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DAILY PILOT
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FRIDAY AFTERNOON,. MAY 15, .1970
VOL 6a. MO. 11" 4 llCTtOMl.,G rAelS ·
Torrid Weekend
Due for County;
Coast Ge~s Fog
Heari'!fJ Ends
Doctor .. F • · · .. Slocum ·to Fac,e a~1ng.'· ort1on .. r ... . . . . . T 1• Jt,;.,1 . .•
1 . · . , ·,, .. ~r ·ill ':'.Jn
Charge Vows to Cont1nlle ~~~~:
horror of a butche(td baby In ,the fretier
Mitcliell Plans
Probe of Deaths
_4.t Ja ckso n State
'VASH INGTON (AP) -Atty. Gen.
.John N. i\i itchell today announced he
has sent government investigators to
determine \\'hether federal laws were
violated in the fa tal shootings of two
students early today on the campus
of Jackson State College in Mississippi.
The students v.·ere killed in a volley
fired by highway patrolmen and city
police outside a women 's dormitory on
the predominantly black campus.
"Whenever there are deaths or serious
Injuries resulting from confrontations
between police and citizens, we intend
to determ ine the facts and take whatever
ection should be taken by the federaJ
government," Mitchell said.
'MlC Justice Department currently is
Investigating the shooting deaths of four
students at Kent State University in
Ohio and six men killed in racial
disorders earlie r this week in Augusta,
Ga .
The Jackson State students were sho\
after police said a miper shot from
a donnitory.
Meet County
Candidates
Wondering about who to vote for?
1'he DA)LY PILOT, in coopera·
lion with the Orange Coast League
of Wo1nen Voters, today offers
some information to help voters
make intelligent se leelions when
they cast ballots for Orange County
Supervi90rs. Orange County School
Board lrustee, and Orange County
Superintende nt of Schools.
Biographies and viewpoint.!I of the
candid ates are published today on
p:ige 3 with supervisorial candi·
dal es presen ted across the top of
the page. Two candidates failed to
respond or provide information in
the school board race. They are
l{oger C. Anderson, and Reg Wood.
Robert D. Peterson did not respond
In the county superintendent of
schools race.
' '
f ackson Police Take Aim
Surgeon Says
He's Testing
State Law On Dorm; 2 Die, 15 Hurt
JACKSON, Mi'3. (UPI) -Two penons
were killed aod 15 others injured today
by a barrage of bulleU fittd onto the
J acbon State Collegt camput by police
who claimed they were returning sniper
fire.
Students at the predomlilanUy black
school vehemently denied there were
any snipers.
"There were no shots fired from the
dorm at a11, and this is one time polite
can't lie and say they were shooting
into the air," declared Henry Paige,
a senior.
"There are bullet holes In all the
windows and there's blood all over our
campus, and blood all over the dorm ,"
he said.
M. B. Pierce, chief of detectives, and
Dmrict Attorney Jack TraYis made l'Oll·
flicting reports.
"There was quite a bit of sniper fir-
ing," said Pierce, "and· there was a
man on the fourth noor of the women's
dormitory."
Travis sakt an •• exten1l ve iD-
vestigation" was being aioducted into
the matter, but that there was "every
indication that a large amount - a
tremendous: amount of sniper fire -
both from the front and the back or
the Officers before any shota were fired
Arsenal Stolen
In San Clemente
A coJ.lection ol expensive rifles,
shotg\lM, pistols and ammunition was
stvl~ from a 1tora1e cabinet ot a San
Clemente office building 'lburaday, 'and
poUce estimab!d the k>Ss at nearly $1,200.
Vinctnt and Anthooy Sanchez, the
ownen of the buildinl' at 1520 Calle
de la Estrella, told police they dil<overed
the loss at 10:10 1.m. ·
The thieves apparenUy forced their
way into the office bulldW,, then pried
open a cabinet door In the area of
lhe building's rest l'OOfN.
The rare guns, Including hi1b-powered
rifles, shotguns ll'Od one upeMive pistol,
were kept in the storage cabinet, the
brothera said.
by the highway patrol. They were under
extreme pressure."
Those killed were identified as James
Earl Green and PhWip L. Gtbbs, 21.
Gibbs Wa! identified as a student, but
official! said they were not .!l\lre Green
was enrolled at the sdlool.
The trouble started a~t 11 p.m. EDT
Thursday when a group of black youths
gathered near the coUege, located a
few blocks from downtown Jacbon, and
began hurling rocks and boWes at pan-
ing cars. It was the second consecutive
night of such violence and state troopers
were on band. National Guardsmen were
standing by in armories.
Students, according to police, drove
a dump truck -wh1cb had been parked
on campus ._ onto the street and ael
(See JACUON, Pait II
Dr. Johl Shriver Gwynne, accused Los
Angeles abortiooist, will be arraigned
in Cen!lal Orange County Munici pal
Court at IO a.m. Monday on two countl of
c,omniitting illegal ·.abortions in Santa
Ana.
The surgeon, arrested th r e e times
previously in hia highly.publicized West
Los Angelea clinic for the same offense,
has vowed to continue his acUvlties ill
his new clinic at 1856 W,; 17th St.
Santa Ana pXice said today they are
equally detmnlned to hall bis operatoa.
Dr. Gwynne was firet arrested Wednes-
day .alterJIOOn by officer• who charge
they saw him performing an abortion
01. a 17-year<ild' Wi9consin girl. He had
allegtdly completed an abortion on
another out-of.town woman and a third
woman from Houston, Tex .• was waiting .
(See ABOR110N, Pl(e ll·
Hot Weekend
Record Warmth for County
Record-breaking temperaturea · were predicted for orange COunty thi!
weekend ~s patches of fog threatened to dampen; orange Coast beaches.
'I1le U.S. Weather Bureau today predicted aunny warm weather with a
high of 98 degree! and low1 in the ·to's for Orange County.
AJ lnland temperature.a threaten to hJt the 100 degree mark prospective
beachgoen are faced with predicted patchs of. rfog along the Co.st, cutttna
visibility down to one-quarter of a mile. •
Orange County Harbor Department spokesman tn Newport Beach said
light winds were erpected with the fog wh.lcb blanketed Lquna Beach and
Newport early today. Water le!llPfl'lture was aet. at 1 warm fl degreet.
The record high for May 15 wu let In 1t87 at-102 degrees, while the
record for May 11, 98 degrees, bu llood lince 1112. WralbenDen &aid the long·
standing reccrd would probably be broken.
Meanwhile, rising temperatum, bolbertome stnog and stroqg winda that
fanned brusb llret coollou«I to plarue the lnllfld areu of Southern California
today, with no relief In sight. .
Temperatures headed hJgbtr than 100 deCrets In tome Inland 1reu and
were in tbe 80'1 in lhe mountaJu.'The utimated high for downtown Loe An-
geles was 15 !or today lfld Saturday. ·
Brush fires hit at least four countia Ttnnday when the Loa Angele!
temperaturt peaked at 89 degree1. . ..
A yellow paD of ey•·lrr!taUnJ smog cut v~lblRty In moat cl the buin
1harply in one of tht h'avtm attad:a of 1tbe year. '
The hot Sanlo Ana "1nd gulll from the clelert 1sve llIUe reUef from
the 1mo1 while l:fringina hlt:h temperatures. . . . .
tor· '1x years, she feared and resented
its birth, begging {or an abortion.
A close confidant testified to this
Thur&d,y, before preliminary hearing
W8! concluded In Harbor Judicial District
Court , with Dr. Wesley G. Slocum, 45,
ordered to !land trial on murder char1es.
The conclu,lon came unexpectedly soon
after croe:s-examjnatlon of a string of
wltnuses who.told of, bizarre. behavior
by both the defendant and his wife.
Tears were frequent and Mrs. Slocum
sobbed as the defense at.tempted to wreck
her crtdiblllty as a witness by detailing
her tortured past.
The witoeaes included the obstetrician
who delivered Cynthia on Dec. 3, 1963,
and the c:oroner'11 surgeon to whom the
baby's remains were delivered. March
26 cl this year.
Godmothers of both older Slocum
Clemente Aide
Wins Contested
LAFC Election
San Clemente city councilman and
fonner mayor Stanley N<rthrup won a
hoUy contested election Thursday to a
twb-year...poa:t on Orange County's Loc1l1
Agency Formation Comn1ission in the
first.ever selection ot a San Clemente
olf1Clal to the powerlw panel.
M::lrthrup, who had served as an
alternate member to the LAFC for the
put. two years, will sqve as a delegate
of the League of California Cities.
'nle JO-year veteran of the San
CJem,ente City 'Council •emerged vlc-
torlws from a field of nine, councilmen.
11nd mayors nominated. It required two
separate runoff •Votes-by ·24 ·voters 10
select the winner.
Northrup won one of lwo posta up for
election -that having the longest tenn,·
to Dec. 10, 1m.
Louis R. Relnhar,dt of Fullerton 1'00.
the ~ ~~yon,1he·~~ wUI last unljlillec.,1,0.,d~I •.. : . ,
All but •_.,meniber of 'the 1M11itl:'s s.1..,ur, ~u .. "' ·:is ·-· .....
prestn al ljle•WAJ1i:m.Or8-1liimoila7 '. night ' ' • '•
The -delegale· lrom the. city ol Los· AlaJnlf9i was the only absen't.ee. ·,
Nonhrup, in the imurance bu!ihess
for maoy years in Sal'J 1 Clemente, has
served' one term ~ the city'a m&)'1;1r. ,
ms ttrm on lhe Chy Cduntil hu
tw~ years to .go.
Re will Jiil the poolUon of former
Villa Par~ Mayor Jamn Workman. The
i)ositklrl ', taken by Reinhardt w 1 s
prevloosly held by Frank Roe of Cypress.
'nle 'ntW~altemate to the WC·w1ll
he Tullln Mayoc Tony.Coco.
Uupters were also called.
Judge Pro Tern WlllJam ™-
de<:)artd be sets reuonlble c~ to
belieye tile crime of murder wa1 com·
mltted and ordered Dr. Slocum arralgrd
May•ZZ In Orange·County Super!« Court.
He refused to aet any ball for release,
clung de a t Jl. threats 111lnst Mrs.
Slocum, deleme attorney Paul Augustine
Jr., and two other physldans\11 lood .........
Augustine arguea that the tey to the
case Is what killed the baby found March
26, while .Dr. Richard Fukumoto, veteran
autopsy surgeon, testified WI la im-
possible to determine.
Brain and other vital tissues were
removed by whoever performed the -
professional autopsy on the mnaJna -
Dr. Slocum -the state contends.
The doctor displayed little COllCtnl dur·
Ing the hearing, but liter.Uy sat on
the ed,qe of his chair u Dr. Fukumoto
discussed the pro[esslooallsm of the job.
"[would have· to llY no," he replied
when Augustine asked if it wae the
work of a highly 1kllled aurgeon wortinc
under ideal conditions.
Chief Deputy District Attorney Jamn
G. Enright, pl'OleCUtor, argued that a
man higb on drug• who has juat killed.
his baby daughter would hardly be work·
ing under· ideal conditon.
'l11e fitlt witness was Dr. Alan V..
Andrews, of Newport Beach, who
delivered Cynthia and 1tnt her and Mn.
Slocum home lrom the hospital in fine
shape. .
"As I recall, abe wu ·•· little d:itap..
pointed -she didn't, have. a IOl1," he a id
when Auguo!lne asked abouflhe moUjer'a
reaction. · · '
He also ,said she. oeglected to1 aet
(See SLOCUM; Pai:e Z) ' ·
Oruge COut
·We•dler
It's aUU 1W11mer 'on the Oranp Coast, no.matter what the calendi.r
~~ Sa~oy should push the
mercury up t~ 95 ln mid-county
aJld ,Jnto' the inlddle, 70'1..,on,. tbe,.,
~· .
' : 'it ,~~ :ail~· !!ljltian/. lllr .. 1
,IMt -. I'/'eri<Ullt Nl:on-1•,.S. I
troops ' into Catnbodio; it · wa p.
co..se oJ . the tfmt bdnQ 1 nol#. 1
·l'ctl• 9. '
•
I
__.,_,.,.
!~ DAILY PU.OT s Frlda,y, M11 15, l9iJ
Troops Clear Highway
' Allies Control Saigon-Phnom Penh Road
84JGQN (UPI) -South Vietnamese
marines and armored units cleared
llretegic Hhttiway 1 from Saigon to
Phnom Pen6 · todly, and Communist
troops in Cambodia were reported
fiCbtlng thelr way northward toward
La In face ol lhe three-w .. k-old allied
offesive. 1'e armored column under command
or LL Geo. Do Cao Tri hid pull«!
up short only three mtles outside Phnom
Penh, with orders not to g.o into the
capital. Tri said he considered the
hi&hW•Y open.
"t 11opo vi.-rt/111,. con "'" Hilll>WIJ I lo rttum lo Vlltn1111," Tri
.aid. 'l'rl llllo aald he bad -vtd a request
for •lltenct from CambodlJO military
au-In Kamponf Cham, IO miles
-of Pllnom Penh, O!ld ht had
•"11 111111\bln ol hit Iliff .. ... wllal
they !)OUl4 .io. 11o aald Klmpona awn
was outside the area of operation but
would crder air strikes there . "if the
situation requires it."
Phnom Penh dispalclles today reported
lighting fn the Kampong Cham .,...
less than 50 miles from an allied drive
into Ille Fishhook pctor of Cambodia.
Correspondents reported · frcm Phnom
Petm thlt Cambodian military authorities
bellevtd the Communiltl wore "fleeln1"
northward in the face er the South
Vietnamese and American offensive a!ld"·
failure or the Communists to hold
Hlibway I between Saison and Phnom
Penh.
The llll>Unl In Cambodia cool the
Unll«l Slates 10 mare mon killed ind
JI wounded '!bursday, brlngina to 115
the numblr ot Americans kilted and
to "8 the number wounded . 111e Cozn..
munlm -,irere reported to have lost 7,100
tlllld ll1d tho SQ\llh ViebWn .... too
dud and 1,700 W01¢1d.
1'rollt Pqe J
SLOCUM HEARING • ••
prenatal care until far advanced in
pregnancy and came to him with two
dilfwenl lnllCllOlll, prior blrlb dlm•I•
and a bad case or toxemia .
Augustine alleges she didn't want the
chUd anyway and became obsessed with
the poaibllity it might kill her er cause
dlmqe during birth u did the oouple'1
•ecood daufll>ter.
"Didn't you say you were afraid you
•
.Frollt Page J
JACKSON ..•
It afire. When a fl.re truck arrived to
ezt1nguiab the blaze,. they saJd, t1nipers
opened fire from Alexander Hall, the
womeu'a dormitory. Paige gave another version o! the
events leading up to the gunfire, He
said police made a sweep down the
street after the fire started, and that
one af!icer stepped from the ranks and
started to addreS! the crowd.
"He started saying, 'Ladles and
gentlemen,'" Paige recalled , "and then
they (police) started shooUng before he
even finisbed. I tlllnk it was just a
massacre. I think it was preplanned.
They came up here with the idea cf
killing."
Coed Eloise Thomas said bedJam broke
out in the women's dorm when the
shooting st~d. She llAid lhe dropped
to the floor and other girls dove on
tap d her.
"All I could hear "'as the tllud or
shooUng and the glaas breaking and
people screaming," she said,
"When I looked out the window t
saw the ambulances coming to take
oot the people who were shot."
About GOO Natlonal Guardsmen, wbc
were on standby, were summooed when
the abooting 11.arted, but' by the Ume
they arrived m the acene, the aunfire
hid ceaaed.
From Page J.
ABORTION •.•
hu tur1.
Santa Ana Police Sgt. Michael Mttchell
obtained a complaint late Thursday on
the two counts of illegal abortions. Dr.
Gwynne had been freed Thur11day an
his own recognizance alter an ap-
pearance before Municipal Judge Philip
Schwab.
The doctor, a naUve of Garden Grove ,
where his parents still live, has said
he Is determlDed to continue the Illegal
operaUons as long as po!!slble. He i1
dellberately challenging the state's e1-
istlng aborUon law as "hypocritical. 01
He has been indicted by the Los
Angeles Ccunty Grand Jury on five
counts of performlng abortions, as the
result of previous raids an bls West
Loi Angeles cUnlc.
DAILY PILOT
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might die and didn't want 'that damn
baby'?," he asked Mrs. Slocum.
0 1 never nld anythln1 aboUt 1 damn
baby," she replied.
Family friend Mrs. Joanne Weir, lip-
reading since she is deaf, testified Mrs.
Slocum was so distraught aver the con·
d1Uon that she vomited.
"l told her she was too Cood to die.
I had toxemia and I was all right,"
said Mrs. Weir, who took Mrs. Slocwn
for her first pren atal visit.
WITNESS TEARFUL
Durlng one point, Mrs. Weir becamo
tearful.
"l want it straight what I say, because
when I leave here, I want to be a b I e to live with myself. I don't want people
twisting what I mean w!th 'vocabulary'
words," she said.
Mn. Cella Rlbera. who wu h t re d
as housekeeper during one of Mrs.
Slocum's periodic hospitalizations for
drinking, said she foond gin bottles and
beer can,, and pills hidden in Mra.
Slocum's bed.
Mrs. Mary Shubin, another helper, said
Mrs. Slocum once barricaded the frcnt
door with tables and chairs and was
terribly afraid of anyone going near
the garage freezer.
Mrs. Nancy Williams, who visited Mrs.
Slocum in Hoag Memorial Hospital, cor-
roborated the rejection of Cynthia, "Did
you say 'you have a beautiful baby'?''
Augustine asked.
"Yes ... She eald she wasn't even
interested in seeing her."
Mrs. Williams, a nurse and godmother
of the second Slocum daughter told the
court she last saw Cynthi a an Feb.
8, 1964 and later asked aboot her.
"I've found a place to keep her," she
qu oted Mrs. Slocum as saying.
A fonner next-door neighbor, Mrs.
Barbara Kearl, now of Newport Beach,
said Mrs. Slocum came to her home
highly intoxicated in November, 1966, and
gave her $15,000 in cashier's checks
for safekeeping.
Mrs. Kearl th en gave them to
Augustine, who drove Mrs. Slocum tG
Metropolitan State Hospital, where she
was confined for a Ume.
HYou don't know where she got this
money?" asked Enright during cross-ex·
amlnatlon.
"All I know Is she said It Wall all
she had in the world," replied Mrs.
Kearl.
MORE TESTIMONY
A former medical aecretary, WIOIXla
S. Solorio, testified that Dr. Slocum ac-
cused his wife of stealing $33 ,000 and
said Mrs. Slocum rarely let any other
personnel handle money.
"Were you aware Or. Slocum accused
you of stealing money too?" Enright
pressed.
"No," she replied.
"l have nothing further," he said.
Augustine rested his case for the
defense at 4:07 p.m .. after seeing his
own wife Darlene subpoenaed by the
prosecution u a witness.
She said Dr. Slocum believed a Mafia-
type syndicate was out to kill him and
that he threatened on Feb. 7, 1969 to
kill Augustine and two doctors he believ·
ed were In on the alleged plot.
Jealous Husband
Gets Six Months
In Wife's Death
A distraught husband whose wlfe died
a!I a result of the blow he gave her
, when he found her tn a parked car
with ancther mau was sentenced Thurs.-
day to six months in Orange COunty
Jail.
Superior Court Judge James F, Judge
o:dered thnt j11U term and thrte years
probation for Amado E. Rodriguez, 29,
or Santa Ana. Rodrigue.: had earUer
pleaded guilty to reduced charges of
involuntary manslaughter.
Rodriguei, a Cuban refugee who tn•
dured a particularly harro .... ·ing escape
frcm his Cistro-eon trolled homeland, was
arrested last May 21 following his attack
Ql bis 24-year-old estranged wife,
Martha. outside her apartment.
Officers said Rodr iguez had been on
the way l.o visit bis wife when he saw
her making love with another man In
a parked car. Rod riguez, poUce reports
state. pulled her from tho car, struck
her nnd knocked her to the slde .... ·a!k.
~1rs. Rodriguez was dead on arrival
al• nearby hospital.
Tbe high number of casualties and
the loss of vast quan11tles «. food, am-
munition and other supplie. appeared
to be hurUni tho Conununllls badly.
Dispatches from the LacUan capital of
Vientiane and the Cambodlau capital ot
Phnom Penh lndieated loss of food sup.
plies was felt most by the Cornmunl!ts.
Cambodian military sources in Phnom
Penh reported fl&~tln& in the Kratie,
Stung Trtng and !Amphat .,..., IJ1d 1aJd
the Communists appeared to be opening
an escape route into Laos. Vientiane
dispatches reported increased Com-
munist activity in Southern Laos just
north of thia rea,ion.
Prince Souvaima Phowna of Laos sald
earlier in the week be feared a com-.
munist offeni'1ve in this area to replenlsb
supplies of rice Jolt in Cambodia. Vien-
tiane dispatches today rtpOrted fighting
around Paksong and Saravane, both
cities in southern Laos.
~ northward Commu.nl.lt movement
appeared pnerally alOll( the Mekq
River which runs almost due north from
the tawn of Kratie, 100 miles northeast
of Phnom Penh, into Laos. This is about
100 miles west of the South Vietnamese
border where 11 allied thrusts have
penetrated Into Cambodia.
'ltlere was 11J01n8 ipeCU].aUon in Phnom
Penh that the Communists i n
northeostem Cambodia mlfll>I be trying
to aet up a base for a rump government
headed by ousted Prince Norodom
Sihanouk. '"111 followed a brOadcast by
Pelting Radio that Sihanouk and his
cabinet members were plannlnl to return
to Cambodia.
County War Hero
Nabbed 01.1 Pot
Import Charge
An Orange Ccunty u·servlceman,
holder ol America'• third-highest medal
for combat heroism has been charged
with importing large quantities of potent
Asian marijuana from Vietnam with the
aid of buddies and dealing it from his
Cypress home.
~1ichacl J. Mokler, 23, Of 9080 Bloom·
field St., was arrested Wedntsday and
is free on $1,815 ball ~Ing a May
22 court arraignment, authorities disck>s-
ed.
He was booked on charges of importing
marijuana; pcissessing marijuana with
the intent to sell and possessing mari·
juana and dangerous drugs wtth the
iiitent to sell.
InveaUgaton said 18 poonds ct finely
cured marijuana -considered twice
as powerful as that grown in Mexico
or 'Ameri c a -along with 2,000
amphetamine tablets were seized.
The month-long investigation included
agents of the Anny's C r 1 m i n 1 I
Tnvestlgatlon Division (CID), Cypress
Police and Orange County Sheriff's
deputies.
They said Mokler, a tonner sergeant
and forwa rd air ccntroller with the Ninth
Infantry Division, is believed to have
been imporUng since last December
when he was discharged.
Orange County Sheriff's Capt. James
Broadbelt estimated Mokler may have
brought In more than 100 pounds of
marijuana -worth $2{l an ounce -
selling It for ridiculously low rates based
on the current market.
The contraband seized wu finely
manicured, er broken dawn Into small
bits and flakes for easy smoking.
''It should have been worth twice as
much as he wu getting," said . Al
Newhart, investigator for the sheriff's
department.
AuthoriUes at Ft. MacArthur were ti!>
ped off by the CID after an lnve1Ug1Uon
involving a GI in Mokler 's old ouUlt
who wu suspected of malling five to
eight JX'Und packages of pot by parcel
po.st
"We found nothing to Indicate he was
making connections through any or the
mlll tary installations," sald Chief War·
rant Ofllcer Lionel Stewart.
Mokler is an apprentice electrician
and part.time student at Cyprm Junior
College, married and with a 2-year-old
son, according to investigators.
He was honorably discharged last Dec.
9 after winnln1 the Silver Star, Bronie
Star, and a number of other American
and Vietnam military service medals
tor his war duty,
Armed Forces
Rites Canceled
WASHINGTON (AP) -Military
pilrticipation has been cai-.:::oled in at
least 10 Armed Forcea Day obs..>rvances
around the country, the Pt:itagon
reported today.
A apokesman said almilar canctllaUona
may have been ordered etaewhere and
not yet reported to the Defense Depart-
ment. The spokesmlTI taid local com-
mandel'l have a responsibility for
deciding wheU1er troops from their in-
stallations will take part ln Armed
ForetS Day events.
Antiwar groups have promised to
demonstrnte ln the vicinity or military
bases during the observance, 'o\'blch
centers on the coming weekend.
Meanwhile, the Pentagon spokesmaa
said about riO deftme officials, military
and civilian, have been scheduled to
make Anned Forces Day speeches over
a period of several days and that he
knows ol none bein& canceled.
UPI T1l1phol1
Fretting for Peace
Former Army sergeant C. A. Dees, now a student at North Carolina
~late University in Raliegh, was amOng 60 male students participat-
ing in a ''fleece for peace" hair cutting movement. The hair will be
stuffed in a dove-shaped pillow and mailed to President Nix on.
Topless Bar Proponent
Admits Control Needed
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The atlorney I suggest you deal with il directly."
credited with legalizing topless ba rs six He opposed a proposed regulation that
years ago in San Francisco says maybe would require performers to be at least
there ahould be regulations to keep bars 15 feet from the neares t patron. lnstead
from going beyond total nudity. he suggested , "you might adopt a precise
"There ls a limit," Edward Flei.shell rule to get rid of the athletic patron"
told the Alcoholic Beverage Control who wants to take part in the
Board Thursday. And with totally nude performance.
entei:ta!n~~s "l think we have reached Other regulations being considered by
the 11~!, be added. the ABC board in a three-day hearing
Fl~1~hel.l ~peed .that the "audience ,. would ban topless waitresses and control
partiCJpat1on described by Los Allgeles the films some bars use between
area cfficers might be going too far, performances or instead a f live en·
but "if the evil is in the touching. tertainment.
Eco11omic
Statistics
S1'owGloom
WASHINGTON (U PI) -The Nixon
administration's effort to calm a neat
pinic on Wall Street has been jarred
by some of the gloomiest eccnomic
statistics in a decade.
As Pre,11ent Nixon huddled with hll
economic strategists at the White Hou se
Thursday, the government reported the
deepset economic slump since the 1960
recession and the worst three-month
period of inflation slnce the Korean War.
In a period or less than three hours,
government statisticans revealed:
-Revised information showed the
economy's output of goods and services
declined at an annual rate of 3 percent
In the first qu.arter o! this year, a
i;lump much worse than the 1.5 percent
drop reported . earller an the baals of
prelimltlary figures, and the steepest
dip since 1960.
-The Gross National Product (G NP)
price index -the broadest based
measure of inflation -increued .;i.t
an annual rate of 8.25 percent ln the
January-through-March p e r 1 ad , the
sharpest increase since the first quarter
of 1951.
-Industrial production, a kty econcmlc
be\lv;ether, declined in April for the
eighth time in the past nine months.
The Federal Reserve said the April lnde1
was 170.4 percent of the 1957·59 base
period , down 0.4 percent from March
and down sharply from the 198.7 peak
set last J uly.
-Personal income or all Americans
increased in April because of retroacttve
boosts in social security benefits and·
federal pay. With<lut those two factors,
income would have declined for the first
tim e in 4Yz years.
-After-tax corporate profits were at
1 seaSC>nally adjusted annual rate cl.
$48 billion in the first quarter of this
year, dawn $3 billion from the previous
quarter.
-The nation's ba lance of payments,
measuring business tra·osactions between
the United States and the rest Of the
world. shewed a deficit cf $1.7 billion
in the first quarter, a sharp deterioration
from the $532 million surplus recorded
in the last quarter of 1969.
The GNP price index \\.'as pushed up
by the retroactlve federal pay raille.
But even excluding the efre~ of this
boost, the inflation rate for the first
quarter was 5.25 percent, the highest
of any recent quarter except for the
highly inflatiooary seco nd quarter of last
year.
The stock market c<1ntinued It,,.
dramatic plunge, with the key Dow Jones
industrial average dropping another 9.05
to 684.79.
.
DRAPERY
SALE!
CUSTOM MADE WITH A WIDE SELECTION OF
QUALITY INTERIOR DESIGN FABR ICS. AS MUCH
AS ~O ~. OFF ON EXC ELLENT DESIGN FABRICS,
!~ke 1dv1nt19e of an opportunity to m~ke dr11tic. savings on cu•tom made qu1llty draperies. Whether
it I • new home fhet needs d rop1n9 or 1u1t replacin g a worn pair, stop in and check the 11vin91.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
7td llNl11tJd. "
NI W-0RT BEACH
1727 Wostcllff Dr., 642·2050
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
LAGUNA BEACH Profe1sion1I In terior 345 North Coast Hwy. 494-65$1
Designer• Avel11bl1-AID OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
!ttlone T•ll frff Mott •f Otcillt• Ca1111ty l40·l26J
I
.I
••
•
7
'
' Huntington •eaeh ~
VOL 63, NO. 116, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES \
• 0 ICC
Hot Weekend
Rec.ord Warmth .for County
Record-breaking temperatures were predicted for Orange County this
weekend as patches of fog threatened to dampen Orange Coast beaches.
The U.S. Weather Bureau today predicted sunny warm. weather with a
high of 96 degrees and Jows in the 60's for Orange County.
As inland temperatures threaten to hit the 100 degree mark prospecti ve
beachgoers are faced with predicted patchs of fog along the C(last, cutting
visibility down to one-quarter of a mile.
Orange County Harbor Department spokesman in Newport Beach said
light winds were expected with the fog which blankeled Laguna Beach and
Newport early today. Water temperature was set at a warm 61 degrees.
The record high for May JS was set in 1967 at 102 degrees, while the
record for May 16, 96 degrees, has stood since 1892. Weathermen said the Jong·
standing record would probably be broken.
Meanwhile, rising temperatures, bothersome smog and strong winds that
fanned brush fires continued to plague the inland areas of Southern California
today, with no relief in sight.
Temperatures headed higher than 100 degrees in some inland areas and
were in the &O's in the mountains. The estimated high for downtown Los An·
geles was 95 for today and Saturday.
Brush fires hit at least four counties Thursday when the Los Angeles
temperature peaked at 89 degrees. •
A yellow pall or eye-irritating smog cut visibility in most of the basin
sharply in one of the heaviest attacks of the year.
The hot Santa Ana wind gusts from the desert gave little relief from
the smog while bringing high temperatures.
Gloomy Statistics Belie
Nixon Economic Stand
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon
administration's effort to calm a near
panic on Wall Street has been jarred
·by some of the gloomiest economic
statistics in a decade.
As President Nixon huddled with his
economic strategists at the White House
Thursday, the government reported the
deepset .economic slump since I.he 1960
Inaugm·al Ball
To End Valley
Culture Week
Fountain Valley's firs t official week
()[ culture will wind up Saturday and Sund~y with the Mayor's Inaugural Bail,
a pioneer picnic and a bus tour of
the city.
A long list of special events is also
scheduled at Uie civic center, IO'ZOO Slater
Ave .. for Saturday.
A flower show, hobby show, exhibits
from the city's junior clubs, club in-
formation and a production of the junior
C"ommunity theater are on tap from
10 a.m. to S p.m.
At 8 p.m. a bridge tournament will
be held in the community center and
"The Crucibl e," will be put on by Foun-
tain Valley High School drama students
at the high school.
The drama department of Los Amigos
High School will present "Out or the
Frying Pan," at 8 p.m. at the school.
The Mayor's ball starts at 8:30 p.m.
in the community center and at 9 p.m.
the Fountain Valley Jaycettes will
present the city with a piano for the
center. Sunday's events include repeats of the
hobby shows, a pioneer picnic at noon,
bus tours of the city from I p.m. to
3 p.m., and various dancers and sh?~s
from 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the c1v1c
center.
recession and the worst three-month
per iod of mnation since the Korean War.
In a period of less than thr111 hours,
government statisticans reve aled':
-Revised informatio1:1 sliowed the
economy's output of goods and services
declined at an annual rate of 3 percent
in the first quarter of this year, a
slump much worse than th~ 1.5 percent
drop reported earlier on the basis (If
preliminary figures, and the steepest
dip since 1960.
-The Gross National Product (GNP)
price ind<!x -the broadest based
measure of inflation -increased at •
an annual rate of 6.25 percent in the
January.-through-March period, the
sharpest increase since the first quarter
of 1951.
-In dustrial production, a key economic
beilwether, declined in April for the
eighth time in the past nine months.
The Federal Reserve said the April index
wa s 170.4 percent of the 1957·59 base
period, down 0.4 percent from March
and down sharpl y from the 198.7 peak
se~ last July.
-Personal income of all Americans
increased in April because of retroactive
boosts in social security benefits and
Iederal pay. Without those two factor s,
income would have declined for the first
time in 41/:i years.
-After-tax corporate profiL<; were al
a seasonally adjusted annual rate of
$46 billion in the first quarter of this
year, down $3 billion from the previous
quarter.
-The nation's balance of payments,
measuring business transactions between
the United States and the rest of the
world, showed a deficit of $J.7 billion
in the first quarter, a sharp deterioration
from the $532 million surplus recorded
in the last quarter of 1969.
The GNP price index was pushed up
by the retroactive federal pay raise.
Sewage
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF6~N1A -F!llDAY, 11MAY J,5, 1970
• • I •
' Youth Gets
Major Role
At Cong1·ess
Youth will get its say in Hunth1~ton
Beach's third annual Commun 1 t y
Congress at Golden West College Satur·
day.
Five students will join nearly 100 com·
munity leaaers in a series of day-Jong
round-table di scussions.
The students are To11y Bonwell, Alan
Delahoyde, Sunshine Fickling, Michael
Tracy and Harry Zatkowsky, all of
Golden West College.
The congress, sponsored by lhe
chamber of commerce, is being handled
by the American Management Associa·
lion which has developed a discussion
format called .. Operation Dialogue.'"
A representative from the American
Management Association will moderate
five separate discussion groups , with
eaach group having representatives drom
<lif!erent sections of the community.
JWgistration will begin al 9:30 a.m.
and the congress will continue until t
p.m.
In addition to tile students, those taking
part will include:
William J. Back, Ted Bartlett, Mrs.
<
Charlene Bauer, Dr. Ralph Bauer,
Ronald C. Bauer, Robert Bazil, Dr. John
Bentley, Michael Bokor, Don Bonfa, Mrs.
R. Dudley Boyce, Dudley R. Boyce,
Mrs, -Tbomas Brod~ric;ko Cris C. Cris,
Rod Cruse, Pat Downey, Henry Duke,
Alan Dirkin, Mrs. Heory Duke;_,'~i
Ralph DeKoven, George Farquhar, Dr.
Max Forney, William Fosler, Mrs.
Norma Gibbs, Gary Haas, GMSon '
Hatch, Mrs. Stanley Hettinga, Mrs. Ben·
jamin Jones, Walter JOhnson, Ralph C.
Kiser, Ed Kerins, Al Klingensmlth, Ray·
mond Kokowicz, and George Lusk.
Dennis Mangers, A. C. Marion. Kent
McC!ish , Doyle Miller, Donald Mitchell,
r..t:rs. Jean Morehouse, Rudi Niedzielski,
Mrs. Bernard O'Loughlin, Ray Picard,
Joseph Ribal, Mrs. Michael Roach,
Pastor Charles ROse, Mrs. David Sariego,
R. M. Schmidt, Mrs. Mamie Seltzer,
Tom Severns, Jim Shepherd, Mayor
Donald Shipley, Roger Slates, Paul L.
Smith, Mrs. Helen Stewart, Robert
Su take.
Robert Tarzian, Larry E. Tollefson,
(See CONGRESS, Page %)
Ne ·w Queen Due
For Huntington
Connie Jo Pfister will give up her
Miss Huntington Beach crown Saturday
night to one of 18 young beauties seeking
the title for 1970.71.
The pageant starts at 8 p.m. in the
l~untington Beach High S c h o o I
auditorium.
Gordon Wheatley will again serve as
master of ceremonies in the city's sixth
annual beauty pageant.
The Women's Division or the Hun·
tington Beach Chamber of Commerce
is sponsoring the event. Judges are
televisio1 personalities Stariley and Barry
Livingstone and professional football
player Jon Kilgore.
Entertainment will be provided by the
.special stage band of Huntington Beach
High School.
to Fire
~
WO u -· .
U'ITI .......
Fleecln.g for Peace
Former ArmY sergeant C. A. Dees. now a student at North Carolina
State University in Ra1eigh, was among 60 male students participat·
ing in a "fleece for peace" hair cutting movement. The hair will be
stuffed in a dove-shaped pillow and mailed to P.resi~ent Nixon.
Youth Group Seems Likely
To Get $3,000 From City
·tt looks like the Youth Coalition Com-
mittee will get the $3,000 it want$ from
the City of Huntington Beach to stage a
summer musicilL
Jim Sampson, lS..year-i>ld vice chair-
man of the YCC, took the group's case
to the council ag&in Wednesday night and
submitted a det.ailed report on how the
money would be SP.Cat. ·
Only four councilmen were present at
the meeting -it was a budget session
with city department heads -but the
c<insensus was that the $3,CNXI would be
a "sound investment." Sampson will make another request for
the ·money at a full council meeting on
Monday.
The Youth Coalition is planning to
stage either "The King and I," "Music
Man," or "West Side Story" this sum·
mer. ·Rick Schr:aler. a Los Alamitos
teacher. will be hired as the producer.
SlfnpSon told the councllmen that Sil·
ar.ies !or professional help will total
$1.500, royalties.and rentals will be $400
Station
and the sets $850.
Last year the Youth Coalition pre·
sented "How to Succeed in Business
Without Really Trying" and it lost more
than $1,100, but Sampson told the council
that the organizers were anxious to start
earlier this year and that with more and
better advanced publicity the show should
at least break even. The councilmen
agreed.
"I don't see how you can miss:' Mrs.
Norma Gibbs said.
After some questioning on how they
had projected ticket receipls, Council·
man Al Coen, who had previously criti·
cized the Jac k of a cost breakdown by
the Youth Coalition, indicated that he
was satisfied ..,.ith Sampson's present.a-·
tion. He urged, boy;ever, that the group
should consider itself a city department
and submit a 'budget every year.
When the YOuth· Coalition was formed
last year, the ·council allocated it a bUd·
get of $10,000. Brander Castle, ass.istant
city adminJStrator. said there was about
$2.200 remaining in the account.
Meet County
Candidates Huntington Solves Harbour's S1nell -Prob1.em
Asked why the group wanted to stage
a big musical production that would . re-
'JUire profession al help, Sampson replied,
"We want something of high callber.
Anyone can put on a rinky-dink play -:
we want something that's a challenge.
something that will hold the interest Of
young people." Mrs. Ruth Brazney, an adult adviser,
said that no volunteers had come for·
ward to produce the show. "li W& could ,
find someOne· to be1p 'us we ·would· be
delighted."
Wondering about who to vote
for? The DAILY PILOT, in cooper a•
Uo• with the Orange Coast League
of Women Voters, today offers
some iRformation to help voters
make intelligent selections when
Uiey cast ballots for Orange County
Supervisors, Orange County School
Board trustee, and Orange County
Superintendent of Schools.
Biographies and viewpcints of the
candidates are published today on
page 3 with superviso rial candi·
dates presented across the top of
the page. Two candidates failed to
respond or provide information in
the school board ruce. They are
Roger C. Anderson, and Reg Wood.
Robert o. Peterson did not respond
In the county superintendent of
schools race.
•
By ALAN DIRKIN
Of tM 0.llY '"'' Steff
Huntington Beach plans to gain a fire
station by .buying the "Honey Pot" -
''>fluntington Harbour residents' sardonic
name for the Sunset Sanitary District's
sewage treatment plant.
It will cost about $115,000 and the
city council "·ill be asked to approve
the action Monday. The move is regarded
as tbe final solu tion to the long-drawn
controversy over obnoxious odors from
lhe plant.
"The proposal is to pay about $95,000
for acquisition of the 13 acres the plant
stands on and then demolish it for a
rough cost of another $20,000." City
Engineer Bill llartge explained this
morning. "The cily's long-term USfl for
the property would be as a fire station.''
That will put the lid w the "honey
I
Pot," but what will happen lo the
sewage? Hartge said that nearby city
lines will be connected to the plant
and the sewage will be sent two and
one hall miles to a county treatment
pl ant in Fountain Valley.
Orange County Sanitation District
directors agreed to thi s arrangement
at a meeting earlier this week.
Harlge said that the $95,CNXI the Sunset
Sani1-ry District "'ou ld receive from
rie city would be pllid to the county
by the district for the cost of treating
th e sewage.
''It's a tortunille coincidence that the
value of the property i11 roughly the
samt as the 1coonty.'s charge," Hartge
commented.
The plant.. north of Pacific Coa!!l
Highway 11nd e~ of Wamcr ·Avenue,
has been lhe ful>Ject or controversy ,
for sev~ral ·years, with: Huntington
Harbour residents 1 complalnlq abOut ·
unpleasant ·od'cirs .•-einanatlng from the
facility.
Two month$: ..ago. the Su~t1 Sanitary
Distri~:w~ orct.:r~ ,to lhut down ,the
plant afttr members of the California
Regional Water. Qoality Control Board
ruled that U was the cause of the
foul odors.
The City of ltunUngton Buch's pipe-
lioes: pass in front or lhe facility along
Warner' Avenue. Hartge esUmated that
only 80 feet of pipe· wlll be needed lO
m~kt 'the necessary collPflCt\on. ,Ai~ed. why .the comectlon couldn'\ have 1heen made years ago, the enalneer
'replied, "The 1problem , hasn't betn
tephn~1J 10,mucb a.s one:.involvina en·
tiUes."
.
T~p ·:Prize .Won
By Jeff Grider '
Jeff Gr\der. an eighth iradet at Mailne
View School. Huntington Beach, is the
sweepstakes win ner in the junior phyalca1
science division of the 15th IMual
Orange Coun ty Science Falt.
There were mOTt 'than 200 .entries
In the senior and junior (elementary)·
division., of the fair, held at Santa Ana
Junior College. The rtsulU: wtre ai\.-
nounced Thursday.
Jell, 13, wait with a project that sbowa
bow paper can.be mad< wt of, wood.
, Today's Flnal
. I
N:.Y. Stocks
TEN CENTS
.t
en· s
Mississippi
.
Officers Say
Snipers Shot
JACKSON, Miss. (U PI) -Two persons
were killed and 15 others injured today
by a barrage of bullets fired onto the
J ackson State College campus by police
who claimed they were returning sniper
fire.
Studenb at the predominantly black
achool vehernent!y denied there were
any snipers.
''There were no shots fired from the
donn at all, and this is one time police
can't lie and say they were shooting
into the air," declared Henry Paige,
a senior.
"There art bullet holes in all the
windows and there's blood all over our -...
campus, and blood all over the dorm,"
he said.
~· B. Pierce, chief of detectives, and
District Attorney Jack Travis made COil·
fllcUng reports.
"There was quite a bit of sniper fir!'
Ing," sai d Pierce, "and .there was a
man on the fourth floor of th~ women's
donnitory,"
Travis said an ••extensiv e ii\·
vestigation" was being conducted into
the matter, but that there was "every
indication that a large amount -a
tremendous amount of sniper fire -
both from the front and the back or
the officers before any shots were fired
by the highway patrol. They were under
extreme preaaure."
Those killed Were idenUfied as James
Earl Green and Phillip L. Gibbs. 21.
Gibbs was ldenUfled as a student, but
0Uk:ial1 said they were not sure Green
Wis enrolled at the school.
The trouble started about 11 p.m. EDT
Tbur~ay when a group of black youths
gathered near the college, located a
few. blocks from downtown Jaclson, .and
began hurling rocks and bottles at pass.-
ing cars. It was the second consecutive
riight of such vkllence.and state troopers
were on hand. National Guardsmen were
standing by ln_armories.
Students, according to police. drove
a dump truck -which tiad been P4i'ked
on campus -onto the street and set
it afire. ·
e'xtinguish the blaze, they said, snipers
opened fire from Alexander Hall, the
women's dormitory.
Paige gave ano!.her version of the
events leading up to the gunfire. He
said police made a sweep down the
street after the fire started, and that
one officer stepped from the ranks and
started to address the crowd.
"He started saying, 'Ladies and
gentlemen,'" Paige recalled, "and then
they (police) started shooti ng before he
even finished. I think it was just a
massacre. I think it was preplanned.
They came up here with the idea of
killing."
Coed Eloise Thomas said bedlam broke
out in the women's dorm When the
shooting started. She said she dropped
(Set JACKSON, Page !)
STOCK .JIARKET
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
regained all its early strength ln fnod·
erate. trading this afternoon, and analysts
said !he Jong.awaited "bottoming" ac·
tion migh t be at hand. (See quotations .
Pages 20-21 ).
Orange Coast
Weather
lt's still summer·on the Orange
Coast; no matter what the calendar
s~s. Saturday should push tht
mercury up to 95 in mid-county
and into tbe nt1ddle 70's on the
coast.
INSmE TODAY
It wasn't any m.IHtarv iftrtaf
t1aat made President Nixon aend
troops into Combodto; it wa.s a
case of the time being right.
Page 9.
, l
'
I·
•
2 DAILY PlLDl "
SA Panther
Nears Jury
A ~ Court jury wu urged !Oday
to ~ject defense arguments "that sttm·
ed bent on proving that everybody exctpt
Arthur Dewitte League should be
•uspoclod ol killing police officer Nelson
Sasscer."
Aatstam District Attorney Everett
Dickey offered that reprimand to the
defense in a Unal argument that will
be followed by Judge Samuel Dreizen's
instructions to the jury. The panel will
then retire, posaibly this afternoon, to
coosider its verdict in the l~week trial
of the accused Black Panther.
Dickey, who Is making the final pro-
secution argument of his career -he
will take his recenUy created seat on
the Harbor Judicial District Court bench
with the conclusion of the League trial
-asked the jury to discount what
he called the "strong Inference that
(prOlleCUtion witness) Rick Tice actually
murdered the 24-year-old palrolman" last
June 4.
"We have readily conceded," Oicltey
aaid, "that Rick Tice and another prG-
secution witnes! have lied under oath
on more ·1.'"~ .. "'le occasion. But his
+ ~stimony 1n this trial is backed by
the testimony of more than 30 witnesses
and we think that we have proved OW'
case even without what Rick Tice had
to ttll us. ..
League. 21, is accused or shooting
officer Sasscer shortly after t b e
patrolman halted the Black Panther and
a companion and demanded Iden.
UficaUon. A 15-year-old witness identified
by the prosecution u League's eompan·
ion has testified that League shot the offj..
""' and that the pair then fled le1vlng
the patrolman dying ln the gutter.
Judge Drdun will send the jury to
the jury room immediately after reading
instructions and the panel will remain
there untll it reaches a verdict.
Arrangements have been made for
the jury to be closeted al night jn
guarded mote] rooms and those at·
rangements will ertecd throughout the
weekend.
Gala Ceremonies
Set for Opening
Of Valley. School
A Methodist bl!hop, a U.S. Marine
band and a U.S. Representative will
help open the doors al Cox School In
Fountain Valley Wednelday night.
Bi.ahop Gerald Kennedy of the United
Methodist ()iurch will speak on "Our
Home and School Relations" as acbool
an deity officials gather at 7:30 p.m. to
dedicate the newest addition to the
Fountain Valley School District.
The fll>.plece U.S. Marine Corps Band
from Et Toro wilt open the program with
a concert. American Oqs will be given
to tho,. school by Rep. Richard T. HaMa
(D-W4itin!Jl!lerl and Joseph Lltchenleld,
senlor vice commander of the Jewish
War Veterans, PO&t 780.
Coz School, at 17615 Los Jardines East,
already is serving students.
Harold Brown, chairman oC the Foun-
tain Valley Board ol Trustees, will be
master of ceremonl<s. He will Introduce
memben of the Jamet1 IL Cox family,
'" wbom !be llCbool ls llilned.
Front r.,,e l
CONGRESS •..
Mrt. Irving Tucker, Mrs. Jack 'I\Jrk,
Mrs. Gilbert Turnbull, Harry Turner,
Mrs. Carole Wall. Howard Warner, Mat-
thew Weyuftr, George Williams, C. E.
.. Bill" Woods, Norman Worthy, Waller
F. Young, Jay Mastroianni, Pete Horton,
Jack Higley, and Dr. Clarence Hall.
DAILY PILOT
0AANOI COAST l'Ull.1~1MG COMl'AICT
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l'n•ldefll ....,. "-llMW
·J•,k R. Cvrley
E<lilOI'
lJIO"'t' A.. Muqthi11•
Mt!!'tlng EdllOI"
Albert W. let••
"'"°''-'' Editor
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'
HARDWARE HOLDERS -Winners in Fountain
Valley School District's speech tournament include
(from left) Sue Laginess, 13; Wendy Coleman, 13;
Dave Reast, 13, and Chris Bent, 14 . Another winner
John Thompson , 14, didn't make the photo. '
OV Offering Housewives
Part-time Teaching Jobs
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
ot ... Dlllr l'tttl '""
WJth Motben' Day behind us, the
OCtan View Scbool Di&trlct has come
up with an idea to put aome housewives
to work -INt only part..llme and only
il they're bored with their domestic
chom.
1be achools' offer 111 to women
fcrtunate enou&h to possess a teaching
credential: part time paid instruction
at the elementary school level.
''Thil community has a wealth or
teacblng talent which could be utilized
in almo9t every area,'' said James .
Carvell. the district's a 11s1 st ant
superintendent. ''And it includes those
f<achen wbo, altboogb they attn't look·
tng for full-time employment, are in·
-ln teacil!n(I °"' to -boon a day."
AJthougb part-time teaching ls a
rela\.tvely untried concept in Orange
County schools, Ocean View already
employs two part-time teachers and Is
looking for more.
One of them Js Mrs. Carol Roach,
who teaches reading to Slh grade pupils
at Marine View School.
The nwther of one child and holder
of a master's degree, she says she
felt "unneeded" after quitting teat'hlng
for about a year.
"You begin to look for outsid e stimula-
tion after you've gotten into the rut
of drinking coffee with the umt
neigbborl/' she explained.
"There att a lol of women out there
we could use as a resource. t know
they would rather be part-time teachers
Entries Pour In
For 4tl1 Parade
Entries for the annual Huntington
Beach Fourlh of July Parade continue
to pour In from all over Southern Cali-
fornia with 1,000 participants already
signed up.
The tally Includes seven bands, seven
floats and more than 60 separate en-
tries.
The Huntington Beach Jaycees, orgallr
izers of the lndependenct Day spectacle,
expect Lo double that in the intervening
months.
This year's theme ls "Achievements
of OUr Amerlcan Youth," and salutes
eight area!! of achievemt.nt by the yoWlg.
er generation.
These Include the arts and sciences,
community aervlce, patriotism, educa·
tion, religion, history and sports.
Television newscaster George Putnam
will be one of the main attractltions on
his horse "Diamond," adorned with
$51),000 worth of silver trappings.
Also entered this year is the Kings-
men Drum and Bugle Corps of Lo&
Alamitos.
The parade beglns at 11 a.m. at Lake
Park and threads lta way through the
downtown area .
It will be followed by a free hour-loog
fire"Works show from the •luntlngton
Beach pier at dusk.
From Page l
JACKSON .••
to the floor and other girls dove on
top of her.
"All I could hear was the thud of
shooting and the glass brtaklng and
people 5CTeamlng," she said.
"When J looked out the window l
saw the ambulancts coming io Lake
out the people who were shot."
About MIO NaUonal Guardsmen, who
were on standby, wert summoned when
the ahooting atarted, but by the Ume
they arrived GD the actne, the gunfire
had ceased •
than substitutes who might be called
up at six o'clock in the morning to
go to work."
Teaching -even if only a limited
amount -Mrs. Roach says provides
immeasurable satislactlon.
"Parents, you know, spend a lot of
money to send their daughters to school.
Most of them become housewives. But
somehow just being a good wife and
mother isn't enough."'
"A woman needs to get out of the
household and assume a role where she
can do some good," Mrs. Roach added.
Inquiries from women · who would like
to do part.time reaching are invited
by the school district, according to A.Mt.
Supt. Carvell. They wlll be used for
actual instructional purposes and will
work in tandem with full-time teachers
and teacher aides.
Qualifications for the part-time teacher
include a reguJar California teaching
credential and a special teaching com·
petency in at least one elementary schoo l
subject.
Pay will be based on the regular
teachers' salary schedule.
Baseball League
Signups Slated
On 2 Saturdays
Recreation and Parks Department
boy1 baseball leagues in Huntington
Beach will form on the next two Satur·
days. May 16 and 2.'J, at high schools in
the city. Play begins on June 15.
Signups for the baseball leaguea for
boys in 7th and 8th grades will be taken
at 9 a.m. at Marina, Edison and Hunt·
ington Beach High Schools.
Boys must have a birth certificate and
$6.25 for purchase of team shirt. pants
and socks at time of signup.
Boys also must buv their own dark
blue baseball cap. Boys who wish to
pitch must not reach their 15th birthday
until after Dec. I for "A" League.
Youngsters In 5th and 6th grades may
sign up for "8" League play at the
same times and will need the same
amount of money and a birth certificate.
They must not reach their 13th birthday
by Dec. I if they wish to pitch.
Play begins June IS and boys will be
playing once or twice a y,·eek at 5 p.m.
From signup time until play begins
the boys will play practice games on
Saturdays.
In addition to the high schools, boy!
may sign up at the Re-creation Center,
17th and Orange Avenue, Wardlow
School, Gr~ Park, Murdy Park, Eader
School and Edl.son High School.
Deborah McCann
Center's 'Student'
Deborah McCann, a senior at Rancho
Alamitos High School in Garden Grove.
captured the $500 rirst place award
Thursday night as the Huntington Center
"student of the year."
Takln' _second, and a $50 cash prize,
was Alicia Cuevas of Pacifica High
also in Garden Grove. '
Eight othtr high school seniors won
$25 cash priies as merchants in the
large Huntington Beach shopping center
honored top scholars ln lhe HunUngton
Beach Union High and Garden Grove
Unified school districts.
The eight runnersup were :
Glenn Tosh. Edison High, Huntington
Beach ; Joyce Horn. Fountain VaUey
lflgh ; Teresa Dole.~hal. Huntington Beach
High: Cynthia Johnson. Marina High,
Jluntlngton Beach ; Gary S p I r I to ,
Westminster High,
Unda Beaton, Garden Grove High:
N()fftn Sweti. Lt QulnUi H I R h 1
We$1.minsttr. and Deanna Brurhhauw,
Santiago Hi&h, Carden Grove.
Five Students
In Valley Win
Speech Tow·ney
Five young students have proven
themselves better talkers than any other
youngsters in the Fountain Valley School
District.
They did it by winning the district
speech tournament Wednesday night in
competition with 44 other speakers.
Dave Reast, a IJ-year-old Fulton School
student. took honors with the best ex·
temporaneous speech. \Vendy Coleman,
13, also or Fulton. was the winner in
original oratory.
Two youngsters, John Thompson. 14,
Arevalos School and Sue Lagi ness. 13,
Cox School, shartd honors with lhe best
dramatic interpretations.
Chris Bent, 14, of Harper School,
brought the most laughs with his winning
humorous interpretation.
The young speakers were judged by
members of Toastmasters and
toastmistresses, club!! for speakers.
I
I
~-
'
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 Wostcllff o,., 642·20l0
OPEN FRIDAY 'Tl L 9
r
Hearing Ends
Slocum to Face
Trial • Ill
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of 1M Diii~ l'litt S:t il
Cynthia Slocum waa an unwanted child.
No matter how her inother hated the
horror of a butchered baby ln the fretier
for six years, she feared and rtsented
its birth, bega:ing for an abortion.
A close confidante testified to this
Thursday, before preliminary hearing
was concluded in Harbor Judicial District
Court with Dr. Wesley G. Slocum, 45,
ordered to stand trlal on murder charges.
The conclusion came unexpectedly soon
aft.er cross-examination of a string of
witnesses wbo t.vld of biurre behavior
by both the defendant and his wife.
Tears were frequent and Mrs. Slocum
sobbed as the defense attempted to wreck
her credibility as a witness by de~ling
her tortured past.
The witnesses included the obstetrician
who delivered Cynthia on Dec. 3, 1963,
and the coroner's surgeon to whom the
baby's remains were delivered March
26 of this year.
Godmothers of botlt older Slocum
daughters were al.90 called.
Judge Pro Tern William Christensen
declared he sees reasonable cause to
believe the crime of murder was com-
mitted and ordered Dr. Slocum arraigned
?o.1ay 22 in Orange County Superior Court.
He refused to set any bail for release,
citing d e a t h threats against Mrs.
Slocum, de fense attorney Paul Augustine
Jr .. and two other pltyslclans as good
reason.
Augustine ar&tJes that the key to the
case ls what killed the baby found March
26, while Dr. Richard Fukumoto, veteran
auto~y surgeon, testified this is im·
possible to detennlne.
Brain and other vital tissues were
removed by whoever performed the aemi·
professional autopsy on the remains -
Dr . Slocum -the state contends.
The doctor displayed little concern dur-
ing the hearing, but literally sat on
the edge of his chair as Dr. Fukumoto
discussed the professionalism of the job.
'"I would have to say no," he replied
\\'hen Augustine asked if it was the
~\·ork of a highly skl\led surgeon working
1ng under ideal conditions."
Chief Deputy District Attorney James
G. Enright, prosecuto r, argued that a
man high on drugs who has just killed
his baby daughter would hardly be \lo'Ork·
Jng under ideal conditon.
The fi rst witness was Dr. Alan V.
Andrews. of Newport Beach, who
delivered Cynthia and sent her and Mrs.
Slocum home from the hospital in fine
shape.
"As I recall, she was a little disap-
pointed she didn't have a son," he said
when Augustine asktd about the mother'!
. .
Death
reaction.
He also said she neglected to ael
prenatal care until far advaoced in
pregnancy and came to him with two
different infections, prior birth damqe
and a bad case of toxemia.
Auaustine alleges she. dkin'\ want the
chlld anyway and became obsessed with
the possibility it might kill her or cause
damage during birth as did the couple's
second daughter.
"Didn't you say you were afraid you
might die and didn't want 'that damn
baby'!," he asked Mrs . Slocum.
"l never said anything about a damn
baby," she replied.
Family. friend Mrs. Joanne Weir, lip-
reading smce she ls deaf, teaUfied Mrs.
Slocum was so distraught over the con-
dition that she vomited .
"I told her she was too good to die.
I had toxemia and J was all rigfll,"
said Mrs. Weir, who took Mr!. Slocum
for her first prenatal visil
During one point. Mrs. Weir became
tearful.
"I want it stta.lght what I say, because
when I lea ve here, I want to be ab 1 e
to live \\'ilh myself. l don't want people
twisting what I mean with 'vocabulary'
words," she said.
Mrs. Celia Ri vera, who was hired
as housekeeper during one of Mrs.
Slocum's periodic hospitalizations for
drinking, said she found gin bottles il)d
Peer caru and pilb bidden in Mrs.
Skx:wn's bed.
Colleges Name
Change Planned
Trustees of the Orange Coast Junior
College District plan to change the
dist~ict•s name since Gov . Reagan signed
a bill Thursday permitting the use of
"community college" in district and col·
lege titles.
At their Wednesday night meetin~
trustees decided they "''ould like to call
the district the Coast Community College
District in order to distinguish the
~istrict name from the l\\'o colleges
11 serves.
Orange Coast College in Costa ?o.1esa
and Golden West College in Huntingt.o•
Beach are the two colleges in the district.
There has been some confusion of lbt
current district name with that of OCC.
District officials said they had not
set a definite date for the official name
change.
DRAPERY
SALE!
CUSTOM MADE WITH A WIDE SELECTION OF
QUALl!Y INTERIOR DESIGN FABRICS. AS MUCH
AS <D i. OFF ON EXCELLENT DESIGN FABRICS.
INTERIORS
Profe11lon1I Interior LAGUNA BEACH
Otaigntrt Avallibl~ID 3-45 North Coast Hwy. 494-6.551
,._toll -M,.., -c OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 """ 14 .. 1261
Friday, Mq 15, 1970 DAIL V PILJ!i' 3
Meet Candida.tes io r Cou~ty Ele~tions
All candidates fCJr the f ifth
District supervisorlat stat, the
Fifth District Board of Educa·
hon seat amt1the candidaus for
Co 11 n t y S'Llperintendent CJf
Schools have been invited to a
?l'leet • !lie • candidates session
sponsored by the league of
Women Vottrs, at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, May 19, in tile Littlt
Theattr at Corona del Mar High
School, 2IO J Eastbluff Drive.
This 11011..partisan session will
give alt voters an opportunity to
meet at1d hear all of the candi·
datts. It might be worthwhile to
tear this page from the DAILY
PILOT and take it with you. to
the meetin g.
TED CRISELL
Theodore Crisell
Tours County's
School Campuses
NAME : ntEODORE 1'1. CRISELL
(TED)
Phone : 64~2999
Address: 323 N. Newport B I v d . ,
Newport Beach,. Calif.
Jtow long in this area? 12 years
Education : Graduate Resear ch ,
University of Bombay, Bombay, India ;
Ch.apman College B.A.; World Campus
Afloat; Loyola U11v.; Ora11.ge Coast
College.
Civic Activities: Rotary International
Scholar to India 1969. R es e a r c h •
Fellowship in connection with projects
of Font Foundation and Peace Corps.
Traveled tCJ 60 countries on 3 trips arowKI
the world. Administration advisor World
Campus Afloat.
Public offices: 1968; President World
Campus Afloat, 1967; President
Associated Students OCC, Freedom
Foundation Award, cou nselor Orange Co.
Probation Department.
\Vhal unique talenl or background do
)OU have that quaJifies you to serve
on tbe Board of Education'? My closeness
lo young people and their problems.
t have been on every campus in District
f'ive and have spoken with all local
district superintendents and majority of
principals. There is a crying need for
young men to serve on school boards-too
muy school board members are out·
dated i{t. their thinking and not in .touch
with prlssing problems of educabon .
What do you consider the primary
funotion of the Orange County Board
of Educalioo".' The county board is very
limited i11. what it caJIJ really do. I
believe the major role in the most re<:ent
past has been affecting public <lpinion.
Most pecple think the board is more
important than it actually is. The board
has generally created a negative public
opinion toward our schools.
Would you fa vor elecllon or ,lp-
pointmenl of the County Superintendent
of Schools'? I believe it is the most
natLiral thing for the county superin·
tc ndent to be appointed by an elective
board. We run most of our cities this
way now -elective city council with
appointed city mallagers, men who are
professional administrators.
Should tbe County Board Uvt more
ar less control over tbt locll Db:trictl!
1 believe the county schools ofDce can
be phased oul. I am very much in
agreement with the 1969 Orange COUnty
Grand Jury Report. The report called
for the phasing out of the county board
and county schools office. The CO\D'lty
office has bee• gelling involved in far
too many local issues . There is too
much duplicallon of services. About l.7
million dollars is given by Board of
Supervisors to run county schools office
and the State gives $700.000. This money
can be better spent at local level.
Wiii you be able. to atk.nd lite ~can·
dldate11 ~1celln& of M11y lltla? Ye.s
ALTON E. ALLEN
Alton E. Allen
Current Chief
Of Supervisors
NAME' ALTON E. ALLEN
Age : 73 Phone : 834·3550
Address : 2535 Temple Hills Drive,
Laguna Beach
Wife'• name: Margaret
Children and ages : Jack 42; Barbara
43
Educatio1 : University oC Washington
Occupation: Chainnan, Orange Cou11.-
ty Board ol Supervisors
Civic Activities : Past President l'lf
Rotary
What unique taleat or background do
you have th~t qualifies you to serve
on the Beard of Supervisors? Have serv-
ed as Supervisor of the F i f l h
Supervisorial District since January 1963.
How much is your campaign. costing'?
\\'bere i1 the moDey comin1 f~m? Ap-
proximately $25,000. Campajp cot·
tribu tions.
Do you favor tbt proposed Upper
Newport Bay lud swap In ill prett.nt
form? Please es:plaln. Yes, but I am
in favor 0£ placing 1 bond issue on
the November Ballot which would give
the people an aJternate opportunity to
acquire all of the Upper Bay for en-
virpnme11tal and ecolCJgical purposes.
What is your solution to Or1nge Coun·
ty '1 air tr1n1portation problems? I would
continue to press for compll!!tion of Phase
II of the Master Plan of A i r
Transportation. I h a v e already moved
to restrict the houn, type and number
of commercial flights at the airport.
Will you attend the !\fay lttli. meeting?
Yes, I am planning to attend.
Vick R. Knight
Seeking School
Superintendency
NM1E: VICK R. KNIGHT
Age : 42 Phone : 528-6510
...
Address: 1500 Shenandoah, Placentia
How long in this area? 11 year•
Wife's: name : Beverly
Children and ages: Steve 20, Mary
15
F.ducalion : B.S., USC; M.A. Cal State
LA ; Ed.D. Candidate USC
Occupation: Assistant Supt. Placentia
Unified School District
Civic Activities: Kiwanis, J a y c t e
President; Boy Scout Dis. Chairman
Public offices: No11.e
What unique tale11t or hackgroW1d do
you have tliat qualifies you to terve
as Superintendent of Seboeis? 14 years
as both a secondary and elementary
administrator-, including five years as
Asst. Supt. of the extremely fast-growing
Placentia· Unified School Dist. aid 1
genuine desire to provide aeeded service!
to local school districts.
WU.t is the mast Important fuaction
of tlte Saperinte.dent wttlt rupect to
servlclD& tlte ioctl diltrtctl! A wilJ.
ingneM to listen to the letds or local
districts and not attempt to force
u111Wanted projects on them. See 1969
Grand Jury Report.
Sboald the eUlce yoa aeek bt elective °' •ppoiltive! °Wl'Y? _There has been a history of divided'rtiponsiblltties which
could be aolved by havlng an elected
ccunty school board appol11t the county
superintenden t.
lfow muctt la your campllp costln&?
When la tlae mooey coming from '! $3000
-friend s, professional associates, self.
WIU )'OU tit attendln& the l\tay 11
mcttln.a? I'll sure try to!
RONALD CASPERS
Ronal,d Caspers
In First Try
For County Post
NAME o RONALD W. CASPERS
Addrr.M: 119 Via Florence, Newport
Beach, Calif. 9'l660
wue·s name: Ann
Children: Kirk, 16: Rick, 13; Greg
aod Kristen (twins) 12; Blair, 8.
E d u c a t i o n : UCLA, Business
Administration degree from San Jose
State; Graduate work in marketing and
finance at USC.
Occupation: President, Keystone Sav.
ings and Loan
Civic AcUvities: Board of Directors
of Big Brothers, Member of Anaheim
Stadium non-profit corporation board of
directors; member or Pasadena Tourna.
men t of Roses: past member of the
board of directors of Harbor Day School,
Newport Beach; member Navy League :
head of fund raising for Friends of
Chapman College; member ot Rotary:
Member ol Hoag Hospital 552 Club.
What unique background or talent do
you bave to qualify you 1o serve on
the Board Gf Supervisors? Suceess.ful
businessman and money manager. I
purchased Keystone Savings and Loan
at $3 millioo and have developed it into
a $45 million dollar business. I ha ve
also been wideJy involved in civic affairs.
Cost of campaign and. where money
Is coming from. -The total cost of
the campaign caMot yet be determined.
A fund raising dinner is planned to
cove r a large portion of our campaign
costs. Donations from individual con-
stituents have been nurnflroos.
Do you favor the proposed Upper Bay
land swap lo its present form? The trade
abuses Orange County taxpayers and
damages the ecology or Southern
California as well. 1 am against the
tra<te and will work to reverse the land
swap. (note PILOT ad concerning Bay
trade).
Wbat is your solution to Oran1e C«tnty
air transportati01t .problems? I do not
favor further expansion of the present
facility. Another site in an unpopulated
area. should be found. Until a new Joca.
lion is selected. jets should be prohibited
from using Orange County Airport.
VICK KNIGHT
ROBERT M. WILSON
Robert Wilson
In Second Term
As Mesa Mayor
NAME: ROBERT 1\1. WU.SON
Age : 53 Phone: 548-4732
Address : 2000 Aliso Ave., Costa ~fesa
Wife's name: Maryalice
Children and age s: Carol 24, Randy
23, Sherrie 20. All married.
Education: Glendale College
Bustiess Administration and PCJlffical
Science
Occupation: Sell-employed as "The
Awning Man''
Oivic activities Or40ge County Coast
A!!soclation, Orange County Coastal
Hlghway Commission, Vice Commander
American Legion Poot No. 455, Represeo-
taUve to National Ri vers and Harbor
Comm. in Washington D.C.
Public offices : Councilman,, Cost a
Mesa, J Tenns. Mayor. Costa Mesa,
serving second term.
What unique talent or bac'kground do
you have that q"alllles you to serve
on the Board of Suptrvlsors? My interest
in government has ranged beyond city
boundaries as member of California
Leag\ie of Cities Natiooal League of
Cities, State Building Regulation Com-
mittee and Orange County Decen·
traliz.ation. Committee on County Offices.
How much J1 your campaiin costing?
Where Is tb.e money coming from~ No
Aniwer
Do you favor the proposed \Jpper
Newport Bay laad ·swap in It• prese11t
form '? Please explain. I do nol favor
present pJan as too many questions are
unanswered. Can .we afford to give up
this prime watershed and salt water
estuary? How much will it cost to
operate? What must the public invest?
Wilt a new ootlet to ocea n be needed?
Now is time to evaluate.
What ta your aolu!ion to Orange Coun-
ty's air tr1nsportatlon problems! Im·
mediate Need : Eliminate noise and
smoke pollution. Future needs : New in.
ternaUonal airport between Los Angeles
and San Diego. New site for regional
airport and metroports to provide feeder
service.
Will you 1ttend the May 19th metdng?
Yes
RONALD E. PRICE
Voters in Orange Count11's Fifth Supervisoriat District wiU find
two sets of candidates specifically orienttd to tlleir area--a rtpresenta·
tive on the Orange County Board of Supervisors and a represen tative
on tlit Orangt County Board of Educa£ion . ~in cooperotiO'l'I with the
Orange Coa.si League of Wome n Voters, the DAILY PILOT today presents
biographitl and v-iewpoint1 of the candidatei in an effort to help voters
select their choices in the two races. All candida&et were offered the
opportunity to tubmit their biographies, 1iote their views a'lld have their
pk:t-ure published on this page. AU of those who retponded appear today ,
In tht supervlt?rjal race. any candidott who receivet more than
half o/ tht votes cast 1ft' tht June 2 tlection will be declared electtd. In.
t11e event no single candid4te receiuts that majority, the two Jeatlino
candidot.es wilt face o run-off in the November general eltction, Tht
Boord of Education election 11 not a porolltl .circum1to11ct; th! candidate
witlt the greatest number of V<lttl June 1 will be declared winner.
T/te fifth superoisorial district covtrs: tht Orangt County coastline
inchtding tht communitiet <lf Newport Beach, Costa Mtsa, Laguna Beach.
So11 Juan Capistrano. Dana Point, pnrts of Mission Vitj(), San Cttmente
and portions of Huntington Stach tast of Beach Boulevard below <Jar·
field Awnue.
CRIS C. CRIS
Cris C. Cris
Opposes Swap
Of Upper Bay
NAME' CRIS C. CRIS
Age: 40 Phone : 962-6973
Address: 9627 Adams Avenue, Hun·
lington Beach
Education : Alexander Hamil too Inst.
of Business Muagement; West Coast u.
Occupation: Government Contracts
Administrator
Civic activities : School D ls tr Jc t
Ad visory Committeea; Chairman, Hun·
tington Beach. Park Bond Election 1969;
Underground Utilities Commissioner;
Chairman or Freeway Advisory Com·
mittee.
Public offices: None
Whal Wllque talent or background do
you have that quallfle1 you to serve
on the Board of Sapervl1or1? 29 years
experience h11 po litics and civic service.
Recent activities: (I) School district
AdvisotY Committees; (2) Chairman,
Huntington Beach Park Bond Election
1969 ; l3) Underground Utilities Com·
missio.ier: (4J Cha irman, Freeway
Advisory Committee.
How much 11 your cam paign costing?
Where Is the money comln& from? To
date, approximately $400. Estimate;
aROther $3,000 maximum. Personal bank
aCC1:lunt and individual donations. The
largest to date $100.
' Do yoa favor t;he proP9ffd Up~r
Newport Bay land 1wap In Us pre se'nt
form? Please explain. -t am not in
favor of thi s swa p in present st.ate.
I would have to make · a thorough
resea rch of the t.ransaction agreed to
by the county before making a final
decision. J would certainly want expert
opinion and advice on it.
What it your solution to Orange Coun--
ty's air tran1portaUon problems? I will
investigate feasibility Of an Ofi•Sh.ore
airport combh1ed with such other service
functions as a desalinliation plant,
nuclear power plant, waste disposal
plant, marina, oceanographic school. A
key factor governing this approach would
be its locaUon and Its effect on the
ecology.
Wm you attend lbe May 19th meeting?
Yes
Ronald E. Price
County Resident
For 20 Years ...
NAME' RONALD E. PRICE
Age: 37 Phone: 646-7315
Address : 1327 Antigua Way, Newport
Beach
Wife's name : Mary Alice
Children and ages: Cynthia a, Beth s
How long in tills area? Orange Co.
approx. 20 years ; Newport Beach, l
years
Education: Bachelors, Masters, Doc-
torate
Occupation: Self-Employed
Civic Activities : Commedores, St,
Andrews Church
PubUc offices: None
What unique talent or background do
you have that quallfle1 you to serve
on the Board or Edueatlon? t have
taught school for almost 10 years:, (4th,
7th, 8th , 9th thru 12th, and full time
college instructor) plus being in business
for myself gives me the background
of practical classroom knowledge com·
bined with buainess financing and
management.
What do you conskier Ute primary
function or the Oraqe Cou1ty Board
of Education? Their primary runclion
is to administer over the few schools
they control directly. The secondary,
and perhaps mosl hnportanl function,
is to assist, coordlnata and help other
district! In special tunctlons and pro~.
To advise other dlstrlctl only when re-
quested.
Would you favor election or ap-
pointment Of the County Saperinttndtnt
of Stboots'? I would favor appointment.
Should I • e Couaty Board Uve more
or leis tontrol over the local Dlstrlctt!
Less. See 11bove
Wiii you be 1ble to 1tttnd the Can.
dld1Je1' MeeUnl ol M•1 lltbT YN
FRED WALTER
Fred Walter
Engineer
And Scientist
NAME ' FRED WALTER
Ageo 41 Phone: "2-ZS<'I
Address : 350 Vista Baya, Newport
Beach
Wife 's name : Kathryn
Children and ages: Karl, 4 weeks
Education : M. S., Es: per Im e nta I
Physics;· 1955, Berlin , Germany
Occupation: E111gineering Phyalctst.
Civic activities: Smog and noise
abateme"t
Public offices: None in the U.S.
Wbat unique talent or background do
you have that qualifies you to 1erve
on the Board of Supervisors? My pro--
fessiona l background and experience as
scientist and engineer, and my aetive
interest in soclal problems and civic
activities.
How much is your campaign costing'!
Whert iii the money coming from? Ap.
prox. $1500 ; from personal income.
Do you ravor the proposed Upptr
Newport "Bay land swap In Its present
form? Please explain . No. It has delayed
urgently needed develCJpment of park
and recreation facilities for almost six
years, caused exteMive and unnecessary
expenses, and accomplished nothin1.
Partial devel~pment should start NOW.
What ts. YCHIJ' soluUoa 1o ~e ~
ty'• air lralllportation problem1? A com·
prehensive Southern California Airport
and Ground Transportation System on
a super-regional basis, and adequately
enforced noise and pollution abatemen t
rules.
WW you attend the !\fay Jllh meeting?
Yes.
JOANN DOUDNA
JoAnn Doudna
San Oemente
Mother of Six
NAME' JOANN DOUDNA
Phone: 492-6063 Age: 39
Address: 124 del Pacifico, San Clemente
Children and ages: Six Children. Two
girls and four boys.
How long in this area ? San Clemente
1959
Education : Two years U.C.L.A. Full
time student at Irvine.
Occupation : Homemaker
Civic Activitie s:
Public Offices: Served four and one
half years on Capistrano Unified School
Board. 2 yrs. Delegate Assembly.
What unique talent or background do
yo u have that qualifies you Lo strve
on the Boord of Edt1ca1lon? Experience
oo local Board. Work at the State level
ol Catlrornia School Board Assn. Have
six children in lhe public school systtm.
J am pre!ent.ly attending the University
and taking education courses.
Wbtl do you coaskltr the primary
runctlon ol the Or'ln1e Cowtty Board
of f,ducation? Providing specific servleu
to local board! which 1tre defined In
the California Educational Code.
Would you r1vllr tl«llOll or apt
poinlmt:nt of tbe County Superl11tetldent
of Schools? Appointment by an el~ed
Board or Education.
Wiii you be tble to ;ttend the Cln·
dld1te1• 1tfeellna: of ~tay 19th! Yts. t
wUI.
----
.f DAILY PILOT
Rol>ort Wynbrant o! Bilborough,
England says be bas been assured
by town authorities that a right of
way through the middle ol bis
house shown on a new map will not
cause any problems. He says he
just discovered the house was built
on what was once a public footpath. • Emanuel Sofianos says bis firm
is applying to Buckingham Palace
to be appointed official toffee apple
maker to the royal family. Sofianos
said Wednesday he decided on the
application afte.r his London sales·
man told him Prince Philip took
four of the apples home from Satur-
day's 300th anniversary celebra-
tions at Convent Garden . •
Officials at the Flamingo Park
ZQO in York, England haw
moved Hannibal, the :00'1 prize
Indian. elt-pha11t, to a new hOM&e
which separates him more from
viaitors. The officWl.! said Hanni-
' ba1 lately hod been grabbing
tOQrnen's handbags and eating
them, rpitling out coins, com·
.,. pacts and lipsticks. But they
said he 1eemed to enjo11 check-
books and paper mone11.
•
•
Tbe British Consumer Council
said Wednesday of the 62 pairs of
tights tested by eight women only
half were still wearable at the end
of one day and only 19 of these
fitted well. Many of those that fail·
ed to stand up split, developed holes
or just fell down. the council said. •
Los Angtlts aui11oritit s clear-
ed a block square area recently
and called in. a bomb squad when
a iuspiciotU looking o b 1 e ct
dangling from a balloon. dropped
to the ground m%t to -a polict
command post. But tht U.S.
lVeatlier Bureau i~ u nearby
buil.dipg cltartd 4ht mat.ter ttp.
It 1001 a weathe'1 balloon from
POint Munu destined for the lo-
cation a11d was Hon target."
•
STUDY IN CONTRASTS AT U OF MARYLAND
Guardsmen Pasted Near School 's Chapel
Governo1· Imposes Curfew
On U of Maryland Campus
COLLEGE PARK. Md. (UPI) -Gov.
Mar:vin Mandel invoked necutlve powers
today to keep the University of Maryland
campus apen. He indeflnite1y a.tended
the curlew to allow authorities to keep
troublemakers oil campus.
Mandel had invoked the curfew Thurs-
day night alter dissident students again
battled National Guardsmen and state
police along U.S. Route I through the
nation's third Jarges_t college campus.
At a 2 a.m. news ronference, Mandel
issued the curfew proclamation and said
It allowed the Maryland National Guard's
adjutant gtneral Edwin Warfield to keep
all but authorized persons off campus.
campus late Thursd"ay night, windows
were smashed in ftu campus buildings.
Offlet: equipment was destroyed and
furniture was set on fire in the main
administration building.
6 Tornadoes Hit
Near Texas City
LU BB 0 CK, Tex. (UPI) -Six
tornadoes touched down Thursday within
15 miles of Lubback, a city devastated
by a tornado Monday v.ilich killed 21
persons and left 10,000 homeless. No
GOP Senators on Spot
Seek Com../!!_2m~~ on Cambodia Measure
WASHINGTON (UP!J -Worried
Republk:an senators called another
meeUng today to write cotnpromise
legislation on Cambodia in an effort
to keep the Nixon administration from
another showdown with the Senate.
GOP Leader Hugh Scott called the
meeting after three top presidential ad-
visers -Defense Secretary Melvin R.
Laird, White House aide Henry Kissinger
and Undersecretary of State Ellk>t L.
1Udiardson -told ·Senate Republicans
Thursday the administration would not
yield.
Scott did not indicate what kind of
compromise he had in mind, but said
he planned to submit it to the White
House be.fore introducing it.
A vote on pending legislation to cut
o[f ftmds for retaining U.S. troops in
Cambodia would put GOP senators on
the spot for lhe fourth time in a year
on an issue involving President Nixon's
presti ge.
Supporttrs or the cutoff legislation said
they had 53 votes, two more than needed
ft ft ft
Nixon Says Bill
'Infringement'
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UPI) -The
Florida White House said today President
Nixon feels that a proposal now before
Congress limits his ability lo protect
American forces in Vietnam and Cam·
bodia .
Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler.
discussing the administr8tion's position
on a proposa l in Congress to cut orf
funds for future military involvement
is an infringement on that constitutional
responsibility ... of the commander in
chief to protect the security of the
American forces in the field."
Ziegler also stated that Nixon opposes
such a move because it would put the
enemy on notice that the President 's
ability to respond to threats is limited.
The amendment , now being debated
in Congress. was proposed by Sen. Frank
Church (0-ldaho), and Sen. John
Sherman Cooper (R·Ky.). Ziegler made
it clear Nixon feels any limi tation on
his options to conduct the Vielnam war
would jeopardize his role as commander
in chief.
At the same time, Ziegler restated
Nixon's intentions to withdraw all
American lroops from Cambodia on June
30.
>
for Senate passage. No one knew when
a vote would come, but It was thought
to be a week off.
Hoose approval wu much less Ukely.
Similar amendments were defeated on
consecutive days last week. Rep. WIUiam
F. Ryan (0.N.Y.), Thursday urged the
Demoa-alic Jeadersblp to call a caucus
on his amen<bnent opposing use of U.S.
troops in Cambodia, but only 98 of the
244 House Democrats showed up, short
of a quorum.
Sen. Robert J. Dolt (R-Kan.), said
the bill -designed to bind President
Nixon to his promise of a quick
withdrawal ol U.S. troops from Com·
munist sanctuaries -would be "a direct
slap at the President of the United
Stales."
Backers of the measure, led by Sens.
John Shennan Cooper (&.Ky.), and
Frank Church (0-ldaho), charged that
compromises which the administration
' already has rejected would tum the
Senate into a "fudge factory.''
Church, the Ooor manager for the
amendment, said it would do nothing
that the P.resident has not already pledg-
ed to do. He said he did not underatand
adminis tration intransigence, because on·
ly four months !go it embraced arJ
almost identical proposal he offered ·10
bar ground troops in Thailand and Lao5.
But opponents of the measure con·
tended it would tum the Senate into
a ''war room" in which strategy and
tactics would be determined by elected
officials with little military experience.
Sen. John C. Stennis (D-A1iss.l,
chairman of the Senate Anned Services
Commi ttee, said the measure would "put
the President in a legal strait jacket."
W alte1· Reuther Eulogized
As Champion of Underdog
DETROIT (UPI) -Wa lter P. Reuther,
president <1f the United Auto \Vorkers
for the past 24 years, was eulogized
today as om! of lhe nation's great unio n
leaders <1f the century and a champion
of the underdog.
~1ore than 3,000 persons, including ex-
ecuti ves of the big four auto companies
Heuther fought with in contract negotia-
tions, attended memorial services in the
Ford Auditorium.
Thousands more watched aod listened
to the serviet:s on television and radio.
At IO a.m., local lime, across the
Unit ed Slates and in Canada, Nort h
America's biggest industry hailed for
three minutes as plant workers in the
l.B·million·member union paused to pay
tribute to their fallen leader. Some
truckers in the teamsters union pulled
<1ff to the side of highways.
Thousands of auto workers stayed off
the job in two of 10 Flint General
Motors plants and rented a large
auditorium to watch the memorial
service~ on closed-circuit television.
Other ~'Orkers in other plants said they
might extend the sile nt tribute beyond
three minutes.
Reuther. 62, his wife, JI.lay. 59, and
four others died last Saturday night
11·hen their chartered exc•utivc }et plane
crashed in a fore.st near Pellston in
Northern Michigan.
Eleven speakers, lncludinc Mrs. Cm-et·
ta King, widow or Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr., eulogized Reuther, who formed
the nation's second biggest union.
Whilney Young. executive director ef
the National Urban League, said UAW
members had lost t h e i r leader and
"all Americans, most espeeially the
black, tht poor, the underprivile1ed, have
Jost a champion."
Emergency Fund
Bill Approved
WASHINGTON (UP I) -The House and
Senate have passed and .sent to President
Nixon an emergen cy resolution to ward
off the threat of paylt!ss paydays for some
government workers.
The measure was necessary because
Congress has not appropriated funds to
cover lhe pay raises -nine percent July
I and six percent Dec. 22 -given gov•
ernment workers.
Sen. Robert C. Byrd (0.W. Va.) said
the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries bas
run. out of money and other agencies.
as well as veterans' benefits, faced the
same problem.
Geta.lb~Specialfrom}OOI"participatingChryslerandPlymouthDealer!
While the rest of the lluto industry was
ciying the blues, more Southern Cali·
fomians bought Plymoutbs this spring
than at any time in recent history. In
celebration of these impressive sales
fi gures and to keep the ball rolling, our
factory bas made available to all South·
ern California dealers speci al. price
incentive."I on 82 out of their 87 models.
With this added ammunition, your
Chrysler Plymouth dealers an: going on
a one-month selling spree ••• selling Blue
Plate specials. They're out to move every
car in stock! That's why if you buy a new
Chrysler or Plymouth between May 1st
and May 3 Isl, you can count on a reaDy
tempting deal . So sec your Chrysler and
Plymouth dealer and check out bis Blue
Plate Sp ecials. You're the one who
stands to benefit! Warfield said he woold interview the
28 persons arrested late Thursday night,
curfew violators arrested this morning
and other suspected troublemakers today
to decide if they should be barred from
cam pus.
further damage was reported . Bl Pl s ials At least one tornado has touched ue ate ~ g'oond "ery day since Monday. All .
or them , including the six Thursday, He said those suspected of battling
with troopers, inciting the disturbance
or destroying property would be banned
the rest of the semester -meani ng
they would flunk their courses for this
term.
hit rural areas and caused no property Pri red ced · I d
damage or injuries. ces u on e s an The latest tornadoes ~truck north and r
wesl of Lubbock near the communities
Students living h1 Donner Hall, a
1n en'& dormitory on the Campm of
Canurgit·Mtllon Univtrsity, Pitts-
burgh, Pa., staltd off one part of a
halltoay with a wall of tin cans. Thr:J
claim the cans were a poltuta11t to the
ci:nvironment.
\Varfield estimated 3,000 to 4,000
studen ts pelted guardsmen and state
police \v ith rocks. bricks and other
missiles after troopers shot tear gas
lo clear l,500 demonstrators off Route
!.
of Littlefield, Hale Center, Colton Center
and Siiverton. These last three cities PIY!Douths 1·n stock. 82 tempting were hit by a cluster of tornadoes last
month that killed 26 person&,
Bill Payne. regional director of Civil
Defeiue, said Thursday he could not 00 Is Immediat d 1• have •oonded lhe sirens to warn cilizens m e . e e 1~ery.. of Monday night 's tornado because the , f •
Before guardsmen swept acros.s the power was out.
Ral·n Th d . M.d t OfferendsMay31st! , un er 1n 1 wes
Frequent Doivnpours Accompanied by Some Torndoes
Calito,...la
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Costa Mesa
Atlas_ Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc •
2929 Harbor Boulevard
'
Mediu1n's the Message
The theory may have some merit but this message seems to be missing its
mark. Like the minister whose message falls on deaf ears. this billboard out·
side Denton, Tex., hasn't moved anyone to action.
Mail Strike
Postponed;
Raise Seen
WASHINGTON (AP)
Congress, which a p p e a r e d
ready to halt action on a
post.al pay boost when New
York mailmen threatened to
strike Ttiursda y night, is now
on a timetable that could
bring final approval in three
weeks.
"Congress i.:; not going to
be pressured by a strike,"
the :senior Senate Post Office
cOmmittee member, Hiram L.
Fong (R-Hawaii), said Ttiurs·
day before New York Jetter
carriers caJled off the :strike.
Fong said the committee is
ready to put out the bill for
a Senate vote bu t a walkout
would have forced a delay
until a settlement was reach-
ed.
Rep. David N. C. Henderson
( D -N . C • ) , second-ranking
Democrat on the House Post
'Office Committee. s aid
Congress' reaction to a new
mail strike might be even
worse:
"I don't see how it could
speed it (the bill) up very
much," he said. "And it might
kill it. ..
But New York Branch 3S
of the Nalional Association of
Letter Carriers, one of two
New York locals that trig-
gered the nationwide mail
strike in March, voted Thurs-
day to stay on the job and
put off any further strlke con-
sideration until June 12.
"Our people s ho w e d
themselves to be responsible
labor," Gus Johnson, the
local's president, said after
the vote. "It is up to Congress
now to show lts
responsibility."
The eight percent pay raise
for postal workers is tied to
differing Hoose and Senate
bills that would create a U.S.
Postal Service to put the mails
on a self.paying basis by 1978,
Pill Suit Filed
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -
A housewife filed a $1 million
damage suit against a family
planning clinic and a drug
company Thursday, claiming
birth cOntrol pills caused her
brain·damage.
Barbara stahlnecker, 22, Tu-
Junga, Calir. said she suffered
strokes last Christmas day
a.nd again Jan. 6 and March
7 after taking the pills for
an umpeci!ied Jen~ of lime.
Dominican Republic
' Vote Set Saturday
SANTO DOMINGO,
Dominican Republic (APJ -
With a tumultoous presidential
campaign over, soldiers and
government officials prepared
to guard polling booths in
Saturday's ·election.
Candidates c a 11 e d a
moratorium on campaigning
today. The central election
board said police and soldiers
will be on duty at the natkm's
3,455 polling places.
In the last few weeks there
has been an average <lf one
politically motivated killing a
day. officials said.
President Joaquin Bslague r
is opposed by foor opponents
-but one of the Dorilinican
Republic's most power f u I
parties is boycotting the elec-
tion .
Balaguer, calling himself an
"instrument ol destiny," an-
nounced last month that he
would se.ek amther four-year
term.
His opponents are Elias
Wessin y Wessin, the general
who helped crush the 1965
leftist Insurrection: Francism
Augusto Lora , Balaguer's vice
president who broke away to
fonn his own party; Alfonso
ri.toreno Martinez, a lawyer
who represents the Social
Christian party, and Jaime
Manuel Fernandez, candidate
of the National Conciliation
Atovement.
Fonner President J u a n
Bosch and his Dominican
Revolutionary party a r e
boyC<Jtting the election, charg·
ing that Balaguer would never
permit a fair counting of the
ballots.
Bosch, deposed by a
military coup In 1963, says
he no longer believes in elec-
tive democracy, favoring in-
stead "dictatorship with
. popular support." He has not
explained how his proposal
would work.
Ul"ITt~
SHOES, MONEY GOING TO VOTERS
B•laguer Camp1igning for RHlec:tion
Friday, May 15, 1970 DAILY PlLOf • IS
Israel Says More · Egypt Jets D~wn
TEL AVIV (AP) -llraell
pllols claimed shoollng down
three Soviet-made Egyptian
MIG jets in dolflgbts over
the Suez Canal today.
By Israeli account, two
M1Gl7s were shot down in
morning battles over the
blocked waterway and a MIG-
21 shonly after noon.
All thrte planes ""re see n
falling in Egyptian territory.
the military command said
here.
The M1G21 had "attempted
to interfere•• when Israeli
plants were on a bombing
and staring missiolJ against
Egyptian military t a r g e t s
along the central sector or
the canal, a spokesman said.
Jt was the second Israeli
raid of the day and followed
two Egyptian strikes.
All Israeli aircraft returned
safely. the spokesman said.
r 1 24• •••• 1.45
113' •••••• 2.00
1141 •••••• 2.SO
116t •••••• :a.os
11n •••••• a.tO
10124 ••••• 1.71
1013' ••••• 2.lO
11141 ••••• 2.90
Jar.el ttatted lhe actJoo · 'l'be co m m 1 a d aald the
wllh a bombing and otralfnc lsroeli• returned tho Ore and
attack on Egyptian · mtHLUy sustained no casualUes.
targets in lhe southern and lsrael ~need ~ursday
central sectors of the 102-mile. that an Egyptian mlss.1le boat
long waterway. sank a 7~ton lrraeJI fishing
th& ~ Elalh WU hit
and llllk In 11117.
A mtUWy announcement
lng. An lll1llOOllC<lllol 1ald tho
"cllllncel of llndln& !hem ...
sllm."
said the fishing lrawlu Oriti,;::=========; was hit Wednelday night 11 .3
ml1es north of the occupied
Sinai PenJnsuJa. Tbe four
crewmen were reported mm-EgypUan warplanes then trawler 1 n Mediterranean
struck blci in the norlbern waters not far from where
sector of the canal.
An hour later, a~rdlng to
the military com~. Israeli
planes intercepted atlacking
Egyptian MlG17s, shooting
down two.
'Can~ Caper
The military command said
Israel suffered no casualties
in the Egyptian raids.
In other action, the com-
mand said Gesher Hasiv, a
kibbutz four miles south of
the Lebanese b<rder, was
shelled from Lebanon during
the night. Mortar sheUs also
fell on border settlements at
Yardena and Klar Rupim in
the Belsan Valley.
45.95
NEW YORK (UPI) -A
painllng of a can o f
Campbell's vegetable beef
soup by Andy Warhol sold
Thursday night for $60,000, the
highest price ever paid for
a work by a living American
artist.
A European bidder who
wished to remain anonymous
bought the painting at an auc-
tion by Parke-Bernet galleries.
• t ! .
PVC FITTINGS
It was sold by an American
toHector, Peter Brandt, and
ww among a number of works
by contemporary American
and European artists dating
from after World War II.
Warhol's painting of the
soup can, titled "Campbell's
Soup Can With Peeling
Label ," is 72 by 54 inches
and was painted in 1962.
Pre-
Finished
Walnut
Shelving
1fr1liflltM,ll•t •• ·.12c 1/1:"'11i,tetllrNll •• 21c
lft" 111•1• Alle,ter •• 1tc 1/2''•11, TH •••••• , 2Sc
1t2"s1i,w111 •••• 22c 1r111''"'"111111 21e
PVC FITTINGS
""(.,tilt .16
fli" Mel. A..,tet_ .2J
li"4S"U .45
~~,,. .21 ""' ~
VNITED
STATES
NATION Ai£
BANK
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
BRANCH
NOW OJllN
SATURDAYS
t hi 1 P.M.
MON.0 TNUU. 1 .. 1 P.M.
FllDATS 10-' P.M.
17141140-1211. LeclltH ht:
S.. C.-t rt-. C... M ..
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E. H. LEVAN
PROfiSSIOIW.S!
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hiWO.,-.; .. r. ......... " ....
2495
Save on Sprinklers • Accessories
101160 ••••• 3.SO
10172 ••••• 4.50
12x24 ••••• J.ts
1213' ••••• 2.6S
12 1 41 , •••• J.lS
12160 ••••• 4.10
12172 ••••• S.2S
1/1:'' • , ••••• , , le
3/4" ••••••••• 4c
C..W.Uf_S_ 45c 'n-%1tf .. ...,,_ _____ _
M,.. ... ,"'.., 4455c hi Mir.i. 070 c: MU.. I .70
A. AUfomatic Break-up Sprinkler 3.95
...... IS<
Onu•l•P...,'-'s, ... ,.,_.... 99c %,%•flll!~,-----
lne ... W' a .fS "'" fMllt .. '-I.IS ~-...... ·" *•...-.v•._ JJt W"....... ·"
REDWOOD FENCING
8" BOARDS
6' High.
8' long. 1.60
lin. foot
A du~ble attractive fence that will hold
-.:p for year•
1-4x4-7' -2-4z4-1' -12-111-6'
-. per 8 foot s1c:tion
12" Boards 1 °4x4-7 2 -4x 4-81·1 x
12·6 per I' s1c:tio1
•
··~""· 't!G\I 'ljater t\oset
38-Stakes
2-~3ll8 rans
l 03x4x7 Post
42
1
l.F.
Visit oar Model
Custom-Built·
Vacation Home
lew prl<otl .. , ""''~Y '"""' ... '""' ,.. ... ...... tc<"'°"'1· ..
ftrt It SH If t•yl
9to 6 Wk D
I
. '
I
. .
• DAn;y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
..
Regulating by License
'Ille Cl\y of Huntil)glOn S-h ~ beefl crlttc~ tor ulllnr tt.s business license ordinance to control buSI·
11111 in the downtown area. The city's mottves are the blghtsl It is simply try-
ing to keep the beach.front free of undesirable teen-age
ban(outs and thus curtail youlb. oriented crimes from
druJ• lo stolen surfboards. ~e question, bow ever, is whether tht council bas
the authority lo use the business license for regulatory
pur(>OleS. The ordinance ttseU Is fuzzy. One sectiOfl
atatee emphatically that ii may be employed only to
raise revenue while other provision.I appear to bestow
regulatory powers in the law. .
Even tbe city's legal experll have some reseM-
tions on the propriety of granting or del!Ylng business
licenses through lhis ordinance. The staff ls working on
a new measure which wUl state more specifically when
and whether the ci\y may impose a regulatory permit
on a business.
It will be far less expensive for the city to clear up
the law itself rather than go through a possible test
case. in court, which some disappointed applicant may
institute. It is recommended, there!ore, that this new law be
atuclled and e!)ICted quietly.
Caution Is Justified~
The Youth Coalltton Co1ttrnlttee; formed a year aco
In Huntington ·Beach lo ~ive youug people a seme of
leadership and participation, :ts receiving a r<>evalua-
tion.
tenns o! both participants apd viewers.
The council has indicated that the group's adult
advisers should be giving better advice, both in the pre-
sentation oi summer shows and in the presentation of a
budget to the council. The advice from councilmen that the youth commit-
tee should nm ttsel! like a city department and •ubmit
detailed cost breakdowns may not be practical.
But some form of controlling and measuring the ef-
forts of this well-intentioned group is in order. lt can do
tremendous good if it operates correctly.
Bon d of . Coo peration
City and school officials in Fountain Valley have
formed a bond of cooperation unmatched in most com·
munities. The latest example is their agreement to work
together to build facilities fc1r pre-school education in
Juarez Colony and nearb,y residences.
The Fountain Valley School District, through a fed·
eral grant, has the money to build a classroom , provide
teachers and work out class material to give three and
four·year--0lds extra training before they enter kinder·
garten.
For its part, the city will provide the space for the
class and also build and develop a small park in the
colony -which will serve school purposes and the gen·
era! ne igliborhood. The project hasn't received final federal approval
yet, but .•Ppe'rs certain to get $75,000 in federal money
fo r th\' first year. City officials will chip in $10,-000 for
the park development.
; 'Ibe Ctty Council is showing some reserve in allocat·
Ing funds for programs the group sponsors, wondering
bow beneficial the organization is to youn g people.
The caution is juJtlfied. More than fl.500 bas been
spent on musical and drama programs and it is difficult
to measure how many youths ibeae programs reach, in
The Juarez Colony project is a fine example of how
all aspects of a community should work together to
provide a good life for residents. City and schools in
Fountain Valley are aware they all dip into the same
bucket and it's good to see them working together to fill
that bucket wi)h •ervices. H
• NO I Hfl.NSON, YOU l>\~N'T flN~ A BOX OF BULLET> AN~ 1WO m»
Of ~ICE. YOU <APlU~E~ AN AMMO ~MP AN~ A SUPPLY ~E~OT."
Conscience,
Commitment,
Concern
(Goo. Ronald Reagan ord<l'•d a
shutdown of California 1ta~ colltge1
and vniNrritiu for a ptriod of cool·
ing off and ,..flectlon frcrm Thurl<lay,
May1, until Monday morning, May 11.
The column todoy is based on Dr.
HayakaiOa's statdiwnt to the f0culty
and ~nts of Son Francitco State
College a.a cllust• reopen.) #'
As we rtturn to class after a four-day
absence, the faculty
and SWdents face
both a challenge and
an op p o rt un ·
tty. What we do
with tbe three weeks
that remain in this
semeoter will affect
us all.
1. Th e challenge. 1 1imply. fl to resist
the praent wave of
emotion that calls
for teachers to abandon t h e i r
responslbillties aD!1 for students to forfeit
lheir Investment In education.
'Ibe opportunity is to demonstrate reuoo. ccmcience, commitmmt and coo--
cern.
Of courae some students have been
deeply agitated by recent events at home
and Jn ScUheast Asia. Some are too
agitated to return to nonnal academic
pursultl. We cannot and will not stand
in the way oC students staying away
lrom classes.
l BUT TEACHERS HA VE an entirely
different order oC respon sibility. Students
have signed up with them to learn.
'Jbose who want to continue instruction
are fully 'entitled to it, and teachers
are legally u well as morally obliged
to provide it. A faculty member who
ts so outraged by current issues that
he feels he cannot continue teaching
is free, of courae. to resign.
In the winter of 1~9, we saw a
amall aegment oC our faculty and student
body -less than 5 percent -create
an impression that most students and
teachers wanted the college closed. The
news media helped. Perhap! someUting
similar is happening again. It is a trap
-into wbk:h all too many college ad·
ministritions have already fallen .
IT IS AN OUTRAGE for a minorit'f
-or even a majority -to appropriate
the co8e&e as an instrument for the
edvancemenl of. a particular politJcal
Quotes
Pafrtcla !ttver, S.F. modter nd aew
.....,_ ut don't believe in censorship. J
don't think pamography In books or
mavi. banns ptaple, nor do I think it
leacll &o tu crtmes. It's ju11t not my
tlllnJ."
..... , .. ,.,.,..., mlNol ~
,,_ el Cal--"PoOce officen
oboUld be J'elllOCU!ll. '!'boy should be
ll'anted Ille dlplly 11¥111 I Judge or. I
collqe ..... -. "
.... ....... ..,.. .... Bill lllsfl
- -"Tbo sJ put (about the ''°"I ......,, Jo lbol IO mony _,. ool!lld '
-.... , -that the Id ...... ..-a, Ole rodlcall art abo lhose
t.Mt,-~ff
\
l)ear
Gloomy
. Gm:
t woukl ablolutely Jove to be
around the day Ronald Caspers
tuml 73 so I could tell him he is
"almost 80" as he does his oppon·
ent Alton Allen.
-M.E.
TMI ...... nntm ,....,.... ¥hw!I, ""
I I lff ....... -....1r .....
,_. .... -......... , 9lllo CN/1¥ Piie!.
view, m matter how Important or grave
the i5'11eS, C!Ollng down lhe colleges
is a form of j.ouUcal coercion, compelling
all !he students and faculty to join
1h the dramatization o( a view that
ls not shared by all.
For a Jone ume, before, during and
since the McCarthy era, colle3es have
fought to preserve open mindedness and
neutrality. We cannot permit the college
to be poliUcized , without aufferlng Jn.
calculable loo to academic freedom.
'Ihode who are tempted to exercise auch
pol.itical coercion as we are confronted
with must ask themselves how they
would like it if their opponents were
doing It.
TEACHERS CAN DO much for their
pro!esaion and for San Francisco St.Ille
if by their actions now they let the
whole country know that they are deeply
committed to their professional role.
However, the tide is running in the
opposite direction. Professors and even
university presidents around the cowtry
are abandoning their neutrality and
pennitting classrooms to be taken over
for political actiqn. Someone must act
promptly to retapture public respect
for institutions of hi gher learning. We
as the faculty of San Francisco State
have that opportunity.
Students at San Francisco state have
the opportunity in these next three weeks
to reshape the character of their college
if the majority, who want to continue
their education and exercise their
political life ouUide the classroom
without violence ot coereion, are willing
to stand up, be seen, be heard, and
to b< counted .
THE QUESTION IS, who represents
San Francisco State -the minority
who want to shut it down, or the majority
who want the educaUon that they (and
In some cases their parents) have worked
so !Wrcl to pay for.
I urge teachers and students alike
to consider the alternative before us.
S&n Francisco State college can cootinue
so that courses now being given may
be completed and certificates. credentials
and degreta may be granted. Or we
can yield to tbe minority and cloee
the collep, In which case we must
race the ract that rt.ate educationll
lecistall«I bm the college lrom granting
credit for courses not completed and
from paying teachers for instructiOMI
servi<:ts not performed .
tF PRESENT TRENDS continue, 5an
FranciscO State ls going to prove to
be one of the finest institutions of higher
ed-uan Ill the nation. While olher
colleges &emporire and compromise their
pr!nclplea, .. are m>lntalnlng academic
freedam rcw <:.ornmunlsts 1od anti.com-
munists, for revolullonarles and reac-
Uonarles, tor ROO'C 1nd anU·ROTC peo.
pt~ -all 'dhin the framework ot r•
Uonal debate. We llre a great coUege'.:
We. can bealme 1 great.er one by 1dbet· Inf .tubbornly to the prlnclplts ol
academtc freedom, no matftt what.
By S. L U.jUaw1 -·· Su Frudm State CoOtp
President Prepares to Announce t:ambodian Success
Nixon Has Managed to Keep Control
WASHINGTON -The protest.en have
coqie and gone, rhetoric has cooled and
President Nixon is preparing to announce
that the Cambodian operation ls a suc-
cess. This announcement will be based
on the . volume of arms and supplies
captured and the hope that further Com·
munist aggressive action in South Vi et·
nam has been set back for a year.
How mUch of a success was the Cam-
bodJan thrutt will continue to be argued
and it will play a part in the con·
gressional campaign but Nixon thuS far,
at least, has managed to keep control
of the operation.
This matter or control has been the
problem from the first. There are reports
that early in considering the strike Nixon
doubted he could maintain contr_gl. That
is to say, a complex of circumstances
including America n public reaction, the
military reaction from the Commun ist
side, the dll ficulty or limiting any
military operation once it has begun
would converge to defeat the operation.
PROBABLY THE DECISIVE factor
was Nb:on's final judgment that he could
keep American opinlon under control
long enough to permlt a 60 day operation
which could be very damaging to the
Communists.
' Ric hard Wilso~
'Ibis required an accurate judgment
Dn the depth of the reaction in Ameri can
public opinion and Nixon measu red that
correctly. It required an accurate judg-
ment on the Communist reaction, and,
up to • .now, that baa been measured
correctly.
Some things. may not .prove to have
been measured correctly, including the
~areh for the Communist headquarters ror Vietnam operations (COSVN) which
nla y be buried somewhere deep un·
dergroun~ in the areas the Americans
are sweeping. If the Americans do not
flnd that control center many questiOQ.S
will rise in Congress and it might have
been better lf Nixon had not mentioned
it in his justification for the Cambodian
incursion. 1'lere were <Jthcr reasons
which were just as good.
PERHAPS ONE OF the m06t signifi·
cant aspects or this critical period was
the reluctance of members or Congress
\\•ho y,·ere attacking the President to
Join in the youth protest, and there
were good reasons for this. A score
of senators and congressmen who en·
dorsed the first mobilization against the
war last October and participated to
some extent in the November turnout
ln Washington shunned the festivities
last Saturday although their cause for
Participating might have been greater
than before.
The recent protest was on a scale
probably about one-third of the Nov.
14-15 Mobilization for Peace and it may
be that this way of expressing public
opinion is no longer, if it ever was,
an effective instrument for influencing
public policy.
When Ct'.lngressmen up for reelection
stay away from such festivities it can
be taken for granted that they see no
advantage in that kind of political iden·
tification. The effectiveness of such
pressure can be measured also by Nix·
on's decision to treat it indulgently as
not really a threat but just 50mething
to be gotten through with the least
trouble.
This is, In fact, what happened. The
latest protest rally did not influence
anyone. Jt was wasted effort.
NIXON, IN FACT, improved his posJ.
lion with those who think jt has been
pointless to take a defiant and name~all·
ing attitude toward student protest. It
is one thing to be firmly opposed to
such protest and something else to adopt
fl:le language of the streets in talking
about Jt, or to appear not to be listening.
Now, at least, the President is listening
but it is not changing his policies any
more than it did when he said that
his policies would not be changed by
student protest or demonstration in tha
streets.
ln the longer range, If the Cambodian
operation is, or can be termed, a su c-
cess, the results will not be merely mlli·
tary and dlplomatically favorable.
These circumstances, coming into focus
after midsummer, would give the Presi·
dent a firm platform for another
forthcoming intervention, a political in·
tervention. Nixon needs more strength
in congress if he is to carry througll
his very extensive program of refornl
in the next couple of yeari;. His hand
would be greatly strengthened in ap-
pealing for a Republican Congress if
Cambodia has proved to be a success.
Perhaps that contributed, too, 1o . the
lack of interest in congress in last
weet•s demonstrations.
'Our President Did the Right Thing~
To the Editor:
I believe that our President did the
right thing about Camboclla. In the long
run it will save m a n y American and
South Vietnamese lives as our forces
capture and destroy the Viet Cong and
North Vietnamese o f f e n s i v e head·
quarters.
It was a hard decision for Mr. Nixon.
but I believe that in the weeks to
come Americans will see the wisdom
of this decision . I agree with Veterans
of Foreign Wars and American Legion
leaders who have stated that had we
done this long ago th e war would now
be over.
My purpose is to plead with thousands
of Christians to join in prayer during
the next few weeks for definite victory.
Urge your church and Christian friends
to band together in this noble effort
for God and country.
THE REV. GORDON LANGMADE
V11de rl11l119 Q11estio11•
To the Editor :
Much of the nem recently hlis focuSed
B11 George ---.
Dear George :
J have been reading your column
for eight yean and l enjoy it.
Every once Jn a while you say:
"Write to George and send a self·
addressed, stamped envelope." I
keep getUng it back in the mail
and I'm going to try this one
MY way -addressing it to you
Instead of myself. Let me know
U l'OU iel iL
LOYAL FAN
Dear Loyal Fan :
lo I didn 't get It. (Clients like lhat
I don'l need.)
(Do you hive probl•m• with 1970
New Year's rtsoluUons still un-
broken with the new year more
than a quarter over? Have you:r
reeoh!Uons broken by ~ -
Gt«ge wtll do anything and <All
it research.)
• MailbOx '
~
Letters jrom readers ere welcome.
Normally writers should conve11 their
message1 in 300 words or les.s. The
right to condense letters to fie space
or eliminate libel is reserved. All le~
ters must include signature and mai£.
ing addres1, but names may be with-
held on reque st if sufficient reason
is apparettt. Pettry will not be pub· lished.
• on President Nixon's movement of
American troops into Cambodia and lhe
tremendous reaction across the country
lo that move. While the advisability
of that move is debatable, and while
the campus reaction Js worthy Df note
and concern, we should not lo.se sight
of the more important underlying ques·
lions.
Should America have a military
presence in Indochina? Does that
military presence cost America and
Indochina more than Jt benefits Ammca
and Indochina? Do we, in fact, have
a right to balance American gain against
Indochinese cost? What kinds of possible
benefits can be entered Jnto an equation
to balance the costs to Indochina?
IN ORDER TO give reasoned answers
• to this sort of question it is necessary
to appreciate what the costs of the
war are to Indochina. We must realize
that much of the land itself ln Vl elnam.
Cambodia, and Laoe: ii dyina. defoliated
and covered with bum& craters. We
must realize that cultures mueh dUferent
than OW" own 11e being destroyed by
the forced urbaniu.Uon ot refugees from
the countryalde:. We must realize thnt
many. many civilians are being killed
by bombs and ortlltery.
We must ask ourselves: A r e
governments like that of Thieu and Ky
in Soulh VJetnam worth this sort of
cost!
GREG CERMAK
Cambodia 11 Mo ve
To the Editor:
President Nixon's action on moving
Into Cambodia makes me finally think
we have someone who has guts enough
to do what we went to Vietnam to
do years ago. We have been messing
around accomplishing nothing in Vletnam
too long, when the source or our problems
was elsewhere.
Fighting in Vietnam was like poisoning
rats in the pantry when they c o m e
from the basement. Maybe a strong
offensive move with full backing from
all of the people in America will show
the Indochinese Communists that we
are a soild country with a solid purpo.o;e,
that we mean business and are not
just fighting for our economic health!
DAN MARTENS
V•e T ra11q11ill.:m9 G11n
To the Editor:
A charging rhino or elephant can easily,
be subdued by the use of a tranquilizing
gun. This protects the man, but does
not kill or harm the animal which he
wants to save. Is the life of a wild
animal more precious than that of a
rebellious student? Why can't. our police
and National Guardsmen use something
besides deadly bullets which kill'?
MABEL DAY O'BRIAN
Devo11rell hV M.m
To the Editor :
Just think. almost 68,000 new residents
Jn Orange County within the last slr
months. In a few years we won1t have
to worry abollt a Sunday's leisurely drive
In the country we had planned on all
week. We can see the transformation
every day with new ugly subdivl!lons
landscaping the hillsides and freeways
and now our picturesque coasUJM is
bclng devoured by man.
ORANGE COUNTY -the county with
orange groves, the smell of smudge
pots in winter and the fragrance of
orange blossoms in the sprln( -this
Indeed was our home. Now It's only
a memory for there are five groves
left. Yes, come here everybody to the
state with room for all people -with
its huge industries, wall·to-wall tract
houses, our wonderful California climate.
the be autiful wages California has to
offer and the golden opportunity.
NOW, WE SOON expect the b<loved
Irvine Company to build a new
unwelCt'.lmed city with another half
million population . This will succeed in
devouring the total land from north El
Toro west to the Newport.corona def
Mar area and eventually our beautiful
rolling hills and roastline south to
Laguna. How marvelous it ·will be to
enter the adjoining towns like a link
fence.
I HOPE THE the people who ha ve
mastered all the planning of these future
cities will tell their grandchildren how
it used to be. How the deer used
tG roam the hills. the wild quail used
to flock in covies and the sad
meadowlark used to be a common sound
in any field.
Man is so Intelligent. yet it is
astonishing he's not capable of preserving
nature•s precious environment.
LORNA PIASKOIVSKI
-----~
Friday, May 15, 1970
T"4 editorial page of th< DaUy
Pilot 1eeks to inform ond 1ti"""
tdate readers by presenting thU
newspaper11 opinioni and CQT1to-
m.entary on topict of interest
and significance, b11 providing a
forum for the expre1sicm of
our readers' opinions, and by
pre!enting the diverse view-
poinlt of Informed observers
and spokesmen on t~fcs of the day .
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
•
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I
I \
• I
•
' I
-:...:_-=--~--- - -
JODEAN HASTINGS, '41-4321
l'rilln. Mtr H.·mt • · ,. ... ll
. '
Pµppeteers ·
Pull Strings
An entertaining performance by the Mar-Dent Marionettes 'Will be
presented when the Monday Morning Club of Huntington Beach meets May
18, in the Sheraton Beach lnn.
Following a 10 :30 social hour and an 11 :30 a.m. buffet, Mrs. Willjam
Summerfield, first vice presitient, will introduce Ronald Martin and Bertie
Dent, puppeteers who designed, created and costumed the ,puppets for the
variety production.
Conductitig the business por"tion of the ·meeting will be Mrs. Robert
Parker, who will introduce new officers elected to serve during the' com-
ing year.
To be seated are·tbe Mmes. Summerfield, president; Bernard Gage,
John Gera Jr., A. L. Eisenzimmer and William Lohman, vice presidents;
James Dugan, William Gillett and Victor Monk, secretaries, and Frederick
Baldino, treasurer.
The last meetiz;ig of the year for the Gour!llet C~king Section will be
an 11 a.m. champagne· brunch Sunday, May 17, in the home.of Mrs. Edward
Howard. Husbands will be honored gue sts, and res.ervations are limited.
The Beasley dolls will be completed during a class taking place in the
home of Mrs. Ted Ohnsman at 10 a.m. Thursday, May 28. and additional
information regarding the Crafts and Hobbies Section of the club may be
obtained by calling Mrs. Robert Jumper, chainnan, at 962--1772.
ON CANDID CAMERA -Mrs. James Grushon (left), retiring
philanthropy chainnan for the Monday Morning Club of Hunting4
ton Beach, has her snapshot recorded by (left to right) Mrs. Wil4
liam Summerfield, Mrs. John Gera Jr. and Mrs. Robert Parker,
new and retiring officers of the club which recently donated photo-
graphic equipment to the Boys Club.
For Exercises, You're Never Too Young
While 14-month..old Lori Bean takes exercising in
her stride, Miss Mary Lowell (left), instructor from
the Huntington Beach YM CA slimnastics class, of-
fers fitness exercises for Mrs. Robert Bean. Shap-
in£: up for summer is available to all area women
•
between 7:30 and 8:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Thurs-
days beginning with registration Monday, May 18.
Morning classes will begin at 10 a.m. Thursday,
June 4.
Husban.ds Invited to Feast
"1" •• ,.... ,..,., ·~
· N~·officers will)le sealed l.
when mmbers of the Seal .,. •
Beach Jurilor woman's Clutt I
invite husbands to attend ~ }!
installation banquet tomorrow
in the 101 Ranch House.
Mrs.
serves as chief of the Seal
Beach Fire Department, mov-
ed to the city in 1966 from . '1
Westminster . They are the ·
parents or two children, a 74
year-old daughter and a son, ,J _-.;,...., ..
Always involved in civic ac-
tivities, Mrs. Adams has. serv4
ed as PTA Newsette editor;
co-leader or Brownie Troop
840, and ,Drange District,
Calirorrua-Federation of Worn·
.... en's CIUbs credentials chair·
man and dean's secretary.
Tn the Seal Beach club she
has served as first and second
vice president safety chair4
vice president, safety chair·
man and parliamentarian.
She also served as club
president for the years of 1967
and 1968. In addi tion to her
responsibilities as homemaker
and clubwoman, Mn. Adams
finds time for knitting, Cro-
clleting and other crafts.
• •
Serving as intalling officer
for Mrs. Adams and her new
executive board will be Mrs.
Frank Fedowitz, Orange
District president.
ALL FOR JUNIORS -Carrying the banier lor>'\he Sea; BeachJunlorWoman~1
Club is Mrs . Ron Adams, who will be ·se~ted as. president during ceremonies
taking place tomorrow in the 101 Ranch House. Mrs. Adams has been an ac-
tive member of the club for the past four years. •
Son's Attitudes Blamed -on Clinging to Ivy (League)
DEAR ANN LANDERs: Please print
this letter so "Heartbroken Mother" will
see it. She's the woman whose brilliant
son didn't. get into Harvard, Yale or
Dartmouth. Our son was accepted by
all three and now I wish he had gooe
to a nice school in lhe Midwest.
When Jack left home he was a man-
nerly, respectful boy, neat and clean
-a joy to his mother 's heart. After
two years out East, the boy's hair is
so long it makes me sick. His moustache
drifts in the soup. He wears sandals,
faded jeans and love beads. He argues
with his dad about pollUcs and has
brought such radical kids home for
weekends that we told him to come
alone' from now on or stay upt there.
I 'thought I'd have a heart attack when
ANN LANDERS
Jack announced Jut wet, •'The only
salvation IOI' !bis toUlllry is to bum
everything <I own and start again."
I hope every mother whose son didn't
make the Ivy League will set thiJ and
consider henell fortunate. OWiJ did and
ram -SORRY
DEAR SORRY: lt'1 not ~ IY)\ lt'1
Jack. Even the qalet mklwtnen scltool1
have t.ltelr Ill are of nau, .ndlcall wllt
wnt to bul'I. cveryWaa dowl. Ytllt
'
IOG wotld hive found his IOGl·m&tes:
Tbe m•joritJ of Ute 1Utdentl at the
lvy acboOll an not la 1ympathy with
the wUd-eyed far left. In fact they are
1tttin1 fed 11p wltll having: tbtlr edocatlon
tntemapied by 1 bandfa1 of kooks. And
I 117 It'• about time.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 am· being
marrii;; in June and my mother ls dr!Vut me null-She Insists lhat the
white aisle cloth be put down AFTER
the groom'• mother is seated. The reason
is obvious. She wants to walk on it
first.
I've ailed several people )rila.t is the
correct ~ure and .nob:ldy knows.
I'm afraid my flance's mo<her will be
hurt when sbe sees , the aisle. cloth laid
doW!J. after she Is seated. The two women
don't get along very well as it Is. This
could be the straw that breaks the
camel's bac"k. I'm sure you have figured
out that my mother is a strong person
-considers herself right 1n all matters
and has never made a mistake in her life.
Comment, please. -MAYFIELD, KY.
DEAR MAY: Since 7oat
mother probably bu lllrelldy wllked OD
wa~r 1be 1houldD't .make 1ucll 1 big I alio am sorry she Is lllowed to
deal out of walking on: the allle clatta. teact1. With her attitude she should. not
lint. I hope sbe recon1lder1 in the be· tn the school system. I hope her
interest ol peace aod harmony. ' sign•ture gave no clue as to her identity
beca1* l'll l:fet there are several million
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I boiled when diabetics who would love to wring her
1 read the leUer from the teacher who neck. -INSUUN IZZY
resented having a dia~c chlkl ln;het . DEAR tz : t am neHlter diabetic nor
class. She aald the kkt was wasUng do ( have any diabetic relatives bl1
the taxpayers' moqey .bY <l~pUng the ' "Include me In." '
class to p to the bathroom aeveral
limes a day and eating ml<l·momlng ·
onacks.
As a college Jun.ior who ba1 had
diabetes for many year1. I'd like . to
tell her how sorry I am that t wasted
lhe taxpayers' money and tnconvenicnced
my teachers by going to the bathroom
and ••Uni mld·momlng lllBtk&
••
Too many couples go fr®\ matrimony
to 1crlmon1. Don't let , yOur marriage
Jlap before it gets started. Send for
Ann Linders' booklet, "Marriage -What
to Expect." Send your request to Ann
Landers in care ol this newspaper encloe.
ti\g 50 cents in coin and a k>n&. &tato'ped.
tell.addressed envelope.
I
• . , ·~ .. ... ' -
•
IWLY Pll.OT fridat, M11 15, 1970
Adventurous Service. Yea~s· Reca .lled
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I)' JODEAN HAITINGS wi.. Ille C0'1 MColal)' was
Of ... -.... .... lnjcnd In .. ~~ Ille
'll>lo 111'1 Aney ta -· prunpllf ~ hlll1 her prtaod of an -I cl bat -I fonntl' court
-· and Lt. CoL Joanne Allr<nle, U.S. Air Porco reporter.
J\elrie, wouldn't tilde a '"We · made a believer of-
IDllllcltclollm fer her ZS Jtan hl111," ahe -lau&hl, Ujd
In -since World War It ' l'UD't 'loai Were tbtre II. wero WAFS lnltructlni tn ·
Now Mn. Dollu Moran JU . Unt tralnen, .., tile ru,bt
of HllllllnCt<>n Hirbour, tbt line and workloc In tbt tower
diminutive redbud wu wort-u weµ u · tn myrakt o t b e r !DC u an ldmlnlltraUvo aldo eipoc111ea ......t the bue.
fer Ille War Deporlment -The ~ eolooel wu worl-sbe tint volunteerecl fer the i,,, u a aypqroplllc olllcer w.,_•oAmq A uzlllary ats.ntoAaa-abe-iv-
Corpl. td her ovetRU o r d e T 1
Sbe wu oeleoted loc tta nrat IWltchlJ1I her at the lost
olflcon' tralnlll( ctau and minute from the Poctflc to
later joined Ille fil'lt 8"lUP the i!unlptao '111eater -a
cl womet> to ..,.,. wllh the bleuln(, Joanne clalma, since
Air Forco. Since 1141 .ii. has abe hu a phobia 111out bui•·
helped to chart • program After recelvtne her ........
tor service women J n training in New York abe and
peacetbne. ·flt other women joined aome
Remembe!illg the b I ea t 10,000 Europe-bound troops
daya cl ltll, Joanne "'1mlta 1board Ille """-Elizabeth"
t!>al at ·11nt male · olllcen where J....,;-;;;; In chars•
didn't -what to do Yllh ol recmUoo, ...Uare and
Ille fembioe YOlunlem, IDOll motale lo< the -·
"' -bad mlllted !O< lll9VlkMry lactlcs to
palrlolJc J'tUOlll or --llillke. a lnjlln( "'bmarlne their loved °"" were flabtlnc. l!lldo the rip lonpr than
Her flrlt commanding of~ lllllll but lhe wu fortut1ale
fleer al Minter, an Air Fo..,. In havlnl the whole Gl•M lllll>I lrllnlnf bue, firmly Miller hand unit aboard to
believed woman'• place "" play 10 ahowl a day and teep
In the home. Aaallned there the penoMel enterialned.
as a second offlce.r, Joenne In England the Allltd Forces
found moraJe low becaute the were prearing for the Battle women didn't have eDOUCh to oi the Bulge and after at-
do. tendln( a plloto.luterpretlng
FEMININE STJU.TEGY ac:boo1 Joanne wu auigDed
Employlns a bll ol feminine to the headquarlera ol the
zlrlle&Y, Joame flliieoted to !ale Gen. D wt 1 ht D.
