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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-05-14 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• • .ea-0 Im • THURSDA'( AFTERNOON,, MAY 14, ·19io . ' \lot.. 6'. Mo. Ult I HCTIOMI, 41 , ...... , • Doctor's Wife· Testifies ( I • UCI Credit Rql~.s E,::xplained • .~... ' • ... ,..,, • • • ,, ..... • ' •• "!" • ...:-' h '.. • • ) • ~ .. .. ,. , .,. ......... -.. · .... ·.' ·r ... · ··~· · ··· · ..... · '7 ; ..• i11 •· • J' 1;..1•·'.\'(. t;.. .:1 \ ~ ..,•1 • •.,,!' -,'• ~iJfl'l-":J.,1'1.f ,1. :L.!J j f, -T.1 .11?1 4,,_, l-J , •• ., ..... ,.. ,. ,.._,..,'(• ,w:. ':' .,.; ' ' -.. 811t ·Beeovet11 Diie . . , .. U.S. Eco:nomic Picture Gloomy WASHINGTON (UPI) -Chairman Arthur F. Burns of the Federal Reserve Board said today the nation's economic picture is admittedly gloomy ud predicted that unemployment will con- tinue to rise for the next few months . Burns testified before the Senate Bank- ing Committee, however, that the jobless situation will improve later in the year. He foresaw economic recovery "wen before the year is over" with prices moving toward stability and ~ natio1 Cambodia. Move Hikes War Deaths F oi· Allies, Reds SAIGON (UPI) -U.S., South Viet· namese and Communist combat deaths climbed to new levels last week largelJ , as result o{ the allied offensives ln Cambodia. 'Mle South Vietnamese with U.S. ~pport opened an 11th offensiYC tbday in the Central Highlands area. The U.S. Command reported 18 American combat deaths tam week, the lllghest in more than eight months. South Vietnam lost 863 dead, the higbtst in more than two yean, and the Com· munists Jost 5,898 dead , their highest in 14 months and many of them in Cambodia. Today's latest incursion into Cambodia oame in the mountainous regiol\ 211$ miles northeast of Saigon and ,about 15 miles south of the Se San region where U.S. 4lh Infantry Division Jroops cloo South Vietnamese 22nd Infantry Division units crossed the border list week. No immediate fighting was reported In that area, but a South Vietnamese offensive pushing along Highway l ~ard Phoom Penh killed 119 guerrillas Wednesday and U.S. troops pushing into the. Filihhook area said they had un· covered "part ol." the Communist "pen· tagon" In. the Cambodian jungles. The U.S. Mililary Command said' the · United States was furnishing helicopter gunships, tactical air support and logistics aSSistance but bad committed no groupd forces to the new border drive, the 11th since South Vietnamese !See CAMBODIA, Page I) • • treading· a nmow line between recession and further inllatlon. The ·nation's unemployment rate rose to U percent la April, the highest level in five years. That indicated that joblessness had risen by 1.3 million since President Nixoa took office. ln 1answer to a question at the hearing, Burns endorsed proposed congressio11al action for standby public hiring programs to put the jobless to work on government payrolls. Burns said "I would 110t want to wait before unemployment rises much more before triggering" such a program. But he cautioned that either the govenment's expenses would have to be cut or taxes would have to be raised to pay for it. The economic situation, with-tl)e stock market at its lowest~vel in seven years, was discussed at the White House at. a mid-day mee by Nixon with top adviJera. Bums said the Federal' Re e-would make no fuldamental change in its monetary policy of permitting a slow (See GLOOMY, Page I) Surfing Crown Captured :by Son ~ Of James Ar.i.tess . ' Sped•! lo tlle DAILY PILOT , .MELllOURNE, AuJ!ra!Ja • -Ro I I Arness, • Y.year.old son ol television gullllinger Jam,. Arneu, 'Thursday night was declared lll!'fhil's champion ol the wor10. Arness, a student at North Hollywood Hlgh School, was almost speechless.· After a long pause during the world champion trophy presentation, young Amess stammered, "Id lite to say this is outt.a-sight. •. thanks everybody." Then Arness quickly' hid .behind one ol the larger objects around, U.S. Teant Manater Brennan "Hevs" McClelland d Laguna Beach. Young Arness• father had even fewer words when hls aon called him in North Hollywood lo'rlg distance at 4 a.m. to tell him the tlews. "Son. I'm stoked, .. t.he elder Arness declared. ' • I • O.oli, That's. Sfaar, .. _An ·unidenUfed girl protester at t)ie·University ch~ks the sharpness of a1 Colorado National Gucvd bayonet as the· guard prevented people Lroni. r~tuming to "Woodstock West," a shanty.~horne village on· the campus. Not Perversion Cause Bottomless Bars Backed ' ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -Sex u 11 perv~stm ·is ·nurtured in childhood - not bottomless bars -a University of califomia psychi1"1st has told. the AlcolJilllc.ileverage Control Board •.. The idea that exposure to nudity in-- duces perversion "ls patent nonsense,'' said Dr. Martin G. Blinder, an assistant clinical professor at the UC Medical School in San Francisco and medical dlrecto< ol the Family Therapy Instltute d Marin. • "In point of.fact," Blinder sa1d, "nudity . or near-nudity ia really tod eXJ>llclt - too clinical -to induce these crimes,·· he sail!- . "Exposur~ of ·human anatOinyi is essen· tially a neutral flCl," he s a id . "Regressive laws are much more hannlul than the simple act of exposing U1e human body." Blinder was the principal witness or bar owners ln the serond day of a (Seo NUDES, Page I) Aldrich Says School Work • • ' ·,l won't c~itse • By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of "" 0.HY l'IMt ltaff • Guidelines for UC Irvine's alternaijve education program were spelled out to- day by Chancellor Daniel AJdrich. "It is important 1o note that the (Academic Senate) bas not in any way suggested that academ:ic work oo this campus should cease· during the re- .ma.inder ol ·the Spring Quarter, 1970," the chancellor declared, "On the contrary, the (Aca demic Senate) has recognized a critical sltua· lion in which students feel it imperative to give aUention to certain inescapable issues, and, at the same· time, to conttaue their education. COURSES CONTINUE • "The {Senate) has assured that all regular courses will continue; that stud'ents who wish to add studies of immediate interest will be able to do so, and that students will be able, if they so desil'e, to modify their schedules ill accord with those interests. "Contrary to pub Uc rumor , there has been no intentia11 to deprive any student ol academic responsibility," Aldrich slated,_ The guidelines for alternative ed~calion were prepared, by the Committee on , Educational Policy and the E'xecuUve Committee of the lrVine Division or the Academic Senate. In an emergency meeting Sunday, rnembe.rs of UCI senate passed a seven. part resolution outlining alternative education options for studeqts. -The student may recieve a grade of Incomplete, without prejudice, upon request at any time up to the final examination. The senate guidelines state this option· r<?quires the approval of the Instructor .. ''Students must be passing the course at the time he requests. a grade or Incomplete. : "fl.1ake·up examinations, m'y be taken at any lime mutually a greed uPon by student and instructor," accordirig to ' the "guidelines. . -The studtnt may drop the: Course, withOut prejudice, at any lime ·up· to the .final e1amination. ' The policy commJUee ruled th~ action requires approva l of the dean, of the ' school in which the class is offered, -The sludent may use the Pass/Not Pass option in any course on a credit·b1· examination basii. REQUIRES Al'~ROVAL This actkln also requires the approval. or the dean or the school in which the class is offered. -The studen t may continue courses lo.the normal way, subject to the normal· requireme~tiJ and grades .. Obvlousty, normal continuation ot' (5ee .UC! RlJLES, Page~~). . . DAILY ,ILOT Staff ....... CALLED SADIST SURGEON Murder Suspect SloCurn Dr. Slocum ~-'!. I?rugs f'w.•f •. £!"~ ~ .. -.w .. i e '~Y.s'. . . . ly ARTlltJR R. VINSEL • • , : .Of !"'·Dlllr .,..,, ~ A ,~..,i '"''""''•cicu5"d ol buidlerihg bis· l>Oby dauijhler ls a jigsaw P=le pe-allty ·m -20 yeais' drug ·uael..injeded. violence, sadtsm and hallucinations intO the picture, 'his wil't teslifled Wedniodoy. Prellminary hearing for Dr. Wesley G. Slocum, 44, dlarged with mutder, resumed today in Harbor Judicial OiMrict Court. • ' M<m~nts of suspense mark,ed ·~ ceedings in the Colla Mesa · coortroom Wednesday as Mrs, Marian Slocµm,. 45., ;oak, thF stand tQ testify against the man she helped rise to a now-ruined career. She wore . dark g!B.sses and JPOk• laconically under cross-examination by Chief Deputy District .Attorney James G. Enright and Paul Augustine Jr., defense counsel for her husband. She teslified that Dr. Slocum ! -Used 100 milligrams of beozethine, daily for 20 years, balanced by . a tran-- quUizing type of medication, and, even-,. tually, gin. -Envb;ioned people moving -through, walls· and wa:i: hounded by 'feelings of penecutlon, biding ~oards of. checlm-paid for medical care in bo1es,. trunks and . bedding. -Severely beat their infant daughter' Cynthia and''look her to his Santa ~a office' in early· .1964 after 'she. died a& home. · ,. ~ "Did you see the baby &&ain?," asked Enright. "In bags,"' she repJied tonelessly. "What dld he do. with them?" ·'.Put diem in tl1e fre~ef." (~ SU>CUM, Page t) Orange 'Coast · · W"•tJler· . , . • The north, wtnd will; l>low but we ; won't have m9W -10t.ls bretze.wlll heaMhings-up along.the .-i Fri- hay, wltll local te!\lpetatur.ea,lh the 7~'s 1 and 1nlahd rea,dingr up .to 93 j degre'is. J • •• ·' •• • INSIDE TODAY I With the death of Gtntral I Qillafd, th• U.S. hiu ldst more .gentrals1 iti Vietna'!"· tha1i i?t iihy l ·milttary :actiot'' of $ll&....,.t)l~ uear& t:ccept t/OY< World ·Wor ll, Page 29. '.' C.iHariil1 t ........ . 11 j at«kllll Up 1 Mt°"'" -.w j (lalflflH lO-J? ,....... '""' " Ctf!lfitS U NlllMal ..... ... c,.,._.. u QI'•• c-1y '' Dltllt iftlktl 11 lyfwla ~ " 01~" II ....,. 11·M •t•t.rl•l ,,,. • ' lttft ,,_.,. .. 1'-11 ' ·~""'"'"""' ' u 'ltlfttllM 11 ,.._, • ""' Tilfft.r.' ,...,. ... ~ ,. ...... 4 .• ... 1L......, '' 1..i.,._.. W• '.M' Mtll'f'll .. Ll(_... 111 • ~·1 ,~ewt lf':M , Miii l!t a.r.1ftn 1' Wtrtil lll':"f-•S ~ I I I " I I I ., I ) ' ,I \ ;:_;;_;:_;:c=:;:;::::===~---:--~-------,------- -....---------------:-----......-----==------. ·-... . ...... • ------ ! DAILY ,IL.OT s U.S. Says ,• . . .. Red Stand 'Intolerable'. - '*"8ble."'' ... U.S. Ambasaador Philip C. Habib told the Communist negotlatorl the United State.S wouid be cOncillatory at the negotiating table but "We shall react acconilngly" if communist in- tra.Migel)Ce continues in Paris and if the Communists increase their attacks in Vietnam. The Viet Cong and Hanoi negoliator1, ending a one-week boycott of the ~s, had told Habib that ID)' niott American bcmbing ol North Vietnam terrltoey would threaten the conference. Reported U.S. bombingl led the Communlll delega- tiooa to atay away from the talU lut week. Habib ttmlnded the Hl!IOl and Viet Cong delegal<s that Pr<lldent Nixon declared on April 30 be wu ready to work patiently for peace. Then be told them: "We wlD be conciliatory at the con- ,.,_ table. But U your reoponae to our efforta for peaceful negotiationll con- tinues to be lntranslgence in negoU. tion and an increase in your military atttclls, we shall react accordingly." Habib said that inatead of responding to allied overturu, the Communlll "answer hu been intranslgence at the conference table, belligerence ln Hanoi, rnuolve military aQr<151M in Laoa and Cambodia, and ~ up attacU in South Vietnam, d,.iped to in<:reale American cuualtles. •• "This attitude bu become intolerable, 11 he said. Habib's statement, observers aald, reDected the aWea' anger over Com- muni1t procedural methods. Hanoi and the Vlei Cong ~anceled last -·s acheduled meeting mi nutes be for e American and South v·i et n am.es e negotiators left to atlend. It ~lao echoed the allies' growing exp.s~ation 1t what they consider deliberate footdraggtn.c by the Communlll 1lde in II monlhs ol talks. F r om P age I CAMBODIA •.• lint crotled ,WO : ClmbOllJa Oil April 29. . The 11 Included low' Soolb Vieman- forays into Clmbodia beiore the current lllHed canJlll}lit was olllcially announced. Maj. Gen. Edwllrd Bautz; cunander or the U.S. 25th Inlantry Division, aaid h1I torcea in the Filhhoot area 90 miles norlheul ol Salcqn appeared to have dilcovered the area ·wbefe "a part of" the Cmununlst commaod cenler for Indochina war operaUom used to be. He said it was about 10 miles inside Cambodia. When Preskient Nixon o r d e r e d ~ lorcu in'4 Cambodia cio May 1 he told the Amerlcao ·people their mLssl.on was to destroy the Central Office !or South Vietnam (COSVNf, the Com- munlstl' Jungle pentagon. So far II baa not been found. Bautz, basing hLs statement on cap- tured documents, sakl this appeared to be part ol COSVN. Military llOUl'CtS aaid the Americans had caplut<d lnore· thin 200 pound3 ol documenis along with two rubber stamps bearing the name of Pham Hung, a vice premier of N<rth Vietnam and the man believed to have run the COSVN compl1L 'Ibey also discovered an International B•ness Machine "readout !heel" wlth an inventory of the supply complexes. And nearby they found 200 more tons of rice which they were hauling out In captured annored personnel carriers, ammunltiorl trailen and oxcarts. "The only way to keep it out of the hands of the North Vietnamese is to move it out of here," said Col. Dennis Whlleheed, 43, or Arlingt«I, Va. DAILY PILOT Mnrp9'f I••" H111tl.,._ hM" let•" ... di ........ Y.te.y c .... ,.... s.. c1-.. ~ fUIANG£ COA~T l'lJILISHING COMl"A"Y llob•rf N. w,,, ,,, .. ,,alt .... Pllllll!Mt J•cli ll. Cu1I•¥ Vite Prc.i~MI and GcM1•1 Mt~ lli•M•1 K•••tl lfl"'" Tiiom•t A. Murptli11t M-.1111 f.Olt• li•h1r4 P. Nill S..111 ~ Cel.o'lly Efltor # Oflk• c.t• McH: Sit Wtil 9" lfl'Wt N_..,. tff(fl: 2211 Wu! ..... , IOVIC.,.rf u.-1--.:11: m ,.._, •- ..., ..... -hid!: "'" hKfl ........... ..... (...,_It! a! ~II £1 C..... lt"I • SLOCUM HEARING · ••• Ul'IT• ......... F or-Wa r d , Oops, Ma rcia . . "Did you ask lbe doctoc aboul lhe bags?ll I "No. I I llflVer looked in the It- again," said Mrs. Slocwn, who the defense contends put them there .and fou&hl tooth and nail ' for six years aaahtst anyone going ntar the appllance and its grisly secret. Mrs. Slocurit said !he became an alcoholic in the years since and seemed vague on many questions asked by Augustine. "Have you bad any medication todat?" "No," !he replied, leading him t.o aak when she last took any. "1 had some this morning ... fm sorry, I forgot." she said, e1plaining, it was a tranquilizer prescribed for her. Augustine asked that she be given none for today's hearing. her if she disobeyed him and once soot her husband threatened often to kill her it she dlsobyed him and once shot her With •ll arrow 8s she held a cln ot pineapple jllice u a target. JAILED IN llU An ROTC unit commander marches in review and salutes over demonstrators trying to halt the an- nual parade at tbe University of Santa Clara. The photo was taken by Paige Abbot of the San Jose Mercury -and was his last picture. He died Wed- nesday afternoon. Under ctoSHxa,nlnation by Augu.ltine, she said she knew Dr~ Slocum -~dn't hurt her when be was in jail after a 1966 shootout with Santa Ana police and last year when he was corm:ajlted for psychiatric care. , "Why didn't you go to the po 11 e e then?" be abot back. 'Build Better Imag,e' Arizona Mi ss Captures Cro~; Beach Girl 4th Speolal ~ a., DAILY PlllOT MOBILE, A11. --Rbonda Kay Marjlp or H!Ji>Ungtonc BOaCll wu crowned liY a cluamal< al Marina High ScbOol w«tnesday night' but failed to succefd · her as the 1970 America 's Junior Miss. CNtgoing titleholder Jackie Benington crowned Miss Mart.in who represented Cllifumia as fourth runnerup in the dazzling pageant in which singer Jimmie Rodgers was· host. for scholarship achievement ln Sunday's round. . . Miss Martyn took first plaCe in youth ·fitneas saturday and talent presentation Sunday .. Laguna Citizens Enraged Over Toilet on Beach Blonde, gray~yed Karen Stenwell, 18, of Phoenix, Ariz.t won top honors, a $10,000 atholarabip and pledged to buUd a better image of American youth. "I'm &oink to try to represent youth Three angry L a gun a Beach in a positive way. There have been homeowners today won at least a tern-~ many ct.emonstrations. 1 would like . j>Qrary victory in their battl~ to . halt to npresent tht better side of youth," the -~-· 1-1 bli toilet t Miss Stenwell deielared. .. . COuow uC Ion 0 a pu c a ~Kare~· if · -of 111 ~londe pa!m,. · 1 Anita. Str~ ~each.. , . In a family lliat bas no boys. '· ~ ), .1 ' • ·~l!Pl'lof Court prilldlng Judge William The pqeant finall were nationally 0. · 8ji!lrs ordered the clzy to cancel televised. ---Ille: coOtract ii s!iined last May I with 1•1 wun't nervous when' they :were-the ~les C. Benton -Company of. 1401 naming the winners becau!e 1 didn't S. Cout Highway. And he further think tt would be me ," she said. . ordered bo1fl. sides in tbe-toilet spat ·~"I wu shocked when they pk:lced ~· ·to aPPear May 27 before Judge Robert l don't think I realize tt even-now." S. Corfman. · Miss Connec:Ucut, Carol Etitabeth 1'e , lavatory lawauit was filed by Buckland, 17, of Farmington, was first h~eowners Harold A. and Elltabeth nmnerup; and Laura Elalne · J:Joy.ett:e; :r.j .. ;O'Brien Of 1007 Gaviota Drive and 18, of Jacklon, Miss., second rtinnerup. Richard E. Loring, 990 Gaviola Drive. Only two girls emerged as' double It alleges that conatructlon of the en- winners in the three roiinds Of · visaged facility would interfere with preUnllnSry judging. · public right-of-way on Aniµt Street. They were AriZona's Junior Miss; The toilet, if built, w;ould be wl?tin Karen Stenwall, and California's MI s s sight and sound of the two Gav1ota Martyn. Both .are blon~s.. , Dl:lv~ ~~.. . -·. ···--·· Miss stenwan was awaided first place The O'Briens and Loring further allege in youth fitness and also was picked that construction of the controversial toilet would be "a• waste of taxpayers UCI RULES ... classes needs no special guideUnfli. -Instructors may offer students an opportunity to drop present classes and to enroll tn Alternative Education 199 or 299. This option, the guidelines state, ~ quires the approval of the instructor, the department chairman and the dean of the IChool hi which the class is olfer<d. Enrotlrnent in alternative education a,lso requires written request to the department chairman slating . propo!ed content of the course. "All individual studies courses carry full University credit toward graduation unit rt· qulrement.s. However, their status for use in satisfaction of the speclfk re- quirements: of individual departments is to be determined by Ole · ir'ldl~idual departments," the guidelines state. -Instruct.on may award a grade of Pass to all students who request ii. and regulations llmlting use of the Pass grade .should be waived. Tbe guidelines state that discretion Iii aM!gntng grades is left to the in· stliUClor. Instructors are also reminded of the regulatioM governing final e1- amlnatlons in undergraduate · courses which state that the testa can be omitted ~ with approval of the educational policy committee and the department involved. "The Instructor should be wary of creaUng a situaUon in wfllch a &todtnt ls seemingly treated dlfftttnUy because of the student'• polltlcal activity or beliefs," the statement wams. Syria Warns U.S. UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -Syria warned today that tf Washington cannot hold Israel In Check the Arab n.10ons will reel free to cut off oll supplles to Ult United State s. The warning came In the Security Council where the-United Stai.s had appeal~d 14 tbe Sovlel -Union to rever&e ifl Middle East polk:y ·and join It In a uredoubltd effort" wllh Israel. the Arab powers and the Palesli· nlan Ar1b1 t.o brln& peace to the area. money," and that there i.!I no possible justification for its construction. Their complaint polnt.!1 out that there fs only a 60-foot stret.ch or public beach at tbe end of Anita Street and the use by , the public .of that limited area of sand hardly metits the building of an adjacent toilet. Many trea residents have· complained In the ):laSt, however, that the ob- jectionable ·habits of some beachgoers hive made the construction of a public toilet abl!olutely vital. The plaintiffs contend that the bulldlng of a toilet would be better suited to other areas of Laguna Beach where bigger beaches and greater numbers of betcb goers might justify the cost and inconvenience: of a public lavatory. Garden Grove . Y outh Killed I n 2-car Wreck A Garden Grove youth died of injuries received in a two-ear crash in that community and an Orange County Medical Center assistant nu rs Ing supervisor died of an apparent heart attack while driving her car in FUilerton, the Orange County coroner's office reported loday. Both deaths occurred Wednesday. ' Wayne L. Cossell . 19, of Garden Grove, was .the victim of a crash at Knott and ·Chapman avenues. He was a pasSenger in a car· driven by John J. Hill. 20, of Garden Grove. Hill's auto collided with one driven by Michael L. S"!'ilzer, . 25, of 880 W. Park St., WMtMtnster, police reported. All three were ejected from the ·\'thlcles and Hill is reported In serious condition today in the medJcal ·center. Switzer was treated atld released. ~lrs. Geraldine E. Wood. 45, Fullerton, died Wednesday noon of an apparent heart attack. while... .driving her car at Acac ia Street and Chapman Aveoue. The vehlcle sideswiped another car before itopping, police said. The cor- oner's office is conducting labcif"atory tests to detcnnlne the exact cause or death: .. P arcel Truck With Ammo "He said no matter where J went, he would arrange to have me kllled." One of the most dramaUc motrients came early when Enright asked Mrs. Slocum if her husband c:oacbed her in what to say if anyone ever asked what happened to baby CynUtia. Few spectator.!! could see it, but an expression of vengeful fury crossed the nonnally impassive surgeon's fact and his eyes widened perceptibly a! he glared at hiJ wife oq the ttand. Ca tches Fire A cosUy, dllDlaglng bu' erupW<J in the cargo compartment of a United Parcel Service truck juat outside of San Clemente today, ruining all but a few of the aeores ol items destined for customers in the city. A~r a long, tenee pause, -in which the defendant relµed slightly -she burK·Jnto tears. And then llhe begao testifying. Dr. Slocum sat with half-closed eyes, occasicaally dnJmmlnc on the table with The cargo, Including several boxes of live ammunition, began smoulderlng as driver George Adam Nicholson, 5Cl, of Santa Ana was heading south on Pacific From l'&fle l NU DES • • • Coast Highway in Dana Point. three-<lay hearing on proposed regula- Nicholson told California highway tions which would ban topless waitresses patrolmen that he thought be smelled and make dancers stay out of reach smoke at that point, but kept driving of customers and cover up alter perform· south along the Capistrano Beach ing. Palisades. During the hearin,(, half a dozen local The van, filled to the brim wlth long· bottomless dancers picketed quietly - awaited packa ges. burst into flame about and fully clothed -outside with "Bot· a mile upcoast from Poche eeach at tomle!!S beats welfare" signs. about 9 a.m. Picket leader Tammy Heath, owner Volunteers from the Doheny County of two Solano COunty bottomless bars, Fire Department station arrived and explained her dancers were typicaUy spent nearly two hours gouging out and divorcees or unwed mothers who would wetting down the ~ldering cargo. otherwise be on weHare instead of earn- None of the dangerous ammi.mitlon ing $35 a day. ' was thought t.o have gone off in the Blinder conceded sexual deviates might fire. Palrolmen noted boxes of matc:Ms be attracted to tbe vicinity of topless in the'center of the stack of packages. or bottomless bars. But, ·he sakl, "U All but a few of the bundl~ were you stop t.hla tort of eritertalnment, the destroyed. deviates aren't going to disappear." As firemen anived at the scene they "Somehow 1 feel more comfortable were able to yank about a docen small with these people attracted to areas bo:s:es from the dark olive.brown truck where there are crowds and neon llghts befnre they burned. • . • rather than to the quiet streets No estimates of damage had been near homes where our Wives and children calculated by late this morning. are s~ing," he said. The cause of the fire was still under "You need compelling reasons to ban Investigation. this mild outlet," be said. =========~ PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS ' Inf/.ate your Comfort< DEFLATE Your Budget with Win a 1lorio'!llTictol'yin the battle cf the budget by treatin1 you rwe1f to a rreat Iha.I broadlomn ••• TOUFFEAUbyKa""'8n. Y cu 'WOUid es:ped KaTlUJtan-the fhmt name in ca.met and mi fuhiona-tocre.a~a 1hai that wn more colorlul, mor.uciilD(,and moN lavilh. Touff91111 ia all o( that and more with hardy mari- loni nylon pileyarnt, lb.in-dyed in fabulout mult.i· color.of breathtaking brilliance cid Kan.-loc womi. But what a happy d.ilccmiy that the COit of lhia senaational1hagia on1y $11.95 eq.yd. Touff 1au U alio aooilcble m area "'I• wilh o. heavy-]rnottrd m4lchillt frintr. 9' I 1Z $1 IO.OO KAllASTAN lllAKE8 FLOOBB FA81110NABLE Optft Mo11., Tllun. & Fri. 1.,., -------- the bullel-mangled fingers ol his right hand. TAKEN"TO OIPl\ili She sald Cynthia was taken io their Santa Ana office after becomin8 severely UI ln 1964 and a spinal tap administered by Dr. Slocum there showed blood tp.. dlcallng brain damlfie. "What did you do? .. Augustine asked. 1 ·•1 told my husbaod sbe needed medical care." "What did he do!" "He gave her medication ..• I don't jection." 1 AugusUne Ulen traced the bisl(lry, of events leadlng to the mysterioua bags he brought home and the remains found March 26 after the discxlnnected freeier was taken from the Slocwns' Mesa Verde home . "Didn't yau ask where the baby was?" "I was very upset, Mr. AugusUne." "Wouldn't it strike you as unusual for a doclor lo treat a child, then come home wlth it in two bags?" he pressed. VERY SADISTIC JJ'here was a t'OOI pause. "Not my husband. Th.is one is very sadistic." Various other testimony during the afi.ernoon involved marital problems and Dr. Slocum's coolnesa: toward her. .. Augustine charged ~ didn\t w~t the third child, also accused her of cutting up Cynthla 'a body and putUng it in the freezer wbile Dr. Slocum was away performlng the surgerx which won him a wide following in Qrange Ciunty. "No sir, 1 did not," she replied firmly. Delense and prt>seo!jtion today plaMed to question the obstetrid8'tl who.handled Mrs. Slocum's Dec. 3, 1963 delivery and postnatal care, with testimony winding up possibly on Friday. Judge William Christensen will then evaluate the evidence and rule wbfther sufficient evidence exists to havi Dr. Slocum's mUrder case submitted for trial in Orange County Superior Court. - Augustine predicted Wednesday this ts a certainty in all capital ca~ and .. guessed it would be three months before such a lrlal could begin. f'ro111 f>age I GLOOMY ... growth In the nation 's money supply. "We're traveling a narrow path between recession and inflation," he said of the fed 's policy. "We intend to COii•. tlnue doing that and we won't be diverted from that path." Sen. William Proxmire (D·Wis.), an advocate of a more activist policy ift coping with inflation, ticked oil a list. or economic statistics showing, besides increased joblessness and a declining stock market, a falloff in corporate pro- fits, but a continuing 6 percent price inflatlo• which he said is likely . to get worse with substantial labor settlements · later this year. "You've drawn a gloomy picture ,'' Burns commented. ··1 think it's substan- tially accurate. But it's a little in- complete." Bums then cited some hopeful signs. including a slowdown in incre<Ues in both wholesale and retail prices. He said they "are signs that finally prices are beginning ·to respond" t.o the Admlflistration's inflation·fighting pro- gram. . Burns went on to predict "reeovery " toward the end of the year. • 1·,: YOU CAN"T COME IN-CALL 646-0275 for'" ••p•rl c•rptl co111ult1nl who will com• to your ho"'• with 11mpl11 without 1ny obll91tion to youl 2215 HARBOR ILVO. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 6~6-0275 I I I ' I I ,I I I I • ' I I l Ii .. . Bn~t~~gfun ·Bea~h • !:DlllON .YOL 63, NO. 115, 3 SECTIO~S, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUN!f, ~FORNIA THURS,DAY, MAY 14, ·1t7Q_ TEN CENTS U,I TtlHl!tlt kAREN STENWALL OF PHOENIX CROWNED AMERICA'S JUNIOR MISS IN ALABAMA FINALS Rhond• Martyn {left) of Huntington l•ach M1ke1 It As Far As Final Round ---------- Huntington's· City Payroll Growing Fast 'Jbf: city payroll ln Huntington Beach Is growing. In pcese.nting the preliminary budget to the council at a study session Wed- ne9day night, Doyle Miller, city ad· ;i;ninistrator, revealed that he proposes hiring 56 more city employes. The staff presently tot.als S90. The police and fire departments will aet the Wgest staff increases with each budgeted for an additional 14 men. 1be city attorney's oHice also continues to grow. The budget includes the ai>- pointment of a new attorney whose epecifk task will be to process oil code vio!itiona. 'Ibe a>UDCil recently orderat tbe hirklg o( such an attcmey. In -1168-69 there were liJ: persons in the dty aUomty'a office, currenUy there are Dine and IO are proposed for the nett· fllcal year. Coo•-~onna GiM>J said.. slje knows a Weman attorney who is willing to ,help the city in haodling oil cues di a voluntary basis. Miller ,.Id he Wllllld be happy 1o meet with her' ro wcrt out what she aiuld do 1o help clear tbe backlog of code violations. Only four councilmen were present at the study session and they offered liUle criticism. The budget will be biven a publk: hearing at a full council meeting .June--1 before the council adopts it by ordinance. The budget calls for general ex- penditures of $10,352,376 with salary ad- jllslments or $(50,000 for a total or $10,802,376, up about %0 percent over last year's. The estimated revenue Is o n I y 19.887,731, but Miller propooes adding '450,000 from the contingency accbunt and another $464,831 from the previous year's surplus fund. lt will be the first time the city bas ever dipped blto the 1urplus fund. The budget. calls for a tu rale of $1.60, up 15 cents over the present rate. FOurteen cents of the increase are for the first payments on the capital :and interest of the $6 million part bonds sold recently. Beach Jaycees Slate Festival, Automobile Bash ' The Huntington Beach Jaycees are belting there is a lol of hootllily peat up ln )ocal residents. 'B.u_ild Better Image' Arizo11a Miss Captures Crown; Beach Gii·l 4th Sptdal lo the DAILY PILOT MOBILE, Ala. -Rhonda Kay Martin of Huntington Beach was crowned by a classmate at Marina High School Wf4nesday night but failed to succeed her as the 1970 America's Junior Miss. Outgoing titleholder Jackie Benington crowned Miss Martin who represenled California as fourth runnerup in the dazzling pageant in which singer Jimmie Rodgers was hoot. Blonde, gray-eyed Karen Stenwell, ~S, ot Phoenix, Ariz., won top honors, a $10,000 scholarship and pledged to build a better image of American youth. "I'm gWng to try to represent youth in a -positive way. There have been ID "l"'Y ~ljcm. ! ~ like 1o ,._ IJiO .bolltt aide al youth," /dis!• Stemrell declarod. Km:en . .is one ot stz hJoode-sisters in I family tlJal baa llO lio71. The pageant finals were nationally televised. ''I w3sn't nervous when they were naming the winners because l didn 't think it would be me ," she said. ''I was shocked when they picked me . I don 't think I realize it even now." Miss Connecticut, Carol Elizabeth Buckland, 17, of Farmington, was first runnerup: and Laura Elaine Boyette, 18. of Jackson, Miss., second runnerup. Only two girls emerged as double winners in the three rounds o l preliminary judging. They were Ariu>na 's Junior Miss , Karen Stenwall, and California·s Miss Martyn. Both are blondes. Miss Stenwall was awarded first place in youth fitneSS" and .a1eo -was pk):ed for acbolarsbip adlitf_,l in ~'• round. Miss MartYn lo* first P.iace in youlll fitness Saturday ·l!ld lalti!l pmentafion Sunday, GWC Strike Plan Fails As UCI Protest Goes On Student war protest activiUes continued tcxl.ay .it UC Irvine and Orange Coast College while student strike efforts' at Goldfn Weat College !altered. Students at UCI were continuing leafleting and community education el· forts and bad lchedUJed 1 noon rally and mass meeting at 8 p.m. At OCX:, students also continued their program of contacting c om m u n i t y members to advise residents of their position in opposition to the Indochina war. A series of four teach-ins were slated today in the campus' Free Speech area. The sessions, led by college instructocs would be open to all in- terested students. A move lo institute a student strike at the Golden West College campus in Huntington Beach failed Wednesday for lack of support. Activists from the GWC Non-Violence Strike Committee \D'ged the class boycott "to redirect the attention ol this educa· * tional community towards what we felt to be the truly important issues ol our society." But though they are united in protest, the students who rallied at noon in the free speech area showed clearly that they are divided in the means of demonstrating it most effectively. Only 10 said they would go along with the idea . "Going on strike will ooly produce animosity rather,than sympathy," argued one student. "Discontinuing our education won·t help anything either.·• Hii sentiments were echoed by political science teacher Margaret Holtrust who urged the gathering to turn their energies to a more productive end. "You cannot say 'we're on strike ' and get the community behind you. You're not the Teamsters, who can get away with it. When you say 'I 'm on strike' the image rou project is 'there's a kid who 's going to throw a rock," * * o I ' . Principal Demoted Lebard's Schwankovsky Now Teacher _ By TERRY COVILLE Of ._ o.1Y "" IMIH Mrs. Cllarloma Scbwankovsky will not be back next year as priDclpal ol LeBard Elementary School in Huntington Beach. Not unless she wins a possible legal battle against trustees of the Huntington Beach City School District who sj)ent sill'. tense hours with her Wednesday night before announcing she would return · to classroom teaching nex t year. Shortly after midnight, Orville Hanson . chairman of the district board of trustees, anO()IJ(ICed the decision to 50 person& who had waited the full slx houn. "It was reached," be said, ';because of her refusal to accept transfer as a principal to another IChool." "I love LeBard. I don•t want to be transferred," Mrs. SChwankovaky told newsmen and friend! when she emerged from her mettlng with trustees. She revealed that she would confer today with an attorney £rom the California Teachers' Association (CTA) on the possibility of legal ation to force f,, district to keep her as principal one more year. When asked what other actions she would take, she replied, "I'll finish out the school year magnificently and plan ror next year at LeBard -whoever may be there." More than 100 supporters. mostly teachers and parents from LeBard School came to the 6 p.m. meeting in the Dwyer School auditorium. By 9 p.m. not ooe had left Some mothers and teachers later began drifting away, however, when it became apparent no quick deeislon wa,, to be reached by trustees. At rnidnicht, nearly hall of the original ' Beach Trea8tirer . . Makes Appeal · For Pay Raise By ALAN DIRXIN 01 ,,.. o.11r l"lltt St-" Huntington Beach's elected c It y treasurer, Warren G. Hall,· made a pitch for a pay raise Wednesday night, He spoke out at a council budget study session, claiming that a salary o( $100 a month is not enough for the city's "fiscal watchdog." H$11, controller for Ling Allee , Inc., Anaheim, also revealed differenct.s betwetn himself Md the city ad· ministrator Doyle Miller over what his job entails. "l want to be able to take the documents home and review them, but the city administrator , and the city al· tomey (Don Bonfa) agrees with him, that this is not good businss practice," Hall said. Hall then e1plained that it is in· convenient for him to go to city hall during the day because he works in Anaheim and that he can't go in the evenings because he doesn 't have any keys. The treasurer said that he would go to city hall during the day if his salary v.·ere increased, but that $100 a month was not sufficient remuneration for close inspection. Four councilmen were present at the study session -Mayor Don Shipley, (8« TREA8URER, Pase .. Z) group was still present. Most were auir porters or Mrs. Schwankovsky and lhey sat in stunned silence as Hanson read the boa~'s decision. Before announcing the action, Hanson ,·ead a press release signed by both Mrs . Schwankovsky and S, A. ¥o!ft1t, district superintendent, denyfug rtports· that he had previou1ty .ask:ed for her resignation. · The", Hanson read llve polnts ol an agreement hammered out during the six hours ot discussion between the prin- cipal, her consultant, Ed Romeo, director or the Orange County regional oCfi~ '·· ol the CTA, ln>it.,. and admiolslrlfGl'I. Those points· were: -That she wouid agree to cOm~ and publish with the district ajS. ministrators, a joint stateme111.tc18iifytng (al8e .stat~ments, to be Included 1n a preSs release. . "I ; -~ecognlze and accee:t , the board's and district admJnistr atoi1·', responsibilities and . prerogatives as l~adfrs of the district and al all time&~ ifopJemenl ~ard and admfuiatrJlive poli~ 'and direction. 1 • Hanson the.n skipped point ~ &hret, · (See PRINC!J!AL, Poge II DAILY PILOT lfllff ........ .· . REV. ROSE ST'ACKS CLOTHING ' FOR TECATE ORPHANAGE In Huntington _ Bue~, l>ooplo Ruponcl to Needs ofOthora Clothes Parade Beach Children Aid Orphanage A little magic from an orpha~age In Baja California has rubbed off on a· num- ber of Huntington Beach families and pro- duced a cornucopia of clothing for small : boys and girls. The magic springs from the hope of Father Jienry Veter that he can rebuild his burned-down orphanage in Tecate, B.C . Clothes are coming by the bundle to the Community Methodist Chutth from· local residents who read of Father Vet-- ter's plight in the April XI edition of the DAILY PiLOT. for the orphanage," she said. · The Rev. Vetter gained fame through- out Mexico as "th,e Magic Padre" for his sleight-or-hand tricks used to amuse the chil.dren. He established Rancho Na~ In July, • 1968, but on Jan 6, this year, names destroyed it. The .Rev. Vetter and about 100 youngsters e,caped the fire when a passerby woke them up. And they're willing to prove Jt May 23 during the city-wide festival by allow- ing anyone who pays a dime to like a whack at an automobile. UCI Scho·ol Program Told '"They've been stuffing our office with clothing," remarked the Rev . Charles Rose, who offered his church a.s a collect~ ing point for clothing to be sent to Fatht,l' Vetter, a CatholJc mla:iionary, in Tee.ate.. Since then-poverty-has. been their trade mark, but various groups in San Diego are pitching in to rebuild the m,Ls. sion and help Father Vetter, Mrs. AJe.. koumbides explaJns. "And we're ~irig lO' do all we can from here," she saidi Orange Coast "Just pick your weapons,'' Aid Dive At.kfu30n, one of the car smub organizers. "We'll have big hammers, tittle dainty hammers, pieces of pipe, axes, you name it." Aldrich Outlines Alternative Education Choices At least 20 grocery bags packed with clothes and one full plastic trash barrel were visibl~ at lhe church Tuesday. !J11e demolition exercise Is just one or many evenls to be offered at the festival, which will be staged acroas from Huntingt-On Beach Hlgb School at the new civic center site. Others include gymnastics, judo and trampoline shows, a pick1c booth, flag displays and an art show. Rhonda Martyn, California's Junior Miss and a runner-up in the national JID!ior Miu tiUe, will re!Jn as queen of the f.stlval. The Huntington Buch c:oordinaling Cow>cll. sponsors or the celebration, have received participation ptom1ses from more than 50 organl:.ations In the city. They hope lo draw about 10,000 residents out to the fesUval. STOCK MARKET NEW YORK (AP) '.J:he stock market continued Ill S"tttp decline eat;ly this af· ternoon in relatively•restralned trading. (See quotaUorui, Pagts 2'-17). Declines outnumbered advances by tight to one: among luues traded on the New York Stock Excbanje. ' By JOANNE REYNOWS Of """ C»lf1 .. ltt ..... Guidelines for UC Irvine's alternative education prograrn were spelled out ~ day by Cha""'Uor Daniel Aldrich. "It is imPortant to note that the (Academic Senate) bas not in any way suggested that academic work on this cam.pu1 lhould cease during the r~ llUlinder al the Spring Quarter, 11711," tbe challc<llor declared. "On the contrary, the (Academ ic Senate) bu recogniied a critical situa- tion in which student.s feel it imperative to give attention to certain inescapable issues, and, at the same time, to conttnue their education. "The (Senate) has assured that all regular courseg will contlnue : that students who w~h to add studies of immediate interest WUI be able to do 50, and that sludtnta will be able, U they so deslre, to modify their achedules in accord with lhoJi interests. "Contrary lo public rumor, there ' ha,, bet,n no intention to deprive any student • of academic resµonsibility," Aldrich stated. 'fhe guidelines for alternative education were prepared by the Committee on Educational Policy and the Executive Committee of . the Irvine Division of th<! Academic Senate. In an emergency meeting Sunday, members of UCI senate passed a sev~ part resoluUon outlining altemaUve education options for students: -The student. may recieve a grade of lncomplete, without .... prtjudice, upon request. at any time up to the final e1amination. The senate guidelines state this option ~ -quires the approval of the Instructor. "Studenls must be pass.in& the counie at the time he requests a grade of Incomplete. ';Make-up examinations mty be taken at any time mutually a grtt(I upon by student and instructor," acet1rdlng to the guidelines. -The student may drop the course, without prejudice, at any Urne up ·io ihe final examination. The policy committee ruled this action requires ,approva l of the dean of the school in which the cla!s is offered. -The student ml)' use the Pass/Nol Pau option in any course on a credit-by- c1amlnatlon basis. This action aJao requires the approval of the dean of the school fn which the cl811 is offered. -The student may tontinue courses In the. normal way, subject.to tbe nonnal requirtmenta and grades: ObvLomly, normal conUnuation of classes needa no special guidelines. -lnstructon may offer students an opportunity 1o drop present classes and to enroll In Alternative Education 199 or 299. Th!s option, the guidelines state, re· quires the approval of the instructor, the department chairman and the dean of the school In which the class 15 orfered. Enrollment in alternative education (See UCI RULES, P11e .. ZI "And we already took out a similar load of clothing over the weekend," the Rev. Ross explained. "Some of the moth ers who brought in clothes even took time to mark the size on each article.,. The clothes· and other items donat.ed . are earmarked for the 100 boys and girls who lived at Father Vetter's Rancho · Nazareth until it burned to the ground last January. , Now the boys live In sheds and tents with Father Vetter !n TFCate, _while t~e girls o! his~group are st~ying m 1hacks in Tijuana. Pt1rs. Hanna AlekoumbideS, who sterted the drive . In Hun\ington 'Beach to help: Rancho Nazar<lh, said the.-"bas been juat great." · She said more clothing and food is .un needed and can be left at the Community Methodist Church. 6662 He:ll Ave. "We've also collected $73 for the orphans from checks malled In by a dozen families," Mrs. Alekoumbldes added. She hi: asking resldepta to mail a $2 donation to "OperaUon Orphans" P .0 . Box 1666. Huntington Beach. "Thal 12 will bll)' elshl buildln& blockl The north 'wind will blow but we won't have snow -this breeze will hl!a! things up along the coa!t Fri; day, with local temperatures In the ?O's and inland readings up~to 93 degrees. • INSIDE' TODAY With the death o/ GtMral Dillard, tht U.S. Ml lost more oeneral1 in Vietnam than in any liiilitarv actlO. of the las( 100 u.ear1 e~cept /or Workt War 11. Pope 29. \ J I ! • " 1 ' I J I DAILY PIUIT " ., ••• , ... J PRINCIPAL. • • llatlp( he would, "return la!A!r to that -" ...:i...u... ""' '_.:aim -op; pr...i &om the ldmlllatrallon. -Accept a one-year probation contract at UI'· tad Of which she would be evaluated. "Mn. Scbwukovsky has agreed to thue. tow points,.. Hanson explaintd. th<n he went to the key third point. -'niat she be placed on probation. u for the rest of the year, to be re. evatuated in 30 days. If her attitude, actions, altd conduct have shown that she supports the district admlnl!traUve •laff, Ille will be tralllferted to uother ICboo1 as ..a principal. "Mn. Schwankovsky did not agree lo this point," Hanson said. "If you can't sign approval. for _a transfer," said Hanson, directing his words to the prb1cipal, "we are obligated to 'reclaaalfy you aa a teacher." 1'be: board, with one member absent. then unanimously voted to .issue her a notice of reclassification. There was not a word from the au· dience at this announcement. After the meeting Mrs. SChwan)tovtky told newsmeJii she felt the board had been "very patient" during the 11ix hours • ------·-;:;::;;·::.o=;+r,.,..,""' .~-;.---... -.. . . . ....... ... ..... --·· .... ··-~ -· . -,._ - By ARTR\IR R. VINSl!L Of .... Defy Plitt l leff A once-prominent suraeou 1CCUMd ol butchering hla baby dauah!A!r Is a Jlpaw puzzle perscmallty Jn which 20 yean' drug use injected violence, 11.dism and hallucinatJons into the pictw'e, bis wlfe testified Wednesday. Preliminary bearing for Dr. Wesley G. Slocum, 44, charged with murder, resumed today in Hari>or Judicial District Court. Moments of suspense marked pro. ceedings in the Costa Mesa courtroom Wednesday as Mrs. Marian Slocum, 45, took the stand to testify against the man she helped rise to a now-~ career. ' • •• • .... , I One of the most dramauc moment.a came early when Enrt&ht asked Mr11 Sloc:wn l! her husband coached her bi wflat to say if anyone ever uked wba~ hoppened to baby Cynthia. -Few 1pectat9r1 could see It, but an expression of venge!UI fury croaed the normally imp&!Sive surgeon's' face and hl1 eyea wldeoed P'rtepUbly as ba glared at his wlfe oa the stand. After a long, tense pause, -in wtUch the clef<ndant relaxed sliibUy -&he burat in&o tears. AD!I then she began teatlfylng, Dr. Slocum sat wtth hall-closed eyes, occasionally drumming on the table with the bullet-manaled fingers of his right hand. or discu&slon, but that she could juM Aot agree to leave LeBard. '"Ibey were most graclou1," she said of the trustees, Forward, Oops, March She wore dark glasses and spoke laconical ly under cross-examination by Chief Deputy District Attorney James G. Enright and ·Paul Augustine Jr., defense counsel for her husband. She said Cynthia waa taken to tfteir Santa Ana ofilce alter becoming severely ill in 1984 and a splnat. tap administered by Dr. Slocum there showed blood in· dlcaUna bfain damage. District officials said the LeBard prin- cipal would flnllh the year at the sc~I, but would be a teacher next year 1n one of the district's eight irade levels, probably at another school. An ROTC unit commander marches in review and salutes over demonstrators trying to halt the an· nual parade at the University of Santa Clara. The photo was taken by Paige Abbot of the San Jose Mercury -and was his last picture. He died Wed· nesday afternoon. "What did yru do?" Augustine asked. "I told my husband she needed medical She testified that Dr. Slocum: care." -Used 100 milligrams of benzedrint "What did he do?" No reuons for the action aptn1l Mrs. Schwankovsky were stated by either side as state law makes such persomiel mat- ters prfvtlepd and private. CAB ,Drops Rap Against Beach Travel Group Huntington Com1nunity Congress Set Saturday From Page 1 UCI RULES • • • dally for 20 years, balanced by a tran.. qulllzlng type of m!!dication, and, even· tually. gin. -Envisioned people moving through walls and was hounded by feelings of persecution, hiding hoards or checks paid also requires written request to lhe for medical care in boxes, trunks and department chairman stating proposed bedding. content of the course. "All individual -Severely beat their infant daughter studies courses carry full University Cynthia and took her to his Santa Ana "He gave her medication .. , l don 't jectton." Augustine then \raced the history of events leading to the mysterious bigs he br9l1ght home and the remains founct.. Marcli: 26 afte~ the disconnected freezet" was taken from the Slocums' Mesa Verde home. "Olctn't you ask where the baby wa s?" ''I was very upset, Mr. Augustine ." "\Vouldn 't it st.rikt you as unusual II will be liu Kini Arthur'• Court at Golden WeSt COilege, Saturday - only ft will be five times u big. AssociaUon will moderate the lnfonnal dlscussiona at each table. T h e particlpants will not switch tables, but will remain in the same places for bodl the morning and afternoon sessions. credit toward graduation unit re· office in early 1964 after she died at quiremenls. However, their status for home. use in satisfaction of the specific re· "Did you see the baby again?," asked quirements of individual departments is Enright. to be determined by the individual "In bags,'' she replied tonelessly. for a doctor to treat a child, then come home with it in two bags?" he pressed. There was a cool pause. C.arpeoter1 are fashJonlng five is.seat 1'Mjlld lablOs !Or the HunUngton Beach °"'J .. •lallllt a llUnUlngk>n Buch Commwilty Conci'"" which will be ~l~ traveJ \,~tlon for vJolaUon of at the -collese from t :30 a.m. r 4, charter ·ll1il>t rules ,..,. dropped today by the CIYlf Aeroaauticl Boan! (CAB), p.m. Wuhlngton, D.C. The pll ... ·at the lablu will be ~keo "The idea of this b that the more Umid ones wllf be more likely to speak out in ~ afternoon!," Mrs. warner said. "Thoise more accustomed to public speaking will probably give their views in the morning." departments," the guidelines state. ''What did he do wit.h..them?" -Instructors may award a grade of "Put them in the freezer." Pass to all stud~ts who request it, "Did you ask the doctor about the and regulations limiting use of the Pass bags?" grade should be waived. "No. I never looked in the freeier The guidelines state that discretion again," said Mrs. Slocum, who the "Not my husband. This one is very sadi11tic." Various oUler testimony during the ohernoon involved marital problems anc! Dr. Slocum's coolness toward her. ·~ Prooeedirigs agatnst the American by reprelenta:Uves from a variety~ of Britillt Canadian Club and fis preslden~ gn>UJll in the city, Including churches, WJillam J, Blackmore were ended the Ill'"'· buslnea, the proCwlons, Wtdne&day because action was un- dertaken to correct the violations. the schools, both adminJrtratora a n d CAB Mid. tea:chen, Mmen'1 groups, the clty;both Blackmore denied "knowingly or councJlmen and officials, and five Golden wll!ully" violating the charter Olgill :Wiii CollOI• students ' rules, &e<ordlng to the board. · • the B)4ckmore, a l&lecnan, was out ot 'Ibt, ft.mtat has been changed for town today wt<OUfcl>not be questioned _...,, 1*,...r. \t Is being handl.ed ab:Jut the apeclfk: ctiargu. • by .. the AJWTCan Management As.9oc1a: His wife Jean -who allo works for tlon which ts calling the program Ille club. ;.id ab. dl4 not know any "<lllra-~-" , details 1boul'llW \)'l'lli •ti 11 Wt that ,o <1111?;), lable 't!,.'1:,,~e ~J; her buJ-1-d been lnl..,.ed o! llletr qti6f .......:.. ,, .,_ J W'irntt'. diJconllnuanCe by le«er. by --.~. ~ •· oan . , The Amaicln Brflllh CIDldiln Club sacrolary of the Chamber of Commerce, serves boll> Orqe Coonty and Ille Los wblch fs ~ tlte event, erplained Angeles area and bu a membership thfa momlng. "It's 1be flnt time this of 9,000, Mn. Blaclmore. said. hU been conaldered !or communfty al· It annually sc:hedulea about II flighta, !a!ro." destined !or both Eiicf..,d aod France. Mn. Warnet' aaid that repre!'OlaUves fte Blactmorea haft been UIOdated from the American M a n a g e me n t Will> the club for about ten years, MCAS Annex Action Delayed As anticipated, the Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFC) Wed· nesday postponed action on two con~ flicUng annexatloos which include the J,563-acre Marine Corps Air StaUoo in Santa Ana. C-onsidel'ation was delayed to July a at the request of 11th Naval District Commandant J. W. Williams Jr. of San Diego. Botb Senta Ana and Tuttin have moved to annex the Navy facility, a heUcopter training base. In 1967, the two cities made 1lmllar attempts to take over the property but the LAFC denied the request wben the Navy objected. The Orange County Airport Com· mission had also requested a delay in the proposed mergers for "further study." DAILY PILOT OllAHGI COAIT PUILISHt/ltG COMPANY Ro•ert H. w,, .. Pl'Ui119'11 eM P\l~Ho!Wr J•ck R. Cvrlov VIM Pl"t\!01~1 «Id Gc-•I hl!IMfW TlioMet K10•1I l!•llW T~ot11•s A. Mirrith;,., M-tlfll ftlH ... Albert W. 11101 ..,_lett ldl!or " ............ OfHcti 17115 a.och lovlov1•" Meltl111 ""'''ni P.O. 111 7,0, 92141 °""'·°'""' LltllM ••.ct1: m ,._, "-• COiii M-: Ja Wut l1y "''" HtwllOrl IOKll1 :1111 WU! lllbol IDllll'lt...i if11 ""'*'tt: * North ii '""~ Retl Fro111 P .. _e J TREASURER • • • Ted Bartlett, Al Coen and Mrs. Norma Gibbs -and they decided that the request should be discussed at the full council meeting on Monday. Hall was elected treasurer in 1968. The previous city treasurer was Mrs. Betty Dlelroff who held the post for several years and was padd a salary in the $14,000 range . The salary was reduced shortly be.lore the election and Mrs. Dlekoff did not run. No salary increase was proposed for the job in the budget submitted by Miller. "I could and should be the fiscal eyes and ears of the city," Hall said. "People backed me for thJs when I was elected, But I think . I need a reasonable amount of money. The city need.I watching because lnlemal control makes It easier for employes to be honest because they are more likely to be caught lf they are dishonest." Hall tmphaslied that he would not be asking for a raise if he were allowed to take city documents home. At present, he said he does little more than sign checks, 'but he wants to review city finances more closely. Miller commented, "The staff is reluc- tant to dive into this thing because it has been a political football in Hun- tlngtan Beach for 60 years." Coen reacted coolly to Hall's plea, saying that the city has a finance direc- tor and that most of the treasurer's dutJes are done by a full-time paid Slaff. Ex·gridder. Held On Bw-glary Rap KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UP!) -The FBI announced today that 15 persons, includ- ing a former UrllvenJty of Tennestee quarterback, have been lndlcted in what it ttrmed the brt:ak·UP of a burglary ring responsible for fO bank thtft.a: in If stat.ea. Seven men wue amsttd today fn Knoxvlllt and another Jn Baton Rouge, La. Six perMms already in jall also w~re charged, and another person was being l\OUi;tht. The FBI ll$ttd a varltty or occupa· lion~ Ior the suspects. One or those Ar· rested" today, F'rtd Johnson Motes Jr, 57. Is 11 Knoxville attomey who quarttr· backed the Tennt$see football team In the 1930s. Thtre 11re thrtt wtldtrs In the group pluli a truck driver and a college studen t. ~I in assigning grades is left to the in-defense contends put tbem there and structor. Instructors are also reminded fought tooth and nail for six years of the regulations governing final ex· against anyone going near the appliance Surf :ng Crown aminations. in undergraduate courses and its grlsly secret. a. which state that the tests can be omitted Mrs. Slocum said she became an only with approval of the educational alcoholic in the years sinct and seemed Captured by Son policy committee and the department vague on many questions asked by involved. Augustine. "The instructor should be wary <1f "Have you had any medication today?'' Of James Arness creating a situation in which a student "No," she replied, leading him to ask is seemingly treated differently because when she last took any. 1 , of the student's political activity or "I had some this morning ••. I'm SpeeiaJ to die DAILY PILOT beliefs," the statement warns. sorry, I forgot." she ·saJd, expl§inlng MELBOURNE, Australia ~ Rolf it was a tranquilizer presctibed for her, ' Augu$Une asked that she be ,tven 'Arness, JS.yesr-old SOil of television Ford l\fotor Rej' eels none for today'• beerlng. . gunslinger James Ameu, Thurlday night her if she disobeyed him and once shot was declared surfing's champion of the Soviet Plant: .. Offer her husband threatened often to kill world. her if she disobyed him and once shot Arness, a student at N<rth Hollyw,OOd DETROIT (UPI) -Ford Motor Co. her with an arrow as she held a can High School, was almost speechless. has turned down the Soviet Union's re--of pineapple juice as a target. After a long pause during the world quest to help build the world's largest Under cross-examination by Augustine, champion trophy presentation, young truck factory in Russia, flenry Ford II, she said she knew Dr. Slocum couldn't Augustine· charged she didn 't want the third child, also accused her of cutting up Cynthia's body and putting it in the freezer while Dr. Slocum was away· perfonnlng the surgery which won him • a wide following in Orange Ciunty. "No sir, I did not," she replied firmJy. Defense and prosecution today planned to question the obstetriciwn who handled Mrs. Slocum's Dec. 3, 196.1 delivery and postnatal care, wtth testimony windin1 up possibly on Friday. Judge William Christensen will then evaluate the evidence and rule whether.- sufficient evidence exists to have Dr .. Slocum's murder case submitted for trill in Orange County Superior Court. Augustine predicted Wednesday this ., Is a certainty in all capital cases and guessed it would be three months before such a trial could begin. Arnesi stammered, "Id like to say this board chairman, said today. hurt her when he was in jail after Ford's announcement at the annual ~--ta An J' is ouUa-sight. ·.thanks everybody." Then stockholders meeting came two days a 1966 shootout wlLh IM.ll a po ice WASHINGTON (AP) - A bUI boosUng' A.mess quickly bid behind one of the after Defense Secretary Melvin La lrd and last year when be was committed the tax: <1n domestic airline tickets from larger objects around, U.S. Team told a meeting of the Detroit economic for psyc hiatric care. t f 1 1 · Congress Passes Bill M ... g.r B-.. nan, "Hevs" McClelland "Why didn't you go to the po 11 c e 5 to 8 percent as par o a Pan c> • '"·" club he was opposed to "exporting Amer-1· I" auw· ays deve!Dpment of ' •m•na n--ch. u . hi! then?" he shot back. 1nance a 1ryear uae.. uca ican technology to the Soviet n1on w. e 1 I h be d by the~House Young Ame"' lather had even fewer k N th v 1 "He said no matter where went, P an as en pas!e • they are sending true s to or 1e • 0-'d 1 N'- words when his son c•lled him in North l~n~a~rn~.'~' =====~========h~e~woo~~ld~a~rr~a~ng~e~to~h~a~ve~m~e~kl~l~le~d~.":;:;;::;:~and;:s~ent~. ~lo;:"~e;:";:';:";;::;:~;:';:";:' ==~ '; Hollywood lo:ng distance at 4 a.m. to , tell him the news. "Son, I'm staked," the elder Arness declared. Rolf recalled that his father had in· troduced him to surfing at a beacll in front of President Nixon 's San Clemente home. "Dad and I still go surfing together almost every day and he loves it too ," Rolf said. "He'1 pretty good, too." Roll is scheduled to fly home Sunday. On• of. Illa surfing "buddies," tiny HawaUan Sharon Weber. 22, won the women 's World crown after Thursday 's ftnal at Skene's Creek. near Apollo Bay. Only 81 inehes tall, Sharon "stole'' the UUe from former champion, Margo Godfrey of the United Statea. "It hasn't really hit me, but I feel kind or all right,'' Sh&ron, an assistant at a Honolulu health food store, said. She said she surfed up to four hours a day at beaches around Honolulu. The president of the lntematio.n~l Su_rf- ing Federation, Peruvian rnilhona1re Eduardo Arena, said at the presentalion of trophies that the surf for the men's final on Wednesday was I.he best he had seen at any world championship. .. I, was worth waiting all this time for it," he said. Rodda Rejoins OCJC Trustees ~rge Rodda, Jr .. an Oranae Coast Junior College Dlstrlct trustee who resigned his post ln Febl'\lary waa reap- poin led to the board 'Wednesday night after a ruling from coUnty eotmsel. Rodda of 949 Goldenrod Ave., Corona del Mar resigned afler he wa1 ~lnted to ih! CommlS.!llon on LelislaUon or the American Al!OClatlon of Junior Colleges. He said he felt 1lmultaneou11 service on both bodies might coostJtute a confllet ol Interest. RoWeVer, Jryne C. Black, deputy O>Un· ty counsel said there would bt no c:oofllct of Interest if Rodd a chose to fill both posts. "Conflicts of Interest normally ~ template a conflict In financial lntere.st, 11nd the common law doctrine of in· compatlbllll y of office would not appear to have any application to t h e clrtttmstancts In t.hla case,'' she stated. Rodda said he would serve . Tht five. man junior college boa.rd Is at full strength once again. Inflate your Comfortl DEFLATE Your Budget with IOUffeou Broa&m J by ar__~'tt!!Jj Win • 1loriaas vieto:ry in. the battle ct ~ budatt hy" • treatinf younielf le a ireat lhq bro.dloom. • • • TOUFFEA U by :tc.1111tan. you would eJ1>ld Kanuitan-the finelt name ia <'!lfpetand rua:fashlons-to~teathai that. \\·as more colorful, more ettfting, and mora llfllh. Touffeau i1 allolthatandmoiellrilhNl'dy:v.D-. Iona nylonpiM Y9lN, abift.dyed in flbuloulmulti· colon o! hm.tht.Uina: brillian09 abd Kan.·loc M1'd. But wluit • happydhlcomT that theemtof this 11emational1hagisonly $11.tS eq.yd.. Touff eau U oho avcWohk tn Gno.O rug111.1Ult cs hcovy-Mo1tcdmotchinl inn,.. 11z12' •110.00 IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-C.ALI." 646·027& fo, 011 ••~•'t .. ,~., con1ulto11t wh• will come to '*''"' homo with 11mpl11 wllhoul t fty ehi:,.tt,~ to ye11I H.J.GARRETT fURNlllJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Op"' MH .. nu1n. & '"· lttL 221 S HARBOR IL VD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. •46-0275' ~~======-=====================~ •. Ooh, That's Sharp An unidentified girl protestor at Denver University checks the gharp- ness of a Colorado National Guard bayonet as the guard prevented people from returning to "Woodstock West," a shanty home village on the campus. Nudie Bars Don't Cause Perversion, Prof Says SACRAMENTO (AP) -St x u a 1 perversion is nurtured in childhood - not botiomless bars -a University or California psychiatrist has told tht Alcoholic Beverage Control Board. The idea that exposure to nudity in- duces perversion "is patent nonsense," .said Dr. Martin G. Blinder, an assistant clirtical professor at the UC 1'1edical Scbool io San Francisco and medical direct.or of the Family Th.erapy lnstitute ol. Marin. "In point of fact," Blinder l&.id, .. nudity nl." oear-mdlty is really 'too upliclt - t.oo ellnlcal -to induce these crimes, .. he said. "E:xpl*U't of. human anatomy is essen- tially a neutral act,'' he ' a i d • "Regressive lawt are much more barmful than the simple act of ex~ing the human body." Blinder was the principal witness of bar owners in the second day af a t:tzree..day bearing on proposed regula- tions which would ban topless waitresses and make dancers &tay out of reach of customers and cover up aftt.r perform- ing. During the bearing, half a doien local 15ottomless dancers picketed quietly - and fuUy clothed -outside with "Bot· tomles.s beats welfare" signs. Picket leader Tammy Heath, owner oC two Solano County bottomless bars, explained her danoers were typlcally dr.orcees or unwed mothen 'WM would ottierwise be on welfare instead of earn- ing $35 a day. 1'Blindei' Conceded 1e1ual deviates might be attracted to the vlclnity ol toplm or bottomless bars. But, ht-' said, "if yOt.I stop this sort of entertainment. the deviates aren't going to disappear." "Somehow l feel more comfortable with these people attracted to areas whtte theA are crowds and neon lighU . . . rather than to the quiet streets near homes where our w:ives and children are sleeping,'' he said. "You need compelling reasons to ban this m.Hd outlet," he 1aid. Economic Outlook Glum, But Burns Sees Recovery WASHINGTON (UPI) -Chairman Arthur F. Burns of the Federal Resef".e Board said today the nation 's eQJDOm1c picture is admittedly gloomy aad predicted that unemployment will COi:· tinue to rise for lhe next few months. Burns testified before the Senate Bank- ing Committee, however, that the jobless situation will improve later in the year. H£ foresaw economic re covery "well' before the year is over" with pi-ices moving toward stability and the na~o• treading a narrow line between recession and'. further inflation. , The nation's unemployment rate rose to f.8 percent ia April, the hi&t.!sl level In five years. That indicated that joblessness had risen by 1.3 mlllkln since P're5ident Ni.lo• tool office. Jn answer to a question at the bearing, Bums eodorsed proposed con~ioaal action for standby public hiring programs to put the jobless to work on government par.roUs. Bums said "I would aot want to'wait before unemployment rises much mart before triggering" such a program. But he cautioned that either the govenmeqt's ex'fienfcs would have to be cut or tai:es ., would have lo be raised lo pay for it. The economic situation, with the stock market at its lowest level in seven years, was discussed also at the White House at a m.id-<lay meeting by Nbr:on with top advisers. Burns said the Federal Reserve would make no fu1damental change In its monetary policy of pennitting a slow growth ia the nation's money supply. "We 're traveling a narrow path between r&:tssion and inflation," he said of the fed 's policy. "We intend to co• tinue doing that and we won 't be diverted from that path." Sen. William Proxmire (0-Wls.), an advocate af a more activist policy i• coping with inflation, ticked off a list Of economic statistics showing, besides jpcreased joblessness aJtd a declining stock market, a falloff in corporate pro- fits, but a continuing & percent price inflaUOI which he said is likely to get Worse with aubllanUal labor aetUements later thil year. "You've drawn 1 gloomy picture,'' lhum: eommented. "I think it's subst•n· tially .accurate. But it's 1 little it1· cOmplete'." Free S h '.) pee~ •. Not for GI 'Protester' STANFORD (UPI) -Some demonstrators at Stanford University be.lievt In free soeech -provl<!Jng the speaker supports their philosophy. After several scheduled speaten finished at a noon rally, it wa11 annour» td there would be an "open mllte" for anyone to have his way. Dave Bray, a 29-year-old salesman, took lhe microphone and explalntd he was a Vietnam veteran and had served In Cambodia. . '"You kids may be ruinina: your school tnd your li ves by what you're do- 1ng ...... " Bray stated. • Two studC!nts shouting obscenities rushed to thr: mike, wrestled It from Bray and lhrew It to the concrete. Bray walked calmly away as a near.fight developed of whether or noi he should be aJlowed to speak. One (lf tilt men who had jerked the ml.ke from Bray's hand explained thatt when lhey ()pen up a "free mike" they meant if was "for constructJve, creaUve Ideas on ending the war." "It wa1 not freedom for the enenur to 1ptak," txplaloed tht demon.rtr1tor, w~refused to give hts name, -• :-. . . --------·-. ------ nursca1. MtY 14, 1970 H DAILY PILOT ;} Indochina War Deaths Mount Allied Offensive in Cambodia Boost,s Casoolties SAIGON (UP!) -U.S .• Soulh Viel· name9fl and Communbt combat deaths climbed to MW levels 1ast week largely as result of the allied offensives in Cambodia. Tht South Vietnamese with U.S. support opened an 11th ofrenlive today in the Central Hlghlsnds area. The U.S. Command ,,,ported 161 American combat deaths last week, the highest in more than eight months. South Vietnam loeit 863 dead, the highest In more than two years, and the Com· munists lost 5,898 dead. their highest in 14 months and many of them in Cambodia . Today's latest incursion into Cambodia came in the mountainous region 215 miles northeast of Saigon arx:I about ts miles south of the Se San region where U.S. 4th Infantry Division troops and South Vietnamese 22nd Infantry Division units crossfld the border 1ast week. No immediate fighting was reported In that area, but a South Vietnamese offensive pushing along Highway I toward Phnom Penh killed 119 guerrillas Wednesday and U.S. troops pushing into the Fishhook area said they had uo· covered "part of" the Communist "pen. tagon" in the Cambodian jungles. The U.S. Military Command said the United States was furnishing helicopter gunships, tactical air support and logistics assistao« but had committed no ground forces to the new border drive, the 11th s.ince South Vietnamese * * * U.S. Declares Reds' Position 'Intolerable' PARIS (UPI) -The United States lldoptcd a tougher stand at the Paris peace talks, t.cx:lay, telling the Com- munists their attitude had become "in· tolerable ... U.S. Ambassador Philip C. Habib told the Communist negotiators the United Stales would be conciliatory at the negoti.aling table but "We shall react accordingly" if Communist in· lransigence continues in Paris and it the Communists increase their attacks in Vietnam. The Viet Cong and Hanoi negotiators, eoding a ·~wfek boyeottiol the ~ks, had tOld lfabib that any more American bombing of North Vietnam territory would threaten the conference. Reported U.S. bombings led the Communist delega- tions to stay away from the talks last week. Habib reminded the Hanoi and Viet Cong delegalcs that President Nixon declared on April 30 he was ready to work patiently for peace. Then he told them : "We y:ill be conciliatory at the con- ference table. But ir your re5J>0n.se to our efforts for peaceful negotiations con- tinues to be intramigence in negotla· tion and an increase in your military attacks, we shall react accordingly." Habib said that instead of responding to allied overtures, the Communist "answer has been intransigence at the conference table, belligerence in Hanoi, massive military aggression in Laos and Cambodia, and stepped up attacks in South Vietnam. designed to increase American casualties." "This attitude has become intolerable," he said. Habib's stalement, observers said, reflected the allies' anger over Com- munist procedural methods. Hanoi and the Viet Cong canceled last week's scheduled meeting minutes b c f o r e American and South VI et names e negotiators left to attend. It also echoe<I the allies' growing e1asperaUan at what they consider deliberate footdragglng by the Communist side in 15 months of talks . Garden Grove Youth Killed In 2-car Wreck A Garden Grove youth died of injuries received In a two-car crash in that c:ommunity and an Orange County Medical Center assistant nu rs i n g supervisor died of an apparenl heart attack whi!e dr iving her car in Fullerton, lhe Orange County coroner·s orfice reported today. Both deaths occurred Wednesday. Wayne L. Cossell. 19, of Garden Grove, was the victim of a crash at Knott And Chapman. avenues. He was a pa•nger in a car driven by John J, lllll, 20, of Garden Grove. Hill's auto collided wlth one driven by Michael L. Switzer, 25, of e&O W. Park St., \Vest.minster, police ~· All three were e1ec:ttd from the vehicles and Hill l.!I reported ln serious condition today in the medical center. Switzer was treated and released . Mrs. Geraldine E. Wood, 45, Fullerton. died Wednesday noon of an apparent heart attack while driving her car al Acada Street and Chapman Av.enue. The vehicle sideswiped another cir before stopping, police sald. The cor· oner's office Is conductlnc laboratory lW to determine the exact cause of death. first croued into Cambodia on April 211. The 11 inclucted four Soulh Vietnamese forays Into Cambodia before the current allied campaign w11 ·otncially announced. Maj. Gen. Edw1rd Bautz, comander of the U.&. %5th lnllOtry Division, said his forces in the F~k m:ea 90 miles northeast t:l Saigon 1ippeared to have discovered the area where "a part o(" the Communist command center for Indochina war operations u!ed to be. He aaid it was ~bout 10 milea inside Cambodia. Whtn President Ni1on 'Ord er e d American forcta into Cambodia °°'May 1 he told the Ammcan people thOir ml.salon was to destroy the Ceniral Office for South :Vietnam (COSVN), the COm· munists' jungle pentagon. So far U has not been found . Bautz, basing hls statement on CilP- tured documents, said tNs appeared to be part ol COSVN. Military IOW'Ces said the Americans h<!d captured m<n than 200 pounds of documents along with two rubber stamps bearing the name of Pham Hung, a vice p~er of: Nortb Vietnam and the man believed to have run the COSVN com pl... i Thf:y abo dil(.'OVered an Intematlon1I Business Machlne ''rtadout sheet" with an lnvtntory of. the supply compleies. And nearby they found 200 more tons of rice which they were hauling out in captured armored personnel e1rriers, ammuniUon trailers and oxcartJ. '1'he only way to keep it out of the bands of the North Vietnamese is to move it out ol here," said Col. Dennis Whitehead. 4.1, of Arlington, V1. LIKE IT ••• CHARGE . ITI Hanging Baskets 1.77 ... Add the beauly of lush llT"n ivy, artillery fern or asparagus growing in baskets ••• all ready lo hang on patios and parches. Tho baskets ore the 714" sire. llae MaMJu•rlte or Yellow Daisy al· ready growing in ont goHon confoiners. Buy sev· e ra r and beautify your th garden today! 77•u. Plant colorful bedding plants now by the tray. Hardy, colorful petunias al· ready growing fn tray1 • , • buy several trays ... ready to plant. 44c a tray Ortho Systemic" Rose and Flawtr Core. Easy to "'"' no mixing, (ust lf"lCld cwound plant and water. 5 lb. mnistlr 2.98 SHOP SUNDAY, TOO 12 to 5 P.M.! CARLSBAD MONTCIAIR • • • • • • • ••• • Grow yoar own fruit and •ave n attractive dwarf size tree. Grows l1t tub or yard. Choose from /Myer Lemon, Nani or Valondo Orange already growing i~ 5 z3:;; I DatP &1110 1\GOlO for ... ilDIOllD"" or GRASS Deep Gree;tvlgoro• for dichondra or gras.. Can bo u-.1 safely on dichonclnr or grats lawns, or mbcecf lawns. 20 lb. bag. 5.45 Deep Green Ylgoro• with ln1ectic:lcle 6.95 Zodiac sun dial with a solid bronze dial S. them In -, "'°"'9, or aluminum. 29" hlah - all siu. 9.99 (P..!naf ava~.W. of -OOll) DOWNEY NEWPORi BEACH ~OWi THESE VALUES AT ANY ONE Of THESE P~NEY STORES! • 1 I I '• I • j I t I ~ • .. I l I , , I \ I .. '~ w .. 0.-Pia.I ...,, Arthur W. Wormley, write.in candidate for Democratic commit· t.eeman of Columbus, Ohio, com· plained to Secretary of State Ted Brown be bad been "short-string- ed" in recent primary voting. Wormley said the strings attached to the write-in pencils were too short to reach the slot '4where they have to put my name to vote for me." • In a \Yash ington, D.C. news offU:e, a .story deliveT"td by phone to a dictationist T"eachtd th.I! editors containing the typo; .. Vice Presidt:nt Spior T, Gag· new .•. " • Little 2~·ytar-old Kris Wilcox of Col· umbus, Ohio is too young to read about war a11d campus violence. To her, warm weather and spring is a tiTM of mw lift and experiences in- cluding the dilcovery of tulips in bloom. Kris probably dotm'i know it, but sht U one of tht rtal "'beaut.£. jul P<oPlt." • Befort the automobile age iii the United States, rail transit systtms were 10 eitensive tli.at it once was possible to go from New York to Portland, Alaine, by trolley. Iii 1920, it wa.s possi· blt to travel from New York to B1nton by ellctrlc street railwav in about 20 hours at o total fore on the various .111stems involved of $2.40. • Suburban London bus drivers have been promised a $24 Christ- mas ·basket of "goodies" by bus company officials if they turn up for all their Saturday duties during the year. • Stock broker Emilio Vandini, 67, surprised three thieves in .bis apart- ment recently. They threatened him with a knife, took about $9,600 from his safe, then shook hands with him as they !el!. • • A burglar invaded Arthur Kttl· Ing'• house in Scunthorpe, England Wednesday. stealing his trousers containing $240 and his "'ooden leg lying on the bedroom floor. • Thursd•Y. Mu 14, 1970 Protesters Storm HEW; • 21 Seized WASHINGTON (AP) -Protesters demanding an end to the war and higher ":elfart paymeris occupied the office of Secretary or Welfare Robert Finch (Cl' eight hours Wednesday belore 21 ol them were arrested. The secrelary was being interviewed by t)¥o reporters when 17 protesters invaded his office. For the next hour Finch listened as the group ac:cused him of being a "puppet," "yes man" and "nunky of President Nixon." Shouting angry warnings, the pro- testers demanded Finch back a proposal lo raise the minimum welfare btnefitll to $5,500 per year for a family of four. They posted a Sign on the ofrlce wall saying "$5,500 or Fight" and took over the secretary'1 desk and telephone. Asked about his view on the $5.500 figure, Finch told the group he was "proud of the part" he has played in getting the Ntton administration's $1.600 a year wel!are program started through Congre.<s. The subject of the war in Southeast Asia also came np repeatedly in the discussion. "Would you like to see your son be sent to a war that he might not come back from wilhout even a just cause?" Washington Post reporter I{ a y n es John9on quoted one of the protesters as asking Finch. "I'm as anxious that we tenninate this war as you are." the secretary replied. And at another point, he said, .. All t can say t.o thaf Is I want the war over as badly as anyone In this room." One of the protesters remarked: "l hope when they drop the bombs they drop one right here on this office, and me right on the White House." Nine more persons joined the group d~ the dl9Ctlssion before Finch Jett his office ln the earJy afternoon. Later he rtCtlved a list or demands from two members of the group. Gellr'ge Wiley, executive director n{ the National Welfare Rig11t.ii Organiza· tion. led the protesters. There also were some welfare mothers from Philadelphia and · several students from American University fn Washington. "It's hard for them to see all the complexities." the Post quoted Finch as saying after he left his office. "Some of them are genuine hard ship cases, and eome are hard-core e:tploilers." An off'iclal f{EW statement said: ''Today's attempt to disrupt the business of the d~ent w a 1 coon- ferprodudlve. 1h:lse arrested Wednesday night were d>arged with di-.rly conduct. Ul'IC8'M!tM .. Dodd Stricken Sen. Thomas J. Dodd (0-Conn.) has been hospitalized by a mild heart attack. The senator collapsed at a di~ner W~dnes· day night and "'.lll b.e .1n the h_ospital for an 1ndef1n1te pe· r1od . President OKs School Luncl1es For Poverty Kids. \VASHINGTON CAP) -President Nix· on signed today a bill he said v.·ould assure a free or reduced-price school lunch for every child from a family whose income falls below the poverty line. The measure would add about eight million children from low-income families to the number now receiving the lunches. Depending on the economic status of the children, the lunches would cost no more than 20 cents and could be free. It also authorizes an experimental school break.fast program. The bill is an open·ended authorization, subject to later appropriations. About $400 million is now spent on school lunch programs, and official s estimated another $200 million v.·ould be required to meet the bill's authorizations. In a statement the President said the new legislation ·will help expand the adm!nistr8tion1s effort! almed at providing free or low-price lunches for every needy child. He said the youngster who is well-fed learns better and "improved nutrition can help children break out of the cycli of poverty." Israelis Dmvn 2 Ml GS Attacking at Suez Canal TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -Two Egyp- tian MIG2ls were shot down today as they attempted to intercept lsraeli war planes attacking military targets along the Suez Canal, the military command said. On the ground, Arab guerrillas 1n Lebanon fired rockets at two Israeli settlements, defying Israel's massh•e an· tiguerrilla sweep through southeast Lebanon that ended only 12 hours earlier, Israeli sources said. A third Egyptian plane was hil in the air battle over the canal, but was not seen going down, a spokesman said. The Soviet.-made MIG21 s attempted to Interfere with J:11raeli planes raiding ob· jectives on the central sector of the canal, De S8Jd. One MlG exploded in the air. One pilot of another was seen bailing out. Both planes crashed in Egyptian ter· ritory, while the Israeli 8ircrait returned safely, the spokesman said . The dogfights brought to 93 the number of .. Egyptian planes Israel clai1ns to have do»'ned since the 1967 war. The Czech-made Kalyusba rockets, fired shortly before dawn, caused no damage or casualties to the two set· tlements -Kfar Bhnn and Ramot Naf. ta!. they said. Both are close to the Lebanese border near Kiryat Shmona, where three persons were killed and nine wounded in a rocket attack Uwt prompted Israel's raid into Lebanon Tuesday. Only a few hours be/ore the latest attack, Deputy Prime Minister ''igal Allon warned Beirut to expect "further and wklerscaled Israeli military attacks" unless it stamped out guerrilla activity from its territory. Israeli leaders said the 32-hour raid a~eved all ils objectives. The military said 30 guerrillas were killed and 15 taken prisoner. Large amounts of arms were destroyed or brought back as booty. 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Laird and top president!3l adviser Henry Kissinger con· ferred today with Senate Republicans in an effort to head off a burgeoning move to prevent President Nison from spending any more money for war ac· tivities in Cambodia. Laird and Kissinger were accompanied to a closed meeting of the Republican members of the S e n a t e by Undersecretary of State E 11 i o t Ri chardson . The appearance of the three at the strategy session underscored t he seriousness with which t he ad· ministration viewed the a n t i w a r measure. It came as the Senate 1ettled in to what likely will be lengthy, con- slltutlonll debate over the J>l01'!"'1• which would bar funds for "relal.hinc" U.S. tl"ODpO In Cambodia. Sea. Peter Dominick (R-Colo.), in.- traduced an amendment to bar funding for the Cambodia operation aft.er July I unless the President needs money to protect American lives -a loophole attacked by rponson of the original measure as a move to practically nullify its e.ffec\fveness. The White House opposes any leglala· tion to restrict the President'• options in Southeast Asia. Sen. Edward Brooke IR·M,.s.), said Laird, KJssinger and Richanhon seemed to stiet to t b a t position at today's meeting. Nilon met more thin an hour this moming with Ki!singer, Laird and his new ddlinate !or cbail'l!WI of the Jo<nt Chll'l'a of Staff, Adm. 111omaa H. Moorer, to discuss development.. la Southeast Asia. The President also atranJed to meet thl! afternoon with secretary ol State William P. Rogen and the un- deraecretAry ol state !or poUtlcaJ al!airo, u. Alexis Johoon. Sen. Charles H. Pucy (R·lll.), olfered a resolution which would put the Senate on record against any future u1e of ~lean Gia. in combat without the COllfeDt ol Congress. Percy and Senate Democratic Leader · Mlte Mansfield both called for prokioged debate on the basic. issue of war and peace, and the respective roles of the President and Congress. ~~~~~~~~ . .~·.·1..·•.' .·.·-. .. ·.:· ,.· . . ... '·. · .. ' :line • Q OMEGA-ACCUTRON -BULOVA lf1 AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE !il COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR e rin gs sized end repeired • diomonds e nd precious stones remounted e peerls restrung WE CUSTOM DESIGN & MANUFACTURE ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY HARIOl SHorl'ING CENTER 2300 HAllOR ILVD. ·COSTA MESA 545·t415 "The Store The! Confidence Built" - ~ I ' HUNTINGTON CENTll HACH l EDINGER HUNTINGTON IEACH m .5501 - ... ·:1-·, ·.·' '. 1 •• 1.• ••• ~ (.-.......... ,_~_ .. ·• .'"''-C: '• ··~ ~v'· "(,~-. :1 ~. BROWN & JORDAN'S FAMOUS All WEATHER OUTDOOR FURNITURE NOi JM DUI '/ IAREHDUSE FOi iMMEDiATE DEUYERY JM AYE POPULAR COLOR CDMIJRATllMS. · SJ.1.00 $23 \\:;; ,JI ::N:::... :::: !!~ ~ µ:!!U:~,i'j=!:·~A,.!>:"':!,!JU!!lS!.JT:Alll.I_j...:.:l_;1:_:~-"+$::.:8:;9=-I fTfl f1Tl ~ OTTOMAN "'"" $26 ~4 .d4.. r°';..';..'.:c•..c'·;..•;..D;..J·;;.•;..•;..•M;..S;...-+-"'-"-·_ .. -+s,-:9"'.9:-I ~ r;jjJ' ROCl<ING CHAIR $&1.00 $49 ~ ·OIAISC, ROCKING SIZC,llO $~9 f74 ~ LOV;;';SEAT tll,.DG $93 1.SfSl!f:j~:;;;;;;~ •• ..;~S;U;N;B;E;N;CH;;;;;:;;;";'°;·'"~~$~7_11 CHARM6LO GAS GRILLS 1S STYLES 0,. GAS •"1'11:-a-O•S i:o ... Ell'T YOUl't •i-S:CIAL. fC£EQS '"' Piil ICIE .. • tzc, ALL ALUM IHUM llllUST lllESISTAHT 1"0111 A Ll,.l:TIJ.11£0 FROM s799s WEBER BAR·B.O.'S THE FAMOO& WC81!:1t ALL POllC£l.41N KCTTLll JS TllULY.TME CHOICllC OF' ,.HC CHAillCOAL CHiii" ll:X• P llllT, ALL CDL01tl5 • MOOltl.5 IN STOCK l"Ollt IMMCDIATll Dl:LIVll'lllY, FROM S36 95 llOIN·JilDAll .FURNITURE ,..IVS ~ COl..CHla IN aTOCR ro. IMMSO&A.TC OCLllV•IW• •Z•• TA•Ut a4 AAM c:.H4Uta NOW •••••• , SPECIAL. PRICES OH ALL. ITEMS, •• MANY OTHER llECES INCLUDED AND AT WA•EHOUSE CLEARANCE PRICES • --~ -... ___ ~ ----~---. ---- 'ooniain Valley Today's Flllal • • N.'Y. Stoen I -' VOL 63, NO. 115, 3 SECTIONS, '40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA" THURSDAY, MAY '141 '19?0 TEN OENl'S • 1,1111 Tti.•11919 ·KAREN ST ENWALL OF PHOENIX CROWNED AMERICA'S JUNIOR MISS IN ALABAMA FINALS Rhonda Martyn (left) of Huntington Be ach Mekes It As F•r As Fin•I Round ------------ Huntington's City Payroll Growing Fast The city payroll in Huntington Beach is growin'g. In presenting the preliminary budget to the council at a study session Wed· ne!day night, Doyle Miller, city ad· ministrator, revealed that he proposes hiring 56 more city employes. The staff presently totals 590. The police and fire departments will get the largest staff increases with each budgeted for an additional 14 men. The city attorney's office also continues to grow. Tbe budget includes the ap- Pointment of a new attorney whose specifk task will be to process oil code viOlations. The council recently ordered the hiring or such an attorney. In 1963-69 there were six persons in the city attorney's office, currently there are nine and 10 are proposed for the next f11Cal year. C<imcilman •Norrpa Gibbs said she 'kno..Jt' a· woma n aUomey who is wiCing to help the city in handling oil CilSts on a voluntary baais. ' Miller Hid Jie -k'I be happy to meet · with her to work out What she could dq tD lierp clear the back:log of cQde violations. Only four councilmen were present at the study senion and they offered little criticism. The budget will be biven a public hearing at a fu ll counCit meeting June 1 before the council adopts it by ordinance. The budget calls for general ex- pend!tures of $10,352,376 with salary ad- jmtments or $450,000 for a total or $10,802,376, up about 20 percent over last year's. The estimated revenue is c n 1 y $9,887,731, but Miller proposes adding $450,000 from the contingency account and "'IDOlber $464,638 from the previcus year's surplus fund. It will be tilt first time the city has ever dipped into the 1urplus fund. Ttie budget calls for a tax rate of $1.a>, up 15 cents over the present rate. Fourteen cents of the increase art for the first payments on the capital and interest of the $6 million park bonds 11old recently. Beacl1 Jaycees Slate Festival, Automobile Bash Tbe Huntington Beach Jaycees are betting there is a lot ol hostility pent up 'in local reskients. 'Build Better Image' Arizona Mi ss Captures Crown; Beach Gh·l 4th Special to the DAILY PILOT MOBILE,. Ala. -Rhonda Kay Martin of Huntington Beach was crowned by a classmate at Marina High School Wednesday night but !ailed to succeed her as the 19'ro America's Junior Miss. Outgoing titleholder Jackie Benington crowned Miss Martin who represented California as fourth runnerup in the dazzling pageant in which singef Jimmie RO(jgers was host. Blonde, gray.eyed Karen Stenwell, II, of Phoenix, Ariz., won top honors, a $10,000 scholarship and pledged to build a better image of American youth . "I'm going to try to represent youth in a positive way. There have been so mppy demonstrations. I would .like to reprt1tnt the better lide of youth,'' Miss Stenwell declared. .Karen ·ls one or six blonde sisters ln a family that bu no boys. The pageant finals were nationally televised. "I ll'asn't nervous when they were naming the winntrs because 1 didn 't think it would be me." she said. "I was shocked when they picked me. T don 't think J realize it even now." Miss Connecticut, Carol Elizabeth Buckland, 17, of Fannington, was first runnerup: and i.aura Elaine Boyelte, 18, of Jackson, Miss., second runnerup. Only two girls emerged as double winners in the three rounds of prelimin9ry judging. They "''ere Arii.ona's Junior Miss. Karen Stenwall . and California's MI s s Martyn. Both are blondes. Miss Stenwall was awarded first place in yeuth fitness and also was picked for _'?"'larship achjev~nt ii ~Y'l roo~. Miss Martyn# took first place Jn youth fitneS&. Saturday -.and taJent pruentatioa Sunday, GWC Strike Plan Fails As UCI Protest Goes On Student war protest acUvities continued today at UC Jrvine and Orange Coast College while student strike. efforts 11t Golden West College faltered . Students at UCI were continuing leafieting and community education ef- forts and had scheduled a noon rally and mass meeting at a p.m. At OCC, students also continued their program of contacting c o m m u n i t y mem bers to advise residents of their position in opposition to the Indochina war. A series of four teach-ins were lilated today in the campus' F'ree Speech area. The sessions, led by college instructors would be open to all in· tereslf!d students. A move to institute a student strike at the Golden West College campus in Huntington Beach failed Wednesday for lack of support. Activists from tfie GWC Non-Violence. Sf.rike Committee urged the class boycott ••to redirect the attention ol this educa- lional community t-Owards whal we felt to be the truly important issues of olir society." But though they are united in protest, the students who rallied at noon in the free speech area showed clearly that they art: divided in the means of demonstrating it most effectively. Only IO said Urey would go along with the idea. "Going on strike will ooly produce animosity rather lhan sympathy," argued one student. "Discontinuing our education \\lon·t help anything either:• His sentiments were echoed by political science teacher Margaret Holt.rust who urged the gathering to turn their energies to a more productive end. "You cannot say ·we're on strike ' and get the community behind you. You're not the 'Teamsters, who can get away with it. When you say 'I'm on strike' the image you project is 'there's a kid who's going to throw a rock,'' * * * Principal Demoted Lebard's Schwankovsky Now ·Teacher • • By TEl\l\Y COvn.LE Of """ .,..., ""' ...... Mrs. Otarloma Scbwankovsky will not be back next year as prini:ipal ol LeBard Elementary School Jn Huntington Belch. Not unless she wins a possible legal battle against trustees of the Huntingt.Qn Beach City School District who spent s:x tense hours with her Wednesday night before announcing she would return lo classroom teaching rie1t year. Shortly after midnight, Orville Hanson. chairman of the district board CJ( trustees, anOO\mced the decision to 50 persons wb(I had waited the full 1i1: hours. "It was reached ,'' he said, "because of her refusal to accept transfer as a principal to another school." "I love LeBatd. 1 don't want to be transferred," Mrs. SchWankovsky told newsmen and friends when· she emerged from her meeting with trustees. She revealed that she would confer today with 8YI attorney from the California Teachers' AssociaUon (C'TA) on the Possibility of legal atlon to force t 1: district to keep her as principal one more year. When asked what other actions she would take, she replied, "I'll finish out the school year magnificently and plan for next year at LeBard -whoever may be there." More than 100 supparters, mosUy teachers and parents from LeBard School came to the a· p.m. meeting in the Dwyer School auditorium. By g p.m. not One had left. Some mothers and teachers later began "drifting away, however, when it bt:came apparent no quick decision was to be reached by trustees. At m.idni&hl, nearly half of the ori&in&l lleact· 'l'1·eaS,urer Makes Appeal For Pay Raise By ALAN DI KIN Of tlMI 0.llY Huntington Beach elec d c 11 y treasurer, Warren G. all; ma a pitch for a pay raise Wedne night. He spoke out at a council budget study session. claiming that a salary or $100 a month is not enough for the city's "fiscal watchdog." Hall , controller for Ling Allee, Inc., Anaheim, also revealed differences between himself and U"le city ad- ministrator Doyle Miller over what his job entails. "I want to be able t.o take the documents home and review them , but the city administrator, and the city al· tomey (Don Bonfa) agrees with him. that this is not good businss practice,'' Hall said. Ha.II then e1plained that it is in· convenient for him to g-o to city hall dW"ing the day because he works in Anaheim and that he can 't go in the evenings because he doesn't have any keys. The treasurer said that he would go lo ci ty_ hall dur ing the day if his salary \\"ere increased, but that $100 a mont h was not su fficient remuneration for close inspection. Four councilmen were present at the study sessk>n -Mayor Doo. Shipley, (See TREAllURER, Pase .. zi group wlls still present. MO!t were su~ porters cr lilts. Sohwantovsky and they sat in stumed silence as Hamon read the board's decislon. Before an"nounclng the action, Hanson :ead a press release signed by both Mrs. Scllwankovsky and S. A. Moffett, district superintendent, denyh1g reparts that. he had previously asked for her resignation. The11, Hanso n· read ·five paints of an agreement hammered out during the six hours of discussion between the prin· cipal, her consultant, Ed Romeo, director of the Or.81&.e Couaty~ regional olflCe of the CTA. trustees and admlnlstraton. Those points were: -That she would agree to com~ and · publish with, the district ad· minislrators, a joint atateme11~ clarifying false statements, to be inCluded in a press relea se. · -Recognize and accept the board'& and district adml n l1 tr ator1' responsibilities and pr°erogaUves as leaders of the district and at an .umes implement board and ldmia.iltraUve Policies and directio11. , · Hanson then skipped Point· • three, (See PRINCIPAL, P ... ZI • , . OAIL't PILOT I~ "9tt REV. ROSE. STACKS (LOtHING FOR TECATE' ORPHANAGE In Huntlngloi\ BHch; Poop le R•tpond to • NHCl1 of OIMn ' • ~ • t . I ' Clothes· Parade Beach Children AUl . Orphanage ' A little magic from an orphan.!lge In Baja California has rubbed off on a num· ber or Hun tington Beach fami lies and pro- duced a cornucopia of clothing for small boys and girls. The magic springs from the hope of Jo'ather Henry Veter that he can rebuild his burned-dow n orphanage in Tecate, B.C. Clothes are coming by lhe bundle to the Community Methodist Church from local residents who read of Father Vet-- ter'1 plight in the April 30 edition of the DAILY PILOT. tOr the orphanage," she siid. · The Rev. Vetter gained fame through- out Mexico as "the Magic Padre" for his sleight.iof-liand tricks used "to amuse tbe children. He established Rancho Nazareth In July, 1968. but on Jan 6, this year, flames destroyed it. The Rev. Vetter and about 100 youngsters escaped the ftre when a passerby woke them up. · And they're willing to prove it May 23' during the city-wide festival by aUow- ;ng anyone who pays a dime to take •<whack at an automobile. UCI School Program Told "They've ·been stuffing oor office. with clothing," remarked the· Rev. 'Charles. Rose, who offered his church as a collect- ing point for clothing to be sent.to Father Vetter, a Catholic missionary, in Tecate. Since 1hen poverty has been their trade mar~ but various groups in San DiegD are 'pitching in to rebuild the mia- sion and help Father Vetter, Mn. AJe.. tourubides.explalns. "AM we're trying.to do all we cln ftom here," she aald. • "JUst pick your weapons," said Dave Aliinson, one of the car smash nrganizers. "We'll have big hammers, liUJ:e dainty hammers, pieces of pipe, asfs, you name it." Aldrich Outlines Alternative Education Choi~s At least 20 groctry bags packed wtth clothes and one full plastic trash barrel \\'ere visible at the church Tuesday. Orange Coast The demolition exercise Is just one ol many event! to be offered at the restival , which will be staged across from Huntington Beach High School at the new civic center site. Others include gymnastics, judo and 1rampoline shows, a pickle booth, Oag displays and an art show. $hondll Martyn. California's Junior .Mias and a runner-up in the-naUonal Jµnior MiM title, will reign as queen ol ,the,festival. 1be Huntiagton Beach Coordinating dounciJ. sponsors ol the celebration, have ~e.ived participation promises from more than 50 organizations in the city. They hope to draw about 10,000 residents out to the festival. STOCK lll ARKET .NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market continued its steep decline early this af· leruoon in re latively restrained trading. (See quotaUonJ, Pages 26-27). DeclJnes outnumbered advances by !lght lo one among issues tradtd on Ute "''"' York Stock EicbaJlie. • By JOANNE REYNOLDS or academic responsibility," Aldr\ch °'"" Dt!IY Pl1tt 11.11 stated. Guidelines foi-UC Irvine'J alternative fhe guidelines for altcrnalivc education education program were spelled out to-were prepared by lhe Qlmmittee on day by Chancellor Daniel Aldrich. Educational Policy and the Executive "lt is important to note that the Committee of the lrvine· ·Division of (Academic Senate) has not in any way lhe Academic Senate. suggested thaJ academic wort a.1 this In an emergency meeting' Sunday, <:ampoa .tbould ceaae during tht: re-members of UCI M:Oale passed ca;sev~ mainde.r ol the Spring Quarter. 1970,'' part resolution .outlining,, altetn.aU,ft the chancellor declared. educaUon options 'for stud#llt.a. "On the contrary, the cACademic . . -:-The tau~ n:rar 'tecieve , gracte Senate) hu recognized a criUcal sftua.' · of tricOmplete.• wfthout pr1JUdice, upon tloo in which students feel it Imperative request al any time up to Uie final to give attention to certain inescapable examh1ation. Issues, and, at the same time, to continue The senate guidelines stale this option their education. ; ~quires the apProval of the instructo~. "The (Senate) has assured that all "Students must be passing the course reaular courses will continue; that at the time he reqi..ests a grade of students who wish to add t:tudies or Incomplete. immediate interest will be 11ble to do "lltake·up examinations may be taken 1'-0, and that students will be able. If al any time mutually Iii gre~·qpon bY they so desire, to modify their 1tehedules student and inalructor," aetordlna: to in accord with those interestJ. the guidelines. "Contrary to pubnc rumor, there ha~ -The student may drop the course. been no intcoticm to deprive any aludent without prejudice, at any time up to • ' ' the final examinalion. The policy committee ruled this action requires approval of the dean of the school ·in which lhe class is offered. -1'he student may use the Pass/Nol Pass option in any course on a credit-by· examination basis. Thls action also requires the approval o( the dean ol the school in which She' class is (l(fered, ._The student may continue 1 course1 In the normal way, subject to•tbe normal requlnmenfl and· grides. . Obvk>usly, normal continuation of classes needs no sptcl.al guiitelines. -Instructors may . orter students an opportunity to drop present classes and to enroll In Alternative Education 199 or 299. This option. the guidelines state. re - ' quires the approval of the instructor, the departmeot chairman and the dean of the• tchOal in which the class is offered. Enrollmtnf 'in alternative education (See UCI RULES, l'aae .. 11 ''And we already took out a similar load of clothing over the weekend ,'' thr. Rev. Ross explained . "Some of . the mothers who brought in clothes even took lime to mark the size on each article." 1'he clothes and other Items donated are earmarked for lhe 100 boys and girls who lived at Father Vetter's Rancho Nazareth until it burned to the ground last Janua.ry. . Now the boys live ln sheds and tent.f wllh Father 1Vetter In Toecate, while the girls-Clf ,hia sroop ;ire•slaylng in shackl in Tijuana. . Mrs. Hanna .Alekownbldes, who started the drive in Huntington Be~h to help Rancho llazareth, sald·th• ,._ "h"' been just Feat." • Sh< said more clothini and !odd Is lltll needed and can be left at the community Methodist' Churcll, MG Hell Ave. "We 've alto collected $'73 for lhe orphans from checks malled lh by a doicn families,.. Mrs. Alekoumbkfes added. She la asking resldeDta to mall a S2 donoUon to "Operation· Orpllana" P.O. Box 1660. Huntinaton Beach', · "That f.I wW buy •!Pt bulldlna blocu Weather T'he north wind will blow .. but we won't have snoW -this breeze will heat thlng's up ilong th;e coast Fri· day, with local temperaturea ill the 70's and inland readlnp up •to 13: decrees. , . · INSWE TODAY With the: deoth of General Dillan1, the U.S. lw Lot~ more geNrals in Vietnam than Jn. anr military oclion of Ilic l<ut 100 Utar• ff'Ctpt 1/or World-War' I/. l'ag• 29. C•l!f~le t Ol.Uln, "' ' Ci.Hlfltll ._,, Ct111k1 U ,,....,..,. 11 Dtlflt MtlkH 11 OI-II ••11..-i.1 , .. , ' lllffl"lall\-1 II "11i.11c1 ,._,, ...,_.'" ,, .t.1111 Lff.fftt U Mt"i..,t 1,1c:.,,, .. It Mt!! "' """'" " l J I • :1 l • l • •• .. l ' l ) r , I DAILY PILOT H • Fl•• r ... 