500 for a new school public addres1
system.
Candy will be sold door-to.door for $1
a box. Senior Jack Heiser, chairman of
ihe candy sale, said orders may be placed
by call ing the school and candy will be
clrlivered.
The student Executive Council has ar-
ranged for prize!> for the students selling
the most bozes of candy. A Suzuki motor·
cycle has been donated by James Lid.
of Newport Beach and a television set
and a stereo tape player have bttn d~
nated by Dlvls·Brown Company of Costa
Mesa.
Nixon Faces Protest;
Communication Tried
WASHINGTON ( APl -Prt1idfnt Nix·
nn, facing plans for a massive antiwar
rally, moved today to open better chan-
nels or communication with college
students and other!!: protestlnt the
Southea1t Mia conflid.
lfe arranaed to have ltlgh government
cfricials available for Inform at in n
cliscuulons with the proteswrs Friday
;ind Saturda,. He 11'0 announced ap.
pointmen1 o Chancellor G. Alex•nder
Heard of V1nderbtlt University a! hls
iptcial adviiitr to keep him posted on
iludent thinking.
•
• . • .. .. f
DAILY PILOT lllff Pl>Ot•
Cuban Exil"
Blames ed s
For Prot st s
Black and youth revolt in the United
States is the work of Communist Cuba,
Cuban exile Jose Norman told members
nf the Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club
Thursday.
"l would like to lell you dear friend~
there is nothing spontaneous going on
in this country," he said. "It is
1horooghly organized. Castro's Cuba is
the training ground, directed and financ-
ed by the Kremlin."
He said Castro has a definite hand
In the turmoil in this country and tha t
the U.S. government is aware of it,
but the public is not because "un·
fortunately, the news media does not
see fit to print it."
No time was allowed for Kiwanis mem·
hers to question Norman publically al
the end of the program .
Norman, an English·born rancher In
Cuba who was imprisoned by Fidel
Castro and escaped, work1 for the Free
Enterprise Speakers Bureau of a savings
and Joan associaHon.
ALLISON BIXBY, 6, GETS PREVIEW OF FIRE SERVICE DAY IN NEWPORT BEACH
Engineer Ray Pend leton of Irvine Avenue St•tion Plays Hos t to Early Visitor
Norman said his wife learned from
111 high·leveJ Cuban gove rnment official
that Castro said in a secret strategy
meeting, '"First Cuba , then the United
States."
Bar's Bid for Live Music City's Firemen
Set Open House,
Demonstration
He· said the United States the last
two or three years has been reliving
what happened before Castro took over
Cuba. "The words -freedom cl speech,
police brutality, imperialism -we've
heard them before,'' he said. Turned Off by Planners "The next step is !'{) split religion
and we are beginning kl see that in
the United States. And• the final one
they do is smear the Anny."
A request to permlt live musical en·
tertainment for dancing in The Gallery
b3J', 810 E . Balboa Blvd., Balboa, was
turned do\Vfl 4-3 by Newport Beach plan·
No Rock Bands
In Pier Park,
Sa ys Hurlhu11
Requests of the "Free Us" youth group
for use of Balboa Pier Park for Sunday
rOl"J.: concerts have been recommended
for denial by Newport Beach City
Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt.
Hurlburt will ask the city council Mon·
day to sustain his denials .
Hurlburt said he disapproves of the
park µse for Sunday rock concerts for
tW'O reasons. The Newport municipal code
prohibit! sound amplification on Sundays.
Also. the park has been "a popular
family recreation attraction for many
ye1rs" and to grant "continued usage
fl) one single group would appear to
be against general public .il"!terest."
TwG applications have been submitted.
Nick Licari filed fur sound amplifying
permit for a concert from 2 to 6 p.m.
every Sunday. Barry Weinberg filed a
~pecial event application asking for roc k
band concerts from noon to S p.m.
(In May 17, 24 and 31. Weinberg listed
a'.'> the sponsoring group the "Laguna
.Free University."
Hurlburt, in his recommendation to
the city 'council, said either "Free Us"
or the "Laguna free University" can
apply for a one-day concert Oil Sunday
without use of amplifying equipment.
From Page l
PROTEST . • •
people, let's stop the war ."
The students walkt'cl back to the OCC
campus after I.he hour long mail-in.
Today's post office demonstration wa1;
nrderly as was Thursday·~ march from
Orange Coast College's Costa MC!~a earn·
pus to the Costa Mesa Ai r National
Guard B:ase.
Police and student organizers estima te
2,000 people took pv,rt in the march
;ind rally h.eld in a field near the base.
The Costa Mesa police helicopter kept
watch from overhead as the marchers
walked lrom the campus· to the rally
site. Oqe observer said he could see
no patrolmen in the march area.
Five national guardsmen listened from
behind the fence surrounding the base
as four student speakers gave short
~peeches on the ·war and ~he Kent Stale
dc<'lth~-
Costa f\1cs<'I police ~aid lod<'ly they
intercepted three youngsters with guns
who were heading in the direction of
the march.
Three teenage boys were stopped in
the 2900 block of Mendoza Drive, he ading
in the general vicinity of the march,
at about ,3 p.m. The boys told office rs
they were looking for a place to shoot
their two rifles and pistol.
Police said they confiscated the
weapons rather than have the youths
carry them into the march and rally
area.
Leaflet activities by UC Irvine students
continued today with a Teach·in and
dialogue session scheduled to start on
campus at 11 a.m.
Protest spokesm11n Doug Whitener
~aid. "We're trying to carry our di11Jo11ue
In the community ." l~e stressed that
the public was invited to the teach-in.
Another meeting was set for 7:30
o'clock tonight at UCl's GatrowAy Com.
mons. Whllent'r said the meeting would
be held to get a consensus for weektnd
activities.
By this morning. the only acth.-ity
planned for Saturday was a rock concert
at Gal Stale Fullerton.
' ' '
ning commissioners Thursday night.
Bar operator Hermann Figge will con·
tinue with dancing to recorded music.
Figge had a faYorable recommendation
from the city planning staff but a ma·
jority or planning commissioners felt
live music would be too loud for
neighbors. Nearby residents ·did not ap·
pear at the meeting .
In other action, p I an n in g com·
mi ssioners :
·-Unanimously approved a request of
Open End Theatre Workshop, 2815 Villa
Way, to sell beer during performances.
-Held over until their May 21 meeting
a request by Harry Alcxon to waive
off.street parking requirements and serve
alcoholic beverages in a restaurant to
be opened in a former hardware store
at 100 Main St., Balboa, All'!xon has
asked for the continuance in a Jetter.
-Al so held over tv•o weeks a request
of Centinela Bank for drive-through.
television banking at 3333 W. Coast
Highway. The planning department had
recommended against the requa'.St and
a bank spokesman said he would come
back with a revised plan.
-Routinely approved a re1ubdivision
of the Irvine Company's Newport Center
property so a city fire station can be
built. City cotmcilmen will be asked
Monday night to approve in principle
schematic drawings for the fire station
and a budget estimate of $310,000.
Newort Beach clty firemen will hold
open house from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m.
Saturday, which is Fire Service Recogni-
tion Day.
Newport residents are invited to met't
the men who protect their lives and
property, see demonstration of equir-
ment. and have their questions answered.
Children will be encouraged to cli.mb
<1n fire engines and wear a fireman's
hat. says Deputy Cbief Leo Love.
Handout material on fire prevention
will be available and parents will be
instructed in what to tell a baby sitter
to do in case of fire.
There will be no interruplion in the
city's 24·hour fire protection service dur·
ing the open house.
Newport fire stations are located at
1348 Irvine Ave. in the Westcliff area,
410 Marigold Ave. in Corona de! Mar,
323 Marine Ave . on Balboa Island, 110
E. Balboa Blvd. in Balboa, and 475
32nd St. near city hall.
'Biafra n · Arrested
LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) -Lt. Col.
Phillip Effiong, chief of staff ln Biafra'11
army who surrendered the secessionist
state, has been arrested by military
authorities in Port Harcourt, reliable
sources said today.
Reports from Owerri said the 44-year·
old officer has not returned to his home
at Emekuku, 1lx miles north of Owerri,
for at least thr ee weeks.
Nonnan said he is accused of "belong-
ing to that extreme right.est group, I'm
not giving my political affiliation," he
said . "Just lhe facts."
Art, Musi c Fest
Set For Newport
An arts festival and band concert will
be held Sunday, May 17, on the lawn
in front oI Newport Beach city hall.
Art work by Newport residents will
be on display from I p.m. until S p.m.,
'"ith Newporj. Harbor and Corona del
1"11ar High School bands alternately
performing a continuous outdoor concert.'
The arts festival, held also last year.
will be sponsored by the Newport Beach
City Arts Committee.
Any Newport Beach resident 11 years
old or over is eligible to enter art
111ork. The entry fee is $1 with a max-
imum of three entries per artist. Entry
blanks are available at city hall and
the city libraries.
The art work will be juried by Clayton
Garrison, dean of Fine Arts at UC
Irvine: Paul Darrow. chairman of thf!
Art Department at Scripps College, and
painter Aline ThisUethwaite. Twenty to
2:i paintings will be selecled for display
in city hall from the festival until June
3~. Three top paintinis will be chosen
for merit awards.
HENREDON TRANSLATES THE suanE PROPORTION. AND CLEAN LINE OF THE ORIENTAL INTO
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•
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F'rlday, May 8, 1970 DAil Y Pll_y
Nixon Goes . on TV ' R 'efu11elf Combat
Hopes to Cal,m Student Protests ·Army May Try 5 Gls
WASHINGTON (AP)
With thousands of antiwar
protestc'I 'beading fl?r a bur·
rledly called demonstration in
the netlon's capital, President
Nixon bu moved to ease tbe
crisis mounting over the use
of Amerletn troopo in Cam·
bodia.
The President scheduled a
news conference tonight at 7
p.m. (PDT) -his first na·
tionally televised sesSion with
newsmen since Jan. 30 -en
the eve of a demonstration
here expected to draw tens
of thousands of protesters.
Even as the President
prepared for the news con·
ference at his Maryland
mountain retreat Thursday
night and today, demonstra.
tors wtte evident oin Washing·
too-on Capitol Hill, near the
White House and cn co1lege
campuses.
'
Nixon is expected to take
a conciliatory approach to the
dem~aton, moo\ty yOW1g
people, following the stance
he adopted Thursday when he
told several college a n d
university presidents Uie ad·
ministration would soften its
hostile tooe toward t h e
dissidents.
Calls went out for the Satur·
day protest after Nixon an-
nounced a week ago that a
joint U.S.-south Vietnamese
attack had beeo mounted into
Cambodia.
Spurred by the deaths Mon-
day of four students when
Ohio Nat Jon a l Guardsmen
·opened fire on demonstrators
at Kent State University. pro-
tests have swept many college
. campuses, often resulting in
violence and student strikes.
Leaders of the Saturday
demonstration have talked in
A Royal Fatt
Princess Margaret is welcomed by Frank Sinatra
on her etrival at London's Royal Festival Ha!I. She
attended the first of two charity concerts given by
Sinatra to ·aid the National Society for the Preven-
tion of Cruelty to Children.
terms of up to 35,000 persons
for a protest in Lafayette
Square just acz'oss the street_
from the Whlte House,
allhougb officials say the
cpssentm will nol be allowed
that close. lt was not known
whether the President will be
in Washington during the
demonstralion.
Other reports estimate the
crowd at close to 100,000
persons, posing a problem for
bolh government officials and
prote.st leaders planning steps
for controlling the
, demonstration.
The rally leaders held crash
training programs (or
marshals to keep t h e
demonstration within its
.stated OOnviolent goal. while
the 2,00l).man District of
Columbia National Guard was
being prepared along with
Washington police.
There were indications U.S.
officials were leaning toward
relying on local authority and
the National Guard available
in the Washi ngt on are a
without drawing paratroopers
and Marines from oUier bases.
Officials said w ha t e v e r
military force is gathered pro-
bably will be kept as much
out of sight as possible unless
troubles develop requiring its
use.
The touchiest p r ob I e m
revolves around the dispute
over the demonstration site.
Officials, saying the two-block
Lafayette Square is too c106e
to the White House for safety,
bave ordered the park to be
cordoned off, creating: a
demilitarized zom-like area a
block north of the executi ve
mansion .
Protest organizers had of-
ferecl Thursday night to com·
promise, giving up -t h e
Lafa yette area in exchange
for the Ellipse south of the
White House. But the govern·
ment !'laid this abo was too
close and would be cordoned
off.
Earlier. the Justice Depart.
ment had offered use of the
Washington Monument
grounds several blocks from
the mansion, but t h e
demonstration leaders turned
down that site. .
~ ,;:p ......
. U~I Te~·
DEMONSTRATION A REAL DRAG
P.ollce Remove Glrl at Ne.w. York Prot•1t
227 Colleges Cl.osed
A s Protest Widens
'By The ASSOCIATED PRE.SS
Some 227 colleges a n d
universities were closed today
in the wjdening protest against
the war in Indochina and the
fatal shooting of four students
at Kent State University.
Strikes and demonstrations
curtailed clas.o;ies at hWldreds
of others.
In Washington, the vanguard
of thousands or students ex·
pect.ed to participate in cin
antiwar rally Saturday began
arriving from throughout the
country.
Most of the oompuses re·
maincd peacetul but violence
flared overnight at several
schools.
At least foor youths at the .
State University at Buffalo
were hit by birdshot fired dur-
ing a poli~udent con·
frontation. It was not im-
mediately determined who
fired the pellef.!I.
The incident came as about
60 city police and 400 students
clashed in a tear gas and
rock-tJlr(lwing melec. Two of
the injured students were
treated at a n1akeshift in·
firmary.
National Guardsmen S n
Carbondale, JU., hurled tear
gas and advanced with fixed
bayonets to rout large bands
of students at 'Southern Illinois:
University.
They scattered some 300
demonstrators from th e
Illinois Central Railroad
1 racks where they had delayed
the Panama Limited
streamliner, New Orleans-
bound from Chicago. for SO
minutes.
The fleeing students smash·
ed ckizens of store windows
as they ran. They were the
nucleus ot somi 1,200 pro-
testers who earlier sat down
in the intersection of U.S. Sl
and Illinois 13 in the downtown
section.
Dissident students at the
University of Wlscomin clash-
ed with Madison police for
the fourth. consecutive night.
PLEl l>JERENG, Vietnam
{AP) -The Anny said today
Jt is considerin& court-martial
pioceedings against f i v e
Amercan soldiers who refused
to make a combat assault
into c.ambodia.
The five Gts are members
of the 3rd Battalion, 3th Infan-
try, 4th Division, an outfit
that encountered h e a v y
resistance as it was flown
into a Cambodian landin' zone
aurround e d by well
camouflaged enemy positions
two days ago.
Five helicopters were down-
ed by enemy fire. a company
commander was killecl on the
ground and four soldiers were
wounded. Other trooircarrying
helicopters were forced back
by the intense fire.
Informed sou rces said the
five men balked as they were
about to board heJicopters for
an assault into the .same lan·
ding zone the next day.
* * * I Buy ing Time
In, Ca1nbodia
NEW YORK (UPI) -Herb
Klein says President Nixon's
order of U.S. troops into Cam·
bodia is not designed to kHI
enemy soldiers 50 much as
it is to wipe out permanent
positions and important war
materiels.
Klein also said the move
was desig ned to buy the U.S.
time to increase South v·iet-
namese strength. to increase
the pace of peace tal ks in
Paris, and to facilitale the
withdrawal or American
troops from Vietna1n.
The Pres ident's com-
munications direct.or 6 aid
Thursday he realized the Viet
Cong would return to the area
once the Americans had left,
but that was the reason for'
destruction of the
emplacements .and equipment,
Klein explained.
Klein made his remarks
Thursdy night on ABC-TV's
"D!clc Cavelt Show."
D'ISCRIMINATING
INVESTORS
AT
Look For:
Stability end AvailabilJty of Principal. Max-
imum Dependable Earnings. Ease of Trans-
actions.
And Find:
Accounts Insured to $20,000.00 Reserves
sufficient to assure continuance of maxi-
mum permissible earnings. A location as
close as your mail box.
1000 FAIR OAKS AVENUE
SOUTH PASADENA, CALIF. 91030
Area Code 213
799-4143
5%
CUITIDt AllRUll
PH&looJlhll
Area Code 213
682-1131
•
Stock in F.H.L.B .••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••
U .S. Government Bonds .•.••. -• -•••.•.••••.••.•• :~:::: Other lnvestment Securities .: •••••••••••••••.•.•
i:!~i~~ Cash on Hand and in Banks ..••....••••.... · .•••. ,
Office Bui}djng, Land and Equipn1enl.-L~s Depre-
134,203.01
715,000.00
3,498,707.88
789,714.41
570,354.47
ciation......................................... 1,427,964.35
Secondary Reserve for }~cderal Savings and Loan
Insurance Corporation., ••• -•••••• ,, •••••••• ·.,... 734,588.70
Other Assets .......... -• • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • •• 507.88
'Total •• , ••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••.. $71,6691175.33
LIAB ILITIES Savings Accounts .••.•..•.••.••.....••..•.....•• $60,593,893.86
Advances from F.H.1..B ••••••••••••••••••• , •• • • • • 3,048,000.00
Other Borrowed Money .......................... NONE
J.oans in Process................................ 236,972.50
lj~]1~ Other Liabilities ••••••• -• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 177 ,915.51
• ... Deferred Income •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -, • • 7 388 32
::;,:::; ~ific Reserves ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,, 7'2•0'•5 .;,'..'.':~·' 6,146',oa'6·.'12 . . en er al Reserves ••• _, .•.••••••••••••• , •••••••• , •
::~:::: Reserve for Contingencies • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • 19 t 259 00 ~;~*: Surplus ........................................ 1,260:469:57
11::;: To:;~~·~~~~t~itR~·~~~·~~;,%1,669,17533 ,,.
::;:-::; MEMBER FEDERAL SAVINGS AND ~J ~~~~*:~.:·:·:::·::::.:-=,.~:~:::::::::::::::::::~.g;.~:;.~~EM:~~fo:::~9::~NM:t~R:~::':!::~~:::!::x:::::::::::::::::~:::~~ :.·:·:-. :.<:~i::::!::::(~:=:=:~:::::x:.;;x:;::::::.::::::::::::::::: .. :::::.:;-:::::;::::::::::::::~::.::.::~:x:=x::::::::::.::::m:::::;:::.::...:::: •. :.x::::::::::::.::::::::::::::::::..:::::-:;x
I
, I
Senior officers "·~e unable
to convince the men 1to change
their minds. \
an allied camp in the C.entral
Highlands near the Cambodian
border.
"You know how it ls," one
officer said later. "It get,,
time to go into action, and
some kids get scared, i'nd
suddenly you have a bunch
of guys who claim they ire
COs" -omscientious ob-
One of the. ,men looked up
from his work. gr!Med and
Oa.sbed the "V" for J>M."11
slgn with two. fingers fl._Y'~
newsman was escorted ~
the camp. •
jectors.
A 4th Divfsioo spokesman,
C11pt. llernard f. M_allett .•
refused to idenlify the five
men until completion of an
Article 32 investigation, the
military equivalent oC a grand
jury proceeding.
The Army prevented a
correspondent f r om in·
PUT SOME
CLOTHES ON
MOTHER
terviewlng the men Friday, THINK although one of them had sent
\11ord he wanted to "tell his
story to the world."
"You have no business In
here, and I don't want you
talking to my men." a bat-
talion staff officer srud after
the men were located digging
··~· ..
trenches and stringing barbed w111cutt ,i.u N••"""' ~
wire at the battalion's rear
headquarters at Plei Djereng,
---Delicious Oven-Ready
M::·~lth SPECIAL thru •.
May 12lfl , ,
Boneless Cornish Game Hen
stuffed with applesauce and almonds
or rice and mushrooms
' Special Pack 6 Hens To A Box
'
89' ... h
----FREE----.:•i•
'•ckq• of 1'or• lll'otuvN• with this ff _
"
Fresh Ranch Eggs ••. 49¢ dos.
Fresh Mushrooms 59¢ 1/z lb.
. ..
" " ..
' .. . ..
.
'
.·
'
L
• DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Promontory
The I rvine Company has been before Newport
Bea<"h city government 1nany times with plans for
housing developments. But their proposed Promontory
Bay plan is a horse of a different color.
The difference is that Jrvine Company wants to
terminate a major thoroughfare r-11 .~cars-per~ay
Bayside Drive -and reroute traffic. The proposed
development is in the crook of Bayside Drive as it
swlngs· from Coast Highw ay near the riverboat restaur ..
ant toward Balboa Island.
To develop a lagoon ringed by waterfront homes
and yacht slips it is. necessary to cut a channel through
the present road,vay. A hi gh-level bridge appears out oC
the question.
The plan is for old Bayside Urive to become a dead-
end \\•ith a ne\V Bayside Drive constructed along the
foot of the bluff to handle through traffic. But that
would leave the six Balboa Yacht Basin businesses on
city-lease property isolated on the old Bayside Drive.
And therein lies the rub.
The bu sinesses undoubtedly would suffer some from
loss of drive-by traffic that might see their signs anfl
turn in. Jt seems probable courts would decree some
severance damages.
The Irvine Company representative told the Ne"'-
port Beach City Council the company would not pay
severance damages. Whereupon city councilmen called
Jor more study.
Real estate Bf>praiser Cedric White says the market
value of the entire city..owned property wouJd be in·
creased by the Promontory development because it
wouJd create more exclusiveness for Beacon Bay
homes. Losses by the businesses in drive-in trade
!hould be nominal by comparison, he says.
City councilmen need to satisfy themselves on this
Woodsheds
A re Difficult
' To Find Now
-'-"' -. . ... '
One of the advantage.s or being a
parent today is that there is more scien-
tific iaformatlon available on early
childhood development thu ever before
in history, The young mother who reads
should be able to approach her first
born with the wisdom and relaxation
you formerly h~d &o have five children
to acquire.
Many theories about children have held
i\vay at one time or another. First,
there is the theoo
logical belief which
tells us that babies
come 10 us full of
Original Sin. They
are inhabited by
nature with wills
that have to be brok-
Pn, so that the task
of bringing up a
child is to exercise
or subdue the devil
within him, We
don't quile succeed!
Then there is a less theologies) idea
aboul children -that they are formless
clay. They just aren't anything at all
ttntil we shape them in some way or
other by the molding we give them-by
wise counsel and proper restraints and
advice. and so en. Alld if you don't
1..eep al il constantly, they go out cf
~hape.
UNDER THE IMPACT of psychologica1
behaviorism there arose stiU another
nolioo that the basic idea in bringing
up children is co11ditioning-lhat the child
should be favorably conditioned to good
habits and against bad habits, and that
t)1e conditioning must. be started very
early. This body of doctrine led to the
fashion which ra'ged some 30 or more
)·ears ago of extremely early toil et
training and rigid :scheduling. Babies
would cry their hearts out, but if, ac·
cording to the schedule, it wasft'l tinte
to feed them, you had to let them cry.
Tile likes and di slik es 'vhich the child
was to carry through lifr wei:e red
into him as if he were being programmed
like a computer.
Each of these theories represents the
tffort of people lo develop Uteir children
according to the models of human nature
which they have inside their heads. But
each of the1n can ~lso be described
as an activist theory, in the sense that
lhe aclive doing of something to the
child i,; felt to be necessary if the child
is to crow up into an acceptable citizen
and taxpayer.
,Quotes
tmng Bowe, professor of J;nglbJ' at
the City Unlvenlty eC NC"w '"ork and
edit« of Dissent, a socialist jnul'l!al:
''The life of the political terrorist is
overwhelmed by loneliness. not merely
because be ca• no longer trust com ·
ple:tely friend · pr comrade, but bccau!>e
he cuill himself o(f !rom all movf'me.n1 :\
and communiUes ii which choices can
bt weighed.
"Slakinf everything on th<' <}C'1 . lie
blocks of all lhat comes before It nnd
an that comes after. Deciding ~·hont
to 1mlte, he repl.a cts God. C.'hoos:ing
'l:.'hom lo punish, he replaces the Justice
1bt it good or bad I of society.
•· Anri since the conflicts of ~at
clasxs must be be11tl to his \''ill, he
replacea history, too . The terrorist car-
ries a moral burden only saints or
f.anat.ics would undertake -worst of
AU, f1n1Ucs mi.a:latlna l.bemselvu for
ulnt&.'·
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Here we go again, with another
revival of that continuing soap
opera. "FIGHTING FREEWAYS.
FOR FUN AND PROFIT" -fea-
turing mom of the original cast of
characters!
-N. H. ~L
Tl\lt ..... ,. ""'*"' .....,.... ...... ...
--t11Y ......... "'' _."'· S.11411
""1l' ...i _.,,. tt •lllMl1' •111o Oii"' Plllt.
MY LA TE BELOVED mother-in-law
was certainly an activist in this se11se.
She could never talk to her grandchildre n
without somehow inculcating a leMOn
of some kind. She was unfailingl y in.
structive, as il she feared that if you
Jet them do something unmauerly or
naughty on~. they would conUnue to
do it for the rest of their Jives.
Sometimes Jn the spirit of play I
would violate good manners. I am used
my children very much once by taking
a great mound of jello and slurping
jt dowa in one slurp. The children were
enomou!lly impressed with father fo~
being able to do this. But the example
l was setting them wOJTied my mother-
in-law very mu ch. She kept saying, ''Sup-
pose the children do that at the St.
Francis hotel!" I said, "Good gosh,
they've got more sense than that!"
This idea that you always have to
be setting an example or layiag down
a rule is a very burden.some way of
looking at communicatioJI with children.
NEWER THEORIES of child rearing,
mistakenly referred to as "permissive,"
are in part a reaction against activist
theories and in part are the result of
serious scientific research. Pioneers ht
the study of child development have
tried in variou!I ways to determine the
natural Jaws of childhood growth, "ki•g
questions Jike: "When do they wake?
When do they sleep? Eat? Cry? At
what agr. do they sit up? At what
age do they \Valk? When do they start
piling up block~. working puzzles? When
do they start playing cooperatively with
otheT ~bildren?
There were also expe.rime11ts in which
investigators put dishes in front of little
children, fruit and sweets and ground
meat and all sorts of things, and they
let the childrtn choose for themselves
\\'ithout trying to decide what was good
for them. The investigators found that
inslead of anarchy a11d indigestion and
autocratic infants. there resulted healthy,
happy babies with a surprisil'lgly orderly
pdtlern of needs and a kind of internal
schedule of their °"'"· a pattern that
could be studied and described.
AND HOW DO CHILDREN de velop
a moral sense. a sense of respo11sibiUty?
There are many studies Stich as Dorothy
Boruch's "New Ways in Dlsciplioe" and
1-'riti Redl and David \Vineman 's "Con-
trols from Within."
I am more than a little concerned
iibOUt the CWTent attacks on
t·permI.ssJveJ1ess" which is blamed a~
a root cause or student unrest and
\1ioleace. ~Many people write and talk
a~ if tb«:re were only two alternative~.
"permissiveness" o" the one hand And
rigid external dlsclpllne on the othtr.
Actually the advocates or
"pe.rmis.~ivc11ess'' as pop u 1 a r I y un·
derstood will find little lo support their
views in the writings of Benjamin Spock,
Arnold Ge1;ell and Frances Jig, or Bruno
Uettelheim. \\'hereas tM advocate of
lhe old-fashioned razor-!trop and "'ood-
shed are whoppin' and hollerin' all over
the place. It 's difficult thtsc days,
ho,vever, to find either razor·strops or
woodsheds. By S. L H1y1kawa
Preatdeni
Su Frud.1«1 SI.lit CoUe&e
point. Tbey are In a bargalnlng po<lllon to negotlirte wilh
the Irvine Company to share the cost of severance
damages.
Otherwise, the development Jooks desirable !rom
lhe city's standpoint Waterfront homes and yachts lit
in nicely with the surroundings and there will be more
view of the water for the public than there is now.
The land on the overlooking bluff called Promon-
tory Point is another matter, howev~r. It prov.ides a
natural vista and the city should hold out for no less
than a public street around the rim like Ocean Boule-
vard in Corona del Mar, as councilmen in the Promon·
tory Bay discussion gave some indication they will do.
Would Be a Valuable Asset
Newport Beach city government has been asked to
donate $87,500 -one-fourth the cost -toward con·
struC'lion of an Olympic-sized swimming pool at New·
port Harbor High School.
Through increased swimming program revenue
from the larger pool and minor fee adjustments the city
can reaJize a return of $7,000 a year to pay off its in-
vestment.
Newport councilmen a re concerned that they don 't
have available the funds for the initial outlay. But sure-
ly they can find them somewhere in the city budget.
Ncwport-~1esa Unified School District is '''iiling to
put up $175,000, an offer made at this time only. In-
terested private individuals have pledged to raise the
remaining $87 .500.
The opportunity is now ~nd a supercharged s\vin1-
min~ program would be a valuable asset to the Harbor
Area.
'That takes care of the pretlS, stu/WU unre.st, Michigan Univenit;f;Yale~
---I Dr. Spock, pennissioe middle class parents, minist.ers and the National I
CollllCil of Cliu7elttt. What's ;your schalule far tomurroulr
N
Interpreting Yarborough's Defeat in Texas
A New Political Base for Nixon?
WASHINGTON -Shudders ran down
the politically sensitive spines of a half
dozen senators up for reelection this
year with the defeat.: for renomination
of liberal Democratic Senator Ralph \\'.
Yarborough in Texas.
It was a fair and square defeat oC
a three-term Democratic senator who
had aligned himself with the new politics,
and Texas may move on to implement
further ilS judgment on modern times
by electing the Republican nominee, Rep.
George Bush.
As between ~h and the Democratic
nominee who defeated Yarboroogh,
former Rep. Lloyd Bentsen, Jr., there
is not much ideological choi~. Both
v.:oold have been called moderately pro-
gressive a few Years ago and should
be called lhat now because they stand
against the retrogressive elements wl'lo
condone or excuse violence and diJorder
whether in the name ol the new politics
or the old. '
IN ANOTHER STATE another senator
finds himsell in &Woximately the same
position as Yarborough. Sen. Albert Gore
of Tennessee. foe or the Vietnam War,
foe of Carswell and Haynsworth , and
friend of the new politics, is in trouble
in the state where the old priorities
still rank high.
But this is net confined to the South.
In the North there are Democrats who
(
_R.ichard Wilson -' .
• -':&.-
must measure the Texas results if only
for the reason ht Yarborough's hard
core of support, ethnic groups and
organized labor, did not put themselves
out to send him back to the Senate.
That is of interest to Sen. Harrison
\Villiams in New Jersey, to Philip A.
J{art in Michigan, Vance Hartke in In-
diana, Joseph Montoya in New .Mexico,
J oseph Tydings in MaJ')1and. William
Proxmire in Wisconsin, to name some
who are doing the new thing on the
basis of old political alignmen ts wh.ich
may be crumbling.
The doctrine in the Nixon ad·
ministration is that the old alignments
ha\•e crumbled and that this accounted
for the election last year of Republican
i:;overnors in New Jersey and Virginia.
Even more than last year President
Nixon is drawing a hard line between
himself and all the manifestations of
new thought in politics.
HE JIAS 11\fPROVED .every op·
portunity to emphasize the difference
between himself and the protesters. He
has unleashed, as lbe saying goes, Vice
President Agnew to articulate i n
language with a high shock content the
views of those who are deemed to be
the new majority -those, it has been
written, Who feel no idenlity with the
youth culture, the hippie culture, the
drug culture, black or white racism. ram-
pant sex, pennissiveness and condoned
racial and political violence.
These have been called by one or
Nixon's young geniuses in sociopolitics
"the great, ordinary Lav;rence Welkish
mass of Americans from Maine to
Hawaii." Thcu rot familiar with the
state of the television art may not knO'lv
lhat orchestra leader Welk, the king
of Squaresville, is now being given a
hard run by Mitch Miller. But. in any
case. the new majority doctrine has
il that ·Middle America is fed up with
est.ablishment liberalism, phony revolu--
llonaries and freaky behavior and is
creating a southern-\vestern-suburban-
blue collar political base for President
Nixon y.·herc only before were the smu gly
sati5fied, well-~ devotees of the status
quo.
THE TEXAS RESULTS certainly can
be interprt:ted that -w·ay. 'Tttought will
have to be given to the concept that
the new majority is rooted in the
Midwest and the prosperous corridors
of Fknida, Texas, Arizona and California.
The blue collar part of the new majority
Is a liUle harder to comprehend hut
perhaps it is true that what \lSed to
be called the white backlash has no\f
become much more than merely a fringe
reaction, and has outgrown George
Wallace.
Whatever the explanation, Yarborough
failed to carry one .large labor dominated
county in Texas but that may tlQt be
typical of the whole country. After all,
in the clos.ing weeks of the I~ presiden·
tial campaign organized labor nearly
succeeded in defeating Nixon, and so
il cannot be proved that the old liberal·
labor-ethnic coalilion of the Democrats
has completely fallen aparL
THERE 1\'ERE SOME signs that the
coalition was pulling back together again
on the Carswell and Haynsworlh nomina·
tions to the Supreme Court, and so
it was as far as the leaders were con-
cerned.
But the Texas results raise the question
or the foundation of the coalition crumb!·
lng under the v.'eight of leaders who
have misjudged public reactions. If Wiw
is the case it is probably a mood more
than anything else. a fetling on the
part of voters that they do not like
the current libe ral establishment iden·
tif icalion. Some polls show that the
largest nuinber of people now tl1ink of
them selves as conservatives whereas j t
was form erly fashionable to be liberal.
Favors Direct Vote for President
To the Editor:
Do we usually 11top to think as we
cast our vote for president that \\'e
are voting for a slate of electors, rather
than the caRdidate himself?
Do we stop to consider that undC'r
the electoral college system a candidate
with fewer votes tha11 another can be
the winner?
In this modern age. do we s!i\I feel
that a victory in the electoral vote
column should outweigh a loss in the
popular vote column?
TIIERE AR.E SEVERAL proposals for
rhange ia our method of electing a
president advocated by various groups
in the nation. Thtre is debate over
y.·hether a plan best protects the interests
vf large states or small states, or
minorities aod of the poor, or urban
areas or rural, whether it preserves
or hurts the tw<>-party system (and
\1·hether thars goOd or bad! J.
But only the direct popular election
of the president imures that the can-
didate with the most votes is the winner.
lt is this factor which weighed h<oavily
in the co'llClusion or members o( the
League of Women Voters -after a
hvo-year study -to ~upporL a con-
stitutional amendment providing for the
direct election of the president.
SUCH A PROPOSED amendment was
overwhelmingly approved last year by
the U.S. liouse of RepresentaUves and
·~
By George--~
Dear George :
rm an ardent ftminl.st and think
American men are oJd..ra.shionod!
Jn Holland women Me on strike
saying tMy have the right to make
passes at the men. \\1hy don't we
do this here?
ANGRY SUE
Defir An~ry Sue :
You mean right here. in a famlly
ney.·spaper? Tsk! (Jncidentally.
does your lrtter imply that the
men in Holland are. against
organized strikers in this case?
1 doubC il)
' M<>ilho ! "' . ii: " • .
Letters jrom readtf'B af'e welcome.
Normally writers should convey their
messages in 300 words or less. The
rigl~t to condense letters to f it space
or elimi11ate libel is reserved... Alt let·
ters must include signature and mail·
ing address, bui names may be with-
held on request if sufjicient reasoa
is appartnt. Poetry will not be pub-
lished.
has just been approved by the Senate
Judiciary Committee. l t 11ow faces stiff
opposilion in the Senate by proponents
of various other plans and the status
quo. It takes a two-thirds majority to
pass the Senate and move to the states
tor ratification.
If you believe that the vote you cast
ror president should go directly to the
r.andidate of your choice, write now
lo Sens. Alan Cransto1t and Gevrge
Radicalism
Press Co1nments !
I
?tlou11I Airy. ft.Id., C om rn u n I t y
Jttporit:r: "l.<'t's have more emph11sis
upon the preservation of the 'perso nal
liberty' 11nd freedom or law-abiding
citizens. so that the se.U-respect or our
nation m11y once more be established 1tnd
\\1e do not have to continue to hting our
heads In shame because of the continued
loleralion 0£ tb.i5 rabid radicalism \vhich
has been tiWeeping the country ."
\\'bat's New In HE"": "~ledical co~ts
nre rising at more th nn double the In-
crease in the <:Mt of living. llos1>ital d11lly
charges, excluding phys ician's ca re , have
risen from $44 in 1965 to $70 this year and
are expected to go to $100 by 1972 lf pres·
tnt inflation continues.·• •
·'
Murphy. United States S e 11 a 1 e ,
Washington, D.C. 2Q510.
MRS. CARL BLACK
lt'orst Catastrophes
To the Editor:
I have a granddaughter \\'Ith whom
T have made a pact. She does my
typing and. in turn, 1 assist her with
her homework.
The other evening, struggling \l.'ilh
social studies. I asked her to list the
three worst catastrophes in the history
of California.
Her list is as follows:
l . The San Fra"cisco earthquake, 1908.
2. The disastrous floods in northern
California. 1950.
3. The election of Governor Reagan,
1966.
Ol.ll of the mouths of babes ..•
RF. BUTTS
'.tlnkes l'tio Sen1e'
To the Editor:
II is extremely interesting that the
Republican senators are more concerned
\vith agrt'i!ing with President Nixon on
the Cambodia situation than seeing the
new developments for what they are.
Senator Cranston, 0.Callf., summed lt
up beaulifully, "It makes no sense at
all."
However, President Nixon Is right
a b o u t one thtns. to stop Amertcan
:\okher~ lrom being killed in Vietnam
Is to transfer them to Cambodia. l
suppose it does ma):e a difference lhat
)'Oung men will die in another Asian
country.
1\tARY \VILLIA~tSO:i
Oii Slick•
To the Editor:
Ever since the big oil ~lick in the
Santa Barbara channel the ne~'~ media
r('port all oil slickll no matter wh<'r<'
they happ<>n. The really bad oil .'!licks
arc caused by leak ing oil wells drilled
lnlo the. ocean floor. When a leaking
ll>'fll causes an oil 1Uck that kills wildlife.
I
those that are concerned about such
things cry out in anguish and demand
that the goverrunent must do something.
However, these individuals never come
forward with any ideas on how they
could help to eliminate wildlife·killing
oil slicks.
on. WELLS ARE drilled into the ocean
floor bc<:ause oil companies can convert
most of the oil they recover into gasoline
which can be sold for a profit. Now
if there \vere no demand for gas there
would be oo need to drill most of the
oil wells that are now being drilled
on the land or in the sea. Of course.
there. is .oo possible way for our modern
society to exist without the use of gas
but each concerned individual could
reduce his or her use of gas to a
minimum.
NO\\' J Al\l NOT going to insult your
Intelligence by telling you how to reduce
your use of gas. but tho.!le of you that
Y;ill at least try will gain much hap-
piness.
Jn conclusion. any individual that rries
out in anguish over each and every
oil slick and drives one or those higtl
per(ormance cars has got to be a
l\ypocrite.
HARRY B. McDONALD J,
-----
Friday, May 8, 1970
Tht editorial page of tht Dallu
Pilot seeks to inform and ttim-
1datt readers by presenting tJif1
newspaper's opinivns and cont-
mentary on topics of intere1t
and .rlgnific4nce, by proutding a
forum for the expreision of
our reocUrs' o~nlons, and by
presenting the diverse vit w·
poinfJ of info""td obseTllfr.s
n:nd 1pokt.rmen on topics of the
day.
Robert N. \Veed, PubliJher
,,
I
I
I
.~ ... -
~men
BEA ANDE RSON, Edit°'
l'rlill11, M.11 L lt1t H ,.,, U
Rally Plans
Put • Gear
Only two people in the whole world ·will know the location 'of the
finish line \Vhen National Charity League Juniors and guests get on
their marks for a Car Rally Saturday, May 16.
1i1rs. George Coon and Mrs. \Villiarn Alvarez, chairman and en-
tertainment chairman, have assembled a network of clues and hints
to be placed along the way, giving directions to the drivers as they
navigate the course.
The participants will be checked and timed as they reach each
point and ultimately the fini sh line, and the winners and runners-up
with the best times will receive prizes from area merchants.
As plotted by Coon and Alvarez, the course promises to be a test
of wit and speed.
Post-rally activities, to be at the scene of th e finish line, will in-
clude an Italian dinner and music for dancing.
Proceeds frOm the rally, raised frortl. the entrance fees paid by
the participants, will be given to the John Tracy Clinic for purchase
of hearing aids for children with hearing problems.
-* •
FIRST ENTRAN TS -The course has been plotted and the finish
line. secured for the Car Rally planned by National Charity League
Juniors for Saturday , May 16. r..1rs. George Coon and Mrs. \Villiam
Alvarez (left to right), the only people who know the location of
the finish line. are ready to go \Vith their 1!)11 American under-
sl ing at the Bri ggs Cunningha n1 A11t o.-l\luseun1 . starling poi nt of
the ral ly .
Ass isting \vith preparations for the rally are the Mmes. \Vil-
lia_1n Allison, ass istan t; Byron Ca vaney Jr., publici ty; Gerry Conrad.
prizes ; Donald Dearing, printers; Thomas Frank, decorations; Gene
Ross, Barry von liemert, Victor Wilson and Albert Skinner invita-
CLOCK TURN ED BACK -When the Newport Harbor Art 11-fuseum stages a
benefit Rendezvous in Balboa, the heyday of the Fun Zone and Balboa will be
remembered. Roping olf the Fun Zone area for the Friday, May 15, festivities
are (left to ri ght) Mrs. Peter Hill and Mrs. Ernest E. Bryant Ill. A prime rib
dinner Y.1ill be served in the Pavilion and tickets v.•ill be sold separately tor
the Fun Zone.
Balboa
,Swings
Tirne \\'ill stand still for a
few moments Friday, l\·1ay 15,
\\'hen the days of old Balboa
and the heyday of the Fun
Zone are relived
A Rendezvous in Balboa is
being planned for tha~ evening
by the Nev.•port llnrbor Art
Museum as a benefit for the
museum. with A-1rs. Harvey
Somers as chairman.
From 6 p.m. tO 1 a.m.
guests v.'ill enjoy the big band
sounds of the 40s a la the
Society for the Preservation
of Big Bands, and a rock .
and roll band and light show
v.·ill be in full sv.·ing to offer
contrast.
The entire Fun Zone will
be ropeJf off and the rides.
penny arcad e :ind ref reshment
booths all \viii be open. A
special sale of numbered and
signed Rex Brandt posters
commemorating: the site and
the event will add a high
note to the evening.
Assisting with preparalions ·
for the gala and nOllta lgic
evening are the ~.tmes. Clinton
Eastman· and EfTlf'!it I F.
Bryant III. benefit chairmen;
Richard Steele, treasurer;
Halliburton Swedlow, publici·
ty; Walter Gibson , bar and
script: George Yule, food;
Johnston Ballard, invitations:
Joseph Thomas, tickets. and
Peter Hill and Sam Barnes,
Fun Zone.
Others arc the l\I m e s .
Spencer Richardson and Fritz
Warren. Pavilion; Seymour
Beck and Gerald Madi gan.
Main Street , and Ronald Foell
and James Young , Art Rental
Council liason.
'
tions. and Thomas Schock, food. '
• •
• I
Marione ttes Promise Some Clowning Around
llurryi ng to get good seats for the Bob Baker Mar-
io nette benefit show in the Conference Center of
li oag Memorial Hospital , Presbyterian are (left to
right) Lesley Lane. Bradley MacMill en , Ci ndy Mar-
lin and Sean Combs. The puppets will perform at
10:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. Saturday. 11ilay 16. Sponsor is
the A!ftliants Chapter of the auxiliary a nd benefitting
wil1 be t he building fund . Tickets at $1, are availa-
able by calling Mrs. Richard Simpson, 548-8374, or
Mrs. Paul R. Kuhn, 646-5775.
Early Birds Real Cards When Asking for 'Timely' Advice
DEAR ANN'· LANDERS! My wile and
I 81'9 not people who let things go
till the last mlnute. We plan everything
ahead and it sure does save a lot o{
headaches. Thill evening we were discuss-
ing our 1970 Clnistrnas card.
In the past years we've always had
the. names of our children on the card
11long with ours. Our last chick left
1·;!e nest In January so our next card
will have only our names. Should it
be Rose and Jay or Jay and Rose'!
My wife says lhe woman's nam e is
supposed to be first. I'm sure I read
somewhere that. the man's name should
be first if it is shorter. Plea!e hurry
you r answer. -1Pi1PASSE
DEAR ™= I'm typing as fast as
1 can and I hope Ullt. reaches you
' .
I
ANN LANDERS ~
In time. There are only Z3ll days till
Christmas. The woman 's n11me shou ld
appear first iC th e card Is printed. If
the wife Is signing the card, she should
put her husband's name first.
ADd while you're at It -please use
}"Our last name. Every year -.·e receive
doufts of cards -from Ol ck and Doro·
thy ??? Bob and Kathy ?? John and Sue
??? -etc., etc .•• ,
(
DEAR ANN LANDERS: In a recent
column you said a man could not tell
for sure if a woman is a virgi n. Tha t
was one o~ the most te rrible slatcmcnL~
you have ever made. In the first place
it is untrue, and in the second place
it gives the green light tq every girl
who think! she can rool around and
pass herself off as pure on her wedding
nigbt.
1 am enclosing a clipping or a neWs
story from Reuters. 'The dateline Is
Naples. This story reports'that a SO.year-·
old bride who claimed she was a virgin
was legally banished by her groom.
The husband, a 30-year-Old fisherman
named Angelo, had heard rumors con·
ccming his future wife, Vin cenzina. \Vh en
he asked her about the rumors she
swore they were lies. On their wedding
night Angelo left Vlncenzina because he
learned the rumors were true.
The following wee k. Angelo went to
lhe church to get the marriage annulled.
The Tribunal heard the case. Medical
~vldcnce was 'produced which proved
the girl had <:eased to be a virgin
one year before the marriage. An an·
nulment was granted.
• You have a mponslblllly to your
millions ol readen to retract your st.ate.
ment at once. -NO F AlTH IN YOU
DEAR NO FAlTR: If all lbt old
wives tales about virginity Mrt laid
end to end Oley woald re.1cb from bere
to Naples. In some tnstance1, It .11 possi-
ble to ascertain vlrgtnlly. b many cases
the ''tvldence" IB aouexlslen& or highly
doubUul. One of my medic1I censultant1
t.old me or two patients who were
technically vlrgtn1 and pregnant. Another
physician said he bad examined at least
50 young girts who bad no clinical
evidence of vlrglnlty yet be was certain
the gl11.s were telllnc the truth witen
they said the)' had not bad sexual ln-
&ercourse.
•
hi I.be ease of Allgeto and his bride,
the statement that a girl ceased lb
be 1 virgin one ye1r before lier wedding
night raises ao many medical questions
that the "trial" was at best preposterous.
I've said It before and I ny It again.
c:burcbes should stlck to moral and
Rplrltual matters and slay out al
medicine.
What awaits you on the other side
of the marriage veil? How can you
be sure your marriage will work ? Read
Ann Landers' booklet ''Marriage -What
to Expect." Send your request to Ann
Landers in care of the DAILY Pu.oT en-
cl091ng 50 cents in coin and a long,
~ atamped. self-addressed envelope.
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·:.!' r
DAILY PILOT Frld11, Mat 8, l97D
Four Generations Get Acquainted
l
'
A rec,ent gathering in the San Clemente home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald A.
~dt reached to the Midwest to join four generations of the family. Enjoy-
mg the company of young Christian Daniel Schmidt are (left to right) Grand·
mothe~ Mrs. Fre~ ~emp, Mrs. Schmidt, and Great-grandmother Mrs. Josephine
Venneillet. The v1s1tors are from Naperville, Ill.
Chapters Install
Ceremonies Fete Moms
Speclal Mother's D a Y Beach. Serving as luncheon Auction on Monday, May 25,
preperatkms are being made chairman is Mrs. Richard w_ill be completed when Mu
by lluntinglon Beach Xi Xi Sherrod, assisted by Mn. Carl Upsilon chapter meets Mon-
Pf. Mu Upellon and Delta Beta· Coot and Mrs. Step be n day, May 11, in the Huntington
~ Pbidiapters or Beta Mansfield. Beach borne of Mrs. Dick
New officers will be the Cooper.
Mothers WUl be honored and Mm~. RJcbard Freudenthal, Seated will be the Mmes. new officers imtalled when president; Stephen Vida, vice Terry Faff, president; Greg
Xi Xi Pi meets Wednesday, president; Donald Shelton, Patchen, vice president: Don
May 13, iD Guy Fawkes treasurer; Keith Eckman and Parker and Stephen Bisset,
resla.Ul'ant. Jerry Rubi, secretaries; Denis secretaries; Charles Beeker,
Presiding over t be in-Terwey, civil defense, and treasurer, and Dick May, civil
stallaUon ceremonies will be Kenneth Sutton and 'lbomas: defense, incoming officers.
Mrs. Norman Nieberlein, West Robinson, council represen-Appointed will be Mrs.
Grove Are.a Cooncil recording taUves. Charles Becker, sergeant·al-
secretary. Final arTangements for a arms and parliamentarian,
During a business meeting Mother's Day tea on Saturday, and Mrs. Lynn SI ave n,
taking place in the Huntington __ M_•c_Y_l_,;6,_a_nd_a_s_umm=-=er=F-=lin::g:'.,_::histo=' =ri::an::· ______ _
Beach borne of Mrs. l(ennetb
Moore, chapter members also
made plans for a rummage
sale taking place Saturday,
May 23.
Mrs. Nieberlein and Mrs.
Moore were honored f or
awards received during a
Foundel'I Day celebration and
Mrs. Moore, the chapter's m.
coming vice president, was
named Girl~f·the-year.
Ritual of Welcome was
given to the Mmes. Kurt
Staake, Bernice FI s be r,
Richard Cassidy and Donald
Elvidge, new members, and
Mrs. John Moquin and Mrs.
Robert Shay presented the
~ program. ~ Delta Beta Epsilon will
honor m<thers and install of.
i flcers during a 1 p.m. lun-
cheon Saturday, May 9. in
'· the King'• Victoria, Long t
.,
T Fashions
End Year
Spring fashions rrom shops
tn Laguna Beach 3'/ld San
Clemente will highlight the
flnal season meeting of the
~ Monday Morning Club of ~ Laguna on Monday, May 11 ,
,.. in Hotel Laguna.
~ Paintings and handcraft by
members also will be ex-
:-. hibited during th~ meeting ac·
cording to Mrs. ltobert CalT,
. art chairman. Work should be
{
" at the hotel by 10015 a.m.
, IDStallatlon of Offietrs will
\ be part of the 11 :30 a.m. t program. New officers include
..-the Mmes. John Ca.'iey, presi·
• dent; William Gieschen, first
, vlce pre<ldeJt; Calvin GJb.
~ • beM, 8eCOM vice president: r; T. E. Kelly, third vice presi·
r dent; Martin Gurney,
, recording aecretary; Halister
~Calkins, corresponding
[ ·~
NORA LEE HOLLAR
Future Bride
Nora Hollar
'June Bride
Nora Lee Hollar and John
Lawrence Lamkin have set
their wedding date for June
27 in St. Olaf lAltheran
Church, Garden Grove.
Parents of the betrothed are
Mrs. Noreen Hollar of Garden
Grove and the late Mr. F.
A. Hollar and Mrs. Bonnie
Lamkin of Costa Mesa and
the late Mr. John Lamkin.
Miss Hollar is a graduate
of Rancho Alamitos High
School, Fullerton Junior
College and now is a music
major at California State
College at Fullerton. She is
a member of Bela Sigma Phi.
The prospective bridegroom
Is a graduate of Estancia High
School and Orange C o a s t
College. He is attending CSCF
and studying music.
Cadettes Sell Goods
For Trip Back East
In July 35 Cadette Girl Scouts and Mrs.
Hugh Turner Sr., leader of troop 555, will
take a cross country trip to Rockwood , the
national Girl Scout house in Washlngtoo D.C.
The; girls and their parents have' been
working toward this goal for more than two
years. Each coed has had to earn $200 and
the parents . $100 each.
Due to bus rates increasing the scouts
have the task of raising an extra $2,500 in
only two and a half morilhs.
Tomorrow the parents' auxiliary of the
~roop will. have a fund-~aising rummage sale
in the Edison Co. parking lot on Main Street
in Huntington Beach from 10 a.m. to 6 p .m.
During the trip the troop will get to know
their ~ountry's heritage and see the govern·
ment in action.
Fullerton
Students
To Marry
Christine Marie W i I s o n ,
daughter of Mrs. Patricia
Wilson or Costa Mesa, will
become the bride or Ronald
William Hauck, son of Mr.
and Mrs. U>well Hauck of
Garden Grove.
St. James Episcopal Church
In Newport Beach will be the
wedding scene Aug. 15.
Miss Wilson is a graduate
of Costa Mesa High School
and is studying history at
California St.ate College at
Fullerton.
The future bridegroom ii
an alumnus of Bolsa Grande
CHRISTINE WILSON
En909od
High Sebool and a physical
education major at CSCF.
Gown Fabrics
Include Taffeta
Horoscope
Cancer: Cycle High
SATURDAY can become rtalilles.
MAY 9 LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22):
Your peNOnallty undergoes
By SYDNEY OMARR change; many comment that
ARIES (March 21·April 19): y_ou look like new person.
Stick to principles. Family Prospect! are brighter in
member may be adamant soclal and professional areds.
about making changes .. But SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
you get your way through Shakeup indicated w h t c h
reason and careful eiplanation causes yoo to b r o a d e n
oI moUves. horizons. You seek-and ob-
PISCES (Feb.19-Mareh 20l o
Good lunar aspect coincides
,vith erqoUonal fulfillment.
llomantie evening in store for
you. Express feelings . Refuse
to be ~aged-· b y associate, frien who whines.
IF TODA JS YOUR
BIRTHDAY so wonderful
opportunities are on horizon.
You get chance to make
known your special abilities.
Attending to details now will
free you for more creative
endeavors.
TAVRUS (April 20.May 20): tain..,-new allies. Be versatile,
Not good to insist, cajole or have alt.emaUves available.
issue ulttmatum1. Best results Give full play to intellectual
obtained by turning on charm. curiosity. Obtain answers.
You are surprised by mean. SAGnTAIUUS (Nov. 22· To find O'.lr ""'°'• 1.,.:~,, tor .,.0v ingful compliment. Member or Dec. 21): You discover facts In moti•V tr>d 1o.-.. or~r Svdr>e~ 'I · frj d hich Id Om•rt'1 boollll!I, "iK•.i Hlnli mr oppo.sl e sex expresses desire concerrung en s w cou M•11 •1'111 Wcmtfl.'' s1nd bl•'!:,'I"'' to know you better. be startllDg. Don't cast first ~ .. ,!? ,r."~,,..1~ ?it~T, ~'0:1f'.J,
GEMINI (May 21.June 20): stone. Take new knowledge 2'.~'.4oof1~111r1t s1e11on. New Vor~.
Don't be deceived by apparent in stride. Avoid form ing COO·!==========~
bargains. Heed inner voice. clusions based on impulse. Be
Your romantic ideas may reasonable.
undergo revision. 'Ibis should CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-.Jan.
not be regarded as setback. 19): Lie low. Play waiting
Quiet discussion accomplishes game. · One in position of
wonders. authority bas not arrived at
CANCER (June 21.July 22): fiDal decision. Avoid appearing
Changes occur in areas you overanxious. Special agree.
considered permanent. Not ment js due.
wise to fight progress. Cycle AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
is high, and apparent 18): Some may make
disagreements are due to unreasonable demands. Know
bommerang in your favor. when and where to draw line.
LEO (July 2.1·Aug. 22): Study correspondence. Make
Light touch is best today. Ob-up your mind to investigate
tain hint from Tau r u 1 questions previously left hang.
message. Accent on how you ing. co~perate with co-workers,lr,~~~~~~='Vi'iiGii'Nvvs~~~~~~~ members o1 club, group.II VIRGINIA'S~
organiiation. Display sense of humor for good results. SNIP 'N' STITCH SHOPPE
vmGo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)o 333• E c Purchase or gift for friend ~ asl oasl Hwy. • Corona del Mat
makes you very popular. Phone 673-8060
Fresh start is good; loved
one deserves benefit of doubt.
Many of your hopes, wishes
Birthday
Date Told
The third birthday of Delta
Beta Zeta Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi will be celebrated
You're Invited May 11th
To etttnd t 1ptci•I frtt demon1tr1tion on two q1111ity uniqut
p1od11ct1 liy Mr1. c,rol Simon. N•mely the "UNI OU El Y YOU"
dre11 form. Thi1 form i1 mort like your body thin eny other
011 th1 merktt. It c•n g•i11 or lo1e incht1 11 y11u do! Alu1 Mri.
Simon will giv1 u •• le11011 011 e11y i111!1ll1tion of both uniqut
poly1ll1r end mtl1I i11wi1;ble Jipptn.
Duri11g thi1 promotio11, piclc vp yovr <:erfif1~1t1 for • 50¢
r1fund 011 • u11iqve 1ipp•r foot.
FV Club
Hears New
Official
Fabrics in the new crop Tuesday, May 12, at 8 p.m.
of bridal gowns include floaty in the home of Mrs. Thomas
types -fragile silk laces,· Ashbrook. .
S•e You Soon!
-'VIRGJN fA
h'ff Cake and champagne will c 1 · ons, voiles, organdy and be d The Fountain Va 11 e y serve . Transferees and
Woman's Club will hear Mrs. light·weight lioen. prospective members are P.S. A fret d1monllr1tiol'I 1+ II 1111 tnd 2 pm-Mond1y M1y
I t th, Norma Brandel Gibbs, Hun· Silk taffeta also Is In the welcome to contact Mrs.
tington Beach councilman, running and looks especially Robert McAdams at 968-7823
speak during their genera1l,...:a.ttrraict1iiveiiinih<irii' iloomiiiilaicei.ii.ilioriiaiddl~tiiooal~ilnf~onniiaitii'oin.ii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~f meeting Monday, May 11, at ·
8 p.m. in the Fountain Valley
Community Center.
A report on the state con·
vention which took place
earlier this week in the
Sheraton Universal Hotel in
Universal City will be given
by Mrs. Laurence Erwln,
president and Mrs. Wallace
Short, president.elect
Hostesses for the evening
are the Mmes. John Waddell,
chainnan, Robert Cardinal,
James Dick, Al Hackmelster,
Charles Keane, Kenneth
Martz, Wilbert Pesek, Merle
Rupp and Jack Yamamoto.
Club Discusses
Baby's Arrival
The baby's arrival will be
discussed when members of
the Costa Mesa Chapter of
La Leche League meets in
the Newport Beach home . or
Mrs. Ralph Benware.
The public is invited to the
gathering Tuesday, May 12,
at 7:45 p.m. Further in·
formation regarding the club
may be obtained by calling
Mrs. H. W. Moore at 545-4359.
Soroptimists
Soroptimist Club of Hun·
tington Beach g.athers at 12: 15
p.m. the second and fourth
Tuesdays in Franco i·li
restaurant.
Get the BIG 6% at the ·BIG M
Everybody knows that NOBODY TOPS THE BIG M -Mutual Savings
In offering the most in earnings to savers. M. UTUIL,
8% 2 ye1r term account, wfth $5,000 minimum
1~% 1 ye1r term 1ccount, with $1,000 minimum
-iecretary, and P\"ank Levins,
treasurer. Omega bracelet watches in 14 korat gold.
s" % 3-monlh• bonu• account. with ssoo minimum s •, n NOS
•. :: 1'Y.1% certlllcale of dapo11t available, with $100,000mlntmum ft VA
If you ll't • Mutual Saver, now Is the time 10 Invest addltlonaf funds In the•• new anll Ian U•Dcialien
h1gh·rat1 accounta. (Insurance ha1 been lncrea1ed lo $20,000.) If you are not 1 COR~NA DEL MAR
-·
Senior Citiiens
C ommunlty Rt<Ttalion
Center at Orange COunty
f'aircrounds is the acene of
actJvtty w h e n Cost.a Mesa
Stnlor Citlzem meet at 11
a.m. every Tuesday,
From left : $375., $260 .. S335.
SLAVICK'S
Jtl'tltr• Since It 17
NEWPORT BEACH -644·1380
18 FASHION ISLAND
Ywr <11111• ,\(Cftll'lt WtktlN -••lltA"'•fktnf, M11ltr (lllrfl, ....
o..-M•lfl4tY •fld fftdoy •11tll t :JO
Mutual Saver, now la the tlme lo open your aceounl at The Blg M-Mutual Savings. ae1 EistCo•t Hlghwq
ACCOUNTS NOW INSURED TO $20,0001 '"'"'M""""
W88TA .. CADIA
MO Witt O....n. ROid
Telt.,,._ 4'Ml18'
COVINA
200 North CllnJtA'llllUI
T1t•p!'lone ~rt
\
OL8NOALS
Jll Nort118r•11d 11011lt~eld
T1ltphon124M141
_.AAAD•HA (Heid Ollict )
J1S r.,, Co1011do llovl-lf
T1lepll-'41>-~3,S
l!P'"iJlllJll!lll .......... 11! ... "!''~"""'"'l!Jlll;;'!';r.!!l!'""""l"""'"'-'~~""'""'"""'.'.""!',!'l!f'!"'•~.,.,...,~..._. ___ ~~~ •
•
--
Cosf:a ·Mesa •
.
Today's Flnal.
N.Y. St.eeks
VO L 63, NO. 11 0, 4 SECTIONS. 42 PAGES
' ~ .
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FR IDAY, MA·Y 8, 1970
Allen Tells
l ' '
~ayTrade
" . '
Intention s /
Fiflh Dls'lrict Superv~r Alton E. Arlen
c1:panded· Th~sday on his proposal . .for
a 'bond election to purchase Irvine Com•
pa,ny·tands in, the Upper :t:'lewport ~y
area for .a regional park, explaintrlg
that· the cost tO count). taxpayers could
be as little as oge..fourth of· the .total
tab.
Allen had ·proposed Tuesday that a
special committee of county department
heads study the feasibility of acquiring
the land through a November bond clec·
lion.
At that lime he estimated the cost
of the property at "about $25 million.
"A ·substantial portion of this cost
would be paid for by the federal and
.state governments," the supervisor said.
other regional parks ·in the coillty
are fiunced under · a formu1a of, 50
percent of the fWlds from federal
.sources, 2$ per<:i!nt frOm 'the State· and
25 percent from the county, he explained.
At the $%5 million figure for the Irvine
lands, the county taxpayers share would
be oaly $7.5 million..
Allen's proposal is a subslitute for
the controversial land exchuge witb
the Irvine Company through which the
county would receive 450 acres of Irvine-
owned uplands and islands for 157 acres
or coonty tidelands.
Final. consideration o( .the proposal
\vas deCeJTed to Pi.fay 26 as only three
supervisors were prese11t Tuesday.
Ne~port Woman
First in Race
Newport resident Mrs. Mara K. °Culp,
and'a mother of nine from Illlnois have
tied for first in the Angel Derby air
race.
In the results announctd rtiarsday,
officials of the all-woman Toronto to
Nassau race said Mrs. Culp tied 'with
h1rs. Marion Jayne of Palatine, DI. The
two women covered the 1,700 mlle 'course
at an average of 210 miles per hour
in Piper Twin-Comanche Pf.30s. They
will split the $2,000.priz.e money.
MrS. Culp, 28, of 2157 Vista Entrada,
i:;; a charter pilot for Martin Aviation.
One of the top w.omen Pilots ih the
country, she was · the winRer of 1 the
Jlli9 Powder Puff Derby . Mrs. Cillp is
one ()f the few women in the ~nation
to qualify as a pyloni.r,acer.
TE ACHERS' TEA.M
OKs SETTLEME NT
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Negotiators
for striking Los Angeles teachers today
accepted a settlement proposed by a
federal mediator and referred it to the
OOard of directors of the United Teachers
or Los Angeles for approval.
The proposa1 also was submitted to
the board ol education which scheduled
11 special meeting for Sunday to consider
it.
DAILY ,ILOT S!tK l>M!ot
AltTl·WAR ·PROTESTORS FllE THROUGH CM · POST OFFICE
The Meilbag Headed fo r Wa 1hi.ngf~ W11 .Hea~i~r· Today
ftrnstee Jordan ReneWing
. ' ..
Feud on School Decathlon
Pre-election fireworks broke out during
Thursday's Orange County &ani ()f
Education mtetlng as board member
Don Jordan Tenewed his heckling of
county school chief Robert Peterson·o~r
the cost 'Of the · annual . · Academic
Decathlon sponsor.ed by Peterson's office.
Both ~en are up for re~lfction this
year •.
Dr. Peterson charged Jordan with
"harassment" in his repeated demands
for .a report detailing man hours spent
,by coonty-·personnel•in &tag.ing the event.
The decathlon, originated by Peterson
l"'·o years ago, involves ten achie vement
.areas covering a y:ide variety of
classroom subjeets. Testing involves the
students' abilities in coping , wltb both
written and oral questioning.
Last November's pri:igram featured 125
students from 27 schools. The decathlon •
STOCK JtJARKET
'NEW YORK (AP) -The stock markel
drifted downWard in slow trading this
afternoon as traders turned their a!ten-
tion to aatlwar demonstrations and fi st·
fights in Wall Street. See quotations,
Pages 20 ·21).
is primaiily supported by a nonprofit
foundation of'bu.sinese and. civic ()t,ganita-
tions.
Jordan sa.id he ·was 1hnply-reviVing
a request he has · been maki.iig in·
t~n\iittently since t.Rt 1first ~ec,atlllon
in the fall of 1968. He emphasized that
he is not opposed to the ·event as sUch.
He termed it a "v;orthwhile project"
Dr. Pe.ter~n said h.is office is com·
piling a cost report on tbe 1969 decathloo
which will be submitled "fairly soon."
He called the chore a "monwnental''
one.
·Stevenson's Son As ks
Marriage Di ssolved
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -John Fell
Stevensoa, yout1gest son of the la~e Adlai
Stevenson, seeks the custody of his three
children in divorce papers filed again st
his socialite wife Natalie Owings 1 Stev·
en son.
Stevenson, 34. filed a suit ThurSclay
under California's new dlssolution ()f
marriage law bl whioh specific grou11ds
are not required.
Oo\ILY 'ILDT SRfl ,,_.. • • • • MRS. RILEY ANO Mll. RUGAN CHAT WITH FAl~IEW HOSP ITAL SUPT, TO, '
'
' TEN CENTS
Coast • Ill Protes·t
Students Plan to Show War Di-ssent
By JOANNE REYNOLDS.
OI' .. Dallr '""' ,, ...
M()re J)tacerul demonstrations are
planned this weetend along the Orange
Coast as student protesters conUnue to
register opposiUoo lo U.S. involvement
in Cambodia and the death of four
Kent State student.!.
In acU()n this morning, about 100
Orange Coast College students, organized
under the Non-vi()Jent Strike Committee,
marched on tht Costa flfesa Post Office
* * * Tricia Tells
Youths Write
Congressmen
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tricia Nixon
thinks anUwar students should write their
congressmen rather than close down col·
leges as a f«m of protest, say two
young women who visited her in the
White House.
In an hour-Jong meeting Thursday with
two Finch College, N. Y ., students Miss
Nixon "suggested we write to ron-
gressmen and senators and tell them
how we felt," reported Ann Holmes,
20.
"We told ber we've been doing that
for live ye an," Mias H()lmes said. ADd
one senator wrote back a scathing letter,
endin& it "Thank )'OU tor your attitude."
Mia Balmu ind MIJly AlltQ, A •
ire both junior• 1t the ucluslve New
York City school where Tricia het1elf
graduated. The two rtudenta were am<mg
some JOO Flncll sirll ~g-par1 in
an anti.War del'nomtration across the
street from t.be White House Thursday.
Miss Holmes said Tricia "seemed
shocked" when they told her millions
<>l American students don't trust their
government.
Miss Holmes said Tricia tcild them
she doesn't see any demonstrations. "She
doesn't look out the windows of lbt
White House," Miss Holmes said.
Later a While House press ()Hicer
said the . visit was part o! an <lJ'Jgolng
attempt to "keep the doors <ipe:n to
all opinl()nS and to listen to all opinions."
Mini-bus Wreck
La,vsuit Filed
Fi v:e Harbor Area teenagers who were
Ljjured, one of them critically, in a
LrafHc accident last March 25 near
Parker, Ariz., have sued Uie occupants
of the mini-bus which allegedly struck
their vehicle for damages totalling
$490,000.
Listed as plaintiffs in the Superior
Court action art Sharon Myers, 19, of
3090 Trinity Drive, Costa Mesa ; Rand()lph
L. Smith, 18, ()f 415 38th St., Newport
Beach; Ronald PlaUoot. IS, ol 298 R06e
Lane, Costa l\.1esa : hlark A. Rdgers,
18, of 3810 Channel Place, Newport Beach
a.nd Robert S. Allen, 18, of 3801 Marcus
St .. Newport Beach.
All wer.e occupants ()f a mini-bus in·
volved In a collision with an almost
identical vehicle on an Arizona highway.
All five plaintiffs are represented in
the court action by their parents ()r
guruV,ians. Named as defe ndants in the
lawsuit are Jay Leavelle. Robert S.
Leavelle Sr. aod Nllllcy Smith.
Nancy Reagan
Sees Old Friend;
Tours Fairview
...
A Costa Mesa woman today renewed
a 21).year friend!hi~ with Callf()mla's
first lady. nie meeting tooi P1aCe at
Fairview State Hospital.
P.1rs. Nancy Reagan was prompted to
visit the hospital In a recent letter from.
"'" friend Mrs . Bridget Rll<y, s\ud<nt at Golden West College training to be a
psychiatric technician . Some of her clas-
ses are taken at the ttatt hoepllal.
Mrs. Riley and Mrs. Mor1ao were both
young actruies at MGM twenty years
ago and have corresponded ever since.
Following a brief cha~ with the hospl·
ta1'1 51Jperintendent, Dr. Anthony Toto,
the two ladles joln<d holplt>I ofllciata
on an extensive tour ()f tbe faclllty.
\\'hlle e>n the toor Mrs. Riley admitt.td
that Mr11. Reagan TY\lde more of her
years at MGM than she did. "She wa11 a
1 1tar dnd I only had bit "artl," Mn. Riley
lauahcd. ii · · ·
' It '
with more than 400 lnd.ivicfval letters
addressed to congressmen and tM: Pres.i·
dml
The group ol 1bout 100 stll<lents. kit
the OX campus at 10 a.m. f()(' the
Adama Street post office building, car-
rying placards denouncing the war In
Cambodia and the deaths ol Coor Kent
State UniversiQt students.
Bob Jennison, an OCC student, stated
that the purpose ()f the mall-in wu
to impress the conununlty with the con-
Patather Trial
cem of the college students.
"By delivering these letters one by
one, people can see that we all have an individual concern lrl this: matter ...
Students f()rmed a slngle tin~ and
marched through the post office building,
dropping off a letter before .moving on
to pick' up Another. M each letter waa
dropped, the students !hooted oot the
number. Other students stood outside
the building chanting, "Power to the
IS.. PROTf;ST, Page I)
Last Testim·ony
Heard by Jury
A weary Superior Court jury will today
t.ke what is expected to be its last
weekend recess in the murder trial of
Arthur DeWIUe League, accused of the
streetcomer slaying ol Santa Ana
policeman Nelson Sas seer.
Jurors lleard testimony from the last
()f a parade of defense Ydtnesses late
Thursday and were then told Jud11e
Samuel Dre.ilen that they will receive
thtir imtructions from his . bench late
too.y before· i.~1 a Uuft.dly weWIMI break. ,.
Final arguments from lawyen for both ,
sides wiU wra p up tbt courtroom .action
Tuesday and the panel will lh<• retire
to tho Jury room for Its !llt let hi
Ibo thrft.mootll trial ol the -Black Panther.
Th'y have listened f() tesUmony from
nearly 40 witnesses called by both sides
since !he trial open<d last Marcll 12.
Amoog them has been the 21-year-<ild
~ eague who denied front the witness
box tbat he shc>t and killed Sassctr
last June 4.
Chier Prosecutor Everett Dickey, for
whOm this will be his last assignment
fci ·the district attorney's . office before
taking bis judge's robes And a seat
on the Harbor Judlclal District Court
bench, believes he has proved that the
Santa Ana Negro shot Sas.seer jn tbe
Senators Delay
Approval Vote
For Mitchell
.The State Senate this week delayed
the scheduled floor vote on appointment
of South Lagunan Clay N. Mitchell tG
the State Board of Education because
of insufficient votes.
This was the asseS!ment today by
an aide .()f Senator Alfred Alqulst (0-Sao
Jose). \.\-'ho is opposing the appointment
or Milchell.
Alquist, a candidate for lieutenant
governor, interrogated Mitchell before
the Rules CQmmittee recently, but
hfitchell won approval ()f the Rules Com·
mlttee by a 4 to 1 split vote. ·
The Alqulst aide said because of.absent
senators the prcrMitohell forces could
not round up the necessary 27 votes
to confiMn the appointment
However, the matter may be brought
up at any time if the volel a.re rounded
up.
Jt would take 14 votes agaiolt Mitchen
to block his appointment and Alquist
has betn t.ryiog to round these up.
Normally, gubernatorial appointments
art rubber-stamped by the Senate with
little fanfare. •
Tfie Alquist aide speculated if the
pr()-Mitchell votes aren't rounded up by
nert week, Governor Req:an might
withdraw the appolotment. "It really
isn't the G<lvemor's appointment
anyway," the aide.suggested, "ll'a Max
Rafferty~s."
Workman Files Suit
For Injury at OCC
A workman who was aertooaly injured
when the jackhammer he waa operating
struck a high voltage power line on
the Orange .coast College campua has
sued the Orange Coast Junior College
District for $280.000.
David A. Bednar charges the dl!trk:t
authorities with negligence in the lltlng
of the underground cable. lie states
In his Su~rlor Cclurt actlon thet he
received no warning ol the pr sence
of the Hne wh~ he wu wortlhg in
the arti I~ 11.
\ ' ~.
chest shortly after lhe patrolman plr.ed
League and a companion f()r iden.
Ufication.
Jt has been alleged that the pair then
fled from the scene, leaving the dying
ofncer in the roadv.'ay feebly callin11
foc the lielp that proved to be useless.
'Dtcke1 has been assisted by Deputy
District Attorney Martin J. lleneghan
in the prosecution chore. League has
bet:n defended by attorneys Robert Green
and Michael G~rbosl, both of wbom wm appoloted by Superior Court.
'Curious' Trial
In Westminster
Held 10 Weeks
Three Stanton theater offjclals involved
in the showing of the controversial
SWedish movie "I Am Curious, Yellow''
have · WCJn a 1().week delay of the.it
Westm.wr Municipal Court trial on
char1es of exhibiting obscene material.
Ordered this week to appear July 2S
for· further court acti()n were theater
manager Harry L. Meyer of Stanton:
adverUslng agent Jules G. Landfield of
Hollywood and Daniel E. Ehrhnart of
Stanton .
The three men wtre arrested 13!'1t
Dec. 22 tn ·a raid which ceincided wilh
a similar descent by Newport Beach
police ()n the Balboa Theater in which
the same movie was confiscated. The
Balboa action will next come to court
May %9.
Stanton officers Interrupted their local
screening or tht Scandinavian b t d
wanner by sending a 16-year-()ld boy
to the box office to aP.PIY for actm.mion
to the theater. When the yooth was
allowed to go in they followed him
an;t booked tbe three alleged operators
()f the emporium. •
The current court action bas led to
adoption by the Stanton city council
CJl an ordinance which empowers the
community to regulate the type of movies
being shown by local theaters.
A federal judge in Los Angeles County
recently issued a temporary restrainfng
order which prohibits any further
~lwres of the film or further arre.sts
for libowing the movie in that area.
Orange Coast
Weadter
You may be able to ootsltep the
coastal cloodiness over the wttk-
end, and from lhen on it'll be a
nice day with fair skits and temp-
era.lures In the temperate 60'1.
·INSmE TODAY
They'ft be hl.sthig the villob1
and cheering tht hero Saturday
night at Newport Ha rb()r lli9h
School when an old time melo-
drama f/OCS on stage for oluir-
ity. Details in todcu 's Week·
fndtr.
,. '
' -. . ' , I
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•· ·-z •DAILY PILOT c
.
In Mesa
Bike Deatl1 ;,
;,
-'l'be partnla of I nine-yur~ Col!ila
~18a boy who v.·as falally injured 1st
/jnuary when his bicycle collided with
•· car have filed a $50,000 wrongful
death claim againsl the City of Co6ti
)! .....
.. Mr. aqd Mn. Frank.Un J. Dietrich,
)lll P latte Drive, named the City of
Costa Mesa aloog with the city's Building
and. Safety. Road and PI a n n i n I
Department11 in the claim.
Jeffrey .I. Dielrich died Jan. 29, the
da y after the accident.
According to the claim filed Tuetday.
dangerous street conditions on Paularino
Jrv@nue near Platte Drive where the
•ecktent. oceured wert 1o blame for the
Cr•Jedy. . . . ·ay attorney Roy June UJd the city
1'f'obably will deny the claim. "After
" ASoday waiting period, the case can
I.hen be taken to court, but that's up
to the family," he said.
Jn the meantime, he added. the city
is turning over the claim and all nports
to its !nuance c<mpany.
Exchange Youths
Visit Goodwill
More than 100 ltigh school 1tudenl&
from foreicn lands, now attendinr county
i;chools u e;rchange students visUed the
Goodwill Industries plant in Santa Ana
"ntursday.
· Offici als said the foreign students
teamed that not all Americans live in
luxury. They uw handicapped men and
'fOmen at work, being trained for jobl
iil industry and learned that the less
fortuna te are being helped to prepare
tllemselves for bette r living.
The visit was In honor of National
<;oodwill Week. "We wanted to l'lhoW
thetn that not every American family
ia: 1'ieb, as many foreigners think," said
c;i)llord Hicks, execuUvt vice president
ot Goodwill.
The visiting students, from lfi high
i;chool!, are sponsored by three organiJ.a.
tlbM, American Field Service, Youth
for Understanding and lnt.emational s·wdents.
Mesa Ma11 Hurt
In Viet Fighting
· Army Spec. 4 Richard E. Backstrom.
,Jr., son of ~1r. and Mrs . .Ft E.
Backstrom, 1829 Iowa Street, Costa
Mesa, rectivtd racial wound! April 30
in SO\lth Vietnam.
He was wounded by mortar fragmenU
while serving with the lOJst ~me
Division and is recoveHng in 21n Army
hospital in Vietnam , •
Backstrom , who arrived in the war-tom
npubllc in November 1969, was awardtd
the Bronze Star Medal in January 1970
for meritorious service whilt serving
wtth the lst Batta.Hon. 7th ArUllery,
l st Infantry Division.
Fifth, Dimension
Gets Top Award
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The Fiflh Di-
mension was presenttd the record nf the
year grammy Ttnrrsdl!ly night for recor<f..
ing "Aquarius!Let the Sunshine In."
The top award of the NaUonal Academy
-()f Recording Arts and Sciences wa8
~ at Its 12th annual presentations to
;tO'J> . .msu of the year on a nationally
-~ised program produced in N8.!lh~
~-v·nie. New York and Holl ywood.
Other nominets for the award included
.Johnny Cast\ for "Boy Named Sue,''
Blood, Sweat and Tears for "Spinning
Wheel," Peggy Lee for "I& That All There
Js," 11nd Henry Mancini for "Love Tl1eme
From Romeo and Juliet."
' -' DAILY PILOT -:.c.: -~ / ... " CltANGl COAST l"Utl.ISHINI) '"""'I'
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MOMl"'9 IJ•llw
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Pilot Finds Only Way
To Fly at Laker Game
By PATRICK O'OONNELL
Of ''" Diii' l'Uol 11•11
WHAT DO AtRUNE pllota: and press photographers ha ve in comm_on!
Well, J've never seen a newspaper photog nying a jel, but Wednf:sday night
at lhe Laker game J turned to the photographer beside me and asked who he
was working for.
"Western Airlines," he replied. Loo king a lilUe puzzled I wondered
aloud why a photog was working the NBA play-offs for Western Airlines.
"No, I'm a pilot," he said, ''and th.is Is the best seat
In the pla~. 'The one I bought is way up on top and I
can't see a thing."
* * * I asked how he got a pass to be under the ba.skel
To my surprise, he said he didn't have one.
It seems that several months ag-0 he was talking to
an usher near the Laker basket during the warm up period
and when the game started, he sat down. The usher check·
ed all the other photogs. but didn 't chec k him. Since then,
he 's been attending Laker games regularly and he al-
ways brings a camera.
He muat be one of the best known photogs at the Forum because he Is
ne ver checked for proper identlilcalion.
..
ANTI-WAR MARCHERS MA KE PEACE WITH QIRCLING POLICE HELICOPTER
March•s on National Gua rd Facil ity and Pottk>ffice Mark.d by Peeceful Protest
What'a more, he is learning a lot about his adopted pro fession because
the photographers from the wire se rvices and daily newspapers talk abou t
their work during the intermiJslons and this is rubbing off on my pilot friend .
* * *
~.,
SGT. RUSSELL GUARDS NATIONAL GUARD FACILITY
In Coste Mtsa, a Cold Shoulder for Antl·w•r Merch•rs
Surfers Due at Capo Beach
f.Iore than 200 Southern California
surfers are e1pected to vie for trophie~
in CapistrMo Beach's f ourth Annual
Su rfilg Capit al Competition May 23 to
24.
Summer Swim
Prograrn Slated
The Boy's Club of the Harbor Arr<1
i:r; offering a summer swimming and
pool proofing program for youngsters
nine monUls and older.
The classes. which art open t.o boys
and girls , are being held from 9 a:m.
to 2 p.m. dur ing the w~kdays, according
to Boy's Club officials.
For registration information, call Ma.
9387 or vi~lt the club at 594 Center
Strttt, Co!lta Mesa. New clla:&ea begin
every two \'Peeks.
The surfcr:r> v.'i!l ride the \\'a\'e s nf
Doheny Slate Park. home waters of
world champion surfers Corky Carroll ,
JCx>y ll 11ma:r>aki and Joyce Hoffman. who
have held the men and women's world
lilles for four years.
A publie rvenl. thr contest will prflvide
lt\·2A :inrl :IA divi ~ions. :ind will feature
the ~peciacular of surfing ar t, the
tandem .
Robert ~imlcy. of CapislrAno Beach
Chamber or Commerce, i:r; chairman flf
1he chamber sponsored event. and Ben
f.ferrill of San Clemente is coordi11ator.
Nixo n .Faces Protest;
\\' AS!llt\GTON (AP J -Presideni Nix-
on. facing l_!lans for a mssslvr antiwar
rally, moved today to open better chan-
nel~ of rommunlcatio n with college
~tud"n'-' and others prot~!lting the
Southea!ll Asi::l conflict.
CAL SC~AEFER, 3, GETS INTO THE 'l.iWIM
Pool Proofing 1t tht H1rbor Arel 8oy1 Club
From J> .. e 1
PROTEST. • •
people, let's atop tht w1r.'"
The st.udenta walked back to the OCC
campus after the hour long mail-in.
Today's poll1 office demon1lraUon was
orderly u wa!I Thursday's march from
Orange Coast Collece's Costa Mesa cam-
pus to the Cost.a Mella Air National
Guard Base.
Police and student oraanizers estimate
2.000 people took pfrt in the march
and rally held in a field near the base.
The Costa Mesa police helicopter kept
watch from overhead as the marche rA
walked from the campus lo the rally
si te. One observer said he could see
no patrolmen in the march area.
Five national guardsmen listened from
behi nd the fence surrounding the base
os four studl!nt apeaken gave short
speeches on the war and the Kent State
dea th!!.
Costa Mesa police sairl lod ay U1ey
Intercepted three youngste rs with gun:i;
who were heading in the direction of
the march.
Three teenage boyi; wt>re stopped in
the 2900 block of ~,endoza Drive. heading
in the general vicinity <lf the march.
at .about 3 p.m. The boys told offictrl!I
they were look ing for a pl.ace lo shoot
the ir two rifle& and pistol.
Police said tt\ey confi!cated the
\veapons rather than have the youth!!
carry them in to the m.arch and rally
area.
Lf'!aflet activities by UC Irvine studenL.,.
continued tod1y with a 'Teach-in and
rlialogue session scheduled t9 start -0n
campus at 11 a.m.
BUT NEXT YEAR, if he doesn 'I \\'ant to get caught , I'll offer one piece or ad vice. Of the 30 or IO pre.!ls photographer s at the Forum I noticed he wa!'I
the only one carrying a translator radio. He had it plugged into his ear and
he would report to the rest of us what Chick Hearn was saying. Somehow, I
think this makea him stand out in the crowd.
But, being an airline pilot, he travels to many cities and th~re are 11
other NBA teams in the leagu e. What about the ABA and professional foot-
ball? A whole world ia open to him.
One thing bother& me thou&h. Where could a photog find a pilot'1 uni-
form lf he wanted to catch a free fllgtit s-OTTleplace. Aw, it wouldn 't work -«
would it?
Newport Firm Pu1·chases
Deer Parl{, Wax · Museum .
Sale o! two Orange County family
recreaUon attractions, 11ovieland \Yax
lvfuseum and Palace of Living Art and
the Japanese Village and Deer Park,
both in Buena Park, was ann-0unced to.
day.
Purchaser is the newly organized Rec-
rt!ltion Environments Inc., (REI ) of
Newport Beach. Stller was the creator
of the attractions, Allen H. Parkinson or
Scottsdale, Ariz.
Ann ouncement of the sale for an un-
disclosed sum was made by Parkinson
and two REI of!lcial&, E. James Murar
-Of Newport Beach, president, and Edwin
D. EtUnger of San Clemene, chairman
of the board.
Park.Jnson, who said he sold the pro~
erty for reasons of health, first opened
the Movieland Wax h-1u1eum in 1962 and
later added the Palace of Living Art. a
collection of reproductions of famous
paintings done in three dimensions.
·'The Japanese Village and Deer Park
\11u opened in 1968. The two atractions
now boast 1.5 million visitors a year.
Murar noted tha t th e purchase marks
the second major Orange County recrea-
tidn enterprise for REI. The fir m de-
veloped and operates Coto de Caza, a
5.000-acre family saddl e, hunt and health
club, three miles east -0f the San Diego
Freeway near San Juan Capistrano.
REI has three other California recrea-
tion projects, two of them near Santa
Barbara and a third on the Sacrament o
ruver near Redding in northern Cali-
forni a.
The firm ls a new subsidiary of Great
Southwest Corporation (GSC l. Wllllam
D. Ray executive vice president of GSC.
said today that assets valued at over $4(1
million of the Newport.-based Macco
Corporation , an-Other GSC subsidiary,
have been transferred to REI.
HENREDON TRANSLATES THE SUITLE PROl'ORTION ANO CLEAN LINE QF THE ORIENTAt INTO
AN EXCITING NEW COLLECTION FOR CONTEM l'ORARY HOMES-TRADE WINOS.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON DREXEL -HERITAGE
NIW,ORT llACH
1727 Wtttcllff Dr., 642·2050
OP!N FRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
LAGUNA IEACH Profe11lon1f Interior 345 North Coo1t Hwy. 494-6551
0.1l1ner1 Avolloblo-AID O,!N FRIDAY 'TIL 9
rti•"9 Teti hH M"f ~ 0"""9 Ce11tty 140·12•)
T -'
\ '
Friday, May 8, 1970 DAILY PILOT 5
Nixon Goes on TV . . ' --11 Reft11efl Combat
' Hopes to CaJ.m Student Protests Army M~y Tr:y 5 Gls
WASHINGTON (AP)
\Vith thousand&.. or anti'A·ar
protest.en: heading for a hur·
r~b' called demonstration in
the nation's capital, President
Nixon bas moved to ease the
cruis Jnolmtini OYef the use
of American troops in Cam-
bodia.
The President ~eduled a
news conference tonight at 7
p.m. (PDT) -his first na-
tionally televised session with
newsmen since Jan. 30 -on
the eve of a demonstration
here expected to draw tens
of thousands of protesters.
Even as the President
prepared for the news con-
ference at his Maryland
mountain retreat Thursday
night and today, demonstra-
tors were evident in Washing-
ton-on Capitol Hill. near the
White House and en coUege
campuse11.
A Royal Fan
Nixon ls e1ped.ed to take
a concjliatory approach to the
demonst.rators, mostly young
people, following the stance
he adopted Thursday when he
told 1everal college an d
university presidenb the ad-
ministration would soften it!
hostile tooe toward t h e
di>sidenls.
Calls went out for the Satur·
day prOtest after Nixon an-
nounced a week ago that a
joint U.S.-South Vietnamese
attack had beeo mounted into
Cambodia.
Spurred by the deaths .~fon
day of four students when
Ohio Na ti on a I Guardsmen
opened fire on demonstrators
at Kent State University, pro-
tests have swept many college
campuses, often resulting in
violence and student strikes.
Leaders of the Saturday
demonstration have talked in
U"I Ttlt~
Prineess Margaret is welcomed by Frank Sinatra
on her arrival at London'·s Royal Festival Hall. She
a,ttended t.be first of two charity soncerts given by
Sinatra to aid the Na-tional Society for the Preven·
tion of Cruelty to Childr.n.
temu of up to 35,000 persons
for a protest in Lafayette
Square just. across the street
from the \\'Dite House,
although of(icials say the
dlssent<n will not be allow.cl '
that close. It was not known
whether the President will ~
in Washington during the
demonstration.
other reparts estimate the
crowd al close to 100,000
persons, posing a problem for
bolh government officials and
protest leaders planning steps
for controlling the
demonstration.
The rally leaders held crash
training programs fo r
mal'5hals to keep t h e
demonstration within i t s
• U"I ltlff!Mtw
stated nonvi-Olent gGal, while
the 2,QOO..man District of
Columbia National Guard w~
being prepared along with
Washington police.
DEMONSTRATION A Rl;AL DRAG
Police Remove Girl at New York Protest
There were indications U.S.
officials were leaning toward
relying on local authority and
the National Guard available
Jn U1e Washington are a
without drawing paratroopers
and Marines from 0U1er bases.
Officials said w h a t e v e r
military force is gathered pro·
·bably will be kept as much
out of sight as possj b/e unless
troubles develop requiring its
227 Colleges Closed
As Protest W ide1ts
use.
By The ASSOCIATED PRESS
Some 227 colleges a n d
universities were closed today
in the widening protest against
the war in Indochina a:i1d the The touchiest p r o b I e m
revolves aroond the dispute
over the demonstration site. fatal shooting of four students
OfficiaJS, saying the twe>block at Kent State University.
Lafayette Square is too close ' Strikes and demonstrations
to the White HouSe for s<ifety, curtailed classes at hundreds
have m:lered the park to be of others.
confoned off, creating a ln Washing1on, the vanguard
demilitarized ~-like area a of thousands of ~tudents eX-
block north of the ell:e<::utive pected to participate in an
mansion. anti"·ar rallr Saturday began
Protest organizers had of-arriving from throughout the
fered Thursday night to com-country.
promise, giving up t he Most of the ca1npuses re-
Lafayette area in exchange mained peaceful but violence
for the Ellipse south of the flared · overnight at several
White House. But the govern· schools.
ment said this also was too At least four yOj.iths at the
close and would be cordoned State Unill.eJ"~ity at Buffalo
off. were hit by birdshot fired dur·
Ear,lier. tile Justice Depart-ing ·a police-student con-
ment had offered use of the frontation. It was not im-
W a s h i n gt on Monument mediately detennined who
grounds several blocks from !ired the pellets.
the mansion, but th f" The incident came its about
riemonstration leaders turned fiO city police and 400 studen~
down that site. clashed in a tear gas and
rock-throwing melec. Two of
lhe injured studen ts \rere
treated at a makeshift in-
lirmary.
National Guardsinen In
Carbondale, Ill., hurled tear
gas aild advanced with fixed
bayonets to rout large bands
of students a( Southern Illinois
University.
They .scattered some 300
deinoi1strators· frOm the
Illinois Central Ra i I road
tracks wtiere Urey had delayed
the Panama Limited
streamliner, New Orleans-
bound from Chicago, for SO
'minutes.
The fleeing students s1nash·
e'd Wzeits oC store win~'S
as they ran. 'They were the
nucleus of some 1,200 pr.o-.
testers who earlier sat down
in t.be 1tntiersect.i0n of U.S. 51
and Itlinoi.s 13 in the downtown
section.
Dissident students at the
University of Wisconsin cfash-
ed with ·Ma~ison police for
the fourth consecutive , night.
PLEI l>JERENG, Vietnam
(AP) -The Army said today
it is considering court-martial
proceedings against f I v e
Amercan soldiers who reh1sed
to make a combat assault
into1 Cambodia.
The five Gls are members
of the 3rd Battalion,.8th Infan-
try, 4U\ Division, an outfit
that· encountered h e a v y
resistance as It was flown
into a Cambodian landing zooe
surrounded by well
camouflaged encn1y positions
two days ago.
}o,iVe helicopters were down-
ed by enemy fire. a comp.any
commander was killed on the
ground and four sold.i,ers ·were
wounded. Olher troop-carrying
helicopters were forced back
by the intense fire .
Informed sources said the
five men balked as they were
about to board helicopters for
an assault into the same Ian·
ding zone the next day.
* * * Buying Time
In Ccunbodia
NEW YORK (UPI) -Herb
Klein says President Nixon's
order of U.S. troops into Cam·
bodia is not designed to kill
enemy soldiers so much as
it is to wipe out pennanent
positions and important war
materiels.
Klein also said the move
was designed to buy the U.S.
time to increase South Viet-
namese slreng,th, to increase
the •pace -0f peace talks in
Paris, and to facilitate the
withdrawal of America n
troops from Vietnam.
The President's com·
munications dire<::tor & al d
ThursdaY he realized the Viet
Cong would return to the area
once the Americans had left,
but that was , the reason for
dest~uction of the
emplacements. and equipment,
Klein explained.
. Klein made his remarks
Thursdy night on ABC·TV's
"Dick Cavett Show."
DISCRIMINATING
INVESTORS
' AT
Look For:
Stability and Availabiljty of Principal. Max-
imum Dependable Earnings. Ease of Trans-
actions.
And Find:
Accounts Insured to $20,000.00 Reserves
sufficient to assure continuance of maxi -
mum permissible\ earnings. A location as
close as your mail box.
1000 FAIR OAKS AVENUE
SOUTH PASADENA, CALIF. 91030
Area Code 213
799-4143
Area Code 2t3
682-1131
•
•
i • I ' ..
r~~i~~~~~f:~~:~:~~j~~~r~~j~:~rr:?~;~;~;~~;~:~~~t~~~~:;~;~:~~~~~;~~;;;~;~g~:~I~;~~~~~!~~;~~~~mi~1~i;~;~~;;~~~~~~i~i~~1~~~i~~~~~j~:~!~~1~~1=~1:I~:~$~:::1:~:~:~:~;~::. ii · Statement of Condition l?
j 1 DecemAbSeSrE3TS7, 1969 !'
0 ~ First Liens on Real Estate ........................ $63,792,542.70 ;.;·:
:::;::: Re IE t te 0 ed ' 591 93 ..... a s a wn ·········-················-·· u, . :.:-«: :·::::: Loans and Contracts Made to Fac.:!itate Sale of Real ::<:
:::::: Estate ...... ,.................................. 134.203.01 ;): j:) Stock in F.H.L B........................ .. . . . . . . 715,000.00
·-:·:· U.S. Government Bonds......................... 3,498,707.88
·-.·· .,.•. ···:·;. ·.·.
=·>>: Other Investment Securities.:................... 789.il4.4 l ::}~ Cash on Hand and in Banks ...................... 5i0,354.47
'.?::'. Office Building, Land and Equipment-I..ess Dcprc-
:·.,:
.......
··-:·:· ~;::::: ciation •.•..•................................... · 1,427,964.35 · :·'
:::::::: Secondary Reserve for }'ederal Savings and Loan ~ii;!i)
11\'!urance Corporation -•......••.•.....•• ···".... 734,588.70
Oftter Assets ....... • • • . . • . . . • . . • • • . . • • • • • • •• •.• • • 507.88
Total .••••..••........................•. $71,669,175.33
LIABILITIES SavingsAccounls ............................... $60,593,893.86
AdvaDc:es from F.H.L.B......... •• . . . .• . . •. •. . •• • 3;048,000.00
Other.Borrowed Money.......................... NONE
:Loans in Process. • • • . • • . . . • • . . . . . . • . • • . • . . • . • . . • 236,972.50
Other Liabilities................................ 177,915.51
Deferred Income................................ 7,388.32 ~~~ ~ific Reserves .•. --....... -. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • 7 ,240.45
;~:~~~ eneral Reserves •••••••••••••••• --:: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 61146,036. l 2 ">~ Reserve for Contingencies . • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • . . . • . • • • 191 259 00
.=·,·.=.'.' . .,.".·', Surplus 1 260°469.57 ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' ' .
·,i·.",· .. :, •. ',f.: 1b;~;~~~-~~~~FL~j,i~~~~-~~:1,669,11s33
.;:~::: ,:,;,:; MEMBER FEDERAL SAVINGS AND @:
ill~~l~:::=~*::::::~~::::r.~~:~~::~:::::::::r:W:::W.::t:f~~~~.·=~f~~M~l~=~:::~fi~1:r::~:§1:;~:1~:~:i:r:~:~tm~ ~ .• ::·:-.-:..-: .. ,·~·····•.-.•.•., ..................................... , ................. ,v,::;: ........ w:;. ,.... •• , ... ,,-x.:X."«-.• ..... ,.,., ........ •'•. ' .........•.••
senior officers were unable
to oonvince the men to change
their minds.
an allied camp In the Central
Highlands near the Cambodian
border.
''You know how it is," one
officer said liter. "Jt gets
time t() go into action, and
some kids gel scared, and
suddenly you have a bunch
-0f guys wbo claim they are
COs" -ex>rw:lentious ob-
jectors.
· One of the men kmed up
from his work, gr!Med and nasbed the "V" for peace
sign wiUt two fingers as Ute
newsman was escorted out of
A 4th Division spokesman,
Capt. Bernard F. Malle~.
refused to identify the five
men until completion of an
Article 32 invesligatioo, the
n1ilitary equivalent of a grand
jury proceeding.
TI1e Army prevented a
correspondent f r o m in-
terviewing the men Friday,
although one of them had sent
word he wanted to "tell his
story to the world.".
"You have no business in
here, and I don"t' want you
talking to my men," a ba t.
talion staff officer said aner
the men were located digging
trenches and stringing barbed
wire at the battalion's rear
headquarters at Plei Djereng,
the camp. •.••
PUT SOME
CLOTHES ON
MOTHER
THINK
W•kllff l"ltU Ht..,..-t"' ...... '-
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Boneless Cornish Game Hens
stuUed with applesauce and almonds
or rice and mushrooms
tac ....
Special Pack 6 Hens To A Box
'"-· ...----FREE-----·
Packq• of h.n 4'owvr•• wlth this a4 J
Fresh Ranch Eggs ••• 49¢ doz.
Fresh Mushrooms 59¢ 1/z lb.
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• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Costa> Mesa Ro:undup
A roundup of compliments, comme.nlaf')', criticism
and kudos on "-'hat's what in Costa Mesa :
A r•mlndtr that the Costa Mesa Kiwanis Club
stages its 20th Annual Community Breakfast tomorrow
morning from 7 to 11 at Costa Mesa Park. This always--
popular family affair offers a good opportunity to re..
meet old friends, enjoy a t~e breakfa.st -and help the
multitude of worthy Kiwanis causes tn the process.
Another reminder that tomorrow Is Fire Service
Day and Costa tl-1esa's four stations will hold open hou se
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. to show their equipment, explain
the jobs of the city's firemen and demonstrate techni-
. ques used in keeping Costa Mesa as safe as possible
from fire loss .. The stations are at 2803 Royal Palm
Drive, 111 Rochester Street, 800 Baker street and 2300
Placentia Avenue.
A kind word for that new paint store at 19th and
Harbor Boulevard. The company removed a derelict
eyesore service station and replaced it with an attract·
tive, streamlined and modernized business building. It
certainly improves the area and offers a point of re-
f erence to nearby merchants who perhaps also should
be thinking about putting their best facades forward.
A word of welcome for the 15,000 Orange County
Boy Scout.111 who take over the Orange County Fair·
irounds Saturday for their annual Scout;a-Rama. The
Scouts offer a-multitude of exhibits and demonstrations
to show what they have learned and are learning -
and the result is a striking reaffirmation in today's
vouth. Tickets cost onlv $1 for adults -kids are free -
Md it is the Scouts' orily county-wide fund-raiser of the
year.
Woods1ieth
Are Difficult
To Find Now
Ont or the advantages of being •
parent today is lbat there is more scien-
tific ilf<W1n8tlon available on eu-ly
childhood deftlopmtnl thu eve?' befon
In hilt«y. The young mother whD reads
should be able to approach her first
born with the wisdom and reluation
you fonnerb' bad to have five children
lo acqulN.
Many lbeories about children have held
gv;ay at one time or another. First,
there is the theo-
logical belief which
tells us that babies
come to ua full ol
Original Sin. They
are inhabited by
nature with wills
that have to be brok·
en, so that the task
of bringing up a
child is to uerdse
or 11.Jbdue the devil
within him. We
don't quite !UCceed!
Then there ia a 1ess theological idea
about chikiren -that they are formless
clay. They just aren't anything at all
until we shape them in some way or
olhtr by the molding we give them-by
wise COllnsd and p-oper restraints and
advice. and so on. AJ.d if you don 't
keep at it coost.antly, they go out of
shape.
UNDER THE IMPACT ol psyd>ologlcal
behaviorism there arose still another
notion that the basic idea in bringing
up children is co11dlUonlng-tbat the child
should be favorably conditioned to 1ood
habit$ a11d against bad habits, and that
the conditioning must be atarted very
early. This body of doctrine led to the
fashion whk:h raged tome 30 or more
years ego of extremely early toilet
trail'llng and rigid scheduling. Babies
would cry their hearl.1!1 out. but if, ac-
cordin& to the schedule, it y,·as11't time
to feed thtm. you had to let them cry.
The Jiie1 and disllkez which the child
w11 to carry through life y,·ere fed
Jnt.o hlm u If he we.re being programmed
like ii computer.
Eich of these theorie!!i reprf!ttnts the
effort of people to de vck>p their childrr.n
according to the models of human nature
which they have in5ide their hends. But
uch of thtm can also l..e described
as an aetivist lheory, in the sense that
the activt doing of something to lhe
child is felt to be ne«ssary it the child
is to grow up inlo an ae<:eptablc cltlicn
and tupayer.
.Quotes
1"'111 ll01tt, profe1sor tf E11nu •t
.. Cry Unlvet1lly ol New York and
._, of Dlueat, a IOClalkt joorn1J: -·n. life or the potiticel tenorist la
OVll'Whelmed by Jone1fn~1 not mtttly
becluse he cu no longer trust com-
plllely friend or comrade. but bec~usc
1'e cu!A h!m.!itlf off from ~I movements
and rommunftttt t1 which chok:ts can
.... 1ghed.
"Sllking everythln' on the act, he
blocks off all that come~ before it and
aU that comes after. Dttldlng 'll'hom
ltl smite, he replt1cts God. Cboo!tng
"1'om to punish, he replaces the justice
Cbt It 1ood or bad ) of M>dety.
"'And lince the C"1nicls o( social
tldsu tnu&f. be bc&t 10 hll w!IJ, he
rtplAcea hl1tor)'~ too. The terrorist car·
rlt1 • monil burden only ~alnts or
fautlc• would undtrtab -wont or
all, fanaUca ml1llilJll th<mJ<lvu for
Uta."
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Summer (and tourlst.sl must bfl
coming; they've started two or
three maj~ projecls which .involve .
tearing up Harbor Boulevaid.
-T. McC.
Tlltti i1Mf1'9 f'lftlnt ,...,....... vtewa, -
-11Y ...... "" --· ..... ,_ ,.. ""9 .. .....,..,. .... Dlflr , ....
lUY LATE BELOVED mother·io-law
was certainly an activist in this se.ase.
She could nevtr tali to btr grandchildren
without somehow inculcating a lesson
or some kind. She was unfailingly in-
structive, as if she reared that if you
let them do something unman11erly or
naughty once, they would continue to
do it for the rest of their lives.
Sometimes In the spirit of play I
wou1d vic>late good manners. I amused
my children very much once by taking
a great mound of jello a'ltd slurping
it dow• in one slurp. The children were
enormously impressed with father for
being abie to do this. But the example
J was setting them worried my mother·
in-law very much. She kept saying, ··sup-
pose the children do that at the St.
Francia hotel!" J said, "Good gOl!h,
they've got more sense than that!"
This idea that you always have to
be setting an example or laylag down
a rule is a very burdensome way o[
looking at communicatiot with children.
NEWER THEORIES of child rearing.
mistakenly referred to as ''permissive,"
are in part a reaction against acUvist
theories and in part are the result of
serious scientific research. Pioneers h11
the study of child development have
tried in various ways to determine the
natu ral ·laws of childhood growth, askiRg
questions like: When do they waker
When do they sleep? Eat? Cry? At
what age do they sit up? At ""hnt
age do they walk? When do they start
piling up blocks. y,•orking puzzles? When
do they start playing cooperatively with
other r.hildren?
There were also txperlme11ts in whi ch
lnvesligators put dishes in front or Jillie
children. fruit al\d sweets and ground
meal and all sorts of things, and thty
let the children choose for themselves
\\'ithout trying ti) decide what was good
for them . The investigators found th1t
instead of anarchy a11d indigestion and
autocratic infants, there resulted healthy,
happy babies \\'ith a surpri sb1gly orderly
pal tern or needs and a kind of inlern11l
schfdule (If their own, a p11ttern that
could be studied and described,
AND HOW DO CHILDREN d"•lop
11 m(lral sense. a Nense of respoulbillty?
1'here are many i:itud\es such 81' Dorothy
Baruch's "New W1ya in Discipline " and
J<'rilz Rtdl al\d Dt11vid Wineman'• "Con-
trol.a from Wlthln."
I am mort than a little concerned
about the ~ent allack1 o n
•·permissiveness" which 11 blamtd as
a l"OO( cause of 1tudent unreal and
violence. ~lany people write and talk
as ii there Wtte only two alternatives,
''permiUiveness" 01' the one hand and
riR}d extttnaJ dllcipline on the olhe:r.
Aehlally the atlvocate s of
••permJssivtM:s.f' as p o pular I y nn-
dcntood will (ind littlr to SUJ'por1 !heir
views in the writin~s of Bt1nJarnln Spock,
Amok! Gesell and ,.~ranees Ilg. or Bruno
.Bettelheim. Wheres~ Ult 111dvoc11te of
the oJd.fashlontd. r11zor·strop and v.ood-
shed are who'?P.ln' And hollerin' all o\'er
the plact.. Jt s dlfficult these days,
hoi\'tvt'r, to find either raror .. trops or
\\'ood•heds.
By I . I. Hayatawa
Prt1ldt11t
Su Fr .. cllCO Slit. Colk1•
Good news for Mesa housewives comes In the form
of a report from the Costa Mesa County Water District.
A new well bein~ drilled on the city's north si de unex·
pectedly is sbowJng up with high-quality test -mean-
1ng that il will supply softer water than ls available
through the sblpped-ln supply. Mixed with the Colorado
River water, the well water should make washing and
cleaning. easier and more economical.
A 1ug .. 1tJon: That the city traffic engineers re-
study the off-hours liming Of the signal at Fairview
Road and Arlington Drive. lt's a paintully long wait
with no one around when neither OCC nor Mesa High
is in session.
Would Be a Valuable Asset
Newport Beach city government has been asked to
donate $87,flOO -one-fourth the cost -toward con-
struction of an Olympic-sized swimming pool at New· port Harbor High School.
'Through increased swimming program revenue
lrom the larger pool and minor fee adjustments Ole city
can realize a return of $71000 a year to pay off its in·
vestment.
Newport councilmen are concerned thal they don 't
have avaiJable the funds for the initial outlay. But sure·
ly they can find them somewhere in the city budget.
Newport-Mesa Un ified School District is \villing to
put up $175,000, an offer made at this time only. In·
terested private individuals have pledged to raise the
remaining $87,500.
The opportunity is now and a supercharged S\•iim·
ming program would be a valuable asset to the Harbor Area.
That take~ care of tk press, 11twhmt unrest, Michigan U..n!~~ty,°Yak)
Dr. Spock, permissive middle class parents, ministers and tk National I
_Council of Clwrchu. What's ;your schedule for tomorrow?' • •
!CJ
Interpreting Yarborough'• Defeat in Texas
A New Political Base for Nixon?
WASFUNGTON -Shudders ran down
the politically sensitive spinet: of a half
dozen senators up for rtelection this
year with the defeat for renomination
of liberal Democratic Senator Ralph W.
Yarborough in Texas.
It was: a fair and square dt[eat o(
a thfeHenn Democratic senator who
had aligned himself with the new politics.
and Texas may move on to implement
further its judgment on modem times
by electing the Republican nontin<e, Rep.
George Bush.
As between Bush and the Democratic
nominee who defeated Yarboroogh,
former Rep. Llc>yd Bent!en, Jr.. there
is not· much ideological choice. Both
would have been called moderately pro..
gre&'!ive a few years ago and should
be called that now because they stand
against the retrogressive elements who
condone or excuse violence and disorder
whether in the name of the new politics
or the old.
IN ANOO'HER STATE another senator
finds himaelf in approximately the same
pos!Uon as Yarborough. Sen. Albert Gore
of Tennessee, foe of the Vietnam Wat,
foe of. Carswell and Haynsworth. and
friend of the new politics, is in trouble
in the state where the old priorities
still rank high.
But this is not confined to the-South .
In the North there are Democrats "'ho
( • Ri chard Wilson
must measure the Te.ll'.as results if onl}'
for lhe reason that Yarborough's hard
core of support, ethnic groups and
organized labor, did not put them selves.
out to send him back to the Sena te.
Thal is of interest lo Sen. Harrison
\Vllliams in New Jersey, to Philip A.
Hart in "P.1ichigan, Vance Hartke in In-
diana. Joseph fl.1ontoya in Ne'v :Pi·lexico,
Jc>seph Tydings in Maryland, William
Proxmire in Wisconsin, to name some
who are doing the new thing on the
basis of old ix>litical alignments whlch
may be crumbling.
'I'he doctrine in the Nixon ad-
ministration is lhat the old allgnments
ha ve crumbled and that this accounted
for the election last year of Republican
governors in New Jersey and Virgin ia.
Even more than last year Presldent
Nixon is drawing a hard line between
himself and all the manifestations of
new thought in politics.
llE tlAS l:\IPR OVEO .el'ery op.
portunily to cmphasiie the difference
between himse lf and the protesters. He
has unleashed. as the sayi ng goes, Vice
President 1\gnew to articulate i n
•
language with a high shock content the
\'iev.·s of those who are deemed to be
lJl(> new majority -those, it laas been
l\'ritten. who reel no identity with the
yo uth culture. the hippie culture, the
drug culture, black or white racism. ram·
pant sex, permissiVeness and condoned
racial and political vic>lence.
These have been called by one of
Ni xon·s young geniuses in sociopolilii:~
.. the great, ordinary Law rence \Velk1sh
mass of Americans from Maine to
HawaU."' Those not familiar with the
state of the television art may not know
tha t orchestra leader Welk, the king
of Squaresville. is now being given a
hard run by Mitch 1'1iller. But, in any
case. the new majority doctrine has
it thal Middle America is fed up with
establishment liberalism, phony revolu·
tionaries and freaky behavior and is
creating a southern-,vestern·suburban·
blue collar political base for President
Nixon y,·here only before were the smugly
satisfied, well·to-do devotees of the status
quo.
THE TEXAS RESUl~TS certainly can
he interpreted that way. Thought \\'ill
have to be given to the concept that
the new majority is rooted in the
Midwest and the pro.perous corridors:
of Florida, Texas, Arizona and California.
'Ille blue collar part of the new majority
is a little harder to comprehend but
perhaps it is true that what used to
be called the white backlash has nO\f
become much more than merely a fringe
reaction, and has outgrown George
\Vallace.
Whatever the explanation. Yarborough
failed to carry one large labor dominated
county in Texas but that may not be
typical of the "'hole count ry. After all ,
ln the closing weeks of the last presiden·
tlal campaign organized labor nearl_v
.succeeded 1Il defeating Nixon, and so
it c.innot be proved that the old liberal·
labor-ethnic coalition of the Democrats
has completely fallen apart.
TllERE WERE SO~tE signs: that the
coalition was pulling back together again
on the Carswell and Haynsworth nomina ·
lions to the Supreme Court. and so
it was as far as the leaders were con·
cerned.
But the Texas results raise the question
of the foundation ()f the coalition crumb!·
ing under the v.·eight ()[ leaders who
llave misjudged public reactitlns. If th.is
is the case it is probably a mood more
than anything else. a feeling ()n the
part of voters tha t they do not like
the current liberal establishment iden ..
tification. Some polls show that tht'
largest number of people now think of
themselves as conservatives y,·herea s il
was formerly fashionable to be liberal.
Fav.ors Direct Vote for President
To the Editor :
Do we usually atop to think as \\'e
cast our vote for president that l\'e
are voting for a slate of electors, rather
than the ca11didate himself?
Do we stop to consider that und er
the electoral college system a candidate
with fewer Vtlles that another can be
the winner?
In this modem age, do we still (etl
that a victory in the electoral vote
column should outweigh a lo.ss in the
popular vote column?
THERE ARE SEVERAL pro!"'sa!S for
change i.i our method of electing a
president advocated by various groups
in the nation. There is debate over
'''hether a plan best protecl.1!1 the l1terests
()f large states or small states, or
minorities and of the-poor. or urban
artas or n1ral , l\'helher It pret1erve11
()r hurts the t\\'&-party system (and
\Vhelher that's go<>d or bad ~).
But only lhe direct -popular election
of the presidtlflt insures that the can·
dldate with the most votes is lhe winner.
Jt ls this factor which weighed heavily
in the co111elusion or members ol the
League of Women Voters -after a
two-year study -to auppcrt a con-
stitutional amendment providing for I.ht
dlrect election of the pl'fisident.
SUCH A PROPOSED amendment wa!I
overwhtlmlngly approved list year by
the U.S. !louse ot Rtpreae•tatJves and
.----B" GeOf'fle ---.
Dear George:
J'm an ardent feminist and think
Amertcan me.n are old-faM.ioned !
Jn JfoJIBnd ~"Omen are on 5trike
11.ytng they hl\'t the right to make
P'UtS at the men. Why don 't we
do this here?
ANGRY SUE
\
Mailbox . !
Letters from readtrl art welcome.
Normallu writers should co11ve11'the ir
messages i11 300 word$ or less. Tht
right to condense letters to fit space
or eliminote libel is reserved. AIL let-
ters must i nclude signature and mail·
in g cul.dress, but names may be with-
held on request if 1ufficient reru;on
is apparent. Poetr~ wiU not bt pub-
l uh<d.
has just betn 1pproved by the Senate
Judiciary Committee. It "ow races stiff
opposition in the Senate by proponents
of various other plans and lhe status
quo. It takes a two-thirds majority to
pass the Sen1te and move to lhe st.ales
for ratification.
If you belie\'e that the vote you cast
for president should go directly to the
candidate of your chc>ice , wr ite now
· lo Se11$. Alan Cranato• and George
Radicalism
'
Press Com1nent
' ---1-
~fount Airy, ~fd., C•m ma nl ty
Repor1er: "Le\'1 have more emphasis ,
upon the J1reserv1Uon of the 'perlllnal
liberty' i nd freedom of law-abiding
ciUuns, 10 lhtt the self-N!5)>f:Ct of our
naUon may once more be eslablil'hed and
v.·e do not have lo continue tc> hang our
heads In ahame because of the continued
tole rt1tlon of thlo; rahld radicalism \\'hlch
hair; been sweeping the country." Dt.ar Angry Sue:
You mean rlsht herf, In• f1mlly \\'hit's New In HE\\': "i\f('(i1cal cos~
new11paper ? Tsk : (lnddentllly, are rl1ing 1t more than double the In·
docs your lttter imply th1t the crte!!e In the emit or living. Hospilal dally
mtn in Jlolland .are agiimt charge1, excluding ph ys ician 's care, h11ve
oreaniztd 1triktn 1n this cue? risen from $44 In 1965 to S70 this year and
1 doubt It.) are oxpectod to 10 to 1100 by tm If pres· .._ ____________ _, c enl Inflation continues."
J\.lurphy, United States S en a I e,
Washingt on, D.C. 20510.
MRS. CARL BLACK
ltorst Cat.astrophes
To the Editor :
J have a granddaughter y,•ith \\'horn
I have made a pact. She does my
typing and , in turn, l assist her with
her homework.
The other eveni11g. struggling wi th
social studies. I asked her to list the
three worst catastrophes in the history
or California.
Her list is as follows:
I. The San Fral'IC~O earthqu11ke. 1908.
2. The disastrous floods in northern
California, 1950.
J. The election of Governor Reaga n,
1966.
Out or the mouths of babel' ..•
It f". BUTTS
•Jllokes 1\·o Sense'
To the Editor:
11 is: extremely lntere~ting that t.he
Republican seMlors are more concerned
with agreeing y,•ith President Nlxon on
the Cambodia situation than S<"eing the
new developments for what they arr.
Senator Crenston, D-C1lif., summed it
up beautifully, ''ll mikes no tien5e at
all."
110\~:ever. President Nixon ts right
a b o u t one thing. to slop Amerlcan
:;okiiers from being killed In Vietnam
is to lnlnsfer them to Cambodia. [
suppo&e It does mike • difference that
young men wtU die In anothtr Asi an
coontry.
?ilARY \\11LLIAMSON
011 Slicks .........
To tl!t Editor:
E\·er since the big oil slick In the
Santa Barbara ch.nnel the news media
rrport all oil 11ick1 no matter whtrc
lhty happen. The really bad oil slicks
art ca used by leaking oil wells drilled
In to tht ocean noor. When a lcnking
\\'ell causes 11n oil slick that kills y,•Udllfe,
th<>se that are concerned aboul l!iuth
lhings cry out in anguish and demand
that the government must do something.
However, lhese individuals never come
forward with any ideas on hO\v lhey
could help lo eliminate wi ldli(e-killing
<lil slicks.
OlL WELLS ARE drilled into the ocean
floor because oil companies can converl
most of the oil they recover into gasoU ne
which can be sold for a profit. Now
if there were no demand for gas there
would be no need to drill mosl or I.he
oil \\'ells that are now being drilled
on the land or In the sea. or course.
there is no posaible way for our modern
M>Clety to exist without the use of g1:oi:
but each concerned individual could
reduce his or her use of gas to a
minimum.
NO\\' 1 Ai'lt NOT going to Insult your
Intelligence by telling you how to rerlucf'
~our use or gas. but those: of you that
wlll at least try will gain much hap-
piness.
ln conclusion. any int'l'tvldual that r·rif'"
out in anguiah over each and cver:-i
nil slick and drives one of those high
performance cars ha s got lo be •
bypacrllc. HARRY B. McDONALD J .
---1WWW-
Friday, May 8. 1970
Tht tdltor'4Z potJt of fhe Doily
Pilot seeks to tt1form and .sUnt-
u!ate ttadt rs by pre¥nting thtl
'ieu:spapc'.c opi n1on11 and eorn-
mantarv on topic.c of intercsc
and rignifiamce, bu providi no a
forum for th• ttpte11icm of
our rtt1der1' opfnions, and b11
presenting th1 dive rse view-
points of infonned ob1trotr.1
and •polusmrn on topics of tli~
day.
Robtrt N. Weed , Publl.shrr
------.-.-.. ---I., r-...... o ' • )r'J'T'""" #"I.__..-,. ' -'
•
Saddleba~k Today's' flnal
EDITION
vo e. 63, NO. I 10, 4 SECTIONS. 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS
oro
Marcia on PO State Vote
More Protesting On Mitchell
Planned on Coast Postponed
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of tlll CMIJ,., Plltt Steff
More peaceful demonstratiom are
planned this weekend along the Orange
Coast as student protesters continue to
register opposition lo U.S. involvement
in Cambodia and the death of four
Kent Slate students.
Orange Coast College's Student Non·
violent Strike Committee scheduled a
march on the Costa l\'lesa Post Office
/,.City May .Aid
Transit Line ·
This Summer .. -
The colorful festival trams and the
big Cannonball will run as usual this
i;ummer but the city of Laguna Beach
may have to go into the bus business
lo keep the faltering local transit line
in operation, it was disclosed at the
City Council meeting this week.
Tommy Thompson, owner or the
Laguna Transit -Oompany which operates
the local line, ap~ared before the council
to protest the competition" of the trams,
specifically the Cannonball, but ended
up admitting 1hat even without the com-
petition, Laguna Transit is "very close
to quitting."
The bus line, he said, has been
operating at a loss since inauguration
o{ the Leisure World run which he
cancelled last week as an emergency
measure. Recognizing the summer competition
of the Cannonball, which operates north
and south on Coast Highway during the
Festival run, the Festival has been
paying Laguna Transit up to $1 ,000 a
year, technically for permission to oper-
ate tmder its Public Utilities Commission
perm.it.
This year the Festival attorney advised
directors that the trams did not need
.a PUC permit to operate within the
city limits, only a city permit, and
the $1 ,000 payment was cancelled.
The Venice Tram Company, owner
()f the trams, applied for a city pennit
bul city action was deferred following
a protest from Laguna Transit.
\Vednesday night, after discussion with
Thompson, the permit was granted.
Under questioning by Mayor Richard
Goldberg, Thompson, who formerly drove
ttit: Cannonball and said he's "not against
the trams," admitted that even the $1,000
would not be enough to restore his
firm's economic equilibrium.
"Laguna Transit has been operating
at a loss and is very close to quitting,"
he said. "I can't get financial backing
and 1 was going to bring up the question
of a city subsidy when this tram thing
was settled."
"We need a bus line here," said Coun-
cilman Charlton Boyd. "I wou1d advise
t.lr. Thompson to go ahead and file
(Set TRAMS, Pa1e J)
this morning where they planned to
hold a "P..tail·lo."
A spok~man for the group said they
had more than 1,000 lett.ers which they
intended to mail individually at the facili ·
ty at 1590 Adams Ave.
"Tilese letters are addressed to our
Congressmen and the President," he
said, "and they register our oposition
to Nixon's war policy," a student
spokesman explained.
A table will be set up in front of
the post office to enable concerned
citizens to have available to them writing
materials and the addresses of their
legislators in Washington D.C.
The post o(fice march is expected
to be peacefu1 as was Thursday's March
from OCC to the Costa Mesa Air National
Guard Base.
Police and student ocganizers estimate
2,000 people took pv,rt in the march
and rally held in a field near the base.
The cOsta 1.-fesa police helicopter kept
watch from overhead as the marchers
walked from the campus to the rally
site. One observer sakl he could see
no patrolmen in the march area.
Five national guardsmen listened from
behind the fence surrounding the base
as four student speakers gave short
speeches on the war and the Kent St.ate
deaths.
Costa Mesa police said today they
Intercepted three youngstei's with guns
who were beading in ·the direction or
the march. ·
Three teenage boys were stopped in
the 2900 block of ~endoza Drive, heading
in the general vicinity of the march,
at about 3 p.m. The boys told officers
they were looking for a place to shoot
their two rifles and pistol.
Police said they confiscated the
weapons rather than have the youths
carry them into the march and rally
area.
Leaflet activities by UC Irvine studenl,
continued today with a Teach-in and
dialogue session scheduled to start on
campus at 11 a.m.
Protest spokesman Doug \Vhitener
said, "We're trying to ca rry our dialogue
to tile community." He stressed that
the public was invited to the teach-in.
Another meeting was set for 7:30
o·clock tonight at UC1'11 Gateway Com·
moos. Whitener said the meeting would
be held to get a consensus for weekend
activities.
By this morning, the only activity
planned for Saturday was a rock concert
at Cal State Fullerton.
On Sunday, the Movement for a
Democratic Military (MDM l has organiz.
ed a march from the Santa Ana Marine
Corps Air facility to Santa Ana Memorial
Park.
The marth, which Is scheduled for
11 a.m. in front of the facility al Red
Hill and Valencia Avenues, is being held
to emphasize the MOM demands to end
all U.S. involvement In Southeast Asia ,
"murder on campus" and ''all racism
.and brut.alism in the military."
Students at Saddleback College and
Goldeo West College planned no organiz·
ed activities for the weekend but a
(See PROTESr, Pqe ZI
Cle1nente High Athletes
The State Senate -this week. delayed
the scheduled floor vote on appointment
of South Lagunan Clay N. Mitchell to
the State Board ol. Education because
of insufiicient votes.
This was the ~ssment today by
an aide of Senator Alfred Alquist ()).San
Jose), who is opposing the appoinbneol
of ~11tchell.
Alquist, a candidate for lieutenant
governor, int&Togated Mitchell before
the Rules Committee recently, but
Jo.1itchell won approval of the Rules Com-
mittee by a 4 to l split vote.
The Alquist aide said because of absent
senators the pro-MJt.chelJ forces could
not round up the necessary 27 votes
to confirm the appointment.
However, the matter may be brought
up at any time if the votes are rounded
up. It would take 14 votes against Mitche ll
to block his appoinbnent and Alquisl
has been \eying to round these up.
Normally, gubernatorial appointments
are rubber-lit.amped by the Senate with
little fanfare.
The Alquist aide speculated if the
pro-Mltchell votes aren't rounded up tly .
next week:, Governor ~ miiht,
withdraw the appointment. •jtt really
tsn't-mrowmior"s a p po I 11 t m en t
anyway,". the aide suggested, "it's Max
Ra!futy's."
Republican aources have said that Ral·
ferty, state superintendent ol. public in·
struction, lobbied strongly with the
governor to appoint the 58-year-old South
Lagunan.
Chamber Opposes
Gas Tax Switch
A ffiove to divert gasoline tax revenue
from highway coostruction use in
California has sparked opposition from
tile Capistrano Beach Chamber of Com-
merce.
The Chamber's board adopted a resolu·
lion protesting proposed amendment of
Article 2& of California Constitution which
might allow expeRditure or gas tax funds
for general government purposes.
In discussion by the board . members
expressed willingness to have gas tax
money spe11t on transportation uses ruch
as rapid transit programs, but objected
to possibility or general fund uses of
the tax dollars.
A freeway linking Capistrano Beach
with other coastal communities Is one
of the projects set for completion within
the next five years.
STOCK MARKET
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
drifted downward in slow trading this
afternoon as traders turnf!d their atten.
lion to antiwar demonstrations and fist-
fights in Wall Street See quotations,
Pages 20 • ll).
Furor Rises on Suspension
A mounting furor over the suspension
of two San Clemente High School athletes
rages unabated today despite a Superior
Court decision which seems geared to
meet both skles in the bitter dispute
at the halfway mark.
Judge Robert S. Corfman today denied
the plea of the Capistrano Unified School
District for dissoluUon of a restraining
order which prevents district authorities
from barring Ruben Paramo, 17, from
baseball act.iviUes and Ant.bony W. Hof~
(man. 16, from the shcoOl's pole 't'aulUng
squad. Both boys tA'ere ejected by Assl,tanl
Principa l Fred Pasquale last April 20
after the hearing charges that the aµr.
lete.s drank beer at a Sa n Clemente party.
Judge Corfman contlnutd t h e
restraining order todny but he Im·
mediately :iib.solvcd from lt!J regulation!
&he coaches o£ the two boys: Z-1arshall
Adair for Paramo and Ray Reeves for
Hoffman.
"In other words," Laguna Niguel at.
tcrney Tom Xeenan said, "the only peo--
ple at San Clemente High Sclw>ol who
can bar these boys from athletic ac·
UviUes are these two coal'hes. It may
well be that they will ~ kick them
off their respective. teams but the ques.
tion that immedfately occurs Is how
much pressure will be applied on the
'!O"cheS by odl<r IOUl"C<S ...
K...,.a. al'gu<d ti><! tchool di.trlct
authorities had acted "unconsUtutlonally
:iincl arbilarily" when they acttd to
remove "two dedlcaltd athletes" from
high school sports activities.
Judgt Corfman commented : "lhty
\\·ere not so dedicated that they didn't
drink some beer."
Rube n Paramo Sr .. 32211 Lml Amll(ol!,
San Juan CapilLriloo, believes that Adair
will remove his son from the school's
ball club.
"l have my reasons," he said, "and
I thlnk that the judg's ruling today
will lead Adair to take my son off
the team."
Anthony Hoffman's parents felt thert
was "a good chance" that tile boy,
who is the brother or surfing champion
Joyei! Hoffman, will be allowed to con·
tinue parUcipaUon in pole vau1ting
events. He is scheduled to appear for
lhe ochool this afternoon in lhe CIF
final.a:.
Parents of both boys spoke of "s.
wsve of unrest" in San Cl~mente ind
UH! S\lspension of two more athletes
durinil the last two days at the high
school.
Mrs. Patricia lloffman ldehtlFrcd the
boys involved as star hurdler Bob
IS.. ATHLETES, Pqe I )
a
• •
, Ul'ITt .......
'I KNEW GOD woutDN'T ~ET ME DOWN'
Ann Turner C•n Now SM Wh•t She Cooks
ea
Crews Hunt
Flier Near ' .
Catalina
U.S. Marine, Navy and Coast Guard
~ a1r and sea units continued their search
today for a missing El Toro Marine pilot
wbo balled out 9f his jet Thursday short!)'
before . it eras~ into the ocean about
1~ miles southeast of Santa Catalina
Island.
Marine Corps spokesmen said Capt.
Jack A. Chiaramonte, 28, who lives on
the base with his wife and four children
parachuted from his Skyhawk after 1ooa.:
ing control · of the plane dwinl!l a
famillarizaUon flight.
The spokesman 11ald the pilot of a
plane Oyinl!l with the downed craft saw
the P!lot arid his parachute go tnto
the ocean aftet the 6:3(fp.ffi. crash.
Three heli copte rs, two fl.J:ed·wlng craft
three tracking planes and a. COast Gyftrd
cutter joined in the search that continued
through the night.
The cause of the actldent had not
been determined. -
Pana-Capo Beach
Cityhood Plea
Filed in County
• ~.,jl·>'.· '-i'f.:f '.lr.11 ~ !.~" ,·~~:.-~~'The committee 'fcir the tncorporatlon
· Medi .. al M1· ra·.-1e·"' · ~~~ i:h~11~P\::~": ~~>;.:~; ..._, ..., waa ofr1cially filed Thursday.
. . . The JncorporatiOn proposal will be corr
s1dered ' at the June a meeting of the
·Blinded Girl, 15, Sees Again
TIP'I'ON, Ind. (UPI) -March 7. A11n
Turner, 15, stared at the solar eclipse
and was blinded. Her doctor said her
eyes showed burn inflammation and
scars, and · she probably never would re-
g~in her sight.
Today she can see again .
Dr. Samuel Th-Ompson, a Marion eye
specialist who first examined Ann after
the eclipse, said she had experienced a
"medical phenomenon .''
When Thompson first looked al ber
eyes, he said, they showed burn inrlam·
mation and scare. They st.ill have some
scars, bul Ann now has nonnal vision,
Thompson said, although he will examine
her periodically for the next year.
Thomp!!on said lhe gill lost her sigllt
from staring directly at the solar eclipse
March 7, when the moon passed in front
of the 11un, darkening the skies at midday.,
Doctors warn against staring at such
phenofljena, b~ause of the danger to
eyesight. · . ..
WednC'5Clay, one day short cl two
months after .she watchtd the eclipse,
Ann cried: "I can see, 1 can seel• .. uer
mother hurried in'to her rOom · and found
her wlth her face buried in her hands,
weeping.
··I believe it was a miracle, through.
the doctor or by natural means," said
Ann 's mother, Mrs. eoy·Tutner. "UrsUU
has the 'touch of GOd'1 .hand In it."
Ann had been continuing her education
at home. Wednesday night, her tutor,
Mrs. Donna Renie, came; for their usual
session. Ann said to' her: ''What a·pretty
blouse you are wearing."
Ann will return to school Monday. Her
Only restriction · is to av'oid bright sun-
light .
"I knew -God wouldil't let me down ,'''
she said.
Laguna Civic League Eyes
. .
High Rise, General Plan
High-rise, the fate o! the general plan
and future deve~ments on the Main
Beach will be the principal topics at
t'le annual atJ.·membership meeting of
the Laguna Beach Civic League at 7: 30
p.m. Tuesday, March !%, in City Hall
council chambers, President Anthony
Demetriades ani"IOunced today,
Brief presentations will be made on
these critical issues, he said.
"The Civic League has for years at-
tempted to protect Laguna's scenic and
aesthetic heritage,'' Demetrlades said.
"We will not be t.alking about the
vague past end the vague future at
our mee'.ing. Developments in Ute last
few days will begin, to alfect the
Former Mayor
To Open Season
Fonner Laiuna Beach Mayor ·Jesse
Riddle will tO!s out the . first blu :as
1970 Little League play gets under "=8Y
Saturday at Riddle Fl~ld. 1
Opening ei!remGnies are scheduled 'at
noon. with Riddle,· Mayor Richard
Goldberg and ruembe?s of the City Coun·
ell on hand as'. ~ests,of honor. '
Mrs. Amy Norworth, whose late hu!J--
band, Jaclc wrote the pqpular .. Takc
Me Out To The Ball Came," will be
lher~ to, with her tradilionijl gift of
Crack:rjack for all the players.
character of our town In the nelt few
wee kt.