IV HIS MAJESTY'S SEAMSTRESS -Lt. Col. Joanne Alfronte (Mn. Dallas the CO's aide that he kt her ElseMower where her com·
Moran Ill) U.S. Air Force Reserve, recalls her 23 year& in •ervlce u she -the fil'lt time -1111nr mandln( olficer wu Col. comparNunlfOnDJPUrcha=s=ed::..:m:....:E=•~gl=•=nd=·~~~~~~~~~~~~-·-ent~=·=··~'-=m-=the=olr=--olllce.=:=·--=E=~="=--Rc=""'=--~=~=--~~-
St. Andrew's Church Leaders OC Philharmonic
Selected for Ceremony Seated Alta Bahia Installs
MRS. JOHN VERY
Affw,,_, Rttos
Fun Film
Examines
Shopping
· Newly manied Mr. and New officers will be In-Mrs. William M. Latng, chairman; L. W. Jenks,
Mrs. John Robert Very are stalled when the Coast chairman of the Alta Bahia recording secretary, and
making their first home in Women's Club meeta in the Committee of the Orange David Chambers, trea.surer.
Costa Mesa. Mesa Verde Country Club at County Pbllharmonic Society M Geor Ochs h
The Rev. Dr. Ch a r 1 es• 11 a.rn. Tuesday, May 19. will imtal1 offkers at 10 a.m. rs. ge ner
Dierenfield performed the Mrs. Jack Hart, president, Thursday, May 2J, in the hostess and assisting her will
double ring nuptials in SL wUI conduct the business Newport Beach home of Mrs. be the Mmes. John P. Kenney,
Andrew's P r e s b y t e r i a n meeting and the inslallaUon Kenneth Smith. W1lllam Heidemann aid Ray-
Chapel. Parents or the ceremonies wiU be directed. Following the ceremony, mond Dosta.
newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. by Mrs. James Badgley, pres.1-lunch will be terVed.. Guests are invited to attend
Haviland Van U:w Smith of dent of Orange Dlatrlct, Leading the group will be meetlnpwblcbwillt.Ueplace
Lido Isle and Mr. and Mrs. California FederaUon o f the Mmes. John W. the third 1bunday of eKh
Robert Kennedy Very of Women's Clubs. Dona1dsoo, chairman; John month bqhming 1 n Sep-
Newport Beach. Accepting tbe president's Croul, vice chairman; Richard te.mber. lnfonnaUon re1ardln1
The former Donna INryea gavel will be Mrs. GMrge Frank 11 n , correapondlnc the lf'OUP may be obtaintd
Smhh, a 1965 National Charity Bryson, wbote theme for the aecret.ary and membership from Mrs. Laing at 8'1$-6033. League debutante, asked her year will be Blue Bird of,...:.:.::=::.......::::.....:::.:_..c.:....:.:. _____ ...:.:_..c..::...:_1
sisltt ChrilUe Smith to he Happlnesl In Enjoyment ol
the maid ol honor. Klmherly I.Ivins.
Fox was the j u 11 lo r Other new officers are the
bridesmaid. Mm ... William H a l i id a y ,
Marc Moureaux was beat Robert Knoi'ff, Arthur
man and aeating guests were Hoodenpyle and M l c he 1
John Richard and Richard Coronel, vice president.; Dale
~·former Miss Smlth 111 Mqor, George Fox and Harry
an alumna of Newport Harbor Oiarlton, secretaries; Jenkins
}Ogh School and the Univeni-Jenkln1, treuurer, and Earl
ty of Arizona where she af-Garren, parliamentary ad-
filiated with Delta Delta Delta visor. sorority. PresenUy she is Memben will gather the stc-
employed as a social worker ond Tuesday of t h e month
at the Rehabilitation Center during the summer for card
for Crippled Children and parties. '
Adults o! Orange County.
The bridegroom, a pduole Dance Club
of Newport -· served The first, third and fifth
JACK GLENN GAllERY
lllRECnCNS "°
PART I L VRICAL AllSTRACl10N
J*9 ... 1Nt ....,._
"""'°"-Dan Olri9__..
Ronnl9 Lal'ldflekt
0on..-1on
Ken~I ....... v....., ___ .......... .
~~___. ......... ---.--......-~-.. .......... -,_, __ with the U.S. Marines 1n Viet· Fridays of the month are the
na.m and now is attending dance dates selected. by Lace
Shopping, a aubject close to On:np Coa!t College. 'n Leather Square Dance Club
evfrf woman'1 heart, will be members. The music starts
MAY 13th niROUGH JUNE 15th
7 DAYS A WEEK. II A.M.10 S P.M.
-&..rCCli09T __ l_o&lllMi---.tft'r,OIUL C I-eumined In a talk, To Secretaries at a p.m. in the RecreoUoo
Mll'ket, To Market, for At 6:30 p.m. every aecond 1_:Cen=ltt=.:., ="::untlnston=:::::::.::Be=•::ch::·:_ _____________________ I
metnbera of the Woman'.s Club 'Itlursday women of Bahia
of San Juan Capistrano on Chapter of National Secretaries' Association '1\Jeaday, May 19, 12:30 p.m. International assemble In dlf-
A representaUve ol a stamp rerent locations to attend
comptny will cover planning, meeUngs. Mra. Uoyd Fleming
bulcs in marke\lng and prac--at f?3-&60 may be telephoned tica1 tdnts for sboppen, u
well • lbow an amusing film ··fo~r;;a;;ddl;;;;tioo;;;;;al;;in!;;;;crm;;;;a;;U;;on;;.;;;I outl!nlng-lhopplns habits of1
• • • Cllltomen u ~ throush the Margot Goodman
_,
•
eyea d. ~ market manqer.
Mn. GeoUrey Mansell,
pnoldent, will a>nduct Ille
-~wblchwlll Include eleot1on o! officen.
'Ille .... board will be II>
ltalled on 1'Jeeday, June 11, m the San Cl<meni. Im.
Mrs. Donald P.!oore, lun-
c:Morl chairman. wUl b e
Mlllted by the Mmes. Nelle
Ford. Ralph Beil. Dav i.d
Payne, Hugo Forster, Edward
Chade, Leon Drummond, Lynn
Shrewsbury, Looile Faranzen,
C. R. Cook. Louis Gauthier
and Miss Helea Shrewsbury.
Film Viewed
The Woman'1 Auxiliary lo
Ille American Soci<ty 0 f
• ~ )Ceciwnk::ll EDCIDeer1 1a plan-
. .. nlal a joint meetlnl In the ._ . Nortbrldp home of Mrs.
.• 11""'7 w. Babel at u 1.m.
... ..;-.,.. ·-,. -·
Tbunday, 1111' II.
'Ille Loe Ausdel and San
fen>llldo Valley MCl!ons will
meet to -a !Um on the "Commen:lal Art o! Cate
Batlni."
VFW Auxiliary
Ooo1t11ne A u r I ll 1 r y to
V-o! l'ottlcn Wars,
. Paet .. pthen tile firat ud
INrd Frlda1I at I p.m. Oolta M..,., American Lelkm Hall
II tlie meeCln( acme.
SUMM~R PR~GRAM
1 • J Wffk worbh,a:
Pol.ti"'• Seel,...,_
Drawl°' 6•twHktooroot:
Polalllf • W ......... n
Jewelry MUI"'
C:.re•ltt •Scot ...... D,.w1 ...... 1lc • fl1ore
Prt.t M•klot. -Writ. ., ,a..... fet •
..... t.rochvtt: 17141 4'4-U10
'10 LotoM Coayoo l4.
Lo9oaa IHc• t2H1
STARS s.,.r_, Owl•lf ft OM ef f .. t
_,1~·, 9r••t 11tr.lottrt. Hit
1ol11mn It c11e of tho DAILY
PILOrs tro•t fe1h1Nt.
(formerly of Margot Interiors)
and
Fritz Steinbach
(formerly of Atta'• lnterion)
announce tht opening of
:Jlie Gfeganl Barn JnieriorJ
locateCI at
447 East Seventeenth Street
Costa Mesa, California
TElEPHONE (71 Al 645-2555
tlVOiO hourt; monda1 lhru lriday; 9 am·5 pm
-da11 and ov .. ing• b7 appointment only
'HELPS ENEMY'
"l requesttd reasstgnment
from that, tbCllgb ," laughs
Joanne, ·who receive~htr maoten degree from u' LA,
"I' couldn't read the tos,
so 1 told tllem t felt 1 WIS
doing more to help the
enemy!" ·
!t was her reassig:qment as
or>eratlon.s officer of the ~
ood Air Division, ·Ellhth Air
Force -the first time women
actually were employed <11 an
air base -that led to one of her most exciting and near~
fatal n:periences.
St.anding just five feet tall
aod nlckuamed "Little Jo" by
the B-24 crews, Joanne admits
she also was 1 typical !ourist
and wanted to llff Uege,
Belgium, where the planes
were flylng in supplies for
Germany.
She finally persuaded. one
of the creVi'a to smuggle her
aboard for what they all felt
would be an uneventful .n\!lt
run -an act •hlch woul~
have caused everyone's· In-
stant. court martial bad· It been
discovered.
Tolally devoid ol mako.up
and wearing a borrowed
uillfonn and he1met, Joanne
arrived in Liege onJy to
discOver · h,er commanding of
fleer also decided to make
that fUght on aJIOUler aircraft
so 'for 10 hours · she t.>as
virtually a prisoner confined to the plane. · •
. Tl}O milt run COl)Cepl ended
abruptly ~ the pline was
hit by flack during their
"'turn trip and the pilot
ordered the remaining crew
to ball out. Fortuna!ely Joanne
had taken parachute training
and lhe airplane was ol.f the
English coast.
"Othet'wiJe, since 1 wasn 't
on the flight manifeet I aUll
would he JJsted as m1'llnl
today," liM Sl)'I of ,btr
youlhful escapade.
,GREAT THRILLS.
One of her greatest tht:ills ' was seeing London for the
!Its~ time ablne wt\.h lilhts
-tlreeta jammed with wlldly
celebrating 1n0b1 -aod the
end of the Will'. Tbe !ood wls
unbelievably bad, $)e
remembers, and evtn today
JO&Mt cu't face peanut but--
t.tr or marmalad~
"There wu a vendor .hawt-
tns fresh grapes on lhe street
In London and I badn'l seen
fresh grapes for yr:ars ... I
paid f4.l0 for a pound," slte
remembers.
A teetotaler, she also as-
tounded lhe other Amerlcan
officers when she rejected
champagne (selling for ~
cents a bottle) in favor of
a bebrMiUul ol fresh c:herries
sbe picked herself from a
nearby tree. ,
When she arrived home Me
discovered her mother had
carefully saved meat ~ps
to buy steak in her bonOr,
and all she could think of
was a huge ftuit salad or
a banana split. ·
She· afso was 8m8zed: to
notice lhat ankle-strap shoes
-worn overseas only by
French prostitutes -v.·ere
high fashion on Fifth Ave.!
ACTIVITIES.
Chairman of the board of
lhe Hi.mtlngton Harbour Com·
mittee of the Orange County
Philharmonic Society and a
member of IJttle Mermaid
Guild and the Election Board
or Huntington Beach, Joanne
also helped to start the Air
Force Molben' Club and was
instrumental in obtaining a
charter for the national
organllalloa.
Sbe bell~• I.he serv~
still olle< opPortWllU.. !"
youna women today. Although
~!1Jeel~v1; !~e;tag~o m~
womtn actually carrying IUMJ
there no looger is dlscrimina·
llon between men and women
in anv branch of the service. ,;-ii'.s a marvetoUs way for
girls to aee the world," abe
enthuses, "and morale is hlch
within the women's !!e.fViceS."
Gone are the barracks-type
quarters, now replaced with modern dorms hoo!ing two
women to a room. Jobs, pay
and educational programs are
equal 1o those of the men,
she aays, and in addition there
is lhe same esprit de corps
and opportunity to make
wooderful friends that she en-
countered. ~
"The service is a ereat
leveler,'' says the engaging
matron. "Women have to
learn to get along, and this
still is the best country in
the world. 'Ibere is a Jot wrong
here. but put someone out
of. the countz:y for just six
months and 1'11 bet he'd never
complain again! As my
mother always aaid : 'Be glad
you're bom American 1nd be
glad you're born healthy~."
Dresses Long
For Tots' Dolls
The Paris fa s hion col-
lections, which stressed long
skirts and dresses and buried
the mini and micro skirtl,
;, hlttlns toylaixt.
A New York doll manufac-
turer. Jolly Toys Inc., is
redesigniDg the clothing of ltl
dolls S() that retailers can
chooae Jong or &hort akirta.
OPEN DAILY 11).10; SUK. 11).7
Onqe
... Tntlll .t Tllft
11JJL T"tt.
11-Park ........ "' .......
.. 1 .........
c::a .-1':
ay 15. SAT. 16
;;
•
COOL SHIFTS
FOR WOMEN
011r Reg. $2.00 2D111s
$
FOii
Collon 11trttn shifts for tool
sumtrttr lilling. Choose fro•
shtatb and drtss types with 11ip-
p.r backs. Washable, pre-shnmk
f or ltl!ting fit. Little or n<>-iron-
i11g required. Popular printt. 10-
18 Pink
Blue
Turquoise
Yellow
U1ac
Blocl</Mlillt
....... 1 •••• , l•t•a Pattc
..... LttMcrMW• U1te•l••tY•lltrvtn
I 1441 IMK• II ... Siii U.C91• a ...
Co1taMeM S.•t1Aae --.. -l&e•st.mt ..... ---""-
~oun1ain Valley
*--.-
VOL. bl, NO. I lb, 4 SECTIONS, .42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA • FRIDA r, >.JAY 15, 1970
• o ice ..
Hot Weekend
Record W armtli for Cou1ity
Record-breaking temperatures were predicted for Orange County this
weekend as patches of fog threatened to dampen Orange Coast beaches.
The U.S. Weather Bureau today predicted sunny warm weather with a
high of 96 degrees and lows in the 60's for Orange County.
As inland temperatures threaten to hit the 100 degree mark prospective
beach.goers are faced with predicted patchs o! fog aJong the coast, cutting
visibility down to one-quarter of a mile.
Orange County Harbor Department spokesman in Newport Beach said
light winds were expected with the fog which blanketed Laguna Beach and
Newport early today. Water temperature was set at a warm 61 degrees.
The record high for May 15 was set in 1967 at 102 desrees, while the
record for May JS, 96 degrees. has stood since 1892. Weathermen said the long·
standing record would prohably be broken.
Meanwhile, rising temperatures, bothersome smog and strong winds that
fanned brush fires continued to plague the in land areas of Southern California
today, with no relief in sight.
Temperatures headed higher than 100 degrees in some inland areas and
were in the 80's in the mountains. The estimated high for dbwntown Los An-
geles was 95 for today and Saturday.
Brush fires hit at least four counties Thursday when I.he Los Angele!!
temperature peaked at 89 degrees.
A yellow pall of eye-irritating smog cut visibility in most of the basin
sharply in one of the heaviest attacks or the year.
The hot Santa Ana wind gusts from the desert gave little relief from
the smog while bringing high temperatures.
~loomy Statistics Belie
Nixon Economic Stand
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixoo
administratiOn's t:ffort to calm a near
panje on Wall Street ha!I been jarred
by some of the gloom~t economic
1tatistics in a decade.
~ Praident Nixon huddltd with his
economic strategists at the White House
Thursday, the government reported the
deepset ecooomic slump since the 1960
Inaugural Ball
To End Valley
Culture Week
Fountain Valley's first official week
or culture will wind up Saturday and
Sunday with the Mayor's Inaugural Ball.
a pioneer picnic and a bus tour of
the city.
A long list of special events Is also
scheduled at the civic center, 10200 Slater
Ave., for Saturday .
A flower show, hobby show, exhibits
from the city's junior clubs, club i~
formaUo.1 and a production of the junior
community theater are on tap from
JO a.m. to S p.m.
At 8 p.m. a bridge tournament will
be held in the community center and
"The Crucible ," will be put on by Foun·
tain Valley High School drama students
at the1high school.
The drama department ol Los Amigos
High School wUl present "OUt of lhe
Frying: Pan," at 8 p.m. at the school.
The Mayor's ba!I starts at 8:30 p.m.
Jn the community center and at 9 p.m.
the 'Fountain Valley Jaycettes will
present the city with a piano for the
center,
SuDday's events include repeals of the
hobby shows, a pioneer picnic at noon,
bus tours of the city from I p.m. to
:i p.m., and various daocers and s~s
from 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the c1v1c
center.
recession and the worst three-month.
period of luflaUon si.Dce the Korean War.
ln a period of lw than three hour!!,
government stalisticans revealed :
-Revised inlonn1tion showed the
economy's output or goods and services
declined at an annual rate ol 3 percent
in the first quarter ~ of this year, a
slump much worse than th-: 1.5 percent
drop reported earlier on the basis of
preliminary figures, and the steepest
dip since 1960.
-The Gross National Product (GNP)
price index -the broadest based
measure of Inflation -increased at
an ann ual rate of 6.25 percent in the
January-through-March peri od , lhe
sharpest increase sinct: the first quarter
of 1951.
-Industrial production, a key economi c
be1lwether, declined in April ror the
eighth time in the past nine months.
The Federal Reserve said the April index
was 170.4 percent of the 1957-59 base
period, down 0.4 perceot from 1'1arch
and down sharply from the 198.7 peak
se~ last July.
-Personal income of all Americans
Increased in April because of retroactive
boosts in social security benefits and
federal pay. Without those two factors,
income would have declined for the first
time in 41h years.
-Afte r-tax corporate profits were al
a seasonally adjusted annual rate nf
$46 billion in the f.irst quarter of this
year, down $3 billion from the previous
quarter.
-The nation's balance of payment.Ii,
measuring business transactions between
the United States and the rest of the
world, showed a dellcit of $1.7 billion
in the first quarter, a sharp deterioration
from the $532 million surplus recorded
in the last quarter or 1969.
The GNP price index was pushed up
by the retroactive federal pay raise.
Sewage
• I
Youth Gets
Major Role
At Co11gi·ess
Youth "'ill gel its say in Huntiagton
Beach's third annual Co mmunity
Congress al Golden West College Satur·
day.
Fi ve students wilt join nearly 100 com-
munity leaaers in a series of day.tong
round·table discussions.
The students are To111y Bonwell, Alan
Delahoyde, Sunshine Fickling, Michael
Tracy and Harry Zatkowsky, all of
Golden \Vest College.
The congress, sponsored by the
chamber of commerce, is bei111g handled
by the American l\fanagement As.socia·
lion which has developed a discussion
format called "Operation Dialogue.'"
A representative from the American
1'1anagement Association will moderate
five separate discussion groups, with
eaach group ha ving representatives drom
different sections of the community .
Registration will begin at 9:30 a.m.
and the congress will continue until 4
p.n1.
In addition to the students, those taking
part will include :
\\'illiam J. Back, Ted Bartleu, Mrs.
Charlene Bauer, Or. Ralph Bauer,
Ronald C. Bauer, Robert Bazil, Dr. John
Benlley, Michael Bokor, Don Bonfa, Mrs.
R. Dudley Boyce, Dudley R. Boyce,
f\.trs. Thomas Broderick, Cris C. Cris,
Rod Cruse. Pat Downey, He~ Dutt , .
Alan Dir kin, Mrs.rlJlliliey DulM', • llltM•'
Ralph DeKoven, George-Far~ar. Dr.
f\.fax Forney. William Foster, Mrs.
Norma Gibbs, Cary Haas, Gordon
Hatch, Mrs. Stanlty Hettinga, Mn. Ben·
jamin Jones, Walter Johnson, Ralph C.
Kiser, Ed Kerins, Al Klingensmith, Ray·
mond Kokowicz, and George Lusk.
Dennis Mangers, A. C. Marion, Kenl
l\1cClish, Doyle Miller, Donald Mitcl;lell,
:11rs. Jean Morehouse, Rudi Niedzielski,
Mrs. Bernard O'Looghlin, Ray Picard,
Joseph Ribal, Mrs. Michael Roach,
Pastor Charles Rose, Mrs. David Sariego,
R. M. Schmidt, Mrs. MamJe Seltzer,
Tom Severns, Jim Shepherd , Mayor
Donald Shipley, Roger Slates, Paul L.
Smith, Mrs. Helen Stewart, Robert
Sutake.
Robert Tariian, Larry !::. Tollefson,
~See CONGRESS. Page %1
Ne ,w Queen Due
For Huntin gton
Connie Jo Pfister will gi ve up her
Miss Huntington Beach crown Saturday
night to one of 18 young beauties seeking
the title for 1970-71.
The pageant starts at 8 p.111. in the
HuntiAgton Beach High S c h o o I
auditorium.
Cordon Wheat1ey will agai l'I serve as
master of ceremonies in the city 's sixth
annual beauty pageant.
The Women's Division of the Hun·
tington Beach Chamber or Commerce
is sponsoring the event. Judges are
televisio11. personalities Stanley and Barry
Livingstone and professional football
player Jon Kilgore.
Entertainment will be prov(dcd by the
special stage band of Huntington Beach
High School.
to Fire
WO u
Fleecing tor Peace . ' . ' '
Former 'Army-sergeant C. A. D~s. now a student al North Caroliqa
State University in Raleigh, was among 60-male student!: partlci~t~
ing in a "fleece for peace" hair cutting movement. The hair will· tie
~Lptfed in a 'dbve-1~ap·ed plllo\v and mailed ·to P,resident Nixon. · ·
Y outhGr~npSeemsLikely
To Get $3,000 .From City
It l~ks llke 'the .Y?!!~.Coalition Com.
mittee wHI get the $3,~•it.wanta .from·
the City of Huntington Beach· to·stage a
summer musical.
Jim Sampson, l~year-old ·vice chair·
man of the YCC, too.k the group's case
to the council ag&in Wednesdiy night and
submitted ·a detailed report on how the
money would be ·spent.
Only four• councilmen were present at
the meeting -it' was a budget session
with city department heads· -but the
consensus was that the $3,000 would be
a "sound investment." ·
Sampson will make another•request for
the money at a full council ·meeting on
Monday.
The Youth Coalition is ' planning to
stage either "The · King and 1." "Music
Man," or '.'West Side' SWry", this su m·
mer. Rick Sc hraier. a Los ·Alamitos .
teacher, will be·' hii'ed ·as:·the prdducer .
Sampson told the councilmen that sal·
arie.s for professibnal help• Will total
St.SCIO. royalties and "rentals·will be $400
Station
and lhe sets $850.
L8!t year the Youth CoaUlion pre-
sented "How to Suc.ceed in Business
Without Really Trying" and it 1osl. more
than $1,100, but Samp90n tokf lhe counci1
that the organizers were an~ious ~o at~rt
earlier lhis year and that with more and
better advaoc:ed publicity the show ahould
at least break even. The councilmen
agreed.
"I don 't see how you can miss," Mrs.
Norma Gibbs ·sliid.
After ' some questiening on how ' they
had projected ticket receipts, Counci1·
man Al Coen, 'who had previously criti·
cl:ted the Jack df ·a cost breakdown 1 by
the Youth CoaliUon, indicated that he
Was s3tis£ied with Sampson's presenta·
Uon. He urged, however, that' th~ group
should· consider itself a city department
a.nd submit .a. qudget every Y.eir, · . . ·
When. the Youth Coalition was forined
last year, th'e. council allocated It ·a ~d·'
get of ·$10,000. ·Brander Castle, assl~~t
city admini8trator, 1S4id there was1abOµt
$1,200 remaining in the accou.nL ·
Meet Cou1ity
Candidates Huntington Solves Harbour's S1nell Prob"lem
· Asked why the grpup wanted to s~Jt
a, big musical pTQducUon that would · ~
quire prolessional help,,Sam{lson r'Rllp<f,
"We want something of h'gh caliber.
A'nyone can put on a rinky4ink play -
we wan t something that's a cha.llenae.
sOmethi(lg that will hold the interest of
young people."
Mrs. Ruth Brazney, an .adult adviser.
iiaid that no volunteers had come f91'~
ward to produce the show. l•Jr we could
find .someone to help us we would be•
delighted."
Wondering about who to vote
for'! The DAILY PILOT. in cooper a·
tiOI with the Orange Coast League or Women Voters, today offera
10me ildormation to help vol.era
make intelligent MlectJons when
they cast ballots for Orange County
Supervisors, Orange County School
Board trustee, and Orange Cou nty
SuperintendeRt of Schools.
Bltlgraphies and viewpoints ot Ole
candidates are published toda)f on
page 3 with supervisorial candi-
dates presented across the top of
the page. Two candidates failed to
~spond or provide Information in
tht school board race. They ire
Roger C. And erson, and Reg WoOd.
Robert D. P'eterson did not re11pond
In the county superintendent of
schools race.
LJj_ _______ ,
By ALAN DIRK.IN
Of Tl'lt DtHY PUM Stfff
Huntington Beach plans to g&n a fire
station by buying the "Honey Pot" -
Huntington llirbour residents' sardonic
name for the Sunset Sanitary District's
sewage treatment plant.
IL will cost about $115,000 and the
ci ty council will be asked lo approve
the action Monday. The move is regarded
as the rtnal solution to the Jong-drawn
controversy over Obnox.lous odors Jrom
thf! plant.
"The proposal is to pay about $95,000
tor acqul!litlon or the 13 acres the plant
stands on and th en demolish it for a
rough cost of another $20,000," City
Engineer Biii Jlartge explained this
momi!)io '"l'he city's long-term use for
Ult properly would be as a lire 11talion."
" Th1t will put the lid Ofl the "honey
pol," but whal wUI happen to the
sewage? Hartge !laid that nearby city
lines will be connected to the plant
and the sewage will bt: sen\ two and
one half miles to a coonty treatment
plant in Fountain Valley.
Orange County S:ri1itatlon District
directors agreed to this arrangement
at a meeting earlier this week.
Hartge said that the $95,000 Lile Sun.set
Sanitary District woold receive from
t'te city would be paid to the county
by tbe district for the cost of treating
the sewage.
"'It's a fortunate.coin6deoc:e that the
value of the property is rou1hly the
same as I.he county's charge." llartge
commented.
The plant, north or Pscific Coast
lllghway and tast. or Warner Ave1.\ue,
has been the subject of cootrovers:y
f
for several · year!! with Huntington
Jfarbour re&ldenta complaining about
unpleasant odors emanatin1' from I.he
facility.
rwo month1 ago lbe SuMet santtary
District Wl!I ordered to shot do~n the
plant after members of · the C&Ufomia
Regiooal wai.-, Qµ~l)ly 'CootroJ. Boa rd
nlltd that it was 'tht cause of· the
frul odors. ' , ' ,
The City of. Hur1Un1ton .Bucb'1 PU>e·
I Ines ,Pol', In !rant of . the flltl~IY a!O"I! 1WarMr. Avenue. J:f•rtge atbriated. thlt
only !O letl of PIP< "HI fit ·n<eded to ·
malc:e lhe nece!lllr)' coonei::Uon.
Asked why the cortntcUon ~dn1t have
been made yeira ago, 'the enaineer
replied, "The problem hasn't been
teChnicat so muCh aa ·onc involvins en·
titles."
...
11
-· Top Prize Won
By J~(f Gri.der
• ;.J~ff Grider, -an elghl,h grader at Mar ine
VM!w"School, Runllngton Beach, 11 the
5wee~~E'i!I wiooer in ~ junior physical
sciCnee• division of the • 15th annual
Orarlge County· SC!e~. Falr.
.There w;ere more than 200 enG1es
In the senior and jwUor (eleme.ntary)
divisions of' the r8ir. held at Santa Ana
Junior CoUege, The resultJ were an·
nounctd 1'1'1unday,
.Jtff, 13, won wUh 1 project that allows
bow paper i;:a.n be made oul of wood'.
Today's l'l••I
N.Y. Stoeks
I
TEN CENTS
Mississippi
.Officers Say
Snipers Shot
JACKSON, Miss. (UPI) -Two penons
were ttlled and 15 o\hers injured today
by a barrage of bullets fired onto the
Jackson State College campus by police
who claimed they were returning snJper
[ire.
Students at the predominantly black
school vehemently denied there wera
any snipers.
"There were no shots fired from the
donn at all, and this is one time police
can't lie and say they were shooting
into the air,'' declared Henry Paige,
a senior.
"There are bullet holes in all tht
windows and there's blood all over our
campus, and blood all over the dorm,••
be said.
M. B. Pierce, chief or detective!, and
District Attorney Jack TraVis made con·
flicting reports.
"There was quite a bit of soiper fir·
Ing," said Pierce, "and there was a
man on the fourth floor· of the women'•
dormitory."
Travis said an ''ext en s ive tn-
vesUgation" was being conducted into
the matter, but that there wµ "every
indication that '"a large amount -a
tremendous amount of sniper fire -
both fNm the front aqd . the bac)I; of
the officers before any sho'is were fired
by the highway patrol. They were under
extreme pressure." ·
. n-ldllod "'"' tdtntlfiod ... Jam .. Earl Greto and Phillip L. Gibbs, 21.
Gibbs was klentllled u a ltudent, OOt
official& said they were not sure Green
wu enrolled at the school.
The trouble started abOut 11 p.m. EDT Th~ay when a group of black youtbt
gathered near the college, Jocated a
few blocks from downtown Jackson, arid
began hurling rocks and botUcs at paSS<o
ing cars. It was the second consecutive
night of such violence and state troopers
were on hand. National Guardsmen were
standing by tn armories.
Sludenu. according to poUce, drove
a dump truck -wh!eh had been parked
on campus -onto the street and aet
it afire. ·
extinguish the blaze, they said, lnipers
opened fire from Alexander Hall, the
w<1men's dormitory.
Paige gave another version of the
events leading up to the gunfire. Ht
said police made a sweep dOwn the
street after the fire started, and that
one o!Ucer !ltepped from the ranks and
started to address the crowd.
"He started saying, 'Ladies and
gentlemen,' " Paige recalled, "and then
they (police) started shooting before he
even finished. I think it was just a
m,ssacre. I think it was preplaMed.
They came up he re with the idea of
killing."
Coed Eloise Thomas said bedlam broke
out in the women's dorm when the
shooting started. She said she dropped
(See JACKSON. Page %)
STOCK MARKET
NEW YO!!I\ (AP ) -The stock market
rtgaloed all its early strength in mod-
erate' trading this afternoon, and analysts
said the long-awaited "bottoming" ac-
tion might be at hand. (See quotations
Pages 20-21 ).
Orange Coast
Wea titer
Tt's still summer on the Orange
Coast, no mitter what the calendar
says, Saturday should push the ~ry up to 95 in mid~ty
and lnto the middle 70's on the
coast.
INSmE TODAY
, It wCJsn'C an11 mfUto'tl thrtat
that ma.di Pttlidtnt Nixon 1tnd
troops into Cambodia; It WOt o
cose oJ t~e timt being rlghL
Page 9.
I
r
ii
l
..... ~~··-.------· ""•"-'""·' ..
,Z DAILY PILDI H
SA Panther
Death T1·ial
'
Nears Jury
A SOl*'lol' Court jury wu urged today
to reject defense argument.a "that seem·
ed bent on proving that everybody except
Arthur Dtwltte League shoukl be
suapec:led al Jdlllna police officer N •Ison
Su:lcer.''
Au1stant Diatrlct Attorney Evntt
Dickey alrer<d that reprimaed lo 1ho
defense in a final argument that will
be followed by Judge Samuel Dreizen's
instructions to the jury. The panel will
then retire, possibly this afternoon, to
consider its verdict in the I~week trial
of the accused Black Panther.
Dickey, who is making lbe final pro-
secution argument of bis career -he
will take his recenUy created seat on
the Harbor Judicial District Court bench
\•lith the conclusion of the League trial
-asked the jury to discount what
he called the "sl.rong Inference that
(prosecutlon wltneu) RJck Tice adually
murdered the 24-year-old patrolman" last
June 4.
"We have readily conceded," Dickey
said, "that Rick Tice and another pro-
secution witnes.s have lied under oath
on mo"P. •'·A .. '"'le occasion. But his
''Slimony In this trial is backed by
the testimony of more than 30 wttne111e1
and we Utlnk that we have proved our
case even without what Rick Tiet had
to tell us."
League . 21. is accused of sboot!ng
officer Sasscer shortly after th e
patrolman halted the Black Panther and
a companion and demanded idm-
tificaUon. A 15-year-old witness klentlfled
by the prosecution as League's compan-
ion has testified that League shot the off!.
cer and that the pair then fled leaving
the patrolman dying in the gutter.
Judge Dreizen will send the j\D"f to
the jury room immediately after reading
lnstructlorul and the panel will remain
there until it reaches a verdict.
Arrangements ha ve been made for
the jury to be closeted at night in
KUarded motel rooms and those ar·
rangement& wlll extend throogbout the
weekend.
Gala Ceremonies
Set for Opening .
Of Valley. School
A Mathodist bishop, a U.S. Marine
band and a U.S. Representative will
help open the doors at Col School in
Fount.a.in Valley Wednesday night.
Blibop Gerald Kennedy or the United
Methodist aiurch will ipeak on "Our
Home and School RelaUons" as &chool
an dclty clficlala gather at 'I :30 p.m. to
dedicate the newest addition to the
Fountain Valley School Districl
The 60-plece U.S. Marine Corps Bind
from El Toro will open the program with
a concert. American flags wlll be given
to the school by Rep, Richard T. Hanna
(D-Westminster) and Joseph IJtchenfeld,
aenior vice commander of the Jewilh
\Var Veteran,,, Post '160.
Cm School, at 17615 Loo Jan!lnes Eu!,
already is serving students.
Harold Brown, chairman of the Foun-
tain Valley Board o( Trustees, will be
master o( ceremonies. He will introduce
members or the James H. Cox family,
fer whom the achool ii named.
F rom Pag~ I
CONGRES S ..•
Mrs. Irving Tucker, Mn. Jack Turk.
Mrs. Gilbert Turnbu11, Harry Turner1 Mrs. Carole Wall, Howard Warner, Mat.
thew Weyuker, G«>rge Williams, C. E.
"'Bili" WOOds , Norman Worthy, Walter
F. Young, Jay Mastroianni, Pete Horton,
Jack Higley, and Dr. Clarence Hill.
DAILY PILOT
CHIAicGI COAST '1JILllHINO Cl)Mf'A#'f
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·-
HARDWARE HDLDl!RS -Winners in F ountain
Valley School District's speech tournarrient include
(from left) Sue Laginess, 13; Wendy Coleman, 13;
Dave Reast, 13, and Chris Bent, 14 . Another winner,
John Thompson, 14, didn't make the photo.
OV Offering Housewives
Part-time Teaching Jobs
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of ,_ Dlllr 1'1191 ltt n
With Motllera' Day behind UI, the
Oce.an View School District has come
up with an ide1 to put some housewlves
to work -but only part..Ume and only
if they're bored with their domestic
chores. .
fte IChooJs' ofter Is to women
fortunate enough to posseu a teaching
credentlal: part thne paid instruction
at the f:limentary school level.
''11lll oommunlty bu a wealth of
leachJni talent which could be utilized
in alznoet every arta,11 sald James
Carvell, the dlstr:lct's as 11 Is tan t
superintend.mt. 11And it includes those
teachen who, altbough they aren't look-
ing for fulkime employment, are in-
terested in teaoltln.1 one to three hours
a day."
Although part-time teaching is a
relatively untried concept in Orange
County achool!:, Ocean View already
employ1 two part-Ume teachers and is
looking for more.
One of them fs Mrs. Carol Roach,
who teaches reading to 5th grade pupils
at Marine View School.
The! mother of one child and holder
or a master's degee, she 1ay11 she
felt 1'1lnneeded" after quitting teaching
for about a year.
"You begin to look for outside sUmula·
lion after you've gotten into the rut
of drinking coffee with the same
neighbors," she explained.
'"Ibere are a Jot of women out there
vo'e could use as a resource. I know
they would rather be part-lime teachers
Entries Pour In
For 4th P arade
Entries for the annual Huntington
Beach Fourth of July Parade continue
to pour in from all over Southern Call-
fornla with 1,000 participants already
iigned up . The tally includes seven bands. seven
float& and more than &O separate en-
tries.
The HunUngton Beach Jaycees, organ-
izers of the Independence Day spectacle,
expect lo double that In the Intervening
months. This year's theme Is "AchlevemenU
of Our Amerie1n Youth," and salutes
eight areas of achievement by the young.
er generallon.
These include the arts and science11,
community service, patriotism, educa·
tion, religion, history and sport1.
Television newscaster George Putnam
will be one of the main attractlUons on
his hone "Diamond," adorned with
$50,000 worth ol silver trappings.
Also entered this year Is the Kings-
men Drum and Bugle Corps of Los
Alamitos.
The parade beilns at 11 a.m. at La'ke
Park and threada ltJ way through the
downtown area.
It will be followed by 11 free hour-long
fireworks ahow from the Huntington
Beach pier at dusk.
F rom Page I
JACKSON •.•
to the floor and other g1rls dove on
top al her.
"All I could hear was the thud or
mooting and the glass brealtinc and
people scrtamlng," she said.
"When I looked out the window I
saw the ambulancts coming to take
out the people who we.re shot.''
About 500 National Cuard!mtn, v.•ho
were on alindby, were 1ummontd when
the shootJnc atuted, but by the time
thty arrived on the scene, the gunfire
h.ld ceased.
than substltutes who might be called
up at slx o'clock in the morning to
go lo work."
Teaching -even if only a limited
amount -Mrs. Roach says provides
immeasurable satisfacUon.
"Parent.a:, you know, spend a Jot or
money to aend their daughters to school.
Most of them become housewives. But
somehow ju.st belng a good wlfe and
mother isn't enough."
"A woman needs to get out of the
household and assume a role where she
can do some good," Mn. Roach added.
Inquiries from women wbo would like
to do part-time teaching are invited
by the school district, aceordlng to .W:t.
Supt Carvell. They will be used for
actual instrutilonal purpose:s and will
work in tandem with full-Wne teachers
and teacher aides.
Quallficationa for the part.time teacher
Include a regular California teaching
credential and a special teaching com-
petency in at least one elementary school
subject.
Pay will be based on the regular
teachers' salary echedule.
B<Ueball League
Signups Slated
On 2 Saturdays
Recreation and Parks Department
boyt baseball leagues in Huntington
Beach will form on the next two Satur·
days, l\-1ay 16 and 23, at high. schools in
the c.ity. Play begins on June 15.
Slgnups for the baseball leagues for
boys In 1\h and 8th grades will be taken
at 9 a.m. at Marina, Edison and Hunt·
ington Beach High Schools.
Boys must have a birth certificate and
$6.25 for purchase of team shirt, pants
and socks at time of signup.
Boys also must buy their own dark
blue ba.seball cap. Soys who wish to
pitch must not reach their 15Ul birthday
until after Dec. I for "A" League.
Youngsters in 5th and 6th grades may
sign up for "B" League play at the
same times and will need the same
amount of money and a birth cerUllcate.
They mu.st not reach their 13th birthday
by Dec. 1 if they wish to pitch.
Pla y begins June JS and boys will be
playing once or twice a week at S p.m.
From aignup time until play begins
the boys will play practice games on
Saturdays.
In additlon lo the high schools, boys
may sign up at the Recreation Center,
17th and Orange Avenue, Wardlow
School, Greer Park, Murdy Park, Eader
School and Edison High School.
Deborah McCann
Ce11te1·'s 'S tudent'
Deborah McCann, a senior at Rancho
Alamitos J{igh School in Garden Grove,
captured tbe $SOO !int place awa~
Thursday night as the Huntington Center
''student of the year.''
Taking second, and a $50 cash prlre,
was Allcla Cutvas of Pacifica High,
also In Garden Grove.
Elght other hijb school seniors won
$25 cash prizes as merchant.! In the
large Huntlncton Beach shopping «nt,,r
honored top scholars in the Hunlington
BeAch Union High and Garden Grove
Unified school diltrlcta.
The etaht runnersup were:
Glenn 'J'Mh, Edbon Higll, Huntington
Reach; Joyce Horn, Fountaln Valley
Jllgh: Teresa Doluhal, }luntlngton B!11ch
lUgh; Cynthia Johnson, M1rin1 High,
lfuntlngton Beach; Gary S p Ir Ito,
\Vestmlnster HJgh.
Linda Betton, Garden Grove lflgh;
Noreen Sweti, l..a Quinta HI g h ,
Westmln3ter, and De:Jnna Bruchhauser,
Sanl13go High, Garden Grove.
•
Five Stud ents
In Valley Win
Speech Tom·ney
Five young students have proven
themselves better talkers than any other
youngsters in the Fountain Valley School
District.
They did It by winning the district
speech tournament Wednesday night in
competition with 44 ol.her speakers.
Dave Reast, a 13-year-old Fulton School
student, took honors wilh the best ex·
temporaneous speech. Wendy Coleman,
13, also. or Fulton, was the winner in
original oratory.
Two youngsters, John Thompson, 14,
Arevalos School and Sue Lagin™, 13,
Cox School, shared honors with the' best
dramatlc lnterpretaUon.s.
Chris Bent, 14, of Harper School,
brought the m~ laughs with his winning
humorous Interpretation.
The young speakers were judged by
members or Toastmasters and
toastmistresses, clubs for speakers.
I
I < .
.. A "
-·.<~ ·1 .,., ...
. -•:
NliWPORT BEACH
1727 Wtstcllfl Dr., 642-105D
OPEN FRIDAY 'TlL 9
Bearlag E'tuh
Slocum to Face
'
Trial • Ill
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 th9 O•llY ,11111 Stiff
Cynthia Slocum was an unwanted child.
.No matter how her mother hated Utt
horror of a butchered baby ln the freeser
for fix years, she feared and resented
jts birth, begging for an abortloo.
A close confidante testified to this
Thursday, before preliminary hearing
\vas concluded in Harbor Judicial District
Cour t with Dr. Wesley G. Slocum, 45,
ordered to stand trial on murder charges.
The conclusion came unexpectedly soon
afte r cross-t!xaminalion of a string of
wilnesses who told of bizarre behavior
by both the defendant and his wile.
Tears.were frequent and Mrs. Slocum
sobbed as the defense attempted to wreck
her credibility as a witness by detailing
her tortured paat.
The witnesses included the obstetrician
who delivered Cynthia on Dec. 3, 1963,
and the coroner's surgeon to whom the
baby's remains were delivered March
2fi of this year.
Godmothers or both older Slocum
daughters were also called.
Judge Pro Tern William Christensen
declared he sees re asonable cause to
believe the crime of murder was com-
mitted and ordered Dr. Slocum arraigned
May 22 in Orange County Superior Court.
He refused to set any ball for release,
citing death threats against Mrs.
Slocum, defense attorney Paul Augustine
Jr., and two other physicians 1s good
reason.
Augustine argues that the key to the
case ls what killed the baby found March
26. whlle Dr. Richard Fukumoto, veteran
autopsy surgeon, testified this it im·
possible to determine.
Brain and other vital tissues were
remo\·ed by whoever performed the semi·
professional autopsy on the remains -
Dr. Slocum -the state contends.
The doctor displayed little concern dur-
ing the hearing. but literally sat on
the edge of his chair as Dr. Fukumoto
discussed the professionalism of the job.
"I would have to say no," he replled
when Augustine asked If It wu the
Work of a highly skllled surgeon working
ing under ideal conditions."
Chief Deputy Distri ct Attorney James
G. Enright, prosecutor, argued that a
man high on drugs who has just killed
his baby daughter would hardly be work-
ing under ideal c.onditon.
The first witness was Dr. Alan V.
Andrey,·s, of Newport Beach, who
delivered Cynthi1 and sent her and Mrs.
Slocum borne from the hospital in fine
shape.
"As I recall, she was a litUe di.sap..
pointed she didn 't have a son," he said
when Augustine asked about the mother's
. .
·'. "
Death
reaction.
He also said sht: neglected to cct
prenatal care until far advanced In
pregnancy and came to him with two
different lnfectlons, prior birth damqe
and a bad case of toxemia.
Augustine alleges she didn't want the
child anyway and became obsessed with
the possibility it might k.ill her or cause
damage during birth as did the couple'•
second daughter.
"Didn 't you say you were afraid you
migbt die and didn't want 'that damn
baby '!," he asked Mrt. Slocum.
"I never said anything about a damn
baby," she replied .
Family friend Mrs •. Joanne Weir, lip-
reading since she 11 deaf, testified Mrs.
Slocum was so distraught over the con·
dition that she vomited.
"I told her she waa too good to dit.
I had toxemia and I was all right,''
said Mrs. Weir, who took Mrs. Slocum
for her first prenatal vltlt
During one point, Mrs. Weir became
tearful.
"I want it straight what I say, becaqse
when I lea ve here, I want to be ab I •
to Jive with mysell. I don't want. people
twisting what I mean with 'vocabulary'
words," she said.
Mrs. Celia Rivera , who was hired
as housekeeper during one of Mr11.
Slocum's periodic hospitallzations for
drinking, said she found gin bottles and
beer cans and pills hidden in Mrs.
Slocum's bed.
Coll eges Name
Change Planned
Trustees or the Orange Coast Junior
College District plan to change the
district's name since Gov. Reagan signed
a bill Thursday permitting the uae o[
"community college" in district aftd col-
lege titles.
At their Wednesday night meetin(
trustees decided they ""'Ou\d like to call
the district the Coast Community College
District in order lo distlnguish the
district name from the two colleges
it serves.
Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa
and Golden West College in Huntingtoa
Beach are the two colleges in the district.
There has been some confusion of the
current district name with that of OCC.
District officials said they had not
set a definite date for the official name
change.
DRAPERY
SALi!
CUSTOM MADE WITH A WI DE SELECTION OF
QUALl!Y INTERIOR DESIGN FABRICS. AS MUCH
AS 40 1. OFF ON EXCELL ENT DESIGN FABRICS.
INTERIORS
P I I I I r LAGUNA BEACH Deil .. ~•.:,•• oni ntt r Or 345 North Coast Hwy. 494-65$l " AYlllablt-AID OPE N FRI DAY 'flL 9
""• .. T•n "°" M• tf o,.,. c •• ..,. ••o.12•a
' ' •
.. ,
Ne rt Beaeh 'l'oday'• F l•wl
EDITI ON N.Y. Sto.eks
* VOL. 63, NO. 116, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS
County Can and Might Block Airline Route
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of ,._ o.11~ PllM ltttf
Orange County government apparently
has the ability and the intent to block
Continental Airlines from flying its new
CAB..authoriled route from Orange Coon·
ly Airport to Paciric Northwest cities.
"I think we shou1d stand by our
previously stated position of opposing
the route on the grounds that we don't
have facilities to accommodate them,"
chainnan o f the county Board of
Supervisors Alton Allen said.
"I rather doubt that Continental ~ill
even be asking us for the facilities
because they know what oor position
is and what our situation is."
Assistant Airport Director R o n
Chandler sakl, "We cannot di.lcrtminate
within a class of alrcraft -commercial
aircraft -as far as taking off and
landing. But when they come to us
for lease space we can say we cannot
lease you something we don't have ."
Hot Weekend
Record W armth for · Count y
Record-breaking lemperatures were predicled for Orange County this
weekend as patches of fog threatened to dampen Orange Coast beaches.
. The U.S. Weather Bureau toda y predicted sunny warm weather wit.h a
high of 96 degrees and lows in the 60's for Orange County.
As inland temperatures threateft to hit the 100 degnee mark prospective
beachgoers are faced with predicted patchs of fog along the coast, cutting
visibility down to one~uarter of a mile.
Orange County Harbor Department spokesman in Newport Beach said
light winds were expected with the fog which blanketed Laguna Beach and
Newport early today. Water temperature was set at a warm 61 degrees.
The record high for May 15 was set in 1967 at 102 degrees, while the
record for May )6, 96 degrees, has stood since 1892. Weathermen said the Jong·
standing record would protmbly be broken. -
Meanwhile, rising temperatures, bothersome smog and strong winds that
fanned brush fires continued to plague the inland areas of Southern California
today, with no relief in sight.
Temperatures head~ higher than 100 degrees in some Jnland areas and
were in the 80's in the mountains. The estimated bigb for downtown Los An-
geles was 95 for today and Saturday.
Brush fires bU at least four counties Thursday when the Los Angeles
lemperature peaked at 19 degre..i.
A yellow pall of eye-irritating smog cut visibility in niost of the basin
sharply in one of tbe heaviest attacU of the year.
The hot Santa Ana wind lusts from the desert gav~ little relief from
the smog while bringing high temperahtres.
Gloomy Statistics Belie
•
Nixon Economic Stand
WASJUNGTON <UPI) -The Nixon
administration's effort lo calm a near
panic on Wall Street has been jarred
by some of the gloomiest economic
statistics in a decade.
As President Nixon huddled with his
economic strat egists at the White House
Thursday, the government reported the
deepset economic slump since the 1960
recession and the worst three-month
period of inflation since the Korean War.
In a period of less than three hours,
government statisticans revealed :
-Revised infonnation showed the
economy's output of goods and services
declined at an annual rate of 3 percent
in the first quarter of this year, a
slump much worse than Ur! 1.5 percent
drop reported earlier on the basis of
prelimDlary figures, and the steepest
dip since 1960.
-1be Gross Nalional Product (GNP)
price index -the broadest based
measure of Inflation -increased. at
;1n annual rate of 6.25 eercent in the
January-thraugh-March period, the
sharpest increase since the first quarter
of 1951.
-Industrial production, a key economic
Meet Coun ty
Candidates
Wondering about who to vote
for?
The DAILY pnm, In coopera-
liOI with the Orange Coast League
of Women Voters, today offers
some i111formalion to help voters
make intelligent seleetions when
they cast ba1lots for Orange County
Supervi30?'!, Orange County School
Board trustee, and Orange County
Superintcnde11t of Schools.
Biographies and viewpoints of the
candidates are published today on
page 3 with 51.1pervisorial candl·
dales presented across the top or
the page. Two candidates failed lo
respond or provide information In
the school board race. They are
Roger C. Anderson, and Reg Wood.
Robert D. Peterson did not respond
in the counly superintendent of
schools race.
be1lwether, declined in April . for the
eighth time in the past nine months.
Tbe Federal Reserve said the April index
was 170.4 percent of the 1957·59 base
period, down 0.4 percent from ri.1arch
and down sharply from the 198.7 peak
se~ last July.
-Personal income of all Amcr \can:i1
increased in April because of retroactive
boosts in social security benefits and
federal pay. Without those two factors,
income would have declined for the first
time in 4Y.i year~.
-After-tu: corporate profits were at 1
a seasonally adjusted annual rate of
Sf' billion in the fir!t quarter of this
year, down $3 billion from the previous
quarter.
-The nation's balance of payments,
measuring business transactions between
the United States and the rest of the
world, showed a deficit of $1 .7 billion
in the first quarter, a sharp deterioration
from the $532 million surplus recorded
in the last quarter of 1969.
The GNP price index was pushed up
by lhe retroactive federal pay raise.
400 Girl Scouts
Camp a t Dunes
About 400 ·senior Girl Scouts from
~t Orange County began pltdllng
tents on lhe beach 1t the Newport Dunes
this afternoon for a weekend of 9e00t
competition called "Garn -1970."
The girll, aophomorts through seniors
in high 9Chool. will compete in canoe
racing, knot tying, cooking, semaph<re
code signaling. first aid and other crafts,
according to Mrs. Allred Woolley,
chaJrman of Girl Scouts in the Coorna
de! M11r area .
In 1dd.l1Jon to the craft competition
there will be ceretnonles, voUeyball
tournamtnts and campfires with many
visitors opecied. Last year, Mrs .
Woolley saJd, the Mariner Sea Scouts
came over to vi~it. ·
"Cam'' meam the gathering of wh•le.,
and the term is used because of the
nAulk:•l naturt of the campout. Camp
will be broken at 4:30 Sunday afternoon.
--------
Awe.rd of tbe route to serve southern
and northern California satellite airports
at Ontario, I.mg Beach, HoUywood-
Burbank, Orange County, Oakland and
San Jose with connections to Portland
and Seattle-Tacoma was granted Wednes-
day in Washb'lgton, D.C., by the Civil
Aeronautics Board (CAB).
A spokesman for Continental, head-
quartered ln Los Angeles. aaid, "We're
quite aware that there fs resistance
to additional service in the Orange Coun·
• I
Death TriaJ
Ordered
For Slocum
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of ff!e Diiiy Pll91 S11lf
Cynth ia Slocum was an unwanted child.
No matter how her mother hated the
horror of a butchered baby in the freezer
for six years, she feared and resented
its birth, begging for an abortion.
A close confidante testified to this
Thursday, before preliminary hearing
was concluded in Harbor Judicial District
Court with Dr. Wesley G. Slocum, 45,
ordered to stand trial on murder charges •.
The conclusion came unexpectedlJ aoon.:
after cross-examination of a string of
witnesses who told of bizarre beh•v1'>1 ·
by both the defendant and his wife.
Tears were frequent and ri.trs. Slocum
sobbed as the defense attempted to wreck
her credibility as a witness by detailing
her tortured past.
'Mle witnesses included the obstetrician
who delivered Cynthia on Dec. 3, 1963.
and the coroner's surgeon to whom the
baby's remains were delivered March
2fi of this year.
Godmothers of both old.::r Slocum
daughters were also call~d.
Judge Pro Tern William Christensen
declared he sees reasonable cause to
believe the crime of murder was com-
mitted and ordered Dr. Slocuru arraigned
li-fay 22 in Orange Q:>unty Superior Court.
He refused to set any bail for release,
citing d e a t h threats against ~1rs.
(See SLOCUM, Page ZI
Judge Gardner's
Bench Approval
Befor e Co uncil
A governor 's peUtion which as"..s for
approval of Justice Robert Gardner of
Newport Beach as presiding justice of
~h! Fourth District Court of Appeals
is today on the desk of the California
Judicial Council.
It is expected that the supervisory
judicial agency will quickly approve Gov.
P.onald Reagan's formal request and
name Gardner, 58, to the ;;ost being
vaca ted by outgoing presiding justice
Hilton McCabe.
The new honor for a man regarded
by many as Orange County's most
capable and popular jurist follows by
just four months his appointment to
the appellate court in San Bernardino.
Gov. Reag m1's naming of Gardner at
that time ended a 23-year career on
the Orange County Superior Court bench.
Ju!lice Gardner's naming as the
Orange County Press Club's "Man of
the Year" in Orange County cal!'le hard
on the heels of his elevation to the
appellate bench. He has received that
same title in the past from the city
-.f Newport Beach, from the Newport
Harbor Kiwanis and from the Newport
Harbor Spastic League.
Married, with two daughters, Justice
Gardner lives with his wife Katharyn
at 320 Evening G_anyon Road, Corona
del Mar. The USC Jaw school graduate
served as a part time city judge of
Newport Beach and an Oran&e Cpunty.
deputy district attorney before.belng ap-
Polnled to the Superior Court bencb
by Gov. Earl Warren in 1147.
A proliflC wtittr tn Jaw, JustlCI
Gardoer is acknowledged by ·the legal
profession as a nationwide authority tn'.
many legal issues. ·He has specialized
in criminal and juveiult laWj ,ind his
writings in those fields have ~n ex·
pressed and quoted In m4ny ~al and
lay publications.
ty area. It Is the responsibility of the
CAB to foster commercial service In
the Untied Slates and they've done their
part. Now It is between the community
and the airline to reach an amJcable
solution."
'11ie spokesman, Dlrecotor of Publicity
C. Bruce Plowman, said," ''We don't
have any definite plan,. at tills point.
Wben we do we wlll amounce them."
-He Pid there la lots of•tlme as service
couldn't ... be -started for · ao days. 1be
...
•
WO
route awards are effective July 13,
following a period for appeal.
The City 'of Newport Beach had earlier
taken a position of opposition to any
new applications to ~e destinations
other then those presently served by
the e.xistlng carriers Air California and
Air West.
But lhe CAB chose not to be dissuaded
~ the county and city government op-
pos)tlM. In a unanlmoos ' ruling, the
board <wrote:
u
OAIL 't PILOT l"lf l'lllfit
MOTORIST LADD. CHECKS HIS UNUSED SE).T·llEL T
hltlet t Drive,.-Gets C~•nee to1 Riff Dunes Ag aln
Mesan For gets 'Seat Belt
' .
-And Survives Smashup
A Newport Beach dune buay en·
thusiast who always uses a aeatbelt
forgot to snap his on today ud it
probably saved his life, when the vehicle
was rammed and hurled into a sign
standard in Costa Mesa.
Roland H. Ladd, 26, of, 218 MUt St.,
was flu11g free as lhe smalT, open vehicle
shattered against the thick pole, mangl-
ing the cockpit area.
Ne ,vport Council
Changes Dates
For Meetings
Newport Beach city counc.ilmen have
changed their meettng ICheduJe to better
accommodate the public and spread out
tile workload for the city stiff.
For years the council has held official
meetings the nights of the leCOnd and
fourth Mondays of the month preceded
by study ...,Iona during the afternoon.
Councilmen will continue to hold action
item meetings at 7:30 p.m. the second
and fourth Monc:IJ.ys, but study ttSslons
will be changed, btglnnlng next Monday,
to Ute first aod third Mondays of the
m9ntb at ~ p.m.
ff ii .,.e'xpected the stUdy ftlslbtis will
fl!n t"l"OITI 4 p'.tn. untU, •btut ?::Kl pan.
, Tiie later starling hour lhan-\he previous
. 1:30.p.m. J¥ill make Jt easltr' for worlllng
people ·to ltterid Ute meeUncL ·
' Moving tbt study teUion»'\O' the orr
wee!sJ also wUI ltelp ~ out the
workload fOr lhe ~ff. councllmtn 'said.
The city council tnetta lri 1lie... council
rhambero ·at d(r ·haJf, -~ Blvd. ' ~
.l r 'l:'•·' I ~ ·-.{~,
I
"
"l"m sure glad I forgot ••• " he
murmured, surveying the wreckage jn
front of a service station ln the 2400
blcx:k of Newport Boulevard. He was
unhurt except for a sore leg.
.. He wasn't even scratched," marveled
one police officer.
Ladd, a surveyor for the city of
Anaheim , was drlV1ng north on the busy
boulevard about 7:30 a.m., ·,yheri he
began a right turn into the station for
fuel.
Patrolman Bruce Hagen said DOnald
C. Kight, 25, of 2082 Wallace Ave., Costa
Mesa, appare•tly failed to notice Ladd'•
tum indicator as he changed lanes.
Kight's large car clipped the lltUe
vehicle with the right front fender, sen-
diJtg the buggy careening Into the pole
and scattering the area with fractured
fiberglass.
W a.sh Defers
To Bird Egg~
1be weather was 1unny a1'd Mra.
Beatrk:e Thomas, of Newport
Beach, thought she would han1 some clothes out 01 the tine.
But reachlng Into her clothes
pin bags she fell no! clO!l1'S p!M
' but I ncot •nil bird ens. Thil ·
was severil weeks aao and ·the •
egas 1t11 bal.Cbid now •
Mrs. Thomas, 1224 Berklblre Lanf. ISll't •bout to dlllurb u.
birds' home to get to her clothes
pi11a.. 'she tnakes do with tter Clolherl
drye r and the few clothes pins
she bad left AUt on the line. . .. •
" '
''We are not persuaded that the
~rt.ification of Continental at Long
Beach or Orange County will result in
substantial increase In the level of
aircraft noise in the surrouncUng areas
or that it will significantly al!eet the
quality of the human environment ...
The CAB members pointed out In their
ruling Uuit there are 16 jet departurea
daily from Orange County Airport. 25
last swnmer, and that Continental ii
(See AIRLINE, Pa1e !)
Mississippi
Officers Say
Snipers Shot
JACKSON, Miss. (UPI) -Two penons
were kjlled and 15 C1thers injured today
by a barrage of bulleta fired onto the
Jackson State College campus by police:
who claimed they were returning sniper
fire.
Students at the predominanUy black
school vehemently denied there were
any snipers.
"There were no shota .fired from the
dorm at all, and this Is one time police
can't lie and say they were lhootlnC
into the air," declared Henry · Pai1e,
a 1enior.
"11\ere .a'l bullet h91~ . in . all thl
windows and there'• blood an over our
.campus, and blood all over the donn,"
be said.
M. B. Pierce, chief of detectives, and
Di.strtd Attorney Jack Travis made con-
flicting reporls.
''There wa1 quite 1 bit of sniper fir·
i11g," . said Pierce, "and there was a
man on the fourth floor of lhe women's
dormitory.''
Trayls said an 1 'esten1ive ln-
ve1Ugatlon" wu being conducted into
the matter, but that there wu "t!Very
indication that a large amount" -&
tremendous amount of sniper fire -
both from the front and the back of
the officers before any 1hots wtre fired
by the highway patrol. They were under
extreme pressure."
Those killed were identified as James
Earl Green and Phillip L. Gibbs, 21.
Gibbs was identified as a studeht, but
officlal:I said they were not sure Green
was enrolled at the school.
The trouble started about 11 p.m. EDT
Thursday when a group of black youths
gathered near the college, located a
few block! from downtown Jackson, and
began hurling rocks and bottles at pass.
ing cars. It was the second consecutive
night of such violence and state troopers
were on hand. National Guardsmen were
standing by in annories.
Student!, according to police, drove
a dump truck -which had been parked
(See JACKSON, Pace ZI
STOCK MARKET
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
regained all it& early strength in mod·
erate tradlng this afternoon, and analysts
said the Jong.awaited "bottoming" ac·
lion might be at hand. (See quotations
Pages 211-21).
Or •ol(e Coast
We•tlle r
It's still summer on tbe Orange
C\)81t, no matter what lhe calendar
says. Satuiday ·should push th•
mM'CUf')' up to 95 in mid.county
and into the middle ?O's on the
coast.
INSIDE TODAY
It wain't anu milita'tl threat
that made Pt-trideni NU:on send
troopt 'into Cambodia: it WCI a
ca.se of the time beina rtohi.
Page 9.
I
I
I
'· '
I
,Z DAILY PILOT H : . ' . F'114ii7, .. .,.:u, 1970
SA· Pantller '
'Pr-otest Credit~ Death Trial
Lawsuit Mulled Nears Jury
P11os for a possible taxpayers' suit to CClllpel calliornia's state colleges and
unive.rsU.ies to "do what they art charged
wiUt doing under rules &et up by the
Regents" are still In a .. very nebulous
discussion state," Assemblyman Robe.rt
Badham (R-Newport Beach) said today.
Bad.ham broached the subject of the
suit durir\g a meeting In Mission Viejo
Thursday night, called by the Young
Republican Club to protest the UC
Irvine plan to permit strike supporters
to drop regular courses and receive
credit for "alternate studies" covering
a variety of protest-related subjects.
He told a cheering audience of 300
at O'Neill Elementary School that he
plaQned to prepare such a suit and
probably would be joined by other state
legislator$ lncluding Senator J oh n
Schmitz (R·Tustin), A ss em b 1 y man
Robert Burke CR-Huntington Beach) and
Assemblyman John Briggs (R-Fullerton).
Legal procedures for the suit. Badha.Jn
said, would be handled by attorneys
Sam Barnes and Dennis Carpenter, both
prominent in Republican acUvities,
Carpenter as chairman of the party'•
state central committee and running for
I.he state senate nomination.
This morning Baham said, "We haven't
really done anything yet. There has
just been some phone communication
and J am meeting this afternoon with
Barnes and Carpenter to see if such
legal action against the university is
possible. lt would be something like
a suit to prevent a fire department
from striking, but we haven't yet got
down to specifi~. "'
ln any case, the legislator said, 0 It
would have to be very carefully done,
not just a big flash in the pan. Jt
probably Would be developed during the
summer with • view of establishing
some sort of control in the future.
Nothing much can be done for the rest
of this quart.er."
The spring quarter at the universities
€hds in four weeks.
Badham said the proposed suit would
be aimed at programs such as the one
approved by the UCJ Academic Senate
for the balance of the quarter, under
which students supporting the strike can
take passing grades for their current
studies, w i t h approval of~ their pro-
fessors, or drop the course entirely,
wilbout penalty, provided they sign up
for "alternate studies" in subjects
regarded as "more relevant'' to the
prese11t sltuaUoa.
From Page 1
JACKSON •.•
on campus -onto the street and set
it afire. ·
extinguish the blaze, they said, snipers
opened fire from Alexander Hall, the
women's dormitory.
Paige gave another version of the
events leading up ·ro Ule gunfire. He
said police made a sweep down the
street, art.er the fire started, and that
one officer stepped from the ranks and
started to address the crowd.
"He started saying, 'Ladles and
gentlemen/" Paige recalled, "and then
they (police) started shooting be.fore he
even finished . I think it was just a
mlS.!8.cre. I think it was .preplanned.
They came up here with the idea of
killing."
Coed Eloise Thomas said bedlam broke
out in' the women's dorm when the
shooting started. She said she dropped
to the floor and other girls dove on
top of her.
"AH I could hear was the thud of
l'ihooting and the glass breaking and
people screaming," she said.
"When 1 looked out the window l
saw the ambulances C-Oming to take
out the people who were shot."
About !iOO National Guardsmen, who
were on standby, were summoned when
the shooUng started, but by the time
they arrived on the scene, the gunfire
had ceased.
DAILY PILOT
OJIANG£ COAST PUlltSMING COMl'AlrN
Rolt•rf N. W11d
..... ,111.111 •>WI J'ill)lltW
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lhom11 A. Murpl.int
Mml!IM Editor
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H•W(IOl1 IHdl Cl1r Edi~
H_,.rt 1Hc• Offlco
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Otltior OffMes
tolll Mn.t: Ult wat l1y S!rMI
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.. 11r>t11111on ~1cn : 1111i l eJCll 11...,1<1v•nl 1911 Ckmenlt : J05 Hori~ El C.mlno 11 .. 1
'
Other campuses or the university have
lnstltuted variaUona of the program,
Badham noted.
"Don't misunderstand me," he said.
''Some of these independent sb.idies are
all right. I had a kid working in my
office to learn the system of operation
of a legislator's office and getting college
credit for it and I think someUtlng
like that is swell. It's just that some
of these altemales they're giving credit
for are pretty quesUonable,"
Badham said he was not satisfied
with, the explanation of the UCI program
presented at the Mission Viejo meeting
by dean of atadents Robert Lawrence.
Describing the new procedures,
La1fNrice referred to tbe "comfort and
ct1nvenience of the students," Which
prompted Saddleback College board
president Michael Collins to comment,
"What are we paying for, an education,
Institution or comfort stations." The
crowd, mostly older people, applauded
this heartily,
A UCI student told the audience that
students are being denied their right
to pursue the education they seek at
the University and offered to give Dean
Lawrence names of professors who are
being "pressured" by other faculty mem-
b,ers because they are unwilling to give
students freedom to choose their act-
ivities for the rest of the quarter.
From Page 1
AIRLINE' •••
asking f-Ot a maximum of Mven ad-
dillooal jet departuw. '1111B, Ibey said
would ·not materially affect the nols~
The board members said they agree
with the examiner there is "no showing
of substanUal or unusual noise problems
which are sufficient on baJance to deter
authorization of an otherwise needed
service." 'rtley said improvement of
service to the Pacific Northwest should
be made available to the traveling public.
The board n-0'ted cooperatlon of local
authorities will be needed. "It will be
up to the carrier we have selected
.Jo convince these authorities that ex-
pressed fears ar~ exaggerated or are
outweighed by affirmative con-
siderations."
Newport Beach City Attorney Tully
Seymour said it Js the city's pasition
this added service would violate the
m~rt UmllaUon 'recommended by
Wllllam Pereira and Associates in the
master plan for Orange County aviation.
A me~rt is def~· ed as an airport
sen'ini cities within miles.
'Charidler, fOr 'the unty, said the
practical problem is where Continental
would park the jets and how passengers
would be handled in available facilities.
"1'le parking is adequate but the
terminal buildings are inadequate to
meet present demands," he said. "We're
putting nearly a million people per year
through :Jiere."
Soviet Ships in Cuba
MIAMI (UPI) - A squadron of Soviet
warships has stopped off at Cienfuegos,
on the southern coast of central Cuba,
to refuel, resupply and rest its crew,
Havana radio reported Thursday. It was
the first time a Soviet naval squadron
has used a CUban port for that purpose.
A squadron of Soviet ships stopped in
Havana last year, but it was only a
courtesy call.
Dollars for Hoag
OAILY l'tlOT S"ll l'Mt.
FREEWAY FIGHTERS MANAGE SMILE AS THEY EMBARK ON PETITION COUNTING CHORE
Mrs. T. Duncan Stewart, Former Mayor Paul GruMr (center) and Marshall Duffield
From Page 1
SLOCUM HEARING ...
Slocum, defense attorney Paul Augusllne \\'hen I lca\'e here. J want to be ab le
J r., and two other physicians as good lo live \Vith myself. I clon ·t \Vant people
reason. t\visti ng what I mean with 'vocabulary'
Coast Freeway
Fighters Gather
20,000 Names Augustine argues that the key to the words," she said.
case is what killed the baby found March Mrs. Celia Rivera, ... .-ho was hired Harbor Area Freeway Fighters were
26 while Dr. Richard Fukumoto, veteran as housekeeper during one of Mrs. up to their ears counting petition a~topsy surgeon, tesUfied this is im· Slocum's periodic hospitalizations for signatures today and it looked like the
possible to determine. drinking, said she found gin bottles and
Brain and other vital tissues were beer cans and pills hidden in Mrs. total was going over 211,000.
removed by whoever perfonned the semi· Slocum's bed . Marshall Duffield, acting chairman or
professional autopsy on the remains -Mrs. Mary Shubin, another hel per, said the F'reeway Fighters, said 10,980
Dr. Slocum -the state contends. Mrs. Slocum once barricaded the front . signatures had been counted prior to
Th ••-I ed litU d door with tables and chairs and was today, the announced deadline to turn e doctor....,." ay e concern ur-terribly afraid of anyone going near
ing the bearing, but literally 11at Ori the garage freezer. petitions in, and the pile looks like it
the edge of his chair as Dr. Fukumoto doubled. discussed the professionalism of the job. Mrs. Nancy Williams, who visited Mrs.
"I would have to say no," he replied Slocum in Hoag Memorial Hospital, cor· He said an exact count wouldn't be
A Superior Court jury was urged today
to reject defense arguments "that seem-
ed bent on proving that everybody except
Arthur Dewitte League should be
suspected of tiJJing police officer Nelson
Sasscer."
Assistant District Attorney Everett
Dickey offered that reprimand to the
defense in a final argument that will
be followed by Judge Samuel Oreizen's
instructions to the jury. The panel will
then retire, possibly this afternoon, .to
consider its verdict in the 10.week trial
of the accused Black Panther.
Dickey, who is making the final pro-
secution argument of his career -he
will take his recently created seat on
the Harbor Judicial District Court bench
with the conclusion of the League trial
-asked the jury to discount what
he called the "strong inference that
(prosecution witness) Rick Tice actually
·murdered the 24-year-old patrolman" last
June 4.
"We have readily conceded." Dickey
said, "that Rick Tice and another pro-
secution witness have lied under oath
on mo~" ···--'"'e ""~a~ion . But his
• -,_timony in this trial is backed by
the testiutc. / o, more than 30 witnesses
and we thirik that "''e have proved our
case even without what Rick Tice had
to tell us."
League. 21. is accused of shooting
officer Sasscer shortly arter t h e
patrolman halted the Black Panther. and
a companion and demandj!(f 1den-o
tification. A JS-year-old witness identilied
. by the prosecution as League's compan· ~at testified that League shot the offi-
cer and that the pair then fled leaving
the pat.tOlman dying in the gutter.
Colleges Name
Change Planned when Augustine asked if it was the roborated the rejection of Cynthia. "Did known until late today but "it is safe
work of a highly skilled surgeon working you say 'you have a beautiful baby'?" to say it will be over 20,000." Trustees of the Orange Coast Junior
ing under ideal conditions." Augu stine asked. The petition signers want deletion of College Distric t plan to change_ the
Chief Deputy District Attorney James "Yes ... She said she wasn't even Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport district's name since Gov. Reagan signed
G' Enrlgb' prosecutor, argued that a interested in seeing her." a bill Thursday permitting the use of .., Beach from the state fr eeway system t d 1 man high on drugs who has just killed Mrs. Williams, a nurse and godmother "community college" in distric ari co·
his bab)'-da~ghter would hardly be work-of the second Slocum daughter told the because it would rui n the city's en· lege titles. . .
i.og under Jdeal conditon. · court she last saw Cynthia on Feb. vironment. At their Wednesday night meeting
The first witness wss Dr. Alan V. 8, 1964 and later Ssked about her. Duffield said he was very pleased trustees decided they would like to call
Andrews, ot Newport .Beach, who "I've found a place to keep her," she with the results. "There are 50,000 men, the district the Coast Community College
delivered Cynthia and sent her and Mrs. quoted Mrs. Slocum as saying. 1vo1nen and children in the city." he District in order to distinguish the
Slocum home from the hospital in fine A former next-door neighbor, Mrs. pointed out. "We got about as many district name from the two colleges
sha Barbara Kearl now -0f Newport Beach signatures as there are registered it serves. ..rs· I recall, she was a little disap-said Mrs . Sl~um came to her horn~ voters." Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa
pointed she didn't have a son," he said highly intoxicated in November, 1966, and He said, "A lot of people thought and Golden West College in Huntingtoa
when Ai.igustine asked about the Mot.bet's gave her $15,000 in cashier's checks we were defeated and nob-Ody could Beach are the two colleges in the district.
reaction. for safekeeping. defeat the Highway Commission. We col· There has been some confusion of th"e
He also said she neglected to get Mrs. Kearl then gave them to lected these signatures in the face of current district name with that of OCC.
prenatal care until far advanced in Augu stine, who drove Mrs. Slocum to that discouragement. When you get the District officials said they had not
pr~y and camf! to him wltll two Metropolitan State Hospital, where she gals going ... They are the ones that set a definite date for the official name
different infections, prlor birth damage _w::'=':..co::::n::lln::ed:::..f::o:_r.::•..:ti::'m::e::· _______ h_a_v_e_d_on_e_1h_e_l..:egw:_o_r_k._" _______ c_h_a_n.cge_. _______ ' __ _
and a bad case of toxemia. -;
Augustine alleges she didn't want the
child anyway and became obsessed with
the possibility it might kill her or cause
damage during birth as did the couple's
second daughter.
"Didn't you say you were afraid you
might die and didn't want 'that damn
baby'?," he asked Mrs. Slocum.
"I never said anythJng about a damn
baby," she replied.
Family fri end Mrs. Joanne Weir, lip-
reading since she is deaf, testified Mrs.
Slocum was so distraught over the con-
dition that she vomited.
"I told her she v.·as too good to die.
I had toxemia and I was all right,"
said Mrs. Weir, who took Mrs. Slocum
for her first prenatal visit.
During one point, Mrs. We.ir became
tearful.
"I want it straight \\'hat I say, because
• DRAPERY
SALE!
CUSTOM MADE WITH A WIDE SELECTION OF
QUALITY INTERIOR DESIGN FABRICS AS MUCH
AS 40 ~. OFF ON EXCELLENT DESIGN FABRICS,
!~Ii:• 1dv1nt1g• ol in opportunity to m~li:· dr11tie 11vin9s on custom made quality driperies. Whether
11 • I new home thet needs dr1plnq or 1u1t rep/icing 1 worn pair, stop in ind cheek the 11.,.;n91.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON DREXEL -HERITAGE
NEWPORT B!ACH
1727 Westclllf Dr., 642-2050
OPIN PRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
P I LAGUNA B!ACH ro es1ion1I Interior 345 N h C H Designers Avall1bl.,_AID ort oast wy. 494-6551
That's real money, $135,000 worth, Al Auer (left) chairman of Hoag
Memorial Hospital's Reach Campaign building fund, i$ recei\1ing
from John Macnab of the lloag Founi:latlon board. !\1oney ,,·ill go to-
ward new hospital tower that will about double bed capacily.
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Pho11e f•lf "" MOit If °'-t• Conty 140.t2•1
. r
ltlediu11a's the Message
The theory may have some merit .but this message seems to be missing its
mark. Like the minister whose message faijs on deaf ears, this billboard out·
side Denton, Tex., hasn't moved anyone to ac.,.tion.
Mail Strike
Postponed;
Raise Seen
WASHINGTON (AP)
Congress, which a p p e a r e d
ready to halt acti;xi on a
postal pay boost when New
York mailmen threatened to
strike Thursday .rugtii, is. now
on a tinietable that could
bring final approval in three
weeks.
"Congress i:; not . going to
be pressured by a strike,"
the senior Senate Post Office
Committee m~mber, Hiram L.
Fong (R-Hawai.i), said Thurs-
day before New York letter
carriers called off the strike.
Fong said the committee is
ready to put out the bill for
a Senate vote but a walkout
would have forced a delay
until a. settlement was reach-
eci:
Rep. David N. C. Henderson
( D • N • C • ) , second-ranking
Democrat on the House Post
Office Committee. s a i d
Congress' reaction to a new
mail strike might be: even
worse :
"I don't see how it could
speed it (I.he bill) up very
much," he said. "And it might
kill it. ..
But New York Branch 38
·of the National Association of
Letter Carriers. one of two
New York locals that trig·
gered the nationwide mail
strike in March, voted Thurs-
day to stay on the job and
put off any further strike ~
21ideration until June 12.
"Our people showed
themselves to be responsible
labcrr," Gus Johnson, the
Iocal's president, said after
the vote. "It is up io·eongress
now 'to show it1
responsibility."
The eight percent pay raise
for postal workers is tied to
differing House and Senate
bills that would create a U.S.
Postal Servjce to put the mails
on a self-paying basis by 1978.
Pill Sui l Filed
LOS ANGELES (UPll -
A housewife filed a 'I million
damage suit against a family
planning clinic and a drug
company Th ursday, claiming
birth control pills caused Iler
brain damage.
Barbara Stahlnecker, 22, Tu-
junga. Calif. said she suffered
strokes last Christ,nas d_ay
and again Jan. 6 and March
7 after taking the pills for:
an unspecified length of time .
Ii~:
~
Dominican Republic
Vote Set Saturday
SANTO DOMINGO,
Dominican Republic (AP) -
With a tumultuous presidential
campaign. over, soldiers and
government .officials prepared
to guard polling booths in
Sa:turday:s .election. .
Candidates c a 11 e d a
moratorium on · campaigning
today. The central election
board said Police and soldiers
will be on duty at the nation's
3,455 polling places.
In the last few weeks there
has been .an average of one
politically moUvated killing a
day, officials said.
President Joaquin Balaguer
is opposed by fuur opponents
-but one of the Dominican
Republic 's most power f u I
parties is boycotting the elec-
tion.
Balaguer, calling himself an
"instrument of destiny," an-
nounced last month that he
,would seek another fou r-year
term.
llis opponents are Elias
\Vessin_ y Wessin, lhe general
who helped crush the 1965
leftist insur rection; Francisco
Augusto Lora, Balaguer's yiee
president who broke away to
form bis own party; Alfonso
Moreno Martinez, a lawyer
who represents lhe Social
Christian party, and Jaime ·
Manuel Fernandez. candidate
of the National Conciliation
Movement.
Fonner President J u a n
Bosch and his Dominican
Revolutionary party a re
boycotting the election. charg.
ing that Balaguer would never
permit a fair counting of the
ballots.
Busch, deposed by a
ntilitary coup in 1963, says
he no longer believes in elec-
tive democracy, favoring .in-
stead "dictatorship w i t h
popular support." He has not
explained how his proposal
would work.
Ul"I Ttl.,,_,. SHOES, MONEY GOING TO VOTERS
Beleguer Cempeigning fOf' Rtelection
~'~'ii'~ rt~ .
Frid.Q', May 15, 1970 DAILY PILOT f
Israel S~ys More Egypt Jets Down
'
TEL AVIV (Ai>) -Israeli
pilots claimed shooting down
three Soviet-made Egyptian
MIG jets In d<>gfig~ts over
the Suez Canal today.
By Israeli aceount , two
MIGl?s were shot down in
niorning battles over the
blocked waterway and a MIG-
21 shortly after ooon.
AU three planes were seen
falling in EgyptJan territory,
the ·military command said
b .....
The MIG21 had "attempted
to interfere" when Israeli
planes were on a bombing
and stanng mission against
Egyptian military tar g"e ts
along the central sector cf
the canal, a spokesman said.
It was the 8eC(lnd Israeli
raid or the day and followed
two Egyptian strikes.
All Israeli aircraft returned
safely, the spokesman sal~.
l"x24" •••• 1.45 .. ,. •••••• 2-00 .... •••••• 2.50 .... •••••• l.05
Ix 72 . •••••. J.90
lOx 24 ••••• 1.70
10 x J' ••••• 2.30
ltx41 ••••• 2-ff
Israel start.eel the action The com m an d said the
with a bombing and 1trallng Israeli& returned the fire and
attack on Egyptian mllitacy sustained no CllSualUe~.
l.afgets in tbe 800tbem and ' Israel announced. Thursday
central sectors ol tbe 101-mUe-that an Egyptjan mlsstl~ boat
long waterway. san~ a 7~ton lrraell ftshlng
Egyptian warplanes then ·trawler in Mediterranean
struck back in the northtrn waters not far from where
sector of the canal.
tbe destroyer Elath was btt
and SWlk in 1967.
A military announcement
IOf. An announcement aald Ibo
"chances of findtng 1Jlem ""
slim."
said Ibo fishing trawler Orlll;:::======== was bk Wednesday night 11.3
mtles north of the occupied
Sinai PerUnsuJa. The four
crewmen wm reported miss-
An hour later, according ·to
the military command. Israeli
planes intercepted attacking
Egyptian MIG17s, shooting
down two.
'"Can~ Caper
VNITED
STATES
NATIONAL
BANK
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
BRANCH
The military ct'ln'lmand said
Israel suffered no' casualties
In Ute' Egyptian raids.
NEW YORK (UPI) -A
painting or a can o f
Campbell's vegetable beef
soup by Andy Warhol sold
Thursday night for $60,000, the
highest price ever paid for
a work by a living American
artist.
It was sold by an American
collector, Peter Brandt, and
was among a number of"works
by contemporary American
and European artists dating
from after World War It.
NOW Ol'IN
SATURDAYS In other action, the com-
. mand said Gesher Hasiv, a
kibbutz four miles south of
the Lebanese border, was
shelled from Lebanon during
the night. Mortar shells also
fell on border settlements at
Yardena and Kfar Rupim in
the Beisan Valley.
K European bidder who
wished to remain anonymous
bought the painting at an auc-
tion by Parke-Bernet galleries.
Warhol's pal,nting of the
soup can, titled "Campbell's
Soup Can With Peeling
Label," is 72 by 54 inches
and was painted in 11162.
9 te 1 P.M.
MON.0THUIS. tO.I P.M.
•tlDAYS 10·' P.M.
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en..1o11-~s,....,.. 45c 'n. \4 .. lccll ,,__,.,.,... ____ _
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ltw prlcttl • • • ~Icily
trtctff ••• rndy fw Im·
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swe M '"It t"'11 o9to6WkD
·-
• Noise _Control Coming?
Beginning nut month when one of the commercial
j.W al Orange County Airport reva up its engine at the
head ol the runway tho roar will be reconled.
Aa the jet lilts oH in Ila power rile toward the Upper
Be,y, •. le!llor below will electronically record the aound .-<!loci .... at ground level.
U tbe pllot throttles back as he should to glide. rise
aeoaon In residential areas on either side of the Upper a.y wlli reco(d the lessening of noise. It be l\rays off
coone and beitins his turn before getting out over the
ocean. they w!fl t1lCOrd thai loo.
All thil information along with meterological condl·
tions will appear on print.out sheet,a coming out of a
computer 24 houri a day. 'Ibis record o! how much noi11e
Ille pilot made flying his passenger jet should be as tell·
tale as a police department's rap sheet.
The aircraft noise sensor system is being installed
by Nortronics Division o! Northrop Corporation at a cost
of between $25,000 and S40,000. None of the cos t will be
borne by local government.
But Northrop has promised to supply data free of
charge to the county and N~rt Beach city govern-
ment.a and to air carriers while 1t is testing its prototr.i>e
system for future marketing throughout the United States.
The futility once felt by residents who could only
gbake fists . at the big birds in the sky is rapidly beint
replaced by posiUve data. Here is a private firm wlllin~
to Invest money in alttrall noise control as a new market.
. Northrop has good reason for doing 10. Legal rulings
by tile Cali!ornia Attorney General early this year have
cpeMd the way for clijes, counties · and !he state to en-
act noise standards. These aiencte11 moie reactive than
federal authorities to the discomforts of citizens, are
moving.
Oran«e County'• Board of Supervisors has banned
night flights, Jlmlted the engine noi,. level of jets usin~
the airport and limlted the number of passenger flights
per week. The state Board of Aeronautics will be consid ..
ering noise standards next week and state standards are llmost certain to be the outgrowth . ·
When those standanls are set, Orange County 111)>er·
Conscience,
Commitment,
Concern
(Got!. Ronald Rtoa<m ordered a
ahutdoum of CaU/ornJa, state colleges
and untocrdtu-1 for a period o/ cool·
ing off and reflection from Thursday,
Mav 7, until Monda11 morning, Ma!J 11.
Tht column todG11 is bastd on Dr.
Ha1JCk,awc's 1tatement to tM facul tt1
and students of San Franci&co State
Coll.toe cu cl.a.11es re~n.)
As wt return to class after a four-day
absence. the faculty
and students faoe
both a challenge and
1n opportun·
lty. What we do
wlth the three weeks
that remain ln this
1etntOl<r will affect
u all
Th e challenge, ·
rimply. Is to resist
.lhe preeent wave of
fmotion that calla
br teachers to abandon t he i r
iesponaibillttes and for student& to forfeit
IJeir Investment in educ.atloo.
The opportunity Is to demonstrate
'eUOll, cooacience, commitment and con-•rn.
Of course some students have been
leeply agitated by recent events at borne
md in Southeast Asia, Some are too
tgitated to return to normal academic
IW'SUttl. We cannot and will not stand
a the way of students staying away
rom classes.
BUT TEACHERS HAVE an entirely
lifferent order of responsibility. Student&
eve aigned up with them to learn.
~ who want to continue instruction
re fully entiUed to it, and teachers
re lf.plly u well as morally obliged
• provide it. A faculty member who
1 ao outraged by current lSSUf:s that
e feell he cannot continue teactu11g
1 free, of course, to resign .
In the winter oi 1968-69, we saw a
mall aecment of our faculty and atudent
ody -U. than 5 percent -create
o impression tNt most students and
?achen wllrted the college closed. The
ews med.la helped. Pttha~ something
lmllar 11 happening again . It is 1 trap
• into which all too many college •d·
UnistraUoril have already faUen.
IT IS AN OUTRAGE for a minority
. or even a"1n1jorlty -to approprl1te
1e colleae •• att lnst.rument for lht
Quotes
P1trfdl. raver, S.F. modter ud oew
•k-"Idon't believe in censorship. J
on' think pornogr•phy In booka or
t0vles hanm people, nor do I think it
a to ... crlmet. It'& just nol my
line·"
Rostr' J• Tt•J•, redrl•& Cldtf
u1ke 11 CoJU ... -"Poll« olflCttl
iOllld be respecl«L They should be
ram.d lbe dignity ii"" • Jud;:• or •
>lleae profeuor."
11t1o ...-.i, PIMd>t 11111 Rig~
...,. _ "'l1le ud part (•bout lht 'vocal
dnority') ii &hit m muy peop'e out.Jde
w t'OUfltry beJieY• that the ideas t X·
;all!d by tbt rldicalt are also thOst
1111 by -Americans."
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Oh, good.le! Now we're 1ol11g to
aolve Newport'• traffic problems
via the Chamber of Commerce's
"women's intuJtlon"! lf we ever
bad honesUy used engineering and
economics instead of all that born·
bast, we wouldn't be in the frtt·
way bind we're in today. Now It '&
too lat..
-G.D. M.
Tlllt ...... ""*" ,....,.. "..... ... .cW111lt ............. ., .....
,_ ............ .._., .... O.ltr '""'·
advancement of a particular political
view' no matter how important or grave
the issues. Cl011lng down the colleges
i~ a form Ol political coercion, compelling
au the lludents and faculty to join
in the dtamatlzaUon of 1 view that
is nol sh'li'e<f by all.
For a Joni, time, before, during and
since the McCarthy era, colleges have
fought to preserve open mindedness and
neutrality. We cannot permit the college
to be pplltlciud without suffering In-
calculable Joss to academic freedom .
Those who are tempted to a:ercise such
political coercion as we are confronted
with must ask themselves how they
would like it if their opponents were
doing il
TEACHERS CAN DO much far their
profession and for San Francisco State
if· by their actions now they let the
whole country know that they are deeply
committed to their professional role.
However. the tide is running in the
opoosite direction. Professors and even
university presidents around the country
are abandoning their neutrality and
permitting classrooms to be taken ovtr
for political action. Someone must act
promptly to recapture public respect
for institutions of higher learning. We
as the faculty of San Francisco Slate
have that opportunity.
Students at San Francisco State have
the opportunity in these next three weeks
to resl1\i.pe the character or their college 1r the majcrity, Wt\O want to continue
their educaUon and exercise their
political life outaide the classroom
without violence or coercion, are willing
to stand up, be seen, be heard, and
to be counted.
THE QUESTION IS, who represents
San Fr1ncisco State -the minority
who want to shut it down , or tht majority
who want the education that they (and
in some cues their parents) have worked
so hard to pay for.
J urge teachers and students alike
to consider the alternative before us. san Francisco State college can continue
so that courses now being given may
be cOmpleted and certlfJcatcs, credentials
and degrees may be granted. Or we
can yield to the minority and close
the 'college, in which cue we must
face the fact that state edu cational
legi.-tlaUon bars the eollege from granting
credit for courses not completed and
from pay~g teachers for instructional
services nOt perfonned.
IF PRESENT TRENDS cootinue, San
Fr1nclsco State is going 10 prove to
be one oC the finest 1.nsUtut.ions of hl&btr
education in the naUon. While other a umPoN< l!ld compromise their
pies, we are maintaining academic
rttdom for c.ommuntsi. and anti-Com·
munists, fer revoluUonarles and reac-
tlonarlu, lor ROTC and anU-ROTC peo-
ple -all wtthin the framt'IYOl'k of r•·
tional debate. We are a great college.
We can become 1 greater one by adher·
Ing stubbornly lo the prl11clpl<a o1
a:.ademk: !reectom, no matter whal.
By S. l. llaytkawa
• Pruktent
S•a F'rancltct State CoUc1•
visors, who control the county airport, wlll have the
Northrop record to measure ftom .
Positive control! with tangible levels aeem to be on
the way.
Lighting of a New Fire
Public programs were held at Orange Coast Col·
lege this week on a day devoted to the culture and bts-
tory of Mexican-Americans. The program, sponsored by
the Chicano students at the college, was called '1EI
Fuego Nuevo11 (The New Fire).
It is too bad more persons didn't attend El Fuego
Nuevo and feel the intensity of the Chicano self real!·
zation and striving to better their status. The old Mexi-
can-American stereotype of jjmanana" and "siesta"
Is being erased.
The lighting of a new fire was a ceremonial event
in pre.Columbian Mexico , signifying new birth. Don't
call the students Mexican-American. They say they are
Chicano at OCC and they say it with pride.
Her Love for Hel' Mother
It's not every litle girl whose love for her mother
turns into an expense-paid vacation trip with dad to
Hawaii for a ·Mother's Day gift.
But that is what 12-year-old Linda Baker of Costa
Mesa was able to give to her "Mother of the Year" Mrs.
James Baker, thanks to Hoag MemoriaJ Hospital's an-
nual contest.
Some 16,000 Newport-Mesa school children had a
chance to take part and the essays .they wrote on why
their mother should be "Mother of the Year" were a
priceless gift to each and every mom. ., ~ But best of all was what Linda wrote of her mom :
"I 'll always know in my heart, that greater than
all mothers, she's just TOPS!!"
Con,R:ratulations to Linda's mother -and to all the
others who earned the glowing words ol love and praise. N
'No, ~moN, YOU Dl~'T flN~ A gox Of BULLETS AN~ 1WO ~·
Of RICE. YOU <Arll!RE~ All >MMO ~~A $UPP1Y ~~t •,
President Prepares to Announce Cambodian Success
Nixon Has Managed to Keep Control
WASHINGTON -The protesters have
come end gone, rhetoric has cooled and
President Nixon is preparing to announce
that the Cambodian operation is a suc-
cess. This announcement will be based
on the volume of arms and supplies
captured and the hope that further Com·
muolst aggressive action in South Viel·
nam has been set back for a year.
How mtich of a suceess was the Cam·
bodJan thrust wUI continue to be argued
and it wiU play a part in the con-
gressional campaign but Nixon thus far,
at least, has managed to keep control
of the operation.
This matter of control has been the
problem from the first. There are reports
that early in considering the strike Nixon
doubted he coold maintain control. That
is to say, a complex of circum stances
Including American public reaction, the
military reaction from the Communist
side. the difficulty of limiting any
military operation once it has begun
would converge to defeat the operation.
PROBABLY THE DECISIVE factor
was Nixon's final judgment that he could
keep American opinion under control
long enough to pennit a 60 day operation
which could be very damaging to the
Communists.
Richard Wilson ----Thill required an accurate judgment
on the depth cl. the reaction in American
public opinion and NiJon measured that
correctly. It required an accurate judg.
ment on the Conununist reaction, and,
up to now, that hu been meaSUTed
correctly.
Some thlng1 may not prove to have
been measured correctly, including the
search for the Communist headquarters
for Vietnam operaUons (COSVNJ which
may be burled somewhere deep un·
derground in the areas the Americllls
are sweeping. If the Americans do not
find that control center many questioo1
will rise in Congress and it might have
been better if Nixon had not mentioned
it in his justification for the CambodJan
incursion. There were other reaaons
wbJch were just aa good.
PERHAPS ONE OF the most slgnifi·
cant upecta of this critical period was
the reluctance of members of Congress
who \\.'ere attacking the President to
Join In the youth protest, and there
·were good reasons for this. A score
of senators and congressmen who en·
dorsed the first mobilization against the
war last October and participated to
some extent in the November turnout
in Washington shunned the festivities
last Saturday although their cause for
participating might ha,ve been greater
than betore.
The recent protest ~ on a scale •
probably about one-third of the Nov •
14-15 Mobilization for Peace and it may
be that this way of expressing public
opinion is no longer, if it ever was,
an effective instrument for influencing
public policy.
When congressmen up for reelection
stay away from such festivities tt can
be taken for granted that they aee no
advantage in that klnd of political iden-
Ufication. The effectiveness 0£ such
pressure can be measured abo by Nix-
01i's decision to treat it Indulgently as
not really a threat but just something
to be gotten through with the least
trouble.
This is, Jn facl, what happened. 1be
latest protest rally did not influence
anyone. It wu wasted effort.
NIXON, IN FACT, improved blJ posi·
tion with those who think 1t has beert
poinUess to take a de£iant and name-call·
ing attitude toward student protest. It
is one thing to be firmly opposed to
such protest and something else to adopt
the language of. the streets in talking
about it, or to appear not to be listening.
Now, at least, the President ts listenlng
but it is not changing his policies any
more than it did when be said that
his policies would not be changed by
student protest or demonstration in the
streets.
ln the longer range, if the Cambodian
operalion is, or can be termed, a sue·
cess, the results will not be merely mill·
tary and diplomatically favorable. nese circumstances. coming into focus
after midsummer, would cive the Presi·
dent 1 finn platform for another
forthcoming intervenUoo, a pohtical in-
tervention. Nizon needs more· strength
in Congress U he is to carry through
his very extensive program of refonn
in the next couple of years. His hand
would be greatly strengthened in ap-
pealing for a Republican Congress if
Cambodia has proved to bf: a success.
Perhaps that contributed. too, to the
Jack of interest in Congress in last
week's demonstrations.
'Our President Did the Right Thing~
To the Editor :
J believe that our President did the
right thing about Cambodia . In the Jong
run it will save m a n y American and
South Vietnamese Jives as our forces
capture and destroy the Viet Cong and
North Vietnamese offensive head·
quarters.
Tt was a hard decision for Mr. Nixon,
but I believe that in the weeks to
come Americans will see the Wisdom
of this decision . I agree with Veterans
cf Foreign Wars and American Legion
leaders who ha\·e stated that had we
done this long ago the war would now
be over.
,,_fy purpose is to plead with thousands
of Christians to join in prayer during
the next few weeks for definite victory.
Urge your cnurch and Christian friends
to band together in this noble effort
for God and country.
THE REV. GORDON LANGMADE
IJ11derl11ln9 Que•tlon•
To lhe Editor:
Much of the news recently bas focused
Btf George --...,
Dear George:
I have been reading your column
ror eight years and t enjoy it.
Every once in a while you siiy :
"Write lo George and send a self·
addressed, stamped envelope." J
keep getting It back in the mail
and l'm going to try this one
MY way -addressing it to you
instead or myself. Let me know
If you get it.
LOYAL FAN
Dear Loyal Fan: ,
..._I didn't get It. !CUent. like that
I don't need.)
(Do you have problems with 1970
New Year's rucluUons 1UU un-
broken with the new year more
than a quarter over? Have your
re90lutlons broken by proxy -
George will do anything and call
It research.)
t' '
Mailliox , __
Letters jrom readers are welcome.
Normallfl writers should convt11 their
message• in SOO words or len. Tht
right to c~mt letters to fit space
OT eliminate libel U reserved. All let·
ters must include rignature and mait..
ing addres1, but name.r may be wit~
held on request if tufficient reason
is appormt. Poetrt1 wiU not be pub·
Ii.shed.
on President Nixon's movement of
American troops into Cambodia and the
tremendous reaction across the country
to lhal move. While the advisability
or that move is debatable, and while
the campus reaction is worthy of note
and concern, we should not lose sight
of the more import.ant underlying ques--
Uon1.
Should America have a military
presence in Indochina? Does that
military presence co.rt America and
Indochina more than it benefits America
and ·lndochlna1 Do we, in fact, have
a right to balance American gain against
lnclochln~e cost? What klnds of possible
benefits can be entered into an equation
to balance lhe ccsta to Indochina?
IN ORDER TO give rta!Oned answr.rs
to this tort of question it is necessary
to appreclale what tht costs of the
war are to Indochina. We must realize
that much of the land Jtself in Vietnam,
CambodJa, and Ltcc la dyin&. defoliated
and covered with burnt craters. We
must realhe that cultures much dlfterent
than our own are btlng destroyed by
the forced urbaniu.Uoo of refugees from
the countryslde. We must realize that
many, many clvlllans are being tllled
by bombs •nd artillery.
We muat ask ounelves : A re
Rovemmtnt.& like that of Thieu ~nd Ky
fn South Vietnam worth this 1 or t of
C<>ll!
GREG CERMAK
Camhodlan Mo1'e
To the Editor :
President Nixon's action on moving
Into Cambodia makes me finally think
we have someone who has guts enough
to do what we wmt to Vietnam to
do years ago. We have been messing
around accomplishing nothing In Vietnam
too long, when the source of our problems
was elsewhere.
Fighting in Vietnam was like poisoning
rals in the pantry when they come
from the basement. Maybe a strong
offensive move with full backing from
all of the people in America will show
the Indochinese Communists that we
are a soi\d country with a solid purpose,
that we mean business and are not
just fighting for our economic health!
DAN MARTENS
1'1onderl11l People
To the Editor:
On Saturday. ?i.tay 10. my father
became ill while shopping with my
mother in the Market Basket store on
Irvine Avenue.
t would lik e to express my deepest
gratitude to all of those wonderful people
who came so quickly to the aid ol
my father and mother.
DAVID GOOD6ELL ,
De1'oured lllJ 111-
To lhe Editor:
Just think, almost 68,000 ntw residents
In Orange County wlthJn the last &ix
months. In a few years we won't have
to worry about a St1t'1day's leisurely drive
in the country we hK plaMed oo all
week. We can aee the transformation
every day with ntw ugly subdivisions
landsce.ping the htllslde1 and freeway s
and now our piclureaque coastline is
beifli devoured by man. '
ORANGE COUNTY -lhe coonty with
oratigf! groves, the smell of smudge
pots: Jn winlcr and the fragrance ol
orange bkluoms In the 1pr1ng -this
Indeed was our home. Now il's only
1 memory for there are fi ve groves
left. Yes, come here everybody to the
state with room fur all people -with
Jts huge industries, waJl-1(>.wall tract
houses, our wonderful California climate.
the beautiful wages California has to
offer and the golden opportunity.
NOW, WE SOON expect the beloved
Irvine Company to build a new
unwekomed city with another half
million population. This will succeed in
devouring the total land from north El
Toro west to the Newport-Corona del
Mar area and eventually our beautiful
rolling hills and coastline south to
Laguna. How marveloos it will be to
enter the adjoining towns like a link
fence.
I HOPE THE the people who have
mastered all the planning of these future
cities will tell their grandcblldren how
it used to be. How the deer used
to roam the hills, the wild quail used
to flock in covies and the sad
meadowlark used to be a commcn sound
in any field.
Man is ro intelligenl, yet it is
astonishing he's not capable of preserving
nature's precious environment.
LORNA PlASKOWSKI
--1WWW-
Frid a y, May 15, 1970
The editorial papc of U.. DaUg
Pilot seek.I to in/orm and stfm..
ulatt rtcder1 by pre11nting thU
ncwspapt~• opinions and com-
mentary on topiCI of inuresi
ond significance. btt protnd'i11g a
forum fM ihe e.rpres!ion o/ our readers' opinions. and by
presenting the diverse view.
Points of fnformrd obsenJers
and .spokesmt7' on topia of th.1
da11. '
Robert N. Weod, Publl1her
r
'
I
I
New Goals Go • OTI •
' '
Officers • 1n Harmony
BUILDING FDR FUTURE - A better life for the Cerebral Plllsied
of Orange County is made possible through the efforts of the New-
port Harbor Spastic League. Checking blueprints for the league's
activities for the coming year are (top to bottom) Mrs. Gerald
Hell.rung, new prov;stonal : Mrs. Robert 0 . Wood.ward, recording
secretary, and Philip M. Cob.olan, new president.
A new slate of officers will assume Ieadership·of the TueSday Club Or
Newport Harbor during the club's Tuesday, May 26, meeting. 13th Year Beg ins •
~men
Taking their cue from the musical show "Carnival," the new officers
including (left to right) Mrs. Pere 0. Endsley and Mrs. Ruth Seaver Ken-
nedy, vice presidents, and Mrs. Donald C. Ohms, Pres~dent have found that
!he song title ''Lo"" Mak .. the World Go Roulld" 'from 'lhtr•bow "is ·a. fit•
New Leaders Build
On Solid Fot rndat·ion ting cue for the club. ·
Addmg the word fri;.i'dship t~\e song uai; !he ne:?:oatd ;,,embers
already have focused on the upcoming year to mate it a successful one.
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
•r1tai. Mn ts. 1m Ill '••• IJ
Zontians ·Lift Off to Shoot for Moon
New board members, new provli!!ionals and new members were
introduced when the Newport Harbor Spastic League hosted its annual
inslallation luncheon in preparation for it& 13th year of assisting th1
cerebral palsied.
The Irvine Coast CouOtry Club was the setting forthe celebration
luncheon where members noted the '10,050 disbursed to three organ-
izations last December.
Houston's Mission Co ntrol Center was transpor·
ted to California briefly when members of the New-
port Harbor Zonta Club went into moon orbit to in-
stall new officers.
The Irvine Coast Country Club was the launch
pad for the space flight, which included a social hour
and dinner.
Getting the flight into orb it was a skit performed
by past presidents. Mrs. Earl Stanley P eth was the
sandblister : Mrs. Marlin Sheely was windblaster,
Mrs. Virginia Luther was soundbjjster. and Dr. Helen
Robe rtson was space ranger.
Others in the cast were the Mmes. Jeffrey
Burke, moonshine : Robert L. Bacon . Come t shovel ;
Robert Jayred,. rain maker; Louis Csenar , ~ky di v-
er; Jack Reinert, thunder clapper; Malcolm Angell,
rock crusher. and Miss Bernice Vestal. star du ster. ' Following the program, Mrs. Robert Harbison.
retiring president introduced Mrs. Bacon. director
of Area JV who was installing officer for the 197~71
.slate of officers.
11 .. 11, P'ltof•
Guests at the luncheon, represe nting the organizations Weri the
Mmes. Nina May Johnson , director of Carl.Harvey School; Nita Wait~.
executive director of the United Cerebral· Palsy Association. of Or~•
. County; Jesse Ohm, director of Hope Haven Schools, and Ruth Kotlar,
director of the UCPA young ·adult program.
The 25 members of the league also have raised an additional
$7,600 which will ·be spent as the need arises. 'These funds are d~rived.
from the .league's ball. bridge brunch, Christmas .card sales and King
Neptune affair in the spring.
Guiding the league through the coming year will be Mrs. Philip
M. Cobol.an, presi dent, and assisting her will be,tbe Mme s. Will.iam
L. Kitch en, Paul C. Garman, William E. Fisher and George R. Jan ..
sen, vice presidents; Rober,t 0 . Woodward and Terence P. Hanna,
secretaries; Johnnie Walker, treasurer; Richard E. SchumaCher,
coordinator ; Gordon McClennan 'Jr., patroness chairman, and ,Donald
G. Langille , provisional chairman. Installing officer was Mrs. Frank
C. Merlo.
Welcopied as a new active member was Mr s. 'J'.om Simovich,
and as new provisionals for the 1970-71 year the ·Mmes. Robert Barne.
son, Gerald Hellrun g, William Laing and Donald E: Lutz.
Mrs. Leroy Bartholomew of the Carl Harvey School spoke on the
need in Orange County for a live-in facility to serve the · cerebral pal ..
.sied .
Accepting the top post was Mrs. Waldemar Ack·
er, and laking board positions were the Mmes. Rein-
'ert and Joseph Hambl et, vice presidents; Ernest
~erberg and Laura Lagios, secretaries: Joseph
Carlos, treas urer, and Al Forgit, fo.undation trea-
surer.
S-erving as directors will be the Mmes. Donald
Ballard, Roger Barrow, Roy Fox and Dr. Roberston.
READY FOR FLIGHT -Preparing to bl ast off for a trip to the moon are Mrs.
Waldemar Acker (left), new president of the Zonta Clu b of Newport Harbor, and
Mrs. George Zebal, who portrayed the first president of the Moon in the instal-
lation skit.
Mrs. Wayn e Sulicasky, retiring president, and her board oi offi.
cers were lauded for their efforta: during the past year~
Son's Attitudes Blamed on Clinging to Ivy (League)
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please print
this Jetter so "Heartbroken Mother" will
set it. She's the woman whose brilliant
son didn't get into Harvard. Yale or
Dartmouth. Our son was accepted by
all three and DOW I wish he had gooe
to a Dice school in the Midwest.
When Jack left home he was a man.
nerly, respectful boy, neat and clean
-a joy to his moUler's heart. After
twG years out East. the boy's hair is.
so iong it makes me sick. His moustache
Jrifts in the soup. He wears sandals.
faded jeans and Jove beads. He argues
with his dad about politics and has
brought such radical kids home for
weekends that we told hhn to come
Rlone from now on or stay up lhere.
I thought I'd have. a heart attack wllen
ANN LANDERS
Jack announced last week. ''The only
salvation for this country ls to bum
everything down and start again."
I hope every mother whose 1on dktn't
make the Ivy League wtll see this and
consider herself fortunate. Ours did and
I am -l!t>RRV
DEAR SORRY: lt'a not Utt: Ivy, lt'a
Jack. Even Ute quiet mklweatem ICbools
have their 1h1re of nutty redk:1l1 who
want '8 burn tve.J')'Wn1 down , YOll'
Me woalcl ha\'i found 1111 toa1-m1tt1.
Tbe majorll)' of the students at the
Ivy tcbool1 are aot In symp.tliy wltb
UM: wUd~ytd fir left. In fact they are
1elting fed up wttb tl1vln1 their edue1Uon
lnternpied by a ltaDdtul of koob. ADd
l 117 h's about time.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I 'm being
married In Juno and my mother la drivlJli mo mas. Sile hllilta lhal Ille
' white aisle clc:>th be put down AFl'ER
the groom's mother ls seated. The rea!IOn
Is C>bvious:. She w1nl1 le> walk on it
first.
I"Ve asked aeveral people what is the
correct procedOr• and nobody knows.
I'm afraid my nance's mother will be
hurt when she aeea the aisle cloth laid
down after she Is seated. 'the two women
don 't get along very well as it is. This
could be the straw that breaks the
camel's back. l'm sure yoo have figured
out that my mother la a strong person
-cmsiders hersell right ln all matters
and has never made a mistake In her life.
Comment, pie.,., -MAYFIELD, KV.
DEAR MAY1 Since yoar
molllu probablJ llu alftad): waDled oa
••
water 1be 11toulda't make 111e• a Mg deal oot of walktag oa tbt allle clotb
fint. I bope 1be reconsiders . ta Ute
lnRrest of peace 1Dd barmony. _
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I bolled when
I read the letter from the teocher who
resented having 1 diabeijc child in her
class. She said the kid was wasting
the taxpayers' money by disrupUng the
class to go to the bathroom 1everal
times • day and eaUng mkf.momlng
snacks.
As a college junior who h•• htd
diabetes for many yean, I'd like to
tell h<r how !OIT)' I am that I wasted
the taxpayers' money and inconvenienced
my ttachen by going to the balhroom
and eatiq mid<DDrnln11111ek1.
, ' .
· I 11.!o am rony .ohe Is allond to
teach. With her attitude she should not
be' in the 1<h0ot sjstem. I hope her
signature gave no clue as to her identity
bec1use I'll bet there are aeveral million
diabeUca who would love to wrin& her
neck. -INSULIN IZZY ,1
DEAR JZ: I am neltber d\li!otle -
do l lli1ve 111y dllbellc relldves, bl&
"include me la. 11
Too many couples go from matrimony
to acrlmonf, Don't Jet ·your marriage
llop before it ge~ started, Send for
Ann Landers' booklet, ''Maniap -What
to ElqleCI." Send your r<quett to Ann
Landers In care of lhl8 ne-.paper enckli&-
·1ng 50 cents In coin and a loo&, ltamped,.
aeU.add......t envelope.
•
-... ---· .. -•
• ~ J4 DAil Y PILOT fridq, Mq 15, 1970
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AdventtJro·u~· Se,rvi~e Years RecaJI~
• I • , ~ •I '
Jly JOOllAN llAS'l'INGS When :the CO'• ~·was 'BELPs ENEMY' would be; lilted .. 111iA1na duu'ler for the a••ll'o n a I °' ..., 0-'" """ 11'" injured In an accidtnt. she "I requestea reassignment today," 6he says ol her organliatlon.
'I'tlb gal's Anny is com-promptly assigned him ~-from lh3t, though,'.' laughs youthful ~apade. She believes the tenlcet!:
prised of an arsenal of best _ 1 former court Joanne, who rtceived her itill olfer opportuniUu for ~ies, and Lt. Col Joanne -ten degree from UCLA. GREAT TBRILUI young women loday. Altl>oul!h
Al!roott, U.st-· Air r.... reporter. "I cooldn't read Ute pltolOo, One of lier ,...tat thrllli Ille feels the 1 .. r.,., male
Reserve, woukln't trade a "We mado • believer ol ao l told them I felt I was Was seetnc London for the would never want to see.
milJion dollar> for bar 23 yean him," the now laup, and' doing more to he1J> lbe fJrll time ab~ with lijhta women aduaUy carrying guns ,
in aervlce alnce World War I~ w1111'I Jong befon l!>e"' .,_y!" there no longer ii dllcrtmina· JI. were WAFS irlltructing-Jn' l\ wu htr reass.lgnn)mf as -streets jammed wUb wildly t1on bet.ween men and women
Now Mn. OalJu MorlD III L1ak lraJaen, 00 the lli&hl GjleratioM oflicer of the See· ceiebratlag mobs -IDd the in anr braach of the ...-vice.
ol H""''""'-Harbour, the · __.,_. 1n lite encl of the war. The food wu "It• • marvelous W.y for -·-·•-· , line and·--,. tower Gnd Air Division, Elghtlr,,\ir .... Is ,_ ... "' -~•,• ·'e diminirtJve redhead wu wort-: u well 11 in myrald o t be r J'orce -the first Ume women u n be l le v ab J "I bad, abe •" ..., Mllll: -111 au ing a an administrative aide capecUiel around the bae. actually were anplo)'9d an an .. · enthuses, "and morale )J: hi'ih
I-"· War n-.. ........... -""-.1_,, , __ 1 b ~"--remembers, and i evea today within the women'1 ltl'\'k6 ...
VO 1"1~ ---..-ou•"-"'""' Tbe ~v eo~ WU work· air ue -..... t Jed to one J~ne can't face peanut but-
she tint volunteered for the Jn, u a ~phle officer or her most uclting and near· ter or marmalade. Gone are the barracks-type
Women's Army Au 1: 11 i 1 r y at Santa Ana: when she recetv. fatal uperlence11. "There was a vendor hawk· quarttrs, now replaced with
Corpe. ed her overaeu orders SUnding Juit five feet tall Ing fresb er-oo the atreel modera donns houaiDg two
She was selected for its first switching her at the last and nictnaiped "Little Jo" by in Loqdon and 1 hadn't seen women to 8 room. Jobs, pay
officers' training class and minute from the Pacific to the B-24 mws, Joanne admits f-' I I and educational programs are t I •-· · ed '" first -'I •wu· grapes or ,years ··· equal •· "-· of "· men ai.a-101n i.ne group the EU10J1ean Theater -a she aJao· was a typical tourist piid $4.10 for a pound," sf1e w u11J1M: un: •
of women to serve with the blessing, Joanne claims, slnce and wanted to see Liege, ·remembers. she says, and in addition there
Air Force. Since 1948 she has she has a phobia about bugs. i Belgium, where fue planes A teetotaler, she also as--is the same esprit de corps
helped to chart a program After receiving her Overseas were flying in supplies for tounded the otbe1 American aDd opportunity to make
for serVice women in traln!ng in New York she and Germany. . officers when sbe rejected wonderful friends that she en·
peaceUme. 499 other women joined some She finally persuaded one champagpe (selling for 50 countered.
Remembering the bleak 10,000 Europe.bound troops of the cttwa to smuggle her cents 8 bottle) in favor of 111be aerva is a gnat
days of 191:1, Joenne admits aboard the "Queen Eiiubeth" aboard for what they all !ell a helmttlul of ln!sb. cben'ie1 leveler," aaya Ute engaging
that at first male officers where Joanne was tn charge would be '°' waevet'.!tlul milk she picked her3elf from 1 matrop, "Women have to dida~ know wbal 1o do with of r=eeiloa, welfare IDd rua -an act wbldl would . n<arby tree learn 1o get -aloog, .and this
the fem.lnine volanteen, mo&t morale for the voyage. have caused everyone's ~ When abe ·arrived home llhe still is the, best coUo¥Y 1n
of whom bad enllsled for OJvmionery tactics 1o slant coort marilaI had It been discovered ber mother bad the world. 1bere 11 a lot wrong
patriotic reasons or because ahake a tralling submarine discovered. carefully saved meat stamps here, but put SOll'leOlie out
their loved ones were !igbling. made the rip longer lblD Totally devoid ol make-op 1o buy lttak in bar honor of the country· for jnal Ii•
Her flrll commanding of. usual but obe was fortunate and wearing a borrowed and all sh<! could think oi months and I'll bet be'd never fleer at Minter,·an Air Force · ha · g the whole Gl uniform and helmet J complain again! As my n1..w In vm . enn . . ' oanne was a huge fruit salad or • mother always said: 'Be glad ~uw·• training base, firmly Miller band urut aboard to amved in lJege onl~ to a banana split.
believed woman's place was play IO shows a day and keep dis_ cover her commanding of ~"'-al'° was ama--.i ,_ you're born American and be
In "· ho •-· ed " f al dect·~ •· all ~.. -w glad you're born ht!aH.hy'.'' • 1u11:· me. nzt~lgn "'1ere the personnel entertained. icer so ~ w m e notice that ankle-strap shor.s
as a second officer, Joanne . In England the Allied Forces that fll&ht on another aircraft _ worn overseas only by
found morale low because the were prearing for the Battle so for 10 hours she was French prostitutes _ were
women didn't have enough to of the Bulge and after at· virtually a JU'.1aoner confined high fashion on Fifth Ave.!
do . tending a photo-interpreting to the plane. ·
FEMININE STRATEGY school Joanne was auigned Tbe milk run concept ended ACTIVITIES.
Employing a bit ol lmnlnine to the headquartm of the abruptly when the plane w•• Chainnan of Ute board ol
Dresses Long
For Tots' Dolls
strategy, Joanne suggested to late Gen. D w jg ht o. hit by flack during Uleir the Hurili.ngton Harbour Com·
BY HIS MAJESTY'S SEAMSTRESS -Lt. Col. Joanne Affronte (Mrs. Dallas the CO's aide that be let her Etseni-r where her com-return trip and the pilot mittte of Ute Orange County
Moran lll) U.S. Air Force Reserve, recalls her 23 years in service as she know the first time something manding officer was Cot. ordered the remaining crew PbllbannonJc Socltty and a
The Paris fashion tol·
lectlons, which stressed long
sldrls and dresses and buried
the mini and micro U:irt.s,
is hitting toYllDd. compar .. UJtifol'Illl pun:based in England. went WT'/ in their office. Ellolt Roooeveil 1o ball out. Fortunately Joanne member of Little Mermaid ="---::...;::__ _________________ ;_______________ bad ~ parachute training Guild and the Election Board A New Ycrt doll manufac·
turer, Jolly Toy1 Inc., is
redeslgning Ute clothing ol lls
dolls 110 that retailers can
choose long or abort skirts. · St. Andrew's Church leaders OC Philharmonic
Selected for Ceremony Seated Alta Bahia Installs
MRS. JOHN VERY
Afternoon Rltn
Fun Film
Examines
Shopping
Newly manied Mr. 8<nd
Mrs. John Robert Very are
making their first ·home in
Costa Mesa.
The Rev. Dr. Charles
Dierenfield performed t h e
double ring nuptials in St.
Andrew's Presbyterian
Chapel Parents cf th e
newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs.
Haviland Van Lew Smith of
Lido Isle and Mr. and Mrs.
RObert Kennedy Very of
Newport Beach.
The former Donna Duryea
Smith, a 1965 NationaJ Charity
League debutante, asked her
l'llster Christie Smith to be
the maid of honor. Kimberly
Fcx was the junior
bridesmaid.
Marc Mourern.a was best
man and seating guests were
John Richard and Richard
Sheetz.
The former Miss Smith is
an alumna of Newport Harbor
High School and the Universi·
ty of Arizona where she af.
filiated with Delta Delta Delta
sorority. PresenUy she is
employed as a social worker
at the Rehabilltatlon Center
for Crippled Children and
Adults cf Orange County.
New officers will be In-Mrs. William . M. Laing, chairman ; L. W. Jenks,
stalled when the Cc as t chainnan of the Alta Bahia recording secretary, and
Women's Club meets in the Committee of the Orange David Olambers, treasurer. Mesa Verde Country Club at County Philharmonic Society
I I Tu sci Ma 19 wii I ol(. 0 Mrs. George Ochsner is a.m. e ay, y . I irista l leers at 1 a.m.
Mrs. Jack Hart, president, Tbarsday, May 21, jn the ho,stess and assisting her will
will conduct the business Newport Beach home or Mrs. be the Mmes. John P. Kenney,
meeUng and ttie installation Kenneth Smith. Wllliam Heidemann and Ray.
ceremonies will be directed Following the ceremony, mond Dost.a.
by Mrs. James Badg]ey, presi· lunch will be ltl'Ved. Guests are invited to attend
dent of Orange D i 1 tr i ct , Leading the group will be meetings which will take place
California Federation o f the Mmes. Job n W. the third 'lbunday of each
Women's Clubs. Donaldson, chalnnan; John month beginning In Sep-
Acet:pting the president's Croul, vice chainnan; Richard tember. Information rtgarding
gavel will be Mrs. George F r a n k l in , corresponding the group may be obtained
Bryson, whose theme for the secretary and membership from Mrs. Laing at 875-5033.
year will be Blue Bird ofo---.:...----------------1
Happiness in Enjoyment of
Living.
Other new cfficers are the
Mmes. William Hall i day,
Robert Knorff, Ar th u r
Hoodenpyle and M i ch e l
C.oronel, vice presidents; Dale
Magor, George Fox and Harry
Charlton, secretaries; Jenkins
JenkiM, treasurer, and Earl
Garren, parliamentary ad-
visor.
Members will gather the sec-
ond Tuesday of th e month
during the summer for card
parties.
Dance Club
JACK GLENN GALLERY
DIRECTIONS 70 ·
PART l LYRICAL ABS'lRAC1'10N
Jak9 Bll'tl'ot ...,.,_
Sheron Bntl"d
Dan Ovistensan
Romie Lendfiekl
Don U.W.llen
KonShowoll -v-...,ws•••--NUIW
.......,~,=-· ..._.... ........ -... ---~-----------The first , third and filth
Fridays of the month are the
dance dates selected by Lace
Shopping, a subject close to 'n Leather Square Dance Club
The bridegroom, a graduate
of Newport Harbor, served
with the U.S. Marines ln Viet-
nam and now is attending
Orange COast College. MAY 13th THROUGH JLN: 15th
7 DAYS A WEEK. II A.M. TO 5 P.M. every woman's heart, will he members. 'The music starts
examined in a talk, To Secretaries at 8 p.m. in the Recreatioo. -1Mf'CCll9T_...,,_.-.-.--.__,,.,.QJU Cit• ,_
Market, To Market, for Al 6:30 p.m. every seeonc1,_Cen_1_er_,_H_unt_in-'gton--B_•_ac_h_. ---------------------1
members ol the Woman's Club Thursday women of Bahia Chapter of National or san Juan Capistrano on SecreUlries' AJ s 0 c i at i 0 n
Tuesday, May 19, 12 :30 p.m. Jntemational assemble in dJf.
A representative of 8 stamp ferent locations to attend
company wW cover planning. · I I basics fn marketing and prac· meetings. Mrs. Loyd F eming at 673-Q60 may be telephoned tical hit'll! for shoppers, as for additional information.
well a. show an amusing fihn,t;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I ouUining shopping habits or1 =e;:s.:,:•:,:t.;.ttte LAGUNA BEACH
Mr>. Geoffrey M 8 n se ll, SCHOOL O'f
p-.,;dent, will conduct t!>e &B'I' &MD .DESIG
business meeting wbich will -• -include election of officers.
The new board will be in-
stalled on Tuesday, June 16,
in the San Clemente Inn .
Mn. Donald Moore, lun·
cheon chairman, will b e .
assisted by the Mmes. Nelle
Ford. Ralph Bell, 0 a v i·d
Pa)'lle, Hugo Forster, Edward
Oiade, Leon Drummond, Lynn ·~·~Iii~ Shrewsbury, Louise Faranzen,
C. R. Cook, Louis Gauthier
and Mm Helen Shrewsbury.
Film Viewed SUMMfH PH~~RAM
J • J -t worhttps:
Pollltl•t • Scalphl.-.
DNWl11
6 & t Wffk cO•IWI!
Pollltlot • Woforcolon
Jowolry Motl11
Coro01le1 • Scolptlre
Drawl11-ba1lc • fl1a.-.
Margot Goodman
(formerly of Margot lnleriors}
and
Fritz Steinbach
(formerly of Alla's Interiors)
announce tho opening ol
Barn !J.nlerior&
locateil al
a.rd the airplane was off the of Huntington Bnch, Joanne
English coast. alao helped 1o start the Air
"otherw:ile, since I wasn't FOl'Cfl Mothers' Club and was
on lite flight manilett I aUll instrumental in obtaining e
\
OPEN DAILY 10.10; SUN. 10.7
c::11r--t-
ay 15. SAT. 16
" ~
COOL SHIFTS
FOR WOMEN
0111' R~. $2.00 2D111s
$
FOR
,f Cotton sateen shif ts for eool
summer lioing. Choose fro•
shtath and dress types with •iP.
ptr ba<ks. Washablt, pre-sbntnk
fo r l11sti11g fit. Little or no-il'01I·
ing required. Popular prints. 10·
.. 18 p;.k 1' ' Blue
Turquoise
Yellow
Lilac
Block,1Whi!9
The Woman'! Auxiliary to
the American Society o I
Mecbanlcal Engineers 11 plsn· nlJll a joint meeting In Ute
Northrtdge home of Mn .
_,-W. Babel al 11 u n.
'lbunday1 May 21.
• The LOI Angelet IDd San
·'· Fernando Valley eeclions will mM to tee a film on the
Pr11t Mold1g -Wnt. er ~ fot •
fNe llroci!uN:
447 East Seventeenth Street
Costa Mesa, California
TElEPHONE (714) 645·2555 ll•t· .. Commercial Art of Cake u .. ~ .. d." I·...._
VFW Auiciliory
eo.._.cu,,. AurlJl1r1 to
V-ol Flni&n Wan, Poot-~ tbe !irll ud etrd lll1ditys al I p.m. 0oM ~·· Amorlcan LqloG Hall 11 tbe -., ......