1 PRINCIPAL •.. llaline be would, ""b!m lattr lo that CIDIL" I -J.aHIMe DD procratnl without ap. ~from the-·-,-Ae«pt a one-year probation contract at 1the end of which Ille would bo evaluated. "Mr1. SchwtJ1ko~sky has agreed to tbe9e ·taut points," lianson explained, tbert he went to the key third poln~. -'nlat she be placed on probation for the rest of the year, to be re· f'taluated in 30 days. If her attitude, 1c:tians · aad conduct have shown that she sui>Ports the district administrative gtaff, lhe will be transferred io uother iChool as a principal. "Mrs. Schwanko vsky did not agree to this point," Hanson said. "lf you can't sign appr~val . for _a transfer " said Hanson, directing his words ~ the priacipal, "we are obligated to reclassify you as a teacher.'' The board, with one member absent, then unanimously voted to issue bu " notice of reclassification. There was not a word from the au· dience at this announc:ement. After the meeting Mr11. Schwankovsky told newsmett she felt the board had been "very -paUenl'' during the six hours or discussion, but that ahe could just aot agree to leave LeBard. Forward, Oops, March -.. Babtl Dftth Caae • Wife of Do·ctQr ' • Calls Him Sadist By AR111UR R. VINSEL otl !flt Diiiy ,lltt I .. " A once-prominent 1urgeon aOCUHd ol butchering his baby daughl<r Is a jigsaw puule personality in which 20 years' drug use injected violence, sadism and hallucinalions into the picture, his wlfe testified Wednesday. Preliminary bearing for Dr. Wesley G. Slocwn, 44, charged with murder, resumed today in Harbor Judicial District Court. Moments of suspense marked pro- ceedings in the Costa Mesa courtroom Wednesday as Mrs. Marian Slocum, 45, took lhe stand to testify againsl the man she helped rise to a DOW·ruined career. . . ' . One of the most dramatic momenls caq:ie. early when Enright asked Mrs. Slocum il her hu!band coached her In what to say ii anyone. ever asked what h>ppened lo baby Cynthia. Few spectaton could set It, but an expressloo of vengeful fury crossed the normally impassive surgeon's face and hil eyes widened perceptibly as be dared at his wife on the Mand. · After a long, tense pause, -In which the defendant relued 1ligtitly -she burst into tears. And then she bepn testifying. Dr. Slocum sat with half-closed eyes. occasionally drummina: on the table with the bulle~mangled finger> of his right hand. "They were most gracious," she 1aid of the trustees. District officials said the LeBard prin- cipal would finish lhe year at the &ehool. but would be a teacher next year in one of the district'• el&ht sradf: levels, probably at another school. An ROTC unit commander marches in review and salutes over demonstrators trying to halt the an- nual parade at the University of Santa Clara. The photo was taken by Paige Abbot of the San Jose Mercury -and was his last picture. He died Wed- nesday afternoon. She wore dart glasses and spoke laconically under cross-examination by Chief Deputy District Attorney JJmes G. Enright and Paul Augustine Jr., defense counsel foT her husband. She testified that Dr. Slocum : She said Cynthia was taken to Uleir Santa Ana office after becoming severely ill in 11164 and a spinal tap administered by Dr. Slocum there showed blood in· dlcatifl&. brajn damag~. "What did you do?" Augustine asked. ·•t told my husband she needed medical care .'' ~ No reuons for the action against Mrs. Schwankovsky were stated by either l\de as state law makes such pel'SOlllJel mat,. WI prlvilepd and privalt, Huntington Coni1nunity CAB ,Drops Rap Against Beach Travel ~roup . Congress Set Saturday tt· will be ilk. Kini Arthur's Court at Golden West cOuege., Saturday -•· . only It 'will be n.. times u big. Clrpenten are f8*1ioo.lng five i&«at roWld .tables k>r the Huntington Beach Olargea qllqot a l!Untllllgloll Bead! Community Coogr.,. which will he held travel «ganizatim. for violation Of at the eollege from 9:30 a.m. until 4 charter flight rulel ...... dl<lpped todoy by the Civil Aeronau11ca Board (CAB), p.mc Wuhlngton, D.C. · The plaOea at the tables will be taken ProceedlngJ lpinll the American by --Uva from a variety ol British Canadian Club and Its presldm~ pwps in the city, Including churches, WUHam J, Blackmore were ended Wednesday. ~ua action wu m-the i:nu. business, the professions, deriaken to correct tbe violations, the echools, both admlnlstrat.on. an d CAB said. Uadlen, ....,..,., groups, the city, both Blackmore denied "tnowm,Iy or cruncUmen and Ufldals, and flve Golden wilfully" violating the chartu flight Wiit Cclleie students. rules, according lo 1lle boMI. Blackmore a salesman was out of. ·TM format has been changed for the Assoda.tion will moderate the informa l discussions at each table. T h e participants will not switch tables, but will remain in the same places for both the morning and afternoon sessions. "The idea of this b that the more timid ones will be more likely to speak out in the afternoons," Mrs. Warner said. "Those more actum.omed t-0 public speaking will probably give their views in the morning." Surfing Crown Captured by Son Of James Arness town today Uci ~!4 not 'be questimed COUii'~ t!ib year. It is being handl~ ·-the ~ !"8rl~1 ,br'..jlli.:.w.;t<an Management ~· · • Spectal lo the DAILY PILOT His wife, Jeaq; wh? alto works for ~, whlclt n1~Lc.!1!!ng the progr MELBOURNE Australia -Ro 1 f U.e club, aid ahe did not Jmow any "()peratl<lft ¥...,.... ' .. details about the proceedincS ·but that -' .. \'1\-Uon J>41l'fec¥d the techn1-.Arness, 18-year-old son of telev!51on her busband~·,,_ bll1ll!1ed ot their• ~ ', . ~e ~~-, l i~lll/lnl" Jam•-: 'lllunder.nl&ht dl.oo>t>U,.-;b)i'!Mt«. I '.'!_i.~. ol .-.•Cham::..;, ·. ' 111a)'declared surfing'• champion o( the Tho Am<ilcln British Clnadia!I Club .....,..., wm "" w ' world oerves both Orange County 111<1 the !AS wl1lcll ts IJlOlllO'inl the event, etplalned ~.. a student at North Hollywood Angeles area and bu a membe.nihlp tl:U mornfng. "It's the first ltn:te thls High School, was almost speechless. d 1,000, Mn:. Blackmore llid. hu '='°.conaktered for community af· After a long pause during the world It annually 9Chedu.lel about 11 fllgbts, ftlrt:. . U champion trophy presentation, young destined for both Fng1IDd and France. lfn.., T/amer" saJd that repreaenta ves Ame~s stammered, "Id like to say this 1be Blacbuores have been uaociated from tbt American M • n a & 1 men t is outta~slgbt. • _thanks everybody." '11len with the club for about ten yean. Amess quickly hid behind one of the larger objects around, U.S. Team Manager Brennan ''Hevs" McClelland of Laguna Beach. MCAS Annex Action Delayed As anticipated, the Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFC) Wed· nesday postponed action on two con. flicting annexations whkb include the 1,568-acre Marine Corps Air StaUoo in Santa Ana. Consideration was delayed t-0 July 8 at the request of 11th Naval District Commandant J , W. Williams Jr. of San Diego. Both Santa Ana and Tustin have moved to annex the Navy faeillty, a helicopter training base. Jn 1967, the two cities made similar attempts to take over the property but the LAFC denied the request when the Navy objected. The Orange County Airport Com· mission had also requested a delay in the proposed mergeri for ''further iitltdy'" l DAILY PILOT o..\NO! C,O.UT PUILl~ING COMPANY •eNtt N. W11i ..... 1111n1 •r.4 t>ub1111w ·Jeck l. c.,1.., flllilW 1ho,,,•• A. M111pki"1 M~Elllllor Albert W. l1tn ... ,_i.i. £d11 ... H!Jflri .. 1 .. hec• t.>ffke 17175 l11ch loul1•1ri M1ili119 Aclcl,.n: P.O. 1011 7911, tl,41 °""'°""" Lt.-.. Kfl: 1Z2 ,_, ,,_ Cl)Wo MfM: Qt W1M hy ~""' frl-i IHKfl; 7'11 WUI 9•111111 SoltleYI .. ... (lurwltc lOS Hor1~ El ,.,...._ IMI f From Page l TREASURER • • • Young Arness' father had even fewer word!! when his son called him in North Hollywood long distance at 4 a.m. to tell him the riews. Ted Bartlett, Al Coen and Mrs. Norma Gibbs -and they decldtd that the Ttq\leSt should be discussed at the full council meeting on Monday. Hall was elected treasurer in 1968. The previous d ty treasurer was Mrs. Betty Diekoff who held the post for several years and was pa id a salary in the $14,000 range. The salary was reduced sbort.\J before the election and 1'frs. Dlekoff did not run. No salary increase was proposed for the job in the budget submitted by Milltr. "I could and should be the fiscal eyes and ean of the dty," Hall said. "People backed me for this when l was elected. But I think I need a reasonable amount of money. The city needs watching because internal control makes lt easier for employes t-0 be honest because they are more likely io be caught U they are dishonest." Hall emphasl>ed that he would not be !!king for a raise if he were allowed to take city documents home. At pre~nt, he said he does little more than sign checks, 'but he wants to review city finances more closely. Miller commented, "The stall ls reluc- tant to dive into this thing because it has been a politkal football in HUD- t.ington Beach for 60 years." Coen reacted coolly to Hall's 1>1ea, sa)'ing that the city has a finance dire~· tor and that most of the treasurer s duties are done by a ful1-Ume paid staff. Ex·gridder. Held On Burglary Rap KNOXVILLE, Tonn. (UPI) -The FBI announced today that 15 penon.1. tnclud. ing a former Univenity of Tennessee quarterback, have been Indicted In what It termed the break-up of a burglary ring responsible for 40 bank thefta ln 14 states. Sevm men were arrested today In Knoxvillt and anothu in Baton Rouge, La. Six ptrsons already In jail also were charged, and another person was being t10Ught. The FBt listed a variety of occupa· lions for the sus pects. One of those ar- rested today, Frtd Johnson MoteS Jr. 57, Is a Knox ville atioruy 'A'hO quartf:!· backed the Tennessee footbflll team in the 1930s. Thert are three wtlders in the group plus a truck drivr.r and a college student. ''Son, I'm stoked," the elder Arness declared. Rolf recalled that his father had in- troduced him to surfing at a beach In front of President Nixon's San Clemente home. "Dad and I still go surfing together almost every day and he loves It too,'' Rolf said. "He's pretty good, loo." Rolf is sthe.duled to fly home Sund ay. One of his surfing "buddies," tiny Hawaiian Sharon Weber, 22, won the women's world crown after Th ursday's final at Skene's Creek, near Apollo Bay. Only 61 inches tall, Sharon "stole" the title from former champion, Margo Godfrey of the United States. "It hasn't really hit me, but t fti!I kind of all right," Sharon, an assistant at a Honolulu health food store, said. She said she surfed up to four hours a day at beaches around Honolulu. The president of the'InternaUonal Surf- ing Federation, Peruvian millionaire Eduardo Arena, said at the presentation of trophies that the S\ll'f for the men's final on Wednesday was the best he had seen at any world champlonshlp. "lt was worth waiting all this time for it," he said. Rodda Rejoins OCJC Trustees George Rodda, Jr .. an Orange Coast Junior College Di.strict. trustee who resigned his post ln February was reap- pointed to the board Wednesday night . after I!-ruling from county cowi5el . ROdda of H9 Goldenrod Ave., Corona del Mar resigned after he. was appointed to the Corrunission on Lqia:laUon of the American AModaUon of Junior COiieges. He sald he felt almultaneous servk:e on both bodies might constitute a croOk:l ol interest. However, Jryne C. Black, deputy c:oon- ty counsel said there Would be no conflict of Interest lf Rodda chose l.O fill both posts. "Conflicts Of Interest normally ~ template. a confUct In f!nanclal lnle.rest, and the. common law doctrine of in· compatlblllty ol. office would not appear io have any appllcalRJn to t h e clrcumsl.l.ncts In this case," 1he litated . Rodda said he would strvt. The five- m1n junior eollege. board Is at full &trength once iilin. Fron• Page l UCI RULES ... also requires written request to the department chairman stating proposed content <lf the c<lurse . "All individual studies courses carry full University credit toward graduation unit re· quirements. Howe ver, their status for use in salisfaction o[ the specific re- quirements of individual departments is to be detennined by the individual departments," the guidelines state. -Instructors may award a grnde of Pass to all studen ts who request it, and regulations limiting use of the Pass grade should be waived . The guidelines state that discretion In assigning grades is left to the in· slructor. Instructors are also reminded of the regulations governing final ex· aminations in undergraduate courses which state that the tests can be omitted only with approval of the educational policy committee and the department involved. ''The instructor should be wary of creating a situation in which a student ls seemingly treated dlfferently because of the student's polltical activity or beliefs," the sta~ment warns. Fo1·d Motor Rejects Soviet Plant Offer . DETROIT (UPI) -Ford Moto r Co. has turned down Uie Soviet Union's re- quest to help bul\d the world's largest truck factory in Russia, Henry Ford U, board chairman, said today. Ford's announcement at the annual stockholders meeting came two days after Defense Secretary Melvin Laird told a meeting of the Detroit economic club he was opposed t-0 "exporting Amer· ican technology to the Soviet Union w~ile they are sending trucks to North Viel· nam." -Used 100 milligrams of benzedrine daily for 20 years, balanced by a tran- quilizing type of medlcanoo, and, even- tually, gin . -Envisioned people moving through walls and was bounded by fet.lings of perseeution, biding hoards of checks paid for medical care in boxes, trunks and . bedding. · -Severely beat their Infant daughter Cynthia and toOk her to his Santa Ana office in early 1964. after she died at home. "Did you see the baby again?," asked Enright. "In bags,'' she replied tonelessly. "What'dtd he do with them!" "Put them in the freeze r." "Did you ask the doctor about the bags?'' "No. I never looked in the freezer again," said Mrs. Slocum, who the defense contends put them there and fought tooth and nail for six years against anyone going near the appliance and its grisly secret. Mrs. Slocum said she became an alcoholic in the years since and seemed vague on many questions asked by Augustine. "Have you had any med ication today?" "No," she replied, leading him l<l ask when she last took any. "I had some this morning .•. l'm sorry, I forgot." she said, expl~ing it was a tranquillr.er prescribed for her. Augustine asked that she bt given none for today·a he~ring. · her if she disobeyed him and once shot her husband threatened often l.O kill her if she di.sobyed htm and once !hot her witl'I an arrow as sl'le held a can of pineapple juice. as a larget. Under cross-examinaUon Dy Augustine. she said she knew Dr. Slocum couldn't hurt her wl'len he was in jail after a 1966 shootout with Santa Ana police and last year when he was committed for psychiatric care. .- "Why didn 't you go to the po 11 c e then !" he sh<lt back. "He said no matter where t went, he \\'OUld arrange to have me killed." Inflate your Comforts DEFLATE Your Budget with IOU ff ea u Broodloom J by ar_@'!!l!Jj Win a 1lorioo1 vidory in the bl.Ute of t1'e buditl by.· t ruling yaunelf to a ~at abal" bt09dlocm. • • TOUFFEAUb)'Karaatan. Yau. would upect Ka!Mtm-tbt!nest Jll!M i4 carpet and rug ral&hiant-tocreata a•baa that . \\W more colorful, more escitinl, and more lanih. Touffeau. is sll of that and more with budymu.i~ . long nylan pile yam1, U.in-dyed in f.bulotl.I :mulh· colorsci breathtakinl brll1W>ce and Kara·loc ......,..11.. But wJ.t •happy ditcxrterrthat th•cmtof Ula serisationsl1hagia only $11 .95 sq.y.d. T outf rau U aho avci/able 1rs. area rugs u,oilA 4 hravy-knotUd matchinl f rinte. 9' J: 12' $110.00 "What did he do!" "He gave her medication • , • I don'l ject.ion." Augustine then traced the history of events !eading to the mysterious bags he brought home and the remains found · March 26 after the disconnec ted freezer was taken from the Slocums' Mesa Verde home . "Dictn't you ask where the baby was ?" ''I was very upset, Mr. Augustine ." "Wouldn't it strike you as Unu8Ual for a doctor to treat a child, then come home with it in two bags!" he pressed. There was a cool pause. "Not my husband. This one is very sadistic,'' Various other testimony during the dfLernoon involyed marital problems and Dr. Slocum's coolne.s.5 toward her. Augustine charged she didn't want the third child, also accused her of cutting up Cynthia's body and putting it in the fn!&er while Dr. Slocum was away performing the surgery which won him a wide following in Orange Ciunty. "No sir, I did not," she replied firmly. · Defense and prosecution today, planned to question the obstetriclll'll who handled . Mrs. Slocum's Dec. 3, 1963 delivtry and . postnatal care, with testimony windina: up possibly on Friday. Judge William Chrislens~n will then . evaluate the evidence and rule whether sufficient evidence exists to have .Dr .. Slocum's mur~er Ca.$1:. su~itted for trtal ~ In O(ange. Qounty Superior Court. ·t Augustine predicted Wedriesday this ·i 1s a certainty in all capital cases and guesaed It would be three months before such a trial could begin, Congress Passes Bill WAS!UNGTON (AP) -A hill boosting-. the t&x on domestic airline tickets from 5 to 8 percent as part of a plan to finance a JG-year airways development plan has been passed by the House; and sent l<l President Nixon. 1F YOU CAN'T COME IN-CAL( fr11 1 11 ••pert c1r,1t co~1u!t1 11t .. ho will Clll'll I• "OUf ho,,,I with 11mpl•t without '"' obli11ti•11 to yoYI ' ' ' •. ' H.J.GARR.E1T fURNlTURE PROFESSIONA L INTERIOR O!SIGN!RS • f Opet1 Moo., TINrs. & l'fl, lttL 22 15 HA RBOR IL VO. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 046-0171 ~· . , " Ne rt Beaeh • VO[ 63, NO. ·115, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE cO NTY, ~LIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY ·1~,. '1970· TEN CENTS I ' Mrs. Marshall Makes Speclal lO I.be DAILY PILOT SACRAMENTO -A plea to use the in. Umate knowledge city governments have or loc~condltions and not transfer full shof'!line control to the state was made beCOre an Assembly committee Wednes· day night by former Newport Beach Mayor Doreen Marshall. Mrs. Marshall was the only speaker frorD. Orange County in a hearing on shoreline control bills before the Assem- bly Committee on Natural Resources and Conservation. The hearln1 was still eoin& beyond 11 p.m. when a delegation o! lour Crom Newport Beach left In her testimony, Mrs. Marshall said : "l sense , •. there is an apparent at- titude on the part of legislators that local government has failed to do an adequate job of planning and administering the development of the shoreline. Although the past record of local government leaves much to be desired, I think the same criUci.s.m can be fairly madt , of the federal and state government. "The import.ant thing is that we not waste our energies in a pojntless discus- sion abciut the mistakes of the past .•. I r;an assure you that local officials are re- sponding to the same wave of public opinion concerning the preservation and enhancement of the environment lhPl you fttl in Sacramento." She said city governments are In com· plete accord with the general goals of the bills and recognize that there will have to be a regional approach. But. she said, city officials believe ini· tial basic planning should be done by Airline Route Oli'd Continental to Fly From County The Civil AeronauUcs Board (CAB), meeting in Washington, D.C., Wednesday, granted Continental Airlines authority to make flights from Orange County Airport to the Pacific Northwest. The route request was granted despite Orange County government opposition. Full word on how often Continental woukf make flights and whether they would be direct to Seattle and Portland or involve stopovers was not immediately available. . However, reports from Washington said Continental was selected to become a "new satellite airport specialist," also mlkinc connecting flights to t h e Mesa's Wilson Urges Bar S,wap Full Stoppage Growing doubtt In recent m~ today led O>lla Mesa Ma}'-OI" Robert M. Wilson t.o urge complete stoppage of any land swap between Orange County and the Irvine Q:mpany until critical questions are answered. "lbere are just too many," declared the candidate for the Fifth District Orar11e. County supervisor's chair in making bis new stand known. "Let's forget everything that has gone on before and start over," be said, listing five specific points he believes must be explained before the c0otrove.rsi1l trade continues. He. explained them this W"./: -Just exactly what is the legal status of· North· Star Beach and North Star Road. -What is the legal status of Back Bay Drive, which touches the tidelands in 80l11e 13 or 14 points. -From an ecological standpoint, just exactly v.·hat is the signUicance ol the Back Bay? -How can lhe waters be properly dlannelled to prevent stagnaUon and pollution if development is allowed to proceed and, further, is another opening to the ocean needed to allow for this tid•l change? -The Back Bay is the collectiC>n area nf some 145 square miles of watershed and have any studies concerning this runoff be.en prepared to show how this can be taken care of in the future? Mayor Wilson abo mentioned the Sall c reek cootrover::sy. "I think lhat one (such controversy) ls enough, so until the facts are in, no trade or negoUations should be made/' he declared. Abortion Clinic Doctor Arrested northwest from Ontario, Long Beach and Hollywood • Burbank airports in southern California and Oakland and San Jose airports in northern California. Route applications Of Air California. United, Northwest, Braniff, Delta, Na· lional and Alaska airlines were denied. The CAB also authorized Air West to fly non-stop between Los Angeles and San Francisco to the northwest cities and Western Airlines to fly non-stop between San Diego and Portland and Seattle-Tacoma . Ron Chandler, assistant to Orange County Aviation Director Robert Bresnahan, said his knowledge of whal CALLED SADIST SURGEON Murd1r Suspect Slocum Slocum's Wife Calls Husband Sadist, Addict By ARTHUR R. VlNSEL 0t tlMI 0.tlly Pl .. 1 Stiff ... A once-prominent surgeQO accused of butchering his baby daughter is a jigsaw puzzle pel'30llality in which 20 years' drug use injected violence, sadism and hallucinations into tbe. picture his wife testified Wednesday. ' Preliminary hearing for Dr. Wesley G. Slocum, 44, charged with murder. resumed today in Harbor Judicial District Court. had been granted was 1 l m i t e d . Bresnahan, Supervisor William Phillips and a member of the County Counsel's office were not yet returned from the hearing in Washington. Chandle r said Continental had several alternative route applications and he did not know which one had been adoptl¥i . The county Board of Supervisors posl· lion was, however, there smould be no additional flights from the airport. "Our space is very limited at tile airport and with the aircraft 'noise situation as it is we're holding back," Chandler said for county government. Su rfing Crown Capture4 by Sort Of Jani~s ~rness Spedll to 1H DAIL V PILOT MELBOURNE, Auslrtlia -Ro 11 Amess, IS-year-old .son oC televisk>n gunslinger James Amess. Thursday night was declared surfing's champion of the world. Arness, a student at North Hollywood High School, was almost speechless. After a long pause during the world champion trophy presentation, young Amess stammered, "Id like to say this is outta-sight. •. thanks everybody." Then Arness quickly hid behind one of the larger objects around, U.S. Team Manager Brennan "He vs" McClelland ol Laguna Beach. Young Arness' father had even fewer wurds when his son called him in North Hollywood lo:~g distance al 4 a.m. to tell hlm the news. ''Son , I'm stoked," the elder Arness declared. Rolf recalled that his father had in- troduced him to surfing at a beacb In front of President Nixon's San Clemente home. ··oad and I still go surfing together ;:itmost rvery day and he loves it too," Rolr said . "He's pretty good, too." Rolf is scheduled to fly home Sunday . One of his · surfing "buddies," tiny Hawaiian Sharon Weber. 22, won the \\'Omen's world crown after Thursday's final at Skene's Creek, near Apollo Bay. Only 61 inches tall. Sharon "stole" the title from former champion, Margo Godfrey of the United States. ''It hasn't really hit me, but I feel kind of all right," Sharo11, an assistant at a Honolulu health food store, said. She said she surfed up to four hours a day at beaches around Honolulu. The president of the International Surf· Ing Federation, Peruvian mlllionaire Eduardo Arena, said at the in:sentation of trophies that the surf for the men 's final on Wed•esday was the best he had seen at any world championship. "It was worth waiting all this time for ii,'' he said. , . ' Coast Control Appeal ea.ch city and county which has shore- line territory within Its boundaries. The approach they SUPPort ~ embodied in the bill.of Ammblyman Pete Wlilon (IW!an Diego). It requires that each city prepare 1 coastal element as part o( its aeneraJ plan, then to be pulled logelher by ,,. gional agencies, Instead of tr1111ferrinc the entire planning process at the outset to the regional agency. Eight members of the Assembly com- mittee were present Wednesday niPt in- eluding Georie Mllias (f\..Lol Gatos), chalnnan of the committee, and Alan Sieroty !D-Lo& Anplts), au-of two other'bilb. Wiison illlOlia member of the committee.. AU lhree presented their bills and then- repreteritaftves of · nine or It COMerVa- tion organiiatiops spoke, followed ,by spokesmen for cities 1nd counties ind then Individuals. Present· from Newport Beach · along \vith Mn. Marshall were ~aty ~anapr Harvey Hurlburt, Clly A\tomeyTlllljo Sey· 11~41, i8ftt1•,·Muck : ' . r' .. .:... ' . ' ' mour . and Cfty ~!Iman .~ Crou,I. rMrs •• Marshall. w111 • c~ to, testlfY for the Cit)r, becaUle, while .Mil, wU mayor •• ,she tesllfled before the U .B senate ' 1ubcomm.Jttee on ~Y. aloillll · a feder'IJ bfil that ,...;fcf 1"1h- h01d ,_al funds etctpt -. -agenpes h••• _, .... cootnL-Sbo also served OD LI. Gov • .Jld Rei_ .. t.caf Govtrnme11t Tail<.P:orte 1111; COii!. line Preservation. ' ' .An .it,bTC unit commatiaer marches In review and · salutes over demoJ:ist.ra\ors tryinc to halt the an· nual parade at the University of 'Santa Clara. The ~ =u .tuin by Plii' Abbot of the san Jost -...,.1wu·hi1 Jut picture, lie died Wed· -.. . ~· . . .. . .~ GW C Strike Plan · Fails As UCI Protest Goes On Student war protest activities continued today at UC Jrvine and Orange Coast Ulllege while student strike efforts at Golden West College faltered. Students at UCI were . continuing leafleting and community education ef· forts and had scheduled a noon rally and mass meeting a.t 8 p.m. At OCC, students also continued their program of contacting c o m m u n i t y members to advise re!idents of their position in opposition to the Indochina war. A series of four teach· ins were Hospital Area Rezoning OK'd A zone change to pennit the William fi.tessenger Company to build a two-story medical building at the corner o{ Flag. ship Roe.d and Placentia Avenue, near Hoag Memorial Hospital, has been ap- proved by Newport Beach city council· men. The property was rezoned from· R-3 {multiple residential) to AP (adminis· trative-prof essional) . The fears of Park Lido residents were allayed earlier at the planning commis- sion level when Messenger was talked out of a request for a l.Olle change to COH (commercial-hoiel), which pennil$ high-rise construction up to 85 feet. slated today Jn . the cainpus' Free. Speech area. The sessions, led by coUege instructors would ht open to all ' in. lercsted students. A move to institute 1 student strike at the Golden West. Collige calnpua in Huntington Beach failed Wednesday for lack of suppbrt. Activists from the GWC Non-Vkllence Strike Committee urged 'the clasa boycott "to redirect the aliention of this educa· tional community towards what we felt to be the truly important issues of our· ~ociely." But though they are united in protest, !he students who rallied at noon in the free speech area showed clearly that they are divided in the means of demonstrating it most effectively. Only 10 said they would· 10 aking. with the idea . "Going on strike will only produce animosity rather than sympathy," argued one student. "Discontinuing our education· won't help anything either." Hts ,enUments were echoed by ;poUUc:al science teacher Margaret Holtrust who urged the.gathering to turn theit·energles, to a more productive end. "You cannot say 'we're on strike' and get the community behind you. Yoti'rt not the Teamsters, who can get away with it. When you say 'I'm on strike' the image you project is 'there's a kid who's going to throw a roc1c,•• * * * Route Fighters C.Ollect 11,000 Petition . Names · Harbor Area Freeway Fighters u1d today they have collect.d almost 'u,ooo siinatures on peUtions calling for thti deletion of Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach from the .llata freeway plan. A gathering will be held Friday morn- ing to collect the many J>ttiiions at.ill out. Petitloll' ctrculatora have: 1been told to brlng their peUUons -to the 1<111th clubhouse of Bayslde Villige Tr:ailer Park at 7:30 a.m. MarShatJ Duffiekl, acting chairman c( the Freeway Fighters, said only· about 20 percent ·of the peOOons are in. with 80 percent &Lill out. He said be doesn't expect all petitions to be rttU~ ar solne people t~k mo~e than they pofslbly c:OUld get signers to fill . Duffield said he ii oot going to try to r~re.sen_t that there might n6t be some duplications on peUUon11. "It's get- tihg too burdellJome to check," be Slid. ,ff• ~Id 'the . pile ol pelitioos wm bt cmie:d. t.o Sacramento a,nd Washington, D.C., and "we'll let. anybody who w•Dls to Inspect 11." ' or .. ge An obstetrician who was arrested 1 t..wice at his West' Los Angele.s clinic on charges of performing illegal abortions. was arrested again Wednesday, this lime in.Santa Ana. Moments of suspense marked pro- ceedings in the Costa Mesa courtroom Wednesday as Mrs. Marian Slocum, 45, took the stand to testify against the man she helped rise to a now-ruined career. UCI School Program Told We•daer Santa Ana police said they arrested Or. John Shriver Gwynne. 28, 1t Ills oewly-opened Santa Ana clinic at 1856 W~ 17th St., in Santa Ana. Police allege when they made the af. ternooo arrest Dr. Gwynn had completed one abortion, was perlonnlng another and had yet a third woman waiting. She wore dark glasSes and spoke laconically under cross-examination by ctiief Deputy District Attorney James G. Enright and P8ul Augustine Jr., defense. counsel for her husband. She i..tilied that Dr. Slocum, Aldrich Outlines Alternative Education Choices . The nOrth wind will blow but n won 't' have snow...:.. this breeze will heat 1hings· up ~long· the coast ~ day, with local temperatures in tht ?O's and inland readings· up 1o 93 de11eea. Gwynn, prior to his West Los Angeles a~ta, had publicly announced his in- tention to perform abortions free flf cbarge. He has indicated plans to cha!· let11e CaU!omia's abortion law. STOCK iUARKE'l' NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market r:onUnued its steep decline early this ar- te.moon Jn relatively restrained trading. (See quotations, Pages 26-27). Declines outnumbered advances by riaht to one among issues traded Qn lhe New York Stock Exchange. -Uled 100 mUli,rams of benzedrine daily for 20 years, balanced by a tran-. quilizing type or Dltdlcalioo, and, even· tu ally, gin. -Envisioned people moving through walls and was hounded by feelings or persecution, hiding hoa'rdS"o( checks paid for medical care in boxes, trunks and bedding. -Severely beat thtlr infant daughter Cynthia and look her to his Santa Ana office in early 1964 after she died al home. "Did you see tht bab)' again?," asked Enright. "ln bags." she replied tonelessly. ''What did he do with them ?" (See SLOCUM, P•JC I) By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tlM O.ltY ...... ,, ... Guidelines for UC. lrvtpe's .~alte.rnatlyt educaUon program were spelled aut ti>-. day by Chancellor Daniel Aldrich. 1 "It is important to note that ~ (Academic Senate) has not in any wiy suggested that academic work 0!1 this campus should cease during the re- malndcr of the Spr'ing Quarter, 1170,'' the chancellor declan:d: "On the co ntrafy, thr: (Academlc Senate) has reco&o~ a ulllcal, situa- Oon in which studll){t feet It Imperative to give attention to -certain ln~!"rflPDblt Issues, and. at the same Ume, to continue lbeir education. 1 ' ,J ... ,. ~--( ' "'.llle -U10ntta ,Iii! asaare4o that, all . In .••' <D)e!iUCY ,~ ·SundoY, !'ilular· .c0a~ •><II\' -~De: \!!14L 1]1•1l\ber1.of, UCl ,~\e,~d,a:'l'v~ ltoden!S wbO-1.r iild0 "'4ki 'o! part ,..solution. <Ull!•'11 '"11ornaUve !mm'edlal> <lo~,~ '40' liiO'."liblf:ti.J'.dp< ~il\JcaUon opiJOns 10.. 1~11: · . · ' so, and--tb~ ents ;'!llbbe able, 1f -ni'e atudeit mly reCteve i ir,.ade· they-so]eSJ~e od~y ,~lr schedul,?,: ,'oi lneompfete, wlll\Out projudlct, •Pon· in '""'m. wi! filt~ · requeot a! any· Ume up to tile final "Con~ry . bile rwnor, there has examMatton. · ~ n0:1nfe , to d~ a~J student Tht Jenate guidelines atate th\~ optton ot! ac1:+m1e res !11~ 'Aldrich : ·quires the approval of the Instructor. ~ed. ! •, "Siuilents mu!t be , passln1 the .<our .. fhe-guldel at tht th'ne he req\.le&ll 1 arade of ~ Pr•Parod. )he Oanimittee on lncomolel<, Educatlonal P 111na lhe Executive "Make-up eica.mlnst.ions may be taken CommJttee or t e Irvine Division or at any time mutually agreed upon by th•.Academlc Senate. (Set UCl RULES,.P ..... J) ' ' ( INSWE, TODAY 1 With tht dtdth of Gtnerol f DiUard. the. U.S. 1icl lost mort" , gtnerall fn Vfetnmn tll.an "" any military action of tM last· JOO t11at1 1:xcept for World War II. Page %9. • . ==" '' ..... , .. --: .......... """" .. ....... """' 11 lrWle ,....... ,. ,,.,.. tt-Jt liMll: .. "' ... Mos TitliWhllll • T........ .,, ....... ' ...... ...... . .. .._...,,.... , .. ,. --~ • l I ~· ' I • \ • • ) J ?AJL Y PILOT N 'Pig for Me' Questionoo By Defense Did ArthUr Dewkte League uy ion the day alfN ho allegedly killed f!Ollc< olfletr Nelson Sasscer "Iha!" on;! 'pig for me"? 'lbe accused BlacJt Pan.the!''• M:Dior defense lawyer todJy urged a Superior Court jury to examine the ~rt.ed state- ment "with the care and caution you mll!I use and In the light ol testimony which indicates that it is highly doubftul that Arthur League ever aaid any such thing." All«ney Rob<rt Green raised the queg- tion of: the incriminating comment which has been quoted more than once by the prooec:utlon u he neared lhe '2ld of his final argument before the jury. He reminded the panel that prosecution witness rucky Tice told • municipal court judge just two monthJ after the shooting las\ June 4 of the Santa Ana patrolman that League had 1aid nothing to hlm (Tice) in the days follow1ng the Sasscer tilling. "Leque !aid nothing like that," Green ar1\H1id, "and J must remind you that you are nquind to view such 1elllmony with extreme caution when you retire from this courlroom to review the evidence." Green a1IO asked the jwy to be1r tn mind. the "many trregulariUes'" of. key testimony In the League trill and be port!cularly -!bat there ... no mdence to cooclushdy prove that the JJ.year~ld defendant had ever kft the ~ garaie where he llp0!1t the nl(bl to go oot and "1ool clllcor Saaocer. He will be fullowed In flllal .....,,_ by chief~ Enm!Dlctey- ""1ll1Ullion wil! lmmedlatefT precedO 1he retlremellt tt lbe Jury for COlllfderallon of !ta verdict. League Is ICCUled of ahootlnt ollkw Sasacer in the chest llhortly alt<r the patrolman de~ ldtnUllcattao from the Black Panlber IDd a companion. MCAS Annex Action Delayed .,_ A.s anticipated, the Local Agency Formation ~, (L+fC) Wed- nesday postpOneld .actlon on two con- flicting annu:aUons 1'hich include the 1,568-acre Marb,e Corps Air Stalion in Santa Ana. , .. ·!, .: . Coosldeutfon wai def«Ytd lo July I at the requeat of 11th Naval Dist.rid Commandant J. W. Williams Jr. of San Diego. Both Santa Ana and Tultln have movtd to annei: the Navy facility, a helicopter training base. Jn 1157; the two cities made similar attempU: t6 take over the property but the LAFC denied the request when the Navy objected. The Orange County Airport Cam· mission had also requested a delay in the proposed mer1era !or •'further study." Salaries Hike Plan Supported Support of a bill which wool<! raise the salaries of. Orange County supervi1c>n from fl5,000 to $17,500 aMually was voiced in a telegram dispatched Wed- nesday by the Orange County Grand Jury. The jury !old State Sen. James E. Whetmore (R-Garden Grove) that his bill was backed because "this post is a major office and the present salary is disproportionately low compared to other (XJUllty officials." The telegram was signed by Grand Jury Foreman George B. Honold, former mayor of Garden Grove. • • DAILY PILOT ORANGE CO,t,IT l'UBLllHINO COMl'~H'I' ••H•t W, w.,4 J1ck ._ Ct.iii.., ViCe '"5:dtf!I lffllll ~II M11t11t ... Tllo"'•• K11wil ...... iho"''' A. M11rph i111 M-2 ... !Edit« Tll1"'1' Fort11111 Nt'"'°" lkldl Oly l!dlle< N....,.... IMdl Offk.e 2211 w .. t l 1lk • a.ul1w1t4 M1n1 119 Ao.M,.111 P.O .... 117i, ,2,,J .......... C..lrll Mall D W"I ..., SiTMt 1...-1uc11: m '0<"' ..,.._ H-'"'*' .. K'I: 11111 auc11 ,..,...._.._ Soil (leftwlt.: al HCll'111 fJ t..,.lno I.Ml OAll 'f PILOT, •1111 1'Mdl 11 C!l!l'llllMll 1111 .,....,,.,.,_ . ~ '""' -~ '-•• .,. Ill -Hiit ulfOllM b ~ '-"' Nl'IOIJltrf 11)(11, C.011 INN . Htlftllrlf'.M a1•c11 -F-11111 VIUl'f, ..... -4"' .... =~ Hll:W. Or"ff C1111 l'Vbll:llllN 'f "1Mllll ~'"'' 1rt II 2711 WMI .... , a:~ N""""1 -..Cll. .,... »I W.I .. , ,""1, Cle .. -· , •••• ~ ••• C7141 642 ... ]21 Cl•lfW ~ '41·1,71 °""""" ...... .......... (•a.I """,.,..... °"""""• ... ,..... '"''"'· llk/111'11~ """"'' IMfW ., '""".._,, llfl"l'lfil Mtl' ... 11p•l>Ull .. IMYt --,,.. .. iu-. • ..,.,. .... -· ~ "-J9lllit ..,. .. .........., .. ,. &rid CAil .. .-.... 'C.lif'lnllt. ~ ....... ., ~ .... _...,, ..,__., ""' -"''" wiUllt'Y dttllllill-L.00 _.1111r. Fro• P .. e J SLOCUM HEARING · •. · . "Pu! !hem in !be freeur. • DefeDH and pr....,,Uon today laaned "Did fOU .,t the c1octor al>out tho to 1111eallon lbe oblle!rldan wbo PJUn w bHtf" · M •1·-'~· • baJdl "No :I ...,t ·~~ ,_ lbe • n , .,,...,.,. • Dae. I, 1111 dall•~and ali ;, r ·-"' _,. palllla(al ..... ._ ""''"-wlDdibi ag n. nld Mn. Slocum, Who the / "P poulbly on Frjda,y. defenie contends put them there anil Judge William r OarUtttisen will then fou~ht tooth and nail for sl1 years. evaluate the evidence: and nde whether aga1~st anyone 8~& near the appllance sufficient evidence exi.sta to ha ve Dr. and its grisly secret. . Slocum'• mUfde.r c~ submitted for trial Mrs. Sloeum said ~be became an In Oranp Callnty Superior Court. alcoholic in the YW'I llDCe and seemed Augusltne predicted W"ednesday this ~ague on many questions 1.!!ked by Is a certainty in all capital cases and ~~ustlne. . . ,gues.sed it would be three months before .Have you had _any med1cailon today?" !UCh a trial could be&fn. ' No, .. she replied, leadin& blm to uk · when she last took ahy. l KAR EN ST ENWALL OF PHOENI X CROWNEO AM ERICA'S JUNIOR MISS IN ALABAMA FINALS Rhond• Martyn (left) of Huntin9ton Be 1ch Makes It As Far As Final Round "I had some tllla mo.min& ••• I'm ~rry, I forgot," she said, explaining: 1t was a tranquilizer prescribed ror her. AwgusUn e asked that she bt itven none for today's heiring. Texas Tornado Victim Succ umbs Fr om PGffe l UCI RULES ••. Jludenl and instruct.or," accordin& to the guidelines. -'Ibe atudenl may drop thfl course, without prejudice, al any time up to the flnil ez1rnination. 'Jbe policy committee ru1ed this action requires approval of the dean of the school ln which the class is offered. -The student may use the Pus/Not Pasa option In any coune on 1 credit·by. euminlUon buis. 'J1lis action ailO requires tbe approval of the dean of the achoo! In which the clau is offered. -The student may continue courses in the normal way, subject to the nonna1 nquiremeots and grades. Obviously, normal continuation of claael needs no spec.lat guidelines. -lnltructon .may off,er students an opportunity to dnip preaent clwes and to aroU 1n AlttrtJ1Uve Educ1tlon 199 er *99. , , -oplfoo. the auld•Une• state. re. quires the . appriival of the ln!tructor, the department chairman ind the dean of the acllool In w11lch the cla!a is alfered. Enrollment In alternative education alao r<qUfrel written requeJt lo the department chairman stating proposed content of the course. "AU tndlvldual ltudjfll counes carry fuU Unlveraity credit toward craduation unit rt· quinme:nta. However, their status ·for we in aaUlflCtion of lbe specific rt-- qulremenla of individual deportments I! to be determined by the Individual ~ti," the guidelines state. -lnltruc.."tors may award a grade <>f PUI 1o all students who request it, and regulatk>ns limiting use of the Pass grade lbouJd )Je waived. ·'l'Wf fD141ralines state that discretion' tn assfcnlrig grades is left to the in· - dc.t'. Instructors are ~ reminded . NDllions govm11M final . ea· , *ir'~dn tmdergradtf&tt c&ft:lia. whktl itate that the tests can be omitt«t only with 1pprnval of the educational policy committee and the department involved, '"!be lnl11uc!or ahould be wary of creaUng a situation in which a student is seemingly treated differently be<:aase of the student's political activity <>r beliefs," ibe statement warns. * * * Pamphlet Urges Citizens Fight Protest Classes An anonymous nyer asking citizens to band lofether to "stop the war protest classes at UCI" his been circulated throughout the Saddelback Valley today. lt asks interested citizens to a meeting tonight 1t 8 o'clock In O'Neill School in Mission Viejo. The flyer states: "The action taken by the faculty senate at UCI to permit students to withdraw from academic courses and substitute ln their stead 'alternative ' courses on war protest is tp say the le~ ouLrageous." It conUnuea to aay that the taxpayers have a right to apect their ftmds Io be spent on education that will be "devoted to that purpo9e." It defines the goal of "true education" to transmit accumulated Wi9dom and tnawledge of our civilization and heritage and to !rain them to approach every problem m a l<>gtcally orderly manner. It says "the faculty senate ha1 perverted and distorted the university by making It a launching pad for political protests and a hot house for breeding irresponsible revolutionaries." It continues, saying that It protests the "expropriation <>f our c1mpu.!! by the despoilers of education." Drug Symposium Set Thurs da y "Dniga and the Stoned Ap" Is the tit.le ot a lhm.aeaion symposium on drugs sponsortd by lhe Newport-Mesa School District and the Orange CoUnty Evenlng Schools. Held Thursdays from ~:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. •\ the Costa Mesa High School Lyctum. the at:Mlons are open to the public. They are conducted by Richard Sturges, advisor on dru1s to the county Board of Education. Topics set for discussion by Sturges include Phyalok>gjcally -the Brain Drain JmpllcaOon, 1otoralty -Is Society Going to PM? and The. Teacher and the Taut Society. ' 'Build Better Image' her if sbe disobeyed him and once shot her husband threatened often to kill her if she diJobyed him and <>nee shot her with an arrow as she held 1 can of pineapple juice as a target. Arizo11a Miss Captures Under cross-examination by Augustine she said she knew Dr. Slocum couldn't hurt her when he wli in jail alter a 1961 shootout with Santa Ana police and last year, when he was committed for psychl.atrlc care. Crown; Beacl1 Gu·l 4th "Why dldli't you go to the po Ji c • then?" he shot back. Special to tbe DAILY PILOT MOBILE, Ala. -Rhonda Kay Martin of Huntington Beach was crowned by a classmate at Mll'ina High School Wednesday nlght but failed to succeed her u the 1970 America's Junior MW. CkJtgotog t!Ueholder Jack.le Benlngton crowned Miss Martin who represented Callfornla as fourth runnerup ln the dazz1lna: pqeant in which singer Jimmie Rodgers was host. Blonde, gray-eyed K1ren Stenwell, 18, of Phoeni1, Ariz., won top hanors, a $10,00> scholantilp and pledged to build a bettu image of American youth. "I'm goina: to try to represent youth in a positive way. 'Ibere have bttn so many demonstrations. I would like to reprtsent the better aide · of youth," Mias Stenwell declared. Kmn is one of Iii: bloode sisters In a famlly tbat bu no boy~ The pageant finals were nationally televised. "I wasn't nervous when they were naming the winners because I didn't think it would be me," she said. "I was shocked when they picked me. I don 't think I realize it even now." Miss Connecticut, Carol Elizabeth Buckland, 17, of Fanning1on. ·was first runnerup; and Laura Elaine Boyette, 18, of Jackson, Miss., second runnerup. Only two girls emerged as double winners in the three rounds o f preliminary judging. They were Arimna's Junior Miss. Karen Stenwall, and Califo rnia's Miss Martyn. Both are blondes. Miss Stenwall was awarded first place in youth fitness and also was picked for scho larship achievement in Sunday's round. Mis! Martyn took fir st place in youth fitness Saturday and talent presentation Sunday. "He said no matter where I went he would arrange to have me killed." ' One or the mQst dramaUc moments came early when Enright asked Mrs Slocum if her husband coached her i~ whit to say if m:iyone ever asked what happened to babt Cynthia. Few spectators cauld see It. but an expression of vengeful fury crossed the normally impassive surgean's face and his eyes widened perceptibly as he glared at his wife on the stand. After a long, tense pause -in which the defendant r'ela:r.ed suihuy -she burst into tears. And then she began testifying. Dr. Slocum sat with half-closed eyes occasionally drumming on the table with the bqllet.mangled fingers of hts right hand. She said Cynthia was taken to their ~anta Ana office aft.er becoming severely ill in 1964 and a !)>ma! tap administered by Dr. Slocum there showed blood in- dicating brain damage. Newport Council Votes $6,000 for R escue Boat "What did you do?" Augustine asked. ·•1 told my husband she needed medical care." "What did he do ?" "He gav e her medication ••. 1 don 't jection." Augustine then traced the history or events leading to the mys terious bags he brooght Mme and the remains found March 26 after the disconnected freeze r was ~ken from the Slocums' Mesa Verde home. /t.n emergtncy expenditure of up to ''8,000 has been appl'Opriated by the Newport Beich City Coullcil to replace 1 engines ln the lifeguard rescue boat "Se• Watch " t · r · Marine Safety Director Robert Reed said today crack.! are beginning to develop in the blocks of the two engines and now, heading into the summer, he thinks the engines must ht replaced. Reed spoke of the necessity of having rescue boats In running order. One boat is equivalent to 30 lifeguards. he said, and tacb lifeguard is paid $1,600 per summer. "If we didn't have boats we'd have to have gangs of cro:ss country men Rodda Rejoins OCJC Trustees George Rodda, Jr., an Orange Coast Junior College District trustee who resigned his post in February was reap- pointed to the board Wednesday night after a ruling from county coonsel. Rodda of 949 Goldenrod Ave .. Corona del Mar resigned arter he was appointed to the Commission on Legislation o( the American Association of Junior Colleges. He said he felt simultaneous service on both bodies might constitute a confilct of interest. However, Iryne C. Black, deputy coun· ty counsel said there wou ld be no conflict of interest If Rodda chose to fill both post.o. "Conflicts of interest normally can- templ1te a connlct in financial interest, and the common law doctrine of in- compaUbllity of office would not appear to have any application to t h e circumstances in this case," she stated. Rodd• said ht would serve. The riv~ man juni<>r college board is at full strength once 111in. President Gives Medals of Honor WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon said today at a 1t1edal of llonor ceremony that the Amer!Can people "will look back" at the Vietnam :war in the future and honor the conlributictns of the men who are fl&hting it. ne president presenttd the Med•l or llonor, the nation's highest award for a:1U1ntry. to 12 serv~emen at a cere· mony in the White House east room. The Vietnam War, the President said, la "many Umes not understood •ltd Mt 11.1pported by some In this country." t.o m1k.e the mass rescues. Then they'd be committed and they dori"l have radios in their hats to call them hick," he liaid. "Sea Watch" is the city's original lifeguard rescue boat. Tbt city w,v bas three. The deteriorating engi\-,es have been run 6,000 hours Since 196-4. The engines have served very well and to replace l.'lem with the same model engine would cost $5,565, Reed said. He also is looking into diesel engines at the suggestion or City Councilman Lin<bley Parsans. ~esel fuel is cheaper than gasoline and makes for I o n g e r engine life but it is questionable at this point whether the heavier. larger diesel, engines can be used on the ZS.foot boat, Reed said. "DlcM't you ask where the baby was?" •·1 was very upset. Mr. Augustine." "Wouldn't it strike you as unusual for a doctor to treat a · child. then' come heme with It in tWo baas?". he pressed. There was a cool pause. "Not my hu.11band. This one is very sadistic.'' Various other testimony during th e .d.ernoon involved marital problems and Dr. Slocum's coolness toward her. Augustine charged .!lbe didn't want the third child, also accused her or cutting up Cynthia's body and putt.Ing it in the freeie:r while Dr. Slocum was away performing the suraery wh ich won him a wi,de following in Orange Ciunty. "No sir, J dld n9t," she rtplied firmly. 1 nflale your Com forl8 DEFLATE Your Budget with IOUffeau Broodloom ~ by rJJJ'f-.n VI•. -·-... 'P-U V.rtn a rtorieus ~ictory in the "battle el the bwfret by • tn!ati.rtJ yourself to a rreat m., bto.dloam, •• TOUFEEAUb)'Karutaa. You would npect Kamtan-theftnellJl81Dfl in carpet llNi nq raaltiON-to ereat. a 1hq that "'" rnon ooloduJ. man ucitinr, ~more lnilh. Touft"eaa Ur all of that and m.or. with hudy mui~ lon1nyJon pileyarrna. ~in fabW.oua multi~ calonol bteathtakbtl brilliallC9 anii Kan.-loc wovtA. But what a happy dilcoYety that the C(ll:t of thia eenaationallhalitonly $1 1.95 1q.yd. Toud1au itallO GDllflablf mor.a"'8• will& a hRV)'·Motltd malchinJ /rin11. 9' x 12' $110.00 LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPI) - A 77-year<>ld woman, who apparently sptnt hours burled beneath rubble of her tomado-rip- ped borne e~ller thl1 week; died Wednes. day, becoming the 2lst fatality of the storm. Aulhorilies said Mrs. B e 11 e Hatch, trapped when the tornado struck her home Monday night, died in the Reese Air Force Bise hospital of pneumonia. They said she had been exposed to strong winds and rains that followed the storm that caused Jn estimated $102 million damage, left 10,000 homeless and injured another 1,000. Police and Civil Defense authorities dl$eovered a 56-year-old man buried benea~h the rubble or a bullding Wed· nesday. Larry Duncan was reported in critical condition with undetennined in· juries. "We ha ve completed the door to door, block by block canvass of the disaster area," sald Lubbock Civil Defense Dirt:c· tor Bill Payne. "Surprisingly and fortunately we found no additional casualties or injuries" since Duncan. Mayor James Granberey said property damage reached $102 million and LuJ>. bock businesses would lase al least that.- much. Dock Awnin gs Plea Rejected A proposal by Thomas F. J ones of Co- rona rel Mar to market dock o ~•ings has been unanimoosly rejected by New· port Beach city councilmen. Councilmen said erection of the awn- ings to provide shaded areas at the end of private pier!, as J o n e s proposed. would obstruct the view or the harbor or , adjacent residen~ and persons who use street ends for vantage points. The city's harbor permit policy per- mits no superstructure on piers except , safety railings. ..i County Gives Okay To Work in Newport ., Agreements for improveJlleot of Jam- boree Road and 32nd Street in Newport · Beach under the county's Arterial Highway Financing Program have been approved by the Orange County Boai'4 <>f Supervisors. The Jamboree Road project will cost $.160,000 to be shared equall y by the city and county, and the 32nd Street; profram, $120,000, also shared equally, · I ~ YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL fo r •11 t•p•rt ct r pet coni ull111t who wlll Y•w• homo with ,.,.,,1,, witloout 111y oblit1lio11 to youl • Arson Suspected H.J .GARRETf fURNITURE Arson Is suspected !ft a Wednesday nl&ht La Palma rire which destroyed an automoblle and a two-car garage al 1 tract home <>wned by Holstein Enterprl"' ol Costa Mesa. P~OFESSIONAL 2215 HAR BOR BLVD. Orange Counly Fite Department I•· Opn Moo. n .... ' Fri. Ins. COST vtsllga!On said the blaze. which did INTER IOR DES IGNERS A MESA, CALIF. not damage the unoccupied rtsldtnce l~::============::::::====~~~~~~~~~~~~~6~~6~·;0l~7~S~~~~[ at 8051 Bluebird Line, did an estimated .... f&,500 damage • ' • Costa Mesa '-l'oday'• Final N.Y. Stoeks voe.. 6'3, NO .. , , 5, 3 SECTl~S. 38 PAGES ORANGE couNir. 'CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS Slocum's Wife Testifies OA ll Y PILOT,.,_,. W JtJWI Vlltml MASKED FIREMAN MOPS UP STUBBORN TRUCK FIRE Delivery Van· Blazes Down Coast Highway NHr S..n Clemantt ParcelTruck With ·Ammo Aboard Erupts in· Flames . . A costly, damaging blau erupted in llht carg1> compartment o( a United Parcel Service truck Just outside of San Clemente today, ruining .all but a few ti. the scores ol Jtems destined for customers in the city. TM cargo, jncluding iseveral boxes of Jive ammunition. began smouldering as driver George Adam NicholS<Nl, 50, of Santa Ana was heading 30Uth on Pacific Coast Highway in Dana Point. Nicholson told California highway patrolmen that he thought he smelled ~moke at that point, but kept driving ltOUth aloog the Capistrano Beach Palisades. The van, filled to the brim with long- 11waited packages, burst into flame about 11 , mile upcoast from Poche Beach at about 9 a.m. Volunteers from the Doheny County l"ire Department station arrived and spent nearly two hours gouging ou t ind wetting down the smouldering .cargo. Nocn of the dangerous ammunition was thought to have gone off in the fire. Pa'.trolmen !IOl.ed boxes of matches in the center of the stack: of packages. All but a few ol the bundles were destroyed. As firemen arrived at the scene they were able to yank about a dozen small boxes from the dark olive-brown truck before they burned. No estimates of damage had been calculated-by late this morning. The cause of the fire was still under investigation. Nicholson told patrolmen the load was stacked into the van by a graveyard shift at his headquarters. Speculation was that a lighted cigarette accidentally dropped in the middle of tht! load could h8.ve ca\IMld the delayed blaze. Ex~Newport Mayo1· Pleads For City Shore Control Special to the DAILY PILOT SACRAMENTO -A plea to use the in· timate knowledge city governments ha ve of local condiUons · and not transfer full shoreline control to the state was made before an Assembly committee Wednes- day night by former Newport Beach Mayor Doreen Marshall. Mrs. Marshall was the only speaker from Orange County in a hearing on shoreline control bills before the Assem- bly Committee on Natural ReSOurtes and Conservation. The hearing was atill going Rodda Rejoins OCJC Trustees George Rodda,. Jr .. an Orange Coast .Junior College Di~ttict trustee who resigned liis post in February •as reap- poi.nlt!CI to the boord Wednesday night after a ruling trom county COLDlsel. .Rodda ol 949 ·Goldenrod Ave., C.Orona del Mar resigned after he was appointed lo the Commisskm 00 LegislaUon or the American Association of Junior Colleges. He said he felt simultaneous service on both bodies might constitute 1,cooflict of interest. However, lryne C. Black, deputy coun· ty counsel said there would be no conflict or intere.st if Rodda cho.se to fJtl bo4h posts. "Conflicts or Interest normally COO· template a conflict in fin ancial interest, And the common law doctrine of In- compa tibility ol office would not appear to have any application to t h 11: circumstances in lhis case," she stated . Rodda said he would serve . The fivf'· man junior college boird i~ at full strrnglh onct again. beyond JI p.m. when a delegation of four from Newport Beach left. In her testimony, Mrs. Marshall said : •·1 sense •.• there is an apparent al· titude on the part of legislators: that local government has failed to do an adequate job of planning and administering the development of the shoreline. Although the pest record of local government leaves much -to be desired, l think the same criticiam can be fairly made of the federal and state government. , "The important thing is thal we not waste our energies in a palntleM discus· sion about the mistakes of the past .•. I can assure you that local officials are re- sponding to the same wave of public opinion concerning the preservation and enhancement of the environment that you feel •n Sacramento." She said city goverpments are in com· plete accord with the general' goals of.the bills and recognize. that there will have to be a reglonalapproacb. But. she said. city offtcials• believe inl· tial bas.le planning should be done by each city and county which haa shore· line territory within its botJadaries. The approach they support is embodied in the bill of Assemblyman Pete Wilson (R.San Diego). lt requires that each city prepare a coastal element as ,part Q( Its general plan, then to be pulled !Ogether by re- gK>nal agencief,1 insteld of-transferring the entire planning process at the outSt?t to the regional agency. Eight members of the Assembly con1- mittl'e '<''ere present Wednesday nigh! in- cluding George Mllias (R·Los GatO.'i), chairman of the committee, and Alan Sieroty t D·Los Angeles), author o( two other billll. Wilson is not a member of Lhe commiUefl. ( Lawyer Reveals· Her Call Abo~t Baby By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tllt Delly P'llltt 11111 Heavily intoxicated, the wife of a surgeon accused ol the dismembennent death of a baby daughter slz years ago telephoned hfs attorney one night many months ago and said : Cynthia ls in the freezer . . Paul Augustine Jr .. who Is defending Dr. Wesley G. Slocum , 44, in his preliminary hearing on a murder charge, dismissed it as an alcoholic hallucination. He made t.be surprise discl06Ure shortly before noon, as the hearing entered ill second day In Harbor Judicial District Court. The couple's other tw9 daughters were also told, then Mrs. Slocwn retracted tile tale, she testified. "Isn't it .true that I told you to lay off the sauce and commit yourself for treatment ... that I dismissed you rather flippantly?" Augustine said in Cf9SS·ex- aminatioo. ' "Yes," replied .Mrs. Marian Slocum. 45, who wore dark glasses. a sacred medal around her neck and a visibly unhealed facial fracture from a beating $ree years ago. Judge William Christensen intervened after Augustine repeated the story or the l:Stzarre call. "We've been over th.is about three limes ." he admonished. Augustine said he simply wanted no one l:i be left "'ith the impressioo th8t he had actual knowledge or the body in the freeier. Mrs. Slocum testified Wednesday that the once-prominent surgeon Is a jigsaw puule personality in which 20 year's' (See SLOCUM, P11e Zl Mesa Mayor Urges Halt On Bay Deal Continental -Gets County Flight Ok Growing doubts in recent months loday led Costa Mesa Mayor Rqbert M. Wilson lo urge complet.e stoppage of any land swap between Orange County and the Irvine Company until critical questions are answered. "There are just too many," declared the· candidate for I the Filth District Orange County supervisor's chair in rnaking fiis new ::.{and known. "Let's forget everything that has gone on before and start over," he said, listing five specific points he believes. must be explained before the controversial trade continues. He explained thein tlflil -Way : -Just exactly what 'Is' the legal status of North Star Beach · and North !tar Road. -What ls the legal status or Back Bay Drive, which tmJchts the tidelands in some 13 or 14 points. The Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), meeting in Washington, D.C., Wednesday, granted Continental Airlines authority lo make fllghLs from Orange County Airport to the Pacific Northwest. The route request was granted despite Orange County government Opposition. Full word on bow often Continental wouki make flighLs and whether they would be direct to Seattle and Port.land or involve stopovers was not immediately available. However , report.! from Washington saJd Continental was selected to become a "new satellite airport specialist," also making connec.Ung flights to th. e northWest,· from ()!Jtario, ~' Beach ,.d' ~ .~JIUroank ,lltpdrts in ...u.em Collfomla"11<1 Oakland and San Jost alrports in northern CalliQmla. Ro.rt? applicaUons of Air CAlifornia, United. NortJnvesl. Branifl. Delta, Na· lional and Aluk'a airlines were denied. The CAB also authm-Ued Air Weat lo ny non·stop between Los Angelea and San Francisco to the northwest. cities and Western Airlines to fly non·stop between San Diego and Portland and Seattle-Tacoma. Ron ·Chandler, assistant to Orange County . Aviation Director Rob er t Bresnahan, said his knowledge of what had been granted. was 11 m i t e d • Bresnahan, Supervisor William Phillips and a member of the County Counsel's office were not yet returned from the hearing in Washington. ·Chandler said Continental had several allernative route applicationi and ·he did not koow which one bad been adM The county B<>ar4 oi 8U,m,lliiftf.1>oor. lion wu, hoWever, there nnould bt no addilional illghts from Ille olrport. "Our ipaee it very Jimjted at the airfort and with the aircraft DOW sttua\ion IS It ls "''re boiding back/1 etiandlcr said for county government. -From an ecologicaJ standpoint, just exactly what is the significance of the Back Bay? GWC Strike Plan Fails -How can the waters be properly channelled to prevent stagnation and pollution if development is allowed to _proceed and, further, is another opening to the ocean needed to allow for this tidal change~ As VCI Protest Goes On -The Back Bay is the collection area of some 145 square miles of wate rshed and have any studies concerning thi~ runoff been prepared to show how this can be taken care of in the future? Mayor Wilson also mentioned the Salt Creek controversy. "l tl1ink that one (such controversy) i~ enough, so until the facb are in, no trade or negotiations should be made," he declared. Abortion Clinic Do ctor Arrested An obstetrician, who was arrested twice at his West Los Angeles clinic on charges of performing illega l abortions , was arrested again Wednesday, this time in Santa Ana. "' Santa Ana police sa id they arrested Dr. John Shriver Gwynne, 28, at his newly~pened Santa Ana clinic at 1856 W. 17th St., in Santa Ana. Police allege when lhey made the af. ternoon arrest Or. Gwynn had completed one abortion, was performing another and had yet a third woma n waiting, Gwynn, prior to his West Los Angeles arrests, had publicly announced his in· tention to perform abortions free of charge. He has indicated plait.! to chal· lenge Calilornia's abortion law. Student war protest activities continued today at UC Irvine and Orange Coast College wh.ile student strike efforts at Golden West College fa]tered. Students at UCI '"'ere continuing leafleting and community education ef- forts and had scheduled a noon rally and mass meeting at 8 p.m. At OCC, students also continued their program of contacting c om m u n i t y members to advise residents of their position in opposition to the Indochina war. A series of four leach-in.s were slated today In the campus' Free Speech area. The sessions, led by college instructors would be open to all in· terested students. A move to institute a student strike at the Golden West College campus in Huntington Beach (ailed Wednesday for Jack of support. Activists from the GWC Non.Violence Strike Committee urged the class boycott "to redirect the aUentiot1 of this educa· tional community towards what • felt to be the truly important issues of our society." But though they are united in protest, the students who rallied at . noon in the free speech area showed clearly that they are divided in the means of demonstrating it most effectively. Only 10 said they would go along with the idea. "Going on strike will only produce * * * animosity r'atber than sympaUQ-.-arJtJld one student. ''Oiscootinuinc our edbrabm "'on ·1 help anything either." llis sentiments were echoed by polib('a1 science teacbu Mar~t Holtrmt • urged the gathering to tum lbtir euts pu to a more productiff end. "You cannot say ·we're oo Itri.kt' and get the communHy behind )"OU. You're not the Teamsters, who an gel awsy with It. When you say' 'I'm on strike' the image you project is 'there's a kid who's going to throw a. rock," Texan Pays 540,000 For Churchill Work NEW YORK {UPI) -A Texan, bidding by closed-circuit television from Houston, paid a. record $40,000 for a painting by Sir Winston Churchill at a New York auction Wednesday night. The painting, 24 by 29 lnches, wu titled "The Harbor at Cannts" and port.rayed fishing boats ,at the French Riviera resort It was p1jnted in the 1930'11 by Britain's wartime premier. The previous high for a Churchill pain- ting was $39.000 paid for a scene of Lake Como, Italy, in 1955. UCI Scho·ol Program Told Aldrich Outlines Alternative Education Choices By JOANNE REYNOWS "The (Senate) bu assured that all Of Kit ~ , ... I t.ff I I . . Guidelines for UC Irvine'• alternative regu ar courses wl 1 cmitinue: lhat education program wt_re 1Pe.Jled-odt\'toj ~den.ti . who ~ Wilk to add !llldiea~ 0[ day by Chancellor Danlel~Alilr • ' _.-. I . I ilim\<Cl•,te Intel.,! ·will be' •abt~ to • d.o · "!< ~ important 'lo · ~~1 00\,·llldl,thal~wlll •be;.t!llo. •f ·(Academic ~·~) .~ Ji!. ' ' ·~:; 'llle~::ui~~"ll'!l1.lllelr,~e<11Jles · suggested tluif ~ wort'. St I'-,\'1111 ~ lliteiel~ '. · campus should cea149f '41t1ng th ~ · "Contraty to public n.iiruif ~re . has • mainder of the Sprfn( Quarter, lf10," betn •PO li1le.ntlot1 io deprlWin,y 1Wdent the chancellor declared. of ICadcmlc rtllpoRslbOK1t ' Aldrich "On the contrary, .I.fie 1.Af.ademic stated. ~ Senate) ha~ recognlu:cf a c.rllical· situ&-(be guide lints tor alternative edUcatlon tion in which students· feel it imper;uive. Wert prepared _, the CommJtiet on to give attention to c'ertAtn lnexi~ble t4ucatlon'I Polt~y and the ~utiv~ issues, and, at lhc same.tllt\e, 'tt-conCb1ae· ~ Commit\~ ~~!f_t{le lrfine Divbion of their edU(1tion. 1 P.>-1,~ ~le. ' · ",,,_,•I "; , • ,f"t l. '· _,.. .. . , , I '! In a~ergency meetlftC Sunday, roembers Oc UCI aenate palled a eeven· part rtsolutlon outUnlni ' altematfv• · educatlon.~option* ror 'stµdtn~ .. -'The ~tudent mi)' rtcleve a. grade of Incomplete, wilbout -prejudice, upon request at a'ny ·\Jme up to the fine! examt.1atlon. The senate guidelines state this option . ~quires the approval of the Instructor. ''Students must be pas.ting the coutse at the time he req\.test.s a grade ol IncomplCte. :'P..1•ke-'up e~a~lna.Uons , may be taken at · ony 'ilfue mqtuelly Wfed upon by • (Sff UCM\Ul.:ts; l'tp: .Z) . . • OAIL Y P ILOT' Sleft ..... CALLED SADIST SURGEON Murder SusJMct Slocum Surfing Crown Captured by Son Of James Arness Special to lbe DAILY PILOT MELBOURNE, Australia -Ro 1 L Arnt:ss, lS.year-0ld son of • television gun.slinger Jamea Arness, Thursday night was declared surfing's chamP,ion of the world. Arness. a student at North Hollywood IDCh School, was almost speechless. After a long pause during the w<rkf champion trophy presentation, young Arness stammered, "Id like to say this is outta-sight. •. thanks everybody." Then Arness quickly hid behind one of the larger objects around, U.S. Team Manager Brennan "Hevs" MCCieiiand d. Laguna Beach. \·cucg Arness' father had even fewer -.i. ..._ bis son called him In North ~ lo,,g distance at 4 a.m. to tdihcll :i.. ..... "'"S.u. re stoked.-· the elder Arness -"'-a.-11 ~~ I.hat his father had ln· ~,,_. bim to surfing al a beach n ~ al President Nixoo"s San Otmcw borne. -Did and I st.ill go surfing together .t!moA. ~"el")· day and he )oves it too, .. Roil said. ''He'1 pretty good., too." RoU is scheduled to fly bome Sunday. One of his surfing ''buddies,'' tiny Hawaiian Sharon Webtr, 22, "'"Oil the women 's world crown after Thursday '• final at Skene's Creek, near Apollo Bay. Only ·61 inches tall, Sharon ';stole"' the title from former champion, Margo Godfrey of the. United Slates. "It hasn't really hit me, but I feel kind of all righl ," Sharon, an assistant al a HoRolulu health food store, said. She said shl> surfed up to four hours a day at beaches around Honolulu. The prtsident of the International Surf- ing Federation, Peruvian millionaire Eduardo Arena, said at the presentation of trophies that the surf for the men 's final on Wednesday was the best he had seen at any world championship. "It i,1·as "'Orth walling all this time for it," he sa id. Orange Coast Weather The north wind will blow but WI! won 't have snow -this breeze will heat things up along the coast Fri- day, with local temperatures in the 70"s and Inland readings up to ·93 degrees. INSIDE TODAY \V itlt tl1t dtath of G1Httra& Dillard, iht ·U.S •. has lost more general.1 i11 Vietnam than in <ttlU military ac'km oj tht last zao 11iarl ezctpt. for,..World Wor 11. . Pbgt 29. C•llfW!ll& t ('*l !llt u, 1 CHH"lttl JWJ C&n1k1 IS CrMI_. II OMtll Nellctl 11 O!Wft.. 11 (1111 ... 1.tl ,... ' lnt.rltlol,.,.nt M ,lflt~c• M-'1 ff-KfH U Mii L•~flrt " Mtnlttt Lit-11 M• fft Stnlct IJ ,,.... .. ,.., n MnlK Jl•tt ,_.;,,.,,., '"""' )I Jtet*"'I ,.... .., OrHttt c-ty 11 1yrwll Ptrlll' M I-It tl•tt llM-"'1•'1tett M-11 t~1911 II Tll••hn • .,. w .. t11tr • ¥tl!lfe Wt01 M w"""'-. """" l)oU W.11f N... ., I' • ~ • • f I • • 1 •- ----------- I OAllY PILOI -L T~, MO I~ 1970 'Pig for Me' Questioned From P .. e J SLOCUM HEARING ... · .. By'Defense Did Mbur Dewi\te League say on the d"Y aft<r he allegedly killed police offi.;e'r Nela:on Suscer "that's one pig for me"? •• Ul'I Tt ... Mlt dru& use: Injected vlolenef:. 5adism 111d haU~cJniUon Into the picture. ~klnl lacooJcaJJy durini "" ...... amloaU<11 by AlliUIU._ and ,Chltf Deputy Dlsmct AJtorney Jilnes G. Enright, she ~t.lried Dr. Slocum: 1 -0.sed 100 milligrams of benzedrine daily for 20 years. 1 -Envisioned people moving through walls and wa1 hounded by · feellna:s of persecution, hiding hoards of checks paid for me.dlcaJ care in boies, trunks and bedding. The aoculfld Black Panther's senior defenM Jiwyu today urged a Superior Coort jury to examine the asserted state- ment .. with the care and caution you must U5e and In the light of testimony which indicates that it is highly doubftul that Arthur League ever Aid any such thing." KAREN STENWALL OF PHOENIX CROWNED AME.RICA'S JUNIOR MISS IN ALABAMA FINALS Rhonda Martyn (left) of Huntln9ton Be1ch Makes It A1 Fer As Fin1I Round -severely beat their infant daughter Cynthia IJld took her to his Sanla Ana office in early 1914 after she died at home. "Did you see the b.aby 8iain?," uked Enright. Fro• Pqe l 'Build Better l11iage' "In bags,'' she replied tonelessly. "What did he do with them!" "Put tbem in the frttZer." Attcrney Robert Green raistd the ques. tion of the incriminatinis c:omm.ent which has been qucKed more than once by the prosecution as he neared the end or his final argument before the jury. He reminded the panel that prosecution witness RJcky Tice told a municipal court judge just two months after the shooting Jut June • of the Santa Ana patrolman that League had said nothing to him (Tice) in the days following the Sall:scer killing. UCI RULES ... student and instructor," accordin1 to the guidelines. -The atudent may drop the course, without prejudice, at any time up to the final examination. The policy comin!ttee ruled this action requires approval o! the dean of the school in which the class Js offered. -1be student may Wle the Pass/Not Pass option in any course on a credlt·by. examination basis. Arizo11a Miss Captures Crown; Beach Girl 4th "Did you ask the doctor about the bags?" ''No. I never looked In the freezer agaln," said Mr1. Slocum, who the defense contend! pt'Jt Ulem there and fought tooth and nail for sl.x years against anyone a:oln1 near the appliance and lt.s grisly Rcret. Mrs. Slocum aald she became. an alcoholic In the years since and seemed vague on many questions asked by Augustine. "League said nothing like that,'" Green argued, "and I must remind you that you are required to view such testimony 'v!Ut extreme caution when you retire from this courtroom to review the evidence." Green also aaked the jury to bear in mind the "many irregularities"' of key tosthnony ln the League trial and be partjcularly stressed that there was no evidence to conclusively prove that the 2l·year-old defendant had ever lelt the neighborhood garqe where he spent the ni~ to go out and shoot officer Sasscer. · He will be followed In final arguments by chief prosecutor Everett Dickey whose summation will immediately precede the retirement of the jury for consideration or its verdict. League is accused or shooting officer Sasscer bi the chest shortly after tbe patrolman demanded ldehUfJcation from the Black Panther and a companlon. This actlou also requires the approval of the dean of the school in whlch the class is offered. -Tbe student may continue courses in the normal way, aubject to the normal requimnent.s and grades. Obviously, normal coriUnuation of clas.5eS needs no special guidelines. -Inltructors may offer students an ~ to drop preaent c1a..., and to enroll Jn Altematzye Education 199 or.a . 'l'hl4 option, the guideline.s lllat<, re· quires the approval of the instructor, the department cbalnnan and the dean of the 5CbooJ. in which the clau is ollerod. Special to the DAILY PILO'T MOBILE, Ala. -Rhonda Kay Martin ol Huntington B.each was crowned by a classmate at Marina High School Wednesday night but raHed to succeed her as the 1971J America's Junior Miss. Outgoing ~tleholder Jackie Benington crowned Miss Martin who represented CaUfornia aa fourth runnernp in the danllng pageant in which singer Jimmie Rodgers was host. Blonde, gray.eyed Karen Stenwell, 18, of PhoeniI, Arlt., won top honors. a $t0,000 ocbolanhip and pledged to build a better image of American youth. "I'm going to try to npresent youth in a posiUve way. 'Jbere have been so many demonstrations. I would like to re.present the better side of youth," Miu stenwell declared. Karen ii one of six· bloade sisters in a family that ha.s 09 hors. The pageant finals were nationally televised. "I wasn·t nervous when they were namin g the winners because I didn't think it would be me ," she said. "I was shocked when they picked me. I don 't U1ink I realize it even now." ~liss Connecticut, Carol Eliiabeth Buckland, 17, of Farmington, was first ruMerup: and Laura Elaine Boyette, 18. of Jackson, Miss., second runnerup. Only lv•o girls emerged as double v.•inners in the three rounds o f preliminary judging. They were Arizona 's Junior ~iss. Karen Steny,·all, and California's ~1 i s s hfartyn. Both are blondes. Miss ·Stenwall was awarded first place ln youth fitness and al.so was picked for scholarship achievement in Sunday's round . Miss Martyn took first place in youth fitness Saturday and talent presentation Sunday. "Have you had any medlcaUon today?" "No," .she n!plled, leadin1 'hlm to ask when she last took any. "I had some. this morning . . . rm sorry, I forgot," she said, el}Jlaining it was a tranquiUzer prtscribed for her. Augustine asked that she be given none for today's hearing. her if she disobeyed him and once shot her husband threatened often to kill her if s.iie d1.9obyed. him and once !bot her with an arrow as she held a can of pineapple juice as a target. Under cross-e:zamination by Augustine, she said she knew Dr. Slocum couldn't hurt her when he was in jail after a 1966 shootout wilh Santa Ana police and last year when he waa: CO!l)roitte.d for psychiatric care. "Why didn't you go to the po 11 c e then?" he shot back. "He said no matter where I went, he would arrange to have me killed .~' Drug Symposium Set Thursday "Drugs and the Stoned Age'' Is the tiUe of a three-ussion aymposium on drugs spona:ored . by the Newport.Mesa School District ao4 'Ille ~· County Evening Schoola:. Enrollment in alte.rnaUve education also requ.lrea written request to the department chainnan stating proposed cOntent of· the. course. "All Individual 6tud.les courses carry full Unlvers.lty credit toward graduation unit rt· quirements. However, their status for U5e in 1atldactlon of the specific ft. quirementa of tndl-al deparlmtnl! 11 to be determined by the individual departments," the guidelines state. -Imtructon may award a grade of Pau to all atudents who request it, Newport Co1:f n<.;il Votes $6,000 for Rescue Boat One or the most dramatic moments came early when Enright asked Mrs. Slocum If her husband coached her in \vhat to say if anyone ever asked what happened to baby Cynthia . Few spectators could see it, but an expression of vengeful fury crossed the normally impal'lve surgeon 's face and his eyes widened perceptibly as he glared at his wife on the stand. Held Thursdays from S:30 p.m. ta 5,311 p.m. 1t lhe Costa M'esa HJgb School Lyceum, the,~. iie1 OPen to the public. They·~ .....itidod·by RJchan! Sturges. adVi!$of on drugsr to the county Board of Education. Topics set for disclfWon by Sturges Include Physiologlc{llly ..-... the Brain Drain Implication, MoraDy -la: Society Going to Pot? and The Teacher and the Taut Society. MCAS Annex Action Delayed As anticjpated. the Local Agency Fonnation Commission (LAFC) Wed- nesday postponfd action on two COO· flicting aMea:ations which include the 1.568-acte ~larine Corps Air Stat.ion in Santa Ana. Consideration was delayed to July 8 at the request of !Ith Naval District Commandant J . W. \Villlams Jr. of San Diego. • Both Santa Ana and Tustin have moved to annex the Navy facility, a helicopter training base. In 1967. the two cities made similar attempts lo Lake over the property but the LAFC denied the request when the Navy objected. The Orange. County Airport Com· mission had also requested a delay in the proposed mergers for "further 6tudy." DAILY PILOT OJ!AHGI!! COAST l'UlllMilNG COMl".\H'I' ••b•rt N. WeM l"rnldtnl INI l'\lllllltw J1c• I!:. Curley Tho,.,,11 Ktt•ll E••IO~ lhomtt A. M~r,.hin• Ct•te M ... Offlct J)O W11t l1y :itr11I M1 llin9 Addr111: P.O. 11~ IS•O, f1'2' Otller Offlc" """'""'' 1t1oC:I>: nn wn1 11111t1 ttv!t¥1...i ltV11111 lttd•: m ,._, ..,.,.,...,. Mlll'll"'OIQ!o ltltll! 17171 IUCll l>1,1l-1tl i..,~ '""""le; llOJ NM"lft l!I Ctll'llM A .. I A .. and rqulatlooa llmltlni u,. of the Pus • An emeraeney expenditure ol up to ~-.-. wlivod. 911poo Jw -apj>rilptlited by fhe Tile guldeJlnq 1tato that discreUm Newport Beach City Council to r<place In ...icnti!& ...-!es la left to the Jn. :r=-• :lDltiio:tOn are alic> rem~ _engines in the lifeguard rtscue boat ... 'i'1-'#'oi,.· govunfii!'t tJ~· , 1 •"'Sea. _Watch.'.' • ; . · amln&ll""' ·In uncJersradil&~ . . M<rlot Safety Director Robert Reed whldi s,tate that the tests can lie <ml . said today cracks tire beg!Ming. to only with aPproval of the educational develop in the blocks of the two engines policy comnuttee and the department and now, heading into the summer, he involved. thinks the engines .mUst be replaced. '1'he iftltructor 1houJd be wary of Reed apoke of the necessity of having creating. a situation In-which a student Te9CUe boats In running order. One boat is seemingly tr~ated differently .because is equivalent to 30 Jifeguar~. he said, of the students political activity or and each lifeguard is paid $1 600 per beliefs," the ~tatement warns. summer, ' * * * Pamphl.et Urges Citizens Fig!it Prot;est Classes ArJ aoonymous fifer asking cttizem to band tOgethtr.to "stop the war protest classes at UCI" has been circulated throughout tile·Saddelback Valley today. It asks· interested cititens to a meeUQg tonight at 8 o'clock in O'Neill School in Mission Viejo. The flyer states : "The action taken by the faculty senate at UCI to permit students to 'Withdraw from acadmiic courses and substitute in their stead 'alternative' courses on war protest ls to say the least outrageous." It contiml,. to ·say that the tupayera have a right 1o eipect their funds to be spent on . educ.aUm that will be "devoted to that purpo!e." It defines the goal of "true educatk>n" to transmit accumulated wi.9dom and knowledge ·or our civilization and heritage and to train them to approach every problem in a logically orderly manner. It says "the faculty senate. has perverted and distorted the unlvtrsity by making It a launching pad for political protests and a hot house for breedJn1 irresponsible revolutionaries." It continues, saying that it protests the "expropriation or our campus by the despoilers of educ&tion. 1' Arson Suspected In La Pahna Fire Arson is suspecled h1 a Wednesday ni1ht La Palma fire which destroyed an automOblle and a two-car 1arqe at a tract home owned by Holstein Enterprises of Costa Mesa. "If we didn't have boats we'd have. to have gangs of cross country men Route Fighters COllect 11,000 Petition Names Harbor Area Freeway Fighters said today they have collected almost 11,000 signatures on pelitioll3 calling for the deleUon ol Pacific Coast freeway through Newport Beach from the state freeway plan. A gathering will be held Friday morn· Ing 10 collect the. many petitions i.1111 out. Pet!Uon circulators have been told to bring their petitions to the south clubhouse of Bayside Villa1e Trailer Park at 7:30 .a.m. Manhall Duffield, acting chairman of the Freeway Fighters, said only about 20 percent of the petitions are in with 80 percent st.Ill oul He said he doesn't ezpect all peutions to be returned as some people took more Utan they possibly could get llgnen to fill. Duffield said he js not goin& to try to represent that there might not be JOme duplications on petiUons. "It's 1et· ling too burdensome to check," he laid. He said the pile or petitions \\'iii be carried to Sacramento and W8!h.ington, D.C., and "we'll let anybody who wants to Inspect It." Salaries Hike Plan Supported to make the mass rescues. Then they'd be committed and they don 't have radios in their hats to call them back," he salch ''Sea Watch '' is the city's original lifeguard rescue boaL The ci.ty now has. thrtt. The deteriorating engfnes have been run 6,000 hours since 1964. The engines have served very well and to replace t:1em with the same model engine would cost $5.565, Reed said. Ile also is looking into diesel engines at lile suggestion of City Councilman Lindsley Parsons. Diesel fuel is cheaper than ga.soline and makes for I o n g e r engine life but it is questionable at !his point whether the heavier. larger diesel. engines can be used on the 28.foot boat, Reed said. After a long, teiue pause, -in which the defendant relaxed slighUy -she burst into tears. And then she began testifying. Dr. Slocum sat with half.closed eyes, occasionally drumming on the table with the bullet·mangled fingers of hJs rl&hr hand. She said Cynthia was taken to !heir Santa Ana office after becoming severely ill in 1964 and a spinal tap administered by Or. Slocum !here showed blood ID· dicallng brain damage. "What did you do?" Augustine asked. ·I told my husband she needed medical care." "What did he do'!" "He gave her medication •. , I don't ·know what kind. He prepared the in· jection." Augustine then traced the history of Inflate your Comfort• DEFLATE Your Budget with IOUff eO LJ Broadwom J araJJ&!Jj by --·-·--· ... Win a 1Iorious victory in the be.tile of the budcet bi· treating younelf to a grut W. broadloom. , • TOUFFEAUhyKuutan. You would espect Karuta-th1 5nnt n.IDl9 in carpet and rugfathiom-toft'Mte a abq that "Wumott mlorlul, moniexiliq,and moni !ni.h. Tou6~11u ia all of that and more with hardymu.i· long nylon pil• yams, •bin-dyed in {abulom muttl .. ·colors oC breathtakinrhri.lliance ud Kan.-toe WO'NA. :But what a h"PPY diacovery t.haot the eo1tcf lhil. 11ru.11tional1ha1i1only $11.95 mq.ycL T euflea.a i8 alao iwailobk 111 tJl'al ""' with Cl heovy.lf110Ucd matr:hint frintr. t' z 12· SI 10.00 event! leading to the rayster\ou1 bq:s • he brought home and the. remains found • March 26 after the disconnected. 1rtezel;' .. ... taken fflm u.e: SAonMni' Mill v~ homo. • "Dl<hl't you ask v.·here.lhe tMU;iy wu?" 111 was very uJiset, Mr. Auau.stine." ''Wouldn't lt alrtke you as unusual for a doctor to treat a child, then Come home with it ln two bap?'' he' pr~sed. I There was a cool pause. "Not my husband. This one i:i; very sadJstlc." Variow: other testimony during the <d..ernoon involved marital problems an<f. Dr. Slocum's coolness toward her. Augustine charged she didn 't want the third chil4, also accused her of cutting up Cynthja's body and putting lt in the freeter while Dr. Slocum was away performing the $Urgery whJch won bin\ a wide following in Orange County. "No sir, I did not," she replied firmly. Defense and prosecution today planned to question the ob!tetridan who handled Mrs. S~'s Dec. S, IMS delivery and postnatal care, wttb testimony wlndlnl up pasaibly OD Friday. Judge William Christensen will then evaluate the evldf.nce and ntle whether sufficient evidence exists to have Dr. Slocum's murder cue submltted for trial Jn Orange County Superior Court. Auausttne. predicted Wedneiday this ls a certainty in all capital cases and guessed it would be three months before such a triaJ could begin. Texas Tornado Victim Succumbs · LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPI) -A 77-yur-old woman, who apparently spent houra buried beneath rubble of her tornado-rip. ped home earlier this week, dJed Wednm· day, becoming the 21st fatality of the storm. .,.. Authorities said Mr!. B e 11 e Hatch, trapped when the tornado struck her home Monday rtight, dJed in the Reese Air Force Base hospilal of pneumonia. They said she had been exposed to: strong winds and rains that followed: the storm that caused. an estimated.,' $102 million damage, left 10,000 homele5s and injured another 1,000. Police and Ci\'il Defense authoriiles , discovered a 56--year.<Jld man buried beneath the rubble of a building Wed· nesday. Larry Duncan wa5 reported in critical condition with undetermined in- juries. ''We have completed the door to door, block by block can\'ass of the disaster ~ area," said Lubbock Civil De.Iense Dinc· tor Bill Payne. "Surprisingly and fortunately we found no additional • casualties or injuries" since Duncan. ~ County Gives Okay .,. ., To Work in Newport .. Agreements for improve'l'llent 0£ Jam: boree Road and 32nd Street in Newport';" Beach under the county's Arterial ~· Highway Financing Program have been approved by the Orange County Board ,. of Supervisors. ., The Jamboree Road proje<:t will cost $160,000 to be shared equally by the city and county, and the 32nd Street program, $120,000, also shared equally. I " ' • IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL' -:, •••·0215 for '" ••pt rt <••p•f <0"1ull1nl ,,..~.will ,,,.,,, to 'f'OUt ho/llt •Ith 11mpl11 •;th1ut lftf oblig1tieft fo youl .. DAILY l'llOT. •llfl .W:.l(Jol 11 ~If 11111 "''~-. " ,.....i.r.u •1ny ••uot ....,. dtJ llt Ml'llf'911 t411'°"t tor l."'1fte 1"""-,._,,._, .. tdl, (OUI llla1. -lll'ltfWI ltoefl INI "'-1911t V1""'1. '""" Wl!1' ,..,. , .. ....., ..cm... Or..... CIHI l'Wlltlt"" ' '-" "'"'""' .,..,," ••• •t nu .,... .. , a.1t11-o '""'# Ni-I ltld!, llltl lll w.t .. , $1r .. 1. C-.lt Mt.w, T ... 11•••• f7141 ••2·•JJI c~ 1."'9t'tlt1 .. ,,2 . .s•11 C...1rltM, lt11. Or..... Cotn l"ullll11' ... C..-nJ. Nt -1...-1n. lllllllrOl- llll•lel """"' ~ .. _"''"""" '-'•lot ""'' .. ~ •it ....... .,odll -· fllllol.1111 .. _,.."'", ·-. Orange County Fire Department i.. vestJgaton said the blazt, which did not damaie. the unoccupied rtrldence at IOll Bluebird Lane , did an estimated $6,$00 dama1e. Syria Warns U.S. Support of a bill wbkb would raise the ularla ol Oranit Cowtcy supervloon from $15,000 to $17.SOO ·aMuaUy w11 votcecl In a ·to1egram d,lapal<hod Wt<!· ne!Jday by the Orange County Grand Jury. The jUl')I told Stal< S... James E. Whetmore (R-Oarden Grove) that his bill was becked becllust "this post Is a major office and the prea:ent salary is disproportionately low compartd to other county of(Jcials." H.J.GARRElT fURNITLJRE $tC9rtO < .......... '°ltl ti Ht-.-t llJclo ..... C•M -..., C.Fll-ia, hbM•l"llo! 11 ~r.,. UM-"'"' ty -II st.JO -ltlty1 11'1!1111rp ""tlMll-. U.• """t1'1\1, UNITED NATIONS (UP I) -S)Tia war~ today tha' U Wqhlngton cannot hold lsratl In check the Arab n•tlons will feel free to cut off oU supPUes to the Ulllled Statea. The tele1ram was 1i11"1ed '1y Grand Jury Foreman George B. Honold. former mayor of Garden Gro\'e. PROFESSIONAL IN TUJOR OESIGN!RS I 2!15 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA. CAL IF. 6~6·0 l7S --..,.---..._ __ _._....,... • • 1i .. ' • 1 <i>RANGE cou~. CAUFO~NIA'. YOL 63, NO. I IS, 3' SECTIONS, '40 PAGES ./. J HURSDAY, MAY 14,.-1970 -- Tedlly's Flillll .N.Y. Steeb TEN CENTS San Cle·mente Appeals for Toll-free Service By lllCHARD P. N~ Of ,,_ 0.llY f'li.t Sl•ff ·s!lff •Clemente would li).e better com· municalions with the out.side world - or . more eeooomicaJ at least. 1be city will ask the Public Utilities Commission to consider including San Cle-mente in an application. far ':toJI.free service between the Capistr..ano Valley and Leisure World, El Tar.o.and Mission Viejo: The' P.acific Telephone & Te.legra,ph Company has made application ·to the PUC for statewlde 'rate·hikes which in San Clemente ~ould incre:ase the basic cOst for a ·private 1Une from•S4.75 to $6.60 monthly and the cost of a business line from $9 to $12.80. John Gannon, local manaier for the phone company, ei:pl~. the company position to tbe councilmen, recently and they raised questions about··• ·btjter deal on toll calls from San Clemente. He said U the toll calls between Capls- trano Valley and the Leisure World area were eliminated it would also mean a toll reduction from 35 Cents to 20 cents on a call from San Clemente to Leisure World-Miss.ion Viejo. ~lmen would prefer no toll. A PtiC order to do away with aU llk:ent toll charges by the. eqd of next year would mean free calling aft.tr that be· tween Laguna.Beach and Capistraoo Val· ley but San Clemente would still have to pay 15 cents. In· explaln!ng 1he propoeed phone )'Ile changes, Gannon , called them an "ad· justment." COuncllman '11lomas O'Kee!e said, "It is a rtadjustmeot down to San Juan whereas bete in San Clemente any call uc~pt threeynµ~bers (prefii:ea) is substantial. It seems we're in a very high toll area." He rnenUoned brOad toll- free ser.vice on the Palos Verdes Penin- sula. · Gannon said It is true in Jnstances calls can be made .for one minute to the Eut Coast tor 40 cents .. He sald phone companies are trying to utilize equip- ment off hours by these incentiYes and said the same origlnaUng and ~· ating equipment is necessary whether the call is 100 or 1,0IXI miles. ' : He said also that the phone Company is looking into an "option service" with the rate based on where lndividUil cU5- tomerS want to call toll free -"a cus· tom built service." O'Keefe said, "What about this Paloi Verdes service; bow can we get that here?·" Gannon said, "I IWlpect they h.eve a wide-area ~ice." O!Keefe aaid, "I understand they (Palos Verdes) call here for no toll and we ·call there for S5 cent.s." CEiplalning this later, Gannon said that Palos Verdes service ls an experimental operation of General Telephone Company with the custom service · he bad men- (Se< PHONE!!, Pap I) Laguna CofC Assured Of City Fund Support Ooh, That's Sharp· ' An unidentified girl protestor at Denv.erJUniversity che;cks the sba,or ness of a Colorado National Guard bayonet as the guard{prevented people from returning rto ''Wood~tockiWest,''•a &hanty home· village on the campus. · Guidelines for ~C Irvine· Alternate Education-Told By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of "" O•llY P'lltl Sti ff Guidelioes for UC Irvine's alternative education program were spelled out to- di1 by Chancellor Daniel Aldrich. · ?.It is ·important to note that tbe- (i\'.tademic Senate) bas not in any way suggested that academic work oo this campus sbotlld cease during the re-- mainder of the Spring Quarter, 1970,"' the' cha~llor declared. . ' ':On the contrary, the . ·c:a.cademic Seoate) bas recognized a dilical situa- tion in which studenU..feel it imperative to give attention to certain ·1nescapible iSMJes, and, at tbe same time,1tcrcootinUt their educaiion. "The (Senate) has assured that all regular courses \viii continue ; that students who wish . t9 add studies of immediate interest will be able to do so, and that students will be a'ble, if they so desire, to modify their schedules in aceord with those interests. "Contrary to public rumor, there has J>een no intention to deprive any student of academic responsibility," Aldrich stated. · 'l'be guidelines for alternative education were prepared by the COmmittee on Educational Policy and lbe Executive Committee of the Irvine Division of lhe Academic Senate. In an emergency . met;ting Sunday, members of UCI senate p3s&ed a seven- part resolution · oUtlining •alternaUve (See·UCI RULES, Page .. I) Mail Truck Fire Ruins Packages ·Free Spee~h? Not for GI 'Protester ' ST AN FORD (.UPI) -Some demonstrators at Stanford University believe in free speech ::. .providing the speaker supports their philosophy. After several scheduled speakers fini&hed at a noon rally, it was announc· ed there would bt an "open mli:e" for anyone to have his way. Dave Bray, a 2$-year-old aalesman, took the microphone and ei:plained he waa a Vietnam veteran anq had ~ved •in Cambodia. - ''jYou kids may be.ruining your scbool 1and your lives by what you're do- A costly, damaging · blaie eru~ in ing •.•••. " ~ay stated. the cargo comparbl\ent <Jf a United . 'J'Wo stllden~ shouting obaceniti~s rUJhed ·to the mike, wrestled It ·from· · P.arcel Service· truck just outside (If . Bray and·thre:w 1t to the concrete. JStay ~w,alked calm:ly awayias .a near·fll hi . ~.~~:••,:;d'~ "!~>• ,,.,~~*~~,~~~-~hlBt.&'i!l.V ' for customers in the city~ · ~en ~1 .. ~ 'up a 1'~'mlke" they mean t it wu 'lfor construc~ve,...creaUvt nie car&o incluillng tteveral bouJ of ideas on ~ the war. Jive ammuniUon, lberan ·Slfiooldering as "It wi.t nOt freec:!om ~ the ~7 to.1pealc," explained the demonatra.tor. driver George-Af atD Nlcboleon, 50, oe refused to alve his name .. Santa Ana was beading 10uth on Pacific •-----------------------l Coast Highway in Dana Point. Nicholson told California highway patrolmen that he thought he smelled smoke at that point. but kept drivin( south along the Qipistrano Beach Palisades. The van, filled to· the brim with long· awaited packages, burst into flame about a mile upcoast from· Poche Beach at about 9 a:m. -. Volunteers from the Doheny County Fire Department station arrived and spent nearly two hours gouging out and wetting down· the smouldering cargo. None of the dangeroµs an;munition was , thought to have gone off in the fire. Palrobnen noted boi:es of matches in the center of the stack of packages. All but a few of the bundles were destroyed. As firemen arrived al the scene thev were able to yank about a dozen small boxes from the dark olive-brown truck before they burned. No estimates of damaj?e had been calculated by late this morning . The cause of the fire was still under lnvestigatibn. Nicholson told patrolmen the. load was stacked into the van by a graveyard shift at his t:eadquarters. Speculation was that a lia:bted ci~arette accidentally dropped in the middle of the load could have caused the delayed blaze. STOCK MARKET NEW YORK (AP) -The stbck market continued its steep decline early this af. ternoon in relatively restrained trading. (See quotations, Pages 26-27). Declines outnumbered advances by eight to one among issues traded on the New York Stock Exchange. . . R(!duced Phone Charges Seen After PUC Ruling A California Pub~c Utilities Com· miS&ion ruling ei:pected next week will pave the way for reducing phone charges between Laguna Beach and tbe Laguna Hills-Mission Viejo-El Toro area, ac- cording to planning commissioner Robert Hastings, former phone company ex- ecutive . The recently enlarged Santa Ana base Ditectors Picked · By Civic League Member! of the Laguna Beach Civic League have unanimously elected a :slate of_ £lve directors. Electe<I to the board were Mrs. Alice B. King, A. E. "Pat" Worthington, Joseph O'Sullivan, Joseph Tomehak aJtd Anthony Demetriades, current president. The new board will direct a six-point campaign covering observer attelldance at civic meeti1lg1 including the City Council, Planning Commission and School Board; fund raising; membership; in· creased communication i n c 1 u d i n g formulation of a newsletter; involvement in people problems, and establishm~•t of an advisory'commlttee. rate district will be diVided, creating a new district for the SaddlebaCk vauty communities, he said. 4,t , this time the PUC also will set a date, probably 13 months away, for reducing toll charges l:letween Laguna Beach and that area Pacific Telephone's Santa Ana base rate district some 30 miles to meet the El Toro area and expansion of the Rossmoor fr~m 20 cents to 10 cents and phasing Qllt the H)·-cent charge a1 soon as wires are installed. As a first step ln this direction, the PUC last week approved e.xpanston of This move bad the effect of reducing. phone bills by about $120,SOO a year for some 12,000 customc 1 in the areas. Laguna Citizens Enraged Over Toilet on Beach Three angry L a g u n a Beach homeowners today won at least a tem- porary victory in their battle to halt the construction or a public toilet at Anita Street Beach. 2 Bullets Fired Into Semi-truck O'n SD Free way . Cultural Subsidies Due .. Supei'lor Court presiding Judge William C. Speirs ordered the city to cancel the contr~ct it signed last May 6 with the Charles C .. Benton Company of J~I S. Coast Hjghway. And he further ordered both sides In the toilet spat to appear May 27 before Judge Robert • -Two· bullets• fired from a weapon shot neaf the San Clemente State Park area r~ into the . trailer of a large truek t~ling on O>e San Diego Freeway ea(ly Wednesday afternoon. California Highway patrolmen relayed the ·shooting incident to San Clemente Po~ce a~ier truck driver Maodona1d C~pbell, 50. of El Cajon pulled into Uie: ttuck scale area beyond San Onofre lo tell of the shooting. ca,mpbell said he was drivi11g south- bound along the freeway when he heard the.,t'jfO shots coming from the Avenida Calalla area. Twq bullet hole1 wtre CO\iqd on the right side or the trailer. Tile driver told police he saw no • 1uspeiets wbo might have done the al\Qqting. ,OUlcers would not speculat.e whether the incident was related to t he Tfarlulets' St.rikt, which has resulted In other rece-nt s.niper attacks on rigs tra.v.eliq Souther• CtUfornia freeway:s. \ .r Laguna Councilmen Endors e $17,000 in Grants Laguna BeacJt, councilmen Wednesday gave tacit endorsement tola6out $17,000 In cultural support for seven organiza· tions in the coming fiscal year. Amounts have-yet to be finalized but this' seemed the consensus of council opinion at a study session. lt compares with $19,000 in support given during the current perk>d. Greatest beneflciary·wUl be \he Laguna PISiyers which projects _a )oss for , the year of $27 ,m in equipping and aperaling the new Lagwta·Moulton Playhouse. The Players have ·aked /or $7,000 and will appatently get it. They also asked for $5,000 to underwrite a new children's theater program and will apparently get ISOO for thls. William Harcum, Players board presi- dent, said It became necessary to borrow $42,000 for new equipment for the Playhouse. He pegged recovery hopes to a big season for the six-week run of "Oliver" and mlmlbershlp expanded from 2,126 to 5,000 perS<>ns. The musical 0 0liver" is being put on jolntly by the Playersc arid Lyric Opera As90CiaUon of Orange Coun~. Production Colt Is estimated rat $40;0001 • ' ' I Speaking <I. flooding, and other pr~ blems in the new bulldin&. llarcum said. "the architect and builders " ha,ve not ye: completed their duUes as ·far as we're eoocerned." Harcum said that attempting to repay the loan hu eaten lnln money thlt ------- • would have been used tor operaUng the neW ' theater. "I would· not like to see this {playhouse) go down the drain," he said. Mayor Richard Goldberg suggested a list of monies spent on plant problems at tbe new theater be turned over to t'.1e ¢ty sM~ it,j.s ,. city building fl0ll1f. ·Jack ', Seymour, 'pubiJCiit or ·the plll,)'Muae~ said, "It made our loss i picture ' bigker than jf we ·had moyed int<J a,bµilding-that operated well. We · rited a ~1ot more 'thin we· are asking tor." · City Manager James D. Wheaton said he Is arrang\ng a oonftrience on all ' parties involved to l3Uc over tM physical (Se< CULTURE, l'ap 11 , S. Corfman. The lavatory lawsuit waa filed by · homeowners Harold A. and EUubelh. M. O'Brien of 1007 Gaviota Drive .and Richard E. Loring, "° ·Gaviot.a Dtlve. It alleges that construction of the e.,..' visaged facility would interfere. wilb public right-of-way on Anita Street. · The toilet, if built, would be within sight and sound of the two G&vk>la · Drive homes. The Q'Briem1tnd Lorine further aiklge:· that constructiOn of t~ c:ont'.roverslal· toilet 'fOUld. be "a , waste of llJPtYefS riloneY." and that ~ere is .no f>osslble jyst.ificatioa for Ill constructJon . . • Their complalllt points oul that · theno Is only a' IQ.loo\ slrelch of public .beach at the end of Anita Street and the use by Ibo public of that limited area Of sand hardly merlta the build.Ina of an ~acenl toll~ • Ex· planner Suggests Alternatives Laguna Beach Cham))er of Commerce "°med US]ll'ed Its 131,500 In promoitonal funds tor U\e comlni lb<al l""'' c!eJplte opPGfiU~ from an M!f01P8C1 ~enltneer and an unsuccessful couacll canclklate. Jot<pll Tomchal!, --·-didate who. WAI . laler b9o1ed all lllt ~ <omm!Hion by ihe new regime, urgcu the Clty tor 1 -Seek malcldnf Jund>. !tom 1he Chamber for the promotion money. -Look into 1he poesiblllty that ad- vertising or proinottOflal_ firml be-· iavlted to bid on hand!fne the city promotion. He Indicated the cbarp !or this would be about 15 perce.nt of fWJda involved, Tomehak maintained that on a · per c~pita.ba.sis only two cities pi CalUornia a.nte I.IP more for.promollol ·tbln Lqm\a, Palm Springs and Santa Barbara (alter 1he oil ·•Pill). , Tomehak estimated the f u n d 1 repreJehted $2.60 per person in La1UDB children included, and called this "rathe; excesliive." , Tomehak suggested also that the uae the funds are put to by the Chamber be :more public. Mayor Richard GOJdberg, former Chamber president, said the city receives a detailed report from the CfJam. ber every month. Tomehak said the ratiOoale for uttliziq: the funds is wantlng. Goldberg said the Chamber matching the funds Is an in· teresUng idea but "I don't think It would produce adequate funds." Bernard Syfan, Chamber president and finance· comnUttee treasurer 'for two Or the winning candidates, indicated that .advertising agencies wOuld not be in- terested in the amount involved. He .said the cllamber produces huridreds and hundreds of hours of volunteer labor toward 'PromoU0r1. srran said, "There are several P.PintJ that apparenUy escape Mr. TomChak for one reason or another. Mott other cities ))eve induitrtea. ·Thia one has to lean on tourism ... Councilman Charlton Boyd eave a tall about tJPtS of communities and said, (lee CHAMBER, P11e J) Coast W~•••er The north wind'wlll·blow but we won't have snow -this breeze wtn heal. tht'1is up along the coait Fri- day, with local temperatures In the · 70's and inland readings up to 93 degrees. ' INSWE TODAY \Vitl1 tile dtath of General Dillard, th1 U.S. has lo1t more gamrata in Vietnam than in anv f!1ilitaf'JI action of tlie last 100 vear1 except /or World War JI. P.og.t 29. 