"We want to eiplain to our members
precisely what the possibilities are, and
to solicit their time and effort . to main-
tain a true . 'village atmosphere' in
Laguna." ·
I1e urged members to attend and to
bring guests. ·
Drug Suspect's
Wife Gives Up
' The wife or a Laguna Beach m11n
arrested Monday ind charged with
pos.session or 70 pounds of hashish, valued
at $90,000 tumed berselt in to Laguna
Beach poUce Thurs4ay alter -a warr1nt
had been issued for hir 'arrest as an.
accomplice in ~ cue.,
· Ann Elizabeth C1,rt1, 21. wtnt to the
police department with ber attorney and
titer· 'wa1 rtlt!faRd . on ' ~r· own
l~!~:,byw1~i~n;:n1~~
1'7G N. Coast Highway,.who was arftsted
with his brotlier: Robert; 18, when police
apprehended lllem 1oaa1ng lhe haslilsb.
into a car.
. In Sciuth County ~tunkl~I Court 'Nlef.
day. Judge Hamilton itet thl!lr ball at
US,000 each and ordered them held for
tri>I.
Local Agency Formation Commission
(LAFC).
A meeting of civic alld service clubs
fn the incorporation area has been
scheduled for Thursday, May 21. The
purpos_e ol .the gathering will be to
study the econor'nlc Ceitsibllity report
which has been submitted to the LAFC
along with ·a map cf the proposed city.
. The m~ting will take plaei! at a p.m.
in the home of Dr. Roger Sanderson,
chairman of the locorpor~Uon committee.
C!ubs which will be asked to send
two representatives include the Dana
Point and Capistrano Beach Chambers
of Commerce, the Dana K no 11 :t
Horii.toWners Association .. tilt D"'arla Po!i:it
Civic Association, the Thunderbird Com·
munity Homeowners Assoclation, the
• Capistrano Beach Community Associa·
tion, El C&nino Junior Woman's Club,
Capistrano Beach Lions, Capistrano
Beach and . Dana Point Rotary alld tbe
American Legion Post 741.
•
Stevenson's Son Asks
Marriage Dissolved
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI I -John Fell
Stevenson, youngest son of the late Adlai
Stevenson, seeks the custody of bis three
children in divorce papers filed against
his llOcialite wile Natalie Owiogs Stev·
en son.
Stevenson, 34, flle<i 1 suit Thursd17
under Calitomta's new dl550luUon of
marriage law in which specific grouads
are not required.
Orange Coast
Weather
You may be able to cutaleep the
coastal cloudiness over the week·
end, aod from' then' on it'll be a
nice day with fair aklea and temp-
eratures in the temperate IO's.
INSmE TODAY
Theu'l1 be htadng the villain
and Cheering.the .hero Sati·rday
night -at Nnoport Harbor High
School token on old iimt ~f&.
drama 11oes-on rtage for char·
ftv. Details in todau'1 Week·
ender. •
..... tt .,.... '"" ..
c.1iw... ' ·~....,... • •• CllMlllftt \Ip • ' ,, ... .r-M ~ '11.Q'. llttt'~·i• U·I' ·c~ 1 • I • 1• ~IWrtt'W,; 11•11 C~ If Sttd\. M.I~ 1W1 Dull! NlltkH • Tttntl1'11 M ·~ .. ,... ' n.."" 2"11 lllliMollu Jl.Jl W"ll11r 4
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:t DAILY Pll~T SC
-'
DAllV PILOT Sl1H P'lltlt ANTI-WAR DEMONSTRATORS HEAD FOR AIR NATIONAL GUARD UNIT IN COSTA MESA
Previously Unnoticed, Quiet Little Communications Unit 81com11 Object of March
San Clemente Council
Nixes 'Bargain Beams'
Even a price reduction of $7,000 wa1
not bargain enough to tempt San
Qemente councilmen to purchase the
hand-decorated beams al the Capistrano
Beach Club.
Councilmen had tartly rejected the
beams, which once helped hold up the
ceiling over U)e oil-wealthy Doheny fami-
ly, at su.odo plus estimated $3,000
demoliUon cost.
They rejected them more gently
Wednesday at $5,000 plus demolition.
It had been suggested that the beams
might be used in construction or the
community clubhouse that was gulled
by fire.
Councilman Thomas OKeefe, wh<i said
be had an interest in the matter, refrain.
~ from di&cus!ion or voting.
Jn othtr business, cooncilmen:
-Adopted an ordinance which reduced
the speed limit for trains from 6&-75
miles per hour to 40 miles per hour. -set consideral.ion of reconsLruction
rl the golf greens !or a Monday s\Udy
HSSioo.
-Reduced the Ii~ fee for slamp
•ending machines from $5 annually to
# after hearing a present.alion from
the machines' owner.
-ln.!llructtd the city manager to call
for bids cn an automatic gate at the
Avenida del Mar crossing cf the Santa
Fe track. One oompeny had agreed to
do the work for $3,386. Councilman
'Iboma<!: OKeefe asked (or other bids
and broad specifications commenting,
"I don't think w eneed to pay f4,000
for a garage door cpener ."
-Set a joint study .session Mond-ay
with the planning commission and parks
and recreation commission on the future
q the community clubhouse.
-Accepted a revised bid from D. C.
1-turalt Co. !or work in an improvement
Stale Drops Charges
In Panther Shooting
CHICAGO (AP) -The slate dropped
attempted murder charges today against
seven Black Panther party members
who v•ere present durb1g a shooting
in which police ki lled . two Panther
leaders.
Two policemen and (cur Pa11ther
members were ~·ounded in w h a t
authorities have described a.s a gun battle
initiated by the Panthers during a pre-
dawn raid on a \Vest Side apartment
De< .•.
DAILY PILOT
,._,Mt l•tclri ""'''"ffM ....
Let••• lffch hnh111t Y.n.y
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lloDtrt It W,,J
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$111 t~lt: JD5 1<10<111 El C1mir111 •ul
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f,
di1trk1 OD East Avtnkia Cordoba lo
benefit nine property ownera.
-Denied a request from the San
Clemente Dental Laboratory, 150 W.
Avenida ~a. for parking space in front
of the laboratory for doctors and pa-
tients.
Set for Monday !Ludy a request from
G. Carson Rasmussen and 111 cther
owners of more than 200 acres of un-
developed acreage that the city e3tabU1h
a policy for con.!ltruction of an interceptor
sewer line at general city expense.
-Agreed to let cart Kymla, manager
cf the Moulton-Niguel Water District,
e1ddress the council at its next sessic11
cn benefit o( joining the South East
Regional Reclamation AsaociaU011 wblch
::;ix other agencies have joined.
--Agreed during budget considerations
to take up the matter of radar for traffic
enforcement
-Scheduled for the Monday session
;11 riiscussion of chamber cf commerce
promotional funds.
Board to Srudy
Teacher Appeals
Over Dismissals
The Laguna Beach school board ha~
scheduled an eiecutive (closed) session
at 8:30 a.m. Saturday to study the writ·
1en opinion of state hearing officer
Bichnell J. Showers regarding the pro-
posed dismissals of two Laguna Beach
High School teachers.
ti-fusic director Jack Kr efting and art
teacher Donna Lynde requested formal
hearings after they were told they would
not be re-hired for the 1970-71 school
yea r.
The hearings were conducted in Santa
Ana last "A·eek, with members of the
school administration, parents and
student.s testifying.
After studying the written opinion pro-
\•ided by the hearing officer, it rs the
prerogative of the school board to act
cn his re<:ommendation as it chooses.
A i.-pecial public meeting of the board
is scheduled for 7:30 o'clock Tuesday
night in the district ofUces to announce
the decision.
Also on the agenda for the. executive
session is an evaluation etf the central
administrative staff and a report on
this also 1nay be made al the Tuesday
night meeting.
State 'Big Fisl1,'
In Locld Waters ,
Att0r1iey Decides
San Clemente councilmen have ap-
parenlly given up on M>vereignty over
local fishing waters to protect the local
sport fi shing fleet.
A report from City Attorney P.
:P.1ac Kenile Brown Indicated WedMsday
that the state is pretty well the big
fllh out 11'1 the three-mile limit.
Local fishermen have protested com·
merclal fishing boalli from other areas
that flah off San Clemente.
Brown 11id Santa Monica tried to
prohibit tl.shlng nets within a certlin
distance from its pier, but the courts
held the area wu pre.qnpted by the
state.
Brown tield out a mb1now of hope
when he 1e.id the Supreme Court ha~
ruled that flahJng Is a "t1 x11ible eve.it."
lte sa.Jd be had contacted l.<11 Angeles,
Newport Beach, Santa Monica and
Redondo Beach about their approach.
lle said they did Impose fees on opera-
tions with boata docked within their
area, but saki be v .. aa doubUul or lm·
posing fee& on boals fishing l.i San
Clemen te but Mt h&rboffil here.
"\Ye c1n't do It ?" 11skcd the m11yor.
1'lt's dUficult," rcpUed the attornfy.
f'ro111 Page 1
PROTEST ...
Golde~ West spokesman said they were
pl,ruung an event of an undisclosed
nature on Monday.
About JOO striking student.s from Chap-
man College in Orange said they planned
lo march on the Western Wh ite House
in San Clemente today at 1:30 p.m.
Ctlapman is one cf the few county col~
leges which is remaining open in the
light of student protests.
Thursday, Santa Ana Colle1e was
ordered closed until Monday, leaving
Cha{Elan, Fullerton College and Cypress
College the only county instltuUons which
have not clet1ed.
Students, faculty and administrators
at Costa Mesa's Southern CalifoTnla
College are participating in a "Com-
munity or Concern for Collegewide
Reflectkln on Responsibility" a f t e r ~
regularly scheduled classes were suspen.
ded Thursday.
Cleme11te Asked
To Give $1,000
For Oil Battle
San Clemenle has been asked to ante
up $1,000 lo fight for restrictions against
off.shore oil drilling.
Councilmen, who l1ad earlier denied
a request for funds to help pay a lobbyist
In \\'ashington, have agreed lo ta ke
anothe r look at the matter etn May
20.
Mrs. Du nca n Stewart, a director or
the Coa stal Area Protecti ve League
{CAPL), told councilmeu Wedn esday
night that Ne"'port Btiach and Laguna
Beach have each pledged up to $2,000
and that the county will match the
funds.
The money is to pay lob byist Fred
Burke in an attempt lo shepherd Senate
Bill 3093 out of the judicial and Interior
and insular affairs coounittees to
passage.
Sponlliorcd jointly by Senators George
,.1urphy and Alan Cranston, the bill would
extend prohlbilions aga inst cff·shore ex-
ploration into federal waters beyond
areas where there are existing 11tate
sanctuariel!I prohibiting e1p\oraUon.
Such a sanctuary exists from the Santa
Ana River to the ~1ex.ican border.
f'rotn Page 1
ATHLETES ...
Blacker and hlghlf regarded tennis
pl11yer Terry Plowden.
"'Mle charges against them," !ihe said.
"11 re tha t they have been smoking but
the evidence seems to be pretty
circumstantial in at least one or the
ca!les .
"Sorr.eooo Is out lo get these athletes
and wt would likr. to koow who," she
said. "The.re are many people In San
Cleml"ne ~part from tht parents of
<llhletic competitof'll who would like-to
know who It applying this kind of
preuure to their son~ .. ,
Capls!r11no Unlrltd School District
11ul horlt ics deelined today to comment
hn lhe la"A'su\t or the su bstquent charges
made. by parents of athletl!s,
-
Cambodia War Widens
Biggest Arms Cache Uncovered
SAIGON (UPI) -The United Slates
today sent another battalion of 800 troopt
into Cambodia where a aeries of allied
operations have uncovered the greatest
arms cache ot the war. Southwest of
iiaigon a flotilla of 100 allied boats mcved
upri ver toward Phnom Penh.
The operatklns in Cambodia brousht
savage retaliation from North Viet-
name~ in the northern regions of South
Vietnam. They killed 57 civilians and
wounded 82 io shelling attacks on the
cities of Hue and Tam Ky and battled
their way into Tam Ky in street fighting.
The action cost them 14 dead.
It was the costliest nlght of Communist
att.acks this year.
Military spokesm en in Saigon said 800
troops of the U.S. 9th Infantry Division
moved into the Parrot's Beak area 35
miles northwest of Saigon where a Sooth
Vietnamese force destroyed the Ba Thu
supply base and then withdrew. 'Thev
said the Americans moved in to preven.t
Viet Cong from returning to the area.
The allied oper1tJoo so far has killed
nearly 4,000 Communi&t troops at a cost
of 56 Americans defd and 153 wounded
and about 200 South Vietnamese dead
and 900 wounded . The Americans also
captured 884 prisoners.
UPI correspondent Leon D a n l e 1
reported from ''The City," a vast Corrf..
munist complex just across the border,
that American troops had found the
biggest supplies oC arffil and ammunilio
of the entire war and that the coun
was sti ll under way.
In Washington, lhe Pentagon told
Secretary oC State William P. Rogers
today the operations have captured
enough a1nmunition for the Communists
to have conducted 719 small hit-run at-
tacks on South Vietnamese cities. It
said this included 4,000 rcunds of rocket,
mortar and recoilless rifle shells plus
1,000 tons of rice -enough to feed
4,000 troops for nearly a year.
The flotilla cf U.S. Navy and South
Vietnamese vessels was moving through
the Mekong Delta on the Bas.sac ruver
which joins the Mekong at ctiau Doc,
115 mllee southwest of Saigon. The flotilla
Dana Institute Backs
Berthing for Nesco I
Efforts of Robert Simley of Capistrano
Beach to obtain pennanent berthing in
the new Dana Harbor for oceanographic
vessel Neseo I received a boost from
the Dana Marine Studies InstJtlite today .
From Page I
TRAMS ...
an application for a subsidy. The problem
i! going to be oun, not the Festival's."
A spokesman for Venice Trams told
the council, "There are only five private·
Jy owned bus companies in the country
now. ,.toet cannot operate without a
subsidy."
It was pointed out that the Festival
takes a lcss of some $9,000 a year
on the tram opera tion, paying Venice
Tram a contract sum for use of the
trams and 11ub.9idizin g the difference
between tbls fee, driver salaries and
the minimum fares charged for the con-
venience of patrons.
Goldberg said that the future of the bus
line should be discussed with Laguna
Transit and set a council study session
oo the problem for 7:30 p.m. Monday,
May 18.
Asks 'Equal Time'
WASHINGTON (AP} -Democratic
Na tional Chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien
asked lhe three major televi si on
networks today to give full coverage
of a major foceign policy speech he
plans Saturday night In response to the
Nixon administration's Ca m bod i a
policies.
I
i,
I
I
Institute presideJJt Dr. Andre a~
Rechnltzer submitted a Jetter to Simley
in which he terms availability of a vessel
such as Nesco I to be "highly desirable
• .. for at least two kinds of servlce."
Rechnitzer said the craft, at anchor,
could be utilized successfully for ln-
doctrinalion and orientation to shipboard
equipment and operations.
For more advanced training the craft
could provide sta erperience f o r
students.
If some assurance could be given that
the vessel will be available for such
a program, the lnmtute would plan to
initiate it by September 1970, Rechnitzer
said.
His allowable time In Dana Harbor
expired, Simley will take the Neaco ... l
to Newport Harbor this morning. . ..
Capistrano Bay
Fund Gets Boost
United Fund organiz.lng effort! In the
Capistrano Bay area received a boost
this week in a vote <>f support by the
Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce
Board of Director:s.
The Chamber heard Bob Oakley, fund
Interim vice-president, in April, and
discussed the organiZ1tion and purpo6es
of United Fund, but a vote on the matter
was postponed to the board meeting
this week.
Roy Garbarine cf San Cle mente
Chamber is Interim president cr the
group which is seeking Chamber en·
dorserntnl throughout the Capistrano Bay
arta.
left in its wake a stQMtl cf cootro\'UI)'
over the lack of secrecy about it..
missions:.
lnlonned sources said it would not
cross into Cambodia before Saturday
morning.
·Its every move has been· broadCL~t
lo the Viet Cong in advance, aod heavy
oppOsition was forecast on the fS mUes
between Chau Doc and Phnom Penh.
The controversy over security delayed
parture, but reports today &a.id
it was· nearing Cha~ Doc with South
Vietnamese soldiers along to protect it
from ambu shes. U.S. and South Viet·
namese planes v.·ou\d be expected to
provide air cover.
The heaviest opposition was expected
at the Cambodian river crossing town
of Neak Luong, 30 miles below Phnom
Penh and 15 miles above the South
Vietnamese border. Strong Communist
forces controlled the ferry crossing there,
and Cambodian troops were reported
moving slow ly into the area from Phnom
Penh-to try to dislodge them.
Students March
On Oliio Capitol
111 Kent Protest
COLUMB US, Ohio (UPI) -Thou>ands
cf College students, chanting ··Peace
now ," marched on the closed and heavily
guarded state capitol today to protest
the killings of four Kent Sla~ students
by National Guard troops.
The students marched from the
Veterans ~lemorial Auditori um, about
a mile from the capitol, through part
of the doMito wn area and oolo the
statehouse grounds.
A force of 150 Ohio tlighway Patrol
officers armed with shotguns and riot
clubs ringed the building. A.bout a dozen
patrolmen guarded a flagpole flying the
American and Stale of Ohic flag.
"Nobody ·s going to pull down that
flag or invade the statehouse," said
Ohio Highway Patrol Superintel'Klent
Robert ~1. Chiaramonte. "'We are oot
going to be a punching bag for anyone."
Albert Gienow, state public work.•
director, ordered the bailding and all
slate offices closed after a conference
with Chiaramonte.
A nearby buHding housing the Colum-
bus Dispa!C'h and the Columbus Citizen
Journal also was locked, but the papers
CQntinued to work.
. \ patrol officeT was asked If tht
shotguns were loaded.
"You're damn right they're kladed, ..
he replied.
Col. J .E.P. ~1cCann, administrative
assistant to the adjutant general in Ohic,
said the guard would carry weapons
loaded with live ammunition if they
were called to duty because oC the rally.
"We feel that 'A'hen cur people are
put in a dangerous situation we stlould
afford them the opportunity to protect
themselves,'' McCa nn said.
HENREDON TRANSLATES THE SUBTLE PROPORTION AND CLEAN LINE OF THE ORIENTAL INTO
AN EXCITING NEW COLLECTION FOR CONTEMPORARY HOMES-TRADE WINDS.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
N!WPORT BEACH
1727 WHtcllll Dr., '42-2050
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
LAGU NA BEACH
Prafe11lon1I Interior 345 North C011t Hwy.. 494-6551
DHlgners Avllltblt-AID OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 rtl•• Ten ''" M ... •f o,_,. Ceuty l40.t 2'J
Lagu11a Beaeh
~. . -
'
voe 63 , NO. 110, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTf 1 CALtft>RNIA • FRIDA:!', MAY' 1970 . ' • '
oro
March on PO State Vote
More Protesting On Mitchell
Planned on Coast Postponed .
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of t11e 0.11, l'llef Stttf
More peaceful demonstrations are
planned this weekend along the Orange
Coast as student protesters continue to
register opposition to U.S. Involvement
in Cambodia and the death of four
Kent State students.
Orange Coast College's Sludent Non-
violent Strike Committee scheduled a
march on the Costa Mesa Post Office
City May Aid
Transit Line
This Summer
TM colorful festival trams and the
big Cannonball will run as usual this
summer but the city of Laguna Beach
may have to go into the bus business
to k~ the faltering local transit line
in operation, it was .dbclosed. at the
City Cowlci1 meeting this week.
Tommy Tllampsoo, OWIK!I' fl tbe
Laguna Transit Company which operates
the local line, appeared.before the council
to protest the competition o[ the trams,
specifically the Cannonball, but ended
up admitting that even without the com-
petition, Laguna Transit is "very close
to quitting."
The bus line, he said, has been
operating at a loss since inauguration
of the Leisure World run which he
cancelled last week as an emergency
measure. Recognizing the summer competition or the Cannonball, whiclt operates north
and south on Coast Highway during the
Festival run , the Festival has been
paying Laguna Transit up to $1,000 a
year, technica lly ~or pei:rrussJon to _oP:er·
ate under its Public UUliUes CommlSSlon
permit. . 11lis year the Festival at~ey advised
directors that the trams did not need
a PUC permit to operate within the
city limits, only a city pennit, and
the $1,000 payment was cancelled.
The Venice Tram Company, owner
of the trams, applied for a city permit
but city action was defer(ed following
a protest from Laguna Transit.
W.ednesday night, after discussion with
Thompson, the permit was granted.
Under quesUoning by Mayor Richard
Goldberg, Thompson, who formerly drove
ttt:. cannonball and said he's "not agaiMt
the trams," admitted that even the $1 ,~
would not be enough to restore bis
firm's economic equilibrium.
"Laguna Trans.it has been operating
at a loss and is very close to quitting,''
he said. "l can't get financial backing
and I was going to bring up the question
of a city subskiy when this tram thing
was settled."
"We need a bus line here," said Coon-.
cilman Charlton Boyd. "I wotild advise
Mr. Thompson to go ahead and file
(See TRAMS, Pase II
Uris morning where they planrn!d to
hold a "Mail-In."
A spokesman for the group said they
had more ~han 1,000 letters which they
intended to mail individually at the facili·
ty at 1590 Adams Ave.
"These letters are addressed to our
Congressmen and the President," .he
said, "and they register our oposilion
to Nixon's war policy," a student
spokesman explained.
A table will be set up in front of
the post office to enable conc9med
citizens to have available to them writing
materials and the addresses of their
legislators in Wash.filgton D.C.
The post office march is e:r:pected
to be peaceful aa was Thursday's March
from OCC to the Costa Mesa Air National
Guard Base.
Police and student organizers estimate
2,000 people took part in the march
aild ·rally beld in a field near the base.
The Costa Mesa police helicopter kept
watch from overhead as the marchers-
walked from the campus to the rally
site. One observer said he could see
no patrolmen in the march area.
Five national guardsmen listened from
beAind the fence """"'1DiliDg the bose
as four atudtDt speakers gave short
speechea on the war and Jtie Kent Slate
deaths. .
Costa Mesa pollce aaid today they
intercepted three youngsters with gum:
who were beading ii> the dirttUon of
the march.
Three teenage boys were stopped in
the 2900 block ol Mendoul Drive, heading
in the general vicinity of the march,
at about 3 p.m. The boys told officers
they were look1n1 for a place to shoot
their two rifles and pistol.
Polioe said they confiscated the
weapons rather than have the youths
carry them into the march and rally
area.
Leaflet activities by UC Irvine students
continued today with a Teach-in and
dialogue session scheduled to sta rt on
campus at JI a.m.
Protest spokesman Doug \Vhitener
said, "We're trying to carry our dialo11.1e
to the community."' He stressed that
the public was invited to the teach-in.
Another meeting was set for 7:30
o'clock tonight at UCI's Gateway Com·
mons. Whitener said the meeting would
be held to get a consensus for weekend
activities.
By this morning, the on1y activity
planned for Saturday was a rock concert
at Cat State Fullerton.
On Sunday, the Movement for a
Democratic Military (ftIDM) has organiz..
ed a march from the Santa Ana Marine
Corps Air facility to Santa Ana Memorial
Park.
The march, ·whlch is scheduled for
11 a.m. in front of the facility at Red
llill and Valencia Avenues, is being held
to emphasize the fl.IDM demands to end
all U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia,
"murdef. oo campus" and "all racism
and brutalism in the military."
Students al Saddleback College and
Golden West C.Ol!ege planned no organiz-
ed activities for the weekend but a
(See PROmT, Pqe I)
Clemente High Athletes
The State Senate this wetk delayed
the scheduled floor vote on appointment
of South Lagunan Clay N. Mitchell to
the State Board ol Education because
oC insufficient votes.
This was the assessment today by
an aide of Senator Alfred Alqu.ist (0-San
Jose), who is opposing the appolritment
of ?>.1itchell.
Alquist, a candidate for lieutenant
governor. interrogated Mitchell before
the Rules Committee recently, but
Mitchell won approval of the Rules Com·
mittee by a 4 to 1 split vote.
The Alquist aide aaid because of absent
senators the pro-Mitchell foroes could
not round up the necessary 27 votes
to confinn the appointment.
However, the matter may be brought
up at any time if the votes are rounded
up.
Jt would take lf votes aa;ainSt Mi1.chell
to block bis appointmeni and Alqulst
has been toring to roond these up.
Normally, gubernatorial appointments
a.re m~..stamped by tbe. Senate with
little fantare.. -I
'Ibe 1A1quist aide speculate,d i! 1i;,e
pro-MiicheU volel aren't roundtd np by
nut week, Governor Reagan milht
withdraw the appointment. "It rea~
isn't the Governor's a pp o I n t m ~ n t
anyway," the aide suggested, "it's Mu
Rafferty's." Republican $0UJ'CQ have said that.Raf~
ferty, state superintendent of ~blic in-
struction, lobbied strongly with the
governor to appoint the 58-year-old South
Lagunan.
"
Chamber-Opposes
Gas Tax Switcl1
A move to dive.rt gasoline ta:r: revenue
from highway construction use in
CaJilomia has sparked opposiUon from
the ·capistrano Beach Chamber or Com·
merce. The Cbamber's board adopted a resolu-
tion prote1Ung proposed amendment . of
Article 26 of california Con.stltution which
might allow expel\Cliture of gas tax funds
for general government purposes.
ln discussion by the board, members
expressed willingness to have gas tas:
money spent on transportation uses such
as rapid transit programs, but objected
to possibility of general fund uses of
the tu dollars. ·
A freeway linking Capistrano Beach
with other coastal communities ls ooe
of the pro)ects set foi completion within
the next five years.
STOCK MARKET
NEW YORK (API -The 1tock market
drilted downward in slow trading this
afternoon as traders turoed the.Ir atten·
tion to anUwar demon.mations and fist·
fights in Wall StreeL See quotations,
Pages :io • 11).
Furor Rises on Suspension
A mounting furor over the suspens1on //Adair for Paramo and Ray Reeves for
of two San Clemente High School athletes Hoffman.
rages unabated today despite 1 Superk>{ "In other words," Laguna Niguel at.
Court decision which seems geared to tomey Tom Keenan said, "the only peo-
meet both side! in the bitter dispute ple at San Clemente High School who
al the halfway mark. can bar Ule9e boys from aU\JeUc ac-
Judge Robert S. Corfman today dlnled tlv!Ues ire these two coaches: It may
the plea o! the Capistrano UnJfied School well be that they will n<t. kick them
District for dissolution of 1 restraining off their respective teams but the ques-
order which prevents distrk:t aulboritles Uon that Immediately ~urs is how
from barring Ruben Paramo, 17, from much pressure wlll be ~lied on the
bueball actlviUes and Anthony W. llof-coaches by other IOJUUS _
fman, tfi, from the shcooi's poJe•vaulttnc Kttna~ ~'itflt11 .lcti001 t41Strict
oquad. ,' autliOrltlt. had acled "1ll!COll!tllutlonally
Bot.h boys were ejected by A.ulstant and arbltartly" when they acted to
Principal Fred Pasquale last April 20 removJ "two dedicated athletc11" rrom
after the heartn1 charges that the 1th-high school sports activities.
letts drank beer at a San.Cll!mentt party. Judge Corfman commented; "they
Judge Corfman continued th t were not so dedicated that they dkln 'I
restralnln1 order today but he Im· drink !M>me beer ."
mecUately absolved ftom its rtgulation!t Ruben Paramo Sr., 32211 ~ Amigos,
lhe coaches of the lwo boys: Marsball San Juan Capiltrano, btUeves I.bat Adalr
will remove his son from the school's
baO club.
"I have my reuons," be aakl, "ahd
I think that the judg's ruling today
will lead Adair to take my son off
the team."
Anthony llo!£man'1 parents fell lhe.re
was "• good chance" Lhat the boy
who ls the brother of surfing chamPiori
Joyce Hoffman, w:IR be allowed to Q>n-
tinue parUcipaPon in pole vau'blng
events. He ls seheduled to a_ppear .for
the school '*' a1teraoon II\. the CIF
finals. ' I
Parents of both boys~ 1Poke of' "a
wave of unrtst'' In San Cl~mente ind
the · suspension of two more athletes
during the last two days .the hlgh
ochool.
Mrs. Patricia Hoffman k!tntlfled .the
boys involved as star burdlet Bob
(Seo ATHLETES, P1p ll '
'f·
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a r .
, ·• • \lf1n 1· '· . " ~ ,.• .~ • ' \ • 'j • 'I KNEW~ WOULPNl'f•Llol ME .DOWN•",,,' I t ••• , ,
An n Turner Can NeW 51• Whit Sh• Coeki . ,
. ' , , ' ' Medi~al M.ira~le .. , . ,. -
' ' .
Blinded Girl, 15, ·Se~s .Again, . '
TIPl'ON: Jnd. (UPI) -March 7, Ann
Turner, 15, stared a;t the solar eclips.e
Md was blinded. Her doctor said her
eyes . atidwed burn. inflammation and
scars, arid' she probably never would re-
gain her sight.
Today ahe can see again.
Dr. Samuel Thompson. a Marion eye
specialist who flrst examined Ann after
~ eclipse, said she had experienced a
"medical phenomenon." -
\Vhen Thompson first looked at her
eyes, he said, they showed bum inflam.'
maUon and scare. They still have some
scars, -but -Ann~noW .. has .normal vision.
Thompson said, alt.hough he will e:r:amine
her periodically for the next year.
T~mpsqn aal!f the glrl lost her sigtit
from staring directly at the solar eclipse
March 7, when the-moon pas.!ed in front
of the sun, darkening ,the skies· at midday.,
Doctors . warn . against staring at such
•
phenomena, because of . the danger to
eyesight. •
Wednesday, ··one day short. ~·or · two
months after she watched the ecllpsJ!,
Ann cried: "l earl see, I cln aie!"' Her
mother· hunied into ·her room • anct found
her with' her' fa.ce burled in ·her hands,
weeplrig. ' 1 •
· "l believe it was :a mirac}e, through
tlie doctor or 'by riatural means,." 1 said
Ann's mother, Mrs .. eoy ·Turner. "ftiatill
has the touch of God's h:and in it.~'
Ann had been continuing her education
at hotne. Wednesday night, her totor,
Mrs. Donna Renie, came: lor_UJelr·. usqal ·
session. AM said to her : "What a pretty
blouse you are wearing ." · ·
Ann will return· to schopl Monday_ Her
only restricUon is · to· avoid , brliht· sun·
light. .
"I knew GQd wouldii't let me down,"
she said.
Laguna Civic League Eyes
High Rise, General · Plan
High-rise, the fate of the gern!ral plan
and future developments on the Main
Beach will be the principal topics at
t'le annual all-membenhlp -tnefling of
the Laguna Beach Civic League at 7~30.
p.m. Tuesday, March 12, in City l:lall
council chambers, President Anthony
Demetrlades announced today.
Brief preseiitatlons . will be made on
these critical issues, he said.
"The Civic .League has for years "at·
tempted to protect Laguna's scenic and
aesthetic heritage," Demetriades.1aid.
"We will not be talking about the
vague past and the vague future at
our meeting. De~lopments in the last
few days will begin to affect the
Fonner Mayor
.To Open Season
.' Former Laguna Beach 111ayor Jesse
.!!¥Idle wtV toss out the nrst ball as
"197_0 Little League play · gets under way
Saturday at Riddle, Field. . 1
Opening ceremotlies .a're scheduled at "°°"· with Rlildle, Mayor f\ichard
Goldberg and members of the City Cowl·
cil on hand as a:uests Of ,hol'K!r. ' ~trs. Amy Norworth. whOM: late hus·
band. JeCk wrote the popular "Take
Me· Ou( To The Ball ·Ga1ne," · wlll be
\here. to. ' with her traditional gill of
CracwJack for all the ployera.
'J~
cl}aractcr or our town In the next few
wee.M.
"We. want to eiplab'l to our ·members
precisely what the po&.SJbiliUea are, and
to solicit their, time and effort . to maift.
taJn ·a true •vqlage atmosphere .. ia
Laguna." · ·
,He urged members to aUend and to
bring guests. ·
Drug S'Uspect's
Wife Gives Up
The wife of a Laguna Beach .man
arTftted Monday Ind• cblrged with
possession of 70 pou,ms of haapish, valued
at $90,000 . tumed herself Jn . to Laauoa
Beath poltct Thursday alter a werrant
had been is.Wed , for her arrMt •II an
ciccomplice in th~ case.
Ann 'Eliubeth Carey, 11-. went--to lbe
police department with her attorne)l and,
ta• wal released on) her· ow n
re<.\>gnlzanc• by Judge Rtcliant Hamllton.·
She Is th< wife ·o1 'fod C.rey,' 23,
1476 N. Coast Highway,<Who wu arrtsttd
with his brother, Robert, IS. wbeh poUct
apprchendt<I them loading the hashish
lhtu a car.
In SOqth County Municipal Oourt Tues-
day Judge lfamlltoh &et their ball at
RS.000 each and orde~od them held f!/t
lrW.
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1'
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Crews Hunt
Flier Near
Catalina
U.S. Marine, Navy and Coast Guard
air and sea units conf,i.nued their search
today for a mls~ng El Toro Marine pilot
who bailed out of hls jet Thursday•allortly
before It crashed into the ocean about
IS miles southeast of Santa Catalina.
Island. ,
Marine Corpa 1pokesmeh aaid Capt.
Jack A. Chiaramonte, 28, wha ttves on
the base ~th hls wile and four children,
parachuted from hill SkYhawk after loo~
ing control of the "plane d~g a
familiariiaUon flight.
The spokesman said the pilot of a
plane Dying with the downed craft saw
the pi.lot and his parachute go into
the ocean after the 1:30 p.m. crash.
Three helicopters, two filed-wing craft,
three tracklnR: planes and' a Coast. ·Guard
cutt<r joined ln the S<ardi that amtbnled
through the night
The cause of the accident had not
been determined.
Dana·CapoBeacli-
Cityhood Plea
Filed in Coilnty
The commJttee '(of the fJ\corporau..,
of Oona ·Polnt.eap!Jtnno Beach bu an-
~.that 1b intent to. incwporate
";&s olfidally rue!tJ ~ay.
The JncorporaUOn proposal wilt be coo.
1fdered ·at the June 8 meeting of the
Local Agency Formation Commission
(LAFCl .
A· meeting · of civic and 1ervlce clubs
In \he .h)corporaUon area ha.s been
scheduled 19r 'Ibunday, May 21. 'Ille J>U"'°" ol \h• gathering will be to
studj tbe economic felsibWtj report
which hOI been submitted I<> the I.AFC
along wilh • map of the 'pro~ clty.'
The mee,Ung will. take place at a p.m.
In ~be l\ome of Dr. Roger S<i~erson,
chairman ol.~ incorporatiqin committee.
Clubs wbtch will be asked to send
two representaUves include . the Dana
Point and C.i>J>tt'ano Beach Chonibit'a
of Commerce. Uie. Dana 'IUrol..lJ:
Homeowners AssoclaUon. lhe Dana Point
Civic Association, the Thunderbird Com-
munity HorTieowners Ass«latiOn, the
Capistr.mo Beach Community A.ssocia·
tion, El Camino Junior Woman's Club,
Capistrano Beach Lions, C.pistrano
Beach and Dana Polot Rotary and. the
Ame"J1tl1f Legion Post ru : · .... · -
Stevenson's Son Asks
MaITiage Dissolved
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Jihn· Fell
Stevenso11, youngest son or tbe late Adlai
steV!:nson, seeks lhe custody of hl3 thM
children in divorce papers filed against
his socialite wife Natalie Owings Stev-
enson.
Stevenson, 34, filed a suit Thursday
wider CaUfomia'• new dl110lution of
maniage law In which 1pedflc ,,....c1a
.,. ool ""!uired.
Oruge Coast
Weatlter ·
You may be able to outaletp the
coaatal cloudiness oyer the week·
end, aod from then on it 'II . be a
nice day with fair. skies and temp-
erat.urta in Ute temperate SO's.
INSmE TODAY
, They'~' 1Je hissing the villain
and cheerhutthe hero Saturdolf
night 'Ot Nteqport Harbor fligh
School when an old .time melo-•
droma goes oti t'4ge for char·
ft!f. De.taili · i1' todav'• Weck-
md<r.
4
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Cambodia War Widens
,.. . -B igg~t Arms. CacM -·Vncove red . ~ . . S>JGON (QPI) -Th• United state
todajr sent tnotbtt""battalion of 800 troopa
inlo Cambodia where a series ol allied
operaUorui have uncovered the greatest
arms cache of the war. Southwest of
iaigon a flotilla of 100 allied boats moved
upriver toward Phnom Penh.
' The operations 1n Cambodia brought
aavaJe retaliaUon from North Viet-
.. nameae In the .northern regions or South
Vletnam. They killed S7 civilians and
wounded 82 in shelling attaeks on the
' cJUes of Hue and Tam Ky and b,J1tt1ed
their way into Tam Ky in street fighting .'
The action cost them 14 dead.
It was the costliest night of Communist
attacks thi:s year.
Military spokesmen Jn Saigon said ·300
troops of the U.S. 9th Infantry Division
moved into the Parrot's Beak area 3S
miles northwest of Saigo1 where_ a Soutlt
Vietnamese force destroyed the Ba Thu
supply base and then withdrew. They
said the Americans movt'd in to prevent
Viet Oong from returning to the area.
'I'tle allied operation ao far his killed
11early 4,000 CommUrUst troops al a cost
of 56 Americans deiad and 153 wounded
and about 200 South Vietnamese dead
and 900 wounded. The Americans ~bo
captured 884 prisoners.
UPI correspondent Leon D a n i e I
reported from "The City." a vast Com·
munist complex just across the border,
that American troops had found the
biggest supp lies of arms and ammun ition
of tbe entire war and that the count
was still under way.
·II) Washington, the Pentagon told
Secretary of -State W,illiam P. Rogers
today the operations have captured
enough ammunition for the: Communists
to have conducted 719 small hit-run at-
tacks on South Vietnamese cities. It
said Otis included 4,000 roUnds ·or rocket,
mortar and recoilless rifle shells plus
1,000 tons of rice -enough to feed
4,000 troops for nearly a year.
The flotilla of U.S. Navy and South
Vietnamese vessels was moving through
the /."ekong Delta On Qie B{lssa'c River
whit:b joins the Mekong at Chau Doc,
115 lJliles southwest of SaigM.1be flotilla .
left ln Its wake a storm cf controversy
over the lack of JPttecy about it.s
missions.
Informed
cross into
morning.
sourcef said it would not
Cambodia before Saturday
' Its every move has been broad.cut tp Ute. Viet Cong in advance, and heavy
opposiUon· was forecast on the 45 miles
betw.een Chau Doc and Pbnom Penh.
The controversy over aecurity delayed
ita departure, but reports today said
.if. w~ nearing Cha u Doc with Sooth
~ietnamese soldiers along to protect it
front ·ambu shes. U.S. and South Viet·
namese planes would be expected to
provide air C()Ver.
' nie heaviest opposition was expected
at the Cambodian river crossing town
of Neak Luong, 30 miles below Phnom
Penh and 15 miles above the South
Vietnamese border. Strong Communist
for(."eS ~ntrolled the ferry crossing there,
and Cambodian troops were report@d
fuoving slowly into the area from Phnom
:Penh to try to dlslodge them.
. '-. ANTI-WAR DEMONSTRATORS HEAD FOR AIR NATIONAL GUARD UNIT IN ·c:~s-T:A"i.i11sA'"'"
Previously Uf!notlced, Quiet Little Communic1tlon1 Unit Becomes Obfect of March Dana Institute Backs Students March
On Ohio Ca pitol
In Ken t P rotes t
, ' . -.... :;~an Clem£nte Council
:Nixes 'Bargain Beatris'
,;_ "EVen a pri~ reduction of '7,000 wu
· niit . ·bargain enough to tempt San
€lemente councilmen to purcllase the
~ated beam& ol the Capistrano
Jleech Club,
-t<iunolmen had tarUy r<jected the 6e8ms, which once helped hold up the
'Cetllhg over the oil-wealthy DOOeny famJ·
1y; ·at $12,000 plus estimated 13,000
:'Gemi)lltion cost.
-: .~They rejected them more gently
. w~ay at $5,000 plus demolition.
J\:. had been suggested that the beams
rilight be used in constrµction of the
"(Xlriununity clubhouse lhal was gutted
by Iii'<. ,,. Councilman Thomas OKeefe, wh<I said
·he·bad an intert:st in the matter, refrain-
:ecf from di11CUSSion or voting.
~ ·.in other business, cooncilmen:
·.:..Adopted an ordinance which reduced
.:the. speed J.irrrlt for trains from 6}75
,. lniles per hour to 40 miles per hour .
• ..::...SCt consideration of recomtruction '"''the goll ""'°' far a Monday study -• :-_Reduced the license fee for stamp
v~ madiines from '5 annually to -n· after hearing a presentation from
·>tflrmachines' owner.
' -I!'iW'ucted the city manager to call
.. fOr bids on an-at.ttomaHc ,gate at the
.:Avenida del Mar ~ng of the Santa
Fe track. One company had agrted to
do the work !or $3,3111. CooncUman
Thoma.1 OKeefe uPd .for other bids
.and broad speclflcatiooa commenting,
."( don'l think w eneed to pay $4,000
for a garage door opener."
-Set a joint study session Monday
With the planning commission and parks
'd recreation CilmmlssiQn on the future
d. the community cluQhouse.
·-Acctpted a revised bid from D. C.
Muralt Co. for work in an improvement
State Drops Charges
in Pa nther Shooting
• CHICAGO (AP) -The state dropped
atternpted murder charges today against
§t'{tn Black Panther party members
Who were present duriRg a shooting
~ · whic'b police killed two Panther :~ ... _ ... _=::~o policemen and fou~ P&11lher
:members were wounded in w h a t
.authorities have described as a gun battle
lniUated by the Panthers during a pre.
·dawn raid oo a West Side apartment
Dec. 4.
. . . ::--
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DAILY PILOT ....,,... .... . ........ ....
L .. , ..... di
4 ~· ,.....,
c -. M... S-Clta 1 ..
()ltANG£ COAST ,.,_.91..ISMIMG COM,.AMY
1.ob•rl N. Wt td
l"rtlid~l llfld "1>blf1Mf
J•tlr a. Cu,ft!
Vlet "'tii.Mt _. ~· M•/11911'
111.,,. ........ u
£flW
lht111•1 A. M11rphift1
M-l"" l!dl•OI'
Ri~h•rd P. N11I
$tulh O••"IH' C-IW Ell""
Of ....
<.Rlt #ftcl: l)b Wu l llY S ......
,,...,...1 ••~"~ nn Wftt ''""'' lltll.....,,. ~ a .. t11; m ~., ,..,,_
M""'tlrtfllli'I llldl: \7'11 IM<ft ·~llWt'll
S.!l (.._i.I A5 Her1tl Ill ~IM R"I
di8ttict on Eut Avmlda Cordoba to
benefit nine property owners.
-Denied • requelt from the San
Clemente Dental Laboratory, 1&0 W.
Avenida Rosa, for parking aipace in front
of 1he laboratory for docton and P•·
timt.a.
Set for Monday study a request from
G. CarlOll Rasmussen and aix other
owners of. more than 200 acra of un-
developed acreage -that the city eatablllh
a policy for conllrucUon of an Interceptor
sewtr lin< at pnqaJ city-·
-Agreed to let Carl '·Kymla, manaaer
of the Moulton-Niguel Wat.r Dl!trlct,
address the council at it.a ne:it session
on benefit of joining !be Soulb Eallt
Regional Reclamation AMociaUoo which
six otbet agencies havt joined.
.. -Agreed during budget consideratior'IS
to take up the matter of radlr for traffic
enforcement.
-Scheduled for the Monday session
11 discussion of chamber of commerce
promoUooal funds.
Board to Study
Teacher · Appeals
Over' Dismiss als ' . '
The Laguna Beach school board has
M:heduled an exeCutive (closed) session
at 8:30 a.m. Saturday to study the writ-
ten apinion or alale hearing officer
Bichnell J. Showers regarding the pro-
posed dismisaala of two Laguna Beach
High School teachers.
Music director Jack Krefting and art
teacher DoMa Lynde requested formal
hearings after they were told they would
not be re-hired for the 1971)..71 school
year.
The hearings were conducted in Santa
Ana last week, with members of the
achool administration, parents a n d
studenl! testifying.
Aft.tr studying the written opinion pro-
vided by the hearing officer. it is the
prerogative of the school board to act
on his recommendation as it chooses.
A special public meeting of lhe board
is scheduled for 7:30 o'clock Tuesday
night in the district offtcet to announce
the decision.
Also on the agenda for the executive
session is an evaluation of the central
administrative stiff and a report on
this also may be made at the Tuesday
night meeting.
State 'Big Fish'
111 Local Wate rs ,
Attorney Decides
San Clemente councilmen have ap-
parently given up on 509ereignty over
local fishing waters to protect the local
sport fishing fleet A report from City Attorney P.
MacKenzie Bro¥ln indicated Wedaesday
th11t the state is preUy well the big
II.sh out Ul the three-mile limit.
Local fishermen have protested com•
m1rtl1l f!Jhlng boata from other areas
that nah off San Clemente .
Brown safd Santa Monica tried t.o
prohibit fishing nets within a certAin
distance from its pler. but the court11
held the area was pre.empted by the
slate. Brown htld out • mhmow of hope
when he said the Supreme Court has
ruled that fishing la a "taxable e:vt111t. '1
He aaid he had contacted Loa Angeles,
Newport Beach, Sant.a Montca and
Redond() Beach about their approach.
He said they did impose ftts on opera·
lions ·with boat& docked within thMr
atta, bul 11ld ht w&.1 doubtful af Im·
posJn1 tees on boata flshln& t• San
Clemente but aot hBrbored here.
"We can't di> It'" 11 sked the mayor.
"lt'• difficult." rcpUed 1.M ati.orney.
From P a ge 1
PROTEST .•.
Golden West spokesman aaid the y were
planning an event of an undisclosed
nature on Monday.
About 100 striking student!: from Chap-
man College in Orange said they planned
to march on the Western White House
in San Clemente today at 1:30 p.m.
Cllaprnan is one of tbe few county col·
leges which is remaining opeo in the
light of student protests.
Thursday, Santa Ana College wa~
ordered closed until Monday, leaving
Chapman, Fullerton College and Cypress
College the only county institutions which
have not closed.
Students, faculty and adminiJtratori
at Costa Mesa's Southern California
College are participating in a "Com-
munity of <Joncern for Collegewide
Refiect.lon on Responsibility" a f t e ~
~egularly scheduled classes were suipen-
ded Thunday. ·
Clemente Asked
To Give $1,000
For Oil Battle
San Clemente has been asked to ante
up $1 ,000 to fight for restrictions against
off-shore oil drilling.
Councilmen, who had earlier denied
a request for funds to help pay a lobbyist
in Washington, have agreed to take
another look at the matter on May
20.
Mrs. Duncan Stewart, a director of
the Coastal Area Protective League
(CAPL J. told councilmen Wednesday
night that Newport Beach and Laguna
Beach have each pledged up to $2.000
and tihat the county will match the
funds .
The money is to pay lobbyist Fred
Burke in an attempt to shepherd Senate
Bill 3093 out of the judicial and interior
and insular affairs committees to
passage.
Sponsored jointly by Senators George
1'1urphy and Alan Cranston, the bill would
extend prohlt)ilions agairttlt off-shore ex-
ploration into federal waters beyond
artas where there are existing state
sanctuaries prohibiting exploration.
Such a sanctuary exists from the Santa
Ana River to the Mexican border.
F r om P age 1
ATHLETES ...
Blacker and highly regarded lennis
player Terry Plowden.
"Tht charges Against them.'' she 5aid,
''are that they have been smoking but
the evidence seem!i to be pretty
circumstantial in at Jeasl one of the
caf!ea.
"So1teone is out to get these athletts
and we would like to know who." sh('
said. "'There art many people in San
Cltmtnt apirt from the parents of
athletic coinpetltors who would like In
know who is applying this kind of
pressure to their sons.''
CJplstrano Unified School District
authoritif'S declined today to eommMt
on the_ h1wauit or the su~ucnt ch111es
made by parent.s\f aU1lctcs.
Berthing for N esco 1
Efforts of Robert Simley or Capistrano
Beach to obtain permanent berthing in
the new Dana Harbor for oceanographic
vessel Nesco I received a boost from
the Dana Marine Studies Institute today.
F rom Page 1
TRAMS ...
an application for a 11Jbsidy. The problem
is going to be ours, not the Festival's."
' A spokesman for Venice Trams told
the council, "There are only fiv~ private-
ly owned bus companies in the country
now. Most cannot operate without a
subsidy." '· ·
It was pointed out that the Festival
takes a loss of some $9,000 a yea r
on tht!: tram operation, paying Venice
Tram a contract sum f(lr use of the
trams and subslditing the difference
between this fee, driver salaries and
the minimum fares charged for the con-
venience of patrons.
Goldberg said that the future ol the bus
line ~hould be discussed with Laguna
Transit and set a council study session
on the problem for 7:30 p.m. Monday,
May 18,
Asks 'Equal Time'
WASHINGTON (AP) -Democratic
National Chainnan Lawrence F. O'Brien
asked the three major t e I e v i s i o n
networks today to give full coverage
of a major foreign policy speech he
plans Saturday night In response to the
Nixon administration's Cambodia
policies.
I
Institute prtsident Dr. A n d r e a s
Rechnitzer submitted a letter to Simley
in which he tenns availability of a vessel
such as Nesco I to be "highly desirable
• .• for at least two kinds of service."
Rechnitzer said the craft, at anchor.
could be utilized successfully for in·
rloctrination and orientation to shipboard
equipment and operations.
For more advanced training the craft
could provide sea experience f o r
students.
If some assuranci! could be given that
the ve:Mel will be available for such
a program, the institute would plan to
initiate it by September 1970, Redmitier
said.
His allowable time In Dana Harbor
expired, SirrHe.y will take the Nesco I
to Newport Harbor this morning.
Capistrano Ba y
Fund Gets Boost
United Fund organizing efforts in the
Capistrano Bay area received a boost
this week tn a vote of support by the
Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce
Board of Directors.
The Chamber heard Bob Oakley, fund
interim vice-president, in April, and
diJCUssed the organization and purposes
of United Fund, but a vote on the matter
was postponed to the board meeting
this week.
Roy Garbarine of San Clemente
Chamber is interim president of the
group which is seeking Chamber en-
dorsement throughout the Capistrano Bay
area.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Thousands
of college students, chanting "Pe.act
now," marched on the closed and he.avil1
guarded state capitol today to protest
the killings of four Kent State students
by National Guard troops.
The students marched from the
Veterans Memorial Auditorium, about
a mile from the capitol, through part
of the downtown area and Olllo the
statehouse grounds.
A force of 150 Ohio Highway Patrol
officers armed with shotguns and riot
clubs ringed the building. About a dozen
patrolmen guarded a flagpole flying the
American and State of Ohio flag.
"Nobody's going to ·pull down that
flag or Invade the statehouse," !aid
Oh io Highway Patrol Superintendent
Robert M. Chiaramonte. "We are not
going to be a punching b8g for anyone."
AJbert Gienow. state public w orb
director, ordered the building and al l
state offices closed after a conference
with Chiaramonte.
A nearby building housing the C.Olum·
bus Dispatch and the Columbus Citizen
Journal also was locked, but the papen
continued to work.
.\ patrol officer was asked ii fll9
shotguns were loaded .
"You're damn right they're loaded,''
he replied.
Col. J .E_P. McCaM, administrative
assistant to the adjutant general in Ohio.
said the guard would carry weapons
loaded with live ammunition if theY.
were called to duty because of the ra11y.
"We ~I that when our people are
put in a dangerous situation we should
afford them the opportunity to protect
the elves," McCann said.
•
• •
f HENREOON TRANSLATES THE SUBTLE PROPORTION AND CLEAN· LINE bF THE ORIENTAL INTO
AN EXCITING NEW COLLECTION FOR CONTEMPORARY HOMES-TRAOE'WINOS.
NIW,ORT BEACH
I 717 WHlclllf Dr., 642-2050
OPlN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
LAGUNA BIACH Proft&11o"•I Interior 345 North Co11t Hwy. 494-655T
Dttltn•rs AYllloble-AID OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
Pll ... T.n 11rM Miit el 0,... Cffllty M0.1261
t
•
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:I
THE ·f'ISHING DOG OF LAGUNA GETS IN OVER HIS HEAD AT SHAW'S COVE
Fish ~ Not Fal~o11s
Rare Lagu1ia Dog Enjo)·s Surf
By BARBARA KREIJllCll
Of ftNo Dlll?r l'tlM SMlf
A \•ery unusual dog lives at 1080 N.
Coast. Highway in Laguna Beach.
H.is name ls Puby ~he's a Huogarian
\'.iz.Sla. a huntmg breed originally trained
lo work i.n falconry, flu.shing birds.
Bllt since falconers are few and far
betWeen· in the Art Colony, Puby has
taken up fishing with his mistress. h-1aria
d< Palasthy, who likes to sUrf fish oil
the rocks at Shaw's Cove.
Puby gratefully eats any small fish
she chooMis to give him and alse has
Jeained to do a little fishing himself,
iicooping his quarry out of the tidepools
\\'ith a deft paw.
~lrs. de · Palasthy a.nd her artist hus·
band, Geza, left HlUlgary after the
Barbecue Set
For Wilcoxen
At Viejo Ranch
Supporters ol Laguna attomey·WUliam
Wilcoxen wlll gather under the oak trees
on the old Mission Viejo Ranch Sunday
t.o holl!Or him with an "election
barbecue."
Wilcoxen is a candidate for the 35th
Congressional District seat, formerly
held by the late James Utt
Hosl at the Spuish barbecJle w~ll
be Dan J. Rios, sixth generation member
of the Ri os lamily of San Juan Capistrano
and former county manhal. The .two
men have been friends smct Wilcm:'tn
was an assistant district attorney for
Ora11ge County.
Site of the gatherilig will be the lJPP't"
Cowboy Camp on the Mis.!ion Viejo
Ranch, six miles east of San Juan on
Ortega Highway.
From 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Rios will
barbecue steaks marinated b1 the
family 's traditional salsa, prepared from
~ secret recipe. Other Rios family
favorites on the menu v.•ill be beans
and salad with a special dressing, served
with French bread.
A mariachi barid V•ill enliven lhe pro-
r.eedings and game s will be arranged
for the children.
Tickets for the barbecue, at $3 each.
nr $1.50 for children, are available at
Wilcoxeit Campaign Headquarters, 32.'i
Glenneyre St., Laguna Beach, or can
be obtained al the gate of the ranch.
disastrous revolution of J956 and came
to the United States the fo\Jowint year.
Four years ago they settled In Laguna .
Last Septrmber, they went "dog shop-
ping" al the Canyon animal shelter
where, to their surpr'ise, they were told
that a dog of rare Huogarian breed
had been left for adoption the day bcforr,
by a family that was unable lo keep
him.
The Vizsla had a new home on the
spot and in short order became a beach
addict, spending much of his time on
the rocks and the sands.
A. few week.s ago he foond <'I ne\'
friend. A young seal heard him barking
on the beach and barked back. "It
\Yas 3mazing," says de Pa\asthy, "they
really became friends. The seal would
hear Puby barking and swim close in
to the shore. Puby would run do'>'•l
to the v.•ater and there they y,·ould be ,
jusl a few feet apart, barking at each
other. Their voices even sounded alike."
But one morning this week Puby wasn 't
barking from the beach. He was howling,
moornfully and incessantly .
Mrs. de Palasthy went down to in·
vestigate.
She found him standing over lhe bofly
of the little seal. wedged between two
rocks.
The man from the animal shelter came
to pick up the seal. He said it apparently
had died from a virus that attacks
tlie species .
After a day M two of depression,
Puby is back to his old routine: -
fish ing in the tidepools.
Lee 0. Brooks
Last Rites Held
Services were held this morning in
Sheffer Laguna Beach ?t1ortuary Chapel
for Lee Ottis Brooks of 5.39 St. Ann's
Drive. \\'ho died on Tuesday.
Elder Case of the Seventh-Day A.dven.
tist Church of Laguna Beach officiated
at the riles. which were followed by
burial in El Toro Cemetery.
A native of North Ca rolina, Mr. Bmoks
\l'as a real estate broker and had lived
in Laguna for the past seven years.
He is survived by his widow, Ruth:
daughter, Judy ~1cKibben of Corooa del
Mar: two sisters and one brother, or
North Carolina.
DAILY P'ILOT Sllfl P'IW!f
FIREMEN POLISH UP FOR BIG OPEN HOUSE
Top of the World 'I Franchot Davis Cltfl), Chuck Spurlkk
G1mnar Boye,
Photographer,
Dies at 67
liun,1ar Boye, \\'ell known Laguna
Beach pho!ographcr , died early today
after a long illness.
f\lr. Boye, who covered the news scene
for local papers for many years. suffered
a stroke fou r years ago and had been
in poor health since then.
He celebrated his 67th birthday on
\\lednesday.
A native of Denmark, he came to
the Unlted Slates 1n 1921 and had lived
r,1 Laguna Beach for 1hc past 14 years,
making his home in the canyon at 2138L
Stan's Lane.
His photographs of the Laguna ~ene
often appeared on pages Of the DAILY
PILOT as well as the old Laguna Post
and old South Coast News.
He is survived by his widow, Karen:
a ~n, Waller of Los Angeles: daughter,
Alice of New Yqrk : stepson. Richard Jfuh<'~ctt of Torrance: stepdaughter PeG·
RY Liotta of Newport Beach · and by
13 grandchildren. '
At Mr. Boye's request no formal
services "'ill be held. f ollowing crema·
lion. his ashes \\'ill be sca!tered at sea.
J\lcCorn1ick f\fortuary ls in charge of
arrangcmenl.s.
Stables Sued
Over Injury
A. Letguna Beach woman who claims
in her Superior Court action that her
lf>.year-old daughter was seriously in-
jured Yi•hen the horse she \\'as ridlng
bolted and threw her has sued the riding
stables's owners for $150,000.
Mrs. Joan McMillion. 2120 Crestview
Drh·-e, holds the Ed Williams Stables.
2tl'286 Laguna Canyon Ro ad. and George
and Irene Middleton. responsible for the
injuries suffered Feb. 8, 1969 by Shawn
J\1ary McMillion.
Mrs. McMillion claims the stable's
ov.•ners knew that fht' horse mounted
by her daughtt'r \\'as a "spirited animal"
and v.•as lotally unsuitable for an jfu.
1nature rider.
She stales that her daughter suffered
pennanent injuries as a result of the
accident.
Unwed Mothers
Statistics Told
A. study of clients covering a two-year
period j 1967.U) by the Adoption Services:
of the Orange Counly Welfare Depart.
ment reveals some interesting figure:oi.
The age level ol the unwed mother s
ranged from 17 (18.S percent) down
lo one perttnt for 24-year-olds.
Of the some 800 cases handled, 79
pe rcent relinquished the child, 16 percent
kept the infant and 4.5 percent lost
the baby at birth or miscarried .
Girls came from all parts of the conty
In numbers closely related to the popula -
tion distribution and were. generally from
middle class homes, many from intact
famili es.
Laguna Firemen
Host Open House ..
Laguna Beach nremen will mar); Fire
Servict; Day by holding open house at
all three fire stations on Saturday .
Visitors will be welcomed at the 1'-1ain
Fire Station on Forest Avenue next to
city hall and at Ille new Top of IM
World and Agate Strctt slations from
9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and (rom 1:30
p.m. lo 4 p.m.
fire flghling equipment will be on
display and Orr.men will 00 on hand
t.o answer questions.
Chief Jim Latimer has issued a
personal invitation to all Lagunans to
vi~lt the fire stations and meet the
crews. 1.
Frld1y, May 8, 1970 L DAILY PILOT :J
Scholarships ·Boosted
. . ':·
Laguna Trustees Back Funding P'lea
,.
• An urgent plea to Laguna Beach
service organiiaUons, clubs and in·
dlviduals lo help boost the scholarship
fund for this year's graduating high
.scboot seniors won support of district
trustees Tuesday night.
Discontinued scholarships and curtail·
. ment of funds available from the
Thurston Scholarshii) Fund will seriOUJly
reduce schola rship awards for this year's
graduates unless help is forthcoming
within a ·week, trustees were told.
.'.nle Thurston Fund, which last year
contributed $1Z,OOO in scholarships, and
had beell counted oo for SIG.12,WI yearly,
has eal'Hd only Sl.300 this year,
Superintendent. Dr. William UUom said.
Ullom uplained that $140,000 of the
original $278,000 fund is tied up In. a
piece of property on which no P'-yment
has been made for the past two years.
Because of this default, and also a
drop In earnings o( stocks In the fund 's
investmen t portfolio, scho\ar1hips from
lhe fund musl be cut by more than
$10,0<io,
~tiss Joan Frilsen, high sch o o I
counselor in charge of scholarships . said
last year's awards totaled $40.000. in-
cluding ald to 39 students with i:J,000
grants from the Thurston Fund .
Five1 new scholarship awards fram
local ·groupi1, she said are balanced by
.six that have been cancelled,
Noting the increase in college costs
for this year's graduates Miss Fritsen
suggested a one-wttk dri ve to ralse
Laguna Praying
Council May Adopt Procedure
The first meeting of Laguna's new
City Council \Vednesday night was opened
Ydth a prayer, delivered by new Coun-
cilman Edward Lorr. This may -or
may not -become a regular part
of the council 's opening procedure.
Thanking fellow councilmen for permit·
ting him to deliver the invocation. Lorr
suggested that it be offered at all
mcelings.
"This would not be unusual,'' he said.
•·Jt is done in all branches of the federal,
state and local gove.rnme111l We could
take turns. I fetl the council would benefit
and the community v.'ould benefit."
Councilman Peter Ostrander seconded
his motion.
"l agree we are Going to need all
the strength '>''e can gel," said coun·
cilma11 Roy Holm , ''but people worship
In many different wa ys. I suggest the
very beautiful thing we had when we
were waiting for the aslronauls to be
saved might be more acceptable -a
moment or silent prayer."
Lorr said he apprec iated the comment
but felt very strongly about the need
to pray for guidance.
~trs. Thomasina Gunri said she would
like an opiJ'lion from the city attorney
Student Scalped
By 2 'Patriots'
OAKLAND (UPI) - A lf>.year~kl slu·
dent was if! serious condition today after
a two-inch square of scalp was cut
from his .head by two men who said
they did not like Jong·hsired hitchhikers.
on the legality of such a proceclure.
Attorney Jack J. Rimel replied, ''A
k>t has been said in court as to the
extent to which. you can go. t know
it's done in Congress aOO in many city
councils. J question a11.y decision as to
v.·hether it's unlawful since it's so
~'!despread but t couldn't say for sure."
~tayor Richard Goklberg suggested
that Lorr withd raw his motion to give
Rimel Ume lo research the matter and
report back.
This was done.
Final Bahe Ruth
.Tryouts Slated
It's time for Laguna Beach area boys
to test their batting. catching, throwing
abilllles as the final tryout for the Babe
Ruth League gets under way Saturday.
Boys aged 13 through IS are invited
lo bring a mitt, if they have one, lo
the high school baseball field from 9
a.m. lo noon. Those eligible must be
13 by Aug. 1 and not more than 16
by that date.
League play will begin June IS, ac·
rording to Mrs. Joseph Sweany. and
hopefully enough boys will tum out for
six team11.
Players shou ld bring their birth
certificates and a $3 re&"islration fee
lo the tryouts.
In addition to Babe Rut.hers, league
officials welcome men interested in being
a team manager.
FurtJ1er information may be obtained
by calling Mrs. Sweany at 494-8630.
' . :
DoUan 1.. Scholars, a prnjoct' !oioed
auccessfuUy Jn other areu. · • ·
Deadline for al!igninf awards ls May
ts. sbe u ld.
"We have 10 students who woaJiS· t.
T<garded .. priority -In !lnrilal
needs, in vocational fields Md another
10 in academic fltkls,.. Mill 1'rltlen
said. ''Vi'e might be able to help them
all if we could receive contribu:UoruJ
in any amoUDt - a dollar or five or
len."
The board approved est.ablisbmeot ol
a. Dollars for Scholan Fund to help
graduates.
Contrib'utions to the fund may be tent
to the Laguna Beach High School, 625
Park Avenue.
Laguna CofC
Reduces City
Funds Request
Jn order to "free some .additknal
capital lo the city budget that can be
applied lo the improvement of our
image," the Laguna Beach Ownbet of
Commerce bas decided to J'flduce ita re-
quest for community promotion llld ado
vertising funds this year, pres!~
Bernard Sylao lold the City Cooncil Wed-
nesday night
Syfan presented a formal req11ut for
$36,500 for 1970-71, a decrease ol M,WI
from last year's allocalion o( Ml,500..
He told the council that an adVettt,..
iag program comparable to last yun,
with added booaUng for the Winter Fo-
lival, would cost an estimated $50,tt».
However, "in the light of the prf.llin&:
problems of the communUy," &be.·~
jection had been r~evaluated and It had
been poMible to reach fan agreemmt
with the Hotel-Motel AssoctatJon wbfte.
fly that body would contribute to the
cost of direct advertising from it.I .con-
Ungen cy fund.
Noting that the bed tax n:venae -con-
tinues lo rise, Syfan said tbe chamber
hopes that in future yean; more Df this
revenue will be avallabte for "profUol·
ing a community that all of us can look
on with pride, and one which wW •appeal
to a select and most welcome ~
of the vacationing and traveling public. it
~1ayor Richard Goldberg expreaed
appreciation for the reduced fund J'Oo
quest and the matter was aet to 1tudJ
May 13. .
Some chefs Yourenot.
•
are paid to cook
over hot flames .
So enjoy a flameless
electric kitchen.
A Aameless, all.electric kitchen is
one of the big benefits built into
t:.vc.ry Medallion Home or
Apartment And that means
a clean, cool kitchen.
A Medallion Home or
Apartment can also mean
fla meless electric heating. Clean
heat. It docSn't dirty your curtains
or upholstery.
•
And flameless air conditioning
that cools and cleans the air you
breathe. Pure comfort (or the
rntlre Family.
And flamelm water heat.'
Ing-without a pilot, without
a Aue, wlthout wasted space.
Furthermore, a Medallion Home
has ample wiring for todaf1 elcctri·
cal appliances, plus provisions for
t he electrical Wonders comins up
in the all-<:lectrie future. MW.Uloft
Homes and Apartments uc now
available in all price nngcs. .
You can see why more and mere
people are choosing to live the Bci>d
clean life-electrially.lndJUllni chlf 11
~ Southern Califom/11 Edlaofi. ' .. "t "'(,
'
I
I
\.
l
, .. ~ . ' j 1lXilntLOT
• (c-blil _,. .. OtJtr ••• 111ftl ~ -!-DI'. Carollno D•Y• U>ld a London :birth control meeting recently she ~jlvea.her 2-year-old daughter birth :co~l pills to prove to women the -,-are harmless. "She has suffer-: · ill effects at all," Dr. Deys :c -Of her daughter, Sally. :: .: : . ., .. _
:: lilC:h•rd T. McAlll1t1r of Roches-
, :ler, N.Y ., says he decided to be-~ome .8 circus clown recently be--
'.rause be wanted his lZ.year-old ~on Michael "to learn to accept
:iaughter." "Michael is a midget. ~ lHied to hide because he thought ~ple were Jau~hlng ·a\ him ," Mc-
J\Iiister &aid. "Since he's Jotned me
;n my act, he's become a big ham." ..... • .. • .. ~~Jaekl• W11l1, a weapons collect·
.Pr from Derby, N.J., was arr.ested
jn Utica N.Y. for the possession of
'8 dang!rous 'weapons. -:--his col·
Jection of switchblade knives which
tie was showing at a eun show. ~olic~ said the weapons were confis--dle4: from .the New York State :Arms CollecU>rs Invitational Gun
Show where they were on disp~. • • : 8111 Smith of London has s~ccess-
fully petitioned to change his last
hame ·Which he said was bringing
him Other people's mail and phone
t alls. He is now Bill Brian-Smith.
; .
~ ,;• . . ~Pin.up pictures of film stars ~ Grayson and Esther Wit·
Jlam• requested 16 years ago by
¢ioolb"I' D•vld Clark• arrived
jas\ week in Birmingham, Eng·
lanct:ctarke, now 31, reeeived the
photographs in an envelope post·
!llatnd Culver Cily, Hollywood,
l'QV. '8, 1954. ...
·~ . •
:.,;t"''' tough Interior (polict)
Mi'n.i.tter Armando Artola sa11s
hij>pit1 art wtlcomt in Ptru -
aa long 111 they don't look likt
· s. He taid Friday that 7't· .
.:of a world hfppit con.fer-
enct in Nov~btr in Cuzco
totre wrong. Ht said ht could
not permit such an event, "But
1 am no~ going to den11 entry
(to Peru) of those who come
with enough doUa11, and art
clean and weU 1h4ven."
• -'"Cfi~rll1 Mayers, of Northfleet,
E~llild, happily married with
f:hrlee sons, got a court letter re-
o~y ordering him lo pay allmony
lb a woman he had never met. The
iatler said be bad deserted his wile tn4 her two children and would l\il;., jo pay her $21 .60 a week. "If
J·didn't know my husband so well 11iit. Jetter could have broken our
tnarriage," said Mayers' real wife,
Ethel. Said Northfleet magistrate
c!Ourt: "We simply sent the order
to the wrong man.11
' • lbiMlrt W~lbr Jr. o! La!ayette,
lad., expec\od U> get out of jail in
Ume ·1'> do something -vote for
lillil•elf for aber!U. Walker, 21. a
l!Oljllcal science student at Purdue
!fll!veral\y, wu arrested recenUy tn ·connection with campus disor-dm and put In jail on $500 bond.
Wlilker Is running for the Democra--1c nomination for Tippecanoo
~\y Sbertlf in today'• election.
' ~
Friday, N/j) 8, 1970
Communists
hi Protests
Says Hoover.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -FBI Dlr<elor
J. Edjar Hoover says Oommunbt
elements anxious to try and · fotet: a
unilateral American withdrawal from
Vietnam were deeply involved with tbe
Nov.15 mus antiwar demonstratkm.
His hardest·h1Wng testimony In years
-critical of demomt.Tator1, liberal
judges and the Black Panth.er Party
in particular -was made public by
the House Appropriations Committee on
the eve of mass demonstration Saturday
against U.S. involvement in Cambodla.
"It was neither by accident nor coln-
cidmce that the demonstraUons htld
in Washington and San Francisco on
Nov. 15, J969, had accompanying anti-
U.S. demonstrations in other countries
throughout the world on the same day,"
he said, detailing various Communist
sessions ~road in the ai:i-month period
prior to th~ rallies.
"The major emphasis in th e
diseusslons on those occa1ions was <1n
the iieed to keep massive propaganda
pressure in the form of antiwar
demonstrations on the current ad·
mmistratton in the United States to force
a unilateral withdrawal of U.S. troops
from Vietnam,'' Hoover testified.
Hoover said, "The Black Panther Par·
ty, a black extremist organization, con·
siatin& for the most part of hoodlum-type
revolutionaries, continues to be most
active and dangerous from an internal
&eCllrit)' standpoint ... law enforcement
agencies throUghout the country are
wrongly accused ()( haramnent by m.any
well-intentioned but unlnformed voices
echoing outright lies generated by the
lawlesa."
FCC Cuts Back
Network Shows
In P1ime Time
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Fe<IOTal
CommunicaUons OorrunWion has ruled
that the maximum amount of network
programs carried by most telev:lsion sta·
tions muat be Uniite.d to three hours
nightly start.lng·tn the fall of next year.
The comm~ vottd 5-2 Thursday
to make the restriction effective Sept.
J. 1971. It would limit commercial
televbk>n staUons in the top 50 markets
to three hours of network fare betwetn
tbe prlme.time hours of 7 and 11 p.m.,
PDT.
Network react.ion \\'as swift in criticiz-
ing the ruling as Ukely to result in
poorer quality viewing because of the
Jimited resources or local network sta-
tJons in producin& programs.
The Columbia Broadcasting System
said in a statement that the restriction
would inhibit the networks from doing
more in the field of news 8J1d public
affairs prngrammlng.
1lae National Broad.casting Company,
tennin& the ruling "mistukte4," 1ald
the. commission had not given all sides
a full hearing and called f o r
reomslderatloo ol the proposal.
The American BroadcuUng Company.
while asserting that it aaw no need
for the rutlng, said it could adapt to
it and might benefit from it.
Brown Files First;
Has Gotten $38,000
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Edmund G.
Brown Jr. has ralsed. ,38,408 for his
campaign for the Democratic nomination
for Secretary of State, accordirig to a
Jlf"<lection report fl1'd today.
Secrttary of State H. P. Sullivan 111id
Bl'O'tnrns the""flrst cal'ldldate to comply
with a new law requiring contribution
reportl fnm contend.en for major of·
fices. He 1aid the filing period was
today tl\rOUil> next We<lnesday.
'SERIOUS MISTAKES'
D1mocr•t Harriman
Israeli Patrols
Hit by Raiders
l 1iside Lebanon
By United Press International
Arab guenillas operating Jn Lebanon
fired today on two Israeli army patrols,
wounding six 60ldiers, a m i I i t a r y
spokesman said in Tel Aviv. He said
the Israelis returned the fire in the
sharp clashes.
The attack! came despite a warning
from the Israeli chief of staff that Beirut
and Amman must curb such guerrilla
attacks or face the con.sequences.
A hlgh Israeli military 50\Jrce reported
Thursday the guerrillas had greatly in-
creased activities in Israel in rectnt
days in an apparent effort to disrupt
Israeli celebratiallS beginning Monday
of the 22nd IMivenary of Israel's In·
dependence.
The military spokesman said in the
first incldent this morning four Israeli"
soldiers were wounded near Metulla in
the Upper Galilee and two more this
afternoon in the Biranit regjon of the
Western Galilee.
Israeli soldie rs In addition rePof'ted
surprlsing a group of Egyptian com-
mandos wh<l had ~ the Suez canal
and were planting mines on the l1raeti
liide. 1be commandos were aaid to ha ve
fled back acrOll the waterway during
a cross~anal mortar barrage.
Israeli warplanes went after Egyptian
guns on the west bank of the c1nal
in a l>minute strike this mornipg, Tel
Aviv said, and all returned safely.
Jobless Levels
In Steep Gain
WASHING TON (AP) -The number
of Jobi"' Americans climbed 300,ooo
t.o a total of nearly four riUUioo in
April, pushing the nation's unemployment
rate from U to 4.8 perc<nt ol the
labor force, the government said today.
"Employment gains have come to a
virtual standstill and unemployment in·
creased substantially," said the Labor
Department's chief flllp}()yment. analyst,
Howard SLambler.
"We've had no gain in employment
since December,'1 while tl'le total of
unemployed has climbed by l.I million
persom. Stambler said.
The four-month mcrease in u~ploy·
ment was th.e steepest since early 19!18,
i . Hail, Hail to Bismarck ' '
J
Senate to Curb Nixon?.
"
V o_te Set on Cambodia Funds Halt
....
WASHJNGTQN (UPI) -The Senate
wlll vote late next fttk on legislation
to hold Pmldent Niml to his pled1e
U.S. tl'OOpl will be withdrawn from Cam-
bodia by July I. ~ ol pauage
on comldered "'"""· The amendment -wh1dt wlll be at·
la<hed to, the forelp mllltary sales bill
-would UH the coqreuJonal power
ov .. the pur1t to deny Nixon any money
for "reWnlng Unllid States ground
forces in Cambodil."
'nte amendment wu offered Thursday
by Sena. Fruit Church (IHdaho), and
John Sh<nn111 Cooper (Jl..Ky.). Senate
Dtmocnlt, aupported by Republican
Leader Hugh Scott (R-Pa.), Immediately
urged the Senate Forelgn RelaUons Com·
m!ttee to apeed the blll to tile fioor.
Senate Democratic Leader M I k e
Mantfleld endoned the amendment and
said be was auured there would be
a vote Thursday or Frlday.
Becauae the military sales bill would
not ta.ke effect until July 1, the amend·
ment would not affect the Cambodlan
operation between now and then. And
Senale aides said the word "retaining''
might give tile President aomt leeway
to continue the operations for a few
weeks into July.
Church and Cooper said the bill would
St. Louis Teamsters Vote
To End Trucking Walkout
By United Prett lnternaUonal
A 37-day old walkout which paralyzed
the trucking industry in the St. Louis
area technically has ended following a
vote by a margin <lf almost two to
one by Teanlsters Local 600 to return
to work.
l·lowever, there were indications that
a back-to-work order may not be fully
complied with by the Teamsters. Jn
other parts of the country, truck drivers
continued to stay of! th.eir jobs.
The St. Louis vote was taken Thursday
at the open·air Municipal Opera in
suburban Forest Park, Mo., y,•here 2,689
Teamsters voted hi favor of ending the
strike and I,475 were against.
Donald Lane, President of Local 600,
1aid the balloting hat been ratified by
the St. Louis Board of Election Com·
mis.sioners. No word was given by local
otfkiah when a back-to-work .order would
be iMUed Jn St. Louis.
'The result or the vote drew a mixed
reactioo from truck drivers. Some
cheered while others remained angry.
One member said, "It's far from set-
tled." Another said, "lt'll take the Na·
tional Guard to get me back."
"Hell no." sakl another Teamster. "I
won't go back because 1 don't want
my head split." ·
The approved St. Louis proposal -
wh ich had been worked out in the
chambers of U.S. Di.strict Court Judge
John Regan -agreed that if the drivers
returned to work, all llUgation pending
against Lane and the ·union would be
stopped. Trucking firms had flied suits
totaling miUk>nl ct dollars in damages
against the local.
At least 600,000 persons across the
nation have been idled by the trucking
\Valkot.lt.
Laborite.s Gain
In Britain Vote
LONOON (UPI ) -Prime Minister
J{arold Wilson 's Labor party racked up
substantial gains In Thursday's last round
of local government voting before Bri-
tain's impending general elecUom.
Poli tical e:iperls said the gains did
not appear sufficiently decisive to en-
courage Wilson to di&solve Parliament
no'Y and hold the election h1. June .
The voting was for local C<lunCils in
34.2 towns and ciUes and 82 other urban
areas or England and Wales. De5plte
the Labor gains, the Conservatives sUU
kept control over most larger cities.
Unofficial final results showed Labor
had SC<Jred net gains 0£ 443 council
seats and the Conservatives suffered
net losses or 327. The remainder of
the Laborite gains came at the expense
of independents, liberals and other
miscellaneous candidates.
p<1t the Senate on roconl olllclally and
for the first time aaaintt the operaUon
in Cambodia and it would force the
admlni8traUon to change any plw it
miaht have to stay in Cambodia tn-
deflnltely or further widen the confHct
to provide protection for the Cambodian
;ovunment.
It was not known whether the White
House would endorse il A aimilar 1"00
pop! by Church and Cooper fut year
to deny funds for U.S. ground ccmbat
troops in Laos and 'Ibailand WU backed
by the White House and i< paned
overwhebntngly.
* * * McGovern Asks
Free TV Time
For 'Peace Bill'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. George
McGovern (0-S.D.), said today he bad
asked far television Ume to drum up
support for an amendment deldcned to
force an end to th~ war in Indodllna
with.in 13 months.
McGovern and nine other Senate and
House members said they wanted free
time on the three major networks for
nationwide broadcasli. lf turned down
by the networks, . they said they were
prepared to raise money for the.
telecasts.
McGovern said he had asked for free
time from NBC for TUe"sday and would
make similar requests of CBS and ABC.
The amendment would prohibit the
expehdlture of funds for the war in
Vietnam and Laos after June 30, ll'lI.
Jt would prohibit use of funda for
Cambodia 30 days after it became law.
McGo\'tm said he was uncertain wben
or how he would introduce the amend·
ment.
Democratic National Ch airman
Lawrence F. O'Brien also asked for
free televi!ion time for a JX!licy speech
pn tbe "Nixon administraton'1 escalation
of the. Vietnam war into Cambodia."
The senators and House members sup-
porti~ McGovern's amendment included
Sens. Harold Hughes (D-Iowa), Gaylord
Nelson <D-Wls.). 1'.{ark 0 . Hatfield (R·
Ore.), and Charles E. Goodell (R-N.Y.),
and Reps. Donald ~L Fraser (0.MiM.),
Paul N. },{cCloskey Jr. {R.Calif.)1 John
Convers Jr. (0.Mich.l, Daniel E. Button
I R-N. Y.), and Abner J. Mi1"• (0.In.).
I
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But Most ·of U.S. Basks Under Sunny Sk~s
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COSTA MESA
Atlas Chry.$1er-Plymouth, lnc.
2929 Harbor Boulevard
. .. . . .. ' . p .
S-an Cle1nente
Capistrano
'
EDITION
VO~. 63, NO. 110, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY'S, 1970
oro
Mareli ota PO State Vote
More Protesting On Mitchell
Planned on Coast Postponed
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of tti. O.UY ,li.t Sl•ff
More peaceful demonstrations are
planned this weekend along the Orange
Coast as student protesters continue to
register opposition to U.S. involvement
in Cambodia and the death of four
Kent State &tudents.
Orange Caast College's Studenl Non-
violent Strike Committee scheduled a
march on the Costa Mesa Post Office
City May Aid
Transit Line
This· Summer
The colorful festival trams and the
big Cannonball will run as usual this
summer but the city or Laguna Beach
may have to go into the bus business
tr> ieep the faltering k>cal transit line
in operation. it was cliic1osed at the
City Council meeting this week.
Tommy Thompson. owner of the
Laguna Tranait C.Ompany which c>pe.r•tes
the locill line, appeared before the council
to protest the competitioo of the trams,
specifically the Cannonball, but ended
up admitting that even without the com·
peUtion, Laguna Transit is "very close
to quitting."
The bus line, he said, has been
operating at a loss since inauguration
of the 'Leisure World run which he
cancelled last v.•eek as an emergency
n1easure.
Recognizing the summer competition
of the Cannonball, wh ich operates north
and sooth on Coast Highway during the
Festi val run , the Festival has been
paying Laguna Transit up to $1,000 a
year, technically for permission to oper·
ate under its Public Utilities Commission
permit._
This year the Festival attorney advised
directors that the trams did not need
a PUC permit to operate within the
ci ty limits, only a city permit, and
the $1,000 payment was cancelled.
The Venice Tram Company, owner
of the trams, applied for a city permit
but city action was deferred following
a protest from Laguna Transit.
Wednesday night, after discussion with
Thompson, the permit was granted.
Under questioning by Mayor Richard
Goklberg, Thompson, who formerly drove
tl.t: Can nonba11 and sai d he's "not agaiMt
the trams," admitted that even the $1,000
would not be enough to restore his
firm's economic equilibrium.
"Laguna Transit has been operating
at a loss and is very close to quilling,"
he said. "I can't get financial backing
and I was going to bring up the question
of a city subsidy when th is tram thing
was settled."
"We need a bus line here," said Coun-
cilman Charlton Boyd. "I would advise
~1r. Thompson to go ahead and file
jSee TRAMS, Page Zl
this morning where they planned to
hold a "Mail -Jn."
A spokesman for the group said they
had more than 1,000 leUers which they
intended to mail individually at the facili·
ty at 1520 Adams Ave.
· '"I'lltse letters are addressed to our
Congressmen and the President," he
said, "and they register our oposilion
to Nixon's war policy," a student
spokesman explained.
A table will be set up in front of
the post office to enable concerned
citizens to have available to them writing
materials and the addresses of their
legislaton in Washington D.C.
The post office march is expected
to be peaceful as was Thursday's l\.1arch
tram OCC to the Costa Mesa Air National
Guard Base.
• Police and student organizers estimate
2,000 people took part in the ~ march
and rally held in a field near the base.
The Costa Mesa police helicopter kept
watch from overhead as the marchers
walked from the campus to the rally
site. One observer said he could see
no patrobnen in the march area.
Five national guar.dsmen listened lrom
behind the fence surrounding the base
as four student speakers gave short
speeches on the war and the Kent State
deaths. ,
Costa Mesa police said today they
intercepted three youngsters with guns
wbo were beading in the direction of
the march.
Three teenage boys were stopped in
the 2900 block of Meodoza Drive, heading
in the general vicinity of the march,
at about 3 p.m. The boys told olficers
they were looking for a place to shoot
their two rines and pistol.
Police said they conliscated the
~eapons rather than have the youths
carry them into the march and rally
area.
l;eaflet activities by UC Irvine students
continued today with a Teach-in and
dialogue session scheduled to start on
campus at 11 a.m.
Protest spokesma n Doug \Yhitener
said. "We're trying to carry ou r dialogue
to the community." He stre'ssed that
the public was invited to the teach-in.
Another meeting was set for 7:30
o'clock tonight at UCl's Gateway Com.
moos. Whitener said the meeting would
be held to get a consensus for weekend
activ ities.
By this morning, the only activity
planned for Saturday was a rock concert
at Cal State Fullerton. _ .
On Sunday, the Movement for a
Democratic Military (MOM) has organiz-
ed a march from the Santa Ana l\1arlne
Corps Air facility to Santa Ana Memorial
Park.
The march, which Is scheduled for
11 a.m. in front of the facility at Red
Hill and Valencia Avenues, is being held
to emphasize the MDM demands to end
all U.S. involvement in Southeast Asi a,
"murder on campus" and "all racism
and brutalism in the military."
Students at Saddleback College and
Golden West College planned no organiz·
ed actlvities for the weekend but a
(See PROTEST, Page %)
Clettaente High Athletes
The State Senate this week delayed
the scheduled floor vote on appointment
of South Lagunan Clay N. Mitchell to
the state Board of Education because
of insufficient votes.
This was the assessme~ today by
an aide of Senator Alfred Alquist ([).San
Jose), who is opposing the appoinbnent
or Mitchell.
Alquist, a' candidate for lieutenant
governor, interrogated Mitchell before
the Rules Commiltee receotly, but
Mitchell won approval of the Rules Com·
miltee by a 4 to l split vote.
The Alquist aide said because of absent
senators the pro-Mitchell forces could
not round up the n~sary 27 votes
to confirm the appointment.
However, the matter may be brought
up at any Ume il the voles are rounded
up.
It would take 14 votes against l\1itchell
to block his appointment and Alquist
bas been trying to round these up.
Normally, gubernatorial 'ppointments
are n1bber-1tamped by the Senate with
little fanfare.
The Alquist aide speculated tr the
pr1>Mitcbell votes aren't rounded up by
ne.11:t week, Governor Reagan might
withdraw the appointment. "It really
isn't the Governor's a pp o Int men' t
anyway," the aide suggested, "it's Max
Rafferty's."
Republican sources have said that Raf·
ferty, state superintendent of public in-
struclion, lobbied strongly with the
governor to appoint the 58-year-old South
Lagunan.
Chamber Opposes
Gas Tax Switch
A move to divert gasoline tax revenue
from highway construction use in
California has sparked opposition from
the Capistrano Beach Chamber of Com-
merce.
The Chamber's board adopted a resolu·
lion protesting proposed amendment of
Article 26 of California Constitution which
might allow expeltd.iture of gas tax funds
for general government purposes.
In discussion by the board. members
expressed willingness to have gas tax
money spent on transportation uses such
as rapid transit programs, but objected
to possibility of general fund uses of
the tax dollars.
A freeway linking Capistrano Beach
with other coastal communities Is one
of the projects aet for completion within
the next five years.
STOCK ltlARKET
NEW YORK CAP) -The stock market
drifted downward in slow trading this
afternoon as traders turned their atten·
tion to antiwar demonstrations and fist.
fights in Wall StretL See quotaUons,
Pages 'lO -'ll).
Furor Rises on Suspension
A mounting furor over the suspension
or two San Clemente High School athletes
rages unabated today despite a Superior
Court decision which seems geared to
meet both sides in the bitter dispute
at the halfway ma rk.
Judge Robert S. Corfman today denied
the plea or the C8pistrano Unified School
District for dissolution of a restraining
order whlch prtvenla district author:IUes
from barring Ruben Paramo, 17. from
baaeball activities and Anthony W. Hof._
fman, 16, from the shcool's pole vaulting
squad.
Both boy! were ejected by Assittant
Ptlnclpal f"red Pagquale last Aprll 'lO
11fter the hearing charges that I.he ath·
letes drank beer at a San Clemente party.
Judge Corfman e<>ntinuecl t h e
restraining order today but Ile Im·
mediately absolved from Its regulations
tile coacl!es ol Ille two boys: Mlf ll
Ada.Ir for Paramo and Ray Reeves for
Hoffman.
"Jn olher words," Laguna Niguel at..
tomey Tom Keenan said, "the only peer.
pie at San Clemente Hl.gh School who
can bar these boys from athletic ac-
tivities are these two coaches. lt may
well be that they will net kick them
off tbelr respecUve learnt but the qiies·
lion that immediately occurs is how
much pressure lrill be applied on the
coaches by other :fQUrCeS."
Keenan argued that tchool district
authorltJea had acted "unconsUtutlona.Uy
and arbltarlly" when they acted to
remove "two dedicated athletes" rrom
high school sports actlv1Ucs.
Judge Cor£man commented : "they
were not so dedicated th at they dkln't
drink some btcr."
Ruben Paramo Sr., 32211 Los AmlgM,
San Juan Caplattano, beli!ves ~t Adair
• I
.
will remove his son from the school's
ball club.
"I have my reasons," he sakf, "and
I think that the judg's ruling today
will lead Adair to t.a.ie my son off
the team.ti
Anthony Hollman'• parents felt there
was "a good chance" that the boy,
who is the brother of surfing champion
Joyce Hoffman , will be allowed lo con-
tinue partk:ipation In pole vau1ling
events. He is scheduled to appea r for
the school this afternoon Jn \he CJF
finals.
Parents of both boys spoke of "a
wave of unrest" In San Clemente and
the guspenslon of two more aithletes
during the last two days at the high
school.
1\.frs. Patricia Houman Identified the
boys involved as star hurdler Bob
(See A~11e I)
a
' .. ,, .. • • •
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't KNEW GOD WOULllN 'T LET ME DOWN'
Ann Turn9r Can Now S.. Whet Sh9 Cooks
' Medi~al Mira~le
•
Blinded Girl., 15, Sees Again
TIPJ'ON, Ind. (UPI) -March 7. Ann
Turner, JS, stared at the solar eclipse
and was blinded. Her doctor said her
eyes showed burn inflammation and
scars, and she probably never would re-
gain her sight.
Today she can see again.
Dr. Sainuel Thompson, a l\farion eye
specialist who first examined Ann afler
the eclipse, said she had experienced a
"medical phenomenon."
When Thompson first looked at her.
eyes. he said, they showed burn illflam-
mation and scare. They s:Ull have some
.scars, but Ann now has normal visipn,
Thompson said, alt.hough he will examine
her periodically for the next year.
Thompson said the girl lost her sight
from staring directly at the solar ecllpse
March 7, when the moon passed in front
of the sun, darkening the skies at midd ay.
Doctors warn against staring at such
phenomena, bocause of the danger: lo
eyesight. ·
Wednesday, one day short of two
mo11lhs after she wa.tched the eclipse,
Ann cried: "I can see, I can sie!" Hfr
mother hurried irito her room· and found
her with her face buried in· her hands,
weeping. · · ·
· "I believe it was a mirac;le, through
the doclor or by natural means:" said
Ann's moth~r. Mrs. Coy· Tutner .. "It atill
has the touch of God's .hand in it."
Ann had.been continuing her education
~t home. Wednesday· night, her tutor,
Mrs. Donna Renie, came' for th~ir usual
~ession. Ann said to her : "What a p~elty
blouse you are 'wearing." '
Ann will return to sch~! Monday. Her
only rest ric tion is to avoid bright !WI·
light. .
"I knew God wouldn 't let me down,"·
she said.
Laguna Civic League Eyes
Higl1 Rise, General Plan
High.rise, the fate of the general plan
and future developments on the Main
Beach will be the principal topics at
tlie annual all·membershlp meeting of
the Laguna Beach Civic League at 7: 30
p.m. Tuesday. March 12, in City Hall
cooncll chambers, President Anthony
Demeltiades anoounced today.
Brief p~sentaUons will be made on
these critical issues, he said.
"The Civic League has for years at·
tempted to protect Laguna's scenic and
aesthetic heritage," De:metriades said.
"We will not be talking about the
vague Past e.00 the vague fu ture al
our meeting. Developments in the last
few days will begin to affect the
Former Mayor
To Open Season
Former Laguna Beach Mayor ' Jesse
Riddle will toss out Lbe first bill a~
1970 Llttle 1League play · gets under waf
S~turday at Riddle Field. · '
Opening ~remonles t're scheduled 'at
noon. with Riddle, Mayor Richard
Goldberg and members of thf!! CltY Coun·
ell on hand as ~ests of honor.
Mn. Amy Norworth , whose: late hus-
b:ind, Jack wrote the popular ''Takf!
f\1e OUt To The Ball Game,'' will be
there to, with her traditional gift of
Crackerjad for al lht players. . ' '
character or our town In lhe next few
weeM.
"We want to eXplain to our iDembers
precisely what the possibilities are, and
to solicit their lime and effort. to maln-
tairi a true 'village atmosphere' In
Laguna."
He urged members to attend and to
bring guests. ·
Drug Suspect's
Wife Gives Up
The wif~. of a Laguna BUch man
arrtiled Monday and charged with
poss~ion of 70 pQUDdli of hashish, valued
at '90,000 turned herself, in tq Laguna
Beaeh· poUce 'Thursday after a warrant
had been Issued fpr her arresl a1 an
accomplice in the case. 1
Ann •Elizabeth Cirey., 21, wtnt ·lo the
l>ollce department with her aUomey and
later · •a·s ri!leaiJed on'' lier o "n
recog nizance by Judge-Rich.a rd Hamnton,
She is the Wife of Tod Ctrey! U,
1476 N. Coast llighway,.wbo was atraled
wilh hi• brothtr. Robert, !I, wheil police
apprehended thllJl Joadln1 the hashlah
into a car.
In Sdulh County Mt1nlclpal Court 'J\J~
day Judge Hanillton tel lheir bail at
$25,000 each and ordered them held for
ltlal • . . . '-:-~
'Today's Fina)
' .
TEN CENTS
ea
Crews H1int
Flier Near
Catalina
U.S. Marine, Navy and Coast Guard
air and sea units continued their search
today for a missing El Toro Marine pi)ot
who bailed out of his jet Thursday shortJ.y ·
before it crashed into the ocean about
15 miles southeast of Santa Catallna
lsland .
Marine Corps spokesmen ~aid Capt.
Jack A. Chiaramonte, 28, who lives. on
the base with his wife and four cbildren,
parachuted from his Skyhawk: after loos--
ing control . or the plane during a
familiarization fllght. •
The spokesman said the pilot of a
plane flying with. the downed craft saw
the pilot and his pa,rachute go into
the ocean after the 6:30 p.m. crash.
Three helicopters, two fixed-wing craft,
three tracklng planes and a Coast Guard
cutter joined in the search that continued
through the night.
The cause of the accident had not
been determined.
Dana-Capo Beach
ptypood Plea
Filed in County
1llt c:ommlttee for the tncorporatloa
of Dana Point.Capistrano B~ch bas an-"
onounef:d !bat its intent to lncorparat•
was olflcialty flied Thursday.
. The lncorporaUon proposal will be ~
sidered at the June 8 m~tlng of the
Local Agency Formation Commission
(LAFCJ.
A meeting o·r civic and service ctubl
in the Incorporation area has been
scheduled for Thursday. May 21. The
purpose of ' the gathering will be to
study the economic feasibility report
which has been submitted to the LAFC
along with a map of the proposed city.
Tbe m~ting will take place at 8 p.m.
In the home of Dr. R9ger Sanderson,
chairman ol the incorporation corrimitte!.
Clubs Which will be asked to send
two representatives include. the Dana
Poinl and Capistrano Bea.Ch ·Chambers
of Commerce, the Dao11_' K.n-.!!lls
HomeoWijer s Associa tion, the Dana Point
Civic Association, the Thunderbird Cora·
munity Homeowners Assoclation, Uie
Capistrano Beach Community Associi·
tion, El Camino Junior Woman's · Club,
<:;apistrano Beach Lions, Capistrano
Beach and Dan• Point Rotary and the
American Legion Post 741.
Stevenson's Son Asks
Marriage· Dissolved
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -John Felt
Stevenson, youngest son of the late Adlai
Stevenson, seeU the custody1of his three
children In divorce papers filed agains't
his socialite wife Natalie Owings Slev·
enson.
Stevenson, 34, filed a su1t Thursday
Ullder California's new dissolution of
marriage law iA which specific grou11dl
are. not required.
Orange 4'oast
Weather
You may be able to outsJeep the
coastal cloudineu over the wetk·
end, and from then on it'll be a
nice day with fair skies and temp-
eratures ln the temperate 60's.
INSmE TODAY
The~'ll bf hlsting &he villain
amt cheering &he hero Satarday
night · ot Ne!DJ)Orl 1Harbor Higfl
Sahool wAtn an old . tfmt melo-a ama aoe1 ·on stage for char· 'tfl· DetaiU in today's Werk·
<Mtr. ' ........ It c.111tw11i. ,
C.-K~I"' U• 1 =::-'1~ -" ............
hltwi .. ,... ' ,._ •11 -" ~llfl ......... u
MtltM• • MM!lltft •
..... 2'41
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• ,__
! OAILY Pll61 SC
ANTI-WAR DEMONSTRATORS HEAD FOR AIR NATIONAL GUARD UNIT IN °cosf'.4°t.il1'S.:."'·
Previously Unnoticed, Quiet l ittle Communlc•tlons Unit B1com11 ObJect of Merch
San Clemente Council
Nixes 'Bargain Beams'
.. Even 1 prict reduction of $7,000 was
J¥>t bargain enough to tempt San
c>emente councilmen to purchase the
hand-decorated beams d. the Capistrano
Jjeach Club.
Councilmen had lartly rejected the
beams, which once hdped hold up the
ceiling over the oil-wealthy Doheny fami-
Jy, at $12,000 plus estimated $3,000
demoliUon cost.
_ 'JbeY rejected them more ge711Jy
Wednesday at $5.000 plus demolition.
,ll had been suggested that the beams
might be used in construction or the
community clubhouse that was guUed
by fire. Councilman Thomas OKeere. who said
he had an intemt in the matter, refrain-
ed from discus!lion or voting.
ln other business, councilmen:
-Adopted an ordinance which redoced
the speed l.irnlt for trains from 6$-75
miles per hour to 40 miles per hour.
-Set consideration of reconstruction
d the golf greens for a Monday study -· -Reduced the license fee. for stamp
vending machines from $5 annually to
S2 after hearing a presentation from
the machine11' owner.
-Instructed Ule city manager to call
tor bids on an automatic gate at the
Avenida del Mar crossing of the Santa
Fe track. One cOmpany had agreed to
do 1.M wotk. for $3,386. Councilman
'Jbomas OKeefe asked !or other bids
and broad specifications commenting,
"I don't think w eJletd lo pay 11,000
lot a garage door opener."
-Set a joint study session Monday
with tbe planning commission and parks
and recreation commission on the future
ot the community clubhouse.
-Accepted a revised bid from D. C.
Muralt. Co. for vrork in an improvement
State Drops Charges
In Panther Shooting
CHICAGO (AP) -The ·state dropped
attempted murder charges today against
ttven Black Panther party member"
who w're present durh1g a shooting
~ which police killed two Panther
~ers.
···Two policemen and four Puther ,, members were wounded In what.
authorities have described as a gun battle
initiated by the Panthers during a pre--
dawn raid on a West Side apartmen\
llec .•.
DAILY PILOT
N..,.,. I••• ........... .._. ........... ,. ,.....,., .....
C.... M"" I• CJ ••••
Oll:A.NGI! COAST PIJ9l15HIHG COMPAH'I"
Rob•rt N. Weel
'"•lde<ll 1r.d Pubtl$W
J1ck •· Curl,.,
Vl(t 'rti:otnt ll'ld c;.w11 M-Dtf
Th-•t Ktt•il
Edi IOI'
T\oool" A. Murpliiftl
M.,...1111 Ell!or
Richtnl '· Nill $0ii!h Ort• CounlJ Edlltot
°'""' C .. 11 11\.-.~n Uf WAI Bil' fir"'
H...-r1 ••idl: nu w..1 ••~1 ~~ .......-efftll: m ,_, ........... '°""'""'"" ... di: IHN .. ltll ·~-.... $111 (""*It:. :IOI NotTll £1 Clf'l!fto llMI
' -o-,tl• PILOT. wllll w:i11;11 h c-lllMd ttlt ...... __..,_ .. pulll™""ll •111, lttlllll ~ ~ .. , ifl ....... "' <.ii-,.,. Lit-leo;cll, , ...,,.... 8~11, C.1e ~. H1111tlftl*>
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t1 .. i., n IO -.11111w1 bw ft'ltlt Jt.tl l\'I
•fll11111..,. ""'..,."""" u• ~'"
district on East Avenida Cordoba to
benefit nine property owners.
-Denied a request from the San
Clemente Dental .Laboratory, 150 W.
Avenida Rosa, for parking space in front
or t.be laboratory for doctors and pa·
tients. set for Monday study a request from
G. Carson Riumussen and six other
ownen of more than 200 acres of un·
developed acreage that the city establi1h
a policy ror corWruction of an interceptor
"wer line at general city espense.
-Agreed to let C&rl Kym.la, manager
of the Moulton-Niguel Water Distrlct,
address the council at its next session
on beoefit of joining the South East
Regional Reclamation Association which
six other agencies have joined.
... -Agreed during budget consideration~
.. to take up the matter of radar for traffic
enforcement.
-Scheduled ror the f..1onday session
a discussion of chamber of commerce
promotional funds.
Board to Study
Teacher Appeals
Over Dismissals
\
The Laguna Beach school board has
~cheduled an executive (c\o.sed) session
al 8:30 a.m. Saturday to study the writ·
ten opinion or state hearing officer
Bichnell J. Showers regarding the pro-
posed dismiSS<1ls of two Laguna Beacn
High School teachers.
Music director Jack Krefting and art
teacher Donna Lynde re<iuested formal
hearings after they were told they would
not be re-hi red for the 197()..71 school
year.
The hearings were conducted'in Santa
Ana last week, with members of the
school administration, parents and
students testifying.
After studying the writtm opinion pro.
vided by the hearing officer, it is lhe
prerogative or the schoo1 board to act
on his recommendation as it chooses.
A special public meeting of the board
is scheduled for 7:30 o'clock Tuesday
night in the district offices to announct
the decision.
Also on the agenda: for the cxecu1i\'e
session is an evaluation of lhe centr al
administrative staff and a report on
this also may be made at the Tuesda y
night meeting.
S.tate 'Big Fisli'
In Local Waters ,
Attor11ey Decides
San Clemente councilmen have ap-
parently given up on sovereignty over
Jocal fi!ihing waters to protecl the local
$port fishing fleet.
A report from City Attorney P.
MacKeniie Brown indicated Wednesday
that the state is pretty well the big
fish out to the three-mile limit.
Local fisherm en have protested com·
merclal fishing boats from other areal!
that fish off San Clementt.
Brown said Santa Monlca tried to
prohibit fishlna nets with.in a certain
distance from its pier. but the courts
held the area was ~mpled by the
st.ate. Brown held out • mhmow or hope
when he said the Supreme Court has
roted that flshlng Is a "tax11ble event.''
He said he had contacted Los Angeles.
Newport Beach, Santa Monica and
Redondo Beach about thtlr approach.
lie said they did impose fees on opera·
Unn." wlt.b boat.s docked within their
llrl!a, but 511d he W3S doublfu) O[ im·
posing fees on boats fishing h1 San
Clemente but not ha rbored here.
"We can't do It?" A~k~ the m:iyor.
•1tt's difficult;• repLied tbeiltorn,y.
From Page 1
PROTEST ...
Golden West spokesman said they were
planning an event of an undisclosed
nature on Monday.
About JOO striking students from Chap..
man College in Orange said they planned
to march on the Western While House
in San Clemente today at 1:30 p.m.
Chapman is one of the few county col-
leges which is remaining open in the
light of student protests.
Thursday, Santa Ana College was
ordered closed Wltil Monday, leaving
Chapman, Fullerton College and Cypress
College the only county institutions which
have not cl0&ed.
Students, faculty and administrators
at Costa Mesa's Southern Calirornla
Colleie are particiPating in a "Com·
munlty or Concern ror Collegewide
Reflection on Responsibility" a f t e r
regltlarly scheduled classes were suspen-
ded Thursday.
Clemente Asked
To Give $1,000
For Oil Battle
San Clemente has been asked to ante
up $1.000 to light for restrictions against
off·shore oil drilling.
Councill\len, who had earlier denied
a request fQr funds to help pay a lobbyist
in Washington, have agreed to lake
another look al the matter on f\tay
w.
~1rs. Duncan Stewart. a direc!or of
the Coastal Area Protective League
(CAPL l, told councilmen Wednesday
nighl that Newport Beach and Laguna
Beach ha ve each pledged up to $2,000
and that the county will match the
funds.
The money is lo pay 1obbyist Fred
Burke tn an attempt to shepherd Senate
Bill 3093 oot of the judicial and interior
and insular affairs committees to
passage.
Sponsored jointly by Senators George
Y..1urphy and Alan Cranston, the bill would
extend prohibitions against off-shore ex·
ploration into federal waters beyond
areas where there are existing state
1Janctuaries prohibiting exploration.
Such a sanctuary exists from the Santa
Ana River to the Mexican border.
From Page l
ATHLETES ...
DlaC'kcr and highly rl'l:ardct.I tennis
player Terry Plowden.
"The charges against lhem." she said.
•·are that they have been smo king but
the evidence seems lo be prclty
circumstantial in at least <lnc or the
case~.
"Sorr:eone is out to get U1esc athletes
and we \li"OU!d like to know who ." she
said. "There arc many people in San
Clemen<' apar! from the p11rcnts or
athletic co1npctl!ors \\'ho would hke to
know \\'ho is a1lpl ying this kind of
prc$i;urr lo their sons."
Capi.~!rano linified School Oistrict
Aulhorltic$ <lcclincd 1och1y lo con1n1en!
on !he law~uit or thetubsequenl charges
inadc by parents of t\hlelcs.
-----------------------
Cambodia War Widens·
Biggest Arms Cache Uncovered
SAIGON (UPI) '-The United Slates
today sent another battalion of 800 troops
into Cambodia where a series of allied
operations have uncovered the greatest
a rms cache of the war. Southwest of
liaigon a flotilla of 100 allied boats 1noved
upriver toward Phnom Penh.
The operations In Cambodia brought
savaae retaliation rro.m North Vlet·
namese in the northern regions of South
Vietnam. They killed 57 civilians and
wounded 82 in shelling attacks on the
cities of Hue and Tam Ky and battled
their way into Tam Ky in street fighting.
The action cost them 14 dead .
It was the costliest night of Communist
altacks this year.
Military spokesmen in Saigon said 800
troops of tht U.S. 9th Infantry Division
moved into the Parrot's Beak area 35
miles northwest of Saigon where a South
Vietnamelle force destroyed the Ba Thu
supply ba se and then withdrew. They
said the Americans moved in to prevent
\'iet Cong from returning to the area.
The allied operation ao far has killed
nearly 4.000 Communist troops at a cost
of 56 Americans dead and 153 wounded
and about 200 South Vietname~e dead
and 900 wounded . The Americans also
captured 884 prisoners.
UPI correspondent Leon Da n i e I
reported from "The City," a vast Com·
munlst complex just across the border,
that American troops had found the
biggest supplies or arms and .ammuniHon
or the entire war and that the count
\\'as still under way.
In Washington, the Pentagon told
Secretary of State William P, Rogers
tod ay the operations have captured
enough ammunition for the Communists
to have conducted 71.9 small hit·run at·
tacks on South Vietnamese cities. It
said this included 4,000 rounds of rocket,
mortar and recoilless rifle shells plus
1,000 tons or rice -enough to feed
4,000 troops for nearly a year.
The flotilla of U,S. Navy aod South
Vietnamese vessel1 was moving through
the Mekong Delta on the Bassac River
which join.a the Mekong at Chau Doc,
115 miles aouthwest or Saigon. The flotilla
left in its wake 11 storm of CtJntrovel'$y
over Ule lack of secrecy about its
missionll.
Informed
cross Into
morning.
sources said it would not
Cambodia before Saturda y
Its every move has been broadcast
to the Yiet Cong in advance, and heavy
oppo1ition was forecast on the 45 miles
between Chau Doc and Phnom Penh.
The controversy over security delayed
Its departure, but reports today aaid
jt .was nearing Cha u Doc with South
Vietnamese soldiers along to protect it
from ambushes. U.S. and South Viet·
namese planes \VOU!d be expected to
provide air cover.
The heaviest opposition \Vas expected
at the Cambodian ril•er crossing tow n
of Ncak Luong, 30 miles below Phnorn
Penh and I~ miles abo.ve the South
Vietnamese borOer. Strong Communist
forces controlled the ferry crossing there,
and Cambodian troops were reported
moving slowl y into the area from Phnom
Penh to. try to disl odge them.
Dana Institute Backs Stude11ts March
On Ohio Capitol
111 Kent Protest Berthing for N es co I
Effort! of Robert Simley of Capistrano
Beach to obtain permanent berthing in
the new Dana Harbor for oceanographic
vessel Nesco J r~lved a boost from
the Dana Marine Studies Institute today.
From Page 1
TRAMS .•.
an application for a subsidy. The problem
ls going to be ours, not lhe Festival's."
A spokesman £or Venice Trams told
the council. "There are only five private-
ly owned bus companies in the country
now. Most cannot operate without a
subsidy." •
It was pointed out thal the Festival
takes a loss of some $9,000 a year
on the tram operation, paying Venice
Tram a <:ontract sum for use of the
trams and subSidizing the difference
between this fee, driver salaries and
the minimum fares charged for the con •
venience or patrons.
Goldberg said that the future of the bus
line should be discussed with Laguna
Transit and set a council study se~ion
on the problem for 7:30 p.m. Monday,
May 18.
Asks 'Equal Time'
\VASHfNGTON (AP) -Democratic
National Chairman Lawrenct F. O'Brien
asked th e three major t e I e vis i an
netvtorks today to give full cove rage
of a major foreign policy speech he
plans Saturday night in response to the
Nixon administration's Cambodia
policies.
t
I
Institute president Dr. A n d re a !!
Rechnitzer submitted a letter to Simley
in which he terms availability or a vessel
such as Nescp I to be "hight)' desirable
, .• for at least two kinds or service."
Rechnitzer said the craft, at anchor,
cou!d be utilized succtssfu!ly for in-
doctrination and orientation to shipboard
equipment and operations.
For more advanced training the craft
could provide sea experience f o r
students. ,
If some assurance could be given that
the vessel will be available for such
a program. the institute would plan to
initiate it by September 1970, Rechnitzer
said.
His allowable time in Dana Harbor
expired. Simley will take the Nesco I
to Newport Harbor this morning.
Capistrano Bay
Fund Gets Boost
United Fund (Jl'ganizing efforts in the
Capistrano Bay area received a boost
this week in a vote or support by the
Capistrano Beach Ctiamber of Commerce
Board of Directors.
The Chamber heard Bob Oakley, rund
Interim vice-president, in April, and
discuslled the organization and purposes
of United Fund, but a vote on the matter
was postponed to the board meeting
this week.
Roy G&rbarine of San Clemente
Chamber is interim president of the
group which is seeking Chamber en·
dorsement throughout the Capistrano Bay
area.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Thousands
of college students, chanting "Peace
now," marched on the closed and heavily
guarded state capitol today to protest
the killings Of four Kent Sta le students.
by Na tional Guard troops.
The students 1narched from the
Veterans Memorial Auditorium. about
a mile from the capitol, through part
of the do"'lllown area and onto the
slatehouse grounds.
A force of 150 Ohio Highway Patrol
officers anned with shotguns and riot
clu bs ringed the building. About a dozen
patrohnen guarded a fla gpole flying the
American and State of Ohio flag .
"Nobody's g'oing to pull do\vn that
flag or invade the statehouse," said
Ohio Hi gh way Patrol Superintendent
Robert ~1. Chiaramonte. "We are not
goh1g to be a punching bag for enyone."
Albert Gienow, state public w o r k~
director, ordered the building aOO all
state offices closed after a conference
with Chiaramonte.
A nearby building housing the Colum4
bus Dispatch and the Columbus Citizeo
Journal also was locked, but the papers
continued to work.
.\ patrol officer was asked if the
shotguns were loaded.
.. You 're damn right they 're loaded,''
he replied .
Col. J.E.P. ~tcCann, administrative
assistant to the adjutant general in Ohio,
said the guard would carry weapons
loaded with live ammuniti on if they
were called to duty because of the rally.
"We feet that when our people are
put in a dangerous situation we should
afford them the opportunity to protect
themselves," Mccann said.
I
I
I DEALERS FOR: HENREDON' -DREXEL -HERITAGE
NEWPORT BEACH
1717 Wostdlfl Dr., 642·2050
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
LAGUNA BEACH
Prof111lon1I Interior l45 North Coast Hwy. 494.6551
Doslgntro Av1ll1blt-AID OPEN FRIDAY 'T IL 9
f'h• .. Till Free MMt .t O,...e C••ll'tf 140.1261
' '•
Tri-Port
Handicap
Satm·da v
,I
The Trl·port Handicap race,
jointly sponsored by Lido Isle
Yacht Club, and Oceanside
Yacht Club, will get under
way from San Diego Saturday
at J0:30 a.m.
The race has l\\'O legs -
one from San Dlrgo Ill
Oceanside on Saturday. and
the other from Oceanside to
Newport on Sunday. The fleet
will be guests of Oceanside
to Newport on Sunday. The
fleet will be guests 0 r
Oceanside Yacht Club Satur·
day night.
Both legs of the race use
the staggered start" in which
the boats with the lov.·est han·
dicap ratings start fi rst. This
results in the first boat acros.s
the finish line being the win·
ner.
Only Ocean Racing and
~1idget Ocean Racing yachts
\\'hich sailed in the Newport
to Ensenada race are eligible
lo enter. Because of the
limited tacilities at Oceanside,
PHRF yachts arc not in·
eluded.
The doub le -ra ce was
origina\.ed as a competitive
means for skippers and crev.·s
to get their boats home from
the Ensenada race. As a rule.
skippers leave their boats at
San D iego for a week after
the Ert>enada race.
Saturday's ~tart will be ofr
the Mission Bay entrance with
the finish orf the R-2 flashing
bell b uoy at Carlsbad.
Sunday's race starts ID
miles northwest or Oceanside.
about t ~~ miles offshore, and
finishes off Cameo Shores, al'
proximately three-quarters of
a mile east of the Newport
entrance.
NHYCSlates
Opening
On Satul'da y
Newport Harbor Yacht Club
will observe its 53rd official
season opening Sunday with.
a gala flag r aising ceremony
and the cu.!tomary yacht in-
spection and open h o u s e
a board the club yad:its.
Also a part of tht> opening
day activity will be the Open-
ing Day race S a turda y,
starting at Los Angeles Yacht
Club and finishing off the
·Newport Pier.
Festivities v•ill begin tonight
with a Mexican fiesta dinner
at the club \\1ith mariachis,
tequila and two stewardesses
from Air California to add
color to the early California
theme.
,
' .¥ - -
.,
.\,
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rr1d41, May 8, 1910 UAILY PILOT f 1J
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LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
illl(TITIOU$ NAll'll STATI 011' CALIJlO l lOA 11'01 ,ldtt_,. ,,,,_ ._ COUNTY Of' OltAJMI Thf .,...,,ltlllfd -. t.,Ull' tit It TNI COUNTY 011' OUNOI THI! UNDEISIONEO •!WM ~llv JM Cl<lk c ....... orw. W..t aw>Wclll't I blillNI& II 2(111 C"-rle (IM .....,. ln.tlJ !NI "'" w\11 1or anluctlfi9 M MUi.m."t .... Au. C.~
'''"'· tli4t• Mwl, C1llfol'Tll•, wrlMr SUMll'ION'I IMllM M.alntsl 11 TllSl!ft. C.llfonll,9 (-.._ ..... 0 :W.1• TH Jkllllou1 UN'l'I -Of CLARKAIE L. M. STRUCK, M, W. tMM(ll, llfldolr trw flc11"°""' ti"" ...,.. tf lft.IMMOllJ tMA•llAO•I lnol !1111 Mid llrm II COllUIOMd ol 11 1r1AllMI ol I ... MAlllLYN 1-iEllEll, AQIJAillUllO L(A$1NG (0, ~ '1'1.11 tlkl In re rht _,,._ .. Plltll_..., ~ 1r.. hl!ltwl ... HuOll, •f'oOw -t" JANET ioiESlEll ¥1C1 CHAllENE .,,,,, 1, ~ 1111 ,,_ tol...W. ,.,_,. COINELIA JEAN LOO IOGGS -full ..... •lee. ol r.1ldenc• 11 ., I0110Wt ' HE$TEll Trvtl~ 'l•l"llfh "'· MICHAEL ..... IWM1 lft 11,tl ... ,It< .. .,; 11.-...nt· JAMl!S HOll'IEI aoc.os Vklv<" E. c-. 2011 Cl'llri., (Olll W, GR.ffN. IYAN GREEN, lfld fMiditncl ll'I u '911owt, lo •II: lo "'°" 11-1.
MIW, (1111. l'REOlllC A. GAEEN. Ml Fl5011CK Ml'r1-Alblrt SoiM!I TM Htllie<>e• fl.II II"' I "'I~" 011ed .l,11rU ,., 1t1" A OllEEN DOE I 11\r-h DOE y TM\MI M '°"""' contemlntl ~-m1f'Tle1M. Ye1r ""' Y•clor Ii. C-r 1..K1u<dV•• 0:......0.n~ ' WITHEI$ • Mrloft !fib 16th •iv ! Ille I ""'Ill"' •-•lrhln HllrtY :TATE OF c•ll,..ORNIA, PEOPLI! Oii' lHf STAlf OF MetCll ,.,. -• Cll'fJ OI !llf CIAl'f !Nor lhll Wl!lmllnl
DR.ANGE COUNTY • CALIFORNIA l'f ""' t t.¥1 l\lmld 'Mtti. Altisrt s..n II IUW"" II'! YIU. ti '"' ltU " Ult Oft APrll 1', lt111, tlekwt ""' 1 Olltef>O.tnli · Thllml M.. Softn 1 written ,..,_ wlm!11 Ml<h 11 ... .,.
No11ry ,<;llLlc In IM tor u ld Sltlt, You ... , .fllffff ell'f<lff lo 1;1, • JTATli oi; CALlflOJtNtA l '°"' Cltlt<;ff n'llY lor Ml ..... Incl :~• ffftcnlllV ..... rid lllCl!;O" E. COOHf wrhtlfl lltllllnct In ri.-.H IO Ille COUNTY OF ORANGE p Courl m1y fnl•r I ]\ldt..,.M COfl!tln ~"
kftOWft lo one to be !he Pl•tOll whoN 'fl•!llld CDmP!llnl ti tll.t ibov• tllMld ON THIS 11 0.y llf Mlrcfl. Ao ltl'O lnl~nc:llv• or othor ordl~ conutr• "I ~.::.,..:: .:,tit~~-= .... i!!.=• htW'l:~::i io111,,11111 ""llfl the tltrk o! 1111 1tloo'ff IMlor1 ""' • NOl•rY P,,.11c; 111 i nd foi. tht ~~'i~~U.~l'~·~~'· •u=~t ,,:~~:;~; in 111UUt<1 tour! 111 llw •bow• lflllltld Mid Couftfy •rid 111!1, r"lcllne tfler•ln, ''" cmti Incl Ml<h oflltr rllltl r• 10•Fr.f':~t. SE!AL) •«tan broutfll 1111ln1t •ou kl Miki ce1rrt, ClwlV eommlulclnecl 11!d 1-r11, H!'IOl\llllY m1Y bot i rf nl.O DT "" court .
• K ''' 0, ""llltln TEN dll'1 t/!fr 11\1 ltrvlct °" -rid Mlrle Altlerl loden ll'ICI TMlm1 11 ,~. ,..Ith 10 lit 1 l.IW'ltr Ir r
· • Mmo&r """ ol lhll ..,.....,Ofl•· It urwM .... 11111n M. S.11. kno""n ti mt to bot -~rson1 '"' Nolt" Pulll!c • C1!1!ornl1 11'11 •tlOvt nlll'llO tOllntv. or ""llhl!I Wholt nfl'rM!I iutn.c;rlbfll 10 th• w!lhlft i... 1C1Vk1 In lflh Wiii!.,, vou 1Mllld llO Or1n1111• Coun~V THIRTY 01,1 II "rYed tlM'Oihlrt , llf'\H'nl<lf, lold ICkhOWltdlll'd IO mt It'll! fO PrOINlllY W llltl l'Ollr 'Olr!ltirn rtlllOfUt ,
My Commlu;on E•Plrt1 YIW trl ""'~' notll!ed in.t <;!'If .. 1~¥ ••l!<:utf'd 11>t llmt. I~ WITNE'S It lftl', Wiil' t. 111-.:1 lln 11mL ' A11rll '· 1•11 l'OU IO Ille ..... rllttf'I re-11,,. pl11dl1>1. WHfltEOF, I h1v1 ht•ellftll Ml my hlrwl Otled AP•ll )J, nn. -~ l"<;bllsfled Ort• Cot1! ll1!ll' Pli.t. ulcl Plll,,tllil 'Oilll fl~t hHl•IMlll !Of' 1nd tlll•M ml' ollldt l U4t !hi Oil' t'ICI LSEAt.) Mtl' I, u, n. )'9, ltl'O .. ,.10 1ny fl'IOMl' or dlml&fl d ..... rldfod lft •••• "' ml1 C1,-1IUc:.t1 ll•ll t kYI ••11· w, I!!. 1f JOHN. ci...-
lhl V•tllltd complt lM 11 .. l1lnt -ltn. 8V ll:u!h ~lb", o.i>lllY LEGAL NOTICE conrr1c1. OI .... 111 ePPIV 10 tl>t cou" \OFFICIAL SEAL! lil'POLO, HEHOalSON &
IOr ltlV Ol'-r relief lltrnlncleO 111 lhor WM, k"°lt..-OINSll'IOOI
-•. ------~-------lv•rllled tol'Nll1l11I, Nol•" P<.lllllc<1lifor11r1 uo E. 1n~ "'"'· i•ll• 111 -....; T·S1'1U You m1v ..-'"" ..i~k• of 1n C01inly o1 Or1not c .. 11 ll'lfll, CtMftt•ll n.u 1UP1!1101 COURT qll' THE •11or....,Y on 1nY n'lllltr conntelld .,1m Mv CommbJIOn f•o11e1 T1lop-: LI J.1"6
ST•T• 011' CALlll'OINIA ,..Oil ""' coml>l•lftl or lhb 1umrnon1. SllCh A111u1t l:L 1'71 -Attlr....,. ,... P11ni.-THE (OUHTY OF OIAMGi-i tlOllWV "'°"Id tie COl\IUllllCI wllllln 1111 Pwllll~ 0<1nlll COl<I Ot>IT P1lol, PuOllJ/'Pld Or111.e (Oltl 0111¥ P!lo•.
Ne. A"4ttt Utr>e Umll ~l•lecl ... lhh """""'°"' '°' ...... 11 11. 2~ Ind ""'' 1, •• "" ut.10 MIY I, •• n. n. ''"° 11•10 NOTICI' OF Hl!AllHO OF Pl!TITION Ulln• 1 '"'l"tn tlelllln• lo 11W tO<Nlllll'll. ~o• OEClfl! OllECTIHG llK· OlleCI Mlr(l'I )5, 19/IO. fCUfOR 011' COMPll!T• Tl!IMI 0,.. CSEAl)
CONTRACT W, E. ST JOH N, (Ill~ P·11'Ht Elllle ol PAUL M, HALAPOFF, 11.a 11¥ Elllft H Gi111~I CllET'IPICATE OP 8USINISI NOTICI! TO Cl •OITOIS knll""n •• PAUl MllCE HALAPOFF, ~ c..rt JllCTITIOUI NAM& 1U-f'EllOI COURT OF THI!
Ind 11 l"AUL HALAPOl"I", OK11>4'CI. WALSWOITN SEIOl!L & CRAIL Thi uncltn ltll«I do Clfllf't !My If• STAT! 011' CALll'OINIA l'Ollt
NOTICE 15 HEREIY GIVE N '1'1.11 1611 Wfttcqf! '0r1 ... , 1•1'-.. c-11<llft9 I llllllnH• 11 11179-8 THE CO\INTY OP OIANOI:
),. LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
Moss Fa11iily CHARI.ES R. HART, JR., •IS t~ICUIOI' N..,_.1 IM(tl, Ct lltrftfl ,,... l nlolthurtt, founllln V1llty, Cllllwnll , HI. Iii <lllltl of l!W ""Ill ol 1111 lllovt 'llmed dlC-1 ('14) ..U·M• <;ndtr 11\t llttlll1111t firm l'latr>e 01 E1t<ll/t ot lAMUEl II. KAHH 0.CM-MO ~II lllrd herell'I • Wl"l!IMI Mtlllon tor A,..,.,, fir Plll~lllft \/ALLEY OF Ft.OWERS Ind IMt "1kl NOTICE IS HEIEIY GIVEN to 1n1
• Mcrtt lll•ICl!ftl 1111 PtlllloMr II P<;bllll'llCI Qrtntt Cotll Ollly PllOI, firm II cGmPl)MCI ol 1111 lflll0wi119 Pl''°"'· t•t<lll(tl't o1 ,,,_ ltl0¥t Mmlll dectdtnl
Keeps lt'i1i1ii1tg
Betty 'loss, 2888 B ayshor'e on·ve. almost ups taged her hus band Don by \1·1·n-"'""' .. ""' ~•·1 h11ere11 in ""' Mt1 I a. n H itn .,,.10 ""'°"' ,.....,.1 in tun •1'4 111tc1s c1 rh11 •H i>ert0n1 h1v1 ... c111m1 •••'n" j.> ,,.,,...,t\hlp llu1l ... u knll•n ti ACME ' ' ' rtsO!eflCI lro IS IOUO"c>: 111, tlld lllCl!d<llnl t•t rtQulfld lo 1111
ning a dinghy given as sweep s takes prize in Uie Newport Harbor Chamber c~ TOOL a. oiE CASTING co. '0 cam•11'' LEGAL NOTICE P•u1 "· LI•k•. 11l1 Ced•r • .._,, 1tiern, .. 1m rh• "l!<:•H•rw vou.:111r1. 1n • c1r11I" conl••cf lfl!t<I Fobrutl'V ~. C .. LOfl'l le•ch, C1Ut. !lie otllce of 1111 till'-ol 1111 lt•we
Commerce Ship Shape \Veek. Her husband 'von the Presid ent of U .S. Trophy, It.It ..-.rered lnro IW !I'll ll8CfdMI Ill Tne1 M, Ll•kOl. \JlJ Clld•r, Apl. t"tlllt<I ceurl, or 10 Ofltent tti..... tlWlll> Mf llltHme •nd 11¥ ,.,,., M, H11ip0ff NOTICI TO CI E01TOI S c .• LOl'lll lttth, Ctlll. "" l'IKIUlrY ¥0UCl'lt<I , " !lit ll ... top prize for the PHRF winner in the NC\Vpor t to Ensenada rac e in their re1er1111:1 to ...,lch Ji meM ..,,. tur1ti9r su•r 1101l couaf 0 111 Ttt• 0.1.ii Ap•H 11. 1.•1a 0011;,_, ,1 '"* ol•lc• of .. 11 •!totnt¥.
Yacht 1 1ossback. Awarding the prize lo Betty are Blackie Gadaria n (left) P••1tcu1111. •1111 i1u11 th• ilme •lld p11ce sT.t.TI! oF CAL1'0•111A l'Oll Th11 L••t.a. Oon•111 E, Sm•ll""ood· un w. c1111 ot ~MtlftO lllt wme h11 tie.n 1e1 THE COUNTY 0,.. Oll ANOI: Ptlll P, li•kot OrlvP SullP ™ Ne-ort IJttCI•
chairman of Ship Shape wm. a nd I-Jank l·lill. president of the Marine Divis-!or MIY ~·. \t1D. ,, l·)I) •. m,. In Nt. A4Mn STATE o .. CAl.IFORNIA, C1lll~n!1 """ :.ni,h 11 , .. , ~lie~ !"-' ccu1troom or De!:Jtrlmeftt No. l E1!11, OI OEMA VEl'INE LEOPOLO, OllANGE COUNTY: o! b!.<lln~u cl 'trlf' uodt•ilonecl In 111 ion of the Ne\'/port Harbor Chamber of Co1nmerce. OI said co..11. II ~ Clvl( C•nlrr Or«•lf<!. On April II. lt10. ~•Or• m~ •• matt111 Otl"l•ln\"Q !O 11\.t trill• af ------------------------------------------10•lvr Wpst, In the Cll~ ol S..nlt A"•· NOTICE 15 HERESY GIVEN lo lflr No11rv Public rn Ind IOI ••lc:I uur. ••id auflk"'' wlr~ln '°"' "*!llU ,,,.,
Ma y 29 Set
•
For Channel
Island Race
Los Angeles Yacht Club has
carded its rugged blennial
Channel Islands race for a
i\1ay 29 start.
The course \\'ill be from
the starting line 1n Los
Angeles H arbor , I ea vi n g
Anacapa, Sanla Cruz, Santa
Rosa, and San Miguel Islands,
Richardson and Begg Rocks,
and San Nicolas and Santa
Barbara islands all to port.
Distance of the race Is 249
miles.
The race "''ill start at 11
a .m . Friday, May 29.
An unusual departure \\'ill
be the trophy presentation.
scheduled for June 4 aboard
the passenger liner Princess
Looise.
Trophies to be awarded are
the Wesley D. Smith Trophy
for the first boat in the neet
on e lapsed time: H.H. Rohl
'Trophy for first in fleet on
corrected time; flumphrey
Bogart 'Trophy tor the cor-
rected time Class A winner;
\V.A. Bartholomae Trophy for
Class B corrected time and
the Richard I. Ste\11art trophy
for the corrected time Class
C winner.
Signed entries for the race
must be in the hands of race
committee chairman James
Rogers by 1'-1ay 28. Entries
should be mailed to Rogers
at P .O. Box 55. La Habra.
Ctll!o•nl• (~0110•1 or Iii• etlOvt n1m..:I dec""nl Pl'rtllflt lly 111119arell Palll P lltkoo tnd ti> 11, 1 ore Hon of tfl!I nolltl
OMf<! MIV 6, 1'7'1. I~" all ''''°'" ht~lnl tl•lm1 •1tln•I T""t l11kO!I kllOWl'I Ill mt IO 11<1 tnr O.i.!r ;'.~,11' )o lt1' · W. E. '' JOHN , Cou~ty Clerk ll'lt !<Old decf'Clenl ere rtc1ulrf'd lo l\11 P1•i.cn1 WllOH Mmtt 111 •ub"rlb"9 M J ri '
Outrigg·er Scliedule
Listed for Summer
CHARlES I . NAl f , Jll. lhtm, wllll 1111 Aft<llUry llOUCfttt"I. In lo ll>f ""llhln tnsrr-1 tnll ttk"l)wl~· E::.:.ui:r 'ti lhe Win
Ari.rMy 11 L1w rM offlc1 ol !hi dtr~ 01 !I'll! 1bcnlt ell lfttV ••tcullcl 1111 lllN· of ll>e •llov• 11<11mf<! dlCflltnl
Jl05 Wnt llYPrtv ltule~t~ Pllllllf<I <Olirl, or le Prfffnl l!>ftol, ""llh IOfllcl•I $rail OON.t.LO E SMALlWOOO
Mtnlttlelio. c111i."'1' ""' ..,,, flf'CPUtr• """"...... lo ·~· llft· Clludl• 0. Kint .. Ttl: till) m-1.111"'1t2-.W' Cllt\IG!led •I ~)ti l1nll Sl•ttl. H•-·• Mottry PubWC -Ctlllotnlt ~~,c~.~~7;.:!'!i.'":iu1 E•l<Wlll' In Pl'I! p., lle1CI>, Ctlllornl•, Which 11 1111 Pll<r Prlnt(Pll Olf\cr Inn TEL· W.-Hll lll4! Pu1>ll1hf'd Orl"lt Co11l 011!¥ Piiot. 1111 bli1lntU ol !ht 111\0eOlflllCI In I ll OFl"OI C-TY ,t,f~...., tor EllC<; ....
M•" 1. J. lJ, 1'10 16t-10 m1111ro Pfr11ln!1111 IO the tsl1!9 ol Mr Comml11lon E•ooru p 1111-0r1~, cow.it Otlll' ---c-=ccc~-c-cc=c=---l "'Id lleeft:lent, "'llh1n 11-manlht 1f11• AUOU11 l:L nil w '"' LEGAL NOTICE 11'11 !It'll publktllon ti lfl/1 nolk.t. Publlll\ICI Ortf'19<1 COlll Ollly Pilot Mil' I. I, 15, >2. lf10
Long Beach Harbor will be
headquarter s for the
Kalifornia Outr igger Associa·
tion regatta schl'dule for the
Eig ht Coast
Skippers in
Dane Meet
A total of eight local s:iiling
skippers have signed up to
participate in t he series of
Scandina\'ian regattas co ·
sponsored by the Association
nf Santa Barbara Chl'lnnel
Yacht Clubs and the Royal
Danish Yacht Club of
Copenhagen. Den1n:irk.