17141 494-1520
HO l.et•H Ca1y°" U .
... , ........ 92651
STARS
Svd11•y °'"'" h •n• ef the world'• 9rett ••tr•l-vtn. Hr1
1ol111Mn 11 1111 of th1 DAILY
PILOTS t r••f f11tufe1.
midio hours , mondoy thru fridoy1 9 am-5 pm
l<Jfurdoy• and evenings hy appoinlmerrl °"'Y
a ..... ... , ....... , ...
1111 L 'hlfl• ..... , ....
9-11 IL•Lthw.a.
All_ ....
We1t•f•1ttr l1111P•rk
....LwtMcP..._ Li1tc•l•dY•U1TVS. , .... _._
StlSU.Ctl•A,..
CnltMIM S.1t1AH ....,.,....,wn .. W..•SLllflrillll __ ...._ , .... _
• I
f;osta Me8a
' VOL 63, NO. ·116, ~ SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA' --r ,.-FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1970
• • 0 ice I
•
Slocum Faces Trial
Mesa Doctor Held in Baby Death
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of lfll: 01111 ftltilt ll1H
Cynthia Slocum was an unwanted child.
No matter how her mother hated the
horror of a butchered baby in the frteier
for six years, she feared and resented
its birth, begging for an abortion.
A close confidante testified to this
Thursday, before preliminary hearing
was concluded in Harbor Judicial District
Court with Dr. Wesley G. Slocum, -45,
ordered to st.and trial on murder charges.
The conclusion came unexpectedly soon
after cross-examination of a string of
witnesse.~ who told cf bizarre behavior
by both the defendant and his wife.
Tears were frequent and Mrs. Slocum
30bbed as the defense attempted to wreck
her credibility as a witness by detailing
her tortured past.
The witnesses included the obstetrician
who delivered Cynthia on Dec. 3, 196.1,
and the coroner's surgeon to whom the
baby's remains were delivered March
25 of tills year.
Godmothers of both older Slocum
daughters were also called.
Judge Pro Tem William Christensen
declared he sees rell90nable cause to
believe the crime of murder 'ft'll com-
mitted arid ordered Dr. Slocum arraisned
May 22 in Orange County Superior Court.
He refused to Stt any bail for release,
citing d e a t h threats against Mr:s.
Slocum, defense attorney Paul Augustine
Hot Weekend
Record W armtli for County
Record-breaking temperatures were predicted for Orange County this
weekend as patches of fog threatened to dampen Orange Coast beaches.
The U.S. Weather Bureau today predicted swmy warm weltber with a
high of 96 degrees and lows in ·the·60's for Oran&e County.
As inland temperatures threaten to hit the 100 degree mart prospective
beachgoera are laced wllh Pftdicted 111tclls fli r., llong the cout, cuttinr
visibility down to GM-quarter of a mile.
Orange ~ Harbor Department 1pokllman in Newport Beach said
light win<lll were expected "with the fog which blanketed Leguna Beach and
Newport early today. Water temper~ture was set at a warm tl degrees.
The record high for May 15 was set in 1967 at 102 degrees, while the
record for May 16, 96 degrees, has stood since 1892. Weathermen said the long-
standing record would probably be broken.
Meanwhile, rising temperatures, bothersome smog and strong winds that
fanned brush fires continued to plague the inland areas Qf Southern California
today, with no relief in sight.
Temperatures beaded higher than 100 degrees in some inland areas and
were in the 80's in the mountains. The estimated high for downtown Los An·
gele.a was 95 for today and Saturday.
Brush fires hit at least four counUe1 Thursday when the Loa Angela
temperature peak!<!: at 89 degrees.
A yellow pall of eye-irritating smog cut vi&i;bllity b1 most of the basin
sharply in one of ttie heaviest attacka of the year ••
The hot Santa Ana wind gusts from the desert gave UtUe relief from
the smog wh.ile bringing high tem peratures.
Accused Abortionist Vow s
To l(eep Santa Ana Office
Dr. Joh• Shriver Gwynne, accused Los
Angeles abortionist, will be arraigned
In Central Orange County Municipal
Court at 10 a.m. Monday on two counts of
committing illegal abortions in Santa
Ana.
The surgeon. arrested th r e e times
previously in his highly-publicized West
Los Angeles clinic for the same offense.,
has vowed to continue his activities ia
his new clinic at 1856 W. 17th SL
Santa Ana police said today they are
equally determined to halt his operaton.
Dr. GwyMe was first arrested Wednes--
rlay aftenoon by officers who charge
they saw him perfonning an abortion
cut a 17-year-old Wisconsin girl. He had
allegedly completed an abortion on
another out.of-town woman and a third
woman from Houston, Tex .. was waiting
her tuni.
Santa Ana Police Sgt. Michael Mitchell
obtained a complaint late Thursday on
the two cou11l.!: of illegal aborilons. Dr.
Gwynne bad been freed Thursday on
his own recognizance alter an a~
pearance before Mwlicipal Judge Philip
Schwab.
Tt:e doctor, a native of Garden Grove,
where his parent.!: still live, has said
he is detennined to cootinue the illegal
operaUo1111 a,, long as posaJble. He is
deliberately challenging the state's ex·
isling abortion Jaw as "hypocritical."
He has been indicted by the Los
Angeles Cou11ty Grand Jury on five
counts of performing abortions, as the
result of previous raids on his West
Los Angeles clinic.
AUeta S11pports Move
Jr .. and two other physicians as good
reason.
Augustine argues that the key to the
case is what killed the baby found March
26, while Dr. Richard Fukumoto, veteran
autopsy surgeon, testified this is im-
possible to determine.
Brain and other vital tissues were
removed by whoever performed. the semi·
professional autopsy on the rtmains -
Dr. Slocum -the state contends.
The doctor displayed little concern dur·
ing the hearing, but literally sat on
the edge of his chair as Dr, Fukumoto
discussed the professkxlalism of the job.
··r would have to say no," he repl ied
\\'ben Augustine asked if it was the
(See SLOCUM, Page 21
UCI Students
To Protest
At Draft Board
UC Irvine students said they plan
to return to the santa Ana draft board
offices today In . ll)p only ormJIOd
demonstration lgalnot U:S, Wit poticteo
along the Orange Coast.
Students in all o( the area colleges
-UCI, Cal Slate Fullerton, Orange
Coast C.Ollege, Golden West College and
Saddleback College -continued their
programs designed to explain student
protest to communities. ·
A pancake breakfast, sponsored by
the Movement for a Democratic Military
(MDM) and free of charge was slated
for Saturday from 3 to I I a.m. ln
UCI's Gateway Commons.
MDM spokesmen said a march from
Oceanside to Camp Pendleton was ten-
tatively scheduled following t h e
breakfast.
At occ, students, with the permission
of the college's administration, lowered
the campus flags to half mast in
memorial of the two student~ killed
at Jackson State College in Jackson,
Miss.
Mee t County
Candidates
Wondering about who lo vote
for ?
The DAILY PILOT, in coopera-
tioR with the Orange Coast League
of Women Voters, today offers
some h1forrnation to help voters
make intelligenl selections when
they cast ballots for Orange County
Supervisors, Orange County School
Board trustee, and Orange County
Superlntende1t of Schools.
Biographies and viewpoints of the
candidates are published today on
page 3 ~ith supervisorial candi·
dates presented across the top of
the page. Two candidates failed to
respond or provide information in
the school board race. They are
Roger C. Anderson, and Reg \Vood.
Robert D. Peterson did not respond
in the county superintendent of
schools race.
County to Block Airline?
BJ THOMAS FORTUNE
Of rllot Delly ~ .... ,..,,
Orange County government apParently
has the ability and the intent to block
ConUnental A1rUnes from flying its new
CAB-authorited route from Orange Coun·
ty Airport to Pacific NorUlwest cities.
"1 think we should stand by our
prevklusly staled ?<JSition or opposing
the route on the grounds that we don't
have facilities to accommodate them."
<'halnnan o f the county Board of
Supervisors Alton Allen said .
"I rather doubt that Continental will
t.ven be asking us for the faellitie~
becauae they know wbat our posiUon
is •od whiit our situation Is.''
\
Assistant Airport Director R o n
Ow>dler aaid, 0 We cannot diJcriminate
wilhin a class of aircraft -commertial
aircraft -u rar as taking off and
landing. But "When they come to us
for lease space we can uy we cannot
lease you something we don't have."
AwJrd of the route to serve aoulhern
and northern California satellite airports
at Ontario, Long Beach, Hollywood-
Burbank, Orange County, Oakland and
San Jose with connections to Portland
And Seattle-Tacoma was gr1nted Wednes-
day in Washington, D.C., by the Civil
Arroneutics Board (CAB).
A 1pokesrnan for Continental, head-
quartued ln ~s An1elc1r said, "We're
quite aware that there is re&istance
to addltlonal service in the Orange Cowl·
ty area. It is the responsibility ol the
CAB to foster commercial service in
lhe United States and they've done their
part. Now It is between the commuiity
and the airline to reach an 1micabJe
solution."
The spokeliman , Olrecl:>r or Public!~
C. Bruce Plowman. said, "We don ·t
Mve iny definite plMs al this point .
\Vhen we do we will announce them ."
lie said there is lots of time as servlae
couldn"t be started !or 60 days. 11lt
route awards are effective July 13,
(Se< AlllLINE, Pap 2)
•
•
WO u
041\. Y Pl\.OT It.fl' .......
M=ST ~ADI> CHICKS HIS UNUSJD ~EAT BELT
\ J•> ' 11 ......... -Ch-.... R*1 Du-Ai• • ., ) . . .
Mesan Forgets Seat Belt
-And Survives Smashup
A Newport Beach dune buggy en-.
thusiut who alway1 use!!'. a seatbell
forgot to snap 'his on today ud It
probably saved ha life, when the vehicle
·was rammed and hurled into a sign
standard in C.OSta Mesa.
Roiand H. Ladd, 26, of 213 ~th St ..
was f/UJ1g free as the small, open vehicle
shaltered against the thick pole, mangl-
ing the cockpit arta.
"I'm sure glad I forgot ... " he
murmured, surveying the wreckage in
front of a service station in the 2400
block of Newport Boulevard. He was
unhurl except for a sore leg.
"He wasn't even scratched, '1 marveled
one police officer.
Ladd, a surveyor for the city of
Anaheim, was drlvTng north on the busy
boulevard about 1:30 a.m., "hell he
began a right turn Into the station for
fuel.
Patrolman Bruce Hagen said Donald
C. Kight, 25, of 2082 Wallace Ave., Costa
Mesa, apparently failed to notice Ladd'1
turn indicator as he changed lanes.
Kighrs large car clipped the little
vehicle with the right front fender, sen-
ding the buggy carffning into the pole
and scattering the area wilh fractured
fiberglass.
Despite the severe damage, lhe first
thing Ladd showed Patrolman Hagen
was the fact his tunt . indicator was
still flashing.
Gloomy Statistics Belie
Nixon Econo1nic Sta11d
· WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon
administration's effort to calm a . near
panic on Wall Street has been jarred
by some of the gloomiest economic
statistics in a decade .
As President Nixon huddled with his
economic strategists at the White House
Thursday, the 1overnment reported the
deepset economic slump since the 1960
recession and the worst th ree.month
period of inflation since the Korean War.
In a period of less than three hburs,
government statisticans revealed:
-Reviied • information showed the
economy's output of goods and servjces
declined tt f"~annual rate of·3 percent
in the first quarter of this year, a
sit.imp much··wone .than thr: 1.5 percent
drop reported eatller on the basis of
pretimMary figures, and the steepest
dip since 1960.
-The G<OIS National ·Product (GNP)
p~ i<Jde.~ .:--th< broadesl. b¥'<d
' in .... ~ 'ti. 1aflalloo ~ ~-d •t ~n1 ~nu.at rate .1i0f ie.u percent in the-
JanuarJ"odtriluth-March ,..p c r 1-o d, tht
piarpeat fncrcale • .slnce the {ir'st-quarter
of lU~J . r
-Industrial production, a key economic
be1lwether, decUned t1 1Aprlf· for the
eighth time ln ·the past nine months.
The Fedtrli Reserve Sild 'the Aprll lndu
was 170..t percent o( the 1957-il base
period, an G.4 percent from M-
and down sharply from the 1!>8.7 peak
se~ last July.
-Personal income of all Americans
increased in April because of retroactive
boosts in social security benefits and
federal pay. \Yit.hout those two factors,
income would have declined for the firat
time in 41}, years.
-After-tax corporate profits were at
a seasonally adjusted annual rate of
$46 billion in the first quarter of this
y!!ar, down '3 billion from the prtvious
quarter.
-The nation 's ·baJince of payments,
measuring business trcr!lsactions between
the United States and the rest of the
world, showed a _deficit or tl.'7 billion
i11 the first quarter,fa·lharp detefiot1tion
from the '* million sUrplus . recorded
in the last -quarter of INt: ·
The GNP pr!Ce ' index ~as pUsped up
by the retroactive ' federal pay• rjbe.
STOCK ltl'A RKET
N~W YORK ~AP) -The stock 1N1rket
regained all its early strength in mod·
erate trading this afternoon, and analysts
said the long-awaited "bottoming" ac-
tion mia:ht be at hind. (See quotationa
Pagr11 Z0.21 ).
Advances retained a slim lead over
losers among the blues tnded on the
New York Stock EJrbange,
~ •
Today 's Fln•I
TEN CENTS
en s
Mississippi
Officers SaYJ
Snipers Shot
JACKSON, Miss. (UPI) -Two per300ll
were kUled aDd 15 othera injured today
by a barrage of bullets fired onto the
Jackson State C.Ollege campus by police
who claimed they were returninr sniper
fire .
Studenta at the lftdomlnantly black
iichool vehemently denied there were
any snipers.
"There were no shots fired from the
donn at all, and this is One time police
can't lie and say they were shoothlg'
into the air," declared Henry Paige,
• senior.
"There are bullet holes in all the
windows and there's blood all over our
campus, and blood all over lhe donn,"
he said.
M. B. Pierce, chief of detectives, and
District Attorney Jack Travis made con-
fllcUng reports.
'"There was quite a bit of sn1per fir.
ing," said Pierce, "and there was a
man on the fourth floor of the women's
dormitory."
Travis said an ... extensive in-
vestigation" was being conducted into
the matter, but that there wu .. every
indication that a large amount -1
tremendous amount , of tzliper fire -
both from the ll'Glt and the back of
the officers before any ahob were flrtd
by Utt bigl\1'117 patrol ThOJ ...,. under extreme preNure."
'll1ote ldlled ...,. ldeotlned u Jama
Earl Green and Phillip L. Gibbs, 21.
Glbba .was ldentJ.fltd as a .ttudent, but
officials said they were not sure Green
was enrolled at the adlool.
The trouble started about 11 p.m . EDT
Thursday when a group of black youths
galhered near the college. locat!d a
few blocks from downtown Jackson, and
began hurling rocks and bottles at pas.s--
ing cars. It was the .second consecutive
night of such violence and state troopers
were on hand. National Guardsmen were
standing ~Y in armories.
Students, according to police, drove
a dump truck -which had been parked
on campus -onto the street· and set
it afire. ·
extinguish the blaze, they said, snipers.
opened fire from Alexander Hall, the
\\'omen 's dormitory.
Paige gave aoother version ot the
events leading up to the gunfire. He
tSee JACKSON, Page J )
Aerial Showing
Set at El Toro
An aerial demonstration of Marine
Corps aircraft will highlight Armed
Forces Day activ!Ues at Marine Corps
Air Station, El Toro Saturday, accordin&
to base officials,
Gates to the air station wll1 open
to the public at noon, giving Orange
Countians a first-hand look at the Marini
Corps' air araenal.
Other actlvltle1 planned for the af·
ternoon open house include remarks by
Lhe station and Third Marine Aircraft
Wing commanders and a concert
perfonned by the wJng band.
The base will close at 4:30 p.m.
Oranl(e
Weatller
It's still summer on the Orange
Coast, no matter what the calendar
says. Saturday should push the
mercury up to 96 in milkoonty .
and into tbe middle 70's on the
coast
INSmE TODt\Y
It wa1n't any militory ihrco:t
tho.& made Pre1ident Nixon 11nd
troopa into Cambodia; It 1001 a
co.s-e of the time being right
Page 9.
• •
-. -· -· ------~-~-'------"~~--=....:-.:... ______ --=::_:__.__c_
-I DAii.~ PILOT -
, College Lawsuit Due?
Badham Eyes Action Qver 'Proteft Credif
Pll.os for a pogslb1e &aq>ayers' suit
1o campeJ Ca.llfoml•'• state colleges and
univenitlea: to "do what they are charged
wJth dafnl undtr rules set up by the
Regents" aN sUU tn a "very nebulous
diacl.Wion state," A.stemblyman Robert
Badhom CR-Newport Beach) aald today.
Badham broached the 111bjecl of the
sull during a mecUng In Mbslon Viejo
Thund<y nllht. called by the Y""'I
RallUl>llcan Club lo Jll'<lleat the UC
1m.a p1an 1o permit slrllte supporttn
lo drop replar COOlnel and ....ive
creel.It f« .. 11ternate studies" covertns
a variety ol proiesl·rclalod subjecta.
He told a cheering audience ol IOO
al O'Neill Elementary School that he
planned to prepue such a suit and
probably would be joined by oilier mte
legislaloro Including Senator J o b n
Schmitz (R-Tultin), As 1 em bl y man
Robert Burke (R·HunUngton Beach) and
Assemblyman John Brtps CR-Fullerton).
Ltgal proceduns for the sul~ Badhun
said, would· be bandied by attorney•
Sam Barnes and Dennis Carpenter, both
prominent In Republican actlYiti",
c..,,..i.r u chairman of the party'•
slate oentral committee and runnln1 for
the state senate nomlnatk>n.
11lis mornln& &!ham aald, "We haven't
rully done anythJng yet. There ha•
just been some phone communlcaUon
and I am meedng this afternoon with
Barnell and Carpenter to see if such
legal action again1t the unlvmity is
posstblc. It would be ...,,.thing Uh
a suit to pttvenl a !Ir< department
f?om ltrlkin&. but we haven'\ yet got
down to apecifka.'"
In any case, the legislator said, .. It
would have to be very carefully done.
not just a big flash In Ille pan. It
probably would be dtveJoped during the
gnmmer with a view of establishing
some sort al control ln the future.
Nothing much can be done for the rest
of tJU quarter." 'lbe' SPl1rC quarter at the unlvenlUet
...i.·1n_'f<Nr-weeu.
Badbam said the pr_.t lllit would
be aimed It procl'lml IUCb U the OM
approved by the UC! Academic Senate
"" Ille balance or the quarter' under
Frot11 P .. e I
SLOCUM HEARING •••
wort ol a highly aldlled llUl'leoe worttnc
Ing under Ideal ccmdilionl."
Oiiel Deputy Dlstrtct Atlomey James
G. Enright, Jll'<IOCClllor, argued th•t a
man high on drugs who bas Just killed
his baby daughter would hardly be wwk-
lng under Ideal condlton.
The first witness was Dr. Alan V.
Andrews, of Newport Beach, who
delivered Cynthia and sent her aod Mn.
Slocum home from the hospli.l In fine
shape.
"As I recall, she was a little di.up-
pointed she cµdn't have a son," he u.id
when Augustine uked about Ille mother's
Judge Gardner's
Bench Approval
Before Council
A e:overnor'1 peUUon which ab for
approval of JUIUce: Robert Gardner of.
Newport Beach u praldlng JUltice ol
tin Fourth District Court of Appea!a
is today on tht desk of the CalUOrnia
Judicial Council
It i. expected that the supervloory
judicial q:eney will quickly approve Gov.
P.onaJd Rtagan'I formal ""!Uesl and
nsme Gardner, 51, lo Ille post betn1
vacai.d by outf!Olnl pmldlng justlct
Hilton McCabe.
'Ille new honor for a man resarded
by many u Orange County's most
capable and popular jurilt follow• by
just four months his appointment to
the appelilte court in San Bernardino.
Gov. Reagan's naming of Gardner at
that time ended • »-year career on
lbe Orange Count,y Superior Court bencb.
Justice Gardner's nam.lna as tlle
Orange County Prtu Club's 0 Man of
the Year" in Orange County came hard
on the heels of his elevaUon to the
appella~ bench. He baa received that
ume title In the past rrom the city
" Newport Bc>cl>, from the Newport
Harbor Klwtnla and from the Newport
Harbor Spaatlc Llea(LH:.
Married, with two daughte.n:. Jwt.ice
Gardner Uva: with his wife Katharyn
at 320 Evening Canyon Road, Corona
del Mar. The USC law school graduate
served as a part time city judge of
Newport Beach and an Orange County
deputy dlstrk:t attorney before bein1 ap-
pointed to tbe Superior Court bench
by Gov. Earl warren in 1947.
A prolific writer in law, Justice
Gardner ls acknowledged by tht leg1l
profesaion as • ni.Uonwide authority in
many legal iuues. He hu specialized
in criminal and juvenile law and his
wriUngs in those f~lds have been ex·
pressed and quoted Jn many Ie11J and
lay publie1.Uon.s.
DAILY PILOT
OaNtGI CO.UY ,.U.LllHING C0M"AMY
l•i•tt N. WeH
"'*'~' ..... ,,,...,,..
J••• •· e,,. • .,
Vld' l'mi..M Mil Gellllr•I M41 .......
Th•"'•' Ktt•lf
ftl!W
Th1,.,11 A. M11rphl111
M•"""" E"411!w
C .. t. MllM Offk1
JIO Wet! l1y Sheil
M1ili11t A1hltet11 ,,0. lo• IS•O, •1•2• .,.....,_
H...,...t aM<111 m1 wr..1 .. llln a.iiew.-L ...... 1-"1 m ,._,A-
Hwlflllf* lttdlt 11171 ...............
... , ...... : .. Nef1'll •• c-• ,. .. ,
I
rw:lla!.
He also uld sbc nealected lo 1et
prenatal csr. untU tar advanced In
prego1ney and came to him wtth two
dllferent Infections, prior birth dllD1ge
aDd a bad caae of to:s:emia.
Aug\llilne alleses she didn't want the
cblld anyway and became -...cl with
the poaiblllty tt millrt kill her or causa
dunage during bh1b u did Ille couple'•
-dausllter. "Didn't you aay you were afraid you
mlghl die and didn't Wini 'th1t damn
babf'T, .. ~Mn. Slocum.
"I .,.... said anything about a dunn
baby," sbe nplied.
Family friend Mn. Joanne Weir, lip-
reading since she Is deaf, t.sllfled Mrs.
Slocum was so distraught over the con·
dlt!Clll that she vomited.
"I told her she WU loo Jood to dle.
l had toffmla and I wu all right,"
saJd Mn. Weir, who toot Mn. Slocum
for her firat prenatal vllit. Durin& one point. Mrs. Welr became
tearful.
''I want it ltraifht what I uy, btcauae
when I leave ben, I want to bt a b l e
to live with myself. I don'\ want people
twfttlna whl.t l mean with 'vocabulary' WOfd!!' stie llid.
Mrs. Celia Rivera, who w1s hired
as bouaekffper during one of Mrs.
Slcicum's petlodlc hoopltallzatklns !0<
drintlng, si.id she found gin bottles and
beer cans and pills hidden in Mrs.
Slocum'• bed.
Mn. Mary Sl».ibln, anothtr helper, 1aid
Mrs. Slocum &nee barrle1ded the front
door w11h tableJ and chairs and was
terribly afraid or anyone going near
lhe a:arage freezer.
Mn.·Nucy Wllllama, who visited Mrs.
Slocum tn Hoac Mtm0r:lal Hospital, cor-
roborated the rejection of Cynthia. "Did
you say 'you have a beautiful baby'?"
Augustine uked-
"Yes •.. She aaid she wun't even
interu,ted in set1ng her.''
Mrs. Williams. a nune and godmother
of the second Slocwn daughter told the
court sht Jut saw Cynthia on Feb.
a, ttM and liter asked about her.
"I've found a place to keep hlr," :iihe
qu~ Mn. Slocum a1 saytng.
A fonner next-door neighbor, Mrs.
Barbara Kearl, now of Newport Beach,
said Mrs. Slocum came to hfr home
highly intoxicated tn November, 1968, and
gave her $15,000 in cashier's checks
for iaftkeeplng.
Mrs. Kearl tfltn save tht:m to
Augustine, who drove Mrs. Slocum to
Metropolitan Slate Hospital, where-she
was confined for a time.
"You don't know where she got thi!!
money?" uktd Enrtcht duri111 cross-ex-
amination.
"All I know Is she said it was all
she had in the world ,'' replied Mrs.
Kearl.
A former medical secrttary, Winona
S. Solorio, test.lfled thlt Dr. Slocum ac-
cused his wife d slolllng 133,000 and
said Mrs. SJocum rarely let any other
personnel handle money.
"Were you aware Or. Slocum accused
you of stealing money too?" Enrliht
prctled.
"No," she replied.
0 1 have nothing further," he said.
AUl\ISUne reMed his case for tl'te
defense a\ 4:07 p.m .. after seeina; his
own wife Darlene subpoenaed by the
prosecution as a witness.
She uid Dr. Slocum believed a Mafia·
type syndicate waa out to i.111 him and
ttl1t he thrutened on J'eb. 7, 19'9 to
klll Aua;u.Une JM two doctors ht bellev·
ed were in on the alle&ed plot .
Wilson Named
To Mayors Post
COiia Mesa M•yw Robert M. Wllaon
~ been appointed to a 1pttlal oom-
mUtee lnclu<Unr only two other Califor-
nians, for the U.S. Conference of Mayors,
scheduled next month.
Wilson and mayors Sam Yorty of Los
Ancele• and Joatph Alioto of San Fran-
cl5CO will alt In on lhe Resolullona: Com·
mlttee during the convtnUon June 13
through 17 In Oen\•er.
Thil is the first Urne anyont from
orange County has been appointed to
t.be panel, according to J•ck D. Afalletler
pttsldont ol tlle U.S. Conference ol
Mayon.
wf>ldl ltudonll 111~ Iba.-CID
take paqlng grades for thelr current
studies, w I t h approval of their pro-
fessors, or drop the course entirely,
without penalty, provided they sign up
for "alternate studies" in sub}ects
regarded as ·•more relevant" to the
present situation.
Other campuses of the university have
instituted variations of the Pro.ram.
Badham noted.
"Don't mllundentand me," be said.
"Some of tbele independent studies are
all right. I had a kld working ln my
office to learn the 1ystem or operation
or a legislator's office and getting college
credit for it and I think something
like that is swell . lt's just that some
of these alternates they're giving credit
for are pretty questionable."
Badham said be wu not aalisfied
wl.lh the eiplanaUon of the UCI program
preoenlod at Ille Mlsslon Viejo mecUn1
by dean of lludents Robert Lawrence.
Describing the new procedure•,
Lawrence referred t.o the "comfort and
convenience of &he students," which
prompted Saddleback College board
president MJchael Collins to camment.
"What are we paying for, an education,
Institution or comfort stations." The
crowd, mo1Uy older people, applauded
thJs heortlly.
A UCI student told the audJence that
studenll are being denied their right
1o pursue the education they seek at
the unlveralty and offered to glvt Dean
Lawrence names of professors who are
being "pressured" hy other foculty mem-
ben becaute they are unwilling to live
student& freedom lo choose their ac>-
ivttie1 for the rest of the quarter.
Colleges Name
Change Planned
Tmteea ol the °''"P Coast Junior
College District plan to clwlge Ille
diltrlct'a name since Gov. Reagan signed
a bill Thursday permJUtng the uae of
"community college" in district ud col-
lege uue1.
At tbeJr Wednesday night meetirul:
truatees decided they would like to call
the district Ille Cout Community College
DUtrlct ht order lo dlstingutsb Ille
diltrict DJme lrom the two coDeges
it Servel.
Oru1e Cout Collep in Calta Mesa
ml Golden West College ht Hunlingloo
Beach are the two colleges in the disbict.
There bas been some confusion of the
current district name wttb that of occ.
DUlrict olflclab said ll>cy bad not
set a definlte: date for the official name
change.
IT'S COMMUNITY,
NOT JR. COLLEGE
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -There's no
longer any such thing as a jwdor oolle1e
in California.
Gov. Ronald Reagan siped a bill drop.
ping the word "junior" and aubltitutlng
"community," his office announced
Thur!day.
One of the measure's authora, Sen.
George E. DaJUelson (l).L<la Angelea),
said, "There's nothing 'junior' about our
community colleges."
The measure becomes effective for
the 92 ~year campuses in the tall.
Air Study Asked
By School Board
Members of the Newport-Mesa board
of educaUon have indicated interest in
using Newport Beach's airport impact
study to aid in sile selection and school
planning. Trustees also said they mi&ht
consider having a separate airport study
done for the district.
The Newport Beach study, which is
being done by Wilsey and Ham is
scheduled for a preliminary report Sept.
21.
Phil Bettencourt, administraUve assi•
tant t.o Newport's city mana1er, save
a brief outline of the mu!U-di!ldptinary
study and t<ild school board members
Tuesday that the city is 1eeking their
cooperation in obt&lning data for the
report.
"We'rt not saying we're trylnc to
dredge up every petty complaint but
if the board thinks it is: warranted,
we would appreciate any comments you
have," he said.
From P-.e I
JACKSON .•.
Nid police made • sweep down the
street alter the fire otltlod, and that
ooe omcer stepped from the ranks and
started to address the crowd.
"He started saying, 'Ladiu and
gentlemen,' " Patee recalled, "'and thtn
they (police) •tarted lhootlng befo" he
even finllhtd . I think It w1s jult a
massacre. I think It ~·as prtplanned.
They came up here with the Idea ol
kflllng."
Coed Eloise Tho1nas said bedl1m broke
out In the women's dorm when the
shooUng started. She nld she dropped
to the floor and other ,tr\1 dove on
top (( her.
"All I could htar was the thud of
_, Ind the glus bresktng Jnd
people ecrumtng," ahe 11.kt.
DAILY ,1LOT , ..... by Jadl: SrtHI:~
" .
E'r!JM P.,e J
AIRLINE ...
follow ing a period (« appeal.
The City of Newport Beach had earlitr
tateo a poslllon el oppllltlon lo •01
new appUcations lo iterVe desUnaUona
o\bt~ ... than those presently served by
the existing carriers Air California and
Air West.
But the CAB choSe not to be dissuaded
by the county and city a:ovemment op-
position. In a unanimous ruling, the
board wrote:
"We are not persuaded that the
certification of Continental at Lons:
Beach or Orange County will result 1n
1ubstantial incrtase in the level or
aircraft noiae in the SW"J"ounding areas
or that it 1"ill slgnUicanUy affect the
quality of the human environment."
The CAB members pointed out in their
ruling that there are 16 jet departures
daily from Orange County Airport, 2.5
last summer, and that Continental ts
asking for a maximum of seven ad-
ditional jet departures. This, they 18.id,
would not m~terJally affect the noise
The board members said they agree
with the examiner there is "no ~wing
or substantial or unusual noise problems
which are sufficient on balance. to deter
authorization ol an ot.herwlle needed
service." 'nley aaid improvement of
service to the Pacific Northwest should
be made available to the traveling public.
STUDENTS, POLICE , NEWSMEN 'RAP' OUTSIDE DRAFT BOARD
In S•nt• Ana, Some Miiiing Around at Selective Service
The board noted cooperation of local
authorities will be needed. "It will be
up to the carrier we have selected
to convince these authorities that ex-
pressed fears are exaggerated or are
outweighed by affirmative con-
siderations." Two Arrested in P1·otest Newport Beach City Attorney Tully
Seymour said it is the city'• po6ttloo
this added service would violate the
metroport limitation recommended by
William Pereira and Associates in the
master plan for Orange County aviation.
A metroport is defined as an airport
se rving cities within 400 miles.
Against SA Draft Board
Protaetors of the Indochina war con-
verged on Selective Service headquarters
ln Santa Ana Thursday, staging a
demonstration that ended with two ar-
rested and draft board business tem-
porarily disrupted.
Leadera of the group representing
t.nree Orange County campuse s
particlpated in the demonstration which
ended without major incident and vov•ed
they would return toda y.
Santa Ana police said they would be
ready.
Half the crowd of about 75 persons
rurged into the headquarters at 1138
E. 17th St., leading to a contingent
or lawmen guarding the doors unW the
protest broke up In late afternoon.
Carol Bobo, 20, of Brea, a Cal State
Fullerton student, was arrested on
charges of disturbing the peace and
booked into Orange County Jail after
allecedly interfering with women person·
nel.
--
Gary Blumenreich, 20, of Cypress, was
also arrested and booked for allegedly
using obscene 13Tlguage in front of
women.
No signs or banners ~·ere used, but
many of the CSF, UC Irvine and Chap.
man College students wor'e T-shirts
emblazoned with the defiant symbol of
the upraised, clenched (ist.
The move on Selective Service head-
quarters emanated from the CSF campus
and many involved were ringleaders in
reci!nl militant activities there, observers
said.
Santa Ana police cautiously notified
other Orange County law agencies at
~ne point to inquire about reinforcement!
if they were needed, but the situation
never got out of hand.
Two more protestors were arres~
lhls morning, however, at the coDlinulng
demonstrations in front of Selective
Service headquarters In Santa Ana.
Chandler, for t.he county, said the
practical problem is where Continental
would park the jels ,and how passengers
would be handled in available facUltles.
"The parking is adequate but the
tf rminsl buildings are inadequate to
meet present demands," he said. "We're
putting nearly a million people per year
through here."
l\'lesa !\fan Injured
In Gnn Accident
A Costa Mesa man was admitted to
Orange County Medical Center early to-
day after taking a shotgun blaa:t Jn
the right loot while cleaning the weapon.
Dan11y R. Perry, 23, of 530 W. Wi!Joft
St., was taken to Costa Mesa Memorial
Hospital after the mishap late Thunday
night and later transferred.
DRAPERY
SALE!
CUSTOM MADE WITH A WIDE SELECTION O~
QUALITY INTERIOR DESIGN FABRICS AS MUCH -
AS <O 'lo OFF ON EXCELLENT DESIGN FABRICS.
T1ke ed.,entege of an opportunity to mike dristi · it'• • new hom• fhit n••ds drip;'• or . t 1 c, ••vings on cu_1tom mede qu11ity dr•p•rits. Whethtt rus rep 1c1n9 • worn parr, stop in t nd check th• 11-tin91.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
7eJ 111111ll!Jll8fl. "
NIWPORT llACH
1727 Wellcllff Dr., 642·:!050
0,EN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
' (
INTERIORS
'rofesslon1I lnt•rior LAGUNA BEACH Designers Avallable-AIO 345 North Coast Hwy. 49..,6551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
Pll ... Tiii ""9 M"' flf o,... C••"" 14 .. 1J:U
.Mediu11a's the Message
The theory n1ay have some merit but this message seems to be missing its
mark. Like the minister whose message falls on deaf ears, this billboard out~
side Denton, Tex., hasn't moved ~yone to action.
Mail Strike
Postponed;
Raise Seen
WASHINGTON (AP)
Congress, which a p p e a r e d
ready to halt actk1n on a
postal pay boost when New
York mailmen threatened to
strike Thursday night, is now
on a timetable that could
bring final approval in three
weeks.
"Congress is not going to
be pressured by a strike,"
the senior Senate Post Office
Committee member. Hiram L.
Fong (R--Hawail), said Thurs-
day before New York letter
carriers called off the strike.
Fong said the committee is
ready to put out the bill for
a Senate vote but a walkout
would llave forced a delay
until a settlement was reach-
ed.
Rep. David N. C. Henderson
( D -N . C • ) , second-ranking
Democrat on the House Post
Of£ice Committee, s a i d
Congress' reaction to a new
mail strike might be even
worse:
"I don't see how it could
speed it (the bill) up very
much," be said. "And it might
kill it. ..
But New York Branch 36
of the National Association of
Letter Carriers, one of two
New York locals that trig-
gered the nationwide mail
strike in March, voted Thurs-
day to stay on the job and
put off any further strike con-
sideration until June 12.
"Our people 1 ho w t d
themselves to be responsible
labor," Gus Johnson, the
local's president, said after
the vote. "It is up to Congress
now to show its
responsibility.''
The eight percent pay raise
for postal workers is tied to
differing House and Senate
bills that would create a U.S.
Postal Service to put the mails
on a self.paying basis by 1976.
Pill Suit Filed
LOS ANGELES fUPI) -
A housewife filed a $1 million
damage suit against a family
planning clinic and a drug
company Thursday, claiming
birth cOntro: pills caused her
brain ·damage. ·
Barbara Stahlnecker, 22, Tu-
junga, Calif. said she. suffered
strokes last Christmas .day
and again Jan. 6 and March
7 after taking the pills for
an unspecified length of .time.
Dominican Republic
Vote Set Saturday
SANTO DOMINGO ,
Dominican Republic (AP) -
With a twnultuous presidential
campaign over, soldiers and
government officials prepared
to guard polling booths in
Saturday's election.
Candidates c a 11 e d a
moratorium on campaigning
today. The cenb'al election
board said police and soldiers
will be on duty at the nation's
3,455 polling places.
In the last few weeks there
has been an average of one
politically motiv ated killing a
day. officials said.
President Joaquin Balaguer
is opposed by four opponents
-but one of the Dominican
Republic's most power f u I
parties is boycotting the elec-
tion.
Balaguer, calling himself an
"instrumenl of destiny," an-
nounced last month that he
woold seek another four-year
tenn.
His opponents are Elias
Wessin y Wessin, the general
who helped crush the 1965
leftist insurrection; Francisco
Augusto Lora, Balaguer's vice
president who broke away to
form his own party; Alfonso
Moreno Martinez, a lawyer
who represents the Social
Christian party, and Jaime
Manuel Fernandez, candidate
"-the National Conciliation
Moven1ent.
Fonner President J u a n
Bosch and his Dominican
Revolutionary party a r e
boycotting the election, charg-
ing that Balaguer would never
·permit a fair counting of the
ballots.
Bosch, deposed by a
n1ilitary coup in 1963, says
he no longer believes in elec·
tive democracy, favoring in-
stead "dictatorship with
popular support." He has not
explained ho\v his proposal
would work.
UPI T•ltll~ SHOES, MONEY GOING TO VOTERS
Balaguer Campai9.ning for Rplection
DAILY PILOT /S-
Israel Says More Egypt ·Jets Down .
TEI. AVIV (AP) -Israeli
pilot& 'Clilmed shooting down
three Soviet-mad;e Egyptian
MIG jets In dogfights over
the Su<z Canal todaf.
By Israeli ' account. two
MIG 17s were shot down In
morning battles over the
blocked waterWay and a MIG-
21 shortly after noon.
AU three planes were seen
falling in Egyptian territory,
the military command said
here.
Tbe MIG21 bad "aUempted
to interfere" when Israeli
planes were on • bombing
and stafing mission against
Egyptian military tar g e t s
along the central S;ector of
the canal, a spokesman said.
It was the second Israeli
raid of the day and followed
two Egyptian strikes.
All Israeli aircraft returned
safely, the spokesman said.
I" I 24" •• , • 1.4S
'"' •••••• 2.00
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a.n •••••• l.90
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.
Israel started the action
with a bombing and atraifng
attact on Egyptian •mllltaiy
taru:ts in the southern and
ctnlral sect.ors of the 102~mJle
long waterway.
The command said the.
Israelis returned the fire and
&~stained , no casualtie, ..
the destroyer Etath wu hlt Jni. An annOOncem8nt aaid the '
and &Uflk Jn 1961. "chances of finding them are
A mllltary announcement sUtn~"
said the fishing trawler "Oriti·;=;========.
Egyptian warplanes then
struck back in the northern
sector of the canal..
An hour later, according to
the military command, Israeli
planes intercepted attacking
Egyptian MIG17s. &hooting
down two.
The mil!~ry command said
Israel suffered no casualties
in Lhe Egyptian rfii:ls.
In other action, the com·
mand said Ge sher Has iv, a
kibbutz four miles south of
the Lebanese border. was
shelled irom Lebanon during
the night. Mortar shells also
fell on border setUemenls at
Y.ardena and Kfar Rupim in
the Beisan Valley.
Israel announced. Thursday
that an Egyptian missile boat
sank a 70-ton lrraell fishlng
trawler In Mediterranean
waters not far from where
was hk Wedntlday nlgnt .11.1
mtlea north of the occupied
Sinai Peninsula. The (our
crewmen were reported miss·
•can' Caper
NEW YORK !UPI) - A
pal.Qtlng of a can o f
Campbell's vegetable beef
soup by Andy Warhol sold
Thursday night for $60,000, the
highest price ever paid (or
a work by a living American
artist.
A European bidder who
wished to remain anonymous
bought the painting at an auc-
tion by Parke-Bernet galleries.
PVC FITTINGS
It was aold by an American
collector. Peter Brandt, and
Was among,• number of works
by contemporary American
and European artists dating
from after World War It.
Warhol's painting of the
soup can, titled '"Campbell's
Soup Can Witb PeelJng
Label," ls 7% by M Inches
and was painted 1n 1982.
Pre.
l f2"11lpcn11lh11 •• o12c 1/l"sllpt•th.tMI •• 21c
112'' .. •ltAd•pter •• lfc 1f2"11ipT11 ••••••• 2Sc
l f2"Slip fO" 111 •.•• 22c lf' 1llP, & tlir"tl 111 21c
Finished
Walnut
Shelving
PVC FITTINGS
li•«Ap -.1S MaJlx lV' 1'5 TH-.JS
~ah" IPS Ill .21
h Pt. Ctr1t11I I.Of
VNITED
STATES
NATIONAL
BANK
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
BRANCH '
NOW OPIN
SATURDAYS
ft91P.M.
MON.•THU"S. 10.1 P.M.
fllDAYS 10-• P.M.
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E. H. LEVAN
PROfESSIOliAl.Si
DO-'J. YIMJISWERS!
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lulldi"I -rloals
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Save on Sprinklers • Accessories
10 I 60 ••••• l .SO
10 I 72 ••••• 4.so
12 1 24 •••• , 1.9S
12 x 36 • , • , , 2.6S
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A. Automatic Breok.up Sprinkler 3.95 h" Mtl1 lilt1 ·" h".,.. v.1,,_ lJf 11"'-lol .. ...
REDWOOD FENCING
8" BOARDS
6' High.
8' long. 1.60
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A dui:oble ottrodive fence that 'Nill hold
up fOI yeor1
42
LF.
Visit our Model
Custom-Built
Vacation Home
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• Noise Control Coming?
Be&lnnlng neat month wben one of the commercial
!eta .at Orange CoUDIY Airport revs up !ta engine at the head ol the nJnway the roar will be i;:ecorded.
As the jet lilts off in its power rise ~ward the Upper
Bay, a 1«1sor below wlll electronlcally record the aound
decibels .at ground level.
U tbe pilot throttles back as he should to glideiJ rise
&ef\sors tn residential areas on either side of the pper
Bay will record the lessening of noise. It he strays off
coune and begins his turn before getUng out over the
ocean, they will re~ord that too. All this lnfonnatlon along with meterological condi·
lions will appear on print-out sheets coming out of a
computer 24 hours a day. This record of bow much noi~e
the pilot made flylbg bis passenger jet should be as tell·
tale as a police department's rap sheet. .
The aircraft noise sensor system is being installed
by Nortronlcs Division of Northrop Corporation at a cost
of between $25,000 and $40,000. None of the cost will be
bome by local government. But Northrop bas promised to supply data free of
charge to the county and Newport Beach city govern-
ments: and to air carriers while it is testing its prototype
1ystem for future marketing throughout the United
States.
The futility once felt by residents who could only
shake fists at the big birds in the sky is rapidly being
nplaced by, po1ltiv• data: Here u a ptlvato !inn wlllln~ to invest money in aircraft noise control as a new
market. ,
Northrop bas good reason for doing so. Legal rulings
by lhe Calilorilia Altomoy General early thu year have
-ed tho way for 'cities, counties and the state to en-
act noise standards. These acencles, more reactive than
federal authorities to the discomforts of citizens, are mo'ving. . .
Orange County's Board of Supervisors has banned
night fllgbts , limited the engine noise Jovel of jets using
the airport and limited the number of passenger flights
per week. The state Board of Aeronautics will be consid-
ering noise standards next week and state standards are
almos-t certain to be the outgrowth.
When those standards are set, Orange County super-
..
:conscie nce,
'Co mmi tmen t,
Con cern
(Gov. Ronald Reagon ordered a
1h1't:down of Californi4 ita£e colleges
and 1111i1¥rritie'I for a pfriod of cool-
l!li1 •11 ofld rejl<ction from Thur1day,
Motl T, until .MondcV morning, May 11.
Tht c:oltunn todot1 is based on Dr.
HayalonDu'• 1tatemcnt to t"' focultu
o'lld atudents of San Francilco State
College a1 cl.asle1 f'l!Open.)
Al we return to c1&ss after a four-day
absence, tbe faculty
and students face
both a eballenge and an opportun -
ity. What we do
with the tlree weeks
that tnmaln in tbi• ..-will affect
us all. Tb e· du1Uenge, simP1, ii to resist
the prlleDt wave of
emotion Jhat calla
for i.cbers to abandon 't h e t r
retpOnlibilities and for students to forfeit
thdr -.Ot in educatton.
The <JppOrtunlty is to demonstrate reason. coneci.ence. commitment and coo-cern.
Of COW'le some students have been
deeply qilated by ......,t event. at home
and Jn Southeast Asia. Some are too
agitated to return to normal academic
pursuba. We cannot and will not stand
1D the ·way of students staying away
from c1a .....
' BUT TEACHERS HA VE an entirely
different order of responsibility . Students
have algned up with them to learn.
Those who want to cootinue instruction
are fUlly entitled to it, and teachers
are leplty as well as morally oblig<d
to pvvlde ii. A faculty member who
is eo outnged by current iuues that
be feeb: be cannot conUnue teaching
is free, ol. course, to resign.
Jn tbe winter of 196M9, we saw a
smoU 1egmenrilf our faculty and student
body '-1-Uwt $ percent -create
an Jnqnalon that m...t student. and
tea.chin 't'IDted the c:ollege closed. The
news media helped. Perhaps 11>mething
simile-ii happening again. It is a trap
-into whSch all too many collete ad·
mln!C&U-bave already fallen.
IT IS AN O\rrJIAGE for a minority
-or even a majOrlty -to appropriate:
the <Oiloge as an lnltrumenl for tbt
Quotes
Paatda f.elver, S.F. mtdte:r ... 1ew
aak-"I don't believe in censorship. r
doo't. think pornography in books or
movies harms people, nor do I think it
leldl to .,. crimes. It's just not my
t.bloJ.n
~ .lolll rr.,-, nun.1 Qlef
-If ~ -"Polict Officers ..... be reopected. They lhould be
vlOllll Ille dlgnlty given a Jud&• or. a .....,.,..,_ ...
............ Pleo.-BD1 RIP
- -"'11le asd port (about tbl 'weal mlnarlt7'! 11 Dot IO lllllttJ -le oullldt .,,, ~ bolloft !bat tbe Jdeq ••· "-* bJ' the radlcalJ are aho tllOH
hddlr--~··
'
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
I undmtand tllat tbe CoBta Mesa
postal workers considered 1 work
llowdown, but decided against it
because no one would have no-
ticod.
-G. W. T.
"'" .....,. "'*" ,....,... wl--_....,,., ~ .. ftMo -.-. kH
................. ....., ... Dllfr l'M
advancemtot <i a parlicolar political
view, no ~.how ,.ffnportant or grave
the issuis. CloSbig ~ the colleges
iii a form or Political coercion, compelling
all the students and faculty to join
in the dramatization of a view that
is not shared by all.
For a long time; before, during and
since the McCarthy era, colleges have
fought to preserve open mindedness and
neutrality. We cannot permit the college
to be politicized without suffering in-
calculable loss to academic freedom.
Those who are tempted to exercise such
political coercion as we are confronted
with must ask themselves how they
would like it iI their opponents were
doing R.
TEACHERS CAN DO much for their
profession and for San Francisco State
if by their actions now they let the
whole country know thal they art deeply
commiUed to their professional role.
However, the tide is running in the
oDOOfllte dirtctlon. Professors and even
university presJdents around the country
are abandoning tbeir neutrality and
permitting classrooms to be taken over
for political action. Someone must act
promptly lo recapture public respect
for institutions of higher learning. We
l.!I the faculty of San Francisco State
have that opportunity.
Students at San Francisco State have
the opportunity in these next three weeks
to reshape the character of their college
'' the majcrily, who want to continue
their education and exereise thei r
political life outside the classroom
without violence er coercion, are willing ta stand up, be ,..., be heard, and
to be counted.
THE QU~nON JS, who represents
San Francisco State -the minority
who want to shut it down, or the majority
who want the education that they (and
in aomt cues thelr parent!) have worked
so hard ta pay for.
[ urge teachers and students alike
lo consider the alternative before us.
San F'ranctsc:o State college can continue
IO that courses now being given may
be completed and cerUficates, credentials
and degrees may be granted. Or we
can yield to the minority and clo5f!
the collece. in which cue we must
ftct the ract that state educational
legislation bars the college from granting
credit for courses not completed and
from paying ttachtr! for instructional
services not performed .
IF PRESENT ~ continue, San
Francisco St.ate is going to prove to
be ..,. ol tbt finest institutions of bigber
education Jn the nation. 'While other a temporiie and compromiae their
es, we are malnt.ainlng academic
reedOm for Communilll'-and antJ.COm·
munl!ll, for rttoluUonarles and reac-
tionaries, for Rem: and anU·l\OTC peo-
ple -all Within the framework of TA•
Uonal deb>te. We are a put colleg..
We e1n become a greater one by ldbtr·
inl llubbornly to tbe principles or
acadomlc fteodom. no matter wbat.
8)' S. t. H•yataw1
l'nsldent
Saa Fnoclset lute Collea•
visors, who control the county airport, will have the
Northrop record to measure from.
Positive controls with tangible levels seem to be on
the way.
Lighting of a New Fire
Public programs were held at Orange Coast Col·
tege this week on a day devoted to tbe ct.ilture and bJs·
tory of Mexican-Americans. The program, sponsored by
the Chicano students at the college, was called 0 EI
Fuego Nuevo" (The New Fire).
It is too bad more persons didn't att~d. El Fuego
Nuevo and feel the intensity of Ibo Chicano ••If reali·
za1.ion and striving to better their status. The old Mexi·
can· American stereotype of "manana" and 11sieata1•
is being erased.
The lighting of a new fire was a ceremonial event
in pre-Columbian Mexico, signifying new birth. Don't
call the students Mexican-American. They say they are
Chicano at OCC and they say it with pride.
Her Love for Her Mother
It's not every lltle girl whose 1ove for her mother
turns into an expense-paid vacation trip with dad to
Hawaii for a Mother's Day glft.
But that is what 12-year-old Linda Baker of Costa
Mesa was able to give to her "Mother of the Year" Mrs.
James Baker, thanks to Hoag Memorial Hospital's an-
nual contest.
Some 16,000 Newport-Mesa school children had a
chance to take part and the essays they wrote on why
their mother should be "Mother of the Year" were a
price1ess gilt to each and every mom.
But best of all was what Linda wrote of her mom : ' ;:::;:...~
"I'll always know In my heart, that greater than
all mothers, she's just TOPS!!"
Con¢ratulations to Linda's mother -and to all the
others who earned the glowing word s of love and praise. (CJ
'No, Hf>MON, YOU Pll>K'T flN~ A gox Of BUllETS AN~ 1WO m»
Of RICE. YOU <APlURE~ AM AMMO ~M.P AND A $UPPlY ~~Ot ..
P res ident P repar es t o Announce Cambodian Success
Nixon Has Managed to Keep Co,ntrol
WASHINGTON -The protesters have
come and gone, rhetoric has cooled and
President Nixon Is preparing to announce
that the cambodia n operation is a suc-
ceM. This announ cement will be based
on the volume of arms and supplies
captured and the hope that further Com·
mun.1st aggressive action in South Viet·
nam has been set back for a year.
How much of • success was the Cam·
bodian thrust wlll continue to be argued
and tt will play a part in the con-
gressional campaign but Nixon tllus far,
at least, has managed to keep control
of the operation.
This matter of control has been the
problem from the first. There are reports
tllat early In considering the strike Nixon
doubted he could maintain control. That
is to say, a complex of circumstances
including American public reaction, the
military reaction from the Communist
side, the difficulty of limiting any
military operation once it has begun
would converge to defeat the operation.
PROBABLY THE DECISIVE factor
was Nixon's final judgment that he could
keep American op,lnion und er control
long enough to permit a 60 day operation
whJch could be very damaging to the
Communists,
~J-
Richal'd Wilse>n
. l I ' . :~2 'L ,///fl I •-
This required an accurate judgment
on the depth of the reaction in American
public opinion and Nixon measured that
correctly. It required iaJJ accurate judg-
ment on the OJmmUQlat reaction, and,
up to now, that bas been measured
correctly.
Some thin&s may not prcrve to have
been mwured correctly. including the
search for the Communist headquarters
for Vietnam operations (COSVN) which
may be buried somewhere deep un-
derground in the areas Ole Americans
are sweeping. If the Americans do not
find that control center many questions
will rise in Congress and it might ha~
been better if NfJon had not mentioned
it tn his justification for the Cambodian
inCW'1ion. 1bete were other reasons
which were just as good.
PERHAPS ONE OF the most signifi·
cant aspects of this critical period was
the reluctance of members of Congress
who were attacking the President to
JOJn Jn ·the youth protest. and there
were good reasons for this. A SC1>re
of senators and congressmen who en-
dorsed the first mobilization against the
war last October and participated to
some extent in the November turnout
in Washington shunned the festivities
last Saturday although their cause for
parlicipating might have been greater
tha n before.
The recent protest was on a scale
probably about one-third of the Nov .
14--15 Mobilization for Peace and it may
be that this way of expressing public
opinion is no longer, if it ever wa.s,
an effective instrument for influencing
public policy.
When congressmen up for reelection
stay away from such festivities it can
be taken for granted that they see no
advantage in that kind of political id~·
tification. The effecUveness of such
pressure can be measured also by Nix-
on's decision to treat it indulgenUy as
nOt really a threat but just ISOD'lething
to be gotten through with the least
trouble.
This is, tn fact, what happened. The
latesl protest rally did not influence
anyone. It was wasted effort.
NIXON, IN FACT, lmprom his posi·
tion with those who think Jt has been
pointless to take a defiant and name-call-
ing attitude toward student protest. It
is one thing to be firmly opposed to
such protest and something else to adopt
the language of the streets in talking
about it, or to <!ppear not to be listening.
Now, at least, the President is listening
but it is not changing his policies any
more than it did when he said that
his policies would not be changed by
student protest or demonstration in lb•
slr<els.
In the longer range, if the Cambodian
operation is, or can be termed, a 81.IC·
cess, the results will not be merely mili-
tary and diplomatically favorable.
These circumstances, coming hUo focu!I
after midsummer, would give the Presi·
dent a finn platform for another
forthcoming intervention, 1 political in·
tervention. NilOn needs more strength
in Congress if be is to cany through
his very extensive program of reform
in ttle next couple of years. His hand
woold be greatly strengthened in ap-
'pealing for a Republican Congress jf
Cambodia bas proved to be a success.
Perhaps that contributed, too, to the
lack of interest in Congregs in last
weei'• demonstrations.
'Our President Did the Right Thing'
To the Editor :
I believe that our President did the
right lh1ng about Cambodia. In the long
run it will save m a n y American and
South Vietnamese live!I as our forces
capture and destroy the Viet Cong and
North Vietnamese o If ens i v e head·
quarters.
It was a hard decision for Mr. Nixon,
but I believe that in the weeks to
come Americans will see the wisdom
of thls decision. I agree with Veterans
of Foreign Wars and American Legion
leaders who have stated that had we
done this long ago the war would now
be over.
My purpose is to plead wtth thou~s
of Ouistlans to join in prayer durin g
the next rew weeks for definite victory.
Urge your church and ChristJaii friends
to band togeth er in this noble effort
ror God and country.
TH$ REV. GORDON LANGMADE
llnderlylng Questions
To the Editor :
Much of the news recently has focused
By George ---,
Dear George :
I have been reading your column
for eight years and I enjoy it.
Every once in a while you say:
"Write to George •nd send a self·
addressed , stamped envelope." I
kttp gctUng It back In the mail
and I'm golng to try this one
MY way -1ddra&ing ll to you
i..tead of myself. Let me know
If you got It.
LOYAL FA!;'
Dear Loyal Fan:
· l didn't get ll (Clients like !bat
I cfoa•t need.)
(Do you have problems with 1970
New Year'• ff!IOluUons still un·
broken with the new year mere
than a quarter over? Hav-e your
rftOlutfons broken by proxy -
G<orge wtll do anything and call
it reaearcll.)
I
Letters from rtadrra are welcome.
Normally writers should conve11 their
messages in 300 words or less. The
right £0 condtme letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. All let·
ters must include $igna£ure and mait.-
ing address, but name1 may be with·
~tld on reque.rt lf 1ufficien£ reason
rs apparent. Poetf'tl wlil not be pub·
lished.
on President Nixonts movement of
American troops into Cambodia and the
tremendous reaction across the countrY • to that .move. WNle the advisability
of that move is debatable, and while
the campus reaction Is worthy of note
and concern, we should not lose sight
of the more important underlying ques·
tions.
Should America have a milit.ary
presence in lndochlna? Does that
military presence coat America and
Indochina more than it benefits America
and lndochlna7 Do we, in fact, hive
a right to balance Amertcan gain against
lndochf~e com? What kinds of po.ssible
benefits can be entered into an equation to balance the Ml to Indochina?
·IN ORDER TO give rtasoned answers
lo this sort of question it is neceS11ry
to appr«late what the cosls or the
war are to Indochina. We m1.1st reallio
that tn~ of .~e land ltaelf in Vietnam,
Cambodia, ai\il Laol II dying, defoUated
and covered with burnt craters. We
must realize that cultures much different
than our own ire being destroyed by
tile forced urbanluUoo ol refugees from
lhe ceuntryaldt. We must realize th:it
many, many ctvillans are being tilled
by bomb, and arltllery.
We must ask ourselves: Are
iovemmenll like tblt of' Thieu and Ky
in South Vietnam worth this s o r t of
cosl?
GREG CERMAK
Cambodian Molle
Tu the Editor :
President Nixon's action on moving
Into Cambodia makes me finally think
we have someone who bas guts enough
to do what we went to Vietnam to
do years ago. We have been messing
around accomplishing nothing Jn Vietnam
too long, when the source of our problems
was elsewhere.
Fighting in Vietnam was like poisoning
rats in the pantry when they come
from the basement. Maybe a strong
offensive move with full backing from
all or the people in America will show
the Indochinese Communists that we
are a soild country with a solid purpose,
that we mean business and are not
jUJt fighting for our economic health!
DAN MARTENS
Wonderful People
To the Editor :
On Saturday, May 10, my father
became ill while shopping with my
mother in the Market Basket store on
Irvine Avenue.
I would like to express my deepest
gratitude to all or those wonderful people
who came so quickly to the aid of
my father and mother.
DAVID GOODSEI.J.
.'
De.,oured 1>11 M•n
To lhe Editor :
Ju!lt think, almost 68,000 new residents
tn Orange County within lht last 111
months. In a few years we ~n·i have
to worry about a Sunday's 1etsure1)'.drive
In tbe coonb'y we had J>lani>ed oo all
week. We can see· the trantlohnallon
every day with new ugly iubdlvlslQN
land!lcaplng the hillsides and freewa ys
and now our picturtsque coasUine is
being devoured by man.
ORANGE COUNTY -thCcounty with
orttnge groves , the smell or smudge
pot& in wil'ltflr and Uie fragrance of
orange blossoms in the spring -thii;
indeed was our home . ..Now it's only
a memory for there are five groves
left. Yes, come here everybody to the
state with room fur all people -with
its huge industries, walJ.to-wall tract
houses, our wonderful California clim1te,
the beautiful wages California has to
oiler and the golden opportunity.
NOW, WE SOON expect the beloved
Irvine Company to build a new
unwtlcomed city with another half
million population. This will succeed in
devouring the total land from north El
Toro west to the Newport.corona de!
Mar area and eventually our beautiful
rolling hills and coastline south to
Laguna. Hcrw ma rvelous it will be to
enter the adjoining town s like a link
rence.
T HOPE THE the people who ha ve
mastered all the plaMing of these future
cities will tell their grandchildren how
it used to be. How the deer used
to roam the hills. the wild quail u.~ed
to Oock in covies and the sad
meadowlark used to be a common sound
in any field.
Man is so intelligent, yet it i!'I
astonishing he's not capable of preserving
nature's precious environment.
LORN A PJASKOWSK!
--·--Friday, May 15, 1970
T1I< ..Utorlal pog1 ot tht 0.Uy
PUot seeks to inform and stfm.
ul.o.tt teadt rs bu prcsentbta this
t1e1Dspaper'1 opiniom and com.
ment<try on topics of intar1rst
and lianificanet. bu promdi11a a
fontm for tht expr1s.riun of
our readers' opin ion,,, and by
presenting the diver1e View-
points of infonned obscnitrs
and tpokfsmcn on topic! of tht dau.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
"
• ... , •)(a:;$a4s4q . w
.Lag1111a Be1;1eh
, EDIIIO·Ni
VOL 63, NO. 116, ~ SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
e •&+•was f ¢4 ' ~
FRIDAY, MAY IS, 1970
"'-"'=~~--.----1
Today'• .FIDal
'
N.Y. St.oelu
TEN CENT';
Citizens'· Suit Eyed Over 'Protest -Credits'
Plans for a possible taxpayers' suit
to compel Califor11ia's state colleges and
universities to •·do what they are charged
with doing under rules set up by the
Regents" are still in a "very nebulous
discussion st.ate," Assemblyman Robert
Badham (R·Newport Beach) said today.
Badham broached the subject of the
suit during a meeting in Mission Viejo
Thursday night, called by the Young
Republican Club to ·protest the UC
11'."'ine plan to permit strike supporters
•
to drop regulJJ" courses and receive
ctedit for "alternate !tudies" covering
a variety of protest·nlated subject!.
He told • cheering audience of 300
al O'Neill Elementary School that he
planned to prepare such a suit and
probably would be joined by other state
legislators including Senator J oh n
Schmitz (R·Tustin), Ass em b I y m"fl n
Robert Burke (R-Huntington Beach) and
Assemblyman Jdm. Briggs (R-Fllllerton). Letial procedures for' 1he IUit, Badbam
o ice
Hot Weekend
Record W armtli for County
Record-breaking temperatures were predicted for Orange County this
weekend as patches ot fog threatened to dampen Orange Coast beaches.
The U.S. Weather Bureau today predicted sunny warm weather with •
high of 96 degrees and lows in the 60's for _Orange County. .
As inland temperatures threaten to hit the 100 degree mark prospective
beachgoers are faced with predicted patchs or fog along the coast, cutting
visibility down to one-quarter of a mile.
Orange County Harbor Department spokesman in Newport Beach said
light winds were expected with the fog which blanketed Laguna Beach and
Newport early today. Water temperature was set at a warm 61 degrees.
The record high for May IS was set in 1967 at 102 degrees, while the
record for May 16, 96 degi:ees, has stood since 1892. Weathermen u.id the long-
slanding record would probably be broken. .
Meanwhile, rising temperatures, bothe_rsome smog and strong winds th~t
fanned brush fires continued to plague the inland areas of Southern Califorrua
today, with no relief in sight.
Temperatures headed higher than 100 degrees in some inland areas aod
were in the lKl's in the mountains. The estimated high for downtown Los Air
geles waa 95 fOT today and Salurday.
Brush fires hit at least four counties 'Thursday when the Los Angeles
temperature peaked al 89 degrees.
A yellow ~ or eye-itrltating smog cilt visibility in most ol the basin
sharply in one of the heaviest attacks of the: year.
The hot Santa Ana wind gusts from Oie desert aave liWe relief from
the smog while bringing high teinperatures.
Accused SA Abortionist
Vows to Continue Clinic
Dr. Johll Shriver Gwynne, accused Los
Angeles abortionist. will be arraigned
In Central Orange County Municipal
Court at IO a.m. t.1onday on two counts of
committing illegal abortions in Santa
Ana.
The surgeon. arrested t h r e c times
previously in his highly-publiciz.ed \Vest
Los Angeles clinte for the same offense,
has vowed to continue his activities ia
his new clinic at 1856 W. 17th St.
Santa Ana police said today they are
equally determined to halt his operaton.
Dr. Gwynne was first arrested Wednes-
day after11oon by officers who charge
they saw him performing an abortion
Ofl a 17-year-old \Visconsin girl. He had
allegedly completed an abortion on
another out-of-town \\'Oman and a third
woman (rom Houston, Tex., was waiting
her turR.
Santa Ana Police Sgt. Michael Mitchell
obtained a complaint late Thursday on
the two cou11ls of illegal abortions. Dr.
Gwynne had been freed Thursday on
his own recognizance after an ap-
pearance before Municipal Judge Philip
Schwab. The doctor, a native of Garden Grove,
••here his parents still live, has said
Meet County
Candidates
Wondering about who to vote
111'! The DAILY PILOT, in cooper a·
liOfl with the Orange Coast League
of Women Voters. today offers
some hlformation to help voters
make intelligent selections when
they cast ballots for Orange County
Supervisors, Orange County School
Board trustee, and Orange County
SllperintendeRt of Schools.
Biographies and viewpoints o{ the
candidates are published today on
page 3 with supervisorial candi·
dates presented acr~s the top of
the page. Two candidates failed to
respand or provide informatlon in
the school board race . They are
·Roger C. Anderson, and Reg Wood.
Robert D. Peter500 did not respond
in the county superintendent of
5Chools race.
he is 'detennined to cootlnue the llltgal
operatiou as Jong as pouible. Ht is
deliberately challenging the state's ex-
isting abortion law as "bjrpocrilical."
He has been indicted by the Los
• Angeles County Grand Jury on five
counts of performing abortions. as the
result or previous raids on his \Vest
Los Angeles clinic.
Oemente Aide
Wins Contested
LAFC Election
San Clemente cily councilman and
former mayor Stanley Northrup won a
hotl.v contested election Thursday to a
two-year-post on Orange County's Local
Agency Formation Commission in the
first-ever selection of a San Clemente
official to the powerful panel.
Northrup, who had served as an
alternate member to the LAFC for the
past two years, will serve as a delegate
of the League of California Cities.
The IO-year veteran t1I the San
r temente City Council emerged vic-
torious from a field of nine councilmen
P'ld mayors nominated. It required two
separale runoff votes by 24 voters to
select the winner.
Northrup won one of two posts up for
elecUon -that having the longest term,
to Dec. 10, tt7Z.
Louis R. Reinhardt rA Fullert111. won
the other position on tht. LAFC which
will last until Dec. JO, 1171 .
All but one member of the Mayor's
SelecUon CommiUee o( 25 men was
oresent at the voting in Oranse Thursday
night. .
The ~legate from the city of Los
Alamitos was the only absentee.
Northrup, In the ln!urance business
for many years in San Clemente, has
M!rved me term as the dty's mayor,
S'l'OCK MAftKE1
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock mark•l
regained all its early strqth Jn mod-
erate trading this afternoon, and analysts
said the lonr·awalted "bottoming" ac-
tion might be at haod. (See quotatioru
Pages JG..21).
/.
said, would be handled by 1ttomeys
Sam Barnes and Dennl3 Carpenter, both
prominent in Republican activiUes.
Carpenter as chairman of the party's
slate central committee and nmning for
the state senate nomination,
This momfllg Baham said, "We haven't
really done anything yet. There has
just been SOQ)e phone communication
and I am meeting this afternoon wJlh
Barnes and carpenter to see if such
legal action agaimt the W\Jversity is
• I
possible. It would be aomething like
a 1ult to prevent a ,fire department
from atriklng, but we haven 't yet gol
down to spec1fics. "'
Jn any case, the legialator said, "It
would have to be very carefully done.
not ju.rt a big Dash in the pan. It
probably would be developed during the
swnmer with a view of establishing
some sort ol control in the future.
Nothing much can be done ror"the rest
of this quarter."
,·
'
WO
11le spring quarter at the ·uni'versitles
ends In four weeks.
Badham said the propo!ed ault would
be aimed at programs such u the one
approved by tfie UCI Academic Se.nale
for the balance of the quarter, under
which students supporting the strike can
lake passing grades for ,their CWTtDt
studies, w i l h approval of their pro-
fessors, or drop the course entirely,
without penalty, provided lbey s.ign up
for "alternate .iludieS'' In subjects
u
• / • DAILY .. ILOT Jllff .. ._19
THESE STEPS IN SOUTH LAGUNA MAY LEAD TO LEGAL ENTANGLEMENT ·IN BEACH ACCISS
Police to Gua1·d
Against Rioters
In Oceanside
Oceanside's police loday vowed to
''show out In force" Saturday durin g
the scheduled large anLiwar demonstra-
tions in their city. even though their
hassle over pay with the city i!t not
yet over.
The department's 5 8 -member
bargaining association, in e s sence ,
delayed their threat of "appropriate ac·
Lion" at 12:01 a.m. Satul'day in the
pay dispute and formally declared that
they would work at maximum capacity
through the day's "crisis".
Earlier this week the situation between
the Oceanside Police Association and
the city was more strained as demands
for a 32.5 percent pay increase were
met with 7,:i pereent by the cily council.
plus promises of further negotiations,
"In your (the council's) action last
Wednesday obviously you fell far short
of our demands," Association President
Robert Haddix wrote the council today.
He added, however, that the group,
which had implied they were perhaps
planning a walkout vole, agreed that
the ''open door" o( negotiations was
a fa vorable factor.
.. You may be assured that in the
crisis faced by the city on Saturday
your police department will be out Jn
forte, taking all necessary action to
protect persons and property of all
citizens," he added.
Plaza Art Showing
Continues in Viejo
An art e1hiblt, which begin toc11y,
will continue through Sunday at the .La
Paz Plaza. ,.
S(!Ollsored joint!)' • bf t plazll'•
merchants 11sodatl6n 8n'd'ttie-Callfol'pla
Outdoor Art Association, the event w111
feature painltngs In the contemporary,
impre$Sionistic, re1llstle and abstract
Vt'ins.
Exhibiting hours wilJ be from 10 a.m.
to 1:30 p.m.
County_ Asked to Take
Access to Beach Area
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of iii. DallY .. llfl Sl1ff
Orange County government ls being
asked to lake over the access to several
blocks of beach in South Laguna which
recently has been converted from public
use to. use of area property owners.
The easement in questlOn is a 10-foot
corridor that runs from Coast Highway
to the mean high Ude line, about 288
feet opposite Ninth Street.
It is a priVate easement on which
no laxes have been paid in at least
42 years. The property has never been
picked up by any assessor and given
a parcel number.
It is owned by the ·Bank o( America
and before that was owned by the Bank
or Italy. However, the right to .the ease-
ment, and the decrtpJt cement atairway,
to the beach. arc a right of the property
owners in Tract 849 whi ch is much
of South Laguna between Second and
Tenth Streer5uphill from Coast Highway
about 600 lots.
Area residents disturbed over shen -
nanigans on the beach including drugs,
nudlsm, unleashed dogs and sex recently
acted to have it patrolled on weekends
and issued cards to residents to admit
them. Others must leave.
The owner or the property on both
sides or the ·easement , Mrs. Maxine
Boggio, wo also owns and resides in
Tract .849. wants only to sell the SJ,840
square reet made up ot two parcels.
They are 90-feet of frontage each,
divided · by the easement, and have an
average depth of 288 feet to the mean·
(See ACCF;.SS, Pag• %)
Doheny Park to Re-Open
.With.Ceremo11ies Saturday
The loog awaited reopening. o( Doheny
State Park's day use facilities wearing
' a new, $1.3-million face will take place
under sponsorship of the Capistrano
Beach Chamber oC Commerce Saturday
at 11 a.m.
And alter lhe parade a.nd speeches
by government officials and civic leaders
the new park with new grounds, con-
ceslion and picnic , areas. -eve'il
modemisUc new lifeguard towers -will
lie ~ -IO · the f!'ll>llc...lor .a <lay•a
1 lree.~1'eloni f~ arc cbofged atartlnc•
~·· -·' -. , ~.Ii aita i<flcoljarii!t.a"4 ·~ l'PllP•·· I will <~artialJ>lle I• i&r ~ ~ad< at 1J :15 throogh lb< part to the dtdlcallon
site.
The· Naval JLl'tlk>r ROTC ol San
Clemente High School will serve as color
guard.
Other participants Jnclude County
Supetvbora ChaihJ>an Allon .E-AUen
and State Sen. John G. Schmitz (R-
1·1.1st\n); San Clemente Mayor
Walter Evans, San Juan Capistrano
Mayor Tcmy Forster and Arthur Bll-
stein, president ol the Caplatrano Beach
.:Ommunily Association.
Chamber presldeitts Jim EIUott of
Capistrano Beach, Bruce Winton of San
Juan and Hoyt Post of Dana Point
also will join in the procession.
· Scouts, both boys and girb. a studtnt
drum corps ana the San Clement• 111ih
Triton Flas Glrla also will parade.
A rlbbori cutting cerf.mony wilt be·
held· 1t. 11:19 a.m:., before the m1Jf
patade.
At 11 :45 the student drummers will'
piirform, ·followed by tlle formal dedlc1·
lion at 11 :56 a.m. .
The h1vocatlon will be glvtn by the
Rev. Donald P. Bankson, pastor of Gloria
Dti .Lutheran Church.
·•
regarded as "more relevant" to the present sJtuatiort.
Other campuses of the univen.ity have
instituted variations of the program,
Badham noted.
"Don't misunderstand me," he ald.
''Some of these independent studies are
all right. l had a kid working ht my
office to learn the system of operation
of a legislator's office and gettiRg COilege
credit for it aftd I lhlnk aomtthing
tS<e LAWSUIT, Pap t)
Mississippi
Officers Say
Snipers Shot
JACKSON 1 Miss. (UPI) -Two penons
were killed and 15 others injured today
by a barrage of bullets fired onto the
Jacbon State College campus by police
who claimed they were returning sniper
fire.
,Students at the predomlnanUy black
achoot vehemently den1ed there were
any snipers.
"There were no shots fired from the
donn at all, and this is one time police
can't lie and say they were shooting
lilto the air," declared Henry Paige,
a .senior. •
"There are bullet holes In all the
windows and there's blood all over our
campua, and blood all ovtr the dorm,••
he said.
M. B. Pierce, chief of detectives, and
Diltrlct AUorney Jack Travb: made con-
flicting reports.
"'Ibere was quite a bit or sniper fir·
lng," said Pierce, "and there was a
m.an on the fourth floor of the women's
dormitory."
Travis said an ''extensive in-
vestigation" was being conducted into
the matter, but that there was "every
indication that a large amount -a
tremendous amount of snipe r fire -
both from the front and the back of
the ofilcers before any shots were fired
by the highway patrol. 1bey were under
extrane pressure.''
Those killed were identified as James
Earl Green and Phillip L. Gibbs, 21.
Gibbs was identified as a student, but
(See JACKSON, Page ZJ
Aerial Showing
Set at El Toro
An aerial demonstration of Marin e
Corps aircraft will highlight Armed
Forces Day activities at Marine Corps
Air Station, El Toro Saturday, accord in I
to base officials.
Gates to the air station will open
to the public at noon, giving Orange
Countians a IJrst-hand loot at the Marine
Corps' air arsenal.
other activities planned for the af.
ternoon open house include remarks by
the station• and Third Marine Aircraft
Wing commanders and a concert
performed by the wing band.
The base will close at 4:30 p.m.
Orange Coast
Weather
It'• 1Ull sUmmer on the Orange
Coast, no matter what the calendar
says. Saturday should push the
mercury up to 9S In mld-t00nly
and into thf: mJddle 70's on the
coast.
INSIDE TODA\'
lt wcun't an11 miliUJ:ry threat
that made President Nf:on 1tnd
troop1 Into Cambodia; it wa1 a
~e of the timt being right.
Page 9.
• •
1
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i I
I •
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.. '
'I DAll.Y PIUll SC
Sharp Souvenir
Sea Urchin Stings Boy, 11
An 11.,.....id )(Igloo VloJo bo7 loan>-
td the bml 1'11.Y th.It lt pays to believe
tn algna.
The youngster, on a l:i1Chool field trip
to study tbe Ude pools below llelsler
Park, either did not notice, or chose
to disregard signs waml:ng against taJtjng
gpecimena within the Marine Life
Preserve, and wound up in a doctor's
office Wednesday hav:ng sea urchin
1plkea removed from hls hand.
"He apparenUy tried to pick a sea
tJrchin out af a pool," said lifeguard
Milce Hartley. "This can _be dangerous
because the spikes, though they're not
poisonous, tend to break off aod keep
on wcrting under the akin. 'Ibey have
to be removed by a doctor or elst
Ibey can set up lnfeclbi."
He Aid lilt bo7'• --lllm tor medlctl lrtalmenl
'nle .... urcllJ!ll are ...U. nlUDd JM'-
ple ciuwm, completely COY<!red wUb
spikes, and common to I.he Ude pools.
HarUey said the 1dvent of wann
weather has brought an inv8'Jon of
school chtldren from other areas to the
Laguna tlde pool area and guards are
having trouble convincing them that the
Marine Preserve signs mean what they
&ay. •
''There . are about 50 ticls from a
Fountain Va11ey achool down there now,"
said the guard. "So we have to go
down and warn them not to take
anything. They come from Pomona and
all over and just ignore the 111.gm about
not disturbing the tide pool lire. '1'1>ey
take stuff all the time."
Gloomy Statistics .Belie
Nixon Economic Stand
WASffiNGTON !UPI) -The Nixon
adminislr11tlon's effort to calm a near
panic <in Wall Street has been jarred
by 10TDe of the gloomiest economic
1tatlstica In a decade.
Al President Nixon huddled with hi!
eeooomic strategists at the White House
Thursday, the government reported the
deepset economic &lump since tbe 1960
Actio n Delayed
On Clemente
Trailer Measure
1 A p1ann1ng commission vote on San
Clemente'• proposed model ordinance
governing trailer park develop~ent is
going to be held up a bit.
Three members of the five-man com-
missioo decided thla week they'd rather
wait for their absent calleaues to join
them in a later session before the key
vote I! taken. Vacationing Ray McCaslin
and ailing Roy Barbarine were absent.
1be propoaed code has undergone draf·
ting and revision for the past 1everal
weeks.
If it wins concurrenc< from the City
Cow>cll the code will be the city'• tirst
act of ltandenla to control the fut.crow·
ing mobile home park induJtry.
1be undermanned commission also
delayed one odler agenda item unW
the nut meeting -a variance teQUf.St
by a aervlce station to run a veblcle
rental business.
· Abstentloo by Olalnnan G<orge Bowles
left only two members able to vote
on the variance -not a quorum.
The three, h o w e v e r , unantmously
agreed to grant a use pennit to Mary
E. Graham !or the city's first dog groom·
Ing salon at 1911 and 1913 S. El Camino
Roal.
At a prevtous meeting lht woman
lost a bid for the same buJinesa at
another locaUon combined with a
"8id<oce.
A alp u:ception maUer Involving a
San Clemente ahoe atore wu withdrawn
by the applicant. Roy D. Taykr, who
had asked for pennlssk>n to build a
fr<Mlandintl sign 90-equar•«•t larger
-the city cod .. Jl"lllll
Donkey Basketball
Set by Viejo High
Mission Viejo High School studenta
and faculty members will board tbelr
moonts tonight for a fund-raising donkey
basketball game, sponsored by .the
1Chool'1 yearbook.
'Ibe game gets under way at 8 p.m.
and will be follcrwed by a dance.
Admlsalon at the door ~ 11.25 for adults
and students, 50 cents !« dilldren.
DAILY PILOT
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kvtll ~ c...,<ftlr U llW -C.lt M«M• :at WCI'! kY ltr#I ........,, atldl: 2211 '#toll ..... , ... ~ L.itflN -..c.1 m ~ ,.._ """'""'* hec.fll 1717' hldl ..,.....,. a.a C""-lln JOt ,,.,... al c.m11w 11"'
•
recession and the worst three-month
period of inOaUon since the Korean War.
In a period of leas than three hours,
government atatlsUcans revealed:
-Revised lnrormation showed the
economy's output of goods and services
declined at an annual rate of 3 percent
in the first quarter of this year, a
slump much worse than ~ 1.5 percent
drop reported earlier on the bu.is of
preliminary figures, and the steepest
dip since 1960.
-The Gross Natl<lnal Product (GNP)
price index -the broadest bued
measure of inllaUon -increased at
an annual rate of 6.25 percent Jn the
January-tbrougb·March per lo d, the
sharpest increase since the first quarter
of 1151.
-Industrial production, a key economic
bellwetller, declined In April for the
eighth time In the past -months.
The Federal Reserve said the April index was 170.t percent of the 1957--59 base
pa-loci, down G.4 perc<!ot from March
aod down lharply from the 1911.7 peak
&e< !ul July.
-Per!IOl'lal income ci all Amerlcam
Increased in April because of re.troactlve
boosts in aocial security benefits and
federal pay; Without those two factors,
income would have declined for the first
time in 4.in years.
-After-tax corporate profits were at
a 1eUON1lly adjwited annual rate ci
$4' bllllon in the first quarter of this
y~, cmn 13 billion from the prevl'"'
quarter.
-'Jbe nation'• balSDCe of paymenll!i,
meuurlpg business transactions between
t&e"Unlted States and the rest of the
wOrld, ahowed a defiCit of $1.7 bllllon
in the first quarter, a flarp det.erioraUon
from the $532 mlllion surplus recorded
in the 1aat quarter of 1969.
The GNP prlce Index was pushed up
by the retroacUve federal pay ral!e.
But even excluding the effect of this
boost, the inflation rate for the first
quarter was 5.25 percent, the highest
of any recent quarter except for the
highly inflationary second quarter of last
year.
Bahe Ruth Teams
To Begin Season
Opening day of the 1970 South Coast
Babe Rulb League baseball season in
San Clemente will be Saturday noon
with ceremonies following the first
baseball game at Bonita Canyon Field.
Teams from HlUlt's Realty and Laguna
Federal Savings will square off in the
morning opener at 9:30 a.m. Judge Frank
Domenlchini 0£ the South Coast Municipal
Cow1 will be the guest speaker for
the dedication. He a!BO will hand out
trophies to last year's championshlp
team, the San Clemente Medics.
Two more games will follow the noon
ceremonies -between the Media and
the Excbanse Club, plus Mission Pipe
Supply agaiwt the Capistrano Beach
Lions team.
Parents, friends or interested citizens
are all welcome to the free games
and the ceremonies.
Ten teams this year provide 120
teenage boys with baseball activities.
Games are played both at Bonita Can-
yon and the San Clemente LIWe Ltague
field .
f'rom Page l
LAW SUIT .••
Jlke that is 11well. ll'a just that some
of these alternates they're giving credit
ror are pretty quesUonable."
Badbam said he was not satlsrled
wtth the txplanaUon of the UC I program
presented at the ~1isslon Viejo metUnl
by dean of students Robert Lawrence.
Describing the new p r o e r: d u r e a •
Lawrence referred to the "comfort and
convenience of the students,'' which
prompted SaddJeback College board
president Michael Collins to comment.
"What are we paying for, an td\JC'atlon,
lnsUtuUon or comfort stations." 1'tte
crowd, MO!itly older people, applaudtd
this htartlly.
A UCl 1tudent told the audience that
students are being denied their right
to pursue the cductitlon they seek at
the university and offered to give Dean
L3Wrtnct aitm~~ of professor• who are
being "pressured" by othflr faculty mem-
ber• becaute they are unwilling to give
students freedom lo choo6e their act--
ivilies for the rest of U1c quarter .
Highway
• -Left Turns
ConsMered
Left tum lanes are be!ng ecmldtred
for three of Laguna 's Coast Highway
iilttnectJons which would at a minJmuln
remove 50 to 56 Parkin& specea.
U maximum length tum pockets wn
used Instead of minl-pocteta, the effect
would be lo remove all parking in the
area between Legion Street and Moun-
tain Road.
Joseph Sweany. publl< works director,
said the state Division of Htghwaya has
recommended the wrn pockets for Cleo,
'll1alla and ere.. Stre<t lniused!Ol1'
to help move trafllc.
The Cleo Streot turn-pocket ....,ed
-· s ..... y uld the d!vlalon wm not put In a stop light at the huardoua
and congested interseeUon without the
turn pocket. He indieated that mini-turn
pockets are ~feet long and normal
pockets are 150 feet.
Councilman Edward Lorr suggested
that traffic turn right and 10 around
the block. He wu told the streets or
alleys oceanward d. Coa.llt Highway can-.
not accommodate the load.
Sweany mentioned that a pedestrian
had been killed at Cleo Street last year
and that Coast Highway handles 30,000
cars daily in the summer.
Mayor Richard Goldberg suggested the
matter be sent to the planning com-
miasion for comment and to point up
to commissioners that off.street parking
mll5t be provided.
f'rom Page l
ACCESS ••.
DAILY PIL01' PPllll llr JIC~ INHdl STUDENTS, POLICE, NEWSMEN 'RAP' OUTSIDE DRAFT BOARD
In Sa nta Ana, Some Mill ing Around at Selective Service
Two Arrested in Protes t
Against SA D1·aft Board
Prof.set.ors of the Indoehina war con-Gary Blumenreich, 20, of Cypress, was
verged on Sele<:Uve Service headquarters also. arrested and booked for allegedly
-----
·High Court
Gets Leary
Bail Plea
From Wire Services
WASHING TON -Word from the
Orange County District Attorney's Office
wu awaited here today befon a plea
to release Dr. Timothy Leary from pri1Dn
on · baJJ was submitted to the U.S
Supreme Court.
'Ibe psychedelie drug researcher Is
presenUy at the California lnsUtute for
Men at Chino, but wants out on bail
while h.ia conviction in Orange County
t.. appealed.
San Fra.nclsco attorney Michael Ken-
nedy plans to submit an appeal to oon·
troversial Justice William 0 . Douglas
and eventually JusUct Hugo 0 .. Black.
"Black firmly believes in bail in all
sltuaUons," Kennedy expla.lned b y
telephone. "and Douglas has cane the
same way."
"I'm as bope!ul as l can be,'' he
dded.
Orange CouDty Superior Court Judge
Byron K. McMlllan re!used to &rant
bail Feb. 11 when Dr. Leary was cm·
victed of possessing marijuana In Laguna
Beach I ;J years ago.
Judge McMillan declared he was a
pleasure·seeking, Irresponsible advocate
·of the free w;e of LSD, while ordering
him to spend 1 to Iii year~ in prt.on
!or the offense.
"Dr. Leary is devoutly religioua,"
countered his attorney. "He Is also a
responsible scienUrt and a deeply em-
cemed humanitarian.''
"He bu totally deplored the use of
narcotic drugs sucll as opiates, heroin,
barbiturates and ampelamines, and con.
sistently espoused controls and even
licenses for use of psychedelic drugs,"
the la\vyer said.
If Dr. Leary does win his bail plea.
he will be imprisoned in a !ederal
institution in Texas, stemming from hi s
Jan. 20 marijuana transportatioo. charge
there.
in Santa Ana Thursday, staging a using obscene language in front of demoiutratlon t,hat ended with two ar-
hlgh tldeline. She would also like the rested and draft board business tern· women. f'rom Page l county to take over the easement and porarlly disrupted. No signs or banners were used, but
fix up tbe dangerous stairway that has Leaders or the group representing many of the CSF, UC Irvine and Chap-
aerved the public for years. Wee Orange County campuses man College studenl.5 wore T-shirts JACKSON ..•
parUcipated in the demonstration which emblazoned with the defiant symbol of
John J. Gabriela of Laguna .Beaeh, ended without major incident and vowed the upraised, clenched fist. officials said they were not sure Green
who deals in investments. wouJ like they would return today. The move on Selective Service head. was enrolled at the s,chool.
to purchase the two parcels and sub-Santa Ana police said they would be quarters emanated from the CSF campus The trouble started about 11 p.m. EDT
dlvkle it for bomel after the euement ready. and many involved were ringleaders in Thursday when a group of black youths
b moved 90 feet either to the north Half the crowd of about 75 persons recent militant activities there, observers gathered near the college, located a
or the IOUth. surged into the headquarters at 1138 said. few blocks from downtown Jackson, and
"I would like to see them (the county) E. 17th St., leading to a contingent Santa Ana police cautiously notified began hurling rocks and bottles at pass.
take over that whole betcb down there of lawmen guarding the doors until the other Orange County law agencies at ing cars. It wu the second consecutive
for the uae or every 1ing1e penon,'' protest broke up in late afternoon. Gne point to inquire about reinforcement.I night of such violeJ)ce and stale troopers
aaid Gabriell. 'tJ am intere:sled In hiving Carol Bobo, 20, of Brea, a Gal State if they were needed, but the situation were on hand. National GuarWmen were
It opened up eo that it ii adtq111.tely Fullerton student, was arrested on never got out of hand. standing by in annories.
policed like AlliJo Beaeh." charges of disturbing the peace and ~o more protestors were arrested Students, according to police, drove
'Ille county aees It ~ u a booked into Orange County Jail after this morning. howewr, at the continuing a dump truck -which had been parked
legal complexity that 1t ia trying to allegedly interfering with women person-demonstrations in front of Selective on campus -onto the street and set
wcrkout without much hope of IUCCesll, net Service headquarters in Santa Ana. it af'ire. ·
Pccordlng to John KUJe:fer, aide to 1 -=:::....::;;;:;;!!li;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i~~~~~~;;::;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;:;;;;;;;;~~=---Supervisor Altoo E. Allen of Laguna.
"The hangup," said Killefer, "Is that ---
the easement ls allegedly available from
the Bank of America for $1. however,
whoever gets it is stuck with the fact
11.at it is for the exclusive use or tract
149."
Killefer said, "The peoole In tract
849 apparently are not willing to gi ve
up exclusive rights to that area and
because ot that (a private not public
easement), the county cannot spend even
one dollar.
"We are researching the law at this
point and as it stands today 100 pereent
of the property owners must approve
(the easement becoming public}. 'Illey
ov.'TI the rights although the underlying
fee belongs to the Bank of America.
We can't condemn the rights: ... not
without a heek of a batUe."
KU!efer said that some or the same
. DRAPERY
SALE! property owners who intend to keep
the beach semi·private are the same
ones that have !oughl the county over
Splt Creek havinii; public access.
CUSTOM MADE WITH A WIDE SELECTION OF
QUALITY INTERIOR DESIGN FABRICS. AS MUCH
AS 40 % OFF ON EXC ELLENT DES IGN FABRICS.
Killefer also said that taklng the beach
itrea for pubUc use -the area above
mean high tide -could result in "some
pr"tly awful severance damages."
He said Supervisor Allen has not only
the county counsel working <WI the mat-
ters but the real property services ~
ole. KJllefer said it might be poeslble
eventually to work out some jotnt use
of the beach so that the county main-
tains it.
1be property around the easement was
owned by the late George Clark. an
r'lorney, who acquiffil. it in the 1930s.
One of the properties has a house on
it. The other is undeveloped. Mrs. Sojz"~io
inherited it from Clark when he died
la.ct ytar.
She has Jt listed with a Realtor for
sale and has for stveral months. The
asking price is reportedly about $280,000.
"I think the coonty shoold take the
responsibility for those stairs. They're
a menace to the public." she said .
Gabriel too would like the county lo
take over the stairway easement and
repair the broken concrete steps, main-
tain the area and provide 1 lifeguard
service.
Some have called the s t a I r w a y
;''lbousand Steps" but someone wrote
there once that it only had !5e. The
property on thhtt side of the stairway
was p:lSled as prtvate but Cltirk used
to let the publ~ use It as lon1 as
there was no drink and behavior was
normal .
Aru rHidt:nta ha~ anted up e fund
to have the area patrolled to eliminate
r "•')chavklr that wa5 going on. Patrolling
ts now done on weektnds but In mid.June
It wilt be dont on 1 fuJl.ttme basis
11nd thole without Cllds pr0vlnj area
"fenee will be asked lo ICa\'t,
On motion of Supe:rvlsor Alita on Dec.
10. the question of tasement acquisition
V.'8!1 referred by county supervisors to
r · "'lly counsel, a first step In tht pun le
of the ntous.nd Steps toward the public'•
t':lcland.s •
•
NEWPORT BEACH
17'27 WHtcllfl Dr., 642-2050
OPEN FRIDAY 'Tll 9
INTE RIORS
P I 1 LAGUNA llACH ro 111 on1I Interior 345 North CotJt Hwy.
D1slgn1r1 Av1ll1t;l.,_AID OPEN FRIDAY 'TI L
l'ko110 foff ,.,... Mott of OnH•ft Co1111" 140.12•1
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04-6.lll
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·-----r••~-•• ·.,,--:"'..":~~7 • ...,.,0-.,..,.------------------------------------------------------------------~ --~----·---~
·Meet Candidates· for Uo11nty Ele~tions·
All ca11didatts for the Fl/th
District ruperWorial .seat, the
Fifth District Board of Educa-
tion seat and the ca11didates for
Co u t1 t y Superintendent of
Schools have been inuited to a
niet:t . t11e • candidates session
s·po11sared by the League of
Wo1nen Votets, at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesdav, /.fay 19, i11 tl1e Little
Theater at Corona det Mar High
School, 2101 t'a.stbluff Drive.
This 11011-partisan session wiU
gfve all voters Q)I opportunity to
1neet and hear all of tile candi·
dates. l t 1night be worthwhile to
tear thi.! page from tJ1e DAILY
PIWT and take it with uou to
the meeting.
TED CRISELL
1'heodore Crisell
Tours County's
School Campuses
NAME: THEODORE M. CRlSELL
ITED)
Phone: 645-2999
Address: 31.8 N. Newport BI v d .,
Newport Beach. Calif.
lfow long in this area ? 12 years
Education: Graduate Research,
University of Bombay. Bombay, India;
Chapman College B.A.; World Campus
Afloat ; Loyola Unv.; Orange Coast
College:
Civic ActiviLics : Rotary International
Scholar to India 1969. Research.
Fellowship in connecUon with projects
of Ford Foundation and Peace Corps.
Traveled to 60 countries on 3 trips aroultd
the world. Administration advisor World
Campus Af)oat.
Public offices: 1968; President World
Campus Afloat, 1967: President
Associated Students OCC, Freedom
Foundation Award , coonselor Orange Co.
Probation Department.
What unique t.alenl or background do
you laave lhal qualifies you to serve
on the Board or F.<lucation? My closeness
to young people and their problems.
J have been on every campus in District
Five and have spoken with all local
district superintendents and majority of
principals. There is a crying need for
young men to serve on school boards-too
mafty school board metnbers are cut.
dated in their thinking and not in touch
with pressing prcblems ol education .
Wllal do you consider the primary
function of \be Orange County Board
of Education? The county board is very
limited i• what it caa really do. I
believe the major role in the most recent
past has been affecting public opinicn.
Most people think the board is more
important than it actually is. The board
has generally created a negative public
opinion toward our schools.
Would you favor elcc:Uoll or ap-
pointment of the County SupertDWtat
of Schools? I believe it .ts the most
natural thing for the county iuperln-.·
tendent to be appointed by an elective
board. We run most of our cit.ies~ thi s
way now -elective city -counctl with
appointed city managers, men who are
professional administrators. ··'"
Sboold tile County Board lasw more
or ies1 control over the ,Joell Dtllrictl?
I believe the county .scHools oftlce can
be phased oul 1 am very much in
agreement with the 19&9 Orange County
Grand Jury Report. The report called
for the phasing out of the county board
and county schools offit1!. The county
dfice has bee• gettb1g involved in far
... many local issues. There is too
much duplication of services. About 1.7
million dollars is given by Board of
Supervisors to run county schools office
and the Slate &ives $700,000. This money
can be better spent at loctd level
'VIII you be able to llttnd the C1n·
dldates' J\feelln& of l\f1y ltt.11? Yes
AL TON E. ALLEN
Alton E. Allen
Current Chief
Of Supervisors
NAME' ALTON E. ALLEN
Ag" 73 Phone ' 8}4,.-
Address : 25.35 Temple Hills Drive.
Laguna Beach
Wife's name: Margaret
Children and ag~: Jack 42 ; Barbara
4J
EducatioJ1 : University o( \\'ashington
Occupation : Chairman, Orange Ccu•
ty Boe.rd of Supervisors
Civic Activities: Past President nf
Rolery
What unique talent or background do
you hlYe that qualllfe1 you to terve
on the Board of Supervisors? Have serv-
ed as Supervisor of the Fifth
Supcrvisorial District si nce January 1963.
Ho" much Is your campaign costing?
Where 11 the money coming: from'! Ap-
proJ.imately US.000. CampaigJ1 co•
tributions.
Do you favor the proposed Upper
Newport Bay land swap ia Ill present
form! Please explain. Yes, but I am
in favor or placing a bond issue on
the November Ballot which would give
the people an alternate opportunity to
acquire all of the Upper Bay for en-
vironmeatal a.ltd ecological purposes.
What is your solution to Orange Coun-
ty's air tran1porla&lon problems? I would
cOntinue to press for completion" of Phase
II of the Master Plan of A i r
Transportation. I h a v e already moved
to restrict the hours, type and number
or commercial nights at the airport.
Will you attend lhe ~Jay ltth meeting'.'
Yes, J am planning to attend.
Vick R. Knight
Seeking School
Superintendency
NAME' VICK R. KNIGIIT
Age : U Phone : 52USIO
..
Address : 1500 Shenandoah, Placentia
How long in this area? 11 years
Wife's name : Beverly
Children and ages : Steve 20, Mary
15
F.ducaticn : B.S., USC: M.A. Cal State
LA ; F.d.D. Candidate USC
Occupation: Assistant Supt. Placentia
Unified School District
Civic Activities : Kiwanis, J a y c e e
President ; Boy Scout Dis. Chairman
Public offices : None
What 11niq11e talent or background do
you bave Ulat qualifies you to 1erve
u Superintendent of Scbool1! 14 years
as both a secondary and elementary
administrator, includ4ng fiVe years as
t.sst. Supl. ol the, ext..em.1y fast-growing
PlaoenUa Unified' SChool Dist. aJKI a
genuine desire to provide aeeded services
lo local school distrlcta.
Wht 11 the most Important function
of tbe S.perlaleodent "1th reipeCI ~o
servicing ihe local dJ1tricll! A will-
ingness to listen to the 11eeds of 1ocal
districts and not attempt to forte
UAwanUd projects on them. Set 1969
Gr'llld Jury Report.
SMukl dte ernoe you seek be elective
or 1ppoladve? WllJ? There hu been
a blsCoey of divided re1poruiiblllttes which
could be solved by having an elected
county school board appoiJ1t the county
superintendent.
How much 1!1 your campaJgn cosUnJ?
'Wbere 11 Ute mone1 C9mlng from! $300l
-rrtcnds, professlonal osociatcs, Jtlf.
Will you. be 1tte11dtns the ~11y II
meelln&? I'll sure try to!
RONALD CASPERS
Ro1iald Caspers
In First Tr y
For Cou11ty Post
NAME' RONALD W. CASPERS
Address: 119 Via Florence, Newport
Beach, Calif. 9'l660
Wife's name: Ann
Oiildren: Kirk, 16 : Rick. IJ; Greg
and Kristen (twins) 12: Blair, 8.
Educat ion : UCLA. Business
Administration degree from San Jose
State: Graduate work in marketing and
finance at USC.
Occupation : President, Keystone Sav-
ings and Loan
Civic Activities : Board of Directors
of Big Brothers, Member of Anaheim
Stadiwn non-profit corporation board or
directors; member of Pasadena Tourna-
ment of Roses ; past member of the
board ol directors of Harbor Day School,
Newport Beach; member Navy League;
head or fund raising for Friends of
Chapman College; member of Rotary;
Member of Hoag Hospital 552 Club.
Whal unlque background or-talent do
you have lo qualify you to H:rve on
tbe Board of Supervisors! Soccess£ul
businessman and money manager. t
purchased Keystone Savings and Loan
at $3 million and have developed it into
a $45 million doITar business. I have
also been widely involved in civic affairs.
Cost of campaign and where money
,. coming: from. -The total cost or
the campaign cannot yet be determined.
A fund raising dinner is planned to
cover a large portion or our campaign
costs. Donations from individual con-
sti tuents have been numerous.
Do you faYor the proposed Upper Bay
land swap in its prtsent form? The trade
abuses Orange County taxpayers and
dam1ges the ecology of Southern
California as well. I am against the
trade and will work to reverse the land
swap. (note PILOT ad concerning Bay
lrade).
Wbat is your soludon lo Orange County
air transportation problems? J do not
favor further erpans.ion or the present
facility. Another slte in an unpopulated
area should be found . Until a new loca-
tion iS selected, jets should be prohibited
from using Orange County Airport.
VICK KNIGHT
ROBERT M. WILSON
Robert Wilson
In Second Term
As Mesa Mayor
NAME' ROBERT M. WILSON
Age: 53 Phone : 54&-f'm
Address : 2000 Aliso Ave., Cost• Mesa
Wife's name: Maryalice
Children and ages : Carol 24, Randy
23. Sherrie 20. All married.
Education: Glendale College
Business Administration and Political
Science
Occupation: Self-employed as "The'
Awning Man"
Civic activities Orange County Coast
Association, Orange County Coastal
Highway Commission, Vice Commander
American Legion Post No. 455, Represen-
tative to National Rivers and Harbor
Comm. in Washington D.C.
Public offices: Councilman, Cost 1
Mesa, 3 Terms. Mayor. Costa Mesa,
.serving second term.
What unique talent or background do
you have that quaUfle1 you to serve
on tbe Board ol Supervtaon'! My intere st
in government has ranged beyond city
boundaries as member of California
· League of Cities National League of
Cities, State Building Regulation Com·
mittee and Orange County Decen-
tralization. Committee on County Offit'ts.
How mn~ b yoar campaign e01ltBJ!
Wbett 11 the money comJng from? No
Answer
Do you f1vor the proposed Upper
Newport Bay land swap In its preunt
form? Please eJ.plaln. I do not fa vor
present plan as too many quest.ions are
unanswered. Can we afford to give up
this prime watershed and salt water
estuary? How much will it cost to
operate? What must the public invest?
Wiii a new outlet to eccan be needed!
Now is time to evaluate.
What 11 your sotu•lon lo Orange Coun.
ty'1 air transportaUon problems? Im-
mediate Need: Eliminate noise and
smoke pollut.ion. Future needs : New in·
temational airport between Los Angele!!
and San Diego. New site for regional
airpc;irt and metroports to provide feeder
service.
Will yoa attend the May lttb meetin1?
Yes
;RONALD E. PRICE
Voter• in Orange Coun ty's Fiftll Supervi.aorial District will find
two se ts of ca·ndidate.s specificall11 orie1lted to their areCl-1J representa·
tive on the Orange County Board of Su.pervisor.s and a representative
on the Ora1117e ·County Board of Education. I1i cooperation with tile
Orange Coa&t League of \Vomen Voters. the DAILY PILOT today presents
biographies a1id viewpoints of the candidate.s in .an effort to help voters
select their choices in the two races. AU candidates were offered the
opportunity to submit their biographies, state their views . and hove their
picture publilhed on this pogt. AU of tho.se who responded appear todav.
In tile .supervisoriat race, an11 candidate who rtceivt1 mort them
half of the tiote.s co.st in the June 2 election will be declared elected. In
the event no stngle candidate receives that majorit11. the ttDO leading
rondidate.s will fact a run·o/f in tht November general e~ction. Tht
Board of Education election is not a paralttl circum1tance; the candidate
with tht greatest number of vote1 J1tne 2 will bt declared winner.
The fifth supeJVisorial di$t7'ict covers tile Orange Count11 C()(l$ttit1e
includitt9 the communftits of Newport Beach , Costa Mesa, Laguna Btach,
San Jua!l CapLYtra11a, Dana Point. parts of Mission Viejo, San Cteme1t't
and portions of Hu.11tington Beach east of Beo.cl5 Boulevard below Car·
/fe?d Avenue.
CRIS C. CRIS
Cris C. Cris
Opposes Swap
Of Upper Bay
NAME ' CRIS C. CRIS
Ag" 40 Phone' 96'Um
Address: 9627 Adams Avenue, Hun·
tington Beach
Education : Alexander Hamilton Inst.
of Business Muagement; West Coast u.
Occupation : Government Contra cl!
Admi11lstrator
Civic activities: School DI st r Jct ~Advisory Committees ; Chairman, Hun-
tington Beach Park Bond Election 1969;
Underground UUlltiu Commissioner;
Chairman of Freeway Advisory Com·
mittee.
Public ot'flces : No11e
What ulque talent or backP"Owtd do
you have that qualifies you to serve
on the Board of Supervisors? 29 years
experience la poliUc1 and civic servi~.
Recent activities: (I) School district
Advisory Committees: (2) Chainnan,
Huntington Beach Park Bond Election
1969; (3) Underground Utilities Ccm-
mi!sioncr: (4) Chainnan, Freeway
Advisory Committee .
How much 11 your campaign costing?
Where Is the money comina from! To
date, apprcximately $400. Estimate
aROlher $3,000 maximum. Pe.non.al bank
account and individual donations. The
largest to date $100.
Do you favor the proposed Upper
Newport Bay lud IWIP tn Ill pment
form! Please e1pl1ln. - I am not in
favor of this swap in present slate.
1 would have to make a thorough
research or the transaction agreed to
by the county before maki111 a finaJ
declslon. I woold certainly wan~ expert
opinion and advice on it.
Whit 11 your solutloo lo Orange Coun-
ty'• air tran1portatJoa problems! J will
investigate feulblllty of an off-shore
airport combbted with such other service
functions as a desallnizat.ion plant,
nuclear power plant, waste disposal
plant, marina, oceanographic school. A
key f1ctor goverlling thl1 appro1ch would
be its location and It! effect on the
ecology.
Will YCMI 1t:tend tbe rtfay ttth meelln&!
Yes
Ronald E. Price
County Resident
For 20 Years
~
NAME' RONALD E. PRICE
Age : 37 Phone: 646-7315
Address: 1327 Antigua Way, Newport
Beach
Wife's name: Maty Alice
Children and ages: Cynthia 8, Beth
' How long in this area? Orange Co.
approx. 20 years: Newport Beach, 3
years
Educa.lion: Bachelors. Masters, Doc·
torate
Occupatton : Sell·Employed
Civic Activities : Commedores, S t •
Andrews Church
Public offices: None
What unique talent or backiroand do
you have that q ... 1111e1 you to 1erve
on the Board of Education! I have
taught school ror alrilost 10 years, (4th,
7th, 8th, 9th thru 11th, and full time
college instructor) plus being In bmb\tss
for myself gives me the background
of practical classroom knowledge com-
bined with business financing and
management.
\Vhat do you consider Ute prlna1ry
funcllo11 or the Oraqe Couty Board
or Educ1llon! 1'1elr primary function
is lo administer over the few schools
they control directly. 'Ille secondary,
and perhaps m09l Important !unction.
Is tc assist, coordinate Ind help other
districts in special fUncOons and pro~.
To advise other dl!lricts only when re-
que1ted.
Would you f1vor eltetioo or •..-
polntment of lite Colnty Superintendent
of Scltool1! 1 would favor appolnlmtnt.
Should t b: e County Botrd hive mon
er Ids control over the Ioctl D11trlct1?
Les!. See above
Wiii you be 1blc IO atttJtd tM C1n-
•1date1' Mcedn& of May JIUI? Yu
FRED WALTER
Fred Walter
Engineer
And Scientist
NAME' FRED WALTER
Age: 41 Phone: 642-2M3
AddreSs : 350 Vista Baya, Newport
Beach
Wife's oame: Kathryn
Children and age.s : Karl,• weeks
Educalion: M. S., Expertmenta I
Physics; 1955, Berlin, Germany
Occupation : E11glneering Physicist
Civic acUvitie.s : Smog and nol98
abatement '
Public offices: None in the U.S.
What unique talent or backgrowtd do
you have that qualllle1 you IO aerve
on the Board of Sopervlson! My pro-
fessional background and experience &$
scientist a11d engineer, and my· active
interest in social problems and civiC
activities.
How mucb ls your campalp costla1·t
Wht:rt IA the money coming: from? Ap.
prox. $1500; from personal income.
Do you fayor tbe proposeil Upper
Newport Bay land swap In Us preterit
form? Please explain. No. It has delayed
urgently Jteeded deVelopment of park
and recreation facilities for almost six
years, caused e1tenslve and unnecessary
expenses, and accomplished nothing.
Partial development should start NOW.
WUt 11 your IOluUoG ~ Oru1e eo.a.o;.
ty11 air transportation pntblem1? A'~
prehensive Scutbern California Airport.
and Ground TransportaUcn System ori
a super·reglonal basis, md adeqtJatelY enforced~ noise and pollution abatement
roles.
WW you alltnd the ftfay Itth meetint?
Yes.
JOANN DOUDNA
JoAnn Doudna
San Oemente
Mother of Six
NAl\1E: JOANN DOUDNA
Phone : 49'U063 Age : '9
Address : 124 del Pacifico. San Clemente
Children and ages: Six Children. Two
girls and four boys.
How long In this area? San Clemente:
1959
Education: Two years U.C.L.A. Full
time student at Irvine.
Occupation: Homemaker
Civic Activities:
Public Offices : Served four and one
half years oo Capistrano Unlried School
Board. 2 yrs. Delegate Assembly.
'Vbat unique talent or backgrcund dn
you have tbat qualHles you to sen-e
on tbe Board of EducaUon? Experk!.nce
on local Board. Work at the State level
ot' California School Board Assn. Have
six children in the public school system.
I .am presently attending the Univenlty
'and taking educallon courses.
What do you eonlider the prlm1ry
fwtcUtft of tbe Oranxe Coanty Board
of Edte1tioft? Provkllng specific 9tf'Vke•
to local board• which '" defined In
the Callfornla Educational COde.
Woold you f1vor electlon or 1p.
polntment of the County Super11ttnde:11t
ol Seboeis? Appointment by an elected
Board of Educatloit
Wiii you be 1blt to aUend th Can.
dldak:1' ~k:ethtl or Mey lttllT Yes, I
wUL '
DAILY PILOT
Robol1 Wynbront of Bilborough,
En&land says he has been assured
by town authorities that a right ol
wq lbrough lhe middle ol his
house shown on a new map will not
cause any problems. He says be
just discovered the.house was built
on what was once a public lootpatb. • Em•nuel Sofl•no• says his firm
is applying to Buckingham Palace
to be appointed official toffee apple
maker to lhe royal family. SofWJos
said Wednesday be decided on the
application after his London saJes-·
man told him Prince Philip took
four ol. the apples home from Satur-
day's SOOt.h anniversary celebra-
tions at Convent Garden . •
O/ficial1 at the Flamjngo Park
Zoo in York, England have
moved Hannibal, the i:oo'.1 prize
Indian elephant, to a MUI hOUJI
which. separates him more from
triritorJ. TM officiab said Hanni-
bal WUlJI had been grabbing
women's handbags and eating
tJmn, 8J)itting out cofm, com-
poctl and lipstick.!. But thev
1atd he seemed to mjOJI check--
baok1 and paper money,
• The Brlwb Consumer Council
said Wednesday of the 62 pairs of
tights. tested by eight women only
hall Were still wearable at the end
of one day and only 19 of these
fitted well. Many of those that !ail-
ed lo stand up spli~ developed holes
or just fell down, the council said. •
Loa AnoeJ.t1 authoritUs clear·
ed a. block aquare area recentlt1
and cclltd in o bomb squad when
a nspidoUJ looking o b ; e c t
dangling from a balloon dropped
to the ground M%t to a polict
command post. But the U.S.
W eatMr Bureau in a ntM'bJI
building cleared the matter up.
It tqC.S a weaUler balloon from
Point Mugu destined for the lo-
cation and was "on target."
•
Ul'I Tt......,_
STUDY IN CONTRASTS AT U OF MARYLAND
Gu•rd•m•n Posted Neer School's Chapel
Governor Impo ses Corf ew
On U of Maryland Campus
• OOLLElGE PARK, Md. (UPI) -Gov.
Marvin Mandel invoked o:ecuti.e powe-s
today to keep the University of Maryland
campus open. He indefinitely ext.ended
the curfew to allow authorit.its to keep
troublemakers off campus.
Mandel had invoked the curfew Ttiurs-
day night after dissident students again
battled Natlonal · Gifardsmen and state
Jl)lice along U.S. Route I through Ute
naUon'sthird lar&e&t college campu1.
campus late Thursday night1 windows
were smashed in four campus buildings.
Office equipment was destroyed and
furniture was set on fire in the main
administration building .
6 Tornadoes Hit
Nea r Texas City At 1 2 a.m. news conlerence, Mandel
issued the curfew proclamation and said it allowed the Maryland National Guard's LU BB 0 CK, Tex. (UPI) -Six
adjutant general Edwin Warfield to keep tornadoes louched down Thursday within
all but authorized persons off campus. 45 miles of Lubback, a city devastated
·Warfield 5.ald he woold interview the by a tornado Monday which killed 21
GOP Senators on Spot
See k Compro m_ise on Cambodia· Measure
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Worried
Repu~ senators called another
meeUng today to write compromise
legislaUon on Cambodia in an etfori
to keep the Nixon administraUoo 'from
another abowdown with the Senate,
GQP Leader Hugh Seott called the
meet.inc after three top pre.sidenliaJ ad-
visers -Def~se Secretary Melvin R.
Laird, White Houte aide Helli)' Klastnger
and Underaecretary of State Elliot L.
Richard.loo -told Senate Republicans
'lllurtday the adminlstralian would not
yield.
Scott did not indicate what kind of
compromiae be bad in mind, but said
he planned to submit it to the White
House before introducing It.
A vote on pend!ng legislation to cut
off · funds for retaining U.S. troops in
Cambodia would put GOP senators on
the spot for the fourth time in a year
on an issue involving President Nixon's
prestige.
Supporters of the cutoff leg islation said
they had 53 votes, two more than needed
* * * Nixon Says B ill
'Infringement'
KEY BISCAYNE , Fla. (UP!) -The
Florida White House said today President
Nixon feels that a proposal now before
Congress limits his ability to protect
American forces in Vietnam and Cam-
bodia.
Pre.ss Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler,
discussing the administration's position
on a proposal in Congress to cut off
funds for future militarv involvement
is an infringement on thai constitutional
responsibility ... of the commander in
chief to protect the security of the
American forces iii the field ."
Ziegler also stated that Nixon opposes
.such a move because it would put the
enemy on notice that the President's
ability to respond lo threats is limited.
The amendment, now being debated
ln Congress. was proposed by Sen. Frank
Church CD-Idaho), and Sen. John
Sherman Cooper (R-Ky.), Zlej!Jer made
il clear Nixon .feels any limitation on
hill' options lo conduct the Vietnam war
would jeopardize his role as commander
in chief.
At the same tlme, Ziegler restated
Nixon's intentions to w i l h draw all
American troops from Cambodia on June
!IO.
for Senate paasage. No one knew wbtn
a vote would come, buL It was thou&ht
to be a week off. "
House approval wu much less likely.
Similar amendments wefe defeated on
consecutive days last week. Rep. William
F. Ryao (D-N.Y.), 11>urt<Say urged the
Democratic leadership to call a caucus
on rus amendment 'OP.posing use of U.S.
lroops in Cambodia, but only 99 of the
244 House Democrats' showed up, short
of a quorum.
Sen. Robert J. Dole (R-Kan.), said
lhe blH -designed to bind President
Nixon to his promise of a quJck
withdrawal 0( U.S. troops from Com-
mwtlst sanctuaries -would be "a direct
slap at the President of the United
States."
Backers ol the measure, led by Sens.
John Shuman Cooper (fl.Ky.), and
Frank Church (D-ldaho), charged that
compromises which the admlnlstratfon
alrt.ady ht• rejeded would turn th•
Senate into a "fudge factory."
Oiurch, lhe floor manager for the
amendment, said it wouJd do nothing
that the President has not a1rtad}' pltdl-
ed to do. He aakl he did not understand
admlnirtration int.ran!i.gence, becall:9t on-
ly four months ago · it embraced an
almost identical proposal he offered to
bar ground troops in 'I'l;lailand and Laos.
But opponents of the measure con-
tended it would turn the Senate into
a "war room" in which strategy and
tactics would be determined by elected
officials with little military experience,
Sen. John C. Stennis (0-Mlas.),
chainnan of the Senate Anne<! Services
Committee, said the measure would "put
the President in a legal strait jacket."
Walte r Reuther Eulogized
As Champion of Underdog
DETROIT (UPI) -Walter P. Reuther,
president ot the United Auto Workers
for the past 24 years, was eulogized
today as ont of the nation's great union
leaders of the century and a champion
of the underdog.
More than 3,000 persons, including ex-
ecutives of the big four auto companies
Reuther fought with in contract negotia-
tions, attended memorial services in the
Ford Auditorium.
Thousands more watched and listened
to the services on television and radio.
At 10 a.m., local time, across the
United States and in Canada, North
America's biggest industry halted for
three mi.nutes as plant workers in the
t.8-million-member union paused to pay
tribute to their fallen leader. Some
truckers in the teamsters union pulled
off to the side of hlghways.
1bousands of auto workers stayed off
the job in two of 10 Flint General
l\1otors plants and rented a large
auditorium to watch the memorial
services on closed-circuit television.
Other workers in other plants said they
might extend the silent tribute beyond
three minutes. r
Reuther. 62. his wife, ~1ay, 59, a n d
four others died last Saturday night
when their chartered exe•utive jet plane
crashed in a forest near Pellston in
Northern Michigan.
Eleven speakers, including Mrs. Caret·
ta King, widow of Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr., eul<>gized Reuther, who formed
the nation's second biggest union.
Whitney Young, e1ecutive dlrectot of
the National Urban League, aaid UAW
members had lost t h e i r leader and
"all Americans , most etpeclally the
black, the poor, the underprivilec«I, hive
lost a champion."
Emergency Fund
Bill A pproved _
W AS!IlNGTON (UPI) -The House ond
Senate have passed and sent to President
Nixon an emergency resolution to ward
off the threat of p.1yless paydays for aome
government workers.
The measure was necessary because
Congress has not appropriated funds to
cover the pay raises -nine percent July
I and six percent Dec. 22 -given gov-
ernment workers.
Sen. Robert C. Byrd (D·W. Va.) said
the Bureau of Commercial Fisheri es bas
run out of money and other agencies,
as well as veterans' benefits, faced the
same problem.
Get aBloe~ 8!Jecial from 3Wf participating OJrysler and Plymouth Dealer!
While the rest of the auto industry was
crying the blues, more Southern Cali-
fornians bought Plymooths this spring
than at any time in recent history. Jn
celebration of these impressive sales
figures and to keep the ball rolling, our
factory has made available to all South-
crn California dealers special. price
incentives on 82 out of their 87 models.
With this added ammunition, your
Chrysler Plymouth dealers arc goillg on
a one-month selling spree .•• selling Blue
Plate specials. They're out to inovc every
car in stock!That's why if you buy a nc\v
Chrysler or Plymouth betwe.en May 1st
and May 31st, you can count on arCl.Dy
tempting deal. So sec your Chrysler and
Plymouth dealer and check out his Blue
Plate Specials. You're the one who
stands to beoefill 28 persons arrested late Thursday night. persons and left 10,000 homeless. No
curfew violators anested this morning further damage was reported. Bl Pl s ials
and other susped.ed troublemakers today At least one tornado has touched ue ate ~ to decide if they should be barred from ground every day since Monday. All
campus. of then1, i\1cluding the six Thursday, ·
He said those suspected of battling hit rural areas and caused no property Pri red cOO :lhde!ttr;;·~: w~ldd~~~::~ da~:'fa~:sfnl::~oes struck oortb and ces u on 1ers and
the rest of the semester -meaning west of Lubbock near the communities I
they would Dunk their courses for this f LIUI r Id H 1 c Co
Studtftli living in Donner Hall, • t":.rfield estimated 3,000 to 4,000 ~~. s~[;~~~~ :-:t~~~;~o~~£:~t~: P"Jttl·ouths m· stock SJOt ""empting
mci'1 dorm.itorv on the Camp1t1 of studenU pelted guardsmen and Btate month that killed 26 persons. J.J ~·~ e ~ IJ f~~;;::~~l~ir~~::.~ ;i~ ~~!~~w:'.~ 1::~:·1~·~: ~~:.:1d:~~;~i~~:,~~:~: m;,...:ie1"' Immedia•e deli'7lerv
claim tht cans were a poltulant to the I. of Monday night's tornado because the ll\I ~. .l! . f• '.&. J e
e.,,.R·,o ..... a .. ·n Th Before guarddsmen swept·":" the poweM·w·~oudt. t Offer ends May 31st!
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2929 Ha rbo r Boulevard
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EDl :r lO N
Today's Flaal
N.Y. Steeb
* VO[ 63, NO. ·116. 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES
Citizens.' Suit
Plans for a possible. taxpayers' suit
lo compel California's state colleges Ind
universities to "do what they are charged
with doing under rules set up by the
Regents" are still in a "very nebuloos
discussion state," Assemblyman Rober\
Badham (R-Newpcrt Beach) said today.
Badham broached the subject of the
suit during a meeting in Mission Viejo
Tbunday nigtll, called by the Young
Republican Club to protest the UC
Irvine plan to permit strike supporters
•
to drop regular COUl'tel and receive
credit for "alternate ltudles~· covering
a variety ol protest-te.lated subjects.
He told a cbe«lng •"'""""' <t 300
at O'Neill Elementary School that he
planned to prepare such a sull and
probably would be joined by other state
legislators including Senator J o h n
Schmitz (R-TulUn), Ass em b I y man
Rob<rt Burke (11-Huntinilon Beach) aod
Assemblyman John Briggs (R-Fullerton). Ltla1 procedures fer the 11114 Badham
Hot Weekend
R ecord Warmth for Cou nty
Record·breaking temperatures were predicted for Orange County thlJ
weekend as patches of fog threatened to dampen Orange <:oast beaches.
The U.S. Weather Bureau today predicted sunny warm weather with a
high of 96 degrees and lows in the 60's for Orange County.
As inland temperatures threaten to hit the 100 degree mark prospec~ve
beachgoers are faced with predicted patchs ol fog along the coast, cutting
visibility down to one-quarter of a tnlle.
Oraage Coonty Harbor Department spokesman in Newport Beach laid
light winds were expected with the fog which blanketed Laguna Beach and
Newport early today. Water tem~ature was set at a warm 61 degz:ee~. •
The record high for May IS was set in 1967 at 102 degrees, While the
record for May 16, 96 degrees, has stood since 1892. Weathermen said the 1001·
slanding record wouid probably be broken. .
Meanwhile, rising temperatures, bothersome smog and strong winds that
fanned brush fires continued to plague the inland artas of Southern california
today, with no relief in sight.
Temperatures beaded higher than 100 degrees in some inland areas and
were in the 80's in the mountains. The estimated high for downtown LO! An-
geles was 9$ for today and Saturday.
Brush fires hit at least four counties Thursday when the Lor An&ele1
temperature peaked at 19 degrees. .
A yellow pall of eye-irritating •mot· cut visibility la llltllt ol tlie buln
sharply in one of the heaviest attacks of the year.
The hot Santa Ana wind gusts from the desert gave liUle relief from
the smog while bringing high temperatures. J
Accused SA Abortionist
Vows to Continue Clinic
Dr. Joh• Shriver Gwynne-, accused Los
Angeles abortionist, will be arraigned
in Central Orange County MunJcipal
Court at 10 a.m. Monday on two counb of
committing illegal abortions in Santa
Ana.
The surgeon, arrested t h r e e times
previously in his highly-publicized West
Los Angeles clinic for the same offense,
has vowed to continue his activities ia
his new clinic at 1856 W. 17th St.
Santa Ana police said today they are
equally determined to bait his operaton.
Dr. Gwynne was first arrested Wectnes--
day attenoon by officers who char1e
they saw him performing an abortion
ott a 17-year~ld Wiseoosin girl. He had
allegedly completed an abortion on
.• another out-of-town woman and a ·third
·woman from Houston, Te:r., was waiting
her tun.
Santa Ana Pollet Sgl Michael Mitchell
obtained a complaint late Thursday on
the two couRl.! of illegaJ abortions. Dr.
Gwynne had been freed Thursday on
his own recogniJ.ance after an ap--
pearance before Muaicipal Judge Philip
Schwab.
Tbe doctor, a native of Garden Grove.
•here his parents sUll live, has said
Meet Co unty
Candidates
Wondering about wbo to vote
for? 1be DAILY Pnm, in coopera-
tiOll with the Orange coast League
o( Women Voters, today offers
some iaformation to help voters
make intelligent select.ions when
they cast ballots for Orange County
Supervisors. Orange County Scbool
Board lruslet, and Orange County
Superlntendeat of Scbools.
Biographies and viewpoints o( the
candidates are published today on
page 3 with supervisorlal candi-
dates presented across the top of
tbe page. Two candidale3 failed to
respond or provide information in
the school board race. They are
Roaer C. Anderaon, and Reg Wood.
