HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-05-12 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• J •
•
I ' •
' .'' . • ICS .
I ' . '
Newport Coa:ncil ,IJpset ·
Over Sex Mo,,.ie ·.Pre.,imv ' TUESDAY AITTRNOQN;MAY 1 2~.l.t70
. . .
' .
' .
I
I
•
"
· voi.. 4 MO. m. 1 s•~tOIU .. 11 ,..._,
' • I
' ..
* •
•
Worst Texas Tornado C:laims ! ..
19·
Classes .Resutned
Irvine Student
•
Pr·otests. Cur bed:
' By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of .... DallY '"'-' Slloff
Off-<:ampus protest activities by UC
Irvine students were curtailed today as
students began attending regular classes
and alternative education courses.
The · aJtemative education plan. ap-
proved Sqnday by UCl's Academic
Senate; allows students to combine
classes based loosely around war protests
\vith regular classes or • to drop out
of regular classes with no academic
penalties and attend nothing bu t
alternative education classes.
I srael l 11vades
Lebanon; U.N.
Council Called
By United Prut International
The Arab nations said 100 l!>raeli tanks
and 2,000 infantrymen invaded Southern
Lebanon today and that Lebanon, Syria
and Iraq were fighting back in the
biggest Mideast battle since the 1967
war. The U.N. Security Council was
called into emergency session.
Israel said its armored columns with
aerial support kni£ed into Lebanon to
wipe out Arab guerrilla bases which
had launched '61 attacks against 22 Israeli
selllementa in 1.be past 40 months. Fierce
derial battles broke out. and Israel said
it shot down three Syrian MIG .17s.
The battle raged throughout the day
In the Marjaywn area cf Lebanon six
t~ seven miles north of the Israeli bor~er
and 3Z miles southeast of Beirut. A
Beirul military spokesman said fierce
Arab counterattacks had stalled the
Israeli push.
A spokesman for the PalcsUnlan Arm·
cd Struggle Command said the Israelis
attempted to drop paratroo~ into south
Lebanon, but gave no details. He said
the guerrillas engaged the Israeli forces
Jn "hand to hand fighting."
There was no tsrae1i confirmation or
the report but a spokesman said 11
hours after the attack began that Israeli
troops were still in enemy territory.
Lebanon, in a lelter to the Security
Councll, asked for the meeting because
of what it called an "Invasion" of
Lebanon. It said the fi ghting raged on
the slopes of tifount Hennon near the
nccup;ed Golan Heights and that the
lsrealls were forced to call off the attack
despite Israeli air supremacy.
A spokesman in Beirut said' Lebanese
gunners scored a direct hil on an Israeli
a1nmuniUon vehicle producing a huge
explosion. Arab sources reported as
many as ZI Israeli tanks knocked out.
Israel said Syrh1n artillery opened up
(See ~WEAST, Pare 2)
\]
•
--·
UCf was the first ·campus to adopt
the plan, whlt'h allows a student, with
his professor's consent , to ·drop a course
with a.pa_ssing grade in order to enroll
in alternative education arKI work cm
~·ar protest activities.
According to the senate propesal, 1
student who has received a passing .grade
in the course he drops does not receive
academic credit for taking alternative
education classes.
When a student does not receive · a
passing grade, he is able to drop the
course without a grade and enroll in
allernaUve education and work for a
passing grade and four units of credit
for the quarter.
The resolutions passed by the senate
which instituted altemati\'e educatioo do
not force all professors to participate
in the program. The resolutions are
expressed in terms of options, making
it clear that participation in alternative
education it up to individual faculy
members and students. It was not clear
education is up to individual facul!y
members were actually participating in
the program.
In addition to alternative education,
a Free University being organized by
students and faculty is also available
to UC! students. Protest spokesman Ted
Bollinger described the Free University
as impromptu classes set up by in·
terested people on a variety of subjects.
Alternative education and Fr e e
University classes scheduled for the week
in the Gatew1y Commons area include
such diverse topics as U.S. History
discussion groups, Women·s Llberatlon,
Radical Psychology, New Journilllsm,
Corre.ct Revolutionary TbougtW. and Ac-
. (Sff UC IBVINE, P'I• Ji
Montreal Given
Oly mpics in '76
AMSTERDAM (AP) -The lnterna·
tional Olympic Committee today awarded
!\fontreal the Summer Olympic games
in 1976.
The announcement came approximate-
ly two hours after Tass, the official Sov· .
iet news agency, had a'nnounced in a
dispatch from Amsterdam that the
Games had been given to Moscow.
Los Angeles was another bidder.
After the Tan report, the announce.
ment was withdrawn bJ the Soviet agen·
cy whhout erplanatlon.
~1ontrea\ won on the second bal)ot.
Monlreal had Al votes and Moscow 28.
with one blank vote. Only a majority
was needt!d.
Avery Brundage, president o! !he ln-
lernaUonal Olympic Committee made the
announcement before the world's prtsll
in Amsterdam.
t) •
STRUGGLING WITH HIGH PRE$SJJRE·HQS~, FIREMEl!I DOUSE COSTA MESA ·BL.UE
lnve1tl9i1to r1 SutP,eCt Arsan i11 They Probe Bli1ckened Rtmi1l n1 of Gi1r1g1 •
Fire Destroys
Garage, 2 Cars;
Arson .Blamed
Investigators Probing, the blackened te·
mains of a Costa Mt;Sa garage in. wh~h
l\\'O vehicles were destroyed Monday
in a $6,800 bla.ze said today arson is
definitely indicated .
Mrs. Jean C. Geraghty, 31, of 2333
Richmond Way, had' made a third trip
through the garag~ with &rm,'!f~I of
groceries ·Wednesday afternoon, •just
moments before the fire Wai dlscovere~.
Fire Depai'tment experts said the 10.
minute time lap°se between 'that polnt
and the raging fire pointed to arsOn,
plus a witness reported l\fO suspicl~s
appear1ng ·men who fled at hii approach.
Robert Barnhouse •told . invesllgat6rs
he tpOtted the~OamtTand Jbtloke pouring
from the garage and slopped hLs crar
to run and notify Afrs. Geraghty and
surrounding neigtlbors.
Mrs. Geraghty was unaware of ille
(See ARSON, Pase Z)
Preview of Sex Mo'V ie
Upsets ·Cit)'·.Councilmeri
. Newpor t Beach ·city COl!ncilmen ; 8.re
alarmed that 1 movie assertedly· Show·
Ing blatant sexual activity was bUle(fjs
a "major studio preview" and shown lo
t~ unsuspectjng 1pu,blic in· their ,:tty: •
Six ot the seven city councilmen Afon-
day night requested a police report On
, w~r there w,s. a· violation of Uie JaW wHen ' New.port Ctnenia sttowed ' '11Je
Magic Oaf.den 'of StanJey Sv;OOtheart"
on ' April zs; · '
, · Co111Jcllman . Undsl~y . PArSOps. a mb.
lion plcture1 producer, al)Sta1ned tr'otn
\'oting because be said the movie t~eatcr
Tharµ1ger 'had • tiken Melro-Goldwyn·
· Mayer's 'aisurance ~. 1n9yte' was . for
general patronage. The1 ~raled movie
·was &hown ·at a 5fleak' pre'vteW with in
R·rated movie.
It won't ~ltp(len again, Parsons said.
· Coondlman Milan Dooiaf s4id, ho'>·
',ever, 'there should be nO dot;ble stand·
ard ln applica'tlon o( lhi laW: An<I remind·
, ed U1at Bfrry \\1einbefi ol F~ee Us re·
1
,cenUy .. was . arrested. for using opscene ,1~n;upge i,n public. . r •
, T~e niovle· "'as· cf11~ \o · th'e a(ttJ)IJo~ ~o( oJty,~~Uy>en i.n a1let\.er Iro.in.Daviq
, W .·Skallj!,\fd; 48(. &lnd Sl.,. l\'est. New; ' . I ' por:t~ .,· . '
• '1Thi.S "'w8s 'a"movie, •"tie 'Wr6t~. ·•·in ~wh\ch,·Jor tbe,.firsl Ume.ip II J09g.tnoyJ!
gdlng, C¥rte'r .. l heard UW: • !~-~ ,lelWJ
: wOr.~ "\lsed 1w1_UC~· romme~ccs 1,Wlth lhe
. sll\th ~ll<r -01.'0.~ alphabet., ~Qj uieb
· •90f; ~ on r<Peated occni'P,~ '1111• '~ • ovJe' ~lch,~poehfy'd!pic!<id ma!-',
· tur,ballo Jiy bblh n\al! and f!"]ate; wei1• •
ly 1hown on lhe'~etn'.". • 1 1 : !
· lie -said llhC nlovte afs&· sll6~ gfoUP
; s.e,fUlll intercouae, .homosexual behavior
bttwtten fembJes l()d' bfalanlly &dYOC:tll•
· ed' fM use.-and abuse or narcotics.
·-'1 think •tmmedla!O-trteps ohou~ lie
takfn lf.o cha1Use thi lhellttr maooger at 1
J'(ew,oft Jctnema ana lll"e· Edward~
ClticmA or.,anhr.atlon ih 3tntt•I (or 11~
'lqW1n1Juu1tvpo or trash lb l~l<I• oor
• ClOri'llflunily,!'"the 'W'ltte: ' : •
' ' . o ~ , I ' .j • 0. 'I '
•' ...
•
:Hit Where
lt',!Jur:t ~?I~.
l ·. \ . ~~tr ~de
' '. ' WBBOCK, Tex .. <urn -A tornado,
striking fi-om the. blackness of a spring
thunderstorm, tore an eight-mile. gash
throlrgti !.ubbock Monday night, causing
death·, and deetruction that "defies the
ima$inatloo" and injuring as many u
1,000 persons:
City Manager Bill Blackwell said the
tWlsler--that roared up Texas' "Tornado
Alley" killed 26 persons. But a . body
count today showed 19 dead.
The spring, dawn over this Wast Texa~
city of 161,000 showed damage over 2,500
square . blocks f,rom the tornad·" and
the ma111 s~or,rn that spewed ra1a and
hall the size of lemons.
· Wind i"5ls after the twist.er lifted·
were measured at 100 miles an hour.
Pamge was estimated into ihe millions.
"It hit us where It hurta," Blackwen
said. He said the list of injured could
run as. high a1 J,000. ·
· Skysci'apers :.__ the tallest 2U atodu
"'-stood pocked and battered. At least
one building was In danger olcollapsing.
• Today:s weather was dark iind cloudy
with more deadly lhunder.sto rms forecast,
fof the Lubbock arf11.
. The tornado touched down a~ 9:27
p.m. -the lime a gymnasium clock
&topped at a local junior· Ngh school
.... near the Texas Tech 'campus, headed
northeasterly throu gh the downtown sec-
'.tion and moved out of town by the
airport.
Most of Texas Tech's 18,000 students
iliad left town at the end of the spring
semester. Today :was ilhe last day for
final examinations. . ,
The torn~o was the worst .in Texas
:since a twls~er reeled U1rougb .Waco
(See TORNADO, Page %)
Orang~ Coast
\\'.eaC,heio ' ' , Anollltr 'gl'OOVy day 1-!'on 1/1• •
Orange Cloast horizon .with r sunny I
s)de,s( cb;ylng,, t~ : ?Jl9l:11ing JP,a(chy
clouds and temperatures in the I
middle seventies. I
INSW E TOBI\ Y
Tli"e newborn Iroint' Commun-
: fty Theaitr •11iake1 cm au1picious I
· debut -sweeping three tOp 1 : awa11f1 at thc ·:Riverttde 1on1.qct I : /l•IJhal S ~ • Enltr1Qlnm'11~
1Pflge· 19.. · I
I
I
\
•
2 DAILY PIUIT s Tvttdq, M.ty 12, 1970
Mesa Making Example Out of Tople~s Tavern
111 ARTUllR. R. VINSEL .... ...,,. ......
Armed wllh a dolller "' alleied m-, co.ta M"''' lop lop! al<le tr.. to Sa......... today lo tallle Oft • -lllni lopletl lavtJ11 and ill ~.sLtff.
Lit:!< of mos . b low on lbe lilt "'
lnlradlW.
City Ailomey Roy June ... ., ocheduled
for llO mlnulel ol ey&<penliir leltimony
duri!C ·1111 llnl oossioo "' a -.S.y heorial before lbe Doparlmeot ol
Alcoholle u...,.,. Control.
'lbe ABC -loser in numerous court
battles against nude eo.tertal.nmart . -
wants to clamp on tough new laws
explicitly forbidding such • e t I v l t y ,
rihoul oonWtuUooal Joopllolea.
"I'm going offlCially for the city to
support the ABC's application," June
explained Monday, sayiDg be bad been
::~ :.;::i,., ~ .. ~·· 1967.Q
llaearcbins -ncordl -,,., pmoaa tmployed lbert durln( the
IJnall)"""""""'ul effort to ohul !l down,
be found they aponned !$ CllllGmla
. cllles and eighl stales, acroa the nalloo.
"It wu rather intereitlnc," uh( June,
ll<klng oil a JlJI of crim .. Iha! 'liould
rail& 1be IWr "' a <IC.,.._ lncllu. 'lbe IUYI and dolll al Baby Doll'1
appamitly ,......., all llm-lov!Di klda.
"I kDew we bacl a_ bonch c{ punks
out lbert, bul liot boW bad Ibey reaU1
were," remark~ June, who r.tn across
aome crimes that be wasn't aware ex·
i.ted.
"We hid TT dlf!ettnt p e o p 1 e in-
volved ••• three or !our managers aqd
the rest topless girls," he continued.
"There were 53 separate kinds of of.
lenses and the fines and senteoces they
* * * * * * Chmoehes ou.-umbered
.SantaAna]oining Fight
' . ' Against Top"less Taverns
Beer bars In Santa Ana -1J featuring
varyiq degree! of nude entertainment
-far outnumber the city's churches,
J~ officials to take a tough stand
aplnat licensing of more and for tighter
«<>troll.
Fl'om Page l
UC IRVINE ..•
tion, Nutrition, Fundamentals of Radio
'EroadcasUnc, Theory, Practice and Po-
tential oC Non-violence and Interest of
French Inlellectuals in PollUcs.
Protest organizers said they upected
to have a rmter of professon for
allernatlve ~tioo classes by this
aJtemoon.
Meanwhile, State Senator John Ci.
Schmit.I (R-Tu1Un) termed the pro.
gram .. an insult to the pul"p09e for
which universities exist, which Is to
serve as centen for learning and rational
thought, not agitation."
Schmitz, a pollUcal science instructor
at Santa Ana Junior College, released
a statement Monday in which he said:
"This lneicusable action is further
convincing proo( that the r e a 1
responsibilities for campus turmoil lie
much more with the faculty than with
the students.
''In a time wtien our country faces
real danger of violent revolution, nothing
could be more provocative th.ab this
open encouragement of revol~tGll')' ac.
tivity by unlveraity professors.
"1bese profemon are paid by the
t.upeyers to teadl, not to lead or pro-
mote demoo.straUons and riota. 11
Schmitz concluded his statement by
suggesting faculty authority over counes
and curriculum at UCI .!lboold be &iven
to the administration.
From Page l
MIDEAST •.. ·
later on Israeli forces in the occupied
Golan Heights but two Israeli air strl.kl!:a
were called in and silenced the batterll!:I,
Then! was oo immediate reaction from
Egypt, but Cairo aaid its commandos
struck across the SUI!:% Canal shortly
after midnight and larael said it hurll!:d
lhem back. King Hussein of Jordan
telephoned Ll!:baDl!:se Presldl!:nt Charll!:s
Helou and offered full support, Beirut
dispatches said.
Both Israel and Ll!:banon asked for
urgent meeting of the Security Council,
Israel to consider Arab guerrilla attacks
which It said prteipU.ated today's raid,
and Ll!:banon to protest the actual in-
curs.ion into the Mount Hermon area.
.~ '
DAILY PILOT
N_,wt I•-"
Ltlt•M ... tll c ....... ...
H•lltl91tfl IPck
h••Hll• w.11..,
SooC-
()t.AM0£ COAJT f'UILl$H1MG COMPANY
R•b•ti N. W11d
f'ru'*"t -PWll.W
J1dt R. C~•l•y
\'kt f'l'u•1 an1 ~ti~
,.,,,..,. 11: •• ,a E•ll••·
TS.0JJ1•t A.. MwrpS.i~•
111-lritE•ii.
Rick1r.I '· Nill Sowlh 0r11111~ cwn•r Edlltr
Offi<U
C.ll MtMt DI WlJI .. , llr .. I
litwJoOrl ••fldli nn Wnt '"'''" lwlc'ff,,. \.l9fllM 1-.c11: m 'or.t' ,,__ Wt1111111t• !Midi: U•7t ltttlo l~lew• ...
"" ~'-l atS ........ .f.I C_.,. ltMI
City Managtr' Carl Thornton bu mafl.
ed a letter to the State Department
of Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC)
asking all authority be pennllted In
city action against such taverns.
'n>e ABC begins a three-day hearing
today in Sacramento on the poulbility
of ouUawing nude, aeml-nude and
alle£edly pornographic f I 1 m en·
tertainment in such nightspots.
Thornton said today in the wake of
a Superior Court ruling that Costa Mesa's
version of an anti-nudity law is un·
constitutional and that JmposiUon of such
curbs will be tough.
Judge Robert S. Corfman noted In n.tl·
tng against Costa Mesa'a entertainment
pennit ordinance that decisions in favor
of topiess types nm heavily against the
control.ling agencies.
"I fully recognize the pol.entia legal
problems the ABC may face in upholding
the coostitutionality d.. these three prcr
posed new rules," he saJd.
'Ibose rules would:
-Forbid sei: films to be shov.n in
bws.
-Forbid waitresses to appear topless.
-Forbid entertal.nm from performing
tn any degree of nudity beyond that
strictly outlined by authorities.
"However," Thornton said, "I have
reluctantly reached the coocluaion that
the eradication of these problems in
Santa Ana will require the marshaling
of every coostituUood.munklpal authori-
ty and pallet enf<reemtnt program
available to w:."
He said In urging Clly-c.undl adoption
of the plea for ABC aid that VT Santa
Ana beer bars were .licensed last year,
almost twice the number approved for
adjaceDt Garden Grove.
From Pagel
TORNADO. • •
17 years ago on the same day, On
May 11, 1953, 114 persons were killed
by the Waco tornado.
Water stood a foot deep on aome
lAlbbock streets. Complete blocka of
homes and businesses were blown away.
All electricity In the city wu knocked
out and hospitals went on auxiliary
power. The only lights in the street&
came from automoblll!:I ud the ap1nning
red flaabes atop police cars.
"Our flral priority II to tend to the
living, bury the dead and cl ... up the
city," said Mayor Jim Gr111berry1 elected
only three weeks ago.
"We have a disaster plan In effect
but Lubbock at this tlme is a dead
city,11 Granberry said. "The destrucUon
is so extensive it defies the lmaglnatim. ''
Drinking water wu scarce. Emergency
supplies were rushed into town from
Muleshoe, Tex., 3S miles northwest of
Lubbock. The tornado broke water lines
ud faucets from downtown into reside&
lial districts spewed air.
City officials said Lubbock uses SS
million gallons of water a day and was
down to reserves of four mUllon gallons
fr om gravity flow towers.
"We think we've made one round up
and down all the s~ but there's
no reason for ua to even think we've
got all the dead or injured," said Police
Chier J . 111. Alley.
The 20-story Great Plains Life building
cwayed in the rooming breeze. Its glass
windows were blown out and bricks were
ripped out. Officials sald It was unsafe
and roped off a two-block .area around
ll.
LL Gov. Ben Dames, acting governol'
with Gov. Preston Smith out of the
state, flew Into Lubbock to survey
damage. Barnes ordered out the National
Guard to pre.vent looting of downtoww
stores that began be.fore the wind died
down.
"We were sitting here and all of a
sudden the roof just ralJed up," said
Pt1ike Reed, assistant city editor of the
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. "There was
a loud pop ln our eara and then the
rool settled down. The Mll we knew,
all the water on top was falling in
on us. I dove underneath a desk and
waited "
The buudini was badly damaged. The
newspaper published morning and even-
ing editions at Amarillo Iii milts l!Orlh.
AutomobUe dealers downtown were
wiped out nere. was not a car wit.bout
a broken window.
"lt WU I hell of a \\'IY to 1tart
1 nf:W business," 11id the assistant sales
manager ol a dealer that opened just
lltls Wffk.
'
got were from !ZS to lhree years In
llate prtaoo. Only eighl had no criminal
record."
"One guy bad 30 arreat.s and/or con-
vktlons, m0$t of them felonleS, and
the lowest AW bad five arrests,'' he
explained.
J w>e said many of the ne'er-do-weUs
who gravitated to employment at Baby
Doll's were registered with authorities
u prior ser oUenders and came from
LeJ Vegas or the Deep South.
Some strange thing& went on 'way
down yonder .in the land ot cotton, ac·
cordlng to crlmlnaJ. records.
"One gentleman from Georgia had
a substanUal number of arrests fO:r
unlawful carnal knowledge ol the feeble.
minded," he ezplalned.
Among other errors in judgment, he
continued, were armed r o b b e r y ,
burglary, assault and battery, pro-
sUtutton, lewd conduct, FIPI!:, c;rand theft,
IJ)l!edJnc and narwllcs of-.
The new laws sought by the ABC
would replace a nwnbtr al ordinancts
which 'bave been lnvoktd against que,.
tionable •i8Jillpotl, only to be ruled
unconsUtuUonal In the courQ.
Latest In the l«lg atrlna to fall vlcUm
was Costa Mesa's own law requiring
luuance « an entertainment perm.it for
any type of perlonner, nullUied MMr ay
by Orange County Superior Court Judge
Robert S. Corfman.
He granted an lnJuncuon to operators
of the Firehouse, 177 E. 17th St., lorbJd.
ding police to cite toplesa· or other
dancers, although not all its young ladles
perform in that fashion.
'n>e same ordinance wu used •la.inst
Baby Doll's -but never tested for
its constitutionality in a hight?r court
-and has since been Ule city's only
~Arnold' and Her Brood
weapon In the war on hart fie.sh in
bin .
June 1!poke Monday of bls plans to
address the ABC hearing, before several
other top city offldala commented on
their vlewa of topleu and ~bly bot-
tomlen again rea;in& tbeir ualy faces
In town.
"I'm going to say: Look fellows, the
only thing left for us now is our reaula·
tions. We hope you make them tough
arxl we'll certainly help you enforce
them." .
"We like what tbe ABC ts doing,"
re.marked acting Cily Manager Fred
Sorsabal.
"AU I can say is we certainly have
to abide by the rulings and in·
terpretaUons of the courts and we will,"
added Police Chie( Roger Neth, who
sparked the :Firehouse controversy.
He revoked its entertainment permit
DAILY PILOT Sti ll f'llll1
a month ago whl!:n the establishment's
wtll-fl\dowed daocm bellan performio& sans any visible means of support.
A subsequent appllcatioo by one woman
for an entertainment pe:nn.it was OaUy
rejected by the Costa Mesa City ·Council
upon revelation that she had been con..
The California Penal Code section
under which her JOOS conviction came,
647a, has since been det.ennined to be
invalid by the courts. June said Monday.
He and the police chiel agree on
criticism of court decisioos which make
their jobs harder\
•·I don't think the majority ol people
In Costa Mesa want this type of thing,
but until that is supported by the courts,
we have lo abide by it," Otlef Neth
remaked.
Mayor Robert M. Wilson, currently
campaigning for the Fifth District
Orange County Supervi90r's chair, was
parlkularly vocal in eriticiz.inl a legal
system wflich Ignores public apinion.
"We've had two or three bills in the
legislature to give local control of such
things,'' be said, noting they were not
successful.
"Maybe it's about lime the people
of this nation tell judges what they
want In the way of morality, instead
of vice-versa," he conUnued.
"Some judge would have upheld lt,"
he said concerning the entertainment
permit ordinance against which Judge
Corfman struck a blow in Monday's
hearing.
Judg? Connan suggested to Assistant
City Attorney Robert L. Hwnphreys that
the city council might best consider
an emergency ordinance, directed
specifically against topless and bot·
tom less.
"If we have to meet in emergency
session I would be happy to," Mayor
Wllson declared Monday.
···we didn't like it In our town before.
We had petitions wilh 6.000 signatures
against it. It see.ms to be a question
or whether we have a right to govern
ourseJves or not,"
"Some judges are saying, in effect,
that we don't."
"We tried/' he added.
Piglets romp at mother's side at Laguna Canyon
shelter or Society for Prevention or Cruelty to
Animals. Despite obvious discrepancy, sow's name
is 'Arnold.' She has been a resident of the shelter
for the past 18 months. She gave birth.lo 13 piglets. • Polish war lielfo
May 2. Three have since been given away and are
reportedly adjusting well to the botlle. Papa has Gen. Anders· D1'es been placed on a foster farm.
Cambodia Coast Blocked
LONDON (AP) -Gen. Wladyslaw
Anders, commander of Polish troops in
World War II, died today at 77.
The general suffered a heart attack
Monday, the 26th anniversary ·of the
day he lauocbed the 2nd Polish Corps
against the monastery on Monte Cassino
which was barring the Allied toad to
Rome. One week later Polish ~
planted BriUsh and Polizh flags atop
the hill.
Soutli Vietnam Halts Incoming Red Supplies
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -South Vie~
nam has set up a blockade olf the
Cambodia• coast In an effort to hall
Incoming auppu.. IOI' the Viet Cong,
South Vietnamese Vice President Nguyen
Cao Ky said today.
The United States said It was halting
North Vltlnamese and Viet Cong ships
there but said this was not a blockade.
At the same Ume South Vietnam tent
gunboats 50 miles farther up ·the Mekong
River above the Cambodian capital of
Phnom Penh in a new example of
cooperation between the Saigon and
Phnom Penh governments In their joint
struggle agalnst the Communists.
UPI correspondent Walter Whitehead
reported from Neak Luong, 30 miles
clown the Mekong from Phnom Penh,
that Ky told newsmen the South Viet-
namese navy was stopping ships of third
nations and searching them for Com-
munist supplies.
Jn the past both the Soviet Union
and Communbt China have landed su~
plies at the port cf Slhanoukville but
tbere was no iDdicatlon of any of their
ships had been htlted by the South
Vietnamese. Cambodia had cut the
"Sihanoukville Trail" leading from the
port lo South Vlelllam.
The U.S. Military Command in Saigon
said U.S. Navy vessels were operating
in the same area as the South Viel·
namese navy but a spokesman insisted,
"This is not a blockade." A spokesman
for Gen. Creighton W. Abrams said,
"no third country" vessels w o u I d be
stopped by U.S. sh Ip s or interfered
with in any way.
The spokesman said the U.S. vessels
were positioned to stop "North Viet·
namMe and Viet Cong s h I p s trying
to bring supplies into Cambodian ter-
ritory. The bulk of the allied fleet was
believed positioned opposite Phu Quoc
Island , which also is a South Vietnamese
province.
"The Cambodian government has betn
informed," the U.S. spokesman said.
Dr. Slocum Baby Death
Trial Opens Wednesday
A grim reunion ls scheduled Wednesday
in a Costa Mesa courtroom as pro-
ceedings against a surgeon charged with
the bizarre butchery of an infant -
his wife a star witness -is scheduled
to begin.
Or. Wesley G. Slocum, 44, Is due
to appear at 9 a.m. in Division One
of Harbor Judicial District Court, for
what could be one of the most unique
events in Orange Cowty legal history.
The state charges that he kllled and
butchered a daughter, Cynthia, in early
1964, storing her dismembered body in
the family's freezer.
Defente attorney Paul Augu9tlne, Jr.,
seeks to prove that his wife, Mrs. Marian
Slocum, 45, was ihe killer, while ha ving
acknowledged \hat Dr. Slocum was aware
or the death.
"Ali I can say is that the truth will
eome out at the hearing,'' Augustine
remarked Monday.
The men who will match Will 1n the
courtroom, AupU.De and Chief Deputy
District Attorney Jamts G. Enright, had
rcque!ted a reserved hearing chamber.
several other cases are already on
the calendar for Division Ont, howevtr,
proml5ln1 a 11Jghl delay in gtttlng Ute
three to five-day procedure under way.
"'Dltre Is a tttmeodous i mount of
evldtnce to be pruented," Augu•llne
told Judge C•l•m Schmldl at Ibo time.
Detectives have gone· oYt.r countless _,o111u.. to expllln ml really ha!>'
pentd in the Slocwns' M e .s • Vtrde
household all yeara ago and who did
whll.
"it should be quite interesting,"
remarks Costa Mesa Police DttectJv1
'
Capt. Bob Green who has headed the
many-fac~ed probe ol the grisly but·
dterl!:d baby case.
Enright, the Distri ct Attorney's pick
for particularly knotty prosecution cases,
says he believes the preliminary hearing
will lead to a Superior Court trial for
Dr. Slocum.
F rom Pnge l
ARSON •..
blaze until he came hammering on the
door.
Barnhouse said t~'O men In a late
model sedan sped away from the blatlng
garage when they noticed his car, but
couldn't get a good de5<:Mpllon.
A stripped-down Volkswagen dune bug-
gy belonging to the Ceraghtys was
destroyed, along with an older model
car belonging to Terry J. Stasik, of
833 S. Daisy Ave., Santa Ana which also
was lost.
The dune buggy was inoperaUve and
St.aslk's car hadn't been driven for thrte
days, another angle leadlng Fire Depart·
ment Battalion Chlef Bob Beauchamp to suspect arson.
Loss wu llsted as P .PI for the struc-
ture ltatU, and $1 ,500 each for tht
houJ~hold contents and tne combined'
value of the destroyed c~.
Mrs. Ger•ghty could give m reason
why 11;nyone would firtbomb t h e
apartment•' garage.
lnv!:3tiCators did not say If any
evidence of a n incendiary device or
chemicals was found at the &eene. ,,,
'
'
Despite the South Vietnamese-Cam·
bodian cooperaUon, a crisis in relations
blew up over the death of a South
Vjetnamese petty officer beaten by Cam·
bodian students Monday night in Phnom
Penh in a new outbreak or traditional
Cambodian-Vietnamese hostilities.
-Six sludent.s were arrested and Saigon
Ambassador Tham Huy Ty told reporters
he had lodged ·the strongest protest.
Ky told a news conference in Neak
Luong, the Cambodian river town cap-
tured by Saigon marines last Sunda y,
that the blockade began last Saturday
and covered about hall the Cambodlan
roastline -a ?~mile stretch between
Kompong Sam, formerly SihanoukYille,
and the Vietnam border.
He said the blockade was begun in
agreement with the new Cambodian
government of Premier Lon Nol and
that no American Navy vessels are in·
volved. Foreign ships, he said, are being
stopped and searched for anns and sup-
plies destined for the Viet Cong and
North Vietnamese.
•
After hostilities, Anders and bis family
settled in Britain.· A staunch anti-Olm·
munlst, he refused to return to Poland.
He headed a relief organization caring
for Polish troops who remained here
after the war.
Manson Wants Court
To !\love Trial Site' .
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Charli!s
Manson, accu sl!:d with flve others <0f
murC:ering actress Sharon 'Tate aod fOOr
others last August, has asked tile St.at.a
Supreme Court for a change of venlie,
court Officials said today.
His trial is scheduled to begin Ju{le
15 in Los Angeles County. The court
said his plea for change of trial locattpn
cited unra vorable publicity from
newspaper, radio, magazi!Je and ~~
publications. · ,
•k UPI Te .....
Here's Lool,ing at You
Full grown ostrich, a most curious bird, take a bead wlth hla blU W
camera tens during controntation with ph otographer, found by ostrich
to be an equally curious bird. Confrontation took place at Lton Cou~:
try Safari outside Laguna Beach. Ostrich ls ono of 52 or the big birds
who, along with other wild a nimals, \viii meet tourists eyebaU·to-eye-
baU when game preserve opens next month.
r r '
•
~ -._(< --• • •
Huntington ·Be~e·h
. • ' 1 ~D l ;rJ ON Stoeks .
'"'-.. -*""". .
VOL. 63, Nd. 113, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES \ ORANGE COUN!Y, 'CAl:lfORNIA . Tl!ESDAY, MAY 12, TEN CENTS . '
Israelis 011 ·Att .ack
' .
Hug e Tank Force In vades Lebano"1
OA!l V l"llOT S!lfl l"Mtet
By UnJted Pre11 lntef!lltional
The Arab nations said 100 Israeli tanks
and ·Z,000 .fn!antrymen invaded . Southern
Lebanon today and that Lebanon, Syria
and Iraq_ were ,fighting back in the
biggest · Mideast tiatUe Since the 1967
war. The U.N. Security Council was
called into emergency session.
Israel said its armored columns with
aerial support knifed into Lebanon to
wipe out Arab guerrilla bases whiclt
had launched fl 1ttack1 against 22 Israeli
setUerTients in the past 40 months. Fierce
aeri~I battles broke out and Israel said
it shot down three Syrian MJG .17s.
The battle raged thro~ghout the day
Jn ~e Mar'Jayoun . are~ o! Lebanon _ six
to seven miles north o! the Israeli border
and 32 mileS southeast of Beirut. A
Beirut mlllta'ry spokesman said fierce
Arab counterattack&. bad stalled the .
Israeli push'..
A spoketman for the Palestinian Arm-
ed Struggle Command said_ the Israelis
attempted to drop paratroops into south
Lebanon, but · gave no details. He Said
!he guerrillas, .engaged the ,lsratli forc;es
1n "hand to hand fighting." ,
There was no Israeli confirmation of
the report but a spokesman Slid 11 •
GWC PRESIDENT QOYC E ADDRESSES .STUDENTS WHO GAT HERED TO ASK 'WHY?'
Junior Cotl'et• Ch ief Urges Students to Reflect Soberly and to Act Positively Parents Set •
GWC Rally Asks 'Why?' For Dis~ussion
On Principal
Studen ts Conduct Curren t Events Soul Se arching Parents wilh opposing viewpoints about
LeBard School Principal C h t'r-1 o m a
STUDENTS WHITEHEAD (LEFT!, BE LCHER 'ARGU E OPTION S
'It's a Beautifu l System; Let's Im peach Our' Con.eres1men'
GWC Scl1ool Strilie Fizzl es
As Students Plan Action
Plans for a student strike at Golden
West College apparently fiziled Monday
as students preferred to channel their
energies toward a community action pro-
gram.
Meeting In s(nall groups foll owing the
mass rally at the free speeeh area,
students hammered out a five·point plan
to work 'for peace on a local level.
The first of these is to encourage
people sympathetic to their think.ing to
run for local offices and school boards,
the students said.
They will also try to bring about
a coaiitiOn with other area C(lJleges and
high schoOls to get into the community
and · explain their feelings on the war
Baker to Expl ain
Alamitos Base
Oranie County Supervisor David Bak-
er 'is speaking tonight at the general
meriibersbip meeting of the Golden West
'Homeowners~ ASsociaUOfl to explain the·
closing of Lot Alamitos Naval ."Air Sta-
tio;n.
Baker will tell homeowners how future
land uses Gf the naval air station might
aff~t them in the Golden West tracL
~The meeting , combined with a ~wine
and chees( tasting, is set for 7:30 p.m.
In the home of President Mrs. Lorraine
Faber, 15271 Nottingham Lane, Hunt·
lngton Beach.
through petitionS, letters to newspapers,
and personal visits.
Student planners said part of the pro-
gram would consist of research into
the voting records of senators and
representatives on peace issues to
discover where they stand.
They said they would al:SO petition
eleeted ofllcials to end the war and
launch a positive community project to
change the image of college youth:
Although the possibility of a student
strike loomed Monday with several stu-
dent leaders calling for a walkout to
protest the war, campus sources predict
relatively few students will take that
action.
The rig:ht to strike has been endorsed
by the Student Central Committee. the
student body organization on the G\VC
campus, according to a student leader.
Teachers Expected
To· ~rotest S~I1;1ry -
• • , Ye~f!Q are .e1pected to, .obj&:t to
a .salary schtduJe up for adoption tonight
by the Huntington Beach Union High
School District board of trusteei.
The District Educators A.Uociation
<DEA) urged by bulletin that all teal'hers
be present for the meeting, scheduled
for 7:30 p.m. 1t district headquarters,
1900 17th St.
Trustees have offered a $7,293 to
$14.586 salary ran1e while the teachers
have campaigned for 1 $7,400 tG '15,300
range.
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Schwankovsky are expected to confront
01 111s 01nr l"litt 11.11 trustees of the Huntington· Beach City
By the hundreds, students and teachers School District tonight.
flocked to the Golden West College Free S. A. Moffett, district superintendent,
Speech area Monday to ask "Why?". admiUed today he is anticipating a con-frontation and said the matter will be · \Vhy did the President order the in· discussed by trustees and top level
vasion of CambOdia? Why were four district administrators during a closed-
students sbot at Kent State? Wby was door executive session at tonight's
Golden West College closed? meeting.
The soul searching went on for abQut The board's regular business meeting
three hours with speakers taking the gets under way at 7:30 p.m. In the
rostrum, mostly to-'Indict, but rarely library at Dwyer School.
to defend the establishment. ';I'd rather not go into the details
"Everybody knows what kind of jive until trustees have a chance to talk
we've been ,getUlai ~f~ the ~JO!._~n-it oVer," M9ffett ' sai~ this morning.
ment;" said Bill '\l\'bltebead, 1"'1!1fCBJ 'Mrt,iflchw~ ha h<;tiildpal.
student leader. • ' at· 1'eBard ~e th! school-opened three
Whiteheac:' then annotineed Uiat he years ago. Prior to that she w~ principal
1 of Peterson School for one year. would stop going to ·c asses until · the "\Ve have liad 1 few complaints since war is over. , the schooJ opened t~e years ago," He was joined In his protest bY'student Moffett said .. "But they were mostlv
. ,-.,.,
DAILY l!ILOT 1tlft l"Mfl'
.,AWAITINC COllNCI L'S.WOAO
Positive Thinker 7•nner
Dave Belts who said, "I intend to strike of a minor nature."
until the war is over. I'm not attending "We simply need to review the situa-valley N.egativ. e
any more classes. I've destroyed my tiOn. No actioTI · hlis been taken afld
Mobil credit card and I have a draft I don 't know what will happen," Moffett
card in the back of my pocket and said. A b t p ';t ' I wonder what I shoold do wilh it. OU osi ive
1 flush~d my draft classification card • • •
down the toilet this morning." N · l B' h fl. :nk:ng'. · Plea Sensing the concern of many students e wp()l' C8C. It~ ~
Who expressed the need to take · time 1 •
off from classes to work toward peace. O F · By TERRY CQVILLE
Dean of Instruction William 'F. Shawl }"ange reeway Oltt.. o.11,,1"11e1 Iliff
told the gathering that he was ready The power .of positive thinking could
to approve independent study contracts G p• · k d do a .lot. of; good in FOU.ntain Valley,
in lieu of regular class attendance. . 1·oup IC e says David Tanner, who wants a· license
Or. Shawl said the independent study to sell his outlook inak:le the clty,i
contracts would work similarly to those Officers have been elected and meeting But negatiV.e : thinking oil the Part or
adopted by UC Irvine and "would allow dates set for Newport Beach's Orange the city c6uncll ·may ·halt TaMer's bid each of us to pursue what our conscience · dictates." Freeway Citizens Study Committee. to open l!P a mli:il-or.d~r . mentology
A round of applause ran ii; through Steve Auld has been elected chairman; course, which he descri bes , as mind Merrell SkUling, vice chairman and Han· power motivation.
t he grassy area in front of the Golden cock (Bill) Banning lll, secretary. The key to ~Ir apparent impasse
West College Forum when GWC Presi· Meetings will be held at 7:30 p.m. Is the little word "Hypnosis."
dent R. Dudley Boyce urged students the first Wednesday of each month at Tanher, a resident of Fountain Valli!:y,
lo "assist actively In a political campaign the city Pa rk s, Beaches and Recreation wrote it on his application for a city
for a man \vho shares your persuasilon.'' Department headquarters, 1714 W. business license and that jumped the
Sober relfection on the vexing prob em!! Balboa Blvd. A spec ial meeling will price from '35 a year'to· '100 a day.
or our society is a very good starting be held there May 27 to hear from And be refuses to scratch the word point. said Or. Boyce, adding that it . . 1 h from hJ's applicati'on. •-f II ed ·;h 't' t• Sid Ellcks, project engineer or t e must uc o ow up w1 pos1 ive ac ion. . h •-o · . . City laws place hypnos1·s i'n the sam'e H t Id th to l't' th · Orange Freeway wit t .... state 1v1s1on e o em pe 1 ion eir con· h · bracket with ,palmistry, as tr o Io gr , gressmen and also "express your con-of Highways, and Cris Cris. c airman phrenology and fortune '·lllng. And Iha 's
I 'ghbo · this co of an Orange Freeway citizens com-1-e cerns o your nei rs 1" m· an expensive bracket for a business. munity.'' mittee in Huntington Beach.
"\Ve've got to turn around a direction The cities of Costa Mesa and Fountain "I'm not a professional hypnotist or
In which things seem to be moving," Valley a~ have appointed cit.izen study charlatan of any type," Tanner says
Dr. Boyce said. committees to work with the division emphatically. "But part 'of what I do
Although uni ted in their goa l to achieve of highways in planning the freeway. Is, .i~ essence, bypnotis_m. If you · give
peace, there was some division ' among The state highway engineers are con· positive suggestipns to· a person that
the students about the method. sidering plans that would bring the 'can be called liypnotism.'• ·
Student Gary Belcher, for ex-ample, Orange Freeway down the Santa Ana What Tanner .hopes to offer to citiiens
took exception to some or the criUclsm River to a terminus with the Pacific Is a mail~rder course in posiUve think-
hurled at the establishment by the more Coast Freeway either o" the West ing. It , consists of ' a series of ·written
radical factions of the Golden West cam· Newport or Huntington Beach side of lectures explaining bow an individual
pus. the channel. may achieve a certain goal.
"It's a pretty beautiful system," he Officials of coastal cities are pretty Topics he has prepared include deep
snapped , but at the same time urged well agreed the Orange Freeway should relaxation, physical well-being, memory
that leaders not responsive to the terminate at the Santa Diego Freeway power, magnetic personality, self con-
people's needs should be turned oul of and not come to the coast. fidence, resUul sleep and flnancial slic·
office. The state highway engineers are still cess.
"let's impeach our congressmen. Let's several months away from presenting ''About 80 ~rcent of my business
gel somethi ng together and impeach,'' their design plans and holding a public would be throuah the mall," Tanner ex.
he implored. bearing, but the citizens committees are plained. The •Other 20 percent includes
A somewhat unenthusiastic reception gearing up for a possible battle. personal counseling where he feels the
greeted student Steve-Hadland, an ad· label "hypnotism" might be applied.
milted conservative, who asked if the ~·rt i.1o't critical to me.''. he added.
silent majority was represented at Post Office Agency: '"! liive' a bililneas 'bi' CO.ta M;sa. Bu! the rally. Only eight people among inore ~ 1 lot-of friends ha:fe a._ed. meD·fer
than 1,000 showed their hands. ott•,J h . c 'l"ee personal Advice anil 1 feel 'l 'earl help
Hadland said he believed in what the .fl. ~ ' y · .Ollll.Xll L peOple with• thls "posltive tht@&g ap-
administration, )f.11 doirlfl aod""Urgei;f'the 1 • • •• r · , proach." ~
students 'to 1110ok '1t the-~ople 'bthitid'~ wAS~l~G~N (UPI ) -The 1House: ... ' T~Myj experle~ wi~ i>Ositive
the peaCe tno em~ril." Kl' '\\'arned .Pos~fJCe Co_mmlttee has approved'-think ing f>egari 'lii Uk late' tf60'5 as he
students that if radicals were to apread creation ot an 1ndependenl . government helped organize a company highly suc-
vi&lence to local areas. Conservatives agency to run the post office, as part cessful Jn the "learn while you sleep"
would take up arms to dele'n;d' thelr ot a ~ea~re w~jch aJ~ wouldr·~ ·bus\Mss. ' · · · · • ·
rights. , tl)e naUo~a •700,000 pol!41 worker!''U "At orle time we ne,a. a 40-offtCe
_________ ...__..., 8 ~rcent Pail hllf· I lld/nK arid' ll<lded llOO' Nlesnian 1n
STOCK · llfARllrril ~. ·~J>iltg~Jor'a~ tf·~ ·Lot Ari&tlet alont. Eventuany ,the
________ m-_ ... ·,"""'.ll;',..· .... ~ .. -oN....,,a~~l .. ~l!f~ buoln<sa "'1'ti!trl .bepa cutting .... b
· s ,_ \ Jiidlid.,.. , , roilal Setv1oe. othtra throats so t eot out."
NEW YORK CAP) -The -mli(llol'. N\lttottlo WIJllld'b< appointed But from the ,; .. p teaching courses,
recovered., surged upward ~ rtvtrfln'(-lts 6y the President. They would in tum which Tanner says were quite efrecUve.
early session lo~s late this afternoon In choose the Postma!ittr General and hi& he {las now drawn ulf his mall.order
stepped-up trading. (See qu&taOons, dlputy who would join lbem on the busineis and coined the word "men-
Pages 10-11). board. lllee MENl'OLOGY, P•&• I)
~ •• :t
hours after the attack began that Jpeli
troops: were still in enemy terlitory •.
Lebanon, ·Jn a letter to the ~lty
Council, asked for the meellug , because
ol what it ·called · an "ipvulon" of
Lebanon. It sal,d the ff&hllng raged on
tt}e slopes of Mount Hermon near the
occupied Gola'n SeJghta and that the
lsrtalis were forced to ,call off the attack
despite ls"raeH air 'supr·emacy:
A spokesman in Beirut said Lebanese
gunners scored .a direct hit· on an Israeli
ammunition vehiCle producin1 a huge
explosion. · Arab sources reported· as
many as 21 Israeli tanks knocked out.
Valley Taxes
Won't Go Up;
Budget Stable
Fountain Valley homeowners can pat
their billfolds a little more aofUy this
year -city taxes aren't going up.
City councilmen reviewed t h e
preliminary budget for 1970-71 Mooday
night -all 12,&M,007 of It.
They made only one change adding
$200 for the fee to join the 'National
Ceague of Cities.
, After the three-hour study session wa.s
over, city fmance dirtctor ·Howard
Stephen.$ slumpett in his chair sw"P.rised
but .• haJ:>PY so few changes w~re riiade, ~ rare ms~ when city. COUDCils revtew
.:>udgets, be said. · ·
The city Plmts to spend '600.sta more
In 1970-71 ~n 11 ·h~ this year, ~ut
the tax.rate oftfJ.lS won't be chaiiged .
C,ltY.. officia~s expect $2,803,88l to roll
Into cdy colfers during 1970-71. The ettra $~451000 not reOect!:d: Jn ·money to be
spent for the. y~ar. is part of a planned
reser:ve the city is building each year
fo Pl! for the fl00,000 cost of . con-
structing addllklns lo ·the police depart.
ment, ·.C1>mmWllty center and coJ'P)rat.ion
yards 1n the·ne.xt folU' to five yeirs ..
'.'~at reserve . ~und will allow us to ~lid those additions without a bbnd i~e or ralsi~g taxes," Jim Hollywood,
assistant to the city manager, explained.
.The 1970-71 budget is a reOectJon of
City Manager James Nea1'1 ' ten-year bud~et, but squeezed together more
rapidly than expected.
"On the 10-year budget ·we ·expected
an average lH>Pulation growth of 3 000 ~r year,'' HollywQOd said,_"Now it l~Q
hke the population will /ump by 8 000 next year." '
This forced greater expenditures but
Stephens told councilmen lhe city' can
handle it without asking for more tax money.
Several questions on the budget were ~ked by cpuncilmen , but most were
Items of explanation. One thought whJch
seemed to prevail Monday night wa~
that parks and recreation money should
(See BUDGET, Page 2)
SCOTT ON FLOOR
BUT ASKS QUIET
. WASHINGTON (AP) _ Sen. Hugh
Scott, <R-Pa.,) took the Senate floor
today to say nothJng.
"He stood, g.ot recognition, and said:
I have nothing to say. I think that who~ .this <;ountry could use more than
&nyt.tung right now is a moment of silence." ·
Orange Coast
Weather
Another groovy day looms on the
Orange Coast horizon With Sunny
skies chasing th~ morning rpatcJ'l)r:. -·
clouds •a"rl<! · tetliJl!raluris"tii" iJlf
middle sevt:nties.
I NS IDE TODAY
The 1iewborn Irvine Commun-
ity Theater moke1 on aµspicious
ficbut -.sweeping three top
awards at the Riverside oM-act
.ft!livol. S e e Entertohiment. page 19.
..
-------------------------------------------------~~~---~~-r • ----.. . .
fl. UAILY l-ll.'11
~; Mose!OW Lose
Montreal Given
Olympics in '76 ·
AMSTERDAM 'AP) -Montreal was
awarded Ult 1976 Olympic Games today
In a scarjmse victory over t.roscow and
Los Anaeles-
Moeeow had bten fav"Med for the
GIUniM, and Ta55, the official 'Soviet
agency, sent out a. bulletin from Moscow
two hours earlier that they had been
awarded Moscow.
'I1le announcement was withdrawn
&hortly afterward without an explanation.
It's the first time any ot the Games,
Winter or Summer, has gone to a Cana-
dian city. This is in keeping with the
Jn&ernatianal Olympic Committee policy
0: spreading lhe Games around to oew
areas.
Moscow b&d been favored because of
Ill renowned athletic facilities plus the
fact that the Games never have been
held in an Iron Curtain country.
The Los Angelea bid was based on
the fact the year would coincide with
the United States' 200th anniveraary.
They were held in lAa Angeles in 1932
Beach Girl
Kidnaped;
Swpect Held
Miu Petll"IKlll said she screamed, to
for arraJgnment on charges of lddnaping
a ~untiqgton Beach girl in Costa Mesa
and tail:ini ber aa far as Corona, where
6he screamed to a sheriff's deputy for
help.
John W. Hagadorn, 26, of 117 Wbltefield
Ave., Anaheim, was booked Jn to
Riverside County Jail last Friday on
suspi.cion of kidnap and turned over to COsta Mesa police •.
Stephanie Pearson, 18, of 9 2 9 o
Slralhcona Drive, Huntington Beach, told
Patrolman Quck Hollard she repeatedly
tried to 1top the strange abducUon from
a market parking lot.
Mias Pera<m. said she screamed to
occupants of one car at the Orange
Coast College parillll( lot for help as
Hagadorn drove up there, but no one
came to her aid.
The girl said she was grabbed in
a chokehotd Friday in the lot of 2701
Harbor Blvd., anl~ into htt car
with a sharp, bWltllfi obj«!· al her
r:ieck.
"I need your car." .i>.e quoted the
ebductor as saytlll. \
Mits Pearson told lnvestlgators a
blacl<-and-whlte patrol ..,, pulled out
of a ~de street In Corona just after
tl>ey tomed off the fl:eeway and Bile
waa warned to keep quiet.
Inatead, she screamed, saying tile ab-
ductor grabbed her balr and yanked
her to the seat, turning onto a aide
road, but Deputy Ed Von Pringle's a~
tenUon bad been attracted.
He followed Miu Pe.arion's car, pul1fd
tt over and she leaped Out and ran
to safety, leading to Hagadom's arrest.
Proceedings against Hagadorn were
still in seSSion in Harbor Judicial District
C<lurt this morning. '
Pre-school Set
For Beach Kids
Pr&<cllool day cll!Ses for boys and
girls aged 2 to 5 wUl be offered by
the Huntlnl(On Beach YMCA beginning
May 22.
Dally 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. sessions will
Feature story telling, creative arts and
crafts, nursery rhymes, music, physical
fjtnesg , juice and cookies.
PrHegistration forms are available
now frun the YMCA, 1'1931 Beach Blvd.,
Suite R. Fees are ~16 for Y members
and GI for non-members.
DAILY PILOT
~G5. tOAST ,UILl'"tlfO COM,ANY
Rob•tt N. W••4
,r4.1ld«lt .,,. '1.lbli"*'
·J,ck R. Curl•'t
Tliom•t K •• .,;1
fdltof'
Tho"'•' A. M11t,hi111
M ....... lft!I EdllOI'
Albtrf W, ltl•1
• .... ... 1. 1!dllllr
H•lltl••• ... Ill Office
171JS •••e.h loul•v•r4
M•ilf111 A44t•t11 P.O. 1011 190, t264•
""'"'Offl ..
I and In St. Louis In 1904.
The announcemeni was made by Avery
Brundage, U.S. president of the Interna·
tional Olympic Committee.
Montreal was. choaen on the second
ballot, getting 41 voes to 28 for Moacow.
One vote was blank.
Los Angeles, the third city bidding
for the Games, apparenlly wa s
eliminated in the first vote. But Brun-
dage did not immediately say how the
first voting went.
Montreal'• seJeeUon as the city for
the games in 1976 virtually knocked
out the bid by Vancouver, B.C., for
the Winter Games. Vancouver, Denver,
Sion, Switzerland, and Tampere, Finland,
are trying to land the Winter Games.
From Pqe 1
MENTO LOGY ••
wlogy" to describe It.
"It's basically a matter of building
confidence in a person through the repeti·
tion oC positive auggections.'' he said.
Tanner has lived in FounWn Valley
ror five yeart. He served as co-chairman
of the city's industrial airpark committee
which was disbanded a year ago.
He spoke to a class at Lamb School
ln early February on the power of
positive thinking.
"I wonder it that wu legal?" he
now laughl.
TaMer plans to fight city ball over
Its $100-a-day fe for hypnoUsm, but he'1
not greaUy concerned about It.
"I don't greatly need this business
or rd really get mad. But I plan to
give tblm (city councllmen} every
chance to approve my application."
The city council has made no ruling
on Tanner's application. It was placed
In the $100 class by finance director
Howard Stephens who said the word
hypnosis clearly puts it in that range.
City Attorney Thomas W o o d r u f I ,
however, bu been uked by the council
to revise the bu1lnm license ordinance,
but not necessarily tn Tanner's favor.
A majority ol the oouncll waoled such
items as palmiatry and astrology clearly
prohibited.
"I'm not a carny man. not 10Jng
to put up a tent or aigns," TaMer
e1claims, p:>int.lng out that 1 u c h
ordlnancea were eetabllshecl to prohibit
gypsy type operallO!ll. "You really might classify me u a
professional l.IJttner," he concluded, In-
dicating he'll be listening for the clty
COWlcl.1'1 final word on his business May
19.
..
90 MPH Chase
Bring_s Arrest
Of Gtove Wife
I
A Garden Grove hou9eWife capped an
argument wUh her huaband Monday by
leading a Callforn!a Jllghway patrolman
on a 90-mile an hour chase on the
Santa Ana and Riverside freeways.
Mrs. Cynthia Eisiminger, 22, was ar.
rested M91lday f« reckleu driving after
her car twice rammed the patrolman's
vehlcle, turning it over after 6lammlng
both can Into the c e n t e r divider of
the Riverside Freeway eut of Lemon
Street in Anaheim.
Patrolman David c.odromac began the
pursuit when Mrs. Eiseimlnger allegedly
ran a red light at 80 miles an hour
at Artesia Avenue and Valley View Street
near the Orange-Los Angeles County line.
She reportedly sped onto the Santa
Ana Freeway southbound, then to the
Rlverslde Freeway where &he weaved
in and out between cars with the
patrolman in hot pursuit.
Officer Codromac passed the woman's
small foreign car at the Ltmon Street
offramp. Her car then rammed his vehi·
cle in the rear sending it lnto a broadside
spin and then bounced into the patrol
car again, sending both vehicles into
a cent.er divider.
The CHP unU rolled over. Codromac
suffered a twisted right arm and Mrs.
Eisimtnger was treated for minor ln·
juries, according to CHP reporl.I.
Peace, Unity Asked
VATICAN CITY (UPI) -Pope Paul
VI and tho vlslUng patriarch of the
Armenian church in the Soviet Union,
cathollcos Vaigen I, today Issued a joint
declaraUon calling on world leaders to
end wars, and a pled&e to work toa:elher
for church unlcy.
'DAil 't PILOT stiff ......
'Arnold' and Her Brood .
Piglets romp at mother's side at Laguna Canyon
shelter of Society fOr PreventioQ of Cruelty to
Animals. 'Despite obvious discrepancy, sow's name
is 'Arnold.' She has been a resident of the shelter
for the past 18 months. She gave birth to 13 piglets
May 2. Three have since been given away and are
reported!~ adjusting well to the bottle. Papa has
been placed on a foster farm.
Cambodia Coast Blocked
South Vietnam Halts Incoming Red Supplies
• PHNOM PENH (UPI) -South Vie~
nam · has set up a blockade off the
Cambodian coast Jn an ef!ort to hall
incoming. supplies for the Viet Cong,
South Vietnamese Viet President Nguyen
Cao Ky said today.
The United States said it was halting
North VJetnamese and Viet Cong ships
there but said this was oot a blockade.
At the same Ume South Vietnam sent
gunboats 50 miles farther up the Mekong
River above the Cambodian capital of
Phnom Penh in a new e1ample of
cooperation between the Saigon and
Phnom Penh govermnents ln their joint
struggle against the Communists.
UPI correspondent Walter Whitehead
reported from Neak Luong, 30 miles
down the Mekong from Phnom Penh,
that Ky told newsmen the South Viet·
namese navy was stopping ships or third
naUons and searching them for Com·
munist supplies.
In the past both the Soviet Unlon
and Communist Qlina have landed sup-
plies at the port of Sihaooukville but
there was no indication of any of their
ships had been halted by the South
Vi~lxlamese. Cambodia had cut the
"Sihanoukville Trail" leading from the
port to South Vietnam.
The U.S. Military Command in Saigon
said U.S. Navy vessels were operating
in thC same area as the South Viet·
namese navy but a spokesman insisted,
"This is not a blockade." A spokesman
for Gen. Creighton W, Abrams said,
"no third country" vessels w o u Id be
stopped by U.S. s h Ip s or interfered
\\·it h to any way.
The spokesman said the U.S. vessels
were positioned to stop "North Viet·
namese and Viet Cong s h i p s trying
to bring supplit.s into Cambodian ter·
rltory. The bulk of the allied fleet was
-believed positloned opposite Phu Quoc
Island, which also is a South Vietnamese
province.
"The Cambodian government has been
informed," the U.S. spokesman said.
2 Chicken Plaoos hTake
$3,800 Lickin' by Hoods
Two colonel Sanders Kentucky Fried
Chicken restaurants in Seal Beach and
Huntington Beach have taken a lie.kin'
of their own.
Two gunmen got . their licks in to
the extent · of s.s;aoo, leaving the
restaurant managers little to do but
cry "foul" this morning.
At lhe Huntington Beach location, the
robber took up the restaurant's offer
ol a bucki!tful -only he crammed
$800 into It rather than chickens.
Both robberies occurred Monday within
two hours of each other.
ln St:al Beach, assistant manager
Lawrince Dziedzic, 27, was just brewing
bis morning: coffee at the restaurant
on 12491 Loa Alamitos Blvd., when the
holdup man pointed a gun at him and
ordered him to open the vault, police
said.
From Page J
BUDGET •..
be continually increased, as It la in
this budg<t.
It was also noted by Councilman Ron
Shenkman that two motorcycles for the
Pollce Department were written into
the budget.
"When I aaked for them a couple
of months ago I thought I would be
shot out of my seat. I'm happy to
see them here ," he said.
Some of the hlghest priced Hems In
the budget include the police department,
$481,000 ; flre departm'ftt, $343,000: and
the administration and engineering in
public works, $244,481.
The total budget for parks and recrea·
tion Is $186,311, up aome $65,000 from
this year.
Councilmen Indicated they would set
a public hearing on the budget for June
2. It must be adopted by the first
of Ju ly.
The robber took a1 estimated $3,000
rrom the floor safe, .-then handcuffed
Dzledilc to the toilet in the women's
res~m. according to investigators.
When he was freed, around 8:45 a.m.,
. Diledrlc discovered that the bandit had
also made off with his 1963 station
wagon.
Police, who discovered the car aban·
doned on a Rossmoor Street this morn-
ing, believe the robber gained access
through the roof and spent the night
in the restaurant.
About two hours later, a masked bandit
'A1ith a telescopically equipped rifle hit
the Colonel Sanders Huntington Beach
restaurant at 19091 Brookhurst St. and
escaped with $800 in a fried chicken
bucket.
"Ge t a bucket and lid and put all
the money in it," he told Manager
Edward Geronilla, according to police
reports.
He then followed Geronilla to the safe,
took out the money, and locked him
into a walk·in refrigerator, investigators·
said.
The robber's face, Geronilla said , was
obscured by a shopping bag which had
slits cut in it for the eyes and mouth.
Winners Listed
For Science Fair
Social science fair 'A'inners In the Ocean
View School Di strict have been an·
nounced by d i s t r i c t Superintendent
Clarence Hall.
First place winners In the seventh
grade dlvlslon arti Debbie Smith, Marine
View ; Fred Zinn. Harbour View, and
Alice Sung, Rancho Vle"A•.
EJghth grade fir st place winners arei
Greg Smith, Harbour View : Sharon
Bn1ns, Harbour View, and Jeff Grider,
fl.1arine VJew.
Despite the South Vietnamese.cam-
bodian cooperation, a crisis in relations
blew up over the death of a South
Vietn8Qiese petty afficer beaten by Cam·
bodian students Monday night in Phnom
Penh in a new outbreak of traditional
Cambodian-Vietnamese hostilities.
Six students were arrested and Saigon
Ambassador Tham Huy Ty told reporters
he had lodged the strongest protest.
' Ky told a news conference in Neak
lAlong, the Cambodian ri ver town cap-
tured by Saigon marines last Sunday,
that the blockade began last Saturday
and covered about hall the Cambodian
coastline -a 7S-mile stretch between
Kompong Sam, formerly Slhanoukville,
and the Viftnam border,
He said the blockade was begun in
agreement with the new Ca~
government of Premier Lon Nol and
that no American Navy vessels are in-
volved. Foreign ships, he said, are being
stopped and. ~art¥d for ~ and sup-
plies destined for the Vitt Cong and
North Vietnamese.
The South Vietnamese vice president
said his naUon'a troops are willing to
stay in Cambodia as long as needed .
"The day they (the Cambodians ) feel
they are strong enough to fight the
North Vietnamese Communists," he said,
"then we will 10 home."
YouthDrama Unit
Plans Auditions
Auditions for Nell Slmon's comedy
"Come Blow Your Hom" will start at
7:30 tonight at Dwyer School, 1502 Palm
Ave.
The comedy ls sponsored by the Youth
Drama Workshop of HunUngton Beach.
For further Information call Mrs. Hilda
Nauman, 968-6876, after 6 p.m.
Individuals with an interest in set de-
sign and construction, makeup or any
backstage work should also attend to·
night's auditions or phone Mrs. Na u1nan.
Blackm11n
CoiVn·med 1
By Senate
If' ,
• •
WASIUNGTON !UPI) -Judge Harry
A. Blackmun d. MIM~ was CGnlirmell
as a Supreme CourC. justice by the SenaA
today, end.Ing an abrasive dispute witfi
President Nixon that persisted for almost
a year. The vote was 34-0.
1l1e conflrn\aUon v~ on the f~eral
appeals court judge came two days-abort.:
QC the anniversary of lhe resignation
of Jl!Rice Abe Forlas, which created
the vacancy.
Nixon was twice rebuffed by the Senate
on his nomination of Southern federal
judges to the c o u r t -Clement F. .•
Haynsworth Jr. of South Carolina and
G. Harrold Carswell of Florida.
He thin turned to Blackmun, a lifelong
friend of Chief Jlllllice Warren E. Buraer
and a judge on the 8th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals sine< 1959.
No serious opposition was raised"
against Blackmun's nomination. He won
the highelt endorsement ol the Americah
Bar AssoclaUon and was unanimouslY.
aPDl'Oved by the senate Judiciary Com'
mittee, 17 to O.
Planning Aide
Interim Valley
Plan Director
A Costa r~esa pluning consultant thiJJ
. week will take control of the Fountain
Valley planning department on a tern~
porary basi!.
Ted B. Adsit, program coordinator for
urban affairs at UCJ, has been hired
Qy the city as planning consultant oJi
a part-time contract until a plannin~
director Is selected by the city council.
Adsit will sit in at planning commission-
and city council meetings and appeat·
ln city Ila.II on certalil days to approve"
plans, tract · maps and other items sub-
mitted to the planning department.
The city's former planning director;
Stan ti-fans!ield, quit two months ago
to take a s i m i 1 a r job in northern
California, and now senior planner Ned·
Parsons has resigned to enter private
industry.
Parsons had been running the depart~
ment as a substitute until a· planning
director was to be named. Now, he
plans to lea.ve the city May 22. ,
Adsit, a planning and admiJdstrative
lecturer, was consultant to the Urbail
Lan<I Institule's c1Uz.ens steerlni com'·
mittee In Huntillgton Beach whictr ceme
up wHh •'modernization pf&n for the city:
He was also a planning director for Po-·
mona and other cities before taking the-
UCJ position. ·
The city council Is scheduled to in~
terview rour appllcanta for the plannillg
head post May 25. A decision on a
11ew director is expected that week
according to City Manager James Neal. 1
I
Baseball League Sef
By American Legion ..
The Huntington Valley Amer l can
Legion Post. 708 will sponsor a baseball·
league for Huntington Beach and Foun;
tain Valley High School studenta up to
19 years of age.
Tryouts and a:lgnups have been schedul~
ed for 12:30 p.m. May 16 and 17 on
the Fountain Valley High School die:
mond.
A registration fee of $15 is required.
Further information is available from·
Roy Schimaji al 962-5602.
l l,_ atK~I nl f'-1 .1.-
(t.ltO #nil t» Wlll a1y l lr•I H~ 11K111 nu w .. 1 a.!Mi a.u1,,.,.,..
.... Ck-"t; as Hort~ •• <aflltr. 1;..i Huntlt!f1ton Network
Officials Get Connected
Got a query for a city official in Hunt.
lngton Beach? You'll IOOn Dnd It eultr
i. call up and check ft out.
A new 12111,000 ~phone •Yli.nt lo bo-
lng ln1tallod and win bl In operaUon
June 29. II will tn1ble ntldentl to call
mosl clly oU!co dlrtctly wlthoul folng
throuih the clly hill swllchboml.
111e 1yatom, called Ctnlru, It blln1
Installed by the Generll Telephone Com-
J)8ny. Jerry SUpernaw of Gtnual Tele.
phone said that each city dtpartn1ent
•ill havt a number which Will be listtd
In the dlrtctory. A lllt of the new num·
bert will be p.1bllshed before June 21.
In addition to bringing .city offlcen
cl-to the publlc, city 1dmlnls1ntor
Doyle Miller expil!Md !bit the new net-
worlt -w111 111.,. cl-conttol ol long
dlsilnce aalls by city staff.
Each dep.art.ment will receive tepar1te
accounUn1 for toll calb. Miller tlplaintd
th•t this will help In dtcldlnf In the fll·
ture the amounl of extended callin8 area
lines needed to conduct business.
Supernaw aaid that tmtead of bavin&
I
Just a few lines connected to 1 central
swilchboard, city hall will have hunc:lrtdl
of llnea availabls for incoming calls.
Cenw1 11low1 the Pollet, fire and life-
guard servtces to have 11pec:ia.I emer·
geney numbers tn 1ddltlon to business
nwnben. Supernaw uplalned.
Fire Chlef Ray Picard tald that telt ·
]>hone 1Uckert with the new em.rgency
numbtrt for tbt cUy wUI be dlstttbuted
to every residence 11nd bu.stness: in the
city so that the new numbers can be
readlty available on telephones.
Here's Looking at You ·'
Full grown ostrich, a most curious bird , take a bead wi th his bill on ..,
camera lens during confrontation with photographer, found by ostrich ~"
to be an equally curious bird. Confrontation took place at Lion Coun. n1
try Safari outside Laguna Beach. Ostrich Is one of 52 of the big birdt 1"
\vho, along with other \Vi!d ani1n als, \\'ill meet tourists eyeball·to-eye-lr. ·
ball v.•hen game preser ve opens ne xt month. • ;
' I
' Tund.11. !10J 12. 1970 H -DAllV mo: :t
•
Worst··· Texas Clainis 19
UC Ir vine
Protesting
Subsides
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI fM o.llJ ,llet lltff
Off-campus protest activities by UC
~rvine students were curtailed today as
students began attending regular classes
and alternative education courses.
The alternative education plan, ap-
Rroved Sunday by UCl's Academic
Senate, allows students to combine
classes based loosely around war protests
..\•ilh regular classes or to drop out
ot regular classes with no academic
Penalties and attend nothing b u t
alternative education classes.
UCI was 1he first campus to adopt
the plan, which allows a student, with
his professor's consent, to drop a course
"'ilh a passing grade in order to enroll
in alternative education and work on
war protest activities.
According to the senate proposal, a
student who has received a passing grade
in the course he drops does not receive
academic credit for taking alternative
education classes.
When <i. student does not receive a
passing grade, he is able to drop the
course without a grade and enroll in
alternative education and work for a
passing grade and four units of credit
for the quarter.
The resolutions passed by the senate
which instituted alternative educaUoo do
not force all prUessors to participate
ih the program. The resolutions are
upressed in tenns or options, making
it clear that participation in alternative
education it up to individual faculy
members and students. It was not clear
today how many students and faculty
members were actually participating in
1,he program.
In addition to alternative education
a Free University being organized by
students and faculty is also available
to UCI students. Protest spokesman Ted
Bollinger described the Free University
as impromptu classes set up by in-
terested people on a variety of subjects.
Alternative education and Free
University classes scheduled for the week
in the Gateway Commons area include
such diverse topics as U.S. History
d,iicussion groups, Women's Liberation,
Radical Psychology, New Journalism,
Correct Revolutionary Thought and Ac--
lion, NutrJUon. Fundamentals of Radio
Broadcasting, Theory, Practice and Po-
tential of Ne.violence and Interest of
F_rench Intellectuals .in Politics.
• Protest organizers said they expected
fo haYe a l"09ter of professors for
alternative education classes by this
afternoon.
Mean'Nhile, State Senator John G.
Schmitz (Jt.TuJUn} termed the pro-
gram "an insult to the purpose for
which univers:iUes exist. which is to
serve as centers ror ]earning and rational
thought, not agitation."
Schmitz, a political science instructor
at Santa Ana Junior College, released
a statement Monday in which he said:
"This inexcusable action is furUter
conv1ncmg proOC that the re a I
responsibilities for campus turmoil lie
much more with the faculty than with
the students.
"In a time when our country faces
real danger of violent revolution. nothing
cpuld be more provocative than this
open encouragement of revolutionary ac·
tivity by university professors.
"These professors are paid by the
taxpayers to teach. not to lead or pro-
mote demonstrations and riots."
Schmitz concluded his statement by
suggesting faculty aulhority over courses
and curriculum at UCI should be given
to the administration.
Rickles P a pa Again
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Comedian Don
Rk:.klet' wife gave birth to a son.
Lawrence. today at Cedars ol Lebanon
JtospitaL It is the couple's second child.
llarbara Rickles and the six-pound, three· ~e infant we.re reported in good con.
dliion.
• ' .... ....... ..
DAIL 't Pit.OT """" ... Hfl!I VttlWJ:t
'Hit Where It
Says Aide
LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPl) -A tornado,
striking from lhe blackness of a spring
thunderstorm, tore an eight-mile gash
through Lubbock Monday r\ight, causing
death and destruction that "defies the
imaginaUon" and tnjuring as many as
1,000 persons.
City Manager BiU Blackwell said the
twister that roared up Texas' "Tornado
Alley" killed 26 persons. But a body
count toda)I s.hQwed 19 dead.
The spring dawn over this West Texas
city of 161,000 showed damage over 2.500
square blocks frorii the torriado and
I.he main storm that spewed ram and
hall the aiie of. lemons.
Wind gusts after the twister . lifted
were measured at JOO miles an hour.
Damge was estimated Into the m.illlons.
''It hit us where it hurts," Blackwell
sald. He said the lilil or injured eould
rull as high as 1,000.
Sky~aperli -lhe tallest 20 stOries
-stood pOcked and battered. At leaSt
one bunding was in danger of collapsing.
Today's weather was dark and cloudy
with inore deadly thunderstorms forecast tor the Lubtiock area . · ·
Jiving, bury the dead ond clean up the
clly," said Mayor Jim Graaberry, eltded
only three wl!eks ago.
•1we have a disaster plan in effect
but Lubbock at this Ume IS a dead
city," Granberry said. "The destrucUon
is so extemlve it defies the Imagination."
Drin~g water was scarce. Emergency
supplies were rushed into town from
Muleshoe, Tex., 35 mUes northwest of
Lubbock. The tornado broke water Une1
and faucets from downtown into reslden·
tial districts spewed air.
City officials said Lubbock u.se1 35
million gallons of water a day and was
down to reserves of four .million galloruJ
from gravity flow towers.
·•we lhink we've· made ooe round up
and do~ti all the streets but ther1;'8
no reason for us to even think' we've
got all the dead or injured," said Police
Chief J . M. Alley.
. The 20-story Great PlaiQs Life building
swayed in the mornirtg breeze. lts glau
windows were blown out and bricks were
ripped out. Officials said it was unsafe
and roped off a tw;t>-block area around
it.
Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes. acting governor
with Gov. Prestoo Smith out of the
state, flew into Lubbock to survey
damage. Barnes ordered out the NatloRal
Guard to prevent looting of downtow.
st.ores that began before the wind died
down.
OLD CEMETERY Rl!STS ON A KNOLL ABOUT A HALF MILE FROM THE MISSION
It's Rare -A C•tholk Cemetery OwMd by Parish Rather Than Entire Diocese
The toniado touched down at 9:27
p.m. -the Ume a gymnasium clock
stopped at a local junior high school
-near the Texas Tech campus, headed
northeasterly through the downtown sec.
tioR aild moved out of town by the
airport.
Most of Texas Tech's 18,000 students
had left town at the end of the spring
.semester. Today W&!: the: last day for
final examinations.
"We were sitting here and all of a
S\fdden the roof just raised up," said
Mike Ree<!, ""'lstant clly editor of tho
Lubbock AvalanclJe.Joumal. 0 'Ibere was a k>ud pop in our ears and tia the
roof settled down. The M:xt we knew,
all the water on top was falling in
on us. I dove underneath a desk and
waited."
Deli~ of Past
Capo Cemetery Quiet, Serene
By PAMELA HAlLAN
Of 1M Otltr Pli.t St.tf
It's a lonely place.
But its canopy of trees and sprinkling
of wild flowers give San J u a n
Capistrano·s old Catholic cemetery an
aura of serenity.
there are no miles or green lawns
and sterile metal plaques here. Only
r!lws of white crosses, heavy marble
headstones and in some places, crumb\.
il.g tombs.
Weeds and tangled shrubbery have
been allowed ta run wild through the
uneven ground. Though some local
residents wouki prefer to see it kept
more orderly, those who care see to
it that their family resting grounds are
neat and beautiful.
stone plaque. Some of lhe names are
Lobo, Yorba, Etcheberria and Olivares
••• all well known Capistrano families.
Just last week Mrs. Viviana Olivares,
the matriarch ol Capistrano, was buried
there. in the last row or plots where
only a few remain empty.
Ordinance Prohibits
Hor ses Along Beach
An ordinance prohibiting horses on
the beaches was introduced Morxlay night
by Newport Beach city councilmen.
Councilmen Donald Mcinnis asked for
the ordinance because police didn't have
any regulation covering it and were
powerless to act when two horses ap--
peared on the beach recen tly in wen
Newport.
The tornado was the worst In Texas
since a twister reeled through Waco
17 years ago on the same day. On
May II , 1953, 114 persons were killed
by the Waco tornado.
Water stood a foot deep on some
Lubbock streeta. Complete blocks of
homes and businesses ,..ere blown away .
All electricity in ttriity was knocked
out and hospitals went on auxiliary
power. The only lights in the streets
came from automobiles and the spinning
red flashes atop police cars.
"Our first priority la to tend to the
The building was badly damaged. The
newspaper published morning and ne11-
ing editions at Amarillo 12$ mJles .mil.
Automobile dealers downtown were
wiped out. There was not a car without
a broken window.
"It was a hell or a way to start
a new busin,ess," ~Id the asslalant sales
manager' of a deale r that opened jwt
this week.
The oldest dates are recorded on the
Forster family vault, a tiny house-like
structure in the center of the cemetery.
One date, that of a child, reads 1854.
Although mission officials h a d
speculated that the cemetery came into
existence about 1870', it is possible that
its original intent was that of a family
graveyard.
GRAND OPENING
Don Juan Forster, who owned 106,000
acres of ranch land which included much
of what is now Su Juan Capistrano,
once owned the Old Mission which he
purchased in 1845. It was later returned
to the Catholic Church by President
Abraham Lincoln.
The Forster vault was believed to
have been built by Don Juan's son,
Marco Forster. who is buried there.
But no one is sure. Doll Juan himself
is buried in Los Angeles .
But there is speculation that when
the mission was returned to the church,
perhaps the cemetery, which is only
a quarter of a mile from the mission,
also became churcti property.
According to Father Paul f\.1artin, the
cemetery is unique in that it is a parish
cemetery and is Rot used by an entire
di~se.
Father Martin said that he knows
that a civil war veteran is buried there,
along with many of the forefathers of
the oldest families in Capiatrano.
Walking around among the unm arked
crosses one can see an occasioul name
scratched on the wooden surface or just
barely make out an engraving on a
ills FURNITURE
NEW LOCATION: FOUNTAIN VALLEY
Showrooms on tire Sun Di ego Fwy. ut Euclid means
Rfllph's is within mi1111tes from your home.
SEE RALPH'S NEW LOOK OF THE '70'S!
A Co 1nplele New Concept in Hom.e Furnishings
Newport Judge Hearing
Now with over lwicc the di splai area, Ralph's offers a com·
pletc selection to suit all taste s from fom1a l elegance to casual
simp licity, combi ned with fair prices and the personal service
Ra lph's r.ustomel'l\ hare enjoyed for 15 ycal'l\. ·
l
VCSB Slaying Inquest
J!.ur..I Orange County Superior Court
l9dge Karl Lynn Davis sat as hearing
olticer today, when authorities opened
a ~ay inquest Into the slaying of
a:• UC Santa Barbara student in tst1
Vlsbldisorden.
Judge Davis, 69, of Newport Beach,
was selected from a list supplied by
tile State Judicial Council after Santa
Barbara Counly Sheriff James W.
Webster disqualified himself.
~eriff Webster was the man in t:harge oeh.w enforcement officers in the · area
•nst month when Kevin Patrick Moran,
22. of Saratoga, was shot by penons
unknown .
ConOlctirlg repori.8 make it dllUcult
~ determine whether Moran -who
Wl.5 trying to pttSU8dt radicals to Jeave
the firwcarrtd Bank of America
buUdlng -was killed by police or a
'W!iper.
Sheriff Webster would ordinarily strvt
as hearing officer In a probe m:h as
that being conducled by Deputy State
Attorney General Ron George .
He said he made the decision due
to lrls role in control at the vlolence-ri~
ped community near the UCSB campus,
to preclude any possible implication or
white.washing the facts .
Judge Davis, of 1957 Vista Caudal,
wiU be sit.ting on the bench ol Santa
B-.1rbara County Superior Court for the
probe of young Moran·s slaying.
He retired from the Orange County
bench last August to make way for
a younger jud1e, since he faced a man·
datory 1971 retirement date anyway.
Judge Davis was appointed to the
bench by Gov. Edmund G. "Pal'' Brown
1., 1957, remaining active in ,. number
of Harbor Area bu!fneM. social and
charitable organlUIUons t.hroughoiit that
lime. ·
STORE Monday thru Fridcay 9 to 9
HOURS SUNDAY 11 AM to 5 P.M .....
I
-......
·-
. .
I
f . DAILY 'MT TOHdi1, May 12, 1970 f
Laird Says ·Camhodia Pullout Already ;Started
• I
WUHINGTOM (UPI) -Dele.,.
&ocr•i lolelm R. ,Laird said today
1111 Unitocl Slates alrudy bas pulled
.._...al -and" 1n1op5 out ol cam. liodll. But he uried Coogreso • not · to lilP-. any llmttat1oo on President Nli-
oit'• ·-ty lhere.
• '°•e hive ,a re:itrictlon Utat we will
,i.. of tJiOi) bJ . lhe en4 of ~lllle."
Laird told the Senate Armed servl.cts
Committee conc:ernlng lhe U.S. lhnlsts
aplMI COnnnunllt saoctuartes In c..,.
bodla.
·•. • • AJ:rudy we have withdrawn
American forces from Cambodia," r...Ird
said. ..We have withdrawn several
thousand this week a.ad we w,ill withdraw
1peclfieally ·bow-many American lljbltng But In rtspome to a questloa !l'<lm -groond troops, air forces or ldvilers
men hid been pulled book Into South Sen. Howard CaMOll (0.Ne•.), Laird -In C.mbOdls. Laird nrged defeat or
Vietnam from Ca.rnbodla. aald he "would not rule out the re-any legislation "which limiU: t h e
He said die ca-u operatlona w.re qulttmtnt ••• for lhe use ol (U.S.) Pr<llident'• aulhortty to protect ..U.. belier than, • ..,..,led and lhat air power on il1e .Upply roulel which Amer)c1111, Amerlcu fi(htlng men, In
.U U.S. ~ woold be out by J11ne come down out bl Laoo Into Cambodia." Soulh Vletosm."
IO. Laird uld lhe Unltocl Slates did 'Ille Senste bu scbedUlecf debate this "I belie¥< lhe llmltaUon would not
aot plan to tend its· f_. \>ack to -k on u amendment which woold help us u for u Pl'OleCUAs American
Cambodia U lhe Conummists rtclaimod bar lhe uae ol uy American forces lives .and (accomplllhl._) the Viet·
nam1'atlon progrom," Laird ,aid.
Laird repeatedly dodged questions by
Sens. Cannon and Henry M. Jackton
(0-Wash.), on whether the adminlstraUon
would oppose the ameodment should it
be tailored to the terms of Ni:rOfl's
own announcement -no U.S. groul'ld
troops in Cambodia after June 30, but
no bar on U.S. air strikes.
t
more this 'Week ."
The seCreWy
decliDed to •a y U>e aancMr7 areu. , ______ ...;.. _________ _; _ _;_....;. _______________ _
* Cambodia Cutoff
•1 ·Okayed by Panel
l
Four-month..old Steven Pepper
was baptized Sunday in a Gilling·
ham, England pub. Terry Pepper,
the infant's father, said because
.the. cblld's godparents owned a
pub, he and his wile thought cbris·
tening there would be "something
to remember." •
Warm we:athU has comt' to London,
Eng14nd, 10 who can blame this couple
jor ift.dulging in a Little "Maytime
Madntss." AJ~r a 1unbath in Si.
James Pork, Andrta Ruthtrford and
her fiatl.ct' Gerold DlC01ta wind tlleir
way through traffic past Buckingham
Palace in the backgTound on tMir
wo.11 back to 1001k. • Ronold Bumd....r, Stoke-on-Trent,
England, a 42-year·old builder, has
offered city officials $1,200 to pur-
chase a garbage dump adjacent to
his property which he says is an
eyesore. The council is consider-
ing the offer. •
The Toyal society f<Yr the pre·
uention of cruelty to animals
has criticized the Rev. Eric Judd
of North Witteringham, Eng.
land, for blasing 200 rounds of
.22·caliber ammunition down ·
mole holes on hi.a laiDTL Judd
said he hod tried eot"fllthing
el.!e. He hru 1,000 round& read11
to fire if the onimall Cotnl bock.
• The Rev. Bob Y tom ant, 25, of
Bridgemorth. England, bounced up
and down the aisle trying ta get
more life into the choir's rendering
of "I Wonder Where I'm Bound."
A moment later he fell to the bot·
tom of the church's central heal·
ing duct when the iron grid gave
way under him. He was not lier·
iously Injured.
WASlllllGTON (AP) -The Senate
Foreign Relations Committee has ap-
proved legislation to cut oU funds for
U.S. military operatklns in Cambodia,
but Republican Leader Hugh Scott said
today it would not pass, and 1uggest.ed
Instead a declaration of opposition to .
a wider war.
"I would like to see the Senate make
perfectly clear that this is not an invasion
of C&mbodia. that thlJ is not a widening
of the war, and "that the Senate does
not want a wk!ening of the war," Scott
uld .
Tbat would amoont to an endon:ement
of President Ni.J:on's announced policy.
Senate Democratic Leader M i t e
Mansfield said he believes there is a
good chance the amendment approved
Monday by the Foreign Re1aUans COm-
mittee will be paseed. He said he would
like a Vote this week.
Scott said he does not believe the
amendment as now framed wouia win
senate approval.
"'lbe White House position oalur.Uy
is that the power of tbe ' commander
In chief canno< be cir<umlCl'tbed con-trm to lhe Coaatttuttoo." Scott aalrl
he may propose an alternative measure
later, after a conference of Republican
senators.
'"'8 Republican leader said more hlr
A.US Communtst.s have been killed uc'
!,Ml captured.
He aald "Ill Americans and WI South
Vietnamese have been killed. Scott la.id
11 million rounds or Communist am-
munition now have been captured in
the Cambodian operation, and more than
3,000 bunkers deltroyed.
Scott said those figures were supplied
b7 lhe While House.
Scott abo said lhe C&mbodlan opera·
Uon has discovered a number or in-
staUaUom which could have served as
Communuat headquarlen. He described
these as ••noaUng crap games," not
permanent beadquarten. "1bere never
was any thought that there wu: any
great Pentagon over there," Scott aaid.
Strikes, Peace Marches
Continuing at Colleges
By Tbe Auocla&ecl Pre11
Striking students went back' to
classrooms at many universities today
but strike action, marches and sit.Ins
continued at other colleges to express
student disapproval of war in Indochina.
The student strike information center
at ~lli'indeis University ill Waltham,
Mass.. reported that 286 schools were
on strike indefinitely.
But 129 colleges and universities In
43 states officially reopened Monday,
llOOle with virtually empty classrooms.
Classes resumed at the University of
South Carolina in Columbia under a
heavy guard of state troopers and Na~
tional Guardsmen after a rampage Mon-
day night during which students swarmed
into an administration building, smashed
furnlture, overturned desks and tort up
records.
Tear ga, and nighlltlcb wert used to clear tile campus of thousands of
rock-throwing students.
Several uodred University of Maryland
students blocked U.S. Highway No. l
where it CJ"OSll!a: the campus for .. time
Monday nlght -the foyrtb 111ch blockade
ainct President Nixon announced the
lellding ol lrool'8 Into eanmOcua.
At Albany, N.Y .. more than l,000 state
Universii, atudeDl! descended on the
federal building and adjacent main Post
Olfice this morning, stand.in& six detp
at all entranoes, aUent and with anns
folded over cbesta:.
They kept m0&t emp}Qyes from the
building and brought mat! dellv,ery
vil¢ually to a 9landlt1ll. A U.S. MaJI
tractor-trailer wu seen~ bein& turned
away from the Rost Office. ·
About 70 students were arrested at
Eastern Mlchlg111 University fn Ypsilanti
1'-1onday night and early today after
students barricaded campus streets and
lit boofirea. Windows ol • bank and
In some university buildings wert broken
before state, county and local police
dispersed a crowd of 1,000 students.
A group of about 100 students at the
10.000-student Virginia P<llyteehnical
Institute took over Cowgill Hall on the
Bl:atkSburg campuS to J)o1il.t up their
demands for the cancellation of classes
for the rest of the term so students
can participate in antiwar demonstra-
tions.
At Washington and Lee University in
of J,400 students staged a sit-<iown on
t~ st~ps of a chapel, protesting faculty
re1ect1on of an overwhelming student
vote for halting classes for the rest
of the term.
AFL-CIO AttackS
Inflation Moves
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The AFUIO
declared today that President Niml's
eff<M'ts to rootrol inflation have been
a .. complete faihin!" ·a00 that the nation
has "croued the threshold of recess.ion"
under his economic policies.
The I a b or organization's executive
council Issued a statement denouncing
his handling of the economy almost
stmuttaneously with a visit by the Presi·
dent to AFL-CIO headquarters to confer
with the council.
The COtJnCil, in adopting a statement
on ~ ~y. renewed ifs appeal
to Nixon to support legi slation for across·
tlle-board coot.cola on wages, prices and
ploflts.
The president spent 45 minutes with
the council at the AFL-C!O headquart ers
to brlef the labor leaders on his decision
to send troops into Cambodia.
Weird Weather Hits Nation
Unseasonable Chill-20 Degrees-Felt in Northwest
c.111 .... 1a
SOUTHIJIJ<t CALl,Olll'tlA -l'1lr "''°""' Wlld.....W, _,. IMl'!llllt low
CIOuGI cotllll MCtn TlllnHY •11111 M
lovlll (Nit W9ClrlltdlY. W_,.t W'6o
N1<11Y. L9C.11 '"""' •lllOS .._. Meo
tJoM TllnlllY II to ,. mtrn ""' t.our
1111 ......
LOS AHGElll ANO VICINITY -J'1!r lor!IDlll 11\roulfl w.dMNlf but
Hfrlw lcM c:leud1 Tunct.r -11\t.
Hltll -• 12 T"'"""' -.cl 1' W.._,. ~·-,.T. CONC!..-ttON TO ..-f. OUM! -
Norlttwnl Wlfldl 11 to 2S knoll "°'"' COM ... lo!\ 1'o Ovter illt,,,.. 1flCI llthl "''"* wtl'ldl • ._. __ ,,..
_.,.,., .. to 111 ~nvl• '" 1"9<'1100•" T\lftdn' .,,.. Wldilffd.,.. Ptk:h'I' low
<loo.I* n.otn tncrn1 ... b<tl otto. .... li.t
~ MlllF d1n. Sllfllll'I' WlnMI' w-. l"OINT DUMI! TO Ml!XICAN •Ot· o:: .1 -lMM ..t.llle wi..... '*"""''"' ........,,. ... ~Ill....._.
1~ lllf .............. M«lllllt IN
c:filudl wit!! _,.., -,,,.,_
""""" ·-w ........... IXTJllMI! lOIJTHflt)I J<tEVAOA -l'llt 111'"911 w ..... ..,..,. Loe.I _,.,
.... t~ "'9<11lnl IS .. .ti "lllft "" "°""' 1t 11""91. Hltfll '""""' In h .. T-0.'I' •NI 15 .. 9' W~
A 'I'. ~ llolll ni.t111 Ill ""' -.. CO.UT.AL ANO IHTllMl!OIATI!
VALLIYI -Ftlr """-"" .......... l'I' '111' •toirr ""' ,.,_ T""4tY ""°'to-... H..,,. 'T'wtd9Y It! .,._ "9 111!1
..... W~1 1Sl9&1,l9Wl1t ..,,..,,,.,,,
c-UiJ llleMIY .......,,. ,,,.,. l ltl\1 ... ,...
AW WINI llltM Md IMl'"IM "°"" '**'""" ... ""' 11 .. ,. ~flOh Ill ......._ INsr Mid W ........ Hl<tll
flMtY M to 61.
Colt!•I --..,,!Vftl. reflH fArft U .. ·-, .. ,.J'l(I '-tlvf'el ,.._ 1-
$1: 19 74. Wlttr i.mHf1""'9 .. s..... ,,........ 'l'Wa
TUllOAT
llClll'ld Miii .......... " J;.. ...... , •
..... .... • lfi• 11.ffto J.t
WIDNllOA'r
lll"t """ ............. 7:1161.m. ,, Finl 1tW , ..•••• ,,.,., lt:IO 1.1!'1. t -S
s.tOllCI 1111~ ........... , l ;Ut.m. J,f
JJ.S. s--..,,
LM ANGl\.U IU"ll -1'111 "'' t~lcle _,..... ......,,.,.,., •• .. ••
"'"" 11'1' tllt U.S. WHll19r llvl'Mv; ·--or. ....,. -'lnttrlM ..... -rd\ ... IMl"I "~ .... .,
""'"""'""-• .i ... ,.._ """'411 ""'' •tnN*: LUbllldl. T•., itt'ttM M Ml!lt
If ll'tfMN *"· w-. ""'"" 1lr llNttPIM '""" !ht Gvlf 9f M .. lm II ,., llW1'll II ,....,,
Lew ~ flrrl-llllPS M -"'"
lf1I .......... llltfl • ,. .,_
Ir Wlft .. 1, "' 11,.....,..... Cfrilll
Mftllll ~ 111t Nto'lllwMI ft _..,.
Ill ~ n. """""' _.-. 9f N flllltll 1"11 Ntw E11tlllfld. Kllrnllll ,.u .. Ort~ •• , 1119 lllllol'l'i c:olC Nill °""''"' ""' ,.,.,.. ti :ia llftr'Wt,
A!buclu...,119
.-.ndlor111
Al11nl1
•1Ur5lltltf
e 1wn1r<.0;
··~ lotton
''°"'"""lilt
'""" (111(1-11 ... _ .......
1'1ll'blf*1
Fir! Wor'lll
·~M ·-HOl'd\llt1
IC1nN11 Cli.,
Lt1V"n Los AllNltl M"""' Ml.._POlls
NIWOr ... M
N .. York ~Pi.nt ......
01111f'loonl en, ...... ... .,, '"'"" .. ... -.... ·-·-· .... ....
JINld Cltt
JIM 111111 ...
S.<''"*'"'
1111 °''"
.,
" " " ,,
" " ..
u
" " n ..
" ~ .. .. " ~
" " " .. • .. .. " ..
" .. • • .. .. .. .. .. ,,
.. .. ..
" " " " " ..
~
" ..
" .. u
" " ..
" " .. .. ..
" ..
~ .. ..
" .. .. .. ..
" " ..
~ ..
·" ...
... ...
•••
'·" •• ..
Meet Miss Shirley Wainon,
special envoy for
Georges Raphael in our
Millinery and Wig Salon,
We<inesday and Thursday,
May 13th and May 14th,
Newport.
•
I ,
/
the midi goes to your head
in exciting new natural-look wigs
Going mid? Go midi from head to toe with the exciling new Vanities of 70's wig. b;pired by
the nostaligic 30's, •• shaped with all the dash of the 70's. The look is morveious
with every new fashion .•• and the Vanities wigs are the only wigs wilh hand-tied "ni tural
growth" parts . Styled close·lo·lhe-head , blunt cut in one over·all length. feath'r
'light Dynel modacrylic is washable. Wide range of colors. Top: Bobette, bouncy tob, 32.00
Center: Flipette, casual flip, 38.00. Bottom: flapette , sollly waved, 38.00
Mllline1y and WI& s.aton,
u umS'
MOUNTAIN .t.Pf.•S -f'llt ~
W..,_IY. Hlwfl !Mlolr•llir" T.,.. •r "*111 If! 11\1 !DI. W1....., Wtdl!n-
..., '""' l'lltht ITHllll¥ Ji "' ... Ltw• 11 Mlftt ....... , .a " G.
s.eOl'ld IDW . , lf14 1.lfl, t,4
Sun tlMI 1•$.1 Im, kft 1td 1.lft,.
M11D-. llbu l llJI 1.11'1. Stll l:Dt.tft.
Moll " fllt l\lllefl 1'1111 ci.w, tldt1
w!lll "'"1111111 llmlltd lo lllll'l*tltfll
... , .. Int '"' ,., ""'"" ......
1t11 'r•nc:l-iff!lft
IMk•fll .. " T ' Ntwport •I F•1hlon l1l1nd Newport Cent•r • 64•·2200 e Mon., Tllur1., Fri. 10:00 till 9:]0; Other 01ys 10 :00 till 5130 .. ..
f I • (
' ,
taia. Valley
•
l'Oday'• Fl•al
I
N.¥. Steeb
'I __ .....
VO~. 63 , NO. 113, 2 SE.CTIONS, 26 PAGES
. ~ ,
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ... ... ., '•TUESDAY, MAY 12, 'lf71i TEN CENTS
DAILY ,ILOT lllff ,,_;..
GWC PRESIDENT BOYCE ADDRESSES STUDENTS WHO GATHERED TO ASK .'WHY?'
Junior Collet• Chief Urges St~ent1 to Reflect Soberly •nd to Act Positively
GWC Rally Asks 'Why?·'
Students Conduct Cµrrent _events Soul Searching·
STUOENtS WHITEHEAD ILEFTI, BELCHER'ARGUE OPTIONS
... : ilt'• • Be•utiful SyJtem;, Let's Impeach Our Congressm~n·
GWC Scl1ool Strike Fizzles
As Students Plan . Action ,
• Flarul for a student strike at Gol"dell
\Vest College apparently fir.zled Monday
as students preferred to chaMel· their.
energies t.oWard a community action pro·"
gr'$ni. Mettinl in smal1 groops following the
mau rally' at the fr~ speech area,
5tur:tents bammtted out a fivtrpoint plan
to work for peace oo a local level.
The flr&I. of thflle is. to encourage
people sympathetic to their thinking to
run for klcal offices and acbool &uds,
u.e student.II Slid. 1
1dl'hey win also try to bring about ,.T~oe.lltion with other area colleges and
ldgh sc!hools to get ioto' the community
and expliin 1their feelinga on the ,war ., ,_ '
Baker to Explain
· ;Alai;nitos Base
. ; Orange County Supervisor David Bak~
.. er ii speakina: WOlght at the general
membership meeting r:J. the Golden West
Homeowners Al80ci1Uon~ to erplaln the
c~ ol Los Alamltol ,Naval Air Sia·
Ucln. -
Baker wlll tell homeowners how future
1:nd uses of the naval air station might , . . affect them _in ·the Ookteh West lrict.
The meeting, combined with a wine
~rid cliee.. 1as11rig, I• st! ror 7:30 p.m.
In the home of PrtAldent •Mrs. Lorraine
Faber, 11271 Notlingham Lane, Hun>
1na1on lkoch.
thr.ough . petiUOll!, letters to newspapers,
and personal visit.a.
Student piann"' said Jli'l'l or lhe pro-
gram would COllS1s1 of researctt into
the voting recorda of Senatbrs .and
representatives on ~ isaue.!I to
discover. where tbe~stand.
They sai~ Ibey would also petlliOn
, elected ofticlalS lo end •the war and
launch a pdiitive &m~uruty 'Pf'Oject to
change tbe 'illl.ace (If college youth.
Althoup the pouiblllty <of a student
strike loQl:nf!sf ·Monday Wllh several stu-
dent leaders calllag ror a-walkout to
protest the war, camP.UJ sources•prOOict
~l~ively' few' stuctenb will take 'that
flin:~right t.o strife has been endoi-ied
· ihe Student Central Committee, the
dent bOdy organiz.atlon on the ·CWC
t pua, according to a student leader.
r
eachers Ex r.ected
~o Protest Salary
~achen ate expected to olfJect to
a salary s<:hedule up for adoption tonight
by-<the Hunlingl<ln Boach Union High .schfol Diatrict board'°(' trulteel.
nte Distrid Educators ASl90Ciatlon
, (Dlill.) urged byoblljlelin that ali.teaehei'!
•be ilfe,ej\t fi>r. ihlo lfueelirQI, ICl>edillM
for·-tt10 .p.m. at d!Mrtct -headquarte~,
llOl \ltb SL .
Trostees have otfered 1 $7,293 ln
Jlf,5116 salary rang~ while Litt teacher!'!
have campa1gncd /or a '7 ,too to $16,300
range.
By RUDI rNIEDlJELS KI
Of llH1 0.HJ ,ilfl ,Sl•ll
By the hundteds, studehts and teachers
flocked to the Golden West College Free
Speech area Monday to ask "Why?". ·
Why did the President order the in-
vasion of Cambodia? Why were four
students shot at Ke'nt State? Why was
Golden West College closed~
The 'Soul searching went on for about
three ,hours with ~~ers taking the
rostrum, mostly to indict, but rarely
to defend the ~blishment.
"Everybody knows Whpt kind of jive
we've beeo ' gettin!.J.~ ~ iOVVJi·
mtnl.'' said Bill ~· a ~l!
student leader.
Whlteheat'. then announced that he
would stop going · to classes until ·the
war is OVer.
He was joined in his protest by student
Dave Betts who said, "I intend to strike
until the war is over. I'm not attending
any more classes. I've destroyed my
Mobil credit card and I have a draft
card in the back of my pocket and
J wonder what I should do with it.
I flush~d my draft classification card
down the toilet this mo ming."
Sensing the concern of many students
who expressed the need to take time
off from classes to work toward peace.
Dean of Instruction William F. Shawl
told the gathering · that be was ready
to approve independent study contracts
In lieu of regular class attendance.
Dr. Shawl said the independent study
contracts would work similarly to those
adopted by'UC Irvine and "would allow
each of us to pursue what our conscieoc~
dictates."
A round of applause rang through
the grassy area in front or the Golden
\\'est College Forum when GWC Presi-
dent R. i>udley Boyce urged students
to "assist actively in a political campaign
for a man \Vho shares your persuasion."
Sober relfectlon on the vexing problems
nf our society is a very good starlinf!:
point, said Dr. Boyce, adding that it
must be followed up with positive action.
He told them to petition their con-
gressmen and also "express your con-
cerns to your neighbors in this com-
munity."
"\\'e've gol to turn around a direction
in ~·hich things seem to be moving,''
Dr. Boyce said.
Although united in their goal to achi~ve
peace. there was some division. among
the student.! about the method .
Student Gary Bekher, for example.
took exception to some of the criticism
hurled at tbe establishment by the more
radical facUons of the Golden West cam~
pus.
"It's a pretty beautiful system," he
snapped, but at the same time urged
that leaders not responsive to the
people's needs should be~turned Out or
office. . ' .
"Let's impeach ·our congressml!o. Let 'g
get somethin& together ·and impeach,"
he implored.
A somewhat ·unenthusiastic reception
greeted student Steve Hadland, an ad-
mitted conservative, who asked U the
silent majority was represented at
the rally. Only eight peiJple ameng more
than 1.000 showed their bands.
Hadland s&id he beOeved in what tbe
administration wis dolni 'and lurgedithe
studenl.! to "look at the people bel\ioo
the peace movement." He warned
students that i! radicals were to spread
violence to local area$, . ro~~tly,e:,s
Wo1,Jld take up anrii'. to deftntf their
ttghi.!.
' .. '
NEW YORK CAP) -:rife stock 111arkel
recovered, surged upl.-ard, revet$ln1 Us
early session losses lat~ this afternoon In
stepped-up trading. '(See quotations,
Pa1es 10-11),
-Isra.elis on
Huge Tank Force.· Invades Leba~n
•1 'Uidled Prtu' llternaUoaal
The Arab naUons sakl 100 fsraeli tanks
andrl,000 : tqrantrymen invaded Southern
Lebanon tQday and that Lebanon, Syri11
and Iraq were ftghting back in tl'le
bfgge.!l Mideast battle sfuce the 1967
war. The U.N. Security Counc!l was
caUed into·emergency session.
Israel said its armored columns with
aerial support knifed into Lebanon to
wipe out lUab ·,Uirrill& bl.ses which
had launched tl .attp.cks agatnsi :22 Israeli
settlements in the past 40 months. Fierce
aerial battles broke out and Israel said
it shot down three 'Syrian MIG .17s.
Parents Set
For Discussion
On Principal
Parents with opposing viewpoints about
LeBard School Prir>qipal C h a r 1 o m a
Schwankovsky are expected to confront
tr:u.stees of the Huntington Beach City
School District tonight.
·S. A. Moffett, district superintendent,
admitted today he is anticipating a CGn-
fronLation and said the matter , wJll be
discussed by trustees and top level
district administrators duririg a closed·
door executive session at tol\ight's
meeting.
The board's· regular business meeting ·
gets under way at 7:30 p.m. in the
library at Dwyer SChool: '
"I'd rather not go inlD the details
until trustee! hav.e a chance to talk
It over," Moffett said \his morning. Mr• -iiilc~ l\11 ..,.._
at Liiiii;d,l'lince Ifie iChool ojittiid W..'
yean ago. Prior to that she was princl)lll
of Peterson School for one year. .
"We hive had a few comp&aints since
the school opened three years ·ago,''
Moffett said. "But they were mosttv
of a minor natw-e."
"We simply need to revi.ew the situa-
tion. No action has been taken and
I don 't know what will happen," Moffett
said.
Ne wport Beach
Orange Freeway
Group Picked
Officers have been elected and meeting
dates set for Newport Beach's Orange
Freeway Citizens Study Committee.
Steve Auld has been elected chairman;
Merrell Skilling, vice chairman and Han-
cock (Bill)'Banning Ill , secretary.
Meetings will be held al 7:30 p.m.
the first Wednesday of each month at
the city Parks, Beaches and Recreation
Department headquarters, 1714 \V.
Balboa Blvd. A special meeting will
be held there May 27 to hear from
Sid Ellcks, project engineer for the
Orange Freeway with the state Division
of Highways, and Cris · C~ls. chairman
of an Orange Free.way citizens com-
mittee in Huntington Beach.
The cities or Costa ·Mesi and Fountain
Valley also have appointed citizen study
cort1mittees to work with the division
of highways in planning the freeway.
The state highway engineers are con-
sidering plans that would bring the
Orange Freeway down the Santa · Ana
River to a t'ennlnus with the Pacific
Coast Freeway either on the West
Newport or Huntington Beach side. of
the channel. . ·
Officials of CGaslal clUes afe pretty
well agreed Uie Ora nge Freeway shou1d
terminate at the Santa ,Diego Freeway
and not come to the coast. •
The state· highway engineers are still
several monthA· away from presenf.Vlg
their design plans and holding a public
ht:arlng, but the citizens committees ace
gearing up !or a possible battle.
Post Office Age ncy.
()K'd by Comm ittee
W ASHlNGTON (UPI l -ThC House
Poat Office Committee has approved
creation of an independent government
ag~ocy--;11!1 the po,ot ofr\ce, .~s ~. of"t~ '~ , h a~ ,vidold , Ove
• !her I 'lldl,ooe ~r . ~rker" m I'~ · l'~·Mke. : • ' " · . ~1(~1 provlde l~~o 11l·m•n'
, or •ktora to ron. .. w~l wouJCf <l led t1*1unl1ed Sta'tes P,Olla} ~!'Vice.,
Nine of lhe 41roctor1 would be appolni.d
by the Preiidenr. They would .111 ',\ul'Tt
cho0se lhe l Postm~s,ter Gencr81 :a~ .hll
doi>!lty who would Jo'• ll~m .on :!ht. boai'd: ' "r ' •
The bait~ rll(l<d lhlougbout the day
in' Ul4; 1.lal-JJy,oun ~; of HIA:•n.' six
to seven miles nortn of the Israeli border
and 32 flJlles liOUtheast of Beirut. A
Beirut m.illtaiy spokesman said fierce
Arab counterattacks had stalled the
Jsraell push. .
A spokesman for the· Palestinian Arm·
ed Struggle Command said the .Israelis
attempted to drop ~ratroops illto south ~banon, but gave ho 'de tan,. He said
the guerrillas .engaged lhe lstaeli forces
in. "hand to hand fighting." . .
There was no Israeli .confJrmatipn of
the report but a spokesman said 11
AWAITiNG COUNCl t 'S WORD
Positive Thll)l<or T .,,_
\
Valley Negative
,
About Positive . . .
Thinking Plen
By TERRY COVlLLE
Of tfle O.llr 'llet Sl•ll ,
The· Power or ·po~itJv'e .thin!tfng . could
do a lot of good. 1n Fountain Valley,
says David Tanner,' who wanis a liCense
to sell his outlook inskle lQe city.
But negative 'tblllklng on the, part· of
the .city council may halt Tariner's bid
to open up a mail.order mentology
course, which he describes as mind
pow~r motivaUon, ,
The key to the ir apparent Unpiase
ls the Utile word "Hypriosis." .
Tanner, a resident 'of Fountain Valley,·
Wrote it on his application !Or a cily
business license and that jumped the
price froin $35 a year to $100 a day .
And .he ref Uses to . scratch the word
from bis applic~Uon.
City laWs place hypnosis-in 'the ii.me
bracket wit~ p~lmlstcy, as tr o 1 o g y,,
phrenology ai1d rortwie lel\ing. And ihat's
an expensive bracket for. a J>uslness.
"I'm not a profeS!lonaf. ~ypoOtlst· or
charlatan o/ any type," , Tanner nys
~ml!hatlcally : "Bu~ ~rf of What ·1· do
1s, 1n essence. hypnollsm .. If you give
positive suggesUoos · to · a pel'JOO . thit
~an be called ~nmotism." . . .
What Tanner hope.a to ol(i;r .to citizens
is a mall.order course )In positive think·
ing. Jt 'consist! of a~ series of wHtten
lectures explaining how an Individual
may achieve-a ~rtakl goal. ,
Topics he has prepared lncJUde deep
relaxation; ph,y~lcal )¥ell·betng, ·memory
~er,1 macnetic . persooa}ity, stU CGn-·
fldence, restf1:1I sltep apd flna~fal 'suc-
cess .. • • • • r
"About •80 percerlt · of my business
would b;e thr~.the !9ajl," T1,1nner ex-
plained. The · oiher 20 perce~ i,!lclucles
personal d>unsellng where he reels the
label "hypnotism" might be applied.
'\It iM11t crlUcal · lo.. me,". he .. ad~
"l have a' business in Costa Meu. But
a lot or friends· have asked me~ for
personal ~~vice and , I fj!el I can help
people wilti this pqslt.lve , thinking ap-proach. n, • • , ' ' •
Tanner's . ·u:perit~e. w.ith positive
thlnkh1g began in the late 1950's as he
helped organize a compaoy highly suc-
cudi.il; jn the, ;'learn~ wh!l,e .1oy ·,.a~''
hours after U1e attack began 1hat Israeli
troops were still in enemy territory.
Lebanon, in· a letter to' ihe · Security
Council, asked for tlie·meeting, l>ecause
of what it calle<' an "invasion" of
Le.banori. It said the lighUng raft(I on
the slopes of Mount Hennon near the
occupied Golan Heights aod that the
lsi'eali s were forced to call off'tbe attack
despife Israeli air aupremacy.
A spokesman in Beirut aald Lebanese
g\(nners scored a direct hit ·on an Israeli
a!nmunltlon vehicle producing a huae
explosion. Arab sources reported as
many as 21 Israeli tanks knocked out.
.Valley Tax~
Won't Go Up;
Bqdget Stahle
Foun.taln Valley homeowners an pat
their billfolds a. litUe more .softly ttm
y~ar -city tues aren't aoing up.
City councilmen reviewed th e
preUmlnaey budget for lm7t ·.Monday
night -all '2,6S8,007 of it.
.The}' made only one change, adding
$200 for the fee to join the NattoM.l
League of Cities.
.Arter~ three-hour study stsslon •was
over, cty flnanct director Howard
St.ephens slumped in his chair, surpriffd
but ha,ppy ao Iew chariges were made. !' rare instance when city counclJa review .Judgets.. ·he said. ~ •
The city plans to spend $6MI Ml more
in 1m11 than ll hu tbil '..,· 8ut
the tar'ttte oOf.15 woo•t'~ c~i.i.
City .. offidals e'?'CI n.1t11.-1o n>U
Into clly ooden duriha JW0.71, The eltra
1145,llOO · l10I reflected lo ._,. lo be spe~ Ior the ye~r ·is part of a planned
r~ery-e the city i$ building each year
to pay /or the $700,000 cost ol con.
structrng adltitioos to the police depart-
ml?J)t.1 community center and corparaUon
yards In the ~el't four to /i..-e years •.
'.'That' reserve fund will . allow us to ~u1!d ·those addiUons without a bOnd
issue or raising taxes," J im Hollywood
asslstant to the ci ty manager, explained.'
nie 1970-71 . bud,el ·is a roflectlon o(
City Manager James Neal's ten-year bod~et, but squeezed together more
rapidly than espected.
"On the 10-year budget we expected
an average population growth of 3 000 ~r year," Hollywood said. "Now it 1C:Ots
like the PoPUlation will jump by 1 000 next year." · 1
This forced greater e1peoditures but
Stephens told councilmen the city' can
haDdle tt without asking far more taz rnone:r..
Se'v.iral quesUona on the budget were ~sked by councilmen, but most. were
Items of explanation. One thought which seem~ to prevail Monday night was
that wrks and recreation money should
(See BUDGET, Poge J)
SCOTT . ON FLOOR
BUT ASKS QUIET
WASHINGTON CAP) -Sen. Hugh
ScoU, (R-Ba.,) took the Senate floor
today to say oothins.
" He ·stood, g~t recognition, and aaid :
I have nothing to say. t think that
whp•. this country could use more than
a~ythjng rig.ht oow Is a moment of mltnce."
Orange <:out
1 ·····Weather
' Anolh~.groovy day looms on the
Orange Coast horir.on wtth aunny •ii" c~llll the momln1 patchy
clouds and temperatures in the
middle sevenUei.
INSIDE TODAY
The ·mwborn trvi11e Commun.
ih/ Theater make1 an 111Uplmoui
de-buc -sweeping three top
awardl at the Riuerside one-act
festival. S e e Enterkdnme11t
POI/< 19 . 2:~jdiAt~ J .. nd. ii/bi :i~·~~··1 tlz~n& ... "'"" fllJ ~ ·neuo.I.. mao.~1ii ,,\J ... ~"'!!""!!<I : '\\ t}I~>' I~· ,.11 JAi , .Ariae1es' I al~. ' y ,; I~.; \ho c~ • " 11·r. ::,'= n
' 'I~ ' •1 4 •, '
·~· ,s, partnert tiegen '*q.ittlng, ~h ~lttt lf : ::r:' -11 , ~f throat.I.so I aot ,oyf.". ~ . : ; •. ; ••1,.,... •-, '""' , t•11
ul frvm the 'aleep,1tea~~j t'OU~., ::=."-'" , .. /~ \'::..::'"' ... ;i
which T"1ner• alys w'4!f11 q1:11Ji eff~jve, ~-14 ''*"-'' be has J now • ttrawn •UP hlf , maJ~ =~·.,, •; · :=. ,..,.. ,,.,: b!islness . and, cqlned the 'ft'Ord "'iDei... M9rrlltl Llffllttt ' w ... ,. *'" ..,
, ' (Ste MEN'!'OLOGY,Jii1e I) • , '
j 1l" •• I J ·i -.• ' . ' ! ... '"~
' • I
·-
I
I DAJL'° PJlu1 .. Tlleldu, t.1«1 13) l'
l..A, Jfoseow Lose
Montreal Given
Olympics in '76
AMSTERDMt 'AP) -Montreal was
awarded tbe 1976 Olympic Games today
ln a surprise victory over Moscow and
Los Angeles.