Local skippers, scheduled lo
leave here f..1ay 21 are Mr.
and Mrs. John Arens, f..1.r.
adn p,.1rs. Ernie Dahl. Hans
Dahl, f.,-Jr. and f..lrs. Bud San-
duval. Ken Sanduva\, ttlr. and
Y..1rs. Dick R eineman. Goldie
Joseph and Frank Rice.
Gov. J?onald Heagan has
senl a letter of greetings to
the comn1odore of the Hoyal
Danish Yach! Club express ing
appreciation for the hospltality
extended to lhe American
sailors a nd officially inviting
the Scandinavians to come to
this country in 1971 for some
r eciprocal competition.
The CQmpetion in Denmark
is slated for h-la'y 26-27.
01tf<! Aorll 11. 1910. April 26, M1y I, .. IS, ltl'O 1•10 8.t.NK OF All'IERICA LEGAL N OTICE
third straight season, ac-sul'11101 cou1r ol' THE ~tJ11~~:1. Ai:&51l,~~: LEGAL NOTJCE
cor ding to President Dud sT•TE 0 " c•1.1"01"'1A "01 E•f'Cutor Ill' ""' wm suPl!1101 couar 0111 THI! •A• ,.. Se 115 f N rt Be h TtlE CO~~fl ~~~IANGI! ol lllt ibovt ntmfll Otttlltnt ST.t.Tll: OF CAl.lll'OINIA ll'Oll 'IU •lllOI COUIT OP THI!
a 0 e\'i'po ac • NOTICE 01' H1A11iNo OF PETITION HU RWITZ. HUIWln & llll'I EI TNI: COUNT'I' 01' OIA NGE STA• OP CAllll'OINOA •o•
Semi·monthly meets art' FOil PROIATE 011' WllL ANO FOi ~!.= !'=:~. C1U!lt'~I• ttU I A'6Ul1 TNI! COUNTY 011' ORA.NOi: LEnflU TESTAll'IENTARY Phonl: 1no 11Mltt NOTIC:ll: 011' S.t.LE 011' lllAL. PROPE-llTY '"· ,142ns scheduled June 13, June 27, Elllle of SAMUEL 11'1 l(INWALO. Atllnlf¥1 IOI' l!ltCUlll' AT PllYATE SALi(. NOTIC:I 01' SALi! 0 11' RI AL. PIO!'· J I I! d J 1 25 le d . Ofc .. 11#11 ub 0 0 II POIQI IA I"" M~ll•r ol !h• F"•'• of llTY AT Pl lYATE SALE u y • an u y a ing NOllCE I~ HEllEllV GIVE N l~•t p l lilli<'d ••1111• COe•I • f 1 ... 10 Mii.OREO JACKIE CONLEY. •hO k,.,, .... ,, E•l•le cl HOllANO LEACH WAlti:Ell.
to the state champio.1ships Olvld J•1om• tc 1n ..... 111 ~•• lllf'<I llf,,in "-P• 1 26' M•v 1' 1' 11' 1910 ,, J1clo l1 conl•"· Oec1•••d. •k• Hgr1tn11 L w111o1r, 1ka ..._,.11n<1
I Pell!lon IOI' P•ob1tt of Wiii tnll NOTICE IS HEllEllV G1VEN 1n1I W•lk•r, d•Ctlr.ecl Aug. 8 as . an event of the +or 1uu1nce DI t.er!fr1 Tp1t1m•nt1'" LEGAL NOTICE 11ie ,.na1r1r9.,,o, M•rv ,..•k• '°"''· •• NOTICE IS HEREBY Gii/EN th1r
5th annual California fnlerna-ro tne Pttlllolll!r. reltrt"<• to ""hie~ 111~mlnl11•11rl• ol th• Ell•!f or Miid•"' ttie unoe11l1ned. 11 Admlnl11r11r!x ~'
11 m1t1• lor lur!tier Dt•llculers, 1nd J•dtlt Conltv. 1!'° a""""n ti J•Cklt 1111 '''"'' of m1 11M>ve ntmtd d1eeden!, tional Sea Festival at Long !nit !tit rimt arid 11l•ct or ~e•rlnG tAI 1u 1 Conley, d~••lfd, .... 111 •tll ti 11rlv1!• .... 111 1etl 11 1>•lv111 111' 10 !ht hlthr•I !nt 11m1 htl l>ftn HI IOI Ml¥ 21. SUPEllOI COUll T 01" THI 1111 lo !M M4~tll 11111 bt1I llld<ltr 1od bt11 bldOtr <;11<1n l~I lt<ml Ind Beach Aug. 1-16, 1910. II 9:)1) 1.m .. In lllt .coY•lr-.. ST.t.T• 011' CALIFORN IA 11101 UPOll lht t11m1 1rwl cOl'IClll!on1 11t1tln1ntr col'ldltlona htrtlntlte• mtntlone<I and 1ub-
Th · · I l · ol Orotrlmenl Ho. J of 11ld court, THl COUNTY 0 11' OI ANO• mM!lontd, t rwl 1ullltcl 10 conllrm1tlon ]IC1 10 conll•meJ!on by 1<11d $uttrlor e organ1zotion Q OU rig· 11 100 Civic c1n1e• orive w,,1, In Ht. A ll~ l>V .. Id suttrlor C1Urt, on M11 nth, '"'''· on Frid••· M•• :n. 1m, •'
ger canoe clubs from Balboa '"" Cltv ol ''"'• A"•· C11ih1ml1. NOTICE 011" SALi 011' RI AL PIO-U7Q, II , ... llollr ol l•A •'clock A.M. lh• nour of !l:U •• m .• o• th9"1tfl•P . ' 011111 APrU n, 1170 PEIT'( AT ,Ill/ATE IAl.I or fl>!l,_tf~r wllhl" ""' 1!mt elkl'Nt'd wl!Mn !hi 11~ 1!10....ed l>V l1w, t1 Newport Beach, M arina del w. E. ST JOHN, E•11tr of N,.THANAE L w11.LAIO 11~ 11w, •I thl L•'"' Ollie• of Selim tn• olllc• ct '~' ettpr....,, tor In•
R d Lo B h nd t C0t1ntv C1-rk W .. t.ICf:ll, akl NATHANAEL W . I. F<1ftk1ln, 101 Etll ltlh SlrM!, Co•lt Admlnl1Jr1trl~. lll W11! Tlhrd Slrttr, ey an ng eaC CO UC S MlllllAY M. CHOT!Mf:I I WAlKf:R, Otc1111d. -M•M• C•lllon>lt, •II right, !Ille, lnlt•••I $1nlf Ane, C1lllornl1, 11! rl1hl, tlllo,
racing programs for both men H. H. IEISMAM NOTICE IS HEREllY GIYE H lfl•I •1111 tslllt ot "" llld Mlld•ed J1tklf lnlerftl .,,., tslt1f ol •1ld ~nl
S:U Oovtr Dr., S<;ll• l 1111 11no11'1l1nlCI, •• A&'rl inl1tre!rl• ol Conlt¥. ilso -Nlwn •• JtO.it Conln, 11 1111 llmt ol h11 d111n, •rlll tll and women, teenagers to N1wP0r1 a11eh. c11i1. t2MI "'" "''•I• o• 111e ttlOVf' 11amec1 111et11tnt. llt<e••ft:I. ,, 1ne ume OI' her 0~11n. rlohl, 11111 ond 1nt?r111 11111 his tll•I'" ·0 · UV\ nd · d Tt1• 1111) ""•1UI .... 111 1elt •' Prlv1te 111t IO !!It hloht~I irwl ell •IGM. Hiit 1N:I l"tere•I rhal m•l' h1vr ~toulrotel l>V att'lllon ~I sen1 rs, in 'T\l\rpoU • SIX·pa • All1rn1~• for ••flllorle• ,,.., lie\! 11i1111er uPOl'l tllP trrm1 1nd itld eitite h•• tc•ul••d 11¥ O<>trtUon 11w, or otherwl1e. 1l'ltt hll d•tlh, 111
dler outrigger canoes pal-Pu11111~"<1 Ortnet (1>11! D•ilY Piie!. conditions Mrolntf!tr mMllonld e'ICI '""" 01 l•w 0, 01""rw\11. 0111er trll" or 11111 lo !tit 101-!"" de1CrlblCI r111
te'""d after the tradi·t.;•.nal N.a~. 1• 1• 1. 1t111 ll!·JO Leet to connrm1n°" bv ... id su ... •laf In aoanion lo '"'' or •he u\d M11orf'O P'~"Y' '"' Court, on Frlcltv. Ml¥ 2', l tNI. 11 J•cklt Conlt~. tl'.O k.-n ~• Jatk•• IOAICEL ONE;
Polynesian vessels. LEGAL NOilCF.: 111r hOur ol 11:U 1.m .. or lllt••t "rr Conll'r. 11 '"" llmt o• h•r or.in. .t..n 11n111vldecl one·n•lf lntr•tst In •itnln tnt lltr>e llk!Wl<I llV •••· ti 1~ 1,.., 10 lhe •t~I proo1ttY In -lne Et~I !6 letl o! 11\e Wt•I !ti.I
The entire Pacific Basin ""'as ------·!'"" attic• cl 1111. 111o"'"YI •or lhe c1w o1 '°'" Mt11. '°""'Y or °'""" lrt1 of 1111 South 1oa tHI cr1 1n~ At1mlnlst•ttrl•. 111 Wtll Tnird Slrttl. 51111 ol (1111111 n11, •1111 Cl~tribrcl ••· NOllft ne letr ol Ille E11I on•·h•ll
explored by Polynesians cen-CEITlll'IC•;E'1:i •USINESI S..ntt An.. Ct lllornl1. 11! •loM. 1111r, lot lJ. T••cl No Jl4J. •• wr Ml• o! rnr Nor""'••' Outrt>Y Of 1no . . sh d i. •• ,,,,, '"" """ ol •tlO Oece<lenl tntreot •KO•df<I i" Boo~ t ) PtOC• S01ilnWt1t Ou•rltr OI 51!<:1\on ... tunes ago 1n canoes ape FICf1T1ous NAME 11 111, llm• al "'' d•.in. 11111 1 11 '5 '"" 111 01 Mit.<•ll~neous M••'· rtcoro1 Townsh11 s sovth, R•nte 11 w-••·
from ko.a trees Thus KOA Tnr ~natri\11ned _,, crr111, "' b rloh1. i.111 •"" '"'''''' •h•• hl1 11111r o1 oriMt coun1', Stu• ot C•hlorn!•. RI"<"" u 1101u Chk.1, In lh• City . . • . COMllCll"' • llu1lnn1 .i. p 0. Bo• m11 l\fVf ICOUl•t<I l>V -•lllon of !In SeMlf Sl•HI. c0111 11'1 ••• , ol Hltl'lll""'°" 811Cft. Countv of or ...... takes its unorthodox spellrng 17· Hunh1111ton ,BNch. C•lllOrnlt. und-. law. or olllt,...ln . 1lnc:t ni, clttln, lft C•lll0t1111 J 11111 w 1>1ltr1 ••• 1"~1r1<1 Sltlt of c.lllorfli1, " 11'.oW01 on •
f K lif . h 1nr tlcll••OUS '''"' "'""" cl 001.Pioi!N Ind IQ '"' IDllo"'I"' C1•1C•lbrcl r111 "' l l ld . .,,_,.., ..... mw1t l)jO In m•p """'°' •Kordfll In llOOlt 51. 0 a orrua as part of t at ~LLUSTltATIONS '"" lhl l •ei<I llrm P<lll'l!•I~· wrlll111 .,.., •Ill tie •Ktlved I I "'' Plte lJ, MlsctlltMOUI MM>I. Rtcor<I\
t radition Koa membership in '' tompe15f<! o• Int tollo""lno Pl'•SOn. P.t.llCEL ONE ' olf!ct ol S.llm 5 Fr1nltlln A!torM~ a! 1tlcl Or1n111 Countv. (known 10 · -whclt' n•me .1" full end 1>l1cr of "sld•nc:e An undivl~ll onl·htll ln1ered lft lor lht Adml"l•t•l!'rl•. or mi¥ llP l!ltll t.ol 1' cl A•HUDrl M.op Ill.
eludes a number of ex-b ·~.!;1~""c II HJ2 Ch (I'll the E&lf ~· IHI of l!'lt w .. ,1 5'1 wllh IM C/11-of 11ld SUNTlo• Court, PARCEL TWO:
Hawaiians who now live in 0 ~ '',1 ·, •,v•r. h ,.. 111 ""r 11 '''' o1 "'• soul!! 100 •••I ol thl .,,. dfUv1r..i to thl Hid Adml<1l1t1•1rl~ An 11n11lvlcltCI on .. n111 lnrtr11t 1 .. '·· u~ "Iii (lfl NC • "' orn. Nor11> no IHI ol '"" ft1I of>lohlll Ht'IOlllllY II .... tll'rM! '"'' "" first ll'lt E111 ,. '"' "' Ille Wnl ,1,
Southern California, Oiled Ap~~ "; 19~0
11 or '"• Nor!ht••I Q11u1rr ol trle owbllc1tlon of lhl1 Nollet '"" lletore 1~1 ol !I'll South 100 '"' of tn1 •• 11 · over southwMI Qu~r!tf ol see11on H, In m•kllll i•ld 18r1, NOrfh 110 ttet or '"' E111 -n~1f
h-fonthly regatlas call for t',t:~G~Fc~~\)~~~NIA . To,.,.,,shlp s Sourn, R~111e 11 w1.1, s.111 u1 .. will bt m1dt uPOl'I lhe o1 '"' NOl'lh••~I •u•rt•r o1 1n11
I · I I · · · R1"cno Le flol•t Chlc1. In llw' Cl!• following 1111•11· C11h, Soutrl .... •I <IYl•Trr al Section ,,, 111 m u flp e-ap races In SIX men S 01'1 AP•ll :n. ltlO. briar• me. e ol i..iun!lng!on 8eecn, C1Unl' ol Or•nut, 0.ltd Apr!I ,ii, 1tto l'cwn1n1p 5 south. 1t11>111 1t w .. 1.
classes and five for \\'omen Not~·• ,,"ubllc 1n .~•"",for ••,!" 5••1e. St•!e or cau1ornl1, 11 11'1own on 1 MtN Alie• JMe1 R1nc110 l• 110111 CMc1. 1n 111t cll'I' , . per~on1 V •ollt.lrcu C •rl~ "' llove• m•o t~fltcf •tccrdtll In 8DOll SI, Admlnlorrtl•I• ol "" of Hynll1>11ton lleoch, Counh of Ortnt1t, over a quarter·mile parallchng kMwn to mr to be th, Pl'"'" "'~' •~g~ 11, Mhc•ll1n•ou• M•P•· record• r11111 o1 s1&1r 01 caUlornl1 .• , 111e1""n on 1
h Ch be , ""m" Is 1u~1rrlbed to tht wln!h\n. ,n. ot •tld OFllllt Cou~ty, (l(no""n 1• M!ldrt'll Jtc~!t conlrl' mlP thtreo', rtcordl'll In lloolt S!. t C erry Avenue ach SeC• l!tume~! l'ICI •ckM""lldGl<I lw t•1cv1td Lot !I ol '"'""•Wlf"S MID Ill. Aki J1cklt Con!•Y, dt<tllld pege U, Ml1Ct!!111"'u' Mttll, rlCerO•
lion of the Long Beach Harbor !l>t samr PARCEL TWO: Sl!llM s. l'I ANICLOI cl Jtlct Orl"ll• Countv. lK-n •• . . IOFFICIAl SE.t.Ll An unellvldl'd ont·hlll lnt.,r1I In ll'llANl(LIN ANO ll'llANKLIN Loi It 111 A11t1W1r'1 MIP IJ).
shoreline. Points accumulated M••~ K. 1-<enry 1~. E111 21 11e1 or th• w.11 "' An•r"''' 11 Ltw PARCE L TNJtl!E ~
m each race a<e lalHecl loward NollrY Punllt · c1n1ornl1 lett 01 tnr S<>ulh 1oa fM"I 01 1h1 lfl 11:111 111~ "'"' Tiit Ei•• "' lf"I el' '"" west i•J Principe! Olllce In North \JO lert ol tnt E11! ont·ft'lf Cl •I• Mttl, Ct Ullrn•t lftl of 1M Soulh 100 IHI ol In• Individual regatta and season Or•no• C&1111r¥ 01 1n. Norlh•••t ouer1•• or IM• Llbtrtv 1.n s1 Norin 110 1.,.1 o1 tn• E111 --'<•ti
I . My Commlu lon E•t1lrr1 Soulh""lll Outrter ol s.tc!lo" 'H, In Al"""' tpr .t.dmll'lhlrl trll ol !tit Norlft1111 Oulrltr ol m1 Ong team p 0 l n f Cham· No ... l(. lm Town1htp S Soutn, R•"'ll• 11 W•1I, Publllhe<I Orini e COlil Oi llr Pllol 5ouln""11! Qu•rlf< ol Stcllon 1', In
Pionships P Ybli•~l'd Ort"'1' Co•"' 0111w Pilol, ll!tncho LI llollt Chlt1. In 1111 cltv Mil' 1. 1. u. 1f10 l»l'O Townsh111 s South, R1r19t 11 w .. t. · ,t,l)fll ?I. Mey 1, I, U, 1•70 J•S.70 of H11nt!no1r.n lle1ch, County ol Or•nge, Rlft(r.o L• 11.olu Cfllc.1. Jn tnt Cllf
The 19iD KOA schedule of St•le of (1llforn\1, II 1ntwn Oii • LEGAL NOTICE cf Hunllntlll'I Betel!. II "-" O't LEGAL NO rtCE meo l'llerf'CI, rl!<;O•df<I ln !look 51, • m1• lhtrNI •tcOrcltd '" Book I, P~GI 13. Ml$Crli1nrou1 Mies. ••cord• ... ,, u, Ml1etll•-· MtPS. rKrOdl
Ranger Appoi11ts Dealer Vel (Jnthoal'CI
reJ:"attas and ocean races:
May 9 -Balboa-Laguna l-----------1
Beach (l('f'"an rac:e. cl!11111111c.t.~i':~ 1us1N11:s1
" 23 "1 r' d l R l"ICTITIOUS NAME . ay -" a ina e ey T~e u"'Clenltnell 11M1 c1•tif't •hr 11
ot 11id 0•11•1• (Ot!fttV. (lt"ClWft IS (;I '"' Countv of Ort""· 51111 of lnl 1' o• j&n r l!M'I MIO 13). IAI tnl C11!for"l1. PAIC!L THiii'!: NOTICI: 011' Ol!ll'lllULT ANO lllCTtON Bldl or ollrr1 t rt lh¥Uell tar slid An ~nalv!dl'll anf·lltlf lntert •I In TO SELL UNOl:I 01110 01' TRUil ••rcelt o1 PrOHth lnllivktUlllv or 11 the E~•' '' 1111 If/ "" Wr1! Yll NOTICE 15 HEREllY GIVEN THAT. Uftll . .l,!I !llCl'l bkll m<;ll bt I" leer ot Ille Soulh JOG !tr! of t~1 Tlfl.E INSURANCE •nd TR VST COM· wrlllnt, t lld 'Olli! bt r-ectl~f<! ttp 1111' Norlh 12t lt•I cl lht E11r one-htlf PANY, I co•11<1•1tlon 11 duly tPPo1nte<1 Admlnl•lrurlr •' lht ollk.1 Ill' You~q.
ol '""' NO•lft•tll OY••ltr ol 111<! Trull~• ullder 1 Ote<I ol fru11 dlltd Prenntr tlld 1-lr""I 315 Weot Third Soulhw~•I Ou•ri.r cl SK!ion ''· Alllllll 11. lffJ, t XKUfN by Mike 80¥1· S!•fff, S.nll Ant, 'c1lllonilt. or mtv T""'n•hll> $ S0t11n. ll•n•t 11 Wr11, Jltn, • mt rrlft:I m•"· •nil Cl'll•lfS F. 11o1 111..:1 with fl'lt Clt<'k of 11'111tl0¥t n1mtd
Rind"'• l.1 flol•• Chica, lft me Cll'I Wool! 11111 M1ull1 E. Wool!. flll'lblllel SYotrlor (curl. or rn1v bl otllYtrtd al Hllf\tlnqton 811ch, •• tftO""n on Ind"""'' lo lnllv 1All 1rv1r•lll' fl Tru1lor, to s•lll 1omlnlllr~l•I• 1>e•t0nilly, 11
1 mtP '""'Kl' recorded 111 BDOll 51. ro 1Kure cer"ln Ollll11llon1 In levor any time tll•r l!r•I Pllllllcttlon cl lftl• !ntreol •Korded In 8ooll 51. ~•ot ol $1tnle• R. Bu1;,r11t, 1110 k~ft not ice ll'ld llelOl't 11\f miklno o1 u llf 1), MIKtll1nHUt MIPI, r•COfd! crf II S .. nltV R. llur111f, II blnt/l(OIN, lille
Robert V. Staats Co., 2001
1V. Coast Highway, has been
named local dealer for Ranger
Yachts, Buster Hammond,
sales manager announced.
The Robert V. Staats Co.
was established in 1927 in San
Pedro and late.r moved to
Newport Beach. They built
46-foot picket boats for the
Army and Navy in World \Var
11:
At the end of lhe war their
business revened back to
pleasure boats and Robert
Staats Jr. was str ongly at-
tracted to sailboats. As a con·
sequence all of his Jejsure
time was spent in sailing
Snowbirds. and later Rhodes-
3Js on N<'wport Bay.
After completion of hls ed.
uc:ition. young Bob decided to
jo!n his father in the business
and they acquired several
lines of sailboats. His latest
additions now on display are
the new Ranger 26 and Ran-
ger 33 yachts-
Hammond said Ranger is
planning the designs from 20
lo 4D feel in lhe coming
month'!.
Dri ve r Return~
A Vetera n outlioard endoro
driver, Bob Witt of Baytown.
Tex .• is returning for another
\\'hack al the dual outboard
titles up for grabs at the
Galveston Bay ou1Uoard races
Sunday ~1ay 17.
\Vitt. \l'hO ifnished third in
the 1970 Parker. Ariz. enduro
and 12th in the Lake Havas u
Outboard \Vo r Id Cham-
pionships last fall, will drive
in both the singlt! anti mullJ·
engine classes.
to Redondo Beach ocean race. tonoucllnG • bli1 inM1 11 ooo C1mt"'
J"-13 _ KOA Regalla, O•lve, Ne""POrl ''•ch. c1111ornl1, """"' "'-"'' fld lll""' llrm n~me o• P05l.t.GE
Cherry Avenue. L<t.1g Beach. ~T.t.MP COMPANY OF .t.MER•CA •"" 1,,., 11111 !l•m It comoo1t<I ol lhr IOllOW· .June 27 -KOA Regatta , 1"'11 ~•IOft .... 11ose namt in f\111 •1111 011ce
Cherry Avenue. Long Beac h. of """•~er i. •• 1o11o""" M~me Pl1mmon1, .t.KA, Mart Br11Wn,
.July 11 -KOA Regatta. 7U Cabrllto, C011t Mt••·
Cherry Avenue. Long Beach. 01t1d,...~;::!' 11. i.10
,July 25 -KOA Regatta, St.rt ol c1111ornl1, O•ftnoe Cou~!v:
h On April U. \910, brf..,P me. I No!~·~
Chen')' Avenue. Long Bl'ac . Pulltl< In &nd ror 1~1d 51ere. "'"n~ftllv
Aug. 8 -KOA State Cham· 1n1>1erote1 Mem1 P1emmon1 •Mwfl •~ mt , _ to be thr orr10n w~o•e "•m• I• 1ublc•lb· p1onsh1p. Cherry Avenue, Long .., 10 In• ""hhln 1n11rum•~I ,.,.,
B"ach &ck"o"'1tdg10 ,h_ ~itcu1td tt>t 1&mt. "' • !OFFICIAL SEAL)
Aug, 15 Seal Be3ch· ~;,~"rv K P~:1r;.¢81110,nl•
Newport Beach ocean race. Prlnc:lp,,1 01nte in
Aug. 22 -Annual Long ~"'"l:mC...i1~1~ E~11rt1
Beach to A\·aton Harbor ocean NO'o'embe• , •• nn
race across Catalina Channel. ,.;; ~1:·.~'r •. ~:;e,: .C.:~'. 1~,;i11
L EGAL NOTICE
Pilol.
19S."'
Or1nge Cowntw, SI•!• ot Callfornl1 recornt'll lllt/'5, •1 ln1trume11! no. 1'504. TERMS OF SALE · !KllQWn ., La! 11 of .. ~ ............ MIP In book 16", PIQI JAJ, ol Olfldtl (81h, ltwful .,;.,"IV ol 111, Unllotd
Jj). llecord1 In int Offltt ol Ille Rl!<:o•ller Sll!e•. T•n percent (IO'll.I o1 lht PARCEL FOUR r cl Or1n4t Coun!Y, C1lllor1111, dt!ttll'!no tmcunl o!ferfd must l(Cilfl1Plnv the An undlvl<lfll Ont·~t!! of C'14!·h~lt l1rwl lhtrtln lnclulllng one nole !Cr w•ll•tn ~ICI or oHer, Ind the 111(...,co lnl•reit In 1n, E111 ?6 '""' nl lh• th• pllnclp•I 1um ol J.111.)00,GC !&Id mu•! be Plld wPO" lht conllr!'lllllon w~1 50 teo! ol int So~th lOll re1I obllGttlon1 llltl lllt ~ntllcl11 1111••"' el i.alt by 1110 $uttrlor Covl"I. Si!d er t~r Nar!h 12t trrt o• lht E11t un111r 1uth Died or Trus! 1nd !he uie wlll be mtllt llllOA '"' uou•! i)!'lf·lldlf ol lnl Nor1n1111 0 ,,.,1,, ol obllo1Hon1 IKUrl'd 11\t!•flw ••t P•n•nPY l'IC•OW 1~rrn1.
Ill• Sc"m"""'' Que•!er ol Sedlon H, h11<1 II• !hf unll•u•lened; 11'1.•I • bre•c~ D•ltll' April "· 1910 f~ T"""n1nlp S SO\i!ft, Ranee It Wtsl. of, t1111 leltftull I", lhf 1Dlltttlon1 !or llkkl R Upton Rtnchc la Boll• Chlta, In !ht ell'! ""hlth luth O"d ol T•u•I I• stcurl"' Admlnl!ir81.,, o! HunliftlllO~ llttCh, Counlv ot Or•"'lle, fltl occurrf'd In 11111 PIYPl'W'nl fl11 AOI cl 1he Esrite 0,
Stt!r ol Calllornl1. •• tllown on m•P bton m1dt of· Holltrwl l llCh w1!ktr. lhtreol rt(O•ded In 8DOll 51, POOi Tht ln1l•!lmen1 nl 11lnc!11I lrwl Decetsfll
1), Ml1Cellt11eO•" Mtot. rtcord• ol lnt ... 111 whlUI lltc•m• dut AP•ll 10. YOU NG, •11ef'INE11 AHO """' ttld Orlntl COll"l'I. 1Kncwn 11 Lot lf)D. Ill~! b¥ "''°" lh~rtcl, 1111! ""' 7U Wnt Thlr• Strltf 11 ol .t.ntuor'1 M1P lll o.r.ltn.it. ~•1.un1 btfllfl(l1ry ullll" s1n11 Ant , Ci llf1m11 n1fl ll!ott or oil•" lrt lnvlled lor lllcl Swch Petri 11 Tru1!, h11 t•tculf<! Tt llPIMM: 0 141 $11-4121
Pe•C••• OI P•t'Pl'•tv lnd1Ylct<;1lly or 11 Ind de!l¥tred lo stld dwll' •oPOlnlft:I Allt""v' .., A•ml"•lrllrl• 1 unit, All lllCh blCI• mull lie !n Tru1IH, • written OKl1r1!lon DI P<.rbllJfttd Ori n'• Cotl! OtllY "•lo!
1--------------1'""''"°' Ind •ill llP •Kfi¥td 11¥ !Iii' Oettutl """ Otmt"4 IC<' s.i., .• ,.., MtV 1 t •nil I ltlO 1u .10 .t.dmlni•l••lrl• •t lhr ol!lct ol YOUNG, hi• dellOtl!od ... 1111 11lcl duly 1p1111lnlf'd ' ' l.t.11 141' PltEllNER I. HEWS. IJ5 Wtll Thlrll Tru•IH, lllCh 0110 ol Tru1I 1l'ICll--------------NOTICE 011' TRU'lfl:E'S SALE Slrttl, Senta Anl, C111!ornl1, or m~y 111 CIOCllmtnlt evlctirnc:ll't ot>ll9t1lon• 1'11. fl•71 lie dotlvered lo 1110 tc1mlnl11r1trl• secu•f<I IM•otl>V, e"'CI n1s 11tci.re11 On Moft<I•¥• MtY JS. 1t70. 11 ll•OC 1ttrt.ot11JIV, or rn1v 11<1 l!lell wjlh nie 1nd llOft htrrlw df'cltr~ •II '""''
BCYC's Cl11bhouse Goes Up LEGAL NOTICE
AM SALINOA FIN AN C IAL IN· ()f,r'lt ol "'• •lloY• 111m•d SllotrlCf' Sl!<:Urtd lfltrtbY lfNnldt1t11V 11 .... l"'Cl[-----------CORPOIATEO. I <GrPG•1!lon, ll dul• (our!, •I 1ny llrnl 1f1tr 11•11 11ullHcallon PIYllllt tnd hit rltclf<I tnll -.. T·tM• totolnled Tru11tt urldfr 1nd 1urt<;an1 of "'h nollCt tfl(I belo•I thl m1kl"9 htrellY tlKI 10 Cllllt lllt l•u1t ••-r1y Htlkt .t Site 91 ll•At. ,,.."' ,1 IO Oted ol T•ull Cleled AUIUS! 7, ol 1tld ••le. lo tie IOlll ,, '11llsll' n.. ot>l'-•llllnt ,.1 .... Slit IHt, Pxrc1111'd b• Joutn F, Mltch1m, TEllMS 01' SALE: Ct1h, l1wlul mo.,..y ll!<:llrtll thlrtb<t. NI. I' Jll rn
• m1rrlt11 mon e• hi• i.clt •"II seP~•••e ot 11>1 Un!tfll s11re•. Te" 11>1rcon1 rH1•.1 OtlM A••ll n. ltlO IN THI SUP•RIOtl coua T 011' THIE
Officers Tell Progress of Ne iv $650,000 Ba y Project
Officers of Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club Thursday gave a
progress report on plans for
1he new $650,000 clubhouse
now being constructed on the
bayfront at 1601 Bayside
Drive, for1nerly !lie si te of
1Uchar dson's Yacht Landing.
At a press conference <inti
luncheon held at the lrvloe
Country Club. Comrnodore
Dave Domans ky detailed the
latest plans for the 24.000
square foot facility whic h In-
cludes exterior dining· dtt:k!,
boat storage, automobile park·
ing and a swimming pool.
The new clubhouse \\'as
designed by William P.
Ficker, AIA, or Newport
Beach, and Is being con-
structed by the Paul R. Sudtr
Jr. construcUon Co. ol Orange.
Temporitry quarters are In
the old Villa Y..Iarin• building.
When completed and com·
ple!ely furnJshed the proJt<:t
'!''Ill represent an ln\•tstment
of l!OfT\e SSS0,000 on Irvine
Co. la nd for which the club
has a ~year lease.
The clubhouse proper Is
being buill on lhrce lt\'el~.
First level of approximately
8.300 square feet will house
storage and mechanical areas,
men·s and \\'Omen's locker
rooms, a srrack bar. a junior
r oom, lounge and protest
room.
The sel'ond level of 12,500
·square feet "'iU be the main
le\·el \\'ith administrative of·
fices, race committee room.
comn1oOore's and manager's
office. bar, lounge. and a din·
ing and ballroom &C'·
commodating 230 persons. gaJ.
ley faciHlies and restroonls.
The third Jevtl h as ap-
proximately 3,200 square fttL
It houses the library-board
room. card rooms and ad·
dltional rt'Slrooms.
In adcllllon 1hc facility will
have a1nple tlry storage ror
snu11I lxlflts and a 6,000-pound
CHpacily hoist for launch!ng
plus a parking arta for 122
cars. Tht •wimming pool will
be 20 b y 4tl fctl wlth a ID
by JO wilding pool at the
shallow end.
Official aroundbre..aking for
t he new clubhouse. \\·a s held
f\larcli 21 .
nah la Corlnlhian Yach! Club ..
started out in 19f>8 as a "le?!·
terhead" yacht club \\'ilh
quarters at the Balboa Bay
Club. For a nwnber of yenrs
club officials had a hard time
convincing U1c So u t h e r n
California Y achting Associa-
tion. governing body 0 r
Southhu1d y11chting acUvlty,
that BCYC w as nol a satellite
of the commerical Bay Club.
After changing its burgee and
rrncgGl.iatlng Its lease \\'lth.
the Bay Club. BCYC wa..!I ad·
milled to membership in
SCYA, As I.he c lub grew and
toxpanded Its activity i n
l'iponsoring major regattas, it
IAttr ga1ntd membership in
lht Y~d11 R acing Union of
Southtrn California and the
North American Yacht It.icing
Union.
YRU Is a group of 14 yacht
clubs within SCY A \\'hlch h.ave
clubhouse f11cilit11!S. NAYRU
Is the govl!mlng and r ules.
making body or yathtlng in
North Amerlcn.
The rJub begnn to ga!n na·
liQnal ~lt1h1rc in 19!i1 \\'hen
one or its n1embcrs. 1'ho1na1'
Patrick IJQ~nn, purchostd
M-rtv. Ind rl!<;tll'dt<I AU9Ull 11, lt6t, ol !hf, .,,,ou"I oP!ertd mU11 1ctomP1nv 511ftle• I , turttflll STAf• 0 11' CALl,..OINIA ,..Oil
'he t2·meler C111,mb•'a d II ln•tr No, 1son, I" book tll5t, p~~e "" wrllltfl 1110 o• 011 ..... ,.., lh• bllAftct TITLI! INIUIANCll AHO TltUST co. TM I: COUl>ITY OP LO~ AN0t:Ll:S an 1!11, ~ Olllclt l Rrcorll1 I" ""' Oll•ct mu1• boo Ptld ""°" lh• cont!•mtllon IOO "'"" M.tlft ...... , In II•• Mtlllr Ill' 1111 Elll!t Ill' MAllY
entered it in lhc America's 01 '"' counlv R •co r a r ' or or 111r DT 11111 SuP10rlor Courl. s.111 1an11 ""'' C1Flfer1111 ttltl RAVl!!RA •k• MR$ MAllY ll.t..vEll"' O•enot CovMv. Collfornlt. ..,,11 will bl! m..:lr Ul'O'I lhr u1u•I "'"·Trull Otlll 0..1. Ot<MllCI' ·
Cup trials lJnlJCr the CIUb Will ttll el Pwbllc lu<!lo" to hl9he1! IWD'* ltrmt. Stlt N<;mlorr ! Tl '"·11 Nolle• '11 lltrtll'I t lvtn Ifill !l>e ,..
b rge llldo:'·r lor Cllfl !Pal'tlllf II llmt ol Otl..,: April ,,, ltlO. tME FOREGOING IS " COPY OF dtFllll'lld "'!II Hll ., Prlv11t Mull
U e. ~~Ir In !&wlu! ...onty ol lht Unllotel lllCICI I . UPTON "NOTICE". THE ORIGINAL 0~ WHICH lo I~ hltl'ltll l l'ICI ~,r bldd~f iutlltci Dougan again took the S!a l••l ., !h~ ~ .... ,~ llron!l ~nlrfnc:t Admlnl11r1trlw ti !hf WAS FILEO FOR I ECORO ON A"1'RIL IO conllrm1tlon of .. 1c1 5..,..,..;,. COt!t!
• • . ID !ht (OOl'llV CcYrlhOt!H. lOCI BIO<:• E•l•le ot NATHANA EL lJ, 1910. IN T"4E Ol'FICf: 01' T"4E on o• 111,r '"' I\! "'" ol Jun: Columbia to Newport, R.T. in Wtsl Sfn!~ "'"A 81Vll .. S•nl1 An•. Will.ARO WALICEll. lltce11td COU NTY ll[COllllEll OF OR.lllNGE 1'/IO •I !ht Ofllct of MARILYNN 11;' 1967 and \\•as r unner-up to C•llfornlA ~11 •f9M, li!!e Ind lnltr••' YOUNO, ••ENlll!I & tt•ws COU NTY AT lANTA ANA. CAt.1rORNl.t... MOFSTETTElt l:llnJ E11l ll•!ley Slreel· conve~!'d le ~nll "°"' htld bV II under A!UrMVI ti Lt"" Publlll'lotel Orenor Co..tl O•Uy Piiot, ~ It O Wftllll' C Ill I «1611! C t ' In!repid in hi$ bid to defend u ln 0.e<I o! Tru•I in lh~ or~rtv J1J Wtll T'l!lrt Jl'1tl MtY ,, •• u. n. ltJO •1'·10 or to.· A-~:~ 's•·~~n ·01 ctn.:.ui:;."
lh C 1llu~•M1In 11ld Co~nty 1nd Slllt oeicrlll-St~lf An1, C1llt1r11l1 tt71l LEG 'L NOTICE-· ---•!! I~• rlthf, '110. 111d lnl1rt1I oi e up. .., ., T•llt>IMl't• 0\0 )ll-4UI ll UICI llec:ttltd I "" II t of Cl~lln It was during Do"gan's two-Lot n gt Trncl 14J2. In 1r.. err. Attot-Mn tw Admlnlttr1trl• ,.., u lflt •~h! 1111 m l'ld lnltrtil ol Cml• Me1•. 01 Plr m~P •l!<:Ortltel P~llt.h.il Or~lltl Cotti 01 tly Plkl!, 1 • ' I • h
Year te nure as cornn1odore in 1n e-. 76. o•o•' , •nd 1. Ml.cell•_.. Mlw 1, i. 1, 1t1o u:..111 1n11 lh• 11111, o1 ••la d1eu1.ii _,, MIPI lft tht 0111ce of tht <Ollntv BAI 14'1 1eoulr1<1 bf -••lion ol llW pr 01~1rw10 .. J9G8 nnd 1969 that the cluh •flCor.itr ot ••Id <""""'· LEGAL NOTICE NOTICI TO c••CUTOIS om.,. !h•n ot in 1ot1111on 10 "'" 01
be · I I' J S1ld 1111 "'II! ~ mall• l>ur ""lll'IOlll SUPl l lOI COUltT 011' THI' 11td d1e111t11. II IM 1111'11 ol llt••~. gan its m:ive O en ire Y t~•n• or •t"•""'· ,.0,~11 or lmpllf'll, ITATa 0 111 CALlll'OINIA ll'Oll 111 •nd 10 111 !!Ir ctrt1ln "''' tr_,,.,
dlVOrCe itself frOJn the IJalboa rt18''lllng Ill!•. POlltttlon. or ..,. TN• COUNT Y 011' OIAN•I ,U~tled 111 lhf CO...ftlf Of 0'1""• 5!flt , "'"'llrtntn . to ••• lfl• or111c1111I 1um P..MttJ NI, ""'"" flf C11ttoo11l1 , J'lrtk<;llrhl OtKrlbtCI •• 83}' Club and Seek ltll Own ol lllt no!-iKurlOll b¥ 18lc! OHll CE l lTlll'ICATI 0 11' I USlllESS E1t1t1 ol OAVIO AllT!>!UI MAllCUS loll0'«1, to-w!t:
Cl"b factl't'es ol Tru1!, '°'"'"' tt1.5«1 OG. wl"' ln .. rnl PICTtTIOUS NAMI! •ltt k-" II OAVIO A. MAltCus: t.OI I In &lock H. T11<t Ne. ll)Ot, I l • """' Sfotpnlltr t 1ftl 11 1ft Wkl Tht llflCllfllonf'l'.I \!Ott «•flh lw 11 tin• 1!M •-n 11 OAlllO MAICUS lflll •1 Hr m•o rKMlllCI In Booli U,
In 1969 BCYC in\i!ed the....,,. 1ra..h:lf'll, Hvinc:ts. ';1 811'1, vndt, ducf1,.,, • 11utlM11 11 lU M••tM 11 o. "· MAllCU5. DK••ud. "'" 11 11 MJtct111._1 M1111. 1"
fl . '"' '''"" cl 18111 OM OI l'rutl ................. fltll:lfl, lllf;fld, C1llforni•, lll'llllr NOTl(I! IS HEREIY GIVEN ,. ,,,. ~ olll<• ol "" Count• ltco•Hr
cdgl1ng Ornnge Co::ist Yacht t~t•M• '"" ,..~nttt ot 1111 t'rvi1M "" lkllllluo llrm n...,. of a " a cr.itlton of 11>1 •tl<W• ,..,,_ IKW.nl o1 .. id°''"'' Counf't. Club and the long e~tablishtd fncl ol lhl trlllll Vldlltll &r Mid ENTEllPllSES Ind '"-' s•lcf lltm It 11111 •II ,...,_ h••I~ tl1!m1 19111\11 _..._ ,_ .... knO'om .,, ,..,, Sftl
• . Qo<ed 01 ''U1' CO!ftJIMf'd ol !l'lt flllowlt\9 l't,,.,,,. wl>oM llWI wlcl CltCKl.nl lfl r1<aut1td Ill 1111 W1v. kPI tffofn, (1l1tornlt.
\'oyagers Yacht C I U b -Tht blflt•kltrv lll\Cltr 11kl Offd ol Mmt In hi1tl •l'ld tilCI ol "''"''flt' It 11
1
lhtm. w1111 tlM ntcu11ry _...,,, In ltrm1 of 11i. u1h lft !•wlul m-v
both• ] l h d 1. -Tf'\lsl, lw r11t0n ol 1 ~rt1cft or Cltflull IOllowlo: 1111 Olli,.. It ll>t Cle•-ol llw 1bovl ol ll'lt Unlltd 5!1IH OI\ t0ftflrm11 ' let ea organu;allON In ,... ~111111n1 l<ll(Ur.., th11'11>V, ~1rmono P ltlfflmlnt. Jr .• 10s w. MttllM court. •• 11 llt'Hlnt 111en1. w1111 " Kie, " o•" t11h •1'111 btl1<>c:• -to merge with RCYC and ""''tetor' ntt111"f •nd 0t11v"" 10 ,.., A"""""· !11~1. c1t1tern11 11u1 "" nttt1wrv ltOUdlt,., tt "'' t.I"' l'Vidtftctll bv ftlllt •tcurld 11'1 Mool9"• . tr.. ~l1"f!d 1 ... r1uen 0tc11r111on 01"' Mrll 14. 1'11 11tr1Joneo II rne olllct llf 111 •tlOI....,: or Trvtt Offd on "" 111'-"" '° take 00 the lease Of the Irvine Of OllMlll ef'lll Olm-fM s.r., 1fld llYmond P, 11.....,1111, Jr OAlllO A, TINCLll. UOI WH411ff Mid. Ttt1 IOI• Clfll ol '"'°""' ll>ld
Pr"""rly and build and new ""'""' no11c1 of llr••Cl'I •nd ot t!tcllon St•I• of Cl!ltomll, Or•"'f• coun1y 0r1ve, su111 l~. NtwflOff IMCI'>. 11 bli *-llod wmi Ille!. ~t'" to uuM 11'11 lll'llltrsl'fntl:I to Ml1 11lcl On ""JI 1., lm. Mio•• m-. • C1tlllr11l1 ,.,..., """'lc h II lht Pitt• lltl\ or llfltrt lo be 111 "'rltll't •"'
clubh()ust. ,.,....rtv 11 111111, '"Id obll4•t10111, •!'Ill lrfot•<v P\lllllc: 1n lftd tor \•Id Sttte, 11 Ml""' of ""' undtt"llontCI In 111 will tit rtctl•tll 1t lt'lt •tor•Ylcl ~
OCvc · h d I ltltr••ll.,.. on J1m1erY H. lt111, 11'11 -11' ••-•td leymoncl P. 11 .... """''' Olffllnl,,. II 1111 10111 o1 11 t"'I' 11,.,. •"•~ 1111 llrst Olllllk•''°" came in on t e ea wn0tnl•nt11 c•u•.it u10 Allllet 01 ~ ..,,,,., Jr., "-" 11 -" tit '"' "'''°" .. .., e11ee11>1n1, w11t11n 111ur-'"°""" 1ftt• ""161 11\d t1etore d•lf o1 wi.. but VYC members v oted do" n •"" o1 •ltctlon 10 tit r1eCH"df<! In """°"' ,,_ 1t •u111<1lbtll io •M w11111" '"-11r11 pu1111c11111n of 1h11 no11c1. 011..:1 11111 4111 01' "" i'o\tr, 1110. ' • . lloolr tltt ••••• )j,j, OI ltlcl Otflc111 lnslrll!Mflf onCI tclt-lllcltld ht fXICllltd e»r.o Apoll ,, 1•10 M••• c, ... ,.,. the 1nv1htt1on. llKorll1, 11'11 .. ,.,.. S<Kurltv l'tcltlc N.ilo..11 ••1111 Eo1e111rhl Ill' '"' lsltf•
Bcvc h 0111! All!'!! ''· lt10 IOll'FICIAL $1111.) l•Klllo• of 11'11 wm ol of .. 1c1 OICel!MI, now as <I mem· s.1111111 l"INndtl •~coreor11,.. cntittr 1<. s.nJbllfV ""1b0.-. 1111114>11 0tee0tn1 MA RILYNN K. HOtJsT•n•• brrshlp of about ~50 with a ·~ •Md Tru~!ft NOll•Y Pullllt.<t !!l\)rftl• D.t.VIO A. TINGLl:ll lJOJJ 8111 l •llY llntt
I. . f l 0 Servl<t Com••~• PrlftCll•I Olllcl In IHI W111tllll OrlYt, tvlll Ut SY11t 0 un1I 9 750. lllgen! Or•!!f• COt!nl• NtWll'r1 •••t•· (1111. ttut Whll!llt. C1Wltn1I• twtl The new clubhouo;;e \l'rtS w.1.,., R. 111u1 t~v COl'l'lm1111on l•PI"• r11 : 11111 , .... ,,, 1111 111J) ox""' 1-n1t , ' lllc,.Pr,~ldtnt Ao•ll ». lf1J Alll•IM'V II• l:•tcY,.• Alltf1lt• fw •xtc•lr1~ frnancrd primnrily by lhe sale 1>111111•11•~ o,~,,., C1uo11 01+1Y i111t1• 1"111>111"Mld o,11111t ce111 0.-11. "1o01, '1\ltllliht<I o •• ,.,,, co111 oonw P11o1. P111111"e11 Or•nt• Co••' O.!lv 1>11~•. or !]!'(' lflf_ITI~rSh}e: M1v I, I, lJ, 1t10 11~·10 Atrll !1, ll. •"'! M1w 1 '""I, l"I tft·IO ,l,.j)rJI 2•. M1y I, &. 11. 1'10 1'1•7G Mil' T, &. 14, 1910 l.1•11
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTtcll OF OISSOlUT ON
01" PAllTH!ll;SIOP
Pllb1k llOI ~· I\ ,,.,,ov t ¥tn Y11J.tr L1borllorl1., <IC Ot1,.. E fl
1 "" C. nc Incl fl l'lioed E IH ! !Wik•
In( ffl'1,,..,, ~ttlolort OOollt l>ul "f»
-· ""' !l<Tllioof' ! m "41mf •Ml t!yte o1 YtlMt l.-tllvtll0t •\, 1.IO 11 •I 'WHI llltl Sl•wl C ~ ol C111ll
Met.a '°"""' or Or•n<M $ 111 DI
C1llfof"ll did 04' -"" lllY o! ~· ltl'l. W m1tlu11 c;OftMl'll dlJwlue '"•
Mid p,1t1llf>f'olll1 .... ~mlflll• Ille
11.111-•• """"' ...... ~ kkl Mlnfot• n ,,.. u ure ,. • t>o con
dvctM '" 011"""' Cll l4'C 1 (1 !Off\ I
ur-111111'1 I! tll Wt• Ill,, SI tf'I
ce,11 ""-" C• l0tl'll1 '1•11 '""'° wl I PIY tlld OIKl'lt N (l'll Iii l>n .ltl<I
dtbl\ ol nw !!rm
•ur!Mr 110lkr I• ,,, otrl' 'I'"" ""' Mdo ot ll>e unOrn II/ltd W n<>I Ill '""'°"" ble lnim "J o~v on or 1nv
elll •lllWI ir>ell !Id 1>v I~ o "'" ill tl\flr ow11 n•.,,•• Of 111 tt>e nt,... el
111~ I m
DAlED AT tent• Mrw C1llO "'
,,11 '"' d•l' Df M•• !t10 Y•..,. l.-1bort "'"' Inc:
Oe•"f EIKlrlW\K-' 11\C EMt<I El« •on,, In(
llv Ntl$Ol'I li:ottn
tllelf "'"Ot"" 1MI Aoon
S"'NOl.-EI •fld IOSEN "'' l'I
,., ..... _ ti "" ''•" !.vii. t11
lM A11ttNt. C•Ntorftl• ... ,
Publl•""" o 11191 Cot• o .. • " le Ml• I 1t70 llJ 111
LEGAL NOTICE
.,. J7':11
N0"1'1CE TO CIEOITOIS
SU,EltlOI COUllT OF THf'
ITAlE OF CAI. FOllNIA 11101
THE COUNTY OF ORANCE
J4' A-41 .. E1r1tt o! REX R ... NOERSON 0Ktt5>
I'd NOTICE IS HEll.EllY G UEN lo ll>f'
• HI tol"1 Df N tDovr n,lmt<I otc'°"'t
1 .... 1 •II t>e I.Of'• "~· 1>0 < • 1'1 •~l!M
the ud decedtn •• t'IV t<I o t ~
lllem w In I~ """"'"""" "°"~ I II
tnr o!I c1 o! "' c t • o "'• •OO•• rnl tie<! coun o !o 1>rr1•n "''"' w " Int nect~rv vo...cl\f • 10 !ht un
oe"lg/ltd •• ltlt olt ct or "• • o•~•
CHARI.ES C MORREY 1'460 Wt W~
I "' llO<JleY~ d MW> N>t o C•! orn f
wn c~ ' nr o act o• l>v• """ ot '"" ~»0r1gnf(l n • m~•~• """"""
lo '"" u 1tr o •• a Oe<eOtn "' " lour montn1 f I• ~ l i>vl> <• K>n
O Pl j 11()1 Ct
Ol lM MIV t 1910 ll;AY 0 N ("0l~
s~i'<•l AQmn • 10 w ~
Ge"<! • Powe O' m~ •< f t ol rnr ~DOvr n1mra
Ot<tOe11!
CH.Alt LES C MOllllE'I'
, .. , Wtll W1'flllrt llv•
Mtlllt'bt It Ctl I
Tel uni n11'22
A"_." Jor SH< t Ad"' " 1lr1tor
PuO l!lltd 0 a.,ge Coast 0• Y P ol MtY I S 7l 79 910 161 JQ
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICIE OF JOUI L C tt E .II It t N G
IEFOlllE THE CITY COUNC L OF
TttE CJ TI' OF FOUNT.ll!N VAl.llEY ~OllCE S 1-<EllEBV G VEN flt
on 111•..,•• ~v \9 111V • I OC
p M n Ill• Cou'W: Cnamii. • C h
, • OlOO Siii 1r A.-onut Founl• n
111 i.v C:tltolli• ,,,. C • Councl"'
flok! 1 PUO t Ilea n<1 on m• t;i tow"' l.ont c11an1t No 1 I -"'PP ca"'"
111t>rn "" llv IA. Mor t 1nd P l(ulo•
1, own• I ~1t nq t"•""'r ol lonr
on p °""'"' lo(_fl!'ill no n 1 d• of
£ 1 6'IO ttl w••I or 8u•"•rd from
A lo 111 l ll 1 mt re "'~ M ernc••5f<I .,.,......,.,,
lo ll'lf Panl\"9 LIWI 0 '"" 5 .lt o r;a torn • (Goll I CDCIP tS 000 "
1t11 l Ind lllt Fou.,t• n V<f t• lon "9
Oro nanc:t lnr ZIWI n~ O <1111ntP Zon no
Ml~ •Ml E.:nOfl • • on t n 1nr Pl1nn t111 Oeiier ment •Ml a P
•vi till• lor 1>Vb "-111~<1 on ind ••
t m NOi on r...... o• "" o .,, tv ~ '""'
fl I" OOPOI""' IQ Ill 00004 wit bt 9 vrn •n ppoo ~n h IO co •o
I tu tllt no mll on ~ dh rPO l'OU
mtv con 1cr n1 P ~nn nG Oe1>1 mrn
•' 9&) iit ano t 10 "• •tlO•r ' .. C TY COUNCIL OJ' 11'<[
CllY OF fOUNT"' N V-"Ll[Y
""'""' E Col• ( Ce . Pull ll\fd O tn9" Co.II>! Oa v P 01
M•• I ltlQ 9'1• ~
LEGAL NOTICE
BofA Co rp.
Incom e Up
first quarter <-on.sol1dated
r11come of BankAmerica Corp
before seeun!Jes transactions
rose 8 I percent lo $36 732 000
or $1 07 per share after pro-
v1s1on for Joan loSS('S
This compared w 1 I h
$3:1 983 000 or 99 cents per
share adjusted to new federal
accounting rules fnr the same
period 1n 1969
Total t'Onso!1da1ed resources
of the one bank holding com
pany for Bank of Arncrica
an1ounLed lo $27 259 356 000 on
~tarch 31 a 13 6 percent 111
ere 1se over lht total of
$23 993 127 000 a year 1go
In other first quarter figu res
nnnouoced today by President
A W Clausen deposits stood
at $23 048 199 000 compared
\\Jlh S2J 079 156 000 ror the
liflme penod m 1969 Loans
toh1led $14 654 671 000 corn
psred with $13 695 647 000 last
\1 art:h 31
F1r 111
National Systems Corp or
Newpor t Beach today reported
year end results for the period
ended December 31 1969
Sales for the 12 monlhs were
$10 563 478 up from sales of
$4 556 891 for the same period
Jasl ~ear Net income for the
penod rose to ss.13 211 com
pared to $672 692 lor the same
-
OVER THE COUNTER
NASO L11;t1ngt fo r Thurtd1y, May 7, 1970
NOTICE INVIT NG I OS
Molk:t 1 ,,,. PbY 11 vtn 1111 nr llo~ <f
tt T "' H1 ol ~ Or1n9f' C<>£ll JunoO<" Colle9t O 1trlcl ol 0 1"9" Counlv
Ct lllorn 1 WU fOCf \tt' ltllfd b 01 UD
lo 11 DQ t m Mt• 1S 117~ a IV'
P<1rU111 nt1 D•QI of Jf <f \Cllool <f s cl
l<JCt eo .r 11111 F• v.,.,. QOlld Ca1 a ~ Cl tor" 1 1 w" Cll I me ••l<I
b •• wl be 1>ub ( v .,.,..~,.., a»d •Oid
tor !II USED OFFSET O\JPI. C•lDll
'\i' our Money 's Worth
Co1rip1tters
.Il l b01 •t o bo' n ~<<oa•nc•
w " '"' !n• uct anJ 1nd CoMI Ions •no ~O'CICI on• wnc11 • • now 111 i • tn<:I m•v l>e •tC\I f<I n !I>• o c•
nl tnr Purcn.11 "~ "'v•n a •~ a •cnoo a 1t c• Etc~ l>iOdl' "'' """' w II n bia • ca)" e • c"'M• <• eo cnet • or b ooe 1 OoMI m•Gr ""'"b • lo nt o 01 ol ne 0•&"9• COll)t Juno Co ...,.
o 1 r ct 8o.i a ot lnn ,..., n 1n amo<1nt
>G n• Ill VI P•t•n IS ol
'"" 1um b..:r t) • out •n •• Int Tht t.ooe wt •n• "!u ~ 1>oo>01t'd Con! tel I Ille Hmt • ..,,. Of'O 0
llm " Int tvtn 111 tau ' lo tnlt
'"'" cont ac r11r orOCl'P<h of I~• •lle<k
.., bl lor1t toa o rn "'' <•ot er!
• bc"'ll "'" !u '""' ~ l'{)f w t t• It o It'd ta '-' 0 1enl'IQ 0 t Not>aa• m•vw 11a .... n 1 1>ato
•Ptodot OY •• jj O•vs •• 1n1 oarp •• ro n~ 0""" ~., I ,. ..,
Tiit 811<1 a o TUI•• t\O V•I ht
u vf"I• o! ·~ctn~ tn~ """ • ba
n o wavt """ e<1ua t O n lo mtl "n• bac 11 netOOn•
N0RM1'N E WAlSON
Sft•fY
811<1 o c 1
c~nM••ll•10
Pu" \,hf(l 0 f!'IOt M•• f S 101'0
LEGAL NOTICE
CElll F IC.lllE OF IUS NESS Fltlll OUS NAME
,.,,. ur>C!t 1 9"f'O OOo• t • ~· 11
tonclvc1 n~ 1 llU• ntn •I (01 ~ f, ,..,
t~l6 •n<l O ""'" Ccun v t~ ton• ~r><l' tnt I c DV! t m n•mf Q "'lt.W
lie tinm,nt (•11' onO n~ •• d "
1 cnmt>01td o nt •o "''" na o• '°"
w"M' "A"'f n tv ~"~ o •c~ o
I\ •• 0 0"' H• r w I v ..... ~~ lOllC1
0• SD Ma bu """II M• ?IV t•
Oa I'll M•v 1 •1~
H~ v l'I V "'°"~' ~.,.rc1 ron• O~n•tCovn•
On M~• 7 1na ti.ro -..,. • "lot• •
Pub le n •nd loo-u d St•I" P~ '°"'"I• •DPt• eo t<• -. W ' 11 "ctn ~no.,.n
to m• lo ~ I"-PC "" .. no ,. n•m~
11 •ub1t lltd lo tne "' "' " " um~n
•na "'~""'" rao!'d ,,.. r•"(u f0 IM 1~m• IOFFtC •L ~EAL!
M•rv I( H~rY
No!,,..y Pvb c-C:t o "•
P f\(O~ ()! t-I\
O on;• Co11n v
My Comm'' on E•P •l
Nov '" un l>ul> 11>...t O a11a~ Coo\t C• " o Mtv I IS 1'I 1' 1010 l:il 1C
LEGA L NOTICF.
f'fOTl(I: OF INTIEHT IOJol TO ENGAGE.
IH THE SALE 011' lll(QMOl.IC
IEVIEllAGES M•• t •I~ TO WHO .I IT t. AV CONCtRN
ktb Kl '" l•11•n<• <>I In• c• '
ll1><1 ..i '"' .-01 er ht bY ,. v• fl~
Ill• ""cH> Slllnf'CI P•PllO •> '" V' ~ o n hive'"'" a! 11'1' p ~m ••• II•>' h,d
•• to Kl~ 'IOI I Adftrn1 1-1\ml no!Qn llt~ch
P11111•n la''" n• Oii !• n
"' I'""' h •PP y "" '" ... OroA ,,. •• u of Alco/lo c B•v• A<1• Con! ot lo u• •
on o it n•I '"" t.i on ol "" •lc.OIWI Dtrv•..., crnw Hit I c•n'''' •o r>l'I 'rttrl '" es lo """ ON S4LE BEER & w NC"
(1100\9 F .St P11b C f•I,,. P•crl it,""''" ~· "" lo o oto lh• • u • .,1 IUCll ll<':•n••l~l ml¥ • " • "' t NI
1trOl1HI 11 1111¥ ofTICI' <>I 1110 O"i>• !"'on1 ol Ale~ Ii; llPV• ••• COr' o or bv
..._ I IO """ O·~·n ... •n ol A col>ol c ltvt!' .. t CO" OI l1$ 0 5 H
k<.ram!'f'IO C• o•fl ll t~ 4 1!• "'
'""'""' tor deft Ill Ill p.rgy OtO b¥ I W TM ""'"';,.., o • not "ll"' I c•f'lt~
IM ~ "'Ir OI •K-Ir llll•• •ft\ l"t totm ol vor f ui• nn mov h• 1)11 aln..i
H\ S'l \Jr\ PORTER
A lienous ob~tacle to 1 ! e
ton1puter s turthCr dC\C'lup-
mcn1 1s manpo11cr 11h1lc
2.)() 000 add!t10MI jobs "'1!1
open In Amenca _,, C.'Omputer
1ndustr1 bv 1972 n1an1 of thr
ope.tung:. may go begging for
l:ick of qualified applicants
The follo1i. 1ng 1nter11ew w11h
Stephen V l\C:\!1 1g prcs1dcnl
of Hone} \\ell Inc 1nanufac
lurer of computers plOJXllnl s
111al po1n1s fl r all ot 1ou
\1ho 11an1 \n be re.id} to fill
tomorro11 s JOb:.
I ORTf:R lt1.111 l 1n :\
person determine \\ hether ht
nr she 1~ qual1r ed for training
Jn the data pr<><.CS: Ing [Jeld1
Kt ATli\G ( c11t'rall\
persons \111h log1ca 1
a ialy11cal trndencic::. I t 11t II
lht gnl l of N• 11 Rosou t"J
t .nd !floe I 0 m1~ ~~~ mq...,.y o ow IO"~th•'Wlu"d a•t
"''Ill <O.,. dr I I> 11111'1 1n<! ~· •Ot'l•~tt IY ~ 0'"1~ • II 'lrtl .. o
di •IOf"',."' d" ~a a llO •"'-
for,_ I,,. "'""/>Ir"' floll'n• •
IJ r••• com1>1f'I• •~d "''I ~• •o~pot .... ~ ..
P •tll 'lllTid ..,. • o m• ~n •""
I> OOP<ICl11\ 1bou1 NI " II Ut,OU Cll 1 .. ~11 n~
••D'l'I ,,,., oft u ot !~ °"P' lrn..m I •~E---------k1rry I' 9..se ., •oo•<•• Robt'1 ,_ W1tl' "' "'"-·----·
P\lb!IWll l)tfftH Clll!•I D• I~ P 1o1 (' TY -----
M.-, I IJXI lt1 PO &1~1£ --211"---r'"="=======:::=====::::"""""'"1l:.~,(~l£~C'~"~°"~~·~-~::: ... : BOAT BUFFS
Alme11 l.clt:•MY I• tt,, 11111ly
full tilt!• \l.oafi119 •ti tor wot~ "'<I
Ill fl'IY l'lfWt.p•p« 111 Ot'""''
Cou11tv His ••<lin "' t ov1••9•
cif botfh19 aiwf v•chtl119 ,, ... "'
, 1 tf111y f 11t11'9 of th• DAILY
PILOT
, " ' .
into this ne\.\ profession As
rn any other job fie ld tesl1ng
1~ 1n1portanl If an 1ndl\ 1dual
1s :.cr1ously 1ntcrcstcd 1n data
proc essing as a car~r he
should arr:\nge to lake the
h 1s1c tests th:it are available
Students or recent graduates
~hould talk to their guidance
counselors
Se\eral un1vcrs111es 11 n d
"one public agencies provide
this tes11ng for a sn1all lee
Al"o the \.A pro\ ides a free
sl'nes of 1esls tu cl1 g1blt>
\ ctcrans
PORTt:R \\1th so m;in\
<lnt~ procc,,s1ng :.lhOOb 1n ex
1s1ence hov. can one be sure
of sclechng a rcpul<1ble ont"
KE AT 11\iG Pr 1~pcct1\e
~tudtnl .. should ohta~n study
111d compare cat<ilogs or oth(r
a\a1lable literature fro 01
Sl 1 era I schools Look clost I\
11 the quahf1c:ations ol the
'nnous teaching s!aff~ \\ h~t
l!-i the facu l!\ ~ edUC:\11on 11
batkµround"' Their actu 11 1n
dus!r\ e>:per1ence"' Th r
~ludent teacher ra1 10 10 the
prospect1\e
qualified to
equipment
student
judge a
but he
1s not
school ll
P er A nnum-
Pa1d Quarterly
Ollll $20 000 Oft•~ F..1 P•id M-..+.
~t Thrift Cwt,McetM, ...-,.ft It.kl to
......... ·-~ ....... ,.... dNi Jilt!
CATJJIOR.NIA.
Co111pl ete-New Yori{ Stoel{ Li st
A1 31 .. ' . ., .. .
' ?1 I . "
" ' ' ~ ,,
" ' " " " .. 't~
" " " ' " '"' l
" "' ' ' 1
• • " 1 " •• '" '" ,,
'" "' ...
'" •• '" " • " ". ~
" " " " ' .,
l "
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1!•• •• " ·~· ' . ~·1
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• ~· 11 I -
•
ltlt• .... lft• J Hlt~ ltw ClllH t~t
•• l~ :: ~~
33 ,, ... " , ~. ;/ .. + " . SI -1 'II ~· . -..
3P.; -·~ ~I -1
ll • -• 21. -• !l$ • -1 ~. . 11 +r .., " 56 -• ~ . ' ~s~ + ~
" 16 ~ + " ,. " . " " ' ,.,.
!ft . -". -"-' ~ .+ ' . ~ nt ....
l?lo -,, 0 ,,_ I
Al~ -> " " -15 ... 1 6t. -1 ~ _,
" 6'1• -~ "' " + ~·-°' I -.1 I " }) ~ -I " 33 -,,
31 ~ -,, • + ss ... + ~. " -. 37'1-•
lflarket
Sy11abols
---· ---
•
• •
•
• •
•
• • '
• • - -' '
Fridoy, MU I 1970
Friday's Oosing P1'.ices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Stoek Leaders
MOST SHARES
..... N•i"'"''"'"" ........... ,.., .. "''""""""""' ............ ,., ..... I 111n.1 Hltti u-c• C111
,J ·~~ ,~~ 1~~ ~'n
.tl ill: ll" F-" ~tmn v.=J ll ll 11-. 1 ~ ~.
Antiwar P1·otests
~11 1!! 1~ ~:~ Hampering Marl{et !~~;~
i!l!j ~ ff: ffn _ " Un C.rbl!H 1 " , • ~~ + I.. Uni~ Corp l~ ~· ~~· ff1.,=l• NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks drifted lower 1n ~~ EJ'C~l: <If 11~ 11 • lP • :j: l\ F d k i 8~ofic.f't~
1,.,1 ~ ~i .... 1; !-U light turnover rt ay as traders too more nterest uoc.1 ~250
.,j i 1~1~ Ji~=~· in anti \Var demonstrations on Wall Street than 111 ~~~f·~·~,1 .ll m• + I'> dlSJnaJ dCVe)opmentS In sid e Un!onem I ~O
J4 Ill \~+· unov•llO :: • m"' : + ;: The UPI marketwide ind icator showed a loss ~n .~~' P:C,•
119 1 t!-1 + 1~ of O GI percent on l 532 J:iSUes o n the tape Of these ~"\'• c 110
1J ' h l "' Jli; +.. 808 declined and 442 gained u~: ~f" ~1:, ~1i.fi:.t ~~-1 U"P"r1111 •0
" s..14 :i;,..., SJ'lt -1• The Dow Jones 1ndustr1a l d\ er age of 30 select 8~1; J.~ 11<1» ~j ~~ U: ~~= ~ ell blue chips "as off 5 34 al 717 73 ~~1~~~ i:11~
,. ' .!~ iJ. +I• tliFF~t'f~ I Ht tm $-~ A turnover of around seven 1n1ll1011 shares com-usGvpsm ,., J ~ e~ 1.f\4 ~.... pared \VJth 9 530 000 shares tra ded Thursday Hs!5t~~' s
~~ ~ a:: 1$ t ~ Among the 1ten1s we1glu.ng on the market were ~s~~~ ::1 ro 2~ n;; ?:~ 7:~= ~ a government report that un employement JUmped 8f l~, ~
5 u U!' ui--"' to a fiv e-year high 10 April word that Soviet war-USSmt f'5 50 , ,.\, ,,i,, ~•I.I. • ~ us,"" ! ~, 16-4 14 . 11u ,... • -, ships \Vere tn the Car1bbea.n and a prediction fro1n us obac 10
1 lJo\o ~ u 1, _ .,., Unit pt11 tt 1~ ,, '°""' 40,,.. -" the Business Council that inflation will continue at vnu11 pit 2s 11 29\1. M'4 11\il -Vi Ul\Ulll I" " ,1 Mr. 14~ 1• .. _ "' a rate of about 4 5 percent th is year ~~v1vi.o~d 'l
t 21-:in.. 72'--\' Un VllY Cm~ ,!~ ,n, ,:~ 1!~ _ ~ The councll s pnvate econon11sts also forcca~t up/onn 1 •
1 n h niv. tn1it -1 thai interest rates '"ou!d rc1na1n h1ah despite sag 8;~1~C9 Vl111 u! l~"I l~ 0 ~" _ t.. "' U$M Cp ~ ,, ~-. ... , .. _ '* grng profits and s luggish economic act1 v1ty 8~c~ 1:.,
3'i )1 )(I '°"° Ut1hPI. lt2
11 «!¥. '° • -. +-~ "'"':!:C:C"t::i::a::;:::ic:=.:::!l:Z:?:lli!!lellm"':,;"'"':•n ll '!' 1n Auo IC• 21'-11~. ,,,_,,..t.:aftA,w '' c i•rn.•x=;--"1nr!M 1 :;.tS:t •B v 1tCor11 4CI
SC DAIL V PILOT 2 f
..... tld t11e1s.1 Hit' .... C ... 0...
'In All Home
Editions
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
Finance
Briefs
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -
Chairman Daniel J Haughton
of Lockheed Aircraft Corp
told the shareholders meeting
Tuesday that Lockheed
employment lliely will fall by
9 000 this year In answer to
a question Haughton said
employment was 97 600 at the
start of the year and probably
will be 88 000 or Jess by the
end of the year
OAKLAND Call( (UPI} -
Karser Stec! Corp has signed
a letter contract to export
$125 m1lhon worth or coking
coal over the next JO years
from its Sunnyside Utah,
n11nes to Japanese steel mllls
The M1tsub1stu Company will
1narket the coking coal
WILMINGTON Del (UPI)
-Sterhng Drug Nnc, an-
nounced a maJor expansion
program for both manufac~
turlng and research In the
United States Europe and
Latin America The company
said 1t ts bu1ld1ng new planl"
1n the United States Portugal
and Ecuador and enlarging
plants in En gland France
ind Austrahe
MONTREAL !UPI)
Canadian Pac1r1c Air Un~
a subs1d1ary of the Canad.Jan
Pacific Radway has ordered
two more 127 a1rhners from
Boeing Co of Seattle at a
cost of $12 5 m1lhon for
delivery next spring
DETROIT (UPI ) -Fl'deral
Mogul Corp wl!I bulld a new
factory to make bl metal
aluminum engine bearings
here at a e<nil or about $5
millron
NASHVILLE 1U P1)
Hospital Affiliates Inc wil l
bulld a new 150 bed hosp1t1l
on a 30-acre tract acquired
1n New Orleans
AT&1' Set~
Interest Rate
American Telephone &
Telegraph Co set an 8~ per
cent Interest rate for the
Sl 569 blUlon worth of Syear
debentures to be offe?ed to Its
3 I mJIUon sharehold1n
At the same tlme the Bell
Co parent set W as the J)nce
at which new 1tock ~ bt
purchased with the warrants
auacbtd lo lhe dobent-.
Irvine Firm
Sales Deal In
The Lrv1ne Company an-
nounrcd that Acero Gaske.t
Company of El ~1 o n t t-,
rectn tly purchased a slle an
Irvine property for their nN"
r adquarters
..
I
' • . •
-------------------------......,. . ...,.. -...-..,..--.• :-.:-.;-:.,-,,.c---;-, -;-, ' -,, '•r * ••
r ~l~Y PILOT f'rldtiy,·May 8, 1970 •
.
'
:·-~~sPECIAt·1z,1NG IN ~----' ~ ~ • I ' ' ~ . ' , ~· . ://' ; '
I • ' ' ' ' •
• • J • •' • . .• {'-'. '•" -'
2 DOOR
·COUPE ·
AMtomcrtlc tran1n1I""
ilon, COllCMled ro-
dlo --· fibre ..... IMlted tlre1,
~~:~ IMMEDIATE DELI-VERY
..
• FIRST TIME . SHO:WN
THE .ALL NEW BUICK HIGH PERFORMER ".G.SX". NOW :oN DISPlA Y
1970 OPEL GT
. WE HAVE A JREMENDOUS SELECTION of the FABULOUS GT's RIGHT NOW.
ALL COLORS & EQUIPMENT TO SELECT FROM!
VISIT OUR VOLUME OPEL SALES & SERVICE CENTER
BRAND NEW BRAND NEW 1970 MODEL
1969 0 PE L ......... with ., ~.A,~ .. E!! ....... •••'"" • •P"I ·fully synchronlzad tr•n1rnla1lon, h••t•r, llfetlm•
lu"9 chriuls. 2 1peH w•thffl & wipers, H•t belts,
INckup ll1hts. ()19261611) SPORT COUPE LS
Roadst1<. Leu -1,000 Miies. Almost llNotl ffW,
Fuly oq•lpped lncl•dlot ........ twlio wfooels, ·AM·FM
Shortwave radio, phis rnuc• more. • (421.ASGJ
·$
·-
AIR CONDITIONING-VINYL ROOF 51891 ·s199_5_ IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
. ' 1 .• '
PERSONALIZED
'
• AUTOMOBILES •
'66 BUICK GS 400
VI, 1ulom1tic, r1dio, h11!1r, power
1!11rin9, f1ctory 1ir. I RRW715)
'68 BUICK GS
'68 FIREBIRD 40D
Still 1.1nd•r f1ctory w•rr•nty, 4 1p11d,
r1dio, h11!1r, p•-r it.1rin9, Yinyl top.
V1ry low 111il••9e, loc•I I own1r 'lllm.
IVTLSll}
' .
. '68 DODGE RT
V-1, •utom•lic, r•dio, h1•+•r, pow•r •Coups. V-1,' •utomstic, r1dio. h1'11r,
1!11ri119, vit'lyl roof, m19 wh11l1, f•c· powsr t••ring, f•cfoty •ir, ¥irtyl top,
tory •ir, low mil•191, imm sculst1 cort· Ah1olut1ly 9or91ou1 loc1l _doctor'1 cir.
ditiort. IXOC43fl 12,SPCt .mil1s. fYOl122l,
'67 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE
J: door h1rdtop. Auto1T11 tic,.pow1 r 1ls1r·
in9, 11dis, h11t1r, l1ctory 1ir, I -owner,
low "1il1191. Jull i1T1111•cul 1!1. IUPSl71l
'68 PONTIAC GTO
VI, sulom•tic, t1dio, h11t1r, po•1•
•t11ri11t, po-r ~r••••· l1etorv •ir, low
,..i\••t•· I ownsr, loc•lly own1d cir,
lll'l!l'l•cul•ts, IWXEfi191
POOLE
-
'69 IMPERIAL LE BARON
Th is automobile hes every conceivable luxury feature that is
offered. Full leather interior, ell power equipment p_lus factory
e irconditioning. Gorgeous. IYBEl461
s4995
'69 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY
9 passenger wegonr Full power, factory air," b way power seat,
power door locks, h199ege rack, local car in ·outst•ndin9 condi-
tion. IYCP4281.
-'68 ELECTRA CUSTOM ·
4 Door b1rdtop. Full power, fectory air. Sold & serviced loc11ly.
Balance of f1dory warranty. IVBA93•1 I
'69 THUNDERBIRD LANDAU
Full Jower, factory •ir conditioning, low mileage. Sold & ser-
vice locally. l912HSI J .
s3s9S
23·4 E. 17th St. AV'l'BORJZED
BVICK-OPEL-IAGVAR
SALES n11d SERVICE
OPEN
SUNDAYS
•
-----
•
THE FINEST SELECTION OF
USED
JAGUARS
1969
JAGUAR XKE
Coupe. 4 •r,e•d tren1mi11ion,
chrome whee 1, factory a ir con·
ditionin9, AM-FM. radio, willow
9r••n with· bleclc l•ether int•rior.
Ab1olut•ly 9or9•ous. I XXE805 I
1967
JAGUAR 2 + 2
Coupe. Automatic tr1nsmi11ion,
AM-FM 1hortw•ve radio, chrome
wire wheels, Pirelli redial fires,
27,500 miles. Natur•I leather in-
ferior. I TRH075 I
1968
JAGUAR XKE
Coupe. 4 speed transmission,
chrome wire wheels, radio end
heater, I owner locally owned
car. Beautiful Arctic white ex-
terior with black full leather in-
terior. IXDA7741 "
1966
JAGUAR 2 + 2
Autom•tic transmission, chrome
wire wheels, factory •ir coridi-
tioning, radio end heater, This
on• is tru.ly a spotless •utomo-
b;J,. IPl65AI
SUPER SPECIAL
1969 V.W. BUG
4 spHd, radio, heater, only 9,000 miles, a .. n es • pin. (XTL 393).
REDUCED
TO
548-7765
OAILY .. ILOT $1111 .. llol.
'Siiakes Alive'
The whole family got into the act when Greg O'Grady's sisters. twins
Lori and Lisa. 4, asked their mother: ''Is that snake supposed to be
in our f\o\vers~" Older brother, Doug. 16. then captured the five-foot
king snake as it slivered through family flower bed in San Juan
Capistrano. Greg, 12. thinks it makes a fine pet.
Higl1 Scl1ool Stuclent Seen
011 Cleme11te Parl{s Board
The San Clemente Parks and Recrea·
lion Comm ission ma:v counl among its
fu ture numbers a 11igh school studenL
with full voting powers.
Councill:11en arc considering: suth a
hridge acrn:;s I.he generation chas111 LJfter
listening to suggeslions from their
vouthful t'<lunterparts for improved com-
Tnuniention between youlh and cil.v
government.
Ten high school students had for the
rlay assu111cd offices in city government.
1hose of th<' five eouncilmcn and ad-
ministrative hrads. ThP confah \\'i\h tile
council \VOund up !he annual Elks
Student Scalpe{l
By 2 "Patriots'
OAKLAND i L'Pl J -A 15-ye;,ir-0\d slu·
tient 11'as in !)Crious condilion tod ay after
;:i two-inch square of scalp \\'a s cut
fron1 his hear! by llro men who said
they did not. like long-haired hitchhikers.
sponsored project.
City ll1anager Kenneth Carr assu red
the .voungsters that their suggestion~
"'ould be considered. l~e noted that he
had two children in San Clerncn1e High
Schoo l and the n1ayor has one.
Carr later told the council that a
position on the Parks and Recreation
Commissior •. that held by Jan Kennedy,
11nsuccessful council cahdidate, is open
due to Lhree consecutive absences.
Mayor \Valter Evans sa id Wednesday,
•·1 think maybe we should make a high
schoo l student a full-fledged member.''
Councilman Stanley Northrup said, "ft
might be worth ·considering making one
a voti ng member."
Since commissioners are normally ap.
pointed to a four-year term, the mayor
suggested the student commissioners
might be appointed to a one-year term.
Councilman Thomas O'Keefe suggested
that the high school might ~iect a com-
missioner or choose nominees from which
the council would selecL
Councilmen arc to take up the matter
again at a latu date.
Laying Fo111idations
\\:orkn1a11 ren1ovc!' ply\\'Ood for1ns covering foundations of Pacific
1'rlephonc's nc\V central office on Can1ino del Avian in San Juan
Capistrano. 1\ccording to co1n pany officials, two-story building, de.
s1~nerl to blend \rill~ Old Mission arc~itecture, \vill represe~t a ~.5
tn illion 1nvcst1nent 111 land. constructton and ne'v electronic equ11>-
n1enl \Vhen 1l is con1pleted next Dcce1nber.
1·
Down the
Mission
•
Trail
Fire Department
Open Houses Set
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Fire sla·
lions in Laguna Hills and Mission Viejo
will be open Saturday for Fire Day
activities.
Special lifesaving techniques will be
demonstrated at the Missioo Viejo exhibit
\\'hich will be in the Safeway Shopping
Center on Muirlands Boulevard from
IO a.m. to 5 p.m, The new Mission
Viejo fire station has only recently been
opened.
Al Laguna IDlls there will be
demonstrations in aerial operation. pro-
cedures for engines and rescu es and
fire fighting techniques.
The station at 24001 Paseo de Valencia
will be open from 10 a.m. to S p.m.
Activities at the El Toro fire station
were cancelled because of road con·
struction.
e Car 1l'aslr Snturduu
l.11SSION VIEJO -Does your ca r
need a bath? Bring it to ~1ission Viejo
High School Saturday and members or
the Mission Viejo Key Club will \\'ash
it for you.
The activity from noon to 4 p.m.
will raise funds for school i1nprovement
projects.
The club is sponsored by the iltlssion
Viejo and Saddleback Khvanis clubs.
e iUarhres Open House
CAMP PENDLETON -An open house
in the Del Mar area ol Camp Pendleton
will celebrate Armed Forces Day May
16.
The even t begins at JO a.m. and end!>
at 4 p.m. Visitors to the School Ballalion
area in Camp Del Mar will see weapons
-and equipment used by today's Marines.
Passes f0r vehicles without mllitary
stickers will be issued at the main
gate. Military police will direct visitors.
e Amigo-<' Niglrt Set
MISSION VtEJO -Graduating high
school seniors in Saddleback Collei;c
district and their parents will be feted
at an open house May 20 to acquaint
prospective new students with the canl·
pus and academic program.
lt will be the second annual ''S<1rl-
dleback College Amigos Night." The pro-
J!ram from 7 p.m. to 9 p,m. will include
tours of the fa cilities and orientation
to acquaint sludenls with the various
divisions and faculty.
e Masons iHecl iug
MISSION VIEJO -The Antiquity
Masonic Club of Mission Viejo is now
meeting on the second and fourth Thurs·
clay of the IJ'!Ofllh at Downey Saving.-.
Building in the Safeway Center. All
master Masons are welcome to attend.
Barbecue Set
For Wilcoxen
At Viejo Rancl1
Supporters ol Laguna attorney \Villi<1111
Wilcoxen will gather under the oak trees
on the old Mission Viejo Ranch Sun day
lo hoJ11or him with an "election
barbecue."
Wilcoxen is a candidate for lhe 35th
Congressional Di strict seal, forn1crly
held by the late James Ut1.
Host at the Spanish b<1rbccue •,•,1i\I
be Dan J. Rios, si xth generation me111ber
of the Rios family of San Juan Capistrano
and former county marshal. The lwo
men have been friends si11cc \Vilcoxcn
was an assistant district attorney for
Oraxge County.
Sile of the-gathering will be the Upper
Cowboy Camp on the Mission Viejo
Ranch, six miles east of San Juan on
Ortega Highway.
From 2 p.m, lo 4 p.m. Rios will
barbecue steaks marinated in the
family's traditional salsa, prepared from
a secret recipe. Other Rios famil y
favorites on Ule menu will be beans
and salad wit h a special dressing, served
with French bread .
. A mariachi ba Rd will enliven the pro-
ceedings and games will be arranged
for the children.
Tickets for the barbecue, al $3 each,
or $1.50 for children, arc avallablc at
Wilcoxert Campaign Headquarters, 325
Glenneyre St .. Laguna Beach, or can
be obtained at the gate of the ranch .
Trouble Number
911 in Clemente
Trouble In San Clemente will mean
dialing three digits after Sept. II.
On that day, the Bell System's
universal emergency number, 911 will
be activated for users of more than
10,000 telephones with a 492 prefix, said
City Manager Kenneth Carr.
The three-digit dialers will receive the
emergency police-fire dispatcher who wlll
route help. It will' be the Urst Southern
California installation Qf the number now
1n use by some SO cities nationally.
f
Frlday, t.1ay 8, 1970 DAILY PILD\' 3
THIS DESK LOAD OF DRUGS ANO DRUG PA RA PHERNALIA DESTINED FOR DESTRUCT ION
It's Only Part of the Ha ul Made by San Clemente Police Since J a nua ry
'Drug Store' Due
For Des tru ction
111 San Clcn1cnlc
Beacli Litte1· Crackdow n
Asked in .Sari Clemente
The dru gs \1•ill hr rlissoll'ed. the pipcs
:<n1ashed and Lhe marijuana burned.
So said Sa11 Clemente police \\ 1111 wcrl'
looking O\'C'r the illicit lnol tofia .v, a
whole table top full of dope .ind its
paraphernalia gathered this year.
There \\'ere a fell' pounds of packaacd
m3rijuana, rolled cigarrts IJf !Ill' \',el•d .
seed~. pills \\'ilh al! lilt• color:; ol the
rainbow, hypodermic needles for 111·'
jecling drugs and an irnprL·ssivc pipe
collection.
There were little pipes and big pipf''i.
an 18-inch homema1lc w.iter pipe and
cve11 a tiny brass T·v<1lvc US\'d :is .1
pipe for n1arijuan<1 . One pipe \\as :t
series of !alxlratory FlfS 111 lanr!c111 111·
tcrconnecled \l'ilh glass and rubber \lib·
ing.
Dctcctivc·~·said nscrs so111rt11ncs inh:ilr,
marijuana through winr 111 lhe \later
pipes for a variation on the h1gl1 liH"/
gel.
hluch of the drugs and par;19hcrJJ<l\1:i
galhcred by San Clemente police in 1he1r
investigations \Vas not on !hr table. lt
\\'as in !he lockers of of[icer s, part
of a chain of evidence kepi intact until
the disposition of pending eourl cases.
\\')11 :-;an Cletne.nlc pol1ce111en don be<J1·h
:irp:irr! !h1,; su111n1cr to tr:irk down
n11 lill(•r1n;: :ind oth1·r 1nfr<1t:IHl!l!) 1111
111'' ,\;111us ·•
Till' rxi.~ribilily 1vas l'ili5rd \\'l'dnesdJy
h1· t'o111111hn;1n Tllo111;1\ O'l\l't'fr ;1f1rr
<l1sc11:-.e:.11J11 ol .i letter lr01n J, ,\I. ·•.\\Jc''
.lonr;;.
J 1J11c~. an ad1•ocate of ell'an bcaehc~.
h;1d suggeste<l a state tax or flne or
lwo r"n1 ; f111 hevrra.cr• ho\llrs 10 pay
!or thf' rosl of brnch tlt•:i111ng.
<1 'Ker](' ."a id 111 1hr p;1rl httcrini: rit:1-
l1011s htid lun1lcd cHecl since !he cour~
Clemente Eying
l\ii1ribil{c (tu·hs
F1Jllu\1'1ng eon1 pla111ts or noi se ilnd flrf"
hazard, t11 1 ordinance is 111 the San
Cirn1cnlc 1ntu11c1pal hopr>er lnday tu
J'{'gul.Jlc use of muu ;ind trail bikes
011 prll'alc !lropert y.
only imposed a fine of$~.
O'Kcefe. an attorney, said he had
lalJ.:erl of lhe problem with local Judges
::111d frcl<; they are more disposed now
!11\l'<JTll t>t!1.erc f)Cna!ties, heavier fines
or pcrhap5 prQbatlon wilh the violator
il~si;::ricd ;i hl'ilch ~clion 1o clean.
O'Kcefc said with an expanded· police
rlrn:.irLment t.hrtc should be a vi~orous
progran1 of <1nl!-l1tter en f or cc men t
adopted llus sun1mrr.
Councihnan Stanley Northn1p said a
polic l'Jllan h;i.~ to ~ee !he misden1canor
occu r and people don't litter when they
:'i"" a pol1cL·m<J n.
(1'1,rrr1· suggested tliat the officers
1" oul or 1111ilorn1 and in beach atlire.
"\\lord 11ould tr;1vel prcl1y f<ist and we
miJ.?hl have a m<irkei:I change," he said.,
i\\ayor \V<i!tcr Evans said, "If we're
i;:oinl! lo enforce a stiff litter law, we
l1ad heller make sure we have adequate
lllle1· ron\.alncrs , • . people are not
~oi11g to 1valk very far."
O'KceJc said beach users should rclW'n
the litter to their cars if there is not
a handy eont<11ner. 'The malter was refer·
red Lo Lhc police department Ior rl'C01n·
mcnrl:i1 iun.
.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
•
Some chefs You're not.
are paid to cook
over hot flames.
So enjoy a flameless
electric kitchen.
A fla111 cless, all.elect ric kitchen is 1-\nd flamcfc ss air conditionin;:
one of the big benefits built into that cools and cleans lhe ;1ir yo11
every Medallion Home or •ll!!~-31 breathe.Pure con1fort ror the
Apo.rt1ncnt. And that n1cans •
a clean, cool kitcl1cn.
A J\.t cdallion Home or
Apartment can al so rncan J
flameless electric heating. Cl ean
heat It doesn 'l dirty your curlains
or upholstery.
critirc family.
And flarnclcss-water heat.
ing-without a pilot, without
a flue, without wasted space.
Furlhcr1norc, a f\llc·clallio n tlo1nc:
has ample wiring for toda.y's c!cctri ..
cal a.ppli.anccs, plus provisions fo r
the electrical wonders coming up
in lhc all-electric future. Medallion
!--lo111es and Apartments a.re now
available in all price ranges.
You can sec \vhy more and more:
people arc choosin~ to live the good
cle;in lif c-cfectrically. f 11cl11dlngclit1f•· se.e
Southern California Edison
•
I
I
•
·'.Sf?nate to Curb~ixon?
~ ... 1 • ~
" r.' , .. , •
V ore ·Set on Cambodia Funds Halt ,_ ;.. F i' ~
.. l •f' ,. • • ~
:. hl_ BrAtests ·-~ ·'~
~ays"Hoov~~::~~
. . . ~
. , ~ ~SlllN~TQN ·(-1,lfll ,..,.FBI Dl .. 01~,i'>l
.,J .. Edpr,., llOQ!I" ,.,~, ()ornJl!.U!lls! •
lelcmepf4 Jlnxtous to try and rorce " .. ,,
.. .., . ' 'WASH!t;!;TOl('!UPO '-·~ Semite
wlU vote late next wedt on l~lation
. to ,bold President Nl1on to · blJ pledge
U,S. lrOOl'I wll) be ·wlUldr""!' f!flm Qam.
bodla by July I. Chi..,. of passage
Leader l!Ugb Scott (ft.Pa.), lmmedlately
urged tht·Senate Forell!l Relatlonl Com·
miltee lo speed the olll ' lo the floor'
Seoate Democratic--J..eader M J k e
Mansfield fndorsed the amendment and
said he w'b aasured there wou1d be
a vote 1bunday or-Friday.
put the Senate on reconl ollidally and
ror the first Ume aaainst the operation
in Cambodia and it would force the
admlnLstratlon to d'lan1e any plans it
might have to 1tay in Cambodia in·
definitely or further widen the conflict
lo provide protection for th• Cambodian
government.
t ... •ttnUateral. American withdrawal from~
• __},,~~ "' ..... .,.., '4iitfl '.vlttnlm .,weu dee.ply invo1Yed wltti1he
~ t•rilrno :Do{a"llifd. l(pjndon Nov. 15 mass anti.,wu demonttratk>DI. -. ' tiiJlb control n1tdllni recerl!IY she • Hb.!ia--lilUia,& tesll-y in yars iite. her ~-old d!UIKl!l'rblrt!i;.; ~ cij~~~1:~r 46nJonst<al!'rs. llbq~I ... , ~Ollrol pills to prove to.womBll !he 1ui1Jea ·•11\l• Ibo Bl.ck Pan.ther .P•l'tY., . JM:IS are laU'lnless. "She D~~~suHer-jn f>i'~ul•J -_was m8.de publlt; .by ·
,.i•n iJ1 ilhcts at all," Dr. 'Days ~ Houae Approprt,tlons ·Comm~tee on · r.. L .. ~er'iiughter, Sally. .. , the.ovo ol .. ,..., dl!1l00Stratlon Saturday . far. f,' ~ .... . .. against U.S. involvement m·Cambocha. ·. · : t: ' · · -'; e · . . . ·•it 'wu .neither· by accident nor coin4 • : i1 •· d .;:~i;cAlll•tor of Roches; <idehce :jba( . .tho . demoostraUons held · "&Jt4' .... _"" 'ded to b tn Wafhlnlion and San Fmtcisco· 1on· (e~ N.Y,., "11)'$ c~~w~·~oen"• b:: Nov.• 15, .1.111~. bad .accoll1jlinying atiU. ~otl)e a circll.s . U. ..,, Id U.S. dtiu<11strallol!S in "'11er countries ~·e he ?w•~ted hts year-o throUgbout 'the wOrld on the ·salllt'day;'~io~ MicliPl .to lea~ to accept • he sa.id,. .delaillni various •Conunun.i!t
lall&bter." ''.J\11chael JS a ~,?ge~~ ,; aesai<w abroad in the sll.1110oth .perlnd ll~.used to bide because he "':;'ug . ·prior. fa Jhe.rilllu. . -·
were lau~hing a;.~u:i" Mc·.·. 1~nie ... major · emphasis in .l he
r sl!i~ :•since b~ ! J01Ded m.~. <Jllc4~iTQn5 . on . U1o~e occasions was on
Jr.• ~·red strong. ' . 'iii< «ll"'odment -@ will be •t-ta<liecl to the foreign riillllaiy sales bill
-:-would u~ the congresaional power
over the purse to deny ?&on any monty
for "retalnlng United State~ ground
'forces in CambocHa .'" · ·
Th,e. amendmeot. was ·offered 'ntursday
tiy .~., FraJ!)t Olurch (IHd~). •nd
John ~. {;oop<\'',(ft.K,y.), Senate
~'\'!· •lfllPPO.~' by . ll'!"'ollcan
Because the mUkary sales bUI would
not take effect untU July 1, the amend·
ment would not aflect the Cambodian
operation between now and then. And
Serlate aides aak! the word "retaining"
might give the Presid~ tome leeway
to conUnue the operations for a few
weks into July.
Cburd! and Cooper said the bill would
St; Louis Teamsters Vote
To End Trucking Walkout
It was not known whether the White
House would endone it. A similar pro-
posal by Church and Cooper last year
to deny funds for U.S;--ground combat
troops in Laos and Thailand wa:s backed
by the White House and it palN9d
overwhelmin&ly.
* * * McGovern Asks
Free TV Time
For 'Peace Bill' a<::t;·li~"-s b·eCQme-a big barn. the nefici. to keep massive prop~gand~
~ r' · · 1
· e '' ·· · . ,p're'¥_ in :t:h~.-_fo~ of antiwar--8y Uaited Prtss Jnttrn1Uoa1l JonnR.eaan.-qreedthatif~drlven WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. George
i · .,,, ...... .. d<tnonstr~Uons .. Qll .. the currel\I :~<!-'SERIOUS MISTAKES' A 37' old lk t hi h Jy-~ --··--•to work, all lltlgatlon pending McGovern (l>S.D.), said today he had ".Jickie ~s_-~e<::~·-__ roinimaticmJn~the ~\lni~d States to force "\Jay wa ou w c para ¥-CU fll'wu-nw:
tr Jigm,. o.4rby.,. ~.J: ... was ,a,rr,ested .. , ..-.a.J.mjJa~C\J.~ wi~hctra~aJ of. v.s. troops Dtmocrat-f'farriman · the ftucklni -indUstry in the St. Louis againlt Lane and the urtton would be asked for television time to drum up
in (ltica, N.Y., for tbt posses~1on ·of· ft-OM Vietnam~" Hoom:testifled. . ai-ea tectin!Cally has ended following a . stoPJ)td. Trucking firmJ bad filed lliits support for an amendment desianed to
'8tdangerous weapops.,. "'.""' !U;s ~Ol· ~ Hoover said, "The~~ ¥,ant~~ P~·. Is' rael: Patrols vote by a margin of almost two to totaltng ntiillons of dollars in damages force an end to the war in Indochina
n
edlion of swit5:hbladt }irµyes )Vhictt. ly, a bl'~ extremat .. 7dt1. A111zat1on,·etm-' " one by Teamattrs Local 600 to return against the local. within 13 months.
e'was showin.& ~t a--gµn ithow. P<¢ .. slstlf)g fur'l.he most 1':M. of hoodlum-type to wi>rk. At least 800,000 persons across the McGovern and nine other Senate and 1c~said t?!~ wiapO?lS '\vett-+onfis-l '~'f'ev0ilitfmilfles, con~e~. to be rrio_~t H, 'b R ide However, there were indications that nation have been idled by the trucking House members said .they winted free ~ ed. from the New York State active and dangeroUA":from an inttrASI ' .. ·it y a. rs \Valkout. time ,on the three major networks for 'J. Collktqrs Invll8ti~al. Guu t"' •. :~R.Otnt. 4~ .Jaw enforctm.ent a baCk-to-work order may not be fully nati onwide broadcasts. If turned down
6 where tl!'ey wok or\.<lilpl~~-...,agtrte -.1tmigbQut~'·country . are . Inside LeballOl' compiled with by the Teamsten. In by the networks, they said they were • .. .• , ; : -·. : .• WfOl\lly: accused or l\)ta~s..,rnent by m:3JIY " other parts of the coilntry, truck driven! La.hoI.;leS Garn· prepared to raise money for the !· 11 ·· · ' . · ~ -• . --wen.mreiitiontd but !baiQformed . \'.DlCtS ' contlnutd to atly off their jobs, _ .1. telecasts. !; 'ill Smith of 1..o·DdOn has success· · 'echOing ,,outright ua:t'~ated ~y tJ:ie By United Preis lntern~_Uon.al The St. Loui! vote waa taken Thursday McGovern said he had asked for frtt
fully petitioned to .ch~g~ ~s J'aP, ._lawless. .t;:'j • Arab. gnerrllias operating in Lebanon at the OnPn-alr Munic"'al Opera in In Bn'tam' v· ote time from NBC for Tuesday and W!)Uld !lame which he said was bnnging .1 .. -r¥•• 't" make similar requests of CBS and ABC. hi1fl ~ther p.eoPl.e's,.maµ, .Sffl p~oni:,~, ~ .. . :· .. · fired today on two Inaell army patrols, subw"ban Fore1t Park, Mo .• where 2,689 The amendment would prohibit the
•:.all!;., . He is ilow."Blll Brl~n·' ·~rruth .... FCC Cut~_o .. ·_.n. ack .wounding six .&Oldiers:, a mi Ii t 8 r y TeamsU.ra voted in favor of ending the LONDON (UPI) -Prime" Minister expenditure of funds for the war in ~ T ··fl SJ>Qkesm.an said in Tel Aviv. He said strike and 1,•75 wm aaainst. Harold Wllion's Labor party rac'ked up Vietnam and Laos after June 30, 197J.
Uie · Israelis ~turned the fi re in the Donald Lant, President of I.oca1 600, substantial gains in Thursday's Im. round It would prohibit use of funds for
•' •UP _pictures of film .,stars N~*'""'rk 'Shows Shar.p clashes:. ·.-. said the balloting has been rttltitd by of loCal government voting before Bri· Cambodia 30 days after it became law. ryn 'Grayson and -Eltber Wit---·· 16-1+-W"'* ~ , .. taln's iinpending general elections. McGovern said he was uncertain when
requested !6 year& a&O by • .. ,. ~ . The a~tacks cilll!«: desf!ile a wamiilg the · St. Lou!-5 Board of Elect.ion Com-Political experts said t~ gains did or how he would introduce the amend·
!boy David Cl1rit9t •rrived. -1 -P"'me· 'Jinn' e from the Jsrael1 chief of sl-aff th.at Beirut m.!.Uloners. No word waa given by local not appear sufficiently declslve to en-ment.
week in Birmingha~.Eng~ .... ~ .. -~ .:·:~-. and Amman ,mu1t ·curb such guerrilla oUiciai1lwhenaback·~workorderwould courage ·Wilson to dissoll'e Parliament Democratic National Chairma n
la~. Clarke, now 31, recetved the · .... ' · · attaeb or face Ul& consequences. be Issue:d tn St. Louis. now and hold the election in June. Lawrence F. O'Brien also asked for
pb1tographs.,in an.~nvelope .port· WASH~G~<;lN <UJ'!l-: The Federal .4 higti Israeli military source reported The result of the vote drew a mixed The· voting was for loc~I councils in free television lime for a policy speech
maFked Culver "Cify, HollyWood, · ~unlCalioRs C~~1on has ruled_ Th"rsday the mierrillu had *"eatly in· reaction. from truck drivers. Some 342 towns and cities and 82 other urban on the "Nixon administraton's escalation 1'1'°'1: 8 195i... that the maximum ar:nount of netv.:ork ,. e.. •· cheered while other& remained angry. areas of England and Wales. Despite of the Vietnam war into Cambodia."
.i ~r--'· _ .: "' , ... -_-. prpgryiis..canle(l.~,,,QS\ t.elevision s~~: creaS:f(t activities in Israel in tecent One member aaid, "It's far from set-the Labor gains, the Conservatives still The senators .and House members sup-~ .,, --· "'''."W'" ~aos ·musi.,.be...11µ1it.~1tJ? three hours dilys in an apparent effort to disrupt tied." Another said, "lt'U take the N·a-kept~controlovermostlargerclties. portingMcGovern'sainendmentincludM ~tl~"~t:a:rttntin'tbtJaD of next year... .Jsraeli _celebfattons 'beginning MondaY · al Guard to et b k" Unofficial final results showed Labor Sens. Harold Hughes (D-Jowa), Gaylord : i~fe,.u•, t'~·ugh Interior (police) The cci~ V'otea .. S.-2 Thui'sday of the 22pd anniversary o( Israel's in-t.i~Hell no," ~ a':theS:-Teamster. "I had scnred net gains of 443 council Nelson (D-Wis. ). Mark O. Hatfield CR· ~n.isUr . Armando Arl6Ii. 1011s ·u,. ·ni.al<e the 'rt5t:!b'uon . effective Sept. P,ependThe enc1.e. . k w~·t go back because I dOn't want seats and the Conservatives suffered Ore.). and Charles E. G«ideU (R~.Y.),
pit.f1tr't welcome in Pirii-J, If«l, .. "'",h Would ' .. limit . commercial ni1.itary spo esman said ln the my head split." net lo6Ses of 327. The remainder of and Reps. Donald M. Fraser <D-Minn.),
long ·a.s they don't tq.Q}£ U.kt ~ te\~"sta~IOiiSjn.~' fQp 50 markets first incident this morning four Israeli The approved St. Louia proposal -t~e Laborite gai11s came at the expense Paul N. McCloskey Jr. IR-Calif.), John
ppies-, He said Friday tho:t Tt· -to three hours 6f ne"'°rk fare between soldiers were wounded near Metulla In whleh hAd been worked out in the of independents, liberals and other Conyers Jr. rD-Mich.), Daniel E. Button
j ,, i. · • I · · :l.he· Prttne-tfnie ~hourf-of ;7. -and ll P·tn·• the UjJpe.r Galli~ and two more this chambers of U.S. Dlltrict Court Judge ·miscellaneous candidates. ( R·N. Y.), and Abner J. Mik:va (0.111.). w ts o.t..a..JO.QJ'..µ,,.ft_IB.Rlf f?.'flltT·' "'~.r-.:::::;,,,_:;-:::, ·=-.~ ... -_afte:~OOOD in the Biranit ~eii1Jn 0( lb~.··=::.:==..:..::...:.;:.:..:::.;....:.-'..-'.....::...._~-------------------------eiice · m lfovtmer -"f'ft .... "ltrco · u ---" w G 11 1·
wtTI! wrong. ite said' he · CoUld Nelwork reacUon wss swift in criticiz· estern 8 i ee.
h t "B t Ing the l'lii'"" as likely t .. result in Israeli solcUers in addition reported not perm.it sue an even , !" .. "& MJ: • • of E ypti
d t -r qual"y vlew1'ng because of the suJ'l)l1SJog a group I an com~ l am. not going to eon.y en 111 "'"''" '" ..:.1-··•-"-d --• th s I limited rnources of local . Qetwork sta· mairl.Nll "1ru u.. '"~ e uez cana
(to Peru) of ~~~e who. come -. .. """• '" ~uc••·.pro1ramff·' . and were plant.Ing nunes "" tN.. 14c.•~L with enouQ,._, dOUM•t"a*' · art ... ~ .,........ ~ ' Id 1be commandos """""d to' h ~ clean and ,,,..u.::.t.~ ~.f.!:..:.!'~"'---'"' ~ -· · TM °"W•,.-8rQl~ting Sy!llem · 8 e. were Ill ave v ·-~9!"'-~~ ·_.~,~ ' :...._.:.&.:..1i1..e r..-...--, fled back across the waterway dUring R•!llllD=,;·m~1111····llflll•o(.t' .... , '""'""' "'""'"~ '. ·~.-a. barr • . •. < • ' . l!et116<1ti front ~'.c. ~:I "'' u· '"''"··• .~ Iii~· 'tt '· • • ·' · m ttie field oc:newa and_pubUc !~ae w ... i-u= went aftir, 11.J>Uan
-· • ~s progr·amniing · · -runs on the west bank of the cana l
Ch1rllt Mayars,, of NorthD~. . ~ ~~ionel Br~casting Company, in a 15--minute Strike UUs mornln&, Tel
Enl!land,._happlly married with •ternitng the ruling "mlsguided," nid Avtv Aid, and all returned aalely. t~ sons~ .got ~ cou.rt lett~r re-the .commisalan bad not given all sid~s ~Y ordermg bun to P~Y ~ony a hill blaring ·and called f·o r
t!' • won:ian be bad never~tn~t. ~e recOnsidetailOO u 1he .pl'tlpQla.J. J hi Le } ' l~ said he ha~ de>e~ Jiis wife . TliO :Aiiietrean Broabting ~ 0 eSS Ve S
3,4 her two children 'Ail would . Miii!> ·uie<ling fMt it saw no nefd· !\a"' to pay her $21.e!);a.W•ek. "U to,;'the" JYlbig J.jd lt cciuld adaix tO •·· J· ; ~l"' " ' G ._ -
I .. 't know my busballlt<&o weU~~t:liid aillltl~i'lrO!!J it, ..... ,~·:· B, ·'l:?. _eep. alll
tb1 letter could have lS'tOken our . . . N~ • -· ~ ~-• • •• ,.: ....... • _ •
m : ·age,:• said May~tl':.r!efl wile.~ .., , ~: ~ · · ... ~: .. __ -,. . ... ; . WM~~!..W) -_,1"-.J1umber
:, · 1; ~~: ~~~Yn:,1~s~~~: )Jto.~Ji ·F~les._1._ir~!h::;;'~~ ~· !~~·~
~0
1 •wrong~~~ ),::;. _ Ha;'·ciitt~if'-$38,oow?::~~~f,~~~·;,...~:;;! · . =· .. -..~.o 'UbOrf...,.,thegovemment·aaidtoday. ~ lf"rt Wal~: :,.of~ay~t~~·~. SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Edmund G. "Employme.nt gains have come to. a
f!ld,,. expected'.::O .. . t ~'jail t".: ~. Jr. bas raised $38,408 , for his virtual standstill . and unemployment 1n· ti~ to do -!_ • ., ., ig_,T":'~e fo.r ~ .. ~for tbe Democratic nomination cttased substantially," said the Labor ~ell fo~ ,11~ · ... 'fl er.· 21, __ ~:,J;.~..state. according to a Department's chief employment analyst. poUtlcal &Cl · ' . ue: ,, . -' ' ' l~ today. Howard Stambler.
UnJ/ersity, 1'&s:1m:I _ · entlt;.' · .. '.~4if''S~®,i'B.."Sullivan said "We've .had no gain in employment
ill ~onnectioa~~ttiy . Ul"•di84r-~ ~i~.~~f!ril·,Cl~ate to Comply since December,''. while the total . of
dietj. and put;Jilnit;j~~: ... bon)l,;;.c'WJl!j:.·~ ..... lii!·~ conti',Jbut!onr. uneJ11ployodla bbul clim1dbed by l.t million ~"1'er is runn g ior LOe ocra· reports from contfnOefs 10l' ml]or o • per!Oll!, s m er sa •
tic nomination for Tippecanoo fices. He said the filing period was The four-month increase in unemploy.
C.ty Sheriff in today 's election. today through ne1t Wednesday. ment was the steepest since early 1918,
' (
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I
! :. ( . r
" I r
Hail, :U:a~l 'to Bismarck .. .
But Most ~t"V.S. Basks Under Sunn,y Skies
Tet11peratures
Hll~ ltw Pre<.
~ 4
Blue Plate Specials
Prices reduced on lers and
" " n ,.
1J 53
" u .. .. " . M ~
· P}ytnouths in stock. 82 tempting
mooels. lmlilediate delivery.
~ Offer· ends May 31st!
------------
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1' •i
n " " " ti ,,
u " 60 4l .e.t ., .• u
" d ,, 41 ,ll
q "
IS '' n " " ,. ~ " ll S• " ~ ~ ~
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n " M " " " " .tfl ,lt IS ... M ,. " 11 14 n ~ ., .., .1. ,, ·" .. " ,, " t.11 .. " : :
Wllllt the Kit of Ille t lltO itdlltllY ... tl)illa t?tc. 1'lua.
mOrt Soullltoi OlllonUll!f bwOt ~ a.ii ""'"'
U11n 11 1-.y Umt. m RCtDt ~. t. ~ ol ltltse
llft~te .ie. llplQ:
U4 IO kmp ck ball
mu.,. our t.c~ hat; lftldl...it.we totll blbMl Cal·
ifoJ1d1 dtt.kn .,.c:ll1 prica 1-d• till. U out C\11 Wit
171iO*b.
With 1\i1 1ddU 1111muitio., )'out Clleyt!tr tad
rl)'lflOll!.h du.Ian IQ ... (Ill • Ol»fflOlllll ..tllnJ tl)ltl
'··MlllAI llR "-" ~ 1\9y'a out co -fnfJ ~••It"°'"' Tl111'1 •llY it Joi blly 1111• Chrysler or
1'1~ ~ MtJ l•udM.ySl11.,)'0lla..OOlllll
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s-... a bm6la lflfl a l11111!bJt. °'YllU N'tflJelt! Oc •
To1tl1I aa4C-r:yWl.pJ 0. a be.utifld Pl)'molllll llf'"
rK'lldaf Or I fanwtic Fury! 0n l ~ Salcllillll (Ir
l'W ol tli1 Olhtt !lllny iUic Ch""lfr Ind f'.b'aiOU~ .....
U )'CCI W&D.I a t..rpiQ ••• It Joa WUI to-1D.f1111.,.
Mt JOU.t CllrJ"1tr ... ~--r ... dlllct•tiJ
Bhlt Pltla Speioi&ll. You'l'l 11-t119 1'ho ttlftdl IO beollt
1!iJit now. Bu1 a MW Ch11tltr'cwP~ befM.Nq
3111. &lid ue.i )'Olltalt 10 •IMC delll
Get a lb Plate Spedlll from )U participating ClJrysJer and Plymoutll Dealer! .
COSTA MESA
Atlas Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc.
2929 Harbor Bo.ulevard
•
F"du· M11 8. 1970 D.lll v 'ILOY IS
Nixon Goes on TV Relued Cmnkt
Hopes to Calm Student Protests Army May Try 5 Gls
WASHINGTON (AP) -
\Vllh thousands of antiwar
protesten heading for a hur-
ricdJy called demonstratioo in
the nation's capitai, President
Nixon has moved to ease. the
crisis mountin~ over the use
of American troops in Cam-
bodia.
Nixon is expected to take
a coocillatory •JllllO'lcb to the
demonstrators, mosUy young
people, following the stance
he adopted Thursday when he
told several college a o d
uni versity presidents die ad-
ministration would s.:tftcn its
hostile tone toward t b e
The President scheduled a dissidenls.
news confere~ tonight at 7
p.m. {POT) -his first ria-
tionally televised session with
newsmen since Jan. 30 -on
the eve of a demonstration
here expected to draw tens
or thousands or protesters.
Even as the President
prepared fo r the news con-
rereoce al his ~ a r y I a nd
1nounLain retreat Thursday
night and today, demonstra-
tors were evident in Washing.
ton--on capitol Hill, near the
\Vhite House and on college
campuses.
A HoyHl FHti
Calls went out for the Satur4
day protest after Nixon an4
nounced a week ago that a
jolnt U.S . .south Vietnamese
attack had been mounted into
Cambodia.
Spurred by 'the deaths h1on-
day of four students when
Ohio N at i o n a I Guardsmen
opened fire on demonstrators
at Kent State University, pro-
tests have swept many college
campuses, often resulting in
violence and student strikes.
Leaders or the Saturday
demonstration have talked in
Princess J\1a rgaret is welcomed by Frank Sinatra
on her arrival at London's Royal Festival Hall . She
attended the first of two charity concerts given by
Sinatra to aid the National Society for the Preven4
tion of Cruelly to Children.
I
terms ol up to 3$.0GO -
for a protoat In LalqeUe
Square jWlt ~ the ltreet
from 1be \\'"bite H O u I e ,
although officla.ls say the
dissenters will not be allowed
that cloee. It was not. known
whether tile l'TeJ!cknt will bo
In w uhlngtoo during tile
demmstraUoo.
Other ttpO<U estlmale tile
crowd at cbie to 100,000
persom, posing a problem for
bolh government officials and
protest leaders planning steps
for controlling the
detnOMtration.
The rally leaders held crash t
training programs for
marshals to keep t he
demonstration within i t s
stated nonviolent goal, while
the Z,0001nan District of
Columbia NaUonal Guard was
being prepared along with
Washington poliet.
, U~IT ......... DEMONSTRATION A REAL DRAG
Police Remove GJrl. •t New Ywk ProtHt
There were indications U.S.
of'ficials were leaning toward
relying on local autborlty and
the National Guard available
in the Washington are a
without drawing paratroopers
and h1arlnet rrom other bases.
Officials said w ha t e v e r
military force is gathered pro-
bably will be kept as much
out ol sight as possible unless
troubles develop requiring its
use.
The touchiest p r o b I e m
revolves around the dispute
over the demonstration site.
Officials, saying the two-block
Lafayette Square is too close
to the White House for safety,
have ordered the park to be
cordoned off, creatin& a
demilitarized :rtln!·like area a
block north of -the exerutive
mansion.
Protest organizers had o(.
fered Thursday night to com-
promise, giving up t h e
lAfayette area in exchange
for the Ellipse south of the
White House. But the govem4
ment said th.is also was too
Close. and would be cordoned off. .... ,
Earlier, the Justice Depirt-
ment had offered use of the
Washington Monument
groonds EeVeral blocks from
the mansion, but t h e
demonstration leaders turned
down that site.
227 Cofleges Closed
As Protest Wilkus
By Th< ASSOCIATES"PRESS
Some 227 colleges a n d
universities were closed today
in the widening protest against
the war in Indochina and the
fatal shooting ol four stu~
at Kent State University.
Strikes a:id demonstrations
curtailed classes at nundrem
of others.
In Washington, the vanguard
ol tDousands of students u 4
peeled to participate in an
antiwar rally Saturday began
arriving from throughout the
country. .,
Most of the car.:.puses ft·
mained peaceful but violence
flared overnight at several
ichools.
At least four youtb.t at the
State University at Buffalo
lli·ere hit by btrdshot fired dur-
ing a poUCHtudent con-
frontation. It was not im-
mediat.ly determined -
fired the pellets.
'The incident came as about
fj() city police and 400 studenta
clashed in a teer gas and
' J 1 • ..
rock-throwing melee. 1"" ol
the injured st11dents were
treated at a rnakeshl!t ui-
firmary.
National Gu&rmmen 1 n
Carbondale, IU ., hurled tear
1as a.nd advanced with fixed
bayonets to rout large bands
of. students at Southern Illinois
University. .
'Ibey scatie:ed some 300
derl'lmstrator• fnm t h e
I llinoLs Central R& I I r o a d
tracks v•here they had delayed
the Panama Limited
streamliner, New OrJeam..
bound from Chicago, for SO
minutes.
The Oeeing students smash-
ed dozens ol &tore windows
.., they ran. They were the
nucleus of some 1,200 ~
testers who earlier. sat dOwn
in the hrbmiecli.onrof U.S. 51
and Illinois JS in the downtown
l<Cllon.
Dissident students at the
University ol W"J!amln'clasb-
ed. with Madison polk:e for
the fourth consecutive night.
PLE! l>JERENG, Vietnam
(AP) -The Anny said todi,y
It II conalderlni coor1.in1rtlal
proceedlncs •Sainst f I v e
Amen:ln aoldlers wllo refused
to make i combat assault
Into CunbodJL
'nle five Gia are members
of the 3r<l Baltalion, Ith Inf•n-
try, 4th Division, an outfit
thlt encountered he a v y
remtance as It wu flown
into a Cambodian landin& zone
surrounded by well
camoufiaged enemy posltionJ
two daya ago.
Five helk:opters were down-
ed by enemy fire, a company
o:>mmander was killed on the
ground and four JOldien were
wounded. ~Other troop.earrylng
hellcoplen were forced back
by .the lnlenff fin!.
Informed oour<es 11ld the
five men balked as they were
about to board hellcoplers for
an assault Into the 1ame Ian-
dlng zone the ne1t day.
* * * Buying Time
In C(l.mbodia
NEW YORK (UPI) -Herb
Klein says President Nixon'•
order ol U.S. troops Into Cam-
bodia ls not <Se.igned to kill
enemy soldifrs eo much u
it is to wJpe out pennanent
positions and important Wlr'
materlels.
Klein abo said the JnOYt
waa designed to buy the U.S.
time to Jncrtase South viet-
namt.!< atrenglh, to .........,
the pace of peace talks tn
Paris, and to facilitate the
withdrawal of American
troops from Vietnam.
The PresJdent'1 com·
munlcaUons director t a l d
'Ibursday he rtalized the Viet
Cong would m.urn to the area
once the Am<ricans had left,
OOt that was the reuon for
de s truct i on of the
emplacenenu and equipment,
Klein ezplalned.
KJeln made hla remarks
Thursdy night on ABC-TV'•
"Dick Cavett Show."
DISCRIMINATING
INVESTORS
AT
Look For:
Stability and Availabil!ty of Principal. Max-
imum Dependable Earnings. Ease of Trans-
actions.
And Find:
Accounts Insured to $20,000.00 Reserves
sufficient to assure continuance of maxi-
mum permissible earnings. A location as
close as your mail box.
1000 FAIR OAKS AVENUE
SOUTH PASADENA, CAUF. 91030
Area Code 213
799-41.43
5%
Current An111 I
Pass look Rite
Area Code 213
682-1131
··~,... •• ,. .•.. ' •·•-..v·••••••A-.. .. Y•.-•••••.,•••••-..•••••• .. •••A•• ............. -.. •.• ,...~.,.,.'"""'"~~~ :'! ~ ~~~~~;~:;~~:l:~:~~~~~~:~;:j:~;:;:~:~:~:::::;:;:;:j:;:;:~:i:j:~;~~:j:~:~;~~~~~:~::=:;~:;:;:j;~~::~:;~:;:;:;:;:~;:i:;~:~:::~::;~;:*::-<.::~l$;W.d:::l-:::~r::.
f l Statement of Condition 1# in · December 31, 1969. ?'
.,.z. ASSETS .,<.,· D W ~:~:~:~ First Liens on Real Estate ••••••••• , ••••••••••.••• $63, 792,542.7B ;:::~:~
''''''' Real Estate Owned............................. 5,591.93 '''''''
Estate ••.•.....•..••••••••••••.. ~ ..•.•••••••••• 134,203.01
Stock in F.H.L.B.............. •• •• • • • • • • • • •• • • • • 715,000.00
U.S. Government Bonds ......................... 3,498,707.88
Other Investment Securities.~.,................. 789,714.41
Cash on Hand and in Banks ••.•••••••.• ~·.·~·..... . 570,354.47 <?ffi~ Building, Lan~ and Equipment-Less Depre·
c1at1on, ••.••..••••.•••..••........••...•....•••. l ,427,964.35
Secondary Reserve for Fede~al Savings and ·Loan
Jnsurance Corporation, ...................... ·••••• 734,588.70
Other Assets., ........ ,.......................... . 507.88
Total .................................... •$7116;69,175.33
LIABILITIES . .
Savings A<count. ............................... $60,593 893.S6
Advances from F.H.L.B...... •• . • • • • • • • • • . • • • • . • • 3,o48:ooo.oo
Other Borrowed Money.......................... • NONE
loans in Process. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 236,972.50 ~:~:~! Other LiabiJities.. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 177 ,915.51 :~:..% =·=·~-= I>efen-ed Income................................ 7,388.32 w·'.~~-· ·~:;: S ifi n----· '7 9 '" '5 '· .?J:.i.: -=i_pec c ~ves • •••••• • •••••••• •., •• , ••• • • • •. • ,.."J'V.• :::~-.> ~* General Reserves •••••• ··•••••••·••••••••••••••• . 6,146,036.12 f~ *= Re8erve for Contingencies........................ 191,259.00 .;.~~ ~~ Surplus........................................ 1,260,469.87 m
~~~~ Total ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $71,669,175.33 ™
;,,,,:. MEMBER dl @i FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK SYSTEM 0,
:#! MEMBER FEDERAL SA VINOS AND d"i l«:$:~:::~=·,··;~:;:~w=:::::~~fel.~m=$.~aey.~31.Q.~~~~~ ....... ·'! .. <:::-'.-.;~~:w.::0:« •• :.~:·:-:..:=:::.:,.;.;.;.:;;.-;.~::.-x:<r.:: .... .-.~........,, ••. ;;~;:>'~":OOW.~:-.;o;·x~~'":::t·.· .-."'
I
Senior olflc<n were 11111ble on l!Ued ·comp In tile Central
to ""'vlnce the mtn to cball$• HJtiNonds 1*r the Combodllll
their mlndl. border.
"You know how Jt '8," one Ont of. tht men kioked up
officer aald llttt. "It ,.U , fnllll 111• -k, sru-and time to io lbto action, and Oaahed the •;y" for ~
llOml kids (et ocared, and 11111 wilh two llnprs u lliC
aiddenly )'OU have • bunch newanan waa escorted out ol
of IUY• WM dalm they are the camp.
COs" -ClO!lldtntloUI ob-ip;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; jecton.
A tlh Dlvlalon opcil<lllDU,
Capt. Bernard F. MllI<ll,
mused to Identity the five
men until eomplttion of 111
Article 32 lnveeUgatklll, the
military equivalent ol a arand
jury proceeding.
PUT SOME
CLOTHES ON
MOTHER
The Anny prevented I
corrupondent f r om ~
tervlewin& the men Frld1y,
although one ol them bad ""1t THJNI
word he wanted to "tell his
stcry to Lhe world."
"You have no business ln
here, and I don't want you
talking to my men," 1 bat·
lal1on staff officer Aid Iller
the men Wert localed dlgglng
trenches and stringlng barbed w.tdlff ,.... " ...........
wire at the battalkin's rear
headqulrt<n at Piel Djereng, -........
---DeflCious DYln-Ready ---.
~J .. SPECIAL
Boneless Cornish Game Hens
stuffed with apple•auce and llmonds
or rice and mushrooms
·98C -•
Special Pack 6 Hens To A lox
. 89'-. ----····---·,· P9cltaft' .......... ....,... with tMI .. -
Fresh Ranch Eggs ••• 49i doz.
Fresh Mlllhrooms
oncl
Directors
... 59i 1/z lb.
',
I
I
------. ·-·------------·--c-c-c-------------------------------------------------------
-,
• • Anti-school Campaign
At a Laguna Beach gathering just after the City
Council electron, someone suggest ed, "Let'6 start work-
ing on the schools now!"
The school critlcls1n campaign, sr,earheadtd by
newly elected councilman Edward Lorr, n his other role
as president of the Taxpayers' Association, was react! ..
vated with a lengthy attack on administrative costs,
notably salaries.
••
•
The antl-school forces ignored an invitation lo set
up a committee, as the Chamber of Gommerce has done,
lo meet with U1e school board and stall to discuss school
finances. Instead, they turned out this week to confront
trustees with their complaints.
· It seems ralher peculiar to approach the trustees.
elected to Bdmini~er the schools in accordance with the
wishes or the majority. as if they were enga'ed tn some
sort or collective con spiracy against the citizens who
put th em in office.
Since the Taxpayers' Association has a ssumed a
very vocal role on school issues, it would be of interest
If son1eone could clarify its identity as to officers, direc-
tors, membership and meeting times. At this point it
seems to have too Utue identity beyond its letterhead
and the person of its current president.
Science of t he F uture
The Marine Science Institute lo be located at Dana
Point Harbor was launched last weekend with proud
words to dream on and even a spanking new blue and
white pennant to fly above it.
Hundreds ol thousands of student! are expected to
use Ute planned $31h million facility in the years ahead,
learning marine science at about the spot where Rich·
ard Henry Dana strode ashore 100 years ago.
As officials pointed out at the dedication, the oceans
and the marine scientists who understand them may be-
come indispensable to mankind in 50 or 100 years as
land masses are used up by mankind and bis recreation.
Americans alone last year consumed 5.4 billion pounds
oC food from the see.
'Ibe oc~ans will 1upply food, chemicals and ra\V
W oodsheds
Are Difficult
To Find Now
-----; °""',.~ ~~I
1'f•yabw-ft· .,
,. ,j w~.u~~.::'--'-"j
One of the advantages or being a
parent today is tJiaL lbert 11 more llclen-
llfic ilformalioD available on early
cblldbood development tho ever brJore
l!J history. The young mother who reads
should be able to approach her first
born ·with the wisdom and reluation
you !ormerJ1liM to llift !Iv• chtldren
1o acquire:.
f\tany theories about children.have: held
~way at one: time or another. Firal,
there is the tlleO-
loglcal belief which
tells us that babJts
come to us full of
Original Sin. They
are inhabited by
nature: with wills
that have to be brok·
en, 90 that the: task
of bringing up a
clllld is to u:erclse
or subd ue the devil
within him. We
don't quite succeed!
Thtn there is a leu theological idea
abo\l children -that they are formleas
clay. They jUJt aren't anything at all
urttil We shape them in some: way or
other by the molding we give them-by
wise coonsel and proper restralnt.1 and
advict, and so on. Md if you don't
keep al it con.stanUy, they &o out or
a;baP'.
UNDER THE IMPACI of peychological
behaviorism there arose still another
noUCE that the basic Idell in bringing
up children is coadltioning-that the child
should be favOf'ably condlUoned to good
hablla alld against bad bablb, and .thll
the conditioning must be started very
early. This body of doctrine led to the
fashion which raged son1e 30 or more
yiars ago of extremely early Wilet
U.lolng an d rigid scheduling. Babic.! wi>uld cry their hearts out, but if, ac-
cording 1o the schedule, i~ waSJ1'l time
to f~ them, you had to let them cry.
'Jbe cliket end dislik es which the child
was to carry through life were fed
IQto him u if he were being programmed
Uke a computer.
Each of these theories represents the
dfort of people lo deve lop U1eir children
according to the models of human nature
whidl they have inside their beads. But
eech of them can also be described
• an activist theory, in the sense that
tbe acUve: doing of somethina to the
child is felt to be necessary If the child
ii to grow up ,iDto an acceptable clUzen
and lo(>l)'er.
Quotes
trrtng Jlo~. prortator or English •t
Ge City Univer1lty of New York and
Mlt« of Dl1HDt, • socialist journal: •-n. life of the pollUcal tenorl!t ls
rwerwhelmed by loneliness, not merely
becaute ht ca1 no longer tnut com·
pletely friend or cxnnrado, but because
he Cllll hbNe1f off from all movements
and rommunHles i1 whlch choices can
llie ftlgbed.
••Stlkln1 everything on lhe act, he
bled! oU all that comes before It 1nd
all that comeJ afttr. Dec.ldlng •bom
to 1mJte, he rtplacts Cod. ChOOllng
whom to punish, ho replaces tht jUltlce
(be It good "' bad) or 50Cidy,
"And 1inco tbe conflicts ol eod•l
cla11e11 mWit be beat to his will, be
replaces l'llstory, too. The terrori.&t ctfio
rlf!s a moral burden only aalnt:I or f1uU~ would undutake -worat of
all, fanatlca ml1Lakln1 tbtmtelvts for
Alnts."
Dea r
Gloomy
Gw :
I'm tired or uninformed nltplcke1'5
who try to divide Lagunans and
bring dl!harmooy by plcklng on
our fine: school system and those
who l'IUl it.
-E.W. L.
"" ,...,. r9"llnl ......... .itwt. ...
W'tlr ......... _. ..........
raw .... ,_ .. fl ...... , •n. Dll" Plllt.
llY LATE BELOVED mother.in-law
was certainly an activist in thll aeue.
She c:ould never talk ta htr grandchlldun
without somehow 1nculcating a leuoD
of 30me kind. She wu unfailingly ~
structive, as. if ahe feared that if you
let them do 10methln1 unmamterly or
naughty ooce, they WGUld continue to
do it for the rest of their lives.
Sometlmts ln tbe oplrtt of plly I
would violate good manners. I amultd
my children very much once by taking
a great mound of jello ud slurping
it dOWll in ont slurp. The childreo were
enonnow:ly impressed with father for
being able to do this. But the example
l was setting them worried my mother·
~law very much. She kept aaylng, "Sup.
.,... tbe chlldru do that ot the St,
Francia hotel!" I said, "Good 1osh,
they've got more tell9t than that!"
This idea that you always have: to
be selllng 111 eumple or laylag down
a rule is a very burdemome way of
looking at commUDicaUoa with children.
NEWER THEORIES of child rearing,
mistakenly referred to as ••permissive,"
are 1n part a reaction against acUvist
theories and in part are the re.suit of
serious scienWlc research. Pioneers ift
the study of child development have
tried in various ways tO determine the
natural laws of childhood growth, aaklag
quesUont Uke: When do lhey wlke7
Wlu:!n do they · sleep? Eat? Cry? At
what age do they sit up ? At what
age do they walk? When do they start
piling up blocks. working puules? When
do they start playing cooperatively with
other children?
There were also experimeats in which
Investigators put dishes in front of little
cblldren, fruit a nd sweetJ aod ground
meat and all sorts of lhing3, and they
let the children choose for themselvt1
\\'llhout trying to decide \\'hat was good
for them. The in vestigators found that
instead of anarchy aPKI indigestion and
autocratic infants, there resulted healthy,
happy babies with a surprisiRgly orderly
pattern of needs and a kind of intern1l
~hedule of their own, a patt1m that
could be studied and described.
AND HOW DO CIDLDREN deve lop
11 moral sen~. a sense or res potSibilily?
There are m,any studies such as Dorothy
UarUth's "New Ways in Diaclpllne" and
Fritz Redl and David Wlneman's "Con..
trols from \\'!thin. 11
l am more than a lilUe concerned
about the cumnt attack• o n •·puml!slvt1eas" which is blamed as
a root cause of student unrest ~nd
violence. ~tany people wrJte 1Dd talk
as il then were only two altematlves,
"permiulvene.Q" o" the one hand and
rigid external discipline on the other.
Actually the a dv oca te s of
"permisslvtntss'• as pop u I 1 r I y un·
clersWOd will find Utile to support lhelr
Yiewl tn the writings ol BenJ•mln Spock,
Arnold Gtsell and France, J111:, or Bruno
Bet\IJhelm. Whereas the advocate of
tht old-fashioned ruor-strop and wood-
l'lhtd are whoppln' 11.nd hollL'rln' all over
the place. 1t's riiffic;ull lheae <1ay1,
ho'i"ever , to find either razor-atrop.i or
W<>Odsbeds.
By S. t. Jf1y1ka•a
Pmldql
!111 l'ranc1aco State Collep
materials ol many lypo1. The ranks ol marine sclenti1b
are still relatively Wn. II ii a IC!ence of the llllun, •
vital science, with macb Wool needed.
It seems llWnr thal the lnsUlute will be located In
the Capistrano Uliilied School Di1tr1cl whore It was
c011Ce!ved and given lnlUal tmj>ftu1. II should prove •
ltne lralnlng laclllly for our bright llllun marine lcl111>-
tists.
From Gloom t o Joy
Throughout the recent elecUoo campaign, hotel ond
motel operators, rea1ton and other bu1in111 people J.n..
sisted !hat the "transient" problem was npldly destroy.
ing buslneH tn Laguna B .. ch.
Tbe story was that visitors were taking one look at
the long·halrs and checking out, promlalng never lo
.return. Former 0 regu1ars" were being frightened awt,y
by publicity about ''the problem." Potentlal residents
were !cared to buy houses and the real estate market
was sagging.
But behold, exacUy two weeks alter election day,
and the victory of the 11Jet'1 restore Laguna's image"
state, prominent figures in the business, hotel and real
estate fields were on their feet at a Chamber of Com·
merce meeting witb joyful tidings. While other tourist
areas are complaining of a· slump, things are just fine
in Laguna1 thanks to successfuf promotion, we were
lold.
Bed tax revenue from the holels and motels is !Oar·
tng and real estate has just enjoyed a record month of
sales. Since the new City Council was barely in or-flee. it's
hardly conceivable their magic could have worked that
fast.
But the chamber \Vas on the brink of putting in its
request for next year's city allocation for advertising
and promotion ($42,500 last year, $36,500 this year).
The apparently confiictin' appraisa.Js of the com·
inunity's economy raise an lDtportant question: Just
how are we doing, really?
'77iOt taka c:are of the pl'ellB, 11tudent zmrest, Michigan University;Y ale,
Dr. Spoc/t. permillaive mit1dk class parents, ministers and tlie-Naliorud 1
Qiun&il of CllMTche&_ What'11 ~ sckdvJe for tomorrow'!'
s
Interpreting Yarborough'• Def eat i ii T exas
A New Political Base for Nixon?
WASHINGTON -Shudders ran down
the pollUcally aen&Jtlve spines of a hair
dozen 1enator1 up for reelection this
y9r with the defeat for renomlnaUon
of llbera1 Democratic Senator Ralph w.
Yarborough in Texas.