'l • '. . ' . ,, ., l ' • • I I I ... • j '' • • _I DAILY l'ILOl SC ,,....... P .. e J CHAMBER SUPPORT ••• "111 ..... ble &rowth ls the only WIY -~ tt be l<lmln!Jltrtd ..... ~i-. 1--cm .,... out of Ill pill 1 ei.. ,,_ ad au_.i fUluro gr-. Sweeooy nlllnlalnod tbat be wu· not We CllllOl be .... track mlnded.'' ~~d ~ 1::t rli:'it11! Goldberg told Tomehak that the bed tu ftum for promotJon are strictly which to bue • ~~,. it. ~ate business generated tax . He 5 8 1 d , presented 1$ not adequate, he 1a1d. •'QUttm are not ~ng for advertising Sweeney menUoned ruods f or tht via.ltors are paying for it." ' life.guards, beach and other aervk:e1 in· Tomehak sald citizens are paying by creased for tourism. "Is It In fad cost virtue of the fact the money ls take• t:ffective to residents of the area?" be away lrom other general city use.. asked. Go!dbera charged that what Tomehak Goldberg asked why he bad not aaked w11 really after wu cuttlnc the pr. the same question about fundi to be moUon f\u'ld1. allocated for cultural suppOrt. Sweeney Jam.ea SWetnty, aerospace executive, iiald he Is asking that dsta on the asked what proportion of the Chamber effect to the taxpayer he made available. budget the $36,500 represented. Syfan Syfan claimed that close to half the said, 0 none." city income ii aene.rated b ytourlam . He aa1d the Chamber operate! kl Sweeney said, "I ltlg(ut th•t tourist.. own budiet and the proportion pald for are a luxury enjoyed by those who extra hefp Is Jess than the amount put make their Uving here, not by the re1t out by the Chamber. of w." S)'fan aald, ''This ls the clty'1, not Boyd commended the Chamber on the Chamber's. If it could be ad· realistically sensln& the needs o( the mlnilttred better 10me place elle, I city and Its cltlr.en1. Spring Concert In San Oemente Students ranglQI from third grade pianists to accompllsbed hl&h acbool musicians will take part In a major spring music concert Friday night sponsored by Ille Capistrano Unified School District. ' Under the baton of district. music direc- tor Cyril Gallick, student! will perfonn at 8 p.m. in the gymnasium on the San Clemente High School campus. The district'• h<l1or orchestra and choir from the di1tl1ct '1 elementary achoolJ: also will perlonn. Marco Forster Junior High School's honor orchestra and choir also wtll be included. Besides Friday night's concert, students Jn the district will appear in other musical programs in the South Coast area this mooth. On May II San Clemente High Sdiool'1 choral groups will perfonn Jn an I p.m. concert in Triton center under ctirectJon of choral director Richard Dastrup. Junior High Sdiool musk: '"'""' wilt ofrer a concert May 21 at Marco Fanter under direction of Leon Badham. The month-long concert series will end May 27 with a performance by the San Clemente !Dgh School band ln<f or~a dlrected by GalJlc:k and Hal Rosenberg, followed May 28 by vocal .and imtrumental groupe: in cmcen at Marco i'onter'a auditorium. All the procr'llDI are open and free to the public. Integration Guide Stands SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A toort order today reinstated -at Jellt temporarily -the aate board of educat.ion'1 adv180Q' guidelines for the raclal integration of C!lifomia public schoolJ. The board Oil March II repealed the guideline! II an aftenn.ltb to a Los Angeles judge's order for the deetlJ'tla· tlon o( the schools there. Superior Cclurt Judae WI 111 a m Gallagher Of Sacramento issued a tem- porary order wlplng out the npeal until a May 28 hearing on whether to make the order permanent. Gallagher llso blocked Ille board from taking any action "to prevent or discourage school dlstricts, parenta or puplls from using all reasonable and feasible means -Including b u 1 transportation -for the reduction, elimination or d.i5cou.ra1emeot of racial imbalance." The board was al10 prevented from holding a public bearin£ it had acheduled for today on a propo..ed new set of guidelines drawn up after its March repeal. The order was oblalned by Negro civil right. attorney Nathaniel Colley, a former board member who helped ln drawing up the guidelines. He flled suit on behalf of his 14-year-old son and other students. DAILY PILOT Hntl .......... .. ....,. ,...., s.c~ ORAAGE COAST PUSl.ISHING CC»i!PANY Rob••• N. w,..i Prt•'6~1 t r.d P~llll'ltr Jtck R. Cwrl•y \II(• Pru ...... , '"" '"9Mrl l MINtft" lho111tt IC1o~il Elltor Tho"''' A, M11r,t.;111 ,_.,_.illt ECl!Ot l.ic~tr.! P, Nill kutf\ Ot•"'"' tturitv EdllOr • °"'"' C..11 M~t Mt Wc1I h y l lf"I ,,,.,,.,., .. 1c11: 1'11 .,...., ••"°II' aow...,.1"4 u....... hldl~ "' "°'"' ... ......_.. M••lrlf'"' •ttd'I: n11s •·~ a;iu'"''' $M C..,_ltt m N-111 •1 C-IN ll:NI -~· I I Couocllmen favored the fund.In( etctpt Councllman Roy Holm who said be would like to study the propoul. The Cbamber listed for the city use of the funds u paid advertising, $6,500; photography, ,1,000 ; conference pro- motion, $500; brochures and maps, $2,000; Winter FesUval, $1,000; com- munity promoUon, '3,500; Christmas decorations, $3,350; contingency ex- pens-. $500 ; usoclaUon dues, $300; pro- motional suppllet:, $2,100; telephone, $1 ,500; postage, $2,500; management salary, $5,300; management expense $600; secretary-clerical saJary, $5,100; and payroll taJ:ea, $750. ' f'ro111 Page l , UCI RULES. • • edtlcatlon optlona for students. -The atudem, may recleve a Qade ~ Incomplete, wlthoot pr_ejudice, upon request at any Lime up to the final eu.mination. The senate guidelines 1llte th1a option nquires the approval of the instructor. "'Students must be passing the course at the time he requests a grade ol Incomplete. "Make-up euminatioos may be taken at any time mutually a greed upon by atudeot and instructor," aecordinJ &o the guid<lioe1. -Tbe ltudent may drop the courae, without prejudice, at any ti.me up to the final eumlnlllon. 'Itte policy committee ruled thla acUon roqufres approval of the dean of the school in which the class i! offered. -Tbe atudtnt may we the Pas1/Not Pus option tn any courae on a credit-by- aamtnalloo basis. 'lbil actton also requires the approval of Iha dean ol the school in whJch ttie class 11 ·orrered. -'lbe ltodent may continue courw In the normal way, subject to the normal requ1Amenll ..., grl<lts. Obviously, normal cootlouation of classes: needs no special guidelinea. -lnltructon may offer student& an opportunity to drap present cla111es and to enroll ln Alternative Education 199 .. 299. Th.is option, the guidelines state, re-- quires the approval Of the instructor, the department Clbalnnan and the dean of the IChool ln which the class is offered. Enrollment in alternative eduoalion AllO requires written request to the department chairman stating proposed content of the cour1e. "All Individual studies COW'HI carry full Unlver1lty credit toward graduation unit re- quirementa. Howevu, their slalua for use in aatisfactioo of tbe speclfic re· qulrements of Individual departments ls to be determined by the Individual depertmenl.s," the aukfelines state. -Instructors may ,award a grade of Pass to an students who request it. and regulations llmlUng use of the Pass grade 1bould be waived. The guldellne1 state that discretion In mlgnlng grades ls left to the In· structor. Inrtructora are at.o reminded of the regulations governing final e:r- amlnaLions in undergraduate courses which state that tbe tests can be omitted only with approval of the educational policy committee and the department involved. "The tnstructor lhould be wary of creaUng a situation Jn which a student is seemingly treated difterently because of the student's JJOIWcal acUvlty or bellefa,0 the statement warns. President Gives Medals of Honor WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pre~dtnt Nii-on llld tod1y at a M!dal ol Honor ceremony th1t the Amertcan people "w-111 look back" at the Vietnam war In the fUture and hooor the cootr:lbutiona of the men who are fighting ft. The president presented the Medal of Honor, the nation's hl1hat award for gallantry, to lZ servicemen at a cert· mony In the White House e•st room. The Vletnam War, the Prtsldent sald, Is "many times not understood and not supported by aome in thl.1 country." Reincarnation Talk Sit.c Change Given A lecture on reincarnation to be presented F'rktay night ln Laguna 8tKh by Or. Gina Cermlnara wlll be held at St. ?tf1rr,'1 Eplacop11l Church, 428 Park Ave. nste1d of in the Women 's Club as announcfd. Admission to the 7:30 p.m. program, 11pon!IOred by Spiritua l R e 1 e • r c h Associates. will be $2 for adult• and $1 for lludcnts. • DAILY PILOT ltetf Pllo,. CALLED SADIST SURGEON ' Murder Susped Slocum Slocum's Wife Says -Husband Was 'Sadist' By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of lfll Dtllr 1'1191 Iliff A once-prominent surgeon accused of butcherfag his baby daughter is a jigaaw puzzle personality in which 20 years' drug use injected violence, sad.ism and ha1 lucinaUons into the pidur~ his wile testified Wednesday. Preliminary hearing for Dr. Wesley G. Slocum, 44, charged with murder, resumed today in Harbor Judicial Dbtr:lct Court. Moments of suspense marked pro· ceedlngs in the Costa Mesa courtroom Wednesday as Mri. Marian Slocum, 45, took the stand to testify against the man she helped rise to a now-ruined career. She wore dark glasses and spoke laconically under cross-e:r:amlnation by aiter Deputy Diltrlct Attorney James G. Enright and Paul Augustine Jr., defense counsel for her husband. She test!lled that Dr. Slocum' -Used 100 mWl1rams of benudrlne dally for 20 years, balanced by a tran- quJIWng type of medication, and, even- lually, gin. -Envisioned people moving through walls and was hounded by feeling1 of persecution, hiding hoards of checks paid for medical care lo bo:resi t:unU and bedding. • -Severely beat their infant daughter Cynthia and took her to b.is Santa Ana offlce in early 1!164 after a:he died at home. "Did you see the baby again?," a1ked Enright. "Jn bags," she replied tonelessly. "What did he do with them?" 1'Put them In the freezer." "Did you ask the doctor about the bags?" "No. I never looked In the freezer again," said Mrs. Slocum, who the defense contends put them there: and fou1ht tooth and nail for 11!:1 years against anyone going near the appliance and II.! grisly secret. Mrs. Slocum said she became an alcoholic In the years 1Jnce and seemed vague on many questions asked by Augu1Une. "Have you had any medication today?" "No," she replied, leading him to ask when she last took any. "I bad some this morning • . . I'm sorry, I forgot," she sakf, e:r:plalnlng it was a tranquilizer prescribed for her. Augustine asked that she be given none for today'• huring. her if she disobeyed him and once shot her husband threatened often to kill her if sbe disobyed him and once shot her with an amw as she held a can of pineapple Juice as a target. Under croswxamination by Augustine, she sald she knew Dr. Slocum couldn't hurt her when be was In jail after a 11196 shootout with Sanla Ana police and last year when he was committed for psychiatric care. f'rom Page J CULTURE .•. problems of the facility. Goldberg asked who .Is the watchdog for playhouse funds spent. Harcum •aid an executive committee oversees minor expenditures and the total board oversees the finances. Betsy Rose. players vice rresldent. said the Players have done away with the posltlon of artistic director "'hich should 11ve $10,000. Harcum also said the first play in the new facility cost $4,000 to produce becaute equity acton were used "I belle\'e we have gained experience," he oild. · C.OUncl.1 dlscussion l.ndtcated that the followltl11upport will be approved later: -Lyrk: Optra, 13.000. -Lii"•• B.,.ch Civic Biiiet Company, $4,llOO. -Laguna Beath Art Association. $4,000. -1.quna Beach Scllool of Art a. Dtalcn, $3,000. . -~guna Beach CommurUty Concert.a Msoclatlon, ll,1!1111. -Laguna Beach Chamber Music Socie- ty, lt,1!1111. ne h!ih tchool chor .. : readers had asked tor $4,000. A council commllttt recommcndtd none and no rtpresen· taU ves of the school group wtre prestnl ' • War Deaths 'Mounting Cambodian Campaign , lJoosis Casualties ' SAIGON (UPI) -U.S., South Vlr· namese and COinnu.m.la:t combaL deaths climbed to new levels tut "eek larply as result of the allied offenSlve1 tn Cambodia. 1be South Vietnamese with U.S. support opened an 11th offensive today in the Central Hlgbl&nda: area. The U.S. Commln<f reported Ula American combat deaths lut week, the highest in more than eight months. South \Uetnam Jost 863 dead, the highest in more than two years, and the Com- munl1ta lost 5,898 dead, their highest in 14 months and many ol them in Cambodia. northeast of SaigM appeared to have discovered the: art1 where "a part of" the Comm.uni.st command center for Indochina war operations uled to be. He said It was about 10 m11es lnslde Cambodia. When Prealdent Nixon o rd e r e d American foreta into Cambodia on May I he told tile American -le their mission w,s to deltroy the Centr1I Office for South Vietnam (COSVN), the Com- munista' jungle pentagon. So far it has not been found. Bautz, basing bis Mtemeni on caJr tured documents, aald thta appeared to be part of COSVN. M!11tary IOW'COI lllcf the Amerlcaos had captured mor~ than 200 pounds of documeat.s along with two rubber stamps bearing the name of Pham Hung, a vice premier ol Nortb VJetnam and the man believed to have run the COSVN complex. They also disrovered an lntemational BusinHs Machine ''readout abeet" with 1n inventory of the aupply com.plu.ea:. Aod nearby they found 200 more tons of rice wlilch they were haulln& out in captured annored personnel c•rriers, ammunition trailers and oxcarts. "The only way to keep It out of the hands ol. Ute North VJet.namese is lo move lt out of here," said Col. Denn!J Whitehead, 0 , of Arlington, VL Today's latest Incursion lnto,Cambodla came in the mC1W1talnous region 215 mllt11 northeatt of Saigon and about 15 miles south <l the Se San region where U.S. 4th Infantry Division troops and South Vietnamese 22nd Infantry Division unlb crossed the border last week. 'Gunsmoke' Arness' Son No immediate figh ting was reported In that are a, but a South Vietnamese offensive pushing along lilghway 1 toward Phnom Penh killed 119 guerrillas Wednesday and U.S. troop! pushing into the Flshbook are1 said they hid un- covered .. part of" the Communla:t "~ tagon" in the Cambodian jun~les. New World Surf Champ The U.S. Military Command said the United States was furnishing helicopter gumhips, tactical air support and logill!cs assistance but had committed no ground forces to the new border drive, the 11th since South Vietnamese first crossed Into Cambodia on April 29. The 11 included four South Vietnamese forays into Cambodia before the current allied campaign was officially announced. Maj. Gen. Edward Bautz. comander of the U.S. 25th Infantry Division, said his forces in the Fishhook area 90 miles From PfJffe 1 Special lo Ille DAILY PILOT MELBOURNE, Au1tralll -Ro 11 Arnell, la.year-old son of televiaion gu8'll111er James Arne11, Tburaday nllht waa declared 1lll'finl11 champion of the world. Amell, a student at North Hollywood High School, wu almo1t speechlw. After a long paU9e durlna: the world champtoo trophy pn1enlltlon, young Arnell atammered, "Id Uke to aay thla is oultl-slght. •• tbankl everybody." 'll>tn Arness quickly tdd behind one ol the larger object.a around, U.S. Team ~tanager Brennan "Revs" McClelland of Llguna Beach. Young ArnelS' father had even fewer words when hla: IOn. called hhn in North Hollywood lorig dlltance at 4 a.m. to tell him the news. "Son, I'm atoked," the elder Arnea.s declared. Rolf recaJled that his father had In- troduced b1m to surfing at 1 beach in front of President Nixon's San Clemente home. "Did aod I still a:o lllrfioa tocether . almost every day and he loves It too," Rolf said. "He'a pretty good, too." Rolf is scheduled to Dy home Sunday. One of his surfing "buddies," tiny Hawailan Sharon Weber, 22, won 1he women's world crown after Thuraday 'a final 1t Skene'• Creek, near Apollo Bay. Only 61 1.nches tall, Sharon "atole'' the UUe from former champion, Marso Godfrey of the United States. • "It ha1n 't really hit me, but I feel kind of all right," Sharo11., an usi1tant at a Honoluh1 health food store, said, She sat~ ahe surfed up to four hours a day at beaches an>und Honolulu. PHONES ... tioned. It's bttn In effect about thrtt years. March on Pendleton Base The Palos Verdes phone user by paying an additional $28 monthly could phone anyw here within the 213 or 714 area codes without charge. Th.ls is the max·_. imum monthly charge. 'T'he customer' for Jtsser amounts, starting at about $.1.85 plus base rate, can have toll free service to selected areas. Reports Called 'Madness' Gannon said. "l would like tn ha ve It here but we can't since it's atill experJmental." He said his company has the same e:r:perimenta] areu in Loi An11eles County. Gannon told councilmen his company is speqdlng $2 mlllk>n daily and wlll spend more ne:r;t ye1r. Cost! are m. crea1ing and cosb or financing are in· crtaslng, he sald. Gannon 1ald taxes had doubled In 10 years and plant lnvestment is up 118 percent. He said his company paid 9.29 percent intere1t on a $150 million bond issue and its rate of rtturn on in- vestment is 5.8 percent. Gannon said the rate now for a private line, $4.75 was $4.85 10 yeara ago. The cost of a business phone Is up only $1, from $8 10 years ago, he 1ald. By JOHN VALTERZA Of tftt DtllY Plllt JIMJ Octantlde's city cxiundl acted as predicted Wednesday night and approved a 7 .5 per«Qt pay hike for the city's police, still leaving the off i c e is dimtl1Hed and preparing for a possible walkout wte toni&ht ahead oi planned weekend demonstraUona. And earlier tn the d1y the city won a court victory of aorta: when organtiers of an anticipated huge Saturday Peace March I~ tbetr ariwnent that the city's 3lkl.ay-notice ordinance fe¥" p a r a d e permlts violated the constith tion. San Diego Superior Court upheld the city's code, meaning that the anticipated 15,000 to 20,000 demonstrators v..·ould not have any legal sanction in their parades scheduled Saturday. One aspect of Saturday's demonstra· tions -reporbl of attempts lo converge Inflate yolD' Comforta ·DEFLATE YolD' Budget with IOuffeau~dWom by araJJlfmj ---- Wm. a &loriOD TictarJ la.~ batU. of th. liadltt bf . 1teatinf Yowtdf to a sr-t llhq brol1d!c,.. .••• TOUFl'EAU by IWMtu. y Oil would upecf; Kanltm-thl IDllt Mme i4 carpet and JUI lalhlonl-to ¢eat. a tbar that wu more colarlul, mweadtiq. and mort hnilh. Toulfttu ill all of lhat •tidmoawfth hardymu:i· lonfnJlon pilt yum, aktln-dyed in faliolou multf • eolan cl. breatht.lklnr brilllahet and :te.n:·loe W'O'nlL Bid what a hlppydilcmvy that U. ..t rl th.ii .... uona1w,u..i1 $11.H oq.yd. Touff .au i.J oi.o oollilablt 111 cOWO "'fl w/Ua • A•..,,·llnotkd-frinlo.t'• IZ $110.00 on the sat.es of Camp Pendleton, were termed "sheer madness" by a top organizer for the Students for a DemocraUc Society in Orange County. The top-level source told the DAILY PILOT Wednesday nl&ht that the an- nounced "convergence" at tile base's ma1n gate at the exact opening tlmt of Anned Forces Day was planned as an "Individual action" by the locaJ Oceamlde membership of the Movement for a Democratic Military (MOM) and "Green Machine." He said that the Idea "is stupid from se veral standpoints." ' "Our group from Orange County plans to have a pancake breakfast for the: servi cemen durlng the 10 o'clock thing at the Marine Base gates." He stressed that plana call for a "peacerul, nonviolent" series of rallies and demonstrations. tF YOU CAN'T COM~ IN-CAL( ··~·0275 for 1n tJ.pert (.tr pt I co111wlt1nt who will cemt to 'f'OWr hemt with 11mple1 wtl~owt tny e\ili••'i•11 to yo~I ' H.J.GARRETT fURNlllJRE • PROFES$10NAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS ' 2211 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646·0275 ( : I t ( I I 1 I t . - . . Laguna Beaeh Teday's Flnal EDITI O N . . YOL. 63, NO. 115, l $ECTI(!NS, ~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURStlAY, MAY 14, '1970 TEN CENTS San Clentente Appeals for Toll-free Service , By l\ICHARD P. NALL Of ,,,_ G•ll'f' l"lltl Ili ff San· Clemente would like better com- munications with the ootside world - or moce economical at least. The c1ty will ask the Public Utilities Commisaioo 1o consider Jncludlng San C1emente-.1n an appllCaUon !or toU.&ee service. between the Capistrano Valley and Leisure World, El Toro and Mission ~iejo. ~ ~Pacific Tel!Jlhone & 1'elesraph • Company has · made application to · the PUC for statewide rate hikes which in San Clemente would 1ocrease the ha.sic cost for a private line from $4.75 to $8.60 monthly and the cost of a business line from $9 to $12.80. John Gannon, Socal manager for the phone company, ezplain~ tbe compa11y po!ition to lhe councilmen recently and they raised questiOf\,S about a better deal on toll calls fl'Qlll ~ Clemente. He saidif-t.be tollbns between·Capls-' . , Oola, That's Sla11rp · An unidentified girl protestor at Denver Uliivenity checks the sharp-- ness of a Colorado National Guard bayonet as the guard prevented people lrom returning to "Woodstock \Vest," a shant)"bome village on the campus. . Guidelines· for UC Irvine Alternate Education Told By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ,..._ O.lly ?It.I Sl•lf Gu.idelines for UC Jrvine's alternative educatkm program were spelled out to- day by·Chancellor De.niel Aldrich. .. ll is important to note that lhe (Academic Senate) has not in any way suggested that academic work oo this caml)Us ahould cease during the re- mainder of the Spring Quarter, 19'1G," the chancellor declared. jfOn the contrary, the (Academic Senate) has reoognized a critical situa-- tion in which students feel it imperative to give aUenUon to certain inescapable iswes. aod, at the same time, lo COOU!lue their education. "The (Senate) has assured that all regular courses will continue; that students who wish to .add studies of immedi'ate interest will be able to do so, and that students will be able, i! they so desire, to modify their schedules in accord with those interests. "Contrary to public rumor, there has been no intention to ·deprive any student of academic responsibility," Aldrich stated. 'I'he guidelines for alternative education were prepared by the Committee on Educational Policy and the Executive CommJttee of the frv:lne Division of the Academic Senate. In an emergency meeting Sunday, members oC UCI .senate passed a seven- put Te30lution caitllning alternative {See VCI R.UtES,. Page .. !) trano Vallty and the Leisure World area were ~llmlnated it would al:so mean a toll retluction from 35 cents to !Cl cents on a call from San Clemente to Ltisur~ World-Miuion Viejo. Councilmen would prefer no toU. A PUC order to do away with all Jf).cvit toll charges by the end of next year would mean free calllng after that be- tween Laguna Beach and C&pistrano Val- ley but San Clemente would still have to pay 15 cents. ln explainln1 the proposed phone rate changes, Gannon called them an "ad- justment." Councllman '11lomas O'Keele said, "It is 1 readjustment down to San Juan whereas here in San Clemente any call ueept three numbers (prefixes) is substantiaL It seems we're in .a very high toll area." He mentJoned broad toll- free service on the Palos Verde! Penin- sula. Gannon said it is true in instances caUs can be made for one minute to the East Coast for 40 cents. He sai d phone companies are trying to utilize equip- ment o!f hours by these incentives and said the same originating and termin- aUng equipment is necessary whether the call is 100 or 1,000 miles. fie said also that the phone company is looking into an "option service" with the rate based on where individuJI cus- tomers want to call toll free -"a cus- tom built service." O'Keefe said, "What about UliJ PaJos Verde• service; how can we lflt that here?" Gannon said, "I auspect they have a wide-area service." O'Keefe said, "I understand !hey (Palos Verdes) call here for no toll and we call tbtre fOr 56~.·· Explaining this later, GaMOn Pkt that Palos Verdes service ls an experimental operation of General Tel~ Company with tbe custom· service be had men· (See PHONES, Pllt I) Laguna CofC Assured Of City Fund Support Mail Truck Fire Ruins Package s A costly, damaging blaze erupted In the cargo compartment or a United Parcel Service truck tgst oullide of San C1emenle tod~, ....... ing llf !lat a·· few or the l!COl"I ol. jtems .-dellllned for eustomen in the City-. 'I1lt cargo, including several boxes or Uve ammunition, betan smoulderln1 u dnvtr George Adam Nicholson, ao, ol Santa Ana was heading !Outh on PacUic Coast Highway in Dana Point. Nicholson told California highway patrolmen that he thought he smelled smoke at that ooint, bu t kept drivinit ,;ooth along the Capistrano Beach Palisades. The van, filled to the brim with long· awaited packages. burst into flame about a mile upcoas:t from Poche Beach at about 9 a.m. Volunteers from the Doheny County Fire Department station arrived and spent nearly two hours gouging oot and wetting dawn the SITIQuldering cargo. , None of the dangerous ammunition was thought to have gone off in t.ht fire. Patrolmen noted boxes or matches In the center of the stack of packages. All but a few or the bundles were destroyed. As firemen arrived at the scene tht>v were able to yank about a dozen small bo)Ces from the dark olive-brown truck before they burned. No estimates of damage had been calculated by late this morning. The cause or the fire was still under Investigation. Nicholson told patrolmen the load was !lacked into the van by a graveyard shift at his headquarters. Speculation was that a liRhted ciearette accidentally dropped in the middle of the load could have caused the delayed blaze. STOCK ltl A RKET NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market continued its steep decline early this af- ternoon in relatively restrained tradJng. (See quotaUons, Pages 26-27). Declines outnumbered advances by eight to one among imles traded on the New York Stock Eicbange, Free Spee~hP Not for GI 'Pro tes ter' STANFORD (U PI ) -Some demonstrators at Stanford University believF ln lree apeech -providing the speaker supports their philosophy. After aeveral scheduled speakers finished,4t a noon rally, it was annouoo- ed there would be an "open mike" for anyone to have his way. Dave Bray, a 29-year-old salesman, took the microphone and explained he wu a Vietnam veteran and had served in Cambodia . "You 00 may be ruining your school and your lives by what you're do- ln& •••••• " Bray stated. Two ttudents shouUnc obscenities rushed to the mike, wrestled It from Br UJrow ii to tho .,.,,.,...._ !!fay welted calmly away u a M·f~ . , GI Whether or ncit• 1bould bi oil• to 'l!'•k. • I ' ' • GI lbe.men wllo )jad·ilfked the mike from Bray's ~end •J9>1alned llJ,11. ~· Uley c;IRIDi •P a •v,e. ~" lhey melnt it was "(or COflltrtlt;Uve: creltlV'I ideas on el1ng \ht war. t1 "I~ wu not Creedom for the enemy to apeak," explained the dtmonattator, who rt!Uted to give tUa name. Reduced Phone Charges Seen After PUC Ruling A California Public Utilities Com- mission ruling expected next week wlll pave the way .for reducing phone charges between Laguna Beach and the LagWla Hills-Mission Viejo-El Toro area, ac· cording to plaMlng commissioner Robert !lastings, fonner phone company ex- ecutive. The recently enlarged Santa Ana base Directors Picked By Civic Lea g ue h1embers of the Laguna Beach Civic League have unanimously elected a slate or fi ve directors. Elected to the board were Mrs. Alice B. King, A. E. "Pat'' Worthington, Joseph O'Sullivan, Joseph Tomehak and Anthony Demetrlades, current president. The new board will direct a six-point campaign covering observer attendance at civic meetings including the City Council, Planning Commission and School Board : fund raising; memberahip; in· creased communlcallon I n c I u d i n g formu1ation of a newsletter : ilvolvement in people problems, and establilhm~it ol an advisory committee. rate dlstrict will be divided, creating a new district for the Saddleback Valley communities, he said. At lhls time the PUC also will set a date, probably 18 months away, for ~ing toll charges between Laguna Beach and that area Pacific Telephone'• Santa Ana base rate district some 30 miles to meet the El Toro area and expansion <A. the Rossmoor from 20 cents to 10 cents and plwing out the IQ.cent charge a! soon as wires are iilstalled. As a first step In this direction, the PUC last week approved expansion of This move had the effect of reducing phone bills by about $120,500 a year for some 12.000 customers in the areas. Laguna Citizens Enraged Over Toilet on Bea ch Three angry L a g u n a Beach homeowners today won at least a tem. porary victory In their battle to halt the coristruction of a public toilet at Anita Street Beach. Ex-planner Suggests Alternatives Laguna BeaCh Chamber of Commercl ,..med assurecl ill l.!6,500 in prvmolional funds ror the coming flacal yur 4e1Plte opPoSJUOn from an aeroapace engineer and an unsuccessful council candidate. Joseph Tomehak, defeated couocll can- didate who was later booted off the Plannin& commiu!on by the new re&fme, urged the ci!y to: -Seek matching funds from the Chamber for the promotion money. -Look into the posslbillty that ad- vertising or promotional firms be Invited lo bid on handling the city promoUon. He indlcated the charge for thl! would be about 15 percent of funds lnvolved. Tomehak maintained that on a per capita basis only two cities in California ante up more for promoUOfl than Lquna Palm Springs and Santa Barbara (af~ the oil spill}. Tomehak estimated the f u n d 1 represented $2.&o per person tn Laguna chUdren included, and called thla "rathef excessive.'' Tomehak suggested al!O that the ua the funds are put to by the Olambtt be more public. Mayor Richard O:Oldberg, former Chamber president, said the city receives a detailed report from the Cham- ber every month. Tomehak aaid lhe rationale for utiliziag the fuAds is wanting. Goldberg aaid the Chamber matching the funds i5 an in· teresting idea but "I don't think it would produce adequate funds ." Bernard Syfan, Chamber president and finance committee treasurer for two ot the winniBg candidates, indicated that advertising agencies would not be in- terested in the amount involved. He said the Chamber produces hundreds and hundreds of hours of volunteer labor toward promotion. · Syfan said, "There are several point& that apparently escape Mr. Tomehak for one reason or aoother. Most other cities have industries. This one has to lean on tourism." Councilman Charlton Boyd gave a tal~ about types of communities and nld, ISee CHA~1BER, Page !) Or ange Coa1t 2 Bulle ts Fi r.ed ,J11to Semi-truck ; 011 SD Fr eeway Cultural Subsidies Due Superior Court presiding Judge William C. Speirs ordered the city to cancel the contract it signed last M1y I with the Charles C. Benton Company of 1401 S. Coast Highway. And he further ordered both sides In the toilet spat to appear May 27 before Judge Robert Weather Two bullets fired from a ~apon shot near the San Cleinente State Park .trta ripped into the trailer of a large truck traveling on the San Diego Freeway early Wednesday afttrnooa. California Highway patrolmea relayed the lhooting incident to San Clemente Police after truck driver Macdonald Clmpbell, 50, or El C&jon pulled into the truck scale area beyond San Onofre to tell of the shooting. Campbell said he was drlviJlg south· bound along the freeway whe11 be beard the two sholt coming from the Avenida Ci.lafia area. Two bullcL ho)!!s were found 00 the right side of the traJ~. The driver told police he saw no suspects who might have dont the shooting. OfOcers would not specu late whether tht Incident WI! related lo t h e Tea~ters' Strike, which has resulted in other recent sniper atucls on rigs traveUq Southera CallfornJa freewsys. ,. ' Laguna Coun cilmen Endorse $17,000 in Grants Laguna Buch COllllCilmen Wednesday gave tacit endorSement to abOut $17 ,000 ln cultunl support for mwen orpniia· tions in tht coming fiscal )ear. Amounts have yet to be finalized but thit seemed the conserlSU! of council opinion at a study session. It compares with $19,000 in support givtn during the current period. , Gre.mi beneficiary ,vtl/; be the Laguna Playm which projects a loss for the year or $27,222 ln equipping and operating the new Laguna-Moulton Playhouse. The Players have aked for $7,000 and will apparently get It. They also a5ked for $5,000 to underwrite a new children's theater program and will apparently get !500 (Of th!~ t Wllllam Harcum. Players board presi- dent, said it became necessary to bottow $4:2,000 ror new equipment tar the Playhouse. He pegged recovery hopes to a big sea90ft for the six-week run of "Oliver" and membership expandtd from 2,126 to 5,000 pel"80ns. The musical 110llver... is being, put on jointly by the Players and Lyric Opera Assoclallqo <>f· orange Cooo\)'. Production cost Ji est1Jru1ted at M0,000~ Speaking of flooding and other pr~ ble ms in the new bulldln~. Harcum said, "the architect ana J)ulkJer! have not ye. completed their duties as far u wt're c0i~." Harcum said that auempting to repay the loan has eatta. into money .._I.hat ; ' would have been used for operating the new the1ter. "I would not Uke to see this (playhouse) go down the drain," he said. Mayor Richard Goldberg sugge!ted a list of: ~oniea aeeiit on plant problems 1t the .Dejr lhe1ter be turned over to 1'1e clty since it is a city building now. 'Jack Seymour, publlci.tt of the el1yhouse, said, "It made our los! pl'Ctu~ bt31er than if we had' moved Into a building that oper1ted well. \Ve need a lot more than we are asking for." Clly ~tana,er James 0. Wheaton said ht ts arrangin&' a conference on all pe.rUe1 ln"olved to ta!k over th,. p)),ysical , Jloo.CIJLTUllE, Pa1t JI , • I ' • 1 S. Corfman. The lavatory lawsuit was filed by homeowners Harold A. and Ellzabeth M, O'Brlen of 100'1 Gaviota Drive and Richard E. Loring, 990 Gaviota Dtive. lt alleges that construction of the en· visaged facility would interfere \IVllh public right-or.way on Anita Street. The. toilet, if built, would be w.llhin sight and sound ol the two Gavk>ta Drive homes. The O'Briens and LorJna .further allei:e · that construdlon ot the conlroVerafat ' toilet wouk1 · be ... waste of taxpayers money." a.nd th&t there it no possible justl!lcaUon for Its cons~lon. , . Their complaint polnt.s out lhat 'there Is only a ~foot stretch of public beach at the end of Anita Sttett and the use by tht pu~llc or that 1 limited area ol "'!ld hai'dly melill lhe bulldln1 or an adjacent toilet. . . The north wind will blow but we won't have snow -this breeze will heat things up along the coast Fri· day, with local temperatures in the 70's and Inland readings up to 93 degrees. INSm E TODAY WiU~ the death of Gtneral Dillard, tht U.S. ha.I lost more Qtntrola in Vietnam than In cny militaru action of tht laat 100 t1tars e:z:cepe for Wo}t<i War JI. Pcge 29. • ' • l . i -· .. -~~.::--r-====~-1'!'!!1!1""'""'--.... ------------------~ . 2 DAILY PILOT F,.._ Piwe 1 CHAMBER SUPPORT • • • • ~ •Rotonabl• croirth ii the only way.._ U be admlni.terod 10111e plm Lquna Btacb can come out of lta past ellt." j1\ "WI . ud llf*"t flltlllo ...,ntl. -s......, malJLJoecf that i!t WU nol Wo-bl-mlndod." ~·lllO ·~but that 1M Goldber1 told Tomchtk that tbe bed -a lll11ll1CW ~ of ~-" llil tax fuods for promotion are strictly wtlcb to 6ate1 a ~Mtamtut. 'The data bus1neas 1enerated ta:r:. He s a I d , ~ted ls IPt ldequatlti'' he uJd. •1attzena art not paylng for adverUsing, S\ll'eeney "!tnlJqne~ funds f o r the vlsltora are paying for it." lifeguards, beaCb and other tervlces In· Tomehak ukl cililens are PIYin&· by creased for tourism. "ls It ln fact cost \'lrtue of the fact the money is takea. tJfecUve to rtsidents of the area!" he away fn:im other general city usea. asked. Goldberg ch11t11..S that what Tomehak Goldberg asked wllj' he had not .,Iced wu really after wu cutttnc the pro-the same quutlon about funds to be moUoP ..mda. allocated for cultural lllpPQrt. Sweeney JUQll Sweeney, aerospace e1ecutive, uid he Ja aa'king that data ou the asked whit proportion or the Chamber etted lo the taxpayer he made available. budget the $38,500 repreatnled. Syfan Syfan claimed Uiat close to half the Hid, 1'nooe." chy income ii senerated b ytourl51TI. He Aid the Chamber operates Ma: Sweeney said, 1'1 suggest that tourlsf1 own budaet and the proportion paid for are a luxury enjoyed by thoae who extra be.fp ii lea than tbe amount put make their living he.rt, not by the rest out by the Chamber. of us." Syfan aald, "This i• the t'lt)''s, not Boyd commended the Chamber on the Chamber'•· If tt. could be ad· realistically sensing the netdJ of the m1nister«I: better some place elR, J city and Its dtlt.ens. · Spring Concert In San Clemente Students ranglnl: from third grade planist.s to accompliahed high school. musicians will take part in a major spring music coocert Friday nJ1ht spo.:1sored by the Capistrano Unified School District. Under the baton ol district music direc- tor Cyril Gallick, students will perform at 8 p.m. in the gymnasium on the San Clemente High School campus. The district's honor orchestra ud choir from the di.strtct's elementary ICbooJa also will perform. Marco Forster Junior High School's honor orchestra and choir also will be included, Besides Friday nlght'1 concert, students in the district will appear in other musical programs in the South Coast area this month. On May .It San Clmiento High Scllool't choral l1'0'IPI wUJ perform In an , 8 p.m. coocert in Triton Center under direction Of choral director Ricbard Dastrup. Junior High School mwlc groups wlll o(fer a concert May 21 at Marco Fonter under direction of Leon Badham. The montll·long concert series will end May 27 with a perfonnance by the Son Clomento High School bind and orchestra directed by Galllci: and Hal Rosenberg, followed May 28 by vocal and instrumental groups in coocert at Marco Fonter'a auditorium. All the progrUDI are open and free to the public. ' Integration • . . ' Guide Stands SACRAMENTO (UPI) -.\ court order today relnatated -at least temporarily -the atate board of educaUon's advisory guidellnea for the racial Bttegration of Calffomla public ochools. The board on March 12 repealed the guidelines u .an aftermath to a Los An&eles judge'• order fer the -B"'i•· lion ol the acboola tbert. Superior Court Judge WI 111 a m Gallqber of Sacramento Issued a tem- porary order wiping out the repeal until a May 26 hearing on whether to make the order permanent. Galllllher also blocked the board from laking any action "to prevent or diacourage school datrlct.s, parents or pupiil from using all rusonal>le tnd feasible means -Including b u s trampxtalion -for the reduction, ellrrtlnation or dilcouragement of racial imbalanct." The board was also prevented from holding a public hoartrq; K hid llCheduled for today on a proposed new set of guidelines drawn up after its March repeal. 1be order wu obtained by Negro ·civil richts attorney Nathaniel Colley, a former board member who helped in dr;:.wlni up the guldellnes. He filed suit on behalf of his 14-year-()ld son and other students. DAILY PILOT .. ....,... .... ........... ~- H.tte,._.._. -·-s. Ck , ... OUNGE COAIT .. UI LllHING (OMPAlfY ~ol:tert N. W," "ruiOtnt ...., 1"1111!~ J, .. l, •· c~.1 • ., vu l"rur-1 ...,. ~·1 M•Mtfl' Tho••• K11•ll ClllW Tho"''' A. Mv,.,1t!111 M-elrlt ••11w 11,•1r4 '· N•ll kulll Or ..... ,..,.,,, E•li.r Ofll•• ~II M-1 Ht 'NU! ll'f 11 .... I .. ....,, .. u.lli ltll W.I hlMl ... ,_,... ..._ •..01 ttt ~-I A"""1to "'-'llfrit!WI 9-1'11 17'11 .. Kii lollie..-1..- IAll 0...-19; ... ,,..,.,,. II (Mllnt ltMI Councilmen favored 1he funding except CoUndtman Roy Holm: Who sald he would lil<e to sllldy the proposal. The Chamber listed for the city use of the funds u paid advertJstng. $6,500; photography, $1 ,000; conference prt>- motion, $500; brochures and maps, $2,000; Winter FesUval, $1,000; com· munJty promotion, $3,500; Christmas decorations, $3,350; contingency ex· penses,$$00 ; assoclaUon dues, $300; pro- motional lllpplle1, 12,100; tolephone, $1,&00; postage, $2,500; management salary, $5,300 ; management expense $fi00; secretary-clerical salary, $5,100; and payroll taxes, $750. Fron& Page 1 UCI RULES • • • education options for st.udent..s. -Tbe student ma)'. recieve a grade ct Incomplete, wHholrt prejudke, upon I request at any time up to the final •aminaiion. 'lbe senate ,Wdelin:e. state this oplion f"lqllires the appro'val of the lmt.ructOr. 11Studenls must be 'pissing the courae at lbe time he reqt.est.s a grade of Incomplete. "Make-up examinations may be taken at any time mutually a greed upon by atudent and instructor," accordina: to the guidelines. -'f'be student may drop the course, without prejudice, at any Ume up to the final euminalion. 'Ibe policy comm1ttee ruled thia action requires approval ol the dean of. the schOot in which the clus is offered. -The-student may use the Pasa/Not Paa option in any coune on 1 credit-by· ~ljoll•. 1ntil .IOlloii alao, requiret the approval of the dean of the llChool In which 111t ·~ i. ofl•'!d· , I· 1-'lllt ,~ may ton~·c:our.iir In the lbrmal way, 1ubJect tct•illt noraflr req~ts and gradei. · ~ , Obviously. normal continuation or classes needs no special guidelines. -::IDltfllctprs may offer students an opPortulllty to drap pmerit d111et and to tnroU :ht AltemaUve F.ducatlon 199 or 299. This option, the guidelines sli!te, re· (juires the approval of the in;troc:tor, the department chalnnan and tbe de•n of the ICbool in which the class Is offered. Enrollment in altemaUve education also requires written request to' £he department chairman stating propoaed · content of the course. "All tndivtdual studies coursec . carry fu!J Untveralty credit toward graduation unit re- quirements. However, their status for use In satisfaction of the apeclfic rt· qulrements or individual departments 11 to be determined by the Individual departments," the guidelines state. -Instructors may award a grade of Pass to all student. who requert it, and regulations limiting use of the Pass grade should be waJved. The ruldellnes state that discretion in assigning grades ls left to the In- structor. Instructors are also reminded of the regulations governing final ex· aminations in undergraduate courses which state that the tests can be omitted only with approval of the educational policy committee and the department involved. "The instructor should be wary of creating a situation in which a student is seemingly treated differently because of the student's political acUYity or beliefs," the statement warns. · President Giv.es Medals of Honor WASHINGTON (UPI) -Prnldent Nixon said today at a Medal of Honor ceremony that the American people ''will look back" at the Vietnam war Jn !he future and honor the contributions of the men who are fighting It. The president presented the Medal of Honor, the nation'• higheat award for gallantry, to 12 servloonen at a cere- mony ln the White House ea.st room. 11Je Vietnam Wtr, the President said. ta "many times not undmtood and not IUpporUcf by IOml Jn lhJ1 COWllry." Reincarnation Talk Site Change Given A ledurt on relncam1Uon t.o be presmted Friday nlJht In La~na Blach by Dr. Otna Cermlnarai will be held al St Mar)l'1 Epl1CQp1l Churth, 421 Park Avt. fnltead ol In the Women'• Club a• announced. Admlulon to the 7,!Q p.m. progr1m, &pontored by Splrltual Re 1e1 r ch Associates, will be $2 lor adult1 and fl !or students. ' • OAIL '( "ILOT l!Mf ..... CALLED SADIST SURGEON Murder Su1f)9ct Slocum Slocum's Wife Says Husband Was 'Sadist' By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of t1M Daltr Piie! lllH A once-prominent surgeon accwed of butchering his baby daughter is a jigsaw puzzle personality in which 20 yea.rs' drug use injected violence, sadism and hallucinations into the picture, hls wife testified Wednesday. Preliminary hearing for Dr. Wesley G. Slocum, 44, charged with murder, resumed today in Harbor Judicial District Court. Moments of suspense marked pro- ceedings in the Co.!ta Mesa courtroom Wednesday as Mrs. Marian Slocwn, 45, took the 11tand to testify against the man she helped rise to a now-ruined career. She wore dark glasses and spoke Jaconlcally under cross-examination by Chief Deputy District Attorney James G. Enright and Paul AugusUne Jr., defense counsel for her husband. She testified that Dr. Slocum' -Used 100 milligrams of beniedrine dally for 20 years, balanced by a tran- qulllzina type of medication, and, even- . tutlly, gin. -Envisioned people movin1 through , ~alls flPd was hounded by feelings of ~~.=~,r.;~g ~:.~~ ~~ ":~~ ti2.lai.w -S-everely beat their Jnfant daughter Cynthia and took her to his Santa Ana office in early 1964 after she died at home. "Did you see the baby again?," asked Enright. "In bags," she replied tonelessly. "What did he do with them?" "Put them in the freezer." "Did you ask the doctor about the bags?" "No. I never looked in the freezer again," said ~1rs. Slocum, who the defense contends put U:Jem there and fought tooth and nail for six years against anyone going near the appliance and Its grisly secret. Mrs. Slocum said she became an alcoholic: In the years since and seemed vague on many questions asked by Augustine. "Have you had any medication today?'• "No," she replied, leading him to ask \.\'hen she last took any . "I had some this morning . . . I'm sorry, I forgot," she aald, explaining it was a tranquilizer prescribed for her. Augustine asked that she be given none for today's hearing. her if she disobeyed him and once shot her husband threatened often to kill her 1t she disobyed him and .once shot her with an arrow as she held a can of pineapple juice as a target. Under crosHxamlnatlon by Augustine, she said she knew Or. Slocum couldn't hurt her when he was in jail after a 1966 shootout with Santa Ana police and last year when he was committed for psychiatric care. From Page 1 CULTURE ... problems of the facility. Crl:>ldberg asked 1<1•ho is lhp \vatchdog for playhouse funds spent. Harcum said <in executive co mmittee oversees minor expenditures and the tota; board oversees the finances. Betsy Rose. players vice rresidenl, said the Players have done av•ay with the position of artisttc director wnich should save $10,000. Harcum also said the first ptay In Ult new fa cility cost $4,000 to 'produce because e(juity adors w~ used "I believe we have gained uperience," he said. Council dlscu~ion lndtc:ated lhat the following support will be approved later: -Lyric Opera. $3,000. -Laguna Beach Civic Ballrt Company, ll.SOO. -Laguna Beach A r t Association, $4 ,000. -Laguna Beach School of Art & De1lgn, 13.000. -Laguna Beach Community Concert.a Association, $1 ,000. -LaAuna B~ach Chamber Music Socle-- ty, 11,000. The high school chor • ..: ruder& had asked for $8,000. A councll committee recommended none and no represen- taUves oI the school group were present War Deaths Mounting '. ' . Cq:mbodian ·Cflmpaign BoOsts Casualties SAIGON (UPI) -U.S., s:ilh \'lei:" northea<t ·of Salgoo 1ppeared to have had captured rriore tharl 200 pounds of 'namese and COmmunbt combat deaths discovered the area where "a part of" documents along with two rubber stamps limbed to new levcla last week laracly the Communist command center for bearing the name of Pham Hung, a c Jndochina war operations uaed to be. vice premier ot North Vietnam and the as reault of the aWed o!f~vea in He nid it was about 10 miles inside man belleved to have run the COSVN. Cambodia. The South Vietnamese with Cambodia. complex. U.S. 1upport opened an lllh offensive. When President Nixon ordered They al.sq discovered an lntemational today in lhe Central !ll&blands are.a . American forces into Cambodia on May Bu.siness Machine "readout sheet" with I he told the American people tqelr an inventory of. the supply complexe1. 11le U\S. COnunand reported l&8 mission WU to destroy the Central Office And nearby they found 200 m«e tons " American combat deaths lut week, the. ror South Vietnam (COSVN), the Cam·. ot flee which they wtre hauling out highest in more than eight months. Sou!h munlsts' jungle pentagon. So far' it has in captured armored personnel carriers, Vietnam last 863 dead the highest in not been found. ammuniUon trailers and oxcarts. tha two yean ' and the Com· Bautz, Wing his statement on ca~ "The only way to k~p it out or , mo~ n ' . tured document.!, aald thil appeared to the hands ol the North Vietnamese is , !"untsts lost 5,891 dead, thett htgbe~t be part of COSVjll. to move it out ol here," said Col. 1n 14 months and many of them m Military tourcei 11kl the Americlnl Dennis Whltebead, 43, of Arlington, VL Cambodia. Today's lale!t Incursion Into Cambodia came in the mountainous rtgion 215 miles northeast of Saigon and about 15 miles south of the Se San region where U.S. 4th Infantry Division troops and South Vietnamese 22nd Infantry Division units crossed the border last week. 'Gunsmoke' Arness' Son No immediate fighting was reported In that area, but a South Vietnamese offensive pushing along Highway 1 towa rd Phnom Penh killed 119 j!uerrillas Wednesday and U.S. troops pushing into the 'lshhook area said they bad un- covered "part of" the Communist "pen. ta11:on" Jn the Cambodian jungles. New World Surf Champ The U.S. J\1ilitary Command said the United States v.•as furnishing helie-0pter gunships, tactical air support and logistics assistance but had committed no ground forces to the new border drive, lhe 11th since South Vietnamese first crossed into Cambodia on April 29. The II Included four South Vietnamese forays into Cambodia before the current allied campaign was officially announced. 1'.faj. Ctn. Edward Bautz, comander of the U.S. 25th Infantry Division, said his forces in the Fishhook area 90 miles From Page 1 Specttl to die DAILY PILOT MELBOURNE, Australia -Ro 11 Amess, 18-year-()!d son of television gunallnger James Amess, Thursd~y night was declared surfing's champion of the ·world. Ames1, a student at North Hollywood High School, waa almost speechless. After a lon1 pause during the world cnampion trophy preaentaUon, young Amen atammutd, "Id like. lo say this is outta-iight. •. thanks everybody." Then Amess quickly hid behind one of the larger objects around, U.S. Ttam Manager Brennan "Heva" McClelland of Laguna Beach. Young Amess' father had even fewer words when his aon called him in North Hollywood lO!!lg distance at 4 a.m. to tell him Uie news. "Son, I'm stoked," the elder Amess declared. Rolf: recalled that his father had ln· traduced him to surfing at a beach in front of President Nixon's San Clemente home. "Dad and I st.ill go surfing together almost every day and he loves it too," RoU said. "He's pretty good, too." RoU is scheduled to Uy home Sunday. One of his surfing "buddies," tlny Hawaiian Sharon Weber, Z2, won the women's world crown after Thursday'• final at Skene's Creek, near Apollo Bay. . Only 61 inches tall, Sharon "atole'• the Utle from former champion, Mario Godfrey of the United Slates. "It hasn't really hit me, but l feet kind of all right," Sharoa, an assistant at a Hoaolulu health food store, said. She said she aurfed up to four hours a day at beaches around Honolulu. ·.~ ' PHONES ... tionerl. lt's been In effeet about three yea rs. March on Pendleto11 Base · The Palos Verdes phone user by paying an additional $28 monthly could phone anywhere within the 213 or 714 area codes without charge. This is the max- imum monthly charge. The customer for lesser amounts, starting at about $3.BS plus base rate, can have toll free servict to selected areas. Reports Called 'Madness' Gannon said, ''I would like to have It here but we can't since it's still i2perimental." He sa)d his company has the same experimental areas in Los An~elts County. Gannon told councllmen his company 11 spending $2 million dally an4 will spend more next year. Cost! are in· creasing and co~d• of financing are in· creasing, he said. Gannon said taxes had doubled in 10 years and plant Investment ls up 118 percent. He said his com pany paid 9.29 percent interest on a tl50 million bond issue and its rate of return on in- vestment Is 5.8 percent. Gannon 1ald the rate now for a private line, $4.75 was $4.BS 10 years ago. The cost of a business phone is up only $1, from $8 10 years ago, he said. By JOHN VALTERZA Of "" Dliln """ "'" Oceanside's city council aded u predicted Wednesday nllht and approved a 7.5 percent pay hike for Uie clty'1I police, 1tlll 1eavin1 the off Ice r,a dissatisfied and priparfug for a possible walkout vote tonight ahead of planned weekend demonstrations. And earlier ln lhe day the city won a court victory of &Orts when organizers of 111 anUclpated huge Saturday Peace 1'.1ar1!h IOlt their ariument that the clty'1 »dll)'·notict ordinance for p a r a d e permits violated the constitution. San Diego Superior Court upheld the city's code, meaning that t.he anticipated 15,000 to 20,000 demonstrators would not have any legal sanction in their parades scheduled Saturday. One aspect of Saturday's demonstra- tions -reports of attempts to converge Inf/alt your Comforts ·DEFLATE Your Budget with IOuff eo U-)oad~m by ar_~'!!!!Jj Win 1. 1Toriaas victory in tM blitUeof t'bt 'bu.difit by~· treatinr YD\lllelf toa rrut 1hl.1~ • •• TOUFFEAU byKarastan. You would eiped JWutan-thelneat.namt in carpet and rur f•lhlcma-to crmta a 1hl1 Uwt "Wu more colorful. more a:clthll. and mon Jan.&.. Tou.ffeau iii aJI of. that and morewitlshard;rmui· laqnylon pile yum.~ in fabaloatmultf· calon ~ bm.thtakinc' brilll,..... and Kuaoloc WOftA. But what a happy~that U.cmtcfthil """"tiomalohorftonly $11.H eq,yd. Touflrau U e:Uo cwa:Uobll va...a;,.,• 111.:t.lt• htall)'·boUcd motchm, f riltft, 9' s 12' $110.00 on the gates of Camp Pendleton, were termed "aheer madness" by a top organizer for the Student! for a • Democratic Society in Orange Count_y. ' 'Ille top.level 90Ul"Ce told the DAILY " PILOT Wednesday night that the lfla nounced '"•convergence " at the base's · matn s:ale at the exact optnlng tlm• ' of Anned Forces Day was planned as J an "individual action" by the local Oceanside membership of the Movement for a Democratic Military (MDM) and ''Green Machine." He said lhat the idea "is stupid from ~ several standpoints." ''Our group from Orange ColUlty plans to have a pancake breakfast for the servicemen during the 10 o'clock thing at the Marine Base gates." .• He stressed that plans call lor a · ''peaceful, nonviolent" aeries of rallies and dtmonstratlons. IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-CJ.Lt: Ct•pet Clfttt.1lf•1tf wh1 ... 111 f;Gfl" to )'tVt Jte'"o ... 111t 1111111111 wilhoul •ny oblit ifjtll to Yt~l • .. H.J.GARRFJT fURNITtJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Opn MDI., Tlliun. & Prl. l'ln. 221 S HARBOR IL VD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646-0275 l J 0 • b • h v b • h ~ • .. Ir ~ )> • I : I I ' -Owen Tait Quits Post I In Schools Owen Tait, a~lslanl iuperintendent in charge of curriculum for the Laguna Beach Unified School District, plans to resign afler six years t1 the district 1n order to acctpt a position in 1 larger district aext fall, it was announced today. Tait said be wishes to accept the ~ition of assistant superintendent wllh respon,,ibilities of personnel aad special projects in the school district at Aber- deen., Washington. Formal action on his resignatio1 will ht. taken by the Laguna School board. Superintendent Or. William Ullom said t1f Tait, "I• the six years he has been with the Laguna Beach schools, he has made significant ~ntributions to educa· tioo. His ucelleat service will be miS!· ed."· Ullom said he will recommend that the board seek a replacement for Tait from within the district. During his 20 years In the field or education, Tait has bee.11 a counselor, junior high school priacipal and teacher at the elementary and higb school level. In Laguna Beach he has beea reaponsi- ble for five special areas: instruction for kindergarten through crade 12 : guidance and testing programs; federa l projects; adult education; and the in· structional material center for kin· dergarten Uirough eigbUi grade. July Trial Set In Oceanside Machine Gunning OCEANSIDE -A July 7 trial bas been set for six persons arrested during a rally cf the Movement for a Domocratic Military (MOM) following the machine gunning rA one of their membe's. The six, arrested April 30, have pleaded !nmct!!l.t of charges ranging from ~isturb­ ing the peace to parading without a permit. They are Marine Lance Cpl. William Chatman, 20; Maurice C. Durham, 211; James Snyder, 22; Teressa Cerda, 18; Michael A. Lawrence, 25; and Thomas Hurwitz:, Z3. The group wert among nine person!! picked up initially at a park after, police 1aid, they failed to disburse. Marine Jesse Woodward war wounded In the chest earlier at the MDM bead· quarters when he was hit by the richochet from a .45 caliber macblnegun. PoHce said the MDM headquarters ..,as sprayed with a burst o( fire by unidentified nigbtriders. The house where the activity occurred has reportedly been t>tJ?Chased for $19,000 to serve as MDM headquarters. Actrrss Jane Fonda at4 tended the housewarming. , Lots of Brass For '70 Festival Exceptionally mellow tones are ex4 pected from the Pageant of the Masters orche!tra playing Vic Schoen's original 1COre this yur, Festival directors have been assured. Asked by director Verner Beck if it were true "no strings" would be used in Uie orchestra. producer Do n Williamso11 explained that nG violins will be used, but there ll.'ill be eight celli, aloJg with string bass. three Frlnch horns, trombones, trumpet, ha r·['I, pj!rcusslon and woodwinds. ""Wa felt not having brass last year was very detrimental." said Williamson, "especially for certain types d music ln-whi'ch brass is essenUal. Viloins dolt't soond very good in the Bowl altd we hope that the large number of aelli will give a richer, more mellow tone." DAILY l"ILOT lltff l"llelt ESSAY WINNER MARGARET BLAND, II, ACCEPTS AWAP.D VFW Auxi liary's Ann Banks Does the Honors Aliso's Margaret Bland ' Wins Flag Essay Contest Elevea-year-old Margaret Bland of Laguna Beach's Aliso School has WGn first place in the essay contest "Why We Should be Loyal to Our Flag" which was sponsored by the Women's Auxiliary of Veterans o( Foreign Wars. 111 addition lo winning first prize in the local coolest, Miss Bland 's essav wo11 second place in the district-widf competition whlch included entries from 22 VFW posts. Miss Bland is the daughter uf Mr. and Mrs. Robert 0. Bland of 756 Bluebird Canyon Drive, Laguna. Tn the Laguna competitio11, 70 essays were entered by six th grade students from throughout the school district. Second and third place whiners were Cynthia Zoch and Patricia Boswell. Awards were presented Wednesday by Mrs. Ann R. Banks, chairman cf the VFW auxil.iary's America11ism CQm- mittee. Miss Bland 's wiMing essay follow s: "Wby Wt Should be Loyal to Our Flag'' "The Flag: What it means to me," by 1>1argaret Blaltd, Age II, Aliso School. "From the brave colonists that fought for freedom againSI. tyranny, to the dar- ing astronauts In space, our flag has represented democracy in our country. "la this brief essay I hope to relate niy opinions and feelings about our flag. "The American Flag to me is a symbol C1f the struggles and hardships of the people of the United Stales. It symbolizes not only the famous patriots but the comn1on people too. that fought for ex- istence under a democratic government. "Our flag represents the brave piooeers who crossed our cou11try in search of a better life. '·The flag .also captures the beauty of the land Itself. Majestic mountains surrounded by Lakes, rivers a"d streams are all a part or our land. "I think the flag represents not only the good things in our country, but the bad things too. The city slums. !he pollution, and the war are all a parl of my country, but I love her Jus~ the same . " "I love my land for wRat she 15 And what she is to be.' .. Jumping Jupiter ; Youth ~lwws Computer Savvy Saddleback College trustees this week watched a student calculate the ·ma ss of the planet Jupiter with cne of the schools three computers. The board wasn 't particularly curious about the mass of Jupiter but they have set up a contirruing series of presen- tations · at board meetings on what is being taught. Computers had the floor this month. Next month it will be an oral in· terpretation and drama class program featured by the Fine Arts Division. The' school's computers include two thal are mobile, the Olivetti 101 an<f'tv the Wang. A third, larger computing device is the Alpha 200. Math instructor Jean M. Vincenii anO business instructor Linda L. Rice, who presented tile computer demonstration, Blood1nobilc Visit Sch eduled Friday A semi-annual viait of the Red Cross Bloodmobile to San Clemente is schedul- ed Friday at the United Presbyterian Church, 119 Avenida Estrella from :i p.m. to 7 p.m. Donor age limits are 18 lo 65. Ap· poiatments and informatioa may be ob- tained by calling 492-6017. 11aid Ui! portable aspect of the computer provides an adaptable teaching tool for the instructor. Saddlcback students learn tG write courses for the computers using basic computer language. The devices are also used in biology, chemistry, mathematics. physics, geology, engineering a n d business classes. One even made an appearance in the English department r e c e n t I y , pro- grammed with information on how to write a poem. The board was sufficiently impressed lo authorize a teletype terminal for the Alpha 200 t.o expand its use, $1.312: and to purchase computer programmer lor the Olivetti at a cost 0£ $2.887. Fa111ily ;\[ovie Set Al Viejo Center A special movie for the whole family will be offered for the 600 families 1vho are members of the Mission Viejo Recreation Center. Cartoons will start the sho1v F'riday al 7 p.m. and will be ' followed by \\'alt IJisney's "Treasure Island.'' The movie ls free at the center. Popcorn will be available for ten cents a bag. • Warnaing llp for Sla.l0t1a Sixth graders Mark Eagleton (foreground) and David Haynes pracUce before an appreciative aud· Jenee for lbird Aliso School Skateboard Competition •cbeduled for 12:30 p.m. Frid17 oo the school'• downhill course. Annual event Is c<rsponsored by Aliso PTA and Hobie's Surfboards o! Dana Point. Boy1 and girls will compete. Winners will face win· ner1 from other Laguna 1chools later in the year. \ I / , ,--~ ·-· fh"1dll', M11 I~. 1970 L DAILY PILO' 3 Lutlaeran Society , Hospital Manager Chosen A new 110 ml_llion non-profit hoopllal, under conslrUctfilll ln Lq1lna Hllb, will be operated and managed by Ille Lutheran Hospllal Society of Southern California, according to Saddltback Hospital officials. Preliminary agreementa have also been reached for the hospital aociety to guarantee long term loans requlrtd to cooslrucl the -hospital. A 11.6 million stale-federal IP'llll to help with construction of the s.iklleba<:k facilily·was awarded last month by the Stale Health PlaMlng Council. Local hospital board members aaid that while details must be negotiated, they have v«od to join wilh the Lutheran HospJtal Society in the conab'ucUon ot the hmpit.al which will serve the com4 munities of Mission Vlejo, Lake Forest, El Toro, Laguna HillJ Let.sure World, Capistrano High.lands and Laguna Niguel. , The board said that the hospital is scheduled to be bul~ on property dit'<Ctly adjacent to the e1i.stlng Laguna Hills MecUcal Cent.er near El Toro Road and the San Diego Freeway. Hospital sociel.y prt5ldent Samuel J. Ttbbetb sakf services provided will In- clude administrative staff work, ac- counting, purchasing, penonnel con- sultation, enJineering consultation, plan-. nJng and arc!Utectural consult.ttion, public relations, publicity and £und ratg.. ing. Tentative ~grtementl also call ror 10t hotpllal admlnblrator lo be hired jointly by the Saddleback board and the Lutheran Hospital Society. The Lutheran HOt!pltal Society ot Southern Cal1fornla currently operates the callfornia Hospital Medic.a] Center in Lo.s Angeles, the santa Monica Hospital Medical Cente1, the Momlngslde Hospital in Los Angeles, Martin Luther Hospital in Anaheim and the Donald N. Sharp ~1emorial Community HoSpit.aJ In San Diego. LIKE IT ••• CHARGE ITI Hanging Baskets 1.77 ... Add the beauty of lush green ivy, artillery fern or asparagus growing in baskets,. , all ready to hang on patios and porches, The baskets are the 714• size. Blue Marguerite or Yellow Daisy al· ready growing In OM galJon containers. Buy MY. era I and beautify your garden todayl 77•11, Plant colorful bedding plants now by the tray. Hardy, colorful petunias al- ready growing rn trays ••• buy several troys ., • ready lo plant, 44c a lray Ortho Systemic:* ltose and Flower Care. Easy lo un, no mixing, fust spread around plant and -- 5 lb.-hler 2.98 SHOP SUNDAY, TOO 12 to 5 P.M.! CARLSBAD MONTCIAIR • • • • • • • I • • • ••• • Grow your own fruit and have an ottractfve dwarf size tree. Grows irt tub or yard. Choose from Meyer Lemon, Navel or Valencia Orange already growing i~ 5 gal. containers. 3.77 Deep Green Vigoro• for diehondra or gross. Can be used sofely on dichondra or gross lawns, or mixed lawns. 20 lb. bag. 5.45 Deep Green Vlgoro• with insec:tic:lde 6.95 Zodiac: sun dial with a sotid bron1e dial, Seo them in green, bronze, or aluminum, 29" hfoh -- all size, 9.99 (P.Outol avaifo&I• at exlro tent) DOWNEY NEWPORT BEACH NOWI THESE VALUES AT ANY ONE OF lHESE PENNEY STORES! ,_ ' l I 1 • ' • • DAILY PILOT ~'" .. a.Ill' ...... .,n Arthur W. Wormley, write-in candidate for Democratic commit.. teeman o! Columbus, Ohio, com- plained to Secretary of Stale Ted Brown be had been "short-string· ed" in recent primary voting. Wormley said the strings attached to the write-in pencils were too 6bort to reach the slot "where they have to put my name to vote for me." • In a Washington, D.C. new office, a atorv Mlivtred bl/ phone to a dlcl.a.tionist reached the editors containi11g the typo; "Vice President Spior T. Gag- mw .•. " • --- Protesters Storm HEW; 21 Seized W ASIDNGTON (AP) -Proleolers demanding an end to the war and higher welfare paymenta occupied the office ol Secr.tary ol Wellare Robert Finch for eight boors Wedne3day before 21 ol them were l!'ftSt.ed. 'I'be secretary was being interviewed by lwo reporters when 17 protesters invaded his office. For the next hour Finch listened as the group accused him of being a "puppet," "yes man" and "flunky of President Nixon." Shouting angry warnings, the pr1> tester! demanded Finch back a proposal to raise the minimum weUare benefits to $5,500 per year for a family or four. They posted a sign on the office wall saying "$5,500 or Fight" and took over the secretary's desk and telephone. Asked about his view on the $5,500 figure, Finch told the group he was "proud of the part" he has played in getting the Nln>n administration's $1,600 a year weUare program started through Congress. The subject of the war in Southeast Asia also came up repeatedly in the discuss.ion. "Would you like to see your son be sent to a war that he might oot come back from wi thout even a just cause?" Washington Post reporter H a y n e ! Johnson quoted one of the protesters as asking Finch. "I'm as anxious that we Jerminale this war as you are," the secretary replied. And at another point, he said, "AD. J can aay t1>. that is I want the war over 11 badly u anyone in this room." One of the protesters remarked: •·1 hope when they drop the bombs they drop ooe right here on this office, and cne right on the While House." Nine more per.sons joined the group durinR" the discussion before Finch left his office In the early afternoon. Later 'he received a list of demands from two members of the group . G«.rge Wiley , executive director of the Nation'-1 Welfare Rights Organiza. tion, led the protesters. There also were some weHare mothers from Philadelphia and several students from Amer ican Unlvenlty in Washington. "It's hard fOf' them to see. all the complexities," the Post quoted Finch as saying after he left hi! office. "Some of them are genuine hardship cases, and aome are hitd-core exploiters." An official HEW statement said : . " Dodd Stricken Sen. Thomas J. Dodd ( D-Conn. l has been hospitalized by a mild heart attack. The senator collapsed at a d~ner W~dnes· day night and v.:t11 ~ .1n the h?spital for an mdef1n1te pe· r1od. President OKs School Lunches For Poverty Kids WASHINGTON (AP) -President Niit· on signed today a bill he said would assure a free or reduced-price school lunch for every child from a family whose income falls below the poverty Hoe. The measure would add about eight million children from low-income families to the number now receiving the lunches. Depending on the ecooomlc status of the children, the lunches would cosl oo more than 20 cents and could be free. It also authorizes an experimental school breakfast program. The bill is an open-ended authorization, subject to later appropriations. About $400 million is oow spent on school lunch programs, and officials estimated another $200 million would be required to meet the bill's authorizations. In a statement the Preside nt said the new legislation will help expand the admlnistratioo's efforts aimed at pro•iding free or law-price lunches for Nixon Ai.des Act , • Antiwar Bill Fought. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Deren .. Secretary Melvin R. Laird and top presidentl31 adviser Henry Kissinger con- ferred today with Senate Republicans in an effort to head off a burgeoning move to prevent President Nixon from spending any more money for war ac· tiviUes in Cambodia. Laird and Kissinger were accompanied to a closed meeting of the Republican members or the Sen ate by Undersec~tary of State E 111 o t Richardson. The appearance of the three at the strategy session underscored t he seriousness with which the ad· ministration viewed the a n t i w a r measure. It came u the Senate settled in to what likely will be lengthy, con· sUtutlonat debate over the proposal, which would bar lunda for "r<taining" U.S . troope in Cambodia. Sen. Peter Dominick (R.COlo.), in- troduced an amendment to bar funding for tht Cambodia operatkm after July I unleu the PresJdent needs money to protect Amtrican lives -a lc>ophole attacked by sponsors of the orJgl.nal measure as a move to practically nul.Hfy its e.ffecllveness. 'Ibe wttJte House opposes any legisla- tion to restrict the President's optiom in Southeast Asia. Sen. Edward Brooke (R·Mass.), said Laird, Kissinger and Richardson seemed to stick to t h a t position at today's met;ting. Nixon met more than an bour this morning with Kissinger, Laird and his n!'W designate for cha!rman of lhe Joint Chief's of Staff, Adm. 'lbomas El . Moorer, to d1scuss developments Jn Southeast Asia. The President also arr1nged to meet this afternoon with Secretary of State \Villiam P. Rogers f.Dd t lt e un· dersecretary of state for politlcaf affairs, U. Alexis Johson. Sen. Charles H. Percy (R·lll.), ollered a resolution which would put the Senate on record against any future use of American GI1 in combat withoot the consent oC Congress. Percy and Senate Democratic J,eader Mike Mansfield both called for prolonged debate on the basic luue of war and peace, and the respective roles of the President and Congress. •' • • ' • •. o .... ; •. • • • • • • • • • • ' • ' • • • • • '• "1 • • ' • < I •, J I > • • 0 OMEGA-ACCUTRON -BULOVA AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR •rings sized and repaired • diamonds and precious stones remounted e pearls restrung WE CUSTOM DESIGN & MANUFACTURE All TYPES OF JEWELRY • HARIOl SHOPPING CENm 2100 HAllOl ILVD. ·COSTA MESA 545.9415 "The Store That Confidence Built" Op•• M.:M1.1 lium., Fri. Tll t P""'· ff'i ' ~ L '-1tUNTINliTON CENTll llACH l IDINGD HUNTINliTON HACH 1'2·5501 Lit!~ 2r£-year-<1ld KriJ Wilco.r of Col· umbus, Ohio 1l too 11oungi to t'eod about war and campu1 viotfltce. To her, warm weatMr and spring is a time of new life and e~riences in-- eluding the discovery of tulips in bloom. Kris prcibably doesn't knolD 1!, but :she i.s one of tht real "beauti- ful people." "Today's attempt to dimfpt the business of the de:Qlli'Vnent ' w a s coun-terproduct.lvt, f ~~ every needy child. ~ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiP!ijii!ipjiijftiN He said the youngster who ls well-fed learns better and "improved nutri tion can help children break out of the cycle of poverty." • Before tile automobile age i>i !ltc United Sta.tea, roil tramit systems were so t'Zttnsive that it once was possible to go from New York to Portland, Maine, by trolley. In 1920, it was possi· ble to travel from Neto York to Boston b11 eUctric itreet nrihoa:11 in about 20 hours at a total fare on tM vario11.S rvstems invo!tnd Of $2.40. • Suburban London bus driver11 have been promised a $24 Christ- mas basket of 1'goodies" by bus company officials if they turn up for all their Saturday duties during the year. • Stock broker Emilio Vandini, 67, surprised three thieves in his apart- ment recently. They threatened him with a knife, took about $9,600 from hi s safe, then shook hands \vith him as they left. • A burglar invaded Arthur KHl- fng'1 house in Scunthorpe, England \Vednesday, steaHng hi s trouse,r~ containing $24-0 and his wooden leg lying on the bedroom ~oor. Those arrested Wednesd1y night were charged with disorderly conduc:L Israelis Down 2 MIGS Attacking at Suez Canal TEL AVIV, Israel !AP) -Two Em>- tian MIG21s were shot down today as they attempted to intercept Israeli war planes attacking military targets along the Suez Canal, the military command sald. On the ground, Arab guerrillas In Lebanon fired rocket.s at two Israeli settlements, defying Israel's massive an· liguerrilla sweep through southeast Lebanon that ended only 12 hours earlier, l3r3eli sources said. A thtrd Egyptian plane was hit in the air battle over the canal, but was not seen going down, a spokesman said. 1'he Soviet-made MIG2ls attempted to interfere wiU! Israeli planes,raiding ob- jective.! oo the ettitral sector of the canal, he sa id. One MIG exploded in the air. One pilot of another was seen bailing out. Both planes crashed in Egyptian tcr· ritmy, while the lsraeti aircraft returned safely, the opotesman &aid. The dogfights brought to 93 the number d Egyptian planes Israel claims to have downed since the 1967 war. The Czech-made Kalyusha rockets. fi red shortly before dawn. caused no damage or casualties to the two set· Uements -Kfar Blum and Ramot Naf· Lal, they said. Both are close to the Lebanese border near Kiryat Shmona, where three persons were killed and nine wounded in a rocket attack that irompted Israel's raki into Lebanon Tuesday. Only a feW hours be!ort the latest attack, Deputy Prime Minister Yigal Allon warned Beirut to expect "further and wldersealed Israeli military attacks" unless it st.amped out guerrilla activity from Its territory. 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"""'" .. • Pllrn Scirft>n " n Pti.o ilt!Mlltl " H Plloen•~ .. .. Plt11111,1,..11 " " P"'111:.<f .. ., i111pld (!'r • • lted 11\Jll n " .. ~ n " llClllnfflle " .. Stll Lt~• (II'!' ., .. Sin Oltto • " Stnl'..ncl-.. " $ttltl• " ,, $tt0kl rle • .. T...,,.,t t .. " Wt tl!lnt!Ol'I " .. ARM Q-IAll'f SUH OV.IR LOUNGE CHAIR OTTOMAN ROCKING CHAIR LOVC: SEAT CHARMGLO GAS GRILLS I' STVl.CS 01'" GAS aA1t••-Q•S TO ""•£T vou" sP'1:C1AL. wrro• IN P'RICC &su:c . AL\.. ~MINUM R;UST .otl:SISTArtT "°"A. Lll'"l:TIME, FROM s7995 sn.• ...... ., .... l '20 DO ••• oo .... ~ 1111.00 $31 .., rii ~ STOOi.. STACKING $34 ~ BAR STOOi. su.oo $31 ~ SUN OfAISE IJl5.DO CHAISE. ADJUST A 1111.00 :::~~· CHAISE, ADJ .• AltMS 1 1ar.oa $49 . ·CHAISE, ROO<ING $93 lfSl!.J SUN BENCH WEBER BAR·B.O.'S "!"Ml[ rAMOV• wr:••"-AL\.. P ORCli":LA lftl Kt:TTLC IS T 1tu LV0TlotlE CWO!CC 01'" .,."II: CWARCO"L CHIE:IY S::K• r>c,.T. ALL COLOllS 6. MOOCLS IN STOCK 1'"0" IMMCOIATI: Cl:L,IVl:Jll""V• FROM S3695 Sl21,00 ••••• lllll·l811All .FURllTUIE P IVC ~ CDLO..a llt 8TOCJC POllt lflllllfllillCDl4TC Dn.rY•Jnl's <II•• T Aal.S ••MN C"4f"9 NOW ...... . SPECIAi. PRICES ONAU... ITEMS ••• s209oo MANY. OTH!:• PIECES INCLUDED AND AT WA"-EHOUSE CLEARANCE PR.ICES I ' • $42 $67 $89 $99 · $99 sn • I ---.. ·--~ San Clemenie Capistrano ' VO.L 63, NO . 115, 3 SECTIONS, <40 PAGES Today's Final EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CA~IFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1970 TEN CENTS San Clemente Appeals for Toll-free Service I • By RICHARD P. NALL Of .._ D11111 •li.t Slaff San Clemente would like better com- munications with the outside world - or more economical at least. The city will ask the Publlc Utilities Commisslon to coiislder including San Clemente ln an applicatioo for toll-free service between the Capistrano Valley and Leisure World, El Toro and Mission Viejo. The Pacilic Telephboe & Telegraph Company has made application to the PUC for statewide rate bit.ea which in San Clemeate would increase the basic cost for a private line from $4.75 to $6.liO monthly and the cost of a business line from $9 to $12.80. John Gannon, local manager for the phone company, ~zplained the company position to the councilmen recenUy and they raised questions about a better deal on toll c.llls £rom San Clemente. He said if the toll calls between Capis- Ooh, That's Sharp . An unidentified girl prolestor at Denver University checks the sharp- ness of a Colorado National Guard bayonet as the guard prevented people from returning to "Woodstock West.'' a shanty home village on the campus. Guidelines for UC Irvine Alternate Education Told By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI IM 0.llt ,.llDI Sl•ll Gtiidelines for UC Irvine's alte'rnative educati-Orl program were spelled oot to- day by Chancellor Daniel Aldrich . "It ts important to note that the (Academic Senate) has not in any way suggested that academic work on this campus should cease during the re- mainder of the Spring Quarter, 1970," the ttiancellor declared. "On the contrary, the (Academic Senate) has recognized a critical situa- tion in which students feel it imperative to give aUention to certain inescapable issues, and, at the same time, to continue their education. "The (Senate) has assured that an regular courses will continue : th al students who wish to add studies of immediate Interest will be able to do so. and that students will be able, if they so desire, to modify their schedules in accord with those interests. "Contrary to public rumor, there has been no intention to deprive any student of academic responsibility," Aldrich staled. 'fh e guidelioes for alternative education were prepared by the Committee on Educatlonal Poli cy and the Executive Committee of the lrvine DivWon of .the Academic Senat.e. In an emergency meeting Sunday, members of UCI senate passed a seven- part resolution outlining alternative (See UCI RULES, P•ge .. l) trano Valley and the LeLsurt World area were eliminated it would al5o ·mean a toll reduction Crom 35 cents to 20 Cents on a call from San Clemente to Leisure World-Mission Viejo, Councilmen would peeler no toll. A PUC order to do away with all 10-eent toll charges by the end of next year would mea n free calling after that be- tween Laguna Beach and Capistrano Val- ley Qut San Clemente would still have to pay 15 cents. Blaze In explaining the proposed phone rate changes, Gannon called them an "ad- justment." Cooncllman Thomas O'Ked'e said, "It is a readjustment down to San Juan whereas here in San Clemente any call except three numbers (prefixes) is substantial. lt seems we'rt in a very high toll area.'' He mentioned broad toll- free service on the Palos Verdes Penin- sula. Gannon said it is true in instances calls can be made for one minute to the East Coast for 4Q cents. He sakl phone compan ies are trying to utilize equip- ment off hours by these incentives and said the same originating and termin- ating equipment is necessary whether the call is 100 or 1,000 miles. He said also tha t the phone company is looking into an "option service" with the rate based on where individual cus- tomers want to ca ll toll free -"a cus- tom built service." O'Keefe said, "What about this Palos • Verdes service; how can we aet that here?" Gannon said, "I sUJpeCt they have a wide-area service." O'Keefe laid. "I understand they (Palos Verdes) call here for no toll and we call tbert for SS cents." Explaining this later, Gannon said that Palos Verdes service is an experimental operation of General Telephone Company with the CUfltom aervice be h"ad men- (S.. PHONEJ, Pt(e II • Ill Parcel True I{ Destroys Mail Pacl{ages Fire Breaks Out Near Clen1ente A ctStly, damaging blaze erupted in the cargo compartment of a United Parcel Service truck just out.side of San Clemente today, ruining a11 but a few of the scores of items destined for customers in the tjty) 'lbe cargo, in<:ludfiiC£""'al !Jo!ll.' °" TIYe ammunition, began lmouklering u driver ·George Ad&n\ ~lcbollOl\, 50, of Santa Ana was heading 80lrth"'1:Jn Pacific C.oast Highway in Dana Point. Nicholson told callfornia highway patrolmen that be thought he smelled smoke at that point, but kept driving south along the Capistrano Beach Palisades. The van, filled to the brim with Jong- awaited packages. burst into flame about a mile upcoast from Poche Beach at about 9 a.m. Volunteers from the Doheny County Fire Department station arrived and spent nearly two hours gouging out and wetting down the m10Uldering cargo. None of the dangerous ammunition was thought to have gooe off in the fire. Patrolmen noted boxes of matches in the center of the stack of packages. All bu t a few of the bundles were destroyed. As firemen arrived at the scene thev were able to yank about a dozen small boxes from the dark olive-brown truck before they burned. No estimates of damage had been cal culated by late this morning. The cause bf the fire was still under investigation. Nicholson told patrolmen the load was stacked into the van by a graveyard shift at his headquarters. Speculation was that a liJ?hted cigarette accidentally drDpped in the middle of the load could have caused the delayed blazr. STOCK MARKET NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market continued its steep decline early this af. ternoon in relatively restrained trading. (See quotations, Pages 2&-27). Declines outnumbered advances by eight to one among issues traded on the New York Stock Exchange. Free Spee~h? Not for GI 'Protester' STANFORD (UPI) -Some demonstrators at Stanford University believe in free speech -providing the speaker supports their philosophy. After several scheduled speakers finished at a noon rally, it was announc- ed there would be an "open mike" for anyone to have his way. Dave Bray, a 29-year-old &alesman, took lhe microphone and explained he Was a Vietnam veteran and had ser\'i!d in Cambodia. "You kids may be ruining your school and your lives by what you 're do- ing ...•.. " Bray stated. Two studenta shouting: obscenities rushed to the mike, wrestled it from Bray and threw it to the concrete. Bray walked caJmly away as a near-fight developed ljlt' whether or not he should· be aUOwed lo speak. . One of the men who bad jerked the mike from Bray '1 ha.Pd explained that · whe\ they open •;ta "r,te.mike":.tbey i;i~~ WN •;1~ co~vei crea~ ' ', • ._ ..... ,... Wlk"JIJ I• ' ' r ' ' ' ' I. ' • ' ~' f'' ,-,. ~· ::li:.~~J. I... • • 1t I I """" ' -~'WIS hif 'treedom f'ot· ,·enemy to speak," ezplained the demomtrat.qr. who refuaed to &lve h1I name. Reduced Phone Charges Seen After PUC Ruling A California Publi c Utilities Com- mission ruling expected ne:rt week will pave the way for reducing phone charges between Laiuna Beach and the Laguna HiUs-Mjssion Viejo-El Toro area, ac- cording to plaMing commissioner Robert Hastings, former phone company ex- ecutive. Tbe recently enlarged Santa Ana base Directors Picked By Civic League Members or the Laguna Beach Civic League have unanimously elected a slate of five directors. Elected to the board were Mrs. Alice 8. Klng, A. E. "Pat" Worthington , Joseph O'Sullivan , Joseph Tomehak alld Anthony Demetriades, current president. The new board will direct a six-point campaign covering observer attendance at civic meetings including the City Council, Planning Commission and School Board ; fund raising; membership; in- creased communication i n c I u d i n g formulation of a newsletter ; involvement in people problems, and establisbme;t of an advisory committee. rate district will be divided, creating a' new district for the Saddleback Valley coounu'nlties, h• said. At this time the PUC also will set a dale, probably 18 monUlS away, for reducing toll charges between Laguna Beach and that area Pacific Telephone's Santa Ana base rate district some 30 miles to meet the El Toro area and expansion of the Rossmoor from 20 cents to 10 cents and phasing out the JO.Cent charge as soon as wires are installed. As a first step In this direction, the PUC last week approved expansion o( This move had the effect of reducing phone bills by about $120,500 a year for some 12,000 customers in the areas. Laguna Citizens Enraged Over Toil~on Beach Three angry L a g u n a Beach homeowners today won at least a tern· porary victory in their battle to halt the construction o! a public toilet at Anita Street Beach. Chamber In Laguna Gets Funds Laguna Beach Chamber <A.. Commerte seemed assured its $.18,.500 in promotional funds for the comin& fbcal year despite oppoaiUon from an aerospace engineer and an UAsucctasful COUICil candidate. JO&epb TomcbH, dlftated council can-- didate who wu lam-booltd all tho planning ""1U!lltalOo 'by the new regime, urged the city to: -Seek maldlla} funds !lvm the Chamber for 'the Pfomotio'n money. . -Loot l.oto ~ poss.ibiUty that ad· vertislng or promotionjll firms be btvlted to bid on handling the city promotion. He indicated the charge for this would be about 15 perctnt of funds involved. Tomehak mali:ltalned that on a per c@pita , basis only two cities in CalHoraia ante up more for promotion tbaR LagWla, Palm Springs and Santa Barbara (after the oil .spill). Tomehak estimated the r u n d 1 rt!presented $2.IO per person Jn Lagun1, children included, and called this "rather excessive." Tomehak suggested also that the use the funds are put to by the Chamber be more public. Mayor Richard Goldberg, fonner Chamber president, iald the city l'f'Ceives a detailed report from the Cham- ber every month. Tomehak said the rationale for utlll:.blg the fuflds is wanUng. Goldberg said the Chamber matching . the funds ls an io- teresUng·idea but "I don't tbJnk it would produce adequate funds." Bernard Syfan, Chamber president and finance commJttee trea!urer for two of the wlnnl11g candidates, indica1'd that adverUsing agencies would no£ be in-. terested in the amount Involved . He said the Chamber produces hundreds and hundreds of hours of volWlteer labor toward promotion. Syfan said, "There are teveral poinll that apparently escape Mr. Tomehak for one reason or another. Most olher cities have industries. This one has to lean on tourism." Councilman Charlton Boyd gave a ta~ about types of commllllities and sakt1 (See OLUfBER, Page 2) Orange Coast 2 Bullets Fired Into Semi-truck On SD Freeway Cultural Subsidies Due Superior Court presidlng Judge. William C. Speirs ordered the city to cancel the contract It signed last May 6 with the Charles C. Benton Company of 1401 S. Coast Highway. And he further ordered both side s in the toilet spat to appear May 27 before Judge Robert Weat•er Two bullets fired from a weapao shot near the San Clemente State Park area ripped into the trailer of a large truck traveUng on the. San Diego Freeway early Wednesday afternoo11. California Highway patrolme1 rtlayed the shooting incident to San Clerne.nt~ Police after truck driver Macdonald Campbell, 50, of El Cajon pulled lnto the truck scale area beyond San Onofre to tell or the shooting. campbell said he was drl vi11g south- bound aJocg the freeway whe" he beard the two shots coming from the Avenida Calafia 3tea. Two buUeL holes were found on the right side or the trailer. n»e driver tokf police he saw no liuspects ·iwho mlghL have done the •hooilll(. OfDcer1 woukf not specuh1te whether the iocldent was related lo l h c Teamlter1' Strike, which ha~ result ed In other recent 1nl~r allacJcs on rigs traveliq; Souther1 Calllornla freeways. " I Laguna Councilmen Endorse $17,000 in Grants Laguna Beach councilmen Wednesday gave tacit endorsement fo about $17,000 in cultural support for seven organlia· tions ~ the coming fi1eal year. Amounta have yet to be finalized but this seemed the consensus of council opinion at a study session. It compares with $19,000 in support given during the current period. Greatest benellclary will be the Laguna Players which projecta a loss for the year of $27 ,222 in equlwlng and operating the new Laguna-Moulton Playhouse. The Players have ak~ for $'7,000 and will :1pparently get It. They also asked for SS,000 to underwrite a new children's theater program and will apparently got llOO !or thi s. WilUam Harcum, Players board presi- dent. said it became necessary to borrow $42,000 for new equipment for the Playhouse. He pegged recovery hopes to a big season for the si.t·week run or "Oliver" ~d membership expanded from 2,126 to 5,000 persons. The musical "Oliver" is being put on jointly by the Players and Lyric Opera Association of Orange County. Production eost is estimated 1t $40,000. Speaking o( flooding and olher pro- blems in the new building, Harcum said, "the architect and builders have not. ye:. completed their duties as far as we·re concerned." Harcum said that aUcmpt.Jng to rtpay the loan has eaten Into money lhat would have betn used for operating the new , theater. "t would not like to see this (playhouse) go down the drain," he said. Mayor Richard Goldberg suggested .a list of monies: spent on plant problems at the new theater be turned over to 1:-ie city since it is a city building now. Jack Seymour, pub lie i 1 t of the playhouse, Mid, "It made our loss picture bigger than If 1\le had moved into a building that operated well. We nted a lot mol'! than we are asking for." City Manager Jamts D. Wheaton said he Is arranging a confere nce on all parties Involved to talk over thf' physical (Set CULTURE, Pait II S. Corfman. The lavatory lawsuit was filed by ho'!\eowners Harold A. and EUzabeth M:-O'Brien of 1007 Gavlola Drive and Riebard E. Loring, 990 Gavlota Drive. It aUeges that construction of Ute en-/ visaged facility would interfere with public right.of-way on Anita Street. The tollet, It built, would be: withln sight and sound of the two Gaviota Drive homes. 1'he O'Brlens and Loring further allege that construction of the controversial toilet would be "a waste of taxpayers money," and that there ii no P!>'Slble ju!t.lflcation for its construction. Their complaint poinll out that there is only a 60-foot stretch of public bench at the tnd of Anita Street and the use by the public of that lim ited area or sand ha rdly merits the building ol an adjacent tollcL f The north· wind wlll blow but we won't have snow -this breeze will heat thJnts up along the coast Fri- day, with Jocal temperature& in the 70'a and inland readings up to 93 degrees. INSmE TODAY With the droth of Grnrrn! DiUord, thi U .S, ha.r Wst more giMralt in Vietnam than in any millta111 action of Ille last JOO ~ear1 e%UJ)t for World War II. Pag• 29. , 1 j • It' 2 DAILY PILOl SC '"""*"• 11"1 14, 197C f'rotll P .. e l CHAMBER SUPPORT ••• I "Rt>lollable growth Is the only way"'""' lt be ldminlltered IOme place Lquna Btach tan come oul of Its past ~·" ..-ud ,./pport !Uture 1rowtb. s._= that be wu DOI Wt -be -trod minded." oppOlloa tho ber bul t~l Goldberg told Tomehak that the bed "'" • " lack of naure;\l"f! tu fund! for promotion are strictly ~ i: ';:" I J•cnt. 11'11>8 data buslneu aenerated tax. tie s a i d , P'-0 not adequate," he llid. "Qtlun1 are not paying for advertising, Sweeney mentioned tund1 f or the vl.sltors are pa,ylng for It." lifeguards, beach and other services In· Tomehak said citizens are paying by creased for towim. "ls tt In raot cost vlrlt\e of the fact ttt money is taken 1.;ffective to residents o! the area?" he away from other general city use.. asked. Goldberg charged that what Tomehak Goldberg asked why be hid not a11ked waa really after was euttlng the p~ the same question about fundl to bt motJoo tunds. allocated for cultw-al ruppart. Sweeney James Sweeney, aerospace executive, said he ls asking that data on the aaked wh11t proportion of the Chamber effect to the taxpayer he made available. ~ge! the 11 $36,500 represented. Syfan . Syfan claimed that close to half the said, 'none. CJty income la generated b ytourltm He a.a.Id the Chamber operatt:r K.s Sweeney uld, "I 1ugges that touria~ own budf,et and the proportion paid for are a luxury enjoyed by tholllfl who extra be p is less than the amount put make thelr ll.vlng here not by the ~st out by the Chamber. of w." ' syfan aald, "This is the city'•, not Boyd commended the Chamber on the . Chamber's. If it could be ad· realistically sensln& the needs of the ministered bettu some place else, I city and II.a citizens. Spring Concert I n San Oemente . St~dents ranitng from third grade p1an1sls to aCCOO"lpliahed high .school musicians will take part in a major spring music concert Friday night sponsored by the Capistrano Unified School District. Under the baton of district mu sic direc- tor Cyril Gallick, students wiil perform at 8 p.m. in the gymnasium on tbe San Clemente High School campus. The distrlct's honor orchHtra and cboir from the district's •lementary schools . also will perform. Marco Forster Junior lfigh School'• honor orchestra and Choir also will be jncluded. Besides Friday night's concert, students in the district will appear in other musical programs in the SOuth Coast area this month. On May 19 San Clemente High School's choral groups will perform /In an 8 p.m. concert in Triton Center under direction or choral director Richard Dastrup. Junior High School mu!lc lfOUPI wUI offer a concert May 21 at Marco Forster under direction of Leon Badham. The month-long concert series will end May 27 with a performance by the San Clemente High School band and orchestra dli:ected by Galllck and Hal Ro.senberg, followed May 28 by vocal and instrumental groups in concert at Marco Fonter'a auditorium. All the programs are open and free lo the public. Integration Guid e Stands SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A coort order today reinstated -at least temporarily -the state board of education's advi!IOI")' guidelines for the racial Integration of C~llfomla public 9Chools. 1be board on March 12 repealed the guidelines as an aftermath to a Los Angele judge's order for the desegrega- tion of the schools there. Superior Court Judge WI I JI am Gallagher of Sacramento isaued a tem- porary order wiping out the repeal until a May 26 hearing on whether to make tbe order pennanenl. Gallagher also blocked the board from taklng any acUon "to prevent or discourage school districts, parents or pupils from u1Jna all reasonable and feasible means -including b u s transportaUon -for the reduction elimination or discouragement of raclai imlPalance." The board was alto prevented from holding a public hearl~ it had acheduled for today on a proposed new set of guidellnea drawn up after its March repeal. The order was obtained by Negro civil right8 attorney Nathanle\ Colley, a former board member who helped in drawing up the guideline!. He flied suit on behalf or his 14-year-<ild son and other st uctents. ' DAILY PILOT """.,. , .. . L..t•• ... ,. Cost• M ... f)lt.t.Hoe COAST ~IL!IMUtO COMPANY Jtoberf N. w •• ~ ,,.,;o..,1 trid PllllfllMf' Jtc~ Jt. C11rlty \II<• Pru.0 ... 1 .... Gtn.<•I M_,.,. Tho111tt ICtt'til t•lltl' Th111'"' A. M•r,hl11t M-•lflf t•uor lti,~trd P. Nttl $ov!ll 0••-'°""",, 14110r Off!• .. CO.It Mbt! JlO Wtlll lt1 11.-t H....,-1 •11t11: nu WHt ··--, '""'"',. .._...,..,. etl<fl: m fOo,..1 ,......,_,. M~lflt1tfl flHClil ~ 1n11 fltld> l.Wi.~tN Slit C"""'"tt: JN MOl'lll Sl C-IN lt•I Ooll\.,. ,ILOT. -•:tlcto II e-lolnd .. ... ~ ........ .....,,.,,.,. ••lly ft( • ._ ... , llo .... Nit t•ll~ ltt l.tOll"I .... ,II, ............ SNdl. QNl1 M-. NllllllrltlWI .. di ........... ttll\ '/tllrf, '""' WllJI ..... ,..i.iv1 "'"""'· °'"'" (100 ~llWlll'lt ~ lrtfltl•" pltftn ore ti nll w .. 1 ...... ·~~ MfWllOll llKl'l. "'°'' ~ '#f:ll .. ., J:tr•I. ('.MIO ~. ,.,.... ,,.,., ,42-4121 a-H'-4 ....... , •. 1.16?1 S-C~ Aft Drc-,.rt•••tu f*' ..... 4tl-44JI C.Wltfll. 1'71, o..,... Cotti '""'41tAlllt ~,. ... ,.... ,,.,... '"""''"""" U IWlal ,... • .., M ,. • ...,,~!• IWtlfl ,..., 1111 '"'""""" •lllrlovl -"' ...... l'rllMllfl ., ~,ltf\f -·. • ....,_ °'*' "°'' ... ptl• 11 N.....-t .... .,. .. ~,. ...._ C:•Htwftlt. htKf' .. t. ... ,,,,!tr ''-°' .... ~•111,1 "' -n u_. -r11tv1 MlllM"f 1l11tl!wl!OOll, U.• -Tiii.,. Councilmen favored the fundlng except Counctlman Roy Holm who aald he would like to study the proposal. The Chamber lifted for the city use of the tunds as paid advertising, $6,500; photography, $1,000; conference pro- motion, ~; brochures and maps, '2,000; .Winter FesUval, $1,000; com- munity promotion, $3,500; Christmas decorations, $3,350; contingency ex- penses, $500; association dues, $300; pro- motional supplies, $2,100; telephone , $1 ,500: postage, $2,500; management salary, $5,300; management expenlle $600; secretary-clerical salary, $5,100: and payroll taxes, $750. From P09e l UCI RULES . • • education options for students. -The student may recieve a grade of Jncomplete, without prejudice, upon request at any time up to the final examination. :z1k! senate guJdellnes 1Late this option r"Quires Ule .approval of the lrustructor. "Students must be pessing the course at the time he requests a grade of Incomplete. "Make-up examinations may be taken at any time mutually a greed upon by sttident and instructor " accordlnJ to the guidelines. ' -The student may drop the course without prejudice, at any Ume up u; the final eumination. Thi pOiicy committee ruled this action requires approval of the dean of the school in which the class i.'l offered. -The atudent may use the Pass/Not Pan ~~ in any courae on a credit-by· exam.tnation basis. 1'b1a acitk>n allO requires the approval or the dean of the IC!>oor la whk:h the class la offered. -Tbe ltudent may continue courses In the normal way, subject to the nbrmal req~ts and grade!. ObVlOUSly, normal continuation or classes needs no special guidelines. -lnltrupt.ora may ofter students an opportunJt)' to drop present cla.!Jaea and to enroll in Alternative Education 199 or 299. This option, the guidelines state, re- quires the approval of the instructor, the dep1rtment chalrm1n and the dean of the school in whicb the class is ottered. Enrollment In alternative educaUon also requires written request to the department chairman staUng proposed content of the course. HAIJ ·1ndJvldual studies courses carry full Unlvtralty credit toward graduation unit re- quinments. However, their status for use in saUsfactlon of the specific re- quiremenls of indivjdual departments is to be determined by the lndlvldual departments," the guidelines state. -Instructors may award a grade of Pass to all students who request It, and regulations llmlting use of the Pus grade should be waived. The guidelines state that discretion In a.sslgnlng grades is left to the in- structor. Instructors are abo remlnded of the regulations governing final ex- aminations in undergraduate courses whicti state that the tests can be omitted only with approval of the educational policy committee and the department involved. "The lnatructor should be wary er creating a situation in v.tilch a student is seemingly treated differently because of the student's polltlc1l adivlty or beliefs," the statement warns. President Gives Medals of Honor WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pre1ldent Nixon 1aid today at a Medal of Honor ceremony that the American people "will look bac~" at the Vietnam war in the future and honor the conlrlbutlons of the men v.