Moscow had been favored le< the
Gamea. and 1au, the. official · Soviet
agency, sent out a bulletin from Moscow
two hours earlier that they had been
awarded Moscow.
The aMouncement was withdrawn
shortly afterward without an explanaUon.
It's the first time any of tbe Games,
Winter or Swnmer, has gone to a Cana·
dia.n city. This is in keeping wil.b the
lntunailoll&I Olympic Committee policy
c: spreading the Games around to new
areas ..
Moscow had betn favored because of
its renowned alhleUc ·ta~iUtles plus the
fp.ct that the Games never have betn
held in an Iron Curtain country.
The Los Angeles bld was based on
the fact the year would coincide with
the United States• 200!.b anniversary.
Tbey Wet< held In Loa Angeles Iii 1912
Beach Girl
Kidnaped;
Suspect Held
Miu Peal'IOD 'said she 8Cl'Umed to
for arraignment on charges or kidnaplng
a Huntington Beach girl In COila Mesa
and taking her u far lJ Coron1, where
she scrumed to a sheriffs deputy for
help.
Jdln W. Hagadorn, 26, of 117 Whitefield
Ave., Anaheim, WlJ booked in to
Rlveraide C:Ounty Jail last Friday on
suspicion of kidnap and turned over
to Costa Mesa police.
Stephan1e Pearson. 13, ol 919 o
Stralllcona Drive, HunUngton Beach, told
Patrolman Chuck Hoffard she repeatedly
tried to stop the stran1e abductioo from
a market parking Jot.
Miss Person said she screamed to
occupants of one car at the e>ranie
Coast College parking lot for help as
HagadOin drove up there, but no one
came to her aid.
11le girl said she was grabbed in
11 chokehold Friday in · the lot of 2701
Harbor Blvd., and shoved into her car
with a sharp, b-object at her
neck.
"I need YOU?' car,'" she quoted the
abductor as saying.
Miss Pearson told lnve,tlgators a
hlack·and·whlte patrol car pulled out
of a side street in Corona just after
they tumed off the freeway and she
was warned to keep quiet.
Instead, she screamed, saying the ab-
ductor grabbed her hair and yanked
tier to the seat. turning onto a aide
road, but Deputy Ed Von Pringle's at.-
tention tiad been attracted.
He foUowed Miss Peanon'a car, pulled
It over and she leaped out and ran
to safety, leading to Hagadom's arrest.
Proceedings against. Ha1adom were
still in session ln Harbor Judicial District
Court this morning.
Pre-school Set
For Beach Kids
Pre-school day classes for boys and
girl> aged 2 to 5 will be offered by
the Huntington Beach YMCA beginning
!day 22.
Dally 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. se,,slons will
feature story telling, creative arts and
crafts, nursery rhymes, music, physical
fitness, juice and cookies.
PrMegistration forms are available
now from tbe YMCA, 17931 Beach Blvd.,
Suite R. Fees are $16 for Y members
and $20 for non-members.
DAILY PILOT
OllAifG~ COAST PVl\.IPllHG COMPANY
Robert N. W11d
l'1t•kltnl .,._ PllM\t""" ·J,,. R. C111l1y
Vlel' '"°'~I Mid Gllttr•I Mllnlltl'
Tho11111 K11vil
IEd!lor
Tlie111a1 A. M111pki11•
M ..... lrtg E411or
A1b1rt W. l1t11
An«l9tl E411or
H_,l .. fe• a..dl Offlc.e
17175 t.1&h l111l1w1r4
M1ili1WJ Adoilr1111 P.O. lea 7t0, 92641
OtMP OHleM
L..IUM 11&(11: ttt ,..,.II A-~'-M1 .. : U0 Wut Ill' i1r .. 1
and In St. Louis In 1904.
The announctment was made by Avery
Brundage, U.S. president of the Intern&·
tional Olympic Committee.
Montreal wu chosen on the second
ballot, getting 41 voes to 21 for Moscow.
Ooe vote was blank.
Los Angeles, the third city bidding
for the Games, apparently w a s
eliminated in the flrst vote. But Brun-
dage did not immediately say how the
first voting wenL
Montreal'• aelection u the city for
the games ln 1976 virtually knocked
out the bid by Vancouver, B.C., for
the Winter Games. Vancouver,... Denver,
Sion, Swtturland, and Tampere, Finland,
are trying to land the Winter Gamet.
From Page J
MENTO LOGY ••
tology'' to describe tt.
"It's basically a matter of building
confidence In a person lhroogh the repetl·
tion of positive suggestions," be said.
Tanner has lived in Fountain Valley
for five years. He served aa co-chairman
of the city's indiJStrial airpark committee
which was disbanded a year ago,
He spoke to a class at Lamb School
in early February OD the power of
positive thinking.
"I wonder if +that was legal?" he
now laughs.
Tanner plans to fight dty hall over
ft.a ' $100.a-day fe for hypnotilm, but he'a not greatly concerned about lt.
"I don't greaUy need this business
or I'd really get mad. But I plan to
give them (dty councilmen) every
chance tO approve my appUcatlon."
The city cooncll baa made no r_ulln!!
on Tanner's applicaUon. It was placeid
in the 1100 claas by finance directoT
Howard Stephens who said the word
hypnl'.l'lia: clearly puts It In that ranee.
City Attorney Thomas Wood r u If,
however, hu been asked by the council
to revise the buaine11 lle61se ordinance,
but not neceaaarU,y. in Tanner's favor.
A majority of the council wanted such
itema as pl1mlatry and astrology clearly
prolllblted.
"I'm not a carny man, not going
to put up a tert or a:i111s." Tanner
exclaims, pointing out that 1 u c h
ordinances were establilhtd to prohibit
8YJlll' type operaUnna.
"You really might c1aslify me aa a
profetalonal liatener," he concluded, in.
dlcating he'll be listening for the city
council's final word on his business May
19.
90 MPH Chase
Brings Arrest
O.f Grove Wife
A Garden Grove housewife capped an
argument with her husband Monday by
leading a Callfom1a Highway patrolman
on a 90-mile an bour chase on the
Santa Ana and Riverside freeways.
Mrs. Cynthia Eisiminger, 22, was ar.
rested Monday for reckless driving after
her car twice rammed the patrolman's
vehicle, turning it over after slamming
both cars into the c e n t e r divider of
the Rlvel'8ide Freeway east of Lemon
Street in Anaheim.
Patrolman David Codrornac began the
pursuit when Mrs. Eiseirninger allegedly
ran a red light at SO miles an hour
al Artesia Avenue and Valley View Street
near the Oranae-IM Angeles County line.
She reportedly oped onto the Santa
Ana Freeway southbound, then to the
Riverside Freeway where she weaved
in and out between cars with the
patrolman in hot pursuit. .
Ofncer Codromac passed the woman's
small foreign car at the Lemon Street
offramp. Her car then rammed hJs vehi·
cle in the rear sending It into a broadside
spin and then bounced tnto the patrol
c:ir again. sending both vehicles into
a center divider.
111e CHP unit rolled over. Codromac
suffered a twisttd right ann and Mrs.
Elstminger was treated for minor ln·
juries, according to CHP reports.
Peace, Unity Asked
VATICAN CITY (UPI) -Pope Paul
VI and the yjsiUng patriarch of the
Armenian church in the Soviet Union,
CatholiCOll Vazgen I, today issued a joint
declar.Uon caUing on world leaders to
end wars, al'ld a pledge to work tos:ether
for church unity.
'Arnold' and Her Brood
Piglets romp at mother's side at Lafulla Canyon shelter of Society for Prevention o Cruelty to
Animals. Despite obvious discre.P,ancy, sow's name
is 'Arnold! She has been a resident of the shelter
for the past 18 months. She gave birtl\ to 13 piilets ·
May 2. Three have since been given away ,nd are
reportedly adjuaUng well to the bottle. Papa has
been placed on a foster farm.
Cambodia Coast Blocked
Soutlt. Vietnam Halts Incoming Red Supplies
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -South Vie~
nam has set up a blockade off the
Cambodian coast in an effort to halt
incoming supplies for the Viet Cong,
South Vietnamese Vice President Nguyen
Cao Ky said today.
'The United States said it was halting
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong ships
there but sa1d this was not a blockade.
At the same time South Vietnam sent
gunboats 50 miles farther up the A1ekong
River above the cambodian capilal of
Phnom Penh in a new example of
cooperation between the Saigon and
Phnom Penh governments in their joint
struggle against the Communists.
UPI correspondent Walter Whitehead
reported from Neak Luong, 30. miles
down the Mekon1 from Phnom Penh,
that Ky told newsmen the South Viet·
namese navy was stopping ships of third
naUons and searching l;}lem for Com·
munist supplies.
In the past both the Soviet Union
and Communist China have landed .su~
plies at the port of Slhanoukville but
there was no indication of any of their
ships had been halted by ,the South
Vi.~tnamese. Cambodia had cut the
"Sihanoukville Trail" leading from the
port lo South Vietnam.
The U.S. Military Command in Saigon
said U.S. Navy vessels were operating
in the same area as the South Viet·
namese navy but a spokesman insisted,
"This i!l not a blockade." A spokesman
for Gen. Creighton W. Abrams said,
"no third country" vessels w o u 1 d be
s~p~d by U.S. ships or interfered
\\·Jth n1 any way.
The spokesman said the U.S. vessels
were positioned to stop "North Viet·
namese and Viet Cong ships trying
to bring supplies into Cambodian ter·
ritory. The bulk of the allied f1ett was
believed positioned opposite Phu Quoc
Island, which also Ls a South Vietnp.mese
province.
"The Cambodian government has been
informed," the U.S. spokesman said.
2 Chicken Places Take
$3,800 Lickin' by Hoods
Two Colonel Sanders Kentucky Fried
Chicken restaurants in Seal Beach and
Huntington Beach have taken a lickin'
of their own.
Two gunmen got their licks in to
the ex.tent of $3,800, leaving the
restaurant managers lltUe to do but
cry "foul" Ulis morning.
At the Huntington Beach location, the
robber took up the restaurant's offer
of a bucketful -only he crammed
$800 into it rather thart chickens.
Both robberies occurred Monday within
two hours of each other.
In Seal Beach, assistant manager
Lawrenct Diiedzic,'27, was just brewing
his morning coffee at the restaurant
on 12UI Los Alamitos Blvd., when the
holdup man pointed a gun at him and
ordered him to open the vault, police
said.
From Page l
BUDGET ...
be continually increased, as it is in
this budiet.
It was also noted by Councilman Ron
Shenkman that two motorcycles for the
Police Department were written into
the budget.
''When I asked for them a couple
of months ago I thought I would be
shot out of my seat. I'm happy to
see them he!'!," he said.
Some of the highest priced items in
the budget include the police department.
$481,000 ; fire department, $343,000; and
the adminittratlon and engineering: in
public works, $244,481.
The total budget for parks and recrea·
tton is $188,311, up some $65,000 from
this year.
Councilmen indicated they would set
1 public hearing on the budget for June
2. It must be adopted by the first
of July.
The robber took aR estimated $3.000
from the floor safe, then handcuffed
Dzledzic to the toilet in the women's
restroom, according to investigators.
\Vhen he was freed, around 8:45 a.m.,
Dziedzic discovered that the bandit had
also made off with his 1963 station
wagon.
Police, who discovered the car aban·
doned on a Rossmoor Street this morn·
ing, believe the robber gained access
through the roof and spent the nlght
in the restaurant.
About two hours later, a masked bandit
with a telescopically equipped rifle hit
the Colonel Sanders Huntington Beach
restaurant at 19091 Brookhurst St. and
escaped with $800 in a fried chicken
bucket.
"Get a bucket and lid and put all
the money in lt," he told Manager
Edward Geronilla, according to police
reports.
He then followed Geronil\a to the safe,
took out the money, and Jocked him
into a walk-in refrigerator, investi&ators
said.
The robber's face. Geronilla gaid, was
obscured by a 6hopping bag which had
silts cut in it for the eyes and mouth.
Win11ers Listed
For Science Fair
Social science fair \\·inners in the Ocean
View School District have been an-
nounced by d i ll t r i c t Superintendent
Clarence llall.
First place v.1inners In the seventh
grade division ar~ Debbie Smith, Marine
View ; Fred Zinn, Harbour View, and
Alice Sung, Rancho View.
EiRhlh grade first place winners are
Greg Smith, Harbour View; Sharon
Bruns. Harbour View, and Jeff Grider,
~torine View.
Despite the South Vietnamese-cam·
bodiari cooperation, a crisis in relations
blew up over the death of a South
Vietnamese petty officer beaten·by pam-
bodlan students Monday night irl Phnom
Penh in a new outbreak of traditional
Cambodian-Vietnamese hosUliUes.
Six students were arrested and Saigon
Ambassador Tham Huy Ty told reporters
he had lodged the strongest protest.
Ky told a news conference in Neak
Luong, the Cambodian river town ca~
tured by Saigon marines last Sunday,
that the blockade began last Satµrday
and covered about hall the Cambodian
coastline - a 7~mile stretch between
Kompong Sam, formerly Slhanoukville,
and the Vietnam border.
He said the blockade was begun in
agreement with the new Cambodian
government of Premier Lon Nol and
that no American Navy vessels are in-
volved. Foreign shipa, he said, are being
stopped and searched for arms and . sup-
plies destined for the Viet Conj and
North Vietnamese.
The SouUt Vietnamese vice. president
sa.id his nation's troops are willing to
stay in Cambodia as long as needed.
"The day they (the Cambodians) feel
they are strong enough to flght the
North Vietnamese Communists," he said,
"then we will go home."
YouthDrama Unit
Plans Auditions
Aud!Uons for Neil Slmon'a comedy
''Come Blow Your Horn" will start at
7:30 tonight at Dwyer School, 1502 Palm
Ave.
The comedy Is sponsored by the Youth
Drama Workshop of Huntington Beach.
For further information call Mrs. Hilda
Nauman, 968-6876, aiter 6 p.m.
• Individuals with an interest in set de-
sign and construction. makeup or any
backstage work should also attend to·
night's auditions or phone Mrs. Nauman.
Blackmun
I
Confirmed
By Se)jlate
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Judge Horry
A. Blackmun d Minnesota was confirmed
as a Supreme Court ~ustiee by the Senate
today, ending an abrasive dispute with
Preiident Nixon that penilted for alm06&
a year. The vote was 34-0.
The conllrmaU~ vote oo the federal
appeals court judge came two days abort;
of the anniversary of the rulgnation
ot JIJ8llce Abe Fortas, which created
the vacancy. ,
Nixon was twice rebu'ffed by the Senate
on hla nomlnaUon of Southern federal
judges to the court -Clement F. Haynaworth Jr. of South Carolina and
G. Harrold Carswojl Ii Florida.
He then tlll'll6d t9 Blackmun, a IUelong
friend of Chief Just.lee Warren E. Burier.
and a judge on tbe 8th U.S. Circuit,
Court of Appeals einee ltU.
No serious oppoe:IUon was railed
against Blactmun'1 nominlUoo. He won
the highest. endor9ement oi the America!)
Bar Astoeiation 'and wu unanimouslr
aooroved by the Senate Judiciary eom-
mittee, 17 to o.
Planning Aide
Interim Valley
Plan Director
A Costa Mesa planning comultant this
week will take control of the Fountain
Valley planning department on a tem~
porary basl!.
Ted B. Adsit, program coordinator for'
urban affairs al UCI, bas been hired
by the city as planning consultant oi
a part-time contract until a pla~
director Is selected by the city council.
Adsit will sit in at plituilng commissiori
and city councll meetings and appeaf
in city hall on certain days to approve
plans, tract maps and other items sub-
mitted to the planning department. . '
The city's former planning director;
Stan Mansfield, quit two months aio
to take a !: I m i I a r job in northern
California, and now senior planner Ned'
Parsons has resigned to enter private. industry. ,.,
Parsons had been rwmlnf the dtpal'P
ment as a substitute untl a t>lannin't
director was to be named. Now, ne·
plans to leave the. city May 22.
Adsit, a planning and admWstratiVt
lecturer, was consultant to the Ur~ Lind InsUtute'.s cltluru: steering com-
mittee In Huntington Beacb wbicb cam,'
up with a modenPzaUon.plan for the city.,
He wu also a plaMlng direet"or for Po-.
mona and other cities before taking ~
UCI PoJillon.
The citY council is scheduled to tn-'
terview four applicants for the plannilg
head post May 25. A decision on a
new director is erpected that week
according to City Manager James Neal. 1. ,
Baseball League Set
By American Legion
The HunUngton Valley Amer I ca Jl
Legion Post 708 will sponsor a baseball'
league for Huntington Beach and Foun:
tain Valley High School students up to
19 years of age.
Tryouts and eignups have been scheduf·
ed for 12:30 p.m. May 18 and 17 ori.
the Fountain Valley High School dia-
mond.
A registration fee of $15 is required.
Further information is available from
Roy Schimaji at 962·5602.
N ....... I 8t•Cll: 2:111 WHI &&11111 ll)!lfn1~
U11 Cll-i.1 »S Nllrlll £1 (I.ff! ....... , Huntington Network
•
Officials Get Connected
Cot a query for a city official in Hunt-
ington Beach? You'll llOOn find it eaaler
to call up $1d check It out.
A neW '290,000 telephone systtm 111 be-
ing installed and will be in operation
June 29. It will enable resldent.s to call
most city oHlce5 directly wtthou1 going
through the city hall awltchboard.
The system, called 'Centrex, la: being
lnmlled by the General Telephone Com-
pany. Jeny Suptroaw of General Tele.
phone said that each clly departmenl
will have a number which wlU be listed
In the directory. A list of lhe new num.
ben will be published before June 20.
In addition to bringing city oUlcers
closer to the public, city administrator
Doyle Mlller explained that the ntw net~
work will allow c!Oller control of long
dl!tance cans by city staff.
Each dtparomnt wlU receive separate
accounting ror toll calls. Miiier uplained
that this wtll halp In deciding In the fu·
ture the amount of extended calling area
linu needed to conduct business. Supernaw said that instead Gf havlDS
•
just a few lines connected to a central
switchboard, city hall will have hundred,,
ol lines available for incoming calls.
Centrex allows the pcllce, nre and Ille--
guard services to have 1pecl.al emer·
gency numbers in addltton· to business
num~rs, Supernaw explained.
Flre Chief Ray Picard &aid that tele-
phone stickers with the new emergency
number11 for the city wUI be dl§trtbuted
to t'''ry residence and busln'M in the
city so that the new numbers can be
readily available on telephones.
•
Here's 11Jokin9 at You .
FUii grown ostrich, a most curious bird , take a bead with his bill on
camera lens during confrontalion with photngrapber, found by nstrlcb
to be an equally curious bird. Confronta·Uon took rlace at Lion Courr
try Safari outside Laguna Beach. Ostrich is one o 52 o! the big bird•
\\1ho, along 'vith other '"'ild animals, will 1neet tourists eyebell·to-cye--, .•.
ball \Vben game presen·c opens next month.
•
•
' • •
Today'• Fbull
.
N.Y. Stoeks
•
VOL. 63, NO. 113, 2 SECTIONS, 26 · PAGES ORANGE COUN1Y, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 12, ·1970 TEN CENTS
Plane
By 1110MAS FORTUNE
Of *' o.11'1' 'Ott Sl•ft
The first mulUple • senaor, continuou!
aircraft noise monitoring system in the
eountry is being installed in Newport
.Beach beginning today.
The city did not solicit ln!lallation of
the noise meuuriq apparatus -it i.s an
independent Jroject of the Nortronic!
Dl•iaion or Northrop Corporation, Anl-
helm.
Presentations oC what the JY9lem will •
Montreal
&ets 1976
Olympics
AMSTERDAM 'AP) -Montreal wa1
awarded the 1976 Olympic Games today
ln a surprise victory over Moscow and
Los Angeles.
Moscow had been ravll!'ed for the
Games, and Tass, the official Soviet
a.gency, sent out a bulletin from Moscow
De llVtr was picked as site of
the 1976 Wiii,er Olympic Games
Tuelday shortly after the Inter·
national Olympic Committee, in
a surprise move, gave the Sum-
, 1ner Games to Montreal.
two hours earlier that they had been
ay.'arded to Moscow.
The announcement was withdrawn
1hortly afterward without an explanation.
It's the first time any of the Games,
Winter or Summer, bas gone to a Cana·
dian city. Thi.!J is in keeping with the
Jaternational Olytnpic Committee policy cf spreedin( th8 Games .,round to oe"
areas.
_Moscow had been fC,Gtt.d because ot
Ill renowoed athletk fadllties plus tilt
fai:t thal the Games MVtr have been
held In an Iron Curtain country.
The Los Angeles bid was based on
the fact the year would coincide with
the United States' 200!.h anniversary.
They were held in Los Angeles in 1932
and in St. Louls in 1904.
The announcement was made by Avery
Brundage, U.S. president of the Interna-
tional Olympic CommiUee.
Montreal was chosen on the second
ballot, getting 41 voes to 28 for Moscow.
One vote was blank.
Los Angeles, the third city bidding
for the Games, apparently w a s
,!iminated in the first vote. But Brun-
dage did not immediately say how the
f.lrst voling went.
Montreal's selection as the city for
the games in 1976 vl.rtually knocked
out the bid ·by Vancouver, B.C., for
the Winter Games. Vancouver, Denver,
Slon, Switzerland, and Tampere. Finland,
were trying to land the Winter Gamel.
Newport Beach
Orange Freeway
Group Picked
'Officers have been elected and meeting
dates set for Newport Beach's Orqe
Freeway Citizens Study Committee.
'Steve Auld hu been elected chairman ;
Pifcrrell Skilling, vice chairman and Han-
cbck (BUI) BaMing III, secretar)'.
':'Meet.lngs will be beld at 7:30 p.m.
Uie first WedneSday of each month at
ll'le city Parks, Beaches and Recreation
Department beadqbarters, 1714 W.
Balboa Blvd. A special meetin& will
be held there May 27 to bur from
Sid ElickJ, project eniineer for the
Orange Freeway with the slate Dlvi.Jion
of' Highways, and Cris Cris, dWr-
of an Orange Freeway dtlzenl ~
mlttee In Huntington Beach.. ~
-The cities of Costa 'Mesa and Fountain
\111ey al,o have appointed cltiatn study'
committees to work with the dlyiaion
l'lf highways in planning the freeway. The state highway engineers art con-
~lderinc plam that would bring lbe
Qtange Freeway down the Santa Ana
Iver to a terminus with the Piciiic
Fneway either 011 the West ::'.!i~, .. ~po~ r Hunllngton Beach side of
Uie ch
Officials of coastal cities are pretty
well agreed the Orange Freeway should
terminate at the Santa Diego Freeway
and oot come to the Coast. .. ST~IL /llARKET
NE\V YORK (AP) -The stock market
recovered. surged upward, reverting its
tarly session losses late this afternoon in
11.eppcd-up trading. (See quotaOOM,
Pagts 10.11 ).
OttUnlng stocks outnumbtttd advanc-
rs three to one among ls!!Ues traded on
lhe New York Stock Exchange.
Noise Monitor Installed • Ill Newport
do were made by N•throp repraenta-
tivea to the Newport City Council Monday
and ·the Oranse County Board cl super-
visors. toady.
Installation of the)~ har.dw11e began
today and the systeQt will be in operation
June J.
Four noise mooitOl;lJ'I& sUJS9n a.re be-
ing located in the c0niirlunit1: The air-
craft noile they recCl'd is to ·be-rel1yed
to a1 central at1tioO 1t Oraage ·eounty
Altpoft ind sent on to 1 computer 1t
Nortl>rop. .
The computer on a round-the<lock
basis will put out a print.out &heet re.
confine the Ume ol elth filght, the air
carrier ind f1igbt munber and the noise
in decibels heard on the cround 1t each
Of the four polnta in the community.
Newport · CouneilTQln Milan Do.st1l
asked · if the system wUI be able to de.
tennlne which specific aircraft violates a
.specific noise standard. ·
Gordon L. Bricken, l)'ltema engineer, said it all would be MCOrdfld on the print..
out sheeUi and even could be observed on
a display panel as the airplanes passed
over the sensors.
Bricken said Northrop will own and
operate the system aod Intends to ana-
lyze the data for its own purposes but
will make it avallable to legttimate rt:p.
resentatives cl the community and a.ir4
port who r<qUelll it.
E. James Normal\, maoager of ad-
vanctd procrams, sald Northrop saw a
potential new market aru aod wanta to
prove lhe point Ufat it has an optimum
sy1tem. While proving its wototype •Y~
tern it will make Information available
without chlrge.
The ·sensor devices will be located one
directly under tbe airport takeoff pat-
tem on Mesa 'Road Drive ln Santa Ana
Heiabt.s, one near Irvine Avenue and Sfiin-
liago Drive, one acroas· lhe UpPtr Bay
near the new Eutbluff E!ahentary
School and one In Dover Shorts, provid-
ing a diamond pattern P,!anq will . fly
through.
Bi-ickt11 sald the sensars will be abJe to
provide the relatloll5hip between wind,
temperatur~. flight proctdures and noise.
·With thl1 data, effectlvenes.s of noise
aba.~ent procedures tan be evaJuated.
He said the state of California. soon is
a:oJng to have modeJ legislation for man-
(S.. MONITOR. Pap Zl
Israelis -on · Attacl{
Huge Tank Force Invades Lebanon
• 1
•••
' '
By United Preas International
The Arab nations ·laid 100 Israeli tanks
and 2,000 infantrymen invaded Southern
Lebanon today and that Lebanon, Syria
and Iraq were fighting back in the
biggest Mideast battie since the 1967
war. The U.N. Security Council was
called into emergency session.
Israel said its armored columns with
aerial support knifed into Lebanon lo
wipe out Arab guerrilla bases which
had launched 61 altatks against 2Z Israeli
selUements in the past 40 months. Fierce
aerial battles broke out and Israel saiJI'
it shot down three Syrian MIG.17s. (
Senate Votes
• Confirmation
The battle raged throughout the day
In the Marj1youn area of Lebanon six
lo seven miles nortn of the Israeli border
and 32 miles .southeast of Beirut. A
Beirut military spokesman said fierce
Ar•b cou nterattacks had stalled the
Israeli push.
A spokesman for the Palestinian Arm-
ed Struggle Command said the Israelis
attempted to drop paratroops into aouth
Lebanon, but gave. no details. He said
the guerrillas engaged the Israeli forces
in "hand to hand fighting."
There Wal no Israeli confirmation or
the report but a spokesman Aid 11
Position Stated
hours after the attack began that Israeli
troops -were still in enemy territory.
Lebanon, in a letter td the Security
. Council, asked for the meeting because
of what it called an "invasion" o1
Lebanon. Jt said the fighting raged 01'
the slopes of Mount Hennon near the
occupied Golan Heights and that the
lsrf"alis were forced to call off the attack
despite Israeli air supremacy.
A spokesman in Beirut said Lebanese
gunners scored a direct hit on an Israeli
ammunition vehicle producing a huge
explosion. Arab sources reported as
many u 21 Israeli tanks knocked ouL
Free Us Debates
, , •;<~ ·DJ ::1JlaiUma 1i · · ' '1 WASHINGTON (UPI) -Judge Harry
A. Blackmun ol Minnesota was confirmed
a.s a Supreme Court justice by the Senate
today, ending an abrasive dispute with
.... "IA•
End iif Newport
<
·-l ~ •· .••
' ' •
Wirl" lt Fly:
OAILY PILOT~ IW l" ... ,,,.
Y~ "bet,. says Mike Simkin as he coaxes his mini kite into the wild
· blu'e· yonder. Mite, along with classmates in Corona del Mar High
School i>h~ics course, designed and built kites.as part of their studies. ft.,,. )fs.t ·cAme when· they had to prove the kites were aerodynami-:.caur~ soUnd. . I . ,' •
UCI Student Delegation
Joins Saddleback Talks
By RICHARD P. NAU.
Of "-D•llY l'lltf Sl1ff
UCJ .students who crowded Into the
smaJt board room at Saddleback College
to talk of many tbiJ14s Monday night
were told by some Sacldleback students
that they Weren't needed. Olhers tboutht
they were.
dress code when there wa s a horrendous
war and students were being "mur -
dered."
Collins Implied the young man might
not understand the meanlng of autocratic
and suggested if the hoard meeling
CS.. SADDLEBACK, Pace Z)
Prfsidenl Nixon that persisted for almost
a year. The vole was 34-0.
The confirmation vote on the federal
appeals court judge came two days short
of the anniversary of the resignation
of Justice Abe Fortas, which created
the vacancy.
Nixon was twice rebuffed by the Senate
on his nomination of Southern federal
judges to the court -Clement F.
H'aynsworth Jr. of South Carolina and
G. Harrold Carswell of Florida.
He then turned lo Blackmun. a lifelong
friend of Chief Justice Warren E. Burger
and a judge on the 8th U.S. Circuit
Cour1 of Appeals 'since 1959.
No serious oppositlon wa.s raised
against Blackmun'.s nomination. He won
1he highest endorsement of the American
Bar Association and was unanimously
aporoved by the Senate Judiciary Com ·
miUee, 17 to 0.
Blackmun is expected to be sworn
in quickly and to assume hi s seal as
the ninth justice on the court whe n
it next meets Monday . However, because
of the lateness of the session, he is
not expected to participate in any
<'ecis ions until the court con venes for
a new term next fall .
rhe two days or Senate debate on
Blackmun was taken up entirely by
speeches praising him.
Talb skJppt.d from tbe dr~ code
and a free speech area to the Cantbodian
situation and was at times critical of
Saddleblck trustees and administration.
Pr.eview of Sex Movie
In a aununing up· altu tbe fraiiµented
dtscUSlioo, youtbful Board Prtsident
Michael Colli~ told the !P'OllP t)>at the
junior college lruJtees were "not here
to end the war or . prolong the war
or reUpnt the Cambodlan situation."
He Jlid the junior college dress code
and 1. free .. apeech art:a would not in
any \fQ resolv~ the war. ~e Ucr stUdent expressed disgust
~t 9'e "autocratic, slothful board wa s
dlicuilllnc rtdkuloos things" like the
Freeway Foµght
By West Newport
Dlrectora ol tho West N"'PQrt Beach
Improvement ~Uon Monday nlfht
unanbnoully oppoo.ll Paclllc Cout
Freeway <>omllii ,lhroilcli' Iii& Wtfl' port
of the clty. , •
About a doUn member• or fbt old
board aod nominees for the new board
or dlredora t.o be elected May. 2C were
prestnt.
The Improvement A 11 o c I a t i o n
representa homeowners , of the We!t
Newport area lnolduin( Newport Shorto.
Lido Sands. Balboa CoVff and Newpoi't
J&land.
Upsets Cit)' Councilmen
Newport Beach city councilmen are
alarmed that a movie assertedly show-
ing blatant sexual activity was billed as
a "major .studio prevl'ew" and shown to
lhe un.su1pecting public In their city.
Six of the seven city councilmen Mon-
day night requested a police report on
whether there wu a vJolaOon o! the law
when NewPort Cinema · showed "The
Magic Garden oC Stanley Sw~lheart"
on April 25,
Councilman Lindsley Par.sons, a mo-
tion picture productr, abstained from
vOUng because be said.thunovia theater
, manlier had takeJ\· Mttro-Goldwyno
Mayer's aasuranct. • lhe' niovte,. waa fOr
geoeral patron~~The ·X·r1ted:mdvte
~ lfWn·rat a .neak> previel' With an
R.r~ movie. , ; -
It won't happen ag1ln: Pal'IQna tald.
Councilman Milan Doital sald, how·
ever, there ahould.lie(ao dooble stand·
ard in •i>Jl!l<•Uon ol~law &ad r<mind·
tel !hat Barry Welli~ ol Fl'!" U1 t"
cently wl.1 arre.St~"-lot. uslnt obtcene
laniua1e In public. , "'
Th• fnovi• WU ..U.ed;IO the ~tl"I!
or city councilmen IJi o. li:tltr11rom bovl~ •
J
\V. Skaugstad, 434 62nd St., West Ne\v·
port.
"Thi! was a movie ," he wrote, "In
which, for the first time in a lonj' movie
going career, 1 heard the four letter
word used which commences with the
sixth letter of the alphabet. Not used
onct, but on repeated occasions. Thia
was a movie wh!ch openly depicted mas--
turbation by both male and female, open·
ly shown on the screen."
He said the movie a_J.90 showed group
sexual Intercourse, homosexual beh.avlOr
between female! and blatantly advocat·
ed the use and abuse of narcoCics.
• •1[ think irnriiedlate steps 1hould be
1111::en to ehut.Ja the theater manageri.at
Newj>ci;f ·Clllflha and the · ·Edwar11s
· ctifema-q1ni11Uon in general for 'al·
• '1oWlng this type of truh to invade our
communk)','' he wrott. 1 .~
flor""" said the plctUtt WU llnmed·
lately sent bac~ and he 1dou.btt pol;ce
cell prg91CUte .. "I doubt. lhe ipresent •t·
U!ud< or ,the 5111'!'•""' Court would pet·
mil anytlJln~ lo 'be done abOul h any·
way," he. sald.
Pll'IOOI 1a)d be attiQded ·the sneak
, pr~vlew~ ... '
•
Any free-ranging dialogue between
Newport Beach city councilmen and the
long-haired youth& of Free Us ended
Monday night.
Councilmen unanimously passed a posi·
Newport Council
Wants Irvine
To Pay Damages
A major'ity of Newport Beach city taun·
cilmen Monday night voted to hold out
for the Irvine Company lo pay the bill
of any severance damages In connection
••ith the Promont~Bay development.
By a 5 to z vot , councilmen turned
down a city staff r mmendation they
spend up to $1 ,000 to have appraised the
possible amount of severance damages to
Balboa Yacht Basin businesses if Bay·
side Drive is relocated.
"I think the developer (the Irvine
Company ) will be curious on thi11 Item
and I have the patience to let him get
curious ,'• said Councilman Howard Rog-
er!!:.
The bayfront home and lagoon develo~
ment is proposed for the property in the
crook of Bayside Drive acros! from Bea-
con Bay .
To provide yacht access to the lagoon
Baysldc lliive would have' to be relocat-
ed along the foot of the Promontory
Point bluff and the present road termtn-
aled al the lagoon entrance channel.
Balboa Yacht Basin business would lose
drive-by traffic.
City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt said
he had contacted Irvine Compahy Senior
Vice President Ray Watson about sharing
the $1,000 appraisal cost on severance
damatu "!nd Watson said no.
HurlblUf, said he assume'd Watson fear·
ed th..'!.t would 1et a precedent for sharing
actual damages later.
"I take Watson's pcsition." said Coun-
cilman Donald Mcinnis~ "Why should
the city set a precedooi'"
City Attorney Tully Seymour said a
prevlaus appraisal sbo\ired th1t damage.~
would be minimal and the development of
overall benefit to tl}e city, because of
incceased ucluatveness of . Btscon Bay
. property on e!tY·lef!O land. , ·
"Maybe Beacon Bay; ~I become, 11 ~k'in 1$' yl!ars when· Ure Jelse. i:Uns out,"
CouJIClhnan Rogert said. '
Councilman UndsleY' Persons and
Mayor Ed Hirth voted to spend the mont)'
on the .. 1ppr1isa1.
ParaoM Mkt he wants to find out how
much U...UalWo Yitbt Bisi• doe• l"Qf'·
He auue1ttd \be N;Ooo annual perce{'lt·
Iii• P17meot to the city mtght not be
.thC full amount it should bt. '1"The1 ml)'
h••• ·a·111<tl7 rood thin& goln( !or then!,"
be •aid,
,,.
tion statement authored br. Councilman
Donald Mcinnis that 1pel ed out basic
beliefs not subject to negolilition.
Among them : ·
-Those who speak in public bave
an obligation to refraln from use o!
vulgar and profane language.
-The basic obligation of the right
or free · assembly is to insure the same
right to others so there can be no
exclusive use of public parks for rallies,
concerts or public speaking.
-Police harras.sment ls a charge that
J!) leveled by dl&1ident .:oups who •P·
parently rejected the philosophy, mores
and principles of society as a whole
and who knowingly in1Jst on engaging
in -activities that are un1awlul. They
refuse to aceept the fact that the police
olf.icer is 1worn to uphold the law. ·
-The city a:ovemment will not take
action to force landlords and employers
lo reapond to dissident groups housing
and employment needs. Resort to some
sort of econofnlc sanction would be
discrimination to end the discrimination
alleged lo be the practice now. The
operalion of the free economic system
is one of the cornerstones of our
American society, and we all compete
for housing and employment on an equal
basis in accordance with our own
persooal ablliUes, attitudes, desire and
capabilities.
-The concept of marijuana and other
dangerous drug use as an important
part or the dl.s!ldenl's "culture" i.s com·
pletely rejected In any shape or form.
Barry Weinberg responded from Free
Us :
"We are greatly disappointed at the
(See FREE US, P1ge Z)
Orange Coast
Another groovy day looms on ·the
Orange Cout horlr.on with sunny
1kiea clwlng the morning patchy
clouds and temperatures in the
middle &eve.ntlts.
INSIDE TODA l'
Tl1e newborn Irvine Commun-
fty Theater makt1 on auspicious
debui -swef,ping tbr:tt toR
· awatds 'at tht RivlriJdc Ont«•
· it1U1XJl. ' ,s t ,.... Enterttllnm'k ,
Pogt 19.
c..•twllll • C1•t1lll.. ll·ti c-iu 11 c~ u °""' lttllctt t ••1"'111 .. _ •
IJlfofrt•"""""I 1t
'"'-· 1•11 """'""-14 ... .... """"" 14 ....... .
MfnMll Llctfl.* t
·1
-':"""'-------~----------r----... .,..---"""'-"""'"""' ...... ,...,...:-"'",,.._.,..... ____ ...., .............. .,--~~--~··. · ..
Newport
OKs Pool
At School
ll<•PGI l Belch city councilmen Mon-
day night voted to contribute up to
"5,G toward the cost o{ construct.Ing
a '351,000 Olymplc-eiJ.e swimmJnc pool
al Nrwport Harbor HJih Sdlool.
Councilmen said they will earmark
J.IS cents of the city tax rate for the
next two years to raise the money .
Over a period of 13 years the city
Investment ls exped.ed to pay off by
increasing the cftarg'e for swimming
lesaons $1 and b1 being able to hold
inore rwimminl programs in the larger
"°lt~wport.Mesa Unified School District
bu pledged $17$,000 towan! coostructiM
of tbe swim pool and now it ii ~p
to the private Harbor Area Olympic
Pool Foond&Uon to ral111 the mnalning
ll0,000 by A!J&. I ll the pool ts to
be built.
Councilman Lindsley Parsons was
reluctant in light of the city financial
situation to approve the expenditure but
he said he doesn't want to be the one
to v o t e against r«ft.atlon. 1be vote
wu unanimow .
.. U we hedge we damage the cause
(private solicttation )," aaid Councilman
Howard Rogen.
Bill Barnett, Harbor High swimming
and water polo coach, said the pool
would be located behind the home
bleachers of the foolblll stadium. It
would be 50 meters by 25 yards which
makes It large enough to hold a water
polo ea.me. diving, and recreational
swimmi.n.& all at the same time.
Earlltr, the dty counell had heard
from Ed Newland, water polo coach
at UC Irvine. Newland said people ad-
vertile all the time they have an
'Olymplo-lize swimming pool, but the
dDR:St ones are at El Toro Marine
Air Base. in the city o( Santi Ana
and at Golden West College.
nie pool would be thret times as
large as the preirent pool, he said.
Newland slJcl the area hu a chance
to eut liJ: or aeven twimmer• on the
Olympic team in 1972. Mike Martin,
of UCI, aaJd a SO.meter pool woo.Id
greaUy enchance his chances of making
the Olympic team.
Mike Ashe, vice president of the
Harbor High Boosters Club who is in
charge of the pool drive, said the coun·
cll'1 action will greatly stimulate their
prtvate oubocrlpilon.
'lbe council'& action was creeted with
cbe<n. ' ....
From, Pflfle I •
MONITOR. ••
agement of noise pollution.
The financial motivation for the air
.Industry to comply i1 great, he said, be-
cause no airport.a: are being expanded or
new ones being built due to the noise
problem . "The Industry Is lnlerested, although
tt sometimes may appear they art not.
to 1et some kind or h1ndle on this prob.
lem," he said .
Bricken said Northrop has been de-
veloping and testing the l}"ltem the last
thret months.
Observation• In the Newport aru, he
pJ.d, have 1h0wn them that commercial
jet.!, particularly those heading for Las
\rqu, turn east over the Corona del Mar
area btfore getilng oot to sea, and that
Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Station heli~
copter• auppostd to fly a corridor east of
the city have been way over on the wm
side o( the Upper Bay. Using the sensors
these flight patterns can be recorded, he
&aid.
Bricken pointed out that it Is the dur·
ation and frequency of alreraft nolte as
well u )ou.dnm that causes irritaUon.
"An alrplane flying over once a day
you mldit forgive, but every five minutes
yoo will not." he said.
He said air noise has phvaiological ef·
fecta of cau1lnii: fati~e and Joas of sleep
and Jll)'chological effects of annoyance,
tension and loss of work productivity.
DAILY PILOT
()llANO• COAIT f>UILllHlltO COMflANT
.. ~ N. W,,.4
.l•&li •• c-1..,
"
\lkll ~ .,.. ~ IMMtfll"
Th-etR•• """;, Elltw
Tlri11!111 A. )l~,,t.111
M~lntl IElfllW
llri•fll lf '••fwRI
.. ...,.,. .... Offk•
2211 Witt 111~•• lowl•••111I
M1llh11 Aiclr1111 P.O. h• ''''· t2661 o,....,.._
'91M ~I DI Witt .... lfr1ilf
~ ·~· t2t ,_, ·-H\lfll""'I ... IUClll 11'75 llf!:fl ICIU...,.,.
I.Ill Clrmltll9; * Mll'VI al Cltftlrot 1...a
•
STRUGGLING WITH HIGH PRESSURE HOSE , FIREMEN DOUSE COSTA MESA BLAZE
Investigators Suspect Arson as They Probe Blackened R1m1ins of G1r1ge
Dr. Slocum Baby Death
Trial Opens Wednesday
A grim reunion is scheduled Wednesday
in a Costa Mesa courtroom as pro--
ceedings against a surgeon charged with
the bizarre butchery of an Infant -
his wile a star witness -is scheduled
to begin.
Dr. Wesley G. Slocum, 44, is due
to appear at 9 a.m. in Division One
.of Harbor Judicial District Court, for
what could be one of the most unique
events in Orange County legal history.
The state charges that he killed and
butchered a daughter. Cynthia. in early
1964, storing her dismembered body in
the family's freezer.
Defense attorney Paul Augustine. Jr.,
&eeks to prove that his "'ife, Mn. Marian
Slocum. 45, was the killer, while having
acknowledjed that Dr. Slocum was aware
or the death.
"All I can say is that the truth will
come out at the hearing," Augusti ne
remarked Monday.
The men who will match wils in the
courtroom. Augustine and Chief Deputy
District Atklmey James G. Enright, had
requested a reserved hearing chamber.
Several other cases are already on
the calendar ~or Division One, however,
promising a sUa:ht delay in getting the
three to five-day procedure under way.
"There is a Lremendous amount of
evidence to be presented," Augustine
told Judge Calvin Schmidt at the time.
Detectives have gone cver countless
possibilities to explain what really hap-
pened in the Slocums' Mes a Verde
household six years ago aDd. who did
what. ·
"lt should be quite interesting,''
remarks COsta Mesa. Police Detecti ve
Capt Bob Green who has headed the
many-faceted probe of the grisly but-
chered baby case.
Enright, the District Attorney's pick
Newport Robbery
Suspect Nabbed
Newport Beach police said today they
have arrested a Corona man in con-
nection with numerous "cat burglarles''
in Irvine Terrace and Cameo Shores.
Gary L. Olson, 30, was arrested late
Monday night following, what detectives
described as an intensive investig1tion
with members of the Orange and Hun-
tington Beach police departments and
investigators from the county District
AUorney's office.
Detective Bill Speirs said 01'°'1 Is
being questioned in connection with an
undetermined number of burglarlH In
the swank neighborhoods in recent
months.
for particularly knotty prosecution cases,
says he belleves the preliminary hearing
will lead to a Superior Court trial for
Dr. Slocum.
Corona del Mar
Water Main Job
Due to Start
Water main replacement soon will get
under way in Corona de! Mar causi ng
alleys to be torn up throughout the com-
munity.
Twenty·t.o-30-year.old cast iron water
mains beneath tbe alleys are badly de·
terioraled and will be ri!placed with as·
bestos-cement mains, according to the
Newport Beach Public Works Depart·
ment. Ace Pipeline Construction Tnc. of
Pomona began tearing up Vista Baya cul-
de-Bac in the Back Bay area today.
After water mains are replaced there,
the company's crews will move into
Corona dcl Mar.
Ace Pipeline, lowest of six bidders, ha."1
the contracl for $111,250 and must co~
plC'tc the work by August 31.
The first Corona del Mar alleys that
will be worked on are those between 3rd
and 5th Avenues. DahtJa and Poppy
Avenus. The contractor will wcrk within
tht' area from west to east .
The: second area on the contractor's
timetable, although exact dates have nnt
been set. is between East Coast High-
way and 3rd Avenue, Heliotrope and
Poppy avenues.
The third area is between Bayside
Drive and East Co&Bt Highway. Dahlia
and Marguerite avenues. The final area
is betw!en Pacific Drive-1st Avenue and
East Coast Highway. Avoc ado and Dahlia
avenu~.
Ed McDonald, project engineer for
the city: said an alley resurfacing con-
tr~ce \\'I]\ be let wlthin 45 days. Alleys
will be repaved with six inches of con-
crete and the pan is for the resurfacing
contractor to follow right behind Ace
Pipeline Construction.
l\fanson Wants Court
To l\1ove Trial Si te
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Charles ~1anson. accused "''ith five ot hers of
murC:ering actress Sharon Tate and four
cthers last August, has asked the State
Supreme Court for a change of venue
court officials said todav. '
His trial is schedule1t to beg.in June
1$ in lA>.s Angeles County.
Fire Destroys
Garage, 2 Cars;
Ai·son Blamed
Investigators probing the black!Md re-
mains of a Costa Mesa garage in which
two vehicles were destroyed Monday
in a SS,800 blaze said today arson is
definitely indicated.
Mrs. Jean C. Geraghty, 31, of Zll3
Richmond Way, had made a thlrd trip
through the garage wlltl armstul of
groceries Wednesday afternoon, just
moments before the fire was dlscovered.
Fire Department experts said the IQ.
minute time lapse between that point
and the raging fire pointed to arson,
plus a witness reported two suspicious.-
appearing men who fled at his approach.
Robert BamhouSe told investigators
he spotted the flames and smoke pouring
from the garage and stopped bis car
to run and notify Mrs. Geraghty and
~~din& Nlghbors.
Mrs. Gerlihty was unaware of the
blaze IU'LUI he came hammering on the
door.
Barnhouse. sald two men in a late
model sedan sped away from the blazing
garage when they noticed his car, but
couldn't get a good description.
A stripped~own Volkswagen dune bug-
gy belonging to the Geragbtys was
deslroyed. along with an older model
car belonging to Terry J. Stasik, of
633 S. Daisy Ave., Santa Ana which also
was Jost.
The dune buggy was inoperative and
Slas.ik's car hadn't been driven for three
days, another angle leading Fire Depart-
ment Battalion Chief Bob Beauchamp
lo suspect arson.
Loss was listed as $3,lklO for the struc-
ture itself, and $1,500 each for the
household contents and the ~mbined
value of the destroyed c1rs.
~irs. Geraghty could give no reason
wby anyone would firebomb I he
<tpartments" garage.
Investigators did not say if any
rvidence of an i.ncendl1ry device or
chemicals y.•as found at the scene.
Plant Taking
Vote on Union
About 230 production and maintenance
ern ployes cf Newport Beach 's Ford·
Philco Aeronutronlcs Division were
voting today on whether or not they
will become members of the United
Auto Workers Union.
i\n Acronutronics spokesman said pr ior
attempts to organize the employes have
fa iled.
CurrenUy the Newport pil•nt has a
JO-member chapter of the IBE\V lelee-
trical workers) and 13 members of the
teamsters union.
Pamphleteers were stationed at all
plant entrances this morning handing
out leaflets urging the worktrs to vote
in favor of UA\V men1bership.
Cambodia,, Coast Blocked
South Vietnam Halts Incoming Red Supplies
PHNOM PENH CUPll -Soutl1 Vi•l-
nam has set up a blockade off I.he
Cambodian coast in an effort to halt
lnc..-omlng supplies for the Viet Cong.
South Vietnamese Viet Presktent Nguyrn
Clo Ky said today.
The United Stl.~s8ld It was halting
North VletnaTMlt and Vltt C.Ong ships
there but said this wu not a blockade .
At the aame til'IW! South Vietnam tent
gunboats 50 miles far1her up tM Ptfckong
River above the Cambodian c1pltal of
Phnom Penh In a new example or
cooptr1tlon betwtett the Sa.lgon and
Phnom Pen.b covemmenll In their joint
struagle against tbe Communists.
UPI corrtspondent Walter \Vhitehead
reported from Neak Luonl!:. 30 miles
down the ~fekong fro1n l)hooin Penh,
(
that Ky told newsmen the South Vi~·
namese navy wu stopping ships of third
natibns and searching them for Com·
munllt aupplles.
In the past both the Soviet Union
and Communist. China hive l1nded 1up-
pU" at tl1e port of SlhanoultvlUe but
thtre was no indication of any of their
ships had been halted by the South
Vi.!lrl&mtSe, Cambodil had cut the
"Slhanoukville 'rr1ll" le1dlnj: from the
port to South Vleln1m.
The U.S. MWt.ry Commend In s.taon
s1ld U.S. Navy ves..w.ls wer. operating
In the s11me area as the South Viet·
namesc navy but a spokesman insisted,
"11lls l!I not a blockadt." A spokesman
ror Gen. c:relghton w. Abrams said,
"no lhlrd countey" vessels w o u Id ~ ,
stop~d by U.S. s h i p s or interfered
.,..·Ith m any way.
'!lie spokesman •aid the U.S. vessels
were J)OSIUoned to stop "North Viet·
namese and Viet Cona: 1 h I p 1 trying
to brlng 1upplie1 Into Cambodian ter-
ritory. The bulk of the allied fleet wu
beUeved poslllooed oppoolte Phu Quoc
Island, which also Is • Soutb Vietnamese
provlnre .
"'Tbfi Cambodl•n government his bten
Informed,'' the U.S. spokesman 11ld.
Dt<plte !he South Vletn1m....C.rn-
bc::jla11 cooperaUon , a crlslJ In relation•
blew up over the death or a South
VletnameS(! petty ofOce:r btttlen by Cam-
bodian students Mond1y night ln Phriom
Penh In 1 new outbreak rJf tr1dition1I
Ca mbodlan·Victna.m cse hottllitlea.
'Conv~n~e ~ ouµg
Cha~ge Possihlet
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A Unlvml·
ty of California chancellor told tht na·
lion'• newspaper edlton today the young
must be ~nv~ that cb-.ng'e 11 p()Ss.ible
"or the repub1llc 11 dooryed to a dlvidon
that may deatro1 lt."
Dean £. Mcllenry of. UC Santa Cruz
attacked the Cambodian invasion, the
Vietnam Wat, the draft and !aws wNch
disenfranchise those undtr 21 in a apeech
to the American Society ol Newspaper
Editors.
About 700 edilon fiun tllroogbout the
natkln aUended as the IOCiety opened
it.I lntlUal meetfj,&,
They were .to 'heft later today from
former U.S. ambulidor to Japan Edwin
0. Reischauer aiid CaUfcrnla Gov.
Ronald Reagan.
McHel\J')''s topic w a s "California
Problemt:," but at the end of his speech . . he turned to.4 the campus crials which
followed U.S. action in Cambodia.
"What can young people do to vent
their an&er ind frustration?" he asked.
''Except. in ~ atates, we have not
F..-r.,,e 1
FREE US ...
pointa made tn your speech," he said.
''We uked for an investlgaUon lnto the
arrests at the park. We see nothing
constructive that came out of that
meetin& (an lnfonnal dlscuukln at Coun·
cilman Howard Rciger1' home). This
report could have bffn written before.
If that ii where the councll'a at ... we
tried."
"I would like to say Btrry we were
greatly disappointed too,'' Mayor Ed
Hirth said.
Only a few long·halted. youths were
present at the council meeting. Two
weeks ago 150 had shown up and packed
the council chamber ukin1 for an end
to police harassment, a police review
boa.rd and droppiJlg of charges against
those arrested in a melee with police
at Balboa Pier Park wbiclt followed
arreat of Weinberg for using obsctne
language.
The qtormal meeUng or councilmen
MclMi.s, Rogers and Richard Croul with
youtha representing Free Us followed .
City councilmea Monday ti\lht alH
sustained the recommendation of City
Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt that a~
pllcaUons by Free Ua for use of the
park on Sunday for amplified concerti
be denied.
Hurlburt said lhe reasons (or the denial
were explained in a report lo the council
and ia letters th1t went out to the
"subjecb" involved.
Those reasons are that 1 o u n d
ampllficatoft is not permitted in the
city on Sunday and Balboa Pier Park
is popular with families so sbould not
be taken over e1cluslvely by one group.
Weinberg said he didn't want the ap-
plicaUons turned down on a technicality
-the concerts could be held Saturday.
"I know you cu point to a mlllion
city ordinances," he said.
Hurlburt said the denials are without
prejudice. 1-te suggested Weinberg come
in today and he will help him fill out
a proper application. He advised that
there will be a $10 application fee which
inadvertently was not charged for the
previous park concert applications by
Free Us and the Laguna Free University.
... . • > '
enfranehlsed tbo\Tunder 21. i.
"l exper\ence great difficulty "
persuading students to participate ln the
eleatoral process. They att ansry and
frustrated' and the corridors of power
are so dislant. J.
"Often, the answer i!: 'We dOt;"·t
believe in the system.' We must convince
them that change is possible or the
republic is doomed to a division that
may destroy ii."
AfcHenry said one obvious route ta
effec~ve influence is through participa·
tion Ill poUUcal campaigns. He suggested
a few days spent campaigning on behalf
of congressional candidates "might
· relieve frustrations and help preclud1'
a COUP such aa Knebel and Ba1l41:t. ~eplcted in their novel, 'Seven Dayi
tn May.'"
The novel describes a mHitary takeover
of the government.
The chancellor said he personally
thought the Vietnam war is one in which
the United States should not have in·
tervened with land forces and from which
it s~ould extricate itself "as promptly
as 1s commensurate with the safety
of our men and our allies."
McHenry also said undeclaffil wars
must be curbed and the "blank-check''
given to the President by Corigress must
be withdrawn.
"The draft has beoome an abomina-
tion," he said. "For 30 years it has
rested like .a yoke on the necks of
generations of young men .
''5?metimes it seems to be a grotesque
credit card, to which diplomatic failures
and military ventures may be charged,
and the bW is paid in the last lives
and health and years by our male youth
aged 18 to 2:11." '
Other speakers and topics on the foufi
day ASNE program ranged from
ecology to segregation. ~
' From Pllfle I
SADDLEBACK •••
disrusted him, "I 'su"ggest you don't
come ; go wage the strug1le at UCI."
Trustee Hans Vogel said he ls worklnc
on the frtt speech area, examining how
it works at other campuses. He also
said no one is suffering from dress
code regulations since the code has betn
suspended until its future is worked out. -..
Brian Colbert. a member of the Sad-
dleba ck student -senate, said lie wa.S
offended oy comment. or some of tht
UCI students directed at the board. '
He said the board produced a wlnninl
football team. UCI students tittered1 Colbert said the college is f i n t
academically and cited o t h e r ac.:
complishment.s. "I'm very inaulted bY,
some UCI students who don't go tJl
this campus who come and Insult our
board," he sa1d.
UCI students seemed dismayed that
they were not welcome by all Saddleback
students. A few said they had been
asked to come. A Saddleback Jlrl student
thanked them for coming.
She asked about arranging for a UCI
instructor to speak on the war. Sbf
was referred to the admlnl.straUon.
UCI students pressured tbe bo1rd ti\
discuss issues it wanted to discu11 right
then. Collins aa1d the board wanted td
discuss the matters as .scheduled aa:endl
items because they are important '.
He told one UCJ student, "We consid~
Items of policy when they are placed
cn the agenda. Ju~t bec11use you haP"'.
pened to show up is no reason for'
us to discuss it." ·
·~ •'• '.'l· •'>
' ·~
Here'• Looking at Yo11
Full grown o5trlch, a most curious bird, takes a bead with his bUI on ·n
camera lens during_confrontation with photographer . found by 01trlch
to be ID equally curious bird. Confrontation took rlace at Lion Coun·
try Safari ou\•lde La~una Beach. Ostrich Is one o 52 of the big birds .
who, along with other "1tld animals. \\'Ill meet tourists eyeball-to-eye. r
~aU when game preserve opens ne>tt month.
I
;
•
r
Tedar's-. l'l••I
N.Y. Stoeks
• • VOL 63, NO. 113, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA -. TUESDAY, M~y 12, 1970 TEN CENTS
'
Mesa Making Example Out of Topless Tavern
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of HM O.ihl Pii.t 51•ff
Armed "''Ith a doss ier of alleged
misdeeds, C0&ta Mesa's top legal aide
flew to Sacramento today to tattle on
1 once-bustling topless tavern and il.s
J'IO\v--0.isbanded staff .
Lack of dress is low on the list of
Infractions.
City Attorney Roy June was sched uled
tor 20 minutes of eye-opening testimony
during the first session of a three-day
hearing .. before the Department of
Alcoholic Beverage Control.
The ABC -loser in nwnerous cou rt
battles against nuae entertainment -
wanu to clamp on tough new laws
explicitly ffX'bkiding sqch . a c l i v i l y ,
without consPtutional loopholes.
"I'm going· officially for the city lo
support lhe .ABC's application," June
explained Monday, sayjng he had been
asked to ri!view Costa Mesa's 1967-M
battle against Baby Doll's bar.
Researching crlminal record! among
37 persons employed there during the
finally-successful effort to shut it down.
he found they spanned 35 California
cities and eight states, across the nation.
''It was rather interesting," said June.
ticking off a list of crlmes that would
raise the hair oC a cigarstori Indian.
The guys and dolls at Baby Doll's
apparently weren't all fun-loving kids.
. -
"l knew we ·had a bunch of punks
, l .. ~ • •
• • •
" -•
• · , • NIL r, Pl&.Of ..... 111...a...,. Ktefl r
STRUGGLING WITH HIGH PRESS.URE HOSE;, FIREMEN DOUSE COS.TA .MESA BLAZE
lnvtsti;ators Suspect Arson 11 They Probe Bltcktntd Remains of G1 r1ge
~~~~~~~~'--~~
Kidnap Suspect
Turned Ove r
To Mesa Police
f\.1iss Pearson said she screamed tn
for arraignment on charges of kidnaping
a Huntington Beach girl in Costa Mesa
and taking her as far as Corona, where
she screamed to a sheriff's deputy for
help.
John \V. Hagadorn. 26, of 117 Whitefield
Ave., Anaheim , v.·as booked into
Riverside County Jail last Friday On
suspicion -of kidnap and turned over
to Costa Mesa police.
Stephanie Pearson, 18, of 9 2 9 n
Strathcona Drive, Huntington Beach, told
Patrolman Chuck Hoffard she repeatedly
tried to stop the strange abduction from a market parking lot.
Miss Person said she screamed to
occupants of one car at the Orange
Coast College parking lot for help as
Hagadorn drove up the re, but no one
came to her aid.
The girl said she was grabbed in
a chokehold Friday in the lot of 2i01
Harbor Blvd., and shove<! into her car
with a sharp, blade-like object at her
neck.
"I need your car.'' she quoted the
1bductor as saying.
Miss Pearson told investigators a
black-and-white patrol aar pulled out
of a side street in Corona just after
they turned off the freeway and she
was v.•arned to keep quiet.
Arsonis.t .Fires Grirage,
'
2 Cars in Costa Mesa
Investigators probing the blackened re.-
maiiis or a Costa Mesa garage in ~·hich
two vehicles were destroyed ·Monday
in a $6,800 blaze said today arson is
definitely indicated.
Mrs. Jean C. Geraghty, 31. of 2333
Rich mond Way, had made a third trip
through the garage with armsful of
groceries Wednesday afternoon, just
moments before the fire was discovered.
Fire Department experts said the 10.
minute time lapse between that point
and the raging fire pointed to arson,
plus a witness reported two suspicious-
J\lesa Scouts Sponsor
Sunday Pancake Bake
Cub Scout Pack llO of Costa Mesa
will sponsor a pancake breakfast from
7 a.m. to noon Sunday at Costa Mesa
Park. according to John A r n o I d ,
secretary.
Pancakes aRCI. sausages will be cooked
by cub scout dads. Proceeds from the
75-cent breakfast will defray costs of
the scout pack's campout In June. For
further information or tickets, call 646-
6207,
appeaiing men who fled at his approach.
.Robert 'BamhouSe told investigators
he spotted the fla mes and !11l<lke pouring
rrom the garage and stopped his csr
to run aQ,d notify Mrs. Geraghty and
surrounding neighbors.
Mrs. Geraghty was unaware of the
blaze until he came ham1nering on the
door.
Barnhouse said two men in a late
model sedan sped away from the blazing
garage when they noticed his car, but
couldn't get a good description.
A stripped-down Volkswagen dune bug·
gy belonging to the Geraghtys was
destroyed, along with an older model
car belonging to Terry J. Stasi k, of
633 S. Daisy Ave., Santa Ana which also
was lost.
The dune buggy was inoperative and
Stasik's car hadn't been driven for three
days, another angle leading Fire Depart·
menl Battalion Chief Bob Beauchamp
to suspect arson.
Loss was listed as $3,800 for the slruc·
lure itself, and $1,500 each for the
household contents and the combined
value of lhe destroyed cars.
f\1rs. Geraghty could give no reason
why anyone would firebomb t h e
apa rtmen ts' garage.
Investi gators did not say If any
evidence of a n incendiary device or
chemicals v.·as found at the scene.
Gri11a Retitaiota D11e .
Slocum Baby T,rial Opens
A grim reunion Is scheduled Wednesday
In a Costa Mesa courtroom as P*
ceedings .against a surgeon charged with
the bizarre t>utchery of a.n infant -
his wife 1 star wilnC$1 -is seheduled
to begin.
Dr. Wesley C. Slocum. 44, is due ID ap[Jear at 9 a m. In Division One
nf Hacbor Judicia l District Court. tor
\\•hat cwld be one of the most unique
events in Orange County legal history.
The state charges that he killed and
butchered a daughter, Cynthia, in early
196'1, storing her dismembered body in
the h1mlly'1 freezer.
Defense attorney Paul Augustine •. Jr.,
•
--·
seeks to prove that his wife, Mrs. M1rh1n
Slocum, 4S, was the k.lller, while havlng
.acknowledge<! that Dr. Slocum was 1w1re
of lhe death.
"All I can say Is th.at the truth will
come out at the hearing," Augusline
remarked Monday.
The men who will match Witt In tht
courtroom. Augustine and dii~ Deputy
District Attorney James G. Enright, had
requested a reserved hearing. chamber,
Several oc.her caaes are already on
the calendar for Division One, however,
promising " slight delay In getting the
three to five-day procedure under way.
"There is a tremendous amount of
evidence to be presented,'' Au1ustine
told Judge Calvin Schmidt at the ·ume.
OctecOves have gone over countlw
possibilities to explain what really ·ha~
pened in the Slocums' A1 es• Verde
household six years ago and who did
whal. · ·•. / '
"It should be qul~e .interesting."
remarks COst3 Mei~ Polici! · betec:Uve
Capt Bob Green who bas he1ded th'e
many-faceted probe of the grisly but·
chered bilby case.
Enright, the District 1 AUoroey's, pick
for particularly knotty proae&:~tlon ~ses,
says he believes the prcllmlnazy hearlf'f
will lead to a Superior <Mlrt trial for
Or. Slocum. ~~J f
out there, but not bow bad they reall)'.
were," remarked June, who ran across
some crimes that be wasn't aware ex::
lst<d.
"We had 37 different p e.o p I e In·
valved •.• three or four managers and
the rest topless girls," he conUnued.
''There were S3 separate kindl or of.
tenses aod the fines aJl(I sente~ they
got were from $Z5 to tnree years in
state prison. Only eight had no criminal
record.''
"One CUY had 30 arrests and/or con-
victions, mo1t of them felorllea, ind
the lowest 1Ull had five arrests," he
aplained.
Jwte said many of tht ne'er-do-well•
wOO gravitated to employment at Baby
Doll's were re&istered with autboritlea
as prior sex offenders and came from
Las Vegas or the.Deep.South.
Some strange things went on 'way
d~wn yonder In the land of cotton, ac·
cordlni to criminal recoryts.
"One gentleman from Geor1l1 had
a substantial number of arr~ for
unlawful carnal knowledi;e of tht fteble-
mi'lded," he explalned.
Among other em:rs In judgment, he
co:nUnued, were armed r o b be r y ,
burglary, assault and battery, ~
'slltutioo, lewd conduct, rape, grand theft.
speeding and narcotlca offenses.
. T1lt: new law1 sooght by the ABC
would replace a nwnber of ordillances
(~TOPLESS, Pose I)
Israelis on Attacl{
Huge Tank Force Invades Lebanon
By Ulllted Press Iai.eraatiooal
The Arab nations said 100 Israeli tanks
and 2,000 infantrymen invaded Southern
Lebanon today and lhat Lebanon. Syria
and Iraq were fighting back in the
biggest A1ldeast battle since the 1967
war, The U.N. Security CoWlCil was
called into emergency session.
Israel said its armored columns with
aerial support knifed into Lebanon to
wipe out Arab guerrilla bases which
had launched 61 attacks against 22 Israeli
settlements in the past 40 months. Fierce
aerial battles broke out and Israel said
it shot down three Syrian MIG . l'ls.
Olympic Board
Picks Denver .. ,_ .. ·:a ..... ,. ~...'.1 Aii . 1'1ontrea.1
' AMSTERDAM 'AP) -Montreal was
awarded "the 197' Olympic Games today
in ·a surprise victory over M03COw and
Los Angeles.
Moscow had been favored for the
Games, and Tass. "the official Soviet
agency, sent out a bulletin from Moscow
Denve r was picked as site of
tile 1916 \Vinttr Olympic Gamts
Tue sday shortly after the Inter·
'1ational Olym pic Conimittee, in
a surprise move, gave the Sum-
mer Garnes to !tfontreal.
two hours earlier that they had been
.awarded to Moscow.
The 1nnouncement was withdrawn
shortly afterward without an explanation.
It's the first time any of the Games,
Winter or Summer, has gone to a Cana·
dian city. This is in keeping with the
International Olympk: Committee policy
c spreading the Games around to new
areas.
MOSC<lW had been fav ored because o(
its renowned athletic facilities plus the
fac t that the Games never ha ve been
lSee OLYMPICS, Page%)
2nd 'Eartl1 Day'
Program Held
At Mesa Scl1ool
Costa f\fesa High School held its second
Earth Day today, sponsored by the high
school's EducatJonal Development Coun-
cil.
Speakers for the day-loog event in·
eluded representatives from the Standard,
Oil Compa ny, Scripps Institute of
Oceanography, area colleges, the U.S.
Forestry Service and the General Motors
Corporation.
Earth Day activities began at 9 a.m.
thi1 morning with speakers throughout
the morning discussing environmental
changes within Orange County, problems
of ecology and· an II a.m. speech by
a Standard Oil Compar.y representative
entiUed, "Attempt to Keep Pollution· in
Perspective."
A noon meeting In the student union
was presented by Donald Shipley, pro-
fessor of biology at Long Beach State
College. Shipl~y is also the mayor of
Huntington Betch. ·
Gary J ames of the Orange coast
Collee•r . biology • department discussed
conservaUon 1n relatloo to · the Back ~ problep1,' followed by dtscussion ·on
ov!rpoPulatlon ~lve.red'by 1 UC trvlne
repreatntaUve ,
Studehts were allowed to selcci rrom
thttt a~akel'I at the final seminar or
lh< day. Speakll\I from the U.S. FortGlcy
Se>vlct 'WU C, R. Boomholfbr, <Donald
Dobmeier of C\>e Trl.COOnty Conserva<lw>
1i.eague1 and B-\1'· P~chuta from Q1neral M~tor1 CorpOratioo alto spok,, durlna I~ lelShm. ", 4 •, •• ,, l·... { \ f
'
The battle raged throughout the day
In the Marjayoun arta of Lebanon siz
to seven mUes norln of the Israeli border
and 32 miles southeast o( ..,Beirut A
Beirut military spuj:esma.lsaid fierce
Arab ~Uilittattafu had atalled the
lsraeJl push.
A spokesman for the Pal"estinian Arm·
cd Struggle Command said the Israelis
attempted to drop paratroops into soulh
Lebanon, but gave no details. He said
the guerrillas enaaged the Israeli forces
in ''hand to hand fighting."
There was no Israeli confinnation ot
the report but 1 spokesman said 11
hours alter the attack began lbat lsraeli
troops were still in enemy territory.
Lebanon, in a letter· to lhe . Security
Council, asked for lhe meeting because
of what it called an "inv.slon" of
Lebanon. It said the fighting raged on
the slopes of Mount Hermon nejll' the
occupied Golan Heights and that the
Isrealis were forced lo call off the attack
despite Israeli air supremacy.
A spokesman in Beirut said Lebanese
gunners scored a direct hit on an laraeli
ammunition vehicle pr:oducing a huge
e1plosion, Arab sourCes reported aa
many as 21 11raeli tanks knoc~ed· out.
Seat Finally Filled
Senate Okays Blackmun
.. • I • ' ti '"f I • .,i ' • Unani~us .Balloting In
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Judge Harry
A. Blackmun of /dinnesota was confirmed
as a Supreme Coort justice by the·Stnate
today, ending an abrasive dispui.e with
President Nixon that peraUlted for almost
a year. The vote was 34-0.
The confirmation vote on the federal
appeals court judge came two.days short
of the anniversary 1 of the resJgnatlQn
of Justice Abe Fortas, which created
the vao,ancy.
Nixon was twice rebuffed by the Senate
on his nomination of Southern federal
judges to the co u rt -Clement F.
riaynsworth Jr. of Soulh Carolina and
G. Harrold Carswell of Florida.
He then turned to Blackmun, a lifelong
friend of Chief Justice Warren E. Bivger
"and :• ,Judge .on the 8th U,S, Circuit
Court of Appeals since 19S9.
No· serious opposiUon was raised
against Blackmun's nom inaUon. He won
the highest endorsement of the American
·Bar AsJiOCiatlon and was unanimously
,approved by the Senate Judiciary Com-
mittee, 17 to o.
Blackmun ts expected to be swom
In quickly and to assume hit seat as
the nihth justice on tbe · COW1 when
it next metls Monday. However, because
of the lateness of the session, be is
not · upecttd to participate in any
decisions unUI the court convenes for
a new term next fall .
'!"he two days of Senate debate on
Blackmun was taken up entirely by
speeches prai&ing him.
Witness Testifies Suspect
l\illed Two CUP Officers
NEWHALL (U PI) -A witness to the
fatal shooting of four California High-·
v.•ay Palrolmen outside a Saugus coffee
shop April 6 testified Monday that Bobby
Augusta Davis personally k.llled two of
the officers.
''The suspect in the yello w shirt (Da·
vi,,) ran up and fired across the Police
car \Yith a sho ti\ln ... at the last Officer
standing (George Alleyn}. The b I a s t
struck him in the face , he brushed his
hand at the blood and st~g1ered bact
onto the trunk of his car,'• aCtording to
~1atthe\v Barth. 23, manager of a Haw·
UlOrne bar.
Barth also testified at Da vis' prelim·
lnary hcarin.e-that Davis fatall y shot of-
ficer Roger Gore twice in the chest w!U1
a pistol.
"Then both suspects climbed Into the
red c-ar (their vehicle) and it drove off
down a dead-end street," where they
abafi®ned it after a third pair or officers
shot out a tire. The suspecll then fled
on' foot and split up.
Barth. who had stopped at the ct1ffee
shon while relUr'f\ing fropl a boating trip
t<> 'Nevada, said the other su.spect, Jack
Twinnlilg, k!Ued offlcera W1lter Frago
and ·Jamts Pence Jr. when they stopped
. the ,,air's car out.side the coffee shop.
'1'1rlinnlng took tilr own life LO hours l•·
1 t~r "'hen Pollce ~nded • ne1rbv
NewhiP home where 'bl ha<fhtld GltM
. S. Hoag hostage for four boun.
~'J'qf;K itlAftKE'J'
: N~l\'..YORK (AP) -Ti!" atock mark1t
reco\ltred,1 auraed upwar<I, r11versing i!Ja
t:arlt ~salon lOMe• late Ws afternoon ln ,•lc:Pt!<~·up traaJ111. (SU quotati~.
',P1&1JJ 0-11).
Barth also testified that fom:ier M•·
rlne Gary Kncss "ran up and picked up
an officer's pistol and got off at leasl one
shot that appeared to wound (Davis),
"who flinched and grabbed his side."
Davis is charged with four counts of
murder and one count of robbery with
bodily harm for aUegedly stealing a
camper truck from Daniel J. Schwartz,
40. several hour& after the slaying.
Police said D a v I s pistolwhlpped
Schwartz: and drove off in his truck. He
was arrested without a struggle when of·
ficers stopped tht vehicle.
Orange Coast
\\'eatber ..
Another groovy dai 10011111 on the
Orange Coast horizon with sunny
skies chasing the morning patchy
clouds and temperatures In the
middle seventies.
INSIDE TODAY
Tile ntwborn lrvhit Commun-
ity Theattr n1akts an auspiciozi&
dtbu£ -noetping thret tOp
owon:i1 ai th<: RiverritU one<Gci
•fcsttoa1 . Set E.'ntertalmnnt,
Page 19.
CtMltntl9 I (1•.u tlltf U·H
("'11tl .. ,_. 11
h•lll Nwllttl . ' •••"'1111 ..... ' ·~''"'""""" It Ill-• 1•11 fltrti(etN Tl
""" l.•1111"' u li'•I~ ' MlmtM l.lftflMI '
r
I DAllY •ILOl c
South Viet s
1 Blockade
Cambodia
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -South Vie"
nam has set up a blockadt oH the
Cambodian coasl in an effort to halt
iocoming wpplies for lhe Viet Cong.
South Vletnamtse Vtce Prmdent Nguyen
Cao Ky said today.
The United States said it was halli)ll
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong ships
there but said this was not a blockade.
At the same time South Vietnam sent
gunboats 50 miles farthtr up the Mekong
River above the C&mbodian capital of
Phnom Penh in a new ezample of
cooperation between tht Sa!gon and
PhDOm Penh governments In their joint
atruggle against lhe Communists.
UP( correspondent Wa1ter Whitehead
reported from ~eak Luong, 30 mllu
down tbe Mekong from Phnom Penh,
that Ky told newsmen U>e South Vtet·
namese navy wu Mopping ships of third
nations aDd searching them for Com·
munist supplies.
In the past both the Sov.iet Union
and Communist China have landed sup-
plies at the port of SihanoukvUle but
the.re was no indication of any of their
ships had been halted by the Soo1I!
Vletriamese. Cambodia had cut the
"'Sihanoukville Trail" leading from the
port to South Vietnam.
The U.S. Military Command.in Saigon
said U.S. Navy ves.sels were operating
in the same are.a as the South Viel-
namese navy but a spotesman insisted,
"This is not a blockade." A spokmnan
for Gen. Creighton W. Abrams said,
"no third country" vesaels w o u 1 d be
stopped by U.S. ships or interfered
l\·lth in any way.
The spokesman said ·the U.S. vessels
were PosiUo~ to atop "North Vlet-
·namese and Viet. Cong sh I p 1 trying
to bring supplies into Cambodian ·ter-
rJlol'y. The bulk ol the allied fleet wu
believed positioned opposite Phu Quoe
Tsla:nd, whkb alao is a South Vietnamese
province.
"Tbe CambodlM government hu hffn
informed," the U.S. spokesman aakl.
Despite tbe South Vle~m
bojian cooperation, a crisis in relaUons
blew up over the death of a South
Vietnamese petty officer beaten by Cam-
bodian studenU: Monday night' in Phnom
Penh In a new outbreak of traclUonal
Cnmbodian·Vletnamese hostilities.
FreMP .. e I
OLYMPICS •••
held in an ln>n C~;Qllll11ly.
The Los Angeles bid was bued on
the !act lhe year would coincide wilb
the United Sta.tes• 200tb anniversary.
They were held In Los An&eles in ltn
and in St. Loo.is in 190f.
The announcement wa1 made by Avery
Brundage, U.S. president of the lntema-
tional ,Olympic Committee.
Montreal was chosen on the second
ballot, getting 41 voes to 28 for Moecow.
One vote was blank.
Los Angeles, the thin! city bidding
for the Games, apparenUy w a 1
eliminated in the first vote. But Bnm-
dage did not immediately say how the
first voting went.
Montreal's selection as the city for
the games in 1976 virtually knocked
out the bid by Vancouver, B.C., for
the Wint.er Games. Vancouver, Denver,
Sion, Switzerland, and Tampere, Finland,
were trying lo land the Winter Games.
The vote on the nm ballot unoUicially
was said to be Moscow 28, Montreal
24, Los Angele s 17.
That vote Immediately d~quaillied the
American city -the host -0f the games
in 1932 -from the sec<>nd ballot.
Mayor Jean Drapeau of Montreal pro-
mised to present the Olympic Games
"in a bumble way and a true Olympic
apirit."
He was echoing an appeal by the
Dutch minister for cultural affairs, Mrs.
Marga Klompe, who thi.1 afternoon had
called for ~lining the Olympic ~
gram JO that the smaller natlon1 also
can stage them.
DAILY PILOT
Ol:A.HGE COA$f ,VILISHIHG COMl"AHY
lolt.rt N. W1.4
Tho.,•• ic,..,a
ltllllt"
lho'"'•I A. Mu,,hiftt
CetN Nna Offk1
llO w,,. 1•11 Str••'
M1ili~t A~~rtn: P.O. lo• tS60, t2626
Othet Offi•"
H"""""t lf"t~; nn WHt lllMI ..... ~.,
l.tt-•Mt~· 71'2 l"-1 ......... ....
M\Ofttine"" l•ttl'I 1"11 lhlCft &JUi.wtC
itll (lol-tt; ~J ltor1'll II C-W.. ... l
Di*.lLY •1LOT, •"'-ff'llUI k "'°*"CC t"t ~ It _......., CJllY t•<tlll """"
.., "' _, ... dill ....... u.e-··"· N...._, lftdrl. C...!t M-, 11w!tiflt!M
9"Cfl ... '"-ieil'I YI ...,., ..... ""'" , .. • ,..--.1 f'fllllw. O<....,i C..111 l'W\hil'llrof
°""""l' "'ill""' IPl<!n!J .,... 11 1tll Wont
•• -.. '""'" ,.,_, ltt<"· .... lJO Wnl .. I' $~1, ~le MfM.
TJf11'1 .. 11141 ''l-4Jll
Clllllffletl M Mthlflf Ml 0S67t
~ '"" °'.,.. c-1 hlll......,. ~. M9 M<f\ Jloft~, 111vo1'1'1!-, .. .,., """""" ... .,,,...,_,, ...,, ...
IN' lot f.-VC:flll wllloM Jlltcltl ,.,.
INMltfl flf '""'llM -·
...... tlHt ....... ""' ff M......i l ntti .,., c;.i. ~ ... GlllftO"'-· "*<,~..., ·~
"""" s;o.11 -.illllfl W llMll UM_,,,,~, "''~ff-dft!loitllfM, If.Of -"'fl'·
DAILY I'll.OT tltn il'llittl
'Arnold' and Ber Brood
Piglets romp at mother's side at Laguna C,anyon
shelter of Society for Prevention of Cruelty to
Anima111. Despite obvious discrepancy, sow's name
is 'Arnold.' She bas been a resident of the shelter
!or the past 18 months. She gave birth to 13 piglets
May 2. Three have since been given away and are
reportedly adjusting well to the bottle. Papa has
been placed on a foster farm.
Black Panther P1·osecutor
Hits Defense Tactics
A Superior Court jury was urged todl}\ of the murder of police officer Nelson
to disregard the "smoke screens and '-"S~.
false issues that bave been raised plea came from Deputy District
throughout this trial . by the defe~" At Martin J. HeneB)lan as the
and find Artbur DewiUe League guilty tion launched final arguments
that will conclude courtroom action in
Exchange Concert
Program Slated
At Harbor High
The Estancia High School·Paclflc High
School Exthange Concert Program,
featuring bands from Estancia High
School and Pacific High Sclwl of San
Leandro, California, wiU .be · held al 8
p.m. Wednesday at the Newport Harbor
High School auditorium.
The exchange concert program enables
both hiCh IChools tG ~rfonn at different
ends C1I. the slate. The Estancia musicians
will travel to San Leandro for the Pacific
High School sponsored exchange concert
on June 2.
Wednesday's program will include
Estancla's stage band, concert band and
vocal ensemble and the Pacific High
School stage and conrert b a n d s .
l\dmission to the concert Is $1.
Mmey received from the program at
Newport Hartx>r High School will defray
OOsts of the San Leandro trip in June,
.acoordlng to Stan Gardiner, press
dlainnan of tbe Estancia music depart.
ment
the three-month murder trial of the
21.year-old Black Panther.
Heneghan urged the pane.I to agree
with the prosecution that tts case against
the accused Santa Ana Negro "has been
proved beyond all reasonable doubt. We
know and I think you know that Arthur
League shot Nelson Sasscer on the night
of June 4, 1969," he said.
Heneghan urged the jury to again
read the teaUmony of IS-year--0ld Steve
Tice, the Negro youth who told the
court he was with League when the
pair were halted by patrolman Sasscer
and asked to produce identification.
'I'tlat testimony indicates that Sa~er
waa sh<>' in the chest by League and
that the officer's gun was never pulled
from its holster. Tice testified that he
and League then fled from the scene
and left the mortally wounded patrolman
lying in the gutter at the downtown
Santa Ana intersection.
Sasscer, 2f, died 30 minutes later in
a local hospital.
Henegban will be followed to the
podium by Deputy District Attorney
Everett Dickey who has b!er1 in charge
of pro,,ecution in the League trial.
Answering their arguments will bt
defense attorneys Robert Green and
Michael Gerbosi both of whom were
appointed to the League trial by the
court.
It is expected that thi"'Jury will be
asked to retire and oonsider it' verdict
late thi1 afternoon.
Olympic Pool
For Harbor High
Wins City Funds
Newport Beach city councilmen Mon-
day night voted to contribute up to
$85,000 toward lht cost of constructing
a $350,000 Olympic·slze .swimming pool
at Newport Harbor High School.
Councilmen said they will earmark
1.65 cen!s of the city tax rate for the
next two years to raise the money.
Over a period of 13 years the city
investment is expected to pay off by
increasing the char1e -for swimming
lessons Sl and by belng able to hpld
more swimming programs in the larger
pool.
Newport-Meu Unllled School District
his pledged $175,000 toward construction
of the swim pool and now it is up
to the private Harbor Area Olympie
Pool Foundation to ralae the remaining
$90,000 by Aug. 1 if the pool is to
be built. ....
Councilman Llnd1ley Parsons was
reluctant in light of the city financial
situation to approve the e:xpenditure but
he ukt he doesn't want to be the one
to vote against recreation. The vote
waa~Ofll. ~u--we hedge we damage the cause
(private:--solicltation)," said Councilman
Howard ...,nogen.
Bill Barnett, Harbor High swimming
and water polo coach, said the pool
would be located behind the home
bleachers of the football stadium. It
"·ould be 50 meters by 25 yards which
makes it large enough to hold a water
polo game, diving, and recreational
swimming all at the same time.
Earlier, the city council had heard
from Ed Newland. water polo coach
at UC Irvine. Newland said people ad-Topless Hearing
Gets Under Way Churches Outnumbered
In Sacramento
Speclll lo tlle DAILY PIWr
SACRAMENTO -Hearings on new
laws to cover up nudity in nightspots
got under way here today, with a warning
to the mostly male audience that sOl'.l'le
ethibits may be personally offensive to
them.
"So feel free to leave if you desire."
said F.dward J. Kirby, director of the
State Alcoholic Beverage Contrc>I Bo.ard
as the three-day session opened.
Tough new laws banning topless and
bottomless are being sought by the ABC
and Costa Mesa City Attorney Roy June
was to testily this afternoon on the
background ol one local establishment.
Kirby, ronner FBI agent.in-charge for
Orange County before appointment to
the ABC post, lold the crowd of about
50 men it may turn them more off than
on.
Initial witnesses today began telling
how liquor releases inhibitions, a factor
the ABC underacores in seeking to clothe
or close night.spot, featuring nudity.
"Alcohol may appear to be stlmulistlc
but it releases controls that we grew
up wtth and learned as we wert growing
up," said Dr. W. E. Sigurdson,
psychiatrist.
He is director of the Tri.City ,Mental
Health Clinic at Pomona. and area in
which topless and bottomless taverns
have flourished .
Mesa Youth Held
On Pot Charges
Marijuana allegedly bought in Lagun11.
Buch was conflacated Monday night.
alter Costa ~1esa police aell'Ched the
car Of a youth arre1ted for almply M.lng
too young to possess his can or betr.
Ronald M. Yarbrough, 20, ol 1!40
Newport. Boulevard, was stopped near
his home by Patrolman Phil Donohue,
who &aid he seemed too Upgy to be
driving.
Tht offi<"r 5'kl di$CO'ltr)' of enough
pot for 20 lo 30 clglrtttes, four drug
pills and 11 pipe of the type used to
1mo-t hashish led to Yarbrou1h'1 being
boo ktd on f11r stiffer charge1 .
. They Included postedlon af marijuana ,
oangerou~ drugs and n 1rcotIc1
p.11ra11htrnalla.
SantaAnaJoining Fight
Against Topless Taverns
Beer bars in Santa Ana -13 featuring
varying decrees of nude entertainment
-far outnumber the city's churches,
leading officials to take a tough stand
against licensing of more and for lighter
controls.
City Atanager Carl Thomtoo has mail·
ed a leUer to the State Department
of Alcoholic Beverage Control {ABC)
asking all authority be permitted in
city action against such taverns.
The ABC begins a three-day hearing
today in Sacramento on the possibility
of outlawing nude, semi-nude and
allegedly pomosraphic f i I m en-
tertainment in such nightspo ts .
Thornton 1aid today in the wake or
a Superior Court ruling that Costa Mesa's
version of an anti-nudity law is un-
constitutional and that imposillon or such
curbs will be tough .
Judge Robert S. Corfman noted in rul·
Ing against Costa Mes.l's entertainment
permit ordinance that decisions in favor
of topless types run. heavily a111inat the
controlling agencies.
''I fully recognin the potenUa legal
problems lhe ABC may face in uphokling
tht con1Utullonallty ol these three pro-
posed new ru1e1," he said.
Those rults would :
-forbid su films to be shovm In
ban.
-Forbid w1ilrtsse1 to appear topl~s
-1orb!d ente.rtalners from performing
In any degree o! nudity beyond that
strictly outlined by authorltiet.
"However.'1 Thornton uld, "l hl\'t
rclucllntly reached the emclu1ton that
the er1dlc1Uon of thnt~ problmis ln
Santi An• will require the marshaling
of e•ery const1tutlonal munlcipil author!·
ty and police enforcement prorram
avallable to U$."
Ile said In urging City COuncil adoption
of the plea for ADC aid that 97 Santa
•
Ana beer bars were licensed last ye11r,
almost twice the number approved for
adjacent Garden Grove.
F rom Page l
TOPLESS ...
which have been invoked again15t ques-
tionable night!pots, only to be ruled
unconstituti onal in the courts.
Late11t in the long string to fall victim
Wlll!i Costa l\feu's own law requiring
inuanct of an entertainment pennit for
any type of performer, nullified Mond11y
by Orange County Superior Court Judge
Robert S. Corfman.
He granted an injunction to operators
of 1he Firehouse, 177 E. 17th St., forbid -
ding police to cite topless or other
dancers, although not all it.s young ladies
perform in that fashion .
The san1e ordinance \vas used against
Baby Doll's -but never tested for
its constitutionality in a higher court
-and has since been !he city's only
weapon in the war on bare flesh in
bars.
June spoke l\1onday ol his plans to
address the ABC hearing, before several
<llher top city officials commented on
their views of topless and possibly bot-
tomless again rearing their ugly faces
in fO\\'O.
"I'm ·goin1 to l!i&y: Look fellows, the
only thina ldt for us 11ow 11 your regula-
tions. We hope you make thtm toup
and "'e·n certainly help you enforce
them ."
··\Ve like what the ABC i1 doing,"
remarked actina City M1naaer Fred
SorMbal.
"All J can sa.y Is we certainly have
to t1bide by the rulings •nd in·
terprttal!ons of the courts and we will."
11dded Police Chief Roger Neth. 111•ho
sparked th fl t"'lrehoute controveny.
}le revokld Its entert1tnrnent permit
1 month 1110 when the establl!hment's
well-tndowed dancers began performing
gan.s any vJ5fble means of 1upport.
Briel Meeting •
Pl~n~e.rs Okay
15-home Tract I
Sillin& in an unua1ally brief meeting,
the C05ta Mesa Plannlna: Comml&sl<ln
dispatched several items of business
Monday, including pre I Im In a r y re-
qulrertfents for a l~acre home tract.
1be panel recommtndtd approval of
both 1 reaone pelltlon for the property
adjacent to Newport Beach and a :wne
exception permit for the 70-unit project.
One area landOwner, however, pro-
mised today he will take legal actlon
if necesury to halt the George Buccola
development at the aoothwtst corner
of Whittier Aven1.1t aod West lttb Street.
Leonard Post., of 1043 Centier St:, said
he and other landowners will ask the
City Council to cteoY Buccola's project
when it comes µp for public hearlnc
in tbree weeks.
Post says the proJe<:t, which h11 a
number of Jots under ttle city's l ,000-
square.foot minimum, will ruin the' value
of properly he owns.
The land on which it is sclleduled
to be built has been annexed from
Newport BMich as inclultrial property
and is to be chan1ed to single family
residential use.
Plarmers withdrew a proposed con-
valescent hospital expansion sought by
Irvin T. Sawyer, o! 2811 Orange Ave.,
from further a>mideraUoo._until the staff
guides him ln a major plan redesign.
A zone exception pennlt for Kenneth
J. Bugna to build a 10-wUt ap artment
development at 1970 Wallace Ave., was
postponed to allow further study next
M1>nday at an informal •saloo.
In.other 'action, planners:
-Approved a stin matter plan amend·
ment allowing a free·standlng Glendale
Rites Conducted
For Mr. Loomis
Funeral services were held Monday
in Whittler for L. W. Loomis, retlred
civic leader who lived in Costa Mesa.
Mr. Loomis died Friday at Hoag
Memorial Hospital at the q:e of 80
following a lengthy illnesa.
A 10-year resident of Costa Mesa,
he was an active member of the Senior
Citizen's Club. He resided at 197S
Newport Blvd.
During h1I business career in northern
California, he served on the planning
commission for the Folsom Dam, wu
,president <lf the El Dorado County Chain-
ber of Commerce, the Western Mlnin1
Council and the El Dorado I.Jona CIUb.
as well a1 a charter member of tfie
Placerville Elks. ·
He is survived by a daughter, Mrs.
R. C. Capps of Montebello, a son C.
J. Loomis of Lancaster, seven
grandchildren and 10 rreal·
grandchildren.
P eace, Unity Asked
VATICAN CITY !UPI) -Pope Paul
VI and the visiting patriarch of the
Armenian church in the Soviet Union,
Catholicos Vazgen l, today issued a joint
declaration calling on world leade!'ll to
end wars, and a pledge to work together
for church unity.
FtderaJ Savings and Loan sign In Olr
Harbor Shoppinc Cent~. 1
-Recommended city council approvil
of Z1Gne exception permit for Home
Fumi.sltings Rent.al Company to build
a 4,500-square-foot warehouae addttk)n
at 1885 Harbor Blvd .. Without on-.site
parking.
-Approved an Increase sou1ht by
Heath and Company to enlarge a
Builders Emporium sten at 289 E. 17th
St., for the new ~ore.
Adsit Takes
Planning Post
At Huntington
A Costa Mesa plunina consultant thla
week will take control of the Fount&in
Valley pllMinl department on a tern·
porary basl!.
Ted B. Adsit, program coordiaator for
urban affairs at UCl, has been hih!d
by the city as planning conaultant OJI
a part-lime contract until a planninJ
director is selected by the city council. •
Adsit will sit in at planfting commiuion
and city council mee:Una:s and appesf
in city hall on certain days to approvt
plans, tract maps and other items sub-
mitted to the planning department
The city's former plllllling director
Stan Mansfield, quit two monU\s agG
to lake a s i m i I a r job in northtrn
California, and now senior planner Ned
Parsons has" resigned to enter private
lnduslly.
Parsons had been running tht dlpart:
ment as a sub1Utute until a plann.lnl
director was to be named. Now, he·
plans to leave the. city M~ 22. :
Adsit, a planning and 3dmlaistraUvc
lecturer, was cooaultant to the Urbaii
Land Institute'• cttliens steertaa com-
mittee in Hunliqton Beach whlch ·camt
up with a modtrnitaUon plan for the city.
He was 1lao a planning director for POr
mona and other ctUes before taking tht
UCI position. . / ..
The city council is sc}leduled to in·
terview fow-applicants for the planning
head post May 2$. A decision on a
11ew director is e:xpected that week,
according to City. Manqer ~ames Neal.
Mesa Rotary to Hear
21st Century Talk
What the world will be llke h1. the
21st century will be discusse<t by TV
and radio personality John Milton Ken-
nedy at noon Wednesday at a meetl!lJ
o( the Costa Mesa Rotary Club at tht
Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club.
Kennedy, appearing on behalf of thp
Southern California Edi.son Company, will
speak on "The Year 2000," at the lun-
cheon meeting. His talk will be baKd
on research by scientists and Jelden
in many areas ranging from home con·
struction to nuclear physics.
DAIL'/' 'II.OT l"l!etf '' t.• ,,,.._
You bet. says ~·like SiJnkin as he coaxes his mini kite into the 'vlld
blue yonder. l\1ike . along \vlth classmate.'i in Corona del l\.1ar High
School physics course. designed and built kites as part of their studies •
The test came when they had to prove the kites were aerodynaml·
cally soun••
... ~
//
'
I
I
I
I
I I
I
I
• • • Saddlehaek
VOL 63 , NO. 113, 2 SE:CTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C~Llf;QRNIA TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1970 •
Li
Teday'• Fl••~
TEN CENTS
\ bCI Stu1dents Toss Queries at Saddleba~k
I I
I
By RICHAJID P. NALL
01 Ille 0.llY Pllet S!tff
UCI students who crowded into the
small board rooin at Saddleback College
to talk of many things Monday nighl
v.·ere told by some Saddleback students
tnat they weren't needed. Others thought
they were.
Talks skipped frorii the dress code
and a free speech area to the Cambodian
iituation and was at times critical or
Saddleback trustees and administration.
In a summing up after U)e fragmented
discussion, youthful Board President
Michael Collins told the group !hat the
junior college trustees were "not here
to end the war or prolong the war
or rethink the Cambodian situation."
He &aid the junior college dre.$! code
and a free speech area would not in
aoy '!BY resolve the war.
Ont UC! student exprmed disgust
that the •·autocratic, 1lothtul boafd was
diacusaint ridicultus lbings'• Uke the
dress.code when there wu a horrendous
war --1lDd students were being "mur·
dered.".
CoUins implied ·the-young man might
not understand the meaning ot auto..:raUc
and suggested ii the boant meetinr
disgusted him. "r,suuest you don't
come; go wage the struul~ at UCL"'
Trustee Hans Vogel aald be ls workine
on the tm speech area, e.um.inina: how
JI work.I at OLber campuses. He also
&aid no one is au.ffutna from dress
code 'regulaUon11 s!nct the code' has been.
suspended until I~ future is worked
OUL
Brian Colbert, a member of the Sad·
dlebact student senate, said be wu
olfended oy comments of IOIM ot the
UCI student. d1rtcted at tbe"board.
He said UM board productld • Winn~
football .team. UCI studeab tittertd.
Colbert said lbe eolle&e Is I in e
academically and cileil o. t h e r pc·
cc;>mplishm.enta. "I'm very in.suited by
some UCl atudenlJ who don't 10 to
this campus who come and insult our
board," he sakt.
UCI students seemed dismayed lhat tbeY were not welcome by all Saddleback
students. A few said they had been
asked lo come. A Saddle.back girl student
thanked them for coming.
She asked about arr8ll&ing for a._ UCI
instructor to .speak on the war. She
was referred to the administration.
UCI students prrisured the board to
discuss issues it wanted to diJcuss right
then. Collins said Lbe board wanted to
di~ss the matters as scheduled qenda
items because they are importanl
·He told one UCI student, "We eonaider
items of policy when they are placed
on the agenda. Just because you bap-
(See, SADDl..EBACK, Pa1e I)
e anon nv.a e srae
UC Irvine
Protesting
Subsides
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
01 Ille 01JI'( ~lie! STiit
Orf-campus protest activities by UC
J,rvine student s were curtailed today as
students began attending regular clas ses
and alternative education cou rses.
The alternative education plan. ap-
proved Sunday by UCI'.!! Academic
Senate, allows students to combine
cl~s based loosely around war protests
with regular classes or to drop out
of regular classes with no academic
penalties and attend nothing b u t
alternative educalien classes.
UCJ was the fint campus to adopt
tbe plan, which aUows a student, with
his professor's C{)nsent, to drop a course
with a passing grade in order to enroll
in alternative education and work on
u·ar protest activ ities.
Accordin g lo the senate proposal , a
student who has received a passing grade
in the C{)Urse he drops does not receive
academic credit for taking alternative
education classes.
When a student does not receive a
passing grade, he is able to drop the
C{)urse withoul a grade and enroll in
alternative education and work for a
passing grade and four units of credit
for the quarter.
The resolutions passed by the senate
~·hich instituted alternative education do
not force all professors to participate
in the program. The re$0lutions are
expressed in tenns of options. making
it clear that part icipation in alternative
education it up to individual faculy
!See UC IRVINE, Page %)
Criminal Council
Official's Death
Termed Suicide
Orange County coroner's orflcers
today scheduled an autopsy on the body
or Richa11f Qregory, the Orange County
Criminal Justice Council exec u live
secretary who died Monday night al
his Caµistrano Beach hom e.
Investigator Jack Bricker said
Gregory. 47, was found by his wife
Louise on the Jiving room floo r bf his
home at :SS119 Camino Capistrano 'lboot
9 p.m. "He was killed by what we
believe was a seU-inflict.ed. gunshot wound
Jn the chest," Bricker said.
Close friends toda y said Gregory had
been in poor health in recent n1onth.o;
and had suffered from an apparently
deteriorating heart condition for some
ye ars.
His supervisor, Executive Secretary
Keith Concannon. today d e s c r i b e d
Gregory's death as "a tragedy and a
tremendous blow to our organization.
"We were talking only Monday about
our plans and how we intended to go
places wil.h this organi1.ation," Con-
cannon said. "Dick had been with me
since Feb. J after 12 very successful
years with the Orange Cvunty Probation
Department and I counted myself very
lucky that I was able to get him on
the .staff.
"lie left here in good spirits Monday
ni"ht, ·• Concannon said. "He was one
or the most popular men in county
government and he's going.to be missed
by much more than our organization."
t"uooral arrangements for Mr. Gregory
had not been completed •t press time
today. lie is survived by his widow.
Louise and two children by a former
marriage.
,
LA, tnoseow Lose i.q ........... By Phil lntarlandl
Montreal Given
Olympics in '76
AMSTERDAM !AP) -Montreal was
awarded the 1976 Olympic Games today
in a surprise victory over Moscow and
Los Angeles.
Moscow had been favored for the
Games, and Tass. the official Soviet
agency, sent out a bulletin from Moscow
two hours earlier that they had been
awarded Moscow.
The announcement was withdrawn
shortly afterward wilhQul an expl~tion.
Il's the first time any of the Games,
Winter or Summer, has gone to a Cana-
dian city. This is in keeping with the
International Olympic Committee policy
o: spreading the Games around to new
areas.
MOSCQW had been favored because or
its renowned athletic facilities plus the
fact that the Games never have been
held in an Iron Curtain C{)Untry.
The Los Angeles bid was based on
!he fact the year would C{)incide with
lhe United States' 200th anniversary.
They were held in Los· Angeles in 1932
and in St. Lou.is iii" 1904.
The announcement. l"•s made by Ave ry
Brundage, U.S. president of the Intern•·
tional Olympic Committee.
Montreal was chosen on the second
ba)iot, a:ettinc 41 voeis to 21 fOl" Moacow.
0nre vote WU "blank.
l.Ds AO(elel, U1e ll*d city ~
for the G~ apparently w a 1
eliminated in tht lit.,:. vote. But J;nin..
dare did not ,,,,_tel1 say how Iii> first vottna went. ...._
Montreal'• selection as the ~ity for
the gamu in tm virtually tnocked
out the bid by Vancouver, B.C., for
the Winter Games. Vancouver, Denver,
Sion, Switzerland, and Tampm!, Fin1and,
are trying to land the Wintu Games.
"
Senate Okays Blackmun ''And .•ftlitMr m1rvelou1 thing •bout' being w•y up on the hll lis thet
bT, the time you 9et up ther• you'll h1vt forgott•n all the 1hln11 that
c& sturbed you while you wart downtown ••• llkt fht! traffic, 1he .,-rk·
Ing, the II.cl •rt, 1he y.oung peoplt ••• "
In Unanimous Balloting ' .
General Plan Alternatives \VASHlNGTON (UPI) -Judge Harr y
A. Blackmun ol Minnesota was eonfinned
as a Supreme Court justice by the Senate
today, ending an abrasive dispute V.'lth
President Nixon that persisted for almost
a year.
The confirmation vote on the federal
appeals court judge came two days short
of the anniversary of the resi~nalion
of Justice Abe Fortas. which created
the vacancy.
Nixon was twice rebuffed by the Senate
on his nomination of Southern federal
judges to the c ourt -Clement F.
Haynsworth Jr. or South Carolina and
G. Harrold Carswell of F\orida.
He then turned to Blackmun, a lifelong
friend of Chief Justice Warren E. Burger
and a judge on the 8th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals si nce 1959.
No serious opposition was ra ised
against Blackmun's nom ination. He won
the highest endorsement of the America n
Bar Association and was unanimously
approved by the ~ate Judiciary Com·
miUtt, 17 to o.
Blackmun is expected lo be swom
in quickly and to assume his seat as
the ninth just.ice on the court when
il next meets Monday. Hov.•ever, because
of the lateness of the session, he is
not expected to participate in any
deci sions until the court convenes for
a new term next fall.
The two days of Senate debate on
Blackmun was taken up entirely by
speeches pralsing hlm.
STOCK ltlARKET
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
recovered, surged upward, reversing its
early session losses late this afternoon In
stepped-up trading. (See. qUotations,
Pages IG-ll ).
Oetllning stocks outnumbered advanc.
es three to one among issues traded on
the New York Stock Exchange.
Eyed by Laguna Planners
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of the D11ty Pllel tt1ff
In a shimlttve session Monday night,
Laguna'11 new Planning Commission
buckled down lo the task of sorting
out alternative general plan concepts
ror the central business district.
Enough ideas were generated In the
two-hour study to produce what City
Planner Al Autry referred to as "a
fourth alternate."
He said he would present the plaMers'
views to the planning consultant from
DanieJ, Mann, Johnson & Mendenhall
and 1sk him to produce such an alternate
to be considered along with the three
previous downtown plans suggested by
tile DMJM ·le.om.
Traffic circulation and parking are
the key problems. the planners agreed.
Commissioner Thomas [ohnston said
he thought further consideratlon
should be given to the ring road plan
proposed some time ago by the Citizens'
Town Planning Association as a means
of routing through traffic behind the
basin.
"I didn't see too mu ch validity In
" at the time." said John.st.on, "but
I reel it should be considered along
with other proposals."
Johnston said he would very much
Jii<:e to see the C{)mmercial area joined
directly te> the beach area. This could
· ' accomplished by closure of Coast
Highway and routing traffic behind or
in front or city hall.
Ruined Clubhouse Doomed Commissioner Jim Schmitz said he
llktd the Idea or routing through traffic
behind the basin but couldn't see the
day when Coast Highway could be aban-
doned.
Most Clemente Officials Advocate Destruction
City Planner Al Autry noted that the
Division or ijighways predicts an in-
,. .. ea.st: or tfarflc on the highway,' despite
the Inland !retwity.
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of ,.,_ 0-11'1' PIMf Stiff
San Clemente's charred community
clubhouse seemed closer to the wrecker's
bar Monday night as all but one city
councilman and most of the city parks
C{)mmissioners agreed a new clubhouse
should take its place.
Meeting in an unof ficial study session
in council chambel's the groups -in·
eluding mOrl!il ol the city's planning
c:ommlssloners hashed o v e r
prtlimil:iary ideas for the. clubhouse
dilemma , outnumbering Mayor Walter
Evans, \lo·ho is a atrong advoc1te of
restoration Oflµ,~ Spanl&h BuUdiog •s
a historical ~ark.
"I'm outnumbered 4.t&-1 , but It still
will take a lot of arguing to change
my mind," Ev ans declared •rter the
discuss.ions.
The metUng, called simply to iample Both expressed opinlons that the Johnston said pedestrian acctss to the
ideas ·rather than arrive at a soluUon, buiklln1 'should be torn down and some beach. over or under the highway would
was marked by debates on the hlstorclal of Ill more historic eomponenll -bt necessary to keep people away frpm
significance or the structure compared beams, Ules and the like -be WJtd the traffic.
to a need in the city for a •new. modtm, in a new, Spanish-style structure. Commissioners a11etd that multi-level
large community recreatl011 and nettina parting structures woukl be essential te Evans has propoaed that the estimated to solve the' triffie jam with one probably
cen r. S57,000 In insurance settlement tundl J6eate:d aaaJnst the hlllslde below Clitf
Evans steadfastly held that the: present be wed &o restore the burned building, Drive
clubhou9C site woul_d be too small to which could Hrve as a mteUng place A Pedeslri&IJ mall 00 . at least ~
allow for the buJlding of a new com·. unUI plans are ~~ ror a new ·-downtown •IJ'ftl was-eyed~wltti fa vor . ,
munlly miter wtth ~.t ·~~" :,. r rty wher~ ~nMs··r. ftobtrt lfutings favortd
and that condemna1:km . , Y . • 1.:\W • . ~.. · ban·n1n1 an .auto 'traffic !tom Uie com-
lots would ca~ probleipt., , .,. r} lftir 1tc;,W 1ont ta .. pleted, Evans merclal area, a/Kl the, u~ of trams to .
reli jde.nl!-. ·; ,. ._, .. :' , .... ~,old' Clubho:qse could become fran#>ort ibo'ppera and belchgoers rrom ~le, too. waa 09~U{!\ber~ 09,, -~J'f'1nu5!um. tbe P8.fklng structurts.
point. I ·! un·-0WOUJd fake Only SIX monthl to Sch~ltl {eared that '!)arklng tWO 0t
Counclbntn Stanley ~P 'ii t restore the clu~ to a decent level," thrte'lbfoc.ks from the Main Beach might
\V•de Lower Wd that .,..ah· pat 1 "be uld, "but it would take lrom two not aa.Usfy beachgoers.
area existed nearby to solvt'the Pl! •\lo tbrte years ~ aet a ne.w ooe built. John~ •kl he like the tram idea
problema. .• • , 1 l 18ee CLUBHOUSE, P11e II . !Seo STUDY, P11e II
' I ..
Both Sides
Ask Special
U.N. Session
By Utitted Press IDkrnatlonat
The Arab nations said 100 Israeli tanb
and 2,000 Infantrymen Invaded Southern
Lebanon today and that Lebanon, Syria
and Jraq were fighting back Jn the
biggest Mideast batUe since the 1967
war. The U.N. Security Council was
called lnte> emergency session.
. Jsr,ael said its armored columns with
aerial support knifed into Lebanon to
wipe out Arab guerrilla bases which
llad launched 61 attacks against 22 lsraeli
.settlements in the past 40 months. F)trce
aeria1 batlles broke out and Israel u.ld
ii obot down th(ee Syr~ MIG'.JIL
The battJe raged throu«houl the day
in the Marjayoun area OI Lebanon aix
to seven tnlJes north oJ the tsr1ell border
and 32 miles southeast ol Beirut. A
Beirut military spokesman iaid fierce
Arab counterattacks bad stalled the
ISraeli push.
A spokesman for the Palestinian Ann·
cd Struggle Command said the IsraeUs
attempted~\o drop paratroops Into south
Lebanon, but gave no details. He said
the guerrillas engaged the Israeli forces
in "hand to h11nd fighting."
·There waS no Israeli C{)nflnnatlon or
the report but a spokesman 5'-id 11
ISee MIDEAST, Pase ll
College Picks
Ex-Col. Lund
For Trustee
A retired Army Lt. Col. living In
Laguna Beai:h was named to the Sad·
dleback Co llege Board or Trustees Mon.
day night.
John B. Lund, 48, of 1569 Tahiti, will
fill the unexpired term or Lou.is Zltnik
who resigned. It has about a year tD
rUA.
The college officials said Lund served
26 years in the Army Signal Corps
and had been a resident or Laguna
Beach two years. He has not had
previous school board experience they
aaid.
He and is wife Elaine have a 17-year·
old daughter living with them and two
manied daughters. Lund ls a native
of COUncil Blufrs, Iowa.· He was one
of four applicants to fill the vacancy
in divlsion three which includes IAguna
Beach and South Laguna.
Orange Coast
Weac•er
, Another groovy day looms on the
Orange Coast horizon with sunny
skies chasing the mom.Ina patchy
clouds and temperatures In the
middle seventies.
INSIDE TO~A. Y
Tht ne wborn Irvine Coml't1u11-
ity Theattr makrs an aW'piclou.s
dtbut -swteping thrtt top
awards at tht RiW'l'side oM-oc t
/esthxil. St t E11teTtainmt"t1
Pagt 19.
C•llfwftlli I cm~ tl·M C...-la II
(l'tN_.i II °""' Ntlk" ' 1•1,.,1111 ·-• • ft,.,.."'"""" ,, •""'94:• , .. " -.. "'"" """"" u Mi l'"• • ~ .. ., LlctRtM f
' \
l
I
• 2 DAl~Y Pll01 SC
-------------------------------....... --------
•
·~ '
Third Top Accreditation ·for, Laguna High?
llWIJ blP 8Cllook, ·--dll""'1!1 On tllll Hem llr. J... -tlllt ~ . ....,.i, el •••J!lll'••t • f,
ID rt\lllnS lbo ldcWcol\I IO<lat7 lo U1ree WttuuY -'if'~ d~la In.-711n-hlve ellon
' t 11 &I .... llllh 8dlool II -,
forftid "' la tlilrd 11..-yur ... credltadan a.s a top.ranking secondary
acbool, Dlstrlct Superinltndent William
Ullom and high school Principal Robert
Reeves said al a press conference Mon·
c11t7.-'
1\te meeting was called lo review
a H-page report on the high sdlool
by a mJ:-member committee to the Ac·
creditini 'Conunission for Secondary
Schools fl. the Western Association of
Sdlooll lDd Colleges.
Tbe comrt\lttee, wlf!<h v!Jlt~ the high
school March 2, 3 8nd 4 to examine
all ~ts jAcluded Dr. John B.
Brint(nr, ch~an or the Depa~tme~t
of·Educatiooal Administration. CaUfom1a
State Cqllege, Long Beach; Michael F.
A-.i, chairman of the English Depart-meot Galli-High Sdlool, CerrilOs; Gary
Ltndtll, assbtant principal. Anaheim
High School, Anaheim; Vlotor Paulson. prlndpa~ Ch I n o High School, Chino;
Dr. Morton J. Renshaw, profeSSOJ' of
eduClilion; Ca!Uomia State College, Los
Angeles; and Robert T. Acosta, con-
sul~ in ttadlng, California 51'.te
Department of EducaUon.
As a result of the visitation, and
study of detailed reports from each
departtnent, submitted by members of
the .c:tmlnistratlon stall, the faculty and
tile student body, the committee will rec·
ommend a maximum (five-year) accre~
ltatioo for the high school, R .. ves said.
Accredit@tions are given in periods of
from one to five years, he explained. La·
guna Bi!ach has received 'two five-y'ear
accreditations since the plan was inaug.
urated in 1959.
The committee report consists of com·
mendations and recommendations in
general and departmental areas.
Singled out for overall commendaUon
were: student involvement in cuIT:iculum
planning; maintenance of a 20..l student-
teacber ratio; development of a rotating
schedule of study; and the English
department for its curriculum and in·
novations.
The committee recommended that the
UC IRVINE •••
members and students. It was not clear
today how many students and faculty
members were actually particiPl!ting in
the program.
In addition to alternaUve education,
a Free University being organized by
sludents and faculty is also available
to UCI students. Protest spokesman Ted
Bollinger described the Free University
as impromptu classes set up by in-
terested people on a variety of subjects.
AlternaUve educaUon and F re e
University classes.,~ for the week
in the Gateway ComiiiOns area include
such diverse topics as U.S. History
discussion groups, Women's Liberation,
Radical Psychology• New Journalism,
Correct Revolutionary 1bought and AC:
tion. Nutrition, Fundamentals of Radio
Broadcasting, Theory, Practice and Po.-
tential of Non-violence and Interest of
French Intellectua]J in Politics.
Protest organizers said they expected
to have a roster -rOf professors for
alternative educalioo classes by this
afternoon.
Meanwhile, State Senator John G.
Schmitz (R-Tustin) termed the pro.
gram "an insult to the purpose for
which universities exist. which is to
serve as centers for learning and rational
thought, not agitation."
Schmitz, a political science instructor
at Santa Ana Junior College, released
a statement Monday in which he said:
"This inexcusable action is further
convincing proof that the r e a 1
responsibilities for campus turmoil lie
much more with the facully than with
the students.
"In a time when our country faces
real danger of violent revolution, nothing
could be more provocative than this
open encouragement of revolutionary ac·
tivity by unlversity professors.
"These professors are paid by the
taxpayers to teach, not to lead or pro.
mote demonstrations and riots." __.