Roben o. Peterson did not respond
ln the county superintendent of
scboo1s race.
he ls determined to continue the illegal
operat.ioas as long as possible. He is
deliberately cballeiiglng the state's ex·
isling abortion law as "hypocritical."
He has ·been lndJcted by the Los
Angeles Couaty Grand Jury on five
counb of performing abortloos, as the
result of previous raids on h1s West
Los Angeles clinic.
O emente Aide
Wins Contested
LAFC Election
San Clemente city councilman and
former mayor Stanley Northrup won a
hotly contested elecUon Thursday to a
two-year.post co Orange County's Local
Agency Formation Commission in the
first.-ever selection. of a San Clemente
official to the powerful panel.
Northrup, who had served as an
alternate member to the LAFC for the
past two years, will serve as a delegate
of the League ol California Cities.
The JO.year veteran of the San
r.Iemente Clty Council emerged vie·
torious from a field of nine councilmen
l"'ld mayors nominated. It required two
separate runoff votes by 24 voter1 to
select the winner.
Northrup won one of two Pod& up for
election -that having the longest term,
to Dec. lO, im.
Louis R. Reinhardt of Fullerton won
the other position on the LAFC which
will last until Dec. 10, 1971.
All but one member of the Mayor's
Selection Committee of 2S men was
present at the v~ in Orange Thursday
night.
1be de.legate frun the city oC Los
Alantitos was the only Ibsen~.
Northrup, in the inwrance businw;
for many years in San Clemente, bas
served one term as the dty'1 mayor.
STOCK MARKET
NEW YORK (AP) -The ·aloct market
regained all lta early strength in mod·
erate trading this afternoon, and analysts
said the long-awaited ''bottomln3" ac-
tion might be at hand. (See quotations . Pq,.Wt).
'
ORANGE courm:. ~IFdRNIA. FRIDAY, MAY 15 .. 1970 TEN CENTS
'
Eyt<~·~,_O.ver ·'Protest .Credits'
said, would be handled by~ attorneys
Sam Barnes and{Dermis Carpmter:, both
prominent in Republican .acuv:lUU,
Carpenter u chairman ol the .,porly's
state ~tral committee and nmdlnl for
Ole state senate nomination •
This morning Baham said, uwe haven't
reaUy done anything yet. 'Ibere has
just been some phone c:ommunk:ation
and I am meeting this ' altemooo -with
Barnes and Carpenter to -II llUch legal action against tbt unlvenity is -•· I
possible. It would be something like
a suit to prevent a, fire d~ent
from atriklnf, 1JUt we ·haven't yet got
down to speclflct. "'
. In any case, the legtsll.tOr said, "It
would have ·to ' be '°ery carefU!ly done.
not just a big flash In : the pan. lt
probably wou1d be dev.etoped durjn1 lhe
summer wJth a view of · establllhing
some 'sort of ' t'OntrOI "in tht future.
Nollilng much .... be _, for"the rut
of thia.qualler."
WO
The spring quarter at the un1venltle3
ends ln four wetks.
Badham said the proposed ault would
be aimed at programs such .as the one
approved by the UCI Academic Senate
for the balance of the quarter, under
which students supparttng the strikercan
take. passi~g grades for thEjir ciirrent
studies, w 1th approval of their ·pro-
fessors, or drop the course entirely.
without penalty, provkled they sigri up
for "alternate 11tudies" in sutijecta
u
THESE STEPS IN SOUTH LAG ~NA MAY LEAD TO LEGAL ENTANGLEMENT IN BEACK ACCE SS
Police to. Guard
Against Rioters
In Oceanside
Oceanside's poltce today vowed to
"show out in force" Saturday during
the scheduled large antiwar demonstra-
tions in their city, even though their
hassle over pay with the city is not
yet over.
The department's 5 a · me m be r
bargaining association, in e s s e n c e ,
delayed their threat of "appropriate. ac·
lion" at 12:01 a.m. Saturday in the
pay dispute and fonnally declared that
they would work at maximum capacity
through the day's "crisis".
Earlier this week the situation between
the Oceanside Police Association and
the city was more strained as derpands
for a 32.5 percent pay increase 'were
met with 7 .5 percent by the city council,
plus promises of further negotiations.
"In your (lhe council's) action last
Wednesday obviously you fell far short
of our demands," Association !'resident
Robert Haddix wrote the council today.
He added, however, that the group,
which had implied they were perhaps
p\aMing a walkout vote , agreed that
the "open door'' of negotiations was
a favorable factor.
"You may be assured that in the
crisis faced by the city on Saturday
your police department will be out in
force, L'.lJting all necessary action to
protect persons and property of all
citizens," he added.
P laza Art Showing
Continnes in Viejo
An art exhibit, which began today .
will Continue through Sunday-at thr1,.a
Paz Plaza.
Spon.sored jointly by 1he ptaz&'s
merchanll a5'0ciaUon and the CaJlfonRa
Outdoor Art Aioociallon. the -. ... 1 wfll'
feature painting& in the contempcrl(}',
lmpresslonisUc. rc1llstlc and abslra~
veins,
Ex1llblllng hours will be from 11 a.ml
lo 1:30 p.m.
·---•I
C.o.urity Asked to . Take
A.ccess to Beach A rea
By RICHARD P. NALL °' .. o.11Y r 11tt 11ett
Orange County government ls being
asked to take over the acces.s to several
blocks of beach in South Laguna which
recently l1as beeh converted from public
use to use of area-property·owners.
The easement In qaeslion· is a 1fl.!loot
corridor that runs frcnn· COast Highway
to the ·mean· high Ude. line, about 288
·feet oppl:!Site Ninth street.
It is a private easement on which
no ta1es have been· paid ·in at least
42 years. The property hu· never been
picked up by any ai.!Usar ·and given
a parcel number.
Jt·is owned• by the Bank .of America
and before that was owned by the Bank
o!'ltaly. However; the right "to the ease-
ment, and the decrepit cement stairway
to I.he beach, are a·right of the property
owners · in Tract· 849 which ill much
of South Laguna between Second and
Tenth Streets uphill from Coast Highway
about 600 lou.
Area residents disturbed over shen·
nanigans on the beach including drugs,
nudism, unleashed dogs and sex recently
acted to have it patrolled. on weekends
and issued car<ls to residents to admit
them. Others must leave.
The owner of the property on both
sides of I.he easement, Mrs. Maxine
Boggio, wo also owns and resides 1n
Tract 849, wants only to sell lhe 51 ,840
square feet made up ot two parcels.
They are 90-feet of frontage each,
divided by the easement, and have an
average depth of 288 feet to the mean
(S.. ACCESS, Page J)
l)ohe11y }>ark to Re-Open
With Ceremo11ie~ ~atrirday
1be long awaited reopening of Doheny
State Parlt'11 diy u11e faclltUts· wearing
a ntw, $1..S.millkm face will tile place
under sponsorship of the Capistrano
Beach ciia.ri'lber of Comnw.r'""<e Saturday
at tt a.m.
· And after the pi.rade and speeches
b'y government ofOcla11 and civtc leaders
the new. park with new grounds, con-
Cession and picnic areas -evm
modernlsUc new llfeguard towel's -will
be cpened to the public for a day1s
free use before fees are charged st.Mting ,
SuOOar. · 1 •
· Bay ,ar .. ·~f·,,Utailt1. and ICOlll J"'"P' 1.Wllf,patjfcl~l fi\ the ob«t pari!t< at
• I):,.. ~ Ille i>aftl tO tht cltdlCatlon'
.
s1le.:tJ;r1 ,:.. ,' ,, ..... ;
the Novel" i unlor RO'ro of San Clem~e Ht&h School will serve.11 color
auard ~ >r' <llhir' pa!ticiiJ,). Incl~ ,Qid6ty Su ..... ' . AltoMll.' ..... pe I • .. '"°'¥i:fir-• ' ~;· •
.
and State sen. JOiin . G. Schmlt.z (R,.. ·
T us Un); San Clemente M a 1 o. r '
Walter Evans, San Juan Capistrano
Mayor Tony Forster and Arthur Bil-.
Slf:in, pres.ident of the captstrano Beach
Community Aslociation.
. Chamber pre:sidenlS Jim Elliott of
Gaplslrano Beach, Bruce Winton of San ·
Juan an'd Hoyt Post of , Dana Point
also ~Ill Join In the procession.
Scouts, both boys and IJrll, a stuilenl
drum ~rps and the San Clemente Hlah
Triton Flag Girls also wilt \)irade.
·A· ribbon •cuttlng ceremony will be '
held at 11 :10 a.m ... befor~· the mill• ~i-1.d.e. . ·, . ,
At J l:45 the stutlent drummers 't'\11
P"llQrm. followed by lhe formal dedlca'
tlon it ll:SS a.m. 1"fbs htvoc:atlon will 1 be given by the
~evcDo.n~ld P. Banltscin, pastor <t Gloria
.Doi wlllmn Cllurch. '
..----·
regarded as "more relevant" to the
prt&eflt situation.
Other campuses of the univtrslty have
instituted variations Of Ule program,
Badham noted.
"Don't misunderstand me," he said.
j'Some of these independent atudlea are
all right. I had a kid working ln my
office to learn the system of operation
of a legislator's office and 1eUb1g college
credit for it and t think JOmtthing
(See LAWSUIT, Pace I)
Missi ssippi
Officers Say
Snipers Shot
JACKSON , Ml!S. (UPI) -Two peraom
were ,killed and 15 others injured today
by a lilarrage of bullets fired onto the
Jackson State College campus by police
who· claimed they were returning sniper
fire .
siudenls ill (he predominantly black
achool vehemently denied ~ were
any snipers.
,!'There were no shots fifed from the
dorm at all, and thia is one Ume police
can't lie and say they were shooting
into the air," declared Henry Palge,
a senior.
"There are bullet bolet in all the.
wiftdOWI lftd ..,.tbere's blood 111 over o.Jr
etliipbs, and blood a.ll over tbe dorm,"
M said.
M. B. Pierce, chie( ol detedlves, and
District Attorney JB(t Travis m°'de COO·
flicting ' reports.
"There ·was quite a bit of snlper fir-
ing," said Pierce, "and there wu a
man on the fourth Door of. the womea '1
dormJlory."
Travis said an ''eltensive ln-
vesUgation" was being conducted into
the matter, but that there was "every
indication that a large amount - a
tremendous amount of sniper fire -
both from the front and the back of
the ofUcers before any shots wue fired
by the highway patrol 'Ibey were under
eitrtme pressure."
Those killed were ldentHied as James
Earl Green and Phillip L. Gibbs, 21 .
Gibbs was Identified as a student, but
(See JACKSON, P1&e !)
Aerial Showing
-Set at El Toro
An aerial demonstration of Marine
Corps aircraft will highlight Anned
Forces Day activities at Marlne Corps
Air Station, El Toro Saturday, accordina
lo base officlal11. ~ates to the air station will open
to the public at noon, giving Orange
CounUans a first-:hand look at the Marine
Q>rps' air arsenal.
Other acUv:ltles planned fOf' the af-
ternoon open bous~ include re111arks by
the station and Third Marine Aircraft
Wing commanders and a concert
perfonned by the wing band.
The base will close at 4.:30 p.m.
Or ange Coast
Weather
Tt's slill summer on the Orange
Coast, no matter what the calendar
aaya. Saturday should push the
mercury up to 95 in mJd<ounty
and Into the middle 70's on the
coast.
INSIDE TODAY
It wa.m't an11 mililory threat ~t madio Prtndtnt Nixon tmd
troops Into Cambodia: it WCI "
cote of the time ' being right.
Poor 9.
-
•.
..
'
I DAIL V PILOT SC FrtdAJ, MOI 1.5, 1'70
Sharp Souvenir
Sea Urcliin Stings Boy~ 11
All 11·,.......id ~ Viejo boy !...,,_
eel tbe bard way that it pl.YI to believe
In signs.
'lbe younpter, on a school field trip
to lbfdY ~ tidt pools below Heisler
Park, either dkl not notice, or chose
to dlireaard 1ign1 warning against taking
speclmeo& within the M1rine Life
l>'nlene, and wound up in a doctor's
olf1ce Wednesday hiving sea urcbln
1pikea removed from biJ band.
"He apparently tried to pick a lta
urdlln out of a pool," said lifeguard
Mike Hartley. '11liJ cao be dangerous
because the spikes, though they'rt not
poilonous, tend to brtak off and keep
on wcr)iing under tbe skin. 1bey have
to bo removtd by I doctor or el!e
they can aet up lnf«lkla.."
He ll1d llw lloy'1 teacbor toot him
krmedkal·litalmen~ ·
'l'be tea urcbinl are 1mall, nMMl ,....
pie .,...1ure1, eompletely comod with
spikes, and common to the tide pools.
Hartley said the advent of wann
weather bu brought an tnva.slon of
school children frorn other areas to the
Laguna tide pool arta and guards are
having trouble convincing them that the
Marine Preserve signs mean whit they
aay.
"There are about 50 kids from a
Fountain Va]ley ischoo1 down there now,"
said the guard. ''So we have to go
down and warn them not to take
anything. They come from Pomona and
all over and just Ignore the algns about
not diJturblng the tide pool llle. Tiley
take atutt all the time."
Gloomy Statistics Belie
Nixon Economic Stand
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nlx<'1
admlntstraUon'1 effort to calm a near
paDic oo Wall Sir.et has been jarred
by some of the cloomiut economic
stallsUcs in a decade.
~ President Nixon huddled with his
economic strategists at the White House
Thursday. the government reported the
deepset ecooomlc alump lioce the 1960
Action Delayed
On Clemente
Trailer Measure
A planning commls!1on vote on San
Clemente's proposed model ordinance
governing trailer park development ia
goin( to he held Up I bil nne members of the five-man com·
m1laion decided this weet they'd rather
waJt for their absent colle1ues to join
them in a later session before the key
vOte b taken. Vacationing Ray McCa.sUn
and alllng Roy Barbarl!le were absent.
Tile pnipooed code baa undergone dral·
ting and revision for the put aeveral
weeks.
H tt wins coocurrence from the Ctty
Council the code will be the city's first
act of standards to control the fast-grow·
ing mobile home park industry.
Tile undermanned commission a!Jo
delay.cl one -. agenda item unUI
the neit meeting -a variance request
by a service station to run a vehicle
rental business.
Abstention by Qiairman George Bawles
left onJy two members able to vote
on the variance -not a quorwn.
'Itle three, h o w e v e r , unanimously a8"'Jd to grant I use permit to MJll'}'
E. Graham for the dty'1 first dog groom.
ing salon at 1911-, and 1913 S. El Camino
R<aL
At a previoos meeUng the woman
Jost a bid for the same business at
another location combined wl1h a
midence.
A algn e1ception matter involving a
San Clemente shoe store wu withdrawn
by the applicant. Roy D. T1ylor, -
had asked fur permission to build a
fr....unding sl1111 !0-oquare-!eet larger
than the city codes pennil
Donkey Basketball
Set by Viejo High
Mission Viejo High School students
and faculty members will board the:ir
mounts tonight for a fund-raising donkey
basketball game, sponsored by the
Kbool'• yu.rboolc.
1be game gets under way at 8 p.m.
and will be followed by a dance.
Admissk>n at the door is $1.~ for adulls
and students, 50 cents for chlklrtn.
DAILY PILOT
M..,..t IHC• H•tl ... • .._.
LepM IMdi ,.. ..... ,..,
C:.... "-S.. CJ ....
l)llAHGli COAST l"IJll.1$HINCI COM"Atrf
•o\iort N. Wool
"""..,,.,,, .... l'vblltlllr J,,. tt. C11rl1y
Vitt ,,_.!oMI .. CO-ti Mt,.....
ThoM•• Koo•il .. ,,.
Th11..,•1 A. Murphifte M-ei...t t:.irw
ll:lch1nl P. Ntll
5o111i. 0rlfl!l9 C-ty IGllOf
°""" C:.lt ""'91 DI ""'°' • .., Stt11tf N..,...1 ... ~, 1211 WHI h!RI ..... ~ uei-... c111 m ,_, ,,_
HIMll••f"" 9"dil: OUJ lttdl ~,,. 1M C*"*"!tt • Ntr1ll «I C.-IN ... ,
I
recession and the worst lhrte-maoth
period of inflation s.lnc:e the Korean War.
In a period of les1 than three hours,
government 1tatlstlcans revealed:
-Revised information showed the
economy's output of goods and service!
declined at an annual rate of 3 percent
in the first quarter of this year, a
s1ump much worse than Ur:: 1.5 percent
drop reported earlier on the basis of
preiinllnary figur.,, and the steepest
dlp since 1960.
-The Gross National Product (GNP)
price Index -the broadest based
meaaure ol inflaUon -increased at
an annual rate of 6.25 percent In the
JllJWU'Y-tbrough.March per Io d , the
sharpest iocreaae slnce the flrst quarter
of Ir.II.
-Industrial production, a key economic
bellwether, declined in .April for the
eighth time in the past nine month!.
1be Federal Reserve said the April Index
was 170.4 percent of the 1957-51 base
period, down 0.4 pereeot from March
and down sharply from the 191.7 peak
se< last July.
-Personal lncooie ol all Americans
increased in April because of retroactive
boosts in social security benefits and
federal pay. Without those two factors,
income would have declined for the f1nt
lime In 41> years.
-After-tu corporate profits were at
a aeuonally adjusted annual rate ol
141 billion In the first quarter of this
year, down ~ blllion from the prevloo1
quarter,
-'lbe nation'• balance or payments,
measuring bu&1ness transacU001 between
the \Jolted Stat.. IDd the mt ct the
world, lhowed 1 deficit of 11.7 billion
in the first quarter, a !harp deterioration
from the fm million surplua recorded
1n the 1u1 quarter of 111t1t.
The GNP price lnde1 was pushed up
by the rttroactJve federal pay raise.
But even excluding the effect of thl!
boost, the inflation rate for the first
quarter was 5.25 percent, the highest
of any recent quarter e1cept for the
highly inflatiooary second quarter of last
year.
Bahe Ruth Teams
To Begin Season
Opening ~day of the 1970 South Coast
Babe Ruth League baseball season ln
San Clemente will be Saturday noon
with ceremonies following the first
baseball game at Bonita Canyon Field.
Teams from Hunt's Realty and Laguna
Federal Savifig5 will square off in the
morning opener at 9:30 a.m. Judge Frank
Domenlchinl of tile South Coast Munlclpal
Court will be the guest speaker for
the dedication. He also will hand out
trophies to last year'! champiomhlp
team, the San Clemente Medk:s.
Two more games will follow the noon
ceremonies -between the Medics and
the E1i::bange Club, plus Mls:sim Pipe
Supply agaln.!it the capistrano Beach
Lions team.
Parents, friends or interested clth:erui
are all welcome to the free games
and the ceremonies.
Ten teams this year provide 120
teenage boys with baseball activities.
Games are played both at Bonita Can-
von and the Sao Clemente I.Jttle League
field.
From Page 1
LAWSUIT ...
like that is swell. l l'a just that some
of these alternates they're giving credit
for are pretty queslionable,"
Bad.ham said he wu not satisfied
with the e1plan.aUon of the UCI program
presented at the Mluion Viejo meeUng
by dean of students Robert Lawrence.
Describlllg the new p roe e du re s,
LallrT'eOCt referred to the "cgmfort and
convenience of the: students." whlch
prompt.eel Saddleback College board
pt!Sident Michael Collins to cornme.nt,
"Whal are v.·e paying for, an educ1llon,
lnsUtuUon or comfort stations." The
CTOWd, mosUy older people, applaudtd
this hellrtliy.
A UCI student told the audience thet
sludents are being denied their right
to pursue the education they see); 1t
the university and offered to give Dean
La111·rence. names of professors who are
being "prl"ssured" by other faculty mem-
ben because thty are unwllllnr to give
studenta freedom to c:~ thelt act.
tvtUe! for the rest or the quarter.
Higlvway
·L~ft r.~~·~.
~' '"··· ·l"'ll Considered ··
Le.It tum lanes are being considered
for three or Laguna's Cout Highway
JntertecUons which would at a minimum
remove 50 to 56 parkJn& ipatel.
If ~uimum lt.ngth tum pocket. were
used ilistead of mlnJ-pocketa, the tffect
would be to remove all parking in the
area between Legion Street and Moun-
tain Road.
Joseph Sweany, public works dlttctor,
said the state Division ol Higbway1 bu
recommended the turn pockets for Cleo,
'Ihalia and Crtsa Street int.enectlons
to help move traffic.
'Ille Ci"' Street !um-pocket oeemed
assured. Sweany said the dtvWon will
not put In a stop light at the huardous
and congested Intersection without the
tum pocket. He Indicated that mini-turn
pockets are 50-feet long and normal
pockets are 150 feet.
Councilman Edward Lorr 1uggested
that traffic turn right and go around
the block. He was told the street.! or
alleys oceanward ol Coast Jilghway can~
not acCilmmodate the load.
Sweany mentioned that a pedestrian
had been killed at Cleo street last year
and that Coast Highway handles 30,000
cars daily ln the summer.
Mayor !Ucbard GoldheTg suggested the
matter be sent to the planning com-
mission for ccmment and to point up
to c:ommlssioners Ulat off-street park.inc
must he provided.
From Page 1
ACCESS .•.
DAILY "ILOT 'IMr. by JK-ll"fM<l
STUDENTS, POLICE, NEWSMEN 'RAP' OUTSIDE DRAFT BOARD
In S•nta Ana, Some Milling Around et Selective S.rvice
Two Arrested iI1 Protest
Against SA Draft Board
Protsetor! of the Indochina war con-Gary Blumenrelch, 20, of Cypress, was
verged on Selective Service headquarters also arrested and booked for allegedly
in Santa Ana Thursday, staging a using obscene language in front of demoMtratlon that ended with two ar-
high Udeline. She would also like the re!b!:d and draft board business tern-women.
county to take over the easement and porarlly dlmipted. No signs or banners were used, but
fix up the dangerous atalrway that has Leaders of the group representing many of the CSF, UC Irvine and Chap.
aerved the public for years. tnree Orange County c a m p u s e s man College students wore T·shirts
participated in the demonstration which e1nblazoned with the defiant symbol of
John J. Galµ'leb: of Laruna Beach, ended without major incident and vOwed the upraised, clenched fist.
who deali in investments. woul like they would return today. The move on Selective Service head-
to purdwe the two parcell and sub-Santa Ana police said tbey would be quarters emanated from the CSF campus
divide it for homes after the euement ready. and many involved were ringleaders in
is moved 90 feet eltber to the north Half the crowd of about 75 persons recent militant activities there, observers
or the south. !urged into the headquarters at 1138 said .
"I would like to see them (the county) E. 17th St., leading to a contingent Santa Ana police cautiously notified
ta1':e over that whole bucb down there of lawmen guarding the doors until the other Orange County law agencies at
for the use of evffrf single penon,0 protest broke up in late afternoon. one point lo inquire about reinforcements
sakl Gabriell. "I am interested in bavtnr Carol Bobo, 20, of Brea, a Cal State if they were needed, but the situation
tt opened up eo that Jt 11 adequately Fullerton student, waa arrested on never got out of hand.
policed like Aliso Belch." charges of disturbing the peace and Two more proteslors were arrested
The county sees it presenUy as a booked into Orange County Jail after this morning, however, at the continuing
legal complezity that it ii trying to allegedly interfering with women person-demonstration. in front of Selective
High Court
Gets Leary
Bail Plea
From Wire Senlce1
WASHINGTON -Word from 11\e
Orange County District Attorney's Office
wu awalt.ed here today before a plea
to release Dr. Timothy Leary from prison
on baH wu submitted lo the U.S
Supreme Court.
Tbe psychedelic drug researcher ls
presently at the Calllomla Institute for
Men at Chino, but wants out on bail
while his oonvictioo In Orqe County
ts appealed.
San Francisco attorney Michael Ken-
nedy plans to submJt an appeal to C'OO-
troversial Justice William 0, Dou1las
and eventually Justice Hugo 0. Black.
"Black firmly believes ln ball in all
situations," Kennedy explained by
telephone. "and Dou1laa has gooe the
same way ."
"I'm as hopeful as I can be," he
dded.
Orange County Superior Court Judge
Byron K. McMillan refu.!ed to IJ'ln1
bail Feb. 19 when Dr. Leary was CGO·
victed of possessing marijuana In Laguna
Beach 1 lh: year! ago.
Judge McMlllan declared he wu a
pleasure-seeking, lrrespon!lble advo:cate
of the fret use of LSD, while ordering
him to spend I to 10 years in prison
for the offense.
"Dr. Leary Is devoutly religious,"
countered his attorney. "He i! also a
responsible scientist and a deeply cOn·
cerned humanitarian."
"He ba! totally deplored the use of
narcotic drugs such 111 op1ate1, heroin,
barbiturates and ampetamlnes, and con-
sistently espoused controls and even
licenses for use of psychedelic drugs,"
the lawyer said.
If Dr. Leary does win his bail plea,
he will be impri80l'led in a federal
insUtution in Texas, stemming from his
Jan. 20 marijuana transportation charge
there.
From Page 1
JACKSON •.•
onicials said they were not sure Gretn
was enrolled at the school.
The trouble started about 11 p.m. EDT
Thursday when a group of black youths
gathered near the college, located a
few blocks from downtown Jack.son, and
began hurling rocb and boWes at pass-
ing cars. It was the second consecutive
night of such violence and slate troopers
were on hand. Nailonal Guardsmen wert
standing by in annories.
Students, according to police, drove
a dump truck -which had been parked
on campus -onto the street and let
it afire. · workout without much hope of IUCCW, ~I. Service headquarters in Santa Ana. ~crordlng to John KIUefer, aide to 1 =~:,;~~~--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;~--l;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;::::;;;;;:~;~:=---Supervllor Alton E. Alien ol Laguna.
"The hangup," aaid Klllefer, "ta that
the easement i! allegedly available from
the Bank of America for SI. however,
whoever gets it bl stuck with the fact
11.et it is for the e:rclusive use of tract
849."
Killefer said, "The peoole In tract
849 8pparently are not willing to give
up exclusive rights to that area and
because of that (a private not public
e~ent), the county cannot spend even
one dollar.
.. "We are researching the Jaw at this
point and as it stands today 100 percent
of the property owners must approve
(the ea5ement becoming public:). They
own the rights although the underlying
fee belongs to the Bank of America.
We can't condemn the right! ... not
without a heck of a batUe."
DRAPERY
Killefer said that some of the same
property owners who Intend to keep
the beach semi-pri vate are the same
onts that have fought the county over
~elt Creek having public access.
Klllefer also said that taking the beach
Area for public use -the area above
mean high Ude -could result In "90me
p,.,.tty awful severance damages."
He said Supl!n'ilor Allen has not only
the county coumel working on the mat·
ters but the real property services ~
Tlie. KHlefer said it might be pouible
eventually to work out some joint use
of the beach so that the county main·
ta.ins it.
The property around the easement wa!
owned by the late George Clark, an
P'tomey, who acquired it in the 1930s.
One of the properties has a house on
it. The other is undeveloped. J.irs. Bofl:'l'.IO
Inherited it from Clark when be died
la-'!t year.
She ha1 it listed with a Re.allor for
sa'e and has for several month!. The
asking price is: reportedly about $280,000.
"I think the county should take the
resRQnsibllity for those !lairs. They're
a menace to the public." she said .
Gabriel too would like the county to
take over the stairway ea!ement and
repair the broken concrete steps, main·
taln the area and provide a lifeguard
service.
Some have called the 1 t a t r w a y
''Thou.sand Steps" but someone wrote
there once that It only had 251. The
property on either .akle of the stairway
w1.1 postld as private but Clark used
to let the public use it 11 loni as
!here WU dO drink and bthavk:lr WIS
nonnll.
Area residents have anted up a fund
to have the area petrolled to eliminate
misbe.havlor that wu goln1 on. Patrolling
ls now done on weekend! but in mid.June
It wlll be done on a f\lll-Ume l>Uls
and those without cards provtns area
re~idence will be asktd to leave.
On motion of Supervl!or Ailtn on Dec.
10. the question of easl?mtnt &cqulsltlon
was referred by county !Upervisor1 to
county collf\.!el, a first step In I.ht puule
ol the 'l'houMnd Steps Iowan! the public'•
tidelands. ,
SALE!
CUSTOM MADE WITH A WIDE SELECTION OF
QUALITY INTERIOR DESIGN FABRICS. AS MUCH
AS 40 % OFF ON EXCELLENT DESIGN FABRICS.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON DREXEL -HERITAGE
INTERIORS NEWPORT BEACH
l727 Wetkllff Dr ~42-2050 Prof•sslonal Interior LAGUNA BEACH
OPEN FRIDAY.,'TIL 9 011;gn•rt Anilabl ....... 10 345 North Co11t Hwy. 494-4551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 P~e,,. fell "'" Melt ef o,.... C•v11ty 140·1Z6J
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Today's Fl••I San Cle111enie
Capistrano EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 63 , NO. 116, ~ SECTIONS, 42 PAGES
Citizens' Suit
Plans fOf' a possible taxpayers• suit
to compel California's state colleges and
universities to "do what they are charged
with doing under rules set up by the
Regents" are still in a "very nebulous
di!cussion st.ate," Assemblyman Robert
Badham (R-Newport Beach) said today.
Baabam broached the subject of the
8uit during a meeting ln Mission Viejo
Thursday night. called by lb< Young
Republican Club to protest the UC
Irvine plan to perm.it atrl.ke supporters
to drop rerular counes and receive
credit for "alternate ltudies" covering
a variety ~ proteo\.related subjects.
He told a cheering audience of 300
at O'Neill Elem<ntary Schoot that he
planned to prepare such I suit Ind
probably would be joined by o!ber slate
legislators includinc Senatcw J o b n
Schmitz (R-TUstln}, Ass em b I y man
-Burke <IHllmllnCton Beach) and A.uemblyman John Brigp-(R.Fullerloo).
LepJ procodureo f« lb< sui~.Bldbam
Hot Weekend
Record Warmth for County
Record-breaking temperatures were predicted for Orange County thi&
weekend as patches of fog threatened to dampen Orange Coast beaches.
The U.S. Weather Bureau today predicted sunny wann weather with a
high of 96 degrees and lows in the &O's for Orange Coonty.
AJ Wand temperatures threaten to hit the 100 degree 1Dll'k prospective
beachgoers are faced with predicted patch! ol fog along tbt c:out, cuttint
visibility down to one-quarter of a mile.
Orange County Harbor Department spokesman in Newport Beach said
light winds were expected with the fog which blanketed Laguna Beach and
Newport early today. Water temperature wa1 set at a w·arm II degrees.
The record high for May 15 was set in 1967 at 102 degrees, while the
record for May 16., 96 degrees, has stood since-ln:J. Weatbermen uid the long~
standing record would probably be broken. ·
Meanwhile, rising temperatures, bothersome 1mog and strong winds that
fanned brush fires continued to plague the inland areu of Southern Ca!Homia
today, with no relief in sight.
Terilpe.ratures headed higher than JOO degrees in some inland areas and
were in the Ill's in the mountains. The e.stimated b,i&b for downtown Loa An-
geles was 95 for today and Saturday. · .~
Brush fires bit 1t least four counties Thursday when the Los Angeles
1'Jnpuature peaked al • d-.
A yellow pall et ey .. lrrttalinl •IDOf cut •lslbllil,}' la moll et the basin
sharply in one ol the heaviest attaeks of the year.
The bot Santa Ana wind gustl from the desert 1ave little relief from
the smog while bringing high tempe:ratwes.
Accused SA Abortionist •
Vows to Continue Clinic
Dr. Jobi Shriver Gwynne, accused Los
Angeles abortionist, will be arraigned
in Central Orange County Municipal
Court at 10 a.m. Monday on two counts o£
committing illegal abortiona ln Santa
Ana.
The surgeon, arrested th r e e times
previous1y in his highly·publicized West
Los Angeles clinic for the same offense,
has vowed to continue hi1 activities ia
his new clinic at 1856 W. 17th St.
,Santa Ana police said today they are
equally determined to halt his operaton.
Dr. Gwynne was first arrested Wednes·
day aftenloon by officers who charge
they saw him performing an abortion
o• 1 17-year-old Wisconsin girl. He bad
allegedly completed an aborUon on
another out-Of.town woman and a third
woman from Houston, Te:1.1 was waiting
her tun.
Santa Ana Police Sgt. Michael Mitchell
obtained a complaint late Thursday on
the two couJ1ts of illegal abortioos. Dr.
Gwynne had been freed Thursday on
hl1 own recognizance after an ap-
pearance before Muaicipal Judge Philip
Schwab.
The doctor, a native of ·Garden Grove,
where bis parents still live, bQ said
Meet County
Candidates
Wondering about who to vote
for!
The DAILY Pnm, ln cooper a·
Uoa with the Orange COast League
ot women Voters, today of.fen
some WormaUon to help votera
ma'ie intelligent se1ectlons when
they cast ballots for Orange Coonty
Supervisors, Orange County School
Board trustee, illld Orange County
Superintendent of Schools.
Biographies and viewpoints of the
candidates are published today on
page 3 With supervisorial ca~
dates presented across the top o(
the page. Two candidates failed to
respond or provide information In
the school board race. They are
Roger c. Anderson, and Reg Wood.
Robert D. Peterson did not resPond
in the county superintendent or
schools race.
' <;> • I
I
he is determined to continue the illegal
operatioas: a.s long as possible. He is
deliberately challenging the state's ex~
isling abortion law u "bypocriUcal."
He bu been lndlct'11 by lb< Los
Angeles Cowlty Grand Jury on five
oounts of perform.log abortions, as the
result d previous raids on his West
Los Angeles clink:.
Clemente Aide
Wins Contested
LAFC Election
San Clemente city councilman and
former mayor Stanley Northrup woo •
hotly contested election Thursday to a
two-year-post on Or1nge County's Local
Agency Fonnatlon Commission in the
first-ever selection of a San Clemente
ofnclal to the powerful panel.
Northrup. who had .aerved as an
alternate member to the LA.Fe for the
past two years, will serve as a delegate
of the League of California Cities.
The 10..year veteran of the San
Clemente City CouncU emerged vic-
torious from a fiekl m nine councilmen ,.,d mayon nomlruited. It required two
separate runoff votes by 2f voters to
select the winner.
Northrup won one of two pasts up for
election -thlt havln( the longest term, to Dec. 10, 1m.
Looi> R. Reinhardt of Fullerton won
lb< other position on lb< LAFC which
will last unW Dee. 10, 1'71.
AH •oot one member of the Mayor's
Seleetlon Committee d 25 men wtu
pre91ent at the vot1n1 in <>ranee 'Ibunday
nlghL
The delegal.t from lb< city of Loo
AlamJtoa wat the onlr absentee.
Northrup, in the msurance busineaii rot many years In San Clemente, hu
served one term u the city's mayor.
STOf;K MARKET
NEW YORK (AP) -The aloct market
regained all it& early strength in mod·
er.ate trading lhl1 afternoon. and analysb
.said the lona:-awalted "bottoming" ac-
lion might be 1t hllld. (See quotaOon1,
Paaea »al).
ORANGE C01,INTY. CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAi\' ·rs, '.1970 TEN CENTS
Eyed Over 'Protest Credits'
sald, woold be -led by attorneys
Sam Barnes and ll<ilnla CarpcotOI', bolh
prominent in Republican actlvlUes ,
C&rpenter u chairman Of the party's
slate central committee and running tor
lhe stale senate Domination.
This morning Baham said, "We haven't
really done aoythlng . yeL '11ler< ha.<
just been scme ~ communicaUoo
and I am meellng thi.s alt=oon with
Barnes and Carpenter to -if such
legal llClion against lb< unlvenlty is
• I .
possible. It would be sometl)Jng lite
a suit to prevent a fire departmtnt
from striking, but we . haven't yet got
down to s~lflcs. "'
In any case, the legislator said, "lt
\•;ooJd have to be very carefully done,
oot just a ·big flash In the pan. ll
probably would be developed during lb<
summer wjth a view Of · establi.shing
some sort of c:ontrol in the future.
Nothing much can be done for the rest
of this quarter."
WO
·The spring quarter at the unlvenlUes
ends in four weeks.
Badham said the proposed sult Would
be aimed at programs such u the one
approved by the UCI Academic Senate
for the balance of the quarter, under
whlch students supporting the strike c~
take passing grades for their current
studies, w i th approval of their pro-
£essors, or drop the course entirely,
wllhout penalty, provided they sign up
for "alternate studies" in subjecU
u
• DAILY ,lt.OT11t•ff 'lit•
THESE STEPS IN SOUTH l./tGl,IN:A MAY LEAD· TO L·EGAL ENTANQLEMENT ·IN BEACH ACCESS . .
Police to Guard
Against Rioters
In Oceanside
County A,sked to Take
Access to Beach Area
Oceanside':p police today vowed to
"show out in force" Saturday during
the scheduled large antiwar demonstra·
lions in their city, even though Lheir
hassle over pay with the city is not
yet over. ,
11Je department's SB· member
bargaining association, in es s e n c e ,
delayed their threat of "appro~!"iate ac·
tion" at 12:01 a.m. Salurday in the
pay dispute and formally declared thal
they would \\-Wk at maximum capacity
through the day's "crisis".
Earlier this week lbe si tuation between
the Oceanside Police Association and
the city was more strained as demands
for a 32.5 percent pay increase wer.e
mel with 7.5 percent by the city council,
plus promises of further negotiations.
By RICHARD P. NALL
Df tM O.Hy P'llet ltelt
Orange (9unty government is being
asked to take over the access to several
blocks of beach in South Laguna which
r"ecenlly has been converted from publi c
use to use of area property owners.
.The easeme:nt in question is a IO.foot
corridor that runs from Coast Highway
to the mean 'hip tide line, abOut 288
feet opposite Ninth Street.
It is a private easement on which
nO ta1es have been paid in at leasl
42 years. The property has never been
Picked up by any IS!e590r, and given
a parcel number.
It is owned by the Bank of AJl}erlca
<ind before th'at was owned by the Bank
of J~y. However, the rla:bt to the ease-
mf;nt, .and the decrepit cement stairway
to the beach,-are a right of the property
Qwners in Tract 849 which is much
of South Laguna between Second and
Tenth Streets uphill from Coast Highway
abol.lt 600 lots.
· Area residents disturbed over shtn·
nanigans on the beach including drugs,
nudism, unleashed dogs and sex recently
acted to have it patroUed on weekend!
and issued cards to residents to admit
them. Others must leave.
The owner of the property on both
sides of the easement, Mrs. Maxine
Boggio, wo also owns and resides in
Tract 849, wants only to :sell the 51,840
squa re feet made up of two parcels.
'111ey are 90-feet of frontage · el\Ch,
divided by the easement. and have an
average' depth of 288 feet to the mean
(Set ACCESS, Page %) '
"In your (the council's) action 13:st
Wedoeaday obvious ly you rel! far short
of our demands ," Association President
Robert Haddlx wrote the council today.
He added, however, that the group,
which had implled they were perhaps
planning a walkout vote, agreed that
the "open door" of negotiations was
a favorable factor,
~oheny Park to Re-Open .
With .Ceremo11iesSaturday
'"You may . be aasured that In ·the
cri1ls faced by the city on Saturday
your police department will ~ out in
force, taking all necessary action to
protect persons a.nd property of -all
citizens,'' he added.
Plaza Art Showing
Continues in Viejo
' The loog awaited reopeMIDg of Doheny
, State Park'• day use:, facWUes wearing
a new, $1.3-mJlllon face will ta'ie -ptace
under sponsonh1p of the Capistrano
Beach Clamber of c.ommerce Saturday
at 11 a.ui.
And . alter the pwlde a.nd spee<::hes
by goverrunent officlal1 and clvlc leaders
tt.e new park wbh new V,<iunds, con..
cession and picnic arus -even
modernlsUc new 11.(eguard toweri -will
&e opened tO lhe public for a ·day'•
An art exhibit, which bega.n to4a1. 1 frff',Ute befott fees are charged.startlng
will -Utrougb SIUldsy at (h.' La ' SUnday; , •
Paz Plua. r • Bay i rea dignitaries and scout groups
Spon90rtd jolnOy by tll< pllua'• 1 'l"U! ·(>llllcipate In the 1ho1t.parade at
mercllantl associaOon and the California U:U through the part ID Ibo dedication
Outdoor Art A!sociaUon, the event wlU site.·
feature paintings in the contemporary, The: Naval J\1nJor ROTC of San
imprea.ion1stic, realistic and abstr1ct Ci$nJ.ente Hla:h School will serve. as color
\'cins. ' guard.
ExhlbiUng houri will be from 10 a.m. Other parUclpants !Delude County
to 1:30 p.m. Supervllor1 Obalnnao AllA1cl E. Allen
~·it ' '~ 11 "1'
• ··I~ -~
and State Sen. John .G. Schmlll (R·.
'fu.stln); San Clemente May.or
Walt.er Evans, San Juan Capistrano
Mayor Tony Forster and Arthur BU·
stein, president of the Capistrano Beach'
c.ommunity AssoclaUon.
Chamber presidents Jlm Elliott ' o(1
Capistrano Beach, Bruce Wlnton of San .
Juan and Hoyt Post of Dana Point
also will join In the proetsslon. •
scouts, bqth boys and girls,.. 1 student
drum corps and the San Clemente Hrgh.
Triton ·Flal Girls alao will parade.
A ribbon cutUng ceremony will be
held at 11 :10 a.m., before the anWl
parade. ·
At 11 :45 · the student drummers will
P"rform, followed by the formal dedk:t-
tion at 11:55 a.m.
The h1vocatlon will be given by the
Rev. Donald P. Banboo, p11tor ol Gloria
Del LuUtuan Obl(l'cb.
regarded aa "more relevant" to the
prese1t 11tuaU01.
Other campuses of the university b.ave
instituted variations of · the program,
Badham noted.
"Don't mlaundersland me," he said.
"Some of these independent studies are
all rigbL I had a tld working In m1
office to le:Un the 1Yslem of opeuUon
or a legislator'• oflk:e and getliq colle1e
credit fa< it ud f thlnt IODlelhlnl
(See LAWSUIT, P11e I)
Mississippi
Officers Say
Snipers Shot
JACKSON, Miss. (UPI) -Two pe!'IOlll
were killed and 15 othen: Injured today
by .~barrage of bu!leta fired onto the
Jackson State College campus by police
who claimed they were retumiog sniper
fire.
Students at the predominanUy black
school vehemently denied there were
any snipers.
••There were ' no shots fired ·from the
dorm at all, and thls is o~ time pollce
can't .lie an~ say they were abOotins ~-~ air," d~ JWoSy ,Plig<,
a~.
"There are bullet holea m an the
windows and 1.bere'a blood all over our
campus, and blood a)J Oller the dorm,•
ba said.
M. B. Pierce, chief of detective., and
District Attorney J ack: Travis made CCII·
flicti,ng reports.
"There . was quite a bit of sniper fir·
Ing," said Pierce, "and ~re ._as 1
man on. the fourth· fioet of the women'•
dormitory."
Travis said an 1 'e:1tenslve in-
vestigation" was being conducted .into
the matter, but that there wu "every
indication that a large ·amOWlt - a
tremendous amount• of sniper fire -
both from the front and the .bad:: of
the 'officers before ·any shots were fired
by the highway patrol. Tbty were under
extreme pressure."
Those killed were Identified u James
Earl Gretn and Phillip ·L. Gibbs, 21 .
Gibbs was identified u a student, but
(See JACKSON, Page I)
.
Ae1ial Showing
Set at El Toro
An aerial demonstraUon of Martne
Corps aircraR will highlight Anned
Forces . Day acUvlUes at Marine Corps
Air Station, El Toro Saturdly, accordinc
to base officials.
Gates to the air staUon wlB open
to the public at noon, giving Orange
Countians a first~ loot at the Marini
Corps' air araenal.
Other actlvJtle1 planned for the af·
ternoon open hoose Include remarks b&..
the station and 'Iblrd Marine Aircralt'
Wing commanders and a concert
performed by lb< wing band.
The bue will close at 4::30 p.m.
Oruge Coast
We•llter
It's sUll summer on tbe Orange
Coast, no mauer what the calendar
says. S1turday should puah th•
mercury up to t5 in m.id«ll.lllty
and. into the middle 70's on tht
coaat.
INSWE TODAY
It u.wn't onu milffarv threat
thot made Pre1ide11t Nf.zon •end
troop• into Cambodia; it wa.r a
case of the time bdngi rloht.
Paoe 9.
j ••
t DAll.V PllOT SC Fridrl, M11 15, 1970
Sharp Souvenir
Sea Urchin Stings Boy, 11
A1t 11·~-Vle~'boy 1 ......
Id the hanl Wiil' that lt pay1 to believe
In ••
'!be ,fO\lllClller, on 1 achoo! field trip
to ~ ·\ht tide pools below Heisler
Park, .tlher dkt not notice, or chose
to disregard algns warning against tak.lng
jJpedmehl within the Marine Life
Preltrvt, ad wound up in a doctor's
Cllllce W-y havtna oe1 urchin
1pikt1 removed from his hand.
••tte ..,.,.rtntly tried to pick a sea
urc:hln out of a pool," said lifeguard
Mite Hartley. '"IbiJ can be dangeroos
becl111e the spikes, thoogb they're not po-. tend lo break off and keep
on Wt'll'king under the skin. 'Ibey have
to be nmoved by a doctor or e.IJe
they CID let up inffJCtton."
He llld 11>1 boy'1 ~ 1ooll 111111
f0< medlcll lrutmlal.
Tbe -m<hlDI are llDlll, round pur. pie crt.atures, completely covertd with
spikes, and common to the tlde poola:.
HarUey said the advent of warm
weather haa brought an Invasion of
school children from other areas to the
Laguna tJde pool area and guards are
having trouble convincing them that the
Marine Preserve s1gns mean what they
18y.
"There art about 50 kids from a
Fountain Valley school down there now,"
said the guard. "So we have to go
down and warn them not tn take
anything. They come from Pomon1 aod
aU over and jUBt Ignore the signs about
not disturbing the tide pool life. Tbey
t&ke stuff all the Ume."
Gloomy Statistics .Belie
Nixon Econo1nic Stand
WASHINGTON (Ul'I) -The NiJon
admbdstr1Uon11 effort to calm a nur
paolc .., Wall Street 1111 been jarred
by some o« the aloomieat economic
autistics In a decade.
AJ President Nl:1on huddled w:ith his
economic strategists at the White House
Thursday, the covernment reported the
detpoet -c •lump olnce Ibo lllO
Action Delayed
On Clemente
Trail.er Measure
A planning commlalon vote on San
Clemente'• proposed model ordinance
govtrnlDa triller part development Is
golni to be beld up a bll
'lbree memben of the fiveman com-
millkn dedded dUa week they'd rather
wait for their abJeflt colleauea to join
them in a later session before the key
vote 11 taken. VaCltionlll(I Ray McCulln
and lillDg Roy Barbarlne were absent.
The propoeed code has undergone draf.
t1ng aod nvWon for the past 1everal weeu.
If K winl concurrence from the City
Councll the code wW be the dty'• f~st
act <t llandanla to control Ille fut-grow·
ing mobile borne part indumy.
'!be undemumned commllalon also
delayed one other qend1 Item until
the nut meeting -a variance request
by a· lerVice Ution to nm 1 vehicle
rtnta1 bui.lnen.
Abltentlon by Otalrm111 George Bowles
Jert only two members able to vote
on the variance -not a quorum.
'Ibe three, h o w e v e r , unanimously
a,,.ed lo srant I tue permit to Muy
E. Graham for the city's lint dog groom •.
ill(! lllon 1t 1111 llld' 191.! S. El Clllllno
R<ll.
At I prevloul meolln( Ute wmwi
loot I bid for the ume 1Jualnea It
another locatklo cmnbtDed with a
residence.
A sign nceptlon m1tt.r lnvoMll(I a
San Clemente shoe ltore wu wttbdr1wn
by the appllcanl Roy D. Taylar, wl1o
had uked for permia.ion to bulJd •
fr<e.stlndlng sign 8kjuitt-leet larger
thin Ille city codeo perm!L
Donkey Basketball
Set by ViejoHigh
Mission Viejo High School lludenll
and faculty members will board their
mountl tonight. for a fund-raising donkey
buketball game, gponl!Ol'ed by the
IChOOl'I yearbook.
Tbe game 1ets under way at I p.m.
and will be followed by a dance.
AdmlJlion at the door is $1.25 for adult!
and atudenll, SO cents foc children.
DAILY PILOT
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recession and the worst three-month
period of inflaUon 11Dct the Korean War.
In a period of leis than three hours,
government lll.Ustie1m revealed :
-Revised infonnaUon showed the
erooomy's output of goods and services
declined at an annual rate of 3 percent
in the first quarter of this year, a
slump much worse than th~ 1.5 percent
drop reported earlier on the balls of
prelimMary figures, and the steepest .
dip since lteO.
-The Grosa N1tiooal Product (GNP)
price Index -the broadest bued
mwure of infllUon -tncreued at
an IDDUll rate of S.25 percent iD the
January-througb-MlfCh per lo d , the
sharpest tocrease 11.nce the first quarter
of 1951.
-IndwtrW. production, a key economic
bellfttber, declined Jn April for the
eighth time In the put Dine months.
The Federll llelerve llld the April index
wu 170.4 percent of the 1957-59 bue
period, down O.f pen:ent lmn March
and down eharply from Ute t•.7 peak
lel laat July.
-Peraonll Income ol all Amertcana
Increased in .April because of retroactive
booell In IOCi&I oecurtty benefits l!1d
Iederll pay. Without thoot two facton,
inccme would hive declined for the tint
time In f\I yura.
-After-tu corporate proflt.s were at
a aeuonally adjutted annual rate of
$41 bWlon In Ibo llrat quarter <t this
year, down p bllllon from the prevtoua
quarter.
-'Ibe nation's balance of paymenll,
measuring buslnw tranaadlonl betw<tn
the United States and the mt <t the
world, showed ii defklt of ,1.7 billion
in the flnt quarter, a lharp deterloraUon
from the $532 mllllon aurplu1 recorded
In the Lut quarter ol 1111111.
Tbe GNP prlct Index w11 pwbed up
by the retroactive federal pay raise.
But even ei:cludlng the effect of this
boost, the tnnation rite for the flrst
quarter was 5.25 percent, the highest
of any recent quarter e1cept for the
highly inflationary second quarter of last
year.
Babe Ruth Teams
To Begin Season
Opening day of the 1970 South Coa•t
Babe Ruth League baseball seuon ln
San Clemente will be Saturday noon
with · ceremonies following the first
baseball game at Bonita Canyon Field.
Teams from Htmt'1 Realty and Laguna
Federal Savings will square off in the
morning oi>ener at 9:30 a.m. Judge Frank
Domenlchlnl of Ille South Coast Municipal
Court wW be the guest speaker for
the dedication . He also will hand out
trophies to last year's championship
team, the San Clemente Medlcs.
Two more games will follow the noon
ceremonies -between the Medics and
the Exchange Club, plus Mhllion P1pe
Supply agalnat the C.pistrano Beach
Lions team.
Pa.rents, friends or interested cltimu
are all welcome to the free games
and the ceremonies.
Ten teams this year provide 120
teenage boys with baseball activlUes.
Games are played both at Bonita Can-
yon and lhe Sin Clemente Uttle Leasue
field.
LAWSUIT ...
like that is awell. It'• Just that some
o! these altematu they're living credit
for are pretty queatloaable."
Badbam said he WIS not 1aUlfltd
wtlh the eiplanaUon or the "UCl program
presented at the ~tlalon Vle}o metilnl
by dean of students Robert LI~.
OeKTlbln& the new procedure a,
Lawrence relerrtd to the "comfort and
convenience of the student&," which
prompted Saddleback Coll•I• boanl
presidttit Michael Cotllna to comment,
"What art we pQln, for , an educatkln,
truUtulion or comfort 1tatlons.11 The
rrowd, mostly older people, applauded
th!• h .. rtlly,
A UCI student told the audience that
student& are being denied their rl1ht
to pursue the educaUon they seek 1t
!he university And offt1red to Rive Dean
Lawrence namea or profuaora who att
being "prwured" by other faculty mom-
beri~ bccAuse they art unwUltnl( to give
$tudenl! freedom to choose their Jcl-
ivllies for the: rest ol the (uarter.
Highway
Left Turns
Conswered
•
Left tum lanes are being considered
for three or Laguna's Coast Highway
lntenections which would at a minimum
remove 50 to 56 parkfnl IJ>ICH.
If muimum length tum pocket.! were
used Instead of mini-pockets, the effect
woold be to remove all parking ln the
area between Legion Street and Moun-
tain Road.
Jooepll s ... any, public woru director,
!ald the slate Division of ffi&hway1 has
recommended the turn pockets for Cleo,
"nlalia and Cress Street intf!rsectlons
to help move traffic.
The Cleo Street lumpocket oeemed
assured. Sweany 11ld the dlvllkln w1U
not put In a atop light 1t the hazardou•
and congested intersection without the
turn pocket. He indicated that mini-tum
pockets are SO-feet long and normal
pockets are 150 feet
Councilman Edward Lorr augf!lted.
that traffic tarn right and go around
the block. He wu told the streets or
alleys ocean.ward. of Coast Highway can-
not accommodate the load.
Swf!any mentioned that a pedestrian
had been killed at Cleo street last year
and that Coast Highway handles )1),000
cars daily in the rummer.
Mayor Richard Goldbera 11111eottd the
matter be eent to the planning com-
mlasion for comment and to Point up
to cmunlssto!ien l!ial <tf-tlrfft parking
must be provided.
bom P•e l
ACCESS ••.
•
•r. --•
DA1l'I PILOT P,,.11 llY JICll enbK-
STUDENTS, POLICE , NEWSMEN 'RAP' OUTSIDE DRAFT BOARD
In Santa Ana, Some Milling Around at Selective Service •
Two Arrested i11 P1·otest
Against SA D1·aft Board
Protaetors of the Indochina war con-Gary Blumenrelch, 20, of Cypress, was
verged on SelecUve Servi~ headquarters also arrested and booked !or allegedly
In Santa Ana Thur9day, staging a In f f demoiutraUon that ended with two ar· using obscene lllrlguage ront o
hJgh tideline. She would a1Jo Uke the re!~ and draft board business tern-women.
county to take over the euement and porarily disrupted. No signs or banners were used, but
fix up tbe dangerous 1tal.rw1y that bu Leaders ol. the group representing many of the CSF, UC Irvine and Chap.
terved tbe: public for yun. three Orange County c imp use s man College students wore T-shirts
John J, Gabriell ol Lalfl•n• Bach, partlciP1ted in the demonstration which e1nblazoned with the df:fiant symbol of
•--ended without major Incident and vowed the upraised, clenched fist.
who deals In invatmenti, wcul Uke they would return today. The move oh Selective Service head-
to purdwe the two pereell and mb-Santa Ana police said they would be quarte rs emanated from the CSF campus
divide it for homea after the eaement ready. and many Involved were ringleaders in
ii moved IO feet either to the north Hall the crowd of about 75 persons recent militant activ:ities there, observers
or the IOl.rtb. surged into the headquartu's at 1138 said.
"I would like to lee them (the county) E. 17th St., lea<Kng to a contingent Santa Ana police cautiously notified
take over that whole beach down there of. lawmen guarding the doors until the other Orange County law agencies at
fCC' the Ute of rlfll7 atqle pstOn,H protest broke up in late aftenloon. one point to inquire about reinforcements
a.kl Gabriela. *'I Im iDterelted 1n havinf Carol Bobo, 20, ~ Brea, a Cal State if they were needed, but the situatio n
it opened up IO that tt la adtqU1tely Fullerton student, was arrested on never got out of hand.
policed like Albo Belch." charges of disturbini the peace and Two more protestors were arrested
The county Mel it pre1111Uy 11 a booked Into Orange County Jail after this morning, however, at the continuing
teial complexity that It la trying to 11legedly lnterferlng with women person-demon strations in fron t of Selective
-.......... -------
High Court
Gets Leary
Bail Plea
From Wire Services
W ASHJNGTON -Word from the
Orange County District Attorney'• Office
was awaited here today before a plea
to release Dr. Timothy Leary from pri!Ofl
on ball was submitted to the U.S
Supreme Court.
'lbe psychedelic drug researcher Is
presently at the Call!ornla Institute for
Men at 'Otlno, but wants out on ba.il
while his cmvkUon in Orange County
is appealed.
San Francbco attorney Michael Ken-
nedy plans to submit an appeal to con-
trover!i.al Justice William 0. Douglas
and eventually Jmtlce Hueo 0. Black.
· "Black firmly believes In ball in all
situaUon.s," Kennedy explaJned b y
telephone, "and Douglas ha.s iOOf! the
same way."
"I'm as hopeful as I can be," he
dded.
Orange County Superior. Court Judge
Byron K. McMillan refused to grant
ball Feb. 19 when Dr. Leary was con-
victed of possessing marijuana In Laguna
Beach 1 ~ year! ago .
Judge McMillan declared he was a
pleasure-seeking, irrespooslble advocate
of the free use of LSD, while ordering
him to spend 1 to 10 years in prison
for the offense.
"Dr. Leary is devoutly religious,''
countered hJs attorney. "He i1 allo a
responsible scientist and a deeyly ~
cerned humanitarian."
"He bas totally deplored. the use of
narcotic drugs such a1 opjatea, heroin,
barbiturates and ampetam1nes, and con.
sistently espoused controls and even
licenses for use 0£ psychedelic drugs,"
the lawyer 1ald.
11 Dr. Leary does win his bail plf!a,
he will be imprisoned in a federal
institution in Texas, sUmmlng from his
Jan. 20 marijuana transportation charge
there.
JACKSON .••
officials said they were not sure Green
was enrolled at the school.
The trouble started about 11 p.m. EDT
Thursday when a group of black youths
gathered near tht college, located 1
few blocks from downtown Jacbon, and
began hurling rocks and bottles at pass-
ing cars. It was the second consecutive
nlght of such violence and state troopers
were on hand. National Guardsmen were
5tanding by in armories.
Students, according to police, drove
a dump truck -which had been parked
on campus -onto the street and aet
W<rkout without much hope of IUccea, nel. Service headquarters in San ta Ana.
occordlnl to Jolin Kllleler, lldt to 1·--:;~~---;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m~;;;;;;~--;;;;:;:;;;;;;;:::::.;;;;;;:;;;;;;~:~--s._.i.or Alton E. Allen <t Lapn1.
"'Ibe hangup," said KllJefer, 11!1 that ~-
It afire. ·
the easement 11 1Degedly available from
the Bank of Amerlca for $1. however,
whoever gets it is stuck with the fact
•'-11.t It is for the exclu.!lve use of tract
849."
Killefer said, "The peoole in tract
849 apparently are not willing to give
up excJ1J!;lve rilhts to that area and
because ot that (a pivate not public
easement), the county cannot spend even
one dollar.
"We are researching the law at this
point 1nd as it It.ands today 100 percent
of the property ownen must approve
(the easement becoming pubJic). They
own the rights although the underl ying
ff!e belongs to the Bank of America.
We can't condemn the: rlahl!, .. not
without a heck ri 1 battle."
KJ!le!er · said that somt of the same
property owners who Intend to keep
the beach semi-private are the same
ones that have fought the county over
~P1t Creek having pobtic access.
Kllle!tl" alao llld that !lldn1 the beach
Rrea for public uae -the arta above
meln high tide -could result In "eome
pl"'tty awful severance damages."
He said Supervisor ADen hu not only
the county counael working en the mat-
'"" but the real property ....,,le., peo-nle. K111efer !ald It might be possible
eventually to work out aome Joint use
of the beach so that the county main·
t1lns tt. .
'Ibe property am.ind the euement was
owned by the late George Clark, an
.~•torney, who acquired It in the 1930s.
One of the properties has a house on
Jt. The other 11 undeveloped. Mr1. &o,°l(lo
lnherilMll' It from Clark wtt.n he dlld
]aJ;t year.
She has tt list.eel with a Realtor for
sa•e and has for !M!vtral months. 'nte
asking price is reportedly •bout $280,000.
"! think the county -Id Ilk• the
respon!Jblllty for those !lairs. They're
a mens~ to -the public.'' she said .
Gabriel too would like th• county to
take over the stairway eastment and
repair the broken concrete llepl, main-
tain the area and provide a Wtiuard
service.
Some hive cantd the 1 t a I r w a y
"Thousand Step1" but somtone wrote
tht<e once that It only had m. The
property on either side of the stairway
was posted u private but Clark u!led
to let the public UM It II lona IS
the re w11 no drink and behavior •••
nonn1l.
Area rts1denll have anled up 1 fund
to have the area patroUed to eliminate
,...1crbeh1vtor that Wll 10ln1 on. Palrnlllng
is now done on weekend• but In mid.June
ft wlll be done oa • full-time b11l1
and those without cards provlna: aru
. ·-'-lence will be asked to ltavt.
On moUon of Supervilor Allen M Dec.
10. the questlon of easement acqulalUon
was referred by county tupervlaor1 to
r ·1111ty coumel, a nrst step tn the puule
of the Thousand Sttps toward the publlc"•
t '~'land.s.
" " .
...
DRAPERY
•
SALE!
CUSTOM MADE WITH A WIDE SELECTION OF
QUALl!Y INTERIOR DESIGN FABRICS. AS MUCH
AS 40 1. OFF ON EXCELLENT DESIGN FABRICS.
•
Teke edventeqe of en opportun't t k d t' · it's • new home th et needs dre' Y 0 m~ 't res, ic. ievin9s on cu.item me de quelity dreperie1. Whether
___ _;_;:_::::::~~.;;::P~''.'.'9!__:0'..' _!:'.fU~ rep •c1n9 e worn peer, stop in end check the aev in91.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
7ed 1111111~"
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 WHtdlll O,., 642-1050
OPEN ,RIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
P I I 1 I LAGUNA BEACH ro e11 on• Inter or 345 North Coast H-. 494 ... , O•slgntr• Av1ll1t l._AID .. , ""9;J;J OPEN F~IDAY 'TIL 9 ,lion, J,11 ,,... M•tt er °'-"•• C11111ty 140•l!ll
I
I
I
..
5 0 .!Illes Added
,Bermitda Racirig
:.Course Changed
The Bermuda T a c e com-
mittee of the Cruising Club
of America has aMounced a
change lrom the previously
announced race course which
Wl!S to have taken the fleet
iround Nantucket Li 1 ht
Vessel.
The Rew r ace coune.. as
'
f•IN!, Mot 15, 1970 DAJLY PILOT JI)
LtGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTIC!: LEGAL Nanes
NOflCI INYITIMI ~lot • Cl•TU1lt.t.TI W IUSINfll IAa >Ot IAlt MN , ... Coun1y $Mll.illlll Diii~ .. llllCTITIOVI flAMI HOT.Cl Oii TIUt11'1t'I &Al.I NOTICI 0, OllllAULT ANO IL«TIOlt
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lo IN 1l1M Ind 1PKltlCllle!\I Ill flll ITATe Of CALl'10I NIA, Ill flll CIUllhl lt1c1r•1r Ill 11 $181111¥ It. •-r1I. M Dilftltlc141rv, " tllt ollk1 11 t1>1 51cllllll"Y Ill h .. OltAHOI COUNT.,.: Or1Ht c.unty, C.11fwftll, ....,.... &llt/U, 11 .....,,.,.,.,..,., -. 1.uof. Ol~llle1 •NI -.tld "",. Ind 5'-Klnc.11\iN Oii AH'll 21. l"O. ........ ""· I 'Mii ... I t Mlle 1\ICfllll ,. lllehffl In .... nu. ·-la, °' Off!cl1I lff 19 bl rtf11'9MI miff I Hrt of Noll,., FWllc I" 1114 fir Hid S!lte, ~ fW ~Ill! ( ..... llj;lf It tlfl'll ol fl:tWd'I In tM Ol'tfu cf 1f11 ·~ 1111t 1111t1c1. __ ,,., .._,... vie. 1. c.o.., Mii .In 11wtu1 -.. 111 lfll u111t9' H 0r1,... c-tJ. c111t«n11 • ..-.cn•ir. 110dtr1 l lll ....... llOllll"' ttwtt II-tt 11'\1 It M fllt ,,..,_, WfloM 1111111 11 #II SWiii flttllll enltlfl« llM lhtllllft lllCIWI._ -~ fof' l>Utluinl ll ltfOYllloM fll IN Lll:lor Ill"" 11 llllactlbtd lo 1119 wtlttln 111-lo lfll (.Ufttll C-"-11, :IOf lloc;k 1111 ,.,lrtcl"91 .....,.. fll MrtJOe.IO Mid Cod! et tnt Slttt ol' C1l1for11l1, tlll '"""'"" wllll 1a-1-... hi Utcll!M W.. ••nhl AN l tv•,. hnl1 ....... , tllollt1t1M11 111•1 !fie btllltltll l 111iw.1t 9Nrl ~ Ol•K'-t I/I (oYt>IT Slt1lt1tloll !fie Ullll. Ctllfttlllf Ill tlflll, "lie llld lnl-1 lllldet tuell OtH Of Tf\llt 1M the
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200, Y acl1ts
lu Unique . '
Sailing Meet
An estimated 200 yachts are
expt'cled lo participate in one
of the 11ation's most unique
sailing evePits, the a11nual
Columbia Ren de zv ou s.
1'Cheduled for the \\'eekend of
Sef}t.ember 19-20.
With Catalina T s l and' s
l slfunus Harbor the destina-
tion, approximately ten
Classes of Columbia Yachts
-ranging in length from 22
to 57 feet -will depart from
f!M.lr Southern California ports.
Staggered st.arting t i m e s ,
computed according to
distances to tJ.1e Isthmus a11d
prevailing wiJ1d and sea con--
l'Jit.jcins, will be announced.
Points of departure will in·
elude Long Beach, Los
Angeles. Redondo Beach and
}.1~rina dcl Rey.
This arrangement allows
skij)per!I of Columbia 22's and
Columbia 26's the opporluRity
Clf possibly crossing the finish.
line at the same time as the
!wilt sa iling big Columbia SO's
and Columbia $7's. This year'!!!
nendezvous will be the first
in which three new Bill Tripp
crra tions, the Columbia 57.
Columbia 43. and the vet-t[)-
be-launched Columbia 34-Mark:
ll will participate.
Kiel Pushes
Flo~,· race chairman. will
be from Brealow Tower off
Newport, R.I. direct to the
Texas Tower on Argus Bank.
approximalely 25 m i l e s
southwest of Bermuda.
The neet will leave this to
port and proceed ea.st aJong
the south coast of Bennuda.
finishing between a committee
boat and St. David's light.
It is estimated this will add
50 miles to the old BennUda
race course.
As of April 15 -with some
foreign countries y et to be
heard from -there were 147
ocean racing sailboats entered
in the 27th biemlial Newport
lo Bermuda classic scheduled
to get under way June 20.
The mid-April t o t a I was 20
below the record set in 1966.
Additioas u d dropouts were
expected to change the total
before the start.
Five previous winners -
three under different owners
-will be trying again. They
are Argyll. Chee Chee V (ex-
Carina). Gesture, hlalay, and
Thunderbird.
Owners who have \\'On
previously ud are trying wilh
different boats are R ichard
Nye, Ted Hood (the 1968 win·
ner) and Vil1cent Larson.
Ted Tumer of Atlanta, Ga.,
llas entered his 12-meter sloop
American Eagle. winner of
thi!I year's Southern Ocean
Racing Circuit in Florida.
Five Champs
In Sunday's
Drag Races
At least five world record
holders will be on hand Sunday
at Sk.iland as the National
Drag Boat A ssociatio n
presents its annual Drag
Dynamics.
1 Ol y1npics
\ Sailing Site
Racing a t Sk.ilaad, the home
raceway for the NDBA, is
slated to start at noon with
tuning and time trials getting
under way a t 8 a .m.
Mike Donnell of Orange,
who established the unblown
fuel flatbottom mark last
month at Skiland at 124.90
and Roy Gollott. whose
"Swamp Rat" set the blo"'"
gas hydro record at 146.93
while racing at 0 a k I and
earlier this year. are the
aeweM record holders set to
go Sunday.
I
Construction work for the
Olympic sailing center at Kiel.
Germany, are nr.1oing ac-
cording to plan. a ccording to
the Olympic Press.
Foundations for the Olympic
buildings v.·er~ laid March L
The buildings should be finish-
ed by Nov. 5, 1970.
The 1972 Olympics will be
hel d in Sept 1972 al Munich.
The site of I.he sailing events
j<; at Kiel. some 560 miles
to the north.
Participants in the sailing
e vents will be flo\1·,1 by special
<rircraft to ti.funich Aug. 26 fi,r thr opening ceremonies
a nd on Sept. 10 for Lhe closing
r iles-:
~sailing regaltas will last
lrom Aug. 29 until Se pt. 6.
Veteran Ray Caselli and his
"Panic Mouse" leads the
blown fuel flatbottom com-
petiliol'I. He established the
world standard at Sk:iland al
146.87 but will face stem bids
from "Big Kahuna" piloted
by Gary Cornwall and Tom
Archibald's ''Californian".
Tujunga's ?\file Masino, v.·ho
owns both the blown gas and
u11blown gas flatbotlom marks
in "Playmate" and "Holy
Smokes" will again be runfling
in both events.
, r. ~
j: i
' Ii[ f i ; I t
I, I.
' "
• ~laakedowta for Cup
ileritall•· officially tabbed U.S, 12-meter No. 23
to the waters or Tampa Bay tltis \veek in her
f shakedown before sailing on her own bottom
to ng Island Sound for the preliminary trials to
determine which American yacht will defend the
America's Cup. lleritage was designed and built
by Charles Morgan of S"t. Petersburg, Fla. !\Jorgan
,viii al so be helmwan.
,
SHIP PRESERVEO -Giant balloon thal can be
inflated inside a boat was designed to keep craft
afloat when holed-through or sinking from other
damage. Upper photo shows how device can be car-
ried aboard. Belo\\', swamped boat is kept afloat
with Ship Preserver inflated.
'Life' Preserver
For Boats Devised
A ,.._ .. 1 1w4r1"'" of 11111 '"1 LEGAL NOTICE CO\ll'fllllt t' w1rr1111\', ,...,_ II' lnwllld, 54ldl Ditti ot Tl\ltl, hf1 tlllCUleof
1111n ttn ...-c1t111 ue•.1 "' 1t1f follll ,....,..1,.,. tltll, ,... .... 1111. or ..,. 11111 ffll'lltrlll fol Miii ..,..,. ttttlllfld
llld l l"IOUnl slttill K('OmHnY Md! ~ ........ wrnlM'lllCft. "' ... ""' ,.lllCINI tl.H'll TIWlff, I wfllltn Dlclll'•fltll "'
111d m•~ r.o '" "" '°'"' ol , tokl 111 1111 11111 MCIH'tll bf Mid om Dilf•u" •llf DlmlNI tor ""· 111d band or Cllllltr'I or c1rl!lllll dlKk. c~·:.i:T~~· .. ~~INlll "'Trwt, ~lfl ~-wtlfl 1~111'111 h.11 w-.llM Wiii\ Miii .... ,r ''"'"'"" NYlblr la Iha Ol1lrkl. TM 111...._..,.., -,.-" ' ~ S....... I, Ifft, It In Mkl T,-, IN, IUdt 011111 fll trwt tlld ._.,,, '"·· ... , ·• .. ............ v-~~ ... ,., 1 11111 -ldM, ...... 1-. If I/IV, IHldlf" I ~h nllttftclftl olllln!loM
....... <.I_,., 1""1'1 • .. .. ,.,., Cll'!Otl!Ktl"" ....... _ If c..11 MtM. "" "'""' Ill Mid Ditti ., """'· fHS. HC\H'M ll'ltrlb'f', .... 1191 ....... ~':::""!:,.'::'' ,.i;:.,::• ";t,.,:1'1 ': n&-H ... Ind ~lltl .(IUllf'lt, C111fwrtlt, dll"K llld -et thl TMfff l lld -.i hetlfW dtclt" 111 IUl'M
' -"" llll'M Ill A&W lftllll 11 tM lrultl Cl'tlltd ltf Mid MCU"" lllll"lob'I' ~N .... dUol Incl Ul)-1t1G Ill~ Clf!IW Ind !Mt Mid firm D1ft Ill T""'I ••Yl~lol llld 11M •ledlct 11tf 11ae1 Frid A. Hit_, Stc:rtllrY 1t tom_,. ti tlll M111Wll'lll ""°"' T1'llo ~ry 11111111' Hid Ot1111 o1 """"" 111d fol tl\IM 1111 tn111 .,...,,.,. ~ullllV!.o:ISoei.::.. 01c:· Dtlh' •1 .. 1, :"::' .. ~i!::lft ft,111 .,.,. t11u Ill ""ldtnc• ~MAf,:;......, ==~I = .,. :;;,11 :CU":. IO~ Mlld'r ttlt Mlll••lllNll
NltY U, 1'0, 111' llN-71 H1tno Wllltl Vlnclftl, ~ l1r1 ~ UKV1911 Ind Nl!wfM Ni DllH Atrll U. 11.,.
0. Ill. Mllfllu Wttl, Mii""'-C.I. 111o IJllCltrtl111M 1 wtltttft 01ttl1r1tllft · 1111!11'1 R, '""'''" Dlttd Mir 7, 1171. of Dlftull 1nd o-11111 fer ..... 111'11 TITll INIUJlAHCI AN~ TkUIY CO. LEGAL NOTICE ..... ..,. w. VlllClllll Wrilltft lllflel et W.cfl wllll ., •llClllft .. ,,,.,. Miit lfttlt , ___ _:::::c:c.:;:,,=------1Sl11t IOf C1U,.,,,l1, Otll'llll (9'11\!y: tt ceuM ft1<t u"""lt!IM ti Mii 11111 hllf1 ...... C. ..... h1'I
T .. 1''1 °" M•r 7. lt1f, lli'IWI ..... I Netlno ,rwtrty ... Mlllfr Mid lbt1t111-. .,,.. Aft, T""' CNtd °""· ffltlCt ff/I ••Ill ""'"'"" F\l'bllc: Ill allll fer Miii 11111, --.11tv f!\tf'fftltt, 11'1 JI_,. 16,. U1', IN ..... .,._...,., Tl llNll (Stn t ltl-4111' UC C I _,_ HttTY WllH1 VlnCllll 111"""'11 ulld.,.ltllld t:lllHll 111d notice fll lw-Hdl THE FOIE:GOING II A COl'Y OP l!KAW VU .i• . 19 "" lit M lfll _..., WhlH tit .... Inf _,, 11Ktlot! '9 M nc.,... Ill "NOTICE", THE OllG!NAL OF WHICH Nell<! !i MrlbY 1tv"" t,. 1111 Ctlllllln II wt.ct!_, ho fM wlll\111 lt1tll"ll!Mnl boo111 tlM, Hff IU. tt Mhl Oftklll WAS FILIO FOi ltECOIO ON A.'11111. of 10¥ CAAVl!tlt INC d~ 10.,. elld ldr:-IMted Ill lltlCUtlll lllt M,.,., 11.--. n. 191', IN THE Ol'l'ICI! OF TH• CARVER FONTIAC: Tru1St~ror, w110W !OFFICIAL ll!AL) Dt11: 0A,r1I 17, lt1'1 COUN"YY lllliCOROEI 01' OIANOR
ti.IJln•u t11drt11t 11 tnJ Ht•llo• tlvd.. "''"'I(, Htnno 111111'111 Fl11111Cl1I l"~lhif COUNTY AT SANTA ANA. CALll'O.NIA, Cco1r1 Mu,,, Cou~lt II o •• ,,... Sltho Notln' Fubllt<tllf'Wn!I II ••HI Ttutlff "'llllHt/lft o •• ,,.. c ... , 011*" Plkol, at c1111orn11 11111 1 bu1t tri 111h• 11 Frl11Ci111I Offltt I" T. D. 11rvlc1 C1111Hn1 Mtr 1, L JJ, :rt. 191' '1'"7D 11:>out t'O bl ..;.di to G!"NEAAL MOTOIS 01111111 CIU"IY AMiii ' CORPOR.-.TION FONTIAC MOTOJIS DI· MY CM\1111••"" lx•lrq W11ct1 Ill. H1,,..
1 d-Noy, U:-1111 vic.F,..1h11111 LEGAL NOTICE VISION. '''"'"''"' WllG•t bul l\lll 1 "~"lllltd Ot•ftft t111t 011..,. t l!ll Fu•lllllld Or1nee C111f 011..,. t !IOl
dl'fl• 1~ 1~n~ v1ntu11 l lYd., 1111NN1n M11 1. u, n. :n. "" U)."'l:M~":..!:'~·~"~·c'!'"~-----..!"~'~"!f--,;;;,.;;;;;-;:;;;;;;;-;;;--.;;--0...,1. COIHll1 et L.o1 An11fn, $1111 ti '
C111tcornl1. LEGAL NOTI,_. SUF•RIOlll COU•T Oil' TMlf Tiit or<111tttr io be tr1n1t1rtd It. loc•lld -..o 1 _..11 NOTICE ITATI OF CALIPOJOllA PO• ti :192, H1rlllt 91\'ll., C111111 Mnt, (-ty .&.lllUn.u THI COUNTY ~ OllANtI of Or1"""· S!111 of C1llfot"l1. T..ntn _...,.., Slid D'°"""' 11 dflcrU1 ... In 1-r1t tU,l•IOR COURT 91' THI NOTICI 0,-IALI 01" RIAL PROl'IRTY
•I: l"ON"YIAC StAtltE PA.ITS & AC-ITATI OP CAlfl'ORNIA POR MOTICI IHVITI ... l lDS AT FRIVATI IALI. CESSOlllllES ONLY et t~11 ~le Tiii (OUMTY OP OllA ... I Notk:I II lllntw t!Wft ll'llt 1111 ... rel 111 11\t ,,,..lft, IOf flw E1t111 of ,. .. _. bu1l-1 k-" 11 llOY CAIVl!I ... ....... If Tn11lln ol 11'11 O!'en,e Co.I JulllOt MILOlllEO J .\CICll CONLl!Y, 11M llftown tONT1AC 1nd loclted 11 ms Htr"' MOTICI 0" HIARllM 01' PlflflOtt Celi.ti Obltlct ff/I Otl,_ COllftff, M J1cllle Ceftlorr, Oect1H111.
Bt"i! .. (Mlt Miii. '°"""' ti Ot111ff, l'Otlt Olt••I OIRICTllM I ll• Clflflrllllo, wlll rK11¥e '""" ... UI' NOTICE I& HEll!IY GIV!N flllf Ste-. $1 Cillfotnli. ICUTOlll TO COlllU•Lnl T•llMI efl '9 IJ:OI 1.m. INY U. 1'7' 11 1111 tlll lllldtrtftinN. Mirr Alki J_.. 11 Tl\t bul~ 1r1Mltr wlH bl! C-lllffllltd CONTRACT l'Ul'dlltlftl Ctlt, of ttkl td>Mf f11lrkl Admllll1tr1tr1JC ol 11\t Ellllt If Miidred
Oft Of 1111'1' !hit '1tll dlY et Mty, !1l1!1t .t FAUL M. MAU.,OFI', tlM llo:lltlf It 2J'fl ,-1lnolew 1-.1, Cos11 JKlllll Cortin, Illa kMw11 11 J1do:t1
!'16 1t N1t11111rt N1llot1tl Bink. 1501 lll'lown II FAUL Mll(IE HAU...OFF, Mtll, C1l~1111o1 I t wllkll flmt Mid C ... llY, ._Md. wlll Mii I f JOtlY-Wr~Jtllll Or1ve Newitlrt •HCll. C111nty l ftd I• PAUL HALA,.01"1", C.CN-. Md• Wiii bl ~lllklY -'" 111'11 '". Hilo te t'ht hltl\991 tM btll lllddlr ol Otl"ll. s11k Of C1lltot'11ll. NOTICE IS Hl!RftY GIV•N 11111 ._, CIJ USfO 01''1SET OUl'LKATOI. "'"",,,. llnN 111'11 1;ondltlO!'lt 11trel111/'ltr
So fir II k/IOWll ti tllt Tr•"'"'"· CHAI LEI •. HAIT. JR .••• UKVllll' All Mdl '" to ... Ill KCOfdltlCI "'"'"°"'"· 111d wtlllCI .. t:Olllll'lnl!IM tll bu1I"'" lllfMI .,,.. •dd•-· ....... of '"" wtlf Ill ""' tbtv1 ... ,,..,. dectdlftl wlftl "" IMtrvcl'lltlt llld c .... tt ... 111'11 .,,. .Mkl "-<'Ill' Cowt, "' Mir IJll't. b,. T•1 ... •~•or '°' 1111 llllM YNrl 1flll 1'111 flied tt.•eln I ""1fl .. Hllllon .... IH(fflu!ltllt Wl'tldl Ill "°"' Ill Ill• ""'· I I 1111 hour .,, '"' •'tlock A.M.
Piii. II dllllttnl ,..,.. tht •llavt. 111: I dKl'M •lrect!ne Ille tlllllefttr .. llld llllY bl tlt:\ll'tllt '" "" tlllu or lillttlfl...-wllllln IN llonl l lllwtdl 51-tr1rwtw 1111 cltolNnt'e lnflrKf Iii 1111 fll 1111 l'llR'fllalllll Alllll' Of Miii tcllool W ltw, If Ille Lew Ol'llct *' Slllrn oufd: Attll 71. ltl'O. Hrlnttl/lle 111,11!11111 lllMwll •• ACMI" •11trlcl. s. l'lllnlllln, 107 l!lfl lftll Sll'llt, Cltfer GENEllllAL MOT01t5 TOOt. & Olf CAITI~ CO. "' COl'lllllllt l1dl Mdditr 1111111 lllbmll wllll 11!1 Mtui, C1lif0f'rll1, 111 rltllt, tltlt, lnlt1"1
wh''ch 1'nllales w1"1'n m1'nutes COllllPOJIATION I ctrl•I" tontrld ...... ,....,,,,...., •• Md • CIMlll''I dlKk, Ct11111ed dltck, I nd .. , ..... 1111 Mid .Mlldttd J1dlle notation U\ PONTIAC MOTOlllS lfft enlttM Int& toy 1111 dtc;edltrt Ill II' Mddt,.I ltol>d ll\IN .. Yl bll ft !I'll Conley, I lla kllOWll II JM:kll '°"'"' 'd fl . OIVISION ~1. 1111111111 '"" "" ... .., M, "'"""" lnllr "' IN Otlfltl Cullt JUfllOI' C111111 ftcMMCI, ., .... tlml ., ,,.,, llNlll. to prov1 e emergency otat1on T''"'"''"' rt-flf'lllCt "' w111c~ 11 1111• fv "'""" oi.1r1c1 '°'"' "' Tr1111-•~ 111 11110U11t 1"" 111 r1t11t. 11111 1nd .,.1,., .. 1 '"''
A lype or new
equipment for medium tG
large sail and pov.·er yachts
has been devised by a Beverly
Hills firm.
'fhe new prOOuct. called Ship
Preserver, operates on the
principle of a giant balloon
Registration
Cost Doubled
By Ne,v Bill
Ed Nichols, t'xeculive direc·
lor of lhe Soulhern California
Marine Association, advises
that Assembly Bill 2221 in·
lroduced inlo the S t a t e
Legis lature by Assemblyman
Pete Schabarum or Glendora
on April 2. an1ong other
things. doubles the cnst of
boat registration in California.
''The boat owner will nol
only have to pay twice the
amount he has paid in the
past, but instead of renewing
every three years he will have
lo do so every year," ac·
cording to Nichols.
"Speaking as a private boat
ov.·ner and not an o fficial of
SCMA, this appears to me
to be just another government
tax on the boating citiaerwy
of this stale. e ven though it
is labeled as a registration
fee." s lated Nichols. "\Ve are
already paying every kind of
tax there is on our boats ,
and now the state wants more.
Where does il end?" wonders
Nichols.
Nichols advises thal there
are many other changes pro-
vided in this bill which he
feels are ver y detrimental tn
the s port or boating and
strongly urges the entire mal-
t.er be sent to legislative com-
mittee study and public hear.
ings.
Tri·lsla11d
Race Marks
Series End
in case of hull damage or av 111. o. wr1111t ••1t1c11l•1'S, ,,,. t1111 1111 t11111 111d •lie• !IOI llN 111111· fl111 ''""'"' f5'il of wld t111i. t111 -1111'1111 tor _11...,
l!ILlfllll IAllllANlllll, "' "'"''"' "" 111111 llt1 ...... "''!ht """ 111(1 II • tUltllllll llYI h ol ,,., er lllltrwlH, ollltr th111 er swamping. Jt is offered in MY11,· .. sM1TH ttr Mir 1'. 1n-. 11 t :» 1•111 .• 1~ blddtr wm 111111r lnte 111t ,,_td In ..s.1111on " 11111 °' 111t Mid Miki,., . . f d ••. Wiiier 1111 81•1111er ""' CO\lrtnlom ., 0.•1nmt11t N1. ' Conlr1ct II tllt ltlftt 11 •Wltdld IO Jitekl1 ConltY. l llD lllftOWll II J1dlll various sizes or power an 11,i wutcHll.D•'"'· suu• ni et wld eo11rt, 1t 100 civic '""'' 111111. '" "" 1Y111t d r111ur1 io 111111 CMler, 11 ""' 11m1 et 111r dtttll. sailboats from 25 lo 85 feel Hiw"tt •••ell c1111 t2ut Dr1,.. Wtlt, 1~ th• c1tr .i 111111 An• 1uc11 c111tr1¢1, t111 "'OC1te11 o1 tllt ~ 111 1nc1 " 1111 rt11 ,,_,.., 1n '"'' Ttl· 1110 «1·1"4 ' C1lltor11l1. ' Wiii Ill forleltlll, or In tlll UM cf Cltv cf C1111!1 Mt11, C°""!t et Ori~
in length. P~llll1hPd O••nt• Cot•! 01lly •1101. 0111(1' ....... '· 1'10, I llond. '"" lutl .... '" llltttof Wiii Ill 1!111 ., C1lllor"l1, •nil dt1erlhd It:
Ship Pr-""'''' ,., co,np•ct M•Y u 111' llS-111 w. E. ST JOHN, C•~'""' CJlrlr "'"'"" .. llld ldllol •l•ltl(!, Lit IS. Tritt No. std, •• Hr Ml• '"'""' " ' CNAIL•I k, HAIT, JI!, Me blddtr '"'' WllPlclr1w Ills told lot lhlr90f recordtd '" •llllk ts, '•-and easily installed aboard. LEGAL NOTICE Arter,., 11 Llw 1 -lod or ~-ftv1 1a1 d1•1 1111r a •11'111 4' ot M1K11i.-M1t1. _ .. ms w .. 1 """"' ....,.,.,.. ,... d•te 111 lor lfll -111ne '"'-"°'· llf Or11111 Counl'I'. 11111 .i c.~'"11. It has a 16-0unce nylon plastic/------7.:::;------/M11it•111. c • ....,_..,..... Tiii •11•• o1 TruslMI ,_.,,,, ""'fin s1111tt sli'Ht, c111111 ,,,.1 ,1 ,
outer bag lint'd with a heavy T·l7W T•I: l:tlJJ m-un.,. n»MI "1wlltl• .i r11tct1111 .,...,. •nd 1n bid• c11111rn11.1 •1<11 .. f/111•• '" 1...,.1~ IUl'lllO~ COUIT 01' THR l •K ....... "" .. .,. or .. w1lv. 111'1' lrnev11rltln •• 111-Iv Slkt ,....,,.,. Ind lllUtl bl In plastic inner bag. Inflation is 1T.\t1 OI' CAL11'01111A l'Olll "'ullUlllftt o '"'" c .. n O.llr ~1111 torm.nn .. 111 1nv 1110 .. In 1111111oa1n1. w''""' ,,,.. """ M rte:ll,,... Pl tM
.ccompll'shed from a ref1'llabl• THI COUNT.,. 01' OkANOI Mty •• '· lJ. 111' .. .,..,. NOIMAN •• WATtoN eftlu Of s.1i... •. ,. .... 1111, AttorMY
• NI ........ u SKttll ,., '°' !ht Admlnl1tr1trlw, 01 m1Y " II ... co res ed · ta I · .....1 NOTICI OF MIAllHD OI' FITITIOH LEGAL NOTICE '""' .i Tt\11'"' wllh t!tt Clltrtl. ef Miii IUN,lor Court, mp s air n ; equip...... 1'01111 ll•OaATI: 01' Will AND POI 0.ltll MIY 2J. lfl'f -11 : .. •.m, °' dill""" le '"" Mid Adml11l1!f1l•'hl with • both manual and L1.n11111.s Tl:ITAMIHTAflY Fublllltllif Ori,,.. , .... D•llY F\lol, lllf'llnlll't' at ...... 111111 •lltt "" tlrtt
h d · Ei!llo ltt ROSE MAlllllE l"ACKARO, MOTICI OP IN"YINTION TO ......... ,,,.., L ti, lt71 Nl-7t 1Ulllk1t1111 er 11111 Nllkt 1nd o.tw1 y rostat1c valves. IH THI SALi 01' ALCONOLIC lftlkl ... llkl Hit.
When i n f I ale d , Sh'ip 0~6~°1tE 1s HEflEIY GtuEN Tll•t •1"1111•0•• s.111 1411 """ M lftde UHn "" ''"' .. \ M11 13. 117' LEG" NOTIC., loUowlne ''""': C•M. Preserver maintains a con-JOHN c ~.\Cl(AllllD 1111 ... ~I! TO WHOM IT MAY CONCEIN· Al.r c. Dlttd .., ... I :19. lt1f • petl!I"' tor 1trobltt' DI WLl1 Ind Sulllect fl II .. .. Al' stant pressu f · nd lor 111111ric:e el Lf!leri Tu11.....,11rv ,,.11.,. ,.,. tut11U "" llUFIM ..., ce '-•
re O SIX pou S lo 11\t PllUl&Mr, rtllrtnc1 It WlllCI! tfM unftrii9,,:"'t It "'-":" •Iv.,. !tiff MOTICI TO CllOITOIS ~m~t1lltrlltlJC ol lti.
per square inch to give needed 1, m1<1e tot 111rt11er ••rtltular1, •11'111 .,._.,..., 11 i:;-:;:,.1..;•11 .!.c~~ tu,.11t10• COUIT 0'1 THI ~1:i,.°' Jickle c.itltY
b"'y•ncy to tile striken craft 11111 111• tlm• .,.•nd '.1~u ""' JMi r17 ts to11ow1 • ' tTAr1 Cl' <ALll'ORNIA •0111 ""• Jtc;tll con11y, •ICMllCI' · 11\e ,.m• 1111 " ""' r 11"' ' lot McFNN!t l"llc1 ~ I Id! TMI COUNTY 01' OIANel llLfM 1, l'IAMl(LIN vs Coast Guard Statistics !:"°·o~r~:... :o: ~ft :-.. ~·= ~1'111,11111 "' •lldl inM11n. ~ ""' •111ft .,, o::.."~fNr E l"OLO l'ltAN•llN ANO •11tANICLlll
Indicate that chances of"' u c1w1c Ct""' or1vt w111. In ot'Al::i1:a:~::c~'=:"~IMlll Deailld, L 0 • ~.i;-i1:;•,::.i"r'-"
rescue are greatlv increased llM! Cl!y of ''"11 "111• C.llfort1ll . tw '''""•r of '" l lColloUc ~ NOTICE IS HEl'flY GI VEN lo .... Cllll ..... Cllllw!Nti
When Sk'·~r •nd. crew are 0""w"". ,•, 1;;. 1j~N. Cwntv Cltl'lt llcenu rot lkt1t111J tor ""-"""'"" crlldltor1 ., 1111 1biw1 111mtd de<Ment LI....,,. •mi ,.,.~ 11 followl! llltl t tl Hi"IOl'lt lllVl"'I clll!M 111l"llt AltenllY" ill' AM!IJllm.trhl
able to stay with their vessel ::~~::~t~~L•T.. OH SALi!' ll!l!R & WINI! ,._ 11\t Hid' ditetdllll '" '""wired IO "11 Publl•~lld Ortftff CNll Dilly l'tlef
Uni., help . Im NII'!~ ......... , Fide "'ullll~ f1!Jne l'ltct) fhllll. Wllll 1111 MUIHrY YtUd!t11. 1" Mty I, •• IS. 1'11 •»-11 1. arrives. • . S•nl• An•, ciHlwftl• n1H A11v..,. '"1r111t i. ... 1111 111.-111u'"'' 1111 oHJc1 .i 1111 c11r1t cf "'' 1111vt:/;::...::.::..::.:::;:_ _____ ::_:,:
Ship Preserver IS designed T11: 1110 "41""211 Ill _,. llttftt1 Ill ""' 111e • v1rrtltd "'""" Cllllrt, .,. "' •••111r11 111.-111, w1111
to 'd th ' f "'"""' ..... llr •111tllnlr p""'"' II lllY eftk• II 1111 o-rtment Ille -..... 'f0Udtw1. '° ... u ... LEGAL NOTICE prov1 e JS extra sa etv Publlilllct Orin•• c1111 DillY i-1101 of A~1lc &1Y1r1e1 Cll!lttl ., Ill' dir11tlltd 11 ~ 2211'11 Strut. N-.ort
1,,...,. rn1!1 flo tr11 DHirt"'"" It '1o1co11ou tNelt, C111rom11, wlllelt. 11 11\t t ll(•"--------------factor. according to J. c. M•Y 1J, 16, n. 1•111 1 .. .,1,1 c.,,.,.i 1211 0 St "'' o1 bu1l11111 of Iha unctlf•ltnfd 111 1111 •·•-s · k 'd S1t:r1mtflt1 c ''" I ' ' 1111tll1r1 ••rl1l11J111 It ltll •tf•ll fJf pina • pres1 ent of Se a LEGAL NOTICE • 1 "''" • tSt14, t1111ne ••kl ditetdtnt, w11111n •I• ,,...,,,111 iltt r CIRTl,.ttAT• OI' •111111111
S"r ',,·v·•I Prnd"cls, Inc., 132 !::~""' tor •""111 11 ,,.....!tied tor .. w. 1111,,,..,1ubllutr111., 111t1 l'llllfCI l'ICTITIOua MAM• n .,,. P•..,,llff 1r1 r.ow LlctnoM foot O ltd AMII 21 111'0 " Ti. uncl«lltl!ld do cert!ty lllly 1r1 <:;. Rodeo Drive, Suite 303, PUllLIC HE.\RINGS WILL SE HELO lllt ••If of 19'olllllc lll'ltr ..... Tiit I IANI( o~ AMillllCA <ondui:tlr19 I ilullneu I I 1111'-•
tr. .... Cotti Miii •11n11J111 ComrnulOll '"""' of Vtr!lkltlll'I MIY .. Mtlllltd O" '""""""'· FOU1111I" v.11.,, C.!lt111111. Beverly HilJS, 90212. 11 thr Clly Hiii, 11 F1lr Orlvt, 11'1111 l "Y efllctr of tile Ot111ttllrllnl NATI '"AL TIUST ANO undtr llll llctltlovt tlrm 1111111 _,, c0.,1 Mne, Colllornl1, 11 7:30 ... M. MC OONA.LO C~ltln R ' IAVJNGS AISOCIATIOH V.\LLh OI' l'LOWIEIS Ind lhfl lllo'
Ne\v Motor
'Stinuer' 0
Unveiled
or IS Hon 11 l><llllblt llltr111i.r MC OONALO, l!lltt" L , l!lllCVtor ef h Wiii 111111 b CtmPIMd-" !hi !ollowlnt 111'1-·
Oil M-•v. MIY u. lmt. Fulllbhed Or11111 . Coelt ol11y "'!IOl "' lfMp lbevt ... ,,,. dectd1t1t wlltlt ... .,,.. In ""' 111'11 pt-Ill tltn•t'Cll"I II'>~ tollowl"" 1ppllc1lloll1 -».Y U, It)• tn-1' ftU•WITI, NUJlWITt a llMIJl relkll'llCI ire ff follow.~
1. 11111 ••<••11111 l'wmll HI, 11-<tt·l'f, .. _,,.. ',"'"!. c ·--P•ul ... Lllltol. IR1 Clld1r, ""'· lor Tl'loml1 fl. o.iornt, U37 """"de LEGAL NOTICE -· • C ' I c ''' T1111Ct .. Corol\I Ctl Mar, C1llf., for FlllMt (714) •JI.tat " .,Oft9 IKll, I · ~rml11ion 11 11111111 lhrN UJ \Ill-Altlrlltn fW l.11tctrtw Thu M. LllllOI, 1&l7 Cld11, Apll.
dftt•ound ltnlr.• ,.,. tllrtt Ill 111f. T4JllU ,ubl~ 0rll'IM C111t DtUr l'Utl, C .. Lano l tldl. Cillf,
lf'rYkt lllOtfM dl1"1'1H11 In Ille JllOTICI o"' ••LI Of' •IAL ,I.,. ,.,,u 24. Mlir I, I. ls. lt7' 16'-10 Dlttct "Pf.J~.~·Ll~7:.
Fell-Ch••fle Cir W11~ t lt'HdY lkTY AT ,.IYATI IAll F•!ll F. LllkM
louoled on Ille 1r..nl1n on _.,,.,. H1. A'°"ln STATE OF CALll'OlllN IA, loc:tttel 11 3010 l•l1lot SlrMt. Cottli Ill THI IVFlllOa COUll'T 91' LEGAL NOTICE 01111.1.NGE COUNTY:
Mfll. C•llP., In I c' lOrMI, THI ITATI o"' CALIJIOIMI& ,..I On APtll 17, lt'O, Mfor' 1111. I
1. t-E•ct•ll111 "'""'II NI. 11-11•11, TNI COUlllTY OP llllAMtl Nollry Fllbllc: 111 111d flor 11111 stilt.
lor Sidnt1 Sher •ndl or D1¥1d l ou In !ht M•t11r et !ht l!&hlt Ill Orll ll'lll IUFlllOI COUl't 01' TNI ptr1«1111y 'llllM'" l"tul P. Lllhl ,,.., Ponl!1c. Ult! A"'""' ol Ille Slltl. Treiber SuttOft, •k• '•vi Tttlber """"' .f'tATI .,. CAUl'OllllA l'Ok Thu Lllkl" klloWll IO "" Ill bt "" LOI An•tlet. C1F!I .. fer Ot,,.,,11111" ••• "'•u• T. Sutton. 1k1 ,tul Sutton. TMI COUNTY o .. OIAIMt Pfl"IOFll whlll "'""" ,,, IVhcrllltd
A I lo t.11• P•-rlf loned Cl.Ci-for !I'll Otut-'" • C.11 Nw1t1Mf' lnaJ !er 1i. wl!l'>I" llllllUllMnl 111d 1ckftowl.e.-l J5-p us horsepower out-con111uc!lan 111d <N>l••llon cl' 1 ntw Noflu ·,, hlr•-v tlvi~ """ ,,.. SUMMONS ec1 """ nltlltld 1111 M111t
b . . ,,. •ttl!C'I', on D'llPI,,.,. leclled II "'"lfne• Wiii Mil I , ho un. l . M. ITIUCI(, M, w. IMMELl, tOflltll l S.•11
oard motor designed for high· 2•1111 H1rbor fllvd .. Cllll Mtll, C•lll. .. IN higl'lellt •NI "'1 11i/d •ti :-11• •• """''-.. ""' MAltlLYN HESTE ll.. Cl1tW!1 o. klnt
f . . 3. z-t!•<N111~ .. .,. ... It ""· ll·U.7t, " COll!lt111t!I tf I~ Su ·r· •11 JKI JANIT Hl!ITEll tlld CHARLfNE Nollry Fubllc • C1t1i...n11 per ormance compet1t1on has tor Ll•lt Miiier. Rlch11d L. LIWlllllCI on .... •fl Oii .. w, •• •"' ~ Court, MEITt:R Tru1b, l'llllllllb V1. MICHAfL P•lllClH l 01nc1 llWI
. end L. II. Fred1rlck1, 3'51 •tr<h er •m IY "' MIY, W. Gll!IN, IVAH GIEEN l "d 0rtng1 CluntJ
been unve iled by Johnson StrMI. N-POrl INch. C•llf .. lor ~n:·hl '',,.'~ offlu OI LIWlt, V•rnl 1'11101111( A. OlllEEN, •kl FRe'OJllC I( My Ct111ml111oft ••Plr•
M ~rmlulon lo (On1!1u(! '111 unlh 111 11' II • .SOI South l r111d l 111ltv1r•, A GRflN OOE I llll'Ollf~ 00£ V Allll.,_I U 1t11 otors. •lkllllon lo •1 u11!11 undtr con1truct1on, •in Ftrlllndo. CtunlT fll L11 A"tlll1, 1nc1u1rv.. 0:.~ndlnll ' Jlubllt~td Or11w1 ' Cot1t Diiiy "'llrrl
b m1kl"G 1 lo1'1 of 61 unlh on 101.HO llllt Of C1Ul1rnl1, t ll 1111 right, tttl1 FIO"'LI! 01" THE STATE OF April 20, MIY 1, t, If, U10 7"'-70 Du bed lhe Stinger, the new 10. 11, ot ••"" 1re1 n uni! P" •11'111 lnrtrt.i tf Ml• di(t•Md ti 1111 CALll'OtltNIA ti 1111 •llov• r111111e1l~C..:.:..;c.:;::..::...::..:.::.::::c_ __ c.c.:c; 'I . 151( sa. U.l o" preperty toc:tled 11 If"" IOf IM1tll •1111 Ill !hi rlf~I, tltlt o fll!d nti• LEGAL NOTICE rni ! gets its po111er (ro1n a J9! w. 1., s1rt11, Cot!• Miu, c1111., 11111 lnt1r111t ffl•t !ht •11111 .i -.tld y~ ;, ·tltrtbr flreclff ,. 1.1 I I V b . . In •n I? ll"e. dlCtllld hll ICC111lt1d br 111tr1!1i11 et I I l I 11 11--------------WO-CYC e, ~ lock d1splac1ng 4. %1"' l•c..,tlen F.,1111! Ht. ll·M·11, 14ow or 1111trwl .. , 1111tr 1111" or I" wt r:: • ltd1 '1 t ;. :::•oi;: It '= MOTIC• TO CllOITO•I
99.6 cubic inches. It has a for 11:a11er1 N. IJ1tln1r1, ,,., Or1n1e •Hlllon te t111t o1 M1d wc1e1td, 11 ;r;11111ff1c:;'r':i1:,.. clerk :, ;;:. "::Ve su,111110111 COUJlT OP TM•
3' . h bo . Avtn111, Cot!• Mlle, C1lll., for the lime If dttlll, I" ind to 111 lftllllld court In h lllovl tnl!Ulld ITATI 01' CALIPOINIA l'Ollt -i-1nc re and a 2.588-inch Pfffn•Ulon lo Clt!llfucl -tffl.,.llCt IN etrt1ln , ... 1 P'°"'""' 1ltu1lld Ill ICllOll '""'"' •••lnlf YOU ln 11ld court THI COUMTY 01' OIU.IM• stroke. In 1dl!lllon 10 ••l1tlnn r11klt!11C1 I" c11t1 M111, Couotr ot or11111, Sltlt wllllln TEH "'' -''"' thl .,,..1ce ~ Ht. A "'1tl 1n 1111 1 Zone !IA 6,UD •~· n. et cf Ci llfll't1fl, .. rtlwl••IY dlKrllltd 11 1'111 ef 11111 tllll'll!IOlll, }I MtVICI w1tlllt1 Eltlte fll tAMVIL R. ICAMN ~. Standard near ralio on the 11nc1 ire• (1 unit Pe• 317J 11. II.) 111ie...1. i..wtt: !tie •bevt """"' elllftfr wlthlt1 NOTIClf IS HIRl!t.,. GIVIN 11 1111
. . b •"" 1>1tmfHloft It lllow I 11 It, Lii Zl fll T T I ' or CTICl'lhlti el fM 1boW1 lltlftlt IMaiilnt Stinger IS 14 :23. A I to J ..,cr01chme111 r"to ,...,1,e.1 1s 11. "'' r•ct •1u •• ""'"'" HJITY •••• I urvtd t!Mwller" 1111r t h ",_ llt.¥1111 elll"" '"''"' . . . . I Ylt'Cl Mtti.<k on pr-•~ k>c•llCI' 11 111 • M111 lllctrltd '" lllllk 1"" You 1,.. ~ Mflflld ltllt 11n1eu 1111 Mid cltCtftlll -~ll'tllt ,. fll• ratio JS available on spec1a 111 e. 7t'lll sirttt. CMt• Mell. ci lff. P•D•• » tt ..._ tm:111t1.,.., of '""' 11 flit 1 Wf'lttt11 ,.,...,,.1,.. 111M11111tt. """" wltll file lllCllMtr \lllUdltt'I. 1,.
order a s an accessory Left For 1urt111r 1n10<m111on on "" '"""'' Ml1e1111_. M• ... II.Kw•• If°"'"" Mloiil 111111t1H1 win 1tk1 111dtlMlll tor 1111 oMc. ti 1111 t:lllil Of lfll .-....
. . . IP11llc1llon1, tell'Otiotw 11)4..J'IJI •• CIU Clltntr. C1llt1r11l1. ...... -or ......... dtllllndlll Ill entllltd COi.ir!, .. " llllNlnt """'· wllll hand prop rotation is stan-11 111e otttc, o1 111t 1'11nnlne o..1rlll'll"'· "*• tomm111tr ~ 11: ui '-• 1111 •«lllllf COll'lllllnt •• .,.111ne -1111 111«1urr wuc:Mrt. 19 IN ..,,.. " d A ( l J" llOOIT> 7!!0, 11 F1l1 Orlvt, CMll Miff, llM•. Cotti MtM, C1lllotnl1. '°"tr1tt, or Wiii •1111'1' to lflt covn clenlltMd it !hi oifki Ill 1ti. •llitt"' .. -uar . coun er.ro a rng ,11110,.,1, T111111 of u11 c1111 111 11'11'1111 _, fer '"' e111tr r11111 dtn11Mte1 111 ""' Don.IN E llnlltwell 1411 w cnt1
system is also offered. cciSTA MESA l'LANNING "' !I'll UnlW '''"' .. ClftllrlTMlllr! "Y"ltd °';"'':!:::; IN .... " Orlvt, S~I.. *· 'N.....-t '111ch. Th S · f COMMISSION of ult , OI' 111rt tl sll 1.W Mll rl("I "" !I'll v l fl C1llh.rnl1, f2'tO w!tlcfl 11 t111 1111t1 e linger uses ma11y o c,,.r1t1 •1<11. c111111111n eYIOt111;ed 11v noi. 111CU111d n Mll'fl•OI ~ "' •llV m.tttr (lllftKftd wr111 Of to...i-of '111t lll'INrlltMd In 111
lhe components found on w11111m L. ou1111. Secrttt" 111'11 tr Trullt OM• on '"' ....,.,,.,. 10 ~---1•1"! .. .,.., llllJ •-, ludl llW!llr• Hrlllllll'\9 ,. .,. "'"t 0, ' Olttclor °' •11nfllnt Mid. Tin ,,., CI M ., l l'MUlll llld ............ .. -I'-! wtltt ft 1111 Mid dlcWlftl, wtllllft """' ltlOftllll llltr .Johnson s stock 115 hp Sea ,1111111Md 0r1ne• c"" o111y ,.11co1. i. 111 •Mt11111 wltlt ,Id, tltnl 11m1t ttlltMI in 11111 111111"""', ,.,. "" 11,..1 "'*1kalltn of tl'tl• llllllt•.
Horse including Power Pulse ,...., u. in11 '"'" •w• .,. ""'" "' bl 111 wr1t1,.. '"" 1111"" • "'"""' '"'''1"' "' 1111 toflllllllnt. 011tct AM1 -. '''°· ' will M rec.i'l'ld •I llM 1lorll11d l'Hlt• 01'-1 Mlrdl ZS. IJlll, Mil! J1ft1
capacllator discharge ignition, LEGAL N011CE et 111r 111111 '"'' IN ""' J111111c111on CSIAl.I e111a11or ., 1111 win n heel It to Nf'IOI 111'11 befott ... .i Mlt. w. a . IT JOHN . c1m. or tM ,...,.. 111111111 •ect111M Los Angeles YaL>ht Club's yw a erna r, pressure D11ttt !!Ill 1111•1'111 Mlv,1t11. •v 1!11111 H. 01111111 OOMALD 1. SMALLWOOD
back: piston rings and WJlter T·•m. JM11n1 Sirtten 11.... O.ll'l'r Clerk 1111 w. CM nrrtw. '"'" * l:ihOrtened Tri-Island r a c e ,. d ·1 . NOTIC'f TO Cll:•DITORS ....... i.i1rtr1trt•"'"" WALtwCllltTM, 11101~. (JI.AIL ,.._, IMdt, c~· nNt coo 1ng an SI encnig. SU,.•l lOR COURT 01' THI £11111 .. -.tltl DKHI"' 1111 w"'''"' Or!VI, Swllt,.. TILi uwm UlO :~:~:r~~ ~:f 0~\;e ~9~0 The exhaust syslem, race 1j~~·cg~,ff;1::R0N~!,.~~R ~:;"~~v:":"~,:JMl•AllDILLI f1~..,.::-. C•lftrt1l1 "* A'=;:r ~ Ct1it 0,111 I'll&!,
tuned for m ax i mu m ef-"•·A"''" ,., ...,.. arM. 11111...,1,., A""""" "' "''1"""' Mw 1. •· 11. n , 1n1 t:rt-1' 'Vllitney Series for ocean rac-ficiency, is an internal type "~••11e ot REX 11:. ANOl!ISON , DK"• 1111 ,_._. C•llllrfllt ""' ,...:;~~1,,o;;~•1;,.c .. tt 01ur ,11o1.
ing sailing yachts. h 1 ed . NoTici is HEllllEIY GIVEN .. 111e T111 1ru1 a.1.ut1 121.10 LEGAL NOTICE
II t at great y r uces the noise creditor, o1 1111 •bov• 111,,,td lllt:ll!tnt AIHnltr1 flf' Aarwllll11r1111~
The 152-mile race nornia Y usually associated with corn-"''' 111 ·~"°"' 111v1,,. c1111111 •••ln11 "'ubtlll!M °''"" c"'' 0111y "'111t. LEGAL NOTICE •uP1•1011; COURT OP CAL1'10•111A encircles Santa B ii r b a r ii , 1. . tb .t.. ,,,. 11111 decltltnt 1r1 , .. ~lrtd 10 t!lt Mir 11, 1s, st, 1t11 "°'7• COUNTY o" •1t•"•• pe ltlOn OU oaru.,. !lleft1, w1111 thfr 1>eee111rv YO\lc:ht1'SI. 1n IAR ,... 1'11 Cl.it: Cillltf' OrfV'I W..t
Catalinrr and San Clemente "'' 1111c1 et 111t clerk et "'' 11tov1 LEGAL N&rlCI MOTICI ro C1101To11 ....,. ••· Ct...,.,..
islands. LEGAL NOTICE entlllfd court. " 1o ''""'' 1111111, w1111 tU,ltlllOk COURt °" TMa CtM M-Mr o NI• t~t '*'"''" vouc11t11, t,. !I'll ""' T ITATI 0' CAUl'OINIA ,Ott IUMMOld lMAkJllAtll The course was shortened --------------ldet1ftnect ,, 111e 1111c:1 of ~"' 1110,.,..,, "*1 THI C9UMTY.,. 0...,,..1 In '' tM 11'111'111•• of l"tllfllMr:
lhl I I. . t s ... nto CHARLES c. MORllEY. llH Wffl Whit· 1,•·,···'"· .':'•,•.T :r .. 1:: .... .....,. C:Oll:NIELIA JIAN ~00 •ooo• .,... S year 0 (! lmlna e an CEITlfllCATli 01' •USINliSS 11,, IOUleYln:I Monlebello Ct~forllll I A I' ""LI • f.ititt If OAl/10 AITHU• ••••CUI R~; JMllS nuMl!llt 10005
Cl l I d •-f l'ICTIT10UI NAMf ' ' ' THI CIUNTY 9F ......... ""' ' Tt the Jl"NlldHlf: emente s 111 """ause o T~-.. , "" ..., "' ,.. 11 w111c11 11 111t 11tt• "' ""'""" "' 1111 .., .......,. •IH ~-•• w.v10 A. MAttcua. •n. ,...11.._. 1111 rtltd , Htltitft I ""' ~Ii <Ir Y u~sl1<1f'd 111 111 ,,....,.._ Hr'll l"ll'lll OTICI l OI' Pl"YITIOH lift 111-11 If DAVID M.All:CVS tfltl nava maneuvers of the <Otlducilt'lfl • IHlllflll• -1 "'· o, Bo~ to '"'-"''" ,,, 11ttt dtttNlll wllllln N ., N•A 1119 .. o A.. MAlllCUI OMM1td Cll'IClt1llM .,..,,. ft'llrrl111. Y111 ""' P 'f' Fl I . th l . 'nlly n, HU11tf119ton llt1cll, C1Ulor"l1. undf' lour ,,...,,lllt Iller 1111 llrst •uMlcat"" FOi. f'IOSAT• 9' WILL ANO l'O• NcirlCf II HiilllY GIVEN ti 1111 lllt • wrltfltn ,.......,., wftllt~ 1111"1'
ac1 IC ee in It VICI • lllt lk llllol!I !lrrn tit"" cf OOl.PHIN "' llllto notlc• "'"··· TaTAMINTA•Y ~.-. If "" lbevt .... ,,,.. """""' illY1 ., Ille .... 11111 11'111 -The new course will Utke ILLUSTlllATIONS Ind .... , ••ld tl•m Dltllld ,.., .. ""· (•"".,, HILlfM •• co,,. • .,., Dec .... llltt •II ...,..,,. Nv1,. ci.11111 ... i..t " .. ,.,. ....... vw. II ,..... ft11 ,. Ill•
. II C~tol et flit lotlowl119 111r-. lllA.,. 0 NICHOLi .... . Kit Miii Mclilllll '" '""",... "' f!ll I Wftltl!t ,_ wllllln tudl '""'· the sailing {Jee:t around Si[lta w1111 .. "'""' 111 lull 11111 ,..« •. ruldtllCe 5"cll l 'Umlfli1lr1tot wltlt NOTICE IS MltllllY Otl/IM Tlttt ttllft't Wlltl ""' IMCllMfl' --. 1ft .,., dtf•u" -· ... .,...,... 111111 Ille
B b d S 'f · land k-.1 It 11 f'OI~· G 1 ,._ II tllt SALLY MAIGAliT CANNIMO llel rtltd !he 9mt:i ef lhe I rll; ef Ille •"""' COlltf ll'llY .i!ltt I illltlll'ltlll Ctl'lll ll'lln" ar ara an uh is s n.111.1 C1Mr1ts C. &ovt•. "" '"""" CNM ,~'41111 "",:..,.... 111,,.,.. lllfll11 • Htlttlll "" •"'"tit -w111111t1,.... avrt ..,.. 11' :, • ..., file wltll "'IMC!hoe .,. """ 1n11n -.rnlntl Catalina island bdore heading o... Hu"11,..1111 '""'· eeu1orni• ~""' •lld "" .....,_ "'"""" ., .. .._.....,. 11w ~;, wtucflln. ,. ;;; _ .,._ltlwl " .,_tr, -1 """'': •• f Dtlfd April 22. 1t1' CH.\•L£1 C MOR•l'I" 19 flll Mllf1llllrr ,..,.,_ ti wllldt ..,. ...... If 1lfll flffk• If ht l lttrlllTI dt11' l:lllflodt. _dlllll Wlltl'ltl, "'°'"'" iutCk: or the finish at Los Cll•f"' c ........ ,. .. WIM W~llllll' l lft It ~ ... ""1fW ••i'ttollrs. tM 0.-.VfD A TINO\.llt llOI WttftllN ..... eetll, l flll Mid'! """ rtllel •• Angeles H rbor ~T.\lE or CAL1FoRN1A. Mitl!Mtlll C••• · '"'' "" ffftrle 1n1 tltcl "' ,...,,,. °"'"" tlifi. • Ntwf*f affdt. 1111•.,. ertllttd"' llMP *"· a • OJIANG E COUNTY· Tel (llJl'm iin "" .. -'* ....... fllr......., "·c.1~ ..... ~ .. ""' tllU " -"""' ..... I llW'fll'" .... Local evP.nl.s on lht: yachting On Ainu n .. "1f· Nte•, mt . • ""~'"' b-111 .. .,.,.1,.1"""'" im. tt .,. t .11\.o 1n "'" :"::r. Of N IIMI ., flill ""'"".,.... "' 111 lfYlct 1r1 tl'tlt -"''· "" .,_., ff
calendar this weekend Include :11",uo,~~N·~~.~'" ·-~ t;!; F11b11.,.,to1 °"""'' c..tt 1111tr l'lltt. :, r:r'~ C:.,.' r:.,,.•-:,.rw .,; -.""' ..,,.llllN ,. tM ''",. "; ~"' i!:Y.,i.."'~':':.;•:;:" ,.....,.., • Mar I, U, ft. 7', 1'10 .... nt -.......1• ' M etadttll, wlthl11 tlw -lfll, llfttr' • ' Voyagers Yac ht c I u b' s t,._ t"O .,.,. "' "' "" ""\'" ""'°'' 1111 c11r 111 ..-""'· c ...... -. ""'""'' M1k1fllfl "'tttr."""" o.,... """ n. "'°' "'"" It WllKtlbtd "' lftf W1~!nl" '"· o ..... Ml"( u. ltlt. on• """' a. ""' ISEALI Laguna C race for Pacific ""'"""' •I'd .ar.owlKttM 11t uecw1td w. R. !T JOHN lecurltf hdfk Nllllfllf 1.,* w. E. IT JOHN, Cit•~
liandicap Racing F'leel yachts ~'0"~·1~;,L $E.-LI Who Ctres? .,1,~\;u".7.111::iite11 ~~*'111:.f'~ ,1,,0L0~· .. :~:J=:.~ t1t1t1111
Jn the Mas~y Srrie5 and Miry «: Henr¥ No , •• ,, ,,.,,,,,, In , •• .,.,, ANO DIM$Mt0Jt OAYll A. Tnll•Ltk OINSMOOlll . , 1 NOl••Y "vbllt · Cl!llornlf W 1n:; -lttl ltltt ti,_, 1 ........... .,,.,., lf//lle -:all •• "'~ SttM!, 11t119 nt llmaller yachlll s111l1ng under i-•ll!(IM! Oflk1 In c.attS about )'Our community llkt c .... 111 .... etn"'""' ,..., """"' 1e9c11, Ctlll. '*' c11tt Mtw. c111ttt111 "''' the Midgl"t Oct!an Tl3cing ~y'"l'om':~n E1P•fl'1 1our community dally newspaptr l~!1 :r'....._. I#:J:.~"'=':' I=1~'11!L Fl~tl and Small Yachl Racing Nov. '4• 111: dotS. u·1 the OAILV PILOT. l't,1bll1P1111 °''"" c .. tt Dtltt P11tt. 'llM~ . C...t 01111' 1111tt. l'ublhllld Or•• CH1t 0.11, !I.~ Fleet measurement rules. ,!/r1;:~1°;:'ieu.c::'~ 0•111 ~~;o Mer 1" 1t. fl,'"' 1"'11"""' ... ,..,.., "a. 1.a. "" 111<1C1 .._, t. '· u. n, 1,10 ..,.
.,,
• -~.
.-.
-
l
... .'f • ..-.. ... _ .. -.
ff IWlY PILOT SC F~. MQ 15, 197n
Your Money's lforth
OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List
MIW YCll,; 1 ... ,., • l"rld•"'' eo11•111i.t1 l••••••••••••••••••••••••••••IHn 'l'.,.k St«k a11cr..11111 11rie.: ·=:: ... , ,,..,,..11 .JO Japan Sets Goals N~SO Li.tine 1for ThurMey, Mliy 14, 1m I _:;_,:
11
Lew CllMClll. r.a-;;· t~:r --..:.·: :.·..::.:: =-=-.:.:::.=~ ......... ,.,.... ~,,.,~" ft 1·1· ir. M~ t·a ~ .. :~: ~~: i~s::·il:i~ :o~tp:!: '1.: "~-~~'\':' I'"-' ol U l'I ,. rrr .... 't... It -~I " ·~ ~:I ] ~ !~ ~·~ 1~7f::rti~ 111 SYLVIA PORTER
frtn. ... ~al flyt)
TOKYO ••• What is Jt'pan's
clmm?
At. the close of eacb ln-
tel'\llew with Japan's top
1 .. dm, I shol this one last
question, for to you and me,
tt m the htart of t.ht Lale.
!Translation: What do you in-
tend to do with all this
powu?) But before l gel lo
tM answers. let rnt re-e.1n-
phame:
Japan ls now a truly alobal
economy. De-spite her size.
manpower shortages, l111ck or
raw materi als, p r of o u n d
forcts going for ber are:
-KERAGGRESSIVE
detenninatioo to achieve a
higt and uninterrupted ratt
.. 97% TAX FREE
....,. C.."'9Nl<I MIMklfil llMI
t i,.,_ • OMllty C..-..,1N .......
Llll'I.,_ efttflllt
C*"'kf: L .. k. O..r11o!fltol
""""'._ & W-a..*191ft""IN ,._,.
""'"
4th Annual
Franchise ~nd
Business
Opportunity
Show
' Fin'd out how you
"C•n 9•t in bu1in111
for yourialf" by
vitifin9 t hi1
1up1rm•rk1t of
lusin a11 Opportunitie1.
75 Companlas ~rom all
OYlr the Unltad S+1t11
•r• on d isf.ley t1 nd
lookin9 for r1nchil111
encl e11oc:iet11 ·;n
Orange County and
surroundinq 1r11t.
May 14-17
Disneyland Hotel,
Anaheim
Adrnlni°" $2.50
.. , ~LOOIO, ...... , •• ._ JL.11 ,.,a 'J'l,,.;#i c... ._..._ ...... .._ ....... _
...,, 59's1. ,.... -,_ ..... --VF' , 'e "-..! -... ----..... ~~. ~ -.HW.. ....... ,_ 9ftlllJ IT lMI 1RNI
UimNOMlMI.~
lOc.ATIONS
1701.1701 St., Cethl M"'
7ZI S._. St .. S011t• l•f\•r•
J04i ~ "'''· 01•.r• J1 tJ4 Sch-bo111,
C-.• '•f'lt •111 WllPlre 11•4.,
L• A119e1 .. •
nr eeonomir growth, her na-
tional desire to excel;
-'nie indu.slrklusneM o£
her skilled, dedicated v.·orkerJ,
the high level of education
of her busines11 leader!i :
-Her unique rco nom i c
sy8tem ln which government·
industry-finance-labor p I a n
together to achieve national
goals: •
-HER "GROUP SPIRIT''
which I maw being developed
Jn infancy in the uniformed.
chsclpHned klnderganen kids
at Expo '70.
And Japan, already a nearly
$200 billion eeonomy -third
ooly to the U.S. and Russia
-is on her way to 1 $400
billion Gross National Product
by 1975. Her per capita income
is targeted for $2,790, double
'69's level. Her wages are to
rise more than 12 percent a
year,. the productivity or her
worken: to cllmb up lo 15
percent 1 year, ber cost of
living lo be rising under ~
percent 1 year by the mid-
1970s ; her personal savingii
rate ls lo stay at the fabu lous
lever of J8-20 percent. A
magnificent blueprint indeed ..•
Of course. she has problems.
A SHORTAGE of labor will
be a massive obstacle, but
she plans to solve that by
pulling more workers off the
farm.s: increasing the employ-
ment of women; by automa-
tion; by l)Ulting up plant.1 in
such cheaper labor areas as
Taiwan and Korea.
Also 11.eep hurdles will be
the resistal'ICf; of othe:r nations
1o her protectionist trade
policies and the tt:sentmenL
ol neighboring imderdcveloped
lands from which she buys
cheap raw materials and to
fjnisf'led product!.
BUT JAPAJi is waking up
to all of this.
So what is her dream'? From
the surprisingly 1 i m I I a r
answers lo my unanticipated
question, I think this mighL
be a "coosensus.••
First, to look inward now,
raise the standards or !he
Japanese people and enhance
the Japanese environment.