•ho are fighting it. The president presented the Medal of Jfonor. the natlon's highest award for gallantry. to 12 servicemen at a C'-re- mony In tht White Hou~ east room. The Vietnam War, the President sald Is j'm&ny tJmes not understOOd and ooi supported by 10mt l.n this country." Reincarnation Talk Site Change Given A lecture on relnc1rnaUon to be presented Friday night In Laguna Beach by Dr. Olna cennlnara will be held 11.t St. Macy'a Epilcopal Church, 428 Park Ave. instead of In the Women'a Club es announced. Admission to the 7:30 p.m. program, sponsored by Spiritual Re 1 ea r c h AslOCiates, will be $1 for adulls and fl for students. l L DAILY ,ILOT Ill" .... It CALL ED SADIST SURGEON Murder Sua pect Slocum Slocum's Wif e Says Husband Was 'S adist' By ARTIIUR R. VINSEL or "'° o.u, f'll.i sr1H A <>nee-prominent surgeon accused of butchering his baby daughter is a jigsaw puzzle personality in which 20 years' drug use injected violence, sadism and hallucinations into the picture his wife testified Wednesday. ' Preliminary hearing for Dr. Wesley G. Slocum. 44, charged with murder, resumed today in Harbor Judicial District Cour1. Moments (If suspense marked pro- ceedings in the Costa Mesa courtroom Wednesday as Mrs. Marian Slocum, 45, took the stand to testify against the man she helped rise to a now-ruined career. She wort dark glasses and spoke laconically under cross-examination by Chlef Deputy District Attorney James G. Enrlght and Paul Augustine Jr., defense counsel for her husband. She testified that Dr. Slocum: -Used 100 milligrams cf benzedrlne daily for 20 years, balanctd by a tt1n- quili:r.lng type of medication, and, even- tually, gin. , -Envisioned people moving through walls and wu bounded by feelings of peraeeutkln, hiding hoards of checks paid for medical Care in boxes, trunks and bedding. -Severely beal their infant daughter Cynthia and took her to his Santa Ana o!Hce In early 1964 after she died at home. "Did you see the baby again?," asked Enright. "In bags," she replied tonelessly. "What did he do with them?" "Put Ulem In the freezer." "Did you ask the doctor about the bags?" "No. 1 ne\ler looked in the freezer agaln," sald Mrs. Slocum, who the defen9e contends put them there and fought tooth and nail for six years against anyone going oear the appliance and it.s grisly secret. Mrs. Slocum said she became an alcoholic in the years since and seemed vague on many questions asked by Augustine. "Have you had any medlcaUoo today7" "No," she µplied, leading him to ask when she lasl took any. "J had some this morning . . . I'm sorry, I forgot," she said, explaining it was a tranquilizer prescribed for her. Augustine asked that she be given nooe k>r todey's hearing. her if she disobeyed him and once shot her bu!band tbreatened often to kill her If she disobyed him and once 1hol her with an arrow as ehe held a can (If pineapple juice as a target. Under crou-examinaUon by Augustine, she said she knew Dr. Slocum couldn 't hurt her when he was tn jail after a 1"6 shootout with Santa Ana police and last year when he was committed for psychlaUic care. From P..,,e 1 CU LTURE . • • problems of the facility. Goldberg asked who Is ttie watchdog for playhouse funds spent. Harcum said an executive committee oversees minor expenditures and the tota: board ovtt.!ee! the finances . Betsy Rose, players vice rrcs\dent, said the Players have done a1.•;ay with the position of artistic director wnich should aave $10,000. Harcum also said the first play In the new facility cost f4 1000 to produce because equity actors were used "l believe we have gained experience," he said. Council discussion ind!cated Uiat the following support will be approved later: -Lyric OperJ, $3,000. -Laguna Beach Civic B•llel Company, $4 ,500. -Laguna Beach A r t As.sOciation, 11,1100. -Laguna Beach School ()( Art & O..lgn, 13.000. -La.guna Beach Cornmunity Concerts Association, $1 ,000. -Laguna Beach Cba1nber Music Socie- ty, $1,000. The high school chor.... Tead,rs had asked for $6,000. ..\ council committee rcco1nmended none and no rcpreset1· tatlves of the school group were present. • \ I War Deaths Mounting Cam bodian Campaign Boosts Casualties ,, SAIGON (UPI) -U.S .. South Viet· namesc and Communist combat deaths cllmbtd to new levels last week largely as result of the allied offen.-:ives In Cambodia. The South Vietnamese with. U.S. support opened an 11th offensive toc:tay in the Central Highland! area. The U.S. Command reported 168 American combat deaths last week, the highest in more than eight months. South Vietnam lost 86.1 dead, the highest in more than two years, and the Com· mun1!1ts lost S,898 dead , their hlghest1 In 14 mcnths and many of them in Cambodia. l)Orthca1t of Saigon appeared to have discovered the area where "a part of" the Communist command center for Jndochi~ war operations used to be. He said It was about 10 miles inside Cambodia. When Presklent Nixon ordered American forces into Cambodia on May l he toJd the American people tht.l.r miss.Ion waa to dettroy lhe Central Office for Sooth Vietnam (COSVN), the Com· munists' jungle pentagon. So far it has not been found. Baut.t, baaing hls statement on cap- tured documenta, saJd th1a appeartd to be part of COSVN. Military 90W'ces aakt the Americans hfd captured more than 200 pounds ot documents along with two rubber 1Wnp1 beartna the: 111me of Pham Hl#lll, a vice premier of North Vietnam and the man believed to have run Uie COSVN comple1. 'They also discovered an lnternatlon1! Bu.slneas Machine "readout sheet" with an inventory of the 1upply complue.r. And nearby they found 200 mart tona: cf rice which they were hauling oot in captured armored personnel carriers ammunition trailers and oxcarts. ' ''The cnly way to keep it out or the hands rJ. the North Vietnamese is to move it out of here," Wd Col. o.nn!a Whlteb,.d, Cl, of Arlington, YL Today 's latest Incursion into Cambodia came in the . mountainous region 215 miles northeast of Saigon and about JS miles south of the Se San region where U.S. 4th Infantry Dlvi!don troops and South Vietnamese 22nd Infantry Division units crossed the border last week. 'Gunsmoke' Arness' Son No immediate fighting was reported In that area, but a South Vietnamese offensive pushing along Highway 1 toward Phnom Penh killed 119 guerrillas Wednesday and U.S. troops pushing Into the Fishhook area said they had un- covered "part of" the Communi!t "pen· ta""on" in the Cambodian ju~les. New World Surf Champ The U.S. Military Command said the United States was furnishing helicopter gunships, tactical air support and logistics assistance but had committed no ground forces to the new border drive, the l lth since South Vietnamese first cros.se<l Into Cambodia on April 29. TI1e 11 included four South Vietnamese forays into Cambodia before the current allied campaign was officially announced. Maj. Gen. Edward Bautz. comander of !he U.S. 25th Infantry Di\lision, said his forces in the Fishhook area 90 miles 1'1·0111 Page l Speelll to llM DAILY PILOT MELBOURNE, Australia -R o 11 Arneu, 18-year-old ion cf television gunslinger James Arness, Thursday night was declared surftn1'a champion of the world. A{nes.s, a student at North Hollywood Hie!" School, was almost apeechless. After a lon1 pause during the world champion trophy presentaU011i young Arneb stammered, "Jd like to aay lh1a is outta-sl1ht.. ,lhania everybody." '11len Amess quickly hld behind one of the larger objecll around. U.S. Team Manager BreMan "Hevs" McClelland of Laguna Beach. Young Arness' father had even fewer words when hla 90!l called him In North Hollywood IO!llg dlatance at 4 a.m. to tell him the riews. "Son, I'm stoked," the elder Arlle3s declared. Roll recalled tJ\al ~IJ lathe!' ltad In- troduced him lo · lllrllni at a beach in front of President Nllon'1 San Clemente home. "Dad and I still 10 aurflna tos•ther almost every day and he lo"8 tt too," Rolf said. "He's pretty good, too." Roli ls scheduled lo fly horn• Suoday, One of his Nrfln1 "buddles, 11 tiny H~wailan Sharon Weber, 21, won the women's world crown alt.er Tburlday'a final at Skene's Creek, near Apallo Bar.· Only 61 Inches t.all, Sharon "ato e" the title from former ch1mp1on, Mario Godfrey of the United States. "Jt hasn't reaU,y hit me, but I feel kind of all rl&bt," Sharon, an aulltant at a Honolulu bf:alth food store, uid. She said 1he surfed up to four houra a day at beachu around Honolulu. PHONES ... tioned. tr s been In effect about three years. March on Pendleton Base The Palos Verdes phone user by paying an additional $28 monthly could phone anywhere wltJiin .. the 213 or 714' area cedes without charie. This is the max- imum mont hly charge. The customer for lesser amounts, starting at about $3.85 plus base rate. can have toll frtt service to selected area.'!. Reports Called 'Madness' Gannon said, "I would like to have It here but we can't since it's still experimental ." He said his company has the same experlmental areas in Los An it el es County. Gannon told councilmen his company Is spending '2 million dRlly and will spend more next year. Costs arc in· creasing and <mlll of financing are in· crl!"ll!ing, he !aid. Gannon said taxes had doubled in 10 years and plant Investment is up 118 percent. He aaid hi.! company paid 9.29 percent intere!t on a $150 million bond issue and lts rate or return on in- ve!lment ls 5.8 percent. Gannon 11ald the rate now for a prlvate line, $4.75 wa! S4.85 IO years ago. The cost of a business phone is up only $1, from '8 10 years ago,. he said. By JOHN VALTERZA 01 tlM Dt1PY '""' 11111 Oceanside'• city council acted as predicted Wednesday night and appraved a 7.5 percent pay hike for the city 's police, sill! leaving the of I I c e r 1 dlssaUsfied and preparing for a pos!lble walkout vote tonljht ahead or planned weekend demonstraUona. And earlier In the day the city won a court victory of sorts wheo organizers of an anticipated huge Saturday Peace March lost their argument that the city 's 3Ckiay-notlce ordinance for p a r a d e perm.ill violated the constitution. San Diego Superior Court upheld the city's code, meaning that the anticipated 15,000 lo 20,000 demonstrators would not have any legal sancti()n in their parades scheduled Saturday. One aspect of Saturday'• demonstra- tions -rtports of attempts to converge Inflate your Comforts DEFLATE Your Budget with ICSuffea u ~dWom by ac@¥!!f; Win a 1loriat11 victory in the battle of the bwftet by .. • treatingyounelf to a rreat ahq blOadloom.,. TOUFFEAU by Kara1tan. You would otspect Karutan-the !ONt name i4 carpet and rug fa1hiom-to create a 1be1 tba.l ~·u mo~ colorful, more eJCcilinl', and more lafth. Toulfeau i1 ill ol that and mortwltb hmly m1'rl· long nylon pil•yamt, skein-dyed in t1bulOU1 multi· colors ol breathtaking hrillianct and Kan.-loc WOWA. But what a happy diacovery that th• coat of thi.9 1otnutionallhagiaonly $11.tS 1q.yd. Tou(fttJ.U ii al&o ovoil.ob1• &n.ONO nlft with a htoV)'·knorted matchin1 /rinle. 9' J: U' $180.00 on the gates tJf Camp Pendleton, were termed "sheer madness" by a top organizer for the Students for a DemocraUc Society in Orange County. The top.level 90urce told the DAILY PILOT Wednesday night that the an- noo.nced "convergence" at the base's main gate at the exact cpenlng time of Armed Forces Day was pl•Med as an "Individual action" by the local Oceanside membenhlp cf the Move.ment for a Democratic Military (MOM) and "Green Machine." He said that the ldea "I! stupid from se\leral standpoints." : "Our group from Orange Collnty plana to have a pancake breakfast for the servicemen during the 10 o'clock thing at the Marine Balle gates." He stressed that plaru call for a "'peaceful, nonvio\elll" series of rallies and demonstrations. IF YOU CAfll'T COME IN-CAlt: 646-0175 for tn ••Ptrl corptl con1ultonl who will e•rn• lo tyOtlt hOfrlt with llrnpltt with1ul •ny •~li91tlon t1 yo11l ' H.J.GARRtfT fURNITtJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Op11 MM., T1turs. & Frf, lfts. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646-0275 , DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS ""'--""--'"-.;;.. ..... Ll'L ABNER '10'15 MAH Wli=EAGIN AN' MAH U'L Ao\PPY IS HOOMI~ AGI N!.' HOPE TMll.l6& • TI.lRNEDOUf AS 'WELL FO'rn' Ll'L RICH GAL- By Tom K. Ryan SALLY BANANAS IT'V SU!'E ~EAT LOA!1ED CIGARS! I HAVE NO ME SOI'M MAKING ONE IN THIS TREE! 5-/4 GOSH, YOU DON'T HAVE TOOOTHATI THE MLITTS HAVE BEEN VERY NICE To ME· THEY CALL ME THEIR STAR BOAROER!--- I'LL ASK 'EM IF You CAN STAY,WITH us.• I HEY~ YA STTJPID UOWN.'! GET DVE/l WHERE YA·· I I : I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by ~ A, POWER I PERKINS oi C.ROSS 1 11.omilfl god 5 Att,ntion ' Lelhal ]~ Be kldol'IH 15 Bdno 10 disastt'f lb Oncl upon . .... · •JJ Ca ti IOI l!elp 50 Grommrt 52 Lack1,,9 movl.'111ent 54 Drbtor S6 l!!Ytl OI achitve111l.'r>t 511 Schtmf! . By Harold Le Doux GORDO r S<JPPOSE IT'S ).[}Mf PASLE THAT··- aJcE A KID 1-EAR.>JS 10 WALK, HE RE:F()SES 10 N 7UTEO MY MORE/ 5-/.f MOON MULLINS TH< WIF~ IS · LOUD ... TAXES ,ARI' PAsr· DLJE .. .JUNIOR IS A DROPOLTJ'. .. -rHe BOSS ISA <;~oucH.: ~1·~-@ ANIMAL CRACKERS ll.lflA\IS Oil 1REIUBE:1 1-Yl.E ~ A Gl'?OUP OF E><~sARE Dl'5CUSSllJG CE:llS~Hlf', By John Miles 1tl9, n.. ........ ., '°' T.,..,.,. $r"4'<•'" J (f)~ I · 2 words b2 Be undrr lhl.' 11'1.'il\hl.'f b4 Asian pe~insula "~--------'~--------' ~--------' ~-------~ 17 Almost lmnied 1a1e fl J words 1' Cast ~O Hot c11lt1vaoted 21 Legal111a"' Att.r. 23 Gr;int tempor<My US! of 2~ Alaska and YukOfl native s 21 lklk 2'l T reachr•Du~ persons JI C !ear I 35 Ship dirrcrlon 37 Of an ilf .. f'd fore• 1' Mala y ,Archipelago ii.• Is land ' -. «I Coclcta r~ ingred ient 4Z Republic t,, SW Arabi• 44 Kind o( t OCIOSlJl'P 45 Cl.'llSLlfed ~7 Musfcal symbols ' • 1• I' ·~ " .. " .. •I Q ~ ' ~ -61 ~ '" " b5 Trrm111ology 07 Exptns1ve labltw<t<t : 2 words 7() Compltte 71 Hero 111 BOl'od '" Opr'!a 72 Brail1 passage 73 01 dubiOl<S charac\t1 74 TUfn dow11 75 Luck 1n It eland OO't N l "Wlldt ,,. 2 words 2 Lion ;r,nd horse lt'alures J MlssOU11; 2 words 4 Hang afl>und 5Kindol · noise & CcmpiiS S point: Abbr. 7 Miss Ftrbl.'1' • ~ I> 5114:70 a Ecctntt1c 38 CeHii l• Baltk pl.'oplt q Q Vl.'fWl.'.i9hl 10 Phy;ically 41 Was one o! the gang 43 Well arran9rd 411 Form of active 11 Gas s lal>Otl item 12 Venly 13 Obsc ene }8 "--··-fl'O!S\Ufl.' Rive l ... 48 Walk •iln 2 w(lld s heav y stein 22 Outdo 51 Beverage 25 Word of 53 Ota prinl ing al)l)rov a1 style 2b Number 55 Not pliant 28 Na1 co\1c 57 Charges shn1b 58 Gazer~ JG Greek S'J In add 1l POll island t.O Stoot: 32 Oepri~e ol S11flix vig or ( bl Archltecl· 33 "It won 't ural pitf wor t.'.": b3 Tlleater bo( 2 words b& Emling us ed 34 "----b1fil'" wHh ar111 35Staport &pill in ls1ael bB ltl a:i 's na!M 30 Coote~l b'J Dull I " N " " " II• !ilu ' " ~R ' JI " I ,, " ~. " " " 0 .. .. ·~ .. .. ' 01" ,, " ... ·~ " " • ,, " 6J ' ,J " ~ -• " .. ~ I n • MISS PEACH ;V\A J',CIA'S P~ft:r-T1N1E fMPlOYME NT A<.e~c"1". , EAP.N Exn<A • M OHE"C I A F•cJ'. J S-c.1-\00L.. ·' 1 ----------; ~~ff'LY '"1ffZE _,. STEVE ROPER t CAM"T PROMl~E '!'Ott AN'/· l\UtK.! t WOULP LIKE VDU TO l tVE 1-/E~f WITM ME •• &if IT PEPENDS ON w.M"f THING!!~ PEANUTS 3 HOJl':S AT 30 CENTS AN HOU!t. ?!! I'\.L H"'1E TO PAY FOi<: MY e.us FA~ES, MEALS AND EQUIPMENT ... 6ETOOT Of HERE! . ;1 " ' f AT THAT RA.TE 1 THIS JOE! ..OULO MEAN A NET L05'5 OF 8 DOLLARS >..WEEK!! !JO? ISNT YOUR F'ATHER. WOIZ'!C;ING ? By Mell • • By Charles M. Schulz !l()I, ll<AT ~5 //of MAD! I LET HI,• COUR THE 6UIE >IOES IN Ill< CIX.OON6 Boo<, WT DID TJ.IAT 5AT'6F'( MIM ?NO! Th11rsdily, May 14, 1Q70 DAILY PILOT ii!~ ly Al Capp :._ ll " ly Charles Bal'IOtti By Gus Arriola By Roger loU.n • MOS\ OF II •• --~ HAS 8EEll 'el-lf'l'eO' DVI. --.. '--~---~-~---'~~ THI SflANGf WOil!> MR.MUM ~----· " 1' ........,., (I/ I • 1 • : ' I DAllV PILOT SC • • Worth~ f.omplete-New York Stock List ,. U.S., ~apan in War of Cars NASO Li1tin91 for Wednesday, Mey 13, 1970 1J SYLVIA PoRTll\ (-lo • Str1a " !ff) .. TOKYO . , • • Lut yiar 4lont1 u.les of Japuese cars i n oar market soared 44.S per. "Ctlll IDd $1.lt• of Japanese 'lnu:U lo UI rocUted ... la the aame months, ' W1r1 ••• w • ,,.flt ....... . •' " • 1•• •••'th••' tht jtll•~• rlllt• nLIPNOHI ANSWDIN• IUUAU 1 3 5.777 7 4th Annual Franchise and Business Opportulity Shaw Find out how' you 1'Cen 9et in .. u11n••• for your1elf" ._., vi1lting thi1 supermerket of 8u1ine11 Opportunitie1.· 71 Companies from all over the Uni t•d Stal•• are on dlsr.l•y •nd ,.lookl"J for r•nchi1••1 • an •••oci•t•s in Oran9• County and 1urroundln9 ar•••· May 14-17 INsneyland Hotel, Anaheim Adml11\on $2.50 Self Medication Is A Potential Danser '~ RllY •UNT. t.n : '1:ven physlel llll:I are far from t(?'ttlMnt about the practice ot sell-medication. 11 everyone went to their d0c'tor1 at ~ 1trn of ill· neS5 tt would be lmp01sible for the medical profession to handle the deluge of pa .. Uonts that wouJd desetnd UpOn thmi. The more su!· ously ill wouJd· 11utter most for there Would not be enouah ol the time needed for them. But, •elt·m~cation mutt ~ carrltd out wisely, One 1ood rWe is ••• if certain 1ymptom1 keep returning, It· is time to have your doc· tor flnd the cause. When we notlce a cu1tomer is oft· en buylnr a particular non prescription remedy we will a1 ..... ays sui:rest that they shoul!! see thetr doctor. YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you n~ a d elivery. W e will de· Uver promptly v.1ithout ex· b'JL charge. A great many people rely on u1 for their health needl. We welcom1e reque.ta for detlvny service and charge accounts. PAii: LIDO PHAIMACT Jl1 Hftftlt•I ltd Kewp•rt IHc• '41·1111 .,.. htl..,,. U.S. auto sales ltJ Japan rose a puny 2.7 percent aad truck sales · (a total af IO) were ridi culous . This year automakers are Japan's ~cheduling production ct • m I g h t y a,eoo,ooo motor vehicles, up 13.6 percent over '69 and pro- jecting 1,100,000 export~, up 19 percenl Japan's sales in the U.S. market could be dou- ble '69 -ra'Qie from a low 350,000 to 475,tol. THE BATILE OF the Automobile is on ln full force. From all over the world, small cars are pouring lnto the U.S. -with Japan's Toyota and Datsun well up on the list of pcpular Invaders. I n response, Detroit finally is rolling out America's new sub- compacts. You have not yet signaled the outcome, but authoritative guesses are that Japan will both make strong inroads into the Volkswagen's sales and be tough competition for all U.S. makes. Confident of this, Japan's autqmakers are forecasting productJon will continue to rile JS percent a year and exports will continue to rise 18 to 20 perctnt a year. And Katsuji Kawamat.a, pre!ident of the Japan Automobile Manufal'· ture~ Assn. 8J well as ol Nissan Motor Cc. (Dats un ), told me he expected total roads to double in the next 11w;an to 30.ooo.ooo. RE'S NO DOUBT that the Battle of the Automobile is ju.st beginning and that it will become far more im· portant than the current coJ. ll!lon over Japan 's tremen. dous textile exports to us - a collision now up to a level of dangerous emotionalism on both aides • Japan poinU out that she EARN ,, ,. ....... ..,. I 1 .... 9"'1aa&Y I-• l S,000, .... .,...... kt '·" ~ ........... Tl11Wt c... tiffc•1, ....... lioe+.1 •• -.. ltwitJ. 5Yt 1. ,..... .. , __ Holi:Acc...._._.,_. ... tW~-M M-..r1 .. ii.- lw.t"'4 -.. wtlff111 ~. Cnt-t "' .me, .,.1 ,.._. yo1. "'"5T IT nt1 Jt'fMI I AM PllOM 1111 11f1 CALIFORNIA XH.RIF.I'&La4N LOCATIONS 110 E. 17ttl St .. Co1to M"° 721 Stote St., S.llht k rtt.re )045 s...1.,. t oed, 0 XHl"d 21t34 Sch ... boMI, CCN109a ,arll. 6111 WlWilre tl•d~ lo1 ""'''" • XEROX COPIES • 4 .... COLLATED fR[[ ..... 20t MINlMtJ~ll 8 l 11 ! fl l.INHOIH~D •. GOODlJJR4 g~~rs 21 11 Sin JHquin Hills Rd. -Newport Center 644-4454 b knocking dowll her barriers ••••-l llvt 111..,...ltr -l&lltftl 11 ......... l ..... lt .. 9 t.ni. ffW9I NASO, ,.,kQ .. llfl lllClllM NllW tr lllMllU .. ~· ... f-1111.uio._ =:b·~10 and wiU perm 11 our f...,.., . ..,., .... .__. __ _,'*..__,,.....,,,...,...,. •• IAC.F-1"° 1·• . ..~ .... automaker& lo invest SO per• NEW Y~IC fAPl IOfl Col• 1'11 ' "•nco1 1" "'I o.c 1,.,,. 1t11i -"mt 1 ~ . • . -l ll• lol Int D!d 11111! Oii I'• I" Pi••• Dr '• Siji : fi$~ Sh 16\11 AclrnE~ .16' ctnt in new JOIDI venlures end ••• ""°'•· r11 T.c 1 1•, Par1<w H ''• t1\ *'e•~ s1"o ~ All Mllll1 .20 !lont[, tul>l>llt4 DY llttl" lS._ lll>'• ~.•~10or,, I' '" 311 St11111~n 10~' ~~.~ I.ill In Jap.n .' 01 Oct 1971 tftt l'ltrion11 Auod-I ClltO 1,. .-• 11 • I lid lfttl1 14 · · ,11on ot 5-curlH•• ~•O y..,; •I• •'• 1>nr!t• t 11•1 2l 1tn ttPo 20 1 AllntLft 1 • .0 Del 't t I !h I th' ls Dtt!ftl Ill( trt FtlrflO T 2 ?.\\ P~ En•ln ""-jft !Irle S!r tl4 101~ Allfltl.11 Jlf 2 rol re OT 3 fl IS flO! 1cr...11 tf't111tc·'F•rtlnt ~\'• •'i P1 G&W 11•> 2 , "tw Cl » ..o A~ulrrt CO h I f 'I'll t k llOll\ 1tu1 •11 rt"' F1aN Mr U5 111 Pl<ln P1f 7 l~ U4 Sul»C T/ y,, ~ Ar Proo .JC, ypocrsy, or I U Crt1tnt1llv1 !nltr.lf=lndl&• "" Pt"n II IO'-J:\Q!uu01I }\t 6\'Ar Po PU.I llt6"' price~; t$ or Fir 6011 3' ; P..i•I W• 1-. '" S11tio Fa '" i Air Red .olOI another ri ve year!! after 1971 •0P•o•1me1•tv J 11G ~E" ' 11 P~1ro111 ~·'·" f•mP• 111 u AJ IMu1rr1e1 P.m ..• , wnkh lhtlt Ft! WFln j'• ,,, p~~Ot pf 60 6j Tanttr "" ""' Al• G1J 1.lt I I In "A ti• f 1t'urllle• CO...IC! Flkkn9 1• ,,, P~I! ~ub 19 7D T31~1t 11""' 19~ Al•ll.• lnl.,1 o ge go g, m:i er O n~ve bet~ ...,,. llOll F,. •'• •.• Pho1on 6~ 1•~T1rior w 73,..75 Al!lffroC .1t . COnCC•n " Say S cll&lecl lllktG/ or For.I Oii H 10\> Pit I'll 1 .... 2'\ T11fv Cm 6\li 1 AIMrt1nl ,3' pressing , lOld !bid). ntt•· 0<mlt \ • Plnkrln to"> !'I, Ttnn1n1 'l"l\lo AktnAlu 1.10 " 'bl 0•~1-t mario.el~ Foti Crnl 1 \~ 18'h Portr MIC 10 I ~ Tt~'' AS i;, A!ro5t•fld .~ Ka V• amata . Incompati e cn~not th•Ol.I~ Fotom I', 1 Pro Col! •·· j1oo '~'"" A 3n '"" Ai.afldr1 .JOr our l~e d•Y, Pr!cts Four Sta ' ,,.., P•09 Anft J 'IO TIHn• Co 14-'""' All" Cll .204 COnceSSiOnS for one Of the do "O! lnclvcl' Frnllt Co t \o I Pt>lll Min Slo $'o Tlf!nr Jn t'• 1"-AllHLud 2.40 f~llil mtrkup Frnllln E 9 tt~ PvbS NH 2•\o 2•\o T ltn CP -$1 A letlud Pf l d I d. ~·11 F 1~1W 1 jh PuoS lllM lf I'"" Trt( c~ 3.; ,~: Al~lucl r" worl 's great ra ing na· :;:~;s,0~11 or com· ,-~ou~ Tl i•. , Pubs NC 1 ,~ Ho ''"cru 11 111 "'tr. Pw .'2 • " Th C AAA EM l'o 1•0 Fuqu1 IO 1'> l''IPublS!lf l'o 1~Ttfl(nl 2'1 31~Alle<1C,, 1.10 lions, counters omas . 11u1o1 Coro s 6 GIH cmo ~·· ,,, P11•Pno 1 • TrlMOO H •'ii .~ Alllc!Mn1 Ab . AFAPt S 111, lt'lo GtrlMI ll'\ 1l P lltn"!> " ll Trlco PO "llV. 7'111 AllleclMlll .Ii MIM president Of the ALTS lrK ''• }\o Ca• Svt 11'• 14 Pur.ty I I• 6 Trllltlr ,,; 1 AlllH PO .61 ' AVM CP 91, 10._ G Alfdl ,,., ' POo;o C11 j ' S TrOPl(t l1Vi 1f!o'i All~P<I pl l Del ., b d ·-·at 0 Acmt El ,.,. ' G 1e1 ..... c ,., 1·~ "~' CM 10•. II~ f•lOfl fcl II II~ AUlodSI< 1 .a to!" ase aS;,v,.I I n. Alf Ho\P 1?\fo lJ'~ lth\lf S j•; 11111 Oyl! ti IJ Unite( 4 '' Alio<ISup ,Up Uow COULD J • .. "Id Ar ln<h>! l~ '"'GR! £1t I l'o P~holl C 1•, I n Ilium U~ l'f•: Alli1 C1t1lm apan uul ,.;,"Orn f , .. 9h Geol•I 1 , • .., r;!.;.1 Tral l \'t I Un McG:t I ll.!o All)htPC .io. f the Id, I t All>t• H j\1 s (•rt11n 11, 6" llln•b Fl 10 )1 \J S 8knor 7h II~ Alce. 1.80 up one o wor s grea es All>t•" ,,, , 1 .. u,11 11 i6 R .. vc11 co '' H» us Enve1 u 1• Am.olSua 1..0 . , , AICOllC S S"• ... t>n W l6'l 11''1 11 ••m (g I Sh II S ~9•r )! 3111') AM6AC ,}II automobile industries in less Ai.co L"ll 1•'t u1. !tk>b Rub ''• J•, l!~O!I EQ ;1 l'f u1 Trill 29v, JO"" Amt•E• 1.10 Allt B•• J'~ 1;1,~010 Cvt I ''1IPe! Cr1d ll'~ J; p PtnP 111, 22''io Amt£1 pl2.6~ than I ' yeses' Allie<! E<I 0 • 1 ood LS 1 1"' 1110111 Pu 1,','",',• u,,','" ,•,,.Lo ·-~ Silo Am HfH .Ole " • AIDn G«i n , I (ICIWV c l'O ' R ltV !!o II '1 ,, A.mtH Clll.~ Some e•planalions leap out Am.tel< l'• •. 1111h I" io 10"" Ro~o E~ " 11 1111 LO Ho 6'1o AA l•Flltr .ID """8ui11 10 ... 11 Gr"ph ~ \i)l'. li<o Pob,a M 14 "II Yent1 $1 Ul, I~ AmA!r lMI .10 to the serious observer: the A E1 L•D •'• ,.,, C•A M1, ,.,~JO"• Ro~•tun •"• ''~ v1•1ron 10'~ 11 Am 68k1t • • Am E•P• 60'o .O•o Gtttll M1 16\1 11U llov C.u! 1'l l '• l'V1c1t 1111 J•\'o ltl~ A8rln<h 2.10 unique government.industry· ""' Fu•" 11. "" Ornn RE 11 11 ""'' s10• '"'· 111• w.11,w P 20 12 Ameoc•I 1.20 . . ~ (irtt! •1'> I] rovt Pr S'• 6i.:. II>~" llo JS'• ll»~ Welt! 8d 11111 11~ Am Can 2.iO f1nancl!!.!abor cooperation and""' 1n·e1 ll'• 1••· Grw1h 111 ,., 1 s~m1•r •'• S'• N 11e~a. ,,, ~ AC~n pf 1.15 th A Mr<11c11 n•) Ill G+J~r!I en •11 s 'f~n•n r ~" •"" w~"""' • s •m <•m 00 planning lo build e industry: ,. s1 c~11 l'> 1 ' :'i~11 1nr ~ •'• !(nott 111 •o.:. 511. W•1ti NG 1~,·,•, "•"•A Chain 1,60 b II ( d II th A~l G ~I 4 S Gvrodn 1'. 1·0, fl tPtf 1'• ,.._ W~•~ R.E C , the j iOOS 0 0 :lrS e Am felv n \J Har>OYr ! 21'> 11 S<;I Ind t 4'~ Wal Tr I!/: flio Am rtY•I .l'O g-·ernment ond the Japanese ~".",~,,• ,' ",'' t.11~ H"',',1~ ,', 11·. 1s•1 ~(Q! 5011• '11• ''" weab R• ,, 12" f~'c.vv~+J~ ::~ v• ,. ,., ,,. 11\ !•' Strlpp\ H 19'/o 10°'\ Wfld!rn 11 11, U'lo it.no oii!ill I b k lb g em. ti po ed A.re• lpcl J" ,,~ Htnr~ F 1J''> 21 ~"l"I~ A l'o •'•We Ing M !I 11 'O> 0 '°" an s Y a re n ur Ard•n M "; I'• Hr•li cu l''> • se.,lt 111 u•. 16"• ¥111cs1 P 1•• Sit Am 110~!IVnt in· the modern plants put Ard•n 111 11 ll Hlaoo: Int l'• J'\ s.,. Cma ~·. •l•WITn NA ~·, ,.,.~ AOuei o.lu • • At-Mol' 111, n•,I. Hlll~vn l'o• '" '~n11r11 lO 11 Wlln Miii 1>, i'~ AmEIPw 1 U Up SO recently that they are Arrow H ol(I •l H.olm EP ~6 J4 1S•c r,ro ''' 8',~ W.in Pue) 8>, 9''• Am En~1 "11 A,rvld~ Y~• 10''1 11olobt!I 9'<. 10 Sovtn Uo •I 41 Wln9 Wh 6' 61' Am E~p llld automated beyond n1ost of ,-.,cc Bot '"" 22 ... Hoover 1 JO'o\ l"' s~.11 Fe• H'• u wlnban 11~ 1t ' Ag"'nd P'"' J , f ""I . A~•o ~cl 1 1 How•ll c I l'lt1So1"1sr s ,','•', ,•,,,. ~.•,<~PLE 1' 10·\f A .,.,,,. .50 OUrS; apan S auu OUS CapaCI-B•lra Al •'t , ... Muc~ Ml ,\, I 5C1I Wot ,. II~ ?•'o )+,.A nln oH.IO f I th US · · I 8~~~' f)•,, lt Hue! PP ~7 lO So"IE ltl Jl•l, ll>., Wr19!11 W 11''1 lt'~ Ami'IO•ll .XI ty ot copy ng e .. ong1na 811 p_,1~1 1·, S"• M~e G•\ I) U Soun G1 19'Ao 1t:O.:. YrOn• E ,\, 4:i,. A Homt 1.SO nd · · '! lh h J 8•,....tk I'• 1•, H~rst P 10"• It'• A Homo 01 1 a 1mprov1ng on 1 ; e l' p e1,1n p lloo '" 1-1,~,, co 11>. 11•, • :i.._ Aw HOJo ·'' h 'th U " 88""'tl 11''1 73•·, HVaU tnl t''I I -.._ Amln~f$1 .50 we gave er WI 0 r Jn-Bayle" 11•. 13 .. HVOI ATll •'· '" AMtt~I· '1'° dustrlal know-how a~ well as =~~7~!t r!~ r~;' I~ ~~~r 1f' Ji'' MUTUAL ~~t1M1:1.:1 ~ a "nuclear umbrella'' -debts 11e1m u.a 6 1' 1rwxco o ,., ,,, AN•!G•~ 2.10 Berk H• JI lf lnlolt( 1'1 )•, Am PltO~ _IJ she freely acknowledges by 6~h L1D ''• lf'> 111rrard 1'\ • Al!110v .06• ' B•lluPI W 1\; 8 lnl (.,.,! •, > ,'', ~:::: ,•:i. o' .'·• !he Way· and, Of C0Ur5e, her Bird Son ll 1' IMrm 11'1 .., • . . • . 61r!cl\r , ••t. Int llW"' !'·• e I FUNDS 4 ~II 1 90 protecUon1st tar1f(-ta1 policies eiaci. HI '1', ,,,,. 1n1 M~1111 ;0•1 11 Am 1r .70 h. h I •··· $3 IJO() Booue El l'• 1V. Int 5•1 ?l 2''· Am It 1~.10 W IC I one UUl13t 3 , Bolt 6tt 1•~ I Inf 5y pf l•\fo 1' . ~::::s~a ~/,,1J car in Detroit to more than R~' c~~ 1!'• 131• l~~t:~ ,f'• ,; Am sr1r11 ... B.cd S 11 1}:0,:,1~ ~OUll 1A ]~'• --__;A.u1ar 1.60 i9.000 in Tokyo. B;~ ... v ~a 2) ,. Jaaibs F l'• ,..., --A !1.l wt ... 1 And again 1 go back to R·~· k • "l'J uo.:. Jo1111ln c 1 e ~. n '~• 1....,1c •.oo 100 !~Tf~T11>0 1 6rw~ Ar ''• !''°J im W~I Hi I" !ll:W YORK jAP! lf\Y~I 60' 10'2-J u'Ja AmWW r~ the Japane11e worker I s'""'nt fl.•<>ee If 6'~ \\ J•m'" " ,,,., 2s•1o -int 1011aw1m1 """" 1nv11<ror1 G..0.,,p, • AW e•~' '"" • r-a,.,,,, e. i1'11o 16\lr J•m•111 ,,,... 1a •8t1or11. '""r11"' tty 10s nc11 J,4 1.11 Am z inc · a full da" touring the Datsun Bu<kr• AO •·~ Jlfrv 01 • '"" 1~ ... N111lON1 An« I· M~t 1 s;i , Jl Amer on 60 I flu•nuP 5 16\l, ITVI J~non PO l~ ll 111"" cl twcut!!le• Prag fll l'.66 Amtltk :tell p}ant near Yokohama and, 3S CIC Le~• Slo 6'~ l(&lt!r SI \0S,,, ~. ,, ,Oc1ter'> Inc., are ~IOCll lJ.ll ll.M AMF Inc .. tO I ~. . I c~t w $v t 41\.0 h K•1t I or • I 'tile Pf tn •I v.nlcn Sfleg 119 t •5 Arni•< ao in other aLoune s. \11as c~mt0 ll i. k•1••r 11, •,:~111ie" v<w•·•·•• uer Pv :"98 l .!>11 AMIC cD .JO I h I db h · ht C~ncn M 61 70 kilt G."1 j • 1 COUid 11.tYt been In• 11.e'~ ; (l'I 1:•) AMP Int .51 almoa ypnot ze ytes1g cannM ll •~ 61 IC&••m u ••r 101o(t>ldJorboY1~1 111c1 l>•~u ~6 Am11••Coro of hundreds O( young workers ~:~''low 0° 'ol't K:r~u' ~;? 1:" lo~ktal Wt'(tnM11 Iv~ 6:11 ~·n Amu~ Z.•O V. ~ ' • Bin A1~ J Hncoc~ 119 1 91 Amtel :n on the llUlembJy }ine, U\ler fy ~::r~~IA ~~ ;~ ~;::;;o E 'ii~ ~~'> At>lrdn l .11 I.II JOl>nl!n !1°0. li!ll AnacooO '90 k ' 0 • ' .'' I'' ,,•• Aal'nlt•l!r F1mao: KtY~lone Fuil<l, · Anch Hock I absorbed In their litUe las s, c!~. J1v 1 ~:; oc:~; '"" ~~ orwrn SJ 1 •.:n AOQ1io 1~·,19 Ancgr11Ns~ t enthu•'astfc gay c111r cp 1;v, lS~t ""''' PC ~ 1;, lncorn l.51 l.11 c~, Bl 11.~. 1•'.lo Anc1 c11y 1.10 .,. • · Cuc N"C ·~ 91,, l{!n11 1n1 • \' 1"1~r 6 3.S 1.•6 Cui 6w It.I» 7Q.7' AP ICheCp .lS THE FACT THAT cl f Cuti C111 J lU. K/""' El } 6 ~~.·,','•'~ •.la •Ja Cul 6, I.JO '·°" APCoOll 1.311 ea l 0 Ctn!ell \9 'II I( ,. (p S'' ~1, "' ala 6 14 66' Cut KI •.19 1 !l APL Corp thtse young men is hired for Ctn· YPS u it"' Kn•o vo1 17', 11•; ~:~~' ,. 5 ~ s '' cui 11;2 J_9, o:J1 APL 01 c1.Cl6 • Ch•rl llA 6\< J•fo IC•tlllr '"-l,,, Al m 61. Cui SI 15.20 16 18 ARA S•c '6 life and will not be (1red ex· cn1rn11 J • LMC 0 .. 1 n1 1•0 11111• 111 'J.j Cu1 s1 •.19 ':" Arc11eN .foe , en~•! o 6'• 1 Ltnce '" 7l'< "l•'Ao Amc:io '15 S l!l Cul SJ 6.Ql 6 SI 4rclt Di n "I cept for extreme cause ha!>n l Chm Lt• r>.. , .... lino llt• I•~ t Arn OYin J 6~ H .•1 Cu~ Sr l.SJ 1:14 ArllPSvc 1.0I . O lh Ch~ 11111 1 •~' l•ne wa I ,,., Amtr E•Pt"•'•· Po1"r l Qf l i! Ar11n1 OS 10 made him lazy. n econ· Chi' uin ll'.'J l•l'L'""~ '" 1~ '•011 1.i• 1)lknlc~b Sil •.•1 Armcos1 1;60 h. I C,, fir J ~l 5' ltr"'~ M I ~ 11• lncme 119 162 Knie~ GI jft iU Arm(O on 10 trary, he repa)'S 15 emp Oyer Cllrlll S 95 tt Lf~Ov Ld 1 \'~ 1~ ln•en J 51 1.1! Lt~ Gr!lt 1.'01 1 u &,rmour l.6o with great loyally and he is ',",,',;•"••" fi,,. '~, f•,•,,.,c0~,1 '" 3"' ti:~ f ~/ 191 tr:. 111'" 11·01 i3.n A•mirck .IO • ' I.. 1~ 1t Ar.1 c.-111 •'t) s ll L/I '~ •.11 !.26 Aro Coro .\Ill more eager to make his COm• ~~::~ e : ~~~ ~~ t~f, ~~ l;"l 1::.; Arn 1nv 12 .:n LH: I~~ t.i'? :·n !~~ 6i':° 1 ii pany prosperous becJuse he en .. 1nv t1 n•llill• Fii 1•"1 1••,!:::,/~~~ ,711 !rrlu.w: Nar 1J1 9:ctA1~o.1 ~11 ,0 P'ospe'. W'.lh ,·t , ~r:~~onM1 'l~ ~;•'/tgfi'-~d• ~~ f• A.m ,,,, ''°' 6utr'.'o'...,, S•v~~s J.3J Auc1 fl•t" , ' >> '', ""'~""' "r-•o C O . · A>sd OG ! ,0 • (Uni Met 1•. 1•, .. l)g lrn (~o I"~; 61 1 ?1 •n.. ~i 71 ll 11! A•,a ~~· I 10 The fa ct that each worker c 1on1011 o !'• '"" L1nc11 t 10 n · ' -eiou.1 1 n er;. Aidt 01 c10 .. C_p I} 16'• M..i CEI ll'· i;i, f:;.!.!: ~ ~~ ~ ~; Mui 1111 II 11 1111ci!,'Ent 't ~ can couat on e paycheck. a c'.ot11• o s•, 6'4 Mal 1111, ''' J ,, ,,. , " ,·,,1M~;n4 1n 1 ll<I i; 19 Arr 111, •• ·, . d ' (O!llt Co •j JO Mallkrl Sf\~ ti Mfnhtn '•I " • aem1·annual bonus an an Mtmt A• , Aoollo Fa '11 1 s1 M · • At1Rc1> 011.11 ~ l(lrl s 10 M I M I'' ~ All«<I Ill I,, M=~~ t.~ :J; .:·:? All Ill<~ Pl l •lmo!f. incredible variety or C!-.1(fl Ir 1'"• ;~,' M~~". c • 11~ A~lron '00 • ll Man lr 11lJ13.}1 A.llRcn gll.90 f . . be "t •• 'l d Com (Ir 11 la Mt• Mii 101\ ,,,... A•~ Houghlor!~ M4''' 1"n J·~ Atl41Cn.m I rtnge nl!!.u S IMISn ma e (am f:a\ lb>', 11•~ Marm Gr 11, f'l Fur.cl A •ll 5.0l Malhttt ill f l& Alla1 Coo-u "m fear au•·-at1'on w;lt 'c~ '!.•,!. -'1,,, '•"·', •.,,',',~,r '''' ~6 Fur1 e 'M 1.11 M .. 111 Fd 1111 Tiz !To im .,.os. JU IULll _ .. ., ,,, 161, 10\ Stock l .J; S •• MIDA Mv • 71 5·21 uroo-a rl•~ ""de'CUt ho's s-ur>'ly , 0n the '!'!,P!Y •,< ', MM~>"o'c, 1• 'J 5'1 Co '·°' 441 MOO<Jy (p lOtlll.O• o,utomln 1"" _. I' "'-. (,..,. ,. no !J• 1 h •-. 81b10<1 l,•711.0 MOOllY"I J1 "3' li l VOi Co 1.:10 contrary, ht welcomes work·~::;~ f,.~ 1 :~ it:': ~le""~' ,~;: ,,ttJ. ~~~~~'Kn• 1~.~~~tt ~:~ ~~~ ~·?J ~·:: ~:~~J'°;D .. vlng innovations i· us t Cmo Trc l''• 3't Meclttn 11 ll 81••' Fa 'I).! 6.6!1 Mu o G 1 · Av"•t In~ •O ComtP• lto f M-rlO Ill )l\I) U"o flond"k 504 !.Sl Mu O;:;;ln ·-Ii ~·'l Avntt 1117.!4 because he knows they do not con 11oc' JC·~ D "• M~ld c. '" e•• F1c-.1f}rl ~1 • '1 1 01 Mur s~,, li1>0 1 ·' A•on P11 1.10 . Cor1!r!d 1"111 l~Mid1•• l'llo ''• 60~1 ra,, ')}1011M 1 T · 1,60 AvonProa wi 1hteaten his Job . Cor1rr~n 1'• l M!dw GT 11~, 15'~ 8o•t~~ 0.11 111 ,.Ir:,. W,~11 ~-\~ ~ 11 Atlee 011 .J31 h , Coooer L 11"• la•M Mr,•• Co• 7ll 19>, Bro~a J1 11101111 N~I Ind 191 1 ~ J APAN WON'T ave LI as Corp s au. 9''J MIJ VIG lS•\ 16'• flul!oc~ CoiVon • N~I ! I ' . h '?O · th Co•m Yr "11 "IH, Mo R1cn l'• • llullc• II 19 1'.•I 1181 r:tyr ~~~ 6.11 =:~I~ '.i1t easy m t e s as in e ~""'frd 11 14 Miid sci ,',"• ,ll' 5~~n 1~g11,s~~ s~1ft~ t.lJ 9,8 6111 GE LB? '&Os, of course. And v:hat I'd c~:~, ~~ ~l~ ~~ ~:~:v·co~ S•• 9\t ~lll'.V ~ 1'1'111 n o.nu ',, 5,3; 6angPnt .!W l'k lo I I th "· C-<~•t Fo 1 7•/1 Monm p' 12 11 NV vnT I'• 11~ 91,~!.o,. ',·~~ •OI 8•noP 1>12 If See come OU 0 l:s Cra•~ Co Jl )S Mnorf p 9•,' !\uiM Fn ~16 110 p,"s" _,., 19~ ,'"',",Cf,ly ob J 'I' . C•UlClt If •• ~ Maart 5 10 1n• CIOAIT1t 6 ~6 1 11 1~ s 88 6.11 an c " J new autom i e compeh ion is C•11•e1 c •' • Miot rrA ''" 1 ~·! C•on 10.-2.:,., 3 •• ~~~r' :·~/ ;·;~ ~:~~ Ji'i /511 the ,: ..... world car in histO"" D0•,",," 0•,, •,1• 10,,, .",",,1! w"1 •'> '" '·'~•1 '~r \I? 6 O• NrJ Grtn , ,. · · B•ra ci:t ,s u••l ·~ " , ... Crnl s~ •• '71QN N , 1.U fl . I -a car which would be at g~::,nGt; 'i·l 23.0 ~~~11c:uD 111, u•, C1tAn~1nQ Fu~~~ · I N~~:}:~' 1 J~ '·~ a:i~~ ~1~·!1ll home on the roads of at! na-01v1• Fa l''I •'\ M1.n1tf £• ~:: ~~ ~g~" ~1 , 9N 1f TI ~~,.. w1c1 lg nit,, :::~s r:1~ 01 1 0•" Mir l S'• 16~ M1"' LE 1t "'• Grw1~ I• 10 •I' ~wton ll 1• 1J l'9 !alhln oil !O Uona: and which would have Dtr°' tn ~·· & N c L•• I" •'1 1~t~m • "" 111 Ni<h 5tr1 I.ti 1.ti •u•chLO ·80 • Otl~I ,.p • &i1 NartaQ c I?" 11•·· Sll<'CI I u I 16 S.C"'••ll H 19 l4.l9 a•ltL~b "to the size and sty\ing tO CrOSS Oflu• Cn ~I 4? Na! 9 rna l'lo '" Ct.n~ Cr C~· nvolt S.16 S.)• dVukC I• "54 . 011 CanT l S U ... NMC•• R 11', 11•, (•~•I l?l l~t em1_","o 05.55 S.61 1~~ri"9s i all boundaries. 011 19, I•'' :10" NCm11 Co 1 1~, f'v~d 1''11 qo "" t ti 1l °"' ~r "d' 1 lk .• , d . D•Y Am 1•. 9 N ~• E'<l<tl 1S \9 ,-,M 10,~611? 01 ~a l.~6 9.CJ 8MIF oll.10 I'd I e to see JI 1•a e 1noewov E I 1\;N~I CA.D l•\•ll•· l~hrt.d 14196•°","WmS !1.'nitn 6ec·~ma" 50 h USA If 't • 'I 'lfO!am Cr 11•,19 Nat lib 10 :>I ll<'C! elOl•l 'N•ol 11•911.~~8~10>(t 0 JO t e , , , I IS, l \VI Ol~C In< ' • •' NMI M.O 70 11 C~""'rl H 91 )6 :J6 g11P~n~ am • M fltt(hA.r 15t> be al least ,·n part because R!.~•.•,,<, • ',',•, ',', ~~1, ,P:!, ,,._ ;· • c~··r·•t~ "" AIM 1 'J '·" e~ico Poi .50 ""' ,.~ ~ 1, 91 fqo11y 1" '"OJC ~< 9'1l101tBeldon I.tel th hall nge Of the -m Oo!lr Na! S~ow l '} l '• {vn<I tll 1007 Pace Fno •'6 1.t• 8el!lnoH IOD e C e ,.v • DoW J~n ]O>, •O''> ~31 S:1tvr •'• \'• t•!ll •61 1"°"' P~ul l'ltY ~9· 6.lf Bell HO"' .6(1 pulsively industrious, an1bil· !?1W,,.1r R,'. 1~ 101 !!Ii'" .. ,",<. 1i.1\ o•~ n<~~· v 01 •.•1 Pmn 5o au 6 8• ee11 1n1orcon '"' " ,, "• ,. " 11·, ·~·~ \tent •~l 4,0 P~ Mu! •?• •1• !lern!i• 160 j()llS automakers O( Japan D~lllill 0 11'\ I~'' Nu:llln F 7'I ! l l CD• Grin 1016 10 11 P~,l.i 11 14 11 91 Beno .. DI l • 1'!11rlron IS'' 16'~ fll lrl• A )~'• 11 Ccm"'c 7 I~ I JI Pi•gro<f\ 11S I ?1 B~AtflCo I 60 forced us to make 11. El Pa-111 ,. ll Nitll 6 JCl'I JI Cam~ 80 '01 • 11 POio! s" t.40 B""•!I D14.SO Ft~I( WI ··~ ·~SI\ i;i,'C I'• ,.~ c .. 11~ All I 19 119 Prne ~· '4~ ,_ .. Bcll!'!I pt4 l~ F~~t Sh 1!o I'll> Car NG J\, l'•Cw!ll! CO l•J l\)Plor1 Ent J.SJ 60• Btntt ~'150 Feon lab 'l 1• l'ur 011 1 ,,, ("O<llO Al fot '•! PIQfl F,,,, '91 lO 'I'll 8P .... Uel E"Ouc 5•s ''" 3'4 NPo\ Gn• ,,.., 11." tamc>t! 1·61 6 11 Pinn Inv 9.91 t.69 8tl'Wlue1 '" Get Fl 113<F I 1'11 l''• NW N~!(, ~. to Cor"o BO 7 13 I •O Pr.(t l'Und• Berkov Pno El!l~r 8t I 8''t lllW PvSv 11\, ltV, °""" Fd goo I in GrW!h !9 !t 19 ~' lltrmt( Corn r1 Nl!t J1 , ''• Nur! ll>c I'• 9'• (G"'I'~ 3 11 ~~I N EtA !~I !:)1 Ot!I> 511 1.90 Fl NU( 8'' t Oh•O At! I'> t Cont~fd 9 ,1 0 ; N >for 19 ?S 19 ?l Blq lhrPt .6'J Fl[!t"" J<' .... l'!lllo W•I ',,1'~ ',,"~ '""'>01 In 96/ )n.I) !:•O f'utlcl 11~ 11" e,,•,•,•,•.o.~.' M, El!rom •11 5'• ODI ~c~n fOMu In ; " l.IJ ~rovdnl )9~ • ll •" • EI r SY\ 1•, J•. l'l•mon• \ ''" (Qnl! Ml ~ ,, • 11 ""'ltAll ~II 9: .. 811~1 l .. uo 1 ~\ e~~JI S~,, 6:,, g~i:; I~~ 1;,; i::-'""' r.!n ~~1 f,~n P~n"';' Fun~" ~l~\l~I~ 1-~ FmoSOlt l?'ll1'>ChvCal 11 • 171·'rorp 1<1 11171••• ~"1 6 10 61~Bnbtoie flrki Orange County employers £,,troy C )& tt PFC '"' 11•_.; 11'~ (nl• C•n ~~; IGIJ ~en•9 l l!Sll_O~ !loeinvco "1J l'n,,g llt ,., ~ Pab5t !Ir .,, •)I' rrn Wl)lu S lJ • M 1 tlh 8 ~ ~ 7<1 8ol1Cas JSb are a ga in offered '1Ennl~e ~,,7,~"'•rAu•n .•,•crn woa1&,1/6'' "''"' 6 0\l.<'QB011e11na 61 ' E11rw1s1 1 ' P~t FtE .l0'• l7'-t ttoYan M S?n 1"11' t:'~~'' .~~' 6l~ 110<>1<M1n 1:a supervisors' training progranl ---------~--'-~--'' '-'IDel•wart Croop~ " 8 1.GI l.M 8orOtn ! 10 -OtC•t l~.0110 t' ~ Uo•;'I \60 6 11 6orgw~r 1 15 in industrial accidC'f1t preven· 011wr 10 •111 '° "'•n l'"'h 1 '' 1.,, B~·m~n1 !O lo , b Otlln ~ lj 6 "'? eyr,r O~l q ~· 80• E<I" 114 tion. The course, deve pe,,,. Y or~~•I 111 11 n :•"1'•' ll 16 l l6' Boo'"' 1nc the Nal'·onal safety Counc;J, Fi'r,ll l\1 • n•e•! fd t~1 r~Js sei'~n'" s11 ''' 6ran1111,, so O vrng nr.yl LY 10801!. ... ~otm Fd ·~ •9'l BroPOSI J <i!a ' ·ncludes 2 l~urs ol com-E~·""~How••O .·~~·· 1'1" llJr fl•hr Mv 110 •v n.1~n ••1 9•1 """'"'~' Fufl(I<-Br11tMv of1 pr.hens'.,, ,·nstruct1'on dealin". c.r ... 1h lDl'lll 11 01 1"' '""" .,n,.,.,,;1 er11 P.r ne • ']'o 1.,.,,,, 1 ll 1 ~, ~"r1 ''" n.•1 llllwY 11a1t , with funda menta l s of · lr·Vl·ll(.'. sl>t'c1 101111 ,11•1 1•~112016-..v~i • ..i,.1 . S!oo;~ 111'171'" om SI e.·~ •?I Bk•vnu<; 1.n sunorvision and loss control. F1"''" 10 n" n soc,"""" Fv~r" B•o"'" co t'~ F:srtr 10)• II 11 a.,,.. '•• '1• Bro"'~ Co "' Th'·s "Key 'Ian Dc•elo~ R E I •••• '' , ,, '•1 !nv•11 ,., ,1 1 >• 6wnS/lar-.60 "' " e:mf'x:• rc lronlc-s,aionrrov 1011 10.&1 u11,~ ~,1,11e .... ns""'9"1so menl Progra m" "'ill be . . Fntpr•e 1 s1 \~rtr 'Im ,,.. ,,. erun~k .011 presented in Santa Ana in two d1~·1s1on or Ex·Cell-0 Corp. ~:~:'•G1h '~ ~! i: .JJ ~~~,,:'P<";J ';!; i~ ~ :~E(o 1:-:, hour pe'l.ods 1·n the late al'"'"· rrcenlly purchJscd 9.5 acres f\~~ "11 ,~~~ Ot~n 1• n n n e,uc10 c o Pl' s """ F•"'"'' In 1 10flJ Dl·~·P 8)1 t.11 UllQ F ofloO R ' I d f th f I · t d d" Fal•fcl I !6 "1 S!om~ l'ul!O• i utJqtt In .M noon. egislrat on an ur er o rv1ne ~I'll , accor 1ng to r''"' ~" 1 , 1 47 C•on , •1 1 ,1 uuFo•G 1 10 ' f II b bl ·n d ] · ff' · I Th I Fll(I Crlh 10"011 •1 111vrs1 '11 9~~ ulova W . .0 1n orma on can e o a1 e rv1ne o 1c1a s. f' nc"· p <1nl ric1 •~o • .. 10 :n Trust 1 i,a i ~1 :un:11 R•lr''° at the otflce of the Or11 nge · . ";1ryn<t11011.,,~,.,,,h a )M ,,,,.9 uM1 1 "· will house lhe electronics com· 1"111 lrn<t I! t 4 10 10 s,.,..,, Inv .. n.•v•l• 8~~.N~ ~ County Safety Council, 1415 lo;, Fln•"<l&I PrnG w•n~ Gt ''n•v•1• Bu•INor Pf.» Employers Training Class l)Jow!PSA _every minutes to Oakland! 17th Street (Suite D\ ' 'n Santa pany's main office at the Oypm 4 "i 4,tl ,\over tnv 11 '1113 I~ flu•nclv ,10 1nc1v" 3 n J "" · ~"" 5 •1 '4~ 6ur•Qll• 1o11 Ana or by phone, 714:54i·9749. _ lr\·ine Industrial Complex. ~~'1'" ~~s1 ~~ ~1~:."'s't' ~,~;.~J 8111hU"• ·'"' '===========-===o;,-=-:....-------'="-:o..=:....-=-=-'il"<TF v~ tit t 11 sre~nmen f~n!lt: 11 FJ!ln D!o • 11 A ~1 Jim '"" 7 Ot 7 n C•!>OI C11 .10 F111nr.111 ~JI 110 Flduc S,•? 5~1~•1 f lnanl 7:11 .-n to 1:45 pm. Both w1y•. 7:1M:4'f.10:1$-11:o'I •m·1 :tS-2:CS-4:1W:45·7:1W:45 pm, · Mor• on w"kencl1. WhrWOITY about • N9'1MUon when PSA hat o ... r 1&0 fllghts • ••Y'f luch In ~momb« IChedule you can carry II 'around hi your hlld. Why Nmtmblr lowes1 fare•? Or all jelS? 10r 1• •Moe lo Sin Fn.noltoO, San Jose, San -, 'Diego. and S1c-ram.nlo? Or tn11 kid• under 12 ' 1 fly PSA (wtth thtlr partnt.) tor hall ta re? Still WlllCa NllMUont.Ml ~l~rlnlvel 10tnl orwh1t1lt.n.1M alrtl,,... PM.,,,,,.,... .... 1•ty·c•te lcfive we•r f,, if fl•r11s •r•n't your thing, Wt h•vt fr•ditiontl trousers •lso; in foct, maybe more of them then flares! \.1nlam11!t •rl • 7 f11hltn i1l1,.J, "'wporl r 11 lnS!• 700 767 Scl~n '!I J.U ~IT•ltM .73' P'O! Multl 1.•• 1 ~' St•ln ltot Fo1 ~mDRL ,., Fl! N•! S.tt 6.'5 11.i 16 Ol !A.OJ ~mpSp .10 F•t !'"'" Jl '' 14 ~ C•o Oo 1.16 1 u coer~w .•o.a fl•1 C•o ~" · 51«~ lo.ti 10" Can Pac l.Jll l'l~I Fn!I s~' ~110 lnGI S.51 6 10 Ctn~IRd 1.10 "'" Cl!~ ••• ~.44 ~VPlflSI 1 t l IJl C•o c !Idell F!l!I Got~ •Ill ;,.itl ~""tr GI IOO 1.6• (1r1Jru~ 1.40 l'auflllro ~M 7'14) !MR Ap 10.?Jll.I! CtrllJlt .60 Fot1r~a !M I .II Te•~!lr. 1.lt 1.10 C•rOPLI 1." Ff••~ll~ (;r'°"a; TKhn,1 •.lt •.S'J C&rpft~ 1,.0 roNTr 1111 ,..., Trchno! 5'1'1 6JJ C1rrJ,rCp .ID " tl•,.,.111 11' ~ 7' '•m~ r.• 1J.1l ?!.'9 C•rrGn l .IOl-U•ll I 11 • '~ t owt MR l .Jj '.IS CarltrW ,IOt 111eorn ton 1 rt Tr•n r~o •.n A.II c.,, JI r '""'"' ~ '' 1 'IA r, ... En 16' 1 ll C••t~c-, '° F~ lrMu l •"IA ~ ;M Tvnr• I'd 1, ,, IJ Ill C1terT1 110 "und ~"' i" •no TwrC r;1 '·" :.1~ CCI Corp Ce~ SK •! t~I TwnC 11\c l6J lH K OCOl"P .fO r"!•bt<ilh t 9J 1.00 U"I' Mu! ,,"II -.•1 Ct!lnt,..CD J Gr""D 5"1: Vnlltl I.BS ~ 5' ("elll'I DfAj.I~ Fne• F "''\ ~'"' V" c~o111 r.si l.1>1 C""<o ln1 .JC .i Fd 111 1 u unn...r "Ufl(I' Ctn! Fcl'lt n"' )1 1n1•11r Acr'ft S61 6.1! Ctl\H\10 lAll 1"-ttf\l'cl ~ \ '' • ,. •~rnm 10 ~f 1' (VI Ct.,ltlll 1 u "-"" tna u ''""" ~(•r~ ! 9' ~ ~ C lllLt pr.'° (';rv~nn ll "° ll ID Va"" 'M 1 )II Cel!lllP$ I 12 >r.,,, •• \'0 4?1'0 •7 Ul'rt C-•~ 1 1' ,.,_ C~n!Lt El 1 I H.•,., Hor>• V"!o,•• !,Inf <"~ Cl'<JMPw 1 16 ll"I l ,., 100 V~I l·n jd 6n? c.,,1 sw ll'O Gt~ I tl •" t"~ • I• ' f< (tnl so-,, .IO .,.,...vr ''"""~" 'rl 51• •" '·" c,nT••U .1111 •1.-to..-, l> • ,.., Vnc:•S tol I u 6,13 Cerro I 60lr •••••wn -'" • •• v~ 3 ~ I·'' Cert 1....C. to "~' I •v 1 •i Io• Vtllt1 l Jl ~! Ctrt-i.d pf toll '/""'h Got • '" • •• v-• rno,. • i• 4 'Ii ,.,1,,.,. illll '""'"" l ... •••YI•·•• l"'"!Fl Sll lOI ,,,.,," •-•••-N~llSt In "lR •~ )1&11btn.1nc '1 Ml"" 11 Ji llj• JW-•11 "'u IO ~1 ll l• ll~mpS \ :IQ .,,,,,,,..~ ''• J 'w-11·"•'11 (;t.,••O (llltt~t~Y· 1 •C~ r 1nl ._,, •" E•n" ",, 1o f' (~ M 1 90 •t! t;lf\ • U • •• !vp\I 11 M 1i '' c~'t ,n "' I ''I '"f J'' ... i.•,,,-o 10• It' t O ""'"C' r I"• ,,, !~'''• ''l'I C~~;~11,>~ "'" r ... ,,. _ .. ,,.,,, •r• • .., ~··• - 1,.,., "" ''' '" W•"'" t•l11\1" fl•mwy 100 In~ r~ll f ,, I t• Wlr•I'" I~· 111 tw1 Vlo 1.60 I '"~"''"~ •\1 ~~·~·""'I"" 1•1 1111 nP\ O"lO ; ""T·~l'I 1n..,11•• .,,~,,,~,, 't·1•'~' ""'e°'o"l' ·~""' '"' ••""'•••""II t • •111C~•~llll' I! i"Hr.•1 • •' •' '" -•I''"' ·<• ,., C~>Md \"I' ~============================~-IL _____________________________ J ~,, .. ,.. , ... ,1 •• ,..,,., Fd •• ~ • " (~!Mi l $!' ~ " Inv Gu1d f I' • U Wofl~ 1?f ~.JI (Ml'"l'\11 ~ --~ -~----------------- ' , .. Jtlarleet Sytnbols MKAl'IF JGll MkOonlCI 60 ~cllrti C,t lO MafF~ 1,,,1t1 ~ Sa ..... MeolcChl 60 Ma~ 120 ~;;a~ 'f!b Man~r n ~~c'01 fu'° Marlllfln I 60 Mllrcor IM 1 M•rcor pf 1'1 Maremnt ?II Ma'Mld 1.60 ,,...,Jonlb ,,~ Mlrl•nna., 1 "''~" '~ f'T II IDI ~" Fd I" """rt nM 10 Mr¥1Cuo a Masco Co .2• MIM1n1!1 12 Ma$..,. F 1 M•ll~ O~ o Ml'f Ir 11~ Mtv pf!"' *fYl Jw ~ MC"''f '' l,.,t . ..;;.: ii -~" -I Co " ~ EO I .0 II .601 ~ ... a!ic!:1~ l N tt IDt d.~ltl "°'" :i::.n~:: , O>M . "' 's~ lvSh oll tilt Co rc-11S I .10 " Ith I JO Ptl 10 .i· :g~ ~bl,,. 4lt> It Mell 1 ~ 50 MC;IC lnv :a M/d•G11U! I Mich \ltlt 1 ~"""' 10., OCnlrl II S<1Ulll 06 Mldkl R 1 o10 Mldwsl 01! I MlltLtb 11 Miit Brad 60 MlnllMM I 1S MlnnPLI 1 20 •1uneo 211 Multf\I 1.10 '-\o P-.; A S MPCtm 160 ~P'vt>S .90b MOb 1011 2.«I ~IJCO 1 10 MOl'l""1< Dall Mc!Mrdl 120 ~m lttd Mor>r-oEo 60 Maru.1n I IO Y.DMa 11n 15 MontOUt l 7' ~tPw lj.I ""oor MCC<>r Mc>tlll nJ 2 .0 ~~~o to70 ""c!o•of1 1 M!FIJ91S I 10 M1'511TT 1 :l6 MSL 1!1od «I Munf nowr 1 M•rollv 1 ?6 Morori0 "" Morpl\ n 60 Murrvori .60 • Tnuts4ol, Ml! I< 1970 SC OAILV PILOT t7 Thursday's Oosing Prices-Complete New . York Stock Exchange List ·~ .... ... .. ------------ llllls.J -uw °""" a.. ..,_ .. q ................... ..,,.. .. ,...., ............... I , ...... Mltill 1.# °""" °"" Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List ' I I Finance Briefs -HOUSTON ( U P I ) Wtltl!:rn UnlOl'l Corp baa'. fo'rm ed 1 new subsidiary .0. handle 1t.o; real estate l('- livitles vice pres.ldent G A lloyt told Dallas security analysts 1'he new !!lubsldlary will build a data processing center In Dallas a new Western Union headquarler3 at Saddle Brook N J , and a computtrlz.ed tom; munK:aUons ctntt:r al Mld~ dletown Va NEW YORK (UPI) -PhUlp J Levin the Netr Jersey re1J estate operator hfts sued Reenon Corp the ronner Parvin DohrmaM Corp., lG vokl actions taken at Its Aprlt 28 annual meetlna Le"ln wanta to call a new annu1 l meeting with new MUcltalhlll or proxies Levin who owns; about 9 percent of compeny." fa tled In " bkt lo 1e1 the courts to delay the April 21 meeting Federal Judae Ed- mund Palmieri onlered Ille company to ahow cau,,e: od May 21 why Levtn'• requelt l11®ld not be granted. •• " •. ,...~.~.--.--~ •• ~.-..... ~~,-..,.,...,...,. ....................... ~~~~~~~-.. .... .., ... ..,. ... .,.. ...... 1!!!".!l'll!!"l"'~.•-•.ll!!lllllll_'l!l._ll .... ~!l!ll~~.l:lll'!!!,!!ll'!lll_ ... 1.,.lr~-!lpll'!llllllllllllllllll!l"llll!lllllll!!llll .. llllll .. lllllllllllllllllllllllll!!I' I I • '"' • I • J :..• ) C :. I MAY 14 IL_ ·,,_. 1111-(C) (IG) '"" 0""'1. •Ill>-(C) (30) • Ca , .. '" ..,., (C) (30) 'Illa ....... c:tlMdy PIMI II COlll· i --4 " JICl Ctfttt. ''"' Wlnc:Mll fM Moc., Anllttnl•'"· D LA. TV DEIUT -"THE + GREEN HELMET" -BILL r· T!!AVERS, ED BEGLEY n • u. O'a.ct lll'rit: "1111 ,,... ili..r (ctrt111) '61-11111 TrtWtrt MtllCJ W11tm, U 8111.,. A ~ 1td111 dftvet •uJI: chooM betweta lo ' Ill• S'Mthlart •nd tlle •PIN! ht "''" &I Didi YM .,. (30) ...... "_(C) (30) !I • llW Tttl (C) (60) . ' " 117Hil AK -"'"' IC> l'O> SI WW's "91 (3'o) ''l.Doll Around '" #2. .. » llt Cll CIS -(C)(JO) :: ·-130) GS Nltldtl !60) G ... II Ull RtlllMI (C) (60) Jack Wllltt , Ntx Dliltf, Glorll lirNr, P1tU B11bt. 41JO D MIC NftllR'icl (C) !&oJ It llM Alltl Slltw (Cl (90) GlllSts trt laroy Y111 o,kl, .Ion•· n thin Wllllm 1nd Jim Morin. u D Tiit 1at11 ca.. (C) (JO) Jim 1 iirldlnll llolb.. Slnln S.Jnt Jemes, Bin OW and Nici GllOIHl1 l\ld. ThursdQ, Ma, 14, 1970 m l1 Tai .. Ttltll (C) (XI) ' fl!J ·--" .... (C) (lil) tE ,,_.. ('C) (2 tw) •·o Momin cfi la Ill~." Miit• Lopez ind Paeo-lt1N1 ttir. 1:05 If)···~ Mlllkll (55) 1,JOD4MIJIDI•-(C) (IQ) (l) "EjtofTllt Hurrkfl111." Durtn1 1 visit to Sin Quintin, hollllltt and hlJ Jt1tf• Ill fGrcff to 114 ii 111 t1t1pt plot for th1M ooll¥lcb. ·-(C) (IO) M ~!JJ!.:=~ c~:~:i S.111 1tta I• trouble with lftFJOlll. l11Clildln1 the police, whtn lttt prt(· n1ner-induotd crninp for txotlc foods Ill flitfllltd by hlf WitdlJJ ,OMIL TomlltJ Dnil IUtsli. ID a.Ml ,,... .. (C) (90) .. A froa fest ivtl." Jacklt Gl111011 (UlllS. ID TM Ii& t111., (C) (60) m 110 ~ (90) "Silltr 111· lonlb." Yi Potil111 11111 11 Sister Vtl'Gllicl (pronounctd Salonlkl bJ' th• childrtn), a Cowich1n h'ldl11 sent Ml t~ lndl1n children in the Yuko11 ttrritory. UO I) lllJ Cll CIS "'"'" ..... (Cl) '1l*i Paradi11" (comedy) '66 -Gin• lollobrlaida, Atte Guin11111, Rotitrt Morll)'. A secret rend11ZVOus •t ttlt Hotel />111diso In 1'1ris turnJ into 1 t11mult110u1 tffllr, 11 friends 11111 f1m lly COll'l'tfll on !ht """· D Cfil Cil GD r .. """ IQ) (60) (R) StB1r1 Edtn, Wi1.,n l'iabtt ind ttM comtdr team ol Htndr1 Ind Ullett l\*f. 041LY PILOT Stiff 'hol• Insubordination"! Don Tuche prepares to take a poke at his pompous commanding officer, Heath Park, in a scene from "We Bombed in New Ha ve n," on stage tonight through Sunday at South Coast Repertory's Costa (S Ho11u1,1CH11 l'rlf_, Hor· Mesa theater. .... (30) '\ot Mist1rio1 di! Des· ---------------------lino." FCC Move Hurls TV News 87 RICK D!,l IROW HOLL YWOOO (UPI) -The most regrtttable upect of the F e d e r a l C9cwmmfcaUona Commlstion'a d"ecllion to reduce network programmin.I( is that moei new1 thaw• were not given apeclal prot«Uon. News Ui television's JD01t Important commodity. But the FCC d<clslon, whkh llmits many slatlons to u s in g network sbo9'1 In only three of !he loot nlatitly prime tlme hours starting Sept. 1, 1971, gives regular news programs no more status that err tertalnment en.triea. 111.e FCC dtciJtaa lut week Is intended to promote diversi- ty and local ptOif'amming. And the 5-2 majority that voled for It obviously felt it was necessary to looaen the grip of the networks on na- tional television. Aside from the fact that Director Set HOLLYWOOD (UP I) Director George Roy Hill and producer Paul Monash, who joined forces for "Butch Cassidy and .. lQe Sundance Kid,'' ·Wi11 f il m ' ' S I a ughterhouU -Five' ,' a satire on World' War 11 prispn camps . most loca1 It.I.lions a~ hardly likely to ofter a sudden wealth of cultural programs -and, in fact, will probably fill the gap with rather ordinary . shows -the disservice to network news is what has upset many observers. For one bing, plans to ex- pand nightly n e t w or k newscasts from 30 min utes to an hour have su!fered a severe setback. A:nd, over all, no one bas spoken more elo- quently aboUt the F C C decision and nliws · cove rage than FCC Chairman Dean Burch, who dissented from the majority opinion. Burch differed with "the majority's failure to e:s:empt new1 interviews .end most Im· portanlly, the new1 documen- tary and thene w sea st,'' which, he noted, are a major means "of Wonning &be cull by leallly quallned CAfto public on eventr and Issues." didates." }le added ; "When the ques-As for current prime Ume tloo of exemption for tbe news series, the show buslnen prtsent rule came before the newspaper variety repoN: oommisslon. t be majority,. "Many in the trade are COO: aware that the networks could cemed now lest CBS cut back avoid the impact of thfJ rule ltr 'llO Minutes' show and NBC by extending the 30-minute trim its 'Firat Tuesday' - eveni ng news show Into a one-both strong newg..ma1azlne hour news show, detennlned fonnats but relatively wtak not to exempt the newscast. advertising vehicles." "ln my opinion, if this rulel)jj~~~~~~~~~ had resulted In addiUonal\I prime time n e w s p~ gramming -the thing which network television can and does do best -that would have been a benefit to the entire country. •· , . , I strongly believe that the commission cannot pro- perly adopt a policy or subordinating n e VI s pro- gramming, which inlonns the public and is surely not in over-supply, to entertainment programming, which exists in Car greater amounts and seeks but to amuse." JUNIOR MATINEE S•turd1y, 2 p.m. J PlATUllS ''TARZAN ANO THE GREAT RIVER" ... "ALAKAZAM THE GREAT" ALL SEATS 7Sc There haS been s o m e speculation tha t the FCC decision might be modified before It goes into effect next year, Meanwhile, the only nt;ws shows excluded from the three-hour prime time limit are "specia1 news programs, involving fast breaking events,1'-;:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~ on-the-spot cove rage ol news1i events, and political broad-NATIONAt. GlNfltAt. cORPOl"ATION . TH6 ULTIMATE EXPERIENCE Fo=·1T· ·s0im ~ Bobby Sherman New Teenagers' Idol E WALT DISNEY'S * ....,...A • ._..._I ·antaSJa ....... _, ............ ... • TOMOllOW, ALL THI ~ Tn::wNo:lt.or -. SUSPENSE • DCITIMINT -~~ IS IN INSLllH 11 lllJ f...ttt Marti11 (JO) t:lO D 9 (j) m DrQMt (C) (JO) fl) "Homlcidt-th1 stud111t." Tht ~.:. ~._: @CD """'..._ (60) rlldin1 hst• of 1 suqlld hi 1 U Cil ......,. .. kl., (C) (JO) doablt sl1Jin1 rM1I hl1 pouibl1 ~. . • n. f..tln (C) (3'" ,,_.1.,.. rnoti¥a. for In 1pp1rtntly 1tnM· "' -• lt.$I aimt. Ktvin Cou&hltN and -·~ .. &pe.N " ll:OIJ about the tloi· Vir1ini1 Gren IUtsl By VERNON SCOTT tie girls raise such a din Bob-. 8# lifal ship, lfopt. by cannot be heard on stage. :°.~ ft(l)ftt lllllllllm (30) ...... (C) (30) Btrllf W11d. HOLLYWOOD {UPI) -The "I could be singing an aria ,.,,,.. --.. ~ (!O) OJ Ntn (C) (30) BHI .k>hns. teenyboppers have f o u n d from The Barber of Seville, .t _. -\•1 lhemselves a new idol lo d h 'd k lh ~ ' II llllll -~ (Cl (30) GD DilM la ¥•11111 (30) an t ey never now e . ,..,....., replace the ancient Sinatra, difference," said the affable ·•·.lie* Lathim. lO:OOll@lillmDMll 1111rt11 {CJ aging Elvis and broken 26 -year.old. "They start .,. m ca I""hll 1'twt (CJ (30) (6li) Gl111loi!Oori&1111. Orlon w.n.., Beatles in the person of Bobby hollering the minute r walk 'ifltter ClvnkltL Gtora:• Gobel, Chltl•s Nt1IDll Rlitlr Sherman whose picture pro· on stage and don't stop until •!Ml The (lolHlq•111111at. bably hangs 1n your home " ....... .., liN? tC) (JO) D m -(C) (IG) the time I leave. if you have a daughter _,...., • ..-(30) "I can't even hear myself." -.... , D (])\CJ) OJ Ph 7000 (CJ (60} betwee n ages 8 and 14. l!l lell a.. a.ct (C) (JOJ (iRl) "Shltttftd Idol." Brtnnin Viewers or television are I I ... I I Quite probabl y his voice fills familiar wilh Bobby in the 9 (II1't U«icl• Wiii (C) (30) ht Pl • Ofl'lllr t r.11" II' con· the house too. I I . h H ··A l•llt far AU SllK1111... fldtnct. Wil1J1111 Shtlntr tnd C1rol ro e o Jeremy m t e " ere L•wt•llC4l •l l11St. lt is the only time the Come the Brides" series fD P'llyiltc tllt l1itlr (30) '1trt, U I Jn (C) (60) frenzied youn~ters hear Bob-which recently was canceled. Mitlofy If ttM1 Guitar." by, although fie ma'kes scores "I'm not unhappy about lhe I.. 9 Cl)T111tli • c.....,..._ (Cl IJ ...... Mlas (60) of personal appearances a c"ncellation," Bobby sai d . -1 -(C) (30) SITlll a.hlutn (C) l60l (Rl year. "It's a relief for me to gel ~ rw ''Shollhl;: .Vdi&:.CltJ f'rovldt Mttht· , «Z91illf:h•D Ill•~ (55) ~..-,Mi Mditb?" Screaming, shouting, crying, on the road !or personal a~ sobbing, walling, groaning lit-pea.ranees and to work on pearanee1 bring him aome 10,000 fan letter1 a week, a great many of them miupell· ed missives from kiddies just learning to write. "Those letters are heart warmin g and the kids say exactly what the/ feel." Jays the pied piper o the lollipop set "I don't have Ume to answer them, naturally," he 1aid. "But I'm oVerwhelmed that all those kJds would care enough for 1 performer to react the way they have." Sometimes the kids· !torm the stage to engull Bobby in strangle holds and other death grips. Two or thrtt policemen are requfred 1 to: pry the youngster~ loose. "I have an elaborate eri- trance and escape r o u t e everywhere I appear," Bobby l------------11 said, laughing. "When the girls get hysterical it can be scarey." In addition to singing and acting, Bobby has mastered nine musical instruments - IO if you count the harmonica : drums, trumpet, guitar, bass, French horn, trombone, piano, organ and sitar. ~.-.nor..i•t. Ge:"IE1t"1. CORPOR..,T'°"' m~~c.'llo composes his ownl~•:======:,;1tFo·-x·· MSDUTH COAST But you'll never discover hisl , ~••.,,..,..... talents by attending a Bobby STARTS WED. S9" Oitto '··-'II Sri6191•546-2711: Sherman concert. What you 'll MAT 27th. Tile _.___,e •L-& hear are the cries and bleats -..-.c.a UHi ol thousands of Ultle g~I• who happeaa only have all fallen in love with the same guy. -ee te dle very & E!ftlt li h1 ('C) {30) E•1111 11(3Q), other shows as a gueslactor." if Ji•841(J)fallilJ Aft1ir (Cl (30) G9"41•T,.htlMl <30) If teen-age and sub-teen-age-c::-----------~----------1 (f) ti°"117 ind Greu (Grt11 Ftddtf· Co t S girls had to choose a new ~ "') ·-· .... p .... '"".., 1uoe-(30) ncer et love symbol. !hey could hardly ,, .. friends 111 1\IDvt tlitm 1eltln1 19 aoarr Til!tillcet (30) Com1d11. do better thaa Bobby. :: l'Nlrrled. He wears his hair long, :;. DOlll l!.I''"'" -lCJu,oofJQtCll lll._ lCJ By Gu1'tar1'st favors mod clolhes and is an "-{lb) (R) "for 1 Few Riflt1.'0 Ill· . 'j di•M captu,. 11r11I Boone ind' of. D 9 CIJ C ,.._. (C) accomplished musician. But ~ 11r ta 1pt11 M1 life in 1xch1n11 g Ofll n., ltJw4 Guitarist Ch r j s t 0 p h e r his hair is clean. his clothes l ·• lor tftlM. D ~(I) Ill fl (CJ Parkening will give a C1'ncert well tailored and his voice '-~ -IIJ G) AnlPll World (CJ IW .. quite different from t h e .. ~ -""" -" ~,..,. 1, at UC Irvine Saturday night l ( ) ''loon)' Goonty." em Bumrd -: •flit* " 11-screaming acid rock of older nirntu tht ll:lldJ' of tll• 1111 cyclt m•) ·~ry Fond•. Oorril Bolf· The program, sponsored by teenagers who dig the unwash- ol ttit LIJUn 1lbtlrou--wllich in· den. the UCI Committee for Arts ed. v.·onders of the double hAils Mhhrty lsl1nd. m lllowit: "Tlll lfH Mtlor" (dfl· and Lectures, is scheduled !or entendre. II 111111111 $ Ml'lie: (C) "flM C.llrt m1) '43-f'll: O'Slltn. Robert R)11n. 8:30 p.m. in Crawford Hall. Sherinan currently holds >Illa" (<»mtdy) '~nny Klyl, Ruth Wtrrick. . Gl)'ftls 1ollns. M u -drt:ui clown General admission is $:1, three gold single records and ~ ~~ joint I bind of outlaws 1tltmptin1 m ... s.w. ... (C) with UC! staff tickets priced two gold albums (signify ing "' •• 10 oust the tyr1nt kin1. m w.....-Wiil hi IA'ltw (CJ at $2 aad students 'l.50. sales of $1 million) for ~' mrnllil • Ceftltq11t11e11 (CJ (30) {R) Tickets may be reserved by Metromedia. ~' OJ ""1 ..... (60) calling the Fine Arts box of-These plus the television fll)llPICLy;!eo.ts,Wllb1MAl1 11:15~ .. CiNIM S1Wt111lt1: ''Somt fice at 833-6617. show and per sona l ap- There'• • eharmins Colonial Hottua wail in1 lo take you Ol'I 1 peraonll to\lr o( oar Co\l.Dtl'J'• be1inni11ii; at Jndependtnec Hill II Knott'• Berry rum. Piao. l'i&iL (C) (lO) Kl'lill O'Connell, 1 tu1st . ,~~ijijijijijijijijijijoiijijijijijijijijijij~ _ •it• on tht subject of ttlwision in ~Mwcl, .. ~ lnt•rrilws W•ltH Cron· 11="°. 9 (j) 111.,., l rifli• <C> 1r.~~~r:iT:~~.,,m~i~ijn~~r,,Fi~~~l Ii~~~~~~~~~~~ • "' .. -.. O ~llllll>JM>o•1""" <CJ LAST WEEKS . eh .. AmM t30} D Ki"'"' Ptbll Bill""'"""<~ · fa(f)li•NMn (C) (60) (R) ID Motl•; ''frontitr C1111lrlltr" Rtck HUdtOn it sptci1I 1u1st 1lon1 (Jltllern) S6-John Brom!ltld. wttti tllt JOlllll YOC1l·lrlslrum1nl1l . . lfOllP, Btwr11t I Sldro lfllh tht 12:00 0 C..111111itJ lullltin lolfll (C) SOllktrt.. • M1wit l•• (C) (30) l11iy Bir· dM bolt&. An118 DleklMOn, Ch11\ll C.llu 1nd Mirtha R1y1 c:omJlltl 1phwt Thi Rib. Broth111 (Htll} 11111 Jl111111Y) incl £Jiz1bttt1 Ashltr. II IHI (I) Ill "'' "' l~ (30) fl) "Ttn Ptfctnt al "olhin1 11 l>lothlnf. n WJ1111 Ann's 111ent du1b tff Ml .w CIOMldY Id, Iii• filldl lrllf1l!lf booktd u 1n unwillin1 ptrt· 11v. MOttJ GunlJ' tnd Al1n Oppen· 1;00 I) lllowill: "flHI WOllllll Ill Pifr 13'' (mylttty) '50 -ltrtlnt Dty, Robert Ry1n, John Al•t DO-<•> m Adlol Th•tr•: "Str1n1u on lhe Prowl." Ptlll Muni. 2:00 m All·fHPt Sllow: '1kt Hund!· bacl ol ltatrt Dime," "Th• Ytm· pini," "Dllmond Cit)'.H hti!Mr sutst. 2:10 • ""'''"' Ut lrli• 0., (C) "THE Acoclell'ly Awonl No111 l- llllot Gould ond DyM Co1111111 plm lobert C11lp 111d Notoll1 W•od 9th Record Week 2nd TOP FEATURE YEAR'S HELO OVER ~cq~·: l'!r;~ Al.,.._ ~ .. OC::~°" i:t-~ '°" c=•::,_ STARTS EXt;LUSIVEL Y ! • .llO$$ JllNT[t __,.,. TMUISDAY MAY 111~ AIAeOAT BURT LANCASTER • DWI MARTIN m "Ill ltlMt Only"' (drlllll) '3~ A UNIVmAL "CTI.Ill£ ~ C» Gaiole lombud. Cliy Gr1nt, Ch•rla 1~;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii DAYTIME MOVIES a:•Q(C) -TIM lllt lt Tn11" (10· 111111c:.) '53-All11 Slltrid111, St1rl1111 ....... t:t1 e...., n.t l ltldt" (co1111dr) 14~cldlt lnickt11, V1ronb l1-1. ~ (!fnlfllt) '41-Al111 LIU, LOflttl Youn1. 1:::11 D.,.,.. IDlllWI" tll'l)'ttt!JJ '4' Coburn. 11 l:OOl1"1•••Mr Ult Nlctit" (00111· tdy) '40-Fnid MacMurr1y, Blf· b1t1 St111W)'d. m "flitlll IN Frlldern" (dr1m1) '4~RGUllnd Rutsell. Frid M11> Mumr 2:DOClJ "AdiMI Ill II• Nd~ (1Mnhl11J '43 -Hum,tlr'f Bo- 1ai1. R11mond M111t1 -SitrtkllM fltJ.t«•kl, SldnlJ' 4:l0 B "P1ttlml" (dr1m11 ·~Ytn lirell'lllrlll Hdlhl, Cd B~ey, Bt1!1~ StrallhL e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS Ou•llty Prlntint •"d O.pendeble Se r ... ice for m.,. th•n • quarter of • c•ntury. F':l l.·T P!<INTING IJI I WIST Ul.IOA ....... •IWPOIT HACH -141-4121 LAST WEEKS! Nal~llll bs beH left out al i111 Adnnt1r1n" IOIMPtt .. L&Vw.......,.. ,,. ...... .......,. I'll.II cw THE ADVENTURERS""'- ..... h 1Dr41 "M ~.,. HNQO IQl8ll3 --.~ CHAILIS AZNA'fO• e ALAN IA.DEL e CANDICI IUIGIN THOM MY lllGllN • DILIA IOCCAIDO e llNIST IOIGNINI e •OSSANO llAZil e OLIVIA HHAYILLAND llllM flHMJU e ANNA MOffO e LllGH TAYLOl·YOUN• Sttrt' Exclusively! Wednesday, May 27th Mart Crowley's ··me~ INTt1l ~v·· ... is not d musical. '0-C-fl.-~.....,.c;.,.,i __ Cob b.llol..• l!!l- 'I I , ..... ,~ A .. ~ BROADWAY w:<1" 11, !~) --·~ ... .... ,., l radw•y Mu1lc~I Hit ''Oli,.,.. {GJ Color 000 ... .,. Wild, 11111 ''"'' (Gl Colo!' Grtar Ftmlly E11!"1•1ft,,.,nl E•tlu1lv1 0••"11" Co. Or.-ln Sllowlno "flll L~tlifll II 1.1.-ly"'1 JOMI" (RI COior "MOM'f J ... ,i.-· C.lor uno:11r 11 ""'"' bl wm1 IHI'"'' AH Color Sllo'll' -'"'' O'Tool• lft "GIMllJ• Mr. Clll'°" CGJ ooo "11'1\'9 Mt• Army" CGP) AM C..IOr Sllew """ O'TN .. ill ~ "OOOO•YI Ml. CHlf"I" l•t & "Jrl\ll MAN AIMY" IG"I All C1lw 11.--I'-M~ ...,._ T'lle!ll.tt c .... •A'96~ IG"I •oo 'TM NII C ....... ICI Tldit11 Oii Slit Nt'll' for "lllll'f 5111" Jlflll W11111 In "'TtW tflr' (GI C..IOr ... •"Tiit lttrllt Cecu.'" {()Pl ctlor BALBOA I 673-4048 • "'"" ' 6:45 70f I . lalti .. a.1kl hnlnn" Full ltni!.h fe alirre Mi.rsieal F'l!lfay ill FAIRYLAND COLOR by TEC•IUCU with AMNA RussnL and r11tu11n1 COn1tanc1 Ir~ SAT. & SUN. MAY 16th & 17th SAT.: 1Z:l0 I Z:l O SUN.: 11:30 ORiy 1-~L SEATS 7Sc ~do "The Undefeated" -ALSO- The Spectecle B1hlnd Thi Spectacle "The Games" lGI Niii._.. COlCM IT llflllil -AlJO- '"' •~tr.a MA$Gll SMITH G. '· IA.TING I DAILY PILOT lllff P"919 Rare Find It's not often, when you're three years old , that you find a starfish all by yourself -especially on top of the pier at San Clemente. Christ· ian MiUer did. He found it clinging to one of the old pilings pulled oul by crews current.Jy repairing the structure. Christian is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Miller, 229 Avenida Santa Barbara, San Clemente. Standing Ovation Given Clemente High Glee Club Richard Dastrup's Triton vocalists ex- pect lhe applause they will receive in tbe achool's Spring Concert May 19, but they didn't expect 1be standing ova- tion llCC<lnled them May I. 'l1le 7knember coocert girls glee l"OOP from 6an Clemente High 3&Jg with l\JCh P.xpertlse that their competitors from uven Orange County hlgti schools stood July Trial Set In Oceanside Machine Gunning and applauded them. Occasion of the exceptional tribute wa.'I the:Southem caftfornia Vocal A3sociat.ion l1l:nl Festival at Anaheim Higb School, an bwitationa1 event in which each ctu:ral group recefves an evaluation by the association experts. San Clemente's choral group missed a perfect rating by only two points. San Clemente High's Spring Concert in Triton c.enter will present 207 students o[ beginning girls chorus, acapella, madrigals, boys quartet and girls trio under direction of Richard Dastrup. Spring Concert is an annual public performance of the vocal music depart- ment of San Clemente H i g h demonstrating the s t u d en 1 s ' ac· complishmenls in classical, popular, sacred, madrigal and "fun" mu.sic. Dowia "tlae Mission Trail Barrels Put Out For Capo Trash SAN JO/.N CAPISTRANO -The San Juan Beautiful Committee tu1s been roll· ing out the barrels these days. The barrels are designed to discouraae litterbugs and have been placed at con- "enienl spots all over the downtown tourist area. Donated by TRW SysWT>s, the IS receptacles found the.it way to the Chamber ol Commerci!'s beautification committee lhrougb the efforts of Roy Garbarine, TRW manager, Walt Pen- nington, a chamber director. and Mayor Tony Forster. The barrels will be maintained by the Public Works department which anchored them to their location& e Comtnlttee Named SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Ap- pOintments ha¥e been announced by Mayor Tony Foster for the Site Plan Review Committee which Is an ap- pendage of the Planning ComnUsslclll. Named to the committee are City Engineer .Jack Kubota, City Planner Bob Johns, City Administrator E r n e 1 t Thompson and Planning Commissioners Jerry Gaffney and Chuck All~n. e Good Skates Wotttell LAKE FORE:ST -An ice skating tri p has been planned for members of the Arts and Crafts section of the Beach and Tennis Club. The youngsters and their guests will be leaving at 1:45 p.m. from the club and will be traveling to Glacier Falil in Anaheim. Only 25 will be aceommodaled so those planning to attend are encouraged to sign up early. For more infonnaUon call the club at 8.17-8161. e Library Talk Planned SAN CLEMENTE -Wayne J . Horvath, Sadateback College instructor, will speitk to Friends of the Library Thursday, May 28, at the San Diego Gas & Electric Company offices. An instructor in languages and fine arts, Horvath will s pea le on "Impressionism of the 19th Century 1s it Affects the 20th Century Contemporary Scene." San Clemente Women Assist Scholarship The San Clemente Woman'• Club presented a $50 check to the Saddleback .Junior College scbolanbip fund , ac- cording to Dr. Fred H. Bremer, superintendent and president of tbe col- lege. · The donation will be added to the fund which provides scholarships to students outstanding in a t u d i e 1 , leadership or service to the schooL OCEANSIDE -A July 7 trial has been set for six persons arrested during a raUy of the Movement for a Democratic Military (MDM) following the machine gunning of one of their members. Servicemen's Center ~ six, arrested April 30, have pleaded tzlnocent of charges ranging from di.lturb- iag the peace to parading without a ~iL ·They a re ~larlne Lance Cpl. William Cllatman. 20; Maurice C. Durham, 20; • Jlrmes Snyder, 22 : Teressa Cerda. 18; Michael A. Lawrence. 25 : and Thomas Hurwitz, 23. IThe group were. a1nong nine per~s picked up initially at a park after. police said, _they failed lo disburse. A-1arine Jesse \Voodwa rd wa s wounded tn. the chest earlier at the MDM head- quarters when he was hit by the rlchochet from a .45 caliber macltinegun. ~Police said the MDM headquarters 1's sprayed with a burst o{ fire by 1midentU:ied nightriders. The house where Ute activity occurred ha s reportedly been yirrchased for $19,000 to serve as MOM headquarters. Actress Jane Fonda al· tended the housewarming. No Tax Honors I ts Volunteers Dalens of recently gractualed hostess trainees, fund raise rs and other vol un- teers for the San Clemente Inlerfaith Serviceman's Center won recognition for their past year's work in a recent annual awards dinner in San Clemente. An estimaled 135 members and gues!-s of lhe center heard an address by Col. Emil Radics. commanding officer of the 2nd Infantry Training Regimeol at Camp Pendleton who praised the center and San Clemente's citizens for fi lling the gap between serviceman and communit y. Robert Taeger, io charge of the recently completed hostess training course, presented certificates of com· pletion to 21 new senior hostesses and a dozen junior volunteers. Recipients of 51»-hour volunteer work slar emblems were Gert rude Wurzburger, Mary Fish, Jackle Spencer and Nancy Dillingham. Sue Chernobieff won a 200-hour award. Mrs. Wurzburger also shared honOf'I \\'ilh Mrs. Barbara Tobiassen for organlz... ing the center's recent thieve!' market rummage sale which raJsed $1 ,700 for the nonprofit center's coffers. Other award recipienlll for the past year's W<1rk included Kay Chaney, Connie Howard , Frank Osborne and JOl!ieph Stephens. San Clemente's Police Oepartmtnt. th! Exchange Club, the Knights of Columbus ;ind Smetona Photography also were cited. Boost for Capo City Budget Shotvs l1icreas e of 14 Percent By PA~fELA llALLAN Of "'' D•llY Pllet Sl•ff The te111lative budget ror San Juan Capistrano's 1971).71 fiscal year bas been Sllbmitted to the City Council showing • 14 percent increase without a raise it! 'taxes. Figured in tht expeJtditures is a police nepartment which would c o n s. u m e ~.m, including $91 ,448 for salaries. 'Mayor Tony Forster said that although tbt police department is figured i1 the budget for lhe coming year, he st.ill bellevts its actual enactment hi one to three years away. \The total bOOget Is estimated •t $1,854.080 of which $826,894 Comprises thl gtneral fund. Last year·s budget Was $1,5921094. FinaACe Director Paul Lew Ji:lld that Utt Increase renecta an increase in r«tenue from no1·proper\y taies inch • as sales. cigarettes and real property lransrers, license and permit!, higher U..terest rates on invested money and grants ii lieu and transfers from special funds. He also said the assessed valuation will be higher. This year 's is being $16,135,798. Next year's i.s estimated ti> be approximately $19,432,000. He said the assessed valuation increase was a combination of increased building and the increased value of the es:lsti"g property. One of the aru's oC e.xi>tndlture which showed the hike ts h1 the capllal im- provement fund. ~ saJd this Is because there arc several projecta which are In va.riouJ stages ol developmoot which may requlre. cei;ain expenditures next year. Thl!:se proJect& Include the public works )lrd1 <tenlp<>rar1 city hall ) the: construction oC the Camino Capistrano-Trabuco bridge, the Novia-San Juan Creek roads to Ganado Road includiJg a bridge, the Oso Road and O!o Road crossing and lhe Mission Flat! streets. The total budgeted u:penditures are: public safety, $203,150 ; public works, $155,347; general ~ovunmerit, $0015.22; capital improvement, $311,050 : no• departm<ntal lil,315 and cullural 15.01111. Reve"ue includts property tu S177~; ... grants in lieu $164,m; t.uea otbtt than property $133,000 ; mt1cellaneou1 revenues . (licen&es. pennlts, tines, In- terest t.arlttd; $161,296 and transfer1 from olher hmds, 131,200. Lew said th.al thla: year'• reserve wtn be 135(),000 which ln<ludt1 an approx]. mate ~.000 reserve whlch waa carried over from the year bef<H. He projects the 1971).71 reserve to be about $191,000 • lh11ndly, MAY 14, 1970 s DAILY PIUY 3 Benclt Slt.e Walt. Vn"til '71 ' Club Purchase Squelched Speculall<a aboot -9>lo S I a t e ~ ol Ille Capillram llelch Club ,,.. hu been ended 1... the -t by Ille Stat. Par~• and RocrtaUon Department Dlreclor Wllllam Pton MOU. The eJal>l-llCnl pu<el ol prime beach Is dellnltely nol .., the ncammended list for 1970-71 budget purch.qes, but lJ wtll be • priority ilem In J omiary ol 1971, Mott uld. Cumnt acquia!Uoo plan Involve• a proposed -ol bond llmda -teVtral orojeds to othen, and pun:haoe ol the beadt site uaing bonda In litu of money. M~ uld, "OUr people have indk:tUon: tmn' Ihelll (parcel owntr1) that lh\s wwkl be 1atlsfactory." A apokesman for the o w a e r 1 , Capistrano Beach Investment Corpora. lion, lald tile f10Up Is wttlln& to ..JI to the statt but prlc. is the critical detonnloatlan. · lk ukt the sllte ls in proce:• of aetUng a dollar value on the pn>pUty, and then the owners mtllt determine U lt ts fair Yalue. A publlc 1tatement by Loyd V. Steen. chairman ol the corporation's board, bu cienled ...,.,... that the ........ would ae<ept fl.I million I« the 1,lllO feet ol oceanfront. He note1 that comparable property in Ilult area "has rocenUy been sold for $2,000 per rfont foot, and more." Another member " the owner lfOUP ""' protest"1 Ilult the -·tion paid fU million for the property and has incurred conaiderable expenses In tas:es and tnlttut and demolition of anUquat.ed structures. Mott, in an address May 9 at San Clemente High School, told ol reeent state purchaae of a beach parcel for 12.500 per front loo<. LIKE IT,,. CHARGE ITI Hanging Baskets 1.77 ... Add the beouly of lush 8'Mft ivy, artillery fern or asparagus growing in baskets ... all 1'811dy to hang on patios and porches. The baskets ore the 714" siu. llue Mart••rlte or Y allow Daisy al· ready growing in - gallOft -i.-11uy 11¥- ora I ancl beautify yoar garden toclayl 77···· Plant colorhl becldl1g plants now by the tray. Hanly, colotful petunias ol. ready growing in trays ••• buy _....1 trayo ••• ready to plant. 44c a troy Ort•o Syste11Jc• lose and l'lowr Care. Easy to ...... """""" (ult spnad .......t plant ancl -· S ... c1111I1or 2.98 SHOP SUNDAY, TOO 12to 5 P.M.! CARLSBAD MONTCLAIR • • • • • • • • • .. ••• • Grow yo•r own fruit and •aw a• ottractivt clwa_rf oize tree. Grows I~ tub or ~cl. ci-from Meyer LemOft, Nowl or Valen• Orange alre.acfy growing i~ 5 gaf. contal1teno. 3.77 DHp Gl'ffn Ylgoro• for dichonclia or g,__c.. be u..d safoly on diclionclnl or graas lawns, or mixed lawns. :20 lb. bog . 5.45 DHp Gl'ffll Ylgoro• wltll laMctldcle 6.95 Zodiac 11n dial with a ...tid "'-cllaL S.. thm In g.-, IN-, ar aluminum. 29" hlgli _. all siu. 9.99 (f-.t ......... "' -...,, DOWNEY NEWPORT BEACH NOWI THESE VALUES AT ANY ONE OF THESE PENNEY 8TllMSI l • • '· "• .... ,, • • : !"1 u h .... c :. ' ... , .. 'iJ-• 111 •• !Cl c .. 'fl., °""'"" a ID -•lor !Cl !!DI . . • c. ... ,., ni.? (C) (30) . I fit. ...t'I '*"'411 pt"" Is ~· • " llOIH f/f Jldl Carter, Palll Windltll •• MottJ Anlattrdtm. 0 LA. TV DEBUT -"THE f' ~;~r~.E'tri~~GL:~ll '" dSil "*' IMril: ~ .,... iliillll" (dr11111) '61-8111 Trtvtfl, N111q Witters. fAI B1Jley. A toti 11dn1 dftvtr must choosf bllhtetn , !•, Jtlt Nlltht1rt 1nd tbt sport llt .... I' DDlcl Y•.,.. (30) • n. hldlollll (C) (30) '1!1 • llw Ttll (C) (60) . ' r, tUl (I) UC btftllii Ntn (C) (30) f.D WW's ..... (3b) "Loot: Around 'IU #2." • x · ell Cll CIS -CCI (301 " ·-(30) ' Ui)-(iO) G .... Ill th• Rhft4 (C) (60) Jtcll: Whit1, Alu D1tltr, Glorll GrHr, P1tti Betbe. -=30 D MIC Nt'DtfYict (C) (60) 8.... All• Sltn (C) (90) ,. Gueits ire ltloY Vin DJllt, Jon•· •n tlltn Wlllttfl ind Jim MOftn. 11 0 Tiit C•• C1at (C) (30) Jim 1, MtcKrtll hods. Sus1n Slint J1mes, Th11rsda,)', Mill 14, 1970 m lo Toi lo '"" (C) (lOI • llil•-• ... •-!Cl (!ill ti) ,,,....,. ('C) (:l ht) "9 Hombfl li ti 1111." Metp lopa and Ptce R1hllblr. 1.:05 Gil T ..... willl M11llctl (55) ''" D GMl! llll 1•-• !Cl CGOI ("{) "'~ofliit Hurrlcllle," Our!na 1 Vi~ to Sin Quintin, lrontldl ind Illa 1t11t·1r1 forctd kl tld Ill 111 fftlPt plot for three conwieb. ·-!Cl (901 0 IHI ill l!!l """""' CCI ClOj {°R} ''SfilNntlil's Curious CrlYinp, Sam lib in trouble with everyone, Jncludlnr tht pollet, whtn her p111· n1ney0induced cr1vlnp for txotie foods 111 futfllled by her witdllJ powers, Tommy 01'1'!1 1unll. m DlwW fl'Mt SMw (C) (90) "A Frost Ftstiw1I." J1ckil Glt190ll cuesh, m TIMI Ila Yllll)' (C) (60) El!l Nrr 1'11Jhu11 (90) *'Siltft 11· lonikt." VI Powltn 1t111 IS Slsltt V1ronlcl (pronounced 81lonlb by the chlldrtn), 1 Cowichan lndl11t wnl to tNCll lrtdltn children in the Yukon ltnltCH'J. ""' D 9 Cll CIS "'"'" "°"" (f) "ihiil Patadl11" (comed)') '66 -Gin1 lollobrl&lda, Alec Gulnnta. Robert Morley. A sectet rendtzYOus 11 lh1 Hotel Pa11dist1 Jn Paris t11m1 into 1 tumultuout 1tf1ir, •t friend& tnd f1mity eorwtrp on Ill• ... •. DAILY l'ILOT ll•H l'n.tl• Insubordination? O @Cil a>T .. Jonts CC> (60) Don Tuche prepares 'lo take a poke at his pompous {II) 81111111 Eden, Wil1e1n Piakett commanding officer, Heath Park, in a scene from i nd th• comtdr te1m of Hendr• "We Bombed in New Haven," on stage tonight •nd Ullett flits!. througlt Sunday at South Coast Repertory's Costa tm)H-..,. """ Proteuor Hor· Mesa theater. •111tl (30) '1.os Mlstetio• dtl Des· -----------------------tlllO." . . . . . FCC Move Hurts TV News By RICK DU BROii' HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The most regrettable aspect of the F e d e r a I CcmmunlcaUona Commission'• decllion to reduce network J>l"Olfamming is that most new1 ahows were not given special protection. News ls televition's m01t important. commodity. But the FCC decision, whidt llmlts many slationa to u a l n g network sbo,J1 In only three of the four nightlJ prime Ume houri stal'Uni Sept. 1, 1971, gives regular new s programJ no more status that en- tertainment en.trie1. 'Tte FCC decltloa last week is intended to promote diversi· ty and local programming. And the S-2 majority that voted for it obviously felt it was necessary to loo&en the grip of the networks on na· tional television. Aside from the fact that Director Set HOLL YWOOO (UPI! Director George Roy Hill and producer Paul Monash, who joined forces for "Butch Cassidy and .• t)¥! Sundance Kid,'' .w·J~I film ''S I a ught.erhot1$e-Five',' a satire on ·w.orld' War II prispn camps. mort local lltaUons are hardly llk.eJy to offer a sudden wealth ol cultural programs ..... and, in fact, will probably fill the gap with rather ordinary shows -the disservice to network news is what has upset many observers. For ooe bing, plans to ex· pand nigbUy network newscasts from 30 minutes to an hour have suffered a severe setback. ADd, over all, no one has spoken more elo- quently aboUt the F CC decision and ' news . coverage than FCC Chairman Dean Burch, who dissented from the majority opinion. Burch differed with "the majority's failure to exempt news interviews end most Im· portantly, the news documen- tary and thene w seas t, '' which, he noted, are a major means "of Wonning tl1e catll by leaally quallfled can. public on even ts and Issues." didates." He added : "When the ques-A1 for current prime time tion of exemption for the ne w1 series, the sbow buslne11 present rule came before the newspaper variety reporb: commission, t be majority,. ''Many in the lrade are con· aware that the networks couJd cemed now lest CBS cut baci avoid the impact of the rule It& 'to Minutes' show and NBC by extending the SO.minute trim il! 'First Tuesday' - h · both strong news-magaiine evening news a ow mto a one-fonnats but relatively wtak hour news show, determined not to exempt the newscast. advertising vehicles." "In my opinion. if tllis rulel~ji~~~~~~~~~ had resulted in additional \I prime time n e w s pro- gramming -Ule thing which network television can and does do best -that would have been a benefit to the enttre cwntry. " , .. I strongly believe that the commission cannot pro. perly adopt a policy of subordinating n e w s pro- gramming, which infonns the public and is surely not in over·supply, to entertainment programming, which exists in far greater amounts and seeks but to amuse." JUNIOR MATINEE Saturd1y, 2 p.m. I FUTUllS ''TARZAN AND THE GREAT RIVER" ... 0'ALAKAZAM THE GREAT" ALL SEATS 75c There has been s o m e speculation that the FCC decision might be modliied before !t goes into effect next year. Meanwhile, the only n~ws shows excluded from the three-hour prime time limit are "special news programs, involving fast breaking events, I';::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~ on-the-spot coverage of news!;: events, and political broad-N~T•ONAL ClNlRAL COAPOffATION FCOST• .. PA . TH6 ULTIMATE £XPERJ(NCt OX som C!4!J t~ $M 0!911 ,_,. .. 9r11tol • '41•%711 Biii Dint •nd Alic• GllOStler 1uut. GI MJ fl'llfltt Mri•n (lO) -• •1l21 CIJ ,,., -(60) ~: ~ 9 (j) "'...,."""" (C) (30) <. ' • fl• Ftltln (C) (30) "lt11er t :lo n@@ m Dn111•1 1c, <JO) {Rj "Homlcicll-th1 Studtnt." Th• 111din1 t1st11 of • susped In 1 double &11yln1 rev11I his pouibl1 motiYes tor 1n 1pp1r1nttr sen11- leu crime. ktvi11 Cou1hltn i nd Vi11ini1 Gtt(l IVtsl. Bobby Sh.erman New Teenagers' Idol E WALT DISNEY'S * lll'LA»A nt-•- 3Il't..8Sla TOMOIROW. ALL THI TmrHKXll.OR' SUIPENSE a. UCIT1¥1!NT IS IN IN.LISH 0 Ntwl (C) (30) 81xt1r W1rd. • 'tQ GI Hope." A lllOIJ 1bout lht llOS· ~ ·r.~ . pit .. Jhlp, Hope, :~' IBl])l)t Mllllll:•" (30) :: . f8Micitn J4 (t) (60) mNm (C) (30) Bi!I Johns. ~ i 9 blll Dmrt ltptlt (C) (30) CID Dlw la Y1rdld (lO) ' ·· Jtd: LllMm. 10:00 D 9 Cil 8' DMn M1rtl1 (C) of:«! II C1S £wnhi1 Nm (C) (JO) (60) Glnlloltobriflcll, Orlon Wtll ... f"' , ~ I ; ~ " l ' I ,-;t l ~ ' ~ J. I f itlttr Crontltt. G.ora:t Gobll, Charles Ntla RtillJ . 1nd The c;otddlwn fllHl CJ Miii'• ., Lilltr (C) (30) D m Ntn {C) (60) m I ...., LHJ <30> O !Hi ll l lll -70l0 CCI llOI CD IMt tilt a.ct (C) (30) (Ji) "Shit11fld Idol." Br1nn1n ID 00 n. hleritai Wut (C) (30) htlpi • former st11 r111fn hi• QO!l· "A l•lll for AJI Stisons." fid1nc1. Willi1m S~llntr i nd C1rol ll'11'11JICI llltsl. • fD "'1laf ta. tiiibr (30) ''f1r1y Hr1tory ol the Guitu." CJ I Slit (C) (60) GI()) TMll • Con111tff11C*S (Cl tr;) Trtt Adwltbn (C) (30) m~ ....... (S5) C9 TW. Cit1 (C) {30) ID Mljef.Adl•s (60) m Tiit AdtKli. (C) (60) (RI ''Shou]lt-ldup.Clty PriwJd1 M•lhl· done"" , M1t0111 Addicll7" 1:00 I) MowM: ''flit W11111ft 1n PMr 13" (myitery) '50 -lir1in! 011, Robert Ry1n, John Aiu. ao-cc1 m Actltl Th•trt: "Str1naer on tile Prowl.'' Ptul Munl. Z:OO ID All.fllltll Show: '1h1 Hunch· bid of Notre D•mt." "Jiit Y•m· pirt," ''Dlunona City." .AcocMmr .Aword Noml- Elllor Gould 011d Dy•11 Ca1111a11 ''" Rabon C11lp ond Natolla Wood 9th Record Week ·¥ "THE 2nd TOP FEATURE YEAR'S HELD OVER ~c~~~"· !!f:~if ~ ~ r011 COl.UMlllA Al 'llOOUC1'10lt ~ JltLl.\H (i}e STARTS EXt;LUSIVELY ! THUltSDAY MAY 2Ull TifElif NOYEL OF THE YEAR::-Now A MOTIONPICTUREI ~ .;ROSS HU~IEll -.,,,.., t ~ t AIAeORT BURT LANCASTER• DEAll MARTlll m Mfl "IMt Only'" (dr1m1) '39-"UNl~EllSAl PICTURE ~ ~ C.role lomb1rd. C11y Gr•nt, Chu1tl l~iiii:;iiiiii;;~iiii;;ii f~IO A Y DAYTIME MOVlES I:• D (C) "T••• Mt tt Town" (ra· MlllCI) '53-AM Slllrkltn, St111in1 ........ • ,. • .,.... n.t llolllh" (comtdy) '4s--£idle 1,.nen, Vt~iel l•kt. "'Cllllll" (dl'lmt) '4l-Altn l•dd, lorttt1 YDlllll · ................... (""""'' ... -GtnldlM Flb.ttrlld, Sidlll)' ,,..,...l Coburn. li 1:00 O "ll•Mtlllbtr !ht Nilfrt" (oom· ldy) '40-Frid MacMu1r11. Bir· b1r1 Sttnwycl m ''1i111t f11 frMllom" (dr1m1) '43-Roalind Russtll. Frtd Mtc- Mvrray 2:00 G "Actilfl .. tk flltrtlt Atlt!!Uc'" (advtnt\lrt) '43 -Humph11r &. 11rt, R1ymond Missey 4:JO fJ "P18'nlt" (dr1m1) '56-Vin Htllln, Elll 81(11)', Bt1lrie1 Str1l(hl e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS Qu•llty Printing •nd D•ptndtble Service for mor.e ~." • qu•rt.,. of • century. U11 'Wll1' ULIOA M.ft., NIWPOITIU.CH-Mlo4lt1 LAST WEEKS! Nolblng ~H 11181 lift out 1!'1111 Adnntarera• "-~-.IOlmPH&.L.SVml I MlllTS TlmUW'llcauRT l'ILll OF THE ADVENTURERS ® ._ ..... CHAl.Ln .UNAWOI e ALAN IADIL e CANDICl UlGIN THOMMY llROllN e DELIA IOCCARDO e IRNIST IORGNINI e IOSSANO llADI e OLIYIA ffHAWILLAND lllllM ,IHMIU e AN,NA MOFfO e LllGH TAYLOl·TOUNG Start' Exclu1Jvelyt Wednesday, May 27th Mart Crowley's ... ''Ttll: IXJr§ INTtil: ~()'' ... is not d musical. '0-C-fi.o...._ A""'"G.n.J"'--Cdob.DM• l!!)e There'• • ehvming Colonid Hoaltu w•iting to take yo11 on 1 penonal 10111 o[ our Cou.a1ry'1 beginni11g at lndependence Hall ti Knott'• Berry Fum. Pita 1 viait. FOUNTAIN VALLEV OlllVl ltl '""Di ... ,.,_ • --111-1 Kl·f'll .. 1-ww. --·--171·1"2 -·-·-....... 1. l roadw•r M111kal I-tit "011¥""' ((;/ ColOr OM "111111 Wlld, 11...., l'rte'' (Gl Cnlor GrMr F1mHy E"llrtllflmt1nl E•cl111!~e Or&ng• Co. Or.·I" Showing "''"' LIW•li•n of Ul'll •rrtn J1M111" ll!l cotor "M<>ll•V J11n1l1" Color Under 17 m1111 bl> wl!ll P!lrlnl AU Color Show -l'tler O'Tll(llt !n "Gotclby1 Mr. ChlPt" (GI •M "l'ln M111 Army" (Gl'I AN Cltler SMw l'tter O'f .. lt 11'1 ~ HOOODIYI Ml.. CHl,.S" (0) • "l'IVI MAH AJIMY'" (01') .I.II C1ler SIW# HHAklD UHDll. LIATHll.., II.I "THI! WILD IUHCH" !Ill U1>111r lf Mlltl H wllll ,.,,..... or111111 Cnnty l'r.m•-lnt•1ern ... 1 "A Ml• C.111111 Htnt" (GP) Color oM "Tiit ll•IYln" (GP) Color AU Coior $11ow A,tldtmy Aw•rd Winn., Jorwl W1"(M In ''frw Grit" "" 'Slwtlt Cftbt"' At! Coior tr.ow M6orlo Tllo"'411 11 "hMr''' CGl'I . •M "Tiiey llMI! Hlnn Dill'! TIMJ" IGI') AU C110r lti.w -...... MCQ\itfn "TIMI Tlloll'l11 CrtWll •.l.ffllr" (GP} ... . 'nit OH C"lllf" (GI Tkktlt Oii Nit H01¥ for ••11111y .SOO" JoM W•~11t In ..,.,.. Or•r• IGJ etlOr ... ""fill Sllrtlt (111; ..... fGPI COior Dustin Hoffman Mia Farrow IPnrilbl' r.cbbr lkt"" l!)o ~ plut , • • V1r11a Ll1I "THE GIRL WHO COULDN'T SAY NO" ••• Rock Hud1on "The Undefeated" -ALSO- The Spectacle Behind The Spoetacle "The Games" !GI • Full length realm Musicrl ,ant.., ln FAIRYLAND COLOR by nCllllCIUI With ANNA RUSSD.l allf Fe•turlnc Constan,e llrl&l*I SAT. & SUN. MAY 16th & 17th SAT.: 12:10 & 2:10 SUN.: 12:30 01dy ALL SEATS 75c 1-- $do ~lW'Oll"l llACM •• et tko --•• Fe••I-ll~e lole •• Cl . t-1110 ENDS TUESDAY 'AIM'llSIOlf9 COlOt n DRUIE -AUO- '"t Attn11 MAc;Gll IMITN G-. r. U.TIMCi • DAILY ,ILOT lllff ~Mi. Rare Find tt'1 not often, when you're three years old, that you find a starfish all by yourself -especially on top of the pier at San Clemente. Christ- ian Miller did. He found it clinging to one of the old pilings pulled oul by crews curren1Jy repairing the structure. Christian is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Miller. 229 Avenida Santa Barbara, San Clemente. Standing Ovatio11 Given ·-Cl em en te High Glee Club Richard Dastrup's Triton vocalists ex- pect the applause they will receive in the scbool1s Spring Concert May lt, but they didn't expect the standing O'll· t1on accordfJd them May I. 'lbe '/kn<mber coocert girls glee group [nm San Clemente High sang with such expertise that their competitors-from ttven Orange Coimty high schools stood July Trial Set In Oceanside Machine Gunning and applaoded them. Occasion oC the exceptional tribute wa."l the 1Soothem California Vocal Association €1iral Festival at Anaheim High School, an invitational event in whlcb each ch<ral group rectlves an evaluation by the association expens. San Clemente's choral group missed a perfect rating by only two points. San Clemente High's Spring Concert in Triton Center wil l present 207 students or beginning girls chorus, acapella, madrigals, boys quartet and girls trio under direction of Richard Dastrup. Spring Concert is an annual public performance of the voca l music depart- ment of San Clemente H i g h demonstrating the s l u d e n t s ' ac· complishments in classical, popular, sacred, madrigal and "fun" music. Down the Mission Trail Barrels Put Out F 01· Capo Trash SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -'Ibo San Juan Beautiful eofnmtttee has been roll· ing out the barrels these days. The barrels are designed to dlacouraae liUerbugs and have been placed at con- venient spots all fYVet the downtown tourist area. Dorurted by TRW Systemll, the IS receptacles found their way to the Chamber of Commerce's beautification committee lhrougb the effort. of Roy Garbarine, TRW manager, Wah Pen- nington, a chamber din::cCor, and Mayor Tony Forster; The barrels will be maintained by the Public Works deparbnent whlc:h anchored them to their locations. e Committee Named SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Ap- pbintments ba•e been announced by Mayor Tony Foster for the Site Plan Review Committee which ill an ap- pendage of lhe Planning c.ommi!sicn. Named to the committee are City Engineer .Jack Kubota, City Planner Bob Johns, City Administrator E r n e 1 t Thompson and Planning Commissioners Jerry~ Chuck Allen. e 6ood Skates Waftlell LAKE FOREST -An ice skating trip has been planned for members of the Arts and Crafts section ol the Beach and Tennis Club. The youngsters and their guests will be leaving at 1:45 p.m. from the club and wHI be traveling to Glacier Falla in Anaheim. Only 25 will be accommodated so those planning to attend are encouraged I.a sign up early. For more information call the club at 837-8161. e L;bror11 Talk Plantted SAN CLEMENTE -Wayne J . Horvath, Saddleback College instruc<or, will speak to Friends o( the Library Thursday, May 28, at the San Ditgo Gas & Electric Company offices. An instructor in languages and fine arts, Horvath will s p e 1 i: on ''Impressionism of the 191.h Century as it Aflects the 20th Century Contemporary Scene." San Clemente Women Assist Scholar8hip The San Clemente Woman's Club presented a $50 check to the Saddleback Junior College scbolarahip fund , ac· cording to Dr. Fred H. Bremer, superintendent and P.ttsident of the col· lcge , · The donation will be added to the fund which provides scholarships to students outstanding in 1 t u d i e 1 , leadership or service to the school. OCEANSIDE -A July 7 trial has been set for six persons arrested during a raUy of the Movement for a DEmocratic Military (MOM) following tile machine gunning of one of their members. Servicemen's Center ~ six, arrested April 30, have pleaded 1Dnocent of charges ranging from disturb- i¥g the peace to parading without a permit. • They are l\.1arine Lance Cpl. William Cl'latman, 20 ; Maurice C. Durham, 20: • Jhmes Snyder, 22 ; Teressa Cerda, 18 ; Michael A. Lawrence, 25 : and Thomas Hurwitz , 23. ~The group were among nine persons plcked up initially ·al a park after, police said. they failed to disburse. Marine Jesse Woodw1trd was wounded In the chest earlier at the MDM head~ quarters when he was hit by the ~et £rom a .45 caliber machinegun. •Police said the MDM headquarters .JIJs sprayed with a burst of fire by llflidentined nighlriders. 'The house where tbe activity occurred has reportedly been tilrchased for $19,000 to serve as MOM headquarters. Actress Jane Fonda at· tbded the housewarming. No Tax Honors Its Volunteers D<rlens of recently graduated hostess trainees, fund raisers and other volun· teers for the San Clemente Interfaith Serviceman 's Center won recognition for their pest year's work in a recent annual awards dinner in San Clemente. An estimated llS members and guesls of the center heard an add ress by Col. Emil Radics, commanding officer of th e 2nd Infantry Training Regiment at Camp Pendleton who praised the center and San Clemente's citizens for filling the gap between serviceman and commwtity. Robert Taeger. in charge of the recently completed hostess training course, presented certificates of com- pletion to ·21 new senior hostesses and a dozen junior volunteers. Recipients of 500-hour volunteer work star emblems were G e. r t r u d e Wurzburger, ~ary Fish, Jackie Spencer and Nancy Dillingham . Sue Chernobieff won a 200-hour award. Mrs. Wurzburger also shared honors v•i1h Mrs. Barbara Tobiassen for organiz- ing the center's recent thieves' market rummage sale which raised $1,700 for the nonprofit center's coffer.s. Other award recipients for the past year's W<>rk included Kay Chaney, Connie Howard, Frank Osborne and Joseph Stephens. San Clemente's Police Departmt:nt, the Exchange Club, the Knights of Columbus :1nd Smetona Photography also were. ci ted. Boost for Capo City Budget Sho·ws lncrec~e of 14 Percent By PAMELA HALLAN 0 1 1M 0.11, l"lllt Shff The te11tative budget for San Juan Clpistrano'1 1970.71 fiscal year bu been ~bmitted to the City Council showing a 14 percent increase withoul a raise iJi taxes. \Figured in lhe expe11ditures is a police nepartment which would c o n s u m e $1S6,278, including $91.448 for salaries. )1ayor Tony 1'~onter said that although tbe police department is figured ia lhe. budget for the coming year, he still believes Its actual enactment ts one tO three years away, n'llt total budget ls. esUmat.cd at 11,BM.oeo of whlcb 1828,894 comprises the g'enet'al tund. Last year's budget Wis $1,592,094. Finuce Director Paul Lew said that tile Increase! reflects an increase in nl•enue trom nmi·propert.y tares 1ucb I as sales. cigarettes and real property transfers, license and permit!, higher U.terest rates on invested money and grants 1• lieu and transfers from special funds. He also said !he assessed valuation will be higher. This year's is bcinc $!6,llS,798. Next year's is estimated to be approximately $19,432,<KKI. He said the assessed valuation increase was a combination of increased building and the increased value or the existi11g property. . One of the ar-ea's ot l!xpendlture which showed the hike 1.s 11 the capital lm· provement fund. Lew said this ts because the.re are several project.I which are In various mgeA of development which may require certain expenditures next ytar. These projects include the public worka yard, ,, (temporary city hall) the construction of the Camino Capistrano--Trabuco bridge, the Navia.San Juan Creek roads to Ganado Road includillg a bMdge, the Oso Road and 0.0 Road croutng and the Mission Flats streets. The total budgeted expendttu.res are: public safety, $2.03,150; public works, $155,847; general government. '90,SD; capltal improvement, $3111050; nol· departmental 161,31$ and cultural IUOO. Reve111ue include& pror,rtY tu fl'J'J',JOO; grants in lieu f1&1,C2 : t.axea othtf than property $133,000; ml1ce'Jlan1ou1 revenues. (licenses., permit.I, fines, tn- teresl eant<d: $181,296 and tr"'1Sler1 from other funds, 131,200. Lew said that tlt1a ft&r'• rtserve win be !350,tltlO which lncllldes an approxi- mate $200,000 reserve •hich wu C11Tied over from the year before. He projecb the lf/0.71 reserve lo be aboul fllll,000. lhul1d•J, M11 14, 1970 s DAILY Plltn' jt Beach Site Waits (Jntil '71 Club Purchase Squelched Speculalioo aboul peaible S t-a le ~ of tbt Capllltauo -. Club olte 1111 betn ended for the preo<nt by the Slate Parb and Recrtallon Departmenl Dtroctor WlllJam Penn Molt The dp~acro pu<el of prime beach b definitely not on the recommended list for 1970-71 budge! purdllses, but It will be a prlorlly Han in January of 11171, Motl llld. Cumnl acqulslllon plan tnVo!veo a propoted 1lift of -f\mda """' ... ua1 orojecll lo -., and purchase of lho beach alte usln& boodJ In lieu « JllOMY. Mot4: u.ld, 110ur peoPe have indication ftom. them (pat<tl ...,,.,,) that lhis would be satisfldor)'." A spokesman for the ow 11er1, Caplalrano Buch lnveltment Corp:ira. lloa, Aid lfle poop ls wtDlni lo Kil lo tho llale boll prict II the critical del«minalloa. · He sa~ the itate b in process of Ill.tin& a dollar value on the property, and tht!n the owners mull determine lf it ill fair •alue. A publlc 1tetem<nl by Loyd V. Steen, c:halm\an of the corpor11ioo'1 ·board, 1111 denied nporta lflll the .....,., woold acctpl fU mlllioo for Ille l,lllO feel ol oceanfront He. notes tllat comparable property In that area "1111 r«:enlly - eold fer $2,000 per rfont foot, and more." Another member <Ii the owner lfOUP has prote8IOd that lhe c«poration paid IU million for lhe property and 1111 incurred conskltrabM! e1penat1 in t.axe.s and interest and demolition ol antiquated structures. Mott, in an address May 9 at San Clemente High School, told ol recent state purchase of a beach parcel for $2,500 per ~ fool. LIKE IT ••• CHARGE ITI Hanging Baskets 1.77 ... Add the beauty of lush 9Net1 ivy, artillery fern or asparagus growing in baskets ••• oU r9CJCly 1o hong on polios and porches. The baskets ore the 7J4H size. llue MarcJ••rlte or Yellow Daisy al· ready gtOWing in ono gallon wtilofners. loy...,. oral and beautify yoor garden tocloyf 77···· Plant colorflll.beddlag plants now by the tray. Hanly, colorful potunios ol· ready growillg in trays , , • buy _,.,r troys ••• ready to plant. 44c a tray Ort•o Sy1te1111c• las• anil Plaww Caro. Eaoy to ...... 11btlng,""' lf'NClll -""' plant and wjlltr. 5 .. , .... ,2.98 SHOP SUNDAY, TOO 12 to 5 P.M.1 CARlSBAD MONTCLAIR • • ••• i 1 ., .. 'i • • • • ••• • Grow your own fruit and •-au attractivo dwa.rf size trae. Grows ilT tub or yard. C'-!torn Mrfer lemon, Navel or V"'-"' Orange already growing in 5 gal. -lnors. 3.77 DHp Gl'ffll Ylgoro• for dlchondra or g.-C. be used 1afoly on dlcliondnl or graa lawns, or mind lawns. 20 lb. bag . 5.45 DHp Gl'ffll Ylgoro• with lnHc:tlchle 6.95 Zodiac: ••• dial with a salid lir-cllaL S.. them In a-. iw-, « aluminum. 29" "'911 - all .a.. DOWNEY NEWPORT BEACH 9.99 NOW! THESE V~ES AT ANY ONE THESE PENNCY , fi1f I I I l I I ..... 4 DAll.Y P!UIT ''-""' .., .. Dllllr ..... """' Arthur W. Wormley, wr~in candidate for Democratic commit,.. teeman of Columbus, Ohio, com· plained to Secretary of Stale Ted Brown he had been "sbort·st.ring· ed" in recent primary voting. Wonnley said the strings attached to the write-in pencils were too short to reach the slot "where they have to put my name to vote for me.'' • Jn a Washington, D.C. ,ntwi office, a story delivered by phone to a dictationist Teached the editori containina the typo ; "Viti President Spior T. GoQ· mto ••... • Th1J'1dll. M>r 14, 1970 Protester s Storm HEW; - 21 Seized WASHINGTON (AP) -Protesters demanding an end to the war and higher weUare payments occupied the office ot Secretary ol Welfare Robert Fioch for eight hours Wednesday before 21 ol them were arrested. The se=tary was b<lng Interviewed by lwo reporters when 17 protesters invaded his offit-e. For the next hour Finch listened as the group accused him ol being a "puppet," "yes man'' and "flunky of President Nixon." Shouting angzy warnings, lhe prl). testers demanded Finch back a proposal lo raise the minimum welfare bene'llU: to '5,500 per year fU' a ramily o{ four . They posted a sign on the office wall saying "$5,500 or FJght" and took over the secretary's desk and telephone. Asied about his view on the $5,500 figure, Jl'inch told the group he was "proud of the part" he has played in getting the Nixon administration's $1,600 a year welfare program started through CongreS.'1. The subject of the war in Southeast Asia also came up repeatedly in the discussion . "Would yoo like lo see your son be sent to a war lhat he might not come baek from wi thout even a just cause? .. WashJngton Post reporter J-I a y n es Johnlon quoted one of the protesters u asking Finch. "I'm as anxious that we tenninate th.is war as you are." the secretary replied. And at another point. he said, "AU I can say to that is J want the war over u badly as anyone in this room." One of tbe protesters remarked: "t 1-wben \hey drop the bombs they drop one right here on Utls office, and U>e right on the White House." NJne more penons joined the group during the dikussion before Finch Tdt his oftlce in the early afternoon. Later be received I list of demands from two memben of \he group. Gtorte Wiley, executive. director of the National Welfare Rights Organiza. tion, led the protesters. There also were some welfare mothers from Philadelphia .!Ind several students from American University in Washington . "It's hard for them to see all the complexities." the Post quoted Finc h u saying alter he left his Office. "Some of them are genuine hardship cases, and aome are hard~ exploiters." Dodd Str icken Sen. Thomas J. Dodd (D.corin.) bas been hospitalized by a mlld heart altaclt. The senator collapsed at a d~er W~es· day night and ~ill ~. m the h~spital for an mdefm1te pe- riod. President OKs • School Lunches For Poverty Kids WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix- on signed today a bill be said would assure 1 free or reduced-price school lunch for every child from a family whose Income falls be.low the poverty line. The measure would add about eight million children from low-income families to the number now receiving the lunches. Depending on the ecooomic status of the children, the lunches would oost no more than 2() cents and could be free. It also authorlies an experimental school breakfast program. The bill is an open-ended authorization, subject to later appropriations. About $400 million is now ~nt on school lunch programs, and officials e~timated another $200 million would be required to meet the bill's autboriz.a tions. In a statement the President said the new legislation will help expand the adminlstraUon's efforts aimed at provlding free or low-price lunches for • N ixon Aides A ct Antiwar Bill Fought. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Defense Secretary Melvin ft. Laird and top presldentl31 adviser Henry Kissinger con· ferred today with Senate Republicans in an effort to head off a burgeoning move to prevent President Nixon from spending any more money for war ac· tivities in Cambodia. , Laird and Kissinger were accompanied lo a closed meeting or the Republican members or the S e n a t e by Undersecretary of State E 11 l o t Richardson. The appearance of the three at the strategy session underscored t he seriousness with which t h e ad· ministration viewed the a n t I w a r measure. tt came as the Senate KtUtd ln to what likely will be lengthy, eon- stltuUonal debate over the proposal, v.'bldl would bar fWldl for ''retainiq" U.S. \roopl In Cambodia. Sen. Peter. Domlnict (R.colo.J, in-. troduced an amendment to bar funding for the Cambodla operation. after July I unless the President needs: money to protect American lives - a loophole att.acked by sporuion of the original meaaure u a move to practically nullify iU effectiveness. The While House opposes any legisla· tion to restrict the President's options in Southeast Asia. Sen. Edward Brooke (R.-Mass.), said lAird, Kissinger and Rkhardson. seemed lP rt!ck to th a t po1lUon at today's meetin1. Nb:on mtt more than an hour this morning with Kissinger, Laird and his new dellgnate rar cblimlan of the Joint Clllel's or Stall, Adm. -'!bomll H. Mooror, lo di>cu1& developments In Soulbusl Alla. The President alao arranged to mett this afternoon with Secretary of S\Jte William P. Rogers and t be un· dersecretary of state for polltical affain, U. Alexia Jobson. Sen. Charles H. Perey (ft.ID.), offered a resolution which would put the Senate oo record against any future use of American GI1 In oombat without the consent ol Congress. Percy and Senate Democratic Leader Mike Manslleld both called for J"<llonged debate on the basic issue of war and peace, and the respect.lve roles ol the Praident and Congress. • " • • •• • • • • • • • • • ' • '·, J. ' • ' 0 OMEGA ...: ACCUTRON -BULOVA AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR e rings sized and repaired • diamonds and precious stones remounted e pearls restrung WE CUSTOM DESIGN & MANUFACTURE ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY HAllOI SHOPPINCI CINTll 2100 HAllOI ILYD. COSTA MESA 545.9415 "Tho Store Tho! Confidence Built" o,_ Moa., linn., Fri. TIU t p.m. tiUNTINliTON CINnt IEACli l ED!NliER HUNTINliTON IE.I.CH 192·5501 , • • 0 / •••• •• ·, ..:-.... • f .·.-·~·.· ... ·.