Schmitz ctincluded his statement by
suggesting faculty authority over courses
and curriculum at UCI should be given
to tbe administration.
DAILY PILOT
N.--,.rt I•-.•
L ..... IMc•
Cnt11M-.
HMtt11ttM .._. ..... ,., .. .....,
s .. c .........
OltANGE COAST •Ull.11,.IMG COMP'AN'I'
Robert N. Wt1d
J1ck It C11rl1y
Viet P'ru:11tnt encl Gen .. 11 Mtn•w
Tho111•1 kt•vil E1111er
Tlior11•• A. M11rphin•
MINI"" l!!tlllllf
Riclierd P. Nill
Soo./111 Ort1111e C-ty E.dHOf
Offk•.
Cllllll Ma1: »0 \Ye.II ltY ~tflt! Newport .. ,, .. ; 1211 W•I •• 111o, lovltt•r4
l.IOU<Wt llltJo: m fora• Av-~'""*" ltKll: 1111S 8tfdl ·~""""" .... C.-lt'; :IOI ,._,II E.I Ctn'llnt lt .. 1
~IL'I' •1LOT, wllll w~kfl I• QIO'ltl(!l(4 "'•
11111•...,..,..... 11 MU"*! dlllf' e1c..i s-..., 11J ..... tc C.Olli0r'6 IOt l..tt...,.. 8~Cll.
.....,..., '""" Cost• M9M, """!lnol°"' ... ell #4 ~Tllrl Vfllty, ..... "Mill !Wt
NtliWMI e-1111....... 0raft9'CI CtUI 1"111111111'"-~ ..-11111.., .,..nta ,,, 11 ntt w.t1
... lbO. llloll .. Mt1fl'p0tl 8t1tl\, tt.1 lll W•I
•ll'f Jlt'tod, ~II Mll41.
T•I•,..•• 1714) '42 ... 321
a..JfW A4wttltl .. 642.,671
s. , ......... ,,,,..,....":
T .... lll11i 4fJM20
~. 1'11, OMlfltt eo.11 M111111"' ~,. ,.. --...... -.. lllvll•""""' Cfl\tr\91 -Utt' fl'f (........,,._.. .....In
lftt' i11t f~ WH""'I WI«~! I*•
Milfbt " ~-· ,_..., ~ d•h ""tfM: pe!4 II Htwpel"I ltlCll
.... COlll Mal. (;11fMfllft. &u111u.pl!Olo .., _,.., ..... _,, ... ,, .., IMll N.$1 -1111\'i nm..., d"1i.o..11oM. 1:1.111 mMllllY.
\.
library ~ ... ·-d lo ••
hvel ionmionsurate wllh,the currtelllum
ofltrod," lDd llllt "• plan f<lt l!lvt!TIM
the entlft lacullY ID the elev~
ol educaUonal obleoil•• be<leveioped."
General comments noted that the
number of drop.outs from.Ille high school
is low; su~Uity of some of the older buildings is a continuing prabJem: the
library fact lUes are adequate, but the
collection of boo¥. is very inadequate:
communication between counseling staff
and teaching staff could he Improved;
and students are enthusiastic about the
revolving class schedule because of the
increased learning opportuniUes afforded
them. .
While noting Ulat efforts being made
to expand 5Chool-communlty relaUons are
"adequate," the committee added.
"Laguna lleadi High, in common wilb
From Page 1
STUDY •••
but wondere<\ if it would work.
James Dilley of the CTPA interjected,
"Laguna could evolve such an attractive
system of transportation in the central
basin people would come here just to
ride it. It would pay for ltseU."
WllL TRAMS PA YT
He noted that j>eople pay for the
privilege' of just riding on unusual con•
veyances at Disneyland.
But Commissioner William Lambourne
pointed out the Festival takes an annual
Wss on iUI trams.
The possibility of increasing revenue
from parking structures by including
commercial tenants was discussed.
Schmitz suggested they could house some
city government offices along with the
parking.
One of the DMJM plans that included
a partial 00.foot high bridge from CUU
Drive across tht: business district met
with little enthusiasm.
''I'd hate to see us destroy the basin
with a bridge," said Schmitz. Lambourne
said he didn't think anyone would be
happy with such a bridge.
HasUngs suggested an additional park·
tng structure in the canyon opposite
the Festiyal g:~unda, with ~ pedestrian
walkway from about the thrrd floor to
the grounds and Playbouse might be
needed.
MAYOR WATCHES
MayOO' Richard Goldberg~ who was
observing his newly appointed . com·
mission in action from a seat m the
council chamber suggested, "I would
mission in action from a se~t in the
just like to remind you that while we are
not broke. we are rather bad!Y bent .. so
we hope that along with all this planru~
you will also come up with some sugges-
Uons for funding."
all this planning you will also. co~e
up with some suggestions for fyndlng.
Lambourne harked back to his freeway
plapning days on the city council a.nd
said that if Laguna can come up with
a feasible solution to local traffic. pro-
blems it. might be possible to get f1nan·
cial aid from the state.
Johnston pointed out the need for set·
Ung \'P priorities for development of
any plan in phases.
"Jf something we like wouldn't be
economically feasible for 10 or 1_5 years,''
he said, "we just can't have Jt. Phase
one must be something we can afford
that will be better than what we have
now."
WANTS OPINIONS
Commissioner Carl Johnson said he
would like to get some opinions from
people in the downtown basin regardi ng
the planning proposals.
Councilman Charlton Boyd, also in the
audience noted that the city council
has to ~me up wilh a firm . budget
in 60 days and· suggested that the council
should "know all the things you regard
as Important to get into this budget."
Two additional downtown p I a n s
presented by DMJM and dealing with
land use and zoning in the basin were
reviewed briefly. One envisioned a
number of high·rise tower structures
dotted in the area, to house both oflices
and dwelling units.
Planners seemed to agree that solution
of traffic circulation and parking pro-
blems were tbe top priority items.
Mayor Reveals
Committee Posts
J.tayor Richard Goldberg has an-
nounced the appointment of new and
continuing Laguna Beach city councilmen
to the council's 11 special committees,
as follows :
Auditing Committee: Roy Ho Im,
Charlton Boyd and Gt>ldberg.
Irvine Bowl Policy Committee: Roy
lio\m and Ed Lorr.
Southern Ca lUornia Association of
Governments: Charlton Boyd.
Sanlta.Uon District No. 8: C'.oldberg
with Boyd a1 alternate.
Los Angeles Regional Traffic Study:
Roy Holm.
Chamber of Commerce Beautificatkiit
Cosnmittee: Pettr Ostrander.
Cultural Funds Committee : Ed Lorr
and Roy Holm.
Chamber of Commerce Advert lsin~
Fund Commlttet : Goldberg a n d
Ostrander.
Represe ntative to the orange county
Coast Association : Roy liolm.
Drug Education and Rehablllt11tion
council : Charlton Boyd.
Bowllng Club Polley Coznmittee : Lorr
•nd Ostrander.
'tM.t . .-..·~ \ -t have bltn. made by «hi staff, seeh kins made It necessary • a:l•ll counsellilf
LlaUq ~ made .._ lho 1ut fedtral fUndlhf lo Ullst the ll rary, -lo entlrt families, 'll'llb lhe paronls fr.-
accreditation vl!lt in 1964, the committee b'ut each has been turned down. quenUy seeking ~Ip in handling thelr
reported that the scope of the curriculum Jt ls noted that counsdlng stfvicea children's problems.
has been broadened; programs for slow have been lnctetlaed and reora•nJaied, "This can tie up a counselor for rour-
learners hav• been developed; instruct.ion but studenta still feel pe.r900il Counteling to six houri a wtek on a ainl!'.le case,"
in music continues it a low level of is not yet adequate. he explained. "We enforce the policy
student involvement; and remedial and Student parliclpaUon ln and entbusla$lt\ that a student can see his counselor
speeial education services have been In• for a variety ot actlviU~ Is commended. within 24 hours ot putting In a request.
creased; students hive become deeply Dr. UJlom noted here Utat student In· but tbt kids still say they need more
involved ln the innovative curriculum. volvement in currl~qm, through mlnl· Ume to talk."
While taking note of the fact that ,.Ourses and in other areas, "bas reduced Alt.bough new buildings have been acf..
redqsign of the library facility has the possibility of an underground ded Since the last visitation, the report
eliminated space problems, the com· newspaper and student militants on cam-said, shop areas still are inadequate
mlttee describes the book. collecUon as pus." and mainlenance of older buildings con·
"woefully inadequate to SUpJ!Ort the 'With regard to counseling, Reeves ttnues to be a problem. Defeat of the
educational program of the high achool noted that whlle the raUo of counselors February' bMd election is taken into
and .• Jar behind accePted standards." to studenta would be cooaldered adequatt consideration here.
'Arnold' and Her Brood
Piglets romp at mother's side at Laguna Canyon
shelter of Society for Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals. Despite obvious discrepancy, sow's name
is 'Arnold.' She has been a resident of the shelter
for the past 18 months. She gave birth to 13 piglets
May 2. Three have since been given away and are
reportedly adjusting well to the bottle. Papa has
been placed on a foster farm.
Frona Page 1
CLUBHOUSE .•
eve~ if we hiffil an architect tonight."
Evans said the persons he has con·
tacted have agreed with his idea.
"You're wrong," Lower said, "because
I find people the other way.
"Three years ago I said tear it down .
The plumbing, acoustics and steps are
very bad and the floors are warped.
The people deserve something better,''
he added calmly.
Planning commissioner George Bowles
agreed, but in stronger language:
"If you restore it you haven't got
anything. It's an old, wore~t, mu&ty
place and I've never enjoyed going in
Ulere."
Northrup said renovation of the struc-
ture would be "money down the drain."
Councilman Thomas O'Keefe agreed.
then added a different facet to the
argument.
"\Ve have a strict code Jn the city
governing renovation of fire • damaged
structures and it seems impossible to
me that the city could bring the
clubhouse up to standards set for other
structures in town, therefore it would
be wrong for us to require something
of private building which we don't follow
ourselves," he said.
San Clemente Nears Firm
Policy on Aid to Chamber
A firm city policy 'on its contribution
to the budgl!!'l of the San Clemente
Chamber of COmm.erce came closer to
reality Monda)t as city councilmen heard
Chamber proposals for donation of 30
percent of the city's bed tax.
1'1le cooncil, meel.i.ng ln nonaction study
sesstin, seemed generally in favor of
such a plan which last fiscal year could
have yielded more than $10,000 to the
Chamber, instead of the $8,500 which
it received.
The proposal, made by the Chamber
in recent weeks, is intended to allow
Chamber leaders to make solid pro-
jections in their budget preparations.
Last year's Chamber request felt on
troubled limes for a while because of
the lack of a solid city policy, Chamber
spokesmen and councilmen agreed Mon·
day.
San Clemente Inn owner Paul Presley
and inte rim chamber manager Walt
Pair Resc ued
Off Clemente
Hunter made the formal request ror
the policy setting.
Bolh said that the bed tax revenues
could ·be used as good barometers for
the Chamber 's out-of-city advertising
campaigns and for the next few years
the 30-percent contribution through that
system would be equitable.
Before last year's hassle over the
city's Chamber cantribullon, San
Clemente gave Ole equivalent or the
Chamber's annual dues receipts.
"That, too was an equitable system,"
Hunter observed," but this new fonnula
could relate much more to · the activity
of the Chamber to help draw more
touri sm to San Clemente."
The city's bed tax revenue this year
has been projected at about $35,000,
City Manager Ken Carr told the council,
based on the past 10 months ' revenues.
Last fiscal year the bed tax revenues
dipped to about $32,000, probably because
of a lfngthy stay by President Nixon's
entourage. Members ol the Presidential
stafi rented quarters by the month, in.
stead of by the day at inM and motels,
thus their rent was not taxable.
The council promised to take action
in the formula matter at its next regular
meeting May 20.
' It • Ml<!d thft Jlllrd!u! " ~.....,. wlll help provi<le nl.eded ~ npanalon cl
pbylscal education fac1l1Ues.
'I'be principal value . of examination
by the accredita,tioo committee, Reeves
told re:porten, ts . "The self~valuation
for the btnefll ol the school that comes
from analyzing au. our departments and
lindlng our strengths and weaknesses
and the value of certl!ying to the com-
munity that our school has been ln-
Epected by an outside organiiation and
meet.I required standard.I."
Seoondaey importance of accredi"talion.
Reeves added, is the certification to
universities that graduates sh o u 1 d
measure up to re;wiired standards.
Graduates of non-accredited high schools.
he said, may be required to take special
examinations to galn college entrance.
Tornado Rips
Texas City;
Da1nage High,
LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPI) -A tornado,
striking from th~ blackness ~f a spring
thunderstonn, tore an ei4bt.mile guh
through Lubbock Monday· night, causing
death and destruction that "defies the
imagination" and injuring as many as
1,000 persons.
City Manager Bill Blackwell said the
t'll.·ister that roared up Texas' "Tornado
Alley" killed 26 persons. But a body
count today showed 19 dead.
The spring dawn over this West Texas
city of 161 ,000 shi>wecl damage over 2,500
square blocks from the tornado and
the main storm that spewed rm and
hail the size of lemons.
Wind gusts after the twister lifted
·were measured at 100 miles an hour.
Damge was estimated into the millions.
"It hit us where It hurts," Blackwell
said. He said the list of Injured could
run as high as 1,000.
Skyscrapers -the tallest 20 stories
-stood pocked and batt.eretl. At least
one building was in danger of collapsing.
Today's weather was dark and cloudy
with more deadly thunderstorms forecast
ior-the Lubbock area.
The tornado touched down at 9:27
p.m. -the time a gymnas.lum clock
stopped at a local junior high school
-near the Texas Tech campus, be!ded
northeasterly through the downtown sec·
lion and moved out or town by the
airporl
Most of Texas Tech's 18,000 students
had left town at the end of the s~
semester. Today was the last day for
final examinations.
The tornado was the worst in Texas
since a twister reeled through Waco
17 years ago on the same day. On
May II , 1953, 114 persons were killed
by the \Vaco tornado.
Water stood a foot deep on some
Lubbock streets. Complete blocks of
homes and busi11esses were blown away. ;
Viejo High Sets !
Careers P1·og1·a~
Represenlalivs of 24 career areas wi4
be on campus at Mission Viejo Rig~
School tonight for a careers day progra~
sponsored by the Rancho Viejo Woman'f
Club and the schoOl's guidance departf
ment. .
Formal and informal di.scussions will
get under way at 7:30 p.m . in the
mulli·purpose room.
Parents of students and incoming ninth
grade students from La Paz Intermediate
School also have been invited to attend.
One comment coming closest to the
solution came from interim chamber
of oommerce manager Walter Hunter,
who said a competent architectural
engineer should be summoned to conduct
a thorough study of the old clubhouse
to determine if it could withstand
restoration.
A pair of Orange Coast abalone
fishermen. missing since Sunday nle;ht
at sea, were rescued today off San
Clemente Island by a passing Navy
destroyer. Cambodian Coast Blocl\:ed
"The city should hire this service just
to see if restoration is possible. It may
be that those old walls just couldn't
back all that work," he said.
Councibnen dropped the matter swiftly
about an hour after discussions started
and promised they would determine more
firm directions in the clubhouse matter
at a regular action meeting -possibly
at the May 20 regular session.
Fron• P09e 1
MIDEAST ...
hours after the attack began that Israeli
lroops were stUI in enemy territory.
Lebanon, in a letter to the Security
Council, asked for the meeting because
of ·wh~t it called an "invasion'' of
Lebanon. It said the fighting raged on
the slopes of Mount Hermon near the
occupied Golan, Heights and that the
Jsrealis were forced lo call off the attack
despite Israeli air supremacy.
A spokesman in Beirut said Lebanese
gunners scored a dlrtcl hit on an Israeli
ammunition vehicle producing a tiuge
explosion. Arab 80\lrttS reported as
many as· 21 Israeli tanks knocked out.
Israel saJd Syrian artlUery opened up
·Inter on Israeli forces in the occupied
Golan Heights but two Israeli air strikes
wert called in and silenced tbe batteries.
Thcrt was no lmmt!dlatc reaction from
Ei)'pt, but Cairo said iL, commandos
struck across the Suez Canal shortly
after midnight and lsratl said It hurled
them back. King Jlusselr. of Jordan
telephoned l..ebanese President Charles
Jielou Rnd offered full aupport, Beirut
dispatches said.
Pilots of three Coan Guard helicopters
out of Long Beach and San Diego v.1ere
summoned home after beginning a 3.500-
square·mile search for the men at dawn.
Don Thatcher, 30, of 25252 Main Sail
Drive, Dana Point, and Fred Yurbic,
30, of Newport Beach, were reporte-d
to be in good condition after the two-niaht
ordeal.
The Bennington was towing their 22·
foot abalone boat from the scene to
a rendezvous with a Coast Guard cutter
and a reLurn to homeport.
Thatcher and Yurbic set out Sunday
for San Clemente Island planning to
return that night.
A second hunt for a crewman \\'ho
fell off the Japanese motor vessel
F.cuador Maru 30 miles southv.•est of
San Diego was called off Monday af.
ternoon.
Double Bill Set
For CofC Meet
A double-barreled progratn of the
Capistrano Beach Chamber of Com1nerce
will bring Sheriff James Musick and
Dana Point insurance agent Hoyt Poat
to speak before the chamber members
\Ytdnesday noon ln Pete 11nd Clara's
C;i,fe, San Jua n Caplslrano.
Musick will appear as a del11yed blll.
lie was unable to attend the April
meeting In which his opponent f01" the
County Sheriff.Coroner post was heard
by the chamber.
Post, who is president of the Dana
Point Chamber will present 8' chamber
of commerce insurance program.
l
To Communist Supplies
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Soulh Vlel-
nam has set UIJ a blockade off the
Cambodian coast In an effort to halt
intoming supplies for the Viet Cong.
South Vietnamese Vice President Nguyen
Cao Ky said today.
The United Slates said it was halting
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong ships
there but said this was not a blockade.
At the sa me time South Vietnam sent
gunboats 50 miles farther up the Mekong
Rtver above the Cambodian capital of
Phnom Penh in a new example of
cooperation between the Saigon · and
Phnom Penh governments in their joint
struggle against the COmmunl1ts.
UPI corrtspondent Walter Whitehead
reported from Neak Luong, 30 miles
down the Mekong from Phnom Penh,
that Ky told newsmen the South Viel·
namese navy was stopping ships of third
nations and searching them for Cotn·
munist supplies.
ln the past both the Soviet Union
and Communist China have landed sup-
plies at ~e port or Sihanoukville but
there was no indication of any of their
ships: had been haltcd by the South
Vidb'lamOJe, Cambodia had cut the
"Sihanoukville Trail " leading from the
port to South Vietnam.
The U.S. MilUary Commend In Saigon
said U.S. N11vy vessels were operating
in the same area 11,s: the South \'let·
namese navy but fl spokesman lnslsted,
"This Is not a bloekade. 11 A spokesman
' l
for Gen. Creighton W. Abrams said .
"no third country" vessels w o u l d be
stop~d by U .s. s h i p s or interfered
"·Ith in any way.
The spokesman said the U.S. vessels
were position~d to stop "North Viet-
namese and Viet Cong ship 1 trying
to bring supplies into Cambodian ter·
ritory. The bulk of the allied fleet was
believed positioned opposite Phu Quoc
Island, which also Is a South Vietnames~
province.
"The Cambodian government has been
informed,'' the U .s. spokesman said'.
From Page 1
SADDLEBACK ••
pened to show up Is no reaaon for
us to discuss It.··
John Bothwell, Saddleback student
body president, criticized thf! bolird for
continua\ delays on matters rtQ.Uest~
by the tludenls but he al!'.O suggested
the discussion WPS over since the board.
had other mailers to consider.
Collins, plck~ up on the cue. and
said the board did oppreciate the tone
or the discussion aad is interested in
discussing problems with students.
"I do hope the time never cornea
when the process of dir.cus!lion sivel
y.·ay to confronta tion or vlo\,nce." be
said.
(
,•
0 M .. 0 -----.... ,., -.,, "" " .
Laguna
I
' f Bea eh
yPL:. '63 , NO. '113, 2 SECTIONS, 2.6 P/,GES ,· ORANGE· COUNTY, C:AliJl!ORNIA
' : ' • I
Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
~ TUESO/,Y, MAY 12, 1970 ' TEN CENTS
UCI Students Tos-.s Queries at Saddlebacl{
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of tM O.llY ~)fl ftall
UCI students who crowded into the
small board room at Saddleback College
to talk or many things Monday night
were told by some Saddleback students
that they weren't needed. Others thought
they were. ·
'.falU skipped from the dress rode
and a free speech area to the Cambodian
l\ituation and was at ~s criUcal or
Saddleback trustees and administration.
Jn a summing up alter the fragmented
discussion, youthful Board President
Michael Collins told the· group that the
junior college trustees were "not her:e
io end the war or prolong. lhe war
or rethink the Cambodjan slNalioJI."
He said the junior college d:rtss code
. and a fret ~ atta would not in
any way re;solve the war. on .. UC! student expre9std disgust
lhat tbe' "lutocuUc:, ~ board WU
•
discussing r~culous tl\iAas" like', the
dress cQde 'W~ ~e' w,as..a horrenctoua
war and ru,14ents were being "mur-
dered." ' ~. ''
Collins i mplied 1he ·~man might
not understand the rbeanips: of autocratic·
and suqesiOd' ii tJie 'tioard meellng
d~gusled him, ''.I •llif!'SI you don't
com·e:.'9 wage the,§trudlt.,at·UCL"
~Hons voeel saldlie ''"'"Id"'
on the tree 1peecb area, e:umlnlng. bow
, 11 worjcl -al -•"l'P"''" Ho' alto
•
sakl no one ls suUering from dress
~e ~eiuiation~ since the code has been
suspended· until its future is worked
out.
Brian Colbert, a member of the Sad-
dleba.Ck •tudebt senate,~ Aid be was offend,04 by ,,, ... .,,.ti of ..... ol the
UCI studenla cUneliod at the ,board .
ile .~ U..'boanl ~oduced .• winning
loolblll: l•m. • UC! 'lluc!ento tittered. Colbert· .said the c:oltp •IJ 11 D t
academically and cited o th e r ac·
compllshments. "l'm very insul ted 'by
1tOme UCl stll!fenl.9 who don'\. go to
this campus who come and insult our
board," he said .
UCI students seetned dismayed that
they were not welcome by all"Saddleback
students. A few said they had bteil
asked to come. A Saddleback ·girl student.
thanked them for coming.
She asked about arranginJ' for 1 ·UCJ'
instructor to speak on the war. She
was referred to the administration.
UCI student! pressured the board to
discuss issues it Wanted to discuss right
then, Collln.s said the board wanted to
discuss the matters u scheduled. a1enda
items because they are lmportant. .
He told one UCI student. ''We conaider
items of pottcy· when they are placed
on the agenda. Just because you bap-
(See SADDLEBACK, P11e I) . ,,
anon nv.a e srae
VC Irvine
Protesting
Subsides
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of llM O.rty ,lllf Sti ff
Off-campus protest activities by UC
Irvine studen ts were curtailed today as
Students bega n attending regular classes
and alternative education courses.
The alternative educatioo plan. ap..
proved Sunday by UCI's Academic
Senate, allows students to combine
classes based loosely around war protests
with regW.ar clant1 or to drop out
of regular classes with no acadetnic
~11ues and attend nothtn& b u t
alternative education classes.
* UC I was t'he first campus to adopt
the plan, which allows a student, with
his professor's consent, to drop a course
\\'ith a passing grade in order to enroll
in alternative education and work on
war protest activities.
According to the senate proposal, a
student who has received a passing grade
in the course he drops does oot receive
£ademic credit for taking alternative
education classes.
When a student does not receive a
passing grade, he is able to drop the
course. without a grade and enroll in
alternative education and work for a
passing grade and four unit! of credit
for the quarter.
The resolutions ·passed by the senate
which instituted alternative education do
not force all professors to participate
in the program. The resolutions are
expressed in terms or options, making
it clear that participation in alternative
education it up to individua l faculy
(See UC IRVINE, Page %)
Criminal Council
Official's Death
'
Termed Suicide
Orange County coroner's officers
today scheduled an autopsy on tbe body
of Richard Gregory, the Orange County
Crimi nal Justice Council executive
l!tcretary who died Monday night at
his Capistrano Beach hom e.
'Investigator Jack Bricker sai d
Gregory, 47, was found by his wife
Louise on the living room floor of his
home at 35119 Camino Capistrano 1bout
9 p.m. "He was killed by what we
believe was a self-inflicted gunshot wound
in the chest," Bricker said.
Close friends today said Gregory had
been in poor health in recent months
and had suffered from an apparently
deteriorating heart condition for some
years.
His supervisor, Executive Secretary
Keith Concannon. tod ay d e s c r i be d
Gregory's death as "a tragedy and a
tremendous blow to our organiiation.
"We were talking only Monday about
oor plans and how we intended to go
places with this· organization," Con-
cannon said. "Dick had been with me
stnce Feb. 5 after 12 very successfuJ
y'ears with the Orange County Probation
Department and I counted myself very
tacky that J was able to gel hlm on
the staff.
"He lctt here In good spiriU: Monday
night.., Concannon said. "He was one
ol the most popular .me.n in , county
1;?verument and he's goinc to be piillsed bf much more than our organization.··
Juneulao:anaem_cnta.Jor_Mr~*Greg:ocy
had not been completed at press time
today. He is survived by his widow.
Louise and two children by 1 former
marriaee.
I
•
LA, 1'1.oscow Lose ~rlt1• By Phil ln t1rloridl
Montreal Given
Olympics in '76
AMSTERDAM tAP) -Montreal was
awarded the 1976 Olympic Games today
in a_ surprise victory over Moscow and
Los Angeles. • '
Moscow had been favored for the
Games, and Tass, the official Sovie t
agency, sent out a bulletin from Moscow
two hours earlier that they had been
awarded Moscow.
1'h8 aanounc:tmfll» was withdrawn.
shorlly afterward without an explanation.
It's. the BM time any o{ the Games, Winter~or Summer, ha~ gone to·a Cana-
dian city. This is in keeping with the
International Olympic Committee policy
0: spreading the. Games around to new
·areas.
Moscow had been (avored because or
its renowned alhletic facilities plus the
fact that the Games never have been
held in an Iron Curtain country.
The Los Angeles bid was based on
the fact the year would coincide with
the United States' 200th anniversary.
They .were held in 'Los Angeles in 1932
and in St. Louis in 1904. ·
The arinounctment was made by Avery
Brundage, U.S. president of the Interna-
tional Olympic Committee.
MOhtrea l was chosen on the second
t>allot,' getting 41 voes to"ZI for Meow. Ont1vote1'al~ ~..it\ t~~ll.
lA>s Angeles, the inl city biddilll,
for '4tie G~es,. ~parenUy , 'W a a eltnlbihcl ·In Ille ;f!rll ~.-, •.. -.
dap clld not iinmedlat;!y .aay bow the
first VOiin& went. '
Montreal's select.ion as the city for
the games in 1976 virtually knocked
out the bid by Vancouver, B.C., for
the Winter Games. Vancouver, Denver,
Sion, Switzerland, and Tam pere, Fin1and,
are trying to land the Wlnkr Games.
r -/ •' .•
. \
Senate Okays Blackmun
.·· --. :;;..c?~
" ' ' ''And -.nothe' m1rvelw1'thlng 1bout beint way up on th1 hll lls that
by th• time you e•t up the ... yoy'll have forgotten 111 the things tht t
disturbed you while ·YOU wtre downtown .•• flkt the tr1fflc, the park·
ing, th1 'bad •rt, the young people •• .''
In Unanimous Balloting
General Plan Alternativ.es WASIDNGTON (UPI) -Judge Harry
A. Blackmun cl Minnesota was confirmed
as a Supreme Court justice by the Senate
today, ending an abrasive dispute with
President Nixon that persisted for almos t
a year.
The confirmation vote on the federal
appeals court judge came two days short
of the anniversary of the resignation
of Justice Abe Fortas. which created
the vacancy.
Nixon was twice rebuffed by the Senate
on his nomination of Southern federal
judges to the c o u r t -Clem ent F.
Haynsworth Jr. of South Carolina and
G. Harrold Carswell of' Florida.
He then turned to Blackmun. a lifelong
friend of Chief Justice Warren E. Burger
and a judge on the 8th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals since 1959.
No serious opposition was raised
against Blackmun's nomination. He won
the highest endorsement of the American
Bar Association and was unanimously
appr oved by the Senate Judiciary Com·
mittee, 17 to O.
Blackmun is expected to be sWom
in quickly and to assume his seat a!I
the ninth justice on the court wbe'n ,
it next meets Monday. However, because
of the lateness of the session, he is
not expected to participate in any
decisions until the court convenes for
a new term next falt
The two days of Senate debate on
Blackmun was taken up entirely by
speeches praising him.
STOCK ltlARKET
NEW YORK fAP) -The stock market
recovered, surged upward, reversing il!f
early seSsion ltisses late this afternoon in
stepped-up trading. (See quotations,
Pages lO·lt).
Declining stock! outnumbere<t advanc-
es three to one among issues traded on
the New York Stock E1change.
Eyed by Laguna Planners
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of llli 01Hf ~Ult l lfff
In a shirtsleeve aell8ion Monday night,
Laguna's new Planning Commission
buckled down lo the task of sorting
out alternative general plan concepts
for the central busil\ess dislrict.
Enough ideas were generated in the
two-hour study to prodoce what City
Planner Al Autry r,eferred to as "a
fourth alternate."
He said he would present the planners'
views to the planning consultant from
Daniel, Mann, Johnson &: Mendenhall
and ask hlm to produce such an alternate
to be considered along with the three
previous downtown plans suggested by
the DMJM team.
Traffic circulation and parking fife
the key problems, the planners agretd.
Commissioner Thomas Johnston said
he thought further co n s lder,at Jon
should be given to the ring road plan
proposed some time ago by &he Citizens'
Town Plannlng Association as a means
of routing through traffic behind the
basi n.
"( didn't see too much validity In
,. 11t the time." said Johnston, "but
J feel It should be considered along
with other proposals'."
JohnstOn said he would very much
JHce to see the commercial area joint'!<!
directly to the beach area. This could
'· ~ accomplished by closure of Coast
Hift:hway and routing traffic behind or
in front of city hall .
Ruined Clubhouse Doomed Commissioner Jim Schmitz: said he
liked the idea of routing through traffic
behind the basin but couldn't set the
day when Coast Hie:hway could be aban-
doned.
i::1tv Planner Al Autry noted that the
Cl Off • • l Division of HighwaY,i predicts an in· Mo st emen te icut s Advocate. Destr.uction , ..... or tramc on ill· highway. despit•
' the inland Creeway ..
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of tM 0.11'1' ,Ii.I Slaff
San Clemente's charred community
clubhouse seemed closer to the wrecker's
bar Monday night as all but one city
councilman and most of the city parks
commissioners agreed a new clubhouse
should take its place.
Meeting in an unofficial study session
in council chambers the groups -in-
clud ing m~t ol the city's pll\l"lning
commissioners hashed o Ye r
preli misiary ideas for the . clubhouse
dilemma, outnwnbering Mayor Walter
Evans. who is'' a .!tr'Ong adVocalc of
restoration of the Spanish Building as
aJiistoricat landmark.
"I'm outnumbered 4-to-I. but It sti ll
will take a Jot .of arguing to change
my mind," Evans declared aflt:r the
discussions.
The meeting, called simply to sample Both expreaR<f opinions th.at the Johnston sai<ff,edest.Tian acceSS to the
ideas rather than arrive at . a solution, buildlog should be torn down and some beach over or und.er the highway would
was marked by debates on the hl1torcial ot' Us more historic compoMnta: -be n~essary to keep people away from
significance of the structure compared beams, Ule& and the like -be used. ·t~e traffic, · · ·
to a need in the city for a new, modem, in a new. s. panlsh-style llructure. Commissioners agreed that multi·ltvel
I ·1 tlon d tin .pru:king structures would .,be essential arge. commuru Y recrea an mee g Evans· bu proposed that the estimated to' solve the trafrl c jam with one probab'y
• ce~~~~s iteadfasUy held that the preient :·~ ~ ~~e s:~m:n~ull=~ ~1~1:' against the hillside below Clift
clubhouse site w~1~d be too •mall to which could ttrV~ _u a , meeting place ~ A ,JcdW~rpaJJ on .It ·:Just one
allow ror the ·bui~ of ·~. ~ .corn· . 1 ',;<om~ !or ·•• new 'downiown· lttli/t-Wa~· gocl.wJtti r,;.,, munlty cent~ '('ilh lllequate ., ~J<lni•. . . :.0 ;ctty.proper17 Bl'O· .. C9"Mll11[all!~,jfo 111stfufs'lavored
ancl that c:ooilemnaUori"ol ,neorl)i II~"'""' ' l.ijqol f)alld!., ', l)Q~hiJli' aD aiito' tt lib from the cofn.
tot>, '"°"\d >taufe 'pfOb!em• wlth. ;~!>)'';; i; hell' ~~JI cilmpleted: Ev..,. ~l!C~l ·~i.!inif fl\~'"' or' trai\il: to
res1d,tnls\ ~ . •;; J i\ : ihe ' ct~ ~Id bocOme ,ra~ shoP'Pefs_i~ btachl<!m trbrn
Ht, too. 'was outnumbcrtd on .that Ulb· city's . mun. 1 : . · 1he parking Jtructurt1. 1 _
poin~ "l take..ton tx~monthLlo~µ !Or~)Mt j)!rldng· two or
Councilmen Stinley tJort!vup a n ~ restore ubhousa to a. decent le\tf!l," T Uirti b]ock~·lr'om the Maln!e~Et
Wade Lower said that enoui!' parklni '.!itd lt.,.oold .~ke from two rot SAIJll)"btachgoei'!. ,
area ex!lted neatb)' to aolve the parkiftl, to Pit ar1 llO get 8: .~w one built, Johnlta:n pkl he \ike the tram idea
problem•. ( CLU'BHO:f1~, {'•ae t) ~ 1 , ' . \~ ~ov. P11e It
. ... ' '
Both Sides
Ask Special
U.N. Session
By Ualttd Preis lntern.atlooal
The Arab nations said 100 Israeli tanks
and 2,000 infantrymen invaded Southern
Lebanon today and that Lebanon, Syria
and Iraq were figh ting back in the
biggest Mideast battle since the 1957
war. The U.N .. Security, Council waa
called Into emergency session. · · '
, Israel said tt.s armored columns with
aerial support knifed Into Lebµ.non to
wipe out Arab guerrilla ~Ses which
had launched 11 attacks against 22 Israeli
, setUO-t.t in the·~ 40'1110!11hl. Fler<e laenar batUes bioke out 'and· Israel said
it shot clOwn three Syrian MIG.lls.
The b~ rqed 1hrourout the day 1n the lftarja1oun Area o Lebanon 6iJ:
tG seven ~Jes north Of &he Israeli border
and 32 tn112s sou,lhea1t of Beirut. A
Beirut military spokesman said fierce
Arab counterattacks had stalled the
~sra~li push.
A spokesman for the Palestinian Arm·
ed Struggle Command said the Israelis
attempted to drop paratroops into IOUth
Lebanon, but gave no details. He 1aid
&he · guerrillas engaged the IsraeU forcu
In "hand to hand fighting."
, Thtre was no Israeli confirmation of
the ' report but a spokesman said 11
(See MIDEAST, Pa1e I)
College Picks
Ex-Col. Lund '
For Trustee
A retired Army Lt. Cot liviq: 1n
Laguna Beach was named to the Sad-
dleback College Board of Trustees Mon-
day night.
John B. Lund, 48, of 1569 Tahiti, will
fill the unexpired tenn of Louis Zitnik
who resigned. It hu about a year to
run.
The college officials said Ltmd se'rved
26 years in the Army Signal . Corps
and had been a resident of Laguna
Beach two years. He has not had
pre vious school board experienct they
1ald.
He and is wife Elaine havfl a I7·year·
old daughter living with them and two
married daughters. Lund is' a native
of · Council Bluffs, Iowa. He was one
of four applicants to fill the vacancy
in division three which includes Laguna
Beach and South Laguna.
Orange Coast
Wea ther
Another groovy day looms On tbe
Orange COaat horizon with sunny
skies chasing the morning patchy
clouds and temperatures in the
middle seventies .
I NSIDE TODAY
The newborn Irvine Commun-
it11 Theattr make1 an ouipidous
debuf -meeping thret tap
(lWQrd1 ot tbe RhJtrsidt one-act
festtucl. Set Entertainment,
Pa ge 19.
t.Mi ... lil t11'?#i..li1il ~· .. ,. c....-.,..,.1 1 U·•..,. ......... , II C...Mts ~ II' ........ ..I c-c ,, ~ Cw!!" ' DM111 ... tic.et t S•l'fl1 hf'W 11
•1111111o1 ..... ' ..... , .. , • ...... """'"' lt ti.o Maft;llt , .. ,,
" 1•11 Ttlit'l'IWM It ~ -u -""-·---.... 1.t111ttr1 U WMflrtr I
Mii .. • I W1Mt11'1 fllWI lJolt
Matrllw LIClll1'f t WtorW ..... W ~
•
-y-.-------~--~----------------------,,----
\
•
2 DIJ\.Y• llll01 SC T-• ..., 12, 1910 ,.
Third 'fop Accreditation f o.r ... Laguna High?:
r ' ' !
~ ........ lllah Sdiool ls looking fonrilril lo •;Ila,<. lilnl 11...,.year ac.
creditaUan 1s a top.r8nkfug secondary
school, District Superintendent William
Ullom and high school Principal ROOert
Reeva said at a press cooference Moo-
!Wj,t .
'Ile tneettrc was called to review
a H.pqe r<pO!t on the high school
by a Q:-m.ember committee to the Ac·
cr<dltbi Commission for Secoodary Sclioola ol lhe Westero Alsociallon of
ScboQll and Coli<c••·
Tbil commj-wbkb viaited the high
schoo1 Mardi 2, 3 and 4 to exanune
all deparbnenls, included Dr. John B.
Brinegar, chainnan of t.he Department
of EducatiOnal Adminlstra:tion, California
State eou .. ., Long Beach; Michael F.
Adams chairman or the English Depart-rnea~ Gahr High School, Cerriioo; Gary
Lindell, asslstant principal, Anaheim
High School. AltaMiria; Victor Paul:son,
vrincipal, Ch ino High School, Chino;
br. Morton J. Renshaw, professor of
educath>ni California State college, Los
An(elea! and Robert T. Acosta, con-
sullanl In reading, Calllomla State
Department or Educa-
As a result of the visitation, and
shMiy of detailed reports from each
department. submitted by members of
the administration staff, the faculty and
the student body, the committee will rec·.
ommeod a maximum (five-year) accred·
ltalloo for the high school, Reeves said.
Accreditations are given, in periods of
from one~ fivt years, he explained. La·
g\Ula Beach has received two fi ve-year
accreditations since the plan was inaug.
urated in 1'59.
The committee report consists of com-
mendations and recommendations in
general and deparbnectal areas.
Singled out. for overall commendaUon
were: student iitvolvement in curriculum
planning:: maintenance of a 20-1 student-
tt:~ ratio; development of a rotating schfdule <JI study; and tile Englloh
departliiont for it. curriculum iDd -rn.
novations.
The committee recommended that the
From PClfJe J
UC IRVINE ••.
m~ ~ students. It was not clear
today ~ many students and faculty
members were actually parUcipating in
theprocram-
library oollecllon be .. ~-lo • level ...........,.le w!llJ currl<Wwp
offe...s:" '~ ltiot "• l'!;ln for ~~ the enlir. !adilty In Ute dev'elopnont
or educatfOnal objectives be dev~oped. u
General conunents nottd that the
number of drop.outs from the high ~
is low; suitability of some of the older
bulldlngs is a continuing problem; the
library facilities are adequate, but the
collection of boob is very inadequate;
communication between counsellng stp.ff
and teaching staff could be improved:
and students are enthusiastic about the
revolving dass schedule because of the
increased learning opportunities afforded
them.
\Vhile noting that efforts being made
to expand school-community relations are
"adequate," the committee added,
"Laguna Beach High, in common with
From Page J
STUDY .••
but wondered if tt would work.
James Dilley or the CTPA interjected,
"Lagwia could evolve such an attractive
system of transportation in the central
basin people would come here just to
ride it. It would pay for itself."
WILL TRAMS PAY?
He noted that people pay for the
privilege of just riding on unusual con·
veyances at Disneyland.
But Commissioner William Lambourne
pointed out the Festival takes an annual
lo'ss on its trams.
The possibility of increasing revenue
from parking &tructurts by including
commercial tenants was discussed.
Schmitz: .suggested they could house some
~Jty government offices along with the
parking.
One or the DMJM plars tbal Included
a partial ro.roo1 high bridge !r001 CUii
Drive across the business district met
with Httle enthusiasm.
"I'd hate to see us destroy the baain
with a bridge," said Schmitz. Lambourne
said he didn't thlQk anyone would be
happy with such a bridge.
Hastlnp _.,.te(I an additional park-
ing stru<:ture in the canyon apposite
the Festival grounds, with a pedestrian
walkway from about the third floor to
the grounds and Playhouse might be
needed.
. 1n addllion lo allernaUv• educaUon,
1 Free Un.iversJty being organized by
s.tudenta and , faculty is ai.90 available
lo UC! student.. Prolest spokesman Ted
Bollinger descrJbed the Free University
u impromptu cW..1 aet up by In-MAYOR WATCHES
terested people on •._llQety of subject,,. Mayor Richard Goldberg, who was
AlternaUve e~ and F re e observing bis newly appointed . com-
UnJversity classes ~ed for tbe week mission In action from a seat in the
Jn the Gateway tf22IDQDll area incl~e council chamber suggested, 'jl .would
sud1 diverse ii~ if U .s: HistbrY mission in action from a seat m the
discussion groupe. 1Worb'en1s .Ltberatlori, just Uke to remind you that while we are
Radical Psycbol61)', l!,ew ,J'.~ · tidt broke. we are ra~ bad!Y bent .. so
Correct RevolutioiiarJ ·'l'h:llihtiJl.&l Ac>~ t-ft-J>o~ that along with aµ this planning
tlon, Nutrition, Fundamentals 6! Radio you will also come up witb some sugges-
Broadcasting, '11leory, Pr~Uce 1.¢ P<r-lions ror fundi~g."
tential of Non-violence and Interest of all this planning · you will also . co~e
French Intellectuals .:in Politica. up with some suggestions for f~d1ng. Protest organizers 11id they expected Lambourne harked bac~ to his fr~way
to beve a roster 'ol prpf~ for planning days on the city council a~d
alternative education clasaea by Qlil said t.hat if Laguna can come U? with
afternoon. 1 feasible solution tG local traffic . pro-
Meanwhlle, State Senator John · G. blema tt 'mlglll be poo~ble to get lman-
Sehmitz (R-Tuslin) termed the pro. clal aid from the state.
gram "an insult to the purpose for Johnston pointed out the need for se.t-
which universities exist, which is to tin·g rp priorities for development of
serve as centers for learning and rational any plan in phases. .
thought. not agitation." "If something we llke wouldn't ~
Schmitz, a political science instructor economically feasible for 10 or 1,5 years,
at Santa Ana Junior College, released he said, "we just can't ha,ve it. Phase
a statement Monday in which he said: one must be something we can afford
"This inexcusable action is further that will be. better than what we have
conv1nc1ng proof that the real now."
rtsponsibililies for campus tunnoll lie
much more with the faculty than with
the students.
''1n a tlme whe,n our country faces
real danger of violent revol,uUon, nolh!ng
could be more provocative than this
open encouragement of revolutionary"'ac-
tivity by university professors.
.iniese pfo!essors are paid by the
tupayen to teach, not to lead or pro.
mote demonstrations and riots."
Schmitz concluded his statement by
suggesting faculty authority over courses
and curriculum at UC! should be given
to the administraUon.
DAILY PILOT
N...,_le•t H ......... .._.
IMpN ... tlr. h 11t1fell ......
C11t11 ..... I • C'-""t
OAAHGa COAST l'U8llSHINO (QM,AN't
lloHrt N. W1M
l'ruld'"I 111(1 'ubtlttier
J 1s\ R.. Cu,l•v \lkl ,,_.!_I fl'lll ~rll Mtl\llltf'
1ho111•i Koo.ti
l~!lo~
lhoit111.A. Mu,phi~•
MMaGilne Edllor
IUsll1ri ,, Nill
Soul~ Oraft!IOc '°""'It li'1!10r
Of .....
(litl Miii: DI WWI 81' S"'9tt
N_..1 •1te11: 1'11 W•I 81illo• ""'""''' L-.uM ._.,: m ,_, •-
1'1\#lll"f1• 911(11: lnfJ •••cl'l"l~rd
IUI C"-111: • Norltl II Clmlnt llMI
~ILY PILOT. willl w.11ct1 r. (~4 !tis ~ ....... lolled'""' n<ceftl ·~ .., loll ._.,,. ,o111ie.... fir i.tovn• St.:(11. .......... ..lr<ll. e.r.11 M-. ti1111•""1111t WCf1 ..,.. ,_ ..... V1M1,, t Tq wl111 "'9
,......, ffll!t!ot. 01...,. C1'11 ~u.ilSJI'"'
~ """I"' pl•nl1 ,,... •I 1'111 w .. 1 ..... et"'llu N._! Sfll<l'I, 1rA1 1• W•I
..., lfr9fl, ce>i. M'"· '
,., •• 11141 &42-4111
Cl lfW A .... th' .. 642.I Al t s.. Clo sc Al h,.........,.,
,,,., .... 492-4421
~ tmJt....... CO.if M !llhl111
c-tf!r. ,.. fltW• .~~ n:in""'*"· dlllro.I ,,...hf If •• ,,.,.IMft'ltl'llt "-kl
__. .. ~ -'"""'' ... i.1 I*'-.... .. ~,_,,
....... t .......... 111tlf •I ,......., llK ll .,,, Chill Mn.I. C..1""'1'1 ... ktll«~llM .,
eMW It.JI__.,,"' Mlill .... -Mi'l'I
,,...., 41ftlNI-. U.• -IPllY.
WANTS OPINIONS
Commissloner Carl Johnson said he
would like to get some op_lnions f~m
people in the downtown basin regarding
the planning proposals.
Councilman Cba·r1ton Boyd. 1llso In the
audience noted that the city counctl
has to ::Orne up with a finn budg~t
in 60 days and suggested that the council
should "know all the things you regard
as important to get into thls budget."
Two additional downtown p I ans
presented by DMJM and dealing with
land use and zoning in the basin were
reviewed briefly. One envisioned a
number of high-rise tower struct~re;
dotted in the area, to house both off1ce5
and, dwelling units. . Planners seemed to agfff that. solution
of traffic circulation and parking pro-
blems were the top priority Items.
Mayor Reveals
Committee Posts
1.fayor Richard Goldberg has nn·
nounced the appointment of new and
• continuing Laguna Beach city councilmen
to the council's 11 special committees,
as follows :
Auditing Conunillee: Roy H o I m ,
Charlton !l-Oyd and Goldberg.
Irvine Bowl Polley Committee: Roy
Holm and Ed Lorr.
Southern Cllifornia AssoclaUon of
Governments : Charlton Boyd.
Sanitation District No. a, Goldberg
with Boyd as alternate.
Los Angeles Regional Trafnc Study:
Roy Holm.
Chamber or Commerce BeauUUcaUoa
Committee: Peter Ostrander.
Cultural Funds Committee: Ed Lorr
and Roy Holm.
Chamber of Commerte Ad vertising
Fund Commlllee; Goldb<rg • n d
Ostrander.
Rtpresenlotlve to the Orange Coonty
Coast AssocioUon : Roy llolm.
~ F-<lucaUon and RchabllllaUon
Council : Charlton Boyd.
Bowling Club Policy Committee: Lorr
and Ostrander.
many hl&h tll!!oolt • ._1ence dllft~llJ
ii> rolalinl !lie acloltaetJ>I ood"" lo tlli ..,;,mUllllY." '
Lisnng changes 1111de since t!le Jut
accreditation visit in 1964. the committee
reported that the scope of the curriculum
has been broadened; programs for slow
learners have been developed; tmtrucUon
in music continues at a low level of
student involvement: and remedial and
special education services have been In-
creased; students have become deeply
involved in the innovative currlcWum.
\Vhile taking note of the fact that
redesign of the library facility has
eliminated space problems, the com·
mittee describes the book collection as
•'woefully inadequate IG support the
educational program of the high school
and .• .far behind accepted standards."
On l!.i. l~ Dr· UP<cn 99*1 u..i '1!D4er """""1 c I r c ~ m •I• n • u ,
'ttiieo ~111 pnparad preoenlaliOlio i<!"veloil!nents In roctnl yorw nave often
have, Mlda ~ the staff, seekln& made it necessary to extend counselinj
f!*!'•l le ljSi!t !ht library, jo entire ram!Ues, wttjl the parents !re-
but each ha.s been tW'ned down. quently ~king help in handling their
It ·is • na;ted that · couasellDa: 8UViceJ children's problems.
have · bMn lrictelstd ind NorganJied, ¥ "Tb.is can tie up a counselor for four
but student.-still feel personal counsellng to si:r hours a week on a sin«le case.''
i5 not yet adequate. he explained. "We enforce the policy
Student participation in and enthusiasm that a student can see his counselor
tor a variety oC a~UvlUes Is commended. within 24 boors or putting in 1 rtquest.
Dr. Ullom noted hete tbal 1tudenl in-but tile kida still say they Offd more
vo1vement Jn aurl.cuhnn, through mini4 time to talk ."
rour&es and in othi?r areas, "has reduced Although new buildings have been act.
the passlbiUty of an underground ded since the last visitation, the report
newspaper and student militants on cam· said, shop areas sUll are inadequate
pus." and maintenance of older buildings con·
With regard to eounseling, Reeves tlnues to be a problem. Defeat of the
noted that whlle the ratio of counselors February bond election ls taken into
to studen~ would be considered adequate oon:!lideralion here.
DAILY PILOT Slllt "ht'-
'Arnold' and Her Brood
Piglets romp at mother's side at Laguna Canyon
shelter of Society for Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals. Despite obvious d>screpancy, sow 's name
is 'Arnold.' She has been a resident or the shelter
for the past 18 montJ:\s. She gave birth to 13 piglets
May 2. Three have since been given away and are
reportedly adjusting well to the bottle. Papa has
been placed on a fo ster farm.
Fro1n Page 1
CLUBHOUSE .••
even if we hired an architect tonight."
Evans said the persons he has con·
tacted heve agreed wlth his idea.
"You're wrong," Lower said, "because
I find people the other way.
"Three years ago I said tear it down,
The plumbing, acoustics and steps are
very bad and the floors are warped.
The people deserve something better,"
he added calmly.
Planning commissbler George Bowles
agreed, but in stronger language : ' . "lf you res'tore it you haven't ·got
anything. It's an old, wore-OUf. musty
place and' I've never enjoyed Koing 1in
there."
Northrup said renovation of the struc·
ture would be "money down the drain."
Councilman Thomas O'Keefe agreed,
then added a different facet to the
argument.
"We havPo a strict code in the city
governing renovation or fire -damaged
structures and it seems impossible to
me that the city could bring the
clubhouse up to standards set for other
structures in town, therefore lt would
be wrong for us to require something
of private buildlng which \\'e don't follow
ourselves," he said.·
San Clemente Nears Firm
l?.Qlicy on Aid to Chamber
A Tfi!tr cityitc>Ucy on Its contribution
tG the bud~ of the San Clemente
Chamber of Commerce came closer to
realitj' Monday as city councilmen heard
Chamber proposals for donation of 30
percent of the city's bed tax.
The council, meeung 1n nonaction study
ses1iin, seemed• generally in favor of
such a plan which last fiscal year could
have yielded more than $10,000 to the
Chamber, instead of the $8,500 which
it re<:eived.
The proposal, made by the Chamber
in recent weeks, is lnte~ to allow
Chamber leaders to make solid pro-
jections in their budget preparations.
Last year's Chamber request fell on
troubled times for a while because of
the lack of a solid city policy, Chamber
spokesmei1 and councilmen agreed Mon-
day.
San Clemente Inn O\\'ntr Paul Presley
and interim chamber manager Walt
Pair Rescued
Of f Clemen te
Hunter inide the fonnal request for
the policy setting.
Both said that the bed tax revenues
could be used as good barometers for
the Chamber's out.of-city advertising
campaigns and f<f the next few years
the 30-percent contribution through that
system would be equitable.
Before last year's hassle over the
city's Chamber cootribution, San
Clemente gave the equivalent of the
Chamber's annual dues receipts.
-'-'That, too was an equitable system,''
Hunter observed," but this new formula
could relate much more to the activity
of the Chamber to help draw more
tourism to San Clemente."
The city's bed tax revenue thls year
has been projected at about $35,000,
City Manager Ken Carr told lhe council ,
based on the past 10 months' revenues.
Lasl fi~a\ year the bed tax revenues
dipped to about $32,000, prOOably because
of a lengthy stay by President Nixon's
entourage. Members of the Presidential
stafi rented quarters by the month, in-
stead of by the day at inns and motels,
Lhus their rent was not taxable.
The council promised to take action
In the formula matter at its next regular
meeting May 20.
' It Is -llial ~ <JI ~· wtll help ·provide 11ffded npanlloo or
phyiscal educaUOlt r,.;11ues.
, The princ ipal value. of examination
by the nccreditalion comm~ttee, Reeves
told reporters,. ii-''1'be · sell~valuatlon
'for' the' benefit of the~ that comes
from analyzing aU our dtpartments and
flndln& our strengths and weaknesses
and '1be value of certUYinJ to the com-
munity that our sclibOI has been ~
spected by an ouWde crganbtUOo and
m~ required stabdlrds." •
Secondary importanee of ......utatliln,
Ree ves added, is the certificaUon to
universities that graduates s b o u 1 d
measure qp to ~l#red standards.
Graduates ol non-&QCredited high schools.
he ~id, m•y be required to take special
examinatkins to 1atn college entrance.
Tornado Rips
Texas City;
'
Da1nag e High
LUBBOCK, .Tex. (UPI) -A tornado.
striking from the blackness .. of a spri11g
thunderstonn, tore an eight-mile gash
through Lubboct··Monday nigbtt cauii:ing
death and destruction that "defies the
imagination" and injuring as many as
1,000 persons.
City Manager Bill Blackwell said the
twister that roared up Tex~· "Tornado
Alley" killed 28 persons. But 1 body
count today showed 19 dead.
The spring dawn over this Wesl Texas
city of 161,000 show-ed damage over 2,511
square blocks from the tornado and
the main storm that spewed raia and
hail the size of Jep10n1. "'
Wind gusts after the twister lifted
"'ere measured at 100 miles an hour,
Damge was estimated into the millions.
''It hit us where it hurts," Blackwell
said. He said the list of injured eould:
run as high as 1,000.
Skyscrapers -the tallest 20 stories
-stood pocked and battered. At least
one buUding was In danger of coUapsinj'. •.
Today's weather waa dark and cloudx
with more deadly thunderstorms forecut
for the Lubbock area. "
The torl'ladG touched down at 9:2'
p.m. -the time a gymnasium clock
stopped· at a local junior high school
-near the Texas Tech campus, headt4
northeasterly through the downtown sec·
don and moved out Of town by ~
airport.
Most of Texas Tech's 18,000 students
had left town at the end of the sprirti
semester. Today was the last day for
final examinations. •
The lomado was the worst ln Te1U
since a twister reeled through Waco
17 years ago on the same day. on
May 11, 1953, 114 persons were killed
by lhe Waco tornado.
Water stood a foot deep on aome
Lubbock streets. Complete blocks of
homes and businesses were blown I W&f.
I
Viejo High Sets 1
Careers Program
' RepresentaU vs of 24 career areas wilt
be on campus at Mission Viejo Hiif!;
School tonight foc a careers day progra.rft
sponsored by the Rancho Viejo Woman's
Club and the school's guldance depart,.
ment.
Formal and informal discussions wtn
get under way at 7:SO p.m. in Ufe
multi-purpose room.
Parents of students and incoming ninth
grade students from La Paz lntermedlatl
School also have been invited to attend.
•
One comment coming closest to the
solution came from interim chamber
of ciommerce manager Walter Hunter,
who said a competent architectural
engineer should be summoned to conduct
a thorough study of the old clubhouse
to determine if it could v.-ithstand
restoration.
A pair of Orange eo3st abalone
fishermen, missing since Sunday niqht
at sea, were rescued tcxlay off San
Clemente Island by a passing Navy
destroyer. Cambodian Coast Bloclced
"The city should hire this service ju.st
to see if restoration is possible. ll may
be that those old walls just couldn't
back all that work," he said.
Cooncllmen dropped the matter swi flly
about an hour after discussions started
and promised they would determine more
finn directions in the clubhouse maller
at a regular action meeUng -possibly
at the Mey 20 ~gular session.
Fro1n Page 1
MIDEAST .•.
hours after the attack began that Israeli
troops \\.'ere slill in enemy territory.
Lebanon, in a letter to the Security
Council, asked for the meeting because
of what it called an "invasion" of
Lebanon. lt salrt the fi ghting raged on
the slopes ot Mount Hermon near the
occupied Golan Heights and that the
lsrealis were fol'tfld to Cflll off the attack
despite Israeli air supremacy.
A spokesman ln Beirut said Lebanese
gunne:rs teored a direct hit on an Israeli
ammunition vehicle producing a huge
exploskm. Arab sources rtported as
many as Jt Israeli tanks knocked out.
lsr1el old Syrian artllJtry opened up
later on tsraell forces in the occupied
Golan Helahta but two lsraeli sir 1trtke1
were CAiied ln and 11le~ the batterles.
Thtte was no immediate reacUon from
Egypt, but Cliro &aid its commandos
strucl< acrou the Suet Cllfll sl!Ortly
after midnight and Israel said lt-hurled
them back. King Hu$!1tln of, Jordan
telephoned Lebanese Pres\denC. Charles
Helou and offered ·full 1uppotl, Beirut
dilpatches said.
Pilots of three Coast Guard helicopters
out of Long Beach and San Diego were
summoned home after beginning a 3.500-
square-mile search for t.he men at dawn.
Don Thatcher, 30, of 252&2 Main Sail
Drive, Dana Point, and Fred Yurblc,
30, of Newport Beach. were reported
to be in good condition after the two-nlght
ordeal.
The Bennington was towing their 22·
foot abalone boat from the scene to
a rendezvous wi~h a Coast Guard cutter
and a return lo homeport.
Thatcher and Yurbic set out Sunday
for San Clemente Island planning to
return that nlghL
A :second hunt for a crewman who
fell off the Japanese motor vessel
Ecuador Maru 30 miles southwest of
San Diego was called off Monday af·
ternoon.
Double Bill Set
For CofC Mee t
A double-barreled program or the
Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce
will bring She.riff James Musick and
Dana Point tnsurance agent Hoyt Post
to speak before the chamber members
Wedn~sday noon ln Pete and Clara 's
Cafe, San Juan CapJstrano.
Musicll: will appear as a delayed blll.
lie was unable to attend the April
meeting in whJch his oppon~t for the
County SheMff-Olronu post wu heard
by the chamber .
PoSt, who Is president of the D1tna
Poinl Chamber will present ;1:' ch1mber
of comme~ lnsuranct proararn.
To Communist Supplies
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -South Viel-
na1n has set up a blocll:ade off the
Cambodian coast ln an effort to halt
i~ming supplies for the V1et Cong,
South Vietnamese Vice President Nguye.1
Cao Ky said today.
The United States said it ,was halting
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong ships
there but said this was not a bk>ckade.
At the same time South Vietnam sent
gunboats SO miles farther up the Mekong
River above the Cambodian capital of
Phnom Penh in • new example of
cooperation betwee.1 the Saigon and
Phnom Penh j:Ovemments in their joint
struggle against the Communi!ts.
UPJ correspondent Walter Whitehead
reported from Neak Luong, 30 miles
down the Mekong from Phnom Penh,
that Ky told newamen Utt South Viet·
namese navy was stopping ships of Ullrd
nations and searching them for Com-
munist supplies.
In the pul both the Soviet Union
and Communlat China hive landed 1u~
piles at the port of Sihanoukville but
there wa!I nG lndlcaUon of any r:I. t'helr
ships had been halted by the South
Vll!tnllmese. Cambodia had cut the
''Sih1nouk;vil le Tr-all" leading from the
port to South Vietnam.
The U.S. Military Command In Saigon
said U.S. Navy vessels "'ere operating
in the same arta as the South Viet· ;
nanicse navy but a spokesman Insisted,
"This b not a blockade." A spok;esm an
•
for Gen. Creighton W. Abram! aaid,
''no third country'' vessels w o u 1 d be
stopped by U.S. sh Ip s or interfered
~·Ith hi any way. ••
The spokesman said the U.S. vessels
were posiUoned to stop "North Vlet·
namese and Viet Cong s h I p s tryllle
to bring supplies into Cambodian ter-
ritory. The bulk of the allied fleet was
believed positioned opposite Phu Qudc
Island , which also is a South Vietnamft:e
province.
"The Cambodian government has bten
informed," the U.S. spokesman said. • ..
F rom Page J
SADDLEBACK .• .,
pened to show up Is no reason ,,
US to discuss it."
John Bothwell. Saddleback atud.14
body president, criticized the board ror
continual delays on matters request~
by the student.!I but he also suggested
the dl9CUSslon was over since the boa\i
had other matters to consider.
Collins, picked up on the cue. ~
said the board did appreciete the tom
of the discussion and is intere3ted in
dl1cusslng problems with students. 1
"I do hope the time never come.
when the process of discussion gi~
way lo confrontation or violt-nct:." He
said.
• •
D~IL'f PW.Of,.,,.._ ",,...... V•lltrl•
_ Tuesday, May 12; 1970 L • DAil V Pll;T jS
Reading Olympic·s se·t
All But Laguna, Tustin Below Average
In an effort to upgrade the reading
of Orange County school children, Dr.
Robert Peterson, county superintendent
oC schools, said he will stage a "Reading
Olympics'' next spring.
Dr. Pet~n noted that reading test
results recenUy released by the State
Department of Education indicated
school children Jn Orange County as
wen as throughout the state ranked below
the national average at the slxth grade
level.
There were two school districts that
are e1cepUons, however, with children
reading at or above the sixth grade
level. The.se are the Laguna· Beach.
Unified School District and Tustin
Elementary School DistcJct.
The Olympics program will be pat-
terned after the County Schools' Office
Academic DecathlQR. no~ in lts third
year, Dr. Peterson said:
0 1 am concerned . with the recently
announced state reading tests," he said.
"Our ~gsters do nqt seern · to do
enough teadin~ outside the classroom."
The Realling 'Olympics' illiUally would
involve only. si¥th gracie atudents who
woUld be chosen to repfeeel1t the '{arious
schbols. · ·
readers but be plans to devise a handicap
ryltem which would encourage the
average reader to participate.
He said he believes the bask reuona
were less time in classrooms than in
olher parts of the country and leas
home.reading. "Our weather is oot con-
ducitt to extensive reading."
I The llrst Reading ~pico .,. plm.
ned : for the sprlrl& <it It'll, to ..,_
the llCl>OOls" office .the '*-'l' !"*'.
to organilt. the event. U IUCClllfuJ,
they woold .be beld twice a yeaT.
Both the Academic Decalhlon and tho
new event would be financed by elem.·
Uoos, Dr. Peterson llld.
* * * * * * Laguna Scholarship Fu,nd
Gets $875 in Donations
Contributions 8'Muntlng to $175 have
so far been received to bolster
scholarship funds for this year's Laguna
Beach Hijh School _graduates, 9Cholarshlp
counselor Jan Fritsen said Monda~.
The "Dollars for Scholars" drive,
launched Jut week, seeks $10,000 by
Friday to replace money not available
this year from the Thurston Fund, as
well as some -scboluships that have
been cancelled.
tool allowance for belbmbll mechanle;
$250-$300, semester regtatratioa f~ ad
text books al a Ca!Uomla 1lat. coUoce:
-· ooe quarter rqlltr-foes and i.n books al the Unlvenlty of
California; 'ISlll, shoi't tmn techllW
trainin1 prog:riam; 1 • $2;000, one 7ear
estimated e:rpenses for lltudent alleDdlQg
UC! and llvbig. al home.
Mayor Duo Get
•
OLD CEMETERY RESTS ON A KNOLL ABOUT A HALF MILE FROM THE MISSION
It's It.re -A C•thollc Cemetery Owned by Parish Ratt.er Than Entire DJoctse
Events would include. an essay from
an assigned reading, ,a Ustenlng event,
memory work and two oral com-
municatioo activities, one covering re·
qu.ired work and the other dealing with free'cboic~ material.
Dr .. Pe~erson granted that the project
would appeal to those classed as good
Miss Fritsen said there are about
20 students in the graduating class
regarded as priority cases · in financiil
need, especially in view of' the rising
cost of college education.
Donations from groups or lndividuab:
may be sent to the Dollars for .Scholars
Fund, Lagulla Beach High School, &a!i.
Park Ave.
Season Started
Annex Battle
OverMCAS
!f o Be Delayed
The battle between Santa Ana· a,d
Tustin over annexation of the Marble
Corps Air Station {Helicopter), Santa
Ana seems doomed to further delay.
TwD urgent requests that consideration
of the coRflicting annexatioas be deferred.
fiave been received by the Local Agency
Formation Commission (LAFC). The
mergers were due to be considered
:Wednesday by the commissioners.
Requesting a two-week delay js the
Orange County Airport CommissiOI and
45king a 60-day delay is 11th Naval
Distcict Headquarters in Saa Diego, ac-
cording to LAFC EJ;ecuti.ve Officer
Richard T. TumeT. I
, The commission will undoubtedly honor
the requests, 0 especially inasmuch as
Ule Navy owns the MCAS," Turner said.
Both Santa Alla and Tustin border
the MCAS property and a spirited a•
nexation battle two years ago ended
in a deadlock, with both ciUes' pleas
being turned down.
Mrs. Brixey
Rites Monday
'Private graveside set'\lices were held
at 2 p.m. Monday in Fairhaven Memorial
:Park, Santa Ana, for Noodis L. Briley,
60, of 251 Lower Cliff Drive, Lagwia
Beach, who died April 23 in Spain.
The Rev. Dallas Turner of the Com-
munity Presbyterian Church officiated.
Mrs. Brixey is survived by two sons.
Stephen Brixey Jr. cf Palos Verdes
Estates and Lawrence Brixey of Newport
Beach; a sister, Vivian Sturdevant of
Orange; a brDlher, Wallace Zirkle of
Orange ; and by three grandchildren.
Backs-Kalbars Mortuary. 1617 West La
Palma, Anaheim, were in charge or
arrangement.s.
• . ..
Military Rites
For Gen. Ross
Graveside services with full military
honors were held Monrlay at Fort
miss Cemetery, Fort Bliss, Tex, for
Major Gen. Frank Seymoure Ross of
South Laguna, a former member of
General EisenOOwer's staff.
General Ross died Wednesday at his
home, 32251 Vista de la Luna , at the
.age or n.
A native of Aspen, Colo. he had li ved
.in California for 24 years, the past
14 in Orange County.
He is survived by his widow, Myra;
11 newphew, Robert Rossum of Los Altos,
and a sister, Dorothy Sieger of El Paso.
Sheffer Laguna Beach Mortuary was
In charge of atTangements in Laguna
and tributes may be sent in care of
Harding, Orr & McDaniel Funeral Home
in El Paso. -
Laguna Art Fest
Producer to Talk
Don Williamson, producer-directer of the Pageant of the Maslers in Laguna
~Beach, will speak to members of the
South Coast Square and compass Club
May 17 at a luncheon in San Clemente.
The ltmcheon is to begin at 12:30
p.m. In UM? san Clemente Golf Course
Clµbhouse dining room. 150 East
Magdelene. Reservations may be made
by phoning George Unveriagt, 492·1220;
or Walter Miller, 492-6151.
I
Deli~ of Past
Capo-Cemetery Quiet, Serene
It's a lonely place.
But its canopy of trees and sprinkling
of wild flowers give Sim J u a n
Capistrano's old Catholic cemetery an
aura of serenity.
There are no miles of green lawns
and sterile metal plaques here. On1y
rows of while crosses, heavy marble
headstones and in Some places, crumb)..
i•g tombs.
Weeds and tangled shrubbery have
been allowed to run wild through the
uneven ground. 'nlough some local
residents would prefer to 1ee it kept1 ,
more orderly, those who care see to
it that their family resting lfOUD<ls are
neat and beautiful.
'11le" oldest dates are recorded on the
Forster family vault, a tiny bouse·like
structure in the ce11ter or the cemetery.
One date, that of a child, reads 1854.
Although mission officials h a d
crosses one can see.an occasi01al name
scratched on the wooden surface or just
barely make out an engraving on a
.stone plaque. Some of the names are
Lobo, Yorba, Etcheberria and Olivares
••• all well known Capistrano families.
Just last week Mrs. ViviaJ1a Olivares,
the matriarch of Capistrano, was buried
there, in the last row of plots where
only a few remain empty.
Many of the readable markers show
short life spans, recalling a time when
there were no wonder drugs. But one
remarkable mes:;age nearly a century
old reads "died at the age of 102.''.
•
Wholesale Index
Remains Stable
WASlllNGroN (AP) -Wholesale
prices did not decline in April as lndi·
cated in a preliminary report, but the
final figures issued today nevertheless
cheered the administration: they failed to
rise for the first time in 18 months.
OnJy farm and food prices declined in
the wholesale index, however,
Industrial raw materials rose three·
tenths of one percent, but this too ,was a
hopeful indicator, because It represented
a 3.6 percent annual rise instead of the
4 percent rate of Increase at the start of
the year.
The index stood at 118.6 percent of the
1957-59 ave.rage in April. That compared
with 111.9 percent a year earlier.
Some typical costs .<:lted by · Miss
Fritsen included:. $50 • 7S; text book
allowance; $200, jwiior college fees and
bOok· allowance · for one, ye.,-, or · parUal
.scholarship · lo &echnical school; tae,
Top Jazz Alto Sax
Johnny Hodges Dies
NEW YORK (UPI) -Alto saxophonist
Johnny Hodges, 6.1, a master of the
alto saxophone who traveled · the world
with Duke Ellington's band, died in New
York Monday after collapsing in a den·
list's office.
Hodges was a Down· Beal poll winner
every year from 1940 to 1949 and ·his
smooth WAes won critical praise frotn
jazz rans.
With former Mayor J.,.. Riddle
pllchlng the !Int ball, and ,,.,.. MIYO!"
Richard Goldberg slandiJli ill ., catcher,
Laguna aea<h IJl!le League play Fl
under way al Riddle Field Saturday.
In the lirsl ,..... of the .,.run, -header, the NaUcnal Lelgue11 Lloal
defeated the VFW team I to 3.
Taking over for the 9'Cond pme,
the American Wgue'a Laguna FedlrU
lloonced the Klwanlt playen 11 too.
The play followed tradltlonll -'81
ceremonies during which playtra nre
Introduced and Mrs. Amy Norwm.t
pre,.ut.d the 19118 cky chlm~
troph'.i to the Rntary teain.
As usual, Mrs. Norworth dJlttlbuted
Crackerjack to the yoUthful pliyer1.
All members of tht City Council, U·
cept councilman Edward L«r, ...,.. '"'
hand for the event. Representing the
tity staff were City Manager James
D: Wheal<ot ·•n<I .J!ulld!J1i Diredqr Clyde
Z. Springe: ..
speculated that the cemetery came into
existence about 1870, it is possible that
its original intent was that of a family
graveyard.
Don Juan Forster, whD owned 106,000
acres of ranch land which included much
of what is now Su Juan Capistrano,
once owned the Old Mission which he
purchased in 1845. It was later returned
to lhe Catholic Church by President
Abraham Lincoln.
GRAND OPENING
The Forster vault was believed to
have been built by Don Juan's son,
Marco Forster, who is buried there.
But no ooe is sure. Do11 Juan himself
is buried in Los Angele s.
But there is speculation that when
the mission was returned to the church,
perhaps the cemetery, which is only
a quarter of a mile from the mission,
also became church property.
According to Father Paul Martin, !he
cemelery is unique in that it is a parish
cemetery and is 11<>1. used by an entire
diocese.
f'ather l\fartin said that he knows
that a civil war veteran is buried there,
along with many of the forefathers of
the oldest families in Capistrano.
Walking around among the unmarked
Lecture Planned
On Reincarnation
A lecture on reincarnation will be
prese11ted by Dr. Gina Cermhiara.
author, lecturer and parapsychologist at
8 p.m. f'riday in the Women's Club,
286 Sl. Ann 's Drive, Laguna Beach.
Speaking under the auspices of
Spiritual Research AssOciates, O r .
Cerminara will discuss her book, "Many
fl.iansions," based 0111 research into the
mediumship of the late Edgar Cayce,
lotown as .. The Sleeping Prophet."
Admission will be S2 for adults and
$1 for students.
On Saturday, at 10 a.m. Dr. Cenninara
will hold an all day workshop on
"General Semantics, the World of Com-
mu11icatlon," in the banquet room c(
the Outrigger Restaurant, ISIS S. Coast
Highway.
Admission will be by reservation only.
Registration fee of $5 may be sent
to Spiritual Research Associates, P.O.
Box 425, South Laguna , 92677.
Rickles Papa Again
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Comedian Don
Rickie!' wife gave birth to a son,
Lawrence, today at Ctdars of Lebanon
Hospital. It Is the couple's second child.
Barbara Rickles and the six·pound. three..
ounce infant were reported in good con.
ditioa.
ills FURNITURE
NEW LOCATION: FOUNTAIN VALLEY
Showrooms on the San Diego Fwy. Ill Euclid 111e11ns
Ralph's is within minutes from your home.
SEE RALPH'S NEW LOOK OF THE '70'S !
A Co1nple1e Neiv Concept in Home Furnishings
Now with over twice the display' area, Ralph's offers a com·
plete selection to suit all tastes from formal elegance to casual
simplicity, combineJ with fair prices and the personal service
Ralph's customers ha ve cnjo~d for 15 years. ·
-"" " ........ : .../ 1' " ~ ... .;.: :"1 ~·\, ~ ~ .;. ..:.. ~ ~-'. (''
I ~;;" l···~·>··-
r·~,.--·1
STORE Monday thru Friclay 9 to 9
.._HOURS SUNDAY 11 AM to 5 PM
I ) I
..
I. I
f :llAllY .PILOT T1'fldl!', M11 U, 1970
l saird Says Cambodia Pullout Already Started
I I • •
~ • (UPI) -Dereose Sea..,. Mol'1n JI. •Laird ·Aid' today
tbe URlted States alread\-hu pulled
-W'ltftl ttiOusaJkr• troope: out of Cam-
Laird told the Senate. Armed Serv~s
Commltt.e eooceming. lhe U.S. 111nlBll
against Communist sanctuaries in Cam-
bodia.
specllically h<>w mw American lighting BUI In mpGOH to a qutllllGo 'from -INIUOd tn>ope, air lor<ea « •v1tert namizallon program," Laird said.
men had betJI pu!led back Into South Sen. Howard cannon (!).Nev.), Laird -In COmbodla. Lain! urfed 4'feal •I Laird repeatedly doc!ged question• by
Vlet.naM frOm Cam'b001a. sald he uwoWd not rule out the re~, any ltCiflatlon "whlch ~tr t 11 e Sens. Cannon aod Henry M. Jackaon
He said the Cambodian operations were qulremeat ••• for lM use of (U.S.) Prealdent'• authority to Protect (0-Waah.), on whether the 1dmlnistr1Uon
...i ,IMlilar .., ·he..-urged OJnifea not 'to
,.... aQll limllatloo "" Presldont Nil«
". • • .Already, we have withdrawn
Am.ericff! 'forces from Cam bod It" Laird said. ..We· b\v.e withdrawn several
thousand lhl• week ud we will tbdraw
IP.in& r.uer ~han expected and that alt power on the aupply routee which Americana, American Oahtlng mm..._ ln would 1,oppoee the amendmect should it ·~ u .. tn>ops wooid be out by June ""'TIO dGwn out ol 1-into Cambodia:' South Vielnam." be Ui-to the terms or NiJ<O•'•
30. Laird ,.id the United Stat.• did 'Ille Senato has ecbedUled dtbat. thil "I believe tho limltaikln wotlld IW!I own .-menl -.., U.S. ground "6t plan to \send 1ts forces back to week on o •mendment which would help ua .u far u pnrtect.h\g American troope: In Camboctia arter June 30, but .... tdllulfy there. .
• • l ,._.. .. ba.ve a .ftllricUon that we will
lie out ol 111ere by the eod ol June," inore th&i Week. 0 · Cambodia if the Communists reclatmed bat the uae of ~Y Amtrlcan forces liw1 and (accompliahiq:) the VJet-no bl-r on U.S. air strike.a. the sanctuary areu. 1-------'...;_ ___________ ...;. __ :__.:;;.. ____ ~--'------:..::C~----
f • 11 ~ I ' ,
· The ' ~tary -. d~lined to 1 • Y
'
\
'· * * * Cambodia Cutoff
; Okayed by Panel
Four-month-old St..,.., Popper
was baptized Sunday in a Gilling·
ham, England pub. Terry Pepper,
the infant's father, said because
the~ ohil:d's godparents owned. a
pol>, he and his wife lboughl chn•-
tening there would be "something
to remember." •
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate
Foreign Relations Committee has ap-
proved legislation to cut olf funds for
U.S. military operations in Cambodia,
but Republican Leader Hugh Scott said
today it would not pass, and suggested
Instead a declaration of opposition to
a wider war.
"l would Uke to see the Senate make
perfectly clear that this is not an invasion
of Cambodia, that this is not a widening
of the war, and that the Senate does
. not want a widening of the war," Scott
l'iaid .
That would amount to an endorsement
of President Nlson's announc«I policj.
Senate Democratic Leader M 1 k e
Ma.nsfleld said he believes there is a
good chance the amendment approved
Monday by the Foreign Relallons Com·
rn1Uee will be passed. He said he would
like a vote this week.
Satt said he does not believe the
amendment u now framed would win
Senate approval.
"The White House posiUon naturally
is that the power of the commander
in chief caMot be circumscribed con-
trary . to the Constitution." Scott sairi
he may propose an alternative measure
later, after a conference of RepublicaJl
senators.
~ Republican leader said more har
.. AA3 Communists have been ·killed aDI'.
1,361 captured.
He said 88 Americans and 2$ South
Vielnamese have been killed. Scott said
12 million rounds of Communist am·
munition now have been captured in
the Cambodian operation, and more than
3,000 bunkers destroyed.
Scott said those figures were supplied
by the White House.
Scott also said the Cambodian opera-
tion has discovered a number of in-
stallations whJch could have served as
Communu.st headquarters. He described
these as "noating crap game1," not
permanent headquarters. "There never
was any thought that there was any
great Pentagon over there," Scott said.
Strikes .. Peace Marches ,
Continuing at Colleges
By Tile Auoclated Pre11
Strikirui students went back to
warm ioeath.er has come to ·London, classrooms at many universities today
England, so who.can blame this couple but strike action, marches an4 sit-ins
for indulging in a little "Moyttme rontinued at other colleges to express
Madness." Aft.n a sunbath in St. student disapproval of war in Indochina.
J.~1 .Pot'l.Attdm.BJl.tWfo_rd_ 'on4_ _ ..'Ihe student strike inf9(ma.tiort center
her fiance Gerold Deeosta wind their al Brandeis University in Waltham,
way through traffic past Buckingham Mass. reported that 286 schools were
Palace in the background on their on strike indefinitely.
way back to work. But 129 colleges and universities In
• 43 states officially reopened Monday,
R..,.ld Burndrwd, Stoke.on-Trent, some with virtually empty cl81ST001111.
England, a 42-year-olcl builder, has Classes resumed at the University or
offered city officials $1,200 to pur· South Carolina in Columbia under a
chase a garbage dump adjacent to heavy guard of state troopers and Na-
his property w~ch he aays is an tional Guardsmen after a rampage Mon-
Th ell · .d day night during which students swarmed eyesore. e coun is const er.. into an administration building, smashed
ing the offer· furniture, overturned desks and tore up e records.
The: Toyal ,sodety for the Ptt·,
vention of t:{'tUlty to. animals .i
has criticized the Re». Eric Judd
of North Witteringham,• Eng-
land, for bla.ring 200 round$ of
.22-caliber ammunition down
mole hole! on his lawn. Judd
said he had tTiet:J. everything
el.se. He ha! 1,000 1:'0Unds read11
to fire if tht: animall come bock.
• The Rw. Bob Yeomant, 25, 0£
Bridgemorth, England, bounced up
and down lbe aisle trying to get
more We into the choir's rendering
of "I Wonder Where I'm Bound."
A moment later he !ell to lbe bot·
tom of the church's central beat-
ing duct when the iron grid gave
way under him. He was not ser-
iously injured.
Tear gas. and nightsticks were used
to clear the campus of thousands of
rock-throwing students.
Severe! undred University of Maryland
student.8 blocked U.S. Highway No. 1
1"here Jt 'cmsaea the campus for a Ume
Mond_ay nlgti\-lhe fourth "'ch blockade
llnce Pmidenl Nixon amoonced the ., _., •«-Into Cambodla.
At Albalu'. JltY., more than 1,000 State
University' students de5etnded .on. the
federal buUding and adjacent main Post
, Office !his mom!ng, standlng six deep
.~at all entrancea, ailent and with arms
folded over cheits.
-They irept -I employ" from the
building and l!roUcbl mail , delivery
v1rtually to a Stand!Jtill, A U.S. Mail
fr!ctor-tr•iler w.as seen belng turned
away from the Post .Office.
A-~ 70 studentS were arrested at
East.em Michigan Unlversity in Ypsilanti
Monday night and early today after
students barricaded campus streets and
lit bonfires. Windows of a bank and
In some university buildings were broken
before state, county and local police
dispersed a crowd of 1,000 studenl.8.
A group of about 100 students at the
10,000-student Virgin i a Polytechnical
I.nstitute took over Cowgill ~all on the
Blacksburg campus tG Point ·up their
demands for the can cellation of classes
fGr the rest of the term so students
can participate in antiwar demonstra-
tiilns.
At Washington and Lee University In
of 1,400 stude.nls staged a sit-down on
the steps of a chapel, protesting faculty
rejection of an overwhelming student
vote for halting classes for the rest
of the term.
AF L-CIO Attacks
Inflation Moves
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The AFt,.CJO
declared today that President Nixon 's
efforts to control , inflation have been
a "complete failure" and that the nation
has "cro.s.9ed the threshold or recession''
under his economic policies.
The I a b or organization's executive
council issued a statement denouncing
hi.1 handling of the economy almost
simultaneously with a visit by the Presi·
dent to AFL-CIO headquarters to confer
with the council.
The council, in adopting a statement
on the eeonomy, renewed its appeal
to Nixon to support legislation for acrrn>~·
the-board controls on wages, prices and
profits.
The president spent 45 minutes with
the C?UOCil at the AFlrCIO headquarters
to brief the labor leaders on his decision
to send troops into Cambodia.
Weird Weather Hits Nation
Unseasonable Chill-~~ De ,grees-Felt . in Northwest
Coutal
lrltllnv ""IWY '"9r. l f1111 v.,.r.
l bl• Wlndt nltM MOd mernlnt hfll/'$
Meomlnt -litrll' 12 " I'll •llO" hi
,...,._ ""' M1t1 W-.ldn. Hllll'
too.'I' .. '° ... CN1!1I ...,,per.tv!'ll •llllM ffWft &II to ... lnlfncl ..,.._ ........ ,,,,.. frotl't
R IO 1'. Wtl.r te!Tlfltrtlllrt> a.
S•tt, "'"""· T Wu TWllDAY ~ hltll ........ .,, S:Jf1.n1. J.I ~ ltW --ll)N ..,,._ J.t
WIONllOAY "!"' ll!tf't .............. t:• 1.11'1. J,J Flr1I low ............ IO:ot1,m. tJ
5lc'Ol'lf Miii , ..•.••..• ,. $:U11f1. l.t
Se(Ofljl low ,,, •• lt:•1.t11. t.I
M IU-l ;U •·1'1. left 71.S 1.!TI.
MOoll lllMa U:JI I A kl• l:J:2 1A
•o '
(I .S. Summaru
LOS AHGIELl5 IUl'!l -T~ n ..
t~lft ll'lfflMr .wmmerv ·•• ,•r• ,..,..,, W fl» U.S. Wt111\ef" 8ul'Hll: ttn<u. WOl'k«f. .,...,, t...,tll!UIM
l'htlr -I'd! 161' "'°'' vlcltm• todll'I'
frlltll0Wlnt1 • ... .... '"""' «wNOf tllfl ~tf"'tll 1.utiti.dt. Tp., lff\4nl ft IMtt
21 "r.Mll'W< dff41.
WU'l'l'I, tiuf'l'llll •Ir l !••klltd frem ""
0..11 of M911\c:l9 •• ''' '*""' •• Iowa. Low OV-ltf!t ttm,..,llU"" In toulll-
tnl lowt -... hlth •• ,. .,... •• ,, COllll'flt. IM'I lllllff_.,.. tfllll ...,..,......,... .... ~ ................
M l trOll t!lt' nortMr~ POHIDn ol ,,,.
Nlllln lft!o Pol-1111111"'-l(llllWllll
,..11 .. Ort .. ""''' "" 11111111'1 C!Dld .... dllrlM lfll ~ftolll 11 )I dfff'Mt,
Moil ol ..... Miion M4 tlMt'r ll(ltt
w1111 1un1111M llmltM k koilt'*'lttrlt 1t1IQ anif Ille IN' Soulhwul,
Temperatures
81k1r1fl~ld
8111••11•,k
Bois•
l l'OWNVl11t
ClllCIM
Clncl-11
Dt•Molnt•
Ottrolt
F1trblnk1
Fort Worll'I
,_~
Htl•ne Honolulu
K•llNt City
l11Vt9ff
Lot,t,nve1n
Mllml
MlllllN"lllll
NnrOl'IMM
NIW'!'e<-k
Hortlo P lt!lt
OAlll•fld
Olli.llonM cnr ...... Pihl $_,llll't
JtlM lllObllt i-..... 1, ........
l"ot!ltM
111.11114 en,
111.Mllull ·-S-<:rl!Mnlt
S111 OlllO ~11llr111dKO
'"'"' -OM
Hl•ll Lew "'ff .. ~
I! •1 ....
" " as .-.01
!I 35 ,14 .. " " " ., " 11 '2 .II •s 711 M
" " n " '' 7• 1S •I
~ ~
.. 75 .02
M " IS It . " " " " " .. " .. " .. " .. .. " M •
02 '2 1.u
t1 " 71 )1
" " • " 1.,1 '° 4) ·" ta ~ .OI M ll .... .. ~
M N ,, " ~ <S T " "
•
Meet Miss Shirley Wagnon,
specia l envoy for
Georges Raphae l in our
Millinery and Wig Salon,
Wednesday and Thursday,
May 13th and May 14th,
Newport.
•
l •.. ;··
•
t he mid i goes to your head
in exci tin g new natu ral-look w igs
_...,.e
cmities
ef1970
6:1~~
Going midl Go midi ftom head to toe with the exciting new Vanities of )Q's wig. Inspired by
the nostaligic 3Q's , •• shaped with al l the dash of the )Q's. The look is marve lous
with every new fashion.,, and the Vani ties wigs are the ·only wigs with hand·tied "n,tural
growth'' ~rts. Styled close-to-the-head, blunt cut in one over-a ll length. Feather
'light Dynel modacrylic is washable. Wide range of colors, Topi Bobette, oouncy bob , 31.QQ
Center: Fl ipette, casual fl ip, 3$.00. Bottom: flapette , sofjly waved , 38.QQ
Millinery ml Wl1 Sa lon,
u umS '
Newport •I Fothi•n hlond Newport Center e 644·2200 e Mon., Thun., Fri. 10 :00 WI 9:30; Other Dey• tO:OO till $il O
San Clemente
• C•pi~irano
VOL 63, NO. 11 l , 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
'
I
EOITl'ON
ORANGE COUNti', CALIFOl!NIA ' ' . . " , . •
I' • • :ruESDAY; "'4>iY • 12, ·1970 . . ... ' ' . '
•
'.a'Gday's Final
l N.Y. Stoelu
TEN CENT:;
UCI Students Qu~rie.s at Saddlehack
By RICHARD P. NALL
0t Ille DllHV Plltl 11•+1
UCI students who crowded into the
small board room at Saddleback College
to talk of many things Monday night
were told by some Saddleback students
that they weren'l needed. Others thought
they were.
Ta1ks sk.ipped from the dress code
and a free speech area to the Cambodian
situation and was at times critical of
Saddleback lrustees and administration.
In a swnming up after the fragmented
discussion, youthful Board President
Michael Collins told the group that the
junior college trustees were "not here
ta end the war or prolong the war
or 1ethint the Cambodian situaUoo ."
He said ~ jwtlor college dress code
and a free speech aru would not in
any way resolve the war.
One UCI atudent expre~ disgust
that the "autocratic, slotblul board wa.s
dlscussing ridiculous tJllnls" like tilt
dress code when there wai a horrendous
war and students were being "mur-
dered." .
Collins implied -the young man might
not understand the me.anin& of autocratic
and suqested if, lhe board meelilll:,:
diJgusted him, ··1 suu• you dan't
Come.: IC wage the struale at Ua.11
TruRee Halli Votd said be b working
on the· !re! speed! area, exa~ing how
11 worka at other campuMS. He also
said · no · one · ls suffering from dfess
cod<·r<(UlaUO,,s,sjl\ee ·the coo/• hos~··
suspended utiW its . future .is , worked ' ' . . ' . out.
Brian Colbert, a member Ot the . s8d: .
dlebac.k atude.Qt' sto1te, saki,_lhe was
offended •>e """"'.,"' or ,.,,,. of Ille UCJ studeob,~ at Ille board.
He said th: bc>ard produced a wioning
football ttam. UCl ttudents tlttered.
Colbert aald "Uio coUeie 'Is f i n'to
1t'ademically and cited o l h e r · K·
complishments. "I'm very lrp1ulted by
sOme Ucr student.s who don't go · tG
this campus who CGme and insult our
board," he said.
UCI sludenla-seemed dismayed that
they were not welcome by all Saddleback
students. A few said they had ·been
asked to come. A ~ddleback girl student
lhanked them for coming.
She asked about arTangine for a UCI
irlstructor to speak on the war. She
was referred to the admlnistraUon.
UCI students pres.tlll'ed the board to
discuss issues it wanted to dJSCUSll right
then. Colllf\! said lhe board wan~ to
discuss the mattei;s u scheduled agenda
i'tems becluse they are Important
He told one UC:I student, "We CODlider
Hems of policy when they are placed
on the 'q:enda. 'Jus\ be.cause you baP.
(See SADDLEBACX, Pase ZJ
anon nva e s.rae
• •
UC Irvine
• •
fro testing
Subsides
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of ttt. INll' PINI Slltf
Off-campt.is protest activities by UC
trvine students were curtailed today as
1tudent.s began attending ·regular classes
a.nd alternative education courses.
The alternative education plan. ap-
proved Sunday by UCI's Academic
Senate, allows students lo combine.
classes based loosely around war protests
:rithrt;r;ta~l=se~i~ ~ ~~~e:~ \
penalties and attend notbiq b u f '
aJtematlve education classes.
.,.UCI was the fl.I'St ~ .to adopt
the plan, whlcb allows a s&udeo" with
hJs professor's consent, to drop a course
with a passing grade in order lo enroll
In alternative education and work on
v;ar protest activities.
According to the senate proposal, a
student who has received a passing grade
ln the course he drops does not receive
academic credit for taking alternative
education classes.
When a student does nol receive a
passing grade, he is able to drop the
course without a grade and enroll in
alternative education and work fGr a
passing grade and four units of credit
for .the quarter.
The resolutk>ns passed by the senate
wbtch instituted alternative education do
not force all professors to participate
in tM program. The resolu tions are
expressed in terms of options. making
It clear that participation in alternative
edU<:ation it up to individual faculy
(See UC IRVINE, Page %)
Criminal Council
Official's Death
Termed Suicide
Orange County coroner's officers
today scheduled an autopsy on the body
of Richard Gregory, the Orange County
Criminal Justice CGuncil e x e c u t i v e
.sea:etary who died Monday night at
JUs ,Capistrano Beach home.
Investigator Jack Bricker sai d
CrCiory, 47, was found by his wife
Louise on the living room floor of his
home at 35119 Camino Capistrano 1bout
9 p.m. "He was killed by what we
believe was a seH-inflicted gunshot wound
ln tbe chest," Bricker said.
Ck>se friends today said Gregory had
been in poor health In recent monthli
and had suffered from an apparently
deteriorating heart condition for some
years.
His supe rvisor, Executive Sccrelary
Keith Concannon, today d e s c r i be d
Gregory 's death as "a tragedy and a
tremendous blow to our organiz.alion.
"We were talking olily Monday about
our plans and bow we intended to go
places with this organization," Con·
C'annan said. "Dick had been with me
sine! Feb. 5 after 12 very successful
y'ears with the Orange County Probation
Department and I counted myse lf very
lucky tha l I was able to get him on
lbe staff.
"H• left here in good spirits Monday
night." Concannon said. "He was one
of the most popular men In county
government and he's golng to be missed
by much more than our organization."
Funeral arrangements for Mr . Gregory
hltd not been completed at press time
tod!'ly. Jle 'is survived by his widow,
Lou1$e and two children by • former
marr iage.
\
LA, Moscow Lose
Montreal Given
Olympics in '76
A~tSTERDA.\1 IAP) -Montreal was
av,•arded the 1976 Olympic Games today
in a surprise victory over Moscow and
Los Angeles. ..
Moscoyr had been favored for the
Games, and Tasll, the official Soviet
agency, sent out a bu lletin from Moscow
two hours earlier that they had been
;iwarded Moscow.
The announcement was withdrawn
shortly afterward without an explanati°'1.
It's the first tilne any of the Games,
Wioter or Swnmer, hu 1one to a Cana·
dian city. This is in k~ with tbl!:
li!ternational Olympic Coinmittee policy
~ ,sprtading the Games around to new
areas.
Moscow had been favored because of
its renowned athletic facilities plus the
fact that the Games never have been
held in an Iron Curtain country.
The Los Angeles bid was ba~ on
the fact the year would coincide with
the United States' 200lh aMiversary.
They were he.Id in Los •Angeles in 1932
and in SL Louis in 1904.
The announctme.Dt: wu made by Avery
Brundage, U.S. pre.sldent of the. lnterna·
tional Olympic Committee.
Montreal was chosen on the second
ballGt, 1eeltiog 41 voes 1to II for Moscow.
One. vote was blank. .
Los Angeles, the thP'd city bidding
for • <;ametr~Uy ,.. ·o; e;I;· in the. :ntit"]Ote.· But. ltflD'l.
dqto-. -~tely ..,1~ the
first VO wfnt. '
Mootre~'s. ldeCUcit 1 as Ute city ·for
the ·.,... in: "" ~Dy knocked
out ·f11e bid .,liy . V~~W. B.c .• : for
the Winter GJme11 .• VJLl)CQJyer, Denver,-
Sion. SW!tzerland, a1iof T•~,_Ftnlilnc!,,
are trying. to land the WtnWr Game.a.' ·
Senate Okays BlaC:k~u~
In Unanimous ·Bal~Oting
WASHINGTON (UPl) -Judge Harry
A. Blackmun ol Minnesota was confirmed
as a Supreme Court justice by the Senate
today, ending an abrasive di~e with
President Nixon that persisted for almost
a year.
The confirmation vote on the federa r
appeals court judge came two days Short
of the anniversary of the resignation
of Justice · Abe Fortas, which created
the vacancy.
NiJ:on was twice rebuffed by the Senate
on his nomination of Soul.hem federal
judges tG the. court -Clement F.
Haynsworth Jr. of South Carolina and
G. Harrold Carswell of Florida.
He then turned to Blackmun, a lifelong
friend or Chief' Justice Warren E. Burger
and a judge on the 8th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals since 1959.
No seriou s OppGsition was raised
against Blackmun 's nom ination. He won
the highest endorsement or the American
Bar Association and was unanimously
approved by .~ Sena~ Judiciary Com·
mittee, 17 to 0.
Blackmun is expected to be ""om
in quickly and to assume his aeat as
the ninth justice on the court when
it next meet! Monday. However, because
of the lateness of the sessio:l, t)f. is
not expected to participate in any
decisions until the court convenes for
a new term next fall.
The two days of Senate debate on
Blackmun was taken up entirely by
speeches praising him.
STOCK /llABKET
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
recovered. aurged upward, revu1ln& Its
early sesaion losses late Ulla afternoon in
stepped-up trading. (See quotations,
Pages J0-11).
Declining stocks outnumbered advanc-
es three to one among i&&Ues traded on
the New York Stock Elchan1e.
. . ~ . . \ . . •• " .. ,.... ,. . . .• • . ' I ' OAILY ,,t'or't11ff l"lltN
Wor-k· iles Vp · " , , . . · .
• • 1 •
. Wo~~n·sdr3mble 'over San .C1effientePier·as·repairs·on the pc)puJar
·recr'eafionar 'stru'cthre· inove for.ward. John L. Meek Company of
W.ilmington ,is rephtcing 39. ·old pilings' and' numerous cross braces
un'iler 1a-$S2,944 cofttraCf<With 'the city: Pier is •being ·kept open during
the:pr:o-jOOt; slated.-for completiori by _ s.u~rp.~r.
' . . '
General Plan Alte1~natives
Eyed by · Lagµna Planners ·
By B~RBARA KREfBICH
or ni. D1llr l"li.t 11111
Jn a shirtsleeve· session Monday night,
Laguna's new Planning Conlmissicin·
buckled· down lo the· task or sorting
out alternative 1eneral plan concepts
ror the central busine.sa· district.
Enough ideas were generated in the
two-hour study to pmduce what City
Planner Al Autry referred tG as "a·
fourth l,ltemate-."
He said he would present the planners'
views te the •PIJinning consultant from
Daniel.; Afann, Johnson & Mendenhall
and ask him to prodilce·wch an alternate
to be. consldere<s aJong wlth the three
previoua downtown , pl.ans suggested by
the DMJM , team.
.
' ·Traffic circulation and p"'rklng are
the. key problems, ,the Plann~rs agreed.
Commissioner 'rhoqlas Johnst'on 1s8.idl
he thought further J::O n.s Ide r' t f on
should be given to the ring road ' p18n
proposed some time ago by the Citizen,•
Town Planning Association as a means
ol routing . through traffic behind the
basin.
"I didn't see too much V1'1idity In
r. at the time,'' said Johnston, . "but
I feel it should be 'considered along ·
with other wopos.als." '
Jo}lnston said he would very ·much
like to .see the commercia l area ·joinPd
directly to the beach area. This could
' " accomplished by closure of Coast
Highway and routing traffic behind or
in front of city hall. •
Ruined Clubhouse Doomed Commissioner Jim Schmitz said he
liked the idea of rouUng •throngh traffic
behind the basin but .couldn't sff the
flay when Coast Highway could be aban·
Most Clemente Officials Advocate Destruction .
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of .... n-111 Piiiot Steff
San Clemente's charred community
clubhouse seemed closer to the WTeCker's
bar 1t1onday night AS all but one. city
councilman and m05l of the city parks
commissioners agreed a new clubhouse
should take ils place.
Meeting in an unolficial study session
in council chambers the groUps -In·
eluding most ol the city's planning
commissioners hashed o v e r
preliminary Ideas for the clubhouse
dilemma, outnwnbering Mayor \Valter
Evans, who ls a strong advocate oC
restoration of the Span~h Building as
a historical landmark,
"I'm outnun1bered 4-t&I. but lt still
will take a lot of arguJng to change
rny mind,11 """Evans declared arter the
discussions.
.(
The meeH_ng, called simply to sample
Ideas rather· than arrtve at a solution,
was marked by debates on the blstorcial
sign iflcanc"e of the structure compared
to a need in the ctt)' for • new, modern,
large community recreation and ·meeiing
center.
Evans steadfastly •held ·th41 the pr'8ent
clubhouae site would 'be too small to
al!Qw· lo< the blllJcj!nJ, rJ ' • . ...,,com·
munlty center with adequate pafklng,
and that condmn&Uon of. nearby vacant
lots would cauae prob~rM with nw-by
resklents. . ,
He, too, was outnumbrrfd on .. tht
point.. •T'lr •
Councilmen· SUOiley Ntfuinip-1 -n d
Wade Lower sai<l • lliat enou11b parklni
1rea existed nearby to ·"'v•'1hl 1parkfoa problems. ' I
\
• ),
Botti expressed opinions that the
building should be tom down and some
of jtl more hlslork: componenta -
beams, Ules and the like -be used'
in a' neti, ·spanbl>style structure. •
Evant has proposed that the estilnaltd
~7.000 in insurance seUlement funds
be \l!M' to re.store \he burned bulldtng,
~1'1ich ~Id serve af a meellng place
uritU plan:s are completed fot a new
center. possibly On. i;tty property wlie:re
the mwi)c1..-1 pool atandl.
After ·tbe new one is Completed, EviaM
!old, the ol<I clu~ • oould become
the clty't: mu,,e11m. . .. ..,;.
"It wOlfld tote only sir mqOtlWI I& reatort't~ ~lubt'loule-to a decenl~~I,"
he said,' "but It would take trtm 11wo
to 'tbrte )'ears to tel a n~w .oe l>\dlt.
' (See CLUBUOUSB, Pqe, II
;
'1 • • • ' -~ .. .
doned. '
City Planner At Autry noted that lhe
Division of .Highways -predl~ts an ln-
qrease of trarnc «1 \the· highway, despite
the inland freeway . .
. JohnstOn 'laJtl pedtstrian access to the
beach over or under 1 the highway would
bt necessa'ry to keep people away from
the tratnc. .
: Comm'issione~s agreed that multi-level
par-ing strtn:tures would be essential
to a01ve 'the1raf(IC jam with one probably
localed against the hlllalde below CIJ(f,
Drive. · · ·
A pedestrian mall tln at least one
downtown &tfttt was eyed-wllh· favor.
Commluloner Robert Hastings favo~
bannlnil: .all auto traffic from the com-
merciAI area and the u.se of traJ'fls to
tra'nsporf •hoppen and bUchgoers from
the parking lltnl<tur ...
Schmitz ftartd that parking two nr
blocta lfom the Main Stach might
ausry beaehgoers.
Ohnstbn . said ht like the tram )dca
(See STUDY, Pase IJ
1 T
-·
Both Sides
Ask Special
U.N. Session
By .United Pre11 Iaterudoul
The Arab nations sa1d 100 Israeli tanks
and 2,000 infantrymen invaded Southern
Lebanon today and that Lebanoo, Syria
apd Iraq were Hghlina: bad: in the
biggest Mideast battle s~ the 1967
war. 1be U.N. Security Council WU
called into emergency ~ion.
Israel said its armored columns with
aerial support knifed into Lebanon to
wipe out Arab guerrilla baser which
had launclled 81 attacks against 22 llll'ieli
setUemenls in the pa.st 40 months. Fierce
aerial battles broke out and Israel Jatd
il.sbofcl9l'n three Syrian MJG ,171.
'I'!>\ llattl• ra1ed lhrwgjlout' t&<d1y
In the Marjayoun area of Lebanon air
to eeven mUea. north of \be Inell border
and J2 miles JOUthult of Beirul A
Beirut mltitiuy spokeaman said Derce
Arab counterattacks had stalled t.bt
Jsraeli push.
A •~esman f(>l' the Palestinian ~
ed Struggle Comman4 -said the lsraell.s
attempted to drop patJilroops into aauth
Lebanon, but gave , no details. He said
tl)e ruerrillas engaged the Israeli force•
in ''hand to hand fighting."
There was no l&raeli conlinnation er t~e report but a . spokesman said 11
, (S.. MIDEAST, Pase I)
College 'Picks
Ex-Col. Lund
For Trustee
A rettred Army Lt. Col. liviJlg In
Laguna Beach was named to the. ·sac1-
dleback College Board or Trusteea: Mon-
day nJghl.
John 8. Lund, 48, of 1589 Tahiti, will
flll the unexpired tenn of Louis Zitnik
whc> resigned. It hu.-about a ·year to
run.
The college officials said Lund served
26 years In ·the: Army Signal ())rps
aod had betn a resident of Laguna
Beach two years. He has not had
prev1ous schGol board experience they
said.
He and is wife Elaine have a 17-year-
old daughter living with them and two
married daughters.-Lund is a native
of Council Bluffs, Iowa. He was one
of four applicant! to Ill! the vacancy
in division three which includes La&una
Beacft and South Laguna.
Orange Coast
Weather
Another groovy day looms on the
Orange CoJst horizon with sunny
skle.s cha.sing the morning patchy
clouds and temperature11 in the
middle seventies.
INSIDE TODi\ Y
Tht newborn Irvine Commun·
ity Theater nialce1 an. au.spidoiu
debut -.twttping three top
awardl at the Riwrsidt ont·aci
fe11tival . Ste Entertoinment,
Pooe 19.
C•Hltnlll • -..
(1-lfllif tl·N MwtHI ,. .... .. ,_ ... .. .,. __
•• ·-"
.., __
• ..... -" • ., ........ ..
••11 ...... 1 ,.,. • ·-,~,.
·~,..,.""'*" .. •• llWlfh 1 .. 11 ·-· 1•11 , .. _ .. -.. ........ ..
Mii ........... " Wo-• .... -' ._,, ,.... l>-14
M«rlHt L.ktl'IHt t w--..
' I I
•
, 2 OIJI. Y PILOT SC
Third Top Accreditation for Laguna High ?-
.
~=--Illa -II_, 1or 1o 111 ·· lii!rd n .. ,.., ""'
credllatloo u • top.ranking ..-dary
oc:l>ool, Di>lrlct Superintandent William
ll1lom ud high lchool Principal Robert
~ sai~ at • ~ conferenc< Moo·
cloy.
1bt meeting wa1 called to review
a 14-r<port on the high l!Ohool
by a 111.-member committee to thfl Ac-<ttd!Unc Commis..lon for Se<oodory
S<!>oo11 GI \he West.m AssocioUoo ol
Schooli aqd"Colle1••·
The C>11111T11tte<; which visited the high
IChool Marc:h 2, 3 and 4 to eiamine
all department., Included Dr. John B.
Brinegar, ftialnnan of the Department
of·EdlJcadon&l Adm1nbtraUOn, Callfomla
State College, Long Beach; Michael F.
Adlnis. d>Birman of the English Depart.-
meat, Gohr Hlih School, Cerrltos; Cary
Llndtll, assistant principal. Anaheim
Hiah Schoo!, Anahehti; Victor Paul!On,
~ Ch In o High School, Chino;
Orlon J .. Relllhaw, professor of tloni Clli!omla State CQUege, Los
Angeles; and Robert T. Acosta, con-
sultant in ttading, Califomia State
Department of Education.
As a result of the visitation, and
study qi detaJled reports from each
department, submitted by members of
the Jdn\iniStraUon staff, the faculty and
the itudent body, the committee Will rec-
ommeod a rnulmum (five-year) accred-
ltatioa !Or the high lchool, Reeves ,.Id.
AccreditatJons are glven in period,, of
from 'one to five years, he explaioed. La-
guna Beach has received two five-year
accreditations since the plan was Inaug-
urated in 1959.
The comntittee report consists or com-
mendations and recommendations in
general and departmental areas.
Singled out for overall commendation
were: student inYOlvement in curriculum
planning; maintenance of a 20-1 student.
teacher ratto; development of a rotating
•chedule ol otudy; and the Engllah
department for its curriculum and in-
novaUons.
1be committee recommended. that the
p,..... Pqe I
UC IRVINE •..
mtmben and student.. It was not dear
today bow many students and faculty
members were actually particlpaUng in
the prngram. .
In addition to aftemaUve education,
a Free Univer1lty being organized by
studenta and faculty is also available
tu UC! student.. ProUs! spokesman Ted
BolliJlger deocribed the Free University
as impromptu claases set up by in-
tereSted people on a variety of subjects.
Alternative educaUon and F re e
UnlversltY clas1e11Cbeduled for tht week
Id the Gateway Commons area include
such dlvene topics as U.S. History
dlxulsic:a groups, Women's UberaUon,
Rldical "'1d>oloiY, New lournaJlsm,
Col=t Revolutionary Tbouaht and Ac-
tion, Nul:rttion, Fundamentals ol Radio
Broadcasting, Theory, Practice and Po-
tential ot Noo·vlolence and Interest of
French Intellectuall 1n PoliUcs.
Protest organizers uld they upetted
to have a rotter ol profes90f'S ror
alternative education classes by this
afternoon.
Meanwhile, State Senator John G.
Schmitz (11-TusUn) tarrned the pro.
gram "an insult to the purpose for
which universities exist, which Is to
r;erve as centers for learnipg and rational
thought, not agitation."
Sdlmitz, a political science Instructor
at Santa Ana Junior College, released
a statement Monday in which he said:
"This inexrusable action Ls further
convincing proof that the re a l
responsibilities ror camJ)U' turmoil Ile
much more with the faculty than with
the students.
"In a time wt.en our country faCM
real danger of violent reYOlution, nothing
could be more provocative than this
open encouragement of revolutionary ac-
tivity by unlversJty professors.
'''Ibese profemn are paid by the
tupayers l.O teach, not to lead or pro-.
mote demoostraUons and riots."
ScbmJtl cmcluded bill statement by
suuestmg faculty authority over courses
and curriculum at ·UCI should be given
to the admlnlstraUon.
DAILY PILOT
.. ..,.. ..... """"""'• .... L..-. ... ~ ........ ,...,
c.... ..... s.. a. .....
a-AHGE COAST PU•LllHING COMl"AlllY
lo~•rt N. W••d l"ruldMI «1111 l"ullli.to.r
J•t.k l. C,utle.,
Vb ,.,.._!Mn! """ ~ti M.MlilW
The111•1 Keot¥il
'"~ Tlio111•• A. M111rphiu
M ..... 1111 Etlller
ltich••d '· Ni ll lovllli Ot.._. c.ir.t't E.•flW
Officn
Cll!O M&$91 2)t Well ,_., ''""' N ...... 1 •NO: ZS'll Wftl ., .. , a ... 111wtrt1
UWM htt.111 !ft' "-' A-~1111• ~r 11'11 l•..cfl ...,..._..,..
ltJI °"'*": JDS !Wiii It Clftllflt lll:t.I
DAllY ... ~.en, Wllll W'>lcJo II (_,..,. ...... Ill••'""" Ill ..... ltW .,,., .. ( .. 1 ...... fltT a.. ..,...., .. c•ltllM ..,. L-"""" a..:ll'I.
......,, a..cfl, C...11 M9o, Hun! .... -
~ Ml ,._ ......... ....,, •Ir.If -1111 ,..
....... .,,.. ...... , Of ..... (eHI l"lilltlloll ....
""""""' ... lfll1"" .... ~tt lrt •I :1211 WHI
••lllH •r ... ~ NI-• 111~ .r• »I W..1
.., ''""'• C..11 Met,
, .. ,,, ••• 1114) ••a.u11
a...ffW AftHIW., ••1·1•71
s-e ta r Al hft~'
..... ,. •• 491-4411
~ -. o....-(Mil """"'""""' ~-.. -..... -.. lliooott•t-.................. 4......,~, -"' ......... 7 • •111111#1 -i.1 .... ........ ...--.
.... 0.. ~ Nlf •t .. ....,..... a1U'll -· °""" ... c.Mtto-11i.. ,.,.,,,1111111 " Ui't1r aM _...I ll' "Mii U jl -fll1rJ ..,,. ...... -. u.• ,,_.,,,,
tUnry· -be "lncnwd to a _ mt111,lllsh odlools, expei1enco ~
Jovel _.,...,,,... wllb 1he currlc!llum IJ .,ialllle .,. ' ~I IOdel)' tu
-· • llld dial "I J>loa fll< Jal'flllolil .. ~ K I lbe -locul!y In the devolopmoal • of edueat!anal objecllves be developed." IJlllng c:lwips made llnc:e lbe lut
General comments noted that the accredltaUon visit ln 1964, the committee
number of drop-oula fron1 the high acl)OOl reported that the scope of the curriculum
is low: suJtabWty of some of the older has been broadened; progranu for slow
buildings Is a continuing problei:n : the learners have been developed ; instrucUon
library faclllUes are adequate, but the in music continues at a low level of
collection of booka Is very lnadtquate; student involvement; and remedial a~d
communication between coumelLD1 staff special educ1Uon strvices have been m·
and te-acb1ng stall could be improved: creased; atudenta have become deeply
and students are ent.husiastic about the involved tn the innoYatlve curriculum.
revolving clus !Chedule because of the Wh~e liking not~ of the ~act thlt
increased learning opportunities afforded redesign ol the library facility has
tbem. eliminated space problems, the com-
While noting that efforts being made mittee describe& the book collecUOn as
to expand acbool-commun.ity relalioos are "•oefully inadequate to support the
"adequate," Lbe committee added , educational program of the high achool
"Laguna Beach Hlgh, In commnn with and .• Jar behind accepted !llodords."
From Pqe J
STUDY .•.
but wondet"ed If ft would work.
James Dilley of the CTPA lnterje<tad,
"Llguna could evolve such an attractive
system of transportation in the central
basin people would come here just to
ride it. Jt would pay for itself."
WILL TRAMS PAY?
He noted that people pay for the
privilege of just riding on unusual con ..
veyances at Disneyland.
But Commissioner William Lambourne
pointed out the Festival takes an annual
loss on Us trams.
The poesibl.llty ol Jncreasing revenue
from parking stnictures by Including
commercial tenants was discussed.
Schmitz suggested they could house aome
city government offlces along with the
parking.
On ltlJa !tom Dr. Ullial Poled tl!lt
-•""'"117 pieporod pr .... tlttons
hive been modi by the staff, se<kln1
.federal IUndfAc to aulst the library,
but each has been turned down.
It ls noted tti.t coun.sellng services
'have been increased and reorganised,
but student! still fetl personal counsellnc
la not yet adequate.
Student participation In and enthusiasm ror t variety of acdvllles 11 commt~.
Dr. Ullom noted here that atudent in-
volvement in avrfculum, through mini4
r C1Urses and in othtr areu, "has redUCt(I
the possibility of an underground
newspaper and student militants on cam-
pus."