It was a fair and square defeat or
a thz'ee-term DemocraUc senator who
had aligntd hlmsell with the ..,, polities,
and Texas may move on to implement
further its judgment on modem Umu
by eloding the Republican nomin<e, Rep.
George Bush.
AJ between Bwd!. and the Democratic
nomlnte wbo dtfeat.d Yarborough,
Conner Rep. Lloyd Benblen, Jr., there
is not much ideologic1I choice. Both
would have been ca!Jed moderately pro-
~lve a few yean a10 and shoo.Id
be called that now becaue tbty lland
agalnst the retrogreulve element. who
condone or ex.cult violence and disorder
whether In the D&IDe ct the new politics
or the old.
IN ANOO'HEK STATE another senator
finds himself in aPJl'OXimately the same
poaltion as Yarboroogh. Stn. Albert Gore
of Tenne!See, foe of the Vietnam War,
foe of Carswell and Haynsworth, and
friend ct the new politics, ii in trouble
in the state where tbe old priorities
otlll rank high.
But this Is not confined to the South.
In the North I.here are Dtmocrata v.·bo
must mealUT't the Texu resultl ir only
for the reason that Yarborough'• hard
core of 1Upport, ethnic group!!I and
organized Jabot, did not put themselves
out to lend him )>let to tl1' Senato.
That is of inteteJt to Sen. Harrilon
Williams in New Jel"lty, to Philip A.
Hart in ?ttichigan, Vance Hartke in In.
cllana, Joeeph Montoya in New Melico,
Jooepb Tydlogs In Maryland, William
Promtlte in WLsconain, to name some
who are doing the new th1ag on th e
basis of oid political alignments which
may be crumblln1.
'!be doclrlne lo tile Nixaa ad-
ministration is that the: old alignments
have crumbled and that thls accounted
for the election la.st year of Republican
governors in New Jeney and Virginia.
Even more than latt year President
Nixon is drawing a hard line between
hli'nself and all the manifestatiOM of
now thought In potltics.
HE HAS 11\IPROVED .evory op-
portunity to emphasize the cllfftrence
between himself and the protesten. He
.has unleashed. as the saying goes, Vice
President Agnew to articulate i n
language wllh a high shock content the
views of thole who are deemed to be
the new majority -thole, it baa been
written, who feel no identity with the
youth culture, the hippie culture, the
drug culture, black or white racism, ram-
pant sex, pennissiveness and condoned
racial and political violence.
These have been called by one of
Nixon's yoW'lg geniuses in sociopolitics
"the great, ordinary Lawrence Welkish
miss of Americarn from 1t1alne to
H1v.·ail." 'ntose not familiar with the
state rl. the television art may not knO\v
that crcltestra leader Welk, th e king
of Squansville, is now being given a
hard run by Mitch Miller. Bui, in any
case, the new majority doctrine has
it that P.liddle America is fed up o,yil:h
establilhmeot liberalism, phony rtvOlu·
tiooaries and freaky behavior and is
creating a southern-western-suburban·
blue collar polltlcal base for Presiden t
Nixon where only before were the smugly
utiafied, well-to-do devotee;, of the status
quo •. ...
THE TEXAS RESULTS certainly can
be Interpreted that way. Thought wil l
hive to be gtvm to the concept that
the new majority is rooted in the
Midwest and the prosperous corridors
of Florida, Texas, Arizona and California .
The blue collar part of the new majority
ls a little harder to comprehend but
perhaps it is true that what used to
be called the while backlash has now
become much more than merely a fringe
reaction, and has outgrown George
Wallace.
Whatever the explanation, ''arborough
failed to carry one large labor dominated
county in Te:ws but that niay not be
typical <1f the v.·hole country. After all,
in the closing weeks of the last presiden·
tial campaign organized labor nearly
succeeded in defeating Nixon. and so
it cannot be proved that the old liberal·
labor-ethnic coalition of the Democrats
has completely fallen apart.
THERE \\'ERE S0:\1 E signs th al the
coalition was pulling back toge ther again
on the Carswell and Haynsworth nomina-
tions to the Supreme Court. and so
it was as far as the leaders were con·
cerned.
But the Texas results raise the qucstkln
of the fOWJdation of the coalition crumbl·
ing under the weight of Jcad('rs who
have misjudged public reactions. If thi!
is the case it is probably a mood more
than anything else, a feeling on the
part of voters that they do not Uks
the current libera l establishment iden·
tHication. Some polls show that the
largest number flf people no1v think or
themsel ves as conservatives v.·hcre::is it
was formerly fashionable to be liberal.
'Another Solution Needed for Alis o'·
To !ht Edilor:
My wife and 1, along with many of
our South Laguna neighbors, have been
greatly disturbed by the aot.lon or the
county supervisors in making Aliso Beach
parklnr areas into pay-parking Jots with
charges of 75 ~ts and $1.
Outside of the Main Beach in Laguna .
Aliso has the only lerel approach to
the sand, which is ideal for older persons
and fiahennen with their gear. Ali other
beaches can only be approached by VtrJ
steep stairwa)'!.
Out-of-town visiton came to this beach
to spend a full day ol picnicking 1nd
swimming. Their cars are utually full
and this break.! the cost down to 10
cents per per&0n. Others come with their
trailers and campers and pai-i prac·
tically at the water's edit for 24 hours
!«only II. Some sloy !«a fllli week.
r.tEANWHILE THE local midents who
\\'i.lh to go for a· on~our walk on
the sand or a quick dip ln the oceAn
several times a week cannot do so
bec1use it has become too expensive
to park their cars.
We are aware of tht fact that funds
must be raised for the ma intenance
of these lots, but wt feel .that more
equitable methods can be found. Perhaps
meters could be lnslalled and one will
only pay for the 1ctual tlme spent there.
·---By George---.
Dear George :
I'm an ardent (eminist ind think
Amerlca.n men are old-fallhloned!
Jn Holland women are on' 's\rike
saying Ulty have the right to make
paSitS 1t the men. WhY don't we
do this here 1
ANGRY SUE
Dear Anary S\Jlf::
You mean right hert, In a faml11
newspaper? Tik i (Inddentllly,
does your letter Imply that the
men In Holland are 111lns t
organized 1trttus in th1I cue?
I doubt ill
Letters from f'tadert arl! welcome.
Normally writer1 should convey thtir
mtssages in 300 words or less. The
right to conden.st letters to fit space
or eUminate hbel is resen:ed. All let·
ters mu1t include signature and maif.
i.ng oddrfll, but namt1 ma11 bt witJ..
held on reque1t if aufffdent rteson
i.s apparrnt. PottrJI wfU no& be pvb-
luhrd.
Laguna Beach his metered parkln&:
tiear their beach.
OR WHAT A80trr a S$ annual ftt
such as ii charpd by the atate for
the Ult ol 80)' and all 1tate patU?
We invite the mkknt.I of South Lacuna
to wrtte to their 1upervlsors to ask
them .. poelpont any llsnlnc or COllltlcb
for Allao patting unW all otJier methods
have been invtstlgattd.
We alao Invite fnWtlttd reeldenta to
mtet with us in the very near future
to dlacu.11 ponlble solutions to this prob-
lem. We 'an be niched by Jetter
addreM!td to P. 0. Bo:t -425, South
La(Wla .
SI SLAVIN
JANE B. SLAVIN
Ottn'Wlnt Loglr
To the Edilor :
E\'ery thnt Edward lAfT ope n• hJs
maulh, ho pull hla loo< In It. Hoptlutly,
tho LllUll• Buch el<Cloralt ncoanl,..
whal they. have created.
f'itlt, It wu dynunitlng the hill cavu.
Now it is the charse tha t students were
employed to appeal to the emotions of
the v&en in the recent Llx override
tltctJon.
It toes ont to know one, Lorr h11
proved himMU a master at the 11me
of ualn1 lll!Ollooaltlln ta overrldt lo(ic.
JO\'CEB. GOCTZ
I
A baacloned ANto•
To the Edllo<:
Wouldn't it be ironic if the effortx
of the city plaMing commission to make
Laguna Beach a pleasant place to Jive
were crowned by a halo of ru sting
automobiles in the hills above, but out
of the city limits of Laguna Beach?
Ironic, but tragic!
A year ago there \vas one abandoned
automobile in the hills above l.agwta
Beach at the end of Alta Laguna
Boulevard. Toda}" there are seven and
the number grows weekly.
ON SATIJRDA\'', April 13', at 6:30 p.m .•
a 1966 white Fon:l pick-up without liti?1t~e
plates, towed a 1960 whi te Che\'folet
Radicalism
' ~ ,;
, ~llii . C111n n1ents •
Alount Airy. ~td., C o m m u n I l y
Reporter: "Let's have more emphasis
upon the pre.sitrvaUon of the 'personal
liberty' and freedom of law-abi ding
ciUze ns, to that the self-respect of ()ut
natJon may onct: more be etlabllshtd and
\\'e dQ not have lo continue to hang our
heads in shame bocause of the aintinued
toleraUon of this rabld radicalism which
has been rweeplng the country."
\\'hit's New la HEW: .. ,.fedica l eo5il
are rising at more than double the In-
crease In the cos t ol livlng. flospltal d11il y
charges, t •cludlng phyalcian 's care, have
risen from Mt ln 1965 to $70 this year and
.,. txpeCttd .. 10 to 1100 by 1972 u prt ..
tnt tntlation conUnue1."
Redwoet Fallt, Miu.. 0 a t e t t e 1
11Commtn:e Secretary Maurke Slan~.
hopeful of COWlt•rtna hl&h untmployment
among teen°a1tn, Is proposing that the
admlnlstr1tlon and Con1ress try a
minimum wq, IClle for youngsltrl
which la under tho prtsent lt.IO."
convertible, also without license plat~.
down Alta Laguna Boulevard and into
the dirt roads bC'voncl. It was followed
by a two-color 1957 four-door Oldsmobile,
Cali!ornia license plntcs OPS 151.
On the next day, Sunday, April 19,
the Chevrolet convertible \\'.'.ls rcslin~
in a ravine ;1bo\'e Laguna Beach , The
J..aguna Beach Police DcJlartincnt said
it ""as outside of t.he city limils. 1tightl y
so. The Orange County Sheriff's office
said it \\'as private property. Rightly so.
Aba ndoned auto nun1ber six.
ON SUNDAY, April 26, a two-lone
hard·top <make unknown) appeared on
one or the <lirt roads at the end of
Alta Laguna . It is slill there. Abandoned
automobile number ~c\·\'n.
Again. out of the city limits, again,
on pri\·ate property.
The private property ls the ~1011\ton
Ranch and the access is Uirough Laguna
Beach streets.
Whal can be done1 We don'l koo1v.
\Vhet can U1e City Council do"! \Ve
don'l kno\1:.
But if nothing is done, \\'e do kllO\f
v.1hat will happen. \Ve've seen Tijuana
and the hills beyond.
JA.\ll~S \V. TAYLOR
rresident
Friday, May 8, 1970
The editorial poge of th e Daily
PiloZ seeks lo f11Jor·m and 1!1na.-
tdatc readers by prescnl ino this
nezQspaprr's opinions and coni.-
mtnto'11 on topics of 111terest
and 1ignfficonce. bJI protrldino a
forum for tht tzprt.ssion of
our readers' opinfon.s, and by
P'"tsenting the diverst trlew-
polnts of fnform1d nbserv11r1
and i pokesmen on UJpics of the
cloy.
Robert N. Weed, Publl1her
---
Reagan Move Eyed
Some Opponents Back Ca1npus Closi1igs
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Even some ol Gov. Reagan's
roost voca1 critics say his
cJecisioo to close the state's
<.'Ollege and university cam.-
puses made ltnSe.
They credit hlm wi~ a
virtually flawless performlDCtl
in ei:plainlng tbe decision on
state-.widt radio and te.levilbl
\Vednesday night.
But they, and many of the
:students, ar1Ue that Reaaan
still ls not speaking the same
1ancuage as the young people
he tried to reach ln his emo-
tional broadcast •ppeal -that
he Is preadllng lo them and
not really commynk:ating.
Reagan talked a bout
tsolaUng radicals and
mWt.ants on campus and solv-
ing students' academic
grievances with i n the
academic environment. But
1nany a!Ucs of Reacan and
young people were dlsap-o
pointed that he had little to
say about the issues that con-.
cem them mQst at present:
the U.S. troops in Cambodia
and the fatal shooting of four
Kent State University students
by national guardsmen.
NEWl ANAl YllS
---·-·-·----........ ---.. ,..-.-,. -.. -------.....-------
FrldQ', M1' 8. l'f70
Ne w Law Unconst i tut ional •
•
Capito l Picketing R ule 'Too Broad'
speech under the nrst end
fourteenth amendmtnta lo U1c
Constitution.
HITCHCOCK
I • I :\ \ ( ( ) I I I ( . I ( ) I (
Although he directed his talk
t o young people ,
Assemblyman Alan Sieroty,
Democrat from Beverly Hills
says, ''nowhere did any in-
LA Contract Reviewed;
Little Enthusiasm Seen
$10" Mod. Color
--Sleeping Bag
'1" Knit Shells
or Tank Tops
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
A selllement proposoJ for the
Los Angel~ tecbers' strike
-described by its author as
doubtful jt would be met "with
enthusiasm" -was con-
sidered today by both sides
in the ctippling dispute.
"'!be best l can hope ror,"
said mediator B e n j a m i n
Aaron, "ill that they will find
lhe propisal accept.able if not
enUrely saUs!actory."
Aaron's proposed agree-
ment, which he would not
Ciscuss, was given t o
represent.atlves of the school
board and the striking United
Teachers of. Los Angeles after
each side presented their
"best offers."
He said the proposal con-
tained elements of the best
"best offers" a5 well as "a
few ideas ol my own."
Both sides were expected
to comment on the settlement
pact by Sunday.
Either way, Aaron said, his
services as a mediator were
at an ~nd, unless he was need-
ed to help implement the plan.
''\Vhenevar thls is solved,
ll'e're all still in trwble
because of the lack of euf-
ficient financial support of
Richardsori
Will Guard
His Office
SACRAMENTO (UPI)
Sen. H. L. Richardson (R-
Arcadia) announced Thursday
he has taken steps to prevent
his office from serving as "an
arena for demonstrators."
Richardson said he has or.
dered his staff to make a "clt-
iien's arrest" o( anyone in-
vadlng his office and violating
1.he law.
The lawmaker said that ear·
~er this week a young demon-
rator entered his office and
Id his secretary that he
anted to talk to "pig Rich·
arpson." The demonstrator, he
~. used ob&eene four-letter
w«ds in talking with the sec-
retary.
··~ere were no men in my
offit; at the time and my sec-
retary had to evict the demoo-
strat~," Rlchard9on said.
"Fnm here oo, H there are
any irrldents of that nature
in my olfice, I expect the male
members ol my staff to effect
citizen's arrests. My office •••
l~ not going to serve as an
arena for demonstrators."
Beached Vessel
Owner Plans
I
OXNARD (UP') -A new
owner has turned up for the
former cnll~ ship La Janelle,
blown asmre by gale force
winds last month , and he: has
some new plans for the 481'-
foot v~sel. '
Ty Monlford, of A·I Lin-Ty
Demolition Co. of Downey,
said Thunday ht hopes ID
mire the La Janelle in the
Mtrina Del Rey and turn It
into 1 Ooating !'fllaurant.. But
If thOO< plans Ioli through,
he said, the llncr .. 111 be salled
lo the F'ar Ea.lit to be sold
for wap.
local 9Chool -by the
Mte," be said.
U the proposal In the four-
Wffk-old strike was accepted
Sunday, Aaron 111aid the
teachers could algn a contract
and return to work im-
mediately.
However, before receiving
the proposal, chief ad>ool
board negoUator Ly m a n
Powell said the board was
"not going to buy (It) Jock,
stock and ban-el."
Tn other developments in the
strike a1ainst the nation's se-
cond largest school district
with 650,000 students and 616
I c h o o 1 s , Superintendent
Robert E. Kelly personally 8J>-
pealed .. _, leKhers to
return to their clu!rooms.
In a Jett.er malled to all
d. the district's teachers,
Kelly said it was his hope
0 we can get together to
salvage the rest of the
semester for our young ~
pie ••• "
Kelly told the teachers: "We
want and need you in your
classroom in order that we
can carry out oor commitment
to youth."
The letter was an attempt,
according to Kelly, to
''provide a be t ter un-
derstanding of the school
district's position."
The strike, he said, has
made Its point of underscoring
the need for mere at.ate aid
to local schools.
Teadler and stud e nt
absenteeism. Thur 1 day re-
mained at f5 percent and 34
percent.
3 Appeal
For Relea se
Of Prisoner
LOS ANGELES (UPI)-An
appeal to get convicted mur-
d~s Lucille Mlller either r&-
leased from prilon or retried
is under aubmialon by three
federal appnla judges.
Defense Attorneys F. Lee
Balley and Robert K. Stein-
berg filed the petition for a
writ of habeas corpus Thurs-
day with the Ninth Circuit U.S.
Court of Appeals, charging
that a female undercover ag.
ent placed in Mrs. Miller'! jail
cell prior to her trial violated
her right against self-incrim-
ination and her rlgtlt to have
a lawyer present during que.s-
tionlng.
Mrs. Milll!T was convicted
and sentenced to life in prison
in 1065 lor the murder of her
husband, Dr. Gordon Miller,
who burned to death in his
sl)Or't& car ln 196.f on a mou~
Lain road In San Bemardlno
County.
The undcttOVcr •&ent's te•
tlmony that Mni. Miller was
in love with another man
helped 1et up dle prosecution's
motive for the crime.
Ilepllly State Attorney G<n-
ttal Philip? Grllnth contended
that the cftuit court hid oo-
thlng to decide. sirl(e the U.S.
Supreme: court hid already
upheld the convi<:tlon by 1
M VO~.
s791 Value!
Rybutol
Multiple
Vitamin'
Bottle of 365
full Jftlt'• npp!r ~I lftl tb.4 le per "•1·
'1" Klttnera1e
1'lt" tZ4 lbtftS. ~ ar in.c piptt from St1nrt Holl.
112' Value! Broom
St11rdf .(._ wilh rtu. -..C
ti.I: tbol.ltltr! 11 -
1111 Unoleum Roll , .... " .. ,. ""· 2 . $1 0.0.Ct of J"'An•. o • .,,.s. ... st ..
Thl1 Wnic'1·Speclcill
Distillers Choice
86 Proof
Straight
Bourbon
Flhh OoliOft
3iSf75
Basketball
Oxfords
For loys $1••
---i1'11'&'1 4
' Metal
lhall•rellau
Photo Frames
• l11l•Ql1rt
1 1111
•l1t l ".1r 111"
Schrafft's Gold Chest
-
ChocolatH ..... '2'' """'' ... flflh! .
69' JIC'l'anf
Hand Towel
Fl.ulf7 11TfJ' ~t· 3.,. .. ,... ,n I
d10i~ ol colors. ·r11111d Fhntridgt
~Chocolates ~'"''"~$150 IOl'llllC'IU!
19" General Electric
Alarm aoclt
·,11.~IJ
,11, 69!. Clierry Orcliard J· Chocolttt Cherries
Dl1tt1nt
Prltd
100" polrtst«lt100" nyiool doubl~ kiu1.
Slripa, 110lid1, ribJ,mcdt
turtle, v.ncn.. r.i,..-.
Qt 1lltllll'l« colo11 i1;
lbis ~ lf'Oll.pl
CompaN to Othon al $1 .35
Lll•y Wllllllrt
Seamless Nylons
" • Nlld• Hell I Oiml· r ..
• S-mlMl Stntch
•3" Dacron®
Bed Pillows
H .. .., s.tl• Toclll"f ~j~ "°:"'J'. dut1 U!in-$2'' t1<ii1n.( wi Pink, Jllw Of
W/i;te • , • 100"' Dt·
aoa ® 'pol,aur fibulill.
16 Val11 Matchabtlli
Spray Mist
!l"'c!:n d~ $350
r-1 •Wind.
"""•· Golilrrt Autumn, Be. kind. J'1oph«y.
Ntw 42 Watt
'
-Bulble lath
Cll'Ytt I i I ht
b11llll (l)fltain. '' en fl( liq11J4 ' ...........
'2" Knitted
Nylon Tops
~~le '1" .......
S·W·L.
Clairol lln ... ss
"20" Halrsetter
~o TOlltrt for .............. $)611 uln r Grtat fot'
J.fochtrl
......... Liie•
Cardigan
-· Sweaters
SJ47
:s591 Value!
Krlnklt Pateilt
Clutch
Purses
20x31" 11" Wo1111n's ~n
Prit11td llf" ?..:ewtt;t p.mi, ' bal{,.!J com·
lle•vr .!utr ~(llt(lll duck
11pptt. Cab-
iorl itHOlt nd
•rd! support.
._._ .... _._ ... _ ... _~· llflocltrlJi.G.
.SLNI 10.1.
Scatter R119s ~ Panty Shp
.Ion,,.,,, •• ,. "'' •'·· . Tr rotton ,.... 7 • 1111 "" f • U ----' p1n1T -Ii~ w1.,. n;11,1t • -..-. • • ., 1· Slcld ntliit.nt. mrr11·11p.
Ip• Yalutl
leach Bag
D11.,striq Tr b.p in
hl'>&ht col·
• 129 Sylvania
Flash Cubes
f11n199W~f ff ~l!.!!!7&c
~~--~----:--•·------·--+ Crochet
on. 1.uilbtNld r •a • ,,,,
Glrl'1 Yest
Polarel•
IOI Ctlor film
1« lftlt color pie. $311 ..,.....,.,. .. ,
Wnt lend
9 Cup'Ptrk
~''6" K~colfte ...
•6•1 Yaluel I Trac
Stereo Tapes
: ?!i.CC.~ '2" • Ii. J. f llrmu •Tonwn1J...-• Olorlllt wuwa
•Mt 0 I
v
I DAILY PILOT Frfdlli1, M1,1 8, 1970
Politirul Notes
Women of GOP
Meet n1 Clemente
Fo1~ The
Record
Dissolutions
Marriage
Denlh Notices
ltAM£L.
<
Gertrv<lt C. R•mtl. RHl<I~! of Co1!•
¥.tu . Dalt ot 0~111. M1v 6. sv~lveG bY
D•u91'11er, Mrt. Tl'ltlm.o G. !>111w ; lh•et
1reMICl'liklrtn •"Cl four 9•tll.<irt1'0CP>ll·
Orf<'. Re<>uitm M1u, MOn<! .... ' AM, SI. J1>1cMm Cunolic Cl>urch. ln!tr,.,.nt, HolY
Seoulc~tr Ctmt1erv. e11u Morlu1•1.
~Oill MUt, OirK!Otl.
Tllll"l.V
Chdsllf>e J<I , T•trnl1. "'' IM. DI J)ll.t-9
Red Hlll, f\jston, 0.lt DI detltl, Mt~ I, ~«.,l<:H Pffl()lnt 11 Wt~!cllll Chtl't'I
MOrtutrv, .,.... .....
ARBUCKLE le: SON
We5tcWl Mortuary
4%7 E. Jitb St., Corta P.teu. ,.,4111 • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona deJ l\lar OR J..tt51
Costa Ptte1a &D 6-Wf • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa l\leu u 8-3U! • DILDAY BROTHERS
8W1tlngton Valley
Mortuary
17911 Beacb Blvd.
llua.Ungtoa Beach
IC.7'171 • PACIFIC VIEW
~IEMORIAL PARK
Cemelery e M-ary
Cbapel
:IMO Podllc View Orin
Newport Be.ch. CaWonla
'"""" • PEEK FAMILY
COIA>NIAL FUNERAL
HOME
?Ill BolM ~ ...
Watmllllitt 191-Sm
By 0. C. HUSTINGS
Of tM EH .. , Plitt St.tit
Ann Bowler, former
Republican N a t i o n a 1 Com·
mitteewoman for California,
will speak to San Clemente
Area Republican W o m e n .
Federated, Wednesday at 9: 45
a.m. in the municipal golf
course restaurant, 150 E .
Afagdalena.
Past president of the Los
Angeles County Federation of
Republican Women and of the
32nd Congressional District
Republican Women, P.1 rs .
Bowler is currently serving
as first vice president and
program ch.airman for
California Republican Women
Southern Division.
* Lloyd }5.nocker, Democratic
candidate for the 7 O l h
Assembly District, will be the
honored guest at a Mexican
riest.a Saturday in Huntington
Beach.
Sponsored by the 69-70
Democratic Club, the fiesta
will start at 7:30 p.m. in the
English Gardens of the Hun-
tington Gardens Apartments,
4901 Heil Ave. at Bolsa Chica.
Further information may be
obtained at 894-1343. A dona-
tion or $5 will be asked.
* The c o u n t y Democratic
Cam paign Committee has an-
nounced i ls "Democratic
1'ean1 for 1970." Candidates
picked by the committee are:
Governor.Jess Unruh;
Lieutenant Governor-Robert
A. Wenke : Attorney General-
Charles O'Brien; state Con-
troller-John It Dean, and
St ate Treasurer-Milton G.
Gordon.
United States Senate-John V.
Tunney: U. S. Congress, 34th
District.Richard T. Hanna;
U.S. Congress, 35th District-
David N. Hartman; State
Assembly, 35th District-James
J. Slaven: State Assembly,
69th District-Kenneth Cory;
State Assembly, 70th District-
Lloyd Knocker : State
Assembly 7lst District-David
Ascher, and State Senate, 34th
District-Barry Baucbwitz.
* Bernard G. Wocher, can-
didate for state Board of
Equalization, 4th District seat,
says he bas a plan for a
"Turnover Tax" which will
eliminate "the need of prdp-
erty taxes, inventory taxes
and sales taxes."
The tax, which Wocher says
would be computed on sales
of goods, intangibles and
services on a monthly basis.
and will brlng the ·state four
times as much revenue as
the sales tu.
Open House
Set May 16
At El Toro
EL TORO -~1arine Corps
Air Station. El Toro will host
Orange County residents in
the air station's annual Armed
Forces Day Open House from
noon to 4:30 p.m. May 16.
Highlighting this year's open
hause will be a ane-hour aerial
demonstration perfonned by
pilots of El Taro's Third
Marine Aircraft \Ving, ac-
cording to base orncials.
Static dis plays or Marine
Corps equipment will provide
visi tors with a close up look
al the ''arious aircraft that
comprises the United Stale
t.farine Corps air arsenal .
Other events scheduled for
the afternoon show include a
30-minute concert presented
by the Third lt!arine Aircraft
Wing band and • welcoming
remarks from the air station 's
commanding generals.
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONA~
GUIDE
e MATTRESSES e
MATTRESSES
BOA TS HOMEs TRAILERS
Irregalar Sh•pes
•
<Mta Mesa M1ttres1 Co.
1158 Newport Blvd.
Uberty 8°1303
UPHOLSTERY
Mesa UpholstelJ
Uberty 8-4781
JJll NIWPOU IL'f'D, • SHEFFER MORTUARY Lop•• a.... ft4.tsss II~~~~~~~~ Sia Clemeale UZ..OJtt • SIUTllS' MORTUARY
11Z? Moln Ill.
lla11.Un:«t0n Badl
AUlll
STARS
Svdn•y O""•rr h one of th•
w•rlcl't 9 r11I 11trolo91r1, Hit
coh1m" h 0111 of th1 DAILY
rllOTS t•••t f1ah.ir••·
Sears
Immediate
Complimentary
Delivery, Of Course!
\ I
Elegant White French Provincial
FOR YOUNG ROMANTICS
•Canopy Bed, Regular $89
•Si ngle Dre'5er Base, Regular $79
•Four-Drawer Chest, Regular $79
YOUR
CHOICE $
• Student Des k, ReguJar $79
• Poudre Table, Re~11lar S79
•:Sta nding Mirror, R·egular $79
•
French Provincial bedroom furni ture in sparkling
white wjth gold color accents. Authentic cabriole
S tyle legs. White wirh gold color antiqued hard-
ware. Mar and stain resistant plastic tops. Fully
dustproofed drawers. Framed plare glass mirrors
tilt for full-length view.
Plate Glass Dresse r Mirror ______ _
Ma1ching Pieces:
S(}J Double :Dr?.~er Ba&e 179 1"'ighl :-ilan<l•-----
Triple Dn:Mf't Ua~~ll 1 9 I :ornr.r 0~•"-----
}'nimed ~1irror 14-9 l >~~k Chair~----
Pand Bed. t'ullorTwin..159 Bachelor Cli~~~--
Staclt. Uni~-----
SAVE 99.85!
4-Piece Colonial Group •
lncl11dea :
•Triple Dres~r.r Ha6e
• f-'ramed Plate Gla~s
.\lirror
•Full orT~·in
Bookcar.e Bf!d
•Two-Drawer $ Dre116er Stan cl
Bedroom fu rniture with country-house charm ..•
Jovt:d by city dv.•ellers and suburbanites alike.
Au1hcn1ic colonial scyliag. Warm birch finish.
Heavy b~s, shaped drawer fronts, mar-resistant
plas1 ic tops. R egular '298.85
Sears CANOOJI ,llW ,,..._, GllNtAlf CW l •IOOI, (I •.til l
Co-rtON ... ,.., •• , • .,. 1.1r11 .. oi.1•wooe HO •• , •• ,
.1u.1.,.1m lUCllAJ1.DC:O. "'"""" _ ... ,, IMelnll'OO• 01 •• ,)11
llt.f' N .......... , rflt .... w..ko1 t 130 A.M. M t ;JO l.JA. SvM•J 12 NMft fe I I.A\.
Your Choice
s59
Full or Twin !:iize
• (._i nrh foarn mallrtm with 5'h.i!l· diMJlle top foatn 1111,.x rorr. plu~
l•yer of polyurelhanf! foam quilted lo gold d::.im11 ~k co'""r
•Quilt-top innerspring m1ltre51 with 857 coils in full i;ize ••• t>Jj 1·oiltr;
in twin &ize, ~ilver b lue quilted dan1ask c:ovt'r
$79.95 Mttr:hini PoE>ture·Male Foundatio 159
$229.95 Queen Siu Se $179
SZW.95 Kint ~iu Se t249
1.01tO RACM Mt J •Oltl
Ol,YM"(. llOTO AM •-Jll'I
Oll•NOI l lP·11Dll
_" ...... 94111
'1(0 Wf ••• , •• '
•• .., ... Noll •• ,.:IJJ'I
f'llAIKMA 1114111, JJt.1111 l""'Art ........ t41.t0ll
.. htl1fcu1lea OM11tt111tc•tl., y_,. MoMJ a.cit"
llNTl -Cl fJ. ••1'1 I
10110! COAll IOlAP,t, f .. 41)1
lO-••N<.• '"'·'l"
VIUll l'a J·l•ll, ..... 1.,.
'ltltlllC)HT ,\ .. ltll
".
.. ..
Learning at Sea
I I
_(Jliapman· Stude1its Dig It
::DAR ES SALAAM, Tanw1la IAP> -Looking out the
llk1holc of a fioaUng campus,
frdessor Meyer BarUb mus·
~4 about the cultural lhodt iJ. having to dftu for class
~en he returns to Hofstra
'Jhtverslty a t Hempstead,
fi;Y. ~· 11oauna campus Is the ~ Ryndam, -ed by
Cbapman Cqllege of Orange.
Beth Ebba, a serilor frinn
the University of Iowa , sipped
colfee tn the dlnlnc room 'lnd
d~cussed plans to junk her
f~r years oC majoring in flute
id.fa vor or "somethlng more
uSdul."
.:£hrbty Herlocker of Long
V*", Wash., saJd she was
st;Sll 11wa1Ung to be inaplred"
a~ sailing moi:e than half w!1 round the world. "In IJe.
lW~ colleges" at 20, Miss
Herlocker said she was haviag
a •Ifantaslic tlme."
Jndeed, Ille aboard the Ryn.
d!(in is a dream compared
lo.most small liberal art.I col-
1eaes which stay in one place
for the entire semesler .•
lts ~es in art, science
and music a~ fully 1ccredited
and traMferable. There are
15 Porta of call including
llonolulu, Yokohama,
Singapore, Cape Town and
Casablanca. The s e m e 1 toe r
slirt.S in Los Angeles and ends
four months'later in New Yori!;
City .
"lmtead of telling a student
to,come to my office I su1gest
he·· pull up a deck chair,"
says Baruh, a vil!Ung pro-
feMor of sbclolOjY who fre-
qlJenUy wears shorts and san-
d1Is .
MW Ebb6, who is from
Bloomlnlton, Ind., adds :
"Ltt'1 face it, in a student.
body of Z0,000 YoU are lDOl'e
or ltas a number. Here you
!elm u muoh II dloner,
acrOIS from a ffculty
... .-. u YoU de In·~· ''There I.a a certah1 1m0unt
ol idenutlcatlan with the -
fessor who hll to leave cllll
to ao t.o tbe ~." she addl. recalllna l'Qllpr parts o1 the
voyqe.
Herbert Levine, or the
University of Southwestern
Louisiana, a visilini: profff.W
of polltlcal science, conaiders
the semester "a chance to meet IOme d. the people I've
been teachin1 about."
Robert M06iar, who is on
hil secodd cntl9t, I I y I
perhaps 70 ol the nearly llJO
ltudeW are akMg purely for
the ride. It COiis about 14,000.
An economics major, Moeter
uy1 the uperlenoe It un-
equ1led, notln& he Cln lllk
to Japtneet, Cblnelt, or othel
businelsmen on the spot and
still enjoy thf: cuualntss or
the Ryndam's llfe.
The Ry11dam, a 15,lm-ton
ship of the Holland-AmeriCa
Lin&, WIS <:<>averted for t'ha~
man College's use and lta bar
became a library. Chapman,
and the Ryndam, are "dry,"
but there ar~ no m trict.l<N
on drinking ashore a n d
students may stay overnight
asho<t.
The biggtst drawback to Ute
afloat is there is no etc1.pie,
stude'l.1ta and faculty a1ree.
Shore stops are only two or
three days Ind the PacUic,
Ind.Ian and Atl•ntic octans of-
fer little hope to would-be
weekend strollers wishin& to
get away from campus.
"You learn .to live with
yourself, an6 o t h er s , ' •
~rvesMO«Ur.
Yoga Cozirses Added
,'
At CSF For Sum~r
· :tlJLLERTON -A course
nn yoga and another tilled
"queil for Sello East and
Wut'' hive been added te
the 1970 summer prOl"&Jtl •t
Cal Siii< Fullerton.
The new courses, each
Conntian
' Guilt . y • Ill
. -Hmited to 4~f student!:, will
be offered by the college's
Interdisciplinary Center. They
'''ill be taught by Dr. Som
Parkash Shanna. an India·
born assoclaCe profeuor of
English.
~esa .Theft Both courses. scheduled a1
part of the first of CSCl"1
two IflO rummer sessions, wlll
SANTA ANA - A Santa run from June 15 through July
12t. Admission 1o the collect
is not rtqUirld of summer
students, and the e a r I y
registration period will be
open unUl June 1.
Arti man who brok'e into a
co5la Mesa music st.ore has
ple3ded guilty in Superior .e.ourt to burglary charges. ,-,-Judge James F. Judge
'ordered George J o s e p·h
'Waldhauser, 30, to return to
his court June 4 for reading
bf the probation report and
Scntt:ncing. \Yaldhauser faces
ji possible stale prison term
·of one to 15 years.
: Waldhauser w a s arrested
last April 11 by officers who
.Were called to the Atlanti c
:)1usic Store. 445 E. 17th SL
'tie had gai ned entry to the
·premises, they said. by klck-
·ing five louvers out of the
'.plate glass door.
: Waldhauser Is bei~ held in
·orange C.Ounty Jail in lieu :or ball.
: Polisli Day
F esti'V itie s
,Set May· 17
The yoga class, Shanna said,
will cover theories, llteratlir:e
and practices as well as aomf:
methods of meditaUon t1u1ht.
The other course is a Ct1m·
parative study of quest nar-
ratives which eumpWy the
eastern and west.em man's
search for self-identity and
fulfillment, he said.
Further information con·
ceming summer sessions la
available by telephone at 870-
2611.
Phillip Pe tty
To Lead Class
Phillip A. Petly, Newpolr
Beach, hu been selected as
vallllictorlan of the 1970 class
at Western State Univetalty
College . of Law, collet:e of·
flclala announced.
Petty, who rece!Vtd his
bachelor's dt_gree from the
University ol Dllnol1, will
ti. e liver his valedlctcrian
. SANTA ANA -Remember speech June 20 at Chapman
:M1y 17, says the Polish Ne· CAltege's auditor:ium.
:Honal Alliance, because it willlp;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiliii;;;;;;'J
:be a day to remember.
-· folish Da y is the title and
fesUvitles will run from noon
to .t p.m., at the Church of.
. lb<: Be1Ulud"' of Our Lord,
:1)0.21 St. Gertrude's Drive, La
Mirada.
: :Colorful Polish costumes
· tf11l ~ worn by parUclpantl
· iia)i:t the day will teatlltt
.,t;tthentlc ethnic foods, games,
And carnival activities, plus
Jnlny prl:r.es.
, · The grand prize will be a
:1970 Cheyrolet, according to
:officia ls of the Polish Natlonal
:Alliance Santa Ana Lodge
;3168, which wtll be celebratln1
lls 90t.h anniversary.
The PNA is the largest
Jratemal organization I n
ttmerica.
l'UT SOME
CLOTHq ON
MO THE~
~-
TfflNK
..Ovtlt IJemottcd potk
Tht So111h"'1ul~ Most Bt8tif"1
M""oriA!s ,
MAUSOlfUM • cOlUM&UtUM • CIMnllT
I TREES of the WORLD .... 0. hlloh•• ...........
'""" ....... ,.. -' er.n ..
ii.
I i .~
I
•
Jrlday, May 8, 1•70 •
flowing and feminine gowns an cf
evening pants for da ncing til d(iyvn
•
fwirl ing, Swi rling. Gossc1 n1er rni sting around you ·
DAILY PILOT !
in t~e rdmantic night . You are ·soft. You are ·
1ern ini11e'. You are bejeweled and beflowered in gowns
or panl dre.ses of rayon chiffon. Be sleekly
sop histica.led in an empire gown with embroidered
bodice, a pdnt dress prettied with pearls, or a
ilowin~ gown w ilh full bishop sleeves.
From our colleclion, in junior sizes 5-1 J . By Judy Gi bbs.
a. sleeveless, embroidered bodice, in pelal pink 40.00
h. long sleeve gown in buuercu p yellow, floral braid 44.00
f, r.111l cire~s in ~C.l dqUJ. w ith pearl braid 44.00
m•y co south co•sl pl•••· son di ego fwy •I bristo l, cost• mes•: 5~6-9321
shop mond•y thru s•lurd•y 10 •m to 9:30 pm, sund•y noon •til 5 P'!'
.,
. -··
MA-V C C>
I
-I
•
I
I
IO DAILY PILOT
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
• YOU ASK l\ll\TI 61Vo YOU A NAr.!E, ~.
YOUNG ~AW? vrny WEll, I ~EREBY
DUB WJ"fSMfRf~PA AFffR AN
OLD FLAME' Of MINE:"ESMERflDA
9UN6WHIP!'LE"1 ..•
,, ~"~~ ~~~
~ ~:::.-''--"---' ... :
MUTI AND JEFF
Frld1y, May 8, 1970
WELL,
WHATA
YOU
KNOW.I
T ...i ATMEANS
YOU'RE GROWING
A THIRD SET
OF TEETH.'
JUDGE PARKER
NO! I MUlf SEE
DICK TIU.CY.
W"Ll..NO,JUSTSO
LONG AS YOU DON'T
START GROIAllNG
ANOTHERTDNGUE.1
By Al Smith
I JUST COULDN'T
RESIST IT/
By Harold Le Doux
U'L ABNER
•
SALLY BANANAS
6ATO!
MOON MULLINS
A&gfY, WE 'VE 60T TO GET IN
TOUC.M WITM JUVEJJILE Al/THOJi.".·
Ill ES ,A.NP FHH1 Ot!T WMO THIS
&OV 15! TELL ME E'l:o\CTLY
J.IOW YOU fOU MD MIM !
Wf PONT KNOW MOW ME I TMtMK
OOT OM TME PROPERTY!., WE'D &fITT
M.t.TllRo\LLV, MY SECURITY 6Ef It.I
~AR'OS Wfll:E E~ll:R'A'55EP! TOOCl-l
t.10 ONE ICNOJllS MOW HE WITJ.4 11!P6f
PLAIN JANE
ACROSS
l A11r 11'11'
11~mP lor
Sv1 ,~
5 ',rrir~ o!
m11~·c~I
1101~~
)0 H~v .. 111
r• o~tr,I
1011'1
l 4 H 1~tn•'
l~ I< 111'1 r1
T~rr l b ' .... 1~
41 Minr pr oducl .
4Z lilember sh•!I · EJ!'EJm'i '-"'""'""'
ir1 an
rxth.lng~
43 HJVI.' ~
lh our1ht
45 l all or
dis1J11t,1,1'.
~7 ,,Jat!P ,1
swr ~t "r
.:; Vrh1r IP
4'1 Gr tr~ 1r··er ~·
5il Gia<;.<;.
tiot11r
~} 1Jou1:~.1
ro1 1" 11a ~~ 5 81 70 17 .... p1· '1 Numb~r
Bli1n•wr 5~ In f11l11r~ 9 r.~1 ~·1 41) Marshall
lJ i1ed· ~l Prev.1r•t~t~1 r 1vl.'• F1t!d or
2 word~ o2 Trayrl 10 [~act Timot11y
10 l\cr~111 ,1 .iur111\' ·.~11sl.1c.l 1011 [~ton
v,11111 soc1rty: 11 [last1c1ly 42 !'(av
i2 Cu111tf1:.1 Ai\h1. l~ Always 44 Coin
l\uirl Ii} Pro1>1>1l101 l 13 Informal 4b Arc he
23 U1111sn~I f~ Cr~u!r• rooms !eatur ~·
1 11~r $C1t~: b'.. ~1qn .11 ™isv )q Ouprs 2 words
~l~1H1 i11'"•~tcl1ou 21 Ocr~n's ~7 Highb nrl
74 Aho1it ~ii "Hr1!1.1· 11~1' and fail r~g1mrnl
12b P•1form ~ popp111·" 25 Westrrn •membe r
11c111J lar ru11,,1,1~1 Can~d1.ln lnlormill r~rrt1$!'.' ti"'i tlr •b city· ~'l Oo\ ct·-·
t 21 T1111!' ~words 50 Or Ga ul!•,
ptroOri<; [)Q •. ~J i'6 Trasmg l'.g.· Abbr.
30 Sk1w~ ]1 Thr to1nmor1 51 Musical 1 J4 fl~n1s!1rd l C.rod&. wo11l \, people 'l.ymbol '
l1ort1 nnr'~ llll "A" ' 28 Pu! forth .. 52 Prcpos•lion
! roontr v ? Tlto•o11ghfar t 2'J Fruit drink ~3 Fut I
JS fem~IP : Sago l 1~r 30 Ollmrnlioned 5S Arizona
3b Bascb.tll ~1.1rth Ir ishman r1ve1
s \al1s\lt: '4 City of J I European 1 5& Kind of
Abbr. '~rx1cc 32 Lessen 1~ lastentr I 37 P1ef1( used *. 5 Pronoun intensily 57 Ho1se
v11\h (.J! l:i Study of )3 Usrd a ' t:hts\nul, ;ind cart qovrrn ments s top w~tch ' lor on'
:!B Archaic 7 Amptuthral'r JS Allow SCJ Away
vr1b s('c\ 1011 JC) Paddlt's bO T rrm of ~
~O Be nomadic d S Jh111 r'lati~t t11drarmtnt
' ' J • ' • ' • ' I" " " "
" " "
" " "
" ' 12 ! lJ
" ., " '
" " " N JI " ,,
• ., ~
" JI ,. ..
.. ., ,:f, ' " " .
w .. " .. .. ' I
~ " ~ " " .. "
" .. "
N ;M ,.,
' -.. 67 ,.
'
PERKINS
.--. .. . ". .. ... '.: .,
MISS PEACH
oor TMROtlUH NE GATE ~ PA.RICER !
By Frank Baginski ANIMAL CRACKERS
.... •.·. . ..
. .-· .....
' ' . ..
.'; :' " . ' ' ' ::
By John Miles
...... -....
11111(
By Mell
THE KtNDf!UiARJEN CLAS!> HOW NICE-! SOON, YOUIC G"'R'OEN \"1'11..L et.OSSO/I,
NOW ~AS Tl-IEr~ OWN GA~DE.N 1 WITH A MAGNIFICENT DISPLAY Of COt.Of'FlSL. FL.OWEitS,
-~·DEPEND\~ lJPON WHA"T KIND'OF5EEDS YDU'VE Pl.ANTEPr
'0:.o/
• .JI, .. •I,.,', ·. ,..
STEVE ROPER
PEANUTS
. ·.
IT J SIJPPOSE M BEEN
Pfe:EPAA»il6 MYSELF FOR
Tl-ltS MOME:NT-9NCE n£
FIRST DAY t ~
FR.4.NKIE /.(
----------.....
SIE? :t: TOLD YOU ~VE'£E"
sul'POSEP To SUP."1
SOMETMIN~.-
By Saunden and Overgard
-BUT THERE WERE:
6000 iM+MGS TO
REMEMBER A80UT
H-4, "TOO!'
By Charles M. Schulz
v .. ,.::.r,t ;..·.( 1----1 ·• ·•
I
'.• •1
By Al Capp
CONTAARIWISE.'!
51-lEGOTA
MILL.'/UN
OF'EM.'.'
By Charles Barsotti
.,
" GATO[ 7#(5
Af./KLE-BITJIJ&
LIT11-E
Ril&-RAT ~AN MAK/3" rr
Tf/IZO()<;,J( MV
CAT tJOORf
BflUR GIVE IT A Go, PAATNER-)'ou fV.VI' ;o
STAY IN SH;\PE ;o f<UN A
R~Pl'CTABL.£
IAVEf<N otJ
S/>.TU Flt¥<'/
NIGHf..
THE STtANGE WOJlD
MR.MUM
' 1::::7
wt~ ~
By Ferd Johnson
By Roger Bollen
OOOOH.
11-lOSC:
HIGH
.... 11~0,...n_e_s_L_,@
\
i: MAil.Ri ~G-f \ J cClJ!lS<\.OR f, ----"1 ' '1.rr1> luooi
OOt/1 Hlf
Hi!<\ iJN111-
I RET\JRN
-
,-
'' '· I.
. '
•• •
~ • j .
' !
!
'lf HE~ l\OR1ll FIFN OOUARS, 14JFF MUST
!lE ~I/RY 111/NKaD OOUA12S !'
· QUEINll 'ly PhJI lnterloncll
"
CHECKING
•UP•
Are ,Tl1ere Any
Elde1·ly Su1~f ers?
.. . ---· ... --;;: -·-
.. rlday, May .8, 1970 DAIL V PflDf j l
De Gaulle at Country Home; il'lacrnilla1i 011. lloliday
Many Heroes of · World War II , Living
LONDON (UPI) -\Vlniston {!rl.sp •·no 1.'Q1nn1ent" jor year8 ln Jall at Nurenbtrg Gu.i~t11i* Surugut, ll aly's CJJnlrai'de ""'Ith oiren crhh:1~1 n rl'ceive.11 vi slls rroo1 h I a
Churchill, Josef Stslin and r.iporters Inquiring Into his for "perverlln.i; lhe nullon's firsl 11n1ba:s:Sudor lo Pun!:! (Jn -and paltl for it with neady duughter and gr11nchildri:ii.
·"··· d present duy aictlvlties-;uul you th " he wa.s relea:sed 111 V·E Du y, atter 1nuny ye;:u·s 10 yeal'l! behind barli Bo1ll l;(lrrt:sponUs wi1h hisloriaris
many European capl1Wci an opinions. lie cuts a dapper but 1066. · us 1u1 anll·fuscblt cxlle. l:s no\11 now ltv e ln·obtcure con)fort. 1:1nd f'Xpot.uH.ts his theory thal
g~r1ls of World War II are frail figure In hl:s rurti public Albert Speer . llillt!r's neur· 71 and Jn the sixth ye1.1 r (If "rlto has wrvlvtd lhein, u in 194~ the Atncricons mlit'itd
dead now on the 25th an· appeerances. genius 1niniste1· or 1nw1l!Joris ;1 seven·yea' ter1n ni1 prc8i· major break wllh the Krenilin ari '1his.toric mornent" lo be ... t
nlversary of V·E Day. But 'Wartime cabinet 1nJnl1ter productions lives 11lone in the dent of Italy. ·Aa one of Italy's and 'StAlln'1 pR:imlse to crush the nuu\aus politieal!y. · ;.
many live on. and former prln1e mlnlster rambling house hf' gre1v up roost popular Pre s l dent s "lhf! upstart." At 78 Tlto'!t PouJ·Uenrl Sp1u1k . 71, no1v
Amo.ng them: Harold frlacmlllan, 76, ii on in as a boy . A su11ve 64-year· S11ragat ls 11 widower and h1s stride ls sure, his tun ),(ut und lives outs!de Brussels .sinre
ho!lday in Greece while Earl old who once employed 14 daughter En1cstinn11 Sttn• polltltril wits sharp 11nd hi~ rl•tlring in 1006 as foreign
V. M. 1'1olotov. now 80 , f\lountbalU:n , supre.me alU.ed million persons, Sr>eer li ves tacatterina plays first lady ror rule firm , mlnl~ter <1rter 11tn1ust 35 con·
at the tind of World War Ir commander In South East well on the proceeds of hii;: hin1. Still revered by a ft•w tinuous years In the po~t.
was the Soviet d e Pu l 'I Aaia fnun JIH3 to 1946 "'.All memoirs publi.!lbed in 1969. In Yugosl11.vh1 Muy 1945 (ft!rman right-wingers as the At v.i:; Day he was rorc:\gn
premier· deputy dwl.lrmin of v\11tlng Puerto !tlco. · P'errucelo Parr!, I ea de r round 53·year-old .lo11lp Hroi legal Gerrn11n head or sl:1lt'. n1!nistcr Jn thl' po11t tlberatlon
the state committee 0 n Maj. Gen. Sir K~nnetb the war.time resistance movl!· Tllo leading a new Yugos!riv Crund Admiral Karl l>oeni!z, ~ovcrnmcnt after year~ nr
defenae, forelan minister and Strong , 70, head or Glln, ment In northrm 1u1ly and govern1nent firmly a n cl 79, lh•es quietly In an n!d governnlent In cxll<'.
second only l.o Sta.tin in lht! D"·ight D. Eisenhower':i in· his country's first polil·w::ir vocally oommilted to Soviet f11shlone<l houst. on th" J o~rl v. S!olln <tied 3 ''hero''
Kl'W\lin hletarchy. telllgence staU and later premier Is now 80 and a cu1n munlsm. lii!I closest aides outsklrts of Hamburg. O:i•!11i1:t j 11 19~3. was debunked hy
Today, expelled from lh.e dlrec~1r aeneral or British in· senato r for li fe . As un iu-included Serb I 11 n born \\'&s named by ll ltlcr in h1:1 Nl klt1t s. Khrushuhcv In J95r.
C<imrriunllt party, he livu , lelllgence Is now trying to dependent \eftwinge1· he sup. Aleksander Rankovlc and poet ''last testarnent " to i>ue~·c1·d Md 1961. and was rtniovt.d
obscurely In Moscow oo ' fit the methods of intelligence ports CommunJi;I campaigns propagandist t1!lov11.n Djllus. hin1 ais Gern10.n chancellor and rrom Lenin's Mausoleu m In
pens.Ion. Hi' wife died la.~t to big business. on issues ranging from Viet. 25 years hiter Rankovlc is fuehrcr. 1961 kl be bur ied bell.Ind it.
week . Baldur \"OD Schirach. 62· n:in1 tn refom1 of tcll'vision. in obscurity having been foiletl Gen. Dwight Elscnho\\cr So fa r he has .no monlllnenL
1\tarsbal Georgi K. Sbukov, year-old former leader or Nazi Pietri Nenni , 11 a J y '.-,; in his 11ttempt to unseat the rorced him to an unconditional Grudually his rtputollon as
74, now semi-paralyzed by a Hitler Youth movement today Socialist party preS'ident 2fl "uld man." ~urrender and Doenlli wits a competent wartime lead"r
stroke last year, on v.£ Day is a nearly blind old man year11 ago is a disillusioned Ojila.s. dlsc uchanlcd with jailed for 10 years al ioi being restored but AJl-
"'as the first deput y com· living a lonely life on a seclud-nlan or 79. He retired fron1 the Increasing gnp hclwet'n Nurenberg and releaSl'tl u1 parently Lhe Co1nmunist party
mander in chief and combat ed country estate In souUtern active politlcs in disgust when Communist theory ancl prac· 1956. hus not yet taken a declalOn
hero number one as well as c:ermany. Sentenced to 20 his party split Jasl June. lice antagonized his partisan Slill run1-rod slrniglit lie Oil whnt role to ascribe Stalin. be~g CQmmander of the,1 ----'--------------------------------------'--------------:-
Soviet occupation forces in
Germany. After being ousted
by Nikita S. Khrushchev he
is again the <..'OWltry's mosl
honored soldier, "
In France, screened from
the ootslde world by the high
walls of his country house
Gen. Charles de Gaulle . 80,
lives quietly at Colombey.Les--
Deux·Eglises. Armed by a
11!eely determination to keep
out or the public eye he is
currenlly penning his memoirs
in his own handwriting.
KIWANIS
20th Annual
Harbor Area, Youth Benefit
·" • By L. f\1. BOYD -:~;,·.
De Gaulle, an old Gaullist
official sald, hns one wish.
'·He wants his rare visitors
lo call him Mon General, not
rear tire or on a front Lire~ l\1oniseur Le Presldent.'' PANCAKE '.~~;~T JS THE CQNTENTION
-Of: a marit.al expert named
: ~rge R .. Bach. PhD, that
: '.olOre divorces result from
.;:taUinf asleE!p than from any
START 'YITll No. 15,873, ln the quiet country town
Multiply it by any single of Allon in southern England, field Marshal V I 1 c o u n t
number. htultlply that by . 1\1ootgomery, 83, victor o[ El
seven, So you see~ All tht Alamain in North Afrlca and
numbers in the answer tum wartime· ~mrnander·in-chier
out to be Uk~ the same of the British group of armies ···other cause
STATJSTJCALLY, young lady, number you started with. in north west Europe has a
your expectation of ~-======="'--~J Cetebratlng a Golden Wedding Curious ..• THAT ILL USION I
anniversary should be Just most co1nmon among women Only One
about twice as good as we.re is the belief they cu·e good F!nal· stocks in all home editions.
your grandmothers' . . , -cooks. The illuslon most com· Thal's a big deal? It is Jn Orange
mon among men is the belief County. The DAILY PILOT is the
AFTER A GIRL passes lhe lhey are good drivers. only daily new5 papt'I" tha t deliv-
·:ige of 20, her chances of ers the acka e gelling marrled suddenly drop TH ERE AREN'T any elder· P g •
hy aboul 50 percent, so1-ry ly surfers, are there? •. · -----:-;;;::;:::::;J
to rePQrl. LET"S SEE you name the ~
. · five rnosl si gnificant
CONSIDl!:R TllIS -So goes developments in the history
-aft old Chinese proverb; "If of warfare. \Vall, don 't forget
"you want to be happy for the jnvention of the stirrup.
;i few hours, get drunk. If
you want to be happy for . • WHEN T ~KING JUM~S,
a -weekend . get married. If the water skier lands with
ylu want to be happy for •n?re impa_ct than the sn_ow
;i week, barbecue a pig. 1r skier. Considerably more 11n·
vou want to be happy all pact. .. WHERE NOW is
Your life long, become a the Seasoned Citizen \Vho
gardener." remembers the old Broadway
musi cal hit, "How Do You
Like Your Oysters'! Raw
Raw! Raw !?" , •• DON'T
FORGET. in England, yo u
press the switch down, not
up, to turn on the llghl.
CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q.
''How fusl do the fastest .
t::levators run?" A. About 19
miles per hour in this country.
'fhat's people elevators • .
• Q, ''How many quarts of
n1ilk, on the average, does
;i dairy cow give every day·:"
A. About 12. That's nol so
had. The average camel only
gives about four quarts 11£
111ilk a day. , . Q ... Can a
J1indu gel a divorce?" A. ·
Apparently not. Hindu Jaw
niakes no provl!ilon for it.
LOVE AND WAR -"Ta ll
\11omen are more 11incerely af·
fectionate than small women.
'rhe cute little tricks ciim))
on their husbands' I a p s
·because they crave attenli<>n
. cind flaUery. When a tall girt
doO.s that, it Is solely becau!>e
she loves her spouse." So con·
tended Ed Dur ling, lh<il Love
u.nd War man of yesteryear.
OPEN QUESTION -\Vhich
h; .the more dangerous -a
blo"·out at high speed on a
SUICIDE -Di vorce d
won1en are three times as
apt. to coinnlil suicide as mar·
ricd \\/,Omen. Predictable,
\\'hat ? But that's not the point.
The point is divorced men,
by comparison, are four times
as apt to con1m it suicide as
1narrled men. Why this big
difference'!
RAPID REPLY -Yes, si r,
you can figure a baseball
ctilcher, when playing a dou·
ble header, has to bend his
knees into the crouch about
300 times. That's work .
Your questions and co1n·
rnent.~ ore welcomed a11d
1ci/l be used in Checking
Up ivherever possible . Ad·
dress letLers to L, !tf. Boyd,
Box 1875, Newport Be ach,
Calif. 92660.
TIBIOT
gin thl1 llHl1
bit DI IUKUry
E-qul1He marquise in 14K
yellow golc1 with ma1ch·
Ing math bracelet. And
inside, the Ti ssot 17· jewel movemen t which ha1 won worldwide rec·
oQnlllon for Us accuracy.
S19S
Hu"tl119to•
Center
l101;h & Edin9er
H1111tlfl91Dft ... ,,
ltJ·l501
BREAKFAST
Saturday, Moy 9-7 om to 11 om
• COS.TA M~S~ P 4RK . •
• PANCAKES-SAUSAGE
e . .,UICE...:.COFFEE-MILK
• •
' ' Free Music:al Entertainment
Continuous Drawin9s for
FREE PRIZES!
FREE PRIZES! BIG DRAWING!
21" COLOR TV SCHWINN BIKE
ON ADULT TICKETS ON CHILDREN TICKETS
Winner n••d not be pre1ent to win.
YOUR ADMISSION TICKET MAY WIN!!!
ADULTS $1.00
CHILDREN --75¢
Proceeds Ral1ed Go To Assist
Harbor Area Youth Orgeniration1
'
THIS SPACE DONATED
BY:
COMPLETE
CAR
CARE
Since 1959
Ho url: 7:30
to 6:00 Dally
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Located at 91 Huntington Center
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0
-I
' -
J% OAILV PILOT Friday, May 8, 1970
Tru~an's D~y Quiet as World Notes 86th Birthday PUT SOME
CLOTHES ON
MOTHER
•
lNDU'ENDENCE, 111 o •
(UPI), -Harry S Truman
hampered by arthritis but
sJjU able to make an occasion-
al .-.ilng, 13 116 today.
lle'U cc.~ate iii the .almost
total ~ion tbat .. has con·
fined hill life in te(tnt years.
l,1\<ft'U .be a bllihdly party • ..
STILL STROLLING
Harry Truman Turns 86
Options Set
As Campuses
Shut Down
• Hy UNITED PRESS
INTERNATIONAL
Llberal arrangemenl.!J have
been made at se vera l
unive rsities regarding classes,
grades, graduation and other
Jl-Ol'mal activities in the face
of an academic shutdown for
the final week or two ol the
spring term.
Major closing were ordered
al Tufts, Boston. Princtton
and Brown universities.
At Tufts UDiversity in Med-
ford, Mass., where classes
have been called off although
the campus is open, the
faculty voted 155-8 Wednesday
to offer the students several
options.
They C3'tl either complete
their courses; not <:omplete
them and receive at the
discretion of the professor a
letter grade, a pass/£.ail grade.
or an incomplete based on
work up to this week: an
incomplete would be made up
next academic year. Students
have until May l l to choose
their option.
Commencement exerc ises
may still be held at Turt s
but Boston University has can·
celed ilS ceremony and will
mail diplomas to gradual.es.
.11, Boston Unive r s ity
l'lpokesman said policy toward
students in regard to the
suspension of classes was
unclear, but he pointed out
that grades and credits are
the responsibility of the in·
di•«idual professor. Apparentl y
a st udent could take the grade
he had going into this exam
\\·eek or arrange "'ith his in-
structor to take the final ex·
am.
All students were ordered
lo leave the Boston University
campus by 5 p.m. (EDT)
Thursday.
At Princeton University In
New Jersey. classes ended last
'~·eek a nd studeols normally
would be in a t .... ·o-week
"reading period" preparing
for fina l ~xams. The faculty
voted to make exams optiooal
and extend the course deadline
until fall.
Students can ask for a pass '
fail grade based on work up
to Otis wee k or postpone work
and exams uotil Oct. 20 if
the professor ag rees. Or he
can have a numerical grade
now. Each department will
decide ""'hetbei' to waive ~
qulretnents such as com-
prehensive exams and finals
in the case of seniors about
to graduat.e.
At Brown Unive r si t y ,
Providence, R.I ., the option
~lists for all students 10
particlpate in academic func·
tk>N even though formal
classes have been canceled.
A student can. take a.1 i ...
compte.te..ar a satisfactory. if
he can qualify on the b&!l.s
or preYiour grades during the
~emcatet. He can also seek
t letter • grade b y ar·
rangt.mcntJ wiUl the pr~
lessor.
as usual tn nearby Kansas
City, .in event he last attended
in 1966.
Seldom. these days, is Tru.
man seen. His qwiet life Is
shared almost exclusively by
Mn.':l'rllDlao -who w"' 80 la~ February -lo the~ big
wllile \frame hcAlse at 211 S •
DtJawaie St., oJ1ly a few
blocks· from the tOwn square.
Most of his days focus on read-
ing newspapers and accounts
ol history, friends say. There
are few visitors to the Truman
home, suM'OUnded by a six·
foot high, black wrought-iroo
fencf'.
Less than a mile away is the
Truman Library, which t.'!ln-
tains more than 3.5 million or
the fonner President's letters.
documentll -and reconh or his
administration.
Occasionally when weather
permits, Truman strolls Dela·
.,.,,are and the streets nearby.
A dark suit and dark hat hang
loosely on llis now thin frame .
The brisk pace has been
slowed by age, and the walk·
ing stick he once swung jaun.
tily at his side is now a cane.
Police Lt. Paul lMlke) West·
v.'OOd, a long-time friend. is
always at his side . A COO·
spicuous. sleek black car -
driven by a Secret Service
agent-is no more than a few
feet away.
Except !or toose rare walks,
Truman's only other kno,ivn
trips awa y fron1 the family
home are to the barbershop a
block away, to the doctor or
d&1.tist and for an occasional
ride with Mrs. Truman in the
family car chauffeured by
Westwood.
And always, the blac k sleek
car follows.
It was 25 years agq_ April
12 -the day FrankJin D.
Roosevelt died -that Harry
S Truman, a farmboy born in
the tiny town of Lamar, Mo ..
found himself holding the reins
of the mJghtiest nation on
on earth . l~is unprecedented
decisions included the aton1ic
bombing of Japan, the Mar-
shall Plan, the Berlin block·
ade alrUfl and the dispatch of U.s: troops to Korea.
'fhe Kansas City birthday
parties in honor or Truman
have been sponsored each
year since he left the \\'bite
HOUSe in 1953 by industrialis t
Henry Talge. ~fore Ulan 200
will attend the luncheon by Ur
Yitatioo only Friday.
'lbe premiere presentation
of ''Give 'em l·lell. Harry!"
opened Thursday night. high-
lighting ''Salute to Hirry S
Truman \Veelt'' in Kansas
City. The two-act documen-
A ~· SHORTY ORIGINAL
Your Choice of Covering
TWIN RIB ALUMINUM OR lXB SHIPLAP
Th• complet• package, ready to pul
over your idab. Our deal includes
headers, rafters. fascia. base plates.
covering. a nd the nails. Nothing else
to buy unless you wanna get a
snauy bor·b·q a nd &ome chairs."'
Advertised specials good thru May
13. 1970 (and listening to today·s
music, it's pretty hard to remember a
pretty girl is like a melody.)
''
10 x 12
FREE
CLASSES
May 13 -"Gold Leafing and
Antiquing ''
DONALD
DUCK
SPRINKLER
May 20 -"How to Construct a Patio,
Slab a nd C over"
May 27 -"How to In stall Aluminum
Windows a nd Sliding Glass
Doors"
• REFRESHMENTS • DOOR PRIZES
6 FOOT
ALUMINUM
LADDER
The lcids'IJ hciTe fun ducking
'in ond out ol lhe 9proy ol cool
wcilet this gives d1,1ring hot
c:ihernoon1, the lowo will get
wci\ered too.
Won't toke you to the moon.
h1,1t 1f1 a 1tep 1,1p, Compcic!
d"de !or poinling, decoroting.
or cle<.Jn ing. with handy shell.
f olds !or •loroge.
12x12 14xl2
9499 109 99
12x20 16xl6
159 99 169 99
LA MIRADA STORE
COMMUNITY ROOM
LIMIT 100 PERSONS
7:30 to 8:30 P.M.
REGISTER IN STORE
UNFINISHED
PULLMAN
R.ody lo stain or point. do
it 'p1ych•d•lic. maybe you"ll
1care the kids inlo washing
their lac••· Compl•t• with
molded top. oval sink, ·and
o shiny louc•t.
99' 997
WI TH FAUCE T 2977
35 FOOT
POOL HOSE
997
IVz INCH
Hook to yo"r •acUllm. and th• pool i• cleaned of
gum ... rapp•r1. leave1. 1harlr tins. ond lh•
hngemoill Vo" hlt oil trying to 119,.re Olli how lo
pay 101 th• pool.
VINYL
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RUNNER
SCOTCH
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Original formula !or fob1ic
pro!ecllon that hasn't been
improved on yet. Used 01
d1r.e:ted it defies dirl.
g1eo1e. "'°°'and 10 on.
167
SP RINGO
MOD
BASKET
57'
Housekeeping 1ho11ld be lun l'bl11!.e:hl and th is'll
ndd a ht1\e color to the whol• K •ne. Shak• ll olll
lo use. told it "P 10 traYel.
PORCELAIN
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Sparldil'lg white. solid
porcelain, incl L1de1
woter closet, tin" tor
replac11!ment or that Of'W
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2177
CRYSTAL
LICHT
FIXTURE
1377
So b<eouUlul :hat you could n•.,.r IL1rr1 it on 'lnd
•Iii\ h_._ sigh• ol odmiralion ju•I admiring the
delicate ..ry11al pri1m1. When you put the juice
lo \I. it's really 111ight.
tary play dramatizes Tru-
man's Whlte House years.
Even a group or Pennsyl-
vania Republicans are hooor-
ing Truman.
In Southampton Township
near Teveos, Pa .. the Repu~
lican Club's theme Friday for
its annual spring dance is
"Give 'em Hell, Harry !" The
club even invited Truman to
attend.
"He had a lot of guts. to use
a modern term," said To m
Welsh, club president. "He
really told It like it was ."
DELUXE
SMOKER
WAGON
DelL111.• smoker wagon.
real elegance in outdoor
!easting. Motor. 1p1f,
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Mt-t44t '"-1Jr
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ELECTRIC \ \
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ln11ant 1torting 18 inch
mower. Double insll]ated.
lightweight. Sole and i!'s
Jun to use.
No,8000 4999
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PAPER PLATE
HOLDER
x-p• lh• plot• lrom
bending and 1pllling on
yollt rich Aunt M01tho c.1
yau gi•• willri th• duty kiss
{remember. 1he'1 ri(h).
Colon.,
27'
BEDDING PLANTS
Grow a salad or a
cenlerpiec•. choose lrom
marigolds. petL1aia1.
a sters, paruiies.
cornatioa1. or tomotoe1.
ORTHO LIQUID
PLANT FOOD
R..eomm.,nded by turl
e1<pert1. contains las!
a cting and lonq lastinq
plant Dllt rients.
ONE AT REGULAR
2ND ONE 2 FOR
FOR A 499
PENNY
RUGG
REEL
MOWER
Tough, lik• day old
whl1ker1. will mow it
down so 1011 you·u have
lime to !rim you•
bougalnvilla. Sell
p:opelled with up top
control1.
6966
KING O' LAWN
POWER EDGER
Tl it's a quick trim yo,.'r• ahet,
here'• th• best d-1 inwenled
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motor. complete edge to lrim
adjL11tmen1. four cycle tngine.
49ee
I \
I
7
\ Behind a City There's a Mayor's Wife
I
MAYOR'S WIFE PLAYS TO RELAX
Mr1. Walter Evans
Election Night
Casts New Role
Earline E vans was the proudest woman in San
Clemente the night her husband, Walter, 'vas elect-
ed mayor. ,
But her pride was mixed wilh anxiety as she
remembered the near tragedy that almost took hei'
husband from her last January.
"He woke up one morning and be~an to sha.ve
and in a few minutes he was back in bed \V1th
chest pains. It was a heart attack."
To this day she thanks the ambulance for its
quick arrival. And although her husband has re-
covered, she still is concerned about his "overdo-
ing."
"In one moment I was thrilled that he'd been
elected mayor," she smiled. "But in the neX't,. I
wondered if the job would be too much for hi s
health."
So Earline is keeping a carerul 'vatch on him
and in the meantime is excited over the prospect
of meeting so many new people as the wife of the
mayor.
NATURALLY FRIENDLY
Her new role is one she'll be good at since she's
the type of person who, after two minutes, you think
you've known all your life.
Earline has a natural friendliness that immed-
iately puts a stranger at ease, an openness which
is part of her Midwest beritagP.
"f was born and reared in Bridgeport, Okla .. "
she said. 1'It's a vet)' smaH tou•n ... only 300
people."
Her grandparents moved there \vhen her 1noth·
er was 8, buying a farm and building t he first
garage and gas station. The title to their land was
signed by Woodrow Wilson.
Earline's husband, \Valter. was raised in Hin-
ton Okla., only nine miles away. "We've known
each other since th e s!xth grade." she said. "But
've didn't start going together until we were seniors
in high school.
They were 1narried in 1951 after a t\vo-year en-
gagem ent which gave them both two years of col·
Jege. At the time, \.Valter was on hi s way to the
Navy to serve in the Korean War.
The Evanses cam e to San Clemente in 1957
when Walter decided to go into business with his
father.
THRILLED BY THEATER
"You may find this ha.rd to believe, but J was
thrilled to be moving to a town that had a movie
theater," she laughed. "Remember, to me San
Clemente was a big city."
She al~ liked the beach and couldn't get over
the fad there were green lawns and flo\vers all
year around. "We used to have water shortages
back home) and we never: s_eemed to have enough
water for iawns and lloWers." · -
When they moved to San Clemente, Earline had
no idea that her husband someday would bt mayor.
and that the city's most imp<n't.ant citizen would be
the Presictent of the United Stales.
"The children a re thrilled." said Earline. \Vho
has a son , David, 16 and Angela, 11 . "Our daughter
is going to start a scrapbook about her lather."
•
HAPPY FOR HER HUSBAND -Mrs. Tony Forster, seated with litUe Marco
and Christa, displays a winning smile £or the new mayor. Hei' husband, a des-
cendant of Don Juan Forster, was elected to the top council post after serving
as a councilman. Mrs. Forster also boa sts an interesting lineage with ancestors
related to Ethan Allen.
Native Capistranan
Dates to Don Juan
By PAM HALLEN
OI IM 011ty Piie! JIM!
Mary Jane Forster has a rival.
It's the city o! San Jua n Capistrano, which she suspects her husband
loves as much as his family. .
And that's why she's proud that h r. husband, Tony, was elected
1nayor.
"He's very dedicated and has put f'n many hours as a councilman,''
said Mary Jane. ''He's protective toward We city and wants it to stay the
beautiful place it is. That's why I'm very happy !or him."
She's full of pride and respect ror her husband, who was born in
Capistrano and talces great interest in his family hi story.
"Tony is a descendant of Don Juan Forster who came to California
from England as a seaman. In 1844 he took ove r the grazing land surround-
ing the mission and once had more than 106,000 acres."
ANCESTORS ARRIVE IN 1800S
Jack Benny Directs Couple
J\•Iary Jane found a story about Don Juan's life and had each page
framed £or her husband a nd children. The story tel ls how he married Isa-
dora. the sister or P io Pico, in 1837 and how in 1845 he and James McKinley
bought the Mission San Juan Capistrano for $710.
J\1ary Jane's interest in history was cultivated at Mount St. Vincent's
College in Riverdale, N.Y .. where she obtained an elementary teaching
credential. But she had a few well known ancestors, herself. By BARBARA DUARTE
Of lht 0.111 Piro! $1111
ll was only four years ago they manag-
ed to arran ge to take the same day
off; now, between requests for social
and civic engagements. they may have
to plan a vacation in order to get
reacquainted.
Since a mayor is held personally
responsible for the ills of the community.
a mayor's wife muii share some of
the burden and act as a social secretary
as well.
Rose Marie Goldberg, a pretty. petite
woman, is no newcomer to the Laguna
Beach poliLical scene. As wife of the
former president of the Chamber of
Commerce, she became tuned into a
constantly r inging telephone. And, as
manager of the Goldberg's Fads and
Fancies shop on Coast Highway. she
tackles problems of the business world
seven days a week.
But, to backtrack 11 years, Rose Marie
and Dick Goldberg decided to head west
from their hometown of Syracuse, N.Y.,
and aim toward California. Leaving a
family of 11 behind (seven brothers and
two sisters). Rose Marie and Dick ar.
rived in San Bernardino on a sunny
February day, took out a map, and
asked each other "Which way?"
Since Dick bad heard a comment on
the Jack Benny Show about a small
artist colony nestled between the moun~
ta.ins and the ocean, a familiar name
was the deciding factor. . .and Laguna
Beach it was. The decision proved to
be a provident one for both the couple
and the community, for seashells led
them into the business world, and the
Art Colony gained a young couple vi tally
interested in its affairs and its future.
One week ln an apartment overlooking
Victoria Beach stretched into a month
while they decided whether to stay or
move on. Meanwhile, each morning at
5 or 6, they would scour the beaches
and tidepools with a specially designed
scoop rig, gathering a colJ.ec Lion of shells
which still occupies a corner of their
hillside home.
Finally agreeing they had spent enough
time relaxing, they opened their first
business venture, the South S e a s
Treasure Shop in Boat Canyon, a shell's
throw from the newest partnership ven-
ture, Fashion Gallery.
TdJe hours (if any) are devoted to
the home, garden , cooking (Dick's
favorile meal is turkey), and keeping
her husband happy. . .an occupation
in itseU.
How does it feel to be the town's
first lady? "Well," she smiled, "I'm
ver:v proud of my husband.
"But," she confided, "I have been
so busy T didn't even have time to
buy a new cocktail dress for the post-
election party."
SEASHELL COLLECTOR
Mrs. Dick Goldberg
"Alt-hough I was born in Albany, N.Y., I lived most of my life in
Catskill where my father owned the oldest drug store in New York State,"
she said. "~1y mo1her's relatives came to the United States when they were
colonies and one of her relatives was Ethan Allen."
But hi story isn't Mary J ane's only interest. Of primary concern are
her two children, Christa, 3, and Marco, 4 months. She's also a member of
the San Juan Beautiful Committee, Chamber of Commerce, Fiesta Associa·
tion. San Juan J-fistorical Society, San Juan Capis1.rano Women's Club. Re-
publican Women and is a charter member of Las Buenas Amigas, Auxiliary
to Family Service Association.
FAMILY COMES F IRST
"But I'm not active in all of-the m," said Mary Jane. "My family
keeps me home."
She loves teaching and wants to return to her profession when her
children are older. In the meantime she's happy to be home.
"I love to sew and paint and I 'm an avid reader," said Mary Jane.
''[ make most of. my own clothes and Christa's." And she indulges herself
two hours a week by taking golf lessons.
For the time being she's content to let her husband be the actiVe one,
serving as a director of South Coast Community Hospital and the county
Fish and Grune Commission , as well as carrying out his duties as a busi·
ness executive at TRW Systems.
INVOLVEMENT IS KEY
"He loves being involved in the community. I think being the mayor's
wife will be a very exhilarating experience, especially having an opportun-
ity to meet so many people.
"I think this is a great time for Tony to be mayor. The city is grow-
ing rapidly and many citizens are taking an interest in it.
"I can hardly wait for 25 years to pass so I can look back and say,
'1 remember "'.'hen ••• '"
Early Birds Real Cards When Asking for 'Timely' Advice
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My wife and
l are not people who let things go
till the last minute. We plan everything
ahead and it sure does save a lot o[
headaches. This evening we were discuss.
ing our 1970 Christmas card.
In the past years we've always had
the names d. 6ur c.hlldten on the card
along with ours. Our last chick left
lhe nest in January so our next card
will have only our names. Should it
be Rolfe and Jay or Jay and Rose?
My wife says the woman's name is
supp!)ied to be lirst. J 'm sure I read
someWl'lere that the man's name should
be first if it is shorter. Please hurry
your answer. -rMPASSE
DEAR lM: J'm typing as fast 11
l cu ud I hope th1I rtacbet )'OU
__ ,
•
ANN LANDERS
ln time. Tlttre ue tnly m days WI
Christmas. Tbe woman's a1fme should
appear flrst If the card is prtated. U
tht wire 11 signing Ule card, 1be should
put her ha1ba.ad'1 aame firat.
ADd while you're at It -please 111e
ywr l11t name. Every year n rcctlve
dotens nf card5 -from Dick and Doro-
thy ??? Bob ind Kathy 77 John and Sue
??? -etc., etc .••.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Io a "edit
colwnn you said a man could not tell
lot sure if a woman Is a virgin. 'lbat
was one of the moSt terrible statements
you have ever made. In the first place
it is untrue, and Jn Ole second place
It gives the green light to every girl
who thinks she can fool around and
pass herself off as pure on her wedding
night.
1 am encloslni a cUppille ol a news -·
story from Reuters. The dateline ls
Naples. Th.is story reports that a .»-year-
old bride who claimed she was a virgin
was legally banished by her rroom.
The husband, a ~year-old fisherman,.
named Angelo, had heard rumors con-
cerning his future wife, Vinceniina. When
ht asked her about the rumors ~
swore they were lies. On tbeir wedding
night Angelo left Vincenzina because he
learned the rumors were true.
The following week, Angek> went to
the church to get the marriage annulled.
nie Tribunal heard the case. Medical
evidence was produced which proved
the girl had ceased to be a vl rgln
one year beJore the marriage. An an.
nulment was granted.
You have a responsibility to your
millions of readers to retract your state-
ment at once. -NO FAITH IN YOU
DEAR NO FAITH: U all tbe old
wives tale• about virginity were laid
end to end they would reach from llere
to Naple1. In some tn1taaces, U 11 po11J.
ble lo ascert.ala vlrK\DUy. ta lDaltJ' utea
tbe "evidence" Is ooae:d1teftt or llt1bl1.
doubtflll. One of my medlclll consultantt
lOld me of two pallentl w\o were
~hnically Virgins and pregnant.ftaa~r
physician said be bad examined M ltut
50 yeang girls wbe had DO dlaltll
evidence of vlrglnUy yet be was certain
the girls were telllng the truth wbea
they said Ibey had aol bod aexuaJ LD-
tercoune.
In the case of Angelo and bis bride,
the 1tatemeat that a ctrt ceased to
be a virgin ooe year before lter weddiai
night raises so many medical quesdons
that the "trial" was at best preposterous.
I've sakl II before and ] say It again.
Cburebes should stick to moral and
spiritual matten and 1tay -out Q(
medlchte.
Whal awaits you an the other s1de
or the marriage veil? How can you
be sure your Qlarriage will work? Read
Ann Landers' book.let "Marriage -Whet
to Expect.'' Send your request to Ann
Landers In care of the DAlL Y PILOT en.
closing 50 cents in coin and a long,
1tamped. ae.ll-addremd envelopt.
'
.. Four Generations Get Acquainted
A rec:ent gathering in the San Clemente home of ~fr. and Mrs. Donald A.
~bmidt reached to the Afidw~ .to join ~our generations of the family. Enjoy-
ing the company of young Chnstian Darnel Schmidt are (left to right) Grand-
mothe~ h-1rs. ~Kemp, Mrs. Schmidt, and Great-grandmother Mrs. Josephine
Vermeillet. The visitors are from Naperville, Ill.
Chapters Install
·Ceremonies Fete Moms
Spedal Mother·s D a Y Beach. Serving as luncheon Auctio •1 nd '! ·~ .J preparations are being made chairman . Mrs ru hard n on " o ay, " ay ~. by Hlmt.ingtoo Beach Xi Xi c~ l! ' · c will be completed wben Mu
o>U<;l_l\IU, ~ by Mrs. Carl Upsilon chapter meets Mon-
' Pi,.MuUpsUonandDehaBeta Coat and Mrs. Stephen day,Mayll,inlheHuntington
Ep8ilon chapters of Beta Mamfielcl. Beach homo of Mrs. Dick
Sigma PbL New offi<:ers will be lhe Cooper.
__,,._ r • i:: uw... Sealed wW be tbt fl.Imes. •: Malbon will be '-'<I ond u-~ ~ude-"·', ~: new o!ficers imtalliil' wben ~d ; ~ ........ Vida, vice .,_ Xi XJ Pi med! Wedneiday. ~~ ....,....Dooald "'·'ton TerTY Faff, pttlident; Greg ... ~ ......... : ~ , Patchen, vice ;resident: Don
:~ 1'.lay 13, in Guy Fawkes treasurer; JWth Eckman and Parker .and Stephen Bisset,
:; restaurant. Jerry Rubi, secntaries; Denis se<:retar1es; Charles Becker,
·; Presiding over the in-Terwey, civil defense, and treasurer, and Dick May. civil
# stallation ceremonies will be Kenneth Sutton and 'lbomas defense, incoming officers.
• · Mn. Norman Nieberlein. West Robin.$on, 'COunctl represen-Appointed will be Mrs.
Grove Area Council recording tatives. Charles Becker, sergeant-at-
•• secretary. _... Final arrangements for a arms and parllimentarian, ·
:: During a business meeting 1.lother's Day tea on Saturday, and fl.In:. Lynn SI ave n, ~ taking place in the Huntington __ M_•_Y_l_&._and __ a_s_um_m_er_F_!ill=g"-=h=isto=ri=an=-------
.~ Beach home of Mrs. Kenneth
• ~ Moore, chapter memben: also
• ~ made plans for a rummage
• • sale taking place Saturday,
May 23.
~ :r.trs. Nieberlein and Airs.
~ fl.foore .,·ere honored f o r
· ~ awards received during a
: ~ Founders Day celebration and
.. ,.fra. Moore, lbe chapter's in-
coming vice president, was
named Girl-of-the-year.
Ritual of Welcome was
given to the Mmes. Kurt
Staalte, Benike F i ab e r ,
Richard Cassidy and Donald
Elvklge, new members, and
Mrs. John Moquin and fl.frs.
Robert Shay presented the
program.
Nora Hollar
June Br ide
Nora Lee Hollar and J ohn
Lawreoce Lamkin have set
their "1'edding date for June
27 in St. Olaf Lutheran
Church. Garden Grove.
Parents of the betrothed are
Mrs. Noreen Hollar of Gard en
Grove and the late ~fr. F.
A. HGllar and ~lrs. Bonnie
Lamkin of Costa ~iesa and
the late ~Ir. John Lamkin.
Cadettes Sell Goods
For Trip Back East
In July 35 Cadette Girl Scouts and Mrs.
Hugh Turner Sr., leader of troop 565. •t1till
take a cross country trip to Rockwood, the
national Girl Scout house in Washington, D.C.
The girls and their parenls have been
v.·ork.ing to"·ard this goal for more than two
years. Each coed has had to earn $200 and
the parents SlOO each.
Due to bus Tates increasing the scouts
have the task of raising an ertra $2,500 in
only two and a hall months.
Tomorrow the parents' auxiliary of the
!roop will. have a fund-raising rummage sale
in the Edison Co. parking lot on Atain Street
in Huntington Beach from 10 a.m . to 6 p .m .
During the trip the troop will get to kno'v
their country's heritage and see the govern-
ment in action.
Fullerton
Students
To Marry
Christine Marie W j I s o n •
daughter of 1.lrs. Patricia
Wilson Or Com Mesa. will
become the bride of. Ronald
William Hauck, son of Mr.
aOO ?toln. Lowell Hauck of
Garden Gro\'e.
SL James Episcopal Church
in Newport Beach will be the
wedding scene Aug. 15. ~
Miss Wilson is a graduate
of Costa Mesa High School
and is studying history at
California State College at
Fullerton.
The future bridegroom ii
an alumnus ol Bolsa Grande
CHRISTINE WILSON
Eng09od
Hi&h School and a phvsical
education major at cscF.
Gown Fabrics
Include Taffeta
Ho rosco pe
Cancer: Cycle High
SATURDAY can be<une rea!IUH.
MAY 9 . UBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. %2);
Your pencnallty uodergoes
BJ SYDNEY OliRR chanie: many comment that
ARIES (March 21-April 111): you look 1i.U new pel"IOll.
Stick to principles. Family Prosptcts are brighter in
member may be adamant social and professiorial artes.
about making changes. But SCORPIO (Oct. 13-Nov. 21 ):
you get your way throu&h Shakeup indicated w b i c h
reason and careful erplanaUon causes you lo b r o a d e n of motives. horimns. You seek-and ob-
Pl!CES (Feb. !~Mard!lll):
Good lunar aspect coincides
wl,UI emoUonal fu.lfiJ.lmenL
Romantic evening in store for
you. Exprus ftellna:s . Refuse
"' be dl5cour&ged b y
associate, friend who whines.
IF TODAY JS YOUR
BIRTHDAY some wonderful
opportunities are on horbon..
You get chance to make
known your special abllJUes.
Attending to delllls now will
free you for more creative
endeavors.
TAURUS (April ».~tay 20): tain-new allies. Be versatile,
Not good to insist., ca)oJe or have a1wn.atives available.
issue ultimatums. Best results Gi\•e full play lo intellectual
obtained by turning on cbann. curiosity. Obtain answers.
You are surprised by mean-SAGmARIUS (Nov. Z2· 1, 11..d our -• 1urtY '°" v1111
ingful compliment. Member ol Dec. 21 ): You diJcover facts !ft mont'f ..... IOVt. ordsr S'fOM'f Om&rr'1 bol*ltt, "kret Hlolts tor opposite su upresses desire cooceminJ friends which could ....,.., .,.., WOIMll." St11C1 bl,,...,,
10 •-be be ---"· Jlo •t t fl •Ml SO ctntt lo O!rl_,r ""rolon ~ you tier. auu~1g. n cas rst *"''· "'' OAttV flilLoT . ._ :n.o, GE.\UNI (~!ay Zl.June 20): stone. Take new knowledge Gruw1 Ct n1r11 s1111o11. New YO<\. •-=":;:-:,'·;:;'m~"-'=======. Don't be deceived by apparent in stride. Avoid fonnins con·i_.
bargains. Heed inner voiet. clusioos based on impulse. Be i
Your romantic kieas may rtl!Onable. J
underao ttVi.sioo. This slwld CAPRICOR.~ (Dec. 22-Jan. :
not be regarded as setback. 19): Lie low. Play waiting
Quitt dilcuss:ioo accomplishes game. One in position of
wonders. authority has not arrived at
CANCER (June 21.JuJy 22:): final decision. Avoid appearing
Changes occur in areas you overanxious. Special agree-
coosldered pennanent. Not ment is due. wtse to fight progress. Cycle AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-F'eb .
is high, and a ppa rent 11): Some may make
disagrttments are due to unreasonable demands. Know
bommerang in your favor. when and where to draw llne. MIMOlY
LANE
HAl lOl CINTll LEO (JuJy ~Aug. 22): Study corresporxience. Make
Light touch is best today.~ up your mind to investigate
lain hint from Ta 1 r 11 1 questions previously left hang· H•v• V•u message Accent k-• 011 .. v•rlll u1 Viti' . on""'" youli~m~g~.~~~~~~ifiiiiriN'J!A;s~~~~~~~ co-operate with co-workers,,
membe" ot club. group. V IRGINI A'S
organizatioo. Display sense of bumor for good results. I SNI P 'N' STITCH SHOPPE
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. %2), 333 E C Purcbase o! gilt for friend: 4 ast oasl Hwy. • Corona del Mar
makes you very J>O!llllar.I Pho·ne 673-8050
Fresh start is good; lo\·ed
one destt\·es benefit ol doubt.•
Many of your hopes, wishes
Birthday
Date Told
You 're Invited May 11th
To 1tt1ncl I 1p1ti1I fr•• dtmon1tr1!0on on two qu1lity uniqu1
produch by Mri. C1rcl Simon. N1mely the "UNIQUELY YOU"
dr1u for"'. Thit form i1 mor1 Ii•• your body thin eny oth1r
on tJ.,e m1rk1t. It ctn 9•<n or 1011 (n.th11 11 you Joi Al10 Mri,
SOmon will 9iv1 u 11 l111cn oft •••Y in1!1ll1tion of beth uniqu1
poly11f1• •Ad met1I inYi sible iipp1t1. FV Club
Hears New ..
Official
The third binhday of Delta
Beta Zeta Chapter ()f Bela
Sigma Phi "·ill be celebratedl
Fabrics in the oew crop Tuesday, 1'fay 12. at II p.m.I
of bridal gowns inctude floaty in the home ol ~trs. Thomas
types -fragile silk laces, Ashbrook. l
chiffons, voiles, organdy and Cake and champagne will
Du1 in9 thi1 promotion, picli up your c1rtifit1I• for • SOt
refund o" • unique zipper foci,
S1e Ycu Scon!
"'-· VIRGINIA
The Fountain Va 11 e y be ser\'ed. Transfertts and
Woman's Club "·ill hear ~Jrs. light-weight linen. prospecti\·e members art P.S. A fret o't"1on1tr1lion 1t I I em end 2 pm-Moncley Mey
I I th. Nonna Brandel Gibbs, lftin-Silk taffeta also is in the welcome to contact !ilrs.
tington Beach cooncilman, runninc and looks especially Robert !ifcAdams at 968-ilZJ
speak during their generai:i-=•tl"r'ictiiviei illiibeirii. i1oonii'i1.tiicei.iiiiili1i0'iiadcliii.tiona1i.iiiiinfionniii•i''°ini.iiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ meeting Mooday, May 11. at ·
II p.m. in the Fountain Valley
Community Center.
A report on lbe state con-
vention wh.ich took plact
earlier this week in the
Sheraton Un.i\•ersal Hotel in
Universal City ""ill be given
by Mrs. Laurence Erwin,
president and Mrs. Wallace
Short, president~lect.
Hostesses for the evening
are the 1altnes. John Waddell
chainnan, Robert Cardinal:
James Dick, Al lfackmeister,
Charles Keane, K e n n e t h
Martz, Wilbert Pesek, Merle
Rupp and Jack Yamamoto •
Club Discusses
Bo by' s Arriva I
The baby's arrival will be
discussed when members of
the Costa Mesa Chapter of
La Lecbe League meets in
the Newport Beach home of
Airs. Ralph Benware.
The public is invited to the
gathering Tuesday, May 12,
at 7:45 p.m. Further in-
formation regarding the club
may be obtained by calling
lairs. H. W. ~foore at 545-43S9.
Delta Beta Epsilon "·ill
honor mothers and install of·
ficers during a l p.m. Ju n-
.• cheon Saturday, May 9. in
the King's Victoria, Long
la-Uss Hollar is a graduate
of Rancho Alamitos High
School, Fullerton Ju n i or
College and now is a music
major at California State
College at Fullerton. She is Soroptimists
a member Gf Beta Sigma Phi • . . The prospective bridegroom Soroptimist. Club of Hun·
.... "'"''-Is a graduate of Estancia High tington Beach gathen at 12:15
NOR &hool and Orange Coast p.m, the second and fourth Fash ions
End Year
A l EE HOLLAR College. He is attending CSCF Tuesdays in F r a n c o 1 s
!r===~~F~utu~r~o:;,;B~ri~d;•:;~~~an~d~s;tu§d~y~ing~m~us~ic§.:;;;;;;;~;;r~es~~~ur~an~l::::::::::::"il
Spring fashions from shopsll
in Laguna Beach and • San
Clemente will highlight the
'
. final season meeting of the
~· fl.1onday Morning Club of
"'·
Laguna on f\.tonday, May 11,
in Hotel Laguna.
Palnting1 and handcraft by
members also will be ex-
hibited during the meeting ac.
:-cording to Mrs. Robert Carr,
art chairman. Work should be
~: at the hotel by 10:15 a.m.
lnltallation of officers will
be part ol the 11:30 a.m.
•• program. New officen Include
the MmeL John Casey, presi·
deri; Wllliam Gteschen, first
.. . •.
vice preside,_; Calvin Gib-
Mns, second vice president;
Get the BIG 6% at the BIG M
Everybody knows th~t NOBODY TOPS THE BIG M -Mutual Savings
In offering the most m· earnings to savers. MUTUAL'
1% 2 Jtlf ftnn 1ccoun~ with $5,000 minimum
l tl" 1 yMr term account, with S1 ,000 minimum
.: T. E. KeUy, third Vice presl·
deol; Martin Gurney .
recmlinc aecretary; HalWer
Caltinl, co r re 1 ponding .-.wy, ll1d Frank Levins,
lmJUrt<. Omega bracelet watChes in 14 karat gold.
514% I-months bonus account, wilh $500 minimum s AtftNGS
71':" c:trtlflcate of deposit evailable, with $100,000 minimum II WI
ff }'OU ar1 a Mutual Saver, now it the time to lrrve1t additlonal tunda In these new and lean &IAciaiin
hlgk-rtl• &CC01.1nt1. (11\lurance has been Increased to $20 000.) II you.,. not CORONA DE
Senior Citi%ens
CommunlJy RecruUon c.mer •l or.in,. County I
Fa!rgniunds ltl tbe scene ol
actJYity when Costa Mesa l Senior Cltiumt meet at J 1
a.m. .. ~ Tbelldq.
•
'
From left: S375 .• S260 .• $335.
SLAVICK 'S
Jewtltrl Si•ct 1917
NEWPORT BEACH -644-1380
I 8 FASHION ISLAND
Ywr (Ila.,. Ace-' W•ke""' ,-l•"*A"'1rk11"11, Mldtf (~rtt. M o,_ M•lld.,. aH fri'-Y ••tll t :JI
• • '
Mllhlll Savtr, now l1 lh11Jme to open your account at Th• e'r11 M-MlllualSavln"-•• L MAR ... 2t87 btl 0o .. 1 "'°"'""'
ACCOUNTS NOW INSURED TO $20,0001 , __ .,...,,,
W••T A .. CADIA
llOW°•I 0\111111 AOllCI
T11t...._«W1M
COVI NA
:>DO HOl'lh Cttt111 AYlnlM
Tl lljlllonl ~11
GLINOAL•
»I NGrt11 l r.i1e1 lollltvarCI
T e!tFllont 2t2_.1"
.. A.ADINA (H11d Ofl1ee)
315 Eat! Colortda Bollt.,,.l'lf
TtltphOllt ttM.J45
' ·-·-··-··---·-·-.-.,......-.......... ----------------------------·-~-~-~---~---------·--·-··----
I
YOUNGER THAN SPRINGTIME -Continental
Airline's ne'\v Adele Simpson-designed hostess unl·
fo rms run the fashion spectrum from the jumper to
the pantsuit. ShO\\'fl in exciting textures and fab-
" •
~· ' , r· ' r
I
UI'! Teleotio!o1
For th e Birds?
The TIC\V fall and \rinter eveni ng fashions out of
Ne\\' York look lo be strictly for the birds •.. or
from t he bird s. !Jictured are t\vo creations using
f~athe rs at ncckli11 c nnd hemline or cuffs,
rl
•
"--_.
rics are (left to right) the MAC uniform, jwnper
with sllk blouse. pantsuit in red wool jersey, shirt-
dress, winter suit in jersey and the striped summer
dress.
r riday, May 8, 1970 DAIL V PILOT JS
Proud Bird With New Plumage
They've Come a Long Way
Spring will be a little skirt has the classic figure
"great" this year as Con-flattery of the A-line.
linental Airlines unveiled its The knit is the basic sum.
smashing new Adele Simpso n-mer dress. The fabric is designed hostess uniforms in showings in Los Angeles, polyester, sort to the eye and
Chicago, Dallas, Denver 1 weightless as ever, Banded in
Houston and SeatUe. variegated horizontal stripes,
The overall mood for sum-a front zipper for easy in
mer attire is softer, wllh high. and oul: A medallion suspend-
interest in fabric and tell:ture ed from a w~lst hugging chain
front . Or is pushed aside for pockets for functional fashlon
fashion flare. · and shoulders decorated with
Taking shape softly but epaulettes.
standing-firm through it aulF"'""""""""""""'""""""oi;, ls the Military Airlift Com· J & J UPHOLSTllT
mand uniform dress made up ~l!'ANSI OUALITY, INT•G•ITY,
in red cotton poplin, A step Sl!1tv1cs, c1t.1.1"TSMANSH1 ...
into front that zips up for W• ACC••T CHALlSHO•S
practicability. En 0 rm 0 us WI LIKI IUUTIP"UL l'UllNITUlll
642·5876 646-8058
for winter outfits, And believ-add s the only accessory this lecturer
in g that 1970 will reflect more crush-proof dress needs. ~~ than ever that the emanci-Pants are becoming a way
pated woman wants h e r of life! For Continental's •
clothing sort. nalural and on hoslesses. they're optional p,·ctures ,_ ~-. ~ -the move, the clothes are worn. with a tunic blouse and _
made up in fabrics that stay coat. ln the brightest or red, U!i!i
comfortable in any climate. a pant look for now snug d ·
Adele Simpson bas come out at the hip, flared on the leg. Lan scopes • ' '
with a complete and dazzling And it pairs with Jhe winter ~
line of fashions for Con-toi>«>al . . nmpsnn
tinental's hostesses ranging Some coots have an all Colored slides ot Europe 0 • :
from jumper to pantsuits around talent for fashion like Canada and the United ~ · HAUf STYLIST
cleverly using the airline's lo-the hostess sash wrap winter M k
go imprint. Logo s<:(lrVeS, worn overcoat. It's tailored soft and will illustrate a Wednesday, 3 8
in a multitude or manners. young from the high shaping l\lay 13, lecture presented by Mother's Day
abound in Continental's new at the shoulders to its superb San Diego ~pe a.rdlitect
high rashJon dis p I a y. seaming and buttons on the R H seifert for the South All of Mayl Hoslesses wiJJ start wearing double. It's fashioned in wool "1 · • -·"f' · Coast Garden Club. the new summer utH its 1n i·e......... SHAMPOO __ , Spealh .... on tile sp1'r1't of JWle aud switch to the winter Mad e from polyester,. the """'fi & SET
models in Octol>er. new light weight raincoat is the community, Seifert will $4 OO
The shirt dress is an essen-for all seasons because it's cover hi.storlcal g a rd e n s , •
lial classic, updated in a Jogo designed wilh the hostess's life modem landscape architec-HAIR SHAPING
print of sensational, soft and In mind. Oversize Oap pockets ture and the spirit o f $3.00
silky twill. Long full sleeves accommodate the over-now American a n d continental
banded at the wrist, wide open from the tote bag. The small citles.
collar with an ascot tuck-in rounded collar has a color Prior to the meeting In
and a matching tie belt circles arlcbor in the gay print scarf. Three Arch Bay Clubhouse,
the waist. Adele Simpson teamed it with a noon salad lunch will be
BRECK OR
L'OREAL WAVE
$15.00
COLOR
$9.50
Continental flostesses will pizazey boots, block heel and served by Mrs. Ro b e r t
take a giant leap into fashion a square toe. , Lindennan and committee
with the jwnper. It mixes A sportswear mood prevails mbnbers, the Mmes. Roger
a shirt and skirt mixability In the tw<rpiece winter suit liolden. A. L. Ho 1 rfn g er, 67U961
with a dress's altogetherness. A more constructed look in Melville Willey, James Ward ~T. .:.:-=,.
,. lt teams beautifully with the the Jong Jean jacket, a flap and W. A. Schoeppe. coro11a QI Mar
-"''-'='-"""'"=1,.! logo print blouse with its softly pocket hitching a ride on each Reservations at a cost ot ~'
1, draped •·pussy cat" bow. hip. A rectangular logo print $1.50 may be ' made with Miss
Count,·an lo Lead ~· Belted with the gleam of a neck scarf spiUs do"'n the Jean Atkinson, 499-1162.
.. golden medallion chain, the I ~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~;;;;~=~~~::;~:;;:~::i::::~~~-
d OPENDAILY,10-lO;SUN.,10-7 FRIDAY, SATURDAY Act .I .On U Teatime _..._
LOS Ar\CELES (AP) -~~~resi· l.i IPnia'ns vareowgell uundeer way c:ll .--•.
dent of the H5 ,000-member California Federa· r
tion of \Vomen s Clubs is A1rs. Vernon Cun· l for a benefit champagne tea
ninghan1 of ·LCfs Alamitos. i sponsored by the Soroptimist
She \vas cho~en at the group's annual · · Club of Laguna Beach on
convention \Vcdncsday in nearby Studio City Thursday, May 21 , at 2 p.m.
by approximatC"ly 1,200 d elegates present. in Pacific Island Village.
In resolutions, the federation urged: Exciting prizes including a
,,igorous action to eliminate auto emissions Sa n Francisco trip for two
as a cause of pollution; that local and state are being arranged by Mrs.
:->chool officials be <ill o\ved to d ismiss teach· · Suzette Dabney, ways and
ers \vho offer theories "contrary to the herit-means chairman. Fashions
age of the United States of America": that from Laguna shops will be
l 'residcnt Nixon appoint a \vo1nan to the U.S. modeled Jn lhe poolside set· . " ting. Supreme Court "at the c::irliest opportunity, Tickets at $'.l.50 are
and 1hat the \Var on pornography and obscen-available from Soroplimist
ity be pursued. members with proceeds going
The federation"s suggestion on the latter into the Vocational Loan Fund
\\'as a letter-\l'ritin_g-campaign to back up to train young people for
judges \l'ho have shov<n recognition of the employme nt.
problem and that ~gislators who share thei·r
vie\VS be given support.
Marriage
Elizabeth Ad a1ns Steclr
became the bride of Steven
Lav.Tcncc fl1ycr s during a
si'ngle ring ccrc1nony.
Parents of the n1..•wly\1·ed~
arc flolr. and ,\Jr:;, Rtchard
Steele of Lido Isle and Col.
~rel.) and trlrs. Lal'tcrcncc T.
•
Announced
]l('r sister, Patricia Steele anJ
given in marriage by her
father.
The bride and bridegroom
;Jr(' students ai the University
of California, Santa Barbara.
Golf Tourney
\Vomen golfers of San Juan
Hills teed off yesterday in
the first club championship
tournament. The event will
continue Monday and Thurs-
day, May 11 and 14, accm'ding
to Mrs. Clifford LaFever and
J\1rs. Frank Ha nson, co -
chairmen.
MISSES'
NYLON TOPS
JAMAICAS
44
. l\lyers of Santa Barbara.
The ne"' Mrs: ~1ycrs, a 1967
Chlldren·s Hon1c Society
tlebutante, fs a graduate of
Desert Sun School in Idyilwild.
Golfers who will compete
ror a perpetual trophy will
be divided into four flights
'A'ith the winner detennined
by a gross score for three
days.
REG. 1.97
llYLONTOPS
The bride was attended by
leoHhril
'"'' ..... lllltnnff s>011..c:• 11'111.
Wt1Nl1tttr
a.dlLetMcF ... •
1S4IO .... ......
. -
88
REG. 2.57
JAMAICAS
NnON TOPS In mock ond fun
turtl•n•cks, v . and U·nect
stv'•s. SaTid1 and Sfr\:ies. S-M-L.
JAMAICAS feofUre elastic pun.
Olll wal1tband1 with 1titched.
dowft ueoaea. atst. Colan. llid
8-18
1•1111 Park
U.Cel•1tY1lteyYIM s,as LJ•-'• ,,..
S.•flAH
NI .. " St ... l rlthl
1400141 .....
"CHARGE IT"
'
L
,
---------
JI DAILY 'ILOt Fr~11. Mar I, 1970
It All Comes ,Down to I Game: Lal{ers vs NY
NEW YORK !AP) -The New York
Knicks have the home court - and
Willis Reed back in sneaken -tonight
tn the sudden-death seventh game of
the National BasketbaU Association 'title
playoffg with l.o5 Angeles.
Long.suffering KnJck fans who have
waited patiently for their first cham-
pionship will no doubt pump some
adrenalin into thelr heroes with tlreles.s
ei::hortaUons.
But -as the Knicks' Cau.ie RuMell
said earlier in the playoffs -''they
don1 put the bill in the bole for YOIJ·"
1bat's -. -<Ulltl in. Importan-ce of tht KnkU' ace center was
graphically d-ated by W-•Y
night'• lSS.ll.J loll to the Later•.
While RMI watdled from the bench
with I bruised right hJp, Los Angel .. '
WUt Chamberlain ate the Knlcka alive
with 45 points and 27 rebounds as the
Lakers tied the aeries at W.
It's true New Y«k won the filth
game ~1onday night at Madi9D11 Square
Garden after RMI I'll burl in the flnl
Battered Champ
Trailing by Three
HOUSTON (AP) -He came stumping
dowLI! the fairway on once·shattered legs,
limping badly on an Injured left knee,
tile familiar white cap a signpost out
of the past.
Ben Hogan was back, briefly, perhaps,
but back at competitive golf.
And lhe fabled Texas Hawk who
Parker's Cvcle •
Batters Mets;
LA Faces Phils
NEW YORK (AP) -"l'V• thought
about it for nearly two years and it's
Just aboot my biggest thrill in baseball,"
Wes Parker said after the 1.41 Angelea
J)odg~· first baseman had clobbered
the New York J'l.tets for the cycle.
Parker, a 31).year"ld switch hitter,
Dodger Slate
All••-.,. K"I ("'411
MtY l MtY t
M•Y 10 MIY 12
""'" 1l ,,. • ., u
"I··~ •= •. m. 10: ...... ,, 1.m..
I: 11.m, : 11.m~
capped his four-hit night -alngle, dw-
ble, triple and home-run -with a two-
run line drive triple over MeU' center
fielder Tommie Agee'a head In the 10th
inning Thunday night, giving Los
Angeles a 7-4 victory.
''I Wal just trying to get the ball
in the air," Parker said of his winning
blow.
Tonight the Dodgen 10 with Claude
Osteen at Philadelphia.
LOS AHG&Lal MaW YOltlC
1llrflr9I "'""°' w n11,11 s11 1A9ft,cf 1010
$l1emo,., 1b l 1 o o H1rr1110t1, 11 J 2 1 O
W.CIY!1, d • l l 1 C.Jon11, II ! 0 0 0 KCIKO rt • o o o ~ll•m,kv, rt l 1 I o Joaltu~. rt I o O O Bo1w1ll, ,b 5 1 2 1
W.P1r1<tr. 1b S 1 4 l J~tnlf~, lb l 0 O 0 Gr1b1r~·wn1.Jb • I 1 I SwobCld~. rf 1 o a C.r1wlord, II 1 0 0 0 Foy, lb l 0 0
MOii, U 1 0 0 0 Oyt•, c ' 0 I 'Totllort;J, ~ ~ l 1 l S1dtck!, p , 0 0
Fosr.r, p 7 o o o MtGr1w. p o o O
Sr-r, 11 0 0 0 0 Ct..;lwell, p 0 0 0
Glbr\•1100, ph I 0 0 0 Ml,.11111, pl! 0 0 0 Limb, p 0 0 0 0 Clend....,, pfl 1 I 0
"Tol~l1 ll
LOI .l"'jtln
NIW York
K--..:;1, p O o 0
W1l1, pl! 1 0 0
MtAndrew, p 0 0 0
71J 1 To11t1 lS 4 2
000 000 4DCI ) -1
100 000 OXI O -4
dominated another era of 1olf received
an ovation at every green from the
gallery that came to study the moves
of the master who won 10 major cham·
pionships, iRclud.111g four U.S. open titles.
He responded with a par 71, a hlghly
respectable score on the treacherous
Ownpion.s Golf Club course, and trailed
leader Deane Beman by just three
strokes going into today's second round
of the $115,000 Howiton Championa
International Invitational goU tourna-·
menl
It was the first competitive appearance
In almost three years for the man who
swept three major dlamplonahips -the
U.S. lll!d Br!Ush Openl and the M1lkrs
-in 1"3. "I must admit J was a lltUe nervous,"
said Hogan, long reputed to have nerves
to match his steel-lfay eyes.
But he made some putts when he had
to -it wu puttil!.g woes that forced
him into a semi-retirement several years
ago -and really had trouble only on
the sixth hole, which he double bogeyed.
The 32-year-old Beman, who had an
outs;tanding amateur record before turn-
ing pro only three years qo, played
in relative obscurity early in tbe day,
posted hill 68, then lit back ud watched
it slaJld up for the lead.
He held a one·stroke margin over
Gibby Gilbert, who had only the marshals
as a gallery, Australian Bruce Crampton
and Bert Greene, tied at 69.
"No, I'm not satisfjed," the 56-year-old
Hogan said, "l'm never satisfied. But
J can't change the score now.
"It might have bttn better U I didn't
do a couple or stupid thin1a. I bit
a couple of chlldru'a lhota."
That WIS OD tbe sixth. He WU one
under, after pitching to four feet on
the fUth, llOinl fo the tee but "toed
the ball too low lDd -htll fopped It."
He put hill second In the woedl from
a poor lie, and hit a tree comtnc out
but It bouncod info the fairway "Ju!I
about where my tee lhot should have
been i• the flnt place ...
He pitched over the sretn, chipped
back and Hiik a three.footer for the
double bogey.
But he rallied with a 20-foot bird.le
putt on the next bole before lhree·puttlng
boUl eight and nine. Ho1an got the
strokes back with a pair of five-foot
birdie putts; on 15 and l&.
Gurney 168.5 in Indy Run;
B1·uins Up Cup Lead to 3-0
INDIANAPOLIS -Mark Donohue,
rookie of the year in last year's SOO-mile
race al the Indianapolis Motor Speedway,
set a new speed standard Thursday for
this year's practice.
Donohue was timed at 168.tl miles
per ·hour to lead four drivers who made
runs in that area.
Dan Gurney, Costa J'l.1esa, was closed
~t 168.5; Al Unser, 168.8, and A. J.
Foyt Jr., 168.2.
Others running strongly Thursday in-
cluded Lloyd Ruby, 183.3; Gf"eg Weld ,
162.4, and Charlie Glotzbach, 161.8.
•
BOSTON -The Bos lo n "Bruins
1alked ccnlidently in terms or one
more practice and one more game after
trouncing the SL Loui s Blues 4-1 Thu~
day night and moving to within one
victory of their first Stanley Cup cham·
pionship since !!Ml.
1'1e Bruins set a playoff record with
their ninth straight victory and can wrap
up the series at Boston Garden Sunday.
't'he Bruins are unbeaten in 23 straight
games at home.
•
story window, the Sanla Clara County
aironer's office aaltl.
He wu pro11ounced dead an hour later
in the emer1ency room.
•
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. -Allan Webb,
3i·year-old former back W\tb the New
York Gluts, became the first black
head coach in professional football
history Thursday wben he was elevated
to the poet by the Long Islands Bulls
of the Atlantic Coast Football Leaiue.
•
AMSTERDAi\1 -International 01,)'m·
pie Committee prtsldent Avery Brundage
warned Thursday that the 6~ Congess
that meets here next week may delay
ils decision on who aets the 1971 Wiater
Olympics until the question o l
amateurism is resolved. ·
Brundage hu been angered by
1tatement8 made by akl circuit tlar1
about their earnln11. uNewapapera are
full of reports by Jome 1tar1 who claim
they are making between 5().f80,000 a
year from their sporl How can these
people be classified as amateurs?", he
.. ked.
quart.er, but it \Yas a super team effort
and quick change of i;\yle that baffled
Los Angeles. On Wednesday night, the
Lakers had tlme to adjust.
So the arduous season -with its
seemingly never~nding crop of playorf
games -comes down to one gam e.
And for the Knicks, it hinges on a
rectus femorls muscle, the one that
Reed hurt.
The 6--foot-IO, 23S-pound Reed will play,
but how effective be wiU be, is the
big question mark.
Team doctors have been putting him
through the most sophisti cated healing
processes. They've run him through a
On TV Tonight
4:30, Channel 7
steam room , an Ice plunge and a standup
whirlpool.
Dr. James Parkes, the Knicks' new
physician. says, "Willis is a good patient
••• he 's very cooperative, and believe
me, that'• a lot in medicine."
After Wednesday night's Jogs at Los
Angeles, Reed left ahead of the teatn
to resume muscle treatmenls in New
York.
Reed 's fierce competitive spirit \Yill
no doubt have him in the game, despitr
Dr. Parkes' judgment that he had ii
"50-50" chance of starting.
The Knicks need him to stop Cham-
berlain -as he had in the first foor
games. But what if he can't?
"The llUle guys can do it," said the.
!\nicks' \''alt frazit•r, 111ean1n,i: himself,
Dick Barnf't\, 1.iJ!l Brtirllry. t:.izz1e
Russell. Dave L>l•Uu~M:hcre ttnd Dave
St;il!\\'urth. all und('r s.7_
But Jerry \Vl'~t of U1:. 1\ngeles had
clifh~r('nt idc<Js.
··JI \\'ill gues 10 tile boup like ht
dJd \Verlnesda) n1gh1,," hi.' ~<1.1 ~. "'!here's
no w<Jy \Ve can lo~r
Anolhrr dcaft'rHn~. '-l'lloul crowd of
19 ,500 will be on hand :ll ~ladi:son 5<1uarc
GanJcu.
COURAGEOUS BEN HOGAN BATTLES THE TOUGH HOUSTON CHAMPIONS INTERNATIONAL COURSE , FINISH ES WITH 71
Angel Manager Too Foxy
Country Rube Snookered
Harold "Lefty'' Phillips is a sly man.
The foxy manager of the California
· Angels caused me to drop my guard
during a moment of relaxation at the
bar in Gene Autry's Palm Springs Hotel.
Lrity left the impression that he had
gone over his limit with the. refreshments
and then further duped me by talking.
When he speaks It is not difficult
to UUnk that Lefty is not sharp.
And that is a gros.s misjudgmen t. if
you happen l-0 be discussing baseball.
Chatting about upcoming pennant
races, Lefty spev.•ed out somethini.:t lo
the effect he thought the Cincinnati Reds
would win the National League West
Division.
,J nearly swallowed an ice cube betore
t could recover enough to move in for
the kill. .
I proposed a small invesln1ent on both
of our parts-he \Vould put his dough
on the Reds-I would have the rest
of the division (Atlanta, Dodgers, Giants,
Houston and San Diegol.
Mentally, I portrayed myself as a
modern day Jesse James y,·hen Lefty
agreed to the: financ ial proposal.
'l'oday I see myself as the <'OUntry
rube, taken to the cleaners by the city
sharpie.
Cincinnati is already so rar ahead
of the rest of the pack thal the Red~
may be printing divisiona l playoff series
tickets by Mothers Day.
Chalk up one for Lefty.
* * * Jl's one o( those things you sort of
drtad to think about -the Los Angeles
Stars (ala Anaheim Amigos) nl a k i n i;;
a permanent nesting place in Orange
County.
But it appears the thinking is
generating along those lines after the
LA enU'y in the American Basketball
I
Associallon drew O\'Cr 4.400 fans ,\londay
night at 1\nahcim Convent ton Center.
You can write that throng off to ty,·o
things, however :
I. Spencer Hay1>,'ood of the opposing
Denver Rocket s y,•as probably 1he reason
tor h;ilf that turnout
2. Complhnentary tickets were about
<1s hard to come hy as sand in the
1tcsert. Herb Livsey. of Orange Coast
College had a dozen. figure al least
another 100 guys fared as well as Herb
and you have the other half of !he gate.
Unlorltinately, Siar~ officials are en-
couraged by lhc receplion, regardless
01.ENN WHITE
·----TVflITE
JV ASl-1 ------
of what the reasons \\ere. According
to club publicist Hank Ives Orange Coun·
ty and S:ilt Lake City are running 1-2
for lh(' Franchise ·while former pick
Albuquerque rs a b;:idly beaten third.
In mv esteern. that tnakes Alhuqucrquc
the rea'I "'inner.
l\·es raps tills column because 1 bad
mouth the Stars \l'i\hont having seen
them play since last year. And sinal!
wonder~
One ganlc in a decade \Yould be all I
cou ld handle.
Having 1hc Stars in Orange County
v:ou ld be 1<lnlamount lo opening a Jept'r
colony here.
The decision on their move is due
sometime between rih1y 15 and J une
1-
Cily.
cross your fingers for Salt Lake
* * * The Lakers will win tonight in Ne\\'
York, says the faultless crystal spherl'.
And Jerry West says he got so sick
watching films or lhe Laker collapse
Monday lhal he got up and Y.'illkcd
out of the showing.
Ted \\'llli ams recenll y returned lron1
a n1onth of big game hunting in Afritu
and v.·hlle admllting he thorou ghly en·
joyed the experience he also says ht''d
just as soon bunt y,j\h a high c1uali1y
camera.
Williams claims he's never seen an\'nni>
"hit the ball harder than \Vashirigton
go\iath Frank Howarrl. '"He h11 s the s17r
and reach -U1ey'rc aton1tc energy
shots," Ted opines.
Phillips say11 that if the Angels can
"'in lbe division, he'd rather meet Detroit
nr Bultimore In the playoffs. "BO!(ton
is tough on us. Their park is a dttublr
advantage and they are tough on lefl ·han·
ded pltchln~. Two of my s!arters a r c
lefti es.
No class Sho\\'n by the lr\'lne Leag ur
officials y,·ho round [.,(Jara guilty nf
violating loop rules, orderccl the Saxon
baseball 1ea1n to forfeit six gan1r~.
then turned around in a great sho'\'
of appeasen1ent lo say the Saxon~ wo11!d
still represent the circuit in CIF pla yoffs.
No wonder our youth is so lackinJ,!
In discipline and respect with tha t kind
of hypocritical adult leadershi p.
\Valkers Rrc invited lo a \\"alkathnn
at Fu llerlon .JC Saturday. The so-called
top ptrformers go In a SO kilon1ctcr
killer al 9:30 a.m. v.·Hh a 5-milc-open
eompetltlon at 10 and hig h school races
at II.
_t\11 gels Battle
Ya11k.s To11ight;
Blitz Se11alors
.J1n1 Sprnct·r :nul Al1·\ .John~on
10 ~11·ing the b:.tl. ;1nd ll .. 11 bodes
for the i\e1v \'orh Y.:i:1~.t'1·~.
like
e\'J(
The :':"riv Yo!'kt1 ~ i·11·.1dr Anaheim
tflnigh1 iu :.l:.trl ;1 !ht"l't"~·a1nc ~eries.
Rook1l' John Lun1brrl:1111t 11 ill h:11 e to
con!rnil 1111h tin• 1 ... 1 h1r1111.; CahJor F1ia
d110
!'t;x·n11~ ;11\d .J·•
hit"' !•t •1,.-1 n 11
tl~r ,\r. I'
rnu;r 1 , r1 ;; • I) "
JtH.; '11Pl ~ I •
•t1 'i·Jh·c;tcd seven
l II' ,d·"· rni;ht as
l·qnfr:en
·' q11·1 lill' \',.ash·
T1111 j ' I' I !11.id" It CilSV
tnr Tnrn \1LJ1·r1 '. 111··1 1'11ch1·d ;1 four·hii.
llr .. n(I t'.l'nt 1l 1.1i· 11r 'h'Hour of his
lll<ljllr /(';1~11<' ( .o.· < 1 I ;ll)ij J11~ (OUJ"(h \1'111 or !he ~{;"1111
Cl1 ,:,, \\'' I '
!l1r \Jilli.~ l"rn;.:J,;
Spcnt'l'I" i1 id :1 f)LTl1·1·1 night at !hr.
pl<1; .. 1111·1 .1 11·,p'i ,ind 1111·cc singles
a~ he r~:1·l'il 111, <J1t-r:i~" Hi points tci
.:167 .1 .. 111\· 1•1 11r111 lhrcr·for·-fo11r and
boo:.triJ h1~ a1cr.1:;it 17 points Iv 3-!i.
. It 1~ no .+1:rirl1'nt !h;H !;penrcr is 11
h11!cr 111~ grandl;ithrr LIP~rl Ben1arn1n
Sp1:nrrr l•tl ~.1·0 tnr \~ash1nt;l<•n 111 1913
;ind l1 L' f.11h1 r 11,1, ;1 pru11unc111 amateur
pln~1•r :tr·11u.d B.1lt1nv•rl'
'·Till'.1' bo1!h lnugl,1 tlll' fllL•nlv about
lut!i11g.'" !hC' 1\ngcl 111:.1 1J.1~e111 ii11 !:>aid. '"~ly i;rilndd:id 1' Ill no11, bu1 he sli!I
runs bC'lter 111,111 I 110
SfK'nccr had lhr dub1ou' honor or ~1n~l1ng into a ~J1ublc pl:1.1 111 the third
1nr1111g Jn Thursd.iy·s g:1n1c. After a hit
lo nisht, hr r:in 11;1,1 lir:.t base anli P~~te('ded 1u :.t•c·ond. \11)1rrc Johnson 1vas.
1!1c S('ll/1IOrs pru111ptly taglled both
11H·11 off !hr bag
ST. LOUIS -Dealt a numbing blow
by fate in March, mu1cular Mike Shan.
non of the St. LoulJ Cardinals is bectn·
ning to see light at the end of the tunnel.
A kidney condit.ion diagnosed as
netiJriUs sent the 30-year-old infielder
home Crom spring training In Florida
to 1 hospital. where he :;pent !eVetal
week:!; undergoing medication and testl.
3 Angels Nominated for A ll-Star Game
,-\h1rphy. nlt'a1111·t11lt•. rl!d not allow it
\\ :ish1n;;ton hlli;crunnc:r past second. Me
!'ll'l)tk 0111 nnl,\· on(' and walked t\\'O,
but ~C'Jll rhr Scn<itoi·s hitting the ball
into !he i,;round
··11 liUrr 11as llt<:c !n f;t'I Jhc shutout,''
WAS!ilNGTO~
•O ' "'~' 6r·••m~n t ' t Q
S"elld <l 1 n n o ~Mc,,..,~. IO l 0 \ 0
DN•''Oll II' a n 0 0
CAlll"ORN!• ••r,,ro1
4 0 0 0
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ex pected, he was pronounced physic.tally
/Jt 1Dd Oew to AUanta for 1 weektnd
~ies. "" •
STANFORD -Donald Kirsch, head
b•1eball coach at the University of
Oregon, died 'Mrurlday at the Stanford
University HOllpital.
The 49-year-old Kll'ICh waii found lying
uneoMClous in the patio of the holpltaf'a
Hoover Pavillon with head woood.a ap-P"""f1 auf.ftred Ill a fall from a 1,,econd
NEW YORK (UPI) -The nll11<1
of 41 AmerJcan LN~ playa-1 -
nominated for the first public AO.Stir
team elktJon s1oce 1H7 -were relefRCI
Thundey by ba!ebt:U commluloner
Bowie Kuhn with a cartful eye on the
poulblllty of ballot stuffing.
The name• of the candktates, atx for
~ Infield po1lllon and calehtr and
11 ouUie"lders, will 1ppear on 26,000,000
btlloti for voUng by the fani during
June.
T'hrff member1 of the Angels were
nomlnaled, lncludln1 Jim Fr11otl, Ken
"1cMu11en and Joe Atcue . Ex-Angel
Allttllo llodrlsu"• now wllll W•shln&lon.
----------------
Is also a nominee.
The ballots will be v;idely and evenly
distributed -to 75.000 retail outlets
coast to coast and to 150 major 11nd
minor league parks -as a sa1eguard
against baUot sluffing, y,·hlch t'Ook 1hc
voting privllego a\vay from the (ans 13
years ago -and Kuhn said a specinl
panel will be named to determine if
blllot &tufflng has occurred. '
Pl11yer1 nominated art:
f'lrsJ b1~ -Norm Cash, Detroil:
Mike Epstein, \Vashlngton: Tony Horion,
Cleveland : Boog Powell, Baltimore: Ri el\
Reese, J'l.11nn~ta ; Gtorl!t Scot!, &~ton.
Second Base -r.1ikc,Andrews1 Boston i
Rod Carew. ~1innesota: Dick Grttn,
Oakland; Tomn1y Harper. J'l.1ilwaukee:
Dave Johnson . Baltimore : Dick r.1cAulif·
fe. Detroit.
Short.stori -Lui~ Aparicio. Chicago ;
~1ark Belanger. Baltimore: Bert Cam-
paneris, Oakland: Leo Cardenas. 1\11.11·
ncsota : J im Fregosi, California, Rlco
Petm('e.lli. Boston.
Third DaK -Sal Bando, Ol'lkland:
llarmon Kltltbrew . l\ilnne.sota : Ken
l\tc~1 ullen, C:illfornh1: Bill l\f el ton ,
Chi cago : Orooks Rohin~on. Baltimore:
Aurelio Rodriguel, \\"ash1nl;\lo11.
Calcher -Joe Azcur. Cailfornia: Bill
i-~rechan1 Dctrqlti Elrod Jlendrlcks,
'
Baltimore : Duane Joseph!on, Chir;i~n:
George »titterwald, ;\llnncsota: Duke
Sims. Cleveland.
OuUield -Paul Blair. BaltimQrl'. Hick
r..tooday, Oakland; Rl'gg1e Smith. Bosloo
Ken llarrelson, Cle1•pJand: B n b by
r..·furcer, New York : r..hckcy Stan1r1 .
Detroit ; \Villic Horton, Detroit; .J1in
Northrup, Delroll : Cc~Ar TO\"ti.r. :\!in·
nesota: Frank HO\\'arrl. \\'ashingtnn;
Tony Oli\ta, MlnnesotA. Teri lThltt<'nrler.
Cleveland: Reggie Jackson. Oaklnnd:
Lou Pinlella, Kans:is Cltv: Rov \\'hi'r
New York ; Carlos r..-lay, thir,1RO Frun~
Robinson, Baltimore; Carl )'astriemsk1,
Boston.
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Le agu e
Mee ts
Tonight
l~y PlUL ROSS
ot 1ft1 0 1111 l'llolt s11rr Tonight is the kind of night
\vhich drives prep track and >1
fie.Id nuts crazy trying to
figure out which league finals
meet to attend.
Three loop finales featuri ng
Orange Coast area prep spike
talent are on tap for tonight
while another wi ll break out
or the starting blocks sawrday
afternoon.
'fhe Crestview finals at El
Modena's Fred Kelly Stadium
\vi ii get a jump on the other
meets with field events
scheduled to begin at 5 p.m.
;ind the firsl running final
tabbed for 7.
A 6 p.m. starting time (field
events) is marked for the
Angelus loop finals at. St. P~ul
J{igh in Santa Fe Springs \Vlth
running fina ls starting at 7.
The Sunset curtain closer
;:il Anaheim's \Vestern High
goes \\1ilh field event fina ls
at 7:30 and running events
beginning a half hour later.
1 rvine League afficionad~s
'rill gel a chance to see their
favorites in full force at I
p.m. Saturday when the
league finals con1rnence at
Santa Ana College.
All of the aforementioned
league finals. with . the e~
ception of the Crestview. will
be scored on a 6-4-3-2-l basis.
The top three qualifiers in
each event from three of the
leagues will advance to next
week's CIF preliminaries at
Westminster. The Angelus will
send only two people per event
to CIF. The Crestview championship
was contested during the dual
meet schedule with Orange
emerging as champion. 'fhe
sole purpose of the Crestview
final is to determine the
league's CIF qualifiers.
Last year's titlist ( E I
Modena) is predicted to make
a shambles of the distance
races.with Dave White (9 :03)
and Mickey Woolley (4:17.6)
favored in the two mile and
mile ·and teammate Scott
Nelson (l :57 ) expected to give
Laguna's Dave H ustwick
(l :54.3J a run for his money
in the 880.
Oraiige has the horses in
U1e weights with Mike Evans
(5a-7, 17t-Slf.r) and Len Ostrum
{53·1, 169-!0 lft).
Mater Dci's slim title hopes
::is lht' lone area school in
the Angelus meet rest \l'ith
Steve Fritz (sprints ). Ron
Dickson 1440) and Rick Jen·
nings (880). .
Although Newport Harbor 1s
expected to make a bid for
substantial honors in the
Sunset affair, d e fe n di n g
kingpin Santa Ana is definitely
the team to beat, having led
Tuesday's prelims "'ith IS
qualifiers.
Pirates'
Powell
.i\.ll-circ1tit
Orange Coast College's Billy
Po1vell has been selected lo
lhe South Coast Conference
baseball second team. an·
nounced by circuit coaches,
Powell, who led the con·
fcrcnce in hitting with a .426
average. was named to the
11lility position on the second
team. He pla yed third base
for the Pirates.
Two other OCC pla yers -
Bob Leavy and f..likc Paul
-drew honorable mention
laurels.
Conference champion Cer·
ritos don11nated the selections
\l'ith five playe rs named lo
the first tcan1 and two on
1 he second unit.
Cerri los first baseman Tim
Steele. who batted .420 in con·
fcrcncc action, was selected
play('r of the year. Cerritos'
\Vally Kincaid was named
coach or the year.
.. -.-.. -.. -... "'-,-----------,,, ,._ .-.------,-----·,-.-..-....------------___,....-.--.-----~---.---, ...... -----~----~--~~~----·-~---~-~--.... -"'." \
. '
GOLD MEDAL PICK -Lee Haven of Newport Har~
bor is the varsity high jump favorite tonight when
the seven Sunset League schools vie for the loop
track and field championships
Anaheim. Haven's best is 6-5.
at Western High in
f rld1y, Mar 8, 1'970 CAIL V ,ILOT J 7
Vikes Nip Ana~eim; ~
Eye Sunset Crown
By ROGER CAlll80N Of .. .,.,,, f'ltet , •• ,,
Marina Hlgh's vars I t y
baseball team stayed in the
thick or the Sunset League
UUe race Thursday afternoon
with a 1-0 pressun-.paeked win
over invading Anaheim to stay
hot on the heels of league.
leading Western. which hold!
a one-game bulge with two
rounds left.
Coach Ray Alltn's Ughl-1111-
Uni Vikings managed onty
four blla off Anahe illl pitch ing
for their single tally but tht
combined talent.I ol pitchers
Ken Murillo and D a v e
Klungreaeter made it st.and
up.
t1le loss dropped Anaheim
a fuU came behind the Vikings
wlth Westminster a half game
bthlnd the Vlk.es in third place
in the hectic r&iCt.
The only tally or the issue.
Saxons Quiet FV
On One-l1it Sl1utout
Loara High School used a
Iourth innin& uprising to pick
up all its nu\.! M notching
a 4-0 shutout victory over
Fountain Valley Thursday in
Irvine League baseball play
on the losers' diamond.
Slick s e n i o r rlghthander
Richard Vince mi.led bis
pitches well, allowing the host
Barons only one hit, a third
IMtng single to ctnterfleld by
Mlke Shlmaj i.
According to Baron mentor
John Cole, Fountain Valley
was not mentally prepared for
the defending league cham·
pions.
fly to center to temporarily
empty the bue paths.
A walk and a single to left
put two more Saxons on base
and a long two-bagger to the
leftfield fence got the final
pair cl. Loara scores across.
And the damage was done.
Although Fountain Valley
starter st.e ve Fox V' d
righthanded relief er D a v e
Lynch bl anked the Loara ns
on three hits in tht last three
framtll!I; the four runs stood
up as enough for the winners.
came in tbe bot.tom of tile
fourth lnninf when Dave
Campbell led off the lnnln&
with a golf ahot over the third
baseman's head.
He adv An«d to tec0nd baae
on Mur1llo'1 lnlleld out and
moved t.o third on a wild pit-Oh.
Ct.nterftelder Rick Saeman
then came up with the key
safety of the game with 1
base hit over third baee to
score Campbell with the
crucial's only tally.
The rest of the story of
Marin a's hard-won victory
centers around the pitdllng
exploii., of Murillo a n d
Klungreseter.
Murillo started the game
and was impressive in retlrtn&
the first 10 Anaheim batters.
The invading Colony picke4
up a hann1es11 single In the
fourth inning but Murillo set
them down by retiring the
thi rd out on a strikeout.
Anahtim threatened t h e
Vikings again in the filth
frame when the Colony'•
starting pitcher, sophomore
Larry St~ling, tripled to dep
right field with one out.
Murillo made a good pl1y
on the en!ulng squeeze play
to nail Stirling betwffl\ third and home and then lefty
Klungre.seter came in to
relieve after a walk JlU t run·
ners on first and second.
Klungresete!' forced David
Temple to bounce oul to fint
baseman Brock Pemberton.
Title Hope s Costa Mesa , Eagles Post Cole said after the game
"Our boys have been playing
pretty good ball lately but
have been kiWng themselves
occasionally on mental errors ..
Despite being handcuf fed on
just Shimaji's single , the
Bara11s had baserunners in the
first, fourth and fifth iMings.
but attempted rallie! failed
to materialize each time.