---. ,· :'-' -/ .. :.I '· Little 2*·year-old Kris Wilcox of Col· umbu.1, Ohio is too you'!g to Tead about war and campus vtolence. To her, wami. weather and sprit1g is a tim.4! of new life and experiences in- cluding the discovery of tulips in bloom. Km proboblt1 ~.m't know it, but she is oM of the Teal "beauti- JMJ. people ." An official HEW statement said : ''Today 's att.empt to disrupt the business of the department w 1 s coun- terproductive. ,, every needy child. liiiiiiiijjjjjjjjj~iijiji!i'-iiiiiijpp He said the youngster l\1ho is. well-fed learns better and "improved nutrition can help chlldren break out of the cycle of poverty." • Before the automobile age i'I the United State1, rail transit system& were so e:ttetl$iVe that t it once was possible to go from New Y ork to Portland, Maine, by troUty. I n 1920, it was possi· ble to trawl from New York to Boston bv electric street railway in about 20 hours at a total fart on tht oorioiu systems involved of $2.40. Suburban London bus drivers have been promised a $24 Christ- mas basket of "goodies" by bus company officials if they turn up for all their Saturday duties during the year. • Stock broker Emilio V•nd lni, 67, surprised three thieves in his apart- ment recently. They threatened him with a knife, took about $9,fiOO from his safe. then shook hands with him as Ibey left. • A burglar invaded Arthur Keel .. Ing'• house in Scunthorpe, England Wednesday, stealing his trousers containing $240 and his 'vooden leg lying on the bedroom floor. Those an"ested Wednetday nlghl Wert charged with dbonlerly «lldud. Israelis Down 2 MIGS Attacking at Suez Canal TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -Two Egyp- tian MJG2ls were shot. down today as they attempted to intercept Israeli war planes attacking military target.s 1long the Suez Canal, the military command said. On the ground, Arab guerrillas ln Lebanon fired rockets at two Israeli lettlernents, defy ing Israel's massive an- tiguerrilla sweep through sout.heasl Lebanon that ended only 12 hours earlier, Israeli IOUrces said. A third Egyptian plane was hit in the •ir baUJe over the canal. but wu not seen going down, a spokesman said. The Soviet-made MIG21s attempted to Interfere with Israeli planes raiding ob- ject.Ives oo the central sector of the ca.nal, he said. One MIG explodl'd in the air. One pfloe of another was seen bailing out. Both planes crashed in Egyptian ter· ritcry, while the Jsraeli aircraft returned safely, the-'l'Okesman said. The dogfights brought to 93 the number of Egyptian planes Israel claims to have downed since the 1967 war. The Czech-made Katyullha rockets, fired shortly before dawn, caused no damage or casualties to the two set-, tl~ents -Kfar Bllun and Ramot. Naf- tal, lhey said. Both are close to the Lebanese border near Kiryat Shmona, where three persons were killed and nine wounded in a rocket attack that prompted Jarael's raid into Lebanon Tuesday. Only a few boun before the latest attack, Deputy Prim• Minister Yigal A.Uon warned Beirut to eipect "further and widerscaled Israeli military attacks" unless It stamped oot guerrilla activity from tts territory. 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" .. .. ·" ARM CHAIR SUN CHA.lit LOUNGE CHAIR OTTOMAN ROCKING CHAIR LQ\I~ SEAT CHARMGLO GAS GRILLS '' •Tnc• OP' GAS •A11t-•-a•• TO Mt:rT VOi.Jiii aPt:CIAL "t:IEO & IN PllllCI: •s 1z1:. ALL "LUMIHUM lllUST llllESISTANT t'"Ollt A Ll,.l[TIMll'., FROM s799s ...... ...... ,, ..• •s.z..ot "'·" Sl:l,00 Siii.Gi $31 ~rti~ STOOL, STACl'l:!NG :::~~ BAR STOOL ..... SUN CHAISE $85,00 •11:1.ot CHAISE. AD s $42~ $26 . $49 ~ CHAISE. ADJ., ARMS s 1:11.111 $93 .... .. ·CHAISE, ROO<ING df}$j SUN 9ENCH WEBER BAR·B.Q.'S THIE ,. ... Mou• WIEBElt A LL "0RCIELAIN KKTTLI!: 15 TlllULV THI: CHOICIE 0,. THK CHAlllCOAL CHIEI"' llJ(• Pll'.lllT, ALL COLOlll• 6 P>IODIELS IN STOCK ,.OR IMMKOIATI: DELIV'IElllV, FROM S3695 $111,00 SI0,00 BHWN·IORIAN . FURNITURE r IYC PMU~Jt COL.Olla lft •TOOK POlt I M MllDIAT ll DllL.IVCRV. .. :1+1 TA aLK ., .MM C HAIRS NOW.·-··• SPECIAL. PRICES ON ALL. ITEMS •• , s20900 MANY OTHER l'IECES INCLUDED AND AT WA•EHOUSE CLEAUNCE l'R!CES I $42 $67' $89 $99 $99 $71 'II! .. -..... ....,...._~----~ -~ -.--... -...... ;;-~;;:;p;-_;::: •• :::-: •. ::: .• ::.7. -:.";", ';" •• ::;.-:.-:: •. -:.~. -:-. -:.:-:.~-,.,,, .• ~.'l't-"11!tL'l'til"l#!O ... £ .......... a ..... _,.J& .. R ............ , ....... P ..... • ..... ,_ .. , ....... ·-·"'*'""' ,,,_, ........ J~,.....--=.,,...,s~•~P~--·.-e~---....... ~.~~·-~---............. ...._ .... _ .. UPIT ...... WHITE MAN FIRES IN AIR AT 'GATHERING' Auguste Netroe1 Miii Araund Auto Accident 6 Slain in Augusta Said Slwt in Back AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - Coroner Nathan F. \Videner says the six Negroes killed In racial rioting here were shot in the .back and that five of them had multiple wounds. 'I1le coroner said in a report Wednesday that the size 0£ the slugs which struck all the victims appeflr:ed to be about .31 caliber, smaller Lhan the revolvers used by m o s t policemen. Policemen during the riot Monday were armed with shotgun!, aod some types of buckshot are about .32 caliber in size, but Widener sai.d he did not think the victims were struck by buckshot. One man had nine wounds, \Yidencr said. Dr. Joe Caldwell a r University Hospilal, who ex· amined three oC the fatalities and a number ol the wounded • ai4• c:o\Y one of the, dead be ..,, .ball mulUple woord~ Caldwell said the ma)onty of both dead and wounded ·Agnew Gets Nixon Voiv For 1972 WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Nixon has personally assured Vice Presi· dent Spiro T. Agnew that he will be on the Republican ticket In 19n, Scripps-Howard newspapers said today. A Scripps-Howard report.er, Dan Thomasson, wrote ~at .: the President talked with : Agnew last week on the heels of criticism within the ad· ministration or some or the vice president's outspoken rhetoric. "You're my vice preside~t. not theirs," Nixon was said to have told Agnew. Thomasson said that the Presk!ent did suggest that Agnew tem_per his public statement!. Nixon added, the st.Dry said, that Utis was_ not an order for the .vice pres1de~t to keep silent but rather · 1t was a suggestion that he tone down hls rhetoric for the time being. . Thomasson wrote that Nixon said he personally agreed with Agnew's assessments of those who precipitate violence on the nation's campuses a~ that he believes a major_ity of American's share the vice pres1dent's feelings. Agnew has received about 50 invitations to speak at ~m- • menct:ments in the coming ~.· week but it i& doubtful he will make many of them. China Orbiter Still Stahle COLORADQ SPRINGS , Colo. (AP) -Co~un1~l China's first satellite i.s m 8 st.able orbit around the earth that could keep it in space for more than 20 years, reports the North American > A1r Deleme Command, which keeps track of space traffic. NQl'ad's Spatt De fen se Center 5Aid Wednesday the ttable orbit will keep the satellite looping the earth for 1L IU!l (lve years, and possibly more than 20 ytars. 11le 1\ed Chinese &atellite makes one ctreult around the earth every tit minute s. com· In& 11 close u m miles 10 e1rth and as far away as 1,tat mllet, Norad uld. had been hit with "small caliber stuff -possibly .22 or .25 caliber." H esaid one fatality was hit by a shotgun slug which struck the chest from the lront. Late Wednesday, as armed National Guardsmen continued to patrol Augusta's streets and a 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew remained in effect, a written report oo only one of the six deaths had been filed by police. The report said John Ben- nett, 28. had been shot by police after escaping from a patrol car. BenneU was struck twice, according to the cor- oner. Dad Urged Mm·der Says Sho~Witness OXFORD, N.C. !UPI) -.A 21-year-Oid Negro testified Wednesday he watched while a white youth, urged on by his father, put the barrel of .i rifle to a woundtd Negro man's head and fired a fatal shot. Negroes angered over the killing threw rocks at store windows and cars Tuesday night. About 50 Highway Patrolmen were called to back up city policemen Wednesday night but police said the town was "very quiet." After a preliminary hearing Wednesday, Judge Linwood Peoples ordered R o b e r t Gerald Teel. 39, and his son. Robert Larry Teel. 18, bound over to superior cpurt for trial on charges of first degree murder. They were charged with killing Henry Marrow, 23, father of two daughters. Army veteran and Negro employe of the John Umstead Hospital at Butner. Peoples ordered both held without bond. The older Teel also was bound over to the superior court on charges of felonious assault. About a hundred Negroes, many of them young. listened ,quietly Wednesday as William Chavis told the court how he saw Marrow die. He said he was walking toward a complex of stores owned by Teel, intending to buy a soda. He said he saw four youths go by, then heard a shotgun blast. Then, he said he saw Marrow fall, heard a serond shotgun blast, and felt shotgun pellets hit him on the forehead, n e c k , shoulders, and hand. At that point, Olavis said, he saw both Teels and a third man approach Marrow. He said Gerald Teel held a shotgun, the other man held a rifle and Larry Teel held a stkk. Chavis said he was about 10 feet away a1 he watched the three men hit Marrow. He said he heard Marrow say, ''OK, you got me. Let's forget It." Then, Chavl.s said he heard Gerald Teel say to his !!On, "Shoot the son of a bllr.h.'' Te s timony al the preliminary hearing gave no Indication of events preceding the confrontation. Howevtt, a member of the town's Human RclllUons Countll and M1rrow and M>me other black men h•d been talking outside the Osh market and Larry Teel RCCUJed the men of shouting at hi.I wife. 1nursaay, "'11 1,., 1.,70 ~An Y PllOT !J broke windows and set small ll,5oo.ctudent_Ohiol tJnivenlty cruiser. un1ver&iUes were on strikes . showed 14 ldlools officially a buildlnc they had oceupled fires on campus and In had demonsrated. -peectfully The .tudent st r I k e lo· of indefinite length. The center cloeed. , ovtrnight on lhe campus of downtown Ath~s for two until Wednelday w~n Sowle f<rmtUon center at Brandeis reported 286 schools on strike Police In Black!bura, Va., II , SO o ~ 1 tu dent Virg,inia hours early today after suspended zeven students UnJversltyinWaltham,Mass., Tuesday. used dogs to help in evlctlng Poly{echntc !Mlltute. shooting down an aitempt by whom he accused, without university Presklent Claude elaboration, of being lhreal! W. Sowle to address a protest to the security of the Universi. rally. 1y. Police battled the rock~ "( am de<.llcated to lhe idea throwing demonstrator' with that this simply can't be tear gas in the latest outbreak another Kent State or Ohio of violence during a na· State" where student! closed Uonwkle wave of student their universities, Sowle said. strlkel! and demo~trations During the disorders, eigktt protesting the Indochina war students were arrested and and the killing of four Kent an auxiliary police officer was State University students. injured by a rock thrown Kent Sniper Theory SupportedP • KENT, Ohio !UPI) -The which killed four students. He said he did not know who fired the first shot. inger of Northfield. "But the Cleveland suburb of Bedford Heights, said authorities have a tape recording of thl shooting which ihow' there was a single shot, a pause of 10 to 11 8CCOOCls, and then the Guard volley. commander of a National Guard unit which (ired on Kent State University students said Wednesday a single shot was fired prior to the volley "There was a shot, 1 can't say ii it was theirs or ours," said U. Col. Charles Fass- reaction of the men supports the theory that the shot WU fired from outside the ranks." Fassinger, vice president of Scott Tarbell, Inc., of the LEAVING HARBOR CENTER FOREVER •• THE NAME CHANGE-OVER We 've been closed the pest two days get .. ting reedy for this big Event. Now we 're ready to offe r you these tremendous values -both in merchondise being cleared for our new operotion -end in high quality stocks ot the low prices perm itted by ou r new methods. Sale Starts Promptly 'it 10-•.m. Tomorrow, Fri., May 15th TWO PANTS SUITS Just s ordinarily sold up to $140.00 100°/0 Virgin Wool, Yeor·round weight tha t you 'll wear everyw here . In plaids , stripes and solids. All fas hio n colors. ' DOUBLE-BREASTED SU ITS mode lo sell for 5 69 as much as $1-40.00 Of lu strous Wool and wrink le-she dding Dacron end Wool. We have them in plaids, solids and stripes in t he new popular fashion colors. LIGHTWT. TROPICAL SUITS 5 55 regularly valued lo $110.00 Docron ond Wool , perfedly blended lo shoke off wrinkle s ev en on the hot , muggy days coming up. In oil summer shades and patterns. PERMANENT PRESS PANTS wash & 1A1ear casuals. Solids. stripes. plaids in popular shades. Values to $I2.00. SPORT SHIRTS An assortment of styles, colors and patterns for every occasion. Values t.o $9.00. DRESS SHIRTS Short steeves, long st~ves. colors, \Vhites. Get severaJ at 1.his price. Values lo $9.00 . SWEATERS Shap<-holding Wool and ·Orlon In cardlgan1-and pullover s\yles. Value.s lo $30 .00. $190 .LTD. The Horbor Store only, is chong· ing. The South Coos! Store on Bristol will continue to serve you under the fom ili or GENTRY LTD. name. Announcing-... an~ • Merchandising Policy We ere now organized to offer unbe li evably low prices in high-quality Men's Oressweer. We can do this throug h: I 1 J Specialization in iust the items li st~d belo w 12) Selective buying contracts with Famous Makers (3) Volume buying & selling ol low profit morg;ns Suits Sport Coats Dre&& Slack& We stock en unusually wide range of 1izes for every build. Regulars ·--------3.5 to 50 Shorts ------·----35 to '46 Longs ................... -----37 to 50 Extra Longs _________ ..... 40 lo 48 ALL-SEASON SPORT COATS 5 49 you'd usually expect to poy up to $85.00 Styled es modern os today in Wool end Dacro n blends. Pick one from t.he popular coordinate colors ond bold po llerns. WOOL BLEND DRESS SLACKS '17 volues to $32.00 Wool, Docron ond Wool, Silk ond Wool. All smerlly styled in en array of solid patterned shades to go with most colors. WIN A COMPLETE WARDROBE A $200 -velue wardrobe if you give us a name that's picked for our new operatio n. Read our new policy. th ink of a nome and bring it to the store -or ma il it in. No purchase necessery. Suits, Sport Coats Slacks & Dress Shirts if You Name Us ' 2300 HARBOR BL VD. Co1t1 Mesa, In H1rbor Center 540-1500 Open Dally 9:30 lo 1:00, Monday & 1bunday 'UI 1:00 p.m. I I , ' ·I • I .. -r --.----. ----~ -. • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • Where Are We Headed? Action by some inotituUons of bigher educaUon in Cali!omla (a.od elsewhere), mod!Jying curriculum and academic rules to adjust to atudent unrest and prote st, has left many people on and oU campus surprised and concerned. Such lnsUtulions as UC Irvine, USC and UC Berke- ley among others apparently have decided that there are clrcumstaoces in which a student's protest against the war or his concern about other social problems can be channeled into special courses for which credit can be justified. The institutions themselves are only now spellin~ out procedures and policies to implement their over·the- weekend. decliions .. ,!fhe. program.a vacy from school to school. 1 At UC Irvine -the,...baa•been· no indication <>f a rulh to drop regular courses, now at mJd..quarter, in favor or ••a1temative education" courses presumably more pertinent to the problems of the moment. The UCI procedures make it easier for students to drop courses up until final exams time without penalty. But dropping a present class to enroll in an "alterna- tive education" class presumably more relevant to current events requires approval.of the instructor, the department chairman and the dean's office. Alte rn ative education counes -special courses of study developed for an individual with special univers- ity approvaJ, have been a part of the UCI program for some time. UCI says it won't give "cheap" unearned credits. No one failing a course can pa11 it merely by citing pro- test activities and dropping the course. • Overall, the UCI faculty contends, their proposals • Retirement at 65 Can Be Bad Policy Most ol UI live in mtnlally air·Ught compartment.I; the left hem!BJJhere of . our brain doean't know what the right hemi.spbe<e II thillking. Our illncbeoo, table lhe other dq, lo, eluded the heild of a . · large company, who was complaining about t h e present genera- tion's lack of respect for age. He compartd it with h.i.s own time, and deplored our mod- em youth'• contempt ror anybody middle- qed or olde!°. Yet thia same man defendl a rigid policy at his company whlch compels employes over 65 to retire, no matter how active, bright, healthy or capable they are. AND, WHILE IT ii not official, his company wil l not hire anyone ovtt 4$ for a middle manageme11t poslllon, because it would put too much of a sb'ain on the firm'.s pension and welfare structure. This is the aUitude of most companies In our time -which is not only psychologlcally, socially and eeonomically devutaUng ror many men of 65 who sun have • decade or more ol productive life in them -but al.lo increases the "dependency ratio" of norr productive people who are being ·~ ported either by the government ar by the employed portion of the population. IF WE CAILOUSL Y dJ!Card older men regardless of their individual worth, we are obliquely .saying to young people that they are right In their disda.Jn for age. We are confirmin.r their belief thnt people get "uselea.s'lta1 they get older, arxl thus undennirting the 90rl of respect for pickled wfedom that has mstained all tradJtictlal IOCietie!I in the past. Young people today, who reject the· pa.It out ot hand, who have no patience with "tradiUOn,'' seeing only !ti negattve and not its positive aspects, take thtlr tear from our practices, not our preachments. IF WE PROFESS individualism, but Cut m'n off the payroll collectively 1t the same· age, rtgardless of indivklual ~;~ and if we pay lip-service to "matarity" but deny responsible employipent .. to men over ts, youth pay more altention to our act! than to our word.II. And, u we put older people out to pasture, instead of drawing on their experience and judgment, )ff are disvalu- }ng age and tacitly concurring in the contemptuOWI atUtude of youth toward its elders. Such contradlot.IOWI within our socio- econom.lc 11stem play hob with all our pious platitudes about "reconciling the generations." By our own refusal to give status and dignity to older citizens. we lay the groundwork tor t h e wktespread contemporary bere11 that ycuth is all. · Young Witness in Court The law requires witnesses at a trial or other proceeding to take an oath. The witness usually swears "lo tell the whole truth and nothing but the truth. so help you God." But all lhe law calls for Is that tbe witness take some sort of oath to tell the truth . If he tells a lie on purpose about a material fact Jn the trial, the district attorney may prosecute him for perjury for wl:UCb, lf convicted, he can be pun1sbed by a term in jall or a Hne. The -.,ttDess has to understand that he has a Jecal duty to tell the tnith on the witness otand. IOMETIMF.S where a young chHd Is a wttness, the judge or • lawyer may a~k 6peclaJ questions to mak' sure that he understand! this duty. In one case a four- year..cMd dllld's tesUmony was crucial in an auto acddent cue. 'Ibe chUd gave In- B11 Gee,.,e --- Dur Goo<ie ' My lwtband sayr tn. uperl<nce he had as a oewipaper route boy is Valuab!e to him, 11 10 many ,,.em men inchJde ln t he I r bi'lfapllles the fact lllis ti how they 1ot their start. However, 1 can't seem to convince my husband thert mlllt be more to it than th.is. lfe'1 4& now. Don't )'OU think lJ's Ume he sold hlr bike and Col out or the newspoper bUlln<sr? CONCERNED WIJl'E ll<at ConanMd Wile: I lhlnt he's daln( floe rt 1ucll I l<nder lie -be must be I IJ'Ul businc11:tn1n. J've been fn Ille ---• 1oo1 time aad blna't been tble to sift up ljle down Jll1lllOnl tor mr bike. ' L aw in Acti on telllgent answeni to the judge's questions as to his duty to tell the truth. Since he did not understand what an oath was he was not swom. He did not go to church. but he did know it was wrong to lie. The judge allowed him to testify. The law before 1967 said child~ over 10 could lesUfy unleSli their incapa::lty was shown. Chiklren under ten could testify only after a showing that they had the necessary capacity. In practlet! the courts never found much magic in the age of 10, No matter what the age, lf clilldren were falrly bright and promised to tell the truth they could testify. It was up to the judge or jury to weigh the testimony. NOW A Ntw LAW dots away wllh lhe age limits. Any perton may tesUfy If hl!l can express himself so as to be un· dflratood and lf hl!l takes an oath to tell the truth. Courts and juries can welflh 1t1ch 1ettimony and evaluate the child'• menhtility, hi_,. ability to perceive and n!membl!ll' facts. A person who Is a llttll!l below normal will not alway1 be di!IQU•llfed. The fact tht:t a penon wis once oommltted to a mental hospital Is 1111ot alone enough to dltQuaUry him. Fortlgners are oflen witneW"s. A court Interpreter takes their testimony. lft ll.kt!I an oath that he will comcily and accuntely tr1n slate the quettklfll ttnd answtn. Jnltrpreters al't 11lso often w;ed for deaf wltntS1es. Not.: ~ifornia laicutri of/tr thi1 coblnu• 10 you ma11 k>&01o0 about our ...... to deal academically with student concerns are mort conservative than similar programs contemplated or announced by other colleges.\Tbey stress there will be no halting of regular classes. Key issue ~s whether tbe universities, including Jrvine, are taking the first step down a dangerou1 road on which there can be no stopping or stepping ott. \Vhen universities involve themselves wltb political activism, it poses liabilities which could far outweigh educational assets. Particularly so for tax-supported in- stitutions. Will greater academic adjustments and accommo- dations have to be made for students who want to be involved in the November elections? What ba ppeni cmtie January and the new sessions of Congress and the Lil"~ ... islature? Are.. tbe universities prepared to relate tbi&- standards to every major social and political ev~t lrom-, now on? How can they set limits, Qr pick and choose? The voiCes of the students deserve to be beard. But to what degree can student or faculty political aJ)d JOCial protest be nurtured by a college, particularly a taJq>ay:· er-owned institution, without destroying public support? Inevitably, tbe institution wi.U be idehtlfied with the student-faculty poltical activism, regardless 'of4be edu. cational aspect of such involvement, and even though the protest or other political action involves only~a 11Iball portion of students and faculty. . ' • ' . • ~ ~ ~~~ These are very serious questions which the ~ emic community will have to ponder and be prepared to respond to. Jn the pressures, the ha ste and the emo- tion of the current situation, there is little lndicaion that this has taken place. ,.WE'lAN'r GO ON MEEllN~ L.IKf THIS .... ! Think Twice . About Reason For Flag Vse A segment of oor society exists at the present that attaches some special. mystical importance to the American nag. Plastic stick-on decals are popping up everywhere, in windows and on cars and people seem to · stiow extra pride because they have their flag where everyone can see it. The American flag Is the symbol of our nation and our nation's goals and struggles. In itself It Is a brightly colored piece of cloth of no inhererit value. WE DISPLAY THE flag for traditional purpose5. yet there has arilen a patriotic cult wh.ich worships tbi! cloth as a • ..._ Guest Edito~l . ' .. symbol of their unity. To these Oq: wav· ers the decal on· Oldr· bumper means they are against Communists, hippies, pacifists, and trouble.making rioters. They are often prejudiced against Black people because or a few isolated cases o! Black violence. 'That decal in a shop window also expresses faith in President Nixon and his policies for the continuation of good, wholesome American ldealii. But ls this what the U.S. nag really stands for and reall y means? Our courtry was founded on idealistic principles of freedom for all peopll!l -frtedom to choose and to express your own opinion v.ilerever you want to. THAT'S WHAT OUR nag stands for , not as a symbol or solidarlty for middle class conservatives. When the American flag is linked With right wing idf!'aS as it is now, th.ls is a Crimi!' against its whole purpose. This l!'Xpre55ion of our nation's most basic ideals shouldn't be perverted into a "lkk and stick insLant jinsoism." Criticizing these nag wavers does nol lnslouate that being patriotic Is wrong or displaying a nag is in bad taste. It ls Just that the flag ls being misused by a considerable number of people to express some private values, which are in turn polariz.lng young people against patriotism. THE FLAG ITSELF is all Ulat seems imoortanl to some people anymore. They feel the rights of individual human beings can be· forgotten . How can a person have a nag and stand on principles \\·hJcti are completely opposite lo those the f\aj!; was intended to represent yet still call himself patrioUc? \\1hen the piece of cloth which the na~ is made of loses ils import ance and the moral and lipiritual rights and guarantees of our country are worshiPPf!d and displayed where all can see them, then our country will have somf!thing lo be prood of. "With lit>ertr and justice for an·• It states In the flog salute: IO wh en you pet' your . Reader's rn1est instan t decal representation M the American t1a11. t'iink twice about the realOTI fer using it. DO YOU WANT to show peopl e what you stand for or where you line up polttlcally! Art you tru ly bltertsted Jn wlll\t the nag really representa:? \Ye need this nag and the ldtttl! it st.ands for. but we don't ntred symbolfc 6J)rellion s of rtacllonary values caused by.feAr and Ignorance. 1..ave Amerita, II.self, not a piece of pl ll!tic or soon you 'll flnd r.verythln1 you love turning to plastic. The Bf:11c-M New~ Harbor lflgl S<llool • CBS in Weak Position TV Integrity • Ill Question WASHINGTON -CM bas been under investigation for allegedly faking horror scenes from Vietnam but is standing its ground in refusing to supply the Defense Department with requested in- formation which Mlght help to detennine if war crime• were committed. There are some OrM!l points here but CBS's Judgment can be quest ioned in not cooperating, both as a matter of self-examination and. in the interest of punishing American oflk:ers for com- plicity in war crimes. Freedom of pres1 and speech Is not SQ much Involved ¥ 1he integrity of television broidcasting whlch already is suffering from a credibility gap. 'nle view inside the Nixon administration is somewhat more drll!tic. CBS is C09- s.idered to be tot.any ilTesponslble, in- defensibly hidinf behind • freedom of the press screen i bald fraud on thl!l public. . THAT VIEW ,NEID oot be rdopjed in order to set the weakness In CM's position In not. ~ · .wishing tQ Pt lo the bottom, or at least letting the public get to the bottom , of how much rakerx there is oa. TV and. where showmanship end1 and falsification be~ins. Three incidents in particular have been under recent investigation. In cne, CBS evening news on February 17. 1970. lihow· ed South Vietnamese scldiers covering the face of a prLsoner with a towel and pouring water on it to bring the victim lo the verge of IUffocatlon and thus persuade him lo talk. A U.S. advilor was pictured watching the incident. CBS ev1nlng news on October 9, 1967, reported an Jncklent in which a soldier • I~ Ric hard .,Wi )IQn. . atlempted to cut cff I.he ear of a dead enemy soldier. Two CBS people. Don Webster and John Smith, were involved in repcrting the incident. They were subpoenaed at the trial of Sp4 George A. Pawlasky ~ neither appeared, both being absent from the Republic of Viet- nam at the lime ol the tri1L . ..f;..... 1-. PAWLASKY>WAS foond guilty In lhe ear cutting irfddent. At the request cf the American' embassy no further action was taken agaimt Smith who was listed as • principal in the case for having supplied the knife for the ear cutting. 'Phe third incident appeared on CBS evening News November 3, 1999, and was: narrated by the &ame Don Webster who reported the ear cutting matter. 'Ibis incident involved the stabbing of a ~ptured Viet Coog by a South Viet- namese iii the presence of U.S. personnel. Its authenti cily was challenged in a · report from lhe American embassy in Vletnam on November 13 as a "cut and paste" job involving dlfferent locales and personnel and Including a n Australian helicopter as well as some U.S. training film. In all these instancf.!I efforts were made by I.he Dim:torate of Defense loformation to get from CBS informatio n or unused film (called "outtakes") other than had appeared in any of the broad· casts. The president of CBS News, Richard S. Salant, advised the Defense Department that it would not risk com· promising its news aources and its news persoonel in Saigon by revealing more information than was broadcast. SA.LANT WAS ASKED to rtcemider but he refused. "Outtakes," like a reporter's notebook, are sancrcsanct, Salant contended. And he observed that the Defense Department, wilh its widespread faci lities, cioes not have to rely on CBS news in order to Carr/ out its investigation of a war incklent. The latter may be quite true but Jt does not adequately e:rplaln why CBS, like any n.ewrpaper, would not support the authenticity ol Its own reports by more than merely asserting that \My were true. 1'lere undoubtedly 'Will be some kind of a judicial determination, growing out of other cases, on whether er not reporters c a n refuse to supply their raw notes which m i ~ h t or might not support evidence of the conunis.!ioo of a crime. ANO, OF t'OURSE, this question., becomes sharper when repGrters ol' photographers, as in the case of the: Vietnam incidents. may be caUed u~ to 90pply information against people Whc( might have cooperated with them it\ prodUction of a television fe.at.ure. The"' people might conceivably be tbeiJt frieOOs, while reporters turning ovet. their notes on demonstrator! and Pf°"i testers might not know. the persons Irk volved. There are really two separate que.s-. lions, the integrity or television broad- casting and the matter of the Inviolability cf a reporter's news li0\lfct9. 1be courts can decide; the lattl!lr. Sir Ronald Bests the Bums Well, chlklren, as you remember, Sir Ronald of Holy Rood and his faithful gquirt, Sruw:ho Retnecke, had plunged deep into Ttie Tangled Thicket in quest of that frumlnous creatun -The Dread Unruh! The two boon companions emerged from another fiscal copse , bloody but unbowed, to see before them the glorious Groves of Academe. Shadowy figures danced thf'OUlh the Groves, crying. "On Strike! Shut lti:>own! On Strlk'e! Shut it down !" "Hark, Sancho," said Sir Ronald, a pleased smile on hll noble countenance, "The Bums are oo the warpath again. I shall enhance my reputaUon with another easy victory." "Shall I sharpen your bayontt, Sire?'' asked Sancho eagerly. "For you once swore a mighty oath : '1ile Groves must be kept open at bayonet poin1 if necessary.' " "Aye, Sancho. And prtpare my nox- ious gases. Call out my loyal guard. lf it req uires a bloodbath, met1phork:1lly speaking, l't us get it ever with." • t Art, Hoppe ' . , r ~ :. lVllAT COURAGE you have, M.'Sler," !aid Sancho admiringly. "For that ill just the ccurs~ Governor Rhodes o£ Ohio took the day Defore his election." "And his grat eCuJ people crowned hill) once ap.ln ! " asked Sir Ronald, nodding confidently. "No Sire, they threw him out of ofUce. Now, about your battle plans ... " "Hold, varlet." uid Sir Ronald with a frown. "Perhaps the tactical s.ituaUon bas changed." "Oh. it has, Sire. For thil time the long-haired Bums have been joined by all the sons and daughters bf your belov. ed people of your Golden -State. But, rear not, your loyal guard &hall beat them down Jn glorious carnage in not one, but all the Groves ol Academe, Shall I sound the battle trumpet, Master?" °?;11~-,-------'4· · · "Hush, fool, while I U\lnk," growled r Sir Ronald, scowling mlghUly. Dear Gloomy Gus:- I am 1t1rUn1 1 peUtlon to declare the Monday followln11 Mother"• Oay to be a di}' of re.st! -Oluahter, Wlfo Ind Mother "'" .. ...,. ""*" ,........ ...... -,__.., .. , ...... .. "" ... -· .. ,.. ll9f -... .....,. .... DMl7 ..... "On Str1ke! SKt!I' JT DOWN !" came • the roar from lD,000 young throats. "I have reached my decisioo , Santho,"' sakt Sir Ronald finally. "Shut dcwn the Groves ol Academe I" "But, Sire .. , " protelled 5ancho, qhut. ''Watch what tr¥'5Pirts, Sancho," said Sir Rooald, sm1Un1 ooce 11•ln. AND, LO. NO IOOn<r bid th< order gone forth to shut down the Groves than confusion and alarm spread among ·Sir Ronald's enomle1. Slowly, they took uo a n~ ·cry of rage: "OPEN' IT UP I OPEN IT UP I" •1 Sancho."' said Sir Ronald ' triumphantly. "They now demand 1 do; \ what I have &worn to do." ' Sancho smacked hll fcrehead with his palm . "Ob, Master. forgive me for ever· doubting your wisdooi 1and guile. YOl.l have discovered that the way to keep! open The Groves ol Academe is b:1: closing them down." Sancho suddenly l~. "But, Sire,~ when you open them again, your enemleJS will be twice as outraged. I fear .• :•: A thought struck him and be grinned deviously . "Un1ess. Master, you plan never to open these enemy-irifested' Groves again ... '' "That would be unkni~tly, Sancho.'~ ~aid Sir Ronakl nobly. "I have pledged' to reopen The Groves and I shall do' $0.'' I "\\'hen. Sire~·· : "On the firsl Wednesday, Sancho,'"' said Sir Ronald, buflb'lg his nails, "in1 November." -----~ Thursday, May 14, 1970 The editorial po11f of the Dano Pilot seek! to iftform mad 1tim- ulatf rea4u1 b11 pre1tntm17 thti newspaper'• opf'd°"' and com- m1nta.'l on topfc1 of intnt.i ond li9niflconoe. bv P«>tridlog • fo1'tlm for the ezpr11ftora o/ our recdtrs• opi,fom. ond br pre1enting Ult • dioer1e vf.rw- pofntl of informtd obstn11T1 and spokesmn on topics of tht c1ov. Robert N. Weed. Publisher • ------------------------- . .. DAIL V "LIW 7 ·Reuther Death (;011rplit!ate·s ·Auto T~lks •\ I: lo I \ DETllOl'I' (AP) -With ~try• In °' -npart come," !or -· Thal adcb to, lldollne """' , avoided. Bu• the wlloa kept ctnl ntll Jtlt-for UAW..,. Walter P. Reuther dead, the to tbe MJdttp· t.ep1aturt.. Under the UAW &osututlon. sures on both the eompanlea workklJ three. montM without , pio,,es. Reuther t6'd S,IOO blC que1Ucin that arises jg Indultry ooiw hlrl the man '•Secmary.TrQlur6r E rn i I and the union. contra& and nnally setUed cbeerinC deleaatu: wh~ hil deaUl ~· mMn '° who ~ Reuther' a pla ce at · Muey became acting pr:esi· The Bia Three -GM, Ford for a package worth'.21.1 cenll . ' -'~Ul*l to do a ,btJJ ol • • CllCKING . •UP.• ·--Capricor n · ~irl~. • ·-~U com..ct_,~ .. ~!~-~~ the bargaining table In mid-dent, but the man wbo will hourly ovor thre< ye·-. _ ~!" .. t.i.r !or the IUY• In th t..-.n UM n_.,. AW\U nUlla~ Ju)y' n\8)' COl1)t there delef• bead the Union uritil ttl }872 and Chry1Jer -baVe reportt(! -... --.... , ~~~. and' .~' nal;ioD'• car m~ t4 prove himatlf even convention will be 'named by sagging sales and profltl the current contracts, written In • The UAW will be alt.empting ~-· • tougher than hll former chief. Lbe remaining tS members of last two quarters. With con-Ulll7, were tsUmated to be tO work upward from 1 base • Already IOIM obleryen on . 1bt UDlion feara, rtgardlesa the internatlorial executive tr.acts expiring next Sept. 14, worth $1 "'hour in wages and ·wage av..-qlng: ... 02 boW'ly .both sides hen say Reuther's cf who ia cholen union presl-board. lb next. stheddled these three flnns come up fringe beneflta over 'their and 1 peekage of ftlrtle ~e- death in ·• ~ cruh ~ dent after Reuther's funeral meeUn& It Juni t. first for oegoUaUons. three years. · nts eitlnlaUd to ff worth helgbtened Poulbilltles of a Friday, that the 'industry will The impact of auto industry UAW leaders say members In 1951, when new car sales ,1.75 hourly. .... A naUon'1 economy, ' the test. ral M~·-~·, ""~s•~-have been feeling the pinch of 1i11e t v--. r1.11-v. ..,,,.~ iei-widespread, the U>tW's strike . ' Call ed Ambitiou s strike -..nth Ill tmpact on Sose no ~ in putting him to pact.s reach far beyond Gene-also were lagging and layoffs! -~~~ii~~i5~~~~~~~~~~~ Their reUoninl: And there's fear ellewbere and American MotOrs. The 1.6 the rising cost of living, aJong fund has $32.t million in it. trl,C ~ hlne Both the union and the In-the next man may not have million-member UAW .,11Ses with widespread layoffs. They Today tls balance is $1a'7.4 mil· ill a chlckeo-plucklng J'6IC to dust.Ty had taken (.ough stan-Reuther's sense oC timl"! of them u a PIUerD lo birgain-have adopted a wide-ranging lion. · -....d-c$\td aod.l 31ffdwio ~ By L. M. BOYD STENOS -Mister, 1he nut Ume your secretary complains about overwork, tell her about the stenographers in Vella Lu, India. \110Y take their dlctition while r u n o i n & aloofrslde ol lllOYlng earri.g ... 'lbeir notes they scratch on palm leaves. They are pajd by the mile. remove all the fe.at¥n. • • ces even before the accident. when to give and take, a knack lng In scores of 1Uto supplier set of economic demands to And tn winning recent UAW ·rtt.t:;:';!;!!!i ,t~' TlilE 'J'J:CHNICAL w o R n and Gov. William Millike:.1 bad that v.·on the UAW m1n1 flrtts plants and In the aerospace override inOation. convention approval of a 15 1'lO C).bllr>TION ST'. ;r-:l--s~po~ke~n~o=r~·~·a~n~a~n~ti~cl~DO~_ted ~~in~~in~d~us~tr~i~al~llTU~· ':"~"'~n~tr~a~Cl;_Jand~~qr;i<ul:tur:·:al::_~im:plem::'":':__~l~n~a~siml~~la~r~e<o~no~m~i~e~~~·tu~a~-Jper~e~on~t iw~a~gle~inc:tt~~,..~~~l~~~~~·~-§~~-~7'~-~"~leo!~ for b r-a i p. w a s b l n g , our mobill • .");... • __ ... ___ ,._, '-:-•··trl I M• k " • strike in the auto · e·. in· -a 'guarant~ IM_._ "" &UUllll es. ion in 1-a strl e was pucent this year and 7 per. Laquage Man po!Dl!I out, L! mentlclde ••. CALIFORNIA • ) ' BEAUTIFUL GllllS Argument continues over that quettion. of whlch of the world'-women are the most beautlfu1. A widely traveled airline ·pilot Insists the girls oC Cambodia win that 1JUe. Maybe' so, ' ,maybe & o . However, the blmdes o f Northeastern Italy usually get a higher number of votes in surveys of the experts. ln the United Slates proper, of course, it Is 1he women of SeaUle arxl San Francisco who are generally regarded as Lhe most attractive. THE RECORD INDICATES no wild animal hunter has ever captured a baby gorilla without first shooting its mother to death. O U R PLANET MAN says Capricorn girls are known to be am- bitious. They go to great lengths to shine socially. IT TAKES only 14 lleCOllCb for Tea Taster s Rep rieved WASHINGTON (UPI) The men who taste tea for the government. all three of them , can keep their jobs, according to a congressman. President Nixon's budget eliminated their jobs and those of the seven members of the government's only ol· Dclal board fA tea experts, wtalch sets standarm for the · 150 million pounds of tea im- ~ each year. _ . )lut Rep. John S. Mi>agan (D.Conn.), said he had receiv- ed ~ letter from Robert H. Finch, secretary of health, educaUon and welfare, · .CknowJedglng only Congress could eliminate the board. The tea tasters 'wW cc;riUnue to judge quality Wlder t h e bOa.rd's standard!. Coming May 16 LAW prohibitl a bu>band from spanking his wile, but' It dou not prohibit a wife from beating up her husband. NUDISTS -A.m asked the whereabouts in this world oC the largest number of nudistll per capita. You wouldn't believe it. 'lbe BriUsh are thought to be so con9flrvatlve. ..But Great Britahl is the pla · where live the highest percen tage cf nudists. ' . THE AC'roRS outnumbe . the actresses in this country. Considerably. In fact, juft about twice as many men as women c 1 a i m professional theatrical status. . . BOW MANY Mll..E$ do you figure the fil't men .on . a basketbali team run during the course. of a single game? l mean.. altogether. 'lbe slide ru1e boyi say it's about 24 miles. MEMORY -What's your earliest memory? Belleve my earliest memory was wadina: in Chlmacum Creek on tbe Olympic Penimllla In tile Stat. of Wllshington. J;>on't ncall the age, however. Three or four, maybe. At any rate, a doctor says l he has documented instances wherein a few persons recall events that occurred when they were six·montbs-old. Incredible. CONSIDER THIS -If yoU drink too much upon occasion; you wake up feeling stiff. A( • least tbat is what the ex~ peritnced researehen report. But why is this? Jleeause, · .says a medical fellow, you do not shift posltkm lrequenUy undt!r the influence. RAPID REPLY -No, sir, tb.at_year in whidl tbe m06t _ inventions were patented was 1914. Yovr questions and conv m<"ntl ore welcomed and will be used in CHECKING UP wherever possible. Ad· dress letters to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Boz 1875. Newport Beach, Calif., 92660. Family ~ekly "I Was Kidnapped By Guatemalan Guerrillas" Sean Holly, a labor attache to the American Embassy in Guatemala City, tells about his har· rowing ordeal in an exclusive Family Wffkly interview. He is now awaiting re-assignment. and looking forward to his next challenge. e UNLIKE FATMER -Michael Douglas may look like his actor ltther, Kirk Douglas, but he doesn't think or talk like him . . . this week's cover story. e FAT CHANCE -Keep stuffing your kids and there's every chance you11 have a house full of fat teen·ager1. Rere are some kitchen hints to help keep your child from becoming a "!atty." .Jtll Co111i11g Saturday in the I DAILY PILOT I 2666 HARBOR BlVD. 546·7080 COSTA MESA WUIDAYS f to 9 SATURDAY & SUNDAY 9 T0'5 So it l11hlon91r t+i111 our w1l1r •upply. 0 All perf,,.t, "' 11c1nd1 or br11kaw1y if!lporh. Mor• li:h1d1 we 911 t10, ff!r more p.ric•t. PVC SPRINKLER PIPE Th• good·•tuff which "•"•r ru1h, ~t1, •t corro4l•t. E•tY to work with, 110 thre•di"IJ• i111t cut •11d fu1e with 1tuff ..... 11. We'll help l1y your 1ytl•"' out. !On p•p•r th•t ii i. INCH 3C n FLIP LOCK • 0 A po1itive leek lhet c•n't be l•"'P•r•d with frem the ouhid1 • • 0 Mov"lt iri tvch • w•y th•t the •11tire do•r work• with ii le hold i!lffvd•l"I. 0 I r••• finisll. SPRING ~DOOR STOP 0 le•h th• hel• h1 th• w•lt fr•'" the Joor k11ob. D Ir••• •• '""•' fi11ith. 0 Spri"9 •Ctio11 throwt the door b1ck et you 111cl you 90 thr•111h tho b1ck w•ll. PLASTIC IRAS" CAN-• 0 ku991d b11r, fl ut1d 1id11 1110 "'utic.11 ~;119 i11t111cl1cl h1r1, it't jvtt 1ho1tt1r. ~ D 511119 fittint lld t• fniltiol• th• c•I trtd th1 n1i9hb•rflo1ll do9t. 229u • ' . OLIDDIN SPRID HOUSE PAINT 0 Gr••* for w1otl, 1111tol'lfy, ___-r__mat1l~--~- O St1rf with 0111 p1liit 1MI ( 90 ri9ht thru. 0 6 1idcl•11 ••Y• il't , • .., • ...i th•y •t.O imp1rfl1I ,; h1c.k, 6'7 •~ GLIDDEft , INDURANCE ~~·-~· HOUSE '.PAINT D Th, r11I hi-hitllnt 111i11 1n1d1 by •ur olJ bucl4y, P'1vl M1rti11 . I 0 If C.1idd111 k11ew 1bovt hi.I littl1 pl1nt i11 the 91r191 they'tl fl l11. 0 Ch•ice of 9r11t c11ort in oil 11111 ouhiclt peint. 697 · .FRIE CLASSES TUEIDA Y, MAY 19th 7 P.M. to I P.M. "Furlllture Refi nishing" • ' Sit • ~, ho ... Piiat D_..,.... WIU BRUSH Tho thi119 to 1111111r1 1vrf1c11 for p1i11!, 0 P1i11li119 O¥er tlwil, f11ky p1inl, or •wtt it jv1! i11titin1e' 1ob oY•• 191i11 111 . "'011lh, H1rtlw1otl h111dl1 inti 111•1 11119 bri1tl11, DILTA FAUCET O Luty Groehch tw••rt bv thit f1u1•t. !Of c.ourt•, h1r P•P ""'Y 1w11t et it, ltwtl. 0 Slntll h1Mll•, 10 Y•U tlon't tlr•11 1vtrythl119 to tit th1 w1t1r 011 • D A 11lt1 ti.ck 11101111ti111 1 •••••• 1388 • •• be 9ood_ to _the ~-:th? It's all we've 9ot. So, give It a !rim too, with Kermits ••• ROTARY -MOWER 0 Th!1 i1 t•ll'I• power with 1 teod lri991 111d Str1tto1 E111i111. •' 0 lut thtn l'v•-111v1r 11111 1.led lri99t 111tl Str1tto11 E111i11•. b ll9ht to roll tnd pow1rful to do th1 work, cuh c1e111 t,1 1 whi1tl1. 0 s1 •• 1 lltck, • b1.tl•r buy •'ltl 11111 th• price it dow• th.,..,. XI McLANI JDGER ·: a w. Jut! 1l11't ••""' :' Clrty7the j.11•y th11p•r 1: "'"' •. \R[-~i,'1'/;=.,l~~fii--i-know 1h·1nou11d 9o•d, but !hit 0111 runt 9004, 111d k11p1 ru1111l119. Full tri'" to Mt• 1dju1l"'111t, offt•f wh11l1, 7495 0 l ike Iii• prof111ion1I 91rd1111r1 ut1, 011ior to u11lo1d th• lti11. 0 F.11 •tljvtl.,•11t, full Mii· topce"trolt, futlf w•rr•ntod. 0 F•r·th11 prlc.• th1y OMtht to co111• out •IHI ll'IOW I Uttl1 with th• d11I. MONOLAV P.ULLMAN CHOICE OF .STYLES . ' SCREEN DOOR COMPUTE , 0 A b11vty 111d iw•t 0111 of tho "''"'f' W• h••• t• 1how off. 0 o". pi1c• ll'l•ltletl ll'llrltl• •• ,., for111 lc.• C1bl"1t. 0 Tho c.11M111! 1i11't nothi"t to thro""I ,,,., 1t n•ilh•r. ·49•• ........... " _..,. 0 Wh111 Y•V ltuy th!t Y•V 4111't liuy 111ytliln1 ., •• .,,,,,. • h1111t te h•nt lt on. • 0 6ot tho fllltUl!llflc. c.l•1•r, th• hin9•1, the •41v1tlnt 1h1nnel, th• 11111 l•tch, th• tl••r k11ob 1rtd K•rffl't lt..t , ,huhu•tloM. • • • ' . I I H I ' I I ' I i . ·~ I ,; .1 l I UPI T ..... i.i. WHAT DO YOU SAY To • Gernreich Model? Question Is What Not to Wear By PATRI~IA. McCORMACK NEW YORK (URI) -:}lake way for the nearly.topless evmlng dress -bared bosom! adorned with silver-dollar size black pasUes. Rudi Gernreich, inventor of the topifts .baJIW>I! sui4 ... vanced the rtteailnl 1"* gowns to fa;.tllon's Cront ra'DU jn his fall collection. The dresses, worn ·under frent. zipped tunics, included IODle fabric around the neck md down the front to the ·-. " The award-winning w e s l <mst designer, covered up to Jrls ears in a black. tunic and matching trousers, beamed. ''The body is free," he sai<l. ••ni.at's very impOrtant. ·We arrived at this point . dur~g the last ten years." The "free body" was one ti his fresh fashion in- 1..,.....tions smne· · Jl1Gllths ago, after he took a ye&.r J off from designing. It-included nude male and female models with shaved heads. Gemreich's latest collection distingillsbed itself further by snubbing the midi -that mas:i ..eover that's saturating designer collectioo.s aU over the nation's gannent district. His costumes came off, Jayer by layer. A long-sleeved tunic became sleeveless when the sleeves were pu11ed off. ·Loog pant lep pulled off to ,-eveal the black legs ol a jumpsuit. Then the tunic itseU came off to reveal the body · ·ltocking -acce!sorized by ' a belt that hung holster- fashion at the hips. The body stocking fit like a 9eCOl1d skin. "The bod y is free," Gernreich s a i d , '••whether robed in lots ol yardage or if fabric slretches · close to the body. "We've arrived al this point • or body consciousness through 'diet, sports. out.side living. Clothes like these are so basic, ., free, once you have them on you can forget tbem." ., Truman's Dam Due in Missouri WASIUNGTON (UPI) - 'l'be House passed and sent to the White House Tuesday 1egillation lo rename the Kl,ysinger Bluff Dam and ruervolr on the Sage River in Missouri the Harry S. Truman dam aod re&ervoir. LEGAL NOTICE _,.Kl Ot' l"Tl'"tOfll TO IMUe• 111 THI iALI Of! ALc;oHOLtc NY_&AAOIS TO WHOM IT MAY eotrtCEAH ; u.ted " MMnc.t ., tlM ,._... _..... ..,, Nllk• " mm •"""' ,,.., -...,.,....... -"' -.11 •icJIMllc ......,..... 11 ... ,.._,..,., dllcrlbllll ......... , 1121 HKtlor ....... Calli Mc» ...,_. ,. MJ(fl lfitenflon. ..,. - ----.. -""""' .. "" 0-..fll!lllt ~ A~ .....,.,_ CinfrOI for lt-llCI ..,. .,._,.,. 9f ... ·~ ...... ,.... .._ .... "'-~'-.. """"] a.. SALE IEEll: .,,,,-. dnlr"" II wotflt fht' i.tUlllff ., llldl n-_, llht 1 l'tffflecl ....... ti lr>V offlu ftf ,,.. 0..rtrnlnt 11 Alc'ellllk k'WI'"' c .. trwt. ., "' '"'" " rr.t. OeNrtmlt>! ef Alcotlllk 1!1_..... Coollr'fl, UIS 0 Stf'Mt, ~ C.111«"1'11• '5114. tUtlne .,..,,.... ..,, Otftl4t .. t>l'WlfM bt .... l,_ ""9!1'111• tl'I rttw L~ W N .... .. eledlOllc "'"'""' l ht .... -~1 lt'tl'lll<l!IOl'I ,,..~ bt ottelllld ,,_ ..,.. offlU " 1111 Dttolrtmtllt. MUHAH, Dot"lt Jttll Pl*llthtd Or.,,.1 toltl Dtllr l"llO.!.r Ml'r l'-tm .,. .Teachers Off er ~.To Forego Raise LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ran!IOm, said s l r i k Ing Teachers who struck April 13 teachers in the 22,000-member union lost $13.5 million in over wages and classroom salaries durilll the walkout. condiUons return to their Besides providing for a S classrooms today after of-percent salary increase, the fering to forego • 5 percent district recogn ized UTLA as salary bike if the size of the bargaining agent for all classes is reduced. teachers. Strikers voted, 6702 to 2,070 The pay rais~ would cost Wednesday to end the walkout the district $17.S million. in the nation's second largest Teachers currently recei ve school district. Then they nar. salaries ranging from $7 .230 rowly agreed -3.~ to 3,089 to $13,650. -that they would prefer The school district is strap. smaller classes and improved ped financially aod voters read ing programs to the 5 have turned down several re- percent raise tendered by the cent bond ls!u". The district district. hopes for more state aid. School SUpt. Robert KellyJ-;::======::::;1 iDdiclted the district may not approve tho request. "Don't forget there were 17 ,000 teachers who didn't vote on this," he said, refer.ring to the remainder o( the district's 25,431 teachers. About half the teachers, membeni of the United Teachers of Loo Angeles union, particlpated in .. the walkout. The rest continued to teach. enabling t h e district's 6151choob to remain open, but almost half the 650,000 pupils b o y co t t e d classes. The union president, Robert L£T'S BE FRIENDLY Jt you have nc"' neighbors or know of anyont' moving to our area, pJe~ tell us »0 thal \\'e may extend a friendly welcome and help them to become acquainted In their new aurroundings. So. Coast Visitor 4-7' 494-Uil Harbor Visitor 646-0174 --4-DAYS ONLY, MAY 14 to 17-.. karls JOl'S • H0881U • SJAJIOllllR1' 50 Fashion Island Newpdrt Beach 644,0981 SAVINGS for YOU ! I WIZZEl by Mattel . 87~ :::;::-·w~,.S."--'· M• le""'"· ' . y-Q.eic• ·······-········· ......................... . 1 ~~=l~?.:~~~I.... .'5" @ JEWEL.KY KIDDLE$ by Matt•I 47¢ ..... -L..cktn y .. ,a.... Wiiie n..y Lett ................................... . &.. ~x ~~E~!!Y.... s12•• --P--4 ~ C.a ~Mt wiHi I-ti S..... ....•. ·--······ .................. • • WALKIE TALKIE sg•s ,4 '-""'with .... ._ c......i. GeM hr ltikiwtr w a.ti..,. Co...W• with _,;.. _.. &. t ,_. ........... Ill ,_•· 1£D EYE $116 T .. H.w F .. ~I f.., Y-t ... OW. n.,_ ttf Kkk ttl CeWh tt! ................... . 4 WATEI IASKETIALL by K•onsco $696 ~-""-,,._, w1~ ~ ::: .. · ... ~: ........... . ,..._, ,_ ""' a.ell ... ,.... GIAHD SUIFER $199 ~·· L.w.t . " r:-·-·-·-·····-·-····· .. ···············-··· CANVAS SUIFllDEl by Jd .. J $299 ~ ,_ .... S--A "' I ........ ! e:;::;/ Gi.llt hr .... a-. .. ! c •••• wiM .... ...,. ..., ... ,.... .......... .. ~~~IOX CAIS 4/99¢ ~-' ,.._, •" .u. ~c... ........................ . l'USTJC M01 El S -CAIS -PLANE KITS llG. so. EACH 4/SlDD HG. 70. EACH 3/SlDD ' AUO SA.ICT Gl.OUP 50 % Of * ~~33£7~ ........ '2°1 MATTEI. PICTUIEMAKEIS $399 n.. .._ f.,._y_ (hie• .... wti..11. ..,..., ,_,. ,..,.. -'""············--······-····················· I HAHG OH HAIHY ly 1 ... 1 s3a1 Hw T.Y. S.... ... . ::.:; ::. -:..•w .. ___ ...... -.......... . • VOLUYIALL 01 IASKETIALL s2n "' ... \: T-'ffc v..... •_ v .. a.....,---·········-··-·-----~-····- snCJAL raOM OUI STATIONllY DEPT. s .rrs[i!~;'.y ___ .......... 31~ ---•OPEN 7 DAYs,----~I : I ' HERE'S WHAT YOU GIT: * Quilted 7 tt, long, 6 ft. wjde King·Size mattress * Matching dual box springs Plus the complete OR'JHO-PAK, original9d by Ortho: · · 1, * Fieldcrest percale King or Queen top sheet * Fieldcrest percale fitted bottom sheet , KW'J"' Que.n podd"' vinyl HtADIOARD (not as iUustnrt.d)' -+ and QUILTED BEDSPREAD with purchase of any King or Q!,ieen.Size Sleep Set. * 2 King or Queen bolster pillows * 2 percale pillowcases * King or Queen metal frame . . * Kin;i or Queen mattress pad with easy-rolling casters ROYAL QUEEN '~ Elegantly qu ilted mattreu and bcx sprinJ in your choM:e of Twin or Full·size. Fine Ortho construction, lu:rurious decorator ticking. An Ortho eKclusive at sale of sales savings• THE LUXURY KING Lavish all·over quiltinrs on 7 ft. long. 6 ft. wide ma ttress with matching dual box springs, plus the complete ORTH().PAK listed 11bove! $)58 DURING THIS SALE ONLY $98 Richly .. quilted 80'' Jong, (If' widt mattress and box sprinc, plus the famous ORTHQ.PAK lis1«:1 abaft! SUPER TWIN or FULL luxurious deep.down quiltirtr. choice of Twin or Full·size d• BOTH PIECES J A Thoroughly Modern Convertible Sofa I . --· FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor Blvd. (Nnt to Zody's J PllOHI l lf·4i70 The "Oxnard" Is Ortho's sleek, m.odem convertible that's so perfect for your den or spare room. It's complete with a full size Ortho mattress and you can choose from print or tweed fabri cs. A precious little price for such a great, big buy! ~·""°""'°Iii\~ ANAHEIM 1811 W. Lincoln Ave. (Just East of FtdMartJ """°' 776·1190 s12a Price includes Double Bonus You 1et aenuine Shephenftl asters, th• smooth· ast rgllinr castert ever,.1nd fine filled arm c1ps. LAKEWOOD 4433 Candlewood Dr. In Candlewood Shops (Across from Lakewood Center) ,..... 62~114 ' ' --------- Thuri.t.y, May 14, 1970 DAILY ,ll07 9 I r.· t~tl•d•~s Show Figures '.f ~eagah: Campaign Draws $1 Million Jess Gives Challenge Will Meet With Reagan Over Tax Reform ; ~~.J.l. - • :· Svj>porters or Gov. Rbruikl ~: Reagan's re-elJdion, ha" coo· ~ tributtd. $1,080!'51 -' more ·: than five times ttie combined :· amount given apemblyman ~ Jess Unruh and Mayor, Sam Yorty. Thia WIS disc16sed Wed· · nesday Jn reports filed with SecreW'y or State )I. P. • Sullivan on the deadline for reporting campajp tfonaUons for the June primary. Another report roust be filed before the November election. 'Ibis year's reports, ac- C'ording to a new regulation, must identify the donor and the amount for every con- tribution over $500. Unruh received $175,646 with an additional $7, 434 provided for such services as air travel and office equipment. Ac- cording to Yorty's rtpOrt, he received only $13,000. Both are seeking the Democrati c iubematorial nomination. San Diego Firemen Vote Strike 1.keagan b unopposed for the Salvatori, $2,500. c.::oP nominaUon. .Hometowns were not listed • Among Reagan's biggest Unruh's campaign coffers co n tr i b u ~ o r i were the got a $51000 boost from the Engineering and Grading Western Conference of ·Con 9'J'UCtOn Association, Teamsters, $7 ,500 from A. '5,000; Roy 'Olney, brother · Weinberg, $5,000 from Albert of the late Wilt Dlsney, Levinson and $5,000 from $4,Tll; the Bell P.etroleum Co.. Peter Maheu. $5,000; and oihnan Henry A. J. Oorskind and \V. F1·og Jun•p Set Angels Camp Contest Today ANGELS CAMP, Call!. (AP) Tbt handlers cannol touch -EUmination beats begin to-the ftilgs after setting them day in a contest to determine down on the starting pads, the,jumpi~ frog ol 1970. but scare them into action It's the annual re-enactment by whooping and hollering. ol the Mark Twain story "The No particular breed of frog Celebrated Jumping Frog in has been predominant in the Calaveras County," and there past, but Mayor Ray W. was an international field of Callahan says .. the skinnier aome 2,000 batrachian broad they are the better." jumpers. Australia alooe had 40 It seems to have something to do with streamlining. starters, and there were frogs as well from Europe, the "These skiMy things really Orient, Canada and many a sail through the air," Callahan US ·t explained . . . Cly. The grand champioo will be In the Mark Twain story crowned Sunday. when they -he wrote it 105 years ago whack up $2,000 in prize while living in a small cabin money. on nearby Jackass Hill -the SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The The lrogs make three jumps red-hot favorite to win the r.oo-member San Diego Fire -in a straight line if the frog jump was one •·01• Daniel Fighters Union called a handler is lucky -and the Webster." 60CHnembef San Diego Fire payoff is on the total distance But a couple of sure-thing Fighters Union called a covered. gamb lers got at O,' Daniel general 1 tr Ike \Vednesday The record of 19 feet 31,li just before the contest and night after salary negotiation! inches "''as set in 1966 by persuaded him to swallaw with the city broke down. Ripple, a leaper owned by some lead buckshot which be The city was planning to Bill Proctor and Leonard Hall mistook for food. seek a temporary restraining of San Leandro, Calif .. who Like many a race horse. order to halt tile .strike, which also owned Rinso, last year's OJ' Daniel y:as beaten by the is illegal Under state .laws. wlMer. weight. Union officials met with the------------'--------I city Wednesday morning, but the city rt!Used to grant salary increases sought by the Union. It was the first time public safety employes have struck in San Diego. f\.1ayor Frank CUrransaid.supervisory personnel were maintaining 20 of the city's 34 fire statioDI and that mutuaJ a I d agreements with other cities would be utilized if needed. -At 8:30 Wednesday night on- ly 56 or the 185 personnel normally working at that time • had reported to their stations. Another 29 su perv i•a,ory • penonnet were a!Jo orf'duty. ******************* MERCURY SAVINGS and loan assDCiation NOW OPEN EVERY SATURDAY 10A.M.-4 P .M. Open Mon.·Thln. 9 om.-4 pm.;fri. 91.1n .. 6 p.m. !IU•NA PARK Mercury Savings Bldg. : V1Uey View at Lincoln '~4', ' ********* BIDWELL BUILDS BEAUTIFUL BODIES lWO WAYS! !! HUNTINllTDN aEACH Mercury Sarings Bldg. £dingtr at Beath ******* This ho s to be the che•pest ood quickest approach with the most unscientific method yet! In one f ive. minute workout, Jock or one of his well -tra ined sales masseurs, will c re o t e who+ Charlie Atlas foiled to do for all these years •.. METHOD '# I The Bidwell Sh•ped Suit $115 -$125. These handsomely patterned noturol shoulder suits by Devon· shi re hove to be the lightest we ights you 'll ever work out with. Wide lape ls and ticket pockets ... t~e hardest exercise about these is slip ping into one~ METHOD '#2 The Bidwell Sh•ped Sport Coo t $50-$90. Thi s is the only woy to beot inflation! !not only the midriff but the pocket book type also!) Deansgate. Devonshire ond Ha spe l make these in a multitude of stripes "designed to obscure any displaced muscles. Work out of Bidwell's clothing spo Mondoys through Soturdoys 9:30 to 5:30. It's eo sy! H67 Via Lido Newport Beach 673-4510 Parkin9 for as meny cars as you own! Charles Chastain each gave '2.w.J to Yorty. C o ngreuional candidates ••ere mt required at th.i! time to file such detailed reports. SACRAMENTO (UPI ) -As- semblyman Jess Unruh Is of- fering to meet Gov. Ronald Reagan "face to face" throughout California and dis- cuss who is responsible for blocking tax reform. The Democratic contender for governor issued the chal- lenge in response to Reagan's warning Wedne9day that if necessary he will personally visit districts of Assembly Democrats and accuse them of denying relief to property tax- payers. loom al lhls and illlff u Cl!" portunily to make I decllion as to how they wut to 1 bt represented in the future ... 'Los Angeles di3trict at- torney Evelle J. Younger, seeking the altorney gene"al's post, reported receiving $.'llS,T11 His largest con- tributor WIS listed as S. Chulman who purchased $2.000 \forth of tickets tor a Nov. 23 testimonial dinner . Younger wants the GOP nominalioh. Deputy State Attorne y General Charles A. O'Brien got $93,%50. He seeks the democratic nomination to replace Attorney Gener a I 'J'tM?mas C. Lynch. VC Regents to Meet; Unrest Talks Slated The governor's $600 miUion ta1 shift program i.s on the brink of death in the Assembly because Democrats refused to vote either ror or again.st it. It needs 41 votes for passage. 'Ibey first agreed last week to provide the minimum 41 votes, but later revoked t.htir support and refused to vote. California Gets Profits From Funds WASHINGTON (AP ) Fom1er Human Relations Secretary Spencer Williams. another candidate to sueeced Lynch, said he received $49,696. And 1 fourth con~ tender, Sen. George Deukme- jian (R-1.ong Beach) received $70,391 with $1,000 donattd by cartoonist Ross Bagdasarian. *FULL 4PLY SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Univenity of California regents, met today in the wake of a four-day shut.down of the turm~il-plagued univer- sity and wen scheduled tp hear a campuirby-campus re- port Friday on •·the current situation." · Contents of the briefing by UC President Charles ilitch *1st Quality * ~'LIFETIME 10.lD HA ZARD GUAI. · ~ YEAR GUAllANTH TIRES~RAIN P1otect Against Freeway Accidents 5.60x I 5 Gerden Grove 14040 BROOKHURST 1""9tf"., •tw1c"'"1t & w .. tlllllllfffl were not revealed in advance. A university spokesman said only that it would deal with. ·•recent events." Hitch postponed a scheduled report on the university's extension service to give more time. All nine UC campuses and the lkampus state college system were shut down for four days last v.·eek at the reque~1 from Gov. Reagan . Without Democratic aid, Re- publicans were unable to send 1t to the Senate. Reagan noted to abstain &om voUng was the equivalent of a "no" vote. California bu made millions of dollars io questionaU.e claims under Medicaid 's pro- gram ror care in state mental institutions, federal aud1tor9 say. In a report to Congress, the General Accounting Office said Wedaesday that California . ~d claiming federal assistance o I in~ stitutions for the ment11IY. retarded. ' Reagan said , •·1 Intend to seek every means, to do every· thing I can to see that the tax- payers in those districts where their representatives repre- sented them by not voting, -~-"-~~~~~~~~- ' ,'-.~. "~ \ HOU•I OPlll lllte1 'Tll 9 OPIN Sun. 9 to 6 flQ/15 17.75115) (fllllS) FREE ~~::e WHEEL ALIGNMENT 1 l lANO lllW' 20.00D •1 • GllAIAllTllO IOlfOfO llNlllG 7. lAIH I. NflfAUATION N<tltOIO J, MKIO·MIAllfll AU. 4 OlllMS "· ADO tll•I ft .. D .U ltttOfD 5. Al(-GlllfO lllflHG 6 tlllO SYlTlM & ClfAll • tACllllG 1'1.A Tl AS 1U010 1. •llAll & 'ACI Wlllll 11.t.llNGI a AU CYUllDlll llfS,ICTIO • llKlUOING Mllfll <YllMOll 9. IOfAff WllUtl & "°'''' 11.t.m 10. IOAO TUf YlllKll TO PMIAIM MOST • "° -CAIS ...._.., ·-..... .. -. ".:: •• ...... ••• COSTA MESA-NEWPORT BEACH AREA ( ~ I ~ ' '· " • • 530.3200 3005 HARE~R BLVD. CORNER OF BAKER & HARBOR ••• 557·1000 I I I f I ·' ' • .. • ,, Thursday, Ma1 14, 1970 LEARNING BY DOING -During a weekend crui~e with the Navy. Orange Coast Sea Scouts learned by doing. From left, top, coming aboard their ship, USS-Mullany, and raising the colors, (bottom) sup- ' l ply drop by Navy helicopter; Roy Neyman of Hunt- ington Beach (right) learning from Navy crew~an how to !ire a 45 caliber pistol, and a Sea Scout JU.St restin~. Guardsmen 1i=====.= ..... =.ff_=,=====;i===so=A=r =su=F=Fs==:: LOSE WEIGHT THIS WEEK ., ... LM""'' ,, ... ,,,, K G OlltiMlt CM .... , ... --,... !ti• &llM ...,_ "" -.. M. O*ille• hlll·till'I• b.tfltlf tcllfor wMlti111 111"11111· MD ltl'Klel Mltftlt4. Gtl rW DI tll«ll NI .... ll'fe ........ o.tr .... eep llns ... lilly , ..... ..., ... u., IWlllieJ..il. C9111•1M .. ......,_ '"""' ,., Dll '"' atwsp•i:' h11 °''"'' AH '"" ..-wcc~ty ,., ,._,.,. .. , '" --. -tty fDI' ,...., It Co1111ty. Hi• t•c ".;,,. Cf¥tt .. f ~. Ollr ... Clllls U.U --' lllD w.,... _., IUt M.11. Y• -lfM tf boiflflt ttt4 ytc~K"'f 11-• MIY llt"" 'fOlff" _, wlA M ,.,.,.... '' ,._ ........ N• _...._ I h t f tM DAILY Unloaded ltllll, S. .. wll!I tlli1 91MrllllH DJ: f• • dtf Y • lll't • ALL Dl Uli STOIU-MAIL OlDllS flLLlD 1 'llOT. I WASHINGTON (AP) -Na· tk>naJ Guardsmen called out to oontroJ protests at four ma· jor LmiversitJes across the country after the Kent State shootings have been given orders to k e e p their guns unloaded. Troops sent into t h e University of Kenlucky to en- force a night-long curfew were 1 issued Uve a m mu nit i o n1 Wednesday 0,1 orders from Gov. Louie 8. Nunn, but the! guardsmen were told not to1 load their rifles. • Ammunition was kept from ! guardsmen at the University oI Wiaconsin, wtiere students! built barricades in the streets and set them ablaze before being routed by tear gas Wednesday night. Only in Ohio we r e guardsmen still carrying load- ed rifles, but new warqings were issued against opening fire in wake of the earlier deaths. SPECI L OFFER AlllPEX CASSETTE CAR STEREO A.M,EX MIClO 4t NOW '99" Model n " o•ustr•ltd wllll •• c~'11er leftur• ,119Mly ~lfl'ler. Navy Shows Sea Scouts What's Going On Four students were killed and 10 wounded Monday when Ohio National Guardsmen shot into a crowd of antiwar demonWators at Kent State. What touched oft the gunfire remaJru unclear, enmeshed in conlroveny and coofusion. FREE! Ampex Auto Speakers Orange Coast Sea Seoul! learned ·from profes.sionals the tools of their trade recently as weekend guests of the U.S. Navy on a weekend cruise aboard the USS Mullany (00· 528). Under the command of the destroyer's executive officer, LL Cmdr. Allan Kemper, the scouts boarded the ship al its home port at the Long Beach Naval Station. The scouts were integrated into the Navy's crew and pull- ed watches on the bridge, deck, engine room, and with some reluctance in the galley NOW THRU SUNDAY, MAY 17 li'VIEW:MASTER r...., pictures :so Real ... You've got to see it to 1believe it! 'VIEW:MASTER Packets $150-· Enl ... -...... wtrole f11tnlty ••• Children k>w VIEW-MASTER piclutes in fulkolol" and 3-dimensions. EKI\ , pKket conl•iM ttvee 74C8Mfee&s (21 scenes tfl ell). Choose l1om n1t1re ttt1n 100 till•, lndddlftgTY end movie taYorles, U.S. .nd Wadd ITIMlf. tllslf)f)', sctene•, 1d'temu1e 9nd mare! VIEW: MASTER Stereo Viewer Sale s1s6 Mak ... View-MASTER Pic.hlrl!IS l' ~<l'J> "com9 to llf•• In ftJ!k:olcr ind thf9• dl!Mnsions. Rugged Md..., io-.Jua1 ltold up to VI• J;ghtl Special Assortment VIEWMASTER REELS Safe 5 REELS 8 &~ And RIG'llllllltr ••• buy 1nou1h II VIEW: MASTER Stereo packets._. the more the merrier! "KNOWN FOR VALUES" Brookhurst and Adams and scullery. While at sea, the destroyer was refueled and received a supply drop by helicopter. There were demonstrations of small arms fire , such as the firing of the 50 cal. machine gun, BAR. Ml nne, and the sub-machine gun. Each scout was allowed to fire the -45 cal. pistol and the three inch guns. The officers in charge of the Sea Scout.! were the com~ modore of Orange County, Allan Stephens and National Committeemao Ralph Whit· ford. Women Demand Equal Banking Opportunity Illinois put 5,000 guardsmen on standby alert and Sei'lt part I or the force onto the Southern Illinois Universit;.· c a m p u s after a clash Wednesday night. But the militia's top general said the troops had standing orders not to load or tire without a Specj.flc command from a senior officer. Guard guns were also kept · unloaded at the University of Maryland, lvhcre the last troops were withdrawn With your purchtJI of Amp•• Mic10 <10 Ctr C1n•H1 Pl•v•r. YOU SAVE $19.95 SAVE ON CASSEm TAPES Gi t Sl l .10 worl\. of +•P•• wilh yeur pu•ch!•• ol the Mic•o <ID for , •• JUST $9.95 SAYE Sil.DO ON A/lll'EX TUNE Tlll'l'El l'OIT.AILf G1! •~frl •It ll'flll ,Mir l•v•ritt c:1uertn wl!ll Y"• 'ltt'CfllH ti tn AM- pt• Mic,. olO. Offer .,,.,. JOlfll Jt, lt7t. Ay1l11!Jlt II INU11cl,.lln1 ~"''"· •••· 12"'' ONLY '12" V1lv1 MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Nine women who say their sex for too long has gone untrained in matters o r finance are seeking a state charter to cstab1ish a n d operate a bank. lion for a charter listed Wednesday after five days of capitalization of •1 million. He demonstrations. ~DAVIS BROWN 411 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa • 646· 1684 said the women's request The Pentagon's riot regula· would be handled routinely, lions says troops are allowe~ with a decision later this year. lo load their weapons only Doily •·6, Mon. Ir frl. '·' . upon an officer's orders or "If this applif8lion is ap-. ~i~f~th~e~ir:_li~·v~es~ar'.'.:e~in'._d~a~ng~er::_.___:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ proved," Dickinson said, "ii!-The First Women's Bank of Florida would be near the retirement center on the &00thern end of Miami Beach. would be to my knowledge the first. such bank in the country." Mrs. Englander. wife of a former ~Jiami Beach city councilman, and eight other women were listed as direc- tors. "We hope our bank would be used as a proving ground to train women lo take care of their financial matters," aa~ Mrs, Mal Englander, a 4f>.year-old grandmother and chairman or the board for the proposed facility . "We've had limited banking ················••r,; experience," Mrs. Englander said, "but I believe you will find that most men who establish banks also did not have prior banking ex· perience." RAMS HEAD ( "We realize that all women would like to predecease their husbands but the fact.c; of life are that we don't. And whether women handle any or the financial matters or not, we would like for them to be able to face ll calmly and with knowledge. "Many women fear just the v.•ord "bank ". We would like to make bank a household word." In Tallahassee. state Bank- ing Commissioner Fred 0. Dickinson Jr. said the applica· The directors range In age from the late 20s to the early sos. "We have lined up women 'vilh intensive backgrounds who will be in c:flarge of the bank itself. All the top otticen will be women," she said. Men also will be employed by the bank, and their .tC· counts would be welcomed, Mrs. Englander said. Unusual offer. Stock up on First National City Travelers Checks at pre-vacation savings-up to $5,000 worth, for a fee of just $2 2l! Durin g May only. 9 CONVENIENT OFFICES SERVING ORANGE COUNTY Alr,trt Offitt/Mid'l1bon .11 M1rArl h11r(&3l·3111 llplff Olllu,l81Jlidt 1t J1mboree/s.t2.t 141 Ct11t11 '"' Oflic:t/Nulwood It Commonwullh/171-2900 l1111n1 Hitlt OU1tt/l.ti111r1 Wl)rld, Larun• Hllls/13Q.J200 .S.11 lt1cll ONitt/lt1sur1 World, S.11 8eltth/596-271 I Sil~llf HiU• Officl/Hlrf>of at 8ret/871 ·7290 Sliptilw ONICt/SllperiOr •t Pl1ctntf1/6tZ·951 I U~Nlltlty Ottk:1/[1sl C1Ypm111 al SUI• Coller-/179 .. 140 Wtttdffl Olfkt/WtSldiff 1t Dovtf!f4Z.Jlll I solld1, pallea 111-luxury wool• & othen REGARDEZI Grodins, Calffomia's first statewide group of men'a fashion stores, Is first again. With a sport COltValue unmatched In Soulhem Callfomta. Current economic softness gives uc an opportunity to make special purchases of top.label clothes -and pass the savings on to you. Eve(Ybody loves • bargain. How about you1 Opet1 .,....kda.,, e11tll ',.111., S11t1t111Y112 te I SOUTH COAST PLAZA, Costa Mesa; ANAHEIM, Broadway-Anaheim Center; LAKEWOOD, Lakewood Center I ·-· •' I lh11r111a1, May 14, 19/0 DAILV PILOT lit-A 1 Students of Month Selected at Edison Deaf Teacher to To·urGWC Seo.Ion Roberta McK.ernan and Pi-1.lke fl'rym have been ~n Boy and Girl of lhe '1tonth for March by students at Edison High School. •· Roberta is the school's cur- fent Girls' League President jlnd this year organized the LEADER OF CLUBS Mike Frym Valeoline Week. She is also a member of tht Light and Power Club and rtclpient of a California Slate Scholarship. In addition. abe has re- mained in the top ten percent of her class scholastically aod was recently presented with HEADS GIRLS LEAGUE Roberta McKerMn Top Students Picked Seniors Tresa March and Dan Shaw, both 17, have been chosen Boy and Girl of the Month of April by the students or FountaM Valley H i gh School. Tresa, the daughter of P.1r. and Mrs. March , 18643 Las Flores Sl., Fountain Valley. hss been active in Spanish and public speaking . She is also a member or Les Demoiselle!, a girls' 247 Broadway Co""· Malts· Hftd Poc•-4 L09111111 IMC• -494·9174 service club, and a sealbearer in the California Scholastic Federation. Dan, a sportsman. was ca)>" lain of last year's football team and was a member of the varsity track and basket~ ball teams for the past tv.'O years. He is the son ol Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Shaw, 17344 Pepper Tree, Founlain Valley. In ~l­ iege. he hopes to major 1n physical education and history. Who Carts? No other newspaper In the world cam about your Cf>mmunlty llke your community dally newspaper does. It's tile DAILY PILOT, "BUY LOCALLY. AND SAVE" SPEARS FREEMAN APPLIANCES -TV- • Gen•r•I Electric • Zenith e RCA WASHING MACHINES DISHWASHERS e G•n•ral Electric e KitchenAid • M1yta9 "WE SERVICE MOST MAJOR APPLIANCES" Ill Glenneyre 49~512 "'"' ,..,llkll ..... ON JUNE 2nd VOTE •••• TOTI EN For Marshal PLATFORM Re,pc ns ible Econcmic•I Oper•tion Of The Me rs h•l's Off ic e EXPERIENCE • 16 Y1tor1 Law E11tarc•INflt hpefi..ce e 6 years 'f..-lllOfl, Cellf. Pelka D1pe1'-"' 12 y..,. S.r9eo11tl e Cl•il -Crh11h1ol -I~•~ Printe l11Mttitetar e Educetlo11 -A11eciote ef Al'tl htfM t-U. City Coll1r41e -fvrtltof lfdy "' UK ScMel of Publk Ad111l11l1tTcrtl•11 •• YHl"I Sec•rlty Officer -Mr.o...11 o. .... FRIENDS Of TOTTEN For MARSHAL ••bert fll1cll. SK. Heoltfl, ldec .. let11 -4 WoHere •khord Gol4beft, Mcrpr .t !At ........ Patsy litUw, Ach'ft1 I. J. l .. 11etlll, 5cNI C~ '-~ Df,..,_ Thomes G .HeltdenOfl DOS. Leit•N .._. GHrt• Hyft, OlrKter le4 c,..... Ore ... Ca111ty I~ Or1119Y, C1mp111911 '°''' .. '44 ,.tul1r, Ltt- the "l Oare You" leadership award. ?-fike ls a versatile student, having d e m o n s t r a le d leadership abilities in drama, student government, speech, music and scholarship. He is the school's current Commisskloer of Clubs and b presklent or U\e ~nter-Club CounclL Mike also earned ' membership in the Orange Boyce r.' Williams, head of Golden \Vest a regional com-chief of the communicatlons cedure s for t.he rebabllltation County Honor Choir, the education for the deaf in the munlty college for dear and disorders branch, Department of the hearing impaired. Ora nge County Ac ad e m.i .c U.S., will tour C.olde n West hearing impaired sludent:s. or Health, Education and He will sptak in tba Goldin Decathlon and was a parhct· College and addr'ess a dinner Deaf since he was 17, Welfare, Washing~ D.C. West Communlty Center It pant in the city-wide St~fcting j f parents and \Villiams has attained Jn-In h~s present catpaclllty hole 7:30 p.m., on "84!condt ry aDll, h I II ·' ( I •uperv1ses a s a Government Day . te c ers o 1e "ea . roi.n ternationa l prominence I n Post Se<:ondary Education lor For the past tv.'O years, he throughout Sou thern Cali!orn iu rehabilitation work for the specialists who d e v e 10 P the Deaf." has been a member of the Friday. Fl~ie~or~i n~g~i~m~pa~ir~ed¥.a~nd~is~n~o~wltpoill~icljje~s,jj;siltniiniidar<liijs;iii30jjd~pro-;iii ... ijjiiiiijjjiiiijii!;iiiijjiiiiijjji scholar bowl and appeared on Wllliams' visit is in con·1 the television show "It's nectlon with a pilot progran1 I IN LAGUNA I Academic." now under wa y to make ''Artistry in Moving" for the BEST MOVE NU~~\E l 7:J Soutfl Cooat Hlgllwoy SMILE·A·WHILE DAY CAMP FOR ALL BOYS and GIRL$ AGES .. 14 R•g. lOc Each ICE CREAM NOVELTIES Fudgesiclr.s T\\•ln Pops 50-50 Bar of YOUR LIFE Call: 494-1025 580 Broadway W NUTS candies seeds Dried fruits f "ncv ' GIFT PACKAGES WE MAIL EVERYWHERE e SWIM SCHOOL INST. e SPORTS e CltAm e COOKOUTS • TRIPS • DANClNCi e TENNIS E•ttll-t -If •II dlllfrtfl ,..,.n1i.n ., ~ l>IH-1. NOW TWO LOCATIONS: LOS ANGELES and ORANGI COUNTY Mtmbtn ti TIM A_.lcall C. ......... "'-MllN OPENINCi DATE JUNE 151~ CAMP HIADQUAITllS 14512 IEACH ILYD. " 530-3333 C•H llM' IRllnMliH INI (Mlp l ttellvr• 894-2312 1~-----·-- ; PRice"s GOOD THROUGH SAT. . MAY 16, 1970 \ OPEN 7 OAYS America's Fastest Growing DrugStoni . Chain 2 FOR 41t VALUE COMEr CLEANSER 14 OL SMklf C11t. 15c Value ZEE TROPIC TONE PAPER NAPKINS 60 Caunt 91c Value STYLE HAIR SPRAY 13 oL Siu 19c~ALUE ALKA· SELTZER 2S Ta"9tl- • 73c Value GRANNY GOOSE POTATO CHIPS 12 oi:. Bag 10.44 VALUE SLEEPING BAG 5 Jb. camp King -88 water repellent oulf"r $ 8 shell -cotton llnini:: -:t'J"x74" -sid<:? zipper. 11.99 VALUE SLEEPING BAG 3 Jb. -band wubabto $1 088 -nylon outer shell & llnine -100" zipper. LUCKY BUCK IU1' 1.39 Value VACUUM BOTTLE Pint Si~.<'. Pl11icl Casing. By American Thennos. LUCKY IUCK IUT 1.29 Valuo Picnic Jug I s.:al. Conni to kl'.'l'll ho! ]1. <1u1d hottrr and r nl d drinks rolcll'.'r. LUCKY BUCK BUT REG. Bk A PACK VACUUM 3 CLEANER BAGS PACKS Diapoaable lor FOR all type11 or the mm1t popular LUCKY BUCK IUY $1.49 VALUE DISH DRAINER &TRAY Poly plaatle bl choice ol •ltchn m11tchtnr colon. LUCKY &UCK BUY SAVINGS FOR CAMPERS-AT HOME .·OR "AWAY -'·wu. ""' IRDP.uAF FOLllll ALL-METAL TABLE ~"'xeo"Ublt. thal foldl to carry or •ton. Stala raia tant. 1.19 VALUE FOAM COOLER CHEST 77' Alumlnunl fr11mc \\ilh 1 $ matt~S.."i, Folds ful' r;1.-. storag~. SIO.tt Yolue FOLDING BED 98 BIG BOY BAR·B·O GRILL • OUTDOOR LIVING FUR NITURE f"i>ld!nr alumlnum lllwn challe and two dla1N tor great loafing comfort. Wet.~ wide and lhere are mort of lhtm. 8111 f6ot'chnl~ h:ia ~;~J~~~~·~ 88 2 CHAIRS FOR~ A $14.25 VALUE -----~----------·~~~ R£0,44c CHARCOAL LICHTER FlUID 33~ G11lf-Llte Quart. Starla t'Mt, bul'OI cltaa. A WEEK FOUNTAIN VALLEY 9107 GARFIELD (Garfi•ld & Magnolia} NEXT TO MARKET BASKET 962-4401 79c VALUE ;,."'\1 \I,. OAKBORNE BRIQUflS ~ CHARCOAL • > ' ' .. $2.25 VALUE FANCI · FUL RINSE FREE! 59c FREE! Sot or wallet tlso <tlor 111'1"'1 ,,.... aquaro Koclaceler n .. attn 11lu1 21% lfltcount on 111 film dtvelOflk'ti at 1u,., X Oru9s. . ' • . , ·, ' ' . • I I I l \• ,, f --. -. -" ' ... t •o "" Oo•• o " I >• t'" • • • • • oj '' -· .. . .. . ... 19-8 DAllY PILOT Tllursdily, M1y 14, 1970 s ou 111 CJlRS'I' Study Shows Bias Toward Chicanos 0,. NltWJ, 1:41 ,.-. ........ s-My, 1:45 , ..... WASHINGTON (UPI) -In U1t Southwestern U n I t e d States, rich in the history and fla vor of Spain and Mexico: ,, .. otes STEVE. DAN & IYRON flNLEY Lonly In New Mexico does an accused· have the consll- tu tional right to ha11e court procedures interpreted in his own language ... -La~·yer Mike Gonsalez, of San Antonio. Tex., could noL recall one trial in which he was involved in IO years in which a ~texican-American \1:as on Ule jury •.. -An in vestigator for the Alamosa, Colo., district at- torney's office said highway patroln1en used to stop and search, as a matter of course, cars of Mexican-Americans driving out of Lariat, Colo. to the farm workers ' organlz.. ing effort in the Rio Grande Valley pf Texas. The com- mission said it had testimony that Texas State Rangers har- assed farm strikers, abu sed them and encouraged strikebreaking. The Rangers denied the contentions and said they enforced the law impartially. Farm worker Jose Martinez, of Pharr, Tex ., said of the rangers: "Many people hate them, many people are afraid ... they will be hit or k.icked ." M e x i c an-Americans. or ''Chicanos," the commission said are distrusful of courts friends were fixlng a flal tire on the Ho llywood Freeway, A police officer stopped and asked what ' they were doing. The driver of the car, fixing his tire with a cigarette in his mouth. looked at the police off icer and did not answer, as he co4Jd nol speak English . The officer became very angry and demanded that he remove the cigarette from his nloulJJ, stand up and show some respect. The driver of th e car smiled and continued lo work on his Ure. The officer became more angry. put him ove r the car and bega n beating him and calling hin1 a dirty ?o.texicat1 ." YAMAHA 12,S Sing!e En eo:uro Llkt everytiody elM, wt 11rtt thlll th••• I• 11111111119 ~re 9r•ctlul 111111 1 lrlm 11'1 Hretklng through tht !llllS, b\11, tCCOtdlnt lo I pNl'nilllftl 11rocly111mi1t, th• !•I• mav 1>e<1nnt more ti I n11iunct th•~ 1 '°''"'' al I ti.ti Irr. These are some of the fin- dings of a study by the U.S. Commission tln Civil Righ ts that led to this cooclusion : and believe them "to be in---:-:-:ccc::-:=====-- M••··'nl•n.. ope11 7:JO OM P.,Jor"'"'°' at 1:00 fri. & Sot., OPfl 6:45 SoMl-r Ct111th1110111 fro111 2 MICHAEL CRAWFORD CHARLES AZNAVOUR IN "THE GAMES" COLOR-UTED G ON THE TUBE Tht 1roul>lt r1111y llirtl'CI, n ·~ ,.an, whea 1ircr111 covld 1xctl'CI !he IPffCI of lOUlld In lt"tt lllfhl ..... II low •llihHll, Cllir.ns II•~• b...i 11t11ll'CI oul ot bllu1111 punull ol tvtryd11y d10rtt by illllef'Hllic: .. _ml" CIUll'CI llY pi..1111o muiellllg ll!tlr w•v lllro1>11h the Minic l>lrrler In dl~tl. How•-•r, H Ille '!ID• ........ 10 t.ioim 1'°"9 511perMW1lt1lly 111 1,a;it lttl, 1 1..0lien pr•Hure rilt of JO ,ouM1 por "'Ill••• tool would lilct plilct. rhi• 1• erM1119h It llallt n 111> swept h1lr..:tH, ill•lllr wll\CIOWI 11111 i1Cl11•1lv wlllp NOfl Oii htmn Wilh llHI fflt ol 1 tornt dt. Oii, .. ,u, ptrfl1111> 111p1rscinll; llytng c111 M rnlrkll!G It trtll htillhll, tr ov1r Ille Ml whtrt tht tnly dlrn- llt woulct M suffer.a l>V 1t1mpedlrl9 ~hone•. We 111 111v1 "'°,. Jmmeai.i. wo"' rln lhln !ht twtur1 r•lUll• of i•1 ,11ntl 11111. rM1w1d1y1, meJI 11 thtm revolYt 1rou11t1 1-Kl!rily. Tht IM'sl WI )' i. 1u11re 1n lnco.,,.. for your 11rnnr 1$ by p.1111c1p,11111g In 1 ...,... For +he be1+ 9uide to wh1t'1 ''""' 11!1ur111<1 pl'09r1rn. WI tan '-ppeni119 011 TV, reed T'¥ d11ol9n on• "'Ill your """"II "'""' Com• to 8YROH FENLEY INSUll:· "Mex·ican-An1erican citizens are subject to unduly harsh treatment by law enforcen1ent oflicers, they are often ar- rested on insufficient grounds, receive physical and verbal abuse, and penalties which are disproportionately severe." The study was made Or Arizona, California, Colorad o, New li-1exico and Texas. Mex- ican-Americans make up 12 percent of the population in these states. The commission devoted one ot the 135 pages or its report sensitive to (their) back(;round and culture. Against a backdrop o f "widespread patterns of police misconduct against Mexican. Americans in the Southwest," the commission said, "remedies for police malprac- tice were b1adequate." It call- ed for review boards within pol.ice departments to handle complaints. The language barrier is a considerable part of the pro- blem, the report said : "In April, 1966 a Spanish- speaking adult male and his A-plants Feared Expert W urns of Pollution WEEK -dittributed with t~t ANCE, M2 Milin in HU11ll1>9ton 6tach. Saturday edition of th1 DAILY ""-Sl'-7515, 10Ny to•• t•u• s.nn PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) PILOT ff 1«urlly. W1 Oller fln1nce pllnl tection and preservation of en- vironmental qualities." Estimates COLLEN'S CARPET l'laer •ml Willdclw COYff' lftg1 -C•rpers -Or•per- io1 -Wtll PIPtl"S -Linoleum -T'•n1p1r111t WlnOOw Sh1C1ts -ll\CIOOI'" llnd Outlloot CDrpeting. II '(Oii ilre ll•VIJll l nHJblt dKkllnt wll1t type ti! ca"' "' rou w1n1, tr wllll ciut~ nr rou llltd, slap In 11nd --· 465 forest A.-e. La91111a leocll 494-6701 MAKES DIRT CHEAP Thl5 dirt bike is 9reot for campi119, h1111th19, trolll119, you 11ome h. The "'AT -18 12S E11duro i1 eco11om icol, ll9l1tweight alld a pra,e11 perforMer. h 'i ,.ctdy for the rough· ett terroi11. Tile *AT·18125 comes dell.-ered with • 5-port po'wer e39i11e. 5..speed tran1mlulon. Autoh1be oil l11jectloA. Spec.iol E11d11ro 111spensio11, the besr • .And a dirt cheap prif.e. ,4) fl II t f1.c ·1• JI 01•1111ge Co11t1t11's Oltfest /llotorc!lcle De11le1• BEACH CITIES CYCL!E§ 525 N. EL CAMINO REAL, SAN CLEMENTE Phone: 492-6741 ~~=·========~=="~'::'~-~-~·~·~··~w~"~"'~'~'~"~'K~'::"::"·~I -A government radiation ex-: , pert proposed today anational P•kl Polltk•I .ad. surveillance program to guard ON JUNE 2nd VOTE IPlll"•lllll*li·llf! against nuclear power plants i'larwird told a national con-11;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::~~::~~=~=:~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ference on radiation control that experts have checked all present reactors and concluded "they discharge only small quantitiesofr ad i oac ti ve wastes in comparison to their licensed limits under nonnal operating conditions ." TOTTEN For Marshal PLATFORM Responsible Economical O peration Marshal'1 Office EXPERIENCE • 16 Yeors LGw l itforc.-itt h~lpc:e Of Th• e 'yean Yer110•, Calif. Polite DeportM•llt IZ Years S.rgeutl • Civil -CrimiltCll -I '"" °' UceMell Prl.-ote l1'1ftti9otor e Ed.cetlon -Auoclote of. Am Dec;1r" h o111 LA City Col~e -f1i1rthef study •t USC School of P1i1bllc Ad111l1istrofla• e I Tean Sec11rity Offlcet" -McDaeoell Do119los FRIENDS Of TOTTEN For MARSHAL llobert fhw.h, SK. Heolth, Ed1ttatlo• oMI Welfare llklMfd GoldbeTt, Mayor •f Lot11we IHch Pt11$J Kelly, MtNSI I . J. LesMsa:I, S.. Cl......,. hMflll DINctor ""'--G .Hndetsotl DDS, LatuM leoc.11 Gearte Hyde, Dir.ht!' lled Creu, Ore1199 County endangering health or spoiling the environment. lfe said the 16 plants now operating in the United States are safe, but noted that 90 new i:eactors are planned or are being built and th.at by the year 2000 nearly 70 percent of America's electricity will be nuclear generated. Ernest D. Harward , chief of the Nuclear Fa c i Ii ties Branch of the U.S. Bureau of Radiological Health, said the bureau. the Atomic Energy Commission, individual plants and states now monitor the release of reactor radioac- tivity. "But a much larger effort is needed now ," he said. "The bureau proposes the develop- ment or a coordinated na- tionwide radiation surveillance program with participation by industry, states and federal agencies to meet the ob-- jectives of public health pro- Harward said a nationwide surveillance program will be important "when an ex- panding nuclear i n d u s t r y results in several nuclear reactors sharing the same local environment. There then must be an assurance that a build up in radioactivity v.'i\I not exceed acceptable health and safety standards." He said several nuclear power p I a n t s discharging wastes into the satfJe river could cause a dangerous ac- cumulation downstream. Harward said another poten- tial problem is the reprocess- ing of spent fuel from nuclear reactors ''which. may result in environmental radioactivity associated with the reactors themselves.'' A. M•tn11.ro1 costs 1011 le11 b«au11e thcr~ is no ''middleman''! Direct-t~dealer Benina: results in sayings 'Which are passed on to you in the forms of higher qualily ••• more feat11res ••• and lini:r _performance. t.:ome in and prove il to )'onrscl/? all-inclusive WE SALUTE oun AH~IED FORCES SERVICEl\iEN AND RESPECT THEM FOR DOING THEIR JOBS FOR US . -COLOR I STEREO I THEATRE 11 I SAN CLEMENTE HOSPITALITY CENTER for members of our Armed Forces 101 El Camino Reol, San Clemente, California I O pen every weekend for ou r Servicemen as a I hom e away from hom e --Ou r name --HOSPITALITY I CENTER --means prec is ely what it says --N 0 CH AR G E F 0 R ANY TH ING including re- l freshments. . Th e San Clemente Hospitality Center is a non- profit incorporated assis tance group supported en- tirely by donations from dedicated people from through-\t: th e South Coast area. DISPLAY YOUR AMERICAN FLAG IN RECOGNITION OF OUR MILITARY SERVICES ••• AND REMEMBER WE NEED THEM! . . . .. . . .• .. • .. • .. • .. • .. .. * • .. • ::::::::::: .. . .. . . . ------------------------------ Why settle for less-when it costs so little to enjoy superb color viewing plus 1hrilling stereo listen ing? Contemporary model 7610 offers • Chromatone for add ed picture depth and beaUty • Quick-On pictures and sound • Color Purifier to automatically keep all pictures pure • Magnavox Bonded Circuitry chassis for lasting reliability • Solid-State Stereo FM /AM Radio -Phonograph system in cludes • 15 -Watts undistorted 1nuslc power • Four spea kers project sound from both sides and front • Precision record player lets your re cords last a lifetime • See and hear it today! Superb COLOR lV Swivel Console PORTAB LE COLOR lV ONLY ONLYS22990 1 50 ONLYS42950 Enjoy today's biggest picture fronl any angle-rega rdless of where you si t in your room! Beautiful mod el 681 O will br ing you vivid 23· diagonal measure pictures plus ou tstanding performance with Chromatone, Quick -On pie· 1ures and sound, plus Ma gnavox Bonded Cir- cuitry chassis for lasting reliability. See it today -treat yourself to a Magnavox! •• , w ith outstanding performance ! ~1o dnl 61 04 will brin g you super b 11 .. (diago nal 1<1 ,- sure) vivid color pictures and such QtiM: ty fea tures as exclusive Bonded C1rr.lJ1t1y c/l.1 ··:. with Keyed AGC for su pe rior recnp1ion ;P1d lasting reliability, slide colo r and t1n1 contrr.ik , telescoping dipole antenn a, fold down h:i 1"1- dle, plus many more. lde<J I for t.'.lbles or 0;1 optionnl mobile cart. TOV MAGNAVOX HOME ENTERTAINMENT CEN TE P. Factory Direct Dealers BROOKHURST & WARNER 401 MAIN ST. Fountain Valley Downtown Huntin gtcn Cec:::r 962-2456 536-7561 -----·--------·-----~---- • , , • • D,'11.Y PlltT Jj , Laatituk ••••·If·· ., Aerial Photos OK'd For the Record Topless Tavern Newport Firm to Slio'!t County Job Meetings Hearing \Slated SANTA ANA -After t wo He said 1he Urm was rt::O.":"'"'be tzp!alnl8. delays, county supei'vilon "selected through negotia~ Awarding , of the contract> . have approved a contract fot based on specUic&Uons P~ was delayed on Aprll JI af'ld aerial photography of the vtded by ,the county PlaMI•• May 5 be<auoe Superylaora county, ·~ David L. BUtr and WUUam .ltitrriage Licenses of '29 wood St. &nd PrlKHll Al"ltlL Jl MONTEL~ARRETTO, Rleharcl L .. 10, R., Hf 21'5 VtllKO LIM, llo1h of C0t I II MclNTO · ONEY, Alll~lrr. 30, •lld .,._ ·~23, ~ ot 1N SM-11tn1r Ort... C Meta. HAVGH'E~ ~LllN~, J1m'j N., ?~. ot 4).1 trlu. "'PCWI IKh .Ind '-""" ~· ;U. f' •• 1!'1 T9!T\Jllrt HIJlll ,~tlk leF."JliiVlif -•• 111d Kl E., 1'f, Ooltl ot 1n14 Loa Tltm• St., Fwriteln Vtllff~ LYLE.SEYMOUR, llobtrt G..,,_ ti: , SJa ""'-lft. lrvl.... ffld IArOI'; of 110 """'" i"";;;t ""_, t , SM ITH~ft ! 1nn1A11 • " , of 1 o "illir"Ew .• II. , ~ W. Comlllp, both of 5 II It. RU~NELL • ROGROVE, Oennlt E .• II, Df . s. snore Ortw. Seil er~~-'1, .. ~=l~.:c... 11 .. ot '" ZEAL-MOi IMER, Rtncltl I<. 22, of 1099 E) 1mll'IO COllt Mnl Ind Ktllltrl.111 ~J., if, ol lttn G1ro.n GroYt ·~" AG,:~1r' 3•0,.., COST .... ~EE, Htrm1n G., lt, ol '.tm W. l>omon1 s1.1 S1nt1 An1 '"' Arv 11, o I "11 LllMn. l"ounltln 111ev HAMIL T • RT$, koll C., It of 241t E. lrove, Or1nH ill'IO V1lerl1 O.. If, 11'1 S1n11 A111. Co1t1 Mow MOURi!:ll~MART. H-1nl L"' 29, of 3.50 1 Terrae1 and Trudy .J. 25, H10 Solano W•Y, both ~ .. ~ 8tt<ll. WEiii IN, 8111. 75. al'IO Hel'" M., , of 1660 Gllnv!-ROilod, F~E' JCOMa. Pllrldl F .. lf, of 1 .. 1 flllJlll SI., S1nll Ana Htlthlt Tlnl l., lf, of 502 Avenld1 1, N--1 •..m. wl\'.":l'· i!l'itli!W~'t'i!ll' l1L •everly , 14. of !f41 l'ron11'1 Clrelll..!0111 of H~tln91on eMCh. I ENHETT·ADDllOH.1 o .... kf L.~· , DI ltl:rJ C1~ \.fn:ll,~"' lie.ell 11nd Miid""' l .(J • llf f I sc':.w•• .Jm, ~'~1!t,. " "1 .~ 12:3\ \'If '1fi:C., rrinl 1n.ir. VM R., 2\, lSIJ P1rdell, Goltt1, k1n111. Mc:GIVMEY~RGUSON, Mld111t V.1 17, of 17 ICtttllOtl L-Mid Cher'I' IC., 1•. 14,, Alblr'lilo borti of Hunlfr!Jlli Btldl, I UlllGEU. OWIM, Robert W., 21, DI loc.6 . 01l1r, Sl>nll ~ Ind M1rNrt1 C .. 2t, of " Hun11'19f0ol HtDft1cHKu rf~. 9;:1:tt w .. :M. oi 1~6'2 W hlwood L1n1. Hunftn&!Ofl Biid! J-1 A,, !2, of 3120 ~rot I~, Cost1 MK.I, HE ell • OX ,Robert A.1_!t, ilnd 1(1 "'" •• 11, boll! of Ul'l' Silnll Ynn Dr , H!Hltlt1Vton llel(JI, CU lllTl'-K P~1 J1>~1 A .• ?J, of 21'DI T1 1 "1!!1 Drive Ind 0-"'tll A., lf. ol6' Park, both of L19UM "!ch. . PET llS-~L NNING. C1rl H , 23. DI !It! N. ,1 Ill St.. Scotlsdtll!, Arl1. anti ,II J,, Jt, DI 2!1131 Norlhrup Orlvt, L 111 HIH1 ... LA l"LA -SMITH, 01n!e! J .. 2:3, of 1Jl 0~1, Hunllr19lon 111.m 11nd hr~M.. 21, ol 2112 Vl1!1 e: h'-.1 . rt B Kii. SCH'V.&.o~ • ;111.&.uL~. Donlkl F .. ''· ~.11r>'.ricl ct11:1:· t~ .. 11~m Death Notf<!C!• .... ,., M111111•11 Pr91f. Att ~s. of m• Wt111C9 51., Co.I• M,. 0.1• of cfeeth, 1'MV 11. SurYlved br 1blfl<I, C!v!k; ,.,... "°"'· 5cOll A. 1 C1tvln Pr1H1 d1uoM1r, Sfl•ll• •• n !hi hafn•I 1111.... Mro. Btrnict Etl1'1f1011· H!olll1nd, C1111.1 fhr" broll'ltrt, eoyjf Syrett, Trtm0ntan, Vllh; Fred Syrt ll, ~""' Ulll'll Mlln Srrel!, Sen BtrNrd)no. Stnilc11, FrldlY, MIY 15, 10 AM, W.1tcllff Ct1111MI, lnt1r~nt. Ptdllc VltW Memorltl P1rll:. Olrteted bV Wntclltf Chal>tl Mtrlllln'o fft-41M, ARBUCKLE A ION w..witff Mnirr 411 £, lllh SI., Coila M ... Ml>ml • BALTI MORTUARIES Corona •ti Mar OR 3-1450 C..la M111 Ml &-Zill • BELi. BROADWAY MPRTUARY 110 B'°"way, Costa Meu LI 8-ll:IS • On.DAY BROTHERS HunUngtnn Valley ~ortuary 11111 Beacb Bt><f, Uq":r'1'1'11 ... olo • PACIFIC vi£w MEMOlllAL PAlll Cemetwy e Mortuary Dissolutiotas of Marriage 0 1$SQl.UTION OF MAllJllAGl ZlflCk, Frtn(ti M. Ind JOlel>f'I R. Elltrfl>ln, l>OrMkl Cllilrlls ilnd arc. ·~~i'!J'w!!o! l!:. 1 • ...,:'t110.'\: .-::r'DoNolcl By TOM BARLEY O! llHI D<IUY l"li.1 Sllll SANTA ANA -Whal could be a landmark ruling in the in c r easingly conlroversial Planners Get Raise Fpr Wbrk ~J.!!:,,FrttlCft A. tlld Forni 8rvc:. , Kli\.11' LI ......... Ii.. and (111111 8MrrA '1ANA -COunty ~ flm !If 11!A!~fj; !Ylll!FYlwi" VJll@d I ijlle In lf11t~M Jore• {i:I'.;• •nd Kut "pay" to the five °"mbers 1'~t:· I~\ ~i. ~i:, ~~~ ~: of the county Plannil\J Com- v'1'-;r':it,...,i:ro1vn P1tr1t11 mission Wednesday ~ c.c1~~ Lor~ruo E1 N1t11ton. ing thal the commi§slonera r,11~et~ ~:'t~d,~" aA~n Lv,i:..,J1me1 111 Were meeting eight tjmes 8 w1v.,. month now and only beina C•lllttn, P1trkk J, arw:f Btlh -"O °T'OS:O'I\'"' Suzanne Mar~ 1nd Terri paid for six. ~~:;.M2~11~1n~ndEd:'.i'~~· c1>er1is Supervisor William Phillips ·~M...C:."1Ho0trt Wiiburn '"" Allvnt proposed the inc rea:r to a e11e maximum of $320, or each W nlon. WUll1m 0 . tnd JOVCI A. M1uro, OJ_rn1 Ruth Mlr&h.Jlnd Ello for a maximum 0 eJabt D' .. ~rn, Killl\1111'1 S. and EOWlnl R1n-o Hf.'ii1111c1, coi-J, ind Oollilil• meetings for the bal~nce of 1~1n. virvin•• 11. and Bernard L. the current flscal fear, c t, Lvn11e F. 1na o.vld L. "because of a concern about 81 , Slndr1 L. Incl ltotltrl L, T' lo"'"· ThH100r1 •nd J•mea ""' th~ . work.Joad of thf com-~::::;'' Vicky LcitiiM ...,,, Ruuell missioners. ,,;;r.,,_, '"'«· "1' m,.'· "~Ir ~~\IQq, ls not ~[11;\liM.!l_ . , · aaeijU&fl lof tbi!AY. Oth•r ~ DiliJl,.klJ. • •owt ~ such as 'the aanitalion ~1/ifl!t~ooi'.""' e. lll'lftct. hav~. raised the1r ~11rramifl~~!/t.,m, . ~nHiton. Ptiill;lns con-e.Hooe. Ptullne M. Ind JI-tinued. Mel~. 5'1Un Ll'M ilnd Donald Euqent . . Row111nd. Rllbert• Lee 1rw:1 Robert Plarnung Director Forest Gert Id · I l r1un. 61nv 1. ano Rermonc1 F. Dickason backed the ~tQposa , ruce. JOl\n Cecil and Gud Beelrke · " · · s1r11t>e1. Arthur Eugene 1nd C1rDI saying, The comm s1lon IS ~-~ I ~.,, Judith """ •NI c11rra11 holdlng many more ~·an s x "' 1· h and ~ 111i. P11rki1 """ and HKlor mee 1ngs a mont nqw aa1;:,~J1nlct1 L. Ind Olle Edwtrd Wi\I be going to lp. The t~'\!>'r~r1~~·~xfne•.~'\rliZl.°1'. "· demands on their tjme is s~~dt~~~.1t:enda~11Ufc'rv.!'~~··d building up rapidly." CABINET CANISTER CANISTER BET ..... .... _ NOW sss> NOW s9@§ AREA'S LARGEST SELECTION! Great 1500 Pocm":~~w Drive iS the big neWS from for bathrooms! It's washable N•wpon :::~ caurornl• CON· TACT" Brand • Products Pipe FAMILY NaW.st lhing you can put on COJ,OHIAL FUNERAL your wall.-real 8ul11pl lt'1 ROrttE actual ta bric, not 1 l00Hllk1. '1ltt Bol11 Ave. The natural labrlc you know Wesblla1ltr 193-35!5 as BURLAP-beauttlul, tich--e loo!llr)g, With the plus Of I SHEJ11;R f\tORTUARV sell·adhesK-e backing. Goes l.Qun• ltath 494•15!5 on amooth as •Ilk. •lays on Cl atrong et-&lrlapl Wonder· San emenle 4ft..0100 ful for walls, great far roorn e dl vldara. W11h1bl1, tool 5 SMITHl' JllOR'l'UAllY •1111 Mitltl ~-to. !IHI• 127 Main SL Bl~. Gold, Natural. Ranllagton Be... V' -fl.It • --. Af.ISSI i, ,_ - I an':fll&.t· $ll.F-ADHE$WE ~TIC Jt'a euy to craal• a btlutlf'uf. Pf'ICIJUI bathroom wtUI! w.,,... abte. wonderful "CON-TACT.• J uat peal off bac ... i"g a nd smooth on! Thia dVrabla. aplaah-able vinyl wat1rproofa turracea. Photo 1howt colar- coordln1t11d flow1r1~ wall• (#551, Coamo•) with Antique Blue wood (#561), Carrart Mar- 111\ C'llMI -!er· • .,_ •ll lhe • ... r•tl1rn1 for •1111 mor• "'"" 1r~ao•1•" • field of nude entertainm!nt is expected May 19 in Su~rior Court when J udge Robert S. Corfman reviews temporary restraining orders be bas issued in favor or four Orange County beer bars. UCI Senior Perfect In Physics Awarded the job for $38,000 ~partment ... Eleven flmis Hirstein wanted ••an es· was E. t. Pe a r s o n and-W"('e contacted, five· replied planaUon ot why the lowest Allocletes of 3955 Birth St, and were interviewed.r1 • cost jiropoul was not • Newport Beach. Lowest cost proposal ·war cep\ed." The Pearson firm submitted .ubrnltted by the Jennings, Baker • explained 1\leaday the second IOwqt propoaa) for H a I d e r m a n and Hood that ·be and Hlrstetri had the project which w a s engtneerlng firm of Santa Ana thouthl tbat the five prosioea11 originally designed to coincide at W ,500. were actual bids not juat. ln- witb the federal census an Planning Director Forest tmiew JH'OPOAli. April 1. Dickason said the selectloo of ;:;;;:==""::i;:====;;;; • Andy's Fun He issued the last of a series \Vednesday when he granted the applicatioo of Gardena •t· tonwy Berri• Moore for a ~ Ill pilj4!@ lffKll of unclothed performers ~ the Sugar Shack, 10711 ~ p s Alamitos BIYd., Loo AJaiiil(ijj, County Purchasing Agent Pearson was unanimous by Nathan L. Ch~rry recom· the pl!Mlog and purchuiog mended the Newport Beach departments and the aerial fll:m as "the most qualified photography study team of the IRVINE -Everyone knows of five who submitted pro-Orange County League of t11a1 111o -· 1111-l<>it ,. · .j!QPA" emu. "Md an r11r emmnt Ask ¥!)' kid. "Ast W(' ls fwR. Sot 1l -~ ll;i &Al~\' PlLOT. ~for • Jury. D. are ln 1 subject, the bette you do in it. UC lrvlne senlo J•nnlogs and dancer Mary .Jo Jennings now enjoy the pro- tecU-On affonled by Judge Corfman to owners Alld !Iii tertatnm ll the IAilmi. tj~J ~d Chee 'ftW!'lf hf1, ·AA;n~ Ana, and ' b e T\l§l:on Rom1 in TusUn -fre@Wm from arrests on ¥ ... that IMI• on-stage perfQrmances amount to indecent qpoeure. deeply Interested lo physic;111 II' Jeffery JusUce must be very SA·VE .. uri119 our for he I• .iillu•llrtf ~ llini ' titll•i•J•illr i~ 1 ~~1~1 11J~11t "~ai M' ATIRESS point average. Allhouab Jorro ganmla, Mr, . But Jud&'!: Corfman has warned M~ -who repre- sents all fotjti establishments -that there IJlUst be no more than one danoer on stage at a titne and tbtfe must be no off.stage activity that couJd possibly be -trued as being in violation« obscenity statutes. Moore pr-diets that the present temporary freedom enjoyed by lt1s clients will be maintained as a result of the hearing ~pd may well be extended jo yiew of the at· titude towar• nudity being displayed by higher courts. and Mrs Lucian Justice of Orange, give him $1.25 ror each 'A' he receives (that's $46.25 earoed to date). Jeff believes that his interest in physics has been his prime motivating force . "Having good parents has al!IO helped," Jeff adds. The fascination of physics is that it is more a theoretical science Ulan a practical one. "As I got more philosophical I got more interested in physics. I don't really care too much for its application." Jeff is also the president of the UC J Sailing Club and a member of the sailing.team. Happy Home Values! HOURS: 9 a.m. • 9 p.m. Monday lflru Friday 9 a.m. • 6 p.m. Saturday 1 0 a.m. • 4 p.m. Sunday . add a, touch of elegance • , . · move furn iture much e•sier. 1'11 sn Try 11 set on yol.ll' favo11te lounge chair. ttle sofa., coffee 1abl1. TV s1and. ottoman or vour bedroom fu1n11ure. They 1111n place of the o1d·f1sh1oned type °' wtle11 casters didn't 11x1st be· fore. Cho°'e flom .a varie1y ol sizes and luxurious l1n15hBL NEVKR fllttcED SO LOWI Clltl oomtN • curvea wherever you draw lhl llnl-ln wood, metal, p~ tlca or OU.. ,._atlflale. NllY'llr btfor• otrerad at thll W1bllltv1bly low pl1~. ltl vtfMtlN" lrtd low .coat m1k1 It an ldtll Qlft tor thl beginning handymen. An oulltlndll Yllu• at only 112.18. RUST•OLEUM 18 Colors to Choose from lrlghten up your Patio ' Furniture and Barbeque 1601.118 SEALY SLEEP TIGHT SALE i Vou Ju1t don't expect firmness like this for only $59.951 Hundreds of tKtrt helVV giuge coils plUs special high. resiliency found1t ion in thi rn•~htd let. Compare the comfort, too, of deep.quilted Our•LuK* cu1hlonlng-tQpped by a rich satin twill cover, Such luxury!. Such t grt1t l!uy during our once·•vear sale! OUllN llZE ll(MiO" 2·pc. Ml $189,95. KING SIZE 76x80'' J.pc •. ,.; '241,fll. From yawn 'ti/ dawn.,. it's Posturepedic time SEAL V POSTUAEPEDIC-Designed in cooperttion with leading orthopedic surgeons fo r comfortft!ly firm support. "No morning backache from sleeping on a too-soft manrass". s999s IWMIOI' lull ti.11. N. p&. Costa Me1111 Oldest Home.Owned Furniture Siol91 1865 HARBOR l~YD. D1wwtow11 0'9fll MIM Phone 548•1131 '--~~~~~~"~, ................................................. .. I ' t I 1 • Have a taste AJ26 varieties of cheese. All different. Prowoutive ind Uf)usual c...._. like Mont St. Benoit, from Quebec, C1ned1. • Otd f1voritu too, of cOurse •. Mont.rey J•ck. Swiss. Sharp or mild cheddar styles. How to chooH?· 'Simple 111 126 choicu If you wish. At Hickory Farm, you m•y always tute before you buy. Our pleasure helping you. Then select cheese that's iust right for you, your family, or your guests. fl-9iti'~ ·::.:~ ~H W\ ~w# •42-0•12 l!J~~ OUNel \J:•lJijJ~ e T•w• I C...try C...., OF ON/ti S4J·I016 AMERICA'S LEADING CHEESE STORES MARKET 'BASKET SPECIALS FRESH LEG OF PORK . HI C DRINKS 46 Oz. Can WHITE ROSE POTATOES 10 Lb. Bag MARKET BA.S:KET W!STCLIFF ·l't.UA , FROM I BILL y THE KID I LARGE SELECTION BOYS SHORTS IN PLAIDS & STRIPES ALSO DENIMS l(\J/.fV1Y OOHV1Y OOLOlll.lf\ ... 1051 IRVINE -WE5TCLIFF PLAZA NEWPORT BEACH A·iTE'NTlO'.N ' 1 . • Young Women ·Of All Ages '1\EET BqNNIE ·BELL'S JUNIOR COSMETIC <ONSUL TANT In Our Cosmetic Department . . . FRID,AY, .MAY ;Sth 6 P:M. To 10 P.M. SATURDAY, MAY 16th 10 A.M . To 5 P.M. 'Frff Make Up & Skin Analysis lNewporl le1ch Slor1 Only) OPllN 'MNINfiS 'TIL 10 P.M. Spring Time Special WHEELBARROW <;arries 3 Cu. Ft. Easily. Big 10" Wheel With Wide Tire. Nylon Bearing. !NOT ASSEMBLED ) RION HARDWARE • WESTCUFF PLAZA •o• Ji Iovely·Wedding See Our Selection Of: INVITATIONS GIFTS-GUEST BOOKS PARTY GOODS PRINTED NAPKINS (Fast SerYiceJ PAPER UNLIMITED 541-7921 WESTCLIFF PLAZA I •one-stop' shopping a.t its finest! . OPEN JHURSDAY.AND MONDAY EVENINGS ..... . , HONEYWnL EUCTlONIC, ·STROMNAR 770 . · The perlcct elccITonio lltib fo, the. · '10995 photogra,pher who wants increased ONLY ' . light output automatlcii.uy from 2 · I to 22 t .. L . REG.· $159.50 , l ', ... .BAKEll'S W~STf.;LIFF . ·~ERAS · W!STCLIFf PLAZA RUTH ONE OF OUR FAVORITE PLAYMATES IS BACK! 11.EMEMBEll • , . WE'llE OPEN EV'EltY DAY , . , INCLUDING SUNDAY. ~~ COIBLEltS BENCH ...... lf"liiil a"'•• .... ...... '* ... , I CONYINllNT SHOPS CLEANING SPEct!LS CLEAN ONLY I DRAPES 95C PER PANEL ONE DAY 8 $2'5 US. ONLY ' 40c EACH ADDITIONAL LI. . SERVICE Montgomery Cleaners & .Laundry MEN'S FORMAL WEAR SPECl1,llST,S darrelPs dedrick TUX-·sHQP SALES -DELUXE RENTALS FASHION SQUARE Santa Ana 547-.6341 WESTCLIFF PLAZA I I 30 Irvine Newport ~each 646-1191 Optometr.ist Dr. Lou Roy Elder e CONTACT LENSES • REFRACTING e EYE WEAR STYLING • PRESCRIBING WESTCLIFF PLAZA . 1124 IRVINE . NEWPORT BEACH 042-0720 ,. . • • -•' ,. r; J . ' '' ... • . .. .... . .. ., .. .~ •• < ' ' • . 1· .. · .. -. . ,. . .:e· e 'f ;afro r1 D .. . . ~''.'\" ('' .. ..... a ys • . . ' ., More than 1,500 rnembers oJ ll\e California Rederation of \Vomen's Clubs, Junlol" Membership will g3thel\ in the Di sne~land Hotel Thursday, May 21, through Saturday, May 23, for a Celel/ration,1970. . . The occasion will be the 42nd annual conventi n of the Federation, w.bere 1serVice. act;omplishments of the past year will e reviewed and new omcel'is elected and installed. ' ·:~t 0-fii~l•hostesses will be members of Orange-istrict ciubs,.led by ~· Terry'll'homas, distl;ict president.