With regard to eounAtling, Rteve1
noted that while the raUo of counaelofl
to students woukt be carWdered adequate
~ DCl1l\ll c1reum.1la Qc •••
dovelopm'11b fn .-yuri hive oltla
made it necessary to eittud counseling
to entire familiea, wHb the parents fre-
quenUy seeking help In -ling !heir
children's problems.
"This can tie up a counselor ror four
to six hours a week on a slntle case,"
he explained. "W~ enforce: the policy
that a student can see his counselor
within 24 hours ol putUng in a request,
bu! the kid• lllll aoy !hoy -more Ume to talk."
Although new buildings hive been ad·
ded since the last visitation, the report
said, shop areas still are inadequate
and maintenance of older buildings cOn·
tlnuet to be a problem. Dtf11t of the
February bond electloo ii 'token · Into
conskltraUon here.
DAIL "T l"ILOT Sl•ff 1"""9
One o1 the DMJM plans that Included
a partial IQ.foot high bridse from Cliff
Drive acrou the business district met
with lltUe enthusiasm.
'Arnold' and Her Brood
"I'd bate to see us destroy the buin
with a bridge," said Schmit.i. Lambourne
said he dldn 't think anyone would be
happy with such a bridge.
Hastings. ouggested .. additional pe~k
ing structure in the canyon OflPO'lte
the Festival ground!, with a pedestrian
walkway from about the third floor to
the ground• and Playhouse mlghl be
needed.
MAYOR WATCll&'!
Mayor Richard Goldberg, who was
observing his newly appolnted com·
mission in action from a !eat In the
council chamber suggested, "l would
mi,SSion in action from a seat tn the
just like to remlnd you that whlle we are not broke we are nther badly bent, so
we hope that along with all thll planning
you will also come up with some sugge1-
Uon!1 for funding."
all this planning you wUl also come
up with some suggestions for funding."
Lambourne harked back to his freeway
planning days on the city council a_nd
said that if Laguna can come up with
a feasible solution to local traffic pro-
blems it might be possible to get finan·
cial aid from the state.
JohMton pointed out the need for set-
tingl •p priorities for development (If
any plan in phases.
"IC something we like wouldn't be
economically feasible f~ 10 or 1_5 years,"
he said "we just can t have 1t. Phase
one mu~t be 90mething we can afford
that will be better than what we have
now."
WANTS OPINIONS
Commissioner Carl Johnson said he
would like to get some opinions from
people in the downtown basin regarding
the planning proposals. . .
Piglets romp at mother's side at Laguna Canyon
shelter of Society for Prevention of Cruelty to
Anima1s. Despite obvious discrepancy, sow's name
is 'Arnold.' She has been a resident of the shelter
for the past 18 months. She gave birth to 13 piglets
May 2. Three have since been given away and are
reportedly adjusting well to the bottle. Papa has
been placed on a foster farm.
From Page I
CLUBHOUSE ••
even if we hired an architect tonight."
Evans said the persons he bas con-
tacted have agreed with his idea.
"You're wrong," Lower said, "became
I find people the other way.
"Three years ago 1 said tear it down.
The plwnblng, acoustlcs and st<PS .,.
very bad and the floors are warped.
The people deserve something better,"
he addfd calmly.
Planning ~mmisdoner George Bowles
agreed , but in stronger language:
"lf you restore It you haven't 1ot
anything. It's an old, wore-oot, musty
place and I've never enjoyed going in
there.''
Northrup said renovation of the struc·
ture would be "money down the drain."
Councilman Thomas O'Keefe agreed,
then added a different facel to the
argument.
"We have a strict code in the city
governing renovation of fire • damaged
structures and it seems impossible to
me that the city could bring the
clubhouse up to standards set for other
structures In town. therefore it 11'0uld
be wrong for us to require something
of private building which we don't follow
ourselves," he said.
San Oemente Nears Firm
Policy on Aid to Chamber
A firm city policy on its contribution
to tht! budget of the San Clemente
Chamber of Commerce came closer ta
reelity Monday as city councilmen beard
Cllamber propo!als for donaUon of 30
percent of the city's bed tax.
The council, meeling 1n TlOll&ction study
sessiln, seemed genera lly in favor of
such a plan whk:h last fiscal year could
have yielded more than $10,000 to the
Chamber, instead of the $8,500 which
it received.
The pro~a1. made by the Chamber
in recent weeks, is intended to allow
Chamber leaders to make solid p~
jections in tbeir budget preparations.
Last year's Chamber request fell on
troubled Umcs for a while because of
the lack of a solid city policy, Qi amber
spokesmf'll and councilmen agreed Mon·
day.
San Clemente Inn owner Paul Presley
and interim chamber manager Walt
Pair Rescued
Off Clemente
Hunter made the fonnal reque.st for
the policy .. ~In(.
Both said that the bed tu revenues
could be used as good barometers for
the Chamber's out.of-city advertilllng
campaigns and for tile next few years
the 30-percent contributlon through that
system would bt equitable.
Before last year's hassle over the
city's Chamber ca11trtbution, San
Clemente gave the equivalent of the
Chamber's annual dues receipts.
'"!bat, too was an equitable system,"
Hunter observed,'' but this new formula
could relate much more to the activity
of the Chamber to help draw more
tourism to San Clemente."
The city's bed tax revenue this year
has been projected at about $35,000,
City Manager Ken Carr tald the cooncil,
based on the past 10 months' revenues.
Last fiscal year the bed tax revenues
dipped to about •n,ooo, probably because
of a lenithY stay by President Nixon's
entourage. Members of lbe Presidential
stab' rented quarters by the month, in-
stead of by the day at inns and motels,
thu! their rent was not taiable.
The council promised to take action
In the formul a matter at its next regular
meetina: May 20.
II 11·!111*1 tllll ,,,,.._al lOIWI•
will hefp provide ntec1.:i expansion of
fibyiscal educa~cm fldllUes.
.'Ibe principal value of ei:amlnatlon
by the aocrtditatlon committee, Retves
tokl reporters, is ·~ aelf-evaluatloo
for the benefit of the school tbat comes
from analyslna: all our departments and
finding our strenp and weaknesses
and tbe value Gf certitytng to the com--
ntwtit~ tbat our achool bat been tr>-
spectod b)' an outJldo organizaUOn and
meets reqU1red stanclanli."
SecQndaty importance of accreditation ,
Reeves added, is the certillcallon to
univeraitles that rraduates s h 0 u 1 d
measure µp to required mndards.
Graduatet of non-accredited hJ1h schools.
he said, may be requ!red to take special
enmlnltlonl lo pin college entrance.
Tornado Rips
Texas City;
Da1nage High
LUBBOCK, Tu. (UPI) - A tornado,
ttrl.klnl from tbe blacknels of a sprillg
thunderstorm, iore an eight-mile &uh
through Lubbock Monday night, causing
death and destruction that "defie s the
tmaginaUon" and injuring as many as
1,000 persons.
City Manager Bill Blackwell said the
twister that roared up Teias' "Tornado
Alley" kllled J.I persons. But a body
count today showed 19 dead.
The spring dawn over this West Texas
city of 161,000 showed damage over 2,500
square blocks from the tornado and
the main storm that spewed r ail and
hail the slze of lemons.
Wind gusts after the twister lifted
were measured at 100 miles an ,hour,
Damge was estimated into the millions.
"It hit us where it hurts,'' Blackwell
said. He said the list of injured coold
run as high as 1,000.
Skyscrapers -the tallest 20 stories
-stood pocked and battered. At least
one building waa in danger o{ collap11ing.
Today's weather wu dark and cloudy
with more deadly thunderstorms forecast tor the Lubbock arta.
The tornado touched down at 9:27
p.m. -the time a gymnasium clock
stopped at a local junior high school
-near the Texas Tech campus, headed
northeasterly through the downtown sec·
tlo n and moved out Of town by the airport.
Mo!t of Tei as Tech's 11,000 students
had left town at the end of the spring
stmester. Today wu the tut day fw
final ewnlnatlons.
The tornado waa Lbe worst tn Texas
slnc.e a twi•ltr reeled through wico
17 years ago on the same day. On
May 11, 1953, 114 persons welti killed
by the Waco tornado.
Water stood a foo t deep on some
Lubbock streeta. Complete blocks of
homes and bual.lesses were blown away.
Viejo High Sets .
Careers Program
Representativs of 14 career areas wb:t
be on CJmpua at Mission Viejo Hljh
School tonight for a careers day prograrp.
spon.sored by the Rancho Viejo Woman's
Club and the school's guidance depart.-
rnent.
Formal and informal discussions will
get wider way at 7:30 p.m. in °"'
multi-purpose room.
Parents of studtnU and inroming ninth
grade 11tudents fr001 La Pai Intermediate
School also have been invited to attend.
Councilman Charlton Boyd, also tn the
audience noted that the city couneli
bas to ~e up with a flnn budget
in 60 days and suggested that the council
should "know all the thlngs you regard
as important to get into this budget."
Two addllional downtown p I a n s
presented by DMJM and dealing: with
land use and zoning in the basin were
reviewed briefly. One envisioned a
number of high-rise tower structures
dotted in the area, to house both office!
and dwelling units.
One comment coming closest to the
solution came from interim chamber
of oommerce manag.er Walter Hunter,
who said a competent architectural
engineer should be summoned to conduct
a thorough study of the old clubhouse
to determine if it could withstand
restoration.
A pair of Orange Coest abalone
fishermen. missing since Sunday niP,ht
at sea, were rescued today off San
Clemente island by a passing Navy
destroyer. Cambodian Coast Blocl{ed
Planners seemed to agree that S(ljution
of traffic clrculatlon and parking pro-
blems welti the top priority items.
Ma yor Reveals
Committee Posts
Mayor Richard ('.oldberg has an·
nounced the appointment of new and
conUnulng Laguna Beach city councilmen
to the oounciJ's 11 special committees,
as follows:
Audi tin< Commltl": Roy H o I m ,
Charlton Boyd and Ooldbtrg.
Irvine Bowl Policy Committee : Roy
Holm and Ed Lorr.
Southern California Association (If
Government.: Charlton &yd.
SanltaUon District No. I : Goldberg
with Boyd as alternate.
Los Angeles Regional Trafflc Study:
Roy Holm.
Chambtt of Commerce Bt:autificat.ioa
Commltlet: Peter Ostrander.
Cultural Funds Committee: Ed Lorr
and Roy Holm.
Clamber of Commttee ,,\dvertising
Fund Commlltce: Goldberr and
Oltrander.
Representative to the Orange Count1
Coasl Association : Roy Holm.
Drug Education and RthabllltaUca
Council: Charlton Bojd.
Ilo\\·llng Club PoUcy Committee : 1.Arr
and Ostrande r. ,.
"The city should hire this service just
to see if restoration is possible. It may
be that those old walls just couldn't
hack all that work," he said.
Councilmen dropped the matter sw iftly
about an hour after discussions started
and promised they would determine more
firm directions in the clubhouse matter
at a regular action meeting -possibly
at the May 20 regular session.
From Page 1
MIDEAST ...
hours after the attack began that Israeli
troops \Vere still in enemy territory.
Lebanon, in a letter to the Security
Council, asked for the meeting because
of what It called an "Invasion" or
Lebanon. It said the lighting raged on
the slopes of · Mount Hermon near the
occupied Golan HelghLI and that the
Isrealis were forced to call orf the altack
despite Israeli a!r supremacy.
A spokesman In Beirut said Lebanese
guMers scored a direct hit on an Israeli
ammunition vehicle produtlna a huge
explosion. Arab sources repcrted IS
many as ti Israeli tanks knocked out.
Israel said Syrian artillery opened up
later on Israeli forces in the occupied
Golan Heights but two Jsrnell 1lr !trike!
were called ln and sllenctd the battultf.
There w111 no immediate rtaction from
Eapt, but Caito said tts commandos
Rtruck tcrOM the Suez Canal shortly
afltr midnight and Imel said It hurled
thtm back. King Hussein of Jordan
telephoned Lebanese Pre:slde.nt Chnrles
Jtelou nnd offered full support, Beirut
dlspatchts said.
t
Pilots of three Coast Guard he1icopters
out of Long Beaeh and San Diego were
summoned home BfteT beginning a 3,500·
square-mile search for the men at dawn.
Don Thal.cher. 30, of 252fi2 Main Sail
Drive, Dana Point, and Fred Yurbic,
30, of Newport Beach. were reported
to be in good condition after the two-night
ordeal.
The Bennington was towing their 22·
foot abnlone boat from the scent tl'I
a rendezvous with a Coftst Guard cutter
and a return to homeport.
Thatcher and Yurblc set out Sunday
for San C1emente Island planning to
return that night.
A second hunt for a crewman \\"ho
fell off the Japanese motor vessel
F.cuador Maru 30 mil~ southwest or
San Diego was called off Monday af.
temoon.
Double Bill Set
For CofC Meet
A double-bmeltd profnm ol the
Capistrano Belch Q'larnbtr of Commerce
will bring Sheriff Jamtt Mu!lck and
Dina Point Insurance a1ent Hoyt POiit
to speak before the chamber members
Wednesday noon In Pete and Clara's
Caft, San Juan Capistrano.
h1uslck 'wUI appear as a de\iiyed b\11 ,
lie was unable to attend the April
mteting In which his oppontnt for the
County Sherifl.C:Oroner post v.·11 heard
by the chamber .
Post , who is presld~nt of tht Dana
J>o\nt Chamber ~·lll prestnt a chambtr
ol romme.rce lnso.ranct pro1ram.
To Communist Supplies
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -South Viti.
nam has set up a blockade off the
Cambodian coast in an effort to halt
incoming supplies for the Viet Cong,
South Vietnamese Vice President Nguye11
Cao Ky said today.
The United St.al.ts sa.id it was ha.IUng
North Vietnanwise and Viet Cong ships
there but said this was not a blockade.
At the same time &luth Vietnam sent
gunboats 50 miles farther up the Mekong
River abOve the. Cambodian capital of
Phnom Penh in a new example of
cooperation betwem the Saigon and
Phnom Penh 1overnmtnts In tbtJr joint
struasle q:alnst tht Communim.
UPI correspondent WaJtt:r \Vhltehead
reported from Neak Luong, 30 mlle.s
down Lbe Mekong: from Phnom Penh,
that Ky told newsmen the South Viet·
namese navy was &topping ships ol third
nations and searching them for Com--
munlst Stlpplles.
In the past both lht Soviet Union
and Communla:t China have landed sup-
plies at Ute pert of SlhanoukvlJle but
there w•s no indication of any of lheir
shlp,1 had been halted by the S<>uth
Vlttnamese. Cambodia had cut the
"Slhanoukvllle Trail" leading from the
port to South Vietnam.
The tl .S. ~illltary Comn1nnd In Sal1on
said U.S. Navy ves!els we.re operatlna
in the same area 11 the South Viet-
namese navy but a spokesm an insl.!lted,
"This iJ not a blocka~." A spokesmao
~
for Gen. Creighton W. Abrams Aid,
"no third country" vessels w o u Id, be
stopped by U.S. sh Ip s or interMed
v.·lth In any way. '
111.e spokesman said the U.S. ve:Mela
were positioned to stop "North Viel·
namese and Viet Cong s h i p 1 tr)'lng
to bring supplies into Cambodiall' ter-
ritory. The bulk of the allied neet was
believed positioned opposite Phu QyQc:
Island, which also 11 a South Vietnamese
province.
''The Cambodian government has'bte:n
informed," the U.S. spokesman uld. --
From Page J
SADDLEBACK .•
pened to sho~ up Is no riallOn for
US to diJCUS! JI ."
John &thwell, Saddleback studtnt
body pre!ldenl, criticized the boafd ,for
continual delays on matters requested
by the ttudents but he alao augguted
the dJscusslon was over alnce the bod
had other matte:rs to consider. , ,
C.lllns, picked up on the cue, aod
said the board did appreciate the lclte
o( the dl.9cusslon and 1A lnteruied tn,.
dlscusslna·problems wllh students.
"I do hcpe the lime never comes
Yihen the. process of disc11sslon atve"1
way to conrrontation or violence," he
sakt.
'
lllfMl•f, M11 U , 1970 em v Pn.OT 9 ,
PoUtlC!Gl Note• 8 Coast Residents
Cited for Service For the
\Uarriage
I Licenses
Record
ef DM. Mafllt II,, 'tl1I el CMll
""~ !IOOIRl-MclUNNl't', WllllMTI \.., SI,
llf lWI l1k1MOl'lt 111111 ~ II.,
'9, II UOI ""I-. ~ fl """"'
llnfttll kfcti.
Appointed Superintendent
Asked by Board Candidate
SANTA ANA -El1ht Ramona .R. Meado11 ,
Orange Coast area rtsldenta Westminster, II~; John E.
art among S7 county employes Marwin, Ll"9Jt ..... a ch ,
awarded service plns this district attorney; Howard K.
d ol S Gerrish; Coeta Me11, harbor: mooth by the Boar uper-and Enid t. Bjorum, Seal
MA•f~A.BIA~7~(1J.ri\1"10
MUlt,HY-1.0Y,"'fol>Mll L,. ,,, ef Dl2 a. i1111 sf:, w111m1111tl!' "'°
i lll(l.1111!,:.,0:.• ol JlJ I!. Gr1v1 {•£1/i!.A.~l , ~:!t \ t). • .:: :J:' ~·· H, 01 llNI ~'l.1111, ~N'.fvt11t, S.m111I 0., i.,
1tW Klm. 21, bo!ll of l1• MMIM Mal'ir1~1 L~~r.· fl:Mrf W ...... ·~ L .. ,(M~·"lllll I A G, of 1ftl ,.,..,It "I' ~1i,MJ>:.,.,," L., "' .. ~~ ,,, tll of 2tli Hlellllftd ·~~ nt~';if~. , .. ~al~ Ii=.:,. 11 .• ~ or .. 5 s-i. \1., a!~l~ra:!NA~E~.f:= j;;J)e
•1111 "U:,..,,.}~'\'1, of 1NI yo,(fown
It. Hynll!Jt!O>I INdl.\ W~I S.~~~·~ltTll: Gtr1'1 $., ~:_8!_
. "~ of 21 =1Mri:.'3i TMl ~ W"'1m115• 0 I It S.lt t , '°' tnd "-/.~• ,z;; hl!, "t ........
• '~'~'''"'" "f.: • .. I"·
• CW Fount•!" •.Jllirf. ~ "'11 '·· "· .. .. "'
N, Y1l~111~rlcw. 1nif fflt,.,.I , tt, llf 41) POPI" la11t, Ctf'{lllt del IMr.
FEit:· HA l mtt It:. , of
....,.,.., 16 "f"'""'"· '1m ... "· .. ', W. llltl St., otll -Ind .... !~of s.•1-
0 t 1~t6.1lts~.·· Jo11" 11.1 1t, .,, ~ of"k!n,,..';~1. ind cnr 1ttnt L., • n!I" !oil II ~In la111, both 01
"b1Juf1.w.p1J1f'"GA N, Glr1' Li;,.('· ~r1 _51nvot1 L1111, tt1,1ftl . ~"" •1t1tfc"')..,.~\i.1L".i.Jla~' fllf 01 swl T·TETEll:, l.ir..,. P .• It. or 14'22 •t imer Clrclt, Hun11'i\ri 111~ '~It M_J~ K., 11, ol I Ort 1.
litE'NNEOY·lltNKI , JOltPll. ~.of 196J ·-, A.YI Ind M1ro111. 45, ol '~"° Wo "''' ... o '"" -· Fiii! NO-Sl'ELO.l'N. J.,..n P .. 1t". o1 ' l klo Perl! Drive, N-1 h"'1'1 •nd M1111111rllt A., 41, d 70t c .. t1nn1. LHun• ••"ch. SAllAlllA-Gll:AHA.M. il'r•llt It:., 3', o1
15'1 C1rlbbi1n W1v, Leoun• llt•cll
1nd M.Wlrne s.. n. of 2JOll
Af'fnlOOIOll, U!!Ullt Niguel.
N.t.YLOlt:<U.SON, fl:a'monct A.., 22, of 1l20 Florldl St. ind o._ L., n . ot not V1!•r,ct1 ortw. 111111
of Hu111i119lon 8e1cll. WACIHlll·N!!LSON, JOI! C: •• 10, of ,..,, s. Ollv. ''·· S.nl• Ant Ind I<•' T., II. 01 IJH1 Yl!"kW!lr1
i...,.., Hu11lll\lttifl le1c:h.
l UCAs.atEllOfl', Scott w .• 'Jl, o1
1122 W, 81lbu lllYd .• Ntw-1 hlCfl
11111 Tin. c .. 20. o1 lom Tr11T1n. Oowritv. C1llf.
GOWOY·Md'"A.RlAHD, Mlt111e1 l ., 71.
of U751 ll11"Yllfll Orlvt, Sur!NI lltlCPI
• ,..., !.111ntv "·· 23, llf Cl S.....nlll St., Hunllllll!Ofl !itldl.
ECIWARDS.SAYlOlt, GrfOGl'V l ., n.
of Ktltllt<ln M., 20, llolh of 1114
W. Wlllon, COiii Miu.
Allfll 17 CUMMINGS-CAPLAN, wu111m E .• 50.
·of U>a Mlr1m1r Orlvt1 11141 Oorl!llv
I ., o Ill 22U \11111 HUfr11, ~
d H"""'°"' llHCl'I. A11SME1t:-Q\IANOT, OelrN" C., SJ, o1
f011: C1rn1llOll Ort...e, Wtltmllltlw
i nd Nl11!1• It:., 27, ol lOOf S. $!1nd1rd, 511111 Anl.
VEllY·SMITH, JDfln R •• n. DI JU
Shlllmtr, (Olli Mt-. Ind Potult 0 ., 22, of tll VII LIOo Nor,,
Nt fllpOrl 111<1!.
81t:OWN-O'CDNNl!!LL. L1w!1 J.. :n,
ol 234 Unlvt1r1lt\< Orlv., Cost• Mt11 11111 Ftllcl1 0., lJ, of 16.H C1r1Nltt1
SI .• LltQUllt lltlcll. ICRUl!Glfl:-MC:Kll, Peter A., JI, 11..t
1Mrltl1 L.. U. both or 111 ~"' SI., Ntfllport 811<1!.
WOL"E·TURK, 8rl1" L., 10. 01 4Co1
Vldor11 Ind tll1cllel M., 11, DI
1U Mtrlpo~1. bot~ of S•n Cllmtn!e.
kl!AtllHl-LICHTY. Jellrtr IC.., ~•. 1111d
Lindi, 1i, both of 11•2 Jiit St .•
W11tmll\Jler,
CIHll-ALU.11:0, Jtmt' Ill., 14, of 1116 !!. Junlpero 11111 P1WIU1 l., JO. of 1:15 Flor1nc:l1, b0111 DI Sin Clt.,..ntt.
80LIH.(AHKEll, Etrl O .. J5. 1nd
Htltn M., U , bolt> DI 17ff5 LI
•-line, fa&111lt ln V1tle,. CUMMINGS-OEMOULIN , lttrmo!'CI
T .• 21, DI t1'1 l tlrnonl, ltllfl_,r
I ncl Ro&lll L., 1•, DI ,.., La Mor i
Circle, Fou11111n Vt ller.
LANDEROS-ARO.A.NOA, 01¥1d A,, 71,
DI JJ11 S. Eve,.,rttn, Slnl1 AAt
ind Sylvia, \I, of U1'1 Ollv1 SI.,
W111m!"1ter.
STlllNGl!lt:-SAACHI, He""' ~ .. J7, 1"4
"''· Joi, bofll Of J44'1 Dtl Prldll, D1n1 Point. llOOlllGUEZ-FAUSTO, Pedro V .. Jr,
111d F1llcll11,. l7, boll! 01 !Jiil
Loc111I SI., W11lmln1ttr.
JDNES-WILCDX, H1rold" G., 11. of
77' Sht l!IT\lr 1nd IC11t1' A., 20.
Death Notice•
MeCOWAN
11:1' I . McC-111. Ollt of dN!h, ""'' t. Su,..,1¥ed ff wilt , Lllllln 0. Mc(Gfllln1
d•uoll!tr·ll'l-llfll, Mn. Calll•ft McCowtn;
tl!rff gr1llll1or11, Wllll•m, JDf111 11141
Do\lgt.1 McC-1n1 11r111dd1uthllf', Cit,,.
t rlne McCow1n1 lour Miiiets. D\1111,
Wtllllf". lll'\l'CI Ind Danlkl Mee-".
StrVkn. Wtdntscll,, 2 PM, Chllrch or
Our Htrl!ttt. Forfll ltwn C011!n1 Hn!1.
ln!1rm..,r. Fore1I L1w11 Mtmorlel P1rl<.
Gllftdl lt. For1.11 L1Wn Morlu1r1', Olr.c-mo.
"OT
Htnr1' M. !loot. A•• '5. of not Florldl, Huntllltl"" 8 ttdl. S.rvkH pt~ll\I 11
lml!rt. Mor11Jarv.
Tt•ANaY
C~rl11!111 M. T111"11ty. l :IUl·ll Ile.cl ttlll,
Tu1tl", Alt 141 d1t1 of de1th, May 1. RMullm M•••· Wedlltlde,, I AM, SI.
JOldllm1 C1thClllc C:~11rc11. 11111rmt111t
1"rlv1l1. W"tcl!ff Cl'llPll Mortv1r1'.
"'6-411. OlrK10r1.
ARBUCKLE A SON
Westcllff Mortaary
417 E. 17tll st .. Coota Mesa Mf.4181 . •
CHllTl•·IOllS. lllOYit l. "6, Ill
IMJI Oelilt" W.11, WttllftlN"' 111111
J1cqutiYll It., JI, of Ult Olffltltl,.
Ot"•ne•. LEl-MlltCtll, 0.... It., :t •IMI
'"'""'"' n. btlll -tt.ll "IOW*. Hllflllnetoll lffdl,
LAI VIG.Al. N'f, -""''"" lltffl ... ltlllH "htrt rw:k.MM:
Hi.IAltO.TAIT -At>r. l~ Rllllltt , f' 11111 l1rtNor1 •11111, J7, Do II OI Oii• Me ... TUC Ell· UCKE~lil At>r. ,,, JIM!\ll ..... u ""''' "''Pl(" ...... XI ..;.ti. {If Hunt ,....,. hllOI.
MANiOM:HUTTON -APf. 1f, 011!1tl ltMA. It. ol Wnlrnl11111r,11'1f llfflGI
"1t. 11, et co"I "'"· ZAIALA•HUGHE --'"'· It 1 "WiEllCI. 20, OI We,tmlNltr, Incl JUI:! ll'rlM" u, II 11ll1t'IOll flRT ·IAllltET'r -APr,._}t1 Th.m11 J"""· 10. 11111 ''"'"" M. lf, t1o111 or Hvf\11..,.,, 1111.11. IYllll""LLEN -AIM'. 20. • 09!\llll L ... 2:S. ot Mklw1' CltJ, 11'1111 O.W1 J1,,,.., l•I d Fovnt1ln Y1lln'
OLIVl•·M NKE -••r. u, I""' Rk:l\lrd, :11, or HunllMloll lldl. 11141 J111J1 Anni . 21. or cwt• MtM, FReMONT-JONll -APf. :14. ltONld
H .. al. of L1t11llil &-. 1M Auel,.., Al\fl, Jt, ef ~ ..,,,; GARONl•4HAW -,.,_,, "'-It..,,.,....
..... ll. 11111 0.-22, llollri " Wttllrl!,..!olr. Cll:OOICS.TAYLOR -.~'1', 21, Reloll LlllV~. S1, Ill MO!ITCl::i, 11141 Ellr1btth lteL41.Dlll HIJftll1'41 lfftll, AltMIJO-FEllNANOIZ -At>r,_25, Jelln I.~ Jil, et FOU!lt1l11 V1hn, 111111 • '"· .as ., Slftll ""'· ,$EA rON·l"~lllMEL!I -AIH', JS. P11rldc, ». or N___,, ltadl, 1114 ....... ~ ....... '""" HAMILTOH·PEAllCll -AIH', :IJ, ~~:-t 1f, f::1:l•Hi~J1..!i~ f:::,,~r KIPFS UttL.-ANOllEWI -A.t>f. U, JDf111 Ot1rll1, lol. OI l"a&1flfllft VII..,,
111d T'hefwsl Oo1ortt. U. of Cff11 Miii . OE MAll.CO.KllOPI" -A.t>r U. RDlltl1 J .. 3', or Hu11111111yn it.cti, 11'111
Stllllr1t•i of f1Wnl1 11 V1tle:r NOEL·W El 5 APr. 2:51 G. Jr., I , af "1ftWPOl1 11 , 1!>11 Domttet Jnve, 41. ol A.nll'll!m. l l!!llltY·Sl"ANGLlll -APr. JJ, lllO .. ~ t'" '2, lllCI """" c .. 4'0, boll'! of lfUl'll •••di. WHITMjl -.104-lNSOH -"-'· 25, ~1 6:/h'~I ~"-i~rwi.,~11111 Jn11, 1 , JOLLl!Y..Pl ~~lf' -A~r. 15, Jtrr1' Sld111.,, 20, or l"rovv. Vtll'I, 111d Jelu lt, ol Hnr~I ••Kil. CALVINU ,OINTI! -A•r. 15. Mttll 01111. Jl, •1'111 Jatlll Jtlll, lol, bolll OI Co1!1 Med. WHYEllS.lt08Efl:TS -A11r. 2f, Jah11 P .. 40, 11141 J•1111\1, .t6, lloltl of
H11ntlntlo11 'I'"· MAtllTON•-WA OLGW -Air. JJ. 01111•1 fredlrldl, 2S, ef Sift Lui• Obl1PO, llld JlllYll Et.l11t, lf, fllf Fovnrlln V•lllY. M•rrl-H«11Mt wtre l1t1JM 111 Lu A1191l11 COllnfY 19 tfll lwlloWllll II of A,,11 27: ROOllAUOH-JEFPtlllES -D1vtd L.1 H, L.A., Incl Ml'l' k ., 11. 111' W"IJl'O•I o~., H11nllntl011 lllldl . Gl ll·ENGU.~O -Roblrf W .• J~. 11051 Grove Clrcll, H11nll1111011 ltldl. 111d N1..n> A., l\L Downn. AUSTIN.aLOOMF1tLD -DOI'! M .. J7, LOl\I l11dl, 111d Cito111ln1 u.,
)S, '901 tt111 ""'·' Hunll,.,.1011 811Cl'I. FROlllANO·Ltfl:OY -Mldllll L., 11, 2'1' ClllfdrlYI, H-Mrt llllc;f\, t1141 lrt1M11 IC. )f, Terrtl'l(I. llR UHl·l!lllC:KSbN -ltoblrf E., J,, ltv1rl'r Hlill, 1..i Olbor.rt J .. Jl, lt161 WP!t rton I!., Hunlll\ffOll l11cll.
Optometry
College Set
In Fullerton
FULLERTON -The Los
Angeles College of Optometry
haa announced plans to move
to Fullerton and construct a
classroom building on a alx-
• acre site near the campus of
Cal State Fullertoo.
The optometry institution
will have a faculty and staff
of 7S and will be able to In-
struct 400 students, accordlnc
to JtS dean, Dr. Charles Abel.
Abel said negoti&Uons are
underway to affiliate with Cal
State Fullerton.
Dr. William Langsdorf, Cal
State president, said bis staff
is considering the proposal
and will make a decision when
the College of 0 pto met r y
buildinc plans are completed.
Chiefs Scout
Slates Talk
By 0 . C. lltl5TINOS
Of .. Dllr ,, .. , '"'"
A candldlle for the Oran1e
c..mty ochool boar</ h.u c:.ol1ed
lo< lepl1Uoo thal would
make the office of county
superintendent of schools ap.
pointive ralhtr lhan elective.
An elective county
superintendent must be more
interested in buUdlng hls
personal image and reputaUon
than in Improving educaUon
if be ts to continue In office,
SIYI Mn. JoAnn Doudna.
Mrs. Doudfta, San Clemente
mother of sis, wu twice
elected to the Capistrano
Unlfted Sd1ool District board.
Labeling the present syst.em
inefficient, Mrs. Doudna said,
"It just doesn't make sense
to have both an elected IChool
board and superintendent ·
"How can the school board,
which is suppoaed to rtflect
the will of the people from
the respective areas of the
county. successfully carry out
ils mission to improve educa-
tion if it has no real authority
over the adminlstratcrr in
charge?"
An appol n ti ve superin-
tendent would be m o r e
responsive to the desires or
an elected school board and
Bids Called
For Work
At College
SANT A ANA -Bid& will
be opened early in June for
more thin $4 million in new
comtruction at Santa Ana
College (SAC ), President Dr.
John E. Johnson has an·
-11bwlce<l:
The $4 million will be spent
on lhe seoond phase of the
college'a $1 million elpansion
program, he said. '
This final segment of the
program 11 being financed by
$2.7 mllllon in state funds,
a $500,000 federal grant, and
the balance from local capital
ouUa y funds , the president
rtvealtd.
Conlract.s will be awarded
by June 15. Included in the
second phue are a new two-
story building to house ad-
ministration, counseling and
.admission offices in addition
to community and per90Me1
services: and additions to
women's physical education
facilities.
AJ90 planned is replacement
o[ nearly all public utility
facilities and the addition of
a new service building.
NAACP Talk
On Thursday
SANTA ANA -The Orange
County chapter of the N1Uooal
AS80clation for the Adva~
EL TORO - A talent scout cement of Colored People
for the Kamas City Chiefs (NAACP) will present a pro.
football club will addresa a '"'am 1!/iUtled "Opportunities diMer meeting of the Orange .,.
County Retired Off Ice rs • in Employment" at I p.m,
Association at 6 p.m. Saturday Thursday al the Santa Ana
at the El Toro Offlcefl' Club. Library, Ith and Rose Streets.
"Athletk Th i nking rn Repre1ent.alive1 from
Today's Modern World," will private industries, city and be the topic of E. Buckley, former high school and coach county government and the
and HK2 graduate ol Harv1rd Santa Ana sdlool di!trict will
Univenity. Reservations for pre1ent i n r or mat ion on
the meeting, open to all employment for Nqroes in
retired. officers, are available Orange County.
BALTZ Pt,ORTUAIUF.3 by calllns Lieutenant Com· -.. bll . invi ted to t
Corona del Mar OR S.HM mander E. H. Crittenderl at l ift: pu c is • •
Coota Meta • Ml f.UU II,==-==· =======t=end=th=•=m=eet=ln=g=.===:;1
BELL BROADWAY
MOR'IVARY
110 Broadway, Colt& Meu u f.US.I • DILDAY BROTHERS
U'"tio"°" Valley
ft.lortu111
17911 Beac!i Blvd.
huodn-'1on Beach
IU-7771 • PACIFIC VIE\' .'
MEMORIAL PARK
C<me!e17 e M-.,.,.
Ctrapel
SSOO Paclltc Vn Drt•e
Ne•port Beach. Callfornl1 -• PEEK FAMll.Y
CO!.ONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7801 Bolaa An.
Witlmiuter ltWP5 • !BEITER MORTUARY
Lapna s .. ck CH-1115
•01'1 llSPOSmONT Go .. 1111cl1 "''"
,114 '"l•v.d 11111l1ti11, with h1111. M1
WAUCiD 1114 TAUCED witl! Acl1111 11111
f.,,, "--111 th1 c11I 1f the lll1y," &111. J :I .
E1101h WALKED wlttt fiP1J 1nif w•1 ••·
t111r1ttl 11 hithly th11 he 111.,1r cll1ttl, l.ut
&•ti tr1111l1t1.i him 111!0 Ht1.,111, 6111.
1:24. Goel m1tl1 m1rt 1,irltw1I, !JI hi1 1w11
ifl'l•t• 111 .. H•111111, !Gtn. 1:261 ••th"'!
H1 could h1v1 PLEASURE flt 111111, hi1 cr1•+11r1, l1v ... ;I I IKl"t
J••· l !hl1J . GH'1 DIS,OSITION w11 t• "' 1 COMl'ANtON to
..,,,.. l ut 111111 ch111914 thl1 Irv lt1coll'lillf relt1lll1u1 1M ,.,11, 8111.
•:1.1. ONLY th1 r19ht1111u111t 1f N1ith "''"'"'''TOTAL 41th11c•
ti•11 of 111111, 6o4·1 DISPOSITION NOW i1 to SAVI 111111 l TElN·
ALLY for l'LEASUlE fholh Se4'1 1114 11'1111'1) i11 H11w111, J11.
l ll•; J l'tl. l it . 1111 God 11y1, "-1 h''' 111 PLIASUlE In th1
ll11th of lh1 WICKl:I>-," E11t. Jl :l 1. Al11, "-th• Lor4 '"'God
it 1 c•ntu111i119 f1r.-.." ''""''" wJcltM ,.,,,1,, D111t. "i2 ... E ... 11
J 1tu1 .. _hill 01 r1v11IH fr•111 htlYlll, with hl1 mi9"ty •llf•I•,
111 1111111119 fir1 t1•i11f v1119111c1 •11 th1m th1t lt111w 110! G.4-,"
2 Tho11. 1:7.t . In itdtlltlofl, "~f the rltht.1111 111rc1ly •• 11w1d,
wh1r1 1h1ll th1 u119 ... ly 1M th• 1i11n1r 1pp11r1", P1f, ";II.
W, 111 NOW h••• •11r chine• !1 ff 1 COMl'ANION with G.d
thro111ho11t 1t1r11lty 11 h1 t111lr11. THAT 11 Qot1'1 DISPOSITION.
Wll•t it YOUAS? Are y111 tll1~11t1 +. \1v1 QM, offy hl111 1M
Ito ''"''' Writ• or pho111 fir Flll •••ltl1t 111 GM'• W1v of
t1IY1 t!o11. Ch11r1h of Chlnt. 217 W . Wll1on St., Co1!1 M111,
CitHfor11i1 t2•27. l'h11111 141·1111, 141·'2441 , •4•·17•J.
Su Cltmaile 4ft.ll.. I For Top Sports Coverage
1j Read the DAILY PILOT • SMITHS' MORTUARY
C7 Mala SL
111lndngton Btadl -
•
Burke (R·HUDtln(ton Beach)
has crlUc!Md Whal h e
detcrlbes 11 Sacr1mento'a
••weak-kneed ctty Father•"
for canctlinr an A r m 1 d
Fattes Weei display on 1
~~~.n a block from the
visors. Beach, welfare.
A l~year.award was given 1;:~~~~~~~~~ H. .... "k•I Aft.,llM:ea:I
Dorise L. Jesko of the Costa
Mesa Library staff.
APPOINT CHIEF
Candidate D;eudn•
to the . needs ol the individual
school dl1tricts, she maintains.
* Asaemblyman Robert E.
Badham (fl.Newport Beach)
h a s introduced legislation
commending John W•yne for
winning an academy award
and for "his outstanding
career as one of America's
foremost actors."
* Assemblyman Robert •I.
When the Assembly voted
47 ro u to ut the dty council
to recomidlr its decl.sl.on,
Burke noted that U>09t: 12
voting 1111nat the resolution
ire "the same legislators
who. . . repeat the same
rhetoric about falmess, equali-
ty and ot hearing the other
side.
"The!e 1<1lal1Ion evidently
feel that lt wu perfectly 'fair'
to allow the Viet COllg flog
to Oy over the State Capitol
grounds and permit
tr1:1sonous, fUthy speeches
about overthrowing the 'pig'
system," Bµrke declared .
* The Oran1e County Com-
mittee to Re-elett Governor
Ronald Rea11n hu opl!ned
headquarters at 500 W. 17th
SL In Santa An1.
The headquarters will be un-
der the supervision o( Mrs.
Mary Jane Smart, according
to Newpart Beach attorney
Ale:.1ander Bowle, county cam·
palgn chairmen.
All-Electric
Costa Mesa
Historian
Slates Talk
SANT A ANA -Costa Mesa
historian Ed Miller will speak
before the Oranse County
Historical Society 'Ibursday
night wt:ien It meet,, •t Charles
W. Bowe rs Memorial Museum
here.
Jim Sletper, president of
th e org anizaUon, noted that
th~ meeting will be al 7:30
p.m.
The author of ''A Slice of
Orange1" the story of Costa
Mesa's blrUt and maturation
has researched the com·
munlty'.s paat tor 10 years
In preparing his thick, il-
lu11trated volume.
He began while pursuing his
hobby of collecting !lreet car
tokens when In search of an
1188 ticket for the shorl·lived
Fairview-Santa Ana Railroad.
Ten-year pins wtnt t o
Donald L. Stewart, El Toro,
medkal center ; Jerry R. Sat·
tefield, Costi Mesa, sheriff;
Marian Miller, Laguna Beach,
South County Municipal Court;
more
Gas
You deserve the comfort of an all-electric Medallion
Home. And for an average of only 56¢ a week
more in utility bills you can have it.
Here are the findings:
A,verage Wae!dy Cootof.E!ecltlolty
AV•rage Weekly Cott of o ..
Total WHklY Coat-Gu ond Electriolty
Extra WHkly COit of All-Eleotnc Ho"'"
ILIC:T JOI
GREINE c,_,. Tu C1••t•
CtllttM fW ,,_ ·-• ._ ,.._i~'O .... .,,
I See by T cxlay' s
Want Ads
• HI, Ho ailvu! Be the rlaht
hand man at the Lone
Ranrtr Re1ta.urant. Need.
ed at once. ·
e This I• a bua you'll love.
lt' I a 1985 With maaa.
headen itnd pin •tripln(j:,
only $950.
• Be the tint on your block
to have yoor own fl)'in&
carpet. This mqnltleerrt
atiental r u c (Bolcan.)
17~1' x U'4" wW cost you
$700.
,56
... -'2.81
2.27
liii The cost of electricity for the average all-electric
Medallion Home ls only 56¢ a week more than the
cost of both gas and electricity for the typical
home using gas. <Established in a survey of more
than 8,000 homes. Bil.ls w.cre typical of a family
Wouldn't you prefer a clean, cool, llamelcss electric
kitchen? A quiet, clean, spac~aving electric
water heater? Flameless electric heating with room·
by-room temperature controls? An all-electric
Medallion Home has them-plus built-in
provisions for the alklcctric future.
of four living in a 3-bedroom home.)
Half the homes sutveyed were all-electric Medallion
Homes, where everything was run by electricity
-no gas. Electric cooking. Electric heating.
Electrle water heaters •
The other half of the homes surveyed used gas.
For the good clean life-live electrically.
It's more than worth the 56¢ a:week. sCS
\ Southern C.lifom/11 Edison
J
· I
TLHMily, M'f 12, 1970 SC
Tuesday's Closing· Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
DAI" PILOI J.i
Boys Club
Slates Camp
Camp Cedar Lake in ttle
Sin Bernardino Mountains wlU
bt ~e site of thrtt camping
sessions sponsored by the
Boys' Club of the Harbor Area
this summer for boys 8 to
12 years old.
The week-Jong c a m p
sessions will include boy-
orlented activillts like trout
fishing, boating, swimming
and hlklng u well I! con:
servatlon programs and
campfire activities, accordln1
to Boys' Club officials.
Boys can register at either
branch of the Boys' Club dur-
ing club hours. Camp dat~
are Jul y 28 through August
2, August 2 to August 9, •
August 9 to Auiust 11.
Price of I.ht campini trlpa
Is m per session.
LA Paper Exec
Main Speaker
Dan Moore. special Usistant
to the publisher of the Los
Angelea: Tlmes w\.JJ be the
(Uest 1peater at ~ final
meeting of tht Oranae County
School Boitd1 Auocl1tlon at
Estancl1 !Ugh School May 20.
The .dinner meeting wlll be
the group's 1nnu1l bualnttss
meeting and will feature tht
elett.Jon of officers and tM
bolrd or directors for the lf?~
71 school year. Dinner wm
be at 8:4.$ p.m. In the
cafetortum.
Pilot Official
Attends Meet
J1cll: R. Curley, vlct prClJ.
dmt and gener•I managtr ol
t~e DAIL V PILOT ~ ll!IOnf
30 advtrtlslng eiecutlves from
new1paper1 In 17 states •1·
tendlng a lwo-weet seminar
11 the American P r e 1 1
lllStllute.
Conducted by Ruu Schoch.
API l!iSOClale dJreci.or, the ado
Yertlsln1seminar111 belna tie.la
at Columbia Unlve:raity.
SPECIAL TODAY!
Modem
Occosionol Tables
•OU•
C.HOIC £
llSf~.95 V.lf PllC( • The ~rlect chance to brighten up your living
room or den .•. orod ol fonJOstic wiving~.
Features qool+ry construclion, to-lhe-floor
styling wi•h Walnut finish. Your choice of
Cocktbil A7"K21" or End Tobie 26"K20".
Donl miss ou!, corne 1010 Levitz. todoyl
list 139.95 THRf( PltCfS
All three decoro11ve 011d ui.eful octogon
!ables con be yours !oday for only $19. UJe
rt.em as plant stands. end tables or lamp
tables. I 01 11ses anywhere in your home.
This rs o special purchase and stock is
limited. M.rocle Pecan vinyl finish, lord many
times longer than loc:iuer or vornish finish
and olmosl impossible to mar! Shop eorfy
for rhis onet
Floor
Pillows 28" sq.
llST $149~ lfVITZ WHSE Pl lCE $9 EA.
11vge 28" square Floor Pillows. Kopok filled
••• covered with bunny fur pole fabric <JOO
corner tusH ls. AYOiloble in red, block, moss,
o range. g <Jld. and blue. Ploce rhem in your
den, living room, family room ..• any room
of your home ... they ore lovely t<J look al
ond comfortable rool Take advantage ol this
MJle price now .•. v1~t Levilz 1odayl
Refreshment Bar
~lDULlD 10 $ 48
Plonn•ng <l parly, or lor your own special
pleasure, this •S !he item lor you. Fial-cut
Walnut l1 n1shed refreshment bor, 28" wide,
33" high. comple!e w11h 18-pc. Glossw<Jre
~et. N1Jte the ample s1orage rooml Come 1n
today and i.ove the lev+1z Whse. Woy!
· Three-piece
Student
St udy Center
tlG. \~9 ~Alt Ptlll. (
This group 1ndudes 4Q,. 18~30 s1udet1I study
desk wtth Wolnui finish lop. 74,.91/.,.36
bookc<Ji.e and plos11c covered pedes1ol
base choir. The rub1ilor metal frames <Jre
l1n1shed •n gold lone. A borgo+n yau'll both
be happy w11l1!
•
i
.. -, •. ..
",. -',
•'' .
Tiv.e Pie<e Patio Set
LIST $99.9.5 l\M4Tf0 ~I()(•
This b.oliliful 3 piece polio ~I ran now be
yours for a wry low low pnce n1 litv•lt
during our wle. Thi• &et 11 mode ol J1irobh:
coif iron to """rhstond fht weather and 1on-
a1ont ..,.. •. T),e whrt. ~. dtsign w·U mo~•
your polio or lrOfll port h look mor• in·
vitabt~.
TODAY 10 TO 10
I CHARGE iii)
May 1970
WE'RE JAMMED
IN THE AISLES!
Crowded condition s are
holding up the stocki"ng of
new merchandise now sitting
on our dock! We must clear
out discont inued merchan-
dise immediately ! This tre-
mendous sale will be for one
day only! Don't mrss the fab-
ulous buys and savings being
offered!
TODAY 10 TO 10
Your Choice! Vinyl
Walnut Finished Book-
case or Commode!
YOU• CHOl(.E I
I
I TERMS AVAI LABLE I J
~==========:....:·,
UST $509~
During this sole ypu hove your choite • , , 4-shelf book.
<ose .•. or storoge commode! Buy borh pieces ond stock
fh' bookco:.e on top of the commode ... features W<Jln1it
f inished Mir<Kle Vinyl finish lasts lo nger th<in the finest
lacquer or varnish! Toke advantage of the i.ovings!
Complete 7-Pc.
Modern Dinette
llVITZ WHSL
PRICE
UST $179.9.5
SPECIAL .PURCHASE!
Elaborately Wood
Trimmed Sofa and Loveseat
LEVITZ SPECIAL
$397
Here'1 o .set designed for the big fomily. Beautifully
finish ed. Walnut wood groined no-mor protected Tobie,
plus set of six upholstered choirs in wipe clean vinyll
Don't miss thi1 Levitz Woreho1ise speciotl
You're rece1v1ng the most _for your money when you purchase this
beautifully designed Mediterranean Sofa and loveseotl The Sofa alone provides 8 lh feet
of comfort! Upholstered in C~pper Herculon with.Gold Hercul on Welts ... This sofa and love·
seat will enhance any living room! Self-decked (the some elegant fabric that went into the sofa
is under the cushion) • , • Just. like the more expensjve sofo.sl Bo ck and seat cushions are re-
versible for longer weor , •• Foam filled for complete comfartl Toke advantage of the savings
of $202. 95 todoy!
UST $599 .95
-
KROEHLER
2-Pc. Top Quality
Spanish Sofa and Loveseat
Remarkably quality ••• ot on unbelievobl\I low Wareho1ise pric.el
You'll love owning this magnificent Solo ond loveseol in <Jll its regal
splendor. Upholstered in easy to core for Herculon (Copper) ...
<JCCe11ted by intric<Jtely carved Dork Fruitwood 1rim. Features reversible
Kodel wrapped sea t and boc.k c.ushions with zippers ... lor soh
comfort and double wear .•• plus the luxury touches o! sell ded1ng,
lEvlrz WHSE P~ICE
$484
UST ~7!990
MUST IE SEEN
$297
soh spring edge and low legs! Sho p
Warehouse todoy and Sovel Save!
o! levilz
5 Pc .· Contemporary Master Bedroom Set "" ""."
The newest trend in Contempor<Jry furniture with the heavy mossiv-e look oChieved by the double fold e~ect on the
drawer fronts <Jnd the lavishly deep mouldings and overlays over the doors. II will remain enduringly beautiful because
of the line crofbmonlhip.,. Finished in Pecan with o heavy top ond plinth bcue •• , Suite includes: Triple Oreuer,,
Mirror, full 1i2• Heodboord, and Two Nile Stands.
5-Pc . Cont emporary Bedroo m
Sophisticated s1mplici!y ... o los11ng 1nvestmeril 1n
your good taste. Mosler crohed by lomous "Lone". Oiled walnu! l'ST So9'19.S
fi-i1sh h<Jod-rubbed to o mellow glow includes the massive 78°1 !rople d...esse•. lw•fl (2)
mi~rors, carved back heodboard and ro<Jmy n1!e stand. Hurry lo l ev•lt lor proof pos1 t1ve
'Houndstooth ' Sofa and Loveseat
8' ol stylish sophisticated, conlemporory luxury in the mos! MJughl a lter fobric in 1he marke1, block
ond white "Ho1indstoo1h"I Black vinyl wehs (the fabric is stitched to vinyl <Jnd not fabric lor exiro
strength olong all seomsl) Bock Ol'ld ieOt cushions that are not only reYe:rsoble but in1erchongeable
for durability ond long we<Jr! Button tufted seat cushions "soft edge" constf'\/Cfi<Jn for 1h<J1 extra
rouch of comfort. All ieol and bock cushions ore loom filled ... rhen do.;ro .. wrapped lo hold
1he1r original shopel Sell decked (the some elegant fa bric that went inro rhe sofa and love:leat is
under !he cushions). Shepherd Cosrers for easy movement.
Selling Direct to
the Pub li c
FURNITURE
WAREHOUSE
& SHOWROOM
llVllZ WH!.l P~ICl
UST $409 95
$/NC( 11110
whe11 11 comes '? value 01 the lowest possible price! ·
~-
Deep Tufted Black Vinyl ~
Mediterranean Sofa and Love seat
For people who like massive, solid solos! Here's o lu~unous solo 011d
loveseot thot ore deslined lo become prized posi.ess1onsl Deep hand
tufted seats and bocks ore cushioned with pure lo<Jm ... Heavy carved
Spanish Oak finished exposed ffQme odds to the elegant beou1y ot
the pieces! Proportioned for lul1 lo1ing1n9 comforl , •• The uph<Jhlery,
.~~~,,,, Glove soft bloc.k vinyl is easy lo clean!
r:
Early American Bo ston
Rocker $18 '"' ,19 95 ll'IHZ WllM! ""'"
Rich nutmeg maple l1n15h hond.
r1.1bbed •o (I mtllow glow. Glov ...
'o h "In)'! secit, cush1or.ed with toa'll.
Easy to
Reach from
Anywhere
--·
A! l otvoll oil tM: "..,tool
lrlll1" or• 1ok.., OUI ol
11w Wa•othol.H Pr .....
1-.. ~ 1ioone 'l'°'"HH
or ho.. ~ .t.!1Yetltd by
l.,.111 GI a J"'IDH oddt-
f-4 <liorge [,lh•r
wgy, ~· "'~"'II' ....
!r""9'>(1ouo,
Tf'1-IS
4-Pc. Medite rran ea n Bedroom
Her•'s a mognilicenr Spon1sh s•yled Mos1er Bedroom Pr l(ed 01 LEVITZ WAREHOUSE & SHOWROOM • BEACH BLVD., Edinger Au . grecit $0Vlngs. Rich mellow, Spanish oak l1n+sh You gl!r 1h" spoc•ous
Nex t to the Hu ntington Shopping Center Triple Or1tsser . Fr<Jmed Minor, K1rigs•1e: Headbo<Jrd, plus 1h11 :i 1-------------------------------" Drawer Commode. All for one l<Jw, low pnc.1 ol lev!\1 1
SOfA (I. lOV~StAT $297
I ..
li~f i J19 95
,-
•
1
-Tue~, •iY l?, 1'70 s DAILY Pllm' ~
· OAIL Y l"ILOT l'lletn n JW Yt"-U
OLD CEMETERY RESTS ON A KNOLL ABOUT A HALF MILE FROM THE MISSION
It's R•re - A Catholic Cemetery Owned by Parish Rather Than Entire Diocese
TIME AND VANDALS HAVE PRODUCED SCENES SUCH AS THIS IN OLD CEMETERY
Some COm1 Through Cha in link Fenc~ to Honor the ·o.ad; Some Brint to Dishonor Th1m11lv11
TOMBSTONE READS 1184
One of Cemetery's Oldest
Down the
Mission
Trail
Opera Offered
At Opening
MISSION VIEJO -Free balloons. rrec
coffee, even fr ee lrips have been offered
at grand openings. But free opera?
It may be a new gimmick, but it's
one the Mission Viejo Company is v.·illing
to try to commemorate the gra11d open-
ing of their Seville Homes.
The opera, also sponsored by the
Southern Counties Gas Company, will
be presented on Thursday, May 14 at
La Paz Intermediate School.
Featuring a professional cast, a
performance will be staged in the af.
1ttnoon for students altd in the evening
at a p.m. for the community. The star,
John Arnold Ford, will be available after
the performance to answer questions
,.oout. the opera.
~ :what is the opera? Rossini's "The
tl&rber of Seville," what else?
•. Viejo. Dance Friday
LAKE FORF.ST -Reside nts or Lake
Forest and their guests and all students
of Mission Viejo High School are i11vited to a dance Fciday.
" "The Prophets" will provide the live
music for the activity which will be
staged from 8 p.m. to midnight at the
Beach and Tennis Club. The band was
(ormed in Costa Mesa and is now af.
filiated with Orange Coast College.
Residents will be charged 75 cents
and others $1. Mike Phiruiey is in charge
of the dance. :e Oil Workshop Set
•• MISSION VIEJO -lt 's still not too
Jate to sign up for the workshop in
Jcrylic and oil painting sponsored by
the-Mi$lion Viejo Association of Artists
and Craftsmen.
The workshop Is for begin111ers and
takes place on Mondays Crom 7 to 10
Jt.m. In the multipurpose room at Linda
Vista Elementary School.
Fees are $12 for members and $17
IW non members. Register at lhe session.
CeJDetery Bea~hes Ba~k Into Past
Forefathers of Capistrano's Oldest Families Find Rest There
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of ttte Dllllr 1"1191 S!1H
It's a lonely place.
But its canopy of trees and sprinkling
of wild flowers give San J u a n
Capistrano's old Catholic cemetery an
aura of serenity.
11lere are no miles or green lawns
and sterile metal plaques here. Only
rows or white crosses, heavy marble
headstones and in some places, crumbi-
ing tombs.
Weeds and tangled shrubbery have
been allowed to run wild through the
Woman to Try
Dog Plea Again
In San Clemente
A San Clemente woman lvho losl her
first attempt to win city permission
for a dog grooming business will try
again Wednesday with a new idea.
Mary E. Graham lost her application
for a conditional use permit to operate
the city's first dog grooming parlor in
a combined residential and business site
at 109 Avenida Granada.
On Wednesday she will ask the plan-
ning commission for another permit for
the same business at another site which
will be strictly commercial in nature.
'The woman proposes lo establish her
shop at 1911 and 1913 S. El Camino
Real. Original site was nixed because
or parking and zoning problems.
The new si te conforms to the zoning
matter and commissioners Wednesday
wlll consider the parking aspects of
the new application.
Other agenda items in the 7:30 p.m.
meeting include a public hearing on
a sign exception application by CapHol
Shoe Stores to erect a sign 60-square-feet
greater than allowed for the business
at 114 S. El Camino Real.
The applicant, Rod D. Taylor, is asking
that the commission approve an 86-
square-fod sign on a free pole. The
maximum under city code is 20 square
feet.
Commissioners also will hear a request
by Robert Huxtable for permission to
operate an automotive, truck and trailer
rental service at the Texaco station
al 795 S. El Camino Real.
The commission's model ordinance
defining standards for development of
mobile home parks wil l return from
the city staff for a final study before
it is sent on to the city council for
action.
The code, drafted after several regular
meetings and study sessions, is the city'.!
first attempt to draft definitive standards
for new mobile home parks in San
Clemente.
Laguna Art Fest
Producer to Talk
Don Williamson, produoer-<llrector of
the Pagtant of the Masters in Laguna
Beach, will speak to members of the
South Coast Square and Compass Club
May 17 al a luncheon in San Clemente.
The luncheon is to begin at 12:30
p.m. in the San Clemente Golf Course
Clubhouse dining room, tliO East
Magdelene. Reservations may be made
by phoning George Unverzagt, 492-l220i
or Walter Miller, 4!1'l-WI.
!
uneven ground. Though so1ne local
residents would prefer to see it kept
more orderly, those who care see to
it that their family resting grounds are
neat and beautiful.
The olde6t dates are recorded on the
Forster family vault, a tiny house-like
structure in the ceP1ter of the cemetery.
One date, that of a. child, reads 1854.
Although mission officials h a d
speculated that the cemetery came into
existence about 1870, it is possible that
Its original intent was that of a family
graveyard.
Don Juan Forster, who owned 106,000
acres of ranch land which included much
or what is now Sa" Juan Capistrano,
once owned the Old Mission which he
purchased in 1845. It was later returned
to the Catholic Church by President
Abraham Lincoln.
The Forster vault was believed to
have been built by Don Juan's son,
Marco Forster, who is buried there.
But no one is sure. Do11 Juan himself
is buried in Los Angeles.
But there is speculation that when
the mission -was returned to the church,
perhaps the cemetery, which is only
a quarter of a mile from the mission,
also became church property.
Acco rding to Father Paul Martin, the
cemetery is unique in that it is a parish
cemetery and is Rot used by an entire
diocese.
Father 1'.tartin said that he knows
that a civil war veteran is burled there,
along with many of the forefathers of
the oldest families in Capistrano.
Walking around ·among the unmarked
crosses one can see ~n occasioaal name
scratched on the wooden surface or just
barely make out an engraving on a
.stone plaque. Some of the names are
Lobo, Yorba, Etcheberria and Olivam
••• all well known Capistrano famillet.
Just last week Mrs. VlvlaAa Olivares,
the matriarch of Capistrano, was buried
there, in the last row of plota where
only a few remain empty.
Many of the readable marken: lhow
short life spans, recalling a time when
there were no wonder drugs. But one
remarkable ·message· nearly a century_
old reads "died at the age of 102."
GRAND OPENING
ills FURNITURE
NEW LOCATION: FOUNTAIN VALLEY
Slwwroom.< 011 tJ1 c Sun Diegu Fwy. 111 Eu.did meu11s
Rulph's is within minutes Frum yo ur home.
SEE RALPH'S NEW LOOK OF Tf/E '70'5 !
A Complete J\'ew Concept in Jl ome Furnishing•
Now wi th over twice the display" area, Ralph's offers a com-
plete se lection to suiL all tas.tes from formal elegance lo easual
simplicity, combined with fair prices a nd the person qi service
Ralph's custom ers ha ve .enjoyed for 15 . years. "
STORE Monday thru Friday 9 to 9.
HOURS SUNDAY 11 AM to 5 PM --•
I )
-.......
I
·---·-
L
•
•
--
• ~OAll.Y "LOT TUfs<la!, May 12, 1970
Laird Says Cambodia Pullout Already Started
Woll!llNGTON (UPI) !.... De!••ol Lain! told the Sen,te Armed Serviles opoc1!~1lly how mftDY Am lrlcln Oghlllg -Jiu! In re•PonH lo a quesU"' from -ground troope, Ill' fon>es or 1dviler1 namizaUon progr;.,, .. Lain! said.
lecreUry Melvbl R. Laird uld today Committee concenilllg the U.S. thrusts men had been puUed ba~k lnto South Stn. Howfhr camon (l).Nev.), La1rd -in ~bodla. Lalrd urged defeat of Laird repeatedly dOdged queaUona by
" a.inst Communist aanc:tuaries ln Cam-Vietnam from Cambodia. sakl ht "would not rule out the rt• any leliJlation "which llmltl t be Sens. Cannon and Henry M. J.cklon a. trolled States already bu pulled ~la. He said the Camb«!lan operaUons were qulrement •.• for the use of (U.S.) Prelid~'I aulhorlty to protect (0.Wash.), on whether the adminlltraUon
.._r•al thouund" troops out or Cam· ".,. Already we heive withdrawn going better than e:1pecled and that air power on the supply routes whJeh Amtr1caiu, AmeriCao flgblin& men, in would OPPoR the ameodmeat ahoulcl it
...._ But be ur'ed Conlf'U not .\Cl Ameriean forctJ from Cambodia," La1rd all U.S. troops would be out by Jane come down out Of Laos into Cambodia." South Vietnam." be tailored to tbe tenna of Ni.J09'a
Jinpom MY llmltalioa on Pre.aldent NIX· aa1d. ..We have withdrawn aeveral 30. LaJrd aaid the United Statt1· did The Senate tw: acheduled debate this "l believe the limitation would not on announcement -no U.S. ground , Gfl"I 8Utbortt1 there. thouoDd this week ud we will wlthdraw not plan to send Jts forces back to week on aa amendment which would help u1 a1 far u protecUng American troops in Cambodia alter June 30, but
'"We Uve a restridlon that we wl!! more tl1il week." Cambodia If the Communl.sts reclaimed bar the use of an:y American forces llve1 and (accompllshlng) the Viel· no bar on U.S. air strikes.
' •
' ' • •
1:lt out al there by the. end ol June, The teerelary decllned to 11 y the 11anctuary areu.
~-... 0....ll't ..... ,,,
Fow--.month-old Steven Pepper
was baptized Sunday in a Gilling-
ham, England pub. Terry Pepper,
tbe infant's father, said because
the child's godparents owned a
pub, he and bis wile thought chris-
tening there would be "something
to remember.'' •
'
* * * *·* * Cambodia Cutoff
Okayed by Panel
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate
Foreljn RelaUons Committee bas ap-
proved legislation to cut off funds fur
U.S. military operations In Cambodia,
but Republican Leader Hugh ScoU said
today it would not pass, and suggeaied
instead a declaration of opposition to
a wider war.
"I would like to see the Senate make
perfectly clear that this is not an Invasion
or Cambodia, that tb.is is not a widening
ol the war, and that the Senate does
not want a widening or the war," Scott
said .
That would amount to an endorsement
or President Nixon'! announced policy.
Senate Democratic Leader M i k e
Mansfield said he believes there is a
good chance the amendment approved
Monday by the Foreign Relations Com·
mittee will be pls e\:I. He said he would
like a vote this w k.
Scott said h does not ~Jieve the
amendment as now framed would win
Senate approval,
"'?be White House position naturally
b that the power of the commander
in chief cannot be clrcum9cribed coo-
trarY 'to the Conltltution." Scott sa.irt
he may propose an alternative measure
later, after a conference of Republican
senators.
~ Republican leader said more bar
j. AA3 Comntunista have been killed aDC
1,361 captured.
He said 88 Americans and 251 South
Vietnamese have been killed. Scott said
12 million rounds of Communist atn·
munition now have been captured in
the Cambodian operation, and more than
3,000 bunkers destroyed.
Scott said those figures were supplied
by the White House.
Scott also said the Cambodian opera·
Uon has discovered a number of in-
stallations which could have served as
Communust headquarters. He deteribed
these as "floating crap games," not
permanent headquarters. "There never
was any thought that there was any
great Pentagon over there," Scott said.
Strikes, Peace Marches
Continuing at Colleges
By The Ataotlaled Pre11
I, .1··
Warm tDeath.eT ha! come to London,
'-l(ngland, so toh.o can blame this couple
t~ ·ndulging in a little "Maytime
ss." After a .!Unbath in St.
Park, Andrta Rutherford and
her fiance Gerald DeCosta wind their
Striking students went back to
classrooms at many universities today
but strike action, marches and sit-ins
continued at other college! to express
gtudent disapproval of war in Indochina.
The student strike information center
at Brandeis University in Waltham,
Mass., reported that 286 schools were
on strike indefinitely.
In some university buildings were broken
before state, county and local police
dispersed a crowd of 1,000 students.
A group of about 100 students at the
JO,OOIJ..student Virginia Polytechnical
Institute took over Cowgill Hall on the
Blacksburg campus to point up their
demands for the cancellation of classes
for the rest of the tenn so students
can participate in antiwar demonstra-
tions.
•
way thr:,ough traffic past Buckinghatn
Palace 1n tile background on their
way bock to work. • Ronald Burndred, Stoke-<>n·Trent,
England, a 42-year..ald builder, has
offered city officials $1 ,200 to pur-
chase a garbage dump adjacent to
his property which he says is an
eyesore. The council is consider-
ing the offer. •
Tht royal society for the pre·
tiention of cruelty to animals
has criticized the Rev. Erie Judd
of North lVitteringham,-Eng·
land, for blasing 200 ,.ounds of
.22·coliber ammunition down
mole holes on his lawn. Judd
said he had tried eve,.ything
else. He has 1.000 rounds ready
to fire if the animals come bock.
• The Rev. Bob Yeomans, 25, of
Bridgemortb, England, bounced up
and down the aisle trying to get
more life into the choir's rendering
of "I Wonder Where I'm Bound."
A moment later he fell to the bot·
tom of the church's central hea t·
ing duct when the iron grid gave
way under him. He V.'as not ser-
iously injured.
But 129 colleges and universities in
43 states officially reopened P.ionday,
some with virtually empty classrooms.
Classes resumed at the University of
South Carolina in Columbia under a
tleavy guard of state troopers and Na·
tional Guardsmen after a rampage Mon.
day night during which student.a swarmed
into an administration building, smashed
furniture, overturned desks and tore up
records.
Tear gas and nighrstlcks we~ used
to clear the campus of thousands of
rock·throwing students.
Several undred University of Maryland
students blocked U.S. Highway No. 1
where it crosses the campus for a time
Monday night -the fourth such blockade
since President Nixon announced the
sending of troops into Cambodla .
At Albany, N.Y., more than 1,000 State
University students descended on the
federal building and adjactnt main Po5t
Office this morning, standing six deep
at all entrances, silent and with anns
folded over chem.
They kept most employes from the
building and brought mall delivery
vi11tually to a atandstlll. A ,U.S. Mail
tractor-trailer was seen being turned
away Crom· the Post Office.
About 70 students were arrested at
Eastern Mlchigan University in Ypsilanti
~tonday night and early today after
students barricaded campus streets and
lit bonfires. Windows of a bank and
At Washington and Lee University in
cf 1,400 students staged a sit-down on
the steps of a chapel, protesting faculty
rejection cf an overwhelming student
vole for halting classes for the rest
of the tenn.
AFL-CIO Attacks
Inflation Moves
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The AFUIO
declared today that President Nixon·s
effcrtl to control inflation have been
a "complete failure" and that the nation
has "crossed the threshold of recession"
lIDder his economic policies.
The I a b or organi1:ation's executive
council issued a statement denouncing
hµi handling of the economy alm<:1&t
s1mullaneously with a visit by the Presi·
dent to AFUIO headquarters to confer
with the cooncil.
The council, in adopting a statement
on the eoooomy, renewed its appeal
to Nixon to support legislation for across·
the-board controls on wages, prices and
prof'Jta.
The president spent 45 minutes with
the council at the AFl..rCIO headquarters
to brief the labor leaders on his decisian
to send troops into Cambodia.
Weird Wea th er Hits Na ti on
Unseaso11able Chill-20 Degrees-Felt in Northivest
Cellfortlla
$0UTHl!ltK CALl~OllNIA -Fii,
thrOU911 WMMtd1y 11111 _.,,lilt """
<I-C0.1f1I ttetleM l,,,_ldtY 11111 Oii
Soo.lth Co.ft WfCltMtcll¥. Wlr"Tl'IW w-.
fOH(l1y. local IUll't' Wlndl dn.rl HC•
tlom TUftd•l' U 11 )II mll11 "' h!Wr ,, '"""· l.OS ANGELIEI •NO VICINITY -
F1lr '°"ltl'lt lhnutfl Wed,...,., but
,,.kfl't low cl-• Tuadly rnom"",
Hllifl _, n T .... r 111111 1' WfClrlt ...
CllY.
l'T. CONCl~IOH TO ltT. OUMt: -
Noo-"-1 wlnll1 1S to 11 l110l1 l'tl"!
Corle..,,.. lo OUtr !1l1"'1t '"" ll1M "''''~ wlnOt eh•"'''''' bao;omlM w1111-rlr 11 lo 20 kr111t1 I" •""'""°"' Tuad1t '"° We<1n1.01r . P1!t~• tow
<lol.odl Twt01r "'°'"1nt but 01!<1rwl1e "'*'"' """"" """' Stlilntly •••mtr w-. l"OIHT DUMIE TO MEXICAN BOii•
OC:'I -Lltltl """-bit wllld1 btcOPllM _..,., M .. • t"9h lt1 ,,,.,._
TWldfr •1'4 W-.dt... Mor"'"' tow _.. wl!!I -ll't 11""'" 1nt rl'IDOl'IL
Sllel'rftY "'"""'" WeotneW.y, lJl:Tlt!MI! IOUTHEllN NEV"D"' -
'''' 1!!1'9Utll Wtc1r1e11i.v. L0<.11 •~"~ wll'ldl TIMl<HY l"Mdllt>• 1) Ill ,1 "'!It•
,.... .....,. 11 tlm11, H!91'11 mctll• 1n
1w ., '"°'"'" w as "' " w..i,,. ... • y. a.-tlt1ll fllthll '" l"' '°' CQAITAL. AND 1NTl1tMIOl•TE
V•LLl!'l'I -,,., """"""' Wl'll"ffdlY
"'9 "l<l!r """ ~ TWMl9Y ""°'""" ..... Ht911t Tundfv lt1 !Pit 1'I •1111 """' w ........ , 7J " u. Lewi ,, lttfllfhltP.
MOUNTAIN Alt£AI -Ft1r """-"
W ........ po. Hlefl 1-th,rr" TIHI"'
WY -tly In 1M ... WtMMt" WM11111·
.... wtt1t """" IMlllY ii ft 6'. L""• 1t
........ -... &
IPll'lmltlfOTOCASl® ..
c ... ,.,
Slltl'1!11 _.,..., hMlev. Li.tot ,.,,1. ••le •1-l'lltM aM 1!10fflln9 houl"I
bKiornlflS -lltfl¥ 11 IG tll ~llOh '" '"""'°°"' roday ano w1111neN1r. ttltfl
loll•¥ " to "· CotJTl l ltm"••IUrtl ··-lrorn S.I
le ti. l~ltM ,,,,....,1lur11 ''"" ll'Ol'l'I » to u, Will!' 1111'1"•-'urt .\I,
s""• M"""· Tlde• TUllDA'I' ~-111911 s Jol•,m. '' SKond low 10 M ,,,.,_ l.t
WIDNISO•Y
Flri! ~1911 • • ..... , ,. '""'· '·' ~In! IOfj •• ,.,. •• lO·ot f ,,,.,, O.S
kc-ftlt~ ••...•. ,.,. S U•m. '·' $«""'11 low JO•",,,.,, t,,
'W" ltl-S SI 1111, Ith ,.tJ 1.111,
Mn! Ill• IHSI 1.m. Jail I:~ t A
V.S. Summar11
LOi •ttGELE$ fU"ll -t N -
IMlnW•ltP """"''' wm.......... ., ...... PtrM .,.,. lllt U.S. WH!-ltlrMV;
llncut ""'.,.• ... ,, cOfltlnulnl
ft>tlr '"''~ tor "'-~l<!lm• lodlr f0ilowl119 • dl•11trou1 to•~•~ flltl
t!rvdc LulltloU, Tait .. l"Wl!lf •I 1M1I
,. "'14'11 dt•d.
W1rm, """'Id tlr 1trt1c11M ,,... !ht
G<ttlf of Mt~ko 11 II< llOl"tfl II I-a.
L.OW lh'Mlltlll '-111\rl'tlf "" ~
.... fowl ;w.,. II fllfh " l'f """"· t r (Ol'llTtfl, t11 v--im d\111 ltfllW _. 111t NOO"lt!Wttl lllCI ottna-
H K<Oll IM llOl1Mtll ptffloll 11 IM
N l'9!1 ll'lto NI"' E11tl1nd, Klt!N!!I
j111l11, O.t,. w11 tllt 1111tltfr'1 e.1111 W'OI
dllrlflt !!It "ltlll 11 20 dffrMI.
Mot! OI "" n•lltn .... , Ciaud'I' 1kt.1
Wl!h wr>1Mn9 llml!H to SOUlht11ter"
1111" anf IN fw J.wlfl-1.
Temperat11re1
ll•ktr•ll•ld
1111 ... 1rck
"'"
trow111,.IH•
CMc1to
'*'""'" O..Mtl11t1
Dtlnill
"•lr1Mllk1
f'orlWONh
Frwl"t'
H~lt"-'
ttonol~lv
K1....,1Cl'ly
Lt1 ¥"11
l•Allftlft
Mlt"'I
Ml-llOUt ...... °''""• N ... v .... t
Nartll' Pllllt
Otki.nd
OIUl!lo!N CllY ........ ,~ ... l ll!"hltl
PtM ll:l)ll11 ·-· '" ..... ~" 'Gf'li•lllfl 11:.;tt Clt1
lltdtlulf ·-"'(ltflltfll'O
"'" Ol•to
Sfll "''"'ltltC• '""" -·M
I
t41tll Uw l"rw<.
u ~
•i .,
u •
n 4
u 31 .Ill
S7 lS ,U .. ..
" n ...
IJ .a .u
IS 1' M
" " n ~
u " " ..
~ ~ u .. .. • " .. • .. • ..
M ..
" n .. • • .. .. ..
" u
" .. ..
" .., " ..
" ,,
" .. .. " ... " ~
61 t.'-1 ..
" ..
" 1 JI ., ...
'' .m " .. ~
" " .. ' M
~
Meet Miss Shi rley Wagnon,
special envoy for
Georges Raphael in Ollf
Millinery and Wig Salon,
Wednesday aoo Thursday,
May 131h and May 14th,
Newport.
the midi goes to your head
in exciting new natural-look wigs
Going mid' Go midi from head to toe with the exciling new Vanilies of 70's wig. Ins pi re{! by
the nostaligic 30's, .• shapell with all the dash of the 70's. The look is marvelous
with every new fashion .•• and the Vani ties wi gs are the only wigs wilh hand·lied "natura l
growth" parts. Stylell close·to·the-head , blunt cut in one over·all length. Feather
'light Dynel moda crylic is washable. Wide range of co lors. Top: Bobette, bouncy tab, 31.00
Center: Fl ipetle, casual flip, 38.00. Bollom: Flapette , softly wavell , 38.00
M1Hlnt1y and Wit Salon,
u umS'
•
Newport •I Ftshlon l1ltnd Newport Center e 644-2200 e Mon ., Thurs., Fri. 10 :00 till 9:30; Other Dey• 10 :00 till !:.JO
'
)
Rioting Erupts • Ill Augusta
6 Negro es Sliot to Death in 'Gu errilla Warfare'
AUGUSTA, Ca. (UPI) -
Hundreds o( National
Guard5men rushe4 into this
riotcarred dty today w1lh
armored personnel cars and
mounted nutchine guns to help
police quell Negro rioting. Six
black men were shot to death
in 'fha1 was described as
"guerrilla warfare."
Gov, Lester Maddox in-
structed the guardsmen to
refrain from pleading with
snipers not to shoot at them.
Instead, he said, the soldiers,
if fired upon by snipers, should
"blow whatever they're in off
its foundation until peace is
restored ln Augusta."
Nearly 1,850 guardsmen and
150 state trooper$ manned
roadblocks and p a t r o 11 e d
!il.reets of th.ls city of 70,000
known wkiely as the home
oC the Masters Golf Tourna~
ment. Its 130--block Negro
district wa.s sealed off.
Gunfire that started Monday
afternoon subsided by
daybreak, and all that re-
mained ot fires that destroyed
at lea.st 30 stores and damaged
another 20 was a pall of smoke
that bung over tbe city.
The six men were killed
as police fought snipers,
looters, arsonists and rock-
throwers. OUicers sald ooe
man was shot to death around
I a.m. (P DT) when he ran
from a looted store, Jirlng
at police with a revolver.
More than 25 persons were
wounded by gunshots. Scores
more were injured by rocks,
bottles and flying glass.
The rioting apparently was
touched off by the death of
a black youth, Charles Oat-
man, 16, in the Richmond
County Jail during the
weekend. Authorities said the
boy was beaten to death by
two black ceilmates.
Madriox, however, said th8
rlot would have occurred
"regardless of what happened
in the jail."
"It is part of the conspiracy
that bas been planned and
well organized to help bring
this country to its knees,''
Maddox said.
The governor, vowing that
tte would not ''tolerat e
anarchy," said the riot would
b8 put down.
~·we've got the equipment.
We've got the guns. We've
got the personnel. We've got
Uie-trucks. We've got
whatever is necessary to be
sure we restore the peace In
that area."
Although sd>ools opened this
morning and business in
downtown Augusta was con-
ducted almost as usual, con-
cern remalned about the night
ahead. City officials hudd~
with leaders ot the black com·
munity in hope of preventing
2 Senators
Favorites
50 A bortion·backers
lnvadeCanadaHouse
In Elections
By The Associated Press
Voters in Nebraska and
West: Virginia ballot today to
choose candidates for the U.S.
Senate. In Newark, N.J., six
candidates vie in a mayoral
election that appears headed
for a n.IJlOff.
Incumbent Sens. Robert C.
Byrd of West Virginia, a
Democrat, and Roman L.
Hru!ka cf Nebraska, a
RepubUcan, were considered
strong favorites for renomina-
t iom.
Byrd, seeking a third term,
was opposed by Jotln J.
McOwen, a Huntington lawyer
whose ooly previous political
try was an unsuccessful cam-
paign for the state legislature
in the 1950s.
There was no GOP can-
didate for Byrd's post. But
the vacancy can be filled by
action of the Rep.tblican ex-
ecutive committee in time for
the ieneraI election.
OTIAWA !UPI) -Some 50
women, demanding repeal of
Canada's abortion laws, in-
vaded the House of Commons
Monday. They forced an un-
precedented adjournment
while guards cleared the vis-
itors' galleries and sawed
through chains holding some
or the women to their seats.
Members of Par!ialll{!nt -
and the Commons Protective
StafI -became aware that
their sanctum had been invad-
ed when a tall, well-dressed
blonde stood up in the back
row or the rear gallery and
began reading a manifesto or
abortion reform .
"Canadian women demand
free abortions, we demand
control of our bodies, repeal
abortion laws now. , :• she
shouted.
Three guards ran to her and
began to carry her out, but
by then a half do-zen more
women had taken up the cry
"Free abortion on demand,
Free abortion on demand .•. "
As guards crowded in to re-
move the protesters . more and
more rose to their feet until a
total of at least 50 women had
Ul"I C•''"'"'t. HOLLANO'S JOSEPH LUNS WAVES BRI EFCASE
Comfortable at Common Market Nati ons MHt
Comn1on Market Talk s
On New Me1nhers Set
plicants. the sources said.
joined the shouting from all
sides of the galleries.
"Free abortion on demand,0
echoed around the four sides
of the chamber.
The guards lhe.n discovered
some 15 were chained lo their
chairs with bicycle chain and
Jock comblnaliom. It took
men with hacksaws and wire
cutters about 20 minutes to
free them and hustle them out
oC the chamber.
Despite a good deal of shout-
ing and some name-calling on
both sides, the women left the
Parliament buildings without
any serious incident and none
were arrested or charged.
Well Armed
Youth Grabs
Ferry Boat
MATSUYAMA, Japan (UP I)
- A fugitive Japanese youth
catT)'ing a small arsenal of
weapons hijacked a ferry boal
with 36 persons aboard today
and held police at bay at
this port. He opened fire on
a pursuing vessel and wounded
a policeman.
The youth, Norahisa Kawa·
fuji, a 20-year-old carpenter,
was anned with a pistol, tv.·o
rifles, a shotgun, an air rifle
and 250 rounds of rifle am·
munition.
The ferry, the 176-ton Prince
Maru, was hijacked about S
p.m. at the port of Ujina
near Hiroshima as the climax
to a one-man crime wave
which police blamed o n
Kawafuji. There were a~
parently no political overtones
to the incident.
As night fell, police on shore
and in patrol boats had the
ferry covered with guns but
were wary of opening fire
nn Kawafuji for fear of hit-
ting his hostages.
The boat carried 2 I
passengers in addition lo the
hijacker, a crew of 11 and
fo•1r officials of the ferry com.
p:my.
Kawa fujl had
by police at a ch
lliroshima 11-1
suspicion of
policeman.
stopped
point near
y night on
stabbing a
Na1i cy Raps
Bad Mo vies
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Nancy
Reagan, once a movie starlet,
says she is ashamed ot much
of what the motion picture
industry Is doing.
''Pornography I !!
po rnography," U1e wife of
Gov. Ronald Reagan said in
a speecll Monday lo a
Republican women's group.
''How curious can you be?" BRUSSELS (UPI ) -Com·
mon Market foreign miflisters
have set June 30 for beginning
t.alks on admitting Britain,
Ireland, Norway and Den-
mark. 'nit ministers were
divided on who will represent
the Common l\tarket i n
negotiations with the four a~
plicants.
France wants the Common
Market executive commlssion ,1;::==========;1
Common Market sources
said the formal opening of
membership talks in Lux·
embourg will be followed by
a first round of. negt(iations
in July in Brussels.
which handles day-to-day af-
fa irs of the market, to handle
the negotiating. The
Netherlands wants U1e foreign
ministers to do the talking.
West Germany favors a
mixed fonnula with the com·
mission handling nonpolltical
is.!Ues and foreign ministers
handling political ones.
Britain has twi« been
thwarted In II.! bids to .get
In to the Common l\tarkl't.
Former President Charles de
Gentry LTD
IHorkr c ... ttor 0 11'1)
WILL lllMAIN CLOSID
WI DN ISDAT • THUltSDAY
MAY l Jtfi • 14tfl
TO Pa lP'Altl FOii A
GIGANTIC SALi TO
I EGIN fttlDAY MAT 11
AT 10 A.M. Sii OUlt
AD IN THUllS. JitAT 14
ID ITION ef TH I DAILY PILOT
renewed strife.
During the night Negroes
roamed in small bands, sn ip-
ing and firebombing
businesses, and one patrolman
in a black neighborhood said,
''A wllite man's life ain't
worth 1 damn in h e r e
tonight."
"In my opinion, this is
so phi s ticated guerrilla
warfare," said Col. James E.
Slayton, a spokesman for the
National Guard task force.
"It's clearly organized. lt
looks Uke they 've been
stockpiling their firebombs for
days."
The soldiers, armed with
rifles and live ammunition,
patrolled the riot area, which
begins about three blocks
from the main downtown
business district, in jeeps, twn
and one-ball ton trucks and NATIONAL GUARD UNITS ARRIVE IN HUGE TRpoP TRANSPORT
armored personnel carriers Gov. Maddox Orders 1,000 Troops Into Augusta to Quell Violence mounted with machine guns. ____________________ __c ___ __;;__ ________________ _
Slayton said "approximately
a thousand men bave been
called in. We have already
committed about 190 troops."
Black demonstrators pro-
testing crowded jail e<1n-
ditions, early Monday had
demanded 24-00ur supervision
over the juvenile division of
the jail.
Mayor Millard Beckum and
the city council scheduled a
meeting today with black
leaders in an effort to search
"with all haste and all sin-
cerity" for a solution to the
violence.
A disorderly demonstration,
in which the Georgia flag in
front of the municipal building
was ripped down and burned,
erupted later into rock-throw·
ing and vandalism and then
into sniping, arson and looling
in a 130-block section of this
city of 70,000.
Fires dotted the largely·
Negro sect.kin, sending choking
smoke over the city. Augusta's
130-man police force tried to
keep the violence f r o m
spreading. Beckum a s k e d
Maddox for aid and the
governor. in Atlanta, ordered
in the soldiers.
"They're going in with live
ammun ition," he said. "We 're
not going to tolerate anarchy
in this state."
•
Meets With Governors Big Gaming
J{ing Raided
In Michiga1i
Nixon Hopes to Reach Youth
WASHINGTON (AP)
President Nixon is considering
a campaign-style telecast to
put the White House Jn closer
communication w I t h dis·
sentlng American youth.
government Is to re-establish
communications with students.
The g1>vernors spent nearly
four hours with Nixon, Agnew
and other top administration
oUicia1s and got a briefing
The legislaUon also declares
it state policy to find a spot
for every qualified student.
but doesn't requ1re allocation
of money to carry out thia
policy.
DETROIT iUPlJ -FBI 1 agents cracked an alleged
$250,000-a-<lay numbers opera-
tion with the arrests late Mon-
day of 58 persons, more than
half of them women, in what
Attorney General John N. Mit-
chell called "the I a r g e s t
f~eral gambling raid in
history."
And Vice President Spiro on U.S. operations in Cam.;;::==========,
bodia. I
The si1nultaneoos arrests
were made at SB locations
here and in Flint, Mich.,
where an esti mated 200 or
more agents seized bundles
of currency, numbers slips,
water soluble paper and
gambling reeords, FBI Direc-
tor J . Edgar Hoover said.
All were charged with viola-
tion and conspiracy to violate
provisions or the interstate
transportation in aid o f
racketeering statute. N I n e
others were still sought in
connection with the alleged
gambling operation.
T. Agnew was quoted as say.
ing he would like to explain,
discuss and debate admin-
istration policy on college
campuses, but feels there is
no chance now for him to
be heard.
These developments came
up at the White House Mon·
day as the governors of '13
states discussed with Nixon
the problems of dissent and
"The President said we·re
not seeking to commit any I
Clf you to support of this
decision," said Gov. John A.
Love of Color~do, t h e
Republican whQ heads the Na-
tional Governon Conference.
But he said Nixon told the
governors he was confident
"it was the right decision,
that It will soon be over • , , 11
communication across t he Ir;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;~
generation gap. . Don't Throw
Agnew Was Said by a Your brllk.., 1r .. 1urn 1w1y --ui~ r""lr ll'ltml Gl•H, a,..111, Democratic governor, Kenneth c~1n •• ,11..,,r, 111w11r. "'••• '"°'°' Curtis of Maine, to have 01:>J1<:11 d'••t. "'" l!11hn1tn. THI! LOFT -"The full 1ervk1 1"ric..i. remarked that "the rascals ll'IOJI," nn I!. eo.11 Hwy., and the radicals" must be '67U,'1 j•r
cleared off campuses lf the ~
Would
you like
a fr~sh
start?
tome to this •
Christian Science Lecture
THUISDf*.Y, JitAT 14, I P.M.
l•tolid• Hlth Sc~•ol
2JZJ Pl--"•• CMt• MIH
Spo111or1d by
Pk1t Qwc• •f ClrMftt, SdMtlat
C..tti M ...
0
0
Now all offices of Southern California
First National Bank will remain open
to provide full banking services until
Monday through Thursday and
Friday until 6 p.m. (some office s even late r).
BOUTHIRN OIWFORNUI
FIR9T NATIOlllAL BANK
'Mle ministers of Uie 5Jx.na·
lion econornic community c<>n-
ferrtd for five hours MondQy
night with sh"8rp disagreement
on what segment of the
market should do t h e
Gaulle of t 'nrce vctoed Brl· • tam's application both in 1963
and 1967. P~t memb8rs t·,,;y'LU
of the marktt are France, jl &Ue COSTA MESA 230 E 17 h s 64 llaly, Belgium , W"t 2100 H-• · I I., 2·1600
•
· .ntgot.lalill& with I be a~ ~~;''!l.,'J:~rl;~;s~mbourg and i...:::0==::::::':-=:M:-:::::'.::J-________ _.:H'.?_U~N'.'.T~IN:'.:G~T'..:O~N~B~E:'.A~C:..'.H:':-$899~~!.A~d~a~m~s~A~v~e:::.,c.1162-~~3S~7~1~1!_71~22~Be~ac~h~B~lv~d'::.-84~~7_::·968~1:_ _______ _
t I I
l . . • . .. • •
• DAD.Y · PILOT EDITORIA.L P AGE
Tax Reform • Ill Limbo
Governor ae.ill!'• '1 bUUan tax reform program
canllnues lo rest In lelislative limbo In Sacramento, a
v1ciim of par&an debate.
The Demoerallc Party's floor loader in the Assem·
bl,y, John J. Mlll•r of-Oaklal\d, calls Re1can'1 program •'•very bad bill.'' He says it gives \Klllness a tax break
al Ille upeme of C011111mers.
Miiier.and hla Democralic colleogiles are still dt-
mandl!ut tllat up In '200 million lo a!Jite aid for the
acboola be written Into Ille packlge. And Rea gan, As-
._bly Speelcer Robert T. Monagan and Assemblyman
WID!am "t. Bagley (R-San Rafael) Just as adamantly ln-
1lst tllat tax "'form and school finance should be con·
alde....t separately. Bagley ii Ille author of Reagan's tax
package.
A measu"' of the depth of Ille pu"' party lines
that killed Ille ""'enue bill, at least fof the lime being,
wu 1hown last week. With 41 votes needed for passage, ti!• bill was defeated by two votes. Only Repub licans
voted and, with one.colleague in a hospital and another
alio absent, they could muster only 39 votes.
The governor's program is aimed at shifting Qear-
ly SI billion from prot>e;fty taxes to sales, income and
business-oriented tax bases. It is also aimed at heading
off voter adoption of Proposition 8, which will be on the
June 2 primary election ballot.
Proposition 8 seeks to accomplish what '!everal
Legislatures and two administrations have fttilPd to do
in the past decade-~et the state back to a 50-50 ba si~
In IUPl>Orl of the 1chools and 90 percent of the local
cost of welfare prorrams.
Soonsored by the Calilornia Teachers Association
and the County Supervisors Association or California.
Proposition 8 does not prescribe where the tax revenue
ts to com~.
One eltimate provided by ihe Common\vealth Club
of Calilomia puts Proposition 8'1 cost to the state, it
tt passes, at $1,130 million to be paid to the counUe1 in
addition to what they now receive. This breaks down
Into $445 mlllion In county taxes, $585 million in school
taxes and $100 million for the increase in homeowner's
exemption from '7~ to f!,000.
Without . arfuing the merits or shortcomings o1
Proposition 8, l ls most assuredly true that the initia-
Uve usually is not the best means of establishing tax
formuJas. Thls is a job the Leglalature should perform,
using all the expertise lt can muster.
But if Republicans and Democrats in the Legisla·
lure fail to compromi se their differences and do not end
up with both relief for property taxpayers and more
state support for the many beleaguered school di stricts,
the electorate may well have little choice but to say .. a
plague on both your houses" and vote for Proposition 8.
Both parties need tax refonn to take to the elector-
ate. Perhaps the last belit hope for action rests in this
political !act ol lile.
Revulsion, Not Support
Jr the "Chicago 7" felt that their court conduct
\vould win them a propaganda victory, the effort was
a failure. The respected Louis Harris poll has revealed
that the American people believe the defendants re-
ceived a fair trial-by an overwhelming margin of 71
to 19 percent.
Eight out of 10 Americans familiar \Vith the trial
do not believe that the conspiracy defendants "were
genuinely trying to defend themselves."
The courtroom antics of the radicals prCMtuced re--
vulsion In ·the minds of most Americans. certainly not
\videspread support for an effort to overthro\v our gov·
ernment of laws, not men.
·--..... -
-~~·~
ANTI-POLLUTION MEASURE
Many Laws
Favor the
Affluent
Opposes A tay Future ltfilitdrtJ l nvolv enaent in Southeast Asia
Speakin& ol the t<lepllooe comJll!liet,
u I was a rew week• aan, a recent
newa item tn the New York Times
held me spellbound !oc to !uclnaUng
parqrsphs.
It seemes that two New York
businessmen iwlndled lhe telephone com·
pany in the five years between 1962
and 1967, by making 114&,000 worth of
Iong..dislance calls on a creWt card,
and not paying the blils.
This seems to substantiate lhe cynical
American axiom that If you are going
to cheat, do it on a big scale. If you
run a large enough bluff, you can go
a long time before being detected.
IF THE ORDINARY phone subscriber
fails to pay his bill for a month, he
gets a polite but firm letter from the
company reminding him of his derelic·
tion. If be lets it go another month,
he ls likely to get his phone yanked
oot, unless he can come up with a
mighty plausible explanation for this
"oversight."
But these two men, under a fancy
company name, and wllh the obsequious
cooperation of a district telephone
manager, went on for five long years
v..ithout making a single payment on
their phone bill, \\1\ich averaged out
to nearly $30,000 a year.
INCIDENTS SUCH AS this make it
hard not to agree with those critics
of our system who contend that we
operate under a double standard -one
eel of rules for the ordinary ciliien,
and another for the affluent, or
presumably affiuenl.
Dear • Gl oomy
.Gus:
Agnew and his "predictable and
avoidable" make me sick. Have
we Americans strayed so far from
our heritage that we have to shoot ·
our youth if they d.lsagree \\'Ith us?
-C. T.
"'" Mtw. rfftKt9 ,....,..... .,"""" --.ifr 1MM ti lllt 11-r. kllf
,_ Mil *"' It OllMny e111o OtllY , .....
A maid who worked tor us last vc:lr
had her gas service shut off for Sonte
minor sum she was unable to pay
because of illness in the family; and
it took us weeks, working wilh various
city and charitable p;roups. to J?et thi<>
service restored so that she could feed
her children.
CONTRACT BUYERS of houses -
and thus the poorest home-owners -
face evicUon if they miss a mon1hly
payment or two, and lose everything tbey
have paJd, 1n addJUon to the house,
under most 1ll.te laws. At the same
time, affluent purchasera of hotel chains
can pile up mllUons In charges and
debts before being called to aecount
-and 1f they go into bankruptcy, no
puniUve measures can be t.aken.
U capitalism ls to remain viable, It
must try to bring everyone into the
mainstream of owning some property,
or some comparable security. This can·
not be done economically, so long as
many Jaws favor those who alreaciy
control prope<ty and assets. Though
everyone has more today, the gap
between the arnuent and the indigent
bu not narrowed in' the 40 years since
the Depression, and a system cannot
be sald to be working: well th.It does
not help its lowest element.
He'd Put Diapers on 'Em
If I had my "''ay -
Any American over 50 years or age
who had never bee11 on a public wellare
roll wouki be given a gold medal
Pigeons woo.Id wear diapers.
Congressmen would have to hitchhike
around their home dlstrlcts al. least
once a year so they'd really get to
meet the people.
lt would be against the law to have
tnlves and forks on the table at a
c:h.lcke• dinner.
Anybody who ever asked a1t0ther
per.on durlne a cold spell how he was
1tandlng the beat wave would be com·
pelled to jog a mile Ui.rough the snow
clad only in his underwear.
111E NAME OF pop art would be
changed to unpop art.
Any advertising writer who wrote that
something waa as American as blueberry
pie would get a Cree blueberry pie -
righL la his lace.
AD television comedians who joke
about I.heir wives and mothers·in·law
would have to buy them equal time
on a naUooal network AO they could
Lell 1fhlt a munbwn he Is.
Supermarket shopping cart.B would be
equipped with rubber bumpers.
Every bott1e at a cocktail party would
eeU destruct five mlautes alter the party
_, au.ll>(letd to be over.
EVERY PERSON "°"vfdM ol drunk•n
drl\'ln&' would receive an automatic one.
year jail sentence.
All nmried people, both n1:il · ti'l'I
female, W'OUJd wear a weddln·~ ri 1.: c 1
the 1ppropr11le finser of UlClr ,lcU hunJ:
1U divorced people and au wtdaws . and
'lridowen OD the. lltne finler o( lht.ir
r ,
i'ial BOyle '
>:!;t..l.~.d.i:.lo>~~~-_J
right hand.
Any grownup caught speaking baby
tali to an infant more than 15 months
old would have his lips &ewn together
\\'Ith a one.Inch-thick nylon hawser.
Anyone ordering 1 third martini at
lunch would , have to drink It with
chopsUcka. ·
NO ONE WOULD. be 11lowed to puff
on a cigar Jn a smoking car unless
he could produce written evidence that
jt cost him at least 15 cenls oc n1ore.
Any male designer who advocated -
for girls under 35 -dresses more than
an Inch longer tha" the present miniskirt
would be tarred and fealhcrtd and ridden
out of town on their own drawing boards.
No man would be pennitted to wear
shWld!!r·ltngth hair In publJc unless he
conctaled It under a crew<Ut wig.
Anyone convicted of peddling na.rcotia
\\'OUld immediately have injected into
his own perliOfl whatever drugs were
found on him at the time of hi.! arrest.
NO NEON SIGNS v.·ould be allo\\·<•tl
w1lhln a mile or any national h1gh~·ay.
\\'boever deliberately d e f 11 e d U1'3
American flag would be compelled to
eal It -stripe by stripe, star by :stor
-tn Lhe hope he would digest its
nltanlng.
l~or .sports fan!I who weary ot the
loog ba.seball season\, pro football u~ains
would play two ~ edules -one ln
the sprin& aod another b1 Ute !all,
\
'There Must Be
To the Editor:
I have become Increasingly concerned
over the issue of our involvement in
the whole o( SouU1east Asia. The
President's recent decision to involve
V"OUnci forces in Cambodia has prompted
Uli.s letter.
I believe that our involvement in the
potentially rich yet underdeveloped
rN;ion of Asia i.9 rounded . not on any
consideration of Communist threat, but
on a lonJ: range planned attempt to
develop this region economically. l sup-
port lhe desire to overthrow static
ecooomic tor~ in lhis area With the
hopes of laying the in[ra·structure
neccS!ary for developing this region as
future markets for American and world
capital.
I BELIEVE TIIAT this Is In Ult Ion~
range best interest of the peoples of
the area as well as of a developing,
(\ynamic global capitalism . I feel certain
that the options available to the decision·
makers in this regard are limited and
rl ifficu!t . \Var against "Communist ag·
gres sion" has been, I Imagine, a prime
ta ctic towards aocomplishing the desired
enris.
I fully realize that T am not privy
tr, any secret inlonnation available to
the decision-makers. Yet it Is my growing
ronvlction that violence is becoming an
increasingly counter-productive means of
brlnalng about a healthy economic en·
vironment on a global scale. Thouglt
I have no answers regarding a more
ef(ective course. I, as a co~med
citizen. must now express my rHssent
Crom our present course of action In
Southeast Asia, and. in particular, the
invasion of Cambodia.
THERE MUST be a better and more
morally effective mtans of bringing
about the: desired lrults wrought from
a healthy and constantly developing
capitalism, than our present violent
co11rse of action.
Letter1 Jrom readers are welcome.
Nonnally writers 1hould conve:Y th.eir
ti~e.ssage1 iii 300 tDOrds or less. Tht
r ight io condeme letee:r1 to fie rpacs
or eUminat e IJ.bel U re1eM1ed. AU let.-
ters m1lst incluck rignature and rnait.
ing addrtss, but nome1 may bt wlth-
11tld on requt1t i/ su/ffdent reaion
it1 apparent. Poetry will not bt pub'..
lished.
we will not pretend that we do not
know what is happening. Even Spiro
Agnew says we cannot win the war
In Southeast Asia . The only honorable
course open to the United States is
to admit that we have been wrong and
!"t11oid and wilhdraw immediately from
Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia an<fThailand.
TllE VIETNAA-1 WAR is destroying
lhls country. Everyone who believes in
the United States has a responsibility
to try to Influence our government's
pollclea ao that they are representative
of all the people. As a graduate of Costa
~fesa H1&h School, as a Stanford
izraduate, as a wife and mother and
cltl.ien, I urge all inhabitants of Orange
County to join with students and citizens
across the nation in non-violent action
lo end the war immediately and reform
the corrupt. undemocratic social and
political system \\'hich allowed the war
to happen .
MARGARET T. SHOENHAIR
l\'o Defe11se
To the Editor :
AJthough the National Guardsmen at
Kent State University were un·
derstandably defending their lives and
a Better Means'·
curtailing v1olen.ce, there can be no
d8feme for these men against the charge
of mtlrder. The rt can be no defense
for the use of bullets rather than trwr
quillzer pellets. mace, tear gas or blanks.
Can we quesUon our children's use
of violence when we place no more
value on human life?
MRS. GERTA FARBEll
/Jlllltar 11 Dletator lf1lp
To the Edil<l<'
I believe that what we now have,
Jn effect, is a mWtary diclatorsh.Jp. The
president (we must usuQle that he j s
calling the shots) has apparently decided
that, with the anned forces In his control
and an ineffectual Congress offering no
rtal opposition, he can violate the
Constitution with impunity, waee war
when and as he sees fit, repress criticism
and answer to no one.
WHAT A DREADFUL, ~iLe-lilled place
he has made of our U.S.A. And, alas,
alooc with ~1r. Nixon, all I expect from
this Congress Ls some iiulbbling and
well-publicized expreaions of indignation.
That's all I expect frolia Congress.
Whether the rest of Jhe country will
be as supine will be seen.
E. B. O'NEILL
Dt.pellfng lllu alons
To lhe EdHor :
Inasmuch as Pifay Is Drug Abuae
Education P.lonth, Orange County is
sponsoring a proll'am whose primary
erfort wlll be dispelling Illusions con-
cerning drugs by prtsenting tactual i~
ronnaUon. This is being coordinated by
a concerned, qualified group named lhe
"Orange County Drug Information Coun-
cil''.
Wt will be striving for a workable
program the last two weeks in May.
The council woulci like to M!Quest the
support of your paper and esp0elally
that of yoor readers.
YOU WILL shortly be receivln1 an
ouWne of programs 11oing on in• the
·county the lasl two weeks in May."
A central telephone line has been set
up to ta~e care ol any quesUona you
or your readers may have concem1n.g
these programs or even d r u g .t
themselves. 'Thia line ls also a ret:errAl
line to all the youth problem centers
in lhe county.1be number ia 844-504D.
A!Jy help wlil be greatly appredatod.
DON ANDERSON
Chairman of Publicity
Drug laformition Cobncil
Pollee IJoKu•e•
To the Editor:
The quality 0£ our police will 1lwa~a
. be related d!nctly to the interest the
public has in supporting them with pay
commensurate to their ablliUes.
To have a truly outstanding pro-
feisiona! local police force is in the
be9l interest of all law-abldlng citizens.
One way this could be accomplilhed
without-raising lues R.lhltlnUally would
-be for -patriotic citizens -to donate to
a tu.free foundaUon whloh, in tuni,
would pay sizable boouaes to the olllctn
rated outstanding by their auperian.
THESE BONUSES could be obtainable
on a point basis, points being attributed
to the man for superior work, edllCIUml, «c.
This would enable people who have
proliLed from an order!,\( society lo repay
in a small way the thantlus job of.
our police.
Also, inherltancts could be paid Into
the foundation upoii request of patrtotle
citizens. What better way ,to expreq
thanks to the outstanding men who ~
tect our life, limb And property?
MARSHALL HAGEDORN 'J'he decision-makers ha\'e a
burden.~me task requiring great courage
a~ v.•ell as a practical moral fra1nc
of reference. I \VOUld not personalty de-
si re to be in their shoes. Jn v:hate\'er
n1anner the future COll~e of action be
determined, lhe individual decision--
mA'cer must live with his decision as
"'ell as with history's evaluation or that
decision.
The Sierra Club Ignor es Histor y
It is with the above consideraUons
Jn mind that I feel compelled to oppose
any futurt violent military Involvemen t
ln lhe whole of Southeast Asia.
BERNARD P. KING
Stantord Con11nltme 11t
To the Editor:
stanford University is completely clos·
Pd to business as usua 1. Never has
there been such an outpouring of concern
a!'ld non-violent action rin lhe part or
students, faculty, staff a n d ad·
ministrators: never has Stanford bfit>n
!'iuch a community of commitment. \Ve
ranoot I!"' i:ibout our daily lives while
the world is blow~und us;
B 11 Gebrge-
Df•r Gtorge :
You kttp saying you mnke up
all the questions in your rolun1n .
lf !kl, why am I v.'riting rou lhis
leti.r!
WANTED TO SoE
Ot!'lr \V anted to Stt:
You're just lonesome, J guese.
(Ir you're cur ious, WANTED TO
SEE may be the phontest sl1tnl'lture
ANY advice columnist has made
11p this' month.)
iS.Od yoor problems .. a..,. •.
tie's past hope, anyhow.)
In it~ opposition to wat~roject con-
atruclion in California th: erra Club
seems to ignore historica facts v.'heo
preclicti ng possible future disasters.
The facts are multipurpose water proj·
ed. development in this state has done
more than anything else to, improve,
protect and enhance livability aod
economy -the environment, that is.
The federa l Central Valleys Project
and the State Water Project have pro.
vided a better li ving. Valuable farm
and home land has been reclaimed, lives
of people and livestock saved, brand
new open-to-the-public recreational areas
crcat.ed and fish and wildlife protected.
\YATER CONSERVATION ha., made
the deserts bloom, lengthened the grow.
lnct season and brought the Golden Sll.te
to lhe top of the nation In producing food
for P.OOPle to eat.
Electric power generation htu made
possible untold benefits ror better and
more comiorU.ble home life.
t.fort than JO yeaTJ ago -after CJ·
tensi ve study and spirited. v.ideSprtad
p11bllc hearing and debate -the votm,
recognizing Ute lmportance of all tbls,
approved a IL 7$ billion bond issue to
build the ule P'"iecl.
TUE PLAN IS BASED upon the besL
('{forts or experts In 1 host of dl.sctpllnu.
AddltionaHy. the plan is in a state of
constant study and updallnR. 1ubjected
10 public scruUny and legi.'llatlve revlew.
One exnmple : The state ls cooperating
••llh the federal govenunent in a con-
Gueet Ed itorial l f .!
tlnulng search for a feasible way to
convert ocean water to £resh to su~
plement surface cilverslons.
COnJtructlon of the State \Vater Project
was started nearly a decade ago and
has been under way ever since. U the
small number of work contracts yet
to be awarded we.rl! not completed, the
project would not be able to make
dellvtries to locl'l dlsiricta whleh have
rontracted to purchase the water. The
state then would not be able to collect
money with which to meet bonded ln-
d!btednes1.
TIOS WOULD CAUSE a shift of
mllllona o( dollars ff"Oln the water users
to Utt general tupayers, who would
be left with a lot of dams and canals
and tunnels -but not much w111ter.
Because of this flna nciAl dilemm " 'T'he
Dee in an editoria l March 18 qu !.'d
the Sierra Club's call for a in
water project conttructioo peixlll1g a
''re-etamln1Uon."
Rtspondln( to this, Edwin B. Royce,
chairman of the club's Nor l her n
Calllorllia J\eclOMI Coruervatlon Com-
mittee, bu ttnl • letter to the Lelttrs
From The People Colun1n. He implies
Qte financial diinaers are exaggerated
1M plans m11de by Lhe experts to protect
the environment may be failures.
THE llEE SUBMITS that the poalble
shifl ol debt from water usen to 1eneral
taxpayers who already are in revolt
ls not an e1iggeraUon. The Bee also
submits that the record sbow1 water
project building has been well-studied,
is being studied, and has done, and
is doing more, to Jmprove and protect
the environment than otherwise. Ad·
ditionally, The Bee submits Utat con.
struct.ion should be continued !lO com·
mltments can be honored and concurrent
"examination" should be carried fcrward
so future promise& can be fulfilled.
SKIUlea&o Bet
--WWW-
Tu•sday, May 12, 1970
Th• <dttonal pagr •I thr Dallv
Pilot lttkl to i1'f0fm (Uld 1Um-
ul.aU r""" by preitnUng thta
n~spapn's opCniON and com-
mtntarv on top.ju of interest
ond lignlfl<on<r, bv providing •
forum for tht . tzpreWn of
our readt'n' opinions, and btt
J)1't.rtntin11 the dlvtr11 ofc""'
po41\U o/ tn/onntd obr1rwr1
ond spok<1n1<n on topk• o/ Ill<
daJi,
Rob<rt N. Weed, Publisher
y
n •
•t • g • II •
~
y
il
,, ,.
.y
d
" to
le
d
'· ,.
'Y ol
to
le .. ..
N
le
al
•t .. ..
d,
id
ct
d·
n· •· nt
td ..
'•,
. .
PIKES EFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY THROUGH TUESDA Y
MAY13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18,& 19
,,~~:,,.Jt GROCERY DISCOUNTS
DIAMONDA . N0.303CAN . SAYE7c 2oc
CUT GREEN BEANS
j'1•1=Y.0 F'll'osl itiG "0
x • SA VE
6
, 11 c
5-VAR1ETIES • 9-0Z. BOX • SAVE6c ~ I IC
JIFFY CAKE MlltES
Pm5NK0 GRAPlFvR'u1T Ju1cie -44 c
J111:1;·&'llo"&: coF;EE 13 c
REGULAR, ORJ P, or ELEC. PERK e 3-lB. CAN
HILLS BROS. COi!FEE 2 40
Flli$.i.'KossviiiR DILLS 75c
PACKAGE OF 60
TROPI C TONE COLORS • SAV E Sc
ZEE
NAPKINS
GREEN GIANT e 17-0UNCECAN • SAYE4c
tlj) CORN . WHOLE KERNE
· e CREAM STYLE
PUNCH e GIANT SIZE BOX •SAVI 20c
, -DETERGENT
i PAiPBiS ..
c
' • • •r .,.. .,_
Tuesday, May 12. 1970 . DAil V PILOT 7
iseount
Pri.ees
EVERYDAY!
•
. .. ~-·,eB·
NOW! USE YOUR MASTER CHARGE OR . _.,..
,BANKAMERICARO 'r o Pl!RCHASE FREEZ· • •
ER BEEF GUARANTEE D TENDE R AN D FUL( ~
1 '0F flAVOR, CUT AND WRAPPED FREE iiiiil
USDA am fAD SELLS ONLY
USDA ClfOICf BEEF
FARMER JOHN e PICNIC STYLE
USDA
CHOICE
PORK
ROAST 49lb.
LEAN, DEPENDABLE QUALITY
GROUND
BEEF
... •FARMER JOHN e FAMILY PACKED
· SLICED PORK .,
~r LOIN CHOPS
53 lb. . .
79,, (-~
., .v USDA CHOICE e FULL CUT
. ROUND 871b. STEAK
FARMER JOHN . a.oz. PACKAGE
SKINLESS LINK33 c SLICED BACON
SAUSAGE • 0
FARMERJOHN e SHANKHALF rlii ~ ~~~~COOKED 59 lb. . :1)--~-·
FORMERLY GREENLAND HALIBUT
FRISH TURBOT
FILLETS
BONELESS e READY TO EAT e 5·LB. CAN
RATH CANNED
HAM
691b .
P,cJ.,1 DELI & FROZEN DISCOUNTS Idd BAKERY DISCOUNTS ... .. -
,.Ai) 12-0Z. PACKAGE o SAVE 10c
• HORMEL KOLBASI
AlLMEAT e 12-0Z. PACKAGE • SAVl4c
HORMEL WEINERI
~ MANHATIAN • 5-0Z PACKAGE e SAVE 6c
~-SLICED LUNCH MEATS
8-0Z • SAVE le
PILLSBURY BISCUITS
8 1/2-0Z. • SAVE 6c
PEN 'N QUILL TOPPING
r.A~ COOl 'N CREAMY e 17-0 Z. FROZEN .. SAVE 6c
W;l'BIRDSEYE PUDDING
,,;_~GREEN GIANT • All VARIETIES • 10-0Z • SAVE 4c ffR;JJ' RICE ENTRIES
~ 9" • FROZEN • SAVE 15c 64c '1llP JOHNSTON CHERRY PIE
Eid HOMEMAKER DISCOUNTS . . . ..
SMOOTH 100% NYLON SHELL • WATER
REPELLENT • 2 PATCH POCKETS • ELASTIC
CUFFS • DR AW STRING WAIS T ATTACHED
HOOD • ZIPPER FRONT MACHINE
WASHABLE e NAVY, BL UE, WHITE, i\1AIZE .
ORANGE, or GREEN COLOR
LADIES NYLON
HOODED JACKET
A fAANDRIN TYPE COLLAR • ZIPPER
f RONT •NYLON PIPING AROUND CO LLAR
flAST IC CUFFS • DRAWSTRING WAIS T l·ZIP·
PER POCKET • ft.ACHINE WASHABLE GREEN,
MAIZE, BRASS, MEO. BLUE, NAVY
MEN'S HI COLLAR
NYLON JACKET
•-OZ BOTTLE • SAV I 18c
YITALIS
RED RI PE
FIRST OF THE SEASON
SPRING TIME
PEACHES
SALAD FIXIN'S
• RED LEAF LETTUCE
• SALAD BOWL LETTUCE
or
STEAK !:.lZE 39
MUSHROOMS Y2LB. c
C.REATFORSAlA.OS 39c
AVOCA DOS "''
t VERYBODY'S FAVQRITE • • •
STRAWBERRIES FRESH "
GLADS
29: ... ,
BOnLE OF 60 • SAVE 19<
EXCEDRIN• BOX OF30 DAYTIME o SAVI 30c .. , I 3 9
f
I
•
L
·-DAil Y PILOT TlltSdlJ, Mat U. 1970
He Guards His Flag
SDSC Gridder Holds Off War Protesters
SAN DIEGO !AP) -Bill
Pie.non ran the American nag
back up to tun.mast and there 4 rt:malned while he Stood
guard in the San· Diego State
College quad.