Wolvitrton, rt Kim, 2b
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Still Aliv e
For Lions I r·vine League Victories "And for some · reason. I
could tell they weren't men-
tally prepared when they took
the field against Loara."
c. Wn!11kt . 11.10
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fl • ' • VALL I T IOJ
Witt, (
&111~r. rt Tot•li
\!/estminster's Lion s r<'·
inained with an outside chance
at the Sunset League baseball
championship by defeat ing
host Huntington Beach Thurs-
day afternoon, 3-0_
Southpaw Ed Banc hurled
a three-hiller lo pull the Lion
league record up lo ().5,
Western leads with a 7.3 slate.
Bane struck out I 4 Oilers
t.o bring his season ma rk to
119 and his league record to
99. He is now 5-2 in Sunset
actioo and 6-3 overall. His
e.r.a. for the league is 0.36
and overall 0.37.
Westminster scoreQ a pair
of runs in the second to put
the decision out of reacll. Mike
Dodd opened with an Infield
single. Doug Milne bunted
down the third base line and
heal the throw to first for
a single.
Doug Price then lrn ed a
single to left for one run and
Steve Martinez followed with
another single.
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Costa Mesa High, behind the
pitching of Dave Barton and
an 11-hil attack, bounced
Magnolia , 7.(), in an Irvine
League contest at La Palma
P;irk ln Anaheim Thursday
night.
In two other Irvine tilts.
Estancia outslugged ho s l
Edison. 5·4, an d visiting Santa
Ana Valley trimmed Corona
de.I Mar, 3-2.
In the Mesa win, Barton
allowed just th ree scratdl hits
(two of the ii:ifield variety)
1n pitching the first five
frames for the visitors. He
struck out seven and walked
two. Dan Quisenberry tossed
the final two fra mes fo r the
?\Iustang s.
Costa ~1esa got all the run s
it needed in the second inning,
scoring three times.
Barton opened the inning
\vlth a "'alk and after he
wa s wild pitched to second.
Kevin Morrow's ground ball
wa s booted, moving Barton
to third.
Dave Edwards then hit a
fly ball to center that was
n1isjudgcd and went for a tri-
ple, scoring. the t"'O runner~.
Ed\\·ards then breezed home
on Tom Neth 's sacrifice fly
lo right.
The f.1esans added three
niorc in the fourth o n
Ed1\•ards' double. singles by
Jirn Safst rom. Dale Kubeska
and Glenn ~lcKinley and a
sacrifice fly by Rich fielder .
The rinal tally carnc across
in the sixth on singles by
Randy Embrey and Kubeska
and an error.
Kubcska 11as the batt111g
Loop Spanks Loara Nine;
SA Valley on Carp et
Lmtra High School's varsity
baseball team has b een
simultaneously slapped and let
off the hook f ol l owing
Thursday's hurried 1 ea g u e
meeting at Fountain \ialley
High School.
The Saxons of Loara were
forced to forfeit six games
to Irvine League foes, drop.
ping them ou~ of contention
for the league title with a
6-7 mark -rather than the
12-1 mark I.hey have chalked
up·on the field.
The league ruled, however.
that it wished the Saxons to
represent it in the upcoming
ClF AAAA baseball playoffs.
Under the f r vine con·
stitution, it is not necessary
for ;i team to win the title
in order to enter the playo ffs
-the leaj(uc has the option
lo send it,s most represen-
tative tean1.
Costa Mesa and Edison ll igh
pi ck up a pair of wins while
Santa Ana Valley and Foun·
lain Valley gain on-:: victory
each via the forfeits.
Santa Ana Valley, W'ith si
two-game lead over now ie·
cond place Estancia 11nd Cost a
~tesa, is the league champion
' and will enter the playoffs as
the league·s No. 2 reprcsenla·
tive.
Another l'lailn of foul is
being presented to the league
today and if approved, Santa
Ana Valley will be less one
victory.
The Falcons are accused of
conducting batt ing practice
prior to their 3-2 \Vin over
Loara -a game in which
the Saxons' ineligible player
participated.
Loari's problems e a me
about when it was learned
that a member or the Saxon
varsity had fielded a fev•
ground balls and displayed his
hitting prowess In an attempt
to gain a berth in the Babe'
Ruth League -a non-ClF
event
~le participated prior to ~lay
1 In conflict with established
CIF rules.
MAgnolia Hiah 's Ju r. i o r
varsity and frosh-"!Oph teams
were also affected in the rul ·
Ing.
I..oara <:oach Floyd Chandler
told the DAILY PILO'f nf·
ltrward, "I'm glad it's ovt>r,
"'e've bctn climbing the: walls
for two weeks over Lb.Ls:'
A pair of mental fl aws star for the Mustangs ¥iith The Sea Kings cut the opened the gates for the Sax·
three singles "·hile McKinley margin to 3-2 in the fourlh ons' potent offense in the
and Edwards hit safelY tw ice. on a home run to center field fourth and 'then the Loarans
In the Estancla-Edison by Karl , but that was all did some work of their cwn.
game. 21 hits were recorded the damage Corona coold Afte r a lead off .single and
with Edison banging out I I. create for the day. a strikeout, Loar a got a dou-
AJI the scoring came in the Samuels, a junior, went all ble to score its first run.
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~ Q • first three frames with Estan-the "'ay on the mound for Following a passed ball, the
cia getting one in the firs! the losers. The lefthander Saxons capitalized on their se· • " • •" • and a pair each in the seeond k 1 d ·'ked d ll 1 u · Lo•r• ooa a 11-1 ' i A.N i.I"' oao llllO o-o ' 1
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each in the first and third
innings.
Greg Powers led lhe Estan·
cia hitting parade with three
singles \vhile Dave Bowen,
Steve Valiere and Jeff Zeis·
dorf had two hits each for the
Eagles. Both of Zelsdorf's hi!s
were triples. including one Jn
the thi rd that drove home a
run.
For Edison, ~1ike Bashaw
had two doubles and fl single
while Ron Ruff and Randy
Tyler each banged out a pair
of singles.
At Corona del Mar. Santa
Ana Valley did all o{ its scor-
ing in the third inning on
a pair of singles. a triple
by Danny White and a throw-
ing error.
Corona took a J-0 lead in
the nrst on a walk to Stuar t
Karl , a balk, a single by Keith
Samuels and John Palmer 's
sacrifice fly.
COSTA MESA {I)
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Coront I• Mi r lOO 100 6-l • a
Our better half .~
lost a little ~
weight
Our new Early Timea hall aallon bot~e io
two pounds liahter. And slimmer. You get
ju1t u much Early Times, but it'• euier ·
to a iry and easier to handle. Ea.tier
to pour, too, becau se of our unique
built-in pourcr. Early Time• in the new
liahter,haU gallon bottle. Pick up our
Better Half today at your liquor
otore and feel the difference .
l'Uss!r.11-
%QAI.LON
SAVE1.~
NOW•U!! ~
~·-· ),:
Save 10'1. mor9 c
A .. •
~ !
i • • ! • ~ t ~ • 3 ' l
ll l
,.-·---------------------------------------·-----·----------~---------------------------·~-.--------··
Baron Ace
Joins CIF
Spike Elite
Fountain Valley's Ted Lyd-
don added hi.s name to the
weekly list of CIF Soulbtm
Section prep track and field
bes14 with a 159-4 discus toss
last week in a dual meet
at'Edison.
Lyddoo's mark puts him in
sixth place in the section
behind leader and defending
champion Jim McDonough ot
Monte Vista, · who has gone
178-11.
Skip Rimer of Corona del
Mar remaim In fifth on the
discus roster with a 161--0in
~I. --'baguna's Dave Hustwick is
the only other Orange Cost
area athlete on the sectional
menu with a top clocklhg of
1,54.3 In the 680.
How to ,Take the Fun Out of Golf
11 Dkk H1rrit 11'1f Wllty Smllll
•.5 If you're using a hand-eart, pull it up to the edge of the_gree~. T~is save s walk-::t ing around the traps. After all, everyone knows a straight line 1s the shortest
;1 distance to the next tee.
l':I 1.,
! ... ••• 21.t
! ... ..,
1:51.t
·11·' 1: •.! I : .J I ;So4.6
"l'I 4: s. t;l6., 4;1i. ~:17 .•
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Gauchos'
Consistency
Pavs Off •
By CRAIG SHEFF ot .. O.lly l'illt Stiff
Area Briefs
Anteater Sports
Events Postponed
Top Cyclists at Fairgrounds ...... t .llS.O
t :06.• •:11• f :l .•
"We c:an measure our SUC• Three UC Irvine sporl.s
cess by the fact that we have events scheduled for this
been very consistent as a weekend have been postponed
·team." in compliance with Gov.
compete in conference meets
Monday.
Rick Woods (right) of Huntington Beach and Bur-
bank's Chuck Berry will be among the top competi-
tors on hand for tonight's (8) Class A speedway
motorcycle card at Orange County Fairgrounds. An
overflow crowd of 5,000 fan s showed up for last
Friday's races and 1,000 extra seats have been
erected in anticipation of this evening's expected
fan rush.
13.f 14.I H.1 l•.1 1•.7 1•.2 .,.2
That's the way Sadd1eback Ronald Reagan's request that
goU. coach Roy S t e v e ns an universities and college.s
analyze.s his Gaucho team that close early for the ·Weekend
has posted an 8-1 season re-to help cool off antiwar pro-
Golden West, "Ailich clinched
the Southern Ca l iforn ia
Conference title last Friday,
travels to Los Angeles Harbor.
for the circuit meet.
Net, Golf
Summaries
GOLF
s .. C1em1n1, c:1111 HJ1l Tu111~
Olwn CS) 83, Morrl1 (l) 81. Jol,.nl'lff (SJ JS, Gtahem (l) 83.
Bernard($) 73, Ntvl11 IT) 8J.
All.VII (SJ 78, Goode ('Tl l'O.
\10191 (SJ 71, LCO!lltnl (l) l'O.
CKll ~II (lfl ill M11noll1
R1rod~ IC) 13, won 3·1. cu ..... (() '3, loll l·l.
Wttklns (C) 19, losl G-4.
YOUl'lll (CJ M, """" ~. PIM (() 15. won H .
McC41rlnrf (Cl U, WO~ S-4.
TENNI~
\11rs11,
Foullllill VtHt r (l) f2S) lo.or•
SlrltlH
V1lenwel1 (F ) lo•! lo Ma!l~t (ll
k ; lost to Poll1nd U; lcs1 10 5usdorl O-.S; io,t to Zurtk ?"6.
Tendall <Fl las! D-6, 2-6, 3-.1, '"· Maroll TOPPfl\ tFJ IOSI ~"6, 1·4, l-6, , ...
MTktl$1>11 (fl lo~I l-4, 0-4, 1·6, D·6,
""''"' l(t1wc1vt Ind Miller IF) lost to
Fr•lllv Mid Oo\1111•5 {l! 3·6. 0-6;
det. OesP•lmes and Llpelo• .-J. 6-l,
st_.-and Jew If) loil 0-~. ?-6;
lo•I 11-6, IM.
\'ar511t
t.t. \ltlltr (lto/o! Cl~•I Co~111 d'I ...
s1n11ei
G_.91nlat (Cl def. Fernana.z 1~1 6·1; lie<! Gr..,n!leld tSl 6-6; lo>I
to Smlnl {SI J~; lost 10 Norsl•<>m
(Sl 1-6.
Oyer <C) l<>!l IM. 3"6. 3-ii, 0-6.
McCar!V fCI lo&l 1)-6, I·& D-6, C-4
Ltwl• tCl lot! ?-6. 1.6, 0-6, 1-6. ""''"' Russe!l·Vermurod (Cl del. H<!Uman-
kevme (S) 6·'; def, Doran-l!onl!•ce
IS) 6-l, NelJ...r.Pr11t (Cl won 6-1, 6-7 / ll•d
6-ii; lost 1·7. --
Var•ilV
1E1l111<l1 IUI 1111 1Edi1on
Slnti.ti Ros.et!! (Esl) 00!'! Keith Or•r>ood
t Edl 6-01 llflf LMil (Ed) f>.O; Ol'f
Harmon (Edi M ; de! Bot .. rd tEO) ... M1llolt (E•Tl W<lf' 6·1, 6-1, 6-0, ••• Emery lE!O won 6·'· ~'· •·l, ... MlilOll 4 E~1l lo•I 1·6, ~-6, 3-6, ... 0(Hlbln
Lew-Gavner tEsl) lost lo K•nl ""~
Kirt. OralloOd !Ed! ll-6. U. dcl lvrH>tl·
H~ll t Ed! 7-S, 4-l. Slelnfeld-S,.under1 !E$l) lo•! l·6. I ~.
•• ,, J"6.
Ju11IOI' V1rs1ty
E'dbG-11 (S) l'l £11111<••
Slll'!ll••
Wade (Est) Oel Hunter !EO) ~'·
•-6, Of'f1un.
Hett'I (Ell) IOI.I to Clalr ~[ol
0-6. 1-6. Slenlcn (E•ll lo~t lo Hamilton l(d)
'·6, 2-6. Burrell /E1!l lo~! to Lvnot! lfGI
1-6. 1-6.
T1vlor (E•t ) ot! l'IOb0>!1S l[dl "~
11,11ul1. Doub It I Home•le1d·RU1Mll If.ii 1011 '@
Frlliit-<·Ste...,_1011 1 Edl J-6. 3-~. Wll~-MOrrlson t f•l) °"' W•l~l•T·
Wll$0<l !Ed), t-4. 1-6 v..-.111
A...,,.lm CUV,' (ll\IJl M•r!n•
Sl"9Ml5
Naroo fM1 1011 lo Mt!1'r !Al O·i 1 Iott lo We11'0f0 (A) 1"61 w111 wir~
01....,., (A) 7·11 lo5! lO Ml!ltnMI
CAI 0-6. Rt<loO {Ml !os! 1-.\, •-ii. 6-.1. 1-.1
llY•M tMI losl 0-6; W<lf' 6•), I'·
.. l. . Thurm (Ml lod l-61 w.in ?·S. 6.J, ... ......
loll lft
•4; d~I
Mt;Dowel~Moorbee~ !Ml
ll~R1lllbllrt1er 4A) U,
Gerard-Rivera !Al t-J, 6·•·
P!pflff'-Roulu !Ml klS! 3-6, •·I;
tie! t-7 ..... Jun ior V1t11ly
M~rin,. Ull 10 l-'nahtlm
C111t1 Mell (U) UJ M111111ll1
Sl1111tt
Endsley /(Ml dorl. Hollv !Ml &·1.
M-t~ IMl 1·1, Po.i~r C"'-1 1.1,
~Ill {Ml 6-0. MtrllUt!l ICMl ""°" ty,, l1>1t SI, won .. ,. 6-4.
SQelr (CM) loot ? &. 0 &. WO• i ), ,_,_
$fidh,.m (CM' lo>I Ct, I 4 l t. ""'°" .... "Doublt1
FonhlY '"" (lolll ((Ml ,,., HI!! end M<:N1m1r1 rM) 1.0. 1.1, 11~•. M9•c:lno tnd L1!11rlno (M ! 6.0. o l Moan •nd s.tlig.iil ICM) wo• &·O.
f.I, '"1' 4-J. J111W V1rsllY
Cfllf MltNI f' )(OJ M•11111h1
Slllt"1
(.oftner ICM) WOii 6 1, ~ l.
Pot~ ICM)-~ .. ). •·) Ot..,.. mtlCl\ll 1orf11!f(! 10 ,~,,~ M-.
AF Acru:lemy on Tap
For Cd~1 Siuininier
By ROGER CARUi0N
01 Ille 0111¥ PllD1 St•tf
Bret Bernard, Corona del
!\-tar High School .\>Wimming
and water polo flash for the
past four years, has received
an appointment to the United
St.ates Air Force Academy.
Scrutiny of the Sea King
standout's individual records
academically and atheltically,
however, poses a problem.
One wonders" where to begin.
His accomplishments, are
indeed, impressive.
He g a i n e d All-American
status as a swimmer and
water polG player at Corona
del h1ar and was a key
perforqier in the Sea Kings'
drive for CIF cham pionships
in swimming and water pGlo.
power-laden aquatics forces.
Ii.is All-American status in
water polo capped placing on
the All-CIF team and being
named to the All-I r vine
League team for three years.
Academically, he posted a
3.75 grade point average, and
had several othe r individual
honors despite the extra work
devoted to bis sc h o o I ' s
aquati~ program.
The captain or the CIF'
champion swim team received
the hono r of an appointment
to the Air Force Academy
from the late J ames B. Utl.
Tall North
Baseball
Standings
GAllOEN GllOVE
Garden Grovt
P.itlHca
LEAGUE IFln•U
W L GB " . .. ,
La Q111111a
llolsa Gr•odt
s.inllago '
Rancho Alamlto•
. ' ' , .. . . '
' II 1
ThurMltv't Storel
l!•ncho Alaml!os t. San!la11<1 J Paclllca '-La Quin!• I
Garaen Gtovit •· 80111 Gr•lld• l
Oii.ANGE LEA<.=;UE
tFlll•ll
"' Alamilfl'I
Kate111
Sonora
S1dd1e1>acK
\'a~ncia
Et Ooraao
Ore ..
Lo• .. m11101
'Thur.Gav's "score1
S•Odl~l>ac~ lJ, M:altll• I Valencia J, Sonora o
• ' .. " ' " ' ' ' ' ' • .. • • ' • ' • " • ' " •
loo -'l~ml!o• 1, El Dorado I
Los Ami901 J, B•t• l
SUNSET LEAGUE
Wr•l••n
W \.GI
' . . '
, ...
11.1
19,0 19.n
19,7 lt.2
3;'20,0 J::IO.G J :70.2 3;'20.I J;Jl.•
3:11.• 1;71.•
... ,,~ •• ., ... ,,,
6-&'~ .. ,.,.
?•·11 14-1 ,,,.
2l·l0'"
'l-7 '" , .. ,., ... ... ,.,
14-1'" 1( i·.~ ... ,.,,
t~i &1-11•~ A2..I 'h ·-· 111-n 111·5 169-lOV» .... !&1-0 .... ...
cord and a 5-0 Desert Confer-tests.
ence mark. The Gauchol \\ill 'Thursday 's scheduled tenni.s
enter the conference tourna-match with Redlands has been
ment Monday at Victor Valley reset for Tuesday at 2:30 on
College, already assured of the Redlands eampus. No date
a berth in the state finals has been set for today's tennis
on May 18 at Cannel Valley. mat.di with UC San Diego.
The conference finals will A scheduled t w i . n i g h t baseball doubleheader with
determine the second place Cal State (Fullerton) Saturday
team to advance to the state. night at La Palma Park has
No. 1 golfer on the Sad-been reset for Mooday as one
dleback team Is Tom Oller, game. A site for the tilt has
a sophomore transfer from not been selected( as yet.
LA State.
Oller is currently averaging •
76, not bad considering Sad-Colden West College will
d1eback uses El Niguel and send three entries t o
Mission Viejo as its home Saturday's state junior college
courses, two of . the toughest gymnastics championship at
in Southern California. Long Beach City College. The
The No. 2 man is Dan Bar-event begins at 7 p.m.
rille. a San Clemente High Rustlers competing include
graduate who attended Mira Glenn Seymour (side horse),
Costa College two years ago. Sean Meighan (floor exercise)
He is averaging 80.9 per and Gary Van Wald (horizon--
round . tal bar).
The !Wstlers, 18-2 for the
season, are assured of a bertJ1
in the state fmals May 13
at Carmel Valley. The con~
ference title is decided on dual
match records. The Mooday
event will determine the sec~
ond place team IG go to the
state meet. Members of the Rustler
team include Ken Kribel, Mike
Nichols, Dare Stolba, Steve
Hayes, Larry Eynon and Tom
Schwitters.
Meanwhile, Orange Coast
will compete in the South
Coast Con f ere nee cham-
pionship at Friendly Hill s go!!
course in Whittier.
The top two teams in the
South Coast meet (probably
Fullerton and Santa Ana) will
also advance to the state
meet, along with the top si.:r
medalists.
Members of the OCC team
include Dave Bradley, Terry
BreMan, Chris Brown. Mike
Fleming, Terry Groat, Bill
Messenger, Greg Morey, Mike
Reilll and Denny Scott. The wate r polo outfit was
undefeated and the swim team
was nearly as impressive, los-
ing only one dual meet as
the 1969-70 season completed
four consecutive years that
the Corona del Mar con-
tingents won Jrvine league
lilles in both aquatic sports.
Stars Picked
Marina
WPstmin~t•r
New1>or1 1-iaroor
.Anah,lm
6 5 1"1
' ' ' ' ' , BBC Team
Freshmen Don Frost and Coach George Beckstead's
Richard Smith are the No. team finished f'lflh in the r----------iit 3 and 4 golfers. Frost prepped eight-team Southein California
at Mission Viejo and Smith Conference meet at East LA
In that span. Bernard ac-
counted for three school
records in swimming and was
an all-round perfonner, com-
peting in the short freestyles,
along with the backstroke and
butterfly.
The towering North squad
of the first annual State All-
Star basketball ga1ne has been
released with live of the J 1-
member team standing 6-7 or
taller.
Led by 6-10 12 J\.1ike Westra
of Frisno Roosev elt. coach
Lou Hensley's Northern outf it
will enjoy a marked height
ad vantage.
The game is set fo r the
Oakland Coliseum Arena July
I.
Santa "'"" t'lunt1ng10r1 B~acn
5 & ,, .•
' ' '
'
Thursaav'• Store•
Marina 1, A.rwihelm O
westmlns1er J, Hunlln~ron
We1ttrn v, S•nt• An• •
TUKCllY'• G1m11 Marina al Hunringtcn Beacn
We1tern al NtW?Orl Harbor Santa Ana ti A.nahe!m
Wesrminller b•t
IRV INIE LEAGUE
5aMa A<111 ValltY
E•lanc•~
Co~la M-.~
Fou11!ain V1ll1•
Le>ata
Corona del Mar
Edson
W LG& " ' ' ' ' ,, s 2
' . ' . ' . ' . '
attended Mater DeL last week. Other members of the team include Chuck Norris, Rich East LA won the circuit
W h 11 nd N ·ii title with 114 points, followed
'loNOLULU _ T~seeded e m u e e r a e1 ~ B bou N · d B '-A by LA Harbor with 1061/z. Chart House of San Diego liv-ar r. orris an aruvur . are from Laguna a n d Other point totals included
ed up to its advance billmg Wehmueller attended Tustin Fullerton (411h), Rio Hondo \Vednesday as favorites ad-High. (23!h), Golden West (14 ),
,·anced in the men's open f h G ho Trade Tech (IO), Mt. San
divis;on of the N a t i o n .a 1 Stevens igures t e auc s have an excellent chance of Antonio (4) and LACC (I ~'.l). V o I I e y b a I l championship winning the conference meet
tournament. MoOOay and should 0 finish •
Chart House, led by Japan· fairly high in the state Golden West and Orange
Posts Win PUT CASH IN
YOUR POCKET
Sell unwanted Item!!
\vith a DAil.Y PILOT
Cla<lsified Ad.
PHONE
642-5678
He was also a member of
the relay team that swept
to the CIF title this past swim
season.
Pllv1r. S('.hOOI Marvin Ouc~ll!"f. Oerket'v Br"° Ounun, SKra~nte El
Magnolia
Thur1a1v'• lh1ul1<
Lod•I •. Fmmlaln Valley o
• • • born Toshio ToyOOa, a UCLA playoffs." Coast College golf teams: will
assistant coach. <lefeated the·~~~;;========:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ University of Hawaii, 15-3, 15-6 Ii
and the Windjammer Bullets, Camino
Jolln Ertttart, SToc:klOtl llncol!l Ma• Goldstein. Turlock
sanra An• Vall•v J. CO<"ona drl Mar 1
Mauri~P Heri>fr, l!eo'kelrr
St. Marv's ~~1r~e~~~k~as1aW~t~7/e1d
Euanda !. Edl5on •
Cosra Mesa 7, Ma~noli• O
Tue•d•v'• G•mu Coron~ del Mar al E~!am:lt
f"ounlain VallPV aT Edison
15-3. 16-14.
Balboa defeated YB A
It was the relay teams (or
\1·hich he was a member) that
propelled the Sea Kings to
I hr s1vim championship, the
tirst·ever for the Sea Kings'
K'vln Restanl, Ri!>l'dan wavne SMioro, SF w11son
Mike We'1r•, l'"rnno R~eveH Arthur WllH1m1. Oakloncl
\.1 1 •·• ••• &-9'' .. ,
6·!0 ' .. , San11 A.na Vlllev al C0511 Mesi
M~gnolla vs. Lo.!r1 at la Palmo
Sla~lum (I ~.m ,)
Honolulu, 15-6. 15-5. and the
Armed Forces beat Lexington,
Ky., 15-9, 15-6.
Major League Sta1idi1igs
A~IERICAN LEAGUE
Baltimore
Det roit
Boston
Nrw Yor k
\Vashinglon
Cleveland
Minnesota
An gels
Chicago
Oakla nd
Kcinsas City
:'1111waukee
Easl Division
W I.
17 8
14 10
13 II
15 13
13 13
9 14
\\'est Jlivision
16 8
16 9
11 13
12 15
R 17
1 20
MHwualtf!I .S. Bo•to" l
NPW YOf11 J, Ofll\llnd )
Aoffll t, Walohlntlon 0
B•lllmore 7. 1Ca11sa1 City 1 Mlnntsota ,, 0t-1n111 6
1)~11 ~.int1 1dw!clulroil.
Pr.t.
.680
.583
.542
.S.16
.500
.3111
.661
.640
.45'
.444
.320
.259
GB
21:,
31 ~
:l\l,i:
•P ;
1
'' ' 51;
8 1 ~
10·~
• TG-da1'1 Gtm••
l\o•,ton tRomo 2~) •' O•ltllnd 1 ~ i.,1, ,,~M
N...,.. Yon; !Cumbforl1nd !·11 el An•ll• (Wn~~t ).?J. n•oM
!(~~•~• CTlv fJol!nson Q>.O), ti 0.Troll PC.•I·
~,nnv t-C). niQM
Minn~•• flC:aal •-!), at Cttvtl1nd IMoore
~ 11. 11loht
(kll•UO (Jtnf$~! ,.1) •I ll•ltlmorr IPJl-r
:~. f\lOM O<tiv oun•• ~(l\tdul•d
DEAN
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Di\·ision w I.
Chicago 13 10
Ne'v York 13 1.1
Philadelphia 13 13
Pittsb urgh 12 H
St. Louis: 10 12
Montreal 1 16
\\"est Di\'isinn
Cincinnali 22 6
Atlanta I.I 11
Dodgers 14 " San Francist•n 1.1 1.'i
I lnuston 12 16
San l)icgo 11 17
Thu1'dt1" Rt•ulll
Plll•txJnlh •. Houston S Clnclnnatr ~. Chicftgo 2
Pct.
.565
.500
.500
.462
-~5.l
.304
.i86
.577
.538
.464
-~2fl
.J9.1
l>odffrl 7, New Yorlt •. 10 lnn1"~'
Sftn 01~ •· P~fl~de!Phi• 1 MontrHI I!. San Fr~ncl!o(Q t
'Tod•v" G1mn
GB
6
6
i
' IO
II
S•n Di.~o fCor~ins 0-J ~"<I S~Mor!ftl \,l) o!
Monl'fll IRet*o 1-l and W••lew1k1 0-l l. 2. tw1-
11i~hr ,
f<•n F••n<IJ<O !Puer11e 0-0l .i Ntw Vork (Gen·
In< J.(I), nl<jM
Dcdttrt (01!~'" l·l) a! p~,l~<lflPh•a (Frvman
,.Of nTqnl
Conc!nn•U !Merrit! 6-1) al C~lc1;~ !Holl1m•n
J.J\
P1ll!.butv•1 (f111u l·ll •I Hou~ton (Griffin 1-•l,
LEWIS
1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303
DEAN LEWIS
Al'RIL Sl'ICIALS
[f][Qlry)~[f]@[
COROLLA 1970
\
$1853 + '". Ii<.
All Other Model$ 11 Stoel!:
Mork II-Hilu• l'lck11p-
La11d C,.is.n-Coro1ttt
VOLVO
1970 DEMO
SAVE $570
142 1 dr., ,,aro, "••tar, •·•P••'· is.,. .,1 .. 01
Make a travel bug out of
your Valkswagen. Buy a Trails
West Campster. A light, easy-to-haul travel trailer with
a king size bed, designed especially for lonely bugs. See
one now at:
18711 HAJ!!QYRH.YF~ w ~42~Jl
' •
l
-----· --------------~----------~·-------------------~-----~--------~~ ~ --·---. -. . . . . ' ' ' ' .
Tri-Port
Handicap
Saturday
'Ille 'J'rl.port ll•ncUcap race,
Joln1ly ~ by Udo IJ!e
Yacht Club, and Oceanside
Yacht Club, will get under
way from San Diego Saturday
It 10:30 1 .m.
'Ille race has two legs -
-0ne from San Diego to
· Oceanside on Saturday, and
' the oUler from Oceanside to
: Newport on Sundoy. '11le Oeet
: will be guests ol Oceanside
Fridu, M11 8, 1970 DAILY PILOT j fl
LEGAL NOTlCE LEGAL NOTlCE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NCYrlCE
C••TllllCATS Oft IUSIUU 1u111ato1t .COUIT 011 'TM• CllTl,KATI Oii ....... .,... su11•••0• COUllT 011 CALWO•ttlA. lllCTITtOUS tu.Ml lfATI 011CAUllOIUOA11'0.. PktMtWt llltwl ...... COUNTY Ofl 014*)1
'Tl\f ~1'1119'•"* dOM c.rlffv lie 1e TMI COUNTY 011 O•AMlll TMI UNOlltlU)NI O • ,.._. ~lfy 111 Cl~ t.111., Orlw Wftt «QIWc:tlnt • ~ll""'* •• 201" CIMtlt '-••m.., 1nm that thty wlll bf '*"""d"'-... MUllm'lent s..,i • ..,.,,, C:•••• s.i...... c..r. ,.,,.., (•1~. vndtr •l*MOMS lttlllll IMINU •T TU1tln, C.llfoqli. c .............. 0 au• !tit fk'llllollll firm ~ ., CLA•KAIUi: l . M. lfllUCK, M. w. lMME"Ll, ...,,...r tht nctrtloln firm Mlllt ;I •UMMCMU (MA•ltAell
11111 flltl """ tlrm II _ ...... ., •• ""'-.... ., 1fl9 MAJlllYN ~!STEii:, AQUAllU•O l eAllNI) co. lfld fll•I Mid t11 ,. "" _,.,, •• flf 'll.e'l1""-•1
"" ro1ir...1no ""'"' whoM -In JANf:T HE.STIER •lld CHAltLENI ftfm •• ~of tlltl fol,.,..lnt -· CO•NBLIA JIAJrt LOO 10001 •1111 l!Jll .... llltC* GI mloti11C19 11 •t follo<w1t HllTI• Trwtt, Pi.tnllfh VI. MICHA fl .._ ,..'"" In fllll tf111 •laCllt .. •1--.dtnl· J.u.\ES HOMl!lt &OO!il Vlc1or f, co.tr, 2011 Cl\4irl1, ("11 W. l)JlllN. IVAN OA.l!:E.N, tnd rtlldtllct.,. .. 19ttowt. 111 wil t To !tie Rftll!ONHnl: MtM, C..llt. l'lllD•IC A. GllfllN, tkt Flitl!Oll lCK Mrrlt Altlitrf SOdtfl TM Hllll-t II.-fltlod I fflltlon 011td APrlt ,,, 1970 A. o .. El!N, OOf I lllr-11 DOI v, ,,.,.ln\fi M. IOCltn _,,,,,.. v-JNt•l.IH, Yov INV
Victor I , C-11'1CM!w, O.lttlOlnh WtTNEI$ *'' Mnft tlllt ltlll .. ,. of Iii. I wrlli.n ,.._ .. Wlllllll ttllrl., STATE 01' CALll'OllNIA, PIOPLI! 01' THE STATE 01' Mtrdl lt7' dtVI 11' lllfo cUti. 11\tt tlll' WtnmG<tt
OltAHOE COUNTYt CAllFOlltNIA "' fM •bov• 11111\td • Mtti. Allll!rt loMn 11 .......... on """· II VOii t•U Iv Ill• Oii AMII Jt, lflO, bffort ,,.., • Defetldinb · TlltlrM M Sod.., • written •••-within •IXfl II"'''
MolttY llu01Jc In •!Id tor atld l lti!e, y(/lj ..,, ·fllr.W olntMol to Ill• 1 $TAT£ OF CA.Ltio•NIA ! vovr det1111t ""'" be 1nl••llC:I 1nd tne ,.,_u,-.... rtd Vlnor E. (OIPll' wrllltfl ~Miine In !tlHllM fro tht COUNTY 01' O•AN!iE u wvrt rTl•1 ..,,19, ' Jucttmtnl C011!1lnln1 ~-II mt to bt In. "''°" wlloM OH THIS ., .. -... ·• D 1 -lnh1Mllve tr 01"4or Ofdll' (Ofl(ttn\n~ I --Ibid i. flit wlfl'IL 1 Wf'lfllocl (Omlli.lnt "' "'' .OOvi llllMlll .. V ., ..... r ..... A. · ttv, dlv.,lon of pr-1,-"'°"""• •~P&>O•! Ill'"' • .._ II n-11i.Jntlfft Wllti IM cltrlr; ol "" •bov• titferl 11'11 •• Nol•rr llubl)( Ill •"' l6r 1111 • ...., ~ •1Nment Mid llCll,_11111111.:11 1'141 •KKVI .. entrtlt!:I cwrt 111 fht •tltw •lllfflld H id Ct1.1nt\' •nd ltlll ,.,Ldlnt tn.r.ln (lllld cu•IOfv. cllJIO MIPPOl'f, .,.,. ntv~ "" w-"'' b "I I I I • .. d ... ......__,__ ,.. ·--·t..! ·-· eoth, •rw:t IWCh olt'Mr relit! •• (OFF ICl.\1, Sl!:AL) °" rou.n ... ,.. YIU 11 M CIM,I••• 11" _,,.,."" t ·-1\, ,...,...,,." .,..v be 1r111ted b,-lti• court.
•
'
I •• I wlttlln TEN d1,-1 •lfw ..... ,,vie. on '""'" ,,.,.,. .. Albtff ~ .. llld TIMflTll II VII; 11111111 TO .... • ......... 1or · 1 lllmlOI" n-u Ill' thl1 Sllml!IOlll, If .....,td wlltll11 M. Sodt-11, k"°""' lo me kl ti. l'llf ""°"' • .~ .. . Not1rv llubllc • C•lllotnlli "" 1110v• n-0 covM1, or within whOse n•111n 1ubtt,lb«I I• lhl wlttiln 11'1-wv • 111 11111 .,.."''• VOii ....... cto
Or•llff County THlllTY d111 11 ""'" 11"'"""''· 1tru,.,.111. tl'ld 1cknowi.d\1td 10 ,.... flit! '° P-llV '° l!let ""'' wrllfol!n tfff'Ollte, Mv C:omtn1 .. 1on E••1r.. Yw ,,, ll«•lw llCllllfltd "''' Ulllttl IMv •••Cllltd "" ltll'll. I~ WITNEilS !I ... ~ ...... ,, be llltd j)ll ,.,.,., Atrll 7, 1'71 you 10 tilt· 1 wtllhin rn-alve •1Hdl111, WHEREOF, I ,...,. Mrwnto 11! mv lltnd 0.IM Al>•ll rt. lf70, ,.ubll~ or..,.. (0~1111 0.11., llHol, Ml4 •l•l11tlfh Wiii l•k• ludtlNl'll !Of •lld tfll~ed m,, offk!•I .... "" dl'I' llld lSEALl MIY •• u. 22. :tt, 1t7'0 NJ•JV Ill'( -~ ot dlll'"''' ftm•ndtf In r .. r In 1'1111 Cet'lltlclll tint •llOY• •tll• lhl Yll"llfM ~111111 11 erltln1 UltOn 1111.
tll)tlfrpel, or wl11 """' to ttil to11•I (OFl'ICLAI, $El.LI IOr 1nv otlltr ,.lltf lllfl'l•ndM ln tti1 Wm. idl1tler
•l·-----:-:;;:;------·l v.,lllfd wn'IPl•lnt. t.io11,-,. llubllc<tllfotnl1 ~I T"1QJ Y(/lj "''" ,.... fht tdvlce ol 111 COUf'lry ol Or11111 SUlll!:.lltOllt COUll:T 011 THI tltorlllY on eny JNlltr to11...cflCI wltll My CIN'l'lmlt1I011 E••lrt1
LEGAL NOTICE
W, E. IT JOHN, Cltrti:
I., •utll HOlhtlnl, Dwufy
Lt•llOLO, H•MOE•SON • OINSMOOll 151 E. 1111 Strtet, Solt. 111 C•••• MIN. C.IH•llit mu Ttlt•llllll: l l •17J& AltltlllVI fir 111111fMM' ; to Newpcri on Sunday. The .
· fleet wW be guests o f i\~7 t
Oceanside Yadlt Club Satur·' r'"h' ~··
S'TATI O" CAllllOlNIA "Oil 11'11 con.1tlnt or !tilt tl.mll'ICllll l<Kh A11tu1t U. lt11
• ei:• "" ,~,i;l THI COUNTY 011 OllANOI 1ttornw 11\c~ld bt 0011t11lllCI w1th111 ftlt A:r,b\1:";: zr-: I cr~~700tllV
• ..--(~,. . Y"io "t!'; He. 1.-Mttt 11...._ Um!t •l•lllf 1,. ttil1 •umtn0n1 "°' ' • ' 1 • •
llilo!, Publl•llld Ort,..e Ctttf 0.!IY
Ut-10 MIV 1, I, 15, 21. 1'10
\. ·~ ...... ~· -fj-,t NOTK:I OI" HIAIUHO o" lllTITION rmne • wrltttll Jl•ldlllt ,. tlle tOl'llPl1hrt. l----LEG:-:::-::-77.,-N"'OTI"""c"p,,..---1·---cLcE~G-:'C"C7'CN"'-="CE=---1~~..-... ~;l:\ "o" 01c••• Ol•t:CTIMO lk· Otttd Mtrch 25, \t10, -Qo IU.f Vil , ,. ;o> , J'l ECUTOlt 011 COMlllSTI! TlllMS 0" ISEALI
:' .. ~f,'l;·~:s -w C'O .. T.ACT W, £, $T JOHN, Clerk ll·DISt "•. ,.,~ 11' Elltlt of PAUL M. MAU.POPI', t!tO 8Y !llttl H. 01111hl Cl•TllllCATl 01' IUllNl•S HOTl(I TO C•IOITOltl • •'!> l. · ·I< ,~~ l' ~' !<>' ~·. known •t llAUL Ml)(E HALAPOl'F, O•lllY Cltrk lllCllTIOU$ NAM.I SUlll1t10l COUllT 0" THI w ~T->'·1 ~~ >-·' tnd••llAULHAll.l"OFF,01ee1led. WALSWORTH lllOll&ClA Tiie und1r111111tt1 dO cerrll\' !Illy lrl ITATt: 011' CAltllO•HIA 11011
.. ' .. ¥ • NOTICE LS HE•EIV GIVEN ""-' Ulf WtstcMff ·DI'!.,., Slllte'" IL e1111C1uc!lno • bu•lllllf •I 1117'·8 THI COUHTY 01' 011.ANO I
-day night. ' ~--~:;;,~r:~~ Both legs of the race use • • t
the staggered start in which ._ 1' •
the boats with the lowest ha.Jlo
'dicap ratings start first. 'Ibis
results in the first boat across
the finish line being the win-
ner.
Only Ocean Racing end
Midget Ocean Racing yachts
which sailed in the Newport
to Ensenada race are eligible
to enter. Because of the
limited facilities al Oceanside,
PHRF yachts are not ffi..
clud«l
'Ibe doubl e -r ace WM
t1riginated as a competitive
means f<r skippers and crews
to get their boots home from
',the Ensenada race. As a rule,
::,Skippers Je-ave tbeir boats at
1San Dieio for a week alter
the Ert-..enada r ace.
Saturday's start will be off
the Mission Bay entrance with
the finish ofr the R-l flashing
bell buoy a t Carlsbad.
Sunday's race starts 10
miles northwest of Oceanside,
about 11h miles offshore, and
tinl!hes off Cameo Shores, ap-
proximately three-quarters or
a mile east o{ the Newport
entrance.
NHYCSlates
Opening '"
On Saturday
Newport Harl>or Yacht Club
·wUI observe its 63rd offici31
'eeaJOn opening Sunday with
• gala flag raising ceremony
and tbe customary yacht Ur
• sprectioo and open h o u a e
abc>anl the club yachts.
· Abo a part of the opening
day aclivity will be llle Open-
ing Day race Saturday,
starting at Los Angeles Yacht
Club and finishing off the
Newport Pier.
Festivities will begin tonight
With a Mexican fiesta dinner
at the club with mariachis,
tequila and two stewardesses
from Air California to add
color to the early California
theme.
Moss Family K Wi • CHARLE S II:. HART, ~·-• II lllttulor Ht'W-t l•Cll, Cl ... rtllt nut lroolllunl, F1111nllln Vtllty, (l!llOtnl1, NO. I. UJll
... 1111 IUed .,.,_,In • vtrlllfd Pt<llllon fol' l.""'1Mn .. llllJ.rl!Hh lEY OF FLOWEJlS 1nd 11111 u lct NOTICE IS HEltEllY GIVEH te !111 ee PS l.n,-9 ol llY WHI of tht tt.ov. llllflld "-C:ldenl (rlll 441.,.._. ~r !tit llClll'-firm 1111'1\1 OI Et I tit of J.AMU!l •. l(AHN O«tltlO.
• dtc'" dlrKll1111 ""' ,.u11'M! "° llllblt'°"" O•-• Coed Dlll'I' !"\lot r1 cemp0s1C1 of 1111 lctlOWlf'lll """"'· erlClltor1 of t~ 1bcw1 11amtd dtc.fclt11f
Bett y Moss' 2888 B.ys llore Dn've, almost upstaged h er hus band Don b y w1'n-, •• ,.1.-"" Mc:ldl!ll'• !nm~t 111 ttw M•., l .. u n lt70 "'·'° ' "'"'""• in iuu •Md pl•<" ot ''"' '" ,.....,,. h1v1111 c11kn1 "'1""1 1>1rlntrllllp bu•I-known •• ACME.I---· -c=c'07',.--c===---J ldtnc• 1r1 •• MllDw1' 1111 ••Ill ctKfdtnt .,-, rMUl•td to tlle
ning a dinghy given as sweepstakes pn··e 1·n the Newport Harbor Chamber o f TOOL • ore CASTING co. to comP191• LEGAL NOTlCE '1111 '· Lt.k°", 1137 <.a••· Ain "'""· "'"" "" 11tci .. ••~ vovc111r.. •~ .. I 0trt1ltl 1;111trtct HllCI 1"1br111tY ,, C .• LOM llttell, Ctlll Ille ollkt ot 11>e clfl""lt ot 1111 t bovt Commerce Ship Shape Week. Her husband w on the President of U.S. Tro1J::y, 1Ht tntttl!d rnto b'I' flll c11etc1tnt tn Tr..• M L1111..,., 1'J7 cttc11r, A111 . .n1111e4 (Oii•'· ,, 10 ornenT ,,...,,, wnn
P F . 1111 111.tlmt •nd -~ II•!., M, Hel.lf'Oft HOTICa TO C .. IDITO•I C , l ont le1cll, Cati!, ~ ntetssirv YOllCMft, to tM vn-top prize for the HR winner in the Newport to Ensenada race 10 eir re11•irna to w111ch '' ,...,. tot f,,,,.,.,. su,111011: cou•T OI' THI 0.1111 All•ll n. 1no •r11intc1 ., 1111 an1c1 of 111, ••totne~.
Yacht Mossback, Awarding the prize t o Betty are Blackie Gadarian (left) o1r11eu11r,, tlld iru.1 th• tkM '""•II« sT1.T1 o11 CAL111oa .. 1.t. 11011; T11e1 Ll•k• ~•Id "· s"'11twooc1. u 11 w. c11n ol • tw1rL119 tht """' his bten ••I THI COUNTY 0" O•AHGI , l"tUI P. 1 . .1111.0' Ortve. Sullt 2!M, N-' atecll, chairman of Ship Shape Week, a nd Hank Hill, president of the Marine Divis-tor ,,,.w :it. '''°' 11 •:» a.m., 1t1 Ne. A-6Ntt STATE OF CALtF01tN1A, c1111omr• nuo wn1<11 r, 1111 Pl•t• 11\41 "C011rtroom of Oll>lrtmt11t Mt. l E1l•ll flf 01!.MA VERNI!: LEOl'OlD, OllAHGE COUNTY: OI builnin of '1111 ullderiltllld In ill ion of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce. " ••Id (9!.lrt, ,, 100 c1v1e c111i.r OK1•11C1, on April 11, 1t10, 11e•or• "'t-• m'"'" ,,,.11111"" 10 The t1t•t• (If
------------------------------------------Orlve wt1I, 111 the (Uy of .S1nll A111, NOTICE tS M(tlEIY GIVEN II 1111 No11,., Pi;bllc: In Ind tor 111d $tt11. "Id declCltnt, wllll1n lour fl\ollltii 1ntr
May 29. Set
For Channel
Island Race
Los Angeles Yacht Club has
carded its rugged biermial
Channel Islands race for a
May 29 start.
The course will be from
the-starting line in Los
Angeles Harbor, I e a v I n g
Anacapa. Santa Cruz, Santa
Rosa, and San Miguel Islands,
Ricbardsoo and Begg Rocks,
and San Nicolas and Santa
Barbara Islands all kl -port.
Distance of the race is 249
miles.
The race will start at 11
a .m. Friday, May 29.
An unusual departure will
be the trophy presentation,
scheduled for June 4 aboard
the passenger liner Princess
Louise.
Trophies to be awarded are
the Wesley D. Smith Trophy
for the first boat in the fleet
on elapsed time; H.H. Rohl
Trophy for 6rsi in fleet on
corrected time; Humphrey
Bogart Trophy for the cor-
rected t ime Class A winner:
W ,A. Bartholomae Trophy for
Class B corrected time and
the R ichard I. Stewart trophy
for the corrected time Class
C wiMer.
Signed entries for the race
must be in the hands of race
committee chairman James
Rogers by May 28. Entries:
should be mailed to Rogers
at P.O. Box~. La Habra.
C1l1t11n1r1. trtdltou of 1t11 •lloYI n•l'(ltcl dee'""' PlflOllllly 111pe1f'fd 111111 11, LI•~°' •1111 Ill• 11r51 publlc•lkln ol thl• no11C1,
Oated M•Y '· 1'70. tllll •II '""'°"' 1'11.,lllt cllllms •t•lnll Tllet LttkOI known lo -to be lh• Dlltcl April 30 lt10 W. E. ST JOI-IN, CounlY Cltft 1111 ltld d1Ctcl111t tr1 r"ulrtd to flit Plf'IOllS Wl\Ole 111m11 lft 1ub1crlbed MIX Jtrit •
Outrigger Schedule
Listed for Summer
Cl-IAll:UIS •• HI.RT, J!l. th.,,.,, with 11\e nf(tlhrY ....VCl'llrs, In to th• wllllln 1Nlr<.t ..... 111 Ind •dlnowtfdg. Executor of 1111 WLll
Att1r111y 11 ....,. !hi effk• ot 11\t clerk ot Ille tboY• Id th1v •~ocvttd 1h• 11m.. 01 !ht tbov9 "'"'" fteldtnt JIOS Wttl •-IY IMllVI... llllll!td court. I/It to Ptfftnl '"""· w!lh (Ollltf•I JI.Ill OONALO I! SMALLWOOO
Mffttblltl, CtHltrtlit ..... l1'lt nir«Hl rY voucfttra, 1o Ille Ull• Cltudlt 0. 1011• Ull W (lllj Drlvt lvlle IN Ttl: ltU) ~11 • ltt-)Ut dtrt191\ed II 43CI J:ftll Sire.I, N-ort Nol•·~ llVDllC • Ct!lfor~l• New..;, ••och C~1""flll 9W.f E•ICY!or Ill llrw lltr lt1Ch, C1l!loml1, Wlllch II Ille •11Ct f'rlMll)ll Ofllt• Inn Tl!L· '4442U {no P<.tblltlled Or•l'lt• C0t,1 Ot ltv Piiot, ot bu1l"'H ol th• 11nc11ra1tnlCI In •II 0 ... 11111 COVllT'I' At!W,..,. tor Ex1oe11ttr
Ml'I' I, t , 15, 197' Ut-1G millers P1rl1lnlllfl to lhl "'''11 ol My Cofrlmlltlon Explftl llubllshtcl Ort nlt Cllltf OtllY ~!d11:.~~i~1'(.,~111:; ,~\: :8i:.'' ••i.r ll11D11111111A"3:':;.~1. ~':;11 0.11'1' llltot M•~ 1, I, 1s, n. 1110 LEGAL NOTICE
f'l IO!. ....
Long Beaeh Harbor Y.'ill be
headquarters for the
Kalifornia Outrigger Associa-
tion regatta schedule for the
Eigl1t Coast
Skippers in
Dane Meet
A total or eight local sailingi
skippers have signed up to
participate in the series of
Scandinavian regattas c o •
sponsored by the Association
or Santa Barbara Channel
Yacht Clubs and the Royal
Danish Yacht Club of
Copenhagen, Denmark.
Local skippers, scheduled to
leave here May 21 are Mr.
and Mrs. John Arens, Mr.
adn Mrs. Ernie Dahl, Hans
Dabl, Mr. and Mrs. Bud San-
duval, Ken ·sanduval, Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Reineman, Goldie
Joseph and Frank Rice.
Gov. Ronald Reagan has
sent a letter of greetings to
t he commodore of the Royal
Danish Yacht Club express!11g
appreciation for the hospitality
extended to the American
sailors and officially inviting
the Scandinavians to come to
this country in 1971 for some
reciprocal competiti0T1.
The competion in Denmark
Is slated for May 26-27.
01i.d Aorll 21, ltl'O. April 20. Ml'/' 1, I, IS, lt1t 1.W.-10 llANK OF AMEJllCA LEGAL NCYrlCE
third straight season, ae-su11111:101t cou11:T OI' THI! ~.tJ11~~tL .J~',lTf~t? LEGAL NOTICE
cording kl President Bud Sj~~'cg~NcTt.¢•::"o~':N~°.111 Execulof or ti. wm l ---,-,-,-,-,-10-,-,-0-,-,-,-0-,-:,c,c,--1------:,c,~,c .. :=,.------
Se It of N rt Be ch N A Uftf flf "" l bovto ........ dlcldtnl STA.Tl: 01' CALlllO•NrA •o• SUl'••10• COUltT 01' TH• a s ewpo a • NOTICt: 011 H; ... ;H. 01' lllTIT10N ~~R:,:,.1~;!.~•WITZ • lllMI.. TH• COUNTY 011 o••NO• STA• 0,. CALll'O•HOA l'Ol
Semi·m<>nthly meets are ll'O• PJtoaATt: o" Wl~l AND 110• N.......-1 •••ell C•Ui.rM• tlUJ ..... 4411 THI COUHT'I' 011' OUNOI
h d led J J ll!TT••s Tl"ITAMINTAlY , ... ,... (THI •n.ft2t .. OTICI" 011 SALi 011 •EAL llltOll••TY NI. A·IUts
SC e u W>e 13, une 27, E$11lt cf SAMUEL M. KINWAl.0, """~'' '-l •ICVhtt AT llltlYATe IAll. NOT1CI 01' SAll o" ... Al ,.01'·
J uly Jt and July 25 ! .. ding Ditceaffd. II bll ~ .. O co 1 OtllY llllOI 111 lht Miller el lllt Etl1tt Of l•TY AT ll•tVATI SALi 1 NOTICE IS HElllEIV GIVEN fllll u '" '11111 11 1u.J0 M1LORED JACICIE CONLEY, 11io kl'llWll Et11lt cl HOLLAND LEACH WALKER, to the state championships Olvld Jtrome Kl11w1kl 1111 ll!td Mrtl11 A••ll ''' M•Y 1• 1• l!, lt70 ,, J1ck!t Conlev, Oitct1otct. 1k1 Holltnd L W1lk1r, •kl Holl1nd
r the I Ptllllorl tor Probile of Wiii Ind NOTICE 1$ HE .. EllY GIVEN 11111 Wtlktr, dKtlted.
Aug, 8 as an event 0 lot l11uenct ol letters T11ltmfllltrv LEGAL NOTICE 1h• Undtrtklnld, Mtrv Alie• J-•· ., NOTICE IS Hl!Jl EIV G!VEJrf """' Sth aMual California lnterna-to "'' P1111;-,, rs11r111<1 to whldl Adm111111r1trl• of t11e f$t11 e et Miidred ttl• ulldereltlll!d. 11 AdrT1lnl11r1trt• ol It m•~ IOI' lu•ttier PlrllCllllrt t nd J1ckle Ccnlev. 11.o kr.cwn •t Jtt~!e tti1 111111 of !tit 1bcv1 111mtc1 <llCtdt~!.
tional Sea Festival at Long 11111 1111 time •Ml pt.ct cl hf.,,i.,. IAI tdl Conley, ctue1Hlf, will wH '' prlvllt wlll .. 11 11 1•rv111 uh! to 111e 111,11a1
IM ... "'. II•• b«n Ill !Of MIY 22, 1u111•1011: cou•T 011 THI 1tl• It tn• 111911ell •1111 bttl l)l(ldlr t n.d ~I blct<lf• u"" Ill• ,.,m. Ind Beach Aug, 1·16. lfl'fl, 11 f:» 1,m., In flil c111rtroom ITATI 011 CALlllOllNIA 1101 "'°" !ht t1rmt 11111 torMllllonl ll1rtl111ller concllrlOni lltftlntller mentioned •nd 1ub·
Th · " f lr' of OtP1rlll\1nl No. J of 11ld court, THI COUNTY 01' OlitAfrfOl m.,,!IOllfd, 11'1d 1ubltcl to c»nllrrMllon Itel to «l"lltrT11!1on by 11ld S\lfltrklr e organ1zauOn 0 OU Jg· 11 700 Civic Conttr Ori.,. Wtlt, In HI, A •MM bV uld Superior Court, on M1,-12111, Court, on Frld1y, ~V :It, 1t10, •t
ger canoe c lubs from Balboa thl Cll'f of S1nt1 An1, C1llfor11!... llOTIC• Oil' IALl 011 •I AL il'lt.0-!11t, II !tit l'lo\lr ol ''" o'clock A.M. Ille flour ol ll!U 1.m .. er ltitrtllle• . • D1ttd Apr)I n, 1'10 lll•TY AT llll:IVATI IALI or ttwi,.11ter wlltiln Ill• time t liow.11 Wllllln !ht 11 ..... t llcw-d bv ...... ,,
Newport Beach, Marina del w, e . ST JOHN, Ett1t1 of NATHANAl!!L WILlA•D bv 11111, 1t ftlt L1w Oftlc1 of s111m !ht ottlc• 01 "'' 111or111Y1 tor 1111
R d Long Be ch nd ts Counlv Clerk WAl kl!lt, 1k1 NATHANAEL W , $, Fr1nkll11, 101 E11I 1tn1 Strw"' CDlll Admlftlllr1trti, lll W11! Tlllrd Slrttl, ey an a eo UC MUltlltAY M. CttOTO••• I WALKE"lit. dKt1otd. Mt11. C1lll01'11fe, Ill r1,111. lltlt. 111111111 Sant• An1, C1t\lorn!1, 111 rlgllt, 1111 ••
racing programs for both men H. N. ll:llSMAN NOTICE LS HIEJlEIY GIVEN '"'' •lld Miiii ol IM ll!d Miid•'" JICklt LnltrHI •lld ttltle of 11ld dlCtdtlll tn Ot\'lr Or., t uli.' the ulld1r1!1nld, •• Admlnl1tr1lrl• of Conltv, 1110 kllOWn 1• J1cklt Conti,-, 11 Ille 11m1 ot 1111 dHth, •nd •II and WOmen, teenager s to Nt~OO"I le.cf\, C1Mt, nw Ille tlllllt of 1111 I DoVI ntmtd dK..,1111, d•(ttaMI, II 111t tlmt of Mr de1tfl, rlflll, 11111 em! lnl1,.1I 11111 f\11 ttltte
seniors in 400-pound six-pad· T••: 1111) ..._,,:II wul "'" 11 11rlvt1• 1111 tv 1111 h11ll111 '"" •II 111111, t1111 1M lnttrest 11 .. 1 m1v 111v1 ec<1u1r..i by <>Ptrellon ot • • ""*"""" ._... ''"''-' •Ml bell Dh:ldt• -1111 te""• •rid Hid etlll• n11 1et1u1rtd tw OP•r•llon lew, or ollltrwlte, 1lnce t111 <lttth, '" dler outrigger canoes pat· Publllltl<I o.,.,.. Cot•! 0111v llllot, conc1111om ht•11n1111r m11111-.:1 end 1u1>-et lllw or 01111rw1i1, oth1r 1n~n or •rid to 111t to1iow1n1 dtterlblo •••I
terned after the tradl-tlOl1-al ~v. •· ~. t, lt11> 122-11! ltd to conllrm1lll)ll bJ' 11111 SuHrlOr 111 tddlllon to 11111 ol tM wlct Miidred pr-ny: 1--------------ICourt, on FrlftY, M•., ti, ltXI, 11 J1ckl1 COllhlV, 1110 lu'lown ts Jeckle llAll:CIL ONI:
Polynesian vessels. LEGAL NOTICE !!It llour ot 11:1s •.m., ., tt1ort1ller Conltv, 11 Ill• t\me ot htr ••••h. An llf'llllvlded cne-ll•lf l11!i!••d '" wlttiln the 11me ellOWtd bt llw, 11 111 l lld I'll tht rt1I "•OHrtt 111 !tit lht "-•1t 16 fffl OI 11\e W••I .!-61
The entire Pacific Basin was l--------------i"" office or "" 11terMvs 1., 111e c1ry o1 COit• M•••· c111111!y ot Or11101. teet of ll'le aou1n 100 teet of •n~ Adm!11!1lrtlrl1, )IS Wttl 11\ltd "'"''' Sltlt of C•llfornl1, 1nd dttttlbed ta: North 110 feel cl 1111 E11I en1-ll1lf explored by Polynesians ceo· 11·1ttu s11111 A111, C111torn11, tn rltllt, 11111. Lot 13, Trtd No. ll'l, 11 "' M1P of rt11 North•••' Ou1rter 01 111• · . sh Cl•T1,ICATI OP •USINlll \llttrffl 111d 1tllle of llld O.cllltnl thtrtol recorctMI In !look '3, l"t•I• Souttiw11I Qu1r!er of SK1k>n 1 .. t unes ago 1n canoes aped 111cT1r1ous:· N.u.\I ,, 111t llm• 111 1111 dtlth, 1nd 111 45 ind .., of Mlta!li1111011i MeP•-•1cOl'<11 TownslllP s s11111n, "'"'' 11 Wtst, from koa trees Thus KOA Tiie ~llCl1rslg11td don <t rllrv ht 11 rl1ht, title •lld lnter111 ttlet Ill• .st111 o1 Or•Me Covn1,-, S!tlt cl c11U0<nl1. 111ncno L• 1101u Clllt1. 111 1111 C!lt
· • condu'11nQ ~ bullnti1 '' P. 0. &o• m1v h1v1 •t11ulrtd bt 01ur1tlon ol nn senile Stretl Co111 Mt•• ot Hl.lflll11tto11 BJ1ch, Countv ot Ot•nt•• takes its UOOrth<:M:kiX spelling 22, Hvnllng!on 81<tch, Ctllltlr11l1, tlllde'I' l•W. or olll-111, 1l11c1 1111 <le1th, ln (1lllttn!1,) 111<11 ot' (llfffl 1r1 Invited STiit of C•lllcmlt, 11 tl\Owll o~ e
f Kaw · rt ol th t Ille llttlt!n1.11 n•m ntmt of OOlllHIN llld 10 1119 loltowlno dffCfltltd r111 for 111c1 PfOPertY '"" mutt be In m•p tMreor ritc0rdt<1 In !look 11. 0 otrua as pa a ILLUSTRATIONS tlld 111•1 Stief firm P•Dl>t•lv: wrtt1111 11111 wLll bt rK1IYHI 11 !tit P••• l), Ml1e1tl1neou1 M1111. Rteor<ll
t d't' Ko m~· hip ·n-11 composed of tn. lollowlno "''°"' llA•Cll OHi: otllct ol St11m a, Frenklln, AUornev ot M!d o,,..,, Cou11"1". (k110w11 •• ra I ion. a me i.n::rs I wllcH 111m1 In full ind piece ot •etl<lt11Ct An vndlvldtd tnt-11111 lnttre11 In lo• Ille Admln1tlr11rlx or mev be lllt<I l ot 11 ot A11H1or1 MIP Ill.
eludes a number of. ex· 1• •t tol10W11: It'll £111 ,, ittt ot tM W••• s.1 w1111 th• c1erk 01 "id s~111•1or court, "AltCll TWO: H ·· ho J" · Cherin C. Boyer, "31 C:hevr, CNlt t"t 11 1ht S111lll 100 111! ol lllt or 61Hv1rld to 1111 .. 111 AdrT1lnltlt1!r\x An ulldl~ldtd ont•l\111 lnlllr1t1 I" awauam w now 1ve m Or .. H1.tn1111111on 811<11. c111ror111 Nortll 1io 1~1 11 n. E••l •llMl•lf ""°"'11" •t 111v time •II•• 1tlt 11," ""' !ti! 2, li!tt 01 lfte we11 11t
Southern California. Olltd Afl~~ "1• 19b° 8 of Ill• Nll'llll•1t Qu1r11r el 111• 1111b11c:111on ., lhl• Nollet 1M bttore IHI 01 th• Soutll 100 '"' ol th• er., -oyer Soulllwt1tf OU•rl•• .. teOllll "' 111 mlklll9 .. rd t•f• North 110 IHI DI Ille Ettl o-ll•lf
M-Onthly regattas call for ~TR"..,T,!'0i'c'o~.~~$~NIA, Town1111p s sov111, R•1111e 11 wut, !l!ct 1e11 w1i1 be m1d1 uoon Th• of tht Norlllt••I <1u1t1tr ot th•
I · f I · · . "' · ll•ncllo L• 10111 c~1,1, In lflt C!tv tollowln1 1trm1: Co•n. Souttiwetl <1u1rltr of SKllon 2,, r,. mu ttp e-ap races Jn SIX men S On April 22, 191(1, before m1, • o1 Hunll119!1)1'1 lltoth, Counlv of Or1~t11. O.ltd 11t~rU 7t. 1910 Town1lllp S &0\1111, ll1noe JI Wnl,
classes and five for women Not1•v ll11bllc In •NI lo• ••Id s111e, Sttt1 o1 c111farn11. •• 1110w11 on 1 Mtt'I' AUco Jontt 1111>C11a L• 11c1 .. cn1c1, In th• d.., . . PttwntllY 1ppe1rtd Clltrln C. 90'(1r mep tti•rtof rtcordld In l ook SI , .-.dmlnfstrtt,lx of !ht ol Huntlnolon lttCll, Cwnl'f of Or1r191,
over a quarter-nule paralleling knoWTI tv m• to bt the f)lrton "'"°"' Ptt• 1i, Mltc•lltMOU• MIP1. r..;ord1 111111 ot "''' of ce111om11. '' ""°"'" on • nemt 11 1Ubt(rlb"1 to 111• wlnlhl11 In· o1 st!d Ort1>11t Counlv. !Known ., Mlklre-11 Jtckll Conley mtP ltitr~f. ftcOrl!ed In 8oot !I, the Cherry Avenue beach 5eC· ~trumt~I Ille! ttknowte-clittd llt IXIC<.tlfd Loi 11 ot Ane110t"t M11 U). Aki J1cklt C11111tv. dlClllld 11111e 13. Mltcel!111tOU1 Mtpt, tt(Ol'I!•
lion of the Long Beach Harbor the 11me. llA•C•L TWO: SILIM s l'll:ANKl.IN or ••Id Or1ng1 CounlY. !Known •• . . (OFFICIAL SEAL) An u11dlYldt<I llllf'llllf lnt~rttl In l'•AHKLUI AHO "ltANKLtH Let It of AS1e11or'1 Ml• ll),
shoreline. Points accumulated M•ry K. H111rv the E111 u '"'' 11 1111 w111 •n 1.11or...,,. ,, Lew 11••Cl!:L TH11:1E: • h ( JJ'ed t d No!1rv Publ!c • Celllornlt Feet of lllt South 100 feel ol The 117 llil 11111 Jtrett TM E11I 7t feel of Ille WHI 5•1 10 eac race are a I owar Prt~clpal Olllct In Nor!FI 1'0 tee! o! Ille 11:111 •111-~lt (Mii Mttl, C1UNn1!1 Itel el t11t South 100 IHI Of th•
individual regatta and season Orerl(le Cov111v of '"-Norltie111 Q111rtfr '' 1111 ll""1Y 1-n11 North 110 1"1 01 tt>e E••I ,,...,.,fl • My Comm!nlon E•plrn Southwfll Qverte• ol SecJlon 16. In Alltr,..1 1w Atmlnh1r11tl1 of !ht MorlMttl Qutfl•r of '"'
long team p 0 I n t cham· Nev. Jt, 1m TownllllP s s.u111, Jl•111e II w111, l"ubllillt(I or111,1 Co••' oeur 1'1101 s1111thwll1 Q111rt1r or sectlOn u, rn
P·ioosh;ps Publl~hftl Or1111e C••t 01Uv llllOI, ltencllo L• 110111 Chic•. In the cltr Mir 1, 1, u. UIO 110-111 Townall!p $ s1111111, R1ntt 11 W"'• · April lf, Mev t, t. lJ, 1t10 745-70 ot H~nllntton lltttll. Cauntt of O••nee. R1ncllc LI lclH cn11;1, In the Clt1 The 1970 KOA schedule or St••• of CeTlforn11, e1 11\oWTI on • LEGAL NOTICE Cll Hunllntlon (leech, •• •Fl-n "' LEGAL NO'flCE mt• 11\trll"(!I, r.cordtd In 800lt SI , • mep Thl teol recorded In lcol! !, •••• ll, MlfClllt .... U• M•P!I, rtcord• Pit• n, Mllcell•-· MJpf, ttc•od•
Ranger Appoints Dealer Vet Outboard
re~attas and ocean r-aces:
May 9 -Balboa-Laguna ll-llfn
Beach ocean race. c 11.-:-1,1CATI! o" •u11N111
M 23 M r . d l Rey "•<T•T1ou1 NAM!' ay -a ma e The ~ncr,r11elltd does c:.rtiiv •M 1,
cf 11ld Orente C11<1ntt. (Kl'IOWll •f ot 1111 Cwnrr of Or111f11, S!•ll of Loi 1t cf AHlllCr'I MtP lU, IA.It H71 Cilllornli . llAlCIL TM1tll1 NOTICI Oil' 01!,AULT ANO l!LICTIOH 11111 "' ctfers ire Invite-cl 1or 111.r
An undlvll!t<f one-l'lllt l11tt111f In TO Sill UHOI• 0110 O' Tll:UST ll•teelt ot flfOllertv lndlvldutllr or •• th1 Ee1! 26 fff!I of lllt Wul Sfl NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVE~: THAT 1 unit. AU iucll Dldt muit bi 111 Itel ol lllr. South !00 1111 of ftlt TITLE lNSlJll:ANCE Ind TRUST COM• wr111111, i nd wilt be rtcelved by Ille Nor!FI 120 IHI of 1119 Eest ont--11111 PANV, t CC<Pllrlllon It dul't tOPO llllt4 Admlnltlritr!~ 11 the olll(t o1 Yaunf, ot 1n1 Nonh111t 01.tt rt1r of !ht Tru1lte under I Offd ol Tru1t d11td Prenner trld Hew1, J\5 WHI TFlird SOUthWMI Outrttr ol Std l!lll 16, AutU1I 11 , 1965, e•tcutlCI by Miki IOY•· 51rttl, $8nM An1, Ctlllornlt, or m•V T,,._tlllp ! South, lllltt 11 WHI. llt n, • m1ftlt<I men, end Cllerln F. bl flltd wltri lht C!trk ol tM 1baw n1mt<I 1t1n~ l.1 llOI•• Chlct, Ill lllt (!I-; Wood end Mtudt E. Wocct, hu1b111d 5uP1rlor Court, or "''" bl dellv•rtd ol H<.tn!lntlOn l11ch. •• tllown on tncl wife, !ol~tfy Jnd HVt,.llv ••. Tr111tor. lo tt!<I idmtnlilr1trlK pencn1lly, or • m1p 11\ereof reconltd In look 51. ro 11cure c1rtt1n otrllttllorl1 '" t1vor tnv tlmt tf!t• 11•5' ou1111c1tlon ot 11111 ftltrlOf 11cordtd In lock Jl, P•llt of SllllltY 11. 8urnr11I, 1!10 ~-II noflCt •lld betot1 !ht m1k1.,. ot wlf n. Ml1tell1neou1 M1p1, reccrdt et 11 Sllnl•Y lit. Bv•••••• •• b1nellc!1rv, wle
Robert V. Staats Co., 2001
W. C-Oast Highway, has been
named local dealer for Ranger
Yachts, Buster Hammond,
saJes manager announced.
The Robert V. Staats Co.
was established in 1927 in San
P edrG and later m oved lo
Newport Beach. They built
4&-foot picket boats for the
Army and Navy in World War n.
At the end of lhe war their
busirtess reverted back to
pleasure boats and Robert
Sta1ta J r, was strongly at·
tracted kl sailboats. As a con.
sequl'!lce all of his leisure
time was spent in sailing
Snowbirds, and later Rhodes-
33s on Newport Bay.
After completion of his ed-
ucation, young Bob decided to
join his father in the business
and they acquJred several
lines of sailboats. His latest
additions now on display are
the new Ranger 26 and Ran-
ger 33 yachts. '
Hammond said Ranger is
planning the designs from 20
lo 40 feet in the coming
months.
Driver R eturns
A veleran outboord enduro
driver, Bob Witt of Baytown.
Tex .• is returning for another
whack at the dual outboard
titles up ft1r grabs at the
Galveston Bay outboard races
Sunday May 17.
Witt, who ifnlshed third in
the 1970 Parker, Ariz enduro
and 12th in the Lake Havasu
Outboard W o r l d Cham-
pionships last fall, will drive
in both the single and multi·
engine classes.
lo Redondo Beach ocean race, eo~c1uc11"11 • bu11n111 ,, dOO c1mou1
June 13 _ KOA Regatta, Drive, NtWJ>Ort &t•Ch, C1Ulomr1, under !tit lltlltlOUI firm nemt OI POSTAGE
Cherry A'enue '-·g Beach STAMP COMPANY OF AMERICA •rwl ' ...,,,, · !!'let ••Id tlrm 11 CO"'Pll11'd ol !II• tollow-
Junc 27 -KOA R egatta, Ing urtcn. wr.ote "'"'' 1n 1uu •Ml piece
Cherry Avenue, Long Beach. of rHldtnce is 11 tollOwt : MerTll PltrT1m1111t, AKA, Miii 8rown,
July 11 -KOA Regatta, 1!! C1brt110, Cot!• M•••·
Cherry Avenue. Long Beach. oet1d Apr11 is, 1110 M1mt
July 25 -KOA Regatta; srat1 ot c1u1orn!e. Or11'1tt Cou11tv: On APrll 15. 1910, lletore me, • N011rv Cherry Avenue, Long Beach. 11ub11c 111 end tor ukl s1111, 11ert1111111v
Aug. 8 -KOA Stale Cham-•-••ed M1m1 llt1mn10n• known To "'t . . to bt 1~ per11n wllo1t 111m• 11 111blcrlb-p1omlup, Cherry A venue, Long ed to 111e w11111n 1n1tr11mtnt 1M
Beach 1cknowlfctaMI •lit txtcuttd lhe •~mt.
· {OFFICIAL SEAL)
Aug. 15 -Seal Beach· M•"' K.. H1n•1 Nole"I' Pu~llt-Ctllfornl1 Newport Beach ocean race. Pr1nc11111 0111c1 111
A g 22 A I Lo Or1nee county U . -nnua ng M'I' commiuron E•P!•~•
Beach to Avalon Harbor ocean Novtmber 7~. itn
race across Catalina Oiannel. ...!'hib1l~~e;'4, ~:;•,~ .~·~'. 1~!o11"
LEGAL NOTICE
Or1n111 Covntv, 111!1 ol C1l!tornl1, re«>rl!ed I/It/~, 11 l111tr um1nt l'IO. 1~~. lli:RMS OF SALE· !Known 11 lot 11 ol AUHIOl''I Mltl !11 bock 16:15, t>IOe $d, ol 0fllcle1 Citl\, ltwtul ..;oney ot Ille Unlll<f
131. tle-ccrd1 In th1 OlllCI ol 1111 ••corder Stilts. Ten N•cenl (l~l 11 1~• P'A•Ct:L. llOU•1 ol Or11111t County, (l!llor"i.., l!ettrlblrio;r lln(lunt flllt•tcl mutt iccompen,-"''
An unc:llYldtd '"""'II of on~8U lll'ld lh1reln IMlllclln• one llO!t tor writ!~ bid or offer, Ind fllt be1tnc• !nt1•11t In !ht •111 '' !~ti of Ille 1111 Prlncl1>1! wm ol U11 ,300.00 111d mvit bt pJ)(I u1>1>n tti• c1>11llrmet1on Wal $61 lltll of lllt Soulti 100 Itel obll11llcn1 lllet lllt btntllcltl ln!eretl ot 11141 b,-tt!d Superior c111rt, Stld
of Ille North 120 ltd ol lht Ettl u""•' 1uch Oetl! ol T•Ull tM lht lllt w!ll bl midt \/POii lllt I/lull cne-t.111 of Ille NOrlhtlll Ou1r'11r of obll11tlon1 1..;urtd fller1b,-f'I t1rttenlfy •1-t•ow ttrmt
1111 Soutnw11t 0111rler of Stcllon ,,, Mid b'I' the ulldtrtl11nt<11 lh•I t b•ltth Ollt<I : At>rll '2,, lt70 In Town1hl• 5 Soufll, lt1n91 11 Wt~f, of, Inf l!tlJllll In, lllt obll91110111 for Vicki R UP!v<I littncllo L• l ol" cn1c1, 1~ "'' city ""'lch 1uch Oeed ol Tru11 11 ttcvrfty Adm!nlitrirtl• ol Hunll111loll t111cll, Countt ot Or1n11e, h•1 occurttcl 111 tti1l ttYrTltnl h11 not of th• eiti!t of
Slllt of C1Ulornte, II lllown on rTllP bltn m1dt ot : H~lltnd Lt1cll Wll~er. thttllOI rtcOl'dtd In eoo1i: 51, ••oe f~• 1n11111m1111 er 1rlMIP1I Ind oe,e•~d. l~, Ml1c1U1necu1 M1P1, recordt ol lnt.,111 Whlcll btcllf!I due April 20. YOUNCJ, llltlNNI• I.ND Mt:Wl 11ld Orl ntt Count-;. lk11own 11 Lot 1110, lhll b'I' •tlMlll flltttof, 1111 Ufl. Jll W•I T~ll'il SlrMf 1, of A1uucr•1 MIP ti). Cltnltnld. ••tltnl btllllle!•"I' "'""" 11111• ARI , C1 tlttrn11 t1111 l ldt or olltrl 1r1 lnvltld for tlld lucll Oeed of T11.11t, h11 tlflCVltd Tt..,hllll: (7141 ~1 .. UI
Plf(t lS cl PTOH•IY lndlvld111Uv or 11 I nd dt!lYt•ICI lo ••II! ctulY •tlOOlhltd A11tr111,-1 .... ACml"tlrllril
BCYC~s Clubhouse Goes Up
1 uni!. Alt 1ucll bldt mutt bt In Tr u1ltt, I wrlll111 O@Cf1r8llon flf Publlthll! Or1n1e Cotll Dtlt1 1111~1 wrlll~t. •nd will bt rKtlved b'I' ftle Ot11utt 11111 0.m•nll for Slit, •lld "''" 1, 2 •nd 1, lt10 11t10 Admlnl1lrUtl• 1t !~1 ol!ICI el YOUNG, h11 cttP01ltfd Wllll ttld dul., IPIOlnttd, _____________ _ IAI U 1f Pll:ENNl!:R a. HEWS. lJS Wttl Tlllrlf T•111!11, IU(I\ Oetd ol Trust ~m1 1 -
NOTICI 01' T1tu•Tfl'I IA.LI Slr"I, S•n•• An1, C11!lornie, ., rNIY •II ctocumenls •vldtntlnt obllottlon~ N1, H•·Jt De dellvtrll! lo 11111 1c1m111111r1rr1~ lMured th_t•eb'f, 11111 ~•• dKlt•ed
On Monc11y, MIY 75, lt?O, 11 11 :0C PtflOtl~lly, er IN" bt !lltcl wltti !ht '"" clct• hertbl' clec!1re •II 1uma LEGAL NOTICE
A.M, SALINOA FIN AN c 1 Al IN· Clerk oi 1111 •bov• 111med SuHr1or H<:Urtcl lhlrtb'I' lmrT11dl1t1lv du• •n•1-----------COltPOJlATEO .• (Of"llC••l1on, II dult Court, ., •llY llrTll 1n1r lltrl Pllbll(lllllll l>BY•blf •nd .... tlteltd •M dotl T·IH• tPPOl~IPCI Tru1IN under 1M 1ur1u1nt of ltil1 nollt• 1M bltort !hr m1kl1>9 htrtbY lite! to (IUll lflt lrvll properly NtllCt o1 •ile II lll;IAI. ,,...tty 11 IO Oet<I ot Tru1t d1ttd Au.u1t 1, 01 11ld ••It. lo bt t0kl to ull1ly the .t11to1tlon1 llrlvtl• lllt
1'61, tXKl/led bv JOMOh F. Mllc~1m. TERM$ OF IAlE: C11h, l1wtul mon'v tte:<.tred 1111r1Dy. Ne. , sn 1n I m1trled "''" 1• Ill• toll Ind 11p1r1te ol 11>1 Unlltd Sl1lt1. Ttn t11rc111t (10,_l 011ed APtll 2J, 1170 IN THE IUlll•IOll: COUll:T 01' THI
Officers Tell Progress of New .$650,000 Bay Project
Officers t1f Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club Thursday gave a
progress report on plans for
the new $650,000 clubhouse
now being constructed on the
bayfront at 1601 BaySide
Drive, formerly the site of
Richard son's Yacht Landing,
At a press conference and
luncheon held at the Irvine
Country Club, Commodore:
Dave Domansky detailed the
latest plans for the 24,000
,quare foot facility whtch In--
eludes exterior dining decks,
boat storage, automobile park-
ing and a swlmmlng pool.
The new clubhouse was
deoigned by Wiiiiam P •
Ficker, AJA, of Newp-Ort
Beach. and is being con.
&tructed by the Paul R. Suder
Jr. conslrucUOll Co. ol Orange.
Temporary quarters are in
the old Villa Martna building.
When completed and com-
pletely furnished the pro]ect
will represent an tnvestment
of aome $850,000 on lrvine
Co. land for which the club
has a ~year lease.
The clubhouse proper Is
btlng built on three levels.
First level of approximately
8.300 square feel will house
storage and mechanicill areas,
men's and women's locker
rooms, a snack bar, a junior
r oom, lounge and protest
room.
The second level of 12,500
square feet will be the main
level with administrative of-
fices, race committee room,
comm-Odore's and manager's
orrice, bar, lounge, and a din-
ing and ba l lroom ac-
commodaUng 230 persons. gal-
ley facilities and restrooms.
The third level has ap-
prt1timalely 3,200 !qUare reet.
lt houses the library-board
room, card rooms and •d·
dit.lonal restrooms,
fn additio n lhe facility will
have ample dry storage for
small 6oats and a 6,000-pound·
capacity hoist for launching
plus a parking area for 122
cars. The swimming pool will
be 20 by 40 feet with a 10
by 10 wading pool at the
shallow end.
Official groundbreaking for
the new clubhouse was held
March '21.
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club
started oul in 1958 as a "let-
terhead" yacht club wilh
quarters al the Balboa Bay
Club. For a number of years
club orficials had a hard time
c0nv1ncing the So u t h e r n
California Yachting Associa·
lion, governing body o l
Southland yachting activity,
that BCYC was nnt a satellite
of the commerical Bay Club.
Arter changing its burgee and
renegotiating its lease with
the Bay Club, BCYC was ad·
milted to m embership in
SCY A, As the club grew and
expanded its activity i n
sponsoring major regattas, it
later gained membership in
the Yacht Racing Union of
Soot.hern California and the
North American Yachl Racing
Union.
YJ{U Is a group oC 14 yacht
clubs within SCYA Which have
dubhwst facilities. NAYRU
Is the governing and rules·
making body of )'8chting in
North America.
The club began to gain na-
tional stature Jn 1964 when
ooe of ii.s m'cmbcrs. Thomas
P'1trick Dougan, purchased
tfootrtt, •Ml tKDf'dt<I Au1111! n. 1HI. nl 111• •mount Offtred m\1$1 •<com••nw SllnT.-r ... avr11•8'1! STATS 011 CALIFO.NIA, 11011:
ll 12 I-C J b' Od. 1s fn1lt, No, l~t. In book .051, lltt ltll written bill or ciffer, tlld TM bll•rw:t TITt.• INSU•ANCI AND T•UIT CO. THI COUNTY 01' LOI ANGILaS 1e -me ,., 0 um ia a 101. of Olflcle1 Jlecord1 111 111-11 otflc' m111t De N ici VHn lhe conffr1111t1011 tot Kt1r11 .,._,. S,,...t In 1119 Mint• of 1119 Eil•!• o1 MAIV
entered it in the. America's Cl !ht County R I c 0 , • I , or ot .. 11 b'I' ••Id Su1trlor Cou•I. Slid 1•111• At11, C•hftl'flll nm litAVERA, •k• Ml'tS, MAllY ll:AVl!:RA, Or1no t Count¥, c1n1ornr1. . ttlt wrn be ll'ltclt llPlfl II•• \/$Utt t.n, Tr111t 0... Dltot. o.ce•1td. Cup trials Under the Club Wiii "u ti tn1Dllc 111Ctltn lo h1•h"t etcrow ltrm1. Slit NlllllW: Tl '"'" Notki 11 hertbv olvtn 1ri1t lhti vn-
burgee. bl!ldtr 1or (8Sh fp1,-1ble 11 !lmr ol Otlld: APrll 17, 1110, THE FOREGOING IS A COPY OF atraltntd wll1 ttll ti Prl.,l!t .. 1,
1e!1 In 11wtul mone1 of 1111 Unltfd VICKI 11:. UPTON "NOTICE", THE ORIGINAL OF WHICH to 1~1 llltheil IM Detl bldcltr iubl~j
Dougan again took the st.itsl •' lh~ $111/th (rrontl entr111c:t Allmln1tlrllrllf ol lllt WAS FILIEO FOil RECOJlD ON AP•tl IO co11llrm1llon ot ••Id ,_,,,;.. Covrl, . • to !ht Ccun1v Cour111ou ... 11111 &loelt E1t1i. ol NATHANAEL ~3. 1970, lN TKE OFl'ICE OF THE on or •fltr tht ht lftY ol Juni, Columbia lo Newport, R.I. tn Wtll Stnll An• l lvd .. Stnl1 An1, WILLA!lO WALKElt. dtc••"d COUNTY RECOROEll: OF ORANGE lt10 •I ·~· olllc• of MARILYNN K 1967 and was runner-up to Ctlllcrnla 811 rleM. !Ille •nd lnte•••I YOUNG, 1111:1/llNl!lt • HIWI COUNTY AT s.-.NTA AN .... CALIFORNIA, HofSTETTEll, ll0~1 E1tl 81111'( Slr••': converect 1c ~ncl now ~eld bt It un<llr l.ttenltT• 11 ltW Publl•htd Ort1111 C11111 01l1w Pilot, Su"I• o Wlllll1., Ctlltarnl• il!HOI counl'f Intrepid in his bid to defend t•ld °""' ot Tr11st 1n lhe prootrlv a11 Wt1t TMN 11....i M•'I' 1, I, u. 22. 1110 111·10 of' Lor' A11t1elQ, Sitt• OI C~lltornlo,
lh C sl!u~!ect In s1!d (Ol<nl~ IM Slelt de1ctlb-letne .t.111, Ctll .. !'1111 nm 1tt lht rlolll title 1M l11i.t"I ol
e up. td ••: T111.-.-1 tTttl S11-m1 LEGAL NOTICE till! dtce•i.td' 11 111t 11m1 oi d••t1t It was during Dougan's two-Lei 11 01 Trott 2'32. In 1111i city AtftrMv• '-AM!IR11tr1trl• •M 111 !tit ri,111, 11111 •nd 1n1,,..,1 of COlll M111 , •• "'' map •KOrctlCI llvbtlsn.11 o ...... Cotti 0.llV Pllol, tt.11 lh• .. ,.,, ot ••Id doqtlflll h11
year tenure a s comm odore In rn eoo11; "· 01ou 1•rwl1, Ml~ct111neoU'I Ml" 1, 2. •· 197' tl).70 '"" ,.._ ic<1u1r1.:11 by _,,11on o1 11w or cllltfWli•
1963 and 1969 that the elub ~!:M.'"ot :rd :~~ty. 0' 111• cou~"' ... LEGAL NOTICE HOT1c1 TO c1t101to•1 ~!7:r :!:!~.: ~ ='1'~~ 1001 1":;.,~'
began its TnQVe to entirely co~:~1";•0~ .,.ii':~.~.,. r;:::~.5~ 1;;.~:l:'. ;~:f:1g~ c~°i.~::.:r,. ::: in 1ncr 10 •II 'tt1• ctr111n lit••' .,._m
divorce itself from the Balboa r19ef'd l111 1a11. 11C11ns1on, or -THI COUNTY o• 011.t.H•I 111u11tct 111 1111 (CllJntv °' o.,,,.,, "''' CVrTlbflrlCfS to p&Y ltle Prlnctp1! tVlft ~ li'"-Mfff .... .........,. ol Ctlllor11f1, Pt•llcvltrly <ltl(rlbtd II
Bay Club and seek Its own o1 "" "°'' ttcv•ld 11~ ••)(! 01111 ca11:1T1l'1c1iT1 OI" 1u11NEJ1 e11111 of 0Av10 AlltTHu• MARcus. ro110W1, '-"~
I b r 'Jit' ot Trull, to-wll: 11,,)00.00, wHll tnti!rnt "K:TITIOUI Ml.Ml •Ito kntwll 11 DAVID A. MAltCUS, Lot I 111 lfotk H. Trttl No. 1009, cu aci Jes. lrorn StoNmbtr 1 ..... II In ••kl Thi u11111.-.1,nt<1 doll Ctrtlry lie ., (1111• llJO known II OAVIO MA RCUI •nc:I II Pfr m1p rteordld 111 !look n. [n 1969 BCYC invited the nc1e ,,ovtdect, 1~.~11et1. 11 onv, undtr dll(fln9 • · b\11!11111 11 m M••lne 11 o. A. MA•cvs, DtcNMd. Ho• If 01 Mlt,1111"'°"1 M1111. 111 • , the lltrflt ot ttld 0-.c! of Tru1I, IN .. Affllut, lllltloo ltl1nd, Ct!!fonll1, ul'ld1r NOTIC£ 1$ ME•EllY GIVEN to t~t ll'le oH1ct ol !llt County Jltc0rdtr
fledgling Orange Coast Yacht dl•re•• tnd •·~~H• o1 tt1• Trutl" !ht fkt111-firm J11m• of l I' R tl"edllcn of lf'lt 1tiove Nmtd dt(fdtnt of wtd °"'"'' Counrv,
Club and t.he long established ""' of 11111 1r\1$tl utc1n111 1w Mid IN1'1!1tP1t11e:s 1rw:1 11111 uld 11r"' •• tMt 111 ""°"' Mvlno c111mt 11111,.1 """" comrnon11 tr110wn ••: 1.-i1 k •I OHf ef Tn.111 CClllMMd ti lht followl111 il'tttOfl, wl'IOM 1111 Mid dtcteltlll l tt rtQUlted to 1111 W1y, SH1 8H(;ll, Ctll!Ol'l'lll ,
Voyagers Yacht CI u b -Tht bln111C11..,. vndtr 11ld OllN ot ,.."" 111 f\111 '"" 111tt• ot rt110t11<• I••• ""'"" wllll "" _..,., Y011Cll•••· lri Ttm .. ot .. 1. u111 I" t1W11.1t1 _,
bo h I h d lz ,~;..... Ttult bt r111011 of • brttcll er o;ltllvl! folloWtz !tit 1f!Jt1 ot !hi d irk ol tht •bOVI ot 11'11 Unlltd $!1111 on con! ""''11111 t etter ea organ awuu" rn Tt.1 oblloltlons 11C11rtc1 lll•""Y· lt•rfl'IO!ld 11, 1t1mmr11t, Jr., 101 w. 1111111111 covrt, or Iv orntnt them. wrtll of 111t, or 11rt co.ii •n.t 1>111nu
-lo merge with BCYC and l!erttotor• ••etuted ltlld Cll'l!Vlrtd to h 'I' Avenut, ll11b01, c111tornl• nH1 "" n-te•n•rv <t0Udllr11. '' !ht un-•vlcl111ctd by nott 11C11rtd b,, ""°""'"' 1M undttlltntd 1 WTlfftll Otcl1rtlll)ll D1llCI At1rll l (, 1970 d...-.follld et !ht ofll<tl If 111 llllH'll'n': ..-Tru1t Offd on fh~ ..,._,,.,. tO
take on the. lease or the Irvine .. Ott1111t .... OtmtM lot '-If· •Md .... .,.~ '· llll!lftllnt, Jr. OAV10 ,., TINGlElt., 1'01 WHfCllff IOloil. T.,, "' ctnt °' '""""' bill
l nd b 'Id d wrllltn 11otlce of OrMCll tl'lll ol tl•tllon lt•lt et Ctlltoff!l.I, Or111tt Cti.lnfV1 Orlvt, Sun1 · no. N....._. lnefl, to be '-Ille! wllll bld, proper Y B. Ul an new te Cl llM .... , llflt(lltlltlltd f(I 1,111 •lld Oii Atr11 ll, 1'70, betott mt, I Ctlltorn1~ tJUO, wlllcll la lhl 'llCt l ll!t ot Olltrl to bt 1n Wrlflnt tnd'
CJUbhOUSe ,..,..,,,, lo 1111tl1Jfy $11d ollllttllon• end NOlltY ll'vbllt In Ind fllt Mid 11119, OI Ml111S1 Of tlM Vni:lll'lil!ntd If! 111 wilt be ~IVl<'I II IM 1111'11MIO tfl'ltt · . 11\tfulter-, on JenuttY JI, 1t10.' lllt .,.,_1~ .,...,.. 11..,.,...1111 II. ••rn-.... nt•• 11trl1lnlnt " !ht 111111 of ti .nr 1111'11 •lier Ille !!rat Pllblk•llotl
OCYC came In on the deal und•r•ltllld c1uM11 11tlf nonce of 1>r .. c1t "''"'· Jr., known '° "" to "' "" "'"" .. r.1 d"tc1t111, wfflll11 fol.Ir lllOlllll• 1t11r 111reo1 11111 belor9 "'" 9' ..... but .YYC members YO'Ad de..,n •Md o1 11tc-11on to M rfCllllled t" ......_ fllf!W 11 Wbtcrfbld te "" within ttll 11rt1 r:ouo11c111on o1 flllt not1c1. Otlttl ""'' ~"" ••v o1 1111,, 1970. , · ...,; '" book tltt, .... 14', (If 111d Otllcl•f lmtrv"""' Incl ~ed ... i.t «irtcultd Dlltd A,prll ), IPto MltY C. "'"' the invitation. 11ttcord1. • "" ......... s.c-11111.,. •tt•nc N1non11 11M E•.c11tr1K of '"" E1111'1
llCYC h Otlt1 A11r!I t1, 1'70 (0111'1(1Al. SIAl) ElftClllOI' el 1111 Wiii of of H id Die"°"", now as a mem-it I mt• 111n1nc1t1 ll!Cel'W>ltd c11tti1tr ,: sen1bllrv Thi •blWt ,..""" ""'""' MA1t1L YtrtN ic. N0"•'1n••
bership of about 450 wUh a •• llhl Tru1ltt NOltr't' l"iibHo<1!11'<rr11tt DAVID "· t tNOt.•• uins .... ••llY '""'
I. Jt f 7u-. T, 0 . lervlc' ComP111,-llrt11¢l!lll OfflCI In U" W"kllll Ori"' Sllltt nt lullt o 1m o ...,, Attn• or111t1 COIHllT ,...,.,. ••~•. cant. ,,.,. w111"'"· c111rtn11• ,..., The new clubhouse was w1too Jl . t1tu1 M., ''"'"''''Ion fulrtt T111 1n•1 ..... m T11i u111 ox..,. 1-1219 v1c .. l"rnlde11t ,.,,r11 n, 1m ""''""' fir lx1C11Nr """""' fer l•ltllll'lll financed primarily by the sale 1111bnll'llcl or .... , C:N1I 0111y 1111a1 "~bn111ed or1n1e ce111 Oenv Piiot, ll11bn11'1ed Or-• CN•I 01Hr PJ101, l"~Dll1111d Or•M• C01l1 o.nv •11f!11 O( life membttsh)ps. Mlv I, I, IS. 1t10 IU·10 AOl'!l 11, 24, ll'ld M1,-1 •Md .. 1'1• fft•10 ~IL 2,, Mty I. I. IS. 1t10 1$1-10 M1,-7, I. U, lfl'O ""Ill
\
I
I
f
I
I I
I
LEGAL NOTICE
IMOTIC:I O" DllM>LUt tO lll
OP l'UTH1 1)•o l>
~ twllu 11 ,,..wt' .iw" "'-! ".i-L..tlor•"''"" IPL DNnt IE!k-1"'*'-Inc., •nd 1....-t11><fl'Onlct.
1...:, ,.,,...,"' ..... ~,. ~ bvl ,_
-!lw llttlliOUI ll•m n-tnd
1.IYlf .. V<e<" L.0.•lor*'-Lid II ., Wnl 11111 ~,M4 CllY ol Co1•• -,_,.,. .. °''"" )l•lf ol Cll !Ot ..... did .., -~Ill ff¥ OI M••
lt1t tit ..... """I l-n OIHGl... 11'\f
ulill •"""~ ""° l•fmlfl.llt tt>rir rNllon1 •• Mrl_.1 1Mr1"' $61d -IMH I" lflt fu 11 f wlll bf COii
'''""" ~• O•l•K"lobf nt 1 C•I lo!'n • co,_ at ..,, •' u ""'''' 1111> .$ '"' (0111 Mtw C1lllornl1 fi•1' -.. 111
111\o ;illll d K"-Of ~,.,11 n I IOll I f1 Ind
•tem ol 11\e tlffll
""'""' l'Cl! c• 11 "'"""" •..., ""' ".ICll OI !fie \lflClt ·~-W I /IOI IN ··-~~ !rem •n 1 d1• on tof Ill>'
<)OI •llofl IM\lff'W Cy ~-O!~f<I n
'"'" own "'"''' '" In 11>1 n1ml o1 t~• !Inn
DATED ,\T COOi Mtw Ctllo•n I
1~11 • .,, dlJ ol Ml• lt 1C
"'"'' l•bc<•'"'''"' ll'C Dttn• E'KlrOll '' i'IL
.. ,.._.. El«TrofO c• '"'
By ff1l-11-
IMlr Allor"t"I' '"" .Alll lAldM .. l lt •IWI IOSl!N All•
1•1 ·-.. ,,.. 111'1 '.i11lto Jlt
i... ..... '"' (1) *"'' .... , Pl/Ol 1-Orlllll• Co.1 01 ., " lo
MaY I ltl'G ltJ.lll
LEGAL NOTICE
T S1'•
NOTIC E TO CIEOITOI S
\U,El /01 cou•T OF THE STAT!! OF CALIFOINIA J O"
JHE COUNTY OF ORANGE
N1 A-411 ..
(ST•lt ol REX R ANOERSON D#<N'
~NOTICE IS HEllE&V GIVEN lo h~
(tiKI fo<I ot 1111 •l>ott named *IOC'ftl
'""' •II ~'"°"' h1v "II < I m• 111•11>1
-wld Of<edenl 1r1 "'"~ t'd a t It ,......, ~II~ Hit l>K'U'"' vouCllf I n
""' otll<t DI !111 ti..-~ al ht 100.-t •nfll~ to11r1 or 10 p,..senl l11tm ., In
tllt MCllWfY """chi I Ill !llt """
"""" '""" •I Ille 0 II<• or " I "' 0 n•>' CHARLE\ ( MOl!llEV UliC Wt> Wll t t H &oiilrVI 0 MOnl~ 0 (,JI !O "II
whld'I 1 ht olt<• o ou1 ntU of he
u!lders 1neo 11 1 mt •t• D• 18 n""
to !ht 111111 ot 1• o 01tt<1enl "' !!• n
fou montlll at er '"" I II PUD ti on
a "'" notlc .. 01Ject Ma~ 6. 19XI
JI.AV 0 N CHOLS 5o~ll AO,..,ntt~or"' II
c-r•I Po~ \ ol flit
•1t1t• ot , .... 1DOv• nt,,,•O
Of'!;fd..,,
(HAILl!S C. MOlll[V
i.u Wttl Whitt 1r I t.I._ _,.._. .. C1tl
Ttl l11U TH UH
All..-. tor Specl1I Aamln "'"" Publw.t'd Orfntlt Co.I" DI V P lo!
Mtv I U 7? 1' 1910 W 10
LEGAL N OTICE
t!OTICI! 01' ,UI LIC HI A I I N G
IEFOIE THE CI TY COU H( L OF
TMI! CIT'I' OF FOUNTAIN VALLl!Y
NOTICE IS HE11£8Y GIVEN "'t
f>f\ T~Wll• Mf,y JI lt10 a ! 00
p M In "'' Countll enamor 1 c 1v
H•!I HtlOO S tiff A~nut FOl/ntfff\
\It ... Ct tor" a tht Cli. Count '" I
l'>okl a pub < ""' °"" °"' '"' loll-Ing z..... Chfft9t Mo 1 I -APUI <II en
1ubm n.a bV /-.\ Mor I """ P Ku aa
t\ o.,...,..rs tG~•I.,.., th~n11t "' 101>1"
"" p OPtrlV oct t<I no th 1 ar c El i MO t~t wr>I <>I l!lu•M d from
A! 111 111
Thi mt ler I• or ng p oct P<I 111i~uan!
to ,,., "''"" "" LOWI ... 11'1 S!I e .,, C•••o nla !Gov Coe• 6SCOO t
•"") end t"f Foun 1 n Vt tv 2on n11 o a"'"'' T~ 2cn1"11 O d n•ntf l on no Mtpi., toe! EJll b h t t on In
fht Pi. nlr19 OtDf !m•nl ill'IO • ~
"vii t bi. !or publ c lnwKI 011 '"" •• t m t<e!IOIO
Thol.e ae~ rht9 o IMI Iv n ffYC<
"" In 09"' !Ion to In ' PrOJl<>>•I w ~ 1lvtn '" ooocrlun I• 111 ao .o
It ll;rtll..-lnlorm•! Ol1 Is GIJ rta "°"
m1v ccntacl 1,... P .,.,. "" ~01 ...,..,J
•I 962 J.124 I nd ,tltr 10 l'lf ll>OVI
"~ C TV COUNC L OF lH[ CtTV OF FOUNTA N V•LL[V
Marv c Colt Cltv C r '
Pub """° 0 1n9t C0t1t Ot ., " lot Mt• I 1'10 "'4 '°
LEGAL ,..011CE
lltOflCI ...VITI"" llDS
Notice " ~ •""'""' IN! ..,,. 606 a ef Trl4lt11 af 1111 Ortl'IP Catst J""-'°' Col~t Ol1lrk t ot 0<1,..• c:ivnrv
Ct! 1ornlt will rt<;1 v1 ou..a b>a• uo
to II 00 11'1 Mn JS If 0 • t~• ,u c1'>11I"" Ol!PI Df 11..i \d'>CIOI e 1tr n
loi:.•tfd 11 '101 F1~ !"II 1!0811 C01 a MtH (11 '°'"a II wh di t ..,, ia d
billl W t i.. 1>ublk ., ..........,, Ind ttlO
tor fl) USEO OFFSET OUPLIC•TOI!
All o 01 trt ro l>t n ~~o can •
wtll 1111 1n11r11c!lon1 and Co'lOI""' trod
Sc>ltlloc.a!loN wn <" s 1 "°'"' on I •od m•• bf ~1111d n nr cot• tt ot tho P11rch1tl.,.;r A9t" or ~ 11 K"iol>
ell ! c!
E1cn b-1'11111 wom .,. " n ; bid t tti!olr I chef.~ Cl I fO tntt~
o b <ldt'f \ DOnd mldf P•••blt lo 111~
ordt 01 "' Ort"9r CH .. Jun Cf Co ~· 0 111 let &ot o IJI lru>lffl n 1n 1moun
"Ill lti1 tn1n I •• ce crnl J I cl
1111 1um b d •• 1 <111•••" ~ rna '"" t.i«I'! \ft I tnl1 I" o tllt l>~>e<I
Ccnlrttt I I"' ··~ ~ IWI -a rilm n Pie evrn! al la lu r o •Mo
•UCll tcnlrtc ll>t o ott•O• o In• cf\«~
w I 1>t fcrft !fld c " "' <l•t ol • Dena !tit lu I •~m "" ....,, w t Df' for!tllfd lo •• ~ Kll<IO 0 II IC No i..aatr mt• ,. oo ,,. n hod lo
• H iod cl •art. Iv• (• a••• tllt
I"• Oil• ~· IO< ...,. o:-n "e I>• ""' Tl'lf &DIG ol T u1tr Mt••• I"•
••vltl't cl •IHt"'I ,..,. ~"II I bOI
or to w1vr '"' "'lu • r 1 ~' ,.. '°'""I tin In 1~• c o o 1,. no boo ~9 NOll:M.IN ( WATSON
!.!'< tll"I'
O...ro al Tr~• Ml
Oo•~ >11v 15 1'10 -1! ~ •"' Pub Y>tll O anvt C0t1 01
M•• I U 1110
LEGAL ,..OT JC E
CEI TIF ICATE OF &USl,.ESS
F!C l T OUS "IAME
"" U6 10
tnr u""t"l9,,..., 00..1 <•'1 ,,. n• 1
conauctl"ll 1 tK.1ln1ll "' Cot 1 ,., ••~ mu ll'IO 0 tn9r Counlv (I Q•~ •
u""'r !Pie Id 110<>1 I m ntmt al 1>.&W
fief t!""''"I C•n' 1no r • ti II I m
11 cor•11•oso<1 o t o !cw no nt "'" wnow n1mr 11 t11ll •ncl 11 ltt ol rf> d~n••
h 11 IOI OWi
H1 • w ' vne·~ l(;ol.{IJ o, So Mt! bu Wt• Me b11 C~I
Ot o<I M~P I !910
H~ ry W Y 'tnl
St• I al C• hi nle 0 •n11• (av~ • On Mtv 1 1910 t>elo t me • NOlt•V
Pull c In •tlO lllf v.o S•!' ae""'' v
t"9e• .,r Ht •¥ Wt ~ Y 'IC·~• ~now"
to """ to De IP>r M •o~ w"~ • n~m~ 1, 1ubKr Md to tht w "'n ~ r u"'fnt •tld l<:~llCIW-..a ,,,. ~•~ll "" !~• Mmt
40FFIClAl SEAL) Marv It H•~rv
t.io1 ...... Pu1> cc~ '"'" • Pr nc oal Oii <I f"
Or•r>Qe C""n'•
Mv Com,.,ru Ill" ( 1> M Ho• ll nn Puhl Pied 0 1nor Co.t~I 0& It
Ml ¥ I II 17 11 Jf10
LEGAL "'0TICE
"' Ill 10 l
HOfl(I! OF l"ITE"ITIO"I
Ut THE SALE O~
e l!VEllACE'
TO EltCl"-CE ALCOHOLIC
BOAT BUFFS
Al1111•11 t..ocl1 b•Y ft tti1 011ly
f111l ti.m • M1tl119 M ltor w ork hf
'" 1111y 11•.,,.1ptptr 111 Or11191
C:O..+v H!i t ircl11t "' c0•1r•91
el ll1111t1119 a114 yaclitl119 f!t•t
11 111 dilly f11 tv11• o f the DAILY
PILOT.
OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stoel{ List
NfW YOltlC IAPl 'Tl\Uf'ldf~ 1 nn'liltft NtW Yott $10(11; Eatl'Mlnoe prlc:tl
NASO Listings for Thuraday, May 7, 1970
11.,,_illl'lt ..................... ti t ,,,..iM1ttfy t A.M '""" lllA$0 AblW~ ~ Prkft 6t M l ...... tllll .. / W """'-_. .... W d~ Abblltb ( 10 '11•"""'"" .. ~·'""'"'"" .. """'"' ... ""'""'"'""'"" .......................... ._ .... ,..., ............ ,,,\ACF 1..., I~
Bof A Corp.
lncon1e Up
Firsl quarter consohdattd
inrome of BankAmenc3 Corp
before secunties transacllons
rose 8 I percent to $36 732 000
or $1 07 per share after pro-
v1s1on !or Joan losses
nus compared w 1 th
$33 983 000 or 99 cents pt"r
NEW Viii:!( !APJ ~ '" -'"' lot fJN' nv bid ''' ""° .HA.Ill -·· Ol'!I ' ' Uorn.. WOPlllO by Ol'!I Gt•
"" N•I °"' Mtoel-om fe ttlOf' OI $tcurlOt1 atri Hl!ll
0111tr11 1nc ••• om P11
""1 •cut 1r1nttt'-1-• • tlOf\1 tK.• ... r"" mp cm rt••~ 11 •r. ln1.,. mp ln1t Ottler p Cf'U t i OI Cmp ltc •llOf(U. mtrt v 1 Comr11 ::u, 11!,w' kn:':.~ ?:.:1r~od;
hl\lf DH11 PU• (onl Jn ~~-0J;tk"°/n1t'f !::' $ l. at:ltr m1 ll;,tll 01m Yr ~In~, dtr ;;~ ~:;r~t
ao ...,, lntllld1 rtll Mh
r11111 mo ~WP r1tt fo ~·;;.•:wn OI' (Ql'ft. c~~h ca
AAA Ent 1 .. '"" Cvo••• c AAI Corp I 6 Danlv M
AFAP S H i9, l'.!•lt O>t AtTS Inc fl. Slo ~•It Gtn ~~:. cl, ~'~ 1~ : o:vi!n F~ All Hosp 11 • n Dtv Mr : ;o.:i~· l'" :~ &:'~{ ~:
A!Oet H 4•o Sito 0.tux Ch At.ell s , •~n. c~nt Alc~otc S S 1 Otl 18
A co Llld 14 > 1j,.10e• Am Al9 6tv l> 1~ev E
Alfld EQ I U, OlMn C• AIPll G.,, I S o OIK Inc Am...,t l ~4,nv11CM
Am Bu•n 10 ' 11 i Ol>cull A ELIO •• )ono lv MO Am E~1>• 59\ 601.o 0-JOI"
ArftFu .. ' 6 1 Dov10B A Grett 4l 'l'lo Or"" NL Am '"i.d 14 l.ll<o Ounll n D A M.O CD lS • 16'\ro Ourlron share adjusted to new rederal A sr GoD , l • Ez P11n1 A.St C o1 '" S'I Ea1!C wt
accounling rules ror the sanie All'I Te v 11\!o '!. F••• s11 A;:r1111 8 61 , 6 Econ Lab
penod In 1969 : ,:n1~ ; ' : • ~fu~.~E~ Ar<1tn M I I\~ F <le Bt Total consolidated resources A k MoP i "" 1,1-1 Ei N te AroW H 44-I F"luG
of the one bank holding com '• •,oe ' o ~ E crc11Y • C Bo! '1 1~ Ft nm
pany for Bank of America Au o sci 1 ' E1 c s~• 1:1~ •d Al 41, ~ o i!t 0• ~ amounted lo $27 259 356 000 on s~k•• 2l:.J ,, , Et Moclvl
h llal P~ nl 4'o s:o.. Fmo5 O 1'-1arc 31 a 13 6 per cent tn B1rw<k 1 1, E111•D• c
crease O\l'r thl' total of ~:~1,'.;,,.," ,f,• J,,: ~~": 8
$23 993 127 000 a ):Car ago :::.,~ ~t • k,... ~:;net 'i
lnother firstquarterfigures Bett 1•1 11 6 Err TK !ltlln ln.d 6 '> I~ Eot In announced lodav bu President e, k H• JI •O F& Ceco J J Btll Lto JI :J'/ 1 F•b Tl'IC A \V Clausen d,,.,..,...,1ts stood B 11uPS w 1 • _,, '•lrna T ~,.,.,~ B rd So<> )6 2t Fe r n9 at $23 048 199 000 compared B •t<hr • • FeoN Ml
&loKk HI '' ~ 11 ~ Fino "v \\lfh $21079156 000 for the lloour El l JI F•I Bo•t =g Loa Bott Be ~ I ~ ~otG llE same penod 1n 1'71,l ns Boo "' c u , It , F1t WFl"
t otaled $14 6M Gil 000 c-om t:• cA; 1: ... ;g ~~"'FP
pared ~1th $13 695 6~7 000 lasl : :!v 5'r.! ~ , 'g , ~~~:!'o •
\tarch JI ~ ~',, 5l: '; > I~ l ~::;,,. nt
9 V<I II' 6'• •• Fovr S•• Br\,rVO Bt 16 .... 11 0 Frnkl CD !lucwrv 1 ' I i=rAAln E
l\cwpurt Finn fl n~D s lA .. u ~Fu·ere L•~• • •>... FwQue 11 Cal W S• '' > 'S ~Qui to C•"'<O ll \ II 1 r.111 Cmo
<•nen ,.,, ., 10 ia· 1n-1 Up ) UCOlllC C~nnM B 6S 61 H Sv<
C•n od '"' • , A rtll (10"5.1.>w I 1 1 (; l!llllC C3P nA ,,c le•u• C•~tcn l, 31 GI! Ell
National Svstem~ Corp of ~~ , 0&1v ~ j1, ?,?::~'..
Newporl Beach todav reported Ir~ r.o u t6 • '' r C•>< NG t\1 JO c~•n W year end results for lhe period tentr• 1• 'o , G1co 11:ub Ct~ VPS 11; 191• God Cc endecl December :II 1969 c,.. 1 RA & 1 r.ooo LS
S I r h 2 th cnun ~ J 1 4 Godwv C aes or! e I mon s 11ere c111 ' o ~ o 1.ga<>t> en
$JO 563 4i8 Up from Sales or ~~~ t ~~ ~ ! 1 xt:Pl>M ~<
$~ 556 891 for the same period ~~"11uil ~" 1~,. ,,,rir !/'J
last vear Net income for the ~~· :: ~1 :' 'il ~,!.!~ P~
period rose to $8~3 21 1 com c1t1de ' ~ ' u~•o c" c 'UA 11 n Gu i'"' pared lo $672 892 klr lhe same c t 1 u B 73 1 • Gvrodn (ty Inv 11 11 ,Hl"l!W S
penod a year ago Earnin~s c • • M• 1 • 21., H• no J
h h rovon •H•wr~I~ per share for t e 12 mont c1" Mt• , , Hen ec1 F
od 67 t C nlOf' 0 & H• I Co per1 were cen s as com c1ow CP '' 11 , Hla« 1n1
Pa'·" to 58 -nts for t•· 1,ke toeyr o s ' ~ • H "'~" t:tl '-" •~ C11111r C~ 5'l ~ l"'o m EP
period a \ear ago ~:i:;:; ~ ,l ,l ~::,",.~"'
Your 1'1oney's \Vortlt
,t,,(mf<:lv ~ • .,_ tv. PEC t1rl I?\) ll\1 w 11--1 P l\oo Stolw n1>19 I~ UV. Aunt Mitt 1'b -'I' ••· .,,,-'' MmE• 1 '" 1 P1bst &r ... """ ',, 1 W ~ PL u,•, 1f!t AO Mllllt :n,,.. 14"' PK Auto Ill '"' w11n Ml• J jllo wrolw £ 7,... • ll'-' IOV. I"~ F1E JO,~»,• WWI~ i!~ •" 1.. Wrltl'll EW • ... •'-lt1'l AOO••m",,',', ' t ~ 10 Ptkco Ct "' 1 ... "" t •1~ 'r•Onv IV. Mrt11Lll l.40 H~ \1~ '""°' 31\ NO 'r.''"' Co • 114 P1.U °" .... 1· .......................... I 4\• 4U. p1,,,,.. H ftil. I 'llill" A t Prod :IOO ,6 ... '' p..,i •• p ' ~ • "Ir PO °'' Jj 71 21 Pt~•li. t \ll J0~1 Ar fl'f(j ..ot
'"' ... PH I•> T 211-> 21 AJ 1..0..0,lr 'f''
1•1 , 'o Ptn 0 •I.. f ~~ MUTUAL At G.11 l D ~t ; ,: :: ~~ 21 ~ »t ~1t.si::OC n ;1'
' • S Ptnn Pa< 7\0 n. A kr1...,t 3' 6 ·~ Plf'I" 'IE 10'1 ll Attl\l(U I )(I 211 ~ n P11>1I W1 ' ... A~osr • ..., M
> • jl Ptr nl •"Ao ••• FUNDS Ait'~ncl~ JO< n 61.'oP1tot li »~• A~C11 20•
:; ~ :~1A.11luf tt,. f:,; :11::t:: ~1 2,11 2• 1 Ptlollll" 1l'I 1h Allf9 p.., l .')? 21 ,J14 Pie Pd I • ,, A llO(h I ?D J J•1 Plnl(fln "' 's ~ Al IOM»t IOO t > 1 t Portr HIC It ~ 11 A ll'dMll 71 • s Po Gou , • s~ 11111 r 1nc111,.. 4 o:i •.'II AllM Po 61 ,1ut tJ'1P 09 A~I l l" EW VOllC (Al"l /"Gc~• >o'•'>',,';',Alli.<!Sr lll t 01., Prud M 11 4 ) S'-0 -TM IOJIOWIM -n• .... , A ~ll~uo UP 4 ~ PubS NH ,:v. ,,loo 1111111"• "':rlll'O or Inv Gu d I :w. I Joi Al '" Im U~ ll 1 Pvb5 NM 11\:i It • 1111 Ntlkwll AH«~ Inv lnd C I 31 I :JI A ~PC 1 20t s•v. U'h Putl s NC 11 n ~ •t""' .,.. 5t<wlllff Inv•• 8111 !O '° 11.ll ... ~ ' • .,, II Putl ... , , .. 7. 0111tr1 Inc .. , tn .... 1 ..... c OUP 0•
l6'•INPu•to11 S 6 ll'lt orlct•ttwlllth IDSndl JU lM~;~.JIJtll l\1 4 p atnrwl 1µ 111'1 •11t•t ~wit" Mui 111 '-'J A , • • ,,,,, ""•II• 51 " " could h•v• -PfOll J 45 J 74 Amf•E1 I I\~ POuo (.p u, 5"' M>ld tbloj or -9~! Stock \S60 16M Am H<:$t 01t l' '"' • CM 11 JU .. lflktd) l'IUr.OY S.IKI 111 t .... AlnlH Dfl sa ,. 11! llad Qyn 11• n... 1111 Al& V1 Py 'II 164 AAlrFI" eo t ~ 10\4 llbhtll ( 1 1~ Abttlll Jt IM In• l!Hll 4 1t 4.ll Am AlrH11 IO ll 4 llall Trtl 1 1"1 Almltinr Fund1 l•le! 16 1M II S6 Am Biiie<
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' 5 ll1ym Cc IS\\I lniur I ll 1nJonn•n 177l111l Al"I C•n llO
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Jli l~ l!us S ow 26"' 21l• Am O•ln 11n•v•I Cut S7 111 9 S! A.0110 o• I ola ,,~ i; ~ ~::i?er Ho 3'\' lj\lo Arntr E•Prtt• lu• SJ • 7t 611 AmE Pw 6'
'
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59 ~ •1 i:•ri. pl i,0R• lo' • •,• ... •0u 11 ~ # ~ I1 L !e Inv 6 JI '~ A'" H(llP 74
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S I SUDO Fii I\., S 8oN11lll;, S71SltMu OmG 426 I ll AmT&l 160 ll 11\ T1rnp• 110 111 8011111" SI •Sfl120Mu °'7ol" ltl f6oll Am T&T r
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'' • ' .. _,, o '" > • C•camr l<>eom • 61 s o Am e l2
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, 1 • \'fntt S1 1611t 11 • co,~•, , _ "' Ptul l!tv 6 06 111 A.tml> "' 1 •a I t h VltlO" 15~1&"1 °"" " Penn So JOllOIAO(ootQ , ·~•Wtcn RI lltl.119 ~ F~l'IO t41 033 P• Mui 4 6(1 '~ Avn "" I 11• U4WtO•W p !J '1 Gr ... 111 •IS SlOPhlA 117•J341 A~d<'.lri211 1-. V1W•" &d u 1' l'ICom tJlltff Pllorlm J41 111 M«! l'rw
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CornP Fa A1~ 191 Pro FunO 112 I 2 AT01nc llta
Com•llt l I.I 'n PTo..On1 • °' , ., •u "'" P ~· Concor<t-10 n 10 lf p., 11,. 1 90 , Jl AutomJ~ t~d
ContOI In 'IS ID 50 Pvlntm Fu""• AV(O (" 11(1 Clll"•U In ]XI 161 E~ull 6t.e IXI •~co oll20 Conti Ml Ill Ill GfOf'• ll ll iJ Joi Averv Pd 20 cntC ~ 7J070 Crlh 1ntJ.aAvnttJr1t 00 OO'P l.O 11l'llU1' ·-7!11 771 AvcnPd J ?O
Co11iputers
r1tv C•p IO:UJll' tn•HI •OI ~"" AllecOI 131
N dM Cr11WO~ Sll SI~ Vl1I& 7ll 101 (rn WOii '-'J l 1'l \/9v1111 t tll i M ee anpower a1u111 M nnn11 RtP lKll unav1 1 ~·~t~WT\Y. 0 'o":: •• 10<;"11 ')!I 11:, .... , 'lO 0 • a: ! CE '., Oelwr ia !Ill II Ill 11 nfrel IJ S IJ II "'""""uni 60
Bv S\LVI.\ PO RTER
A senous obstacle to thl'
1.:or11pu1cr s further de\ clop..
men! 1s manpoY.er y.h1lc
250 000 adcbtional Jobs Y.111
open in Americas computer
1ndus1rv b~ 19i2 manv of the
openings ma} go begging for
Jack of quahf1ed apphcanls
The folloY.1ng 1nterv1ev. \\Llh
Stephen V Kea111g pres1denl
of llooey .... ell Inc manuf:ic
turer of computers p1npo1nts
\Ital points for all of \OU
\\ho \Vant to be ready to fill
tomorro\\ s JObs
PO R TER tlO\\ 1.:<1n a
person determine Y.hether ht
or ~he 1s quah!ild for training
in !he data processing field~
K FATl r\G lo er er ill\
persons Y.t!h Jog 1 ca I,
a ialyllcal 1endenc1cs lit \ICll
NATURAL RESOURCES
f UND IM.
ADDITION 'TO ~AX SAIJ\NGS .•
,~, GQ•! 'II N• u ~t "~~ourui•
r "~" Int:. • 10 •I• '~~ ,.,O"'lY g o.. o <:lo ·~• ~• u~d !ii•• .. ~. l COIU[O. t II u ltnl tnd 'lt• •0~1~ • • ,~. 1~ O~G" • <fl ... 111 ! ,o d• • 0111111~1 d I rQ ~'W .,,. '"'\lo. 1 ltr• -t•t "' lloo•l~r "'"' ~cimP'•t• 1ntJ m•ll mr co.pa~ lie o•
................ -........... 1
''' 1 1 I I
into U11s new profession A~
Jn anv other JOb field testing
1s unportant If an in(hvidual
1s ~er1ously interested in data
proct>ss1ng a~ a c:ueer he
should arrange to lake the
basic tests that arc a\a1lable
Students or rl'cent graduates
should talk to their guidance
<:ounselors
Se\cral m11vcrs1t1es and
some public agencies pro\ 1de
1h1s 1est1ng fur a small fee
AJ<:o the: VA pro\1dcs a !ree
series nf tests lo chg1ble
\C1crans
PORTER \\ l!h ~o many
data procl's~ing s1.:hoo!s 111 ex
1~1ence ho1v can one be sure
of ~('lec11ng a eputable one '
I\ E \ T INC Pro~pctllVC
students should obtrun ~ludy
an d compare catalogs 01 othe1
i1111 1 ible !1teraturc r r 0 nl
several .school' Look closi'I}
at 1he qual1ficat1ons of the
\ anous leaching s taffs \\hill
ts 1hc facult} s cducal1on:il
background"' Their actual 1n
d 1s1ry experience" Th,.
"\uclcnt te:icher rauo Jn the
t;)<'lS:.L'S.,
Arc tu!l1on 1.h 1rges all lll-
clus1ve CO\t'rT11g all texts ;ind
other ma1er1als' /\re the
hours or classroom 11or k 1n
hnP 1v1th ch;irges"
11 \NOS-0~ training (3t"
lual train1n,1? on a computer
and Its peripheral equipment I
1s extremely 1n1portant J\
Oe I I Sl 1 u llooe11lh S .I ll6l BanvP " ) Po F 39 '"'•lem Fii •i1 SlO 'lar>QP pJ2S O ~.~: 12 1117 I S(llu! 12 I• !J f( 6nk o! C!
prospective student
qua lified to JUdge a
equip ment but he
D•t•t Fd JO l• 1111 Sc~d•r.,.Fu"'!.'nave "•~•" NV •
IS nol o1vf L• 11osu1 51'1:1 21•911•9~~.,~~ {t:1 h I Ellonl.Howtrd a1 n 1111 21 ea d Cll: 1s
SC 00 S lie &11 t 90 fn CQm SI '"" 16<1 11a 80 Cw!~ 10l711:Jlst<:u '"fun~• B~ti Mrq should !ncom 5 'J '93 EQu v l 67 1 •7 A~·~ Ml 0 l ~cecl 1 0 I 11 lnvtll 6 19 1 42 111 ~ !nd
dclern11ne 1'.hat is a vaiJablei;:btoctk )1 6;gj~ ur• S916S.IA ~ .... r2•n et• Se re Am ~38 •01 B•v•c~tb so
to aid in his 1nstruclion ~~ ·~ St 'f :; 1s 1: sei ~petS n •o n 56 ~~. ~b Q E IJ 1 11 11 Shtm f'a ' O t o Bevu-c 9 ~o
Other ccrns1deralions 1 n E~'tt sri t':it0••n 1:l/ 1:!~ ~:: ;;~: :
Equ !y 11• !II 46 5 ~ma Fun<11 BK~"'"" 50 selecting E DP training might E""t G" ur~v• c10 1 11s 1 91 11~ o ,~ ,,, Ene• 17 iJ ln~tlt 9 3' 10 "l 11...cllA 7SO be the converuence o{ the Ev• ' In It :io ''' Trv1 1 SQ t '' !Ir o Pr! "l Farfo 161 ••1 5mt~ fl 119 11" ll~lfn11H 60~ Chool d the flex bil t r Fnrm au 110 180 SwM nv 7 '9 1 10 R• f He"' 'O S an I iy 0 FedGrh l ll12.40Swln~ GI SSS 600ll•mo (n l
tlass schedules F 11 C1a • t 1067 sovrr In~ i• 1't 1J"" 'I~""~ 6n Fd Fufl<I llSOU7.Sscec 1 6'19 6tt A•~ov 01 J
F1nalJ) a person ln Fld Ttnd ltllO!J64 !Fm GI ,., ••I Aenet(o 1'0 Fln1ntl1I Proo alt St JI IS )t 7S lltn~ll 014 3'
\esligatmg computer tratrung o.'.".!'m, ',',',,',','• sre.aman F~""• ::"':~':1P~·
k '"'"' ~"' nd l oJ IU '"' ~hould !al to one o r m ore ~Q(Ofn 1~1 i'' Fkluc 16.' 111 ;:1~~11 c1~-;.
en1ployment m anagers o f F, :nr v1 • ~ t~ s !<,,en Rot lf~ls 3 37 ; ~ lio:• 1 ~
comparues \.\i11ch hire these~:, "n8~ !l! ;lg ~:~ 00 1t~:it!f ~~·1r~ .,
d Th t F~t •~s ~ 11111t1 soc-lJ;ttJJll,,' ~0~ gra uales ese execu ives Fst Mu111 7 &• 11a \up .,c;1 .s 1 6 37 'I ~·11~ ;:(,
C31 advise on the training'," ,N•' •• 611 eu su111"st 1n ••i "°"~~ s k '' •a ,.4Jl9f'Svnt Cl 7d 11• Peoo 11 cn MJ ttal their O\.\n flrn1s conSJder F ~ C•0 !SI TMll: Ap JJ>snoo .. .,,~,. 1111 Fl•! Fnd JJI Tt•Ch\ 11• It>" 'l()ll'l I"(! ~l the most important F • G 11 5 u 1" Tt<llno1 • 1 '•• """~Mr~ it Ffld G1~ 4 I! '6! T~t11 .... 1 t 71 111 l\c """ 1 n PORTER \\hat about JObFcur>di 1 I IUltmo GI 2ll61ootllnDW~ I'S Fourso I J6 ' 4 Towr Mtll 4 S1 • 91 'lor,... "• !In placemertt after graduation" Frankl n G °"" 1 •~ C8o •, 6 '' "o• l':o • 211
d h I ONT( 1 41119 1 av ED 79.s 970 llo "'' ~c An W at Sa a ry rJnge c:an Crw II .I .SS 6 OI luoor Fd 1, 6' 131 ~ ~" fA, •~
h d I U I 515 t•l TwnC I;! 170 196 n. ..,.,. l?O t e gra ua e expect to move 1ncom " 1 J Twnc inc 3 is , 11 " •! 1v 01'
'
"''' "rel'<lm 614 ISG u~· Mu! AlQ fDI :,• ,.. 31• Fd ,MUI 170 U111d 111'1 911" WVH••
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ouar antee a JOb ~fter a stu G b •I• 11s 1 2J Ac<m 516 6 41 11 ~~.~ Cn ,.~ ,., Grouo SK lncom 1 Jj n •l ,,w" • 0
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k 11 I EDP V~nQ 6ft 766 • rvE ''n \IOI owe\er mos Com s1 l 1111nuFd CA~ 11& 148 "u~tt ,.0 ~o
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ob S r r H1mll011 VnttS •al ~II 6ll <>" 11-n <l('rVeS 8.s <'I J OU CC Or Hf! ) 111• I• Y~"llrbl .S 01 6 7D au"'" l>I ,~
th dt Gth 6l66i!.lv1ntd )!1l ll'l~nd•G eir gra ua es H1nov• J 01 J fl v~r no, •JO •67 0;" ,..°' 1~ ..
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q ualified computer personnel Ht'dgt t111aos E•Pr 10Js:ioi1 "lerlt" l ff 2 11 lve.r 1160 1317 C•bol (o kt I think the graduate can an H "'•~~ n 2• IJ 11 Mllf• ''1 a" c. F1~1n1 Hub1rnn 'U 4 u 'Tee:"" ~ 1' Ca •hM 1• l1c1pate a Job and entry 1cM F "1 • 11 111 ., ., t 16, , 5'l ca""'ll L •\a
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--------------------· ------· -. ·--------. --. -----
1970
Thursday'~ Closing Prices-~mplete New York Stock Exchange List
..... M~' .. lllllllll .. llllllllllllllllll::::Jllllllllllllllllll ... 111111111111111111•/
tw1.1 -'-'• c .. °"'"I"'
NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock market edged
hlgher Thursday in "'hat analysts generally describ-
ed as an extension o[ Wedne sday's sharp upswing.
Turnover 'vas moderate.
The UPl marketwide indicator \VSS up 0.55 per-
cent on 1,536 Issues on Uie tape. Of these 803 gained
and 473 'declined.
The Dow Jones industrial average of 30 select-
ed blue chips wu up 4.55 at 722.94.
Turnover of around 9.25 rnillion shares com-
pared with more than 14-.mlllion shares in the pre--
vious session.
AJan R. Shaw, direc\or of market research for
Harris, Upham & Co., said, "I ~'s no~Jlle beg1nnln$!"
of a new bull market, but one of the better rallies."
Shaw noted that summer usually has served as
a tonic for Wall street, "And maybe," he con-
cluded, "seasonal influences will be&in to ploy a
greater role soon."
Harry Laubscher, vice presldeut of Walston &
Co., said some preweekeod calftion seemed to be
developing in anticipation of widespread antiv.•ar
demonstrations over the weekend.
OAIL't' PILOT
In All Home
Editions
Finance
Briefs
NEW YORK !UPI) -Kinp
Electronics Corp. has rented
space for a new factory at
Cross Westchester Executive
Park al Elmsford, N. Y. The
new plant will increase
capacity of the company by
half over the present plant'
at Tuckahoe, N.Y.
NEW YORK (UPI ) -Ten-
nessee Valley Authority will
take bids today on $100 million
In 119-day power notes tssutd
on a discount basis without
interest.
LOS ANGELES !UPI) -
A new oil field has been found
in the Anadark() Basin in
Dewey County, Oklahoma, by
McCulloch Oil Cocp. The con-
firmation well and t h e
disrovery well flowed at a
combined rate of 350 barTels
oil from the Morrow Forma-
tion al depths ol arou11.d 9,240
lo 9,270 feet. McCulloch has a
70 percent interest in the loca-
tion .
LOS ANGELES (U PI) -
Christiana OU Corp. has ar-
ranged $10 million in initial
financing for development of
l he 1.800-acre Titrrasanta
commurtity In San Diego. The
lender is FJdelity Mortgage
Investors Trust of Boston.
Olristiana Intends lo build
11,000 reside11Ual uniU at Tier-
rwnta.
NEW YORK (UPI)
Wt-Stern Union Corp. and Data
Research Corp. A1onday an-
nowteed formation or Interna-
tional Oi't.a Terminals, Inc ... a Joint venture to develop and
manufooture data processing
terminal equipment. \Yestern
Union .and IL11 affi l iate,
Western Unioo C o m p u t e r uunues. Inc .. 1 franchise:r of
data proeessing ccriters, wlll
have 75 percent of the venture.
CHICA GO iUPJj
Martllall Field & Co. 3'ld at
its annual metting Wedneday
that it is expvlenc.ln& a sales
decline 11nd upects aecond
quarter-enrnin,s to be well
below the $2.3$ mUUon or 29
ctnt1 a share earned la the
second quarter Wt yMr.
DETROIT I U P I )
ChryaJer Corp. s&fd a w11dctt
lruckers' strike had fol'Cfd the
company lo Mnd warker.1
home t'Arly Wednesday from
the Jef(t'raon .ard Lyncb
asst'mbly plant' In Dttrolt
bccau1e ur compont.a t
shortages.
\
1
•
•
• "
. , . ---------------
Frl~1. Ma, 8, 1970
BRAND
NEW
_2 DPOR
. COUPE
AutOIMtlc troawls-. SIM. cO.tc:Mlecl re-
• • --fibre 91s 'IMltM fires,
---·--·-------------
·a .. _ ··A"!: ·E-:~IT··_ \9" ~.,-!~ rt: Jt· i• l.~· . -. '
i-. ' . . i ~ "'I
' • ,> .J ••
• •
~---==::~= IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
•• FIRST Tl ·M-E SHOWN • '
THE ALL NEW BUICK HIGH PERFORMER "G'SX". NOW ON DISPLAY
' 1970 OPEL GT NOW DR:ASTl.CALL Y · REDUCED
1969 JAGUAR XKE •• WE HAVE A TREMENDbtJS 'SELECTION of the FABULOUS GT's RIGHT NOW.
ALL CQkORS & EQ!JIPMENT TO •SELECT FROM !
VISIT OUR \IOLUME OPEL SALES & SERVICE CENTER Roadtter. Lou -i.ooo .. ii... A-..~ .... Folly "'l,lppM loclodlot c.,_ -........ ,AM:'M
BrtAND NEW "BRAND NEW 1970 MODEL ---=-Sh~....i•• . ...,.., .......... •1a1A_SG1 .
196·9 OPEL" KADETT
SPORT COUPE LS
lqulp,.cl with 6S h.p. 1100 eco"o Kadett enjlne, 4
~ fully synchronl:r:td tr•n1ml11ion, h1at1r, I fetlm•
l"be c ........ 2 1pMd w•Nl1r1 &. wlpsrl, aut belts,
IMckup Sflhta. (319261~11)
$
AIR CONDJTIONING-VINYL ROOF ~1891 s1995 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
l •
PERSONALIZED
• AUTOMOBILES •
'66 BUICK GS 400
VI , 111ko,,.,1tic, r1di1, h11!1r, p1w1r
1t1erin9, f1ct1ry e ir, IRRW775l
'68 BUICK GS
V-1, e11to,,.,1tic, r1dio, h11 t1r, power
st.eri119, •inyl roof, rn19 wh1el1, fie·
tory 1ir, low ,,.,;1e19e, irn'"l culete con·
dition. lXOC4ltl
'67 Pl YMOUTH SATELLITE
2 door h1rdtop. Aulofl'l •tic, p-•• 1111•·
in9, ''dio, h11t1r, f1 clory 1ir, l-ow111r,
low 11'1!11191. Ju1f i"'fl'l1cul1i•, IU,Sl71 l
$1767 '
'68 FIREBIRD 400
Still under f•tlory wett•~ly. 4 1p.1d,
r1dio, h11t1r, power 1t1erinq , vinyl top.