\ .(. \ 'Mrs~ Frank Hughes of Newpo~ Beach, convention chairman is being ~isted by the Newport club, amenities, credentials and publici'tY i El Ca-tninb a:nd San Clemente clubs, special events and prizes; Huntington -Beach and Seal Beach, decorations , and Costa Mesa and Laguna Beach, script. The session will open ~t 1 p.m. May 21, with reports and presentation •1 •.• .-"'~c~·s.•Dele_g~te&:Jl}so will' vote On five propo~ed.resofutions,.the'~ commeOdation O.f contftruatlO.P _.and expanSiop ,,l()f: cJriy~r jf!Stru<;tiOp I}~ kt ·•. ~ornia l!ii:li~~s;, reCO!lliri®dation of·legislij\i0~·1Dlik\Qg .w ng of safe!y.'belmets by, all molDJ'CYCI~ driv.er,,. antl J>asseniers : andAtoey;while OJ!'ll'.ui; ·mo19reycles; ~e~Qth.nlh>dation ·\hat :~p_act(•IJ<; ·allQwed"'QQ. California ~diive'r"liCense'~for vo1untary iAsertion· O'f 'blofid: tj,u'e·; !eci>mmendation of reflector-type license p1ates in California for' 1s.iet.v riasons, and the recommendation that safety seats be used in all -sehoo1 \l\lses in California. 11. "f ' : 1r.' • ' " JOSEPHINE SEAMAN AWARDS . ,:f" . " At 7:30 Thursday evemng·a report of the state coordinator. pre:senta- "f;ipn of coordinator awards, report on elections and presentation of the Joser .. p!].ine Seaman Awards will be featured. · A Celebration of Fullfilled Dreams banquet honoring Mrs. DeFotes't CuUer, state coordinator, aJong with state department chairmen ::and special gue'sts will be sta~ed·~at-8:15;cUmax'ed•by an awards festival direcled by }4rs. Thomas Chris'tensen, dean of chairmen. ~ · . . ·. Friday morning's agenda is filled with workshops on legislation, ven: ereal disea5e awareness and public speakipg. , . ... . . .. • • > ' ' . . Roi:E·oF vo;umE 11 R . ; .. :r · ·. . Speaking 1at. the 1:15 p:rh. Fri.¢~"1uncheon; ·Cele~ration of .-Cre.at!ve Involvement, ,will be Dr. Eva Schindler R3inmari·, -commtt'nify or,stal'l:izat1on and training consultant, whose topic will be the Role of the Woman Volun· teer in the 1970s. · . . Honored .during the luncheon will be 1"1rs. Edward D. Wylie, ·Calif- ornia Federation of Women's Clubs president, and Junior district presi· dents. The Citizen-of-the-year wil1 be named for t he state. . · Delegates will . gather at 8 p.m. for the gala banquet Cel~bration ~f Involvement in Mank.ind,,· which will be highlighted by installat.1on Qf o~f1- cers and tile· Build a Better Community awards festival where more than $3,200 will be presented by David D. Hurford of Sears-Roebuck Foundation tO those-clubs ·deemed outstanding in community service. • • . - Saturday's 1uncheon, the convention fina1e, will be. themed Celebra· t:ion of Hope. M~s. Philip Allin, general federation Junior editor, aild o~f· going state officers will be honored, and special awards will be given to the Hallmark.An Co ntest winner ,and the high school senior girl named Miss T~p~~ ;i;ig,~n;J!f?0:_ 1!'l;S· man)lcj!iinn.on, state· presfdent will close the g~ijiF1r~~~:i~!>D •h!~~~.of office •. _. ' ":·~.1;. : . · .·.i: . ·FESTIVE MOOD -With the 42nd annual convention of the €a1i- fornia . Federation of Women's Clubs. Junior Membership jiist · around the comer, Orange District members are getting in a· fes- tive mood. Of~ring a chamP.agne 'toast to the May 21-23 evept ar~ ' ' ·' ,... . -\ .... / . SURPRISE PRIZES -In charge of prizes and special events ·will be the .El Camino Real Junior Woman's Club and the San.·~ente · ,lunlor ·Wo~lll)'~ <llub;J'>rej>l¢\llg hi;i~pack-'. ' • ''• ' ' '/ , -··; 'H~ (' ~ . . . . .:( .. .. ..,. ' . . , ' ·~" ' . . .i> ·, ... ,.,/,.. .· ·,:r ~ .. -'·~ ···- > ( '··' • • . • :",;t. ···.!-':.'< ages for the three-day DiBntYland. ~otel con· ference are (leftt ,to right) Mrs. Bruce Lewis and ¥rs. Normah 'Clow . i I ; ! : .. ' . ' . ' . ' • . } " ' .· ,_ ... .. .-. . f/. • .. I • , )") ·i' fo f : - Jun:iors ' I O.ity ,llM ....... IW .... ,_ (left 11.o right ) the Mmes. \Varren Fix, Vincent Wood and Frank Hughes, members of the Junior Ebell Club of Newport ·Beac•1. Tlie ~ Newport club will take chari;:e of amenities, credentials and pu.b- liqty. I . .· .. . . . ~ .. -;, . --. ·-. . ' .. . ' ,, . . .. ~ ) J •• •, . : ' TICK ETS TO CELEBRATION -Scriptfor the upcoming_ c9"1en,tion· of Callfornia Federa!jon 'of·WotnO!l~·Cl\1111!, Junl?l'J~niberslilp Will be · hal1dlel1<1iY -membeno of 11\il'CoStalMtsa' Jdn- ' ior Women's Club .. All )Vrapped UR Jn 'thetr work for tbe event, thel)'led Celebraijon 1970 are (jen to rlglit/ tl!e Ml!leS. Thomas BfndV. ~Pete+ Viqtto add· Ronald Sten~e. · ' ' .. NEXT STOP, CONVENTION -The Di,neyland HoteJ and convention is the· destination of members of the Huntlhgton Birach' Juniors (left to right) -the Mmes.\Dlile "BU.Sb, ! Do~gla's"Moscrip · ~Dd, George : Kemp. The Huntington Beach club Is workl~g w,itll the Seal Beach Junior club t~ provide dec!oratioi11 for the annual •gathering to tall• ·p!~ce 'l'hursdjly, ! ltl•Y. 21,.U)roµgh Saturday, May~· , 1 , o I ---~-~--- \ ,. Yal.Jr Horoscope Tomorrow • Aquarius: Evening Favor's Fun FRIDAY MAY IS By SYDNEY OMA1UI Caneer prl'IOlll like .. COD· Vol eYeaCI, penoa. Tbey CU be pOllHllve beeaue &bey feel they know wUt ii best for 'oll. Al -· \hoy \ on rjp_L Bui wllea -~-Y CID be VU)' .l!'fODI• I ttlffrltln bori1 andtr WI In. lriplag IOdlacal llp are Jane Ru11t:U, Daa~ Rowu IDd O. J. Slmpsoa. ARIES (March %1-AprU 19): Some o( your ideu require r u r th e r development Con- flllion exists; opposite aex CO\lkl be involved. Check calls, messages. Avoid unnecessary journeys. RelaUvea may be In fighting mood. \TAURUS (April .ZO.May 20): Young ptraon who wants to spend your money me.y have to be rudely awakened. Time to draw line. Be fair but firm. Lover's quanel tonlgh} shoCild not be blown out of proportion. GEMINI (May %I.June 20): Personal magneUsm soars. But you will have lo ltetp feet on ground. There are bulc issues to be coftfrooted. Some concern property value, residence, family duUes. Be aware Of details. CANCER (June 21.July 22): You may find yoursell on wild· goose chase. Obtain hint from PISCES (Feb. l!t·March 20): Aries message. Keep com· Give yourself time to weigh municaUon ·Unes clear. Avoid taking situations, persons for VJU'iOUs factors. Avoid snap granted. ae analytical. decls!ons or snappy \anrwen. . make some new starta whlcf\ win change outlook for ~ better: your sense or dram• proves ot value. LEO (J l 23-A Permit mate, partner to have u y ug. 2%): 1polll•'I. Strive lo strengthen T• 11n11 °"' "'or' •bout "°"rMlt Some friends may not have '""' •rel ""°'°'~' 0111•r $yd111Y °"r.,..,.. .. all financial data. Best to do ties of affection . ~0:.,y.~~11,i,..=te ~:::,"JO ::: your own checking, research. JF TODAY IS you R 1o o,.,.... IOOkl•I, ,~. 0A11..v '11..01. Bo.-:n-IO, Grind Centr11 S!lllono N• You could f1nd great bargain. BIRTHDAY YOU, are due to 'f'orlt. N.Y. ICI017. But this-takes P.m0MJ in·l~;;~~~~~;;;;~;;~;:;;.~~~~l ilialive. UUllze w on d e r f u J II sense of showmanship. VIRGO (Au~. 23-Sepl. 221 : Many v i e for your aUenUon. Flattery may be used in ~vious manner. Strive to be reallrtic. Then you are more likely to attain goal. Don't get caught in middle or quar- rel. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You tend to be restless. Creative outlet i.!I required. Write, advertise, add to your knowledge. Accent a 1 s o on special conference. Smoke.fill· ed room is where vital decision is made. SCORPIO (Oct. 13·Nov. 21): A new friend is highlighted. Someone who shares interests, work makes gesture of good will. Reciprocate. It is time for you to widen circle of acqualntaJlces. Convention Tables All Dolled Up League Fetes 'Better Half' SAGmAJUUS (Nov. 22- 0ec .. 21 ): Marital or business tie is under pressure. Handle responsibility. Don't cast first stone. There are disagr~ ments. But there is no need for exct!:sll irritability. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Light touch is best; all facts have yet to be reviewed . Not wise to commJt yourseU to definite course or actlon. Friend who Is moody may not deserve your sympathy. THE BRIDE WORE AN ELEGANT NEW WEDDING SET CALLED, "THE SWINGING SET" These are just a few of the examples Decorations for the 42nd annual convention of Cali- fornia Federation of Wometi's Clubs, Junior Mem- bership will be in the capable bands of members of the Seal Beach and Huntingtou Beach Juniors. Cut- ting an arty caper are (left to right) the Mmes. Military Ball Plans Revealed Orange C<uity's first and oldest boarding school will celebrate during its fourth ~1ititary Ball Saturday, May \JSAF, Los Angeles and 1t1r, and Mrs. Harold Mestyanek . Allan Ansdell, Charles Simmons and Ronald Adams, Seal Beach Juniors. The confab will take place Thursday, May 21, through Saturday, May 23, in the Disneyland Hotel. June Date Announced AWARE Gives OCC Awards Hulbands will be honored llUertl when Ora.nae County Officers' Wivt$ League en- (ertains wilh a champagne brunch at 11 :30 a.m. Sunday, May 17, in the Newport Harbor Elks Club. Members of the Association Sing -out or Barbfrshop AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emotions ny high; avoid pennttUng impu1se to shove logic aside. Money situation can improve U you are less extravagant. Evening favors fun and ·frolic, but with budget In mind. Cbrisl Church by the Sea will be the setUng for the June 6 nuptials linking Can- dace Ann Cox and D. Kent Stol'Jll. . of Women's Active Return lo Harmooy will be presented by Education (AWARE) will bear the Newport Harbor Chorus, a talk on financial a I d a functioning unit of the Socie-1;;; ________ _ ty for tt._ Preservauoo and available·fOr conunuing educa· Propagalio'l\~~r Barbershop lion during a scholarship cof-Quartet Singln in the U.S. fee at Orange Coast College Reservations, wbk:b are due J I. J UPHOLSTERY M•ANSI QUALITY, INT•GIUTY, l••VICli, CIUll'TIMIJllSMlll'. of today's: look in wedding sets. Stop in and take a look at the entire collection. From top: Textured bridal set with diamond cluster engagement ring, $595. Textured set with round and marquise diamond engagement ring, $350. Overtap bridal set with solitaire engagement ring, $250. SLA...VICK'S Je\Yclers Since 1917 NEWPORT BEACH -6<<· 1 llO 18 FASHION ISLAND tomorrow night at 7:30. tomorrow, may be made with v,..., c11.,... ""-' web~ -......,_.1c1r1, Ml•ter CMrtt· '"· •• acca..-r CMALL•NO•I WE Lll(E llAUTll'UL PUllNITUll• JG. Sponsored by the Parents' Guild, St. Catherine's Military School, Anaheim, will host the ball taking place in the Anaheim Convention Cent.tr, and the j>ublic is invited to Serving as this y e a r' s chainnan is Wililam Pearson, and assisting w j t h ar· rangements are John Burke, Mrs. Pearsoo, Mrs. Clive Le Voir, Mrs. John Ciarfella and Dr. Kraszewski. Miss Cot:, a Newport Harbor High School graduate, is the daughter' or Mn. Beverly Cox or Newport Beach and the late Mr. George Cox. Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer 0. Slonn of Garden Grove, attended Rancho AJamitos High School and Fullerton Junior College. The Orange Coast student Mrs. Frank A. Reis • 557. 642·5176 64"'8051 Opon Mon4•Y and Frhl•Y untll t :JI group of AWARE will co-host _:':'.:'79::·:_ ______ _!~~~~~~~~~"" 'l==================~ the meeting at which time1-.= attend. Military flags will form the background for the black·tie event, and miniature flags of St. Catherine's Military School in floral centerpieces will grace the tables. Amoog the special guests attending will be Mrs. Virginia Thrash, wife of t.1aj. Gen. William G. Thrash, USMC, currently on duly in Vietnam, who will be celebrating their 28th wedding anniversary at the ball in his absence. Hosting Mrs. Thrash will be BfiC. Gen. (rel.) and Mrs. Thomas F. Riley. Other honored guests will include-Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Robert Owens, US~1C, El Toro, hosted by Dr. and Mrs. Robert Kraszewski, Anaheim: Rear Adm. and Mrs. Frank Kyes. USN, San Diego, hosted by Mr. and Mrs. John Lauth ~Yj~'.· ~~w 2lDO HAlllOI ILYD . HAllOI CINTll llec• of M•lll 2300 HARBOR Costa, Mesa Harbor Center six women students attending the C<>l!ege will receive scholarships. -~VJ!(;' ~~w 2JDO HARIOl ILYD. HAllOI CINTll ttec• of MallJ and Rear Adm. and J\.1rs. 1------------Charles Tighe, USCG, Long Beach, hosted by Mr. and Mrs.· James Dye. sun other honored guests and their hosts will include Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Ross Dwyer, USMC. Or. and Mrs. Gary Lester, Ora111e : Col. and Mrs. Salvo Rizza . USA, i1r. and tiirs. Dominic Mercadante. Anaheim ; Col . and Mrs. Jack Goelz, USA. Comm anding Information Unit, Los Angeles: J\.ir. and 1t1rs. George Evanoff ; Col. and , 1'-1rs. Frank llaggerty, New Club To Install &uth Coast Chapter of Women'• American ORT f Orgaat za t lon for Rebabilitallon). met today in the Mission Viejo home of Mrs. E:dward Clement. Choos· in& the 22nd aMiversary of Israel's independence, l h e group selected May 14 as the date to sign a charter de6iinatin& them an official chapter. N,w olfars installed during the meet.in,; include the Mmes. Edward Chement, president: Sue Kllgman and Joyce Fruhl· ina:er. vice pre.sld e nt s: Norman Hammer. secrclary, and Helene Winne.grad, treuunr. The. group rebel funds for rehibllftaHon ol Jcwl1h people WE BID COSTA MESA GOODBYE! Oar ... 1,. 1"cl .t tlM ll"llty hwli• .,,.,... M .cc....n.t Is .. Ml• oad soctfflcH .t l•w. low prtcn. We _,. wH air ..tiN stoc.k, la .............. ,... ,,.,.. ..... -..... of preflh will •MM 11 .., wey. N• Mat· t« ••• ,., ..., .,.. lift •.• It wlll ,_, .,.. t9 tltt"4 tllls Mlle aff ill.y wlftl ......, dolt•r yo1 coa ..,.,., W• ...,,. J•• the ... 1... -..... ,le ttlrMtlie•t tM ........ •WI qUIT IN COSTA MIU. BELOW WE UST A FEW OF THE GREAT SAVINGS! DRESSES AT COST • NEAR COST JllS. MISSES I l'ETITE BELOW COST! IT fAMOUI MAlllS. YAL. TO '20 .... BLOUSES & TOPS , ND ALl.-WIATt411 COATS -VAL. 17 BUSH JACKETS ND ALL-WUTttll COATS-VAL. '40 50c •• MAY 14th SCARVES ...... •o .... 1/2 Pric:e AT 1 0 A.M. BRAS . SLIPS.......... 1/2 Pric:e SYLVIA'S Pant Tree and reru,ee1 throu1h voca-ll-----------------------------1 Oonal tra1nnlg. McetJn.p a r t ALL SALES FINAL ~ 110 LAYAWAYS· NO EXCHANGES NO CHARGES -B1nkAm•rlc1rd & M11t1r Ch1rg1 W•lcom1! SHOES COSTA MESA 1831 NEWPORT BOULEY ARD STORE MOVING 3000 PAIRS Men• Women UP TO • Children SHOES AH ttlll flMI, M r-. ,.... tr Udllfltl'. Strry, IM ....... """" •' C.0.D, UH '"' Htmpflll Cllarwa, 11!11o;1mtr'lt:11'i1, Mt .. '"' a.-,.._ en/I ., -·-• MliN'I 111•1 TO 14.A-WIDTNI TO ... e '#OM•M'S lllal 4'i\TO It-WIDTHS TOAil TO C e CNLID•IN'I WIOTHI TO •• AND MORE OPEN FRIDAY NITE TILL 9:00 P.M. ARE MOVING TO 54 FASHION ISLAND .· open to residents In Southern Orange County. Anyone wish· in& lnformaUon may call f\1rs. 1 Clem"11, 837-4-067. .. _______ 1!11 _________ !111\ -----• •-------------..,.-------------------- / ,. ___ ......_ .. __ ,_ ._ ... _,,..._ -·· • . -~ -.-. ·rm,...,--.....,-• Tll11rsday, M11 14, 1970 D.\ll Y PILDT JS Pollution Talk Aired By Caltech Doctor The Tee Tattler FUN AHEAD -Nothing but enjoyment is ahead for members of the Costa ~esa Senior Citizens Club : with a full calendar and new officers. \Vaiting for ;the first event are new officers (left to right) Mrs. , May Buckland, president, and Mrs. Jean Maloney ; vice president. ' ' ! : !Seniors Pause A national authority In the study of air pollution will be the speaker at the meeting of UCI Town and Gown on Monday, May 18, in Mesa Commons. Members and prospective· members will welcome Dr. A .. J . Haagen-Sn)it of the Cali- fornia Institute of Technology at a coffee be- ginning at 10 a.m. Dr. Haagen-Smit, professor of bio-organic chemist'\' at Caltech since 1937, presenUy is chai!i"'an of !he Air Resources Board of Cali- f om~ .• Recently he was appointed by Presi- dent Nixon as chairman of a task force on air pollution. Dr. Hilda McCartney, outgoing president, will preside during the business session and Mrs. Roger W. Russell, nominating commit.- tee chairman, will present the new slate of officers. Year end reports by chairmen of com- mittees and interest groups will provide a pic- ture of the year's achievements. W. Ballen- tine Henley, provost of the UCI MedicaJ Col- lege will bring members up to date on the progress of th e medical school. Information? ' Club Answers Information regarding every sandwiches will be served. SIX DECADES TOGETHER Mr. and Mrs. Elvin McGavran • 60th: ·Anniversary McGavrans Honored adult club in Fountain Valley Cooperating with the club will be dispersed by members in sponsoring bridge night will Family and friends of Mr. traveled by horse and buggy of the Fountain Va 11 e y be the Parks and RecreeUon and Mrs. Elvin R .. McGavran to Seymour, Iowa fOf' their gathered. to fete them on their honeymoon trip, a 375-m.Ue Woman's Club Saturday and Department, and Mrs. Helen 60t.h wedding anniversary dur-journey which took 11 days. Sunday, May 16 and 17. Creed will be the dire<:tor. ing a dfuner in the home of McGavran, a retired Club members will man a Mrs. Creed also is teadling their daughter, Mrs. Dorothy railroader, worked tn the a five-week duplicate bridge G'rant of Costa Mesa. Milwaukee area during his table in the community center session now, and a beginner's Hosting the affair with Mrs. between IO a.m. and S p.m. course will start on July 9. Granl were ,. i d hle careerc 1:; · r r· Saturday and noon and s p.m. Brld 1 ..... e r aug rs, a uorn1ans or 1ve years, ge is schedu ed each Mrs: Hai:old Londean of Seat-the McGavrans lived in the Sunday in support of the city's Saturday at 8 p.m., and ad-tie and Miss Betty Jean Midwest for many years and Cultural Week. dltlonal information may be McGavran of Co,,ta Mesa and now are Newport Be a ch Functions of civic and 30Cial obtained by calling Mrs. their grandson, David Grant residents. groups, activities, times and Creed, 847-344S, or Mrs. Will of Costa. Mela. They enjoy traveling and locations of meetings will be Romine, the club's bridge Tbe .honorees were married have made trips to Denver, ~·u~s ~IJnmpsnn HA1• 1"um . 673-6961 RoVOr a Gldgot 3545 E. c .. 1t Hwy. Corona d_. Mar When Quality Counts BRICK or L'OREAL WAVE $15.00 Comploto ·'lor Cerem~ny With 1a new set of officers ~d a new year ahead, the .Costa Mesa Senior Citizens :Club is off for another round :or special activities. available for all interested chairman, 147-22S6. in AHnneaROlls, Kan., and Seattle ID!l other areu. residents. ,------------:-:-..::.._.:. _ _: ____ :::::_:::::_:....::::=-==:....::---------------=====~ A little theater group also is in the process of being formed, and anyone interested in joining will be invited to register for it. A clipboard for questions needing answers ~!so will be available, ac- cording to Mrs. Robert Curley, general chairman. : During installation ~eremonies in the Community Recreation Center the outgo- ing president, Mrs. Jessie Rider was presented a plaque by the Costa Mesa Recreation Department, sponsor of the group. Mrs. Wanda Wright, senior Citizens coordinator was in· atajling officer, and accepting ttie gavel was Mrs. May Bockland. , Other new officers are the Mmes. Jean Maloney, vice president; Winona Monshower Efni:I Josephine To g e r s o n 1 secretaries; Walter Griffin, historian ; George Grunwald, , Fantasy Flight hislDrian; Emma Ha 11, parliamentarian, and Wright, coordinator . Others are G. Sanders. treasurer, and Mrs. Walter Gri~fin and Grunwald, auditors. The senior citizens' calendar includes monthly symposjums featuring such. speakers as Councilman A." L. Pinkley, Mayor Robert· Wilson, police and fire department represen· latives and OCC personnel. Also, special activities are planned including tours, trips, performances, card tournaments, picnics, potlucks and birthday and anniversary celebrations. The group recently traveled . lo the Music Center for a special performance by Liberace and the Trinidad Tripoli Steel Band. The club will sponsor bridge night at 8 p.m. Saturday in the center. Regular com: petitive games for seasoned players and a novice section tournament will be scheduled. Men and women will be welcomed, and there is an admission charge of $1.50. No advance reservations a r e necessary and coffee and Delta Gammas Early Birds .·All Aboard for Ball Planning ahead will be Delta Gammas ol Santa Ana and Newport Harbor when they meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday, May 19, in the Villa Park home of Mrs. John Everett. At this time plans will be :Passenger service including Carol's Book Shop, Bushard's made for the an nu a I buffet dinner at 8:30 p.m. will Pharmacy and Mrs. Alan November Serendipity Bouti· fly members and guests of Ferguson. the Laguna Beach Ebel! Club'"F-""--------q~u~e~ . ..,..,..,..,..,..,..,,., into fantasy tomorrow even-11 ing, according to flight' direc- tor Mrs. Winfield Shiras. The group will gather in the Airporter Inn for C<ln- tjnental cuisine arranged by co-pilots Mrs. Aldon Clark and Mrs. James Agnew and danc. ing from 9 p.m. to I :30 a.m. ;Other members of the flight crew include the M me s. 8dward Nell. Howard Hinrichs, Gordon F o r b e s , Howard Wilson. W i I I i a m 'OK>mas. Donald K n a p p , Macauley Ropp, Jack Snipes, Lewis Gillette, Arn '/oungman, Gordon Oahlqulst, Jack Enfield , Jun Chino and Edmund Van Dusen. Proceeds will support Ebel! philanthropies including $3,000 1n scholarships for graduallng ieniors. : Additional patrons of the fliBht include the Mes.srs. and Mmes. Cecil de Wolfe, William E;adie, Frank Walter, Ray. ~ond Gill, Thomas H. Jones, James Ballantine, William Carey and Larry Hunt Texaco, Rene's, Arch Bay Liquors, Student Greeted Prasit Tongsavla, foreign exchange student f r o m Clllmbli, Thailand, will be the gu"est of Fountain V a 11 e y Jkyce<tes when they meet at I p.m. Monday, May 18, in the Huntington Beach home of Mrs. John Taggart. The exchange student at· tends Fountain Valley High School and Is residing wllh PARENTS HOW MANY TIMES HAYE YOU HEARD THIS EXPRESSION- .. , regret I did not continue t1klng pi•no lessons when I was a child." DON'T LET YOUR CHILDREN MAKE THE SAME MISTAKE! WALLICHS MUSIC CITY IS HERE TO SERVE YOU WITH - PIANO RENTALS AND A PIANO SCHOOL EXPERTLY STAFFED COME IN -INQUIRE ABOUT OUR SllllVICIS WallichsMusicCi1Y SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA 540-3165 1h< Robert Moss family. '"------------------JI I SANTAANA STORE CLOSING SALE FINAL DAYS 2/30FF.! (Shoes, furs priced as marked) Lalf days of sale'prior lo dosing the Sonta Ana store-your I ail opportunity lo buy fine fashions at much less !han costl;All sales fi;..,I. No mail, phone, C.O.D. Use your Haggarty'• Charge, Mas!er Cha,.g;;- BankAmericard, cash or check! NOTICE ·to Haggarty's FUR Customers ' . FINAL REDUCTIONS ON ALll FINE FURS FINAL DAYSI HAGGARTY'S SANTA ANA STORE CLOSING SALE. ONLY IJ 40 FASHION SQUARE --....,...,....-----------------------------------~ -~~----.... ----~-~-~~~_....,..._.....,..........._.,---'' ....,.-> • -•••• - J8 DAILY PILOT ThursdQ, May 14, 1970 Samples Could Be Ample If Sh-e Counts All Calories DEAR ANN LANDERS : Please tall rny fat litter that tasting counts. Sbe never wants any dessert -unUI it comes to the table. Then her fork is iw everybody'• plate. She only "'tastes" whi.~. kl' some strange reaaoa &he doelll't con&ider eating. l'\·e tried to aplaln that the calories don't know whether she tasted the cake or ate tt outright. She does t h e same with pie, let cream and candy. Another &tunt of hen is to take small helpings and tell everyone she is dleung. But \Yhti. 6he clears the table she eats whatever is left. Last night it was mashed potatoes, rolll, spinach ring, corn soufflei arid chocolate pie .. Jf people really want to lose weight why do they lie to themselves? \Vho ·. ANN LANDERS ~ I are they kidding? Corrip>«il, plaaae. - FATSO'S SKINNY SIST~ DEAR SKINNY: Tbe 0.U It wesk -and wbea tllere'1 I lOt of It. It's UIWl1ly weolter. Ealfq II ,.. ol Ille major pleasures of Ille. Jt11' oot eaq to pan up tempUnc foodt or qull a.Un& wltfta 7ou'n: 1dD baqr)t. I Your 1ister ls fflltttnc • loagh battle. Yeu could help H r by tbowhll a Ullle companion, Sklnay.• DEAR ANN LANDERS: I wu Jn. lrlgued by Ille letter from "Henry's Bad Girl." She WU the Ol'le who aald wUe spanking had kept, their marriage toeether. lier lather llled to spank her when she miBbebaved. He gave the hairbrus.h to hJJ m-~Jaw u a wedding present. She cloled ber lelter by HY.Ing after the spankinp they always Jn4de lo" and toraot what they were 0"111ac about. • YOW' answer waa a gem. You l&ld, ''The arrana;emtt1t llOUnClf ideal for a ,_ couple of nuts like you and Htnry. The rocks in )'OW' head mate~ the holes in hla." But I was disappolnted that you falled to ¥v• deeper into the pro- blem and acknowledge !he partn_ershlp between the sadist and the masochist. Your warning tllai she might change her 'tune when the spankings filmed into beatJng1J wu uncharacterist'jcally naiye. Let me 3S$Ul'e you, Ann Landers, she will enjoy ·the bealin1s just . .as the now enjoya the spantlqgs. A woman who feels the need to be punished (maSochtai) invariably finds a man who will ·cheerfully oblige (tadlll.) Pleise tell II Uke It hi. -P!Tl'SBURGHER DEAR PITJ': Thank• for putting • . little ·OeU oa my bony commenL 11 wa1, 11 yoa pointed oat, biadtqu1t.e. And now a word f.o wtmea wbt eajoy belag 1panked and men no enjoy 1pall~ tn1 tbem . I hope yoa kool1 flnd tach otber ud leave tbe baJuced people aloae. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I was fascinated by Ille letter '""" that self-pl· tying mother who said her only mistake was 0 caring too much and trying too hard. "I'm sure many parents who read thole lines iCentified with her. M('ques~oru are U!es~: Caring ~bout whom? Trying lo do what? Too ~any parents say they \Care -and they do. But they care atiout the wrong things -like "what will the neigbbon say?'' and , "how will It look?" Some kids don't want to go to college but tbey art pres.sured into goinc -tor ihe wrong reasons. As for "trying too ha.rd," many slllus- consclous, upper-middle-class parenll try too hard to mold their children into what THEY wanted to be, but couldD 't. Today's youth has different goals and differeyt valuts, and those differences are ~at create the Gap we've betn hearing so much about. -JUST ME DEAR JUST: Yoo make 1t111e. J buy It. When romantic glances turn to wann embraces is it Jove or chernlstry? Send for the booklet "Love or Sex and How to Tell the Difference," by Ann Landers. Enclose a Jong, stamped, self.addressed envelope and 35 cents in coin with your request ln care ol the DAILY PILOT. Ground Rules for Camping 'S ite_d' PR_OUD MOM :--~rs. Ramon Poitevin, an active member in Punch and Judy Guild , takes pnde in her daughters (left to right), Shelley and Terry Poitevin as they accept responsibilities as officers of the junior group, Chocettes. Chocettes Organized Volunteers Welcomed Under auspices or Puoch and Judy Guild of Costa Mesa, a teen volunteer group has been formed to augment services at Orange County alildren's Hospital. 'lbe primary purpose o[ both croups is to serve the hospital. Ok>c~ttes began with help- ing their mothers on hos pital projects which st.imulated an jn~est and desi re 10 do aomething on their own, so they organized last January. Heading the group as the fzrst president is Te r- ry Poitevin and assisting are her sister. Shelley Poitevin, secretary; Patt y Bono, treasurer. and Mindy Holmes, first vice president. These leaders were installed with the adult group duri ng a luncheon in )iesa Verde Country Club . Heading Puncti and Judy Artist Selected For Show Guild is Mrs. Robert C. Carsley, v Ice presidents; Thomas, arid serving with her Phillip Northcote and Thayle are the ftimes. Vaughn N. Taylor, secretaries, and Redding and Renton B, James M. Gorman, treasurer. Home in Europe Pair Married at Mass ti-laking the ir home i n Europe after honeymooning in ~1exico are Shaun Douglas Owls Opt For Music Burchell and the former Jan- ice Elaine Ludwig. The couple were married during a nuptial mass in St. Cecilia's Catholic Church. Parents or the newlyweds are Mr. and f\.lrs. Earl T. Ludwig of Tustin and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burchell of Costa Mesa. . A . musica l Jll'ogram will Miss Fran Farrell was maid J11ghl1ghl the meeting Sunday, of honor; Mias Donita Roberts May 17. of the Newport Night and MW Barbara Trapp al-Q.,.,·\s, Hoot 'n Holler Roost in the Senior Citizens Recrea· tended as bridesmaids. . The bridegroom asked Quen-t1on Cente r, Newport Beach. tin Burchell, his brother. to During the 2 p.m. program stand as best man. Ushers the Senior Citizens Choral were Garrick B u r c h e J I • Group wiU present a medley another brother and Gregory of songs with Mrs. Melvin Ludwig, the bride's brother. Johnson featured as soloist. 1be former Miss Ludwig Director of the choral group graduated from Tu stin High is t>.1rs. James Sawyer and School and currentl y is at. accompanist is Mrs. Florence ttndlng Orange Coast College ~lcGinilie. in the dental assisting pro-Ham Burk~ who Is C1ln• Refreshments will be atrVed gam sldered one of California's under the direction of Mrs. Th; bridegroom was a stu· tint abstractionists, will be Clarence Raines: from a iea dent at Corona del Mar Hie represented during the nei:t table decorated -in. colorful School and OCC Pre ti -ub1't In lhe Coffee Ganlen .. "'' · sen Y 111:.uu flowers. ls serving with the Army. By WILUAM LAFFLIUI NEW YORK (UPI} -Wann weather will Jure a record number of campers into parks and other campsites this spring and summer and some of them will be disappointed .if they fail ~ p~ in advance. Leaders Installed Past presidents wilt be horiored w h e n Huntington Beach Delta Beta Epsilon chapter of Beta Sigma Phi members and their husbands meet at a p.m. Saturday, May · 16, In Mt. C's, Long Beach. Following cocktails at 7 and dlnner at I p.m., Mrs. Kenneth Sutton, Mrs. Donald Shelton and Mn. Richard Shem>d will be Introduced. In charge or dlnner ar· rangemenU are the Mmes. DeniS Terwey, Tom Brannon. Keith Eckman and Dennis Huish. AddlUonal lnf'ormaUon may he obtained by calling Mrs. Brannon, 847-4MO. Eastern Star Laguna Beach Chapter, Order or Eastern Star will participate in a memorial service tomOTTOW night at a in the Masonic Temple . Worthy palron and matran, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Chris- tensen will preside. Hostess for the evening will be Mrs. Elgin ilurke. HAIR BEAT • HAIR COLOR HAIR STYLIST QUESTION : Wilt th1 h1irc•lo" b1 cliff1r111t for th• 1111'lm1r7 Mra. W, D. N..,_,,.._h ANIWll: Y1t, No, and m1y81 . A N1tlo111I Anot.. of H11lrcfr1t· ••'1 1•111 ut tltat ·mo1t tl1Uc1l1-ly, n11rly dowo ind ftwn ten11 will •lo willt t11fy 1fld b11H•r- c11p, 11 wlll doa •nd min~ brownt. w ; ... ,, wllo r •• 1 h111- b111d1 .. ,. 111c11111y, 1.11 UI No, my ll111b111d lov11 ll'IY blo11d1 heir, •. ow111 if it'1 9re•"• 1011'11· fill'l•1. Mo1t h1irdr•11•'1, 1ay m1yb1, d1p1ndin9 011 whit 1ll1d11 tll1y ht•• 011 h1,,d. M1y- b• p1l1 9r11n blo"tl11 will 90 011ti I lt•1r thty t•t .tirty f11t1 r • ....... if '"'' •• h•·· ,...,. '""' • , • or ll'ltylte b•c111111 Whicll 1xpl1ir11 why R1dh11d1, 8runolt•1 I M••it.1n1 111 111, b1· t.1u11 fh1v don't 1~ow it "'' m11c.h. 9 UHTION: How 4o yo11 11t rid 1r th1 ,, • .,,., c11t i11 th1 h1lr •ft•, th• 1will'lll'lln9 p•ol1 Mltl T. L. C....RI M• Gallery, Corona del Mar. ljii•-~;;;;oiiiO;;;;;;••;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-~;;;;;;;;;;••;;;..,;.ll Burkhard\, a native ofll ANSWll: lv1y ,.4 ,;n1• will Switzerland. Was raised In an CUSTOM MAD. E dr•D tt••n, cl•p•IHlint .,. ffi• orphanage in Basel. He came • 1h•d•. Try 10'"• l•ft o••r E11t•t to New York at the age of DR·APERIES L.b'a;.otor, •r the 111w SHAVE 20 When! be studied at Cooper Union. Ull OUJ: CONYINllNT IHOP AT HOMI Sl•Y1Ct MoVlftl to California In 1936, the nnisl taught al California H"""'"' c-I S-... ~ H~Jl IR ~· State College at Long Beach, ''2·6611 147 .. 141 p--_: C&U.fondl. UCLA, Otis Art wltll • 1tr1•r11t t1l.ctlo11 of hl9t. q111llty JMtilute, bguna Be a C: h low <••t f•b iit.1 f•r y•u to cho••• ftorr1. hOW> teaches at San Fernando lei -"phol1t1ry -tlipt.o••"· 7t PAJHION ISLAND Nolhlng can be disheartening aft.er day's journey than campsites filled. . more a long to find Families so caught generally go to mote]s, whlch may charge five times the rent of a campsite. The seasoned camper makes reservations ahead when such privileges are offered. There are several franchised cam· ping systems w.h!Ch have sites Workshop Eyes Art Six arUsts will present a workshop for members f!f the Affiliates of the Laguna Beach Art Gallery on Monday, May 18, at 1:30 p.m. ln the gallery .. F o 11 ow i n II refreshments pl1Med by Mrs. Walter Laraoii, Mrs. Hovey Coi:. presklent, will Introduce the craftsmen. Presenting displays a n d demonstratlon.s will be George CuMingham, (G'amics; and the Mmes. Gertrude Ploudre, seaweed and floral ar· rangemtnts; Ernestine Allerhand and Eunice An«>slk, creative flower arranging; Nita Kinnard, auemblaaes us- ing material fonns, and Tracy Moscaritolo, creaUve jewelry and small sculpture. acrou U>e country at in· expeni'·1e rates. Franklin S. RUey Jr., a New Yort public rel"ations counselor who moved his headquarters to Burlingame. took his family across the country with a tent camper and had a gre.at time. l\,lley, his wlfe and two daughters hid been taking short camping trips in the northern United States and parts of Canada for more than 10 years but their New York· to-California journey was their first long haul. He advises camper s, especially those who will be gaing out for the first time this year, to become familiar with their equipment so they will be able to strike camp quickly under all con<tilio~. "Make a check list .that you can check against for each trip, thus preventing leaving something behind," Riley said. "I started using a ro11· ventional list you find in cam· ping magaiioes and added to it each year and finall1 lest Silver Sands The first Tuesday of each month. al 8 p.m. members of Sliver Sands 286, Native Daughters of the Golden West 1ather for meetings. Lake Park Clubhouse in Huntington Bf'.ach is the meeting place. summer made my own. It contains 215 items from medicine to a popcorn po~ per." Riley said one of the first mistakes he made was taking too many clothes. "A good rule ··of thumb is to lay out oo a bed What you think you ought to take," Riley said. "Then, cut it In half. Believe it or not, this formula works perfectly." He said he made several ''dry runs" with his tent camper, a compact trailer that folds out at destinaUon and sleeps up to elght persons in some models. "We took several weekend trips to get acquainted wilh loading," Riley said. "We did the same with the tent when we tent<amped. ·· Here's a Faciql For Home Use Before setting out on their cross-country trip, the Riley Here's a facial you can give family had a conference ~to yourself at home! assign chores. First, cream cleanse the".=='======== skin to remove makeup and then use a makeup-removal brush to lift resldue from the skin. Next, lather a soft·bristle cleanser brusll for a soap-and· water wasJi. Then rinie and work cream in the skin with a massage tool. A mi.st can be used to help the cream penetrate or, before creaming, to flush the pores. Finally, close the pores with a chilled metal massager cold pack. COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY SERVICE e WIDDING e PASS'°ln • PORTRAITS e ALL IN NATURAL LIVING COLOI. 842-4212 7511 Clay, Suite 3, Huntington leach is week only! o0 off reg. price ~e Famous Stylist• zig-zag sewing machine by Singer in "Pacesetter"cabinet. SAVES35 Now 513995 ~~~ Sew Pradical! This machine dirns, mends. sews buttons and button- holes, blindstitches, too. Sew fancy! Doingappfique and embroidery is a cinch! This machine e'len does twin-needle stitchi'-' 0 SewsttraWJtorzllur· switch with a flick of YoUr finger, Get extr>widt ziig·zag stitches too! Sew any labric, from chi"on to leather, _____ with just the right _ stitch length. Usetht easy-tc>set control. NO\V!GETOURSfEELSHEARS ATA SHEER SfEAL! These are scissors ol the f inest --? quality steel, all lab-tested for perfect cotting. Styles for every sewing and household need. and they're a11 on sate at 25o/o less. Buttonholl tcluon. Notched blad e for eaty cutting, adjusts to 1 Y." bullonholc. Reg.$4.25 NOW '3.11 Ught Trimmers. Perfect for :;irks, light· weights. Reg, $3.50 NOW $2.12 Sewfng tcluot1. One pointed and one straight blade. for all general use. Reg. $3.75 NOW $2.11 Dre11maker lhtara. Bent ha ndles for aoeurats cutting without lilting fabric lrom cull ing surface, Rog. $5.25 NOW '3.94 AND MANY MORE • The SINGER I to36 Credit Plan is For theeeldr ess ol lhe stOfe nearest you. see ¥mite pages or phone book under SINGER COMl¥M". designed to fityiwr budget. SINGER lt?lati 11.tt11,fort~ 11ot S1 NG ER lodQ/• Uoivenity Qf SO u l her n A W1rJ1 d1t.or1lw wfll c•ll 11 yo11r lto'"• ' School or Art and Dtslgn Ind No 11bll9tflo11! Coll'lpl1t. , ••• , ... , •• ,.... I I Valley State College. !Ill i NIWPOllT CINTIJ: 1111 works may be viowed '44·2111 COSTA MESA COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH SANTA ANA GARDIN GROVE , from ll a.m. lo 3 p.m. starting H .... C:...tH HNer l'lft• Brl1tol I Su11ftow•r 21 00 Htibor llwd. Etl Monday, May 18. The exhibi1IJ.!!r~1~,-=l~~·~'.!l!!..i"~'='~'!•':"'~":_,!_~'~·'~":'':°':!:':'':'_.IJ~=~========~L~.'."'.~"~o;-'~'~"~'.'....--~~"~'~·~' ~"~'.'.'...---,;~~'~':;:~;-f~~~·~',•'..:•!::·'~"._ __ :}:0t·~·~··~··;·~-----'='.::1~1~'~' ~C~h~··~·~·;·~--WW Cloie June 25. & --. H••t. h«h S••f9 Alie Se11th Co11l Pl111 H,,c_ c,,,,, Kl 2·1•4S 5>0·'40IO 11.. H1111tifl9to11 l1115ft C111I•' JOI W. 4th St, Ora1191 Co11J1ty Pitt• ' -i; ~ -• .. . 1< •o. .. ,,,, "'''" • ! , I,•'•• t ••'"-f,l•.'I.' 'I '1 I . . ' .. .. · .. "" . . ·. ... . " . ....... . • p •• . ... - Thund•Y, Ml! 14, 1'170 DAIL V PI LOT J 7 Drug Informants Command Fantastic S alaries 2 .Teachers From Coast Plan Studies Two Orange Coast area high school teachers will hit the books this summer at a Na· lional S c i e n c e FoundaUon sponsored in sti tut e in mathematics scheduled at Cal Sla te Fullerton. John R. Dawdy, Marina High School, Huntington Beach and Gerald G. Noser, Newport Harbor High School teacher, wlll attend the Jl..week course along with 27 other Southern Calllornia teachers. The new program is In· tended for high s c h o o I teachers who wanl to further their professional careers, ac- eordlng to Dr. Russell V. Benson, associate professor or mathematics and director of I.he institute. The math course, which begins June 15, is supported by a $30,000 grant from the founda tion, according t o Benson. The course w a s designed for teachers with a baccalaurea te degree in math, and over a three-year period, wlU allow the instructors to earn a master's degree in maihemaUcs. Busted for Pot NEW YORK (UPI) - Micha el James Brody, htir to part of an oleomargarine fortune who once promised to give away $25 million, was arrested Monday on charges of possession of marijuana. ANTIQUE ANTICS .. H• 1l•p1 Ilk• • lttl'" Tony Tovatt Sez , . Y911 <I n 11.., tlllt I lllf tor I " IAlrl l!Ouf tr so .. th O.yl Tiii !'• •tiiwf llOW l!'llldl lllTll )'1'11'11 ''"' Wllll t lt llullMo wtllr!J90! 01'"'"°.,._ .,-frO"" TOVATT'S. A 1t ll-c: ... t1l"'1 rlllff fl'leflM 1111 IN!'I ,.....,l!\tlflt, 11th«. S.. 1M"' new t f TOVATT'l. TOVATI'S APPLIANCES 401 M•l1 St,. H11tl1tfh9 YHCll 1)6·7161 '"""'"' ' w ....... ........ ,.,..,. t62·24S6 ANO lUCll:T 49,C IONDED If IF LI. THE WAY P.C.S. PROFESSIONAL 1 STOP SERVICE CARPm & FLOOR CLEANING 492-2993 CAU. COLUCT WALL T• WALL FLOO lt Te CllLIH" GINIU L HOUSI CLU.NIN• COMllHI D IXPll llMCI FREE PICK -UP IN THI INDUSflY OYl l )0 YIAU PRJ:E ESTlMA TES & DELIVERY I ~~!!!~ .. ~~~5.!. .. ~:~:.._,. ___ $309 !~~!!~~.!.q~sT __ ~:~----......... $379 T-BONE STEAK $)33 Tlltl l lMOVID-UKIT INMIDll IU1 ••••••··•·••"•M• .. ,-.. ,• U , ~~.!!.~2~E~~ .. ~F. HA~ 68~ ~.~!!r!,.S~~~-~5.-....... ,-......... 33~ \~-' \ - ,,\•• LUCKY BACON SllCID :;-. , ,,.:.... . -~ I --'l""' .. "''· 69( Pl6. CHUCK RIB FARMER JOHN FRESH ROUND SUCED·BACON :;:: 79c fUUYCOOKID ROAST ROAST HAM FRYERS STEAK JWln. llOlllW., WIU09 (fl llflt•--75 c STANDING rvu ta•lt( llll' lAIGE lllD '=' 29c 79,~ 58~ llADl(Uf 4 7 C "°'" (tll(.llG C!JITR CUT 8 7 C lU<KY lUClT IOKDED llMOYID U.1.1.t.. LUC KT IONDED l flf lL HUNT'S PEACHES ~:':~u ............ 28' FRUIT COCKTAIL ~::i'll:~-~ ......... 23< SUPREMA RSP CHERRIES:!:'.:.29' STOKELY APPLESAUCE ~=~ ... -.21 ' FRUIT TR .. TS MOTI'S (4,lllrTIUI 35' ~ ?tOL(A11 .......... -... . GREEN GIANT PEAS ~l:l:~ ........ 27' STEWED TOMATOEsr::~~=~·~····22' FRENCHIES POTATOES!~·.~:~' .. 22' DEL MONTE SPINACH :::•:., ... _ .. 22' GERBER BABY FOOD !~~.~\~ ........ 9' GERBER BABY FOOD :::O:l ....... ..1 2' , .. ~&y~-...... BAKED BEANS .... l l-Ol. UN 33c MAXWELL HOUSE f1~:· ............. 83' MAXWEll HOUSE ~~::.1c.11._ ....... '1 '1 MAXWELL HOUSE ~:'::.'uw .... _ .... 12•• · YU BAN COFFEE :::~: .. 87' YUBAN COFFU1l:': ... '1" YUBAN COFFEE:!:~ ... '2" . COFFEE '°"'1r1•1•11r •1•· 110Llll •.•••.•• , •••• COFFEE ~~~.~.'-~~-~ ....... '11 COFFEE ll1JUH '111''11' '1' llOl.Jll ........ .,,, ... 4&y~--. SUNMAID RAISINS SllOllSS 6-1~ OL rXGS. 23c TODDLER MEALS :~·1~~:1·.~.~~.·~~.1.•.•.1 •• 23' POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL ~:.~ ......... 47' ~ PEANUTS~~'.~~:~~~.~-~~~-~ ....... 73' NALLEY'$ BEEF STEW :::'.: •. -.... 66' STARK I ST TUNA i~·:~ ......... _ ... 32' HEINZ KETCHUP ::: .................. 24' PEANUT BUTTER :~::.'. .............. 87' ... ~/&rt.--. CANDY BARS HOllYWOOD ASSORTMINT 6-Sc .... ,.,. 21c I Elf """" .ti Ultlf ... 4 &yt.---. ASSORTED DRINKS H•:z:sr 25c 41-0Z. CAN APPLE BUTTER ~:r~l:~ ............... 36c SNOWS CLAM CHOWDER :::~ .. 33' BLACK PEPPER :c:~·:;_~~.~~.~ ....... 43 ' Dill CHIPS ~~i~~~~~~.~~ ............ 45 ' PITIED OLIVES ~~'::~~l-~:.~~~~~~.~~~-' .. 38' CIDER VINEGAR ::•:: ................... 33' WHITE VINEGAR ::•:L .. , ............ ..1 9' ... ~&yt.--. SYRUP COUHTIY 64C KITCHIN 36-0Z. ITL ORANGE JUICE ::~r'~ ................ 47' lOHN'S PIZZA \~~~~:.~~~~.~~~ ....... 79 ' OHNSTON PIE SHEus:::~~·--36' • f lll11111 l llf 73' ,OLD KIST STEAK ""·""""'-.. . BEEF STEW :~;~·: .................... -... 361 FISHSTICKS !':l.1:::~.~ .................... 39c OCEAN PERCH ~:~';:':::~ ................ 63• TANGERINE JUICE :<:;~::~.'.' ....... 2S' LOW DISCOUNT PRICES CHIQUITA HAND BANANAS CINTtAl AMlllCA'S fUllSTQUAUfT U.S. NO. 1 GRAD( 1 RUSSn POTATOES Ii " 10 1!~0 54c •••••• ll, 10.DEO lllF ll. ... _.,.115 · STEW VEGETABlfS 1!:~: .......... 44' FRIED HALIBUT ::i•:,:~~.~ .......... 86' RICE PILAF f:~·i~:~~~.~~.~~ ............. 37' MEXICAN FOODS ::::~~ ......... 49' r1ur r.&cot '•n • c•n.1 11111111, 111 c1HU t\11111011 HOT SLICES f:~~~~~ .......... -....... 48c CREAM PIES ~:~;'.'~:~.~~-~~~~ ......... 27' VEGETABLES :'.~~:~~~-~~.~'.~~'.'.~'. ........ 30c CORN ON COB :m~:~~ ................. 45< EGGO WAFFLES ........................ 44' ... ~&y.t--... MAYONNAISE lUCICY 46C ll-OZ • "' ·:_:H PACfMQ._. . . DRY BEANS ~~~~~::.~~~.~~-~~~~~ ... 35c LIPTON TEA BAGs ................... 63 ' SUNSHINE FIG BARS .............. 42 ' NABIS€0 CRACKERS (l~'l'~: ...... 36' BREAD llAIVISf OAlffl lU 33' IOllllO ro,, 2411. IOAf ................ . SHREDDED WHEAT :i~~~t':: .... 32' ... 41k(t--... 5 ~ 'lMil a'! ftMlt'. ,~.ma.;Jr...,. WATER sonENu r.·i:'.::~· .......... 57' SAFEGUARD SOAP m':• ............. 20' IVORY SOAP:::T'~!~.~.~·~ .............. 28 < BOLD DETERGENT M '" .............. ' 1" DASH DmRGENTu ................ '2" IVORY llQUIDm1:~\t': ................ 82' PEST STRIP 1111111'0 Pllf S 1" 1-1ne o1.r•'··~--........ . CALO CAT FOOD •uu .............. 17' VETS DOG FOOD "",. ............... 8' MILKBONE BISCUIT ::::<: ......... 39' HI CLASS DOG FOOD rn.u o ....... 59' ITS f ~~~~!~.~.E~!.~~~~ ........ 23< ~.~~~~.B!!.~ ................. $J62 !2!~,Bll~D -•t.1n ......... $389 IA••l'-'>t. ot Mout \lfc~r l•t<"l 2,S£~~ ~AJ.~~,.~~!NE~S. .... 78< ~~.~!R~!~~~.~~~P.~~-79c ~~H:~.1!~!:,_ tt·H. nt---· $] 03 .,,+ !!2:s.~~!,~~!!I:!.~~. 4 9c r:!,11~~.~~J~S E .............. 5 9 c 1~!~.0~2'.~.~.f!~~i~~--·~· 39c !~!~~:~"~~!~,u ._ ........ -..... 73c DANDLA BEEF ...... 63< Ulftl~ tU1. t.H ,., # ... , .. ~~~s:.~.~:~~l•~-~-.~~~~~ .. 48 c .,,+ ~E,:S"2~~~~~~s·--· 83< ••• tho few 1tem1 li1ted on thi1 page COii• slil11to just o 1moll 1ompling of 1he tho_.. 1ond1 of low, di1covnt price1 i11 store lo' yo11 ot lu<k y. MARGARINE ~::~;.,ir.~ ................. _43• LADY LEE BUTTER ::·:~f.~'. ........ 79' SOUR CREAM ~~~~~.~~~ ......... 29• VIVA PAPER TOWELS "' ·, lDW DISCOUNT PRICE S ON llOUSEWAR fS £ RfAUTY AID S SCOTT 3oc 12 .. CT. l Oll KRAn PINNER l'::~::.~.~ ....... 37' CAKE MIXES ::':~;:!~'. ............... 35 ' INSTANT BREAKFAST:~\~~.'. .... 55' POP TARTS ::toti~: ••. _. .................. 46' ~-.. ~&tr! . CLAMA TO JUICE lOID MOTT'S 12-0l . IOTfll 39c HANOI-WRAP ~~~~~~ .............. 31' FLUSH A BYES ::~::.~:~'.~: .. -..... '1" DUPONT SPONGES w ............... 26' PLASTIC CUTLERY TRAYS D111M1 Jtlr lttJI 1ll•iul1 ckll!tf an• $J 27 ,1t l1ct •11tts I tl1tw111. rACl AGI OF 2: ~· .... ~&y! t ..:-JERIENS LOTION flll INlllllC ICtitl JI rtlltTt '''' 1r1t•111 •J1111 11r r••r 1tt111cl 111111 1t 111. OUILOW 99c IVllTDAT PllCl SCHICK 10's BAND CARTRIDGE lll G Slit DRY BAN .I 11trt 1t1tcti11 111i-JtUJir11t n11 •1rJt '''" 1r•1 ''ler 11f ,rn1111 111•11r11- aill( tftr, Ile If l1•1l. 79< OUl lDW (Vfll DAY r11cr SCORE T•1 char ••ir fr111i11 t••t •1111 •1lr 1t 1t Jll 1111111 l11kltf, Nt (ttll)' •1llf • ., wl1' SCOIE! 4~·0W11t1 fl~t. OUM OW 84( lVll l DAT r11cr BACtlNE '.::;•:,~· s,rar ti UCTUIC II rtlft'lt Jlil 1r •11u, il11't •itt1,.. •l11r ltforlts. Ult<tl'• SJ21 ltliffJtiC IClilt. COYER llRL MAKE·UP WHITE KING "D''otUtGlllT .L a < Ott tH1rl•lt llftl f'I llt tl•I t i ClllHf, ••or.101 ......... -.v. d11tr, 1111n c111f1r11.i11,1111. $ • WHITE KING SOAP .................. 69' ..,, .. ~'l~:f.':.~'i:::: )27 Fr1m t•e 111ak1rs 1f t11111s NOXEM~ C1•1r Slrl 111-1·•• ti· fers tbe s1m1 ~e1li91. 1111-11· IJflliC. ac.titl. C•111e fftlll I fill s111,ti111f 1b1-1s i1 ,, .. lir. liq1id " llbt. $J 39 tvr1tY011l low r11cr Shop Any Day-::. Save Every Doy ••. wi th Lucky Everyday Low Discount Prici ng! I ' --·t 11 ---------·-------.--------------------------------------1 • ' ' II IWLY PILOT Tflw.sd'Y, Mu 14, 1970 LllGAL NOllCE LEGAL NOTICE Ll!IGAL NOTICE UlGAL NOTICE Ll!IGAL NO'nCE LEGAL NOTICE .. ~ .. ~, ' i._ ' _.. I • ::r~ .. . ~. LEGAL NOllCE LEGAL NOTICE I.lit Mt6 NOTICI! TO CllEDITOllS SUP'EllOtt COUllT OF TNll STATI! OP CALIP'ORHIA l'Olt T'HE COUNTY 01' OllANGI ,. M•· A..U7S of ETHEL B, "Hlll lPS, • -13 .. I I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I I I I -------------. . . --. ,·--,, ---~--. •• ..... ..... -~+ ........... ,.,,,,,,11,. ' .... 1 ..• t ., .,.,., •••• , •• " . ' •• ! '•I . ·-· Th,,.i,y; Ml)' 14, 1970 DAILY PILOT ilJ· • .. Orange Coast Area Men · in Servic·e Around the W orldi~. I J• II. MW; -of tho former 11191 Diane M. Skelly ol 1111 SH.- Dr!,., Huntinglon Beach, 11 at~li\c the AYlaU.. OlfJcer <;andldale Scllool at the N1vat A'v!Mioo Scbooll CoounlJld, Naval Air StatJan, Peoucoll, FIL Marine Staff Sergeant Herbert N. Bellle, husband of the former Miss Marlon J . Whltaon of 1889 Monterey . Ave., Col1-. Mesa, is now strV· ing at 1bird Force Regiment, Okinawa. Marine Gunnery Sergeant !Wold J, PO)'BO, lwband of the fonntr Mias Je1n A. Jarvis of 20t Mou SL , Lqwia Beach, is serving with the Third Marine Division now in Okinawa. Navy Petty Officer First Class Plllllp A. Brick, husband of the former Ml.sa Darlene: R. SaHer ' of 16211 Howland Lane, Huntington B e a c h , returned to Long B e a c h aboard the amphibious usault ship USS Durham aller help- ing to transport Marine units a nd equipment from Vietnam to new duty usignments in the Pacific and the U.S. Navy Emlgn Peftt M. Luce, son of Mr. and Mn. Gerold G. Lance of 219 Geneva St., Huntington Beacb, completed t h e three-week CourBe at the Environmental Indoctrination School, Naval Aviation Schools Command, Pensacola, Fla. Airmu Rlc•ard H. Airman Michael A. Hall, son ol Mr. and Mrs. Joe J. Hall, 13302 RainlerClrcle , CUSHIONED SNEAKER . VALUE g;;.r:~~?~ 1 22 Tex .. ror trainlllg in aircraft 2 DAYS ONLY • maWeoance. Airman Hall " Li bl I d ml rlabl f · 'th • ~ SAVE NOW ON TRIM POLYESTER JAMAICA SHORTS 2 DAYS ONLY 297 r-1 Summery selecUon In easy-care polyester. Many '~·ith elastic ~et.on wal1 t· bands, trlmfit darts. Hit colors. 8-18. Jaedlcte, .son of F. H. Jaedicke of 15621 Monroe Ave., Midway CHy, has com· pleted basic training a t Lackland AFB, TeL He has been assigned to Chanute AFB, Ill., for training in the armament syltems f I el d . Airman JaecDcte Is a 1964 graduate ol Magnolia High School, Anaheim, and received an A.A. degree in 1989 from Fullerton JwUcr College. a 1969 graduate of g , COQ an co o e •.. avo r1tes WI women Westminster High School. and teens for casual wear. Sturdy cot~n duck ~th .,...,,.,. __ ,;.,...,,,;.. . ..,""' __ ,.,.. ____ .,.../l cushioned innerso les. White, black or navy. Sizes 41h "" Airman Parris L. Mun.Ion, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. 1tfoore, 1714 Labrador Drive, Costa Mesa, h a s graduated at Sheppard AFB, Tex., from the U.S. Alt Foret aircraft mechanics course. Jack D. Ptleet, san of Mrs. Army Specialist Five Ken· to 1(). ne&b S. Kaneback, 26, son of !iiijj~~~;;;j!ij] Mr. and Mrs. Sven Kaoeback, 189. Del Mar. Costa Mesa, received his second award of the Air Medal at Ft. Lewis, Wash. Airman Fred R. Kruger, son af Mrs. Claude G. Hooper, 8241 Terry Drive, Huntington Beach, has completed basic training at Lackland AFB, Tex. He is remaining at Lackland for training as a security poUceman. Airman Kruger is a 1968 graduate of Founlain Valley High School. His father, Major Arnold F. Krufer, resides at 4 I 8 2 ~~:n Place, Huntingtoo "CANDLE GLOW" OVENWARE Edward J. Anderson, son of I' JUNIOR BOYS SHORT SLUV( POLO SHIRTS 2 DAYS ONLY 'Fine quall(y all cotton shirts have reinforced. crew neck collar band. Choose from horizontal multi-striped styles and 110Uds as well. All \Vash- able in 3-7. Etbelyn I\. Polee~ l9IH Meyer Place, Costa Mesa, has been promoted to sergeant in the U.S. Air Fo.tee. Sergeant Poteet, a radar operator at Mount Laguna Air Forre Sta· tion, is serving wtth the 75lst Air Defense Group, a part of the Aerospace Defense Command which protects the U.S. against mstile aircrafl and missiles. U.S. Air Force Sergeant 5 7. "ea. Mr. and Mrs. Ervin J. 2 DAYS ONLY And~n, 19051 Wales Circle, Cook, serve, and store with Uiis attractive ovenware. ~~..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Westminster, has arrived for Cb f 1 d ]I L 1 · 1 'th lid 8 8" duty at Clark AB, Pbillipplnes. oose rom an r:.:·q .-size cassero es Wl s, x NaY)' Fireman Lawrence P. Wrtgh~ son of Mr. and Mr .. Harold W. Wright Jr. of 1261 Conway Ave., Costa Mesa, was graduated from the Elec· triclan.s Mate School at t..'1e Captain William S. Brad- ford, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Bradford of 725 Via Lido Sound, Newport Beach, is now on temporary duty at a forward base in the Western Pacifk:. Naval Training Center, San NayY Petty' Officer Sectlnd Diego. Class Gtort:e A. Tarner; son •••••••••••••••••••••• • • • : Comprehensive • • • everung programs • : toward degrees of • • • Bachelor of Science: • • • • Syst•111C1tic, dynamic lratn.ction ii oiven by on cutstond!ng • foclJlty of proctlclno JCit'ntim ol'ld englniMrs holding odvonc«I • dtlgrws '"'"' IDp u"iversitltl throughout ttM notiorl, • Mor. than 12,000 Nchnlciot'b, .nglnwrs ond odminlstro· • ten-both men ond <wOf•.,.,___.~ continued full.time employ. • ment whll• wortr.Jng toward th.Ir --ot W.at. Coost Uni· • • versity. • • • 1.S .... ,... lit -.111Mri1t1. d..,l'tM ....... .,,iw IMlfhe. • • ...iu, eM .,,11_. piyala. • • • • wcu 11 ooc19dhM by HM w.mn Htodatloft of Schoob • • ondCotlfOH,ondh~fot vmrons. • • • New term starting • • • • Ntw ulltltrtr•tl11at• clan•• b"lft Mty 21 at th• Or•119• Coul'I• • ty C.ftttr. For iftform•tlo11, c•lt 1714) 147°5712, f i t. 20, er fill • 8 eut a11tl ••ittl ift th1 c1upo1 btlow. • • • •••••••••••••••••••••• • : West Coast University : • • 550 So. M•;n St. P-20 • • o .. ngo, C.111. 92661 • • • ~•••• t•nd c•t•lo9 •ntl lftforni atio11 on mtl•rtratl11at1 "'"'''"· • • C Under;t!Xluot• progtom D &vcluote P'09'°'" a • • NAM•<--------------~ • • AllOR<<»~-------~----- • CllY IP·-----• • • •••••••••••••••••••••• HEAD & SHOULDERS 5-0Z. SHAMPOO CONTROLS DANDRUFF 2 DAYS ONLY 1.24 INSULA TEO 30·CUP AUTOMATIC PARTY PERCULATOR 2 DAYS ONLY 10.97 Keeps bcvei-ag~ hot or cold . Brews coftee automaUcally. It stays hot without added warm- ings. Avocado enamel finish. LlniH• QMllfltJ-4(-•If .. -i.t. 2 DAYS ONLY Just .. In time" for v&eallon! Save 36c on ihls ~dre: tllm for 1nalaht-1<>3d f&tneru. Gel 12, lharp 3,.x3n," co1or-orints . t.a111-ICtlllA-11.,, T .M. . ; . •; • .. . ' ·-· ' ~ . ... .. :..•' . . ·.: ' ,-. ... ... .. ~ ' . .. ;.. > " : ' " ' '" ... • "\ ,· . ;, " . " 44/45" FAMOUS-MILL: :,. SPORTSWEAR FABRIC'S:· 2 DAYS ONLl 47e,. Save 21c, on aprlng and-summer fabrics that are just~· in time for you to--sew the latest fashions. Includes co~ 1 · tOn poplins. oxfords, gabardines, plaids, wrinkle-resiS.: ! · tan! fabric.'. 2 to 10 yd. lengths. Use your K mart credit, card and s.ave. ..~·:, 4" ALL-PURPOSE NYLON-BRISnE PAINf BRUSH ·, ·. .. ... .-.' .·• 4 DAYS ONLY . ' 1~46 •'• .. . . - • I 4" pa.int bnah hu Upped w : nagged nylon brllUes to hql!f , more paint Allpurpoa;e, built:: ~luL :.: . . 12 ALL-PURPOSE HEAVY PLASTIC TRASH CAN LINERS .. , . ~~' ". ' . .. "' • • ~- 2 DAYS ONLY ... Fit 20-or JO.gal trash can.or.·: Ideal for leaves and au p.rde)I~. needs. 12 bags in a pacK wit&·-twist ties, • • Llnilf• Qu.tftlllt--f'I• .............. ,' . .. lk~ ~; I ' ' APPLIANCE DOLLY •a . ",.:, .... I . .. I .. , .... , ...... I." .. 1~27 2 DAYS ONLY I· • • • ... .. ' ;.: .·~ .,. t! ... . . . :.. ·.!Ny 1970 I -'"'• ·~ 1'84 Famous Brand Name Sofas To · Be Sacrificed Today •SPANISH• FRENCH• ITAllAN •CONTEMPORARY• EARLY AMERICAN QUILTS . • VECTRAS • HERCULONS • DAMASKS • MATELASSE • TWEEDS • BOUCLES • VELVETS That's right! 184 sofas and loveseats in every style and fabric you could desire for either livingroom or den ••. On sale for ONE DAY ONlY at substantial saviiigs to you. (Save up to 50o/o and even more •.• !) These solos and loveseats are brand new, some as-is, most ••• one or two of a kind • , • but certainly all phenomenal money saving ~lues! Our aisles are jammed with merchandise, to prove to you that at levitz .seeing is believing when it comes to sensational values , in brand name furniture! This sale must be first come ••• first served. Be here when our doors open of 10. Make time to come to levitz to satisfy your particular needs ••• you won't be disappointed! CHARGE /Tl CONVENIENT TERMS AVAILABLE setling Direct to the PtJblic FURNITURE WAREHOUSE & SHOWROOM Easy to ·Reach from Anywli1r1 . San Diego fr"""'°y At Beach OPEN DAILY 10 TO ~<d . LEVITZ WAREHOUSE & SHOW~6o~~~: y NOON TO 7 ""' to tho Hunlin•lon Sh ACH (BLVD,. Edinger An. • opp1ng tnltr • • -~--------------. -~ ~ """'!!llll!lllJll!l'l!!ll!ill!'!l'!!ml!"'!"~~~~!-.-~~~~'.'-"""'--:--:----:-:--:-::-:-------~_, _,,, .......... -·~······....... ........ ...... .. .. . ~ ..... ~ .................................. .... ' TllursdiJ, M11 14, 1~70 DAILY PILOT n ~efty' s Getting More ~han He Bargained F ot , ' FREGOSI IN THE Fl ELD • , • Angel short stop Jim Fregosi tags Boston's George Scott in a force play Wednesday nigbt at Anaheim Stadium. The Angels t.ge Openings Due " ,..;;n...,,.,..J, , Di11.iY d'1LoT ,,..... 11r-P•lrldl: O'Olw!e" , won. their third straight.decision. over-tbt Red Sox. 5-3, to bold a one-game lead1in.tbe AmeriCan.League West. O"lson May Go to Vegas \ ' H<is2Heavy Hitter~, Lea ds Divisio n? Wbon Harold"'Lofty" PfillllPI bocame manq<rofthe Callfonla A,.i. a year ap, he wanted a b!I ~. ADii lie •'"'lad a UUe cooleodbig learn. Not l!OIY did be aet ... bitter, bul he IOUlld be had anolller. AJ¥i aol only doea he haVe ;a tilJe .~. but the ~Is· ... 1eodill( the A........a '-"<Weal. Alex J~, acquired lrom the.C!J>. cinnati .Reds· in a winter trade, IDd first --· Jim · Spoocer rank l)lp In American League batting • far ~'8 the Angels Dirt wllh the lop l]lOI' In lhe· Wostitn Division. • Spencer's .366 averare ls second aoly to Luis Aparicio and . Alex ranks , third in the loop with .355. Nine tlma the Angeb have .-from bebind to win mf lour ot -ralllca have -• In the llnol lming. Phillips !ell be hid the ~ 1tar11n1 pitchen In Andy MeUti.mia., Tom Murplly, Clyde Wfilbt and Rudy May, 111 young. . He made a ' trade to tet iluthpiw Paul Doyle to help Km Tatum, Eddie Fbher and the «hen in the bullpen. Rootle hurlen Gt'eg Garrell and Wally Woll made the clu~. . And wantlq ltlll lllOl'e'hllllnc be "'*P- ped 1oocl lleldlqi Aurelio·~ along wllh Rick JWchardl to Wubinllon !or thlrd baseman Ken McMullen. Alter complellng a ..ies at Anaheim Stadium. earlier t:hll week, New YGrk Yankee manqer Ra)ph Hou.i commented pointedly. .,,.., Is lhe btJt Alge! tam o1 lhem au. Beilel' lhln the 'It tam that made a run at us. Better ~n the '67 team. '"nlis team has better pHchlng - frun lhe' -.n.rs •nd the bullpen - !ban any Angel team I've aeen and there is m comparilon in the offense.~ So• surprising has been the _, ol th' Angels that the All.star ballols m&de out during spring training dlln't even include Johnson and Spenceri ·it sore point wlth Angf.I fans at this point. Phillips says o( his squad, "1i)ey jUl!lt don't know ~·to quit. And, anather thing .J like about th.is team i! that ev~ry member thinks he is golnt • tp play a leading~ In vielory." ,.,: Angels Give Boso·x the DeviJ. Everything is heavenly -· the Catilonla Angels. but the _,.!l•d Sox are having the devil to pay. • For the third slraight nlibl Wedneed.ay, the Angeb emacted an excruciaU:nc victory at the ezpeose of the: Sox. ·Mooday nlght, the · Angels went 18 Innings to "in, Z..1. On Tuesday ~y scored ·four runa in the. bottom ot . tbe ninth to pull out a 6-5 triumph. WedneMay, they u.sed a bases loaded walk in the eighth inning as the catalyst for a 5-3 conquest over the sturmed Red Sox. Both clubs are llO"R seven for eight -the Angels (.'(l(ftlng that many wins and the Red Sox adding.up lolses. The triumph clo&ed a profitable 7·2 home stand for CalUornia Ind enabled it to mai!Min .a one-game lead oa ·tbe ' l\llnneaola Twins In !he American Le,ellUe Weol. 11>e An&els. alter an olf c!ay today, launch a.IQ.game road lrip Friday night at Oakland with Rudy May 1-1, duding Jim Hunter, W, of the Athlelic1. "Every night, it's something differtnt," marveled Aniel mana1er Lefty Phillips. ~Tonlpt it wu Alomar and Fregosi and Spencer Ind tomorrow it will be 10mebody else." For the sna:kt-bltten Red Sox; the bases-loaded walk to Jim Spencer was even more im~bable because Boston reliever Sparky· Lyle had an. 0-2 count working in his favor before he threw four strai&ht wide ones. Sandy Alomar, makhl1 a detll'mined nm for an AU-Star berth, hiked hil 1ver11e to .291 with 1 pair of sin&les . ' Sports In Brief and stole his 12th base of the yGir. Ills oecond hi!, a perleet bunf to Jll>e moupd, launched the winping Angel rally. SOSTO:., r • ,.a ~Lll'Oa~~r ft rW Sdlofltlcl, lb 1 I t AltnMlr, 1b ' I ,i. t 111.Smllll, ct J I t FrllQOll. u ' t ,.,\ 1 v .. ttHfl'ltltl. If '' 1 I ll'PN-rt J 1 .,.: t T .COfllt/ltn1, rf ' 2 2 A.JohnMlrl. II J I J. I Pttroulll. 11 ' 1 Jp111Cer, 111 l t ., 1 kott. lb :I I McMllllM'I. Jb • I t I Andrew., lb ) o Johnl)one, cf 4 1,. I • S.tri.no, c t t Eoen, c J I I I Moff$, c l 2 ~"''"'· -) ..... I Sltlbfrt, p 2 O C»yle', p 1 0. I • •• (11111lgll•ro. all I 0 IC..TllllO'I\. 11 I I .I I lllfllf, II I I Lyle. II t I II-. P 0 I Oft-rid, pl! I I TOl•i. :ti 1 TO!•ls • I "' 4 ... _ C.lltornlt E -S.lrl•no, ODii· D ,Ill-'"( 101 100 ftll -• l"•lr-«111. DP -C.11~1, 1, LOI• -... ton 4. C•lltor111t S. 11 -A. J-.,_, E114111. M-. Hll -T, c ... 1111i.ro t 111. &a -Alomllr. S -lltPU. 'I WP -Si.lier!. Tiiow -r.#. AfttnNIK• -.1& -t'. ' . Banks Ruins No-hitter;. ' •' . If Tarkanian Takes Job Laver, Emerson Breeze -, Appirenlly a major coadiing change ls afoOt in basketball with Jerry Tarka .. nian Ute feature perfOrmer and ex-M¥illl> !ligh boss Lute Olson.a member of ,,,., cast. · Blending rumor with some inside infa Jt appears that Tarkan.ian will hang up hil whistle at Cal State (Long Beactl) to take over duUes at the University cl Nevada (Las Vegas branch). And going along as one ol his aides would be Olson, who guided Long Beach Cilf College to a nmnerup finish in the state jayce• toumamenl last year ~previously making Marina a ~wer. Sources say Tarkani.an is being oUered Dodgers Battle ~iants Tonight \ After 6-5 Loss JX>S ANGE~ (AP) -When Housto• b~ted Los Angeles lefthander Claude <>*en Wednesday aight, winding up with a J.5 vic«ry; Dodger pilot Walter Alston oq~ed sometlµng or an understatement ~ he .said, "he'.s due for one or t~ once i• awhile." to& Angeles, which 1ports a mediocre 7-r Dodger Stadium record compared j Dodfflf" Slate Mi u . ~·.::: ~~!,!Mii ''H ~.m. -. 'l ~~ ..,. ~fl fr ·.-:f1a1 1: o.m. M-V 1 50'd;;,~,.,. :.afl Fr•11Clta1 '' 11.m. tol a 10-3 log on the· road, opens· a bii four-game series with arch-enemy s• Fra•ci&CO tonight. luaii M.arlcbalt 1-0, will pitch the odener for the Giants, opposing the Iiidgers' yGUng Serxiy Vance , 2-1. ~·far a.s Houston is CORCerned, he w•s long over~ue. psteen, Wha'd won three straight af~r :t:ng his first three games this . , took a string of seven consecutive vittories over the Astros into Wed· milday's series finale. What's more, all !leven were .complete game wins, dating ~ck ta 1968, so wbefl OSteen was removed in the seventh lt' was something or a triumph for Houston. 1'ActuiUy, the pitching wasn't up to par all the .way around," Alston added as the Dodgl?l'S gave up eight bits alld, worse yet, !Ix walks. 0 We had our <:hances but we just didn't iet the hita at the right Ume," Alston added, fuming a bit over the JO stranded base runners -six the IN! three looblgs HOUSTON LOS ANGllLl:S Hr •rM allr•rlll ~:Ill l l l!Wllll,u 1 111 J.A'°"'l'f S t••MOtt.t! 4111 ~.ct st •ll W.O.vls, d •2 7 I !·J>I~"' If I I I 1 W.P•rtl•r, lb S I f I I~• ff 1 I 0 t Gr•bMk'wlt1,ltlJ t 2 t fMM;f,11 1 I I• Jlfffl'IOrt, )II s I I I ~.lb )JJlMoOno," lOt ...,.--., 10 I 1 I l Cr•'#ford, rl I I I J '""'"""" c ) I I I Twtlllrl. c :I f 0 ' -~tw •• I 2 I I 0 IW t•, ' t • I O HlUl!ll', D11 I I t I O&IMrlt ' 2 I I O ~.p •t l l MMlltr,11 •••• J.Jl:rf, I I I f 0 L.,..._.,.. pt, I t 0 • .. _, p I • I • NOl"INl'l,P I I I I 5udrtla. Ol'I ' I I • Lel'l'!b,jl l fl f T•Ull M S It S IOll Jiil 010-' 000 JOO 111 -• everything but the grdss income from Caesar's Palace to take the job with the Rebels. Reportedly Tarka n i an wasn 't particularly sold on the idea of leaving the Long Beach iMtltutlon and when one ol. the Lu Vegas types called to make a pitch. Jerry ts said to have told him he didn't think they could meet all of hi! needs. "Try me," the caller was supposed to have said. So Tarkanian read off an ample list of desires. When he finished, the guy on tht OL•Ntt WHITS ------WHITE WASH ---------- other end said, "is that all? I haven't heard anything yet that can't be taken care of.'"' And if all that is tnie, there may be two ~ openings in Long Beacl1 in the neer future--one al Cal State and one •at Long Beach City C.Ollege. * * * A couple of newapaper1 drcula\IJl1 in Orange County upgraded UCI"1 buketbaU schedule by saying the An&ea&ers were meetlnc I.SU WI year. "ActuaUy, UC lnine meets I.SU or New Orkan~hk:lll is ta no way &. be confued wttll Ule main unlvenHy that Pete Maravlcb 1Uended Jn Baton Rouge. · * * * The Im U.S. amateur fipre skating cbamplonsbJps will be beld Jan. U.15 In Loar Beach and frem that meet wUI be seltcted the membtr1 of the United Slotes Olympic team which will vie at Sapporo, Japu. * * * Looks like J1ck Wlgmore wlJI be quar1trbackhl( Wasblngton S t ' I e Ulliver1lly'1 fecKbeR team th.la f11l follow- ing rtceat knee aarserJ. The former Mater Dei Hlgb 1tar wUI Olly throw Ute ball dWg spring prac- Uce, avoiding coatlct ud poslible lnjvry befort Ute rtptlr job b llea&ed properly. ... AND AT THE 0 PLATE -Fregosi ts safe on an error after bunt- ing in the eighth inning while catcher Gerald Moses and Umpire Jake O'Donnell watch the action. 'lbe Angels won their seventh decision in nine. games at the Big A. Today they're off before opening a key road trip. CHICAGO -Slender Gary O.ntry of the New York Mets pitched ni>-hit haR for 71/J inninp against the Chicago cutni: Wednetday and.then be decided to "take 1 chance" on· throwing a fast ball to Ernie Banko. The line drive sin&Je that the 39-year· old Banks slammld.to left field, bounced off the glove of outfielder Dave Marshall, wound up the ooly hit Gentry 1ave up in hurling the Meta to a .f.O triumph over the East-leading Cub1. "I know Banks likes to hit fast balls," explained Gentry after the 1ame. "But because the wind was blowing in, f took my cha.nee on throwing it inskle and low. H he doesn'I bil ii foocl, he pops it up -and if ~ does 1et a hold of It, it probably wouldn't get out of. the ballpark. "So I simply took my chances and let it go at that," said Gentry. • LAS VEGAS -From opering roond results, it aeem1 the rlcbest first place money in , tennis, $17,500, will go to an Australian. Three of them, Rod Laver, Tony Roche and Roy Emerson, each won their first· round matches Wednelday in the $50,000 Howard Hughes tennis champlonshlpi. Laver, usually a slow starter, defeated long-haired South African Ray Moore, 4 .. , 7-5, 6-2, ccmlng ·back to run Moore down. Pancho Segura fell, M. 6-3 to Roche and Emerson defeated Ron Holmberg, S-6, 4-6, 1-3. Ddendin1 d>amplon Pancho Gonzalez rallled to de!eat Torben Ulrich, M, 3-6, &-3. Cliff Drysdale fell to No. 4 seed, Andrea Cimino, 8-6, 8-2 and Ken Rosew1ll defeated Butch Buchholz, ~. &-<>. In today's featured singles match, Laver meets Fred Stotle, who ouUasted Dennis Ralston, M, 4-8, 7·5. • AMSTERDAM -Alpine skiing and ice hockey apparently won a reprieve Wednesday night from the lnternalion1l Olympic Committee after governing federations for the two sports, tainted by commercialism, pledged that rules would be rigidly 1dhered to· fGr the 1976 Games. Lord Michael Klllanin, an IOC vice president, told newsmen after 1an emergency meeUng with the Interna- tional Ski Federation that the proeram for the 1972 Winter Games at Sappora, Pae-8.Spike Showdown·Opens lit U(;LA LOS ANGELES (AP I -By past perfonnanc!s, the Pacific a track Ind field champlonsh.lps this weekend at UCLA are the toughest conference com· peUUons in the United Slates. I• every event, a world class athle~ gets a challenge from anothC'r world class athlete. Trials bl most eventl and finals In four open the scl\edule Friday. On Satur- day the meet will conclude with a spec-. tac)e few track meet.s can match. World recordt in at least two eventt are threatened and the meet record In all might be surpassed. The top co mpetitive race might be the 440 relay. UCLA, the favorite, has run 39.6 seconds this year wilh Southern CalUornia having a 39.8 mark, California a 39.9 and OregoR Stile a 40.S. UCLA.11 fast Tartan surface track ha! been the site of a l)Umbtr of fine sprint Umes thl1 year Including the world 's fMtest 440 for 1970 . Bruin Wayne Collelt, a junior, ran 45.I there two wetks ago without com· petition and teammate John Smith did 46. l there. Also recorded on the swift UCLA surface were three 9.4 Umes h1 the 100 and a 20.$ mark In U)f: 220, which is on~ cf the but marb in the world this year. Friday's only running event final 11 the 3,000·meter steeplechase, whlch pita the favorites, Jim. John!on ol Washington and Tom Gorman of OregoR, against a hoot ol runnen with polenUol. Gorman and Johnson have run 8:51.1 lh lii year with Oregon'• Steve Savage back at 8:$9.9 and USC'1 Curtis Jones at 9:01.0. Oregon and UCLA are es:pected to fight down to Sal.utday's filal event fGr the team Utle ii this 11th Pie ... champlonahip meet ana Oreaan musl acore well in the oleeplechale and lhe other Jone distance rlCOI !or the pucks to hive a chance agalnat UCLA'1 aprlnl corps .. Oregon'• ootltandlng freshman Steve Pre£ontaloe will be the favorite In the mile and tbrte·mlle and Oreaon'1 Roacoe Divine hopes to pick up pointl in the baU mile. Japan, would remain as it was previously set up. That means Alpine skiin1 and ~ hockey will be included. • lNDlANAPOLIS Denis Hulme d New Zealand, wboee bands were burned badly Tu~ay In an acc:klent at tht Indianapolis Motor Speedway, s a Id Wednesday be understood he would be hospitalized here 1mtil Wednesd1y or Thursday ol next week. .: · Or. 11lomas Hanna, Speedway mediCal staff chief"' said a bums specialist in- dicated it was "highly unlikely" J.1¥t Hulme w o u I d be able to alteJrii>t qualification for the 54th 500-mile t_ace May 30. Triab open Saturday and ind May 24. "I am not sure whdher I will be able to drive," Hulme said. The former world champion said he was not in severe pain . "It's much like a bad sunburn:• Players Reject Contract Offer; Cite Gripes ,,. NEW YORK !AP) -Jot.n Gaberin, attorney for the -major league club owners, say1 his 1roup is expected to meel wlill the Major !.ea1Ue Bo-0 Players As!OClation before the end ·ot this week in an effort to resolve contract dU:agreements. Gaherin spoke up after Marvin Miller, dlrector of the Players Association, an- nounced Wednesday that the players ¥ overwhelmingly voted to reject a lfo- posed. three-year contract. 1 At the same time, Miller said fils group has asked for a meeting with the club . owners to resolve differences of the ger,eral contract which bad expired May 5 after belrlg e:dended from Diec. 31. • •. Miller said all 24 major league teams, except the Philadelphia Phillies, vatcd against the owners' proposal by a 505-89 margin. Miller pointed out that the big dif· ferences were the 162-game 9Chedille, which the players want sbortened, disagreeriient about 1he players share· of the playoff 1ate and dissatisfaction wltli tennlnaUon pay. "1be sincere feeling that the freeze (the over8 1ong frantic schedule of 162 games fOf" three years) is not In Che best interesl.4 of baseball, the fans, tho owner1 or the players," Miller said. '''nle lack of equity in the owou!' proposal to take the lion's share ot the new revenue ,generated by adGirig at.ill more 1ames to the schedule ln the form of divisional playo(f series. "ThiJ departure from lbe tradltiorial: arrangement whereby the Workl Seriell revmue has been lharod wllh the playeta II considered lneqilltablc." Mllier's statemtnl m&Kle nG menµon of 1 on«tay butbaD moratorium oa 1 Saturday when the Game of lbt Weet ii n1tic.1ally tel~vised, as tome pl.,,.. repteMataUves ha ve hinted. • ... ":""' ' ... . ,. .. ._..,..,._., .-·.•. ,·,-. • ." · -. :o.·.~.. •· -. , -,.,--. .-•.• -, _::; '"7. -.... -•• ; •• --0--:;-~ .• ;--;.7;:-· -~., .• .-::-~ •• r..;:-~~;::-:r--;--:--;;:;;-::-;-~.,.,..,"":r.'l""'"r.'':T.~~m"'~'"'l.-:-"""""'"'"'.,...,..,,...,...,...,.,..,......,..,_,.._,....,_..,.,. ___________ _ ' . --··-.-·· ·~ .. , .... , ..... .,,, .... , .. ~"'""·~·'"·""'"'"'"' .~. ·:it DAIL V ,ILOT ' IJCI; Pirate Oarsme11 ,Jn Classic I • UC Irvine hi a darkhorse cont.ender • f°'1 tbe championship of the Western ~Uegl1te Rowillg Championships va?sity race whilt Orange Coast Ccllege i! a prime favorite in the junior vanity "'ud freshman races. r ·Action will take place Friday and 1 Saturday at Long Beach Marine Stadium wjJll the first lreshm~ heat stai:t~ng , •\ I a.m. Junior vamty competition ··~ al 10:30 arid tht varsity action '·At'Uoon. : •Orange Coast and UCI are 11 tht t'fit!if: race down the Marine channel for iruhman eights. UCLA, Stanford and 1 St. Mary's are also entered in the first :·ffeibmu heat race. " .UCI and Orange Coast draw the same >w~ in the juaior varsity competition. They will face Ortgon and UC Santa Birbara as well in the second heat. Irvine's varsity crew was placed in -first heat race against four teams already defeated and a nfth that fopped by others irl the ract . .JJ>e AAteater shell will go again st ord/ UC Santa Barbara, Loyola, f ·:();ego State and St. Mary 's. SoCal JC ShowdQwn 4 Area Trackmei;i Survive Prelims . Only lour Orllll• CoMI .... a com· peUtors • _the.... 'lllelcloy'1 raged prol!mlnOtY competition at Bakenlleld Collect to' qualily !or 5aturday'1 state Junior college tract 1111<1 fleJd llllala at the aamesllo. Saturday's lield events boCln at g,30 p.m. with running eveota llated for an hour late!'. Saddleback hllf-mller Bob Stevtnt WIS the only aru athieto to prner a top spot In hll heal. 1be detennmed Gaucho breeif.d to a 1,53.1 triumph In hll heat Of the 88D for the fourth but mark among the quaWlera. Golden West provided the area with two -qUIW1en in /he other dillance r1ee1. lloui Scbmtnk turned in• ,,zi.o clock· inl • to pull in • mth place in hil heat 1111<1 • •pol in. /he 1Jna]1. Scbment'1 teammate Tuey McKean Wll Dftb in h1a two mile heat in l :Z8.f1 a ,.,... u '-behind Balcenlleld's Rlck l1ltdlcock. HJtchcock captured the heat in ''"·' llftu tyinl lot llnl In his mile beat wllh p.,.c1ena·1 Charles Rosner in ,,11.0. Golden W"1'1 Phil A&e, a product ol Fountain Valley HI g h, lipped to a third In hll DI heat In 21.L In addition to the Hllchcocl"Rooner dead heat in the mUe, Groumont's Armando Valencia and Maury Greer of Long Beach slunned /he crowd In lhe other mile heat by tying 1t the tape 1n ,,1s.a. 100 09' llMtl -1. MeUtflllll tLl l t.I I. Wllf.. rloftt (Ollf) f,f l. ltwtetl (A111 VII.) Ue (tNll hMtl -t. Glllltnl llLAI t.I 1. Dtvlt (C-1 It.I t. wtllt\iw flllil IU. 100 (lnll t'llll) -I. Oldl1r• 11,,AC:C:I t.t l. ~ !MCI 10.0 ;i.. Wiii~ llNJ 10.•. I Diversity of Washington and UCLA the heavy favorites in the vartity co peUtion. Washington is in the second r he race with Oregon State, Califoraia, ! US and Western Washington. Former Orange Coast area grid performers now at the University of Hawaii are (top photo, from left ) former Fountain Valley lineman Dave Graven and ex·Huntington flanker Roger Parkman, with offen· sive line coach Cal l\!urpby. And (bottom photo) a tno of ex·OCC gr1dders, Ed Foote, Ramon Ricardo and Jim Barsuk. Keck to Seek Third Straight Bowling Title Defending cbamplon Lamu Keck of ae..da will ileel< bis lhlrd straight UUe when the 10th annual West COut Match Game -ling ellmlnaU... -Monday, May 25, at Kona Lanu in Costa Meaa at 9 p.m. 220 (19' J1t11) -I, Wll«lcl9ll la..fl D.4 t. Hlck1 (S .. J tt.• S. ..... tGWl D .I. 2211 (hi llNtl -I, Olllllnll (ILAI tJ,j 1. D1vl1 (C-1 2\.1 .1. WMlltV 111111 fl.I. DO !Int lwtt) -I. Dtclttnl (LACCJ 21.1 t. Joiv.n (M() 21.4 l. Alllrlll11 (ltl¥1 n.o. Tbe..BrWna will face Cal State (Long . Beach), University of British Columbia, :~and Santi Clara . r ,. , _ rs in Friday's heat raceg qualify : UcaDy for Saturday's six-boat :f while the seco1d and third place t l~slwlll have to row in the afternoon ·rt bage (second chance) heat to get ;. ack at the title.. I . e:rtrt e:zertion ol a tough second T down the. 2,~me'ter (1% miles) Olympic coirse might mean the dif· ·fl)Rllce ol wiMing or losillg the cham· )>UM.ip race. the ne:zt day, according :to'1'X:c coach Dave Grant. · ~$he first threl fiflishers in the t eptcbage race will jbin the three heat ~ in Saturday's fmals. The other .,nm will jol• fourth place finishers i°lt'Oeat races in the. petit finaJ Saturday. ~rant looks for freshman times in Friday's competition to be close to or better than varsity race clockings. Wt ts much tougher to race later tn the day because of the wind and the earlier races that churn up the watu," Grant says. "You have to bt much stronger lo pull an oar u n d e r these circwnstances." \Vashlngton is the defending champion h1 the Western sprints in which the winner gel!! lht Coveted Ky Ebrighl Cup. The Cup i! given bl hottor of the former California coach, who was also an oarsman al lhe University or Wuhington. Orange Coast will also enter a boat In the varsity fours race, which will bt interspersed betweeA the races for the, eJ1h t·man shells. No time or beat schedules have been released for these extra races for smaller shells i• the 1ingles, doubles and fours classes. YAll:llTY •t01IT1 tltfff •IMI lMI A..Stlllllfllt.J HEAT 1. -I, SIAl!forf, 2 SI Mt r'l"t. 1 UC S."lt l•rNrt, 4, Loyolt~ s: UC irvlM ; '· s." DI-$1111'. HEAT 2 -l Otegon Stilt 2. c.marnla, l. u se, 1. W11hlM ion. s. w""",; W•JfllMlon. HEAT l -1. Ctl Stitt !Lone lt1(11), ~-s~~,. lc•~;~ Calumb(1, J. UCLA, '· 0•-· JUNIOll VAll:SITY •IOMTS 14E AT 1 -!. Orevon Stitt, 2. W•ll'llritlon, ! UK. '· Ct l Sti re !~ BtM:lll. S. U. lrl!l1h Columb!I; HEAT J -I. or-. 1. Or1nJP Cot1I, 3. UC iall1t ltrtM .. , '· UC Irv! .... HEAT ~. Ucl:... Lovol1, 2. S.n DI-Sll!t. J. C1lltornle. Pl.IH"""M EIGNTS HEAT l -. 1. UCLA, 2. UC lrYI M, 3 jltllford '· O•• ..... eca11, 5. SI. Ml •Y'I. HE0A 2 ...: 1. UK. 2. UC !'" Dleta, l . C!I Sltlt (L-llttdl), •, WtMI ntfon. /· UC 1n11 llfbtr1. MEAT 3 -I. l1n11 l1r1, 1. Ct!llornl1, J 0rf'9o", '· LOVOlt . . Swimmers Honored Pirate of the year honors were ac· corded Orange Coast College'a Chris GamlTIQn at \Vednesday night's awards banquet ror the OCC swim team in the student center. Bruce Johnston and Andy Erickson were selected co-captains. Anteaters Hit Imposing .295 Team Average UC lrvjne has raised its team batting average from a modest .257i mark after 1% games to a mammoth .215 average after 43 outings witb three tilts remaining on the regular season slate. The Anteater team record is 31-1(}.2 for the season and since the Allaheim tournament the.mark is 18-3-1. In the last six games, the A11teaters ha ve made 76 base hits to bring the mark rrom .284 to the present level. Foremost individual improvement ha1 been by Tom Spence and Mike Sheline. Each has had a 1tri1g of six consecutive tcips to the plate with a bast hit e.acb Ume. Spence, in addition to moving his bat· tiag average up to .329, is the team leader In RBI (42 ), doubles (15) and home runs (4). In five games, Sheline has improved from .174 to .244 With the aid or seVen hits.in his last eight plate appearances. Rocky Craig continues lo lead the way i• hitUng among the regu1ars with a .313 average. He bas the most base hits (54.) and triples (5). He is also ·1eC<1nd to Speice in RBI, ho mers and doubles. UCI l"IT(HINO 15COIDI tU 01111•) Farr1• Wonos Hldwif90<I WltlJllr .... 81r1aw ""-Tl>ft ll '''' w I IJ r JI If" 1111 N .,, o o O o 1.0 O O O I ?0.00 ll I 12 1 IU.2 37 10. ~ 14 10 2.11 lJ It 21Dl.2 40 " JO 1' ,,, ... 1 I J I 2'.2 U 2• 11 II 2t l.• 1 1 I I 11.1 10 II 7 . J ll l .JI ' 5 J ~ '3.1 ., '-' );I 3' J7 5.01 I 0 I I ?oll 17 l2 17 J 14 •.• ~ n 31 10 111.0 IN :Ml U1 n1 :UI J.17 UCI •ATTINO AVERAOEJ Ill 01m"J M.Pl1u~rd O.Nk l'.ollCHI 11:.Cfl lg T.SPlfK• D.M•ftMft IA.S"f'l<Ofl l .1'1rr1r 11,h,_ l .WttJlt r C.$P1n1k! J .Greenwty M.5.lltllnt M.$11kt J .Andtrion D.Wotlot T.Docld T.O'Coronor J .lltkff T1ttl1 I Ill r II 2b Allr ,.11v1. 21 J] ' 17 ) 0 0 12 .•lf 2JJtl5 2l5 0211 .•11 41 1'1 "' ~ s J J 31 .:Ml .01" If '911 I I .Q .nt 401'1 ~S 45 •D I M .~ 41 14 Ill 4 • J I 1• .301 •J H4""4•2 1 1J .1't 11 lJl tlO O l .71l fU2 •00 02.2U 1t ll11 16 10111 .25-I 3' 111 21 21 I I 1 1J .252 21 "7 Jl l 7 0 I0.2U Jtl:U 21 l l s I 2 1'.llJ 21 IS 10 17 • 1 0 U .111 Jl .O ll l OG J .:IOO 1110 l 1 001 1 .:IOO ll t D I f 0 0 I .Ill JJ tOOOt•.000 •• UtJ V• '11 61 U U 112 .:rtJ Major League Standings NA TI ON AL LEAGUE Chicago New York Pittsburgh St. Louil Philadelphia Mootreal Cincinnati Atlanta Dodgen Ea1t Dfvlslon W L 16 13 16 16 15 17 13 15 13 19 to 20 West OlvJalon 24 9 18 13 17 14 17 17 16 17 San Francisco Howton San Dleeo 15 20 • ........,. ..... 11. MlfllrH I f, 1"1111Ht '"111 ' Hew T-' I., O!k.itil I l"llllWrtifl S, SI. i....,11 I MMllMft '· ON..-. s Sift Pr.,,dllOI J, '°"" D .... I ORN-.. ,,,.. ..... lllld. T...,.10- Pct. .~ .500 .... .... .~ .333 .m .58/ .5<8 . .500 .485 .'29 GB ' 6 7'1 a to ~ltttl Cltlllkt 141 11 Phll9d~IDftl1 (l'fl'mlfl , ... ,. """" MIW Tl'rll (Kootm1" 1•11 11 Cllic-IJIM.1111 '·JI P~ 1•tt1t WI 11 $!, Ltiloll (C11l.,..r ,.,,, .... Slifl Fr.ntllct 4Mtrichll 1.f) 1t °""""" (VlfKI ... ,. lllWlt ~ (OltrtlH .. 21 .. kfl oi... CKI,., N), .... °""' ""* ldldlllttt. AMERICAN LEAGUE Baltimore Detroit New York Bolton Wuhlni\On Cleveland An tels !\1innesota Oakland Chicago Kansas City Alllwaukee Eut DlviJlon W L 22 9 '15 14 17 16 14 16 13 18 10 17 West Dlvl1loa 21 10 19 10 16 16 13 17 II 18 11 21 Pct. .710 . 517 .515 .4"7 .419 .370 .177 .655 .500 .433 .1111 .30 WMl"""t ''I llM411h M~t1 J, l 11t'llnort <I, 10 lfl"I'''" ......... 1. ....... i /.AllW11o$'1 a, NMI YMI: 1 Olkltllll , W19flll!tl"°" 1 IC1Mll ()tr I, (""'l•Nll f, II l1111lnet Clll11" .i Dlll'tlt, ,•In TllOll1r'1 01-1 1(1nw1 (II\' !Jlfln-1.01 II MlllMIOll l.O), .... ~, O!ll'I ·-~ltd. ,.,....,,. ..... A-1\. et 0..1 ..... """' M~• Ill MltwM ... fl191'tf KtnMS Ctf'f' t i (Ilic.to, ftllf\I 111111"'0'"1 tt Wttfl""'°", """' Dlttoll tt M1w Ttrll, nlt llf CltV4illnd ti ta.111'1. lllrftit DEAN L·EWIS GB • 6 7\1 9 10 1 '"I 7'h 9 to!I lfl11!1 1t6' HAllOR ILYD., COSTA MESA 646·9303 ' s.r-.lce and P'1rt1 f..-All '"'"""" Cart Modern llody Shop t.r All Cars Orange County'• Largest and MosL Modern Toyota and Volvo Dealer Rebel Boss Set For All-star Tiff Phil Winkler C6 Garden Grove High School ha, been selected to guide the South ttam in the third annual North- South Orange County baseball game. Winkler, wbo guided his Argonaut.I to the Ganlen Grove League. cham- pionstUp, is erpected to announce· his assistant shortly -probably Tom Trager of. Corona del Mar. The all-star affair ts stt ror Jime 18 at La Palma Stadium in Anaheim. DEANLIWIS MAY SPICIAU I T~OllYIO~ TlrA![ COROLLA 1970 $1853 + l•• I l ie. All Othr MMef1 11 StMk Me!'ll l~ll•• PIQ.,,_ Lfftl Cn1ken-C- VOLVO 1970 DEMO SAVE $570 t•l J ••·· 11die, ht•f1r, •·•Pttd. IS1r. ••1•01 USID CAI SPICIAL 1t't TOYOTA c.,.... H.T. CIN, JIMle. llllltw, "Mllld. i.l'Mll\I to11. OIDK .WJ $1495 The: 14--Mooday ni,rbt scramble featw'es 120 of the Southland's finest. performers. Each entrant will roll four games each Monday. After 28 games the field is cut to 60, then to 16 followin1 36 games. The eventual champion will take on winners from ellmlnations in San Fran- cisco, San Diego and Sacramento. The Western Stat.es championship roll-off will · be held over Labor Day weekend. A strong Orange County contingent will be headed by Anaheim's Bob Ramirez, the. onJy other mM to win the tourney twice (1951 and '64). For the first time in the history or the Costa Mesa tourney, all IS finalis ts Crom the preceding year will be in the opening lineup. Bowlers Will hail from as far as Santa Susana, Newberry Park and CamaMllo as well as large representations from Riverside, San Bernardino, Los Angeles, Gardena, etc. Orange Coast area entries include: Larry Schoenfelder (Costa Mesa), Dick Braasch (Westminster), Bob Probert (Huntington Btacb), Jan R. Fishburn (Fountain Valley ), Larry Ke 11 er (Westminster), Fred Rlccilli (Westminslel'), Bud Rose (Huntington Beach ), Fred Bernal (Costa Mesa ). Jerry Brennan (Westminster), Ken Dale.Iden (Fountain Valley), Jim Koen- ings (Fountain Valley ), Nick Stigailo (Costa Mesa ), Ray McKean (Huntington Beach), Gino Panzarella (Wesbninster), Ted Schwartz (Huntington Beach), Roy Wilson (Costa ldesa), Glen Quinliven (Huntington Beach). '«I (UI tlltl) -I. WlrDY IL8) 'f,I l. 11\ll't (l>ro•ll a .• J. GtdOa (l"ler) 4.1. 4'0 !7nd 111 .. 1 -I. Rico IMSAC:) 4 .1 l. Mldttnllll ILA'CC) _.,_. ), TtltiNY fl"ilr) ... I. '«I lW fllll) -1, Hll'I ll"llrl 4 .1 t. Cl,11~ CID) "·' S. TllCktr (IV) "·'--{19' tlltll -1. or-IV•11 1:!ll.J l. Oilsarft fl"H) l:U .I t. L1rllln (Pt tJ !:Sol.I, U0 121Mf IMtll -I. Sanc:l'ltJ. I~) 1:5:11.1 2. Morlol'I !l"ltrl l :U.7 3. llJflul; (P111) l :Jl.I. 1111 Uni Mill -1. St-nt 1"441tMO:l l:U .I t. All!t.Wrt IS ltl"ll) l1J.4.l J. lvnc~ !SM) l :ll.O. Mitt (Ill 11111) -1. Tit bttMtn Hl!thCOCi. (ltkl •llCI ROlfllf (P11) •:11.0 l. All"ll ISA.l •:17.I .C. M•rllntr (MKI) ,:11.• J. Ditz (lASW) ''"·' '· Sc:l>rNI* (GWI 4:1l.O. Miit C2ncl ht1ll -I. Tit bf-fl Vllll\Cll (GtOI) tnol Gl'ftr !Lii •:U.I l. ~ !MU.Cl 4:1'.4 l. l lltlleV fEl C1ml 4111.t j . lotf'MI ICtrf) •:11.J '-1(-!Gltnl 4:11.1. T-mli. Utt 1M11l -1. Hltdlcedl lltkl t:?•·• !. Fitter (Fun t:fl.7 l. G«ry IMOorl t:l l.7 '· Cll- man !Oltf!) t :27.4 J. McK.-. (GW) 1:21.f " EY41"' (P1sl 1:'2.0. Two m!ll (2nd htll) -1. lurf'ltll !VIII t :11.f I. LIPslll !SA) t:16.t J. Colberl (VIII 1:11.t l. Grtw0rlll (MIAC) 1:?7.1 $. Alltrlclo !Meir) 1:21.J 4. CPllPPlfll fClrt) t:lJ.I. llG HM (Ill llt11) -1. Miu<~ (MSAC) U .3 2. Alclrld~ (lllVI 14.1 J. M. Whlll" (llkl U.I. 170 HH (2nd htlll -I. Jonu {50) ll.I 2. Ptn• {M$AC~ 14.I 1 ltoslol fAll1 V10 14.t. 120 MH Ord httU - 1. 81txl CLACCJ 14.4 :t. '°""*' (MC) U.I S. Smit" 18 Jk) 15.0. '«I 1H (ht Miii - 1. Prov!n1uio IGro1l 5'.I 1. Wtrl!I !l"lerl $.ol.( l. Hl1lm1n CGl....,I 5'.•. UO IH U!\d llltll -I. Pet1n IMSACI 5'.3 2. Rosio& !Ant V11) 5'1.J 3. SlllPH Ul1k) 5'.J. UI IH (lrd lltll) - I. !11bt> !LACCJ U.O 1. llllbY (Cttrl 5-1.6 l. Murr1r (Cl\~ 5:•r;, 1111 h .. o -i. 1.~e .. 1111d •1.5 '· ComPl'Oll G.J l. Mill C2.S. '«I rtl•Y <2ncl 111•0 - 1. H1rtlar "2.0 2. Ml San Anton~ O.J l. L°"' 8t•dl a .s ..... '"'''' Orf ke11) -I. LACC •t.I 2. S1nl1 ll•rkrl G.J l . Pt lldtna '1.1, Mlle rfilr Cid hfll) -\, P1J.tdt11o11 l ;U.1 t, l"ltrte J:14.I J. Chlttn J:U.5. Ml~ rll•r I,,..""'•') -1. Mt. Sin An!Qfl~ J;ll.5 2. lll<t rtlleld l :1t.5 J. M .. 1 l :20.0. Miii r1l1y (lrd Mii) -I, LA Vt ller 1:20.0 J. S."11 Menlct J:lG.4 .J. LACC l :21.I. OT -I. sc ...... 1 IMSAC ) l'°"J ,, Ftlr lltkl 1.57 .. .J. Effll!ll (fl C1ml IU.OV. •· """''"""'rv (Cirri UCM J, Ctlll (11111) UJ,I 4. W1IU119fen (Gra.J 1•11 7. Foley IDrnl 1'6.J\IJ II" -!. AndlrtOll (LASWI 5'-Jl't 2. Cttd'lclrt (CMf) SM 1 H.9rrowby !IA) SJ·IV. (, Vl1h1kl• IH1rflorl 51·1 f. P•lt Cltkl Jl·ll 6. Tl.>dctr (Pt ll SI .. 7. L.111rt.IO fLll Sl·M. U - 7. W•tltn (IVJ 2).H'! 2. CofllWIY tMoorl !:M,,.. l. Fry (ELA! 2Ull& 4. lutti (l!lAI 2l-t\lo J. Hiii (MSA,C) ~V. 6. AHrv lltlv) U.0111 J, Mciod¥ (Pttl 22·1W.. HJ -!. HI.off !LACCI M 2. J1rn11 (Ctrrl M J. OOHll (M ... I M 4. Foot !Gro1) 6-4 5. Curll, !Riv) M '· Pr11llt (l.ASFI M 7. Cllrll (S1k) U 1. lrlltll\I !MC) M 1.-Hollln1 IMC ) M . PV -1. Rlthtrdt CMSACJ 1 .. 0 J. l"trre!I fMSACI 16.1 J. Slrntnt ICrPr) 1'"4 (, Simo-lPull 1U S, Torrl1nl (Full 14--0 6. Shlldl fl1kl 16-4 1. Stuebt (111<1 l«I I. lluu (Ptl) 1«1 t. Chtw ((lf't , ... 10. Ch-n tCt rt) 1«1 IT. Wrltlt! (VIII , .. , 11. Mlllhtn (VI I) 1U IJ. Rock (VI I) 1 .. 0. TJ -I. l uTlt !El.Al Jt.JV. J. Smit~ flltk) ,._,._. .J. Jtnnlnes (Ht•b! "-1 •. Kt llrr ll'•tl #.•'-. S. Wlhan CIVI '1-4 A. LOU911r1Qe (lACC) '1·Jlll 1. looOY (1"11) ..... 11. SPRING SPORTS SALE 10 DAYS ONLY SHOP OUR WATER WONDERLAND! • IMPORTED SWIM SUITS-BIKINIS-WARMUP SUITS Jll~IA (Swtdonl, RIMI (Franni, WHIT! STAG (AUITULIAI • SURF and SWIM SUITS -(Male) LAGUNA -HANG TEN • BIRDWELL • WHITE STAG SPEEDOS COMPITITION SWIM (TANK) IUITS J WARMUPS • TAPERFLEX WATER SKIS • HODGMAN SURFLOTES • WETSUITS BY "SEASUITS" • SCUBAPRO "VOIT • SWIMASTER" COMM! DIVI AND SWIM, LIMIS • "PAIPO" BELLY BOARDS AND KNEE VECTORS DIVE SPECIALS BIKINI SPECIALS FltOM ONLY VOIT DUCKFllT FINS I Blem1 l . . • • ••" SPORTSWAYS WATIRLUNG FINS ($1011 Ano Onlyl b9. $13:95 ............... Ooly - • Rods • RHls •...... , , .... S.v1 to 30% • P1utzk1 Selmon Eggs. Jttg. 1.30, Slit 99c •Any Lur1 , ......•....•...... 20% Off • fl1hm1 Unt ............... ' .. ~ OFF TENNIS SALi • Wlll111 tlt•t Gt-141) T111ni1 l•ll• (limit 2 (1111~ 111. $2.25 ......... C..• $1.lt • Pr.•114 T11111l1 Sho1t. 111. $10.tS., .... $6.9$ • Clnturl1n·Mlt Mtlu111 T1111tb Pr11M1 •11. $4t.9S ...... , •.......• ,SAIJ tlt.tS OUR SNOW· SKI· SALE CONTINUES· SAVE TO 50% • GUNS SALE UP TO 40•/0 ILOOI MOflll.I .... Ull WS....,_. #141·tttlU l int I t4.tl f MM ..... ,.. """760llk 11.r·."i iiilit,"s11•n s1n'.t1 ~':t~= =~:.-..,.-11 ............ :.. 1111.tt ..!!'i.'=: v ... •• ............. ., ... I'"·" ..... Clllhn........ ..... • ... MNrlr, AUNl' MOU GOLF •fl'lltr SALi • p,. .lw1r4 S.li• C.,. C.lf 11111, 1 .. ft.ts $1.41 •lrffk.1 hlf Shtta .............. f16.tl, Sil.ts • lllf lall• ISIJtlll UM) T•, '9-Ht,.,,., .heh SO. SPORT SHOES IATA IASKITIAU SHOIS 4ts ltt. $7.tS ........... , Sill FOOTIAl.l--IASllAl.L-TIACK ..,, • ........ ·""'· ,_ 99c CStnt1 1111 Only) ' SCUIA DIVING CLASSES -HOW lrMfM & PDIM#lfe.- ' ""' \.A. (.-ty-c«ttft.....,. ., ... .,. ................... , 1 ,._. TN111l111 ~ .... • o ... 11114 .... ....., ..... °*"• •Ix ........ ........ SANTA ANA-219 I. 4th ST.-ICI 7.5723 #27 FASHION ISlAND-NEWPOfl aNTER-644-2121 FIJLLHTON-601 S. IUCLID-871-5988 rrsH 11Po•r-1 7-U4J --------~ \ Th'ndJ1, M'1 14, 1970 FV, Eagles Place 2 On All-Irvine Team AlllfJJI& Pa/Mt..t, Gaucho Grid Chie · ~.na..rn:: -'Illa. .oc. ... "~··~~~~~~~~~--t AY<MD ffRIGH T-HAM D TAKE· OYER" AT THE TOP A common·•rrur among coif. en, especially. women, ts aUow- Wi1 the right hind to take con- 0 .. Expects Carryover ) Fountain Valley and Estan· cia high schools led Orange Coast area nines in honors received in the 0 Al L Y PlLOT's release of the oUicial AU-Irvine Leaglie baseball seleeUom. 'Ibe Barons of Fountain Valley nabbed two first-team spots along with a pair of second team honon while the Eagles of Estancia received Clemente's TsumaNip~ Loop Rivals 4th Annual Franchise and Business Opportunity Show Find out how you 1'C•n get in bu1lne11 for yourself" by vi1iting this superm•rket of Bu1ine11 Opportuniti1s. 75 Comp1nie1 from •11 over the United Sti1te1 • are on di1f,lay i1nd looking for ri1nthise•s ' d • I • 1n i1110tt• II 1n Orang• County i1nd surroundin9 •r••'· May 14-17 Disneyland Hotel, Anaheim Admission $2.SO Loara, the league's No. 1 trol of lht dub at the top of the By CRAIG SIJEFF two first-team choices aloog with one secondo-team spot. llerschel Musick of cham- pion Santa Ana Valley was named coach of the year and l.oara catcher Rudy Sgont.z received player of tilt year h1urel!. entry in the upcoming backswing. This .controf then °',... O.l)y Pt1et "•" Playoffs, domioated the first contiliues.on thedownswinaaf'd Sadd~bllck College football · All·Desert c1r· cult cenlet •• roogh lmplCl. . . . 1 111119 t lhe hool he One of the two otfenstve team with four seleetlons. ui n N• sc on I Yuba game also 18 graduating. Tom Scherer. Colbert 1 He 's ticketed for Cal Western. Fletcher wtte all-conference. There Is no eaSHtr way lo ,.. guard potts sb:luld be filled Don Martin alao rtlurn& to 'li'le only other junior in the ruin a go• shot. When the right map. by Terry MunhaU, an •II· the Saddelbact fold along with lineup is ·Santa Ana Valley 's hand takes over, it often turns The Gauchos not only won Crestview League selection al let ardJ Ra 'Tvlet. Bill Bolden, who bad a 1.14 th• hands so that the club the Desert Conference chanr F'oothill two years 1 go, termen gu Y ·:l · Sgontz was the leading hit· ter of the Irvine elite Y:ith a .54~ average. e.r.a. points "across th• line"-to plonship, but finished runner-Munhall attended Oregon and Chuck Lockwood. ' He struck out 100 b11tter!'I the right of target-as in illus-I up to Yuba College in the State last year. Saddleback will not ,be i11 58 innings over the entire tr;ition fl. Tbis misalignment rtate 1m1ll schools title game, Last year's starting of· hurting for talent Jn / the season. of the club makes squirt con· losing 2f..19. fensive guards Jeff Virden and backfield with such actJi q Fountain Valley's pair of winners were infielders Sleve Mitchell and Mike Robert.!. Second-team laurels were tact dilficull . Rtght·hand tak• Tbe brilliant 9-Z season Bob Ureil are both headed Toby Whipple and Jlm Kuhn. eerned by Fountain Valley's over also causes other m~takas eUbJl&hed Saddleback •s a for state colleges. Virden will Whipple was the secOncl Est.anda was represented by Steve Valiere at third base and outfielder Dave Bowen. Dave Lynch, a pitcher who •• .such as ''hitting from th e football po\\'er. be playing for Cal State (LA) top" (pr•m1ture release 'of en-And Gaucho head grid coach next season and Urtll will leading rusher in the nation: chalked up a 5-Z won-loss c Hartm · 1· · 1 ernv and clubh•ad ·s-ed) and eorge an IS op 1mist c attend CaJ State (Fullerton). last season with 1,333 yards record, and third baseman ~ ..... u f od ·11 rt "coming over the ball" (throw-te new ou power w1 car-Chuck Finn, an all-Dese in 227 carries. In ont!: pme ~\~m~jT1aJ~ttied .300. Both ing .the clu bhead outsid• the . ry over into the 1970 season. Conrerence tacklt!: selection, is he gained 234 yards. 3 Other Orange Coast area players to make the fir st team are John Palmer of Corona del Mar and Dave Barton. of Costa Mesa. target lit\e durina th• down· "Wt!: art!: very optimlsllc," also graduating. Kuhn, who prepped at are juniors. swing); says Hartman when talking Top linemen returning next Laguna Beach, is a tr1ufero Corona del A1ar'.s Keith In the proper swine, thtriaht about the '70 season. "If we season ror the Gauchos include from Washington. He led Samuels (first base) and Don hind must never assert itHtf get the personnel we're alter tackles Bryan Colbe:rt, Rocky Laguna to the Crt.st).'ie,_. Outfielder Palmer, a junior, batted .333 for the Sea Kings while Barton was C o s l a Mesa's one-man gang. Snyder (utility) were selected more thin the ·left. In iUustra-we will nu the empty gaps." Fletcher, Dave Llmebrooi: and Ll:agut!: UUe two years 110. for the second team along tion #2. I show the ideal top.of· The gaps are mainly on of.,---.;._--------'------''----"o,::i, - with mate Stan Crippen in swinl position. The e~sence of 1 fense. , : tht!: ouUield. inward bending 1t the back of 1 ' They include quarterback, ,-----------------:;., - Barton pitOOed (7-4 In Jeague), batted (.350), and played e1cellent de-fense a.t first base and in the outlield. Other area player• on the my left wrlst indtcates that this the two guards spoU and a saMe $2 ~.!!O a. second team are Greg Powers hand is stiU ht control tackle and end. .U of Estancia, Rich Fielder of The quarterback position Com Mesa and Mike Bates ~=~~~=======·~·~-~-~ ... ~-~~.,..~-~~ may be the hardtst lo fill. ot Edison. Last year's signal caller, Rod Graves, led the nation's junior p ; * "f:r -(:( -{:( "(:{ "HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR PUTTIHCn ...,.. la NMll1 ,.._., colleges in total offense with RW ~PPIN' WllJmY ,.... fuOJ 111ustraa.d suick to puttkic mnc:it. ...,....,, 9treket Send 20, 841 yards rushing and another ~. All-Irvine League :..io:..-:;.·::::;,.~~·-··'*'OpetoANoldl'lftMr. 1,624 passing for• total of x -~ 2.~;~ves, who will be playing IN f • ftl 11 ftllft Firtt TNm for Cal State (Long Beach) ~ tiRLWl1~ School Class Pos. Record Area Briefs next season, completed 116 of 212 passes for 16 touchdowns. Santa Ana Valley Jr. P 4-1 The quarterback spot at this Loara Sr. P 6-0 R "d A h • moment belongs to Chris Hee· Loara Sr. C .545 ei to na eim tor, a sophomore who played Fountain Valley Sr. 18 .346 II behind Graves. He also was Fountain Valley Sr. 28 .333 an all-Desert Conference Estancia Sr. 38 .333 defensive halfback. Second Tum Fountain Valley Jr. p 5-2 Loara Sr. p 3-0 Estancia Sr. c .415 Corona del Mar Jr. I B . 381 Loara Sr. SS .341 Neal Reid, basketball coach at 7 o'clock with special Hartman is hopeful that Estancia Sr. OF ,268 at Santa Ana High School, a~·ards for captain and most Foothill High quarterback Bob Loara Sr. OF .340 ill lo Anahe' 8 . h 1 bl . luded f Blacklidge will enroll at the Corona del Mar Jr. OF .333 w move un ig \la ua e inc or the Saddleback campus. If he Costa Mesa Sr. Util .350 to replace Brant Cowser as 11.tonarchs' b a s k e t b a J 1, does, the void left by Graves Colony cage chlef. baseball, track and a: o I r should be fllled. Cowser recently resigned hi~ Another gap is that or position as head of the teams. receiver. h1arc Hardy (now Anaheim cage program. e at the Unlve.rsity of Kansas) caught 37 passes la.st season Fountain Valley High School for 507 yards . will honor its spring sports Slotback Gary Rossman, • Co~ Mesa Sr. zg· Fountain Valley Jr. 3B Magnolia Jr. SS Corona del Mar Sr. OF .283 .300 .400 . 391 Cost.a Mtsa Golf and Coun- try Club men's club will hear Joe Mullaney, head coach of the Los Angeles L a k e r s basketball team, Wednesday night at the monthly mem- bership meeting . athlelC1 Tuesday night with:i-~w;ho~c~au~g~hliiiill~pe~sses~~in~th~e ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~= a 6:30 awards banquet in the ' · school cafeteria . Edison Sr. OF .370 Santa Ana Valley Sr. OF .298 Corona del Mar Sr. Util. . 283 All-Crestview League First THm School Cl111 Pot. R•cord J\1j ssion Viejo Sr. p Foothill Sr. p Mission Vjejo Sr. c Villa Park Sr. TB Mission Viejo Sr. 2B Villa Park s·r. 3B El Modena Jr. SS Mission Viejo Sr. OF Foothill Sr. OF Laguna Beach Jr. OF San Clemente Sr. Util. Second Team Tustin Jr. p El Modena Sr. p Orange Jr. c San Clemente Sr. lB Laguna Beach So. 28 Mission Viejo Jr. 38 Villa Parle Sr. SS Orange Jr. OF Foothill Jr. OF Tustin Jr. OF Duck Feet Fins-Blemish $6.95 Duck Feet Fins Regulars-$8.95 Skin Diver Fins-$9.95 Masks-Snorkles White Stag Sleeping Bags 6-1 7-2 • 42'l .324 . 356 .353 .444 • 239 .348 .320 . 225 5-4 3-5 . 280 .300 .333 .3ll .371 .280 .280 .325 Reg. $21.00-Special-$14.95 Other Sleeping Bags-$12.95 to $79.95 Pack Fra111es & Bags-$7.95 to $39.95 Ricli-Mor Freeze Dried Food Sierra Cups-Space Blankets 1 G11111p Boys & Men's Acryfic sweaters Reg. $4.95--Sale $2.95 Long Sleeve Acrylic Sweaters-$4.95 Short Sleeve Acrylic Sweaters-$3.95 Laguna Swim Trunks-$6.95 Shirts to Match-$6.95 Life Guan! Ty!J8 Swim Trunks-$4.95 OPEN 9 To 6 Dinner will be served at 1 o'clock. All members and their guests are invited. Call the. club at 540-7200 for reserva- lions. • About 33 competitors are expected to converge on the pool at Mesa Verde Country Club Saturday for the CIF girls diving preliminaries. Competition gets under way at 1 p.m. with finali!:ts headed for the combined girls .swim- ming and diving finals May 29 at Beverly Hills High Natatorium. The girls swim prelims will be contested f.1ay 23 al Foothill High. • A spring spo rts awards ban· quet is on tap for Mater Dei High School athletes when the Monarchs meet at the Garden Grove Elks Club Monday evening. Festivities get under way Include.d on the agenda are special awards for captain and most valuable for track and field, baseball, go!( and tenni! in all classifleations. • A karate tournament featur- ing standout teams from several statea will bt held at \Yestmin.ster High, June 14. Eliminations start 1t I a.m . with finals slated lot 7 in the evening . The event Is aponsored by Mike Stone's Karate Studio of Westminster . Teams will come from u far away as Michigan to com- pete . Twenty percent of the pro. ceeds will go towards the benefit of cheerleaders at the five Huntington Beach district high schools . Adult admission ls $2 while students with ASB cards will be admitted for •t and children under U for $1. Tickets may be procured by contacting the act.iviUe.s office at any of the five high tehools involved. • • Tennis Dresses-$13.95 to $26.95 Tennis Hats-Shoes-Sox Mens & Boys Tennis Shorts Mens & Boys Tennis Shirts Converse Tennis Shoes-Mens-$7.75 Ladies-$7.25 Mens Jack Purcells-$8.95 Bancroft-Wilson-Dunlop DaviHragin-Tennis Rackets Junior Tennis Rackets-$4.95 Pennsylvania Tennis Balls-$7.50 Doz. Yellow Pennsylvania Tennis Balls-$7.95 Doz. Wilson Xtra Duty Tennis Balls-$8.35 Doz. Tennis Cany-all Bags-$9.95 Tennis Hats-Sox-Visors Raleigh Bikes-Partr. Tires-Tubes-Accessories Racket Stringing CLOSED SUNDAYS - , which sports figure . earned the mOStmoney . last _year? " JI .. If the sports figure you named has fewer than four legs, you guessed wrong.• Because last year a thoroughbred named Arts and Letters (1969 Horse of the Year) earned $555,El04. That's more than Arnold Palmer. Or Joe Namath. Or Lew Alcindor. Or any other two-legged athlete earned. •So if you 're the kind of sports fan that wouldn 't miss the World Series, the Super Bowl or other"big name" events, be at Hollywood Park Saturday! The featured race is the $100,000 Californian. Arts and Letters will be flown from New York for his West Coast debut. Nodouble (defending champ ion), Ack Ack, and Snow Sporting, all winners of $100,000 races, Baffle and Right or Wrong ere ready for the invading champion. It's like a "Master's Tournament" for thoroughbreds. Daily Double closes at 1:10 Saturdays. Hollywood Par-K -tl!a Hlll>or n San Diego Fr..,...yo II Century Boulovlnl and Pro~!• A-ua tn Ing!- - • ' " I • I , t<J DAILY PILOT WHAT'S IN- OUTDOORS? Irvine _ ·' Tennis Prelims Coast Area Tennis Scores HB DRIJ'ER I • VIES SVNDA.Y van11, ""''" Pel. s.o1cw111n oo . 1-11 oe1. wn 1. 1 ... 1'111-1•1,) UV.I "eunlal~ VI MH l e!"• IF! loft to l ... rd IE!, +• •.O· Gr"t ICI dll •11nd'l1ra (Sl 14, -.1 I.I tin s•111••• '"' i.1. Nlt11o11°"' CM> '°"' 1·•1 'l'Ofl l-t, .. ,. Rick Woods, tht ha1..,....t & Kt•Wl<fk !Fl lllO LYllCll ![), M i Y•mlCIM (Fl lost ,. Cl1lr 1£), ,.J. s. MY•'• (C) dtf WrlgM (S) 1·S. rid l ,.... Orehood UH, 1-2( !H'I. Ooint , .• ,.., ~w1Uilm1 IMI '°'' °"'' -M, Huntington Beach er, ! ~. (ti M i lo1l IO Hermon !), :;.4. i11ld (Fj iDll lo tl0bbln1 . !El, U, 1-1. "4, sri.w IFI w011 1·51 •• s.1. o.;,, 2·•. ""'!Is Sn\1111 IC) io.1 10 °"'lveroi 1s1 favored for the t b I rd l·t Cllernqw IF' loll IO H1mlltcn 11:1, 0'1111 l llCI 1 .. tl !Ml H I. Wl tl'!l r 1"• W. o~zue11 !Fl won •41 '°'1 1"" 1-4. u. .. , '"° s11111on IH!, M • .,.., 1(1"""' 1c1 1os1 10 oii.on (5 11"4. Speedway motorcycle racing ..,_, .... tFl !oil u. w. , .. , l... I !'Mii !FJ loll ti LVl'IOll fEI. ,... khooltv Ind Z•ct< (M) losr '"'· , ... ,. '"· ow.i.. meet of the season at the DWIN'I O.IHll Juflllr v~v MUltr Ind MIU TMI*' 4{1 ~· Morrll lllCI A.llen tfl ci.f. IUu C•-111 UI htl flCLI Mimi ll'd V1rlLJ1191n !Cl totl 11 Antelope ValJty Fairgrounds 10 Or1h0od end Orahood (: ), ...,., I nd.....,.. .. (Ii!), .. ,, .. I. ,, .. ·----.. ,, •"·" ,,, •• I . 24 / Cid. Hlnll 111C1 WllllGll !El, ,,, S(lllldlw.,.r 11td c ....... Cfl llfl, llf ...,. .. ..,... r -• .... S "" "-l FrlUltr 1nd Sll plol!:l\I (E ), W ... ,. Sll'le T1t111i, ICI wt. Wide !E l, Cirtw Incl Potier ICl loll IG 'unuc:>y. ~ Deep sea fishing has really improvtd 'A'i':h ~he ret~rn of sum· ry Weathfr A great run ol large yello wtail lS oow m progra.1 Mte Coronado lslands and loca l landings are getting their boat,, 0 good schools of barracuda , ba ss and bon.lta. } The best bite for our closeby landings h~ ~n from the ~·-•Angle~s are . limitin.