A group of 150 militants
pulled the flag down to half.
mast htooday as Pierson. a
senior marketing major, wallr.-
ed through the quad. When
tbey left, Pierson put it back
up and stayed at the base
of the pole for three hours.
'Ibe antiwar delTl<lnstrators
jeered and chanted. But they
dkln'l approach Pieraon, a f.
fool-3, 250-pound center on the
football team who wu drafttd
by the New York Jets.
"l was born under that Oag,
1 fought for that flac and
I'm going to collea:e today
because of what it
represents," said Pierson. "No
ooe ia going to deaecrate it
as long as I can defend and
protect it."
Pierson. 26, served ln tbe
Navy from 1962 unlit 19115.
He \\'aJ a crewman on the
aircraft carrier Bon Homme
* * * * * * ·Dead Student Called
S piri.tual, Sensitive
SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UP I)
-George M. Winne Jr., 23,
was not radical. "just too
sensitive," his mother said.
Friends described t h e
University of California at San
Diego history major as a
spiritual, highly opinionatt:d
person who acted on his prin·
ciples.
Winne, who was to graduate
next month, ran out of a cam-
pus hall near the end of a
rally here Sunday, poured
gasoline over his body and
ignited it.
Witnesses said he r a n
through a plaza shouting,
"Somebody kill me. kill me.
Please God, kill me."
Several students tackled him
and smothered the flames.
Winne died ~1ooday of third
and fourth degree burns over
!15 percent of his body.
Officials said that on the
v;ay lo lhe hospilal he
repeated the Lord's Prayer
and said he was opposed to
war. He recently had received
his draft notice.
••This is not a boy who
Grant Files
Countersuit
AgainMt Rap
SANTA ~10NICA, ca Ji r.
(UPI) -cary Grant, accused
of being the fa ther of an infant
girl, filed a cross complaint
in Superior Court Monday de-
nying the paternity and asking
the court to stop the girl's
mother from claiming he is
the father.
Mi ss Cynthia Bouron. 30, fil·
ed a complaint earlier this
month asking Grant provide
reasonable child support for
lier daughter. Stephanie
Andrea. The child. born ~1arch
JZ, bears Grant's name as
father on her birth certificate.
•,
was what the establishment
calls hippie," said Mrs .
George Winne.
"He waa not affiliated with
any political groups. He acted
on his own. He was never
in any demonstrations."
San Diego
Employes
May Strike
SAN DIEGO (AP) -City
employe groups threatened to-
day ~strike aa the city
prepares a $3.8-mlllion salary
ordinance.
Officials of the Municipal
Employes Association an d
Local 127 or the American
Federal.ion of State, County
and Municipal Employes said
Monday they have sanction
lo call strikes if negotiations
break down.
The final portion of another
strike vote was scheduled to-
day by the Fire Fighters
Association.
'Ille City Council is schedu1-
ed to vote Thursday on
whether to i:.1troduce an
ordinance providing pay raises
ranging from 5 percent to 12.$
percent.
Officials of the Municipal
Employes Association a n d
Local l27 said proposed raises
or 5 percent for 1,870 wcrkers
would bt unsatisfactory. Loca\
127 asked 27 .5 percent hikes
and the association wanted $62.
more a month, plus 7.5 per·
cent.
Police and firemen would
r eceive 10 percent boo6ts
under the city plan. Police
requested 22.5 percent and
firemen 17.5 percent.
Rlchal'<I.
About 15 other 11tudent.s
helped keep lhe vigil but he
WMS alone mosl ol the tl n1e.
"I was prepared to defend
It by myself -and wllh
myself -for as long 3.'I r
had to," he said. "None of
them assaulted me, and I
wouldn't have moved if they
had."
The Associated S I u d e YI t
Council at San Diego State,
enrollment 24,000. voted to
keep the flag at half-mast
for the duration of lhe Viet·
nam war.
"A smaJI group of 150 hard·
core militants, with less than
800 supporters, ma k es
everybody think they 're the
true situation. The time has
come for the so-called silent
majority to challenge them,"
Pierson said, calling for a
popular student vote t o
determine whether the flag
will be lowered.
* * * Panel Urges
Vet Priority
In Colleges
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Veterans o( Ule Vietnam war
deserve to get into the
University of California and
state colleges before anyone
else, the Assembly Education
Committee has decided.
It approved and sent to the
floor Mooday a bill setting
new prioriUes for admission
to the state's public system
of hlgher education.
Qualified Vietnam veterans
v.·ould be first, followed by
transfers from junior colleges.
Next would come students
returning to college after
dropping out, followed by
students desiring a certain
campus because it has pr~
grama not offered elsewhere:
The final priority for ad·
mission would be the claim
that tinmicial condition pre-
vents the students from going
elsewhere.
Fishermen Fiud
Dangerous Fish
NEW BEDFORD. Mass.
fUPI) -A lishing vessel
brought up a live 1,000-pound
bomb in its dragging nets
Monday.
The Moby Dick's five-man
crew spotted the bomb tangled
in the nets about five miles
at sea.
Ctlllll9 ~ $lAI •
•-.I flliltll ....
Wl!ll psoline purthase at participating retailers.
•
"
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
!~~-~ --:..~ ·-------.....
Mediator Keeps Busy
LA Teacher Talks Pushed
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A Board member R 1 chord
mediator walked back and FetTaro, while P"141ctlnc •
forth between two secret 43 vote of the board 'affirmll)g:
meetings today as he aought a new contract: saki he. reu the board' had "sokl out" in
to end a monlb-olft teadtera' endorsing IOJlll concept& of
strike that has crippled educa· a compromile pact drawn up
tioo in the nation's second by Aaroo.
largest school district. Aaron's proposol envisions
The scene was the downtown • a seven JIU ~ P•Y hike
headquarters of the L 0 s ~~~ ~ 2 5 j 4 0 0
Angeles Board or Education aJzes r;storatJon of ~e:~:
where officials of the United budg~t cuts .Boo gpl v i n g
Teachers of Los Angeles were teachers a greater voice in
huddled In one ~oom ~d administratJve deti.sk>DS.
board members weighed their
declsiona in another about &a
The Sdlool ai.tricl said
11,791 teadli>I -41 )MC<OI
-were off the Job Moadey.
This wu ~ 2$0 more than
wert absent P'rld11.
Absenteelam among
!tudenlt was ,reported 1s
211,oao. 'lblJ would be about
H percent of the enrollment
·of m,ooo 1-u,; about 5,000
f"'m Friday. ,
More than 2,000 teachers
gaU\ered Monday at board
headquarters to "encourage
the board members to make
a quick .00 rational decision."
feet away,
Bustling between room! was
UCLA Prof. Benjamin Aaron.
regarded by both sides as an
expert on labor law.
Brown Will Not Try
Nixon Impeachment
"l! I had known you were going to ask !or a dividend
increase or a stock split, I never would have brought
you to t.hi8 well."
When the marathon session
began Monday evening, school
board member J .C. Chambers
soon walked out of the closed.
door session. His only com·
ment was that he sharply
disagreed with some aspeets
of the discu.uion.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -troops into Camlxxlia without
Rep. George Brown (D-Calif.) prior Congressional authorlza·
will not attempt to impeach tlon, the President clear!}'
President Nixon, "at least at usurped the Conslitutional
this time," although he claims right of Congress -and only
there are suff:t!ient legal Congress -to declare war," Lawinaker Wants Bill
To Force Viet Ruling
Dr. Julian Nava, another
board member, was op-
timistic. He said, "We are
getting down very ck>se." He
described the chances of a
aettlement as "excellent."
grounds to bring such action. he said.
Brown, candidate for the Brown said he was con·
Democratic nomination to the vinced "the tide of antiwar
Senate, said last week he was sentiment is rising in lhe
considering introducing an im-House with the passing of
peachment motion Jn the every day." He said there
House because the President was a "fair chanre" Congress
sent American troops into would force major changes
Cambodia. in American military policy
hearing May 27 before the
A. s. m b I y Governmental Store Robbed
A d m inistration committee,
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
San Jose Democrat is pushing
a legislative proposal which
he says would force the U.S.
Supreme Court to rule on the
constitutionality of the Viet·
nam war.
Assem blyman John
would provide that no 0£ $10 000 Califomla citizen could be re-'
quired to serve overseas "in
an area where armed B Ph
hostilities are being conducted y one
He disclosed his decision no\ through alterations in the
to start the proceedings during military appropriations bill
a speech Monday before a being considered In the com-
meeting of clergymen, citing ing weeks. Vasconcellos called a news
conference for this morning
to have supporters discuss the
const.itulionality of his plan.
which are oot constitulionally rising antiwar sentiment ml;==========·
His bill, scheduled for a
Kill Suspect
Asks Death
authorized." HACIENDA HE I G H T S
It also calls upon the al· (UPI) -A discount store
torney general to file a suit cashJer who was told over\
in an appropriate federal court the telephone that she and
in behalf of any Californian her children wert b e I n g
who is requir~ to serve in "watched" left $10,000 Monday
such a war. for an unidentified man who
A similar law has been then made off with the money.
enacted in Massachusetts and "Put all the-money into a
is facing legal challenges. bag and leave ii in the
Vasconcellos explained that cashier'• window. You• re
the House.
"By ordering Ame r l can
LET'S BE FRIENDLY
J( you have new neig hbors
or know of anyone movi ng
to our area, please t<!ll us
so that v.·c may exl!!nd a
friendly welcome and help
them to beeome acquainted
Jn their new surroundings.
VAN NUYS (UPI ) -"I his proposal will provide a being watched and your kids
want to go to the electric means for federal courts to are being watched," the
chair and pay the supreme rule wtlether the war in Vlei· anonymous caller told Mrs. C9me to this 1 I
penally," Mack Ray Edwards, nam is constitutional. Irene Woodmansee, 33. ' SD Coast Visitor · Christian Science 1 ~ture
the admitted slayer of three "Our cpuntry can then cease Police said she did as she • THUlSDAT. MAT ,z-; r.M.
children , insisted in court fighting an unconstitutional was told and left the office. 4f4..057t 4M-t3" hhllld• Hltti ScltNI
Moi'iday. war or openly and legally con-A few minutes later, wib1esses Harbor Y"sit 2121 Ploc .. tt._ CHt. M.,.
Edwards. SI , altempted lo tinue fighting after a con-said, a man entered the office, I or Spo"aot.d by
enter pleas of guilty to the gressional declaration of war grabbed the bag, and escaped 646-0174 first C1t1rclt .,,Clwl1t, k5-tftt
three murders and the kid-1 ~h:•:• ~bee=n =m~a~d·~·~" ~he=sa~id~·==~i~n :•~lat~ .. =m=od~e~I ~a~ut=omo~·b~il~e·~~~====~==~~==~C~n~to~M~-~===! naping of three young sisters,
but superior court Judge L.
Thaxton Hanson continued I.he
hearing until today.
In California tht maximum
penalt:Y for the crime11 is death
in the gas chamber, rather
than the electric chair.
Edwards' attorney, Earl
McDowell, also argu~ that
he ·be allowed to plead guilty
after the judge refused to
ha ve the defendant's con·
Cessions suppressed.
a
For our Account Executives
who work at it all day.
And for our clients who like to
stop in to catch the action.
We 've moved our Corona del Mar office
to new and larger quarters at 500 Newport
Center Drive, Newport Beach in the Newport
Financial Plaza. We think you'll enjoy the
added comfort and convenience .
Walston & Co., Inc. is the place to get investment news
wh ile it's still news. Individual market transactions on the New
York and American Stock Exchanges are electronically reported
on our large, easy -to-read Teletrade. Stock and commodity
quotations are available instantly on our new Telequote desk
units. And our Telequote Trends unit provides a continuously
changing display of the ten most active stocks.
Behind each Account Executive serving his clients in the
Newport Beach area is one of the largest brokerage firm s
in the country, with over 100 offices coast to coast and
overseas. A staff of more than forty research analysts searches
for investment ideas {seven are regional analysts working out
of Ch icago, Los Angeles and San Francisco).
Stop in and look us over. On hand to greet you will be
Vice President and Res ident Manager Kae A. Ewing, and
Account Executives John R. Arbaugh , Jerry L. Cosgrove,
James K. Creath, Edward D. Edwards , R. Bruce Meeker,
Frederic J. Nord, Alv in A. Sugarman , John H. Van Uden,
James Bernard Vincent and Franklin L. Wilson.
And don't leave without copies of our famed
market letters. Walston & Co.
~~~~Inc.~~~~
fDONlW"°"1CIHTDtmavE • N!WPCllllrRACH • (714) MM!'50
Membert Ntw Yottc Stock IE.JI Change •nCI Other Princlpll Siock and Commodlly Exch1ng11 • Ovtt 100 ofllces coast to coul and ov.r1en
-·
----··---------•
Tutsd•y, May 12, 1970 DAILY mCf 0
Political Not.ell 8 Coast Residents
Cited for Service ' For the
Harriage
Licenses
Record
91 UM Mt-. M~ 91 _CKle ......... -..... ,._...,,
llOOllt"Mcl(INHl'f, WIU!tln L,. n,
" 1un L..,,trnon, '"" Dtrlflt 11. ..
Jt, of 17CI KMI-. M1ti ot H111t-
1"'910fl IHcfl.
. .<\ppointed S pe1·intendent
~Asked by Boa1·d Ca11didate
SANTA ANA -Eight
Ornnge Coa area residents
are amon
•war<ted
month by
vlsors.
county employes
service pins this
be Board of Supu·
Ramona R. Mendo z11.
Westmlnster, library: John E.
Marwin, Laguna Be a ( h,
district attorney; Howard K.
Gerrl.Bh, Costa Mesi, harbor :
and Enid I. Bjorum, Stal
Beach, welfare. MA1.N•11"~Y~NNwu•0
MUiltl'HY..LOY,""io11tu1i. L .. M. o1 lJI% 1. JCllJI SI., Wfllmlrltttf' 11111 ~i.ar •. e.. 11, " J11 •· o .....
L 1~11!,.t~.~ ll:J~ \~l,l-..= ~ 't.· u ... 11 .. 1 ~~
M i'iii10frr6.f;.'t11., S.mut! O., u,
tnd KIM. 11, boll'I .t Jll MArlrlt .~r.'tolA'.'ll:~~~r.· .!: ... " w.. "· inc1'°L.fi" 1.1··~. =~Ml~ HG:J:Gif1~\. ,,..,Id! L .. n. tnd ~ A·i If, ~~ Jo» Hfll!llncl ·i~~-.~~F it .. f.' of 21•11 ;;rt,.,.. "u" nllcw! net. IL'IOI Cl It., 4), OI IH tlltll St., G~l~r~.e~-"3:~ i~ 1rd Mlrw1r1I, ri:'"Of l'oe Ytrktowft
~\ "''°'~·~ ONd>. W ,fs-~.,~~ATli: G1..,1 S., ~
Ill It, Ill fh1 =-~lll':t~ 11.0ICI, 011vA&lo'1.W~~iet· Ro.1111. 10. •nit ull1, ~I. llOtii OJ 1001 1e11rt st .. R~~~'r~All.T, t:;:11 11:., ?h ~r,~citi~F4= v1_1:!,. ,' Ki.~ N. y,~'."'1! .. 1'''"" 1"4 P11t.ri ~ n, "' ... P-v Lint, (Pn:LIHI 11•1 Mtr. ,.,.,11 11 HUG HES-KEITH. JllJlts IM.ill, of 7IO W. ltlh $1., COl11 t Incl ~'li..t M .• l'.I, ol' 7lU S. lmc:N
GI ~~! l11~s'r.· Jolln 11:. ,,, "' • 11 litl .,,1, •L'ld Christine L 11 nl I I wen LtlHI, both iii Hu"ll_119t.... hit~. CA1LIL!TOH·"INEGAH, Gtry L, 21 ,
of ffll Cllll'Oll L-. Hu"tJ,._i-Butll •I'd Slwrvl L., n. d 2101
5. P1c111c A".L'1n11 ""'· JWIFT·TIETl!lt, ,,.,.,. P., "· of u•n lt!""'r Clrrl9, Hun1111111.n~ ee,ct:
!nd ~!! K.. 11, of 21111 Or11e<1, K~~~'e~IEHKI;, JosAi.th • .,, o< 1N' ,~:u~:~'b.:3.""o. ~'~'11.Y.e "· "' l'ltfl!Nli.SHeLriflH . Joli':: 1P , ~; of •SS L1'tt l'trt Orlw, N........ort 8w•ll Incl l l"llvtrtfe A.. •7, of 1f1I c;,tall"I• Lt-.,"I' lt~cl'L IARAllA-GRAH.lM., Fr1illc It., :W, of
15'4 C1rl~1n W1r, L911un1 lttch tnd M1dell111 S.. n, Ill UCll
Anntll-· ltOUnt Ni9vtl.
NAYLOR<LAIOH, lttVmond A., :n,
of mo Flor Ida St. tncl DOMt . L.,
22, Df '201 V1lenc11 Drlw, bOfll
Of Hun11ng1,,., Bttd:.
WAGHEll·HELSON, Jot! C., 1', of
2«11 S. Otlv1 st., Sl:nt1 Ant ti'ld KtY T.. It, !If 15Hl 'rortutllre
Lint. Hvnllflll'Oll •••di. l UCAS-CHEltOl'P. Scott W .. %1, 11
1122 w. 8tlllPll llvd., ,.,..., h1Cfl
encl Tint c .. 20. ol 103Jit Tr1st1n, D-y, C1lll.
OOWOY-McFAl.l..ANO, Mlcl':MI L., 17,
ol 1'751 ltYYltw OrlVt, lunttl ltldl
Incl Sl'ilrlty A., 21 II Cl Stv9ftth
SI., H11Mlntr1M ••ld'l.
l!:DWAll.OS-SAYLOI., o,....., L~ 21
of Ktflllffll M.. '9. bell!) If 100
W. WlllOfi.. Coill1 Mtff. ,.., .. u u
(\IMMINOs-cAPLAN, Wlltl1m e .. .NI,
of JJ)O Mlr•rn..-Orlw incl Otroltry
IE .. 41 ol 2215 \llill Hutf1-. ba1to .,, ,:.,Wl*t kW!.
AllSHEl.-QUANOT, Oe!mtn (,0 SJ, o1
t1172 C1rnttlon Ori.,., W11tmlo!ttt:r
Ind Nel1tf.t R.. 17, of loot $, S!ll'dlrd, 51nl1 An•.
\IEllY·!MITH, Jolin R., )2, ol 14• Slllllmar, (•It Me11 Ind Oonn1
0 ,, 22, ol' 2U VII Ll<le Horii. NewpOrl e.1m.
IROWH-O'COHMELL, L..Wl1 J .. 32.
ol )J4 U"llltrtlf'f' Drive, (HI• Me1a
1nc1 Fellclt O., :n, of l•Jt C•rrntfllt
St., L111un. hecti.
Klll UEGEll-MclCEE, l'ett r A., 21, 1n<1
M1rtru: L. 2t, bon. of 111 4'111
St., NIWfiOM le•dl.
WOLFE-TURK, llrltn t., 2C, ti 41M Vll;tCll'll tlld ll:ld'ltt M.. 11. of
lU Mirr,....., both of S.n Clerntnlt,
k EARNS-LICHTY, J•llrtY K .. 11, tnd
lll'dt , ll. bDlll of 71'2 211t SI.,
Wt1lmfnl11r.
CIHll-ALLARD, J1rnt1 Ill .. , .. o1 106 E. Junlptrl tllO P~ylllt I., JO,
ol IU Flortll(1t, llol'r: ti Sen
Cltl'Mnle. I OLl!N<AHKEll:. Etrl 0 ., 3S. Ir.cl
Htltn M., U, bolt: ol 17:1f5 LI
llott Lent, F""nlt ln V1l1ty,
CUMMIHOS·O!MOULIN, lttwnond
T., 11. Df n'7 8tltrlOlll, l1llltower
tlld Robin L., U, Of f6M LI Mll'I
Clrci.. Fount1ln Vt lltY. LANOEROS.Al.OAHOA, Otvld A., 23,
ol :U17 S. Ev1rgrftn, Slnlt Ant
Ind Sy!Vll , It, of 1•1'1 Oii" St .. Westmln•ltr.
ST1111NGEll:-SAACHt, Henr., e .• 17, Ind
F11, 2t. bolh o1 1' .. 7 Dt:I l'rtdo.
Dint Pol"!. llOOll.IGUEl·FAUSTO, Pedro V .. :Jt,
l!ld l't11Cltll, ]7, bol!I ol' 13751 LDCV•I SI,, W11IL"ftlf11i.r.
J ONES-WILCOX, Htrohl O., 7l. flt
7" Shlllmlr 1n<1 -K1trlt" A.. io,
Death J\'otires
McCO'#AM
lltY •. McCPw1n. Otte Pl dttn.. MtY I,
Survived by w!ft, llll!tn D. McCPWl"I d1u11111..-.1r1-11w, Mr1. CPllftll Mc::OW1n1
lllrH 1r1ncl10n1, WHiiom, Jflhn Incl
Do:.:1111 McCow1n1 1r1ncld•Ytllftl', c.111-
1rl,,. McC-1n1 four Wohrs, Ol.INI,
W111..-, ervc1 '"" DOr:tld MC:C1w1n. S.rvlc .. , WMllH!tdl'f. 2 l'M, CllVr<ll ol
O..:r H..-lt11e. F-f Ltw~ C9Y1111 H1Kt. lntttmtnl, l'"ore1t llwn Mtmorltl ,,rk,
Gt....:lt lt . FDrtlt llwn MortulFJ', Dlrtt· ...
OOOT
H"""" M. 11.ool. Ate ,5, ol 2102 Fllrldl, Hunllf!llan llHct!, Strvlcu Jl'fndlfll t i
Srnltl\S Mortu1ry, tllltNEY
C~rltllnt1 M. Tierney. 13'.Sl·I ilted Hiii,
TYltln. Alt 10 dtlt of dt11t1, Ml' r,
11.ICIUl'"' M111 , Wlltn"41Y, I AM., St,
J11cl'Llnw Ce!Mollc Churc~. lnltrrNnt
P'rlvt tt . w .. 1cllff Chl1>1I Mortvtn",
~ Dlrtetora,
CHt:lTllt·•Ol.IL FI0¥41 L, 4', fl
1341 ~ W.lt, WttlmlMlw 111M1
Jaqwtn ... ti, of t(lt oun.11.
Ore,...,
Ll!l-Ml!RCEk, Otortt It., :t. 111M1
,,,,. ... n. ....,. of '°' "'°"'*'• Hlilftt"'9tc11 hKll.
LAS Vf0'4. Ht¥. -Mlrrl.,. --·--"<-· "itA.IU~TAtT -Aw, ltj' Jt•l1 '"t. •1rtw1r1 Uln. tr,
TU Kf~.~~~llt ... Aw. l t, J.,,_
A .. U. rw111r~Fr.-l!lelM, a. llolh ., HI/flt~ 11.efl.
.IMNJ.ON.HUTTON -Aor, lt, Dtfllel
-.. ,.It. tf Wtlt!rllftmr,Mll lt•MI ~ ~· tf Cetl1 Miu.. V.9A....,.HUGHEI -AW. 1 t L1w ... 11n, •• of WHfrnlMllr, .n..1 J11e11111 Fr111n1,u. 11 Full•rlo!I ,lltT*-IAltllETT -Apr. lt. Thom11 J•-· aii, .,. cvn11111 M. ,,, llofl\I .. H11nHNlwl 11..:1\. IYllll:-ALLEH -~-20, Detv!l1 LM, 23\ Of Mklwl'f City, 111111 DetN-1 J1'fM, •• of FC111n1tln V1lllY OLIVElt-MIHKE -A11r. U, Jemt1 "~ ti, rl Huntlftllorl l11eh. 1N1 1n1• A11111, 11, ol C01!1 Me11. ,.E ..JONEI -Aflf. t_•1 ll:D111lcl H., 3', of l...,,.. l•ldl. -Alldno'f Alwl, :W, Of ~ Arl1. GAllOHElt·SHAW -Apr, 71. lttl'IMllCI
:; •• ~(~:' ~ tl, both ol
CAOOICS-TAYLOll: -Aw\ 2•, lltlph 'llt't't!M, S1, Of Mon clalr, 1nd E li1beltl Ltt, 44. Of HunllnglOll lltlCh. AAMIJO-FEltHAHOl!!Z: -Apr t5, Jclln S.1• "1. Of l"Mln•ln v11ir;:, .,.. EDtH, d , .. Senti Alla, SEATON-PAltMELEIE -AM. 7S, Ptlr!dl, )3. Of M-M ltffdl, Ind PMt!Y.1 22, ol Lone Y•ldl, HAMl l rON·PEARCl -Apr, 2S, SttphHO Dl!u1l11, '1, Ind Jtf'lnlltr M~t lt , both Of H11nlh•111lorl lt1ch KIPPI _V,HL-ANOlllEWS -AIM'. ;s, Jol\ft 011rlt1, 1t. Df Foulll1ln v11i.v.
aM ~ Do'°'"-U. Of Cnta ..... OE MAll:CO-ICltOPP -Al!f'. 25, llDbln l" l6, Of Hunll1111I011 l1Mto. trMI tndft.1. 311, of Foun!1ln V•ll•Y NOEL·W~EFIS ....., A11r. t5. Vidor G. Jr., •7, of ,.ewPOrl ltldl, "Id Doni"-"t Jnu,, '4. of ..,,..,,.,,,., l !ltllY-SPAMGLIEI. -A..-. 1s: Ebb A-Jr., '2, Ind ltulh C., llO, bolt! Df Utunt ltldt. WHITMIL.L.JOHHSOH -~r. :H, Dtl LPWtll, 1', Ind 0on"9 Jetn. 17, bo1ltl of W11tmln111r. JOLLEY-FINLAY -Apr, 2J, J1rrv $1dntY, 2C, of Provo, Ujlh, tnd Joltt, lf, ef N-rt 8t6Cll CALVIH·LA POINTE -A,,,-. 2J, Merit Clffn, nL N'lllil J1net Jnn, ft, tlollt of Cotti -i.a. WHYl!ltS-ROIEltTS -A..-. 2S, JOl'lll ,_, •· ind Jt1n1H1, 46. llollt of Huntlntlon 811dl. MAll:TOHl!·WAROLOW -APr. 21, 01n111 Frtderlck, 21. of St" Lui•
# ObttllO. tnd JUIY" EltlM. It, of
""""'tin VtlltY. Mtrrl11e lletnMS W1',. ls.ued lft LM AMelts Collnt'I' la l1'lt follaW1rtt1 ts ol ,tjirll 17: lt~llAUOH..JIE"l'ltlES -orv1c1 L.f w9'i';o"1• o~~H~1~"e.1.C...11u
Cl18-ENGLAN'o -Robin w... '" llOJJ Gl'OYI Clrclt, Huntlllllton tch.
tncl N1~}..-1 11 Oewnr#. AUSTIN·8LUUM,liLD -00.. M.,
)1, L-lt•dl, 11'1d ~ ... !n1 U., ~ "91 Htll ""'"· Hu"t111111o11 lttt:ll. Fltu1Sl..ANO·Lt110 T -MkllHt L., 11, 1'14 Cllttclrlvt, NtwPOrT 1111:11. tnd erencra K.J. It. Torrtnct.
••uNS-lll:tCKluN -ltelltrt l·· "· 1-IY Hltl1, Ind Detlort~ " 11, llW ~"°" It .. Hu"l'tntfO!I ltKll.
Optometry
College Set
In Fullerton
FULLERTON -The Loll
Angeles College of Optometry
has ~d plans to move
to Fullerton and construct a
classroom building on a six·
• acre site near the campus of
cal state Fullerton.
The optometry institution
will have a faculty and staff
of 75 and will be able to in-
struct 400 students, according
to its dean, Dr. Charles Abel .
Abel said negotiations are
underway to affiliate with Cal
State Fullerton.
Dr. William Langsdorf, Cal
State president, said his staff
is considering the proposal
and will make a decision whm
the College of Optometry
building plans are completed.
Chiefs Scout
Slates Talk
By 0. C. HUSTINGS
Of .. 0.lty 1"011 lltft
A candidate for the Orange
County school board has called
for legislallon th11t woold
make the office or county
superlntendent of schools ap-
polnt1ve rather than elecUve.
An elec t ive county
superintendent must be more
Interested in building his
penonat Image and reputaUon
than In improving educatlon
if he is to continue in office,
says Mn. Jo.Ann Doudna.
Mrs. Doudna, San Clemente
mother of six, was twice
elected to Ute Capistrano
'Unified Sdlool District board.
Labeling the pre!ent system
ineffjcient, Mrs. Doudna said,
"It just doesn't make sense
to have both an elected school
board and superintendent.
''How can the school. board,
which Is supposed to reflect
the will of the people from
the respective areas of the
county, successfully carry out
its mission to improve educa-
Uon if it has no real authority
over the administrator in
charge?"
An appoint ive superin-
tendent would be m o r e
responsive to the desires of
an elected school board and
Bids Called
For Work
At College
SANT A AN A -Bids will
be opened early in June for
more than $4 million in new
coMtruction at Santa: Ana
College (SAC), President Dr.
John E. Johnson has an-
nounc<d .
The $4 million will be spent
on the second phase of the
college's $8 million expansion
program, he said.
This final segment of the
program is being financed by
$2.7 million in state funds,
a $500,000 federal grant, and
the balance from local capital
outla y funds, the preskient
revealed.
Contracts will be awarded
by June 15. Included in the
second phase are a new two-
story building to house ad-
ministration, counseling and
admission offices in addition
to community and personnel
services; and additions io
women's physical education
faclllties.
Also planned is replacement
of ne1rly all public utility
facilities and the addition of
a new service building.
NAACP Talk
On Thw·sday
SANTA ANA -The Orange
CouBty cha pter of the National
Association for the Advan-
EL TORO - A talent scout cement of Colored People
for the KaMas City Chiefs (NAACP) will present a pro-
football club will address a diMer meeting of the Orange gram entitled "Opportunities
County Retired Off Ice rs • in Empklyment" at 8 p.m.
Aasoclation at 6 p.m. Saturday Thursday at the Santa Ana
at the El Toro Officers' Club. Ubrary, 8tb and Ross Streets.
"Athletic Thinking M Representatives from
Today's Modem World," will 1 d ~ · ·1 d be the topic or E. JJuckley, private n Ua.nes, Cl y an
ARBUCKLE le SON former high school and coach county government and the
We1tcUff Mortuary and 1942 graduate of Harvard Santa Ana school district will
UT E. 17111 St., Cetla Me11 University. ReRfvatiom for present Information on
Ml-USS the meeting, open to all employment for Negroes in e retired officer1, are available Orange County.
Ln ORTUARJES by calling Lieutenant Com· co:!!. delM Mil' OR U4R mander E. H. Crittenden at 'Jbe public is invited lo al·
ea.ta Meu • Ml f.1411 llr-===· =======t=end=the=m=ee=Un=g=. ===:;!
BELL BROADWAY •O•"S DISPOSITION: God "''"' fll o1n
MORTUARY 111d enjtvH 1no•lati119 with hi"'. Ht
WAlkiD i nd TALKED with Atltm 111d
llf Broadw1y, Cetta Meta Eve, "-i11 +t.t cool of th1 tltr," Gt11, l :I.
U 1-1433 Enech WALKED with Good end wts 111·
• tt6111td •• hl9hly that h1 11••tr tl!1o:I, hut
DILDAY BROTHERS tiotl tr1n•l•t•tl hr111 into He1Y1n, Gtn.
81mtln-'"ll Valley 1114. 9otl 1111d1 Miii S11'lrltv11, i11 hi• ow11
6"' imtt• a11d llktn1t1, 16111 . 11261 1• th,.1
Mortuary H t co11ltl h1 w1 ll'LEASUllE in "''"• hh 11r11t11r1, lie•. 411 I I Kint
17'11 Btacb Blvd. Ja1. 111111). a ..... DISPOSITION WIS to It• I COMll'ANION to
HwilJngton Beach 111111. I v+ rn111 <th•ntttl tt.rs !.v h1comlnt r1b1llle111 ind ovil, Gen.
I0-7771 611•1, ONLY +ht rltht1ev1n1s1 ef Ne1h pr1v111ted TOTAL tl11trvc·
• ti111 1f m111. We.1'1 DISPOSITION NOW i1 It SAVE m111 ETEll:N.
ALLY for rLlA.$UllE lbetft &otl't 111d m111'1) in H11•1", Jn. MPE~f'ORIALt'IC VJPEWAnw 11'6; 2 ll'tt. J1t . lwt ti114 11y1, "-1 ht¥• 110 ll'LEASUltE in th1
1•1 na 411th 1f fli t WICKiO-,'' l1k. Jl:l l. Al111, "-th1 l ord thy 9od Cemetery • Mortaary it a 10111v111Lln9 fir-.'' ttw1rd wlckM ptoll'lt , Dtvl. ~114. ETe11 Cb1pel J11111 "-h1U ltt rtYt1l1d ftom h11•1~. with hit Mi9hty i n.th ,
3591 P1dflc View Drtte In fle111ln9 firt lakl"t ve119111t• 011 th1111 ltlal •now not Go'-.''
Newport 8e1e•, Catlfornll 2 Then. 117·•· 111 ,,diti111, "~f 011 rithteou• •c1rc1ly be •••td, lfi ... t10t wh111 th11l tho un9otl ly tlltl th1 1i1111er •Pllttr1", 11'11, 4 ;1 1.
• Wo 111 NOW h1.,1 011r <hell<• to 1::1 1 COMll'ANION wHh Sod
throv1ho11t et1r11ity ,, h• deslr11 . THAT 11 God's DIS ll'OSITION.
PEEK FAMD..V Wl111 It YOUltS1 Are yo11 di11101od to lovt Wff, c:l::1y h1111 •n4
COLONIAL FVN!JlAL ho ,,,,,47 Wrltt o' 11'ho111 for FREE hoeH•f on Qod't Wl'f' of
JIOME 11l•1tlon. Churth of Chlfll, 211 W. W!l1on SI., Co1t1 Me•1,
'7801 Boin Ave. C11Jfor11i1 •1627. ll'htnt 141.1711, 141·1441, 646-1761. w--• SllEl'FER MORTUARY
Lquna a. .. b 4U.1131
9u Clomeale ....... • S!DTH5' MORTUARY ~·· 111' Malt IL RuffnJletllleocll -
For Top Sports Coverage
Read the DAILY PILOT
APPOINT CHIEF
Ci1ndldat• Doudna
· to the needs of the individual
school districts, she maintains.
* Assemblyman Robert E.
Badham (ft-Newport Beach)
h a s introduced legislation
commending John \Vayn e for
winning an academy award
and for "his outstanding
career as one of America 's
foremos t actors."
* Assemblyman Robert Ii.
Burke (R.ff\ll\llng1<>n Beach)
lw: crUlclied what b e
describes as Sacramenlo's
"weak-kneed City Fathers"
for canc~g an Armed
Forces Week di.splay on a
public mall a block from the
Capitol .
When the Assembly voted
47-to 12 to--ask the city councu
to reconsider its decision,
Burke noted ihat those 12
voting agairuit the resolution
are "the same legislators
who. . . repeat the same
rhetoric about fairness, equali-
ty and of hearing the othtr
side.
"These legislators evidently
feel that ii was perfectly 'fair'
to allow the Viet COng flag
to fly over the State Capitol
g rounds and permit
treasonous, filthy speeches
about ovenhrowing the 'pig'
system," Burke declared.
* The Orange County Com-
mittee to RHlect Governor
Ronald Reagan has opened
headquarters at 500 W. 17th
St. in Santa: Ana.
The headquarters will be un-
der the supervision oC Mrs.
Mary Jane Smart, acoordlng
lo Newport Beach attorney
Alexander Bowie, county cam·
paign ch.airman.
a wee
All-Electric
A IS-y r-aword was given --.. ~. ~ ... -...,~~, ~ .. -.-.~.,-•• -,.-,-, --
Dorise L. Hko of the Cimat;=:========;;;:;;;
Alesa Libr staff.
Costa Mesa
Historian
Slates Talk
SANTA ANA -Costa ~tesa
historian Ed Miller ,.,,111 speak
be£ore the Orange County
Historical Soclety Thursday
night when it meets at Charles
W. Bo~'ers Memorial Museum
here.
Jim Sleeper, president o[
the organizaUon. noted that
the meeting will be at 7;30
p.m.
The author or "A Slice or
Orange," the story cf Costa
~1esa's birth and maturation
has researched the com·
munity's past for 10 years
in preparing his thick, il-
lustrated volume.
He began while pursuing his
hobby of collecting street car
tokens when in search of an
1888 ticket for the short·lived
Fairview.Santa Ana Railroad.
Ten.year pins went I o
Donald L. lewart, El Toro ,
medical cen r; Jerry R. Sat·
tefield, Costa: Mesa, sheriff;
Mari!n M~lerJ..= a~a Beach,
OUlfi Counfy Ml c1pal COUtt:
.{
more
Gas
ILICT JOI
GREENE
C011•ty To1. Coltctor
Cltll•• fir '" .,_ .... llltw, Cllrlll, P.O. 11,11 4'1,
ltn!LLMI
I See by Today's
Want Ads
• Ht, Ho silver? Be the r!a:ht
hand man at the Lone
Ranaer Restaurant. Need·
eel at once.
e This ls a bug you'll kJve.
It's a 1965 with mqa,
headers and pin atriplng,
only $950 •
• Be the firSt on your block
to have your own fiying
carpet. This rnqnilicent
oriental r u i CBokara)
1711:' x 13'4" will eo1t you
$700,
You deserve the comfort of an all-electric Medallion
Home. And for an average of only 56¢ a week
more in utility bills you can have ir.
Here are the findings: AL\..lL~O OAI
HOMES HOMES
Average Weekly Coat of Electricity $5.44
Average Weekly Coat of Gas .().
Total Weekly Cost-Gas and Electricity $5.44
Extra Weekly Cost Of AIJ..Eleclr1c Homes .58
$2.61
2.27
"i4Ji The cost of electricity for the average all-electric
Medallion Home is only 56¢ a week more than the
cost of both gas and electricity for the typical
home using gas. <Established in a survey of more
than 8,000 homes. Bills were typical of a family
of four living in a 3-bedroom home.)
Half the homes surveyed were all-electric Medallion
Homes, where e11Crything was run by electricity
-no gas. Electric cooking. Electric heating.
Electric water heaters .
The other half of the homes surveyed used gas.
Wouldn't you prefer a clean, cool, fiameless electric
kitchen? A quiet, clean, space-saving electric
water heater? Flameless electric heating with room-
by-room temperature controls? An all-electric
Medallion Home has them-plus built-in
provisions for the all-electric future.
For the good clean life-live electrically.
It's more than worth the 56¢ a week. sf:E
Southern C.lifomlt1 Edi.an
I
)
I
• J8 DAILV PILOT s Tutsday, May 12, 1970
ComRuter Era Over?
1
_0VE_R_T_H_E .... c_o_u_N ... TE ... R_,~wy~~~~:!~Ne,~:~·:~~~toc~~~~-~
Systerns Get Ctiticcrl Eye i11. De cline NAso Listing• tor Monday, May 11. 1t10 ~~' "'-u. c-.. c'::~l~~~,~~011\°J. 1~ ,1'; 1~11 ,rr; t ~~ :ii:'f.~ i J~ Jtt 9! :! ~
By JOHN CUNNIFF
NEW YORK (AP] -The
elt!Ctronlc computer, to which
many companies h1tche<I their
wagon during the explos1vt
expaD.!lion of the 1960s. is
beginnW& in some instances
to drag hke a ~·eighty
millstone as thr ecooomy COO·
tract!:.
Ont of tht: best 1llustrat1ons
nf the devel~ng ~1tuatiQ[Lin
''olved the collapse recently
or ~ AfcDonoetl &: Co.
brokerage firm, but there are
many other examples. A
1yp1cal situation is this
REPLACES .50
During the late 1960s a com·
pany's busints.s 1s 1ncreas1ng
rapidly, so fast. 1n fa ct. that
it cannot hire enough ex·
penenced clerical help to deal
~·ith its paperwork. A com-
puter, 1l reasons. c:oold do
the work of 50 clerks.
Projecting a continua lion or
Increased sales and earnings
for the next five years, the
company decides that it mi ght
as well plow a considerable
amount of money Jnto ex·
pensive equipment No sense
getting caught short again
A1d1ng m the dec1s1on is
the new electronic data proc-
eSSJng manager who argues
that whlie the new machlnery
might not pay o[f 1m·
medlately, ii certainly will
become profitable by the
1970!i. And so the company
buys a big new computer.
\\1llERE TO CUT?
Then the economic ex·
pans1ons stops ln ract, the
compan)''s sales begin to S3g
and, looking £lver the books.
the n1ana gement g r oup
decides it must cul back. But
V.'heree rt coold h11ve cul 25
clerlc:il v.·orkers. But i1's stuck
v.•Jlh the big computer.
!\lore and 1nore compan1C!
are f:icing such situations t~
day. according to consultants
at Brandon Apphed Systems,
Inc. which advises co1nputer
owners on management and
ll'chn1cal matters.
"\Ve think 11 reasonable lo
c:\pect further collapses of the
f.tcDonnell kind,"' said a
spokesman, ••as well as reduc-
ed earnings for corporations
with a heavy investment 1n
data processing Insurance
companies, banks and brokers
n1ay be dragged down the
most."
For this and other reaso11s,
many companies are taking
perhaps their first cn11cal look
at their computer systems.
No longer are they content
to sit back and believe that
wonders are being worked
.. The begjllllmg of the Com·
-A-~z.,~1.: ~,~II<} ~=4:~s~1'1~",~ '1'~~t)11 ... lM.-v.
•-ttl"" --....... , .... , ~ ...,..._.,.. .. ,.. t ••'"• 1n111 NA.10, c•-.. !f)! IE. I..»: ... ""'"" ~ .. ...._ ....... ._ .... .._ .. ...,_..,,_..,.W!lwmftlf!MMiM. ~~ft':1·'f~10 ~ lU;. ~ u~=1~'ci',;;c:;1~1 r.: '' ~14 11'" ft1•+1
• /111:1 I l)"'""' -;--:
A5-ll'lf f·"' If oJ'iio 4.1 o.Jh.., n (HI GE " ' !100 S7 S6 S1 +\.':i t•!F~ .,lot \~ \~ \ b -t. ~,:::_, : ; n~ lJ~ !!~ -~ ~lrl'~\I\ ~tO 1.J = ~ = .:._f .:ti_• to 'r: !4''t 1,~ h"O ,+ t;i
NEW VOltlC fA"J lnrwlu N IV. ,.all.co Co •'~ J loUn G• If'-20.,_ ~.',',,,, '·"',. IJ" 'fi :: CIT F pfJ JO J '114 ~ tO" -11\ fll Tire Ill IJ 16 W. 15 ... -~ -T"iielollOWl,,.bl 1111Core 1 .. 2 PollC'OI J~l "lw G'Co l1'i.l4;"Z AOc,,,u 1:., 11°"' •<•Ill~+ \•Cllle.Svc 220 ..., :II f1"-31~-'4 1["11' n 1~ Uft 1"\'t+I.. tnd tlkMI' a ~II OU I ll~ Ptrltr Or •to S•fl w El$•< 1$1l 16\lo AOmlrJI · 1 >,1\o :11'"'1' 1'f\'1 -l~1 Cit. lftV .50 1"6 1~ ' l•'Ao --~ ·~a~.·~ J 3"' 11t:'~ 1m t • lion•<. tuOPI Er .. Tee J JV. "arkw ti ,, .. 10' .. rr-J' ' A , ' ...!'1 111 IN> -n Cll"rl~V pf 82 u, »11\1 t_Mo ?!""' -~ ' --'" m:'"" .. ,._ -·· .... NtllOMI ..... Ei!tflft " u Ptu•ev p ,., •• • • • tlrMh.. I llol • -..,. 3-'h Cl!Ylft pfl.ll ... -.. p ... ..... .... ""•" • tl!on or $tQ!tU1tt FB Ceco 2'1'i !\lo Pilltlle '\o 1~~ 1 Yft 23 ~"\al. I p\ 2 ;i. 3' ll (e1'·~ I tO ~ ~ ll'llo 21111 -2 IC I'll 6'I I I ~ 6•v.-»~ ~ .. Oetltt,. .,.. ••t Ft! "' > 11 16\li ltt91\ ,, 1$ Ai111ltr1 Co 6 11111 111'4 llloo '4 ( k j 10 11\lo 10> lf'• • 1b4r I'° .S 2J\i, ;i2\o .... -"' _, >' • ~··r •ll P-lffr l"'IU 11"1-lPd M.,_,.tl A1•Pr\'l<I 20b ..o (l\o •• •1 "'-,,, C ',,1 ',"'r. ' »• mo;!:' -<>'••>"'I• -\.o '"" e<u• ren11C•..-tr ... 2 \loPtto~l<e •'",fu !lrl•Str J;l.10\'.I ArPd.f"'"" ~'lll:''fl:'lli' ''" 11 ~, Jl)'l l9 -l'o , •• 1-•1"•''>> -'o lfofli; !Mil ore <fl>-Fir nt 'I' •\\ ~· "''I/ • , f ~· -I A> R " "" ClovEIUI l.' 20 »~ l Jll l2\\ • ,,.,,, ,_ ll ,, t f _ •~ .... n'••il~t ,,, •• r. "I.:" ., •n ''' • • •1• ~ , • • ·i-•, ·i ·-··•1•n , ~ ' " -vo 1··· ' .L .L .. ....... .. ... •• ..-... '"' Jh s -" .... o~ Nie 11', "',..l ,."" "10 --•" I"•' ''" 1>" •-/"• dto•ltr prkf'lt II ol F Nlt1v 214 IS Ptton p~ 14 ~· f" "' •V· A Gti 1 1 lut11Ptt 90 ~ .... ... a11Pt0>0lmeltlY 3 F1I IOI! -40 ., P-ll:E 10li< 1'\4 lf.llo l'.t 4't l AIB:lkt nter1 1l ~:t~ ur.: ~lt{! .:!: l! (lvettP p/1 I IS 1>'4 ,1~ +~ Id.ii'"' ..... >.'~ ~" •,•,•. 'i::il J....-= u p,m • II wtllOI l'l'll:H 1'1IG RE 1$14 1•14 Pt111I Wa J'l'I 1\li 111\Pll 111 lie A r .21 O ""'CNA l"I I SO lJ l•\lo 4 •14 .. ., _... ·~,,rill" Could Fii WFh1 1'41. JV. Ptil'Olll lS 16\lo lnHI' 'l'I ,.... A t11n1 .3' 11 )! '"' Mii =:: CNA pfnA,-10 ,, ,. U \\ I"" -c;.1~',!! I 1• !',-,... ~ =1·:. hlVt bff" Pllf· Flktl"l l \'J 9\\ Pl'lfi09 .. 60 ii T··~· j'lll :n..., AICtnAlu 110 1'•1 ,, ... :n~ -1.., c .... 11 $1 G•• .. 2914 3111'J. •"---Glift Al;t" t A 614 •14 -1, ~..., cbl:~lld/~,: ~~' Ji 12" ,:~ : .. "1-""' 11·~ 1?~ 1•,r,!f!,~ ,112 1s, •,•"·:-r."'"• .... ' '! ,,..., 11" -\... II~ pl11t I •1 •l •I 3=:111 .. , 1 "™ ~ ·~ t "' .. • , '" .. -· ,..., ~· '•"' " .. ... 1 ? l'I 2114 21._ ->,-. 0<1 o~l-~ :iot t ~ n• + ' •··•• ... -· '"' H4 " • ' m•• 111 Forml9 t t Pie Pd l '"' Tt11,,..,r lfV. 1"4 All" o .201 •,•,, ,t~ .?:.! ~"--\'o ~ ,',~'~ :ii " -~--,, 0 .., .. , -.., -,·-,,,,,,, .... n'-\'O ~ ""~ Fool Gr .. 1 ,.~ :J0\4 p .. ,,n 6)\, Ml'I T1•1.1 AS \ ... l A IHLllCI '·tlf '" ~ Oii ... .,. ... ... ·-
do f'O~~l~l~~~~ie1 ~i.; ~~ ~Go"Vf 11~.2li;f~J~ :~llj :ua~ fl~ 11!;~ r,~ ~+\ o!ftP \Iii "" Vt'+I COooOr~l:rJ r,~ ~k ~ ~i" •t11ll m1rkllfl, Frn1<1 c.! •14 7 Pr"' Alli 3 3:14 Tlllnw 11 ...., ..., Alllto'Cll I 20 Hf 1:~ 1l 1:~ _" olU:::R l<tf ~-r.llll fft? = tt ~ti-A '' 16 1•'to 1~ \~ ~ ma/'ll;dowft Of com-Frnkl" t'~ 1G rvd M!n $~ ,11,o Till.II p I!,!' jVo AllioMnl .40D nllo 21~ 241>,-. + ojoln!ol 1.iO 4 Iii ~ + 1o Gouldll'K 1 • .-0 1? 2.S~s lJ.llo r:.'1' ~~ m!H IOl'O Ful~tw 21'• 2W. P\lt>S NH 24' l ... Trac C ' All'-HI 1J 12 \lo 2!)i 21 \lol .olo Sou..--~ z10 YI •J .Ul'I -1 Grotteo I.JO t0 U\'o 2~ 2A< -.., AAA En! 1~ II,\ FuQl/I n 1111 l ubS NM 11 t\~ TrllClll l I '"' " ... led Pd .. 70 v. I .... u· -.., 011 h'ICI 1 H I 1 " 17'1/o + \\ Gr•nb'I< I.Ill JIU )O\;t :JO »V. +"" '~l,.c,"! 1'm ,•!~ '•~"',~. 3 \:. Pubs NC 111'1 """ T•11e~t ""-3,1• •'[l"',,,srr l,.,.:i .n J••· 2 •1 2•1~ + ~1 I 'n .,14 H 1 • ~ ·~ -1 .. G•anoun .to • v. 23V. 2• + "" RI . ., t tlll P11bllftr 'l'I 1 TtlMOb •:i.. IV. ii j IO lh 1\11 n., -VI 5 '>'" >O l°' lfu 30lot -\.\ G<1nll.C: i!I I ""' l)\t l1" AITS Inc " Gar!nkl 12"1 1114 PurePO I • 3 k p A 15 him •• 21 20\l 10\to -1 ~~I t t 19 Gr1n11 ... 119 1 ~• 'M'-14\\ u.o; + .., AVM C/ o~ 1°* (';1~ Svc 13'-14 I rldo d 21'-1 2'1-1 AIJiht C 20e lll ltl4 l4'A h i< 'l'P 11 161 3' 1-l't 2~ + ~ GftlllW 1.JO ti l&llo 36'-lo .,...... -"'o Aem• I 1 l\.'t G Alrcn ,.. 4V. l• ~ ~~~~ JY, ~'lo AlcN 1 60 •Ji 60~ to'1o '°-, ;_ i1r, o ~f 30t 45' lo'I \ ... l!'llo -Gr•YOrt !.to 1 20'4 ~ 20'4 -I' Alf H°'P 11 lll/'oi G Klne!lc l~'lo 1\~ •I~ s Tvoon Fd llllt 11'4 "',.m•,IS~g ~·.. ·im· I'" fH• -11'1 OI 116 ' 2~ lfil m-GI A&P !.lD 19 io• U\.~ 2•'1• -i. •1r !Miu• 3\;; •"l G ltlo11r $ Slit lP~l H,Ut1llK O'" 5 ,_.,A,<, -l f \r 1\lo 1~+ I' n 2.0 7'f 79\o'J I,,. '\lo +l:i.IG1Norlr I~ 2 13 I> 13 A rbrn F t f l.lo t'.ru E11 I"• ' n,,. H' 1 " ,,_ jV • ~ ~ I Iv 411 2s, j,"', • >1 -~ G1N0Nelc 1 60 lt .o~ «IYO «I~ -11• Albee Ii j ji,, Geott: 1l.!o '"• If 7!1 ! !./," II llm C:itl'i :JO AmrEs Pl2 IO l 1\ 11'!. ]1\.o .'....1% Ml al Pl 90 • + "'GINN llA "'° 1 1111. 1Ho 11 .... -.. AIDlr~ Sl't ' (;llf•n Sh ~ ~ Tr~• I .. ~ MKC II I Am Heis 071 6] 201.lo 20' 20 Olt\WEd ! " 'l n !ill lll'i .., no1ter revolution ls over and Alc<!lilC s '"" G1it1tt1 JS 26 Ransb E• •''" ' u a~no• • t>:. A"""" ptJ .50 "1 J!!'lo 50.~ sin -\o mwE l>f ...12 21 111o 2n +~ Gt WHt Finl n 111o11 11•4 11•,. •· llo +'M "llc.o Lnd Hl~ lSI/• e"~'" W lS 2• lleYCfl Co 2 ll'llo US fnvtl 1•'-'l 16'-'l AAlrF IUr 10 l' "'"° .... ol61oii -n;, ""'"" Oii J" " ~ 11· !I • ~ GIWnUnlt fO NS 1$~ \"° !$ .... -this beginning has been a ,•:,•,.,•,~• 1~ ,J"" Glob R~b 2\.'t l•) A•Ym CP 1f: 1);"" &l '\~t' ~"' ~ ~:::: ·~~~=• ao ~ 1 ~l\'t I"" 11;. -~ 11m11111 Sc: ·~ 14 1 l • ~ = ~ g~~~r,.'1 ~ f ~ 1111 i:" = U
f•>lure •n terms ol what might Al-0 • •,;, •" Gog:::ld C~c • t\1 lloo;""' Eo l o 11 Up P1<1P 211.4. :nl.\ ABran111 I,. ••' .~\\,. 10!_? .~~ --~ :;Nk.1111 1 ,J, ,L !,1 .... ~. OreenSll 1.20 1 1no 1•~ 1t"" • -· ea .. v• Ill 1 nlo lltl Crl'd 31 Jt\\ u1.i. ~Ld •lolo S\.\ Am"J-, " ,,.. l]..., ,.. ·• i " ·• G etnG I ~ 1 11 2•1T 11''1 '"'
h "•• "' e<f " Am.Id( 11'1 4\~ '11V C ]\~' Rkldr p 11 11"''""'' , .. -> uuu ~1' 1l•' 22 2J -l'o ~~<0 ,•,M n ·ru lS\jo-~ r "• l -ave """'n ac1uev , says a Am a11"' 10,,. Ill.\ 8,.., I: 11 ioi... 11 ' ~ ' Am C•n l 10 » ~~ 7iit ..ov. ~· IO 11o1 1 7Sh G•WYllOllnd 1 11 t•'"' " ".r. ...
k r h ul . A '' .,, ''' 0 ,,., llev Slo lf 21 VII LO 5'" ·~ AC•n pf .7$ I H ff" if" -"-°" d11 Pi j • ll" .,. !'' "• Gralltf '° J l'G 10 20 • spo esman or t e cons ting ,.. 114 n 1ta.o ex '' · 1s v ... a1 $• It 11 Am c .... to n 11,, ~ ~ ..., 11011 11 '-S ~" ,,., :. G,,,....mitcr 1 n i~ 11\\ 11\\-" Am. •or 60 60\lo GIA Ml9 :ltVt JD\I) Ronin M ,, 21 Vlllron l6l,I, 11''• A Chai• ',,, •• ... onFd • • ''
('rm Or TGUche "·ss A'" Furit • t \11 G•ten Mt u 11\.'J 1tose1.., ,. , C -' :u>, JS•1 ?S\O '~ '"' 1 M!.O IM'4 ... Gull 011 50 21l ,,i,, ''"" 2 • -•w ,.. G<MI C7,. o(ll't §'"'I llE "' WilCl'I Rll It\' 19.... rn •Mii .90 11 'II)•. 19 201... +l't MFre11hl I :n "In'" 2SV. ••. GuH lt11<<f1 11 ..... ... ...... -i. A I .J 17 11 Roy C11I 7U 3\0 Wa<i•"" ~ 111 21 ACrrSt111 I «I j 7~0 ......... ">! ~-°" Ltt1J119 ] o 1~ Sh . G"ll" pl\ :10 6 16~ Ml\!i 16\\ -tr, He adds: "~1any business .., m~1i',, lf"' Jl"' ~~~ f~ '"' 7\lo 11111 s10~ ""'" "" w1111 e11 1111 11•" AmCYen 1 JS 1 11\, iili 11 "" = h on~1~G 1.1• t?.. U.~ 2s -~ G1tL11i1d .10t u '''·"' 3l l:llll -1~ tGCKI b k A St Gob llll 4 d Ch !~ f ~Uii°trHo JS J514 W JIHdt •\r S "g\ 0~!111 1 5 11!• 11 .... 11h Oii.i owr J. tf"' °U., 31'/r -~ G!JlfSliUI ,K 11 :n 211\ 2111.11 + 1ta managers s ac 1n awe ASt G pf ,,,. !v.g~~'1n1 1 , Scanin E ]~ !',t ~:~l."~r: 1!1•1t .. ~~·1I,•J11i~., 1 211. n~ ,,,,_._ ~:~ ~l:·sa uo 60 .... 60 M -l\il c;.,11W11111 JO 111 u.., 12 1114-1~~
of both the machinery and ~.J:1~ l~~ Utt ":~~ J 1l}~ 1i11o ~?0~1111: •'• 1~ w1Mi RE ' 9') AmE1,, .. 1 '' 213 526 1 1s·~ ,ffi: = ~ ::l"c~; !'!. •" .~.• ,,•.• ",•,~ -""•~I~ ~l ~i i ~1<1 ~., ~,,.,-' thepersonnelof thesystemsAHttnC '""11/o Hev•n1n !°'1'o$(11nll lli 7'\W~•Tr S>t i,AmEnktla ll '9h 29 \<t1'',.-'11 !>t!ICoP01t 12 ft 9"'-Gullot1IM: 12 N 'lo n.+11
operation, and a lot of the :~~.: ••• •; ,i,~ n: ~:,.~f!.~c,,:, 1)l. '~~~ ~rip~~ ~;·~ li:i $if~:; lr~ Jlv, ~:fn: ,.\~ "1~ ~1" J''" J'"' =1\' ~~0Qcp01~ 15 1
:: 1.~t ~"· ll1" "'1~ -H·l-
echn f I d d 'J d 1. A.rt! '"' " ~ l' • 31,;, Scrl11!~ A • •l~ Wtlcsl p !>~ ... AGnln ot\ IO J 2t~ lit ~~l• • I P PIA1.50 'l ""° •l\O 01\.lt = ~ H1(kW1t 11<I )'] 31\lr 3l1.fo 33'4 + 'lo t 1ca peop e 1 n e 1ver MoP 11"4 n•.r. Hlllhv" IV• t S11r1e at 1'1"11 16''. w11n NA. t ,.i Amtiahl JG s 111 -' 11 PIB1 50 tO\lt :>tlo'i U"" +n~ Hett Pn 1 60 '' :36\lo 3' •l -....
kabl b 1 lrrow Ii '1 •l Hglm EP 41 Si Se!1 Cmp 02, 111/t W~ln Mt• 5 ~'iJ A H<>rt1e I.SO ~S 1 ' 12~, ll!o + '.lo DnlM"' .IJ~ ' 16.... 16\.0 l .... + 14 Htlllbllrt 1 05 ll ~ 31,,, 321'i--11• v.•or e us1nes.~ systems.' •rvld• 9V. lo•1o llolobm 101.t 11 Stnslrn 10·~ 1111 wu" Pub a>: , 11 Home Pl 2 , s ~ !6'' l.I"' -\' t O/• l so 11 lJ:: ~'" "' -"Hamw11 ltt 1 ..., A A -lfo
D kB d h d r B A~CC 90! 22 21 1100vtr :Jill;, 31-V. SYc G•P I ~~ Wlnq Wll •'• 1 Am liOIP ,. t 1-4"1 M\1 nlOI o 12 1 4 1' -V. Ii.mm PtP 1 ' i:t .... 22\~ 22'1. -V. IC ran on. ea o ran. •uro Sci 1 • Howrd GI th •'• s,ven UP 40v. ,1'~ .,.,.1,._ \J'• 11 Aml~ve•t ... in \lo l•1• 35l. + v. cint T11 n i.1 t\ 201~ -""Hemm1111 ~ l9 tt• '"" Ali+ !t
S th Baird Al ~ •'• ti11c-Ml 6V. 1 ~t R "' """' "' 03 9'• l'o 9"1 +Ii< Oftf~I 11 lOJ ·~ ... ~l'o -~Htlldlmn 60 1' )1 .... :IO .... )1 -\lo don ystems. comments ate,"',"• tl\:oo 2•111 Hlld ,., 32...,36\.,SauJs,eS 1~~1:t~:r~crwP~ ;!,:1i ':Z:::~:: i...111:1 11 u•, JJ'\o '.lll0 -10.. n0t1 •so JlXI H1;, \~--""•""•CP .~ 1 11,,. 11 .. 11~ _,
"!he mushroom ~owth of data ,•,_,!!1n1 •,•• ,•,•, ~·.•, ,••,' ""• 1••· sc~1 ...,., ,, ... 11.., w.1a111 w 18-'.. u~, Am Mo1or1 1 tl'• 911~ tl''< +"' 11 190 ,,1 Vt 10t \Ot-111 H•n naM 1.:io , 1J -*''14 ol6\i + ... f>' ·-" " \ -· 10•• •·•• r' -·· '" C 141 I<.. I It•_ 1, ooli r." (~ 2'\IJ .... " _ ... u••••·n ' 13 "''• •• ., _,,.
P ocessi g has led lo lh h" 88•1n ,, J>o &i.. liY• I CD , ·-.. ...,,. •• ~ .. .:;!Iii 'l'<dftY E I'• '"" 11 •• l lO }j 3' 36'~ 3'lo +.. 'n '° IJ J1 ~ "lDil 'ji'~ +\: H1rri'i lnl I " .. v. 4'11r :;;~ •• r n e If· 8eumt"1 2S''> 2•\T H~•lt lnl ~~·, !~ ::r P;;o1a~l n 111 ll• l<lt. -11 OOPll'IO DIAS 1 14lfl 16 , -J H1r1« C• 1 6 I"' 11 11 .. mg of skilled electronic data ,a1~1e1• ni.o ll'• +ivdt A111 41• ''• -•m''sevat 1 '~ tf!", ~,,:,•~ ,,~', --"',, ~ .!.':2i , n' •, 1'1• -1• liarUMno Ill 10 l'lO 11:w. ?1fio = "°
h • Jh a'T:"' 71 '11'1'1 I"" G11 251~ 11\, Am Sh,p llO t 1l'1o 16,., 161, _ ,__ oae1a.J"'1 .20 j • 'j;i 11 + <.. +i1rv Al l 20 , 10 1h 1n. ln'i .. processing tee rue.tans ra er ,• 11ie 15l~ "''• lld Nuc1 11 n A sm111 I.to 1, '"· .,, ., + -,, ~'Iii! ~' , , • , •,,• --1~ H•v• "lb 1 j 1lt11 ~ !"' -•
r f • tlm lnll lo.\o JV. 1111~e<1 0 ''' 1 Arn•·A• •• ·~ • • S• I " Vt ... H''''"M > 30~ 10 ' than pro ess1ona managers as Berk Hft 31 ..., nrorec l 1\-'I MUTUAL Am5A1r' In/~ 36 0 •• l1+. 41:i.-\:o 00"" h ~ a """ !1'4 1'\lo He fld I~ .• h d ( d rt t ,. Bfll Lab 311~ 71'-'l lnlrard l >.; 4\, AJn 51~ 1 1: 1J 111~• 1i\, , r.h""2 61Jo. .J.11-2l 2l + 1i Hrc~1kn J~ x3) Jo! 2~ ~-m .:!:, ,•i
eMa s o oleplah metn sh . . :1~~"So~ ,:"' :J~ l~\r,;~1n :~ 3' ~ms,", e,r• J5 ' '''~ '''~ a1• • = ·1 a,'.·,~n,•,mn : ·~ 'r!si, 'ti = n ~:11g"' 'lur? .. ff" 30\? 30,. any ese ec n1c1ans, 01r1d\r ' ••1, '"' aw1n •--. ,,, Z::sU:r~, ~ ': lb~• B•. ic..:, -I'• o• Bdcit :io i4 lllJ) l!ll~' 1•~i -1' li4l col tO f 1k~ l~ l= -•I
he maintains, have noL com· R~~<Jt, ~1r 2~(". '~l? /~: ~~"' ?~ ~ Ji·~ ~mrtz r w; :-01 ~al L.. :.. ;, , = ~ ~a~;M/ Jr, 10 ~ i!~ Ii J: :: ¥; ~:! :~ it• o' i~ 11" if'" l! -1 1 ~
1nunicated to top management ~ • ..:tc 1~.,, 11"" 1~:.xs,v pf 1/,L 1*, .... , FUNDS :•m.._llr, •;. 11ils fl~,,~~ ~l~.:.:.: ;=~~t ~lnJ ' u~ ~ I~ ~tlm• do~ ~ I~ n .. 1~:.. J}
I d ' '
-,,,, ,,, , .. • ... ~ ,.. .J. ,., ... ,, ''\ ,k _ .• ·~• 1,.-, j g• ~: 1,,~. + ,1-. u!!Z'I~"• ,,, I , ,, ,
Money's Wol'tli
Japan 's Electronics
Fill Low Cost Market
l le ecreasmg cost-produclion o=' c.; 8;: ~·: 11:" !~uni Uv. ~: =.: ~\~ 1 2j v-u 1s" rOWcoi 1 011 1 1r.:, i6~ ~" :!:. " Hem toic :i,. i , 5.,. ~ _ ,,
ratio of their operations if Brad s,. is111 ''"" JICGl>I F ,"• •3"' Aml't"on ·'° I 12li' 11-. i~ -'• ro .... cor~ 1!, 1"'1. u i:. !!!'1 + ~ !:J.!!:c,•,~ •"'•• ,1u :JOV. Ei.. .. :IOI.\+ ~ • Brit...,. r, 7~\~1•v.J1quln C II Arnett!('°• 2~ l~" ta•, 1 1 ·-~ '""llZ•lt 160 ITT! JO ....... ~""'''d 20 2$'Ao ,,. 1~+111
Only !O protect the1r Own JobS. 8rlo1 !.ct lS 1.W. Jftm W1! "II ' AMF Inc to X116 1tt !~"> J~,.. -1 .... T$•• c,o;/lo j~ ~· •1 ~ ',",)' 13j!O ---• aw'~,1'!.. '°.-'tt 39'1/o ,, 39"' = ~ •• 9.....,n Ar •'4 .... J1m1• F 1••) 711~ NEW YOJ;il( ,,..,, JNTGN ' ... 1 •1 Aml•c IO 2 '' .... ud .. .. "' '4 ~~ -"" :15 .. loll.lo But.headds,management1s 8
0
ruc1R '~'t•J1m1by t11t 10•,-l rie1011ow1ne.....,.1n•COA 1ou11.14AMK.co -JI 31 u1111v 11£ JJ 11 11 -+'-«H9llVol1tPT It f'h t\~ tlll-'• ru\tl ll l• ... 17 JHt Fii I II 1, "' 165 ISi~ 1•'\ i.~ -11, ~lllqlft 11 16 JS~ Jill' + • 11 ttonHo"I 11+ 'II )t 39 -\'I
now a ware and --erncd. Buc:krv e 7,. 0,•, ,,,',, po' 01, "' ' Oft$. •u pu ltd by Inv G"id I 1' I 21 AMP tnc: .SI 15 ~'~' 46\.'o -*'"" _ "° ummln l 1' m j +· Hoblrl 1 l'll 11 JI 31 l1 _ 141 .. v..... 16 IJ •t>e Nallon•I A1i.oc:I-Inv 1no1, 6.11 t '' Ampt-Cor11 1 IJ ""• ,,,_ ••• _ .. ~~o.·-• ,j •m 3,! ,'7 l1ofl e1ec1rn ~ "' .,. •• /lurnuD s 17 11>4 K•11~r SI 51i'> po, lllon ol Securlllt• In••• llDS 10 .. I Q Am<lf' • ~ ' 113 " .... ~ " -• ' fo CIC Le•• •'• ~ K• ,s, pf 11•. 111J. Ottltf•, lrw;. •rt inVlllOl'I GrOllP Am re, ,l2 1 • »'lo JClll -1~~ Uri 1• Wrl I l \.'t 1]\li I "" -:w, m~x·nr ii 1 D :nv. 31~ -!'!-Cat W S• 2"'4 7•.,_ Kalv1r 16'" 11 11>1 orlce1 ti wt>lcl'o 10$ 11111 i.SI l tt AlllC!lfll> l to 1J5 ,J;" 26l"' ~'-'>_+,: ~lftrw~ t .J 1; ~ B" JIVO -~ Holl\IS111 '1 '° 1i 'r.: ff~ m; = :Z Ctmco ll'h U'h IC•!t Grn J'J • lllnt 1ec11rl11e1 Mut I 69 •" An<:h Hoell / n 1ft, 19 2' _ •4 vlcoos 1 ;f' u 21 2t ::+ ,, Hemt1lk• 411 M ~ ~ -·~ HE WAS FlRED
By SVLVlA PORTER
(Second in a series of five I
TOKYO -Ifs a portable
POP-UP, TV, the first of its
kmd 1n the v.orld. I touched
the hd and up popped a a.ioch
screen for a bblck and white
picture. t touched .the lid and
back folded the screen mto
a case which also mcluded
an FM·AM radio and v.'h1ch
altogether weighed a mere 13
lbs. It works on any house
current or a bu1l1 Jn
rechargeable battery w11h a
hfe span of 500 hour s
l\falsush1ta Electric of Japan
will jnlroduce it to lhe U.S.
market lh1s June to sell for
under $180 .• , .
It's a Sift by 9 ~.:..·inch e lec·
troruc calculator we1gh1ng 3
lbs. On the simplest or
keyboards. I added, sub-
tracted. mull1pl1ed. d1v1dcd
land erased my mistakes) in
an instant. Sharp Corp. of
Japan has this one for the
U.S at $390, cheapest on the
market.
IT'S A Tlr.-'Y tape recorder
with a tiny microphone wh ich
v.orks v.·ith an easy standard
easselle and can be earned
in a man's coat pockel All
the big Japanese electronic~
con1pan1es have models v.•h1ch
are available. 1n lhe $80-90
range.
I could go on and on. delall-
lng !he exciting consumer
electronics products I saw on
the assembly hnes a t
J\.1atsustuta Electric 1n Osaka,
at the opening or the 1970
ElecLrorucs Show in Tokyo,
at Expo '70
FOR WHILE the pioneering
U.S electronics industry hns
Why 1•01d I p•of•t b1c1 u1e
you c;en't h1ar the phone rln9.
TILIPHONl
ANSWERING-1uauu
835 ·7777
EARH
I'll ANNUM-
PAID QUAITl•lT
oo $5,000, lwo yea •, FwU
Peid ln•e1•-t1t Th.,fl C,1.
hl1'°1t1•, whea hale! le ,,., •.
t.,ji,, 5.!r°1 °l p.ld Oft P6n•
k•k Aco<-ou•h, •nr a'"ew~••
Wlthdr•w•l1 ho11111d 011 tit•
.. ,rtJ -...... rti,... pe riod.
C..t.c:I o., .,Jf;.s.1 •••re•+
Y••· HlfUf 11' THI 20"'41
..... PIOM THI 1 •l
LOCAnoNJ
17f L 1Ni It., C.... .. ...
JJIS....St .. s... ...... .
JMl~•Nll.o.._,;
JttJ4 Id•••,.,
C:....• hrt
i 111 WU.W... •"'1 .. ... _
•
T() iJIUStrate, he Cites the C~'"~M M 67 70 Kav1m • •'-'l COUid l'lt~e bHn Proo l 4' J '6 Ar\<:O<DNSv I 15'o U't 19.o _ ,,. YIH"lllM I 60 • S1V. IA! 51" _ ,~ "4Dnivwl lJ!l' <I 1 •h 11~~ lU\(r -IV. tnn 8 6S ti Kt1rT I lllt •Dld !bld)O•lloutl!I Stock 156•1IOO Al'IO Cl~Y1i0 I -lolt' J.l!o 3'~• D ,.. "HOoV·111111.,,. ] 22 11 ~ _,r been c:oncentrallng on e:<· case or the EDP manager ~nrllll ··~ •'• Ke11111 J«; 4'~ 1a.1c11<1> Monday se1ec:1 1" •,'5 Apac11acp 2.s 10 15.,., 11•. is11 _ l, --Ho;t n11 ,:16 71 :u.., :n"' 31 + o
I '
•••• "', .~ •,;~ I~~ K,"'11". " j•U. &Id Al~ VM Pv 6 ll '66 ,•~oO~ll 'Jl! l "" fS'' 15\'t -\'t ~nRlyr ~ " , ... , ,•,• '" -... Ho el c'!.J"~ l 6 mo ra .... tremey COmphcated mlhtary or a Jead1ng ln.~urance COm· n,. • ... "' fl • 0't.oAbttOn /76 J9J lnv Jltlh •U ~U PL O<p ~~, 6 '1 '!'' ..... an1Co I 11 21 .. ''!::I'""' fs' 1 1!\l 1Jh 17 -~
Pany wh-0 asked his presldenl ~!~l'Sev ~h ~\Z ~;~: fi.~ 11l\• i,• Adm iralty 11nc1• i11e1 15 11 16 lO ~~11a vc Df1' ~ ,,." •Ji1 ,,. •,,,, -_J',! '' /"' ·, ' ·~ "" "',~ """° -11,• --~•1' 11' ,i' 'u.. Un" l'•• --and Commerc'af equlpmenl a 1 ' ' •• A Grwl!\ 61» 66J IVY tl6 6U Ar<o••• ' -"" ,. rl nd 1 t0 :)9v1 t0 ~ ~ ,. ... • tJ ( $50J)OtJO b are I l J,,j1...,1IPC 1 11..1 lncom l59l tJJ H~cDCk 6A9IO!Ar!llO..n ol'" ,j> ,,, ~,,,,,-_It Dl!!,Proctf>, ,•,',,• ,tl~ ,i.i,7-t(,, Oll>flh 11 ~ 361,r,+ ga ha ed th h receny or , to UYc•"rif& 1~ 1g Kint In•• 5 1n1Y• 6~719John11n 11so1150 Ar PSvbJ OI 1411'\j\1 211-7+i!~:,·/~Juc1'~ 6016111 1~~:11 -~t:!~~~'~·-:, 1 ~1~~\iol~l~tt-l
P s open in c ome a nev.· computer as part of c:~~ •• n'"'~, ~i~'c~' : ~ ~1~:~;:11 :~ :'~ic'l~T:;,e F~"t/"1 »~~~~51s 1 ffl" "• ••· \, ",_,,.oav nPL 160 ,. ,, ,3"' ,, +~~F••"'•" ,,j ~"' .s.lV. "•"+~ and smaJI offJC:e field. Into an expan5>'on of h>S deporJ. (tfl VPS I''~ lt\lt 1Cn1t Vol 1• 19 A!ulr1' 6 O! 6 QS Cui Ill II 46 19 71 Armco f'' 1 t 7]\, 1 1• f,'-+ \.a Clte•t Co 1 t 3''• 3<1 )!. \ "~• p; ?0 )I 37'1 31'-C!\eri II.A 6~. 1l, K•t!slr 7\1 J .... All Am. F 67 .. C11s 111 lt 11 iO IS A•m• 0 ,·,, ,1.6 Ul, 21.. 1\o Oelrn1rP 1 l t 11 lt4il l•'L 1 -' H<IOll Gs llO 32 44'4. '°""' n•~ -th•s gap, Janon has happ>ly men! c11ernt1 JI) ''" LMC 001 11, l A11s1a!e , 01 , ;o Ctn 11• rols' n Arms!C~ '° ,', s~~ S•ll. t.:. -'• ge1 Mn1, 1 10 11 1' 11~ ~Vt -~ HOllG, P'll.50 21 "'"°' .c:i q -11 ,...... c11 .. 1 0 '"'I L .. M;e tn , •.• ,s ,..lplla Fd f 1J1G07 Cui 1(1 ,,7 1AI ArmR11b 1.611 ! 21 .. 11 ,,,._ '• tl11Alr "° 1» ~ ,.., .,. Y>l1.,..-Jollft ?4 to 13 l?ali 1) + ,.
m•1•e<f d o h ' When the money WaS ref US· Chm Ltt I K 'i Lani! RH 6'• ''-Amc•D S «I ~ -~ Cuo 1(1 •OS 4 4J "'° Coro 9U 1 ff..___ J,>,,. '1•'• _ .. ,, °'g::~!<.,,'°f ,-,•, .~... •'1"' 2:\'J -l\ t!~:i-••' I·... ", m~, ',',•,, 'm~ :!: ~ u an now .~ e s C11t• 1na J"• •\\ 1.a"" WrJ 1•1 1 Am 9.,. 1 u 3 12 Cui s1 u 53 16 9' Arvin Ind '1 .. .. ... ·~, -... lffi """ "' ,. .... ed. the EDP manager then Cllfl Uld llV1 1•111 Llr"'IO<I 3• ' "· Am Dvln • 16 9 jJ (111 Sl • St ' le A•hl<I 011 I l'll I~ lT1 ,... ~--,., nYRll CM 5' tD'-'I I ~ I -I\ Hu Hal «I ' lO•t 1~ I~ • •. challeng1ng US 00 3IJ 1;1dei Cnl 8t &I 11 5" l~r""n M llC. l\_.. Amer E~Pre••• Cu' Sl 616 6 11 ASld 8rtw 110 10 1 ~"' "•o" , ,, i?"',,,'~,',",nf I ~,', 1'\~ !,!. .. 1~~ :--..... 1,•-,,, ~,,,,, .... , ,,u ,~,,•, l">l{' •""> -,, asked for $250,000 in order c1>r;.1 s " " I.tad• t.d u .... 1J1, caou 1 Ni 1 ,, c.,, ~ l -" • 01 A.,.d DG 1 10 15 ,, ... di .:i ~ ,v.. 70*lo d ,,, .. The phenomenal electronics C11"•' ot 97 96 Lrh COIOI 1\1 ,,, tno:me 1 01 1 71 Paler l ot l ltAndSD<i 110 ~ ~ l<l~-',8•' 5tut ' 1J It 1111 nn+~'/1 Cen! 1 1' t t.lll 2l\.!t 11~-\• to buy a smaller computer Ci i.del 6\i,1V.L1l1ur G 111/t lt•~ nvo~I I f 1ia!Cnlc~b Sft &~A:ldfr•n OlD IOO~I\ 2t l'9 +~1 uler J4 6 ?1'4 2.S\~ 2.IV. llCe~ 11U$0 lS ~I\\ 46 .t6 --boom in Japan 15 almost Th d t db bout~\\\~~: ~~Hv.t'~r.1'¢ 1"•1 Sae<I 1 1 Kn!c•G• 1 n1 02 A11c1~El l:M 11 21,,.211(!J~_,_-~•Dl1IFtn1n .«1 1 t'lo '"" '"' UI Power J >::1»11 31\031 .,
\.... . e pres! en • u IOUS a CilY Inv 13 1311 LMlv EU ~~1,,, ~·· A;.IDCG".111 ~ir.I ~gr c:~ ~:~~ 1~ ~~ 1~ ~ ~:IR~~'nil~ ls lid riv· ~ .• ~~ :-~:. ~,l:ffi'f~~i:, */ i: ~~ t;.~ i":.,. ='i: 11[-L~.:,·cll,'~'' ~ ,;., 2ft ,,,. ::+ ~ Unuo.>hevable Her production the QU3hf1Cal!OnS Of a SeclJOn Clerk Ml t.l ?2•• Labl1w $\lo 6"• Am. lt1v 11na~all LlberlY • 91 S SD Atl RI01 of l 3 1•'0 8A n A "'t ... , llf C7 6 26 .... 26\'t 26\t _ 11 ,·-,-, .. ,m 0 ' 11 11 II -"'
has "· I b I I h d II I d$500000 11•vton 1•0 2•.Lottr:dv ,"",,l•,..m Mut '7"611S LlltS!k 4 605 0J A11Rc~1'1210 no •jU ''"'+-..fl:l•SDf0110 401S'~IS lS -~.-....... '94• ·~· ·~+·11 ueen C 1m 1ng a a ra e ea WI 1ng o spen , 11n1 Mer ••1, 9\.~ LcP Et•n 13 15 AmW Gin 7 3s ? si u11 Inv ell ~ ~~ A.j•,~• Chem 1 10 11'1 1 ~ nro +'t "/cl.iphon 4 :iol 11 12o,;, i11• _ '? ,;;:;,, .. ,,, , • JG 11 161'> 16;1, -'It Qr "to38~rcentayear•. whenM~.ooowoulddo."•red 11Mot1 0 s-,., L¥nch r ""'\'11 AmP•' 11niv.inLlnc N1t 1nt11 A,,•01car11 so''",,. l' •8'bo1d 4b 60,~60 ill''!'' t11>•:nv.m' ..,., "'~ ~,,.,,, II (low Cll 16,,.111..I Mad (;El 13fi l•l~ Lrnv Jl• l4l lf!C ~·· ll ' • ,:=~ IG!Or"ltlo 60 ,, 1 I• l11111•R11111, 311 3'•1 ll'• Jll•-;i ~h US A b d h Coeur D 6 6•l M•I Rltv ~\'•AA;. Al'Khor Grou1>. Loorn,1 ~evle!. Auror1 P•~• 1 10 IO IO Dllllft91!m tO ,.,j.j 1:{~ 1: 1',l? ~Ing d Pt'/35 I 3'"' ,,._.. 3'h -> • r m assa or to 1m. c~er c.. s1 s1 Mlltkri '°'" ,, ce1111 •.IS l s1 c.inid 315, l? 5, Au!om!ll •~.d :io '\.i .i·~ 6"'t '• 01uot1cc !1611 9 14~• 1411 1,~ = ;-• lnl•fld su 1 in u 21111 2m -J "pan, Armin H Meyer, Brandon maintains that Co•m E l r .11oam1 ,.., ,~, "' Grw1n •~11000 c.1111 16, 167 Aw(o c11 110 st u1, 1~,, 1~··=~011nev JOb ''"' llf!\llMt -?~:::,~1c.!,.·"' 12 9& •'• ,..,._~
esllmated for me that her managanent personnel must 1ot1 Str 70.,;, 71..,M111<1r c ~ &''t Fo tnv ''l •~M1vn• hi 1" 161A•ervPd ?o ,. tt•~ 11:. ,.-..,_1,01v1n1n0 l6 11 11"1 17 ,,.~-lo) ,,,,,~1,, n st~ y 51 -1 ~lllM F 17 !JI"> Manin M 3 ]~ lr>eme 105 111 M"l 121'2UC:I Avco 1'tl 2C I .io1• er er·~ D111S..o l 7G it .U'/r 65 .S\•-'-1m•"<-,, ., TN"~ 16\0 -
Ol'!'l(fl IS 11 M1r Mllr lO\O ll '~"pello Fd 6U 151MenMn •.61 Sl1A~nellnt .0 l6 l 't I i l~-1 ,DlvrMlU .731 SI 1''-1' 191.:, ' ,-.,. 10 2Jl' '1 11 -i...
Output would -ach 17 • billion •·mand more p rec j s e ""' Cir 37 ll Marm Gr • •>.!; -">«•• 1 1s 1 16 M•H Fd t 19 10 oJ Av°" Pd , 10 ~4f Id"' 1~s 1<1o1 _ "'OrP.oHr :io ,. !Hlo 11,, 1-. · nrer 1 1 IO 5 1•1• ''"-1•1~ ... ": ,, 'UC !am Gt1 11 11U M lr-r 2~ '6 Mi ron •,17 'M Min r.111 t U 10 l!IO :..ivonP0rod ,..1 1 1• 14 1' OomeMln IO 11 SJVt ""' silJ _ •i j~{t11•FIO• ... 231 110~' HJ 7Ulo'> -5 this year. While our output evidence of efficiency and om l~ 21 1'"'~Ma'te• o \1~'4 1,,..,.....,. ll(llQl'otDn IMI'" Tr n n n" ''cu 131 '11 to>, "·-·~O°"'Fnd .as. so ti~ ••• l>t -••lnlH•rv 1.., 's ,.... 55''> ss~+n•
d om HM~ 11~ Iv. McOtiv 1~ 'J F-un11 A • n s ll M.i•~s 1 111 1 ., -B-,"!'.',","'," Hu •1 "" 13<2 I• + '• I"'"-, ., .01 2011 231.\ 1.i11o -"" is at $26 billion, thoughUul need when agreeing to a -"'" P•v t l1 10 ~·n G 11·• ,,,., Fund B • ,, 111 Mt111tr, 'n •.11 n!.':: 0 P J 1'\lr 16'~ 16t'o _ 1-. ni")'M,,, 1' 11vt !NII ll'' -!.Ir
Prolecl'ons Show the U.s and
• , J . I Al. Comp CA l , 4 Mtdlc H 611t J\' ~lock J •S '" Merld Fd 111' 11 )I ::~!!..~ 1.~ 61 It•. \' • "" -'• ~· llv•r I U•o !Po\ lJ:wi _loo tnl lldl on.. H 1414 11~ 12?1 -!"' dlllOna eqwpmen puri.;.r1aSCS Cm11 m 16' 1~'~ Ml<I Mlf '"• 'l'llo Sci CP • 15 4 ~1 MlllA Mv 4 S• S 1' '"' "" I 11\a 11 11 -'• vvwtr CP ,70 4.5 JI\• 37 JI -11' I"' Ml-• •w II 24 r.l"O 22~ -l<o
f h h I I M h d I be Cmc lfltl 41.;, S\\ Mll<llrn JJU. ]11,, 8•b•OI\ 1 U 1 U N.OJ;AJv CP 1n 1111 p llan GE 1 f! 11 181~ 11'1 1Ho _ '• Oow<Torn ' 60 lDI> 61\'t 61:\lo 43l.'i _ 10 lnl M.iii ,... lt 11 1!. 10\{ t~ -\l • apan reac 1ng t e same eve anagers. e sa1 , mus t:mD Tee: l'• •', M~rld +n 11 '"· Bea(OI\ i 1 1s 11 u Mooo:lv'• 11 ~ n ,3 a .. 111Punt oo 1t13 ''• 11, ,.•lt _ ~ g•,•.•,,",,.• •,.'!?. 14 ••~· 2Ht 26:w, + "" 1'11 Nick i:::: "' n u 1,. 1•!• _ .,5 billion _ W>lh>n 15 made lo Justify the,·r -quests Comrn l'• ·~ M1<1111 Ce • I'~ Ber11 l(ni 111 '11 MIF Fo 1 J• , •• 11an11P l!f 1 1~ 1a .. ... '° 2f1\ 11111 J1" _1 I"' ,_ 1 ~._.. n1 411~ -. 41v. • ~ " ',~, ·D(); ll ll Midi•• J'• ,, • Blair Fd I :w 'fl MIF G1~ • SJ • 90 B,td< of c~· ) 7J~ ]JI\ 7J"• I :::•eHr cfJ 2C s, •""· .!.~ "•'"· -.• "' ,,·-••• -. 97 ~ lJ 3.1"--...
'n dollars and cenJS Clfl fld n. l'"o ModW GT 1'''> 11', Bond~tk S !6 S 60 Mu OmG A l! , 51 ~nl< ot NV ? '1 4J .o;.. ,,,,., -1 • urtssr of 82 •T , • ., '> _ !\ In" •odl• 110 5!r1 !91'1 59'1> -~ )ears. Con!ran J..., 7'1 Mnl1 C.•• 1• '9'• Boi;lon SI 6 S• 1,U M11 Om ln ! 14 '61 B~nk Tr 7 t• Jl 60 st•-. S'' -~ Drtvlu1(D lb '1 161\ lS'• 1611 + ''• Int 5111 u 0 •, .!~• ~!,, ,~,, --~
Ho Too often he says EDP COOPer L ""• llV. MIH VIG II"• lA•l 11.,,. Fdn '•O 10 '" MUI ~"" n )JI?,, llerb O!I I S>I! l 711~ ?I''> ?I. -g:••Pw I •o " ,, ]J'4 '~ + .., l"I ,,. '. ---.... ~
W COJ\.1E? The answer. • • CMP ~ • 9"-Mo R1c11 J\oa • 8os1011 '" '~'"'l1 '"' 11• 1 1t 8~rd CR ~s J• '° 391;, 71~=:! ~e,•,.~",1.l J ••~'> ''"' 1'7;l) '"'!&T'ot'C• ,•~,,,,',",,1',!t~•_-,,'"
l cannot Overemphas~e. 's managers reel they are no! 18•m .,., 11''1 21 M(ICI Sci ' 1•, llrollll SI 11 SI u 5J N A. M•il ~ TJ ~ •1 BUI< Inc eo j '' •1 " " .... •Y 11 •l!1 •l~'t ' ''"' • --'w''. ''
' '' "-•• ' 1>•' > • o C I o "-'o 11"1o -•~ "··o•oo " o tt -"• n! T o!H' > •" ,, .... ~ _,,,. .. ........ • t, ullocl< ~"'"" NU Ind 111 Ill e•t• Ml~ 10 J'l ''• ,.~ 1':h:p ""' I•''"' ,.,,_._,TT Dll•SO JS "' .. ,.
n()t, as you may think, cheap being constructive UnJesg they ~i:!. 'tf~ ,,~ ;v. =~ C~~ 1~ 1~1 1 ~~!!,..~ n 'il ','o o't ~:: ',"!',', ',',,', 1 ~· :::~J ~.·.Pl I J lit, 11'~ 11'• -~ ck.>P::i ~I~~ ll• ll ~. 10970 109'1 -1\• tnlT&l DIJ 4 ? 't2 't1 ~ .!~
t q '~ 1••1! ' •. ,. • • .... ·-1 UI.) I!\ .. H :i., ... ·~ llU"""' ,.,·.-•, .. Lt. MV. .WV. -·~ Intl• orl(• 1! 1' -,., --· labor' Wh>le her wage --ale are reques tng more e u"" 0 • oore 11& • 01vo J H J~• ~~11n •-1011 B~1n1n .,,,30 1 ,. _ ·'' . ,,-·-•• •• -.... ll,, t\.,_ ,•j, +"lnTT "/"~ '""" .. " _, -, d ron Co :J6 :15 Moore S l lU• 10'' NalW S t lo 98S llond •It Sll 8nu•tlllb 1(1 ~· ~ """''" -.,. ., L<•• ., ~ is nowhere near ours _ what ment or are tn the m1 sl Cru1c11 R 5 ~ M•11-t Tr.t. 11'1. 11'4 NY vn1 13,1s u ,, D•v d :i 11 4 "e 8•~••Lib 10 1\~ ;i~ "13..... n 11 -Po ~ ,",~ 10 110 2'1 :it ..., ' + 1 · .~: ~i/1 l·"' } "'\, "2• ,, , -'"
I c~arnC. ••')M!<ITt WI O\.;S BusM Fd 6611 3'1 GrWlh 76'1 1lr ll~v11toc• SG ........ 21•r.-• ........... n o7 1•SOH 77 21 +)I ! I "711•-.. nation's is?-she's up lo Italy's of massive new app 1catlons. oo1.n1v M ••· 10 Mo!Ch M s•• ' cG Fa 1 l1 111 P• ~--s •4 • 11 llt~rinvs 1 J 1~ ro 10 o.mo111<1 .ir 11 '° ,,,. 1~ n ~ra•ct , n;;. n"' ~ + ... Oele D;v ~. ''• ,..0. Cl11b J1l, "'• Cao~mr 6 ,. I" 1111;...., • ft) s N lle11 Fds ' '-1 19•, Jt . JI''• -•1 DYnt Am «I " ,.. 1\'o m -~ rn::~g:/rr DIJ ~ Ii't~ ?i·~ (•,.,_ =1,,
lt•vel and moving toward ON THE SPOT 0•18 Gen 1s• • 2.1~" Mvtlie. 1~. ''' CilP•' 1<1v 1 ~1 l ,. s1,,..~ & 76 1 ,& ll1~1 F 1111 10 '", ,","' ~~"I 11•. + '• -E·F-1nr.,.,.,. 1 2• 2 1 ·~ , , ,--, .. 0Alat" p • ""' Mu1RI E• • • .... (&DI! Stir s M 6 21 Ntl Gun 1 Sl I u e~. ... 6) 11 I 8 I -.. England's. \\!hat's mort, Devi• Fd F. •'')Mvlr LE 11•,20 Ctn1 5~, 96!10JJ"'~v"'"' IA"Gl!~~ll~r 'ci~~ SG• 1? 1'':0 "'~ ;9..,-:.._~EIO .. Pcl! llO • n n·. Zllo-•:.i:"'e'i1.l' JO ; ~ft~~ f.l:t =~·.
J With coSll ,Il!)ITig relative Div Mir '"•11",!<C Le~ ... 81\C~annlflt Fuflds Ntw Wld lOtSll.tJe ~, '' 45lo en , '7~ n,E•icoC.. .to 2 Ith II ... II~ +-•t.1tUIGE Ill ..., a pant' Se Companies take On Otcor In S'~ ''-N1rrM1 C Ill~ t4l, llel~n t" 10 91 Ne YIO<I I "J I ll •• I!~~ c ~l}b J9 !l... 11.. I Ii.I) = * ~::: ~~ L,•,•, ',', 1•"0 II-1U -\t IOw-1P1..t 1 60 j~ ~;.-: ~t ~~ = t
I nd b I.. ( to sales, and with the overall oei~1 ,.P 6\• 6\o Nat ll•!'d ''• ''• com s1 1 .i 1 ~ N•tn s1rv "" '" 8 • 1 121110 ',',,, 2• 2' -'" e ... ,,,, 1 _ ,, ':'!'• JJ,,. •,~ -~~ 1ow1PSv 1 Je 11 'IO" "~ 1., _ ,. cos s a respons1 11lies or be Oelu• c" "''••iv. N81C1r A 11>, n" G'""'h •:is • 1~,ND•1"'1 11 •1 1i" ,",,'o Ptt, .,,so 15• u• ... , -• .-.• -.... 1 " ,, ' • e-nomy blaring a SOm r Oel C•"T I\''• H NCmn C11 ? 7i,, !~~-6 '' '. O<•o•O 5 01 ''' • •n "" J 11• ' ' • E111Cadtk It lilt 6'V.. 69 pco nOIO l lS.,. 71 :UV, +_ '> their employes bey 0 n d '" .,, ,, ,. •• ,,, ••• , , ·~... B••••" ,, • 7j•• 11•1 -1, •'°""'• , • --•• -• f,' +· • 1TE imo '° ' :n'-'> :n"' 12111 tt.
note as
'
't contract. from the " ' •• • ... QUI 11 11 Soecl 1 6t • 15 0,,,10~ 1 ~6 11 9n 6 ,', 11•, 16" 111, ,,.,1, "' _ 1-, , .. , •• w" • •', + •,,', 11n Coro ••• ,, •• ,, .. ,,,L _ .1.;;
h. Dev Am 1\4 9 ~M G"'O 1 • , ,.,~ Cntst Cr Bot· 100 Fd 11,11 !l 3<1 l!erJ How-60 J4' " '0 .. • ,,_ "" "' "-. .. anyt mg the US even dreams h oe .. rv e J'• t N11 lib :IO'•l"" c81111 1 ,1 ~·6 101 Fii ~lo\ ,1,St11 1n1rrcon n ,• J.J , JJ'•-i.Et~erdJ 211 'l'," lJI• 1J"--'' -J-IC-•f accordion·like expansion oft e 01em Cr IR•, zo,,. N~tl M•d :!fl'' 211 , F11~11 1 S9 110 On• wms n ,12 11 11 l!~m1$ co l is 191" 1"° 11~ -1\ E111'°"ar,,. 1 1 15'eli 1-™ "' v Dist '"' l\o •''•Ne! Pe! p • ?• rrot 6"11S6l~l(')N~ll ll<11l •?fianll•• !60 • 11'• 1"•+\'o EG&G 10 1111~~ 11 II -,~JIC~•""11 2' 1' I"" i ''o l ''t-Mo
N
. 1960s, the EDP managers are 01ve• CM J 1" "''' ~~'R ~'· •'• !>h•~d •o• ,11 gPDenll •Jl 611 11e"111, ur 1 Ill 7J'~ 1''1 il'• -1 EIM1111c ·°'' .. 4~• ~1; •14=''1:~:~1 ~40 ~ 7+\ 121 "• . or IS the reason Japan's h Oocult1 1•. s',NM s~o .. 3., '" '"''' ,,, '" ,, ••M 0 -006 11rnr1~0 ,.. ,1 •l •?•.~!\·-·~Elect Auoc ll $:... 11, !'> 'h •'~ "' n.-v.
( d v uOY .. l'•N~t11v, •'•''•C~~m<I 1!11161001CSec99110&1Bt"elolllO I ...., .. ..., '" .. 'J101F•711r 'fi -•n I e spot -,, •• ,. 5 I .. "" I• ••'• ... ..,, _ ,, "•<-••• ,,.. '''' 10,, -J•ntnn .611b l 12'\.I 1m ,,"°' _ •-
un arr umping at cut-rate Th I I seems Daw Jon •O cru NEn GE 16'• n-. ColOf\•a< P~t• Fnd J 13 119 B~nell 1111 so i:io IJCt !JO ___." £IMMaD pl 1 • 11 11~. Hh-•• J nFd 1 • "' 31" 31"" -1'4
Sh d
e rompU er, I • f'>avle OB 16'1t 11,, NJ Natr: lit. 1.,, Eulllv Jll 3 64 P•ul l!rv alJ6 663 B~~! PU -?ltCI 54 51 5-1 _ 1; Elc1n Nll !Ml 19 610 S<• fl'a 1~ J"'ln ';' )t l " 10\'> lOi,, -I,. prices e oes export does ·' I epot •'ts Oreo. NL l • NI ~ F "' '' .. , ,, 69'• 6lJ..:. 611,-!•.E•Pa•~NG 1 'XII,,,, UV, uv.=·····.~.· .• ~ .•• •·, •,»,,•.11..3"1,,.• "'" nuo. a ways r r Dunkin 0 1,"" 11,., N l~t.'nA Funo ,,n 10 101Ptnn s., 1 01 J 01 B•""' .s~n so 1100 JJ 31 ll _1 Elir• cp 1 20 69 10i. "'" ~ + ... , , •. ,,... .. 101~ , -"-a~r brands and s • 11 I I 0 ' 1 "'l ll '~ Gtw!ll • 1? s 11 Pt M~• •SI ~.S1 ll•r111ue1 '" ,. ' ••• • .. -• ,_, .,,, ' I•• ,,_ ,,.. ,,. ,,, ' m "'' to Jl110 11 , ... ,,... + .. ... ,~ .. ~ expense account accuraey,E~r~"'lnt ,~lt!!~1111Re :111•11v. 1nc:om t011 t f1P~11~ nDC111n Be~"UC'1 1" 1 ,., 6,, 6-: ~r:iYiEtP/B vo 3 36 ... Dw"'-1..;J•rCf'!oPI• 110s1 s1 '1
higher-priced items in the and now the boss is examining !"ic'""' ru 61~ NfA•' 'H'& 1"" ''• v11111 • 21 • 60 Pllar1m 1 u 11> 8tn.ev P~o ..., 1 ,, 6.• 6 : _ ,., E,~m.-,,•, ', •N v, U ... J!V. 511: +no ~r,;•1w-:n·1 ~ "• ~. »,~ 3'''" : ~
h k b . M• •• ' •• , ' ,,, 01• ,•, ..... COi Gf'lll 10 ~ 10 4\ P0IDI 6"" 6 ,, ltrmec CO•D l7 J'. ' " .... .... 32\lr l• ?s.,.. .. .. ome mar el ut so do we, . 1 b 1 ,,., "' '1• C"""'1t 1 t:i • M Pint s• t w 'w a~111 su l llCI • 1•, -'~ £mDOtC t0 1 2111 ,.,,. 21"' +·v; 11'"w1n 011 l nv. J6~ 11~ -1 1t llle y ine. con 1..lb 22''1 , • ..., NPA G11 I RI. Ill, ComS Bd • to • '6 P•"" Ent 5 •J 6 iO B•t Tllr~ llO 't'1 16~• 16' • '' • __.,, £Ml JOllnon 11 :n1o 71\'I :nv. ~ J1mw of! tO 7 1' """ JJ -~ No. The reasons. I am con· ---------------·1 ir~~~~ 1,>!!. 1~"' ~w• ,',•,••, , • ..., •i· cw11n "a 170 1 JO P1on Fnd 10 1& 1110 lll•ckow 110 ul ;:! J11. JJ EllllJOlln DI , 150 •s ,j.j « =1 ~ JorinMan 1.21> 1u 2'1 ?lh 11 -••
ced f ... .. t lN Cwlln co 1 .t'I 1 sl Pl~n inv '01 '•• '''' ,.. • 6 • 6l -'-'• •••••••• -'' '' • ,. '''Johll.Inn I01 -13''• ns '" :.J'' V'n a l'r th's har"WOrk>ng Ider Bf l't I "" N•-1 P•< 1"• "' C-o '' o >> lO" ''''' ·,-, -''' r :"'" _. J ll' r " --,_ ,_ ' ., ~ !' "I -, v~ "'" ,,, ~ • .., 5 ._ 1 Oo ,,,•, IJI, IJ14 -1\ l"° M ol• lJ • 116 115 lll _, ~,,,....,.,ft "" lS "5'• •S'• '5'-' -i'I "'' ' 4\0 0lllo Ari I>. •V.ComPet 51!1 l lol C·rw•!\ in•o)'l1~11 io("~lia,u~.. :n , 21't-•, <111IGas ?l'll 1 30'1 JO'/o JOV.-v.JollMSVt 10 2' 2111 ™~ 'l6'•-tnp to Japan's industrial I Nv< ' •·~ n1110 Wftl '' 1• Com11 Id 111 1 s1 N Er.i tu 1st B .. ~:II .si, 051 , .s·~ -•• Sii 1"' 1 20 ~l 11"• 21 n JonLOQ•" IO '1 "" '-l'\ '3'" -1'4 ElclCPI' ]\' ··~Opt k •n 11 70 Coma Fii I'\ 116 N Her 19t419 9' BObOle Bi•~ ll 17 11•. 11•. -... EtaUI•• )Cl 1 17!itio n-.. 122.(, -Vo JontllU :M.. it 111. 11\.'t n +•A; CeOters, 3re much more E!lrom Alo l~OtmOll! ' "~Com,!k l ll A16 P•o Fu"" 1'1 J9' OO'lng(o A(I 11 1 10 191., 19<1 -•t E•SC~lnl 170 6 11-.. 21'A r.IV. ~ Jorr,nsn !JO 1 :IG'• '2fl :XI\~
Sublle. El ( Sv' 1Vt J (')J!tr TP 11'~11 Concord tt2 t 't'IP•o~dnl •OJ 4tO BohC•J l!h 111 $11._ Sb 56 _1,·ElllYIC• 1, ., ,,,. '' ,,•-'Ja1en' 10 11 '6 1!'~ 2S'~-t\ F.I 0~1~ t? 70 Ov~· N,.. ( "" (O<'"OI In 950 10'00 Pvtl!~n 111 ,,, BOlld Ind 61 6 '°' 10' " ... -... Jov Mio 140 71 1 1'-1
HER UNIQUELY I m s 011 1J ,,, .,, ' ·~ ~ llO<d 1 II"" 18 E~•DMd 1-lt ~· "~ 16lfo 16'• + ... •lier ,..I I 3' l• Jl'~ 33•· -~· II Ml>Clul s~ 6'•0..-YCll 11V.11•,,,,,,, '" ,,. ,,,, .. ,, ••• '"""' SookMtft 171 j ,,· "lOv.-•,E11,.1 Pf2 10 1 31\'I 31 ~ J!I) ' ....... +\•
-C 05e 11 • l>r 1,11 1 "~ Conti Ml 6 fO t I'll EQ~11 6 S5 7 ft t.n 70 90 '/01o In. 19\,\ -•, £von•P .~0 " >>•> ''"' '", _ , . 1(111 !htU 1S 1 16'• 161M 76'4 -~ Mrgy C 11, 31 Pab'I II• n " , Con I G!n 1 02 'o.\ Gt0<1< 11 l'8 1J 70 Borow~r 1 is es n •1 21 ''L + "" -.. K.111 590!• I! ' 11~1 1>•; ''" '' g overnment-trade·•ndust"'· nero"e 1 , 3 P•c ""'" 11, ''•C••• to 1,,,,,,, ... ,1n ••••llormnn' ~o 14 10 ' .. '•E•erl~••P 109 2614 25--25'•-'" .. _' 'J Enn!• 8 l 'i I' p F E u BQi Ed! Ol " l)'~ "'' + \, E~CeilO 11$ S 131/t 11'• 2J ' l(t!IAI pf•11 1 63'• 631\ 6]\"o -1"4 f1naooal relat•onsh>psandthe •''a 11 Jl cn1yc~1110 70 1 1 c1 !ncom 101 J69BOll 1 • lll2ll•J7-.32h -... F•bertie .O 123 ,, .. 21.-•1(1!•Cem10 221 :n 21 _14 Crn Wlllv $?-511 tn¥tll S91 t tO r~s Inc 6 15 14'• 1''1 +lo FaUorA 60 b 17 ll•• 3l ll 1 IC1!t( Dfl,JJ 7 2CI\ :lll'l 70\o)-\\ way all segmenls p 1 ,, n cr~ woe1 6 " 1 u vi. A 111 1 u Bran11A1• 10 s,s, 1::-•· 1 ,..., _ \~ Fa+rct1C 50 145 ,,, lSl'I Jl• -.,,• K•nC '"""L' , u JO 1''· 30 _ ...,, ntV9n,,. n .sonso VDY~9 SN ""° 8•1•~5• 211U S•. S!'~ Slli ''''"''' 1-,. ··' • , .. _~._ ,,,,l pl•50 YlOO }9 51'> 59 l(o •·gether f th I Ofla,nart Group l!tu Ttclt J 1• l 91 Brl1t My l 70 t•I SJ , 'I' ''' ,, ..., ... .. , p• "' '' -~• ! w or grow n O•cai 10 n 11 06 Reve•t , 21 10 OJ Br111Mv ~t 1 , '°"' 1 1 '"• Ftirmot11 ' • 1414 l•~• U>t -\' '" In y.,,,, "' ' SI''> 51'-'l lift
S;pec'r'.ed. ··J-ted areas. Th•s Black Um' l oerwr 106' n •s R1nrre1 111• ,~ 61 11,.•·• Pp! :ne '°' 100. 1"°-" ok!'I + +\ F11,1t11 10o 11 JV> ,,., JV. ~ Kc .sou 1111 1 • n1. 11 21v.. -..., ""'-"" Delta 6•5 1DSROHftln 5"'59S ...,.lia l~I ~!Jl.o O!t lQ•o Faml!,Fln l 10 \l'Oll•A lJl/t -IC1nGE l .:I 1621 '°""~-Iii sort of relationship I s Oown1 F l 'J • u SIJlem Fd '61 5 c.e B ....... pf ., ., ~·. ~ Ili' -~ F..,llHI ltw; 5 101\ lo:i., lo-it -" K•nPwL 1.2, 2 :IO'I '°'"' m ; -"" D•••tl \ 70 12 70 5'ft11•1t 12 S91l.1'9 Bkl"l'nUG 111 21 ?S 'IA~ 14,~ -,; Far Weit F!n 11 IJ 11\4 11;"1 -1\~ ~:~ 81,"t 20 ; :J;: )lN ll~ -"'-3bsoJute\y ahen 10 US; Ollf grevl Fd 10 0010 •6 S!>1dllt• FuMI• !!row~ ~o IS 7'¥ t•~ '"' -1• F1r1~MI It.lb J "'~ ~ya U \':t -l'j KlwteB 2Clb ' 11>, 11,~ l7'~ + ~
n •· ru .... aws a or 1 ea~&How~' soc1 1~ '~,.is .. nsn1r11 1111 1 rl 1,1, 12, , Fl'dMco 1 ao • " .... 11 1 ,0 1 .. a t'i ~1 bh 1 Sets Exhi'bi't rev1 l¥ r~1 11 " '"' 1nv n st 11 1o1 0Br°"'n o u1 , 1,, 141 , ui~::~Fe11aer1...., •" ,",•,•. ,~,,, ','m-··,,_K•Y.e•Ro H 11 "" ,,., ,, .. Bel•~ •·1•6• 1111 l )Qlll]QlllWnS~xlS(I "" ?9'• ,,,, 1f>~":f·\FedPKE ltc 10 12 n:i.i. 11\< .,tl>!ll) 0 .:11'1 40 40>\-S\ But in each af 22 mai·or Grwr11 10 ,, 11 1t ca-" st 8 •5 1 OJ B•un,.,.k o~ l D! !•'• ,3 , 111, _ ,, Fe<iP•PBd 1 ' 11~. 111' 11.:.. :.. "' ttels.e~ 1 JO • n·~ 72'~ 7Zll .... !. lnc:om 5l7 5 Sec:urll• F11.,.,1· 811cvEr 110 111 lG'• ,0 10,,,_,,Ft<ISltnS 60 s ltl"o 19\\o ltV.-~ICtlldlll 60 12 Jl1• 31Wi J0~-1 1 indust.ries.iustthreeJapanese S1>«1 Ile 199 E11v1, 261 1i1l!vdd co 10 ,, ,,, ,, Ft""'''''-1 ,, ,-"' •tCennc:ott 160 101 d "'~ o1e~1-1
Bl k b , 3, •• ,,.. , , o ,.. t ~1.1'\•->1 "' ...,,! ,,,;: ,,,,-, KFChOel 10 xi>'' lo•••<'•-"
Z bat ac usinessmen w 111 o.... ,.,. n 11 nvtJ 61 w11 co P! s llO st st s9 +i F1!<1DeP1S1r 1 ts ... ,, ,. -, "''' 1.. , -a1 su -M1tsub1shi,Mllsui Eber,1 10?1 11'9 Ult•• Jfl0 6J•!udoFlll60 n 11, 1 1 FedMllll"v 1 11' ~ 1~ v .., •2&'11 2•~•2Ut -1""
d S t I Sholvc.•• !he r ro · • f'grel 10\Dll~l~nl~ Am t ?I 19! Vdfe!ln 64 "ll'l ,,,, ,,,,,_,Ferro('"p Ill Xl 16-k 1lll 1'•-',!l(errMc 150 14 1''0 1i1~ 1P,o -h un um1omo-accounl or ,,..,. I g wing tn·t;m•o Sc S il S61S"$01c$1?1l1ll6 Bv1rFor-01 10 ,! l4'• 33,, 33,1 _11,Fo!M"etird .10 1• 10 10 20 "'K1rrMP1•~ 1 ff 69 69 -i,. one.third lo fiJ() t ( d St J d , Entrov W '19 10 9' Shim Fd I tO I 'II Bv1ov~ W 60 11 17.. lll.I 1 71~ _ ,, Fleldc!M 1 411 116 ,,i,, 2•111 2flll _:_ ~ K.t~ICDn!ft 1 2 11 26~ 2~ -"II pereen 0 U r1a an C 0 mm er CI a J Enlcr.e 561 ~'' Oe•n 1' 1914,19 ll11nk R~"'o !'1 , 11; I >i-,, Flltrol 140 ~1 1!" 25~ 15l\ +IA I( Co 120! '1 :!ti~ 1!\.0 :Hilo -'• alJ prodUCl•On The b gneSS Of E111111v 1 tS 116 Slcle t S] 9 1$ B~nkl! p(1 50 ?9 ,,, , 11., '", ->"• Fin Federll" 1J IP. l!l't UI~ _ --K bCllt 11'0 1l 61\1 611') 6fl,' -'\ • 1 potential 1n a special Los £1111• Grh H 4 l.i" ~111me Fund• Burl 111<1 1 40 ,~ 31,, J>• 1,1 Flrel!~ 1 60 u ··~ H" "" '• 1Clno1Dsr .:i l? 1t 16 ''
thesefam•lyirusl lo h i F~~· l?IJ Ce1m 111 1-,.,avr•Nor 10e 1s 16 ,,,,• .... ,-_,•, .. FstO.rt>m ,, •-;'• •• ,,,.__._T"._._KlnntvNS 15 •12''¥181-'; 2th -~
f
s a ne e PS Angeles Civic Center ex ~""• 1n 11 •t n 10 ~n•~\• ~ u 1a 11 a11r11o10, 111 ss 10 1 1 J' _ ,; Fii MW: 1 ,j.j 1 '°"' 20~ 20i. :; ;; ic111t1tv Pll j5 1 s.0;; s1 se -"' C..'ODlro Japan's production • •or111 • • •it ru11 1 n 14" 1...-nnv 10 , 1.., ,_,,,,,,, ., ,,,,, , • ,, '"' ...... ,, ,, ic1r1eh co 11 JO\, l•'"' ,.\, +""' • posit• d • W Id T de Ferm Bu I 61 I &1 5mll~ 8 I 11 I )I 11.,rrohs ... '' '" .. ,.. --K.LM ,t, 2 •11!1 lt ,:w 3.11, :Uali markels. prices, prof!Js. com· ion uring or ra Fl!d Gr111 11 "11211 ~ ... n •nv 1 Je , ..,, 8111nunv·-,,,1 1'' n s>1 12'\io 1'7~ -1"" FIKl'lbdl to 1 H ll> ,...., U l<I: -.,. Koe11r1.., '1 20 , 19 11 .. 'l'l .. \to Fld C•a 9681051S""l~vGI Sd Stl 'Y II U~ U 1• -\li Fli.ttrFd .lOt S IDl't 11 lfl'I+ ! 1-':! -
I l nd t I I Week 'lay 17 23 " ' ,. '' '' s. -C-Fll/Wr.kl .1• ' 104lo 10\/o 101,1, 111 _,. 1-' "' Jt>4. >1-.-"' pe •
1
ion a promo e na 1one 1• • • Fkt T~"" 1, ,1 ~j ~j ~..:i.~"" 1!.lf 11 ~ C•l!ot co 111 F1...,1nv so 5 10-. 10'4 1N =I' ~g·1 It ,,: 3 "" ll~ 3r' _ goa S Products of the b I a c k F1n•ll(1~1 Proo !•Frm G! • •5 • 4.5 c11 Flnenl " J1lo 31 »'-+ ~ F11nft.~ 1 •1 11\\ 11'11 11-1Ct1!1l' ss .o 12t '"• •H• .iv._~ Ovnm • 11 ~ 11 '"'' St ll 00 ~ 00 Ca!ftM\ l"M 11 I'-'> tlo I"" -"' Fii"' OIA• 50 J!OO nl'll n n'l'I +11" ICl'Ot 19r .10!o 1l 16\~ 16 16 _ ,_..