Dedicated to the nat1on &11
her people are, they ire gel·
lions in livlng ilandards. In ;;..-.l.7"' ~'~ :::111:, 'J111 ,. ., 1f'I • '1. ~111 14' Admfr\'1 ?I 'lr. +t 1,., 5.,, ....
rceognillon, J1pan ls ICbedul-:t,N11:.:f1'Ltoe't :~~·· ri? 1U ..c.r" it:~·· .... ,J,l Ii ; ~'U:&,l~r ~.·• ;~ jn,. :tr~~~ t.r5·l~*':·:i
Jng sharp lnccease.s in _ 1pen-&' .. 1~., 1~'1~'1: llfl:!i'' l.1T J~ :~ ~t .. ~,: ll ~ Iii"~.. '"" l" -~I: ... •" 11i, '•''" "!ti +•\.\ .,E1111·"''.1' ding for social and public tm-not • 11 trlnlK> , "' ,•, • \Ill IC Av ' E~'" "' " " I 1-.1~1 l • + a .. • Ilona '" •-iu~ \'f -'ill ~ 1"1 :)(I I l'll n ii; A 01, .I li 1 1•1~ 1 \~ -luthPN .to Provements 1n the next five ,_..11v1 '""'-~ t~ i~ , .. cie o .. •116 oil.. ' "' • '" ' u·~ 1~ 1m l """" ,, 1 o.11tr Hlcn1 11 'l H '"" '"" •llCJOI J ilf lat1 'd' I" A "fl' JM\ 7t 1 NA Pini .JO
)'tars. :~:i~~r:'~~ !fl~,:'~~ !"' ~ :;::~ o.: lit ttt ~~~ •r " .... 1 '· ,,: '~ ,'!~ t ti "'", r. ..,1~0 i\Nl> DOES s.HE need It! =Ill~ c:i':! i"r:.1 • .,.M• •it~ 1H ~~ ,. :~ ,:... bi< f~ = m ~~!!t,':i 1J ~ 1 I n f. :: ~q· ~:!:
While E~~ '70 LS a bcautl!UI :,-,,Md tJ:r.1111 ,::. :'oBMI si ..... ~ :9'.l8 1! t1n 1l lAOG .... f J~ ~~,~~ ~ l! ,,, • .m ,._tu ~oc:.:)r~ 1.)(1
and ex1ctu1g 1 r e 1, in-dt•lw m1:1:1t11 1\ w'~ l~ 2'1 , G~ l ... U:: '::: 11? 17f • •'II': -1.!. it ~..., ii~ B~t ~olll I' 1.10
du...,1rialized J apan today looks ~rn;. •• .,..fh~~ ~!::''1:0, :v. :t: = ~f 1~ 1?~ ~w },"" Jm i ~~ ~1' Ml t" 11~? ~l~ ~16~ ;5fl:-nt~r.t-'j . . d f oo not klC~ For11 ·11 14 14\'1 19'! wo 1y, ,,..!_ '"' I~ .., I "' A t r 2 · like OOt' big rt&ry 1ctory r11111 "'-••-.1111. l'wmi. "'~ RO l"ttrotll ""' lf tMent 1 "' 1t1~ A I tdMUl-~)j i "' H"" j v. .::"" · 111111 '·
broken up by crackerbolCeS of ::::r;,k~ft or com-f::!mGrm '1;; ~\.\~~°Ju~ ff ~ 1~ "'Jm 1. m :1 r,;• r.l l~ ~~ 311• ,~ .. :1"° oll l~""~tu
h n d h 0 U' .1 n g AM 'i111
'" 1"" ,.our s., • '" IMllWI 11.1. 1 1tt"" c. • •'4 A/"'' ,... .~., llfi~" '~l·~ ',;'!! _.+-~ 1"11"", .... •, '"' 0 uses Iii Ml '°'! s • l'rnkl CD 114 1 k: Pit 1'• Jlo!o ltf11~ ... ' '1111 A::i,r."1~ ... ··'ll.-,, .. "' d I '" I h'-L. u,_ AFAPr II 1'1-'o l'rnklfl E ' '~ l"lnlcrtn 5'1'1 1 l.'ljl"• C• llt' • I • eve opmen..... rom w 11..,1 .. .,. AlfS 1_111; ,04 1• F1.1lviw 1 J \1 p'"' •" tt .. C '° ' 15"-+ v. o1u G11 1 ... I co I F n 21' n.o ... l'O 21 ric c9,11 ,_~ Ak:oe l M 17 lt .sai.i. .._,._ Col11l"lct .• laundry hang~ oot a I day ~~:_ f.1 ;•' ~~: ,,~:~: " ,~: 3~ ~~:. G,.°,,". • ;"" A' 1=: iS 1~ 1~~ ~l'.l~ ..;," ,o 21~ •• 21"' .+114 co1s"°" '·"
'
'ery day While sht is well Atr 1n.1u1 3U •\.'o ~" <rP 1.,.. 1 Prud M!11 s:i. s,.,,,,,.,. H ~ ~ A1t,.rE'i l~"' ' 1 1011. 11 -+I CDl'l'lbEn 2.~ · Alrlrn F flti t~\ 111nl 12\.'li 11 Pubs MH 2:1!1 ,ill'"~ ,., '' ,. AmrEt ·~"'40 10 1t~ t\1. ''"' -l'I CmbE Dfl.10
'
·nio an 1'mpressive low-middle "'I"'" H • •Vi 11 vc n\I 11" Pubs NM 11 If j•I 1r l" •'h Am H · ' j1 J7 n t \\ C61'nt'°r" 'II Abe•l1 S.,.. ' Alrclt ll.'I PubS MC ll\\ ,.,Cl t 21 Am.iH~!rJ/t! Ill I mil 1l '~ Com1So1 .,i.fO Clas.• housing program much AICDllc •'111 I ICl:r.llc ll't JJ,'t Publlllr 1 ~T~-l"f 11 llU M lrf'U r ;IO r~ g :~ ~ ComwEd f,10 . . ' k bl A!ICO Lnd 1• '"" L.llur •'\ ~ P11rt•1 ! J Unlttc • ·~ AM ..... lfl .• 211! J]~ J5t? +1~ ~mwE ,ett.~J
()f her housing IS unspea a y ~\lf..il~~ l~ l:: :.:..1 " ' ~ p ~,,,t.nn;; 1.\1111 ~: =· "~ ':1\ :rr.~"t·'' 14 10~ 10\<, IOti -... .....w oU . .o
bad by our st~dardsl land a :!:'*Geel ~:,.; ~~ 11:"",·~~ll 2r:1 ,: ... ~cc;. 1: ,:n~1~ ·= 1~ 1r' ::'t:.: ,J: '" na ~ u~ ti~,:£:: 1k1'° sewage system I! actua Y non-""' tu5n It\~ 11 •1•n w 'I"' 2,.,., Id DYn 11 11 o r 31v. ,.,,.. AC•n .r 1.75 l 111~ is1<i 'U\4r "" c-Mn11 1 · te I · b' ·it• El Lib (\i ~ 1oO lluD l'I llli 1tah11t C 1 1\IUS rtlL 17\'t ~" Afl> c,.... ,fCI 1t lO'io j0!-1. lO.. ·" ' Conr•,CP " ex1s n 10 many Jg C / "m E•or Stlt '°'~ eve • tl'I ltfl Tr11 s1't 1 VP P~fl' 21,,. A c1111.,, JM ' 1">.I ,,~ 2~" t-t, eon Edi• 1:1a Wh'le s•• '1s ac!·o,e)y .t.m Furn l~ 6\1) LS VO Alo ft1nsb fl lfYo i!'l'!Ut.ri SL41 •YI A...CrMll .'IO 1• U~ 17>.1 l~ I~ ConEd lt p16 areas. I ll'C A Gtffl l'l\li ff."" WW c l'.lt • ll:tYdl Ct " Ulll INI 2t t• AC~ ..... 1.• 1 ' '•'" ,. •• 11'1 -I.lo ConEdll pl s
building roads. her roads 111d ~M~~. Jf,. h1a i!:;: ~ 1: /gv. == g Hl'i ~ ~·1 LD11 1~ 1~ ::--b~;111l·¥ 'f 1m, ill;· f~ +1~ ~:;~O:Ct·~
traffic congestion post the big· :$~t G~ ~l't ~ ~~nM~I ~l~ r~ =~~·~ ff~ n~~:r°"11:1t ,r..: 1ti? i;i~\j..,'!1~ ,,: 1Ji: 71:: n~ t ·~ ~:::;~::i1:5' gest threal to her own auto Am Tttv 11,,. u>.• rn11 AE 16,,. 11 1ut.r Ste n · ,,,. w1<11w P '10 n ""'' e1.u. J 11 11~ 11\i con L•i•l"9 Aflllevt 9 JV, 61 ro~, Pt JV. 6'h Roaot E• 24 'l Wtltt lot 161/t 11"1 AmEtJlw f\U 1'1 11'1 l•te '~ + " (IWINtlG 1,7, industry and he.r problems of Anktn c •~ 1\'o rwn1 t" 'Z • llobl11 M '' 2 • "' ••.o. ''°' ,-:"' Iflll• • i'1~ Vo.,,. :i;11 2'v. + v.. CDnt p....,,' 1 II t. d f r Arc! IM ''-" s~ &u~rd1 th ::. :~ Roctt°" •14 4fllW1rlhw ll't ,..., Am~.r:., !,'"J., ·~ ~ '''L •"' ..... ConPw pU.so p u ion war OU $. Ard•n M 1~ • ~ " • it°" '''' Pill l\liw1t11 NG tt.,. lS • ,,, •• • • .o ,. c~iAtr• ~ Ardtn ..t 31 3f ~r..in ,.,~ no •~s 11o¥ 7'% 1n~w11111 1te ti\ ~A ni,.''"ri 11 • i it ll 1u· · ~ "" .. ·
Second, to look OUlWard loo:~~-~ ~Vt !iv. H~:~v;} l}~ ij4, 11:,,.",",,,Ho 3!\'t '".~.· .. ","• ,•,~ •• ~ AmHolt 711 r1 f~:~ ~~ rr: :+'.>.,I, !c:::~= ~ci~
""
I t k h I '' I ' ',. ,,L \It • t "" A~-,.,.. ''! .,,. ... , ..,." t"l·;, t Coo ""''
'
0
' ' er pace among "'"' • ·o.:. 'I'• 1r•n n • ., •n ... E s11i s:u.,.,,, , 10 • . ... ....-.. . Al(( lot " n H111r..i " 15\.'I 2, ;r ,, lln .. -0 ' ' ,,,~ l!W1 IJ Diii CD 2 the great econom1c ""Wers of Au10 1c1 1 1 Ht•ll Cp J'~ ~ scr c111r Ht si~w.inr M 1'v, 17'"" ""' Hoto 2• uo ''~' .u:i. :w14 f11~ tCp llfA1.JO ,,.. l•lrd "t 1i1 ..... Hldoc Inf 31'0 31i kl Ind ' l~Ns~ ,. ru. N -'mlnwst ,jo «) ' .... ' II Cl (p p/8J.50 the world . Bel!tr ll'lo 21i-. lillllwn n o '''Scot Sorls 2t\li ,; Nt!n NA ' ,..., AMe~!x I Ill 21t ~ :121. :U\lo tv. ConrMll ·"' Btl Pt1nt 4'i jlll Holm ll!:P 45 SJ Serl-H II 20 =-:~ ~u': ~": f,_z AMet Ix rlf I J fO II"'-to 2 Olll 0 I 1.50 JAPAN lS PREPARING to a.,. ... 0; I'• '• ~olollm l\lt '\Ii Scrlote ,. JIO llllN~Wll , •v. Am oi.... 'J2 1•• 7'll 1\-'o ..... oflt T11 .n . . 111h1 P Slolt ''4 ""°"'tr 30~o »I\ Surls pl IW, 11\llN~ li'Wi l1Vo :NI II 2.1n r )S:lt St .. ).jf\ i Ill onlror C.11 earmark an 1mpress1ve I J)Cr-wmn 11 n How•• GI • 1111 s.1, cm• 1,,. • N ,.... 1,~, ,,,,., Af,~hota.Ji' llll ,.,,. 1•0 1'4 ~ n1>11 61•.si
GNP " b'JJ' r•~ltH 12 IJ"' H11rt Mf •'~ 7 S...Slr" tt~ 10 NrrJ £ 1"1t 711t Am J>'<,, I •1 65 StV. &.I;\ ~O onWDocl I.to ccnl of her -"" I ion H<flM 21 n Hud ,.,. :J? ll\.'I Svc Grt 1111 ,...,w ttllll w 1 lt\'t Si:l 4 1• 111o:o 1• + "1 oclk Unll 50
f . 'd lelle lslt lS;, 16\4 HUI G•I i,,.' •,•, .. $e-UI tll't twt'(: .. .., I! 1~ 6'..I ~s--'of ,·~... s lS>to lJl<o Ullt -1.!o .,._,In I.«) by 1975 -or economic a1 , 111m '"" 1 1 H11•11 P .... .. "~ u1 111:. '"' '' .+ ~ _,..., 11tAS · ·1 · So t•· t A · Btrk H, l ' !I Hvert Coo 17 11'11 Am.Srilr .111 1!6 13'• •1'4 •l'Wi -l>f ooo~r Tll 1 pr1m.ar1 Y In U 1n;aS ~aa. sm L1D 31 31 Hw1rt Int t•:. ••:. 2UJ&d!!'.!!!i?i£!1Q£2&&£15 I ~"', Id I 74 ll ... JI JIV. t \.li C1Ptl111d 1.70 · b a>>•-W '" • H•O• •-4\> "' ..,m td pi.,1s ' 11\.'o tl'fl' 11\lt I oopltpf ·;H Also, he.r giant com ines are Bird pion ,,i ",. 1...d Gl1" ,,,:. 1s A"' s1,.u .4t ~3 !'~• is u -v, oowisr i .
11,,dl • lV. tnd Mu(I 27 7' MUTU A S1,1<11r I'° 7l 4"1 24\.o 24 >, + "• Corll'rhB .Be uniting to rorm even greater 11a r HI '''",. 1n,,co 0 o1• ,, AL •msUfl 01 ·" ' ''• , . ., ,~, + •• i::orGW 1 . .i.o. · •· •.~ · lo -•~ ao. fl l'\ ~ 1111o1ec 1'\ ?•·, A T&.T wrwl SSll t~\ •'• 9~ t ~. coron1rln .n g1an ... .., movt in V1o11er so11u•9,, 1,~ 1 inlr•rot ll't , ilim ra.1 l.tt 11~' •J 'i\'• *1• 1 Cowr11 com I d f A · ··• I t Boelflt C ,, 11 I I Cont • 111 -'m T&.T " '"'' 7'·6' '-1.1,+1.1' !OK Bdat .lO 9n S .o , Sil All\I n 0 8-AH IJ'~ lJ\li ~lrtn 1~ • ,... AmWWlo1 .S6 S f~t t t -•:. PC lnll I.la A st I ~ J ... c I I BW!lo s 5.,, AWW~t 1.is :50 ""' ,.,,. 16'1> + ~. ••n• 1.60b U ra Ja In sear,.., u ~w Ired t:. 1ftt ,;~ 1~1 Mulllt '°"',, FUNDS Aw Pl'tl 1 s 11oa u 1s 15 . . rornQKn .IO m•n~wer, raw maten.als, ·~-o 110 ""1n1 I"~ '° ti v, AW 4.1p1 1.,J l270 11>1.1 u1 .... , -V. jroweo1 1.011 ~ k >• >•• >• AM 71nc t 1 '• 11 '1 11~ -'9 rown Cor\ k ts. Br t I 4 U\~ ~ 114" .. A-ron ... H 16 .... 11 16 •.. l'WllZ•tl l,tO mar e :::, t : :~ 1:::.t~~ 21 ?l M\11" .IOt lS II~~ Ill.lo 1111. -t \.'> ~lS CllfD .tO Third ·~ grow and grow ,,.,.h II IJllt 16 I• Soll!U 1S\lt 26'• AMF IM .tO 1!1 ""' 11'4 ltl1 + .. lldlh~ .... ' ' lvck1W 7 1111 J1clltl1 F Jiit Jl\ Alflfec .ICI JI ll>ll XI "* + !o udhv pfl.ll lo P-~r and pro-r to! , ''' '' '" c 1 • AMK co .:roo .or ,...., n~ u -+ \Ii uwu ..• n '"""''" -,.--, ur,,.... ~ IQll ,,c > Mlf U 1n¥ ~·• •0.1111.Sll ~p ''! .ii 70• ... 1 .. "'• 451~ -.. <•~'' .>~ d IC l•11 Sl't 6 1m Wll " A ~ --. becom~ a grealtt power an 1r w sw Jc ''"' Jtmto ,-,.1 .. 7511t NEW EOllC IAPI '"" ukl \·10 1 10 moe• llfP 11s n ~ 11v. 11"-+ ~. !unnorua .-llt'l(O 1) 14 Jim~v f \'I 10 I'"'' tollowlntl Cll:li lnw Fldlc 7,J !.13 Amoltd 14,a ~l JG>< Jtl lll •.... urtlH ...,.,, 1 a !Uper power. """" M ,, 111 Jltly Fd• 1 ,111 1t1on1. 111PPl1t11 t""" ..,. 10.14 11.0I Amjf,I .37 1' ~\1 1l< '" -~ 1111t:r.., 1.111 •nnM I 6.1 " JI\"'" Pd JJ'h 1s ll'W NllhMWll A1loc • l"""''O"f Gt-: AIWl cond I.ff t Jt ,, ?c,,. 21 -1., ....:1001 I.to It's oot so Inscrutable -not '"r" ' •V. ll:tl1tr SI J] SC lllOll DI ICUr !\too IDS ""' ~.lt ).I.I Ancl• Hock I 50 1~ ?Sh 2i +11 (Y.,.,.UlM '·'° . , CIP Sew 1•<, 1'4 1(1!1S! p1 11'~ 111~ 0.tltro. Int. I'' Mui 1.50 f.21 Mc0<11H$v I 16 11 1• IS +\~ lo another fl:Onom1c miracle c..1 '"'" 1,, ..v. ic11v1r 1• 17 'flt orlc" 11 wh ch "! 1.:io J.5' And ciev 1.70 2 XJO, JO\\ lO'i -~'
US S I CtPTtfl ''" 11\ ~''' Grn J•\ 3~ these s1curlllt1 jt 15.06 16.:M APICl\l!Cp .1.S 31 ll..,. ll ll"• .. O.nlllvr 1St named U\e , . Urey, J. {''r 01v t 11' flY1m )>j, •!lo CWld IWIYe IWlln U, Kt 1·'1 t.45 Ape:oOll 1.311 SI ~Hi llV. 2'°i i I D1n1 Co l.2J . . irlt 91 J 11-'o ttr T 71~ IV. lold !bid\ " bouclht 1r P1 .I ' 31 •PL Corp •< U lJ'll 15 +-i-. !:Mirt l"d ,lllb .Japan intent on becomtna: an ,.,, Gp t.iv. l!\'J IC•!'-" 1,. •1o11 11kldl hur1dv. Inv 11.'11'1 ,,ae '-* ""'-p1 c1 °' , 13 n 13 o.n nd 011 . ~ pow• . to ~··c NG ..... '"'Kt IWd ,, • 71>-lo lltl ··~ ltttl ls.n 15.Jtl AR:" Svc :,, 160 ..... Il l' a.th -i-J'h 011• P•OCtH econom1c i>u"""r r IS 1111 C•• 3 lVt Kll.lff E '" 1ov. -'tlt•dn 1.u l.M lvr '· •.~ Arc1t1N 10t 41 21 19•,, 21 -+I vcoCo 1.i. ~ b f d to J tn1 x lt 70 Ktvt F-lb 1~ llYJ -'drnlr1t1Y Fu~: JHntlCI( '·• 4,tl Arch 01"· 1 xio .Sl'o 500\o 51.,, +l\.'i 1vco olt.21 "" muc pre erre a apan Ctn '11,5 11.,. 1.,.. ICtY• Cu• 11 1, Grwlh ~·" ~.It ~l'" 16.Jt !''" Ar!ll'Srt LOI 31 19,, 1'Vi lt'I< 1r1n1-if, .~ intent 011 other goals And 0.1rt RA It'.\ 1'• IC1v1t PC 1 ~~ i~:r" ,:ii'! ,:u ~v:oi~ "~'.11''•.ot Arl1n1 DS .Ml Slll .,. I . I•• IYl~P 0 171/J ' CP11rnt1 . '"°' ,.,..,ic,.,. Int l J -'dvliri , 5 ,,_. cus Bl lf""'' ""•mcoSt 1.llJ 1'6 :tt>, n11o na.+1 1m1t 112 if y,·e both i,1.arl now to handle !::~1r1 o ''\ 1•1 ...,, et '" s•! -'l'fllllld '· ,33 ~111 It 1 :\1111·'-! Armco ,n.10 .ll 1111o '"" 21 -+"'> 1 M~l• 1:10
1·1 n'ght. our mutual --•c """,.. ',!! !.~, t \\ .~. 'i/,, 1f,' ,•,:t. AMre s.4 J.• "' sc 1. '·'' Armour 1.611 1' .:i •2.,, .;1., -\1 1,.,.,1, ,~ '='""""u ~-"" ~-A ·-• • II -'IT! f' '° M C111 IC1 ,.., 7.53 Arrnr pf 4.75 1 Sl 55 11 rte In ~-~1.··~n can lead lo •• ~r.u,, .. ,• ,',"' lJ" '•Ne""•·· •,:1 ,3"'.> AllUl!e 1.11 .... c .... kt ,,. U C A•~ICk .to 7U 7P.'o 76 v-. +I hn Mf~ .~ '-"'"'"~ 1-"J '-" .. '• to~ "' I It '-'I !"' H 1•,t5 li.l:I Arm1t11b 1.'6 71 JJ llV. ll'.> Mvl1 .04 immensely be n e f i c i a JU• 5:~!: !, ~ fI L:~·11.~ ~~ ~v. fllC•o •:11 s.1 u1 ' •Jt t .CM Aro Corp ·'° i ll'Y 16'• u• .. ....::·h n11giw "' l II WI 61~ J A"' Biii 1.11 )~ 11t !·" I.&$ Arvin lftd 1 I •11~\ 111~ 11~• .. _ nll r :·~D pan.ion of two-way 1rade and ',',"', !. , ,•,;t ..?. •,~,_ -· ,,, ""' 0v1n •·• t.t1 ,.._ ..t.t i .1, Alllld 011 1.~ 1110 20• .. 1t,.. '°"' -1-1,., fi)•K•, • ., c I• " .. •• -.. ,.._ ...,,.., 'illl•ni: ''"' '·" l n Asnon ei11 a:i 1 ~ 40~ JIOto _ u, or~ nc , treal breab ror you and me .. <>,!)' ,u,ua Jl'Wi n•Ji L1rwn M 11i~ 15" Ceoll I 1 1 • .0 K~lckb S.7S 4.)11 And lrtW n 10 t'lo IO +h I &ti~ j < ('.,, • 111\ I~ LHdV Ld l•'~ 15'• llKM• 1)6 l·"ICnkk Gt l ,fl 7 . .0 AudDG l:IO t2 "''• 3s1, Jj'" ·~ r d D5.SO the consumer5• :,•,·.~-Mf 21 v. 7'1'1 Ltll '°"•1 m J\t 1nv111 ,,., .11 Ltx Grtl'I • '·" 1.s1 "nd s., 1·n J 11,, 16,.,, '''"' -+ "' 1 ""1, "~' 11~ , •• Ltllur 11 lt jPKI 7 00 t·· lt lCl'I 11.17 U9'1 ' . ' . XI•• • c Clln't Mr~ ·~ t~ tewht1bbblBI "• too:k 1.11 'fj1 lbtrtv 1.6t 5:U ""' rin .oso u ~. 1 ~ lh ·· 1IFI"'" .<II rnnten o 5 51.!i lllw Ell Ill'> II''> A ""c; 111 •IS s'>0 ti" l"' , o 'a AtlCtvEI L).I M 27 ll >to 12 +14 tm 1111 110
Spending Money Hike
Clew C11 1.~'.':i ll'lo Lllbl1w i-. 6t'i A::: In~ ,: .. c:.. tt1 nv (04 6:61 All ltlcl!l!&t 7 1111 SI\• 4'• SO'lt 4 1 '4 tm Shem' 1 C:etur 0 ' •Vt Lei! C:dv 'll:. 811 Am Mui '·!7 7.17 tine Ntr 1.11 • 16 All ltk:h pl J 1 15 17 I S_ .,., tS fDl.?a ,.OJI,. Co 4' SO '-" l!trn 12 11 AmN Glt'I 2) tA 11111 ]OS lU Atlll:tll ftll.IO !10 l•l'o 1!'4 IJ o -tl'o 1c•1 ~ II "'olen<I F. l :N. ~Vfl<l'I C lfVt 11 •m PIC 6:01 6.17 Loomh 11v1e1: ' Alllt Cl\l!m 1 15 HI< 10•" 20·, + ~• e~ .ti~ Co111"' F 11•" 12.,.. .... Id GEi l:RO U\/o nthor Group' C1n1d 30.71 :ll!l.11 A11tl Cotp ll• J ll~ ll'I . 1ff Ol'~lo .llJ l"olorl Sir 1~ 70 ... w.1 Rltv •'It 5 C1olt 1.11 71J (loll t.20 l.:IO ATOlnc .Ol1 II I'• I I~•+ \lo 111111Q_lm .~400 Comut 12 14 V.1 ilrT 56 JW, Grwtro 1.M t:H Mui 11.M 11,M -'U'""' Pits 1l ''' ,..... 1·, -,. •i. ,t o..C:o ~ COl'l'I Cl~ :UI\ J71't 1m1 A• n~ ,,~ tnqn• 'II 71 ""' '" 1.15 IJI Automtn l~d 113 J~. S*• .s•o -~. '!~..i· I ~
W C:orn t;11 1111\:o 11\ .. Wl nlro M 3 3"' Fd 1"¥ 7.F. ,. tnhtn •·5 •.14 AVCD Cp 1.10 \It IJI\ U\o 15,,. + '• Vtnll'ICI · M B E • COl'ft Ttl JllV. !IV. flOr C J.lt ,._.. Aottls 1'41 I, Ill l"d I, z.11 Avco plJ,211 71 Jt\.'li 3t l9 -'I> vrMtoo j ay e Conom~c oe ....... Hllfl , I Y.tr Ml9 '" "" -1• 1. 2 1. IU Gitt '· I .JS Avery Pd .70 ol$ 21~, 21 21" -.... p . ., ~,'c..,','~ •141 ~ ''"' G"r '" ly, """'°" 1.1t 4, lo',111 Tr 'l·"ll.'2 Avner inc ,40 14 &l~ 11·, •'• +~t '•PDt~ '° "'" l 1 Browt ,....., '6 A•t HOlleflten: M•!!!. ·~ ~·lf Awon '"it 1-10 Mt 14~ 1!\.'o l~ tl\• l'ld '5r ~~: f:, 'ha 1~"' 1
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;: ~6i"' ~~=: :.~ ~:n P.HT"• ,t:,",'i'''l,, tvr:"srr .1rt ~ 1.::: 1i:? 1i·~ _1iz 1c.·1~~·:~ Cm• Tee l'~ 1•• 11 G 23'h 2 \'I Stock S. 1 I.I ,..... M11 t . • D , Ollvtr ts .. JOHN CUNNlFf <:omplcted their annual con-,....,," l \i ,._ ic H ''' 1t• Sci C• 1. •. Mood• c, 10.u l .31 -~ ver co 111 ~ CIWI llodl: 3(1 J') I'll Mii 10\~ '11,\ BlblOn 7 7, 11'1'1 11.h 11.ll lltbck W l.ll IOI lJI• 11\io wChrn j 10 NEW YORK iAP) -So tributlons to Socia] Security. tontrfd ,,, 'Ill "'141''" :nv. """' B11con 10.UIJ. M Flt 7.ff r l!r1krOIJT .•~ 10 1 •, lo'• r1v0Co 1.40 l"Ofllr1n '" S Y.trJd In ll"• )( !"' ""' 1.611 • Giii 4.J.I •·" 1•11 GE 1.IJ 41 l"" U'" 11'• -+ ~-•1ulfl0 1.tO perverse is the present state "--'uc';on• are made on the c_., L 11"! 1111t .,.,ldl!I c1 1i ., ~ 1a1r Fd •.1' '· •Mu OmG 1.ot, •,.» 11G oll•.J.o 110 j1,~ ~\, 6JI• -1-i . or.ur orJ.10 · • f · · I vt:U "' Co•• s n. tl., .,.,ldl•x 114 l•~ loncktk •.ti 1·g u 0"'1" '·' .31 •NlPnt .ISo '' 111 n. + ~\ O•eH• "' 81 of the nation a: 1 n a n c J a basis or 4 percent of the. fll'st llim vr '1lflll 21y, .,., dw GT 1•~· l51h ct ton s1 ;·f, 1 . :!'l lh't 12·n lf'f: ,:~Pc f' 1 1 1 ~• 1. 11•, + '·'" 0,1y1..,5cp ,0 balance lhat some of the rare ' th rwfrd It u ~ol• G•• ,. tt~• l oot Fdn · · ~~:., :,,1 · 137 • y.J1 ll ~l"' 2 •.• 22 -1~ oukePw 1 60
good news for 0 rd l. n a r y $7,800 earned, a. flgure • at ~1 "t'~ :~ !~t ~·· 11.~~~ ';._ 1~1-, 1'~~ s1 1f:; il:" it tt111"' J:t'f ,,11 :~ 'VrN 2.1J I~,',' r,Si).•,' Jr.8~,· ff4 t ~ g~~~rnld Jj10 much of Amenca•s middle "" Fo 1 ;.,.. "'°" sci 4l1 ~ ullock c11v1n, .i 11v11 6. •.6 11 ••bOlt 1 . .ut 21~. :+1•.•otuPan• i.lS• A rlcans in recent weeks · rou ca*',.. Mollwk 1t 13 1' Bulkk 11111t.UNtt ecw Str. '"'\"' .lS u ' l'• 36$'-'•guoLt iu me c.la~ Is now approaching. It Crlllct> 11: •$it s 'l!ont' co1 1 1,,., C•Fld~ 1'.Jt 1t.n l•l•ri •.01 t.•1 1111c 11C .eo 11 1161 n•. 11~ -'"' ymoin.1 · ."11 could mean more trouble for can mean $50 or more in c::i:' ,l : be,,.,_, ~k 1:'.l. 'f"' ~:,IX-5 l:ll ~:~ trwi:, t:l J:n :; ,.,,"1kloi 1 102 jjt, H" fzti.'+;.;, o,n, ..,,,. .111 the economy. thl k ~ I R,,, 0,, , .. 11 .. '-\l!Dri s t>a 1o1~ NV vnt n.l'il '!·'1 Grwih 1.1• 1.16 •Ji;1 1n.1 eo 1;µ. nYt Iii.Ii -., mon y ta e-uvme pay or 01'1• Gin 21.., tt\'o ''\Tr-' II'' 11\il BuM Fd l ,Q .0$ Pl SI!{ J,lll •.3J : •iLC''·~ 14 lt'• ll J•~ -J• EttlorPcll .Ill Summed up 11 lot of kers D11,1n " ,., • 11 • wt '"" 4!\ CG ro 7·11 7.n 1~ •.so l.9'/ I 'l'~b ·10 2H ~:! n-'t! ..;i t !l E1•co C• fO • many wor • Dl"ll F' ll~ 414 \\etdl M sv. ' C•D~m· 4.11 1... s •.JI 1.11 Ill .. • ' .• I '' •• 2410 1 Ct51 • ., Lin A ·cans are receiving more • th bl o Ml 15';; l 1; Mot c1 b 11 1'< 11'~ 101• 1.... 1.11 j.Cll Net rlh 1.u '" 1" 0 · 1 10 1• e 1 GF ,1, mer1 · Now here 1 e pro em: O:w .~ 51, : M.,.11.,u ,.., 11~ 1011 s11, s" ·'• Ntvw Ct! 1.s5 1.1• :;:f1"2 I 11g i!~ -lh"; ~7v1:.:·.,;1::!;, urii i.t0 spending money than at the These increases in disposable O•IM ,.P S'1 ''' Mu1111 E• n~ •1 .. t~'~"~,;;; ,~;!:.~0·01 ~:,w V:.: 1!·~ 1f1; 11t Fd; ..it 1 Jl 11 1! -11 E1s..:oe1111 11 be . . f th Th" 0.lut Ch IOl't 41 \li M~tr LE lf I"~ 8 I 1nio•2H"'"°" 1i o1 13'1t Kkt'N" .JO •1 Jl 2t\~ JC t ~.E•111"11• 1.40 g1nrung o e year. is personal income could bt turn-t>tt \tr1T 1s 1.n1 Ncc L•• 1" •'.\ ~~"•• 1·31 1·50 1ci. s1r, •'JJ •'S2 Kt 01,k ·G 111 ~'4 .,.~ 44"' 11• e"'11" Mt .11 Id lead to more demand . nd I Ott Br ltl't 20'A N•rr•• c u l• ·-~· ,·,, •.• ~"'' '' 1i,1.1 1raM• ,1 0 1St 10'. 11'r 10\/J t '!Q<t'll J .20 cou · ed into treme OUA saes o,v 4m 1v. • N11 l•flO ''lo 1•• ::.,.w,:_ '*'' ill'I nopro f 11t iit •<oP•i,, 10 U•• ll'·~ u·~ ~. dl10nBro1 1 And · · de and could · · Otwt, E s I" N11c1r 1t 111.~ 12\:. ·~-.. · ' · 5· e '" .... J 14'• 24\.i ''"'~ + ~. G&G ,10 1ncre&es m m pressure. lf Americans decide D!•m er 11•1o 1 11o NC mp CP n1 1i• Ch5:,'i' Gr ,1.;,~ 1·7' ITT~ 1~·~ u U lldniiH .60b 1l 16•'., 16 16\• -!-1~ EIMy11c .OtJ Well .Imo~ cerla1'nly would 1 d th-"·-Ohle tl'IC :t.li ''·'& N11 l!out l• 11 , ,, , M , " , Fo ,·11 ,.,, "II Haw ·'° 11 l.i'• Jl'·• ll t \, Eitd Anoe ...... ... 0 spen IS money, uMn you DIY9r CM ll~ l~ fl1l GIO 1•'\ lS\lo FIO Ii 1'l:i 1'11 M WmS l2'ot n'at 81 I ln'terton .u. I;\ n. ,,., Vi El Mtrn Mt•
-lead lO higher prices. can be JU re prices Will COn• g:i~te~lt ~~ ~l'J ~::1 \!_~ ~\It ir rz~~d S\' :; 6~:n 'Ht~ll 11:~ tl:;, 1=1~ 1,,f J IOt 1!1'11 7"1~'> 2!1\ .. +2J~ ~l~~N':t ~:.;
T"· questo·on ,., !ho's• Wo'll lm. d ~ Jon ,..,_ fOl'J N1t "'' ,._ 1 r · · ••• ,·1, ,·,, ~-11cp 1.fCI JI •j'• •11~ •P~ -"'ElPnoNG 1 '"' ' Ue UpWar • ior OB 1• 1t M1t jtcl I>, t"lo ~~<II 11'ii°11:·,l TC Set: fNlo'n '""'Sor.I.JO 1130 )''> )(l•o ,'JO~>-''Elttl CD 1,20 ronsumer:s bank it or spentl -n.: · h 1 • 1 ed d '"' NL J jt< N11 how J'to J~ fl'<=. • • 1c FNI ''• ,·26 eno.,. tt• 1 1i. 1 + emir t 111: 1 11uS IS WI IS erm e-unk l" 0 11 • t111 $11vr ••• J'' 0~Jr:· llniviJt Ptuf Rev f u ,13 81i?"'1.,1.:, .. : ~ .. t..., 1·'·+• EIT'trYAlr ... ii? That is, will they add mand . pull inflation to dif· Our!..., l~':'S~ e~ GE 11•; i1;1o Fu"~ uftiv•llPenn SG ,;,o •)tr I:~~ Coro 11 ,,, J J'•. ~ErM1<1 1..20 'nff ,; d d b . • El P1lnl 17·• 13•, NJ N1IG H~ 16 t Grwtll u.,.~I ftt Mui 4.06 t,061'"' Sit l IO 2,1 M'; 71,.., '6'• .._ l,. EmpOlll 1.16 to 1 awonary eman Y terenUate 1t from cost. push, ,EnTC_wt "" s•• Nic1'1111" ?!Vi! 1111;om u ... v111 P111t1 11 .s112 ... 1o1hree ·ao n U'} 33 "'~ + ._,1::m"°'c ·'° •· ·ng a nd lurn•'l11re and 1 1'1 "" '1• t '\ "'111• " ~ _..\, v1n1 vn1~111 p1io.1"' 111 1 n i:ckC>I< ; 10 ll6 6,.,., 1~ 65 EM Jot>n1n ... 1y1 c f'!'i a which means that pr ces arc Ee°"' l•b 3V-1 V.7! " lt!'IC '!" '~ co1 Grtll t.•s t.t5 Piiot ·u""'•11 1 elrJDll" ... :JO 11 12•, n~ ...: .. !ttGJolln pl 4 Ppll'can•es' Or w1'JI they hed h' h . F.kttr I t • • .... NCI• NG 7 ..... Com....:: UlllV•!I Pl11t SI f.30 t.JC 31111 LIUO r ' ,,,~ " 12 "'11\Mlft .«I a .. · pus up by 1g er operaUng F1 Nii. ~'' •u Eur 011 2 ,,,, C!)mS 1111 1.•• 1.11 "'°" En1 '·" 5,., 1oc~ HR .M ol09 u'~ w.0 ._.._ +1*·; "'111 au1 JJ mark time until price in· · I d' th t f I bo El Nvc •l'I t 'A G11 1'''> lt''> Cwtth Al 1.11 11.21 Pion Fnot t .JJ 10 "" 11u.1,•11 1 :io u 3J'I :n~ J3', .._.,, Eq.utG11 l" costs, inc u 1ng a or a r. E1cfocPV , ,,, w M11G J?o •'~~with co 1.'1 1.s2 ftl•n Inv '·" •..tt Bobli e 1rk1 , 10~. 1oi.. 10•·, + ,, ESI inc: .10 creases begin to slow? bl Ell...., o,i; !'' . w Pulv 11'1-1•·~ omo A1 • 01 '11 Pr lee Fu-: llollfll co '° •11 10 11~. 10 t \t E~!rt .lO Jn the present unsta e e1 c s...1 'l'I 111 N11c1 11c J•\ ~1~ om11t1 s's.t ,:01 Grw>l'I 11.A.11•.'1 1o11C•• .1Sb "'' ss Sl'• s~ l•o ene•lnt 1.10 Millions Of Amt. r i C I n ~ · j · 't d 't El D11t St ~ :it.in "'" 11o; t Como Bit 1.5' 1.'1 N E•t 1.15 l.?S Bond !flO .DI c 1n o•~ 10 + •t E11~• pl7.14 . economic s luat1on 1 oesn t1 Mootut •~ • :>Mo w11 2n' 111~ omo Fd l,11 1.n N Hor 11.1111.J"t BD01rM111 1.11 1o u ti•• H•t _" e11111 CP .u recently received pay In+ l k h f dd·,;. f o"'Jlk 1).66 •.oo Pro Fuftd 1.t1 7.6? 1"'"~" 1.?11 2u 10 '!'~ "'·• _ i;, Eurofr.d .llt h ·-· I H e muc 0 an a luvn 0 r.0<>cord UfttVlll Provotnt 3.•• 4.31 Bo••W•r 1,H ~· ,,,~ 1 '·• 11'• .. '• Euro!d ln.2.ie creasei;, among f. em, ~1a money to make the pot bubble con•ol in t .. o;o 1~.oa :;:::11•~ it 1~4 • 33 1ormtn1 .IO u n 1p, n + ~. evan1" ~ Security rec i pie n ts and · rons~ In l.~ J.lt F"'\l' un " Boa l!otls 1.14 11 l111 ,, •. , 17'• + Ever>11irir.
I De•pite a year-long effort lo spree to eipand '.aci'llto'e•.. onn Mt '· •.•1 .,.Qui ,t·~ ,;.,1~ BOllt~• 111e • H '''• 11 i. 4i E•CtnD 1 1~ government employes An1 . ·' oM G•h 1.u '·" "'°'' · B•1n1• ... 1• so 1• 1•1 ''• •'• + '• F•oe•~t .oo m,·11,·oos more are ,·bou· l to bring sLabihty, consumer Businessmen arm ... that the'°'o L~ 1'.•>H.M ~'c"' :·r. ;Ji&r1,,s1 1.4o. ',,,, •• "'~ F1e10'" '.6-011 . I Jh' Illy.. Cnlv (JO '" J0.$6 1"""' ·n I • Brl1t Mv 1.10 17• ~,,. so•. 51 1 '• F1lrcll( 50 pr1Ci!s eary 1s year were nnly way they can overcome Crnv101v J.os SJ. v'lvr• !·.., 7·',,sr111Mv ..,, 11 le'~ ll'• 36'• 2•,FalrHiu 1.,10 increase their take-home pay, . . 6 l 1 '" wo11 6.11 t.JG 1 • . · 1ru P•t J?e 111 to ,,, ''• Filrmo 1 ·
h rising al a percen annua lnelr rising costs is le -nd Voh M n .... s1.1t,vovia, s.n ,o.•14arP.i 1":1:1, 1 ,1, •1, ,,, , "•lit.it 10, i( you can judge by t e ~,.... 011owert Grovo : •o •K '·'~ 'Bdwv Hilt 1 , 11,, :J? i:i
11umber or union contracl rate. lied for "!ore efficient plants and 8:f~ 1g:U tV:fi =rz,~~~ 1t~1 1;::~ l~nu~01.n 1! 2::~ 1:,, '::~ + '" ~::;1,1:,r1r.,,1
·•go1o·a11·~ .... ,for this year. Based on the S(K!I con· machinery and thereby lnwer 0.111 ,•,·, ,•, .... •:,~"'•• •,.M,, •,·~!•own ca .i 1 13", 1J1, 11~-·~ ~·.:-~:,.1,1 ':.!n, •~ ~"' -I'd of led °'• · f I bor hi h tK•I .Sf ,.., · ·-wnS!lflr• .!ol 11 11'• 17,, ,2,, _ '· .,, .... Moreover. payro1•~ a rt 1 ence consumers • .as ra uro;: urut cost o a , w c ~·1 to 1.u 10.Jf """' Tt.1J U.JO BwnSllot 1 so 11 19 •• ,.,.,, '"' _ • .; J:AS 1n11 .•11 ~ l Id b M I . I 'sl t bout ' v 1a 6111 ,lt uddorr l"uncll: Brv111wlr .051 11J 1l n1-11'• + '• FoOdc•t .Ill JilOing to be inc re as c d 1 cou e. any peop e are IS present Y r1 ng a a *""'" ow••d: !nt 11nv un•;•1t aucwEr 1.?a 16 n11 11 .. 1, + . ., F.oMov 1.50
somewhat by the termination rearful of getting thcn1selves 8 percent a year. ~~;, ':~J:ft ri":i i::~f1:~ I~ ~0 Pi':O ~ IJ.,., 11·-'~~: + :: ~t<lt',~' D~11er6 . l f' . I lraps ol tak'1ng . lftCC1TI s ... S.JJ Com SI •. ,, 117 lud9tl I" ~ ' II 10· lO''o ' FtdP•oBd I ()n ,July I or the f> percenl 1n 0 1nanc1a ' Consumers do not feel this $<>Kl '·'° J,S. SKU•lfV """"': Bui/For 1:~0 ,, !lol''o ,, • .MV,-; ·? 1'.0SlvnS ''°
''ncome Jax surcharge. Tile on big installment loarur that need Moreover ;r you e.x-~:!.II(~ \~~ n·~ fn~~ l·~ ;·r: lulov• ~ ·'° fS 11'1 U11o 11•t t"i F..itr&I• In<; . th k • ' l 1o'C1110'•• Ullt• fff 1'" 811"~ RlmD :tll '"· ,~. I'• l1 FHtOtPl~!r 1 •. urcharge. ii you remember. l'.Xlend far into e un no"·n Amine the opportunllle~ for '"" sc ,·1c s'u 5tltoi: ""' 7·,, 1·6, 111nk1t on.JO ' ll'n ~·• ,,,., t 1 FM! M•v •n¥ " fu · m•o 1j6ll lftll ~I soe' · · n B11rl h•CI '·'° 1' 36 3.,., ll'~ -. F"ro (D 10 was meant to be an anti-In· lure. s-nding you find some outlets =:. ·., 5·41 1m ;o , ~r•v!~' 1u•1Nor .~ JJ 34\._ l3 J.C'a +11'& Flttttll rd ·"' , . • r-. , · · l'I DI ll'•t l .ff urlNOI' Pl.SJ 3! 1 6'o 6~o Fltl<k lM 1 oK1 rJaUon device., but ifs bard The.re IS, ln fact, SOIT!t In· closed. M1JIJons o( Americans ='1'YGlll ,,·=1t·~ ldt '" ,·;. 1·1111~fndV .ltl l6 11 1,1,_ n Fin F~•irn • · h · ht I ~-,,· · "'"'' F"undi· · urrtht .60 H' 11c..., 11•'• U7'• +1•1o Flrtttnt 1 '° to measure its contribution. d1callon t at consumers m1g have posj.poned buy ng uvun::S ~~. •n 10 ·:: li'ti c1ort , ;1 , ta 111111unv .1111 1J 11 1' u ,-,. c11r1 2.ifl
In .ddl.to'on, m1'JJ1'ons nf be rtacting to inflation in a because they can't get the ·D C10 c.11 1:111 lnvt1I t'.01 t,15 -C-Fii Mitt 1 4' •lrtd 1t? U Trust l.it l,](I :12 , FllNClty 2411
sizeable inereaSC?s in !heir business, which is planning to spending projects have been ~U ~:O"' 1;GJ:11::1. :i",...n~t S:!~,j'.61 :~1,.~~t ·~k "' 1 ~ 10•. }g;_: '-1:• "I~~~ ·fg.
Americans are already finding manner much difrcrent from mortgag". And various other ~.,,,. 1u 1.11 ,·ll m11n11 ~·a~·:.; c!:r~1~: .. 1·11 ?J :Pi'" 11, J~.~ i 1 . ., ~~1N11.s1 .1s.
'<•I ndl b k -. Fld Fulld 1 .b 102 tr Inv II .... ff I i 111 v1 nii !J\,, -'Ft>llfr.ki It paychecks because they have go on a cap1.. spe ng fnrgotten because an s won 1 ,.la' Trrld 11.tt '°'.41 ire $.11 •·" :~o • ilJ10 ff " .:: ,, -1• ~1rm11>9 50 1-:::.::.:::..:.::::._ _____ :._ ___ .::_ _____ _c._ __ -'---lend t.ht money. ';B::.!.'1 pl,"'J' ,,30 1.r:"s't' 31.~r;r~~ ,c:~'';.':;~~1,!o 10 s. ~·· ,s~.~ .. , ~:l~r-~r:..~.""
th. b' l l>ldull :Jf l·~ !~ld"ltn f'ul!Cb' 8' ,.,. <v I ll\t 511• • ~II f (04! I Moreover :some 1ng 1g s 1ncorn s.1• .ts Am n• '·" 1.•1 C•P c fotc11 11 77'" 14,., 11•, ±' ,-1, Gti !..l
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. ' '-• , \ii" 'i\ Jn F!ltllc ~.•!.to C1rbrv" 1.411 Joj 16V. ...... 1, '•Fla P .1'° liappen1ng In bn: automotive Fii VI 1: 1,<t Seit" ft.I t.11 Ct•11•1r . .o !O 11'~ 141'4 Ill'. I''• Fl&PQ1L1 j
k l P I ol I ,.,ti~:{;'' t.1 t.lf !tlilfl ... ~-~ (l!'fl ca.Oh s flO •• 14 M Fl 3w mar e . MP e n on Y fll'fl F11 1 "" '·'° 1.ft 811 1 .•• 1!.11 c11roPL1 '·"' n• "''-14•• i•» -•• ,, • c'"',' ndl d th ed F-11 1~ tk j·N 7, C111 0• 7,02 7.02 C.1rofch 1.IO 40 1J'Q 2:1>, 13'" + ~, uor ~ .JI! spe ng own, as ey us F-•' Mv111 .l>t 1. 1 Steck l0.'4 10.16 c1rr1trCo .tO •1 3l'" n•. lJl1' + ~. ,F"'r Df 1 l I nd '" b' C F11 Ntl S, ...... , ..... !nGI .SIO J.9' C1rr J1tt .U 110 "'' .u>o 1'1"t W lttr ,10 O spe up w a igger. ar • F1t Sir•• un1v111 1111tn!t '·ti • :M cirnirw · .«>• its 16·, 15c, 1s1,-, + or-. FMC C• .11 but 1 gOOd many Americans,'",', '!! ~·,1.1, .... ml "~r 1:·tt ,rfi c111 JI 10 101~ 10 10·, ~~F~~~·'190 1 ['"' · · · l ·,. f c1111.ckt " i1 ii n·~ n ~ -.,, c · h1vt 11imr,ly fallen out of love F i!i rJI;.. ~:~ t~ ::~: !:ri ,:~ C11trTr 1.io 7111 ltl'~ :JA1, 1''• -•, ~:i: Jin·ICI
with the r can. No longer ~01111C1r1 t~ :·r, j=°'r;, J·;: ri:ri ~~: cc°'!.1.is ~ ,::; ,1·:~ ,:~ ~ l; ~=~~::'·r.~
i.1 it the atatua: symbol It used F~a1;~ &~~ · -r.;11: f~i :·~ ~:t;,!:-~1·i !! ~I!. , 1• ~..., ... ~., F ... ~:1'11:1 .to
to be 8:t.!ti t.1;t 1·~ r~:: E~1
1:0 • 1' c111 .. plAt.so. • u .#..; 5l : ,,• ~:fw:'1 #
On • I'· othc h nd t~• Ulfl :fi : !'~ l'f 12.1' ll'fi Ctnco l~t •• 1t1 J4'' 1'>' l~'~ +Hl Foti WI\ l,! I ,,.. r a • ,.,. fn(om 1. , , """' Gt j·~ j·10 ,..,, itotv 1 ''' ... "' itll'borl ~ ~; "-to --~-· I '""" u w 1..c ·r. .tt Ctn H,,.. 1 I.I 21 2111 21...,, n~, -" Fre!ll\ 1,. 40 11JVUYl1.ru11 11.V• .. ~ .. in y It frMlll ' ,.1 u"I' Mlrl . .Ml !tftltlL! , M XI ll>~ 71'' Ill'! ,-,,,ptju li.10 ' 't ·~-'f;•• by.-. ra•-gFuflO ""' ,f On l'll ·1•j t.16 lllLI .ti.JO t.)00 U SI lJ -•• FroJIPICp !n 1sn '""""SI l't;U 1.1n; "" " Ste 1,., !· "c .. 111 '·~ 1,11 .,./111ts 1,1! ,. !6li 1~•1 ir" + •• ,,,_ •n ,in nf lntert!t available to ((In. 111•1tr '·'4 .o ':'" '""~m 1 0, ce11 L• l!I 10 10~ 1011 '°'" -'• ~umera:. Savings bonds and z:.,1r 1
·',' I·" w",0? 1!"16 11·ti ~:~:; !:~ 11: it~ ~.! :::: : :~ GAC Co 1.M
be !11 'd 1· 1 .fl ~ j· s Cent lo'!• 111 ,, 71 tl''! t'~ ·-AF-Coro -bllOka ,tve rate1' that at st ~:r '.l, 1 ·U 'l~ :"'i~n 1 1·J.i c111r.1u .Me •s ,,,~ 11•. 11•1 1•1 "F p11.lo'
merely keep pace with the .,~ 111111 I '"ll·~ ''"' ,,,. K1 · crrre 1Mb Hs 1,'.,· 10 .. '11• + "' •m.Ska 1..10 •YOh11 to 1 V11 L 11 S S.16 Clrt•'"" .IO &l lA 11 .. t '' 11'\l ..i 1.1~ rate or tnOation. ""'"" 10:11 : !ti(°""' i. 4.4' ~11111A .n " 1~· ... '""' l•'\ '1 •m' p1 1.'6 Htmllltlll ol Ill •. 4.ff t Sii .IOI I ll\lo 1'1• 1t , 1,,._..t .ti Whether the c 0 n I u m e r "'". S.tf ,.. l'ICtS 111 "MYlll "°"'11 Inc lt Po I'' "• .. .. •1'70tn 1.JI
1pe:od1 tJm addlt.Jonal money Ii:.::.. J:!; : v:~M t; l" g:~rSN~·~ t: jl,, ~ i~, 1°1~ :'11':1•r·':°nd
ii • tOSllJp. If it Is apen_l, H:~wc" 1:11 . t.'1,.. ntP 1-!I 1·n"' ~~~ft J-: ': tt:; tj'4 ~. = :t ':!~1n '··1:·
"
COUid mell\ mor. lnfl.tlon "" "II '· 111sr •ft tu 1 . ""'"""'" 1to <i ,,;~ ,ni• »'" ._ ·~ ,...,,~.,. 1. ,, \. l "'•'" M• ,o.t1 1 """'T 1.ao 1i1 -.,.T s' "1'• _,._ ..... 011 .61111 -•lema "" ~ . N~UM111 1ow: "''"...,. .M .u, .,!_., .s·~ ~ A'lri n 1 eo t""" · H MtM 1t 1 •Olr l ... 11.~ 1~ Vt I fCI -lO'o ~+lot -'ff" "'1.l4 -::::::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;:=;IH"hln" 'I~. "'" 111 1 .11 Pli'l Ot11t. :io •'~Ml '• + ,, tn l•n<"'
• 'ol"o~"I 1.1' I. Mlw• 1,H ., rw--eu• 1 D :I'' 'l'~ '''' -'~ ~f!Clblt .o. " t Sh I "' '·" •. jKll" '· I "~•11 iu ' '• '• Sl~ .. ,., '~ ci. '·"" Mii• I 1rp 111 1"' J.to • 1 ¥.f~1 •. '· •~""I ~,.P '• 1,\" 11•, _,. l'IOtvtl ·'" f!IOI(! ,,. ~rll~I I ~ •.• j·" I'll , "' ' ,,,~ l' -'• n0v ... m ' T d u I"'' c~ l·tj 1· w ii 1·•1 ,fO II" , • ):J\l\o "'• !'' ... •• '" •1« },6(1 '1 •: 1• I~ ,-':i1 _., · ~f11~i-11:11 .,& "'~' ,Y," •o 'f' '!.'" ~. -•• "F1••• ,,.. Oime·A-Lines nde"f.': ::;:.v~: ;l~fl!t • ;'.;! fr; ;.:u1f.1r. ll 1• '• 'r>.' 'i" ~ ~~ ~ "ifJ1,'AG )~;"c1 r.» l:nf...~ • !.~ Iii Ei:1:'Zr.fl' "i ,:·: 1J~t 11~ = ~ ~~.,::~ 11 ...._ ______ .,
Market
Sy11ibols
·+·• -~ I _,.
+" +" +• I !~
+ " +• ... + '• ... +••
+ " _, -·· _,..
'--• _.,
+ ••
+ .. -'•
+' _,
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! .. ,, . •• t n, H o
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l
I
Frld•f, M<Y 15, 1'70
Friday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
. ..... Jfet••·------------, .. , .......... c .... a ..
,•
I
SC DAILY PJLOt I 2L
Briefs
NEW YORK (UPl)
Marketing cigarettes without
the aid of broadcaat ad·
vertising will not pose tOo
many difficulties, G e o r g e
Weissman, president of Philip
Morris, told the New Yori!:
Security Analysts Thur!day.
Weissman also said Philip
MoM'is' international sales of
·cigarettes presently are ill
fastest growing operatipn, up
14.2 percent for the first
quarter of the year whfle the
company's total c igarett e
salts were up about 3 percent.
WASHI NGTON (UPI)
North American Ro c k we 11
Corp. 's California dJv\slon ha1
obtained a $29 4 mill ion three·
year contract from ~he Na·
tional Aeronautics & Space
AdministraUon for suPPorfl
operations in the second stage
ot the Saturn rocket protram.
AKRON (UPI) -Goodyear
Tire & Rubber Co. 's aerospace
uni t hu obt ained a $21 milho11
Air F0tte order for an im·
proved venlon of Jb aide·
vlewlnc •lrbomt r a d a r
system
BOSTON (UPI) -Mr. Dotwt, Inc., has arranpd with
().11k!n1 Ltd .. 6f Osaka, Japan,
to franchise 100 Mr. Donut
shops fn Jap~n. Dulkln wilt
open pilot shops In Osaka and
Tokyo itse.U, then tranchilo
the remaining shopt,
SANTh MONICA. Ca ll r.
(UPI) -LeRt Sl11lcr, Int,,
ha3 oblaizled at $9.7 million
contract from Dnll lnpu&
Devices, Inc., ot Derry, N.H ••
to make dl&!tal encodel'l for
commercial data pmc!ssln1
syJtems. TIM! r: n c o d e r 1
elimJnaie a 1ubatantl1 I
number or manual ktypunch
operators.
. " DAILY PJLOT Fridq, Ma, 1.5, 1970
. .
----..''SP·EC IALIZI NG · IN
'
AND
,
•
. · ·ro WILDCAT ' '
,Cui~;,. 4 Do.or h11.rtltOp. Mill powtr •q uip·
mont irfllldJflt tl'flMl,w1 I ••et.~, c:o!Mlitio11·
. l119,.llf:i11\.I r9-f,·ra1~i••t 1p1•J:•r, tJtt ,._,_
i119 wheal, 1fc:_, ( I 061.t l " -. ~· .·~4.•s -
2 • '=-' '70 OPEt WAGON
Oalulla 1t1tio11 ••I."'"· Aut01t11tic t r'11umi1·
1io11, pow1; diK. br1k11, 102 hon1powtr e'n-
gh•f, lu99a91 • r.t ck; ... hit. lii11 will ' tir11, ' .
..
197'0 . . ' '
Rf.ViE.RA . ' .
CUSTOM
1tc. IJJ l lSll Fu!I power equipment includ ing wi 11-
~345
'70 . SKYLARK
dow1 &: 1e•t, f•ctory •it condition-
ing , chrome wheels, AM-FM r•dio,
tilt steering wh11I, vinyl roof, plus
much more. 19170861
' ,
. . ~· '
-70 . SKYLARK
Cu1.fom 4 Door' h•rdtop. At.tlom•tlc, pow••
1tMri119 I braki!!•· air c:o11ditio11i119, •••r 1e't
tpaa'lct r,.powor ,.,.1,riC1ow1, tilt ' 1tf:1riruJ wh1t1l, .,,,, ····· 54;·95
. · •70 -ELECTRA
Cv1to"' 4 Door h•rdtop, Fult powor il1cl11d-
i119 wi'"'ow1 I 1e•t, •ir co11tlitio11i•t . •11111
roOf, AM.FM r1dio, tilt 1tMri,.. whM I, power
door locl1, _!tc., otc. I llJ252 1
70. LIMITED
DEMONSTR ATOR. C~Jl.om 2 Door h1 rdtop. Autom1tic tr•n1mi1·
1i~11., i;r, conditi.011i119,· pow or 1!1ori119, powor
br11i~1, r1d!o, ho,-tor, •inyl roof, tilt 1foo ri119
wh1ol, custom i11torior, otc. 1101427) . . .
C111toll'I 4 Door h1rdtop. This irr11t1•c11l•i•
•11fomobilo h•1 iu1t 1bout •••rY co11coi•1blo
lu:wry oxtr•··vou cO\lld ponibly w•11t. Full
powor. •ir conditioning, doroo AM.FM, otc.,
'''· (206611 )
CLEARANCE
IMM EDIATE DE LIVERY
'68 CHEVROLET IMPALA
" cloor Mrdl'DP. AlllOmltk:, power lllMl'l.111.
fac:tvr-t' 1!r condlllonlnt, rM io, httler.
CWJH20ll
'68 FIREBIRD 400
Stilt ...,...,. l•tf'D.l'y w1rr111ty, • 10Md, rHlio,
flffler, power tllMl'lnO, vlllyl '°P. Vtry IOw
ll'llleloe, Locel 1 o-g..n. (VTL.5111
'68 PONTIAC GTO
VI, 1uiom.1'k:, rMlll, f\Ml1r, pow., 1l'Mrift9,
1111w•r erM•, facf'D.l'y 1lr. krw mllHOt. I
-·· loc1lly ownft cer. lmm«ullll. tWXl!:'5lt l
'66 JAGUAR 2 + 2
AulOITllll\c tr1111ml1~lon. tnrome wirt wllee\1.
IK IOrY •Ir c-lllofllft\I, redlo 1rod ""'.,.· Thia -II truly 1 11111lle11 1ulomobll1. (P16SA!
'69 JAGUAR 2 + 2
'°"~· A11!om1tk: lr1n1m!Hllln, AM·FM 11\or!Wlvt r"'lo, ell ........ Wirt Wlleth, Pfrtlll
riMllll tlrn, 17,500 milll, NllUrl l l .. ll!er In·
ltrlof". ITRl1075l
'68 JAGUAR XKE
CouPt. ' 111etd tr1..smt111Dn, c""""' ..,,., w11Ml1, rM io 11'6 Mlt.r, I Ownl'I' 10c1lly
eWft9ll Ci r, IMutlful Alctk whlll •~!tl'lor
with blKll; tuU IHll>tr lnr.rlef'. OCDAn •i
'69 JAGUAR XKE
Coupe, '1pHd tr111111'1ll1loll, <II•-wl'lttl•, factory t lr condlllanlnO, AM-FM relllo, wll·
low ··-Wirf\ lllldl: IN lll .. lllrtrior, At.so-lullly ~. 0 1.XEIOSI
'69 IMPERIAL LE BARON
Tlllt ll/IOfTIOlllle Ml t YH"I' CON;tl .. ble IUI<·
wry foelllrt lhll Is ott.r•. Full lfftlltf In·
terlv, I M P'W9'" tQUIPll'ltnl plvs fKlwV 1lr
concll!lllll"9. Gor9to111, 4Yll!:'U6!
.
. , .. . . .
OUI PRIC E
ILUI IOOK ,
$1945 $1495
---------. -OUR PltCE I LUI 1001 '
$2430 $2295
----OUR PRICE ILUI IOOI
$2600 s2395
-----
ILUI IOOK OUR PRIC.E .
$3875 $3275
OUR PllCE ILUI IOOK
$4200 . $3195
---OUR · PRICE I LUI 1001
$4265 $3865
ILUI 1001 OUR · PRIC E
$4790 ~4390 .
OUR PRICE
I LUI IOOK
$5145 $4595
I I
'68 CHEVROLET IMPALA
C pe. VS, 1utom1tic, power 1teerin9, fa ctory a ir, radio, heater,
vi nyl roof, imm1culete car. IWJM /89)
'68 ELECTRA CUSTOM
Full power, factory i1 ir conditionin9, 4 door herdtop, vinyl roof.
IVBA9l II
'67 ELECTRA CUSTOM
4 Door ha rdtop. Full power i nd f1ctory eir conditionin9 , vinyl
roof.
Full power and fa_,i:tory eir conditio ning, chrome whee ls, vinyl roof.
IVAT0291
234 .·£._ 17th St. ·-. AJ)Tfl.DRlZED
B IJ l Cll0 fJP EWA61JAlt
SALES a11 d SERVI CE
OPEN
SUNDAYS
'1
' ' ' (
s5795
'64 · SKYLARK
2 Doo r harc(t op. V8 , 1utom1111fic, power steering , power w ind ows,
red io, heater , fec::tory eir conditioning. IOTU6l3 I s99·5
,
'68 BUICK WILDCAT
2 Door hardtop. Auto., power steering, f•ctory a ir, radio, heet•r,
26,500 locally driven miles. (VFR598 I
'2795
'67 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE
2 Door h1rdtop. Automati c, power 1teering, factory 1ir, radio,
heeter, I owner, low mi le age. Just immecul1te. IUPS871 l
51767
'64 THUNDERBIRD LANDAU
Full power a nd factory a ir conditionin9, I owner, ll,000 locally
driven actual miles. (OML5861
548-7765
.
'
•
I
--~ --· --·--------------------·--------------------- -• -* -------·--·----
•
r,1da1, May 15, 1~70 DAILY P!LoV 3
Meet C,andidates io r Coun~y Ele~tions)
, \ , . I
AU candidate1 f or t11e Fifth
District suptrvisorial aeat, tlic
Fifth 'D:Utrict Board of .Educo·
tioR teat and the caMidatet Jpr
C o unt 11 Superintendent of
Schools have bttn invited to a
mttt • the • candidatea se11ion
.spomored by tht Ltagut of
Women Vote,.s. at 7:30 .p.m.
Tut1day, Ma y 19,, in the Ltttlt
T,...fattr at Corona dtl Mar High
School, 2101 Eastbluff •v nve,
This non-partisan session. wiU
Qivt all voters an opportunit11 to
. meet and Mar all of the candi·
dates. lt might bt worthwhile to
tear this page from the DAILY
PILOT and take it with you to
th~ meeting.
TED CRISELL
Theodore Crisell
Tours Co~ty's
School Campuses
NAME : THEODORE M. CRISELL
(TED)
Phone: 645-2999
Address : 3a8 N. Newport BI v d . ,
Newport Beaeh, Calif.
How long in this area? 12 years
F.du:cation : Graduate Re s t ar c h ,
University of Bombay. Bombay,, Indici :
Chapman 'COilege B.A.; World Campus
Afloat; Loyola URv.; OraJige Coast
College.
Civic Activttles: Rotary lntemaUonal
Scholar to India 1969. R e i e a r c h •
Fellowship in connection with projects
of Ford Foundation and Peace Corps.
Traveled to 60 countries on 3 trips arOUJld
the·world. Administration advisor World
Campus Afloat.
Public offices : 1968; President World
Campus Afloat, 1967; Pr es ident
As6ociated Students OCC, Freedom
Foundation Award, counselor Orang• Co.
Probation Department.
What unique talent or background do
you lLav~ &hit qualifies you to serve
on tile Board tf F.ducadon? My c~ess.
to young people and their problems.·
J have been on every campus in District
Fift and have spoken with all local
dislrict superintendents and majority of
principals. There is a crying need for
young men to serve on school boards-too
m.aay school board members are out-
dated in their thinking and not in touch
With pressi ng problems of education.
What do you conakkr the primary
fUDCtion of the Orange County Board
of F.ctucaUon? The county board is very
limited ia what it caJI really do. I
believe lhe major role in the most recent
past has been alfecting public opinion.
Most people think the board is more
important than it actually is. The board
has geilerally created a negative public
opinion toward our schools.
Would you lavor e1ectioe « ·~
,.._,., of the Counly, .,....,._.,
ot Scliooll? l believe it ls ;ihe ill'l06t
nalural thing for the COU!il1 ·ioiflllio-
leddent I<> be appointed by an~•~
board. We run most of oUr cities th15
wiy now -elective city cwncil •ith
apPointed city managers, men.. •bo are
prtfessional administraton. <'.' -Id Ille County_,_ -
tr less control over the 1M:al Dlltrtcll?·
I believe the county achooll Offtce ~
be phued out. I am very much In
agreement with the 1969 Orange County
Grand Jury Report. The riport callOd
fer lb< phasing out ol the co\Jl\IY. board
and county schools office. The COWllY
office has beeJI getti•g involved in far
too many local issues. There Is too
mach duplication of services. About J.7
mDlion dollars is given by Board or
Supervisors to run county schools office
and the state gives $700,000. This money
can be better spent at local level.
WJU you be 111ble to attend the Can-
dldlltJ' Meetla& of !\fay ltib? Yes
AL TON E. ALLEN
Alton E. Allen
Current Orie£
Of Supervisors
NAME ' ALTON E. ALLEN
Age: 73 Phone : 834-3550
Address: 2535 Temple Hills Drive .
Laguna Beach
Wi!e'a name: Margaret
Children and ages: Jack 42; Barbara
43
Ed ucatio1: University of Ylashington
Occupation : Chairman, Orange Cou•
ty Board oC Supervisors
. Civic Activities: Past President of
Rotary
What ll8ique talent or background do
you have tb.at qualifies you to itrve
oil tbe Board of Sapervlson? Have serv.
ed as Supervisor of the F i f t h
Supervisorial District since Jan UMry 1963.
'How much Is your campaign costing?
\\·here is tbe money coming from·! Ap-
proximately $25,000. Campaip co•
tributions.
Do you lavor the proposed Upper
Newpl)ri Bay land swap in its prtseJ>t
form·? Please explahi. Yes, but I am
in. favor of placing a bond issue on
the November Ballot which would give
the· people an alternate opportunity to
acquire all of the Upper Bay for en-
vironme•tal ud ecological purposes.
What is your 10Jutlon to Orange Coun·
ty's air transportation problems? I would
continue to press for completion of Phase
JI of the Master Plan of A i r
Transportation. I h a v e already moved
to restrict the hours, type and number
of commercial rughts at the airport.
Will yea attend the May lttb meeting?
Yes, I am planning to attend.
Vick R. Knight
Seeking School
Superintendency
, ... NAME: VICK R. KNIGHT
Age: 42 Phone: 528-6510
Address: 1500 Shenandoah, Placentia
How long in th.is area? 11 years
Wife's name: Beverly
Children and ages : Steve 20, Mary
15
Education : B.S., USC; M.A. Cal State
LA ; Ed.D. Candida te USC
Occupation: Assistant Supt. Placentia
Unified School District
Civic Activities: Kiwanis, J a y c e e
President; Boy Scout Dis. Chairman
Public offices : Noite
Wbat unique talent or background do
you have that qualifies you to serve
Q Sapertatendenl of Schools? 14 yeari
as both a secondary and elementay!y
~trator-. U.:luding ~e years as
Ant. supt. of the extremely fast-growing
Placentia Unilied Scllool Dist. aad a
genuine desire to provide leeded services to ·local ocbool clistricts. ·
Whit ia &be most important funct.ioa
of die s.perintendent with respect to
....ic1a1 Ibo local dblrlcla? A will-
inpas to listen to the Jteeds oi loca l
di.strict.'1 and not atteinpt to force
uawanted projects on them. See 1969 Gfll!ll Jury Report. . • .. .
SbOald Ute tffice )'Oii seek be elective
or 1ppobldve? 1fty? There has been
a history of dtvided responsibilities which
could be solved by bavlng an elected
county school board appoiitt the county
superintendent.
How maclt 11 your eampajgn costing'!
Where Is dte money eomlng lrom? $3000
-rriends, pro!essional associates, self.
WiU you be attendin1 tbt l\tay It
meetin1? 1'11 sure Lry to!
RONALD CASPERS
Ronald Caspers
In First Tr v •
For County Post
NAME: RONALD W. CASPERS
Address: 119 Via Florence, Newport
Beach, Calif. 92660
Wife's name : Ann
Children: Kirk, 16: !lick, 13; Greg
and Kristen (twins) 12 ; Blair, 8.
Ed uca I ion: UCLA. Business
Administration degree from San Jose
State: Graduate work in marketing and
finance al use.
Occupation: President, Keystone Sav·
ings and Loan
Civic Aclivities: Board of Di reetors
of Big Brothers. Member of Anaheim
Stadium non-profit corporation board of
directors; member of Pasadena Tourna*
ment of Roses; past member of the
-board of directors of Harbor Day School,
Newport Beach; member Navy League :
head of fund raising for Friends o(
Chapman College; member of Rotary ;
Member of Hoag Hospital 552~Cltib.
What unique background or talent do
you have lo qualily you to lierve on
the Board of Supervisors? Successful
businessman and money manager. T
purchased Keystone Savings and Loan
at $3 million and have developed it into
a $45 million dollar business. l have
also been widely involved in civic affairs.
Cost of campaign and where money
Is coming from. -The total cost of
the campaign cannot yet be determ ined.
A fund raising dinner is planned to
cover a large portion of our campaign
costs. Donations from individual con·
stituents have been numerous.
Do you favor the proposed Upper Bay
land swap in its present form ·! The traclt'
abuses Orange County taxpayers and
damages the ecology of Southern
California as well. l am a'gainsl the
trade and will work· lo reverse the land
swap. (note PlL(Yf ad concerning Bay
trade ).
What is your solution to Oran1Le County
air transportation problems? I do not
favo r further expansion of the present
facili ty. Another site in an unpopulated
area should be found . Until a ne w loca-
tion is selected, jets should be prohibited
from using Orange County Airport.
VICK KNIGHT
ROBERT M. WILSON
Robert Wilson
In Second Term
As Mesa Mayor
NA!'.1E: ROBERT M. WILSON
Age: s:J Phone: 548-4732
Address: 2000 Aliso Ave ., Costa Mesa
\Vife 's name: Maryalice
Children and ages: Carol 24, J{andy
23. Sherrie 20. All married.
Educ a tion: Glendale College
Business Admi nistration and Political
ScienC<'
Occupation: Self-employed as .. The
Awning Man "
Civic activities Orange County Coast
Association. Orange County Coastal
Highway Commission, Vice Commander
Ame rican Legion Post No. 455, Represen-
rativ~ to National Rivers and Harbor
Comm. in Washington O.C.
Public offices: Councilman. C n s t a
Mesa, 3 Terms. Mayor, Costa Mesa,
serving second term.
\\'bat unique tal ent or background do
you ha\·e tha t qualifies you to serve
on the Board of Supervisors? t\1y interesl
in government has ranged beyond city
boundaries as member ot California
League of Cities National League or
Cities. State Building Regulation Com·
rnittee and Orange County Oecen-
irjllizatioQ, Committee on County Offices.
flow much IS your ca mpaign costing?
\Vbere is' th e money com ing from? No
Answer
Do you favor lhe proposed Upper
Newport Bay land swap in its present
forn1? Pl ease ex plain . I do not ravor
presenl plan as too many questions are
unanswered. Can we afford to give up
this prime watershed and sal t water
estuary? How much will it cost to
operate? \Vhat must th e public in vest?
\Vill a new outlet to ocean be needed?
No1v is time lo evaluate.
\\'hat is your so!u•ion to Orange Coun-
ty·s air transportation problems? In1·
1nertiate Need : Eliminate noi~e and
s1noke pollution. Future needs: New in-
ternationa l airport between Los Angeles
and San Diego. New site for regional
air??rt and metroports to provide feeder
service.
\Viii you altend tbe 1\1ay 19th meeting'!
Yes
RONALD E. PRICE
Voters iii Orange Co10111(s Fifll~ Supervisorial District wilt f ind
t1uo sets of co·11didfltes spe,·1ficatly oriented to their orea--a represe11ta·
tive 01i the Orange County Board of Supervisors and a representative
on the Ora11ge Co1u1 Cy Boord of Educa tion. In cooperatio1i with ll1e
Orange Coast Leagy.e of.Women Voters .. tlte DAJlY PILOT today presents
biographies and viewpoints of I.he candidates tn 011 effort to help vote rs
select their choices i11 the two races. AU candlrtates were offered tlie
opportunity to subnut their b1ograpli·ics, state their views and have their
ptcLure·pubUshed nn this page. All of those who ,·esponded appear today.
Jn the supervisoriot race, any ca11didate who Teceives more than
hot/ of the votes case in tli.c June 2 election will be declared elected. Jn
tile event no sh1gle condidatr. rr.cei11es that majority, the two leading
candidates will face a ruti-off hi tile November gemrat electlo;1. Tile
Bnard of Educafio11 election is not a parallel circumstance; the candidate
toith tlie greatest number of votes June 2 will be declored winner.
The fiftl1 supervisorint district covers tilt Orange County coasUlnt
including tile communities of Newport Beach, Oosta Mesa, .Laguna Btoc/1,
Son Juan Capi.itrano , Dona Poitit. parts of Mission Viejo, Son Clemente
and portious of lfunt1ngtot1 Beach cast of Beach Boulevard below Gar·
fltLd Avenue.
CRIS C, CRIS
Cris C. Cris
·Opposes Swap
Of Upper Bay
NAME, CRIS C. CRIS
Age : 40 Phone: 962-6973
Address : 9627 Adams Avenue, liun-
liRgton Beach
Educatio11 : Alexander Hamilton Inst
of Business Mait agement; \Vest Coast u.
Occupalion : Government Contracts
Administrator
Civic activities: School D i s t r i c t
Advisory Committees; Chairman, Hun·
tington Beach Park Bond Election 1969;
Underground Utilities Commissioner:
Chairman of Freeway Advisory Com·
mittee.
Public offices: None
What unique talent or background do
you have that qualllles you to serve
on the Board o( Supervisors'! 29 yea rs
experience ht politics and civic se rvice.
Recent activities: (1) School district
Advisory Committees; (2) Chairman,
Huntington Beach Park Bond Election
1969 ; (3) Underground Utilities Com·
missioner : i4l Chairman, Freeway
Advisory Committee.
flow much Is your campaign costing?
Where is the money coming from? To
date, approximately $f00. Estimate
another $3,000 maximum. Personal bank
account and individual donations. The
largest to date $100.
Do you favor the proposed Upper
Newport Bay land swap in its present
form? Please explain. -I am not in
ta vor of this swap in present sta te.
I would have to make a thorough
research of the transaction agreed tG
by the county before mak b1g a final
decision. I would certa inly want expert
opinion and advice on it.
What is your solution to Orange Coua·
ty 's air transportation problems? I will
investigate feasibility of an off-shore
airport combi11:ed with such other service .
functions as a desalinization plant,
nuc lear power plant, waste disposal
plant, marina, oceanographic school. A
key factor gover11ing this approach would
be its location and its effect on the ecology.
Will you attend tbe ·1\1ay 19th meetin g'!
Yes
Ronald E. Price
Co.unty Resident
For 20 Years
~
NAME: JlONALO E. PRICE
Age: 37 Phone: 646-7315
Address : 1327 Antigua Way, Newport
Beach
Wife's na1ne : Mary Allee
Children and ages: Cynthia 8, Beth
5
How lo ng in this area? Orange Co,
approx. 20 years; Newport Beach, 3
years
Education: Bachelors, Masters, Doc·
tGrate
Occupation: Self-Employer!
Civic Activities : Cornmedorcs, St,
Andrews Church
Public offices : None
What unique lalent or backgroand do
you have that qualifies you to serve
on the Board of Education? I have
taught school for almost JO years, (4th,
7th, 8th, 9th thru 12th , and full time
college instructor) plus being in business
for myseU gives me \he backkround
of practical classroom knowledge com·
bine<I with bu.siness financing and
management.
\Vhal do you consider the primary
funclioa of th e Orange County Board
of Educa tion? Their primary function
is to administer over the few schools
they control directly. The secondary,
and perhaps most important tunction,
is to assist, coordinate and hel p other
districts in special func tions and projects.
Tu advise other districts only when re-
qutl stOO.
Would yoU favor eltcllon or ap-
pointment of the County Supertatenden$
or Schools'f I wwld favor appointment.
Should l b e County Board ha ve moNJ
or leas contr<ll over the local Dl!!trlcts?
Less. See above
Wiil ycd be able to attend the Con·
dida tcs' Meeting of May ltth? Yes
------------------ --
.... .. "' ·-' F.RED WALTER
Fred Walter
Engineer
And Scientist
NAME: FRED WALTER
Age: 41 Phone: 642-2543
Address: 350 Vista Baya , Newpat·t
Beach
Wife's name : Kathryn
Cfiildren arid ages: Karl, 4 \fee ks
Education: f\.1. S., Experime nta I
Physics: 1955, Berlin, Gennany
Occupation: Engineering Physicist
Civic activities: Smog and noisc1
abatement '
Public offices: None in the U.S.
\Vbat unique taleo t or background do
you have that qualifies you to serve
on the Board" of Supervisors? My pr~
fessional background and experience as
scientist and engineer, and my active ,
i11terest in social problems and civic
activities.
How much is your campaign costing?
Wbere is &be money coming · from? Ap..
prox. $1500; from persooal income. '
Do you favor the proposed Upper
Newport Bay land swap in its present'
form? Please explain . No. It ha s delayed
urgently needed development of parlC ·
and recreation fac ilities for almost si~
years, caused extensive and unnecessary,
expenses, and accomplished nothing.
Partial development should s(art NOW. ,
What Is your solution to Orange Coun.
ty's air trans portation problems? A com-
prehensive Southern Ca lifornia Airport
and Ground TransportatiOll System on
a super·regional basis, and adequately
enforced J11oise and pollution abatement
rules.
Will yo u altcnd the J\.1ay 19th meeUogt
Yes.
JOANN DOUDNA
JoAnn Doudna
San O ementc
Mother of Six
NAME: .JOANN DOUDNA
•
Phone: 492-6063 Age: 39
Address : 124 de! Pacifico, San Clemente
Children and ages: Six Children. Two
girls and four boys.
How long in this area'! San Clen1ente
1959
Education : Two years U.C.L.A. J<'ull
time student at Irvine.
Occupation : Homemaker
Civic Activities:
Public Offices: Served four and one
hall years on Capistrano U11ified School
Board. 2 yrs. Delegate Assembly.
What uniq ue taJenl or background do
you have that qualifies you to serve
on the Board of Education'! Experience
on local Board. Work at the Slate level
of California School Board Assn. •lav~
six children in the public school ·system.
t am presently atlending the University
and taking education courses.
Whal do you consider the prlm11ry
function or the Orange Coonty Bo:ird
of Education? Providing specific servicea
to local boards which are def ined In
the California Educalional Code.
Woa ld you favor dcclio11 or MJ)-
poinlment of the County Saperlbtenden.t
of Schools? Appointment by an elected
Board of Education.
Wiii you be 111ble to aftcl)d tbe Can-
didates' l\1ectln, of ~lay 19th? Yes, I
will.
' •
4. DAILY PILOT
Robert Wynbront of Bilborough,
England says he bas been assured
by town authorities that a right of
way through the middle of his
house shown on a new map will not
cause aoy problems. He Yys he
just discovered the house was built
on what was once a public footpath.
' . Em•nuel Soflanos says his finn
is applying to Buckingham Palace
to be appointed official toffee apple
maker to Uie ro}'al famlly.,Sofianos
said Wednesday he decided on the
application after hi s London sales-
man told him Prince Philip teok
four of. the apples home from Satur-
day's SOOth anniversary celebra·
tions at Convent Garden • •
Officials at the Flamingo Park
Zoo in York, England have
moved Hannibal, the zoo's prize
Indian elephant, to a mw hOU!e
which separate.s him more ff'om
vilitors. Tht officials .YOid Hanni·
ba1 laUlJI had been grabbing
Women's handbags and eating
them, 1pitting out coins, com-pactl and lipsticka. But tMv
said he seemed to enjoy check-
bookt and paper money.
• Tbe British Consumer Council
said· Wednesday of the 62 pairs of
tights· tested by eight women only
half were still wearable at the end
of one day and only 19 of these
fitted well. Many of those that fail·
ed to '1.and up split, developed boles
or just fell down, tile council said. •
Los Angele& authorities clear·
ed a block 1quare area recently
and called in a bomb squad when
a auspicious looking o b j t c t
dangling from a balloon dropped
to the ground nezt to a police
command post. But the U.S.
Weather Bureau in a nearby
building cle<;1red the matter up.
'."I It ioaa a wtather balloon f1'om
· Point Mugu destined for the lo-
cation and was "on target."
•
Ul'I Tt'-llM!e
STUDY IN CONTRASTS AT U OF MARYLAND
Guard1men Potted Near School's Chapel
Governor Imposes Cu1·f ew
On U of Maryland Campus
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (UPI) -G-Ov.
Marvin Mandel invoked executive powers
I.Oday to keep the University of Maryland
campus open. He indefinitely extended
the curfew to allow authoriUes to keep
troublemakers off campus.
Mandel had invoked the curlew Thurs--
day night after dissident students again
battled National Guardsmen and state
JXllice along U.S. Route 1 through the
naLioo's third largest college campus.
At a 2 a.m. news conference, Mandel
Issued the curfew proclamatioo and said
it allowed the P..faryland National Guard's
adjutant general Edwin 'Varfield to keep
all but authorized persons off campus.
Warfield said he would interview the
28 persons arrested late 111ursday night,
curfew violators arrested this morning
and other suspected troublemakers today
to decide if they should be barred from
campus.
campus late Thursday night, windows
were smashed in four campus buildings.
Office equipment was destroyed and
furn iture was set on fire in the main
administration building.
6 Tornadoes Hit
Near Texas City
LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPI) -Six
tornadoes touched down Thursday within
-45 miles or Lubback, a city devastated
by a tornado Monday \\'hich killed 21
persons and left 10,000 homeless. No
further damage was reported.
At least one tornado has touched
ground every day since ~1onday. All
of them, including the six Thursday,
hit ruTal ar'l!as and caused no property
damage or injuries.
The latest tornadoes struck north and
west of Lubbock near the communities
•
-
GOP Senators on Spot
Seek Compromise on Cambodia Measure
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Worried
Republican senators called another
rneeUng today to write oomprom11e
legislation on Cambodia in an effort
to keep lbe Nix.on administraUOO from
another llhowdowo with the Senate.
GOP Leader Hugh Scott called the
meellng after three tap presidential ad-
visen -Defense Secretary Melvin R.
Laird, White House aide Henry Kissinger
and Undenecretary of Stat.e Elliot L.
Richardson -told Senate Republicans
Thursday the admillistraUoo would not
yield.
Scott did not indicate what kind Of
cunpromise he had in mind, but said
he planned to submit it to the White
House be.fore introducing it.
A vote on pending legislation to cut
off funds for retaining U.S. troops in
Cambodia would put GOP senators on
the spot for the fourltl time in a year
on an issue involving President Nixon's
presti,e..
Supporters of the cutoff legislation said
they had 53 votes, two more than needed
* * * Nixon Says Bill
'Infringement'
KEY SISCA YNE, Fla. (UPI) -The
Florida White House said today President
Nixon feels that a proposal now before
Congress limits his ability to protect
American forces in Vietnam and Cam·
bodia.
Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler,
discussing the administration's position
on a proposal in Congress to cut off
funds for future military involvement
is an infringement on that constitutional
responsi bility .•. of the commander in
chief to protect the security of the
American forces in the field."
Ziegler also slated that Nixon opJK1ses
such a move because it would put the
enemy on not.Jee that the President's
ability to respond to threats is limited.
The amendment, now being debated
In Congress. was proposed by Sen. Frank
Oiurcb (D-Jdabo), and Sen. John
Shennan Cooper CR-Ky.), Ziegler made
it clear Nixon feels any limitation on
his options to conduct the Vietnam war
would jeopardize h.is role as commander
in chief.
At the same time, Ziegler restated
Nixon's intentions to w i t h d r a w all
American troops from Cambodia on June
30.
fer Seoale puu.1e. No one knew when
a vote would come, but it was thought
to be a week off.
House approval wu much IHI llUly.
Similar amendment.a were defeated Oft
consecutive days lut week. Rep. William
F. Ryan (0.N.Y.), Thursday urged the
DemocraUc Jeaderahlp to call a caucus
on hlJ amendment-'"'.,. ol U.S.
lroopa ln Cambodia, but ooJy • ol the
244 House Democrat. lhowed up, lhon
of a quorum.
Sen. Robert J. Dole (R-Kan.), uid
lhe blil -deaigned lo bind President
Nlxoo. to bis proml1e oC a quick
withdrawal ol U.S. i.._ from Com-
munlst sanctuaries -would be "a direct
slap at the President ol · the united
States." .
Backers ol the m.......,, led lly Senl.
John Sherman Cooper • (R-K,y.), and
Frank Church (D'ldallo), chorlocl that
...,promi... which the admlnlllralloft
already hi1 re.fed<d 1'iou1d turn' the
Sen.ate futo a "fudge factory."
<llurcb, the Ooor monoier for lho
omeodlilitn~ said JI would do ao4bblc
that Ille Pnald!lll lw not _, plods·
ed to do. Ro said be did not undorltond
adminlstralloo ln.....,._, beco,....,.
ly foor DlOl!lbl aao II embroetd an
almost ldeatl<al propooal be off-to
bar·grounc!·fn>Opl In '!llalland and 1-.
But opponents of tbe musure-con--
tended II -.Id tum the Senate loto
a "war roca" in whk:h Jtratea and
tactics would be determined by tltcttd
ollicials with little miilllr1 e.perlence.
Sen. John C. Si.nob (().Mia.),
chalnnan ol Ille Sedate Armod Semcts
Committet, said the measure would "put
Ille Preaidenl in 1 i.1a1 strait i-i..
Walter Reuther Eulogized
As Champion of Underdog
DETROIT (UPI) -Waller P. Reuther,
president of the United Auto Workers
ror the past 24 yean, was eulogized
today as one of the nation's great union
leaders of the century and a champion
of the underdog.
More than 3,000 persons, including U·
eculives of the big four auto COOlpanies
Reuther fought with in contract negotla·
tions, attended memorial services in the
Ford Auditorium.
Thousands more watched and listened
to the services on television and radio.
At 10 a.m., local time, acros,, the
United States and in Canada, North
America's biggest Industry halted for
three minutes as plant workers in the
1.8·million-member union paused to pay
tribute to their fallen leader. Some
truckers in the teamsters union puUed
off to the side of highways.
Thousands of auto workers stayed off
the job in two of 10 Flint General
Moton plants and rented a large
auditorium to watch the memorial
services on closed~ircult television.
Other workers in other plants said they
might extend the silent tribute beyond
three minutes.
Reuther. 62. his wife, May, 59, • n d
four others died last Saturday night
1•,.hen their chartered exe•utive jet plane
crashed in a forest near Pelbtoa in
Northern Michigan~
Eleven opeoten, lncludlnc Mn. Canl-
ta King, -of Dr. -I-.
King Jr., euloslzed -· --Ille nation'• aecond blgpol am.
WblUley Young, u--tl the Nlllooal Urban ~. ulil UAW
members bad loot I he Ir luder and
"all Americans, molt npedally lie
block, the poor, the underpriv1llpd, ....
Iott I dwnpion. 11
Emergency Fund
Bill Approved_
W ASHJNGTON (UPI) -Tllo llGule and
Senate have passed and sent to Prtlidt!lt
Nixon an emergency resolution to ward
ol.l the threat of paylen payday• for lll:DI
govel'Mlent workers.
nie meuure wu necessary becalM
Congr"' lw not approprlaled funda to
cover the pay raJses -nine perctl!l July
I and siz perctnt Dec. 22 -Jtven JOVw
emment workers.
Sen. Rober! C. Byrd (0.W. Vo.) tbl
the Bureau of Commercial Filheriel hu
run out of money and other a1encla,
u well as vete.r111s' btneftta, factd the
same problem.
Get a Blue Plate Special from }WI' participating atryslerand l'lymooth Deller!
While the rest of the auto indostry was
crying the blues, more, Southern Cali4
fornians bougbt Plymouths this spring
than at any time in i'ccent history. In
celebration of these impressive sales
figures and to keep the ball rolling, our
factory bu made available to all South-
ern California dealen apecial.price
incentives on 82 out of their 87 models..
With this added ammunition, your
Clirysler Plymouth dealers arc going on
a one--month selling spree ••• tellingBlue
Plate specials. They're out to inove every
car in stock! That'1 why if you buy a new
Blue Plate S~ials
Prices reduced on
Chrysler or Plymouth_.,., hi
aod May 31st, you Cltl COl!ltlan • ....,.
tempting dell. So oee your Cbr,.ier 11111
Plymouth dealer aod cbeclc oat hll-
.Plate Specials. You're the o•ewJao
stands to benefit!
lersand
Students living in Donner Hall, a
men'• dormitory on the Campus of
CarneQie·Mellon Univt1'sity. Pitt.!·
burgh, Pa ., seated off one part of a
hallway with a wall of tin ca11s. ThP~
claim the cans were a pollutant to the
environment.
He said those suspected o( battling
Vt'ith troopers, inciting the disturbance
or destroying property would be banned
the rest of the semester -meaning
they would flunk their courses for this
term.
Warfie ld estimated 3,000 to 4,000
students pelted guardsmen and stale
police ,.,,ith rocks. bricks and other
missiles after troopers shot tear gas
lo clear 1,500 demonslrators off Route
I.
of Litt~efield, Hale Center, Cotton Center Pinn tbs • k 8.., e ~~~:~~:t~r1.~1~l~r~:1·~~:.,ci::~: ou m stoc • ~ temnting ·
Bill Pay"', regional director of Civil 00 Is Immedia d live :l' Defense. said Thursday he could not te
have sounded the sirens to warn citizens m e e ry.
or Monday night's tornado because the e e
Before guardsmen swept across the power was out.
R . Th d . M.d t OfferendsMay3lst! a1n, un er 1n 1 wes
Frequent Downpours Acco1npnnied by Some Torndoes
C11Htornl11
IOUTHEltN <Al/POllNIA -1-.
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w-.m, G\laly Wllldl ft\0Ullt1I... l!ld
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t o.1111 1r .. 1 11 tlmc1 tl!rou•h Ftld1v.
Stl9hfl'f w1rmcr d1y1 1f'lterlor revio..1.
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nllllh 11111 c.ontlnulCI qwll1 w1nn """"Y
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f'rldW -r llO. Hlellt .se,.. ne1r tJ.
Locll 9Ush' ~I llNt un.,_ flrldtl'f.
'1>1NT CONCE,.flON TO MEXICAN
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Coastal
luNW *It~. Li.tit w rlfM• WIN11
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Jodi'( Ind S.l\lrOl'f, "r.11 looiY 11),
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11'.•tQAY
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Summnr11
lllowtrl lfld ~r..,_rJ INkld ~ MIOWt1! i.o.y wllllt' tM Wnl .. M
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Costa Mesa
Atlas Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc.
2929 Harbor Boulevard
..
•
Medium's the Message
The theory may have some merit but this message seems to be missing its
mark. Like the minister whose message falls on deaf ears, this billboard out-
side Denton, Tex., hasn't moved anyone to action. ·
Mail Strike
Postponed;
Raise Seen
WASHINGTON CAP)
Clongres<!, which a p p e a r e d
ready to halt actk>n on a
postal paf boost when New
Yori: m~n threatened to
strike Thursday night, is now
on a timetable that could
bring final approval in three
weeks.
"Congress i:; not going to
be pressured by a strike,"
the senior Senate Post Office
Committee member, Hiram L.
Fong CR-Hawaii), said Thurs-
day before New York letter
carriers called o!f the strike.
Fong said the committee Is
ready t_o put out the bill for
a Senate vote but a walkout
would have forced a delay
untlI a settlement was reach-
ed.
Rep. David N. C. Henderson
( D - N • C . ) , second-ranking
Democrat on the House Post
Office Committee. s a i d
Congress' reaction to a new
mail strike might be even
worse:
"I don't see how it could
speed it (the bill) up very
much," he said. "And it might
kill it. ..
But New York Branch H
of the National Association of
Letter Carriers, one o{ two
New York loca1s that trig·
gered the nationwide mail
strike in March, voted Thurs-
day to stay on the job 8.nd
put off any further strike con ..
&ideratlon until June 12.
"Our people showed
themselves to be responsible
·labor," Gu s Johnson, the
Jocal's president, said after
the vote. "It is up to CAngress
now to show its
responsibility."
The eight percent pay raise
for postal workers is tied to
differing House and Senate
bills that woukl create a U.S.
Postal Service ta put the mails
on a self-paying basis by 1.978.
Pill Suit Filed
WS ANGELES (UPI) -
A housewife filed a $1 million
damage suit against a family
planning clinic and a drug
company Thursday, claiming
birth control pills caused her
• brain damage.
Batbara Stahlnecker, 22, Tu·
junga, Calif. said she suffered
strokes last Christmas day
and again Jan. 6 and March
7 after takint the pills for
an unspeciried length of Ume.
Dominican Republic
Vote Set Saturday
SANTO DOMINGO,
Dominican Republic (AP) -
With a tumuJtuous presidential
campaign over, soldiers and
government officials prepared
to guard polling booths in
Saturday's election.
Candidates c a 11 e d a
moratorium on campaigning
today. The central election
board said police and soldiers
will be on duty at the nation's
3,45S polling places.
In the last few weeks Ulere
has been an ave rage o( one
politically motivated killing a
day, officials said.
President Joaquin Balaguer
is oppoSed by four opponents
-but one of the Dominican
Republic's most power f u I
parties is boycotting the elec-
tion.
Balaguer, calling himself an
"instrument of 'destiny,'' an-
nounced last mooth that he
would seek another four-year
term.
His opponents are Elias
\Vessin y Wes~n. U1e general
who helped crush the 1965
leftist insurrection; Francisco
Augusto Lora, Balaguer's vice
president who broke away to
fonn his own patty; Alfonso
Moreno ~1artinez, a lawyer
who represents the Social
Christian party, and Jaime
Manuel Fernandez, candidate
of the National Conciliation
Movemenl.
Fonner President J u a n
Bosch and his Dominican
Revolutionary party a r e
boycotting the ~lectiOn, charg-
ing that Balaguer would never
pern1it a fair counting of the
ballots.
Bosch, deposed by a
military coup in 1963, says
he no longer believes in elec-
tive democracy, favoring in-
stead "dictatorship w it h
popular support." He has not
ex-plained how his proposal
v.·ould work.
UPI TtltllM19 SHOES, MONEY GOING TO VOTERS
Balagu•r Campaigning for Reelection
J
Frlda:t, May 15, iq70 DAILY PILOT ,/S
Israel Says More Egypt Jets Down
TEL AVIV (AP) -Israeli
pilots clalmed lhoolin( down·
1hree Soviet-mode Ebptlan
MIG jets in dogflghta over
the Suez Canal today.
By Israeli account, two
MIG17s were abot down ln
morning battles over the
blocked waterway and 1 MlG-
21 shortly after noon.
All three planes were seen
falling In EgypUan terrJtory,
Ille milltary command said b..-..
The MIG21 had "aUe.npted
to interfere" when lsraell
planes were on a bombing
and stafing mission against
Egyptian military t a r g e t s
along the central sector of
the canal, a spokesman said.
It was the second Israell
raid of the day Jnd followed
two EgypUan strikes.
All Israeli aircraft returned
safely, the !pokesman said.
ral4N • ••• 1.4S
'"' •••••• 2.00 .... • • • •• • 2.SO .... •••••• l.OS
hn •••.•• J.tt
, •• 24 ••••• 1.7'1
lt•H ••.•• LJt
10 •41 ••••• 2.90
Iarael started the action
Wilb a bombing and str•lfnr
attack on Egyptian military
targeta In the southern and
central sectors ol the lO'l-m.ile-
long waterway.
The command aald the
llraells returned the fire and
au.stained no casualties.
the destroyer Elalh was hit lng. An announcement Nld the
and sunk In 1967. "chlnc:t1 of finding lbem .,.
A mllltary annouocemtnt allm.u ..
Israel announcN Thursday
that an Egyptian missile boat
sank a 70-ton lrraell fishing
trawler l n Mediterranean
waters not far from where
said the Oahing trawler Oriti;;;=========. was hk Wednesday night 11.3
miles north of the occupied
Sinai Pe!Unsula. The rout
crewmen were reported miss-Egyptian warplanes then
struck back in the northern
sector of the canal.
An hour later, according tQ
the military command, lsraell
planes Intercepted attaeklng
Egypllan MIGl7s, ohootlng
down two.
The military conunand said
Israel suffered no casua1Ues
In the EgypUan rajds.
•can' .Caper
VNITED
STATES
NATIONAL
BANK
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
BRANCH
HOW Ollll
SATURDAYS
t,. 1 P.M.
Jn other action. the com·
mand aald Gesher Hasiv, a
kibbutz four mJles south of
the Lebanese border, was
shelled from Lebanon during
lbe ni&hl. Mortar shells also
fell on border settlements at
Yardena and Klar Rupim in
the Beisan Valley.
NEW YORK (UPI) -A
painting of a can o f
Campbell's vegetable beef
soup by Andy Warhol sold
1bursctay night for $60,000, the
highest price ever paid for
a v.'Ork by a Jiving American
artist.
It was sold by an American
collector, Peter Brandt, and
was amoo.g a number ol works
by contemporary American
and European artists dating
from after World War II. MON.-1HUU. 10.1 P.M.
Pre-
Finished
Walnut
Shelving
10160 • ••'' l.SO
10'1 72 , •••• 4.SO
12'124 ...•• 1.ts
12. u ••••• 2.IJ
12'141 •••·•a.JS
12 .... ••••• 4.lt
12171 ••••• J.25
112'" ••••••••• ..
3(4" ••••••••• "
NIDAYI 1t-6 P.llL
A European bidder who
wished to remain anonymous
bought the painting at an auc-
tion by Parke-Semel galleries.
PVC FITTINGS
Warhol's painting of the
soup can, tiUed "Campbell's
Soup Can With Peeling
Label," ls 72 by S4 Inches
and was painted In 1962.
ttr1ll,catll., •• ; lie tfl"'•llJt•"'-4 •• 21c 1/2"' ••NAl.,tw •• ltc ltr •llJ T• , •• , , •• JSc
1/2"'SllJWl11 •••• Uc 1r111,& ........ lll 211: ,
PVC FITTINGS
CT141 l40-1111 . l.MlltM .. :
le.C:... ...... C.... .... ....... ,,_,.,., ........
E. H. LEVAN
l-1111 ........
... , • .,1 ... ............... ..,. ........
Save on Sprinklers • Accessories
C.....14f......,._., 45c ~ ..... , .. -~---fll•",::". ___ 4•sc hll-~:===·"' Mstrtt-.51: IWl!SH .11 ,.. ____ 15,
0 ;l11P..., ....... , .. ,.... 99c %, Ya ., ... ........_. ____ _
.. ,IM W'' .K .._.,,_...._, ..
A. Automofi1Brtak-epSprinkltr3.95 ;:::::::,:o,. ::; ~·-v._ r.sr
REDWOOD FENCING
&"BOARDS
6' High.
a• long. 1.60 II•. foot
A dui:oble attrac""9 fence that wiJI ttold
up f0t'year1
42
u.
Visit ••r Model
Cust0.11!-BUilt•
Vacatli1 111111
.... pric.I ••• ..,iar,
trtdol ••• r-'Ylorlro--· "-·" S.tteffth .... 9to6WltD
• ' '
>
• DAJJ.y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Mayor's Seven Points
Mayor Richard Goldberg'• seven-point program to
retrieve law, order llld Image in Laguna Beach seem& to haw undergone a metamorphosis in the journey from
elecUon campaign toward budget.
nte police foot patrol in the downtown area is to be
left on ·& ~oobnd basis until July 1.
A more restrictive dog control ordinance has been
deferred for more lnfonnation and the city manager is
to Joor Into delalll ol additional animal control.
Home rule on hltcbhlklng control is at best a long
lllot llld always was. The state bas pre-empted tbe
field.
IJ'he drug control was under way before the new
council loot over. Help Is to be aougbt from lhe county
In eotablisblng beallh services.
Volunteers serving as eyes aiid ears of the police-
1ome I.eared vtgllantism ...... bas been reduced to distri·
ballon of educational materials Instead of forming
Mlghbo>ilood groups.
And the team approach to substandard housing and
health problems seems, initially at least, redirected to--
ward houses where code violations are evident from outside.
Citizens were certainly using their eyes and ears at
the recent council mffllnl that took up Goldberg' a seven
polnb. They turned out about 200 strong in a room de-
signed to seat 80. And d .. !>lte the wide spectrum of
oplnlon llld pbilosopby, Goldberg did a good job of keep. ID: order llld cood' bumor.
Moving Santa . Fe Inland
There wu a period not long ago when the dream of
movin1 the Santa Fe Railroad from San Clemente's
beachfront to an inland area seemed to have only re-
mote chances of succ ....
But hard WGrlt:, determination and a little luck have
brought relocation closer to realtt)r.
Cbances oeem brighter !bat in the next few years
Conscience,
Commitment,
Concern
(0.. Ronald Rmgan ordered a .sh'*"" o/ t:ali/orni4 state college1
and wifDtrtida /or a period of cool·
i"l1 off and 1'fl<c:tion frum Thurlday,
Mor 'I, vntil Jlortdaf montlng, Mau 11.
Th< -· today ii 00.•d on Dr.
Rat/fJltalff'• 1tatnnent to tht faculty
and lludenl< of &m F rand&co Sl<ll<
College GI claun '110J>en.)
AA we return to dlJs after a four-day
·-· ~ !acuity and ltudaats race
both a challenge 811<1
an opportun-
ity. Who\ ... do
with the three weeks
that remain in thil
semester will lffecl
us all
Tb e challenge.
1impQ'1 ii to resist
the preaent wave of
emotion that calla
fOf' teacbers to abandon th e I r
rapcm1billlles and ror students to forfelt
their iavestment in education.
'l'be opp>rlunity ls to demonstrate
fe8'CID, ccnacience, commitment aod coo-cero.
Of course some students have been
deeply agitated by recent e~t.s at home
and in Southeast Asia. Some are too
agitated to return to normal academk
pursuitl. We cannot and will not stand
ja the way or sludents staying away
from classes.
I BUT TEACHERS 11AVE an enUrely
different order of responsibility. Students
have ll:gned up with them to learn.
'Ibose who want to continue instruction
are fully entitled to it, and teachers
are legally as well as morally obliged
to provide it. A faculty member who
is so outraged by current iuues that
he feels be cannot continue teaching
is free, of course, to resign.
In the winter ot. 196M9, we saw a
small 1eg1nent of our facu1ty and student
body -Jess than $ percent -creale
an impresak>n that rtl09l student! and
teacherl wanted the college cloaed. The
news media helped. Perhaps s«nelhlng
similar ls happening again. It ls a trap
-into which all too many college ad-
ministraticlls have already fallen.
rr Ill AN OUTllAGE for a minority
-or even a majority -to approprlate
the mDece aa an instrument for the
Quotes
Patrlda Zelttr, S.F. mothtr ud new _..._"I don't believe in cetllOl"lhlp. [
don't tbJnk pomogrephy in books or
mori• banns people, nor do [ think It
!Olds lo .. crimes. It'• just not Ill)'
ll>lq."
~ ,,.... nap., r<tlrll( Ole! J.-of CaUltnla -"Polle<! ofOeen
-bl .._iat, .Tbey lhollld be
11antal tbt cUcnil1 sJY<ll a Judge or. •
coUett 11•eam."
.... .,,, ... l'lolAOI IOTI Hip __ ..,,,. ud port (aboUI the 'vocol
lllloorljy') II tllot so mll!J' I"!'~'• o•tl:lde
.... _,,. bellevt thl.I tlit iOeas '" ~ by !ht radlc1il sre 1lso those
htJtl b)' -AmericlDL" • •
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
The ntW Laguna Beach City Coun·
ell's abrupt ftrlng or planning com·
mluloners because they were "too
restrictive" is a certain signal that
envJronmental shenanigans could
be in I.be offing. We'd better watch
'em.
-A. B. D.
ftlt "9111,. "11Kh l'ttftft' Wlewi, -
~I\' """'-.i ""' "".''"r. StfMll ,._ "' ....... " • ......,. .... De"' l"lltf,
IC!vancement of a particular political
view, oo matter haw important or grave
the i~s. Closing down the colleges
Is a form or political coercion, compelling
all the students and raculty to join
in the dramatization of a view that
ls not shared by all.
For a long time, before, during and
since the McCarthy era, colleges ha ve
fought to preserve open mindedness and
neutrality. We cannot permit the college
to be politlcfr:ed without suffering in·
calculable loss to academic freedom .
Those who are tempted to e1ercise such
political coercion as we are confronted
with must ask themselves how they
would like it if their opponents were
doing H.
TEACHERS CAN DO much for their
prolession and for San Francisco State
if by their actions now they let the
whole country know that they are deeply
committed to their professiona l role.
However, the tide is running in the
opooslte direction . Professors and even
university presidents around the country
are abandoning their neutrality and
permitting classrooms to be taken over
for political action . Someone must act
promptly to recapture public respect
for institutions of higher learning. Vi'e
as the faculty of San Francisco State
have that opportunity.
Students at San Francisco State have
the opportunity in these next three weeks
to reshape the character of their college
if the majcrity, who want to continue
their ed:lCation and e:rercise the ir
poliUcal life outside the classroom
without violence or coercion. are willing
to stand up, be seen, be heard, and
to be counted.
THE QUE.STION IS, who repreM:nts
San Francl.!Co Stale -the minority
who want to shut it down, or the majority
who want the education that they (and
in some cases their parents) have worked
so hard to pay for.
I urge teachers and students alike
to con1lder the alternative before us.
San Francl.Jco State college can conUnue
so that courses now being given may
be completed and cerUrlcates. credentials
and degrees may be granted. Or we
can yt~d to the minority and cl~
the college, In which case we must
face the fact th11t state educational
legislaUcm bars the college from granting
credit for courses not ctimpleted and
from paying teachers for instnfctional
services not performed.
lF PRESENT TRENOS continue, San
Francisco State is going to prove to
be one ot the finest IMUtutions of higher
educaUon in the naUon. While other
coll'les Lernpori:e and compromise the.Ir
principles, we are ma lnt.lllnlng academic
freedom for Communists and anti.COm-
rnunbts, for revoluUonarles and reac·
dooariff, for ROTC and anU·ROTC peo-
ple -all within the framework of ra-
tional debate. We an a grtat collr:ge.
We can become a creattr one by 1dher·
Ing atubbnrnly to the principles cl
academic freedom. no matter whaL
By S. 1. llay•kaw•
President
SU fraodxa State Collrge
tbe noisy , dangerow trains wW zip past San Clunonte,
instead of through its beach area.
Much work toward tbe goal wu done by I 1DlllJ
committee of San Clementt Chamber of Commerce di-
rectors. Ed Cbalfee and Paul Pn>slef.
Their plugging persistence helped •ell tho ldoo.
The next gool Is to include the n>location Idol In •
$250,000-federal mass transit study covering high-speed
commuter trains using new, inland roadbedJ in.stead of
the present seaside route.
If the cities of San Clemente and San Juan ClpJ.
strano and county supervisors can together pru1 for
tbe study, the end of tbe San Dlegan and its tracb mllht
become reality in the next few years.
More Kudos for LBHS
Laguna Beach High School seems lo have como
through its five-year accreditation inspection with ny ....
ing colors.
Since five years is the longest accreditation granted
(this will be Laguna's third since the program began) it
would appear that things are In order at LBHS, 11 11111
in th e eyes o( the six-member committee Of out.lid.a ob-
servers who examined reports from admlnistratc>n,
faculty and students, then spent three days aeetnr for
themselves.
This is Important to graduate• heading for lop col·
leges and also reassuring to the community.
The examining committee seemed especiaDY. iJno.
pressed by student involvement in development Of cur-
riculum, and had kind tbings to say about tbe low pQpil-
teacher ratio and the rotating scheduling that widens
learning opportunities.
The defects -a serious sbortago of library boob.
inadequate s pace for shop and~hom11 economies du1es
and problems in maintaining older buildings -were
subjects of the recent unsuccessful bond election and it
is hoped can be corrected in time. s
' '
'
President Prepares to Aanat1nce Cambodian Success
Nixon Has Managed to Keep Co·ntrol
WASHINGTON -The prot..ten have join In the 1outh prolesl, and there
come and gone, rhetoric hll! cooled aod were &ood reasons for this. A score
President Nixon is preparing to announce of aenaton and congressmen who en-
that the Cambodian operation is a sue-daned the flrlt mobilization againat the
cess. This announcement will be based war Jut October and participated to
on the volume of arms and supplies ane extent in the NOYember turnout
captured and the hope that further Com· -... 1biJ reqWrtd an 8ccurat. ~ in Wubingtcn shWllled. tbe festivities
munist aggressive action in South Viet-00 the depth d the f'ltC1ion in ~rlcan Wt Saturday although their cause for
nam has been set back for a year. bli opinion and Nllon ...... _ __. that particlpaµng might have been greater
How much of a success was the Cam· pu c m-...,. than befort.
boclian thrust will contln,ue to be argued corrtctly. It required an accurate judg-The recent protest. was on a scale
and It will play a part in the con-meat on the Convrmnllt ruction, and, probably about ~third of the Nov.
grtssional campaign but Nl.J:on thus far, up to DOif, that hll been meawnd 14-15 Mobllizatkln for Peace and it may
at least. has managed to keep control correctly. be that this way of expreuiDg public
or the operation. Some ~ m., not prove to ·blve opinion ia: no longer, if it ever waa,
This matter of control ha! been the been measured oorndly, inchldlrif •lbe an ' etrectlve inlU'umtlrt for influencing
pro-blem from the first. There art reports search for the Commun1st ~~ pubUc policy.
that early in considering the strike Nixon for Vietnam operatiaal (COS\rK-) wldch When cooareasmen. up for reelection
doubted he could maintain control. That may be baried iOIDINbere deep an--stay away frcm IUCh feltivttlea it can
is lo say. a compln of cirCUJmt.ancts derlf'Cl'DI In the arell the Aawtt:w be taken· for granted that they tee no
including American public reaction, the are neeplnr. U the Amlrictnt do not adnntage in that kind of poHtica1 klen-
milllary react.ion from the Communist find that control centM' many qaeltiGal ' tiflcatlon. 'lbe effecUveness of such
slde, the difficulty of llmltfng any will rile in Conireu and Jt mJ&M 'ltlte J1AA11ft can be measured alJo by Nii·
military operation once It bas begun been better if Nilm h8d not melWlned oe'a dedsk'1 to trelt 1t indulgently as
'tl'ould converge to defeat the operation. it in h1I Juattflcatian fer the Cam~ not really a threat but just something
incunlon. 'lllere ,... other ....._ to be 1ot1en fbrou&h with the least
PROBABLY THE DECISIVE factor
was Ni:ron's final judgment that he could
keep American opinion under cont rol
long enough to permit a 60 day operation
which could be very damaging to the
Communists.
which ..... just u Pd--ble.
PERILU'll ONE OF the mOot. '"'1Ufi·
cant _., ol t2'ls critical period· wu
the relucllnce cl m""bln ol ~
·who were attacktna tbe Prellcllat. tit
Thll la, In fact, what ha_,ecl. The
lateat protest rally dkl not inOuence
anyone. It WU wasted tffort.
NIXON, JN f'Acr, Improved bis pool-
tion with those who think ft bas betn
pointless to take a defiant and name-can.
ing attitude toward student protest. 1 t
is one thing to be firmly opposed to
such protest and something el~ to adopt
the language of the streeb! in talking
about it. or to appear not to be listening.
Now, at Jeut, the President is listening
but it is not changing his policies any
more than it did when he said that
his policies would not be changed by
student protest or demonstration in the
street..
In the longer range , If the Cambodian
operation is, or can be termed, a sUc·
cess, the result! will not be merely mili·
tary and diplomatically favorable.
These circumstances, coming into focu~
after midsummer, would give the Presi-
~ a firm platform for another
fcrthcoming intervention, a political in.
tervention. Nixon needs more strength
in Congress if he is to carry through
his very extensive program of refonn
in the next couple of years. His hand
woukl be greaUy strengthened in ap-
pealing for a Republican Congress if
Cambodia has proved to be a success.
Perhaps that contributed, too, to the
lack of interest in Congress in la&t
week's dem~trations.
'Our President Did the Right Thing'
To the Edilor:
I believe that our President did the
right thing about Cambodia. In the long
run It will save m 11 n y American and
South Vietnamese Jives as our forces
capture and destroy the Viet Cong and
North Vielnamese o ff e n s i v e held·
quarters.
It was a hard decision for Mr. Nixon,
but I believe that in the weeks to
come Americans will see the wisdom
of Otis decision. I agree with Veterans
of Foreign Wars and American Legion
leaders who have stated that had we
done this long ago the war would DOW
be over.
My purpose is to plead with thousands
of Christians to join In prayer during
the ne:rl few weeks for deflnite victory.
Urge your church and Christian friends
to band together in this noble effort
for Goel and country.
THE REV. GORDON LANGMADE
l!11derl11IRf1 QuutloR•
To the Editor:
Much of the news recently has focused
Bii George --~
Dear George:
I have been reading your column
tor eight years and I enjoy~ it.
Every once Jn a wbile you say:
"Write to George and send a self·
addressed, stamped envelope." I
keep getting it back In the mail
and l'm going to try this one
MY way -addressing it to you
insteltd of myself. Let me know
if you get it.
LOYAL FAN
Dev Loyal Fan:
I dldn'I get I~ (Cllenla Uke lhlt
I don"t need.)
(Do you have l"'blan1 with ll'IO
New Year's JU>lutlona stll1 un-
broken with the ne'ff year men
thin a Quarter over? Have your
re90lutfons broken by proxy -
GeorRe wlll do anything and call
it research.)
on President Nlzon.'1 movement ol
American lnqll l!tlo Cambodia and· !hi
trenttndoOI --the country to lhlt move. Wlllll tho advillblllly
Of that move is dthltable, and whlle
the campus re9d.ion la wor1hy of note
and cOocml, we lhouJd not 1-llCht
" !ht -· lmporlonl ••dtrlyin1 qUff-
tiool.
Should America hi.YO a mlUtlry
pmence In loclocblnaf Does •P,I
military JIRll!!1ICt COit America add
lndochlns .,.... -It -Aa.lca and lndodtlna! Do w1, lb fact; ion
a right to balance -. pla;.,.tnll
lndochlnm coot! Wblt klndo ot,poatbl•
beM!lll can bl enlerOd IDlo an~
\o balance the com to JncMcbina?
IN ORDER TO llv• -ed ...,.,rs
to thil sort ol question tt II ...,..ry
to a~lat1 w~t \he cosll cf the wu m to Indoch1na. we mu1t rtau.
lhlt much ol tho Jud tl>l!I bl VlttMm,
Cambodia, and 1-II dJlnl, cldoUsted
•nd coft!l'td wttb 'burDl cntett. We
must reslla tllll -mudl dlfknnl than ..................... u., ... by
the forced urboDbatloo <l mu,_ frwn
the countmldo. We mlllt l'Ollbe thlt
maJU'' mlaJ' dtl1lalll .. bdai"' lklDld
by -"" llld -,.. We mllll . ~ -lvll: A r • pemmOllll Uh tllll el Thieu and•Ky
in South Vietnam worth thl.1 1 or t of
(1)61!
GREG CER.\IAX
C....tHHllaa Move
To the Edit«:
Pnsldent Nlxoo'• action on movtnc
Into Cambodia makes me fin&llJ think
wt hive tomeone who his guts enough
to do what we went to Vietnam to
do years ago. We have been mesaing
sround l<:COll!plilhlng nocblng in Vlelnlm
too looi. wbeo the aource ol our problem1
was elsewhere.
Fighting in Vietnam was like poisoning
rats ln the pantry when they c om e
from the ·huemenl M1ybe a llm1g
offensive move with full backing from
1ll of the people in America wilt show
the Indochinese Communists that we
are a soUd country with a solid purpose,
that we mean business and are not
jull fight1n1 for our economk: beslthl
DAN MARTENS
V•e Tr••q•lllshttJ G••
To the Editor:
A chargln.t rhino or elephant Wt easily
be 11.1bdued by the use of a tranquilizing aim. 'lbJa protects the man, but does
not kUl or harm the animal whlch he
wanta 1o uve. Ia the We of. a wild
animal more precioua than that of a
rebellkim ltUdtnt? Why can't our poll('!
and N1Ucaal Gaardeen use IOIDttbini
bolld" deodly·bullela which ldll?
MABEL DAY O'BRIAN
Devoure• f>1' M ..
To the Edit«:
Just tblnk, alrno.<it 18.000 new residents
lo Orange County within the 1111 Ii•
months. la a few yta.r1 we won't have to WOfT1 about a Sundly'1 ~ly drlve
lo the coantry we had plw>ed on all
weet. We can see the transformation
tJVflr'J d1y with new ucly subdlviltons
llndlolpln( the hllllldel and IJWWay1
and -our pk:lureoque coutllne ~ belnldenundbyman.
ORANGE COUNTY -the counly wilh
orance grovts. tbe smell ot smuda:e
pota In wlnttr and tht frogrance of °""'' blouoms in tho •f'l'ini -thl.s
'
indeed was our home. Now It's only
a memory for there are five groves
Jell Yes, come here everybody to the
state wlt.h room fur all people -with
its huge industries, wall-to.wall tract
houses, our wonderful California climate,
the beautiful wages California has to
dfer and the golden opportunity.
NOW, WE SOON expect the beloved
Irvine Company to build a new
unwelcomed city with another half
million population. This will succeed in
devouring the tota l land from north El
Toro west to the Newport-Corona de!
Mar area and eventually our beautiful
rolling hills and coastline south to
Laguna. How marvelou s it \viii be to
enter the adjoining towns like a link
fence.
I HOPE THE the people who have
mastered all the planning ol these future
cities will tell their grandchildren how
tt used to be. How the deer used
to roam the hJUs, the wild quail used
to flock in covies and the sa d
meadowlark used to be a common sound
in any field.
Man is so intelligent. yet ii i~
astorlilhlng he's not capable of preserving
nature's precious environment.
LORNA PIASKOWSKI
----
Frid a y, Mny 15, 1970
Thi tditotf4l pagl Df the Daily
Pilot 1e1ks to inform and itim-
uloW f'tadtrs bw pre1enting this
neWIJ>Oper°I opinions and com-
mtntary on topjci of interest
and .slgnf/jcancc, by providing o.
forum for th1 e:rprcssiqn o/
our readers' opinions, and by
presmting the diwrse view-
point.a of informed obse,.ver1
and .tp0k111'1'&tn on topicl of th•
day.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
:
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DAIL V PILOT 7
CHECKING Pr~p~ 7 Aimed at Bond Lag
• UP • Water Project, S~hools Called Top PI.i-0!.ities _
Don't Give Checks
To Dieting Woman
SACRAM)IN'l'O (I/fl) -
P,._tti!' 7• ii de<lptd to
move thi state's $1.3 bJJtion
construction program off dead
center, -especially the vas~
Calilornla Water Project.
By L M. Boyd
ODDS RUN 900 to one that
11 man won't stay on the same
job lor more than I O
years. , , .DO YOU CARRY
Propo-contend -·· would "1ftrl disaster" for
to one another before they
hatch? Wait, what's so
ridiculous about that question?
A professor at Colorado State
Unive""ty Is 'trying to find
out. In fa~t, he is operating
on a research grant to do
public ICbool and blper
educatbl c ristru ctl on,
veterans iqam, aa.t.e parks
and the almott complete II
blllloo walel\ i>roJect.
Biit -ts -end th~
balloC mouure woultr give the
legislature virtually a blank OPEN QUESTION -All cbecl< foe unlimited t.uatioo.
right, everybody now know-s The pr0poeed c:c:mtitutional
that Pete Gray was the St. amendmeat ·'""11d erase: the
Louis Browns' on e -a r m e d · current 5 perffnt .rmax imunl
baseball player but who' rate allowed on atate general
a bank charge card? The
statisticians have analyzed
those, too. Average transac-50•
lion nationwide ls $19.00 .•••
' ob!lgatloo boods and aulborize
knows the name of that St. the legislature by. two-thirds
Louis Browns' player who was vote t.o set any rate il desired
only 3-feet-7-inches tall? on authorized .b.lt unsold
bonds. • ·
prevtously by the voters but
unsold due to inllaUoo in the
bond market.
Bood buym are unwilling
because · Uon l o
porch a!Uornia general
obliga boods. Proposition
7 is med at catching up
,.t Jnflation and returnlog
th the bond bullness.
Bu some opponents charge
that to approve Proposition
7 would merely be playing
infl~t~n'1 1ame.
The:State's boad selling pro-
gram has been stalled for
more than a year.
· .• UMOld are '600 million ta
water bonds, $269 million rOr
JOcal school building aid, $200
million for veteran loans, $75
Iri.illion for university and
state <.'Olkge bulldin&,. $75
million for parks, and $156
million for junior ' colleges,
Harbor improvement a n d
general state con.9truction.
A chief aim is to keep the
water project from grindlhg
to a halt, a possibility Gov.
Ronald Reagan has said he Nejedly, wilhou~ mentioning
will not permit to happen. the water project specifically ,
His finance department has said that the cilizens "who
drafted a rontingf!ocy plan for must pay the laxes lor in·
implementation in cise the terest charges should have the
measure ls defeated. One right to determine what those
possibility under consideratlon charges should be or at least
is the levying of a tetnporary be guaranteed a maximum In-
two-cent increase in Ute sales tercst rate.''
tax:. He suggests as an
Legislative nnatyst A. Alan alternative that previously
Post has warned that without authorized bond issues be
water project revenues to pay resubmiUed to the voters al
off $LI billion worth of stated interest ral.e11 and that
outstanding water bonds, the an interest ceiling be set for
payments would have to be all issues.
made direcUy by the tu:payer Orr says that if the measure
from the general fund . Is passed he hopes the state
But Sen. John A. Nejedly, wlll sell $300 millicri1 worth
a11 outspoken opi)onent of the of bonds during the first year,
project to traMpOrt surplus adding, "We're off in a drca1n
northern water to populous world at 1norc h1:1n $350
southern Calirornia, insists million."
that passage would be He • said the administration
equivalent to a b a n k would assign the "two highest
unilaterally hiking the interest priorities" to water aoo school
rate on a previously authoriz-bonds. fol.lowing by loan hoods
ed loan without the borrower's for Vietnam veterans with
permission. higher education constructia.1
"No voter in the future will bonds next in line.
know, lf Proposition 7 passes, Before the inflation crisis
TIMED BY RDLEX
Gold Rolex with 24 diamonds.
$1,125.
i'
RO LEX
SLAVICK'S
Jewel1rs s ;nc.• 1911
l8 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH -644-1380
At\1 TOLD about 80 percent
ol the reservation Navajos in
New Mexico speak n o
English .•. IN ONE TOWN in
Germany, the experts are con-
ducting a sex education class
for people over 60 .. , .ANY
PUBLISHER who puts out a
new dictionary can call it a
\Vebster if he so desires.