~ out on the "skinnies", some to "lk" size using Uve bait and Jigs, Me•tll 'Of:." CF) end M1u1u n Ju•I• Vltl"ally ,.._ •·11 Shi T •ti • t ICJ 4•'· '"911rwn Ind Nelton !SJ H , o.1. Wood• v.•on the 1961 U.S. Dual match tltlist Loara will ~·a-., M 1 1 u . .... e1 M•111 111,1,~ltl L11u111 6t•c~ Nen11 1e 1 • ..o. ,... Goenel 1c1 J;inler Vlfllh' d1t. Slt nlon (I!), •T, l·T. Tarra ((/ le cl bt favored Friday In the Newport .. .,...,. H I 111 w.111r• "lllln 11..1 1011 1 , 1... def. llYr•111 tEl, 1.1, ~... Hf1Yl1 Speedw ay motorcyc ra ng 11111111 "11111n1 1L1 '°'' '"· 14 , H•rPtr 1c1 def. M<OvlfY 11!1, ""°· Prep Go lf ha · h. d Is the All landings are running full summer schedules now. but pas.senger loads are light. lrVine League tennis ~~~· i~i' = t:: :r. •·1 J1v CL) mt u 1 _, M. i-1. -..~.. c mptons 1p an CNr1e1 iH> to11 w. u . T1v1or ILi we111 .... •1. -logical man to ,.,,.,.ure the semifinals and finals at Foun· ,,., .. ,, '"' -;::.t'"' 10,11 ,... o..i111o11 P11knn1 1r>G Lfflll 1c1 1o11 "' ..._. -Boats running out of San Diego are getting into some v!ry 14 schools of working yellowtall. All or the boats are findin g fMting fish daily. and the outlook is for continued good flshlng. " W<• "' •••• < (El >, $11\ CIMll!lle CMll l.Wl Mlulloli Vkll Iha h. I HI"" A111t11WMC1111r (LI -J..J, •l. • ....,.., '°" • ... ..,, 1970 crown now t IS tain Va ley 6"· Jacobs.en and Mrtra !NI ....., M. Ho 1-2. l4. J~n,..5 (II 911. I011 '° Scl<lrrot•1 •1 L1G1.,..T1bor (l) lost ,. .. , ... 2... Marci\ Ind tt•lll'lfr (Cl fft r t ~ fl g r Steve Semifinal matches in both L1w1er •Old co11e11 !NJ ,11111 w. 2·L Homeit•R 11111 • .,.,.11 !El, ,.2. 6-J. !Ml n. oremos ... ~,a en e , I I Ill •t_,, .. ,,1 oM M••" OtH WOii J11..i.r v1r&11, JYnll< v1rlitY voi11 (SJ 1" def L-nl• IMI 11. Bast, is out for several wee'5 ' Phil Tozer and Art Gronsky, owners of the Newport l~ings saf area water conditions are eicellent, and t~at If bait and water conditions remain the same, lhe yellows might start mov· Ing up the coast. singles and doub es pay ~· ·-.. M1r1111 1N1 111 H11n11111i.oo <•••• M111 f21 111 SA v 1111v 0111111 t11 11, c1et s111111r IMJ &J. wo·th a •-k·" arm. b . 2 ·1h .... •·2· Jv•ltt Vlfll!Y Si111k• Sln•l•s &em1rd !SI n, dtl •1,11 tMJ u . UIV .... eg1n al p.m. WI .,;11am·, ___ •_•_••-'-'-' _,._,_•_w_"-"-'-" _v_.,_'"----"-'-'-""'-'"-'M_> -'-"-· _M_<_••-'-'"-'-· _..,_; __ ,_~_•_•_• -'-'-' _,,._, -'-'-"-·----"-'-"-· _ __:':':":":'_':':' :n:·:...::"':::_':':':"':...::':M:> :":·-'-----------~ Big Bear Bass • Big Bear Lake bass have taken the spotlight from trout at thii San Bernardino mountain lakt. This writer spent last week· e04 al the lake and found very few anglers scortnc oa troo t. r ·A few to 1:11, pounds were picked up by boats troltm1 lure:s a•' Filbbacks in the bays, bat action from shore was very slow. ·Bass f11hermen bra,ing: winds plcktil ap Ugbt limits of the lighting bromebacks from shore using nighlcra\\·lers, Sorllh· wick's and Fishbacks. r 1tfost of the bass are throwba cks, running les1 than a half pqund, bat a few keepers to three pounds were l•Dded by lucky a1a;lers. For ~Lion the bus are bolter than tbe trout, but because u;y are roan.Ing: so small Lhey art not good for the table. ' At1glh1g ; The big Fl orida bass in Lake Wohlford. located a few mile:;i ..:Jst of Escondido,. are hitting good. r~ish to 1011.t pounds have been uf ,en the past \\'eek and Jake offic ials report that bass arc aver· aging better than three pounds. . . •\Rubber worms and leadhead jigs are lhe best enticers during !~day, while surface plugs are taki ng bass in coves early and l e in the day. . . . 'Trout and crappie are also listed on the achve list. but blue- gil and catfish are slow to bile. Pro Grldder --."titarlln AlcKeever of pro football fame and me mber of the Wlfblngton Redskins fished Vail l.ake last \\"ttk \\'Ith Costa ft lesa aagler John McCarthy. The duo found troul and crappie DCliOfl \'try Jood in llunler ·~ dafe. Tbt catch included trout to 11,• poWKls, crappie to 11,; ~ds and lots ol bluegill nearing the 'poond mark. • ·eus fishing Is consldettd very good with plenty of bl'Olltt· bMkJ running 1n Ott 2 lo 3 pou11d class, The but flshlna: has ~ along the nerth shoreline •lib semMteep runat.g plags fisirtd ln about dcltt feet of wattr. (iood action on Rapalas ud s.Jtlt;wk:kl ls reported by those anglen worilll1 the weed beds .... 1th surface plugs. pple and hluegil ha\·e been holding their own as bait r en are scoring on limits and near UmJts· of the pan fisb •. onn1 and Jle11t art the besl ballll to use. Vail Lake is open daily, restr\'alions art nttessary for both hoa>s and trailerli/t:amper spols and can be made by cal!Jn::: U.~611 . ' • ' .'ia11 Dieg11 plonshlp deciders taking pJace ,. lmmedately upon completion of the semis. Loara sends a pair of Lop singles pla)'f!rs a n d a formidable d o u b t e s com· binatlon Into the semis. Estan· cia heads ·area aggregalions tvith topseeded singles pJ1yer AtllliG Rosetti and the doubles duo or Steve Emery and freshman SI.eve Mallott. lrvlM Lt..-l'reflMl111rill 11 F-ll lfl VtlllY ·-~lrll round: 11.0MIH ll!sl) def. Mi r· "'°'z (CMI 6-1, M i HollY IMI d9f. Htnu !SAVll Teno:i.I {FV) def. Htrlll tEdl 6·J,, t ·l: PoU1nd IL) dfl. Sllolmtk•r (CdMI U. I-OJ F1rn1ndtl !SAV) Olf, M<N1m1r1 (M) '"°· M l H1rmon (Edi 11tf. S11elr fCMI "-0• 1-0; Slundtr1 {1!11\ def. G-11nt1i tCdMJ U. U , 1·51 Kr1wtrtk !FVJ !kf. Zortk Cl l ~ Ml St!Morf Ill def. H-rtiorn CMl .. ,, •f.-3; Endli.Y CCM) 111!1. N11td1trom lSAVl i Sh1w CFV ) <kl. a ... 11td U:d) l-l. 6-l; $le1nfl !d tElll def. M<C.rlY !CllMI •1, 1-1; Porler CM) def. IUdllAm CCMf 1·2, 1·31 5 m I ! h ISAVI dtl. V1len1....,l1 CFV) l-J, 4-J.; Ktlltl Or1hc0d !Ed) def. over fCcSM l 1-1, M1 Mallev (Lt def. M1•S011 (l!st1 .. 1, ..0. ~COf'd ""1nd: Ros.enl IElll "'"'· HOllV IMI .. ,, 4·1; Polland (LI <Id. Tef'dll CFVI .. ,, 1-S; Fe•Mlldll fSAV l del. Hermon fEdJ .... •I; Kr1Wt:ZVi !FVl .S.I. S111ndefl (l!:l!J 1-2, i.J; Sv~dcrt CL) lltl. Enihley (CM ' •l, t.1; Sllaw <FV) def. S!t!nf91d fElll t.1 , .. O; Smllh t~AV) def. Pcrltr /Ml 1·2, 2·1, 1-t; Mlllt V IL) def. K1lth Or1110oC1 CEd) 1-1, 6-2. Third round fqu1ri.r1111111): Rounl !E,tl lltl. PolllJl<I (LI .. t, .. J; Kr1wtrvll CFVJ det. Ftrn1ndl1 ISAVJ 1·.S. i.o; Svldcrl CLI O.f. SNIW IFVI .. ,, 1.5; Malley {LI atf. Smllh ISAVJ ..o ... ,. 0.lllH Flnt rounCI : Emery·M•lk>n CEitJ def. Nt lHer·Rvo»ll (CdM) ..... 1·51 O.~Palmes·LJpales CL) det. K1m1e- H0Urrnin (IAV) .... 1"' f-7; Mike Toppi:,..Mlller !FVI del. ~-Lvnott IEdl 1-J, 1-21 Clolll·Fori.MV ICM) de!. Alkn·fo\orrl1 !FV) ~. •l; D0119ll l•Ft1!1Y Ill dlf, Mll'lll TOJllltn IFV) Mlkt lWI lll'V) 4-0. 4-1; M_.t , Sl\t1llt kl ICMI def. Lew-GIVMt !Est) 6-J, •J: llonll1e•D11r1nl CLI def. VermYlld·P rall !CdMl U, \M, •t ; IClrk end l(ef!t OttllOoCI (Edi .S.I. . Pdtflon--Green!ltld (SAVI ..o. "-t. Second r o v ,. d IQv1rterfln1!1): Eme•Y·Mtlloll tE1tl dcl. Dt1P1lme1- LIPtlll (LI 6-0, •21 Mlllt ToPPtf""Mlllt r {FVI del. Clolll·FOMlll V !CM) .. ,, t.!; Frtllv·DCIJClllJ (L 1 Ol!t. Mt>0<t- Shet l1kl !CM! 4·2, t -0; Kll1! Ind Kent Oral>Ocd !Edi 0.1. llQnotac•·Dvrant !SAVI 1·! ... 0. Trout Plant : Lakes in San Diego County are slarting lo shine agaln , aft('r hWng slowed by winds an d et1ld wea ther. All three of the major hf.' ss Jakes in San Diego : Lower Olay, El Capitan and Sutherland Los ..,NCELES _ crv1ui L111.1. e1e h d anglers catching bass over JO pounds. Rotk C•M!ll . J1tk•~~ L•k•. L'" Ltkeo (Mlcklk '"" Scutn), Llrtlt 11.ock ~fost of the big bass are Floridas and hit best on live bait or Cr~k. Puddlng1tOT>e P..,.•r101r. CRANCE -Tr1PJ<.tcu Creel<. plasti c black worms. 11.1vE1ts10 E -F111m.:;r LAkt, Hemet r-.'ot too many small bass were taken last week, v.·hich means L;~ eERNAJlDl~0-91• enr U k•. !~at if you're after quan tity go somewhere el se, but if you are c;r,en \11111v L•k•. Gr99Crv L•k•, ;~t:r a trophy bass be sure to iish one of these famOUJ lakcs. 11$~:;"~1 i~~.:. Do•n• L•k .. sin t 1111 ]Lake Hensha w reportS say some good bass and crappi e fish· 11.~~:;-::r'eA11.IARA _ o.v•v a "'w" "trfien ha\'e been taking home limits of fish on every outing. Fish· cr~k. """"u"" creek. f VENTURA -Mallll!a Crr<ek, PltU I~ in general is good for alJ the Species of ish round in the Cttf!I< 11-r 11Kllofl, Plr11 Llk~. 11.n'H 'ake. but the main attraction is the bass. C•ftl<, 11.011 v111"' Lll<•s. s1n11 P111 l• Ctftk, SI"'• Ynet River from Lm ...... The largemouths are working the shoreline on surface plu~~ Pritt~• "'" ... ' s1111on vP io 1~ond :irtl sefTli>(!-.i diving lures and jigs which seem to be disturb-cronl11g, Sno• Creek '""'"'' 1nd lower ~~r-. ' ' ~ectlon1, V1ntvra RIVlf Netti! Fer~. inj:; the spawning nests bei ng bwlt by the bass. · ----------I Crappie are hill ing ye llow and white jigs fished off the dock :~ ARE Y·OU ~ al)d being drifted across the middle or the lake in boats. THE MAN FOR US? , Hen shaw is open daily from 5:30 a.m. 'til 8:30 p.m. and has 1 n big fishing derby currenUy in progress. For boat or cabin res-I tt\"ations for tAe upcoming holiday phone (714) 749-1361. .frvit1e Geftit1g Wnrt11 0111' c1m,.RJ k t•~ly u••rwl· Int 111<1 ... l rl ilooklflt hr I llc1I mlft wfll If tltMI .. llftt ,_n •!Mil llllrt "*''"· " 'l'MI l\IWI a lllMlllll llMUnl .. Cl.ti II lnvftl llKlll'ffJ ...... toM r11111l1lk>n, ltl u1 dl•cuu I llouft' llful 1T70 lfr you tna YfYr l•m- Hy. CALL COLLECT FOR PEtl· SONAL INTl!tlVIEW, MR. ROtl· EltT. CtUJ 717 .. f12, OR WRITE I OJI\ M·HI, Dally l'llel. iTbe "'aler in Irvine Lake Is ·war1ning up and the bas! and calfish are really on lbt mO\'t, Good catches of these warm "·altr fish ha\'e httn reported t\•try day. Ba11 to 7~' pounds are hilting off the rocky points on Purple Bandits and catfish to 13~ peunds are biting cheese near Sierria~Co;1~··;··-·-···----~!l!!l!!!!I= ;PAIRINGS. ENGINE NEW TWIN 23' ''l.M.P.'' AT COST! TwlN 160 Mer,n1ls.n -12 G•I, hef -H.U -hll IRsti, ktl! "''"" -y.,_. ,....._ tNI* w/...-elt•. THIS IOAT WA$ OUI 1t69 DIMO IT MUST GO THIS WlllCIND. HARBOR BOAT HOUSE IMP ..... llNILL- JOHNSON OPlN JIU.-1, SAT.-6, $UN.-1 ILOCK SO. GARDEN GnOVE FREEWAY ,ON HAR !Or. C~VD. Sl7-~_.'9 1~ ~~~----~~-... .SPEEDWAY ~'~i~RACING 1• Every Friday Night @~~~@~ ~@llJ~rn~ Wl~@~@llJ~[i)§5 Costa Mes,a ·: BUY IN PAIRS ANO SAVE 700.13/695-14 735-14/685-15/735-15 2 for $34 775-14/825-14 775-15/8'-5·1 5 2 for '40 7.15-14/7.75-14 7.7S-15 2 ~·2s 1;111wn ~Fed.EL T•• $1.14 tlJ 2,04 11111' tlN lilMlldins en •tr• l.OG-14/S.2~14 7.60-11 7·10.15/1.15'1! LU-15 2 ~·32 2 ~·39 liiihjpQ ijNWLj "-'' Fitf. EJ. l11 $2.17 la 2.2l per tin ~,.,cfinr on sit• Pl111 fed. [•. lo• , ... lit• $2..15 le Sl.71 dcpendint i§llMM H71-1411.55·14 H71·15/8.55·15 J71·15/l .15-15 Ptva f~. t.. To• , .. 11,. $2.93 .. Sl .01 deptltdint on 1i•• WHITEWALL ONLY $2.95 MORE Most Si:e5 In Stock .-• .,~•FOREIGN CAR TIRES· WIDE TIRES• WIDE UVALS •STEEL REINFORCED• 78 SERIES • 70 SERIES•~ Seaaitp TiieStoies 'Where tJiere is more than meets the e~ ANAHEIM I CO~ONA I GARDEtl GROVE I HAWAIIAN GARDENS I HUNTINGTON BEACH 1961 llOOkHUIST 136 1•1, 6!h St . S ~OI r:·;J '\l~STEI 11t73 CAISON ST. 19411 •EACH I LYD. tAT l lN{OllQ !t ti\), I I SI 0' llt ()lj llnvltl.N PIOHEll I NO•WAUQ M Mill NOll:TH OF AllANJI 635-1170 7JS-6010 t :;.::~s 165.0227 536-7.571 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SANTA ANA HARIOI AT tow llt.J700 SANTA ANA 1211 W. WARNtll AV(, (WAINfl •I lll~IOU 540-1646 TUSTIN l Jl ! lst STR((T 11 · ' I "" STJ ~ '1.9~31 USE TOUllt MAJOR: Crt!'.C!T CARD • r:~~T:.iltlSTE~ \'.'" ,;~· So!ol AT Cl DAll rJ ~.0(1·; t o< C.')tDfH WiSTI ,.).J521 COSTA M!SA- N!WPORT l!ACH 3U LI.ST 17ttl ST. '42·4131 OPEN 8-8:30 DAILY /8-5 SAT. SAN CliMENTE t27 N. il CAMllllO lUl 492.SSQ TUMBLEWEEDS MUTT AND JEFF I HAVE NO HOME SOI"M MAKING ONE IN Tf\IS TREE' JUDGE PARKER AFTI'" MV COMCTIOH $41! OIVOAcEO NE.. ANO , 1 WA.5 TOl.DtREMARRIEO. t NE.VER ME.A.RO OF HER. Ac.AIN. THEN, Vvll'< NOT W< ONE FOR AN ACQUAJITTANCE, M'BOl'J OR f;E1'TER STlll, SE:ND SOMl'ONE ONE OF MY GIFT CERTIFICATES! CAN \VU lHINK Or ANY1111N6 ilfTIER TO GIVE A Y'KNOW, \OU GOTA l'O INI lHERE ... 5-1.a GOSH.YOU OON"T HAVE TO OOTl-\AT! THE MUTTS HAVE BEEN VERY NICE TOME· FRIEND? • . ' l ~ !I THEY CALL ME THEIR STAR 80AR.OER!--- I 'LL ASK 'EM IF You I ' 'BOl!T ONE ~fOtCE TlAC/JPFLll lN THE (AN_I PLAIN JANE ' I -~ L""' 60iNC> to HAVE OE"'TONG-ITI . ',---~ ·' ·1 • ' " r{ PERKINS I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••. by R. A POWER I •CRO SS l Roma1 ~od 5 AttentlO•I II Letha l 14 Be inclo!r nl 15 Bring to rl •sastrr lb Onc e i pan 2 worn~ 17 A.Imo<! immco •ii!~ 1·1 3 v.ords 1q ca~t 20 Nol c1dl1 .. at,n Zl Legal ~1~11· A btJ1. 23 GrJnl !t mpo•iH y use ol 14 Alaska a"d YLJkon 4'f Call !or l!tlp ~O Grommt\ 52 Lac.k ing move mrnt ~4 Debtor 5fi Level of • ach1r11e111en! S11 Schemr f:2 Be urnlrr 1he wealhl'< &4 Asian oeninsul ~ bS Tr•m1no lo9y 1,7 E~pl'llSI V' 1.1ble11a1e ? w ord~ 70 Complete 71 He ro 1n Borod in operi 72 Brant " • ' " C H A II U t A II " 0 " ' ' ' .. G H A t " ' "" '"' • ' . IN O E •OT V Al~~·~ I A S I G l I ~· I 'I H1NIG 'l (•SC &~ • " " ' .. I ~ :§)ti C t P~(OG •"G rrr•5 Pf • .. ' • " . "' . '" .. ' ~l:{P ~HA " " " • '"' 0 ~ ~ [ 0 ' ' ' " 8 [ccen\1-<; ' Ower'lll'i9nt l') Phy!ic•l!y l t\1VI' Jl Gas st•ti0<1 l \tlll " II r I' 5114 70 )8 Ctrlaon Bal11c people •1 Was ont ol '"' ga•ig 43 Wrl I Jtr~ngl'd MISS PEACH /\'\AJ!.C.IA'S VA.lt:r~TtMf" ' nat1vr~ p~SSill'l~ n Of dub1ou ~ chi11icler 7• Tur" down 75 luck 1n lrr!a<ld 12 Verily 13 Obsctne 4Ei For111 ol mots lute fMPLOYMENT Aue~q-. 27 l 1nk 1' Treache•oos person'i Jl CI ear JS Ship rl lrect•on 37 QI an ol•mrd force ]' "1illily 1 A1ch1pela90 1slar1d ltl Coc kla l1 in9rr d1eul 42 Republic 111 SW Arabi • •4 Kir'll of e1i.c losu•, 45 Censurl'd 47 Mus ic~! •ymbols I l " " - • ' ' OOWN " 2 woid< 2 L1on and hors I' ll'atu1t~ } M15SOut l. ? .,,.oids 4 Hang it0ttnd 5 Kindof 11oist fi Compass point: Abtir. 1 Mis ' Ftrtl'r ,, • " 18 " .••.. II 1111'r ": 2 word~ 22 Outdo 25 Word ol Jpprov~I 2& Numbl'r 28 Narcoi.c shfub 3' Grel'I. 1slo111!1 32 Oept 1>'t o./ v19or t 33 "11 .. on'l "' .. o:k : -!! 2 WOl'dS )4 '' ...• b1tni- )) Stapo1t in lsratl 36 Conttsl N " " 48 •al k .,.,.1111 l1ea~y steps 51 Btvl'rJ9t SJ Of a prinlll19 style 55 Not plianl 57ChiHQl'S 58 Gi171'tS SC! In add 1l10!'I bl Stont' Su!f1~ !tl Architec t· ural p1l'r &3 Thl'attr bo, 6Ei [n<!1ng usrd wilh i !rll "pill l:o& lll a:!'s n•111t &'Dull II 12 I) al" =-25 .,. lti )-,,~ '" '" I •• ' -.Ill ' 36 ~ " • l9 .. " .. " ~ .. .. , " " ~ n ~ 1.; ••• " L'.:i ""' " " "' -" ~ .,. ~ -" • .. 6l ! ~, .. --,~ .. M .. I '" : n .. ,. I .<I" • f"AP.>I fXT•A I MOH£'< AfTE:J!. S"c.f-\OOL. f ' ---------; !"A f'PL Y f.ff'fi!E -> STEVE ROPER ? CMl"T PROMl<:iE 'tt>ll All'f· TMIMG~ I WOllLP llKE VOii TO ~ Ma!E WITM ~E •• &ff IT PEPEMDS ON W.Wf THINGS : '~~ PEANUTS ly Chester Gould TIUl.CV, WSW JRal · TR'llNCl TO oeT VOUI IT's .. SOU'T TINKY. COME l':: .. TO~Tl'E ""5PITAI., By Tom K. Ryon . I· By Harold Le Dowe By Frank Baginski Il.L H,IWE TO ~ l-IOl.JRS ~T 30 CENTS AN ...OUlt ?!! 6ETOUT Of HERE! PA'/ F~M'/ BUS FAl<t:S, MEALS AND EQUll'MENT ... 1: .__...._ ___ _.__. Ll'L ABNER "'"IS MAH WIFEAGJN AN' MAH U'L Ao\PPY 15 MOOMl>I AGIN.'.' HOPE THINGS TUA.NEDQJT A'S "WEl.l. Ftl'TH' \./ 11. RICH GAL- SALLY BANANAS Thursd•y. May 14, 1'170 -·T-0 GORDO MOON MULLINS "THE' WIFo IS · ~OUD ... T,Al<ES ARI' P.Asr· Po<· ·.JUNIOR 1'5 A DROPOlJT .. ""THE BOSS 1s A GROUCJ< .. ." ANIMAL CRACKERS AGWOf'OF 'EXl'ee'f"S AR€ DlSGOSSIAJG calsa:!SillP, . By John Miles AT Tui.T AATE , SO? THIS JOB ISN'T l\.OULD MEAN 'fOUlt: A NET LOS6 FAT HE I< OF 8 DOLL•l<S WOR"IN(;? A WE~K!! qJ ''"· '"'' ......... ••f T"'""' ~,..,,..!, J ~.JM I By Men • s.,, • • By Sounders and Overgarcl By Charles M. Schull ....-------~ • ' \~ THl STIANGI WOllO MR.MUM . •' •• ~'.>;si~ .... : By Charin Barsotti , . By Roger BoUen "" • 'M05-r OF rr •• ..,. __ .. w.,s SEEO 'f.IJf'l'eD' cm: •• " • i· (I; \-!J/~ .~ L ! ., ........ "::?'"TI·-·---:.~ .... ..,.........._..,.--....----~ -..:i-:::::-r. II .---....--;-..,· '=-~ "; ---ryw=-;,-;ry;-:c"';,"TCO,,,."'l","""f•Tl""""r""•"~~r,.,_,,,,r,,..,,"'l"""'~"'"""'"'"""""'"" .. I"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"""""""""''!"'_, .. ..,.., ..................... .,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,..,.,,.,. .. ., .. ., .. ., ... • H DAILV NLOT s Thunday, M11 14, 1970 ltlonet1'• Worth· ·in War of Cai·s '· OVER 1'HE COUNTER By SYLVIA PORTl':R IFlut;a t. a SUit1 of five) 1 TOKYO • , • • La.st year ~ a.ales of JapanKi cars ~· tn 'our mlrktt soared 44.5 per- • r&nt ad sales of Japanese "U\ICU to us rocketed M.J -~! In the ~ monlhs. \'f'lly ,.,..i4 • pr.flt b•o:.•v•• J•U 1a11'f h•1r tfi1 ,i.011• ri119. T!UPHOHl -ANSWlllM6 IUIUU 135 -7777 4th Annual Franchise and Business Opportunity Show , find out how you .... "C1n 9et in bu1in••' for your1elf" by vi1iting thit 1upermarket of •au1ine11 Opportuniti1s. 75 Companies from 111 over the Unit•d States are on displ•y and looki"J for fr•nchis••• \ ' •n 111oc.i1tes in -Orang• County and •Mrrounding areas. May 14-17 :Disneylall!I Hotel, Anaheim Admission $2.51 ::sett Meditation Is : ·.A Potential Danger ,:Jy 1UIT &U.NT, t.n ~ "Even ~cians are far 'fi"om agreement about the . wActice ot Rlf-medication . .It; everyone wt-nl to their ck)etots at t'YC!J'Y :sign of ill· netls it wouJd be Jmpossibll" ·fbr the mt.<dlcal profession to hand.Ir th.:-delugc of pa· .(llllrlts that would dffoend· '\lpon them. The more seri- t'O\isly ill woul(J suUer most for thcrf' would not bf. ~ough ot t he time needed ,J:or them. ~ But, self·medicatiop mu1t • ue carried out wlsely. One :•ood rule is •• • 1f certain ._JYIDploms k~p returning, ~li. ia tlme to have your doc· tor find the cawe. When 'i!o'e notice a customer Is oft· buying a particular non criptlon remedy v.•f" \\/ill ys suggest that they ldfOuld see their doctor. llvou OR YOUR DOCTOR C!A'N PRONE US v.1hrn you J'i!iM a dl!livery. We v.ill de- IMT' promptly wilhout ex- .tm chan:e. A great many ptpple rtly on u.~ for their hq.lth n~. \Ve welcome req_uests for deUvery service ~ charge 11ccoun1.<1. ' .,1tAlX LIDO PH~RMACY ,,_ 111 ""''"" •-4 .....,.,, 8"cJI Ml·lllO " ,,... hll"'Y ,,. U.S. auto Ill.ts ln Japan rose a puny Z.7 ptrctDt and truck sales (a total of 10) were ridiculous. This year Japa n'• automakel"I are scheduling pniduction of a m I g h t y S,800,000 motor vehicles, up 13.6 percent over '69 and ~ jecting 1,100,000 exports, up 19 pernent. Japan's sales In the U.S. market could bt dou-- ble '69 -range !rom a low 350,000 to 475.000. THE BAm.E OF the Automobile is on in full force. From all <1Vet the world, small can are pouring into the U.S. -with Japan's Toyota. and Datsun well up "on the list or popular iDvaden. J n rtspome, Detroit finally is rolling out America's new sub- compacts. You have not yet signaled the outcome, bul authoritative guesses are that Japan will both make strong inroads into the Volkswagen's sal~ and be tough competition for all U.S. makes. Confident of this, Japan's automakers are forecasting production will continue to rise 15 percent a year and exports will coo.Unue~ to rise 18 tO 20 percent a year. And Katsuji Kawamata, president of the Japan Automobile Manufac- turers Assn. as well as ol Nissan Mot.or Co. (Dahun), told me he expected total roads to double in the next fi~y:s to 30,IMXl,000, E'S NO DOUBT that the Battle <J! the Automobile Is just beglnning and that it will become fat more im· portant. than the current col· lision over Japan's tremen- dous texlile exports to us - a collision now up to a leYel or dangerous emotionalism on both sides. Japan points out that she EARN P9A ..... .._ ..... 9'MITllLT -tS,000, .... ~ fwl ,. ;a '-......., Jtwift c.,,. tili< ..................... - .......,, $'/t \ ,_;.i .. ,_ booli: ,\c:~•-;. ••Y ..._.,,_ WitWr-.11 i...rM .. 4 .. ''"""' -.. w.m..t ,....,,. Coat.ct -oaffic-1 .. .,.,. ~,., ttrnSt n TMI JtTHI IAIM N:OM "41 I •l CALIFORNIA :nlRIFT&UJAN LOCATIONS 171L17tt. St., Cette 1111 .... 721 Sl'wte St .. S.... .. ,IHI•• 3045 s..len IM!d, ChJ!erll 21114 kh-b<ani, c--.. , .... '111 Wlbltlf'9 ~,4 .. ............ • "' XEROX COPIES ' ,, ' .. " - .. 4 .... COLLATED FR [[ .... lO c MINlM1JI,, fl , I ! Er, , 1 ;1 tl 111 "in .GOOOUJR'-1~ 2131 San Jo1quin Hill• Rd.-Newport Center -· ~PSA _every m1nulesto Oakland! 1~11o 7'11 am lo 1:4S pm. Both Wl1'- rtr;1 M :4S.10:1S-11:.es am-1;1 S-2:4M:1S.5:4S.7:1s..1:45 pm. ui1 Mott Oft Wffkendl. •••y·c:•r• •ctiv• w11r , .. me1' •nd MY' if fl•t•• 1ren't your thinq, we hn• tredition1I trou1en el10 ; in fe,f, ITl•yb• mor1 of th•m then fler•s! Complete-New York S'tock List Market Symbols ~-., ..... ;;s;-.:;;;::;;;;:::: .... ::;.;: .. :.~.~-~-=-=-::::=;::::::::::.~-:::.:::: .. :.;;::_~.~-==-: ... : .. ~; ... :::_::_~_:;_;:_::_::_::_::_~-::~;-:-~.:.:.:::.:-:::;::=:-~-~ ... :;:_:.:-:::-:_::.:.: .. :_::.;.:_::-:,:-.: .. ::::::-:':-:::-:::: .. :::.'"':.~.~.~.=.~.:~;:.7.:_;.~.::-;.~.: .. : •. ;;,:.~(.~,;::~~.:.:.::~;:_:-:;_:.;.,~.:.;. ..... ..,. .......... ,.J ...... • , M11 lt70 DAllV mo·: Wednesday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List .... ... ..................................................... , .....,_,__.,.,. ~---~ =---~ f • t !I'" lf'!t -MW JONIS A'll•.t.eU w .. W1r l,Jf N IM 11\l 'It -9' , 1i 2 f)... ft~ -I Ntw Ylll'lltA"l''-1 0--~ •--~11!1!11 J.,_ 1)4 1f':t """ II"' -"' II 1!~ It n r ~==•TOCIU w::~,,. l 1~ •m '~_:·Ii t.r ;i tt II: . ='l< 0-"i.11 t..-(I-N1I ~::e~~/l: I' ~ ~ ~ = ~ !'-,~ 'l , L.. ='tl • 1,.,. ... JU.• Mit.M m .e.1 -10.r =fit~'\' 11' .,'l _'m rili---1 I D\; nr,i •,. 20 Tr11 141.'1 ••-* JU.IP 1'6UP-l.lS ~jT.,-.i ... 1 ••••• °" • t~ fr" .:.::,l u "" UM.a to-1.1~ ~tt.12 tt.JJ•-1.• w!m; 1.J1! 1; lf" t1: I ..... ..,..";I .I t ~ ff -11~U $ti!. J».'1 tJ!,7'0 7".JI Ht . .ff-,_., 1''-',r Ul •'!f ff.. .. t!.... ~I .. =w~~ f 1~!:il T!.t:-'"1~.~.~~~ .. ~.~~.~:'.9'~'~w:~,.,;7r111 :I lt76 llli 1~.:.::~ ,.."''""' ~ 1 1 \Al fr'l.'n . • .• . • .. ...... ........... , Wn 811111: 1~ .M i1YI 2"'1i -\.'-~A 'I l ,l 1,~111 .......................... fi W•lnMd ,,. 4 11\t . tr"~-" It• ~:n 1'it ~ = a lk .......................... I.I :*..:J:a ~ n f r ~: NEW YORK (UPI) -An unwillln!iss to pul'-,•2.01& ~ ii:-~ ••i.. .... ::.,:., ~:'° ... J ""' :f.., S...-1'\i Chase SecuriUeS in the face o1 MOWl intern.. .n, t r ~ -Vi !Mt.I Hllll UwC'"" ca., utt: .n.tll 1m ~ DI\ ~ -! ..... IPtif I 1 -1\ Wft!Va 1.61 "! JM '°"' 21 41i~ Uonal and economic coocem continued o plague =J 1 1! .:j~ ,,,,.., ~ ., ,,'lt n~ u, -_41w:::;:,1-?" ~ ~'" as14 : Wall Street Wednesday as the Dow Jones Indus-TlllW t•-n, -.1 'ft DI! 1 sll ,., • 11' ... WfYtlt •• n ~ lOS\.\ le1"\ 1= iJ trial t bl-• •-• th '700 ~ f th '04 -T lti\ 1'to! -Whffll' If! 1t I'~' W'A -avero~e um ~ ~ow • ma.. or • .first time 1mce tbe .. swnmer of 1963. -U·V-.wL"r . .l! h 1~ +..,. wti1r1c, ~ u '°" 5111, '°" t l: The closely Watched bJue·chip barometer WI$ UA~clr'i:ll' ~ ~-m: ~~=1~ ruairr.~' 1f,i ~l\i=t~=1~ft:ifi , ~: ~ t =•: oU 10.75 at 693.84. The latt time the DJ reached c~ 2 111 11~ -U ;r~1J 1f• ~ R~ w 1 .. ,lt w111t1Cr11 ..u ,, in.'AI ll 10 _., th! I A I 1-b ·1 c1 ed 1 c.;.'i/ .J.!. l1' I ='v. ~· ,~ "' , :+" -1itN.cl' .loOP 36 .. ll'h 1•.., -• 11 ltllto 1,u, ltlo\ _ ~ S OW W8S On Ug. , ' .u.i, W en 1 OS I n c.,.,..,.. ~ !!• !! Jl-"' ll1• 4J • '.t 1,1 -1 ~ nNer 1.., ,,. ~ 11--~ ~ I"' '!ill \Oii 694 t:1 n c.itikle t l U1t. !f~ ...'. •• Ul•h L I . I~ ,,.., J ~ t -\\ W dCetCOrP I Ii ~~ ""' 21,)~ l .. " ' I". ' Im' _+·;, . . n }ii] .. • t a Vtrltn AHO nt 11111 1S\t 1m -1 w '"'" .Hb 1 7 ""• •••• im o Th UPI k I I d' to In ll ~-k ' J ' 11\~ It ..,-YCA C6"• . .o 1~ 1 1t 'Ni tru -,.. wrn ••11 ,1' ~ "6 .,,,. -1$14 -w u • I 11'-n• e mar e n 1ca r, mea5ur g a .,~~ s " P 1 ,. 1 _ .,.._,., 1 . .0 110 ~ .s>.t " +i\• w1111_, ... v 1~ 1,.,.. 1v..-~ l) m ::::· traded. showed a loss of 1.83 percent on l,MS Issues n • lft tU1 II .: .. ::«. ~J"? .. ~0 .... ~ ~ ~~i ~. = ~ wi':~l. 't:i I~ ~~ ~iii :i~ = ~ 1 ""' .. !:--~ on the tape. Ol th•••. I.I"' decl1'n-• and 22' aalned. ~ ... ~ ~ -~' VlctC""' .so 3' 1' IJ'.• U\.o -1 ~lf!l'w ,.... .. 11111 '° 20..,. _, »7 ~ ~"" , • ...,,.~ '" cu 'I ,. It:~ J ~ l'o-ilivm,...r 4' Jl• s J'"-i.-W •l'Svc 1.io t w moo ln. , .• "I l l6\lo n· -_,• . Turn.. OVer Of around 10 mJ'llion !ba-g -mpar-l,l"IC .. I -l V11!1Pw \,lt 19"1 2~ 1"111 ~\ + \II la Cf! .97 ' lilt 1' .. ltU -.. n • .., ..... ... -I\ VtE&.' .,,, I 1• " ., '' +1 Wp*"' WW .JCI a ' ~ .,. -.. ,,. ,, •v. -"" ed with 10,850,000 shares traded Tuesday. -ff ~· H~ , -" v1EI' ..,.... llO ,, " ,, -"'111..,..,tt.o .c ~' 111\ u" i.t\\ -1'• t lttlo :m ··· · -"oVomt4o U 1°" 10 10 -'A ~C• .U l6 11\4 11 n\li--217 lt 11\l l -v,, H La b h nal•-' • w 1st •-c ~~ • m .. =lsU V!t Cor• . .a IS tn. ,.. 2"• ..... W.IW!tl l.l(I 21 ''" ,,"" ,, ... -'• H 'l nl'> -iv. arry u sc ner, a ;;~~ 1or a on °' o.. ""fr: i 1 ,. .. vukt11 M.111 1 n 111\ 1•u n -"weoiw "".20 ' ~ ... '"" + ..-'11 .,' "' 2.w u = ~ said the market is "bu~?; lo~ood news" which • fr · • = vw• un11 n 1 1~ 1N '"' -\t W•ld AlrWl' " '"' "' ~ -"" -iJ 2J v. . ' • -. WXV"' Wr11lt'i',. '"" .... ~+•It " lilt ,.. ffil' -" would turn it around. Bu e:.a ed that there Is a ~ 1 ij " ~ + "' -• • ·.a..-• w~r11111r "' • ie '" ""' -~ '. M' "s ",.,.• .. = :1 !l!\ .... Wtdtevl• t 11 ~ ~ s,s~ -\!i )l(t ra.11 C• _.. tn 1' 1Mto n -~ 15 .. complete lack of confidence al a result of the llst's i ' ~ -~ w111r.n 1 n 1m i1u , .. \ -1 XTlllA inc: n 11 1&•.1o ,.,,. -t, 'II, "~· u1 i ~~ =-·a· " llCJ' 1 ~ ,, -\\ W•I '" 1.• .u •1 olOlli ..,,. _,"' v:C'''I> 1.:JCI • VI• I• 'I ... \la •1 prolonged decline and the conflnUing gloom on the ii' "• -~" ' ll f ' -\~win M11rno 1 11 1N 1"' 1~ . 11 COi"• "' J? '"' 1fl 2nt + ~ ft i , ""r~ '"" • J 2 • • • w11wvt11 c1 ' 'llO '"' J~ -" l! • '' A.• l 2il't »Vt 23V. +2'\tl li ec~nonuc and intemationaJ scene . r::i:, 1. ti • ~1 : 1t -1~ w.,.,,..., '·'°' 11 11~' 11"' 1 -\\ "'' Morn 11 ,~, n v. 1:)1,\ -\lr' ' • ~ : I 1 . " Ill .. -~ W1rn•et ·" J ,,,i 14h ' -~ i:••NP• "', 1!2 21"/r ,~ 21 + w o1, • O ' U -' 1 Vi V. -V. Wt•LI"' 1.211 t6 st 5n'o JI ... ,.,,_ Cpr' 11 )l'.t 2ll• UV. -W \t 11 ' -1 w1rn Sw 1.40 U "" :nV. 32'h +14 z,..1n.1t l.411 131 ,.l't 'l'M •tt -I'( 4' t l loio -~, ............................................... , l't Df1 1 11 1"i + '.\ WltG1a 1.10 ' 2t H UW -.._Zurn lrld .21 "'9 ,.~ '' 11 14 "\,lo Ul.11 :U ..... •~ ,M I lllt 11\li-.. Wt~Sll .70 * U 11 I' •\ (~rl1hlM ff Tiie AHOC:ftlldl'r-,lfJ< Steek Wall Street Hits .. Seven-ye~ Low • Complete Oosing Prices -American Stock Exchange List l T " l I I I ( ,, " " .•• t· i• ''l" l11,·J1 ''''rfJ DAILY PILif MAY 14 -m l• l" .. rn1111 (Cl 1101 G!I W ......... Wffl ii ltwln (C) tlOI IE~ (t) ('l h1) "D HOl'llbrl de I• 1111." M•11• Lopez •nd PKO lt•b1! 1111. 1:05 EI:) ltle-ltwist1 Mullctl (55) .., / l:tO. ~ NMn CC) (60) Je11y Dunphy. . - ' II m H1.u.,4ri11U.,. (C) (30) 1:30 B ID @ al) 1renSicl1 1c1 (60) (II) "£rt al tht Hu1rk:1111." Durin1 • visit It Sin Qullltift, 1rolltldl ind ttis stiff 111 lorctcl to •Id Iii an 1.ape plot for rtl1" comictl. 0 ltllll& (C) ~) . ' G C. '" 1., Tllis? (C) (JO) 1ill Wltk's COlllldy ,11111 11 com· JOMd of Jltll C.rt•. P1ul W'i11cilllll " , Ind MOteJ Amsttrdlltl. • . 0 L.A. TV DEBUT -"THE · * GREEN HELMET" -Bill TRAVERS, ED BEGLEY G Sil O'Oocl Mowit: "TM Grnn '"' , Hflrnlt"' (clram.) 'Iii-Bill T11vus. , , ,1, Halley Witters. Ed IM1ley. A loDI rsclnr clrivtr must thoo:se b1lwHn ., :::.,~eethe!f"l and lllr sport Ml • .t Q M V111 0,U (30) • fie flllrtltoots (CJ (30) Q) st. lrtt CCI (60) ~(])Alt Evtftinr lkwl (C) (301 _. Ill Wlllt'• NawT (3Dl "Look .lro1111d You # 2." 0 !Ill (I) (!l ... ,_ (Cl tlOI (R) ~mantht's Curious Crninp .'t Sim 1t1s in t.roublr with Mt)Ont, lnc:ludinc tilt pollet, When her p111· 111ncy-induced ct•vinp for txOllc foods 111 luffilltd by . lltr witcllly. powe11. Tommy Dnis cunu. m Dtwid r1ost SIM• (CJ (90J MA tr<tst FtSl:~•l." Jackie GfUJOfl 111tl1S. m fie Iii VaMty (C) (60) fI) NET ~ ... (90) "Sisltr Bl· lonik1."•Yi P<twlan stus as Sisler Veron ica (pronou11eed 81lonik1 bJ lllr children). • Cowichtn Indian se nl to tetth lndi1n d!lldr1n Jn the Y~kon tetrilory. ~. GI CJ) en "'" 1c1 caoi •< I 'I cm Acwdi (30) t:OO 0 3 (j) CIS Thu11d11 Mlvit: (C) "ltoltl r111diM" (comtdy) '!iii --Gin• lollGbri1id1, Alic Guinness, Robert Morley. A 5W"el nndavous at the Hotel Par1dho in Paris turns into a tumult119111 aH1i1, its lrleftcb i nd 11111111 COllVMlt on 1111 llotcl. '• •' • EiiJ NllHlll (60) (f) lftws In Ult ROMM (C) (60) J..:11 Wh ite. Alu Drtifl, Glol'la Gree1, Pdtl Beebe. '13P 0 U.BC HtwllYiet {CJ (60) or1• 8 sttw All• Show (C) (90) "'l! Gursts 111 lttO)' Van Dykt, Joni· , , than Winler1 ind Jim Morin. O @(])GJT•• ~nN (GI (60) (RJ 81rWr1 Cde11. WillDn Pld:1tt ind 1111 comedy te1m of Ht!lclr1 and Ullett runt. G Tbt ''"" Ca• (C) (30) Jim MtcKreH hosts. Suun Stint Jtll'llS, •; ~ Bill D1n1 Ind Nici Ghosll~ 1u1st ,~ .. CD Mr fMrill ill•rtt•• (30) ..,,.1$.@(})hnylll.-(60). ml Htrttctoe ~ ti .....,...., Hor· 1npl (XI) "Los Mist1rios del Del· lino." " U ti)--(C) (lOI ID ~lft NIMI Diii(" (d11m1) '3,_ C.rolt Lombtrd, Cao Gr111I. Cl'llltltl Coburn. DAYTlr>!E MOVIES 1:00 O •a1 .. mblr th• Nifftt~ (com· tclrl '40-fred MteMUtrlJ. Bir· b111 St1nyqtk. l:JCID (C) "1'1k1 Mt ti l o•n" (ro 1 ._,l ltelt) 'Sl-An11 Stltrid", 'Stul1n1 Ht)'6111. . Qt "f11&M 1 ... Ff'llclo•" (4fam1) ··~lilld Ru111H, frtd Mtt> Murrty. .... "11111 TW• lltl'Mlt~ (tomedr) ••....Cddil B1ld.tl. V11on.ea Lake I z:oa 0 -Actiel 111 ti• ktl AliHtit" "'Qtll" (d11111t) '4l-A11n l•dd, (atttntvre) ''l _ Hu11p11r.., eo. l.,.ltl Yo wn&. l aart. R*Yftl(lrlll Jlliury. l:JO Cl '11nl Shl&ftl" (myslery) '46 -C1r1ldine' Att1e11ld, Skl1111~I 4:JO IJ "l'ftt.n• (d11m1) 'S6-Ya11 'rlWtrMt Httfln, (d lttllf, BNlrict Strtllh\. e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS , e N~SP~S 10.•lity "1nt"'9 ond 0.pMd•bl• s..,.;,. j, fOf' ;.;d:r. tli•r ·• qu1rter ~ 1 ~e11t•!Y· • .. , ·' ' · ·l--'. f·'1.INTll~G 1?11 WllT IALIOA ll1'1,. NllWPOIT IUCH -'4Z~Jl1 I ',r ' 'I. ~ FCC Move Hurts DAILY ,II.CIT 11111 l"M .. lns~bfwdination? · 8~ JUQC,00 BIWW HOU.YwOOD (llPI) -Tbe most re~ttable upect of the Fe d e r a I COJ1]JDWllc1Uon1 eo,a.misJln'• • 4ltdilon t o redtlct network procfamm1nr ls that most news·sbow1 were nQ\ given· special protection .. f"lews is televllloo'1 most important ccrnmodlty. Bjlt the FCC decl.slon, whldt limits many RaticNll to u 1 l n g netWork tbowt In mty three of tile loor nlgl!Uy pthne time hours startln& Sept. 1, 1971, gives reguJar news proaram no more Jlatus that en- tertalnment entnes. The FCC decision Jut week Is intended to promote diversi- ty and local pt'Ofll'amming. And· the· $.2 ,majority tllat voted for Jt obviously fell it was neCeW.ry to loosen the 'lriP of the networks on na- tional televlsion. • rOOst kloal ilatlons art111ardfY likely to offer a sudden wealth' ol cultural programs -and, in !•~. will protiably fll\. tile gap wflh rather ordinary ihows -the disaervict to network news is what tw upset many observers . Aside from the fact ·'Director Set For one bing, plans to ex- pand __ t!'-_igbtly n e t w or k nlll'.'"""' ff9m 30 mJnutes to that an l hoQr have suffered . a' ie'!ere sjtbaCk.. And, Over~ll, no one has spoken more elo- quently about the FCC decisioo and news coverage HOLLYWOOD (UP I) than FCC Chairman Dean DireCtor Gtorge Roy HW and Burch, who dissented from the producer Paul Monash, "'ho maJority oplnion. Don Tuche prepares to take a poke at his pompous joined forces for "Butch Burch diff~red with "lhe commanding officer, Heath Park, in a scene from Cassidy and the Sundance majority's failure to exempt "We Bombed in New Haven," on stage tonight Kid,'' w 111 f 11 m news interviews and most im- through Sunday at South Coast Repertory's Costa ' 'S I a ugbtuhouse-FJve' .' a port.antly, the news documen- TV News ' . means "o( Wonning the ca!ltS by legally qualified can- pobUc (ln events and issues." didates." He added : "When the ques· As for current prime time tlon of u emption for the news series, the show businm present ru le came betore the newspaper varil'ty reports: m-·•on th aj r1'ty "Many in ti e trade art con· com lS;i,i • e m 0 • cemed now lest CBS cut back aware that the networks could d h Im I the I its '60 Mlnults' show and NBC avol t e pact 0 ru 8 trim Its 'First Tuesday' -by e..xtendlng the 3(1.minut.e evening news show Into a one-both sll'(lng news-magulne hoW' news show, detennlned formats but relatively weak not to exempt the newscast. advertising vehicles." "·In my opinion. if this rule lr-fi~i~~j~iii~~~~~ had resulted io addltionatil prime time n e w s piy- gramming -the thing \\'hich network television can and does do' bell -that would I have been a benefit to the entire cpuntry. ~:iiii~;~~;;~ " , .. l strongly believe that l the commission caniiot pro- perly adopt a po\Jcy of subordinating n e w s pr~ grammlng, which informs the public and ls surely not in over-supply, to entertainment[ programming, which exists in far greater amounts and seeks I but to amuse." JUNIOR MATINEE Saturd~y, 2 p.m.· Z FfATUIE's "TARZAN AND THE -GREAT RIVER" ... "ALAKAIAM THE GREAT" ALL SEATS 75< There ha s been s o m e speculation that the FCC decision might be modified before it goes into effecl next I year. P.1eanwhile, the only ne'" shows ellcluded from the three·hour prime lime limit . are "special ne ws programs, involving fas! breaking events, I~==========~ on-the-spot coverage of news events, and political broad- 1H£ UlflMA T( (XP(R!(NC( Mesa theater. satire on World War 11 Pri891'1 tary and then e w s c a s t ,·' Bobby Sher.man N: Teenag:;s-;l-;;:, RfiljiSia rl-11~11 TOMOIROW. ALL THI SU5P£HS£ l lXClllMIMT IS IN INGLISH •• llQSS llJ•TER ~ AIRF?ORT BURT LANCASTER • DWI IARTIN . A UlllVWM. "CTUlt( !al C}) ::."'::~eot~==~~ . WT WEEKS ) N ... ln1 MllllH lift 01111'1111 Mmt1r1rs" ·--"'3-Ua.LW#S I Mn fm&.awllOM F JJ .... OP THEADVENnJRERS llillllt .... llloll "'1HE ~., twl1t falM£ ! __ ...., CHAlLIS AINA'VOF e AU.H UDIL e CAHDJCI Ill.IN THOM MY UJIGllN e DILIA IOCCAl.DO e llNlST IOIGHINI e IOSSANO IUZZI e OLl'VIA •HA'flLU.ND llllM NHMIU e ANNA MOffO e Lll~H T&TLOl·YOUN• Startt E•duJl .. lyl Wodnfld•y. Mey 27th Mart Crovyley 's ··mt: m:ns f.lmt: ~v·· ... is' not d musicdl. 'C.-C-fk~..,, A"-'C-."""'llk• CO.q.O.U.• 1!!)9 Tl1cre'1 1 ch1r111 in& Colonial Ho&IW 'Wl itin' 111 tale )Ou on 1 penona! l(Hlr of nur CoUJ1try'1 beginning 11 Independence Hdl at Knot1'1 Berry Farm. PJ&.D 1 •·i~il. ~) l~Wl'f Ml,lllCtl Hll "011¥tl"' (OJ Color ... "It• •llf, lt'lfl l"rff'' CIU C110r GrMt F1ml,., linl•r111n,.,..,t1 E11clvslY1 Oranire Co. D<.-ln Sl!Owl"' "fk L ..... lllo!I .. L-lyrlfl JIMIM" Cit) (.olDr "Me!My J1111tl1" C1tlor Under 11 mu1I ti. wllll JWO•lfll Alt Color SMlw -Peter O'loole In "Ootlllt\'t Mr. ChfJrl" lQJ ... ... "TIM llelwn" !GI') c~1or AJL ColOr Sl'low Acldemy A,..rd Wl11n•• JCIM Wlyne Jn "TnN O•lr"' '"' 'Sltrl .. c.doW' All C1llor Show Mlrlo Thom.1 11 "'llln)"' !GI') ... HflllJ SllMI ioltl'Mt Dlll'I Tl\tr" fQP) All Color Shew -Stt\11 MCO""' "TM '1IMll1 c ..... Allllr"' IGPI ... 'Tiii 0oH ,.._,., tGI ' ~ril Ol'I S.lt "°"' le< "lndV IOt" ,...... WIYll'f r" ..,,,,. •rll" 4(;) Colo< '"' ""'-ltwlho (vt-M" ((iPl Corot John Wayne ... Rock Hudson "The Undefeated" -'LSC>- The Spectaclt Behind Tho Spectacle "Th'e · Garries" IGI The miracle that happe ns only once to the very young ••• at , " heart? full length real tin! Musical FanlUJ in FAIRYLAND COlOR by ntUICIUI 'Wiii! ANNA RUSSO.L 1llCI r111wr1~c COns\lnc:• B-r!alW!t !AT. & SUN. MAY 16th l 17th ~Al.: 12:]0 l 2:30 SUN .: 12:30 Only ALL SEATS 75e 1-- ~do "lfW'Oll ll•CM .... , ..... ,,._ •• l••~I••• 1140 lolo •• o~. l·l lJO ENDS TUESDAY "·MAYISIOll9 C:OUJlt If DElUZI -JIU<>- hit Acttnt MAGC.11 SMITH I . o .•. 11.'n~G · l•~''sf I ~ ~~~!~ .. l Mis s USA Of 1952 Recalls MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Eighteen years ago a bus pulled \.IP in front of a Hollywood movie studio, deposited a wide-eyed blonde from Brook1yn and drove off, leaving the first Miss USA cm the sidewalk with a slightly IJ· used bathing sult and a head- ful of dreams. 'I"his Saturday night when lhe 1970 Miss USA Is crowned, Jackie Loughery will be ap- plauding .in the audience on her first return to the contest that started her on a road full of detours and finally suc- cess, "When that bus dropped me off along with several foreign girls whOdiCffi't whl the "Miss Universe contest, we were on our own," she said, "no chaperones, no protection - just the big world out there and nobody between it and us." STILL BEAUTIFUL Still slim and beautiful at S6, Miss Loughery said, "We S • Ship Visits l'ien1ui bad been wined and dined for ov1et two weeks before the CO'lltest. But when it was over, ·we A Soviet armored artillery boat arrives at Vienna's were left wilh our bathing Danube River port 1'-1.onday 'lo commemorate the " " ' j ae: ' ' from the Bl;;:ck Sea Fleet which arrived as part "O( a Danube Riv(:t flotilla of the Russian Navy. The flag in the foreground is Austria's. suits. \Ve had to learn to 25th anniversary of Austria's liberation from survive." Germany by the Red Army. The craft is one of five Survlveal Inc I u de d ap.. ----''-'------'--------------------------------- pearances in such movies as ' • Thursday, Ma.r 14, iq70 DAILY PILOJ !I) Ge11erals Loss High . Only Wo rld .War · II Excuds Viet Toll WASHINGTON fAP) -The Vietnam war has taken the lives of more American generals than any other con- rlict in the last 100 years with the exception of World \Var ll. The death <1f Maj. Gen. John A. 8. DiUard when h.is helicopter was shot down by enemy ground fire \\lednesday WM the sixth Ameri ca n general killed in Vietnam and th.e second to die there in little more than a month. Ahhou&h 28 U.S. gentral1i and three Navy admirals were killed in World War II, tbe natfon's military involvement then was far greater than it is now in Vietnam. ·Jn 1945. more than twelve rni.llion U.S. soldiers were under arms \Yhile the number of American troops in Vietnam has never exceeded 543,000. · Only one American general lost his life in World War U.S. Finally Ag·r ees To Pay Off Seminoles 1111AMI , Fla . (AP) -The average price when the land CeCleral government, "'hich was taken. finagled a big chunk of Florida The U.S. Court of Claims out of th e Senlinole Indians in \Vashington ruled In-June JSO years ago, has finally or: 1967 that the government owed fered to pay them $12.3 million the Senlinoles for the acre8ge. for it. The government originally "They're trying to steal i! "''anted to pay only 20 cents again." was the indignant . an acre. The proposed ~t· reaction of Joe Dan Osceola. llement by the Indian Claims chainnan of the Un it e d Commission was based on 43 Southeastern Tribes, "'hen in· cents an acre. formed of the offer by the The Seminoles w o u I d n ' t lndi8n Claims Commission receive the full $12.3 million. \Vednesday. The government would deduct · Osceola. namesake a n d from it money spent on the desce ndant of a [am o us Indians or given them as a Seminole v.•ar chief, said the result of tre11ties, a figure proposed settlement probabl y estimated at ~ million. t. Thrt! Wert kiUed In Kore« during thr,. years of !~Ing. Pentagon ottlelals •tx 9ed · no undue .aJano over hat Js coosidued a prOportl etly high number of deaths or star· rank officers. "This i~ what they are get· ttni .paid tor," one officia l said. "They're just doing their job." ii It isn't that generalS' are braver noW or that they a~ taking unnecessary risks, Pen- tagon Offjcials said. "Vietnam is a a u n- conventional war in aa un- conventiOnal place." said one official. ''There are oo .. nice, tidy front lines." In past war it was easier to find the enemy, and. although generals sometime:t got close to the front, they didn't live there 24 hours a day, the officials said. In Viet· nam , generals such as Dillard. who headed the A r m y ' s engineering command, h a v e units scattered all over the country . "If a commander is going to ride herd, he's just got to move around and go into those areas,'' the official~ said. Extensive use o f helicopters give them the mobility to do just that. "Abbott and Costell on Mars" and "The Hog Angel" ·and a starring role in "18 and Anxious." Liberalizing Of Cong1·ess Rules Eye d Nixon Still Hasn't Acted \vould be appealed to the U.S. Said Osceola : Court of Claims. " '"If the people in \Vashington "\Ve were willing to settle could only visit the reserva~ with the gove rnment if they 'd lions they're dealing with, pay enough ," Osceola said. they would not be so stingy. "But after 20 years in court, ··People think we receive after 100 years of depriving a monthly check from either us of th e land. now they offer the state or the federal us peanuts." government. It's not so. We or the six generals killed in Vietnam. all but one in· volved air crashes, elth~· ac· cidental or caused by enemy fire. In addition. a number have been i n j u red in helicopter crashes. It started with a parade before Miss USA judges in a borrowed gown at Long Beacb, Calif. "I daa't regret it. but I found it hard to overcome being "Miss' anything," ho1iss Loughery said. "Wher: I left · Brooklyn, J was a model and an actress. I had steady work <1n the Millon Berle show and Uncle Milty himself had en- couraged me to enter the con- test. ''I thought it was just going to be a nice two-week vacation i,1 California .•. ln those days the contest wasn 't like what it is now. They used to juSt give you the roses and the crown. MANY STAVED ON "At least I won. Many of the girls v;ho didn't, stayed on thinking that Hollywood was just out there for the taking. J\1any never went home· again and most didn't make it ·tl1ere. J can tell you a lot of stories thal had a sad ending." After the breakup of 8 six· year marriage to producer-ac- tor Jack Webb, Miss Loughery married Jack Sch w i et ze r "who is not, thank God, in the acting business." This season she expects to do television guest shots on ··ironsides." "Marcus Welby 1.t.D .. " "The Bold Ones" and "Adam 12," a Webb pro- duction. Despite the pleasant prese nt aod rosy future, J a c k i wouldn't recommend the Miss USA route to any girl: "If I had a daughter, I \\'ould hope that she \•;ou ld choose a more stabilized type of life. I have had my moments of glamour and sometimes it has been ex· citing. But I \\'as once very messed up, and I worked for what I got. I would like for a daughter of mine to take a different road ." P at Takes Up 'Wifflehall' WASHINGTON (AP) Page girls on the floors of Congress and televi si on cameras in House committee rooms are included in a major and tradition-breaking con- gressional reorganization bill passed by a House c:>mmittee. The bill also authorizes a study on gla ssing in the House chamber and providing visitors in the galleries with a running explanation of the often confusing debate and procedures on the floor . The measure was passed by the House Rules Committee Tuesday after a year of hear· ings and study. The traditional Senate and .House page boys would be replaced w i t h college·age women as well as men, leaders said. The committee chose hiring ot college-age pages -high school graduates under 22 years of age -over an alternative proposal to set up supervised dormitories for the present predominantly high school·age page boys. The Senate has long permit- ted television cameras and radio microphones in hearing moms. The bill, for the first time, would permit s11ch news coverage in the House by a majority vote of the com- mittee members. A glass bubble over the House chamber had been discussed since 195'1 when a group of Puerto Ricans fired a hail of bullets onta the House floor from the galleries, but Chairman B. F. Sisk (0- Calif.), said the study of glass- ing in the chamber is not f"Or protecting members. The purpose would be to soundproof the. chamber, he said, so guides could explain what is happening on the floor without disturbing members. The bill also would make tours of the Capitol free - \VASHINGTON (UPI ) they now cost 25 cents - Pat Nixon said she has taken and guides would become con up "whiffleball," played with gressional employes. a plastic ball and bat. ;:=========::; "It's so light I can hit the baJI ," she said. Mrs. Nixon told a reporter she has been getting <1utslde to play "whifneball" "'ilh David and Julie Eisenhower, her son·in-law and daughter. ON THE TUBE far t I• h•1t 9uide to whaf'1 hepp•ni119 011 TV, reed TV WEfl( -di,tribufetl with the ~•turdey editio11 of the DAILY I'll.OT. 011 Senate Meeting Request The Seminoles lost the land just make it by the skin of In th~ early J800's when Gen . ~ou=r~t~ee~t~h~.'~' ====;===.II nlng to do anyway," Aiken no ""ay to judge public opinion Andrew Jackson marched into 11 ' ""' ,, '" "'' ""''' ,,,,,,,,' < I 'tPrH • '1< '- "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" WASHINGTON !API ·President Nixon has never directl y responded to the Senate Foreign R el ations Con1mittee 's twQ<week old re· quesL for a rare face·lQ<facc meeting on Cambodia. Senior committee members, iriterpret silence as rejection. "\Ye have had no repl y.'' said Sen. J . \V. Fulbright tD- Ark.), the chairman, "not unless he considers the other meeting to be a rc1)ly." The other meeting \\1as a Ma)' 4 briefing when Nixon and several administ r::itlon of- ficials met members of the Senate panel and the House Foreign Affairs Committef. Fulbright said there was no opportunity then for real con- sultation with the President. "That was hard!Y a . con- ference." said Verfnont Sen. George D. Aiken. senior GOP member of the commi ttee. ··Apparently th e Whi~ House \\'as not receptive to the re- que~I," he said . "It looks as though the President felt that we wouldn't approve of what he was plan· THIE °Wl!STMINST.E.tl: Cl!NTEt said in an interview. -by the number o( pepper Florida to punish the Indians Fulbright said he did not shakers we capture.·• for providing escaped slaves plan to renew the request the Senate Republican Leader with sa nctuary in the swamps. committee made of Nixon in Hugh Scott brings to the floor The treaties of 1823 and 1832 after the Seminole wars left a letter May I, the day alter each day a report supplied the Indians without any of the Cambodian decision was by the "'hite House on h ..... , O'THle "GOODIYI Ml . Clfll'S" their real estate w ich once announced. casualties, supplies and cm.braced about 30 million 11•~· There were c o m p I a i n t s W•ll Ol&1H11'1 elseWhere in the SenaLe about weaopns captured in Cam· acres. ''H•11t Y•11r H• •• tll• Wirill" ( bodian operations. The Seminoles riled sull 20 eon1, s.i. a sun.-1 ""·"'· All SEATS $1 :50 c 0 m m unications di ficulty But l1is other lines to the years ago, demanding the ---------- with Nixon or his top aides. \Vhite House appear to have rederal g.overnment pay them One of them came· from been crossed at least "twice $47 million ror the land, a sou rce close to the GOP in lhe past two days. f' ed I $1 25 per acre the leadership. "\Ye aren't getting.,,,==""===~====='~g~u~~-~~·~-·~-.;,,.-=-~·= through to the \Vhite House,'' this source said . "\\le have the same problem as Hickel." Tha l was a reference to the complaint of Interior Sec'refary Walter J. Hickel that he had trouble getting t:> Nixon with hi s suggestion that t h e administration demonstrate more concern about American youth .. By Any Standards, Excellent" .... "WE IOMIED IN NEW HAVEN" l'I' JOSEPH HELLER MIY U, U, 11, 11 & )1 L. A. TlMEI "ONE FLEW OYER THE CUCKOO'S NEST" MA'l'll &2l "A Theatrical Shock TTeatment" ... Daily Pilot POR llt:5EllVATIONS: CALL '46--llU lW N.W ... ff ltwl., Ce11e M_. "I understand it's not only difficult for members of Congress to get through, but for the executive branch, too,··'lr;=:::::;;=== said Aiken. 9: i FOR ADULTS ONLY Exclusiv• Showing For Information Phone 673-6260 "They're goini; too much for illl••'lil members," he said. "That's •• NOW AT POPULAR PRICE S Academy Aw•rd Ne111h1H for '"t Actor - PETER. O'TOO LI THEATU ~ l•ll tAIT (OUI HO~-·· --(a•°"A Di~ ...... Ul·•I .. "'The LIBERTINE' COMES ACROSS· INCREDIBLY WITH WRY HUMOR AND TASTE." "'Cnlh.erlne Spank. 111 Cul'iolUI (;r"e<"\,, T•·IU< rin1;11 •.• ttrui 1/1'.cfde• /.(J lwt!Olllt! ..... n one-1<:m11u•~ .. .K illl>lflll '"'.>: ....... ,1111 ... ' I ---... ·~ Al~O PLA'l'IH& • I i B11I fu~ i11 iow11 t "TH I IEST HOUSI IN LONDON'• I I 4 01 .. id Hem"'i~91 · ~ Jo111n1 P1tt1t I G•ar9• S111d1n -·-.,.._ PlaJJOOU Pc,.1/1nu11e I Jook 1111c n ""rl>fflrv ,,....110C1/ I" _, .. _,.,_,,,,.,_ ••ttU:T .... ~,==·---- -1 ·-·TH_E_l!_IBERTINE" I ........ !•.th~'!'.~ ~·Je•a·l.otiO.Trinll,..•ot 2nd Top Feature Jim l raw11 •l1rrin9 ill "'1'1CK •• , TICK ••• ·11Cl , ... .... e:AcH • • AT •LL•• •• 4th Record We .. ' l'IUNTI NGTON ••ACH • •4?·S•o11 ltETUJIN TO "2001 °' I Xl'l lflENCE. Tke Ed ... 1rcl1 Hu11ti119to11 1 C<111m1 Tk11lr1 ii on1 of lh• few \.i9 1c1e•11 th11ir•1 i11 th e c;ou11lry 1qu ipp1d with • lr1clr 1ler1optlo11ic 1aund. Yau will heir "Zor•tft~Jtr•," 0'Ti... 11111• Ds11111k," 111d Gyar9y li91ti'1 1l.ctro11ic , compo1;tia111 lto'll I ov•rh11d All1c ·l1n1i119 1P11k1tt e11d 20 ~ front1 I A4X con1ol1 1p1•~•" I•' hi9h, )' .,.id1, ]0 de•pl, Th• 1cr1111 11 lh1 Hunli119lon C;111m1 i1 6(1' 1cron 111d 25' hi9h, Yau will ••• "The D1w111 ef Me•• 111.J "Te .l•,iter ...... .,. ..... projecltd f1am 15 MM Super P1nol1r, P111ovi1ion proj1clor1 equipped with A1hcr•h Su p•• Ci111x l•mphau,11. IHUltN '1'0 "'21H11 " IX,llllNCI. lf.\1111 ... KEIR 'DUWA . GARY LOCKWOOD t(O,Cttt-"' STANLEY KUIRICK -ARTHOR C. CLARKE _. .. , _,,. STANLEY KUBRICK SUPER PANAVISION' • METIIOCOLOR • stereo 103F~ the sounds of the harbor " 1 . ~:::::d~~7 youve never heard it so good ,.. • • • : _., ( I ~~~~~~~~~~~------------------.................................................. ~~ • . ' . ~SIS FOR SALE /HOU SES FOR SALE ·HOUS ES FOR SAL E /HOUSES FOR SALE H9 USES FOR SALE HOUSI$ 'OIJ SALE Gen.rat 1000 Gerter1f 1000 General 1000 Gentr•I 1000 Gen.ref 1000 C .. te Mete 11• HOUll S FOR SALE HOUS&S FOR SALE ;.;N;;;"'P°=:.;rt.;..;:Be=•d!;:;;..._;.;1200~ I c-a del Mar 1250 HOUSES FOR SALE Hunllntton Beach 1400 FREE RENTAL PRESTIGE WAT ERFRON T HOM ES CUSTOM 4 TO 1 BEDROOM HOME S FRDM $135,000 TO $500,000 PRIME BUILDING LOTS FROM $35,000 TO $175,000 For Appointme n t Call: BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR Do~•r Dr., Suite 3, N .B, 642-4620 LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMEHTS 320 LIDO NORD . NOW Reduced to $175,000. Xlnt terms 6 Beautiful units. 6 Car garages & utility room, ''lith 80 ft. fronting on excellent swim- 1ning beach. Unl ts are newly furnished. * TAYLOR TEEN:, :.:o~GAIN BWFFS GEM. lmmac , CUJtom deoor, ! br, 3 ba, Oil l1ftllbelL $31,900. cute 1 bednlom •qe on 644--0575 aft ' pm HARIOR VIEW HILLS <!Wet ""'!i.i<le cu!<IHac • WATERFRONT No. 15 Room enougb tor l•rae fam. Panelled 1nteri0r -B&ylide Village. 2BR. 28A. lly; 4 Bdrm, fam nn, form. .,.._7171 Modtrn all ~ livlnc ::5CX>~· Beautltul decor. room J25,ooo. 67>1™ ID LINDA ISLE N H I h Stt thi1 new 5 &: maid's rm, ••eort 1 P ts 1210 !am rm + Rll, s baths. HA VE 2 HOMES BI LL GRUNDY, R EAL TOR 833 Oov•r Or., Suitt 3, Newport Bea c h Op<n doily 116',300 t.uae """bdrm. ..,, kit ,,. MUST SELL DNEI 642-4620 ''Our 25th Year'' en cabl~ta. formlca ~n-Stt today! 3 Giant bdmui., WESLEY N. ter tops. Stainleaa ated I.ink. 3 baths, rumpus nn., view. TAYLOR CO. N•wly d"""''"'. "'"eat. Walk to •Cbool" $49,950 I NICE duplex in Cdl\t. So. oI Rwy, on dbl lot. Owntt. $!:18,:.00. m-4169 l•ll>oa l'enlnsula 1300 WIST BAY AVE. Charmin& new 3 bdrm. 2 ba. Mediterranean 1lylr; Block ftom ocean I. bay, Builder' a ........... quality. Bill Grundy, Realtor 833 Dover Dr., NB M2-4&20 SERVICE SUpcr Sharp 3 bedroom, 2 batl1 "'Ith built-Im, family room for $225. \Ye have othen. Come in and browau through our book. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee Realtors 7682 Edln&rr 842-4455 54().51-40 L ido Isle 1351 * BY 0 \VNER • 5~ Gt General 1000 I Ge neral 1000 Riattors ~ts. Own!!r Movina:. Priced Univu.lty Realty 613-8510 General 1000 Ge ne r al 1000 -:=======~ NEWPORT CENTER al only $2l,350. 31Xll E. Coaat Hwy., CdM 1-;:::;;;;;;.;:;;::::;;;;;;;;;;::;;;; I • FOREST E. 2W San Joaq,in Hilb "°"" M. M. L•Bortle, R~r. NEWPORT Hghb, .-amblln& OPEN HOUSE ~an. :: Br, family rm. 2 , bath. 22101 capi.strano Ln, I• Ba Ith BIG FIVE 644-4910 &l&.()56.j l:Vn:. 673-6tl6 ranch style 3 bed.rm. shake SPARKLING POOLS ycrest • • · w o L s o Nl .............................. JEASTSIDE • 1'6,500 FHA! """· ""''" 121 ·950 · 110 VIA PALERJ.10 nr. Brookhunt .t 101 . 3 BR. paneled family dini nl: $28,500. $3500 dn, 2nd TD. rm . Lge. kitchen, 40 fl, lot. 492-3285 t\VIT!l HOMES ATTAOIED) Guest Suite VETS NO DOWN GI LOAN VA , 0.aotilully main. Kingu.ed R. E. •fl 2-2222 3090 Bali C ircle JmmaculatP 5. bedroon1 on tained, aparklin& 3 bedroom. -----------· Orlt' or ~1tSll Verdes' mosl l'Omer lot with room for 7 Stoi·y niodC'ru humt" w/~1 homf' on quiet tree lined leycrHf 122J lie patio. Open Sat. 1-J. 1-==~""'=====' I h owatzb lawson jR. 1'10 outJtandi.ng homes w/5 Bed-pool . Tv.'O fireplaces, dining-Bedrn1s, 3 BA in Mesa OC'l ilk·. Realtors 3 Bedrm, 2 BA. bltn rana:e strttt. O'l\'?IU movinr to nn~ &: convert study. 4 family room combination, l\lar. Big L'Ovcred patio & & oven, diahwasher, fire· mobile home • price &: BAYCRES:f 4 BR Aeatt oR t.o•VU, \100 • Nrwf'OIT Jt..:; .. , (!Ml e!~··- F.V. spaciou.~ 3 BR. 2. BA, fam rm, din tin. firepl. Balh!I, b~ expanll(' along hi-cakfast area in kilchen. honie in xlnl 1·ondition 1n. Just Take Over place, crpu. drps, shake term& for immediate sale. Custom Built Home a f.airway wiih a sometime Ont" bedroom and ba!h com. llldt'. Lorne 4 Brm/ rool etc. $28,767. with a:;sum. Call ~:>-8424 South Cout \Vill trade. ~ beaut. SQUEAKY CLEAN :: c. 111r. f'eneed. Immae. view of Ocean" Catalina. pletely scparlltl' y:ilh priv· DIVORCE Ati!ON -':I able. G.I. loan. Quick pog. ~al Estate. ya.rd. Secluded St. 548--0773. 2005 Balearic Drive alt-rntry. CALL TO SEE !\JU~,. SELL $ 18.500 seiisionr FHA-VA JUST USI'ED. 3 Br. 2 ba. Nr schl1. As1ume 7~1 % doll house in move-in condi-$4-000 equity. Asking $33.500. lion.% Blk. to club & ten-Leavins:: stat.e, Owne r . nis. On oversize 40 II. lot 962-9791 Som•thino a little dlUercnl • thi11 very livable home with Call 10 si'f' this yr11.r'11 and only ti yrs youni; !"BJ'l-Wells-Mcca rdle, Rltrs. Sub .1 1 d ·~ lo b111i;uin! I '"'''·,. tnrmu • U••"-U;v•bln 1810 NeWfto'\rt Blvd., C.!\f. ... _mi bdow T ~~.·n on neat thill 4 '-lmmAI dining rm a t of "warmth". $6.1.000 ..., "" ._,. ... ~. ..., .. " ~,... uutt rm ........,, s of extras Dover Sher.s 1227 * PRIME VIEW * Bay t.. Mtns • Scenic I.:. pvt. Nearly ne1v "Old \Vorld " Contemporary, 1paciowl \\'/ atrium & court. 5 Br's ex- pandable, 500) sq ft. 41r.i Ba, hi-ceilings, 4. c a r gar. $178,0Ckl furn. opt. Will trade for IITlal1 bowie or vacant land in vie. Chmer ~72.f.9. MAGNIFICENT Vl&W bas a "df>tached" family , . .and OWNER \V ILL $37,950 I LO\\/ • LO\Y -LO\V down 548-7729 M4--0684 Eves. in kltcben, and bath, N•w Jil'.:LP fo'INANCE. II I 4 k. nn • keep I.he TV • kids I 19 a you nt'Cl ing size -~ az --;;za carpeting thru-out. Large lot v.ith lit'. So. patio. Realis-BLDRS SAC! Cus J & ~ tically p1iced at $59,500. Br. $31,200. Low dn. Deal H•I P inch in & A11oc. direct. :Z blk.~ E. o l away from thl" living nn & c I th bcdroo~is 2 ru lJ ba1 hs, 1vife Mes• Verde • quiet street. Only $2l,850, kitchen. Simply immaculate 0 eswor y Newport ~uvrr kitchen entertainment Immaculatr, adult occupied M. M. LaBer de, Rltr. I lop tenns al S46,900. patio Well kept conimunity. 3 Bcdnn corllC'r homf'. Nl'w ~ Eves. 673-6116 REALTORS Brookhurst on Elli& at Las 390C' E. Coast Hwy. 675-4392 Flores. :Jl~ 2007 Santia"O Drive ,at !ll"arch "vcry"·h!'rr and you & d . kl • & C · · 1\/011'1 find a ba,...11i n like crptg rps, apnn e.rs MESA VERDE DECORATOR'S 2-STY . .:; Br. 21,1 bathis. $3.!XXl HOME Assun1l'll G.I . 7~~% loan . ... _ .... ~ •<;NW! • this lovely O. F o1 1r v1ew ·.e-front & rear CI o s to "'""'""...,. _..,.,.,, 1tils, Cull lollay. Dial : " COUNTRY CLUB DR. Beauttfully done. 5 Bdnns.1 ~B,,y~·~·-"'~'~OOZ.~~"~"~=~ Family rm. Xlnt street to 5 LG BR 2300 SQ FT dec!htar home w/5 Bednns REALTOR ~6-881 1 962_5585 !!Chools. S28.9j(). Corner Lor. Spack>wi 3 Br, is ~mas tomorrow & in Newport Bea ch Office I 2 ba r I -• d' -'= e. "'' t I ( 1· J ~ S..i ·5110 . am. rm, ormcu 1n. N~· ac o ve Y 1028 Bayside Drive a ny 1me I 19131 Rrookhun;I (-tW!emalllelbt) rm, 2 frplc's. By O\\'ner. BQcft:St area. OWN THE 675-4930 / :;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;~ 1 _11untington Beach LLEGE REAL'Tl 540-45TI, Enonnous 2 JtVel back yd. LAND · NO LEASEHOLD! ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, 500,......atMIMW.--~~~-----Split Jev. home. 1 ~~ Yrs old. 1lreet 45 ft. Jot. $32,500 Pvt ply. 962-9555 $98.500 LIDO REALTY INC. 1705 & I OCEAN VIEW SACRIFICE By Own<r. 4 Br. 2 .., 500 Call SU·SllO A $1000 BARGAIN __ _ _ '""' lam rm. AU blli.,., < Br, II ba. -· · HANDYMAN'S _.-...._. HUNTERS CORONA DEL MAR T h e Possible Dream Xlnt c .r-.T. ana. Assume 833-2GlS. Balboa Island 1355 SPECIAL .=:e.L!rl Rh · H ·1· Been lookinA: fur4 bdrm., 21.4 Ivan \\'ells' new 4 Bedn11, 3 7~fis:, Int. Low down. UNIVERSITY Parle 3 BR Ht're's a~ buy. Charmine ap1s um1 IS ha. hon1e with ocean view! BA.+ pwdr rm home, Dov-5-19-3283 Townhou11t. trplc. BALBOA ISLAND TIUK'h style home. Sm.JAT· 3337 Via J.ido 673-7300 OCEAN VIEW Lf;l,yely custom home on t"i39 C:amden Road In eXclusive Cameo Shore& OPEN HOUSE DAILY J Bedroollll'l • 3 Bathll \Varm, oomfortable Mn Pool & poolside lanai Great klcation acrou the street lrom prt~te community hcai.:h $89.500 LIDO ISLE Jusrpduc«l $2,0Ckl. SUnshin. t-Y •JIO\rth patio & colorful gSZJie:n a1mo1phf!'N' furnish ideal background for !hill 4 bedroom home. 3 Balhs. l''amily room & bonus room for otlice or i;e"<lng. Break- f~ area in br11:"ht, spacious kitchen, with new icc-niaker refrigerator. Near 1enn1s .t· private-beach. $14,JOO MACNAB-IRVINE Realty Company (1141 642~35 ~~nder Market 4 -Kuse King size Bedroom home on qu)ct cul-de-sac street, Back Bay. 0 n I y C 11'9 old. Lots ol charm & extra •lor'a&t'. Excellent tinanclng or may 1 r a d e lcr smaller. Lachenmyer R('.1 lt ?r ' 1880 Newport IDvd., C.M. CALL 646-3928 Eves. 54,8.ti769 ..,, $37,500 BUYS YOU THIS - Cozy J BR. 2 Ba. Doll House 1 in~tblutt. nr. CdM High SchOOl. shopping, the beach "sroog-frtt air. SUbmit yOW' lttlnl:. Vacant. Is in lhfo entry hall\\'llY ol thiis Eastbluff home. 'This is the forerunner of fealures in this 2 story 3 BR, 3 BA holnl' '"'hich includes an unexct>Jled Beck Bay View. Big, bPau. lifully panelled den \\•ilh wet Dar, patiO!I Front & rear for outsidf' entertaining & Jnore! Prict' only $52,000. co: Ts . WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141 - (0pen Evenin91) $22,500 $0 Down payn1f'nt Vrts. m Down lo Vrts who u.'!Cd 1heir VA's ---S950 for 1111 other buyf'rs. Nict> 2 Bath hon1e in Cosla r-.1esu. 2 Blocks 10 11chool_ \V.ilh tht> ~alest increa!W' in proper. ty ever lhis home 1\·UJ br a money maker. Nichols Real Estate 546-9521 I_. --~ ' ' .. """'~ Estate Sale Fixer upprr . lo be sold in "M is" condition. Back Bay area -good size lot. 3 Nice size Bedrms, 2 Baths, hard. woOO floon;. crpta &. heavy shake roof. ntA or VA tenn1 available • fl!l.500. Call 545-8424. \ou_th C OdSl DOUBLE YOUR INCOME 2 Oi~tlnrl hotn<'s on 11\i lots In Corona ricl 1.lar. \\'alk to town & beach. 2-Sly. 4 Br., fa m. nn., officr & pool, The olhfr home has 3 bdnni;. &. 11cw dc<."Ontlin~. $77,JOO _....... Cold\wll,Banker '~~~!·........._--.~ !COOL POOL 15-30 - 644-2430 f!\dll5ivc. Secluded Arca A homn you'll Jove • 3 Br. 133-0700 644-2430 (~ 2100 sq, IL i; 21~ ha .. v p. din. rm. 1..0VPly k11ch. 11ug. cov. palk>, iargt' deck. Excitingly dt<COrated. A pleuutt lo tthow, Call for app't, $79.000 ii lloocis1ly "''Ol'\h mon', 61""~ Bay & Beach Riiy., Inc . -Owne r D9sperat1-- $24, 950 4 Bdr m . + F a m ily rm. liUJ.:t' l11;in; nn_ l\Hh n:ttura.I br1c.1< firepla~. Fihl·st bunt. Ins. dini~ rn1., pl1·ture \Vin. do11·s. Almost rhl do111n r;.1, >t<).11'lll N!W TERMS FHA TARB ELL 29SS Herbor $22,500 * OPENSUN~1-:-f*- f''n!rx!h Quarll't'I 2 8'>(lroon1 2Z'1 C.oldenm.1 . 1. L 00 lor turtnrr In. L"Uroni1 df'l ~1iu J tion. * LAGUNA BEACH * P IO\flON 642·1nJ On Hwy., s1orr hld1t , l 11p1~. ~~~~;:;;:~;;" 3 car gru"M.gr. Vj('11 • N POltT HEIGHTS FITZMORR I~ ~ l ·Br o bL P)ll. REAL TY YQl)!>lll dlO, ..;., ui-ia1tJ S13S E, C.UL Ot!M 613-!010 •''!:--· 6 potto. Cempo;/lleot Shelter OllQ' ~ • Xlnf ta:TM! 3 btm. plu ram .. flreplaoe:, CAYWOOD REAL TY 2 dbl .._.. .,.1..i.. ~ W. o.Jt H..,, 1'11 -· -V Aini A. Ag! .. • 541-12'0 e Ann Cc.la~. 6TS-t93/J • * • SJlf'CUlatoni liN! Thii; is ii~ Sep. fam. rm, w/ er Shores. Panelled fam rm 1•4-B_D_R_M~. M-,.-,-y-,-... -,-N-0-rl-h, Le a s e I 0 p ti o n. Owner Fixer upper; beach cott8.(t', ED ON LGE. LOT, NESTL-* * • 1his 4 Bed1oon1 !· frpt.. dining rm. l· many w/frplc t.. wet bar, sunken i20,000 loan, allsumable at 8"-2289 partially furn.; 2 Bdrm. + ED BENEATH TOWERING * * • fan1. for $24,!IOO rxrros. Be5t Broadmoor loc. !iv rm. Lge kitchen w/brkfsl 5~ %. Landicaped pallo.1 -=========~ sleeping porch. A run house SHADE TREES. WHERE • • * 1\ssume 5~ 'la tTIA $67,500 arf'a. Secluded swim pool in viell'. o\\·ntr's full price Univer sity Perle 1237 for a lun vacalion • a good THE COOL GREEN OF NA-• * * loan. $159 nio pays ..,,'8.IJed-in garden. 11ake your $28,;;oo. ~~7700 buy! TURE ABOUNDS m A * * * f'\'t'ry1hing, J\'ct'ds ~ ctreani come ln!e! Roy J. . ----MORGAN REAL TY QUIE.1" Alf OF' SECLUS. * * • some ccmenl & L'ar. ~ .............. \Varel Reallor 14.10 Galaxy FOR Sa.le by Ch~·ner. 3 ~R TO A SMALL BOY 3411 E. Ccasl Hwy., Cd.\1 ION. A rileasant walk froin * * * pcntry rrpa1rs. 1'1lke Cold··-'I n--t.-Dr 646-15."iO o...-n 011.lly house on corner lot. Ex· Ho-,., J"••t a "f<"UI-•'--673.S&U 67~ the beach. -,DGllft&RI · · ,n. · (.-ellenl landscaping. ?rin-""' '"" '""' ,,.... -========= • * • a look then de<'idf'. $32 500 tion,'' but to ~tom and Dad ---1 Olde !Mhiol'INI parlor fyJW! * • • Call 54nuoi ~·· COM""11' • ' cipals only. 546-36.)2 H , B h 1400 r fl A S OAKEN "" it's much more -here i1 unt1ngton 1ac iv, rm. 1 5 Bdrm + F.ml'iy rm --.,., a hom• I h, I offe-PLANK FLOORS, \VOOD ,. 833-0700 U'9'T" ,. 11 everythinz -and only a BIG & PANELED \\'ALL, COZY '~'Gt ! ... 2430 5 iv.:•"o Loan . MeH Del Mer 1105 • • •• llAL Bl.tll I ~~~~~~~~~~!Assume this lerrific 5'4 'iD hop, skip and jwnp to pools, BEAUTIFUL LOG BURNI NG FlRE--. 1 · parka, shopping crnter and PLACE IN A N TT Q U E D Ne ar annual 'iU rate loan. En!Ij' BY O\VNER 1 5 b 2,, ba 1 il Prestige home . located in DESIGN. Center hall opens MESA VERDE WESTCLIFF ball, dining rm., 2 fireplac-5 bednm. family rm, 3 schoo · r, 7ll •• am Y h 2 bd · room, Asusmable lo1v intt'r· executive ntighborhood. J lo t e rms .. serviced by es. Park like yard with or-baths, carpet & dra~s. over est rate. $37,950. Jcing size bedrooms, formal central 4 FIXTURE BATH. Home Shows Like A MODEL $A2•3••2m0e0 afli'! t.. fruit trees. 540-1720 2300 sq. h. \Valk to all • Reef H ill Realty dining room, moden1 buill· KOPPER KET'l'LE IQTCll- ' TARBELL 295S H,arbor 5 schools including O.C. Univ. Park Center, Irvine Im. plush carpets and eta-EN \VITI{ ELEC. RANGE 6°/0 V .A. LOAN *OCEANFRONT* Colle_gr. yery Cl ean ! Call Anytime 83J.-OS2l'.I 1om drapes. Buy 11ubject to & OVEN, CERA~flC TILE, $31,950 DUPLEX S37•950. Z735 San Juan Lane, 7',0 FHA loan.. Total r>a.Y· ETC. OPENS TO SEPAR-A popular Pat'CSl'tlCI' 11•11h 4 bedrooms • 3 halhs . for1n t1I dining roorn • fu111ily 1w111 - 2 f.ireplaces. ionc in n1nsll'r bedroom f • CAREF'REI'.: Costa ~fesa. 549-1001 t $231 .,. 500 f'U" ATE BRKFST, R' ''· CALL Now Fi11h, surf & swim at your1"°::==::===~==: $244 MONTH men a • _.., ui. ~ door! Oivner will finance . 1;; 1 t IN PRICE. The spacinus rear grounds 546-2313 $67,500 Newport Beach 1200 ~~JNt~la.;.=:;,,, .;. WE SELL A HOME have sheltered arbor type \-0 THF. REAL \"'-ESTATERS G.org. Wlll l.em·-· t .~ · 1 •--EVERY 31 MINUTES patio, 1e1T11.ced garden, plck- 9¥'1 • sumption o '·"'" ex1s ....... n w lk & L ('t fence. THAT LOOKS TO landscaping . high up on 1hC' hill . A rnus1 Sl'C !or $•13,!l:-I(). 546-2313 REALTOR * Duplex Plu1 * on lh~ BRAND NEW 3 BR. a er ee THE WOODS & OLD WOOD. 673-4350 645-1564 Eva1 One lot frorn Ocean &: v.ith k din. rm. townhouM!. EN BRIDGE BELO\V. This A Touch of Sp•nlsh Ocean view. 2 BR l 3 BR Choice, cnd·unit loc. Must Real!or5 charming older home needs I "'""'""iiiiiiiiiiiiii--'""'"lwalled patio: :: BR. + din. 11-ith Fam. nn. PLUS 1 BR be sold NO\V &: priced un-7682 Edinger a little touch up here l.· ' ,, '. . . CAPTIVATING + family + Jge. room over &: bath guest rm, $51,500, der market al $33.950 IN· 84244:>5 540.5140 there. It's an outstanding BAY VIEW &araa:e. Reduced to. make ofter. CLUDING THE LAND . but 1 NEAR TIIE BEACH buy for for $39,500 •A7,9'<l * WATERFRONT * submit any reasonable off~ $25,950 FULL PRICE R~I 7'5200 Ou I BOB PETTIT, Realtor A.!swne 61!.4?'~ VA Loan. ( bl ,, Bf'd W•lker ty. 6 ~ P ex on the canal with "Since 1946.. Home l~) yrs young. -4 Br, LOWER ON. PYMT. O.K. COZY CORNER FOR C(im oria ~ -· room 3366 Via Lido NB Open Sun. dock 1or boat. 2 BR .I: 3 BR 2 Ba, elec. bltns, custom MISSION REAL TY d1•n homr 1n 1·ho1ce loca-· ~ aJ3-0101 THE HORSEY SET uon Call to llt;'C. O\\·ncr \Viii Finance! or use as a BR tam. home; drps, 'v/w crpt, beamed 985 So. COil.Si Hv.'Y .. Laguna 1r you ..,,•an1 hol"!IC's you nu1.st ~ \Vorking man:1 chance! No 2 baths, o~fice, patio, I: sun. 15 FT. X 30 FT. ram. rm. \v/dining area. P hone (714 ) 494-0731 !i<.'I" This ro7.y 2 BR homr + Pete Barrett points. no impounds. Only deck. Askmg $74,500, MASTER BEDROOM frplc. large redwood V OR F H 1 bath. This homP is 11·rll REA' 'TY 10'/ti do11·n + 8% int. Sunny covered patio 'v/tirepit. .A. • .A. n1alnt1uned .ind ha!> mnm .,.. 3 BR on 225• lot, Zoned Low down payment. Excel· 1 Low Main!. yard. Room for LAGUNA BEACH for r1d1ng 1n 1he t'l:'ilr, 11 ·~ I Hi05 \Vcstcii;r or .. NB ..._ r-for 4 more units. Bier. Jent financing, 7%% annual boat ·or camper. June 1 OC· Fabulous terms and 11. fablJ. hke getting •hr housr for 642-5200 ~ MS-8226. percent.ase rate. W/w car-eupancy. Call ow n c r. lous home high in the hills ~I ~·ti;~!~~ buy thi~ li6x :;PP~~ Be~u~':':ati~~ 9Ei2-l5ll aft 5· or Laguna on large level Joi. . o . ,. . Westcliff A re a [;C;o;;';';;e;M;;;;;es;;e;;;;;;;;;;l;;l;OO~l ---a._CK 9Ty ~ .. , ...... ,995 for this 2 s-·. 2 BEDROOM l luge patios, sprinklered DA\. " •oq --1 Elec bltin range/oven, \.\'ash---' · _..,. · do PA~ ·*'W'l'• I" -" rful f 'I ho 3 4 bdrm. •--. rm. home. Yocuu, air COuul 1on1ng, u-.u..,." vo .. uc a m1 Y lllf'. Qverlookina the aki ~a. ....,,. er, dryer, refrig, FA heal. bl CARNABAll Bed 1~ BA t r.rd N W t l"ff .,. A&ent : Phone (TI4) 8J3.0300 t-1''1REPl..ACE, sparldinJ: rms, · · 1 ear •• C I largest lot In the IDuUI, crpls, drps. $2500 down and C'lean inside and out. OWlM!r •&4LT T c •· floors. Large covered palio, 3 Bcdroo1n & family nn, Model E plan. 3 Bdnn &: LARGE llSIUme existing FHA loan leaving i;tate and has valur hu~e back yard & loll! of Jll'IUC!d on lowly, quiet, tree tam rm or 4 Bdrm, Too 1115 900 ' ~· tru t d~ G II A k BONUS ROO"-J o ' . no .u"" s ... ~. priced at $34,500. HURRY tree!\. arage on a ey. s · lined street. Spacious livlna: many features to list them M Full price only $18,500. for this one! ing $26.%0. rm has niassive brick lire-all, Bll·irtl appliances, re-OVER GARAGE ' WE SELL A HOME 4o/4 °/o VA Loan! ~ 5C5·~880 P,lacc, BBQ in ~amily nn. frl&. ""'asher Ir: dcyer includ· Excellent tinanclng and Jo-ll EVERY 31 MINUTES Great l-'l<'sa v.-mr. :l ,t, ran1 (ne.-cinrmathMfl!) Xlnt shag carpetil)g on peg. ed, Hon, 7%%-annual t.. t6z..4471 ( :::) 54 .. 1103 w lk & L rm on la"'' lo1 . ~•lly """I OLLEG E REALTY ged hard•ood. $39,:iOO, s.. $63,500 ".,, rate·. W/w .!!::.n 2 8 er ee . 0 '-~-•• , ..... ,CM. It 1)01\' F . -~ $22 500 ~1ze. i\•11l'r v~·ry nrxibh• on -Ml""'""'" No Dn Vets Lo On FHA or appt call 644-1972, d no Story, 3 bdnn. home for ' lern111. A..::ku1,1; $28.500, -" u • ~""'! ~1 nJ '" -•-t Pho 1800 SQ IT .. 6 room homl'. 'Large lol, lncd !ront Ir. rear antwer, "'""' ,,,_.._.. • ~~-n-o Y ..,..,"""'· ..... n : ne FULL PRICE !:IC6 ·~BO I Easts1dc, Co11ta l\1t'sa. 3 for pnvacy &: safety. 3 Bed·1~'~ipW~~onl~y!' ~pljiea~"~·!i1!~!i fn4) 8J3.0300. (ntlfc~~ Bt•<lnn, l!\o Bli. W;t-livini; nn. l~1 BA, shake roof, dble1~ I=========-NO GIMMICKS LLEGE REALTY rni 11,11rplc. Lgc dining rni gar, C.all now! $2.1.950. NEWPORT DRIAM Coron• d1I Mir 1150 Sharp, c:lean 3 bedrooni, 2 l500MMisatHaibor,CM. & kit. F.xtr11 lgc dblc gar 808 OLSON REALTOR 3 BR. 2 be:·· cpt11 •• drapes. --------bath, carpeted and draped. ,v/launrlry roo111. Cornt"r 546-5580 \Valk lo 1"'~ dub or be~ch. VIEW Cove~· patio and sprink· S. A. Heights uir"yO~r-G.I. 101 . t:nrry olf alley in rear Priced 10 i;ell .at $28,500. lers make yardwork cafl)' on 1his, 3 BR. $23.~0>. 1..gc for boal or traill'r. $29,000. CLASSIFIED? Someone will Call us for detail11. FROJ\T, • • . ror DAD. EASY GI and yd, 2' Car 11:ar. Kingaard l.t.>t1n Vibert, Hltr. 548-0588 t e looltiJW for it. Dial 642-MAL.TOft SAN CLEMENTE ISLAND 1'"HA Terms available. ru;, Al l 2-2'/n j 11nyt1mt' :'i678 Coftll.N..M~ TO •• , .SIGNAL Hn..t. WE SELL A HOME _G_one_r_al __ • ___ I OOO--'l ~G;on~e~r~al~===~lOOO~~I G~e~n~e~ra~l====~lOOO~l~*~B~A~Y~IF~llR~·~~l~:;T~*~I 4 ~;.;~j.:u;:..ily w;ik~~ M&r:~ The Puz:le ·with the Built-In Chuck/1> 0 Reorronoe l!ittmrs of the four M:rombled words be. low 10 forrn four ~mple words: I DYLRAK \ I ' . I' I I' I J . i.,...I • ~H~lj-D~,, ~, -ii i ~-rru_s,1 E....,.....,....1 ! 1 ~ -,::, ih~ honeymoon is over I I I j I when his dog brings him his slipper. C1nd 1he wife -af I~ --BE-M-RE-M--~,-. ,.,~ , J J J' J I' 0 Comolet• 1he thutkl• qvot1d' by f,f!1ng in the mlulng "'°"'' you d ..... ~ lroni *P No. 3 Wow. PENINSULA AREA room, oversiaed earaae with Gott;eoua 5 bdrm. 4% baths. wfi1 J.iihtcd ..,,.ark ~a Realton;; Private beach with pier a: ON 7682 Eclin~r slip. I-las everylhing! Like Ont: of Eastbluffs lov~lle~I 540-:i140 842-44:;5 new thruout plllll large pri. pride or ownership streel.'I 71;2 0/0 \1at~ parking for guests. ONLY ~7.950 S2W,IXXl. 673-3550 VA LOAN JONES REAL TY Anyonr c11n qualify, One yrllr 2)01 \V. Balboa, NB 673-8210 ne1v. '.l Bt.>tln11, l \:: BA, dl:occ cutto111 tlrps. upgradrd l'OR SALE or leue • erpts, I~ r1l('Jost'd patio. sacrifi«. Decorators home, Must i<ell !his "'erk! ;; yrs new, J Br, 2"&,1,.. ... ,.. ... ,..,.. ..... ..,1 BRASHEAR R E ALT Y lrg rooms, all elect. kltcht!n, UNEXCELLED VIEW 847-3507 E\·cs: 642-04.77 Deluxe Four·Plex new crpts, drp1. hd11't, i\lu1t of Harbor &. Clt'ean, Allr. see to apinc. c:; All80 1pllt level hon1e on R-3, 5100 ~3,mN.B. &4J...32T3 41 r 1q. fl . lot. Ideal for 4 Ap!. unll1, $225.IXXl. 2501 Ocean 1-3 Bcdnn. 8-2 Bcdrms, nlr •BLUF1''S -Choice rorn, Bh'd,, Cdi'lt . By appt, only. cond. Carpets. drspcs, Yoatk vfcw lot. 3 Br. 2 Ba.. l lcvcl Bill Grundy, RNltor to Broad..,,·ay shopping & \l•;\lled patio. c:us. extru 133 Dover Dr., NB s.2-4620 Colltgt-, Savo ll · $30.950. 644"'65 BRASHEAR REAL TY 18 UNITS NEWPORT CAMEO HIGHLANDS 8(7-3507 E\·e,;: 968-lJnl BEACH (\\'estcllff) ultn VIE\V · POOL ANYONE can assume Joan. deluxe -pdint rc11\denHal. $56,000 Beautiful 4 Bedrm ho1nc. f'antullc tax advantage. 3 &droomJ, family room, SUbject to 5~s• VA Joan. Sizl!able dov.·n payment re-2}i Baths. lmmacul&te in Pa,ymentJ $1!8 per mo. quired. Call ~ South A out Come tee SW>dlJ' Complete C11>11: I: ~ COi.it Real Estate. alternoon. 4eO'f ~Itel'. ala1ted ln patio. D"'O"'N"'"'T'"M=1s"'s'"""a'"L'"'U"'P"''"'s' iUolvtr•ltY R<lllty m.6SID CouUtn. Ru1 Eetate Eltqws11e 3 er. 211 bl, •~• HAitllOR VI EW HILLS l38-37T! * · $J6.13lll bar. dbl OYtnl, automatic Leite opUon, beautlhtl view, BY OWNER: 3 Br. 2 Be. SCRAM·LET:> AN SWER IN CLASSIFICA TlON 96011 ""'"' '°1"""· By OWoee • 3 bdnn, 2 balh. ~,OOO. Bax Anumo GI lo .. •'Ii% In!. ---~-------------------------' $4.i.000, Ph ~. ~t~. 0.ily Piiot. Tot. pm! $150 mo. 812-5135. " I 20-!3 \\'cstclHf Or. M6-7711 OJ)('n 'Iii 9:00 J>j\f 340 HIGH DRIVE BY O\VN ER i\IAKE OFFER SI'. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH 4944985, 494-7-421 CHAR~11NG 2 BR retreat, privacy, good f.inancln&. $27,500. Eves 4!W-5100 Mission Vie jo 2-SrY. 4 Br. 2 Ba. Dbl. gar., fl•pl. kitcll. bltn!'i. i\lembcrxhip S\vim I.: rac- quc1 cluh included. $37,500. BY 0\VNER. 830-4415 Dana Point 1740 I l\llLE So. of marina. Cstm 7 Rm + 3 Balhs + 2nd ki1chn. $36.:a!. <19&-3371. Duplexe s for S•le 1t7J LG duplex in N.B. \.\'/view, 200· from xlnt ~wim'i: bch. Ovrnilir:ed livln~ rooms. f 1'f;lnt b:t.lcony, rear patio k 4 br, 2 bath UP: Nice front yd. 2 hr, 1 b11 DOWN. $-11,!)j() Tcrnts. by ownt.r, 673-m.l, NO mailer whit tt 11. )'Oii can st:ll It with a DAILY CLASSIFIED! -will be looklrw for It. Dial ft.12. 5671 l ( I 'C 1- 1 ' 1' •I Im "" I ; ~ ' .. ' ' ,, ~ I NJ b > ' Vl I• p I, p I •• t RENTALS RENTALS IU NTALS HouNs Furnished Apts. Fumllhod Apta. fumllhod 2000 O.norol $130-UU pd, nr Ocran A: BQ, ,J Br + den duplex pell ok, Snicla \\'eloon1ed. Bkr. -FANTASTI C VIEW PIO util pd. 2 Br triplex. Avail now. Cbildttn ' pell y,·dcomtd. Bia. 53M980 * NEW-PLUSH * 1 BEDROOM FURNISHED APTS. $125 On OCffJ\, utU pd, 1 Br triplex, child A-pet ok. Bkr.Mf...6980 ADULTS OlllY, NO PUS $16-UU pd. 2 Br lower duplex, nr bch. Snals ok. Blue Beacon, 645--0lll Bkr. 28.15 Fullerton, Costa Mesa ------------------ Rentals to Sher. 2005 EMPLOYED lady wishes to 1hare 2 bedroom c.o.ta 1.fe1a apartment with same. One child OK. 5ST-B'196 aJ'ter 6 p.m. RINTAL$ -U--lthod Coot• Mos• 3100 2 BDRM-, ..... !<need yud, $175. 2658 Orona< Ave., (in the rev). E!\fPLOYED aentleman 2 BR u --Be "'-•--. s~. am ce,..;.~., su .. re e w/ same, frplc, prv patkl. Adult!, no compl .hm. util pd, Nice pets. $1~. 642.-8520 Joe. Handy. to bcb I: lhops. ~~'-c-~'-'---64&-7313 2 BR, cpts, drpa: .. fenced yd, xlnt location. 3S1 !:. llth STABLE Home environ. for St. No. 3_ $l5G. 6CU029 re~ \\'Cman who de.1ire1 stimulating com pan. & in-'3200 volve. H.B. to Lag. Bch. Newpert leach 673-2916, (I) (213) SU.-2440 Le11•H•rkr View BUSINESS Man. stralght, 26 2 Br, dtn, 2 Ba, 1 yr old. yrs, will share apt ln N .B., Prv park. clubhae, pool, your 1 hare S 1 7 5. Luxtiry crpb, Re{rlg, Orps. (213)443-filOJ diftet. Open ceilings in llv 4-din SH ARE my elea:ant nns. Avail Ju1y 1. ~ \\'&lertront home w/ man or 6444076. --------35-60 yn. Sl~ mo. 675-4331 TO\VNHOUSE: 3 BR, 2~1 WANT wotkill& Kiri to share BA. frplc, patio. pool, 2 2 Br C.M. apt.. Call any-car pr, all bltn!!, crpts, time. 54&.9701 drpll. LR $215 mo. an-8811 or 642--2497 eves« wknds. 2100 3 BR. 1% Baths. Din nn.. ---------Kitch, bltrui. New crpts, 2 BR., gar., patio, Quiet drpa. Compl. landscpd. Back tropical setting for adults. Bay area. Leue $300 mo. 1 blk shops, Sl85. 548-7134 MI 2-5600 Coste Mesa Newport Beach CANAL WATERFRONT Own pvt. beach. Lo~ly 3 Br. 2 Ba. }'urn or uni. 2 Patios, Yr. lease $450 Mo. Graham Realty 646-2414 FOR Lease: New Eutbluff Cbrdom.inium. 3 BR, 2~t BA $350. Nr. school, mkt, pool, tennia ctl. Ov.rntt 644-4134 * 2 BR. neat beach, no pets. Year lease $22 3, monthly $250. ~T-8400 GUEST house, compl tum., 3 BR. 2'1S ba. town borne util incl. $125 mo. Avail Swimmfnt: pool. $28;i ?o.fonth now, Adult only, S48-86l.l Hal PIDChin Realtor 6754392 ---=="'-Gener el Single Adults · - Ltlxucy -· 1 • 2 bed-room aputmerit., 11.lmiah- <d ml -. wjlh comp'8te prlvac:y abd land. aca.ped country dub ·~ pbere fndudlria • $150.000 \\"Orth of ~tklnel fadl. Ides deslped an..' opuallld just for .m.&le people. Renh From $145 to $300 lmmedlal8 °""""""' Mo. to Mo. Leate Avail. ANAHEIM m So. Brookhunf (1 blk. So ... Lln<.'Oll>) (n4) 7J2.45llll GARDEN GROVE 13100 Chapman A-fe. (f blks \V. Santa Ana J"W:y.) <n-1) 636-J030 NEWPORT BEACH 880 IRVINE AVE. IR VINE AND 1'th cn·u 64.>0560 Soult. lay-Club Newport Sho_r_ .. __ 2220_ University P•rk 3217 _ _,Apa,,,,,~rtm=~lt~n~l~•- REMARKABLY .JUNE thru Labor Day, Mod· ern 3 BR, 2 BA house. l b!k ocean. club lac. (213) HO 7-3290 wkdays. Un iversity Park 22'7 ·I B<irrns &: family room June 15 to Dec. 15 .••• $325 4 B<lrms. & family room June 20 to Sept. 20 .... $350 BOB PEITJT, Realtor "Since 1946"' 833-0101 Balbo• 2300 * SUMflotER or Yearly. 45' Bay!ront Balboa Pertln, tum 5 BR, 4 .BA. Pier-Ooa.t Avail Sept 1st. Call 673-2039 Lido Isle 2351 LUXURJOUSL \' furn. Ex· eeutive 2 Br, 2 Ba. dress. rn1. So. patio. Nr. Beach. Adults. 1 Yr. lse. $375 mo. 6i5-8444 or (1) 882-3572 \\'~kdays 4 BR. townhouse ·····• ~ UNB~ABLY 3 BR. 2 ba ·•··••••···• 1285 EXTRAOROINARILY 3 BR. 2 bt. •. • •• •• • •· • • $300 BEAUTlJVL 3 BR. 2 ba ··:········· ~ Vel D'i1ereGilrdenApts 3 BR. 2 ba ... •• • •. • • •. ~ Putting ~n. waterfall & f BR.. Exec. home •••••• $57a • "· •-• Red Hiii Reelty s_,eam, uowen evuyw .... re, Univ Parle Center Irvine 4::a pool, rec. room. bllllards, eait Anytime 833.oaio BBQ'ii, Sauna. furn.-uni'urn, LE.A.SU AVAILASLE 3 Br. le dln. rm ......... ~ 4 Br. &: tam. rm ....... $350 3 Br. tam &: din nn. • • $325 2 BR. 2 baths , ... , ••••• S260 BOB PETTIT. Realtor "Since 19t6'' 833-0101 Irvine 3231 e NEW HOUSE, CP'I'S, DRPS, 4 BORMS, 2 BATH, LEASE, $300. 833-2317 Corona del Mir 3250 -------·--- 1 & 2 Br. also Stngles from $135. See it! aXJO Parsons Rd., MU670, Between •rar. bor lr: Ne\vport. 2 Blk N. 19th RENT FUilHITURE :l Rooms frOrn S19.9j J.tonth to moriU1 Rentals \Vkie Selection 100% PURCJIASE OPTION 24 hr, Delivery Custom Fuml ture Rental 517 ~V. i.qth, CM. 5-18-3481 1583 ~v Lincoln. Anhm 11'4·2800 * APARTIIENTS * Furn I: Unfurn • from $15. Blue Beacon, 66-0111 Bkr. ·-Coot• Mot• 4100 T>urld4y, M11 14, 1970 DAILY ~ILOT 3l RI NTALS R!NTALS ..:..::::.::~ii;e;iii~ii;;iiii~iili;;;;;i!ii,m'oii~.~-1iiiiii.:l~I • Apts. """'"""""' Af!>: Unfumlohed Ill' * Iii' * * * Cotto -., 5100 Cos t• Mt•• 5100 8egant Living ... PARK AVENUE & merrlmac woods Lui~ lend1cepin9 w/ J S' Pine tree1, spetkllng w1terfell1, bubblint 1tre1m1 l ••r•n• poncl1 m••• Merrlm1 c Woods the pl1ce to live. Th••• I & 2 IR1 2 IA, furn. or unfu rn. 1pt1 feature 1ir-concl, 1e/f.cl1anin9 ovens, b•tm c:1Uln91, cf11hw11her11 prlv. 91r19e w/1tor1911 1/ev1tors, 101' th1r1peutlc pool~ swim pool, 180 '11 11u1111 &: •lovely clu llhouse w/1ocia / 1ctivitl11. Adult1 pl••••· From Sl .. O. Whoddye Went? Whoddy• - I PI CIAL CLASSlflCATION l'OR NATURAL BORN SWAPPIRS Spocl•I .. le s Ll--s ""'"-' bucb •tA.U -AD Mun tffClUDI ,_.... .., ..... " ""'· a-W11tt Y9" ...... ...... ~'l'Ol/fl ..,_. •""-...... • ... """ ......... .. ..._..OTHINO l'Oll IALS -f M Oll ONt Vi VILLA POMONA COSTA MESA'S FINEST To Piece y..,. Troder'1 Por..a .. All PHON! '42-5671 -"NEAR THE BEACH" - lac~elor, 1 & 2 hclroorns Completely Furnished from $140 suo CU.tom ranch l cue1t hie WILL TR.A.OE 1 T '. for El Toro nr Cota de Caza tor tma1J dietel enstne Land ImperlaJ Valley TB'1 to inltall ln JI' aptl, commercl&I aubmlt. Monterey atyle boal qt 61S.21C., Mr, Stewart. ~Ii. &e3380 Adults only, no pets • Luxuriously Puml1hed BAY MEADOW APTS. New a:cltlna 1 BR, $140. 2 BR, $165. Beam ceillnp. Wood pt11'lr, •lt&r cr,,lr, priv. patio. IOl'ne w/ frplca. Pool, l&Od volley ball crt, l'IC bJda, pool tablet, put• t1nc ireen. Adulta, no pell. 311' W. Bay. Open. House U.7 pm daily. 66-0073, 173-1'21 Trade 35' f'ibrt&J,us Sloop ijj Aett, custom I Br, 2 Ba, any 1tap of completkln pool, bonea or wdtl ok. ~¥ trorn $39115. Want late <:ad. Want: lftcome propa1;;y, mo- - e All Eloctrlc AporlOMnh • Prlv1te CNragn -..: Iliac, Lincoln, camper ot tor home, pwr boat or T .,..,. motor home. meaoo. 531-7631 Owntr/A:Jt. e 2 Swimming Pools (hooted) e lndlvldu1I P1tlo1 ON TEN ACRES CX>MMERCJAL prop., fl'ff 8 DLX. units, cloM to Holly. 1 6 J BR. Furn 4: Uidunl A: clear. Next lo Sean, Co-waod Partr. AJI teated. Fireplaces / priv, patlct / vtna; SSS.cm equity, For $38,000 Equity; for boule, Poo.lt. Tttm1s. Q>ntnt'l BJdlt. boule, unit, or land. 1a.nd. or income. IOo Sea Lane, CdM &44-2'11 Ownor 61>62511 Oomer mGll ........ PLUS ....... . * NO llATE INCREASE r.r Summer * Spoclol -1 Month's FRE I RINT, No LUM Required (~ur nr. O.st H~) I B'°'E"A"UTI=FU~L_:;EN;;:;G;:t.~rSH=""°'& 2 Newtt dgp~ side trr • MARTINllj)UE • L2£ !!! RM Home ,,.., Puadtna _, 3 Br. 2 Ba..._, f111c1. for N.B., CdM. C.M. Dupn Nr. beach. Equity IPIJl'DIL P•rk·Llke Surrwncflftll Huntington BHch 5400 or unit.. Home value $29,500 $27.000. Trade tor land • D!;LUXE 1·2 ~ 3 BR APTS. clear. Call 5CU532. indlllt Realtor -_,. AL!O FURN. BACHELOR --1 ,,~_,.,~-"-',;.;c;.c-,_ . ··~. Ttade M·l lot Colt& Mtu. 1956 Jeep Wa&on. f wbNJ ~ .:.~ .. A~~tl "::; ON BEACH! ~.!o~!15C:iatW:!R.-~ ~~Val~blii~ ~ 1760 Pomona, Costa Mesa IW01t of N•wport, "8tw-17th & 11th St.) -----.. -----·---1171 Santa Ana Ave. CM Nw-nt Beach ID n -M-pt, •----tlo -~ Mar Apt ll3 e 14isM2 e 2 BR l~ BA FROhf S23S -t"• .._... u ... _.,...,_ n car, -· e 2 BR 2 BA FROM $260 Call 673-6809. cycle or T M6.46U , LOVELY 3 Br, %~» ba. Ail e 3 BR• BA FROM "~ I ~-a-~ Bl • ...,...., lNV!:STM!:NT STOCK 3 unlta eqult;y $8000, Ofc. e t c. co .. ..,,,. ... .,.,r vd CarpetM!rape:s.dl.ghwuher Quoted approx. $10 per mned lot, clear. Vat $llM. RENTALS · ~ Be.~K"'h'-_.:;4200:;;; Apit. Unlumlthod Nowport Beech GRAND OPENING IMMmlATE OCCUPANCY ~ carden apartmmb oUerlna complete prlvacy, beautlful landscapln1 Ir unparalleled recreatlonaJ tacllltln In a country dub atmosphere. Now leuln1 1n Newport Beach. J.Iodels open 10 am tog pm R•ntt: from Sl.354310 F'umlshed or unfumlshed Oakwood Garden Apartments 1100 16th s1 .... 1 714: 642-8170 &: San Dltro Fwy ana. heated pool-auna.ttnnll share-JtOWlna computer co. ~ aer,e1, equl1:1 135M. Trade Bltins, new crpt, drps, rec room-ocean vlewa -..... I ·~·-E ~••-•- Coste Mase 5100 FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. patio 2 -· -•---• I ••-tor Real Eatate oc or uuavn.. , -... • oov. • ....... ~ 1ar. poo • pa•~---pl -TI" -1UI. $215. Reter, 'n4) 545-018'9, .........,., e • Boat 615-l<M7 alttr 6 p.m. " - !213! ,,..,..., !213! Socur!Jy auard>. HAVE '61 VW BUG Trode clear Jot w/beout o':: 1 & 2 Bdrm, Bl• HUNTINGTON WI~AN ~~ur.'" :i °'1o~= t;_ ""'! Prlva18 patio, pool -IDdlv. ;,,. ...,,.. & dl•hwuhor. PACIFIC • 6<~2175 e "'bmll w. E.W.-.,.. laundry tac. encl prqtl pools ~ 7u OCEAN -Rltr. 641-31121 or MJ.2231 Near 0ranie Co. Airport Ir $170, put util. 301.'' 301 AVE., H.B. l BR, 2~ 8A Townhouse, WILL -·~E lJI '--~ UCL Adult! only. A·-do.'.,._l~ (714) 536-1487 N.B. Pri. patio, pool, elec. ,.r\J\U' ... _ ....... .,. ....,,, Ofc. open 10 am..fi pm Daily kitchen. $32,000. Take low acre1 In Hemet w/3 nntaJ1 70122 Santa Ana Aw. 2 BR, Compl crpt, drpl, down, late model car, T.D, for Oranze County 1ncomt htcr. htn. Bruoe S4s.3894 blllns, heated pool. Children 2 BEDRMS, near beach. or !1 Owner~. property. ..;..:::;,""":,,:~~.::..,:=-I OK. 642-Sm. 126 P.lonte newly decorated, b It n 1, 4 Bedrm, 2 ,...,,, ""' '4 Call tntl 962-2S61 THE VICI'ORIAN Vista. refrla:. Immediate NtW, 2 BR W/ prqe $150. poneuion ft hOme, 258 Shttwood St., lJst It Mn -ln 0rarwe Adulll only. Crpts, drp&, ONE bedroom Cond. Blt-in Tradewtrx:ls. Rlty 847•8511 CM, NEED small boUH , du. What do )'OU bave tn tradlT bltns. fncd yard w/ patio. -atove, rtfrl&. Wather &: plex. triplex or fourpltx. CCuntY"• 11.rpst l'lllld lnld- Wt: pd, prdnr. 667 Victoria dryer. New carpell. POOi NEW f Br home, 2 ba, prb Fannie Price JUtr Ml-32)9 q*poet-~* ·-* st. 63Mlal area. $135. 646--8!69, 3.$ PM dilp, dhswar, stove, drps, Ina! yd 1190 + ""' ""'· .. * * VILLA MESA APTS. Newport Be•ch 5200 '"· Av.U lmmod. 8451 Lo-"11J!!!!!l!!l!i!'!!!l•li•l!IJ!l!liil!llll!! 2 BR. Prlv patio. Hid pool. mond Th", (213) 534-3582 RENTALS Rl!AL I ATE 2 ar1 encl'd rar. Chplfidr<~ e NOW RENTING e 2 BR. Coodo.: bllno, cpt~ Aph. Unfvmlth~ "'-·r•' I we come, M pets eue. Beaut new 2 Br. 2 ti.th units d l \I ba Encl dbl -....,,. I 65 119 W Wlllo rape1: . , • 1 mo. · n. w/qual, cpts. I: drps, Plan-gar. 1 Child OK. No pell. Santa Ana 5620 Rentals W ....... 646-12.Jl, ned 1Dr privacy plus outside 642-2752 ~7 -'-----2 BR. Unturn. Newly dee. Jlv. areu, pool 4: rec. tacU. 2 BR, 2 Bath, cpll, drpl, New crptl Ir drps. Spac Dbl. prqea, Jn the heart ATTRAC. 2 Br., cpts, drpe, blt·lhll. Patio. Pool, 1&11n&. -•M .,, ~ ll~ I N I •-• .. / gar, kids ok. $135. 17401-A Laundry room. l yr ltue ........... 1.~ta,no pe ... w 0 p .OU11. eaayaceesi Kl Ln 9687510 mo. ·2283 Fountain W~ E. to lhopptna:. beach. frw)-1. ee 10n · -• SJ<IS. Fatrv:lew, McFadden. (Harbor tum w. on Wilson). $2fiO to $300, 847~ Adults. 542-1045 2 or s n houe, tmmed. tor famlly of 5. Up to $175. CM area. 645-2113 --· Roome for Rent ms ----··-·;.;.;..-=;1 wu.o, """'"' Apll.. BOYD REAL TY 2 BDRM. Ap~ carpe~. built· REAL ESTAT! $170 644.1617 67J.5'30 lm96; .~:;"'· no peU. Call 0.nor•I SLEEPING Rm. E. CotOt .......,,.., Mtta. ~pirdeman. 3 Br, Iii Bt, patio, bit-I,,., IAYfRONT 1--------165 Mo, CTpts, drps. Ask about our 6'2-&XIO stl-0380 Ev. discount plan. 880 Center 2 BR,. 2 BA Luxury Apta. S.nte An• 5620 Rentals Wentecl SffO =--==-....,--'"="""-'" St. 64UJ40. ~~.!lev&Allton, tu1 b. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; -=-~-----$15 PER wk up w/kitcbu .,..., .... "'an .-1· e ec. ·-$30 wk 1.IP Q tl. LOVELY Sp&eklu!I 1 Br Pool, llOft water, docka. 3121 FEMALE Doctor W/w.!U· Motel • ' I• I • • ~ • . ' . I . I 2 BR Home. N. llide of Hwy, $210 mo. Avail. 1'1ay 26. Owner. 67S-3299 ~~-~----H untinglon BHch 2400 Lido Isle 3ill $J1 WEEK • UP e WiNTER RENTALSe ABBEY REALTY Duplu. w;w apt & drpt. w. Coul Hwy, Newport. VILLA MARSEILLES menner<d doc """'' to • 5'1-11515 rc:!ric.. .~. util. ~ 6C2-22Q2, BRAND NEW rent year roun:I unfurn. LARGE cornfortaMt room, I LARGE 2 n•-r Quiet mature adulU. Retu. FOR ,_ _ 3 b 2 b SPACIOUS house w/fenced yard In convenient am.. $J> wett . ..!', owm., lrepl, Blk. wae r a CdM , ·-·-R ~-" •••1-· ~· I BDR!\f house on rear of /iiiiiiiiiijijiipiijjj;ijjiiiiiiiiii STUDIO I: 1 BEDROOMS lot. Walking di.st to beach (IDD iiLE TV&: K!tchenettes Incl. to Ocean Yr! $200 548-3007 • • ' I & 2 Bdrm. Apts. or ..._....... e f . ""4U -•ilD . y. mo. --------Blu f l1 condominium Adult L1v1ne 673-115S, 8JS.Dl. --========-I Llnet"e I: nWd aer avail $87.50 mo. Adu.I ts, no pet!, YEARLY LEASE Chlldrens Ir pet section ..,._ Adullt oruy, HARBOR GREENS ov.rlooklnr Upper Bay . Furn. • Unfurn. JR. Exocutl"' _,,.., < Motels, Trollor 1 BDRM apt. Close to bay GARDEN le STUDIO APTS sro-nss. ews 644-lMT Dlahwaaher. -1---'•-·t. bdrm home J une 15, leue, Courts fff7 536-1783 2 Br, 2 Ba home. Can be 1376 NIWPORT BLVD. temi-lum. Red@C. New w/'# 541-f755 • beach. rum or unflU'n. 2 Bd 1x .,.,..... UNJ\Ul... l--------67>78M, ~n RoblJ\IOn Bach. 1, 2, 3 BR'•. from SUO. rm nr ocea.n upr dup ed eppJlanca • pllllb ahaa leue option. up to sm, Summer Rent1ls 2910 shag crpt, d!1hwuher, car· ---''-"'-'"----DELUXE 2 BR. Wet:tclltt loc. Pool I: built-ins. Adults mo mo-no l&e. 642-6274 2700 Petel"IOn Way, C.M. S200 yearly refrlg A: r· ·e carpet • choice ot 2 color .5.16-4:::,;:.023.:::_~-~--I WEEKLY ratu. SEA M6-0J70 Avail June 1, crpU, aundeck .. __ 2 ....... • ... ;:: LARK MOTEL, 1301 se ...... ..,, • ........ •w.>1 O. C. maJe employee, noo N OCEAN, Goll Course, Mobile home. Adull Pk. D.B.C. Pool. l!auna, bar/rest. ~32\ bage disposal, bltns, 2 car * WEEKLY * gar. 1..Dvely patio. Prl• Lovely apt. Bachdon or bcMs & club privil avail. cpla. Furnishings comp!. * DELUXE * Jll~ 36th St. (2l3) 24s.-1B21 lhowen , minored ward· drinker, needs rm. or bach. ewport Blvd, a.ta Mesa. ./ DELUXE 2 BR. Apt. 6/15-9/15. $375 mo. \Ve stcliff area. 642-6274 RENTAL~ Houses Unfurnished General $190 PVT heh. 2 Br duplx, 2 blk ocean. Nu ww lt drpg. RIO. ~lr. Sngls ok. Bier, '14-6980 1$160 • 3 Br. lo/. ba. RIO. 1 chldrn .&: pet welcomed. 'Blue Beacon, 64~111 Bkr, Sl3.'>-2 Br .. fourplex. bltns, j e~. drpg, children ok. Rl ue Beacon, ~ 0111 Bkr, !cost• Mese 3100 ENJOY TIIE SUP.IMER AT Kitcblnettes. $33 wk-pays AVAIL June 1. l Br. Beach. WINTER RATES. ~ mo. all. 998 El C&mlno Dr. View. Couple, no children, Call for appt: Days, 675-8233, 5f6..M5l :no=.":::".,· =S1=15=. ="=3-=29='='= eves 615-8040. SPACIOUS. Attrac. Pool. --Util pd. Garden Uvin&". 1 Newpert Hgta. 4210 ------- BR.. $150 I:: up. 2 Br. $175. --------Huntington Beech '40I Adults, 00 pets. 740 \V. 13th CLEAN 1 ~ 2 BR, Lrs ktt. Adulll, no pets. $1$-S150. 24n E. 16th St., ~llllL FOR IM: Townh::lua, 2 br, ,;s:.:•::.· .;:CM=,._~~-= 2 ha, CTpt, drps. frplc., bltns, FURN. Apia. Bachelors $115. fenced patio, at t ache d 1 BR's, $120 -$130. 2135 carport. $175. 962-Dii llft 5. Elden Ave .. CP.f. SH 1-flt'. CoNne del M•r 4250 2 BR House w/'1f) at ~h "A.;.:Pc;t....;6;;.. ------ 110 Cout Hwy. $180 mo, SUS CASITAS BAY view 1 Br apt, util yrly or $800 for June, July ram. 1 BR Apll. Adults l rar incl. $225 mo. or &. Aue. 53&-1319 or 6T.l-17U only, no pell. mo Newport S225 wk-&Ummer. m.o228 Lagun• Beach Blvd, Of. 642-9286 LG. BAOf, pvt entr, S. of S715 * QUIET 2 Bdrm DupleJC hwy. lkamed ceilp. rdric, --------Bl · E Id 1IO kit. Sll5 lnc uU. 67~ tns. &at'I. patio, -11 e. $275 Dix Beautiful Immac. 3 Br, 2 Ba Custom Spanish. Adults, no pets, 360 B 16th Pl. &U-1298 Lide l•le 4111 Beamed, .trplc, v I e w. --------S4:J...42S7. LG FURN 2 Bdrm apt, j Adu1ll only. no pets, else L•eun• Nlfuol '717 to •hop. Jnqulre 1 a I RENT-LEASE ~--=-'~"~'-· -,~-=-or LEASE OPTION 3 BR. 2 BA. W.U, Im 1 BR. Qeu. A11rec. Furn. 1 BR. UIU pald. Guqe. 1 adlllt. No pets. $171 mo, yearly, 673-0S37 eve1. 1 .1 Homes ...... 3 Bedrm $200 dinl .,.., ·"-B ' $110. IAQe, Rell. Cpl « sep. nr w••· Y ft'tirtd. ~Ne .. -Blvd. --------,, Bedrm $250. 5 Bedrm lux. owner. 49&-2645 --· ury home, $350 mo. al!IO ===~--~-1 Bdrm. turn. cpts, adults, BOAT Slip Ir 2 Br. l 8&. •l bachclors· condo. $1.S mo. RENTALS no pets. Patio. Call 642-6742 1ara~ apt. $350/1afo. yrly ' 546-9521 Aptt. Fumlthtd aJt. 6 PM. or $500/Mo. summer. BW Grundy Real!Dr 642-4620 a.n.o. 111...i 4115 Uy 1 Br. apt. unturn. New OPEN ll-7 - 2 BR, 2 BA, robe doon • 1Ddirect ll&bt. apt. NOW. P.O. Box 92, crpta:, ntw drp1 thruout, cpta, drp1, prlv. p&Ho. 1111' lo kitchen • breakfa1t C.M. bltns, sep. din rm.· 991 El Leue. $115-$195. 4230.Hllarla bar • !Jure private fenced 3 R::ESPON==SIB=LE=--c.,-mal~e C&mino Dr. 54tJ..M51 Way. Call 213-981·1039 patio • plulh lVl.lscaptnr • teachers need house for SPAC. Studio $165. 2 Br,** 4 Bdrm, 3 B1th brlclcBar-s.Q'i.larpbeat. summer. Beach area pm. 1~; Ba., gar, patio, ctpta, BurFFS Townhle ovulook• ed poo)J I: lanai. &tZ-<1949, 6'1>3213 drps, bltni, children ok. Dys pool. Delux 2 1tory $350. 3101 So. Bristo! St. RENTAL SERVICE 542-3524, eves 516-<1689 644-2730 (~Ml. N. of So. Coa.rt P1ua) FrH to 'L•ndlords * TOWNHOUSE * 3 BR, & 2 BR, • Balha S•nt• Ano I Blu• Beacon, Jl45.0l83 CM 2 BR. 1% BA, crptl, drpt, encl pr. Lanai, lrplc. at PHONE: 557-8200 S.'\fL Apt or Room w/ ba, patio. Adu.It&. $160. Newport Be a c h, 641).0lf7 ka: fa d Im! CM 64U872, ~17686' -c_~:,:2036:.::.,::...· ~~---$1]0 • LRG 2 BR. Studlo Upcoo to u;· es ~,.,19 &n!a ~ Apl ~,1.-). Fam""" •I" -mo. """""' *DELUXE 1 I: 7 BR 2 BR. Condo.: 2% ba, 2 Car '''' " 'Y e LANDLORDS Garden Apll. Bit-Ina, ,prlv. lara&e· Pool. Adults $240 ldtch. w/ bltns, crpt1, drps, e -• pool -•.. Month Fortin Co MW(OO frplc., encl gar. 1 or 2 F'REE P.~AL SERVICE patio, heata.i • .. _. · · children ok. (Nr schls) No Broker ~ Adults. si.,; mo. 546-5183 YEARLY, 3 bdnn. 2 ba, ~-d O'pl 9')VI pets. Z230 s. Center St., RENTALS DELUXE 2 Br. apl Crptl, .. .,_, rp&. c, car, .-. s A N w u• -·~ ·-· · r """'" ~~= Apt1, Unfumllh-' drpg. dthwhr, frplc, cart>··1,;.-~;;;;.:,~=-~~-... dilpl. Mln b'OQ1 J'rwy. CM. 3 BR. 21,S BA Apt. Swim. :S::•n:;;l:;:•c_;An:;:::•:.._. __ _:5';::20:::':::5::•n:;;t:;:•c_;An:;::•:.._. __ _:5'20:=::. 96J-0367. pool prlvil. W/w erpf&, $300 lMMAC. 2 Br. Studlol, crpta, mo. 67J..el33. drpa, pool, Wrkn& cpl or DEWXE 1 BR. We1tcllff 1nile gltl&, no chldrn &aft Joe. Pool .l bltna. Adulll. 3-10. 646--0496. $165 ~no lse. IH)-6274 NEWLY derorated • 2 BR J.GE. 3 Br. 2 Ba. unr. apt. w/carport. SW. water pd, Ntar beach. $215 Month 25116 Orame Ave. 63&-41'3 67W863 67S--0232 NEW Dlx l Ir 2 llr. Shi crpt, * 1 BD'RM at the Beach. dr)s. bltna, Im.med. '>t.'Cp. No pets. Sl.25 mo. Yearly. """' mo. :l40-1913. 5IS-232l * Call 613-mG 2 B6RM. •PL, 376 £. lllh w-1-11 -5•2-_ St. Hi beam celllnp, pvt _,!-~•l;;cc;l::.;... ___ _:;:;:-1•] J N .~l(HIJl) --------BAOIELOR apt, f'urn. General 4000 Drps, new w/w cpts, pool, pvt bal. 645--0092 aft 3 pm. Hurttlntton IMch 4400 patio/ 642-1953 $16;5.Q\liet deluxe 2 Br. pool, * LRG 2 & 3 BR, 2 Ba.thl, adlllll, no pell. lat I: lut mac.Artl..,. u11..,. A,-1.....i. J BR, 2 Ba, fully d_,.,i, * 1 Ii: 2 Br. P"Urn. ApU. 'Y"'" ~ I I QCNT POOL. 171 22nd St. rrp!ed, trplc, sl.ove, refri&. l.JL.J ~ltl 1 NASSAU PALMS. ~5 encl ya.rd, patio, dbl pr. \\'&lk to Shopnc Ctr, Meu. A#tia~ Rent•I DUf'LIOC 1 BR. tum.. near i\lemorl&l. CUl-de·u.e St. Llstifttltrvlca 1hbp'1, Quiet, no docl. 523.i i\lo. Eves, 673.-4n1. For Inf~llon write: s..2T3J NEEDED dtlldrtn le pets, ~i>hottt~~ 1·-=BR"""°''l\'tlle,....,,....r ~sso=--.~.-p."'1=32 :: Br'll. ! Ba's, crpt!I, drps, W, Wilton. MS-9577 U3 E . bltns. (rplc, lrg wt.Ued yn:I. JtOL1DAY PLAZA 1 :;16:th=St=. ;:'4='-=00=-=== "SOL TEROS APTS. !rpl~ bl"'• crpu, drpt. "'° '""1' """"'· ISO clor Bachelor 4: 1 BR'•. Pool. J;ncl pr., patlo. 54&-1.03f fet. ~251<(. Adulti no pets From SlfO I NEW l • 2 9Jl. $1SG I $110. up, 173o1 Keeu0ri Ln, H.B. Utft Incl. Adulll onb'. no pett ·~~~~ 52'2 '(l blk W. or Beacb, on l<l A-do * 646Mll PR!STIOI LOCATION S.t«'.) 637Ul 2 Br apt. elec bltlns. crfltl Fot' leue, delu.n l1111q. n. STONEHENGE APTS. ~ drpa. 1150 P" mo. F&Mle < BR, 'II BA opt, f'rplc. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Dlhwbr. Pool Pritt Rltr 548-3IJ9 drapes. crpti. wt bar, pr! Jntam ok.·$185. 233l Flarid&., CLEAN 3 Br, 7 &. cpu, balcorun, dbl CU ott k1tcbtn 538-2130 dp1, bllN. Xlnt N. 01 area. dlbwbr, dbl oven, Poot. Qmv 50'nd patio. dbl pr, uni.in. D~ S1*toa 1 Bdnn 1• n1mpu1 nn. -. ~7-e640 Furn apt P35 plm uW. VERY Oean 3 Br, 1~~ bath, Httted plOI. ample putdlw. Newpert Beach 4200 2 BR. at beach, Adults. 1IO Cblldm ok. $1J9. 5S1~151 to lhl»'t 1Chl1 A nqieatlon. peU. IUO. lt>q. tu !.llh St., NEW Apt 1 BR, Si ... , drpl, Only '1JI mo, !g covtt paUo, tncd )11, No chll4rtn • no pell. Partly turn. U deslrtd. June =~-==-p.,..,,.,..,*'..,"',...,c.,.l\I,,.= I. Re...,11tbl• to ""°llllble CHATEAU LA 1'61NTE ,..,.,,.. -alt '""' Lcmly 2 Br ..... Apl I BR, 2~ Ba, carpets. 1: Carport . .Adults, no rlrape1. frpl, lcnctd yard. 1941 Pomona, C.M. !i;().646-0903 Sl20-Nr. ocean. ull pd. bacb. ./ Four Bedroom llriuse qtrs over prtlfS. pet ok. Crpt11 ii: Drp1. SXIO 51iil1 ~'tloomtd. Bk r Call 5JI. 1688. MO-O:M1 ,53.µ;980. BAYCLIFF "OTEL DI Uth St llB "' bch. ....,,,, Adulla. no M 135 .!tml&oo-W01, NB "" 2 BR. Adulb """'· Ulll pd, ..... 112.1. -·· IJ'. 1115 -· *LOW WEEKLY RATES* Beaul ·Qu"t. QlO. ll6'11 2 BR dtluxe. AduJta. Crpu, roWNHOUSE "' Nl!"lt' Ira. Kilchrn, TV's, maid teMce. Cameron. MJ.m1 drpe. bltni. pr. Prfv. patlo. 2 BR. 2"6 8at1'11, frplc. encl Heattd Pool. .;:===::===== st!J.0433. Sl&I mo. car, patJo. m-«133 -4715 OEWXE 2 Br. 2 Ba. BllnO. rrs WOl'IDERroL I h. crpll, dl'I>•· Condo. 2 ....... """" btqo In epPJt- $225 mo. Call 546-.1no JO.I find tn tht Oa..ultd SOCK rr '.11> 'tii1 Ada. Chtclr !btm -I LG 1 Br. tum. swtm'a pool, ocean vltw. Prtf. adult COU· ---------pit, no chOdn,, no ..... .,.. $21 WK. LUXURY SIT5 lncl \ltll. 646-~ .. 87 the Mt. $1201 I Spellilh Style Luury J ,. J ,.,.,.... r..w..i .-v~ "'""'---c.-.... ,-. ,_ ,_.., °"'"" ....... ,.,,,,., • a.... ,_,,.,. ... _ .4£r c.Mlt'"-' E.V., r_,. Ow.. l'riHf• 31. ff ..... ,... c.i.. ,., ........ Now II•~"'"' l l 40 / .. NenA •I ......,. C.... ,,_. 1000 II'. MoeAr1/11u Blod. I W«A ,_,•I ....., Sanl« .411• 540-3491 --Income P"'P"rtr .... 9 Units ••. •. A PLEASURE to live ln. Proftt&ble to own. Deluxe, prden home • like unltl. Shake roofs. 11replac. , e1. Prtvs.te patlol, S):*dowl. Quiet, AuUme $90,000 tint T.D. Out ol tmm OWMr' mU11 HI! NOW, Al"'"' $119,500. cau now, YoU'U be a1ad )'OU did, -541-2316. T l Ir: f.·1:;11. 'Z r::;'f'i\l'I'/.'.; = Bual-• Rontol ---· --"'---"-"I OCEAN VIEW OmCES 6 SHOPS • Nicest oomrnerci&l bulldlnr In Sin Clemente. All flus front A tidt, U!IO sq. IL thop In l!:l Ctmlno Plua. BUI)' commtrbl CITlttr, l!IOO s. !l Camhto Rell 492.-2979, .f92..7!04 atbtr 6:00 pm G:)...4551 HILLGREN SQUARE 2 •tonlt •val!, ... lmmed. leue ln one of dtfa b_... lhopptnc een11en, App, l50 111. ft. ea. 250 E. lTtb SL, CotOt U- Call Mr. Bnm (213) OL 1 •STORE -Ill~ ltlS W. 19111 St.. CM. Avail Junie 1st. 511-17'3' -·-·· Offlco ROlll•I D!:UIXE 1.2 or 3 rm. IU!M nr. OrtJ>p CounJy Airport & Irvine lndu•trlal Complex. ea,,,.1. ~ rmulc, afr.condltioNzw a. janitorial ttrvlcc. AV/.Jl..ABLE NOW BOB PE'l'l'IT, lift!"' • m.o101 • PRIVATI OP,.CE Sha& ...,,.,., -. "'"' • fUt. Modml, dean. Maa Vtrdt """· llJdc. llll) -lnd\kb all utWUt1. Jim Wood. 54$.5990 •I 11 1· ,. I 1 ( l ~-~----~--.. -·-.~· •7"1"GC.,,"P'-.,-... ,--·~·~'· ·~,-~-~~~~~.,,,..,.. ... .,.,..,,..,,.,,,.,,, ............. ""'e'I':~"'"""'"""""""''"" ......... .,. .................. .., ....... ""'"""'""'"' ......... ""~""'"'" ...................... ~. '1 L • • Thursdiy, May 14, 1970 REAL ESTATE ANNOUNCEMENTS 0-ral and NOTIC!S 0-.ol -----1 -.....01 ~ --WANTEo to purchaSe: 4 BR FOUND Lad\e1 \Vatch. PfJ"k· Ml 1111'11 Offices ...,., BM1'. c • m • o '"' lol w .. «:1111 Pllu, May IS-1111 I rm ...... Hlgtllond• No 1-na Bob, ll, 646-8438 ._. told. 8ect'y lll'Vb, CdM I Nev.·port. PrincipW ro=UNO=---mW!=..--=::-,,-,-call"" putialL amna, located. Olfll:JI S.U.-M.'\O to kttnuty. So. Colli ht IW. Bk. Bids-.....,14 2311 E. 17lh So..t BUSINESS and Oona 1i1o1J fn.1C'5 FINANCIAL BLACK nbblt Vi<. of Lido -Sandi. DESK SPACE a...1 ... , "~'5.18 222 forest Avenue Oppo'!unitles 6300 DACHSHUND. College Park h COIN LAUNDRIES area. Call &. describe. Laguna Beac Frigid•lre s.15-2700 When You Wqn f "t don~ . rfg ••• Call C>~e of the ·~~rts listed ~wit .f9f..9tG6 From $6500 to $37,500 ro=u~N~0~.~..,,-.,-~.1-.,-.. -.-, 1 , * OFFICE SUITE o Buena Park o Full<rton o Bal•arlc School, c, M. SERVICE DIRE~ORY SERVICI DIR,ICTORY SIRVICI· I CTORY FOl' leaae ~ llQ. ft. Jdt>al Cyp~ • Westminster • 546-2530 -location. doMttown Laguna Huntington Beach e Garden FO=UN=o-, .. -,-.-pc-l.~V~lc·.t B•byalttlnt 6550 C•rpt! Cle•nl"I '625 Movlnt & I~ ... 6l40 ~ach. Crptd, air • cond. f!rove • Orange • Santa M~u. Verde Monte Vl1t• School 0 ... ~ LOCAL & lone dist. movin&. Janitor, Ulil. Priv dual rest. Ana • Costa Mesa • Ana. 545.o?s,, Area • Heu. 1rorqe. ·Free Eat. rm fac. 494-9481 helm e FOUND Whit Do H_...__ \VIU catt for ""''" child ht>. .., -• . &U--OtOJ. OJC.\ Van ~ CALL otARLIE 525-1833 e ve, atuur .z-.. DESK SPACE ERA SHOP p I v•w lWI•, CdM. 6#-2612 fore. afle< 6'hool.. ,Grad-CARPET Slo ..... ; CA..:\1 · r me eves. ee 1 thni <tth, I am exper. STEAM CLEANED ------17875 Beach Blvd. !\e'.l'J)Ol't Beach Center -. mother \v/nl yard & SQ Palnti"I, serves \\'estcliU area.. Fine FOUND: Pearl ring, J\1arch ce 10c • FT. Papomont,_1 61.11 Huntl.ngton Booch 10 h H lli ' N healthy atmosphere. Very • •~-,.y ...... 1-·"·Uon ,,. business 'o\'ilh hea\"" gl'OM t , o Iler s ursery. .. .. ____ .. ,""' ,.__,, ._._......, J....-.u ......,1 .... ,..,...,... ~. Ext 2i6 sale. Impossible to find bet-Call to kl:vitlty. ~ ;,:-:ttM. uw ~ 646-5971 * PAINTING INT 1 l EXT. OFFICE OR !m)RE ll'r llX"alion. Call ~;)....342-' DOG, small, black I: Whitt' RE~1ARC Strv!ca. 3 room.11 Averg. 1 sty •. 2 1ty 15 x 33• or 30 x 35• South Coast Real Estate. female, mixed breed, has ** Baby1lttin11 my borne, $'Zl.50, Full euaran. Credit $350. 1ncl all matrital A off 1t pkln& & utll furn :i.tESA Verdes Exec. \\'ilh nea collar. 5:16-1497 H.B. ai;as;..~ ; cards OK. UT-3688, 648-1234 ::.ra~ ·~-~~a~ Newport & Bay Center, C.!\f Ext. Local and U.S. con-YOUNG Welmara~r. Vle. asi-3895 or 837~ 20S2 Newport IDvd 646-1252 !mets and exp. \Viii Build Santa Ana i 22nd St. C.M. \VILLhebabysit for.~,~voWrking C•rpet Laying A CUSTOM p.; .. t; .... • ''The DESK SPACE Your Business for 1~ S48-5636 mol r, exp'd, vlc o amer _ Re~~r '626 • _ ..... ..,. Normal Salary. Let's . take ''RA~B~B-IT~---8~1,-.-,-.-.-,-,.1, & Edww'ds H.B. 842-5969 'Exterior-Inteiior·~" ]05 No. El C•mino R••I dv ntage of situation .. RELJA. Exper. My Home. *EXPERT CARPET Residential • Commerclal. S•n Clemente ~9-~574 . ~~~ndt~ii. =· Cd~r. Good rates, Refer. $12.50 per Ins tallation & Repair No Job too larie or 'too ~-~-'-""~'"'_,-,....,.,-I DISTRJBUTORS & -=========J child. fl.largaret, 548-7801. Nl job too small, 6f&.5971 mtalI Llc. Bond .. Im: •. Woll'l -:: -be , underbid! 6*3679 Best Location In CdM SALESMEN WANTED lo Lost 6401 BABY sitting, my home. Electrlcol 6640 soo to 1400 1q. ft. Deluxe Off. !'-'II a revolutionary new Nice play area, hot lunches. 1 sroRY Stucco A ove.rhana Jee Spaces. Avail Immed. \Vater Bed. Unlimlted fina~ LOST -Small up, fem. beige 2270 Miner, c.r.-f. 642-9589 e MINOR •electrical '.\'Ork. $99. 2 story stucoo ".& Pho-0w .. r. 642..9950 clal *"'"'Slbilitie •. Share \\'/ drk bl'Wn tips. overha"nt $149: ACst. cenu.t . .., .,.,... BABYSITIING in my home, 220 hook-up. 646-7613 $13 Min • \Valer Bed. Broadw•v·S.A.-Tustln area. _,_ Call •-t 8"'l • 6 PM kd · per nn. · ,. nn1. NEWPORT Beach Delu.xe 12131 4~7967 Half Y~/poodle. Jl.feans Jeni..'ed yd, hot me~. ""ore "-''-a,. w ys 64&-0STI A 6J7-6119 Offices. Air-cond., heatfii, • &l2-0829 w/ prlv ba. 2400 \V. Coast GREAT food & malt shop very much lo little &itl . ==~--~-~,-Gardenlnn ,. 6680 No \Vuting 646-6268 CHILD Care, my home. d.lcy& ··• * w•LLP•PER * Hwy. operation for sale to right & N l "·-h M M C r--r-• 0 eves. ewpor , ixt1.C NEW Lawn'• -··-'•'""· \"hen you _,, ....... .. offi I party. u r .......-.. pus . .,.,.,.. B Y'S Schwtnn bike, black, 67,7~..., ·~ ... ·T ~ .. .... H.B. Deluxe ces, w w business mw -fantastic sissy bar, leopard seat. area. " ;u.:, Complete lawn care. Clean 548-1444 ~ erpts., AJC, $90 mo. 19322 growth. $5(81 dn. Contact i\liulng from Harper Sehl. IJC'D Babysillt'I', vie \VUson up by job or month. Free BEFORE You pay over $200 Beach Blvd. 96U631. Dan. 833"-2470 Reward. &46-l!SlS & Pomona, ct.I._ Fenced estimates. For tn!o call to pa.Int )'OW' house, cht'clc NO. C.M. oHice, nice. Prof. FANTASTIC Bus. Oppor, 6 LOST: Beige color poodle, yrd. Hot meaJs, &60017 S97-2417 ot 846--0932 with Steve A: BUL eou. Atr-cond, cpts, dpt, ST9 ea. )T mr<lium sized retltaurant Vic. Adams & M··-ita. CHILD Care, my home, AL'S / Landscapln&. Tree 1 1lUdenta. 