Very low mit1191, loc:1I I owner 91m.
IVTL5111
'68 DODGE RT
Co11pe. V-1, e11tom1tic, r1dio, he1t1r,
p1w1r te1ri 119, f1clory 1ir, •inyl t op.
Ab1ol11t1ly 9or9eou1 locel doctor'1 cir.
12,500 rnil11. IY011221
'68 PONTIAC GTO
VI, e11!0,,.,etic, r1dio, he1ler, pow1•
tle1rin9, power br1k11, f1c lory 1ir, low
f1'1ile19e. I owner, loc1lly ow111d t1r.
/,,.,,..,,c11l1t1. !WXE51tl
.........,.POOLE
'69 IMPERIAL LE BARON
This 1utomobil• has every conceivable luxury feature th1t is
offered. Full le1ther interior, all power. equipment plus factory
air conditioning. Gorgeous. IYBEl46) .
'69 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUN TRY
9 passenger wagon. Full
0
power, fo1ctory 1ir, 6 way power seat,
power doAr locks, lu9919e rick, local car in outstanding condi-
tion. (YCP4281
53895
'68 ELECTRA CUSTOM
4 Door hardtop. Full power, factory 1ir. Sold & serviced loc1lly.
Balance of factory warranty. (VBA'll I)
'69 THUNDERBIRD LANDAU
Full dower, f•ctory iir conditioning. low mil••ge. Sold & sir·
vice locelly. I 9 I 2HSI I
$3895
234 .E. 17th St. AVTHORIZED
BVIC:K·OPf;J.,.JAGVAR
SALES and SERVICE
OPEN
SUNDAYS
'
THE . FINEST SELECTION OF
USED
JAGUARS
1• JAGUAI XKE
Coupe. 4 •r.••d tr1n1rni1sion,
chrome whee 11 factory air con-
ditioning, AM-FM. r•dio, willow
green with bleclc leather h1t1rlor.
Absolutely gorge.us. I XXEIOS)
1967
JAGUAR 2 + 2
Coupe. Automatic transmlision,
AM"-FM shortwave radio, chrome
wire wheels, Pirelli racli1I tire11
27,500 mile1. Natural leather in-
•terior. (TRH0751
1968
JAGUAR XKE
Coupe. 4 speed tr1n1mi11ion,
chrom• wir• wh••ls, radio •nd
he1ter, I owner loc1lly owned
car. Beautiful Arctic white ex·
terior with black full leather in·
terior. IXDA774l
1966
JAGUAR 2 + 2
Automatic transmiision, chrome
wire wheels, factory air condi-
tioning, radio and heater. Th i1
on• is truly a 1pofl1s1 automo.
bile. I Pl65A I
SUPER SPECIAL
1969 V.W. BUG
44 speed, r1dio, he1ter, only 9,000 miles.
Clo1n 11 1 pin. (XTL 393).
--REDUCED
TO
548-7765
.. "
------·------~ -------------------. -----------.-----------·----------------------
'ri"'1, M11 8, 1970 OAILV PILOT
•
E
•
A CoJ1;1p·let:·e Guide • • • Where to go • •• ·What-to tlo • •• . . .
4-H Clobbers
Show Fashions ._',
At Dress Revue ..
-Fashion -will take on a youthful nair
this Saturday when an· estimated 260
young feminine members of 4-H Clubs
from throughout Orange County-parade
\heir design and sewing skills from t
to 3 p.m. in the Stage Court at Newport
Beach's Fashion Island.
-The occasion for the colorful display
of young creative talent is ttie annual
4-H Club Dress Revue, held e.ach year
as a warm-up to the Orange County
Fair and Exposition \\'hich takes place
in July.
.The 4-H girls . age 9 to 19, taking
part in the revUe will model their own
creations, which , range rroln beginning
to advanced projects. Judging categories
include "ABC's of Sewing," "Separates
for Fun," "Mix and Matcli," "Teen
Clothing" and others. Advanee levels
entries will center primarily On school
clothing, ensembles and fo~'.Vfear.
Each of the girts in the: coin'ptlltion
is judged personally first -her poise.
posture, stage presence, grooming and
general apgearance. She next is judged
on the overall costume itself ~luding
fit. color, texture, ,appropriateness and
accessories. Finally. each. entrant is
. judged on sewing skills.
A unique feature of the 4-H Dress
Revue is that all fashion commentary
"·ill be provided by teen-age -boy an:
nooncers. What the OOys might lack
In high fashion vocabulary, says 4=H
Home F.conomics advisor Gloria Cooley,
they make · up for in enthusiasm and
Wililngness to learn.
RibOOns will be awarqed in all
categories and a top winner 1 will be
' xi~ to represent Orange County in
the ..statewide clothing competition later
this year.
Admission to the Saturday 4-H Dress
Revue .is free and the public is invited.
Forger of Art
To Sho'v Skills
On Video Special
The world's greatest art forger paints
Picassos and Matisses on camera for
a color television special filmed by Fran-
cois Reichenbach, winner of a 19~0 Oscar
for his "Artur Rubinstein." ~ on
the McGraw-Hill best seller, "Fake!"
by Clifford Irving, the 60-minute show·
i.'5 scheduled for this fall .
Elmyr, the authentic, flamboyant
character of the book, candidly reveals
the circumstances which led him to
paint more than 1,000 forgeries valued
at over $60 million. In a defiant outburst,
he justifies the title of the telecast,
•·'J'he Greate:>t Forgery Ever Told," by
producing stunning works of art under
the scrutinizing eye of Academy Award
winner Reichenbach's cameras.
Art dealers and collectors will be
reas.sured to learn that all these latest
Elmyrs are burned -also on camera
-with the exception of a Matisse which
was later authenticated by several ex·
perts.
Linquist Elmyr had no difficulty in
tapiJig English, French and German
versions of the show. Told about the
success of "Fake!" in Japan, he .joked:
.. Give me a couple of weeks before
V>'e do the Japanese version!.".
WEEKENDER
INSmE FEATIJRES
Friday, May I, 1970
Got a hank~g to spend some
time on the "Barefoot" islands in
a warm climate? Stan Delaplane's
travel colum.u has some a<Mce on
the subject. It's on Page 24 ~with
other travel news.
Wheels and Camping Page U ,
Travel Views Page U · ~
Wood Sculptor Pa1e 24 '
Gulde' to Fa P•1e %4
Greek Tbeakr Page U
Hartford Tfteat.er Page %4 .
Out 'NI _About Pages 25 • !7
In 1be Gallerte1 Pare %8
Llve Tbeater P•ce n
Best of Oavld l'ro1t Page %1
5th Dimension Page !I
Television Log Page ts
Gulde to r.1ov1e1 Page ZI
Chin• Art Restlval p.,. %t
"Grenade'' Opens In OC P1,e ft .
•
NANCY BREITMEYER MOOl!lS HER FOUR-PIECE outFIT
Intermission
' Ne ·wcomers Provure Boo st
For -New ·;~rvine Theat~r
' liy ·TOM' TITuS Hair." loured the country with a children's
'01 it.t oa11, P'i1oi !1aff Pf¢essional group, studied at New
How does· a bew ' Community theater .. YOrk's Neigbborhood Playhouse, and
group get stattetP-particularly in a coun· later was among the foundin g rompany
t~ \Yhich abounds in bm·ateur playhouses? of Ahe Actor's \Vorkshop in San Fran-
One way is for theater-conscious people ctsco.
to move into arr ar\!a not yet.fepresented NO\V A PUBL IC relations director for
by a local performing-entourage. That's the Jn:ine Company. Richard confines
how the Huntington.. Beach Playhouse his.theatrical activities·to the community
was born in 1963 with the .arrival of level. Before coming to Irvine, by way
Bill and Helen susmao: . the pattern of Fresno, he was active for four years
was repeated in 196f '\vhen Art and with the Valley Commi!l1ity Theater in
J.anet Gordon . moved to l\hssion Viejo Pomona where his productions of "A
·and started the ,Rancho · .community Streetcar Named Desire," ··Tobacco
Playtts. , • Road" and ."The lncocents" carted off
. This week . the rapidl y growing com-most of the season's award hardware,
munity of Irvine-wb.idl one day . will inb:fuding three consecutive best director
be the Jargi?st city in the county and trophies. As an act.or. he's played such
one or the biggest in ttle"•litate-takes, diVerse and demanding roles as Shannon
its first steps toward establishment of . in ''Night (!f the Iguana'' and f\:lurray
a little tfieater group. In fact, tonight in "A._ Thousand Clowns."
marks the official birth of the Irvine · Carla., who WUJ.-appear w-ith her hus.
Community Theater with its performance ,~' band in the Laguna Playhouse's summer
of "How Tall is Toscanini ?" at the musics~, "OUver," has spen t the last
Riverside one-act play tournament. t~ 'm'onths wfth behind-Oie-scenes
, This play aod a 'iOJ11P3nion piece, "Aria • pap;erwork required ·to stand the new
_da CaPo," will be presen~ to the public theeter on its feet-a formidable task, ~for 1two wet!keildS, May· 2.:i-23 and 29-30. par~iculiltly for a newComer to the com·
Meanwhile. the Irvine Group has just munity.
begun rehearsals for its first full-length ';We're starling out with an old
offfl'ing, ''Come Blow Your Horn," to fayorite, 'Come Blow Your Horn,' but
~ late next ~~ • • we're going to offer more than just
THE IRVL~E Community Theater light comedy,·• she promises. We want s~ to be of( and i\Jnning-and, like to po gOOd theater, and we're . guing
the Huntington Beach and Rancho to avoid the trite plays as studiously
groups, the impetus has come largely as we stay away from the avant garde.
from a transplanted couple who are "In short, we mean first to entertain.
in the-vangu'at(l.of'\tfle lr.viil!!: .movement. to move .our audietl!e emotioually. We
Richard and carla Dow moved to hope {he theater will thrive and become
Irvine early in February-just in time an integrilted parl of the new city.
to attend the organizational meeting for The fact that we have 6.1 members
the budding Irvine group. Carla v.'aS in threeJnootti:i snows \he need is there;
named dlairman of the committee ap-we're h~ing l9~fill that.need."
p>inted to-.g~t the.theater under motion;. TllE IRVINE Theater faces a•problem
Md Ricb8rd became. the director Ol • 1 common to · most new. groaps-where
the "Toscanini" ooe-act. ' to stage ils, shows. The one-acts ' are
"lt all started with. three people' in scheduled for the little theatj!r at Corona
the Irvine Company-Roy McCann, Paula · dcl ·Mar lligh.&:hool, where "Come Bl{>w Worsham and Beverlee Price-who Your Horn"' also may pe staged . Even-
organized that first meeting," Richard tu~lly, llowever, the Dows ar~ng
ttlates.. .. 'Now we have 63 mem bers (Qrward to the day when Irvine has
on the rolls.'' Hs own coiiifflunity pta:VOOuse-'
Richard, who is serving as artistic "We're hoping for ·a. season of at
adviser· to the group, has spent most least four shows and possibly six ."
ol his life in one phase or another llichard d~clares. "We'd also like to
o{ both amateur and professional theater. do 1teen prpd4cflons. We're looking
Jfe worked professiooally as a child toward the time when lr\·ine is a good
'¢or in the movil!S_ "Annie Get Your 11iuXI cit.Yt JUl{j •We want to provide a
Gun'' and "The Boy With the Green ?;here of its cultural fntluencc."
Dollywood
Sallv Sco~es .,
In 'M-A-S-H'
NilrSe's Role
By VERNON SC01T
Ul'I HollrWMll Ctrrt....otfll
~IOU..YWOOD -lt just takes one
big break in a sensationally successful
picture to transform a floundering ac~
tress into a very desirable package of
1nerchandise.
In the old days they would have called
it a cinderella story.
The picture is "M-A.S-H," and Ute
actress who turned on like a l~QQ(t.~t\-"
bulb w,S811.V,_.Ke11er~. . mal\r'wtao-hU been
, trytng ,'. to get •
~ 1J1 movies for a --iJa7.en years.
Sally has .appear•
ed in SO plays. .20
television show.i and
three motion pie·
w-tures. JI took her
•11 ~ y 1 eight years just to
SALLY KELLERMAH. win a lead in an
episode of a television show -''Outer
Limits."
"1 couldn 't shoot my way into the
T?°:vies before '.M-A·S·H.'" Sally said.
ft>.:mg a sandwich in her new l).illtop home.
"Now l've been offered t~·o movies
playing the lead role. I never had
<1n~thing like that happen to me before
in my ijfe."
Sally 'i~ a big blonde girl, almost ·
~feet ll-1nches tall. She's large booed.
frank, a compulsive talker and possessed
of a sense of humor. .
She almost lost her opportunity to
make a name for herself when she
was first offered the role or Mar11aret
Houlihan (Hot Lips), the officious nurse
in the hilarious comedy.
"t'went ln t6 See director Bob Altman
and told him I didn't want to ~
the nurse tiecause she was a cold, tik~ ;
up female cthat I'd played a rilillion
times before. Anyhow, she only had
seven lines to speak in the script.
"Sob told me to take the part aod
maybe a few changes could be made .
\Vell, the part was expanded and Hot
LiP6 became a wonderful character in
the movie ."
.-
Play fo~ Charity
Melodrama in N e·wport _Saturday ; Sally shines in one scene in 'which
a buoch of playful medics at a field
hospital, drop the side of a tent in
which she is taking a shDWer, It Is
a high-point of the film.
"It's the first time J ever did a
nude scene." said SalJ y. whose figure
will not soon make the world forget
Raquel Welch.
This Saturday night a un ique group
of amateur thespians will stage a plty
at 8 p.m. in the <1uditorium of Newport
Harbor High School, 600 Irvine Ave.,
Newport Beach. It 's a show for the
whole family.
his noble son. David Desmond. and R.
-ert Kehoe will be a bank employe. GMe :
Simpson is cast as the office l>Oi't
"Skeets" Skinn«!r'. and the unfortunitlc
victim. Bosw'ell Bancroft, will be taken
by ~irector·producer Wally Bartlett. ''.But I wanted lo look as attractive
as possible. I asked · Alirnal\ if he Woukl
light the set carefully so I could 1ook
my best and still be a little bit modest.
·•He gave me a choice. lfe said T
coulcl stand for an hour without any
r.lothes on in front of the cast and
crew while the sce ne was lighted to
my salisfaction. Or 1 could go in and
have the shot done in one take, covering
myself up as soon as possible.
"l decided to forget about the lighting."
Currently Sally is making another film
with Altman. Title : "Brewster McCloud
and His Sexy Flying lo.lachine. ''
Sailboat, Horse
Among TV Booty
At KCET Auction
The group calls itsel( "The Hamsters
of Costa Mesa.·· ·
A li!tle O\'er a year ago a small clutch
of people sitting around \Vally Bartlett's
living roOm in Costa Mesa began talking
about putting on a melodrama just for
fun. Wally had performed in ooe many
years ago and had a lot of fun doing
it. But they didn ·i want to just stage
a show -they wanted to contribute
something in tile process.
\Vhile talking ii out. !hey. hit upon
the idea of doing it lo raise funds
tor various organizations which have been
overlooked by the large fund ral'sing
groups -and they were off and running •
They didn 't. have any money but ~ that
didn't stop them. Each contributed what
they c~\d and anyone who crossed the
path or a '·Hams te'r" member was
drafted into 90me kind of service.
They rehearsed and learned lines
wherever they could hang their hals
for an evening after their regular work-
ing day. Wally Bartlett, wh6Se idea · it
A JG-foot sailboa'l,• televiston sets, \\'as in the first place, acted as director-
The victim's wife, Blanche Bancroft,
will he played bv DOris Bartlett an·d
her daughter Bertha. by Arva Mait!ouJ.
Cla rice Claybourne, an adventuress
female. \Viii Jr.iv~ Rober1a Barrett in
the role. wilb Sharyn lo.1orris and Char!e.s
Kehoe also in Ole cast
The play is in four acts followed by
an Olio with the music provided by
Red Morris, }\ay Miller .. John Gra hatn,
Willie Fuller and Farrell Quigley.
Jn the near future "The Ha'msteri''
hope to stage "Bertha" to benefit the
Villa, a rehabilitati9n home for worrtin
in Santa Ana. Up to now there has been
a problem in finding a plact: in the Sa~
Ana-Tustin area in. which to hold it. The
need of course (liOpefuJly) a no-cost site
or one l\'ith a low-fee use chargeLAnyofie
with any ideas for this one may relay
their thoughts to Wally Bartlett at ~ 8083:, .......
.. 'W oods&ock: Reco'rcl .
·R eleased."b y Group refrigerators. radios. pair.tings and an-producer. 'The play chos.en w~S .cBtrtba
tiques. and. a real live horse are among the Beautiful Typewriter Girl" by
the thousands of merchandise items that Charles George, tpe same play Bartlett ''WOoclstock," the title song of tba
have been donated to KCET, Channel had been in,30-years ago. Wa'tner Bros. motion P.icture, hits bee:n
28, for ils second annual on-the-air TV Last November. after many trials, the released by Atlantic Retords in a l'ecord;
auction which will be held May 31 first production ""'.i:nt on the board~ at ing by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Yoµng . At~
through June 6. Newport Har~r High. The funds raised lantic also will release the film's sound:
The horse Is a chestnut mare named went to the First St~p H~·o4 .• ~ta.~. •1tack~abum ~.11! Cotillion label nexi:
zaca Rae, who brings with her $2000 Mesa. Alter the hauling and lnc1aental o(montb. : ..
worth of :>tud services by a thoroughbred expenses were pa id the group found 'bJ~ M1tcbell wrote the ''Wood toef"
stallion named Sense of Rhythmt. a they had $320 for th_•. Sfep Hoose7 _Jr(ot ,. tllrH:, , which ~ill be included i~ tfie
son « the gi'eat race bone, Native a ron.Uf'C P,Crhaps-. tiut $.'30 ~· t&ib · IOW'td(rack ·Album-. .along w\Lh other
Dancer. they had b:f!lore the piall'. was, ~ltd. pi:r!ormances fom lhe'Michael Wadleijh
Proceeds from the auction will be And more important it encouraged The Film ,...
used by KCET to defray part or its Hamsters" to incorporate as a non-profit Th· Tech ~ 1.1 •·· 1 .~ • • · organ;zal'-and . ~ on •· •'-ir next e n 1 m, ucll)g ~ a~, operating eipenses. Last )'e&r S ~Upn .. ""' ' 0"'4 "" ~ £or E~r WU ecte4 .b)' W. h· nd brought in _. $l5&~ to ·~,-. Dllli<om· fund-rai sing P1!rformance. 'pl;oductd b sOb M 1_ The wJ1 ~ mercial~ pUbli~ed ·~. 1'is' ':'Only a ~~~I sum ~or irJNnedifl~ex M~P~na:Pii;res on~~;;'~
yeat1 the goal if $300 000. • if penses (hauling. fabric. ~fut, etc.) is . ~tioo Of Jove peace and The auction win ~man~:from. :the• ~kept by the group, the b81anct"'e( all Jlti.lsic3' • ' ~
11tuatos of KTI'V' 1'bere tw'"i'-!Wnd !rtikes ,. ·funds goes to the benefiting organization. ..~ • t
Nave been contitbUted by MetroMedla Funds from this Saturday's production " , ~
Inc. , ,(L . ' wm go th~ Alano Club Of eosta Mesa . J.J1uJ,dy Ebsen to Play
,"<Art ob~ anti trfiiphics materials only Ticket~ are $1.50 for adults, 75 cents ( _.. _-..J _ :JfA' ·h _, will· he au~' rln' May 31, from.3 to 7 f0r ,children, .• • ..,J'Aloue<TSOnV...-p n.mg
p.m: AuctJoo, ~ on June J through As are all . of these o I d • t t m e ~ • j
JuTie 6 will be:tfom 8 p.m. until mldnlghl. m~rama's, ~s ts one whlch ·the .whole 'BuddJ ~blenfta.s ~n ~ast la.~1ea~ure
Gift certificates will go up for bid on family ca n en1oy. The usual hlssmg "'-role in Andersonville, produced by
special "quickie boards." Other items the villain and cheering the herQ ,Is Lewis Freedman, ~lrected by George C.
will be displayed on tables. quite in order. And the cast loves it. ._ Scott, for May 14 beaming al 8:,, p.rn.
To make your dooation to the KCET The part of Panic! DesbOro,o.morv.t, tover Channel 28 (KCET) of the. PµbU_p
fund-raisin11 auction. telephone the auc-an unscrupulous banker. will bt ptayqt 'Broadcasting Systeins ot 150 non-com·
lion of/Ice at 4"1-3901 or 466-421%. by Dale Harrison. Bob Toubey wlh play mercial stations •
•
.1
•
. . .. -..-~··,.. ·----
0~11.V PILOT Frldjj, M11 8, 1910
i
Go Barefoot
In. Honduras
it llAH lj'LAPLANE
• ISLAS DE bJi lJAj!IA. Honduras -These are
• .barefoot Caribbean iSl ands. TOO. barefoot ,for any· l · body but the adventurous. But Hilton hasn t moved
l in yet and they're fearfully c heap. ! · · The Bay ls lands are off Honduras. They '"'ere
round by English bucca neers and_ black slaves
banished for rt·voll:i 10 the West Indies. The people
speak English.
* l 'ou fl y to S<1n Pedro Sula from _New O~leans,
Miami or Guatemala City. Local air serVJce to
Coxen's Hole on the main Island of. Roatan. A poor
town. The hotel is nothing. Skip it. .
You are f1rri.d by boat around the laland
io one of the "resort hotels" -only a, couple and
really boa rding houses. However. theres a new one
and quite. good : Anthony's Key Resort. . Good bedrooms. Cottages. A pleasant, cane
cb,air, open bar over a \Vhite sand beach lined with
1azy coco palms. Bugs are not bad. but bring repellent. A rub-on
as well as a spray. Spray is diluted. sometimes it
doesn't work. ~1oney is Honduran lempiras-lwoto the U.S. $1.
* Good swimming. Fine skin diving. No shopping
-nothing to buy. No night life -absolutely no-
thing to do. Some people will love it. I thi~k most
people will climb the walls after a week of it. (01 four couples flying over. two took a look al
Coxen's Hole and got right back on the plane and
flew ba ck.)
* "We, too, are looking for the b•refoot l•l•nd•
you write •bo1i1t ••• "
. The untouched bareboot Island& are usually just
TOO native for the tourist taste. The trtck i1 to
·move in JUST as they put in the first, modfst, mod.·
em hotel jfeared to the touri~t.
Until then, you a.re sleeping. ln, boarding houses.
. And the native food 1s not Maxim I, Max.
* The Fijis are the upcoming islands. Several
small island resorts that are remote, barefoot, warm
.11eas and absolutely first·claas. A top resort !s The
Fijian, not too Jong a drive from Nadi Airport. ·Th~ a crossroads of the Pacillc. Every plane
flying south stops there. * . There are several othera on nearby i.sla.nds. New
and well done. Fiji Visitors Bureau Suva , Fiji will
send you names and rates. Make It attention of
R. J . Scott and tell him you want jhe small Isla nd
1esorts. :. * " t took 1 houM in Suva. l really like that tow n. i. Jt has a Somerset Mau&ham flavor ol the South
~at Some tropical white bulldlng1. A Jot of 1hacky
1>oard stores. Big Fi/'lans in wraparound• above
brown, brawny bare egs. : * t 1· • A greet open native market. hey wrap 1ve ~lggling shrimp for yoo in woven ba11ket• of green ~eaf. Two adequate supennarketa -most of. the
:caMed things are from Australja and N~ Zealand. :;. * .. ~ The sea is blue as a kitten's eyet. There are ul J{
::Shade trees ·along wide Victoria Parade. And· on :?>oat Day (when the crui se ship comes in) the mili-
~~.ary band -red ~unics aiJ?ve whit~ wra pai:ound ~
!"-goes marchin g do\vn W1th ~ mighty swin g of
·British music filli ng the warm air.
* A letter from n wandering friend: "Take a look
;:it Co rn l sland off Nicaragua. There'll be a Hilton ~'9J ere some day.'' ..,: * I . Our bicycle reporter in France '"rites: ''The
isle de Groix offsh.ore from Lorient, Is suppo!led to ~6e magnificent and wild. I like Brittany better thqn
fj:!Normandy. So many towns in Normandy got smesh-~..ed during th e war, and the rebuilding wasn't done
with much taste."
* ; The island of Taveuni ln the Fijii Is untouched ~~uth Pacific. Can be reached frorU Suva. The Jn--~rnational Dateline bends around it. 1t used to run
:iprough it.
.ltrit'la' .V.att'devfllians
~y ztr'be and Salome Jen1<?teate the title roles 'fl/ ·~•veflnr lrl•b vaudevllle tum in Brian t'rlel '• ·..-.e<Jlnedy-<!Ntma, "Crystal & Fox" in Its Am eri·
lion premier• at the Mark Taper Forum, Lo• An-
· eJes Music Center, through May 24.
-.. ----·-----------------·-·--------·
Tra1Jel View~
Russian
Excursion
Offered
Air Canad.a in conjunction
with MUllc City Tour 1 ,
HoUywood , bu developed •
21-<lay excursion which will in-
clude Russia, the Black Sea,
Turkey, Greece, Yugoslavia
and Denmark. The name of
the tour It "Runil and ••• "
and 11 round trip from
the West Coast OD an aJl.to-
clusive package price of
$1,599. Air Canada offers
1tn1le carrier 1ervtce, Los
Angele21-Moecow via Mont.real
or Toronto as well a a
Copenhagen-Eastern Canada.
Loe Angeles filghts. "Ruasla
and . • . " tour available
throu1h travel agent.a or Air
Canada olfices. •
IS THIS 'CAMPGROUND' OF FUTURE
Artltt Sketches Holid1y Village Cent1r
No 'Con1munities'
CHAIN SAW SCULPTOR -J, B. Blunk, who has won renown for his huge red·
wood burl scuJptures, will be featured (.n Channel 7 tonight at 9 p.m . in "With
These Hand1." Upper left photo show s him roughing out burl with Jogger's
chain saw then it is moved'to UC Santa Cruz, upper right below he does fine
work with' smaller saw and final product is enjoyed for relaxation by students.
Trans • Pacific P111enger
Conference, an oraanLtatlon
which represents 1teamshlp
companies, says some
reservaUons are available on
c:n.il1e ships aa Uttle as tw~
mon ths ahead ol sailing. Most
major cruises are booked
nearly a year aheld however.
Th e minimum-priced ac·
commod1tlons are the fir.It
to go, so if one 1' looking
tor price break Jt would be
well to book aa far &head aa posaible.
For Tr11e Camper
Sometlmei It seen1s: es
though everybody is planning
a lovely and lu xurious future
for campers and trailers.
Wood Artist
A Nort.h~rn Callfornia man
hat adapted lo4gers' tool.s to
create .fine art and has
t>:eeome -one of lhe renowned
actJlptors of the d<i y.
J. B. Blunk will be C1mong
the artisans featured on Cha n·
nel 7'ti "With These Hands"
special program at g p.m. to.
night
Blunk spe t i al lz cs ti1
11eulptlng organic fonns from
huge redwood burls which are
left over from big timber frJg·
1lng. The rugged 21culp1or
carves his ~~aUorui freehand
with two McCulloch chain
.sav;s -a big limber saw
to establish his basic shapes
and a PoWer·Mac for fine
delall.
One of the artilit's most
famous pieces is .a burl
weighing slx ton s, whiclJ he
t ul down to size from ten
tons. The functional sculpture
is used as an outdoor loungt·,1g
area for studne\11 at University
of California Santa Cruz.
Blunk pieces are on ~xhihit
Your Gt1ide to Fu1i
o·n TV
at the Oakland and San Fran·
cisco museums, lhe City Park
of Mount Kisco, New York
and leadlng pr l v a t e col·
leci.iOnll.
For future work, the
sculptor has his eye on huge
redwood burls weighing up to
100 tons. He has worked in
wood since 1911 1. Prevlou11Jy,
he rceeived' a fine art.a deiree
11! UCLA, worked as a potter's
apprentice in Japan.
• t•or tbe flJl&t lime, NONay'1
llunny cout is included in a
new package tour tailor-made
for American visitors. Called
''Discovery Tou r" it starta
each Tuesday from Stavanger
and each Saturday from Oslo
during the months of June·
Sept. One travels by motor
coach and hydrofoil on the
seven..<fay trip Md stays in
top-grade hotels. Available
through all travel ag?ntl, f240.
Tile· May j<Ford Times" had
a preview of such a future
in It.a "Holiday Village'' story,
looking forward to five years '---"-'-'-A_c_K_K_N_•_A_s_s _ _,
from now.
It gave me the creeps.
Such a place might be a
good <>ne lo visit, but 1
woulrln '! want t.o "camp"
there. You couldn't, anyway .
The true camper is an in·
dlvlduallst. Two or three com·
panlon1, at the most , arc
enou1h. Larger groups are all
righ t, but sooner or later the
camper #neaks awa y
sometimes In the dea d of night
-to aeelt aomet.hing resembl·
Jng solitude ,
Hippies call It meditation:
campers call it loafing or
relaxing.
Yosemite In the middle of
the summer ma y be pleasant
but for true enj9yment try
it in the crispness of April
or May.
But for those of us who
have become effelc as time
passes l he self-contained
trailer or camper offers a
better method of enjoying the
beauties ol nature. • .and
sornething r e sc m bl i D g
solJ tude.
ll is odd, ho\vever, that If
one parks on a beach without
a person in sight the nex t
camper who comes along will
gel about as close as he can.
Perhaps he feel.s safer that
way.
Or it can happen that he
has four children with hin1,
<ind necda a place to send
them.
Jazz Concert Set Sunday
HunUngton Beach or Coney
Island in July may be fun
spoil, but when compared to
a t<Hnlle atretcll of Oregon
or Florida beach without a
person In sight. •. well . ask
you r dog, ii you have one.
Lasl time we were out for
an extended trip one of our
"neighbors" had a tent frailer,
dogs and kids. They all used
our sanitary facilities, causing
us to pack up and go.
A desire for an occasional
stretch of solitude i s n • l
necessaril y a sign of aher·
ration any more than the need
for contact with people on
a more or less frequent bash;
is evidence of psychological
imbalance.
J\tA Y !·29
FRIDAY CONCERT -The music department of UC lrvint:
pre1ent1 concerts each Friday aft.e rnoon 11l J p.m. In Room 17fl
of the Fine Arts Bldg. on campua. There is no admla.sion
charge. Friday~. !\.Jay 8, fl.l ~ic for String Qµarlet : Hay<ln
Quartets; Ma y 15, Music for Violin and Pla no: Mozart and
Ravel ; ·May 22,•Conservatoire de la Voix : Students of Voice;
May 29, Musio for Small· Ensembles : Barlok -and Franck.
MAY I
.JUNIOR TEE!\" DANCE -The Junior Teen Cluh of West·
minster will have two dances each month -on the se<:ond
and fourth Fridays -from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. The secon d
Friday of the monlh all Westminste r 7th and 8th grade
:itudents attending \Vesminster schools east of Beach Blvd.
may attend. and on the fourth Friday night all 7th and 8th
grade students attending Westminster schools west of
Beac h Blvd. may altend. All schools have the new sched ule.
On May 8 "Pure Joy " will play for d11ncing.
MAY 9
PANCA KE BREAKFAST -The 20th annual Costa Mesa Ki·
wanis Pancake Breakfast wiU bC held this Saturday, May 9.
from 7 to 11 a.m. in Costa Melia Park. Tickets are $1 for
adults, 75 cents for children.
IUAY 9
·uc1 FANDANGO -The UC I Spring Fand ango 1,1•ill begin
at II a.m. on Saturday, May 9, and be climaxed by a bar·
becu e and a Teatro Popular presentation. Booth1 and con·
lesls, stagecoach and .Pony rides, folk danc ing, a flea mar·
ket and handcraft displays are alt plan oed for the event.
Funds raised will go to 1,JCJ 's UN ICAMP providing ca mp-
ing experience! for underprivileged children. It will be staged
in Campus Park on campus.
MAY &
.f·H DRESS REVUE -Approximately 200 girls will be nuldel·
lng clothes they have made, an d in some citses designed ,
when the •·H Dress Revue is staged at Fashion Island, New·
port Beach. The show will be narTated by f.H boys. All of
these young people are from Orange County and are between
the ages of 9 and 19 years. The shov; wl!I take place fron1
J to 3 p.m. on fl.1ay 9.
l\IA Y 9
TEEN CLUB DANCE -The Weslminstcr Recreallon anrl
Parks Department wiU hold a Teen Club Da nce in !he cnm·
munity "·Cent er, 8200 \Vest n1inster Ave., (for \\'cstn1insler
teens) each Sat. from 8 p.m. to midnight. Adm ission, SL
for members. $1 .So for non·1nembers. The "Rei Bros." will
play for dancing May 9.
l\1A Y 9
I.A QUINTA DAflr.'CE -1'he La Quinta Te<'n Club holrls
chaperoned dances each Salurday night from 8 p.n1 . to mid·
night at the La Quinta 1-ligh School, J03n l\fcF'adden, \Vest·
minster. All teens are In vited lo attend. Admission is SI for
members, $1.50 for non·members. Drc~s is restricted to
school wear. For further information phone 531·3583. The
"Faith Crusade'' group wtn play-for dancing,
l\1AY 9
SLY CONCERT -Sly and lht' Family Stone and Mounta in
will be hearrl in concert at the Loni;i; Beach Arena, Saturday.
May 9, at 8 p.m. Tickets, avai!ahle at· the arena or tlckrt
agencies, arr. $3.SO · SS.~O.
l\1A\' f
JOHNNY CASH CONCERT -Johnnv Cash will appear in
concert, Sat., l\1ay 9. in lht' Forum. ~1 anchester at Prairie,
Inglewood . Ap pearing wi1h him will hf' the Ca rter Family in·
eluding hi~ wire, J une C11rtcr: Carl Perkins, The Slater Bro·
thers. The Tenne11see TI1rrc :ind Tom1ny C;;i5h.
l\tA Y Ill
JAZZ CONCE RT -.Jazz: Tncpr poraled, & relttlvely ntw Jail
Club ba~cd in Hunlington Reach 11t the Mooi1e Hall, 7904
I.org e Clrcle , Jfunlington Beach. bolds 111 meetings on the
se<:ond Sunrhiy or each monrh. Tbe Concert ror Mav 10 at 2
p.m. will hnvt Teddv Bucknor'11 All Stars, Rosv McHariue·ii
Ra11:tlmers uncf ~l aplc Leaf Ragtine Ban<!. Spccl&J guests
will Inc lude Turk Murphy, hi& band and vocalist. Pal YankcE'.
The meeting also gi vesj)illina to Hot Ja1i, Cool Drinks and
\Varm Friendship. Tickets at the door are $1.50 for mrm·
bl-rt: $4 for non·members. For more inform4tion phone
846·211 $.
i\IA Y 12 ·17
CULTURAL AltTS \\IEf;K -;·ount11ln Vallry wlt1 crlcbratr
c:u1tur11l Arts Weck ,._fay J2 • 17 wJlh eve11ts hapllfn init all
over the city. A thlldren'• pl11y is l!Cheduled 111long 14·ith school
art exhibiLs, n1u1lc :uxt arl fe1tiv1ls, a producrlon or "Tiie
Crucible," travel films, 1 pre-school story hour, a band
concert, a ballet performance and much, much more all
climaxed by an Inaugural Ball for the Mayor. The project
i,, sponsored by the Cham bu of Commerce Women 's Di vi·
sion. For more lnlorm1Uon phone 847·1396.
MAY II
AR1' ft"lLfl.1 -1'wo films, "Avery Brundage Collecuon of
Asian Art" and "China by t.he Golden Gate", will be shown
Friday, May 15, in the Laguna Beach Art Gallery, 307 Cliff
Drive, Laguna Beach. Total running time ls one hour. Ad·
niission to members is free, non·members may make a do·
nation which "'ill be aypreciated. 494·6531.
!\IAV 16
CL ASSICAL GUITAR CONCERT -Christopher Parkening,
protege of Andres Segovi a, will give a concert in the Science
Lecture Hall at UC Jr vine on May 16 at 8:30 p.m. Tickets,
$3, available at Fine Arts box-offJce.
l\tA Y 17
NB ARTS FESTIVAL -The Newport Buch City Arts Com·
mlttee Is holdlnc an Art Festival on the grounds or the City
Hall, 3300 W. Newport Blvd., Newport Beach on May 17 from
I to 5 p.m. Bands from Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor
Jllgh Schools will perform during the afternoon. Art will be
displayed for sale on the lawn of the City Hall. Refr eshments
avallable.
MAY 17
STUDENT CONCE RT - A senior recllal by students of the
1'+1usic Dept. will be held In Room 178 Of the Fine Art11 Bldg.
a_l 8:30 p.m. Sunday. May 17. Sarabecca Hart, violinist. as-
s1_sted by Roger Hickman . vio!ini.!lt and Carol Stackpole, pianist \Vi !/ be heard.
l\1A\' 11 llO~E Sl~O\Y -l\fnre than ~00 horsemen will eo1nrcte fnr
lroph1es, r1bbon!'I nnd points in the Cal·Border Rep:i onal All· ~ppnloosA Horse Show 11t Ran~ho Californla Showgrounds ~unday, r-.1ay 17. The even! begin!'! at 8 a.m. ancf admiss ion
1s free . Aren11 located on Highway 395 midway between Los Angeles and San Diego.
Deluxe campgrounds are
well ind good, Fine places
to stop and do lau ndry, meet
new lri~nds, drlnk a beer,
enjoy a little organized en·
tertalnment, and spend a day
or a week , but for real
splrltual renewal Cl week or
10 of seml·lsolation cannot be
equaled.
Young people can join •
Sierra Club hike. And even
n1any of these are adjusted
for old er people less devoted
to the strenuous life.
There's nothing like being
alone an d at rest. 1'11\h 11 pine·
scented breeze or an onshore
wind in you r nostril.'!. milCed
w!lh the scent of a harbecutng
steak. And it helps if, clQst
by, there 's a refrigerator wjt h
cold drinks. and all the lttx·
uries of home. Especially if
yau are over 39 ye.i rs of age.
1i-·s the best of t14·0 worlds.
Greek Opens June 23
The Greek Theater starts its
18th conseculive season this
year on June 23 with the
. James A. Doolittle production
of Puccin i'!! immortal opera,
"Mad.ime Butterfly."
Starring the lyrical soprano
voice of Dorothy Kirsten and a
metropolitan a\l·S\ar cast. the
heloved opera will light up the
his!orlc Greek ·stage for three
evening performanceij, June
23, 25 and 27, ushering in
anothe r sum rner of musical
ente r!.ainrTie'nt under the stars .
~1iss Klrslen , recognized as
one of the finest operatic
performers of Lhis generation ,
sings the leadlrlg role of Cio-..
C10 San. supported by tho
voices of Barry i\1orre 11 ,
Frank Guarrerra and Necfda
Cassie .
Dorothy Kirsten·!> name. i!I
synonomous with many oJ>Ora
classics . During her 1 9:1 3
'·Butterfly" po rtraya l at Gie
Greek The11 ler, thousands:'.of
ci!S<Jppointed fans were turned
away. Its return is due to hun·
dreds of calls tha t have come
to the theater expressing the
hope that ii would be produced
again.
This summer's productiO'll
~·ill utilize Lhe stunning sets
de signed and built for 1'1iss
Kirsten's _ lasL appearance . •
••
'Butterflies'
Next Show SUNDAY IS MOTHERS DAY :: ,\
~
At Hartford I~
Arrangement!! have bttn ~
cootpleted f or Broadway'!'! ~
newes t comedy sucee55, "But..
terlHes Are Free,'' to follow 4 Ann l\lillcr as "Mame·• at the ~
Huntington Hartford Theater. \
Being brought to L o s ~ Angeles by the Greek Theater
Association, ''Buttern!es'' will ~
star comedienne Eve Arden
nnd "'ill open a 1 i mi t e d
1'11gagement Wednesday, May 1~
20. Speclol prtce pre v i e w "
pe~~~:a~~:s.~!;~ :~~e!~;ul ~
ntw comedy of the season" by
!hf' New York Times' Clive 1
Barnes, who added I h· a t f•
Leonard Cershe "hes written
the play that nearly every
comedy has <llpirallons to ~
be," "8utternies " tells the
~lory of a young bllnd man's
irtrugg!e f o r indefM:ndtnc:e
from hi~ weJl·meanln1 but
overly pl'otectlve mother. He
moves into a Green wich
Village apartment and soon
fa lls in lovt with the zany
young actress next door.
S UNDAY
.MAY tOth TWO THINGS YOU MUST DO ...
T •ke Mother out to di"ner •t o"e of the many fin1 restauranti i" the area !
T•ke her a cor1•91 to w1er ore bouquet of fre5h cut floweri , potted plant or
err•ngement from our flow•r shop!
You 'll be em1ted et the fine qu•llty •nd et the low , low pr ic e\. Cell "Flowers
ly Debra,"• dlv!1lon of Newport Pro4uce-675·62t1.
CLIP THISl i. SAVE
··········1·········~····••••\ • T•••t-Rulty Red 8 P•nlf Prealt 8 lceber1 8 • • •
GRAPEFRUIT • TOMATOES • LETTUCE •
o...i 111•
IOC ... • • IOC lb.
• • I oc head • •
.·
• • • • • Limit S • limit S lbs. • Limit S ·:
With Thi• Ceu,en With Thi• Cevpen With Thi• Coupon • • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
COUPONS EXPIRE MAT JJ
"MOTHIR" will re1tly 1njoy the food at •.. THI ARCHES, NEWPORT; GUY
PAWMIS, POUNTAIN VALLIT; "llUSHlllS" ON THE BAT. NIWPOIT;
DILLMAN'S, "IALIOA"; ALLIT WIST, NIWPORT. So t•k• "h"" .,t to d;,,.,
todey.
"ORANGE COUNTY'S FASTEST GROWING PRODUCE ORGAN IZATION "
e NEWPORT PRODUCE ~ Op•• 1 Doy1 A We"" 1 to 8 p.m.
Ph..ne
67W715
67l47tl
675-lJtt " 2616 N1wport loultvt1rtf1 on Tht Penlnsulo '----'·. In Rddlt1on to Miss Arden 11 ' thP. n1nther, tht. ~uperb cast
• ~-1 11 a!if> include We n d f: 11
Burton. of "Sterile Cuckoo"
fan1e, as the young man.
"35 Y111rs of Prndttce
Kno10 11010"
""'here Q11ollt11 I! T/1t •.
Order of tlt t t-lo11sc" :: 1
~~""" ......... ~ -·~ ... ~
.•
Friday, May 8, 1970 DAILY PILOT !lf --
WEEKENDER OUT 'N' ABOUT By
NOR!tl STANLEY
and
AllLlll' STEVENS
\, '·
ORANGE COUN T Y'S R E STAURANT , N I GHT CLUB AND ENT ERT A INMEN T SCEN E
M th ' D T ne Scene MASCOLAS relish dish, soup or salad, .choice of ice cream, mine~
O er S ay At Mascolas, 1675 E. 17th st.. Santa Ana, a meal cobbler wi_th brandy sauce or pumpkin pie, and
• 1 , co1nplete dinner menu is offered. This is one of the bever~ge. All ch1ldrens dinners are $1 less. The Golden
No matter .1! the weather is cloudy or bright1 Out n _abouter surveyed !"-number . of local fine restaurants which serves spinach salad with bacon Bull is located at the El Toro turn off of the San
Sunday will find the year's 1.arges~ crowd oi ~ur 'n restaur.ants thi s week to ascertain what diners can and hard boiled egg dressing in addili'on to the usual Diego Free\vay. 23862 Bridger Rd. Reservations please.
abouters on the move. By l1mous1ne, f~ily J~opy, expect 'Yhen the;y sally forth to treat mom. In most ooup and salad choice. Entrees include roast prime GYPSY CE LLAR
motor bus and on foot record numbers will heading t()cases dinner will be served from early afternoon rib of beef baked potato $5 25 · tournedos rossini (2 If M th r . r· E k. ti
th. ' t 1' f t · hi ·a1 g t of through Late evening • ' · ' · o er 1anc1es 1ne uropean coo 1ng in e areas res urants o e ea m1g Y spec1 ues , . · . , fillets).m~shr?O.ms and eggplant, bearnai~e sauce $5.25 ; Gypsy Cellar a\\•aits her. From beef goulash $3.6.5,
honor. . Its 8 g~ idea. f:o make reserva~ions , \\here".'er sci,unp1 lmgwn1 $5.25. Cbildrens selections al so are to chicken paprikash, ~.25, each dish is given careful
possible, lo avoid watt1ng. Not only \Viii the occasion avilable. attention by Chef Petery. All dinners include an ap·
be m?~e pleasant f~r all concerned but the restaurant ' petizer. home inade soup, and cucumber salad.
can g1 e better sen:1ce on a very bu~y.~ay. . . c Childrens dinners are hall price\
Object or all the fuss \Vill be everybody's favorite By no means intended as a def1n1~1ve c~n:ipilatio~. 1
girl _ mother _ who'll be basking in th e limelight we trust, non.etheless. that the , follow~ng listings w~l ~
as we acknowledge her unsung tending oC our needs serve as f! kind of representative guide to Motner s •
the other 364 days of the year. Day offerings h~reabouts. Each Mother will be presented with a corsage on 1-~or dessert lry one of Matilda P.etery s
ONE BRIEF DAY
She who labors week·in·and-month-out to keep
the household pulled together can at last let dad and
the kids take over the towing. Jf only for. .this one
brief day. . .
Even so, the family is going to be hard pressed
to take the lady's P.lace in performing some tasks
around the house. Like jumping into the kitchen and
conjuring up a little culinary magic to create the
main meal.
Bon appetit! her special day. Dinner will be served from 2 to l ~omemade cakes or apple _ struddle with pa stry so
• 8 p.m .. reservations please. Mascolas is located between light you could read thru 1t. Music 1s provided by
the Santa Ana and Ne\vport Freeway on 17th St. head \Vaiter Endre Kallay playing an antique cym~ balom.
O'AM ICO'S Gypsy Cellar is located at 2555 IV. L• Habra
D'Amico's offers to serenade Mother ~·ith her Blvd. in La 1-labra , off Beach Blvd. Reservations are
favorite music. The busboy s, all fledging artists, join suggested.
the singing chef, in offering a fnuslcal salute to each . ~IN~ S~AFT . . ·table. Each boy is auditioned for his inusical talent Darrell Atkins !\·l1ne Shaft \\'Lii have orchids ror
before he is hired. each .rrtom and she .1nay think she is pan1.1ing for
BOB BURNS
Even if mother doesn't trace her ancestry back
to the Scottish highlands, she'll be accorded just
recognition as matriarch of the clan at Bob Burns
restaurant, 37 Fashion Island, Fashion Cehter, Newport
gold \Vhen she receives the 1nenu . It's written on
a pan used by miners to sift gold. The children's
menu is on a smaller sized version of the same pan.
. .1 Beach. . T\VO note\vorthy items each at $3.50 are spiedini. . ~1om can take her ease !JP lo that, point wh1 e . Mor~ tha~ a wee touch of Scotland in the de~r tender slices of beef, broiled and served with Italian
admiring the cards., flo~ers, gifts and c1andy offe:ed \v1ll comb1n~ \\'1th savo~y entrees such as .roast Long sauce: veal cacciatora with peppers, 01 iv es .
as part of the day~ tribute. But theres r,tO .hoping Island dµckl1ng. grenadine of beef tenderloin and . veal mushrooms, onions and tomatoes. All dinners include The special .r.-Iother's Day menu ,\VilJ feature t~e others can duplicate her efforts in wh1pp1ng up c~tlet Oscar to generate ,a pleasant repast. Dinner soup, salad, spaghetti and dessert. Each Mother ,viii roast chicken, $2.95 ; roast ham, $3.50; roast prime
dinner. . , . . . will be served from 1 p.m. 1 be presented with a glass of ,vine. Special prices rib, $3.95; top sirloin steak, $4.95, and New York
. T~e answer, is to c~p the days act1v1t1es by LI ' for children. Dinner \viii be served from 3 to 10 steak , $4.95. All dinners include salad from the salad
\vh1sk1ng mother off to a fme restaurant for toothsome s D'Am. , · 1 ted t 2610 E Ch A bar, potato. veJ(etable and bevera~e. delicacies and a fe\v hours total relaxation. Giving 1100 goo gai pan is only one of a numbe r of p.m. ico 5 IS oca a · apman vc., The Mine Shaft is located at 2916 \V. l.incoJn
her the strength to carry on until Mother's Day rolls special holiday dishes that will be on the menu at Orange. Ave., ju st off Beach Blvd. in Anaheim. Reservations
around in 1971. Li 's restaurant in Huntington Beach: There also will be l~~ -~ .... suggested.
"" Cv
entertainment by five-n1ember Festival de Tahiti. ~~ ~~:7 MlTLA
.. GOLDEN BULL If madre \1·ants her dinner accompanied by an
~ . atmospheric touch of early California or Mexico, Mitla . . The Golden Bull. \v11l be open for champag.ne hilexican restaurant. 547 W. 19th St .. Costa Mesa, will The c~arm1ng One_ntal atmosphere ~an als~ serve brunch , from 9 .a.m. till l p.m. and for the sp~c1al provide the backdrop. And a choice of many south
Be su re, however, to pick a spot ~here. the as .a setting for t~eati~g mom to a wide vanety of Mothers da.y d1n~er from 1 to 8 p.m. The. hohd~y oi the border house specialties.
honored woman can partake of her favorite ~ 1 s h. Chinese and Am~r1can 1t~ms. ~cated at 8961 Adams menu has six e":t~ees -:-roast turkey : duckling "'Ith The day's significance also ,viii be noted by \Vhether it's turbot au champagne, scallop1ne al Ave., at Magnoha , service will be from 11 :30 a.m. orange sauce : prl111e rib of beef : baked ham ; Ne\V
marsala or hamburger steak. to 12 midnight. York steak or halibut steak. Included are an ic ed Continued on Page 26
PRESENTS
FRANKIE
ORTEGA
AND HIS MUSIC .
OPENING MAY 18th
1107 JAMBOREE ROAO
NEWPORT BEACH 644-1700
OPEN MOTHER'S DAY
Serving Dinner From 2 P.M.
'Reg ular Menu -Regular Prices
No Reserva tions
COME IN TONIGHT
''For The
Pritne Of Your Lite''
Roast PRIME RIBS OF BEEF
c.9"94 fro111 GIANT I ll I OASTS. 5er"4 wltll h ell s3as ..,..tWhla. ftllffy whipped potcitoft, 9NY'f•
c,..llletl ll•rwedtsh ...c.•, "'ll Of Mid, '""""' .
DIAMOND JIM BRADY CUT , , , , , , 4.85
CH ILO'S PORTION ....... , ....... 1.SO
IAILY PllME Ill DINNll: SPICI AL • •• SJ.ts
MONDAY THIU f l lDAT ONLY ! 4 te 6:Jt P.M.
NOW-TWO LOCATIONS
OPEN 7 DAYS
KING· SIZE '"OCKTAILS
321 N. STANTON
BUENA PARK AREA o,.. ,.,...., ... ,. s..,.,
11 A..M. l•Kh o,_ 2 r.M. S11"'-Y
DlnerM .. ,
Phono 121-4110
421 E. 17th ST.
COSTA MESA o,.. M....., tflni "'lff't
II A .... &..Mir! o,... 4 P.M. S......, 6
s....i.., -DI""' M .. 11
Phono 645.499C)
ARCADIA
'ifP1!BY -AIRPORT.
Ftoturing S1eak. Chlcklft ·Italian Cuisin t
Serving Late Dinners
MMl.-Thllr. 11 A.M.·1r)t AM.
1262 PALISADE$ RD.
~rl. I. Ill, 11:•1:JO A.M,
~JJ E. HUNTINGTON OR,
ARCADIA COST" MESA ....... w ... 1,,
Make Mothers Day
Reservations Now
Champognt 8'unch 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Dinner 1 to 8 p.m.
830-2142
.
.'J86, BlllDll~ 11 0 El 10 PO ,Af"'llt. A~A f'llY "' (l TOFIO
OPENING TONIGHT
DIRECT FROM THE CASTAWAYS
LAS VEGAS
AMERICAN STOCK X CHANGE
LIGHT HEARTED JABS AT .THE
AMERICAN SCENE IN SATIRE & MUSIC
DANC E TO
THE MORNING SUN
J. RANDALL DIGHTON
STROLLING TROUBADOUR
FINE ITALIAN FOOD
DINNER & SHOW
FROM $3.)5
212 W. CHAP MAN
AT TH E CIRCLE IN ORAN GE
DELANEY'S
SEA SHANTY
Serving Orange County's Fine•t
SUNDAY BRUNCH
., Choice of Entree Only $1.65
lobster Benedict • Shrimp R1nchero
Sc1mpl Under Glass • Chef's Omelet
e Shanty Hem & Eggs •
Ch1mp1gne -2Sc Ptr Gl 1'1
630 LIOO PARK ORIVE
NEWPORT BEACH 675.0100
NOW BEER & WINE COCKTAILS
MINESHAFT
MOTHER'S DAY SPECIAL MENU
1 P.M. TO 10 P.M.
ENT REES
e R.a11t Chic.~111 • , ••• , $2,,5
e Ro1•I Him , , .••••• $).50
lndvd11:
S1!1d l•r
Pal•la e Ra11l p,;'"1 Rib • , , , SJ.'15 (l1\1d, Sw11t or I Whipp1d l e Tap Sirloi11 • , , ••••• S4 !O V191t1bl1
e New Yo1 k Ste1• •••• $4.'95 R.otr1 I: B~tt1r a, .. ,,,'11,
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! Taking Reservations Now!
'" 2916 w.'trticour:~;~~:· 826-1840 MILE SQUARE
GOLF COURSE
RESTAURANT
Invites You To Visit Us On
MOTHER'S DAY
Featuring A Special Mother's Day Me nu
Serving from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Complete Dinners
Make Reservations Early
loc.1f1d 011 W•r111t Av111v1
l1tw1111 Euc.licl 111cl Broo•huril
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
lJuu '-, A Feast You'll Remember
Pri me Rib '/w Yorkshire Pudding .......................... 4.95
Londo n Broil ...................... ·-···-·················· ......... 5.45
Roest Long Island Duckling ................... -............. 4.35
New York Steak .................................................... 5.25
H•w•ii1n Ma hi M•hi ....................................... -... 3.95
AND Ml l l Y MANY MORI
MONDAY NIGHT SPICIAL
COMPLnl PllMI l ll DINNl l
BE "INN" WITH US
MICHAEL'S TWO
DANCING NIGHTLY
$125
Monday thru S1turd1y -9 to 1 :30
LEE FERRELL
Sunday -9 to 1:30
3295 Newpo rt Bl vd., Newport Beach
Rese rv1tlon1 673-1374
Opon From 3 P.M.
MOTHER 'S DAY
Reservations Suggested
~oolas
RESTAURANT
WHERE MOMS ARE SPECIAL
Roast Prime Rib of 8e.t-B.ked Potato 5.25
Tou rneclos Ros51ni 12 fil•ts I
Mu,hroom1, E99plant, Bearn•is1
Sauce ................................................... 5.45
Scampi Llngulnl ..................................... 5.25
Combitt0tlon St•k & Lobster Tail.
Dr•wn Butter ..................................... ,.25
---··----
Exquisite Dining - 2 to 8 P.M.
Res•rvations , 547·9511
1625 E. 17th Street, Santa Ana
'
••• _, ~·-·-----·--...,-·------·-----,---------=-:-::--------....,--..-..-.-~~-..,..,..~~-~...,--' . . . . ~ ... ,_.,... _______ ~----
' DAllV PILOT Frld1y, Mq 8, 1970
Melle It A Heppy
MOTHER 'S DAY
S,-1 .. M•1 Sef....i 11 :JD a.-. te 12 ,,,._
Specie! Polyn•tlen Ent•rt1inment
1961 AIAMS AYL fet M.....,lel
HUMTINSTON IUCH
MOTHER
HER DAY
968-5050
The Champagne Brunch
9 A.M. to 2 P.M.
•••
A Ve ry Special
DINNER
From 3 P.M.
1107 JAMBOREE ROAD, NEWPORT BEACH
For Reservations-Phone 644-1700
SUNDAY, MAY ID
Dinner Served From 1 P .M.
1......,ette111 s .. '"'-'
We've got ·
something
warm and
wonderful
for -Mothers.
A SPECIAL
FROM THE SIZZLER STEAK HOUSES
flEE ORCHIDS
FOR ALL MOTHER'S
Flown In Fresh From Hew1ii
Togelhtr With
A con1plele New York steak
dinner for Lwo for just $4.69
Show Mom the kind of tenderness she desems ... 1nd
sh1r1 in it yo11rs1tl! It's 011 r fabulous New Yor k steak
dinner fOf two. And the price it as special as the occasion,
so everyone can •fford to treat Mother riiht.
Just look what Sillier has tor tilt two of you. Two big
juicy Ntw Yon. steats, broiled the way you like them. Nut
to jumbo bakld potatoes or 1olden frtneh fries r •. and. cruldly ch111k of dltese toast Two crispy S111ds too, with
your ehoice of fftUlite dressings. Thin you and Mother
top dinntr off with scrumptious dess1rts. And we even
include your bner1a:es ill our special iow Mother's Oay price.
Of course Sillfer's rot lots of other 1rtrt beef platters.
Top slr1oln, burpri. steak $alldwichts ... wh1tever 1 tam!ly aoes for, • Simar Family Steak HOUSI goes one bett•r!
Your Mom's a cut lbo¥I tht others. SIWer helps you
t iY• her a dinner~ match. We wouldn't hm it any other w1y. And neither would you.
(Mother's Day only.)
lflltinltan Beach
-•coutmr
, ....... IW. tll-ltlJ
Costa Mesa
"" .. 11111 ... ~ .. llHlfllD TUACO 9'AftON
I. 17MI 6 ._. .._ '41•7fH
WEE.KENDER OUT 'N ABOUT
Continued from P•g• 25 BEN BROWN'S roast Long Island duckling, country style roast chicken,
. . A speciaJ Mother's Day menu will be ser ved u sorted seafood a la Newburg. the present_aLion of a co~pllme.ntary gard~n1a to every from 1 p.m. at Ben Brown's in South Laguna. E ntrees
mother being !eted. A-liUa \Vilt be serving from ll inc,lude roast tom turkey, glazed Virginia ham, Catalina
a.m. to 11 p.m. broiled swordfish Mirabeau, roast prime rib of beef,
DON JOSE New York steak and duck bigarde. Don J ose i1exican restaurant in lluntington Beach 1
portunity to enjoy the atmosphere of romantic old Mex· ~
also \vill open its doors \Vide to give madre an OJr ~~
lco. While seeing that the kiddies get their !ill of
Dinner wil l incl ude assorted relishes, fresh fruits,
salads, aspics and jello, choice of vegeta ble and dessert,
. assorted nuta:, mints and beverage. Located at 21112 tacos. All entrces Include fresh fnut cup, salad or Pacific Coast Highway, the Inn will serve from 12
soup, vegetable, potato and deesert. Th~re will be noon to 8 p.m.
dancing to The Naturals from those choosing evening NEWPORTER. INN
dining at Ben Brown's, 31196 S. Coast llighway. Del Webb's Newporter Inn, 1107 J amboree Road,
FIVE CROWNS Newport Beach, is offering a ,._!other's Day doubl e
The guest . of _honor can take her pick from a The F ive Crowns, 3801 E. Coast Highway, Corona header. For early diners there'll be a ch~mpagne
slate of comb!nat1011 plates,_ or undertake .the a la del Mar, will di splay its gracious English heritage brunch fron:i 9 _a.m. to 2 p.m., complete 'r1th a lot
carte _order binge of .~er life for everything ~rom while serving Mother's Day dinner from 12 noon to of fancy tr1mrnrngs.
albond1gas soup t~ ch1l1 verde. ~ocated at. 9093 E . 10 p.m. Mom ca n express a preference for dining
Adams, at Magnolla, Don Jose \\'Ill be serving fron1 in the sunny outdoor patio or in one of the authentic ~·
11 am v· to. din. . · · ic nan 1ng rooms. Starting at 3 p.m ., the Jnn \Viii serve a sp~1al
, S~UFT ~HI RT . ,; menu that offers a wi de range of entree selections.
I 1\'lother s Day d1nn~r fit for a quee~ 15 thivpromise Jn either case mon1 can enjoy a full measure of attention
rn.ade by the Stuft Shirt r~st~u rant, 2241 · · Coast ! as she's pampered by the Inn's guaranteed extra H1gh,vay, Newport Beach. Sk1pp1ng the reg~lar S1:Jnday . . . . care.
brunch for this special day, dinner service v.•1U be Fam1hes will have the.Ir choice of four entrees
continuous from 12 noon to 10 p.m. from the regular menu -prime ribs of beef, Ayles bury _BERLINER . .
duckl ing, roasted r ack of Southdown lamb and No rfol k Any German dish that holds _special at~ract1on
chicken. Complete dinners offer either soup or salad, for mother, from sauerbraten '''1th dumplings . to
beverage and dessert. schnitzel a la Holstein, can be hers fo r the asking
at the Berliner German family restaurant, 18582 Beach
One suggested meal consists or choice of cream SHERATON-BEACH INN Blvd., Town and Country Center, Huntington Beach.
of mushroom soup or tossed green salad , roast leg The spec:ial Mather's Day menu in the Cari~e By way of acknowledging her special day. th e
or Ja1nb, au jus, ,vith mint jelly, green peas, broiled Room of Huntington Beach's Sheraton-Beach Inn will Berliner is offering 50 percent off on the cost of
tomato, \Vhipped potatoes, stra\11berry cheese pie and offer a choice of four entrees. Roast baron of beef, Continued on Page 27
lntime te 111 nd De lightful
FRENCH RESTAURANT
Open 3 p.m,
Mother's Da y Dinner
Lii11ch 11 :l0·2 T11M. thr• f,I.
Oi"11er S:J0-10 T11e1. thru 51111,
ClOSED MONDAY
Cor11er ef Ro11do1ph 011d lrlstol
Coua MffG 540·l,41
® (j)'~-(fktJ ~ '
MOTHER'S DAY DINNER
CARIBE ROOM
12 Noon to 8 P~l
BUFFET
Assorted Relishes
Fresh Fru its •. , Asiorted Salads ••. Aspics 111 nd Jello
ROAST BARON OF BEEF AU JUS
ROAST LONG ISLAND DUCKLING,
BIGARADE SAUCE
COUNTRY STYLE ROAST CHICKEN,
PAN GRAVY
ASSORTED SEAFOOD ALA NEWBURG,
STEAMED ~ICE
Choice of one
G•rden fre1h rhubarb Buttered beby carrots
Parsli ed new pof.mtoes Farm fresh corn on the cob
Choict of one
Gra nny's Peach C obbler . C hocolete eclairs
Assort ed ice creems
As1orted nut1 end mint, , •• , . , , . coffee or tet.
Adults , •• $4.25 Children ••• $2.50
Reservations Suggested 536-1421
21112 Pacific Coast Hwy., Huntington Beach
I I-
COSTA MESA
GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB
ALL FACILITIES
OPEN TO PUBLIC
MOTHER'S DAY BUFFET
$2-95 -Children $1 .50
Sir.I .. II •·•· t. 4 ,..-. ..............
ENTERTAINMENT e DANCING
Tllurt., fTl., Sot, t '·"'·re l :JO e.-.
Now Serving Dinner
I te f :JO p.11t. -Thurt., frl., s.t.
Phone 540-7200
' .._ .. ., . .,, .. "'""' ..., .,..._,
H.," "De..a.le hfey" Heir, Mndey tit,. frlHr, 4 t9 I
franeois'
CONTINENTAL CUISINE
Famous For
FLAMING DUCK
O pen 11 :00 A.M. -Closed M'cnday
HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFORNIA
' '
IB151 BEACH BLVD. 842-1919
Visit Temple Gardens' Beautiful New
RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE
PIANO BAR ENTERTAINMENT
FRIOAY And SATURDAY
Tr11t Mother Sundey, IMy 10th
Temple Gardens
Chinese Beataurani
150I M•m• {At Htrbor) Coste M .....
541-1tJ7 540-1'2J -~·~~!!ii
OPIN: 1 f :JO •·"'· te 11 p.M., I..., ,.,. '11 .... y
11 :JO•·•· r. 2 •·•·• fri4-, Miii s.t.rdey
You Hav• Only One Mother
REMEMBER
MOTHER'S DAY-MAY 10
THE BERLINER •
Genna11 Fa111ily Restaurant
Famou1 Fer
SAUE RBRATEN w;th DUMPLINGS
Open On Mother's 01y At 1 P.M.
5091. Off On Mather's Dinner
Please, Only Ont Mother Per T1ble
11582 BEACH 'lt\to. -Town & Country Center
HUNTINGTON BEACH 968-5 800
EXCITINGLY NEW AND DIH'ERINTI
REMODELED FACILITIES
NEW COCKTAIL LOUNGE
WOULD YOU ·IELIEVE nm
SEA FOOD-0-RAMA
t )cf'ans or Sea Food. plus .•. Boulabaisc, old fashionl'd
Chicken & DumpllnJ;'s, Roasl Top SJrloin, plus •• , fabu-
lous array of Cold Salads.
ALL YOU $4 25 CAN EAT e
A MOTHER'S DAY MUST
Al. tht' l\'r\\"f'Ol"l Grotto "·hcr.e \\e can't hollrr any louder
about our dcliclo11s cho\\der.
.BRUNCH 11 ·2 DINNER 2·11
NOON FASKION SHOW
WEDNESDAY A"d FRIDAY
DUKE BURRELL
At Th e Piano Bar W•tl. thru Sun . 9 to I :30
l33l W. c-t Hlthwoy
Newporl loac• 642-42H
I
~ .~!!:.u~~~;. t
~ lWUVATIONS (n o "'-~" i
~14("~!4("~~~~
DENNY'S COSTA MESA
MOTHER'S DAY SPECIAi,
Complete Dinnn
1 Yircalnia laked Ham ... ··---~----···· .... . $2.75
USDA Prime Rib af ltef ----.. ........... .. .. 3.25
Child'• PortlOft -·-······ .. ·-······-· . ·-$1.95
Served wit h Soup and Salad
Choice of Potato Vegetable Du Jour
Homemade Fresh Strawbe rry Pie
Coffee -Tee -Milk
3170 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 545-9916
YE OLE INN
Dencing-Enterle inm ent
Enjoy The Ver1atile Mu1ic of
"POLARITY -3"
Bunny * Geor9e * Ron
Appearing Fri. & Sat. • 9 p.m. to 2 a.m,
Rock • Country Western • Rhythm & Blues
Open EYery Da y b a.m. to 2 a.m.
Merc:hent's luncheon Special De ily
2316 Newport llvd. Costa Mesa
642·282' Ample PerkllHJ In R•r
DON JOSE'
presents
SPANISH FLAMENCO DANCERS
featuring
GENARO GOMEZ
TV & Movie Personality
Every Friday & Saturday
3 ~HOWS NIGHTLY
e COCKTAILS e
Enchilada end Taco .......... _ ..•. , $1 .35
Chili Relleno-Enchi11de ...... , ..... $1 .50
s.nH whti Ike • .._, T"t9dltM •MS.I••
9093 E. Ad1m1 (at MlanolieJ Hunt. Be1ch 962-7911
•
mITIJ~
MEXICAN REST AU RANT
CELEBRATE MOTHER'S DAY MAY 10th
Frff G1 rdenias For All Mother's
• ,.., .. ·~
·•
' -, "I
New A11"9rl11t
JONATHAN BROWN
AT THI ORGAN
FRI. & SAT. NITES
ti ~ .... WILLIE IS BACKI
With Hit $e1191 e•d Gv!tor
Tli1r. & S111. Nlr.s
BEIR -WINE -BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCH
Opon II-A.M. -II P.M. Dolly
54 7 W. 19th St.. Costa Mesa
642-9764 Food To Go
I IT
(I
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D
ri
T•
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T•
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Friday, May 8, 1970 OAILY PILOT f1 ~~
W EEKENDER
' .
Continued from Page 26
mother's dinner -at the rate of one mother
table. Service gets under way at 1 p.m.
PRIME RIB INN
~lather's Day dinner will have a 2 p.m. launching
at the Prime Rib lnn, ~ E. 17th Street, Costa Mesa.
Same for the Inn's new sister operation, 328 N. Stanton,
Buena Park.
In addition to the house specialty -roast prime
ribs or beef -mother is urged to consider the
restaurant's other offerings like top sirloin steak,
Jobster tails, New York cut sirloin and steak 'n lobster
combo.
FISHERMAN
A special Mother's Day dinner menu with fi ve
entrees awaits diners at Fisherman in Huntington
Beach. Choices include roast beef. au jus, combo
seafood plate, scallops in sauce poillette, roast Long
Jsland duck and top sirloi n steak.
Service is slated to start al 12 noon and con~
tinue until 10 p.m. The 1'"'ishennan is located at 317
Pacific Coast Highway.
SIZZLER ST EAK HOUSES
Mother's Day special at the Sizzler family steak
houses in Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa is a
Teduced rate on complete Ne\Y York steak dinners
.~ fo r two. Included are baked potatoes or French fires,
cheese toast, salads with choice o! dressing, desserts
and beverages.
The offers hold good at both 18552 Beach Blvd.,
lluntington Beach and 17th St. and Santa Ana . Costa
Mesa. ~1others also will be given orchids flown in fro1n
J1awaii.
LORENZO'S
SPAGHETTI BENDER
The Finest In Italian Food
F•mily Dinners e A La Carte
Food To Go
Op• Daily 5 p.111.-S1111lay J P.M.-ct ..... M•llll•y
6204 W. Coast Highway
Newport Beach 645-0651
MR. MIKIS
HOUSE OF PRIME RIB
PRIME RIB .......... $2.9s,.::,!j, ::~!
DINNER FROM 5 to 11 P.M.
SUN DAT CHAMPA CONE llUNCH
10 A.M. to 2 P.M.
209 Palm, Balboa
Ill Ill• •1lbt1 ..... ry L1IMll119)
R"'11rw1tion1
675-5774
Welcome to the Wonderful World of
OMELETS
PRESENTEO AT THE
EGG AND ALE
CHOICE OF 30 OMELETS
Dally E11trtts L1111cli or Dl11111r
Serwff with RellR Tray or Hon 'lfoeuwrn
Tu•. '"'' Sat.-Lv11eh 11 to J: DJ1111er 5-1 0 S1111.-L1u~c.h 9.:z; Dill"' 1·9-CLOSID MONDA.TS
3101 NEWPORT BLVD., NEWPORT BEACH
(11111" fr•• ,.rtil119 lot 1lde 91 t'9 Sit• at THI EGG AND ALE.
adj•c•nt ta Flying autl•r. '73.0977
•
l\lurry I-lorn Tr io
'fhe Caribe Roo1n in the Sheraton Dcach Inn, Jluntington Beach , is presenting
the J\.llu rry Horn Trio n i~htly. l\1onday through Saturday, from 8:30 p.m. At the
piano is An dy !lilichlin \llilh fl1 urry on bass and Ron Hawkins at the drums to
send forth so1ne lively n1usic for listening or dancing. Songstress Kate Porter
entertains fro1n 5:30 to 8:30 l\1onday -Friday. 21112 Pacific Coast Highway.
RESTAURANTS
COFFEE SHOPS
COCKTAIL LO UNC>ES
LIQUOR STORES
All Type1 & Clones At
R1•li1tic Prices & T1rm1
FOR FOOD ANO IAR
OPPORTUNITIES CALL
NEWELL ASS OC IA TES
4'81 N. Coou H ... y.
-1
L09w"o l•och 4'94-6594
llA.UTIFUL RISTA.UltA.NT
M 0 U NT A IN/SU. AT MOSPHEI f
MOTHER'S DAY
Complete Dinner -$4.95
SMYed Fror11 1 p.l'l.-Do11ci1Mj ot ' P·"'·
311 01 COAST HIC>HWAY RESERVATIONS
"W• 1e ..... •~• au11nt11" South Laqurta 499-2663 ~-"""-~"""-~--1~========:
In the.finest traditiotr
of the tn« innheptr1 s ort.
3801 f.A~T COAST }CJcHW"AT
ColmxA nr.L M Alt, CAuroRMlA
Pno:-;i:: (714) 675-IJ74
FOR ADVERTISING
IN TllE
\VEEKENDER
PHONE
642-4321
· Real
C1nlonese Food
eat here or
t•k• home.
ST AG
CHINESE WINO
111 21st pl., Newport Beach ORiolo 3·9560
o ,.n YHr Rr••11lf D•lfy 12·11 -frl. n4 S... 'tU S •• -.
PIZZA HOME DELIV ERIES
HAVE CHANGED A LOT
SINCE THE
OLD DAYS Biii Martini Presents
THI PROYOCATIYE SOUNDS
OF THE
ART· H~WK
SOUND COMPANY
F11lutirt9
MODERN JAZZ, ltOC K.
SOUL Ir. POP MUSIC
646-8181 JAil SESSIONS EVERY
SUNDAY NIGHT
DANCING MUSICIANS W!LCOM£
NIGHTLY lllll•rd lo•l&-Ledl• W.tc•-
130 E. 17111 St., Costa Meta
l\fiyako
The Mlyako J apa ne se
restaurant, generally closed
on Sunday, will be open Sun-
day, May 10, for Mothers Day
dinner.
hMtwt n. •1-t
(l'IDkl or c ... m Df M"'llroom Soup
or T011«! Or-.S..laa, ltOAST LEG
OF LAMB AU JUS Mini Jtlly, l roJI·
«! T-N, Grff!I 1' .. 1, Wiii""°'
l'ot1-, Str1we.rry CllMM Pie.
1-lfl. Clllldr .. llnOef" If, U.50.
•oo• $4.7& ,Lu• 1110. TO U l'.M. MINll
[Js~~f:.~!
lltl WIU COAST lllONWAT
IUWM)IT l(ACll 171(1 ...._.,,
M1i.r CNlt Clrft......,...
The serenely beaulirul
Mlyako is a perfect setting
to hooor Mother. In the tradl.-
t.ional Japanese dining room
dinner will be served at a
low table by graceful
waitresses ln bright kimonos. I~~~~~~~~~~ Each Mother will recelve a[;:
gift from Mlya ko m
observance ol her day.
~
Dinners will be served from
3 til 9:30 p.m. and reserva·
tions, are reaimmended.
Miyako is located al 33
Town and Country Plaza,
Main SI . in Orange acrm
from Fashion Square.
Fin • Eu rop•1n Foods
Ope 7 Days
MM111r fflni ltl. INl'I 11 AM .
~wM1r 1 i. f l'.M.
C•n1,let• 011111.n Fr•"' s2so
H un91ri1n l 11f Goul11h,
Chiek1n P1p rl k11h.
Stwff1d C1bb191, Ro11t Duck
Jiii W. LA HAIU ILYD.
LA HA.IRA
S•nl• Alll .-ry. i. INCll, H. t11 L1 Mtbrl (c.,.lrll) 2 blkl W M LI
H1•r1.
r~
~ J'V' anderley
\ JNJAZZCONCER T
' l\l!NDAY ' M.ly 10th ... 171h ~ 3 P.M.
Se1food Resteurant
l•loltllllle4 19Jt
15971 HAllOR ILYD.
'4lUNTAIN YALLIY
839-4nO
r::-""'·'6 c , ... ~~ 11~~~~~1 , Pa1,,teJ
llRl ll THRll HOUU
OF CONTINUOUS MOYIU
Pizza Palace
16121 H•rkr 9' 141119ft
INtn t. Zetfy'1J
839·7290
W• HONOR ALL l'IZ:ZA COUl'ONI
SPA5Hml
SA.NDWICHIS
SALAD
IUT f'IZIA
FAMILY
FUN
F•llr Mnk
Fri. & Set.
~~~II
Visit a bit of Ott! JaPan •••
i@MIYAKO
LUNCHEONS• DINNERS
·COCKTAILS
KI 1-3303
33 Town &: Country, Orange
F or
Weekender
Advertisin g
Phone
6424321
ftMEU
tu:&TAUUNT
Contlnent1I Cuisine
Cockt1ll1
Smiing
Luncheon and Dinner
Monda11 through Saturdav.
Closed ·Sundays
We •r• loc•t•d n•xt t o
th e M•y Ca. in South
Co11t Pl1z•.
JJJJ s ....... c.-. ..... 140.1140
~ P(Jli'f
ii.: DANCING
• 7NIGHTS
· · J OE & HERB TRIO ~ Wff .• MH. 1:31 P.M. ~ H""f a.i. T-.
-' ~ ~ '. 8 121'1 Herffr 119'.
CN11r I.Im..-, 0 • ... l '"W
Ph•nti Nu"'• 5M·tt1t
TUE OCEAN AT YOUR TABLE!
MOTHER'S DAY DINNER
ENT REES
Ro•1I 111(, 1w ju1; Combo
S11food Pl1l1; See/l op•,
S1uc 1 Poil•*'•; Ro11t lon11
h l1"d Duel; Top S!rloirt
St11k; Sou,o, S1!1cl, 01111rt,
...... ,.g •.
$4.95-Childron $2.50
JI 7 Pacific CMlt H.,,.,.
Hutt .. .._ .....
lllHf"t'•tlon1: ~5
''GRANTS BRADFORD HOUSE''
OPEN MOTHER'S DAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M.
Special Feature -All The Chicken You Can E•t
EVERY FRIDAY EVERY TUESDAY $ s129 AND THURSDAY YOUR
CHOICE
BUCK ltHlt l •M T•rk•Y ALL THE FISH G•I"'" fried Ch ick"
YOU CAN EAT .... ,...., •• ..1 ..
NIGHT H•"' Sftl9' .,, """" Prl•, .,,
Cl"MlllY C.lt l ltw, Mii r111i., 111111rM """''°" 11:111 & lvtttr, T1rt1r •r (,.. ..... , u11 1iiw. ·-· Hll lt•ll & lvtter
OPIN FOR BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND DINNER
1:30 •.m. to9:30 p.m., Mond1y thru Saturday-10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sund1y
GRANTS. HUNTINGTON BEACH BROOKHURS'r & ADAMS
st0reo103FM
I
the sounds of the harbor
~d.~~7 youve never heard it so good
•
·~ . ' ~j .,
I
I
•
·~--...... --... ---------------------~~-~-~------~--------·---------·. -
U DAILY PILOT Friday, May 8, 1970
Dimension In the Galleries
MAY I
fill lilt f.-.,tl Sql (R) "A Min Of Property.~
I lltl Noc:M t LI• Onct
ll:JO 9 ([l M1rt l11tfln (C) @oom--. !Cl
Mwlr. (C) '"Mllllt SUIOfl !Of
Spits" (dr1ma) '67 -1'•111 Vin
Eyck.
Discusses
Audiences
Mixed Media Show
At Laguna Gallery
om• ....... 1t1 Q) Movlt: (C) •[11ph1nt Gui" (Id·
vtntUfl) '59-&lindl lee,
'111e fabulous five who make
up The 5th Dimensictn agree
b NEWPORT BARBOR ART MUSEUM -400 Main St., BaJ. they all love to entertain, ut boa. Hours : 1 to 6 p.m. Wed. through Sun.; 6 to 9 p.m. Mon.
where and how are sLrictly Closed Tues. On exhlbit through May 14, palnUnga and
matters of individual taste. gouaches by "W'lderground" artist, Edward Newell
uo111t .... (C) (60) JenyDunphJ, ID..,..,~ (t) !30) €?) Notldero l4 (C)
1:00 O Movie: .. 3:10 to Yurn•" (wtst·
ern) '57~1enn Foid, Vin Hel!!n,
BONm!CI m Actioft Tlntrt: "Red Li&hl ..
Geor11 Ritt, Y11(1nl1 M170.
1'he opinions were voiced dur-LAGUNA ART GALLERY -307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach.
ing the taping sessions ol the Admission $1. Members and ooe guest free, Hours: 1 to 5
group's first television special, p.m. dally; docent tours Sundays at 3 p.m. CUrrenUy on
"The 5th Dimension Special: exhibit, "Panorama '70," a mixed media show of paintings and scuJpture.
S II T U R 0 A Y c.. y,. Top This? (C) (~l An Odyssey in the Cosmic
Sb: O'a.a: Movlr. .. ~ Universe of Peter Max," to BOW!:M MUSElJM -2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. Hours;
(dr1m1) ·~t-Kht: Dou111s. b Ch 1 10 a.m. -4:30 p.m. Tues. -Sat.; 1 to 5 p.m. Sun.; Wed. and
El11nor. P1~er. WH!lat1 Bendll. MAY 9 e seen an anne 2, May Thurs. eve. to 9 p .. m. No charge. On exhibit through May,
Diet Y• llJ'• ClOl 21 · an ecology show by UC[ students and the Museum titled n.. Alltllo"" (C) (30) Florence La Rue Gordon "Man: the Race we must not Lose"; Collage paintings of
stir Tdt (C) (60) and Marilyn McCoo Davi s, the Juanita Hislop.
0 C.nlllitl (30) 7:00 SuQrbe s-estt:r (C) definitely prefer one-nighters CHALLIS GALLERY -1390 So. Coast Highway, Laguna . =?;:: (C) (30J S·551 Giv• U• This DtJ (C) female songbirds of the group,
•, .·lO -..... 1~ ............ Ro111,,! ((~ (60) , , tH ~3 m ::::r 'i1')cllt (C} to a prolonged night club stay, Beach. Hours : II a.m. to 5 p.m. dai:ly. On exhibit through ·• -.,_---, .. , ...,, •® .. ~ (C) •·our voices suffer from the May, oils and watercolor one-man show by Jack Dudley.
Stnt Allen Sllow (C) (90) r, """' Guests •rt Pit Hirrington Jr~ AJlan 7:30 Dlllly's TtMhoute (C) air condiUoning and the smoke MESA VERDE LIBRARY -2968 Mesa Verde Drive East,
Shfim!in. su, Gilliam, F1ank C<r!A· l lim lll'loklJ tt1t811r CC) jn night clubs," Floren_ce said, Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular library hours
brese ind -m, Tokyo Happy Col!U. 1:00 The let10111 (C) "and after a week of it, through May 15, oil paintings by Blanche Downs.
I n.. 51me 51111t (C) (JO). 6 mHere Come• the Marilyn and I often had to Mr rlVl>ritl Mlrtiln (JOl:il! Grul!'J'. I CROCKER ~ CITIZENS BANK -2.'JOO Harbor Blvd., Costa
f..tttrt r.1111 (CJ (30) "V/e'Jf. to O (J1J@ Q') ClttlllOllP Cati (C) give our voices a comple te Mesa. On exhibit durjng regular business hours through
tM MountJins." Burl Ives n1rnlas § Storrbooi Tim• rest for one or two days." May 15, oil paintings by Jean Say.
th. ,,.. 1 AJb rt T1tes of Welts F1rp "She's so rlght," Ma..uyn is '""O!Y 0 e 1· 1:30 -. t7l Bup Bunni/Ro.if Ruri. '11 COFFEE GARDEN GALLERY -2625 E. Coast Highway, Notki1111 34 CCJ 160) ~ 1.2.1 affirmed. "And, of course, c el H 30 3 30 M ••-·· " , fl:MIR Desert Report (C) (30) n« Hour (Cl orona d Mar. ours: 10: a.m. -: p.m. on. uu.,...gu
. , orme L• Ylldtd 130) CiJ @@ m Pint Pa rrthtt (C) most of our one-nighters are Sat. On exhibit through May 9, acrylic paintings by Albert
J:OO cas Enr1tn11: ftews ICJ (30) O C.mp111 Prolll• (t) college dat.es -and we love Anderson Clymer presented by' the Newport Harbor Service
• Wlllt's Mr Un•f (C) (30) 0 Mowit: "Cr1shour• (mystery) college audiences -they like League.
I t.ni UtcJ (30) '55--Wil!iam Bendix, Gene Evans. fresh material and really dig m "''" Kid COSTA MESA LIBRARY -566 Center St., Costa Mesa. lfll the Clod: (() (30) "' what the 5th does." Book Bfft (() (30) "A Beggar ffi Movit: "Plunde1«1 of Painted On exhibit during regular library hours through May 15,
in Jtrusalem," bJ Elie Wiesel, fltts~ (we.stem) '59--Cor'inne Cal-Ron Townson put in his bid barbed wire sculpture of Robert T. Fisher.
. IAlllficlD Wai (C) (lOJ v~t. Skip Homeier. for attention. "I like the sta-MESA ART LEAGUE -513 Center St., Costa Mesa. Hours: ., Slrnpltme!Yll Mir'i• (SS) !:DOO~@ mH. R. Pllfnstul (Cl tionary gigs," he said, "and
0 Movie· "Blue Blood" (western) Sat. and Sun. 1 to 5 p.m. Continuous exhibit of art work in . 11111 51rt (C) (301 · so do the other boys (Billy 7:30 l(I)llt Sm•rt (C) (JO} (R) ·~1-eill Willl1ms. Jan• Nlah. various media by Art League members. No admission charge.
HI .. --l(C)(60)(R) O @(!)f'.E)Hot Wheel1 (C) Davis and Lamojlte . • rn ci'TCn,inr Jrlull (C) mMorie: "U·Zl! ind The Wllcll McLemore), though I'm pro-CIVIC CENTER GALLERY-3300 W. Newport Blvd., New-
(lO) !RI HMirctUo's ldot.• Doc:tol" (adve~ture) '66-Cl1yton bably more stuck on them port Beach. On exhibit through May 14, during regular busi·
0 MilliOfl $ Morie: .. Fivt Miits to Moo1e, Phyllls Coates. j than they are. 1 dislike travel-ness hours. An exhibit of Jo and Esther Oendel and their
Mldn'""l" (1!1)'11:MJ"l '63-Sophll · C.ndon11 r M111icl · d Craftsmen Association. The show includes mosaics. weav-,. ~~-tho _ ,1 P•norir1a Latino 1ng every ay -and 1 like h . 1 h . uiren. ,.., nr ,.,,, nr. •IO ! ~ o.~J11 l ""'"'"" the night club audiences. The in gs, knot tings, stile er1es and b eac prmts.
I Tnrtll or Cel'l11quent11 (C) (30) ' ~-u \ .. , t!A S LIBRARY 2005 Do D · N t '"" Muon (60) · 6 ID lln1n1 SJ>lits (t) girls don'l find them as at-i• RINER' -ver rive, ewpor
rrencll ~ (30) (R) "Veiu a> The Hardy lo71 (C) tentive and appreciative as Beach. During regular library hours, the Jr. Ebell Artist of
s M•" · tuerdls 7 Cllitlrt1s th II kids b 1 lhe d · the Month exhibit featuring linoleum cuts, pen and ink i c:N 41 A., (30) 10:00 ~@ Wld;J Rices (C) ho~~~:;:." u y on t drawings of Leslie Wayne, student at Newport Harbor High
7:55 CmUon 41 Sepidos @CV (D Slir Hnrb (C) School, through May. ·l :OO 9CIJTI• eonw.,. (C) (30) A · Movie: (C) "Cw11111C1'• lr1 T11t· "There are times when J'd · producer at televisiC>n r.ommerci1!s son" (westein) 'S8-M1rk Stevens, like them to quiet down a UC IRVINE LIBRARY -The Irvine library on campus will
errees to iudition Spud ind Her· rorrtsl Tuclter. · little but when we're up there show woodblock prints by UnicbI Hiratsuka, through May 29. ~t:! :=~~:r: (CJ (30) Gloria f!l;:;;::,~~~a1k~m;;; singing, I don't pay too much NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside Drive, New·
Swanson, Huih O'Brian ind Sl!lma Portm1n. attention to what's going on port Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours through
Diamond compete a1alnst Donald IApeidl around me," said Lamonte. f\.tay, oil paintings by Bert Blanchet
O'Connor Shirley JonM ind Me110:30 ~(J)SeoobJ·Do0 (C) "Neither do I," Billy Davis UCI GALLERY -UC Irvine Fine Arts Gallery hours: 1-5
Torme L1r'L_Blrden hostL ' @@m Thi Flintstones (Ct added, "but you fellows ha ve p.m. daily except Mon. Currently on exhibit in the art Gal-o @@ 1ll The lnidy l11ndl Movie: "Thi P1lo111lno" (drama) be h I t h M 24 I d xh b' (~ 130) (R) .. Mikt's Horror-Scope:' '50-Jtiome Courtland. to remem r t at our girls, ery, hroug ay ; annua stu ent art e i 11. m To TtM tM Truttr (C) (30) 0 lf7J (}J G) Geor11 of tht Jun-Marilyn and Florence, are h1UTUAL SAVrNGS GALLERY -2867 East Coast Highway,
ED111t Rtll Rnolutlo• (30) •tf'I· El• (C) sensitive. We can kid back Corona de! Mar. On exhibit during regular business hours,
in1 ind Dull!." Talks with the In-10:45 m Mwle: CCI "Hontyeh!lt" fmusl-when some of those night club through May, watercolor and oil paintings by Violet Clark.
dl6n spiriti111 leader, l<rishn1murti. . ul comedy) 'SI-Judy Cinova, Ed· patr<lns have a little too much
l l.weKftl (C) (30) d)'. F21_ Jr. . HUNTINGTON BEACll LIBRARY -525 Main St., Hunt-~ llldla llbrt (55) 11:006Cl9)CIJ W ~n (C) Fl· sauce and keep yelling 'Sing ington Beach. On exhibit through May, oil paintings by Eliza-
l :3o ~(!)Koa•n'• Heroes (Cl nal games o! the Amencan B1sket· Aquarius' every five minutes, beth Nador, during regular library hours. (30) (Rl M1jo1 Hochstetter sus-ball Ass<>eition Playoffs. or make rude remarks. It's pec:ts th•t ther• Is in espionali! 0 !H 00 a:l Ml!O' Lupe list-I f lh · I ,, OCC ART GALLERY -2701 Fairview Road. Costa Mesa.
operitioll ioinr on in Stalir IJ. bill (C) San Fr1ncisco •t New York, noT~o e.asyls 1 orghede ~~F51· Hours: 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Mon. -Thurs.; lo 5 p.m. Fri.
CiJ @@m1t11111 o1 tilt 51111• l @(J)IID_liet It Toatttltr (C) e gir au · orence and I -5 p.m. Sun. In the Library Gallery prize winning art
(C) (90) (R) •1he EmiS-Siry." · • fled.I M111una and I do quite well holding by Edward Baker, May 11 _ ll. O Dr. 11rter'1 Amnllrr• Iii {lO) 11:3'1 @ c»im i\111el'ltttl Bandsttnd our own with any audience,"
"Rid• the Wild Riwr." A 11:roup of (C) 01~ Cl1rk Is llOSL Marilyn said. •Any h 0 w • GOLDEN WESr GALLERY -In the Library 0£ Golden \'Mn build sm1n one-and-two-men, i ~ (C) "ltrffllo lllt" (wat-h · d 1 · West College, 15744 Golden West Ave., Huntington Beach. On
wood·and·fiber1l1si; bolts and b'av-em) 44-.loel McCre1, Lindi Dar· re earsmg an aping our own exhibit through May are waterCQJors by Darrell Ebert and
el doWn the tnind CanJOn OR the netl. television special has been a Colorado Riwr m Movie: "'AM111n Qllat" (Id· joy for each o{ us. figurative drawings by Kay Mortenson, faculty members
O @(I)m° Thi Cholt ind Mn. venlure) '49-Tom l"eal. r~ICK'w~~~~~~~:,~io~l~t~h~e~c~o~Ue~g~e~,~~~~~~11==;~~~~~~0~1 MMlf (C) (JO) (R) "Medium We!! -
Done." Shirley Bootll rue.stJ •s • For Advertising In
medium who deims she tan rid '"" "'"'' ""' "~''"" '*"' ,.,. u """' ....... " <.,.,,.,, The Weekender I "'"' '"" '""' 1" 190> .,,,__.. .. ,, •. ,,.,. Phone 642-4321 n. BJ1 Vilify (C) (60) I Tutro F1mlli1r -
.. M1_klng T11iqs ''OW:, (C) {30) , Dr•m• d• 11 Sen!•~•
QuutJOllf end Anmill. 12!30 T.H.E. eat (C) •·uu • Dl1n1 m la 1m1tr di r.11vn11 130l v "' ••. , '" · 8 l:OO O S(!) CIS Fridly Morie: "fhe ,:~ r Ylll an Ylctor uona 1,;;;;;;;;:;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ll
Croolled Rotd'° (su1penst) '64 -m Mme: (C) "fronl tilt Elrtfl to
Robert Rpn. ~'lrl Gnin1e1, rtl · lh• Moon" hd·fi) '68 _ Joseph
d11 Gnir. M1rius Gorin1. Cotten
0 Th• ..flbonl.! (C) (60) "1l•m· B Yli..11 Clrt (Cl
met I"' An.ti. 1:00 ~@ SUptrmtn (t)
O l·hour Special @\l)f18Houston Ch1mplons
* fascinating stories lnt11n1~n11 Goff (CJ Comment•· . 1011 Chns Schenkel. Bud Palmer of 8 gifted craftsmen ind Keith JKkson will describe the
WITH THESE HANDS INt coverage of fi\le holu in the
0 CD I i~fb111tl Willi Tiiis• third and lintl round of tht toum•·
Handt (C) (60) "Thi Rebirth of ment. Among the participants will
SOUTH SEAS
TROPICAL FISH
Largest Selection of
Tropical Fish &
Supplies in the area.
N•w J Locatto111 211 W. WILSON, COSTA MESA
Junior
Matinee
Saturday at 2 p.m.
Jerry Lewi•
in
Motlier's Day Present
Juliet Mills, \Yho cares for other people's children
in hf'r title role on Channel 7's "Nanny and the Pro-
fessor" each week, gets a Mother's Day gift from
her own son, Sean, 5. The big day is Sunday in case
you didn't know.
Best of David Frost
··-
Live
Theater
"Girl In Freudian Slip"
A comedy about psychiatry
on stage at the San Clemente
Community Theater, 202 Av&-
nida Cabrillo, San Clemente,
Thurs. -Sat. at 8:30 p.m.
through May 23. Reservations
492-0465.
"Streetcar Named De.sin"
Classie Ameri can drama on
stage at WestminSter Com-
munity Theater at Finley
School. Trask at Westmi~ter
Ave., Westminster. Fri. • Sat.
at 8:30 p.m. through May 9
and Sat. May 16. Reservations
-897-1164.
"One Flew Over
the Cuckoo'• Nest'"
A comedy on stage at South
Coast Repertory, 1827 Newport
Blvd., Costa Mesa, Fri.-
Sat. at 8:30 p.m. May 1-3.
8·10, 22-23. Reservations -
646-1363.
"Waltz of Lbe Toreadors"
A comedy of marital indl!·
cretion on stage at Huntington
Beach Playhouse. 2111} Main
St., Huntington Beach. Per-
formances at 8:30 p.m. Fri. -
Sat. through May 9, Reser·
vations -536-8861.
••we Bombed in New Haven"
Anti-war drama on stage at
South Coast Repertory, 1827
Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa,
at 8:30 p.m. May 7, 14-17 and
21. Reservations -646-1363.
Shows Aired Next Week "The Apple Tree"
A musical trilogy on stage
at the new Tustin Community
Playhouse, in the Tustin High A Frost Festival is on Its
way featuring David Frost's
one-man in-depth interview
entertainment sessions with
Sammy Davis Jr., Johnny
Carson, Peter Ustinov, Jackie
Gleason and Richard and
Elizabeth Burton -all during
the \Veek or May 11-15 on
Channel 11 at 8:30 p.m.
These editions of the 90·
minute nationally syndicated
talk-variety programs are
runong the season's most
popular fare of any series.
And. all were high audience
raters. •
Solo guesting on the May
11 show, entertainer par ex-
«llence Davis. who has been
:i School auditorium, Thurs. •
Sat. May 14 -30. at 8:30 p.m.
Reservations -544-8890
"Bus Stop"
William Inge's romantic
comedy on stage at the San·
ta Ana Community Theater,
500 \V. 6th St., Santa Ana. at
8:30 p.m. Fri.· Sat .. May 15 -
30. Reservations ..._ 541-2188.
"The Trial of Maxine Lowe''
A courtroom drama on stag~
at the Fullerton Footlighters
in Muckenthaler Center. 119
Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton,
Fri. -Sat. at 8:30 p.m., May
15 -30. Reservations -
528-8927.
acclaimed on five cont.inents, Diana Cast
recounts high points of his DAVID FROST
biz assi~ he got from Jerry Festival on Channel 11 HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Lewis and Frank Sinatra. The boy from Omaha, Neb., Diana Muldaur, who played
who made good as the star opposite Charlton Heston in
of network television's popular Elizabeth Taylor a~d her dla· "Number One," will cHtar
late-night talk strip, Carson monds make a brief appear-with George Peppard l n
comes in for an in-depth in-1-==""=c~e=o=n=lhe=s=h=o~w-. ======"=H=a=rk=·="========; terview May 12. Ir
Peler Ustinov will be seen
on May 13 and Jackie Gleason
on May 14.
Richard Burton holds the
spotlight May t5 -until easy-care active weer
1o,
men and boy5
fin ally, iuede
cloth flare1
by
cactus casu.iils
th1 Amefican Crlftsman." David be Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus,
Wern• narrates th• sto11 of ei1hl Orville Moody, frank Beard, Le•
lndMdu1l~-young and old, from Trevino and Billy Casper.
V•1Yin1 b1tl;1rounds •nd wlde!J· 0 Movil: (C) "The Lrtt Hind II
loft Fairview A.Cl., 54-1"1
1n-G, A.lvenlde Dr. -NeWPOrt Bt.tdl lbel\!nd 11111 Poat Otfltll 6464$311
"HOOK, LINE
& SINKER"
ALSO
SELECTED SHORTS
ALL SEATS 75<
Thens h I lololhn'• n.,. Ci£1 1(1 plea~e ~loth"1 at
Vir1inia'1 Gift Shop. or 11 onG of the more than 50
other Jtope at Knot1'1 Berry Firm.
aepar1ttd regioM ol ttlls count11-5od" (drama) 'S5-H11mphrey Bo· 1~~~~~~~~~~~ who represent the mowmerrt ID -eut. Gene Tierney. 1-
ward personal 1rtlstic upreM111n. I Pcrblk Smic:I Fl1111 (CJ
· Hoy (JO) 1:15 lllttmltlon1I Trldtra (C)
, Tele-Cinern• 40 {2 hr) l:lD ~mhn"f Quest (CJ 1:30 · ftns (C) (30) Bll111 Wtrd, , Dollllli FW11 (C) "Ghiclrah,
P.ews (C) (30) Bill Johns. tfle n.r.Htedld Monster'' {hor· I
. D1'1ld Swklnd Sbew (C) (2 br) • Rabi
, "«hes TIPltifa (301 fOl'J '6S-YMllkl N1bukl, '1ulSI"
10:00 · @00 tJ:l Brtebn'• "'World (t) (ftltem) '49 -Suun H1yw11d,
(60) (R) "All the Be1irtitul Voun1 P.~rt PrtitGll.
Clrls." LIUtl Dune sufleri tle1rt· 0 OM $\Ill llfllfl4 sche when 1n old love (Arthur H~l) ffi Mowlt: "Hell's flft Moura" (dr1-
shoWI up but stltl c1st1 an ,,.. to· ma) '58-Stephen McN1lly.
ward youncu cltts. 2:00" Archie Comtctf Hoar (C)
0 m ftews (C) (60) I i~c(ilL i UCLA Sprln& Sporb 0 C[) lovt, Amtriun StJ!e (t) ( ) Track: P1cific S Southern DI·
(60) "Low 11\d the Datin1 Corn-vision Rel1)'l. UCLA defends ii$
puter,• with Herb Edelman 1ndl liti1 1giinst 11l1y tetms from USC,
Broclt11d Cniwlord; "Lov• ind lhej C•I and Stanford.
8u57 Hu,btnd," with Did Plttn· 0 Morit: •KJlltr SM!\'" (d11m1)
ton ind Emm11!111 Ken11: '1.M' 'SO-Roddy McDowell.
•Ml the W11thdo1.H -..tll Pt!1"7 1St• 11'1• USA (C) Fuller 1nd Mich1el Ci!la11. · Anned Forcis Hichllthb (C}
0 l'lHbln's Peoplt CC) (60) 2:.JO • W1p Trall .CC)
(DI SflC!AL I Tlit ~ kw USC SPfln& FooW (C) Tom
(C) (60) Ho't Bill 8urri:.o ~"..-. Kelly 111111 be miknldt wtlen the
1111 editor ol • •·s11'1llts• ~ SC 1ridlmMrs pl11 •n •lt·oul Rtd
villt& 1 typical "sindts odt(" ~ ind White squid 11me to di·
l'lent house, and ei1m1"" fht 2'.i!:\ mix Ille iprtn1 tralnln1 M»iofl.
twlties. ! • Y11ledldts M11siule&
Centt11J blchelor'~ knt11t tn11 et I lnllnltl · Horkolll (tJ
l0'.30 Allrellt (30) Movll: .. Air Str~e" (dr1mt) '55 I
Rubi (30) S:Gll Th• Monktn (C)
·ll:OO tB C1J Nm (t) -Richard Dennin&.
@@mNm (C) Toret ' ht sttp llJ'Ollll . lie Pktllrf (C)
@ m m """ 1C> • ci. •1 '*"
. •
'
' '
· John °Wl}'lll WHa: "!if 1111 sc.tinl n-tre (Cl
Mc:Cllll" (dr•mt) '52-.lolm \¥1)'ne, 3:30 PtMlopl ,... (C)
Mincy Olson. Jim kness. Wlll,p tt ......,. (CJ
• filoylt: "Thi Bil Sllft!" (corn· · St.tilts TMltrf (C)
tdy) '42--Henl)' Fcnda, Luci111 Ball, 3:45 MoN: (C) "tilt ti SUrn•tfl"
S.rn ltven1. ectwnlure) 13 -Jtff Clllndltr, 18 lk Slid, Sbl Slid CC) ArlthonJ Quinn, Sunn Bill~-
e JOB PRINTING
e PUBLICATIONS
e NEWSPAPERS
Qu•lity Printing and Oepend1ble S11Yict
fOi' mor• than • quarf•r of • c.ent11ry.
PILOT PR INTING .
Uf1 WUT llAUOA ILYD,. NIWPOft HACH -MJ-4111
Iv. Show Stmfl 7 P·""
C•Mh111•n Show
Su11doy Fto1111 2 p.m.
HELD OVER
WINNER OF 5 ACADEMY AWARDS
ORANGE COUNTY'S BIGGEST SHOW
MUI.NEWMAN
ROB!R'l'.RmfOllD
MntARIN! ROSS"
BUTCH CASSIOV AND
THE SUNDANCE KID
A 6!0!1G! RC1t •Lt· .
PltJt ICONllH PROOOCl10ll -SIROTllER MARTIN . JEFF COREY HENRY JONES °""'"' l'lod-. PltJl --11 m R>RElllll G.P. ~"'1od Ir 6!0RtlE RC1t Hiil, Writtlo Ir W>UJlll 60UllWC .
... _""""""" ~ WRT """"°' A ICIWMAll-RJ((Jlll( PRElOOlllOM
NllA~ COi.OR n DCU.rn ! JW 11111 ~ ri,.., ,,.. . ., 'w.,., 1! l 111>ooa I
-AUO-
MAGGIE SMITH
ACADEMY WINNER BEST ACTRESS
ban~am11ic1 rd e tr11ll1t ch1r9•
7 f11hion i1l1nd, n1wport b11cl1 644·5070
Ill ;1 e 1 @ ' t1 • 1 ; i ''' :o 1 ~ 1 i : 14; s i ; 1 H l"":;:::::""""""=================c='
Shows Start at Dusk• Children under 12 free! -
---~-1Jl·lt11
-~.)
.. -.....
"'"''
&•cl1111¥1 Or11111 Cou"IV
OrlYt-ln SIMIWllll
"•ul N1wm1"-J10111rt Jledfonl "flUfCH CllSSIOY & T"E SUNDANCE 1(10" tGPl Color "THE PRIME 01' MISS Jll!llN
flRODIE" (GPl Color
il!J(IU11V• Or•M• Counl'(
Orl'ti'•I~ Sl!oWlftg
"". M•~ C•lltlll M•r .. H !GP) Ctltr ...
"TM ltel'ti'tn" !OP) Color
ol-Ll COLOlt SHOW
"THE HAPPT ENOINO" !OP) • "THI 5EClllT 01" $,\NfA VITTORIA" (GPJ
11!1 CtlOr SllOW
"OJlllNO PRIX., !01
"WINNING" !OP!
• All cei.r SMW
"TH•Y SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY" (OPJ • "fAl(ll! THI MOHIY AHO JIUN" 101"1
t11e-rnesa T.-,~atre of Frr1e ~~-.::\·,, A;:p.::.1n+r 1 nt""
NEWPORT AND HARBOR I,,_ COSTA MESA
(Phone 548· 1552 For Information)
The
strangest
trio
ever to
track
a killer.
LAST WEEK
111&41
ACTOlt
(GP)
RAFER JOHNSON, OLYMPIC TRACK STAR
Fe atured In ''Grtn1d1'' 1t Llncoln Drlv•ln ThNter
'Last Grenade' Opens
In Cou ,nty Theater
"The Lasl Grenade," a ffil).
tion picture adventure 11tarrlng
Alex Cord, Stanley Baker,
Honor Blackman, Richard At-
Lenborough ;,ind R a f e r
John son. is now playing at
the Lincoln Drive-In Theater
in Buena Pork. for an ex-
tended first-run engagement.
It is a story of two
mercenary soldiers who £et
out to annihilate eadl olher.
Their struggle for personal
vengean<:e is fought against.
the bac kground of guerrilla
warfare in China and the
Congo.
"The LasL (;rcnadC'" Y:a~
filmed in Panavision on loco-
lion in Hong Kong. Spain and
London.
Alex Cord and Stanley
Baker arc th" strong-willed
adver9aries who make their
living by fighting bat.ties that
MOVIE RATIN08
FOR PAREIVTS AND
'VDUNO PEOPLE
no self-reapectlng Army would
undertake. Richard At·
tenborough , direct from his
widely acclaimed "Oh! What
A Lovely War ," adds his
portrayal of General Whiteley
to his disUnguished career.
Honor Blackman and Olympic
champion Ra.fer Johnson, in
one of ·his most in1portanl
screen roles, round out the
intcrnatiolllll cast.
Based -on the oovel, ';The
Ordeal of Major Grigsby" by
John Sherlock, the screenplay
was written by Kenneth Ware
for Josef Shaftel Productions.
A Cinerama Re I ea s i n g
Corporation and Dimitri De
G r u n w a I d Presentation.
directed by Gordon Flemyng.
''The Last Grenade" i s
distributed by C i n e r a m a
Releaaing Cori:ioration.
Friday, May t , 1970 DAILV PILOT I Q
Yoair Guide to Movies
'Happy Ending'· Gets a GP Rating
Edektt"1 Nott: T hi ,1
mewl• ouldl " prepared bv Ult t«mi committee of
Harbor Council PT A. Mr1.
Joh'IJ Clark ta J)f'lridtnt
and Mt1, WUUom Watt
h com.rnittee: chairman. It
is intended as a refernu:•
in dltfrm~nfng 1uitobLt
jilma for ctrtafn a a •
Of'O"PI and toU4 appear
weklfl. Your views at•
1oliciled. Ma't them to Mo-
vie Gu&tt~ ~rt of the
DAILY PJLO'l'.
* ADULTS
Tile Adventurer• (R): Film
veralon ot Harold Robins'
belt.seller about a n in-
ternational playboy w h o
t>.comes embroiled In the
political life and revolutiQ.11
ot a South American republic.
Bekim Fthmn and Candice
)$erg en,
Barbarella: Girl astronaut
received orders from Preel-
dent of earth in the year 40,000
A.O ... to find a nUsaJng earth
scientist-inventor ol a weapon
that can de11troy the world.
Jane FaOOa.
Bob ind Carol and Ted and
Alice ( R l : Contemporary
aocl1l comedy aaUrlzJne mar-
riage and friendship . Robert
Culp, Natalie Wood, Elliott
Gould and Dyan Cannon.
Jlappy Endln( tGP ): Jean
Simmons portrays a bored
middle-class housewife who
turns to drink. John Forsythe
and Shirley Jones.
Hotteymoon Kiiien ( R l :
Shirley Stoler and Tony Lo
Bianco in a curious and
unusual drama based on fact .
The L11t Grenade (GPl : A
drama of war and Its effects
on people. Alex Cord and
Honor Blackman.
The Lswyu IRJ : Young at·
torney attempting to build a
career defends a man accused
nn murderlni his wife. Barry
Newman and Robert C.Olbert.
Midni1ht Cowboy ( X ) :
Dustin Hoffman and Jon
Voight star In a sludy of
' loneliness and sarvtVaJ in New
York.
jecl<d to truelty 11 ho !ti" (OP): Woody Allen I 1 eyed marshal ond a y011ns *
t.o prove himself. Richard author, director and atar of ranger. John Wayne, Glen The letter immediately
Harr l 1, Dame Judith aaUre of the life ltory ot a Campbell, Kim Darµy. a1cer che title indicates the: Tile Rel>tar1 (GP): St.eve
McQueen rtara In the filmed
vel'llon ol Faulkner'• novel.
The l\lred man'1 odyuey lead&
him from a emall town In
M;,.i,.1pp1 to the sinful bla
city ol Memphis duri'ng the
early llOO 's.
Ander10n. ·frustrated man who trte1 vain· !081: A Space Ody11ey tC): rattng git11·~ the picture by
Tbe Ntaht They Raided I)' to climb the ladder to Fascinating film about the the Afotion Pic&ure Code.
Mln1ky'1 (GP): In 1925, a criminal llUCCC!SI. history oi earth's formation The ~fot1on Picture Code
nalve Am~ girl run1 away Tbay Sltoot Honea, Don't and the development of man And Rating Program mc11
to New York and, dreaming: Tbey? (GJ;"): Drama of to travel in space. Keir Dullea, be found on the motiOft
of a g\mouroui danctng heartbreak · du r Ing the Gary Lockwood. picture page.·
The Tboma1 Crown Affair :
F1ye Dunaway and Steve
McQueen star in this tum
about a crack insurance sleuth
who beoomea intimate com·
panion of a thrlll"3eekln&
mnhonaire whom ahe IUlpe(t& ot rn.utermlndlng .. back rob-
bery.
career_. endJ up at Mlnaky'• Depreaaion. Jane Fond a,'f""';;;;;;;;:,;:~:;;;;:;.;:;:;~j
advertanUy lnventa the 1trlp Young. __ Burleaque where she Jn· Michael Sarruln, and 01111 .... -.. Fa• SOUTH ~
teaN· In her first appearance. tick .•• tick .•. lick ••• (Gh 1111111 COAST
Britt Ekland and J a s o n A Negro is elected shertfr rllAllOll MMDI at "'"'lower ·• 549~2111
Robards. In a small Soutbem town . Jtm
Odd Co u p 1· e : Uproariou s Brown, Grorge Kennedy aad
comedy 1n Which two ill-Fredric March.
matched ex-marrieds dceidc A Walk In the Sprtn1 Rlln
to room together. Walter ?Yla· (GJ ; Romantic drama stlr-
thau and Jack Lemmon. ring Anthony Quinn and ln1rld
ft1ATURE TEENS The Prtme ol Ml11 Jean .Bergman.
AND ADULTS Brodie (GP): English·made Z (GP): Algerian-ma de
Batch caaaldy and tbe Sun· film with Maggie Smith tn poJltlcal su.pente drama .et
dance Kid (GP): A deft com· the starring role u an cc-in Greece. Yves Montand,
edy aboul two charming legen· centric bUt captivating teacher Jrene Papu, Jean-1.A>\ILI Trln-
dary bandits wtio take the at an Edinburgh girls' tchool tlanant.
ways of the old West to in the mkf·30'a. TEENS AND ADULTS
Bolivia. Paul Newman, Robert Secret of Santa Vlttorta .Gone With the WI n d :
Redfcrd, Katharine Russ. (GPJ : Anthony Quinn plays Margaret Mitchell's brllUant
the newly appointed mayor novel of the olO South during
Tbe IHrty Dolen: Shortly of a little ltallan village wh.lch the Civil War era. Clark Gable
before D-Day 8 d 0 z e n tries to p~venl Natl con· and. Vivien Lelah.
American military prlsoner&, flscatlon of Its treasured wine. Tru• Grit (0): Western set condemned to death or life imprtsoninent, are 0 ff ere d Anna Magnani. in the 1880'1 about a fourteen Tbe Sterile Cuckoo {GP): year old girl who is determln-clemency if they accomplish Liza Mlnne!U 1ives a sensitive ed to avenue her fat.her'• a brutal suicidal mlulon for e performance in thll story of murder and is helped by one· the Army. Lee Marvin, Ernest two lonely college kids "·ho ----------II
Borgnlne. find love for the first time. ~':Mt"'" toUT " "·
DownhUI Racer (GP); Study Wendell Burton also stars.
of a young American's strug· Take_tbe Money an~ _ _!lu_n •·--.II gle to become a cha mpion -•
skier. Robert Redfard. T.alt9 n 610t ed l tll I·
JeMy (GP)' Marlo Thomas BALBOA DIRECTFROMITSLONIHIUN
portraya Jenny. a presnant 673-4048 ROADSHOW ENGAGEME""l girl from New England, who "'"
goes to New York. She mar. ~~::
ries (for convenience) a young 7" I. lafhll
man played by Alan Alda, ••~ ,.nlMVI• who wishes to avoid the draft. Ii.;::;;:::..;.,. ..... .;.;,.,.;:;:
A Man Ca lled Horse (GP):
English aristocrat is captured
by Sioux early in the Nine·
teenth Ctntury and it &ub-
SAN JUAN CAl'ISIRANO
MISSIOM
OHl \ft IN MU\'11 '>
HOW TMIU TUllOAY
... ,_.,..,, Aw•nll Wl11npr
"THIY IHOOT HOltllS
DON'T THt r •
Plut WINY Alltfl In
''TAltE THI MONIY • lUN"
;..::_~ ~! \:'.) •:\-.:, 0. 1 ·
llOllCllJI". \I \ "·l:,WiJ ::l"'il \~'{-Jt * HIY KIDS!*
111 , .. Stt.w, Sotvr4-y, I :JO
NOW PLAYING
SPECIAL CHILDREN'S MATINEE
Sat., 11 a .m.-8ox Office Opens 10:30
2. OUTSTANDING FEATURES
Dick Van Dyke
"FITZWILL Y"
and ,
Jack Chaplain
"GIT"
FASHION ISLAND * NEWPORT CENTER • • ••• • •• • • • • • •• • •• •••• • •••••• w COAST HWY. AT MACARTHUR BLVD.
NEWPORT BEACH * 844·0760
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY RUN
Bob&·
&Ted&
rol
7ht 0•1«/lr• o1 Oh• 1•1•"91 •• N '"'-'"'
.. ftflll •Ooo<il lh• W•/0111111, .,
....... <00"-'"' ,, .... ~9 b, ,,.... , ........... Spring Craft F es ti val =~"':':..~ 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOllllll'IATIONS
............................
"' II lllJ -® "w' •u.•·" ,.,.., ... O o••"' ................ """'"'""" ..... """'·
-
Tile Arfs. and Crafts Guild
In the Caliromia Institute for
1i1cn. Chino, is holding ilS an-
nual Spring P'eatival on Satur-
day, June 6, from JO a.m.
to 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, June
7. JO a.m. to 5:30 p.m. The
men of the Institute will
present works In many media
wilh the theme of "The Sea."
The Ft.stival is open to the
public and one is invited to
look. admire or buy as the
mood strikes. The quality of
the items offer'd will com-
Moll1 lrow11"
TONIGHT AT 8
-Z Pl ltST IUN PICTUllS
M•rl• '"'-"'• 111 pare to any like merchand ise "JENNIE" • j
anywhere. •"'
Members of the Chino Arl "TH~ LAW:YER " (RI
Association will lend their help •Ith h rry Newmo11
to this event and alao will Ce11tl1tuo• l11•ll.,, 1 :lO P·'"·
hav' many works on dlaplay. ll~~~ Through these eventa the I
men of the Institution are
endeavoring to acq~lnt tho&e
on the ouliide with what many
ot the men are trying to do
to build a constructive future
e.s responsible citizens. Few
of them were even aware of
their artistic talents, which
tn many were hidden deep
within. 'The encouragement
this kind of activity provides
has steadily grown and the
results have been most graU·
.ti
lying.
The men will realize aome
financial gain from the sale
of the Ir efforts and much
of the monlea wUI be used
to further their work and also ·
to provide some financing for
~eir h1itlal needs upon
release.
The Festival v.·iJJ be h'ld
at the Califo rrua Institute for
Men, 14901 S. Central Ave .,
Chino. The short drive is well
worlh the joy or the exhiblt
awaiting the traveler.
~it1~t
~ 67l 0 6Z6D
2'05 la1t c ... 1 Hwy.
Corona del Mir
May 11
I tO • M tB
lhlt1 Kllinn ''''"'"I Co11Pt:li•Re•• B1tT111lt in. JEAN·~OUIS IAllAULT1 .t
Rl\BELAI!
.. ,Rlf.N~JC
PUN!
A 1win,U.1 ,,,,,.,,,ti/ Si•,
l olfr1 II Wit!"
, ........... .
•.ii n ""' t
Moll t:hff Tllan.1 I: .. .it/4.IOJl.50/1.&0
'"· 11111! .. L, l1J0 -$4.50/l.SO/l.'°/f,&O
Jilflh,1 Thwr1. ~d .. t.o 2130-' $2.71/3.71/4.75 1.75 111ft1'1111tklll ca1Lt2Wfll •
TloUts 11ow1 MUSIC NT ·~· ""'"· O AHMANSON All ,\fellelts TIHAIKI:
Jean Simmon•
2 ACAOEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS
Best Actre1s
Best Them• Son9
ALSO PLAYING
The M!1isch Corporll:IOl'I ~
SteveMcQueen
FtiyeDunBWay ..
ANonnenJewlson Fllm
· WINN~ROF
n. MM•mJ A.word
WIHlllf Show!
e NOW AT p0PULAR PRICES
·-·•·11111.--111-•TllOllUMNml Mfaw't' ..,,,.. ___ _ _, ___ .,_ ...... _., ____ .._.,._.,..,_ ·---·-,_ .......... .
ACADEMY AWARD WINNEll
.E~lJ!Ess
' HARBOR ot ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546•3102
OH HARIOI I LVD. • ON I Mllf SOUTH OP SAN 01100 rwY.
NOTHINCi HAS BEEN LEFT OUT OF
THI .ADVINTURIRlf 111---.... -.. -· ....... --·---.......... ...... _
A ""'-oVICM PflODUCT,IOtl l'lfl • ... !!!] ,,.. c--.,..... I.XI
* * BEACH 8LVD. AT ELLIS * *
HUNTING.TON Bl!:ACH * 847·9808' . .
Direct· from Its Roadshow Run
2nd Week ...... Now at Popular Prices
An epic drama of
adventure and ex lorationl
•
•
•
f
I
L
• . .. -. •. : .
.. . ... J • .
frldq, M., I, 1~70
... . '
~utomatic +ransmission pow. t • I I •rs eer1n9, power brtiles tiir coftdit~ning, radio, ~ i ~ y I
bOcly "do mouldings w"1 ·;i · , n1e 1111!1. waa tires, •fc ....
sti•I .#ce~1toc1os12s
•
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I • ~ I
SPECTACU~R >YALUES ON AT~S CHRYSLER/Pl YMOUTH'S ENTIRE
INVENTORY OF NEW 1970 CHRYSLERS,
Pl YMOUTHS, IMPEllALS AND TOP 9UALITY
USED CARS Now. DURING ANNUAL SPllNG
CLEAN UP DAYS • • • YOUR TIME TO
SAVE THE VERY MOST!
. '64 FORD 'COUNTRY SEDAN
Station wagon. Y8, autornatJc, radio, heat.~
er, power"' steerfttg _& brGke;s, air condl· -~ tlon1ng, e1~elleftt sftctp •• (PRC490J
'66 DODGE CORONET
Sedan. Y8,. automatic,: rodio, .. heater, air , condJtionllHJ. fSCE389)
'66 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE
2 door· hardtop. ·YI, · •utomOtic radio,
heater, poWer st~ing, wsw, bucket Sftlts, console. CSl'S19~J ·
'66 FORD MUSTAN(.7
,VS, 4 ~speed', radfO, .h_.ater, power steer ..
,l Ing, chrome ·~he9fs, etc. .( SAA4~6 J •
'66 FORD GALAXIE 500
2 door hardtO, •. Ya, automatic, radio, heat•
er, power steering & brakft, air condition· Ing. IRSZ611 l
'67 CHEVROLET BEL AIR
Seclon. ·vs, automatic, rodlo ,heater! power
steering, air cOndltloning. fXSTOS.J
'695
•995
'1095
'1395
'6'6 T-BIRD 'LANDAU '
Automatic, radio, heaier, power steerJng·
· ·brakes-windows. air con~Htioftfitg. -.IRUN. '6171 •.
"67'DODGE MONACO
•1 _595
Sedan. Automatic, radio, heater, ,pow.,
·Steering & brakes, air, condftlonh19, Yinyf roof. IXGT824J 5
ATLAS
SERVICE
DEPARTMENT
"Where Pride Makes the DiffereQce"
Dependable and economical repair and maintenance work.
For your conweni.rice we honor:
Carte Blanche, Diners Club, American Express ' . Master Charge, lonkAmerfcard, GosOllne-Credit Cards
•
--·-·--··--·--------------·---------·---·----•
DICK WILSON $AYS: . THERE'
SUPER $P~CIALS .. ·.
. ' . • $388P.• .. '63 FALCON: SPRINT
V-8, 4· speed. uei 806. , .
$688
'65 ~:XU3~~0', !.~L.~~~dio, air. $10·88
· _·, 66 ~~~~X~~~~~.dio, ai, .. ~1088
If 66 ~~!,:.~;~,!~~!~.R~310. $1'288 .. -. .
'69!·FAIRLA~~ 500 .. ·:~20· 88· . 1\1"8,· auto., power•stee nng, . radib, 11ro •. • xv~ 100. • · ·: . . ' . . -
f ,. JJ ' .• ,. . I -2188 ausr ING Hardtop '$ · 6 9 loaded including faclory aircond. YOA 213.
'69 !~a~l~~~rEst~~ facr. air, vinyl ~2388
interior. YRU 562. --· ' -• .
* * * FREE • • •·
7 DAY TRIAL . EJCHANGE
Buy ono of •lir' HY01tl1oCI usu con -
·Drlvo It for 7 doy1 ond H you oro not
co111Pletoly IOflsfin, tNdo It for ono
of .... 200 ulotl con ovotloilo.
·TELEPHONE APPRAISAL
RENT: WHY WALK? DRIVE A MAVERICK .
LEASE, LTD 2·DOOR HARDTOP
$& ... ...,
. ·''Mlle '
Power steering, disc brakn, 390 2V tngint, 1lr. con-. $11505° ~•r
dltionlng, wtiftewlll tires, 24 month optlHnd l11u. C1ll -i-tu• .:'.~
Rtntll Dept. Sf2~11Of'540-7780. : .
Immediate
Delivery
'111 F·;rlO STYl.ESIOE l".IJ. I ll J«I C.t.0. en1., • l'IJ llrH, 1m1> • .. o;J 1111911.
Setl1I No, F2'ARlt100'3
'11 l'Ul.L CAI OVER "OTTOWA".
• "'--• wftll ""'"" M1t'CI bed + 1l1n<Hrd bed. Tlll'M bur"'r ,,,... w1111 1'ood. c..,1.,. cl!Mttt
& I lattoe w1r11r-.
•
s 17 8 8 t' FULL ~ : LqW.DOWN
.. PRICE -ti>w :MTS.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . · ~. 1~92iK70442
SPEC.AL PURCHqE
SPECIAL SaYINdS.
NEW 1'970 MUST•NGS
CHOICE ~·
HDTP. 5 YEAR
OR . 50,000 Ml.
WARRANT'I'
FASTBACK · · AVAILABLE
$2388:
LOW PMTS. , ' 1. •
IMMEDIATE DELIVER~~ · . ·' . ~~01rl3~1u
NEW 1970 ~ANC:Hl!llO $24a FU~ . LOW DOWN .
. " •P.~CE, , & · .• · · ~ .. ~ .... , ·i, ,J, ~~ .. ~ .. ~·:~ ~ LO~,,~s.· .. ·· I . .. . ....,,W!i ' ' ,. ,, • '
· NEW ' 1.970 GALA·X•f "500''
2·DOOR SPOnl ROOF~OR .4·DOOR'llDAN
' ; YOUR C"OICE
1 ' • • • , . $2588."' ,. ; FULL ,. : !LOW DOWN , . · .. ·: ·-· · LQW PMTS. ' "PRICE '_.,.,·'· . . ' . . ' .. ORDIR 'NOW B=~D 1970 THUROERBIRD1
•
·,~ .~1
' : . . . .
t ' .' ' •
2 DOOR 'HARDTOP $
429 V-8, cruise-o-matic trant.,
radial whitewalls, pwr. st'eer-
ing, power brakes, 111 vinyl
interior. Flow thru ventila-
tion, ryted. Ivy green metallic.
Seti al No. OJ83NI 55983.
.
. IMMIDIATi
. : ' ., ' Dil .. IYIRY
I
j
f
I
l
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t1ous1s FOR $ALE .
1
~·s FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE / HousEs FOR SALE HousEs FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES l'OR SALE I HousEs FOR SALE
rO;•;-;•;;'r;•l;;;;;;;;:;;;;';*;;;;O;•;;•;oe;••;l;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;';DOO;;l~G~e~no~r~o~l ----~IDOO~~G~t~ne~r~o~l----~1000~/ ~ner'•I 1000 General 1000 General . 1000 01n1r,1 1000 G1n1r1I 1000
MACNAB • IRVINE GOT THE STOCK MARKET BLUE57
INVEST IN REAL ESTATE AND
WHOA -. • • . • • fl. / n /1
Here · ol..inda J:Jle
FINER HOMES
COUNTRY ESTATE
Tborobred horses, fruit trees, beautiful pool,
manicured grounds & artist's studio, make
this home a showplace of country living on
beautiful Mesa Dr. This custom built brick
& v.'ood residence of rural charm has 7,000
sq. ft. under heavy shake roof, on 1-acre of
land. A special home for a special buyer.
$24-0.000 -llarbara Aune
LINOA ISLE
Best buy on 52 ft. of Prestige Bayfront 'vith
pier & slip. Home \viii be custom finished
for discrin1inating buyer. Open Sat. & Sun.
106 Linda Isle - Dave Cook
OOVER SHORES
:fi1agnificent view -pool -retractable atrium
roof -4 bedrooms plus se\ving room. This
hoine has ev!ffi~1ing. Newly decorated by
Cannell & Ch · • '139,500 -Eileen Hudson
BAYFRONT
WATCH YOUR INVESTMENT GROW!
12' Units on 2 large lots in Oceanside, near
the beach. Always lull & excellent tax shelter!
The finest craftsmanship went into tho own-
er's 2 bdrm. home. Try $25,000 Down on ask·
ing price of '139.000.
We also have 12 units in Santa Ana, Hunt-
ington Beach & Costa Mesa. Call now for an
app't. to see these .fine properties!
LAGUNA'S ,Fl,NEST
2 Bdrm. house plus 3 modern units with all
amenities. A property -you will be proud to
own & located only 1-blk. from the choicest
beaches & parks. Shown by app9intment only.
$125,000.
PRESTIGE AREA
Adult occupied. immac. 3 bdrtn. & den in
Cameo Shores. Ocean view & private beaches.
$76,~00. .
LOW, LOW PRICE
Corona del ri~ar duplex with 2 l·bdrm. units;
corner location assures maximum privacy.
This is an xlnt value at $36,000.
It
Is!
this may be your new home,
Jt posltlveJ.y is the mo1t
beaUt. yuu've ever seen.
LUMINOUS ceiling in kitch·
en ... CUSTOr.1 tripl.e drap-
eries. , .$16 per yd, New
shag cptg, •. B!t-ln bookcas-
es & cabinets .•. all rooms
beaut wallpapered, • ,extra
storage cabineta .•. i natur.
ally, sprink1en, rain gutters
& block wall. With over S6000
in improvement$ this is a
1remendous value at $33.900.
Even has a low interest VA
Joan to save you, a few thou-
sand! Located in Mesa Ver·
de, ncC'd \\'e say "Call now
<Jn this Wttastie property"?
NICHOLS R~ E.
546-9521
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
101 Linda 1111 Drive
5 BR. 4 baths ; fam. rm. Mexican tile firs.,
exposed beam cell., cpts, drps incl. W /Pier
& slip ........ -.................... $135,000.
16 Linda Isle Drive
Ne\v 5 bedroom, 5, bath home with upstairs
view of Corona del Mar bills. 3 Fireplaces &
BBQ. Luxurious carpeting & panelling. Land~
scaped. With dock _ ........ _ .... __ $145,000.
77 Linda Isle Drive
New 5 Br., 5 bath home on lagoon. Marble
entry, wet bar, AM/FM Intercom, Mstr. Br.
has beam ceil. & own frplc. Large family
room w/fireplace ... , .. , . , ..... $185,000
80 Linda Isle Drive
5 Bedroom & maid's, 5 baths with family
room &: large rumpus room. Carpeting. 3
Fireplaces. 4,246 Sq. Fl . ___ . __ $169.~00
W•terfront lots
No. 4: Excellent 51 ft. Linda Isle leasehold
lot. Plans avail. Consider trade ..... $35,000
Immaculate 2-story home with character &::
charm. Completely remodeled & redecorat-
ed at considerable cosL 4 Bedrooms & a
bonus room: spacious dining room; patio &
deck ; private pier & slip. $175,000 • Jane
Frazee
BEACH SIDE OF HIGHWAY
1 'h Blks. to Little Corona Beach. Perfect
summer home in best CdM loc. 3 BR. & study + 3 baths & a lo\v interest, assumable loan.
UARIOR LIGHTS No. 41 : Long water view lacing Harbor ls-.,. land w/76.2 ft. of frontase. Plans avail.
BAYCREST & OCEAN VIEWS! No. 88 : Point lot with ll8 ft. of frontage. Long
Corona del Mar 'vater view. Plans available. 4,000 Sq . Fr.'i.story home with View of Mts.
& Back Bay. Family room with enclosed wet
bar. Today's kitchen with large adjoining
breakiast area. Formal dining room; 4114
$62,500 ' 3 large bedrooms, 3\.!i baths,
formal dinlng, plus 1amily BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR
Dl LANCY
REAL ESTATE
Corona del Mar
673-3770
room with fireplace and wet 833 Dover i;>r., Suite 3, N.8. 642-4620
baths; a1nple area for large pool. Plans
available for 6th bedroom & bath. $93,500.
On Fee land~ Jeanette Peart
bar. S\\'eeping view troml -"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
the gourn1ct kitchen. l\tanyl ------------------extras in this custom.built
home PLUS an exialing low-
interest Joan that can be DAILY PILOT WANT ADS BRING RESULTS
BAYFRONT 2B28 E. Coast Hiway auumed. Asking $79,500. ================== First time offered. Fabulotis 5 bedroom &
den in Dover Shores. Warm wood paneling
& t extured walls in an excitibg world of
color & contrast. Space for your Dilliard ta~
ble. Swinuning pool. Jarge pier & slip. Open
Sun. 1014 Polaris Dr ..
DOVER SHORES
Gentral 1000 I General 1000
Vermont Colonial
I
Luxurious home with Permanent Panoramic
View of the entire upper bay. 4 Bedrooms,
huge living room with fireplace. formal circ-•, .~ ' -:. I I
·-'-·} uJar dining room: large den, wet bar; huge
inaster suite. A feeling of spaciousness ac-
centuated by the high cedings. $145,000.
Open Sat. & Sun. 1330 Galaxy Dr •• Tom
Turner
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
Lor.ely 2-stocy $ l>F.,droom home with formal d.ininifyoom Jlus family room, situated on
a large lot overlooking new golf course.-
Brick fireplace, all electric kitchen' & only
l year old'. $44,960. Open Sun. 1701 P ort Ab-
bey Way. -
CAMEO HIGHLANDS
Lovely 3 bedroom home. located on quiet
-~treet. with access to private beach. Good
value. S43,500. App't. only • Lois Miller
MACNAB-IRVINE
R11lty Compainy
901 Dover Dr., Suite 120
1080 Bayside Drive
Ntwpart Beach
642·823S
67S.J210
Young -Big -Beautiful
G.Mral 1000 Gener•I 1000 ~
JUST LISTED! Giant 2 story colonial.
5 massive bedrooms, 3 baths, formal
staircase to 18 ft master suite with
huge 14 ft. walk·in closets. Deluxe kit-
chen with all built-ins. Colonial dining,
and huge family room. Unique 19 ft.
work shop for dad. Nestled in a quiet
cul-de-sac of to\vering trees. Unbeatable
today at $44,000. Terms to suit. See
NOWI -------
Total Payment
$145 Per Montlt
•
D;,1 645-0303
FOREST E. OLSON, INC., Realtors
e
Colesworthy
& Co.