-iler astounding capac11y ,\ppolnle cf buS3'-ss comm••nily •'ntheLos 1...av11 1.•1 J1'S1tllllrn•n F11n111 c1rnDllL ...l}a ~ii 12•~ 111.t-'\oF1n1 MB7.u ,' ,',' it .• • .• _-1,.,K•011tr 11'0 .s tt~ 111vt 11 ...... "" !n<om s lS 5 's Am !nd 11• I t'.I c.m11SD , IQ •• 1l' •12'' • 124 -It Fl• E COit! .... .. ., L
for copying the technology of llult"rl•eld Land co~. Angeles-Long Beach area and F$~tn'v. iU ~ ~ ~~:i ~,~1 ~ g; ~:e~ R.o.~ ,fl ~,\, ~l"-!{ ... =\It f1~ ;:; 1$0,'° u l~·~ ru·R~ ~~ = u r:c Gt~ l.M -; 21~ "~ other nations building superior "' • ,. r Af I I Fllln Oh 6 S1 J 15 S!tln ROI di Clln Pee J 70 11 11 • 1 n, Fl•,.owLI " • • i!ii + ~ anel!ry I ll J1 ll'4 J.l\ll
ed T L o emergmg r can nu tons ~., 1nr.1h 6 1n 1 l• s 11 1a l6 16 :16 c~"•c '" 10 " 14•, 5?'h ii• . • !):.., s~,", •, 1 ~ l 1 1 + ,... •nv 1t111 • 1 Ji"' J1h
''Japan-lzcd" products on this has na1n homas .. will be on display at th e Civic ~:: :,ZJ,+~ ~ ll l 'J f,~, °" 1{·1! 1! ~ E:~'lfd11l1~ 41,, ',1,1~,· •• ',,J.., f1 ,, ~·~r 11'0 '° ' ,• ft~,~-:+'-Ltr•obSt .1 ' "' io~
know.how and Ulen creating Slevcos or Ne~·port Ce t •1 11 th c 1 H 11 Ft• Nit , C111 ~ &• s11P •10 1 j n , 21 c br 1 ' M o is u "' " '171'. _.,.
h I I ner1>a,1n e 1y a F"s1er1 11"•••ltlvP1n1 1011 11c:~11 '{,,n 0040 '" '11 ...:i.~,M '-'~ .J>4 j' >-4 t~
on er own. l!eac l as sa es mana· Rotun~a and in various l<>ca· ~::: f~ i tt ""°'1r A~r ,~·~ ,: ~ ~:~~t~ l·: is ,!1, u:: _+1:;, oo !':,jr ':i-., 'lt, ftr 1i~ :r:;
HER HIClfLY skilll'd. RC r of mobile/modular lion• •n••de ihe Deparlm-nt ,F•• q,111 s.10 551~wir1 J!.6 1.•cirritrCD 1111 13 lt:~ i!V. 111'\ ... •~ Datt in I""" 1•tt f \oo +il
educated. dedic:ited and fan· horncs. In his ncv.• poSI• ... .. ""'u!ll •11 ·~1•~ .. ~~1 •Ar •U C•rr c11JS ~,Yi: Ji\: g~-ft ~~r 1'°.:i HJ~~ n.::, •• ,,1~_::··~
as 1ca Y I ustnous ti r at Ill N. 11ope St. be111nrung ",~,•,1n Gr1111,~•, , ,tcwr ,M11 •u •ts c1.e Jr lJ 10w ;o•• l~ _I; F111ot w111 .l tt"' ff _.,, t I. fl 'nd Ibo tt'on. Stevens. will han-of Water and Power B~llding~,::~;t ~r, :nt~.:'°~1 ,~~2;::~:~~'W1~ r.:; \1~ n;i;.:_:;~~M.tic~1;J ~ " •
Marl~et
Sy11abols force I never say anythl g die the 1'n park sales of II" .. 01 ••n Ao l l? llJ C1u1ee-· 60 11 ,,, 3 ... Jit.4 ~ Fil; • • m •• . n • 10 a.m., May IS G,•,r:l!I 1 •• i·· J:r1 w Ea 1U l,SI Clltrfr 1.20 ,. .,: ,Vo ·-=.: ,,,_ tr ' ., .\0 . .
Ilk' th. -nt-Jlon an" m nbt'Je homes ford~ Th h'b 1 i.•uOo• F1111,1u"!" <•• '' ,,, , ! ~ , , ~·· +·· •• '-V""" •" U .,-C e.Jt I II 0 ptodUClS ,,_ ln<:om I tl 1 IO t .. l'>C: GI l.•t 211 t<-o Coro '° ?4 ~0.. XI 20 : r II fi'O j, \' n-•
cheerfulness or the :roung men velopers. ~le is ba sed at under the aus prce!'I of a gro"P F~"::.'Mui l~••A11 i:11t ,,\~ i i0, : ~ ',1",~'r.'•'•'•JI' " j"' ~'• 5;,\ 1 -•~ AJt "' \Ii ~ + ~ ~ '°11ow1nti .. • • .,. ta wmbollo _..
d J • J • F nd Ml " r • 5' + ~ -G-In !flt 1111d'. m.rtld rfllO<ll.
an women On a p a n s t le c ompany s Nc\vport kno\\•n 81 the Blac k World ~ s!tm •y :n ~~1'2~111!1 8,~~ =~~ ~r,.~ 14 1 J.\lr ~~ ... i. ~~ ~o ~ ~ mt n~ f. "''" tlwull!I ... vnotfl(IOL
assembly hoe!. Beach headquarters. Traders will be acoompanicd ~~~~1"~· 1 J ... u~:~m Fii~·,, ')1 ~~1~t1 ,'~~· 76~ 2~.~\ 1'iv. n~; 1 " ~ c;o ~Ji ~ !h ~ .! ='t: "~~~=-·:i:~~·~Li!;i!.~ ~r:
What do
Christian Scientists
really believe?
Come to this Christian Science Lecture
THUISOAf, MAT 14. I P.M.
bta11<I• Hlth Schoel, JJ2J Ph1effttl•
S.11on•o•1J bv
tli,,t Ctr1rd1 1f Ctr1l11. k1111~t, C•it• """'
by b1rolling (nshlon 1'htl\ ... S, ::r·Fd 6,.M ,.Ml r~i.':" •,111n11c,!'1',',,',"1'IT 11ro ~ •• ~" 60 •\ AFsr~l"'°IJ 2 i:: t -1,i Oel'ld. 11-0tClatl'll O< Dl<d In lt7CI ,.1.,.. C .., ' .... U f J1 C " 21 1'•, ;:: 1~~ \' :~! ~I ~ + ~ thlek dlvldtrll!I -P•kl 11 • 1 '!'liar. 1-cultural and m 11 s 1cn1 orn M 1 12 ¥'"n 616 51 c~nMPw 11 • lf'' •Ill 11 1,., 01 · ~t• ~ -~ P1vob1t 111 •ll:rdl. 111.1r1,,. 1mi. a 11,,.11.,. • Grt!oFd A t·O' u i u d C~n , 1~ • so Ctnl ~w I I'll ,.., ~.. ~'!.. + .... •n~ '. ... ... '.."(' Ct-11 ••l1tt °" tll•lvllltftd OI' tx41tlt1W.
pcrformaTJCtS On the malJ dtlf· i~';.,,~nd l,•!; J ~ VI~~, L~~nt ! ~:"'. tt ~:::~:tll1 !I: 1i ii1' r~ fl\ ':••• ~'fo(f' l,iJO ~ '--I"' non 4'olt1.. -Dtclat«I 0# llllcil M "' ing the wte;k wt•dn 2CI .. ~ lntom • tf 4 I~ ~tno T.110b 1 191, "lo I• , , I\ :~~¥ •mo ~ ~ 16 + t1 IMI YNf 11-0.Cltttlt or Hid .r!t'I' St;:ig~ 11ndtt the direct1on ~."11111 ~~ ~=~~~:;·~ 1t·fi 1ltl~~i~1d111! :: '1';= Hn ~l.~~~ m1:1n1' I~'.,~' li~ ·+14 !r'«!.:·~~"':..'!1~~;1:Cl::
of Fletcher Brown, execu11ve 1N-• ... n.~111 v._, •• "~"' S•• IO• , '"'· '6'• ~;~ -11 i".,.!A.T1 ' ' ~ '< jf"' :.::u. •1111 dl<l""'41 1n 1rtt•"1.. -Norw !twit. t11rDor 1 .U I.I• II•• ll'lllP • 26 'il nodbrn In<;, 11 I'• J16 1'"i -It A't;ii11 l'I " + ~ -P•ICI 1'11' rter, dlvldtfte ontltltll, • director of the Bleck Bus1fK!SS H•,·,~· 'll !"1"1¥"" ) ~ J ,, Mme$ ..10 35 I' n .. 11,.,, __ ,,, l~nc 2'-0 1 . ~ • 1:""'"' or ... ocllon "~"''" 1111 dl\lldm9
D' l d E N lf' I !! \V•llS• In f M 10SJ ~1r1t1NV 2 IJ ':•, _... ..,. t n. t j _.,. ""'11M. r-OtcltlrM or H~ 11'1 1'11 ...._ 1rcctory, nc, an dward "Mb Gor • ~ "N•·n "'" 10 11 n .. {1'141•tMn 1 '° "• H'' •15:! lJli-+ •, 1· ,~ ,. jl" •; _1 ... 110dt Ol'llelfno. t-P•ld 111 , ..... :=
S 'd f lltff• I 11 'ij •1111,...1n Group hl'<!tt< MCI I~ • .Y ... ,. ,._ ·-m----tiger. pre,.'il tr\l o I h e H"ll" l"' !·1 •Pl< u ,, 10 '' ntmttr" 1~ ~h 3 \o ~ -.. "' •• · ,v, .......... ttth •alvt on "'"'""
l l 11 I Ar , Ii M11111 I •I lvtt• '' -'j "' ~,_,NY 2 1111 ~. i!ll"' '-=' ~~ .. ," i~"', mfA• 3 " ,1" ~ -+~"' l:or:-4111t,lllv11oro 111111, .,_.,.i.., In N1L n e r n a o n a r1cal'). """"m" , l'O • IO"" t tf 14 ,._,..,, ;"' r,;: • "' 'li ~ ~'t: ~ _ wo <......C:•flld. u-E'll-cttvldfrlo. -e.-...iw1o
A r-ll d ICM l'rnt 'd f ~tr~v '11 "" Va '° ,,1 ,,,·· " _, • ~ 7 ~ -1 6"111 Ind M1t1 In tuff, ~Eli-dltfrlo nien can """'t'·• IC tra e s1 0111 it1 L 1.,,.. ••< •r, ""'0tiro • -·~ ~bu!lon. JET Ex ,-, w1 ISlf• ., c;rw11o 1 ,.,4-.u1'"4 lt -"'111n1r :IO! .. --.,,.,, .. _,....,,._ ~how is exptttcd to rcfJect 1mo~("f ,. ii/I :.f' :·.!:!~ :~1j 8lr..~rc~•1~'1u io 1 ~ .-.-111 111111101rsfa ': ''' 1,11 -'•"1'· ,._W!l!I ••rrtflb. ...,__~
ihc produc•s aod l·reaJ,'vliy I~'. c~ 11, ~~v4,1J .••,•,,•..!,"', ,•, • ,1 's ~.1'•" ,' !,"" -'•' 11~• u ';l -a. Otll Ml!lt "i" ~ ''' , ,,., + .,. dl•lrlblltH, w!-Wt11111 l•uH llCl-Nm "' ,.. r. • ., ,_v ,,, ;it '\i '~ ,,. ,'"'• ' •,, -. ~ iJ""""' ,.'\ I W: 66"-= i! d•f """"'" vl-1~ bt!lknl~lrY or riKt""' nf lh" black bU.!lllt:!!l!I ''"m Ill( F~• ')I •ti Wl<>t:~ r<1 ~ u , n Cl'llf'n•~l 1 11 , ~ >' .. n1• f-"' f'"''P er 11e1111 Nt0rt1nru11 ul'll•r ii. ,. """ 'l•~ff' ... ,,.,.~111w'"'"" ''••OfCl'llllPctuP 1 f' I'~ lfl•l--'• Mel•r.17S 5-11• Mlot -~••nl(,.,,.,ICYAcl, er ~ll\t!1ttv!Wdl n1un11y I"" l rf'CI !OJI" IJ 1W"C ~II ,, .... Chi!'" e!NW II • ' 11 _,.. P Ctm IO I :n n OllTINt11"'. '"-tl:orer.n IJ.111t 9Utl!CI • • llldJltr '' • ""°'lh "1 n CJl«F11ll ,!)t ,, •1 ••• l•-"GPubUI IM 114 10'0 '°"' l'\-lll ll'rl-1"~n ... 11ontu..
I
' •
• • • ,
: • • • • ' • . • • ' • • , ,
• ,
'
' • : • • • ..
" •
.~ .. ~
-
.~ "' .. 1-...
"" ...
"' ... .. ... .. ..
$
"' ... .. •• 'M ... •• ...
"' •
MKAftF ,70tl Mact>onld .'O MKkt Co .)0 MI CY llH l "lad F4 I.~ MMI S• G1r M1tfcChf .60 M11mvox l.lO MlllorY 1.10 M1nhlnd .$6b M•n-r .71 M1nH1n 1.IO MAPCO .70 MAP( 111 1.11 Mtrl!M 1.60 Mire.« 1111: 1 M1rcar pf Al M1rirrnnl 211
Mlr Mr >.~ Mlflon b .2'I Martenr1an l M1r~tt Cfl'TI M1rr lot! .IOI M1r1hFd I.la Mlrtl~ l.10 MrvlCUI .«Jb Ml~ (p .24 M1tortll1 .n MIHIV F l M11!tl ..tO Mt1Te1 Wl Mtv05tr l.f.O M1Yt JW .II) ~~1,~·.60 MtCDl'd 1.1()11 McCrory 1.tO
McCrorv61>1 • McDerml! l b McDonlld Co McD..,nD .¥1 ~GrEd 1.40 McGHlll .60.!o McGH pfl,:i.1 McGno Dat1 Mclnt...re ? Mcl(e. I.SO Mtlet n .IOI Mclouth • .ioct ""!'1 .JI) MN Ccro 1
Mtt plA1.IO M"o~ 1.20 MEI Ol'J Mtl'f Of
Mel"Or'IM Co Mt•ct nS 1.40 M trd( la M-lth 1.30
Mtui P•I .10 Mtl v pl1,:IC) MtuP 1111.20 MtuDlf .43.
Melt• """' 1 MOM MtlrDmd .50
MGIC Inv .20 MldlG41Ut 1 MIC.II Tutot I Mlcrlllloof . lo.
Mer;Ttl .M ~ Utlr .96
R \.fO
llel.•11 1.20 •111 a • .., .60 M nnMM 1.15 MlnnPt.t lJO M H~ip ,.lS M l1• rv L}O MP C.-.i 1.60 MoPubS .IOb MobllOll 2.40 Mollt KO 1.10
Mollwll Dt!t Mol>oom Ind Mon AR .Jlt MonroEq ,.60 MOl'liMI 1.IO .......,,,.. Pn.1$
Motor Pll( 1.61 =•nJ l~ Mar1fSno .111 Moor-Nor .tc Mororol• 1 MIF~tlS 1.IO Mt$rtTT l.» M$l lnO .40 Munilllfl•H 1 Muro~Y 1.2(1 ~~~::1111'"1o
MurryO!\ .60
Ml1 , 1970
Monday's Closing P~ices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
...... .. ..
IM1.) ... U. C .. M Cltta.
l
~~~~~~~~
•
-
DAILY 'lLOT
Final Stocks
Jn All Home
Editions
On. Roads
At 54,985
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A
record ~.895 per500s k>st their
lives in highway accidents
in 1969, the N1 l i1>na l
Transportation Safety Board
said.
Pedestrians accounted for
9,800 of the highway dealh
loll.
Added to deaths at rail·
highway grade crossings, the
figures represented 93 percent
of all deaths in transportation
aceldent.!, the board said.
The highway death total was
an increase rrom S3,6M in
1968. Safely board chairman
John H. Reed said there were
more vehicles on the road
last year "but we can take
!lllall (..'()ffifort Crom highway
eccldent rates when t h e
numerical tolJ ln lives, injuries
and property l0&s is so high."
Other transportaUon
fatalities tompiled by the
board included : 1,544 avlaUon,
1,807 marine, 1,505 at ralt.
h.ighway grade crossing s, 7J3
on rallroads and 21 in pipeline
No Method
Can Stop
Snoring
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP)
-Dr. Marcus H. Boulware oC
Florida State University spent
more than 1,000 hours on re-
search ror a book "The Rlddle
or Snoring." His conclusion :
about one person in eight
snores, and not much can be
done about it.
Boulware said 188 anlisnor·
ing devices have been regis-
tered with the U.S. Patent Of·
flee. They Jnclude a chin strap
lo prevent mouth breathJng
and ball sewn lnto a nightshirt
to keep the iiubject Crom sleep.
in on his back.
But snoring still 1oea on.
Boulware said more men tend
to snore than women ..
He snores himself. That's
what got him lntuested in
writing a book about it.
Escl1er .Joins
UCLA Panel
SOuth Coast. Plaza and Town
Center pubUc relations direc-
tor Wttner EJcher bas been
named to the UCL':\. Alumni
Assoclat.lon Board of Directors
and Alumni Council.
The advertising and media
chll!l ror the COsta Mesa
cuter was the only member
newly appointed to the 15-man
panel at a recent sesskln.
A 1958 UCLA graduatt,
Eldler took hi! M8.$ter's
Decree in Journa lism ·there
in !HO and from 1967 unUI
1969 was president of the
UCAL CraduMe Journalism
Alumni Association.
Dividend Told
The boa~ ol dlrecton ol
Smith InternaUonfI. Inc. today
declared lhe regular quarterly
t'OO'lmOO stock cash dividend
of 10 cents a shirt, payable
f..1ay II. 1070, to shareholdcr1
or record Mey 4. The compa:fl1
ia based In Newport Beach.
,
I
l
..
-------------------~ ---.. ~·--~---~~~~~~~~-~-~~·~~~---~~~~-~~----~~~---~-~~~~~~~~--~~
SPECIAL TODAY!
,
Moil em
Occasional Tables
llST S3'1.9~ $36
Th. perfect chonce 10 bnghlen up your l1v1ng
roo'll or den ... ond ot lanrostic 1ovmgs.
features quol11y constr..,cr.on. to-the.floor
·11yl1n9 with Wolnut l1n1sh. You• choice of
Coc:li:lail 47"x21 " or End Tobie 26°'1t20".
Don! miss ou1, conle in to lev1lz todoyl
All three at one /ow price!
l iSl $39 'I~ ]t1R£[ PlfCfS $1 9
All !hree decorohve ond useful octogori
!obi~ con be yours 1odoy far only Sl 9. Use
them os plont stonds. end tobler. or !omp
lobles. 1 01 uses onywhere in your home.
Thii 1s a spec1ol purchoi.e ond s1ock •S
l1m1ted. M1rocle Ptton vinyl l1n1sh, losr mony
times longer than loc:;iuer or \IOrrush finish
ond olmost 1mposs1ble to mor! Shop early
for !his onel
Floor
Pillows 28 " sq.
l lST $1 4 9~ lEVlll WHSf PRICE $9 EA.
Huge 28" t.quore floor Ptllow~. Kopok lolled
••• covered with bunny fur pile fobric ond
comer 1auels. A\lalloble in red. block, moss.
o range, gold, and blue. Place them 1n your
den. l1\11ng room, fa111ily room • , . any roo•n
of your home ... they ore lovely to look ot
o nd comlortoble tool Take odvantoge of this
sole pnce now ... v1s11 lev1tz 1oday!
Walnut f inished
Refreshment Bar
RlOULlO 10 $ 48
Plonn1n9 a por1y, or for your awn $pec1ol
pleo)Ufe, lh1~ IS the 1!em for you. flol·CUI
Wolnu! lin1shed refreshment bo1, 28" wide.
33" high. comple1e with 18 -pc. GIO))ware
.set Noie the ample ~toroge roon1I Come 1n
lodoy and wve 1ne Levitz Whse. Woy\
Three· piece
Student
Study Cent er
l lG $.!19 SAll PRIC (
Thti gro11p 1nclvdes 40~ 18.30 s!ude111 ~tudy
desk wilh Walnut l1n1sh lop. 241t91/•1t36
bookcose and plaMoc covered pedestal
bo)e choir. The tubular n1etol i rome~ ore
l1n1ihed in gotd tone. A borgc11n you'll bath
be hoppy wi1h!
I; ...... ,
Three Piece Polio Set
I/SI S99 O~ \tMll[O ~TO<.I: $ 48
Thi• beoutif11I 3 poece patio ~t con now bl!
your1 lor o very low low pr.elf! ut l"~•tt
dur1119 our .al@. This wt ti mod11 of durobffl
cost iron to withik>nd rhe weather ond <On·
lfonf use. The white loce dei1gn w•ll molr:e
Yolf' patio or front por<h look mo111 1n°
\'itoblc.
' '.
TODAY 10 TO 10
CHARGE IT!
YOUR C.HOIC(
$28 '
May 1910'
WE'RE JAMMED
IN THE AISLES!
Crowded conditions are
holding up the stock'ing of
new merchandise now sitting
on our dock! We must clear
out discontinued merchan-
dise immediately! This tre-
mendous sale will be for one . ,
aay only! Don't miss the fcib-
ulous buys and savings being
offered!
TODAY 10 TO 10
l \ I TERMS AVAILABLE I Your Choice! Vinyl
Walnut Finished Book-
cose or Commode! llSl $~.95 SPECIAL PURCHASE!
During This ~le you ho\le your choice • , • <I-shell bo.ok-
cose •• , or storage commode! Suy both pieces and stock
lhe bookcase on top of the commode .•. features Wolnu!
fH11shed Mirocle Vinyl finish lost$ longer thon the finest
locquer or \l"Ornishl Toke odvantoge of 1he lovings!
Complete 7-Pc .
Modern Dinette
lfVlll WHS£.
PltlCE
llSl $179.95
Elaborately Wood
Trimmed Sofa and Loveseat
LEVITZ SPE CIAL
$397
Here's o set designed for the big family. Beautifully
lini1hed. Wo!nul wood groined no-mor protected Tobie,
plus M!t of six upholslflted choirs in wipe clean vinyl!
Don°1 miss this Levitz Worehouse speciol\
You 're ·receiving the most for your money when you purchase th is
beautifully designed Mediterroneon Sofa and loveseotl The Sofa alone provides 8 V2 feet
of comfort! Upholstered in Copper Herculon with Gold Herculon Welts .. , This sofa ond love·
seat will enhance any living room! Self.decked (the some elegant fobric that went into the sofa
is und er the cushion) ... Just like !he more expensive sofos l Bock and seat cushions ore re·
versible for longer we ar .•• Foam filled for complete comfort! Toke odvonloge of the savings
of $202.95 Jodoy!
LI ST $599.95
KROEHLER
MUSl 8£ SfEN
5 Pc.· Contemporary Master Bedroom Set LIST ~&9.t5
2-Pc. Top Quality
Spanish Sofa and Loves eat
Remorkobly quolily . , • of on unbelie.,.obly low Warehouse pnce!
You 'll love owning this magnificent Solo and loveseot in oll i!s regal
splendor. Upholstered in easy lo core for Herculon (Copper)
occented by intricately carved Dork Fruitwood rrim. Feolures reversible
Kadel wrapped seol ond bock cushions with zippers , .. !or soil
comfort and double weor , . , plus the lu11ury touches al self dedung,
llVlfZ WHSE P~l(E
l l~l \719 90
I wit spring edg_e and low leg~) Shop at Levitz
i I Warehouse todoy and Save! Save!
The newest trend in Contemporary furniture with the heavy massive look ochill"'ed by the double fold effect on the
d rawer fronts and-the lovish!y deep mou ldings and overlays over the doors. II will remain enduringly beautiful because
of rhe line craftsmanship ••• finished in Pecan with a heavy top and plinth boMi ••• Suile includes: Triple Dresser,.
~ .. ~ !Lan el
Mirror, full sl1e Heodboord. ond Two Nile Stands.
'Houndstooth' Sofa and Loveseat
8' of stylish soph1shcoted. contemporary luxury in the most ~ught of1er fabric fn the morket. block
ond white "Houndstooth"1 Block vinyl welts (the fabric is stitched to vinyl and not fabric for e•tro
strength olang all seams!) Bock and seal cushions that ore not only reversible but inlerchangeoble
for durab1/1ty and long weorl Button rulted sea t cushions ••soft edge" construction for that e•tro
!ouch al comfort. AU seal and bock. cushions ore loom lilied • , . then docron wrapped !o hold
Their or1g1nol shopel Self d~ked (the some elegant lobric tho! went into.the solo and lo\leseot +s
u11der 1he cushions). Shepherd Casters for ea1y movement.
lfVllZ WHSl. Pl!ICE
llS l '469,95
$367 5-Pc . Contemporary Bedroom
Sophisticoled simplicity ••• o losting investment 1n
yovr good taste. Moster c.rol!ed by fomous '°Lllne". Oiled walnut liST ~6?9 9S
fi nish hand-rubbed lo o mellow glow includes The massive 78" !riple dresser. twin (2)
mirrors, corved back headboard and roomy n•te slond. Hurry to Lev1!t !or proof pos•t•ve
when ii comes I? \IOlve 01 the lowest possible price! ·
Deep Tufted Black Vinyl
Mediterranean Sofa ond Loveseot
!.OfA & lOVES~AT
$29 7
Sel ling Direct to
the Publ ic
FURNITURE
WAREHOUSE COAST 10 COAST
for people who like massive. solid sofas! Here's a luxurious solo ond
loveseor tho! ore destined to become prized posseulons! Deep hand
tufted seoh ond backs ore cushioned with pvre loom .• , Heo ... y cor~ied
Sponish Oak finished exposed frome odds lo th!! elegant beouty ot
the pieces! Proportioned tor full lounging comfort ••• The vphobrery, l l~T $6~90
•
Early American Boston
Ro cker $18
\1\! )1Q II,!, \IV 11l Wl\M ~'~'"
R•<h 11utr111:9 maple lu1hh hond.
rubbed to Q mfJUow glow Glove.
,011 vinyl \l"Ot, cush•on~d w•lh foon1.
& SHOWROOM
Easy to
Reach from
Anywhere
Son 01fljo f-rttway At S.OC.h 81...d.
Ar l_,z oil it.e "re1<1J
1,~11~ .,..,, ro~...., out al
!tie Worehouse Prite
I ai!e 1t homt )IOWMll
.... how ~ i;1,,1,,.,,,ed by
llh•!I i;rt a tm0ll odd1·
llOl'IO! cho19e. E!tt.,,r
way, your ll:ml>g$ nre
lr1Jmendou1.
TfRMS
AVAILAl lf
LEVITZ WAREHOUSE & SHOWROOM • BEACH BLVD .• Edinger Avt.
Ne•t to the Hunting ton Shopping Center
Glove soh block vinyl is easy lo deonl
,rt\
4-Pc. Mediterranean Bedroom
He,.·s o magni ficent Sponiih ilylcd Moster Bedroom ProCed ot
great 10Y1ngs. Rich mellow, Spanish oo~ fin ish. You gel the ~poc1011'
Triple Dremr, fromed Mirror. Ki119size Heodboord, plus lhc 2.
'-------------------------------' Drower Cornn1ode. Atl for one low, low prtc.e ot lev•ltl
Ii
lfl~IANI Ct(Otf
$268
•
. ' '
;, I
' •
SALAAM TO EXPO
t
Fashion Odyssey Begins
A collage or sandlewood and incense
• , • temple bel~ and ·wood chimes
• • . laq jasmine and lolus flowers
••• lush fashion lines are' being colJecled
for a salute to Expo ·70.
Jap&n, India, Indon~la, Iran, Thailand,
Hoog-Kong-and--Pa.ki&tan-and-1.beit-
mysteriouS allure, their color and pattern
are all 'a part of tlie inspiralioo for
the Odyssey to tfte East collection
created by American designers who have
pointed their compasses w e s t w a r d
toward Fashion Island.
The fashion showing, pi'esented fllon·
day, May 11, at 7:30 p.m., will showcase
the many moods or the East.
Along ·with the fashions, some or the
wares which long have· made .the Orient
a mecca for sophisticated travelers and
shoppers will be shown.
Odyssey fashions will capture the
essence of these enchanted worlds in
'a .myriad of silhouettes.
From Japan, graceful kimono sleeves
• . . the obi sash • • . shimmering
colors . , . pure new cuts and shapes.
From India, paisleys and border prints
in delicious silks and textures aDd from
Hong Kong, dazzling prints ranging from
an emperor's garden of florals to ex-
quisite luminous pastels.
Jmagination plus freshness mark the
fashions which may be viewed in the
Broadway store in Fashion Island.
A dramatic tunic and pants
costume is ins~d and
accessorized with ~ flourish
of silken ropes and tassel·
led beads. It's from Cam·
pus Casuals;
Not to be found tn the back-
ground are these ,lotus print
iersey pajamas . opulently
designed by Vanity . Fair
and a voile gown with
matching short kimono by
Jerry .Moiton : · ...
~men
Tvt'41y, M9y U, 1'71 , ... 1a
FREE SPIRITED -New York model Marisa
Berenson often models for Vogue. flere she is clothed In Trigere's long gown and Kimberly's
knit dress. ..
High Fashion-society Model
An Unconventional Rebel
By J\1AR lAN CHRISTY
NEW YORK -Marisa Berenson, one
of the world's most famous high fashion-
society models, is a rebel.
Anything unconventional is her lorte.
She isn't strapped in or Jin1itcd ~y
personal inhibiUC1ns, the s y s t e rri ,
establishment or, in fact, anything or
anyone. She's often photographed nude
from the waist up in Vogue, appears
on every name television commercial
and Is the face that smiles from the
cover or supersophisticated s Ii ck
magatines.
Recently she pulled what friends call
a "typicaJ."
Marisa and lhe.r lhen-boyfriend Arnaud
de Rosnay, a well-known Paris
photographer, look a fast plane to Delhi,
India. because Marisa had been com·
plaining about the nervousness of New
York and expressed a strong desire
to master transcendental meditation.
Marisa, a 5-fool-9-inch waif-Amazon
wllo happens to be the granddaughter
of the famous French couturier or the
30s, Schiaparelli, nonchalanUy took a
week off from those $75-an-hour modeling
assignments and went into the mountains
to meditate with a maharishi who taught
her how ·10 empty her pretty liUle head
of negatives and distracting frivolities.
ELEVATING EXPERIENCE
About the elevating experience Marisa,
• catholic, says:
"Suddenly 1 became ca.Im.er. No more
jitters. I hit a ntw channel of self-
awareneu. And , like a bolt out of the
blue, I diacovtrtd I could write poetry.
The th~bt hadn'l occurred to me in
my wildest dream1."
Random House, the book publishing
company. has gotten an inkling or lhe
dollar potential of her poelry and has
commlssloned Marisa. now 2.'J, and her
!Isl.er, Bcrlnthla, a free.lance
,\
photographer, to collaborate on a book.
The present plan is for Berinth.ia to
photograph Marisa in pictures which besl
illustrate classic Poetry.
Marisa's Manhattan pad reflects her
disdain for conVention.
Wilh some guidance fro1n a Cuban
decorator, Landa, the rooms have been
transformed into bona fide tents made
from Persian print fabrics strung to
the ceiling in. a central point.
There are zebra walls. The rug is
plaid. Venetian blinds are leopard.
_ Yellow love birds chirp In a white
cage. Incense burns a musty fragrance.
''[don't like anything thal's uptight,''
she says. "I believe totally in the free
spirit." Marisa practices what she
preaches.
NEA RLY NUDE
When she gets $2,000-an -hour
assignments lo pose nearly nude for
name photographers like Irving Penn ,
there ts no music, no noise, no nothing.
Just precise concentration. Marisa. who
always has liked doing the forbidden ,
can be seen lying nude on a rug in
the April l!isue of Vogue. "It's art,''
she says. "It's not a Playboy come-on."
P.1arisa's rich mother, now the ltiar-
quesa CacdapuoU·Di Juliana with estate!
in Rome Ind Klosters, Switzerland, sent
Marisa off to a series or posh-expensive
private girls' schools until she was 19 •
The last one she . attended, Poggio
Tmperiole in Florence. is Marisa's idea
or "a L'Ollcentralion camp kepl by fierce
women.''
She and a fri end would get out of
their drab grey unlfG!'ms and hlue capes
-u pictured In the French classic.
"Les Petites Flllcs Modelles" -and
snea k over the walls, beg rides Into
town and go straight to the n1ovles.
"I thought only of one lhing, being
free," says Marisa.
The acting bug bit deep. Marisa now
is studying acting at Carnegie Hall witlt
Bob Motica and being coached in singing
by Ann Stenburg. She hopes there are
movies in her future.
Four years ago when J\1arisa came
to New York for the first time she
went to see Eileen Ford who runs the
famous Ford Model· AgCncy. Mrs. Ford
told her she \\'as unpholGgenic and would
never earn a dirne in front of the
camera. The disastrous encounter, which
caused Marisa to temporarily give up
the idea of modellng, was righled by
Vogue's Diana Vreeland who sent word
to Marisa at Truman Capote's masked
ball that Lhe maga:cine would Uke her
to do photography modeling . She practi-
cally yelped for joy.
DAIL Y ASSIGNMENTS
Now she works with the Stewart Agen.
cy -somelimes handling as many as
eight assignments a day for top New
York designer s.
Arnaud de Ros nay, her old love, has
survived a series of break-ups with
Marisa who bursts with ldeali.s:Uc
thoughts whenever romance is men-
tioned :
"Love i;. an incredible thing. It makes
you now through life. There are no
drudgeries. It sharpens up the se~
even though the relationship ls not all
blis!."
Marisa, born under the astrological
sign of Aquariw, has just had her astro
flash done by IBM and every Saturday
goes to a "medium healer '' who coaches
her in the art of positive thinkifll.
tliarisa. both independently rich and
personally successful, has a whole closet or Revlllon furs -Including a maxi
lynx 1.ail ·coat. Most or her clothes are
1ntide by Halston and she haunll
Greenwich Village boutiques for craiy
getups. At the moment she's wcarlna
pantsuits almost exclusively.
.. -.. . ... .. . •
J4· DAILY PILOT TueSda)', M1.7 12, 1970
-----------. . . ' -
Hair Raising a Problem
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I agree with
the mother who wishes you would quit
saying "hair is not lmpcrtant." Hair
is very important to O'f' houae. We have
three Jone-haired ~ and a daughter
whose hatr is down to her waist.
The boy1 wash thelr halr four limn
ANN LANDERS ~
• week. Wllh lhe girl, It's a dally My huablnd hu prwlded m• wllh One day Grandma hit on a bnpl
ritual. 'I'b1I me1n1 11 towels in the everylhinl a woman could ull: for -idea. She had Grandpa build a ·small
wub every Monday morning. We buy \)}UI k>ve. I 10m.etimee wonder if t thampoo by the cue. And now lhey have done as much for hlm. Pleate trough -like they ueed f« stopplng
are uklng for creme rinse which costs print m)' letter, Ann. It miaht be 1 the hobl, only lower. She fllled the
nearly u much 11 lb&mpoo. We have welcome relief from the dally rec:1taJ. trough wlth coJd water and put it
two hair dryers Ip the house . which of wifely ....,pllllntl. Sip me -NO aloaplde Uncle Earle's bed. He bid are~in constant ~Tb_j_electrlcdy blll_NEWLY.WE_l) to lltep In Jt to stand up. 'Ibe cold
ii 00f0fdii1 world. · DEAR N.N.: Htii'1 yoar letter-1111-wat« aw-atenea--iwnat once antt-tbat-
Nothlng clogs up the sink like hair. my tb•W. for wrtttaa It. It II lndM put an end to bls sleepwalking. Please
lt't easier to get a doctor to ccine 1 welcome rt.llef. I don't llfM, bowever, print th1a if you think it will help
out than a plumber. (And cheaper, too.) tbt tile faaJtl yoa lltt.ed "mall:e a mu IOmebody -A FRIEND
The last time a plumber came he greeted a mao.'" A womu mlpt klve • mu DEAR Jl'JUICND: Grandma'• aoladon
me with, "More hair, huh." So plea!e, in spl&e: of tbtm, Rt Mt became Clll , malcea MMe. OCMr reed.en 111getied
Ann Landen, don't tell me hair is not Ulem. eond1aket w popc«m atrtwa beside tlte
important because I know better. -bed wMre tbe deepwllker woaW 1tep
MRS. G. W.W. OF CHATTANOOGA DEAR ANN LANDERS: Sometimes .. ll A117 "' ... 1auet11on1 are 'fOrllo
. DEAR CHAT: Once again experience grandma's home remedltt are better a try.
trtumpba over dtetfyl Yoa win, Lady. than ~11 the 1eientif1c d18coveries put
DEAR ANN LANDERS : '!'hi! probably
will come as a shock to you, but I
am ln love with my huaband. Don 't
ask me why. He snore1, looks at too
much TV, rubbernecks when a cute
di.ah atruta by in a miniakirt, forgets
to throw hls shorts and sox in tbe
hamper and ht leaves Wet towels on
lhe bllhroom floor. I could go on and
on -but aren't these things that make
a man 1 man?
together. Tile letter from lhe oleepw alter
who Was reluctant to take a trip for
fear .tie's lllow up In a hotel lobby
at 3 a.m. wearing ht!" nightgown (or
less) reminded me of a problem in
our own family.
Uncle Earle Wied to walk ln his sleep.
It w<rrled Grandma to death the way
Uncle Earle unbolted the door, let
himself out of his room and walked
all over the nelgbbcl'bood -llOUnd
atleep.
CONFIDENTIAL to WHY ALWAYS
ME!: If you are not part of the solution,
you a"' port ol the problem. G<t with
ii and •lop pwlng the buck.
Un1111e el youraeU oa dat.n? Wb1t11
rlplT Wllol'o -a? Sboald you?
Shoalcln't yoa'!' Sepd for Au IAnden'
boot.let, '1>a&tn1 Doa aad Don'tl," uclot-
ln1 wldl )'OIU' reqaett SI et11tl in coin
ud • 1..,, aelf411drened, It.amped
envelope ta care of Ille DAILY PILOT.
•
Flight Officers Soaring
Peering
Around
.. ,
't
AMONG guests Invited to !
1 formal gathering tn the Los >.
Angeles home o f G e a r ~
McEmyfe, Canadian ConJu1.. ,
general were Mr. and Mn. l
~~~Id Pelletler of Costa j
The party was given to
booor PelleUer's b r o t h er •
Gerard Pelletier, Canada's
secretary Of state.
Pelletier himself recenlly .t
WU honored by Philco-Ford '
Corp, He ~ved one of the
corporation's top • e v e n :
awards for community !
IUVJce. •
League's
Parents
To Meet
Parent.! of boys playlnc In 'i
the Huntington Beach Pony· .4
colt League are Invited to get !
acqualnted during an Informal •
dance taking place between ~
8:30 p.m. and I a.m. Saturday,
May 18, In lhe Carpen1erl 3 Hall. , ~
Cultural Arts Come Ali ve in Hobb ies
Council Challenged
At Speech Contest
An intercouncll speech con-
test will follow t he theme
Escalon to Monte Corona
when Council Six, Golden
Desert Re1lon, International
Toutmlatreu Clubs meets at
10 a.m. Saturday, May 18 in
the Anaheim Bowl.
P. Olcott of Huntington Beach.
Toastmistress will be Mrs.
Ernest Johnson of Stanton,
who will introduce speakers
and judges and outline contest
rules.
Four members of Flight 11,
U.S. Air Force Motben will
serve as national officers.
Elected .during the 13th an-
nual convention in Fre1no
were the Mmel. Jean B.
Miller Sr., Cotti. Mesa, third
vice pnaldent; Me 1 v In
Roenfeldt, Westminster,
treasurer, and Emmett
Spindler and Leroy Hammack,
both of Santa Ana, director
Ticket., at $3 each now are~
on sale and may be oblllned..l
by calling the Mmes. Max J
Engle, 96M917 or Pett Pen..,~
nella, 846-4787. They allo IMY'"i'
be obtained at the coor.
Also 11erving on the dance ;
committee are the Mmes:.
Wally Engstrom, Ron Bauer,
Andy Chersin, Gail Branift ~
Arlls Arndt and Richan!\~
Robinson. •
Examining collections are Mrs. Thomas Humphrey (left) and Mrs. Wallace
Short. Stamp and coin collecting for the beginner or expansive collector will be
described as a part of Fountain Valley's Cultural Arts Week. Speaking at 7:30
p.m. in the civic center tomorrow will be Charles \VJndham of Newport Beach
, discussing stamps, and on Thursday, May 14, Don Wallace, national president
of the Numismatic Error Coin Club will explain error coins. The public is in·
vited to attend•tbe meetings and there is no charge.
Horoscope
PartJcipeUng in the contest
wlll be the recent Council Six
WlMer, Mrs. JUTY B.
Michaud of Anaheim, who will
be compeUn1 with winners
from San Clemente to San
Diego.
Mrs. Mark McMahan of
Tustin, former president of
I nternational Toastmlstren
Clubs, will preent a trophy
lo the winner who will ad~
vance to the regional conte1t
taking place June 5, 6 and
7 in 1t1onte Corona near San
Bernardino.
Capricorn: Bon Voyage ~ • Presiding at · the luncheon
meeting will be Mrs. Calvin
Toastmistress training of-
fers practice in v a ri e d
leadership roles and a
stimulating forum for ex-
change of ideas as well as
public speaking. WEDNESDAY
MAY 13
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Basic is&ues dominate. Be
aware of diet requirements :
avoid extremes. Some
asaociates, co-workers make
surprise call tonight. Be
diplomatic and co-operative .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Creative forces surge; you can
make meaningful changes.
discoveries. Work with young
persons. Be open to sug-
gesUom. You feel more vital
if active.
GEMINI (May 21.June 201:
Your hunch about property.
family affairs is apt to be
correct. You seem lo know
instinctively what is of value
and otherwi!e. Check safety
measures at home, office.
CANCER (June 21-Julv 2:21:
Tonight you could rfceive
message or call which causes
revision of plans. Be versatile.
Relative who makes req uests
may not be aware of ex-
teauating circumslances.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 ·
Income potential is accented.
You can get money 's worth
if aware of details. Study fine
print and read between the
lines. Debts are paid and col·
Gardening
Hints Told
Garden problems will be
under discu ssion when
members of the Orange Coun-
ty Branch of the American
Begonia Society gathers at
7:30 p.m. Thursday, May 14,
in the Grange Hall.
Eugene Johnson. garden
t.'Onsultant from Artesia. "1.'ill
speak. Refre&hmer.ts 'A'ill be
HTVed and a:uests a r t.
welcome.
HB Auxiliary
The Ladles Auxiliary or !he
Rtu&ington Beach F I r e
Department will host a
(l!neral meeting Thursday.
1'tay 14. at a p.m. in the
home of Mr1. Will.Lam Valoff.
Mr1. Jim Lacy wlU preside .
Oiscusr.ed '<l'ill be the city
festival booth. auxiliary phone
d1rtetorie1 and a bowling par-
t7.
FV Newcomers
Foualaln V1ll1y Newcomt.rs
Club wtU meet Thurlday even-
1111. May 14, It I In the home
ol'Mrt. Michael D. Mllslead.
Women new to the area may
cootect Mn. M. William
Mc:Camell Jr. al 131-3'187. The
f1rlt luncheon meeting wUI
take pile< In June .
lected.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 \:
By tonight circumstances turn
in your favor. You put yoor
finger on missing link. Take
initiative. Stress lndtpendele
of thought, action.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. ) '
Some family secreta could be
revealed. Maintain 1enae of
balance -and humor. Seek
greater ilannony. Make con·
cessions. Be considerate lo
one who may be temporarily
handicapped.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Avoid tendency toward self.
deception. Face facts as they
exisl. Some friends paint
glowing picture. They may be
right. But ii is best lo
basically heed own counsel.
SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): Consider career o~
porlunities. Plan formats, a~
pointments. ln persooal area,
share you r ambitions. Qu iet
discussion tonight could prove
beneficial.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
191 : Good lunar aspect tonight
C<Jincides with writing. cor·
Mo ms Seat
Offic ers
f.lrs. Alan Schwalbe v.•ill
host a potlUC'k dinner in her
Costa Mesa home when the
Orange Coast Mothers of
Twins Club meets tomorrow
at 7:30 p.n1.
Following the 8 p.m. dinner,
election of officers will be
conducted and there will be
a general discussion or twins
and their problems .
Reservation s and in-
fon11atlon may be obtained
by calling Mrs. Nicholas
Bartlett, 546-631a.
Club to Vote
On Board,
Philanthropies
Board nominations and 8
proposal or phllllnthropies will
be voted upon Thursday, May
14, wOCn members of Mestt -
Harbor Club gathers at 10:30
a.m. in Mesa Verde Country
Club.
Following lunch ~l r s.
f.larshall Cowley. pro1tam
chairman v.•111 review the
club's history nnd f\.1 r ! .
\\1illiam Homes, retiring presl·
c.lent v.•llJ be tiresented "'ith
the lrltditional silve.r scr,•lcc
gift.
During the gal.he.ring Judgt
Lofr;an f.1oore of t~ Child
Guldanct Center or Oran«e.
.county will be given a ctlttk
rcpreaentlng proct.'eds fro1n
the aroup's two benefits. ~lrs.
Harold Lakin. ways a n d
me.ans chairman will n1 .. kc
the presentation.
reapondence, study of faraway
places. Excellent for travel
plans. Put finishing touches
on project.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Financial prospecU of
mate or partner occupy at.
tention. Emotions are strong.
Don't play games -stakes
could be hlgb and for keeps.
Say what you mean -mean
what you say.
PISC~ (Feb. 19-March 20):
Lie low ; play waiting game.
Permit one close to you to
take initiative. Legal questions
require attention. Answers are
obtained if observant.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BmmDAY your best quali-
ties a re emerging: your
chances (or success, happiness
are highlighted. Know this and
act accordingly.
To llnd Ollt mort •i)Owl YOUl"1t!!
and MlroJoey. orcllr SYdflrf O""rr't
*Pi~f boQkltl. lflf Ttlllfl Aballt ... ,.
!tol09v. Stnd blrffld•!e and 50 ttnh
1D Omarr Bool<ltt, t~e DAILY PILOT.
Bo• 32~. Or10'ld Ctnft"t l Sttllon, Ntw
York. N.Y. 10011.
Models Go
U p Ramp
A luncheon and fashion show
are on the program for Balboa
Yacht Club's First Mates.
The clubhouse will be lhe
setting Thursday, May 14, at
1 I :30 a.m. ~rs. Don V.
Franklln. hostess is being
assisted by Mrs. Edwin f .
Steen Jr. and Mrs. Jack
Baillie. Luncheon chairman is
Mrs. Bill Carlson and decora-
tions are being handled by
Mrs. Stephen Stewart and her
committee.
Members modeling will be
the Mmes. Larry Baum. Allen
Cottle, Bruce Chandler. Almon
Lockabey. Gus Go me t,
George Schmidt, Marc Hall,
Michael Hirsh and J a y
Linderman.
Mr1. Leonerd J. South is
fashion coordinatot and Mr!.
R. H. Deaver wlll assist as
the accompanist.
Seniors Doff
Historic Hat
PENNY SCHILLING
August Bride
Sch illing s
T ell News
Wedding VOWS will be ex·
changed Aug. 22 in Garden
Grove Community Church by
Penny Schilling and Philip A.
Knox Jr.
Their betrothal has been an--
noun~ by Mr. and Mrs. \V.
H. Schilling Jr. or Coata Meu,
parents of the brlde--to-be.
Miss Schilling, an alumna
of Estancia High School,
where she was student body
secretary, will graduate in
June from Orange Coast Col-
lege.
Her riance , son ol Mr. and
?\-trs. Philip A. Knox of
Anaheim, is a eraduate of
Anaheim High School and
OCC. He served with the
Anny in Vietnam.
Pediatrician
To Lectu re
AddiUonal intonnalion may
he oblalned by callln1 Mrs.
Wiiiiam Rose, chalrtnon, m.
2985, or Mrs. Peter Hanzel,
~1129.
Ball Clubs
To Benefit
A wine-tasting party and a
dance are being planned by
parents oC the Huntington
Valley Little League with
funds from both to be used
to purchase equipment for the
ball clubs.
'l'icket& for the third annual
""ine--tastlnJ; are $2.50, ac-
cording to Mrs. C h a r 1 e s
t'uller, cbainnan. The event
will take place between I and
10 p.m. Thursday, May 14:,
in the Parkhurst building,
Fountain Valley. Addltion1l ln-
formatlon may be obtained
by calling Mrs. Fuller, 981-
4933.
June 8 has been selected
for the dance date.
BPW Group
Insta lls Slate
Mrs. Janice Halnu will
direct i.ctlvitlea of the
Newport Harbor Bualness and
Profesalonal Women'• Club.
Worldna: with the president
during the nett year wUI be
the Mmes. W. A. R09enfe1d,
first vice president; Emma
1tfiller, second vice prtsldent ;
P. B. C111ld)', correspondlna
secretary; Bonnie Berry,
recording secrei&ry ; Euaenie
Brown, treasurer, and Donald
Dungan, parliamentarian.
Bri de's Big
Day Usually
Dr. Martin Biren, pediatrl· Trad itiona I
cian will speak before the
Orange County Ch apter, The bride can be 11 mod
Neurologlcaliy liandlcapped in dress u lbe pleases untJI
Children. the bil day-then she 1oe1
The session wil l take place trad1UoneJ, say manufacturen
Pl II p -i. '""'~"""W I" Jhn of bridal g'OWD8.
Public Health building, Santa And the traditional fabrics
An11. Dr . .., .. l'Lu it •~,. ... '!.. 1 are white or ivory peau de
be the Jtble or the P•rent .soie, saUn and aUk or1enu.
A program revolving around and Phy1lclan ln Tb e 1 e Few manufactW'tra memJon
Hat.9 and Their l{istory will Troubled Timf:1. the all-I ce be presented by P.trs. Eilee.nw-"-'""'""--"'""'"------'!!!:..!!!=:"'-lll::""-----
Wood, newly elected financial
secretary for Orange DiMct.
Ch;urn1an ~1rs. Ray Miller
will be assisted by the Mmet.
Austin 1\ILnette. G. R. Salmen ,
llnzcl f'urdcr, W 1 I t e
Thatchtr. Anlolnttte Wlklng.
Perry Good.,.,1n, Robert Irwin
""~1 °'(;~~.!1'f.:&1 woman 's Come to Ihle Chrl1t11n Sclene9 Lecture
Club will honor !he Junior 1MUISDAf, MAY 14. ' P.M. membcr~hip at the ;tnnual llNKI• Hit• k• .. 1, 2J1J ,.--.
I k I Co I H Sp•111•rt.l by
pol uc n mmun ty ouse Pint Cfllirc.fll .t Cllrl1t, k'*'i,.it, c.1 .. M"• Uil Thursday, ~lay 14, at noon . ._ ____________________ _
, I
Instant
Openings
and chaplain.
Awarda received include
first, hospital volunteer work
and preu; HCOnd, history
book and commwllty service,
and aped.al awards were
preeent.ed to Mn. Edward
Wlllon and Mrs. Spindler,
boepltal volunteers.
Playing for dancing will be :·
the Wamn Taylar Group.
J I. J UPHOLSTERY
Immediate openini1 art Mn. James Tucker will con·
MIA.NII IUALITY, INTlflrTY,
Sl ltVICI. CllAl'TSMANINI,,
WI ACCI PT CKALLINOll available for y o u u 11 t e r 1 duet her first meeting of the
betw t nd 5 Id In fllcal year at a p.m. Thurs-een 8 years 0 day, May 1• in Hyde Park
WI LIKI I UllTl,UL 'UllHTUll ~
lhe North HunUngtoo Beach ~ '42-9176
Cooperative Nunery SChool,,~M~o~b~lle~Esta~le~s~r~ecr~e~aUo~n~hal:l.~iiiiiiiii:iiiii:iiiii and reservations now areli
being accepted by Mn:. Robert
Berg or Mrs. Henry Duke.
A year-end picnic also ls
being planned for the 72
families now participating in
the program.
New officers were selected
at last month's meeting and
.serving for the coming year
will be the Mmes. Karl Foss,
president; Frank Coruteau
and Mel Keegan, v J c e
president5: MJke Towme~.
secretary, and Jack W amltl,
treasurer. .;> t.
Mothers' chainnen wlll".Jn--
clude the Mmes. Richard
Crandall, Berg, Howard Shif-
flett and Duke.
Ladies Au xi liary
Twice a monlh the Lodies
Auldliory to HIDJnitorl Beacil
Veterans of Foreign Wan,
P<>1t 7381 meets at I p.m.
Tile first Friday "' eadl
month they 11ther in Odd
Fellows Hall for a buslnes1
meeting and the third Friday
the aocl..Uze in variow loca-
tions. Fur t be r infonnaUon
moy he secured by colling
Mn. LeRoy Hermann at 53&-
3.all.
_111 ,.._
11r 11u-r
Styl17 Aocuracy? The
m1k1r'1 reputation? All
th1". M hor., I nd thlt .. w'r r.cu're looklng for TINO • Tlll11lmpl,Cllltlo
With r•Uow ot whrt. lop, 1t11 back, m1tol'lln11 brac1ret. ...
"-• ... ,,i .. ......
JJH M.tlet
~ ...
C1Ht9 Mfte ..........
"·---· ··-"••" ...... .....
••>·1101
OpM M••·· TINrt,, M . 'tfl t PM
lffkA~M....,Ck'1•
MODIL HltOI JI", I,....,
CAL.:ORIC0
0As RANGES
ULTRA-CLl!AN"
C110rlc llllra..Clun •If-cleaning 1y1tem Pyn:lly!letrty cle1n1
1he enll1'9 brolter/ovtn and the 111i'h0vabl1 panel1-1ld1t, b1ok
end bottom-of the Upper Own, comp111ary, smoo1tu1y, 1uto--
Nllc11Jy-Wi .... than 2 l'lour1. ,.ucu 01' CALORIC
ULTRA-RAY• o.u llANO~I ITAllT AT
Comfort·L~I Urtra·Aay 1nrr1·'9d
broiler glv11 m11t1 eh1r·tnoll
flavor, fa1t. tmoktl11aly.
DISPLAY MODEL CLEAR-OUT
1 ONLY 1 ONLY
'.
l
16" ... • .......... ,. .. -
Ce111fen.Lenl, UIM-1.., ltell·
.... ffil wl4"t ,,.,.... ,,.....
et, H .... , •• ...._
JI" C.MP•t -Glut ~-•• '
Clec.k eH l.....i TIMfi ~ .......
JUST $279.95
1 ONLY
II" Ce...,_t. 1_, ..... , ... ·-....... JUST $189.95
JUST $238.95
1 ONLY
JO" C•11,_t, htf .........
U"'-4a... hflet eM 0....
·-tr.llw • .,.tty.
JUST $331.95
' 411 I . 17th St. Cost• Mes•
Dally t.6, M••· & Fri. 9·9-446-1614
,.
<
I
T"-.... -----.... -----..... --.--.,...--.,...--....,,~.,...~ .................. -.,...,.,-_,,.,.,....,_,..,., -;-, ..... ..,,....,,, ...,,-.,-,. .. -.-.......... ..,,,..,,,,..,,.,., .,._ -,,-""tt"'"":""""":"'~":"'""--..-:---....-,--·-.-·-----------. -· -· -. . . --.. ~. '"'";'_.... .. ..,....._.
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUTT AND JEFF
Wf!AT?
JUDGE PARKER
• l PLAIN JANE
I 'WAS '21 WARS a.D AT
'TMI! TIMI!, MARA:IB) @:;JR
OVER A VEAR. \NE~
EXPEc:nNG A CMILO.
JKJW UOUl.WT THAT TOP
OFF THE EVENING ?.1 ··70 FIRST
~~ A BUS'FUP WITH CARYL.,
THEii TO /.b!VE SOME CREEP
STEA/. MY B~"~(,"£~.':--,--
PERKINS
By Tom K. Ryan
PIRT --iH~·
CHEAP, 601N6' FOR A L
E'H? DIRGf.!
By Al Smith
By Harold Le DOllx
R/GHr IW~ I lEFf '>Oil. ~ 8ABYl·•lr5 A M/GHTY DAh(
STREE"T; 7lJO/ 161/ESS !ADY
t.LICK 15 IA/ lfY COllNE/l
AFTEK ALL./
By Frank BagiMki
I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by ... POWER I 6 AC ROSS
1 Dull p~son
5 Hit
9 Stora ge
pl ices 1~ Alt :
Comb. for111
15 Eidst
Iii Femlnint
name
17 Tattered
clothing
18 ··-of
the Dog
19 John or
Richard --
.ZO Nauth;a!
co111mand
22 Got rid or
2~ Singe1s
2& Sierra -·--·
27 Be partl;il
loward
2' Old pro:
ln!oonal
30 WWII vtsser:
Abbr.
ll lllade 11ort
1\trilCliYt 17 Commllf!il)'
)8 Sharp
)9 .-and awar
40 Weilther•
man 's word
•l Sea bi1d 42 Bea Lillie
or Phyt1 1s
Ollll"I"
44 Fixed
cou1se
of llfr
t5 Heart
46 Opera star
47 Roofing
material
49 Certain
photo91"aph s
53 County fa ir
contestant:
2 words 57 Re lax:
2 wo1ds
58 Re11ion s
59 Mr. Sevareld
fll Mr. Ma111n
fl2 Burns
•3 Chinese:
Comb. form
64 Mooth
procedlng
current
one : Abbr . fl5 Heavy and
awkward in
11ppearance
bfl Kind of lily
b7 Rainier
or Robson
DOW"!
I Weight un 11
-2 De~1t
3 Instrument
4 Lice11tious
5Notlobe trusted
completely
fl Uttered 11n
untruth
7 Profit
8 Continued
ste11dfastly
9 Intersecting
line
. -N: •
I•
" .• .
N ' --" T R l '
·--..
--' -" .. q
"' ~
-~,--
N -.. ~ •
~
"
..
Yes terday's Puzzle Sol ved:
• ' 1 ll ( 1 (; • l •
' " .. t s .. 0 V l l
' ' 0 " " t r E N D
P l R o P(l [NfOR C (
II ~S 0 II T [ ~
-r.t f • 11 1 015 11
S (l Pa(V[Nl A I Q . ,,.,,,~~~
R i ii 111111[~1
. 11100( ~(.' O T
PR 1 N I ll.GE N
11 111 [A S T G ii.D o ii
' " S l OI ( l I II G 0
' ' S ( N fl [ l .. ( ~
5/12170
10 Thin k most l b "--
highly or Curlous
11 Comr across CVellowl":
12 Diminutive 2 words
suffi• 37 M11de 11
13 Emil and fortune:
let lall 2 words
21 Lacking U. 40 ---·-War
freshne ss 42 Fuel
23 Kind of 43 Petly th.el:
undergraduale Slang
25 Travel on 45 Elegant
snow 47 Wound
28 Easy ma1ks
30 Change on 48 5pookf proprr\y 50 Uselu
31 Musial or 51 --·-Areoas
Mikita Chilean port
3Z Aot ient 52 Ghosl M~dittt· 53 Muddle
ranean Po•l 54 Mountain :
33 Foimtr Comb. form
htaYy¥1'!'1gl1t 55 Equ1pmrnt
champ Sb Circul ar
34 Color metal band 35 Mame, bO Talk
for one amorously
' " " " I ,,
"
'" ' "
' ,,.
" A " JO "
' "
) .IQ -.. .. .. " " -. -" ..
. .,
MISS PEACH
I
I
f
! . .
STEVE ROPER
PEANUTS
. ---·----IT OOf5N'T TAKE MOCH
TO MA~E HIM HAPI'/,.,
Ll'L AINER
• ----..xniE'I .-&.....,,, ,,. TF<'l lO
GETIN ~
-I.Alf
IAlrrl!
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
Tutsday, Ml.)' 12, 1970 DAILY PILOT JG
By Al Capp
By Charles Barsotti
. '~ ~-"""'h~"""· ~· 01._;j
By Gus A11iola .... ---"""~------11 r'?'---""'=~-,-C,.\-,,~,,-~., ... ...,.-I-OO_r_aJ._~_V_O_N._'E_~-...
lO<J DIWJ'r .AFFORD !! Ol!C&>Jf TAIL f ~ WUP.5~ 11UJLIN& AR6U1lls ear "'°" Pt:JPC r
JWEN TRV 10 RV>/ !< FEAT/I#? tP'T,
TO ~r 1-<R.OM HtAA I'• • ,A.W,A,V Fli20M AiNY MORE/
HIM f .. ~ • i1
MOON MULLINS
L.Al>Y l!, l1P LIKE iO
COMMElll> '10lJ oN
!HE FINE JOB you
Al<E POIN"i FOi<
H.Al<TBUl<N
CON<SLOMEIY\TE'S., .
ANIMAL CRACKERS
EXCUSE f.le-IS
~IS \U.lt!Eii: Ol)l,J
-ro Dli:l~K-!"
By John Miles
.f./l
-,cu w~r-rr
TO HEAR
'>OUI< (GJ.11.'I)
HOROSCOPE,
ll<A 1
By Men
NO! WE CAPl'<~IANS WMO
WE!lE SORN WHl\.E MEllCUl<Y
, WAS Tl<ANSITIN« THl<OUGH
AOUA~US IN TI-4E F'IFTM MOU
OF VENUS ASCENDING, DOl'IT
Bel.IEVE IN THAT 5TUFf .•
By Saunders and Overgard
ves .. MUCM .\5 T PON'r ltKE
10 p,£ OLLED '~ATME-AD',
'KNOTMEi'.D', 'FAS>CIST P16:
A.tr.IP OTHER CMOICE TE6\~
OF ENPEA.RMENT!
.i"&i ev; Wi've 601-ro
TURN TM IS VOllN'"TER
OVER TO TME lUVEIJILE
AUTMOIUTIES !
By Charles M. Schub
• l
!
' t . ' ' '
{i
fKf STUNGI WORLD
MR.MUM
By Ferd Johnson
••
•
'
,.
. . -~-
DAILY PILOT Tutsd.11, M11 12, 1970
@liver Gives Up Pro Foothall to Be Hippie
~ ,,.. .•• = '
OLIVER AS A PRO •••
Five Mo1~e
And Aaron
Has 3,000
tmCAGO (AP) -Five more hits
i.bd Hank Aaron will reach the J,000-hit
rr'lilestone, but the Atlanta Braves'
superstar seems more entranced with
his home run pace this season.
· ''It's the fast~ homer start I've ever
flid," said the 36-year.old outfielder whc>
Js in his 17th season wHh the Braves.
His 14th homer ol the campaign -
11 10th-inning, ~foot shot against the
wind off rookie Archie Reynolds on a
3·1 count -gave the Braves a 7-6
victory over the Olicago Cubs Monday.
Aaron didn't get his 14th last year
until May 31 , when he hit one in Chicag'o
off Fergie Jeni.ins.
The triwnph Monday was· Atlauta.·s
12th in WI last 13 games and Hammerin'
Hank's seventh homer in the last 10.
Aaron also bagged three singles,
boosting his career hit mark to 2.995
.as he .ieroes in on the J,000 mark that
would make him the ninth player in
trlstory lo achieve ii. Ty Cobb is among
eight Hall of Famers in leading the
list with 4,191.
When Aaron attains the goal, probably
at Cincinnati this weekend, how does
tie-think his thoughts wHI go?
. "All I'll 1hink about is 3,001." he
says.
"There's no buildup of pressure for
that 3,oooth hit," he continued. ''It's
something that you know is going to
come. Anyway, I'm not ~ kind of
player who pressures himself. I just
want to keep getting the bat on the
ball and then I'll get my share or
hits."
Aaron 's home run total is 568. "'ilh
season highs along the way of 45 in
1964 and 44 in 1957, 196.1. 1966 and
last year.
"I think the reason for my fast start
Ws season ls because rm g~tting much
better pitches," he said. "The pitchers
are thinking twice before walking me
when l 've got Rico Carty and Orlando
Cepeda coming up behind me.··
Lineup Solid
For Saturday's
.95th Preakness
BALTIMORE (AP) -The lineup for
the 95th Preakness on Saturday now
appears solid with 13 starters represen-
ting 12 betting interests.
• Such a field would boo.st the .gros..s
figure to $201 ,llOO with the \\'inner getting
Jl49,300. Both figures represent record
payoffs.
: James P. Mills' Buzkashi JOined the
Jjneup Monday and is expected to arrive
pt Pimlico Race Course here later !his
week.
, Dust Commander and a1y Dad George,
one-two in the Kentucky Derby, turned
Jn sharp workouts l\1onday in preparation
Jor Saturday's running of lhc second
leg of the ll"iple crown.
·: My Dad George went three-quarters
ii( a mlle in I: 12 3/5 "'ith ex~cise
bOy Don Mcfarren. who reported the
coil "real(y wanted to run."
Dust Commander got his fir!t workout
aince arriving from Churchill Down~
Saturday. Mike BU!ingbam Look the
f)erby upsttter through five furlon gs in
1:02 t/5. Trainl!t Don Combl said he
,, ... piealo(I.
Robin's Bug, loth 1t Louisville,
Admlral's Shield and Oh Fudge aU wark·
ed out Monday. The tntlre Prea kness
F~ld is.eq:iected to ht stabled at Pimlico
by Thunday.
. · High Echt~ and Per90nality. both
owned by Mr1. Ethel Jacobi, are due
to arrive TuNday.
· 1be lineup tncludm:: Du9t Commander,
My Did Geor1e, SUent Screen, Native
Roralty, Plenty Old, Naskra , Admiral's
Shield. Oii Fud ... Robin'• Dug. Stop
Tlmt. Btlllutil. ,,.,....,allty and lll1h
Echelon.
•-
l .
Last of Life Savings (25c) Goes i1i Jukebox
NEW YORK fUPI) -Chip Oliver
dug into the right hlp pocket of his
pale green levis, pulled out a rather
lonesome looking 25 cent pie.ct, dropped
it cheerfully into the jukebox and thereby
spent all that remained of his life sav·
in gs.
The song.....he _selected was ..,. lnilant-
"Karma sung by John Lennon of the
Beatles. II left him feeling very good.
Also dead broke.
"So what?" laughed bearded, long.
h.iired Chip Oliver, 26-year-01d Oakland
RaidErS' linebacker, or perhaps more
accurately, former linebacker. "Money
v.·as the last hang-up I had and now
lhat I've gotten rid o( it I've never
felt better in my life. For the llrst --·.
time t really feel liberated."
To get this feeling o( euphoria, Oliver,
wbo used to play for the UniverSity
of Southern California, had to do a
couple of things.
He joined a California commune and
got himself a room in an old Victorian
mansion-witb-a-dozen-otheu. He also
gave $5,000 to the Messiah o( the com·
mune wh~ he became part or it five
mcnths ago, and a week and a half
ago he told Al Davis of the Raiders
to keep his $25,000 coolract because
he wasn't coming ~ no way.
"I quit pro footbiU because J felt
I wasn't doing an)ihing positive toward
making this world a better place to
live,'' Chip Oliver said before plunking
• •
his last quarter In that jukebo1 at the
Mustard Seed Restaurant near Sausalito,
Calif., where he sells organic foods.
"The world I was living in, Ule world
of making mooey, wak leading me
nowhere. You make money, you die
at 70 and it goes in the form oC in·
heritaoce. In pro loot.hall, L.was_ooly
a machine. 1 don't want tD be a machine.
I !imply realized I wasn't doing the
right thing by playing pro football. lt
wasn 't play, ii was all profit motive
instead I enjoyed playing football in
college but not in the pros. Thal was
too business-oriented."
Chip Oliver's I.Q. ist.ne of the higher
ones among thase in ro football, but
he has taken a lot o( ribbing since
he decided to join the so-called O{le
world family. Llke some J>eOPJe have
been asking hinl point blank whether
he has Jost all hls marbles. QI.iv.er will
di!!ICWJI it with yoo if you like.
''I picked up the name 'Loose Wire'
because I was trying to tum some
o{_ lbt.-guy.s oo..the organic. foods.,.'..'...Jle__
says, "and I know there are some who
question what I'm doing now but I'm
convinced I'm doing the right thing.
The main thing about the deeision I
made was that I didn't want to hurt
anybody.
"My mother at first felt t was slipping
out and 9he was kinda paraly!ed by
what 1 wa1 doing. That was at fir st,
!SH IDPPIE, Pace 17)
JD~~------~~ .............. ..,. ............ ..., ........... l -· ANO AS A HIPPIE
Cerdan Snaps at Scribe; Suffers lst Loss
NEW YORK (AP) -A snapping
answer and a hopeful queslioA told tbe
story of the American ring di!DUt of
~farcel Cerdan Jr., son of the late world
middleweight champion.
"I feel first of all that's a bad qut'stion
and a tactless one. I'll leave it up
to the writers wether or not I disgraced
my father," Cerdan snapped Monday
night after losing for the first time
in hi!! career. to Donato Paduano.
Then rising to his feet, with an unopen·
ed boUle of champagne in his harids,
Cerdan asked, "Over-all, what did you
think of me tonight?"
The writers applauded.
Cerdan's curt reply to the question
of whether he felt he di~graced the
memory of his father, his asking
reporters their opinion of h i s
performance and the applause stemmed
from the magic name carried by the
2&-year-old fighter -the name of a
man who became a legend in France
and a boxing idol in this country.
Cerdan, a stylist and not an electric,
:;\am·bang fighter like his father, fought
\l'ell. He even controlled ·the first part
of the fight, but at the end of 10
roW1ds in the Madison Square Garden
r ing the verdict was a close but
unanimous decision for Paduano, an
Jtallan·born resident of Montreal.
Both fighters, each at 147 pounds,
\\"ere bloodied at the end of the fight
before a crowd of 10,767 that saw Pa·
duano start slowly and then come on
CANADA'S DONATO PADUANO ON WAY TO DECISION OF MARCEL CEROAN. JR.
McLain Tells $$ Woes
Wi 1.s Just u Little Bo y Without Money Says Wife
t.Al\ELAND, Fla. (AP) -Denny
McLain \\·as a 116,00D-a·month baseball
pitcller for lhc Detroit Tigers last sum-
mer. Today ht•s an ullt'mp\oyed former
Jl·game "inner "living on an allowance
frotn Big l)addy in Cleveland ·•
Fat payrheek~ wlll aMain roll for
McLaln come July 1 Vi hen his .suspension
for assoc1at1ons \Yl\h gambling !lgures
is lifted. but Dcnn)•'s dollars won't -
for the most part -be reaching his
fre e-spending fingrr~.
"Mark l\f t{'ormuck bc('arnc (amous bv
handling thr profl!:-is1on;il /l\"eS of Ar nolit
Palm:r, Jack NicJ..lt1us and 111os1 of the
golf croy.·d," said McLain. '·Now he 's
got my life in his hands."
1'1cLain's money will 10 to
McCormack's Cleveland headquarters
and Denny, in turn, will gel an allowance
ror out~f-pocket expenses.
"Anybody \\'ho has bills (or me will
have to send them to Mack," said
McLain. •·1 have faith that he'll not
allow me to get in such lousy financial
shape again.''
Not only ha s the Joss of about $40,000
In salary hurt !he: Introit hurler. but
had invesunculli and his eagt'rness to
spc.nd ltd to a line or red figur e!! at
the bank.. ,,
-------
"It'll take me a lon1, long lime to
become solvent again:" he admitted. ''l
lost a big bundle investing in a paint
company and did some other foolish
things.''
~tcLain's wife, Sharon. said he "\\'as
just a yoong boy who had never bad
money before and enjoyed suddenly being
able to buy anything he wanted."
Denny doesn 'I have an airplane any
longer, he lives v.•lth a $9.460 lien against
hi~ D.::trolt property and jokingly say~.
"jusl nt.>out ti vcrybody here in Lakeland
must ha ve a lien against me,"
In the second half o! the fight with
fa ster. more accurate and harder
punching.
There were no knockdowns, but Cerdan
was shaken up in the Jut two \rotmds
as he went down to defeat affeil 46
victories and a draw .
"I have to say he's a good fighter,
better than people say." said Paduano,
who now has won all 19 of his pro
starts.
The main knock against Cerdan v.·as
he had beaten a bunch of unknowns,
Alter 16 ln1ai11gs
all in Europe, before coming here In
a bid to launch a drh•e to the title.
His father came to this country in 1946
and went on to win the middleweight
crown.
The Gartl en announced plans for a
rtmatch in September.
The fight , televised nationally, with
New York blacked out, and beamed
to FranCi: via satellite, grossed $91,601.
Cerdan was guaranteed $40,000 and Pa·
duano got $25,000.
Culp's St1·ikeout Record,
Garb Almost F 01·gotten
. By GIJENN WHITE
Oi ,,.. O•llY l'lltt Sl•ff
Ray Culp tied a major league record
for six consecutive strikeouts to open
a game and the umpires came out
dtes.'led like a rag-ta11 bar quartet.
Yet all those things were barely
memorable four hours and 14 minutes
later when the Angels finally ended a
Angel S lale
All ••f!le• Oft kMl'C C1UJ
Mly lt Attgtil vi. !OllO"
M1y U A1191l1 v,. llotlon
MIY 15 Ant1ell It 01-lflld
MIY U All9el1 11 01-l1ncl
7:U p.m.
7:1111.m. 1:1$ P.m.
1:U o.m.
!6·iili1ing show with the Boston Red Sox ,
2·1, before 6,984 Big A faithful Monday
nigh t (and 14 minutes of this morning ).
It finally ended when second baseman
Sandy Alomar dropped a looping fly
over the infield to score Jarvis Tatum
from third base. It was Alomar 's fourth
hit of the marathoo show.
Tatum had doubled and gone lo third
on Joe Azcue's fly to ri11ht.
Thus the Angels are percentage poinls
out of firsl place in the American League
\Vest and tonight they send Clyde Wright
against Jim Lonborg.
Culp (5-0 lifetime against the Angels)
ripped throu gh the first six batters he
faced in unbelievable fashion, striking
Why No Light?,
Asl\.s Ai1clretti
Mter S111ashup
lNOIANAPOLIS, Ind. (A P I -If ~1ario
Andretti continues to foll ow his 1969
script, he'll climb into his old Hawk-Ford
and v.•in the 500-mile race ~1ay JO at
the Indianapolis l\1otor Specd"·ay.
A universal joint let go and Mario
crashed his ne1v German· bu i 1 t
,.1cNamara-Ford ~1onday as he round ed
the northwest turn just before a thun·
derstorm broke. He bounced off the
inner v.·all t~•lice. losing his left rear
wheel, but was not hurt.
"I missed the outside wall and covered
every inch of the track," Andretli said.
"But the car spun and I tagged the
inside wall.··
He was disturbed later when told
several meehanics In the pits said they
saw sparks coming from the car·s righ t
rear wheel as he began the lap that
ended with the crash.
"If everybody saw sparks. v.•hy didn't
they turn on the yellow elution light~··
he asked.
Andy Granatelli, owner of the car,
said he planned lo ha ve ii repaired
before the opening of qualifications
Saturday.
Last year Andretti crashed In an
English Lotus-Ford when a hub carrier
broke a few days berore the start of
qualifying.
He suffertd facial burns but dro\'e
his No. 2 car, the Ha"'k, not only to
the 500 victory but to the U.S. Auto
Club's national chan1pionship.
The II aw k, oonslderobly remodeled,
con be readied again quickly .
A twin McNamara c:lr Is lx'ing shipped
frorn Gern1any but probnbly \\'ill not
arrive for lhe first or l"'O "·cekcnd~
of lime trial&.
them all out lo equal !he major teagu!
niark for that rather unusual category.
-consecuti\·e whiHs to open a game.
The string came to an end, however,
in the last of the third irming when
the No. 7 man in the lineup -Jay
Johnstone -grounded out to first base
after running the count to 2-2.
Culp departed from hostllilies in the
eighth when the Angels lied it up on
Billy Cowan's pinchhit.
The umpires were forced lo improvise
uniforms when their luggage was lost
in transit to Orange County. Most notable ·
of their attire was plate umpire Jim
Honochick ·s.
He was v.·earing an old Angels cap
long white stockings, a black three:
quarler length plastic or leather jacket
and blue-green trousers.
The other three umpires v.·ere without caps.
10ST01'1 CALll'OIUO,t, f~rhrtll 1llrhrlll
And•eWI. 2tl I 0 0 ... IOm&•. 711 I 0 4 I
Smi!h, Cf 5 I O Repcu, r! J o 1 I
Ya•t•:emlJ<i. H 5 0 O O Cow•"· ph I O l I
T.Conlllll•ro, rt 6 o 1 l o'"'· .. J o o o Petrocelli, n I O 1 a Frt'QOSI. u 4 o o o
Scon. 10 s o 1 a 1C.T1111m. p 1 o o o ... , ... ,_,JI> JOOO Von, pl! 000 1 MUrtok~. lD 1 0 0 O Doyle, p O O O '
M<>ns, c I O O O M-s1ersmi!h.ph ! o a o Cutp,p JOOOF!sner,11 000 0
Lvle. p o o o o L•Rocne, p o o o o
Scholleld, ph I D 0 0 JohnMlfl. II I 0 I !
Romo, II 0 0 0 0 S-1Cff. lb s 0 I :0
II Conigli•ro, ph I 0 0 0 S11.-,roo, ID I 0 0 'it
Brett, 11 I D 0 D McMullen. Jh 6 0 2 0
J011n1tone, cf I O o o
Ee>•"· c J 0 1 0 J .T•lur1. d 4 2 2 q M11r~hv, p 1 O O O
Rul1,11n 000 1
A·cue.c 4010 To•~·· >O I 6 ' To!~I• .S6 1 14 2
flo1·on OO'J Olli 000 000 000 o -I C~li!ornl~ OOJ ODO 010 OOJ 000 l -t
E -Alv•t~d<>. Eg•n 01' -B ~1!0" !. Cllllorn!1
J. LOB -8o•lon 8, Ci llfornlf 16 ~B -Re1101.
JohnJon. J. Tatum SB -Srnotn. S -AIOITllr 2, Rull.
" " • " .. • • (u,p 1 Ill ' ' ' ' • Ly1e 1·1rl ' • 0 ' ' '°~ ' ' 0 • • ' £Ire!! IL.0 71 J l/J • • • ' ' Murl)lly • • • ' ' ' 11:.T•tum • ' 0 0 ' 0
Oovle ' ' 0 0 0 ' Fisn•r " 0 0 0 ' • l 1 R0<.ne rw.1 01 . ' 0 0 • 0 • .. -c ~o ll•l~ -Oavl• t.me 4.14 . ...
leM~n~t -6.1~4
Do dgers Host
Astro s T 011ight
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los
Angeles DOOgl'rs, sporting a four-game
11 Inning strenk, a potenl collection of
bats and one of the hottest third basemen
in the business. plRy Hous\01,.s .Astro.•
here tonigl1t in tht opener of a six-game
home stand.
The Dodgers \\'ere idle J\londay a~
although they fell oot of a S«'Ond·place>
Dod9er S lnre
.,
... II"'" Oft kl"I C ... J
M8~ 11 8:3:-:'"' v1 10111!on 11 ..,__ MIY lJ =:"' v• f,Wl\Ol'I 1: •:M. a:: u ~ ~ ~~~ ~~:~::i~ ~: Ht;
tle with Atlanta in the National ~n~
\Vest, they still edged within 41111 g
of fronl·rwming Cincinnal.J.
The first-place Reds lo~t 4·! tQ,
Pitlsburgh but the Braves look over
sole possession of second with a ,7-\
victory over Chicago.
Los Angeles ls slated to send y
Alan Foster, 2·2, against J im flay il·J
ur Don Wilson , 0-0, of the Aslros. ' ..,
Billy OraharkcwJtz Is holding dowlf
thl' hot corner f(lr th<' Oortger~ ;ind
doing it superbly for n 24-year-old -witb
n f'1!al nf 60 gani"s in the m:i]or leagues
26 of then1 this ) car. '
r·------------------------,-------------------------·---------+Wft fi•--·-·---------..---·---------·--• •---•T--• w ---~·---·---,.-, .... _,.
10-0 Victory
For U~I,
Nichol son •
By HOWARD L. HANDY
ot lllt ~llr ~Utt t11tt
1'hree games remain on the schedul•
but the UC Irvine baseball season is
complete for all intents and purposes.
. T~ Anteaters, behind the superb
pitching cf Dennis Nicholson, thoroughly
trouneed cross-county rival Cal Sfltt
(Fullerton) Monday afternoon, IG-0, at
the losers' field .
The victory brought the UCI season
record to 31-lG-2. NCAA Western Division
officia~ will meet Wednesday night to
deternune four entrants in the regional
tournament to be held in Sacramento,
May 19-22.
The three remaining Anlcater games
are scheduled out-of-state. A single game
In Las Vegas Friday and a doubleheader
Saturday in Cedar City, Utah.
Chapman, the leading contender for
a berth from Southern California, plays
Fullerton today. Chapman is 40-11 for
the year .
San Fernando Valley State, leading
the CCAA at the moment, has a 31-17
record and is 13·4 in the conference.
Tt has a doubleheader today with Cal
Poly (Pomona) that could determine
il! destiny.
In Monday's game at Fullerloo.
Nicholson scattered fou r base hits over
the nine innings. No Fullerton runner
went beyond fir st base and a double
i>lay eliminated one of the four. No
walks were issued and the Anteaters
played errorless ball.
Catcher Mike Sheline extended his con·
secutive at-bat hilting streak to ~i:c
before grounding CNJ.t in the seventh.
He was 3-for-4 In the game. along with
Nicholson. Sheline had a double and
a triple and drove in two runs. In
the last fi ve games, he is 10-for-21.
a .476 clip, and has brought his sea.iOn
average from .169 to .244 in that span .
Nicholson is now 9-2 for the year
an<l has brought his e.r.a. do~·n to 2.43
in 108. 2.'3 innings, second only lo Dave
\Vollos (12-1 ).
Tom Spence, slugging first baseman,
had an earlier streak of six consecutive
hi~ over a tw1>game span. He was
!-(or-5 Mondsy and in the last six games
has brought his average to .329. In
that time he ha3 JS hits in 26 appearances
at the plate for a .577 figure .
Young Kevin \Voodrow. the Anteater
batboy and son of coach Gary Adams'
secretary, was hit in the face while
attempting to field a ground ball during
batting practice. He will exhibit a black
eye to school mates today. X-rays showed
no serious (jamage and he is expected
to be on the team bus Friday.
Every member of the Irvine starting
lineup had at least. one hit during the
Fullerton game.
UC lnlnt 1111 F11tltrt.11 Ill
"~rr••· !I l\n~rlOll, If
SYkOtl. 3b
Crt lt . t i
S9ef!Ct. tb
S11ic1. rl P l11!trd, oh
S9tnilll, rl
H1n1itn, H
Grttn,..1v. l'b
Sl'lell,,., t;
NICrt<)l!O'I, •
tlC lr\lh'>t
F11Uer1011
•-•hrlll •'rhrt>f s ~ 'o MtGtrrv,cf 4 o'
i o111Ro1e111.l'b •oo J l10 Coal<.:Jb 101
J l 1 l Rld\1 .. hon, lb l O O
5 021Follmtr,rl 3 00
l0 1 1 NorlOl'l.lf 10 1
I OOO H1mm,p 000
1oe os1ncl\f1.,ph 100
5221JtUt,P 1100
• 1 l O Mc:Ctrl"f, u l O II
1 l 2 P tlmtr, c J 0 0
f 1l!Gt\114'i P 100
W19ner, • 0 0 0 0
Wtr1119,tf 10 01
41 1n ,, I Tot<h lO D ' 0
$c1r1 ~., l11•l11tt on o!Cll 110 0-10 16 o
DOO 000 000 0-o 4 I
CIF Pairings
For Small Scl1ools
CIF playoff pairing.5 have been releas-
ed for AA and A classification baseball
and AAA tennis.
The 4-A and 3-A baseball and large
schools tennis pairings are expected to
be released Wednesday.
}(alella Hi&:h of the Orange League
ls the only Orange County school in-
volved, the Knights hosting Royal Oak
or Workman in tennis.
AU first round aclion begins Friday.
··rr" i,-~;~,J/, c.~·~i::~~~~~' 8ioomln;!On II 8rtwi.-, or El Cetttra to ti. Hitt!·
H •I LI Pllffllt W!hon • Ptt8lle ... Palv •I 51. ~lll!Yltllil C1t9 11 COl11 or St. Jo~
Ftlltl 1101111 •\ ilm!NHNor ~~·!.'~'::.,.. .... Vtlln Chrlu11" ti El1IMrt ~""'Ill ti 1ll11ttr!t
I mren at Ao111n1_• ---r:nn.
911lloc> ~ ti Arrovo Grtnd' M1yl1lr 11 Mon'-"' or Ptllr Noiltr lh..:Mr ti St!llt Pt11ID "°"'' Ot1i: « Work~ll IC~t9ll1 "" Jltfnio 11 l!lwn Nori~ Mot!Y! le 1t Me....i « o.e111111
\'k!Or Ve!ltV ti i\11111
Ptttlltfll Polr 11 HtN t td
, ---.. -----·~ ...... ....., .... ,.__. .,
I
•
Irvine BBO Chat1apion
Steve Christiano of Fountain Valley leaves Santa
Ana Valley's John Southwick and Corona de! Mar's
Nick Rose behind him as he wins the 880 at the
Irvine League finals. The Baron winner was given
a 1:55.7 mark ror firs1. one tenth off his seasonal
best of J :55.6. Southwick was clocked in 1:56.9 and
Rose in 1 :58.1.
OCC's Powell
Second Tea1n
Ail-Conf erenee
Cerritos College, placing six players
on Ute first team, dorrtinated the all-South
Coast Conference baseball unit, selected
by Orange County sportswriters.
Orange Coast College's Billy Powell
was placed on the second unit at a
utility position.
Cerritos first baseman Tim Steele v.·a~
named the circuit's top player and Wally
Kincaid, also of Cerritus, was selected
as the conference 's top coach.
AU.South Coast Conference
First Team
Pos. Player College
l~teele Cerritos
2~taggs Cerritos
3b-Gerakos Fullerton
SS--Hernandez Cerritos
OF-Potter t.lt. San Antonio
OF-Diggle Cerritos
OF -Balaz San Diego
P-Vaudreuil Cerrtios
P-Brunell Cerritos
C-Bielanski Fulerton
Util-Barnes ~1t. San Antonio
Sttond Team
Fullerton
Fullerton
lb-Turner
2b--t.taas
:lb-Odom
SS-Coronado
OF-New
OF-McManus
OF-Molina
P--SnUth
P-Minton
C-Musick
t!til-Powe\I
San Diego
San Diego
Fullerton
Mt . San Antonio
San Diego
Mt. San Antonio
San Diego Mesa
Cerritos
Orange Coast
Av~.
.420
.333
.320
.384
.:r>...1
. :ioo
.:ioo
7-1
>-0
.:160
.<00
.325
.325
.323
.37fl
.325
.327
.38.t.
4-3
Ii·:!
.213
.426
--------
State JC: Champs
Fresno Loses Three
Top Offensive Stars
JuniOr college football programs vary
considerably from one year to the nexl
and two-time defending stale champion
Fresno is no exception.
The Rams defeated Fullerton t23·!1l
ror the large schools championship at
An aheim Stadiwn last fall .
And. winning coach Clare Slaughter
is optimistic for 1970. "Of lhe learn
that played in the championship game.
hair of them were freshmen . And oul
of 22 starters, nine were freshm en."
J le admits lt will be tough replacing
MOWAAO MANO'f
HOWAH.D
llANDY
Mike Rasmussen, Chuck Davidian and
Vic Lamanuzzl, offensive stars with the
team .
Rasn1ussen was the passer, Lama nuzzi
the runner and Davidian the pass re-
ceiver.
So, area schools can breathe a bit
ea sier knowing that the bulk or the
offense v.·ill be missing from Fresno's
1970 team -If they reach the playoffs.
"Roman ls willing to work and sacrifice
In order l.o Improve. 'I
* * * lt wasn't too man y years ago that
staid baseball officials laughed at Bill
Veeck and his many promotion ideas
in Cleveland.
But, it isn't that way any 1nore and
lhe sport ·is becQming more and more
dependent on gimmicks and giveaways
tu ge l the rans into the stadiums across
the country.
A crb'A•d of 36,353 showed up at
Anaheim Stadium Saturday for Bat
Night, more than double the figuie that
reported for a routine game Sunday.
The Angels not only staged the only
bat night promotion in Southern Califor·
nia this year. but will continue with an-
other exclusive Sunday, June 7 when the
annual ,Angels-Disneyland Fun Day is
staJied .
Tickets for l}}is one are now available
through all Angel ticket outlets on a
bargain basis. They are priced at S7
and $6, depending on \\•here you sit
at the ball park, box or reserved level.
The Angel game will be with the
Cleveland Indians with action getting
started at I o'clock. Following the game.
a mass migration to Disneyland wi ll
take place. It is hoped the Anaheim
Police will have Katella open, perhaps
on a one-way basis for an hour afler
the game, to get the crowd to Disneyland
around 4.
Tue1day, MlY 12, 1970 DAILY "LDT 11
Trading Begins
Key Players Still
iWith Champ NY
NEW YOR.tC (AP) -Th~ trading Kei1y. The league ref~ to dlaclotie
began in the N"ational Basketball Assoei.a· the order of the select.Iona but the first
tion almost be/ore the league's fourth two choices of each expansion club were expansion draft in five years had ended. ·More deals were in the offing today released and the remaining 2'1 picks
as the New York Knicks. newly crowned later were made public in three groups
~NBA.champions, SUI! wooder«IJ1ow:4.1~-'"!-!nin!!!•!,·_
escaped Monday's selection by Buffalo, Buffalo, which had the first 11eleetion,
Portland and Cleveland without losing apparenUy picked Garriott, r°'lowed by the key players.
'lbe runnerup IA! Angeles Lakers Ray Scott of Baltimort.
weren't so fortunate, however. 'lbe Portlaod, which Jeiected 1 econ d
Laken unexpectedly left rookie guard throughout while Buffalo ind Cleveland
Dick Garrett, a starter. unprotected. rotated, chose Siegfried and LeRoy Elll s
Buffalo quickly grabbed him. of Ba!Umore.
'' r was really surprised to see him available," said Edd ie Donovan, Buffalo's Cleveland's picks were Luther RackJey
general manager. "He's 1 young player of Cincinnati and Walt Wesley ol Chicago.
and I thought he had done :well for The Knkks, Lakers, Boston, Chicago
the season and in the playoffs." and San Diego each lost three players,
Buffalo also selected vteran Bailev the other established clubs two apiece.
Rowell from the Boston Celtics. Howell Buffalo appears to have the maklnp:
was then dealt lo Philadelphia for of a fine backcoort. In addition to Gar·
forward Bob Kauffman and a future rett, the Braves have Mike Davis,
draft choice or a player to be named another rookie obtained earlier in a trade
later. from Baltimore, along with Herm
Another Boston veteran, Larry Gilliam, Fred Crawford and Em Bryant.
Siegfried, y,•as one of P o r t I a n d ' s
top picks and the Trail Bla:eni promptly
traded him to San Diego for guard
Jim Barnett.
The NBA eooducted the draft in secret
tn the .offices ol Commissioner Walter
HIPPIES ...
1Coatiaued from Page 111
hut she Is an intelligent \\'oman and
she finally realized what I was tal king
about. My father reacted a little bit
also. He didn't want me to make a
mistake I'd regret, but I think I 1:on·
vinced him, too."
All .possessions are held In co1nmon
In Chip Oliver's one world family . and
all incomes pooled. Oliver gave up all
tie had when he joined.
"All I really need to live is to give.''
he says. "Everything I need 1'11 gel.
There is no fear in our family. We 've
found tbe plan. Instead of projecting
negativity we project klve. Look at 30me
nf those demonstrations you're seeing
all over now. People are terrified.
There's tot.al fear but there's no fear
in our one world family because we
ire not involved in any kind ol cimflict
or competition."
Oliver says it is "impossible" he'll
ever play pro football again.
"Nothing's impossible." he quickly
amends the statement, "but it's highly
unlikely."
·Al Davis tried tn get Oliver back
in the fold but couldn't. He said he
didn 'I think his young linebacker was
doin g the right thing.
"He tried to make me fee l a litlle
guilty, as if I was deserting them ,''
Oliver says, ''but I didn't feel the need
to defend myself. I to ld him ( was
more conce.rned with what was happen.
ing to the world than with what was haP-
pening to me."
Some of Chip Oliver's teammates with
the Raiders call him Loose Wire and
all that and the wey he has picked
to renovate the world is. well, let's
say, rather unorthodox. but ail hi~
answers, aren 't exactly haywire.
Oliver was standing there listening
to the jukebox in the restaurant, for
example, and a guy asked him whether
he might reconsider some day and maybe
come back.
"To what?" Oli ver inquired.
"To conventionaJ society,'' Uie guy
said.
Chip Oliver kept listening to the record
and smiled.
"I don't know if it 'll still be around,"
he said.
IUP'P'ALO
0.:;k G1,,1n, L~ All091ftl lit•'!' lc:Dlt. •1ltl• rnort: 8itl Ho>l<l'I, Wtw v.,.;,; OOl'I IMy, New Vtrt: ••l't1 Mo·-11, 8oiten; Frtd Cr1wlonl, Mllwei*MI
Htrm Gllll1m, Clnc:lnt11tl; G-vt WlltOn, Pfll1,._
lltlJlllO.< Emmtn. l ry1nt. aot.ton1 Mike lWlft. LOI
A11119les; P1111 LOl'lll. O.trotl.
l"OllllANO
Lero1 £1111, 8•111rnort; •·lt rry Sle'lllrlld, ••·
1on: l!kk Adlimtn., San Dltoer Ed Mannlftl, Clll•
c190; Dorie 111 .... rtr, s .. 111., Jtr•' Clltl'rlbtrl, '"°'" ~I~; S!tn McKtnJlt, Pr.tnlll; Otle Sd'llutltl', II"'
Fr1nc:itco; ~ ..... Hflltl, Phllacklpflltl ''' ltlltl'o
51n Diego; J" KtnMlly, Sttt11t.
CL•VlLANO L1111'11r ll:1d<lty, Clnc:lnn.ltli Wiit Wttlly, Ciiio
<:l!IOi Bot>ty 5ml11'1, S.n OlegO; JOIWI Wtr,..,, We•
YO<'ll; 811!cll e .. rd. Alllllllt; McCoy Mc~ ..
O.lrolt; Ltn Cht-11, MU-W;tt: Jolwly E11111o
Lot Anqefe•; 80b Lewlt. S.n FrtncLKo; Clofl Ohio
illl1n1t; Lov P11et1on, Cllh;1g11, ~·T•l<ltd 10 5tn 01'90 lor Jim ••mttt.
Area Drivers
In Fuel Drags
At Raceway •
Orange Counly lnlemational Raceway
\\'ill play host to thirty top fuel dragsttr
drivers in SaLUrday's feature event.
A fat purse of $4.200 will be offered
to the thirty drivers in the 16-car field.
Qualifying begiru at Z p.m. with driver
presentalions at 7 and racing a halt
hour later.
Three Orange Coast area driven are
among the jop perfonners who will be
competing in Saturday's big event.
All.Pro champioo Gary Cochran of
Fountain Valley has enlisted for h
first top fuel contest at OCIR since
the All-Pro finals in March.
Another Foun tain Valley driver, Loll
Baney, will join Dana Point's Don Enri·
quez in the talented field.
The area trio will . be gunning for
Winternationals champion Larry Dixon
of North Hollywood and Bakersfield win-
ner Tony Nancy on the rosin-treated
OCIR track surface .
The final runoff of the Ford High
School Scholarship Drags will augment
Saturday's top fllf:I competition. student.
from LA County champion Arroyo wW
face Orange County winner Valencia.
At 9 a.m. Sunday, AFM . grand prix
motorcycles and sidehacks will begin
1.1·armups for their road races which
are scheduled from noon to 4 p.m. at
OCfR.
Bob Noice of V11n Nuys won Saturday's
combo eliminator feature despite the
fact he could not muster a good enough
elapsed time to qualify for the eight
car field . .
Noice entered the first · round a~ tin
alternate to Enriquez, who broke down
during qualifying. ·
Big Salmon Catcl1
A 151/:-pound silver salmon was caught
recently at the Newport Harbor en-
trance. Katsumi Ikeda ol Garden Grove
snagged ttie fish \Vhile skiff fishing.
* * * Tim Steele, first baseman for Cerrltn111
College and mod valu1ble player in
the South Coaat Confertnee. I' the sfln
ot James Steele, 1 former grid slar at
Compton HJgh Scbool and Junior College.
Major League Standings DEAN LEWIS
Catching salmon in these waters i~
a rather freakish event.
Don Von Gerdern of Corona del Mlr
and Pab"ick Healey of Costa Mesa got
in a bit o( fishing recently while at
La Paz, B.C.
Healey caught an U-pound marli n
while Von Gerdern caught lwo roo~1erfish
and fiv e pampano.
Young Slttle is one of lbt hottest
pro~peelg in the area and will un·
doubtedly ht 1elected early at the June
drarl meetings co nducted by tbt major
lta1ue1.
* * * When the Western Intercollegiate Ro"'·
Ing championships are staged in Long
Beach this weekend . UC Irvine will be
in a heat race with fou r teams it h<i"
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division w L Pct.
Baltimort' 21 8 .724
Detroit 15 13 .538
New York 16 15 .516
Boston 14 14 .500
\Vashington " 16 ...
Cleveland 10 I! .385
\\'est Division
1\finnesota 18 • .6'7
.Angels 19 IO .65.I
.,.,L srlCIALS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eut Division
GR w L Pet. GB m~m1 TltAI!
Chlcagn 15 ·12 ,5;11
51~ New York 14 t6 .467 COROLLA 1970
' Pittsburgh 14 t6 .467
6'~ St. Louis 12 14 .462 • Philadelphia 13 17 .433
1111, Montreal 9 19 .321
\Vest DlvJ1ion
£,:incinnali 23 9 .719
Atlanta " 12 .600
17 ti .59'
Diablos Pi~k Coa~h
1 nlready defeated this season. The fifth
oppone nt lost to one o( these team.o;
which should make the Anteaters heavy
fa vorites to reach the finals with a
rir!!l heat victory.
Oaklanrl
Chicago
K11nsas Ci1y
f!.fllwaukee
"' 19
10
10
" .467 517
17 .414 7
18 ,357 ~I~
20 .~1 ,, '
Dodger1 • San Francisco I!
Houston 14
San Diego 14
16
17
It
.500
.45%
.424
$1853 +To.&L:<.
All OtHr M94M I• ,, ....
Marll l r-.Hll•• rtck•,-L...t c ... -..-c.,-
BILL CROW
,
Mission Viejo High School has its third
track and field coach in as many year~
wilh Bill Crow taking over the reign!
for the 1970-71 campaigning.
Crow replaces Olenn Dill, v.·ho'! resign.
eel to assume the role as head of the
athletic departmenl.
The new Diablo mentor. 27, has bc<?n
al Mission Viejo 11ince 1968 as an assis-
tant football coach.
He was the varsity track coach at
Orost High (Fresno) for three years
v.•here he also tutored basketball and
football.
He letttred as a halfback al Cal Poly
(5an Luis Obispo) for lhrtt ytars 11fter
A successful t.our al Santa Barbara lil11h
where he was a four.sport lettcnnan.
He \1·as named most veluAbl~ ~lhlcte
al Sanla Barbara in hi~ stnlor year.
Crow resides in Mi!!lon Viejo.
The Anteaters open the comrelition
at Long Beach Marine Stadium against
L.oyola. Stanford, San Diego State, UC
Santa Barbara and St. Pi.1ary 's.
University of Washington is the o\'erall
fa\'orite despite a close loss to UCLA
r«.'Cntly .
* * * \Vhrn Rom1n Gabriel flrtt dnnnrd pre-
resslonal foo~ tors. people used tft
rompart him 10 t stab I ls lttd
quarttrb1cks. These days It's the otber
"·ay around. Now Ule quarterbacks are
l11mpared to him.
lie 11 • sophlsllcated cralt.smitn nnw,
a lnng way from the shy, oncertlin,
aawkv rookie from Wllmln~lon. N.C.
who flr11t madt tbt Rtm l(:ene in 196%.
Some of the -accoladeit thro"n hi!1 w~y
lhtl!t dliy1 Include, "Best In lhr:
NF'I.'' .. , ."Best dityr nhead" .... "A
1tylr itll his own."
C6"cb George Allen Sil)'~ of Gabriel,
M .... 1v•1 llltul'1
•""Jell l, 80111111 1. " 1nn"""1• ~•w Votk S. Mllw•u'"' ,;, ti•, (hicetc t , Oe!roll s °"'• ,,,.., .. Kl'INl!lell
TM1y•1 Otlftfl
Wtolll119'°" !C11un1n 1·3) •• 0-"l•lld !OobMlll 1 •I, llkrr>I'
Cllluto fJ11111kl l·1) 11 Of'l•O~ {Ctill 1·11,
11'9M
8tl1lmott (Cutll~~ )•)) 11 Ml"""'°fl (Ptt•Y
)-IJ ni.M
Ken'"'' Cftr !ll11tler 111 11 Cleveltlld IMao!'t J J) n11111
JS) N;i;,Jorl: IPl+.f'JOft ).l\ 11 Mllwtvltt<! (ltr11111•
n1<111~''°" lLonbort 1·1! •! Antt11 C'Nrl!!M 4·J),
M~IV'I lttWll•
Monlft•I l, N.w Yon: O M. Loult l, f'Mlallflof'li. I
illl1ntt I, Chi<;"° 6, 10 lnnlntl PlltlOutth l, Ci!>cllllltll I
S•n Frtnc:IKI 6, Stn Olffo !. 14
Oft!r ttmn 1cl'Mtlu1N.
,..,,.,., Ottnt1
IH1n•1 IJtrw., ).U •I C"k-l"9!1?mt11 4.JI
Pithburt" (lltlt J-lf 11 Cll'IClllnl!I ttoWrrl"
... ti. nlthl
l'h!llOttpl\i. (!llMI 1·1) II SI. LOll•I l•rlltl 1·1),
11llM I
MGnlrNI (Mofflol U) ti Nt,.. Ytlk (Stcledll ...
J.111 Flll'ICIKo ["'°''''°"' J·JI ,, Stn o~ (S.ntor1nl l·f), 11lt'tt
l'tolllltlll (Wll-.. 0) t i DMttn (Fetttr J.J),
"'"'"''
DEA.N LEWIS
1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
Servlca ind P1rt• for All Imported C1r1
Modern Body Shop for All C1r1
646°9303
(lran t c County's Largcsl and Most ~{odern 1'oyot.a and Volvo Dealer
VOLVO
1'70 DEMO
SAYE $570
t41 2 Or .. ,.e;,, ht•l•r. •·•p•14. !Ser.
•41401
U11D CAR sricrAL
1961 TOYOTA c.... .. H.T.
(pt, ltt Glo, ll•l1r, ..._oeal, ltnlttu "-•
~XOK »JI
$1 0 5
!.
I
• I
--·T --- - -- -r' -----. ..... . . ... ... ... . . . ..
.fl DAILY 'ILOf
STA.RS PLAY
AT A.NA.HEIM
LOS ANGELEs -The
Anterican Basketball Ass1fia-
tion champk>nshlp p I a y o f r
be1-n Illdllna and the Lo'
Anatltt ltars OPlftl Fridlf
at lndianapalls, a •pOkeunan
for the Stars announcld Mot1-
da)'.
Sunday, the seeornl game
1t lndl1n1poll1 will be n1-
tlonallJ ltlevlNd.
1bt cl&Jbe come lo AnaMim
Tuesdaf, l\lay 11, and al the
Los Anl<IH 5!>0rts Artn1 Fr1-
day._lll"l 12.
Collegi ate,
Prep Golf~
Net Scores
....
'\lwtlltr11 t•I (Ill~ CMlll.f!!:'"~" · Pn•r; 1r:l: ·1awr •tt. 0
1"dlw1c1w.i * ~ J,\~ IOWI 3r4 llldlv14wtl Wlrto
ntt n. 11. •
!I ,r.1"1t fOWI 1111 1nt1wl*t1I
w ·~· "9 IGWI J• ~. f'J' l'IWll (G'#l 6. M. Ml rll,.t1 !II I ,., 11.
FlllAll t"m tc0res : Golffll W~~I t lol, 1110 lilndll "!!1. (l'IN"IU t1', E11t LOI A1111ift ~ LA HlrMr 1.011. LI. Cl!f 1,011. s.u• c .. 11 c~..a11 i;r 1'0.o"!l''l.."·;;;;.,;;1:-.. ,._
~iNIE.~~~·
Morll't' (OCCI n . N-'"· l~~l·ii~·~:;~,~
·~i·r.: ... , •• "' -··-(1\ffftMni"fil II tf, .. .,. M ,
Atlln Ol 7l, -Ml. HDPklnt Ill 1l. Wllll 6-t,
$otln H l 75, "'°" 6-t.
-\" 76, "" •f. ,cutt~ ~.•14 II 11 ~ ,.~. 111"'U, ~lldtiuMI\ If:)
Olton !Sl ti, llUi~•• !11 ji . e~"!" 'r" ... A I'"" ] ... Allll' 1 (S It. ,Ill rd II . M1..-Um (Sl n, We .. 1 IE '2.
•1!11t<ll (211 (I) '""""'" VllllJ ltoblf"llOll !El 1l. dlf. Brown CFI 11Gl!11 Clil 11, lltl. ll:1nlln !Fl '1 it:~ti (II 7f, llft, ll:lltlln (Fl II, ....
Sch11lll IEJ ''· der. Alll mJ O"I '!. "5-0. ' KnJ!lht (EJ. 7t, llllf, Wll lllml ~F)
101, .... Hiii Ill 79, llft. tt1l11'1r111 f'l tt,
.J-0.Mlltil' hi IMI liJ ktf111Hr
Mllcti.il CM) WOt'I H.
Irwin CMI won "'4.
lllcll '"'/ -... 8.Cl1rli: Ml -M . $1rno (Ml -, ...
TMfth
UC lrt1l111 (II (I) (111...,111 ·-e1r1 C>'Ntlll !UCO ftf, Diii fl•~•n·
·-CC)W.M. Greto Jt~lwllll;I U.ICll Ill. 1'1wt ''""''"° ICI .. a. '-'· JltYt T .. t 11.ICt) •tr. Jattn 11.U·
lkltt !Cl M , 6-t •
._., "'''" (IJCIJ 111, Jtrrr l!dl1 lCI •t. •1.
• Cl'luc.t Ntcl'llfllf IUCll WOil bw ....
'ft11!1 ~ ,1ut M1!1r tCI.
R!c~rll Tripp (UCIJ cltl. Win l'trr.t
l~j ...... ......
' JtMM•l 11111 Ntcl'lfl'l4 IUCll 1111.
loherw'lort •1'1111 Cnlmff CCI •I, t•1. TM I •rlcl Tri_, !UCI) lltf. 1!&11 tnl
'''"' jCJ M, H.
Baseball's
Top Te11
I AlllAL'-'t ,01' , ...
It TM AIMllttM l'riu
llMll on• itt Mii.
AM•IUCAN LIA.I.II
l'tlrtf, Chi~ • Al I N
s,......,.,c11 11 7' 11 tt
I", ..-1111n, Ill f( ft II D
-...11c ... C~I 1, tf, 11 3"
A. J"""-, Cll " lit U .01 l"\MI .. , KC f( " 11 :M
011¥1. Min.. 11110 n ii l"ln-. Cl.... ,, ti t JI
M-lftl , (hi !J IJ t ti
0. J.lh..-, 111 1' tf, 11 31
Wl'lltt , M'I' 11 111 11 if
Wt!""· Mii )1 117 U J'I
MWll IU~f ~. l-ftw1,ll, W11l'll111ten. 111 J, ,..,. .
.i1, l1lll11"1Gn, 10; IC.lllebr..,., Mlnn1-
Mlf, t ; W1llon, MTIWf uktt, f l '1'11-
IN.lfl'l•I, lfll9", t 1 Mh'IC:l'llf, Cll111•M, ..
•w11t ••tltll 111
'#111111. #llW1uktt, !&1 Ollv1. M\1111•
. ttll• '" J , ,. .... .i1, l1tllmor1. 111 F. H-trd, W1llllfttioll, 25: AIYll,
Ml"~""'-• 24; W~flt. Nirw York. 2~.
.... lllMI ••
H A"'°"' Alll11t1, »i S. Wlllllmt,
Cl\lclto. Iii l'tt"ei, (l11cl1111~tl. ll;
Ol1ti:, 1111 ll'rtMIK .. .ft; McCovt~.
· Jin 'rtf'll:lllttl at
Guild Tennis
Winners Set
• ·~~~-~-~-;::-::;::;;:;::;;::;;~~;;;.:lr.=::;:;:;:;;::;:=.;::;:;:::;;;;:::::;;~;;:;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;; ........... ,... ... -----,.,. ........... --·-~ --. -,,,_ .. ____ _
I
Tuesd11, Mu 12, 1970
,, ... tr ll:ldl 11 ... n
President's Cup Wl1a1aer
. !Jm Lockwood (center) of Co rona del !ilar. accepts the Prealdent's Cup trophy
from Chu ck He.idbrink at Irvine Coast Country Club. The Corona del Mar golf·
er came from behind to defeat Biii Von Essen (right) of Harbor Island on the
first hole of a sudden-death playoff for the championship of the month·long
tourney.
New Wave M atador.s
In Bullfight Opener
A U-star Tea1ns
Ex panded Lo Ill
TIJUANA -Th t 1p-
pear1nce of Curro Rlver1,
leader of Mexico's new wave
of exciting young matadon ,
will mark· the: opening of Ole
1170 bullfight !lea!On htte tl 4
p.m. Sund1y 1t the dcr.mtown
bullring.
young!lter never had a poor
performance and crowned lhe
1ea1on with a corrida lhat
won ear1 and tail.
Allhough con1idered a
cla11lc styli&!, Rivera has
develaped a llamboyant swirl-
ing cape ~tyle labeled
1•p1ychtdellc11 by critics.
TI1e thi rd annual Orange
County North-South All-Star
Orange County baseball game
is set for La Palma Stadium
June 18.
The event, which pilo; the
best of greduatin1 hifh school
senior1 from orange County,
has been altered slightly to
provide room for a squad of
18 players and four alternates.
Joining Rivera on the open-
ing day card will be two other
youlh!ul matadors, A r t u r o
RuJi Loredo and Luis "El
Jerwno" Lara. 11ie trio will
race bull! from Valparaiso
ftalldl.
R.lvera , a sl!cond 'J ear
matador at .age 18, ha~ emtre;·
ed •s a le'ldlnl catldlda\e tor
t.he No. 1 'bi.Ill8ghter or M11-
IC(). Jn th~ p~t ye~ R:ivera
1;t\afed with eouritrymhn· Eloy
Cavazos the Jead in 1p-
pearances (Ml) ror the com·
blned winter-11ummer seasons.
Hts six ll)tlearences locally
la9t year introduced border
aficionados to Rivera end to
uhpttcedented sucttss. 'nle
• GOOOWR4g~~ers
2131 Sin Jo1q1o1in Hilla Rd. -Newport Ctntt r
~54
Congralulaliona/
Isl ander Ya chts wishes to extend t heir
congratulations to Don end Betty Mou
of Newport Beach, ownera of the fs .
lander 37 "Mossback," for their recent
win in the Newport to En1Gnede race.
"Mossback" finished first in the Pacific
Handicap Fleet to win the U.S. Pr esi ·
dent's Trophy over the other combined
entries.
The previous week, Mr. and Mrs. C a rl
Noecker, owners ·of another Isl a nder 37,
"Nocturne", finished a close second in
th~ Ensenede warm-up rece.
For mor• lnform•tlon on th• full I s l a n d t r lint of famlly
race boats from tht I t I t n d • r 2 3 up to the Bruc:t King
designed I 1 I a n d 1 r S S, c:ontact
SOUTH COAST YACHTS
-1100 W. COAST HWY .
NEWPORT BEACH
645-1133
WESTERN AERO-MARINE, INC.
tit N. HARBOR DR .
REDONDO BIACH
(213) 377-2002
Sf ARCHEST INC.
1150 HARBOR ORIV! NORTH
OCEANSIDE
(714) 772·4454
Late Rally
Come ts Defeat
• O s -
Jets in Op ener
Tht 00t11 M111 Comet• with a five run rally ln the
opened thalr 1970 non·le11ue bottom ot the el&hlh lnnln1
baseb11l 1chedule Sund1y with to tlrn their win.
1 74 vlolory over the vllltln1 Winning plloher Rick OOHgl
Houatoa JN at COtl1 Mesa's socked Ont o(. the two bl1
TeWlnkle Park. blow1 or the !Ming for the
11\e Comet•, third place boats with 1 double off the
litUftr1 lnl he -SOutllenrirtt-ttetd-fence-10 1core Din
Ctllfomla B11eb1ll Auocl•· DeHoog and Lee J!:v1n1.
Uon (Hml·proreulooal ) l11t Plnchhtuer Don Mc K • Y
year came rrom 1 1-2 deficit powered a triple later Jn the ' same fram1 to push acro11
Forfeit Verdict
Benefits CdM
'tlle wave or b 11e ba11
forfeits In the lrvlne League
Js at an apparent end with
corona del Mar Hllh c1plt1lli·
tn1 with one such win over
Loar a.
Sant• An• V11ley, alao
rumored lo be In deep water
over battlng pr1ctlce prior to
a v1r1lty tilt, wa1 vindicated
when It w11 leamfd that the
te1m In quutlon w11 not the
Falcont' v1rtlty, but a
freshman team that compete•
In Junior hli!h drclts .
teamm•lel Terry Tobia• and
Bob Dwyer wll.h the ded1lve
lallle1.
Ne•t action for the Comet•
Is 1:30 p,m. Sunday at
TeWlrikle Park 111ln.11t the
Pacolm1 Red1.
.rM'L ..->~~:· . .