548-454.9 646-4833; alt 5, 547-t751 ~"'" 1 1 d thru F ' d "· al l-=:========-1 in N.B. that must be sold H.B. No collar. Reward! uon ay . ~r 1 ay. 1 n.cmov . YantRemodefuu:. EXT & INT i;pecj.al rates. Commerc ial '°'5 due to loss of mgr. lOM doMt 962-520-1 La.guna Niguel. ~ Ha~ trash. Clean-ups, Acst. cellirtc sprayed $13. Call GaJe Pike -494-6373 tOr Small beige poodle, very CHILD or in!ant care in my Repair sprnklrs. 673-ll66 incl good pa.Int R oy PRIME OCEANFRONT 4 furnished unfts. zoned com- mercial, 25xl25, S 6 9. 5 O O. Owner: 673-2259, 644-5972 FOR Sale, store building. 686-698 W. 19th St. Bethel To\\'erll ~a. 548-1768 Agt. MARINA Jn Nt>wport Beach w/high potenlaJ $315.000. KINGAAR D RE ft.fl 2-2222 11ppl to see. shaggy. Ans\li'erll to "Coco... lovely new home, 23rd St. AL'S C&l'OlelUnl A Lawu 847-1358 BEER &. \Vine Bar for sale, \•ic. Ne~rt lleightll. 968-& Santa Ana, C.M. 646-S537 Maintenance. Commercial, i·'w"ILL"'-:.,-:-1o:n:-t -.,-,,~hd=nn 38342 Sierra Hwy. 3079. Aft. 6 646-2785 lOOustrlaJ &-l"t'SidenUaL house for $1!i0, incl trim, Palmdale. Ul05l 947-9179 Boat Maintenance 6555 * MS-3629 * _,_ $.iO Reward for recovery ---· ----· ROf0TJLLIN~ ~:::'S:>r~~-&: material. Investment Ht>athkil Am P . Ricken-BOAT maintenance complete O rt .,. 6310 backer guitar. No quesUons. refinishing, genL cleaning, Ne\v I awn 1, landscaping.p ""A"INT=1"'N"'G-"l;:n7l.-"°&-"E",..,.1. ppo uni ies Call 673-7431. painting, varnishing, in-Shrubs & trees removed. Highest Quality. Lowt>1t e HORSE LOVERS e REWARD for relurn or Witt. terior and exterior also Free est. 5~8-1742 Prices. Fully t>xp. rns. John Invest now in beautiful naut>r \\'&!ch, prack face dock:;;. \\'ork guarcll\teed. CLEAN·UP SPECIALIST 673-1166 comm'l stable to be built in & band, inscribed "\\'es." 897-8163 l\lowing, edgin&. odd jobs. METICULOUS PAINT lndu.strlal Rental 6090 Santa Ana Hts. Use permit SU-7775 Reasonablt'. 548-6955 · 1 Brick, M•sonry, EXP, DOCKS-hou!fl, nt-ext. allows. 2'1 box stalls, bull LOST:' Sinai! gray/brown etc 6560 NEAT & rtliablc, 30 )'J":ll INS. col, students. 675-SSU * * * * * * pen, riding arena it spccta-female mixed Schnauzer exp. Complete yd scrv. INTER or Ext. PAiNTING, New 3800 sq n. "83 mo. tor paUo. 61J-2259 type dog. Spayed, flea col-BUILD, Remodel, r e Pair Comm!. &12-4389 ThtMED. SERVICE. LocaJ Ne\\'J)01"1 Beach 64Z-1485 · ---6320 Jar. Name r.litz;I UZ-5410 Brick, block, concrete, Exp. Japanese JandscaJ)t', ref. FREE est. 548-l627 ·~ SQ FT for _ ....... ,..__ Moner to Loin REWARD: SA J\f 0 y ED carpentry, no job too small. cleanup, maintenance, '"""" ............... Lie. Contr 962-6945 M k 84" °'42 luring, all po"·er. Laguna 1 TD l <WHITE 1'1 US K YI under 1 ac ...-.... Beach. 494-4447 st oan Vels Care PLEASE CALL 1.r-JAPANESE Garden i ng 492-7378 Cabinetmaking -Service. Neat work. Cleanup Lowest Intt>ttst Available LOST: P.1ale Siamese blue-Furniture&: Antlques yd, maint. 968-2303 2nd TD loan point cat. Vil': Euclid It. Retinillhing k Restoring. mrs Gardening & lawn OCEANFRONT LOT Ta I be r 1. • · ~T ae ta a I'' * 60-0001 * maintenance. Res. &: com· Lots 6100 San Clemente, Calif. Tttms bavd on equity, Rc\\·ard! 963-in2 John's Custom Cabinets mercial * 540-ol.S.::7 Superb vat>w, 60 x l20' lev. 642-2171 S45·0611 LOST; Labratlor, b I a ck, Shelves-l\Iinor Repair · JOHNSON'S GA:t~O~E~N~IN~G= com. lot. Crtllobal Esplanade .21 Serving Harbor area yrs. male, anS\\''-'-l'W t" "Boss," M&-{)835 after 5 Yard care, Clean-ups, Prun- for &ale by owner, $29,500. Sattler Mortgage Co. Please call &46-G827. Reward! ing, planting. 962-2035 673-5848 eves. 336 E. J7th Street C•rpentef1ng 6590 l LOTS. 25Xl00 each plu~ ========::;:; Persona ls 6405 Gener•I Ser.vices 1005 easement. s12,ooo. Mortgages, CARPENTRY lAlw down. Panoramic \•iew Trust Duds 6345 Slnglt>-\\'idov•ecl-Divorced hUNOR REPAIRS. No Job CALL THE HANDYl\IAN or Laguna's Bluebird Can--==..::.;=;;__ __ ;..;,;I * WOMEN * TO<' Small. C..blnet ln Pf' General Home Repair yon, 12'13) 657-5315. Exchange yollt Trust ages A o t be f c:ablnetA. * 67~1341 * Everyone':; looking for the l I========= ** LAKEFRONT LOT Deed fo1· cash today. right one. We have a way.so ~75, Uno a nswerH.eave FOR SALE, CAN y 0 N Call T. D. Ce:nter; Inc, call us & begin to live? ms: a't &t6-23Tl. O. LAKE, BY 0 \V NE R. S4J..1381 547.mrr Andel'90n 837-5311. I=========' I 24 hr. recordlni; QUALITY \Voodcralt, sml Money Wanted 6350 gen'l constr. & carpentry, 6175 ---------*FULLY LICENSED * Free consulla!lon & quote. . Reno\\•ned Hindu Spiri1u11.li&t. .:Ao A""~ INTERIOR des1gne_r needs Advice on all matters. CaJ Ken 645-00t4, ....,.,..,......, $j.{IOO lo Sl.0,000 l~an to ex· t.ove, MaITiage, Bu!!lness CARPENTRY-Cabinets-Room COLUSA COUNTY pand furniture inventory. Readings given 7 days a Add., Patios. ,,ny size job. 4200 Acres Of Prlmt' Grain & Securt' investment. Xlnt v.·eek. 9Al\t-9P~t 312 N. 1.1 ?-.like 67l-ll66 & 646-2576. Hauling 6730 Citrus Groves Grazing Land. Approx. 2500 return. 962.-6631 Camino Real. San acres can be Jarmed. ti.lain ANNOUNCEMENTS Clemente. -492-9136, 492--0076 YARD/ Gal'. Cleanup. Remove trtt.,, ivy, trash. Grade. backhOt', ~45 MOVING, garage clean-up & lilc hauling. Reasonable. Free e11limate1. 6..J5-IGO'l. LITE Hauling Ir. prage clean-up. Mon thru Sat A·l CARPENTRY Frtt estimate 54s-5031 Small Job Spel'Wi~I house & help house. Good \\'Orklng corrab, xln't fenc. 1nd NOTICES SACRIFICE Offer: Holiday Call Gordon 847-674;; HAULING & Clean-up . RE=P"•'",=ru;""".~AL~l=E=x"Ac;Tl"O"N"'s Tre<:s remo\.'ed. Reiu;onablt. Free estimate. 548-1742 Ing. Ranch is fenced into u ftealth Spa mcmbt'rshlp for diUel"t'nt pastures & ea. pas-Found (Free Ads) 6400 sale. Good any'<l·here in ture has .--..t water supply. . ndl \\'Orld. Call Grorge :>tS-9691 &"""' !\!ALE Daisy type fr1e y 1~~~~~~--- * CABINETS. Any sizl' job 25 )'rs ex:-per. 51S-6713 HAULING SlO A WAD Clean up. Trw Scrv. Ge n. This ranch will easily run ~hhCY dog Adam& & AL COHO LI CS Anonymous 500 he11.d of cowti. Colusa r,.1agnolia In· front of Don Phone s.12-7217 or \\Tite lo County is one of the best Jose Restaurant Sllnday. P .O. Box 1223 Co.~ta ;\ll!sa. GEN. repalr, add., cab. Pruning 646-2528, 54:J...SO.U Fonnir-.a, paneling, m11.rlite. general farming countil!& ln 847-7588 or 833-3600 days. SA.LES-Slim Gym dealers. Calif.&: Real J>l'Oper1y taxes TOY poodle or?_ Gray Pt or 0 time. $300-$2000. Cement, Concrete 6600 Anything! Dick, fi'll.4459. are low bt'Cause of efliclenl Call Kay IM, 540-0497 --local governlfl&'. Priced al w/black, male, w/black CONCRETE, all types. Free St.88 per a.ere. For turthl!r collar. Vic. 16th & Santa FREE CROUP esllmate. Sawing, breaking, If pl .. l ~-t Ana, CJ11. 646-0623 or ENOOUNTER SESSIONS .. ~ lln & kl. loo.ding n °· east' con c .,,..,..,s 548--5924 Call 673-7555 .... u g s P ' EckhoU, 1 -========= Sc!rvice & quality. stS-8668 Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. FOUND on Newport Blvd. I" -· Bob li18 w. Chapman Ave. near the Pier, black & white Cemetery Lots 6411 CEME..~T \Vol'k: \Valks & Orange, Calif. male Collie CTl (1)1---------pnUos. whatever you Pt'ed 541·2621, Evts-wlmds m.6974 6.Tl-5807. 3 CEi\1ETERY LOTS, in concrete the price is !'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""' FOUND: Young g i r I's \Vestminster 111 em or I a I righl! Call Bob 642-9187 aft 5. rluses. brown lrame, Vic: Park. All or s e p a r a t e * C 0 NCR ET E Work. on beach in Balboa near "84~'~·""'=~·=--=c-c,,..-~~ Licensed. Patios I drVwys, 12th St. 673-9:>56 12 PLOTS, Pacific ViC\I' etc. Phillips Ce men t. 6200 $995 FULL PRICE $31 down, $31 per month. 2~ acre ~11h trttl, county road l utilities. No. Calli. Xlnt buntln&: " fishing, 644-418.) CABIN & 5 ACRES Only S499a \\"/Low Low Down &: Euy Pilonthly Payments. Bttck Noll Realty, ~2·00.W. 3 ACRES, S63'7S. good lenns. RJcht no:t lD \\'ell developed community. Eves. &1~70 Blcr. h'EYS found on beach vie. Memorial Park, 1 or all. 5481380 Island & Ba1boa. Inquire $250 ea. I n c 1 u d \ n 11: t'.n· CONCRETE \\'Ork all types. at counter, Daily Pilot, 2211 dowment care, 5-15-5359 Sawing, breaking, hauling. Balboa, N.B. 3 PLOTS. Harbor Re~t Sklploading: Lie. Serv1Ct'. & FOUND: Pet cat. Vic : ldemorltll Par k. $185 ea. In· Quality. MZ-1010 Wllson A~ loni· cldlng endowment care. ll10RE Concrete patio fOI' haired, you!\( black, trmale, 1.:!4>-5359=-.c--,--,---..,..-= ll!ss money. Artistic seltlng. v.•hlle feet I: chest, S4&-46S1 T\VO choice cemetery lots. Lie., call ?>.lax at ~. FOUND black & ...mite male Pacific Vit\\' M e m "1' I a 1 C~fENT \VORK. no job too kitten, a.~ 3 mos old. Park .. /.lust Sell! JI.fake l'.l!· Small, reasonable. r~re~ vie: of Indiana & Petersen fer! 54!}..{)6T~ Estim. ll. Stullick s.JS-8615 School. H.B. ~3839 6 i\IASONIC-p~lo-~-. -p~,-,~ll~ic DECORATIVE CONCRETE BLACK slx'irt haired fem. Vlew i\tcmorial .Park, $250 DRIVES-\\'ALKS-PATIO 6735 WANT A Sunny & brlE"hl home? Call the DUTCH ?>.IAJNTENANCE MAN for your windows, lloors & ca rpet cleaning . SPECIALJZES IN ALL KINDS OF FLCORS. No crew. 537-1508 aft. 3. BAY " Beach-Janitorial Carpet~. windows, floors, etc. Res &: Commc 'I, 646-1401 ' :r.1esa Cleaning Servit.-e Carpe'8, windo"'''· Ooors, etc. Res. &: Commc'l. 548-4111 JOE'S CLEAN SERV. \\'e do Everything • Re11. & Com. Free E&t. 54g.3126 WINDOW \VASHING OOMMERCIAL HOliIB Call Pele· 492-13:17 \VILL Do genera l hou1>ecll.'an!11g. * 968-3132 * ~· "H"'OU°"SEC.LEA.~N~l~N~G­ E.'Cp, Ress. Ref. 638-2354 pup "''' clear nea collar. ea. lnclding t' n do w m e n I 642-85!4 Vic. Orana'-'. Newport care. Mf>.5359 l -'===~"=====-1 lronint 6755 0Sho~"!''~· i54~!1-~n~54~-~~I~~~====~ .. ~ .. ~ Contr•ctors 6620 --~------ Resort Property 620.I BEAUTIFUL Northern Callf, a~age in Modac Natl. Fore&I. Calllomia Pi~1. Must sell. $260 down S1l rmnth. 6*-15B7 llftl'r 6:00 ~.M. ~BBIT on E. Ba1bo& Blvd. Travel _.., IRONING In my home, Sl ROO i\1 ADDITIONS. L. T. Hr. Dressma.klna k altera-Blk & v.·hl. --------tlons. 545--7641 67>1193 LJVE In S. Laguna. Need Construct Ion . Family rldt> to Dally Piiot, 3.)J W. rooms, single or 2 1tory. IRONINGS done in my Bay St. Costa t.1esa. Will E.!tlmate1, plans, layout A home. \·ou pick up and pay. 49-l-5739 financ.ing. Call 847-1511. deliver. F~cellent \\'Ork. 30 DAY Special Int Ii Ext. Free t'lit. Loe rtfs. He'd & Ins. Call Chuck &ts.-0809 YOU Supply The Paint. 3 Br, Llv JL\t & Kitchen Painted, $50. Call 5.l7-8638. I PHONE The rest then phoile 1he bes1. Custom Painting. .......... RETIRED Painter: 26 yrs 1 exper. Neat & bone!t. Non drinker. call 536-6801 PAINTING· Ext-Int. 18 yn. exper. llll. Lie. Free est Accoust. Ceilings. 548--532.i. PAPER HANGING [ 20 yrs exp. Free estimate. Call Keith anytlmt', 642.-2509 * PAPERHANGING & PAlNTING. * 968-2425 Plastering, Patch, Repair -* PATCH PLASTERING AU types. Free estimates Call 540-&lS Plum bing PLUMBING, alterationll. I: repairs. Special on water htn & disposals 646-120'6 an,ytime. \Valer hl'alers-di&posers Gen. repalrw $7 .50 per hr. 6.tz-27~2-w.ai PLUMBING REPAlR No job too small • 642.J128 • Remodeling & R9Palr 6940 * IF you need remodeling, painting, or repair&. Call Dick 642-1797 Roofing GUITERS I: Do\\'flSpouts Installed Reasonablt' San Clemente n4: 492-!706 Sewing 6MO -··------·II DRESS.\1AKING le ALTERA110?\S Rea.sonable ntes. 6-12-0497 • DreS.!!?Jlaklng· A!teratio11!1 Dt>slgned to "Uit you. Ca.JI Jo * 64&-6446 Tiie, Ceramic 6'74 * Verne. The TUe Man * Cust. work. Irtltall & repain:. No job too small. Plaster paUo. I.eak1nc sllo"-er repair. 847-1957~ TrM Service -Mountain & DHerl 6210 NOW'S THE TIME FOR Addition• * Remodelin; Newport, Costa ~lesa area I r. •·•· L' St per hr. 64~1 ---------F'rl'd I . vcl'\\'n.:r., IC. ===;======= J $ Ac. On Pt.\'ed Road, )ust 90 trolt'I O.C. Xln't lenn1. S2>lO lull price. Bk " '38-fl&; It. E. W""'9tl 6240 tt_.n.te Porty Wonll to Buy Hol&lll or income propertJ On or near 1¥1tet' Pot low down pt.ymt ..... °""'' Co ll: 67M57S SERVICE DIRECTORY QUICK CASH Accounting 6500 THROUGH .A FULL a. .... bookkttp<r DAILY PILOT ....... ,,~, .. ~ -----WANT AD a.by•1111"' 6550 642-5678 -------CHll.0 en~ .t Ironing, n1y home vie. Placentia l 19tl) St1, C~f. lili;..&;.12 673-00n * 549-211'0 Jant'tort'a' t TREE SERVICE All types 6790 Lise It Ins. Frre Estimates "'"'"'I. 64z...iM4 Car pet Cleaning -~ --------CA~RPF~'TS Cl.EAR Vu t.lainten.ance, \Ve TREES. Hedaes. trim, C\11, I do evt'rythlng! s-lali:it-stum-re-·.,. hau'·' 30 Steam Cleaned ..-~ ''A ..... ""'"""· ..ru. Ir .apt clttt.nup. Free t'St, 24 ,.,, ~'P Fully los "'" •••• ' ·or I'--E1t1ma1-l tnro · · ~ •""'!! ..., hr serv, 6'f6..2!198 ClarKare • 842-41155 • HOAtE It APT Clcanina' BY DtA.,IONO 187 2J1l St.. Costa. ~teg 6f>.-JS17 Fft'e est. 6991 Uphol•tory 6110 ------- --------CZYKOSKJ 'S Outom. UphoL LICENSED lal'ldscape con- traclOr. Comple!e 11!rvlce. 968-19'.ll or &t&--8247 Europe1.n Ctattsmanship 100~-' fin! &12·1454 1131 N•wport m..i., c.r.i. --------- JOIN THE •• WE'RE SAYING SPACE FOR YOU ••• ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ,_. ~ ~ If you sell ta service and don't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you 're doin9 busineu the h a rd way· The Service Directory I clauifications 6500 • 7000 in the classified all section daily) 9 i v e s you an advantage you 9et through no other adver· tisin9 medium. It reaches customers who are ready to buy. Be there whe~ your prospect. come into tho market looking f~r the services you have to sell. If your service isn 't listed, we'll start a category just for you. your space in the "Sellers Circle" Pick up the phone r i g .ht n ~w and reserve Your Direct Line to Directory Results 642-5678 DAILY PILOT CWSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT • ... --• ... --1, ;; • -:ff~~-~~""" Ti>Jlndll', M11 14, 197P · DAJL Y Pit~. J.1 !,.: .. JOBS " EMPLOYMENT _JOllS •. EMPLOYMENT JOll I EMP_L_OYMENf ~"bl,~OX NT -~ & ~LOYMINT_ JOIS & EMPLOYME_NT J s & EMPLOYMENT MIRCHANDISf l'Olt I MIRCHANtifsl l'Olt · -SALE AND TRADI SALE AND TRADI '.I Job W•nlo<I, M•n 7000 Job• Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobo Mon, W.om. 7100 Mon, Wom. 7100 ~ Mon; WOf'll. 7100 Job>.-.Mon, Wom. 7100 J , Wom, 7100 1 • • ' · ~---r -· -, · -' · Furniture IOOO Furntture 8000 ~ ~~~le=:Eo~ ~1~~~ Casting Agent ~~~ ·"!or\e~•· Key~b ' ' ~ :=Tl!REo NURSE ~~l~0e.~1:. :s~1~i: Ex una r:!~YY~'~'Ork l ~~~~iiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;miiiiiiiii~ ~ O[ yacht.. NEED 'ft'Ork. c c ' Jo"IBERG~~ .. Up ITT JAl·~o tc . .c:.c.u. JIOST Ir MANAGER ol 1.n ly new ore. in Irvine 61;)....()445 ALIF. A.STING CO. m..n. 1!K.1 Place:nUa Aw. ~ ~tnr Utlll. Challetiai11& deluxe.1ell 1ervlce laundry. eJl'a for a Wl>ndertw baa, ~ HOUSEMAN. Oiaut, Escrt, We are ca.tlinc d..lrtttors lot Bldg. "B", Costa ll1ffl.\ opportun!Uea, conUootna l!d. fCrpte<l-Color TV· Etc.) The co. b Ptlbl'd .tc stable. • THE USE_D • FURNITURE FACTORY 1 ~~..!:i.~Exo R<!'s. ~·:.:.1~ F~U~'":.'C:x;. I ~fUNCll :!:.iTc:;..~ ~~bl~ :~· .;.~,clJai~ i;~.s '!;e~ •,~~,:~~ ' ~ • jUs for non.dnbii)pi."°i'75 M~ -bK>~~lnr & munlty llocp, !1872 Coul meelirw public. live oce Send re11wne or call ri.11u ~ Job Wa;;;;I~; lO ~ per day. Wa ~"'hot . fuoeiaf tlqigna. Apply, ·tn MnllJOlt Hlf)'1 ~i Laguna (ntJ $ to lllon. Vecy, very mode~t Ellubeth, 5.'.>7-6122 AbJsliil 1• Worrttf! ~ 7D28i •a 'IChoo1 or ~nl ~ ":,' • ,~ .1'J•.inJk>laa Ave., Urtftlll 1311 Eij:t. 356 .&&huy. See store before Abbot Pel"90n11(1:1 Aaency, 230 ~ ~ ~ Pract!cal Nune. FREE ~~S~CREEN 1 w::m~:~~ -Days. \•~ ~~r:'~~SAIDE~-3 *P~ =n&Ce~;,~;-.:er~it ~~arner,Sulte 211,S&nt.a Selling, Ilk• new furnltute, returned from !"apartment rentel1 & model homff •t prlc•• btlow )whol1s1l1I ~: Pleldant, capable, }lave Apply 9-U noon, MacGl'!'p ,IBMV:~ :..~ .nulllft'i. • * S.19-:r>St * Tiirvlew, \.,M.) Call Belfy * Secy/Typlat * ., Cllr. No Ml<lkc or drlnk. NO ~;1'° YOU Yacht Corp. 1631 Placenti,I, f:~ ~~~ e":: Gentral Offlet Brlacoe, alt ~PM, 644-1307 Co. aolld u a rock nttds ' :: Also experlenct'd w 1th We are .client..,p;p.ij, Pb.. t.-... C.M. t \ t • • Cood wilh fll:uru lite typ. good lypllt. Very congenial i: ~~~n Science cues. lntervitw (714) . ..,_ :r FRY eoat. GI*' mo trainees -ooOi) ioiurri---AND lnr, 2 YI". up, Cab l.cftlne, REUBEN E. LEE aSallytnw,,~he;, !a~~. Call MAY-\l Price Clearance Sale! ;: CLERll' ='ILIST "'"'"' .... 1unnt npw. wo!UdNG OONDlTIONS Wettc11• l'tnonne1 """"'· • •. -• , PRACTICAL Nurse wishes ·~.ff ·Abo~• ava . pq. Jni ; ' -t ~ Wes~.-Dr., N.B. NOW INTERVIEWING COASTAL AGENCY •• • • Mattr111 & Box Springs .................... :.. •. $25 ,; bed patient or elderly. Well Mlirlttti .. • Dept.· '*"nt..-'Ap;Jy De:~s. F.q\al ()pportunfty Id.mo 2790 Harbor ~vd., C.M. ·, :;PJ&..~' re.ts. ~9-2738 Acc\lrate typist 9J '!VJ)l1I alee-129\' 2$WI Blvd. G.G. Employer OlltOER CLERK Wffk encl, .nl1_ht S•cretary 2 Be•utiful •ntlque white l plec1 t•ble 1et1: con1i1tln9 of 2 ind t•bl11, tric typevaitu. Ooe. year ** 'F'\Iµ. TIME ~IAN Needed to proceu on:lefl and BUSBOYS ' Construction firm, beach NURSE -'eQMPANION e:qierlen~.· · , NEED~, l,APJNy al Mesa 1485 DALE \VAY perform customer service. area, i;:ood sk.111!, caU ~ GOOD COOK Coll Personnel Dept. V•~il. "°""''"' • N••-COSTA MESA, CAUF. 926211 s.,...i •accuracy In ... 11,.. DISHWASHERS n.lne, WHlclltt -OMO! I cocktail t•bt1 ·---····-··········-······-···$20 set e Spanish Sof11 & Love S11t1 both pc1. $ff · 49<-1l'l8 (71.41.l 494-9'40! ru~ Ume, apply in (n41 ~ ma.thtmalics, type 40, use 10 ~en ~~ :3-Wett~ ,. AIDES • lor-•coJWalesce.~, "TJ i.r:.-.: 'Jack-In-The Box, key. Min. 2 )TA oUkle e.xptr. l:<co,;"-;'C;;-;,. ,·...._..,•="'-o-:= e &rean velvet Sofa, like new ................ $79 e Gold Sole ················-·· .. ·········-·············~. ~i ~:Cr:!~~~~~ care. forTE. oppL a:i~.n;'ltnt ~!i~~ .. 1 .. u A.M. ~ .::: It cook· ~· ~~erviewlna ~11 .U.t 151 •E. ~~ H~. SNE~!~ ~!. ~p = ·; P.ENT-'L H'\'OIENIST ONlC ~ DollYory Oil!-AVERY PRODUCTS NEWPORT BEAOI °' 631.J070 IG-5 PM .• -Avail M'.aY 11-26, 540-1481 lndu5tft91 _______:__~ '' ~ Copswner Divil'lk>n * SERVICC: S'J'ATJON AT!I" :: • '!"" '::-1 e TR.AlNEE • , 2'20 So. Sual.n, Santa Ana ROOM & board plus gm Sal • • " Jobi. Men. Wom. 7100 'l1tjunl 8tlteh No eb,er~.ls l'le!?· XInt opp, Local Offlct Jobs (~ear Harbor & Warner) .calary Jor woman In ~X· ~it:~ ~ A~~~~ e Over1tuffed Cheirs ·······-····--·-·········----··-$19 • Color TV Console ··-··--·---·-···-····--·-----S1 JS e Complete 12 pc. Spanish 1ntlqu1 9reen Bedroom Set ----······--··--·--··$210 ·i Equal opportunity employer (714 ) ~-· No Charge 100-/. Frff Contact Pel'90Mel: 5'10-40:!> change fo1· lite hOU!ekeep1ng neat appearing man. Top COSMEtrcs' 'o ,. ~ GENIAL.. ACJ'JVE. OUT· PART Tl?i-IE duti~ in lovely N.B. home. "'ages, bonus plan Ir profit ', 1185 Horbo< Blvd., at.19th St., Costa Maia e 541-9457 . • . • .. abilities anlfmite() agency r~ 'I TRISH HOPKINS • ~ '8fl E. '17¢:,;Sllite 224 c.~t. ' 642-1470 ACCOUNTANT/BKPR : A small friendly mfgr. (20 etnp.) selling nation1vide nttds man to handle jnls, Jdgrs. sllnts & pa,yablu:.· :;.i;,...7101 ask for Jack Crout ,• .. ' .. Ancient Mariner -NEEDS - •DAY• DISHWASHER APPLY IN PERSON 2007 \V. COAST HWY. NE\VPORT BEACH: e ASSEMBLERS e Exp'd. in soldering & com- ponent a11sembly hclplul. VALOR. ELECTRONICS 3100 Pullman St ., C.r.f. 5'1J.9'l61 How M:uch?'$hare1irii'e. How DOOR T¥PE, i;eml-reti ,· Pie~ call for appt. lNTERVlEWJNG 2 school age children. Box sharing . Undtr reoonstrue- much? S5 to i ? hrl)!. How? rparrie<I 1'teo\tple. Live ~ SUpcrior Ageocy 642-7141 Pleasant, part time work, ?l!Ia.3. Dally Pilot lion. WJJI re-open May 8th. Call now 893--ri8Cii7-1112. ~ trailtr 1on 160 wooded, 11$1~bot. Costa M.ea no seUirig. No experience Sales Write or call Ray Carey. Open: Weekdays 9·5:30, Saturdays 9.5 1 Closed Sundays Luzier,Acoot 'Brisfol-M~ @de,velo~udedac~ necessary. Choose own BEAUT¥ CARE, INC. 4~7. 604 S. Coast I-IV?" • * COSMETIC~·t;'twsales &tMl~+:of~f:;,:"luor,, llm. sioo1 ..... ~ tbo .. ~;w. :r~~=!na a~ EX'cltinc opportunities await Laguna Beach, Calif. 1 '!!~![111!~~!!!!!~~~~!1!1!!!! Experience ·dnfy , dr; ~ uri:::_. ·~ .... all women who wish to SERVICE Station An~ .1085 & EMPLOYMENT · * 536.3lB'> *' ;duli.1 fo~!)naq.., ?j ear Needed at once. Exp'd. $100. th Ir 1 Y•Ye.ar.(lld .cu~ J>lrticfpate ln a new concept Full timP, over 25. MUAt Furniturt IOOO -=-=======-=-1 ~. ~!lnife. T\\'O 6 AM-aPM, Sun ~ Pltuc researeb COnlP4111. S2.00 per or total body cleanltneas haw exp. In mech. won· Jobe Mtn, Worn. 7100 .,.-------e COST ACCOUNTANT e OWDtrsoccupythelrtrallers appty ·LONE RANGER hour, plu1 u:peft9e1 .• Equal blendtd with luxurious~ hr plus ettmm. 17 PC. KING SII& Standard COlils and Inventory Q,CCUiona.lb'd Letters only RE ST AURA NT. 1150 opportunity employer. Write beauty aides for both YoWli Blackwell '• Richfield, 744 WIGS BEDROOM · ooiatfcl. Knoilleli!fge of EDP. til~ase. Glv'e age, health, ~ch .Blvd., Huntington Box M-596 Dally Pilot. &: old. W. l9th. CM l\tanufacturing indus...., .. v. ~-9f'i k h' 1 •-a~ Sa'-s & Stylln9 Larae 9 dra\rer .i-~·Ar, mJr. ~J ""'"' _,., ,..., yr. wor 15 ory, """'"· "" PR.'{ OPERATOR. Answer-Full or part lime. We Lrain . ,. ... ..._ perit nce deslflble~ Degrtt references. phone No. 'We MAN lo assist l.Jf'I' .• local ing service exper. P"'f'd. you in exclusivP, scientific SERVI<?£ Stat1<>n Attendant. Exctttnc beauty center tn ror, 2 bedskle al.ands, Kln1 MCeS&aJ'1. Staple, non. ~call )'O'l.for interview. apPlianct store. 1.1ust be Pt time &. n time. afternoon beauty lleC«LI. Hiah Pat~ Full t1mt, eve •hift. Over Fubion. Island onus an op.. size headboard, lr'arae, quiIL defense, Orange Co u n t Y Orange County J\fanagement' neat appearing. Ca11 9 AM & eve hn 536-888! lngs 2 yn exper. Over 25, neat portunlt)rl for ·• wtg' expert ed mattress, sheell bfank. divbion of NYS listed firm. Corp., 153 No. Coul f-!'''Y·· to IO AM only: 496-2383 •••. PIE MAKER Call . l.tr. Stoll. BEAllrY in appearance. Apply 2590 lo itylf!, sell and dPmon-ets, etc. ' Send · resume' \\'ith salary Laguna Beach, Ca. 926;;1 . 1. CARE, INC. 956-0!8), 1424 Newport Blvd. C.1.1. _ _ strafe a complete selection Choice of Spanish requirements and history to i -~~~~~==-. MAN ice~ C-27. Pereen-Responsible, young man to SF.RVICE · _.. •· or Modem Style BOX M-594 The Daily Pilol * GENERAL OFFICE, typ. tage growmg bu s I ne s '· learn pie-~ bWJlness, S. Allee St., Anaheim , stal1on alleuuan..,. ol quallry hair pieces, ALL FOR ~49 ing is requlred. Experienced Interesting opty. 6#-4860 6 .1 .. u 1 • 48 hr wk, worlc lnto SALESMAN pa.rt li me, n I I e s &: Excellent salary structure. .,,. D>•lodlan OCEAN ii1EW SCHOOL DISTRICT CUSTODIANS s.1,ry uu.-$611. Minimum Quiillfleations: U.S. cltlu hip, '8th gra~ edu· cat! .1 &: 1 year exp, prefer. at janitorial. Apply Per- nnel Commialion OU!ce, 9 AM41PM,' '1972 Vi.arnei Ave., Huntington Beach, Calif., be· fore 4 p.m., May 20th . * COOK • Nights. Apply I G u N ~ "''eekends. good wage + UnlimJted lnccnti~ pro-No down pmts. only $9 mo. ony. Apply: LA ~ MANAGEMENT OPPOR. go future with gro•ving co. Imported car dt!alershlp. comm. Laa:una Beach gram and a fucinating fu-WELK'S WAREHOUSE BEACH NURSING HOME. Full or pt. time. Car nee, 20 • 9 • ALSO NEED Foreign car expf!rlf!nce pre-4!»-8430 ture Jn this fun environment 000 W. 4Ut St., Sanlf, Ana 7t4: 494-8075 hr wk. S36-4302 All-around girl. Apply in per-ferable. Excellent opportun-SERVICE atatlon attendant. if )OU can mett tbl ..X..cting Daily :9-9 Sat 9-6 Sun ll-ti GENERAL MAlNTENAljCE MAID, part time. Call in ton, vf·, Pie& (l to 6 pm) ttles. Call 11ale1 mar. for ai> Exp'd, tull Ume. Apply tn requll'!'mertll•ol our Young, QUEEN...sz mattress, box man for private school. person, Hunlingtori. Shores l!ll E. 16th St., C.M.__ . polntment 540-3100. person, 2096 Harbor Blvd., dyna1n1c and rapidly grow. springs k frame--extra firm Cleaning&: yard work. 16835 Motel. 21002 Ocean ll.B. POWER Sewing Machine SALESMEN : Call 548-0»5 II C.M. ~5568 big organization. $50, 3 tw in mattre111 box Brookhurst St.. Fowitaln MAIDS, Mature, 25 or over. Opr, exper. Cushion 6' upho.t you have the market for SITI'ER ... 8 yr old ~. Interview with Dlalt, ts Fash-springs & frames $10 ea, Valley 962-33U • GoOd saliry for dependable exper pref. Baxter ii: a profitable product. We waJ.kg dlst. Marlnen Sehl Jon Iatand, Mif 16th A May 9' modern &0fa-xlnt for' GENERAL office work, part-woman. Apply 3151 Harbor Cicero, Inc .. &IZ-7238 wUI design & produce ii NB. ~1 u&t be flex . as 1~ 18th, 10 am to 6 pm. reupholstery $35, 2 drellltr time, shorthand It typ.ing Blvd, C.M. PRES.5 OPERATORS on joint venture. hrs & dy&. Pref w/ trans. THE w/mlrror $Ci ea. Maple req'd, 24 hn per wftk. MAIDS _ Ex"'"enctd for Women wctrk for plutle1 e SALESMAN' • liU-1807 DEMONSTRAJION double dresser w/mlrrot PEID.f, 25-35 yrs. 675-5333 housecle8.ninr. Afust provide mold fng plant. Eve shltt. Exper business madtlnes mJOENTS! 11 Y-. • Up Mt.2682 $25, Very old sleamer trunk. -s.t&-3310 • • 6 wrought Iron dining rm GIRL. Attractive, over 2L own lransp. $2 hr. 642-586-1 * 5484533 * To Sell Candy. M•k• ,_.....,, 'V0:'\1EN, 18 and over. Part ·, ~ 5""" chain $5, 1 teak 11q. coffee Work in lounge at Lat:una MALE-Full time y.·eekend!i, Printed Circuit SALESWOl\tAN lull time 25 money in spare time I: help time. Good workln&: cond'&. table $5, Over&ttiffed chair BABYSl'ITER 11(1:eded for 2 ·Mesa Lanes, l~ Superior, :; children, 6 days wlt. Call 1 =Cos='-•='='' .... _·~-~-~ ". after 3 pm, 642-9163 COUNTER lady for dry • Hill.a Gun Club. Apply in hourly ral'e, over 21. Call Driller years or over. Gily Bil dress needy 5chool . No cv;h re-Apply 325 N. Broadway, $10, Unique footstool, !X5 person, 9601 Valencia, Lag. 968-8195 alt 7 pm. Experienced. Immediate shop. 17908'.~ Ma g110 11 a quired. &14-2159 6-9 PM It Rm. 410, S.A. ll'tlm 4-6 P~t 51!ding glass window, Laria Hb. MALLIE'S 0--•-g on swin.,. ihllt. Fountain Valley, Call for wknds. Sc --~---~-desk $10, Rare bric-brae. · ~ .-....• -· in-1 ·~• ...,., -nools.-lnstructlon 7600 GIRLS ,· Buuty &:WJg Salon huopen. 3767 8irch SI., N.8. appo u.utn ..... y.;,yo-~ -TELLERS-1_67_3-448 __ , _____ _ ; BABYSI'ITER for leacher, deaning plant, exp'd prel. -: my home, off Vicloria near Some hand in machine sew· ;~ Brookhurst. 646-6106 ing. Apply in pel"90n. Five Points Cleanen.. 18641 Main :: BABYSIT my home 6 am-2 SL Huntg Bch. ~ pm 5 das/wk, mature. -""',,-==-===-oc--C!u'islian Scientist. ·19-t-3416 $120, DELTVERY. P e rm. • .. .. .. . .. *BAR BOY* EXPERIENCED • APPLY * Reuben E. Lee 151 E. COAST 11\VY, NEWPORT BEACli ': BEAUTICIAN. I u 11 or p/tlme Guaranteed 60%, paid vacation. J\fanicurist : needed. Apply in person : International Beauty Salon, 1 169J Irvine Ave .. C.l\1. ·BEAUTY Operator, booth space for rent Cd fif . Reasonable. 673-1646, eve 542-4185 BUFFUM'S NEWPORT Now Interviewing applicants for , * LADIES SHOE SALES* APPLY IN PERSON 2104.P~t • NO. 1 FASHION ISLAND NE\.\'PORT BEACH * BUSBOYS * COOK * * \VAITRESSES * 64>-0098 BOYS 10 • 14 Carrier Routes Open •' . "" Laiuna Beach. So. l...a.(tum DAILY PILOT your o •n area 644-2159, 6-9 ~1 & wknds CAR WAS HELP Pern1. Po1:1ition. ings. 3 Locdtfon.~ 2950 Harbor Blvd. CASHIER • Female Shoe Store San mente, 114 S. El Camino Real ARROWHEAD ENGINEERING CORP. !i)S Nartb >". StNel San lkrn3rdlno, Calif. (114) Jl89.J611 Heavy y.•ork. Training starts ;2.~.,hr. fP.r 2 w k s. SERVlSOFT, ""tios 31st St. N.B. DENTAL Assistant • Exp'd preferred, progressive of· nee, good hours. salary open. Fringe b e nefit s . &12-1050 Dept, Slore J. W. Robinson llAS l!\f.1.fEDIATE OPENING FOR A *SALESMAN* Men's Clothin9. Xlnt. Company Benefits APPLY JN PERSON Fashion Island, N.B. Equal opportunily employer Dishwashers *** EXPERIENCED No Phone Calls Apply In PeJ!son 1 · SURr & SIRLOIN 5930 Pacific Coast Hwy. N<!WpOrl Beach Draftsman l\linlmum 2 years experi- ence in Ia.your &. taping" o! art work for printed circuit boards, Call Personnel D•pl. (714) 494-940 I for appointme~t '\'c ~a young attra~ve 1ng lor Hair-stylist with Equal opportunity employer SALES • Service Eltab Altractlveopeningsareavall. IT'S YOUR MOYE 20 PC. ''MADRID'' Girl Friday ,v/a good book som& fotlo\ving. Salary plua e e PRODUCE MAN Fuller Brush route, $125 wk able for eJlperienced teller& 3 ROOM GROUP head, typing hand, &: phone comm & paid vacation, want~ by l'!'lattvely &mall guarantee to start. 546-5745 in our new Jluntington FROM MODEL HOMES voice, grow w/a desi,n stu: c.an 5'8-3446 food store -not a 1upermar. START IM1.lEDIATELY Beach and C.oltll. l.fcsa olf. AIRLINE & TRAVEL lnclUdet: Quilted aota .tr dlo. 54()..5990 CIJJ for appt. MARINE Mechanic: First kit A ooe-ni.an job, '° ex. lees of Downey Savings & chair, 2 end tables &: coffee GIRL FRIDAY. Good ~ clap. marine pa engine perle.nce is neeessary, No SALESMAN WANTED Loan Auoc. For full partlc. INDUSTRY CARE£. RS table. 2 lamps, dttuer, mlr- mechanlc with all • around ob'-tion to older man If Own your own busine.n, $250 ulars, call Personnel (2l3l ror, headboard, quiltecl box figures. Apply 9 W 12 noon. .-~ 869-0512 J\lacGregor Yacht C.Orp. boat exp@r. MURI have know. can handle the "'Ork No to get start~. 5 figure in-l;;c;,-;=.-· =,,,.._,,,..,.--,..., sprtngs & mattress, 5 pc 1631 Placentia, C.M. 1 ledre of eleclrlclty and the night or Sunday 1¥0rk. Moo. come posalble with. these TELEPHONE GlrJ,,..."'·ork • OPERATIONS AGENT dining room; table & -4 hl· :ability to install gear com-ical & HO!lpitaJ benefits. AP-product•. Diftct sales le set from your home. Ca I J back chain. GIRL F.Md&,y, Single. Ptrm. mon to yachts in a profes-ply al LlNOBERG NlITRI· up dealers. Training pro-Mr, Kay, Cl13l 334-6241. e TICKET SALES COMPARE AT $149,95 Position. Growing Co. s&n lliorial manner. Permanent TION, located In back ol vlded. Write B. W · B . TYPIST, Doctor'.s off. N.B. •RESERVATIONS $399 Clemente on heh. 492.-?0f It qualified. Good· pay, good thr Toy World Slbre in the Interprlse11, 1853 Port Mar. Approx 25-30 hrs per wk • AJR FREIGHT-CARGO No down Pmt.,_ Only $16 mo 1-IAfRDRESSER Wanted benefit&, load worldng con. South C.oa1t Pla1.a Shopping aateo, N.B. now, probably full time e COMMUNICATIONS WELK'S WAREHOUSE Newport following. Unusual dltions & paid vacation. See Center, 3333 . Bri.,lol St., Savings &: Loan later. 90 WPM, 181\I exec •TRAVEL AGENT 600 W. 4th SI., santa Ana opportuni.ty. '1a-.ll30 Jrfr, Service Manager Co&l.ft Mesa. MANAGEMENT exper, Pennanent. S4 per . Adams P1clflc M•rlne1 Y•chts PROOF MACHINE TRAINEE hr start. Box r-.136.1, Da.Uy Alrllnt Schools Pacific HOSPITALITY HO STE SS 2751 W. Coast Hwy, COMPUTE;R CLERK Dynamic Savinga and Loan Pilot 610 E. 17th, Senta Ana SERVICE: bas oi>eninp .for N~wport Beach Pos1tion av1llable i.t Auoclatlon is lf!'f!kina: ~I· .-.,-w=•=ITR=ESS=~l-A7M~.,..-lo 54U596 malun! "''omen looking for J\fATURE WOMAN for li1e Security Pacific Nat'!_ Bank, lege graduates for their 3:30 PM. APPLY: 10 Alli •-;;-~;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;-i;;;;;..,;;-;;;;;;;-;;;;;;I iotere&li~. part time work. cleanup, .come oUice work So. Laguna branch. Apply n1anagement tralnlnr P~ lo ll AM, Jamaica Inn • Th9Nl"Wport 9 LEAVING state In one week, must gel! houseful of furniture It misc. 2 twin beds $25 ea. dinette tbl Ir 4 chn $25, refri&'. sm. couch Ir. chr aet $15, over&tuffed chr S5. Westlnghse com· mercial washer. Many more Items. 934 Congress, CM. 8'&8126. welco ming oeweomer& 10 plclrup & delivery. Local at 30812 S. Coast Hwy., South aram. , Molor Hotel, 2101 E. Coa&I e School of Busln•ss e )OUr area .. ,~~& exp .. Medical ·Lab. 494-0701 Laguna, 499-2224 This potlt1on offers ~hal· Hwy, CdM. -desirable. ~fust have car. * MECHANIC-CLASS "A" Equal op ply, employer J\l/F len&"inr and rewarding ca· •""°'w'°Al=TR=ESS=-.-c=0<~klal...,,I"""& CALL;. 547•3095 license. own tools. PmT1. PROOF' MiCtllne Operator, ~~ to the right person. CoUtt Shop. Apply In Feature• weekly refnttber courses In the skills yoo need to get the job you want. • * * HOSTESS . 18 YEARS OR OLDER APPLY IN PERSON * )MMEDIATf?LY * REUBEN E. LEE i51 t. COAST fl\VY. NE\VPORT BEACJi position for rcsponsiblP man. & teller p/lime. ?i-tondasy J\lr H -1 (2'13) 86l-571.3 pel"90~, Meaa Lanes, 1703 Top wa&es, bonus plait It fr ·Fridays. Exper-pref, but • ens ey · Superior. C.M. profit &haring. Under not neccu. Apply Bank of SECRETARY, part tiine. WAITRESSES, exp'd. Apply, ~l\Jlruction. Will re~pen America 18691 Main St, H.B. penn. Approx 10 hrs wk. 1262 Pal Isa.deg Rd., S.A. May 8th. ~rl_te or call Ray R•ctpt/Secy to $500 Mal' work bet sch; hrs, 2 * THE DERBY * Carey. 494-5851. 604 S. Coast F Re' bursed days Inc. Fri. Reply PO Box ~=""°'==~=~~ Hwy , Lag•na S.aoh. Calli. Lll !du." y •m •-· 1555 C.M. WE NEED YOU I! II , OUfll' pow ... '6 00, *Mo<llcol l'ns. Clerk* Xlnt bo"I•. Olhor fee & ""' CALIF. CASTING CO. Accuracy desired more than jobs 11vail. TIME FOR Lookina for every day people •ll'«I. Work by .hr. or on JASON BEST "'UICK CASH like yoo! For T.V. Commor. comm, $125 per fonn, Call Eniployment Agency ,.. clals & film work, Receive Gloria Kay, 540-6055 2201 So. Main, Sanla Ana THROUGH A free screen teat, no exp nee. · COASTAL AGENCY 92&1 W. Kalolla, A"ohd m DAILY PILPT Nol• ""hool, no"'· 7190 Harbor-Blvd, c.~1. 546-MlO or 821-1220 $50 to $115 PER DAY od St WANT ADS ft =plod. Foe •ppl pbono • 833 Dover Dr., N.B. • • 642-3870 e Cottage Art Shoppt Art lessoru, land & seaseap. es, signs le: truck lettering. Emma Blanldruihip &: Joyce Sisler, 690 W. 19th (At Po- mona) 642-1689 or 836-6455. MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRADE ---· -Furniture 8000 aiAtI.~~ING ~~R for OiARGE tr: (U4l ~ HOUSEKEEPER/ Babysit· Attrtctive young woman in WOMAN for cooking I Ute PEDESTAL pine table w/ tea· for 4 schl age chldren; N.B. otfict>, w/medical 1~ Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100Joba Men, Wom. 1100 housekeeping, weekends a! 4 chain, pecan finish, wood ------- ages >12. Begin June 1. ·surai:ice, book)leeping; IYJI-beach, Jive ln Fri to ?i-1on. It wrought Iron hue, $250. J\lust have own tral\l l ref.I. Jna. (No agencfell 543-3142 Write Daily Pilot Box M-30, * 644-21'1S 546-4592 aft 4 pm. TELEPHONE I ;:=-,;,='"°==-=c-MEDICAL 0 ff I ce rece~ Is Your 4d tn ou r DIAL direct MJ..5678. Olar&f! ~:~n:nrn~~:.;er: =-~1~·su:a~~= The Smile in Your Voice =~t1t~ne= ~n&d~ tho: ~=ck~ 106-8 B. 16th, S.A. 541-0393 lli~m Daily Pilot Now! Hoo"'k'"'' ptum •. ls .,.L;;;;;.,~CAL;;:~.;.illlng~"'-1n=.= ....... =" Could· Be Wo'rlh Sch-'>·1-uctloo 7'4>0School•-1-.11-r-uctton--1-6DO-P" wk, 11.lO hr. Vk. B--,cltrlL Ex"'llenl ,..;tion. ~ """ ~r.::: Adams. H• 963ru9 ~1:~~":;.:x 5"· A Starting Salary of ijOUSEWIVES Earn Mo"''' . MF.N·s Ha1n1y11., /or $4lS A Month ltav, Fun .w/Trl-Chem LI·. Ken Allan In CdM quid Ehi~dcry. 841-6743 * tor appt. 675-1470 * HOTEL CASHrER, male. Eit:p'd NCR--4200 n e c ., NEWPOf\TER INN (7UJ 644-1100 ' See Betty Bni~ al mi,u"· Gxec Agency for Career Girls 410 W. Cout Hwy., N.8. By •ppol~. . '641-3939 * MOl'EL ·MAID • Full time. Apply 2376 Newport Blvd. C.M. 54S-9155 We n•ed people with 1milin9 voices, who are 1bl•.to w9r~ eny shift, to do som• of our most important 'Public Relation& work -•• T 11•· phone Operators. And we'll pay $415 • month right from the stert. .Here's what 'tile you can count en: e btra pay 11 yeo -" s....Hys .. Hotwoys • Reg•'"' .. 1 .............. ,.. pr-tlatl e P.W TCKtltlOM • ••I. IJI • C..pri• ••• ,. MHftt ... ,, .... ,.. sKWlly ........ ... e All4 tot. .I •ew f!i .... Yft'TI "'"' -al worii o"4 lo .!tor.._ «tt.111.._ T•lk to us 1oon end find out mor• tbout b•- ing a Pacific Telephone Operator. We're hir· ing nttw batween 8:30 A.M. tnd 4:]0 P.M., Mondey 'thru Fridey •t No. 2 City 81...-d. East, Su it• 240, Oran91, Calif. !So. of Ch•pman. west of Ortn9e Co11nt7 Ho1pit1IJ 639-3260. I If toll ct ll, c•ll collect. Pacifi~ Telephone An 'Equel Opportun'ny EmPloyer CAN YOU llCOMI A NOFDllONAL IN COMPUTtl ICllNCD end benefit from the added preftl'e of iden .. tilyin9 with the orlgi,.,J Ac•demy of Com· put er T 1ch11ology 1 NatloneNy recop(JU. Thoutaf'td• of po•+· hl9h-1chool• men •nd women have. Their future_ ha1 b~•n 11tt1/ed by invtsting fu1t I little more to become 1n Aiademy 9r1d11ate. A priv1t. 1ducat)o!J9I in. liilvllo;. Corrlcole •ppl!IOblo lo tl!f litMd- esl !••of. •f.t'1Pvl l11t •J!lo!(I•· · ~ lntlftitirig, :lVC:rati\ie P,otltfo.n• in c:oritpuiar protr1min9, and keypurichln9 eveileble evary .. where. For more inforfftation just phone or meil the coupon. • •., eq1i1i••l•n+ I •• ....... llr-~ (OJAJtOf) o o.,c-..a--.a...o ..... ~ . ' ~·------~~~--- ··-~~~~--" ..... ~-" .. (714) 547.9471 S.-Towor. Suite· 40, 500· So. Main Union lank• Squ1N, Or•"f'I, C1llf, 962tl • BEAUT. solid maple hutch or breakfront, like brand new, cost $1000, now $300, Ai.co solkl maple coffee table, unique clover-leaf design, glass top $40, must see to apprec. Picnic table It benches pi, Sola bed '30. 642--0065 or 6(2...0045 XLN'T Fut n l tu r c. Reas. Custom ~ch, coffee tbl, din. set, &!rm se:ta:. No brte- a-brac or antlq's. Momlng 'HI 11. Eves from · ~. 548-0362 DOUBLE Bed~cellent cond.; walnut llnlah; box 1pri11g11, mattreu, tr.me, he.adboard, 2 nltht stands. $50, 551-9796 After 6 PM SPANISH Liv, Rm. Furn. Sofa, IOVf:seat. c r us he d velvet chr, colfee !bl, 2 end tbl'.c, dark oak. Ex. cond. $583 CUh. Call 91)2...4988 eves. 8' SOFA l'ln'er ultl!d, quilted fioral, 1eotchguarded $m. Match. l oveseat $75. 71~. HOUSEFUL Of new model home furniture, Reg. $683. now $197. 894-4417 or 63T~ Offlc• Furnltur• UlD USED steel desks $39.~ • Posture chalis $12.:50 I-up • Used 2 " 4 lire.Mr nunc cabineta e UIC!d ~-ood dPW Md>fahan Btol Desk 1Dc. 1800 Ne.wport Blvd Colla M'esa * ~ EXEC. desk, new, Millcrah w/ walnut fin. 66", 1lde return O", new uee. chr, naua:h. groaspoJnt fabric. m-4!15 Ou•go S•l• GARAGE Sole: Crpl, drpo, patio cl'lr&. blby tqlllp, c1"ib. balblnette, m.lllc. 1415 Seacrest. CdM. &f4...U29. G!l.l'l\P Sale All Wee• 316 Cedar, Npt Shortt, NB. Furn., lamps, o(c:. equip. • • GAR.ACE SALE * * Will Po> Dr, ij.11, • after .f p.m. I I ' I I r I l . . ------------------------·--~-------~-------~------·· --- . ., Looking For Someone . To Take An . Order?.· We're Good At It • We'll even pay the postage to get you to give us an order. Get ' ready for some quick profits by mailing in your order today. Put a hard-working DAILY PILOT. classified want ad to work for you. USE THIS ORDER FORM 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD WS THAN 3 LINES J 4 1 12 TIMU TIMU TIMIS TIMU $4.50 $6.IG $I 0.65 $15. 90 $5.10 $1.21 $13.10 $20.10 1 ~--1-----crl---1---1--~1--1--~1--1-- $6.00 $9.76 $15.55 $2~.30 PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 ro flGUH con Publi1h for •• ,,,,,,, ·'•y1, i,.9innin9 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Cl1uilic1tion • , ••• , •• , ••• , •• , • , , , , , , , , , , , , • , , , , • , • , • , • , , , , •• ••••• N1m1 •• , •••• , •• , , , , • , , • , , •• , , ••• , • ,, , , •••• , •• , , •• , • , , • ,, • , , • , • • Addr1u. , •• , , , , , , • , , , , , , , • , •• • •. • •• •, •. • •., •• ••,,. • • • •• • • •• • • • • • C ity , •• ,, •••• ,, •••• , •••••••• , •• , Ph1n1 ••• , ••••• ,. ,, ••••••••••• Put only 1ne word in 11ch 1ptc• abova, lnclu'• your tddr•u or phone number. Thi c111t of yo1,1r .cl h 1t the 111d of th1 fin• Oft which th1 l1 1t w1rd of your ad i1 writ. t111. Add $2.00 1rlra If you '•1ir1 ''' of DAILY PILOT l o• 11,.,ic1 with m1il1d , .. pli•lo ______ cut HERi-PASTE ON YOU. INYILOPI -------·--·-- BUSINESS REPLY MAIL flnl Cl~u P•ronit Ne ll, Colla M1M, C.111.,nle Orange Coast DAILY PILOT p. o. ·'"" 1560 Costa M11a, Calif, 92626 Cl111ifi9d Dept. Or Give Us an Order by Phone At 642-5678, The Direct Line to • • Classified Want Ad • RESULTS . - -~ ' ' ' • • . .... -------·---·-------------·--------------~------------- MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE F OR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR DAil Y PILOT 3$ T RANSPORTATION DAILY PILOT SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRAD E FREE TO YOU FREE TO YOU --. ------w-----~---·---,......, crut..,.. _.,.. CLASSIFIED INDEX ,G;.;•:.:•:;;•,_9•::...:S:.:•;;;l•:....,_...:.:•::::12:J;;Appi;i;l;;;i•:.:nc:::•:.• ___ l:,1:.:00:, Tele'i'ision nos Mlsc1ll•neout .... THREE darlln& kittt:nt1 need Ct Cyptt11 tr'ff, 1 Oll&nder , --lovinc home. Cray Wra buah. c.alla llliti. • .you 28 ~s Crl.ft, '63. twtn Vllrl'U'E BR.OS. DINETTE SO. COAST KIRBY WON new Zl" Ma.in&VM col-* AUCTION T ha~ Calico A 1triped. di& up) can. lillc1 IM t . Encl. htad,, auto plJot, DIAL DIRECT N%-5871 SET, hutch. 4 chrt A thl. bM c:ndlt TD'1 A dtmo or TV at Rine, can't u&e. Frldey 7:)0 P .M. Calico mother alto avail. MU223, befott t P.m: tltt w1neh.. hdlo. b&it tank. white w/JOld bn.a. Nlldc modtla ct oew '70 Kirby Will aeU or trade + c::uh Mey ISth Call evt:I. 838-'7G50 5/lt Pl.EASE. No calla t&Jc:tn bow rails, swtm ttep. f\al1 ,.,. PMt ~kal atMI D:pwt ~--plctuN on w!vet MldS", 01•'<». 25% oft Fact tor a;ml CM&tboard boat. RePoSHaaed I Bank r u PI ONE, i,,, .... 1~ 7 wk. old kllten. alt 4 p.m. Plt&K brinl" your coven. Comp.I. nifin. ST,900 • ......_ 2 bar ·•-1• ..... t... llltUte. Warm't. Pll: 536-7521/m n -... ,·1, •~. "" "~. -~ -•· l tal 5114 673-7'60 lJtOU~U l"VK :5ALI: ~~iLi. "'WiLlia C:ou1tn ··;;; Dtik '"""';b;: .,;;;;;~ Ootbel 5tb St/ HA 6'3-2C81 """ _,., Furniture. Bookcast with Fem.I.le. Blaek 1,1 Slt.mtM. 0""'1 ......... con Ml'I. -~~---~-~-••N•UL .................... !• OUEIT MOME$ ... ltaded , .... doon, Spaniih 11.e-broken. Lovt1 •mall BEAUTtnJl., ht alt h.,' 23' BUtOl Craft tlahinr boet COSTA ~ .................. n• MliC. ••NTALI ..,. n w.wt)es. Marnavoz wu•·r • c1-1 • ~·--1V' bdrm ' -·1 .. 1r ~n ,•-, •• ~ •• L MAii ,... · ""' r ..... • t reo 1, """""-l, children. 644-1407 Can 1tt '-·····bro"·n " Slamne kl!· .. · ~ ""' w.l'l JUIA .............. 1NCOMI PllO,PTY .......... ,... 1beatu TV I: 11t•r•o, ........, 1 .--• H I ,.I & Ste 121D ·~ -n EvJ--·•· 112001 II MllA v110~-...1··-·······• •• u11 1vs11tE11 ,llOPEllTY u ·T~· n -co1.... • · r.. self, diva.DI, Occ. chn, anytime. 511~ t.el'll. 408 Huntinaton St, '"-· 0 er. COLL••• ,,... .............. n11 TllAILlR l"All«I ttel remote control, .nHq. white, llO "·· F~·-•-•'-· ..,,_._ .._._ _..... de•'· •1° ~ ... E W"··n A•·• ••Wl"O&t •t&ACll ............ 1. IUSlllUI lllllTAL .............. t • twaU, •-.;•WWV ..... .. ...... ~. u..,.tl, ........ ASSORTED kitter. incl. part 11.8. 536-3748 after 3. all c' ~M ·w. ~ • ..... • 11swPMT Wli.HTl .......... 111• 01"ir1c1 ... ,.TAL ......... t1>1 e c. etc. 4301 Patrice Rd, dryer, xlnt cond. $SO . SI'EREO con'iOle llil'.>x26". C&Jll&Jna cbrt, d l ri et t t 1, Slam•se. ~.~ • ._ hcilthy, d•u wktnd•. 5/16 · · t.ALSW. COVIi ............. tnl INOUITRIAL ,.ort•T'f' ...... N.B. $1&-4685 Ml-3115 or 546-&'72 AM/FM tuner & rl' c. I h ,_ .. £_ ·--.-• ......, .. "Y ,......,,,.,.==-7'=-;-,:--: ••W,.., 1M01.•I ........... me coM11111tc1&L .• ............... ampc, u .... ~. m ... .,.o. weaned £'. trained, 3 l:lEALTHY, IOOd-looklna: 25' Sportft1her ANGLER =~=h ·:::::::::::::::::::lGJ t:~•T•-~~-~~-~-~ .. ;;;:::::r.: ~~~ r:~ Sa!._~~ NEAR new Norge aut o ~=r, ~~4r1'11 In. Like new aide by aide refrlg. ~15 5116 ldttens. St!J..1678• Call att~r Cruzon bullt. Mint cond. 90v1a sHoan ............... 1121 IAHCNll ········-···-···-·"111 a.u.o& ""wvpt, •~ washer. Lute tub, ex-• • eratol'1, fftell!r'S, tlovt1, 4 Pm on4 Looded l 3 radkll + lnck11 ~sTcL•''" ................ '*" c111u1 •1ov1.s. ............. 1111 mutt be IOld thll week. cti.ltnt condiUon I so. -Y.'Mhen, (2) llx.15' 'NOOI Jn. DARLING home srown kit-• • hard to l't Ne...-allp, 11.ot: MIOHLAMOI ........ 1m •C1t1M 1 .................. a11 ~-1 .._ ""· A~• •"--• S rtlnt Good ••-t ·ur~ 2 ~ •~ .,. I ·~· u111v1•1rn PA•K ........... 1m u.1t• 1&.111to1• .............. aa -. • ""n ..... y, ........, .. ..,pm. 1146-5848 ' ~ • -dlan l'\IP, ofllce dcskl & em, u v• ,_. "",.,. e, PETS end LIVESTOCK $1250. 5.36-0206 aft 6 pm. 11tv1N• ...................... 1m •itSOIT PllOPlllT't ........ mt Coln ailver, hand painted , • h 1 blk " whlte. Elaine ~cic u.v .... ~·-·-·--········' ... 01t&N•• co. l"ROl"lllTY ..••. .,.-, China, &IUt, tum. 306 Hutt RCA Whi rl poo I port . 1956 % TON Dodge truck. c 111· 64&--8749 ~14 Cits ll20 l.UTSLUllP ................... :::: OUT 011 ITATI. l"JtOl'...t ............ Dr, CdM, ott ~--u-dllhwaahtt' wbt W/blue-Mil,)' be attn at 5&l w. SAVE SAVE MONEY! SpMCf-Slcl .... 9030 JIT"9 111ouNT&111 &01s••'"·-........ 11 .....-..~ -1 -•R oond Ste n J..o•·o!Newr .. ,_,, __ LOV e•ntlo small .. v11t• :ts•u.c. ............ 11u 1u1Dtv1110ti1 u.•o ., .......... 1 -11 5 ,..__ &ft)' to& A'""' $75 19th M MB--0 7 .. • .... ..-'"6 ·' • BLUEPOINT m'1e s1·---co1ottA D•L MAil ........... lue -•AL 1tTAT• 111t'htm .,.. ·-0 ~wn1 8"13-0092 ,. • · • • • Wi ndy's AUction S.rn Schnauzer mix, lem., beia:t klt~n ahots ACt"A .... ...,,... Jl.LIOA l"IMIMIULA ......... , •• '·'· IXCHAH•• ......... :::::.. ........._ • Fri COl\fPLETE SCUBA equi11-"-blk Lo·-· child-• ' • • papen •··-IAY • • • w .. t•o -••w•. · O'KE~ 21~1· ~ C ""' ' • ., '""' • •""' '··· 1·~ .. , 51•1314 .Av'1i"LAMb1".'.:·:;;::::.:-: .. ;;1,,. · · ............... FOR Salt: Porta.cribs, Wlltt £4ri • fattrrltt gu ment, U.S. Olvtn, new co~ "' 1 •'l:"'"wpor\, M 640-3686 Nffd5 gd, hrn, MS-08l3 WI-t .-.. ~ w u""'. ir" t.100 llL.I ... , ................. 1u1 BUSINESS i nd llkil. re-.. ·,, 1am.,, ba-ltovt, bu brollu and ~ven. d itlon. 497-1.521atter6 Behind Tony'1 Blda-. ~Jat'l I========== eAL&OA lll.AMD .............. tul F INANCIAL "'6 "T tftrltl bake $20 66-0940'1..:_:=::...c;~~~.:o.,.;...,.-6 ADORABLE box trained "'-• 1125 --NUHTUllGTON •UCH .. _ ... 1• fqU!p. springs• ma:t'a. ex-c r. · Scube Tenk J Ve lve CUSTOM CASTING healthy kittent need a new """"-''-·------"" Boat Malntin•nc• 90S1 11' CHRIS Craft Jnbrd. lmmac. In brand 11ew concL Call 673-3755 .... :~~"i?.N MAa90l.lll ..... ~= 1ua1H••• Ol"f'OllTUlllTIU...... t.niu slant brds, 80lu, USll> Appliarw:'et & TV's, $45. 548-4825 Your patterns or DU.111, eold LOVE 11 1u111ta11 WANT•O ............. all home. 646-MQ5 af ter * FOR SALE* ,oulfTAIN llALUY .......... 4t 11t1111TMl!MT ~-. ... ..a11 tbls, etc. St. Andrtw1 IUU'&ntttd. Dunlap's, orsUwr.Handcn.tttdjewel-3:30 5/14 e PUPPI.ES: Brindle ~at N AL •ucM ................. 1::: IN\llEn Ml!NT w.t.WT•D ...... .Wt Oiurch (Comer St. Andtt:ws 1815 Nt:WpOrt, C.?.l 5-18-7788 Ml1e•ll•-·· ... _ ""'in •tock or -n-'-to vn:nr WNSIT I I.I.CM ............... 1 MONIY TO LOAN ............. &DI ·----•1 .. _ ~¥-ADORABLE Kitt M-CI Danr. MI n ' ScimaUZtl'I, fr,lttOU •1tov1 .............. 1411 l"EllONU.L LOANS ............ ms Rd I: 15tb St.) BRONZE ptuJa:i retr,.. era ... order. Jt.,.elry tools, cast· e ~r SUky Terriers, Whlppou, &.ON• •UCM ........ -•••..•.. 1 .. JtlWELllY LOAHI ................. . T '""~VING ~ Eu-M ... , ,__ pll t -all &: white and blaek • white. t,.Al(IWOOD .................... 1Ut COLLATlllAL LOAMS ......... ms RUMM/.GE Sale: Multitude tor, almolt new. Sll5 ~ • .,. ·~r~· "" "'6 sup ts, cu S<uMIJ Labndon . .... ,... COUtn'Y ............. 1 ... lll!AL •STAT• LOA HI ............. of .......... -.. -· • MB-35'9. Sell Mercedes 280SL, f1(XXl, 1lzes &: kl.Mi, rough llontlJ All iveaned and potty-• MA'ruRE STOCK: St. fllT Oii COUNTY ............. Ull MOllTOAOft, T,_, °'991 ... ."41 -·1 •Tl"'" .. ..--un:t. lnfiatbl fubbt'J" boat for ftl •'--kbound Ja · trained. 536-8149 5115 DETAILING! Ow-Specl&lt1 Big or Small, We do thtm all! Boats! Yea! 893-Z561 ~1rlne E .. q.~u_l,_P· __ toU_.·1 OUTOfl'ITATI ............ -•. 1~ !M>N•Y WANTI O ............... Clothet. hou.&tbold etc. At - -r ill'C roe • pidary Berna.rd, \Velmarantr, ,,.., .. TOM ··· .................. 1611 ANNOUNCEMENTS Nen-J Shorea Oubhoule, Anll-1111 w~ttr skilng $650. Water toolt, 1uppllea .t machinery. KITrENS-1 Adorable pure Fem. Brindle Great O&M. NE\V Chcy&ler mP O/B ••STMINrTIR ············--~·''1' "'l""• k turn ..... t .. _. mot... ~ Tu Sa '' ' bl k • • MIDWAY CtTY ................. 1616 end NOTICES 511 C&naJ.. May 15th, 9AM ~ a. · .... ,.,,. • vl"'n H thru l M ca co, ac IJ'l.Y. Mutincrtat Kt>nnelt: 546-0989 motor. Coat $365. Stll tor .. NTA AMA .................... ua 5PM"-" ORIENTALRUG 69ChovyE·----·--.... SUndayl"' -·-~., ·"··oldhO"IObrokeo -or·.·~·-iA NTA AKA Mon. ............ 1ut irovNo ,,-,.. ..,..., ........... "" , •>M&J 16th. 9AM-3PM. _ • ""T" ... .., · .,.. UVllCU on, wJUI. • " • 4 ?.L\LE AKC G 'f.6¥" .,,....,....,""° OttJr,HOI ...................... 1W LOIT ' ....................... '411 0 12x23 Royal Kerman 675-4442 FIVE l\f CEl\fS & &K-OOSS. S/15 Sht htrd n.. i ermen -::-========c l nllTIN ........................ l+M t"llllOHALI .................... M VING : Sl'ars washer A 6.,...,... DROP I alt bl 2 I LAPIDARY SUPPLY P .ruppes, $50 ta, 1K11tTH TUS'flfll ............... lMJ •ttNOUHCEMINTI .............. 11 gas dryer ,10, slipper &: ·~ e a t , ca~1; BEAUTlflJL chocolate col-337 Maanolla Ave., C.M. Boot Slip Moorlnt 903' •NAHEIM ..................... 1uo 111tTH5 · .............. -...... '411 w;•• ~-. lampo, ~, .... VERY old ltaliatt marble top entry table: tablt lamps; Rear of Collei:e Center ored kitten, male, haU "~" -~o. 'IL\llllADO CANYON .,,,,,,,,14SJ PUHlllALI , .• , .. , .. ,, ........ lt -~ .. ~11:0 1..-u '" d b) d Sho · C •• ~~ BQ ~GUNA NILLI ................ 1111 l"AtD OBITUAllY .............. 4411 garden furn. mi1c. 521 buffet, 1arJe old desk. drapes; OU e sprea s; ppmg en....,r Sia.mew, half Persian. SILKY==~~T~~~---~A~K~ AT SLIP U.GU HA ••AcH .............. t?ts l'UNl!ltAL Olllll!CTOltl ....... '414 o-'!i-~ .. ,, N.B. ·~ ,792 picture tramtl: mink stole: 2750 Harlxlr mvd., 11-A 494-6661 5115 e,, ..,-rs, C. FOR RENT. LAGU NA HIOUl!iL ........ -.. tJl1 1'L0•15TI . · ........... .,'411 ~~a.."' ~ "'--Ch tk JJ MISSION Vl l"JO ............ 1711 CAllO OP" THANKS ............ '416 RuSl'lian l!nnine •tole, Aft ...... ta Me18. * 549-:1()39 a m p I ' 1ma • 67>0198 . SolN CLEMl!"NTli ....... 1no IN MEMOllAM .................. ,, Al.L DAY SATURD~Y Sewf Ml hi 1120 10 am 675-8773 720~ Mar. ?.11'.XED Up Slameat, Toua:hY males/ftm. Reas. Stud I ======-=:::::;;:;:;;:;::.J SAM JUAN ul'ISTllANO ou CIMITlilY LOTI ............. w11 g• Sofa, box gprp/ma.1tr, "I C '* "''erli;, CdM. ' .t: Pandy, 7 wk old kltte111, Avail. 648-7335 M b I H __ CAl"ISTll.t.tto •EACH 11• c,,•MM1",•,,•~ c,•,T,"',,, ......... '41t , kl ... •·-7 GER .. -, J male, 1 f e male. 0 I e om•• ., .. _ DANA f'OIMT 1740 _ ....... '411 l\"O~ ll II ' ~ts, llMI • SIN Au.to ilr·Z&J, 6 mot. BLOCK LONG RUMMAGE * POMER.ANlAN AKC reg, --· ~ ... --- OCEANSIO• ................... ,751 ~~·,,:-~ti:~'~~a"KS"'""""· .. ··= Seb'WUln Ex. erl11cycl!, :r.•"" old. No attadl needed lot •.. B'~ SALE. Sat. 10 494-53Sf 5115 Cream color, 10 w'--old. BAY HARBOR ~l~E~~~:: COUMTY"''"""""l: t.UCT10M1 ........ ::::::::::: .... tool'. &: miac 962-5252 ,--z .. .,.... butt!On h ole• o:: n.n.o;:., NEED -i, homn lot malt IUI Mouses TO •• M011E0·::::::1t1t t.VIATION llRVlCI .......... aw ' . ·-· • lo 2. Friesland Drive, 2 ... male Mobil• Home s.1 •• cottOOMllllUM ... . ........ 1tse f~AVEL ................... ..a 3 FAMILY Garage Salt. Frt. dH!gns ttc. GUU". S39 cash blla So. of Warner oU .t: fem. mix/breed pUps. 501261 ALL NEW ?O MODELS Ot11"Ll!1Cltiro1t u.L1 ........ 1ns All T1tAllll"01tTAT10N ............. & Sat. 506 Orchid Ave., 91' &mall paymentt. 52£.Qj16 New•·-•. Spo-~ by Cute l healthy. NOW ON DISPLAY ....... ltTMINTS ,Oil Soll.t .... 1 .. 1 AUTO TllAllll"OaTATION ..... ..., ........ • ...... ..-.. 548<0Jl3 5/l4 2 Adon.bit poodle mixed RENTALS LEO&L MOTtc:Es ............ CdM. 10AM-5PM. Good Lakeview P .F.G. · pups a wk be!n & WhJt 20' \Videt at low u $S995 Gl!llMAH a TUT01t11to ...... "" bargains! Mu1lcel BEAUT all ht. td t , , e, 12' Wldta to 34' wtdta: Houta Furnished SERVICE DIRECTORY Instr uments ll2.S CA.i.'1PER '64 Ford 6 Van, • ! t f ti ' ~w •PAY ca' 1 curly. Need eood homes, p k s Availabl Nflll!llAL •······ ........... ~ ACCOUHTI NO . ............ _..;.;;.:.:;.=c:.::.::::.;:__....::::.::1 s1and up txttmk>n, bit-Ins, gtt•SQ' on. back• tace. leactd yarda, 83S-0853 at paces e AEMTt.U TO IHAII ......... HOS ANIWIRIMO ll!ltVtCI ....... 'Ml 2 klltent • 1 bl.k., 1 tiger, 1425 Baker St., Costa Mea cosTA MUA .................. 11• ..,,,LI.I.NCI! "llEl"AlllS. ,.,,..,6111 YE WIIJ.. Sattllice Kay elec. $1200: Honda 50; Model's 89'2312 GERMAN Sbephttds, AKC, 1,'s hlockEutofHarborBlvd, :~~ e:~o'="~.::::::::::::·~~~ All"HALT, 011• ................. me SA pltar, cue • adj. strap. clothes tizelll ~10: Old craY 't" 53-0llIJ sn4 6 wb, Qua.ll!;y pup1 from c .. 1a Mo.. (714) ·-··10 .II' AUTO Ilil"AIRI ·········· .,,'5)1 1 ·-• ~-t~-I ~-bl k & ·'ii kit •~. ~ ('llLLEGI l"t.llK . ............. AUTO, S..t ••lh. T.,., lk. &WI NalUJ'al wood ftniab, tx. po s: ........ uul'Cr an "t""·· \...U J""' ac ..... e -- MIWPOllT ••.t.c:H ............ 11111 1A1Yt1TT1No . ............. cond $45 &e.0875 ~ BIG RUMMAGE SALE tens. B Wffkll old. Goin& * 962.-7362 * SPACES NEW•O•T HGTI, .............. nit •ot.T MAl,.TINt.llCIE ........ "'9 ~As H' ==-·-7=·-",:...:=---· I,~~~~-,----,-I h A I al ~-1 hi A ilabl In H -MEWf'OllTI HOllll .......... !!?! a1t1cic, MA:10H1t Y,.,c. ....... MM • OUT OF Businea •·•e•. GAS l'f'' .......... ator, work• r.ray 14th, 10 am-9 pm, M•v 0 1 e nm ~m:ltr 1 ~ DALMATIAN'AKC va e un &AYSHOltl!I ........................ IUSlfllEll Sll VICI S .... ~ ""5"' "Y ""ttk-nd ••0 •0 •! 5/17 ~ "· h ' r .... M ' -•-OOVllt SHOIES ............... rtu ........ Gultan ~1 ~ SJO Antiq·-clock 15th, 10 • St~-~ .. """ · .n<t"VO'I Pam-~ ~ .... by pr,·v. acac •........ tsat ""'° llEITCLIFF ' ............... m• ~.:~~~N·: ····· ............. ASJt • amps-, 8 <.-..Vll,I ona, ............ • .... • &mo;, pm, tu ...... :wi ~~ l;"\j parka UNIVEll llTY l"AllK ........... n~7 c MA .................. ws acens. up to 50% oU. work• good,$~. Wood room Presbyterian Church, oor. KITTENS, White, blk 1:-ownt'r. &U-1937. eatMOBl.LE HOMES lllVINE ........................ am c::~~EMTT•ll~~':.0 .::::::::::::::=l l ~ 646-.1843 preferably am's. divider $5, Dishes &: little ner 15th St, & St. Andrews white, red, beige&: tortolsr ..... Cl( ..... ~ ...................... w.,.•, CEMENT, Ct!Krn. ................ GUJTAR. ···-."""'.bot· ..... ls. clothes sz 3. 25c-$2, Rd N•wpl Bch &hell. Box tr~. Before P~T Collie/Pat\. Gtnnan America'• fint:1t. avallaYe ST ILv ......... .,....... CHILD CAllE L'-" "II ......, ,.~ '• · · ~ 7 -~ old. $10 Jn ·•·-~ 11 Torw 2l-M ' ........ & It 842-SUO ! PM call 839-U6T 5/16 "'""l''"'"" ,..,... every .._.it.,.,...,.. l'Ull". :~ii: T::~A~1t".'::.:-.:·:: .. rJ: ~0.:,,:,R~:,.~,.',,i:,La;:~"':··~~~:~;~:= --·---~~~~~s~, all LA~;~ e:~d diamond 12 ~E~d~~ 1~ i ;::_~ 2 MIN. Dachshunds (male ;~16: ~o 5 1'. J1C:.1~~b ~~· ~.o \IL •....................... .,,, ................ ··.,,_ -FENDER J--Bus, F--•-ct ring •· !I ct emerald -•Ar d•.amond, 2 .. , __ ~..., '-ftmalt) to one lovlnc ·· ..................... Dl!MOLJTIOH ws .,,__ ~ at """""'" .....,,........., "'" AKC, ICl:ive mile, 1 yr oldA Huntington Bei:.. ·, 536-6Sll v ISLANDS ................. u• 01tt.irT1Ho ssRVits ··· .. ·--···..v bottom ~o pendant & mort Box M-595 -~'• karat on each side. home · w/fenctd yard. No -9ALSOA 11u.tr1D ............ 2us ELli<:Ttt•CAL .......... ..,., ~big yd. $60 642-1276. CHILDREN tfUNT1NGToti1 tEACH ......... 2•oe ·· .................... 'can ~ •••• 16 Daily Pilot Brilliant cut Sacrifice! Rep-sma.11 chlldren. 494-8960 5/16 l'OUfllTAIN VALLIY .......... 24lt EOUll"ME HT lll NTALS ....... U ll V'M"<I" --"'--------Jy to Box p•~. ~,, .. Pllot. I ~ISKY box -•-~ kll· POOhoalDLE Pups • lrre1\st1ble_, 1961 24' Wld CIAL 11ACH ................. 1.so l'ENCINe ... ....................... GIBSON ~· 335 -. Fonder REFRIG .• plumbing_ fixturrs, ....,,, ...,....., ~ .. ~ ,.,...,_, • -'"' • ._ •·-•-··t -510 .,...,. .,..., .......,.o .. CARPET ltrt from ""--'J,' '"'DI· r11ltty bk &. white 511 ~o or•-.-.. ' ' LOHG •IACM ............... ISM 11,•,00,,•,•,, .. ,·,··,·,··,·,·,··.·;.:.;,:··-".·.·."" .. ,. c ,,,,.., -~ .... -.·er·-"""odd• • ~ 1 -t thy, Aprlcot. AKC $7a Owner Must StlJ By June 1 OllANOll COUN 1 • ............. FUltN ITUlll! lllS'l'OlllU ..,.,,....,....,er ~ rJ<>D;i ' .......,quu ......,,. .,.., ·411•• 2 B 0t Or 3 B 2 Ba u.MTA ANA .................. 1'1t a lll'"INISHIMO un Call 6-7 PM • end!!, All day Sat. 1TI W. contracts. $1.98, S2.88. shag Jong haittd, 1 gray strtped. I ===~~~...;.,~--r. n, r, 1111!.STMINITE• ....... ,_ .•.... till •••o••••O ··th St c M 13.99 -yd. Drake• c .... , ~,.., 5116 WIRE llalJ'td Doxie Pup"ies, Up to 10 Yr'1 Flnancin& MIOWAY CITY ................. 2•1• • ............ "' • · · .,.. "' SANTA AMA NSIGHTI ........ ,.,D :::~rN ... ; ~~:c~~CGES ......... Mil... BASS Amp 90 watts RMS.'• ·-M-M--'eam'--,-.. --.-... --~-.-.. -r 11206 Beach Blvd, H.B. SMALL Pt.nppiet ~ to ~ not regls. $10 ea. Call .. A.rit.S. 842-3939 9 am-7 pm COASTt.L ..................... TJM • ........... I 2-15" L&nslnc 81)kn. Xlnt I ' J"' ' ..... .......... 646-6425 tVCI or sun. Only. LACiUNA •l!ACM .............. nos ~~~H TMUM .................. u" cond. "._ 4M-5373 E·-. never uetd. Woman I W!laon 842-5ll4 homH. 300 Robinhood Lane. le' SPARTAN TraUer, 10x25 UGUHA HIOUEL ............ 17117 .............. ,.,.. -..... -Jf 1 b • ··-TRA c M uo m2 5116 mack Poodle Puppy new awning. $2300. Sl'I up >AH CLl!MINTli ............. 111, MIALTH CLu1s .............. int td 49>-0450 1 --·na Ni...~1 N Id 6 ft C b 7 "-'ffka old S30 in adult park. Rn1t $40. "'" JUAN CA,llTttANO ...... 2nJ HAULIH• ................. '"' Pi1no1 & Ort•nt 1130 . . '--6u '•"". onco cu . om pro-TWIN Kitten1, all baJck A * 64~ * ok 87 327 MISltof4 llllJO ........ -.... 2111 GUN SHOI" ................. ,n1 L 6 ... c u 1 at ._, never us-VEL Trailu. Retrig. . • ,,_......., CAl"llTllANO •llACH ,.,_ .... 2JM ~:~::~L.'"o"'~~gllAi'iNO '::::::: -·-NEWPORT Btach Tennis pane It. eltc $i:>. Mariner'• Duff)', % Pen lan. Call ~~::On. c,.1~P642-8923 W. D.lHA f'OINT ................ 21•• IHCOMI tu ,,.. Cl"b lamlly mom~-... Sl'xtanl ''T'"'""""a 636 M~2" 54• -· ~ • pm 5/16 For sale: 2 AKC Min. llVEllltD• COUNTY ........ nee ·· .......... -CONN & WURLITZER ...::.. Call <"' '°'' ~,·,·, 6 -·~ ~" ~· \It.CATION lllNTALS ......... I'll ::g:itito;---Jrllll. Etc. ........ 1151 --~ Bzoand new, ('(Imp. S225. 6 A.DOR. corly ball• or fl.Ir. Dox it'I, 6 wetka. Call 1UMME1t ••1t1TAU ......... m• 1Niuu.Titi1o .................... UN ORG NS pni. 548-9W7 962-9951 C:ONOOMIMIUM ................ ttM IHJUIUMCE .................. ,,,.. A A Blk & 'vhl. pupa. 6 w~. oul"L••n "u•M •....•.•••... tt1s 11tvE1T10At1N&;·~·::.:: a Cosco bar 11oots, $175. GENT'S diamond r i o i:, 836-4493 5/14 AFGHAN PUPS, AKC RENTALS JANITOlllAL .. .. ...... 67" w u· •·· -11 o ttnter stone 1 ca.ni.• en-12 "~ T•--.,. u•• Hout" Unfurnis hMI JEWILttY •t:PAIA, 1.1c. ........ Ezclusiv•li At es ng .. ..., l'Olllu:r • .. 1 FEMALE kitten, black & "-· ...... ~ LANDICA,11to ................ 6111 GOULD M SIC Simmons white hkle.e·bcd, circl~ by 9 flmA ller white. 6 wka, old. Frtt to BASSET PUPS .. MEIAL ................... >OOI '.OCltlMITH ................. mt 135 ~ -alt 5 diamonds, Sac. $1000 COSTA MlllA ................. 11• MAIO SE1tv1c1 .............. "" COMPANY · ~•.;wu pm. good home. ~:n69 :i/15 AKC, 3 Mo's. 544-3617 ,.Est. v11tDI ..•. _ .......... 211t MOlllHG a sTORAOI! ............. A Quellty HouM . MALTESE. l yr. old grey DACHSHUND Puppies, 6 LIDO Park; Furn. % Br, prlv. bch. Immtd. occup. Adults Only. $6800. Tenna. ()wn(or • Frt., Sat., Sun., 673-2242. REDUCED pri<:t! Vildnz Scandia, 20x60'. Ex. cond. :> Star Adult Pk. 548-1142 r.f!ESA Ol!L MA• .............. 2115 MASONll"f', ••1C1C ........... .... s ORIENTAL RUGS ,.,....,, - MEWl"OllT •1..1.cM ............ no1 l"AIHTIHO, 119111 , ............ 6151 w nc .. ..-.,...,58_ benh! 1 . C t Co cm. cat. ncsp, a II; w wks old. AKC rtg, after 6. N•Wl"OllT HOHTI ............. ttlt PATtOI . . . ............... "'II ' n }<·or TI1e Finest Jn u•...-..,.. p, .rvine oas u~ spay, 67~1988 5114 675-3594 COLLICil l"AIK ............ ·"" PAIMTIHG, , ................... 61SI ~With A ~ Y•ar ........ Vanous llZtl. Mutt sell FOR Sale -Family Mem-f ·-dul Ill Nl!Wl"OllT 11101tr 1 .......... '211 l"HOTOOllAl"HY .......... "11 "1.;~,. & •-USE C 1 E 11 t try Club. Can be plll'Chased OCEAN, Coif ooune in Adult ' t.\YSHOlll!I ................ :Im PLAITl!RINO, l"•kll. ._,, ..... a ....... '6 .X'.rvu:e FaciJ.. D arpel na-. xce en by 6% note, u qualified. TW0-6 week old IWfft black --Pk DB c 24x55' pool DOVE i 1Ho1t•1 ............... m r '"•'•"rM0•0••00•M••• ........ ·······...,'*" •i. Condition. Very cbtap. Call kl 1 h hi 1 Hor••• 1130 ,..'.-, ·bar. 1·,..~. ·~· "32l • WESTCLl l'I" ............. m• s Call 545-2337 10 a.m-5 pn1. tlt ns ... t w le tel. -----""~ ...... DI .........., UN llll llllTY l"AllK ........... '2:11 POOL SEllVICE ............ ,.,t21 536-4170 MB--0233 5/15 --l=:=========I' 1tv1 1t• ........................ ma l"OWEll IWEl!l"IMO ........... 6'11 GOULD MUSIC bl ......i base 21" Ad1nlral Color T.V, with HORSES bo1rdtd, box stalla. "'crc: •AY .................... "'' l"UMI" IEllVICI! ............... ,m 48" rnd oak ta e, .,..... new antenna and pictul'f! SET or stalionary tuba for & corrals, $40. w/feed. Call U.IT &LUI"!" .................. m2 llOOFIHG . .. . .. . ............ •tu COMPANY w/leavea $US. JO' rowboat II Tire 12'4 ll.1.010, •• ,.'"' Et~ ........... •tJt 204' N M I 533 tube. s:ni. ca1J 673-JJUI wuhroom. GE wuhen. 001 549-3591 lllVIHI TElllt.CI .... -...... J24S ltEMOOELIMG .. REPA11t 69"11 "' o. • " w/anc:hor, oars. 673-4. after 6 pm. \\'Orkin(;: 548-2726 5/14 co110NA CEL MAit ........... me •t:MODl!L1Mo, KfTcHEH• .,.6'41 Sant• An• 547-0681 TRANSPORTATION Mini BlkH '275 POWELL 5 bp Sl45. eon.am. !AY 1suN01 ........... ,_,,,:1u1 11.w11to .. .. .. . .. , 6'" J•!!!!!!!'!'!!!!~!!!!!!!'!''!"!!!!!!!!• Club membenhip for sale. ...., 100 ll Lli . , ................ *311 IEWIHO MACNllll 'Rl!l"At l S 4H:I PIANOS A ORGANS almost new. Seat, hand Maned 6' trained, 7 wkl. 9000 JAL•Ot. ..•.......••••..•... »11 1c11so1s IMAl l"EN ... 1 •• : ••• 6u.1 I NEWPORT B tac h Tenni1 INVALID Wa.lkPr, fold! .... BABY.faced tilky ktttem, U.LllOA ISL.I.HO ............. llll lll"TIC TANKS. S....... l'.k. .. •NJ $400. 67:>-M92 b k hi S15 540 ~....., 54&-J.l.13 5/14 3 hp, brand new $120, Call alter 5 pm, 83l-3S9Z 1 =======!! lllEWl"ORT WEST ............ l!7S TAILORING ............ 69N NEW&: USED r S, W I, · O""'U•" llUNT IHGTOH ll!ACH ....... )100 TERMITE CONTllOL ........... ,12 • y---'--n.t. __ ,___ l l\IEMBERSlllP To Holiday _I FAMll.Y •• h. MALE k;110-·, I gray, 1 -y llUMTIHOTON HAlllOUll _ .•. MOS TILi, Cenmlc ., , ········-···'"' ...,....,,.. r....,...,, ...,,..,...,. H al S S10 4() " · mtmucrs tp, '"" ..... ftOl.IHTAIH VALLEY .......... >411 TILE, LllHlltvWI a M.rtit. ...... t tlS • 'niomAll Qrpna e th pa, . ptr mo. Newport Beach TenniJ Club. & wh.ill'. 7 wka:. old. Part l•AL IEACH ............... Sols• T1tll1 s11tvice ........ "" F •Kimbell Pianoa Call 67""a-3807. """' ._,, Siamese. 962-5719 :i/16 I AltO IH GltGVI'. .............. 1411 TELIVISIOH, ll1,.1n,. lie. ,..691! $400. 0) ~" l»NO l lACH ............... UOI Ul'HOLSTlllY . . ...... ,. 4fM • Kohler" Campbl'll GOOD hand mo~n. ~-l BEIGE I l 2 BWND. I black ma.I• pup-011.1.MGE COUNTY ............. MM '#ELOINO ........... ms COAST MUSIC whee-I bicycle m. 1.811~ ny on carpet. 4 x SAHTA AHA .................... MIO WIMOOW CLEANING .......... "'7 24' w/pad, $45. Gu stove pies " many aPOI'ted kit· lfESTMINSTllt ................ a.it JOBS & EMPLOYMENT NEWPORT Ii HARBOR Merrill Pl, C.M. 646-5206. SI" """' u-c., tens. 549-3183 5/15 MIOWAY CITY ................. 2'16 ;), • v•~ CANTA AHA Hli lOHTS ......... MJI JOI WAHTEO, Met!" ........ 1'1111 Costa Mega * &U-2851 • SCULPruRE iru;trucUon .:OASTAL ........... , ... 11oe ~g: :::::g; W-• ....... mt I Optn 10--6 Fri lG.9 Sun 12-5 on portrait bust w/model. 4 PAIR Gold Drapes + 1 LAGUHA l l ACH .............. 21!! Miit & WOMEN .... rm tor Al id Ing glass door. $25. LAOUMA HKOl.ll!L ............. :11n 11.-,·nn•r• Or•on Class Gloria PUglsey, 644-2874. MISSION VIEJO ..... , ___ ,, .. J7 .. SCHOOLS a fNITllUCTlOH '" "" --wi • Call 642-9671 l.lN CLliMENTE ...... snt Jo• l'ltEl"AllATIOH . . . .. noe • ENROU. NOW HAND ,...;nttd oil portrait Y.N Jl,lt.N CAPllTlllHO Jill THEATlll CAL ... , NM ,,.... CAPttTRAHO IEACN ......... 11:11 MERCHANDISE FOR Class starting Tues,, May oJ you or yout children from Misc. Wentecl 1610 i.ANA POINT .. .. ........... 3141 SALE AND TRADE 19th, 7 pm . 8 week coune a photograph. 646.3629 ~NOOMIH1UM . . ......... ltH E S12 HA OND 0 OUl'LEXES utt"tJIN ......... Jt1s l"URN1Tu11e .... ...... ... · MM RGAN Wed&e\i"OOd Holly, &.pt siu -----·-----SUMMER lllHTALS •....... "" Ol"FICE l"UltHITUllE .......... ,. STIJDIOS, 285t E. Coalt ... ··~· excellent condl· WANTED 16 ?\t.r-.1. projector RENTAL~ OPFICI! EOl:llPMIHT ........ 1011 H Co I • A F I hod STOii; EOUll"MEHT .......... 1111 wy, rona de Mar. tion AU:ing $30 M7-TI87 Wf90Und. Call Costa Mt18. • pts. urn I >:Al"E, IESTAUJ!AN T ........ to14 673-8930 • . Exterminating Co, 646-8734. •l!Ml!RAL .................. 11110 =~~s~~gl.'":::00, ........... Mlt BEAUT. blue-royale lOxlD ~STA Ml!Sl ... ,., .......... ,.41M OA•AG• l•L& ...••..... tnt rug, f"lly •-.. nd. 175 ESA \llllOI 1111 ·· ......... ,,,."21 " """' · trttW,ORT '4•1oMTt .......... 4111 l.l"PLIANCl!S ................. 11• aha, New Ir: used pianos ot11.,:,::.,=:::...-~-~--rtl!W,01tT SHO•E.I ........... 4m •t1T1oul!s . . ............ 1111 _ __. m·•-, •-.t N ... , In PING pone tablt , like new, lfESTCLIFI'" ............... cue SIWING MAC"HINli ........ 1121 ........ uu:: °" ~ UHIVl!RSITY l"AltlC _ ......... CUI MUSICAL IHITltUMl!NT ...... llU So. Calif •• ,·Schmidt Music fold up roll. away, S30. FREE TO YOU ADORABLE frte puppies. FREE kittens ~ Orange malts, Torlolsl'-shtll 847-T.""136 5/16 FREE hone ftrtllizer. Pick up at 20311 Cypress, Santa Ana HlA. 540--092S 51 16 FREE kittens to good home, 1 CaJico ma.Je. 2 U1en, C1ll aft 4, 536--9589 5/15 BLACK cocker s paniel, gentle with children, h11.1 all shot!!. 646-1843 5/15 SUPER fluffy part Peniian kitten!. 962-4533 ~115 l!Wl'OttT sEt.c:'M"::::::::::::1:roo FURNrTt1RI! AUCTrON ........ ms D llAMMOND, Steinway, Yam-673--0~2. U.Clt IA y .................. ,.4:140 l"IANOS & OltGAHS ........... 11M Co. l007 N, u-•-, Santa ••• 6 .~7>--05:..,:.~9~2==~~~~~ IAST ILUl'P" . , ........ ,. ... C24t ltAOIO ····· · ............ 1111 .,........ no.,.. _":" COIOHA CIEL MAit ........... cue rELEVISJOH ............... nu 6' ALUl\flNUM step ladder IALIOA ................... c'" ~.I·:~ ·.~T<~~~~1ti"' ··• ..•.. 11,,." 15. '--e w1·ng •·•k •ha1·r ....... ISLANOI ................. OH ... I We are ha .. 1...... • '""'6 ........ .. L)t>O ISLE " ............... 4151 CAMllAS & IOUIPMIHT .. , not .... !'> $35. clean. 6Ta-7924 uL•oA 1sutto ............ •us NO•IY SUPl"L•l!S . ............ Wh•I• of • S•I• ll\INTINOTOH •EACH ......... ~111 Sl"01tT1No oooos ........ •Mt on Piaru and ............ PERUVIAN Alpact fur ru'1;~. Cockapoo mothtr. 2 males, FREE part Slamtsr kittens:, 2 female1. 6 wks old. "Just 6 wk&. 836-4176 ~/14 Darling." S 4 !I ~ 8 4 0 9 or 2 CUTE blk " wht. killtfll, 673-3176 5/16 548-6842 5/14 l't:ll.IHTAIN VALLl't ,, ...... ,.4411 llHOCUU.:soiCOl"l!I ........ lilt va5..,_ CalJ 1•.1.L 1uCK .................... ,. MISCELLA E s ................. 6 You better rome on down! 4' x 6', .$19 &: SS9. I.CHO I UCH .................... MIC. WANTED ............... !Nit WARD·s BALDWIN Sl'UDIO 54&-0JO:J aJter l. »t.MOt: COUlllTV , ............ 1611 MACMIHlillY, Etc. ............ IHI 1111.1101N 01ov1 ................. 11 LUMll!tt · ................. s1u 1.!19 Newport, C.M. 6t2-M84 21" TV. Works \'ery IUn.MittsTEa ................ 4'12 ~i~~~?NEO MATl1t"IAL·i '" .... '"1 Opon Eve .... Nite -....i. ·~.oo ..-.oWA't CITT ................ '616 SWAPS ...... IHI -~ .......... -NEED good home for lovable ~~~ ::!·ii~·1om·::::::::::: PETS a nd LIVESi oc'K 1:-&.lnday Afternoon &t&-l525 1payed, female, tortolw FREE kltten1, med-length FREE Kittens hair, 7 "-'Ir!, blk &: wht. 962-31..38 '5114 blond I wht, or gray & wht. 549-3132 5116 FREE! 6 wk. old kitten&, mixed. ~ 5/15 3 BEAUT . kllttn1 . 673-2'l02 S/16 •STAL ...................... •7'1 CATS ........ ... "" ebony 1969 organ_ Seib tor 165Xl5 SR S5(I lll!ebrk. very IWtet .. genUe. BABY Guinea Ptas lo _...... LAGUHA l l!lCM .............. CHJ DOOi .. , ... ", .. .•. . . . .. 111J 6""" i::01T111 ............................. , l"l!Ts ,GEHEllAL ... -4 GULBRANSEN Premm ** PtREU.t_l_TtRES shell cat, brilliant colon, LA•UHA HIOUl"L ............. 4717 HOllSES ., ····•· . .,. $(200. Going to Hawail ·.i==~·~Sl>-<~;':::';=·===-L:"~>-08==';'==::::=::::;,:::"~l~G~ho::;:;m;•~· ~54;6-9965~=::::==~":;:" llUSllOll VllJD ........ ---4l'OI LIVESTOCK ., .... f 13000 SAN CLIMl!MTI ....... c111 CALIFORNIA LIVING mus t sac. or • Can '"'"' JUAH CAl"ISTll&MO cn1 finance. 968-2710 CAl"llTllAHO I UCH l.IJD l'IUltSElt lES .. . 1911 °""' l"OIHT .................. cu• SWIMMING l"OOLt INt 2 STEINWAY "L", 5 '11' ', jim T G ,..,.E-o"~~..., Tlll"LllC. 1tc. ................ •Ml l't.Ttos ... .... .. .. ttu Ebony, Sa.Jet new for S4-. '' 1 . S AR. .&"1~ ~ 1"' f:OHl:IOM IMltJM ................ ..W t.WH INGS ..... . • fftt """ ·11 I J RENTALS ······-·········''" T RANSPoRTATION ff1I 5 Y1'I old for S38M. ~1458 l'.:~:!.!. .. "1u.!.,.'---»r CLAY L POUAN LlllA GRAND-4' 11", walnut fin. 1t .tJI M Yot.1r Doilr Adttily ~ide H u,r,t1~·~ 'Ar,ts Unfurnished •0.1.Ts • "f't.CHTI .......... .,... lttA, ..,... • _,. ' '' '' ..,. • Jt.ILIOATS ............. 9111 Completely reconditioned. »-.ft .. ci:erv•11• 0 • 0"· oci: JJ GIH ltAL .................... IOOI POWEi CltUISEltl ............ totl • A k' ,.,,.,, 675-1245 ,;.:;::,. .. To ci:evelop me1srio• for Fridoy, ... 1i-UJ9M COSTA MISA .................. 1111 Sl"IEO-Sltl BOAT ........... ,.,. s 111g -· 1 1?-9.11-1 NOdword1('omspondlngtorunbers ;-,;,;;-;.;: '•(61 :::~~o~~·~:AcM··:::::::::::.C: :g:~ ~~~\~•"'s"'Ncl ·:::::::::!: HAMMOND Home Model 0-3 7U0-12 ofyourZodlocbfrth1lgn. :::~=~ "•=~o.~n ........... s,~: IOAT UUNCHIMQ ......... ..,.. 5 Organ, PR 40 epee.ker. XJnt ~'~-~·u,,' I n-. )I If '.,' Utllold ..,.scoa, ~ .. . ........ ,,, MAlllHE EOUll". . . ., ... , .~ __ .. , '"""" •t>J" ...,~~ __ .._ 20on't 32c.,f~ Uftditt """• '#llTCll,, ' ............... IUI IOAT SLll'. MOOltlNO ........ HM ............. _.,.,._..,.,,..IQ,)'t l'At it 3Shered ))Good 6lftl-' HM JI u:1v11t11TY ,AlflK ..•.••••••. ns7 IOt.T IEltVICEI ..•••••.••.•.. "17 I ~·,.,: 7-41 .. we11 ...... )"4 (Horii 44}+•••"' 1 .; -.. I CltlA't ...................... IOAT llEHTALS • ••••. .. BALDWIN Acroson lc, rl-..'J!!-1~17 Sf~ l!Ttlk 65 11 ~~n-IAIT I LUll, ............... SHI •OAT CHAllTS:lt .. . ........ walnut, f'X~Uonally tine 9. .7s:tf.IJ 36Mtwt -.f-.d ·~~!E.!!:!!ll~ CtltOJllA OIL MAit ........... rut ... llNIHG IOt.TI :::::::::::::::,... GIMl•I •• ,-.... 31•~•• O>C> '. •• -... .. •!L90A ............... ,.tMll IOAT MOVINe ................. tMS C(lnd, $625. ~ ,,,_ -•• SAT ISLAN01 ................. UH IOAT ITOllMI ,............. ...... 6 O I ~HA., 11 IOr :JI For 61s....;clOl't H(Jlf 21 ~ LIOO IS .................... M .IJfl IOATI WAM,.D ................. HAl\fM ND ELECTRIC _! tT-JfCoo:;w ..... • .. AN*"' •' I ALIOAllLAJIO ............ nu .... c .... ,,. ·-··········,,· SPINET ORGAN ·-I c:°IJllNf10 · tDMlo coc fillON 10r.;...,;,,. NC.Jf •• NUHT/NOTOH •l".t.c:M ......... MM l"LVIMG Ll!llONS ............. t1M f'INU I"""·'" .. !".!-% 110.-' CIM!wt 71TD 6-223"" l"OUMTAIH VlLLIY -........ Mii MOllll HOMll ....... , ... ,., t2ti1 • 646-2939 * IJ}!{).T ._ llClchM Cl()o,,'1 no, D~l!!O .,·~C.C:Lj SIAL •t!A(H .................... ,. MOTOI MOMn ............... nu llOld ...,~ 1l '-1nf ~ -· LOHO llACtl ............... t.MI llCYCLEI ............. tttl * UPRIGHT KIMBALL. CAMCll. II """"" 44..... ,, Todoy CArllCtlM O•.&.MOl(OUNTT ............. NII ELl:CTlllC U U ........ : ... ::n11 --..,.ltlo~ •-(1) JUNt 1• \SI-•I '~ 7SW...... ~ •AROlll ••ov• .............. Ull MINI ar1C•I l ................ nn '"""'..... '""'• ..,,,,.,, ~ . l•C.O..W "6;.;;;..-7ACorofuMil ~. ll ' W&IT#JNITEI ........ -..... Mll MOTOllCYCl.U .............. .. 7 493-4m bttwn ~7 p.m. JIJlt n ,,... ..,u.___..... 77,._... JAN. fl MIOWA'T CITY ................. Ml• MOTOllSCOOllltS ... "'" ,.. I -~ --· _,..,. IANTA M4 ..................... AllTG lllt'llClt I , ... n ....... "A7M\ llSell-.O ••Your 11n.c... ".~f!...'I W4TA t.lllA 11t111om ......... ~ .1.uTo TOOU a t:ou11" ....... '41• T•levlslon 1205 Ill!<!!:;~~ 1tCo-dl11aN ••s..r...dtf 7th IUITlll ....................... ,"41 rlt.ILl:I. TRAVEL ........... '4• UO "121 ~'1 '°,,.......... 8011 ~ AQVAIM CMITAL ...................... 17'1 TttAILlllS. Ulllltr t4• FRENCII p l ~-" ~ t:g~=: =~•"J:'.. ·::::::::::·::&: , ... ,, .......... :::::::;:::::,,,. rov ncl•I ~ JULT 11 22e. '21..t nen.-JAii.• li\ff CLIMr1t1T• .............. 1111 t1:uc1t1 , .......... -........... C2"X20" RCA TV ctiblnl't I S,.All .. Jl ll~ l.1.. oo..io... ni 11 "'"JUAN c•,1ST11ANO ...... tnt Jral"s · · .. .. .......... tsll 8 for 23" IJCl"f'en, Xln.1 --". I 24 ~ SI~ .. .._.... •21 ~l"lnllt.MO ••ACM S13t o'!':",,••,• •• •.•,,•,T4U !!"u .. ..,.,,... I 2SMioh!Y SS Solic;lt... 15MDl>lnf .. DANA l"Olflll ........ , .• ,.. 1M'PORlt:O ,t,UTGI ............ ff. El~t components Incl. sao. »Jl.74· 26A S6T• Nrt-"lllt UAL ESTATE, ''"o"' <••• ............. 1• 549-C507 l ~VI·!'°, .. ,, J:~,. ~=-... n=.. ,,. ~:m:;J • ~-I •llTIGUll, CUISICS _ ....... HIS ,. 2'"""'1'" ..... S9 Mlnd 19l .. • v-.n•ra IACI Clll, •ODI , .......... ''2f n • '•"'S .opo!I Ai. H rttl"LIJ;, au .................. ltol lllTO IVl!llTl ............... tm IF: QUICKER YOV CALL, .,':'!_!. JD®-@'°-{)tO V,llS ",. 7,J•A CCIHOOMUOUM ........... Jiii .&.UTOS WAHTl.D ............ "" :-:·:r-1 ,,, Good Adverse Neulhl r.&·,, ... -,. llfllTA.LS WANTliO ···········'"' !!AW C.ll.I ................ -, __________ ._m_E_Q_ut_CKER ___ Y_o_u_SE_LL1 ____ __.~~-~~~;========~::i~::~::=~~-----"°'"'' "It a11fT ............ tn ... U'TO L«Altm ,,.,.., ........ "1• ... ,. 7 , WANT to rent. Priv. ply. 17.l) ft 1ki, cruitt boat. w/trlr. 1/0 drive or out- board. Min 75 hp. Sleep 4 lnsldt or on deck. June 12-Zl. Chuck J<iyee M&-Ot55 Mot~rcycle1 '*I '68 HODAKA 100, exparwlon , c hamb~r. hot held. fiberg.lau IAnk: 6: seat. com- plete dirt bike. $ 4 7 $. 557-7315 WANT nSHING PART-=-===-"""'=~ NERS? 2 &"\I.YI will share '69 KAWASAKI l\10CK Ul, boat expense w/boat owner SOOcc l!XXJ ml'1, Brand new who likes lo fish. Bob, cond. $900. 5 48·3688, 644-0330. 499-3200 8' PRAl\1 dinghy w/ 3 hp J ohn. Both comp! recond. Xlnt cond. fl65 or trade for Schock Sa.bot 644-5346 WORLD'S smallest twin in· board, only 20', xlnt cond. lfead, d/(, b&lt tank, $1495. 546-575,; 18' CRESTUNER w/115 HP Interceptor motor, $1100. 2J' 11ip opUonal. 3333 W, O:>ast Hwy, N.B. AV ALON ~1oorlng up to 60 let!, S2.150, call 21J....638...6l 1969 250 SUZUKI dirt Ir: ST. model. 600 Ml'1. Still undrr warr. $525 or beat ottu. Call 673-4386 ./ '69 HONDA CB 160. like new, '350 tirm. 644.1033 '65 HONDA Scrambler Good Condition, $285. 673-7008 '68 Yamaha DT·l Endlll'O, custom paint, GYT kit, &: stock tnglnet. $600. 873--8335 '67 1-IONDA 160 Scrambler dirt bike, $250. Call 536-69Zil '66 BULTACO ?\1atldoJ', like new, ma.ny utru, $315 firm. 4M-6363 :o::r::4::3J..::9762:::c====== 1350 CL mu Honda. Take -over payment.. (1) 492--0945 Sellbo.ltt 9010 Thurs or alt 7 pm. CAL 25 ''KILO" * '67 HONDA 90 Tn.U Bike. Consistent Race \Yinner • Cmtom tank, xlnt cond. Loaded w I extras: Radio, S200. 613-4923 boat bath, life raft, safety 1970 Honda SL 350 gear, etc., etc. Owner mu.st P.totori;port. Take-over Sac, Tont Butler. 64&.25ZI, paymenll. 548--8662 an f . Columbl• Che lleng1 r 24' w/lllp. $.1000. 2912 \V, Cot.ti llwy., N.8. Call 64!>0810 LUDERS 26' -Sailboat. 1st class cond., 30' allP Inc, former Oeet champ . >f0..0020 RACE Rl'ady Snipe sailboat, No. 5852 Ii tn.1.ler, hew rlg- gll\i. be11utltul, S 12O0 . 494-189l eves. 15' SKtPJACK, XLNT cond, DESI' OFFER °'-'tr $950 lh11 weekend. stl--0864 U' Flying Jun.1or O a y u.llorfractr. $995. • * Call 67!>-47$4 for frff dtmo. CHINESE Junk ll' long, teak, good cond. $2000 or ht1t O{~r. f213J 39Q...465.3 CAL 20 • $2,950 673-0517 SASOT •474' mi.~ HONDA 305 Scrambler, runt le. looks great, S35D. * 642-821.1 around 5 rim* 1965 1-TONDA 20a Scrambler tor great dtal. Call 6T:i-l!U '68 Bultaco Shtrpa "S" ~cc. • 646-33~ • T r a ll•r, T ravel '67 FIREBAU.. 21' Oean! Like newl Scll-contalnect. '" Traveled 100 ml. only. Tandem Whet!~. UV-UOV lights. R.efrilt'ratlon. ru le ' tlectr1c. Cost S420 0 , • Socrtf.!ce $2500. C&ll an s. !148,-4641 KENSKI LL NEW '70 r-.tOOEL $2295 18' Fully Sclf.C.Ontalnt'd SCOll's, 914 N. Harbnr, S.A. Nimrod Capri Traller $47i. StM519 ~ 'r j I I ·1 '· I I· ' ' i --· -·------------r~-~---..---~----~-------------------- 537-4011 8' Full cab-<lvtt camper, fact, discontinued model. Complete. $895. 869 Wut 18th St. Costa Mesa. StrHm lint '70 '61 CHEVY Jore van camper. Terry•Nomad•0.111 Warranty, 23,000 ml. Awn- Explorer Motofl H.mes Ing, stove, V-8 auto. Best Fourwlndt•WHkender otter over $2500. 673-4923 TRATEL '69 VW ''A dventure•• camper, radial tires. stereo, TRAILER SALES many extras. "'-= 1Jl72 Harbor Blvd. G.G. '67 DATSUN P/U w/bat l~ mocks No, of Camper, Io mi's, closet, Garden Gnn•e Freeway icebox, $1495. ?fS-8925. 537-4011 '63 VW Camper, Stove, I ========== I icebox, heater, good seats. ALPINE suoo ., ,,.,t .u ... 4!$-3618 VACATJON TRAVEL CENTER Excel. • Golden F•lcon Dune Buggies 9525 "ONE OF A KIND Dune Buggy just returned as showroom demo in So, Pa- cific, Ready to sacrilic.e at best offer. PI ease call 833-0055 days, 644-1259 eves. FIAT '66 F iat Roadster 1500 Xln'I Cood. ~19 or 962-1782 '62 FIAT ~D; runs ,eood; clean; Jlew paint. S2S), Call: ~1776 JAGUAR JAGUAR HEADQUARTERS The only authorized JAGUAR dealer in the entire Hartor Area. Cornplebii SALES SERVICE PARTS Pool• BUICK IN COSTA MESA ~67 TRt-A JRS. overdrive, Cloan. WE PAY TOP CASH * 675--7615 • -.,,,=-,-~~==--I ·for used n.n & truckJ just '68 Triumph Tft.250 Immaculate! l8,000 ml. call us for tree estimate. _,, ean 67f>.8133. GROTH CHEVROLET VOLKSWAGEN LARGE SELECTION of vw CAMPERS Harbour V.W. AU'lHORiz:Eo SALES &: SERVICE 18711 BEACH BL., 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH ', '68 VW . BUG Alk tor Sales Mat18grr 18211 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 347-6087 Kl ,9-3331 WE PAY CASH FDR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828'Hatbor' Blvd. Costa Mesa 54&-1200 HELP! Olympl• -Alpln• Apache .. ~I C•mper Worlds largest most eom- pleU! RV veb1cte ahoppfn&: ..,,,.,, 234 E . 17th· Street VW Dune buggy. Flotation 548-7765 tires. Street. Legal. $600. I========:::. 2 Dol;lr Sedan. 4 speed, ra: Harbor VW needs your VW dio, heater, excellent oond. campen: for our large camp. in & out. Take small down, e!' clientel 8352 Garden Gnive Blvd. GG 534-6686 &t&-2lss, 546-6420 GHI 1958 VW Sodan. Ideal for KA~MANN A will finance private party ff b v w IZKM588), Call dlr Phil alt ar .our , , Cosed Sat. Open SUnday 26' House Traner, gutted, Suitable for construction of- fice. Needs new root $295. 712 Yorktown ,Ave.,, H.B. Trucks 9500 GMC TRUCKS Here now. Immediate Dellvtrf Soothem °"""' County's only Authorized GMC Dealer UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE 2850 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540-9640 '64 FORD V8, half ton, long bed, excel- lent cond, in & out, Radio, heater. Take foreign car in trade or small down, Will iinance private party ( # 65471). Call dlr Phil aft 10 am 540-3100 or 494-1029. dune buggy coll vers i on, $210. 675-3829 TRANSPORTATION Imported Aum SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Darkly -Humid -Suite - Member -BARKS at HIM The honeymoon is over when his dog brings him his sliJ)pe~ and the wife BARKS at HIM. AUSTIN AMERICA AUSTIN AMERICA Sales, Service, Parts Im.mediate Delivery All ·Models J1rtuµor1 31111µorts '67 Ford Window Van Big s· engine, dlr, automatic transmission, excellent co~ dition, new tires, will take trade, final'le.'P or sell for 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. cash. (YLT ti65) Must see fi.12.94(6 54(),.I76f to appreciate. C.alJ. ~ f=A;;u;;ll>orlud===M:G:De=al:o:'= or 494-9772. '55 CHEV. 1% T Trutk. New DATSUN eng. Good concl. ---------* ~ * '65 DODGE P.U, % ton, 8' bed, R/H, Clean, $995 * 963-4560 aft 5 pm • '69 FORD Ecoool!M 200 9,000 mi's, Mint Cond. 2 :.! 5 6 Columbia Dr, C.M. 646-2365 '57 CHEVY, 3A. ton, re-blt 283, Reasonalile oiler, * 673-92ll • '69 FORD, % ton W/heavy duty rear end, h~a v y '67 . DATSUN ''1600" Roadster ""ilh radio, heater, 4-speed, new top. $1199. (ULZ-3251. overloads. VS, auto. ~2 S49-30:Jl Ext. li6 or 67 '57 FORD PICKUP 1370 HARBOR BLVD. '-'i th '61 motor $300 COST A J\1ESA * 646-0059 • I ---,~===~- LC}56 ~~ton Dodge truck. 1tlay DATSUN be seen at 594 w. 19th st, Priced For Quick Sale C.M. S48--0n7 '69 DATSUN 4 DOOR W/AIR 1950 CHEVROLE'J' '68 DATSUN 4 DOOR Pick-up. New licer$e-'67 DATSUN STA WAG Ailto Sl 75. 6-12-9214 Example '61 Datsun Sta. \Vag. 4. spd. 1962 FORD Ranchero. good VOG150 &\le Price $875. cooottion. 545-4!55. 3 265 Barwic:k Datsun Oregon, C.M. '70 % Ford Ranger, 8' camp.. 998 S. Coast Hwy., er. 4 whl. dr. $5,500 or best ~~r ~~~~71 olfer. 897-2889. Jeeps 9510 '70 JEEP Universal V6 engine, 4 wheel drive, 3 speed trans. Olive green, convertible top. 7,000 miles. Near new. f322AFXl Kustom Motors 845 Bake:r, C.M. 540-5915 Rec:re1t'n Vehicles 9515 1969 CHEVROLET CUSTOM CAMPER Turbohydramatic transmis- DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS 18835 Beach Blvd. ltuntington Beach 842-7781 or Y.0-0442 '65 DATSUN P.U., new clutch, tires & gen, lo mi's, xlnt cond, $900. Eves & v.·knds 536-0161 .... (tAEUN)- "Leader In The 1..earll Ci11es" ZIMMERMAN 2845 HARBOR BLVD. 1965 KARMANN Ghia Convt. $995. Original owne r . 673-5103 eves. aft 5. MG MG Sales, ServicJ, Parts Immediate Delivery, All Models J1rtuport 31inµorts 3100 W. Coast HwY, N.B. 642-9.J05 ~()..1764 Authorized MG DeaJer '68 MGB-GT O'Drive, Heat, wire whls, white, blk. upl. A-lust sell. $2600. 675-2779 '6:i i\1GB. Priv. Pty. Good Cond. $1400/0Uer. PORSCHE -----·-- 10 am 540-3100 or 494-1~. 18711 BEACH BL., 8424435 WANTED HUNTINGTON BEACH I'll pay top dollar for ~ WE PAY. TOP DOLLAR VOLKSWAGEN today, Call FOR TOP USED'CARS and ask for Ralph, 549-3031 II your car la extra clean, Ext. 66-67. 67J.-0900. see ws first. '66 VW Sedan, re-bit eng, POOLE BtnCK new clutch, good oond, 234 E. 17th St. _ $1150 / best ofter, Call aft Costa Mesa 54S-7765 mon 675-1926 1968 I p).u vw Bus in x1.nt1 _N_•_w_c_,_ .. _____ _ cond. By owner. Below '70 Chevy Belair retail bl bk. Call 833-6ro3 4 Door Sedan V8 automatic or 673-2014. power steering,' air cone!'. '69 S.-passenge.r VW Bus, Blue Book $3495. Will sacri; Perfect cond, under war· fice $2695. (385APR) ranty, $2.190 or ofter . 169 Buick Skylark Dix. 54.8--0308 3 speed -mothers little gas 1964 VW Bug, Xlnt cond, saver - low mileage. Full price $1699. (CNV585) Small down will finanet> private party. Call dlt Phil aft 10 am 540-3100 or 494.-1029, $899 ., S..t oUor. 2348 '70 REBEL Rutgers Dr, CM, btwn S&9 6,803 Actual Miles pm. Automatic trans, power steer-** '68 VW, chrome rims, ing, power brakes, radio, stereo, MANY CYJ'HER EX-heater. (249AEE) TRAS. Real clean! $1550 or. $3199 Full Price ,,.,, 011"· 544-<376 Kustom Motors * * WANTED: Reliable par-S4S Baker C.M. ty to assume payments onl-====''======= ~69pmvw, Call 6!Z..I003 alt OLDSMOBILE '63 VW. Good condition, 1970 OLQSMOBILE 98 clean, s1;i0. Al"? Dune bug. TOWN SEDAN gy. needs repair $700. Call F . to . nditi . &12-7243 alt 3 pni. ac ry . a 1 r ~ orung, automatic, rad1Q lr e a r 1~ VW S~n.rool. Lo speaker), heater, power mileage. Sacrifice. $1350. steering, power disc brakes. 847-2403 wheel covers remote mir-' '62 VW, Xln't For Dune Bug- gy. $250 .• 962-1782 or 545-6519 'r.6 Volkswagen e x c e 11 en t condition. $975. Call 492-5818 ror. tinted glass, w-s;.w. Serial No. 3M&.KIMZ76391. $4694 UNIVERSITY • -OLDSMOBILE &:I .• KARMANN Ghia, 70,000 2850 Harbor Bl., Costa Mesa mi a. Xlnt Cond. $900. call OPEN 7 DAYS 540-9640 M0-14.73 CREAMPUFF '68 VW I il I 911 SPORTAMATIC • • 0 m es, sunroo • Auto Leasing $500 of extra.!, xlnt cond. Mr, James, 671-9191 eves/ Call ~11~ v:knds. Mrs. Brown Days , . . FORD AUTIIORIZED 774.-6110. 67 VW bug, onginal owner, LEASING SYSfEM g_ood. cond, new brakes &. America'i largest leasing '68 PORSCHE, 911, tires. Sl!J95. M0-6287. system for finance or net Sportomalle,, air, AM-FM. e '65 vw "Bug" e leasine oI all type cars and r.tust sell, best o I I er. Good Trans. Best otter trucks. 526-5917 ____,0 ' • 64~5748 • e Immediate delivery from '63 Porsche cpe, red w/blk 1965 VOLKS\VAGEN, eng. over 300 cars and trucks int. Xlnt concl, Nu tires, just reblt. Sacrifice. Call e Competitive rates See to appreciate. $2400. 5'10--0292. Aft s. 544-0704 e New car dealership service 67;)..2347 -"'~""""'-".:.;cc'c'=c:;-e Full "tradeln" value for '67 Porsche, A!\1-FJ\1, VERY '62 VW. Body DamSa~. your present car CLEAN, lo mi's. OK Mechanically. -..u. e All popular makes avail-* 592-1660 * Call 962-1782 able .6=7~9~12~,~sPEE==o-. -X~lo=t. '69 Fastback. Automatic. For Complete Details Call 17.000 mi. Real nice! Below Malcom Reid Al\t/Fl\1' S. \V. radio. Low 6 market. 646-4120 alt Leasing Managor mi's. Call 637-4589. ,c.:=,.c.c_c..::-=~'-~~ '68 VW, auto, 1200 mi's, like Theodore '67 Porsche 911 S, w/blk inter, 24,000 white mi's. now, $1500. lmma<ul•te! ROBINS FORD 5-19-3163 aftt"r 5 $.-1700. 5-16-7563. 2060 Harbor Blvd. * '63 VW Bus, mech perfect. Costa Mesa 642-0010 '61 PORSCTTE, Conv., Ai\1-44,000 m i'i;, R/H, nu brk:s1.,,..,,....,!!!!! .... !!!!!""'!!!!!" :FM, very clean. $2200. & good ti •<>""' &iZ-5864 I' • "'-"" • • "''· - 0 • V LEASE V '64 PORst1iE C, N>blt eng, e '57 VW e 1970 Ford V8 F-11)) Pickup Immaculate $50() new pain!. crpt, 2 Pirellis, * a ll 6 pm 548-0503 * w/camper, air, p/s, auto halt. $3050. 636-2411 =7.0;;_:_;,-'::::,=-=;'-:c= f trans, 3900 ml. SlO!I per mo. ========= '66 VW. New tires & paint. SOUTH COAST RENAULT '59 RENAULT, rebui lt engine. $50. cost $22Q. 29631J.i Terry Road. Laguna Beach Reblt eng. S950 or best of-CAR LEASING !_er. 64&-8765 alt 5 300 w. est Hwy, NB. 645-2182 '68 VW Camper, $2100. See at 61414 Jasmine, CdM. Used Cars Atter 5:30 PM. 9900 sion, 350 engine, power steer. :===54::().=64::1::0=== ing, spilt rims. heavy duty SUBARU tires with OPEN ROAD llli ENGLISH FORD ------- It, sell rontolnod cam,... -;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;-;;.;;;;;;I * '70 SUBARU Full bath faolliti" Including • '67 VW Squareback. Clean. BUICK Good condition! Sl.450 1--------- 642·9885 After 6 Pl\t BUICK Riviera, 1 9 6 6 , shower, aleeps 6, has every All New Eni::Ush H.erc Now • possible feature you would Farrls In Our Big ln1n1ediate Delivery J\.1UST Sell '64 Volkswagen. Fircbird green, full po\1:er, $675. Call Fred Milne: work straddle seats, ti!! 11teering, 536-2561 home 536-8984 u9dere<>ated, Xlnt cond. Call want. Cost originally $8000, Stock flow At • !!Cl MPH Capabilily Now Only $5599 FACTOR'..-• 3j J\liles Per Gallon . M7-6852 '65 V\V Bug, m11.gi;. headers,. I----· ------ UNIVERSITY INVOICE• e Beautiful Styling Positively No A.dd<.d Test Drive Today At pin striping Otfer ·68 Le Sabre 4 door, hrd Call 08-16·143i tp. Air cond. P/S, P/B, ,63 VW $585 ~~: ~~wholesale at DLOSMDBILE 0ea1or c""""''' Kustom Motors 2850 Harbor 81., Costa Mesa C'-·· From .. 673-6865 • '"""""' 84:) Boker, C.M. S.i0-5915 S4G.888l Sedans, Sta \Vgns, =========j'5.'> Buick Rdmtsr-runs good, Everything \1!0rks. S 100 , Priv. Pty. 646-6584 MC7J'OR HOME RENTALS GT's At Our Cost ReterVe Now For Sununtr! \Vhile Overstocks &i2-66ll or 831-3009 Last. Theodore C•mpers 9520 ROBINS FORD :llf.o Harbor Blvd. Datsun Pickup 1 ,eo.~ta~M~'~"'==~"~==Q New lS'lO Datsun Pick Up I , wHh campctr, dlr. Fully tac. FERRARI '""' ,.,,,;.,..,., .... , .,, .. ,. tunlty. WW take tnlde or 1--- wtU -privato party. FERRARI Full price ·ia $2099. Ser. • Newport lmporll Ltd. Or- (67798) Call M&-4052 or ange Count)''• only author· 494-9173, tzcd dealer. RENTAL SALES·SERVICE·PARTS 3100 W. Coast Hwy. New ~ Ford Piclrupt Newport Beach w/camper, ~Pl 6. 542.9405 540.1764 e $97.SO Weekly Authorlled Ferrari Dealmo • + 5c Pr:r MUe Make Rnervations F..atly Soott'1, 914 N. &1tior, S.A. 8' 36" CAMPER &bell·bed. Colr:ms.n lor Im $225. 646-2138, ~. ~O War- ret1, Cotta Me .. TIIE QUICKER YOO CAU. TIIJI: QUlCKER YOU SELL ' " FIAT '68 FIAT $50 5'-don. Xlnt cond. 13,000 AU. Radio. 4~17 after 6 r .A-1. TJ\E SUN NEVER SETS on DAILY Pll.OT WANT ADS! . . -... TOYOTA l!]O]vlQITIAI Mark 11 Wagons Hi Lux Pickups l and Cruisers Wagons DEAN LEWIS t96f Harbor. C.M. VOLVO Best Stock of VOLVOS in Orange County DEAN LEWIS 1966 Hrutior, C.M. 06.1 BUICK Le SabN'. air conn, p.b., p.s, 1 O\\'ner, 51,000 mi's. SU75. 67:'i-5016 CADILLAC '59 VOLVO, 4 cyl, 4 S?d.1---------new brks & valve job. Runs '6fEL DORADO, full power, ~·~ood~S="'=· "55"7='-60:03=7=== I Ult strng, am/fm. Fire ll1isl -Brown, vin. rf. full l!hr Race C•rs Rods 9620 inter, fact air. Xlnt, ~1ust ----• .!. Seel After 12 PM, 67:J.-23!18 !92'1 FORD ROADSTF.R '65 COUPE DE VII LE. All Y Street & sho\v $3000 . ~ . BILL l\fAXE • •1;.o351 ,.,.., but '"'· !:"' '."'1"· xlnt cond. $1695 r 1 r m . !TIOIY!OIT!6) _A_ut_ •• _w_.-_··_1~_-__ 97_00 .-~""'-c'mJ_AD_. -s.o-.v-.-... -.11-.. -.-.,,, 18881 BEACH BLVD. IMPORTS WANTED 40,CKX> mi's, 1 owner. Xlnl Hunt. Beach 147-1555 Orange Countle• cond. Call 9£!l..l0.ll. t mJ N of Cotlst Hwy, on Bell TOP S BlJYER 1970 Cadillac Coupe de VJllr, Bn.L MAXEY TOYOTA fully l'Qp 0d, like new $6000. '69 TOY OT A Crown Wagon, 71 675 2030 R/11. disc brl<s, luggagt 18881 Beach Blvd. I 4.l a- " ''I I $"",... R. Befch. Ph. 1347-8555 '68 CAD El Dorado, 26.000 , rac..;, .-. nl t'Onc , ~. 00.S-1~!60 aft 5 pm mi's. Xln't 1...oaded. S·lll9J. '69iUYOTA Coro--o.-,-4,---,d,-r. I S V 0 U R AD JN 833-2255 or 833-1103 euto shifr, r/h, 12.000 m\"1, CLASSIFIED! Somf!Qne \\ill CAD. '6.) Coupe de Villi'. Ju~! 1ik1• ntw. $1775. ~looking for It. Di&I 6'12" $1700. \\lhltr/hlk lenlher In!. 675-39.JO da,ys. ~eve&. 5678 Full pow. Air. 644-IMt TRAN~PORTATIPN. TRANSPORTATION New Cars 9800-C1rs TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 9900 N ew Cara 9800 New Can -- r • • • n m • ; • • • • • m ------------------------------ I TllANSp01tTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TltANSPORTATION Thursday, May 14, 1970 DAILY PILOT U TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TltANSPORTATIO""N,--"'T"RA""N"'l"PO""'R"TA'"'T"'l""O"N-""T"'RA""N"'S"'PO"""R••T A.,.T"'l~O"'N_, ... , -'N;;•;.;w-.Co_ra ____ MO_lll_N.._w~Co-'-""'-'--_;.';.;'°;.;°';.;.;'w.:...C:;;•:.:•.:.• ___ .:-:::.Now Cora 9800 New C•r• flOONow Cars __....._''SP1ECIALIZING IN QUALIT4'''~ FIRST TIME '70 WILDCAT C111to111 • D•or li1'4to,. Full ,.. .. ,, 04111lp- 1111111 l11t l1141119 willllow1 I 111!, •lr co1141ilion· 1119, •l11yl roof, r11r 1111 1p11kt1, tilt tt11r· OFFEREI) I~""'· '$489s I ,70 '70 OPEL WAGON D1l11x1 ltollo1 •19011, A11lorn1ti1 tr11111111it• 11111, ,.wer J ltc iwako1, !OJ hon tltO""'' Oii• t i••· lwn•t• r1clr, wliolte 1i'1 w•ll tbt " ' EXECUTIVE 111. 12)1151) ·' $2345 ' ' I AND 70 SKYLARK DEMONSTRATOR Cw1l•111 J D•or h1nltop, A11h1rru ti1 tr1n1111i1• 1i111, 1lr c•Wlflonl•g, pow1r ll11ri1t9, p1w1r lw1•11, r~I•, llttter, 'tiayl r1•f. tilt lfttrint "'"'· '"$3982"' CLEARAN·CE I PERSONALIZED. • 1'UTOMOBILES • '66 BUICK CS 400 \It, •wl•1t11fic, r1,jio, ht•tH, powtr •f11rin9, f•clory 1ir. I RkW77&1'. $1695 '87 PLYMOUTH SATRUTE J ,joor h1rdt1p. A11f•M•tic; ptwtr sh•t· iftf, ,,,.;,, h11ft r, ftcf•ry 1ir, l·1w111r, '81 FIDRD 480 Still ..... '"''"' Wt!ft:llty ....... .... rMit, ht .. tr, ptwtt' .t-i ... vieyl tep. V1ry ltw •llt•t•• LM.I I twflfr IM· IVTLllll s2295 '88 PONTIAC GTO VI, 11llt11'11lic, ftill•, h11tet, ,....., el•erinf, ,.wit "'•••1, f•cf•l'f 1ir, i.w .,.a •• , •. I ..... ,, JM1llw: •wllM •• ,. l111MtcMltt" IWXElltl •2395 '69 IMPERIAL LE BARON 7"11 •utomoblle hea '"''Y concelvtblt lvxury feature fhtt 11 olfettd. Full l1ethtt interior, tll power equipment plu1 factory 1i~ ~clitionin9. 6org10111. IYBE1461 . . '68 ELECTRA CUSTOM 4 Doo' herdtop. Full power, ftctory eir •. Sol-' I 1trvictd loc1lly, 81l1nct of f1ctory w1rr1nty. IYBAtJ 11 1970 '70 SKYLARK C111t.• 4 o .. , II•"'"'· A11t.111otlo, ,._, 1t11rl11t I lir••••· olr u114llioal119, ,.., 111t 1p11k1r, l'''"' wllldow1, till llo1tl111 wlio•I, Yill'fl 100 1 I~. (1 01 1111 RIVIERA $4185 CUSTOM '70 ELECTRA C111fo,. 4 Door horcltop. F•ll pow1r l11clud· 1111 •iMl•w1 i 1•1t, 1lr c•lilditl•Alllf, ,,h1yl '"'· AM-FM r•'i•, tilt .t•1rl111 w•••I, p•w•r NII ptiw•r equ ipm•nf including win· 4,,, 1., •• , '''" •••. lllJ2121 dew1 & •••t, f1cfory 1ir cond ition-$5235 in9, chrome whe•I•, AM-FM r1clio, tilt 1feerin9 wheel, ¥inyl rool, plu1 '70 LIMITED much more. 1917016 1 C111t.111 4 Do'-' h1r,jtop, Tliii l1111111c11l1t1 $5379 1wlo111obil1 h11 iult 1bout t vt ry co•c1iv1ble l11111r'f' 1x111 yo11 could pouiblr w;ftl, Full powtr, 1lr ce1icUtioni1f, li1r•• AM·FM, t h:., '''· """$5795 THE FINEST SELECTION OF USED JAGUARS " 119 JAGUAR XKE 1988 JAGUAR XKE Coupt. 4 1r,11cl trtn1mi11 ion, • chrome whtt 1, ftcfory t ir con• ditlonin~, AM-FM ratio, willow 9rttn with bl1ck l11ther interior. Ab1olut1ly 9tr91ous. .IXXEIO&) Coupe. 4 1pted tr1n1mi11ion, chrtm• wirt whttl1, r1dio ind h11t1r, I owner loc1lly owned ctr. lteirllful Arctic white t x· ftrlor with bleck full l11the r in· ftrior. (XOA7741 1967 JAGUAR 2 + 2 1966 JAGUAR 2 + 2 Coupt. Autom1t,ic: tr1n1mis1ion, Autometlc' fr1n1ml11ion ; Chrom• AM-FM shortwevt rtcfio, chrome wire wh11l1, fedory 1ir condi· wire wheel1, Pirelli r1di1I tire1, tionin9, recUo end ht1f1r. This .._ 27,506 mil••· Netural le1th•r in· ont i1 truly a 1potle11 tufomo. ~P00.Ll111111111111111111111111•111111•111111111111111111111111111•••••111111••••-.111111111 ... t· .. ·i· .. •• .. ' .. TR .. H .. 07 .. 5 .. J._. .... _. .... ~bi .. '·· .. ' .. " .. " .. A .. I_.. ................. 234 E. 17th St. :.tllTJIORIZED BVICK.OPEWAGVAR SA.LBS elNI SERVICE OPEN SUNDAYS Usod Con 9900 Utod C•n 990o Usod Cars 99tJC! Usod Cors -----9900 Usod Cors 9900 Usod Con 9900 CADILLAC CHEVROLET CONTINENTAL FORD OLDSMOBILE MUSTANG '70 Maverick. Auto. ll,000 t970 OLDS MACH I 1969, l!KI, 4 5J)d, mi S track stereo, 4 apkn, SPORT CPE. AM/FM stereo, air, P/S, 548-7765 Uood Cors 9900 UHd C1r1 9900 Used Cars -----PLYMOUTH RAMBLER '63 Plymouth 2 dr hrdtp, '61 RAMBLER Sta, Wag. auto, p/1, Xln't Cond. $600 Ru~s good! Needs paint. 64&-2118 alter 6. $17a or Make otter! 642-3122 T·BIRD '63 T·Blnt, motor ju1t overhauled. Take owr payta + some cash. 54&-1627. . • • . I . . • ' ' ' ' • , ' i I i • ' ' • ' ' • . • . • It" CAOILLAC PARTS FOR QUICK SALE Batcery \Vind!!tield Wipen: Radio Wheels Transmission Air Conditioner I: '57 CHEVY I Sharp! '83 Chevy l,-2 T. + ahell. Gu dryer, German Shep pups, cha.mp. aired, blk I: tan & blk & allver. C.Olor TV. 897-5408 '68 CHEVEUZ Malibu, 2 dr hdtp, VB, auto, p/a, p/b, bucket seats, Jo mi's, rw:w tires, VERY SHARP. $2150 {213) 592-1660 LATE '67 Continental, l ow ne r , c l ean , r u ns perfectly, air, leather, &: powt!r. Priced to a e 11 • 646-4400 weekdays, 642-0766 weekends It eves. CORVAIR now D!0-14 -tirel • (2498 P/B, 12,000 ml., aqua .I: 4 chrome u tro rims <I w/wht int By aduJt owner. $1995. 5(5.l.59'J aft 6 l'erl corxl. 54()..4464 00 FORD PICKUP f17,69 MONTHLY PAYMENT 1965 Ford Mutlanf, new PONTIAC e PARTS e S299 1s the total down ;>aY· motor, trans, radiator. bat· Aft 5:30 pm 642-2124 ment. rn.69 ta the total tery a: tires, by owner, '61 PONTIAC GTO '61 RAMBLER 440. Air cond. Full power, mag whee.11 $1475. 847-6745 White ElepbantlT DON'T JUST WISH for IOrnethlna to furniah )US' I borne ••• find great buys ln today'• Oauilied Ada. Heating Unit And Man)' Other Itema ·• S42-3l20 After 5 P.M. CA MARO CAA!ARO '68 Z.'8, < spd. dJc brim, beaden. Lo ml/Xlnt cond. $2000. 536.J560 '19 CAldARO Z28 h I· ;pertonnance. fully equip- ped. $>111), - CHEVROLET '18 O\evtlle Mal.ibu, 2 dt hdtp, VB, auto, p/1, p/b, bucket ipeatJ. lo mi'•, new ti res. VERY SHARP. $2150 ~lli60 '63 CHEVY 4 Dr, need.I trans, w«'lc:. $190. 540-1412 or 54&-6428 an 5. "til Oev. Bel Air Sed, Oris. Owner. Only 67,800 mi's. $300. 545"-2470. '&4 Nova VI Stn W,n, auto, air, Ml. Luggage reek, very clean. $675, 644-0062 54 CHEV COUPE Good condition. New llres. ·-· 1967 Impale SS 'spd. $1450. Xlnt cond! • 846-3939 * '1.1 CHEVY Impala 327 eng. J BR c1rb, pf .. p/b. $625. .. 113&-2368 ----~·. MUsr Bell '67 CheveUe SS 396, like new, many xtru. Aal<lna IUOO. 960-21!64. PVI'. Pty,, 4 door '67, Malibu, excellent condition, $1550, 968-~73 '66 S.S. 396, red Chevt.Ue conv. Auto. Great Sbape. $1250. Owner, 84W714 A Do . II • Younelf . Fbter . Upper! '57 Chev $100. 541"'33 '57 Chev. Xlnt meclll cond. $250 or ofter. Can ~ CHRYSLER '69 am.Ysu:R New Ycrker, .. dr, M.ly equip. incl. a.Ir, am/tm A: tuU power lncJ wlndowa. $ 3 5 9 5 , Ce..U ~ or ""-4746 11169 OIRYSLER, Xlnt ODnd! Town A: Country atn wan, all extraa, pvt cwner SJT:iO. -CONTINENTAL --------'fi6 CONT't.. Priced to sell, lo ml'a. full pwr. alr, Im· maculate. $2050. 67~ "64 CONVT, f\lll powr, l air cond, Jo mi'•. veI")' clean. S!H nnn. 962-4133 1962 CORVAIR 4-dr. stick. Air. Good coOO. 27,o::xl mlles, new brakes, tune-up. $195. 646-3t31 '63.~~G~al~w""e'-"XL."'°~R"'IH~. ;,.p-1,-,1 monthly payment including below bl bk. 833·69 03, Conv. Orange wlblk top. =========-========= p/b, aood cond. $500. :;es, licerR and an C&JTY·,='13-~20"1"'4==~,,--:;;-fgic,P·!i. Ai~Us~u ~~~ U1td C•r• 9900 1 Used Cars '900 &G-25U charges on approval of '65 MUSTANG hdtp. Xlnt week! 494-5739 after 5, '°:;;::;::;::;::;:;;;;;:;;:;:;;;:;;:;;:;.:;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;~ Bank credit for 36 months. cond. 45,000 Ml. Sacrl!lce, r '89 RANOI Wacon. .12,000 Or, iI yon would prefer to mUJt tell! 3(7 Grenoble Ln., 165 PONTIAC T e mp es t CORVmE ml'•· $2400. pay cash, the full cuh price Cost& Mesa bet 6 1 8 PM Wagon, 1 owner, x Int Clll 561897 la only $87.90 lnclddlnG all ' · ' tra n 1 po r t at lo n . $1000. '62 FORD Econo!Jne. New taxe1 and 1970 llctnae trans-'66 MUSTANG, 2+2 V-8, 673-8103 eng., aood tlm, heater. fer, Nothing more to pay, 57M, stick. aptt. handle 1968 LE MANS 4 Dr. Hrdtop SEUJNG a 1967 Fastback Clean. Call: 60-9899 Deferred. payment price ill package. Sell or trade. S329S. Powtr .'" air C<lnct. Corvette, 1 owner, under ~.64~Forc1~'-'r"a1~...,=;,.a°'cy1:..,.... ~A-uto $3095.14 lncludlni all carTY· 644-3'.M4 e>wner 673-2259 Ev e• warranty, must sell·movlnr. tnna., ' dr. r/h, $500 or inl charlt•. laxe• and D?0.1'·67=MU=sr=AN=c-, ~v~ .. -. -.,-.-.. -w 644-59T.I can aft 5: 30. 67>®5f. ofter. Call Mf.-5936, Uoeme transfer. Polyglu tires. Xlnt cond. '"" PONTIAC C •·•tn W '68 OORVE'ITE '27 conv. ~~='-=='o='-"-,=~·I ANNUAL PERCENTAGE Lo Ml. $1450. 675-3027 Aft. vo 8 "" a ag. Xlnt cond. Mala! offer. can e '67 CORTINA 'G Te RATE IS ONLY 11 % 6 PM PIS. air, fm stereo, new &ft 6 pm. 83H755 Tako ...,. _.,,. UNIVERSITY =~-~~~= tJru • """· s=. Alt 6' _ * 675-15.15 * '65 Mustana:, r/h, auto,-V-8 673-5435 OLDSMOBILE >IS. Good Shapo. l9IO Call 1·=970~PONTI==•c"""'F1tt=b°';,.t"°'3SO..-ll f 54~741, I 2850 Harbor m., Colt& Me .. 1 ,,:,;;.,;.""'=~~~~-grHn, auto trans, p.1., p.b .• OPEN 7 DAYS '65 MUSI'ANG 2 + 2 fut. 2 mo ol.d, 2800 mUes. Muat COUGAt OLDSMOllLE , '69 COUGAR. aood cond, CALL 54f).964() bl.cit, mint <."ORI,. ntW tirel, eel.I. Ptv. Pt;y. 84&-3221 cn4> w/&lr & radk>, 4 nu tlrea, XUfr 8U7,I 'f7 OIU CUtlut ======== n.any xtraa. SU>G. 49C.6e38 •68 Flteblni too, landau top, S1'iO cu in. Wlllinl to make Su~me, .f dr, Very aood deal. can aft 5:30 Mt-1967 cond, auto trans. p/a, r/h, MERCURY '65 FORD M1111.anj, 2+2 a.tr, p/1. p/b, 1 owner. ~ wbeel coven. l"ef. Pio Futback, V-3 auto. $850. ~er trade. ns Victoria, DODGE 1989 Dodce Super Bee, Xlnt cond., 5.fXXI mi. mllllt 1ell $2495 cub. 642-5505 '69 DODGE Van.cu.st. tnt. Elec. rerria:-new tirn. Tape deck. Bob 671-2098 LINCOLN $1500, ar11 owner. SlW745 IAM-12PM, 536-7216 C.M, aft 6 or wknda ·68 Ci1'i'I:IA:ti atOHP 1 ·ea MERCURY r.onv new '65 MU~. m . • apd, • '67 FIREBIRD 400, pt•, p/dllc brb. buck. '..:t!: top I engine. Very ciean! barrel, atereo, rad.lo. MW r/h. 1 OWner, Magi. $1690. conde fir ihitt, Polntu $395. Ctll 646-9022 oiler. 548-26,n aJt fi. f42..3970, (nJ) 18'7-21'1'.l5 tlJ'N, r/h, 24,000 mi'1, like '86 Parklane convt beauty Pt1USTANG 66, hardtop, 4 '61 PONTIAC Tempeat. auto, new. ~2315. 428 HP, air, full power'. 1pd ., 6 cyl, Ml, new tires. R/H. Good cond. truwut. '65 OLDS Cutlau hd tp. Air, $.lDI pvt pty. 646-4..'170 $975. ~17 Sl.95. Ctll 54G-0062 loch, comol•. 1-0wn.T. Lo "62 M•rc. Com<!, 52,000 ml'•. PLYMOUTH 1957 PONTIAC $50 Ml. Clean. $1100. 968-6462 very clean. $275. Ca 11 * 962-8333 * '64 CUtlau V-8. PIS. P/B. 675"-3348. Auto Or lhft. Air. Xlnt cond. '67=~co=uc~AR.=-.-.,-.---a. '69 FURY III 4 dr HT, &Th-7715 new tires I: shocb, p/a, Loaded! S77'95 or best oner. RAMBLER '60 LINCOLN, Lie. 681F205l. PLANNING to move? You'll x.lnt cond. $2050. 830-5135 Pvt Pty must sell! 642.-2461. 4 dr htdtp. Public 11le 11 find an amulrc rtumber of '111 Ptfontere)', 4 Dr., radk>, ~ Plymouth, aood running AM. r>/16 l 5123. 1011 hornet ln todey'• Clauilk!d heater, power, $400 caah. corn!. $100. 2Z21 llarbor v_a1_,_oc1_._._c_.M,.__.l:~,.,__. Ad1-Oleek them now. 64-2157 .:;":..'Yd.:;·.:.·"~"'''-·----- '65 RAMBLER 2 dr, 327 V-8. Good cond. $850. * 6.fJ.8619 * FREE Las Vegas holiday for two •llN• IN TKIS ADYllTlllMlllT AHO llCllYI TOUI YALU.AILI TIAYIL CIUlPICATI WHICH IN• CLUUr WJTH PUICHASI lteu11d trip t lr tr1111porlt tlt 11 t• tlMI fro!'l'I lt1 V1911I Ground lr1111,or• !•lion /11 l11 V•9•1I Fri• 1h1111o p1911•I fft• lir11•f11t, lunch or dJn11erl Vtli4 1 <ll•T• t w11 •1 f,... tttllt NltrYt fi•ll ~y phOllt ! VALID ANY TIMI 7 DAYS A WllKI NEED A CAR? w. ,,.tel•ll1t le 1tllln1 10M ct n to 9.M 11••pl• wflo mey h••• h•" prti.lt fl'U Ilk• ......,,.._,.,. ..... A~-NrwtoT ... If yo11 ''' workin9 011d wlllint to ,..., •• ll•Y~•11h, l1t'1 "''~' 1 clt•I, w. c11ry 011t ow11 contr1;h, Blue Chip Auto Sales 2145 HARBOR Bl VD. COSTA MESA --------------- l • I r ~ ---------------------------------------------------J jll\ DAILY PILOT ' Thursda,, Ma, J.4, 1970 ' I ' I l ::. ~ ll_' Meat prices got .you t·rapped? I - ~ , . ' -' . ' ' . . Vvith prices what they are in rriost markets, meat is taking · '. \ 1 more than its fair share of your b_udget .•• the lion's~sh:are ' • to be exact. Exactly the reason FADis such a gre~t escape: l ' . •• . l Because FAD discounts prices, not quality, you can be,sure·you're getting tender, delicious meats. And at prices you'll· be wild -about: . From the jungle of supermarket claims, FAD really stands out. You'll -~ind, . . ' instead -of getting all ca1.1ght up in high prices, FAD lets yau off.cheap. ' . . ' ' --- , l _. ~" I • \ : I ' . \ . . I