REALTOR
Newport Beach OfUce
1028 Bayside Drive
675-4930
The Possible Dream
DeaignE!d to take advii..ntage
of the View, Ivan 'Veils' new
4 Bedroom. 3 Bath f pow.
der room home ill Dover
Shares. Richly panelled fam-
ily room with fire~lace &
wel bar. Sunken living rocim.
Lar~ kitchen with break-
fast area, Secluded swim·
min&: pool in walled-in gar-
den. A combination <JI beau-
ty, quality and practicality
to make your dream come
true.
Ivan Wells & Son
Roy J . Ward Co.
EXCLUSIVE AGENTS
1430 Galaxy Drive 646-1550
(Open Daily)
Real sharp 3 bedroom. 2 bath
home. Freshly painted. GI
loan of $15,800 at 5i6 % an.
nual interest. You can't
beat 11 ~ Service porch.
Double Garage. ForC't'd air
heat. Completely fenced.
Sprinklen. Carpeb an d
drapes throughout. Family
room, Let us show it to
you!! GI er FHA tenns
available.
ot $17,"83 is assumable all::::========~========. !~: ~~;~ ~~o3u ~General 1000 General 1000 $31,350 Appraisal
'm " 2 Bath '""'"" homo. BEAUTIFUL $31,350 Price brick fireplace, ne~-new FOREST E. The C.R.V. issued by VA ls
crpls, drps & bltn kitchen. YCRE
Your total payments will be o L s o N BA ST in and ready to go on this
$142. mo. including taxes. Spacious Living roont plus 2-story beauty~ 4 BIG
\"hy 'rail! Call now: formal dining room, den. BEDROOMS, 217 baths.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
Newport
••
Fairvi ew
Inc. Realtors
COLLEGE PARK
$26,250
J UST LISTED~ A Ti'Ul bar· 646-8Bl l gain. &autifu! tr!'r lined
Realtors (•nytime) streets. \Vinding Urive past
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams towering trees leads to this
545-0465 Open 'tjl 9 PM J -:--:=--z-::-:=====~J gn.CiOus College Park home , 3 large bdrms., dining roon1, *********** Near Westcliff 2 run baths. Kitchrn '\'ith 3 Bedroom & family rn1. II d I b ·1 -I Lease Option Sale • c "'" "' '""" 100, 0 nestled on lo..-ely, quiet, tree old brick fireplaa', shake
lined street. Spacious livin~ roof. Seller has job ti·o.ns-
rm has 1n8Ulive brick fire. fer. Terms to suite you! Ov.ner tr&nlferred, now va-
cant. Immediate pos&ession.
CiotgeOUI 3 Bedrm, 2 story
home in immaculate condi-
tiOn. Leue $300 mo. _ fuU
sale pric-e, $33,950. Ca 11
54~.
Neer
,)VESTCUFF
A.sumt
$23,200
6% V.A. LOAN
' $31,950
CAU. NOW
5*2Sl~
-0 1·1 11 !Jf 'AL
'"'\. ' . 1·1Tr:r~"
BAYl'ROHT APTS.
VISTA OIL LIDO
Pi•r & Sllp evell•bl•
$12,500 and up
G-.. Wllllomton
REALTOR
67M3SD 645-15" Evos.
place, BBQ in faniily rm. G.1./FHA or you name it.
Xlnt shag carpeting on peg-Hurry on this one. Call
... banlwood, 1"·500· """ 645-0303 it 00\\'~
No On Vets Lo Dn FHA at Harbor Centrr
Large lot, fncd front & rear 2299 Harbor Blvd., C.r.1.
tor privacy & safety. 3 Bed· * BLUFFS * rm, l\i BA, 'bako roof, dblc
gar. Call now! $23,950. BUDGET BUYS
(6) 2 BR Units w/Pool' Mini-VIiias
Easts.Ide -sharp! Crpts, drps
patios. 175,000. Hu1Ty!! ' * 2 Br. 2 ba. 2 sly •• $24,000
BOB OLSON * 3 Br. 1~ ba. 2 sty. m ,;ioo
REAL TOR * 3 Br. "stair.free'" • $29,500
546-SSIO .. 3Br, 2ba, 21ev .•. $30,500 * 3 Br. 2 ba, "~UP€t" $32,500 -------
FOUR BEDROOMS and Large COVERED PATIO
nm.EE PULI.J\1AN BATiiS. enclosed on 2 shJ('s opens
to well land$caped, walled
yard, Family nci,'l"hborhood
ronvi;>ni('nt 10 SC'hools and
SllOpping. \Von '! last at this
realistic price \Vith VA and
FHA financing available!
Recently dtcorated thni out.
Bullt·in Nu-Toll{" Food Crn1.
er and breakfast bar. Cir-
cular drivt', enclosed f.ront
court yard, patio, play yard,
and wrought iron fenced en-
closed lS'x.36' heated and
filtered Anthony Pool.
Everything a gro\•;ing fam·
ily can ask for .it on I y
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
$66,950. Good Financing, 20-13 \Vestc1iff Dr.
owner "'ill carry 2nd T.D. 64S.7TI1
SUB!\1IT LO\V 00\\'N PAi'-O!X'n 'tll 9:00 Pl\I
?-!ENT. Vacant • l mmrdiate -.;;;ii;;;;i;;;i;;;i;;ii;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;. Po..~ssion. • NEWPORT HEIGHTS ~~
Evenings Call 646-4579 * GOY'T REPO *
$20,950
Sharp, remodeled, t"Xcellent
location. Scparall' guesV
hobby rooni. \\'all lo 'vall
carpets, draJl('s, bi.i: lot.
Room for expansion. \VO\V? !
· COATS
&
WALLACE
· REALTORS
-546-4141-
(0pen Evenintt)
Lochenmyer
Re altor
1860 N~wport Blvd., C.M.
CALL 646-3928 El.-e11:. 644-16.l.')
Open Houses
THIS WEEKEND
Keep this Midy directory wfifi yo1 this WHk11d as
yo1 t• •ouH·h1111ti119. All ttte leccrtfo111 llltff below
.,.. dncrlbed 11 fr9ftft ct.Nit by Mftrrislllf ....._
....... i11 tocfcry's DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. P9troM
......... ,.. houses for Nie or to flllt •te "'9ed to
llst s11'h l.tormcttio1 11 this coh11ri• •OCk fridar.
HOUSES FOR SALE
{3 Bedroom)
**106 Linda Isle Drive (Linda Isle) N.B.
642-8235 ;675-3210 · (Sat & Sun)
17931 Caledonia, Huntington Beach
846-0604 (Sat & Sun 11-7)
2351 Westminster Ave., Costa Mesa
644-1102 (Sat & Sun 10-4)
(3 Bedroom & Family or Den)
435 Aliso Ave .. Newport Beach
548-3323 or 642-3273 (all day Sat & Sun)
333 CataHna, (Newport Hghlll N.B.
673·6510 (Sunday)
1701 Port Abbey \Va y. Harbor View Homes
CdM 642-8235; 675-3210 (Sunday)
**433 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach
642-8235; 675-3210 !Sat and Sun)
2501 Ocean Blvd., Corona del Mar
644-4910 (Sat, & Sun 1-5:30)
1927 Santiago (Baycrest) N.B.
644-4910 !Sat 1-5)
2540 Vista Baya, near 23rd & Tustin, N.B.
. 646-88Jl (Sat & Sun l 'ti! dusk)
*2867 Velasco Ln. !Mesa de! Marl C.M.
540-2464 ISat & Sun 1-5)
(4 Bedroom)
2015 Kewamee (Irvine Terr) CdM
642-6472; 673-3468 (Sun 1-5)
1038 White Sails Way (Harbor View Hillsl
Corona del Mar 548-9450 (Fri & Sat 1·5)
1130 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) N.B.
642-8235: 675-3210 !Sat & Sun)
**JI Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) N.B.
642-8235: 675-3210 (Sat & Sun)
1633 Highland IWestcliH) N.B.
644-2430: 833-0700 (Sat 1-5)
20 15 Galatea (Irvine Terrace) CdM
644-4910 (Sal 1-5:30)
(4 Bedroom and Family or Den)
1330 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores) N.B.
642-8235 ; 675-3210 (Sat and Sun)
* 1800 Estelle (Westcliff) Newport Beach
642-8235; 675-3210 (Sat and Sun) * 1015 Goldenrod (Harbor View Hills)
CdM 675-2101 (Friday 1-51
877 Sandcastle (Harbor View Hills) Cdtwt
644-4910 (Sat 1-5:30)
1430 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores) N.B.
646-1_550 (Open Daily)
1507 Lincoln Ln., Beycrest
642-5200 (Sun 2-5) * 1721 Galatea, Irvine Terrace
642·5200 (Fri, Sat, Sun 2-5)
(5 Bedroom 1nd Femlly or Den)
10448 Owl Circle, Fountain Valley
962-9565 · (Sat & Sun, all day)
*1536 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores) N.B.
642-8235; 675-3210 (Sat and Sun)
*** 1014 Polaris. Newport Beach
642-8235: 675-3210 I Sunday)
**IOI Linda Isle \Linda Isle) N.B.
644-4910 (Sat 1-5:30 )
(6 Bedroom)
**80 Linda Isle Drive (Linda Isle) N.B.
644-4910 (Sat/Sun 1·5:30)
DUl'LEXES FOR SAL! -
(3 Bedroom & 1 Bedroom)
303-305 Iris Ave. Corona del Mar
673-6900 ; 673-1362 eve" (Sun 1·5)
* ... 1
* * w ..... ""' , • ., .. w., .. ,, ...
HAl'PY MOTHER
Whose family enjoys the luxury of a two
wing'd home with breathing room for every·
body. 5 spacious bedrms, 3~ BA, lge. fami-
Jy rm. w/2nd fireplace. Separate dining rm.,
as well as island kitchen, breakfast area.
Magnificent Dover Shores View. $95,000
DOVER SHORES SPECIAL
An exceptional 4 Bedrm, 3¥..i BA, VIEW
h ome. Reduced fo r quick sale belo\v repro-
duction cost. oUtstanding View of Bay &
Mountains. Luxuriously carpeted, draped &
landscaped. Only $89,950 complete.
IT'S NEAR
and yet so far. This 5 Bedrm. 3 bath home
is only 5 minutes from schools & shopping
yet far from the bustle of to\vn . Set way back
on :If.a acre site with View of mountains. CaJJ
today to see this unique offering at $55,000.
ROY J . WARD CO., Realtors
BAYCREST OFFICE
1430 G1i1xy Drive, N.B. 646-1550
General 1000 J Gtneral 1000
Coldwell,Banker OFFERS:
AND COMPANY
UDO ISLE
4 Br .. 2 Ba .. Beach Home Near Club $50,000
3 Br .. 2 Ba .. Lg .. Street to Street Lot
$69,500
2 Br., 2 Ba., 40' Lot. Low Down Payment
$49,950
1i1odern Triplex -All \V /Private Patios
-$115,000
. 60' Lido Nord, 4 Br. Slip $290,000
BAYSHORES
2 Sty. Modern. OY.'ner \V/Carry T.D.·Reduc.
$67,500
3.000 Sq. Ft. -Great Beaches, Boat Facility
$59,500
Oversize Home & Patios w/Volley Ball
Court $59,500
WESTCUFF-CLIFF'HAVEN
Open House -1633 Highland -Sit. 1.5
Cotne see Immac. 4 Br., 2'h Ba. $55,000
5 Br .. 31h Ba., H/F Pool, Exe. Financing
$69,900
l Br., 2\t, Ba .. Choice Loe .. L~-Lot $52 750
View, Cozy 2 Br., 2 Ba., Den, Trees $49'.500
BA YCREST -DOVER SHORES
Exel. Vie,v, 4 Br .. 3Ih: Ba., Pool $109,000
2 Sty., 5 Br., 3 Ba .. Pool, D.R .. Fam. Rm.
$98.500
Vac. Lots (3) Spectacular Vie\VS $35,000
WATERFRONT
4 Br .. Conv. Den , 3 Ba. -Beach & Shp
$180,000
4 Br .. 3 Ba .. 3 Car Gar.-Slip $85.000
C.D.fvl. Oceanfront. 3 Br., 21;..i Ba. Fam. Rm.
IJnda Isle 4 Br. Beauty -Slip
Best Bayside Dr. Area-3 Br.
60' Bal. Isl e Frontage-Slip
IRVINE TERRACE
Sll0,000
$140,000
$179,500
$140,000
2 Br. + Den + 3V2 Ba.-Bay & Ocean Vie'v
$89,750
{ Br. (2600 sq. ft.\ L~. Fam. Rm . $59.950
Custom 3 Br .. 31h Ba .. AAA Vie\v & Pool
$175.000
3600 Sq. Ft.. 4 Br., 4 Ba. \V/Great Vie\V
$200,000
HARBOR VIEW HILLS
View. 4 Br .. 2 Ba., Fam. Rm . 3 Car Garage
-$58.800
4 Br., 3 Ba., Split.Level -Anxious $57,500
4 Br., 3 Ba., Vacant. Make Offer $53 500
3 Br., 3 Ba., Great View -Prof. Dec. $59'.900
4 Br., 3 Ba. Open Beam, 2 Story $66,500
CAMEO SHORES
& HIGHLANDS
4 Br., 31h Ba. Pool. Priv. Entr. to Beach
$150,000
5 Br .. 7 Ba. & Powder Rm. Best Vie'v of
Harbor Entr. & Bal Beach $190.000
3 Br .. 3 Ba .. Den & Family Rm. $89.500
4 Br., Pool Sized Patio $44,950
3 Br .. Fam. Rm . Pool. Ocean Vie\v $59,950
BROADMOOR
4 Br., 21-? Ba. + Fam. Rm . \'aulted Ceilings
$69,960
4 Br .. 2 1fi Ba. + Fam. Rm. Prof. Decorated
$67,500
Ocean View -4 Br .. 21h Ba. Won't Last!
$67,500
"EASTILUFF & BLUFFS
Best Buy!! Cozy Home $87,500
·Gracious Decor. ·Need Action $51,500
Bluffs Popular "Linda"' Model $39.950
Spacious ''E"' on Green Belt $45,000
Best Buy for Prlme View $45,000
8:13-0700
644-2430
•
------..-----·---·----------··-------------
rrldU, May 8, 1970 * DAILV PILOT :J3
~~ES FOR SALE I HOUSE S FOR SALE HOUSES _!OR SAL ~, HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi! I HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSE~_FOR SALE -
.'1-G;•;"';;;';'l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:l:OOO;;;;G;;on;;•;;'";;l;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;;OOO;;;\G;,ion;•~r~t~I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~lOOO~iiG;•;"';;;;'"~l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil~000~,~~~1 ____ 1_000_ University Perk 1U7 Un lvertlty Park 1237 Corona ct.I Mar 12.50 Corona del Mar 1150
I' LOOK
WESL~Y N. TAYLOR CO
HA BOR VIEW HILL~,500
Room en ugh for a large family. 4 Bdrms,
lam nn w/fireplace + formal dining area.
Beautiful decor thruout & great patio & gar.-
den. m SandcasUe Open Sat 1-5:30
MOVE RIGHT IN-$26,500
Vacant 2 story townhOuse in "The Bluffs"
near Corona dcl Mar lli School. 3 Ildnns,
llh baths. Priced for quick sale. Buy today!
LINDA ISLE-$135,000
BEST buy on beautiful Linda Isle! Owner
moving to another state. Spacious 5 bdrm.
home designed for the ultitnate in living on
this exclusive island of boating & fun. Pier
& slip. The most for the least!
101 Linda Isle Open Sat 1·5:30
BAYCREST-1,500
Fine quality & loads of glamor in this 3
bdrm home with fam rm, 21h: baths & formal
dining. Perfect U shaped kitchen w/electric
bit-ins & char broil. Rear yard is a picture.
1927 Santiago Open Sat 1-5
CORONA DEL MA R
Spectacular! Million $ VlE\V of bay, ocean
& peninsula. Spacious 3 bdrn1 split-level
home with den & playroom. Above harbor
entrance. '
2501 Ocean Blvd. Open Sat./Sun. 1-5:30
LINDA ISLE
P ele Barrell f<eaft'I
preden,14
Ready & Right
-for the young family, 4 Bed.rms, formal
dining room, panelled family rm. Light.
bright feellog thru-out and a floor plan that
will delight you. ,77,000. Florence McCue.
1507 Lincoln Lane, Bayc:re1t Open Sun. U
View -lrvlne Terrace
Price reduced. Beautifully decorated 4 Bed-
room home, or 3 with maids quarters, for·
mat dining room a nd Sflacious l ivtng areas.
Nice pool, protected patio and lovely garden.
Harry March.
1721 Gal•t•• Open Fri., Sat., Sun. 2·S
Balboa Peninsula
Jusl Listed -A "brand new" older home.
Thi charming 3 Bedroom beamed ceiling
home bas been completely redecorated and
rejuvenated. It boasts of 2 fireplaces, new
bltin electric kitchen; new copper plumbing,
bathroom fixtures , furnace and water heat-
er. Plus much more. Bill Bents.
Open for your in1pectlon Tue1. and Thurs. 2·S
Office Open Saturday• & Sunday•
l PET~60~~~~~r.,RN~~LTY ~! 642-5200
General 1000 1 General 1000
AT THE llEST $1000 MQVES YOU IN 2 FIREPLACES
lt'i 8 walWocat.d, wdJ deo S LIASI OPTIONI One in muter bdrm. 6 one ·~ ~--~-~ 2-Townhou..•, • Bdrm>., In th h !·-"· ora"""" ..__....... .,._....own. 2~ ba'a. family rm. 2 e uae .... ,...., rm ..
erah.lp home In bN.utitul tn)!ci. • ' w/wet bar. 3 BR. 2~ bl.,
ME.SA VERDE. Shae c.... l..J Bdrm, 2 Ba., tamUy formal dlnin1 nn. Swtt~
pet.I, decorator wall paper, rm .• din. rm., Broe.dmoor ln1 view from UP1l&lrt.
Iott of Vt'OOd pahtllr\L Inter. home. You own W land. $'""'-Uta oond. Ai a real -0 .. Shad ~ ~-·11-3 Br. 2 Ba. family rm. .,... -·.. e i •-=•.~ Wet bar. Aslume 6%% plN.sure to 1how at MW Thi1 One • S2T.S50, loan. $36 9501
$46.2313 l·Townhouse 2 BR. t Ba. '
You own the land.
2 STORY -o THEREAL
"\. ESTATERS -Thie le t he ONLY 2 story
"'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,..liOiiiiiiiioJ home a vailable in the de· • 1irable TUR~ R 0 CK FOR SALE -$56,'50
2015 KEWAMEE
Irvine Terr•C•
4 BR, 2'Ai ba.uia, lanai room.
Elec. kitchen le .U bit.ins.
Lllw Land Lease. Call
CURT DOSH, Realtor
~a! 4 bdrms -family
rootn le dining room. 3
batlll. Leu than one year
old. Sweeping vie"' of UCI Ai countryside. from
upstah11, 3 car garagr.
Price just reduced '3,000
• to $42,950.
LOWEST PRICED
1730 W, Cout H\1hway 3 BR. 2 b&. in the area!
642-M72 EW!, 67!-.3468 Desperate owner wants
I -=========::I this prop. sold RlGHT l • NOW. Hu lo"·ered t~
FIX AND SAYE prlct" to $27,950 v.ith
very COOO TERMS avail.
This ls a rare opportuni·
ty I ls dPtintely under
market value, Don't mis1
lt!
$244 MONTH
Ia the tot.al paymenl IN·
O..UDING TAXES upon
auumpton of f,he exist.
Joan on thl1 BRAND NEW
3 DR. le din. rm. town-
hou1e. Cholct', end~unlt
loc. Mu11l be sold NOW a:
priced under market at
$.33,950 INCLUDING THE
LAND • but submit. any
reasonable otfer!
OUTSTANDING 3 BR.
This one defies comparl11on
-ab5oluteJy 1poUai1 lhl'\I·
out! Professionally lnd-
scpd. Y..1any, ~ e:ctrall.
Reallstlcally priced at
$35,950 INCLUDING TIIE
LAND, with u IO\V as
$.5,000 dov.•n.
4 Bedrm, famll.1 rm, fire-
place, bltln1, rovtred patio,
aide entrance for boat.
camper •tc. Atta or $27 "
$28M hou9es -Ultina $24,900.
Assume 5% % loan. Glen
Queen, Heritage Real Es.
tale, M0-1151.
BOB PEI llT, REALTOR
"SINCE 1946"
133-0101 CAY or NIGHT
Low Int. G.I. Loan Newport Beach
S Bed.rm, 2 BA, bltn range ---
1200 lrvlne 1231 -----'--MAGNIFICENT VIEW
Enonnoua 2 level back yd.
C.D.M. Duplex "Let'a Make a D1tar' ••
Owner bought • needs cash -ollers this
very attractive South of Hwy. double unit,
3 bdrm. 2 ba .• front -2 bdrm. compjetely
furnished unit rear. Both units avaUable
COE -Buy now price ol $49,750.
OTHER B/'-"BETIER BUYS"
R ETIRED DOCTOR'S costly featured
home. Cameo Hglds. 3 Bedrm. Ocean
View. Was $69,450 now only $65,000.
HARD TO FIND, Newport Hts. cozy 2 bd-
rm., FEE lot, $29,500
J UST LISTED • Duplex on Narcissus just
North o! Hwy. Special $37,500
VACANT - Redecorated 4 Br .• Fm. Rm.
EaslbluU. Reduced to $43,390.
IRVINE TERRACE -Vacant big and beau-
tiful; great value '49,500
BACK BAY VIEW • Large lot 4 Bdrm.
Eastbluff. $49,500. Excellent condition.
675·3000 CALL ANYTIME 67$-3000
FJj II.\\ ,\ llE.U'll llLU.I'\' 1:\f.
New Orleans charm is reflected in this 6
bdrm, 5 bath home !acing lagoon. Living rm
w/unusual fireplace conversational pit. Lge
game rm + lam rm. Fine cptng thruout.
Spac deck w/gas fircpit. $169,300
80 Linda Isle Open Sat./Sun. 1-5:30
IRVINE TERRACE
Tremendous VIEW! Watch the boats go by
from huge liv rm, din rm & kitchen. Relax
beside Jge pool. 4 spacious bdrms. Beauti-
fully landscaped & maintained. $106,000
2015 Galatea Open Sat. 1·5:30
ofl£e :Jaffinff !Jn clove?
a: oven, dilhwuher, fire-FOR SALE or lease·
place, crpts, drp!!I, shake sacrifice. Deoorators home,
1\.of etc. $28,761. with assum. 5 )Tl new. l Br, 2 Ba,
able G.L loan. Quick pos.. Ir rooms, all eleet. kitchen,
seaalon! new crpll, drps, hd-.w, Must
Welt1-McCart:lle, Rltrs. see to apprtt. 435 Aliso
lBlO Ne'A"POrt Blvd .• C.M. Ave,, N.B. ~ or
. . Split tev. home. l ~ Yr11 old . ~~---""========:::=:::=;;:=:;;;;.i1 4 Br. 2~ ba. $58.500. CaU
CORONA DEL MAR-$75,000
OCEAN VIEW DUPLE.X. Quality constr with
every modern convenience. 5 Yrs. new. 3
Bdrm & 2 bdrm, 2 baths each. Good financ-
ing.
OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 10.5:30
''Our 25th Ye a r''
\Ve do & we have, with this lovely Cameo
Jligblands view home. 3 Large bed.rooms, 2
baths + a powder room, family & living
rooms are separated by an unusual fire-
place. Plush landscaping, Anthony Pool with
poolsweep. Eight years of T.L.C. & only
$56,000. Shown by app't. & exclusively by
UNIVERSITY REAL TY
3001 E. Coast Hwy., CdM 67:1-6510
~
Genaral 1000 I General 1000 WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtorsl"""'.;.;.;;.c.----'.:.:..:.:..;:..:;.:;:;.;o;. __ _..;.oo;
2111 San Joaqu;n HUis Road THE BEAUTIES
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 Are In Baycre1t
548-7729 644-0684 Eves, 642-3113
83J..2616,
Back B•y 1240
E. 22nd St. • COUNTY
Country living at I~ best
J Homesites, 2 home11, ap.
prox. l ·Acre, Easy terms.
(\VarTen Sethi e 8111 Haven, Rltr.
2llJ E. Coast, CdP.f 6'13.Jru
Et1tblulf 1242 -----Let's Ignore hi int rate1I
EutbluU LuMc 4 Br, 2~ Ba,
fam nn w/ frpl, Owner will
finance, Come itt & talk
about $3000 dn.
OPEN
Huntington Beach 1400 I Huntlnpton h•ch 1400
CUSTOM BUil T
DOWNTOWN
MOST BEAUTIFUL STREET, 3 Bedroom,
separate 14x28 guest cottage, especially se-
lected alder wood kitchen cabinets w/bltin
r ange &: oven. Hardwood floors, corner stone
fireplace w/raised hearth. 3 Car garage, seir
arate boat gate, blck fenced. SO x 150 Lot
BRASHEAR REALTY 147-1507
Eves: '42-0427 961-1171
Coron• del M•r 1250 Huntington Botch 1400
We have two th at are now ava ilable. Each
with 4 bedrooms, 3'h baths, pools, formal
dining room s. Custom quality appomtments
t hroughout. $80,000 and $85,000.
250-=t=B=a=m=boo=::=St=.:::::='""-::::·1~400 1:::::;::;;::;::;;;:;;;:;;;; --~-~~~~~I -I• Owner Anxious PANORAMIC VIEW SV• G.I. Loanll General 1000General 1000 Irvine Terr•c• 1245
Costa Met•
----CUSTOM home • view, 3
Br., 2~~ bath!!, den, Bil
eltron kite., sltrd patio 4
lrg bkyd, IO\v lease-prin,
only.Owner 673-9360
Coron• del M•r 1250 --·----
* * * * * * "THE BEST OF
EVERYTHING" * • * * OPEN HOUSE
1127 Galatea T•rr•c•
Irvin• Terrace
G•n.ral 1000 General 1000 GORGEOUS <i br, 1900'. Elec
klt, din/fam, 3 tiled ba.
Lu.sh crpt, pat. lndscpe, rm
'" ~6461114
REALTY "'V~~~j[)f
* • • .. •
Exquisite panoramic Bay,
Ocean, catallna vle\v,
Large. heated, filtered
pool , •. 3 large bedrooms
with huge master bed-
room with view; 3 bath·
rooms, 2 tubs, 3 showers.
Storage and closet!!! ga-Jore. LArgP family room,
view d ining room, 11hake
roof, 3 cal' garagp plus
NfAI! l./fl'IPORT POST Of f IC[ workshop. Expensively
LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS
320 LIDO NORD
CAN YOU
TOP THIS??
In an area of $90,000 homes
, •• A spaclou! 4 bedroom 3
bath home with formal din·
ing room, large living room
with Door to ceiling windoWll,
a superb built in kitchen
with gleaming hardv.'OOd
~binets and a 1amily room
with wet bar. A built in
vacuum, and a pool 1i1!d
673-4400 tor boal $32,950, 54().8376 NEWPORT Hgbts, rambling .,...,..,..,..,..,,.,,,.,,!!!!! 2 BR, be.th. + large family ranch style J brdnn. shake
Qui.ck Sale ., ...... M R·2 ... root. "1>1c. 128,950. $23.CX>O owner 6'Ul35 Kingaard R. E . MI 2-2222
lr.nd.scaped, bar wlth
built-in BBQ. Plenty of
room to add on lo it de-
1im:I.
''OPEN HOUSE''
SAT-SUN. 12-5
Exclu1lv• wi th
SALISBURY REAL TY
(7141 '73-6900
NOW Reduced to $175,000. Xl nt terms 4 Bedrm • 2 bath • all bltns 3 Br. BeauHtully Decontted.
• tittplace • family rm • ~; Cu!!ltom. By Owner.
carpeted ..... sparkling condi. $:.l,500 545-2531 or SST-9116.
Bay crest 1223
6 Beautiful units. 6 Car garages & utility
room, with 80 ft. fr ont ing on excellent swim·
ming beach. Units are newly furnished.
Hon, Low interest loan avail.
a ble -good terms. Priced
a t $28,950, Call M5-8424.
BAYCREST 4 BR
CuJtom Built Home
Met• Del Mar 1105 Will trade. Large beaut. ---------1 yard, Secluded SI, 548-0773. S BR. Famfly room. 3 be.thl. ****** BRIGHT BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
133 Dover Dr., Suit• 3,. Newport Beach 642-4620 EXCEU.ENT LOCATION! Dover Shores
$381'(1(), 54S.1001 1227 CHEERY
'""'""""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"':"""""''""""''"''"''"''"'""' yard, Can you top this al 1000 G~I -1000 only S64.950· * PRIME VIEW * 1110 Bay & Mins. Scenic & pvt. ---------! Nearly new "Old World"
BLUFFS
GeMr•I
NEED 5
BEDROOMS??
Here It Is! Beautiful 2 s1ory,
with covered patio, 2 HUGE
bathl'I. NesUcd on extra
larie COITll'r lot wilh gor~c
ous land8COping. Most in-
viting modem kitchen for
Mom. No Down tn "VE7S"
and )ow do'vn to Fl-lA, IT'S
A LO'ITA HOUSE!
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
Realtors
2790 Harbor Blvd. "' AdRmS 545-0465 Open 'tll 9 PJ\1'
PHONE 673-8550
FOREST E MESA VERDE
' 3248 COLORADO LN. \R:THEREAL '\.: E§! !Yf ~~s 0 L S 0 N $30,950 /,;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;~;,;;;;;;;;;;;;; / lmmaeolot• 4 Br, family
Inc. Realtors
Just Take Over
Large 4 Brm/
$18,500
and only 6 yrs, young, Fan.
tRstle terms. Unbelievable
LO\V • LO\V _ U)\V down
is all you need. 4 king l';b:e
bedrooms, 2 Cull baths, wife
saver kl!chen, entertainment
palio. Well kept community,
LIVE BETTER
FOR LESS
3 Bedroom beaut)' In ni ce
area, convenient to school!!!
& shopping, Beautiful land-
scaping. An unbcllevable
low price of Sal,SOO. Fealur·
es bit-Ins, extra qualicy cpts.
2 Baths, EZ termR.
PAllLoWBlii C.lRllAB.lll
•a.Al.TT CO
8':ar~h ~'-'t:'f'Y\"'here and l'.°u 1093 Baker C.P.f. ~O
'A'On t find a bargain like1'====· ==~~:=: !his. Call today. Dial [•
room, 2 fireplaces, carpeted,
drapes & 11hutters. Covered
patio, built-ins, lovely land·
sc.aping with d~rarf fnlil
trees. Assume 51.4% VA or
new VA or FHA ok.
Owner 5464399
nENY BARGAIN
$16,500
Cute 1 bedroom c0ttage on
qulel Eastiide cul .... c •
Panelled intl':rlor -
-7171
M•sa Verde
NEW HOUSE c ontemporary, 1pacious w/
V" BY OWNER atrium & court. 5 Br'• ex·
S BR., 2 BA. Tran1fen-ed. pandable, roxl 1q ft, 4% Ba,
$33.500. A11ume FHA 8% hi-ceilings, 4 ca r gar.
loan. 3321 California St. $178,000 turn, opt, Will trade
557-6608 for small house or vacant
*COZY & Clean 4 Bedroom, land In vie, Owner 548-7249.
l % Bath, $24,700. 546-7308 ---·
Princip&la only pleue! Unlv•r1lty Park 1237
.4 BEDROOM, 3 Bath, 3 C.rl---------
Ganp. 145."'1 ey Owner. 15 FT. X 30 FT.
=M=S-t'°'"'=·=====I MASTER BEDROOM
Newport Beach 1200 ~ down payment Excel. _____ 1 lent financing, 7~ % annual
Unu 1u•I w.t.rfront percentage rate. W/w Car·
Home overlooking Newport pet, ck>se to schoolA and
Isl. Bridge. Dealgned by ma. 1hopping. Beautiful locaUon.
rine archltect on 1~ kit•. Only $38,995 for Ulla 2 1tory,
outstanding features tnc. 4 bdrm. tam. rm. home.
1talned a:las1 windoWI, for-Agtnl: Phone (714) 833-0300
Top BluH11 condo, upgraded
in all respects. -Heavy
1hag carpets, drapes, shut.
ters, all the bel!t. Overlooks
ll gorgeou!I gteef)..belt 8Ur-
rounded with co l o r f ul
blooms. Owner has purchfts..
ed larger home and want1
offl!rs. Asking $37,950. For
details e&ll 646-TITI.
1-0 THE REAL
·'.'\.. ESTATERS
OPEN FRI. 1-5
1015 GOLDENROD
Herbor View Hiiis
THIS IS ntE PLACE!!
Most fabuloua view of bll.y Ji
ocean, 4 BR, 2V. ba., H/F
pool, cov. patio, OwnQr ma,y
Ca.t'T')' 1st trust deed.
Ho<S• Lov .. s AtteoHon 962·5585 Custom Built
1-oTHEREAL
\"\. ESTATCRS mal entry &: den, dining rm LARGE
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, / that overlooks protected pa,. ' . ' '
SEMPLE
REAL ESTATE
2515 E. Coast Hwy. 67;..2101 Just Rtducad $2000 1'131 Brookh=t Newport Heights
Owner gays 11ell 11! 2 Bedrm liontington Bench • tio. 3 BR'1, 2 B• II Mth BONUS ROOM
sunken tub), 1011d teak cab. OVER GARAGE Assume 5%0/o *TRIPLEX* home w/1'(>8rkllng 15:c30 pool. I----"""-----3 BR, 2 BA homP, huge liv· VIEW ing rm w/stone t.ireplace + !net walJ.to-wall carpeting, · (RARE OPPORTUNITY) An.
Largt: 2 horse .!;lablc "'Ith dining nn. Bltns, crpts,
tack room. Now only $31.500. F"ROi\f, , . . d dbl 2 t'
FHA loan on U..shaped home dock, etc. &i6-8'.103 Bkr. Exc~llent financing and Jo. nual income $5,700. 2 Lfe,
located on pleuant cul-de· OWNER FINANCING c1t1on, 7%% innualpercent-bedroom" EACH, fully mod.
PAtJLoWBllE C.lRNABAN ..... ,,.co.
$AN CLEMENTE ISLAND
TO. , , .SIGNAL lUU
TO ••• ,MT, BALDY
rps, e g11r., pa 101',
Lachenmyer
~e.,ltor
age rate. W/w carpet, 2 em, no vacancy, Itlea.I loc.
sac. 3 Bedroom!!!, l"-bath•, Beaut. Eastblutr home. Spec. Story, 3 bdrm. home t.or in Costa l\.te11a. Try s:;700 On.
very large family room.' Ex· taeular bay a: Mt, view, 3 only $34,995, A~nt: Phone Sa.crlfl $36 900
ccllent location. BR. 3 Ba., lge, libn.ry.tam, (714) ·mrooo. Call C:11.t \Yood 545-2.'!00
4 Bedroomii, large family Jean Smith, Realtor rm, ""'''"· d""""'""• • • Biii Htvon, Rltr.
r,46-5440 room, oversized garage with 1860 N11WlJOrl Blvd., C.M. =llC~~~-2500 Sq, It AU· lrvln. 1231 2lll E. Coa11, Cdi\f 673-3211
well lighted 'A1lrk area CALl... 646-3928 Evei, 548-6169 ~255 OPEN Sat/SUn. :l-5 j,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;:;;;:; DUPLEXES
1093 Baker, C.P.f.
Lerge Lot Mes• Verde
3 Bedrma. 2 fllll baths, Jot~
of mlrrom:I walls. Redecor.
atad kitchen, OWner n1us1
11'.ll, hn11 bought another
home. $28,SOO, (Open Evtn.
irurtl.
•
Ml ·SllO ,_ ci'lerN lhelfNt
OUEGE REALTY •li»Mlnis etHlrtlor.Cil
ON !========~ ""''"'~~~!'!''!"'!!!!!!!!!l29'27 CATALPA ST. 644-1043 61/2% LOAN-? Now M1trt11a: completiOn.
011f' ot Ea!!thluff'.s loveliest B•ck B•y View Home $28,500 Eastbluff &,st Buy We have sewral 4 A 5 BdJTn, Good location South of Hwy.
prKle of ownernh1p streets: Fabulous 29Cr view of pro. Atsume SV4% Uk le • .. k Priced lrom $57,SOO to
ONLY $47,950 posed U.C.I. rowlna courw. annual o/., rate Joan. Entry e a v w corn.? ~• homes which wt could i;bow $68,500. Call for lnfonnslkln. 67J.8550 . ..,. qual! N~ 4 8t'1, ram rm )"OUT Price• vary fmn MORGAN RE •LTY n'IOW?tll.lna and tht. Unlvtr-ha.U. huge fam, rm.. 2 fire. w/ trpl, 2~ Ba, 1vc. nn A SSS.IJOD m $39,500. ""
slty, Lowtst price 4 a: tam. place., bullt·ins, park 1ikt Ii ydT Close to new elem e RED HILL REALTY Mll E. Coest Hwy ., CdM
lly nn In EastbluH, (open yard. 54G-t720 1ehl Ir •hop. New CJ'l)t & Univ Park Centt>.r Irvine 573'6642 675-&459 eveni~> TARBELL 29SSHarbor palnt.s:ro>dn.Nofeei,2501 eaii .An,ytime 83i.o820 OPEN HOUSE
SCl ·$llO ASSUME 6% LOAN Bamboo st. Ope:n, 544.1t.;o. Thur, Fri It S.t, 1-5, 1038
S. A. lt<!lghls U~ your C.t. flWciW!lltt.btt 3 BR, 2 BA, fain. rm, p1tlo BLUF'FS GEM, Im mac, UNIVERSJ'JY Park. 3 BR White Salls \\'ay, Harbor
on thi$, :l BR, $23.~. 14.?e UEGEREALTY & pnol + fenced rilA.Y yd. custom decor,! hr. S bl, Townhouse, t r p lc. View Hilla.
yd, 2 Car gar, KlnglW'l1 Adn51tMMbet:cil Nf'wly painted, Ot.rner • on f1'Hllhelt. SST.900. Lt>a .s t/Optlon . ~r ~,,-.,-,-Q-U~l~CKE=,~R-Y_O_U~S-E_LL_
J,~rn'.::··_:'::;U:_:2'.:;-2m~~---~ .. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.1 _540-_2<84-'.------• ~1~ 11.rt 6 pm 83J..2289 ,THE QUICKER YOU CAU..
2001 Bayside Dr. Beaut. You can buy this dream col·
shake roof l·sty, J Br. 4 b..·l. tage subject to the e:ti1ting
waterlroot home, xlnt swim· 5%. GI loan and only $134 ming beach. Newly redceoc. h $175,(XJ) SHOWN B'l APPT. i>er monl • 4 Lara:e bed·
# rooms, 2 baths, nRE-8111 Grundy, Re•ltor PLACE, bt.tilt·inii, and spa
333 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4620 lous patio and BBQ for 1um-
e HORSE LOVERS e
V•cant Lot 60x300'
Choice location! O'A·ner will
help finanre. $22,500
Pa trick Wood 545.2300 e 8111 Hev•n, RNltor
2111 E, Coast, CdM fi73.32J.1
PRIME LOCATION
JOJ..305 Iris Ave.
40' Lot. 2nd mk From Ocean.
Open Sunday 11·5)
Seli1bury Realty
673-6900. Eves. 873-1362.
Lido Isle 1351
DECORATOR'S
HOME
Beautttully done, 5 Bdnns.
Famll.Y rm. X1nt street to
1treet '5 ft. lot.
$98,SOO
LIDO REAL TY INC.
3337 Via Udo 673-7lJO
HOME + STUDIO
Muter BR. vr/Roman bath
+ 2 BR's &: 2 balhs! Artists
studio, Just reduced to ..
$79,500
mer partie11, all on LARGE
0Vl"l11ize lo!.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
Realtors
7682 Edlnaer
541).!\140 842-4455
St/4 •;. VA
$26.750 Full price, l BR, 2
BA, larg~ OOxllO fenced,
landscaped lot, Bullt I
range I oven, plenty of cu
board1, cozy living nn with
frplc, spacious master Bed.
rm, upgraded w/w crptl'I &:
drps. Exceptlona.lly n I c e
neighborhood.
I' "2-4471 ( ::::J 546-llOJ
NEAR THE BEACH
Big, new 2 l'ltory, 4 Bedroom.
Expensive &hag crpts, pr.
den kitchen, atrium, land·
scaping & aprlnklen. Walled
corner lol with 15' wide en-
RUJ..ToN c!Olle.d 1ide yard, I Blocks
CofmtN·MAfn'I~ from new High School, By
lli·lll' JI Ownel' at $37,750,
S69,soo I lj~-~54~6-5351~~~-·I For aeU·cleaning oven ~ sur· 11
rounded by 3 Bdrm. +den. ANXIOUS OWNER I
21h: baths: 30 fl. wide patio, Must sell !1pactou1 5 ~nn.
Call to SEE TH IS WEEK· with 1hake roof, ,tone fin!.
END! place and all desired bltimi,
W•lker Rlty. 675-5200 Take over f.abuloua 5%. % 3366 Via Lido, NB {)pt:n Sun, loan!
BRAND new Non.I be.yfront, Pacific Shores Realty
5 Br, 4 ~2 ba, area's bPst 847-8586 or 53&889-t
buy, 7% financing. Call J ~~~~~~~~~~! owner {714) 494-MlS I:
BEAOf home -save real
Huntington Beech 1400 estate cost . AMume &%.%
G.l. .7000 sq ft. 4 BR, 2
Owner Tr•nsferred BA, 1 lewl, formal din.
$4,000 Will Buy rm, tam rm. tlle thruou.t,
subject to 6% GT loan, Total fenced yd, brick paUo. 3
payments of only $181 'Ailh Yl"l!l old. By owner. 963-20U,
3 lll1:e queen sized bed· principals only, $38,000.
rooms, 2 bath!!!. modl!m I~-~--~~--
br1ghl bunt -;, lritoheo. MOVE RIGHT IN
FIREP~CE, deep pile car. Take over 6% GI loan. I BR,
'j)etl end custom drapes, :Z BA, 1hake roof, cov'd pa.
Comt SH. tio. Owner w/help tinllnCI!',
WE SELL A HOME CallCathyorMary846-0604/
EVERY 31 MINUTES 84&-3&18 Ari.
W lk & L TRANSF. ~t Townhou!le a er e e living. .,,... " ....... •
Realtors
7682 F.dinger 142-4m 54().5140
Downtown Area
Nice S Bedroom, Thia 6%
Gt lv1n can be assumed by
•n)'Ol'le, Low down payment
Total payment S139 per mo,
Best buy around 11.t $22.500.
MARINER REAL TY
142-5541 Evt11, 541-2442
Walk to Beach
'h.h-over 7% ~ ntA loan,
Like new 4 BR, 1 % BA, tge
panelled fAm nn, CWltom
drpa.. upgraded avocado
crpl.!. Prof, derorated, Block
fenced, Owner tn.rtffd, Eu)'
tcnns.
BRASHEAR REAL TY
847-3507 F;ves: 642.G427
BR. 2~ ha. Din, rm, All
clec. Dishwshr. 2~~ car aar.
J"ully cp('d. a: draped, Lo~
ly patio, Sacrifice -i 25,900.
Low int. Owner 968-1669.
Tragedy Strikes
~fust tell I year old S Sednn.
1%. Ba. 11x17 enc.lolled pa.
Uo. Otb: CUJ:tom drpa, crptl.
Anyone m-.y take OVtr 1:11dsf.
ing v .A 7~% loan. $2'J9 Tl>
tal monthly. No quallf.Yini.
BRASHEAR REAL TY
847.o:m .Eva: -
BY 0wneT: Extt. Home, 4
br, 2 ba, den, Mattd pool,
volley bo.11 court, 2 car pr,
neu btach. A atetl at
129.500. 5'&-89911.
BY 0\\'NER: 3 Br, 1"-ha.
w/W crpt, cust. dl'p&. 19031
Und11.y La. 96Ml'B
---. ------------------------------~-~------·-~---------~~----------
'OAJi;;Y PILOT fthUJ, May 8, 1970
:.ffisiie'E-$ .... F,O;:;:;Ro:.:SAaL•&;--;;R°'E .. NT"'°Aµ .. , ---"--'-~RffiENJl,.lS RENTALS RENTALS .
~tu Fumlsht)d ' Hou-Ml Furnis~ed Hou1e1 Uqfurnishtcf Aets. Furni"h~~ RE_NTALS _ --Le.-
Apia.. Furnl1n.a Apts. Unlumlohed Apts. Unlumbhicl
RENTALS I ~ts. Unlurnlohed Huntl...... &.1th 1400
u ·'cott · R1nt1l1 to Shire 1 2005 Summtr Rent1f1 2910 Newport Beach 3200 Coste Mt~• 4100 Cosio Mos1 4100
RENTAL$ I RENTAlS
Co;;; Mesa -510Q Cott• ~.. 5100 Coste Mesa 51001
DELUXE 2 Br. apt. Crpts.I
drpa, d11hwhr, frplc, garb.
ditpl. Min from Frwy, Qt. I
962--0367. .
I BR. pri patio, all ~lee,
crpts, drps, earpqrt. No pets
or chi Id re n , responsible
adull.l! only. $U5. 54S-132'J
,----.oneymoon . • ..
$16.,.SOO ·Full Price YOUNG \\'Ol'k!ri& mother JR~£ TtrT. 3 Br. 3 &. 3 BR1 Z BA. crpt11, drps.
Ideal fJOr a sWLet homt tor v.·ants to lihatt unfurn tpt A\'an. June firh nn. :sroo fenced. Sho~·n Suixtay. Call 00"1.'lyv.~. WIU' pay rtnt w/1&me, 1 child ok. ?110.BoydRf!fLlly~ ~· ~4 .
when you" <;an OWN yO\I~ -~SGS-8;;,,;,;,",c'=~--,-.,._.,, NEWPORT hJ1Ul4. ,.. •2 Br, 2BR. NN'' '-t. cr,fls,
O\\'n, \Vubtfr. dl')'tt al1d re-BUSINESS !IWI, straight, 26 sleep!~ porch, prlv. dOC:k. 'drps,:refrl&: avail..Nr. be&ch. ~rator aTt tpcloofd, tit.. )'ft, wW &hare a.pt in N.B., $225 per wk. Cnll ~J061 _ yr. """·$225. 557-8400
PARK A VENUE ;
iklve it or not, e:nd-only 5 your ah a r e $17 S. f/ DELUXE 2 BR..~l . . . .
yean old. Call now before (213)4tW103 dlttct. 61 15 .. 911 5. sJtSµ 'mo. Uruvtnity P1.rk 3237 &
u·s gonr. LO\V 00\\J" •m •1ALE '--· .... mate ID :Kl'•· ''''tdlU ., .. ~'
letml #''allable. " nMn 1-=====-=*====ll BR, "Marquf!-ttt'",
WE SELL A HOME 1~r;h w~~~ ~arly. Dupltxts Furn. 2975 2~2 ba ................ ~75 ·EVERY 31 MINUTES ·. ev s. 3 BR, '2 bn .............. $285
W lk & L \VANT working girl lo share Sl30 UTIL pd, l Br + den. 3 BR. 2 bu ............ S300
VILLA POMONA a er ee ! Br C.>I, apt. Call MY-Avail 5/25. SiniJu ok P)'~ 3BR. 2 bw ............ S350
, time. 5t8-9701 ""eloomed. Bkr. 53~ 3 J3R. 2 bu. ....... , .... S:l25
COSTA MESA'S FINEST ... ,
"NEAR THE BEACH" J Realtors * APT, Ullfurn HB. S6S per t BR.iExec. honie •.•... $575
7682 Edinger mo. lmtned. occupancy.' 1 ~R fum ., near . shop'g. , • Red Hill Realty
841-445,'j 541).5140 Call 6-8 ·pm., 53&-8706 Qu1e~ no dogs. Costa ~Iesa, 1Jnlv. Park Center, Lr\'ine
BY 0\VNER: 3 Br. 1~ Ba
honu•. Custom drps, upgrad·
ed crpt, co\ltted pat. 6'"1;.
Assumable FHA. $29.950.
846-lSlO
!>48-2 120 call An)i6me 833-0820
Coat• Mes• 2100 I RENTALS LEASES AVAll.ABLE
----------Houies Unfurnished 3 Br. & din. rn1 .' ........ $3~
Bachelor, 1 · & 2 Bedrooms
Complet.ely F11rnlshed from $140
. (also unfurnished available I
l\10DEL homes, ~1us1 Hll
JIO"'"· Villa P aci l i e ,
Brookhurst " Hamilton.
962-2-1-16
Huntington
Harbour 1405 --·-·----
ATI1UC\ 1 Bdml, furnished.
Eastside. $120. SI JI g I e
female. l nq "u it"e 2&13
\\'est minster. Eves &
"''lends.
2 BR., gar., patio. Quiel
tropical tietting for adults.
1 blk shops. $185. 544-0452.
General 4 Br. & lruu . r1n. •••••• S3-'"JO
3000 3 Br, lam '"·.din nn, .• S325
------~.-.--.I 2 BR. 2.ba111.'> .......... S2GO
S150 CLEAN 2 Br. Sep. 1308 PET'I'rr. Realtor
house. Gar. Children & pc1 "Since 1946"
ok.. 8.13-0101
Blue Beacon 645-0111 Bkr.
n31).-xtra Jg redec. 2 Br Corona del Mar 3250
apt. Yrd & P0",•.io, BRk/~ .. s. of hwy on cul dt> sac, 3 Now port Beadt 2200 v..• /w. Child , \\'ATERFRONT \\'/Dock 3 fiJ.~O br, 2 Ua, dlnven. u, ht·!1
Br, Study, fn111. mi., form.al 1----------& sl1op. :.:¥ lse S3:l3. c•v1"
din. rm. Sell or Ls(' "''/op-CANAL \Vaterfront. :x Int 2 BR., 2 Ba .. \\'hitr water 67~350C> 't!on. Sac. sn.:.ioo. Owne1·: home; 3 Br. 2 Ba. turn. \"ii'"''· So. Laguna. $250 mo.I-========== ~S-2381 or unf. DbL gar. J Yr. Owner I Brokrr. 499-1990 Lido Isle 3351 =~"°=======-I 1ease S450 f.1o. Gtaha.m JUty =·='~"~·~~-~-~--. liiiiiiiiiijii!iijiii!i;iiiijiiiiiiiiiii[ Laguna 'Hills 1700 646-ill4 .$21>2 BR + Den. Forma!ll LloO iS(E * * LEASE • Ocean l"ront din. rn1 ., di.JI gar., frplc. WEAR A MASK ·· one bedroom. 1 adult, No Children/pets ok. Bkr . YEARLY LEASE
When )'OU "steal" this 4 BR. pets. 6"5-l810 534--6980 2 Br, 2 Ba hon1e. Can be
pOOI homC". Party patio: S<"mi-fum. Redee. New w/w
Adults only, no pets
• Luxuriously Furnished
• All EIKtrlc Apartm1nt1
• Private Garages
• '2 Swimming Pool1 (heat~dl
• Individual Patios
.....•.. PLUS . . . . . . * NO RATE INCREASE fo, Summer * Generous MOVE-IN Allowance * Special -1 Month's FREE RENT
No LtaJe Required
' .. ,COME SEE .....
1760 Pomona, Costa . Mesa
W 'll * 3 BR, 2 Bath Furnished $175 NICE 3 Br. lloW>e. J..rg I d h I gounnet kitchen, e Ji\lf". ......rd, 2 blks beach. s iagcrptg. 15 ll"aslCr,gar-(West of Newport, between 17th&· 18th St.)
render at $3.i,500. \Valerfront Home. $350 mo. J-bage d isµosal, hltns, 2 Clll'l"!i!!!!!!!'! • iHal Pinchin & Aaaoc. * Call 536-3741 Blue Beacon. 645-0111 Bkr. gar. Lovely pa1io. Priv l~-
REALTORS 3100 bches & <'lub privil avail. Costa Mesa 4100 ! Costa Mesa 41b0
3900 E. Coast HWY. m.-4392 University Park 2237 Costa Mesa 1-:NJOY THE Stmtr.1ER AT liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Leisurt" \Vorld Baldiny ----------i ----------1 \VlNTER RATES. $425 mo.ii
Casa Linda, 2 Br. 2 Ba. 2 B<trrns. 2 baths, May 15 SHARP, Clean, romril retlec. Call for appl : Days, 675-S233,
XI Ip<; to Nov. 15 ••• , , . , , .• $275 3 BR -dining -2 RA eves 67;..8040.
I \\'!-~~r~~:~ie"'·· nt8314 j)T 4 Bdrms & tamily room -gar. A quiet strf"et. S195 June 15 to De-c, 15 •• $32:i 1no, Call 540-Il!il, Heritage·
4 Bclrrns. &: !runily room Real Estate-' Huntington Beach 3400
June 20 to Sept. 20 ·· $350 POOL TIME! LEASE t BR, 21!! Ba .
BOB PE'ITIT, Realtor If BR. Monlictl!o nr. OCC TovJnhsf'. 7/10 m!. frnm
OCEAN VIEW "Si""' 1946" 1235 mo. ;nd ""b ""'· pool b<h. Cclp" <lcps. bttns. '"" Single Adults Only Custom built 3 Bedrm, 2 833-0101 & main!. 838-S5.15/546-47W. Pennington Or. MB. $2'15
* NEW-PLUSH *
1.aguna Beach 1705 1 BEDROOM FURNISHED APTS.
bath, lg l\v rm, frplc, all EASTSIDE - 2 Br, frpl, beam rno. (2131 884-7981 aft 5 ~elec incl kif bltins, dinette, l_c_o_ron_•_de_l_M_._. __ 22_5_0 clgs, priv patio, adults only. c•m.c.c.,=~~~--~1 2035 Fullerton Costa Mesa
playroom, all beamed ceil· '--~ BR $152. 642-S.i :!l ~IODERN I Br house. beach ! I I t di. Lge LRG. furn. nvme -., .,
ngs, °"" ~· 1crp ~·e-d ~ 10 2 BA, den, patio, garagt. 3 RR, J Ba. fPncC'd yard. area, adulls only, no pets.11!'!!!'!!!![!'l!'!!!"!~~~
corner 0 · u 2 bl.ks from beach. $200 mo. Avail. 6/1. S180 mo. CaU $110 mo. unfurn .. Sl:YI mo.
$34,700, O"'ner 494---4726 any. year lease. Call aft 6 pm. 546--0379 after 6 furn. 1st, last & deposit. ~I 400() N B h
L!n1e. Fri or all day Sat. 673-4565 HALECREST~-~, ~B~,-. -d~,-,,· 1536-2615 ewport eac
NE\\/ 2 BR, 2 BA + lt"lu!ti 2 Ba, l.:pts, drps, bltns. S22j 2 BR To1l'nhllusf", pool S.· REl\IARKABLY
Purpose Room. \Vbite water Balboa '2300 mo. fl) 735-9432, 842-TI53 clbhouse. crpt, drps, Plec. UNBELIEVABLY
v ie w, Bit-in oven,1 ----------rippl" . .,-, patio. ~·a rport . EXTRAORDINARILY
1range--<lishwa$fler. Balanced • SUMJi.tER or' Ye8rly. 45' }-{~E on l<i~ .wt duplex, lrg :\dulls 111) pets. S 17 5. BEAUTIFUL
'µov.'t't, Carpeting. S27,%0. Ba)lfront Balboa Penin. furn kitchen. dlll g, 2 Br. den, 5:i6-71 13 V ID" G d A t Low Down, -499-3006 or 5 BR, '4 BA. Pier-0081. Adults only. $17;,. 642-0&'i7 a 1sere ar e n p s
i. 4 811, 2t...i BA. frple, dble Puttin;: green, \\'Rlerfall &
Newport Beach
GRAND
OPENING
4200
• '
II
Elegant
Living ' '
"Oft11l)t Cou"ty11 Motf 1•111•
tif11I Ap1rtm111t Community"
-ProleuloMI
IWIKI.,• M191lln4
ft merr1mac woods
' Lush l•ndsc•ping wfi 35' Pin• trees, 1perklin9
w•terfells, bubbling streams & 1erene ponds
meke Merrimec Woods t~e piece t o live. These
I & 2 BRr 2 llA, furn. or unfurn. epts feature
eir~cond, 1elf-cleanin9 ovens, b9om ceilings,
' d ishwesheri, priv. 9erege w/1tor19e, eltvators,
108• ther•peutic pool, swim pool, 8BQ'1,
11une1 & • lovely clubhouse w/social ectivitie1.
AduJts please. Froh, $I '45-$210. ·
RENTALS:--~==7'1 =""-"°'·"'°--~====
_A-'p'-1-s._F_u_m_l_•h_ocl__ Costa Mesa 5100
Balboa 4300
BAYFRONT lurn apt. Sleeps
2-6. Pa!io overlooking bay.
Open May 9th. 1 mo. or
weekly 673--6790
Lido Isle 4351
BAY view 1 Bl-apt, util
& gar incl. $223 mo. or
S22a Wk-fiununer. iJ8...-0228
1 BR, Util paid. Garage.
l adult. No pets. Sl7;i mo,
yearly. 673--0837 eves.
Balboa Island 4355
BOAT Slip &:-2 Bdrm.
Garage Apt. 1 Bath. SJ;,(I
Bill Grundy Realtor 6-t:l-46:!1
FAIRWAY
VILLA APTS.
Private patio, pool _ indiv.
laundry tac.
Near Orange Co, Airport Z.
UCI. Adults only.
20122 Santa Ana Av~.
Mgr. l\·Irs, Bruce 545-3894
Vacant & Clean
Spacious 3 Bednn, 2 bath
apt., with all modern appti.
ances + fireplace. It"s like
havin~; your own home! Call
for detailii, 546-4141
Huntington Beadt 4400 I !"!!!!!"!"""""!"!!!!!!""""'"" I:\1~IACULATE 2 BR duplex.
Bit-in oven and range. Drps,
new cpts. Garage. Fenced
yd. Gardener &: water pd.
Adults, no pets. Sl4;) mo
+ security deposit. Avail
Now! 548-3036 aft 5,
$130 A MONTH
l Bdtm furn apt, overlook-
·lng .beaut, garden patio &
htd pool. 1035 12th St.
(across from Lake Park).
53&4""
VSOl TE ROS APT5.
Bachelor & 1 BR's. Pool.
Adult.i;, no pets. From ;t40
up, 17301 Keelson Ln, H.B.
(1 blk W. of Beach, on
Slater.) 842-7848.
• MARTINICj)UE •
Park-Like Surroundings
DELUXE 1-2 ': 3 BR APTS.
Al.SO FURN. BACHELOR
Prv patios e Hid Pools
Nr shop'g • Adults only
2 BR deluxe. Adults. Crpl.l!,
drps, bltn.s, gar. Priv. patio.
&$-M.13
Newport Beach 5200
e NOW RENTING e
Beaut. new 2 Br. 2 bath unJts
-A-'/qual, cpts, & drpa:. Plan·
ned tor privacy plus outside
!iv. areas, pool &: rec. facll.
Dbl. garages. Jn the heart
ot Npt Bch, \V/easy access
to shopping, beach, frwy~.
$250 to $300.
BOYD REALTY
644-1617 675-5930:
OOWNING APTS I
CORNER CLAY ST. & t
ST, ~DRE\VS ROAD,
1
.
Upper 2 Br, 2 Ba, Frple -
priv. deck • pool, 12 adult!!
occupying 10 apts. QUIET! i
$200 mo. Adults over 18, .
64&.$111 i
BAYFllONT i
2 BR. ~ BA Lw.-ury Aprs.;
Prlv. terrace, elevators, sub-i
terranean pk'g, All elec.'
Pool, sou water, docks. 3121
\V. Coast Hwy, NewparL
64.2-2202
DUPL E X uppeT,I
water!ront/ dock. 2 Br,
w/1v cpts. drps, b I t n .s,
Adults. $200. 673-4927
2 BR. Condo.; 2~2 ba. 2 Car
g~e. Pool. Adults $240
Month. Fortin Co. 642-5000
OPEN 12-7 -2 BR, 2 BA,
cpts. drps, priv. patio.
Lease. $175-$195. 4230 Hilaria
\l/ay. Call 213--981-7039
2 BEDR~l. 2 Ba, erpts, drps.
near Hoag Hospital. Adults,
$185 mo. 64&-832;)
3 BR. 212 BA Apt. Swim.
pool privil. \\' /w crptg, $300
mo. 673--9183.
2 BR. N e 1v paint, crps,
drps, refrig av;,.il , Nr, beach.
yr rnd. $225. no pets 557-8400
Newport Heights 5210
NE\V 1 BR-blk to beach.
1150. Pl"i patio -QUIET!
G<1r. sin~le adlts. couple-.
202 A 14th. 5.16--1319, 673-1784
JTn Santa Ana Ave. Cl\.1 NICE 2 !)r, pool, sun de-ck,
l\-Jgr Apt 113 e 646.5342 gar, bHns, cpts, d rp s ,
2 BR. Unfurn. Newly ,.Jee. Adu It s. No p!'ts. SIW.
I 2 BR. Adults only. Util pd.
492-4($4. Avail Sept lst. Call 673-2039 lfd. B,R. i ~1 i;a· ~arpet~, ~nr, S26:i n1onth. Pacific s•1 ean1, flov.·ers every•.vherc,
BY ov.·ner: Executive-home, 2 Br. ~t Blk lo Bay & Bch. ~pes, rp ~ ence yar · Shurr« Realty. 5.'IB-8894 01· 4.'}' pool, rec. room. billiards,
large i BR. din nn. liv $180 yrly. 13M \V, Balboa $250. 646-590,, 8--17-8:>.~G BBQ's, Sauna, furn.-tiniurn,
nn, huge fam rm. "F.x-Blvd. 675-2539. NJGE 2 ~R TO\VNHOUSE, 3~2 BA. Drps. hrdwd 1 & 2 Br. ~lso Singles' tran1
ce pt i onal qual ity garage, Frplc., firs roont ft.J,. trailer/boat Sl35. &e it~.2000 ,Parsons IMMEDIATE
Beaut .. Quiet. S200. 17676
, , Cameron. 8.f2..6121
Ne1v crpts & drps. Spac 642-8001 or 642-8006
grounds. Adll.s, no pels. S140 S160-Triplex. 2 BR, 2 BA.
n10. 2283 Fountain \Vay E. prlv. patio, gar, bltns, crpts,
(HarlJor lurn. W. o n drps. 6T">3708 aft 5
\*/iJ.,on). Wilson Gardens I~=========
\>-/panora.mic view. $41,750. Lido Isle 2351 543-8428 or .~ nr 'Brach & l-leil. S200: fut .• 642--8670. Be11veen Har.
49-4-2Sfl LUXURIOUSLY Furn. Ex-. 1 BR. House. Adul1s. 962-4391 bor & Ne\vport · 2 Blk N. 19th
CHAR.\flNG 2 BR ....... ~ "'"'"'' ' BR, 2 SA. d""· r· '262\Sa;;,~:::"'· ,. B<dcoom, F~\ly Roo.,, RENT FURNITURE ~~· Ev!s~~5~-rm. So. patio. Nr. Beach. l;t Baths. S2'l0 JX'I' 1no.
Mission Viejo
Adult.II, 1 Yr ]5f. $371> mo. Mes.-Del Mar , , 3105 Gall 8-12-445.i .
170l lz'~'l>-8444========= _ 4 Brt, 1 1~ Ba, Stove. retri~. \Vasher/dryr. Pool & rec.
factl. Call 5.Jfi..~32<J
3 Rooms from $19.SQ
flfontl1 lo n10nth. Rentals
\Vide &ll'ction
2.-STY, 4 Be. 2 Ba. Dbl
gar.. 1rpl, ki!ch. bltns.
l\.fen1bership s1vim &:-rac-
quet club included. $32.500.
BY 0\V7""ER. 830-44l:i
Huntington Beach 2400
NE\V • Bdnn, 4 bath, fully
furn for exe<:utive, 1 mile
lo beach, Avail Ju™' thru
Dec. S675 mo. 962--6114
I Four Bedroom House
Crpts & Drps. S2j()
Call 549--2601
Newport Beach
10070 PURCHASE OPTION =====I
Capistrano S.•ch 1730 Laguna Btech 2705
Nr bch, l ml So of Marina.
Flexible custm 3 + den,,
3 Ba, Dining + brkfllt,
2 kitchens. Center patio,
Stables & fields 2 blk.~.
$36,500 lo dO'lt-'TI~ 496-3377
RENTAlS
Houses Furnished
General 2000
Slli 1 BR. Sep. 11se. R/0.
Relrig. Pet Ok. Nr . Bch.
Blue Beacon, 645--0lll Bkr.
$143 UTIL pd. 2 BR. d1.1plex.
Avail no\\·. Singles ok. pets
"''elcome. Bkr. 534-6980
.Rentals to Share 2005
!\E\\' split level, nev.·ly furn
3 BR, l~i BA, lge !iv room,
massive frpl, all modem
lacil, ocean view. lawn &
patio, loll! of extras. $350
mo. lse. 1034 Miramar
Eve&, 213: 462-4174 roll.
Summer Rent•la 2910
e WE HAVE e .
Over 25 Different
LAGUNA BEACH
SUMMER RENTALS LG duplex in N.B. iv/view, $30 WEEK & UP
By Wffk or month BEAUTIFUL View. of uppt'l' 200· !rorn :dnt s°"im">: heh. STUDJO & 1 BI::DROO!l.1S
MISSION REALTY · Ila.).' & Nev.1>0rt Cenler. :i 01«·t'S11.etl lt\•1ng rooni!(. TVs, T\itchenellcs incl. e 494-0731 e bdmt home, ne1f" cpls, $300 Fri>n! balcony, rear p:iHu J..lnPns & 111aid sl'r avail
SUMMER RENTAL lno. Avail JUh(!.,548-848$ & 4 br. :! 1.Ja1h t;P; Nice Cl11ld1'("11s .~. pc1 S('1:11nn
LAGUNA BEACH FOR Lease: New Easthlulf lron1 yd. z br. l ba DO\\'N. 2376 NEWPORT BLVD.
Beaut. Blue Lagoon Villa, 2 Condoniinium . .3 BR. 2v1 BA $<11.9JO Tcrins, by 011'ni'r. 548-9755
OCCUPANCY . . Luxury garden apartments
offerinG: complete pri\'acy,
btoautiful landscaping &:
unparalleled recreational
facilities In a country
club atmosphere. Now
leasing in Newport Beach.
f\Iod els open 10 am to 8 pm
Rents ltom $135.$310 :
Furnished or unfurnished
Oakwood
Garden
Apartments
1700 16th Street
714: 642-8170
Apartment Rental
· Listing Service
For Information 'lfl'ite :
Box 4486, Nf'\\'port Bch.
92064 or phone 642-4656
Santa Ana 4620 Apts. East Bluff 5242
-------LOVELY Spacious 1 Br1----------
2 BR. 2 Bath, cp~ .drps, Duplex. W/\V crpt & dJ'i>S,
blt-inS, Patip. Pool; sauna, re!tig., stove, uti!. Sl:i.'>.
Laundry room. 1 yt ·1ease "Quiet mature adults. Reier.
Sl45. Fairview, McFadden. 34S-8007
Adult" ,,,.= "'H'""A""'R-=B-=o-=R-G=R=EE=N=s
i 4705 GARDEN &: 5Tunto APTS
Bach. l, 2, 3 BR's. from SllO.
2700 Peterson Way, -C.1'1-I.
Laguna Beach
1 BR Apt; also sleeping rms.
Ulil pd, Free TV & radio.
2200 So. Coast Hwy.
V $21 WK. LUXURY
By the sea. 494-7201
LEASE To adults. 1 BR,
ocean viev.-. radiant heal
REFERENCES. 494-Sll2
RENTALS
Apts. Unfurniahtd
General 5000
-VENDOME
IMMACULATE AP'I'S!
ADULT &: FAMILY
SECTIONS AVAILABLE
Close to shopping, ~ark * Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ba * 2 Bedroom1 * Swim Pool, Put/green * Frpl, Indiv/lndry fac"b
1845 Anah•im Ave.
OOST A MESA 642;2824
546-0370
*DELUXE *
l.rg l Br. apt. un!urn. New
crp!g, new drps lhruout,
bltns. sep. din rm. 998 El
Camino Di·. 5'16--0-1Jl * . TOWNH'OUSE * 2 BR, 1 ~ii BA, crpts, drps,
pa!~2~t8~~· ~~~-1768
• DELUXE 1 & 2 BR
Garden Ap!s. Bit-ins, pri\'.
pa1 io, healed pool, frplc.
Adults. Sl.45 mo. 546-5161
, NEW Dlx 1 &. ~Br. Shg crpt,
drp.1;, bltns, 1mmed. <lC'C'p.
From Sl50. S40-1973, 54.>-2321
"It LRG 2 & l BR. 2 Baths,
frplc, bllns, crpt~. drps.
Encl gar.: patio. 546-1034
3 BDR1'f, 2 bath apt. built-
ins, cpts, drps. S160. 2.515
Orange Ave. 673-005.1
2 BR unfurn. apt., patio &
·built=lns. 2658 Orange Ave.,
PRESTIGE LOCATION
For lease. deluxe 1888 sq. fl
4 BR, 2~ BA apt. Frplc.
drapes, crpls, wet bar, pri
balconies, dbl gar oH kitchen
dsbwhr, dbl oven, Pool. Conv
to shop'g schls & recreation.
Only $350 mo.
835 Amigos \Vay, NB
riigr. next door 865 Amigos.
TO\VNHOUSE -New lrg.
2 BR. 2~~ Baths, trplc, end
gar, patio. 675-5033
Corona del Mar 5150
~~~}
ON TEN ACRES
l & 2 BR. Furn & Unfum
Fireplaces I priv. patlcs I
Pooh. Tennll. Contnt'l Bktst,
900 Sea Lar.e, CdM 64-4-:!6ll
!MacArthur nr. Co11irt Hwyl
Balboa 5300
UNFURN.-BALBOA
Ne~1·. Lo11·er du plex. 2 BR. 2
ba, & den. Near ocean.
$350 Month 13'" N "-I kt 1 i;73,?Z!l!. * \VEE'KLY-.---Ei\1PLOYED lady wishes to BR, 2 BA, w/dryer, wet bar, .N. r. :;Cnuu • m . poo , l~==~~-----
share 2 btt!room Costa 2 swimn1ing pools, tennis teonnis cts. Owll<'r 644--4~1 RENTALS l.IJvcly ap1, Ilachelo.rs or
'Mesa apartment with same. ('Ourts, step~ IQ private EASTBLUFF Lusk 4 Br, :!'Z Apts. Furnished cp!s. 1-'urnishin.i:s compL
MESA MOTEL' I Costa Meu 5100 .c.M. * LO\V \VEEl{LY RATES * BAY 1'1-lEAOOW APTS. ,NR, new 2 Br, 11 ~ BA, crpts,
Kitchen, 1V"s, n1aid service. Nc~v exc;iting 1 BR,, $1~0. drp11 , stove, <lshwr, gar.
Bay & Beach Realty Inc.
901 Dovu Dr., Suite 126 NB
645-2000 Eves. 646-6001 One child OK. 557-9796 after beach. $42.i month of June. &, fam rm "'/[rpl. f11Cd KilChPnclles. s.1;1 \\'k·pa,ys
6 p.m. S250 wkly. July and August. yd. Yearl.v S3S:i _ 2 yrs. General 4000 all. 9~S El Camino Dr.
BACffELOR. will share lg 499-1152. 10 AM·2 P~·f. $3T.i. 644--14:)(} J----------J c"::C:~::'.'.C'';'.'.1 ____ ~~
attract Newport Hhl home. OCEAN==~.~Go""11-c=o-u-,.,-,-.~,-lo~b~il~, ITI-LE BLUFFS; 3 Br. 2 8:1.. s·1ngle SPACIOU!:i. A1trac. Pool.
l'icaled Pool. 2 BR, S155. Beam ceilings .. 766 \\I. \Vilson, 642-79~
6•1fi..96Sl Wood pan'lg, shag crptg, LOVELY Lgc. 1 BR. Crpts,
TEACHERS Aitention-2 BR priv. palio, liOme wl frplcs. <lrps. bit-ins, gar. Adults,
apt. block h'Om beach & Pool, -sand voflry ball · crt, l'IO pets. SlJ;) mo. 646-1762
bay. BaJhotl, Avail June 15 rec bldg, pool tables, put-f/ NEW 1-2 SR. $150 & $170.
Huntington Beach 5400
mu.I ........ to awreciate~ home Adult Pk Dec 2 •ar g·• cpl• "~s II li!il pr:I, Gai·tlen Livin~. 1 ~ · · · · · .... "'·• " "·..-• a BR. SI'" & ,,,.' 2 Br. !l?J. ON BEACH!
fo1· J mo's. Sleeps 4. SHOO. ting green. Adults, no pets. Util incl. Adults only, no {K'ts e 2 BR 1 ~; BA FRO~f $235
67j...1070 eves. 387 W. Bay. Open House f-11 Avocado * 646-0979 e ~ BR 2 BA FR01'.1 S260
646-6112 Pool, sauna, bar/rest. bltns. Avail l\fay 201h. Only .......
536--0321 1295. Call Broker 6T;r.Hi62 Aduh.~. no pets. 7~0 \V. 18lh w ANT: \\'orking girl lo Ad I SI C\I 2 t ..... share Balboa Island home BR. furn,.house, Spanish, 3 BR. 2~1 ba. 10"''11 homr. u s ---~-~--with same. 673-2 383 6t!.>.7/30, near beach, s .... ·imming pool. SJOO i\lonth FURN. Ap!s. BachclorsSIIJ.
anytime-. Laguna Bch. Refs. 497-1064 1-laI Pinchin Real!or li7'.J..4.l92 I Blr~. Sl20 -S\30. :l13.) ·~========='-"="======'=""'"'-'"'======='==:Oo:I Elden ,\vc .. (':-,{,Sec ~Isr. I• Luxury sin1?l<'. 1 & 2 bed· \ 1 6 1_G;;..;.••~•~r~•~l-_____ 2ooo __ G_e_n_1_re_1 ______ 2ooo __ G~e~n~•~'r'-l _____ 2_000 __
1
roon\ apart111ents. furnish-1 p' ·
l
I '
. 11 1~ .·~ cd and unfurnishr.rl, \Vilh -( SI lj
con1plete pt'ivacy and Jnnd-t2) J DR Apl.!. Fu1·n .t pnr1Jy
scaped country club atmos· lurn. 1846 PLl'i_('nlla 1\u. JI.
pbere l:nchiding S750.COO r.11,!r. fi.16--&jG.I S@\\oU}A-.!££~s· "
Th1t Punle with the Built.Jn Chuclle
\1·orthpt recreational facil-•SUS CA-S~l-T~A~S-
ities dl's~ned !Ul•; opc1·alcd Purn. l BR Apts. Adults
Just tor single pcopJ('. nnly. no pel~. 2110 Ne1vport
Rents From
$145 to $300
lrumcdi:itc Occupan~·y
?Ito. kl ~lo. Vu: e Avail.
ANAHEIM
27j :'o. Brnokl111r:;I
fl bllt. :"oo. ol Lincoln) ~ n ~) m..J:-ioo
GARDEN GROVE
Blvd. C~I. &12-92.~f,
I B_R. Cl~an. Attrnc. F)tr·
s110. l.f't1 ~r. n('[s. Cpl or
rel lli:'d, 2538 Ne\\"port Blvd.
I BR. t:tll pd. $130. No pets. ~ll11tu·,.. ndul!. 99~No. 1 I
Va!t'n~ia. 510-9680.
$lG:1 l'RIV1\Ti-;l-~ll-d~im-.
quiet den, pool. patio, gar,
Adults. Nn f)l'ts. ~37G4 '* 1-&-2 B;:-F'urn. Apl!I.
POOL.. 177 22nd St.
1"A$5'\U. PAL~lS. Gtl-3645
./ J Br. furn Apt.
131(Xl C'hapn1at1 Ave. No J>('\5. 1:£.1 Santa Ana /\.'Ve.
(·I blks \\1• S:.nt11 An11 Jo'wy.) All :,, :1~966.l.
LG Furn 1 Br apt, pool.
QCl'llll .,·le\V, Desire a<lulf
eoupll'. no children & no
pets. S200 incl utl. &lfi..2'jj6
* * t BDR~I SUBLET, 1
BLl\ f'ROM 8 EACi1 ,
67 :1-179.t CALL ·IN
DAYTii'llE
e \\'INTER RENT ALSe
ABBEY REALTY
•642-3850•
LARGE 1 Bdrm near Ocean.
$150 mo--ye-arly. Students
OK. 673-SOSS.
DELUXE 2 Br. \Ve~tclill Joe.
Pool & bl!ns. Adu1'5 S210
mo-no 15". (l'IZ-6274
1 BDR:'lt apt. Close·•to '$ay
& beach. Furn c:r~'uutirm.
675-7876, 49"l-9"1711~lnson
ON BA y -Near Lido. l
BR. private patio, Sl.8.J.
moorlng avan.~673-M9l".
Newport .-1gt1. 4210
~TI~) 636-3030 1BRJ:~-.1.-1,-,-,~,.-,-1 1 Cl.F..A'N, J &.. 2--nR. Lrg kit.
• :r.:~I' r r I' I' I' I' I' I' I
NEWPORT BEACH
880 JRVJNi-; /\\'!':.
JnVTNF. ANn 1601
tTl 1! 61J.O~
rnn'•. A<lulr!t 1owr 2JI <i1tl.J1. Adul!s, nn pets. Sll5-$1SO.
No p.11~ Pu\lo. 64~7509 , 2~21 E. 16th St., 646-.!E«ll.
Newport Beach 4200 Corona del MJJr 4250
12-7 pm daily. 646--0073, '*; LARGE 2 BR .,,../palio e 3 BR 2 BA FROM $300
"6.73-7fi29 Cai'pets-drapes-dishwruiher cpts, drps. stove, relrig.
1010 f.:L CAMINO Dr, CM. Adults, no pets 642-2768 heated pool-sauna-tennis
Upstairs 3 RR. 2 BA. \Valk rec room-ocean view1
to stOres & chu r'cbes. 2 Br apt, elec bllins, crpts patios-ample parking •
Children under 3 vr .over & drps. S-l50 per mo. Fannie Security guards.
15 ok. $165 mo. Open Sat. Price Rib-548-3209 F URN. also Avail.
'-3 or shown bf appt. Ph. 2 Br Apt. bltlns. garage~ HUNTING TON
545-3868, ~165 or eves fenct'l"I patio, E-si,de. Sll5.
67".>-85:>5 mooth. Ph. (213) lll4-6llli PACIFIC
NE\V Single sty Garden LRG. front -d l ning com-71l OCEAN AVF:., H.B.
Units. 2 BR, l BA, shag bina!ion, 2 Br. den. Adults (7141 536-1487
crpts, drps, dsh'olo·hr, 2 only. S17S. 642-0857 Ore:. open 10 am-6 pm Dally
patios, beam ceilings, frplc, 1 '1~a~R~~°'-,-,,-,-,~,,-m-;._Q_•_1ic-!
separate gaar~. Adu.Its. iarden ainiospherf'. No pets NE\V 4 Br home. 2 ba, garb
no pets. $165. 2650 Elden, •)r children. a.tlHmO dtsp; dhswsr. s tove, drps;
536--0062 aft 7 pm & Sun. LG fncd :vd SIOO + $JOO .see. 2 Br, crp!s, <lrps, fee, Avail imm<'d. 8451 Lo-
DELUXE 1 Story 2 Br Apt carport, pool, cbild ok. 2214 mond Dr, (213) ~
In trlMplex. 2 ~I 11 r b I e College, 646--0627
·.,Ullman ba's.' 2 Jrg enel 2 BR apt, C~ts. drapes,
"
sn.roro 2 Br. crpts, drp11, dishwasher. acro!I• b'om
P.tl oa. crpf'A & dl""P'S, loads pool. \\lotki"" coupl• '"'· .! hit• A ·1 J 1 5 h ....,. J.:unfy park. $145 mo. ""· va1 . u Y I · No chlld.ren, 2-13. 6~&-0-196. /; ~~ Close to shopping. Adults 84~77
only, no pel.$. $16S lse. DELUXE :Z br, 2 ba, Ad ults ATrR,AC, 2...Bll. $l35, All e:x. &IG-1~6. pa.st 40 -only, SlUI n10. trll', Nm\' avnll. Kids ok.
263-265 16th Pl. See mgr. 17401-A K"elsnn Lr!, H,8. * STUDIO APT. * $115 PER mo. 2 Br, 1 J1:n111.ll fl68.-7S IO, 847-74~6. • 2 Bedroom I ~==Co-~-.:;_ __ _
,• JI~ Bath child Ok, No ~ts. Bltrui, 2 BDR!\.1. Apt. Cll..rpets, built·
·e Adult, ·only <:pU., dr1>4. 538-94Gl aft 5· liw:, gnr&ge, ho pets. Call
• Healed Pool 3 Br Studio Condo. 962-a178.
102 1 ftlission Dr .. C't 2 Pools, bltins, $225 mo, Call 2 RR. s1;..1 \\"( 1 yr ltut
'".~.~ ""!"~" 54&-3TIO ..r•v """" ., ..... ~ """"',:0.~~~~-~-1 SJj(). Patio, pool. 1~ ba .
VILLA MESA APTS. LRG. 3 BR. Apt. Crptt. cl.rps, 8181 C11rf\eld. !!Gi..s9!H:
, ti ~'°'I I I I I I I I I I
SCRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 8000
· South Bay Club
Apartments
2 OR. Priv patio. lltd pool. kid.i; ok. Pool. 1998 r..taple, NEAR Huntington Jtarbor.
2 car encl'd gar. Chilifl'i'n Apl 3, f>48-2808 Tri plexes .. Quiet 1rta. l.rJit
./ I. 1\ ll G E 2 Bdrm. ./ \\'AN"'rf.D • n1n1urt". quiet welcornc, nn pt'lll pleaH? CLEAN 3 Br. l Ba.. cpts, 1 & 3 Bit $140 & up. Pt'IS,
t'lrcpl:iec. fllnck tn Oct-lln. t\"Omnn 10 rtn! ~m<ill r.o1J' S165 mo. 'n9 \V. \Vlilon. rips, bllns. A'lnt N. O t 11.tta. ch11th'C'n (lk. (213) !)92-2623,
Y-nyfy faXJ mo. 6'73-$88 , _ru_rn_._•-'P_1._,_;_,__s_~_, ___ . __ ..,.._1_2S_l______ Chlldrn nk. Slfi9. ~T~151 (71•1 846--3559
•
-------·--------..___ __ _
..... ·-···-····~---...--.....------~---~~~~~·-·r,-,r..~------.... ,..,.~.,.. . ...,.,.,..., .. ...,..,... .... ---.,-.~.._~·----,---r,..,.,-,,-:-.-:.-:'.-:.:-;-.-.,--:-:--:.:-:.·-:-:--:.':".-~~-.~.~-
•
I'm The Kind Of
Woman Who Gets
What She Wants
' '· ..... '4_ ........
• • • Because I'm The
Kind Of Woman
Who's s·mart Enough Jo
Use DAILY Pll.OT
Classified Advertising
Believe me, tliere's nothing •round our home •nymort
that isn't being used -because the minute I discover
something is no longer needed, I seR it, whi~ a stin
h11 maximum v1lue, through 1n inexpensive DAILY PILOT
Clonifiocl Ad. Th1t woy, insteod of 1 clutter of things
we don't us11 I h11ve the extra cash that lets me have the
newer things ••• thl "extr111 things my whole family
enjoys. Here's whet I mean.
The cash I got for tho goocl clothes ind toys tho children
hod outgrown bought me tho decorotor lomp I'd been
w1nting. The musical instrument no one played paid for 11
big part of our portable stereo unit. The power tools
redecorated our daughter's room. And, just for the fun
of it, the good chair thot just didn't motch 1nything
anymore took my husbond ond me out for 1 fabulous
dinner at the fanciest restaurant in town.
Go through your homo. Mako 1 list of 111 tho worthwhile
things you fine! th1t 1ron't being used. (Y ou'U bo 1urpri1od
1t tho number you tum up the first time.) Thon , di1I
642-5678 ony timo between 8 1.m. ind 5 p.m. incl
givo your list to 1 friendly, experienced Ac! Writor. Th1t's
el there is to it. It's inexpensive too! It can cost you 11 tittJ.
11 PENNIES A DA Yl
Well, now th11t you know my secret -isn't it time you
got st11rted toward better, easier, happier Gving with
DAILY PILOT Oeuified Ads 7 St1rt boing tho kind
of wom1n who gets whit sho w1nts tod1yl
Call Now 642-56 78
Watch for the full week's T.V. listings
.
Saturday's edition of the DAILY PILOT.
--•.
• m
R•NTALS
Apto. Unlvrnlollod
Hunllntlon lleoch 5400 ----BEACH BLUFF APTS
New 2 &: l BR, patlol, pooJ,
view, di.liiwuher.
lln Elllll. 342-1477
HUNTINGTON &y Condo.
Adllltl. 3 BR. \Vshr/dl')'r.
Pool. $185. 536-2~12, .,,.,..,,..,
* * * *
"""
Friday, MQ I. 1970
* Rt.AL ESTATE
a.nerat
Office RMt11I 6070
OF.LUXE 1·2 or 3 rm. auJte
DA.IL\' ,ILOf
BUSINESS ond
FINANCIAL
luslnat
Opportunltlu
nr. Oru&e County Alrport OOI.N LAUNDRIES
A: Irvine lndu1trial Frigidaire
Complex. Carpet. t:lrqlet, Fl'om $6500 to $.17.500
muak, atr-oonditionfn& I< e Buena Park e Fulle:rtoa e
janitorial aervice. Available Cyprcaa: e Westmlns1er e
May l.!11. ltunoutton Beach • Garden
BOB PP"b"l'"l l~r. Realtor Crov, e On.nJe e Sanla
e 833..0101 e Ana e COit& 1.f,u e Ant.
DESK SPACE "'m • CALL QlAllLIE
222 Forest Avenue UNUSUAL
NE\V 1 BR·blk to beach.
$130. Prl pallo • QUIET!
G&r, ain1lc adlts, couple.
102 A 14th, 536-1319, 673.1714
Whodtlyo Wont? Whotldyo Got'
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
Laguna .Beach OPPORTUNITY
VILLA MARSEILLES
BRAND NEW
SPACIOUS
NATURAL BORN SWAl'l'EllS
Spoclol lt1ta
494-9466 , Attractive Boutlqu' on t~
beach e11tablilhed 2 yni. * OFFICE SUITE Xln't tea!Ml'. Sacrltlc.:e at
Foi: l'a.se 2600 SCI. ft. !deal $3500 tl1tl. lnvt:11tory at COllt.
location, dol\'ntown Laiuna Owner moving out ot 1tatf!.
Beach. Ctptd, air • cond. P.O. Box 23.11. Newpm·t
S LI--S "'"" -S buclrs IU\..11 -AO MUST INClUDa
1 & 2 Bdrm. Aptt. ~ ,., 911-.. .. .... l-Wll.t ,..., ...,,. ~ .......
~'l'OUI lllMnt' •Mltr .-..... •~ •-#If ~1'-Janitor. UW. Priv dual tttsl-Be Calif 5.11-5363
Adult Llvlnt ~0THING !JOI SAl.9 -Tl.ADM ONL'tl nn lac. 49+9-181 ==·~'"=·~~·~-~· ~ GREAT food &:. malt tihop Furn. & Unfurn.
Dishwasher. c:olol' coordlnat·
ed appliances • plush aha&
carpet • cho.lce ot 2 color
ICbemes • 2 baths • stall
showen • mirrored "ard·
robe doon • indirect 1!2ht.
in& in kltchrn • bttakfast
bar • bu.a:e private fenced
patio • plulh J\nr.iscapin&' •
brick Bar-a.Q's. larfe beat-
M pools It lanai.
To Pl•c• Yaur Trllder'1 P1r11cliM ArJ
PHONE 642-5471
DESK SPACE opentlon '°'Ill• to ""''
17875 Beach Blvd. =.uUCino~P'!nt=
3101 So. Bristol St.
C% Ml. N. or So. eoa~11 Plual
Sant11 Anll
PHONE : 557 .. 200
CAN'T BE BEAT
Single SIOl'y
South Sea Atmosph'rt:
• 2 &droom 2 Balhs
Carpets &:. Drapes
Air Conditioned
Private Patios
Heated Pool
Plenty of la"''n
10 duplex's 1: 9 4 BR houSie!I
on aoH cout"R. Santa Ana
(sepant, lot!) all rented.
\Vill trade up for ro.100
units, C.M, Bkr. 646-8362
San Cl'nlente • two RI lols
nr. golf rourse on Su.n Din\-
as. Assu1ne $146. per n10.
loan, Trd eq, for late mod,
car or !? 492-8078 aft. 6 pm.
l BR. P.lountain home: Run..
ning Springs area; $12,000
equity -for: Mobile llome,
Costa i\Jesa. \Viii carry cash
d!Ucrence at 7~i:%. 546-6277
Trad, 35' FibreglaJa Sloop
any !ltage ot eon1pletion
from $3995. \Vant lat' Cad·
iliac, Lincoln, campe1· OI'
motor home. 673-6809.
HAVE: 10 units in Do1\ncy
\Vant N'pt. Beach dupl'x
ASK FOR "LEE"
Pyramid Exchango1'1I
615.8800 499-19911 Ev,11
150 acres nr. Fallon, N,v.
f'rto' &: clear, for houses,
units, <."Omm,rcial, !:~
Carport l:. Storag, "fyers
673-6756 l~IDDEN VILLAGE GARDEN APTS HA VE CAL 20
2500 South Salla WANT
Santa Ana * 5f6.152.') LATE STATION WAGON * 673-0517 * $150 • LRG 2 BR. Studio ~--~~-~-Apt. ('n'iplex), }o~amily i;lzc Kenn1ore Electric Dryer,
'"I h / bit t d used l year, like nf'\I'. .. , c . VI ns. crp s, rps,
frplc., encl gar. 1 or 2 \\'ill trade lor gas dryer
children ok. (Nr schls) No in same good condition.
119'ts. 2230 S. Center Sl., 646-8092
S.A . Nr Warner. 54:.-0989
$115.UP. Lrg cheerful newly
furn or unfurn. l Br. apt.
Crpts, drps, blln!I, encl gar:
l child ok. (Nr ll<'hls). rl30
S. Center St. SA. Nr.
Hv Dual Showman, Vox
Cont'! organ, '67 Honda 160
CB, A1U' pool tbl; trd 2 or
more for Jj()cc or largcr
Motorcycle, 044-0420 ·
Warner. 545-0989 'i * *
2 Ney;er duplexe!I, side by Huntington B84ch crowth. $5000 dn. Contact
1idco; 3 Br. 2 Ba. ca., fplca. 642-4321, Ext 276 Dan. 833-2470
Nr. beach, Equity approx. OFFICE OR Sl'ORE SUPERB Opportuni t y .
S27.000. Tradt' fo1· land or 15 x 35• or 30 x 35• Marine hardware s tore ,
indust. Realtor 673-4330 Newport. Inv'at. of less on st pk!ng &: util rum BEAUT!Jo*UL ENGLISH 6 Nr.\vport & Bay Cent,r, Clio{ than $10,000 will net m in.
RM Home near Pa11ad,na 3)j2 N'wport Blvd ~1252 ot 30%. \Vrite Daily Pilo1
for N.8., Ctlf.t, C.f.f. Duplex Box M-926.
or units, Home ''alue $29,500 DESK SPACE F~ANT=~A=ST=1-=c~B~u-•. ~O-ppo-,.~,
cl~11r. Call 548-s:;J2, )05 No. El Camifto Re•I yr medium ailed restaurant
J HAY~ A 1969 VICTOR S•n Clemente in N.B. that must be sold
10 Key Adding Machine. 492-44~ due to loss of mat'· lOM down
Orig. Cost fl.50, Will tratlC B•tt Loc•tion in CdM Call Gale Pike • 49U373 for
fOt' guns or ! 800 to 1400 sq. fl. Del1L"'<e Off. ii•P;;P7.'~·'0""'""'-' -~=.,...,,, Call 5.'.i7·9:·136 Ice Spaces. Avail Immed. ·S\VIMJ\1INC pool route for
Trade f.f-1 lot Co;;ta f.1csa. Phon, Owner. 642-9950 u..lt-. \Vil! train. C&ll after
7 pm, sa7-7949 Equity $15,000. \Vant R·l lot SUITE L: 400 sq. ft. ot :;;;;=======·I
or home Coastal area rronf office I< stora(::e area. 1651 Monty .. LNn '320
NWpt Beach to Dana pt. Pla<:f!nlla Ave/COAST ----------
Call 6'J3..6809. DRAPERY. 64G-4401
12 Z.BR. apts. Costa f.tesa. EXEC ofc suite • UOO sq. ft.
Trade for home In Costa crpts/d1-ps. #I Npt Blvd.
~fesa or nr. "'ater from So. Call aft T pm wk d y •
Oregon to N. San Di'&o 67a-t&l4
Cnty. Fortin Co. 642-5000. l.NCC.EWPO"""°'a"'T~~ ... ~c7h-.0.=1wccxo
Have 8 units amaU 1hopping Oflices. Alr--cond .. heated,
a:"nter, vacant Jot, ~Vil· v;/ priv ba. 2400 \V. Cout
eant land suitable for trail-Hwy.
rr !)llrk, any area or ???? H.B"'.'"""'O..c-clW<-.,-."t'°t;ce-= .. -,c-::\'/W
PriCf' Rlty. 548-n:l9 crpts.. A/C. $90 mo. 193.."2
1916 1'.fodel T Ford Road. Beach Blvd, 96U631.
1st TD Loan
Lowest lntel"e!t Available
2nd TQ Loan
Terms based on equity.
'42·2171 545-0611
Serving Harbor area 21 yn,
Sattler Mort9•9• Co.
336 E. 17th Street
6350 ster. Looks good, runs good. NO. C.M. office, nice. Prof. ~y W11ntecl
HM 2 t-ngln,1. Trade lor Air-cond, cpta. dpc. $79 ea. INTERIOR dt'signer needs
la.le Jo'ord or Chevy. 2210 6•16-4833; alt 5, 547-4757 $5,000 lo $10,000 Joan to ex· O_r_,_n~_r. !:_s._4:i;_"il $l:i0 f.fO. 900 sq ft. air cond., panel furniture inv,ntory.
3 BR. 2~~ BA TO\vnhou.~e. 2320 Npt. Blvd., CM, Secu~ inve11lmt'nl. Xlnl
N.B. Pri. putio, pool, ,Jee, 548-2616 return. 962--6631
kitchen. $32,000. Take low ===-====== -===~====-down, late mOdel car. T.D. lndustrl1il ANNOUNCEMENTS
or !? Owner 64&66:>4. Property 60IO •nd ·NOTICES
List It hel'9' -tn Oranre -'--'---. ---Found (Fr•• Aclt, 6400
\Vhat <io vou have to trade! \VAREHOUSE-Oilice space
County'•"lari::-est re11.d trad f~r lease. Campu.~ Dr at "'i post_ U'1 make a deal. au'port. r>Iullan R' a It y.
540-2960
* * * Commerci•I
':!!~ Beech 5705
./ OCEAN VI E W. LJi:.
Bachelor, 1 le: 2 BR apts.
Furn or unfum. Crpts, drps,
bltns, patios, walk t n a:
diltance to town. 100 CliH
Drive, Lq:. Bch.
-------------
FOUND: 9 month o I fl
German Shepherd n'ar UC!
campu.,, Doa: hall "·hite, tan
and black markirl£S. No
identification. Call 833--0785.
FOUND 1 Long haired mutt,
N.E. Corona de! Mar area.
l\iusl id,ntily. 61,,...3322 a ft
6:30Pf.1 .
REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE PR1'1E OCEANFRONT
G•neral Glnlir•I 4 furnished unilll, zoned com--------i---------mercial, 25x125, S69,500. SHS lncom• Property 6000 Chvner: 673-2258, 644-597l Rooms for Rent ----·-----·I -MARINA Jn Newport Beach. BUFF Co~ i\tona r el
found on my pat)o, vie.
Harbor 1' Adanu. 54j..7862
aft 6 pm.
WALK To town & beach,
1 BR. adults only. $135 mo.
494-3839 or 4~!Mn. Ask
for Dave.
REAL ESrATE
Gener11f
Rentals W1nttd 5ff0
TEACHER W'lUl ls l br furn
or unfurn apt. Nc1vport or
Laguna area, )Tly. Call
67~2894 aft 4 P?.1
\\'ANTED: l er 4 BR hou!!f'
to rent or leas' around June
lat, residential are&. Call:
542-1'38
RENT AL SERVICE
~'" to L.1ndlord1
Blue Beacon, 64~183 Ci\I
CHEERFUL Room Ir: bath
overlookinr ocean $,,/wk.
Nicely decorated. qUiet bldg,
aund,ck & kitchen priv. 12B9
S. Coast Hwy, Lazuna
Beach . .t94-9017
SLEEPING Rm. E. Cos\<1
M~a. Employed a:enlleman.
$6;; Mo.
642-5000 548-0390 Eve!! * ROOi\1 101· reni, re.liable
non-drinking man. $15 \\'k.
64~10
$1."i PER "·k up "'/kitchen
s:lO \\lk up apl~.
1.fotel. 548-91:);1
Motels, Tr11ller
Courts 5997
./ \\'EEKLY rates. SE A
LARK f\IOTEL , 2301
Newport Blvd, Costa :\iesa.
Moel Off. Bid Prime loc. Fee. $315,000 •rn 1ce I • Exel. K I n I a a rd R.E.
2600 Sq. Ft. Mt 2-2222.
e 2 Story, Jo"Ully Occupled.l'M'°A7RJN=~A~Jn-N~,-wpof1--,Bo=-a""ch.
• + 2 Residential lncome Prime loc. F'ee $315,000
Unit11. Exel. K i n I a a rd, R.E.
e Prime Corne.r Location. 1_M_1,2,,.mi"'."·=-=,.-.,:-..-
$85,000 FOR lease 830 i;q. fl.
The Fox Comp1iny DowntoWn Harbor Blvd., Ci\I
(R••ltors) Good parkinr. alt/cond. Call 642-8000, LI S.2698
ll10 E. Co111t Hwy FOR Sale, lltore building.
Coron• d•I M•r 686-69S w. 19th St. Bethel * 673-!1495 • To11.·,rs area. 548-1768 Agt.
LARGE Female Penia.n cat.
mottlt:d brown A: black, 3 .
weeks aro, So. Lai:una.
4~2835
FOUND Tan colored Puppy, '.
Mesa Verde area. C.M. For ,
lnfonnation call 673-5709
FOIJND -SealpOlnt Sialnefte ,
cat. F'male. . . Area. of ,
Lido Isle. Call 675-4639.
Lost 6401
USE YOUR
STOCK
Industrial Rental 6090 LOST: Alask;ui 1.lalamutr.,
BLDG. For least, Laguna malr, black l w h It e :
Beach, 1900 sq ft. all or ans\\"ers to ":\falamud."
part, all po\\·,r. 494-4447 Vic. Univel'!lity Dr .. C.OSla
A!'. Do1\·n Payment on thesf' 9 * * * *
Deluxt-Gw-den Apartment~. Ne\\' 3800 sq ff.
.$49.~iOO Equity. Ou\ of lo\\•n ~vport Beach
* * S383 mo.
642-14s.;
i\1e~a. Re\\'ard. Call after
6 P:\I. :;,18-5993.
e LANDLORDS e
FREE PENTAL SERVICE Mi1c. Rentals 5999 O\i•nc.r anxious, --------1 546-~l:: 646-71TI Lots
LOST: Small-.,.-,~.,b~row-n
female mixed Schnau~r
'100 type dog. SpR.yed, Oea col· , Brok'r S.14-6982
RENTAL v.·a.nted. 4 Br \\'ith
pool. Also 2 & 3 Br. Phone
6"~1070
ENCLOSED Stora:i:r Garage.
Easy Acce!l!'i Ne111 port
lll'ights. S~ fllo. Ca 11
~
Rooms for Rent 5995
ROOi\1 With pvt b"th It en-
tranc,, kitchen priv, near
STORAGE spacr. 800 sq. ft.
or les~ available in NB.
642-1893, 9G2-a046
IT'S \VONDERFt;L I ho oce-.1n, young "·on1an or
diV(lrcee, J child o k , =· D1a1 64:&-5618 fol" RESULTS
many buya in appliances
you find in t~ Classified
Ada. Check them now!
RENTALS RENTALS
_ ~·· Unlwnlollod Apts. Unfurnfthtcl
s~nfll Ana 5620 Santa Ana 5620
A,,.,,,,..,.,,
Spanish Styl• L•""'Y
Far,.itltd .,., Vnfttr,.bltff
A4ah U.f"f
Qafllil1 .,,..., c .. ~ ... ,..,,...
£.ttlfl"' ,,........,. a.ftp
r.r.11.1 .. r.-.1ry • a....
,,.. • .,. ,,_, .!Ml •.rr.,.
Air c.MifN;,llff
L;., r-, Ow• r n .... St.
RHrl!I reol-Celor rr """'"'"•
NOWI Renliltr-From $14-0
Ju NW1A. •I .S.a1ll C-• ri-
1000 W. Mlf<Arthur Blod.
1 Wor,\ B.,t _, lrUt~
Smtlo Ano 540-8497
------¥· Jar. Name ?.fitzi 842-5410
\-oTHEREAL
''""-ESTATERS
* • LAK.EFRONT L 0 T BRIEFCASE with music, ne<:·
1'"0R SALE, CA NY 0 N e~iary for \\'Ork. REW ARD.
LAKE, BY 0 \V N E R. 613-4~9 or 67~3346. '-. I ' ' 837-5311.
Busin••t R•nt1il 6060 2 CONTIGUOUS E-side, 1; ---------i acre, & nouse. $22,300. \\'Ill fo~OR LEASF: 11ubordinate. Bkr. 63&-3raO
ifO'ITLED Femi.Je cat lost •
in vie. Cd~t Tennis 1:1.ub '
approx. 4/28. 613-1570
NE\V SHOPS & OFTTCE~
NO\V AVAILABLE A 6200 Personals ~~~·---~--5 ACRES
6405 .
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO
Pre!tige, A/C, l\I i as ion
Style, individual 1 to r e
fronts, excellent parking.
PAClrtc INVESTMENTS
82Cl South Grand. SAnta Ana
714: 8J.>.2923
Full price $6,37:1.
Level land w/ good view,
Vic of Multi-million-$
dcv,lopment. Good t,nru.
(n4J &W-4670 eves. Bkr.
l2JO Sq, fl. Comtlkrtial, Ne\v-R•sort Property '205
port Blvd -Costa P.1,iul ---
Prime -hug~ traffic count. 8EA1Jl". l level Lake Ar·
Leak $200 "'°· Call 545-8424 rowhead home, 4 Br, 3 Ba.
TJl'd kit. I< bath!. Bltn
vacuum cleaner i)'&lem,
crptg, drps, new Rock
Maple dln'g set. new living
rm !um. frost·tree rtfrig.,
dshwhr, aelf-cleaning oven. HILLGREN SQUARE House les:: than 2 )TS old.
2 1tores avail. I~: immed. Llved In 2 wknds only. Sell
lease in one or city's busic,ql for considerably Jess than
shopping eentcrs. App, 8j(J r.o1t al $45.000. Call 114:
sq. ft. ca. 540-1867 wkdy1. Owner.
Sing1e-\Vitlo1\·ed-Divorced * MEN * Everyone's looking for the
righl one. w, have a \\'&y •
so call us &r begin lo li\'e!
547-666.1
24 hr, recordirtK
HAVE You ev'r had com·
plimenta: u to how nlct
you hair looks! lf )'0\1
haven'!, $ir \Valt,r's Euro-
pean Razor Cut will do the
tri<'k! 3l52 .Newport Blvd,
C\I
* FREE • GROUP
COUNTER SESSION
Call 673-7s;;;,
EN·
AL COH'.OLICS Anonymou11
Pho!lt' :>42.-7211 or 11'flle to
P.O. Box 1223 Co;;IA Mesa.
2jQ E. 17th St., Costa 1rfes11JO:.==o;:;-::===
Call Mr. Bram (Zl3) OL 1-271)) R. E . W11nted 6240
OF'F1CE·Slott • Or Antique R••-~sl"b"lo'-P-,-r-ty-NOW'S THE Slort' for renl. I. Iv I n g ...-··
qu11.rttr1 ln rear. $175 mo, Wants ff Buy
Call 548-2134 . llOUSf' or tncorne propert}' TIME FOR
600 SQ. FT. STORE o" °' near W&t<r ror low down paymt
Jn C.f.f. Call O'A'Mr, 646-2130. from Owner
STORE FOR LEASE C1ll: '75-1575 QUICK CASH 536 \V, 19th St., CM ~nnltt R.lags Agt 546-2739 BUSINESS 11nd
•STORE -1110. 82S IV. 19th _!'.INANCIAL THROUGH A
St., Ci\f. Avtll JuM ht. Business
~~ __£pportunltles '* p LOT
Office Rontol 6070 DtSTRIB\'.lTORS A DAILY I
SALESli1EN \V ANTED to
Modern Offices sell • f'f!\'Olutionary new WANT AD ST5 single. S175 2 nn airlte, Wtll!r Bed. Unllmlted fina.n-
Alr col't(I, Scct'y service. 1•lal l>OliSibUllit!I. Sh a re
paJ.'kil\g, c~nlrally locattd. \Yater ~. 642-5678 So. CA.llf 1st Nat, Bk. Bld1. (213) 438-7967 I
230 r:. 17th Sl:rtftt 1'0"'•"1"'c"Y"P=IL""tJ"r"1"'vAN=rr"""•"os""1
Costa lifega 642-14SS DIAL dl'rect 642-56.'fl, Cha.r:e ---------'~
1
j
r
-'--r..cr.-,: ..,,,,.,..,..,----·---:------. -. -, -. ---_ _. ____ ---------------~------------------------·----·---
•
LL
AMONG . THE GREAT
Here, among some of the great newspapers of the world, is an old friend. The
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does at the front door of thousands of 0 range Coast area homes where it is
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town newspaper" can be sophisticated and still not lose touch with what's hap-
pening at city hall. Whether it's news from around the w or Id or down the
block, the DAILY Pl LOT packages it best for you. And the si m pie fact is th a t,
because the DAILY PILOT emphasizes local coverage, you'll find a lot of stories
in it you can 't find in any other newspaper in the world. On this international
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est one in the world (for local news).
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DAILY PILOT
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DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED INDEX
rrl d11. M11 8. 1970 DAILY PILOT :17
JOIS & EMPLOYMENT JOIS & IMPLOYMENT I JOIS l IMPLOYMENT I JOBS" l!MPLOYMENl
Job Wanted, Men 7000 Jobi Men, Wom. 7100 Job• Men, Worn. 7100 Jobi ft\eft, Wom. 7100
RF.TIRED Chl~t Boattwa.ln'a
DIAL DIHEC'I' 642·5878
MOTELS, Tll:AILl:lll 'coo•n .""' elNllAL ..................... ! .. GIJIEST HOMEI '"' COITA MUA · ................ UM MISC. Rt:NTALS '"9
MllA 01 .. 111\Alll .......... .,.,11at INCOMI t'ROPIRTY .... ,.,. .. ... 111\llA VlllRDI'. ... -.... , ..••• lilt IUS1HESS PllOPERTY .0 COLLIOI ,ARIC .............. 1111 TllAILEll PA1tlt5 411!1 Nlwt"OlllT al'.ACtl .......... ,.ltot IUllNllS RENTAi. , .•••.•.... 6111 NIWf'OlllT tlllONn ....... , .. lllt Ofllf'ICI RIWTAL .............. l'I t.ALIOA COVIii ............ l tU INOUSTlllAL l'lllQPl.aTY ..... ... NIWl"OlllT IHORllS ........ , •. Int eOMMlllltCIAL .......... 60ll tAYClllllT .................... l tU INOUSTllllAL llllHTA'-.,.,,.,...,. UY1HORIS .•.•. ,. •...••••.• Im t.OTS .......... , .............. '1M OOV•R SHORES ............... ltt7 RANCHES .. ·-···-···-.. •IH waSTCLl,F ............... 1QO C:ITRl.IS OROVEI ....... '1n 11A•1011 M1GHLANOS ........ 1us ,CREAOI! . .:::::: ......... •• SERVICE DIRECTORY
When Yoo
Want it done
right •••
Call one of
the experts
listed below!!
SERVlCE OIRECTORY SERVICE OIRECTORY
mah!. llave 15 yrs exp in
5n111.ll craft operaUan. Tor
intonnallon. v.·rlte ft.I P. O.
Box 344, C.M. !12627
Job W•nted,
Women 7020 --"----'-""' MAnJRE lady with flxcel.
&ff)'. abll. cleslrta pt. time
pos, Mon., Tun., Fri.. or
'' da,ya, Box p.152 Daily P!lo1.
EXP. cleaning lady. Newport
Bch area. By day or v.ttk. UNtV•llSITY l'Allt ........... 1ltl I.AKI ELltNOllE . ,,. .......... •m!1;::;;.;:,;,;:,:;,.;:.;,;;,:,::.:,.;:,;:..:._
111v1N• ...................... in• 1t1so1tT f'ROP•RTT ........... .,., 8 b ittl 6550 Cer~t Cleenlng IA.CK aAY ........ -........... 1141 ORANOa CO. l'lllOl'•lln' ,..,.Of7 I Yl n9 ,.,.. 6790 '"""" 6625 Jenltorl•I E.UTILUF, ................... 1141 OUT 0, STATE l'llOf', ........ •HI
El T•... 114'1, ~OUHTAIN & Ol!llRT ...... ,.nit BABYSffllNG my home. lllVINE TS.lllllA~I!' .......... ,.1NS SUIDIVISIOH lANO ......... ttn '
OENTAL HYGIENIST
CLEAR Vu Maintenance, We Avail ?t1ay 11-26 54().1481 do everything! Speclalizina; · COlllONA OllL MAlll ........... 1t51 tEAL IEIT ATI $1.RVIC• .... •1u ages 2 yrs & over. !llon aALIOA f'l.NIN$ULA ......... 1)111 ~.f!. EXCHANOll .............. 4lll thru Fri da"" only Ie oc<d 1•ACON IAY ........... ,_, ,.1.., t. 1, WANTIO ................ 6141 , • "w • •AY Ill.A.NOS ............... ,.1ut · m yard. 642-0829 Ltoo 1sL1 •. .. .............. 1u1 BUSINESS and IALIOA ISLAND .............. 1»1 F INANCIAL CHILO Care, my ho1ne, days HUNTIHOTON IEACH .,-.,,141111 • N t Be b HUHTINOTOH HAllOUR ..... UH IUEIHl!ll o, .. ORTUHITIES ,_..,.. eves. ewpor ac LINOA ISLli 1 .. 1Ul1HI$$ WAHTIO ............. area. 673-7523 l'OUNTAIN VALLIY , ......... 1111 INVESTMENT 0,...,.,.11Hlt5 ... llllf .::~;;:._:::::_------=::-:--taAL •«ACM ................. 1ut INVESTMENT WANTIO ...... '31' Chlld care in my home
CARPET
STEAM CLEANEO
10< SQ. FT.
Also carpet 1.nStallation
646-5971
in apt cleanup. Free est, 24
hr serv. 646-2698
6810
NEW La w n s, re-seeding,
Con1plete lawn ca 1~. Clean tUNIV' aEACN ............... 11J! MONEY TO lOAN ........ _ ... "21 M OAROl!N OltOVI .............. 1111 ,ERON$AL LOAMI ............ ll!U Costa esa area. LONO l«ACH ........ -........ 11M J'<Wl!LltY lOANI ............ •SH 548-5409 HOME & APT Cleanina' up by job or month. Ftte
BY DIAi\10NO t"Stimates. For info <"All 1.AK•WOOO ... , ............... 1»11 COlLATElllAl LOANS ......... tiU ~--:--,--':zC.::'CC-;C-C: )llANOI c;ouNTY ............. 1 .. REAL l!STATI! LOAMI ..... , •. U41 ** BabysiUing, my home, OUT OF COUNTY ............. I~ MOltTGAGES, Trull 0..-.... I.MS H B are eves OUT Of' STATE ·······•····-··160I MONEY WAKTEO ....... ,,.,.,"'41 • • a, ·
181 21st St.. Costa fl.1es:a l=89::7=-":::.:"::'::'::8'0--09=='::"==: 645-1317 Free est.
STANTON ' .................... l•ll ANNOUNCEMENTS * ~3839 * Wl!STMIHSTIR ................ 1•12
M10WAY CITY ................. 1u1 and NOTICES Child care, fenct>d yd, SANTA AN.\ .................... l'26 FOUND (I' Ad I "'" I h Vie w l'N'r & IANTA ANA HOTS ............ ,1ut LOST ~ .... ' .. ::::::::.:·: .. 11111 unc ~s. • a o•ANOI ...................... 11l1J ,111soN.t.LS ,, ................ ...., Spnngdale. 846-0839 TUSTIN ......... ., ............. 1'41 ' ... 10 ~=:;,;""7-'i-'-=--""C".'.:0 NORTH TUSTIN ............... 1 ... s ANNOU NCEMENTS ............ MOTHER of 1 "'" old g~I ANAH11M ,, , ,,, .. , ........... 14Jt 811tTHS , .. ,_ ......... -...... tlll . _,. . 111.Vl!RAOO c;ANYON ......... IW FUNl!RALS ....................... II would like to baby&1t fOl'
, "•UNA H<"S 1111 PAID OllTUARY .............. MU -··'t hild 00< <~J .,,.. .... ..., .. ,......... FUHEIAL OIRECTOltS .......... 11 l SlllCU C , ~
Carpet Laying & ,
Repair 6626 * EXPERT CARPET
Installation & Repair
Ne job too small, 646-5971
t::~:! =~Auc:L .............. ;~: FLOlllllTS ............... ,.'41J s~ING ho MISSION Vll!JO ::::::::.~:: 17ot CARO 01' THAHkS ............ 61U BABY •• • my me. Floors UN Cll!Ml!NTE ....... 1110 IN MlMOR!AM ............... 4411 Llndberg Sehl area. Exper, __________ _
SAK JUAN CAf'ISTltANO 1115 eEMl:TERY LOTS ............. 6'11 need d 646-6669 CARPET
CAPISTRANO l&ACN '''° Cl!MITISIY CRYPTS ......... 6111 mother. Fe y . Sl 'AGS HI·LO '.l'\VEEDS DANA l"OINT 17411 eEMl!TERY CRYPTS ..... ., .... II ,..,....ING St J hi > OC •• N.'o. 1151 :R l!MATORll!:S ............. MH BABYS,,, • oac m L•'• Con•->~-••t. ................... Ml!MORIAL PARKS "'21 F ----' --> " u •<re SAN 011!00 ,,,, ................ 1175 AIJCTIONS ........... 61,. Church area. e ..... ~. y ....... 546-4478 .540-7262 RIVIRllDI! COUNTY ......... l ...... ,,,,,. ,·,-, .. ~·,,,···········-..n $12 50 wk ~r child 548-2437 --MOUSES TO IE MOVED ...... UOf w w , ....... ,. » ':=·=-::::~rc::._=_::_.,:.::,,:,cc_ COKOOMINIUM 1t50 TRAVEL ...... ................. -b · · Wil oUl'lExis ,011 ·u.:.1:::::::;:1,15 AIR TRANs,o•TAT10H ........... LIC'D Ba ys1ttrr, vie son Gardening 6680 Al'ARTMl!NTI l"O• 5ALI .... Uh AUTO TRANSPORTATION ..... Md & Pomona, Cl\f. Fenced .:;;:;;,,;;.::c~!..---.c,.;-'
Ls LEGAl NOTICES . . ....... '4SO RENTA GERMAN & TUTORING ·······"" yrd. Hot meals. &:15-0617 NE\V Lawns, re-seeding.
Houses Furnl1hed SERVICE ·DIRECTORY BABYSfflING, H.B. & F'.V. Complet.e la\vn care. Clean
Moving & Stor•ge
LOCAL & lon.i;: dist. moving,
Reas. Stora~. FN!C Est.
831-0401, O.K. Van &
Storage.
Pelntlng,
Paperhanging
* PA1NTING INT & EXT.
Averg. 1 sty $260. 2 aty
$350. incl all material &
preparation.. $.1.8. per rm +
paint. Local refs, Call Jack
894-3895 or 837-6925
CUSTOt.t Painting -"The
Exterior-Inter ior Speclallst"
Residential .. Commercial.
SAYE
~ASH!
llN•RAL ................... ,.1600 AceouNTING ., ............... 61111 Any ag• a"y hour up by JQlJ or month. Frtt ll!HTALI TO SHARI! ......... tllOl ANSWl!!RING SERVICI ........... area. . • . estimates For inlo call COSTA Ml.SA ................. ~11111 ).P .. LIANCE lltE .. AUtS, '•rl• .. 4510 847-5802 I . M•SA DEL MAR. .............. 110S ASf'HALT, 011• .............. ,.,,,,. 897-2417 or 846-0932
No job too large or too "
small Lie. Bond. Ins. Won't c
MISA ll'IROE .... ---··-·· 2110 AUTO REPAIRS ... ... ...wt BABYSITTING my home. . COllEOI! ..... RIC .............. 7115 AUTO, Se•! 8•11•, T•P•, El<;, IS* So ,...__ Pl Call LAWN MaJntena.nce, Once a NIWl'ORT IEACH ............ noo IABYS ITTING ' ......... •55• .......... st aza. area. v.·eek general up-keep NEWPORT HGTS ............... Ult BOAT MAl,..TENANCI!' ........ '5U • 540-8870
Nl!WPOlllT SHORES .......... :mt 8RtCK, MA~ONRY, t ic. ••••••. llUt'I :::::======== la1vns, Dower beds, shrubs. IAYSHOltlS ................. 221:5 8USIH&$S SlRVUllS ........ 6Ml l. Call anytime beforo 9 pm OOVl!lll sH01111s ............... m 7 11u1Lo1111s .................. ,.,.,. B M I 1 6555 ' WllTCLll'I' ................... 2230 CATERING .................. ,,,, oat an •nance 546-6678 ask for Tim UHIVl!RSITY .. ARIC ••...••.... nn CAalNETMAKINO ············,,!MIG IRVINI , ....................... rPI CARPINTERINO •.......... .,,,,,.REFINISHING Painting, AL'S Landscaping. Tree IACIC aAY .................... '2llll Cl!MENT, Con(rllt ............ '60t . . ' , · I od J' IAIT •LU, .................... nu CHILO CARE. Llctllttf ........ 6'11 varnishing, gen l cleaning. Remova. Yard Rem e mg.
II T•,. 2l4'1 CONTRACTORS ................ uu Gu~-""'ee work 67i>-8133 Haul trash. Clean-ups. IRVIHE Tl!llRACIE ..••••• .,., ll~J CAIPET CLl!ANING ..... 6'U """"n · eoRONA Ol!L MAil ........... THO CAllPET LAYINO & Rt:f'AIR ""' Repair sprnklrs. 673-1166
•AL10A ....................... uot 0RAPE111Es ............. UJ1 B 'ck Masonry AL'S G ·•-& La llDO ISLE ..................... U31 OEMOltTION"''.'. .............. uu r1 , , aroe...... wn IAY ISLANOS ................. UM OIAFTIHG SERVICE ............ ,, etc 6560 A!aintenanc:e. Commercial, IALIOA ISlANO ............ 2llS ELECT11CAL ....................... _,;_;,::.... ______ ;_:, Industrial & ~dential. HUNTINGTON IEACK ......... 24ot EQUl,MINT RENTALS ...... ,61'01 ' . oc1u flOIJNTAIN VALLIY .......... tuG l'ENCIHO ...................... '641 BUILD, Remodel, r e p al r * 646-3629 * Sl!AL•EACN ............ ~ .. -~50 l'LOOllS .................. -.... "'5 Brick block c on c rete 1--~=_:,::c,;;:;-c,..,~-LOHG llEACN .................. UOll l'UllHACE RE .. AIRS. lie. -... 611t • ' . • ROTOTILL ING ORAHOI COUNTY ............. 1600 l'UlllHITUll! RESTf:IRINO carpentry, no JOb too small. SANTA ANA .................... 2111 .. REl'INISNIHO ""Lie Contr 962-6945
WISTMIN$TIR ........ -...... 1112 GAllOl!NING . , ........ '610•1~~·~~======;:: MIOWAY CITY ................. !'1' OllHEllAL SEllVICES ......... "8:11 'SANTA ANA HllCJNTS ........ U:lt GRAOING Ol!CING U&S C b' t kl COASTAL ...................... 1700 GLASS • • ............ ,. a 1ne ma ng
UOUNA IEACH ..... '' ..... '.2195 OltEEN . THuMa ·:::::::::::::::,,. lAOUHA NIGUll. -........... 21•1 OUN IMO.. •nt J ohn's Custom Cabinets
MISSION VllJO .... ---···· 21• HEALTH Cli.i•s ·::::::::::::::·,m Sh•lv••M•·oor R•-·· IAN CLEMENTE ............. ,!110 HAULING •nt o-....-SAN JUAN CA .. tSTRANO ...... 2125 HOUSl!ClEAH1i.io··:::::::::::::,,,, 548-0835 after 5
CAl"ISTRANO llACH ... -.... 17JO INTIRIOR OECORATINO ..... '111•1 "========= OANA POINT ,,, ............... 1111 INCOME TAX ............. ,.,,,lltl ~l~~,:~~E 11C:J'T'l~ :-.:·:::: .. : 11:g:i,.°.""~~~~~'..~~.:::::::::;:; Carpentering SUM.Miii: RIHTAL.S ......... Jtlt IHSUU.TINO 'J'f CONDOMINIUM ................ 1'50 INSURANCE '".'.'::::::::::::: ..• .,,. CARPENTRY OUPL~1llfl FUlllN. ............ :ttu INVESTIGATING, 011Ktlv1 ... •Jtt MINOR REPAIRS No Job RENTALS JANITOR IAL '..... . ........ ,.. .
H U f • hed .u;:wELllY Rl!,.A tll, etc. ······"" Too Small. Cabinet in pr-OUMI n urn11 U.NOICA .. IMG .................... age • 0 t be r cabinets. lllNERAL ..................... HM \.OCKIMITH .. , ............... 4CG S
6580
6590
«;OSTA MISA ................. ,JllO MAIO SIEltVICI! .. -.• -...... 6'lJ 568175 u no aniwer leave MaSA DIEL MAR .............. llH MASONRY, IRICK .............. JO .,._ ~t 646-2112. R 0 MIS.I. VERO• ................ ino MOVIHG .. STORAOI ............ 40 ...... • eoul!GI! PAlllK ............. J115 .. AtHTING .... _ ... 11111111 ••••• ·"" AnderlOn
New I awn 1, landscaping.
Shl:ub1 &: trt-es removed.
Free est. 548-1742
CLEAN-UP SPECIALIST
Mowing, edging, odd jobs.
Reasonable_. 548-6955
NEAT & reliable, 30 yn
exp. Comple!e ;yd serv.
Comm!, 642-4389
Exp. Japanese land!cape,
cleanup, maintenance.
Macl< 8'2-8<42
JIM'S Gardening &
maintenance. Res, &:
mercial * 540-4837
lawn
rom·
be underbid!' IHG-3679
I YilLL paint a 3 bdrm
house for $150, incl trim,
stucco, labor & material. cau Gene 557-7543
No Wasting
*WALLPAPER * \Vhen you call "Mac"
548-1444 5-1~9
E>.l & INT special rale11,
Acst, ceiling sprayed $15.
Incl good paint. Roy
847-1358
INT & E."\'T. Painting. Free
es!Js. Loe refs. Neat &:
Honest. Call Chuck 645-0809
or J im 548-040S
PA:INTING-lnt, & Ext.
Highest Quality. Lowe11t
Prices. Fully exp. Ins. John
671-UOO
METICULOUS PAINT
EXP, OOCKS-house1, int-ext.
INS. col, students. 675-5812
L'lTER or Ext. PAINTING.
IMMED. SERVICE. Local
ret. FREE est. 5(8.1627
PAINTING -Ext-Int 18 yrs.
exper. Irui. Lie. Free est.
Accoust. Ceilings. 548-5325.
NQ .. ORT ll!ACM ........ .,.,J'lOll .. AINTIHG,lltM ............... "51!1==7"=-,~~-,--Ml!Wl"Oll:T MONTS. ............ ttlt ,ATIOS ....................... 11 .. QUALITY Woodcraft sml ::~~~ .. T11:H~~.~~ ... ::::::::::: ~~:;.:i::1!~~~.tc~:·at..rr·::t::: gen'I constr. & carPentry,
* ALLEN Bro:s. Gardening, NEED a Painter? Interior
I care about your ya.rd! & exterior. Experienced.
Do you, if so call 54G-1769 557-8638 oovl!R sH0111.s ............... m1 ,lU"'11•1NG ................ mt Free consultation & quote. Wt:STCLll'P ........•••••.••••. mo PET OROOMINO ''°° Cali K !:AO: MA~ 548-4235 UNIVl!RSITY ,. .... IC ........... JDJ "00L SERVICE ' ... -.......... m en ~. llVINE ......................... :nJt POWER SWEE .. INO ............. 11 CARPENTRY.C hln<ts-Roo IA.CK IAY .................... tt41 l"UMf' SERVl~E ................ '" a m •AST •LUFll' .................. JUt ROOl"INO ...................... ,,» Add Patios Any 5ize job 11 Tori '211 •ADIO, Aft'llfn, IE!( ........... 6no '' • • llllVINI TIRU.el!' .... -...... JtlS REMODELING & AEPAlll: "IO Mike 673-1166 & 646-2576. CORONA OIL MAii: ........... nst REMOOELING, l(ITCHENS .... tHJ . IAl•OA ,,, ...... 1 ............. ueo SCISSORS SHARPl!N .......... •tn GEN. repair, add., cab. IAY ISLANDS ............ -... :1350 Sl!WINO ...................... ·"'° Formica paneling mll.Tlite LIDO ISlE ................. .,, :Wl SEWING MACHIN.II llE,AlllS t tU • • •
JOHNSON'S GARDENlNG -~P~A=P=ER~H"'AN=G"'I"'N~G,---I
Yard care, Clean-ups, Prun-20 yr:s exp. Free estimate.
ing, planting. 962-2035 Call Keith anytime, 642-2509
LAWN MOWING SERVICE RETIRED Painter: :l6 yrs
Neat, depend;.ble, reason. exper. Neat & honest. Non
able. Free est. 846-0955 drinker. Call 53f>..6801
aALIOA 1sLAND .............. »u sEPT1e TANKS. Sftl'9Ao 1ic ... 4u1 .A=nythe.:::='"~•='=0='='k=·='=73-4:....:<=5=9·:.,..,, General Servic11 Plasferinn, Patch, HIWPOllT WEST .............. :U7S TAILOIUNG ................... 4tl'I _.., ., HVNT1MoToN 11EACN ..... , ... ,.. T•RMJTE coMTROL .......... •tn REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS Repair 68IO 6682
MUNTINOTON NARaOUll .... ,)I0,5 TILE, Ctr1111lc ........... ,_.,,,,71 *CABINETS Any •••• JO' b HANDYMAN ,OUHTAIN VALLIY ,,. ...•... Mlt TI LE, Ltn1i.onn & Ml,. .... ,.,.,nl · ' """ Ge raJ H Repa.ir
llAL SI.ACM ................. ,)1$0 TRl!ll SEllVICE ........ ····•• ''":1==25~"':=='="""==·=54~8-6=713== ... 675-01~341 * * PATCH PLASTERING OAll:Ol!N GllOVI! .............. M75 Tl!LEVIStON, R1palrl, lie. ... 4ftJ All t.--Ffe ti tes LONG IEAeN ,. ............... SSOI u,HOLST11av ................. ,.,. I========== I ..,.,..... en ma o•ANOI! couNTT ............. ,... Wl!LDINO .................... '"'Cement, Concrete 6600 Call 540-6825 SANTA ANA .................... :111• WINOOW CLEANIHCi. .......... ml Hauling 6730 ==='=======-WllSTMINSTEll: ................ :Nlt JOBS & EMPLOYMENT CCNCRETE all t Ftt MIOWAYCITY ................. Jll6 7tllll • ypes. e SANTA ANA MEIGHTS ......... MJO JO& WAHTEO, MM ............ estimate Sawing breaking AMBITIOUS College boy has
C ••• '.' 1106 JOI WANTED, W-1 , ....... 7a11 ' ' ' k ill t E .................. -.... Joa WANTED haul' & k . I d I true: ; w hau . move. X· U.OUNA •IACN .............. SIOS ' '"' tng s I p 0 ll n g . lAGUNA NIOIJll. ............. J1t7 MIEN .. WOMl!N ,.............. Se . & -·-Bt 548'-8668 per, dep. 833-6075 for free MISSION VISJO --····-"'" JJOI SCHOOLS • INSTRUCTION .... 160t T\1100 't-.U Y· SAK CLEMENTS ....... ITU JOI l'R E,AltATION ........... 7IOI Bob es t. ~. SAN JUAN CAl'ISTllANO l7U THIATlllCAL --......... 1'111 Q Q cl cA,ISTRANO aucM ........ 11• MERCHANDISE FOR. CEMENT Work: Walks & M VIN , garage can-up
OANA "0tNT .................. s74o SALE AND TRADE patios. wha!ever you need & lite hauling. Reasonable. CONDOMINIUM ··············· Jt$0 . •L-I . }'rec estimates. 645-1602. DUPLEXES UHl'UllH. ......... 2'75 l'UllNtTURE ................... IOOll Jn concrete UR: pr ce IS
SUMMIR RIHTALS .......... im OFFICE FURNITURE ........ IOU right' Call Bob 642-9187 all 5 YARD/ Gar. c I ea n II p. RENTAL~ Ol'l'ICE IQ•l .. MINT ......... 11411 . . -~ STOii! EQIJll'Ml!NT .......... DOit 1t: CONCRETE Work Remove trees, ivy, trash. Apls. Furnishfil ~AFE, RE STAUllANT ......... toll . p · 1 d ' Grade, backhoe, 962-8745
•• H ••• , 4006 •AR EQUIPMENT ............. ICU Licensed. at1os rvwys, " .................... HOUSl!NOLO QOOOS 1011 · · COSTA MISA .................. •llO QARAGE SAL ........ ::::::::::tm etc:. Philhps Cement. HAULING $10 A LOAD MIU. Vl!llOll ................ •111 FURNITURI! AUeTIO N ........ uu 54&-6380 Cl•an up. T-~rv. G<n. NEWPORT llEACN ............ •10ll 11ot";~;;.;~"'°"=:;,.-=-::-::-:c: '" ~ Nl.W,ORT HflONTS 1210 1.Pl'LIAHCE$ ................ ' :1 Pru . 646-2528 543-8043 KIW,OIT SNOllES. .::::::::::.,,. 'NTIOUl!S ..................... 1111 CONCRETE work all types. ntng '
WISTCLll'I" 12:111 SEWINO MACMIHI! ............ lltt Sawing breaking hauling LITE Hauling &: garagt' ~:~~·:11V..·~~.~~·.':::·:·:·::·:·::'.~!! ;~.'~g~la ig:~:~;'~~~.:::::::l~ Skiploadihg; Lie.
0
Service i. clean-up. M0n thru Sal.
IAST aLUFI" .................. nu RAOtO ......................... Im Quality 842-1010 Free estimate 548-5031 COIONA OIL MA• ........... 4ll0 fl!LEV ISION ................... nos -"=="'-·~:...::=-----• t A '* Hl·l'I & STE REO ............... n11 MORE Co ret tlo f
Plumbing
PLUMBING, alterations &:
repairs. Special on "'aler
htrs & disposal.a 64&.1286
anytime.