}:. A·
'
~PSAJets ~hour
ootliehoor
to San Francisco!
7 am lo t pm. Both w1y1.
7·1·1·10·11 am·12 noon·1 ·2·3·•·&·8·7·8·1 pm.
Mort on weekend•.
Plus-fl jg his
emryliOur
on the half hour
to San Diego!
1115 em lo 10:10 pm . .Solh way1.
1:11·1:10·9:30-10 :30-11 :30 am· 12 :30·1 :30·2:30-3:30 ..
•:30·1:30-8 :15-8:30-7:30·8 :30·10:1 o pm.
More on w11ktnd1.
Why worry 1bout a reservation when PSA h:i1 oYor 160 flights a
d1y? Such 1n easy-to-remtrnber sC:hedulo yo'! can c1rry It
1tound In your head. Why remember low1st 1ar(I~? Or a!I )els?
Or ;real 1etvlc• to Oakland, San Joao, and Sac-
r1mtnto? Or that kids under 12 lly PSA (with
th1tr p1r1nl1) for half fare? Still want 11
,.11rv1tlon? Ju1t call your travel agenl
or wh1l1Jt1n1me alrlin••· PSA gn.e. ,OU e lifl.
Buv 3 Atlas H·P tires, get 4!!! tire free!
: (or buy 1 Atlas H·P tire, get 2!!!! tire~ price)
'"
un t1' rw1
..,111ru
It Tlli1
il'riu' t..:•
... , .. •m M•
flrtl
htl ol i flrt•
... hi 2• ....
Tiit '1 T•lt 1IN "t Pflu' r..:• "'"11"' nm ... f I •2.90 t 2 90 11 t5 11.tS ••• 'I.Oii .. ...
hU U .1$ KU
••• "" .. ~ .. ~ .. • ••• " U» ..
"" "" ..
nt.lL
'" ..
"' .~.
• '
STANDARD STATIONS
and participating Independent "
CHEVRON DEALERS
Standard Oil Company of California
TUESDAY
MAY 12
1:00 IJ lit: NM (C) (60) Jeny Dunphy.
Cil m H11ii~·lrinU1r (Cl (30)
11 C•n 111 r., Tllbf (C) (30)
Jtc:ll C.uter, Paul Wu~htU and
Morey Amllrrdam.
; D n. Mllrit cu. (C) (30)
\
C11nts \ndt.ioe All.lit Olckinson,
Cl\ff11t CIJl1i, Martha Raye, 1111
Ritt Broth•s •nd Dir1beth A$1\lty.
m Tt Ttl "-Tnitll (C) (30)
fl) Cilcllf Mtl!IMl (C) (30)
1:05 UiJ Hit ........... (60)
l :JO 11 9 {f) hi 5'11lo1 (C) (60)
(R) G90fll Gobel Ind ll)U Rilwls
1u1st,
0 @@ mJ Jltlia (C) (30) (If)
"Rom'° and Julia." Juli• firleb th1t
a bUnd date, .lofdan HtytS (Vine.
Howard), b llOI 15 militant 11cially
IS 3ht bllievtd.
0 Ollt-ltll1 SMw (C) (30) MOl'tJ
Amdetdam 1' spotlirtittd. o @rn muc ,...,. « n.
Wnk: (C) "1111 Mo.t" (mysttry)
'69--Georre Mallaris, J111et lti&h.
JKki AlbtrtlOfl. Cart Bltl, Edwtrd
G. Robill!IOll Jr., Lindi M111h. A
ftst·pic:ed story of ldvtnture tfld
intrip h1 Sin rrtncixo. (Rl
m D1rii1 rrost S11N (C) (90) "A
Frost fntiYal." JohnnJ Carson
1uasts..
Children's
Show Set
On Friday
The Scheherazade Players
or Orange County will pertonn
their adaptation of J o h n
Ruskin's classic fantasy ''TI1e
King of the Golden River''
Friday al 3:30 p.n1. at the
Westminster Library in the
Westminster Shopping Center.
The 45--mlnute show features
both live actors and "mup-
pets," designed by Ron Evans.
An original musical score was
composed by Gary Basin.
The play ~ directed by Don
Hayes, who promises "a
delightful diversion for both
youngsters and their parenl:t."
DAii..'!' Pll..01 St1U Pllll•
lutsd1y, May 12, 1970 OAJLV PILOT J 1J
3 Fest·ival Awards
Irvine Players Win
By TOM TLTuS
Ot t1M O.lb' .. 11111 ll1M
The brand new lrvine Com-
munity Theater is off to a
fiylng start.
In their firsl production
since the group's organization
two months ago. the Irvine
players captured thret top
awards at the So uth er n
California Tournament of One·
act Plays in Ri verside over
lhe weeke11d .
The Irvine entry -''Jlow
Tall is Toscanini?" -was
selectecf~as (hebeSt comedy
of the three-day festival . Its
two cast members, Jerry
Leland arxl Sharon Thread-
gold, were acclaimed
best actor and actress, respec·
tivey. The play was directed
by R. Eastman Dow.
Theuter Arts Association or
Riverside County with a eut·
ting from "America, Hurrah,"
selected as the best drama
of the festival.
The best au.around pro.
du ction was "Collage 70," ,on
original show written and
directed by Mark McQuoM1
ror the Atph:.i Psi Omega
players of Ca lifo rnia
Polytechnic I n s i t u t e or
Pomona. A special outstanding
achievement award w a s
presented--10 JanelL.C.ornforlh
of the Cal Poly entry.
Runners·up in the acting
competition were D o t t i e
Davis of J.D Productions of
Arcadia for "A Minuet" and
Jack Fisher of the Divinity
Players of Ontario for "From
Paradise to Bulle."
presented at Corona de\ Mar
High School's liUle theater
May 22·%3 and 29-30 on a dou·
hie bill with ·'Aria da Capo,''
directed by Tom Threadgold.
The first full·lengtb produetion
of the Irvine group, "Come
Blow Your Horn ," is schedul-
ed to open June 19.
D CLR-JAMES COBURN * & CHARLTON HESTON!
'MAJOR DUNDEE'-Part I
0 Sii O'C*ll MMit: IC) "Ma}M IJi8dW' Part I (dr1m1) '65-Ch•ri·
ton Huton, Ridlard Harris, Senti
B«1•. Jim Hutton, .limes Coburn.
In MIW Mllico lollowln1 tht Civil Wa r, 1 lonner Conftd«1t1 aipl4in
arid 1 Unicln Major art lorced to
ba1111 1n1ts apinst the Indians, lt1dln1 1 hundred trimin1l1 11-
ltastd fr\lm prison to help chast
1 $1'1'11• Indian leadet.
0 Dkl ¥111 DJt• (30)
ID Tiit l i1 Ytllty (C) (64)
fD TM CtnM!'lttivt Vlewptint (C)
el LI Constitudo1 (60)
'Mle players ha\'e bee n
presenting "King of the Gold-
en River" throughout Orange
County and Long Beach since
March 21. Friday's perform·
ance will be the 23rd and final
presentation. Tlaree's a Crowd
Among the five Orange
County groups entered in the
•tourney, only two ot~rs
returned with awards. Doris
Oonka and Richard Andersen
of the San Clemente Com·
munlty Theater were named
second runners.up in the ac-
ting com petition for their
perfonnanccs in "Memorial
Day ."
Other Orange County pro-
duclions entered in t h e
Rive rside tournament were
"Sara and the Sax" by the
Rancho Community Players
and "You Call This a Dude
Ranch?" by the Jek-Hyde
Players of Garden Grove.
m Tiie flillltstonu (C) (JO)
(D stir Trtll (C) (60)
@CJ) UC Evtnint News (CJ (JO)
fD W\ll's News? (30) "Ri~er Tr1I· lie #1." A comparison ol the old lltrnwhteltrl with lht fJVtlboats
a1 tod•r-
The Scheherazade Players
were organized in April of
1967. offering "The Wiiard of
Oz," an all puppet show . Pt1ore
recently live actors were ad·
ded. Young people from all
areas of the count y are in·
volved.
Lover s Steve Patterson and Jacque Sherill are
Adam and Eve and Bill Metcalf plays the unwel·
come visitor, the snake, in a sce ne from the Tus·
tin Community Players' production, '"The App!e
Tree," opening Thursday in the Tustin tli gh School
gym.
The Irvine Community
Theater·s prize wb1ner. "How
Tall is Toscanini?" will be
PlUl llST ACTIDl WINNll 1'8 Ci) CIS hws (C) (30) m,._.. (30)
e-<"l GJ Nws la tM lloulld (C) (60)
.IKt White, Alex O.l!itr, Gloria
Grw, Patti Beebt.
!l;OOQ9@ mNIC I.Uy Mn·
M: {!) "nl1 Lontly Paffflian"
(mptery) '69 -Htrry Guatdino.
Orin Jagef, 81rb111 McNair,
Joseph Cotttn. Ina 811in, Dini Mer-
1ill, Jae~ Clrter, Troy Do111hu1,
Sttflhtn McN1\ly, ftn11ndo Limas..
P1iY1t1 eyt LH Gonion (Gu1rdino)
uts out lo solve 1 murder afltt
he becomes • suspect.
0 l'llJbof Aft.tr Dirt (C) (60\
Edi• Mi ms. Bill Cosby, Lu Mc·
C:..nn, Ltd., The Grass Roots, Tony Randall, Robert Claf'f 1uest.
The players will hold audi-
tions for their su mmer season
Saturday. May 16. at 4 p.m.
at the home of Don Hayes.
1117 1 Endry Street, Garden
Grove.
Treacher· a Master
Of 'Elegant Insult'
A special judges· award was
presented to the Guild Players
of Santa Ana for their cutth1g
of '"Spoon River Anthology ." Peace Benefit ! 'lhe:JWmeqf I
,,io omc-... (<) <60l
II ..,. Alllft Sllow (Cl (90)
Sandler I. Youn&. P1mtl1 M1son, Louis Nye, .kJhn Codd1o 1u1st.
0 "Bii CU.1 Ct .. (C) (30) S11~n
Saint lames. Bill Dana. Alice
Ghostley 111esl. m My fMrit1 M1rtil11 (J O)
@CV PtrTJ Mnon (60)
@ (!) Hirnlltr-lrh1llley (C) (3 ())
fD ltlbln1 (30) ''T1bl1 C.nter·
pitct." An 1rr1n1em1nl combinin1 th1 ancient Oriental method of llowu 1rr1n1ina: 'with the Wnl em .,,.
9 Cf) Tht Mul'!sters (30)
IE Notlcitrl 34 (C) (60)
(D lMUt hart RlpOrt (C) (30)
Jack Lath am.
7:00 II CIS [Mnin1 llNS (C) (30)
Walter Cronkit1.
O wurs Mr line! (C) (30)
ID I LM LIKJ (~) m 1..t u.. Clod; (Cl 1301
~ (1) lrtndtd (C) (30)
m '"' tor ttta1t11 1101 1 19 (I) Trvtti er CoftMltutnc:U (C) mJ•• hi tllt 51111 (C) (30) I
al) Sl .... Mfttl Maril (SS}
(D nit Clrt (C) (30) .
!lil SPECIAL! TONIGHT! * Hear MASON WILLIAMS
Debut His Warner Bros.
Album, "HAND MADE"
ID NET rmw11 (Cl (90) "Mason W11li1rns: •A Gitt ol Sona." Music
p1rto1med by this [mmJ Aw11d winner and tl·thief writer for !ht Smother1 Brothtrs incluclts his ori1·
in11 comPosition1 "Classical Gas.~ "Cowboy Bockeroo," '\on1 Times
Blues," 1nd "J. Ecl11r Swoop."'
all fMtllfl (60)
9:l0 0 Qt Ci) Tiii C1Wtirno1 •nd I. I. (C) (30) (R) Alexis Smith 1u1.sU as
a girl out of Governor Orinkw1ter'1
fo111o!ttn past.
0 Jf..rs (C) (30) Barter Ward.
m """ (C) (30) 8111 Johni.
@D lilniCI J lmllu (C) (JO)
all INN la VtrdM (30)
Shows planned for the sun1·
me r include "My CI i en t
Cu rley," "Sambo or Do You
h1ake Your Pancakes With
Corn?" "Thuv1an h1aid oi
Mars," "Cinderella," "Indian
Captive" and a new pro.
duction of "The Wizard of Oz"
v.1hich will be presented in
the Mall of Huntington Cen(er
along with the "Scheherazade
.Follies.''
For information, phone 539-
7696.
'Take Me
By VERNON SCO'IT
HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) -The
art of the elegant put-down,
the grievous affront, is dead
in the United St.ate s ex~pt
for the ripostes of Arthur
Treacher, second banana Lo
Merv Griffin on his nightly
show.
Viewers are amused by
Treacher's abuse of guesl.S,
assuming he is kidding.
Englishman T r e a c h e r
definitely is not joking.
"Everything I say on the
Al ' S t air is heartfelt." s aid Oil g C Treacher. looking down a nOI 10,ool)~CIJ OO M;,.., <CJ (iOt · ·d bl I h I H•rf'f Re1soner and M1k1 Wallact. 1ncons1 era e engt o
B LB CLO beakish nose .
0 m Ntws (C) (601 y "There is no style left in
0 (fi) (I) m Mltc:llS Wtlby, M.D. the polite insult as practief:d
ICl (60) (R) "Lt! Emut Come "Take Me Along," the by Eric Blore v.·1th a withering over." A pollce w1ea111 lim lalst I k b k' h · information abGut his octupaOo11 musical version of Eugene 00 · or Y as ·1ng 1 s
10 Dr. Wrlbr in ~ to pmtect O'Neill 's "Ah \Vilderness.'' employer politely if he werP
7:JOllQl(.l)llfis1All Artttur W -hls ~-Pnor Rodri ..... i iuests. .11 be th (" 1 od 1· going la wear brown shoes tnr'• .-..nc:.-tlte Ocull frontier ,.... .w~ w1 e 1na pr uc ton th k
(CJ (60) Marr•ted by Arthur God· O I s,, (C) (60) of the Long Beach Civic Light wi a dinner pac et.
1111 and filmM at 1111 Oc11nic 111· Opera season. "Of course he wooldn 'I have
stilutt and SN Lift P1rt 11: M1k1· m Ma}w Adns (60) The show opens May 2.2 for asked that of C. Aubrey Smith pu~ Point on lh• H1wali1n Island Q) lllAll (30) two weekends al the Jordan for fear of suffering a caning
of Oahu, the prorr•m u.plores the el> rtltiwll Mtlku• (60) on the spol."
111 1nd .. 1i11 from tht P.i:ific High Schoo! auditorium, 6500 On a recent Griffin show
wrftc:e to its Uoor, and it ex1m-10:30 fl'l Sptculation (t) (60) "The Glo-Atlantic Ave., Long Beach. Merv plaved host to a proin-in" ~ht ewolutloMJY hlstOI)' o1 the ril!ctlion of U(ly," Ken Dab-Ro w takes the J
porpotte I r U I s·d inent female performer ad· D Ci) (I) m I Ort•• ., .INnnil @!)Aurel ii (JO) starring ro e o nc e • i , voca.ting the abolition of
(C) (JO) "My Mister, th• Chill 11 __ -o ~ ~ ~ N C played on Broadway by J ackie restraining undergarments, in·
'
. "t 1 ·" J · t ·--g Wu:Ji,;u ews() Gleason. Other f eatured inf. ony mus 1 ... eann1e o eluding brassieres. Her claQue · use her magic J>OWtr lo bilk th' O Dne st111 ll)'trwl pe rformers are Marvin Cloyd, in the audience applauded
r!lol'ls of his con-man cousin. O Morie· "CaMitlt Norttrllldl 77.,.. Patricia Zieg and Betty "Jdl
Gabriel Dell 1uests (Re!ltheduled) (dram•) ·48-James stewllt Kimber Toppen. wi,.,.:aclter dashed 1 h c i r
O @CIJ!l)Mod""'<t:l <601 . • . Prf ·11beg•e "To Li~With Love." Unt 11111 m Mtftt: 'lltttlt. tltll!"" (tchtft. e ormances wi 1 n bravado by asking. "Why is
in loY• with an 1ttr1cti¥1 youn1 lure) 'Sl-f1111k Lovejoy. May 22· 23, 29 and 30 at it you and your kind are all
woman, but thrir rorn1nc1 i1 threat· (D Ht SM, Slit Slid (C) 8:30 p.m. and May 24 and so drab?"
eflld wt1111 1 man from tht 1i11's 31 at 2:30 p.m. Reservations The b 1 1 past 1rrivn in towil. Guests 111 @ (}) fD 00 Qt (j) Nm (t) may be obtained by calling one • time ut er o a lanet Maclachlan ind fred Pinka1d. . 2 31 432 7926 hundred Hollywood movies
0 Mflllln $ M"ie: "Air for«" 1~:15 @ ~till••• Smnt1111: ··o.. I 1 · · was pleased recalling thi s
(dn11r11) '43 -1olln Garfie~. Gl& '°11· minor triumph.
Youn&. Mhur Kennedy. In the lt·lOl)f.ifl(J)M Critf IC) D C "Americans haven 't th c tlrlY da)'I or WW II, an Air fOl'C9 . "" 11 t•ug 3J'l00Jl!ii lalent to insull a person With
bombrr. nicknamed "Mary Ann," 0 Ql @ m Johnny tuw (C) dignity," he said. "They may
takes off .lor the Picilic •ith Its OHIPWIJ' Pltrtl HOLLY\VOOD tUPI ) call vou a foul name. but crew bl.ttlln1 heavy odds. J m Trutll • toMtqllMIUI (C) (30) 0 CiD Oki Cftett (C) 11anna ~ Barbera Procluctions it's not i.he same thing at
IDPmJ ltltlOfl (60) mMO'ril: "'liitttll Finrtn" (dra-will procluce a 15-minute car-all. There is no wit in it."
SharinJ?; lop honors with th::
I rvioe theater in the pro.
tJuction sweepstakes was the C · d ·1 "'('R MS8:te&'ilrodie
ar eu al ..., , :.. I ~-· .. ZSmidJ 1 The Orange Co unt y! ,,..._...,
Coordinating Council r 0 r ~-OU.;fUJDl'I•~·
insult, coming straight to lhe
point.
New ~111eu Nix Peace will sponsor a special
performance of the play "Wei-"==:==:==:==:==:==:
For instance. when Treacher
was hospitalized recently he
returned lo the show with an
admonition rrom doctors la
cease imbibing for a time.
Griffin foolishly asked Arthur
how it fell working the show
witho!Jl his customary nip of
\1ANIL.A tUPJ\ -Nearly Bombed in New llo:1ven" as
half (eighl of 181 of the Philip-a (und·raising event for the
pine Board of Censors for mo. benefit of the c o u n c i I ' s
tion pictures are newsmen or Speakers Bureau.
their wives. The others inc lude 1"he special performance
a reserve ofricer. a p u b 11 c will be presented at South
school teacher, a pl:.iywright, Coas t Repertory in Costa
alcohol.
a high school princi pal, a Pt1esa al 8: 15 p.m. on Saturray ,
women"s club president, a f\.1av 16. Ti c k e t s for the
former ambassador and a performance will be a5 and
I · , T representative each of the are avallable by calling Mrs. "It's at rigAJ .' reacher Catholic and Pro I es I ant Nicholas Roberti at 871 -6888,
answered teslil y, "bu! I never churches. ·::==========:::;II realized what a bloody av;ful __ _ _ \,
show it is." r.tlfl(l PACl'l"IC CO.UT 111GIMAf ' !ITM n.
Treacher, unlike nt,her night· ~...,,.
talk shows, is hardly an
unguent to ruffled guests who -. . j .
thrust and parry with the top
bonooa. If the guest star is DIRECT FROM ITS LONG-RUN
wounded Arthur is delighted ROADSHOW ENGAGEMENTS I
to provide the COtJP de grace. 1.
"I say things to guests that
Merv would like to say but •
can't," Treacher said. ·~
Treacher is a past master
of the unspoken "Ho\v dare ~
:vou ! " school of reaction lo ~
coarseness. Wl "There is a great difference auW°fMI. ~ ~·
among A me r i ca n s and llY,l!l ,,.._·-'"·" ._,'·\··. • . Englishmen when it comes to , .. -..;-.;
a finely turned in s u It,'' . '.J ·' \ (Ni.~· 1.
Treacher concluded . ' 'A o lECHllCO.o:i-' ·\' \:\If~!·\ Englishman would be upset PAHA~reol \~, •..;.,;;.1/.1
TOMOllOW, ALL THI
SUSPEHll & EXCITEMENT
IS IN lN~LISH
if he could n't lurn the insult1~=-=l!I=•="'==·=·'=-="':"='=-'='=~
lo his adva ntage. I lf~;;;;;;;;;;i!I "The insulted American only BALBOA
lakes umbrage.''
Arthur Treacher 673-4048
sincere. He affirmed
Englishman rarely s a y s
anything he doesn't mean.
OP'lN
6:45
7ot L l•IMa a.1• Ptnln1ula lftdo
NIWrclll •IACN •· ol 1•0 ••"•"'" lo l•hl••• ti•• l•lo •• O•. )·IJ!D
,._."°" M -CQt,!4 WU, -Ml-"01 .......... -.. ---... ---
Nolhlng h11 been left oul of
"The Advenhlrers"
AP.llMICUlll'ICll.ll
-llllm-1 11 lllll llBI Ill I
TIAIMIJB
IM 1 It N111i"lillllV!l1Umi1"
~ HIHOID 108811!
... . .. . . .. . ... . .
O C0A5T HW'O'. •T 111.0C••T+w~ tl'fO, o
HELD OVER
S Academy
Awards -·-· ........ PllUl.Nf.WlllAll --"THE ' ¥""~" "·"" • w .. ,~
fD ne FM• Ctnerition (60) "On m1) '48-Robert Buitty. loon show for the Southern Clearly, an i n c e n s e d
Wir." Th• rouni lilm maker's . . California Medical Association Englishman can be ruthlessly 1 ___________ _
apprOKh to wa r is reflected in 12:000CoM11unitJ lulltl1n l oud (Cl titled "The Drug Scene." incisive and specific with an -~. SU1tH Ci\SSiDY ANO
YEAR'S Gird BEST -Oi-COMEDY!" "Th1 Desert" by Jlnuu Kubik, rr;:~;:;:;~;;;;;;::::;;ii;;;;::;;;;;~al~ii,;;::;:;;;;:::~;;r.;::;:;;2, "Opus 007" by ~rtld Btlkin and 1:00 U Mo.Ir. "J•c' McCall, Dtsper. "Occurrence at Ox eaw Cretk" by ado" (1clventure) 'S3 -Gtora:e Robert Enrico. Montgomery, Dot.11111 Ke~~edy.
GI Crui di AlllOI' (30) 0 0 Mews (C)
7:55 G1l) Clllll:iH dt Slpndos
a:oo 0 9 (j) m DtDblt lleyntlds (t) (30) l Rl "In Utt ~p." Dtbbie's 1ppe1r1nc1 in 1 TV tommtrcia!
jeopardirn her ht11b1nd'1 ch1nce
tar his own sports sl'lovf.
WEDN ES DAY
DAYTIME MOVIES
1:30 0 "Tht rtct111t If Dl1i111 S1eJ''
(su5111nse) '4!,-George San<1er1,
Oon111 Reed, Hurd Hatfield. I
t:OO 0 "Mrs. Wigs If ttl1 Clbba1tl
P1tdt" (comtdy) '34-W. C. netds.
Z1st1 Pitts. "Popp,.. (com1drJ '36
-W. C. rirlds, RocheUt Hudson.
t:30 0 "Ll1h1tnin1 Shit1s Twlc1'"
(dr1m1) '5l-Rlth11d Todd, Ru1h .....
IDActi111 Tlt11lr1: '"!nv.s.ble
Stripes." Humphrey 8011rt.
2:00 m All·NiJhl Show; ''The Ma1n1fl· cent Ambusons," "Simso n in \ht Wu Museum" ind "Lost Island al
Kio1a."'
l:OD 0 "R1g lu ti RN Gip,. (corn·
edy) 'JS-Charles L1u1hton, Charles
11~111les.
m ~SlltiG11 WcstN (mysl•IJ) '48
-Dick Powtll, B~rl IVil. A1nts
Moorehe1d.
2:00 D .. ,ht ft1111d ••r" (comedy)
'61-.ltriJ Ltt1ls.
4:30 U "llold 111 the M1111• (wtsttrn)
'41-Robtrt Mit~u111, Walter Brtn·
nan, B1rb111 hi Geddes.
e JOB PRINTING
• PUBLICATIONS
• NEWSPAPERS
Quality Printing and Oependebl• Servic•
for mor• ihan • qu1rt1r of a century.
"111,. C:un-C .. n 1.,r1. ,..,.,.,,,.[,.-om' or the n1n~t e~rilin.t
•·u1>1L"''"'1<u1 •·\l·r ~··1 11 in lhe Old Wild We3t. Yuu'll
lu"I 1h~m 111 lhr C.tl i•" ~at.~·n 11 Knott"• liury t"arru
1nJ l.110-1 fn.,n. Fi>e ;:.J,.,.,·a lJ1il).
•uTl1ENTIC
16Tl1 CliNTU"'I' 1iNGllSl1
DICO"
-· llEGUlAll
lUNCl1EON PROM
11 A.M.
INDS TONIGHT
John w • .,..
"TRUE GRIT"
Lbo Ml1111eUI
"THE STERILE
CUCKOO"
llAITl WIDNESOAT
Alie Ill
Al1l11 0.1011
"NAKED UNDER
LEATHER"
JASON ROBARDS · BRITT lKlJND
NORMAN WISDOM • BERT lJHR
(( \'1 1\~1 ... f ~ TNFITfl
~ 673·'2'0
2905 East Coast Hwy.
Corona del Mar
THf SUNDANCE KIO
Al•t !Grl
Ac:odf"ftly Wln11ef
M1t9tlt Smit~
"THE PRIME OF
MISS JEAN BRODIE"
Jean Simmons
l ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS
Best Actress
Best Theme Song
Jea n Simmons Joh n Forsyl he Shirley Jones
Lloyd Bridges Teresa Wright 0 ..,1 si. .... ,. N ..... 1 .. r.M • .,
R•n D•lln Tin• LW14' '""•••Ml R" h d B k "'"'"'Ito t:.i11y r .. 1J• 1e .. , .. s, .... ~ o. ... rfd 11o 1c ar r oo S 111~~1..M rw-.,i..c""'"" H .. 11. A!) c p .. ,. .... -•T.cllnkolo<• llnJfld Artlltl
-l IHll!O'I "<'Vol ''OO( .. WVOl.I 11'™" IMI 5--'• .,.."'" -~ J¥WtU DO ""°"" Uill!\ O!(Otlll ·-•·• ,_,~..., -·· : •
ALSO PLAYING
Tht Minsch Corl)Or.illtln PreM""nt1
SteveMcQue?n
Faye Dunaway ..
ANonnanJewison Film
-I
Ted .'. .. ·-·~ ... &-A TllA,.llO'lllCM
~ TOii tOtUll.IA Al "1(111\JCTIG+<
~ llll lAlt (!}o
IST AREA RUN
TOUR IYES WON'T IELIEYE
ALL YOU HEAii IN
2nd Record Week
An epic droma
of adventure
and
exploration!
I 4Cj11 ........ STAHL[Y~V•"
2001 '
PILOT PRINTING
B1rgain Matin••
Every Wednesday, 1 p.m. I a space odysMY
•••'·"·'-"".'"·'•~•"•"••r'l-~---------------------JI sunit ~A10N111011•· 111n.oco..-2211 WIST IAl lOA ILYD., NIWJIOll IUCH -641-1121
Adu1~ 11.00
•
........ iiiii;;o:;>;: •.
.
' I • ' t
. t •
LEGAL NOTICE
I
•
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
~,;;,-"'.~-;.:;::;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .. ;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;:<;;;;;;:;;;;;; .. ::;:;;:;.;.~.7.:;::::~.::::::--.~~;::;;::_::~;~~::::;::::;;;;;;:::;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;::;;::;::;:'"'1111 ............ ""I"""""''
•
Nixon Likes Relaxed Weekends·
But His Predecessors Vrged Need to' Get Lots of Rest
Nlxon mjoy• the olticlal
prultknilal rtlrell, ' Camp
J)avld, In ihe Ca&ocllp mowt-lailll near ihe quaint hlstorlc
town of Thurmont, Md .. even
for an ovemi&ht stay. He
tel!kt the f.reth a.ir and
phyalcal renewal that comes
from the ruetlc surroundln1s
at the Ma rlne -gu a rded
hideaway.
Mn. Nixon accompanies
him only occasionally. Nixon
11 mwe apt to call on hl:s
belt frilnd 11111 Key Blicayne,
Fla.: ntl&bbor Charles "Bebe"
Reboio, a quiet man, to keep
him company.
Nixon likes to stroll along
the wooded paths, sit by the
open fire at Aspen Lodge and
watch a mov~ before retiring.
For lon1er strttcbes away
front the While House the
President heads for t h e
Friorlda \Vhite House at Bis·
cayne Bay with it.s inviting
strip of beach.
Until he put his gleaming
white presidential yacht, Julie,
up for sale, Nixon always en-
joyed a late afternoon cruise.
It was a personal sacrifice
in the interests of economy
t.o sell the boat. Now he'll
be hitching rides on Reboio's
yellow house boat.
Not since FDR took trips
to Campobello, C a n a d a .
has a President left the coun-
try as often as Nixon to travel
t.o a re50rt area.
The President is a frequent
multimillionaire Robert H.
house guest c f
Abplanalp at Grand Cay, the
island the induirtriatlst owns
In the Bahamas. Nli:on as·
tounded some observers when
he flew to lhe British~n4
.,
trolled Jslaod on lndependence
Day, last July 4th.
Nixon'a $340,000 apanish·
styLe villa at San Cltmtnte,
CaUf., with !ta magnificent
view of the rolllng Pacific.
also beckons tbe President.
fie had planned for a 10-day
sojourn in California this
spring, but the Cambodian
crl&ls and domesUc tunnoil tinenul with h\1 wlfe .. 19dy-~
put the trip on the ~ck Blrd •t hi.a: side to look at
burner. . the deer.
NiX0'1 bas ample precedent For t:lsenhower. goU was
for feeling lhe White House the magic formula to lift the
walls are clQfing in at times. While liouse burden.
Housewives
Johnson taJke<l about U)t John F. Kennedy escaped
1'1onely acres" and when U:le by joining his wife in the spirl~ moved him he would bunt country at ltotlddlebur&
m&Jl:e a sudden decision lo Va., and book.i.ng up with the
fly to Ttxas for 1 few days big Kennedy clln at Hyan-
to ease the tensions by b3.sk-nisport. Mus., during the
Ing at the LBJ Ranch. The sumn1ers.
rugged tUll country always did Presidents have ncvtr called
thctrlck ror~lm. lie-wou ld --theirrtttt1ts vacations. They
rest by counUng his cattle, take their official work with
visiting his various ranches them. But life is a~~ays m~re
and taking rides at sunset relalting and the living easier
Are Winners
Costa Mesa's Housewives'
Novice VoUeyball team is
cleaning house all over Orange
Coonly.
in bis while Linc<lln Con-away from the \Vhite House.
The group has won its sec-
ond first place trophy in play.
day toUrnaments again.!t other
teams.
Coach Deanna Martin 's
group picked up the trophy
in Newport Beach last month
and won its second last week
in Orange.
The lineup Includes Jean
Payne, Joanne Styles, Sandy
Vena , Pat Oliver, Jane t
Conover, Dee Rhynard and
Barbara ~1ortoo.
Recreation Direct.or Keith
Van llolt notes hoosewives'
volleyball is offered beginners
Tuesdays at 9 a.m. at Heller
Park and al the same hour
Wednesdays and Thursdays al
Corsica Park.
Baby-sitting Is available at
the parks, where recreational
facilities are jus~ the thing
for pre-schoolers.
The fashion revolution has
worked down to the ground.
Shoes are news. Everyone's
buying more shoes-because
of style. Not just women.
Men, boys, girls and toddler:s,
too. The footwear business Is
on 'he march. "Because,"
Boot & Shoe Recorder says,
"basic shoes are no longer
enough-for any wardrobe."
During 1988, the average
American family spent $100
plus on footwear-up from $68
just six years ago. Count the
families who live in your area.
Multiply by $100. If you want
your share of that footwear
money, you've got to tell the
fashion footwear story. Otit
where people will see it. Right
on the pages Of this news·
paper. Your newspaper.
Eight oul of ten over-21 's read
the paper each day. Seven out
of ten teenagets do too. Even
more to the point: a recent
survey showed that seven out
ol ten Americans look forward
to the ads in the papers-while
only one in four feels that way
about ad& on TV. No wonder
retailers invested more than
$3 billion on newspaper
advertising last year. No
wonder the country's top shoe
stores spelid more than two
percent of net sales on their
ads in the papers. Your
competitors know the power
of that seven-syllable sales
force: Newspaperabltlty.
The lootwear busi ness has
changed. And newspapers
have changed, too. With
economical new neighbor·
hood ud buys, superb color
reproduction, and new printing
techniques. Thia change has
brought a subst1ntlal Increase
ln local papers' ad volume.
During June '69, dallies· retail
ad revenue jumped 11 .3 per~
cent over June '68. News·
papers are working for retell.
To paraphra se an old saying;
If the medium fits. buy It. And
no medium tits you better than
your own local paper.
That's what we mean by
Neweptlperablllty.
•
THE mE 1um
THAT
FITS
FOOTWEAR.
•
I DAILY PILOT I:
. p~· ... '"'""' l ldl1llw : Hfl<lf>lll'll llllormlllOfl Cot11m!Utf , I U,...11 ti hl•tllltlflO A H.,,A., loOI ,\ Sl'lot ll:tCOtOtl, ~OOlllr"tlr l.jt.,1
OllANtH
COJINTY'S
LARGEST
2629 HARBOR
BOULEVARD
546-8640
OpooE, .. 1 ...
Ill l :JD
Take Over 4 Yi%
Laan and Save
TOTAL l\fonlhly payment
will be less than $120.00
per month v.·ben you buy
subject lo lhe existing VA
loan. 3 bedroom, 2 baths,
double garage, Ii: a .i
built-ins, and it's clean
u a whistle. See It NOW!
Unbelievable
But True
This 3 bedroom home has
been completely remodel-
. ed \vilh an added game
room, added dining room,
added living room, added
betlroom, all with city ap-
proval. 2000 sq. ft. Full
price $26,500. FHA-VA
terms. See it lo believe
;c
Fixer Upper
On Lots of Land
Located in thl" Back
Bay area of Newpor t
Beach on 'iii or an acre.
Featuring 2 horse cor-rals. encloaed I a n l!. i
overlooking beautifu l
swimming pool. The
2000 SQUllTe ft. J bed-
room residence hee<b
paint and elbow grease,
but what a price. Chvn· er will finance at 7.5%.
Call today,
Wife's Delight
Herc It Is. The cutest
3 bedroom 2 bath home
v.-e ·~·e sl!en in a long time.
All large rooms, privn.te
back yard, pink tiled
built-in kitchen, paneled
den for dad, in model
h o m e condition. Take
over 4.5'if, VA loan at
$111.00 per month or no
mortt'Y doY:n to vet.I. Hur-
ry to the phone.
Mesa Verde
" 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
$22,300
It's an unbelievable price,
so lt must be a fixer-up-
per, right? Riah1, but
with a built-In kitchen,
forced a ir heat, fireplace,
aooct ne!Pborhood. All
you need i1 paint. Owner
anxious. Buy rii:::ht and
aavf!.
Yi Acre
Country Living
Absolutely private, po11l-
tlvely 11ecluded. dlsllnct-
ly charming, be11.utlful-
ly Jandsl'aped, the resl·
dence features h I & h
beam ct!llln11s. pgrqul!t'
noon, 2 l8r2'e b<-d-
rooms Jocaled In Eul-
lilde Costa f.1esa. Hurry
on this one!
-r;.7 r r....;.,. "·
OltANGol
COUNTY'S
LAR•HT
2629 HARBOR
BOULEVARD
546-8640
0, ...... 1 ...
tlft l :!D
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
CUSTOM 4 TO 7 BEDROOM HOMES
FROM $135,DOO T9 $500,DOO_
PRIME BUILDING LOTS
FROM $3S,DOO TO $175,DOO
LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS
320 LIDO NORD
NOW Reduced to $175,0llD. Xlnt terma
HNr Wt1tcllff
3 Bedroom A famib' rm.
nc1Ued on ~ely, quiet, tree
lined street. Spacklwi living
nn haa mauive brick fire-
place, BBQ In family nn.
Xlnt ghq: carpetln, on peg.
red hardwood .. $39,»:1, See 6 Beautiful units. 6 Car garages & utility tt fl9!:°l -~
room,-_ WJtb BOl t:-frC:iiftlftgon e!Cellent swtm-No On Vets L• Dn l'HA
ming beach. Units are newly furnished. Lar&e kl1, tncd rron1 It rear
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 1" pnvacy l ,.1e1y. 3 Bed-
For Appointment C•ll: 133 Dover Dr., Sult. J~ Newport Bt•ch '42-4620 nn, l liS BA, ahake roor, dble !~~~B~l~LL~G~R~U~N;D~Y~·~R~E~A!'!L!'!T!'!O!'!R~~~~I~~~~!!!!!!~=~=;;~=~~= 1~i'"2°i"Ru~1F.'!1looo1 133 Dover Dr .. Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 •--,. -•· Crp •--L1Ulsrue . an•1'Jll la,-..-,
G•neral 1000 Gent:r•I 1000 patios, $75.000. 11urry!!
G•ner•I 1000 Gtfttr•I 1000 --------801 OLSON ~=;;;;;;::=;;;;.1 ------1 NEED CAMPER NEED 5 BEDROOMS? REALTOR -OPEN HOUSE OR BOAT 546-55111 51/ 0/ L 11121 HOLJDAY, 74 /0 oan NEWPORT BEACH SHELTER? You """" look "" tw1h<•l======i==
of $17,483 is assumable at
thiio low rate when you buy
this SftARP, SHARP 3 Bed-
rm & 2 Bath luxury home,
brick fireplace. near • new
crpts, drpa &: bltn kitchen.
\'our total payments will be
$142. mo. including taxes.
Why wait? Call now:
Newport
•I
Fairview
646-1111
(1nytlme)
Estate Sale
Fixl!r upper -to be sold In
"as is" condition. Back Bay
a.1-ea • good &ize lot, 3 Nlce
sl:re Bedrms, 2 Baths, hard.
wood iloors, crpts & heavy
i;hake Joof. FHA or VA
lcrms available -s29,soo.
Call 545-8424.
In BA.YCREST, tor )'Our In. This \\'onderful home on a than !his out1tanding 2 story OREGON BOUND
specoon Wednesday 1:00 tW quiet cul-de-aac street has home. II has 2585 1q. rt.,
4:00. Large 3-bedroom, for. TWO DOUBLE GARAGES large nook, 3 baths, f'.paclou1 O tran&f rnd Ult II mal dlnln• room, delu1te family foom & FORMAL wner e • m se • , ,plus 3 bedrooms, a sep. spacious 2 11""" 5 Bednn pool, Excellent financing. DINING ROOM too! Anx-""~• arate family or dining room • home Anyone can assume Price lnclude11 garage door lous owner "''Ill conside r oU-· · cpener and VERY NICE completely paneled and with en , so HERE'S y 0 UR exhllnr GI toan with small
NEIGHBORS. a lovely used brtck fireplace CH..\.NCE! ! Investment tor ownen: equ-
'
& raised hearlh. Easy.care Easy FltA or VA terms are lly .. Jdeal location !or,_~1 ,',
wool I carpeting throughout available, 11 you can do bet. family home. Wont .....,
& beaut!Iul ceramic tile in ter than this for $36,950 bet. $34,950 ......... ••• stO-llil kitchen Ir baths. A very pri-
vate backye.nl \\'i lh covered ler GRAB IT!! I *jPI IM'AGI I
patio. Beautiful condillon... COATS M ...
A DELIGHT TO SHOW! ~ & -
Colesworthy :i:i~e.J.:VA-rnA buyers ·~WALLACE MasA FVl~DE
R&ALTOll.$ COUNTRY CLUB DR.
& Co.
REALTOR
Newport Beach Office
1028 Bayside Drive
675-4930
'
-~54"1"'4141-Corner Lot Spadota 3 Br
(Open Evenlntt) 2 ba. tam.' rm, fonnal din'.
l""""""""'""""""'"""'!PI rm, 2 frplc'g. By owner.
* TAYLOR 4 =~: Meaa Verde North,
LIDO ISLE
BAYFRONT
Beaullfut new 3600 1q, It,
h l>l.000 lot.o, u"'mablo at Coleswort y HARBOR VIEW HILLS ~~~· .~·~ ~:
& Co.
home. 4 Bedrooms plus REALTOR
maid·s room: family room; Newport Beach Off.ice
eunken 11ving rooni; 3 fire-l02S Bayside Drive
places: formal dining room. 675-4930
All exterior walls insutated. • --p~O-O~L~H~O-M~Eo
P rivate pier & slip. S:135,000
MACNAB-IRVINE $25,900
Rt>ally Company 20 20 1714) 642-8235 l
001 0ov., on~. s"'" !lO FAMILY ROOM
Room ehoUgh fbr Jarae lam-$28,500. 5'5-7100
U~. 4 Bd1m , lam rm, fonn. J iir. &autlf\llly Ow>rated .
din. nrea. Beautiful decor, Se mi Cui tom. By o~ .. ner.
$541r:'i..rNDA ISLE $26,500 545-2531or 551-9111.
See this new 5 l maid's rm, Mei• Verd• fam rn1 + RR, 5 halhll. 1111
Open daily Sl69,~ 4 BEDROOM. 3 Ba.th, 3 Car
1 '0ur 2Sth Ye1r'' Garage. $45,950 By Ovmer.
w ESL EY N. I:::;_"_ """=· ====:;:,
TAYLOR CO. Newport .... 11 1200
Realtors ----
1714) 675-3210 16 :< 32 HEATED P 0 0 L, DOUBLE 1080 Baysidr. Drive dressing rooms and balh,
YOUR INCOME ........ N'!'".,"""~":o .. !!!!!"'!'""!"..., 1~ARDWOOD F L 0 0 Rs.
NEWPORT CENTER !.... --c --&'¥¥!
2lll S.rn Joaquin Kills Road IA K '"' I
644-4910 Overlooking tht •ki area,
J-'ORJ\1AL dining room. and
2 Dislinct homes on 112 lots PANORAMIC "sharp as 8 tack" condllion. in Corona de! !\-Jar. Walk to OCEANFRONT
LOT
!arrest let In the Blutr11,
Model E plan. 3 Bdrm I:
fam rm or 4 Bdrm. Too
many featun1 to list them
all. Blt-il'll appUancts, re-
frt1, \\'&1htr l dryer includ. ...
tov.TI & beacb. 2-Sty. 4 Br., VIEW t, V.A. or .f .H.A. financing available, HURRY, HUK-
fam. rm., oHice & pool. The Oct•n-C•t•lln•~C lty RY! other home has 3 bdrrns, & E
new decorating. $77,500 Light1 WE SELL A HOM 60 Feet on the aand
Mary Lo" Marion EVERY 31 MINUTES
-
1
"·'"" · 10"' "°"" · Walker & Lee Balboa Peninmula $63,500 ..........------------....... You own the land!
Cold .... -11 ft--t ...... -Very dl!lilithlful 4 bedroom 2043 WestclilI Dr.
$00,000 For appt call "4-1912, 11 no
aruiwer, call 543-410l. Savt
broken commlllion le bu.)'
thli week from owner! ¥Vtflll.1Di1111Uft" find forn111.l dining room. 646-7711 -·•~Y · 0""'n 'tit 9:00 PM --------·--------Bcau!H11l easy cart> yam.,,._..,.--.,.._..,.., ... ,_.,
PRICED FOR QU I CKI ~
133-0700 . 644-2430 SALE! OCEAN VIEW F OR sl.le by ov.•ner. Dover
Shore• beaut. cuttorn built
home. J...e:e llVing rm with
llti•ilacl!, formal dining J'?h,
4 Bt. 4 B11 . Ire tarn.Uy rm
CORONA DEL MAR
Been looking for 4 bdrm., 2\1: Step Up To Success ... homo wHh "'""' vl•w!
This Is it! Sep, fam. rm. \\'/
1-0 THI: REAL
\"'-E.STA'lERS """""'!""'!""!!'!"~!!!1.,.I with fireplace &. v.·et bar, JOIN THE ACTION '•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii;I frpl .. dining r m. & many
EARN MORE -LEARN I' exlra~. Best Broadmoor loc.
• ' l ,J.
breaklut rm. tutd kitchen
with 2 sell-cl1an!ng ovens
& loll! of cupboards. 3 car
gar. Fee slmple. $89,500.
MORE -Opomln"' '°' ex· $37 ,500 167.500
perieoced or in-experienced BUYS YOU THIS -l\ilarlon c. Buie
....--
A!lllume this terrific 5~% 1117 Marinfn Dr., N.B. pe<>ple -cash bonus -hos-Cozy 3 BR. 2 Ba. Doll House
pi\al/lile plan -sales train-in Ea1tbluU, nr. Cdl\i1 Hl&h
ing course -nationwide re. School, shopping, !he beach
Jerra1 servil'e -tnde-in & smog-free air. Sub1nlt yOUr
and equity Joan program. terms. Vacant.
annual % rate loan. Entry Sho"'·n by appt. 0 n I y ,
hall, dlninc rm., 2 Jlttplac-643--MlB. Open house Sun Coldwell, Banker es. Pal'k like yard with or-1.i-5 ........__ .... , e<m,....,~ ange & fruit trtti. 54(}.l720 D=O~N~'=T-M=1•s•s~B~L"U=F"F'°S
------TARBELL 2955 H1rltor Exqulilte 3 Br, 2\-ii ba, wet Please call Doug Whlting La.Vera Burns
546-5440.
Large Lot Me11 Verd•
3 Bedrrrus, 2 lull baths, lots
of mirrored "''alls. RedeC(lr.
aled kitchen. Owner must
sell, has bought another
home. $28,500. (Qflen Eves.)
\\'e have MORE J..istings in
J\fl!a:a Verde than any othl!r
oHic.-c at this tin1e.
133-0700 644-2430 Owner Dtspor1te bar, dbl ovens, automatic l'::i::::l:i::::lC:::===== I $24 950 wai:.r aoftener, By Owner • I• Bd 'F II S45.DOO, Ph, 644-0985. 4 rm. + am y rm. Leisure Livin9
Bluffs, N.B. Overlooking
133-0700 644-2430 "KJ.-een belt''. 3 BR, 2\.1 BA,
huge living + dining a1-ea. -~ ---
Huge living rm \\1fh naturaJ •BLUFFS -Choice corn.
brick fi replace. Finest built-view lot. l Br. 2 Ba. 1 levf l
ins dill ing nn . picture win. walled patio, cus. extru do~r Almost ·no down G.I. Save SS -S30.95CI. &44-426.'i
MG-1720 BLUFFS GEM, Jmmac,
FHA Re11lt TAl'.BILL 2955 Harbor custom decor, 3 br. 3 ba,
Out of area owner extremely ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I on greenbelt. S 3 T, 9 0 0,
aru:lous for offer on vacant Try $25,SOO 644--0575 aft 6 pm
romer home • immaculate,
\\'OOd floors. model-like. Ex-1860 Ne\\·port Blvd., CM 2 &<!room, Eastslde custom, N•wport Htliihts 1110
cellf'nt FHA loan at S220. In-CALL &46-:!928 Eves. 644-l655 new paint inside & out. 10% 1 --~--~----
cludlng laK .\ insumnce. Down. Asking $26,500, BAY & OCEAN VIEW
Listing ls S32,500 but make ·-PERRON REALTY &>U or lease/option
any reasonable oUl!r. (open R·2 Eastsidt 6ot2-1771 Cliff Dr. tAlvely 2 BR le Den
CAPTIVATING evea.1 Unusual, different, adaptable, I .,...,~~'"'""'""'~!!!!!!'I PLUS guellt rm. 2 baths,
BAY VIEW ~ ~411_5180 2 Bt'.'d.room + 11 x19 dl!lach· O\\INER Otters to dl100Unt large dlninr rm, Collrt yanl
ed sll't'ping room + JG x 32 direct to buyeT only 6 yr patio. See this pano1'tmic
' " 'l\.'Ol'kshop. Murry -o n Y old 2 sty 5 BR. 3 BA home. view, Owner w:I Ina.net on for $39 lDD L1""'LEG"'E.,.RE1~"':'T~ 1 U 1
Ccmforlable 2 Brdroom ISOOMlnllatfla ,CM. S26,500. (Open eves.) Nr Sant8 Ana Country :'lub. good tenns, $59,900
den home in choice loca· l ,..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'""""•"'",..1 Full price $34,000. $28,SOO
HJGH frth!'cinttna llle.:ltrel Call 546--6740 tlon. call to see. ~ $46·$810 loan, 71,!%. SUbmlt down.
PeN Barrett ~ on the hill LLEGE REALTY 15IXIMM11attbrtlar,CM S. A. Hel1ht11 Use )'Our G.J.
REALTY 4 Bedrooms. Tri-level hcme1 ~~~.,,,~~~,...,,. on this, 3 BR, $23.SOO. L&t HAVE 2 HOMIS with mountain lake pool I ~ --. -d 2 C K' &rd 1605 Westcli :r Dr., NB "' Cblack plastl!r l in r.t f.SA The Possible Dream hi:. MI ::~ar. mga MUST SILL ONE I
642-5200 '(,\Ir. VERDE. Largr separate fvon "'f'llR' new 4 Bedrm, 3 See tod&)'! 3 Giant bdrm1.,
WATERFRONT
DUPLEX
WTTI I PIER AND Fl.£lAT.
\Viii rorusidcr trad~ tor Con1-
n1erclal or Industrial land
Family floom 1•orn1«l IJ!n. BA, + riwdr rm hnnir., Dov· 1----------· 13 bftlh11, rumptt!I rm., view.
Ing Room, Pe;1rct f1Jr large e.r Shores. Panell~ Jam rm Costa Mtt• 1100 Walk to 11rhool!I. 149,900
fan11ly living S50 7fJO w/frplc & \\·et b!lr, sunken Unlvcnlty Realty 873-6510
Cali No1v ... ." .... :. s4S.2313 ll v rm. Lgc kHchP~ w/brkfsl MESA DEL MAR 3001 E. Coast Hwy., Cdt.1 uea. SccludC'd s"'·1m pool ln
or small boat, Choice rent. -"========
walled-in garden. i\lake Your Thff.t bdrm. fam, nn, l'f. N!:WPOR.T HiJ11s, rambllna
dream come tru<>~ Roy J . bath, lirepb1ce, built • In ranch style 3 bedrm, 1hake
Ward Rc11.Uor J430 Galaxy kitchen, new w/\v carpet root, frplc. S2!,950.
Dr . 641J.l5:i0. Open Daily, thru-out, Laundry and dbl. Kll\iurd R. E. Ml :l-2322 it l area. -$63, 750.
CALL NOW ...... 64&-TITI
'O THr REAL '°'-CSTA'l't:RS * OCEANfRONT* DUPLEX
Flah, 1url A 1"''im at )'OUI'
door! Owntr will fin&ncc.
$87,500
George Wll ll1m1on
R£ALTOR
173-4150 645-1564 EvH
C•mptr/lo•f Shelter
3 bnn. plus fam., firfoplace,
2 dbl. aa.rngt,, cul-de·
PlltC, $33.&00 VA/1'1lA, A.gt ..
Ann CORlll li7~. 6754930
-garage, electric door open-~. -· -Low Int . G .I. Loen A Touch of Spanish er. u ·xro· d!!t&chtd nimpu• B•ycrett 12"
3 lkdnn, 2 BA, bltn range \Vallcd patio; 3 BR. + din. room, two patios. $30,950 • -· .. -
.l oven. dmhwMher, lire-+ family + lge. room over Owner will ClUT)' 1st T.O. BAYCREST 4 llt
plal,., t'rpts, drps, shake garan. RcduCf'd to · M. M. LABORDE , ftltr. Cvstom lullt Hom•
roof etc. $28,767. v.ith usum. $47,!lj() 646-0655 Eves. sts.am wut t:radf. Lup beaut.
able G.I. loan. Quick poa. Wilker Rlty. 675-5100 ..... ..-.IDE • -.-_'A/ ya.rd, SfclucW St. ~. 1e1~lon! . 3366 Vta Lido NB Open Sun. £;ft<J •.:i ~--""
We lls -M cCardle, Rltrs, UPPE.R BAY VA, Btaulitully main-Dover Sho 1227
1810 Ne\\·port Bh-d., C.~t. f1IA-VA • Utrtt bdrm, fire-1alntd, !lparidlng J bedroom ,.., ---
5'ft.7729 644-0684 Eve1, plact, built.In kllr,he n. ntw home on quiet tree llned * PRIME VIEW * 1treet. Owner moving to Bay 6 Mtna • Sctnlc .l pvt.
NEWPORT HEIG HTS t"&rriet. Dcu b lr KttrlJ'C', 1noblle home • prlct .t Nearly new "Old World"
Adorable J Br. 2 ha, Fpl. ~e ~=d yard. Sl3,;iXI • lerms for lm1nedlale 1alt . conttmponry rpadout w/
Formal din. rm. Unusually M M LABORDE Rltr Call $45-8424 iouth Cout •trlum & court. 5 Br's tlt·
1'Hr. lndK'PI:. It patio. • · ' • Rell Eat.a te. pandable, 8000 sq ft, 4~ Ba,
Only s.11 000. Xh1t lenn!\! G16-<m5 Evet1. MS-l175 t"'OR Sale by Owner, 3 BR hl-ct.lllnp, 4 ca r &ar.
CAYWOOD REALTY h0\1111 on comeor lot. Ex-$171,00) fU:rn. a pt. Will trade
ooM \V, C•·•t H·•.·' NB THF. QUICKER YOU CALL, II I ~ I Prl ~ all •-·· I """"" "" .... u SEU.. er tnt 11 • ...,.ot('ll) nir. n-,.,,-am •JYUlle or vacan e .541-1290 e ntE QUICKER YO cipalt only.~ land In vie. Owner $1$.7249,
DIS,IRAT1l OWNER
WUl aell his gpaclmlJ 3 Br.
+ tam. nn. borne with
smaU down payt. Qul~k poa.
se•. Prlced at $3(1,950.
• Red Hiii RHlly
Univ. Park Center, Irvine
Call Mytlme m.oc>
Corona del Mar
CHINA COVE
,ANTASTIC VIEW
Overlooking Ha.tbor entrance
jetty & Blue Paclllc. A
qualnt & exclualve conunun.
ity everybody loves, See
thla 3 BR home, Jure llv.
rm., Iota ot du&. SUndeck.
3 aanae•. AQ:lnc $67,SOO.
r.~,,.,._i.lh ,11 1;
'1'•EALTY :,", ·1
N!~I Ojf\\l'fl~! Pll~1011\I'(
LOWD PRICl-
sueM1T ON DOWN
Make.p; thla CdM, ~ar Big
Corona Beach, 2 BR. w/
f lllTil lit. fam. rm., A
SURE SEU,.tlt! Lee. co~
· ner lot, ellltra par)llng. Pa·
tlo w/BBQ; new paint, carp.
I: drapes. SM,800, Vacant •
quick pouess. Enjoy tum·
mer here!
Bay&. a.ach Rlty .. Inc.
S'B-DXI 673-2569 Eves.
DUPLEX
Real ton
7582 Edincer
842-4455 540-5140
$22,500
FULL PRICE
NO GIMMICKS
Sharl>, clean 3 bedroom, 2
bath, carpeted and draped.
Covered patio and aprlnk·
len make yardwork easy
lor DAI>. EASY Gt and
FHA TonT111 ava!lable,
WE SELL A HOM!
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
Realtors
761J2 Edlftier
540-5140 842-4455
$24,7SO
DAILY f'ILOT
1111
D•n• '°'"' 1740
I MILESo.ol...-,Qtm
7 Rm. + 3 Baths + 2ald
Jdtchn. '311,llOO. 41Mm'.
11up1 .... ,., Solo 1m
LG ' d"Pin 1" 11.8. wMew,
208' &om xlnt nrlift'I 'bdl.
OVen tled IMna room•.
Front balcony, nv pe.&
!. 4 br, 2 beth. UP: Nici
front yd, 2 k', 1 be DOWN.
$41,950 Tetm1, by OWMr,
613-:1291.
iiN'fALS
HtMIMI ,umlshM
~ .. 1 ---·------1 fANTASTIC VllW
1211> •lil pd, ' .. tripltx.
A\fab l'loW. Chlldrtn 6 ptbi
welcomed, Bkr. !JM.t9llG
S115 1 aa. Btp. Hie. RIO.
Rtfr!c. ht ok. Nr. lkh.
Bllll Beacon. 6'$-0lll Bisi'. 3 ~rm, 2 Bath, W/W ttptl
All the conveniences or home. " d!'Pfl, convenient ldtchen
+ a rental lo help make with delwee range I ovtn, Rent1ft te SheN illl
your pe.)'ml1. Lovely 2 BR. co~ uv rm W11h trplc. + a new unit. So, aide ol $2!!00 Down and Sl90 per mo WANT worldnl' s1rl 19 aMr'I
Hwy, Offetl!'d for S!'i?,500. Incl laxes. Large dbie 1ar. 2 Br C.M'., apt, Call a.,
MORGCouAN REAL TYCd•• The moat house .tor the .ttm='::.·.:-.::..:=----3411 E, l Hwy., '" money thia area! Clo11e to
613-6642 675-&159 the b e a c h, shopplnc A:
UNEXCELLID VIEW ""hooo.
of """°" • .,...,. Al'" l''"'"'~-11111,.111 .. 1111R11 1 split leWI home on R-3, 5100 -· --
aq. ft Jot. Ideal for 4 Apt. 61-44 I ( :=) 10
""''" $220,000, 2001 °"'"" . 71 I Ol . . mvd., CdM. B)' appt. only. 14 1•
Biii Grundy, RuilOf' VA LOAN
Read
The
833 Dover Dr., NB S.3-4620 An)'One can qualify. One year
z g ms., &:zS new, 3 Bednn, 14' BA, dlxe
HARBOR v1~w HILL ''"""" ''"" ·-Lease opUon, btauUful view, crpts, lie enclosed patJa ..
3 bdrm, 2 bath, $54,000. Box f\bu:l st!ll this week!
M364, Dally Pilot. BRASHEAR REAL TY DAILYi
847.a507 Eves: 642-0421
Balboa p..,1nsula IJOO
WEST BAY AVE.
Charmin& new 3 bdrm. 2 ba. Mediterranean style.; Block
tiom ~u & bay. Bullder'1
home, top quality.
FREE RENTAL
SERVICE
Super Sharp 3 bedroom. 2
bath with built·ina, tamily
room for $225. We have
others. Come In and browae
PILOT
through our book,
Biii OrurMly, R••ltor
833 Dover Dr., NB 642-4620
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee ORANGE
Lido Iii• 1351
BE FIRST
To 1ee thl1 just 1!11ted 3 BR.
2 ba. Doll Hou1e In move-In
cond. 11': BUI:. to club A ten.
nls, 40 Ft. lot; larfe South
patkl. S59.~.
RealtO'l'll
7682 Edinger
84ut55 540-5140 COAST'S
H•I Plnchln &. Assoc.
REALTORS
3900 !:. Coll.st Hwy. m-092
IT'S Beach tJOoJM Wne. Bl11•
ae11 se1ec11o" ever! See the
OAJLY 0PILOT n 11 ••f1ett
atttlon NOW!
Deluxe four.Plex
1·3 Bedrm, 3-2 Bednns, air
cond. Catt>@ts, dra~s, waJk
to Bl'Dl.dway ahopptnc &
College.
BRASHIAR AIALTY
147-8501 EVf!I: 968-1118
THE SUh NEVER SETS on
DAll.Y PU.Dr WANT ADS!
leading
Marketplace
-----General 2000 I General 2000 10. .... 1
S(l:\"l~lA.-lt"B~s·
The Puzzle wifft tit• luiff./n Cftudle
0 Reorrong• i.ttan of th• tow Mrambled 1¥ordli b9. low to form four sl111Ple WOl'dL
·ATUNaol • i I I I I' I _• _
r-...,HE_CK.,,O r-Tr""r"'11 ~ I I' I' I _ 1
t"-D00,..
1
..,E
1
R,......
1
.-, ... ,-t, f About o .talb!tivo -.ona
_ . _ _ _ • A•klng her o qoestlon Is Il k•
r-:==---.... tak~ng your flngor -·°' the
t-i'Q,....uo ... 1_L ..-.,.,.., .... ,, .....
1
; ~r.~ ::m.~e I I I ___ yo..,,.,..,,,,~.., .... -·
• :~'ik!M;~11~1"11S r r · 1· r r r I' 1
_• ... st .... ·ji'.._,·_._1 ..... 1 ... r ..... 1 OF'"' 1 1 1 1 1
-
SCRAM-LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIACAnOtt tooo
..
I
l
I
' •
• . .
T11tsday, May 12, 1970
RENTALS R TALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RE NTALS
Apts. Fumllhod l--'-"9-""h.'-F-'-urn.;...;..l•_hed ___ 1_'-Aptt..._._U-.nfv_rn_llll;..,..'-"-Apl1. Unfvrnlohed Aplo. ~milllod Apto. Unfvrnlohod
l~lt;ol'll;.:;ah~t.~Sh;;;•~ro;;.:2005:=.;l iC~N~lo~Mo;;i .. ~jjjjjjjji~4~1~00~C~Ol~l~o~Mo~ .. ~--~4~100~~C:.:fff:;:•_;Mo;:.::; .. :;:... __ .:5~100=C~oot~•~Mo~1;;.•_;c;:;51~001 !!_1~ 5141 Santo Ano 5620 ~ PLOYED 1.q """°' ., PRESTIGE LOCATION ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i
'1>arc 2 bed""'" O>ota For ...... "'1uxe t88S oq. n. VILLA MARS EILLES
M-··-·· wUh ...... * NEW-PLUSH * Elegant • BR, .,. BA apt. "1>1<. BRAND NEW One chlJ4 OK. 501"""'6 attu dnP<t. '"'"' W<t bar, pri SPACIOUS
1 p.m. balconies, dbl pr ott kitchen 1 &. 2 Bd rm. Apts.
S?t\,BLE Home env\ron. for Livi ng • • . dmwhr. dbl o...en. Pool Conv Adult Living
nJlnod woman ""° ""'"" 1 BEDROOM FURNISHED APJS. lo"""•'<"""" k """°""°n. Furn. I. Unfurn. alim.ulati.rc oornl>Afl. & I~ Only $350 mo. Dlthwutier . color coordlnat-"Or•""• Co11ntw'1 Moat 10111-0"" Amigos W•• NB volYe. ll.8. to 1 ~ .... Beh. Si le Ad It 0 ~ . .,, °"""' ...,,., ed ·-1ianccs • plush aha" -na u s n tlful J.p1rtm1nh" ., t -·~ Am•-~~ • 6TS.2916, (1) 1213) "'""' "• -•~"''""'' "gr. nex -~-· .., .. , • ch<>!"' ot 2 '°'°' WANT: \\'orklng girt to l uLldtn ~.,in. ? TOWNHOUSE -New lrg. sehemea • 2 balh11 • stall
share Ba1boa Island home 2035 f II rt c st M 2 BR, 2% Baths, frplc, encl 11howen1 • mlJTOred wanl·
with aamo, 613-2383 u e o_n, 0 a esa merr1·mac woods gar, pal~. 6"/S-5033 robe doon. lndl""t light. 8J\)"tlme. tng ln kltche:1 • breakfast
YOUNG worlf th ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!![!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll! Lush l•ndsc•pinn w/ 35• Pin• tr••s, sp•rklin9 Coron• de l Mar 5250 bar • huge prlv1111e fenced ing n1 o er RENTALS --. • ~ --patio • pluSJi 1'lOoSCi1plng .
wanta to share unfum apt GeMra l 4000 w•t•rfalh, bubbling streams &. sertn• ponds brick Bar-8-Q's. latG:e heat.
w/iwne, 1 child ok. Houses Unfurnished m•ke Merrimac Woodt th• pl•c.• t o live. The•• ~ -ed pool& & lanai.
968-1149 Newport Beach 3200 REMARKABLY I & 2 BR, 2 BA, f urn. or unfurn. •pf• feetur• Q.~ 3101 So. Briitol St.
BUsrnESS l\lan, straight. 26 UNBELIEVABLY e ir-cond, self-clea ning ovens, b•1irn ceilfn9s, ort• (~Ml. N. or So. eo,1 1 Plua.l·
)'Ml_._ will •hart: apt in N.B., TOWNHOUSE;__l__mt. -21,1, EXTRAORDINARI LY dishwa.1h.er.i,_pci.v .. ..ga ra9e w/stora9e, ele ... a tors, Sant• An•
you r 1h1 r e $175, BA. frpJ.c , patio, pool, 2 BEAtm.FUL 1oa• therape utic pool, swim pool, BBQ's, ON TEN ACRES PHONE: 5574200 (213).f4.\..6103 dlreel. car pr, all bltnl, crpta, Val D'isera Garden Apt s sa una • & a lovely clubhouse w/sociel acti ... ities. 1 I: 2 BR. Furn &: Unturn "''"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"'~I
S HARE my e le::;;;nl drps. Lse $775 mo. 871-8811 Putting green, waterfall I Adults please. From $1-40. Fireplaces / priv. paticli! / ~ • LRG 2 BR. Studio
V.'&lertronl homf' w/ or 642-2497 eves or wknds. "'learn. flowers ew:...,,.,bere, PoaLa. Tennis · Olntnrl Bid.at,. ·~ ~ 9IXl Sf! Lane CdM Apt. (Triplex). Family size
35-60 )'t'I: $150 mo. 67" I 3 BR. 1% Baths. Din rm. 45' pool, reC. room, billiards, fMac!thur ~ eo.i:~~ kltch. "'' bllns, crptll, drps,
Kitch. bllns. New crpU, BBQ's, Sauna, fw'n.-unfum, frplc., encl gar. l or 2
Cost• Mesa 2100 drps. Compl landl!cpd. Back 1" 2 Br. also Slngles from RENTALS.======'="'==':!:::::_~ . -children ok. lNr schls) No
1----------Bay area. lease $300 mo. $135, See ii! «lOO Panona A t F . heel Costa Mesa 5100 Balboa 5300 pets. 2230 S. Center St.,
A'ITRAC. 1 Bdrm, furnished. !\II 2--5690 Rd., 642-8670. Between Har-P s. __ urn1s ---·-S.A. Nr \\'arner. J4,;.()989
:Z DAILY PILOT
RE ALS ....._ ,....,...,, ... -* * * * *
Whaddy1 W a nt? Whaddy1 Got?
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Spacial Ra te
S Line s -5 timH -5 bucks
llUl IES -AO AllUSl INC:I UOE
t-WlltT '°"' ~'f• to Ir-. ~Wl'>~I JOU ~ft! II I,_,
I-TOUR ""°"" •FIOlfW off!Or..... •-.!i anei o4 adven1 ...... ~J!tlNG_FOa .lALE -lu.D.ES~l 'fl
To Place Your T r1der 's P1radiM Ad
PHONE 642.5671
*
Eutside. SU'.I. S i n1le FOR Lease: New Eastblu.U bor&Newport .2BlkN.19th New rt ~ach 4200 VILLA MESA APTS. UNF UR:N.-BALBOA
f.emale. t n q u Ire 26t5 Condominium, 3 BR, 2% BA CHA TE AU LA POINTE _!D -2 BR. Priv patio. Htd pool. Ne~·. Lo~·er duplex. 2 BR. :?
tlAV1'::. 10 units in Do~™·Y
\Vant N'pt, Reach duplex
ASK FOR •·LEE"
Pyramid Excbangors
675-8800 • 499-1990 Eves
150 acres nr. }o'allon. Ne\<,
REAL ESTATE Free & cliar. for houses,
General units. cornmercllll, !?!
12 Z.BR. apts. Cos ta Ml'Q.
Tnade for bome in Costa i
A1esa or nr. ~·a1l'r front So.
Oregon to N. San Diego
Cnry. Fortin Co. 642-:.<ol.
Ha\'e 8 units small &hopping
('('ntcr, vacant lot, need va-
cant land suitable for trail-
rr park. any area or ???!
PriCf" JUty, 5-18-3209
Westminster. E v es & $35(1. Nr. school, mkt, pool, Lovely 2 Br Furn Apt. Pool . 2 cu encl'd gar. Children b&. & den. Near ocean,
v.·knds. tennis els. Owner 644-41134 & Ca@'.lrt. Adults, 00 pebl. ~ I I nENT welcome, 110 pets please! $350 Month
1941 p c flt l..JU .-•LJ1l Ill I $16.i mo. TI9 \\/. \Vilson . Bay & Beach Realty fr){'. 2 BR... WU°·• paUo. Quiet 3 BR. 2% ba. town home. omona, · · 646-1251. 901 Dover Dr., Suite 126 NB
tropical setting for adults. Swimming pool. $300 Monlh • API'S • Apartment Rental &4" 2000 E
l blk r;hopg. $185. 548-TI34 Hal Plnchin Realtor 675-4392 Furn & Unfurn . from $75. Listing Service 2 BR. Unfurn. Newly <lee. a. ves. G46-600l
Blue Beacon, 64!>-0lll Bier. For Infonnation writr: New crpts & drps, Spac ---;'"
Box 4486, Newport Bch. b'l'Ounds. Adlts, no pets. S140 tiun.!!_n.gton Beac~-~
92564 or phone 642-4656 1110. 2283 Fountain \Vay E. 3210 1 .N_•_w_po~rt_B_•_•_c11 __ 22_00 Newport Heights
CANAL WATERFRONT 1 BDRM, stove, garage, S125. Cost• Mes11 4100
Own pvl bl!ach. Lovely 3 Adult couple only. 3017 Clay I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;,1
Br. 2 Ba. f'utn or unL St. or 548--0159 Furnished Apt1. * LOW WEEKLY RATES *
MESA MOTEL
Ol11rbor turn W. on Wilson).
\Vilson Gardens Apt.~. ON BEACH!
2 Patios. Yr. leaae $450 Mo. ·· VILLA POMONA Kitchen, TV's, maid service.
Graham Realty 646-2414 University Park 3237 from $1-40. Heated Pool.
LOVELY . Spacious 1 Br e 2 BR 1 ~3 BA FROM S235
Duplex. W /\V crpt & drps, e 2 BR 2 BA FRO!\f $260 ref~ig., slove, util. Sl.5.5. e 3 BR 2 BA FROI\1 S360
~1et mature adults. R£'fer. Carpets-drapes-Oish\l'asher
~8-8007 heated pool-sauna.tennis ~!!_port Shores 2220
LO\V SeaaonaJ Rate. Modern
3 BR. 2 BA house. l blk
ocean, club tac. 12131 HO
7.32911 wkd~.
Balboa 2300
* SUMMER or Yearly. 4.>'
Bayfront Balboa Penin. turn s BR. 4 BA. P,ier-noat.
Avail Sept ht. Call 673-2039
2 Br. % Blk to Bay &: Bch.
Sl80 yrly. 1304 w. Balboa
Blvd. 675-2539.
L ido Isle 2351
LUXURIOUSLY furn. Ex-
ecutive 2 Br, 2 Ba. dn!u.
rm. So. patio. Nr. Beach.
Adull11. 1 Y'r. lse. $315 mo.
6'i;i;-8444 or ( l l 882-3572
"""'"""' LUXURIOUSLY f'urn. E.~·
ecutive 2 BR. 2 BA. dress.
rm. So. pe.Uo. Nr. &11ch.
Adults. 1 \'r Jae. $375 mo.
67S-M4f
Huntington Beach 2400
NEW 4 Bdrm, 4 bath, lull)'
furn for executive .. 1 mile
lo beach. Avail J une thru
Dec. $675 n;x:i. 96Ull4
Summer Rentals 2910
SUMMER RENTAL
LAGUNA BEACH
Beaut. BIUe Lagoon Villa, 2
BR, 2 BA, w/dryer, \lo'et bar,
4 BR. to~nhow;e •.•••• Ui1J ADULTS ONLY, NO PETS 646-9681
3 BR. 2 ba •••••• , ..... $285 AU. l\-fODERN AMENITIES e WJNTER RENTAL-S e
3 BR. 2 ba •••••••••••• $300 1760 Pomona, Costa Mesa ABBEY REALTY
3 BR, 2 ha •••••••••••• S350 \V. of Nwpt. betw 17th&: l8th e 642-3850e
3 BR. 2 ha •••••••••••• $3Zi --DELUXE 2 Br WestcliU loc
f BR. Exec. home •••••. $:575 LOVE~Y 2 Bi:t. Spac)o~, Pool & blms'. Adults $210 e Red Hill Realty Jwcunou1 furniture., Brick mo-no llle. &12-6274 Univ Park Center Irvine mack bar, shag carpel, ==~~------ea·u Anytime ~ beaulifut kitchen, lile bath, sr~s lo be~~ yrly, 2 br.
reasonable rent. No lease beamed ceiling, fr p I c .
required. Children &: small Adults. $22). 642--3490.
Hunfi"lton Ba•ch 3400' pets welcoml'. l:lt Victoria, LARGE 2 Bdrm., tirepl, Blk.
3 BR. 2 BA. Drp!!, hrdwd
fi rs, room fO!" trailer/boat,
nr Beach & Heil. $200.
Adults. 962-4391
Apt 4 to Ocean. Yrly. S20Q mo.
$30 WEEK & UP 673-8088 Adults only.
STUDIO &: 1 BEDROOMS 1 BDR:"d apt. Close to bay
TV A Kitcbenette1 incl. & beach. Furn or unfurn.
3 BDRM, 2 bath, enc1011cd Linens .l maid ser avail 675-787b, 494-94n Robin.son
patio, Very clean! Avail Chlldrens & pet section --
-'="""=!=. l='s;=·=· 968-J616==== I 2376 NEWPORT BL VD Newport Hgts. 4210
-541-9755 -___ :__; __ ""----ICLEAN l & 2 BR. Lrg kit.
Fountain Valley 3410
3BR, 2\i:BA house. ~ase.
Cpts, drps, bit-ins. Fenced
Ir. landscaped. $235. Sil-~
aft 3
* WEEKLY * Adults, no pell. $135-$150.
Lovely a pt, Bachelol'!I nr 2411 E. 16lh St., 646-1801.
cpts. Furnishings com pl. I======'=='='==
Kitchenettes. $35 v.·k.pays Corona del Mar 4250
all. 998 El Camino Dr. ----------
~51 BAY vie\v 1 Br apt, util
Santa Ana 3610 SPACIOUS. Attrac. Pool. & gar lncl. $2'L mo, or
------Util pd. Garden Living. 1 $22a wk-8ummer. 838--02'J!I
3 BR, 2 bath, Fam nn., BR. $150 & up. 2 Br. flT:). 1 BR. Util paid. Garage.
bll·ins, Lg fenced yard, 2 Adulls. no pets. 740 \V. 18th 1 adult. No pets. $175 mo,
car gar, $200 mo. 548-0324, SI., 0 1 yearly. 673-®7 eves.
MG-2966 aft 5.
La~~!. ~uch 3705
FURN. Aptli . Bachelors $115. 1 BR. Apl. w/garage. $165.
I BR ... $1» -1130. 213; *67S.5553*
Elden Ave .. CM. See l\1gr.
Apt , 6. B1lboa Island ~55
HARBOR GREENS
GARDEN & STUDIO APTS
Bach. 1, 2, 3 BR's. lrum $110.
1700 Peterson Wa,y, C.?tt
546-0370
rec room-ocean vie\\'S
patlos.amplc parki11g.
Security guards.
FURN. aJso Avail.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC *DELUXE * • -I B' t t N , 7ll OCEAN AVE .• !J.B. ....., . ap , un Ul'n. e v (7141 53fi..l4S7 crptg, new drps thruou1, .
bltns, sep. din rm. 008 t:I Ofc. open 10 am-6 pn1 Dally
Camino Dr. !>16-0-151 * DELUXE l & 2 BR NEAR l lu nlin.gton Harbor. Triplexes. Quiet area Lrg
Gru:'cn Apts. Blt-lni;, prlv. 1 BR., dishwasher. St40 & up
patio, hca~ted )XIOI. Jrplc. Pets, cbildrt'n ok. (21.31 592-
AduHs. S14<1 n10. 5-16-5163 2623. 1714 ) S.IG-li'l9
DELUXE 2 Br. apL Crpts,
drps, dshwhr, frplc, garb. NE\V 1 Br-~!k to heh .. $130
displ. l\1in from Frwy. Cl\1 . unfurn. •S150 fur) P•:i pal
962--0367. -QUIET! Gar. sgle adlts,
cple. :m A 14th. 536-1319, NE\V Dlx 1 & 2 Br. Shg crpt, 673-17S1
drps, bltns, imn1ed. ·'>Ccp. l-0.~C.0.~=~=~~=
Fron1 Sl50. :.40-1973. 5-15-2.121 BEACH BLUFF APTS
2 BDRl\f a I. 376-E J8th Ne.IV 2 &. 3 BR, patkis, pool. . · P • . . · v1e\Y d1shwashct'. ~1~;1 &l~l';k ce11Lngs, pvt s23i Ell is. 842-8477
* LRG 2 & 3 BR 2 Baths DELUX ultra·private 2 br,
• ' 2 ba apl. Pvl garden pat, trplc, bllns, crpts, drps. . 1 1 1165 53S-S659
Encl gar., patio. 546-103-..!_ :;'? c'ei!c~:;'· · '
LOVELY Jgc. l BR Crp!.~. NEW 4 Br home. 2 ba, garb
drps. bl1n~. gar. Adulls, no d' 11 d t 1135 646-1762 tsp. ( IS"'Sr, stOYI', 111s, pe s. mo. lncd yd $190 + $100 sec.
./ NE\V l -2 S R. St.50 & Sl70. fee, Avail immed. 8451 Lo-*FOR LEASE*
Spacious 3 bdrm. h9n:ie, to.
cated on 3 lot1, )ge deck w/
~an view, fireplace, 8 /1
kitchen. 3 car garage. $285
Month.
./ $145 BOAT SUp &: 2 Bdrm Ulil incl. Adults only, no l)('IS mond Dr, (213) 534-3582
(2) 1 BR Apts. Fu~ & partly Garage Apt. 1 Balh. J35o 241 Avocado * &1&-0979 2 BR. Condo.: bltns. cpts,
MISSION REALTY
494-0731
~!:: ~acentia No. Ji. Bill Grundy Realtor 642-4620 2 Br apl. elec b11ins, crpts dl'apes: i•; ha. Encl. dbl.
... & d111s. Slj{) P<'I. n10. t·annlc gar. J Child OK. No JX'IS.
SUS CASITAS Huntington Beach 4400 Price H.ltr a<!S-3200 530-0817 Alier 5 PM.
Furn. l BR Apts, Adults --· -LG 2 Br. crp1s, d111s, 2 BDRi\-1. Apt. carrcts. built·
2 s1o1•irnming pools, tennis "'========= only, no pets. 2110 Ne\l·porl $130 A MONTH carpo1i, pool, child ok. 2214 ins, garage, oo pets. Call
Blvd, CM . 642-9286 1 Bdrn1 furn apt, overlook-College. 646--062'7 962-&S78. courts, steps to private
beach. $425 month of June. ~g~ Niguel 3707
$250 wkly. July and August. 3 BR, 2 BA, family rm,
499.2152. 10 AM-2 PM. &ep. dining area, view. By
owner. 4~2545
OCEAN, Goll Qourse, Mobile RENTALS home. Adult Pk. D.B.C.
Pool, sauna, bar/r est. Apts. Furnished
>J6.-0321 ~....:..--~-'C...--
Gener• I 4000
./ DELUXE 2 BR. Apt. ---------6 /l 5-9 / l S. s.m mo.
\Vestclill area. 642-6774
RENTAL)
Houses Unfurnished
General 3000
$190-PVT. beach, 2 BR
duplex 2 blkl. from ocean,
New W/W and drps. R&O
& Refrig, Single, ok. Bkr.
52+<980
Single
Adults
• QUIET 2 Bdrm Duplex Ing beaut. g~cn palio & SllS PER mo. 2 Br. I &mauol ~===;;=======
BUns, garg, patio. £.aide. htd pool. l035 lZth SI. child ok. No 1ie1s. Bltns, Santa Ana
Adults, no pets, {across from Lake Park). cpts, dfl)s. 53.S-9462 aft 5. ---
5620
3" B 16th Pl. &1"1298 _'3&-4=..,===~~ 3 Bt· Stod• Co"'1o. CAN 'T BE B£AJ
l BR. aean. Attrac. Furn. ""'SOLTEROS APTS. 2 Pools. bltins. S225 n10. Call
SllQ. Lea~. Reis. Cpl or Bachelor & I BR's. Pool. 546-3710
retired. 2538 Nc~1>0rt Blvd. Adults. no pets, From $140 ----------up, 17301 Keelson Ln 11.B. CLEAN 3 Br. 2 Ba, cpts.
1 BR. Util pd. Sl.30. No pet!!. 11 blk w of Beac'h on dps. bl!ns. Xlnt N. C:\f area.
1'1aturt'. adult. S'!&No. t Slater.I 842.7848. ' Childrn ok. $169. 557~1!11
Va1Pnc1a. 540-9680. L G lro b =~~===~-,07-' 2 BR. Adulls only. Util pd. R . n1 . dining com inR-$1~ PRIVATE 1 . Bdrm, Beaut.. Quiet. $200. 17676 lion, 2 Br, den. Adults,
qu iet, den, pool, patio, gar. Cameron;-84Ul21 teens, O.h:. $1 7J. 642-08.'17
Adults, No pets. 646-3764 I-===°'·====== NEW Ap! 1 BR. BHn11, drps, * 1 & 2 Br. Furn. Apts.
POOL. 177 Tltld St.
NASSAU PALl\fS. 642-J64j
./ 2 Br. furn Apt.
Laguna 8tach 4705
"" $21 WK. LUXURY
By U)(' sea. 494. not
No pets. 1563 Santa Ana Ave. RENTALS
nr bch. shops. AtJults, no
pets. $125. 642-1014.
Newpor t Beach 5200
Single Story
South Sea Atmosphere
2 Bedroom 2 Baths
Ca rpets & Drape&
Air ConditionC!CJ
Private Patios
Heated Pool
PIC'nly of lawn
Carpot1 & Storage
Alt 5, ;ws.-966J. Apts. Unfurnished • NOW RENTING • lllODEN VltLAGE
DUPLEX l BR rum., near ( t-M ;sa 5100 shop'g. Quiel. nn dogs. -•-•-•--------
Beaut new 2 lit'. 2 both units GARDEN APTS
\V/qual. cpts .• t drps. Plan· 2."iOO South Salta
__ ··------Myert
Renta ls Wanted 5990 673·6756 ----.. --l--H-A-VE CAL 20-
FEMALE Doctor 1o1•/well-\\'ANT
mannered dog ~·lshe11 to LATE ~-rATION \V1\GON
renr ye11.r round unlurn. * 673-0517 *
houi;c ~·/fenced ya.t-d in I c==='°'-=~~-CdM or Laguna. Re t. Kenniore Electric Dryer,
673-1158, 835-2081. used I year, like new.
RENTAL SERVICE \Vill trade for gas d1j'er
FrH to Landlords in same good conditlon. &ffi.809'l Blue Beacon, 645-0183 CJ\f
llv Dulll Showman, Vo x e LANDLORDS e Conrl organ, '67 Honda 160
FREE P.ENTAL SERVICE CB, ru,u, pool !bl; trd 2 or
Broker 534-6982 more for 350cc or larger
3 or 4 BR, 2 BA ~'8tcrfront t.fotorcyclc. &l.J-0.120
home for Aug. 644-1500 or 213: 796-~ Custorn ranch & guest hse
---------El Toro nr Cota de Caza for
2 or 3 BR hout.e. unn1t'tf. Land Imperial Valley ra·s
for lamily or :.. Up to SIT.i. apts, commercial subn1it.
Cl\! area. 645-2183 agl 675-2741. t.tr. Sle\l'arl,
Trade 3.i ' Fibreglass Sloop
any stage o( completion
SLEEPING Rn1. E. Costa from $39!1.'i. \Vant late Cad.
Mesa. Employed genlleman. lilac, Llncoln can1per or
SS5 l\1o. n1o!or home. 67J.6809.
Rooms for Rent 5995
.._ .. _500l ____ ,._8-0_390 __ E_,_ .. _ !"co""M~M~E~-R~C~l~A~Lc:.:p~ro~,~ .. -h-..,
IN Pvt, home for <'mployed & clear. Next to Sears Co-
n1an, no t.'OOking. S~JO n10. vina: $6.i,000 equity.· For
Pvt entr. N.B. 5-18-3684 house, units or lafl(J.
PRtV. Home near Baker &. Owner 67:..0259
Fairview, C~l . Also near BEAUTIFUL ENGLISH 6
OCC. Call 54~3298 fi;\f Home near Pasadena
l cl5c_P_E_R_•_·k_o_p_•-·/-lu_l_t;J;-,-,· l for N.B., Cdl\f, C.M. Dwplcx
$30 "'k up apts. 01· uni!s. Home value $29,500
t.lofcl. 5-IS-!1755 clear. Call MS-85.~2.
Motels, T railer
Courts 5997
./ \\'El'..l<L'i.' Mites. SEA
LARK l'llOTEL, ·230 1
Trade ;\I-I lot Costa i\lesa.
Equity Sl5,000. Want R-l lot
or liome Coslal area from
N~·pt Beach to Dana Pt.
Call 673-6809.
1916 Model T Ford Road-
ster. Looks good. runs good .
!·[as 2 engines. Trade lor
late Ford or CheYy, 2210
Orange, LI 8-4553
:l BR, 21;f, BA Townhouse,
N.B. Pri. putio, pool, elec.
kitchen. S32.000. Take low
do1vn, late model car. T.D.
or ?? Owner 64&6654.
\VlLL TRADE ? ? ! , !or
:sn1aJI diesel engine
lo install in 34'
!\lontercy style boat.
Days: 642-3360
\\'anl Greenbrier Bus or
:;imilar, \\'iii trade above
book as 1:1 credit on 2n
acrL-s nr. Palm Sprgs, Bal,
r>ayable $25 mo. 53&-1131.
1~ Acre, custom 3 Br, 2 Ba, rool. horses or uniL~ ok.
\\'ant : Inco111e property, mo..
lor home. pwr boat or ?
;131.7636 Owner/Ag\.
S DLX. uni!s, close lo Holly-
"'OOfl Park. All rented,
$38.000 E11uity: for hoUSC",
land or illt.'On1r.
O\l•ner 6Ta·62:i9
'.! Ne\l·er duplexes, side by
.sule; J Br. 2 Ba . ea.; fplcs,
Nr. beach. ~:quily approx.
$27.000, Trade fnr land or
1ndus1. Realtor 673--tl"iCI,
Lu;t it here -1n Orange
Whal cio ~o have to trade?
Couniy·1 larR"est read trad·
Ing polt -ar1 make I deal
Newpot1 Blvd, Costa !'1-lcsa. 1' * * '* * '* 5999 l !R~~~A~L~E~S~T~A~T~E!!!!!li!!i!!!!!!!!!!,~R~F.~.A~L!!!!i!E~S!T~A~T!E!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!I M isc . Rentals
STORAGE space, &JO sq . ft.
or less availahlc in NB.
~2-7893. 962-8046
Income Property
LET OUR
QUA RID
SING YOU A
SONG
\\·,!call them .. TI·IE l\10NEY·
l\IAh"ERS" . .f M>parate hom-
rs on ~~ acn> of t.:11. Plenty
of extra room lo add c:unp.
rr . IJ-ailer s!oragt' or build
a sn1all Al 1 building.
P lus
AssunK' ou r exislinc: loan ;it
fi.6'.-:. Great potential for
tho:\<" \\'ho look beynrnl to-
111orro1o1'. Call us abnu1 lhcsc
rasy.to-o\\•n bf>11utirs.
ONLY S4!l.500
673-8:.50
Business Rental 6060 ;.;;; __ _
Gene r•I Genera l :.=..-~~ --'-~"'---~-I
Business R enta l 6060 Office Rental 6070 ------FOR LEASE
NE\V !'-;HOPS & OF'FICES
NOW AVAILABLE
SAN J UAN CAPISTRANO
Prestige, A/C, i\1 ls s ion
Style. individual s Io r c
fronts. exttllent parking.
PACIFIC INVESTMENTS
820 Soulh Grand, Santa Ana
714: 835-2923
DESK SPACE
305 No. El C •mino Real
San Clemente
-1~2-1420
Best Loc ation in CdM
8oO to 1400 sq. n. Deluxe Off.
ice Spacc!S. Avail l1nn1cd.
Phone Owner. &12.99;,o
HILLGREN SQUARE Commercial 6085
2 stores avail. f • immed,
lease in ooc of city's busi~t
shopping renters. App. 850
~·ft, ca.
25G E. 17th St.. Costa r.fesa
PRfl\1E OCEMFRONT
4 furnished units, zoned com-
mercial, 25JC125, S6 9.500 .
O\\·ner: 673-2259, 64~-:i972
CaJ! Mr. Bram £113) 01.1-2700 ~IARINA In Newport BC'ach.
Store o r Ofc. 600 s q. ff. Prinie loc. ;;·ee $315,000
r c E:<lcl. Kingaa rd, R.E. n .M. 01\•ner, 64&.2130. !'I-fl 2-:?7!.!. . I F'°On;;R-,Sa=1,~.-,,~,-, .. ~b~o~U~d-;,-g,
Office Rental 4070 6S6-698 \V. 191h SI. Bethel
Tu1\·ers area. 548-1768 Agt
DELUXE 1·2 or 3 1111. suite .
nr. Oronge County Airporl
& Irvine Jndus trlal Indus trial Renta l 6090
Complex. Carpel, d1•a,pc~. --
music, air-condilinning & * * * Ir
janitor ial service. Ne1v 3800 sq rt. * * $383 mo. $150 CLEAN 2 Br, Sep.,
house. Gar. Children & pet
ok.
Luxury single. 1 & 2 bed-
room apartments. furnish-
ed and unfurnished, with
complete privacy and land-
scapetl country club atmo&o
phere including $750,000
worth of reereational facil-
itirs (lesigoed an1· operated
just Jor s.lngJe people.
54!l2720 FAIRWAY ncd for 11riv11cy plus outside Santa Ana * 546-1;125 •STORE -S110. 828 \V. l!l!h AVAILABLE NO\V Ne\\°{)l)r! ll<'ach
BOB PETTIT, Realtor e 833.()101 •
642-148J
Blue Beacon 6.f5.0111 Bkr.
S190 PVT heh. 2 Br duplx.
2 blk ocean. Nu ww & drps.
R/0, retr. Stlgls ok. Bkr.
5.'l<-<980
2 BR., 2 Ba., white \\3tf'r
view. So. Laguna. $250 mo.
<n.-ner I Broker. 499-1990
eves.
S135. Nr. ocean. 2 BR duplrx.
Yard & Gar. Children \l'el-
come. Bkr. S344Dll
$l7S NICE 3 Br. House. Lrx
yard, 2 bllai beach.
Blue Beacon, 645-0111 Bkr.
Cos ta Mesa 3100
3 BR. 2 Ba, fully drped,
crpted, (rplc. 11!o~·e, refrlg.
encl yari:!., patio, dbl gar.
Walk lo Shop~ Ctr. J'.1eM
~1 rmorial. Cul-rlt·MC :;t.
S23;; r.10. Evrs. 673-4712.
.f BR, 211. BA, carpet11,
drape11, frpl, fenced fard. s 2:.0. 64&-59().:)
./ Four Bedmnm llouae
Crpl3 & Orp$. S250 cau ~7688. 540-0341
Rents From
$145 to $300
Tmmcdiale Ocrupancy
r.to. to l>Io. Lea:e Avail,
ANAHEIM
m So. Brookhunl
11 blk. So. of Lincoln) (n-t> T'r'.A;ioo
GARDEN GROVE
13100 Chapman Ave.
Cf blks \V. Santa Ana Fwy.)
{714) 631)..3030
NEWPORT BEACH
880 IRVINE AVE.
lRVINE AND 16lh
( n41 &L>0050
Soutti Bay Club
Aportm•nts
RENT FURNITURE
2 BDRM houte. tarp fenct'd
yard. SI75. 26.jj! Orange 3 Rooms Imm $19.95
Aw., Un the rear). Month lo month ~t-11
Wkle Selection HSE on lot w/ duplex, I~ 100~ PUROi.ASE OP'IlON
kitcOOn, din'1, 2 Br. tk!n. 2.f hr. Dellv('ry
Adults/IMm. f175. 64~7 Custom l-Urniture Re.ntl!.1
2 BR, cpta, drpt. fenced Vl'I, 517 W. 19th, C~f. MS·l-1.~
xlnt location. lSJ &. l!th l!i68 W Unooln, Anhm 774-2800
St. No. 3. &i2-«129 HOLIDAY PLAZA
I BR dtlp1ex. UtU, ntngt!, OEWXE. Spacious 1 Bdrm
refrl1. f\Jm. LatP yard. Furn apt $135 plu' utn.
S13.>. 288 Knox S(. aft 5 Jleatcd pool. ampl~ parking.
CJ Yoor .\d m 0 u r No r hlldrt:n • no pe~.
cl&idned9? Sotneone •1U he I --~IOOS=~Po-=mo="~'~· =c~.M~·-tootdtto ... IL DIAi -, __ SOCK __ rr_ro __ ·EM_< _
I
1 BR Trailer SOO-~.~,-,-. ~13~2
\V. \\1llson. !"J.lR-9577 lll E.
16th SL 642-126."1
BACllELOR"aPt-. -f u r n ,
!iv. areas, pool & rec. facil. fT'S WONOER.Ft.:L 1 he St., Cl\'i. Avail J une Isl.
Dbl. garages. In lltt! heart b . 1. 54S-1768
VILLA APTS. f N t Bch / man) uy1 1n app 1anccs -"--"'-------0 P · . · w easy access you find in the Classified THE QUICKER YOU CALL,
Drps, new w/w epls, pool, Private patio, pool • indiv.
~~~p~: beach, f:rwys. Ads. Oicek them now! THE QUICKER YOU SELL
pvt bal. 6~j..()()9'.l all 3 pm. laundry fac. BOYD REALTY RENTAL S RENTALS
Near Orange Co. Airport & 444-"1617 675·5930 Apts. Unfurnished Apts. Unfurnished
Newport Bea ch 4200 UCI. Adults only. DOWNING APTS Santa Ana 5620 Santa Ana 5620 ~~--------'-'"-"'-;c,;.;.o..c..;.c., ____ ,.c.
Newport Beach
GRAND
OPENING
IMMEDIATE
20122 Santa Ana Ave.
J\li;r. J\In. Bruce 545.3891
BAY t.:IEAOO\V APTS.
New excitina: 1 BR, $140.
2 BR. $165. Beam {'eilings.
\Vood pan'lg, shag crplg,
prlv. patK>, some w/ frplcs.
Pool, sand volley ball crt ,
rt'C bldg, JXIOI !ables. put·
tine: green, Adul ts, no pets.
387 W. Bay. Open Hnusl'
CORNER CL.\Y ST. &
ST. ANDRE\VS ROAD.
Upper 2 Br, 2 Ba. Frplc •
J!riv, d<'ck . pool. 12 adulti;
OC'<'1Jpying 10 apts, QUIET!
$200 mo. Adul1s over 18.
6'16.S'iOI
BAYFIONT
12·7 pm daily. 6•1&-0073.
OCCUPANCY 1 ~'-"-~""~· ~~~
""""'' """''" apat"tm'""' • MARTINIQUE •
2 BH. 2 8 1\ J.u:ocury Apls.
Pdv. tc1Tace, clevalors, snb.
IUl'f'IUK'lln pk',::. toll r ice.
Pool, soft wall'l'. docl1s. 3121
\V. C'nnsl lh\·y. Nc1v1>0rt.
&12-220:.!
ff 1 --plete prl\·acy P ark·Llke Surroundings o er ~!!: '""'" . DELUXE 1·2 ~ 3 BR APTS,
beautiful lando;c11plng & ALSO FURN. BAOIELOR
unparalleled recreational Prv patios e Hid Pools
faclliUes In a country Nr ~oop·g e Adult! ()nly
club 1un~rihere. Now 1m Santa 1\na A\'e., Cl\I
lcaslnit 1n Nt!'lllJOrt Bead1. lolltf' Apl 113 e 646-5542
2 BdmlitrOCCanuprdllpl~
~200 )C11rlv rrh·11.: & 1 .. , ·1•
1\vn1l June I. c1'11U!.. ~undeck
3111 ~ 3tilh St. 1~1.11 :1-IS.lltll
0PEN 12-7 • 2-RR, 2 sA.
cpt£. th'f>l', JJriv. patio
Ll'11.'K'. $1 75-$19.l. 4230 l!Uarls
\\'ay, Ca.II 213.981.703:9 ~lodel• open 10 1m to 8 pm
Rent. from SllS-$310
f\Jmbhcd or unrumlshed
Oakwood
Garden
Apartments
1700 16th Street
714: 642-8170
DELUXE I & 2 Brlrtn, BJt.
IM l"Htlgt' &: dish\\·asht'r. 2 BR . Condo.: 21~ ba , 2 Ca r
r ncl garages. pn.1\i;. S\3.}. J:aJ'fl.Kf'. p,"?I. Adults S240
SJ70. part util . 301 & 307 ~1on~F'2:!1n Co. 6-1'2~
AvO('ado. ~S...74().'.) 3 BH. 2lS BA A11t. Swim,
J BR.-Duple~:-s1oc.-:-Qu1e1 I pool pr\\·il. \V/w crptg, $300
g3rdrn atn'IOsphtrt: nn pc!~ nio.~7l-9183. __
or chlldfl'n. Ohlf'r f)C'rm . 2 BR deluxe. Adult~. Crp!5,
tenant onl)•. ~1s..Gm dn1~. httn~. gar. T'r1v. 11n1Jo.
ONE bedronm Ctmd-:-Blt·in f•l!l.0133. $165 mo.
JOIO\'~. ~frig. \\'asher &
tltyf'r. Nr1\ ('8rfl('ts. Pml Back Bay
1u't'a. Slli. fi·lf...s9~9. 8-5 P\I ---114.!l
For DRiiy f>Uot \Vint Adi drp:.. nhn~. pvo.ll. $1 6:i rnu.
..JJ11<U"/,,. ,n I J
Spani11n S1yle Luxury
I ~ ! Bedroorru
r•rni•hM •"' fJn/aarnU'ir<l
A.Juli Li.,lnr
Qu•li•r Shn1 C•r~1-rr •fl l'•ntllin1
fi,'fr:ilin.1 l nltrior Dr••I"
,,. ttllt-i,. '""'"' I: O •Uf'f
Priuie Dttk •nd Bnleo,._<r
Alr Cnn.di1i11ntJ ,.;,.m Your o .. ,. p,;.,.,. St.
llNIN Paol--Color TY A.nltnn•
f\'ou1 Re11 1i11g-,.·ron1. Sl 40
}•11 Nort" of Soul.Ii Uwlaf rlo••
1000 W. MacArllttU' Bl•d.
J blMJt r. •• , .,, Bn.tal
Snntn Ann 540.Jl4.97
1
ON ILTlllt' A\'f' 2 Ur. fl'Jil,
__________ 0_1,_,1_6'~2-·'6.;..,,;7>_1~or:....:;R~ESUL..::::~T:.;;SC :•~1~1~67~3-36..::::'00::_ _______________________ _
•
•
Modern Offices
$75 single. Sl75 2 rm suite.
Air cond. Scct'y service.
parking, centrally loca!Nl,
So. Calif ls! Nat. Bk. Bldg.
230 E. 17th Strecl
c~ta l'llesa &tz.1485
DESK SPACE
222 Forest Avenue
oh 6100
* * LAKEF'RONT LOT ~-on SALE. C ANYON
LAl\E, BY 0 \V NE R.
837-5311.
OC."E'A~N=F=Ro=Nc'T-L~O~T
San C\emenlf', Cali!.
Superb \'iC'\1•, 60 x 120' lev.
1urn. lot. Cri~loblll Espl11.nad~
for sale by 011·1lt'r, $29.500.
67l-:,S-18 f'Vt·~.
Loguna Beach C itrus Groves 4175
49•1·9466 ---·-· ---* OFFICE SUIT°E COLUSA COUNTY
Fo1· lease 2000 Sil. ft. Iden! 4200 Acres Of Prinie Grain &:
location, do1vntO\vn Laguna Gt·n7.lng l...11nd, Appro.'t. 2;"1()(1
Beach. Crptd, 11ir • eond. acft's can l'lt' fnrn1Cft. 1'.laln
Janitor. lJHI, Priv dual rest. huu~· !..· ht•!p hou&-, Good
rn1 lac. 494·9481 ll'Orktng l'Orroil~. xlrl't renc-
DESK SPACE ini;. !lunch 1 .. lencNJ into 12
d1rftr('11t pu11rut't's & ea, ~lll-
l 7875 Beach Blvd. lut·c h;1s 1.•ood \l'll.lci· 11ui>ply.
H I' B I ·riu:.; n1nch 1\ill 1·asily n 1n un ington eac l '.°JOO head ol ~·01\·s. Colu!MI
642•1321. F~'I 276 Coun1y IS Or\r• o/ the bcllt
--W:·f''ICE OR STORE-J:ct11'rul l:u•1n1111: 1'0untif'lll in
1:1 x :l:)' or ::O x p· C.:al1f. & llt";1J 11n1fl('11y tnxes
off $1 pking & util furn lil'f' lo1o1 be1.:au~ of cflicit?nl
NC\l'Jl0r1 & Bay C('n!('r, C.'I IOr;iJ J:ll\'l'tning. Priced \II
20.l2 Ne~l>(lrt Bh·d IH&-1252 SIS8 J>l'r ac1'f' Jo"or lurlhcr
SUITE L; 400 i;q, ft. ol :~·1 plra."C' ~'Onlncl Ernc1t
offict' &. litonigc Rl'('n. J6:>1 I 'IOff,
Plact"ntln A ve/COAST E ckhoff & Assac., Inc .
IJRAPf.RV. &lS-l lOl 181S \\', 011.111n1an 1\,·r.
- -. -----Omni.:e. l:i111f. NE\\ PORT B<'a rh l:>t'lu...:(' I :i-11·2621, Jo~'C's11 l.;nd.~ 6:L~ro74 Olllrt'~. Al~iintl.. llf'ated, -=~~~==~~~::!'! W/ p1·iv ba. 210(1 \V. Coo~t "
llwy. I Acreage 6200
iil3. Oelu:o..c nffi"tts, lol'/w -• -.-.-,.--.. --=
rrpr11 .• A/C, s~ n10. 1n::2'i • ·• ... RF.:-; .. ~-
Brach Bll'Yi. 962.ft.:n. t ull r1r1cr S6.Jio1.
_ _ _ l.f'\• I li+tl;l ll f i.:1•11t \lf'IY
NO. c .• \I. r1Hirr. nlt't'. t•rvL I Vi!· or '.\h1l11-n11ll!uu-S '
/11~-Mn<I, cri1;. ;111~. $79 l'H . do•11'lo11111rn1 t:n .. ,t trrnl'I,
611i-IS3.1: aft ''· <117-1~7 I (7111 ~·ll-'1670 l'\CK, llkr .
ANNOUNCIMINTS
and "IQTICll ANNOUNCEMINTS
and NOTICES
MtO Announcements
WANTED
15 OVER·WEIGHT LADIES
When You
Wpnf if done
right •••
Call one ol
the experts
listed P.low!!
•
Jen -· w..,,. 7100 Jobs Man, Worn. 7100 J1lio "'°"·Warn. 7100 J1•1 Man, Wom. 7100 --;--...... -----·--·~-... ----
abilities
ur.Jlfmfteb
ageDCN
COASTAL AOINCY ** rut.L TIME MAH ** JNSPECl'ORS ** A znembrt Of. Ntl:Dlt>, Apply at Mell All three &hirta. M/F.
Snelling ii: SMlllrll Inc. Unklfti J'altview l Newport APPLY 1N PERSON'
The World's Largest ,vrriltVre Dllfwry Mal'Gregor Yacht Corp,
Proft11ton1I Put tUne. 96Ulal 15.11 Placentia, C.M.
Employmant S.rvlaa i O•liDl!!b:ii TRAINEE • kaypunch $533.
27So Hatbor Bl, CM ~ No t"P'r· II llti:. Xlnt opp. Wtll 9moWn co; In Btadl
Cott A.cent to "'° H•ttxr Blvd, at Ad1Jn1 cnfl 5C6-!IOS5 .,.. Nld1 a:p d epr,
Acct, degrtt, Exp'd EDP, COSMETICS StlecUvt Starch
1td. cos ta •Inventory cont'L How Mucbt l{>aretimt, Jtow Gal Frldey $JM. "Em~nt A&ency
. much'! SS to S? hrly. JlowT l:xclting opty tor IOmtont 2120 IO. Maln, Santa Ana
W1tthou1em•n '4U C.U Mw 8~2/841 lU2 who likes pbona eontacl 1111-80$$ ··'-. · I -' Good bents ' Shlp & rwev, exp Mlprul. WI I LutJll", A co of B.rl1tot.&.tyer JASON BSST * LADIES* U-00. ahoW
For weight reducing program lo eat1bl1Jh
litatistics !or rapid permanent weight loss,
conducted by qualltted physical culturlat.s.
hitust be a minimum or 30 pou nd • ovet·
weight, have tran1portatlon and not cur-
rently under doctor's care. All inquiries con1-
pletely <onlldentlal. . SERVICI DIRICTORY SERVICi DllllCTOlY lillVICI D llCT RY :.::c:c;.:.;:;::...o.;.=.;:.;..:::o;..1;:..::.;.;;.;..;.;:.:..;;.;.;.;.;;.;.;.;""'-
trai n youne man w/ food •COST ACCOUNTANT e Em 1 1 Alt SARAH COV"ENTR.Y Sprina
attitude, MUtt drtw. Standard coata and ln1,·t ntef12':)7 So~~~:n SA.hr::' Ana A all •U011 je-:etr1.
TRISH HOPKINS <0nlrDI. Knowlod8' or EDP. 1264 w. Karerio Anohelm A"°lulely no lnve•t mt, Wt
Accountln1 6500 Carper Clunlng 6'25 J1nltori1I
ASK FOR MISS P0WELL-S37-S412 Manufact\ll'lns Industry e• M6-54.lO or • 821.1211 tr&ln. 531-8631 or 962-5989
•!8 E 11'.. 111...1~ M.t CM. plrltnet dtllrable, Dcrret , ilt>Y, 111idd&w.ge, to care
67'0
-------REAL ESTAT!
G•neral found (Fret Ada) MOO
FULL Chara• bookkteper
need& parL lime wotk,
962-0577
Babysllllng 6550
'.f'N':i, ~~ ~
CARPET
STIAM CLIANID
OLEA1t VU Matntenatice. Wt · 111
'..,.."".,,.. ' neetmry. Staple, no n· *G•n I Offlt• $M0 tor elderly lady, J!S> mo.
&l ewt')"lhlne! l!lpec,.1o~u~atzw":ll "!,..ii~'4ii!il··l~47~0ifeo~··! 4•,.,,.., Oranp Cc u n t )' &0. Santa Ana co. paya )'(!Ur ~-HD attl.
In apt clfe.nup, 1'rM eat, Jt ACCOUNTANT/mp>l\ division of NY& lt1ted firm, qeney fee, 1 1"11 etc ttp. LARGE La1'd t>twtopmenl
ht 1trY. 6&-A •mall frle~ -•-. (I) Stnd ruume with u.IA17 qualifies. Type 5MO, blto. Co In S' n.... .. -Co am. .. ._ nqulrernentl· and hlllory IO \Vlll train on PBX for re-n ......... ,.~ ·
R. I . Wanled '240 TOY poodle or"? G ray
v.•/black, malt. w/blacll:
collar. Vic, l81h l Santa
Ana, C.?-1. &46---0623 or
S.IS.-592·1
Monte Vitt• School 10c SQ, PT. Are• AI&o carpet lhlt.all&tion
Movinn & Stor-e 6840 emp.) aelllnz nattomrtdt BOX M.slK The Dail Pilot llef. Xlnt co. & brnlt, TH hu •11 ~l!d. openinl tt • -• nttda man lo handle jnla, Y jobl alsc an enginttnn& contract ado
LOCAL & 1q dist. movi111. ld.gn:, sfml! 6 P&Jtblel. * * COOK * * J .' R. Pietce mh'listralor. A p p ~ I cant R•1pon1lble P.erty
W1nt1 to luy
!louse or income property
On or neu ll'aler
1''or low down paymt
f'rum Ow ner
\Viii ca.re fur your child he-___ '4_c•_S_f_71 ___ _ Reas. •loralt· Free Ett. 5.15--TIOl a&k for lack Croul Elq>erlenc.ct. Apply: Flyt na AMoelates Agl!ncy Inc 1hould haYI an enginttrlnl 831-<HO~ O.K. van • Ancient M•rlner 8 "11"' "01 N•WJ>Ort 81,.i· IK85 N•wpon CM '&f2.<im • '""""'""" --
Co II: '75·1175
\\'ANTED lo pUrehase: 4 Brt
h11nu1. Bluff$, C a ni "o
llighl&nd1, No. La11una Bch,
CdM & Newport. Prlnelpo.J.1
:Jnly/ 5'11-6450
BUSINl!SS and
FINANCIALc __ _
1''0UND: Prt c.:al, Vic:
\V i Is on & College, long.
haired, young black. female,
v.·hil<' feet & chest. 548-4681
BLACK ahorl haired f1·m.
puµ "·J clear llea collar.
V!e. Orange, Newpor t
Shores. 5-18-7154
RABBIT on E. Balboa Blvd,
B!k & wht.
675-11 95
101-e l •fter school. , .Grad-
"' l lhru 4th. I am ex per.
mother w/nice )ard It
healthy attuosphere. Ver)'
Reaso1mble. Call 642-8223
Ix-fore 4 PM.
* * Babysitting, my hon1e,
H.B. area, eves. * 536-3839 *
BABYSITTING my hon1c,
Lindberg Sehl att11.. P.:X[>C'r
mother. Fenced yd. 646-666e
}o'OUND • small poodle call BABYSl'ITING St. Joarhim
lo identify. Church area. Fenced y11rd. Bu1in11&
OpPortunitie1 6300 MM014 $12.:-0 wk per chUd 5'8-2-137
-~-~--,.-~~
Ou DACHSHUND, Callep Park \VILL ba~H for \l.Wkinf * FAM S BRAND area. Call &: de11cribe. mother, e:<i:p'd, vie of \Virnet
NAM! + !14>2703 a Edward• H.B. 842-00!ilil CANDY I. SNAcK 'nouTE
(PART OR FULL Tl~1E) FOUND. Boy's bike 11f'IU' BABYSM"TI NG ~ day-s wk.
VERY J~IGH IN{.'Ql\1E Balearic St~, C. l\f. rountaln V11.lley Area. Any
\\'e need a d\1\rlhu tor In thhl 5~&--lllO c"";c;:·_;gg_:c2:,,.21_21~-~~"'
Ar'f!a tor our candy fNe1tJe11, VouN·--D=--,-.,.-~a-,,.-L~V~ic. WILL M.bytll from I: :;o A){
Planlen . Toollle Rolls, Milk Mesa Verd P. lo 3:30 PM.
Dud11, c!c.l. No ~lllng In. 515-0758 * aJD.4!130 •
volved. We furnish all ac-,. --0-U-N_D_o -p-,-.,.~,-,-in-g-, _M_arc_h UC'D Babysitter. vie \\'il50n
counta. You mu1 t have 2 to N C" ,. ---• J01h, Holl ister's ursery. It Pomona, .... en\,"t'\I
8 hni. per week spare time Call to identify. $16-552;) yrd. Hot nieal.s. &fj .. ()6\7 (days or r>vc11.
$JIM TO Sl!Y"J(I DARK grey part pOOdle pu p-Cl llLD or infant care in m)'
CASH REQUJP.ED py. Vie o( Santa A Palmer. lovely new hon1e, 23rd St.
For morP. Information m'lle 54.S.!15="'---~-..,,.-.~ Santa Ana, C.i\'1. &16-5J.'l7
"DISTRIBUTOR OfVISION RA BBIT • Black &: white CHILD cart, my home, vie
•2S", P.O. Box 58, Pomona, "·cry tam<'. !kitanla, CdM. or Placentia ti 19th, CM.
Cllllf. 91769 • Include phonl! }'ound 5/10, ~ 1 =-:==2=. ======::. number. ---------I•
Affiliate Lost '401 lut M•lftttntnce 6555
CARPETS
Steant Cleaned
.For F'n!e Dtlmatea 6 Info
ClarKare
• 64M055 •
HO:-OlE tl APT Cleaninc
HY DIAMOND
187 21st St., CoAI& Me&a
64&--1317 Fl"f!t' e1t.
DISCOUNT Cai-pet Oeantn.
Expert~Late1t Equip. \lied.
Credit cardl $8. Rm.&4S..12a4
s1orq1. N.8. .:. ' bkgrnd. Pmltion otfer l * t'OOK . N ht. A p1,)o 1.iENERAL MAINTENANCE challenge and tuture Jot tht Palntfn11 -NEEDS -tg • P man for Ptl\late schcol. right puson. Send resume P1~rhl!'.tl.l!!I. 6UO e DA y e C:esa Lanei, 1703 Superior, Clee..nirc 6 yard work. 16835 to Box M·TS7 Dau, PUot -~-~---~.-~. --·-ta Mf!u.. Brooktl11rtl Sl Fel1flta1n -.m.. ..:a. ..a.. .w. --..... * PAlNTING INT • rn. DISHWASHER • COOKS . [fry rooka) Vallty ~12 ~
Avt.fl. 1 •11 J2GO. 2 •If !:xperie.nced GENERAL orilct work, part. Loetl Off let Jobs J1'o incl &I.I mlt.lrtal I APPLY JN P£1t!ON e WAimESSE! tirne, 1horth&nd A: t)'Pln& No Ch•tge 100% Frff
pNpar.1.Uon. Jll. per rm + 2607 w. co..ut ICWY. req'd, S4 hr1 Pit wttk,
p&lnt. 1..ocal rtf1t. Call Jack NEWPORT Bf:ACH Experienced Ptru.r, 15-!G yn. 115-al.\t
m.!8&sor llT ... 2& • ASSEMBLERS. APPLY TO Outi..l-w1ks
EiJl'J'OM Pa.lntJ111 'a "The Exp'd. In soldering & com-J\.fr. Hend•r'!IOll or Mrs. Gal"> To work In phone 6tdtr dept.