MEN -There are three
kinds of men. Those who
primaril y want power. Those
who prima r il y want
achievement. And those who
primarily want love. Stick
with me on Utis one, it gets
Additionally, it -.<Id raUrY
1969 legislation, increasing the
limit from ~ to ~ 7 percent
on a back1og of Sl.3 billion
'worth of bonds authorized
· B Ch • what the total interest charges in th e bond market. the state Y-en • .,. Ac-• *.....,. _ 1.,..-.....nun1, 11111,..,. oi...-. ...,, oys on• Oil bond issues will be," the sold about $500 million worth Op" Mo•doy ollld Fri4or 11atU t :JO
'fW~a~inuit~C~riee~k~R~epob~~lic~a~n:s~w=·d~.~rn~bo~nd~s~a~n~n~ua~ll~y~.~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~~~ DIETERS -Have you
noticed your ladyfriend gets
a litUe giddy whenever she
goes on a diet? Here arises
one possible explanation. Our
thoughts are said to be in-
fluenced greaUy by sUgar and
carbon in the blood. And if
the little lady stops eating
adequately, she deprives
herself of this chemical. What
follows then may be odd no-
tions and peculiar turns of
mind. Or so say the science
boys. Remember that, mister,
it wouldn't do to entrust the
family checkbook to a dieting
woman.
At Fairvie'v 11
a little tricky. A Harvard pro-~---------~ ressor named David C .
McClelland says mosl all men
are afflicted to some degree
with a need ror all three of
the arorementioned. But in
each man, he says, one of
the three comes first. AU
right, mister, which one are
you - a power, achievement
MQre Ike
Coins Due
An Mternationally known
choir which has performed for
three popes and trowned
heads of Europe will sing May
19 to patienlll in· the Fairview
Slate Hospital auditorium.
Fred . Barnes, m u s i c
reh:abilitation· therapist at the
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Costa Mesa facility for the
or love man? The government wants to mentally retarded arranged
ntint 150 mlllion silver Eisen-for Bob Mitchell's sintlng
DREM1S -That we
citizens dream every 9 0
minutes while asleep Is com-
mon knowledge. But now it's
claimed, in additiion. we
daydream every 90 minutes
when awake. And the science
boys contend those daydreams
are just as beneficial to our
mental frame of mind as the
sleep dreams.
hower dollars, the kind YfM! Boys to tnake the Thursday
spend more thap $1 to b\Jy nigQt appearance.
so you can save \hem. The youngsters have ap-
A propoeal ~mttted to peared at the Los Angeles
Congress by the joint com-Music Center, Europe, Canada
mission on the c:olpaae' wfl.l)d and throughout America, plus A WHALE can get by on
about five hours sleep a
ni&ht. ••. THOSE FINGER..
LICKIN' GOOD t'hickens that
cost 57 cents a pound in 1955
bring only about 42 cents a
poW1d now .... FOR SOME
UNEXPLAINED rea!On, the
Na lion's nickels tend to collect
in Baltimore, Louisville and
Nashville, it's reported.
authorize minting the. coins performing in 160 motion pie·
bearing the image or the for-tures.
mer President as collector'<J Mitchell and Barnes, of the
it.ems and selling them at a Fairview staff, have been
p ri c e substantially higher aSiOCiates in music for many
Your questions a1td co11t-
ments ore welcomed ond
will be used in checking
up wherever possible. Ad·
dress yo11r letteTs to L. M.
Boyd, care of Daily Pilot,
Box 1875, Newpori Beach,
than $1. years.
The commission also asked I;:"'==========,\!
for authority to mint a much TURN ON -·1: larger number of dollar coins
made or nickel and copper. TV WEEK k••P• yo1t t1tR•d
They would circulate at their to wh1t'1 h1pp1t1iflt b•hit1d th•
face value. h1b• -Ev•f"t S1t11rd1v in th•
DAILY ,llOT. CONSIDER THIS -Do the
Inhabitants of hens' eggs talk
AN OPEN LETTER TO THE
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
.. ., DEAR MR. PRESIDENT: ,..
\Ve, the undersigned members of the "Silent Majority," can no longer stand by in
silence and apathy thereby giving tacit approval to a national policy dedicated to
fighting undeclared wars in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos for reasons only re~otely
related to the national security. This policy has today claimed more than ·40,000
American lives, wounded or maimed nearly 250,000 others, imperiled the economic
health and prosperity of the nation, siphoned untold billions of tax-dollars away from
serious domestic problems, and has dangerously divided the American people ..
In view or the pajn, death and division already \\'rought by the Vietnamese war, we
must strenuously protest the \Videning of that war to Cambodian so il We feel that
your decision to commit A1nerican troops to that neutral country is in error and we
ask you to reconsi der your decision and recall our troops now. If the war in Cambo-
dia is allowed to mature into a further extension of the Vietnamese war, we f~ar that
the domestic di sorder that would follo\v will so divide this country that its very sur·
vival \viii be in question.
\Ve believe that the entire Vietnamese conflict must be scaled do\vn immediately and
all our troops brough t home at the earliest possible date. Let us then heal the divi·
sions in our country and apply our skills and resources to the pressing domestic prob-
lems that confront us.
LU THE SILENT MAJORITY BE HEARD NOW
We Are Writing President Nixon
PLEASE JOIN US
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Dr. and Mrs. M. Rabbitt
f..1r. and ti1rs. Thomas F. Crosby
Dr. and f..T rs. Victor M. Bardack
Dr. and 111rs. David 111. Schaal
Dr. and f..1rs. 0 . Kirk Hoffner
'!ltr. and t.1rs. Fred Neuburger
!lfr. and Mrs. J_ Nicholes Counter
Mr. and Mrs. Byron J . Beam
Mr. and Mrs. L Ftuhllnger
?i.tr. and Pt1.rs. Donald Roberson
Mr. and ?ttrs. Chuck Jones
111r. and Mrs. StanJey R. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Duffy
Mr. and Mrs. John Hiestand
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Weir
FOR COPIES OF THIS LETTER TO SIGN AND FORWARD
TO PRESIDENT NIXON, WRITE TO POST OFFICE BOX 4015,
IRVINE, CALIFORNIA 92604
AND HELP SAVE AMERICA !
••
NO\l\f! JUST ARRIVED!
ALL-NEW
1970
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I
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DAILY PILOT Friday, M.,-15, 1970
By Phil lnterlandi
... Winds Spark Blaz~s
50 Fires 'Hit; Firemen Brcree for More Shake~ yoll' notion of what color TV costs!
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Southern Califor n ia
firefigtiten, wearied by two
large blar.es and more than
fifty smaller brush fires in
four counties Thursday,
prepared today for more of
the same.
ridge near Mt. Ho1lywood
fought it back w h 11 e
helicopters used a e r i a I
chemical and water df'Op:! to
!tQuelcb the U.foot flames.
The ruverside blaze, which
broke out a.round 1.p.m., was
oontalned late 'Iburaday by
175 men on the &round and
'RCA prices are right
The fire was contained
shortJy after dusk, but ground
crews and surveillance teams
remained on the scene through
the night to spot IJ\Y fiare-up1
and isolate the burnt-out area.
in lbe alt. ·
Henrietta Cantrell, 31, a
resident of the lodian HUb
Country Club Estates, was the
ooly injury, suffering . minor
burns while protect.in&: her ·
RIGHT NOW'! . .
. . !~ r'"':' • , .
• t.;.<l--> ' ,
l "'It's from the entire executive· staff for general. ef.
ficieDC:Y and not switchiD2' to the midi!"
LA Schools in Business
After UTLA Strike End
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
city's public schools, whose
education programs were in-
t.emipted by a month-long
teachers' strike, are back in
business.
Thursday. School officials said
absenteeism among the 25,438
teachers was 6.1 percent. They
attributed this to illness or
other normal reasons.
'Ille largest fires Thursday,
boch sparked by the hot, dry
winds, burned 375 acres in
Griffith Park near downtown
Los Angeles and 1,000 acres
in an agricultural-residential
area of Riverside County.
The GriH>th Park blue sent
names spi!Ung through the
Eastern and Southeastern part
ci the park, reaching to within
a quarter-mile of the merry-
go-round area and threatening
to force the evacuation ol wild
animals quartered in the old
zoo facilities.
'Ille fire, which broke out
around 3 p.m., also threatened
to sweep toward populated
hillside districts to UJe west.
but firemen .stationed on a
Simon Gave
Contribution
To Tunney
property.
70 Percent Turnout
Foreseen in Primary
SACRAMENTO (AP) -An
estimated 5.6 million Callfor·
nians will vote in the June
2 primary election, Secretary
of State H. P. Sullivan
predicted today.
Sullivan forecast a turnout
of 70 percent of the state's
eight million registered voters.
The record is 72 .21 percent
Jn 1968 followed by nearly 72
percent in 1964, the primary
f~aturing the GOP presklentlal
fight between Barry
Goldwater and Nelson A.
Rockefeller.
vote efforts for UJe general
election, confident of defeatinJ
Yorty in the primary.
'nlere is no r.ace for
governor on the GOP aide,
with Gov. Reagan the only
candidate. Sen. Ge o 'r a e
Murphy is opposed by
m I l 1 I o n a i r e industrialist
Norton SimCl'I for the
Republican Senate nomlnaUon,
but observers did not see that
race causing much excitement
among Republicans.
This table model come& with ·
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it would be a fabulous buy
even wilhout the stand. 8&-
eause it's detuJi:e New Vista•
quality color TV from RCA. · .
You oet a big 18" diagonat
picture. Plus super-powerful
24,000-volt c~is (compare ·
this picture power witll othlf'
18" diag. ·sets. Plut a bea~
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tractive stand. ~
MdSf important of all, you get
Automat ic Fine Tvnino, 1he
advanced feat ure that helps 1
take the guesswork out of :
color tuning. It's completelv,
electronic, completely auft> .
ma tic,
Come in for lhe '"Right Naw"
buy ~·ve been '!'ailing for, '
RIGHT NOW
Virtually all of the
membesr s of the United
Teachers of Los Angeles
returned to their classrooms
Some high school studenu
possibly may have taken an
extra holiday, however. The
school district said 112 percent
cf the 653,ooo · pupils and
students were in class. But
absenteeism for high school
students -except in the San
Fernanda Valley -waa slight~
ly higher. An absentee ratio
of 18 percent over-all is con-
sidered normal at thU time
of year.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Republican Senatorial Can-
didate Norton Simon, ad-
mitting a "modest" con-
tribution to Rep . John Tun-
ney's campaign fund last year.
says he hasn't m!lde up his
mind yet about pledging sup-
port to the winner of the
primary June 2.
There are 1 ,053,319
registered voters for the 1970
primary including 4,388,052
Democrat.. and 3 , 2 7 f , 9 5 7
Republicans.
Sullivan's forecast was con-
curred in by Leon Cooper,
Southern California Demo-
cratic chairman.
The most spirited G 0 P
primary has been between
State Sens. John L. Hanner
of Glendale and 'G e of g e
Deuk'mejian of Long Beach,
Los Angeles Dist. Atty. EveDe
Younger and Spencer
Williams, former h u m a ri
resources secretary f o r
Reagan.
n. '"""' ll'mMMI ..... 111-4.,,.11'1 ........... ...._ ~39995
Firefighters
Ignore Order
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -City
firemen ignored a · Superior
O>urt injunction or d e r i n g
them back to work Thursday
after the GOO-member union
declared a general strike Wed-
ll<Sday night.
"I don't know yet," the
m i 11 i o n a I r e Industrialist
replied when asked Thursday
if he would support incumbent
Sen. George Murphy over the
Democratic nominee.
Cooper said he thought the
U.S. Senate contest between
Democrats John V. Tunney,
George Brown and Kenneth
Hahn would draw a number
of voters.
"I think the students will
probably work pretty hard for
Brown," said Cooper.
Compton New
District Judge
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -.
STAND INCLUDED '
The city council met in ex.
ecutive session Th u r s d a y
. afternoon to consider possible
actions against the firemen.
Among alternatives discussed
were possible contempt pro-
ceedings for disobeying the
Injunction and firing the
strikers and hiring n e w
persmnel.
The end of the strike
resulted from a 3-t.o-1 vote
by UTLA members to end
balloting Wednesday. They
agreed to aceept a school
board proposal that gave them
a S percent pay boost and
recognition of UTLA as their
bargaining agent.
Additionally, the v o tin g
teachers instructed t h e I r
negotiators to trade the 5 per-
cer:t pay boost -il possible
-for what they called an
improvement in the quality
of education-smalltt classes
and better remedial reading
techniques.
Interviewed on an advance
taping of a "news conference"
show on KNBC, Simon said
he gave Tunney, a candidate
for the Democratic nomina-
tion, a "modest amount" last
year, before he himself got
interested In seeking the job.
"I don't think there will
be a bi( turnout for the
governorship race," he added.
"I don't see Yorty coming
out with a big get-out·the-vote
program."
Los Angeles Mayor Sam
Yorty faces As,,emblyman
Jess Unruh for the
D e m o cratic gubernatorial
nomination. Cooper said he
believed Unruh forets would
save their major get-Out-the-
LyM D. Compton, 41, a police
detective turned prosecutor,
was named by Gov. Ronald
Reagan Thursday as a n
assoclate justice of the 2nd
District Court of Appeal in
Los Angeles. Compton would
succeed Donald Wright named
r ecently to be chief justice ·
of the State Supreme Court.
Compton joined the Los
Angeles County District At-
torney's office in 1951 after
four years as a detective in
the Los Angeles P o J 1 c e
Department.
... Sat .. lnf ........ loft Call 646-1684
411E.17th St., COSTAMESA
"Obviously, l felt he (Tun-
ney) could do a better job
than Sen. Murphy," Simon e1-
plained.
D·ISCRIMINATING
INVESTORS
AT
';vut 7'ea rl-~
& Loa,,e ?/446~ o/ S""tk. 'Pa44deHa
Look For:
Stability and Availability of Principal. Max-
imum Dependable Earnings. Ease of T rons-
actions.
And Find:
Accounts Insured to s20,000.00 Reserves
sufficient to assure continuance of maxi-
mum permissible earnings. A location as
close as your mail box.
1000 FAIR OAKS AVENUE
SOUTH PASADENA, CAUF. 91030
Area Code 213
799-4143
Area Code 213
682-1131
~;:~~]~;~~~j;t;;~:~j~;n;1r;~iriij~f:~:;~::j;~;~:~u~~~~:;~~j;~~j~it~~~~~~~1~;~~~~;~~;~~ili~~~f:i~~r:r~~j~ji~%~~~~~r:~~rE~~*~'J~lf•iim:~m~J~I-
it Statement of Condition }!
!Vi December 31, 1969 !}'
: : First Liens on Real Estate .~~~~!.~,,, .. , ••• ,, isa,792,542. 70 :' ~
:•,••'' Real Es tare Owned . . . . .. . .. . • • . .. . • . . . . . .. • • • . • 5,59L9a ;,:;:;: .11'.:!.r.~ Loans and Contracts Made to Facilitate Sale of Real ::;:::; Estate ......................................... l34,2oa.01 ~:n~; Stock in F.H.L.B.................... •• • • • • . • •• • • 715,000.00
~r~~~ gt~~?I:!::i~~tt t:~iti~,; ::·::::::::::::::::::: 3·~~:~~~:~
::::::: Cash on Hand and in Banks ••••• ,................ 570,354.47
.
. ~ .. ~ ... ~.1 .• :.t;, C?ffi~e Building, Land and Equipment-Less Depre· ciat1on • • • • • • • • • • • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • 1,427 ,964.35
Secondary Reserve for Federal Savings and Loan
Jnsurance Corporation,........................... 734,588. 70
Other Assets ..................... ,., ••••.•••••• ,. 507.ss ~
. Tota1. ......... LiAsit.1riEs ......... sn,669,175.3:1 W
Savings Accounts •.••.••• , ••••••......•••••••••• $60,693,893.86 ~:it
Advances from F.H.L.B .• ,.,,,......... •• • • • • • • • • 3,048,000.00 ~~~~
Other Borrowed Money •••• , ••• -• • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • NONE :::::~
!A>ans in Process , ••••••••••• , ••••• , •.• , • • • • • • • • • 236,972.60 =:.'::~
Other Liabilities •••••••••••••.•• , , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 177 ,915.51 lt~ ~.... Deferred Income , ••••••• , •••• , , •••••••••••• , • • • • 7,388.32 ~~ <"i:~ Specific Reserves. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 7,240.45 ::M i~ General Reserves •••••.••••••••••••••• ,......... 6,1'6,036.12 ~~ ~:§~ ReaeneforConUngencies........................ 191,259.00 *~ ici SUiplUB •••••••••••••• -• • • • • •• • • • ••• • • • •• • • • • •• • 1,260,469.57 ~~~ :~:~~ Total ••••••••••••.••.••••••••••••••••••• $711669,176.33 ~ :~~:: MEMBER ···:::~ ~M FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK SYSTEM ~)!
:.cf.: MEMBER FEDERAL SAVINGS AND <~ ''J,""'"·''""'E'~Wfi.q~JNrmsyW~~N£f-.~C9!f&.%_1lQM"' ...... ,,.A ~:.:::::::~:::.::;::;;. •. ~~:~-..:-:...:: ~=«:.. .. -~~:·~==~:.:-:.: ... -.::·~ ·~:·: : =~'..::::.;;. '&.~;-::~:.:-.. ;:..:;.:=,::;~:·;) •• •.;:::::::::~:~::-:::~ .. ~::: .. '"'"""" ...... """'""-"';_.,. .. «-: .•»."., .................... ;w:; ....... ............. • ...................... «........... ... . ......................... x: ... ...
,---;:-%~1
II Directors
~o:Ei~~~~~dent, Manager and Directnr ,1 .. ·.·: .. ·•.·,•.,' .. :,'
Vice-President, ~tary and Direct.or
;;~;;;:;o~i~~id~i:f~~=~ 11~1
~:~~~€stant&cr~~=1~ 1.1.1.
R. A. YOUNG Assilllant Secretary :<'l
~
I -• u fui ....
# 0 <'·::;.:~~~:«<-:•:«>:->:>-.': .. -..-.. .. :-:·:·:~···· ................ ~~ ............. »:-............. . . :·:.:·: ~:=>:::::=:::======~====~:::==~:=:=:::*==~*::::::::::::::::::::=:~::.:::::::~~~=~:::~~=~===~:==~~s~=1~:~:~:~:~:j:~:;:~:;:~1:~:=~~=1:~=~~=~=
..
•
• •
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•
Friday, May 15, 11170 OAllV ,llllT t
Cambodia: Time Was Right
'' KIRKPATRICK'S . ~
Action Not Brought on by Mili~y Threat 24 YEARS IN THE HARBOR AREA
FREE flAND McNALLIT TflAYIL GUIDI
No P.archot• Necessary WASHINGTON (AP) -It Cllllalliesbocame opparent." ~ cltllllin& out~ . opeedJ, Laird and other •d·
b beCombc ~ ap. 'ftwl, Lalrd. ID:!, .. this was ww tptmy hudqu.uwn •w.u mlnlsfrallon officials have at. ALL COLOR PORTABLES parent the II ho a eel-the Ume to bit them" in tho nmoloed In Ille mlndl al tempted to emphasize the goal
[
ln1n1mtioli decldN to hit the unctuaries. many-11 the bit objecU.e. of the over-all operation is IN STOCK & READY FOR enemy 'aanctuarles in Cam. Wben newsmen pointed GUI But U.S. and South Vi•• to destro~ the base chain and
bodla because the rlghl .... thisoppearedtoCOlllrodlclthe ....... ( ..... have no~ so tons of supplies laboriously IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
.I
dit1onl had arisen, r1ther than administration line of a far as can be determined, built up by the enemy over
as I rault of I major new buildup and inp'ealed Unat destroyed any vital ~ad-many months. RCll ·cE
military threot. from the-.· l.ird q..W..lo.lact,allldallnow Achievingthis,theysay.will SALES & SERVI . The lr.ey to opening the way IDIWtrld then: wu evidence uy the mllll1 ~'and curtail enemy attacks from
for U.S. and South Vietnamese at tlie ame tame Jht Norih contral ellmient tili!fi*bilf.awn six to nine months, cutting
M-411
FM 41tW
10" 01., ••• 1
127 '""'''' itteh ,1ct11''
forces to bit the eoemy'1 long-Vletu._ -to bit c1oepor Jnte Cambodia d •i> u.s. deaths while buying time 2760 Coast Hl1Jhway Corona del Mar
secure bue complei: was the hardtr inlldt·Sou&b VlelDlml·~pu~·~-~~·~ll~flm<tloalnc~~~~·~,..~.'~n.~Jf~or~the;JSou~th~V;l~etn;am~ese=~to~====~~~~~~==~=~======================~=:;:! overthrow in March of Cam-from Cembotlla. SiMit ~Pre1id••t '4i aclUevebatllereadiAess.
bodla'a ooutrallst chief of The main lluutt of the od·
state. Prince N o r o do m nllnlitritloa · raUoo.ale h as
Phone 673-2650
Sihanouk. been the escalated thrMt to
Until the nc• re&ime led U.S. Ind allied troopo in South
by Premier Lon Nol toot over, Vietnam reruhtnt fr om
the United Si.le.'J felt ii hod lllllllaQI dtftloponaU ID tho
to respect C a m b o d i a ' 1 eftlmlY )»ue area.
neutrallty and its borders. . In his April 31 speech u-
But the change p"'sented 110W1C1q 1bO U.S. -nd o(•
a new situaUon, the im-fenalve into the FWtbook ar ..
porlance al which in ad-al Combodla, ~nt Nltoil
min.lstraUon thinking cu be said, "I have C'IMdDded that
lffD in the statement• of U.S. the actiom of the enemy in
offidals in their 1 e n g th y the last 10 days clearly en-
discusslons of the Cambodian danger the lives of Amer1cam
operatloo. who are in Vietnam ••. "
Secretary al, Defense Melvin • At ·another Point, NllOll
R. Laird has aold: "For a aold, "1bo ~ ln\lhe piat
lq period of time !hero hove two woob baa stepped up
been pollUcal conalderotlons his guerrllla. actioas and he
-latematlonal political con· is eoocentrattnc his main
JideraUorui that had betn in-forces ln tbei sanctuaries
valved, Ind the allllation where they ... bulklina ap
dum&od Ind tblt opportunity to launch maalv. atlacts ea
was presented." our forces and thO!le of South
And Thursday, the secrttary Vietnam."
said about onHhird of the Military observers believe
40,000 North V let names e Nixon made a mistake in
troops in the Cambodian dramatically f o c u s I n g at·
sanduarlet had faced away tention in his speech on what
from South Vietnam startin1 he said was u attack on
about mid-April. · "the budquarten for the en-
'lbls created a situation i• ti.re Communist m i 11 t a r y
which he uld the risk to operation in South Vietnam."
allied force11 became less and Although he men t i one d
"'the possibility of much lower destroying military supplies
.. * * * * * * J .
. ,Soviet,s Don't Plan
' To Act .With Peking
LONDON (AP) -Soviet
authorities privattly art ruJ.
in& out any po!l!ibilily of ac·
tive mllltary cooperation witb
Red Clllna against t h e
Americans in lndod>lna, -Aslon and European dlploma\s
reported today.
Informal Chinese ef!orts
have been 8UUestlng a rtccm-
cillaUon with the Rusaians to
m..t the c:halle111e of Pmi-
dent Ntson•1 inta'Veodoa in
Camhodla.
These diplomats said they
have been told by senior
Soviet colleagues any renewed
Rwsian-Otinese cooperation
would require a Chinese in-
it.iatlve. Nooe has b e e n
sl£bted, and Moscow has no
propoeals to offer.
The infonnants have been
in touch with hlgh Soviet of-
ftdals. Their informal ex-
changes have been reported
to their home tovtrnmenb.
The account they oftWed ol
Soviet thinking have been
checked Ind crOO><:hecl<ed,
namlned a1alnst Molcow'•
acUons and pronouncements
and seem to have a n
authoritative rin1.
The Soviet Unioa'1 poUey,
according to tho tnlonnant.s,
was summarized thus:
-The Kremlin is ready to
provide ID mllilary aid for
~orth Vietnam , and other
Jeftwing Indochinese forces,
lhort of manpower. This Cot!·
trasts with imolficial QUnese
talk of enlisting volunteers for
tervice in Indochinese battle
sones if they are needed.
-tbe Krtmlin is. resolved
to avoid any diAd con-
lronlatlon with tho Americans
in., or over, lndochina. IJb1s
Iles In with a Weat<rn belief
that MOICOW would not rnlnd
watching the Chinese and Am-
ericam slugin& it out In the
rq:ion.
-The Kremlin is ready to
10 Oil provldlnJ the North
VI-with ID the anno
and equipment needed to
replace the loues IU!ltained
during the Amerlc.,,.S.Uth
Vlelnam<se aweep lllrouah
Cambodia.
One high Rua,,ian w a i
quoted by an Asian colleasue
as saying: "There are no dmt
pressures on us or on our
lndochineR friends IS there
are on the Americans.
"The rains soon will descend
over lncb:hlna ruUnc ciut
anyway the paalblllU.. al
major millury _.-. We
have several months m whk:h
to make lood any 1oaes in
armor Ind eqWi>-K 111111
may haVe been IUffered.
"This we intend to do. and
we anticlpate no problemJ
about shJtting the materitl
across the terr1tory or the
Chlnete.''
SOmt clrcumipedlon over
the lndochlna crisis ha been
reflected In official actions
and pronouncements.
The government.in-exile of
Cambodia's Prince Norodom
Sihanouk, based Jn Pekin&, ha11
yel to be recogn!Rd by tho
Run1ans. ·
STAR TV
IS ROii
PorllbllNwittg
wHhperfonMnce
•nd rolllbDllJI
Htf•'• • tlio Kflli"
port•bl• tMt Cf>l'l'lbiM•
tr•di1ion1! ftCA qu.1li'Y
with room·to·room
mobility. Co,,... cOlftfl4tt•
with ill OWl'I rvftlbout
... nd. row..ful ~
sharp rec.p6on.
27' EAST 17tfl IT., COSTA MESA
e SALIS 641·'742 e SEltVICE
S.rvl,. TM Herber Alu SI ... 1'57
' • r1
TillllMUTE _,, ..... .
14· ....... -
RIGHT NOW
oon \ 'let the k7w price fool )'OU;
it incorporates flf5l cl••• features
Me 8 19,000 '#Ott: ch-.sis, OM set
VHF tint tunint: and ilh~ (Just. ....... )-
a
RCA dealers
I i will
change
your mind
about the
cost of
Color TV
Ill
I
s279~~ low Prices
-Cplianal .,.. .. le,
Model FM-477·£N
1r dl1&0llil pict»r!
The Fraser
ensemble
RIGHT HOW
$399~
This table model comes with inatchinr roUabalt stnl
But it w04Jld be 1 fabulous buy even without the stlnd.
Because it's deluxe New Vista• quality colorlV fn:ln RCA.
Yoa iot 1 bi& 18" dia1onal picture. Plus super~
24,COl-volt chassis (compare this ~icture powerf!ith ~
t8• diag. sets). Plus a beautiful walnut·ar•!9*1 Yinyl
finish. Not to m11ntion the attract!¥! stand.
Most important of 111, you 1et Automatic Fine Tuotnr.
the actvanced featul'e that helps take the auesswork out ~f
color tuning. It's completely electronic, completely tutc.nabc.
Come ill for the "Rij!!t Now" buy you've been nllinc for,
Check the yellow pages for ·your nearest dealer, todeyl
~~:.,:·:·~'""':: .. ::Y~Y!Ml:U~•:1~1 .. ::.Y~f!A:.M.~_.:.::,.M.:.P:::;•·~•M:.~~.I-~~~~~~~~~__:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_:~~~~~~~~~-:-~~~:-~~~~~~~~~~--;-.~~~~~~~\ t .
I.. I r
I ' I
1
DAJLY PILOT
Ricky Sta.r
Guilty on
Assault Rap
WESTMINSTER -Garden
Grove hairdresser Ricky Star
has pleaded guilty i n
Westminster municipal court
lo d!.arges of assault and bat·
tery and trespassing, all (If
which stemmed from a series
of fracases with his eI·wife.
The fonner boxer will be
ced June 10 on the -""°":-aoor conv1cijons after
as re · ewed a pro-
on he defen-,
Star, who at one time head-
ed the fight of a group of
Orange County barbers who
defied union edicts by setting
prices below the s t a t e
minimum, has spent nearly
six weeks in Orange County
Jall 'awaiting trial on the
misdemeanor counts. He was
freed last week when hii bail
was reduced to $500 fri>m
$20,000.
A series of court actkvls
filed' by barbers who haVe
repeated his ch'1Jengc: of
haircut-prices establish~ by
unioos is awaiting the outcome
of a California Supreme Court
reTiew of Star's suit. ..
Fine Urg~d
For La x
Trash.men
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
proposa1 to fine employers of
garoage collectors failing to
pick up all refuse up to $1,000
has been thrown on the
legislative junk heap by the
Senate Health and WeUare
Committee.
"I just wanted enough
penalty to make sure the guy
picks up the garbage,·• ex-
plained "Sen. James E. Whet-
1nore (a.Garden Grave ). who
proposed the bill alter he
found SacrameDto a re a
garbage collectors neglecting
to pick .~ some of his
garbage.
Gerald P. O'Hara. lobbyist
for the •California Teamsters
Legislative Council. objected
Wednesday that Whetmore 's
bill, which also provided ror
a misdemeanor punishment of
the colleclor. could mean a
jail sentence of up to six
months for a garbage man
who overlooked a can.
Sen. Ralph A. Dills ( D·
Gardena) objected that the
bill could pose problems if
an employer were hit by a
sl.rike causing noncollection.
•
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Friday, M11 15, 1970
Political Notes
. r ounger Dinner Tonight;
Steiger Opens Headquarters
By O. C. HUSTINGS
Of .. 0.111 P'lltl Sl•ff
The Monte Carlo Room or
the Newportet Inn will be the
scene tonight ot a $75-doUar-a-
plate dinner for Los Angeles
County District A t t o r n e y
Evelle J. Younger, who hopes
to be the GOP candidate for
attorney general come June
3.
District Is John Ratteree af
Santa Ana. He is part Choctaw
Indian.
"As Cangressman, 1 will
sponsor legislation designed to
curb the illegal activities of
Department of t n t e r i o r
persormel in its Bureau or
Land Management and
Bureau of Indian Affairs," he
says.
* * John A. Steiger , a Frank Halpern, a UC San
Republican seeking the 3Sth Diego physicist who is the
Cangressional District seat, Peace and Freedom Party
opens his Laguna Beach cam· Candidate for 3Sth District
paign headquarters Saturday Congressional seat is con-
al 10 a.m. Area residents are ~ptraUng his campaign on
invited to attend the opening envirO:Olllental problems.
at 282 Forest Ave. and mee'( ''TO make headway in solv-
the candidate, Ing the environmental pro-
Sleiger also will be feted • blem , we must begin by
al a reCeption Sunday from organizing politically so that
4 p.m. to 7 p.m. al the C.Oto we can end tile governmental
de Caza Clubhouse south of stimulants to technical pro-
the O'Neil Park entrance in. gress. We must accompany
Trabuco CBnyon. this with a campaign to
Mrs. Eunice B a r b o u r , change attitudes," he says.
hostess for the etent, is ex-*
tending an invitation to all I n c umbent Congressman
3Slh District voters. "Come. Richard T. Hanna { D •
bring the whole fatnily. have Westminster) of the 34th
a bite to eat and meet Jobn Disirict has authored a bill
Steiger," she says. which would provide for Earth * Day observ.ations in t h e
Another candidate for the future •
GOP nomination in the 35th The bill, co-authored by 28
County Study Slated
For Villa Park Plan
other House members, would
make the thlrd Wednesday in
April Earth Day, "a day to
renew each individual
American 's commitment to
the anti-pollution effort."
Rep. Hanna is scheduled to
address the Orange County
Chiropractic Society at its 1970
jJ13tallation and awards ban-
quet at a p.m. May 23 at
the Royal Coach Hot e I,
Anaheim .
* William J. Teague, GOP
candidate from the ·3 4 t h
Congressional District. has
received the unanimous back·
ing of the Orange County
Ca lifornia Republican 1
Assembly and Area 14 United '
Republicans of California .
Total membership in both
groups is about 1750.
* William Wilco1en, candidate
for the GOP nomination in
the 35th Congressional
District, describes himself as
a moderate ''Niion
Republican.''
"I am not interested in the
rhetoric of the right or Jelt
but in the realities of Jiving,"
he says.
Four Repub~an candidates
for the 35lh Di strict
Congressional seat plan to
discuss their platforms May '
21 before the Newport Harbor
chapter of the Capifomia
Federation o f Republican
Women.
Ca'ndidates John G. Schmitz
of Tustin. William Wilcaxen
VILLA PARK -A general Villa Park Dani . of Laguna Beach, John D.
development plan for Villa The $15,000 contract with Ratteree of Santa Ana and
Park Dam RegiOnal Park Linesch and Reynolds, signed John Steiger o( Oceanside will
prepared by Linesch and last summer, calls tor "full be on hand for the 11 a.m.
Reynolds of Long Beach goes integration" of the twa parks. luncheon and debate.
before the Orange Count" L t r 11 th t t Also featured will be a · " as a . e couny spen Board of Supervisors Tuesday. 1.,68 000 · t discussion of the propositions "' . lo repair s 0 r m on the June 2 ballot by Ed The new Villa Park regional damage from the January and ward, assista n t t 0 facility of 291 acres will be February 1969 floods to Irvine Assemblyman Robert Badham
combined with the adjoining Park, and to redesign It. (R-Newport Beach ),
and existing Irvine Regional1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Park for a total of 476 acres. II
The Villa Park facility was
purchased from the Irvine
Company last year for $1.5
million.
The combined parks are
designed to offer an outdoor
playground of streams, lakes,
camp and picnic grounds. a
zoo. golf course and possibly
a conference center in the
future.
The acreage extends down
Santiago Canyon alm~t ta
UC IRVINE
FILLED UP
IRVINE -UC Irvine is
no longer acc e pting a~
plications for admissian at the
undergraduate level for the
fall qua rter 1970, John C. Hoy,
vice chancellor for student af-
fai rs. announced today.
E;Jigible applicants who filed
prior to the closing date of
April 28, 1970 will be processed
for admission. However, Hoy
said, na further applications
will be accepted from entering
freshman or junior college
transfers.
' "
BRING ·HONG KONG
to NEWPORT BEACH
COSTA MESA
Custom Tailors
FOR LADIES •nd MEN
and Dittinguithed Shirts
l,000 En1Jli1h, lt•li•,11 encl Fr1nch f1b-
ric.1 for your 1elec:fio111.
M•li•r d•1ign•• will d11ign to yo111 in.
divicluel f•1lo end rn111ur•m•nh, com·
bin•d witlt Chi11111 workm1n1hip
Hong Kong.
Save 50°/o
ALSO
\Vomeii's Beaded Sweaters
Dresses and Knit Wear
..__ __ 3 Days Only
For you "HAll.0 TO FIT''
m•n, our "'l ife of Hl• G••-
m•nt'" Fii.EE ALTERATION
PL.AN i1 1111 1n1w1r to your
fluelualing w•i1tlin•,
Sat., Ma116 thr• M••· M•r lt
DON QUIXOTE MOTEL
2100 NEWPORT ILYD.
COSTA MIS.A
for Appoiltf11Mnt -642·2170
THI MANDARIN Jt55 Wl"'I,. II.cl.
PA ID POLITl(f.ll L ADV,
•
• •
I
•
••
"It would be a tragedy and unjust pun·
ishment of ·'the majority ·· ind~ed a set·
back for the · State as a· whole·· if we let
our unhappiness about the trbuble-making
minority on our campuses influence our
vote on this critically important bond
. " issue.
Governor Ronald Reagan
It makes good business sense to support
Proposition 1. Not only will it solve our
critical medical manpower shortage, but
it will give a major boost to -our econ·
omy by bringing nearly $90,000,000 into
Orange County.
Victor C. Andrews ·· Chairman
Dr. Arnold Beckman ·· Co-Chairman ·
on
,
l
Proposition 1
Citiiens Committ11 for Proposition I. Vtctor C. Andrews, Chairman, 1101 C1mpu1 Or., Ne....,porf liich
' '
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\
F.ld1y, MIY 15, 1970 DAILY PILOT J l ~ital Statistics for the O.-ange Coast . Area
Meeti~
Marriage
Licenses
, LAS \lll!GAS, N1v.1 -M1rrl-lk:•nM1 luutd "'9f't nc:ludt:
htAllOii:THOMAS -MIY J 011.n!tl I 0., • of S."'tl A,,., Ind Ell11btfF1 G., , ot We•lmlMI.,,
ILAMa.lOCHll!ll -~V 3, Elm<1r
j L.. 27~ Ind N1ncv Fruic:n, 23, · both or C.0.1' M .. t .
<MO\\IGA.N.JOHNSON -Mloy ~
1 W im :I'/:'"'· $$, ol HuMl"lllori :r ro: CC:.11. Dorothy L., 2J, ol St1m-
l H~ffKINS.-ROPEll -MIY ~. 01vld .< ... ·.• 2'1. Ind Lt6nc11 1(1!Fltrl~, n. , of '"il'WPOrl tlch.
·'ALLAltD-GUIMONO -~V ' Rablr. i G., 27, of G1rdtn Grove, ind Lortl 1 . , Jt.¥, 3', of Wntml"u ....
WEA'iflt.W1LSON -Mav 7, ,i.nd.-.w E ''· of H11n1!~tQn 8nch I rlty M., ~ of lltllll.,......, '
!COS E ·SAMORS -411.V I, John Al II. Ind t.!11.rie:r Lrnn. lt, bo , L11un1 euu..
W•w-GAll.tl!ISON -M.n I, JQ1111 l , lt, of Coror11 cltl Mir, tnd J1 1', of $.Inti An1.
"'~!E S.HUNTER -Mrf lkllolllrt ' E. Jr~ 21, of 1(1111, W11 . , -J II t An,.., 24, Of Newiiort 1tdl.
(ATll"ON-$ADLER -Mii' ~1 C .. >dldo
, G., 3', ol Lis Vw11, """'·· -N111CY S., J7, ol C0<on1 ... Mtr.
'ADAMJ..l"RESHELL -Mii' t, Jal\11 ' Wifl :JO, •lld Dl1ne Lorr11,.., JJ of C•t1 Mn1. FO ST·ll"Rl<LEY -Mii' t , . ~~':/~u"1fn.t!..""e~~ ••111. 31,
·, BEAULIEU·ll"RTELS -M11' t, P1ul • J:r1nc'iJ; >t, .,,., SNron 1(1y, 27, Hi;nllntlWI lltach.
• ST VE S-JOYCE -M~I' '· Ntll · 2', tlld 114tny C1ro1Y11 ::M7~l~ .• %1t"ZF~m~·1~." '· Rover
"""'"'' lS, ~ Huntlnt1on ll•ac:t!, ~ Ind lorrtlM, of (Mii Mfu. j HOLDER-ROSLAI -Mii' t, Gr1nville ~ L••••1irnic:1 ..... of Cos!• ,,,,.... Ind ~ Ellen lh1tll, :II. of Sanft ""'· ICRUIE;!jlljOM -Mtl' t, itck Allin
' ~ C:.ll '4::.trl JotllM, lf, bolh
Dissolutions
'-pt Marriage
"INAL OICR•IS ll"O'flfn, Mtrl' flit!! Incl W1rrtn Wln1!otl l<itmll•lr (l l'Olt L. 1nd G1rv Robert
C1lvl11, b!tnt J. Ind Mtrl• 0ftn · Llllltlolln. K1n111!11 L. Ind Ctlllfffne ••
Deat h Notlres
ALMOND
rt111 3. Almond. A91 llO, of l'OIJ Cll1rle
tee, COl!t Maw. 0111 DI de11!1, Mii'
su,...1¥1<1 Irr rwo "'"'' Gor"°", 01 t1 Mtu; 01vlcl, of Wnlmlnlltr;
111llt1ra, Mn. Cltrt 511111, l"omone:
1, l . H. Cottts. of Cre•ltlne; 13
1ndclllldrtn 11111 n ornl-1r1nde"'1lclrtn.
lc11 will bt lleld Molld11, 11 AM, 1 I PNd'WtV CIMpel. wllfl lhl'. Jtv
lfl"°"I orJlcl1tl"9. lnum,....,1, Yf•ll·
Jn11.,. "'--ltl Ptrk. kll llrNdwty
t111rv, Dl...,;!or•. •
KING
fblr1 L-..11 Kln9. PIHed 1w1Y MtY
1'11:1. BtlDYld mother ol M1wwrn C.
l'IO Jr,. Lfnd111', C1Utornl11 ttut Cll•k
Kfflt of NeWPOt"I BHch. "''° 1u .... lvH1 bnl~. Frederick C. Loom11, ot
lo1, (1111., Ind 1l1ttr, EmllV Looml1
el1, "•••Orne; end live 9r1ndc~lldr1n. lcH will De prlv1!•. F1mlll' 1uo911!s
W1d1 who wllll to ma~t memorial con-
butloi11, pl11se con!r!bule to ch1rltv
lll1lr dlolct. Mou1111111 View Mortu1rv,
.. dtnt, OlrKlors.
MARSH
oll 0. Mtrlll. Allt 16, of 16!-11 lrtrf.
n!fnthlfl e11ch. Ot!e ot CINI~, MIV
. 5u,...lwcl bl' d1u9Mtr1, Nllt Boles
Grt ct Sll1n1r1blr, boll! of Hunllnt·
811Ch. S"""lcl•• tonltl\I, Fridal', l:JO
, Sm!lll1 ClltPll. l"lnt l rl1t1 lo be held
Ctd!Utc Mtmorl1I G1rclrn. G1rden
"'· Mlclll91n. Smltlll MOrlulfl', DlrK·
l'AROll
lch1rd t.. 1'1rdff. 1107 l"wl Cll1rte1
tct, Ntw'POTI llMCll. Otlt of IH911!,
•I' lJ. Survlwll by d11l!t1n , Mn.
etll' Wronke , Tu1lln1 lint '"" J1111
trdM, N"""" l1tch. M.1-!c M rl·
ti Wiii be II.id SflUrGl\f, MtV 1', J PM,
1clfk: VI"' Clll"I. lnltrm1nt, Pecllit
-Mtm0rl1I Ptrk. l"tclllc VI,,... Mor·
rv, Oll"l'CIOl'I • ... ,
rnrv M. Raat. "'" u, of SIS W1ln<1I, unlln1I011 811cll. 0 1t1 r1f de1!h. M11'
. S.Urvlvtcl lW IOl'll, l"rtd Ind De11nl1
OCll; Gtutllltr1. E•li1blll!, Ellffn "'" '"'°"' Raat1 lltllY Fr1nklln1 brol!\tr.
•• H11llno11 1lsters, Florenct Olvkl-11111 L-Wtlk!n11 11 er1ndchl1dren;
t•ttl·lrtndcl!lldr.,.,. S.rvkes, Mond1v,
AM, Smiths Cl!IPll. ln!erm..,r, Good
1rd Ctmeltr\'. Smiths Morllll'"Y,
lr~or1. RYIURG
m1111 Rvbuni .... " .,. of 622 lSI~ SI.,
1,111tl111!on leech. Otte ot d••tn. Mlv 1s.
lc11 ptlldlnt 11 smn111 Mortu1rl'.
ARBUCKLE & SON
Westcllff Mortuary
U'1 E. 17th St, Costa l\lesa
646-1181 • BALTZ MORTIJARIES
Corona del Mar OR J.1450
Colla Mesa l\U U4!4 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Bf'Olldway, Colla P.tesa
u~ • DILDAY Bl\l1l'llERS
HanUnatoo Vlll01 M......,
17111 Be1cll Blvd.
Huntington Beach
84!-7171 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery e Mortuary
Chaptl
3500 PaclHc View Dri'e
Newport Beach, California
644-Z?OO • FAMil.Y
AL FUNERAL
DOME" Bob•'"· W .... ster 1'Wlll • SHEFFER MORTIJARV
guna Beach 4N-1W:
n Clemeale 4ft.OIOO • SMm1s· MOR11JARY
6Z7 Atala SL
rhmtlqtoa Beacll
531-Wt
10 LBS. BRJQUETS
lfo"t tlie 11111• d•cd• that tum 1o dual
wb•o you loucb theio, 1111••• are bl-
h.at and 1low buralng. lln foci. dump
lht big cool• lo o buclr:t t of woter and
you too 111• 1hem lo tbt Ytry end.)
BIG BOY
GAS BAR-B-Q
The lilttlmt lln'a nx:lr:
ab1orb1 th1 or•a11 and
product• nic1 coolrh111
1moli:e. No me11 t•tr, Ju11
hook up to a go1 llnt .
Endorttd by l h19 Alphon1•
just belo1• he fled th•
country. 2997
1Yi FOOT PATIO UMBRELLA
I !ere is a nice floral deal
\\'ilh a fringe on the top.
flf you"re over thirty 14,, you'll rcml'mber I h ii I
that phrase.) Sturdy mr·
ta.I center post.
PLASTIC
WATER CAN
Plo1lit 10 ii nt••r f\l llt. Kold1 a
ton ol julct lor the plant1 or JI yoll
like lo pour your double1 ou\ol a
big bucket,
SIT-ON CAMP COOLER ,, A wild idea. aol oaly dot1
ii k••p liq11id1 cool. ii
do1.1b\t1 a1 a Ital for l!l'ln
the biggttl camper. (Oh
yto.h. you oug:ht lo set my
dog),
J78
HOUSE AND
GARDEN SPRAY
U your hou1e or garden need s
1pr1:1ylng th\1 ls tht •lull. I am
g11e11lng. but I think ii dotl
tht buo• in, Aero110I.
LOUVER
WINDOWS
The lhing: with g:uod clear or
ob1e:ur1 gla11, complete wilb
operalor1,
24 .. HIGH 499
ANY WIDTH TO 41"
30•• HIGH S.88
38" HIGH 7.88
42" HIGH 9.88
18" HIGH 10.90
54" HIGH I 1.88
60" HIGH 13.88
BLACK & DECKER
DEWALT 1150 RADJ,AL SAW
•
A on• mon 1hop. rip1.
cro11e:u11. and dot1 a down
other lhlng1. Some of tho~
thiagt rtqlilte ••1rcr blod11. 8 8 8 7 bul wt'll lalk about lhot lott r.
oloy.
'
..
YOUR CHOICE
• UIGllC llSIET
• RED ... TUB 199
• ESPILIDS TRELLIS EA •
FREE CLASSES '
REGISTER NOW
May 20 "How lo Con1trucl a Patio Slab and
Cover"
Moy 27 "How to lnatall Aluminum-Wicdcws and
Sliding Glass Doors"
June 3 "Wallpapering the Ea11y Way"
l
• REFRESHM EITS
• DOOR PRIZES
LA MIRADA STORE ONLY
WED. 7:30 TO 8:30 P.M.
LIMIT JOO PERSONS
REGISTER IN THE
STORE.
' '
' I
IEW! TUB.
ERCLOSURE
A Hner dto.I. oil lb• niggtd
1treagth ol tht big tr11:lo1ur•
and a ll th• 1l1t. p lu1
1ho1terprool plo1tlc glat&. lowtl
bor, and 1lldin11 truck •
1777
METAL BUILDUIGS
J eo:ts .,haling up o big: thlag 11tbta 'fi)U
need a g:ardea 1htd. a playhou1t. a
hou•• to put th1 blkt1. or a place tor
dad lo pullet around 'With hl1 hobby.
!But min• 11 1ouciag, da.1 It have a
bar?)
5x6 4997 6x1 0 8777
•, 4x8 FT.
SHEETROCK
127
\I !NCH
A buUd.,.:a..buy. We •lrJ>KI to M il 10111 .o w1 bur
lon1. 0.11'1 bt 1hy. get OrlCNgb.. W• bow r ou
ca.11.'t do aiuch •itb 2 1heet1.
}.dvtrU1td tpKlala
good thtu May 19.
1970. ftbtn wt call
Loi V'1Jal Jor mor•
ln1truc1lon1).
90 LB. CONCRETE MIX
A fail way to mtilr:t quick
1epair1. do a llttle curbing. or 6 7c
•lltftd a Walk .omt. full tidd
wtiler and you're rto.dy lo go.
UNDER COUNTER
FLOURESCENT
LIGHT
When you ju1t aren't g•lling
light where you aMd It a light
llk• thl1 wtll tura the trick.
Complete wUh cord, fu•I put
up anywhere In HC011d1.
4s7
NO. 1800
MAILBOX
s11:1G1ptd 11 .. 1 .,.,uh 1111 llJftOr
Jlttit Crell, cmd Cl bltJ
magalint rack to bold our
catalog which. -wW mall
rou aooal
1'9
INDOOR-OUTDOOR
CARPET
......
Roll• of bta111\ful 1111fl la er
choice to today type color•. 199
Wtathtr 111eo:n1 nothing to
II !unlt11 11'1 a 1omado
th.•~-w1e sit up 1111d lake SQ. YD.
11<11 .....
I
I
'
I
\]
I .
I
•
) l? DAIL V PILOT
---~-----.... ----'"" . --. --.... ·-·-
oo.
Vol · m
hat Our
a·r pet
1
Buyin
"-··-·
oes For You
). . ,t ...
6 Deco rator Colors
It's Guaranteed
Aqai nst All Common
·Household Stains
Because It 's
Herculon
Olefin -pile
·-
H I G H
DENS ITY
I{ ITCH EN CARPET
With Rubbe r Back
Highly Stain
Resi stant
.• ·-t ·.y
·"\. ;, ~'/ C LOSE OUT , , . .. CUT PILE ~
Heavy Pil e )'lush \
Carpet-Choose ~I
From 5 Popular
Colors
Limited Stock
.~ ( .y
,>M ANUF ACTURERS
SPEC I A L
C OMl\~E R CIAL CARPET .
Li 9 htly Wove n Nylon
.._ Pile Tweed-Lar ge
.,., . Selectio n Of Colors •
.,,e \, To Choose From ~,
~ "" ., ... . . , "" ~ ~.. •• lo ,.
~ ,.t , 'ft"" .,. , • ,t-' ,,.. • • • .r . .., AS K ABOUT
OUR C O NV ENIENT
CREDIT TERMS
fFREE ESTIMATES)
. ' '}'
-1 ,r
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\'JE OFFER 30 • 60-90 DAY
AC COUNTS
R-EMNANTS
ROLL·ENDS
DESCRIPTION SIZE
Sndstn. Twd. Nylon Hi-lo I 2x9
DESCRIPTION
Green NYion Hi-l o
Tweed Green Kodel Sh ag
Dark Gold Nylon Hi-l o
Re d Nylon Velvet
Green Nylon Hi-Lo I 2x8.5
Maple Twd. Nylon Hi-lo 12x9
Ligh t Gold-He.,vy I 2x9.l
Nylon Hi-lo J 2x9 l ight Green Tweed
Nylon Comm. I 2x8. I 0
12x7.9
12x9.5
Dark Green Twee d
Nylon Comm.
A 'tumn T wd. Nylon Hi-l o
Pistachio Polyester Sh ag I 2x I 0
Blue Nylon Hi-l o
12xl0.0 Maple Tweed I 2x8.3
I 2x 12.6
I 2x I 0.4
I 2X"9 .8
12x8.6
12x9.9
I 2x 17
t2x I 0
l 2x I 0
I 2x 10
I 2x 1 I
I 2x I 0.9
Derk Gold Tweed-
Nylon Sh ag
A ... ocado Nylon Hi-lo
Gold & Green Tweed
Avocado Herculon
Royal Blu e Hi-Lo
DESCRIPTION
Green Tweed Nylon
Comm. .
Grn. Twd. Nylon Hi-lo
Gold & Brown Comm.
Avocado Kodel Hi-lo
50 I Nylon Kitchen Cpl.
Royal Slue Kodel Sh.tg
Indoor-Outdoor Rust
Rust Nylon Sh.tg
Tweed Nylon Comm.
Red Velvet Plush
Antique Gold Nylon
Aztec Gold Hi-Lo
SIZE DESCRIPTION
12xl5 Hi-lo Beige 50 1
t 2x I 3 Bronze Green Kodel
12xl4.8 Avo"ado Vel.,,et Plush
I 2x I 4.b Mint Green Shag
12xl2 .3 Two Tone Gold Comm.
12xl4.9 Tan Hi-Lo (SO I )
I 2x I 0.6 White Kodel Sh.,g
12xl4 Hi-Lo Gold Tweed
I 2x I 2 Kodel Shag
I 2x I 2 Red Plush Nylon
I 2x I 1.9 Blue Plush Shag
12xl0 $old Kodel Sha9
12xl 0.9 J ade Green Tweed
12x9.I Brnz. Gld. Com. Twd.
I 2x8.l Antique Gold Nylon Sh.,g
I 2x9 Av oc•do Nylon Hi-lo
I 2x8.4 Carved Nylon Bronze
SIZE
15119.6
12xl 0.2
12 11 t 2
12)( It
DESCRIPTION
Ligh t Beige Nylon Hi-lo
Red Kodel Sha g
Avocado Kodel Hi-lo
Green Tweed Nylon
Comm.
I 2x I I .6 Ork. A¥o. Nylon Hi -lo
I 2x8.3 l ime Kodel Shag
12xl0.3 Lime Ny lon Shag
I 2x I I Grn/Gld Twd N'l'n Hi -Lo
I 1.8xl0.9 Rd/Gld Twd Herc Com
I 2x 11 Brown & Gold Hi-Lo
t2xl0.9 Amber Tweed
12x 11 Beige· Hi-Lo
SIZE DESCRIPTION
I 2x I 5 Heavy Kod el Moss Green
t2x l4 .4 Avoc.,do Hi-lo
12x 14 Comm. Tweed Jade
I 2x 19 Bronze Gold Hi-Lo
12)(12 Kodel Shag-Olive
I 2x I 5.5 Gold Tweed Hi-lo
I 2x I 5 Oyster Plus h Shag
I 2x 13.6 Rust & Gold Comm.
12x l7.b Gold & Green Hi-lo
I 2x I S.8 Antique Gold Kodel
12x 14. I 0 Hi-Lo Nylon Gold
1211 lb Bronze Hi-Lo 501
I
DUPONT
HEAT SET
NYLON SHAG
Selection Of Tweed's & Sol ids
So Easy To Keep Cl ean
Won 't Crush Or Mildew
Non-Allergenic
DUPONT
501
EXTRA HEAV Y
Continuous Filament Nylo n
Hi -Lo Styling
Won't Fuzz Or Shed
FHA Standard
DUPONT
501
TWEEDS
.Broad Range Of Co lors
Hi-Lo Nylon
Won't Mat Or Cru sh
FHA Standard
(PARTIAL LISTINGS -lOO's MORE FOR YOUR SELECTION>
ALL ~ LE ITCM S SUBJEC T TO PRIOR SALE • BRING YOUR ROOM MEASUREMENTS • EXPERT INSTALLATION AVAILABLE
I
•/
I WAREHOUSE I Fo• Information-Phone 642-4305
Open Evenin9s 'Til 9 P .M.
Saturday 'Til 6 -Sunday 10 • 5
Our Huge Buyin9 Power For 30 Carpet Town Stores Saves You More!!
FIRST COME I FIRST SERVED I
524
WEST 19th ST.
COSTA ES
CORNE R OF 19 th ST RE ET
And HARBOR BOULEVAR D
t
\
I
I
\
/
l
BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466
flrl4l1J, MAJ IS. ,,,, I ,._ 1a
Fashions
Bubble. Up
\Vorldwide fashions will add a decided flair to the
Champagne Tea presented by the Soroptimist Club of
Laguna Beach.
Gowns from Lois-P a ul Originals, poolside wea r
from Gladrags and shoes !rom 41-guna Bootery will be
modeled beside a poolside settipg in Pacific Island Vil~
lage on Th ursday, May 21, at 2 p.m.
Along with the latest in fashions, an a rray of door
prizes including a trip for two to San Francisco is being
a rranged by Mrs. Suzette Da bn ey, ways and means
chairman.
The event is a benefit for the Vocatio nal Loan Fund
sponsored by the Soroptimists. The fund aids high
school students not planning to go t() college by enabling
them to learn a vocation. It also benefits nonstudents
who need to acquire additional education in order to
earn a living.
The fund was initiated by Mrs. Floyd Lee and is
administered by Mrs. Thomas Pole. The first recipient
of the fund is attending a business school in Santa Ana.
Tickets for the sparkling event may be puri:hased
from members at a cost of $2.50.
A FASHIONABLE FLIGHT -Mrs. Rickie·Welr models a "little
something" suitable for · San 'Francisco should she win a trip for
two to·the Bay City being presented by the Soroptimist Club at its
Champagne Tea. Travel agent Jim Gillenwater is on band to ar-
range flight schedules for the lucky couple who will be airbourne
after having sampled the latest fashions at the benefit.
P-aisano Goes to Asia
By BARBARA DUARTE
01 ,... 0-ll~ ,., .. , 11•11
Mrs. J ay Ruediger knows you don't
have to join the Foreign Legion to travel.
She joined the U.S. Government and
not only traveled but also gained an
insight in to people.
As a membe r of the U.S. Information
Agency, or the propaganda arm of the
government as it is commonly called,
Lori spent three years in South America
and Afghani sta n helping people and ac·
quiring a depth of understanding of their
culture.
An international affairs major at Lewis
and Clark College in Portland, Lori took
her first junket to South America as
a senior member of the Experiment
in Internationa l Living. The effect was
permanent, and she now labels herself
"Latin-American oriented.''
CHILE TRIUMPHS
Following graduation, She took the
foreign service examination and ap·
peared before a panel of senior sta ff
members in a three-hour session. With
tests behind her, she was delighted to
learn her first assignment would be
in Chile, an "eel-like country hanging
on the edge of the ocean, anchored
by mountains."
As a junior trainee, she spent 13
months on-the-job with 13 other staffers
while practicing her Spanish in the
market places.
But just as she was getting to feel
li ke a paisano, the next assignment
came ... a hardship post in Afghanistan,
a constitutional monarchy in West Asia.
Slx: Americruu had the monumen tal
task of educating a conservative Arab
population adverse to a c c e pt i n g
strangeni.
. FIIA1S BRIDGE GAP
The government post was located In
Kabul, the capllal cily, a large
n1etropolis stituated 6,000 feet high in
a spur or the Himalayas. Within the
compound , the department set up a
library and attempted to structure pro-
grams to improve living ronditions.
Films covered sanitation. he2lth, U.S.
hislOry and space programs as well
as progrruru: for teaching English.
Outside Kabul, Lori traveled through
small vill ages of adobe huts with women
rarely seen outside the domicile. Much
of the country had been devastated hy
the ravages of foreign invaders including
Ghcngis Khan , leaving a wealth of.
archaeology still to be uncovered.
BUDDHA UNCOVERED
In one ruin . she found a buddha dating
lo the 3rd Century. a gentleman who
occupies a shelf by himself in Uie
Rucdigcrs' home.
Asia was lo have an added surprise
for Lori , for here she met her husband-lo-
be, a young Marine stationed wi th the
secu rity guard . Plan s were made for
the wedding and she returned to Oregon,
only to have the wcddin'.! date delayed
by the six-day Arab-Israeli "\\'ar.
Now happ ily settled In San Clemente,
as they have been for the past three
years, a wealth of mementoes and
artifacts remind them of the past. Wit h
this In mind. will the Ruedigers head
'for foreign shores when Jay finishes
his stint with the Marine Corps?
ASIAN ARTIFACTS -Mrs. Jay Ruediger shows
oU the many mementoes she has collected
from Afghanistan and South America during her
three years with the United States Information
Agency. The San Clemente resident spent several
years abroad working with people of foreign nations
and improving Jiving conditions.
Here the dual purpose of USIA, in·
formation and culture, were put to the
test. With a population 90 percent il-
literate and extremely poor living con·
ditlons, lhe country was at the crossroads
of' transferring from the 13th Century
into the 20th Century.
Someday, maybe, was the reply.
Righl now they're happy in the States
and hope to head tor the far·flung shores
of Maine. ,
Son's Attitudes Blamed on Clinging to Ivy (League)
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please print
this Jett.er AO "Heartbroken Mot.her" will
.see iL She's the woman whose brilliant
son ilidn't get into Harvard, Yale or
Dartmouth. Our son was accepted by
all three and now I wish he had gone
to a ruce school in the Midwest.
When Jack left home he was a man·
nerly, respectful boy . neat and clean
-a joy to his molher ·s. heart. Alter
two years out East, the boy 's hair is
so long it makes me sick. His moustache
drifts in the soup. He wears sandals,
faded jeans and love beads. He argues
with his dad about politics and has
brought such 1adical kids home for
weekends that we told hi m to con1 e
alone from now on or stay up there.
I thought I'd have a hear l attack when
ANN LANDERS [ml white al1le cloth be put down AFrER
the grooin's'motber is seated. The reason
Js obvious. She wants to walk on it
first.
I've .asked several people what Is the
ctl'rect procedtD'e and nobody knows.
l'm afraid my !ianct's mother Will be
hurt when she sees the aisle cloth laid
down after !!he ls eeated. 1be two women
don't get along very well as it · is. This
could be the straw that breaks the
camel's back. I'm sure you have figured
out that my mother is a strong person
-conskten t1er..eU right In all maUers
and has never made a mistake In her life.
Jack announced last week, 4'The only
salvation for this country is to bum
everything down and start agai n."
1 hope every mother "Wh~ son didn 't
make the Ivy League will see this and
consider herself fortunate. Oun did and
I am -SORRY
DEAR SORRY: It's not Che lvy, It's
Jack. Even the quiet mldwestern 1tebool1
have theJr 11bare of natty radlcah whet
want to burn everytblag don. Yoar
to1 woWd bave toand 1111 toul-m1(t1.
The majority tf the 11tudentll at 1he
Ivy acbools •re not In sy mpathy with
the wild-eyed far left. In' facl they are
getting fed •P with havin g their edaeaUon
blterrupted by 1 handful of kooks, And
1 117 it's abollt time.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am being Comment, please. -MAYFIELD, KY.
married in June and my mother is DEAR MAY: Since your
driving mo nuts. She !Mi.ta lhat Iha . m•r prtbabl7 NI alr<""1 wllktd H
water she shouldn't make 11uch a big
deal out of walking oo-the aisle cloth
fi rst. I hope she reconsiders ln the
interest ot peace and harmony.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I boiled when
l read the lelter from lhe teacher ·who
resented having a diabetic child in her
class. She said the kid was wasting
the tax payers• money by disrupting the
class to go to lhe bathroom several
times a day and ea ting mid-morning
snac ks.
As a college junior who has had
diabetes for many years, I'd like lo
tell her how sorry 1 am that I wasted
the tax payers' money and inconvenienced
my teachers by going to the bathroom
and eating mid-morning macks.
I also am sorry she ts allowed to
teach. With her atUtude she should not
be in the school system. I hope her
signature gave no clue as to her identity
because I'll bet there are severt1l million
diabe tics who would love tO wring her
neck. -LNSULIN IZZY
DEAR IZ: I am neither diabetic aor
do I have any diabetic relatlve1, bid
"Include me In."
Too many couples go from matrimony
to acrimony. Don't let your marrh1:ge
flop bcJore It gets started. Send fOr
Ann Landers' booklet, "Marriage-What
to Expect." Send your request to Anra
Landers in care of this newspaper enclc.
ing 50 cents In coin and a long, stamped ,
self-addressed envelope.
\
. •
' '· -.
' "
DAILY PILOT Fnd>J, M<1 15, 1970
Adventure
I
Service Years Recalled
111 JODEAN ILUTINGI Wbtn llMI C0'1 . Wll 'HELPS ENEMY '
Of ""' "* ,. ...., injUred Jn an t, ~ "I -requested rcassigMlent
'"'1s gal's Anny i. ...,. promptly , • ...., lllf from Iha~ though," laughs
Jrised of an anenal Gf belt _ a ~ • Jo.Me, who rtctlved her
memocles, Ind Lt. Col. J~ mlllten ,,._ !tom UCL~.
Aflromt, U.S. Air I'~ repor1«. "I couldn't read the photos,
Reserve, wouldn't trade 1• 11W• made so l told them I felt I '4'3S
mUllon doDan for her S3 yean: him," Iba now laua'bl, doing more to help Ule
in service 1lnce World War k ·w•'t bic befoni ~ enemy!" · · '
II. were ,WAFS lnl&tudlns ln' Jt was her rtasalJnmerit as
Now Mra. Dallas Moran UI. Link tnlnen, en the flight , operations of fl ctr of the Sec·
of Huntington Hubour, the l.lnfl and worklnt in the tower OOd Air Division, Eighth Air
dimlntltJve redhead wu wwk-u well 11\tn myrald other Force -the first lime women
Ing as an admlntstrallve aide Clpacttles around tbe bue. ac!y were employed on an
fer the War Department when 11>e t1JJy colonel wu wort· air ~ -that led to one
she rm volunteered for the fna .. a cryptosrapblc oUJcer of , most exciting and oear-'
Women's Anny Aux 11 Jar y at Santa Au When she recetv. fa&al ~ences.
Corps. ed. her oveneaa or de r s Stancb ng just five feet tall
She wu aelected for ltl fint nr1td11n&: her It tbt tut and nicknamed "Little Jo" by
officers' training clau and minute from the Paclflc to the 8-14 crews, J oanne admits
later joined the flnt group the European 'l'be1ter -a she al.so was a typical tourist
ol women to serve with tbt blealng, Joanne clalml, tince and wanted to see Liege,
Air Force. Since IMS she bu she bu a pbobla about bup. Belgium, where the planes
l!elped to dlart a program After t1Ceivill6 her Ovtrlell were flying in supplle, for
for Mn lee women I n tralnhic in New York she and Germany. \
peaceUme. 4111 <Kher -Join<d some Sbe ltruilly J><!<,SU•ded one
Rememberin& the b 1 e a k 10,000 ElU'Opt-bound troops of the crews to Sl{luftle her
daya of 191!, Joanne admits aboord the ''Queen Elizabeth" aboard for what they all fett
that at flrat male officers wben1 Joune wu in charge would be an uncverntlul milk
didn't know what to do with of ncreallon, wtUare and run -an act wb.icl?. would
the feminine volunteua, moat morale for Ute voyaae. have caused everyone's in--
of whom had enlhlted for Dlvenionlry tactics to stant coprt martial had it been
patriot~ ttalOM 01" because ahaka a trailing subjnarine discovered.
their loved ones were fighting. made the rip longe-than Totally deVold of make-Op
Her first commanding of. usual but abe w1i1 fortunate and wearing a borrowed
ficer at Minter, an Air Force in bavlo.i the whole Glenn un.jfonn and helmet, Joanne
flight training bUe, flnnly Miller band unit aboard to arrived in . Liege only to
believed woman's place wu play IO lhows a dey and keep discover her commandJng of
lo dle home. Anitned there the ptnOllDel entertained. fleer also decided to make
as a second officer, Jeune Jn EnaJand the Allted Forces that flight on aoother aircraft
found morale low beca.u..c the were preartnc for the BaWe so for 10 hours she was
women dktn't have eoough to oC the Bulge and after at-virtually a prisoner confined
do. tendll1i a photo.Interpreting Jo the plane.
P'EMIN1NE ITRATEGl:" school Joanne wu 8""igned ~ The mtlk run concept ended
Employing a bit of feminine to tbe headquarters of the abruptly when the plane was
strategy, Joanne suggested to late Ctn. D w I g ht D. hit by flack during their
BY HIS MAJESTY'S SEAMSTRESS -Lt. Col. Joanne Affronte (Mrs. Dal1as the C0'1 ak:le that be let her EiamhoW'er where her Com· return trip and the pilot
· Aforan Ill) U.S. Air Force Reserve, recalls her 23 years in service as &be klXrw the first time smnethlnc manding officer was Col. ordered the remaining crew
compares uniforms purchased. in Engl and. went awry in tbe.lr of flee. Eliott Roosevelt. lo bail out. Fortunately Joanne ....:=::!:=.:=-==:.::::..cc:::c:.c::::.:c:..:........:.:..:..:..c:.. __________________ _:__________________ had taken parachute training
St. Andrew's Church Leaders OC Philharmonic
Selected for Ceremony Seated Alta Bahia Installs
and the airplane was off the
English coast.
"Otherwise, since I wasn 't
on the flight manifest I still
would be listed as ml.ain&
today," she uys oI her
· youthful et1eapade.
GREAT THRILLS
One of her greatest tbrtlls
was seeing London for the
llrst Ume ablaie with ltahl.s
-streets jammed with wildly
ctlebratlng mobs -and the
tod of the war. The food was
unbe li ev ably bad, she
remembers, and even today
Joani;ie can't face peanut but-
ter pr lnannaladc.
"There was a vendor hawk·
Ing fresh grapes on the street
in London and I hadn't seen
fresh grapes for years ••• 1
paid f4.10 for a pound," 9be
remembers. •
A teetotaler, she also as-
tounded the othe.r American
officers when she rejected
champagne (selling for 50
cents a bottle) in favor of
a helmetful of freah cherries
she picked berseU from a
nearby tree.
When she arrived home she
discovered her mother had
carefully ~aved meat stamps
to buy steak in her hmor,
and all she could thlpk of
\Vas a huge fruit salad or
a banana ,split.
She also was amazed to
notice that ankle.strap shoes
-worn overseas only by
French prostitutes -were
high fashion on Fifth Ave.!
ACTIVITIES.
Chainnan of the board or
the Huntington Harbour Com·
mittee of the Orange County
Philharmonic Society and a
member of LltUe Mermaid
Guild and the Election Board
of Huntington Beach, Joanne
also helped to st.art. the Air
F orce Moti"lcrs' Club aod was
instrumental in oblainlng a
chaner for the national
oraanlz.atlon.
She beUeves lhe servkd
$till offer oppartunlUe1 for
young women today. Altbou&h
.!he feels the average male
would never want to see
women actually carryin1 guns.
there no longer is di.scrimina-
tion between men and women
in anr, branch of the service.
"It s a marvelous way for
gtrla to see the world," she
enthuses, "'and morale is hi&h
within the women's service•.''
Gooe are the barracks-type
quarters, now replaced with
modern donns hous.ing two
women to a room. Jobs, pay
and educational programs are
equal to those of the men,
she say$, and in addition there
is the same esprit de corps
and opportunity to make
wonderful friends that she en,.
countered.
"The service is a great
leveler," says the engaging
matron. "Women have to
learn to get along, and this
still is the best country in
the world. There is a lot wrong
here. but put someone out
of the country for just six
months and I'll bet he'd never
complain again! As m y
mother aJways said: 'Be glad
you're born American and be
glad you're born healthy'.''
Dresses Long
For Tots' Dolls
The Paris fa sh ion col-
lections, which stressed long
skirts and dresses and buried
the mini and micro skirts,
is hitting toyland .
A New York doll manufac·
turer, Jolly Toys Inc., Is:
redes.igning the clothing or tts
dolls so that retailers can
choose long or short skirts.
Newly married f\.1r. and
Mrs. John Robert Very are
making their first home in
Costa Mesa
New officers will be jn-Mrs. William M. Laing, chairman; L. W. Jc n ks,
stalled y,·hen the Coast chainnan of the Alta Bahia recording secretary, and
Women's Club meet.!J in the Committee of the Orange David Chambers, treasurer.
Mesa Verde Country Club at Coonty Philharmonic Society
OPEN DAILY 1.._10; SUN. 1.._7
..
'·
. ,, .
:·
•
MRS. JOHN VE RY
Afternoon Rites
Fun Film
Examines
Shopping
The Rev. Dr. Charles
Dierenfield performed t h e
double ring nuptials in St.
Andrew's Pres byt e ri an
Chapel. Parents of t h e
newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs.
Haviland Van Lew Smith of
Lido Isle and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Kennedy Very of
Newport Beach.
The former Donna Duryea
Smith, a Hl6S National Charity
League debutanle, asked her
sister Christie Smith to . be
the maid of honor. Kimberly
Fox was the junior
bridesmaid.
Marc Moureaux was best
man and seating guests were
John Richard and Richard
Sheetz .
The former Miss Smith is
an alumna of Newport Harbor
High School and the Universi·
ty of Arizona where she af·
filiated with Delta Delta Della
sorority. Presently she is
employed as a social worker
at the RehabilitaUon Center
for Crippled Children and
Adults of Orange County.
The bridegroom, a graduate
of Newport Harbor, served
with the U.S. Marines in Viet-
nam and now is attending
Orange Coast College .
11 a.m. Tuesday, May 19. will install officers at 10 a .m. Mrs. George Ochsner ts
l\.1rs. Jack Hart, president, Thursday, May 21, in the hoste!s and assisting her will
will conduct the business Newport Beach home of Mrs. be the MmeS. John P. Kenney,
meeling aM the installation Kenneth Smith. William Heidemann and Ray·
ceremonies will be directed Following the ceremony, mood Dotti.
by Mrs. Jame! Badgley, presi-lunch will be served. Guests are invited to attend
dent of Orange D I • t r i c t ~ Leading the group will be meetings whldl wW tab place
California Federation of the Mmes. John W. the third 'Ibunday of ucb
Women's Clubs. Donaldson, chairman; Jdm month beginning ta ~
Accepting the president's CrouJ, vice chairman; Richard tembet. InformaUon reprdlng
gavel will be Mrs. George Frank Jin , corresponding the group may be obtained
Bryson, whose theme for the ICCJ'et.ar)' and membmrblp from .Mrs. Laing at f75.50S3. year wili be Blue Bird of~---'-------_:_ _____ _;:.._ ____ I
Happiness in Enjoyment of
Living.
Other new officers are the
Mmes. William Halliday,
Robert Knorfr, Ar t h u r
Hoodenpyle and Mich e I
Coronel, vice presidents; Dale
Ma1or, George Fox and Harry
Charlton, secretaries; Jenkins
Jenkiru, treasurer-, and Earl
Garren, parliamentary ad-
visor.
Members will gather the sec-
ond Tuesday of t h e month
during the swnmer for card
parties.
Dance Club
The first, th~d and filth
Fridays of the month are the
dance dales selected by Lace
'n Leather Square Dance Club
members. The music st.arts
JACK GLENN GAU.ERV
OIRECT10NS '70
PARTI LYRICAL ABSTRACTION
J~BMU'xJt
Go'Y-""""'"-Den Chris._,
Ronnie Landflrlld
OonLMftllen --· -y .....
..... w1w.,.wue-Ni
&olUIW~ ...__,,.,._...,.~--"'°"'Po-·..-.-----------MAY 13th THROUGH~ ISth
7 DAYS A WEEK. II AM TO 5 P.M. • ·. Shopping, a subject close to
-· every woman's heart, will be
examined in a talk, To
• -r.tarket, To Market, r or
-·· members of the Woman's Club
Secretaries at 8 p.m. in the Recreation an l.ASTO<M$t-'f' /-l:l&.--C9.ln'f'. ~I-
At 6:30 p.m. every second 1_C_en_t•_r_,_H_un_ti_.n.cgton __ Be_a_ch_. _______________________ ~
Thursday women or Bahia
Chap t er of Nationa l
•· of San Juan Capistrano on Secretaries' Assoc ia tion -~: Tuesday,_May 19, 12 :30 p.m. International assemble in dif-
' A representallve of a stamp ferent locations to attend
•. company will cover planning, t' M LI d Fl · basics in marketing and prae-mee ings. rs. oy eming
tical hints for shoppers, as at 673.6360 may be telephoned
., well as show an amusing fllm'jf~o;;r~a;;ddl~tion;;;;a;;I ;;in;;form;;;;;;';;'i;;on;;.~;J ouU ining shopping habits of l
customersasseenthroughthe LAGUNA BEACH eyes of a market manager.
Mrs. Geoffrey Manse 11, SCHOOL OF
president, wilt conduct the
business meeting "1>ich will ART AND . DESIGN
•
,
include election of officers.
The new board will be In-
stalled on Tuesday, June 16,
in lhe San Clemente lrm.
Mrs. DonaJd h1oore, lun-
cheon chairman, will be
assisted by the Mm es. Nelle
Ford, Ralph Bell, D a vi d
Payne, J{ugo Forster, Edward
Chade, Leon Drummond, Lynn
Shrewsbury, Louise Faranzen,
C. R. Cook, Louis Gauthier
and r.tiss Helen Shre~sbury.
Film Viewe~
The Woman's Auxiliary to
. • the American Society o f
J.1echanlcal Engineers is plan-
ning a joint meeting in the
Northridge home of t.1rs .
Henry W. Babel at It a.m.
• Thursday, May 21.
Tbe Los Angclu and San
;I"" Fernando Valley sections will
.,,. meet to aee a film on the
" "Commercial Art of Cake
•• Baking .'"
VFW. Auxiliary
Colotllne Au1ll11ry w
Veteran• of Forelp Wars,
Post 35111 gathcn the first and
third Frldaya at 8 p.m. Cost•
M""'' America n LegJoo Hall
ll the mcet.l.ng scene.
I
•
SUMMfR PR~GRAM
2 & J week work1~op1:
Pal1tln9 ·Sculpture
Drawing
6 & 9 week co•net!
Poiatl"t • Watercolors
Jewelry Mold11
Ceromlct • Sc1lpture
DN1wl19-H1lc & fl91re
Prl1t Mokltt
Writ• .,. pl.011• far •
frff br.U.11r•I
17141 4'4-1520
6JO La9u•a Co1yo1 Id.
La911a leach 92651
STARS
Syin•v O"''" Ii on• of th•
worli'1 9r11t •1trolo9•"· Hi1
1olvll'l11 it tn• of t~1 DA ILY
PILOT'S ,,..., f11t11r11.
Margot Goodman
(formerly of Margot Interiors)
ond
Fritz Steinbach
(formerly of Alto's Interiors)
") announce the opening of
") :Jh.e Gfeganf Barn Jnferior<I
) .. ~
l locateil al
447 East Seventeenth Street
Costa Mesa, California
TELEPHONE (714) 6'5-2555
sfudio houm mondoy thru lridoy, 9 om·5 pm
>oturdoy1 ond evenings by oppoinlment only
c::mr-1':
FRI. May 15. SAT-.. 16
Oren1t
I•. T•ltf• .t To~
llSJ L T•1tlo
•••n1 Pork
'"ell II. •I lllttnf11r
SJ111Mdlf•
' '
COOL SHIFTS
FOR WOMEN
Our R•g. $2.00 2 v,,,s
$
FOR
Cotto" sateen shifts Jo,. cool
J11n1111er Jivj1Jg. Choose from
sheath 1111d dress types tcith ziP-
per backs. Washable, pre-sbr11nk
for las ti11g fit. Little or no·iron·
;,,g required. Popular prints. 10·
l8 Pink
Blue
Turquoise
Yellow
lilac
Bla ckfll/h ite
Wt1tminattr l•tH P•rlr:
1Mc.lll.91Mc,etl4 .. U11c1I• 9t Yafl" W..
1S4401eecll11"-SllJU..1l•A"'
C11to M111 Sant• A.111
Merhr 119'. •I WH•• 141•ttt SI. 1t lrf1t.r
2200 ... rhrl .... 1400141 ...
(
l
Friday, MIJ' 15, 1~70 0.IJLY PILOT J ii
Horoscope
Dates Emphasize Beauty
BUILDING FOR THE FUTURE -Although it looks like doll play
now members of Children's Home Society of Orange County are in
the midst of final plans fo r a workshop, installation and awards
luncheon in the Saddleback lnn, Santa An a. Looking forward to
the May 18 date are (leflt to right) the Mmes. James Ackley, work·
shop chairman; Anthony GaJewski co-chairman, and Kenneth A.
Brown, incoming president for the council of auxiliaries.
Children's Home Society
Workshops Calendared
SATURDAY
MAY 16
By SYDNEY OMARR
TEEN DATING ' HINTS:
~ ;.tOt1t popular dates w 111
emphasize beauty, perhaps
even formal wear. Tblt ls 1
night for 1peclal occaslon1 and
Llbta Is personality kid, while
Virgo gets stuck with check.
Aries Is concerned w 11 h
permanency of relations.hip,
while romance sbine1 for
'Spofford'
Previewed
F irst Nighters of the Laguna
Moulton Playhouse will open
the Broadway comedy, "Spof·
ford'' wh.ich closes the current
season or the playtiouse, on
Tuesday, May 19, with a din·
ner in Victor Hugo Inn.
Reservations ror the 6 p.m.
social hour and 7 p.m. dinner
may be made before Sunday,
May 17. with. the maltre d'
at 494-9477.
Hosts for the evening will
be Col. and Mrs, William H.
Bruggere and Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Gassman. They will be
joined in the receiving line by
retiring president Mrs. Harriet
McConnell Also seated at the
head tnblc will be Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Lawrence, Mr.
and Mrs. Oscar Hoffman, Mrs.
Armand Sctiaerer and Jack
St'ymoar.
Astrology
Headlined
The Officers Wives Club ol
El Toro will present their
nomi nating luncheon in the
spirit of the Age or Aquariu~
Provisionals Rally
To Support Projects The Saddleback IM in Santa More workshops are in-ty will be Mrs. Will iam Ponn on Tuesday, May 19, at 11 :30
A ·11 be t ed I t terpret.ation, Mrs. James and Mrs. Betty Patterson, a.m. in the 0 Club.
Gtmlal. .,_,n, --.111
1Utdo-.lllu-I
tllbotato HWq. Ma a y
IGalpt ... -.............
Mahltal• M• el • 1 mt r.
Seorplell~ .......
trlpet: ..-lie perfect -
dato, wlllle ~ "'" graUate1 .. 11 •1 ...... y el
ge.111alae frkHll-.
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Be light, not lerioufl. One )'OU
quarrel with merely needs
face·• 1 vi n g opportunity.
Provide. it. Laugh •t your own
foibles. Let others take in·
itiative. This is no time to
loree issues.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Basic issues dominate. You
reali7.e lmporilnce of apparent
minor matter1. Key is to be
thorough. Health, diet, the
way you relate to eo--workets -tbete artaa are llhlmlnated.
Take it alow.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
Romance is highllghted. Give
play to emotioDS, but protect
yoursdt .1n clinches. 'lblJs Is
a time for vlliety, for ex·
perierx:e, for pursuit 0 r
pleuure and creative eD-
deavora.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Emphasis on h om e , en--
vironment: Best to entertain
close to home base. Include
family members. M a k e
amends for recent slight to
loved one. Get fulOllment by
making others happy.
LEO (July :ZS.Aug. 22): Ac-
cent on short journeys, deal~
ings wilh neighbors 1 n d
relatives. Not so good for
handling details. Le1ve that
to others. Strive to see
persons, situations In realistic
Peering
Around
ligl>I.
VIRGO (Aug, 2$Sept, :IZ):
Money is accerMd. You c•n
•am II gain I~ successfully
lnve1t ii. Dancer comes when
you 1ttempt to mix money.
and emotions. Be c11sc:r .. 1.
!loo~ be bough! and don't try
lo buy anyone elre.
LIBRA (Sept. Z3-0ct. 22): r Cycle Ls hlgb: take iniUative. •
1 Get rid of deadwood. One who
eonstanUy burdell.9 you with.-
pn>bleons should be dealt with
politely but firmly. Message
1
ll very clear by tonlgl>I.
SCORPIO (Oct. :ZS.Nov. 21):
Events: which occur behind the
acenes affect you. Be willing
to accept new wlgnmen~.
Display lndepend e n c~.
origlnalny, Adhere to pri°'"
ciplea--and to your own
life style.
SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dtc. 21 J: Spotllghl o n
romance. hopes, friend11 •nd
wishes. You hive a full day
•nd evening. You 'come out
of shell and expr<is y..,,..U.
Acctpl social invttatiOo. You'll
be Ufe of party,
CAPRICORN (Dec, :a.Jan.
tt): You are able to coo.vlnce
Important peroon of your
worth. Fine, but alao be true
to your own cpnvicUons.
Means don't rationalize where
beliefs are coocerned.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-l"eb.
11): Good lunar aspect today ooin\id<I with long-distance
communication, travel, ability
to perceive potential. You may
have to tear down in order
to rebuild.
PISCES (Feb. 111-Man:h 20)>
Finances of mate or partner
may become your penonaJ
concern. You could be banded
proverbial bot potato. Avoid
making commitment if odd!(
are stacked agaiNt you.
Think.
T• fllld Oijf WhD'I 11.od<'I' fol' 'l'OIJ In ll"lllMY •I'd low, ordel' ,.,..,....,. Om.rr'1 11oa11i.t, ''Stc:rwt Hint. tor
Men ,,.. women.... send bl'1flcleft
tnd • c:ef1f1 ta OnltN' A1trolort ~ tM OA.ILY l'ILOT. BOit :J2.0,
Grtllll C""'trll llellon. Mew Y{rt.
N.Y, 10017.
Six new provisional members of the As-
sistance League of Newport Beach will be
\velcomed by Mrs. Robert .Crowner, presi-
dent. on Tuesday, May 19, ~in the service
center.
na wt urn n o • The 12 signs and colors or ••••••""""'••-! "-ho Ackley; ways and means. CHS direct.or of public rela-N Set gian worl\;'I P as represen· Mrs. Kenneth A. Brown and lions. the horoscope will be carried A CHILDHOOD friend o( 8WCOmer
tatives from the 19 auxiliaries M-. J-•n· Gray·, mem~~,·..... out In the decorations. name "~ta M-an Mrs. R-"' vu 1,11;;1:111 ,. Edward J. Mooney, director nd A be """" .. ., ....... "' W ( All of Children's Home Society provisional. Mn:. Rob e r t of the Children's Home Society Lalgstha A pos~rs. Fedmemt. r Scheuer, Mrs. Jennie Gregg e CO mes
in Orange County gather Mon-Vernon: members h Ip· will be the main speaker. 0 e merican era ion of Tacoma, Wash ., is a guest
Giving the introductiDns will be 1.1rs. · associate, Mrs. Michael Tru-f of Astrologers will speak f M Sche -· will New~ are invited tn day, May l!, at 9:15 a.m. Receiving awards or 10 following ttie social hour and o n. uer. 11K'.Y
Colin Reynolds, past president in charge of
provisional training. Newcomers are the
Mmes. Wynette Bedall, Sain Gurley, Robert
Hurtt. Richard Kimball, Guy Miner and
Charles Ripley.
From Utis annual event jillo, and n.ewsletters-hospitali· years of service will be Mr s. luncheon. . -depart Sunday, May 17, for attend. a Monday, May 18,
be · ·d L.. ty, Mn. Anthony Gajewski Jer...,. Farrow and cited fo r H ·11 be he M a trip to Mexico, making Mex· eetlng · f the S ddl ba k mem rs gam 1 eas 1vr more and Mrs. Charles H. Neuman . 'J ostcsses w 1 t mes, m o a e e successrul auxiliary work. 15 years are the Mmes. War· v. G. Benson. J. R. Evans. ico City their headquarters. Valley Newcomers Club. The
During the morning and Heading the l re as u r e r ren Baker, William Druilt and A. o . Froman, E. B. Swint Mrs. Gregg,• native if Den-group will gather at 7:30 p.m .
afternoon affair installation of workshop will be Mrs. Grant Robert Ewart. and K. T. Zoller. mark, first visited Mr s. in the Royal Savings and Loan
The provisionals already have taken a
lour of the thrift shop and the Children's Den-
taJ Health Center.
officers fQT Ute Orange County Hendricks, CHS director or Following the workshop:;;, Reservations may be made Scheuer on the 01 y mp I c building, El Toro.
Council of Auxiliaries will take volunteers, and taking charge award presentations and in-with Mrs. Walter Redmond Peninsula in Washington when Activities and advantages of
Mrs. Carl \V, Service, thrift shop chair·
man. explained how donated clothes and
household articles are priced and sold, and
]\ilrs. Edwin Wachter, dental chairman. out·
lined the duties of members working in the
center.
place and l~year and I>year or public relatiorul and publici-st.a llation lunch will be scrverl. al 838-1453. Mrs. Schel.Rr wu just a baby, the club will be discussed. certificates for service will ·be -~------'--------------==...:.;= _________ ...;... ___ .,_c..:..:;:.::.;_.;:;;;,.=;;_~"'-"'--''--.;.....
awarded.
Each provisional \viii be required to give
125 hours of service to the league's projects
with in the next six months.
The first workshop, a mock ~l'·"f'7"
aUiiliary meeting for new ~ ,:.
presidents will be handled by , t ! ..
the Mmes. Orville Dunn, f:"':!
Richard W. Jensen, Lawrence !1''" ~
Jordan, Stewart Morgan, Joel l</~t· .,
McNair, Robert Black and
Club Sets
Night Out
A Nighl or Adventure
leading to a treasure hunl
for a money tree is being
planned by Huntington Beach
Emblem Club 31 4.
Reservations for the Satur-
day, May 23. progressive din·
ner must be made by Satur-
day, P.1ay 16. According to
P.1rs. Guy Cannon. chalrmm1.
Assisting Mrs. Cannon with
arrangements is Mrs. P hi I
Cessna. C<K:hairman.
TOPS Mermaids
TOPS Merging Mermaids
meet at 7:30 p.m. every
1"hursday in Woodland School,
Costa Mesa.
Edward K. Charlson.
J I. J UPHOLSRIY
M•ANSI QUALITY, INT•OlltTl',
S•lllYICll, CllAP:TIMANl"IJI',
WE ACC•l'T CNALL•NO•S ,
W• LUC• la.\UTlflUL l"UllfUTU••
We're New Owner1-We're Cre1tin9
INTERNATIONAL INCIDENT!
RAYmE
PERMANENT
DAILY SPECIAL
Ew~ M••·
TMS. I: Wed.
SHAMPOO & SET ......... .
Mttl Dorothy Ford -,,.. New Owner .
"'lsO 01 .. Don~ .. C0111urn In S.nl• Ana
$850
$]50
FOi APPOINTMINY
TELEPHONI 646-3446
international beauty salo n
"the profes1ion1l1"
1695 I ·ne c"""" L• c..... C 1 "-rv1 ltnl•wr.,.11 OS • ,.,,.p
Tickets. at S3 each. may
he obtained by calling Mrs.
Cannon. 968-7275, or Mrs.
Cessna,962-2500. /~::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::;=::::::;:::;::::;:::::=~I
High School
Class Cooks
The Home Economic s
Department of Laguna Beach
High. School will prepare a
din ner for mcmben; of the
Business a n d Professional
Women's Club on Thursday,
May 21, at 7 p.m.
The program for the evening
will be presented by new
members. according to ?.1iss
lrene McClure, vice president.
The Aud•
is breathtaking.
Its ventilation system
completely changes the
air every 30 seconclso
~,~-~···""'· "''(". '"$~
> •v)'-; ,/"'•i
~"-!.'x'~;,'!~
·w •' ..
••
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'
Three American F i e 1 d
Service students. Manfried
Heine Margaret Leroux and
Fern;ndo Diaz will describe
their countries and their year
in the United States.
'You probably won't notice that the air .
over Southern California will be a little deaner.
Hostess Named
Test drive it today.
It's more of a car
than you think. Mrs. Craig Combs will open
her Newport Beach home at
10 :30 a.m. Tuesday. 11-1.ay 19,
for a coffee meeting or the
Orange County Chapter. Town
•nd Gown Junior Auxiliary of CHICK IVERSOI the University of Southern
California . po...,~.-..... J Mes. Roben c. Thorell. r-=0._.,e AUDI
director of specia l programs 900 Wnt eo.st Hithway/NewpoJt BeKh
at USC will discuss USC To-646·9391
But it'll be a little cleaner.
, 23 neighborirtg commun~ies Ol'e cOl"IV«f• a,g .some of dieir tleet vehicles to natural gos..
Not someti" kl the distant futwe. Right -· Right now we're providing up to .siic con-
ft'fsion •as opiece to 23 cities, lawns ond
counties in Soolhern California for o one
yeor trial period todemonslrote how nolurol
gos con cut 90% of o vehicle's pollutonls.
Over lhe yeor, we·u orronge for continu•
ing teclmicol ossiJlonct and fuel S1Jppliei.
We're olsocoover1ing moro thon J,l OOof
ciur own fleet vehicles.
With over J1.i> million registered vehicles
in lo~ Angele~ Coun1y olone, we"re under
110 delusions that we're going lo eli_minote
'""'"· But it's o beginning.
Our business is the gos busines~-
But po;I of o ur business is to help mo~e
South111n Colilornio o be!lor oloce to live.
Jn lhe future, we and, wo hope, others lrt
Sourtiern CollfOfftia win be worting even
ttorder. lo corwert ll"IOr• 1J9hide ffeets to
cleon-buming ncturol gos.
There's on ofd rule about
projects like rhis one-. To
slort, you hove to stort,
SllllonC-..6"~
"'~ .. ...,..tl'l>c!ll<;l ....... C.._
(Acht~
Communities Use
Natural Gas
in Fleet Vehicles
LOS ANGELES-Twenty·
three-Southerm California
cities ana counties ITC •in& a
new weapon in th• battle
•aaiost air pollution.
Tiiey arc converting se-m"a I
of their fleet vehicles to opcr·
a1e on clean-bumi~ natural
ll''· The Gas Compani~ or Iha
Loic Angeles·bascd Pacific
Li&lrtma eorp •• "' """"""'' l hcsc communities witlt equip-
men t to convert up to 11x.
vehicles eath. The aim oflhis
program is to demonstrate the
.smog abatement and operat ..
ins cost benefits of I.he system.
Na1ural aas operatlor&
slashes the emi~iOB of con·
taminants from motor vehide
lllthausu :u much as 901JE>.
Gu Company offici.ab In
cbarp of the project repon
that they have received out·
*landing cooperation from the
cities and counties participat·
in& in this program. They
c:tpect many more dlics as
well M priYatc companies to
install the fuel sy.wem..
Counties involved in the
proaram •re: Los Anaeles.
Oranac. Jtivcrsidc1 Sa n
Bernardino.
Cities which are particlpat ..
fng arc: Arcadia, Brea. Bur ..
bank, Covina. Glendale,.
Hunlinaton Beach, 1.a Hahn..
La Palma. Lo9 Ansele.'\o Moo·
tebello, Newport BeacH.
Oranac. Palm Sprinp. River·
side, Sao Bernardino, Sanca
Barbara, West Covina, West•
minster, Whittier.
At this 1'11go or dCYClop.o
menc, Pscific Liah1in1'• nat ..
tJrat a•• •chicle_project is
focused on fleet operatiom.
This approach will produce
maximum impact on the smoa:
probtcm.
Paciftc liahtint"'a Ill dis--
tributioo tJ tilicicl arc COO'l'm ...
in3 more than J,IOO cU!ltomt.r
service vehicles 10 the .natural
11s furl system.
Amons other mers of the
system are fedenil and Mate
aaencics •nd priwate fleet
operators." The General $erY...
ices Administration, for
example, is 1estin1 lhe system
at le\leftl kw:atiom..
Gov. Ronald Rtaaan b"
announced that lhe State of
C.lifomia will have m<a lhall
J SO vehicles coovcrted to the
natural gas system in the near
fu ture. Pacilk: Gn It Electric.
Co., San Franci!co, is convert .. in& 40 of its vchicl-.
day. Palroncsses. members i ORAN&£ COONTl'S AUTHOllnD DWEit
and ~csls arc invited. !'---------------------''--------------------------------------------------
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----------J f DAILY '1lOT Fr1d1)', M.,-15, 1'70
Dodgers . Sink Marichal,I · 6-3
LOS ANGELES (AP) ,..-B 111
I <ll'lbllbwt1I, Loi Ancoiel' r<d·hol third
I buemu.. summed I up for hll'team:
••Jt wu my sweetut victor, u a
Dodier. To 'belt San· Frandlco -and
.Jb•n Martchal -well, that'• aomethtna."
1be ooctcer1 sank Marlchal, whO't now
'l(Oll all but 12 (Imes In 42 matchea
With_ Loi Anaelel. with a five-run out.
, bun\ ·In the ·lhlrd IMIOll to beal the
Glanll ~ Thunday aJS)lt In lhe opener
of a four-.game 111:rte1. ·
The win broke the Dodgers' tv;«>-came
losing 1lrealt, with the victory going
to-Sandy Vance. The ZS.year .. td rlghth ...
de.r b now f.J.
In tonight'• game, Mi1Uel Pue11te, l·l,
wtu be pltcltlng for San l"rancisco qalnal
J.(11 Angeles' Don Sutton, 4-4. •
The attack OD M'1'1chal and bla
ttplact1M11t'ln the third tnnl•g·by Frank
Reberger wu not a 6W-priJe to giant.a
llll!IAger Clyde KJn.i.
''lt11 lhe middle of spring tra!nlnj
for MarlchaJ," be said.
Marichal, who won 21 and loll J l
Dollg..,. Slate ... ..-... ,, (...,
M•Y ,,._ VJ 11 Jl=r111C O Mw \I E wt" Fr'"!: ~'..; IJ 9ff1, ¥1 II l'rl M -l·u•·m· : o.in,
I : '·11'1.
last year, Ls only 1·1 so far In 1970.
He spent two weeks Jn a hospital after
reacting adversely to a 11hot of penicllll•
and bas yet to regaJn his sharpness.
The strength tJ. the Giants wu alto
diluted by two Injuries. Wlllle McCovey,
Nattooal Leque'1 ma,,t valuable player,
was sidelined by a jammed ahoulder
and may DOI pla,y In tbe nmalnlo(
thl'ft gamea. Ron flWIC wu out because
ot a brulled bet but wu expecttd
to play tonlS)lL
Playing McCovey'1 flnl bue poaltlon
wu Willie May1, who bu held down
tbe hot apol only a !"" times In put
yeara.
The Dodger•' thlrd·lnnlllg flploolon
wu started with a •lnale by Maury
Wills. Manny Mola and Willie Oavll
a1oo alllgled, drlvln1 In lwo tllJll, Wfl
Parker followed with another alngle and
when Willie Crawford forced Parker,
Davis ICW'ed.
Grabarkewltz:, now hltUJ\g .no, then
hit Na third borne nm, a lint drive
that carried Into tbe vaconl rig)ll field
pavilion.
Wbe:1 Tom Haller singled, MarJchal
GIANT OUT -The San Francisco Gian!.!' Don
Mason slides into serond base and ii: out attempt.
ing· to stretch his hit into a double during Thurs·
day night's game with the Dodgers. Second base.
man ~ed Sizemore makes the tag. The Dodgers
won, 6-3.
Trevino, Player
Share Lead;
Hogan Fires 69
FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP) -Lee
Trevino paid tribute to Gary Player
after tying the little South African for
the first round lead in the $115,000
Colonial NaUonal lnv:llaUon golf tourna.
rnent.
''It always helps to play behind Gary,''
the quick • quipping Mexican • American
sald Thursday. "He does such a won-
derful job repairing the greens. He's
out there tamping down every spike
mark on every green.
"Why, that liUle man Is bent over
go much he looks like he's planUng
corn.~·
Trevino and Player, the top two rnoney
winners this year, matched 665, four.
uiider'-par and led the massive assault
: oo the proud old Colonial Country club cour,..
In all, a record 27 playerli bettered
par 70 on ttie 7.142-yard layout, breaking
the previous record ol 20.
'A.mc>ng them was the limping little
figure of Ben Hogan. a five·tlme wiMer
of this event and playing in his home
town tOr the flM time in three years.
He birdied the 16th and 17th for a
fi9 well among the leaders.
:'ll'1 always tough to play in your
hometown," the 57-year old mast.er said.
Most of the leaders said the demanding
layout played easier than in the past,
cittng the relatively short rough . in
particular. But both Player and TreV100
had a different idea.
!•J don't know of a better or tougher
golf course ln the world," said the globe-
trotting Player. "It was everything a
good golf coorae shoukl have . It'• an
Ideal course."
Andrettl Returns
Final Shakedown Day
For Indy 500 Pole Run
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) -Little
Mario Andretti was back in acUon at
the Indianap:tl!J Speedway today, aiming
for at least a front row shot at the
Rich Memorial Day racing claSlllc he
won a year ago.
'I'1e 5-foot-t Andreltl, returning with
another new car to replace the one
he wrecked earlier in the week, joined
other drivers in a final day of
shakedowns leadlng to Saturday's run
for the 500 p:tle pos.illon.
nie conditions under which they were
to work today were not expected to
be ideal, however. An ovemiiht rain
left the famed old Speedway soggy and
almost cts1alnly slower, Furthermore,
weather forecastera said more showers
likely would fall during the day.
The 33-<:ar field, repreeentlng the
futest cara in an original entry list
of more than• 70, will be determined
in two weekend• of quallfylna:. The
fastest car 1n Saturday'• flrts round
wins tbe pole, worth ll0,000, and gobs
ol prest.lgt.
Joe Leonard, ooe of several threats
to cop the hooors thl1 year, holds the
one and fwr-lap records of 171.853 and
1'10.'69 mllea per hour, reapeetively. Most
ob9erven believe both markl will fall,
and ev1n Leonard baa predicted a p:tle
sp«d of 173.f m.p.h.
Al Unaer, who mlued last year's race
after breaking a leg In a garage area
accldent, has come the closest to
Leonard's irtnale-lap standard tn practlce.
The fl·)'t&r-old brother of 1968 winner
Bobny UnHr was clocked at 171.133
m.p.h. earlier in the week and came
back Thursday to put 170.295 on his
chart in his Vels·Parnelll Jones Ford.
BefOre today 's final practice he wu
the only driver to exceed 170 m.p.h.
but others have come close.
A. J. Foyt, a three-time wiMer and
43-year-old Art Pollard have had laps
In the 169 bracket. Mark Donohue, Dan
Gurney and Leonard have topped 118,
while Lloyd Ruby, Bobby Unter and
Mike Mosley have gone better than 187.
Andrettl, 30, demolished hJs German·
built McNamara Ford in a eotUsion with
the fourth tum wall Monday. Only the
engine and transmls.slon were salva1ed
and these were put into a ntw cha•il.
After missing three days of badly
needed practice, Andrettl returned
Thursday and promptly had the new
car In the IN m.p.h. ranse. Dlaap-
polnbnent showed on his face when a
thundentorm swept ac.ros,, the sprawling
Speedway •nd chopped olf the Dnal three
hours of activity.
Meantime, New York sports ctr ace
Peter Revson toot ewer the McLaren
turbochar1ed ()fly .. 11111ed to New
Zealander Denis Hulme. 1be car cauaht
f~e during practice Tuetday, -..
Hulme to a hospital with badly burned
hands. If Hulme is able to drtvt, tmm.
manager Bruce Mcl.area nld efforts
will be made to qua!Jfy throe cm with
Huhne, Rev80n and another New
Zeal1nder, Qirb: Amon, u drivers.
WU nplaoOd °by 'Rabqor, wbo p Iba •
flul 1 ........
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Owners Offer
Seattle Another
Franchise
NEW YORK (AP) -11'1 back lo
the drawing boarclo today !or major
l•que owners ••• and, paealbly, b11<i to
bl1 time bueball _, !or Seattle.
Tht owner• lwddJld here to aettle
pcellinf -In tbe aftmnatb of
II decilllon to olfar ll10tber frll!ICblae
to Se11We should the -,. League
•xpond ll tho futun.
Meet1Jlg be.hind cloled doors 'lburld1y
nJght, American Leatue owner> voted
unanlmou1Jy to offer 5el.ttle a new
~anchlse Jn an apparent attempt to
head Of! a threatened $12--million suit
by the city.
Transfer of the bukrupt Seattle Pilo~
to Milwaukee recently provoked threats
of court 1cUon. No date has bet1 aet
to hear the suit, however.
The Ml<>ciated Presa learned Thuradar
night· the owners decided to make the-
franchJae offer candlUanaDy, requ1r1n&
the city to come up with a domed
atadlum suitable for major league play,
The PJ!ots played Jn Slcks' Stadium,
which aeats 28,SOO and hu no top.
"There'• no way ·we can keep a major
league team out 6f Seattle," aaJd OM
owner, "and lt would certabtly be better
for an American League franchise than
a National Leap ooe.
"Can you lmqjne what the radio and
television revenues will be there in the
next five years?"
Another owner, speaking for the
franchloe lnvllallon, oald he "lllooiht
it WU wronc to dilrtCard the advice
of our COWtJel."
Ho 11pponnUy rtlemd to the lm-
pendlni law sWt and a p:>saiblllty it
miiht be setUed out of court. There
t1 a report the AL would try to appease
Seallle with on e1ponolon franchl1e plum.
"The .\merlcon Leagua bal conllcluce
th1t Se1"le II a maj« league dty,"
Aid another owner at the aeeret meetln1,
appannUy tchoJn& the a.entlments of
thole present.
One or two felt, however, the AL
should not commit lilelf thie: early.
But another ariuecs that the leaiue
would do better to preterve lts ima1e
in the inl.ertsta of "eood puhlk: retatlona"
by quickly maltla1 11 firm offer. ·
"If the ltldlum 11 built according
to major ltque 1peclflcaUons, then we
should atve the city an optlOI! for a
franchlae ••. U and when we expand,''
said a 1poke1man for the move.
The argument capped more than an
hour of dlO:Uuion and WU (reeled by
a unulmoua "ayt" vote around the
board room 1n the m}d.town hotel.
OREGON MILER
OUT OF RACE
LOS ANGllL!S (AP) -Oregon
frtahman dlatartce nmntr Steve Preforr
taine wu withdrawn Tbwsday night
from tbe mile run durlq tbe scratch
meetlq prtar to thil wt1ktnd'1 Pacific-I
lrllok and fteld cbampjooahlpa al UCLA.
Prefontalnt, whole but three mlle
time W. year of 13 :12.1 equals the
Pac-I meet mark, will concentrate on
the thret-mUe nm. No espluation was stven fer his wlthdrawal-fmn tbe mile.
He heel blen entered la both race:oi;
becaUll cl the eJPKted cloleness af
the team 1carlng battle today and Satur-day. •
Tom Morrvw ol Orqon, 11 9,05_7
lt.MpllCba.Mr thla Jtar and tut year'• runner up In the event, wu al.lo scratch-
ed from his opeclalcy and was abo
pulled out ol the -..rui..
IMPOSSllLE RITURN? -Not !or Pancho Gonzalez who caught
the ball, then delivered a looping overhead return in defeating Andres
Gimeno in Howard Hughes tourney in ·Las Vegas Thursday. Coro~a
del Mar'1 Rod Laver will face Roy Emerson of Newport Beach ln
a semifinal match today. Both scored wins Thursday.
3200,000 Race
DustContmander Heads
Preakness Field of 14
BALTIMORE (AP) -Dust Com· mandu, the winner of the Kentucky
Dtrby and $111 ,604. is in the Preaknesi.
So iJ Hark The Llrk, winner of two
noft9takes and $10,146.
Jn between these two extremes faJ I
12 other S.year-olds who w:IU take a
lhot at the flnt $200.000 race in the
hlstory of the Triple Crown.
If all If go to the post at 2:40 p.m.,
PST, for the 13/6 mile classls. the
iro.sa purse wtll be $20.1,800, with $151,300
golni to the wlMer.
The 9$th Preakness at Pimlico \\1ill
be televtled by CBS from 2~ p.m. PST,
and bro1dcut on radio from 2:2.5 to
2:'5 p.m.
In order to Jive Dust Commander
a chance at hecominl the first Triple
Crown wlMer since Citation won the
Derby, Preakneu and Belmont Stakes
in IMS, owner Bob Lehmann had to
supplement the coil for $10,000 1'1uraday.
A check for $12,000, which alao covered
the normal entry and 1t.artlnt-feu or
$1,000 each, was signed by and presented
to the racing secretary by Lehmann's
1 .. year-old son Fred.
Seven of the 17 colts beaten by Dust
Commander In the Derby also were
enterfld for the PreaJmesa -Raymond
M. Curtll' My Dad George, runner-up
in Kentucky; Mrs. Ehtel D. Jacobs'
Hlgh Echeloo , the Derby third, and
Peraonallty; Her.Jae Stable's Naskra;
Sonny Werblin's Sllent Screen, William
C. Robinson Jr. 's Admiral 's Shield and
I>r. Richard Kuhn'• and Walter Hickey's
Robin•' Bu1.
Joinfnc Lawrence P. Boyct's Hark The
Lark In a shot at an upset will be
Brtardale Farm's Stop Time, James P.
J\fill's Buikashl. Nelson B. Hunt's Sir
Wiggle, h1r1. 1.ierle Weisman's Oh Fudge,
and Rex Ellnorth'a Plenty Old.
Each starter wUI carry 1» pounds.
Mike Mao1anetlo will Hnd Dllst Com·
mander, the early favorite. oul of the
No. 10 poet with early aeeond pick My
Dad Gecqe, ridden by Ray Brouuard
just inaldt or him. Sllent Screen, third
choice ind ridden by JObn L. Rotz,
will letve ftom No. 3, just outside of
the Jabcobs entry of HJs'I Echelon on
tht rail and Personality. Larry Adams
will ride ltigh Echclson. and Eddie
Behnonte will have lht mount on
Personality.
Personality scared trainer John Jacobs
when he· shied, unseated his exercise
boy and ran back to hi! barn Thursday
morning. However, he was not hurt and
returned to the track with blinkers on
to "''ork three furlongs In 40 seconds.
Other jockey assignments are Naskra,
Ron Turcotte; Stop Time, Bill Hartack;
Buiksshi, Michael Hole; Sir Wiggle,
Howard Grant: Admiral's Shield, Jimmy
Nichols; Plenty Old, Hank Moreno, and
Robin's Bug, Leroy Moyers.
No riding assignments have been made
for Hark The Lark and Oh Fudge.
Lawton, Clarke
O'Brien Head
Distance Field
Joh.11 Lawton , ex-Kansas University
distance runner, ise't impressed willt
the entry of Ron Clarke and Kerry
O'Brien of Australia in the Orange Coun.-
ty Invitational track meet Saturday, June
20 at Fred Kelly Stadium (El Modena
High School) in Orange.
!\feet director Earl Engman made the
announcement about the two Aussies
Thursday with Lawton in attendance.
Tt is the third year for the event
and despite a disappointing turnout o{
1,900 paying customers last year, ex·
posure to a national television audience
of 41,':z·million homes brought it ba ck
-with the financia l blessing ol the
Orange City Council.
La."'ton is one of the few distance
runners in lhe world to hold victories
over Clarke at two miles and Kip Keino
of Kenya in the mile run.
•·1•ve always said this 11 the hardest
IJO)f course I've ever played," sa~
Trevino, the No. 1 money-winner this
uaMJn and already a ~Ume champi~.
1•1 think .the changes: have made it
tas!tt. But any coor!e is ea~y when
you're hitting the 0011 like I am: .
Angels Take $1;000 Flight to Oakland
He is building toward the National
AAU meet in Bakersfield one week after
the Orange County Invitational in the
immediate future and toward the 197l
Olympic Games in Munich on a lo11g-
range basis.
Clarke, now 33, \\•as voted the oulsta1.
ding athlete of last year's meet when
he won the two mile in 8:30.0, the
fastest time in the world in 1969. He
holds world records al two, three and
aix miles and 5,000 and 10,000 mel.cr.s. ' He didn't miss a ~. hitting hil
Jrom with rlne accuracy.
"lrat>f'Olll'llll ~-Ill 1tM1 llH.000 te!orllal N1· t'9nfl l ...... Nlllorwl Gell TIUrt'ltlY*ll; a.tr P'ltWf ,..:n-4-6
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OAKLAND -Whit ha1 74 legs and
costs S2,600-a-<lay to run on the road
sboul 14 weeks a year?
The Califcrnia Angels, says Jerry Wtr·
Ing.
The American League buebsll learn'•
travtllng secretary looked at the books
and muUered : "When you see cosla
like these, you aee why b1'M'hlll Js
still cla.ss11led as a sport and not. a
business.
"No Nlneas would spmd this much
money!"
More than haJr the money spent to
transp:trt 37 pel"90fls -playen, Manager
Lefty Phillips and hi! coaches and other
tt.am officials -goes to the alrllnes.
Take the Angels' cu.mnt road trip,
for example. Waring figure! It will ~st
about $26,000 for the llki1y journey.
Today's 0 r a n g e County·to-Oakland
night -about Sl ,lltltJ. Sunday nli!ll'•
AllfJel Sl«te
Alt -"' ltMP< cn•J Mrr TS ....... It 11 Olltllfld
Mii¥ " A~1tlt t i 01-111111
Mlly U ""'"'' 11 o.1111.W UJ
11tt """' l:JJ, "'· l:U11.m.
Oakland-to-Chlcago flight the only
charttr on the trip -wUl be ~.900.
Next Wedn<Oday nlght'a Chlc1go-to.
Mlnnoapolls flight will be 11.700 and
It'll cost IS,lltltJ to bnn1 the Anael1
horn• on May 21. Tola! flight ""'" lll,60tl.
''Really lh1t's just 1' typical trip,"
SBYS Waring ol the 126,lltltJ fliure. "Our
total coets for tbe yeor -for 10 trips
-wUI be over a quarter ol a million
dollars."
The present excursk>n i's also one oC
lhe shorllr ones In ltrma ol mites -
f,IKS. Generally !bay ar• about 5,lltltJ
mlle1.
MovlJll the Statue fnnchile lo
Mllwaukfe just be.fore the season -
prohlblllni any possible ocllodule cllang"
to e111e travelinc -haan't htlptd mat~
1«1.
The J.nitla' final trip of lbe year
In mld.stptcmbsr wm lake tht tum rrom Lot Anaetes to Minneapolis to
San Franc:laco to MUwaukee and back
to Los Angeles -f,184 milts . "I don 't
even want to think about the COllb
on that one," W11rir11 moaned.
Where does the nit of the money
10? "It colts us at Jeut $5(IO a night
for hotels,'' he said, "and that rate
1s dlacounted c:onakterabJy from v.ilat
it ls to the 1entral public ."
Then the:re'1 fllO a day ror meals
and alll the inc:ktental expenses -lips,
cleaning bills. med ical supplies. To put
it slmply, it all addA up. .
GonenJ M111gtr Dick Walah uPlalned
that tbe vt~llng club fell II per cent
ol tbe f!'Oll ltcelpta ol eadl flll\O.
"Th t re are a few cluba -a vary
few -that make money on tht road,''
\\r1bh said, "Most af us are ju1t 1chalch-
ing to get even."
In tonllflt'1 1ame, the An1el1' Rudy
May (I.a) lacu Jim Hunter (1-Z).
O'Brien, a young executive with "
soft drink firm in Adelaide, is belit
known as a steeplechaser. He hold1 the
British Commonwealth record of 8:26.3,
but has been concentrating on longer
races this year.
The l"'O Australian runners will be
on their war to Edinburgh, Scotland
and the BriUsh Commonwealth Gamea
when they compete in Orange.
The meet is co-sponsored by the
Southern California Striders and the
Pacific Coast Club !rack teams wlth
.support from the City of Orange . Tickets,
priced at $3.50 and $2 for adults and
'2 and Sl for kids. arc now on .sale
al the Orange Chamber of Commerce,
625 E. Chapman Avenue.
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Lion· Ace SeekS
CIF'· Gym Laurels
By llOGEll CAIWION ................ "
Tile a-bllh acllool l)'lMlll ii hanlb' an lmpooh11
•liht In -I dolbts. On tht.lvmll', lf!Mastlcs
llOrls -In Ille $-7 to '14 range in .helcbt ud weigh
in the nei,t>bortlood or about
140 pounds.
That, iDcldeJUlly, l.s what
Westmlnller Blib null Jim
McF1ul mtll\INll.
However, cloler inspectiM
Anteaters
Snubbed
By .NCAA
By BOWARD L. BANDY
Of ... .,..... '"" ....
Polltlcs make strange bed·
!ellon and the staid .NCAA
policy ,of pJacln1 ad·
minlstrators from perennial
cootenden for Re1ion1 l
playoff bertha on telectlon
commtUees bas once again
deprived UC Irvtne of a pla~
In the Colle&e D 1v11loa
Western Reeioaal compeUUon.
First it WU th~ Anteater
basketball team that was it·
nored. Now . it'a the lrvirte
baseball team that W I I
sll&hted despi~ an impressive
31-10..2 record, 5eccnd but
amoni all teams COn!ldered for ·the tournament. ·
v.'hen hlcFaul Is do)na , hla · thine on the mats. reveals
a phenomeall tnasrormation .
McP'aul, like mOBt om-
naSt!, b • mlnilture Charles Au u with the ability to
perform exacting maneuven
on the bars and mati.
And McFaul doea It better,
probably, than anyone· In the
immediate .artl.
He enters competition
tomct>t at Long Beach WUaon
In the CIF Individual ftnals
•ith fU'SI place ahowlnp In
three eventa or the semifinals
Welted under hJs belt. "t Anaheim HIP last week,
McFaul swept to first place
in tumblin1, free tJercise and
the Jone hone -an,d added
a second in the: hlgb bar.
However, these feats aren't
particul1ry surprising t o ·
l)'lnllast.ics fans, s i n c e
McFaul showed his potential 1
In last year's CIF ch•m·
plonshlp meet .
He was one of the key
performers in I e a d 1 n g
Westminster to the CIF title
vi'hen he placed first in tumbl·
ing and free exerci.!t.
ms CIF fmals score In the
fret exercise wu 1.9, ·the
hlatiest recorded tally in any
h1ah school finals in the na.
lion. accordillf to coach Leon Cr~wford.
Maximum ICOfinl for the
event is 10.0.
Hl5 best event is the free
e1ercl.se -the Ol ympic
Games event that ht hopes
to compete in the 1171 edition.
Before he tackles that chore,
ho,.·ever, he expects to work
under the tutelage ol George
Chapman Collqe ol Orallge
(IJ.12) Is the ooly team with
• better l'<Ord and It look
the Panthers 13 inninls to
finally defeat Irvine in the
secmd ol two lllDfl between
the two indepeDdenta. IMne
was not disiraced in 'the other
a:ame, either, loalng 5-J.
Beckstead at Goklen West PA.t'L., PILOT """" "" 1tkMnl ••w
College, then 00 to the WESTMINSTER ACE -J im McFaul shoWs Whal it take! to excei in gymnas-
Universlty o1. New Mexico. ti~ti· His 8.9 mark in Cree exercise as a junior was the t~p ma_rk in the . nation.
Beckstead was his cOach at He'll compete in four. events at the CI F Southern Section finals torught at
FL YING HIGH -Westminster High School's Jim McFaul displays his air·
borne ability in free exercise drills. McFaul, who qualified for the CIF indi-
vidual finals at Long Beach Wil son tonight with three first place and one sec-
ond place effort in the prelims, is a four-year letterman.
Westminster, incidentally. L<?ng Beach Wil son High.
when the Lions captured the ...;~.::..-------"-----------------------
1969 CIF UOe.
_Sports In Brief GWC Mat
. StarsFacePacers; Job Goes
Sinden Resigns ToDeffner
Other team1 telected for the
regionals to be staged in
Sacramento next wte.k include
Pucet Sound (Bob Ryan ol
that school was a voUna mem-
ber of the selecUOn com-
mittee); the Far Western
Conference champkn: and the
back-breaker -San Fernando
Valley State Collest if it can
win tht CCAA Utle.
U S a n Fernando doe.a not
partlciplte, the toonwnent
will be limited to three twrui.
Cal Poly (Pomona), the other
contender, is a university Dale Deffner "has been nam-divimn school and not eltalble
ed wrestling coach at Golden for the colleie tourney.
JNDIANAPOLIS, Ind. four years at the helm, decid-"West College, the DAILY Chairman WUUam L. Lakit
Denver businessman B i 11 ed to call it quits while a PILOT learned today. (UC Davis) wn uked why
Daniels can catch two of his champ in his hockey career. He succeeds Gene Farrell, tbt tournament would be
sports enterprises in action who has acted as an interim limited to three teams tnitead in the same city when the Experienced in engineering , coach the past season. Farrell of four if, SP'VSc doesn't
Los Angeles Stars o p en Sinden elected to go into the will continue duUes as assis-qualify and be &aJd: "I can'lo
against the Indiana Pacers . business field rather than ccn-tant football coach. answer that quutton."
tonight in the Amer I can tinue at the helm of a National Deffner, 29, brings 1 distin-It bas been rumored that
Basketball As90ciation cham-llockey League power. quished wrestling backgfound Chapmu coach "Paul Deese
pionship playoff series. \vith him to Golden West. has c:ipenly quesUonecl Irvine's
Daniels, who r e c e n t I Y • A graduate of Morningside parUdpatlon. ·
purchased the Stars, also has LAS VEGAS _ Ageless High School, he placed 9'cond Gary Adams, Uc_J baseball
entered several cars for the ho in the 1951 ClF finals in the coach, was keenly disap-tndianapolls 500-mile race, jn. defending champion Pane 1~-""4. divtS· IOll. • pMD.ted in tht ded.sion. "[ Gonzalez, and Australians Rod """1"""' ~ .-·af h eluding one Lloyd Ruby of Laver, Tony Roche and Roy Deffner .competed two years don't AUUW wua you ave
\Vichita Falls, Tex ., is driving Emerson _ the top th ree at El Camino College followil'lf to do to fft fn the plaYoffs," in weekend qualifications. · · 1 1 . nd · wls his only c:ormntnL · · seeds -scored 1mpress1ve hig h scboo , pacing seco m Cb..,man's .fil-11 rec 0 rd
HU present tutor a t
Wtstminster, Leon Crawford,
tenns McFaul an ou~g
individual with limitless poten-
tial .
After tbe CIF finals, McFaul
hopes to compete ln the Junior
Olympic meet in Tennessee .
But first he must survive the
prellms at Van Nuys over
the Memorial Day weekend
to qualify for the final.9 . '
Olympic routine requires all
competitors to perform the
siJ: l}'mnaaUcs event.s in eoro-
pulaory routine along with op.
tional routines by a11 com-
peUtors -Jeavina little room
for spedallzlng.
The event! are tumbling,
Jong horse, parallel bars,
rtnis, hlsh bar and free ex-
ercise.
He's a four-year lettenn1n
1t Westminster and is one
tA three flnallsts for the
athlete of the yur award at
. the Lion inoUtution.
Indiana, runnerup in last victQries in Thur s d a y 's the stat~ in the 11>-pound class figur; out to ,774 while
year's ABA championship to quarterlinals of the $SO,OOO in his ftrst season. and winning Irvine'• mark (!l·JO.i) is .766. lodlvklua! f)'IMIStks ~
Oakland, is fawred over the Hoy;ard Hughes Tennis Cham· the divi~k>n the following year. other records as . of Wed· are at slake tomght when tht
Young Los Angeles team . The pionships. While at Cal State (IA!g netdiy w1rt: Humboldt State CIF Southtrn Section's bat
Pacers, coached by B 0 b Laver will oppose Emerson Beach), the Huntington Beach (lt-11) and Sacramento State meet at Loni Beach Wilson
Leonard, had 3 59-25 season and Gonz.alei faces Roche in resident finished first in the (1>11) will playoff lot the in the fintls.
record. be st in the league. tonight's semifinals at the Pacific C.oast Intercollegiate Fir western Conference bid; CompeUtion 1eta under way
They breezed through the two Frontier flotel. The winners meet in the ll~d class Puget Sound (JN): and San •l 7:15 wilh seven events in
rounds of the Eastern Divisionk will collide in Saturday's finals in 1962 and was fourlh in Fernando Valley State (Jl-21 ). Up. .
Gymnasts
Vie Tonight
playoffs with an 8-1 mar • with the winner taking home tile national college touma· Lakie added : "Irvine recelY.. Leadln1 Orange Coast area
brushing off Carolina 4--0 and tennis' richest prize of $17 ,500. menl. ed a areat deal of discUBSion competitor is Wutminster
taking Kentucky 4·1. Gonzalez the 42 -year -old Dtffner graduated from Cal (not consideratioo). We felt Hli:h'1 Jim McFaul, who
Coach Bill Shannan's Stars lion of the courts from Malibu, State in 1964. it lbould be a toum1ment of qualified for the ftnala with
finished strong in the Western unseeded despite his victory Following that he was head champions (Far Western and first place in three events and
loop, making fourth pla ce with a year ago, was as cagey wrestling coach for f 0 u r CCAA) and that Chapman was sd1d in another at last
a 43-41 record and earning as ever disposing of No. 4 seS!Olll at Cal State and spent the best independent 1 n week'• prellms at Anaheim
a pla yoff berth for the first seed Andres Gimeno of Spain last year at Jordan High in l'iSoullleiiiiiiiiii~mjiiC;;;alil~·;;o;;;mliiiia.iiiiifi!iiilll&hiiiiiii.!Pfii time in the club history. 8-i, &-4. Ulng Beach.
• Laver, after his usual slow "This is the greatnt thrill
start, breeud by countryman ·r " -·'d ~rr BOSTO" -T'· Boston II I • • • •1 of my lie, -.i. in: ner, 1-. •n:: Fred Sto e, -v, O""O. ~ • wtien contacted by the DAILY
Bruins Mf: In the market for Emerson rallied to defeat PILOT. "Orange County 15 the
8 new coach -and who wants fello"' A1111.~le Jnhn NewcoMh-' hotbed of wratlln&. 'lbere art to try to follow the footsteps 1-6. 7·5. 6-4 and Roche rushtd many out.Mndlng wrfltlen
of Harry Sinden? p and --•ches tn the area ."