Water heater!Hlisposers
Gen. repairs $7.50 per
hr. 642-2755-642-0506
PLU'MBING REPAIR
No joh too small
• 642-3128 •
Remod1ling &
Repair 6940
* IF you need remodeling,
painting, or repairs. Call
Di ck U2-1797 ,:;. fsLAiriOJ '::::::::::::::::'.iJSo tAf'I! 11l!co11,ol!1s,M .. 1 . ., ....... mt,_ 1 noArle' Ea # ..... or HAULING &: Clean-up. LIOO llLE .................... 1u1 tAMEllAS a QUI .... "" ess money, 11..,c """"mg Trees.re.moved. Rcru;nnable.
aAL.aOA llLANO .............. •us MOaaY sUPl'l lEI ............. Slot & finishing 6'4-0087 F-,,,,·mat•. °'°1742 6950 NUNTINOTOH IEAeN ............ Sl'ORTINQ GOOOS " ........... ISM".::...::="-'~·.,;,,,,;,,;,=---• '"" ........ Roofl.ng l'OUHTAIH VALLSY .......... 1111 a1Nocuu11. ICOPll .... -.. UH CEMENT WORK no ,.. b too 1 -========~=' I O"-''-"'"--------''"L ••ACM .................... ,. MllClllANIOUI ................. • H I 6735 lONO llACM ................. .uoo MISiH1~::~E~ ................. :: Small, reasonable. F1'le ousec eanlng GlITI'ERS &: Downspouts
DRANOI COUHTY ••··•••·••••·4400 ~U.,,.91!11 .. : ..•. ~::.:·:.·:::: .. ::1111 Estim. H. Sttlflick 548-8615 Installed Reuonable San IAIOIN OROVI .............. 4'10 STORAOI!' ..................... 1n1 WANT A Sunny & bright Cl I 714• 492-3706 HISTMIHITlll ................ 1411 llUllOINO MATl.RIALI ....... 114' DECORATTVE CONCRETE home? Call the DUTCH _•_m_._,_. __ . -----1 MIDWAY l;ITY ................ "II~ tWAl"I ..... .... . ....... ,.. DRJVES,WALKS-PATIO MAINTENANCE MAN for ~~:~~ :::'HllO~iii':.:::::::'.~ PETS and LIVESTOCK 6.u-8514
TUSTIN ........................ 4'41 l'lfTS ,OENl!ftAL ................. , ========== your windoW!, noors & COASTAL ...................... IJN CATS ........................... 1t2tt ~ carpet c l eaning. uou•A a1ACM .............. •m ooGs ........................... wu Contractors 6620 SPECIALIZES JN ALL 1.A.(tl.INA NIGUEL ........ _ ... 4711 HOltlfl ...................... ,ltJt1::;:.:;:::,:::.;c:;,: ___ ...:;::_:
MISSION Vl•JO -····-··-•1ot t.IVEITOeK ............. " tllO KINDS OF FLOORS. No IAN CLEMENTI ....... •111 CALIFORNIA LIVING ROOM ADDITIONS. t .. T. 537 1508 fl 3 ~:.:~:"r:~::HANO :~~ HUl51!11 1ES ' .. ' ......... ' ..... HU c 0 n s t r ~l c I i 0 n • Family 1 .~o;~y~w~·~&=-~Be=ao~:=·~, .. ~· ~,-,.-,,~al OANA "01HT .................. 411• SWIMMING ,.OOLS ............ ;:: rooms. single or 2 slory.
Tllll,LIX, etc ................. 49111 '"Tios ........................ Est' males plans lavout & Carpet&, "'indows, Uoors, C:ONDOMINIUM ................ "° AWNINOt ................. .,,,...,. I • •. • etc. Res &: Commc'I. ~ENLTA'LS ... ::: .... -......... ,,1 TRANS'pORTATiON"lf'!I tinancing. Call 847-1511. 646-1401
aOATS • YACHTS ................. Addltions * Remodeling Apt1. Unfurnished 5AILIOATS ................ tt11 Fred 1-1. Gt"r'Wick, Lie. Mesa Cleaning Service ••Ntll:AL ..................... not POWER CJllJISli!ftS ............ "11 673-6041 * 5'19-2170 Carpet!l, windows. floors, f'\C,
eOITA MISA ................. ,llM l"l!EO-SKI IOA1' ........... tm1~~~-=======;1 Res. & Commc'I. 5484111 M•IA Vl!IOI! ........ , ........ 111t IOAT TJIAlllRI .............. tonl• MIW .. O•T •E•CM ............ not IOAT MAINTINANCI _ ... -.tOU c I Cl • 6625 I G MIW,OJIT Nl!lllMTI .......... J!ll IOAT l.AUNCHINOC ............ "'4 arpe e•n1ng WTNOO\V WASH N NIW .. OIT I HORl!S ........... mo MARINE EOUIP •. ' .......... ttU COMAtERCIAL lfOr-.IE I Wl•TClll"I' . . ............. tut SOAT SL ti'. MOORl•G ........ tou DISCOUNT Carpet aea.ners. Call P•te -<9'1207 UHIVlltSITY .. AlllK ........... nn IOAT Sl!lVICIES .............. JQ1 '1-
IACK•AY ...................... .,... BOAT 111NTALS ............... ,.. Expert-Late!t Equip. used. JOE'S CLE~ SERV. IAIT 11.Ull'll ................. nu IOAT CHAllTllt ........ _,.,.,,.,,Credit cards $6. Rm.~1234 :AN COil:ONA OIL MAil ........... mo l'ISHOIO IOAT$ ................... We do Everything • Re~. &: IAL.aOA ...................... S>M IOAT MOVING .................... REMARC Services. 3 iooms ....... ,,,. tAY llLAHOS ................. AH aoAT tTORAOE ............ ...... Ccm. FN!@ Est. 54~ LIOO ISL• .................... JUI IOATI WAKT•O .................. $21.50. Full guaran. Credit G aA1.aOA Ill.ANO .............. uu a111c11Al'T .................. fl• c•""'s OK 847-6688 646-1234 HOUSECLEANIN MUNT!NeTON tlfA«;H ......... Slot l'LYIHO LESSONS .......... .,,tlJI .,.... ' • E~. •·u. ""I, ooo ~" l"OUJITAIN VALLIY _,. •• ,. .. Mlt MOllL ll HOMl!I ............. .,,,.. ~,.. ..-'""' ...,.,..-.n llAL alACH ................... 14St MOTOR HOMU ............... Hlt LONO alACll ,., ............... SJIO alC YCLIS ... , •• ,,. ........ 92• ORAlfll COUHTY .............. WOii ILICTlllC CAlllS .............. f'IJI OAJIOIN 01.ova .............. UH MINI llKll .................. ftn WUTMrNITllt ........ -..... U11 MOTORCYCLll .............. Hit MIDWAY CITY ................ ..U1' MOTOlllCOOTIRI :.1••" ...... tUI IAN1'A "N,t ,.,. .................. AUTO St!RVICll I l"AITS ... NM :e~~r" A~~.~~~~~.:::::::::::: t~z:t;~:v:f11~~:.: :::: ::::t C:OASTA'-y •• , ................ 1711 TllAlllRI. UlllltY ..... ,,..,,,,,_M LAIVNA ••ACM ............. ,S1CIS CAM,.111111 ...................... tpt
TIME FOR
lj)UICK CASH
THROUGH A
lronln@ 675$
IRONING In my home. $1
Hr. Ortssmaldnf & alttta·
lions. 545-7641
BIKINIS by C. Cutrtom made
co p ies, reversibles,
covrrups S8 & $10. 53&-8G61
• Dressmaking-Alteratiorui
De11ignt>d lo ~t you.
Call Jo * 646-6446 --------Tiie, Cer•mlc 6974
* Verne. The Tile Man *
Cu1t. work. Install & repairs.
No job too s.mall. Plaster
patio, Leaking 1hower
repair.
847-1957/846-0206
TrH Service 6980
TREE Sl:RVTCE All type11
Lise &: Ins. Frtlt Eathnate1
642-5584
TREES. J(edges, trim, cut,
atum!'J!, rt'mOYtd. hauled.-30
yrs exp. Fully Ins. 642-4030
LAGUNA 1UOVI L ,., ......... ll't1 TlUCl(S ............ -...... ,,.tfOll iAK C\.tMllNTI .............. rl'l• lll'S ......... • ............ ttlf SAN JIJAH CAPISTJIAMO .,,. .. J7U CAMPllt ll:INt ALI t ftl ln1uranc;e 6770 Upholstery 69'0
DAILY PILOT CA,\JTRAHO ll!AeH t7JO OUNI! 91JG01l1 mJ
.. RE .. AL'"e"s'TA"'E ........... .,. IMf'ORT •o Auros ............ , ... I SPORT CARS ............... H'U ANTIOUIS. CLAlllCI ., ....... Hll O.ner1I llACI: CAltS, 1001 ........... NH TRIPLIX. irk. '"' AUTO IVIHT5 ................ "211 COlfOONllNIVM ·:·:::::::::::::'.nso loUTOS w,t.KTIO .............. f711 li:IH.TAU WAHTID ........... me Nl!W CAiii .... _,, ......... ... ll:OOMI IJOil: llllN'f' .......... ,.tttS loUTO LIAllHO ., .............. ~ ' '
WANT AD
INSURANCE E~limates. all
lypt.s or dfl.mA&ed: hoU1ehold
fUrtlh:hinp, F.veJ It Wknd5
548-4898
tzYKOSKI'S Cu1tom. Uphol
European O"afl1m1.nshlp
100% tin! 64)..ltM
1831 Nt.,,ori Blvd., C.M. -------------------~
L
A
s
5
I
F
I
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D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
-nHST
RllYSI
THE AIRPORTER INN HOTEL
18700 MacArthur Blvd.
Newport Beach
(Opposite Orange County Airporl)
IS NOW INTERVIEWING ALL
HOTEL AND RESTAURANT
PERSONNEL
Job W1nted,
Men & Women
Job......Men~ Wom. 7100 Jobs Men, Worn.. 7100 7030
C'OUPLE will manaae adult
units ln Coata Me1a /
Newport. Exp. & refs,
511~
abilities
anlimiteo
agencN
TRISH HOPKINS
488 E. 17th, Suite 224 C.M.
642.1470
ACCOUNTING
-CLERK-
1\\.,, )'l':I. clerical accounUng,
accounts payable or receiv-
able, or job cost. Type 50
\\'pm t'le<:tric.
Coll Personnel Dept.
(714) 494-940 I
for appointment
TELONIC
Industries
Laguna Beach
Equal opportunity employer
ACCOUNTANr/BKPR
A «mall friendly mfgr. (20
emp.) 11elllng nationwide
needs you to handle jnls,
ldgrs, stmt! & payables.
54~TI01 ask for Jac:k Crout
AIDES • tor oonvale1cence,
elderly care or family care.
Homemalcen. 547-$)81
Ancient Mariner
-NEEDS -
•DAY•
DISHWASHER
APPLY IN PERSON
2607 W. COAST HWY.
NEWPORT BEACII
ART
Picture Framing
Gallery &: Gift Exper, Good
aalary, Reply Box M-88,
Daily PUot. N.B.
e ASSEMBLERS e
Electrical -mechanical 2nd
shlfl production supervisor
also assemblers, 1pra y
painters for both 1st &: 2nd
shift. Mt11t be able to •tart
Immediately.
KECO INDUSrRIES INC.
17335 Daimler St, S.A.
(Irvine industrial complex)'
557-8545
BABYSIT my home 6 am-2
pm 5 das/wk. mature
Christian Scientist. 494-3416
*BAR BOY*
EXPERIENCED
* APPLY *
Reuben E. Lee
151 E. COAST HWY.
NE\VPORT BEACH
Bkkpr F /C to $650
"Exc:ltlng & stimulating" this
Is what this c:o's 1iecy uy11.
We placed her there Jut wk
&: now they want a bkkpr.
We are: proud to represent
this fine firm • they ~
stable. pay top bents, A the
working conds. ~ v er y
pleasant. Call Miss Pal,
557-6122. Abigail Abbot Per-
llOMel Agency, 230 W, War.
ner. Suite: 2u. Santa Ana.
BUFFUM'S
NEWPORT
Now Interviewing
•ppllcants for
* COOK *
* LADIES SHOE
SALES*
APPLY IN PERSON
2to4PM
NO. 1 FASHION ISLAND
NE\VPORT BEAOI
BOY) 10 • 14
CaJTler RoutEa Open
"'' Lacwa B<ach, So. LaiuNI
DAILY Pn.oT
642-4321 ** BUSBOYS ** (Daya Only)
The F'l11herman Re1t1urant
311 Pac. Coast Hwy.
Hunt. Beach
Casting Agent
CALIF. CASTING CO.
We are cuUng ditector1 for
many Independent industrial
&: documentary film produc.
ers. Need lmmedlately &ale:
• 18-35 for non-union jobs, $15
to $125 per day, We an not
a school or agent.
FREE TV SCREEN
TEST
NO Cl!ARGJ;: TO YOU
EVER!
\Ve are cllent paid, Ph. for
lnfetview (714) 835-8282.
Civil EnglnMring
Mapping
Draftsman
e MUST BE
EXPERIENCED e
t ;eatth, accident and lite
tnsuranee, vacation. Sal·
ary open,
Only experienced persons
eall !Dr appointment.
ARROWHEAD
ENGINEERING
CORP.
598 North F. Strftt
San Bernardino, Callf.
(TI4) 889-3674
CLERK TYPIST
Mark1ting Dept.
Accurate typl1t. 60 wpm elec-
tric typewriter. One year
experience.
Call Personnel Dept.
(714) 494-940 I
for appointment
TELONIC
Industries
Laguna Beach
Equal opportunity employer
CAR WASH HELP
Perm. Position. Many Op!!n.
ings. 3 Locations Orange Co.
2950 Harbor Blvd .• C.M.
COASTAL AGENCY
A member of
Snelling & Snelling Inc.
Tht World's. Largest
Profe11tonal
Employment Service
2790 Harbor Bl, CM 540-6055
Harbor Blvd. at Adams
Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 I Jobo-Men, Wom, 7100
A11embl1rs.
Burroughs Corp.
New Commercial Computer Plent
MISSION VIEJO
H•s opening• for
ASSEMBLERS
at our now plant in Ml&Slon Viejo, C
Some experience preferred.
Apply 8 a.m. • 4:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday
EMPLOYMENT OFFICE
25125 leronlmo, Ro•d
Ml11ion V lefo, C11if
130-:1232
Equal opportdnlly employer
Male/Female
a!ll.
.
e COOKS • (try "'°ks1
Experleoced
e WAITRESSES
Experleoced
APPLY TO
Mr. Henderlon or Mrs. Gar-
rett, 3099 Brlrtol, C.M. VAN
de KAMP COFFEE SHOP
**COOK**
Experienced, Apply: F1ying
Butler. 3101 Newport Blvd.
N.B.
CCUNTER lldy for dry
cleaning plant, up'd pref.
Some hand in machine teW•
ing. Apply tn penon. Fiw
Points Cleanen. l86fl Main
St. Htintg Bet}.
*COSMETICIAN-Drug ales
ExperienCI! only
*""""""*
Draftsman
Minimum 2 yean expert.
e~ in layout It ta.pine
of art work for printed
circuit boards.
Cell Personnel DeJ>t.
(714) 494-9401,
fo r appointment
TELONIC
Industries
L19une Beech
Equal opportunity employer
DENTAL ASS"T Front detk
only. Must haw exptt. u
~-in dental ottlcto.
Beach area. 846-3540 8 am·
• pm,
Dept. Store
J. W. ROBINSON
HAS IMMEDIATE
OPENING FOR A
e BUSBOY•
Xlnt. Company Benetita
APPLY IN PERSON
F8.1ihlon Island, N.B.
Equal opportunity emp.loyer
*DRIVERS*
No Experfence
Necessary I
Must have clean CaUtarnlli
drlvlnr.....-d.Apply
YELLOW CAI CCL
18& E. 11th St. Coota-
EARN $50-$COO WK.
Sl!IUng 1 hr-8 hr day Meno
Women 18 up. S4S-3271
FEMALE -Now hirilw:
Counter hostesses, full or
part time. Alk for J'4r. Vin-
cent, 2855 Harbor Blvd,
Costa Mesa. 546-7101
FEMAIE Companion, part.
time dayt,Jor elderly lady,
own trans, N. Costa Ml!I&
area, 549--0222 aft 5pm.
FIBERGLASS worker•.
Exp'd .....,. pulltt
FIBERGLA$ touch .. up
man, 1943 Placentia Ave.
Bldg. "B", Cotta Mesa, * MANU PLASTICS *'
FRY Cook, expcr or trainees
Wf9mlle restaurant eXper.
Above avg pay. In ti .
benefits. Apply Denny'a.
12924 Beach Blvd, G.G.
FULL lime and PART
time, Experienced sales.
X1nt. aalary. comm. &:
benefits. Call for appoint.
men!'. 540.SOSO. Ext. 30,
Joseph Magnln
Equal opportunity employer
FULL Time receptionist,
1YPln& & lite f i l i ng ,
pereonable. Send re1ume llO
Box M 362, Dally Pilot
Furniture Delivery
Part time. 962-6631
GENERAL office work, part.
rime, shorthand a.. typina
l"E'q'd. 24 hn per Wttk,
PERM, 2$-.35 yn. 675-MlJ
GIRL FRIDAY
Four &ir1 ottlce. Able to
learn about hardware .
APPLY 9 AM to 12 Noon
MacCrqor Yacht Cctp,
1631 Placentia, C.M.
GOOD opportunity for r!Rht
atrl, l 1lr! insurance ott.
Exp not ........... Full --54!H354
HOUSEKEEPER Full tW.,
live In, p<rm. Cleaning',
cooktnr. ehUd , .... N........, hnlnaula. $~
mo. Ref tr -· Wl'lle
Sulte 304, 3333 w. Cout
Hwy, N.B. tao
White elepba.nfll D
-
I
. ' '
~
f
r
rT.~..-.~r;:;::;:;;;;;;:;;::-:;:------------·--·--------------------------·--··-. . ' . . .
J
H ~lY -l'llOT '""''· M•7 •• 1970
.IOIS .. l m;LOY, MENT JOe5 & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHAN.DISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR ,.---~----1·----::-·7.;:i;~,~I SALE AND TRAOE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE
------1: FREE TO YOU : i . J1•1·-Mel0t Wem. 7100 Jabs Men. Wom.. 7100 J~bt-M.n, Wom. 7100 Jobt-.M.n. Wom. 7100 Furnlt·~o IOOO Furniture -Pl & 0 1130 M• II 8600 NEFD aood hcr:nl' le.need
..... 9'llUV __!!!!! 'Sl•RI isce aneous ,~.:. ~--' -·n,,.:nlOnslUp of '. ,SERVICE lltadon ii.llCbdlUlt. ..-u .. .., .. vo ,....... MOUSl!KEl!PER MAIDS. Mat~. 25 or O'Vff, \ p TING Exp'd, Jui! time. ,Apply In Pl.ANOS &:: ORGANS ORDER NOW youn: people tor Snoopy. Part·"-·,~--. Vic: Good ltlAry kit' dependable """"' "--'-91 d N~V &: USED FOR MOTHERS DAY y,,... lovabl• male bt'qle
&4th .... ~ NB. woman. Apply 3151 Jlarbor p SMAN r.:.m~ na1uur y ., • THE USED • • Yamaha Pianos Organs Molhcn n,. .. w11h clilldrens andJoaeh&hund mix~. Good
6G<Ql9 .B,,lvd~·..:C::;.M~, :-='7.::.::= I e Thomas Organ& bir\hatonet;_ Beaut. CU$lom \\'atchdog, all 11hOU. C.JJ
MALE . Grill men. 00.boyL SHAllP. ALERT BAR MAID FURNITURE FACTORY •Kimball Phu.,. made n..,, ....,.,.,,,. • 532-3lll3 519 llSKPR for buly lamll)r, live-E',,11 or -• "mo .... for Fine career opportunity 2J or over, apply In pet1,10n , • u-••-, "·-1 11 ni
1
,. _ _, in • hall time penn .... ..-• u ,..,. ' 11 l 'I I N El , _ _., « ......,.,,i ~ ea 11'$ lift w "'' 01,...s, ru-FREE KlttcM, 3 callcos, 2 or ou., . , , •tr. VtN~nt, _ _. 11,. _.~r tar preun1un, ci.:per1cnc. Dr t nn L l • COAST MUSIC b' -·• -•Ir •·f ·-••••JIB " . .,.... ~ , . ..., 1 •--t t t Ca t •·k f M ies, aqu1;1.,,...,,ne11, &ap.,,, • blark, 2 black It white·, nc req. ~~ · · Bl·" ~--M•IL ~7101 ~ n cw....i rcQ: s er, WO m no. na or ac SPEC
-~ •-k -ultlll'" S-"109, Uke o-~~-•• , .. ..,._. from ~~ NEWPORT & HARBOR eti, jade, tic. for lhc . "°"""broken, 6 wu, mol< JlSKP~ Emplyr pays fN ooaw-wor , on '" u• SHIPPING .._ Rec e iv t n c -•-...-wn.,. --r-' :.1...... """ MAL&-F'ull time v.·~ktnd~. 1"""' · o -an • pri L-•-Cbsta Mesa * 00-2851 lAL hlontER. Lap ...... ,, l lemale. G«--0688. 2921 r-'llen Byl·~ •• ,...... ........, nt' ""UIV, nt' "' Clork, ~. ·-rd. \Vlll "''"' rento~ l --•t1 •·-n at ... -• · b 1 'U"-""6" " anu """ ''"'-.J how'ly n.W over '1. Call lo .. ., h · ....... ., .-~ "' '"9U ftUllTI Open llJ.6 Jo"rl 10-9 Sun ll-5 equip., roug ,. cut s ones, Carob st. N .8. SIU 106-8 E. 16lh. $.A. 547~ • CJtX'r&I n, V.'!l lf'O'\'lf'tl:, train the right man. Apj\ly wholHGI.! tools for th!! rockbound, all .
HOUSEKEEPER 9fi8..81!l'i a.ft 1 pm. su~ssfW Orange C.oua-. ln pel'IOO b<>t 9-4pm. SAF. jeW('lry making suppUt'11, AIN'T NoUun; but a
For Conva.IHcent Hosp. lull MALLIE"S ty Urn1, Advanced Packaging, 1357 ODDS & ENDS SALE! HAMMOND, Steinway, Yam. aold silver iindings toola: (Beagle\ hound-do: & ht'r ;
Ome. ~ Be•Uly" Wig Salon has open. Xlnt, con1pany benefits and E. EdltJit"r, S.A. •ha. New &: used planoa ~f &: ~ting s~pplles • jct-bJnck !ellnt' bien<I. Both ,
Ins: for Hair-st)'list with incomt> for UM! iight pe11;0n, STUDENTS! 11 Yrs & Up • Ftincy Walnut Bar with 4 Swivel I!'°'' ~es. Beat buys in "-n Tue1 thru Sat 9-6 lJ mos old w/sbot1.'
IBM Composer 110me following. Salary plLlS Back Bar Stools ........ · · · · · ... · .. · $59. So. Cali!. at Sclunldt ltfu11ic su7,d lB-4 iosed M s.1s..2143 5111
Operator comm A pajd vacation. C•ll (714) S47-8891 or To Sell, Candy. ~Jake good e 8 Ft. Massive Spanish Sofa & Love Co. um N, ltiain, Santa Ana ~IVE t.! G~MS & on. T\VO Adorablr. lorw-haired • Build ........ OWTI eom-lng Call ••• ••~ A I •t inoney m 5Plll'e time It help Seat, like new, returned fro1n '
.z-..-i>'lO"..mu pp y needy school. No cub re-LAPIDARY SUPPLY kirtens; Ont tiger. one black I busineSI with I no invest. ** lt1EXllAN1C: Alignmen1, 1300 E. Norm•ndy Pl." quired. &«-21.59 6-9 PM le model home ..... , , .. , .. , . , ...... , , $179. SAVE Rear ot Collegf! Center and \\'hile. 1 weelul · old,~
ment. \Ve provide composer, bralra a tuneup. Good pay, S enta An• wknds. e Beautiful' 10 pc. blue green Corner Sl>oppirig Centct need a:ood homea . i'
headliner, "'axet, office., hi-volume station. Ca 11 --,====-.,.....,.-Group · · · · · · · · · • • · · · · · · · · · · · · · .. · · • · $99. HUNDREDS 2Ta0 tlarbor Blvd., ll-A S.~13 519 ~ ~~~~-~':~ 2ta~ f~~i:: 61";>-0533 Equal opportunity• empl:yer Mal~f~~~~~30 • (1) 7 Ft. Sofa & Chair, excellent On New Conn Organs Costa l\1csa. * 549--a>39 TWO female tiger kittens,:
S •°'• tor ...... uneu. Phone MEDICAL Secy-Front Of· Pn'nted C1rcu1t a.m. hr11 wkly. P ro r. condition · · • · • · · · · · ·; · · ·M· · · · · · · · · · · • $Scb9• All Models COMPLETE Jurnisbings & parr Persian. 1 Brown rbort i -,. 1... • 4 Walnut Dressers with irrors $35. ea GOULDS 'ANTA ANA •' day ot eve, Mr. Holcomb, fic-e, 10me beck, lmow o:uge Driller customen, many e!ll'd. ac-d ;:a; bar. Antiqllt' clockery, orig, hair, J Gray Imig halt. o
Sportmr-n'a Publications, of .all types or m!d. fonnll. Experienced. Immediate counts. Long range. S3 hr • Assorted Walnut Nite Stan S · · · · $7. each a:>45 N. 1.faln 547.oo!l water colo1· by Andtw, lge wks old, house brokt'n ..
642r474B Mon. Tues. Thurs, Fri. 9:~ . bif to start Call S4!>-1824 e Assorted twin & double headboards . . king bednn wite by Costa Mesa. S»-til« 5111 · 6 .. -. 12.-'·. ~ ........ •-t. opening on SWlll& 11 t. "===~·""'==:--::..-..-~ from •• each up HI F' & 51 1210 ~ "" •J w -'""' "'" '-" 67 B'-" St N.B '""'°JST Doct · oU Ne • · • • · • • • · · · • • • · • • • • • • · · • .,., • 1 ereo American, new color TV. AKC Ba&set Hound 4 Y"" IN SU R AN CE : s;,,io.ptt Send resurne ro Daily Pilot 37 uu• " ;,......,, ' • .-• ,..,. .,,,, or~ ' ' k e Assorted 80'' Sofas, like new . , $79. each custom cabinet, r a re old 1 e m a 1 e. tri-colored, , P/time Girl Friday for Box M-2'. Equal opportunity emp ... .J .. r Approx ~ per w e A rt d Lo S 1 l'k •49 ach CRAIG Piottcer 4 track tape C . "-1 • hall Genera.I Insurance Qffjce, I Su isor now, probably full time SSO e ve ea s, I e new .. "' . e det'k. Under warranty. Cost h1nese Cu•:s . con-loves children. Needs tt'TIOeO : I t P 0 bfEDtCAL off ic e recep-Product oa pen later. ~ WPM, JBi\-f ex~ • 3 Used Refrigerators, all in top sole, man,y misc. items. 1100 yard. After 5 PM, • send btie resume o . , 2nd shift eleclrical. mechan-JV d' . •59 $19 & •J09 $70. sell ~. Speakers $20. R U ·" Rd A 3 NB Box l563, C.M. 9~. tlon!At. Prefer mature 1 nd" . elt'per, Perm!llle!lt. $4 P'r con 1t1on . , ............ -v ., • '+' • ~$-9138 u a1.... , Pl. , . . ~38 5/8.
RIOR ~'Omal\. Send rerume to Box ica1 military 8 r co iuonrl. hr start. Box MJ63, Daily e Chests of Drawers .. , , . , ... $29. each up -'~'~~1~8'~2c-,;,,-~,.,--,-,.,,-,.,-
INTE l\.1-719 Daily Pilot ing I refrigeratton. Eicpe • Pilot STEREO \\'/~arrard record LADIES diamond di nner
DESIGNER ence desirablf!, 1.fmt be ·""=°"'-.,,-.,""=7 70:::: pla;·er, Le. she s pea ke r, ring, sel with 11.~ karO!.I -~=·1 _... 1\-fEDJCAL BUling-imurance able lo,, ... •'mmediately. USED car Lot Man. 5 llour 1885 Harbor lfwd., at 19th St., A""' b lfr.rl ., •• ,.., • ., l.
DOG, Part Chihuahua &
08.chshund, Approx, ~ • 8
mo's old. Had all puppy ~
shot5. 6464401 or 546-8116. ·1
.. ~ ... _,,_ .,. ... , y.·.....,._, ca 1ne1, ..,., . .,...,........,, -nter .,.. mond, 2 d ;•mond• clerk. Ex .. ....,....,nt pog1 )()n. KEC0 lNDUSI'RIES INC. Dey. Marcus Motors, ~ ,.,,_ -
**INSPECTORS** Send resu~ to Box 578, ,~•• Oaiml•< St., S.A. lfarbor Blvd .. C.M. Cosra MtH • 541-9457 --1~ karat on each side.
All thn'e !hlftl M/F J c · trano ,,,,,., Radio 8200 Brilliant cut Sacrifice! Rep-APPLY IN .PERioN San uan apJS (Irvine Industrial Complex) WAITRESSES*** Open: Weekdays S.5:.'.30, Saturdays 9-5, Closed Sunda)'s I Bo P360 o -1 P U 1
' SI! G~oo=o""=m=at;:,:-:;dogc-=•""'r;:..,.::::at;:• I :
cat ne-ed a loving homt' as :
soon a11 possible, 543-1968 ,
N Ing 557 °""'" HAl\.I ""'Br 1'TY Mod 15, 14 Y to x · 81 Y 0 · Ma~regor Yacht Co..... urs ........, EXPERIENCED I ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!'I!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ I •-o.:u .... "'·llh reperr. 1It.pe xmtr, TRAVEL Trailer. Rtfrig. 1631 Placentia, C.M. R.N •• 3 days per wk. REAL ESTATE SALESMAN -~--·· . --RA.87 P'A'r :iiUp.. \Vest. Norscold 6 cu f1 . Comb pro-
Jr. Dr.ft.m•n to $52S .1. wanted experienced. Active No Phone Call11 Furniture 8000 Garage Salt 8022 Elect. Tu, manuals Sl50. pane & t'lec $7S. 1ltariner's Challenging pos1 1q_n, ~tablished oWc-e. clxlice Apply ln Penon -------PLAYF1JL aft Iona! kit Si ll
Employer pays fee . Xlnt relief IUftarYiM>r" 96 •--·•"-n. AL-rtJs•·-. park-SCRAM-LETS SAT 'Til'!' ·156 16th Pl., Cl\.I. Comm. or Ham, Collins Se.xtant "Tama.ya 636 l\.1~2" , . .'ky ect bl •, • bent' "-·'-tandina opty to ,.. NUluu uvc . ..., RLOJN 50E6D diwrslty RCVRS Brand new, comp. sm. terui, ..... c -ac or • vuu. ~.... &.-..1 ECF. ; .. g. ref-'s . ...._,, collect SURF & SI Portable dishwasher, com· Tig '"".....-l ::.•D = 43/J d l ·~ right man -'-'' .,...,.., ......, AM / USB I L.SB 2-30 f.ll-lZ, 548-0447 er·Su•~"· ~. •01~~r 1_ ""• ;::_ -..J.... avail.· 3 for apopintment. 492-6:145.--5930, Pacific Coaslle t 1Hwy. ANSWERS _plete milsc bousebold llcm!i. =="'°""--~---I Rrdlands, N.B. &/9 , '"' ..... un:: ,.,.,,. LVN 6 30 pm N rt a0> gas stove lop, golf bag, orig rosf S12,000, sell as is GEi'iT'S di11.n1ond r j n g, " : am · . ' RESTAURANT hel p, ewpo 200 '"M E 4 k' l able k R I f b Sl . Ant, Tell'<':>i ~vi Ct'n!cr stof}(! l caral, en-FR E -cute 1ttens, 'JASON BEST 2 days per W • e le ma1ure, for fa.;! food •\VAITRESS, Part lime. 211 SAT l~, couch. ba Y lttms, Dcam & Hygain HI tower, circled by 9 s ma 11 er tiger, 1 black & while, 1 •
Employment ""e"""' med. nurse. service. Apply PUP 'N to 30 hrs a wk. Over 25. Endure -Orbit -Valet -c-hairs, clo!hf's, misc. 18791 both for SlOO. 549-1001 dian1onrls. .., .. ,., 11•0 0 calico, I mixed. Need good ; ·~ '"' co o · ~•o A ly In -rson F W Eczema -MUTTRECAL Via Verona, Turtle Rock. .,..,,_ v 2'1111 So. Main. Santa Ana TA r' v" u P • ~ PP .,.. · · --962..fi631 home. s.m.8798 5111 .
9264 \V. Katdla. Anaheim NURSE AIDE • Exp'd. Talbert, F .V. WOOLWORTii, 2302 Harbor o~!:~~a ~~ s:::~.~~~; GARAGE sale -bar s!ools T•pe Recorders 8220l;POIT;;;;~ER'°''os"::,:;:,h=oe1:;:-,,:--::,;:1,=otn::c'r 546-MlO or 821·1220 preferred, 3-11 :30 pm Blvd. C.M. .v..... •• ·"-RECAL," hide-a-bed, misc. 302 Iris
_.. ""&" u1u1 • Cdl\.t , * ----------1 motor operated, $6.l each. See Betty Bruce at WAITRESSES Want.,.. grave. SONY Stereo tape recorder Marine Surplus Co .. 3307
UNHAPPY • mu.c;t find home ,
for loving spayed fl!maJe
cat, outdoor bunter and pet, .
499-2489 5n1 •
* JANM'OR-Nigbt work 1%
to 3 bn. ~ntuclcy Fried
Chicken, 29%9 E. Coast Hwy.,
Qorona de! Mar.
PARK LIDO m l yard shift only. Apply: SAT. & SUN. ONLY w/Wald air suspension S. l\.lain, Santa Ana. CONVALESCENT , ODIES RESTAURANT 1400 Rauan lounge chairs wl ol-Appliances 8100 ll""'akers, must sell, $22:5. 5'1:;...s;;.;t
HOSPITAL LAA X€C W Co t H NB toman's SJ0 ea. Rullan di11. ~~--------•-oo'nc::::;:--o;:= "" ' " wy. . . SO COAST IRBY 54>-2081. &16-lC>Sl NEWPORT tbl, 6 chrs, very 11turdy, gd · K Beach Tennis
SINGLE 1nama cat must
give up :1 beautiful kitteM
for adoption. Call after 6: 00
~.>--221& 5/9
*•JANITOR with exp.
1'1ile Square Golf Course
+545--3726•
***KEYPUNCH
f.tohawk operator. Experi.
enced on machine llOI pre.
ferre<l. Temporal')' or full
time.
A VERY PRODUCTS
Consumer Djvi&loD
2620 So. Susan, Santa Ana
Contact Personnel: 540-4020
LARGE Land Development
Co in S'n. Orange Co. ~a.
has an imml'd. opening for
an engineering contract ad·
ntlnistrator. Applicant
11hould have an engineering
& engineering purchlling
bkgrnd. Position o t I er s
challenge and future for the
right person. Send resume
to BOX M·767 Dally Pilot
+ LADIES * 18-QJ, show
SARAH COVENTRY Spring
& aJ1 seuon jewelry.
Absolutely no invest'mt. We
train. 531~1 or 962-5988
loc•I Office Jobs
No Charge 100-/. FrH
Pleue call for appt,
&1perior Agcnc:)' w.n41
1351 Harbor, Costa Mesa
r.1AN lo assist Mgr., local
appliance 11tore. MUst be
neat appearirc. Call 9 AM
lo 10 AM OHi)': 496-2383
:i.tAN'S IJairstyli&t for Ken
Allan in CdM. * fOf" •J>I 6'5-7410 *
l\.fANAGEMENT OPPOR .
Full or pt. time. Car nee, 20
hr wk. 836-4302
./ MAIDS-0ver Zl for Mole.I
"'OI'k-For appl. Call
646-9681.-MESA 1'10TEL.
415 N. N(>WJ)Ort Blvd., NB.
White Elephants?
(7141 642-2410 N"""" REGISTERED NURSE 1.c . .c.c.u.
Expamlng: unit. Challf!ng\ng
opportunities, continuing ed·
ucation progran,. Contact
penonnel So. Coast Com·
mun.it)' Hosp. 31872 Coast
Hwy, So. Laguna (Ilt) 499-
lJll Ext. 35ii
* * NURSES AIDES * * Experlel'>C('d. 7-S Pl\-t
* 549-3061 '*
PART Time girl Friday,
mornings -Dental ottice.
age »JO. Qualiticatioos to
Box Ml62. Daily Pilot.
PART-TIME WORKER
GARDENING 18 YRS UP
• 642-4030 •
*PART TIME·
EVES.
Ol!.tributor !or.west coast
mfg. co .• now hiring
TRAINE~ lot. sales and
ll(!J'Vic:e.
$90., WEEK .
Hours 6 to l0:30 'p.m.,·J'bone
547-7182 Penwinel Dept.
PBX Recopt to $425
Good co. bertf• & raises.
Plt'uanl working OJl'ldl,
JASON BEST
Employment Agency
2201' So. Main,. Santa Ana
9264 W. Katella, Anaheim
54s,5410 or 121.1.220
e e e PIE MAKER
Respofll!\ble, young man to
learn the pie making bus!·
ness. 6 days • 48 hr wk, work
lnto gd future with growing
co. Apply in person, Vi's
Pies ll 10 6 pm) 191 E .
16th SI., c·.M,
Far Daily Pllot Want Ads
Dial 642-Stml ftr RESULTS
Profession~! Sales
Specialist
Home Furnishings
Jf you are a professional, top earning
specialist. not satisfied with a mediocre
income, then Crants has a proposition for
you. Consider the following:
1. Top commission
2. PM's (special
a•le1 cornm.)
3. Opportunity for
•dv•ncement
'-Employment
near your home
5, Quality line to
Hli
'· P•ld "l•cation
• 1. SJck pay
I. Retirtmtnt plan
9. Group Life •nd
Mecflc•I
ln1ur•nc~
10. Employu
discounts
11. Nationally
e1t•blished firm
12. Paid milea9e
Car required for personal customer
contact. If you want to learn more about
·our money making. proposition in one of
the companies fastest growing retail or~
ganiz.ations ..• Come prepared to discuss
your sales:. know·bow and your previous
experience.
APPLY AT • • •
W. T.
0
GRANT CO.
PERSONNEL OFFICE
9811 ADAMS AVENUE · GRANT Pl.tAZA
HUm!NGTON BEACH, CALIF. 92646
Agency for Career c;Jrl• ••WAJTRESS !Focxll Exp'd oond., $98. Blonde twin has credit TD's & demo Oub mt'mbers hip, transl'er-
410 W. Coast J{wy., .B. Mile Square Goll Course bdrm, comp! $l25, COJ"ncr models of ne\Y •70 Kirby Miscellaneous 8600 ring, mus1 sell. Call !\fr. By annni:1t. 64&3939 * 545-3726• Cl · ~ ~ tt F t .,,..... tbl SS, dropleaf din. !bl $20, ass1cs, .,a ,o o · ac · 1----------Seguin, days 853-1514, eves
SALES WE NEED YOU
$400 to $3,000. No sales exp. CALIF. CASTING CO.
needed to take orders & Looking for every day people
cover leads for world's like you! For T.V. Commer.
fastest selling home ex-cials & film work. Receive
ereiser. ll 11ells I i ke tree screen test, no exp nee.
banana11, in bunches, for Not a school, no fee,
$103.50, with 1009' tinan-$50 to $125 PER DAY
cing. Call: 897.1986 or u accepted. For appl phone
fi4&487l. 1714) 835-8282
SALES: The Aulo Club Of WESTCLlFF'-PERSONNEL
So. California has perm. AGENCY
positions open for exper, 20~3 \VeslcHU Dr., N.B.
Field Representatives. Xln't 64S..mo
earning ~nity & w'';;;o"'i\t"EN""°.''''"'""::;;-;.;;; .. ;;,c-_'iParti;;;; employee benebt pkg. Ap-time Good 'NOl'k:ing cond'&.
ply, 7891 Taltie:t Ave, H.B. Appl~ 325 N. Broadway,
Equal Opportunity Employer Rm. 410, S.A. from 4-6 PM
maple cricket chr SIO, warrn't PH: 536-7521/222 PAI.PO knee machine, 54 49-J.7952
blonde cnffee lb! SW, sofa 5th St/ H.B. inch, . good . condlli?n .S30. FO°'"R""SaJ:;:-,-_-.,;:,~m=i;:ly:-;M:;•=m~-· I
bed S25. 675-8019, M 0 NT G 0 !\1 ER Y \Vard Elc:ctric ~1tar n11~s1 n .g bership, Jr\'ine Coast Coun-
CHERRY Dining table, 8 "'asher & matching gas stru~gs ~ 4:> \Vall amp. SJ~, try Club. Can be purchased
Duxbury chrs, custom pads dryer. late n1odel, xlnt concl . Bolt achon 22 excellent SI». by 6% note, if qualified.
incl ·$5.jl), Maple crib Both for $140. 847-8115 or 20 gauge shotgun good con. Call 545-2337 10 am-5 pm.
\\'/matt $2'5. m11.ple cradle 546-8672 dition Slj, Call S4HM7 CARPET Left fro Co 'I
after 3: 30. 214:i Bayport m mm · w/pad $20. 2 bkcases, KENMORE gas dryer, i:ood \Vay, Ne ..... -port Beach contracts. Sl.98, $2.88, shag
red"ood picnic !bl etc. cond, .$30. Norge gas drytt, $3.99 .sq. yd. Drakes Carpet
493-4917. late model, xlnt rortd. $60. * AUCTION * 172(16 Beach Blvd., H.B.
SPANISH Liv. Rm. Furn. 847-8ll5 or 5-16-8672 U you will sell or buy 8-12-5114
Sofa, lovescal, c r ushed WHIRLPOOL Avocado grl'C'n give \Vindy a try REJ-'RIG/tree-1.l'r combo, "21
velvet chr, coffee lbl, 2 encl dryer, used 2 hlO, $12:1. Auctlon11 Friday 7:30 p.m. cu. fl. bottom freezt'r holds
tbl's, dark oak. Ex. cond. * 646-5176 * Windy's Auction Barn 325 lbs, $175. Power mower ""-"" Cash. can 963-4988 -~ 536-2069 ~ ELEC. Kf!llm<lre \\·asher $45, 2075~ N CM 64&86861=-=· ===""'=-,,--,, ~·~·"-=·========I elec Kenmore dryer $50. Behind~~ Bldg_ Mat'I. SURFBOARD 7'7" l_Wssell.
Office Furniture 8010 ~G~ood~~oo~nd'.':·c.'"6"1~"."44;_a~f_:t ;':5·-i ~RiCOCiCiKKiHHOOii:UttN'iiDDsS.:fF'iRiEEiE ~~~· Sleeping bag
STOVE ape.rrment s i i e, olishin """
"" I whtt•. Al -ndi"on, ••• p g unit I.: tumbler. TRADE C•r -·,1er litU• 5 Women wan..,., or ._u ,_, Complete new rock shop. · 1 11• ' ....
Imported car dea.lenhip. part-time work, car needed, USED steel desks $39.50 • $47 .50 492-6175 Come in & register for draw. money tor a cement drIVe.
SALESMAN
4 BLACK puppies. Father·
cocker spaniel, mothe r '
pekingese, 11 wk, o Id. ,
646-4378 5/11 .
NEED good home for lovable
young med. Shep mix,
hsbrkn. good watchdor .
893-0976 S/8
BLACK Mama cat y.•ith 4
lovable kitten:oo; need good
hon1e FAST <Bird :oo;anctuazy
next door! l 5-18-7061 sm
PUPPTES--Need good homes
ror 6 lovable, healthy mixed :
breed puppies mat~ and '.
female. 548--0813 519 •
BEAGLE Dog, male. Full ·
blooded, 20 rno:s. old. All :
shots. Xlnt for children :
:m-7346 5/9
Foreign car experience pre. * "Jenny't 5t7·34.28 * :os~~ ~~ d!,!;~~r ti: USED Appliances & TV 's, ing. Open 1dayg10 am-6 pm. Call aft 5. W-5846
1erable, Excellent opportun· cabinet!!• Used "''Ood desks all guaranteed. Dunlap's, 8101 Bolsa Ave. ORIENTAL RUGS
ities, Call sales mgr. for ap. Scnools-lnstruction 7600 Mci\tahan Bros Desk Inc, 1815 Newport, C.J.t:. 548-7'788 lttidway City e m-l970 Various &i.zet, Muat sell
pointment 540.3100. ~ 1800 Newport Blvd. % REFRIGERATORS, good RUt.U.iAGE Sale. May 11 & 673-58"22
3 YR . Siamese cat, spayed,
11hots, To home w/middle
age or retired c p I .
641-1036. 5/ll
3 TINY Kittens will share .
SALES LADY. J\.tust be e The Newport e Costa Mesa * 642-11450 conditj(')n, S35 & $5 0 , 9 Friday & Sat., Pacific BALBOA Bay Club mem·
penonable &. exper sewer, e School of Business e 673-1365 &tnds Cabana Club swim bership for sale at discount.
Virginia'a Snip A: Stitch, Office Equipment 8011 AUTOMATIC WASHER team, parklng lot at 8141 \Veekdays 12131 879-1520.
3334 E. C.ollst. Cd.M. Features We(!kly refft!shcr ----------Near new, xlnl cond. $45. Atlanta Ave., H.B. lime 9 HAND painted oil portrait
SALES • Service Estab course!i in the skills yoo IB M Ex EC u T I v E 64&-5848 am 'ti! 4 p.m. Piano. TV, ol you or your children from
Fuller Brush route, $125 wk need to get the job you TYPEWRITER. --Freczt>r, love seat. clolhes, a photograph, &16-3629
guarantee 10 start. ~745 v.·anL 18 inch can-iage s11:,. Antiques 8110 ~en & \\'Q~1en's, you name l\'YLON Shag Crpt, beige,
SAL&S • 5'1g..J()(ll ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I it, 're got it. 2 yrs old. 6Q sq yds. Must
Wanted: Exp'd motorcycle • 833 Dover Dr., N.B. • · ANTIQUE 10" radial S&W, 3 speed head. sell by Sat. Cheap! 64fr1996.
salesman. 642-4343 • 642·3870 Cl Garage Salt 8022 metal stand, 4 blades, I --· ·
e SALESMAN e ~~!-----------carbide tipped, nr new Sl50. Misc. Wanted 8610
AIRLINE ESTATE AUCTION Engiorm transi>, romp 195 Expt>r business machines Gara9e Sale * 548-4533 * SCHOOLS Tablt ·~ 6 chairs $20 Buil~-in '''ANTED: \\'lleelchair f or Moving To Europ& Sa · 9 h 1 vac: y.•1th control. no pipe Savin~ & Loan PACIFIC , .1 1 ,1 1 t. night l\lay I • prn l 2; 220 1\I 1 v· 1 C<1.i elderly grandn1other. l\lust
MANAGEMENT Day & Night Classes 2 f-anii Y garage sa I'. ''us 2 Complete antique stores :>. ' one 18 a, ~ be incXpensivc, ;HS-7218 or 543-6500 sacrifice everything. Hou~. ,t; art glass collection on dis. 642-0618 5"1()-2279 DynamT,.~SaAvl~gE•Eand Loan 610 E. 17th St., Santa Ana hold ilcms, fl1rr111ure. cloth-play now for viel\ing. * • 3 PAL~! TREES. S1200 .~~P"R"tv=A'°TE""_pa_rt~y-w~a~n7t•
adventure 'With you it you •
"''ill share a !Oving home. :
545-18i8. Call aflt'r 6:00 5/ll :
3 LIVELY ll'Opard kittens.
Comp. trained & weaned. fl
Fret' to CXCl'ptional homf:. ;
673-6300 5/11 ~
EXCEPTIONALLY Cute kit-~
tens 1 'vks. 'veaned It •
housebroken. 5.IS-461.J ~/9 •
FREE Cement Rubble, Build to
a wall or planter. 67J..M51 ,
after JP~t. 5/8
FREE lo good home • pw;_
gray ki tten • box trained.
&1'1-11233. 5/8
~ ·~~7.'=:'"'CEC'ilE::::"''i ing, T.V.'s, Everythini:: must 10 am to 6 pm daily VALUE, YOU RE:\TOVE -1 1 12......... 1 Associalion is lieeking col·1' he sold. Sale starts Friday 'llr1tl:Ction ONLY sooo. CAN BF: SEEN goo.-USC< "-'V ca~:
lege graduates for 1heir Cottage Art Shop~ 10 a.iTI. 1,,~~1 RHONE LN lf B gold, avocado, or beige.
managemenl traini11g pro-Art lt'ssons, land & scas~ap.-619 Plummel' SL ,,,,., i • . • 64S--1791
gram. es, signs &. l!UC~ leucr111g. Costa J\lC'Sl\ BOB'S AUCTION NEW HUFFY 2·1" GIRl..5'1.1=v7\N'°'T"E~O"""U"°"-d""'l°'O'"°'"o"r~l"°'l"
This position offers cha1-EmmaBlank1nsh1p&Joyre 204 \\'.Chaprn~in BICYCLE. SPYDER '. l!h tall .
lenging and rewarding CB· Sisler, 690 W. 19\h tAt -~ SALE Sat & Sun 10.5, Lo\•t>ly Orange, Calif. i\10DEL, $40. eng1~ a ;· ~e urning.
rrer 10 the right person. mona) &12-1689 or 836-6~"· old tilt lop tabll'. outbrd Phone: 538-l111 &12.1724 EVENINGS Call .>IS-7339·
Call _ ?.JASTER ARTIST v.'111 teach motor. disht's, trnill'r n1ir-SUMMER'S HERE I Wanted· Old Kitc,hen
ror.:: for car. 4 burner ~ai; Cab1net:oo; 614-4188 !\fr. Hensley fZ13l 861-5713 painting. Apply in JK'rson .Auctioneers Bud Gan-etson ./ Newport Beach family · S s1ove top, golf ba~. gardt>n
Secretary to $600 29l2 \V. Coast Hwy. pace /urn .. & me.ny other ilcn1s. and Bob !"01-d Club l\.1rmbership. S300. Machinery E tc 8700
Exciting op!)', You will "'·ork No. 3, Newport Beach. 1{)(< to !? 2 homei; 200R·2010 Days 549-Zl86, i>vrs, 5.'i7-8968 • •
· HANDISE FOR ANTIQUE SPINNING l in lovely new ofc. in Irvine MERC Vista Cajon. Thi! Blulls. ORANGE carpetu1g • ny on ..
nrea for a V.'Onderful boss. SALE AND TRADE \VHEEL SiZl ( -make • high·lov• pattern. like tlt'V.'. IO PR.t\TT l· \Vhi tney
1be co is estbl'd & stable. -1 "N~·~B"·==~-cc-cc---,--o ~~n'!b.le oUer, Call 100 yBJ'ds al S2 pet yard Turrrt Lnthe \\'fnlQtor !'
Youn ~ill be a pos. w/in-Fur niture 8000 RUi\li\IAGE Sale, i\tay & & --=========o I or best offer . 8.."IG--ll61d so nie loollng. $l2:.. &.12-n59 9, Friday & Sa!., Pacific -ays.
finHe varlely & interest. -----------: Sands Cal:!ana Club s1\·i m S-lng Machin•• 8120 SACRIFICE. Like 11('\V organ ~=""',---""'""=.,.--<·nd ail M' · 2 ..-...-5HP Blower & Cyclone, ..., resume or C ISS CUSTOM Furn 1 tu rr. team, parking lot al 8141 "-'=-:-:c:---I $1100. SlOO rlo1vn, t11ke over
Elizabeth, 5.57-6122 Abigail Orangt> silk chrs, 8' floral Atlanta Ave., H.B. time 9 SACRIFICE pmls. S 1rack stereo $60. i\lillc. PIPf' le fittings I •-230 Call 642-6183
l YEAR old Basset hoond
male 'vith papers, 646-3033
af1cr 4 5/11
4 OilliUAHUA mLxed pup.
pirs, males & females. Need
special homes. 54&.3566 5/11
SURPLUS kil!ens 3
black and while, 2 silver
gray. LI 8-246'2. :i/11
DOG • Part roll1r & husky.
malr _ Love s k id s .
5-l&-9.11'.! 5/11
T\VO alJ."·hite kilt!!llS, 6
'reeks old • 11'eancd and
0011:.trained. 5-46-1570 5/U
li\'O nutty
6 weeks
96S-5!i12
kit1ens, black,
old. J\1a l e.
5/ll Abbo1 Penonne "o&'"ncy, 50fa. gan\e tbJ & 4 chrs, am 'Iii 4 p.m. Piano. TV, I yr oh.I, rully auto. zig zag ,,,.,~...,';".°"~0~.~~-..-,.--,1==========
\V, \Varnet, Suite 211', Sanla pecan 80" dresser & inin 'Or, F°r'e(U'I', .Jove sea1 , clothes, fancy pattern sewing ma· :-,1967 40 H p Outb d FREE TO YOU FREE horlle r r rt i 11 ze r . ____ .. _,, . . oar Pickup al 20311 eyp...,,, Ana, match. hi-boy, <=vni "'...., men & women's, you name chine w I \\'alnut console, E · R Good
T u50 1 C 11 "" «M Xl t __ , Pu •·~ fro ng1ne, uns , S.A. 5/9 S.cy/ Lena I rnH .,... amps. a <;l"tV"V'l\IU-it \\'e got ii. • n .. ..,,, .. _ re,...,,.,,._, m "'4J4 ft 5 I---------I
• I l-' la ff loc•l 5,··-r d•al•' -·•-n $175. 67~ a pm TIYO '''' f•mal• '·•gl<, Exciting opty to start n "5"' CUSTOM Built rge co ee JfUGE GARAGE SALE "P>~ " • .,-~ • COCKAPOO . s 1 I "" "d V I t l I nd bl l I t··•• Pvt ply 546-8197 >"OR Sa.le: '66 21n V.S Chev. pupp!e' niae, Spn}'Pd. R·al fr>'•ndly . Jit'.l . ery p easan aw tab e, e ta es, arge 50 a, 117 Via Quito. Lido Isl, "'"· · . 1 fem11lc free to good home. L
(lfCS., good benfs. Call Miss bedrnl set. chests, i\1isc. Ncv.f10rl Beach, Sat & Sun. SINGER Au!o zig·Ul.g, 6 mos. C'nginr, llkC' TI('\\'. Cninpl 549--2"i95 5 8 54().6894 af1. 2:1X) p.m. 5/9
Ellzabelh, 557-6122, Abi gail 675--6090. Jed l "'/Bel! Jlousinc.. <:luteh , . ' OLI) El ,1 ~~""C-,c::::-.::::;--:;:;:; A n t i q u e is , f u r n i l u re • old. No attach nt.'ec or ct1rb, s!al'lrr, $:!00. &li'~l 973 PART Siramese kittens to l'C. Rt frig (latch Ablxlt Personrn:I Agency, 2lOrLARGE Glass fronl maple clothing. oporls l'qu\p'1111, ;i:ig-ing, bu!ton ho I es. ...vvi ho 962-1932 H broken) & gas Refrlg. (good
\V. Warner, Suite 211, Santa hu\"h, ltke new. $.175. Oval appli8.11Cf$, dishts, linens, designs ctc. r.uar. SJ9 ~a.,h POOL Table Brunswick. b1.""" gto'" ~n-t'. h '5'~18 cond). ~328 519
' II ~0016 l t•·r kt Al 11." in ui:x:ec Ana. tbl w/4 chn 10 match $16.5. rugs, garden IOOll!, etc, etc. or sma peymenllS ... w.,,.. ea "" poc e 8· · · ' 6 k Id k 11 d _,. PUPPIF:S -1'1i:o.: Cockflpoo slate. $JOO incds acce:!i8, "-'l'e o 1 ens • an1ng SECRETARY, pan time, 546-334111.ft 5:30 METAL desk. Band Saw. Jig SACRIFICE :;.tG-4484 2.stJort Mlr 3-long hail'. Also & Brlgian Sh!! phf!rd .
perm, Approx 10 hrs "'"k· HOUSEFUL Of new n1odcl Saw. Drill Press. Sm. hAnd 1 yr old, fully auto, f11ncy -=--:c-.--.,.:o:c-.=::-sivin~ o;et. 962-86!2 !'-i/S ~S-:1623 5/11 ,
r.111y \\'Ork bet sch: hrs. 2 h<>me furniture. Rrg, $683. ,., shori tools • Orig, paint. pattern. Ori~ cost $395. Priv Electric T•ble Saw ANGORA C<it. feinale, &
days inc. l-'rl, Reply PO Box now $197. 894-4117 or ing!' S.J & up. B11thirn>t1e, prty, S.$-8197. S.15. 546-0982 ri.ft 5. TERRIER/Bt'agle Pu P P Y · gray ki1\rn. 812 _,,g91 !!Ill
u:J5 C M J\his! be good ho m E' ""VIJ
.J • 637~200 C'hai rs, papcrl:!ks 5r • l5c:. 48" rnd oak tabll', ped base 646-6996 518 2 Fluffy Black It-\Vhitt Kil·
SECRETARY. must be xlnl 8,~.~Soo:';f~.~..,=.=.,=-:u=>«l:::o.-::q,~i;;lt:;;ed & n1isc. Sat·S~ 9--S, l04U Muslcal "'·/leavrs $135. 10' f'O\••boat 1,,--,,~·,---.,,.""°-~ lens, 7 11,ks old. S4&.6842.
519 t:ypi:!it, sofl\f' S.H. to Ira.in floral, scotcliguarded Sl25. Pua Dr .. H.B. ;io2-4;'i96 Instruments 8125 w/anchor. oars. 673-4533 1h Doberman, 1.1 Shephen.l
as legal 1eel')'. H.B. Call i\falch. Joveseat $15. PATIO Sa le: Frl. & Sat. ,.,..n ,._.,...E l lni r mal" puppies only . CUTE pla,yful kittens, frtt. •-3030 * ..,._,.., .... ' vn. llS C k>n 4!»-n15 5/8 675-mt 5/ll .-r · 7i~.\92. Desk. TV, rollav.-ay bed, GUITAR & baa, tops & bo1· on portrait bust v.·/model.1,,,=~,--,,-=,,.--~
SECURITY GUARDS J\•1,"11"1;;0Gr.A"N~Y,..-d:;;i=ru;; ... :;--;ta:-bo;l:-e. i"O"'~r nlO\ver. \\'1'0\lght iton tom, alllO p.s . .system. all Glnria Puglsey, 64•1-2874, FREE lovable Kittens. 2 3 Adorablr pups. part silky
Newport at't"A. Call 633-3620 A•ll'"'" Vi,.lorian Gent'!'> CAndclabm, CI o th in g I.:. or Individual. j,'J6..8706 USTO 1 '--• fl·" 1 1 lit!erR lo choose from. Cn11 riond l", lt 11·k.11. 5'15-1868 5111
... , .. L ~ . "ll C i\ 1l!Uiu era ...,,, ~er · ~lS-:!"'n-,, 510 --or 637-3070 1().Z, Pl\1. cha1 r. &l4-16i9 many mii;c, itenis. ;, inJ:' roffce & tea service.:.·""°~"'~,,---;~--,-,----,-6 \VE ~:K old kittens ,
SERVICE $talion Attendant, BUN'"R"'be<l::;:s:osso.,.-:-.. ~.-Soo:;I,:-;& ~""°=.-"~la=A~vo~·~· ;:C_d,,\l~.-;:;::c: I Pianos & Org1n1 8130 548-0012 SIX \Vl'<'I(, ()\d, very cute, S.IG-0:168 5/9
days, methn.nlcAJ r-x p ., annchAlr un, 3-pleCI' .sec--RUJ\.11\1AGE Sale., SI. John's 0.~R~AP=E~S~1~3~. -~8,---.,1-~3 1 clenn, he11:lthy. box trained 2 PARAKEETS \\·/--. ~ Ch h ~·3 0 A x ' 0" Y ki11t'ns. 642-70Sl 5/9 ~ ...... ~ salary & com1n, Pete's l)()n&J $40. 54&-3403 urc · W1 range ''~. \Ve are Mvl.ng a mo use. Dellk. c:Mlr &: lamp 67">1008. 5111 ~~ .. 2nd & S. Cout, S. 5' Sora, spotless, blut', like (at Bay) C.M. Fri i\lny 8, Wha)e of a Sal• $40. Dr-esst-r $15. 4~ DOG -WW gl\•e hunting PETS and LIVESTOCK ._.. S.'\f r.tay 9, 9:31).4 :30. F'urn. on rtunos and Ortallll. dog lo rood homt'. Male.
SERVICE Stri.t ion m11nairer, llE'W $35. ~·"9754 clot.hes. bric-brnc, TI\I~. You bf:tlcr rom~ ()n do'''n! 1969 DELUXE rele.x-.-ci~r. llJ0.-5119 5/8 ----------•
-D G \V R"'' BA' "WUN STUDIO 6 d~I . Sl2S. Large pagoda. P tts, Gtntral 1100 ', lite mt'ch prel, pcm1, xtnt CUSTOM l'fe brtoaltrA.11t NEJG.t1aoru100 a rage A .,..,. ..u • 6~1 FREE Kinens to go~ri •
ul11ry. llu11r1 Ttxaco Sta. 1 nia !\.'lit', 9100 hlk. El t.1orado, 1319 Ne\\'porl, C.M. &12.&18-1 ·-=~---~~-;-I home. 96U383 5/8 ----------
tlon., 1404 N. rOlil!l Jh\'f, t;1l~le \\'Ith 2 uphollltl'N'd r .V. Furn., <'loth., appll.. f)pt'n 1-:very Nile BLACK Angus Rotl~serle, ==,..,--,-,,--,-,,;c---BANTA'.'.1 Chic Bc11.utlrs aD .
La,g. Sch. 4!M-3000 liW1vel chain;, SSO. 644~6. niisc. Fri noon thru Sun .£. Sund!lY Af1ernoon llke: new $40. Fjec, rietp FREE Longhalrro klnem, 6 l'OlONI &: size•. 3/$5 2512 •
'
De-Ilea ha' SI If s fryer, $15, BBQ S5, 61:\-fim "'ks. 642-7140 5/8 BUSlESl' rrtf.11letplace in · c u-s, au rr _P~"-'-· -~---.co-'* 1r PI AN 0 PS \Vick S.E. r.lt'u. Or (upper hl)'I •
t11blc, misc. furnl!urc. Super Garage Sale Uprighl FUU. lcf\Jrth mink COlll & FREE A~hlr kinc:ns. 2
town. The DAil.Y Pn.ot1 ~;il8-'83:...:.~1"°'"'-..,.-,;;--;; E'vel')lhlng \maginitblt'. Comp E,'('('llenl~ $200 ~lolC'. Tourmaline, Best of. Plll'f' v.-'h i\r, 847-984~8
.............. ..__tlo S IS Y 0 UR AD l N l·lcaranre, Y.15 E, l61h, C.l\1. 1714l ~231 &f1Ylfrn<. fer, &t"-..1368 FREE Killrfl.S. 6 \V'ks. Ol<t. ~u•= ..,., n. ave ,.., •sslFl-•. Som--, .. 111 _ ~ -...,..,.,. ' 9 ......,, ,,..,-...._,,.., • Pt.U:\IBING Fixluf'l'5, ful'T1, f'TJ-:JN\\'A\' "l.", :>' l 1' ', ANTIQ. \Vsilnul Co!iturnrr . .,.,,,. <->o •
nlO-..., tlme & t!Uort. Look be lookitl& for It. DIAi 642-I I ~1 ~ \Y Ehon "·I -~,. ......... over 100 ~ olct. <Ill" cl~. TWO d11rli11g killf'llll -6 •-.z ~ lou li,O\l!t.ai:,.,.,es.111 , y,.,._,r5 , ... ,v ,., •""'· .z•-
""111 100\ St. C..M. All day Sat. -S yra.eld for $3Sj0. ~14511 stow, 9 mo'a. oJd. 646-4113 wee~ old 6JG.-0\19'. 5/9 aow111
Cars 1120 : ______ ,.
r tHSll\N h1irENS • J..ov. '
Ing gilt IUJ' /liothrr·~ DflY. :
C11pi11trano area 496-5:>39
..
------··-----------·---·-------------------------------.. --------------~-----------
Friday, 1111 I, 1970 DAll Y PILOf
ITS and LIV!STOCK TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TllANSPORTATl~::l!!~~~!!~CJ'~!!!!~!!!~~:_j
~·" 1120 11Mt1 a Yoohh -Spold Ski lloo to 90:111 Mini lllbt '275 Trallor, Trawl M2S C1mpore t.!10 lmpor!M Autoo HOO lmportld Can -lmportld Autos
S£ALPOINT B•ue -· • ., TWIN s.r... -w FIBERGLASS Runobout MINt-BIKE • c.1 ax HP.4 '69 Pac• Alrow * CAMPER AUmN AMERICA DATSUN FIAT -
;femaJe, I wb. Grand CrulMr. Orit Cn1t 28'. lllce .... Mm:rullu LD--!!?!,,.,CCllld. Aft l p.rn. n t)Ot Motor ltome. Auto-SPECIAL --------;~~-•lk. ISO. Call Sacrilic< • ..,.._ dayt. boar<!..,.boud. m""' ..u. -matic"""-, va, nodlo, pow-AUSTIN AMERICA '"DATSUN P/U
CF A rea:ilttted Siamne
kjtten, bluepoint, ma I e ,
E\oet m-c159. 67S-.237'-U).OTU, $2300 "Sii TACO '4 M1nJ Bike. 1JI er atetrina. JOMr brabi, Chevy .. ~~ ind~~ Salu. Suvb, Putt f.IJIH(I, "tape dedr:", $999.
44' HOUSEBOAT. ~rl. live 16%' R&ymm craft I: bir, xl.nt OMCL Sl2S. air conditiontns, electric new .--......uper, 0 """"'· lSBN.aa&>.
aboard. FuUy equip. Days completely rblt. Ford pwr, * aJ.1* * &tnt1'9t(r, Cbleman rool,,... ice box, alffpt six, deluxe rmm::-~
damp lladt[uound. $25.
!>19-1314
MotbeT's DI¥ Gift
~iamee Kittens, Purebred.
1 $12.so. Call ~n.
: • PART Penian kittens
Six v."e'eka old.
SIS-1512
\ 2 SIAMESE KITI'ENS
' 6 wtieks old, $5 each
: ' • S4S-O!Q •
111 737.(16.U Eva 4 wkends t1Ctrem. tine cond. $2900. POWELL. 5 hp $145. Booanz.a ~Uon unit, bu.tant eltc> cab Oft!' tb'lt-.
'43-2'34 141-1425 ' ... -.... mo. Call Irle _...... ........ $1799
alter S pm., IS3-3!l91 •toYe w/own. Mooomatlc 1\lll ~
Salll100t1 tDIO Morine Equip. -PAL MlNl·BIKE. !Ike new. ., .. ~ ......... <Oftlpl<tdy Kllltom Moton
--19'7 40 H.P. Outbolrd 3 HP, $85. 54M4n •lt contained. Near new, 145
.t~rlLIPLl\'I
.Ii 111 p Ll II•:,
27' SWl!DISH BU ILT Engine, Runs Good. -2.400 actual mil••. • Bam, C.M. 5'4).69]S
SLOOP $175. '7UQt oft 5 pm. Motorcyclo1 mo ~;!':'.. ~-;,:: ~J~1l'~S ,::::.w. Cout ""'"~"l-111
Built 1966 of African Mahoe. M~CK 1S lone •hafl '70 KawuaJd Sldewtnckr ln trade. Private party. See • New 11' Cabovtt Camper Autbortled MG Dealer
'l5 Watt Slmaon SIS inbrd paek 2 prop11, xlnt cond STREET I: DffiT at South Coast Ford Mere. $1495
awdllary. encloled head, w/a11 nmote eontrols. ,,..., ..,.. .., __ .. i .. -.... 9 AUSTIN HEALEY galley, att. Thb 11 a beauO-64._2732 ""8nd new· aoly 1'0ll mlitL _,, -~-•a.10, --• New ' Clbover C..,,..,.
ful warm well ke:pt boat. Paid $8l'XI. Will Aa'ifk:'t Beach, il.295 1.:..;..;..;..:_;_;.;.;;:..;;~:...
UTIFUL Seal point Varnished coclcpit, cabin I: EVINRUDE 40, short shaft, $650 AMNTION! Otter uplttt May 14, lS'JO '59 SPRITE, needs work,
SiaJDl!9I! kittens. SlS each. •'--t .... ..__ __ ... -1.... spotlHS manvd remotes ~ Scotts, 914 N. Harbor, s:A. PX>/bMt otler. Wkdys tll ~----' ' ~~-~-SM-, *&ll-0843* slonally mainf:a.intod. * &46-2132 * 1966 HOida S 90, 1400 ml. Campster l2' camp tra.Uerf 'fi6 VW Camper, '4,000 mi's. 6: ~ wknds • &tt
549-3031 Ext. 68 or ST
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
-$-
My very desirable Newport Xlnt cond. Pt!) or ofter. Complete with ktng she bed, Just like brand ntw, Compj .::_· ===-----1,Doe;;.='------1125= Harbor mooring avail for F lahf!'! eo.ta f040 Call 646-8513 This kmr awai~ tralJu w/tent awninp etc. 1100CC 19$) AUSTIN H~y. wire ''LeadU"lnTbetear.bOdN"
GERMAN Shephud, ex-bo&tMooring'°"$32.50 per 1r SEAMASTER GREEVES '66. 250cc, Xlnt can be pulled by a VW <>< enc. 1 Ownor. See 11 to •1>eelo, Aborth •>:!>au,., ZIMMERMAN
'ceptionally l.ge, 6 moti, over ~ar to ~ this boat tied Almo.t new • Lea than 3 cond, wttraller. '450 aey other compact, See it believe tt! Art 6PM, %311 rood condition $51)). 89T-Sl:ll 2*45 HARBOR ILVD.
Ill Lbs. 100 hr. Guard...._ up. Most slips are $60 per t--"-1 ··--'" VOi * ~7621 * .-.... at Heather Lane, N.B. 'li6AUSTINHealey3000Mark ., _ _.._..11 .....,. mo Recent ............ '-'"'--tea ... ...a 0 pa: .-:u, \/0 ......._ 646-311• ru Xln nd, Lo -•~ --::=0:-:-'i:"7:==,.,.... =· ~-=.,~ OO.:t ...... iioim -;_w _..,.., with Inboard/""-'66 Honda cu ''° """'Harbour V W 1961.....;...,..,v.,, ....... 12ioo. ~ .. -·· DOT DATSUN
1--• .. ~.. Thia WMk~ o;,ly boar<! drtw. 2 bunb, bead, Sport. must ..U. c.n .,.. ' ' •·~-. $4lO. See at 10th ' ·-SP•-OPEN DAILY the il-l.IJ.Uy ... ,IUX" husband $8'150 bait tank, new trailer. Too aft 5: 6'f3..T72l lS7ll BEACH BL., 842.4t35 .... ~., ... ~ iui.c.. XL NT
trawls. SDI. 642-l!'M. Call 645-0962 busy to use, must aacrif:lce. 'f7 TR.SC HUNTINGTON BEACH A Virginia St. Owner at COND. ~-AND AMERICAN M · Cana-Will t.ft mobile h::lme in 32086 S. Coe.st Hwy, So. 49&-0M9 SUNDAYS
dian ~pio~nca:~ 5 1 et ----;S"A"L""Eo---trade, $2895. Aak for Steve CaH s::..m. 1965 SHASI'A 2>, full)' aeU-cl.ar~:..· alt~·~--~-_!,=====:=== lSlm Beach Blvd.
Rowxl pup<, Beaut. •how O>lumbla 21 .. .. • .. • $1195 alt 10 am ""3515 or 54>3851 C<n>talnod, d.,.. I. many * TRA VE LALL * IMW Hun-Beach
'dogs a: tam pets. $50, $75, Col Challena:er 2' •• $3000 __ 1'0R Sale: '69 Triumph 250 extras incl oo.• dolled awn-IQ.Tm or Y.G-OH2 noo. 213-332-00S2 Venture 21 •••••••••• $1995 Boats Wentecl fOSO 'I'n>phy. $475 cub. after 6. lna. attached eycle rack, 70' brand new loaded, Hardll ---------
Coronado 25 ••••••• , Save S$ SJ6..002L rock shield, etc. $2000 firm. to find 392 ell.line, auto, BMW'S frt
Cor 30 3 spinnaker drifter. WANTED: Ski boat. Tri or 1i6 $lber, 1000 miles 54~2-498 alt 5 pm or aee •teerin&, air, dual tanlcl, Tr I
Corona:&, 30, 109~ every. Cat hull, U'-14'. w/out SOce $150 at 1059 Prnldlo, C.M. much, much more, save
'69 De.tam pickup TRUCK.
xmt cond. $1500 * 557.na * i Cockapoo Pllppift:, 8 wk:s
,old. 1 Blonde &: 1 Cocoa.
Champ. Stk. $35 each. • 646-9287. thing, °'"'· mot..-. ..,. 540-8299, <1ys * M9-368S * ICENSKILL mo. 11>11 ..,k at DEALER IN
Now Coronado 21 . ol'dtt now, •1>-5300 •61 YAMAl!A 100 m:w '70 MODEL sms Kustom Moton CALIFORNIA AND EN GUSH FORD ~~. ~~r,ru!e~ar! =~.ryu!i ~~w UDO 14, ulll!!d. Flwlt balast $175. 587 Yorkshire, C.M. 18' Fully Sdf.·Contalned 145 Baker, C.M, 540-5915 O~NGE COUNTY'S -
, w/black points, Possible y ch .., __ ,_ tank, trlr, eowr, 't c • Call 5C5-431l Scott'•, 914 N. Harbor, 8.A. VW Camper, new paint, 'GT All New EQcllsh 8 ta ...... ,,.a.c Inc. 544-9319, Prin. only. '69 HONDA 90. Good eng, ovals&. 1ide tent. Muat LARGEST Fords In Our Bia : best ol show. $125. 494-4605 2912 West Coast Highway con-11 1 Stock tlow At 4 MALE AKC German Newport Beach * 660810 Mobile Homu: t200 dJ.tion. Make otter. Trucks 9500 ae within wk. 1'63 Coast 1970'• lmmed. Delivery
Shepherd Puppies, $50 ea. --------Calli 83thn8.f Hwy, apt 8, Lag. Bch aft Zi New A Uaed In Stoclr: F ACTORY SOMEONE '63 HONDA 200 6 pm or call 1133-Hll. T&M MOTORS JNVOICEt 337 M""'°Ha Ave., C.M. must want a * Newport Harbor * Like _ • $250. GMC TRUCKS 8' Full ctb-Ove• camper, m Ganlen G""" B~ G.G. Pooltlvely No Added
&lUJIO. LIDO 14 ftwremaininamobUebome 492-3811 Hen! now. fact, discontinued model. 534-22840penSunday89U551 Dnler Omseil
POCKET size poodle1, No. 2275. Good cond., tun ap&Ct11noaeof.Callf.'1tut. 7 250 . . Immediate Delivery Complete .. $895. 869 Welt 1 _:stan;1'ps. '!~;;. ~ l~~!~~~t = ~t1:r:e:;~ ..... =·~: at=~Mes· ~~~lrt. ~~:Southern Orarwe <:oont;Ya 18th St. Colla Mna. COOPER GT• At Ow Cost
54>2100 • $1100. Will sell far $1000. are on di.splay, these bomta: only l500 miles. Pd $800, only Authorlied GMC Dealer ~ cm::v. ~IN; Y.:!·1---------While Overstocks
SHETLAND Sheep Dogs. 2 0 t Ii c • 613-67Q'.); home a.re fully equipped at prices will sacrifice $650. 956-3044 UNIVERSITY 4M-~ne. co . _... '6S Mini, Michelin, Korlls, Lut
beaut. Champ. Stock male 548-TI16. youwon'twanttopauupl Auto Service OLDSMOBILE ,69 V\V ''Adven;ure'' Blaupunlrl, Sacrifice, $1.XIO. RO~RD
puppies, 5 wks, AKC $100 Immediate O.Hverv EXAMPLE: I. Partl -2850 Harbor Blvd. "'--.. ,_, 1,_ ,. 49l-024T, att. 6· eL ~ ' ' New 20x4C w/awninp, lldrt, c.otsta Mesa 5CD-9640 ......... ...,r, n,...,.. "~' 1 f'fO., e 26' SOL1NGS e etc. $9l80 complele lnd.. tu many txtru. 644-6212 lpu~~~~~. =e&; :~~ New bl-ftoor •••·•·••·• 14695 A lie. Many ready 1or IM-'36 FORD wiahllone tront.nd '67 FALCON ALASKAN CAMPER, 10 ft.,
u...i, '..u. .......... 13995 MEDIATE OCCUPANCYI ''"'"""ly ftbullt complete WINDOW VAN perlect. 1-----"----1 eurly_ Need l!OOd homes, e 22' TEMPEST e GREENLEAF PARK -1'"......U Pocw make •~09atter •pm '67.DATSUN "1'00"
fenced yards. 8J9.08SJ •••••••••• $3500 An adult private club offer. '61 Corvair carbl Automatic, bis I. dlr. Low CAMPER $350 Good cond Roadster with radio, heater,
AKC Poodle, min. Black Pacific Yacht Sale• 613-1570 1750 Whlttler Ave., rebuilt $5 Htb MB-72U miles. W~I take trade or SI 2 ~ta I box. +speed, new top. $.1199. --------
male, 10 mo,, champ. stock, • SAILING CLUB • Costa Mesa · llna.nce pnvate party. tYLT 11~1 % T ~ .W,:.~ ' (\JLZ.325) PllRAll
S7S. 536-1398 12 to 25 foot racer-cruiaerl. Ph, 114/642-1350 FD~ ~~telyeam, ~~!!LY 6&5). -tM-91'13. 546.flm', -, • N'ewpart lmp:c11 Ltd. ()rl.
AKC -•· u-~-Bl·~. •· cu • ~ ft~ '65 fo d p• k U .... Comtl>'I oo1J -OOBIE'S -, male, 18 $'1.50 per day. Ne..,,,,m"t , • ...., ......... "" UI $350 or ofter'!' 646-mD r IC • p Dune Bunies 9525 tied dHler.
mo'a, blk. Xlnt pedieree &. area. Sailing exp not nee 19th St., then we1t V-8, green color. Thia week ft SALES-S!:RVICE-PARTS ~ispos. $100. 642-7312. SOUTH COAST SAll.JNG to Whittler Ave. $1.199 '67 DUNE BUGGY ... 3100 w. Coast Hwy,
DATSUN
FERRARI
·a nAT 11»-Dt rum saod:
clean; new paint. SZ'l(I,
Call: ~177&
J~GUAI
JAGUAR
HEAD9UARTERS
Tho cdy atlthcrhitd JAGUAR
-.. ~ -llorbor Area.
Compleb.
SALES
SERVICE
PARTS
Poole
IUICK
IN
COSTA MESA
234 E. 11th Street
!>19-1'715
MERCEDES UNZ
'59 190 D e '60 DI D
'60 190 SL hardtoo
'61 180 D e '155 190 0
'66 XMJ D (2) e '13 220 SE
'&1 m • 'Mm
'94 190 ltk e 'M 190 Auto
'65 230 SL. MANY MOllE
TO OIOOSE FROM!
Finest seJed1on of Jft>-Owned
Mercedew ~nz. FULL LINE
OF NEW CARS lN STOCK.
House of Imports, Inc.
211 S, Brea Blvd, nr..
(I) !129-1967
Authorhed MerctdK Be111
dlr. PartJl.Sal~
MG
J!l'lllPLl l l
.11111P l11 I '" oo~s=ERM=°"AN~~PU=P~P=1ES,=...,1 CLUB cn4) 547-9f06. JOMJCRA, INC. Auto Tool• Ku~tom Motors Road and rally equipped, ex-Newport Beach
ma!K. Champion ,;red. SABOT Wlboo~ ........... BAY HARBOR I. E I ~lo f<2·9'-00 540-l'lf< 'MGO w. 0... 11WJ , N.11.'
Call 64&-2321 fully equipped. $200. British Mobile Home Sales qu P• 1"9 M5 Baker, C.M. ~ 1lne OVttf\auJed this WHk Aulborlr.ed Ferrari DeakT tQ.&a .WC).}'111
SHEL TIE Pups, 6 wks, 3
female, 1 ma!~. saber I:
Seagull, outboard motor, ALL NEW '70 MODELS ---:---'69 Oiev. %. T, Truck. 2 at a coat of $465, $1999. FIAT Authar!le4 MG Dealer
,,;i ,......,. or aoparate!y. NOW ON DISPLAY *SACRIFICE* Saddle taola. H alwt1 U'YT.OOl. "7 MGe.GT, red. "3,000
• whL AKC reg. 962-7078 $15. 545-6331 2)' Wides as low u ~ Complete service station owrload sprinp, Straight 549-3031 Ext. 66 or li7 ml' Factory re-painted
12' Wides to 34• Wldta equip. incl air tire cbang. atlck V.S, 17,000 m I'•· l9TQ HARBOR BLVD, ~ '"" SABLE Collie, AKC, 1% SHOCK 25, top cond. IDnred Park 5 ... ,..., Available ers, front end equip, wheel 546-0318 o COSTA MFSA '67 FIAT 850 · Xlnt Cond. $1DI. , years, "Lucky Lad." Fatle' mut, 5HP outbrd 150 Gema ....... -balancer the Newport -~-~.,..:,;~,:,,..,-642-GX>, Dr. L. Nellon
• ·-......... 4'Cll ,,.... -by Watts. Aaldng $2400. 1425 Baker St., Cotta Mell. G··" ro.-J.'!.... o ... ~w· "·'boa CLEAN '66 Chev,' cyl, P.U. '69 DA-UN 2 Door Coupe, lamp white ex-M--•anlc s-1011 uuti· ..,.,_ v•~w % block Eut cl Harbor Wvd. ...,. ;xi-vn.,,-, .u1111 • U6I CU.tom cab, rlh, I1eetakle •~ terior w/wtne lnttrlor. 4 *""" ...,. r--M C Terms 0. A. C. (114) Blvd NB 6'13-5640 •.-•51 MGA l1'5. 5M-8fil5. • IN. ~d """~ ;._.! 846-2936, (213) m.2>05. Costa Meu. cn4J 540-9470 ·• · • · body, Goodyr Poly mu. A-1 $1C8i fUl1 ptfctl or 1mall
·""" •• --.. ~ ~-LUDERS ... -~ "" HUNTINGTON BEACH ~· """· SWl5. 60-1158, --.(VVP!i'll ... __ Call '68 MGB-CT O'Drlve. a .. t . I: mmpallions. 644--0916 PARK Tr•ll•r, Tr•vel ~ 1 7 Fo d Y Phil after 10 am. 54Q...3100 or win whJ•, wh~, blk. upl.
, For sale1 2 ARC Min. class eo~~ 30' ~lp inc, 8'x3S' "E"-.. .. ..-6 r an ,,.:,"';,> Call==-:.='=••;"'-;;;9712=:;;:_· _.,;"'-~1029~·======--""'=""=°'=ll.=$211==00=. m.;::=·;;2719;;;:..1 , no~·, 6 ,,_,_ Call fonner c amp. .__........ ALPINE White Econoline Sale thlll M9-3031 :Ext. 68 or 61 ' "''" ' ........... 540-0020 lxl5 ~ned porch k 11499 ' 1910 HARBOR BLVD, !162-9951 2 •-tam"" 1 k -· COSTA ··-, Uood Cars 9900 I Uood Cars 9900 /Uood Cars 9900
CAL 24 Sailboat. Loaded with -· UJ pe par K t M---=~~::;~~~=,_ 11~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,J :I YORKIE PUP, FEMALE extras! Immaculate! NB Space rent JCS. $19SO US om v1vr5 ""'ONE OF A KIND
'. AKC, champ stock. $lliO al!p available. T~ Lido A.M.S. Ml-!939 VACATION IC5 Baker, C.M. 540-591S Dune Buggy just returned u * 64&-S226 * 14 trade-in. $3950. 644-2128 Must Sell by Mey 15 TRAVEL CENTER. '55 OIEV. l~i T Truck. New ahowroom demo in So, Pa-~IE. AKC, 6 mo, black RACE Ready Snipe aailboat, l0x55, 2 Bdnn, I&e lnsul. Exe.I.• Golden Falcon erw. Good coriif~ cltlc. Ready lo sacrifice at
'brlndle color. SlOO. No. 5852 It trailer, new ria'.· 1creened porch. Carpets, OI pie_ Al lne * 962-6631 * beat oUcr. p I ea a e call , * 646--82'11 e'°'" * ging, beautiful, s 1 2 o o. drape1, oven, 1tow, refriz.. Ap.t!J:' .. Wheel C~mper '66 Datsun P/U, ne11 paint, 833-065.5 days, 644-1259 eve11,
St. BernardB, AKC, male ~ 494-1893 eves. awnings, etc. Worlds lara:est most cotn· xlnt cond, $695. Pvt pty. Dune Buggy '67 motor,
, mo's. female 4 mo·s. Call CHINESE Junk 30' Jong, A.M.S, 842-3939 9 am-7 pm lete RV vthlcle sho 1D& * 536-7628 * like new, $1600.
496-2.381. ~ak. rood cond. $2000 or TRAILER Cabana Baytront. ~ter PP '68 FORD Econoll.ne aio 9,<XKI Call 846--0&'I>
SCHNAUZER Puppies, AKC best offer. (213) 390-tGS.1 many xtru, aduJt pk. 8352 Garden Grove Blvd GG ml'a. Mint Cond. 2 2 5 6
shots. 8 wks old, $85. 2 1JDO l4-COMP1El'E .. Owner leavin& area. $12,500. SJ4-66 96 ' Cblumbia Dr, C.M. 64&-2365 Imported Autos 9600
males, 1 fem. 494-8338. Good Condition. S650 13 LldG Terr. (Lido Trlr '70 % F'ord Ra.ngu, 8' cam~ .;...;o..;;_.;__ _ _;._...;;.;.;
,/SILKY puppies, AKC, sire 61;,-6050 675-3325 Eves Pkl N.B. 675--025(). OOttd Sat. Open SUnday er. 4 wh( dr. S5,fi00 or belt '62 VW-$3'9
·champ. Come see-make af. 15• SKIPJACK, XI.NT cond LIOO Park: Furn. 2 Br, * offer. 897.2889,
fer! 64&-35-11 BESf OFFER over ;950 priv. bch. ~. occup. ' 537-4011 ** DACHSHUND puppies, this WttkeM. 548-0864 Adults Only. $6800. Tuma. Ownet' -Fri., Sat,, SUn., JHpl f510
AKC regis, reds I: blacks, UOO 14, newly ft:finished, 673-2:H2.
atler 5 pm: 675-3594 new trailer & cover. $850. R:E;.:D..:U=.C:;lll:_-,-n-·e<-,-V~l-k!ng~
LAB. RET. Pups. AKC _644-=1-3-78~~---~ Sc&ndla, 20x60'. Ex. mnd.
Show-Field Champs·Pets KITE No. 593 w/yard dolly, 5 Star Adult Pk. 54M142
Blond & black. 67'3-8778 Good condition. $ 7 o I), ,ai=-'="7c'::·-~---~
AFGHAN PUPS, AKC 644-ll58 24· Terry. Shower & Ba .
12 \Vks . Tenns, 846-5452 SABOT, Equipped For Rae· Furn. Not tandem whls or
Cocker S paniels $25 ing, Fiberglass. Dolly Ii aelf-eontained. Like nitw. * 847'6425 * xtras. $350. Call 675-2623 $1250, &fl.2098
20 x 57 Parle Lane 2BR,
:zBA, W/D. Bottom freezer,
St reem Line 170
Terry•Nomad•Oa1i1 Mil.JTARY, • cyl, OHV ere.
Explorer Motor Homes 4 whl dr ., canVll.s top, roll
Fourwlnds•WMk•nder bu, tow bar. $850. 51~2687
TRATEL
TRAILER SALES
Uln Hubor Blvd. G.G.
1% Blocka No. ot
~arden Gw•e Freeway
537-4011
Recre1t'n Vehicles 9515
Cockapoos, Terrlpoos
& Pl!'elalpoo!I. 847.5425 ------
HOBIE Cat. 1969, No. 119,
9 JnO ol.d, $1065. 646-4592.
613-1824
1969 CHEVROLET
CUSTOM CAMPER Landscaped·Adult park 'TR __ A_VEL __ E_Z_E_21_·-. -•• -.... -1 * * 18 ' Cat am a r an• 1-'A"'p"-pt:..:96::2-:.,,::1800:::..____ atove, Servel, 2 closetl, Turbohydramallc transmls-
ti berg 1 a•• , near nu, OCEAN, Opl.f course in Adult perfect. $650. On beach lot 1k>n, 350 en~ne. power steer. Horses 1130
PINTO Geldi...,., 8 yn, wry Sl!iOO. (213) 944-2848 Pk, D.B.C. 24.x55', pool, Mexico. Space $15. 642-3701 ing, split 1'11113, heavy duty "• -=========-1 •--1~ ·-·-----'--~---tires with OPEN ROAD 11% sound. Gentle. #15. Call -sauna, .,.. '""" ...,..........., :16' House Tn..iler. autted. Power Crvl1er1 9020 ft sell contained camper. ,.,__ ---------1 Bl I _,... SUltable for construction of· Full bath facil ities lncludlna:
APPALOOSA gelding, beauti-20' Sabre cratt, Li~ new, =.:.•:..Yc;•c;•;.;;• ____ :.c'~;;:.:. fice, Nttda new root $295. thower, sleep! 6, hu every
fully trained, Gentle yet 12'.t Mere cruiser, fully NEW HUFFY 24'' GIRLS 'Ill Yorktown Ave., H.B. p:.ulble kature you would
Spirited. 675-4059 ~ipt. 313 Robin Hood Ln, BICYCLE • .SPY DER VACATION Tune! '69 15' want, Coat originally S8000,
TRANSPORTATION CM MODEL. $40. "''d ~ so.am trlr, $950. Now Only $5599
GLASTRON Jl' De.,, V, 327 6'2-l1'4 EVENINGS. Xln't '°"'· Call 64"-1686· UNIVERSITY
Bo1t1 & Y a cht1 9000 a»ev. Berkley Jet, heavy BOYS bicycle. Good '&615' Soot1man. SoOd cond. OLDSMOBILE
'64 CHEVY S.S.
Air conditioning, automatic
transmluion. $699.
'60 Chevy Pickup Truck
-$499
COSTA MESA
MOTORS
2208 Newport Blvd.1 C.M.
642-9433
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD duty trlr, many xtru. $31JO. cond. Hand brake. Slttp.1 5, $595. :rio Harbor Bl., Coata Mf!ll.
30' CHRIS Cratt Cav. 60, ~Call==5'5-321.5=="· ====l:=S25'=-=====64o.Ul4==:..:.==C".U=96Z=4;,51;:8===1"==~-~~===J.-========ll twin .crew, tao shape, -
sacrifice $5900. &'f! 10-2 Sat,
1lip 71. Ken Nil~s Marina
nr Balboa bridge, or call
968-3538 kr appt. Broken:
welcome!
36' Jo..IONTEREY "fbrel'·
Upper", $1500 or trade. , ,
Jeep, 01· 1 See ·u1 Sun.
Bami Boatyard, N.B. Moor-
irw Avail. (213) '38-2101.
.16' 7" Bo!lton Whale hull.
1968 fO hp Johnson. TUt
lrlr, big whls. $ 1 15 0.
49-1-3839 eves.
13' CRESTLINER w/US HP
interceptor motor. $UDO, l>'
Ill ip optional. 3333 \V, Cout
Hwy, N.B.
T G~ Sunliner w/new
'1970 15 hi Johnson le rnany
xtru 6 b'lr. Call evew. ·-, tr Chri• Cntt Jnbrd .
lmmac Just Ukr N~wl Js.;oo. . Call 673-3755
GRAND BANKS 32' yr old,
(\.Illy eqp'd, ale by Owntl'
; 122.:)00. 673-5531 aft 6 pm
!!i• Glw Sloop $65CIO. A-1
cond. Pvt ply. I 21 3 )
~2893 or (2131 78U5.16 ..
U&ll • mTIU • WAm • AUZll I El
CAMPERS
ONE Of TME WGEST SIUCTIONS -~~~Couty
WIOllllA CAMPll SALIS
9520
rm:m;i.,; . --"~ ~ ' IG L~·--·'""~
WHEN THEY'VE EARNED A DRIVER'S LI·
CENSE, REWARD THEM WITH A SAFE
DEPENDABLE USED CAR FROM SOUTH
COAST FORD-MERCURY. -'68 MUSTANG
'66 MUSTANG
'64 PONTIAC
'65 f.AIRLANE
UCI. WYtt 471 ..................... $2195
J Dr. HT. SIY 6t7 ••·•••·••••••••••••• $1495
Gte!MI Prlr • .0 111, , , , , , , , •, ••• , , ,
4 Dr. W •. 19Y 111, ·•• ,,,.,, ,, •• ,, •••
$795
$895
'66 FORD •otulo 2 or. HT. SYf tll ..................... $1595
'66 FORD 1c.-,..., ... 1uu211 ......................... $1595
'62 THUNDERBIRD Hn JOI. ... ............... $495
'68 CHEVROLET .... H .... ,. Wll JIL ............ $1995
'57 FORD .. , ,. ..... ,. """· . ... .. .......... ... .. .... . $595
'66 BUICK ........ c ...... ,,. ,,., .................... $1595
'67 MERCURY C•-· UD .......................... $2195
'63 FORD ............ llM '"· ... .. •• .. ... ... •• .... ..... $895
'65 MUSTANG H...,.,, ... '"· .................. $1295
'68 VW w...., WY• JJt. ••••••••••••••• ,, ••••••••••••••• $2495
See Tlie3e Fin e Uaed Cara At
.... SOUTH COAST
FORD-MIRCURY
044111 I l l llOAIWAT, U.•UfU MACH 149-1111
I
I
•
~
I
I
•
I
11 ,
!
11 '
-· ··------.,--------------------------------------·--
rrlday, May 8, 1970 40 DAILY PILOT TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTAl'ION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
9900 Used Cora '900 9600 Imported Aut .. --9600 · lmpori.d Aul .. 9600 Auto. Wonted 9700 -· 9600 lmpon.d Autos Imported ~-""---9_600_ ·lmparltld Aufot
WE PAY TOP CASH MG SUBARU VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN TOYOTA l'1 LEASE l'1 CADILLAC ---* '70 SUBARU
1---------1989 TOYOTA Corolla Station
Wagon, like new. 968-4016
aJter 6
LARGE
SELECTION
'65 VW Camper lll'lO Fon! V8 F·ulJ Pkkup --------
/ -•-p1 ., 1959 CADILLAC PARTS '69 ,_fGB/CT Green w/blk,
12,000 ml. OD. Chrm spoke
whls, radial tin..1. 494-6892 ..... Hl>re Now •
lmmE:d!atc-Delivery
e 90 r.1PH Capability
1 Owntt excellent cond. in &
out w I exterior awnings.
Small down or trade, WW
finance a private party, dlr,
Call PhUl aft 10 am. 540-3100
or 494.1029.
w camper, a.ll', •. au
trans, 3900 ml. $109 per mo. FOR QUICK SALE
SOUTH COAST Battery of VW
TRIUMPH CAMPERS
h uaed CUI 6 trucla just
call ur tor tree estimate. CAR LEASING Windshield Wlpen
Radio
PORSCHE
• 35 ~tiles Per Gallon
• Beautiful Styling
T~st Drive 'foday Al Harbour V.W. GROTH CHEVROLET ~?'t Hwy, NB. 645-2182 Wheels
1966 'I'riu.n\ph Spitfire lofark
I ConvL Wire wheels, R/H,
Ml:UIY extru! $2lO &. T.O.
Pymts. 675--3631
U19d C•r• 9900 Transmisskln ____ ..,, ____ _
'65 PORSCHE CPE.
Chronle w~ls, nidial tires,
A).l/FM radk>, 4 • llpeed,
Kustom Motors
845 Baker, C.M. !»0-5915
"'""tifw maroon paint. E~ TOYOTA glne rctenUy . O\~rhaulcd.1 ________ _
Locally O"'ned. $3499. (PGX.
""'·
549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD,
COSTA ~IESA
PORSCHE '63. 16005 am/fm
tape. New inter, tires, bait,
trim, ~. ~ offer over
S2000. (I} 1213) 43J..2149.
'65 Porsche, xlnt cond., all
extras. Pvt pty. $3400 or
best otter. 646-8135
POR. '58 sum. H.T. convt
Am-Fm. Reblt eng. New
lntf'r. Must sell. 5'18-4842
'61 Porsche, Immac cond,
1'-1us1 see to appreciate! Ju:st
purchased a Targa, 546-6155
'59 PORSCltE 1600N
XI.NT COND. $1695
548-3515 .Arl'ER 5 PM
'67 Porsche, AM·FM, VERY
CLEAN;-lo-nti'!I. * 592-1660 •
PORSCHE '65 SC C.Oupe Im-
mac. Loaded w/xtras. Ask-
ing $3400. Call 548-7251 aft 6.
PORSCHE '67, 912, 5 11pecd,
burgundy, AM I FM, 30,IXXl
mi, xlnt cond. 542-4990
'67 PORSCHE 912 5-speed,
~hit engine $3600. 54~9163
or 548-2431
'67 PORSCHE 91JS, v.·ht
w/blk interior, 24,000 mlles.
$4800 • k S46-T.:i63
jTIOJvlOITIAJ
Mark 11 Wagons
Hi Lux Pickups
Land Cruisers
Wagons
DEAN LEWIS
l96f' Harbor. C.1'!. 646-9303
'67 Toyota
Pickup
4 speed, radio, heater. D1·iv.
en by little old fireman
from Laguna. Small
down, full price $895. (TEY-
6731. Call Phill dlr 5'10-3100
or 494-1029 aft 10 am.
BILL MAXEY
!Tlo!vlQIT@
18881 BEACH BLVD.
Hunt. Beach 847..8555
J mi N. ot O>e.st Hwy. on Bdl
'69 TOYOTA
Corolla Station \Vagon, v.·hite
& sharp, Sl.29'J this 1veek,
bank financing at
Kustom-Motors
845 Baker, C.1-f. 540.5915
LAND CRUISER. 4 \VB, J-IT.
Lo mi's, Xlnt cond.
$1695/olfe r . Pvt pty
54 .. 3667
'68 TOYOTA Corona. AIR
COND. Auto. trans. Good
shape. Orig. owner $1595
or? 543-3724
CLASSIF1ED? Someone will
be looking for it. Dial 642·
5678
1964 Triumph Spilbre, good
cond, $725. * 962-0262 aft
4 wkdays
'61 TR-3 $700
Good condition. 642-9990
~rusr sell '57 Triumph
\\'/Devin fibergls body.
'Vire whls. 5'~2647 alt 6.
1964 Triumph, good oond.,
hardtop, ~1re whee Is •
642--8335 or 67!>-0051.
'65 TR 4. Xlnt cond.
'"' New top. Best otter.
842-3891 aft 5 pm .
~,64~TR.-IUMPl'fl200
MG-1669 Best offer takes!
VOLKSWAGEN
'63 V\V Camper. Xlnt '64
eng. Nu interior, $900 or
best oUer. 673-8662
'67 V\V BUG, xln't cond.
l owner. Serviced. 30.500
mi's. $1295. Call 499-2367.
]967 BUG
27,000 e.ctual miles, $1,150.
492-3878
'66 Volkswagen excellent
condition. $975.
Call 492-5818
1960 V\V. Body & engine
good. $325.
Call ·&44-0067
'60 VW BUS * 525-8577 *
'63 vw $585. * 673-'865 * '63 BUG. Radio, heater.
Clean 'inside & out. Needs
mech. work. $350. 673--0910
'Gt V\V Bus. New clutch,
gef"l('rator, tires. Clean $700.
642-7458
1970 VW CAMPER
!llOO mi's * 540-1121
AUTIIORIZED
SALES & SERVICE
l87ll BEACH BL., 8424435
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'67 V\V • mint cond. all
xtra.s Porsche whls. etc, low
mllge. $1450. 673-8ra8. Ask
for Scott.
'69 VW Fastback, auto., fuel
inj., dk green/wht. uphol.,
radio, etc. Real nice. $2250.
640-4120 * k '64 VW CAMPER • *
Rlbt 1500 engine
$1200 tlrtn * 548-1493
'66 V.W. dcluxe camper, A-1.
cond. cabana included,
$1.900. 592.5627
'66 VW Sunroof, new clutch.
Xln't cond. $950. Call -
548-9645.
'67 VW Bug, AM/FM radio,
very good cond. Sale by
pvt. pty, Best ofr. 842-8133
'66 VW Bus. Radio," 7
passenger. $1350. * 962-3602 *
'62 vw Body. Damaged.
OK Mechanically. $250. eau 962-1182
Alk for Salu Ma.nqer
182U Beach Blvd. WANTED
I'll pay top dollar for your Hun~ Beach
VOLKSWAGEN today, Call KI 9-3331. ::. ~~.=: S4lJ.3031 -u.W""E -=p-""A"'Y ""c"'"A;:SH,_..
vw Van 'S9, '&1 engt.,., cam· FOR YOUR CAR per unit, WO!'k down on
trans, complete new brake
system • u ..... Good <On<" CONNELL $800. ~1708 Btwn 5 PM
& 9 PM. CHEVROLET
'69 SQUARE bac'lt, radlala, 2828 Harbor Blvd.
AM/FM, Super clean. Costa M~ 54fi.12XI
15,000 mi's. Mak• offer. ---.H"'E"LP=t,---
675-5038 or 846--4748 .=o-===~~---Harbor VW needs your VW 1969 SUNDIAL Ca.mi>er, t~nt Campen for our large camp.
rr:i. Elec. retrig, hmde er client.el.
10"'1. $.1000. 536-3625 Harbour V.W.
VOLVO 187ll BEACH BL., 842-4435
Best Stock of VOLVOS H~INGTON BEACH
in Orange County WE PAY TOP ooLLlfu
DEAN LEWIS FOR TOP USED CARS ·~ Harbor CM "'~" "'"'" U YoUl' car ia extra clean, ...,.,g • • • 17W"...-J aee us first.
'60 VOLVO SPORT. XLNT POOLE BUICK
SHAPE. $650. 234 E. 17th SL
Call 642-3231 Com. Mesa 5'18-T7G5
f96 I VOL VO PU 544 ·
$300. * 549-1~1 New C1n 9800
Antiques, Classics 9615 OLDSMOBILE 1960 VW bug
Xlnt cond $450 * ~3958 *
1965 VoJ'·~wagen 1500 S 1948 Cont'I, aasslc. Olds VS 1970 OLDSMOBILE 98
"" auto trans. P/B & P/S. TOWN SEDAN Squareback. 43,000 mi • Phone. 548-74't0 $950 Body xlnt $1900. 6#-0962 Factory a i r conditioning,
•..•..•.. ,
'66 Mustang ... ._.. '.,1.
$1350
A GOOD BUY
'67 Ford Ranchero
••to...tlc, •••• t tf'Mfl ...
Nfllhlfff.
$1695
'64 Chevy Impala
t ,_ .. ,., Woto•
'-t l1y It Tow•I
$695
'67 Pontiac Catafina
Coupe . .............. ~ .....
$1195
Nothing But
Good Buys Here
TRY US
VILlAGE
AUTO SALES
465 E. 1 7tti StNet
C....M.,.
'45·0410 141·0411 automatic. radio (re a r
MUST SELL • '65 VW 8 Race Cars, Rods 9620 speaker), heater, power
P"" van. $UOO. >IG-7316 1921 FORD -R-OAD_SI'E_R-1 ,1,.rlng, power d;,. brakos, ••••••••• ,
after 5: 30 PM. wheel covers, remcte nur-' Street & show $3000 CLASSIC '56 ~-M '66 VW Bug, sun r oof, ror, tinted glass, w-s-w. ~ut, ark ll.
mechanically perfect S900 cr ====*=645-035'1=====1 Serial No. 384690M276391. "62 Chrym.ler New Ycrker, -be~•~'~•~tt~er~·~'~94-=254-0~==-1Autos Wanted 9700 $469.4 ~~· Priv. Pty,
'67 VW $1200 FIRM -1962 VW Camper "'ith awning
IU50
673-1684
THE SUJll NEVER SETS on
DAILY PIIm' WANT ADS!
''EARLY BIRD''
JOHN CONNELL
"NO GIVE>.WAYS
NO GIMMICKS"
••. Just 21 Y••n of Ho"t1t
Dt1 lin9, Sellin9 Chevroloh.
EXECUTIVE
DEMO 5 -ALE
LOW MILEAGE
Air Conditioner .l
Heating Unit
And Many Other Ilernl!l
542-31.XI After 5 P.M.
'66 Cpe. De Vine
See this car to believe it,
mint cood. }>()wer & air,
blue coral black, matchin&:
leather interior & vinyl top,
except. low mileage, needs
nothing. Blue Book •a..Y!
$3100. Buy it for $2700. Can
arrange financing • Private
Party 537·'1280.
'68 Chevelle Malibu, 2 dr
hdtp, VS, auto, pis, p/b,
bucket 11eats, k> mi' 1, new
tires, VERY SHARP. $2150
59>-1000
'67 CAD El Dorado, full pwr,
air, vinyl roof, tilt steering,
A~f/FM & stereo tape.
$3,350. 645-2182; a.t:t fi pm
& wkoda 642-4011
549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
'66 CHEV
WAGON
Bet Air. & passenger. dlr. Air .
conditioning, A-lust Sell. WW
tinanee private party. COY-:
8276) Call 494-9773, ~.
'62 Chevy Impala 2 dr '
brdtDp, R&J-1, PIS. P!B,
clean, good cond. Best oUer.
646-8163
'65 OJEV, Impala 2 dr, V-1.
auto, p/1, rad. stereo tape.
Spotless cood. $10IXl. Call -2700
'66 Cadillac Sedan DeVille, '68. EL c~rno. Sharp.
full power, a/c, near new Silver wft:?lk mt. Spec, whh.
tires. Tmmac. cond. Blk vin, ~?t~uto. Make otter.
top. Priv. owner. $2200. Call
894-4601. 1965 Chev II Nova, 4 cir, ... =-E=L~oo=RAOO~=.-.-"'~,~-~-~I R&H, good tires, good oond .
mi. fact air, vinyl roof, lthr Best cffer. 548-5896 Sat It
hot f ll Sun. wkdays aft 5 up ., u pwr, r;tereo,
$52fl0. Pvt pty. 645-0797 '56 CHEVY V-8, 3 speed all
•~° Cal•;-.... p·-a/ ga uge s, mags. $325.00. ........, ......,, 'u.u "'' C, 907 xtra clean, top mech cond. 64&-6 alter 5 pm.
New car on onler. WW ac· '67 CHEV ImWa Convert.
cept lo book $1700. 495-4539 By owner. Good fuu, Price
-1967 CadillR.c El Dorado reasonable. SJC 493-3071
Loaded! $2650. Days '62 Chev. 327 lm,,.I•
~7713, eves. 968-7817. $495. Call 64&.2865.
'66 CAD. S.D.V, Full power,
40,000 mi's, I owner, Xlnl
cond. Call 968-1042.
'65 COUPE de Ville, tulJ
pwr &. air. Xlnt cond. ;J.600. * 644-4234
CA MARO
CHEVROLET
'65 Bel Air, auto trarx;, pwr
.steer, nu tires, 1 owner.
Makf, cUer. 546-2080
'57 CHEVY
Good cond! Best otter. * ~1965 *
MUST sell '67 Chevelle SS
396, like new, many xtru.
Asking $1800. )168-2664.
1962 CHEVY II Nova, red,
very spor ty. XInt cond. $475.
6734420
'67 CAt\URO. 37,000 actual
mi's. All xtras. Xlnt cond.
$1600. Ph. 673-7851
CONTINENTAL
LATE '67 Continental, l
Owner, c I ea n. Rans
perlecUy. Air, l e&ther,
'power. Priced to se ll!
646-4400 ~'kdays, &12-0766
eves & wknds.
'64 CONVT, full powr, &
air cond, lo mi's, very
clean. $1300 firm. 962..-4133
CORVAIR
---·---·11960 CORVAIR $150
1967 Impala S.S * G4S.0045 * 4 spd. $1450. * 846-3939 * '63 CORVAIR convert. Auta.
'61 Chev. vaii, chr wheels, trans. Good cond. $195
tape deck, am/fm, xlnt Private party 848-9559
cond. $850 or ? . 494-8185 White Elepbanta? 1970 Monte Carlo 1970 Impala 1970 Impala
9800 I New Cars 9800 I New Cars 9800 J New Cars 9800
Vinyl roof, tinltd 9!111, power wiru:loWi·lfttl"<
ing-c!i1c br1 kc1, turbo hydr1rn11ic, ,;, condi.
t io 11i11g, tilt 1t11ring wfieel, pu1h button redto,
fandar 1kirh, etc., tic.. 1117591) Stir, 200
• Door h1nftop. Turbo hydr11'111tlc1 vinyl roof,
air conditioning, powar 1t11ring I br1k11, altc·
tric dock, full wliaal cov1r1, tintad gl an, JOO
1n9in1, tic,. ate. f 118 086} Stk. 294
C1ulom coup•. Turbo hydramatic, power 1taar-
ing, powtr wi11dow1, air conditionin9, fancier
1lcitft, puth b11tton radio w/r1•r •P••kar, rally
wh111, tu-fona, culfom rim 1t1aring whl., ate.,
'''" 11 056651 Stk. 12l
$3996 $3736 $3869
1970 Impala
Cu1lof\'\ eo upe, J;nted 9l1u, turbo hvdre"11fie,
power 1l11rin:;i & br1ke1, 1ir eond;+ioninq, t•I•
Iv wh11l1, vinyl roof, 1p&c<1I front & r11r 111 ..
p1n1ion, pu1h button r1dio, ele., 1lc, ! 1184·
221 J Stk. 282
1970 Impala
Cu1to"1 coup1. Turbo hvdr1melic, tinted 111111,
1ir conditioning , power 1leerin9, full wheel
cov1tJ, 1peei11 front & r11 r ,.,np1n1ion, vinyl
roof, 1tc., tie. 1121102) Stk.149
1970 Caprice
4 Door. Turbo hydr1m1tie, pow1r 1t11rin; &
di1e br1!.•1, 1ir eonditioning. rellv wh•1l1, p111h
button redio w/r••r 1p11 k•r, vinyl roof, tinted
roof, tinted 911 11, 1le., •fc. 11036461 Stk. 111
$3814 $3737 $3973
USED CARS
'64 PONTIAC GTO
4-1p11d, redio, h11l•r, bucktl 111h. Conv1rt.
IHWK93 9l
'64 CHEVROLET IMPALA
Airto1111trc. r1dio, heeter, pow1t 1l11rin9, llOR
2611
'68 CORTINA noo DRUXE
Bucket 11ah, redio, h1el1r. fXTKlS4J
'67 OPEL KADEnE DELUXE
4.,p11d, bucket 111h, 1t1r10. IVTS 365 1
'65 MALIBU STATION WAGON
Automefic, r1df1, h1el1 r, •ir condilioni119.
IRDKlOl l
'67 PONTIAC GTO
Autometie, buclttf ·•••h, r1dio, he1t1r, vinyl
roof. IUJD2l6)
$1095 .
''You Aren't Listening!''
'61 IUICI WILDCAT
2 Dr., ivory Tn co lor, blu1 interior & to11. Well c1r1d
for fully equ ipp1d cir, incl. f1ctory eir eond, Lie.
.IWAE5l5l
$2650
'67 CADILLAC COUPt DI VILLI
fmll'lecul1t1 cer throu ghout in •que eolor with .... hif•
Yi11yl top. Full C•diU11 eec111ori 11. lie, (TWV6661
$3650
'65 FORD MUSTANG VI
2 door h1rdtop. Ivory In color with blu1 inferior. Auto-
'"'tie tr1111mi11ion, r1dlo, h11f1t. IOSUJSSI
$1250
'61 VOLKSWAGEN
A11tom1tic tra111ml11io11. B11utiful b1i91 1rl1rior. A
v1ry will cer1d for 11r. IWIE9241
$1550
'66 MIRCIDIS 110S
4 Dr. Radio, he1!1r, 4 1pd. · tr111•., 1unroof, Ba1ufiful
d•rl~ bl111 colo r end 11 • 1potl11i cer throughout. l ie.
IXPSI 191
$3350
W•v• 1aid
IS IT! o,.
it before, but THIS
FINAL LAST CIHr•
•nee of '69 & '70 New & unreg•
i1tered Ponti•cs. Some below
manufacturers invoice, •II with
manufacturers warranty,
'69 CADILLAC FORMAL LIMOUSINt
With bl1ck l1nd1u lop -13,lOO 111il11 on thi1 lunrv
cit which 1old le1t v11r for $14,100. All co11v1ni1nc11
yo u would 1xp1ct. lie. IXWYll4l. C1dill1c1 fin11t
model. -· Out1t1ndin9 v1lu1 et
$8750
'67 BONNEVILLE 4 DOOR HARDTOI'
Aulom1tic, redio, h1el1t, pow1r 1!11rin9 ind windowa.
Ori9in1I bron11 with 11dd!1 inttrior, i111mecu l1t• .(
owner r1fl1ct• fin1•t of c1r1. ITRH600)
$1950
'61 CATALINA 4 DOOR SEDAN
Automatic, tedio, h11t1r, power 1t1eri119, fectory afr,
11tception1I velut. IVTL2411
$195'0
'57 MK II LINCOLN
Co11tin111t1! 1 lfoor. I own1r, ouhte11din9 ellell'lple of
thl1 c1111ic cir. INST091 )
$3550
'69 CUSTOM S WAGON 6 PA.SSINGIR
F1ctory eit, power 1+.1rin9 & di1c br1k11, turbo hydre•
m1tic. 011ly 21,000 mU,,. IYPTl24 )·
$3150
'61 GU.ND PRIX
Autom1tic, redio. h1el1r, pow1r 1l11ri119-br1k11-wlih
dow1, fectory eir conditioni119, On• owner, 1old I
11tvi c1d by 111. J9,0J6 mil11. IPIY2 1ll
$1550
ROY CARVER
Rolls-Royce
2925 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COST A MESA
•ALL CA•t SHOIWN
CARll:Y OUll: 11
MONTH •UAlAN'rll
•
TRANSPORTATION
ttd C•rs 9900
CORVAIR '·-----------J!l60 Corvalr, trantl, brakes
'. ok. Ena needs work. $15.
: 64~176 eves: ~3755 days ·. CORVETTE
A Corvette conv. Xlnt cond.
Golrc to Vieblam, MUST
SE.LL. Asking S 3 4 5 D .
491-1363
LUNG a 1967 rasttwack
Corvette, l owner, under
warranty, must sell-moviJI&:.
, Call aft 5: 30. 6Th-205·t
,'64 Corvette Fastback. 4 spd,
aJr, 3:?,000 mi, Pvt. $2425.
.' 646-7800
i'GT CO,RVETl'E. Power.
Hardtop. Aulo. Blue. Xlnt.
$l300. 968-1668
'59 Corvette, 283 3 &pd Hurst,
: linkage, map & slicks $.'.«I
or best oUer. 847-7838
COUGAR
"&3 COUGAR XR 7, low
mileage, new tirt!s, air
cond. Xlnt cond. $2500. Days
644-4070 Diane, eves &:
\vknds 646--0829
1967 COUGAR. auto, air,
delux inter, vinyl top, 37,000
mi. $1900. 645-2621
'67 Cougar, R/H, auto trar11,
nu tires, P"'T steer, xlnt
cond. $2100. 83G-5135
(5) 197() COUGARS, loaded,
low mileage. S3000 each. * Gli-5480 *
DODGE
'68 OODGE RT convert. 4-10
magnum, torque flitc, p/s,
p/b, discs on front, R&H,
1 ov.11er, x!nt cond. Must
sell, new car on order.
$2400. 4M-6S82
IMMACULATE '69 Dart GT-
Sport. Contact ' ' G e r r y ' '
54S--065I. Ext 135, ~11 PJ\f
'68 Q-IARGER, auto V8,
D/p\vr air, r &h. Good cond.
$2500. or best oiler. 493-4283
1961 Dodge Lancer.
$300 or best ofter. * 548·3956 *
1969 Dodge Super Bee, xlnt
cond., 5,000 mi, must sell
$2495 cash. 642-5505
FALCON
J
Frld11y, May 8, l'i70 DAILY PILOT ..) j
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION IRAN>PORIA ION T ANSPORTATION
Und C•r1 9'00 Ustd Cars 9900 Used Cars 9900 Used Cars 9900 Used C•rs 9900 U11d C•rt: 9900 U1td Cari 9900 Used C•r• 9900
FORD MUSTANG MUSTANG MUSTANG PLYMOUTH PONTIAC ----------------1·------'67 Ford Gal. 500 LEAVING Country 1nust sell, '65 MUSTANG i\-1USTANG 6~ r.1ach I, 428, PLYr.tOUTJt JOOS Roadn1n-GOOD buy. 1968 Catalina.
Full •· 1969 Mach I 9800 nii $200 vs. auto trans, radio, ill'ttlcr, auto., air cond., p'.11,. p.b., ner coupe. 4 apd ll'ans, xlnl ooncl.. air, AMIFM p0wer, .. ctot)' air cond.. ' "' radio-tape. $3199. 536-1398 R&lf, ""l"ola.ss t I re 1, radio, new tires $2150. wihc ext. Exclt. ru:nnin&" oon.. under book. 1965 Convt. pov.·cr steering. Exl"eplion.' .-J
-----
RAMBLER
---~----'65 RAMBLER 2 dr, 321 V-8.
Good oond. $850. * 6(2.8649 *
di lion. Take small down. Comple~e nr"' f'llg, clutch ally clean. 1 o"·ncr. 49,00U hraders, shurc g r Ip. 837-7273
Full -rice Sll95 Call Phil! & radiator. $900. Eves. original 1niles, $1199. <ZV& PLYMOUTH 67.HO'IB alt ;, Pi\-t. '62 Pontiac Satari Stn wgn, T •BIRD
""· (TTD ti99J · S4(>JlOO or _•73--067~~'-~~~--98TJ PONTl_A_C___ rad/htr, a1r cond. pwr win· ----:-1"---~ do'A'S, Sacrifice at best ol-'67 T-Bird Landau. All 49'-1D'l9 aft 1Q a.m. LO f.fileage 1965 J\fustanr ~ '63 VALIANT fer! 646-4750 pov.·er. Air. ?.lust &ell. ll.take
'64 Ford Falcon 6 cyl Auto f'astback, R&H, b 1 a ck 2 Door, auwmallc, dlr., R. lf. 19GS LE l'otA.i~S 4 Dr. lfrdWp ~~=------I olfer. 962-759'l eves. Days
•-·-.. 4 d·, ;/h, ,;,,. 0 .. upholstery. Cl.can, .good o· ~ '65 PONT. Catalina 4 Dr. 83•' ........ ... ...,.. • • ~ • ~ l\fust lR'li, Sniall dov.11, low $2295. Po11'('r f· air cond. ,...,,.,.,
otter Cail 646-5936 mech L'Ond, good lltl:!s, 1 o payn1ents. tKJ\K750) Call Owner 613-2259 Eve' Xlnl rond., air, full pwr. 1968 T-BIRD, Landau. Full
• • 0"'ner. Sl()95 -~1578 ' jffs S.16-4()51 or 4(1.1.9m. 644-59i2 $895. JOO% Financ. 642-7374 -r & air. lmmae. co11tl. '65 Ford St Wqon, N~ B E A U T J F U L R d ·~ .--=~-~-,_ ... -paint &: front body repa.ir . e ft ·oo Pl)•n1outh, 9 passenger f>:1 Lel'o·larL~, VS.radio. Very $2695. ~
T·BIRD
'64 THUNDERBIRD
Full pov.Tr, factory air ain .. diUotdng, absolutely like
new tor thi1 yt:ar. $10i'J.
(HBG-rotl
$300. 549-1001 1\1.ustang convertible, VS, w~ ' ~ sta tion II' fl.' 0 fl. $200. clean. n {'built trans RAMBLER '65 T--Blrd Gqnvert. All "=========I sr1ck, po1\·er exU'11s, top 4 -II * &16-6176 * J>IOO/offer S.18-5802 pov.'t'r. Ne w tire~. Xln't
___ J_A_VE __ L_IN ___ I._~_""_· ~-*=*--.:.64,_4-,..1.:.::~S 549-JOJl Exl. 66 or 67 1964 SPORT Fury, ~Int oond, 1969 Firebird. Alr-cond, 6500 RAll-1 BLER Amer. 2 Dr., C.ond. $1200. g.'6-0()50 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
,68 JAVELIN. Xlnt oond. \Vhite E1ephan1S? 1910 llARBOR BLVD. ~~~ta~; ~l;~~~:ll quick. n1i~s. ~::. = * ~~ ;t·ll~nt buy f725. '62*T·:A.~4~9 $3f5 197() =~VD,
Sacrifice. mu11 sell! SJ.4.95.j--,========0.:..--::COST:;::,;.:A:_::>:;IES;:::.A:_ _ _.:_=========,..-:========_.:_========= -========='--=========!
or bestoUer. ~7403 New C•n 9800 1 New Cars 9800 !New Cars 9800 I New Cars 9800 INaw Car..
OLDSMOlll.E
1970 OLDS
SPORT CPE.
$2498
$299 is the lotal down ;>a.Y·
menl $77.69 is the total
monthly payment includina;
taxes, license and lill carTY-
lng charres on approvaJ ot
BanJc credit for 36 months.
Or, if you wouJd prefer to
pay cash, the full cash price
is only fl667.90 includin~ all
taxe1 and 1910 license tians-
fcr. Nothing more to pay,
Defen-ed payment price is
$3095.84 including all carry.
ing cha.rres, taxes and 1S70
license transfer.
ANNUAL PE RCENTAGE
RATE IS ONLY ll%
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
2850 Harbor Bl., Costa !ltesa
OPEN 7 DAYS
CALL 54()..964()
XLNT Buy! '67 Olds Cutlass
Supreme, 4 dr, Very good
concl, auto trans, p/s, r/h,
wire wheel covers, reg. gas,
$1.500, orig owner. 673-3745
MERCURY
'61 Monterey, 4 Dr., ra.dlo,
healer. power. $400 c&$h.
494-2157
MUSTANG
Lincoln • Mercury
1970 COUGAR
"The Summit of Sports Car Luxury"
Eq uipped with power 1teerin9, power disc brekes,
white side wall t ires + meny other desirable fee·
tures. •OF91HSl7834
9800
1962 Falcon dehD<e station 1966 r.tUSTANG C o nvt .
wagon, auto. radio, heal~r. Loaded! Deluxe v.·ood grain
good cl $350 int. \Vire \\'his. V-8. All ~~1 • very ean. · po1>.-er. Xlnt cond. 54~.
FORD
*'67 Ford LTD, 2 dr, air,
p.b.. p.s.. lo mi's, $1650.
pvt pty 548-7226
1967 Ford Squire 9 pu., air,
1965 coovertible, new top,
paint & tires $1200.
833-1213
r.tUST Sell 1968 J\.fustang. See
to appreciate. Xlnt cond.
V-3 $1575. 842-7954
ll@W tires, $1900 Must sell. back, mint OOnd., new tire!,
494-776.1 many xtras. $1200. 494-6636
Imported Cars 9600 I Imported Cars
LIMIT!
One per
person.
$1195 $1095
1967 vw 1966 TllUMPH SPITFIRE II
lt1dio, H••t•r. <f-1p11d, R1dio, H••t•r, <f-1p••d,
1h1rp ITRH 122 r. wir1 wh••l1 ITIB 917!.
$895 $4495
SED. 1967 PORSCHE '11 CPE. 1964 VOLVO 111 R1d10, H11!1tr, 1ir condi·
R1dio, H11t•r. '4-1p1t1d, lionin9, S·1 p11d, Ii I t I
cl1 1n. INAJ 1931, d1111, in1id• 1nd out, Sir,
.::9974,
$1795 $2895
VOLVO 1800 CPE. ' 1,64 1969 FIAT 114 SPIDEii R•d io, H11l1r. 4·1p11d, Ro1d1t•r. R1d io, H1t1!1r, 5. 0•1rdri•1, 1h1•p. IOSR 1p11d, lik1 ........ s •• thi1 1461. Diii . /TXU 576l.
$895 $1095
1'61 VOLVO 111 CPE. 1967 TOYOTA COllONA
R1d lo , He1l1r, '4-1p1ed, S1do11n. R1dio, H11t1r. 11110·
1111 nic• IJWV t2'il. "''';c. •• •••Iv .. , this
on . IVCK671 l.
$1095 $1495
1967 YW fASTIAC IC 1968 TOYOTA COlONA
R1d io, H11t1r. 4-1p11d, HT Cp1. R1d io, H11t1r, '4-
pric1d lo 11 11. CVOP 7151. 1p11d, l1rtd1u top. IXOK
J 3 J).
$895 $1395
1964 YW 1961 TOYOTA COlONA
R1d io, H11t1r, 4·1p11d, S1d1 n. H11t1r ... 1 1110 · cl11n !IVK 412 1. ,.,,,;, tr1"'"'ii11 on. IVTT
1711.
$1295 $1695
1965 Tl-4 lOADSTEl 1t6t TOY OTA CORONA l1dio, H11t1r, '4-1p11d
wi11 wh11l1 CNMJ 12)), HT Cp1. R1d i1, k1tl•r. 4.
1p1•d, l1nd111 top, 1h1rp.
IXSS 2711.
$2395 $1395
\961 TllUMl'H GT·6 CP!. 1969 TOYOTA COlOLLA lt•dio, H1••••· 4·1p11d,
wir1 wh1•lt. Li••"'"' IXJV Coupt. R1d io. H11l•r, 4-
80]1, tp••"· 1111 riic• IXIN 4461.
DEAN LEWIS
1 H6 H-IMI,. Costa M ... 646.fJOJ
-·
GOOD SELECflON
OF MERCURY MARQUIS & MONTEGO
STATION WA GONS
Summer is just around the (;Orner!
(Don't wait too long}
'69 MARK Ill
Beautiful Jodlver 1nink fin1ih 11· 1nn11·h1n:.:
int. Fully lu:.iury equipped lncl11dint tilt
\\'hrf'I, Al\l/F!'ll Sll'fl'O. autom1ttir (l"UI~~·
control. Beautifu!\y maintained. 1 owner.
YDL·li·l6
SAVE
'69 CONTINENTAL s4995 Cou1>e. RnsC'v.·ood n1ctrilli<' fini~h 11i1h
black i<'n lh<'r & 1vhi.te Jandn~1 ni~L L11'lury
e11uipped, factory air, C'tc. Lie. XSH-580
4 Dr. Srd. AgC'an !{old finish, hro1l'n '68 CONTINENTAL $3895
landau roof. !rather intrriur. All thr luxury
features incl. factory air. Lie. VTP-7:.16
MONTEGO ACTION
SPECIAL
$2866
+ TX & LI C.
HERE
NOW!
Sexiest European
THE CAPRI
1970 MONTEGO
2 DOOR HARDTOP
Deluxe wheel covers. whit•
well tires, power 1teerin9, pow~
er d isc br•kes, radio, V-8.
'68 MERCURY
r.1ontego \\'nJ:;on. Polar "'hitc flni:.h \\/
black vinyl int., automatic trans .. radio,
po1vcr stcC'rinJ:; & brnk<'s, air cond. \Veil
mn.intaincd car. NlD-985
'68 MERCURY
Colony Park Wa.[:nn. 9 pns~C'ngcr. Jonquil
yellow iv/gold vinyl int. Fully pov.·er
equiµpl'd. fact. nir, Ar-1/Ff.f stereo.
XEV315
'67 MERCURY
MontC'rry Coupe. BPrmuda blue metallic
finish w/black vinyl int. Automatic, ra-
dio, power steerln.: &: brakes, air cund.,
landau roof. UCC092
s3095
Chrome yellow finish w/bl.'lf'k buckrl '68 COUGAR $2295
scat.I, automa11c trans .. 1·adio, pov.•cr strf'r· Ing & brnkrs, lnndnu rouf. /,·lnintaincd by -------------------··-----------------------1 Johnson A Son. \VXG\17 s2795 BARGAIN CORNER .~::,.~~t~~.~~N"°"'!.:~1T,~~w/m-"'"-l"' ;-, ... --=s-=-=17~9~5 '67 CONTINENTAL
4 Dr. S!'d. 8C'autiful Brrmuc1n Blu1•
metallic finish \\"ilh matching lrnthcr in·
terlnr. Black landau roof, fully luxury
cquirDCd nnd factory air c::onditioning.
Alt1-flt1 radio. One-owner car. Brauti!ully
maintained. Lie. TIN-020
'66 CONTINENTAL $2395 4 Door Sedan. Silver 'mist \\'/mo1chillJ::
Int . Full y po"·er rqulpflC'd. Sold & servic::ed
by Johnson & Son. HPB-001 ,
automatic lrana., radio, power steering &:
lri Our lor1Jlll11 Corn•r. w• llove 1111-0111 ••ff cart. Some clean. 111118 brakes. air cond., landau roof. E:.iccptionally clean. VOGl50 "t 10 cleo11. So-ffl..-tmi d1plicatlo11t, 10"'• we'q hod roo IOlllJ -
i11 011y """t, Ill-cers are r .. I boriel•. LOOK 'lM OVlll '69 FORD TORINO GT
'69
'67
'67
Convprl. Atlraclivl' Cardinal Rrd \\'ilh
color match<'d Interior, while to11. auto.
trans .. P.S .. radio, hco!er. Lie. XXH·231
'65 T llRD
Rirh ~fidnl~ht Bl uC' metnllic finish
\Vith matchlni;i: interior. Full po\\'C'l' Jncl.
factory 11..lr. Lie. OSE-64.5
NOW IS THE BEST TIME IN TEN YEARS TO BUY A LINCOLN-MERCURY PRODUCT
Johnson son
COSTA MESA
2626 Harbor Blvd.
le South 1 Ml
of San D lego Freeway
540-5630--642-09&1
540-5635
rJJREE GENER.4,,.IONS IN TIJE AV'l'OMOBILE B VSlNESS
THI OLDEST ISTAILISHID "'ACTORY DIRECT" LINCOlN·MERCURY DIA LIA IN OIANIH COUNTT
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•
OPEN ·
SUNDAYS
HAVE A
CAREFR EE
VACATIO N . ,, '.
IN A
THEODOR! ROBINS
ECONOMY
·SPECJAL! . " { ~ .,
BRAND NiW 1·969 ENGLISH
FORDS BELOW FACTORY
INVOICE •
BRAND NEW PRE-70 CAMPERS
BELOW FACTORY INVOICE . .
I
•1552
•1682
•1616
Acres of Station Wagons -Thunderbirds -LTD;s
Galaxies -Torfnos""" Mustangs•-Maverlcks ready
for Immediate Delivery at Unbeat~'-le Savings~
THINKING OF LEASING?
Vi>lt our c car aftd-1nlck 1-·depe• In.:.!. FORD. AUTHOR-
IZED LEASE SYSTEM me•ns competitive fees, in-dulershlp setvice,
ind more for your present c•rl
AL!. POPULAR MAKES
Let our le1u experts give you full details on the plan best suited to
your p1rticular needs, without obli91tton. .
RENT A VACA TION HOME ON WHEEtS I .
Our Big Camper Rental Department features COmpetitive Rites
On Both Pickup Campers And Self-.Conlained Motor Homes (up lo
27 feel long). Fun For The Whole Family O~ A Family Budg et !
Reserve .Now To Assure Oaf es.
VACA~:~~:~ADY USED CAR SPECIALS
. . e SJ'ECIAL e e SPl;CIAL e
1969 FORD CUSTOM 4 DOOR SEDAN 1968 PLYMOUTH .FURY 111 FAST TOP
·~2• Vt, •u+olfl•fic, h••t.f-, PS, ctr.c tw.1t:.1, Coat• M•1• Potic• C•r. lll1di: I White •
Compl•t1ly m1inttin•d 1t Th1oc:lor1 Robina ford. Stir, #8490, Ser. #149046.
A THEODORE RO BI NS EXCLUSIVE
LOOK FDR THE DIAGNOSTIC
CENTER SEAL ON THE WINDSHIELD !
100°/o PARTS AND LABOR
V.1, 1ulom1tic, r1dio, ht•f1r, power 1t1 .. ri.i9, •invl ro11f, appro~lm1t1ly 21,0(10
mil11. !521ASH)
$1585
'63 BUICK LE SABRE
2 Do••· Aofo•••<, AIR 15'88''"" ''"""'· IOKNtl61
.
'65 UMILER 2 DOOR ;., ....... h$78i" """"
'64 'coMET 2 DOOJt
J ''"'· ,,,;,, hs5 98'"· IFMlll71
\V AR ANT Y 4000 MILES OR 90 DA YS
Cnen all -.clldlcal parh l1teh11ft1t etiM, trCHtU11lllio1 di:IM
II•, ,.. tlHI, PLUS ·1tr•e1, ""9ry ud oUHtt tptnl. Al~ ,..
flf4EST SEL ECT ION OF
LATE MODE L USEO C~R S
TRUCK SPECIALS
'67 ~-~.~~!.~~!.~!.~· $1877
low mi11191. !VOL377l
'65 RENAULT DAUPHINE
4 Door. V1ry 1h1rp cir. 111)7) s 498·
'67 MERCURY
< ' ·,' < I ;, •
Con•1rtibl1. F11ll pow1r, °'IR CONOITIONI~, ~if 11t lr~_,tiTTlt6IO ) 51587 .. . .·
' . . . .
'64 COUNTRY SQUIRE
St1+Hi11 w19011. VI , Allt-CONDITIONING, 1utom1ti,c, R.&H, P.S., i11.4•c1ll111t co11•
dition. IOXTllll ' · $888 .
... ·-----------------------------~ :c '68 MERCURY MONTEGO ..... 2 D•. H.T. '"""' pl" ,.;1,$1'377;"', ud;o, hut ... IWIDS<ll
• '67
'66 MUSTANG HARDTOP
l opHd, $1 o77Wn9I '68
~~~~!.~:~~~: $1
CAMPEil SHELL low 111111191 •
lV95,0tl
'67 CORVETTE FASTBACK
'4 1p11d, Aut CONDITIONING, r1d io, h~1t1r, r111I 1h1rp. ITTP139l
52999
'69 GALAXIE 500
2 D•. H.T. FACTORY AIR, Aolo$2695 m;I •:•" ,;,,1,.,1, IXSR'1JI
~ h ..• 'p, .•. ".":,• ,,, 'h•. ''''URDA! 8 AV '1' 6 '" PARTS~ SERV ICE HOURS PARIS ONLY
' "! '•. '..,.. '.J 6 pr°'' ; "~~ ll) 'r I-' M M:J~~[iA ~ • 7 Av TO 6 p M TUESDA r f RIDA r 8 A~~ 10 6 p M \/\ ruqr;A y
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