Pteue call tor appt.
Superior Apney 642-nd
1857 Harbor, Cotta Mraa
Exle.l'ior-Interiai.· 8iieclall1t" ponent assenibly helpfu1, rett, 3099 Briltol, C,M. VAN Coeta Meaa off.let, 4 hrs
REMARC Servlcoe. 3 nioms 1\llldentlal ~ Commercial. VALOR de KAMP COF'Fltr! SH.OP a day, 5 daya a wk. No ~ !~~-0~1~=. ~t No Job too Jars• er too ILICTRONICS COUNTER I d b' typtna. Must haYf! good * MAINTENANCE MAN * ~~nd~r~id~:S,~ Wc.n•t JlOO Pullman SI., C.M. cleanlna pta!t Y e~'d p:T telephone volcel'84~1508. ~~~;~~ ~J>.'dPi!=
Carpet laying & W..U 541).hln Same hand In in.thine If!~ GIRL Friday, pert time. S2 apply LONE RANG EA
lte•1lr IOI W~L·L,..,."'"11...,; IWlYIITTl:R. nMaed WI Inf. Apply tn penon. f1¥t hr .. Receptlorilst,lltebkkpg, R&ITAUJ\ANT, lTIO
_.;,;,;.,t. "* "' "'a1t1
' r.' children, 6 d~ wk. Call Point!: Cleantrt. 18641 M&Jri WlttlLHOUSI: COMPAU, Bl HUnt1ns'ttm * EXPERT CARPET 1Vhen you. c l'itae atter 3 pm 642-9\63 st Hunt• Bch 2701 \Y. Coast Hwy. 642--5603 BttBta~ \Pd., 548-1444 5'19-0449 • . . . ... ,, Installation A k•P•lr ":::L . . BABYSlTi"iii ror teachlr Dept Start OIRL Friday, Single. Perm.
t\c jo b too sm•ll, ft8..!i011 tx-r & JN1' spec1al rates. my home otf Vktorla nff; ' l>osition. Growing Co. s.n MAN 10 usi&t Mgr., local
Ai:st. ttiling spraycd $1$. Broo~t 6«Mii06 J,W. lloLJMOn Clemente on bch. 492.-70» appliance store. ~flllt bt
Floors
CARPET ""I
SHAGS HI-LO TWEEDS
l ie Contr
&.16-4478
Gardening
f"ree est.
540-72&2 -f\'E\V L a w n s , re-seeding.
Cumplrle lav.·n ca.re. Clean
up by job or mont h. Free
estimate•. tor lnlo call
897-24.17 or 846-0032
Incl IOOd p&.lnt. Roy ~==",.c.'..c...,--,--liJI HAND labor • for clean up neat appearing. Call 9 Ar.I 841-1™ BABY!fT my hon\e 8 am-2 to 10 AM: on111 -..JIB3
.~~~-~-~~--) \\'ILL paint a 3 bdnn
house for Jl50, incl trin1,
stu.i;co, labor It. material.
Gene 557-7543: IW6-9062
PAINTING-Int. &: E xt.
Hlghe1t Qualil)'. LoweAl
Prices. tlllly exp. Ins. Johll
673-1166
MliTICULOUS PAINT
EXP. D00ts.h0u1n, lnt~xt.
INS. l..'01. student!. i15-5811
pm 5 du/wk, matul'! HAS ME Span. 1pQ. O.K. • kn ·
Christian Scientist. 494-3416 JM OIATE Clemente Ana. 'tl-4 : MAN ll~nltd Ctr. Perceno
*BAR BOY*
EXPERIENCID
* APPLY *
lltullen E. LH
111 ~. COAST HWY.
N>:WPORT BllACH
OPENING FOR A 968-2845 aft I p.m. ta,. 1fOW1r1t business,
* HOSPITALITY HOSTESS IntrretUnropt)'. 644-tBliO . SALISMAN * SERVICE, hu •Pl•lrcs lor MAHAlitMM OPl'OR, Men's C:lothi..., ""'""' ""mo" ,_,,, ''" J'Ull ar p1. ttmo. cu""'· lll •orw lntere.tlna, part Umt1 work, ""'::....:•:.:k;:. • .:l!MJOl:.:..;;::;;~---
Xlnt. eom111111 BtMflli "-elcomlns newcomers to MAJD[ Matuf't, 21 ot orir.
)'our iu't.i.. SaleA exp . Good u.larY for di~
APPLY IK PD\SON' de$1!ta~le. MUil Mvt cat. woman. Clll 14DJ8'r1 Fuhkm lll&nd, N.B. CALL' lllT;!'>!., MAm, .put Umo. Call In
CANDY SUPPLY LOST . sm·" "'· f"m. be'-ING . . AL'S Landscaplng. Tree 30 DAY s,.,..eial Int &: Ext, 11.11 ~ ,. .. RErlNLSH , Pa1nt1ng, mod lln ,. ROUTE w/ drk brwn t J p s. Removal. Yard Re ' IJ. Free e8t. Loe nf!, llc'd
l'Atua.I cpportunlty employer Hou1•kpr-Coe1e ~ + pereon, tfllntlnltOn lhortl
BEAUTICIAN, full or Dl1hw11h1r1 *** Fee P&iCI Motet 21~ OC..an 11.B.
pttlme G11arantttd ll9', lilXPtftiENCED Jc.b atart1 &.1, Livt.ln loveb' MAt£tuil tlmt wtti.tid'.1
~=~~..,.,.--
varnl.!lhlnJ, gt>n'l cleaning, I{ I •--·h Cl (No 11elling involvrd) Bro•d"'•Y·S.A.-T,,ti.n area. au u-... . ean-up,,, ·• ln1. Call Ch11clc '45--0809 .. Guarantft! work. 61:H!J33 R •-rnkl ~ u-Excdlent income 10&' few llair )'orkic/poodle, l'i1eans epau-sp rt. •;11,,... w INTER or Ext. P'AlNTING,
hours Wffkly work. !Days \"ery much to little fir!. Brick, Mtienry, AL 'S Oamtn.t.ri:: A Lawn lMMED. S!:RVJCE. Local
and Evenl"'8J. Refilling and 6-16-6268 6560 ?ilaintenance. Commercial, ref, rR.I:E 11t. MS-le.27 "'".:..::=---~--etc collec.ling montoy from· coi n LOST: Ala.e.k&n Ma.Jamute, industrial A residenUal
optrated dl111penacni ln Or. h · BUJLD, Re model, re p a i t ---*-"''--.;.S-.;.3629cc..*
ange Co. and surrounding =~·~r.; bla~~ ~MitlW:~;_.; Brick. block. c on c re I e , RdTOfl LLI~
area. We etilablish rou!P, Vic. Uni\'ersity Dr., Co!!!a carpentry, no job too small. No\v I a 1,v n s, landscaping.
l!iandlu name branrl candy r.ll'Sa. Re1\'ard. Call alttr Lie. Contr 96Ui!M1 Shrubs & tnie1 removed ..
and 81lac.k1). $1625.00 cash 6 P>I :::.to """l ~-'''· "1"1742 required. Jb r personal inte r-' · ,,..,,..JJ,, · 6580 z '~" J' ,...
vkiw in Orange Co. area, !olISSING for 2 wks black, I ~C::•::b;:ln:;•:,:tm:;.:;•;:;k;:;lh::i!<-._.::;;;. CLEAN-UP SPECIAU!T
send n.1.me. add~u nnd part Pt-rslan lomeal w/ Furniture &: Anttq1.1es liilowing, edging, odd jobs.
pho~ number lo ltfULTI· v.·hite ve11t Ir. 4 "''hlle bootl. Rcllnl!hlng • Re,toring. Reasona ble. 548-6955
STATE DIST., INC., 1881 W. 3:io Pearl, Laguna Beach, * 6.J:>-0991 * NEAT & ~llabltt, 30 yn
Broftdway, Anaheim, Ql.U.1 ~R='=·~"-•.,,·,.•,.94_tt_l3~--o-I -=Jo~hn-'s;:.,:C::'8:.lo::m~C;ca"'b~i,-.,c-11 exp. Complete yd serv,
lomia 92802 1114) 11&-5000. LOST: Beile color poodle, Shelvt.,.Ptf lnor Repair Coznml . 642-4389
COIN LAUNDRIES Vic. Adams Ir. Ma.anolia, &4s-oia0 after i"t Exp. JapanaH iandtcapt,
Frlgldalr• H.B. No collar. Jtewardl I-,:::::=::;;:;:=:==:. cleanup, ma.lntl!nAnee.
PAINTING -Ext-Int. 18 yn,
exper, Ina. Lie:. Frff eal
Attotat. Celllf111. &48"&!25.
NEED a Palnter'! Jnttrior
A nlftior. Experienced.
55T.oti38 * PAPERHANGING
& PAINTING. * 968-2425
"IHl&rlnf, Patch,
Ra~alr, • lllO
* PATCH PLASTERING
AU type1, l'rH 11dmat1t
Call 540-6825 From S6rm to $.17,500 ~z..:;20 1 Carpentering 6590 !\tack 842-8442 e Buen.a Park e Fullerton e Small--.. ~,.-,-,...-~,,-.-,-.,, 1 .::~c::C::•:.;R;:;Pc::E·.;,.N_T_lt_Y_= JAPANESE Q ardenln 1 .1.aM
Cypr!!lll e We,tmln11ter e 1h&ggy, Answer! to "Coco,.. .. .,,_ I N 1 '· Cltan p l'lumltln9 907V MINOR REPAIRS. No Job """rv ct. ca \Vor11 . u I'--'-'"-'""''------HunUnaton Bet.ch • Cardell vie. Newport Heiahts. 968-Too •--" ~b!ntl In -.... yd, maint. 968-2303 PLUMl!ING, a.I terations I C:rove • Orange • Santa 3019. Aft . e 848-2'1&5 om&IL ~ ·-·
A r •••• 'I e Ana =--------.... A: •th t 1 ciblntta. JIM'S Gardening .t: laW'rl l'IJJl,in. Specht.I on \vater
paid vtca.llon. M&n1curl1t No Phf>ne Calli heh hem• w/.Wrly cpl. hourly rate, owr 21. &ii
needed. Apply "ln pert0n Appl)' In Per10n Must be hllhb' MJ'd, ma. 96MJ.15 aft T pm.
lnternatlorial a .. ,., Saioft, SURF. SllU.01~ ....... Also'" pool-. MALLIE'I
1695 ln.ttne-Ave., C.M. Y30 Pacific CoUt Hw, ~~ ltU'Oh Beaut..• 11n-.111o11 \a.1 openo
BUFFUM'I
NEWPORT
Now I ntef"f'ltwln1
•pplic•nt1 fer
* COOK * * LADll!S SHOE
SALES*
APPLY JN PERSON
2to4PM
NO. 1 f'ASHION ISLAND
N!WPORT BEACH
N . rt Be h . Em_, .... nt AltMJ ·1 ..... f!'NpO AC 2120 lo. Matti, lanta Ana ing for Ha\Ntyllat wHll
D,....___ llT-"'"'° ~ . .....,. plUJ vnwnun . comm It paid vacitlOn. Atlnlmum ! yean expert-MSKPJ\9 impl)lr pl1t fee cau ~
ence In layout & taping George Allen Byland Agency * MECiiAN·Ica.ASs "A''
ol art work ~ prlnt!d 106-8 E. 18th. S.A. 547.o395 Ileen•, own ~t. Perm.
clttult bouda, HOUSf!kepptt p/Urnt, 18 llrw pos.IUon for retpoMlble man.
C1ll Personnel Dept.. per Wk, Sl.50 hr. Vic. Brook· ~ ""''· bona plan •
(714) 494.940 I hunot l Adsl!IA, H.B. -Pftlfil slllrlnr. 11 n hr
after S. l"f!COnatructlon. Will re-open
for •ppointment Jioun:wtV1:11 ~ Monty! May 3th. Write or t'&li Ray
TILONIC:
Industries
L..9url1 ltech
Equal opportunll)' •mploytt
Have J'un wfI'ri.Cblm µ. Ctrey. ~94-5SS7. IN L Oout
quid !:mbroidery. 34M'T.43 Hwy, Laguna Bet.ch, Callt.
llM Compo,., ** MJ:CHAN!Cr ll!liilMlll.
Optr•ter bre.ke.! & tuneup. Good pay,
na • .....,. .. "CA. -$30 Rev.•ard for recovery ..11 I 646-1281
hl'im • H RI k 06-&115, u no anlWtr lave main!enancc. Res. & com· htrs & ~sposa. s ••-,*-B"u"sso="y"•"•"""'=::::o:::K"•~ CALL CHARLIE 523-7833 eathkit Amp' c •n-m.eg at tf6.2372. It. O. n1ercial * 5-10-4837 T time. " l."UU
backer guitar. No queiUom. Andenon JOHNSON'S GARDENING \Valer heaters..-dllpolf'rs * WAITRts.!IES *
* DlllYIRS * No l11perien1•
Necftsctty!
Build your own eompHlnl J\ktotume 1tatlon. Call
buslneAt with I no 1nW1io ,;11).0SJJ:;;.~:c..~,.-==-,~ ment. Wt pl'OVlde CGmSiOllJ', MEDICAL ~t Of.
headliner, waxer, ottlot, lice, aome back, lu'lowll!dp
desk, lllht table, phdnl, of all type• of med. forml.
utU's, Work I days for US. Moni Tue1, ThUl'I, Fr\. 9: 30-
1 d&)'I for )'O!JfWlf. Pholll 9:30. $2.15 hr. P'uhion Ill.
day er eve, Mr. Holcomb, Send resume to Dal.I)' Pilot
8_ ... , PUblloa-. ,.llml:::::..::M:.:·29::;·c.....---~ I
UNUSUAL call 673-7431. -PORTUNITY ------~-= QUALITY Woodcrelt. sml Yard can, Clea!Mlp!, Prun-Gen. repelra 17.!50 per OP FAWN boxf'r, fem.I.le, 2'1 · 1 "' """ ""•~ h• ••• -••• -
Meat hav. dun Ca111om11 ilmlnl rooonl, A,_,, ien'I ron1tr. & carpentry, 1ng, p anung. nv_.., • -·~-Altraetivl:! Boutique ()n the _, tricndly, Chino lie. .:c.===,.:..;:::.::::;;....._
•"·•-• 2 .1•... F'tte COl\J!ultalion • quote, LA\\'N "'OWING SERVICE PLUMBING REPAIR beach. e11ta L161i= yrs. choke chain collar. 968-4629 "1
XI · 1 •-lfi 1 CaL Ken &1:>.oo4-4, 548.-4235 Nea• de-nd,,ble, ""a.son. No job too 1mall nt 1aae, .,.er ce • alt6pm " ,... ~·""! .,~Incl · I al -I --~----~-CARPENTRY-Cabtnets-n.oom e.ble. Free est, 84s.oo:55 -==::·=~==21=·==" "*''"' · mven ory """°' L0'1': Small gray/brown ;;;:.:;;=':;:;::;;;:,=, 1-0w-· movln• -·I ol •!al• Add., Patios. ,.n .. size Job. -. ·--· l•mol• m;·-• Schnauzer 'Y G ""2 od 11 & PO Box Zl31 Ne"'•nnrt ......... ~1 ikc 673-U 66 I. 646-2576. ttneral Strvicel -Rem • ng · · ' rv type dog. Spayed, flea col---· 6MO
Be1.ch, Caltr. S3l·M63. Jar. Nan1e Mitzi 842--5410 A-I CARPENTRY C,\L.L THE HANDY1\1AN 1-..;R.;.0;,P":;;:.;i"'------
01 STRIB U TORS Ir. SML bn1in " wht d""', ~mall Job Spct:lallat General Home Repair SA' ""'MEN WANTED to v.. Call Gordon 847-6745 * 675 J"l * L..L~ p/oollic, ans "Poochie," I ===="=~==== sell a revolutionary new "'•LJt REPAJRS 1t ALTE RATIONS
* IF you need rernodellnc,
Plllntlng, or l'f!pairl, Call
Dick eo-1m \\'•l•r "·d. U"llmlt··' finan-Vlc Mesa Verde 54_,..,, oe ..... • CABfNETS. Any 1frze job cllll pos1lbllltlet. Share ..... 05 2'5 )'rt l!Xr>@r. f>.IM713 \Yater Bed. Personals -
1:113) 438-7967 GEN. ntpi\lr, &c!d.. cab. Blnglc-\Vidnwed.Dlvorctd Formica. p11nl!.Ung, marlite,
GREAT food & mall '""' * WOM!N * Anything! D1'k, 613-1459. operation for 1ale lo right p8rty. UCI Campui;. Good Everyone's looking for lhe
bu1\oos11 now .. fn ntaatic ritht one. \\'e have fl WlY«I
growth. $5000 dn. Con tact call us & begin to Uvt?
Dan. 133-2470 547-6667
24 hr. recording FANTASTIC Bu~. Oppor. g "°'"'°'=""""'"_,~~yr ml!dlum 1!:zed restaurant A L COl{QLICS Anonymous
in N.B. that mus! be sold Phone M2-121T or writ~ to
due to lots of mrr. lOM down P.O. Box 1223 Costa Meu.
Call Gale Plk• • 49Uit71 for FREE GROUP
llPJ!t IO Re. ENCOUNTER SESSIONS
SWIA-1:0.fJNG pl)OI route for Call 1'13-1555
----· Ctm•nt, Concrete 6600
CONCRETE. all types. Free
eeumatc. Sa1vlng. breaking,
hauling & 1k lploo.d ing,
Servlct & quality. s.tll-8668
Boh
CEMENT Work: \Valks &.
patio!. "·hatever )'OU need
tn concnte thl prtce Is
l'lahtl Call ilob M~9Ul all 5.
sale, W111 treln. Call after DRIVE our truck. as
1 pm, 657-1!H9 own, to Indianapolis, your * CON C RETE Work,
?i-1ay Licensed. Patios I drvwys,
30!h, 54~2148
Manor to Loan iU20 =""-====== 1;;..:=::....;;:....:;=---
c1 c. Phillips Ce ml!nl ,
"""""' 1st TD Loan
Lowr11t Jntere1t AveUable
2nd TD Loan
T•rrnt baud on ll<JUll.)',
'42·2171 545-0611
Servin& HarbOr trea 21 )'rl.
Sattl1r Mortgage Co.
336 £. 17th Stl'Ml
~·l Wanted '350 .
Trav•I -·-------CONCRETE wotlt all l)>pe11,
COMMt'RCfAL pilot A ...ire Slwtn1. brttkln1, ~111ln1.
flyi ni::-to Brilish Columbia !k1ploedlna: Lie, Sctvlce &
It. Alberta, Canada on vaca· Quttllt)', 14.2-lDlO
tion lst 2 \l."l'eks of J uly, f..tORE Concretf! pttlio for'
hnv!" roo m for anolher COU· lru morlf'y, Arlislic !felting
ptC!. ~1-9rol • fln!1h1rlf, 944--0687
J•o~B~S~&~E~M~P~L~o=Y~M~E~N~T" I CE~fENT WORK, no joh loo
Job W1nt1d,
Women 7U20
~mall, h!l\IOnable. F'ff'e
F.atlm. H. s tuflltk ~13-8615
MAONASITE -SEALING
PRACTICAL Nurse wis~s 6 Rnpt.\rlnf M2-2l5.l
•&12--0500• bed Pf•tll"nt or f'lderl y. WtU ==~""'-'-~'=== t~'d, C'itlOd rl'.'fs. ~2TSS DECORATIVE CONCRETE
INTERIOR designer f'lttdl t>r 838-3478 DRIVES.\VALKS-PATIO
P.000 to $10,000 loan to e1r-EXPER.. domMi Uc w 0 r k. ..:==="'='""=·='=' === pend rw,tltllto lnvrn!pry, n .• .. Srcurr 1nve11me nt. Xlnt P!Ubuft an!«. Call arttr 6
"I _,1 p.m. 835--4670
"c.-""""=· ------· 1 5ENTAL HYGI ENI it
ANNOUNCEMENTS
and NOTICIS
P'ound C ~ .... Ads> '400
BLUE P ai-s keet, vie.
Amhonl R 0. d • C~1.
54!)..-0874
Avail M11y 11·26. 54G-t4n
AIDES .. for convalescence,
tltk>rly c11.re or family care.
Jlomrmaktt1. MT-8641
Jobs-Man, Wom. 7100
ACCOUNTING CLl!RK
Contr•ctor1 6620
ROOM AODrtJONS. l.. T.
Co n1lruct lon. J"amlly
rooms, ~lnJle or 2 ~tory.
Eallm•tea. phu1a1 la)'l'.IUt &:
tlnanelllj:. Call 147-lSIL
Atldltlons * R.emodtllng
f'rt'd H. Gtrwlck, l.lc. ,
67J.6041 • 543-2170
NO nw r~ what n as, you
CM :will It wllh a DAILY
CLASSJTIE01 Somto/1Q will
b4J look.Int 1ar It. Dial 61,2.
t.618
Hauling 6730
-----~ YA RD/ Gar. Cleanup,
n en1ove IJ-ees. ivy, tr!llh.
Gr;adr, backhoe, 962-!745
MOVING, garage clean.up &
Jue hauLin&. Rtuonablt.
Free e1tlma1u. &4f>.1BO'l.
UTE Hauling & garage
clean-up. Mon tllru Sat.
Fl'ff e1tlmate 548-0031
IL\ULING & CI e a n -b p.
Trees removed. Rea.!!Onable.
l"ree estimate. 54S:.."17~
llAULING SJD A LOAD
Clean up. Trt!E' Se rv. Gen.
Pr\lnln1 Me-2521, MWCHS
.::_ __
Roaflnf 6950
CUTTERS &: Down1pouta
lNtalltd 1\euonabl• Ian
Clemente 714: 492-3706 -
BIKINI S by C. Cu111tom made
cc.plel, r1ver1lbl11,
C0111rupa U A 110. !l!Ml61
DRESSMAl<INQ I:
ALTERATIONS
Rftl;onable rate!. &12-0t11
• Dressmaking· Alteraticns
Dcsl&ned to "Ult you.
Call Jo*~
f!ousecl••!1inp 67~~ Tiit, Ceramic 6974
WAllo'T A Sunny I: brltht + Verne, Thi TUe Man *
home? Ca.I I the DUTCH Cust. ""Ork. Install 6 ttpalrt.
1".fAINTENANCE ?.IAN for No job too smtll. Plaster
your windo1,1·s. floors &: paUo. Lealrinc lhower
ca rpe t c l e an i ng . repair.
SPECIALIZES I.N ALL 847-1957/846-0208
KINOS OP' n.coRS. No ========
crew. 537-1508 alt. a. Tree S.rvfc1t "ID BAY &. Beach Janitorial
C11.rpcts, windows, Ooorx,
etc. ltct I Comm c 'I ,
946-140!
ft1eA C!r11nlhl 5ervlce
CRrpeL~. ""'indows, noon, etc.
Res. k Commc'I, 54Mlll
TREE SERVICE All typel
Lise & Ins. Free Ealtm.1.tel
642-5584
TREES. 1-r~re~. trim. cut,
atumps, removed, hauled. 30
)Tl •Xp. P\aJJ, ins, &U-4030
joE'S CLEAN SERV. 1-------
W!" do Everything • 1\.tl. I
Com. r ree Est. 549-ll26
WINDO\V \VASHINO
CO~IM ERCfAL HOritE
Call Pete -492-1207
HOUSECLEANING
E.'ffJ. ReM, Rel, 638-2354
I to~lnl _67,5~
11t0NJNG Jn my home. St
Hr. Dl'f'umaklng ' alll'ra·
Uons. 545-?Ml
IJON'T roJi'' MSH tor
aontcthlng to furnish your
borne . , • find great 1N)t1 ln
tCldq1 0...llled Ads.
czYKOSKl'S Cmlom. Uphol.
Eu~an er~Jt.!lmll n5hlp
100% fin! &12·1454
lall Nawport Blvd .• C.l'if.
TIMI FOil
9UICK C:ASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT ADS
BUSl£ST ml!l'tetpltce In
town. 1lte DAILY Pll..oT
CJualfied eectlon. Sa v •
montf , tlme 6 tll«t. Look
hOWlll
SAi.ARY 1512 TO $M1
Fllc n pplt~111tnn by May 16th
In P<-~nnrl O.pt.. Rm. 511,
City II.a.II. 77 F'ulr Or. (1l4)
13i·:.i:EO. --·-. ·---. +CITY OF CX>STA 6lESA *
' '
~24749, M.EDJCAL Off ice rtcep.
INflRIOR tlonisl. Prefer mature
BOYS 11. 14 Yl!LLOW CAii CO.
earner lloutts ""' 111 E. 1~ St. .. ~ a.ta Mua
Loauna Btutl, !lo . ...,_ EMl'LOYMENT
O&SIGNER W011WI. Send rnwne _,Box * lllUl3l * M·11t Dally Pilot
DAILY i'l1.0T AOINCY
• 842..atl Nffda hifhly experienced glJ'l Jr. Accountant Te $700 MEDICAL Billinz-lnsurance Boys 10 & Uf' for m ........... ment nn•illon Lee. stable cc. Heavy exp. clerk. Excellent po1Jtton. --· ·-I Good i.1 ... c:ondl send tHUme tc> Box 578, To sell candy Xlnt opportunity. Ca I not nee. wor ..... ,. San Juan Capll:IJ'ano
)'OUr ewn area 673-1113 or 646-0703 6 pm-I: benf11. i .:=.:.::::..::~==---
944-21&9, g.g PM .t: wkrlda 8 pm. JASON BEST MEN .. Clean factory work.
C Employment Ar.en.ct CUlU11« &: a 111emb11 n I
t. A ent limployment mr So. JI.fain, Santa AM wooden parts:. Start $2.25 II Ing f Coun1olar 9264 w Ka!olla, Amohelm hr. 40 hr wk, 1977 PlaoenHo CALI~ CAITINO GO lh&l'f', 11111""' Cralnte •1,,.1116.~54;";,. =~°'===821;;:.,;·ll211;;:_•...:A="'=·::c"'.M~.=:====:::i • . • IOOd phone ~nor11tllty tor1.,.. -·-We are cutlns c:UNctora 1or new branch thl1 &10-7100 I J • M W 7100 many independent Industrial Selective Se11'<lh"'1 ' J1b'-'Aen, Wont. lal Aen, om.
A documentary film produc,-E111pl0ym1nt Az•ncy m . Nffd lrntnedlately 1ali: WO So Main S.nta AM
18-35 lor non.union jobs. $75 ' 557-Mss
to $125 per day. We ara not --~--"..C.:.C:.---· 11
a 11ehoot or qertt. I Women wtntl!d fer
FREE TV tCllllN port-ttme ""'1<. <ar """'"· TIST * u..1m. 847·3'128 *
NO CJtAR.Gi: TO YOU FAcioRY tralnees, 1
EVERI ttm&le, 1 male pre.ren'@lf,
We ~ clle~t paid, Ptt. fOr M :ao, Marko Products Inc.,
Interview <'114> 83S.82i2. Plullca manut~turrr, 9U W, 11111 It., C.M.
01,n •"''""""' Mepplnt
Dr1fnman
• Mllft IE
IDXPmltICNCJ:D e
Health, accident JM life
tn1urance. vacation. SaJ. ..., opoo,
rii&Gilii lio1-no: lltllr
lldlltd, mllllmum ' rn "' ptr. In aalllloat ,...,Cllloo.
Work with mtntmiirn
supervision. A,,Z)'I 1tit
Placentia, Costa Mii&. Ptu
e<MTIT Oftb' operleneed pmont Btownlhg-Ntwport Mi.ti oall fl:lr &PPo!nlment.
AlllOWHIAD
INtlNllllUNG
CORP.
Ml N6r11i I'. '""' ..,. llorllordlnO, Call!. <!1l> 11Nft4
rtiltliaLASS "o r k 1 u .
E>cp'd s~ puUtr l'IBtr:R LASS toueh • .,
man. lN3 Plaetntta Aw.
Bldr. "B", COila Mtsa. * AIANU Pl.AmCI *
FIGURE -I• i=aod for
phil~. Mu1t flt"
Prltl1 ""1 l leod liaUft ... u.a. 118/lir. c•tl CLERK TY~ISf 4lj.IOli) bat 10. 5 tor lPPI.
Merllttlnt °'"' ri:6lllL Doolanot. ..,..., A'°""'r. ~l to wtlm o1... M..t -wld<llrla • trlc typewrtt.tr. Ont )'tU' hmeHJ &tip. Apply In
t!Cpf!rie~. Pt'rMln1 7801 Bolsa Ave.,
.Call Personnel Dept. w .. imlNI". TRY Cook, u,.r·or lralr"lff1 (7 I 4j 494-940 I W/OOll\O .......... ..,.,.
for appointment Abo'ff! avg pay. t n•.
l:K'nellll. Apply Denny'I, TELONIC: ""'Beac• a1,.i, G.C.
IMlllfrlft FULL Tlmo -ptlo"l1l,
h 1yptnr A Ille t 11 t n11,
Profe81ional Sales
Specialist
Home Furnishings
II you are a prof111tonal, top eam1n1
spedall!t, not 11tl!fled with a medlo<re
income, then Grant• has a proposition for
you. Consider Iha followtnr :
1. Top commission
2. PM's (spoelal
••l•s comm.)
3. Opportunity for
adv•ncement
4, Employment
near your home
5. Quality llna to
''" '· Paid v•cetlon
7. Sick pay
I. llatlrtrnant pion
t. Oroup Liia and
Medical
ln1ur•nce
ID. lmployao
dl1count1
11. Nationally
11l1bl11hed firm
12. Paid mllo•il•
Car required for penonal customer
contact. If you want to learn more about
our milt\1y mlltlnl propo1ltion In oa1 of
th• compahl~• fastest growing relall or·
ganizatlon1 .... Come prtpartd to discuss
your sa1es know-how and your previous
experience.
APPLY AT • • •
W. T. GRANT CO.
PERSONNEL OFFICE
9811 ADAMS AVENUE· 8RANT PLAZA
HUNTINGTON B~ACH, CALIF. 92646
An tqua.l opportunity employer L19un1 Bee' petlC>J\.l.blt , Send rrau me to
J)qual opportwilb' 1m1>_lo)'U I _!llox~~M~'62~,:_llall>~t!P~Uo~l~-'L.-----------------'""'
'
II
•
\
'
I -
t
I
I I
rUi NILY I'll.OT
l •
Young Set
Pre • School
Serving
Southern Or1nge County
FULL -PART TIME -AFTER SCHOOL
6:30 AM to 9:30 PM
7 DAYS
Rtttt for 2 or more
1525 S.nta Ana
Cost• Mt1•
646-3706
or
534-1292
For 6 Weeks Course on the
HAMMOND ORGAN
You do not have to own an instrument.
Free practice time available. Register
now. Beginners register Tuesday night,
May 19th at 7 P .M. Teacher, Laura
Mae Shelor.
Also classes for secondary & intermedi·
ate organ students, register same time.
Sien up now & avoid the rush.!
fUN • ENTERTAINING • KNDWLEDGABLE
Rent Organs
Available
During Term
of Coune.
Register NOWJ Inquire for detail1
Hammond Organ Studios
2154 E. Co11t Highw1y, Coron• del ~r
67J.ffJI Opet1 MoH-r & Pri411y Ifft.
LEARN
TD
RELAX!
LET Us Show you how to enjoy
• lei1urely game of
golf.
FOR GOLF LESSONS
See Mike Evinger,
Jack Saenz,
Dean Fulle r
Bob Ryan
COSTA MESA •
GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB
1701 GOLF COURSE ROAD
COSTA MIU 540-7200
COMPLETE LINE OF
GOLF E9UIPMENT.
, ALL FACILITIES. OPEN TO PUBLIC
ENROLL NOW!
SPEED READING CLASS
All Ages
Tues. Nights 7 lo 9 pm
SUfMR READING PROGRAM
· Remedial & Developmental
for all uges
e REGISTERING NOW e
Send for brochure or
Phone 544-4404
TUSTIN READING & SPEECH CENTER
130 H. Street, TusUn
Schools and
Instructions
Th.ii variety of fine schools
could introduce • you to a new tomolTow.
Fw furihlf inform1tion re91rding the D•ily Pilot
Schools and Instruction Directory
CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Jo~n. Wom. 7100
* MOTEL ?if>.ID • Full
timt. Apply 2376 Newport
Blvd. C.M. 54M'7»
l\!O'mER'S helpt'r, pa r t
time, 2 hrs, a days wk.
NB area. CaJI au 7, 646-3-134
NEED babysitter lor small
To Women •••
• • • Of ALL Ages
If you are entering the business
world or if you are presently em·
ployed and need to improve your
IMAGE and INCOME, the
ewpoil Scnool-ofBusmess
offers a unique and extremely ellecttve
Refhament Course
• • • • • •
For both men & women we also have pr~
fession1I . vocational counHllng .service.
Phone·
64%·3870
newport school of business
I JJ OOVEt OttV!, NEWPOIT I EAC H
SAUCERMAN SCHOOL
ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
88 FAIR DRIVE • COSTA MESA
Grades 1 through 9
Small group and individualized teaching to
meet the realistic needs of youngsters.
Abilities will be challenged by good teach·
Ing and a variety of educational ma terials
so that more effective learning will result.
MOTIVATION
Oper ates only from within a person -not
from the outside. Good teac.hirig can stim-
ul ate motivation within a' youngster by
building on successful learning experiences.
·Nothing succeeds like success!
WHERE THE PROGRAM
FITS THE CHILDI
\Villard I-I. Saucerman, Ed. D.
Telephone 540-4060 School
548-1758 (eve.)
ENR()LL NOW FOR FALL
SPECIAL MAY OF.FER
The Oldest F.A.A. & ·
V.A. Approved Flight 4>-
Scbool at Long Beach _
Airpcn·t has relo<.:a ted ·
lo
ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT
For brand nrw pilots ,,.e offer ou1·
COMPLETE APPROVED
PRIVATE PILOT COURSE
FOR $500.
This includes 35 hrs dual & solo instruction plus
j;round school.
Fo r VA Students. \Ve have complete ap--
proved instruction for your commercial li-
cense, instrument rat ing. flight instructor
r ating, certified flight instructor rating and
multi·engine rating.
Trll your friends & brin::: thi5 ad \\"ith you for a
11peciaJ S5. introdu<:tol"y flight.
AIRCRAFT ASSOC.
FLYING SERVICE
19531 Campus Drive. Suite I
Orange Coun~ Airport, S40.96S6
THINK
LINK
Affiliate of Iha
SINGER COMPANY
• 7 •. ~a~~m.3,,~.~:k • 639-3380
" • I
MEN·WOMEN
RADIO
NEEDS . ANNOUNCERS
In broadcasting, only ability counts. Age or
education J.&._lliL~r._onc.@...you_llav~.£:__
quired the training that can bring youlame,
happiness, and big money.
ALSO FCC l!t Phone
Ucense
6 Weck Course
Results Guaranteed .
THE INSTITUTE OF
BROADCAST ARTS
1681 W. Broadway,
Anaheim
\Vhen you train with
us, you learn by using
top profeMlonal equl~
ment. You are tauiht by qualified working
air personalities and
you are heard on a
, leading Orange Coun-
~ ty Radio Station.
for PrH Audition
Phone 772-JIOO
Enjoy success in Ltte
through Modern Cosmetology
COLLEGE of BEAUTY
offers onl y the most advanced, updated
Courses and Techniques. Your skills
\Vill be onl y as good as the training you
have bee n given.
New Classes Start Each Tuesday
Register NOW
646-2919
1895 Newport Blvd., Coit• Mesa
2817 S. Bristol, Santa An1 540.0667
HOSPITAL-PRACTICAL
NURSING
A profitable &
rewarding ca"reer .
Age 18 • 65
MALE & FEMALE
1. 1 mo. classroom training
2. 1 mo. acute hospital training
3. Job placement assistance
(can earn your tuiti on in 1 mo.)
4. Finish theory classes at N.T.1.
S. Graduatio n in approx. 6 mo .
OFFERING 2 ~100. scholarships to every
Orange Coun ty High School toward tuition!
Nurses Training Institute
•016 W. Commonwealth, Fullerton
525-7521
SEW KNIT
&
S-T-R-E-T-C-H
CLASSES
NOW STARTING
EVENING & DAYTIME
Learn to make Stretch Panh ,
Bothin9 Suih ,
eve n Girdles!
(Make In 20 Minutes!)
1 OO's OF DESIGNER
STRETCH FABRICS
IMPORT YARDAGE
9rJ73 ADAMS
HUNTINGTON BEACH
,,
I
962-2660
----------------.! baby, pt-eler married v.uman V.'ho nttds Added
AIRLINE & TRAVEL CAREERS
For Men and Women
• Trivet A9ent • Re1erv1tions
e Ticket Sales e Air freight Cargo
e Communic1ttons e Operations Agent
Day end night cl111e1
AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC
Accredited :
S11nt1 Ane $4).6596
610 Ee1t 17th Street
National Association Trade & Technical
Schools
Approved for Veterans
EJigible institution under the Federally in-
sured Student Loan Program
income. Near Newport-Lido
area. 675-4387
Nunln&
R.N. • 3 days per wk.
Challenging position,
relief supervisor, 96
btd ECF.
LVN . 6:30 am. 3 pm,
-2...de.yL pel'. wk.. Relief_
med. nur11.
NURSE AIDE· Exp'd.
preforred, :1-11 :30 pm
PARK LIDO
CONVALESCENT
HOSPITAL
(714) 642-2410
Nursina:
REGISTERED NURSE
J.C . ..C.C.U.
Expanding unit. Challenging
opportunities, continuing ed-
ucation prograr,1. Contact
personnel So: Coe.st Com-
munity Hosp. 318'12 Coa.sl "''IY, So. Laguna <n4J 499-
1311 Ext 356
i.; A1/i'A s; '\ Jrn ** NURSES AIDES •* ~~mi 4. ~tm l""Expe=ri='::'"';-;::~~3()6:;:,--1 =.'-3,,-;P>f
-~ -~-~-~------~ ~-~ -~
NEWPORT BEACH
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
15th & Monrovia Street1
Newport Beach
t 1 lllk. W•t of H•°' H•1plt•ll
PRE-SCHOOL -ELEMENTARY
Special Summer Educational Program
Limit to 12 students per class
Kindergarten thru 4th
SPECIAL RATES FOR FIRST 25
PRE-SCHOOLERS WHO REGISTER!!
646-1872 or 546-7866
GJ..J/arre//
STUDIO of CHARM
And MODELING
Phone for FREE Brochure on
·"SECRETS OF BEAUTY"
Cla11e1 Now Forming
Hovrs: t a.m. to t p.m.
Course approved Ct>!h:lr"''t .....
by tlit '---""'
Calif. Supt. of Public Jnstr. * ModtlhtCJ and Television * Charm & Personal Development * Dramatica-Speech·Uttl• Theatre * Special Couf'HI 1or·.Homemqker1 * Corter Glrk
FLORENCE SMALES
Director of Our State L'icen !ed
3Iodeltng Agenct1
151' N. Malo. Santa A-547·6'71
1'65 Sunny Crnt Dr. (Sunny HiU1 Vllk19el
Fun..... 197.1000
•
Newport Air Associates
fllle School & flying Club
LEARN TO FLY
$500.
Compltt• Cou r•• l"cli1dt•l
40 Hours flight time in Ce1sn• 150's with
20 hrs. duel in1tru ction. Clu b momber1hip.
2 Month'• free du••. lndivldu•I in1truction,
t•ilor•d to YOUR •bility.
OTHER AIRCRAFT AVAILAILE
ot LOWEST RATES IN ORANGE COUNTY
l e•rn t o ily now -end hav• fun!
• fly Maxlco .. d c.-
• 5,_cl.. Rotes fOf' 'Commercial,
1Mtrvmnt, or A«obatlc Studeets.
F"or Compl tt• D•teil• Cell NOW
673-0313
ELIABLE lady, 40-5.). Li-
quor, Deli, sales (C.~f.) Ex·
per. desirable. Call alter
6 PM, 642-QM2
RETIR ED MAN NEEDED
31;; days ea. wk. as p/time
HOST & ~tANAGER of
deluxe seU service laundry.
CCrpted-Colot• T V-El e .)
Must be sober, r e l ia ,,
likeable, have exper in
meeting public, live cl06e
!o sto1-e. Vt>fy, very modest
salary. See store before
calling. Mesa North Shop-
ping Center, {Baker at
Fairvie'>I', C.>'11.I Call Betty
Brisc:oe, alt 5 {.'M. 644-1307
REUBEN E. LEE
l\'0\V .INTERVIE\VING
-we•k end, night
BUSBOYS
DISHWASHERS
* APPLY *
l ~il E. COAST HWY.
NE\\'POR1' BEACH
General Office
Good \Vith figul't's, li!e typ.
ing, 2 yr:s. exp. call Loraine,
\Vestcliff Personnel Agency,
2043 \\'estclill o'r., N.B.
6'15-mO
PART Time girl Friday,
mornin:;:-s -Dental o!:l'iee.
age 20-30. Qualifications to
Box ?.1362, Daily P ilot.
*PART TIME·
EVES.
Distributor for ·west coast
mfg. co., now hi r i ng
TRAINEES for :sales and
tservice.
$90. WEEK
Hours 6 to 10:30 p.m. Pho~
ll47-7782 Personnel· Dept_
Part1 ·Man $476.67
Phone work & counter 18.le11.
Must be someone who en·
joys \\"Orking 'v/public.
JASON BEST
Employment Agency
2207 So. l\fa in, Santa Ana
9264 \V. l\alell a, Anaheim
546-5410 or 821-1220
PBX OPERA TOR. Ans\\"t>r·
tng strvice e::i:per. pref'd.
Pt !ilne & fl lin1f'. afternoon
& eve hrs. ~6-8881 ·
e e e~PTE-MAKER
Responsi ble, young man to
learn pie making business.
6 days -48 hr wk, Y.'Ork into
go future. '''1th growing co.
e e e ALSO NEED
All-around gii:I. Apply in per-
110n, Vi's Pies (3 to 6 pm)
191 E. 16th St., C.f\-1.
PO\VER Se\\'ing Machirn!
Opr, exper. Cushion & uphol
exper pref, Baxter &
Cicero, lnc., 642-7238 :
PROOF MACHINE
COMPUTER CLERK
Position available at
Security Pacific Nat'I, Bank, 1
So. Laguna branch. Apply
at 30812 S. Coast H\yY., South
Laguna, 499-2224
Equal opply. employer 11>1/F
See Betty Bruce al
mijj lxec
Agenc)' for Career Girls
410 W. Coast Hwy., N.B.
By appoi:il . 646-3939
-Sall or I Mainten1nce,
Rla\ng, i.nstallation, fi1us
kno\Y ho1v to 11ail. Yac:hb
Royale 2912 IV. Coe.111 Hwy,
N.B.
SALESMAN
tmportc:d car deaJet11hll).
Foreign car c:x~rienee Pf"-.'
fc:rablr. F.xC't'llen1 opportun·
iii('.~_ Call u 1,.s m:n-. tor ap.
Poln!n1cnt 540-3100.
e SALES~tAN e
Exper bua;i~s~ n1achhlt"I * SIS.4533 •
f'H t. QUlC.'KER YOU SELL
THE QUICK.EH YOU CALL.:
Tuuday, MIY 12, 1970 DAILY PILGT ,IS
MIRCHANOISI ,OR I MIRCHANDl51 ,DR MERCHANDISE FOR TRANSPORTATION TRA!ilPORfntON JOIS a EMPLOYMENT JOIS .. I MPLOYMINT JOBS a EMPLOYMENT o"' Men, Wom. 7100
IAl1d """' DOUBLE
Jobe Men, Wom. 7100 Joi....-.Mon. )Vom. 7100 SALi AND TRAD& SALE AND T ltADI SALE AND TRADE FRE~ TO YOU
*Secr eta ry Jr. $433 WAITRESSES*** iiFiiurjinjill~uii";.iiiiiiii~IO~-OO~~fu~miiill~UNiiiiiiiiiiiiilOOO~~l~M~li1c~e~ll1~neou~ o l6GO THREE c!Jrilnf ldlt<nt ....., S.ll...,.lo 90lO !!•lier, Trevel ~
1Acal co. """' ,.., a&ettcY EXPERIENCED CUSTOM CASTING -loving ,.,,... a..,, '°°" SOMl!ONE '69 Pace Arraw
rec. Good typlnr, Ille SH. hatred Calleo A striped. ml,Ult want fll 22 foot Motor Home. Auto..
PRESENT l!!ARNlNGS \.'ariety ot duties, XJnt co. No Phone Calle • THE USED • Your patterna or oun aoid C•Uoo mother alto avaU. LIDO 14 ANO w/fine benfl. F'ee Jobe also. Apply In Person or iUver. Handcrafted ).wei. C«ll eves. Q8.ft50 &/14 No, %l15. Good com., fU1J matic trans., V8, radJo, pow.
THENSOMEI J.R.Pierce fUR·NIJURE FACTORY ~~~.•t:we~ryma~to=DARLINGhomesrownklt· ractnacear,yatttdOIJ.y,Udo :r':~r= If you're n1aklng Jl.5,00o now Aalociates ~rx:y, Joe. SURJI' & SIRLOIN tng 11,1ppllcs cut ,toM, all lent, tiut!y, 2 red 6 lfiftr~ , ,. say lta wortb SllOO generatw, Coll'tmlln fl)Of re-
-we can abow YoU how U8S Newport, CM 642-673) 5930 Pacific Cout Hwy, lizes & kinds rou.a:h stone• 1 blk I: white. Elaine 0 f J 1 ~ 9WU1~~ ~~ frlgen.Uon unit, butane eJet:.
yOU me.y make $30460,000, 5,c:retary Newport Beach 5.nl"t, llb ll.w hntfture, rehlrlled ........ ,.,,.. for the rockhOund, lapidar)' &46-81ol9 5/14 serus.. tric retnaerator frttw',
No gl.mm.lcb. YCKL'U be Construction firm, beach** WAITRESS TAM to mat,...lmodelltomHotprfct1b•w toola,1uppJloaA:maeb!nery.LOV., 1entle, 1mall ..;,:..:.::::0...-.,.--=-=--atove w/oven, Monomi.li
backed by a multi-million area. good akilll, call i.o. 3:30 PM. APPLY: 10 AM wHlttelet Open 'l\tei thr\I Sal g.s SchnauJtr nm, fem .. belle Immediate O.lfvery toilet, ahower, completel,y
dollar public co, with full n.lnt, WeatcllJ'f Pcnonnel to J.1 AM. Jamaica Inn SUnday 10-4 clOled Mon. A bUc. Lovea chlldren -• 26' SOLING$ • .eH contained. Nl!V 11ew,
adv<t1islng wppor1. A1ency, 2043 w""""' Motor Hot•• 2101 E. °'"' ODDS & ENDS SALE! FIVE M GEMS & N ..... rd. Jun. 548-0813 sn• New hf-Door .......... 14695 only 2,400 actual tnll•• .•
We guarantee to tell you how, Drivt. N.S. 645.mo Hwy, CdM. LAPIDARY SUPPLY SIAMESE _ ? KJtttna T Ulled, 3 lllla ••••••·•·· $3995 ~. Muat aacrtflce -Take
when and where you may SECURITY GUAR DS * wAfl'R.E•~88~.~Coe~k-tail-&: •Fancy Walnut Bar with 4 Swivel Rear of College Center weeks 1 "Siamese" male • 22' TEMPEST• car, truck or mobile home
begin making U'1a money -Newport area. Call 633-3GJ Oillee ShOp. Apply 1 rt Back Bar St ools ••...•.......•...•.. $59. Shopping Center 3 "Ruaalai:. BhlH'• male · ·• ••• ..•• $3SOO In trade. Private party -See
the really big money! Our or 63'7'"'3070 10-5 PM. peMK>n, Me'lfl. Lanes, 1703 • 8 Ft. Massive Spanish Sofa & Love mo Harber Blvd., U.A and temaJe 545-4873. sn2 P&clflc Yacht Sales 673-1510 at Sou.th Cout Ford Muc-
people may earn up to *SERVICE srATION A'M' Superior, C.M~:·----Seat, like new, returned from Costa MK& * 549.mJS g ADORABLE box trained CAL 15 "KILO'' Ul')', 303 Broadway, Lquna .!!,~O: ;.::..;:;. = _ Sal ... Full A part ~ WANJ1!J>' First clus ma. e :rod•&~me .... · .................. $179. hoalthy kit!'"' ....., a new Conolstent aa.,, Winner • Bcach.
a week position for rnponslble, .rlne. a:aa e.naine-mecllanlc.. eau 10 pc. blue green Corner home. 646-.8405 after Loaded w I extras: Radio, AMNTION!
• Cedlliac car plan at once. neat appearing man. Top wlUt all.around boat exper. Group · · · · · ·: · · · · · · · · · · :-·. ·. ·. · ....• $99. -S:30 &/14· bQ&t___be_th,_ life r~. aa~ty
• Use our pro~n formula A wagH, bonus pWi A profit Mtllt have knowledge or • (1) 7 Ft. Sofa & Chair, excellent 9 WK. old Samoyed Hwky aear, etc., etc. Owner must
Haw )'OU aeen the
Campsttt U' camp tn.ller?
Complete whh king 11.r.e bed.
Thia long awaited trailer
can be pulled by a VW or
any other compact. See it
toda.Y at
guaranttt yoorseU
2
sales s~arinf. Under reconstnic-electricity and the i.bWty condition ................... , , . . . . . . $59. ftte to a:ood family, Shott. Sac. Tom Butler. 646-2.524
JIC!f' monUt tion. Will l'@'-Open May 8th. to install gears common to • 4 Walnut Dres,ers with Mirrors $35. each 54M1'5 Mr. Hayes 5/ll Columbia Chellenge r
• •=draw·-·-k plan Write or call Ray Carey. yachts In a pro!Hsional • Assorted Walnut Nito Stands .... $'1. each 24' w/allp. $3000. ......., .,..... .. ..,.. ,,. .,.,.. Pe t If al e A rt d twin & d bl 3 HEALTIIY, ~looking • Croup Heelth lrururance....: 4~7, 604 S. CO&at Hwy. tnann!r. nnanen qu -,so e OU e hea dbne.rds . . kittens. 5A6-l.678. Call after 2912 W. Cout Hwy., NB.
$25,oo:> major medical, Laguna Beach. C$llf. ified, Good pay, good be~ ........................ from $3 each up Call 645-0810
Ufe & accident. SERVICE Station Attendant. etits, good working condi-• Assorted 80" Sofas, like new .. $79. each
4
p,m.
5
n.f e M an associate of, and Full time, over 25. Must tiona & pe.ld vaca.Uon. See • Assorted Love Seats, like new .. $49. each 894-2312 PETS and LIVESTOCK
under the aegis or profes-have exp. ln mech. work · ~~c ~-=• Yuhts • 3 Used Refrigerators, all in top Cats 1120
sional salesman and fin. $2 hr plus comm. ~ W condition .............. $69., $'19. & $109. * AUCTION *
anclal tycoon H. w. Blackwell'• Richfield, 744 "'"N .... ~:_ Hhwy. e Chests of Drawers •....... , $29. each up SEALPOINT Blue Siamese, OY.'ight. renowned Calif. W. 19th, CM .... ....,., ucroC n )'OU wU1 ICll or buy female, 8 wkl. Grand
R.E. broker, community SERVICE station attendants WANTED, Dependable lllS Harbor llvd •• at lttft Sr., atve Wtndy •try Champ. 11.k, $50. Call
leader &!'Id entrepreneur, part time, nite 11 & b&b)'!itter, vie Garfield &: Auctiora Frlda.y 7:30 p.m. 673-261.f,
LUDERS 26' Sailboat, lat
clu& cond., 30' slip inc,
former 11.eet champ .
540-0020
CAL 24 Sailboat. Loaded wttb
extras! Immaculate! NB
slip available. Take Lido
14 trade-in. $39!!0. 644-2128
you will learn how YoU weekends, good wage + Brookhunt, H.B. 96S-6174 Cotta Mna e 541-9457 Windy's Auction Barn _;_;..,M,,:;otber''-~,~o.,,~-G~H~t-
may instantly-succeed, comm. Laguna Beach WE NEED YOU Open: Weekda.YI a-5·30 Satu..,;i•·-9 , a-~ 5 ,..._,_ 20751,l Newport. CM 648-8686 Siameae Kittens, Purebred. Power Crut1ers 9020 • Professional trainin& pro-494-8430 · • • ......,.. ~. ..-:u un.......,.. Behind Tony'• Blda. Mat'l. $12.50. call 5fWJ.T2.
gram euy to !•am. --------CALIF. CASTING CO. 23' BIRCH Cl'alt fllhfng boat e Pre. qualified prospects SERVICE Station manager, Looking tor every day people ---·-------ROCK HOUNDS-FREE n..:1 II" w/trlr. 50HP elec start
thnl mlllion dollar adver-lite mtth prel, perm, xlnt llke you! For T.V. Commer-Garage Sale 8022 Pianos & o-•n• 1130 ~ unit le tumbler. ~ Evinrude. $1200 Io t f er. tiaing programs, salary. Hunt'• Texaco Sta· clals A film work. Receive .:..::;..:.:..:...;:;:.:;: __ _;.::.= -·-•• Complete new rock ahop. AMERICAN, M«dcAn, Cana-548--9766. 245 E. Wilson Ave,
Get the Facts Now-Call: tlon, ,_l'°4 N. Coast Hwy, free acreen test, no exp nee. GarCHJ• Sale ~me In&: rethter for draw-dian champion Ba 1 set C.M.
In Orange County Lag. Bcb. 4M-300> Not a school, no fee. Movlnn To Euro-CONN & WURLITZER ltlg. Opert 7days 10 arn-6 pm. Hound pups, Beaut. ghowG ",..t.A"sra="o"N"'20~'~0e<P~~V~32T
Mr. SIAnl•Y (714) 835-3233 SERVICE rtatlon att.ndant. $50 lo $125 PER DAY 2 Family• r• ORGANS 8101 Bola Avo. do .. • !om pt!!• l>O. 115. Cho B kl ' Mr. Samoom (213) •-1110 Ext>'d, tun time. Apply in lt accepted. For appt phone garage aa.le. Mw;t Midway City e 897-1970 $100 2JS-332..-0652 · d v. er ey Jet, heavy 00\>"
2096
Harbor
81
.sacrifice ~verythlng. House-ft',.-"",;;.;,-;""'.;:;:;:;;c=-1.:;::;·,.,:;:;.:;:;;:;=;~=~ uty trlr, many xtru. $3750. r:°~ vet, WOMANc~;~ ~ng • lite
1
hold items, turnlture, cloth-Exclusively At :1G 1~.!'M10MAG9£ SAMLE P D~~~.~NS.AKC C&ll 54&-J215.
""""" "" ng,, T.V.'s, hundreds of GOULD MUSIC ay , am-pm, ay am....,..,.. .. "l"'• by prlv. Sal"
Harbour V.W.
18711 BEACH BL., 842-4435
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Nimrod C•prl Trailer
$415. 548-8519
ALPINE
VACA1JON
TRAVEL CENTER
Excel. -Golden Falcon
Olympia -Alpine
Ap .. he • Whffl Camper
Worlds tarce11 mCJllt oom-
plete RV ve-hlcle ahopptne
center
8352 Garden Gl"OVe Blvd, GG
534-6686 Fee Pald housekeeping, weekends at items 5c and up. Toya Sc COMPANY 15th, 10 a.m-5 pm, St Andrews owner. 6'2-1937, Speed-Ski Boats 9030
SILK SCREEN beach, Uve in Fri to Mon. and up, complete bathlnette A Quellty House :.'.",•15•yter11h s""t • ChSl~~-cor-SKYE Tenier, fem., 1 11, CHRIS ~· •-brd Closed Sat. Open SUnday
U 21 d
,.._ M&M or Wade preas to $3.50 Wrtte Daily Pilot Box M-30. $3 ...,tlo chairs $1 "" de k "' • ..u11.•.n:wa ....,-,.... .1.u -you are over an ui1..,-Hand T • r-·>N, s e With A 60 Year Reputa· Rd N t' Bch weekl. AKC. rare c~m Immac. in brand new oond'. F.U' HoUAe TraUer, gutted.
YOUNG MAN'S
DREAM
talking to girl!, why not pt able Opni to $3.00 WOMEN, U and over. Part $15, baby crib $4, marble tlon For The Finest In " ewp • • w/black polntl, Ponible Call 6'(3..3155 Suitable for construction of-'
paid tor il A sale• program Xlnt co. moving to new plant time. Good working cond'&, breakta.st table $7.50. Much, Teacbina & Servtce Facil· LADIES diamond dinner )be~•~t~of~eho~w~.:,$!25~·C:'~94-4605~~ I:;~==~===~=.: I flee. Needt riew root $295. '
dealing with gingl lirls. ~=--e Counc;y. Also fee RmAPP_".io',25s.AN.lro. m~."""PM, mucthbemo1rde. Everythina: Ulei, ring. set with llN. karat 4 MALE AKC German Merine Equip. 9035 712 YorktoWn Ave., H.B. ·
Our men earn $664 per mo, Selective Search " 't'V mus so . center diamond, 2 diamonds Shepherd Puppiet, ~ ea. during training. Good fringe 619 Plummer St. GOULD MUSIC -.'ii. karat on each side. 337 Magnolia Ave. C.M. 1967 40 H.P . Outbo1rd Trucks 9500 .
benefits. Call 9 to 5 PM. Employment AJeney Sc I I I ti 7600 Costa Mesa BrillWlt cut"-~"-! n~,.._ ....... 10 ' 1-...;...-'-----"-'~I 534-30<1 2120 So. Main, Santa Ana noo s-n1 rue om COMPANY ly to Box P36-0-o::n:; Pll~t ~~ . Engine, Runs Good. GMC TRUC. KS
IJDO DISTRIBUTORS 557-&JSS Cottage Art Shoppe Furniture Auction 8025 2045 No. Mein '· 811..KY Terrien, AKC $175. 673-6434 aft 5 pm.
STUDENTS! 11 Yrs It Up Art leuotlS, land&: seucap. Santa Anl 547-0681 CARPET Jett from Comm'J. champ 1tk amali
SALESWOMAN full time 25 To Sell Candy. Make good ei, sign& & truck lettering. FRENCH Provincial ""'""""""""""""""""'"I contract&. $l.9B, $2.SS, Iha&: males/fem. Re
1
u. Stud F lahin! ~ti 9040
yean or over. Gily Bil dretss money In spare time & help Emma Blankinlhlp &: Joyce )4"XJ:I" RCA TV cabinet GUI.BRANEN Premiere $3.99 lq yd. Orakel Carpet Avail 6f6-7335
shop. 179081!.i. Magnolia needy schoOI. No cub re-SWer, 690 W, 19th (At Po-tor 23" screen. X1nt cond. ebony~ organ. Sell& for ~4Beach Blvd, H.B.~ alze p ood les, 11' SEAMASTER
Fountain Valley. Call for quired, 644-2159 6-9 PM A mona) 642.1689 or 83U455. Elect componenta incl. $80. $4200. Going to Hawall -Yorkle1, A-Malteae. Pup1 Almott new " Le• than 3
appointment only. 968-3838 wlmdi. MA-~ AR~ will t•&ch 549--0507 muet sac. for $3000. Can TRAVEL Trailer. Refrlg. I: adults. 2 lb toya at etud tanka ot gas used. Volvo SALES -~rvice ·Estab <>•Ln. ~~.,~ finance. 968-2710 Noncold 6 cu ft. Comh pro-545--21DD ' powered with Inboard/out-
Fuller Brush route, $125 wk Technlclen Trne $329.ll painting, Apply in pehon Appll1nce1 1100 CRANI>-4' ll", walnut fin. pane I: elec $75. Marlnet'•f.:'=~===~=-board drive. 2 bun.kl, head,
gUUantee to st&rt. 546-:5745 Prefer older woman. XInt 2912 W. Coaat Hwy, Space -'-'-'-=;.:;.;.::... __ _;.= Completely reconditioned. Sextant ''Tamaya 636 MS..2'' * POMERANIAN AKC reg, bait tank, new trailer, Too
SALES benfs &: working conds, w/ _N=o=·='=· N=ewport='==Be=ac=h=. == SO. COAST IORBY Asking $&XI. 67&-l24S Brand new, comp. $225. Crtam color, 10 wka old, bul)' to Ult-, must sacrifice.
Wanted: Exp'd motcreycle, fa!t growing co. -haa credit TO's & demo ~7 mtle .,_ ~-. Will take mobile home tn
salesman. 6424343 JASON BE.ST Theatrical 7900 modela of new 'TO Kirby HI-F i & Stereo l2lO GENT'S dlam.ond ring, ...,,.,........,.. trade, $2895. Aak for Steve Employment Agency Classlc1, 25% oU. Fact. ;;;...;..;..;;:..;:;.;:;;:;:..,_,......=.:; center stone 1 carat. en-2 Adorable poodle mbted aft 10 am 494-8M5 or 54s.3851
Savingt & Loftn 2207 So, Main, Santa Ana ACTING warrn't. PH: ~75211222 ** MOTOROLA STEREO clrcl~ by 9 1ma Iler pups •. 8 wk, beige & white, --
MANAGEMENT 9264 W, Katella, Anaheim Do you want to be a full time !>th St/ H.B. CONSOLE, Very aooct cond! diamonds. S&-c. $1 o o o 1 curly. Need KOod homea, Boats W•nted 9050
TRAINEE 546-5410 or 821·1220 working profeuional'? Do KENMORE Washer & elec. 642--1003 aJt fi pm. 962-e631 fenced yard1, 839-0853 A=~~~nSai~n:!~ndngi.:~ -TELLERS-yotou hlblve the self disclpUne ~Al· .,Both ~dxl~t colod. ·--------1 MEMBERSHIP To Holiday AKC Poodle, min. Black &U ect yourself to a rig-..,.,. , "•qo• atre e ec, H al th s llO ale 10 mo · .__ ~-•
..... rltlah training course & ryer, ...._.... co · • ,..._ -'• Cal.I 675-3807. $75. 536--1398
WANTED: Ski boat, Ttl or
Cat hull, 13'-14', w/out
motor. ewt 540-3299, dyl
61>5300
Here now.
Immediate -
Southem Orange County'e
only Authorized GMC Dealer ',
• UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
~ Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mea 540-9640
'67 FALCON
WINDOW VAN
Automatic, big 6. dlr. L<>w
miles. Will take trade or
finance private party, (YLT
665), 49.f-9773. 54M052.
'55 CHEV. 1~ T Truck. New
enr. Good cond. -* 962-6631 * Jege ,,.,...duates for· their Attracti~ openingll are avail-td B d -•-od 150 Ta-R-ordo-1220 e pa, .40 per mo. m ' "c ....... p. s.""""'
management training pro-able tor exP!'rienced tellers the artiat1c bumility to ac-847-81.l.S or S46-8672 SO
gra
m.-in our ·new HuntinP:in '"'-~ .. NY Stereo tape reootder ORIENTAL RUGS POODLE Pup1 • l!Tt'!llatible, '69 FORD E--1•-· -9.-. cept m~ rotes untll the USED, cook-top • oven, Gar-!Wald -•-"'"'"" ... ,., _, ......... 'J111s posltion often chfil.. Beach and Costa MeaaaU· w ..... auapen 1lon V&rt0Ullsltes.M119tsell healthy, Apricot. AKC. $'15. Moblle Hornet 9200 ml'a, Mint Cond. 2256 ,,.~ ... and rew·~;-~ ca-ices ot' Downey Savings & tra.lningll • THEp<rlodLOioNOOeomNplLAete? fers & Satt)er, $2J, Mesa speakers, mu.st ae.ll, $225. 6"" i:_.. 541-0958 or 947.2072, • ______ ...;.. ''6u' ... .....,15 Loan partl ao -del Mar. 2803 P<rtol&, CM. 545-aist 6.f&..1581 ,......_ . . SPACES Columbia Dr. C.M. 646--2355
reer to the right pereon. Aasoe.' For full c-GUNA AC T O RS WORK· O'KEEFE & Merritt i USED Carpetlna'. Excellent WIRE Halred Dolle Puppies, Available ln Huntington 1950 CHEVROLET
Call -ulars,
12
call Penonnel Cll.3) SHOP m1ght be able to help stove, has brolier and ove un, S r1I Good ••-Condition. Very cheap. Call not ngta. SlO ea. Call • Beach le Cotta Mesa'a nle-Plclc-up. New license
Mr. Hensley (213) 861.sn3 869.{)5 • you. No previowi experience terri.trbaker. $20. 6t>O!HS Po ng I -536-4170 fi.tS..6425 eve• or Sun. Only. 11111 parkl. $175. 642-m4
Secret•ry to $600 TYPIST, Doctor'& off, N.B. neceaaary, no age barrler. _.,:,:,:co;::.·===:..:::..:::::. 1956 % TON Oodae truck. 4 PAIR Gold On.pet + l DOBERMAN PUPPIES, 3 MOBILE HOMES 1962 FORD Rancbero, a90d
Exciting opty. You will work Approx 25-30 bra per wk Members of this exclU11ive USED Appliances & TV'a, May be &een at 5!H w. for sliding glass door. $52. ma.lea. Ownpk>n sired. America'• fineal, available condition. 545-4455. 3 i 6 5
in lovely new otc, in Irvine now, probably tull time group will only be accepted all guaranteed. Dunlap's, 19th St. C.M. 548-0717 Call 6@.9671 • Cl:ll, 846-2321 In every alie ~ .. ..i .... range. Oreron, C.M.
11tea for a wonderful boss, iafer. 90 WPM, IBM exec upon a satisfactory per10nal ]!15 J!_~rt, C.¥. 548-7188 --·-For sale: 2 AKC Min. ...,..... ~-=-~------1 ~-co. ~ ostbl'd • otabte. aper, Permanent. $4 per interview with the director An I Ml II Ml W _... JOMICRA, INC. 'TO" Ford Jtancir, 8' camp. ''""' °" · · t quas 1110 set 1neou1 •_,("" ac. ent-1610 Doxie'•, 6 weeb. Call 19261 n -... h Bl d • -•• d .. •--Yours will be a pos. w/m. hr start. Box M383, Dally Call 494-4404 for appt. ;.;;;==;:_ ___ _;.;.:;.;.:I :~:=;:::;::::::::: __ .::-::: _9951 uc-v · er ... wn.o, r . ....,,500 or ~t
Pilot
lllU-Huntington Bee. '.1 536-651l offer. 897.2889,
finite variety &: interest MERCHANDISE FOR B le J COUNTRY AUCTION LEAVING lor Europe, Must WANTED Uaed 10" 01' 11" -,-,==~""~--,,=
Send resume or call Mlsa Typist Start $433, SALE AND TRADE 838 E. 1st St, s .A. ~II Mercedes 280 SL, $1000. engine lathe, metal turnlnf. AFGHAN PUPS, AKC MoBAY HARBOR J tSlO
Elizabeth, 557-6122 Abigail Fee Paid Now Open to Public for lnflatbl rubber boat for Call 548-7339. 12 Wkl. Tmn1. 846-5152 blle Home S•le1 ffPI
Abbot Personnel Agency, 230 Exceptional co. in beaut. new Furniture 1000 Retail S.9, 1 days a wk. water skiing $650. Water WANTED 16 M.M. projector DACHSHUND Pupplea, e ALL NEW '7D MODELS IM-ILIT..:...-AR-Y-.-4cy-I-, _O_HV_e_or;.;.
1
W. Warner, Suite 2ll, Santa plant needs sharp, mature Many Antiques & Cu1glus ~kls, furn. outbrd motor, w/sound. Call Costa Mesa wkl old. AKC ttg. NOW ON DISPLAY 4 whl dr,, canyas to p, roll
Aoa. typist. Xlnt future. Also tee LEAVING state In one week, + Lots of Modern Furn. 69 Chevy. Everything goes. Exterrnlnatinr Co .... 1~~ 6'1'>35S4 20' Wides u low aa $5995 h ~
Secy. E xec. $550 positions, must eell houseful or 67;)-4442 ' ~ '"· ===='=='=='====-! 12' Wldea to 3.f' \V'Jdes ar, tow b&r. $8""'. 54g...2887
"·I u o. h fumiture & misc. 2 twin ORIENTAL RUG CAMPE H 8830 Park S••-Av·"·bl Fee Paid ..., ec ve .,.,-arc l2x23 Royal Kerman R '6~ Ford 6 Van, "M=•;:•h::i;;;n:.::•!Jc..::Ec:.t•::·_;..:1::7;;00 -~r!!!.,. ____ ...c= --~• ....... e Racraet'n Vehicles 9515
Top level job tor sharp wo. Employment Agency beds $25 ea. di~tte tbl & 673-5822 stand up extension, blt-in1,1-' 1425 Baker St., Costa Mesa man w/much exp, Xlnt co. 2120 So. Main, Santa Ana 4 chn $25, retrig. $20, couch I ---....:::.::.::::::... ___ I $1200; Jfonda SO: Model's 5HP Blower I Cyclone. HORSES boarded, box atalla % block Eaat of Harbor Blvd. 1969 CHEVROLET
CUSTOM CAMPER recent!" moved to Or&""ei==~-""-7-6055~~~=-&: chr set $15, overstuUed .'Sewing Mach1nH 8120 clothes sizes 8-10: Old gray Misc. pipe & flttln&s & com.la, $40. W/fted. Call Cce:ta Men (n4) 540-9470 " . .., chr $5, Westlngh&e com· 1 od can .t!A" "183 549-3591 County, A1w fee positions. USED Car Lot Man. 5 Hour merclal washer. Many more SINGER Auto zig-zag, 6 mos. po s; a other antiques.1 ::===:-=~==== ;:..;:...=:.c:.------1 Chlldren, '68 24' WIDE
Selective Search Day. Marcus Motors, 2026 item&, SM C.Ongreas, CM. old. No attach nee-cled for 545-Sl.18 I· TRANSPORTATION Owner Must Sell By June 1.
Employment Agency Harbor Blvd., C.M. 646-8726. zig-tag, button ho l es, PO'I"IER'S wheels, electric FREE TO YOU 2 Br, Den, or. 3 Br. 2 Ba.
2120 So. Main, Santa Ana WAITRESSES Wanted grave-designs etc. Guar. $39 cuh mo!or operated, $65 each. BNts & Yachts 9000 Up to 10 Yr's financing.
557..SOSS yard shift only. Apply: SPANISH Liv, Rm. Furn. or small payment.. 521).{i616 Marine Surplus Co., 3307 NEED gd. homes for male --A.M.S. 842-3939 9 am.7 pm
'J'Urboh)'dramatlc transmis-
sion, 3!Kl engine, power steer.
ing, apllt rlm1, hesvy duty
tirea with OPEN ROAD UY.,.
ft. sell contained camper.
Full bath tt.cWtles tncludlng
shower, sleeP8 6, has every
possible featurt-you wouJd
want, Cost or1.(11nally $8000,
CR R 1400 Sofa, loveseat, crushed S. Main, Santa Ana. le fem. mlx/b,.od pupa. SCRAM LETS LIDO k 2 $ ETA Y, part time, OOIES RESTAURANT vel~t oh-coU tbl 2 d Must"cal Par : Furn. Br. •, ee • en 545-6551 Cute It heal th•. • · penn. Approx 10 hrs wk. W. Coast Hwy. N.B. thl's d••k --•· Ex od ., pnv. heh. Immed. oceup. I ~::.:.,:;c:::.:.,=~~~-• .... .,,.,... · co · Ins truments 8125 5<8-0813 5/14 d I May work bet ·sch; hrs, 2 DIAL direct 642-5678. Charge $585 C&!h. Call 962-4988 _::_::;::::::_:;::::~ _ __:::;:: NE\VPORT Beach Tennla , AN. SWERS A u ta Only. $6800. Terms.
days inc. Fri. Reply PO Box your ad, then sit back and eve11. GUITAR & bass, tops & bot-C:Jub membership, tr1uu1fer-BEAUT, all wht. 1pa)'ed cat, Owner -Fri., Sat., SUn.,
1555 C.M. listrn to tbe phone rlna:! OVIN tom a1., 1 all ring, must ac\I, call Mr. tiger.striped on back A: face ~:n42.
Dial 64l!i678 tor RESULTS Now! M G East -Must sell or i~ivldu~'.a,S~m, Seguin, days 853-1514, evH 2 kittens .. l blk. l tiger: AmounLI tld-OCOOke -Rodeo REDUCED price! Vlklng -2 bikes, 2 desk11. king 494-7952 S48--08l3 ' 5n4 -qu -UT of the DIKE Scand
Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100Jobs--Men. Wom. 7100
TELEPHONE
The Smile in Your Voice
Could Be Worth
A Starting Salary of
$415 A Month
Wt n11d ptopl1 with smiling voic1s, who art
eble to work any shift, to clo some of our most
Important Public R1l1tions work -as T 111-
phont O perators. An d we'll p1y ,415 a month ri9ht from th•
. ••• rt.
H1rl1 whi t 111• you
c1n eount on:
e l 1tN poy II you warti ~· ot Holidays
• l19UIOr reh .. an4 ••an•• for P'"'"""" e hlM ta..il-& Mllday1 • c ... ,..._... blftttfit pion to gin yo•
-lflty .. proh<tloll e Aod lots of new frlotMh. You'O "'"'th..,
at work and I• .tltr..hour actlvltla.
J1fk to UI soon •nd find Out morl about bl•
.lng a P1cif1c T1l•phon• Op•r•tor. W•'r• hlr~
1ng now b1tw11n 8:30 A.M. i nd -4:30 P.M.,
Morul1y thru Frid1y •t No. 2 City Blvd. East,
·:suit• 2-40, Orange, C11if. I So. of Chipman,
w11t of Or1n9t County Hotplt1ll 639-3260.
,l lf toll c1ll1 c1ll collect.I
acific Telephone
An Equ•I Oppor!unlty Employor
size bed, baby bed, 4 alum. FENDER Jazz Bass, Fender . About a talkative woman: la, 20x80'. Ex. c:ond.
<:hrs, child's picnic tbl. bottom. $270. FOR Sale • Family Mem-8 PUPPIES -Mam a "Asking her a question 'ii 5 Star Adult Pk, MMl.42
5.f&-2148 Call &12-5916 bersh!p, Irvine Coast Coun-coclc:apoo, daddy? s weeks like tl\k!ng your finger OUT after 6.
ITALIAN provincial tbl, w/6 GIBSON ES 335 1~". Fcoder try Club. Can be purchAsed old, 548-8409 5/12 of the DIKE" OCEAN, GoU coune In Adult ~ by 6% note, i[ nualitled, FREE -;;;;ii;i;-==C,· cc-=~= Pk 0 BC "•-••• pool ch'g, bunk bed11, Queen-IZ bandmaster $250. 548-3869 Call M&2337 10 ~-5 pm. lo good home 4 mo. BOSTON Whaler, 13', 40 HP, ' ' · • "'"""' '
Now Only $5599
UMiYERSlfV
OLDSMOBILE
2850 Harbor Bl., Costa Meaa -bed, bar stools, Maple bed, _c::;all::.;6-:_7:_;.P:;M:_____ =~...c....:.:-,;...:::::.c:..o.::::.. old puppy, Loveable &: good. Evlnrude's selectric f u 11 •una, bar/ttlt. 536-0321
chests, dres&ien, color TV, Movtng to smaller qrts Must 897-1298. 5/12 coven I; trailer. uice new,
stereo, lamps. 548-8611 Pianos & Organs 1130 dispose of Electrolux sweep. ADORABLE Gray Kitten $1595. Mini Blkeo 9275 C1mpero _____ ;..: 9520
AIL furniture & appliances er & other hsehold items. Wants Home. 67>5350. art MMS5T or 213: 87'-1100
M be l
PIANOS & ORGANS 548-7659. 6 & wknda S"";1,-,,_:;;,;::;;.c::..:=;,;;::;.:::;...,, 1961 Ford camper Van, Mflfs
Wll Sod! Refrig., port. NEW & USED ** l PALM TREES $l2JO . · 1.u 16' 7" Bolton Whale hull. POWELL 5 hp $145. Bonanza tunt-.up. $42S. See at 10th
di9hwasber, pecan credenza, •Yamaha Plano& Orpns VALUE YOU REMOVE OERMAN SQepherd, male, 1968 '° hp Johnlon. TUt 3 hp, brand new SUO. C&ll & Virg1nia St. OWner at
lamps, etc. Call aft 6, 714: e Thomas Orga.na ONLYiooo. CAN BE SEEN to good. home, 8 mo'1 old. hit, bll wbll, $1150 .l_;al;:.te;:.rc.:.5.o.p;:.m::.·c:-::..:='--3~ S. Cout Hwy, So.
531-3409 e Kimball Pie.nos 16551 RHONE LN, H.B. 53M9~ or 839--04G4. IS/12 4M-3839 em. Lai. aft 4
8' SOFA never used, qu illed e Kohler & Campbell . MALTESE, 1 yr, aid irtY 8' PRAM dlnlhY w/ 3 hp Motorcycles 9300 8' 36" CAMPER shell·bed.
Doral, acotchguarded $135. COAST MUSIC SOF~. Chalr w I ha.11sock, fem. cat. Resp, adulta:: wW John, Both compl tt00od. ¥ __ , ______ ;.;.
Mn.tch. loveaeat $75. NEWPORT & JlARBOR Meditcrni.nean hangi ng spay 61>1M8 •n4 Xlnt cond $115 or trade •70 Kawuakl Sldewlnder Coleman tee box $225.
'11
• nl:&t lamp. Motorola 23" TV. ' " ' M&.21&8, 54&1420. 3010 War-.,..,_,., . C.Osta Mesa * 6(2.2851 847-7924 SET of tt&tionlJ'y tubs fbr for Scllock Sabot. fH4..5346 STREET A DlRT ren, Cotta Mesa
HOUSEFUL Of new model Open l<M> Fri 10..9 SUn U.S , washroom. Gt waabel'I, not WORLD'S smallest twin in-Brand new -only 1500 mUes.
home tundture, Reg. $683. Beginners Organ Cfe11 SUMMERS HEREI workl.ng 548--2726 S/1.f boud, only 20•, xlnt cond. = $800. WW aacrlftce
8~acruudl:~i!ct ca='. ;;-6.J19'1· 894-4417 o r ENROLL NOW ~~e~mi:er!~~p. Fa= BABY·faced silky kitten., !!!~~It. bait tank. $1495. 95W044 Complet~. $895. 869 West
_, Class starting Tues,, May weaned & tr: · d 1 wkl .,...,.... .. iw ,.-;;;:::o~-';;~=-=-18th St. Cotta Meta .
HIDEABED Sofa, Simmom. 19th, 7 pm, 6 week rourse Dieys S49-2286, eves, 5.'>7-3968 548-1243 aine ' 5114 18' CllE!l'LINER w/115 HP '66 Konda CB 160 Super _:;__,:;:..,,:.;;;;;;::,:::;;:,, __
off white N8ug. New cond. $12. HAMMOND ORGAN 1967 40 H.P. Outboard FRE Interceptor motor SllOO 25• Sport, m111t still. call evu VW CAMPER
Coat $340. SRcrlt. s1GS. STUDIOS, 2854 E. Coast E ngine, Runs Good. b~ P~~C:~ P;" !~~ slip optional. 3333' w. ~ att 5: 673--1121 ·~ Po~ ~t
613-6408. ~.;;:a9Jo Corona de I Mar. $175. 673-6434 aft 5 pm. 548--7932 after 4 pm sill cH:,::"':·:,Nc.·::;B'=. ===== 1965 HONDA .!Kl5 Scrambltir
LARGE Walnut desk, 48"rndoaktable,pedbuecAIJCO kill. ___ .;;;; torereat deal '69 VW <'Adventure''
50X23X29, like new, ST5. w/lcaves $135. 10· rowboe.t "'"k bo ttrenalo, dem~e. 8,, ~S.:;a;.;ll.:;bo;;;•:;tsc:_ ___ ;...:.90::1.:;0 I ---;:;.Call;;.,::615-:;;;I::~~,--camper, n.dtal Ure1, stereo, * 84&5625 alt S pm * HAM:r.fOND, Steinway, Ye.m. w/anchor, oars. 673-4533 '· x e · .,,,,;·l5l41 '67 YAMAaA 100 many extru. 644--6272 aha. New & used pianos oI 5112 RACE Rte.di Snipe sailboat, $175 587 y rka:hlre C r.t '67 DATSUN P/U w/btr
most n1akes Be~t buys In * scut..~E lnstructlon SIAMESE -Pe.ra:ian k:lttl!!ns. No. 5852 & Inlier, new rlr-' eafi 545-0io1. · · Camper, . lo mi's, clOl'lt,
So. Calif. at .Schinklt Music on portrait bust w/mO<al. Call alter 3 p.m. 494-6608. glng. beautiful, $1200 . :::..-.,,==~,,C-=--~ icebox. $1495. scs..8925
USED gteel dtskl $S9.50 • Co. 1907 N. Main, Sanla Ana Gloria Puglsey, 644·2874. 5/12 494-1893 ew1. '67 HONDA 150 Scrtmbltr -=-==-=-=:=.:~=I
Poature chain; $12.~ & up --~------lr>:NO ))ljlted oil portrait 6 ADOR. cur•u balls ot lur. 15' SKIPJAO<, XLNT cond, dirt bike, S2SO. Dune Bun •. l.o.n;__;;;95::25:I
8010 Office Furniture
• t!~I 2 t: 4 drawer flllng . of YoU of )'OU1' children f.rom " B&:sr OFl'""' 1Mft. C11ll M&-6951 -cabinets • Used wood deiks We are having a a photograph. 646-3629 Blk 6 wht, pups. 6 wka. £fn O\'er -·=62,...,6!0t:<""""°'="~:;:~-• MINOR electrical work,
McMahan 8l'OI Onk loc. Whi le of• Sale . . 8*4493 -5/14 this weekend. 548--0864 Bike •• ~:re~'rl 220 hook-up, 646-7613 beloni
1800 Newport Blvd. on Pf8JIOI and Orp_ns. TRADE Car, Trailer. little FREE pnrt Siamese kittens UDO 14, newly reflnls~. * 846-1491 aft 5 * SAM. a1t 6 PM •kdys
Yoo bctler come on down' money for a cement drl'Ve. 8 w'-, 836-4-I!G •114• new trailer & covtr. $850.1========::. ,.,,,...,,........,~-..;,;,'--! Costa Mesa * 64.2-8450 WARD'S BALDWTN S1t1Dt0 Call aft 5. 842-So846 ,... " 644--1378 ·vw Dune buggy. rtotn.tklb
Store E quipment 8012
CIF'T shop, Clothirtf, htdle,
Fixtures, Shelf I um b c r .
Chenp! 5'13--lail, aft 6 pm
644.-WA) .
:T'S Beach Muse titne. Big·
ltlt ttlectton l!!Vel'! See the
DAILY PILOT WANT ADS!
1819 Newport, C.M. G4U434 Wedge\VOOd llolly, apt sl 2 CUTE blk le wbl. Jdtt~m. Auto Tools fires. Street. Lea:"1. $600. :..e 54M8.f2 5/t4 KITE 898, xJnt cond. New 64&-2188, 546-6420
Optn Every Nile gu 1tovc, excellent condh 11.111 + lrajJer. $600. Seaa:ull & Equip M10
& SUnd!l¥ Afternoon tlon. Allk1na $30. 847·'llA7 9fi2-3l38f'R.EE K!ttena
5114
motor. bst ofr. 675-1245 ---• tT'l! WOND£RFVL tbe ** Piano PS Wk:k Upright 21 " 'IV $20, 10" TV CHINESE Junk 30' ltina, * SACR IFICE * mt.rt)' tnQ'I tn a~
F..xccllcntl $200 iz. DNtuer $5. 5 SWARMS or bees. ttak, cood cone!. $2000 or Complete servl~ 1tatl0n :',.~-!': .. !h'm ..,.Claoltllotl1 (714) 968-4231 n.nytime. st!·M 646-2Sn S/12' best olfcr. (2l$) a90-4653 equip, Incl, air tl~ ehanc· ,..,.-u"'=~:,.,.";:::;:~::..i::;.;:. __ 1
3 CUTE
en, f'l'Dnt end equ; ... w ... I IS u OUR AD IN
S'T'F.lNWAY ''L", S'Jl'', GOOD hand mowers. f.j, 3 kl11.en1Sf0.21955/l2 ** ll' Catamarati', balanctrlcolhett.'Newport :1
Ebony, Salea new fM $4500, Whee-I bteycle $!5. JSS~ nrE SUN NEVER SETS on t lberala11, neu nu, Quit Service, 1920 W, Balboa ~,c!. ~=::. ~Yr'!! old for $.1850. 546--1458 Men-Ill Pl, C.M. 646-sn DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! $1!i00. (21 31 944·2S4G Blvd., N~B. 673·5640. 6678 ,
(. I
\
I•
'·
r
1
•
I DAll.Y ~LOT TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANS,ORTATI ON TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
Dune llugglos '525
"'ONE OF A KIND
~ BUUY jut ttlumed u
aboWrOom demo In So. Pa-
dnc. Ready to sacrific:e at
bu:t oUer. Please "°
m.o&5S ~ 6#12511 t'WI.
lmeortod Autoo -lmportod Aul~
MERCEDES BENZ TOYOTA
ITIOJYIQITIAJ
lfnportod Autos 9600 Auto LH1lng "'° U1od C•,. -UHd c... -Usod Ciro -UMii-c... --
VOLKSWAGEN l'ORD AUTIIOIUZ$D CA MARO FORD OLDS MO II LE
•~ V ,;;;" '61 •M-LEASING SYSTEM • '' llll ,.,, e ...... "'. cam. America'• Iarsest '9tastna
ptr unit, work down en Q'ltem tor filW'ICe ot net
tn.nl, c:om,pltle nl!W brake Jouinf: al all type ctn pj
ayltem A Urea. Good condl t:rucb.
CAM,<RO ·111 UJ, • IJ!d. '67 Ford Gal. 500 die brU. headen. L o
ml/Xlnt CObd, $2000.
!'71 OLD.S
SPORT CPI!.
DUNTON ~-1
FUll JIOW"!l", factor)' air oond.,
wine ext. Exdt. nmnine con.
dltion. Take sm.all down.
importod Autos -
AUSnN AMERICA
AUSTIN AMERICA
Sales, Setvior, Partl
~iate DQUvery
All Mod<ls
J~eluport
~1111 po rr ~,
3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.8.
'59 MERCEDES 100 SL, Con.
vertibla, Good Shape,
i11chelin tires, 6~7594
'66 ·MERCEDES 250 SE
Coupe. J\fust sell. Xlnt cond.
$4500. Pvt ply. 496-5998
MG
MG
Mork·ll W•gons
HI Lux Pickups
l•nd CruiMr1
Wagon•
DEAN LEWIS
196" Har~r, C.M. 64.6-9303
'67 TOYOTA
Corona, dlr. Will take trade
or finance private party.
(ZLK 977>. Call 5464052 or
494-9773 aft 10.
TRIUMPH
$80D. 5»-1708 Btwn 5 PM e Immediate deltvttf from
& 9 PM. owr 300 Cati and tnJckl ** '68 VW, chrome rinu, •Competitive rates
etereo, MANY ontER EX· • Ne.t car dealtnlrlp •rvb
TRAS. Real cll!anl $lS60 or e FUD "tradeln" VallWI for
bl!st offer. 544-6.TI6 your pl"l!sent car * * \V ANTED: Reliable par-• All popuJ.&r makes avan.
ty to assume payments on able
'69 V\V. Call 64Z..1003 aft For Complete Details Call
6 pm. Malcom lUkl
VOLVO
Leul111 Manager
Thoodoro
. ROBINS FORD
-CHEVROLET
'118 CHEVEU.E Mallbo. 2
dr hdlp, VS, auto, p/•, plb,
bucket seals, lo mi's, new
ti.res, VERY SHARP. $2150
f213l 592-1660 •
'56 CHEVY V-8, J spel!d all
ea u I• a, mags. $325.00.
MS-0076 alter 5 pm.
'62 Chev. 327 Impala
$495. Call 646-286a. Belt Stock or VOLVOS
-"' Otal>p_Ottu>f>_ ' 2060 Harbor Blvd. '65 Bel Air, auto tram, pwr a.ta Mea---M2-0UO-DEAN LEWIS i;teer, nu tires. l owner.
Make ofter. 546-208o
$2498
Full ;rice $llifi. call Pbill S7T.69 MOtmil.Y PAYMENT
dlr, (T'l'D 6!11) 5tQ.3100 or $299 is lhe total 00-u ~·
$1029 a.ft 10 a.m. menl. m.69 is the' total
1$57 FORD Falrlane v.s. monthly payznent lncludlns
Runa, but ~· work. $50 taxea, lioellae ud all can')'·
<ll' bt1t ctter. (No checks). Ing cha.rries en approval of
642-C809. ll85 Costa Mesa St., Bank a-edit tor 36 monlba.
CM -Or, H you would prtfer to
'67 GALAXIE 500 l:"~;'"~~-:1~:,"~
Loadl!d + air, dlr. \Vill tske taxe• and 1971) Uce11$e tn.ng.
trade er finance private fer. Nothing more to pa,y,
party. Call 546-4052 or Defii>rred payment price ta
"':":·9773"=°:•0:.":1;•=· ==="I $3095.84 lnclud~ a11 tan')'· Jog chariu. tan& and-1!'70
license tr'l.Mfer. JAVELIN ~ Mo.1764
Authoriud ~fG Dealer
SalH, Servk..!, PuU
Immediate Dtllvecy,
All Mod.a
1964 Triumph, good tond.,
hardtop, wire wheeJ1.
642-8335 or 675-0051. 1966 Hal'bor, C.M. 646.9.ix! u;d C~ra '57 CHEVY '68 JAVELIN. Xlnt rond.
Good t..'Ond! ~ cffer. Sacrifice". must sell! $1495.
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE
RATE IS ONLY 11% ----
AUSTIN HEALEY J~rluµort
3l1nports
'65 rn. 4. Xlnt cond.
New top. Best oUer.
842-3691 aft 5 JJ:m.
R•ctt c.,., Rods 9620 BUICK 11121 FORo-RRO;:;AD~Sf:;;E;:;R;-1--~~~--==-'*_,,.5.1&-:,;,,l:.:;005'0"'-*"----I or beat otter. 536--7403
r.1usr &ell '67 Chevelle SS
396, like new, many xtru.
A6kirig $1800. 96S-2664.
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
'59 SPRITE. needs \\-Wk,
$200/best otter. \Vkdya tll
5. 547-9501., wknds 1: aft
6: 645--06.li
1964 Triumph Spitfire. &ond
cond, $125. • 962-0262 aft
Street & gbow $3000 '63 Buick Riviera * 6t5--03.j7 sood shape, 646-8430 3100 W. Coast Hwy, N.B. 4 wkdays
Mi-Mm :.40-1'164 _:_..:_:.:_:.:_~_'-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_· j:A:,:u:I::.•:_• _:W::,•·:•;:.l::,ed:_ _ _:t;:.7:::00 '60 BUICK 2 dr $100, 'TO
Autbortz.td M:G Deall!r Uanse. Runs 1ood ! BMW VOLKSWAGEN WE PAY TOP 64G-7561, ""' Pomona.·cM
'66 S. S, 396, red Chevelle
conv. Auto. Great Shape.
$1250. Owner, 8ti-8714
'63 CHEVY 4 Dr, nttds
trans. v.·ork. $190. 540-lill
LINCOLN 2850 Harbor Bl., Costa Mesa
OPEN 1 DAYS
CAIJ.5«).9640
'60 Lincoln. Uc. 681Fnl,l======='===o 4 dr hrdtp. Public aale 11
AM, 1027, v&lencia, C.M. PLYMOUTH
MERCURY Mechanic Special I CASH '59 BUICK Convertible. 1175-,. '58 MGA $145. 5J6..8615. BMW's #1 LARGE Nl!w top, good tires. '68 J\.1GB-GT -O\Drive, Heat, Call 642-2033 or~aft;). !----------=========' \ '60 MERCURY Conv, ~w
PL YMOunt 1968 Roadrun-
ner coupe. t spd tn.nl,
R&H, .pocyglass tire-a,
headers, shure grip.
673--6076 aft 5 PM. wire whls, whll .. blk. up!. SELECTION
DEA LE R IN t.1ust sen. $2600. 6~ of YW :,~'s4or~&e=~
CALIFORNIA AND ·55 MGB. Priv. Pty. CAMPERS
O"ANGE COUNTY'S Good """"· 11•0010""· 'GROTH CHEVROLET 1959 CADILLAC PARTS
CADILLAC
" LARGEST •494-030laJ•• Harbour V.W. "'"'°'Sal"".....,. roR:~SALE OPEL 18211 Beach Blvd. 1970'a lmmeri. De.livery AUTHORIZED Windshield Wlpen
25 New & Used ir. Stoclr: ---------SALES & SERVICE Huntington Beach Radio
M S '68 OPEL Kadett Sect Xlnt IO 9-3331 T & MOTOR -~ 1!71l BEACH BL., 842-4435 Whttls
ll081 G-~ I G G transp. $1vuv. Eves & W£ PAY CASH ~---•--~"'" Gn>V• B. . . wknd" 61>-335l HUNTINGroN BEACH .. ~~·=Ion
534-2284 Open Sunday 892-5551 J:::i:==:=~====-J Alr Conditioner &:
DATSUN PORSCHE -------CREAMPUFF
lllm NTSUN _. l>ir. James, 673-9191 eves/ $ 911 SPORTAMATIC
wknds. hlrs. Brown Daya
774-fil.10,
''Leader 1n The Lea~h t:uiet"
ZIMMERMAN '6' Pond,.., xlot rond., all
1964 VW Bug, Xlnt cond, Heating Unit
1'119 °' Bost off•r. 2348 FOR YOUR CAR AO<! Many OU..• Item• Rutgers Dr, CM, btwn 5&9 542--3131 Alter 5 P.M.
pm. CONNELL ·67 EL DORADO, lull pow,., '63 VW. Good condition, !"It ~-/Im ~-M. I clean, ST:il. Also Dune bug-CHEVROLET 1 6"''1>• am · s-u-.. ·15
-~ · $700 Call Brown, vin. rf, full lthr gy, ·~11 repair · 2828 Harbor Blvd. inter, fact air. Xlnt. MU6t
642-7243 aft 3 pm. Costa Mesa 54&-lll>O See! After 12 PM, 6T>2398 • ·57 vw . HEL I lmmeculate $500 P. '68 Chevelle Malibu, 2 dr
CHRYSLER
1969 CHRYSLER, Xlnt cond!
Town &: Country stn Vt"RTI,
all extras, pvt owner $3750. -CONTINENTAL
LATE '67 Continental, 1
Owner, c lean. Runs
perfecUy, Air, I eat her,
power. Priced to s I! I I!
646-4400 wkdays, 642-0766
eves &: wknds.
'64 CONVT, lull p:iwr, &
air cond, le mi's, very
clean. $1300 firm. 962-413.1
extrM. Pvt pty. $3400 or
2845 HARBOR BLVD. "'"oiler. 646-8!.15
540-6410 '67 Porsche, AM·FM, VERY
* alt 6 pm 548-0503 * Harbor V\V needs your V\V hdlp, V8, auto, p/s, pfb,
Camper.; for our large camp. bucket seats, lo mi's, new ,68 n--·•tto -~. Xlnt -~. '66 VW. New tires It paint. tire1 VERY SHARP $7150 ~.. ""' '""'"'
DOT DATSUN CLEAN,; 1~i:ro *
OPEN DAILY PORSCHE '65 SC Coupe lm·
SUNANDDAYS mac. Loaded w/xtras. Ask-tns $3400, Call 548-7251 aft 6. 18835 Beacli Blvd. HW1tington Beach '67 912 4 SPEED. Xlnt. mmt or ~ AM/FM s. w. radio. Low
mi's. Call 637-4389.
Reblt eng:. $950 or best of· I!!' cllentel. 592-1660 ' Going to Vietnam. MUST
1"· ......,65 aft5 Harbour v. w. '65 COUPE DE VILLE. All ~,:;::-"' A>kiog 134 50 .
'68 VW Camper, $2100. Sel! xtras but air. Lo miles,
at 6141,i Jasmint, CdM. l87ll BEACH BL., 842-4435 xlnt cond. $1695 I I rm, SEWNG a lll67 Fastback
After 5:30 PM. HUNTINGTON BEACH 49fr.2500 Corvette, l cwner, under
ba WE l>AY TOP DOLLAR warranty, must sell-mcving. '67 VW Square tk. Clean. '66 CAD. S.D.V, Full power, Call aft 5· 30 6T>2054
Good condition! $1.450 FOR TOP USED CARS 40.<XXI mi'1, l owner. Xlnt . ' .
642-9885 After 6 PM 11 your car 1s extra dean, cond. Call 968-1042. DODGE
top &: engine. Very clean!
$395. Call 646-9022
'61 M,l'nterey, 4 Dr., radio,
heater, power, S400 cub.
.tM-2157
'63 Plymouth 2 dr hrdtp,
auto, p/s. Xln't Cond, $600
645-2118 alter 6,
__ M_:.USTANG i _ __.:._PO;;:.;NTIAC
LO Mileage 1005 Mu.tang '68 FIREBIRD
Fastback, RltH, bl .11. o k Leaded, MUJt 8E!ll, • m .11. l I
upholstery, Clean, geed down . lcw payments, dJr,
mech cond, good tires, 1 tWQL 212) can 5t64052 or
owner. $1D95 -673-1578 494...9773 aft 10 am,'
'65 MUSTANG hdtp. Xlnt 1968 LE MANS 4 Dr: Hrdtop
cond. 45,000 Mi. Sacritice, $2295, Power !· air cond.
mu.st sell! 361 Grenoble Ln., Owner .673-2259 E veg
C.OSta Mesa, bet. 6 &. 8 PM. 644-5972
LEAVING Country mmt .sell. l<l~970~PO=NT=IA~C~F=ln~b~;,,i~3511=,
'69 Mach I, 9500 mi's, vinyl gretn, .11.uto trans, p.s., p.b.,
top, xlnt cond! $:1650 . 2 mo old, 2800 mUes. Mmt
673--0675 sell, Ptv. Pty. 846-l2Z1 {71:&)
'65 Mustang, r/h, auto, V-8 '68 Firebird 400, landau top,
289. Good Shape, $950 Cali air, p/s, p/b, l cwner.
54:>5741 , Cohllder trade. "115 Victoria,
'65 MUSTANG 2 + 2 fast-C.M. aft 6 or wkncls
back, mint coDCI., new tires, ~196!t=~F~ln~b'°';,,i~·~. "°'A~Jr.<o--od~.-6500=
many xtras. $1100. 494-6636 miles. Xlnt thruout.
'65 Must. 289, 4 spd, 4 bar-:::::*::::EO:v':'C::'·::6'13-t16'1===; :::;*= rell, stereo, radio, $1000.
548--2671 aft 6, RAMBLER
MUSTANG 69 f\fach I, 428, l-----------
FORD
U40 S. Meil.. ~
SANTA ANA
546-7076·
.'66 CUSTOM
2 ·Do•r. 6 cyllNler,
,hlft, , •• 1 •• 11 .... , •
t1·11
Jill
'65 FALCON
'''l~t. V-1, euto. tr•11• ..
recllo, h11ltr, whifew•ll
tlr••· 011ek1t 11ot1. tOYV
174 1.
$1189
'68 SQUIRr
Wtto11. f1c:tory 1ir, r.S,.
190 V0I, 111to. tr1t11., lut·
9191 C1rti1r, W•W1 W•CO"'•
1r1, T. 91111, IWES 2951
$31B9
'66 FORD
S9Ulll WAf.ON
v.1, 1uto. tr1n1., f1cfory
iliir cortd itionint. pow1r
1t11rlng, lu99•g• rick. fl
to choo11 from I. fTFX 1121
$1789
'67 CAOILLAC
• l
I'
j , ,,
I ,,
j
f' '
I
1
I•
~· • -1 " . " ' " ' ,,
"' " ill ,,
t
I•
I
I
I
'I ..
" •I .:
li ,.,
•I I
S..1111 d1 Villi. ~1ctory 1tr it
t o11d!ti1ni119, fMll p1w1r, fl• 41
dlo, h11t1r0 lw99191 top. 'f l 'I ITYU1441 .f,,
$3295 I
'68 CUSTOM ' I
500. 4 Door S•dt"." Auto., ,I
P.S,. f,ctory •ir, rttllo,
h••t•r, WI'#. IWEM 12 71
$1883
'65 MUSTANG
' .,
I
'68 DATSUN PDRSCHE '67, 912, 5 speed, Musr •-11 ,., V I'·--see us tint. '66 S V · ..:re '" o ..,.wagen. POOLE BUICK . D. , Vrnyl top, auto., air cond., p.s .• p.b.,
radK>-t&pe. $3199. 536--1398
"67 RAMBLER 440. H•rchop. v.1, 4 •P• .... r•·
4 door 5edan. dlr, will take burgundy, AM I FM. 30,000
trade or f.inance prh•ale ml, xlnt cond. 542-4990
party. {UQD 23). Call ======"'== $615. Call Fred Milne: v.-ork 234 E. l?th St. i;;te~, air, full power, gold.
536-2561., home S36-89S4 Costa Mesa MS-7765 $2350. 838--0906.
'63 VW Bug, radio, heater, IMPOR.i'S WANTED 1970 Cadillac Coupe de Ville,
1969 Dodge Super Bee Xlnt
cond, 5000 mi's, Must Rli,
$2495 ca.sh. 642-5505 OLDSMOBILE
Air cond. Full power, mag dio, h11!1r, whitow1l1 tiro1. =·~·ho=•7b=1!=41=;=. 8'~1-67.,_45==~ II I Pff-7 161 '65 RAMBLER 2 dr, 327 V-8. S997 546-4051 or 494-9772.
'69 DATSUN
4 Door Sedan. 4 spd, dlr, air.
Will take trade or will fin.
ance private party, 1XSP-
112!1J c.an Sf6.405l or 494-9772,
'67 .DATSUN ''1600''
Roadster with radio, heater,
filipeed, new top. $1.1$.
(\JUJ25),
&19-3031 Ext. li6 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA ?i-IESA
ENGLISH FORD
All New English
Fords In Our Bir
Stock Jlow At
FACTORY
INVOICE!
Positively No Added
Dealer Charge1!
Choo!e From
Sedans, Sta \Vgns,
GT's At Our COfit
While Overstocks
t.a.t.
Theodore
ROBINS FORD
2060 Harbor Blvd.
Costa ?ttesa 642-0010
FERRARI , __ _
FERRARI
Newport Imp:.iru Ud. Or-
an&e Countr"• Cl1l,y autbof..
Jud deafer.
SALES-SERVl~PARTS
3100 W. Coaat HWJ.
Newport Beach
14.2-94(6 540-176C
Authorized Ferrari Dl!aler
FIAT
'62 F1AT 600--D; runs cood;
cll!all; new paint $250.
Call: 6T>1776
JAGUAR
JAGUAR
HEADQUARTERS
Thr onb aulblrizil!d JAGUAJt
deaJer in tbe entire llarbor
Ar.a.
Complet.
SALES
SERVICE
PARTS
Pool•
IUICK
IN
COSTA MESA
234 E. 17th Sb'ftt
548-TlllS
• ~l'MA.NN GHIA
196:1 KARMANN Gh1• C.onvt.
$995, ClrltUwJ o w n e r ,
fT3..SJOJ t.WL aft 5.
PIWT WANT AD! I M24811
SUBARU ---* '70 SUBARU
Here Now.
Immediate Delivery e !IO MPH Capability
• 35 Mlles Per Gallon
• Beautiful Styli~
Test Drive Today At
Kustom Moton
845 Baker, C.M. 54().5915
TOYOTA
'67 Toyota
Oean inside &. out. Needs Orange Counties fully eqp'd, like new $6000. 1969 Dodge Super Bee, xlnt
mech. y.'OJ'k. $350. 673-0910 TOP $ BUYER ~"~1~4)~6~1_"-~'"~'°~-~== 1 cond.. 5.000 ml. must sell
Good cond. $850. * GU-8649 *
'66 VW Bus. Radle, 7 BILL MAXEY 'J'OYUI'A '68 CAD El Dorado, 26,000 $2495 cash. 642-5505
XLNT Buy! '67 Olds Cutlass
SuprelTll!, 4 dr, Very good
cond, .11.ulo trans, pfs, r/h,
wil"I! v.·heel co~rs, reg. gas,
T-BIRD pas8er\ger. $1350. 18881 Beach Blvd. mi's. X1n 't Loaded. $4895. FORD * 962-3602 * R. Beach. Ph.. ~7-3555 833-2255 or 833-1103
'62 VW Body. Damaged. ;_;-~c.·,. IOO '60 CADILLAC, GOOD!
OK Mechanically. $250. , -~-------9-'-4 dr Sedan $350 548-m5
---------·I nsoo. oria owner. 673-3745 '67 T-81rd Land&u. All
'69 R.ANOt \\'agon.
mi'a. $2400.
'68 CUTL.ASS llOHP, p/s, po,.,·er. Air. Must sell. Make
p/di9c brtcs, buck. seals, cHer. 962.7!m eves, Daya
console flr shift, Polyglu 834-3274.
Call 962-1'132 I ' ~.,=1~VW~$""12~oo"'F=1R=M~1 OLDSMOBILE
'56 FORD Station Wagon. tires, r/h, 24,000 mi's, like '65 T-Bird Convert. All CAMARO Call ~9-1897
646'I0'1I
'66 Volkswagen ex c e 11 e n I
condition.. $975.
cat! 49'2-5818
1960 VW. Body 4 eniine
good. $325.
Call-
1970 OLDSMOBILE 98 .69 CMfARO Z28 h l -Need• Rear End. $100 or new. $2200. 64~2315. power. New tires. Xln't
TOWN SEDAN performance, fully equip-ofrer. 119 J7th St. N.B. ,65 {>LDS CUUus hdtp, Air, Cond. $1200. 846-0050
Factorytl a Ir ~londitio(. ning, ped. $2800. 638-8429 '64 Ford Fa.loon, 6 cyl, Auto tacb, console. I-Owner. Lo T-BIRD, '68 Landau, beige
automa c, ,;:-u re a rc1 ~CLA~~ss=r=•·=,ED=T~So~mro-.,.-wil~.1 tran1., 4 dr, r/h, $500 or Ml. Clean. SllOO. 968-5462 mist, tac air, full p:iwer,
lfll!akl!r), ater, power be looi.f .... for it Dial SU. o,,u7'.;.'·c.Call~~-;_.,...,::;· __ ~ TH• QUJCKER YOU ,.. ... , ' sterec. $2495. 67~7286 steering, JIO'Ver disc brake1, .... ,. = ~
whl!el coven, remote mlr-,5678========:..:,.;;Whl=te=•l=ep'=ban=IS=t =Dfme.o===·=ll=.ne THE QUICKER YOU SELL Dia.I SU-5671 fo1· RESULTS
'62 COMET
4 0001. Auto. tr•n1., r•llJ•,
h11f1r. IREFIJ91
$395 -
'64 COMET
2 Dior H11lfi1p. v.1, 1iito.
fr 1n1., r11Uo, h••l1r. <OLU . ' 212 )
$7B9
'67 PONTIAC Pickup
4 apl!ed, radio, beater. Driv-
en by little <lid fireman
from Laguna. Sma.IJ
down, full price $895. fTEY •
673). Call Phill dlr 54(}.3100
or 494-1029 aft 10 am.
'68 V\V. lo mile1, sunroof,
$500 ct extru, xlnt cond.
Call 9Th--1753
ror, tlntl!d glUR, w+w. U--• C -=========:.. !.:;==========oil SUiaI Ne, 38469QM276391. ..u •rs 9900 I Used Cerl 9900 I Used C•rs ttoD I Used . C.n 9900 C1t1li111 2 Door H1'rdtop. I
$4694 v.1, 1uto. tr11u., ,,J~o.
BII.L MAXEY
IT!OIYIQ!TIAJ
18111 BEACH BLVD.
Hunt. BeM:h M7.as55
I mi N. of a.st H"Y. ari Bell
'68 TOYOTA Corona 4 spd,
good cond. Except right dr.
dented. $000 + trade.
642.73,;8
'67 VW bug, original owner,
good cond, new brakes &
llres. $l!Si, 540-6287.
'65 VW Bug, mags, headers,
pin striping . $950.
Call 846·1432 * 'f,6 VW. Below wholesale
book. $700. Xlnt cond.
846-4604 alt 6 pm.
'69 VW Sqbck, xlnt. Sunroof,
am. $229()..offer. 833-1234 or
&4&-68."D, Wei~. ·----1965 VOLKSWAGEN, enr..
just reblt. Sacrifice. Call
540--0292. Aft 5. 644--0'TM
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
285(1 llarbor Bl., Costa Mesa
OPEN 7 DAYS 540-9640
Auto Leasing 9810
&"" LEASE &""
J970 Ford V8 F-100 Pickup
w/camper, &ir, p/1. auto
trams, 3900 mi. $109 per mo,
SOUTH COAST
CAR LEASING
300 W. Cit Hwy, NB. 645-2182
Priced for
ACTION
We have (0Uptil, secf1n1, I lost of gorgeoUI Wlgons It the "good
old d1ys" prices. Come In ind ... why Mont990 Is th• best Inter·
mtdi1t1 buy In Amerlc1.
NEW 1970 MONTEGO
1 dr. h1rdtop. Equlp. with d1ft;Jtl wh .. I COO'f'lft, whil1 1id• w1U
tlr11, C•'1"1iftj, 111tom•tlc tr1n1111i11i1n, powtr d11rln9, AM
t•d11, tint1d 9 111. Ho. OHOIU6J954
.Johnson+ son. ---!~ .. llHtlm CCllTIHllTAL • llHlll· llllllY•IHW .
.. ,. ...... MU\IYAll, ""'' ...
Hl•HH
M.., II ... Int Tl111t 11110 YMrl t. hy e U••l••Mtte•IT ,,.._.
\
''You Aren't Listening!''
'61 IUICIC WILDCAT
2 Or., ! ... ory ;" color, blut inlt rio r I top. Will c1r1d
for fully 1quipp1d c•r, incl. f•cfory 1ir cond. l ie,
IWAES351
$2650
'67 CADILLAC cour1 DI VILLI
lmm1cul1t1 Cir throuthout in •qui color with whit1
Y111yl top. Full C1dill1c 1cc111ori 11, lie. ITWV666)
$3650
'65 fOllD MUSTANG VI
1 door h1rdtop, Ivory in color wit h blue int1rior. Auto·
m1tic tr1nuni11ion, r1dio, h11i1r. IOSUJSS I
$1250
'61 VOLKIWAGl:N
Aulom1lic tr1n111"1i11ion. l1•ullfu l b1ig1 ••l•rio•, A
..,lry will t•r1d for ca r. IWIE•241
$1550
'66 MIRCIDIS liOS
4 Or, R1dio, fl11ter, 4 1P4. h1ft1., 1unroof, l11uliful
d1r• bh11 color •nil 11 • 1p1fl1.11 cir thr1~9houl, Ue.
CXPSI ltl •
$3350
W•'""• said It b.fore, but THIS
IS IT! Our FINA L LAST Cl••r·
anc• of '69 & '70 N•w &: unreq·
ist•r•d Po nti ecs. Some b•low
manufacturers invoic•, all with
manufactur•rs warranty.
'it CADILLAC FORMAL LIMOUSINI
With bl1ck l1nd1u top -13 ,JOO fftU•1 on thi1 luxury
cir which 1old l11t Y••r for $14,100. All con.,.1ni•nc•1
you would •Xp•ct. Lie. IXWYIS41. C1dill1c1 fin1st
fftOdtl. -011tsttnifi"9 .... 1~1 •f
$8750
'67 IONNEVILLI 4 DOOlll 'HAllDTOP
Autom1tic, r1dio, h11!1r, pow1r 1t•11in9 ind windowt ,
Ori9in•I bron11 with 1•ddl1 int.rior, imm1cul•t1 I
own1r r1f11cb fln11t of c1r1. ITllH6001
$1950
'61 CATALINA 4 DOOll SEDAN
Autom1tic, rtdio, h11f•r, powtr 1t11rin9, factory •ir,
111c1ption1I "1lu1. IYTL141)
$1950
'57 MK II LINCOLN
Confi nont1I 2 door. I ow111r, ouftt•rtdint 1x•111pl1 of
thi1 cl11iic ci r. CNSTOt•I
$3550
'6t CUSTOM I WAGON I PASSINGllt
F1ctory 1lr, powtf st.1rin9 I dhc br1k•1, turbo hydt••
m1tic. Only 21,000 mll11. IY PT1141
$3150
'II •RAND PRIX
A111tot111tlc, r1dio, h11t.r, powtr 1f11rl111·b-r•k11·wh•·
dow1, f1colory 1ir coMltl-lwg. 0fto ow111r, told &
11r.,.iced by ut. Jt,OJ6 Mil••· IPIY2•l l
$1550
ROY CARVER I Rolls-Royce
2925 HARBOit BOULEVARD, COST A MESA
5'46-#14
1
•ALL CA.II SHOWN
CA.llT OUI 12
MONTH •UAUHTU
h11 l•r, ¥i11yl roof. l155
ASHI
$1393
'67 SQUIRE I
W1gon. f•clory 1ir. V-11
•~to., P.S., W·W, lu9111J
c1rri1r. IVCK 351} I!
$2269 t
'65 FALCON J
4 Door, 6 cyl., stick. thift, ~
r1d io, h11t1r, whit•w•lll
tire1. tN8Ell•l I
$693
$1195
'64 Y, TON
Ford Pkk-up. 6 cyl, tflc\
1llift IM45,lll f
$847
' 1970 Demonstrat,
SALE
All 1171 o.tnonatraten .,. ,.,,....,. fr9"' _.,_
Ice at •ppra11. & It t mu..._ TheH 1m ,...,.
h•v• hed t h•lr ... mlle ch.c:k-u, aM .,.
rMC11 for Immediate .... llv•ry. '
All Modol1 To
ChooM From
M•t c.,.. Pully
l11vl1'1*1
e T ·llnts • Teri.,_ e M111ta,.a • o.aa .... e Pont LTD'1 ,
DUNTON
FORD
2240 S. Main
SANTA ANA
546-7076
'