Sinden. 37, shocked the 1-;;:=;;;l;;;S<;;;e=B;;;ri;;;e;;;ls=;;;'g::e=l;;;!J====-========:d sports \\-"Orld by quitting their
Bruins Thursday just fou r
d11ys after leading the club
to its firsl Stanley Cup in
29 years.
Sinden. \\"ho led the Bruins
from a fourth place finish UI
a world championship in only
Boes Win
Orange Coast Collegt's Jim
Ogle and Laurie Cunningham
advauced to today's semifinals
in singles and doubles play
Thursday in tbe Southern
California JC tennis
quarterfinals.
Singles play was 1ebeduled
for 9 a.m. with doubles action
at 1 p.m.
Ogle won his sin 1tes
matches &·2. &-1 while CUn~
ningtiam took hl1 singles set.s,
6-3 and 6-4.
The pair also advanced to
the double s semis with a 5·7,
ttty·c•r• 1ct1'•• ""••r ,,.
rntll 1114 .. Oyl
••11• .. (111 ,,, tht
"''" whe wt11h
ll••illlt t• lf11tw if!
\•111~•rnttic 1rd e. ~•.+tr eh•rt•
1 ftthie111 itlt111tl, 1111w1t9rt M1clt '44-1070
7~. 6-2 win. 'L..--------~--------''
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whowlll
WIN the ...
INDIANAPOLIS
-500 ···-· . ____ .. ... _..... ~
SAT~ MAY 30" MEMO!!IAL DAY
HURRY! IUY lOUll TICKETII HOWi
FIRST T<MF IN COLOR"
DOOIS Ol'IN 7il/ll AM. llACI lllOlll$ 1'30 AM
All Seala l111rwtl-$6,$7, $1
JC Golfers
In Classic
Golden West and Saddleback
College golr teams will seek
honors in the junior college
st.ate meet Pt.1onday and Tues-
day at Monterey.
Both teams won their con-
rerence titles this w e e k .
Golden West captured the
Southern Callforn.ia circuit
cro\vn Monday and Saddleback
wa,1 lhe Desert title in a close
battle with College of the
Desert Tuesday.
Orange Coast College's Mlke
Reeh! will also compete in
the meet. Reeh! was the fourth
medalist in ~«>nday's South
Coast Conference meet, won
by Fullerton.
Golden West golfers com-
pe_ting in the meel include
Dare Stolba, Steve Hayes, Ken
Kribel, Larry Eynon. Mike
Nichols and Tom Schwitters.
The Saddleback team will
be composed of Tom Oiler.
Dan Barrile. Don Frost, Rich
Wehmueller, Chuck Norris and
Rich Smith.
•
. I !
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f ·~
i· •
Newport Captures
· CIF Bee Net Crown
Newport Harbor High won
the CIF Class Bee tennis
championship Thursday af-
ternoon at Santa Ana High.
The Tars ended up with 24
points In the competition while
runner-tip Arroyo Grande of
San Luis Obispo County had
18.
The doubles combo of Kim
Perino and Da ve Eastman
were the only Newport
representatives in the Bee
flnals and they came through
with a first place.
East1nan and Perino had a
tough go of it before subduing
a Santa Ana doubles pair of
Jim Schilling and Gary
Kermott. The Newport duo
defeated their Sunset League
rivals in a couple Q{ tough
S!ls, 11 ·9 and 6-4.
Although the Tars were vjc-
lorious In Bee play. they failed
to defend the Cee crown which
they won last year.
However the Cee diadem re-
mained In the hands · of the
tennis-conscious Sunset loop •
Santa Ana took the team tr~
phy home.
A single Orange Coast area
player emerged with 1 win
in the Cee finals.
Esiancl1 frethman Steve
Malk>tt, one or the top-rated
players nationally In his age
group, 1:aptured a couple of
tough singles sets fr o m
Fullerton's John Rice, 7-5, 1-3.
Malkitt ls teamed with Steve
Emery today in doubles play
as Estancia goes after the
Irvine League vanity crO\·m
at Fountain Valley.
Prep Golf
TRAVEL
BUG
Make a travel buCJ out of your Volkswagen. luy a Trails
West Campster. A ll9ht, easy·to·haul travel trailer with
a king size bed, desi9ned especially for lonely bugs. See
one now at:
HARBOUR V. W.
11711 BEACH 8LVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIF. 142-4435
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l»ollY 'IUIT ftkllY, M1y JS, 1970
Start
Your
Engines!
by Deke Hou/gate
Weeds will grow In the sarden. 'nle fence that Meeds a
new board will stand unmended. 'nle family car will st.ay
dikJ and uawued. Television has discovered a new way
to imprison the husbands of America ln their owa homes.
Auto raclng. Last weekend there were three, count 'cm,
three major r1ces on the tube. Two wert live.
By careful and thooghlful pluning. it was possible to stock
enough beer in the refrigerator to make it thtoogb both weekend
aftemoona without tending to the chores lefl over frortl football
1111d basketball !leaSOflS. . ...
The ot1ly wtinder is Ulat it took the television Industry
r;o loog to diaco'Ver racing. It bas many ol the same elements
of appeal thal football has -potential violence. strategy. n.esse. cooflict and suspense --but little of the tedium
associated wlUl gol1 and baseball
lt was interesting to oote during the long weekCRd 1!1al
the techniques oC production and the staJtdards of announcing
have improved since the early days of auto racing on television.
There haven't• bee• too many races °" cmnmercial television
-ABC has provided almost the only coverage -but they
had been universally insipid.
The product last weekend, however, was at least good enough
to be shown ill the home.
Improved A11nouncln11
CbarlJe Brockman, who had become bon as the world '•
worst asnoancer because of bis comisteaUy inept performance
on lhe cloted circuit telecast of the Indianapolis 508, almost
sparkled Jn hls call of the Trenton 200 USAC championship ......
It was like Usitninl to him for the first time.
The nee was delayed one week, bat even thoug:b the outcome
was never in doubt, the show was absorbing.
Jim McKay, ABC's sport• anchor maa. gave ~ impression
be was 1till not completely at use calling an auto race,
but be wa1 weU prepared with backgroUlld notes to talk
hil way tbroag:b the Rebel 400 at Darlingtoa.
After David Pearson bad the nee wrapped up, ft.1cKay
and lli1 Ci>lor man. exdriver • Ned Jarrett, dlsbed out enough
ioformaUo11 aboGt stock car racing to satisfy tbe most critical
Ian.
Ill ether words, tJte abow was never duD, evea when lhe
race Iliad tamed Joto a laugher.
BIR Fleming, who needs to do bis auto racin g homework
Ir be Is going to continue calling important races, anchored
the ABC telecast of th~ J\tonaco Grand Prix. But even
rumbling for facls and the technical difficulties of transmitting
tbe race via satellite from Europe failed to dim the luster
of the best race of the weekend.
Greot Pictorinf Coveroge
Jochen Rindt was photographed ~s he took he lead on
the final tum or the last lap, and the unfortunate shunt
that dumped frontrunner Jack Brabham out or the lead was
replayed i11 a slow motion to highlight great pictorial coverage or the race.
Auto racing on television is in its iolancy. Everybody who
was around remembers how bad TV football used to be.
Auto racing coverage is bound to improve, and when It does
it could be'come the best produced sport the television networks
have to offer.
It should be no surprise if aulo racing becomes the most
widely exposed of all TV sports. Compared even with the
baseball arxl football marathons aulo racing has no real season
of the year. and it has in(inite wriety of sight and sound.
Jl has something for everybody. Every kind of machine
fre»n dragsters to dune buggies, and personality from Johnny
Reb stock car drivers to world champion Jackie Stewart.
The Golden Era or auto racing popularity Les Richter a111d
the oi.her visionari es have talked about is off to a good
st.art.
Rider• \111fneroble
•·A bad motorcycle crash 1s t'lickening to watch bttauSt
the rider Is so vulrierable," seys Joe Scalzo in hi!ii fascinatirig
biography. "Racer: The Story or Gary Nixon." Parkhurst
Publishing Co .• SS.95.
Tbe violent world of motorcycle racing is (issected, analyzed
and eulogizld by a sen.sil.ive writer who once viewed the
!iiport from the saddle of a racing two-wheeler h.imseU. Scalzo
(.°i!Dtinues:
"The average race car driver, for example, Is belted in
and surrounded and protected not only by the car's body
flff his head. But the motGrcycle rider -witb nothing more
than bis helmet, Jtadded lealher suit and wits to protect
blm -is tompletely on his own."
Rocer llurdfes Tl1ro11gl1 Air
"In 11 bad spill the raa?r is usually thrown clear or hi~
ike. He hurtles through the air. Fences and crashwalls and
her unyielding objt-cts come up to greet him.
"All the smart riders know that crashes are inevitable
nd prepare for them accordingly. Usually a crash will be
armless enough: !he-rider throws his bike into a corner
oo fast. inertia catdles up with him and he loses the back
heel and goes down.
"If he slides long enough and doeSJ1't hit anything, he
will probably jump up uninjured. his leather suit having kept
tum free of road bums. Frequently the rider ~·ill be able
to retrieve his bike and restart the race .
·• 'I tell everyone,' Sammy Tanner once said, 'that H's
not how fast you're going when you fall off, ifs how hard
you hit something.·
"Bart Markel blunlly said, 'ir you don't gel orf 00« in
awhile, you're not racing hard eaough.' ,. --------
4th Annual
Franchise and
Business
Opportunity
Show
Fincl out how you
''C•n 9et in busines'
for yourself" by
visitin9 this
supermerket of
8usines1 Opportunities.
75 Compenie1 from all
o.-er the United State1
Girls Camp
A girls sports camp is In
the offing at Estancia H i g h
Sdlool tor girls age .six
through 13.
Camp director Joe Wolf'~
program begins saturday and
runs through Junt 1S.
The curriculum t n c 1 u d e s
softball, track aod field, swim..
ming, agility and body
dl'velopnlenl.
Emphasis is placed on skill~.
technique. rules and etiquette.
C0!>1 of the program. which
runs rrom 9 a.m. -noon tach
Lions Host
CIF Meet '
S~turday
Track and field pbeooms
!rom all six <l<IQ&O County
""1> leagues plOI 'COlllpOIJtort
from three other loops wUI
conve-ge on Westmin!ter High
Saturday for one ol !our Cli'
prelimlnarles.
Field events art slated for
11 :SO wJth runni.DC evenls
some an hour later.
lrvin·e Spike Stars
Ranked 2nd CIF • Ill
By Pun. llOS8
01 tr1e o.u., ,.... lttif
The Irvine League proved
It& formidabllity "' the tinder
paths in the 1970 tJypolbeUcal
DAILY PILOT track and lleld
meets for both the ClF
Southent Section and orange
County.
while the other Orange County the -IGanko. GtoYa
1._ were well boelt of the loop. \ 1 pact. 'Ille Slllioot was tblrd wtlh
The top two couoty loops :II with the Orqo (llll).
tted kw the pr<mier IPol in Ji'reewl)' (11) and Cmtvte.,
th• 2IO wlill Zl.I marts by (17) roondlng out the llCOrlng
Santa Ana'• Jackie Wbke 'in order. '
!Sunset) and Eotancla's Dive 'Ibo ltvtae loop led the....,.
John5"1 (!'Vine). ty :plncle in number ol !Im
Gauchos
Rate High
Nationally
Saddleback CoUege'1 Paul
Cox and Bob· Stevens eontJnue
to be llalod •IDOll& the ellte
of the top junior college tract
and field performers Jn Ille
U.S.
C.1 has a top Javelin lht°'!
of 208-6, which ranks him
ninth In the nation. Willi• Franklin of Mesa, Am. bu
the bett toss (251~). In a dd ition to the
Weotminst« meet. the three
other locaUoos for Saturday's
prellms art at Long Beach
Wiboo Hll!h. Ont.rio's Chaffey
H1gti anc1 senune1 F><ld in
Inglewood.
The pair or Oil-paper .meets
were based on winning marks
compiled in the various league
finals meets throughout the
section and county the past
two weeks.
The Irvine J>l"'Valled in ,placen with five outrllbt wtn.
the 180 low burdl., where SA .. n and a tie with the SWJSet N*"" C-h Stevens turned 1:5.1.S I~ 11111 to Weilnesilay's 500 ·
California JC spike pr.eltms
at Bakersfield, the 14th best
time ln the: U.S. His prevtouJ
best was l :M.J.
Valley's Ktlth Otn!ioa Otw to lii ·Uie DJ: a JU cloctlng to outdo other ~ surpris!ns 1 r v I n • Dalo Hagey Is the new
CIF hurdlen. Le--Jn the N e w p o r t Harbor IDgh
-ln ClF competition the
Irvine loop toot a back seat
to on1y the Sky League, which
features talented groups from
Morningside, Palos Verdes
and CUiver City among ilS
membership.
Another Ottt pla<e e I Io rt aeo. (l:SUJ, 1111 lowt (II.I), basketball coach, replac-
for the county was J 42.0 mile rtily (S:%3.7). high jump iog Dave Waxman, who
In the 440 rolay by Sanla (I-SJ Md lalg Jump (11-1). served two years as Tars
Ana, !~ch tlod . the Sunset The '°""""1>1ace <rarden boss, Hagey was jayvee
loOp or NoJ 1 In tbe race Grove CGnfederatloa wu first tutor in t.hat period,
Tw u.1. ~ s.1111 M.Ml• County ath1elel from the
Crestview, Freeway. Irvine,
Garden Grove, Orange and
Sunset Jeagues will j o In
representatives of the
Angelus, Santa Fe a n d
Sub urban loops at
Westminster.
with the Coast League. in the 440; ('8.1) aftCt pole ---------E~ Modeua3 Dave While vaull (14'!) irhlJe the &wet cloc~ a !:01,~, in \IJe \wo manqid wins In the 100 (U)
mile to Provide 8ie cmtview and 440 relay (42.0) In addition
League . with it& looe gold to.ha lie in \he furlong.
medalilt in the €IF meet. The Orallge, Crestview ind
the "Irvine "Circuit ran oft Freewl)' loops pOeketed single wftb the county's six-league, wlDI ln Ule lit hlghe (14\S),
hypothetical clambake,Jick-the. two mile (1:07.5) and shot
IOI -£drmomo!I f!Mrrltl), t.>1
Gr~ (Myrrw. Okie.I. Ford. CMtr·
rltl), t .. 1 D«brll fL.AttJ, W-1111 (t.•ct1 ... ot1w (OdHI&. Ta..t.
'"'
The sprints and hurdles
shape up as the hoUest bat·
ties.
The Sty C~cuit piled up
26 points to 22~ for Irvine .
spikers. The Sunset League
placed filth with J8lh points
Santa Ana's Jackie White,
with bests of 9.7 and 21.6.
should pretty much bave his
way in bis dash heats while
Loara's Steve Elkins .(21.7)
is entered in the same furlong
heat with White.
Coaches Tab
All-Irvine
Ing up 59\1 points to for put• (51-1%).
Hypothetical CIF Me!ll
11111 -I. Tie Sunset (t.6), San Antonio.. (t.6) 3. Tie Irvine
(9 .8), Orange (9.8), Del Rey (9.1), Sierra (I.I), Moore (I.I),
Sky (.98).
••
Kirk. Oo!Yll0111.>tJ P-ars. COmlllolt C1rtef", Bot!llt
ICl\Ucloon. Tlll"rlnct Whitt, Santi AM
C11t1t, SI.mil¥ Hiii•
Horn .. El•,.,,._.,
JohMor\. l!ll.llr
LIC0te, Hirt
D•sllllll. Comi>t1111 12t ITU•li)
l i!»w, Hatti! l•lv~)
.Jehnlon, E111ncl1
Wfll", S1flf1 A111
Alllllnct.I', ComPton Elklnt. Lotrl Hollll.E~ :bl CSTUIGHTI
Hieb, Mornlfltlllclt Hicks, Monlifltls!Or Slll~r,p.ilm VtrOK ..
Hlrtl. Mo111lr111ldt l(nyZG1l1k, Glrdtn Grov1r
Rob!-PolY
H1rrtn. Santi An1
Calwttl, H1wlllome • ...
KHll"ll, Mornlnt1hl1
Fr1ne~, Whlllltr
Mosts, P11ad-
Senlaf, Montclair
Hutlwlck, L11u111 B~h
MILE
Johmon. Wnt Tarr1nct
Whitt, El Modtnt
P1!ttr111n, Bllholt MOrtltomerY
Murr1v. Mira C111I•
Woolll\I, El Maclttll
TWO MILi
Whllt, El Modena
.>ohnoon. WeJ! Torr1nc1
GrM<. Ltk~
S1utr. MIHH1111
.>oh-. Mlr1 Cost1 I• HIGH HUIOLl!"I
H1!I, MOml,,.,sldt
Ector, P1lo Veroe (lltytr.t) s..,.,,u, c~
JK~. Lom...,c
Cook., Cllr-t
G1ltt.er, Poty McNtl~ 811dw111 P1r'
IM LOW HUIOLl:S
~nson, $11111 AM V1lllJ
Hiii. Mornl"'1SIOt Cook, Clar-I
O.vl1, Stnll Ant
Mc.lll1t .. , lllllr
Hendrick., MOtnlnnlCll"
Camolo!'I S.nll An•
C1nt,,.,,11!1!
Ooml»11ue1
LDlfl
Poty
C~nltnnlal
Mcrnlne110e
8 1&1•
Polv
CornPloll Ooml,,.,utr
G1rd-fn GrO\le
... ll!~AY
-" HIGH JUMP
Fu!ktrson, Stnll fe
lr11r1m, MOrnl11<111de
Frldrlch, LamPOC
Koll'ltk. M U!lk1n Prlu, Templt CltY
LONG JUMP'
Mc.lllbltr, &111r
Brown, Lont 8H-th Pot~
OrN, Sorn •
81tlst1, l.-l!le1c.l'I Pol1 Krrv1oll1k, G1ro.n Grove
"Ne VAULT H1mtf. S111t1 91rb.lr1
ICHbler, UPll!ld
T udltr. G1ne1h1
V1tH. l»11leWOOO'
HUI, M1yt1lr
K rl"IJ, Sl11l1 Mtrl• Wll~zYrnkl, No•re o • ..,.
SHOT PUT
Wllhrow, P11deM
F•tbur11, Sin M••lno
ScMll1r, Ml111~on
P111el, Fu!ltrlOn
McC•"· Ce11ten11lat OISCUS
M(Oonou!lh, Mon!e Vis"
Ev1n1. Or~"9t Oslrum, Or11111e
Frtbvr11. Sin Morin<>
Rime•. Corona del Mor Lvoaon. Foun11ln Vtlle1
Selections 111 -t. Tte 1rv1n• c2u1, sunset (ILi) s. Tie Citrus s.11
u (21.7), Hacieoda (21.7) 5. Del Rey (21.1). !:: Four Orange CoaM area 44' -1. Sky (41.3) 2. TJe Garden Grove (ill.I), Co&!llt (ii.I) :~ 4. Tie Freeway (48.9), Moore (48.9).
::: ~=pfi~a:~HOflp:~:e~l-I~~~ u: Sanl.AnSt?._1~1(:15455.1)•)2.5 BTiay 1Ct:Sf:.l(l) SSli. Camino Real (1:55.0)
t.1 League team as selected by Mil. ~Ci 'a.·hD . e rvme : .7;, Moore (1 :55.7).
::; th ches of the . "t t ....1... 1. trus ' (4:20.0) 2. FreeWay (4:21:1.2) 3. Moore
•Dcoa "-~-1 ~~~~ ·M f4:20.3) 4. Bay (4:Z0.1)'5. Pacific (4:21.5). "' J1 ,6 ,,,
Jl.7
11.7 "·'
ave D<U·wu o .............. esa Two Ue "'--'--" ) · (first base) M'k Roberts f . m -1. "''~~Y1ew (9:07.5 2. Bay (l:Ol.5) 3. Sky F-·~ . v' 11 ' 'C 0d (9:21.7) 4. Moort (9:22.3) 5. Rio Hondo (9:28.8).
uwn.8.Jn a ~y 5 e c 0 n 1%t HU -1. Sky (lS.9) 2. Moore (14.2) ). Tie Orange
base). Stan Clippen or Co<ona u4.31, San Antonio (14.3) s. Irvine (H.4).
21 ., del Mar (outfiel~r) and utih-tit LR -I. Irvine (18.9) 2. Tie Sunset (lt,O), San Antonio ~::~ ty pla.yer G':g Powers of ll9.0) 4. Sky (19.1) 5. Moore (19.2).
Estancia were included on the •• Rdiy _ l. Tie Sunset (4.2.0), Coast (U.O) s. Irvine (42.4) ~:~ first team. 4. Foothill (42.5) .5. Moore (4.2.5). !:~ Player of the year ts catcher MUe relay - L Foothill (3:21.2) 2. Coast (3:21.4) 3. Moore
"'·' Rudy Sgont.z of Loara. <3:23.5) 4. Irvine (3:23.7) 5. Sunset (3:24.0~ AH•lrvlM LN IU. 1:s2.1 1"1rs1 T .. "' HJ -1. Rio Hoodo (6-So/,) 2. Tie Citrus elt (M), Hacienda 1:s.1.si Vince. Loar• P '-'° ("), PJoneer (") S. Irvine 16-5). l::M.?n &OIO.... SA V11!r'I' P ._I
i :s.15.• s"°"1i. L01r1 c .m L.J -I. Camino Real (2~) 2. Foothill (23.9) 3. Irvine
l :S..:ln 81r1cm, Co111 Mesa 1e ."6 123-1) 4. Tie Sky (22-IO'h), Citrus Bell (22-IOlh).
•:U .& Gree11. M1tnall1 • 11!1 A1 PV s Ti G d G 4,15_, 11:-11, Foun111nv111e~ Jl!I .u1 -I. an Antonio (14-6) 2. e ar en rove (1-ul),
•;16.1 stand•er. Loer1 ss .lll Coast (lU) 4. Rio Hondo (13-11=!~) 5. Del Rey (13-10 ). 4:16.t Wolverton, ~r• OF .380 SP 4:11.1 cr1ppen, Cof'Oll• de1 M•• oF .Jt1 -I. Foothill (63-51h) 2. ~1oore (60-101h) 3. Freeway
e11nc1. S•n1• AM viuer OF .J59 (59-2'14) f. Bay (53-1) S. Santa Barbara County (57-9). o·OJ.O
t :05.0
. 9;06.•
•:11.1 t :IJ.I
13.1
U.1
H .1
14.1
14,\
U.1
" ' 11.I 11,I
lt.O
l t .O ". lt.O
3 2"0.~ 3 2"0.0
3 :I0.1
l io.1
] 21.4
J 11.• l ,1.,
····~ •·• .. , ..... , ....
l•·ll '·1''? ,..,
71·10'' n-1•~
...... ... ...
l•?· , ... , .. ,
14·1'.
H•ll->
'" •l·l &?·ll':f
61·11
5t ,5
111.11
111 s-
169· 10'1? ••• 161 ·!''
159·1
P-eo. Est111d• Ulll ..(10 s~ TN m FINAL SCORING: I. Sky (26) 2. Irvine (22lf.:) 3. Moore
~~oo;:,~~j1111ev ; ~~ (21)· 4. San Aftlonio (19) s. Sunsel (181/z) 6. Foothill (18)
snydlf, C0t0111 dtl Mtr c :m 7. Coast (11) 8, Citrus Belt (13) 9. Bay (10) 10. Frttway :~:.,-;s·L~;~ 1: ~ (91A) 11. Camino Real (9) 12. Garden Grove f7) 13. Crestview
Ne111, cas11 Meu JI .lll (5) 14. Hacienda (51/z) 15. Orange (3'h:) 16. Tit Del Rey Kirl5fllan, Mlllnolla SS .M1
M!ski. ~no111 oF .•u 12), Rio Hondo (3), Pioneer (3) 19. Tie Pacific (1), Sierra
P1lrner. c ......... o.1M"" OF .m (l) Santa Ba bar Count (I) Mltch<l!I, Fou11t1ln V1Urr OF .l6S ' r a Y •
Tyler, !.cllson U11i .M.S
BRIEFS •••
(Continued From Page 171
Ken Rosewall of Australia into
submission 6-1, 3-6, 6-1.
Hypothetical Orange Coo.nty ft.feet
191 -1. Sunset (11.6) 2. Tie Irvine (9.1), Orange (9.8) 4.
Garden Grove (t .9) 5. Crestview (10.1).
!%8 -I . Tie Irvine (21.6), Sunset (21.6) 3. Garde• Grove
(22.1) 4. Orange (22.3) 5. Crestview (22.6).
440 -J. Garden Grove (48.8) 2. Freeway (48.9) 3. Irvine
(49.2) 4. Sumet (49.3) 5. Orange (50.0).
S8t -I. Irvine (1:55.7) 2. ~reeway (1:56.2) 3. Orange (1:57.4)
• 4. Garden Grove (1:58.0) S. Crestview (1 '58.6).
OAKLAND _ 'l'he annual Mlle -1. Freeway (~;20.2) 2. Irvine (4:22.0) 3. Garden
E t W t Sh · r t b l I Grove (4:23.l) 4, Crestview (4:26.5) 5. Sunset (4:27.5).
as · es dda"d""d 0
1° 11 pos' t Two mile -I. Crestview (9:07,5) 2. Tie Sunset (9:27.3),
game, gran Y 0 a • G d G (9·27 3) 4 F (9·38 3 5 I · 19·43 5) season collegiate a J J • s t a r ar en rove · · · reewa~ · · · rnne . . -
games and a fixture on the lll ~ -1. ?range (14.3) 2. Irvine (14.4) S. Sunset (14.S)
San Francisco Peninsula since 4. Tie Crestview (14.8), Freeway (1 4.80) .
l9'l5, will be played next Jan. lit Uf -1. Irvine (11.9) 2. Sun.wt (19.0) 3. Orange (19.4)
2 in the Oakland Coliseum. 4. Garden Grove (19.5) 5. Freeway .<19.9).
440 relay -I. Sunset (C.O) 2. Irvine (42.4) 3. Garden Grove e (42.8) 4. Orange (43.0) 5. Tie Crestview (4S.1)1 Freeway
KANSAS CITY _ The Allie relay -1. Irvine (3:23.7) 2. Sunset (3:24 .0) S. Freeway
Kansas City Royals atu1ounced (3:24.S) 4. Ga.rden Grove (3:~.S) 5. Orange (S:21.I ).
the signing Thursday of two HJ -I. . Irvine ~6-5) 2. Tie Sunset (6-4), Garden Grove
or their top selections from (6-4 ) 4. Tie ~stv1ew (6-2), Freeway (6-2), Orange (6-2).
the January free.agent draft. U -I. Irv1•e ~23.l) 2. Garden Grove (22-9%) 3. Orange
They are Greg Minton of (22-7114) 4. Crestview (22·2) 5. Sunset (2U-l).
San Diego, the Royal's No. PV -I. Garden. Grove (14-0) 2. Irvine ll3--0) 3. Orange
3 pick, and John Joseph of (22-711•) 4. Crestview (22-2) 5. Sunset (21·11).
San Leandro, the No. s choice. SP -I. Freeway (59-2%) 2. ~arden Grove (55-101/1) 3. Orange
Minton is a right-handed , (55-4) 4. Sunset (55-31/z) 5 .. Irvine (54-10%).
pitcher who .<rlands 6-foot-2 and FINAL SCORING: I. Irvine (59~) 2. Carden Grove ~44)
weighs 180. He pitched for 3. Sunset (38) 4. Orange (31¥.:J 5. Freeway (19) 6. Crestview
San Diego City College, ! 17).
Majo,. League Standirigs DEAN LEWIS
MAY SPIC IA LS
NATlONAL LEAGUE
Easl Division w L Pct. GB
Chicago " IJ .552
New York 16 16 .500 1••
SL Louis " 15 .48.1 ' Pittsburgh 15 l8 .455 ,
Philadelphia 13 19 .4-06 41,
Montreal 10 20 .333 '" West Division
Cincinnati ,. 9 .727
Atlanta 18 13 .581 5
Dodgen 18 14 .56.1 5'>1
Houston 17 J7 .500 71•
San Francisco 17 JS .4116 8
San Diego 15 21 .417 IO'A
Tt111rH1y'1 lt111lll
S1. Louis 11, Plltlbu•gll I Houlton J, Sin OllVO l
o.dt .... '· s.~ "•~ncl9cn J Mon!rNI 11 "hlla<lel!lhl4. r4ln
New "°'~ II Chlc~go ••• 1~ Onl~ Q.ll'N!I 1checlulecl.
T•1y'1 G•-t
New YO!'t /Seever '-I! •I Phlledt lpfll1 !l'•Y·
t1111n M>. nl9f11
MonfrNI CMcGl11n 1·1) ., Pltli.IM.lroh iv ... i...
t-l), l!lglll
Cllk tflCI !Dt<lr.ff l 11 11 St. LC>IJil C70f"f'tl 1.J),
n'9ht
Atlan .. {Nl111 4.1) It (Inell!""'" INOl'n ~11,
nfOll! ~II Fruicltoto I ller...,. •·•) •I DMltffl ()\lt!Ofl
'·•), n!Qllt H6ut>t'M f!oo11"1 0.01 II lift 0 lftl0 (Ootllon
).JI, nllJl!I
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Baltimore
Detroit
New York
Boston
Washingtoo
Cleveland
Angeli
Minnesota
Oakland
Chicago
Kansas City
~1ilwaukee
\I
51>
,71>
t \I
10\1
[!][Ql[y]PJT l[jJ[
CQROLLA 1970
$1853 +r .. &u •.
All OtW Mffeh; I• StMlr
MM ls-Hll•z Pleb,_.
L .... C ...... n c .....
VOLVO
Raceway's
Old' Mark
Menaced
The loogest standing tra(k
records to the history of
Orange County International
Raceway wtll be endangered
ta Slturday's top fuel dragster
OOlllPelition.
Qualifying starts at 2 p.m.
with races at 7 p.m.
Tom Mc.Ewen set the elaps-
ed time standard of 6.64
seconds back" in 1961 and that
mark still nmaiM as a track
and national record.
The late John Mulligan
breezed to the lop speed
record of 229.59 mph in '68
and that mark was matched
by Virginian Tom Raley Jast
year at a national record meet
in New Jersey.
Thirty top fuel drivers have
signed up for Saturday's 16-
car eliminator contest with
a $4,000 cash purse offered.
Top area threats are Gary
Cochran and Lou Baney or
Fountain Valley and Dana
Point's Don Enriquez, y,tJo will
be driving the twin engine
"Double Eagle".
LA County champion Arroyo
and Orange County represen-
tative Valencia will knock
heads In between the top fuel
elimination rounds in the Ford
High School S cho I a r ship
Finals.
For every girl
a ring •.• we
hove one for
every girl ...
220 -GltU1~ C£11t LA\. 70);
Dedl1rd fl.ACX:), 20.1; l"Otll, :IO.t/ Wll.
llam1 ~I"), JI.If Edirr*l-.,Ha"
tlaon, Vllltrl;NI (l"oothilt), 71.t.
..... -Eclm6nioft. O.J1 S!Vdlt"f f"Mitr-
rltO, '1.7r Tl•l1 IMlamj.0.0t, Fla.I,
•7.71 W<llJll llllMt9'. T ... ), She'"
1wt11r10n, r ... ,, coo1c lC11&;t1t, P.a.
• -J1C111ues l...,...cOI•, •FJ:l·l•
1:90.r; LOUC111 fNIW M1xlca JCJ,
\:SI.II S.nelltr fMoorNrt), 1:5!.11
L_...,. fil.mer1c111 llllYWI, 1:G,t1
WIU11m1 fMi.ml-0.CS., Fl1.I, 1;12.1.
011\t<"s: lhvtn1 !Slldl:llebldll, 1;53.1.
Miis -W\'1111 !M1n1tn, F11. I,
4:07.IJ lk.oril.wl11 fSPOk1n1l, 4:0'.0I
Hltd'lcoel( Ullkfft"1ld), 4:M'.t t. tVck•
Jff IMIMIN), 4:11.0; V1ltnela !G'-i-
mont), 4:10.I.
2-111 -Buril.w!1t. 1:!2.l J Hltd'lcodl,
l:5'.J1 Emlf1l1111 (Gten.Hl1, Arlr.J,
t:OG.,1 C-t fl.A V1ll1Y), t :11.•1
EY1n1 !PIMlde-nl}, t :t.1,1,
120 llltih flurdl" -ltbtl fl.AC('),
1._lr J-IS.n DletiO), "-'I W1$11<
IMIDll lMurr1~, Okl1.), 8r1Mlu1 (,..,..
lf"I-Vtt!IY), HodN1 (S.11 J1dnlo. Ttx.), 14.1. ..e 1111. llurc1111 -Ht"""" IG'-
111111, J1d<1an IM.s.1, Arlt.I, SJ•1
Glllwl fMlrrltlJ, 57.t i MtCrtn" IN-
Mnlc.o JC), 53.l. .. tnn (Ml. S.11 A/II'
bllo). 1'.•.
Hlvfl lump -HoHlnt (Ml., C•l1l.
11,_n {LACC), 7..0t lrldle'I' (P1 ..
11111.11), 6-lOV.; F11tcher" {F,1tn0), 6-101
Cl.lrlt {81kfflfltld), Tiii'" (Miami.
Dldot, Fll.J, c-•Y IMoornrkl, "'"'·
POI• ¥1Ult -ltldllnb (Ml. Sin A"" '°"'°'· Crydl!' (MIH. Arlr.), Htrdtten fFrHl'IOl. 16-0; Chew lCtlru1J, 15'7/
KM-(LA V•111Y). 1.MV..
L-lump -Hiii (Ml, S.11 A,nlon-lo),
JU; Sllld:IY (M9'rltll, W•ll•c. COcles-.a. Tn .I. 2UV.; "1rrym1n fW.,t
Hll1JJ, 2~·714: Ft1'9traon lMtrcfd),
0.MIS (Victor VllllY), 2•"6'h.
Triple lumP-J1ckH!! fMl'llt. Arti.J,
S0--6; Fl"Mm•ll IS1n JOH!. "'..&'Al Bultl
{1!"111 LAJ, 4'·J\.'J; Smith (lllktnlleldJ,
'9·2V,; K1lltv (P1s.adtn1>. -111·&.
Shot P\lt -W11ktr 1SPokane. W1tll.l,
57·2-l>I C1!hc1rt (Ch1fftv), 56-.J; BIW"n
IAmerlct n Rlvtr). S.·IPl1 Pow1!!
tNe-w Metlco JC), Jll-11~l; E1p1n1
($111 Joie), 53-9¥1.
OllCUI -f'a ..... 11 IM•n••tt. 1'11.J.
11'-9V,; M1•1f11ll !Wt1I tfll11), 1Tl•Tl l
Hlm1n !Weil VllleYJ, 1'7-5: F1il
(!1krr1fleldl, U7·S; N1¥t ISPGll1111l,
166-10.
J1yfiln -Frlnklln (M111, Arl1.1 •
252-4: s1 ... e111 1Ne-w Mnlc:ol. 2~;
GrlHll COklt , Chrl11!1nl, 1•1·11; lluf;k
!S-.lnolt, Fla.), 215.0; McOoDlld
(Oll!1, Chrl1ti1nJ, 21M. Othrn: COii
IS.ddl~ck), 20M.
UI relay -Merrln, 40.I; Odtint,
T1>:~ •1.0; Lubtlocl:, Teii., LACC. 41.2'
MUHl"f Stile, Ofllt., ll.),
Mlle rtl•'I' -New Mt>:ico JC, 3:14.01
Mttrllf, l :U.1: 811M, Tu, J:IS.31
Plen:t, l ;U.4-
Revel in t}w: feel of Confovto -the
ring crafted to fit your finger. Choose
one of these sets in l 4 koro1 white o r
yellow gold. llh.rstro.tions enlorged.
Vf.11"'9111
lOt.M ''" U!
~-Tilt Stort: Tltat Cunfidet1cr. Built''
E•'Y ,,..dlt t1rl'l'l1 e Stude11t •C.tounh
•v1i11ble e Up to 11 ••i°onth' to P•V·
Kit!. Cl.1r9• e l.n!.AM1ric.1rcl e M11t11 Ch•t9•
H_..llfttllll c ... ,., ._,.a ... .......,
~ .... ~·-·
OPl.M MON., T'tlUltl., r•• . .,.,.._' r.M.
•re on di1r.l•y •ncl
looking for renchi1ee1
encl •••ocietH in
Orenge County •nd
surrounclinq •rees.
Saturday i:s $12 per child. Ii---------------------... -.. ---: 1970 DEMO
SAVE $570
May 14-17
Disneyland Hotel,
• Anaheim
Admlulon $2.lO
' f l
Di scus Trial!! DE AN L ·E W 15
CIF' Southern Section discus ;-... trial' to .i.termin• stat• .,.,.1 , 1966 HARBOR BLYu., COSTA MESA 646-9303
qualifiers will be held Monday, j Sarvice •nd Parts for All Imported C1r1
142 J d1., 11dio, •••fer, 4°t1'9.d. I Stir.
••1•01
USID CAI mctAL
1t'I TOYOTA c:.r-. H.T.
Clll. lttelo, tltlM, ... .,..., !lftdtu !Op. l\fay 25 al Cerritos College Modern Body Shop for All Can
In Norwall, $14'5
Competition b<J;lN at 2, i; 11 ___ (.lr·a-ng:.•.C•o•u•n~ly.'•.L.•.rg:.•.sl•a•n•d•M•os-t •M•o•der_•.T.oy:Oo.ta•a•n•d•V•o•lv•o•Deal-·er--..!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:.
CKC>K Ull
p.m. tr,
·-~·------~-
50 l'tllles Added
:!. !Jermitda Racing .. ...;·~
.. , Course Changed
.. .
200, Yachts
"fu Unique
Sailing Meet
·A~ estimated 200 yachts are
exptcted to participate In one
o{ 111c 11ation's n1ost unique
!Hilling eveMts, the 311nual
Columbia Rendezvo u s .
:-cheduled for the \veekend of
September 19-20.
Wilh Catalina l s l a nd' s
Isthmus Harbor the destina-
tion. approximately l e n
classes of Columbia Yachts
--,ranging in length from 22
111 57 feet -will depart from
four Southern California ports.
St<iggercd starting t i mes.
·computed a c c o r d i n g to
diSl<1nces to the Isthmus aAd
pre~ailing wind and sea coo-
dJ"tlon's, will be announced.
Points of departure will in·
elude Long Beach, Los
Angeles. Redondo Beach and
l'itarina de! Rey.
''!'his arrange1nent allow!
5~i})pcrs of Columbia 22's and
·Columbia 26 's the opportuitity
of poss ibly crossing lhe finish
Jin~ at the same time as the
1$W~ft sailing big Columbia SO's
and Columbia 57·s. This year's
"Rendezvous "·ill be the first
in which three new Bill Tripp
_creations, the Columbia 57.
Columbia 43, find the yet-to-
be-Jaonched Columbia 34 Mark
l~ will participate.
IGel Pushes
Olympics
Sailing Site
Construction work" for the
Olympic sailing center at Kiel,
r.ermany, ar£' running ac·
1·ording lo plan. according to
the Olympic Press.
1'~oundations for the Olympic
huildings were laid A1arch I.
·rhe buildings should be finish-
ed by Nov. 5, 1970.
The 1972 Olympics will be
held in Sept. 1972 al 1'.1unich,
111e sit£' of the sailing e vents
ls at Kiel. some 560 miles
\(\. tke north.
: ~tticipants in the sailing
ev.~ts "'Ill be flo"-o by special
.ai~ft to J\1unich Aug, 26
fQr.: :pi(' opening ceremonies
and 'on Sept. 10 for lhe closing
111..;,
The sailing regattas "'ill last
f'>om Aug. 29 until Sept. 6.
' :·
~ ·-;
~ • ~ ~ ,,
)
~ '
1l ~ •
i I~ •
~ ---• ' ,. • • . • •• • • . • •
• • •
'
•
The Bermuda T • c e com-
mlttto of the Cruising Club
o~ America has &lllOlmced •
change from the prevloualy
announced race course which
was lo have ·taken the neet
around Nantucket Li g b t
Vessel.
The Rew race cot1Ne, as
armouaced by Walter T .
F lower, r~ chalnnan, will
be from BreatoA Tower off
Newport, R.l. direct to the
TeiaS Tower on Argus Bank.
approximately 25 m i 1 c 1
southwest of Bennuda.
The fleet will leave this lo
port and proceed east along
the south coast of Bennuda,
finishing between a committee
boat and St David's light.
It is estimated this will add
50 miles to lhe old Bennuda
race course.
As or April 15 -wilh some
foreign countries yel to be
heard from -there we~ 147
ocean racing sailboats entered
in the 27th bierutial Newport
lo Bermuda classic scheda.led
to get under way June 20.
The mid-April tot a I was 20
below ttie record set In 1966,
AdditiOM aad dropouts were
expected to change the total
before the start.
Five previous v.inner! -
three under different owners
-will be trying ag&n. They
are Argyll, Chee Chee V (e'll'.·
Carina), Gesture, Malay, and
Thunderbird.
Owners who have won
previously aRd are trying with
different boats are Richard
Nye, Ted Hood (the 196! win·
nerl and Vblce"t Larson.
Ted Turner o( Atlanta, Ga ..
has entered his 12-meter sloop
Americu Eagle, winner of
this year's Southern Ocean
Racing Circuit in Florida.
Five Champs
In Sunday's
Drag Races
At least five v.·orld record
holders will be on hand Sunday
at Skiland as the National
Drag Boat Association
presents ils annual Drag
Dynamics.
Racing at Ski1aitd, the home
racev.·ay fOf' the NODA, is
slated to" start at noon with
tuning and time trials getting
undl"r way at 8 a.rn,
Mike Donnell of Orange,
v.1ho established the unblown
fuel flatbottom mark last
month at Skiland al 124.90
and Roy Gollott3 w h o s e
"Swamp Rat" set the blown
gas hydro record at 146.93
while racing at Oakland
earlier this year. are the
"ewest record holders liet to
go Sunday.
Veteran Ray Caselli and his:
"Panic 1.1ouse" leads the
blown fuel flatbottom com-
petitiOJll. He established the
world standard at Skiland at
146.87 but will face stern bids:
from "Big Kahuna" piloted
by Gary Cornwall and Tom
Archibald's "Californian''.
Tujunga's Mike Masino, who
owns both the blown gas and
u11blown gas flatbottom marks
in "Playmate" and "Holy
Smokes" will again be run11ing
in both events.
" · 1
"
~li11l.:edo1vn for Cup
Kerltage, oUicially labbed U.S. 12-meler. No. 23
look to the waters of TamJ?a Bay this week in her
flrst shakedown before sailing on her own bottom
to Long Island Sound for the preliminary trials to
detern11ne y,.·hich American yacht "'ill de.fend the
.i\mer1ca '! f'up. l leritagc \Vas designed and bulll
hv Cha rles Morgrui of St. Jletersburg, Fla. Morgan
\\.Ill also be helmsman.
..
'
l
F1ldU, Mq 15, 1970 DAILY l'ILDT Jt
•
LEO.!L NOTICE JJOGAL NOTIC& LEGAL NOTICE
MOTICI IWITUI'• •Mt• C••Tl•ICA'fli °' •u11•eu ..... ,.,., u•,.,. •
ni. (¥H'!l'f laflllol...,. Dktrktt ., JltcTrTIOUS f!IAMI •OT•c• o• T•USTll't MLI NOTtC• Of',01•1.111..T ANO wt.ltTlOlll
OrallH Ctunfy, C.I~ wltl ,......,. TM ~ ... c"1HV" .. " ........ ,. TO llt..L u•o•• ..... TllUIT
M•i.d bltlt 11ntll 11:11 •·"'·• T....-.J', ~Ill • MIMM '1 1t1f (llerloJ On MMilff. N.'f 2S. I"" •t 11!• NO'llCI II Ml•llY •IVbh TWAT M•v M, ltJCI, •I Wllldl ffl'llt ttltJ' ltl'MI, c.M MtM.. Cell..,_, 11""' A,#.. IA\:IMO.\ , I H ""II' CI;. 1.. IN-Tl"T\.I INIUIU.ff(I ..... 1111U$T (OM. will M lllllllk.IY _... •lllf •-lllM ftle fk11"-flrl'll NlfM _, CU.llllU\ll COlll~RATIO, • _,..,..11911, •• •111Y ,AN'I', • WMtltt!M Iii •IJ' .......... •I 1119 offlc. .oC. tfle Olt!rlcta. lllMI •M fkt MW llPWI '9 .......... 'tf ..,.i,.,.. TrwfM unDW ulCI ~ "h'Vt ........ • o.911 f/11 TMt .... EUii Alltftllt1 ,_ .. Ill 'i•llt1, Ctllfor• tfle .. lltWllll """"" ...... NIM Ill fD 0eM ., Tl'yff ..... Aw\11t 7, Nlf11tt ti. Ifft. GKVtW Ir!' M•1 '°1.,
nl•, faf" TM lollDWlrw -II! 11,on """ .i.u ti rt•~ It " '*"""": ""· •ucllffd iw ,,.,._ " Mt!Chll"'• li.t\. • f!W'r... n'llft, .., Cfwrllt F Silt IMfl'•OVl.MINTI, ,HAii IY Vlctol' I", C_, 2t17 CMrlt, CtoU1 1 m1rrl .. m1111 •• 1>11 ..i. .ti. -r•ll WIOd Mii M.udt I!. weed. ~ ., fl'L.AMT NO. t Mtw. cent. _,.,., .,,.. ,_..., A\ll\l'ff 12, 1,., • ..,.. wtfl. IOlflttr ,.,. -•II\' .. TnAlor,
Job No. • i•s fltMllll O•tM ,_H tt. It" M 1 ....... No, tllff, 111 Moll tOlll, HM 11 MQWt CWfW'" ...... .._ In fl'IOf" Tll9 wtl II II .. 11111 ~Ill 't'lt1w t . C...,.,. Im,' ti Ofnde;I ill-* ill 11W tlflc. ttl ..... ..,, ~. llllt99,...,, •llo tr;_.. lo"" 111111 •11111 -Hlat ...... flit STATI Of' CAl..ll'OflNIA, ot ""' C-ewll¥' lttC•r••r « .. fllfliW "· lwtr .... ~f'Y •
11'1 tt1e otHn .. tfle Slcrlt.r? _, lltt OlilANGl COUNT'!': Or•-c.,my; C1ltt.nKI. ,_.... tilt/ ... H 1n1bw14lll -14.ICW. Obtrk.I and MW , .... 11111 ~"""" Oii Nlrll », ltJIO. ..._ nw. I Wll .... .t J1UM1c 911CfiM 11 ""'*' ... lllol 1'if. HM )Q. f/I Offklef
al'I to llt ,...,_., "*'-• ..... II trfotWY l'l.lbllc Ill •NI frw Mhl ltlta, ~ llf' allft l ... .,11\'9 .. fllM II illtcenlil Iii .... Oftklf .. 1111 lt-*f' lf\ll lltlk.t. .._...., ""9r'lt Vina' I . C.0-Mlt Iii a;.fl)I fMlltt' 11 1111 Ulliflcl .. Or..,.._ ~. C.ll!wM, llMcrlW..
llddtfl IN ......... MtiltM .... .,_ fl IN JI M ttle ..,_ ""*t llttlll •I .... S.,lfl (li'$0tl) tiflfrWCI ...,,. ...,.... lflc:Mllfll .,. llOttl ...... .,_,_nt II ,,....ltJtN ef ttle ........ ~ It WliKribM II 1119 wltlll11 lit-II lflt (_.,. ~. M llldl; lllli .,W: .. I -.. ...n.-... Mid
CO* ot ~ St•N ti C•HMnll•• tM ltrwNlot •NI .a-..... M 9111CUIM Wat km. AM l llld., ....._ AM, ........... ""'' !ht lltnel'lchll ltltw.,t llotl'Cll ot OINC!ln .. CWt'll\' ~ 1119 H-. C•ll~ •ft rltht, tllle •1111 In..,._. lllldll' well 0... ., T111tl Ind .,... Oitlrtct Ho. l fin -.rtfilllt(I tfle ..-1 .. IO.Ol'ICIAI.. llALl CllWWM tt 1M -ht .. ,,., tt Vl'ldtl' IDl ... llont -~ ""'*' ar1 .........,IV lrll r11t ot -1.iM1 w-Ill ... It, 1(11111 0111-Mid Olilif If TNlf 111 the "'°""" held IW ... Ulllltnltfl.tdt llllt • llrtaert loc•lll'f 111 whldl 1til1 Wtflt h " ..., Not•rv l'llllllc • C.llfitrftl• •""•""' Ill .... Cwnf'I "'°' It•• ...,~ ol. -"' ..,•ult In. ftl9 eti'l•-,,. ""°"""'"' lllllublt ~ tl\t _,. N Ofl .... Ceu!!l'I' .... ! wi'tlc:fl ilUlcll o..d ., Tt\111 I M<U'lf"' M lloflt, fl M •1 ftl•llM 11111 fllM M'f CM!MI ...... fQIN ut 11 .r Trtet HQ, lit tM tltJ' hH CICICV..,.... Ill llllt ...,,,...,. ... not 111 ~ ofllc• ot the C-'Y *"'"•11111 AHil r. 1'7t .. c .. i. Mt&ll, " Mr "'"' ,._..... '"'911 ITll'IN 9f1 Ol1!Tlc:l1 of Of•fltl C-IY. fl'ubll1,_. Or..... C1Mt Oll'I' l'llat, Ill lollll 16. ...... 111111 1. .Ml-I'--Tl'lto ._l•ll!Ntlt vi JM"llldNt l>lld ftcll lktckr inutt IN llHll... •lllf INJ" L IJ, tt. 2', mt .... ,. ~. Ill "" tlflct • 1111 cwf!tJo llllwtlf ...tilm -.rn. M ..... II 20,
"I ..... llfltd tt Plffolml .... --U1119111M ,_mr ...... C*lfll\I. 1170, ""' ,,.,.. -""'""'· n.. u ... 111 ltifte Docurntllh. I* Mid wlll M ,,..,,_, M wmw.n llln..,..., ,,,__ lllMflct.ry llllRr A •-I _,.111.. .. 1111 .... LEGAL NO'nCE -.flt ., W.ITMl\I, ........ OI .,,.,ti.id, S\ICJI °"" ., Tn.t, "" '1lfCll1td
!Mn i.11 ~ ''"'' .. tM .... 1 ,.....,,..,. fttk.. -••nler. rw 'fl' •M .. It_. 11 Mlf .,.., '"-int.d
bid ,_,nt >Ill~ __. -.di W ,._,,., ~ 19 ..., -. Pl'lnclNI -TrwJM, • """"" DKlfflnM "' •lld ""'I bl lfl fM firm .. • Ml CllTl .. ICATI O" IUStNltl 9f h ""'9 NCVr9ll bot Mid OMd Olhou/f •NI °"""""'..,. fOI" S.lt, Ind bOlrld or C•Mlfl''t or Cltt"ltf!M dltl:ll. "ICTrTIOUI of T,,,,.t, fl-Wit; mMOA Wlllt .........., hto1 -..nw """' """" -im.t11 ...'!Ible 1111 1119 Oltlrk:I. . n,_ ~"'""41 .... ""':.,111 ht '9 '""" lll"""IMr I, 1 ... , •• Ill Mid Tf\lthlt. Mft 0... of Trulll 111111 "'91;1flc.-tloim, 1114 l:i49nt;1, 11111 !'Urthtr ~ _,I Mtt ............. _,,,.PIC-.o If ...,., 11r!Cler •lt ~ ..,..,_lrlf '*ilNtloM
lntorrn111oi1 rn11 i. ~'''"'" •' flw nlM ..w •0r.n!. ~-!!.,.. c..t,•,-~· the ..,,,.. ti .... 0.-ti Trwl, f-. "'°"" !Mt...,. • 1111 dKllt"fd •bovt .-ddreu, 11....,_. ff!<Mll 01 ..._.,.y, I ,., di•-...... 911-.. 1IM TNIMI ~ ._ ._,...., cltdt'1i •ft Wfl'll
U>-2tJt ~~:ic'c'::. 1~ :t:r" ... "',, W •M If """ 1,,,..tt cr•tld w Mid titarw thtn&iv li'M'l'IMlltlly dU. '"d
Fred A. Ht•"'· Sott:r.t1rt I ~ 7 M 111'1 DIM rif Trwl, =:-:.~ •nd l'ltll .-CW •lld OOI•
llolrd ot Qlrtctor1 -~ llf the "9lltwlflll M,_, The IMMflcltrv 11!1111!' Mid OMd ot •Itel fl c.lllM fM tn.111 l'•-'1v 'ubll,htd Or11111 Cotil Dllll' '!lot, .. It ,.i:::.111 11,otl •lllf lllact rif mldtl!Ct Trw.t, 1i'1' ,..,'°" el • llrNch Ill' Get•ult 1rt bl IOll:I 19 .. """ .. Clbl'81llOt11
M•v 1s, 20. n10 ... 10 "••rv .,y1111, Vlnc•ftl 30603 1111., 111 1111 .tin•·'~ ll(ur1111 thenib'f, .. -... ~ ..... r ... ,•,,.· DI Stf MllJllu W t ' ..........,. ••to.!likl •llCI .. Hwrld " ,_.,
..... ·... " • Mlllbll, C1I. the 1111dtnlfMlll • Wflltill Otcl•rtl*" l""WI II . ..,,,..,,.,ff
LEG .. NOT!,.... H 'I ''w""v ot ~ •lld OlmtN .... S.lt. '"" nn.• lltlUltANC• A"D TltutT co. ,.... .....,. .,,,. · lllelftf wri1tt11 ~ ot WloKll 11W1 .r ~ • ...._ M9'9 ..... --------------1··~::. Cl~~ °"•"" C~ fl UllM 1111 """"""'ltnl'd lo •II Mid ...... ML C. ...... fl7tl T.J"MI M~ 111" ,.;.. ._' .~. to~ I Not9tT _,.., fl MlilfY MW lllillell'-. 111111 ......... --... -n~-N•ll<• of ••• TnlltlW .., -1,., ""'°"'9tlV ll'lll'Mlttw, efl J-ry 2'. f'71, 1M I _..... It.a """ltr U.C.C.) :_--rw ... """" .... wur. ~ ,_ ulllltnlt"'" c•1111d Mid Mllee el brMdl ,.., llOlltlGOIHG If " CO/l''f Ol't I!-:ans J• -.... ,.,. .... wh9l9 ..._ •l'!f 11 •llctlort It ... ,_-.. In "'NOTIC~j TH• OlllOINAL OF WHICH Notk~ h ........ 11Wn fl tfle CtWlfln h_,~111111 II tfl9 wllfll11 liltln;mll!I "* tiff, -1U. f/11 MMI Oflklel WAS Fli.aO fotl lltaa>lllD OH ~llllL ot ltOY Ct.ltVl!lt, INC. Rio lllOV • ..... -lld..,.i tit ti!~"" MIN. ltte....,._ U.. ltJll,, IN THe °"'ICE 0,. 1'H!: Ct.ltVElt PONTIAC. Tr1n1flrll". """"-(01' .. fCIAL Sl!ALI D•l•I A"11 TJ, ltl't COIJNTY illl"COllOIElt OF OltANOI!!: butl,._U l<ldrt .. It tnJ H•rtlor 81¥11., NMery I{, HMrl' S.lllldt fll11111e!1l flll'll(W•lld COUMTY AT SANTA ANA. CAllfO'tNIA, Co1t1 Me11. Countt' of Or•M•, !l•!>t otM"Y fl'lilllollc-C•tllwl'llt 11 Mid Tl'lll... ,uMllllMI Or-c:.tit rMllY ~lot. of C1lllor11l1, ltltol I 1111111; IT•,.,_, It "•lncll•I efl'ICI 111 T, O. Swvlclo (Dlftlltlll' IN'r 1, L 11, tt. ltl"t 11~111 1b0ut to IMP rnHe lo Gl!Nl!ltAL MOTOfll Or...,,, CMMIY ..... 111 CORPORATION ..ONTIAC MOTOR I 01· M., c-1111o11 l!••lres W•ldo 1111. H1111
SHIP PRESERVED -Giant balloon th"t can be
Inflated inside a boat was desi~ned to keep craft
afloat when holed-through or sinking !ro1n other
damage. Upper photo shows how device can be car·
ried aboard. Below. swamped boat is kept afloat
'vitb Ship Preserver inflated.
VISIOH, tr•n•llffM, wf\OM bu1h••U. .. Nt.,. 24, 1'11 Vf«..prnld"'! dr111 11 iou v ... iu,, l lvd., Slltm11111 ~~':-:;' 11 o~,-,,.~Mlf h flY "!Jot, •Wllll'IMI O••Ttt• Cout o .. ., fl'lltl
Oalr.i, Count., el LOI A11"1n, .1111• .,i • "'' ID-10 Mt1 I, I. IS. It,. 11.WOl--.,,=:=:"°'-:°"'"""'.,...°"'--Ctlllornl•. LE IU,lllllOllll COUlllT 011 THll' TM Pl"Ol>IITT to ti. trM11tlr9ll It loc•i.. GAL NOTICE _LEGAL NOTICE ITAT• OI" CAUl'OllllNIA "Oil •I 2'2' Htrbor l t'fd., Cotl• Me .. , C...,m., TMe COUlfTY ~ OUM•I!
o1 Or•ni11, Siii• ot C1Ulll"lll•. T.,.,, ...._,
S.ld o.--ri... h dncl'lbed 111 ._,.1 tU,lltlOll COUltT ·~ THI JrrilOTICI OP SAU Of' R•AL PltO,llfTY
•1: PONTIAC Sl'Aitl! •AlllTS • AC· STATtl 0" CALll'Olllll'IA "'°" ll'OTICa t•VITIM9 •1ot AT •1tlYATI SAU. CESSORI ES ONLY .. 11\.ol ~II THI COUMTY Ofll °"4MI Jrrilotlc• .. ..._.. t lvlltl t!Wt tfle ... ~ I~ l'he tMttw ot l'he E1l•I• el .. ~ bu"""I ~ •• 11:0'1' CA"Vlill .... ......... .. T"°'"" .. h Or ..... C-t Jull1-r MILORED JACKll CONl..EV, •191 ~n
LllGAl. NOTICE
PONTl .. C tM ltc:•IM ti 2"J H9rW fllOTICe 0" ll'IAIUMO 01' PITtTIOft c .. ~ Olttrlct .. Or•"" C-.f'f, •• Jld.19 Coll..,., 0.0..Md.
'Life' Preserver
fllVil., C111t1 Mt111, C-"' .. Ot....... ~,!!'~ICltll tUltlCTINe ll(-C.llfwllllo, wlll l'IC .. 'H 11111d Md:i lllJ NOTICI!" 11 Nl!llllEBT O~lf lfllf Sit"'°' ti! C.Ufornlto. .,...,,.,.. TO CCIMl'LITI TllllMI 09' " II :• •.rn, ,..,_,. ts. l'l't •I 1M tt. \llldenltlltd. Man Alkt Jonn, ••
Th• bull! tTlfllflff will M < __ ...,. COHTllACT '°Ul'dll1I .. D•I. ot Mkl ldltlOf •llrtrld ....... lfllltr•ttl• f/11 tfle 1•1•" ttt .Mlldr .. on or 1ller fM 11111 d•V el Mrr. IE1t"' -' "Aut. M. HALA~ff, 11to lllell.,. 11 mn f•lrvltw "Old' COit• J«fl .. eoni..,. •IM .,_,. •• J.01• "~· 11 Ntwl'Grt Ntllontl ••1111. lJln --•• "AUi.. MIKE KALAJl'OFF, MIM. C1llfwftl•, ., wtikh tlm. M~ (Ollley, ......... wu• Mn ., •"""'" Wes!cllff Orlw, Nt""""' leedl. (ow""' Mii '' PAUL KAU.fl'Ol'f, ~ Mdt wlH M •11bllc1V -"'" •1111 f'Mlll .. It fl tt. l>lehesf M41 Mtit bld6tf of Or•n11,, $1111 of C1llloml•. C NOTICI! IS Ml!ltlBY GIVl!N tllll W Ill USl!D Of'fll!T OUJl'LICATOlt. WIDll 1111 fffmt ... c.nctltiON hertfnttt..-
So ltr 11 kllOWn to tM Tr•111fll'M. MARl..l!S II, HAltT, Jlt .• u ntcvtor AH blft 1no to M In 9«'0111111t't -''°"""'• 9nd Mi.ct tot -fl!'l'llollllort
For Boats Devised •!I t1u1lnttS "'"''' •llCI 1cld,.1M1 ulld f/I the wllt ot h 9bo'fl lllfMd dtctellnt lfl'llh fht 11111rvc1i-Mid Ctlldltlolll .,,. b¥ Mid kN!'kiil' c.wt. .. IMJ' 12fti, b'I Tr•n.te"'' fV !hi lf'lrH ,,.,. Int 11H flltd ,,.,,,11 • vtrtn.d Mft!lon tot Sll<llk.lt!Ollt wl>ltl> -,_ "" fllt lt10. •1 tll. flollr ., t.n o'clodl A.M ..-it, If dlfltlrwnt '""" the •""'-_, • '"<'" dlrKtl119 !flt Ml""'-r fl •l'!f ,,. • ., Ill ttcUrld Jn the Gffk9 IDf" ni.r.enw wlltil11 w. """' •lllwMi SI"""· tT•111lw the dtcldlftt'I 1"""°"' Ill lflt" rl !h4i •w~•lll\9 Al"" .. Mid ldlclel b¥ llw, d fflol LIW Offkt of Stllm
A new type of flotation
equipment for n1edium to
large sail and power yachts
has been devi~ by a Beverly
lfilis finn.
The new product. called Ship
Preserver, operates on the
principle ol oa gianl balloon
Registratio11
Cost Doubled
By New Bill
Ed Nichols, executive dircc·
lOf' of the Southern California
Marine Associa tion, advises
that Assembly Bill 2221 in-
troduced into the S t a t e
Legislature by Assemblyman
Pete Schabarum of Glendora
on April 2. among other
things. doubles the cost of
boat registration in California,
"The heat owner will not
only have ,to pay twice the
amount be has paid in the
past, tiut instead of renewing
every three years he will have
to do sc> every year," ac.
cording to Nichols.
"Speaking as a private boat
cwner and not an officia l of
SCMA, this appears to me
to be just another government
tax on the boating citizenry
of this state, even though it
is labeled as a registration
fee," stated Nichols. "\Ve are
already paying every kind of
tax there is on our boats.
and now the state want.s more.
Where· does it end?" wonders
Nichols.
Nichols advises that there
are many other changes pro--
vlded in this bill which he
feels are very detrimental to
the sport of boating and
strongly urges the r.ntire mat-
ter be sent to legislative com-
mittee study and public hear-
ings •
Tri-Island
Race Marks
Series End
Dlftd: AHll 11. lt1D. llll'lnl"".. bllllnnt IDlllWll .. ACM! •1ttrld. s. "r•llllllrl, 10, e:ut 1111'1 Sll'MI, C•T• Gf:NElllAL MOTOllll TOOi.. & OIE CAJTING CO ... COl'l\Pltk l!Kll blddlr fll\lll tubmlt Wltll hit M-. Callrom ... •II rllllf, Mtlt, Int-I
"'"hich inflilt .... Wtlltin m'•nutes COIPOltATION • carl•lll OllllrKt •tt.i1 """'-"" '· ..... Ulhllr'• dllcll, cllf'llfltd ditdt. Ind .. , ..... "" Mid Ml .. rtd J•dl:l<I <><> PONTIAC M0T01t5 lftt tlltw.d 11111 b¥ tM dtc.otftt 111 or bklcl .... 1 bolld midi ,..,Ible ft tfle Cor1 ...... •llo II-.. JM:ll:lfo CollieY tc> provide emergency flotation 01vt110N hi• """"" •1111 11'1' •9tl!' M.. H•iafoOff ,,,..., of 1111 Of"•"" eo.11 Jllllkw" c1111H NceNld, •t ftw tim. ., w ....,,; Trantlft"N ~I fl ""'kit it _... tw ~ Olttrkt ... rd • Trva .... Ill 111 M'IOIHlt •lld •II rltl'll, ftti. Inf llltOI ... tf!el in case of hull damage or !Ir 11:. o. wr1t111 ••nlwl•rs. •M 111.i "" fln'>I •1111 •Ila not 1111 lf'IM ti"' wunt ,,._,, ., .. 1c1 """ ,... _I,.. iw _..., · It · ff l!llltlS, •A1t•w•11t, ot ...._""' the Ml'IW 1111 ......, HI Ille """' b~ n • -r•ntw ""I 1119 of .. w .,. ...,_,..,..., ...,.,. n-"" swamping. IS 0 ered in MYl'.ltl .. IMITM tor #MY "· ,,,., It t :• •.m,, ... bldMr wlh .... l'w' ..... the ........ Ill addlflut> .. ""'' W-IM MW Mlldtld various sizes for power and ev: w111er 11: .• ,,,,,.,, .,.. ~ ., n...'"'-nt Ht. i ContrKt If ""' ~ +. •••r"dtd "' JK1111 eor.1ow ..... k-n •• J.O:ltt Ull WUIClff Drfw, 1•11• '" er .. 1c1 Uot;rt, ., l'OI C .... k Clnltr hllll. 111 ""' IY~ "' !1Uur. lo ~ ... COllt.'11 •I .... """ ef 1111' "-""· sailboats from 25 to 85 feet N•-" .. Kii. C•llf, '"" orr.,. Wnt, 111 ,... c111 ., "nli ""• clldl C1Mtr1c1, lt'lt 1•ocetd• of tM u.c1 111 •llCI 11 llM ,111 ~,.,. 1,, ""' i Jen th T1I: OHi .U-1Uf Ctllfootnl.. • Wiii bt lort9llld ..... In """ CIM "'Cl,., "' Coll• MtH, C-fv "' °' .... '"' n g · Publli~f'd Or1nt1 C011l Ol(l'f "llol, O•tH ,,,.,.'I I. 1t7t, I bond, Ille 11111 wrll l!Mreof wrn IN St•l1 "' C.llftlflll•, •1111 dnulbtd ••· Ship Preserver is compact M•-r u. 1•111 "'°" w. e. ST JOHH, c1un,., c11rt forfelltd 1o ••Id tc:hool dlttrlct. Lot 1s. Tr.-:1 Mo. :na, .. "'" Ml;. CMAltLll It, NAlllT, J•. No blclHr ,,,.., wllhdr.W fllt bid for l~•rHf •KOl"lltd 111 1oM: '3, p1-and easily installed aboard. LEGAL NOTICE A"'""" •I uw • -1oc1 of ,.,..,.flv• 1u1 ••n •ttlN' '5 •1111 *., M1ac.t11-M#s. l'ICOnll
It has a lkunce nylon plastic•------~-------·1'* w"' .._.,. ..... .,.,... tM """',...""-"'"''he"'°'. er Or•"'• Cowil'f. •i.t. of ca111or11i.. 1· ~Ill, C.......... ..... Tl'lt ..... Iii Tl'lllfNI ,_..... tfle 1111 S-11 Stl'MI, CHIO M • • • outer bag lined with a heavy T·m. Toti mu 11Mtt1 w 11W14t ,n.,111111 ot '9IKll1111 •11r •1111 111 bldt c111tor11l•.I lkb or .,._,, ..._ lllYltrtd
I . . 1U,.1'.ltl011 COUltT 01' 'l'Hlf I_.,. lit,,.. ..... 01 fl w11vt •111 lrrNullrttlH w I,.. for ..... ""'""" .,,.. ,,.111t Ill Ill p asttc Inner bag. Inflation is ITATI 01' CALll'O•lf•A ll'Olt • ..,...,.,,.., Or-CMd Ollly •Uo! ..,, .... 111 .. 11> • ..,. Md 1r Ill """blddl11.. Wl'lll111 •1111 Wiii ... rKtlvtd ., the accomplished from a refillable THI COUHTY 01' Oil.I.... Ml'f •. ,, II. 1t11 t6t-ni HOltMAN I". WATSON .me. ot s.u,,. s. irr ... 11 ... AllOI' ... ., Nt. ..,._., Stcrl'l•rt fOI" the Mm1111,1r11r1x. or m1v bt nw CQmpressed air tan!: equipped NOTICE 011 H1A1t1No 011 ,.•T1T10N LEGAL NOTICE S01rc1 ., Trv1t1tt wttll fll.t ci.n ot Ml4 s..o-1or ctvrt •th bolh I l'Olt PROIATt 01' WILL ANO l'OR Ooet1: ,,.,.., JS, lt11 -ll:OI 1.111, "" dlllWrMI 11 tfle .... Aclmlflltfr•trt.f \\'I manua a n d LITTERS T•STAM•NTAltY • HOT-Kl o .. llfTIHT Publl ...... Or•llM (Md D•llJ' PilDI, ... ..,.u ...... ,.,. fffN •tier the ""' hydrostatic valves. Ett•~ "' ltOSE MAltlf fl'ACK.i:ltO. ... THI II.I.a IOW TO .... A •• ,,.,.,. •• IS. "" IM-79 ""''k.ltloll ot Ifill Notlc• ll'ld btfor•
U rl.A-D..:!!1~. B•Vl1tA•h Oii ALCOHOLtC ""kl"' Hid NI•, ••ll'Clt inflaled , Ship NOTICE ts HE111!8Y GIVEH TM! s.1111 Hit wrn "'...,.... w.n fll•
Preserver maintairni ' """'-JOHN ~-,.t.CK.ARO "•• tllld hirer.. TO WHOM IT MAY coN<<•M~'f ,,,. ltJCI LEGAL N011CE 1o11ow1,.. """"': cn11. • ...... .-• 111111111 ""' 1robtt• °' wm •lld tub! 1<1. oe .... ""'" "· 1'" Stant pressure or si :t pounds lor !tt11•nct ol Ltlflrt Te1!1mt11•rt •HllMllC!for.. I~"''' of 1119 Rc.1111 ,.,...,., Alica J0nt1
per square inch to give needed :~ !'!d~p':!!-'°";;;.,,;:"'~~~~c1111:n1.~': ::::.=:-ri~ i:~~.1~1~~; 1u~~Jfo•11 T:0~:;•w~i. =~~.,, .. e1 "" buoya t th 1 ·k f 11'111 !ht Tim• •lld tol•e1 el hN•l1111 u follow . 1 llftml111, .. alMd S1'AT • < , Mlldrtd J•el .. Cw.ll'Y TK'Y 0 e s r1 en era t. lht i1mr ~., Men 1tl ,.,. J-s. lot M ~ THI :oiNT:L~ .. OltNIA "Olt All• J•c:klt C....,'.......,
U.S. Coast Guard stalisUcs 1'70,0 •I ''° 1 • ;'" ~" oth ':"c:;r to11r1~nt•dcli:11 ,:~c:•in~ :!Id! ,.., A"wnOltA,..t i~K~·1:".":o"';':. .. ~
fndicale that chances 0 t ~ :c'::icn c.:; ... 01'1111 .. W11t,. ~ :n~.:::.'11"' .. the o..,.,,,,,:; o:.~·::, .. D•MA VE"NE Ll!Ol'OLD, A...,_, ... '"-."'
r escue are greatly increased !heo.~:-:1.!'~: ,~,' cii11orn1•· .,. ,, • ...,... "' :.;'~=Ne"'~':".:':! MOT1ci tt "tltl!BY 01VEN " ,,.,. ~~!-:.!.""C:::...
when skipper and crew are w. E. ST JOHN, c-rv ctel'l 11~ '"" 1ic-..1 for ,..... ,,...,,y ct1e11tort " ""' •bovl MmN d!Cfdlllf LI...,,,. Miti
bl I •YHOWl!lt, LO ... Lt'I'. '' foli0w1: ltitl •If ,.......,. h..,l..., clll,,,. -h•ll AllWMJ' fw A ........ a e 0 stay wilh their vessel PETH1!1t•111DO• OH SALe IEElll .. W~t (IDlll """ .. ~ clltCldtftt .... rMUlrtd I• tilt fl'ublllhtd o; c,.:::
t'l h J nia11w '"""""lie 1!111111 'ltnl """"' wlltl tfle lllftlMrv W\!Chlrt. Ir! ._ '"--C•llJ' !>lief un J e p arrives. ~Z.:1.M:;! :.,...,,;: "'" ~ .inrr1111 "' 11,.,._1,,,. 111..._nc, ..,. ottlc• ., "" n.<11 " "" 1r.ov. Mt., 1. •· is. 1r,. ... 19
Ship Preserver is desi""""' T•t = c1u1 s""""" of IUdl 1'-"• 111 rn.t'f 11i. • .,.m1111 .... t111..t court, " " ""'e111 """'· w11t1 I id 6 "'-" All-I "'" ·""*"" '""Kl ., •11'1 """' ....... ~rl'r!Mllf .._ MCllll.... ¥tlld'i«t. .. 1111 Ullo 0 prov e this extra safety .,.,.,,,,fled 0, • .,., c011t oill'I' Piiot e1 Ak.'llftollc: ,,.,.,.'" c.,,,,.1 "" b¥ fft'lltollfd •' oo 221>11 Stl'ffl, N...,.,,i LEGAL NOTICE
f•clo•, acco~,·ng •· J. C. ••• 15 l& 12 1tl'O tH-70 rr11u to 111, o..rt"'lftl .. '•"·•·•• BHdl, C•tt1or11••· Wllldl 11 t11t •l<I<• " ' 1" .._. • ' ' .... .,... C«llnlf Ull 0 ;-C: flf bul/lllU ol IM UlldoriltMd 111 •111------';':==------Spinak, president of Se LEGAL NOTICE S•cr•"""''" c.n.fnti. tStl "'"'· m•ttll'I ••'1•lnt119 lo the ••1•11 ot ,.,,_ . a •"-'Ill• 1., dWli. 4. tl•tl,,. ••Id 4'c:lffnt. within .i. rr>on1111 •1111' CllllTltolCAT• o" •11.tt1Nan 1 StJ rv1va l Products, Inc., 1.i2 TM •rwnl'" ,:. ••,.!.,...'"" "" i.w. ""first 111b11ca11o11 er thl• Mt1ct. "tCTtT1ou1 •AM• s Rodeo Drive Suite 303 PUBLIC HEARINGS WILL IE Hl!lO """ ..... •koliollc ~'= T: Olltd APl'll 21. Im. Tll9 ""'"' ......... Cll'tlf'I "'" •r• . • , b., th~ COl!I -•11""1nt Co"""ulOll ,.,.,,. f/# \'lf'llk.t""' bt • BANK O!I AMl!lttCA corw:lllCll"' • ...,_,,,., .. 171J't.9 Beverly Hills. 90212. ., 11\f Clf'f H•ll· 77 F•lr Ori.,., !Forn •"'I Offlcoo., .... ~: • ..,,,"""""'""" NATIONAL TRUST ANO lrook!wr1t, F~•lll v.1....,, ClllllW"I'! Colli Meu, C11Jlornl1, 11 7:• P.M. MC OONAlO Cherin Ill • JAVINGI ASSOCIATION llndlr 1"' tlctHl«lt flnn l'lllM _.,
New Motor
'Stinger'
Unveiled
or •• -II l'OUlbll thtrNfttr MC DONALo' 1!111111 L • l!•ocutot" ...... Wlll VALl..l!Y o• P:lOWl!"S '"" "'-' tlld "" Mortd•.,, Ml., 1J, ""· fl'ubUll'lld o.,,... • c " ri 1• " tM 1bowi 111rntc1 dKMtftf llrrn 11 Cll!'r!PfNll of tfle ........,... ""'°"'' llle11u·dl11t i111 fallow!"' -llcallollto -M11 11, ltllt °' 1 ..,.•11f1!: HUltWITl. MUllWITI & ltlMlll ~· llllMI Ill fl;ll •M pl-.:. .t I. hn. Exc .. KM ""'""' Mt. 1'14·"· '" •• :atlllll llrMt '""'tnc• •r• ., fol .... :
fo• ThPm.11 fl. ortor"'· 101 ~ LEG" NOTICE ...._, ._., e • .....,.. ,_ •9111 •. Lhlt-. 1117 c.,..r, Apt, T..-•tet .. Corolll Dll Mar. C•tH .• for ..... • ..... I m•1 ~ c .. L.,.. lffctt. C•IN. ~rmb•""1 tt l11s!lll ltir11 (JJ Uft-A""""" frw ._... ThN M. l..IMal, ltJ, t:td•f• Apt, 0.rt•oulld l•M1 llld tllrH (JI NII• T..,... Pllllllllhtd Ontlll Cont Dtlll' l'Jlel, C,, LDt19 a..tdl, C.llf. ff"'ke OlllOl!M dl-n1tr1 lit lf>I ffOTIClf ~ IALI Of" •IAL fl'ltOft., Atorll 24,. fMY I, 1. IS. Jrlll 7U.7' Dlltd April 11. lml Folio., C~1r!ltl Cir W•th .,......., ••TT AT fl'ltl't'ATI IAl..e Tl'IN U1t11t locall!cf 011 tM pr11ml'" "" .,_,,., II'•. A-Uln fl'ull "· l..l•to1 loce!td •I 3010 Brl1tol S!rlll, Cftl IN TMI tUPl•IOfl COllltT Oto LEGAL NO'J1CE STATE OF CAl..ll<OlllNIA, M .... c111 r ...... CT """· TH• STATI o" CALl•Oltll'lA •o• OllA.NGE COUNT'!':
1. :-l!•«•llH P-11 ..... J•·ll·JI, THI COUNT'!' o .. MAN•• On Aprll 17, im. Mforji -· • for SiOr'lr'I Sher 111d/or 0..,ld lt1u 111 the Mllltr of ll'lt l!llt'9 ot Of"I llClo IUl'lltlOll COUltT 0,. TMI Nol•f'Y Public 111 •rd tor t•lcl St111. P()l'lll•c, ltol A.,tmie of lllt Sl•rt, TnilMr Mt., HI fl'lllt Tr 1111 I 1 ITATI O" CAl.l .. OltHIA ,0. ptrtlllll!J' •PPllrtd fl'tut "• LlttoJ •rd Loi A""tlei. C•l!I.. tor 01nnl111tft ••• ••ul T 'lutlOll lk ; r ullol>, THI COUNT'r °" OlllAJMI T~ ll1t111 k-.. Jo ,... fl bl 1119
A , I .___ 10 u1e "'-"" 1"""" Cl-CP fol' ll'lt l>tct•ttlll ' • • 9111 SUlllHI, CtH Numlllr l7JID pl1"ION wllo-. l'MllMI ••• :i.ub1crlbed ll~p us 11V1 sepower out-«,..lructloll 111C1 -••llot1 ot a NW Matlct · .. I'll ab¥ , IUMMONI to "" wr1ti111 ln1fnilrltt'lt 11111 •dl:.nowlfdo-
'--. ar IVl<>CY, ""' •f'llPl'1'1 localld ., dt r • "" thel .... u... L. .M ITltUCK Ml llM"r UIC\lttd lf'I• .. ,.. • uuard motor de31gned ror high-1uo H1rbor e1vtt., c09,. Me••· c.111. ""'""d w111 Mii •t fl'r111111 Hi., · • M. w. IMMIELL, tOffk.i.1 s..n . . ], 1-bciptlttl ""'"'It Ht. Zl·U-11. fl 11'11 hlthtn •M Nil l>lcldtr, :i.ubi.cf •• trwl-el lt>f MAltlLVN Hl!ITElt, CIMMlll o, ltlnl
performance ,compet1!1on has tor Lli"' Mlllt•, tllctl•rlll l . L1WTY11C1 lo COllflr"!.''-ot Mid su-i... c..,,,, ~~~~I11: T~1,!1!~1.1i..:i= v C~illc~~NEIE Not•ry "1.tbllc _ c.utor"ii!•
bee 'I d •nd L. !I. Frldlrlckt, JUS llrdl Oii or ''"'' the Ulh 0.y rif Ml'f, W Gitt! • '· ~ L "'lllCIMI Offlq JM n unve1 e by Johnson Sl.-11!, Ntw-1 •••ell, C1IK.. tor 1m, •• ""-olfb " .......... "'""' . IN, IVAN Oilll!l!N, •lld °'"'• eo...ity ,1 I • ~.....,i11kM'I to comlrud 20 11111111 111 & Glllr•rlltlU, lfl Soutl! lr11111 •oult\lird, ll'REOlllC A. Glltel!N, •111 l'll!DfYCK M1 Comml111Pn Ex,lrtt ,. 0 ors. •Miiiott lo ., llnllt ul'ICllr COl>tll'Udltll. ••11 Ftr111ndo. CliUnt'I' ., Lit Ano11H, A. Gltff:Jrril, DOI! I ltirwth DOIE v, AUllUll "· ltrl
Dubbed lhe Stlngec, lhe new m••I"" • 1ot11 °' '1 11nth ... "'-'" St•ll ., c1111wr>11, 111 "" •llft1, 1m. 1~~~L~'*C;';""TMI! s •...eill1hwlll Of"1119t CNst 111111,. •r•ot IQ, ti. er 111'111 •••• " 11111! Hr MWI 111 .. r"' ...... ~ .. d .. ""' CALll'01'NIA .. TATE OF•.'-'-'-"-'-'-"'.,..c'-'-·-·-"--"-~----'~c...n_ m"IJ ts ·1 I 1~14 SQ. 11.1 "" o•-rt<r 1tc1ted 11 11,,,. ot ••1t1 .,.. 111 the rlf~t tn1t "'-•t1cwt 11•rn111, 1 ge I s power rom 11 :n1 w. e1., s''"'· co1t1 Mt .. , c.111., .,,. 111ttr"1 """' the "''"' ,,; ••Id Otltlldl11h! LEGAL NOTICE I I y ' bl k d. I · In •n Rl zone. diu•Md Mt Kqulrld b¥ , tloit of You •• llfftbJ' dlr111;1ed tf ttl• • '---:::::;::::-c:::,..,-,.,O'C:,=---WG-eYC e, -.. OC !Sp acing t . lln. l!•c•llN """"It Ht. Il•..,11. 11w or olhlrwllt lfllfr :-• 1 wr111.., 11 ... 1111,,. In ''"°"" 'fro 1t1e l
99.6 cubic inches. ft has a 1or Rotier1 N. tthl~•·•· 1"1 0r.,,.. •ddtti.i to ""' ff .... .:;."'; .~ .,.,lllt<f -1t1111 e1 "" •boll• 1111mtd 1u,::I~~· ~u~~·i::~~lf
3 0 • ch . Avlltlut, C1r1t1 M111, CtlH., for tt.. ti"" ., ft Ill Ill ' Pl•lntlfl1 wllf't the cltr-of 11'11 llloYt ST T• O ':?-in bore and a 2.58&-lnch PfflTl<11l111 to alflrT•Kt 01>1 ~1l!M!>c• 11ie art•ln ,,,1 • .. ~ ... ,,., •:ftu11':, ·~ '"':!!,td court 111 lh• •bovl lfltH1ikl ~H• c:u~~1:~11::~,.:.~11t stroke r~ ~Cll!Fon ID n ltll1>1 •••lftnc•. 111 Codt M•M Coll""' of Or '' " "', br'Wtlht •••11111 ""' In .. 1c1 court, ,.._ 4 ..,., · •n RI Zone .., 6 750 tc1 ff ., of C Htor ' •flOI, ••• W 11\ln TEN dl~t •fflf' IM 11rvlct on Standard gear ratio on ,._A 1tfld ••t• n unit ,;., :.1s" .. : tt.i .... _• 111• •. S11rtkui.rr1 •KrJOM •1 -ot 11111 """'"'-· If """" wllf'llll &tlil't., IAMUlL 11. iCAHN .,.....,., . . u~ •nd Plrmlnlol> to •llow • lf ft, '"" to-wll. tt.. •be.,, 111mtd cOUn!'f. ir wlffllll NOTICe II HEltl!IY GIVEN N 1119 Stinger IS 14 :23. A I to I fl>C•Old'ltnent "''' •-.ilrtd tJ" ,..., l..lt ll ot Tr.ct ,, .... , lho-THlltTY d•~· If ••!WCI .,......... Uldlltn .. ""' .,,.., ,,....,... ~
ratio is avaiJabl · 1 v•rct Hlblld "" • ._,., 1ocnlti .i .,,, • M•• rtcwllld 111 •• 1.w, You ·~ hlf'1bJ' lllltHIM ""'' im.11 .. !Mt •II ",,_ Pini"' ca.""' ... 1111r e on spec1a 211 e. '°"' sirm , COi.ii M-. c11H. P..,.1 • ,. '°• 1nctu11.,., ot "" .. 11i. • wrtlfltl ,.._ ..... ,..,..1111 ,.,. Mid llltcMd en r9*1/rld • ni1 order as an accessory, Left '"" turlhlr 1ntorm1tlon .. "" ~ Ml.ull-. ,,.,....,. lltteorA rA °'""' Hid •l•lnllf'ht •Ill tH• ,.....,_,1 ~ "*"' wlttl Ille nKHMl'I' \flOVCNn, !ft
h d . . IPOllc:elloni. "~ UM26 "" call C""'h" C•lllorl'tlt. ...,. """.,. " """"' ...,,,./WJM I ""' aftic. .. ft.. cllrlt el """ tbciw• an prop r otation IS stan-,, 11>e o!fkt ot ,,,. "'""'1111 °'""""""'· ""'"' c-1>/' k-.. 1 "' ._.. 111e ••in.. ClOtl>llletlll .. """'"' ....;: tllflflld mvtt. or to .,_, "*"· W'ltlt dard. A counter.rotating 11oom 200. n F•fr on.,., CNI• w.., 11: .. •. C•t• """-• c1r11om11, C1Mtnoc:t, or wn1 '""'"' ~ "" ClllITT 1tit _,,. ~ " "" 11.-. C1llfoml1. T1nm If .... c•lll lrt lfwful -'I for 111'1' el'll<ll' r.ri.t ~llCJMI Ill ""llltll""" •I 1111 lllfk.9 of 1'111 •lt!lnle'f'· system IS also o[fered. COSTA MESA •LANNING ...... U11llttl 11•19• Oil COll!lfll'l.tloll .,.,.lfltcl Qlftltolllllf, Dollild r . ,,,.., .... , 1•11 w. Cllff The Stinger USCS many Of COMMISSION of Nit, OI' ,_rt ulh •"'II Mllnc:t 't'tu tTWY •Mk llM H".,k.I ef' 111 Ol'M. lul• *-H-1 l•lcf\, . Cl\irlft t'tck. Ch1lrrn1n ,.,kltl>c:td by 11(119 Hatrtd Irr ""'"'"" ................ •ll'r IMttw WllllfClecll Wiii! C•lffaml•. ""'°· wltld't It .,,. Pitt• the components found on w11111111 L. Dllnn. *""'"' tlld or Trull O..d "" ,,,. "°"'"" M "" conlPllllll " "'" tll'MW\t. lud> of "'11111111 u1 the wHnlt111111 111 •It Joh • l k 115 h Se Dkeclor el "l•n111,,. told. T•ll Jlfr c•lll ot •"*"" ~1111 •lfot"MT lllollld Ill C11u1111lt.d with!" "" m•lltn 11'11lnl11t to Ill• 11f•lt ol ' OSOi~ S S ~ p a "ub!l1hl!cf Oru111• CNsl D•IW Piiot, '9 ._ Ot'91flff wl!h bid. lllM tlrrill tl•tld 111 lf'lli tt;"'"'°"' tor Mid dfttdeltl, wllf'lln four months •ntr
Horse, including Power Pulse M•'f u. "" m-11 ,.,, .,. """ to bl 111 Wl"lllflt •"' nu,,.• wr1tt.n 11t•d1,,.",,,. CMl!ll9llll. ""t;:;:,1:Wi'f'!!llj',t1111• 111111,,, ., t d'sch · · · wllt M rWoll ..... •I the •fll' ... ld lffkt 0•1 ... Mllrdl 2!1, 1"°9 pr -•
flcapahc> a1 or J arge 1gn1tion, LEGAL N011CE 11 '"" """ .n.r ,.,. ""' fl!ilblkltt.11 !SU.LI w ~;:a,-:;:'•., !flt wrn Lo Ang-1 yw ec alternalor, pressure ,..,_ '"'""'"'...,. .. Mlt. • •· IT JOHN, c1.,1r e1 ,... -'-' _... -..itnt s i:ies Yacht Club's back piston rings and water T.,,.. D•"4Jtft11 t111 ,.., .i Ml.,, int. t.:!,~~ 0.111111 DOHaLo 1. tMALLWOOo shortened Tti-Jsland race MOTICI! TO CltlOITOltl .. -Mttll llallt w ...... 1"' w, Cllff om. • ..,. ..
h'ch cooling and sHencing . SUPl!lllOlt COUltT 0" TMlf ..... 1ri1.1rwht"'"" AUWOltTN. lllDll... ClllAIL N....-1 •-11. c. ........ ,... w 1 starlt; today al 5 p.m, · &1111"' Mid °"""""' 111' Wlllkllff Dnft, llllfll • TIL1 .-..nu 1n•t II The exhaust system. race STAT• OI' CAl..l,.Olt,llA "0" LIWIJ. 'l'Altlll. AHlll.l•O•LLI .. _, ..... C."'"91• ,,... A ..... 1 ..... ._...
wi mark the end of the 1970 tuned for m a 'II'. i m um ef-TKI c:o:_'!"~r .. 011.APM• &1: Kf\'111 •· i.""'" ~~· ,.ubUll'lld ar....,. c..r D•ll'f •n~. Whitney Series for ocean rite· . Elf It of ltl!X It. ANOElllON -.... JU ..... .,.. ......,.,... ·--·~ ... ,.....,.. M9y I, •• IS. tt. lt71 111-~ • .1. h f1ciency is an internal type tl'I 1 • '" • .,. ...... c.1lfw!M "* •lilllol.....,. ~ .... t..tt ce ri,. "11o1,J---.,-,-,,-..,-------mg sai ing yac ts. that gr~atly reduces the noise NOTICE is HEltl!BY 01vl!N "' .,,. T .. , mu w1-11n """' 1' '" lS. 22• 1'11 lt1·JCI LEGAL NOTICE The 152.-miie race nonnally . . crtl'l11or, of ""' • ...,, ... ,,.... llK..,nt Atl#Mr1 W Mlllllllltl'.trl• e ncircles Santa B a r b 3 r a , usually associated with com-1to11 111 ,,.,...,,,, 111v1.,. d1ln11 "•""' "llbllfhld °'""" co.11 1111'1 'Hot. LEGAL NOTICE 1u•11t1011: cou111T o" CAL1,.011:1t1A
petition outboards the Mkl OKld•nf .,.. 1"Ulr.. to tilt M.l'f 14 lJ, "· '"' '""" COUNTT o.. OltAHOI! Catalina and Sao Clemente • 111em, wltll 11t11 """" .. " 'fMICllll'1, 111 IA1t _, ,.. CNlc CMtll' °""' Wiit
"
. lands. '"' Dfflc• ot TM '"rt ., ""' •lllrl• LEGAL NOO'ICI NOTtCI TO CilllDITOal •••'• AM , C•llflnll• LEGAL NOTICE ""'11~ C11Urt. or • •l'ltll'll "*"• wllf\ tU,.••10tt COU•T °' .,,.. c-Nllrl!W o ,., • 'J'he course was shortened '"' ntClllll"f -.idltni, to fllf y,,. T"""1 STAT• o" CAl..lllOltHIA "" IUMMOMt CMAlllltlAlilfl "-ll'MJ' d""919M<I If 111.i off!tt ,,f hll .,,_.,, IUJI' llllOI COUlllT 0 TH THa COUlfTY Of' O•AM•I 111 r1 '"" m.rrt1111 " il.tltloMr~ this year to elin1inale San CIRTIFICATE 01' IUUN•SS CHARLIE'S c . .MORltfY, ,... Wttt Wl>lfo ITA~I °' CALll'Ollllr,. '°: .... ......... COlllHELlA JEAH LOO 80001 •1111
Clemente Island because or "ICTtTIOUS NAM I! :~I> 8:-"te;!"'~ttc:~~~•I:""'~ TNB COUNTY Ofll OUM• .... ~•tt,t. If DAYIO AltTHUl MA~CUI, ~!'::"".::!:...~$ HOMellt i80GGS
"tl'lf unclll'tlllntc! clOft twlil'f he fl II Ht. ,,....., ·--II DAVID A. MllltCUI _........,"· naval m aneuvers of l he OHlllu(tlng • blltll>n• " •. o. eo~ Ul'lllltft. ...... 111 el" ... ""tllrt Pffl•l11t111 NOTte• ., llBAllllM ... 'tTITIOll lllO k-•• D.A't'IO MA•CVI .,.; Thi Mllllontr Ml fllld • Miit ....
P 'fi Fl In . . n. M111>tl"'"" flMCh CllllOrl>I• 11111111 M TM ""'"' M... d~. Wlflllll •Oft •1tOBATI 0111 WILL AID ,o ... o. A. MAlCUI o.c..... ainutflll\t .,_ """""· You ,,..,. ac1 tC eet that vlc1n1ty. IN llctlliOW firm " ..... Ill o0Ll'Hll• lollr ·""""" .,,., the ""' PWflUllOll L.lntlll TUTAMIWTA9Y NOTICI II H .. lllllY 01Y1!11 ...... flit • wrtltlll -wlllllll lhl•IV
nie oew cc11.u·se wil l take ILl..USTRATIONS •fld '"'" .... 111111 "'C:t:i =~· ... ""' IE•t.11 .. HIL.aN •• COflfl'I', ~ ... ,'"::.,the •tlf'H ... ,,... .. ....,,. f'"'~IM 111•1• ::"1 lf'll~ nwi::'f.·
th '!' • fl ll C°""CIO$elll pf !Iii! 1o1......,..., per-. RAV 0 H CHOL Ml • WMM Ila-, .... cllll'lll IOllll'lll I Oii 'rlU. \'DU I e sa1 in" eel. a round Santa whole ""mt 111 tun 1nc1 1111ct of rnldenc:I SP11;t•t ·A.,!,,111,tT!t,,, W'lfll NOTICE 11 HlflttB'I' orvrN '"'' :::,,. "'!t ~ .,. ,...,1,... ,. n1, • ~ 11-bt wtlll~-" _.. ~
Barbara and Sutil Islands and 1' •t:~~C •av•r "'' c"" Chttt G_,.1 .._, " ""' :::.i1..: MA:•r ... o:=. ~ "~ lt!e ~"".,the the~,., ot~-111: ,,.:.,u .,::r. '~"""' _,1111111
Catalin11 isl.'lnd bcrore heading or., H11~111,V1on e~ch, c.111or~1 =.,:"" •bo'f9 "',,.... •lld,., \w1nc:t" l..""'9 T"'-""" .... ,.,... c:wrt, w 11 '"""' """'-w11~ :~=.,.•• '-"" ....., .~~ •· k I . nc1eo Apr II n n111 ;. "" """...,. ,...,_ 11 wtlkh ~ ~.... "' "" ~ ""' ,., '• -_..... .. U<IC or lhe finish a t Los CM111t c. 1011r (lfARL•S c, r,:11:•1Y 11 '""' tor fllrthtt ••ltlalt.n. .,.. ............ , the .itltd .. "' .""""". e: CllllodY· child tU#Ort. dterntn "
Angeles Harbor s,TATE OF CA LIFOllNIA. ::,,:.:~~ w~~.~~ •1n1. !hit "" tlftlt ...... ,. -ht••lnt ~D f.: .... TIN .. Gt.••· lWI W•ttllff .... 1 ... ce:~n~lldbll' ·::."~~ "1"' •• ' Rt.NOE COUNTY • ' · 1119 .. ,,,, hi• ..... Mt frw M11 2f .... ..., '"'"' • N..,,.,.. IN'~' •
l.ocal events on the yachting 011 April 12. 1t10, l)ltlOt-• mt. • l~1l., 111~?.1 Milttlll•"'"" 1tJC1. 11 ,,. •·lft.o 111 1119 ~ ~·11:.~-flMB. wtiltfl '' .._ ~ ~nu,,. ':~h .::,11-,:, 1-;::, : e I nd th' k d I I d No•t•r PIJbtlt r11 111d '°' ••1111 si.11. •vllll.t>td Or °' °'""""'"' H., , ., Mill c.urt. -tir flllo ....,..llllld Iii •" 1 1r. a e ar JS wee en nc u e P11no111U'f ·~••td c,,.,1,. c. flO't't'r '"'' c .. 11 0.111 fl'llet. .. ,. c""lc Ctlll'w' 0rtw wat, ..; -"'" ""''".._ " ,... •"" "' • ,.,_i1., " lhlti _,,. ~"'" ,........., Voyagers Yacht c I uh• s ~nc>w11 " "" " bl "" ~''"" ....... ""'1" 1J. :n. "· tno ,...ro .,,. ClfJ'.,, s.flfl Ant. C.llflrlt.le. .... -......... wi111111 """ """"" ""' If •11'1'· ,.... bl MIN 111 """· 1111"" 11 :i.utnallllcl to "'-wlll!llln .,,_ O•IM Mil'I' 1' 1971 1'111 fttott ,....lcil1toll .. IMt Mllca. nt! .. APrll 2lo ltJa Laguna C raee for Pacific ''""""'' 11111 .a._.*"" M exocutec1 w. 1 ir JOHN o.1o11 ""'11 :a. "" ISEALI
Handk:ap llacing Fleet yachts ~,:,'1~L set.Li Who Carts? Lifl'rot~~.~= .. 11 ~ ~ :1~ .. ,,. :; :u,:~!. ~
In the Massey Series, alld M•ry IC 11 ..... 'f No ot•-·-··-In t~ "~d AMD DIN$M001t DAVIO A. r.:.~';"' ,..,,.., ~ Ll••OLO, M•lfOtltlC»I .. 11 ch ·r "01•1'" "ul!llc . C•h!Otllll ~ ....... ....... '"' -· •• .., ll'lft "'"' ''" ......... Ill OINIMOOtl sma f'r ya L~ sat 1ng under ''""1p11 oi11c1 111 urts About ,our communltr llkl! c.... M-c......., "'° "....,. ...._°'t:;,....,.. • JJ1 •· 1111> s1 ..... ....,. 111
tht !\1idgct Ocean Rllclng 0'•• COUii!\' '"'' 1n•1 i.."" T111 1n() -,... c""' ........ ,,.,.,,. ""' Fl M~ commlM~ fi1p1rea your community dally ntWsP•ptt ,.....,_.. "' ,....._ A"--,.. ....._. T•lllhlM1 LI •rm
tel 11nd Small Yacht Racing ttov ''· 1tn ... ~s. lt't ••· D"L" PILOT. """'-°''"" CIMI .. Irr ,.1.., fl'l*litlllll ............... ""' .,,-...... Att1n1tn 11r fl'ttll'-" Fl I •. , to11blhl!ec:I Or""'• ColJI D•llr fl'flot, ""'" uos "' r Ml 1 . • ·-~ ............. .... '"'" fl'uNI• ..... Or1• CMd Dtlt'f ,I ... ee measurement• u es. AlH'll u. M•v 1,., u. itJC1 7'5-10 • c. 1s. "· "-" ... 10_.. ""Mey t." 11. "" 111-1'1 ,,., i.. a. 11, n. 1911 ._.,.
• • I I
• . \
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•
Jtt OAll.Y PILOT . -Frldo, Ml)' 15, 1970
Money's Worth
• OVER 1'HE COUNTER Complete.:..New York Stock List
Japan Sets Goals NASO ll111,. tfor Thuraday, May 14, 1'70
a--...w. ....... ,., ..-tt11M w...,. 1 r r ""' .... .._ JllAJO.
BJ SV\.VJA PORTER
(rvtai II a ltttn of five)
TOKYO ••• Yt"hat i1 J1pari's
dream?
At the d06t o( rach in·
tervlew with Jtl>&fl '• tQp
leldm, J 8X this one last
qUMUoa. for ,. J'OU and me,
Jt ii the bun af the lair.
(Tramlalfon: What do )"OU In·
iend lo do with all lh1t
poWtt!) &t before I ae l to
.1he answers. let mt re-cm·
pbaslz<:
Japan is now • truly global
e.conomy. Despite her size.
manpower shortages, lack or
raw mat.eriala:, p r o f o u D d
i ort'H going for her are :
-HER AGGRESS I VE
del.erminaUon to achieve a
hlgh and uninterrupted rate
6.97"/. TAX FREE
DMllty C..1'""1111 M1111kl ... I 8 '°""
'"'~ "' °"'"'' c. ....... ,. ·~ Ll"'I .... ~
c.ithe'' U. H. 01rll11tl9" *'""..._ & w""""'"'""""t He¥ .. --
4th Annual
Franchise and
Business
Opportunity
Show
Find out how you
"C•n 9 tt in busin•11
for yours•lf" by
visiting this
suparm•rkat of
Business Opportunities.
75 Comp•ni•s from •II
ovar the United States
•r• on disr.l•y •nd
•fookin9 for r•nchi1ea1
and associates in
Orang• County and
1urTound in9 •r•••·
May 14-17
Disneyland Hotel,
Anaheim
AdmlstiDn $2.SQ
EARN :;.
-*"'°°°'· ..... , •• ,, f.11 PM I• ,,.,_,,,, Tlw-ilt C.,.
tif'~ ~-i..J.d lo .,. ..
I_...,. '" 'l. ptid .. r .... ~ -'"-~ .. .., -~ w~-_, . ._......,_..._
,......_ ...... a; ... ~ C..tloct .... ..w.... __ ...
.,_.. 8f'llST lit' THI HD41 i---... I
lOCATIOHS
170 L 17tll St .• c ..... M-
711 SNN St., $4iti~ l•rtMI••
J045 s.n.n l•ed, O•n•t4
21tJ4 Sc"-9bon1,
C .... • P•r\
6111 Wlf1llll,. 11•4., ........ •
or ~nomlc growU:, her n•·
uonal desire to l!Xctl:
-TJ'he Jndwtrlousness ol
her skilled, dedicated workers,
rht high level of educaUon
o( her business leaders; '
-1-ft'f' unique econ om I c
system in which government·
industry-finilnce-labor p I a n
togethet". to achltve naUonal
goals;
-HER HGROUP SPIRIT"
"·bich I saw being developed
jn Infancy 1n the unironned,
disciplined kindergarten kids
st Expo '70.
And Japan, already a nearly
$200 billion ecooomy -third
only to the U.S. and Russia
-i! on her way to a $400
billion Gross National Product
by 1975. Her per capita income
is targeted for $2,790, double
'69's level. Her wages are to
rise more than 12 percent a
year, the producUvity of her
workers to climb up to 15
percent a year, her cost ()f
Jiving to be rising under 4
percent a year by the mid-
J970s: her persooal savings
rate is to stay at the fabulous
level of lS-20 percent. A
magnificent blueprint indeed ...
Of course, she bas problems.
A SHORTAGE of labor will
be a massive obslacle. but
she plans to solve tbat by
pulling more workers off the
fanns; increasing the employ.
ment of women; by automaA
lion: by putting up plants in
such cheaper labor areas as
Taiwan and Korea.
Also steep hurdles will be
the resistance of oUler nations
to her protectionist trade
policies and the resentment
of neighboring underdeveloped
Jands from which she buys
cheap r~ materials and to
finished products,
BUT JAPAN is waking up
to all of this.
So what is her dream? From
the surprisingly ' i m I I a r
answers to my unanlicipaled
question, I think Olis might
be a "consensus."
First. to look inward now.
raise the standards Of the
Japanese people .and enhance
the Japanese environment.
Dedicated to the nation a."
her people are, they are get~ -
...................... --. .......... I -·-.... Ung rMtles&. Third 1n oulpu''••••-m••••••••••••••••'""4itLa11 1.11 "'I' ACP' J.~ !.•
she is 20th among world na· _ Nfi: ,:>1t~,..i'\"J l=.,.ol U"' 11,. ~San 1, 't ... ~ ~ 1, is ;~-.,Z,1·:: tions in living standards. In 1,. .-!:'" i.3'4,. ~=r: •• ·i.,, 1 1;:""t~ 1r' 1m ,t 1l .. 1~~ :J'~n11:·1jg
recogn!Uoci, Japan is achedut. t='\.C .u.Jl ~:-,.:11,• ~ ~"' vw ,rA ?'Ii lb ~ MY:'== =,~,\ 1.-Jng stuarp inrcease.s In spen-rt.*' • s.cwui.. IOll c-'"' E .. ,, !ii'! 1 •• '••,!:,.. Ii~ 1,,
1
• ••Mtl' 1 . .0
ding for IOClal and public Im· 1Mt'1~•1'"tf.n:C~ ~n f~' !~ ~ "~·~:r j J fff,~ 4i{ ~ f.t", 1~r•' C:. t
provements In lhe next five =.t.'lt'~ 1'' ,,.:.:: ~r.'.l'!.., 'l~ ~ti' ~:t.!'c~o ~ ~· n n 2 ~ Al~~!/.,!"",, \!ear~ Offltf ftlctJJ '' el' rn· Yft. '-Iii 4" 1nc0. lt i~ 1111 ltm 1:\11 i!SV; Air ll '.°to. .1 • • •PPl"Gldll'llltlY J •ftlld T 11/o ,,.. art;• Dr ,, j l\ lt•I• Sit '"' I \'I AJ I utlrltl
ANO DOES SllE need it! :.:·r1:j;j'' W11ic11 :.Oi: '3f=Mt 1if 111" :~':; ~ s:Z ,~ tr•w f~ ~"' 1t. ~~~-,,,1.it
While Ell.po '70 is a beautiful :_.-. "• 1111.:r ~~r~.,. 1 ll14 ~ ,,::~11~ T ;1..., ~·1 LU:::' F~ f' i~ ~iC~~. ·,~
and eaicllng area , m.il:1 :r.m.l:::;~!fw'S~ ftt.111fi: rrJ; 'm_:"n:r= •1: 11J 2~~':(.. :ii
duslrialiud Japan today looks ~"f:. d••·"'~= ~!:'"Tr.. :"'" ,.t:Z :; ~i 11 1 '~t:~~·w uv. ~m :~"&' .~ like one big dreary fact-do not inc""" "'"'' 011 \4 ~~ .. ,,,1 W• .... "'1 .. , ... em 'tv. ,_. A,1 ',,."t"'., •·• -., r.trll m1l'llull. Formlw ""° -"ollt ii..., M 1nntnl · l&l/e lt\le Al f!J broken up by crackerboxes of ~'1!*"'n ., c.m-F0tt Grnl 11v. ~11111 11 " ~ ~·· At 1 1\'.i ~1~'"' ·• m •tlotl. Fo'°'" 1\\ 1111 Sull It rm .1, lV. 4'-.. :£ houses and housing AM Eftf 1u. 21,1,Fou~ s.1 • •1-t -'\' !~ ... c, 1\, tv. A n 1.10
d I ..... c..r I ' Fr I to 6111 7 le ,.. '"' '* ftn't In ,\,. m .... I .... eve opments Crom which the Al'1<Pr 1 ltl'I Fr In E • ~ Plllk"n Sf'.~• G 1 At11edM n .1s
I AIT5 Ire •14 -. Fu....._ 1 11'1 '1irtr HK 20 11 Tr:f C a ~ 1" Ar,ll_IH Pd 6' aundry hangs out a.II day AVM co '" 10111 ~-n 2~ 2'6lia10 "-tt 4lo s l'llCftl"' ,~ 1, 1<111ecill'o oi 1
every day. While she is well ~r,"1,J.! ~~ ~ grf'c:.. it; 11'1 ~~ ~,~ i~ ~~ r~ ~ l~ ~ :::~~; }:!
into an impressive low-middle :~n .r :" :?; ~·rt~ ;Jn 1MO ~I :1:1 tr• tm,;.~,,~ ns.v. 1: .... ~:_PC"''.~
class housing program, much :=: ~ ; ~Ir.fie I(~ ;v. ~~Ne 111\ 11"'rrOP1c1 i' n Ako. 1.•
of her housing is unspeakably ~Uf:i:: 1~t\ 1~'t 111 ·~; 1•v. ~ .Ur~ ,f 1, JMH~;:. ~14 ~t ~l~ .~.o
bad by our standards and a ~,n E• 61~ '"' •1 '"" ~·11v s1 u 1' u11 .McGH 1\.1. ,,. ~::-E;1 J.:~., .. "' ~ 4\~ 4l' G """ N al(. Duo C• ~ 4~US tlinol Ill I ""' sewagesystem is actuaUy non-""'Ide: 3v. 41' G 11•11 '~ -'' iii•• CM 11 1'*u! Enve1 11 1, 14 :~Ht" 'r,' 3·.0!• Am I V$fl lO'Ao 11 tlfll W '!"" 1w. lod 0... 11 11 U 5<111 """ ... existent in mMy big city "' Et Lib ,..., ~ •uo v. '" m1f -2 1 ~us ,.rtit' ~ •,.,•, ~'•'•~••', ·•.-
""' Eur Mtli '°""' C¥C I m Ri ll T~I JV. 1 ui 'ti,. ''"' ,, ... areas. While she is actively Am ~u•"' '~ '"' Ls 6'\ 11o1o ltlMb , ,,,. """ •• ., ""' s Am a.a:.,. ... Gl'HI ~4~ C J\lo 4 II • "" .. ~n Alrtnet 1.10 building roads. her roads and Am ,,..., ,, 1~ •Nh c" 1D 1g"' 1"<11 • •,•1 .• ",, ~',',' ,'"• ~, .• ~, Am&ow 1.20 . A Mtdl<'" 11'\i I~ ••Ph k t IS llwm • v. • .--. Am C.11' 7.19 traffic congestion pose the big-A s1 Goll 3'" , tA ,.,,e ,, ... :ztv.i:IQ>O ~ ' 21 v,11e, s. 1 ~ '''Ill AC.11 pr 1.1s
I ••· h ASI G DI • S r .. n Mt 1~ 1114 11f.L.C•ru i1"' 311.'J VMl!ron '\t IOI'> 1"ITI Cem .60 ges 1.11ceat to .er own auto Am r11v 11•~ IN\ rntt •E 161>1 1! .rr.;r si: ,:~~ ~1"':~·~ ~"" ~~ Acn.111 1.t0 industrv and htr problems of !::::'u' c• 1""" rcwJ ,., sv. ,... ltMd E• '' is W••'!' ..., 1w. 1m AmC•ec111 .ffl ., A ~. 6'14 7\'t rw '" 1V. jii!o11111 M 24 :r1 'Ii ,... ,,. S ACrvS119 1.'11 plllllion dwarf ours. A~5!n ':: 1.t ~ ~~'11111~11 :~ ~ Ron1on 4\i •'4W••lhw ,\; 4'lt ~m. •:11J·¥ Alden If 31 3l vrodn 7\;, ™ llO't Cllf ,.,. jl~ W111t NCI ''"" 1$ AD!• •! .to. Second, lo IOok outward too Ark MoP nv. nv. H1novr s 2lVt 2l 11,:,,',"•°" ,.111 1 1;,w11~ R£ 9\~ -Arn rvnt
nd k h I 141rqw H 10 .i Htrlncl J 11l.\o 11'1 ldi I :1•111 3!111 llVll Tr I',\ ffi AOU. of.Ma a to ta e er pace amDng Arvld• 1~ "~ H•~•n 1n 1v. Pio L II•• •v. 14N1bb •• ,, •P.~ A111E1Pw t.u
the great economic powers of ~c/oc :_r •; 2i ~:vt•c: 2jtz ''"' ~111 .~ ~ ~~:1f'11t"'M i:v. l~~ ~~ l~':-1,,!t
th Id 81 rd "'' •'4 ,,. H~ Inf 3\\ !"' s Cflr 2 ,~Nttal p •l't. .ffli ~J'~llld DIAf e WOr · 81ktt 'l'O Jltt HflrrWn 7~·, J~ i~ Ind l\li ( Nttn ~A ' 6Vt AG.nl<11 .Jll
JAPAN IS PREPARING to l::..!J1"' :~ f..~ t::'~E,. 'f..,, '"" ~~o:"4 i~ ~ Z:l~ :r:: ti;"t ~~ ~'n~~,°'~Jf'
earmark an impressive 1 per-R:i~"~ ,f'" J14 t=;.':{ GI ':"' ~,~ f~~~": o' 11:? 11~~1:Z,:V" 1t\li 1~';? ~H-;.r;; Ji'°2
cent of her GNP -$4 billion :=Ji ~r .. l1v. ~l!cidl. ,'t' :JU. nv. i:i:.,fnm• i~ 1: ::~1w"~ 1;~ 1;~ ~~1n~f :it by 1175 -for -·om•"c at"d, Btlle ''" ISi; lf\/il Hue Gt• ll l• YC Gr• .7,~ 1\.'!Wr!Ol!I w 11\.'i 1 ..... AMe1C1,., .... , "'~' Blln'I Ir-cl f 1 Huril P 10\l IUll StYtn U11 • n -Hl'l't"rdn't E 6\t ~ AMttC DI I
primarily in Southeast Asia. t~ ~ ~ = ~~:~ g '~u. '!U!•••••••..,••••••l:~1~!°'l10
Also, her giant combines an: l~~ ,.1Yi J r=•a::" ,:\: JJ""' ~;r'-rP.:-: •.N~2
un ilin g to form even greater aildr. •HI 2f1~ J'4 l ..... :u~ 2:\o ,., MUTUAL ::;: f~rJ .k giants ta move into other eoo.,..,._ El 31to w. l"fottc 11, 2•, !mtll~ ~:
I lier 7lll I lnfr1nt l \1 4 AmSAI I 1' ands of Asia and I n to a~ c '' 11 Int Cont 4 '" Am s1d i"·
Au stralia in search of new ~ c".~ 1~ 1~ :~:''Bw':i S ~~ :~5s'l'.rf:":!:
maten--'-B•ld Sv• 11~t IW Int Mlll!lf 70Vt tt FUNDS , ~!' , ~ manpower, raw ;u.:a, l~wv G J1'4 ""I" I"' "° ''"" "'TT Wtw1 k" '"' k • 1• 1"6 "' r ~ ''"" *' AmT•T , .. mar e . a,,..,, Ar • ,.,.. intt•• fl' • Am T1. r ;,
Th • d [ d rue~ Ill: f l\o) lonlO 2 2l Am-k5 .51 1r , o grow an grow, :·~ •• l!V. 1• '' '°'-1111 ~l'I H'~ :!: po:,!!. 1.is
lo prosper and prosper, to e~: s 11•! ,J14 J= ~ ,v. ~·· Arnr•~-.60
be ,_ and CIC l•11 SVi 6 •m Wt! •l't 5 Mtr 14 Inv CoA 10.cl 11.31 Atnti.k loO& come a greaKI power C1I w s... ,. ''""IJJSmtl F 2•\' 7.5\'t NEW EOllK fAI") lrw ¥. I.II • 10 AMF '"" ·'°
nN> Ctl'l'l(o 13 U •mtlll' 9\'J, 10 jil,,,_ ~lowl,.. -lnY I k S7.J S.1) Amfle ..IO a s.,.~r power. c • ._ M •1 7' lfrY Fds ' •Y. 111o11s, •:::riuld ~ ln~es " 10.14 II.Of AMK Ca .30 C1111'1M I f.l M llNn Pd ll"" IJ ,,.. N•lloM Auoel-111.-.11'"' Gr-· AMI' Int 51 It's not so inscrutable -not C111rld • ·~ K1~tr 51 " SI fl iol! ., <KUl'llle1 IOS IMll 11.)t ..... Arnotll coio
l lh . . ad C•11 Sow '''-av. IC• •51 "' I'™ II\;, De•"-'f· Inc, ... , Mvt ·'° •.:n Aini'!' '·" o ano er eC1>00nuc nut e cc"r'"'A J\li •·.~IC• ,, • 1r ,,.. 11r '" 11 wr.1c11 "\!! ,,. !·ff Amr .22
n"amed lhe U.S. Surely, a 111 Cl'I ''' 71~ Kitt Grn ~ Sl\ ltltst 11Wtlt111 11 ls.II' 1 .x An•cOlld "'° Ctrl" OtW a ~ "''""' m ~v. <Oll:I' l\IYI bet!! s. Kl l·" t.ts AllCll H~t I Japan
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"ntent on beco . g an C•rtt 81 l lYi K••• T ,.., f \lo r.: ''"l"'" llou!:lht v., p' .17 • 3t AncorDN5~ I ffiln Cs"r Ga 1•1', IW! Ktllttl ,,,_ •'4 1tkldl h\ll ldl'. _ Inv llttll 4.0ll '·"' And Cl1y 1.10 economic super power is to c<11c ~ •1~ "~ 1C1uwo 11 21'!4 1c1 ., .. ,,,., is.23 n .10 APld>eeo .25
be h el d .. J !:~l~i • 1~ .J~ ~~ fi11 ,;~ lt~t::"r.ttv ~t'11c1tJ ·M 'YJHncodt 1:U ::ri Al>COOll 1.37r mUC pr erre a apand tn VPS ll!> '"'° Kt'IJ Cui 11 1l ~ .. 111 J.IS 6.19 Jah111Tn l•.711 lf.7' APL Cora intent on other goals. An h1r1 ltA 61• 11t "E'' PC 1 ~ lncorn 31' '·£ K1Y11-Fullds: :~~ f.,i1::t Ch1rnt1 2V. W. K In! l 4 ln•ur '· • • Aool lo 7,37 l.6t A ! N 1 ir we both start now to handle en.,, o 'lit •'6 "9t 11!1 •" ?~t:~v••rt •. s •. S:u. 1 1 l'·",'·" A~g 'oan' ~
it right, our mutual economic r..: ~~ ;~: :? IC~'!o C°J11 1ra JJ\; Aml!:td 1:~ t~ ~~: l~ l·l\'if, ArltPSvc !.GI
competition can lead to an ~r .~:,• lf"' ~l'i ~t'1~.1 l~ ~l? ~11,t;, F 1.tt .~ ~~: ~J t i: t~: !~=s~s 1::
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·mme•••ly b 0 n 0 f 1• c ,· 8 1 ex ~~rtn s '' •1 •n<• 1n 2n~ ''~ AIDl'l1 Fd 1.l't •·tl s;u• ~.' 14.ts 11.n ~~~. ""• ;!o '""' • Chrl11 ,, ,., H Lind "" j•~ ' .4rf1<10 '·" S, ~Ill ~ •. ,. t.CW Ar;;;sick ".;,
Pans'•Ofl Of tw~way •·a~· .-.1 Cit-I 1\f 1 ,,,_ Wd fl', 7 Am I UI 2.11 3.IM c" > !·'' 6.~ A-C-o .-.,. 1-1 Ut: 11\1 Cltll U A '.Ni '3\1 ar111n 1'1 l'\ Am D'ttn l.d t.21 U1 54 M 3,7, ·• ,.. .,,
treal breaks for You and me "/•z U a 2ni :1111e L1rwn M l•h lS'lt AnMr E•ortt•: ~•1o11r 2.'7 Jn .-. ... in Ind 1 I C:I ¥ In¥ l~ 13\0 LMdY lei 14" IS,_. CIDll 6,77 7..c& n,~~DG S.n 1:>0 Mllld 011 '·'°
lh' -·wne... ~ltrt Ml 711.'i """ Ltto (NI n. 3U lncm• 1.16 I.II n...,. I 6.fl .611 Atl'IOll Pf2.40 .. ,,.... ''" ~la'ttOll !~ 114 1lsur G 11 1t lnYtlf 1.•t I.JI LR.• Gr1f\ 6.M 7.52 A.Hd Brorw Cllnl ,,,,,,, 1\4 tl4o l .... IM'lt>Dlll (I l~ llllel;I 1 DO ,. LR• lll:Kfl n .n 11.tt .Uld DG 1.711
Clln!on O , SIA Lllh' EU llV. IL V. tac:N 7.11 .tt ltl~t\'f '"' 5.1! Ands,.. 1.711 ;_ksw C• lSVt 11V, lotllfW ,., ... A..i Gr!ll 4.U !.JO 111 ft; 4.,0 •.u Alli!Tr1" .tio ~-O 6 'l>'I loll Cd't 1'4 II• Am lnY 4.6' I ,.. nv 6,D6 6.6l AllC1YEI I.le S d • M H •k S°''' C• • 50 Lw Etnt 1, '' m Mui 7.27 1.•1 ~~Nit 1.11 \M Att Rltl!lod 7 Pen .. , .. g on ey ") e Olfm E 3 l'i L,.PICJ! C """ 21 AmN Git! 1.17 1.... J.OS .l3 Alllll:<!I ~.1S
•
II Ii &i Co111..., I" """ lWt Y.tc:t GEi 1:n~ TW. ~::l;,.:'l<<tr~:! 6..511~ "~'i~10 '• All lll:lc~ Pf J
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Colon Sir ltU 711U. 'Ml ltlty 1\'I 5 &-" 6 •i 'U 1011 1:,... •. ,. AllR~h PO.Ill Ol'nC.lf 12 14 1~1lll!rt U 51\'I ~ ., • I l>., ,,. Alll1C,,..., I Com Cir :i.vt J7V,MIN'lll A• 1\1 ,..., rw!R ··" •. M~ I 1'iS .... All•I Corp
M E W Com Git 10::. 11,,., 'A~:lnln M :I lllo ~i::"1..v ~ g 1,·:1 M•nllln 11 4:.0 4 ~ ATO Inc Jiii B • Corn T•1 IOl't '1\\ 1nor C Sll '"' AllOllO Fd 1·M ~· iGQ I'd I 'I f 11 A-• il't10 ay e Conom"lc oe s:-Hmr. 1 t ir Mfl ~ 1'~ /u 1 1"1t > 1\111 Gth t1 10.)J Avlomln Ind
" ,~ ... "' .. ·~ •• ... '" .. ~· i to .. ·-,, ":ti "·" ·~ " ··~ Comp A 1 • ~"' erowr 2'\.t ff Allt "'-h!Oft · M~"' l ~ u AYCo oU.211 c ..... c'" ts 11 ,,,,..,.,. o " U I,\ Fln'MI ,.. 4.Jit Ir.~·-1· f·os ,...,.,,. ,.,, ·"° Cm• In$! .fll Wt V..:Oul' 7• jl F a · Mlr!C I'd 1 ·, 1 · ~ '*'Yroel rnc ..io
By JOHN CUNNIFF completed their annual con-~;;:...,~te l~ ~;: $l~ a '!t? ;n t'f=c. i:tf f~ ~~~ 1tl11 Jf ~=pr\·.~
NEW YORK (AP) -So lMbutlons to Social Security. c::iJ';c" ~v. S'ln.i V.:::1:1• ri~ Ya I::::: ,70·13 ,~~ ~y;~ Ji: 'l'll ~~Ori' .n\
.rs. is the Present 'tale I\._ C:ontrt" '~' ' V.trkl '" IJ\le 14 11r,a ICM 7:.0 7.tO MIF Gll1 4 M •ff perv -Oeductlons are made en U1C c-L ,," 11v. ~1c11d t• ''1' n\ 11111f "" t.14 6j1 Mu 1!£G •'.02 .:,1 Or lhe nati.oo's f 1· n a n c ,. a I CDrD s ni, l1h 0,,1011" Jl, 3'~ joncntt ~ ,, 'I! Mu 111 !·u t 311 B1tKk w 1 36 basis or 4 percent or the first ~D$'1'1 Yr 70\i 11 \4 ~ldw GT ,,,,., 15.... Mlon ~I 6·,1 ' MUI I " l ·'"l:.n ••krOHT ·'' balance th.I Some Of the rare f lh t rwfrd u -14 ..,r." GH ,. "" _, ''" tu 11· Mui t"lt ,t7 .. ,. ••Ii GE 1.11 $7 ,800 earned, a igure a ••• Mfl't N ·~' Y. •• v1G 16 ,,,,., aOihil! 4'.n :40 SEA Mut 1 . ..0 1.11 8a1111P-n1 .ua good news for o r di nary much of Ameri'ca's mt"ddle re•t M~ n' '" ~ •1c11 3•\ 4 gro.d s1 11.ot n.ot et •nd 1.11 1.11 B11111P Pl 1 •111 FD 7 7"" ~ Sci ••.• Ye ulloc:k (l!Yln' II l"YS' •. 16 613 inkofCll Americans in recent weeks class ls now approaching. 11 •011 to !'1 3, ~wk" 13 1.r -i1nr1t 11 1'1!·" 11 Secur Ser: ""tofNV ' could mean more trouble for roic11" •fl s MON..ct1t ~ '""' n '16.n t ,12 e11•11 t.01 '·" •1111·Tr (:" can mean $S0 or more in g;-i:i ~ l ~ MoDr• PP!t; 1
1v. 1:!,<i :i~ s i:~ 'lil. 88~ tU l:~i I:~ 0l111 ·.5:1 t.he economy. monthly take-home pay for 111 O•• ''" •11 ~. s >1 10" NV' vnt 11.101 .t i rwtn 1.1• 1 ... 111s1c Inc .IO 8•11 Gtn ttV. 2•\\ Mlft 7rA llV. ll'Mo uM Ft •.4) .05 Pl Stli: $.13 t,J1 Balet Ml9 Summed up, a lot or many workers. att1n " 31, , i!':°'!'T' wt '" 4'r'tl G Fd 1.11 1.n 51ncorn 4~ 4.tt B•1e1 Ml °' 1
A · · · D1vh1 Fd ll'o 4~ l'""lclt M $\lo 4 -mr 6.SI 7.~ ltd: l,SI 7.1! B11h Ind mer1cans are receivmg more Now h••e'• t'· problem·. 011 Mir 1J1>1 161'1 Mot c1~ 11'• 11'4 ... 11 •n• 2.11 l·°' Net Grn. 1.u ''' 81 hln P",!11
d. Iha t lite .... In:: Otcor In SI\ • Mutll1r 11,\ lllt 1Qlt snr s .., ·'' HIUW CRI 3.55 ).It Blll!lchLb .IO spen 1ng mooey n a Th-e •"ncrea&e! 1·n d•~sable o-1111 AP St• •v• Mu11111 E• JU •Ill ,.., snr t .1410.01 ,M .....•• '!d 16.01 11.01 B••t•L•b .10
be ' . f h Th' "" ~,.... Deknt Cn .SOI,\ 411.'i M1tl'" LE l' I~ hlnnlNI Funds· .W .. 1d 10.U 11.U B•~ukClo .50 g1nn1ng o t e year. IS personal income could be turn-0,1 cenT ,, 1N N c Lt• Sh ·~• ~111n '·" kA2 N,-, s u.01 1J.U t•arl11111 l -"Id lead to mo-demand ori 1er If\~ 111u. N1tt1• c It '' om st 1.3~ 1.sa, e11 Tro 1.s1 l.J ear Fds r
.. vu .... · ed into tremendous sales o.. NII 114 ' N11 ••"" ''~ 2•;, """" 4.11 ,..,~"'"'' 14.:1414. Be11 F l)fJ.JO And increaes in demand could o-... E s s-.1 Nortelr 111: 11>J. lj\~ ncom '·'" '·ll ""°" s.M s." Bec•1111n .so pressure. l f Americans decide 011m c~ ,,,~ 11v. NCm• ca "'~ -. Sotcl 1.51 1. _ ,•, ,'-'', 5 M !leer oitw .:io -well almost cer";nly would nd h" lh g1sc 1~ -· •• N11 E•u1 11 11 Ch1" er 11o1: '"' 1.1 n.M 1rec11Ar .73b ,..... lo spe t IS money, en you 1v1r i:M fl lit N11 ••• "'' "" CM" '·" '"";.:·: , ,1.11 !·'l eko ""' .50 -lead to bighet prices. be · ·u Ooc:u1e1 7'lo ..... M•I Liii 251'1 27 Fund 1.11 1.H m 1.ot l .Of B•ldt11 '·" can sure prices w1 con-0otr ... Met 3 • ., 4 Niti """ '° 1, ""'' st "'I·°' 'N•U n.4' 11M ••!Gt"1H ~ The quest'·on ,·s lh>"s· \v,·11 1· d 0ow Jon )W, 'II"-N•j PRI 1•0 , Shrlld 1.61 .a 6.01 t .J1 a.11 How .60 · 1nue upwar. Oo'tll 08 16 17 .. Ne 1~clt 1,, "" Sotcl 6,111 'JI AIM •-21 1.•1 ~lntttcon consumers bank it or spend ..... ,., 1·, whal ,·s te•med de-o...-. NL l ~~' N•' s-11~ '"'~11tmc:1 11.11116 1 , c ~ .. '·" 10.n ,-\,' ,•,.~, '" §inkln O 11 ' N!I SU'tr •'lo 51,\!l-'lonlfl: Kt F-,,;.. a64 711 "'"' it ? That is. will they add nd I . n di! 1rlrot1 1~. \\ N ... GE 16\t lJ\'o E0\11¥ UlllVtU l'1ul R.tu S'.d •. '3 Btntf\Cp 1,60 ·nn . d ma -pu l 1n ation, to • "'1"' 11 • lllill NJ Na.C 15,, 111~ Fll"tl u111¥111 ;•""•SQ 6.10 6.7'0 !ll~fl" t!",).'.!. to I at1ooary deman by te•enl"ale ,., f-COS[ A .. e .. IC wt .,,, 514 Nld1s11 F ,.l'I )Cl Gr .. rn W ... Y.I • UI~ 4.116 4,115 ·"· .-.
bu . I ,.,m •pLI:iu,E•sfSf\ T!'oll~Nltl•A :Ill :io•o lncom u.,.¥1tll'hll1 11J71j·" ·~" y1ng cars and furniture and whi ch means that P••·ces are Econ LMI lv.1 \.'J1' A ltt•r 1,, '" \lint wn1v1 I il'llorfrn 1.11 .n Benawt
I. ' Q "\I th Elder 81 i 11'1 Cir tlG 1h S''t ~al Grth t.t! t.t5 '"•I'°' S> un1v111 B-uRI In app ttances. t WI ey pushed up by h>'glte• ope•ating Et N!I< ••• ,,, ''' 0" , , ... ommc un1¥1ll nt •.lCI t .)'l 11,~""..!:, 'c'°,,,
k . ., . ' E• Hue ;.;:; • .. ... GI• ,, .... 11\; om$ Bd J.,. l .tt .. , .. , ,E!!! ·'·,','•5.'1 .... ~ mar time unli price in· costs, including that for labor EkteP't , 3\!o w N•IG 71~ I"' wl!h ..,. 1.11 •1-'1 °"' "" · ~" Rf.'h su 1·10 creases begin to slow ~ Ell•orn •'i l'~ ww Pusv 11,~ , ,,, ~wrth co 1.•1 1.sl =1'n •:¥ •.-" '·" a Th••• 60 In the present unstable i"• <0 ',"' .~1~ .. " ~', • ',", ',:~ 1111 o;;,°ot1A• 1·tl. l:3r G~w1~ uM11(13 1'.fl ll:f.~~n ':!i Millions of American s . ·1 t" ·1 d 't I I ... .. .. a r .. , ""'' 8d 11' ,,, N Er• 115 12JBHH ltuQ l
1 · ed · economic Si ua ion 1 oesn t MooSul ~~., ' ::>111o w11 21i~ 23\lt comn Fd r:u 1:.,1 "' Hor 11'.18 11:n 11tac:t Hiii: .l6 recent y recetv pay en· take much of an addition of c°""o•t 13 .... 4.00 Pro Fund '·'' 1,6, 8lv• 8•11 110 creases, among them, Social concord un1v111 Provdnt "'' 4,l1 Bobbit Brts money to make the ""' bubble Con1111 In t.50 10.00 Purllln 1.5• t lJ Boeln• to ,40 Security rec i pient s and ~ °"lu In J.11 l.1' Putn1..i "ullds: 8ql1C11 .1Jt>
government employes. And Despite a year-long effort to spree to expand facilities. ~,1 /fl~ ::J1 ttt ~.:~;~ 1f:lg 1~:i' R::M11~ ,J;
millions more are about to bring slability, consumer Businessmen argue that the ~~~ cL!a 1,'·11:~1: ?..'.c'~ !:= J:l~ 3~:1'W1r1.r',.s
l·n--ase the'· lake-home pay, prices early this year were only way they can overcome rn wo1v J.os SJ.. !~,'",·'' s."n •,.11 llorma111 .10 ..... .. . . I 6 I I '" WOtl 6.U •·!• v' I •. .JJ I"' Ed it 3.11
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·r you can i"udge by lhe ristng a a percen annua their rising costs is to spend :i.voh M SLHSl.26 ,vov1n s.n '·'' oorn1 inc · t . . ll1w1r1 G;CIVll: ea T1H;~ 3.~ 3 1t gr•nllATr .50 number of union contract ra e. for mort. tff1c1ent plants and 11 ·'''°·" 11,r-... 1.u t.67 r1;,s1 1 . .io.
d h I . lwr 10.Jl 11,11 In~! lj.1' ll.61 8rl1t My l."XI negotiations set ror this year. Base ()fl t e so-ca led con· machinery and thereby lower or Ill f·" 6 .... llt~tnthFd .26 S.7S ll•l•IM't pf 2
Moreover. payrolls a re fidcnce of consumers, as rated the unit cost er labor, which 0.:'11 Fd 1.i: t&J; ~,,.;;'\, 1#:tl 1;:U l~,P~!1.:3'r "1t could be Ma I . II . . t bout°''!: Lv ,. 61 l1.6t CU(fcltf ~imds· 11 .. 1H1 pl AJ going to be increased · ny peop e are IS presen y r1s1ng a a , :tt,lillw1rc1: 1"' Inv uMv111 etivnuG 1.n
somewhat by the termination fearrul oC getting themselves I percent a year. ~~ '"".:·.fl ~~r s i;:nlt~ Ri::~ ~:pl
on July 1 of the 5 percent inlo financial traJ>8, of taking Consumers <lo not feel this i~'T ,~;11:J! s't.:11¥ 'FuWi: 117 =~~ru 1:~
illCOme tar surcharge. The Qn big installment loans that need. Moreover, if you er· ..;~r 'k~ If:~ .~ l._J JJ1• l::t~~"t' 1:~
surcharge, if you remember, extend far into the unknown amine the opportunities for :::-~~ SC 1:·= 1j:r. t:JU!tr',.m i::; :::1 r:= ~= if
was meant t.o be an anti-In· future. .spe='ing you fillcl 30me outlets "'"'• 10.at' .M re\grcs u111v•ll Bue1<:1 ~ Df'.'J uu n!WH J,4! s.4 ntm Fd 1.41 •.41 811dQt! '" ,64 (lation device. but it's hard There I!!, in fact. some in· closed. Mlllions or Americans OUllY J.» ··~ ~°'1" ll . .ct 13.~ lulfFOl'q 1.10 · 'b I" ,. 1· II t · ht h ~ ed bu · horn ~-Giii 1\·00 1'."4 I F 1'" '·Cit ukloo• w ·60 to measurY tlS contn u ion. 111ca ion 1a consumers m1g ave ....,.,.-pon y1ng es -:~~' 111 1'0.'f. 1~:ff ti':" u~~h 1 "' 1~~r. ":fl'."w
Jn addition, millions or be reacting to innaUon in a because they dcan't. get ltethe Fi~r~" 1:'1 :':r:20 t~:·:' J:~ :~ .,. "" 1.• Americans are already finding manner much di fferent from mol"lgages. An various ot r F•fm •t.t •·11 1 Stt11n. a 7.#9 1.11t ~!~: ~'~ ' b · h · b · h" h • lann" lo .,. ' h be '" ~rtt. 10. '11. • .. n 11!'1 7.0ll 7.'5 urf'ld"t .la s.1zea Je increases 1n t e1r us1ness , w 1c 1s p 111g spe1a.im1 pro)ed.! ave en ~1., 111 ':ll lo.1• w11111 GI 5.1• !·" eu•riiht . .a
paychecks because they have go ()n a capital spending rorgotten becauR banks won't i: r~::# l::J,::n ~,~nv 1i:tt 1,11 •u•~un ... ·711
--'-----------------------lend the money. !;:11~~~·1 ";~1 = 4.lll !l':r.111s?' 3'.fr;1~1: ~bot cn .1G , . nduu 3:if J.SS Pldi'll111 l'ulldl: I Fln1nl Moreover, something big Is ncnm 5~ 5.65 Am ,,.,. '·" 1.&s 111hM ,131
h · ' the lo t' Vtn• ,,,., Sn Ftduc j·ll 5.tO molli.. .& appen1ng 1n au mo 1ve FstF v1 1·f• t.•t sc11n ·" >.11 mnso 1.1Q
""'"'-~-~--~AIXlllC•--------""'~----~---1 f A fe< .. ___ .. ,. __ _
: . .!.~~: .. ;..:::::::::::::::::.J
····•e•1&•1J lt
'"''"""'°""' &r.wrl11n c ... p. 21t l. lft' J I.· f.t,t•• Tf 1
hlk •• ..._, Callf• I l t l'
'' -
market, People not only are ~::11YI~ ,;.: ;:lt s~~. 11°' 1f11:1s.«~ ~:~r;.':t ·~~
spending down, as they used ~:I' fr1t,~ f:r." ~fi ~::~oo 1~:'~ 1~·-~ ~:~11~c1aJ(~~
lo Spend Up ... bl••er C&r 1'1 NII S. I I.Ct !uo -lnGI 540 i ·'l C1rbrun 1.IO M • '!' Sltr• un1v•ll uolnSt t.,I 34 C n 1 llO but a good m11ny Americans ",, c•11 s., ..... !'"i' .a• ,,'·U ,,.•, c!~~c, ·1."' Ftl Fnll 4~ ,. M .. o . . l CaroTth lllO h~ve 5imply fallen out of love{~ '"G'~ !: 4.H :C:~f !:n !.1: C••rit1Cf '.t0
with their cars. No longer,.,~, 6. 1.z; ftt~1111b1 ,]'Jt ,1·~ ~=~G~ ;!t
is it the status symk l it used ~nlc,J.~ Ci~: 1· ::r9 tl" {11 t'.~' c.w J•
to be. ~ili 1:;; ~·JI ~~ E': ;:•7 1.12 ~:~~'r9'),;r
On the other hand, the ~~ {l~ /'.~J~ bt 11:!: 1;~ ~1 c~~· .10 motl~ation lo save Ct!rtltnly rnut i:f1 .qtdii;i.::: J:e ~'.~ ~:J:i,11t~:.s~
isn't intensified by the rates ::'i!c."' ~J 'i:!iH~~ ~:,1 l:tt ~~·"~ ·10
or intemt available to coo-;1•1th'1K 1 ._,, .01 u~ llf1'Jo , 0, ~:1~ l:t
sumers .. Savings bonds and 'mf• ,: i:I' •1::t ~i:" 'tjl 'i·~ ~,J,\11ft5rlf1~-1~ banks 11ve rates thiit at best si 10.U 1613 ut!tlri f . ., 1:~ Ct<11 L• E• 1
merely • keep ~ wlth lhe 8~v~!nc1 1l:;: lt::1 ~\I: Llft1rtt si(: s." ~~::z ::~
r•te of lnflat!on. W:rr!O!I. 1f.tl "·t1 ~°TK ::n t'" ~~~m· .~
\\'hetbf!r the consumer t,., · 1 ti l~ nctSJ"I ["!M )'"o 1·'°" 11pends this addiUonal money H~C,.. f:1; · :i ~ ~ c:;;:;::i !Ii'°
i!I a tossup. If It is spent. ~lc1wr, ... /.'f ~ M1...!llCIP t i£ ~i'r"'t,t ·=
It coukl mean more lnfiatloo ~=-Gtr 1•,~ i· Nim' J: 1l:&i lt.M ~~ti;;' j~
prnblems. ?,HfT~~ 11: 1 . w~~:i-111 ~r!?"fit.u ~~~'3~~~
I. ;=:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=J ~•1non •. t I. IV91t 11.f? 11~ {111!(11•• Mol ~ 'lnl & 11 6. M-/l] (l\etllflf" It>
Mike • Sh1rp jdi.: jl·t.,.i~ ~i 1:l1 'i1i {5~~~ ·~
T ride; Use I~~': ;~ tU =r;H.h~~ i!~ if:~6 ~~clM11 :
Oime-A-Lin1u 1'11,:f/"' ~"'~~ i!~r.~~ J·K i fl ~=l:U ~~"' o1
'------------'' ~TG.. t.u 7.ff #Ol'lll J.05 2.JJ 'hlPntUf l
ltlarket
Sytnbob
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... oU\t 41 d -Vt J ,,,,_ 1M 11* .....
\~ 111: it., lfa ::.a
n J~ .~ .!• =·u
S k M Still """'' .u toe art !~1 :~ "•~lfll ~.411
':; ,,;; m: t~"! '
I ... ,,,
Plnnges Downward · ... ;~! F Ull 14 l~\lo -'111 ':: ir~ ,!:tt Un ! S
Jifn~f ='"' •• ""' ""' -• NEW YORK (UPI) -The Dow Jones Industrial 'j 1r ~ 1 · =1~ average plunied to its lowest level ln rnore than ri: ~ ,,'a ~·" + !? seven years Tb,unday as Wall Street continued to u• '~'\ ~~l'I " + ~ worry about inflation, Indochina, the Middle East, 1f'l i:1i J.~ Ji:.:!:~ student unrest and bllh unemployment . Ji 2:~~ 11: J-. ~ ~ The closely watched barometer or 30 selected , JU ,~n ,n; =•'it blue chips wu off 17.17 at 617.67, its lowest level
fl tt~ ttl~ :;14 =3..., since March 21, l96S, when It finished at 675.57.
S4' ~ ~ ~~s ... ~ The UPI market tncUcator, measuring all stocks
1 lOn XI',. -,,.. traded, showed a drop of three percent on 1,595 is· t• tl~l -1, 2"' "" .. u1' -1" sues on the tape. 01 the1e, 1,30G retreated and 143
l '°"' llOlo'J =ti ....... "
=·',•'Jo =i:n .ill Tr111t (;• .ft T•an.aU11 1.1'
Trtl'!t W i" Tr11WAlr !
'
,.,.. w 111
''"""'' ·" l•tl'!ICOll .«I Trtl\ICll lrw
Tr1111f1r1111 r •• ,,. .. ,, .t11
l r,.vlt" of? lrlCOf!t 2.~ "I'°" "'1.JO l r tl'llncl ,loll 111.W 1111; 1 ~w pl4..0 Tve>n <;II!: .n .,.....,. <:41'!1 Tvltf' Corp
•, ~,. •• "' )1,1'1 1JYt -,... gained. ,: ~ io~ :ioi.t + 1' Volume of aroWld 12.5 million shares compar· uAL 1f'IC 1
130CI 111'1 13-'"' -"' UARCO 1.11 'Jtl ,,~ " 11 -\' ed with 10,720,000 shares traded \Vednesday. uo1 Cp 1.n
' th '" m -\Ii UMC 1no .n 'lj u " " -'"' Electronlc1 and oil1 were amonr the softest is· u ... r«1 . ..i )Ill. lt1, :llh -\Ii hi h (( Ullll Ltd .~ 11 11 " -tv. sues. Gold mining shares, w c norma y perform u1111 Nv .11Gt 1 7'\li "~ 2"' -l II • d ed k l aJ (( ed Un C•"'" 1 u i1 11·~ '"" -,,. we in a epttts mar e , so a ract some 1.111 ,.,bl~ 1 ' »" ,.1, 111'1 -"' u· tl":,"1°" c~ ,1 ;11'1 ~n\4, 41~ .:.:,~ se 1ng preasurt. ~ ~ "Q .... •011-1\
! u lJ!'\ ... ~ -"'"'•••••11( .. ••••••1!1!'1!!!!!"!1!'!!"•'!'1!!1•!!"11!!!'1•!1 " • ' Id '°"" 1t lt''I -"r JO t ,1 •t t l U M2 1 m? !;~ ~'lt.:!: :? !:, • ...; tMt 11~ 1• tsv. +"' "'" ·~ S" 1
" '!" ~ u -"' j•tt 9111 ·'° ti I' •• " ~ It'~ -"" tmPltlll ,JJ 61 l~ JIU lt''I -., ~~~ •'f.i1..1 '!! "' l " lh •lcoUH 1 10 l~Va + \' ltM~ '•" lM ,.,. 11 II\\ -v. u~ .... 1.olO 1t \~ · 1 ,~• ::, j•ll•V ,...,· lJ ~· -• J""nte: pl .JO -, H"" 71"' n -" U11Jr•v•1 • ff 2C1 ~ + lot tm1>9 El .N li" °"' -h ~· C9 J,60 'I' l •• 1Ht t~~ -'~ On 'fr.: '" 11• ~ 514 111 •. 1...av CDl'p 100 + Iii Tto :Trn l:«i IS '!" u\.'o -.,, un11 o ••
11 15 Uh 1 -1'1 tflD•l\Co .«I u' .ll!" • ~--itX tll 14 .0 2 ~~ \.i.-114 Un A1( 190 M Im" '!Ill ' -V. !td!Mal .UI ~· -~ t• s Pl\~· :"'.S 7' 1 ~-. h -VI Unit Ct tlt llt 3 \.'o t \.'Ii Kf!lllC9ft '" ~ -1 "!" ,,~ '' 1•\~ ,. ... \J1111 l=ln ~·· .. 1 \lo 1fVt 2' t~ tletr..,lx Jf :n1 V. ,. -·1-11 Piii b ,. 1ni. 2aat -It Un Frv!I 1,; U U l \\ 11 \~ ltlec!Yll I.Ott ~•' 11' ,.111 + \II t•ttlntl f)'ll, It'll> ~ +'" Ul'!ll lllCI •
. .
-------------
Mu 14, 1970
I
•
OAILY PILOT
Finance
Briefs
HOUSTON ( U P I )
Western Unhln Corp. hli
formed a new subsidiary tO
handle lt.s real eslllte ac·
tivitle11, vice pre1ident C. A.
Hoyt told Dallas setUrity
analysts. 11'le new subsidiary
wl11 build a data processing
etnter ln Dallas, a new
Wntern llnion headquarters
al Siddle Brook , N.J., and
a c omputer ize d com·
munlclUons cent.Ir at Mid·
dletawn, V1.
NEW YORK (UPI) -Philip
J. Levln the Ntw Jiney real
estate opet"AJr. hu sued
R<crloo C«p., Ole ll>aner
Porvln·llobrmlM Corp.. to
void actlono llk<n al Ha April
28 IMUll meet[fll, Le'ln
nnta to call a ne'W annual
meettna with MW toHdt•tl•
of prozles. Levin, who OW'IW
•bout 9 pm:ent of company,
laUod In 1 bid to &et lhe
oour1I to deloy Ille April •
me1Un1. Federal Judlfl Ed-
mund Palmieri order~ lht
tompan)' lo shaw CIUIMI Oil
May H why Levin'• rrquest
abould nol be JIT•nled .
,
I
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DAILY PllOT Frid'1, ..., 15, 1970 '
~''SP..E€I ATuIZ·IN G ··' ~IN t UALITY''
:~;-i~~~==·=··:::,:·:·:·:::::·:·:>·:··:·::":::·:;::~:::::::::~~~::::::?::::::::::::~:, .~~ ... ~ ........................... d • t • I -.. +. ~· \
••
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EXECUTIVE
AND
'70 OPEL .WAGON .
D1l11u.J 1t1ti111 wig.an: Auto1111 1Jic tr1111m:1-
1i111, J>Cf-' .li1.t DreNo1, I 01 hors.power 1n-
9i111, 11199191 rtek, whit1 1id1 wilt tir11,
tic. 1'23 115*1
'$2345
'70 SKYLARK
. ·1970
.,RIVIERA
CUSTOM
Full power equipment including win-
dow1 I seat, factory air condition-
ing, chrome wheels, AM-FM radio,
tilt steering wheel, vinyl roof, plus
much more. I 917086)
'70 SKYLARK ' ,. C111tcu" 4 Door h1rdlop. A11lom1lic, power
1lt•rin9 & brelrt1, •ir condit iorWn9, r11r 1111
1p1•ktr, pow"' willdow1, t1/l 1lt1rin9 wh11I,
win'tl roof, etc. tl01il511
$4185
•• Li§+Hffii&
'70 ELECTRA
Cu1l~111 4 Door h•rdlop, Full pow1r i11dud·
ing window1 & 11•1, t ir conditionin9, vinyl
•oof, AM.FM radio, till 1+11 rin9 wh11I, powtr
door lock1, etc., etc, f I Sl251 l
'70 LIMITED
DEMONSTRATOR C1otom 2 Door hardtop. Automatic fran1mi1-
1iol', a ir c;ortditioning, pow1r 1t11rin9, power
br1~11, rad io, h1afer, vinyl roof, t ilt 1t11rin9
wh11I. c11tfo_m interior, 1tc. ( 101427)
Cu1lom • Door hardtop. Thi1 iMm1c;ul1t1
automobile ha1 iu1! 1boul 1very c;onc;eiv1ble
luxury exlra you c;ould po11ibl1 w1ni. Full
power, a ir conditioning, ii.,reo AM.FM, etc.,
1tc. (206628 1 " CLEARANCE $5 795
NOW DR·ASTICALL Y REDUCED
1969 JAGUAR XKE
loackter. Lns than 1,000 mlles. AlmOst ' brdftd new.
Fully equipped 1nclud1nt chro11te turbo· Wheels,. AM~FM
Sltortwne rocllo, plus much more. # (421~SGJ
sm plul ·Tu & Lie. II w.. tltlll "°"""' payment. Solt." " tlllP 10111 monl!lly payment lncll.ldlng 1\1 c1rrvlt111 . ,
Cri.t'JI& ,., l6 rni:intha. Toi.I ush price Is 11"7.tl lncludlnfl 111• &. lk;ense. Otferrtd PIYITW!lt price' 11. $2222.12 ·
l<Kkldln9 •II CMeying dllrge, hxn. llcense, 1r1lght end dnltr pr-r1lklnl. Ori blnlt. approv11. (Jlf'2t1611l
. $
ANNUAL l'l'ICl'NTAGI! AATI' 11.H -. ' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
'68 CHEVROLET IMPALA
• dollr Mrdtop. Autom1tlc, powtr 11Nrlng,
llclor( 1lr condllllnlllg, rldlo, l'c11!1r,
IWJHHI)
'68 FIREBIRO 400
51111 lll'Mltr t•tlorv w1rr1n1v. • speed, radio.
llNr.r, po ... r 11-lng, vlnyl lop, V1ry IDw
mUng,e, LD<ll 1 •-gem. IVTUll)
'68 PONTIAC GTO
\It, 1u1om1tlc. rll(llo,. hlllar, power sttering.
powtr brllcn. tKlory 1lr. low mllHQe. 1
-•· locl llY OWMd cir. lmm1culltt. tWXESltl
'66 JAGUAR 2 + 2
Avtomtlic 1r1n1mlulon. cllromtt wire whH IS.
t1cl0ry 1lr c°""'lllanlnv, rlHllo •nd hNtltf. ~1111 -II lruly • 1pot!n1 11110mObllt ,
IP"SA)
'69 JAGUAR 2 + 2 ,..,., AulfllTlltk; lrtn1mlHlon, AM·F" s110rtw111e r1dkl, chromt wire Wliffls. Pirelli
rldl1I Hr11, 21.5Dll mll•. H1tvr1I !either I.,. terior. (T~H015)
'68 JAGUAR XKE
COUJll 4 •PMCI lr1nsmlnkwl. chr-wort
""""''· radio Ind hHltr. I OW!11t loc1t1y o-car, lllllf!lvl Ardlc whl!I tl!ltl"lot'
with bl•ck full INlfWr lf\tarlor. (XDAn•l
'69 JAGUAR XKE
~-• l99td tr1nsmlulln. chromt """"b. la<IWY 111' conditioning, AM-FM rldlo, Wiii·
low gr.., with btldl IHlhltf Interior, Ab!a-
l1111ly ~. fXXlilOS)
'69 IMPERIAL LE BARON
Thlt 1111orftobli. 1111 •Wt'I C6netlv1bi. lu•·
11ry f11101'1 ""' 11 Mftrld. Fun lelllltr i..-..-1or, 11t pOWt1' equipment Plus factory 1Jr
conditioning. Goto-. (YIE!oii)
OUR PRICE
ILUI IOOl
$1945
OUR PRICE ILUI IOOl
$2430 $2295
OUR PRICE ILUI IOOl
$2600 $23 95
OUR PRICE ILUI IOOW
$3875 $3 27 5
OUR PRICE ILUI IOOl
$4200 $37 95
ILUI 1001 OUR PRICl
$4265 . $3865
OUR PRICE
ILUI 1001
$4790 $43 90
I LUI IOOl OUR PRICE
$5145 $45 95
........... pooLE
'
•
' CHEVROLET IMPALA
C pe. VS, automatic, power ste ering, factory air, ra dio, he ater,
vinyl roof, imm•culate car. IWJMl89 J
ELECTRA CUSTOM
Full power, f1ctory air conditioning, 4 door hardtop, vinyl roof.
IVBA93 II
'67 ELECTRA CUSTOM
4 Door hardtop. Full power and factor,y air conditioning, vinyl
1oof.
Full power and factory air"conditioning, chrome wheels, vinyl roof.
IVAT0291
AJ!'JlfJORJZED
B f]fClr·O'PE,,...,AGVAK
~,h,Ji.S attd SER VICE
$'2995
I •
OPEN
SUNDAYS
2 Door hard top. VS, a utomatic, power \feering, power windows,
radio, heater, f actory air conditioning. ( OTU633 )
$995
'68 BUICK WILD CAT
2 Door hardtop. Auto., power steering, factory air, radio, heater,
26,500 locally driven mile s. IVFR598 J
'67 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE
2 Door hardtop. Automatic, power steering, factory ,iiir, radio,
heater, I owner, low mileage. Just immaculcite. (UPS87 I )
'64 THUN DERB IRD LANDAU
Full power and factory air conditioning , I owner, 33,000 locally
driven actual miles. IOML586)
-.. .... .. . .
548-776 5
•
A Complete Guide . ·-· Where to go •••
'
I
I
I
1.
•
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"~ -
"' ' .,
~
l
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" ·I
BALBOA RENDEZVOUS WILL HAVE FUN ZONE JUMPING •
'Balboa Rendezvous' Slated
As Art Museu1n Benefit
• 'Mlc Balboa F'un Zone will be the
i;ccne o{ a "Balboa Rendezvous" tonight
starting at 6 p.nl. and running through
'O I a.m. lt is all a benerit for the
Newport I-I.arbor Art A-1ui;;eum and wiH
include the big ]and sounds of the 40s
und rock and roll music as v.•ell s
a llght shov." and a Dixieland band.
The Fun Zone will be roped off wilh
L11dmissiOJ1 by ticket only. SlO per person .
If onl'.' wishes a sit-down dinner , anot her
$$ will take care of that. All food con·
cessions along lhe wne wlll be open
during the evening as will the rides
and other concessions.
'There will be dancing in the Pavilion
lo 1nuslc by the Society for the Preserva-
tion of Big Bands, and dancing in the
street to Dixieland and rock and roll.
A Germa11 Beer Garden will be open
that evening as well.
All funds raised will be given to the
~1useum which depends upon these fund
raising activities for Its operating fund~
For ticket information phooe 673-8603.
Uoll11wood
Sellers Sees
Sinking of
Star S)'Sterii
By BOB THOMAS
A.IH!;il!MI P'ra1 Writer
llOLLYWOOD -There's new kind of
star system in the movie industry, and
Peter Sellers approves or it.
SELLERS WAS here for the premiere
and we talked to him on the telepho'le.
" 'The ti.1agic Christian' is not a great
message picture," he remarked. "but it
does illustrate the power of money, how it
can corrupt, and the ways in which it can
corrupt. And money indeed was what
caused the downrall or this :very industry
-movies.
"THE STUDIOS are closing up because
they were making the wrong kind of
films. They thought that all they had to
do was poor money into films, and that
would do the trick. But it didn't.
"Along came an 'Easy Rider ' which
showed that a lot of ml1iley could be
made from a very inexpensive movie.
That makes it a much better investmenl
than a 'Hello, Dolly!' Whatever its merits
-and I haven't seen the picture yet -
'Hello, Dolly!' will be a Jong time paying
back its cost, as well as the interest on
the money."
"How can any one person say that he is
worth $500,000, $750,000 or a million
dollars to a picture?" he commented. "ln
the old days, that might have been true. I
can recall when J was a movie nut as a
boy, J went to many bad films just
because my favorite stars were in them .
"BUT THAT'S NOT true today. The
younger audience goes to see the end pro-
duct, not the stars. They wouldn't care if-
God himself was in the picture: they
wouldn 't gG unless they were interested
in the story."
Ice Capades
Now Boasts
N~~Champ
~ .
Tim Wood, current World Figure
' Skating Champion, has joined Jee
Capades and will be performing with
the show When it opens at the Long
Beach Arena, May 18. It will run through
May 24.
tn the show he will duplicate t.he
championship performance at Lj\lbljana..
Yugoslavia which won him the 1970 li~l~.
He is the first man to hold thUI ·uOe
in over ten years.
Wood joined Tee Capades In lo&··
Angeles (where the Company is currenUf
performing), direct from a EuroPeazi tour
which ended in Mascow .
Wood, who has been skating since
age 3, entered into competition at 10.
He won, !UC'Cessively. the National Junior
and Senior competitions in this country
and. has received the highest scores
in competition of any male skater in
history.
He began skating with bis parentA
\Yho are longstanding members of the
Detroit Figure Skating Club. His father
Is a surgeon in Detroit and he haiJ
three brothers, one a member of the
United States ski team and two wbo
race sail boats in competition.
Tim attended John Carroll University
tn Cleveland where he became the first
letterman in skaUng In an American
college. He is now a pre-law student
at Colorado College and plans to return
there to school after his career with
Ice Capades. -
He ha.s been coached since he began
skating by Ronnie Baker who is coaching
at the Broadmoor Warld Arena at
Colorado Springs, where Tim has tr~e<I
for the past year. ,. 1
\Vood Is an accomplished athlete In
other fie Id s and is a fine skier.
He also plays the guitar and sings and
has turned down several offers to appear professioo~Jly ~s a musician. The young
champ ion ordinarily practices up to eight
hours a day.
Celebratln2 its 30th anniversary. this
year's "Ice Capades" production include.<11
several inoovalions, new races and plenty
or fun-types to make it a vibrant,
streamlned go-go show.
Along with the all new. lavish cos-
tumes. there are such eve catchers as
Multi-Vision, Magic ·Screen and
psychedelic lii?hting effects that dazzle
the beholder from the opening "Sights
and Sounds" number, spotlighting Mitsu-
ko Funako!!hi and the Corps de Ballet, to
the beautiful finale, "The American
Girl.'' which Includes the entire all-star
cast of Olympic Gold Medalist. Wolfgang
Schwarz: World's Free Style Champion,
Tommy Litz ; the lovelv Linda Carbone!·
to: hilarious Hans Leiter: Soankey the
Ch.imp with trainer Dave Pitls: Billy
Chapel: Cherrie Moritz: Terry Head and
the teams of Margot/Danne. Richard
Gilbert/Faye Strut!, Peter Gordon/
Barbara Wil son and Hans Mueller/Pepe.
Other production numbers Include
"Love, Love, love and More Love.''
as skaters spray a Venus potion to
create instant happiness : "Indian Splen·
dor" with fabulous headdresses and cos-
tumes plus orifi:inal music; "Welcome
to Dur World ," the kiddies delight featur-
!nst storybook ch a r a c t e r s and
"A.I.M.,"otherwlse known as Anot~er
tmprobable Mission, another spdor of
the television serle!,
Weekend Highlights
ART FILMS -Two films on art will be shown tonight
at 8:30 p.m. in the Laguna Beach Art Association Gallery, 307
Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. "Avery Brundage Collection of
Asian Art" and "China by the Golden Gate'' have a total
running time ol one hour.
CHILDREN'S THEATER -The Costa Ml!sq Civic Play-
house Jr. is presenting "Frobarohop", an original children's
play, in the Community Recreation Center, Orange C.ounty
Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, tonight at 8 p.m .; Saturday at 10:30
a.m. and 8 p.m., and Sunday at 2:30 p.m.
NB ART FESTIVAL -The Newp0rt Beach Cily Art
Council is holding an Art Festival on the grounds of City Hall,
3300 W. Newp0rt Blvd .. Newport Beach, Sunday from I ID 5 p.m.
Art will be displayed on the lawn and blinds 1-1 the bigh
schools will perform throughout the afternoon.
Set Gulde to Fun, P•g• l4
••
,,,daJ, ...... 15, 1970 DAILY PILOT D
ER
What t .o do • •• ..
TIM WOOD IS NEWCOMER TO 'ICE CAPADES' THIS SEASON '
Intermission
Theaters 'Bunching Up'
Jn Season's Ho1nestretch
By TOM TITUS
Theater groups, much like race horses,
often tend to gel bunched up in the
home stretch.
That's what's happening on the Ioeal
thesplc front as the community and
calleglate producing ·groups endeavor to
squeeze one more show in before taking
a rest for the summer. The last three
weeks of May will see "° fewer than
IO new productions being unveiled-half
or them this weekend .
And, unlike similar slices of other
seasons, most or the newcomers are
just that-new to their audiences as
well. With just two exceptions, the fi.1ay
crop is being reaped from previously
untapped soil, with most of the shows
taking on premiere status in this area.
It all started last night, when the
newborn Tustin Community Players
opened their production of "The Apple
Tree," a musical heretofore uftseen in
Orange County. Jn the "world premiere"
category is "The Merry Wives of Hot·
maliki," debuting tonight at the Long
Beach Community Playhouse.
"Waltz or the Toreadors," which closed
at the Huntington Beach Playhouse last
weekend, gets the collegiate treatment
this evening, ope11ing at Goldeo West
College. Swinging up to lhe north county.
we find "Bus Stop" opening at Santa
Ana and "Tbe People Versus Maxine
Lowe" at Fullerkln.
ANOTHER COUNTY premiere ia a
season replete with them closes out
the first season 0£ the new Laguna
Moullon Playhouse next week when
"Spofford" opens a three-week run
Tuesday. Orange Coast College winds
up its drama season with "She Stoops
to Conquer" on Wednesday while . the
new Irvine Community Theater presents
a pair of ooe-acil, one the prii.e-wlnning
"How Tall is Toscanini?," on 1''riday.
"The Rimer! of Eldrltch" la the · cur·
taiJI closer for the UC Irvine Repertory
Theater, opening May 27, and ia another
unfamiliar show along the Orange Coast
F.qually fresh. is "Love in E-Flat," the
Rancho Community Players' finale, going
on May 28.
UM!klng ahead lflto June, South COast'
Repertory has another new arrival,
"Saved," waiting in the wings for un-
"·eiting on the Sth. The Costa Mm
civic Playhouse closes ils seuon with
another county premiere, • • Boe Ing .
Boeing.' while the lrvi11e Community
Theat.er counters with Neil Simon'• fir11l
brainchild, "Come Blow Your Horn,''
botll scheduled for the last two week.s
of June.
* BACKSTAGE -The Lagu11a Moulton
Playhouse is hoping to fill some· of
!he vacancies in its treasury with , two
special beneHt performances of its .sum.
mer musical, "Oliver'', •• _ .for $100 •
couple you can be a "backer" (or it t~at's too steep, you can become a
"friend " at $5(1 a pair) for the prevlelt'I'
July 1 and 2. . * Ron Anderson of Corona del Mar Is
singing the role of Schaunard in the
Pacific Opera Theater's p.roducOOn of "La
Boheme" .. , . . the Puccini opera wiU
b:e . presented May 14-31 in the Studio
Theater of the Long Beach Community Playhouse.
* When Bob Paver steps onstage in the
role or the sheriff in the Sanla Ana
Community Players' production or .. BUs
Stop" tonlght it'll be his first crack ~t l;he~te~ si~ he played the lead
1n hill. Junior class play back in Corry,
Pa., m 1955 •• _ , . why bring that
~P7 Well, just because one of the kidi1 1~ th~t particular comedy (which shalJ
remain nameless) was a fellow called
':f'om Titus . who had two lines and 8 Jug. . . .everybody starts somewhere right? •
WEEKENDER
. INSWE FEATlJBES
Frit14y1 M1')' 15, 1170
· Entertainment in Orange County
is lull or surprises these day! with 1
• ev·erything from 1 luau to enteftain. '
ment by the American Slack x. ·
Change. For details read Out 'N'
About column on Page! 25. 27.
Travel Pap U
~II ~d C1mp.ln1 . P11e %4
;Ql1lde lo F~a P11e U
Pearl Batley Pace 1:4
Uve Theater Pate !4
Ovi 'N' About Pll't·2$ • 17
Robei:a Fuller P11e ll
'Televl•lon Loe Pqe 21
ln the Galleries , ,,. II
Padua Tlteater Pace !I .
JleUy Beoltd P11e II
Your GIUde to l\fOViel Pace ..
Walttr Cronkite Pap n I
I
•
i--------------~--------............. -..----__...-~---------·---·----
' • • ' •I
DAil Y PILOT Fridir, M11 15, 1970
Water :Show
~ . . .
·~~At Estancia
• . . ' MAY ii
AJlT F1LM -Two ntnu, "Avery Brundage Collection of
Asian Art" and "'China by the Golden Gate", will be shown
yrlday, May 15, at 8:ll0 p.m. in the Laguna Bea~ ~ G~lJery, :¥11 .Cliff Qrlve, Laguna Beach. Total runrung time 1:s
9tlt hour • .Admlssioo to members is free , non-members may
pW:e • donation which will be appreciated. 494-653L
MAY 15-16
AQUA SllOW -The students of Estancia HiJh ScbOOl, 2323
PlaoenUa Colt.a Mesa an staging an aqua show in the
aicboo! ~I tontaht aDd tomorrow ni&bt at 1:15 p.m. About
38 swimmers will perform. Tickets, $1 for adults and 75 ctnl!
(or students, 00 n.le at the door.
MAY 15 -11
CBJLDRIN'S TREATER -'11:1e Costa Meaa Civic Play-
llottH Jr. la.JftSeDUng "Frobal'Ohop," an ori&lltal dilldren's
'production tonight at I p.m. Saturday at 10:30 a.m. and I
'p.m., and Sunday at 2:30 p.m. It will be staged in the Com-
munity RecruUon Center of the Orange County Fairgrounds.
tEnter west gate.) Tickets at the door, $1 for adults, 75
"centa for children. Pbooe SM-5303.
MAY15-17
.PICTJ'lNG 7.00 -Jett's PetUng Zoo with baby animals
'which can be petted and fondJed will be in the M-:11 ?f the
-f:{untJngton Center dming regular store hours. AdDllSSlon ~
·cents. Beach Blvd. at Edinger.
MAY 1~17
CULnJRAL ARTS WEEK -Fountain Valley is celebrating
CUitural Artl Week through May 17 with events happening
all over the city. A chlldren's pl1y is !ICheduled along w:llh
liCbool art -esbibit.s, music and art festival!, a production or
l"lbe Crucible,'' tr1vel rums, a pre-scpool story hour. a
band concert, a ballet performance and much. much mor:e
all climued by an lnaugural Ball for the Mayor. The 1))l'Ot
ec:t is sponsored by the Chai::riber of Commerce Women s Di·
vial~ For more inlonnation phone 847-1396.
MAY u.11
FRIDAY CONCERT -The music department ol UC lnin< presmts concerts each Friday afternoon at 1 p.m. in Room 178
ef the Fine Arts Bldg. on campus. 1'heit is no admission
chlrae. Friday May 15, Music for Violin and Piano: Mourt
Wx1 Ravel ; May 22, Conservatorie de la Voix; Students or
~Voice· May 29 Music for Small Ensembles: Bartok and F'nnd:; June 5, Instrumental Recllal : Students of Music
Dept.
MAY 11
'CI.AallCAL GUITAR CONCERT -Cllriatopber Parkening,
"protege of Andrts Segovia, wiU give a concert in the Science
Lecture Hall at UC Irvine on May ta at 1:30 p.m. Tickets,
.(.'3, available at Fine Arts box office.
:: MAY 11
:: LA QUINTA DANCE -The La ~Teen Club holds
;: cbaperooed dances each Saturday night from I p.~ to mid-
•. night at the La QulDta High School, t0372 McFldden, West·
minster. All teens are invited to attend. Adirussioa ·is $1 for •
memben:, $1.50 for non-members. Dress ii restricted to
1CbooJ wear. For further information phone 53145&1. The
·:. "'Falth Crusade" group will play for dancing. ·
MAY 11 . .~ TEEN CLUB DANCE -'l1le Westminster Recreatioo and
Parks.Department will hold a Tem Club Dance in tbe_com-
;'. munity Cmter, 8200 Westminster Ave., (for Weltminlter
· t e e n s) each Sat. from 8 p.m. t.o midnight. AdmissJon, $1. , : Jor member!. $1.50 for non-members. "Pure Joy" will play :~~tor dancing May 16.
htAY 17
NB ARTS FESTIVAL -The Newport Beach City Arts COm-
miUee is holding an Art Festival on the grounds of the City ~; Hall, 33)0 W. Newport Blvd., Newport Beach on May 17 from ~~ I to 5 p:m. Bands from Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor
High ScboolJ will perform during Uie arternoon. Art will be
displayed for n1e on th• lawn of the City Hall. Refreshments
available.
MAY 17
HORSE SHOW -More than 300 horsemen will compete for
trophies, ribbons and points in the Cal-Border Regional All·
Appaloosa Horse Show at Rancho California Showgr~~:J
Sunday, May 17. The event bf&ins at 8 a.m. and adnuss1on
: js free. Arena located on Highway 395 midway between Los
~-.:.Angeles and San Diego.
• MAY 17·14
snmENT CONCERT -A senior recital by students of the
Music Dept. will be held In Room 178 of the Fine Arts Bldg.
at 8:30 p.m. Sunday, May 17. Sarabecca Hart. violinist, as-
sisted by Roger Hickman , violinist and Carol Stackpole,
painist wt11 be heard. On May 24, String Quartets: Haydn
and Mozart. sponsored by Dept. of Music.
MAY :O ·Zt
AMERICAN SllOWCASE -Twenty-three displays sponsored
by leading industrial organitations will be on view in three
specially detlgned trailer carriers at Newport's Fashion
laland, May 20 • 24. The history of greeting cards, progress
of home appliances, a display of sporting flreanns, the
story of chocolate and hundreds of authentic anUques from
museums will be among the many exhiblls shown. Hours:
to a.m. to a p.m. dally; noon to 4 p.m. Sunday. Admission
is free.
l\1AV ZZ
JUNIOR TEEN DANCE -The Junior Teen Club of West-
mlnsttr will have two dances each month -oo the second
and fourth Fridays -from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. The second
Friday of the month all Westminster 7th and 8th grade
students attending Wesminster schools east of Beach Blvd.
may attend, and on the fourth Friday night all 7th and 8th
grade students attend.Ing Westminster schools west of
Beach Blvd. may attend. All schools have the new schedule.
On May Z% "Pure Joy" will play for dancing.
MAY ZZ
GUESS WHO CONCERT -A roncert featuring "Guess
Who" with Crabby Appleton and Small Faces is ~t for May
22 at 8 p.m. in the Attna of the Anaheim Convention Center,
300 W. Katella Ave., Anaheim. Tickets at the door or from
ticket aitncies are $3.50 -$5.50.
1\tAV tt -U
BAZAAR -A bazaar and handicraft sale for the benefil of
Creative Day Care Center in Santa Ana, will be held at the
center ID W. First St., on Saturday, May 23, all day ending
with a dance and barbecue dinner. On Friday, May 22 a
barbecue dinner will be served from noon to 8 p.m. with an
Afro fashion show at 5 p.m. and contest games for the chi!·
dren. Saturday, booths and games, a rummage and handi-
craft sale will occupy the spotlight. Tickets to ea.ch day
dinnti' are $2 for adults, $1.SO for children. Phone 836-7666
or S.1590 for further information.
, MAY D:.zs
VCI ORCHESTRA CONCERT -The UC Irvine Orchestra
\ under tbe dlrectlon ol Peter Od91ard, will perform works
: of stravlnsky, Beethoven, Prokoltdf and Rossini in the
: Sdtnce Lecture Hall on campus at 1:30 p.m. May 22 and : • p. Admlslion is free. ~ ~ MAY ZS· 14 : ,llrr IN TUE PAM ...-Thert wtll be a two-day Arts and
: dprafta Fair In Colla Mesa's Vista Park, Victoria St., west ~ ZfG' C&nyoe Drive, .,:ay S3 • 24 from 10 a:m. lo 4 p.m. Mote • jlbu: 50 ctisU and crattlmen will bre dlsplaylng their ware.3 ~ lpr ule, Included will be painUnga. stoMWare, Jcathu,
l' ' j:mnd)Q, ICUlpture, weavinc, mOlllcs and Ue and dye f1brics. ;.t!lllJ rrall.lmen wllt be demonatralln( their art during the . ~~rwo dl)'I. Mwlc by wandtring minstrels and troubadours,
appt;arances by harlequins will add t.o the festive occasion
"'1ICb .II .aponaored by the Unitarlan UnlversaliJt Fellowship.
PhoDe I0430l lor further informatlon.
'
Travel
Doi~g Europe in Summer
PEARLIE-MAE IN 'DOLLY' AT GREEK
Opens Four-w"k R.un With Calloway Aug. 4
Pearl Bailey's 'Dolly'
Set for Greek Theater
''Hello, Dolly," ont of the
most popular musical com·
edies of thls generation, will
be presented at the Greek
1beater in August as part
of its 18th season or summer
entertainment.
Starring the Inimitable
Pearl Bailey and C a b
Calloway, the lavish pro-
duction that opens August 4
for a four week-run will
feature the same Broadway
company that Gower Cham·
pion choriographed a n d
directed to rave reviews.
"There aren't enough ad·
jecUves t.o describe how great
Pearl, Cab and the show are"
was Sheilah Graham's evalua·
tion and even Clive Barnes
admitted in the New York
Times : "F'Tom the first to
I.he last, I was overwhelmed,"
urging his readers to "go and
see Miss Balley, Mr. Calloway
and Company."
Based on Thornton Wilder's
"The Matchmaker," Delly
was written by Mi ch ae I
Stewart with music and lyrics
8~ STAN DELAPLAN~.
SAN FRANCISCO -The summer •.• ''We will
have a rente~ car for three weeks -July-August
-in Europe4 Do you tblnk it's pOsslble to go from
place lo place without reservations?" OK for a couple. Though you may have to put
up with some second choice hotels. In most Euro-
pean resort centers there's a tourist bureau. Their
main job in summer is keeping track of open hotel
rooms. Check in with these offices -they're often
in the railway station.
Don't arrive in a new town over the weekend.
The locals are weekending too. Latch onto a room
Friday. Stay put until Monday.
* Before you go into the big cities -(like Lon-
don, Paris, Rome) -get your current hotel to
phone ahead. See that you have a reservation.
Somewhere. You are going at the jammed peak of
the season.
* ''Yov mentioned thing1 you bought overs••• that
s"med be1t buys. Could ·you extend th•t list?''
We do a lot of impulse buying in foreign countries.
The things that have lasted best for me -things
lor continued pleasure -seem to be something I
can hang on the wall. Things to look at.
* In an olive grove in southern Spain I wenl
through the Roman ruins of the city of Italica. There
are a lot of mosaic floors. A local artist does paint·
ed replicas of them. J bought four. We bung them on
our kitchen wall.
* In a Madrid book shop I found splendid color
drawing maps of Mexico City and Cuzco, Peru
about 1540. Copies of the originals that are in the
Archives of the Indies in Seville.
* In a Dubl in pub in Duke str .. t, I saw wonderful
Auto Makers All Have
Camper 'Convertibles'
"Everybody wants to gel
Into the act." Jimmy Durante
may have said it first, but
automobile manufacturers are
proving the statement is true.
politers of the great irl1b rabtUloOJ. I think 1 could
have got some. And I'm aorry now that I dldA't.
* Native clothini doesn't come home. well. Tbe
dashing planter's woven h1t from Tahiti. No good
here. Same for tbe fisherman's shi~ .t~ PortU;gal; I think liquor is a poor buy. What U it ts half price.
You have to hand<arry it all the way home. It
adds weigh!. At home it's soon gone.
* Expensive things -Swiss watch·es, J apanese
tape recorders, German cameras.-are about hal(
home prices in the free ports. ObVlously a good buy.
* "Do you have any favorite restaurant• in Ath-
en1? We will be there for three days?''
That's a smoggy old town. Traf!ic is. fierce. 'J!le
gasoline mus e (rightful even though it CQsts like
liquid gold. Take a taxi a half an hour out to the
sea at Turkolimano. (Cabs are cheap. About $1 .50)
* Now this is a c urve of paved waterfront. A
dozen restaurants have set up tables with umbrellas
beside the fishing boats rocking on the black water.
Fish in the dish. The best is the lobster.
* This is where you eat. The cooking restaurants
are across the street. You go over there and pick
your lobster or fish. They cook it, and a waiter
brings it acros s when it's done. For about $8 ~o
of you can live it up with lobsler and Greek wine,
coffee and brandy. Most menus have English trans-
lation.
* W•tch the traffic crossing. That's a narrow
streel. Cabs come through in high gear. (I think
they must gel a prize if they clip a waiter with e
tray full of lobster. 1\1aybe they get more for a
tourist)
* Take in cigarettes. American brands cost $1 a
pack on the street. You can buy at free port prices
on the plane. Leaving Greece, you can buy again at
the free port at Athens airport.
* Good presents to take home: Greek worry
beads. Just a short string of colored· beads on a
leather thong. The Greeks stand around swinging
these. And presumably worrying. They're supposed
to be only for men. But I find them a good gilt fo r
women. You find them in all tourist stores. At cig·
arette stand s. At the airport. About $2.
Live
Theater
by Jerry Herman. It will be
the seventh attraction of the
Greek Theater's 1970 season,
which opens June 24 with
Dorothy Kirsten in three
performances 0 r Puccini's
"t>.1adame Butterfly."
All three major companies
now have "vans" suitable for I~""'-""""'""',..
By JACK KNEASS
•••••••••••••••••••••• • • conversion to RecVees and are
promoting them vigorously. '-----------'I
I t Other attractions sel for the
Chevy's latest has a much few. As a general rule sealed •
needed longer wheel base, liquor can be transported in r
forward front wh~I location ArW>na, New Mexico, Oregon ,,
"Glrl In Freudian Sup•·
A comedy about psych.iatry
on stage at the San Clemente
Community Theater. 2 0 2
Avenida Cab r i 11 o . San
Clemente, Thurs. -Sat. at
8::K> p.m. tbrough May 23.
Reservatloos 492-0465.
"Streetcar Named Desire ..
Clasaic American drama on
stage at Westminster Com-
munity Theater at Finley
School, Trask at Westminster
Ave., Westminster, at 8:30
p.m. Sat. May 16. Reserva·
Lions -897-1164.
"One F1ew over
Ute Cuckoo'• Ne1t"
Griffith P.ark amphitheater
lh.is summer will be an-
nounced shortly.
aod load adjusting rear leaf ancf California.
springs for greater stability. Fortunately for many of us
Options i n c I u d e automatic we have never beard of a transmi~ion, power brakes, search and seizure in the case I'.
deluxe trim, carpeting, tinted of normal travel. a
Extra Cal• glass and radi*o. * •
An across-the--seas move has
With some surprise we read been started by an outfit call· •
Pays $1 an article by Oren Bathes in ed Camper America, Inc. The •
tile May issue of "Wheels firm plans to have 2,500 rental •
Afield" Magazine. Bates camping units distributed at •
At Ca S warns that "'liquor carried 100 key spots in the United mp ac ross state lines is risky." St.ates. A European can fly in,•
Anyone who docs much go to his preferred destination. •
The Stale Department of traveling In nn stay awhile and then set out • Parks and Recreation has an-autoMobile, and • •
I ~ · ht on tour. • oounced a I u1arge per rug has the' habit or hi ·elf ti ..... t He can come over on s • is now in ec or eal.'JI ex ra carrying a bot· own, or buy a packaged tour
motor vehicle brought in by ti e in the car from one of several air lines. •
a visitor for use in a state trunk, as many or course there will be •
park campground. 'The charge salesmen and nothing to prevent an • SINCE 1888
is in addition to the oormal experienced tra· American family from flying •
• PLAN YOUR •
TRAV EL VACATION •
WITH US •
CRUISES • STEAMSHIP • • • and TOURS • •
Chairge Your Trivtl •
At Robinson's Upper Floor •
FASHION ISLAND • • NEWPORT BEACH, 92660 • A comedy on stage at South
Coast Repertory, 1827 Newport.
Blvd., Costa Mesa, Fri.-Sat.
at 8:30 p.m. May 22-23.
Reservations -646-1363.
campsite fee and will be col· v e Je r s do. JAcic 1eN1-.ss to Florida and touring that • • • • • • •
lected at the campground en· should read the article. area, or vice versa. 1---------------------
trance station. A rew quotes follow . Rental prices by the wttk
• • •••••••••••••
Under this system, a "Sealed or unsealed bottles will be $297 for a motorhome
"Waltz of the Toreadon" camper at a Class A make little difference in many that sleeps eight. Pickup
ft. comedy or marital in-campground, for example, us-states. The important factor campers go for $185 a week
discretlon on stage at Hun-ing a second car or a motor is a bottle bearing taxes paid and a tent-camper costs about
tington Beach Playhouse. 2110 scooter would pay the regular within the sta le." $140.
Main St., Huntington Beach. $3 campsite fee plus an ad-In Pennsylvania, says Bates.
Performances at 8:30 p.m. ditional SI for the second vehi-alcoholic beverages possessed
Fri. -Sat. through May 15-23. cle. within the state w it ho u t
Reservattons -536-81181. .The action is necessary, the Pennsylvania taxes paid could
*
department exp 1 a in e d, result In vehicle forfeiture. "We Bombed ln New Haven" because of the increasing use He remarks that those under
Anti-war drama on stage at of recreaUonal vehicles such 21 years of age are banned
South Coast Repertory, 1827 as dune buggies, mo lo r in most stales from driving
Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. seoolers. trail bikes and four-a n1otor vehicle containing
Sho..:ld you think tent cam·
ping is dead berause you don't
see as much of it In California
any more ... forget it. Tent
sales are still big. And
Coleman reports that catalylc
heaters and stoves are big
sellers. Coleman, incidentally,
now makes a tent-camper and
also has come out with a new
line of sleeping bags.
at 8:30 p.m. May 15-17 and 1 21. Reservations _ 646-1363. wheel drive vehicles. 1'tls has alcoholic beverages, sea ed or
increased the problems of en· unse aled.
The Apple Tree" forcement and maintenance in Fortunately for those in the
A musical trilogy on stage state parks. west state restriclions are
at the new Tustin Community! i';:.:~;;;:i;;;;;g;;;;;;;;iiiii;;;iliioiliiii!;im;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiO;;;;;;;;a;;miiOii.i ... ~~~~iiiiiiiiii Playhouse. in the Tuslin High J; ~r=h:sr·30:~a0 . NEW SERVICES EVERY DAY!
"8111 Stop''
\Yilliam Inge 's roman l I c
comedy on stage at the Santa
Ana Community Theater, 500
W. &th St., S.nta Ana, at
8:30 p.m. Fri. -Sat.. May
15-30. Reservations -a41 ·2188.
''The Trial o( Maxine Lowe"
A courtroom dr~ma on st.age ~ at the Fullerton Footllghers
in Muckenthaler Center. 119
Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton. •
Fri. -Sat. at 8:30 p.m .. May
15-30. RescrvaUons -528-8927.
"Spofford"
A comedy about 1 retired
doctor on stage al Laguna
Moulton Playhouse:, 6 0 6
Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna
Beach, Tue!ii, • Sot., May 19-
June 6 at 8:30 p.m. Rese.rva·
tions -494'-0743.
"Rlmers of Eldrttch"
Drama of a small town on
sllge at rrvlne Repertory
Theater, Studio Theater. UCI
campus, at 1:30 p.m. Wed.·
Sal., June 3 • 6. Reserva-
tionll -&3ue!7.
For example -here is the newe1t of the many we have. A new idea in airborne
fruit or flowers. 0.A.X. will fly "the real thin9," you pick '.em o~t, then we'~I fly
them east to your favorite relative or customer, and delivery in 24 hours, Try
this you'll love the new low price1 and the 1peedy 1ervicel .
You' cen fly • cat• of C•lifornia strewberries, • mixed essortme.nt of ex~t1c
fruit, liMe Miwi fruit, pineepples, pap•y•s, avoc•do1, 1tr•"".'berres .. b1nq che rr1~1,
etc. Here at Newport Produce we heve them all! Try this new 1dee. Exclusive
here -use your B•nk>:m•ricard or Mester Charge.
MORE SAVINGS If YOU CLIP THESE COUPONS .
~·········~········~······•••\ • MAUHIUlN QUALITY • CRISP.FRESH • S9UASH •
: FRESH.CARROTS : CELERY r : zucc1N1
: 5¢ IAG : 1 Q¢ IUNC4-1 0¢ LI.
• • • • llmlt-5 l•I• Limit-! Bunch•• • llmlt-5 lbs.
• With Thi• Coupon • With This Ceupon With Th\1 Coupon a • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
COUPONS EXPIRE MAT 20
The1• reit1urents demend the fine1t for their customers, Thet's why they fee-
ture NEWPORT PltOOUCI. Petronite them! DELANEYS SEA SHANTY, New-
po•I· VILLA NOVA, Nowpo.+: IHKSHIRES "IN THE SKY," Nowpo.t: VILLAGE
INN: S.lboa Island: HOWARD'S RESTAURANT. Nowpo.t.
"'ORA NGE COUNTY'S FASTEST GROWING PRODUCE ORGANIZATION"
Phone
,7)-1715
67l-t711
67541t1
~ NE!r,9~Iw.~~~~~CE
2616 Newport lo1.tleword on Th• Ptnln!ulo ~----·
",1S ~·ear.! of Produce
Know I/ow"
"\\'llerc Quality f,, Tlit
o,'der of the I-louse"
"She Sloop! i. Ccinquer'"
Oliver Goldsmith's Re51ora-
lion comedy on stage at
Orange Coast C o I I e g e
auditorium , 2701 1" a Ir v i c w
Road , Costa Mesn. al 8: 15
p.m. 1'11ay 22-2.1. This is lhe
Orama Oepartmenl'a spring
play. No charge for tic:kets.
pick them up al CoUege ~
bookstoro. '"'oc::r--,.,..--
,,,,,, ,,,, __ _
111111 ii a111r
1011111 i.
lllerel / ,.
Fast, new frequent schedules to
Las Vegas
21.0 E. lrd Sr. Santo A"o (71 4) 54 7-1465
Contlnenlial TrallwByr
Ask About Hacienda Hotel Three Day
Champagne Tour
* $29.95 Weekdays (per person)
* $30.95 Weekdays (per person)
'
,.---~------------·------.~_ .............. ...,.~ .... ~'""--.;..!-ic::·.-.-.~·-.; ----...---------~---.,..--..-•·.--·~-·-~ -.. -.. ~ ___ ..._, ____________ ,_....,.,..., __ ..
.
"
WEEKENDER
ORANGE COUNTY'S
VilJe nel Mondo
Take one old livery stable, badly in need
nf TLC (lender loving care). Add a group of young,
fresh, talented performers guided by a young man
with a great idea for showcasi ng that talent and
combine all lhree with great gobs of hard work.
Joni:· hours and a soupcon o[ Yankee ingenuity
and you have the latest night spot in the city
of Orange. ~
e;.~~.
LARGE STRUCTURE
The finished product is still a barn like struc-
ture \Vith 25 foot ceiling which rings with song
and laughter. There is a tantalizing aroma of
fine Italian cooking in the air.
ENTERTAINMENT
The "American Stock X-Change" provide~
the major partion of tire stage show, music and
comedy, doing skits and musical bits in costumes
of their o\vn design. on a stage they helped build
and decorate.
FOR DANCING
The '·Morning Sun s" trio provides dance
music and J . Randall Dighton, strolling troubadour.
serenades diners with songs and the music of
his lute.
SIMPLE MENU
The dinner menu is simple, sev.en items from
spaghetti and meat balls for $1 .85 thru ravioli
filled with ricotta cheese for $2.10, and fctuccini
Alfredo for $3.00. A special antipasto plate, th at
is a meal in itself, is just $1.75.
·~--.. • .....
Chef Angie }.llondo doubl es in brass as painter,
seamstress, adviso r and house mother of this
hardworking cre\v, They have nominated her for
Mother of the year. a title 'veil deserved.
The Ville nel Mondo is located at 212 \V.
Chapman, near the circle in Orange. There is
ample parking in the rear.
LUNCHEON by the Sea ...
Served fr01n 11:.{)0 to 4:00 p.m.
f:OURMET DINNERS
•.. with a VIEW
Llltef'foillMef'll
,\'ig"i1b1
~~tvttl in a Craritl
'lllnner from 5:00 lit
11 :00 p.m. \\'l';rl .
o'tl<ls 5.00 til 1 ~.•Wl
p.ni,
niE ELEGANT
i~~
(213) 437-0488
LUNCHEON DINNER bAllClllC
OPENING MAY tt
O"e WHk Only
i/. JACKIE JOCKO
....i=:i .. ·JVf SEE THE GUN MOl!S AT~
... · ..
I ---
'R.!freshment . r. 1: ..Means a
< ¥ .(dt of
'' Things
A Jong look at the
rolling sea
The nostalgi c cry of a
wheeling gull
The floral artislry of i
French Garden
And, good food arld drink
'in such a settingl
1hc VICTOR HUGO INN
h.1s been refreshing diners
And making memories
for over a quarter of
a century.
Open Daily
luncheon-Dinner-
Cockl..lils
Champa gne Brunch-
Sunday frorn 11:30 a.m.
to 2 p.m.
i, "'' •. ....... Cliff Drive .it Coast
liighw•y-lagun.i Beach
494--9477
49 VraOR Huro Inn
I\ Jubsldiaryol />.MFAC, INC.
Fridq, Mq 15, 1970
• • .
ABOUT
DAll.V 1'11.0T 2/!
.,.
NOIUI STANLEY ...
ARLEY STEVENS
RESTAURANT,, NIGHT CLUB ' AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE
Murry Horn-Trio
Waste no time tracking to the Sberatori-Beacb
IM in Huntington Beach for an exhibition of
showmanship in the grand style. And don't mistake
the headliner for Al Hirt or some Sbakespe'arean
actor.
The associations are apparent at once but
Murry Horn quickly emerges as a forceful
personality in quite another way. As a dynamic
singer with one of the smoothest and easy-to-listen-
to voices in the business.
As boss man of the Murry Horn Trio he
also plays bass that's got to be the envy of any
old pro. Further, all around stage presence is
something he could give away by the bushel and
never miss. '
DRAMATIC-INTENSE
The guy, in an over-worked but singularly
appropri ate \vord. is impressive. But mo• than
that, he's a rare performer who comes across
'vith a driving and dramatic intensity.
If you want to make a bet on certain stardom
Murry, in our opinion, is guaranteed to protect
and double your money. That he hasn 't long since
been perched at the very top is graphic evidence
of the bard climb behind every show biz "overnight
sensation.''
Aside from Murry's look-alike resemblance
to Al Hirt -beard, size and all -one might
next speculate on a possible connectiop between
his Falstaffian ap pearance and birthplace. Strat-
ford . Ontario, Canada, home of the Shakespeare
Festival.
CANADA'S LOSS
Jokingly, he says tie sneaked across the Cana-
dian border in a wagon load of hay. In truth,
after leaving the University of Western Ontario
where he took part in such sports as football
and hockey, he moved to Los Angeles whe re he
MIKE
Mon. thru Sat.
DICK POWELL 1RIO
with ARLENE SKILES
Sunday Evening
37 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER ••iw.tn •Vff'lllm• A 8t'MCWI A111 .... P1rllh11
"~'-..... 2030•
DolWe~tV.,
PRESENTS
FRANKIE
ORTEGA
AND HIS MUSIC
OPENING MAY 18th
• 1107 JAMBOREE ROAD
NEWPORT BEACH 6«-1700
Ol>tein Your Tick•h Now for Our Fttliv1
LUAU-SUN., MAY 24
S lO ID P.M.
AUTHENTIC POLYNESIAN
ENTERTAINMENT
l1•1 Hui• Girl1-Flemin9 Swe1'11 D1nc1r
ALSO
POLYNESIAN FOOD
S4.00 ALL YOU CAN EAT •
FREE LEIS
FOR THE MEN
CO.CKTAILS
FREE 011.CHIOS
FOR THE LADIES
YOUR HOST
RESTAURANT
843 West 19th Streot
Costa Meso (Vista Center)
•
• YllTA ~ CINTllt
642--0712
studied acting at MGM and worked small clubs
in the area.
Then it was back to Toronto where he filled
radio' and television assignments before moving
on to co-host a variety show at WLWI in In-•
dianapolis. Next came Chicago where he worked
the Cloister with such entertainers as Ramsey Lewis
and Lenny Bruce.
•l:f t
~'furry then joined lh.e nationally known John~
nie ''Scat" Davis group. He held down a featured
spot during many tours with Davis that included
engagements at the Riviera Hotel in Las Vegas
and Harrah's Club at Lake Tahoe. •
For the past two years he's headed his own
group and alternated tours of the Orient with
enga~ements at the Cipango Club, the oldest private
club 1n Dallas. The trio is making an eighl·week
stand at the Sheraton-Beach Inn, stopping off
en route from Japan to Texas.
The o~her t'vo-thirds of the group speak a
strong: musical language too. They're Ronnie
H~wk1ns on drums. and Andy Michlin, formerly
"'1th the New Christy Minstrel s, who takes the
piano and organ chores and gives A-Iurry an oc·
casional helping hand with the vocals.
YOU NAME IT
. Their musical selections run the gamut from
3azz and show tunes to pop and standards servini
both sides of the generation gap if not cementing
a firm bridge between them.
B. J. Thomas singing this year's Oscar win·
ner. "Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head''
represents one artist and work and hfurry's reh-
dition reveals another. With the listener afforded
an opportunity to hear two distinctive but equally
fine interpretations.
Other vocals by Murry we particularly en·
~~.in;~.in;~~~ ~ e'l:\ez e'an~ l 1 "W--..H•lidcJ~Magazfu AwG1'4" t
~~;;:;:;._,~,
DENNY'S COSTA MESA
FOR ONE WEEK ONLY
• COMPLETE STEAK DINNER
$2.95-u.s.D.A. CH01C1-$2.95
HALF POUND TOP SIRLOIN, Served with Soup or
s.1.d, choice of pof•to, veget•ble du jour, rollJ end
butter, sherbet or pudd ing. Coffee, ••• or milk.
Come AINI' S.. U1
MHt Yo11r Hnt, How•r4 Writ"'
•Jt4 tti... w•tc" for 110xt wHl'• •'"lo!.
3170 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 545-9916
-f Hftt te.. tlMi S-Diop ,,._Ill J
COME IN TONIGHT
''For The
Prinie Of Your Life''
Roast PRIME RIBS OF BEEF
C:.-0 .... 6lANT Ill ROASTS ....... wl ....... s3ss .......... flltffy wtllppM .......... ,,..,., ...................... ...c•. 1011p ............. ...
DIAMOND JIM BRADY CUT .•.••• 4.IS
CHILD'S PORTION ............... 1.50
IUnd.,. 10 Ytoanl
IAlLY P911MI Ill DINNll SPICIAL • , • SI.ti
MONDAY THIY fllDAY ONLY! 4 r. f :JO P:M·
NOW-TWO LOCATIONS
OPEN 7 DAYS
KING· SIZE COCKTAILS
321 N. STANTON 421 E. 17th ST.
ANAHEIM COSTA MESA
OtMr ·-· 1"1111) 0,.. .. ..., tfltll Pfl*r Op• M..;., ttlrt Set1tftr 11 A.M, ..._.
11 A.M. 1Htll 0,.. 4 P.M, S.1114•1 I o,.. 2 P.M. S. ....
Dl""f M"• S•llfff -DI'"" M .. 11
Phono 821-4110 P~ono 6454990
Mt1I Mtj91' crw11 (Ifft Ace"""
'
joyed were Jim Webb's hDldn't We/' two Oscar
nominees, "Jean" and ·••What Are You Dolnff For
The Rest 01 Your Ll!e,'' "It Hurt& So Bad and
"I'll Never Fall In Love Again."
""DOLER ON ROOF"
Unquestionably, however, the night'•
highlight came with about a ten minute aketcll
and song -"If I Were A Rich Man" -Muny
performed in character as Tevye, the hero of "Fid·
dler On The Roof." In that ohort time Zero Mostel,
whom we saw in the original New York production.
Io.st his ranking as our favorite Tevye.
~. ~
Murry told us later that he had played the
role in a production of the show. We told him
we'd go many a mile to see "Fiddler" again
ii he repeats the part.
You can partake of the Murry Hom Trio
entertainment spectacular between 8: 30 and 1: 30,
h-fonday through Saturday. Don't miss rt and treat
yourself to dinner in the Inn's Caribe Room first.
The result is an out 'n' about package that's hard
to beat.
The Sheraton~Beach Inn is located at 21112
Pacific Coast Highway, Huntington Beach.
Your Host Luau
0 These islands we re unique, alone, apart.
of( the main stream of life, a secluded backwater
of n a t u r e , . . • a n authentic natural
paradise. . . •• , • "
So wrote James Michener in his best-selling
book , "Hawaii," giving expression to some of the
mystique that America's island state holds for
mainlanders. Which , in turn, explains why we're
generally eager to participate in festivities with
a Hawaiian theme.
GO NATIVE
An opportunity for locals to i;o native again
presents itself next weekend. When Co!ta Me.sa '1
Continued on Page 26
ARCADIA
... SINCEl"' ~BBY' -AIRPORT
-1 .. Stoolt • Chi•kH • "110.. C1l1loo
Serving Late Dinnen
MM,.Tllllf. ti A.M.•11M A.M. IW P'ALISAOES llO.
COSTA MUA ....... •rt. ..... 1t1•1:tt ....
UI IE. HUHTIMc;TON Oil.
I~
llAUTll'UL WTAUllANT
MOUNTAIN/SIA ATMOSPHlll
Aft CA DIA 40-~11r1
Dencing Nightly Tuesday thru Suncl•y
THE NATURALS (!3!!i MONTH
Specie! Sunday lrunch 10:30·2:]0
31101 COAST Hl&HWAY 111SllVAT10NS
Soot~ ....... 4H-2UJ
ENJOY A
COCKTAIL
We now serve cocktails with
luncheon ·or dinner et our
Coste Mesa store restaurant.
Enioy one as e perfect complement
to the gourmet menus of
Chef Chr istian Ra smussen,
formerly of Scandi a.
OININGllOOM O,EN MONDAY ffiur SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAYS
"'•V co 1e11tlt coo1t "''••••
lfll 4:190 fwy. at l11lllol, 101!• ""'''
146·tJ2 I
111011 tr1011clay tl1t11 f1icloy 10 11'1'1tot:JO11'11'1
1w11cl•v tt.••Jt 'til I iJll'l'I
MAVCO
• • .
OAILY PILOT frldiJ', M11 15, 1970
i•••••••I COUl'ON •••••••;
:I Y2 PRICE SALE :
: BUY A CHICKEN DINNER :
!
•. ).flu. leU·& H..,,'""' & Cei. SI•.. ••
• llG. PllCI S1 .Jt
a AND GET A SECOND • = ONE AT Yz PRICE :
• GOOI THlU 1·21·71 ONLT •
• a-lllMi,..... • , , •• , • , •le ClllN ....•. :: .• lS & ''' •
• PUii & Cltl,. • , •••••. 6tc Clul Cll•wMr •. JS I lie •
• CHOW BELL •
WEEKENDER
Continued from P•o• .25
You~"tetaurant.. stages the la test in It:; con-
tinuing series of luaus.
Several similar events in the past year have
been sell-out successes. l'he one corning Lip Sunday,
1'.1ay 24, should be no exception so those who
don't want to miss out better Undertake a little
-advance plaMing.
·-----·· ----------·-·
OUT 'N ABOUT
FLOWERS FOR ALL
No one. however, will be lacking a touch
of ts land color. Because each gentleman will be
presented with a flower lei and ladies will receive
orchids.
• OYll COUNTll SllYICI e 'OOD TO GO •
1 ' • 2576 Newport Blvd., Coste Mes• •
• Dlet9Pllr MrtU ,,.... Or•..,• CHll!r P'•lr .,..,..._ ~ ••••••.••.•••••••••. ,
MAT lJ-IAYAllAN NIGHT
Din• & Dene.• with
THE ASTORIA TRIO
flROM MUNICH
ANO: TMI! SAMf" llYl!IONG
OPENING OF THE HOFIRAU ROOM
THE BERLINER
Gernian Fa1nily Restaurant
F•mous . for
SAUERBRATEN with DUMPLINGS
Ol"fl D11lly From 11 A.M.
S11tli1ril•Y & Sund•y Prom S P.M.
ClelM Monday•
18582 BEACH BLVD. -Town & Country Center
HUNTINGTON BEACH 968-5800
Alie 11 s.,. .. 111 YllH 011r MNrlty 111.-11H11
o.11c.11 .. ..., 111 r-& Ceuftrry c11111r
DON JOSE'
present5
SPANISH FlAMENCO DANCERS
featuring
GENARO GOMEZ
TV & Movie Personality
EVERY THUR50AY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY
3 SHOWS NIGHTLY
e COCKTAILS e
MUST HAVE TICKETS
There'll be no admittance 'vithout tickets,
whi~ .. are now on sale at the restaurant on a
first-come, first-served basLo;. Tab for t he dinner·
and accompanying en tertainment is $3. 95 per
person .
Hours for all. the fun and feasting have been
set from 5 to 10 p .IT). •
GOOO FOOD
Your Host's lu au repast will take the form
of a Polynesian style buffet. Featuring such
delicacies as ru maki. barbecued spare ribs. S\veet
and sour pork. chow mein and fried rice.
AND ENTERTAINMENT
Entertainn1ent will be provided by th e
Humalema group . attired in full native regaJia.
They'll perform traditional l"lawaii an dances, in-
cluding the spectacular fire dance, and offer
numerous selections from the island's mu sical
treasury.
The waitresses will be decked out in apparaJ
~~ ".:.;c..'°' ._J tlie FLING::~
ENTERTAINMENT -7 NIGHTS A WEEK
DANCING MON.TUES.-WED.~ * HAP HALL DUO * L•rry Loke
wmi J11111 11....-1 en 11u Singer
Tllvr. thr1 51111. -~ita_!!St _
I
•
. '
.
Franl' Still Plays
r·or Lhree years the Five Crowns Restaurant in Co-
rona del Ma r has been presenting Frank Still at th e
piano. If you haven't heard him drop in any Mon-
day -Saturday from 8:30 and be enchanted.
Preparation of the luau fare -like all food
served at Your Host -will be under the direction
of Chef Roberto Cruce, who has the distinction
or being a former U.S. Presidential stat! cook.
This honor came his way 'vhile serving with the
San Clemente Inn .
During that time a fairly impressive lis t
of guests sat down to Cruce's table. includ ed were
President Nixon, former President Johnson,
Governor Reagan and New York Governor Nelson
Rockefeller.
Aside from hitting Your Host for the May
24 luau, out 'n' abouter will encounter line dining
and cocktails anytime they drop by. With the house
s~ecialty -prime ribs of beef. $3.95 on the complete
dmner -an item to keep in mind.
OPEN SEVEN DAYS
The restaurant is open seven days a week
from 10 a.rri. to 2 a.m. Food service for lunch
and dinner runs from 10 a .m. to 10 p.m.
Your Host (Vineyards until the change of
ownership about a year ago) is located at 843
lV. 19th St., in the Vista Shopping Center, Costa
Mesa. nppropri<ilc lo the occasion. and customers are
invited to do likewise. although casual dress of
,,..;"o::""Y-"-P'c:•"'fc=:r..:e"nc"'e'""'is""-in'-o"r-'d"e"r. __________ .I *"c* > ~ ~~ ,. d ' . t Real
Cantonese Food
e1t here or
t1ke home.
STAG
CHINESE CASINO
11 1 21st pl .• Newport Be1ch ORiole 3-9560
r J llJt 1111ng 'Ir
da~g~~l:r ~
COCKTAILS ~~
BANQUETS ~
tNtEtnAJNMENr lf'-
1490 S AllAMEIM ILYD. If\
ANAMllM I~
PRlttCE o+ w!Wes Rear-Me1a Theater s:f'uE1::~.
145 E. l.9tll St. J111t ·off N.w,.rt llvd. Enchi111da and Taco ................ $1 .3S !j_~,,VHO~f fAMILY RESTAURANT
776·'600 ft O,e11 Yeor lt11111d Dalty 12·12 -Fri. •11d Sot. 'tll l •·"'"
: SerYN wldi l ice, ...... TnNditn _. S.11• . . ' Now Beer & Wine Cocktails "The Trent/' Dl""ERS ,...,. U.75111 $(J5
Chili Relleno·Enchilada ...........• $1 .SO -Fw .. r1yr1_, .. 11111..,i.1i..,.,,..,,o_, • .,._,.,,.,._o.11Y .... ~J':.=.:0-=:_========,.,-========='i~ :i.:io ,1.1-t m UDOOD ... STEAKS
·,· 9093 E. Adams (•I MognoliaJ Hunt. Be1ch 962·7911 111 The Lounge Orut 11•• tt 1°""' l<StsH fllorld.lrt) SAIO'A AIU: 15'ni ... rllol I~. ll9·1110
I [~~~~~~II m1 T Lf.I [jiiiiii~=~=~ =m =="'"'---·····---""'--.
! MEXICAN RESTAURANT MINE SHAFT '8"-u -Oot,o~
' • ' .
EXCITINGLT NEW AND DIFFERENTI
REMODELED FACILITIES
NEW COCKTAIL LOUNGE
WOULD TOU HLIM ITll!
SEA FOOD-0-RAMA
Oceans of Sea Food, plu11 , •• Boulabal~. old fuhioned Chicken & Dumplings. Roa.~t Top Sirloin, ptua , , , Fabu·
Jous array of Cold Salads.
ALL TOU $4 25 CAN llAT e
Every Nl9ht S te 12 P.M.
South Coa1t'1 Larg11t Selection or
Se.food C uisine .,
Select Your Own Steak et the New Steak Dock
NOON FASHION SHOW
WEDNESDAY Aod FRIDAY
DUKE BURRELL
At The Piano Ber Wed. thr u Sun. 9 to I :lO
3J33 W. Coast Hl9hway
Newport leach 642-42'8
]tttt
DINING AND DANCING
ENJOY THE FANTASTIC
MICHAEL'S TWO
JOHN SAYS ,
...
, • , qreatest pri1Tu1 rib
, , , qr11te't 1nt1rt1in merit
, • , 9r11f1lf itaff
, , , qr11f1st drink'
•• , 9r11fest lunch-
T'••t Younelf To A 6r1•t Night O ut
BE "INN" WITH U5
MONDAY NIGHT IPIECIAI.
COMPLITI PRIMI Ill DINNll $3.25
•
U'5 No..,... ll•cl., N°"port ... c•
· a....,.etlOfts 671·117_.
Wa.td'I for ope:nlntt of the-\Yhi<1tlln' 01111.tt -Comtna' IOOft to •luntington HAtb(lur .
Now Appeerl11•
JONATHAN BROWN
AT l HE ORGAN
FRI. & SAT. NITES
WILLIE IS BACK!
With His So119s 011d Gwhar
Thin. l S1111. Mires
BEER -WINE -BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCH
Op•n 11 A.M. -11 P.M. 011i ly
547 W. 19th St.,
642-9764
'I
Costa Mesa
Food To Go
GRUB
TOP SIRLOIN ••• , .• •.25 TIRIY.AJll •••••••• 4,50
NIW YOll ••• , •• , • 5.50 FILn .•••••••• , •• I.SO
COMIO .....•.•.• S.SO LOISTEll: ••••• , •• 6.25.
HALllUT ••..••••.. J.SO IEEF KA.IOI •.•.•. J.so
I SOUTHEllN FRllD CHICKEN •••••••. l .lS
1nclud(i Bu!fet S1IMI, Brt•d .. llev•01ge
LUNCHION 11 A.M.·2 P.M. • DINNER FROM S l".M. I '-KW..OREN'S ME"'U AVA ILAI LE
2916 w. LINCOLN ANAHEIM 826-1840
AUTHl"'TtC 16TH CE,..rUllt'f"
EHGl.1511
OliCOR
lllGUl.AI
l.UHCHIOH ,-ll!OM
II A.M.
i-,·~ 0"u!? FRmK£S ~~
: ~ RESTAURAN!0~ ~~~!i!:IL LOUNGE fr ,
11 WAYNE GABRIEL
J Kil SOflll .. Gvll•r -WtCI, thrv '""· NJ!" J:)I 19 1:M
Co111plate Dl1111en Fro I'll SJ. •s
17171 BROOKHURST ST.
• AT WARl'>i~R-NEXT TO GEMCO r9 FOUNTAIN VALLEY •
1 For Reservation• Call 962-6625
COSTA MESA
GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB
ALL FACILITIES
OPEN TO PUBLIC
Now AppeAring
VIC GARCIA L TO.
Vocals by GERMAINE
INTllTAINMllNT e DANCING
Th11r1., Fri., Sat. 'p.ni. ro 1:JO1.111.
Now Serving Dinner
6 ro t :JO p.111. -Th11n., Fri., Sot.
P"ione 541J.7200
~ :::~'"::...·~· ... _ .....
Hoppy '"Dodol1 le1rr" Ho11r, MolMley tll111 friHy, 4 to 4
TUE OCEAN AT YOVR TABLE!
SEAFOOD, STEAKS AND GOURMET ENTREES
Now Appe•ring
The
Murchison
Co.
N;ghlly
Tut1d1y thru
Seturdty
DAN,_CING
IAN9UIT FACILITlll
. '
Jl 7 Peclfk Ceest Hwy.
H1o11tiAtt11 lffcll
Jl:tMrw11tlon1: SU-2SS5
----------
FAMILY DINING
COMPLETE DINNER UNDER $3
"HOME MADE PIE"
Opt1n 6 A.M. ta 10 p.m. D11lly
JUS VIA LIDO, NIWPORT IEACH 473-1103
Vi sit Temple Gardens' Beautiful Ne'v
RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE
PIANO BAR ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY And SATUROAT
Temple Gardens
Chl11e•e Restaura11i
1500 Ad11m1 (At H•rMr) Ce1ta Mese
540-1937 540-1923 ...
OPEN: 11 :JO 1.111. te 11 p.111., S1111day thru Thunday
11 :JI •·"'· te 2 1.111., ,.,ld•y •11d Sctturday
.
Bill Martini Presents
THE PROYOCATIYE SOUNDS
OF THE
ART· HAWK
SOUND COMPANY
f•t fu1ing
CLAY CHRISTOPHER
..... I SI""''
646-1181 JAZZ SESSIONS EVERY
SUNDAY NIGHT
DANCING MUSICIANS W ELCOME
NIGHTL y 111111'4 ···-Ledl• Wek.1"'9
130 E. 17rh St., Costa Mesa
.
DELANEY'S
SEA SHANTY
Serving Or1nge County's Fin••I
SUNDAY BRUNCH
Choice of Entree Only $1.65
lobster Benedict e Shrimp R1nchero
Scampi Under Glass e Chef's Omelet
e Shanty Ham & Eggs e
Ch1mpagne -2Sc Per Glass
630 LICO PARK DRIVE
NEWPORT BEACH 67~100
""I\ '.AM i I'll~ Musical Cabaret rJJ n_rlw.AJJJJ presents J" 1 "The Mu5eial Busboys"
I "The Singing Chef"
~ and
"'.I THE BEST ITALIAN
) CUISINE AROUND
Closed Tuesday
L.c.•y Sh•ll''I"' Ce11tet-et New,ert Frwy.
in Orange 211a 1AST cHA"°'AN 639-4610
fltlll fHlll HOUJtS
OP CONTINUOUS MOYllS
Pizza Palace
16lZ1 ......_tit ldlltfW
I Neat t. ZMr's t
139-7290
WI HONOR Al.I. PIUA COUPONS
SPAGHmr
SANDWICH IS
SALAD
llST PIZZA
i I
=
FAMILY
· FUN
Folk '4111lc
frl. & s.t.
. '
TAtEJ1kWHAtE
SEAFOOD RESTAURANT
WITH A SWl!EPINO view OP
NEWPORT HARBOit
Tt\6 nero
<IBLL€!! «l€,8T
OUR CHEF
IS A REAL PRO.
TRV HIS LOBSTER. IT'S,
Tt-IE FINEST OUTSIDE
MA RlNELAN D. STEAKS,
TOO. AND A FIX-tT-
YOURSELF SALAD BAR.
TRY OUR NEW COCKTAILS
TOO, LIKE A FOOT OF
RlSTAUltANTS
COFFEE SHOPS
COCKTAIL ·LOUNGES
ll(j)UOR STORES
All Typtt & Cl1u•1 At
R11li1tic Pric11 & T1rm1
FOR FOOD ANO IAl
O PPORTUN ITIES CALL
NEWELL ASSOCIATES
411 N. Ceat HWJ.
L.otwno koc:lri 4t4·6St4
"Wt 1(-Tiii lvtl-" I
~ ~q y tl!t· 1
)/{' · lluu/1
VILLE NEL MONDO
Frld1y, Seturdty & Sundty -
Oi11ct from lht C11l1w1y1,
l11 V1911,
AMERICAN
STOCK XCHANGE
l i9ht H11 rl1d j1b1 11 the Amir·
ic111 Sc'"' i",S1tir1 I Muiic.
01nc1 to
THE
MORNING SUN
J. RANDALL
DIGHTON
Strollinlil
Troubadour
FINE
ITALIAN FOOD
COMPLETE DINNER
FROM Sl.05
Show Tim11 8, I 0 & 12 midn•qhl
M<1lin1e 1how1 !'.u11dey 1t 4
i nd 6 p.m.
Tu11d1v Reck night
W1dn11d1y Country & w~•lern
Th1.1nd1v 01nc1 lo th1
l ig land Sound
212 W. CHAPMAN
532-9177
AT THE CIRCLI IN OltANGE
Movie Set
On Frontier
"The Frontiersmen," Allnn
\V. Eckert'!i dramatic nar-
rative history of the pioneer
west, has been reactivated as
a fi lm project as Warner
Bros., it was announced by
John Calley. the company 's
executive vice-president in .
charge o( production , with thel
assignment of Arthur Rowe to
\\'rile the screenplay.
Rowe , who recently com··
pleted }he script of "Zeir
pclin," another Warner proj-
ect, has checked in but lhe
Warner Studios in Burbank.
"The Frontiersmen," the
sto ry of the men who opened
up the Am~rican West, was a
Literary Guild selection in
1968.
In the fintSt tr.Jiriotr ·
cf the lrt<e innkeptr's .rt.
3801 EAST COA ST HJGll'W•T
Co110NA ML MA-r, CAuJ'o1.!'I L\
PnoNi:: (71.f) 675-137-4
ftIVI£ftA
The major portion of the slage shows with music, comedy and skits, in the Ville
nel fi.1o nd o is provided by a lively g:roup calling itse!J the American Stock X·
change. The latest night spot in Orange, near the traftic circle. \vas an old Jiv~
ery stable which now rings \vith bright music and is filled with an aroma of
fine Italian cooking.
YOUR FAVORITE MARTINI,
A GREAT DINING our
VALUE ANO SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA'S MOST
SEA.UTIFULOCEAN VIEW,
Coming-May 24 and 31
Frank Rosolino
Quintet
with Conte Candoli
R£5TAUft.ANT
Continental Cuisine
Cockt1il1
Seroing
Luncheon and Dinner
Mand.au through Saturdau.
Range 'Home' to_ Him
ENTERTAINMENT NITEL Y,
TAKE SAN OIEQO FFIWY,
TO HAWTHORNE BL VD,
AND GO SOUTH TO
MARINELAND
DISCOVER THE ALL NEW
Walter.._ _ _.
Wanderley ~.' "I IN JAZZ CONCERT ~ LAST DAY
~ Sunday, May 17-3 p.rn C'le..i c /...:i _ _,
'PaUdeJ
\ P011-lf ~ .
lri DANCING I
• 7NIGHTS
.; JO~!f.~~,?, r.!:10 ~ HHYJ lah1 Td5.
~
' ~ ~
• 12565 Harbor llvd. I] IN••• Lempion, Gtrlltn c;r~v•I Phon• Number
534-Hlt
Closed Sundays
We are lo cated next to
the M"y Co. in Sou th
Coast Pla xa.
3333 S. ltbtol
,CIHte Mno Sof0-31140
• "'" f1
*~ ~lC~f~ ~
RESTAURANT fjl
CAr~TONESE CUISINI:
AMERICt,N FOOD
TROPICAL ORINkS
COCKT A!LS
FOOD TO GO
ENTERTAINM EN T
THURS. THRU SAT
6785 WESTMINSTER AVE.
WESTMl,.STEll CE NlEll
WESTMINSTER. CALIF.
PHONE 17141 89)·1368
''GRANTS BRADFORD HOUSE''
}'our Fa1nily Restau.runt
EVERY FRIDAY
s129
ALL THE FISH
YOU CAN EAT
wllh flr.n(h Fri••·
CrffmY CGll Slaw. Wol Roll & lultfr, T1rr•r
S1u<t.
EVERY TUESDAY
ANO THURSDAY
BUCK
NIGHT •
YOUR
CHOICE
•••• Tor11 Turtc1v
Goldo11 ffl•d Chldu
ll:oa1t loef .Au J111
Hom Steak
wn~
,.ot•to, l ul!trtd Yegtl••1t tr (rtlmy colt 1l•w.
HO! Roll .a, 11101r
OPEN FOR BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND DINNER
8:30 1.m. to 9:30 p.m., Monday thru Saturday -JO 1.m. to 6 p.m., Sunday
GRANTS HUNTINGTON BEACH BROOKHURST & ADAMS
PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES
HAVE CHANGED A LOT
SINCE THE
OLD DAYS
''I should have been bom 100 ...
years ago. Th en I could
have played cowboys and In·
dians all the time. rd have
been a Texas ranger or a
marshal -someone that has
something to do with whippin'
fered the actor a television
series of his OWfl.
.. I said I'd love lo do a
series, if it's a western," said
Robert. "Well, il wasn't and I
said I wasn't too interested."
He came back the next day
and was offered "Laramie,"
and the rest is history ,
a gun out of the holste r."
This is Ro_bert Fuller speak·
ing, for four years a star on
"Laramie" and for l\\'O addi·
tional years one of the stars
on "Wagon Train." Both
se ries are still hl syndication,
seen daily in over JOO major
markets in this country plus
many forei~n ones as well.
Fuller is no stranger to
milit.ary life. tie was in the
Army for a tv•o·year Korean
slinL
"\Vhen I can1e home in 1955
J \\'as confused about what I
wanted to do." he recalls. "I
had arrived in Hollywood in
J9ao and started as an extra
but when I came out of the
service I completely discarded
the idea of tying to become an
actor. I figured I couldn'l
waste more years and maybe
not make it at all."
Despite this. Fuller w~s
persuaded to visit one class
conducted by Richard Boone.
After 20-111inutes. Fuller \\'as
hooked again. He supported
himself by working as an
usher and gas station at-
tendant in order to kctp up his
acting classt'!s.
ROBERT FULLER
Likes Being Part of West
television series, he was asked
to see ;:i Universal-Interna-
tional vice-president. ~le of·
"I ~ppose there's alwa ys
th£: Jure of a simple, un-
complicated period in the
history of the world, when the
present one appears to be so
mechanical and c o m p I e x ,
Maybe I'm eve n reincarnated
from a front iersman, who
knows? But my feelings run
deep and t would still rather
do a western than any other
form of production."
It certainly hasn 't hurt John
Wayne, also an ex-stun tman
turned actor.
Four Britons Signed
To Play 'Bugaloos'
Sid and Marty Krofft, pro-1nburgh-born John Mcindoe, 22,
ducers of the JXlpular NBC· circus clown, e I e v a t o r
Television series, "H. H. operator and one -time
r~ufnstuf." and lhif forthcom · n1c1nber of a London pop
ing feature film based on the group that lived and worked
show. "Pufnstuf," announce for a time in Sweden, and
the signing of four young Wriyne Laryea, 18. youngest
13rili:;h performers lo star as or the lour, who ha s done
"l love westerns and I 11up-The Bugaloos in their new t e I e v i s ion commercials, pose it's because basically, I'm an outdoorsman. 1 like tn NBC -Television series, "The television and stage dancing
ride, hunl and rish and I would Bu~aloos Is \Vherc It's At." and ''tnucking about on
rather be part of the "''est !in which goes before the piano."
his work) than do most cameras in Hollywood in June, !,..or the young newcomers
anything else." Chosen from among hun· to Hollywood, it mean s
TI1is does not mean Fuller dred s of talented young can-virtually instant stardom.
will turn down a good part. He didates auditioned by the Krofft Productions bas aJso
was recently featured in Kroffts on two recent talent· scheduled the newly-formed
Robert Aldrich's s u s p e ns e scouting trips to London, the Bugaloos to make their first
film , ".Whatever Happened to four signed to long.tenn con-records during the next two
ALl'lit Alice" and in his first t 1·a~ls are lS.year-0Jd Caroline months, and these will be
comedy role when he slarred Ellis, who played Loui se in released Worldwide even
in "Boeing, Boeing", at the the London production of "The before thei~ series debuts on
Pheasant Ru n Playhouse, Sound of Mus ic"; J oh n the network. In September.
outside Chicago. Philpolt, 2t, former drummer-The producers also have a
Fuller's desire to work in vocalist with a British pop commilment with Columbia
westerns has paid off. One group. who for the past six Pictures for a full-length mo-
day, while working as a guest months has worked in a fac· tion picture to star The
star on the ''Cimarron City" tory as a trouser presser; Ed-Bugaloos. :• ($\,· ;;~_;;;,; ;:• • ;;,;b: • ;o•o:• • •:
• ~ PRESENTS •
: ENTERTAINMENT -DANCING Monday thru Saturday :
• • • • • • •
· IACK IY POPULAR DEMAND
Tw& W••kt Only
DAVE -MERTENS
IOlllE GENTRY'S GUITARIST
-.. •
I
• Tho
s.n11tlon1I
MURRAY
HORN
• • • • • • •
------·-----· ------. .. ..,..~-
Friday, Ml1 15, 1970 DAILY PILOT 27
"Bll Any Standards. EzctUent" •••••
LA. TIMll
"WE IOMBED IN NEW HAVEN"
l'f J0$&1'1C W•l..LIJ• ~ Ma, H, 11, It, 11 I II
"ON E FL OVE~.J~E. ~UC,OO'S NEST"
j'A Theatrical Shock Treatment" •.• Daily Pi-Wt
l'OR ltl!5111tVATIOftl1 CALL '°"'UU
1111 Newl"if1 ll'IO., Cttll M.w
• Acode111r Awwd N•"" ....
llllot ••1fd Md Dw'• C.H•
••• • • • ' ,•'' I o (IOMT HWT. Al •-"CUTHiii lll'D. o p .. 1u-~M • w•·w.o lobert c.1, -4 H.,...I• WMd Bob "THE 9th Record Wffk -& 2nd TOP FEATURE ~ v~~~s ~;~~.~,~
~ c~~~~~.!'', 1~:[~
Al PttOOl.IC'f•OM ~ rOllCOl.UllllA
~ •ti.UK (i}o
STARTS EXCLUSIVELY ! T::!,'::v
THF#l H.OVELOFTHE YEAR ·NOW~A MOTION PICTURE!
, ~CISS HONlER ""'°"''""' AIReORT
BURT LANCASTER • DEAll MARTlll
A UNJVERS.Al ,ICTtlllE ~ ~ 11
LAST WEEKS!
Nolhlng has been left om of"Tl!e Admi1unn• ·--
CHARLES AZNAYOR e ALAN IA.DEL e CANDICE llRCllN
THOM MY IEIGllEN e DELIA IOCCARDO e lll:NEST
IOIGNINI e ROSSANO IRAlZI e OLIVIA d1H.AYILLAND
IEIUM fEHMIU. ANNA lllOFFO. LllGH TAnoR.YOUN•
Starts Exclusively! Wednesday, May 27th
Mart Crowley's
··mm:~ 11111 mm: ~v~·
... is not a musical
'0...~fm"'°"""' A"""'c;...o"""',,._ G;.b,t>l.,• 00-
NOW AT
POPULAR PRICES
A.cod.my Aword No1111 ...
for lest .Actor -
PETER 0700ll!
mm
-
, · · 2nd Top Feature
I 1 Jim Brown 1!1Hinq In
,.. ~ "TICK .•• TICll ••. TICK ,,"
•• <ll!:ACl'f eLvo. AT ei1.•s •• 4th Record Week HUNTINGTON llt:ACH • 847-080'1
ll:fTUJIH TO "ZOO!" EX,ERIEMCE. The Edw11d1 Huntin9to"
Cin eme Th111lr1 i1 tint of lh1 few big 1cr1111 lhethet in th1
country equipped with 4 hack )lereophoni<: 1011nd. You wJll h11r
'"Zoralh1utra," "The llw• Danube," and Gycrgy li9eli'1 electronic
corripo1ilion1 from, I ove•h11d Altec-l1n1in9 tp11k1ri e11d 20
f1ont1I A-tX conuile 1pe•k1ri ( 4' high, 3' wide, l' d11p), The
tcr1en et +ht Hunlinqton Ci111m~ i1 60' 1cro11 end 25' high.
You will 1•e "The Daw11 of M11n" .,nd "To Jwpir.r a11d lerolHil"
proj1ct1cl from 35 MM S1.1pet P•1101.,,, P•nevi1io11 projectort
•quipped with Ashcr.,fl Sup•r Ci11e• l1mphou1e1. Jtl!TUlN TO
"2001" lXrlRlfNCE.
•-KEIR DULLEA • GARY LOCKWOOD
te~lll'\.OT " STAHLEY KU8AICK .-AATHUR C. CLARKE
~,,........cne.., STANLEY KUBRICK
SUPER PA}IAVISION' • METR(l(()LDR
' '
I ' q
'
. '
-:
.·
•
I
= • • = • .I • • • • • • • s .
1
I
. • • • . • •
• • ' .
. .
JI DAILY PILOT
.DAILY LOG
;:.TUPD hY
MAY 15 MAY 16
'.' <1 p -, 1 /'.. r__;
1:00 m tila kid
... ~ ... -(C) (Ill)""'"''"''· ''" "'"' •• ""' .., (ti m .....,.,._ <C1 (301 m-• """
Cl• TOI Tep Tiiis? (C) (30) 7:DOIS.nrite SMISttr (C)
Sb O'a.dl Mttle: (C) "It's • . ii)~ m KK\11 & Jecll1 (C) Wwtt" (j1Mnll1) '66-Dtb· @ m GuU,,_ (C)
orfll Kirk. Mr. lllbo11t (C) I Diet ¥•• ~ (ltl) 7:JOIJ D'"£ Tr'"4Klsl lC) TIM J'll~ ((} (301 Star Tiit (C) (60) @ aJ Slllllhy tM ... , (C)
Wlllfa NIW? (C) (30) "Btlow 1:00 II ~~ TIM JeboM (C) s.. Lewi," 0 !jJ 6 [D Htl'1 Com" tlM
I .... (JO) '"'"'' ( ) Jbtldl• (fiO) §@@ m c.1'""' ttb 1c1
Mtws I~ 1i11 lllHIRd (C) f6ll / $~ Ti1111
Jack Wllite, A1111 Duier, Glori1 T11t1 ol Wells Ftrtt
Greer, Pltti llffbt. 1:30 1J9(1)111p l 1nn1/RNd llut-l!lDB MIC ""'11!tict (C) {60) I "" Holl (C) 11tr1ri1 Ct• (C) (lO) l1rry Bly· §@ (!) m PW: Pant•• (CJ
cl., hosts. Antll Dle~!nt0n, C111rl1!1 C.•pa hotilt (C)
C1n11 tnd M1rthl R1r1 r.ompet~! · Mt.it: "Sidtu f11M111 Dttp•
111iMt Tht Ritz 8tOlhtn (H1r ry (adwllb.irt) '1&--lloyd Bndees, Lon
1nd Jimlll)') 111d Uir1bllh -'ll'l!ey Ch1n1y. G Tiie C1111t , ... (C) (.ll\ Jim m Cixe Kil
Madl.r1ll hosts. S11u11 Sflflt J11111s, m Mwlt: "ll'idt 1 V'io14111I Mlle"
Bill Dini 1/!d IJiOI Gholllry 111151 {wulern) '57-John Agu, PtnnJ m.., ''""" Mlttlall (30) [dw1rdi. m fut"' flt11 <lOJ ''Only y,,. !:oo o ~ oo m 1t. a. rvtnstuf CC) ttf'dlV... O Mowit: "Al1ik1.. (1dvelllurt)
fl) ..... M (C) (liOl 044 -Dean Jaue1, Kent T1ylor,
ft:) Ulll Dmrt Rl41ort (C) (JO) M1111ret Und:i.ay.
]:CG CIS [\Whtc lflWl (C) (JO) 0 @(}) (D Hot W~Hli (C)
~ W1,..up (C) (JO) m MO'lill: 4111 Ill Operalol" ldt1·
WW'1 MJ 1.Jnt? (Q (30) m1) '59-Mickey Rooney, M1ml1
I 1.-. L1cy (30) Ven Doren.
IMt lllit D.a (C) (JO) til C.lldonts J Mllliu
M1"1q Tow hllol (C) (30) Cl) Plntflllll Latina
ARMrlal Wiit (CJ (30) 9:l0 1 1m'DuUrdly' Mllttltf IC) Si•p .. _lt M•ril (!t.5) · 6 a;, 11111111 Sjtlib (Cl
, ftlrl: Clrl (C) (30) ffi Thi H1rdf IOJS (C)
7:3D.Ql(l)W 111*1: (CJ fJOJ (R)I · cu"do• 1 Gulll1Tn a;, Milli ~ (CJ (tiO) (II) 10;00 §~fl) Wacky R1cn (Cl
Allpl J...W (C) (2 1h: ~1)1 @(j) (;fl Sky Hi.ts IC)
Antlls ft. Ol~l111d Atltlefic.s. • Movie: '°MIUICl'I Rivtf'' (wt!.I·
0 @ (I) (D Th rtyHi1 Hun (CJ u n) '49-Guy Mad1il0n, Rory CaJ.
(30) (RJ "A Conveftt fu!f ol Mir•· llttun.
d•." I Q) MM: "Tlie C.rdin1I" !d11m1)
G Mllieil S Mtrit: ''Tk l•ll·I 'J9-£11c Ponman. Ju111 Duprtz.
RENE MARROOUIN
Guardian of Shrint
Dancers
Ask Rain
At Padua
As it has many ti111es
before, tlie rain dance of the
spring production at Padua
llills Theater ha~ brought
showers lo the Southl and.
"F'iesta a San Ysidro." thr
current folk play at this world
famous thea ter is the story·
of drought bescl farmer!; in
Northern MexiCTI who look to
their patron saint for rain.
K...-. 111• (••tun) '58--f>1u11 I"'"' H!IWl!lln, Uh Milin, John Dellner.110:30 9fi ([) Scoobr·Ooo (C) I Tll'ltl If Co1111q11t11Ctt ('C) (JO) • tn (lJ fD Tiit f lintslo11t1 IC)
M ... (60) Mmt: "fhr M11111ter I lh1 One of the most 1nteresti nR ~111tllrrill1" In· 'irl" !horror) '41-llod Clmtron, moments in Aci I 1s the rain
kr*-( ) (30) (II} [lien l>few. dance of the Indians whose
ti) Cnz M A.of (JO) 0 @@ m Gtortt II ttti J1111• ancient sacrificial dances to 7:55 G) Ci1e1ti1t1 • Slplldoi 111 !Cl
l:OOIJQtmn. c-., CC) 13oi)l0;45m fllowlt: (C) "'Th• ~""" and the god Tlaloc have been
With ttiifr lleW lmpnwld im1ae. lht O~Ulw"' (~tern) 57-Antho-adroitly bl-0ndcd into prayers
SpiM Ind Htrt>trt itl 1 111 .. "l") ny Oede1, Mafle Wilson. ;i nd ritu als lo lhc Chrislian
ttiey thint u n put kl • 1ood 111ordl11:«>1),S([)W Bi1\etb•ll (Cl n. Saini , Ysidro.
for fhtm with Brttlsh my1rt1. ~11 Pl3yotl s . 111 this dr<1ma nf lhe ba.~1r
fJ lfn(l)GJTM lftdf 81111Ch O Ql (i)il:)Maior Le•(lll l•t• ne<-ds of farmers, for rain (~ (lh) (II) "flthll' ol t~• y111. "I ball (C) Chir.1go Cub~ vs. St. loo+1 Mtn:i• enleri h•r 111w fi1her In 1, Caio:t1n1ls at SL Lo1.11s. ;i nd c:rops, the audience will
COll'fllt 111d reb lletMff 1roullded. O @mt;DGtt H To,.lhfr IC> see ;i nd !1ear music anrl m Te'"' "" Tl'ltlt (C) (30J I Jetl\ro Tkilr ind R. B. Grents IYtsl. dances that arc still pcrror1T1· m T1-Jtlll ltwollrllOll (30) Tht "flella Merlcani Thillt e<I by the farmers in remo1c l11diln .oirJtu1l letdtr 1ctno<1ltd11e11ll:30 ~ Cil al Amtfican landibnd · !
Ind u 1min111 disturti•no1 •'Ill dis·I ( J Oic:k Cl~rk 1' host. Tht Chair· agricultural regions o ruoclern
t.Ofttlnt tflroulf'lout th • world man ol l~t Board group iuesh. 1\lei ico.
l l.llC9dtl ft) (30) ' 0 Mll'llt: ft) "The Olllho1111~• The produc!.1on or Lins an·
l:CIS LllCN Un (53) C•nttfll) '!16--Joel MtCrt•, Bu· nual folk drama i~ prr ...
1:31 Q't(J) Hltn'• ..._(Cl (30) bira H•!t. fess ionally done. The set. iA'll h
(II) Hop~ NYI 111r1 that Colonel t!) Motif: "SNd Nt Tllf1" llllYtr· bl k d 11 IUmt x.,. .t &tlllq; ll •l'ld thll leryJ '43-June Vi11c111t, W1!11ee :ts barren ground . ea 'Al' •
• florth ,Vria n·boulld Gt1111•n di. fOld, 1ngs and leaden sky makes
ma Nllllk't1 w. c11111a11y. Ill(' one reel the drought. The clap
B QJ {l}fDNI• If tftt C111111 nf lhunder that ,1ccompan1e<i
(C) C901]rl '1M Prbontr Wi\1!111:· lightning and agua (rain) ts
D @rnmn. Cltttt •I'd "'"'1 ~0MiMr. "'flttti •nd tht Spllr" so startling th al one ex pe ct.:; liliir (C) '30) (R) "Surprbe Pw·1 (wtStem) '56-Joh.11 Alff, Mtt l• to literally sec the riHn, <1nd ty." [nidiPI.
I DllW ffllll IMw IC> (90) I'"'" fa!Ril11r the joy of the players is \•cry HPtllty CC) (60) • 'D11M1 de i. Slfl1111 real as they prc1mre a fiesta
Ctlrb. W1rts •~d 12:)(1 "'-Conl11111t1 (tl in gratitude.
(JO) IR) MMe: "f'mutd" (wes\1m) ·47 "Fiesta a San )'sidrn" Y.'111 l lAI 9-t, • l'lnMl1e (!OJ -Ttft$11 Wright, Robert Mitchun1, run through .lune 6 iA'il h
1:11 QI (I) CIS frfdlJ MO'llt: (C) • .>uditlt Anderson. ....,rformances on \Vcdncsdays "CMlll T1y Wiii! 11t" (r.omedy• i VIHal Clfl (C) r•v
1U1111a) '6.1-0olOfu Hirt. Hurti l:OD ~(l)SUper111111 (C) through Saturdays. Curtt1in
O'Brt111, 1'1111111 !1f11n, kiri M1ldlll, Motl1: "1"'h ind fury" (dr1· time is at 8 :30 p.m. wilh
Kiri Boehm, lo11 Nettleton. ma) '52-Tooy Cuni,, J111 S · , matinees at 2:30 on Wed·
D a>""" C.1111 lh1 liidn (Cl Mona frttm111. sdays and Sati.;rdays.
,
lta tlae Galleries
Golden West •
Has Exhibit
LAGUNA ART GALI~ER.Y -307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach .
Admlllsion SI. r.-1e1nber1 and one guest free. Hours: I to S
p.m. daily ; docent tours Sundavs at 3 p.m. Currently on
extUbU, .. Panorama '70," a mixed media show of paintings
and sc11lpture through May 24 .
BOWERS MUSEUftt -2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. !·fours:
JO a.m. -4:30 p.m. Tues. • Sat.; I to 5 p.m. Sun.; \Ved. and
Thurs. eve. lo 9 p.m. No charge. On exhibit through May.
an ·ecology show by UC I students <1nd the J\.tuseu1n titled
··Man : lhe Race we must not Lose"; Collage paintings of
Juanita Hislop.
CHAWS GAU.ERV -1390 So. Coast flii;hway, Lagun a
Beach. Hours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. On exhibit through
May, oils and waterColor OOe-man show by Jack Dudley.
ti-tESA VERDE LIBRARY -2968 J\.1esa Verde Dri ve Ea:st.
Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular library hours
through May 15, oil paintings by Blanche Downs.
CROCKER • CITIZENS BANK -2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Pt1esa. On exhibit during regular busi ness hours through
htay IS, oil paintings by Jean Say.
COSTA hf~A LlBRARV -566 C e n le r ~t.. Costa Mesa.
On exhibit during regular library hours through May 15,
barbed wire collection of Robert T. Fisher.
AIF.SA ART LEAGUE -513 Center St., Costa Mesa. Hours:
Sat. and Sun. 1 to S p.m. Continuous exhibit of art work in
various media by Art League members. No admis.sion charge.
Pt1ARINER'S LIBRARY -2005 Dover Drive, Newport
Be<ich. During regular library hours, the Jr. Ebcll Artist. or
!he Monlh exhibit featurin g linoleum cul!'. pen and ink
drawings o( Leslie Wayne, student al Newport Harbor lligh
School, through May.
UC ffiVINE LIBRARY -The Irvi ne library on cainpus will
show woodblock prints by Unichi Hiratsuka, through htay 29.
NE\\'PORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bnvi;ide Drive. New·
port Beach. On exhibit during regular husiriess hour s through
hlay, oil painfings by Bert Blanchet.
UCI GALLERY -UC Irvine Fine Ari " Gallery hour:-;: 1.5
p.m. daily except Mon. Currently on cxh1b1t in the ar! Gal·
lery. throogh May 24. annunl student art exhibit.
!\fUTUAL SAVINGS GALLERY -2867 East Coast Hig hway,
Corona del !\1ar. On exhibit dunng regular business hours,
lhrough May, watercolor and 011 paintings by Viole t Clark.
ll UNTrNGTON BEACll l.IBRAllV -S2S Main St , ll unl ·
ington Beach. On cxhibil through J\1ay, oi l pa1nt1ni;s by Eliza.
beth Nador, during regular library hours.
OCC ART GALLERY -2701 fo~airvic\11 Road. Coslg Mesa.
Hours: 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. hton. ·Thurs.; to 5 p.m. fri.
<1nd I • 5 p.m. Sun. In the Library Gallery prize winning art
by Edward Baker. through ~lay ~I.
GOLDEN \YE.~T GA IJ~ERY -ln thl' Library of (:01r.Jc11
West Colleg e, 15744 Golden \Vest Ave . l!unt1ngl1n1 Be11ch. On
exhibit through May are wa Lcrf'olors by Darrell Ebe.rt anrl
figurative drawings by Kay l\forlcnsun, fac ul1y members
of the college .
COFFEE GARDEN GALLER)' -262fi E ('Q;1st I ligh1vay,
r.orona de! fl.l.<tr. Ho urs: 11 a.n1 to 3 p.m. fl.Inn -S;i1. On
exhibit, h1ay 18 -June 25, lh r 111or ks of Hans Burkha rdt.
CJ1a1ming
Li London
"Carol .Channing wit h lier
Ten Stout-Hearted t\fen," the
musical enterta1runent star·
ring Miss Channini;. opened
a four-week engage ment in
London on April 22 al the
Drury Laoe Theater I 11
una nimous raves Frorn !he
critics tl1err. and hus bcrn
[}laying lo c<ip<1clly audiences
al the historic playhouse ever
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPl.E
111f °",..,,,.. ol 1 ... "'"'fl II ID ...... .,.
p.o, .... , ·-,,.. ,.,.,.,....,,Ill "'"''f CO" ..... '"' ""'"'V br ,,..., <"''"'""
--------·----------..
(60) (II) '1lll fltctlin1 of .ltmiy.M QMoril: "Pn or 'Di•" (dram1) adua Hills is located in Jfa>n JI* kl San fr1nciKO In '60-£mtst Bor(nina, Zoltra l•111· u I
order l:o bool Jtnny Lind to linr pelf. lhe foothills on Padua Avcnur. Today protl ueer uf'rnart
~ince. ® 110 D•l IJllO!R 1' AOllllHD
llQt 1 .... , "'t'r •• ,.,
'" U '11•• 1"111
M111 1uut · J111bi Blvd. in Cl:ircmonl. ncscrva· h1iss Cha nning in her London ····························
Betty Beaird, who 11tars as
1ilarie Waggedorn lo 20th Ccn·
tury·Fox Tcle.vii.iiln '~a "
llt!ries, came down . with a
i,'f'Cat case of nerv~ during
the filming or "Father or I.he
Bride" episode .
lier nerves did nol come
from doing the show hut
rather f r o m obtainins • h e
autograph of the incoo1parablc
hlae West who was then at the
studio rilming ' ' Myra
Breckenridge.''
•
Thtrr'• I 1'.hltll!ing C<J[unl;i) JIB~r~-~ ""~ilina Ill •• ~ •
11.u un • pcrocinal tnur nf our Counrry·1 iYMinnin' ftl lndt pcnden..:c: ll•ll 1t Knott"• Derry Firm. Phm • •1~11.
Belly was invited to Mae's
apartment with some other
rriends for the purpose of
securing lhe famed signature.
Betty was so nervous that the:!,~~~~~~~~;::~~~~=~~~~~~~~~ evening started out as a total __ ----
<fi.:;aster. She lefl her pen in
her car along with her purse,
the keys to the car were left in
the car door and when she was
introduced to 11ae \Vest she 1
couldn't utter a word .
·'It was quite an evening,"
said Belly. "l was Uke a little
kid . She is really an amazing
wo1nan -still beautiful as
ever. \Ve talked and I got my
:lul ograph . IL ended up a love-
ly evening."
"Julia" stars J)iahann C<ir·
ro!l h1 the title role and "fre ·
quently stars" Lloyd Nolan i:IS
Dr.~ t\lorton Cheglcy. !\111rc!
Copage, Lurcne Tuttle and
hlichael Link co-sta r.
Violence Fil111
llOLLY\VOOD fUPI I
"\Vhal Are we Going to <lnl
\\"il houl Skipper'? "is the lillel
nf National General's new
rnnv ic rlealing with the roots
nf \'iolence among }X'ople in l'
the Un ited States today.
S. P. E. B. S. Q. S. A. *
Presents The 13th An nual
(lleu<11 Ch•ftl•r-
C11•renl '''
Wt1t1r11 Dl•lrltt
Ch1mp1I
Parade
OF
Quartets ,, __
·~' ''the E'qlll'91"
.. INOWPorl 1'1A•Mr
Chap!lrl
""'""" "'""'' v..,111 Cho•1i.
Ol~tr·1
"DOWN AT THE OLD BARBER SHOP"
SAT URDAY, MAY 23-a'DD P .M.
NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL
15th & Irvine-Newport Beach
TICKllS: 53.00 llfSERYf'D Sl.50 RESERYED-SZ.00 GEN. ADM.
TIC!l'.fT INFOltMATION CALL: 197·7676
f62·f61 s 548·8127
Oil WRITE TO: 5612 S!'A DRIVE, HUNTINGTON IE.A.CH
801 Offlc:1 Opens ot 7:1 5 P.M.
• ie(.Jtl¥ '"' Tiit Pr1M'r'VlllD11 & EMIMl<~l-~t ctf 1•""1' JIMI•
Ou11111 ~11111lng 111 "'m•rki, lncw.-riltd. IN1wpGrl Har!Mlr Ch.,,llfl
ORANGE COUNTY'S ---
*
All NEW COMPLETE AMUSEMENT CENTER!
Gala Grand Opening Party Tue~day May 26
llSllN ID RADIO KEIY OH CHECK YOUR LOCAi WHITE moNTAOS.
(REGULAR SHOWS START WEDNESDAY. MAY 27tlll
4 COMPLETELY *** 4 AUTOMATED LARGE NEW·OEL UXE
* ** *
HI-KIO OIE ULTRA SEPARATE GIANT
IRIDESCENT INTENS!TY PLAYLAN D MODERN PROGRAMS
TAKE YOUR SCREENS PROJECTION ***** SNACK BAR
THE FIRST DRIVE·IN OF THIS TYPE
IN THE ENTIRE WEST!
P1Ck
NOW! AN AMUSEMENT COMPLEX Wl1ERE YOU CAN TAKE YOUR PICK OF THE TOP CURRENT ATTRACTIONS. CONVENIENTLY LOCAT ED IN THE HEART OF ORANGE COUNTY OPPOSITE
THE ANGEL'S STADIUM. In Seltll1. Milt~ •llCI ,\1111 l hbtit Stivk1 r~1111 (t ) three mile~ north of f"ooth1l l J)rlfon!, v.hn is presenting
....
-
.. -(cl (2 ') . ... p; ~ ..... ~ ......... ... "
1
• U_pbUt (C) lions for I healer and dini ng rlebut . announced an e:<tcns1on ·~, .... 0 .. ....
""(30) J;30 la@Jot1111 Q
11
nt (C) room are taken at (7141 62&-or the engagement lron1 t<.lay __ .,......,_, ............... _ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ij~~~~~~;,~~~~
f11twn (Jill Ttn111t1 Ar1111d IDfcti DIJ P1·\,.,::;.. _________ ~~=~h~J~~2Q~---.:.;:::::::::;;::::.~~~~~:::;i::ii~ii::iiii11 ------l:JD · "'-(C) (30) 81J\er W11d. r•d• {C) 1288. 2J throug unc · ____ _
Ntrn (t) (30) Bilt .lol!n\. 1 O UCU Sonne S9ortJ (C) G•r) -I •
. ~ T1111til1 130) 8ehln ind Tom Harmon look •I thf F COST• Ml!'9•
· Di111 .. YnlHI (30) 1!170 Bruin rootbal1 squad. ........... I x SOUTH COAST Shows Start at Dusk• Children Under12Free ! lltlD QJ @ m lflditfl'l Wont! IC) ffi Moyie: "Voodoo bla!Mf' (mys ,....,.,._
( (II) '"CIMed Set~ A moYie 1try) '!11-Boris K1rlolf, BeYerf) ctNUAt PLAZA THEATRE euEN• P'AAK TWIN DR1V!:·1 N:5
lfirldor is murdl!td Oft th1 wt Tyler toRPOUTllN San Ofqo freeway at 81i,tol • 546·2711 • Md 1n1r1t ad011 b«omt pnmr 2:00 6 ~ li) Triple Crown Hot11 AK· !
11.1191Ct1. .lofl1 ¥111 l>r'•I"' 00!· ing {t) '111c Prea~nrss." Tht !Sit N 11 d • 82\·4010 • '---"'i;7,;;;;-~!".!~!!!J
tr1rsRdllWl'IMl!.\'W1nn1W1ldtt runn1ngofthePruknus.t Pimli· ow, a the susp·ense an ' AllColo•Sl>ow i sb n [tta Goldlllln, tO RllOI Cou!llt , 81ltimorf, Md., e~clll"·•~" Or•l>Ot CD. Dr ·In SN>*1"'~' Rlc~~'ll H•td,.___S,~n C.o""''Y 31-(cl (.,I ' T ">001, A Spl<I OllytUY" ((';)Coor * "Th• M•llv M•o•••n" ''"• i! the •ond jelft! of l/le 1i!1!e fld • • "~
• -A • St..t• wl "· • I • • "S•t1n'i S1d1>11" n>J ~ lllWIClll , .. I" I ... own tttnb 1ur thrl!l!-Y!ll·O ds.. "Dirty OD11n" CGl C:o•or • una~r 11 mu•• b~ wilh P.''"'I 160) .,__ ind lht Bil leap," l he SISO.OOO·Added P11111!neu II • t t • • E 1 • h ::. ~ '."::;" ... w~:, '!,:";:!; ;;;,,:~ '"' m,,, ... lhoMO· exc1 emen IS '1n ng IS •
Skye Aubny, Plli!llp C11rll. Jan! m Q1 (6) l'ldOc ll11ht Confer·
Wyatt: 1.0¥1 ind tM former Mar : ence Trkt ind r111d C111mpkmllllp
rilgt," Ct rl Betz. Dant W1n1". (C) LIYt fin1!s from the UCLA Trtd
Elliott Reid. Stadium ln Westwood. plus hiRh·
• l'llltbl1'1 f'lople ft) (GO\ li2ht1 ot both the P~c·S S•1m ind
TWve O'Cloc:t Hie\ (60) Gtmn1ilits Ch1mpion!.h!ps ol this
hW (]Cl) past Muth.
• Tft.Cln1111 40 (l hr) I ~ Stt lllt USA (C)
l0:311 A•lll1 (lO) · Ar111ed l orc.1 Ht(bliJhb (C) u• ll!J ~""' fCl I Z:lO Mowlr. "MJStlry Submui111• i» m fihwl jC) fd11m1\ • 'SI -M1cdon1ld Ca1ty,
he 1.,.lld I ~t1n1 Tortn.
@ rn t:i> ...... {C} 2.30 Q frloiM: (C) "The Clslili1n'" (Id·
...,..: ..,flf!Uftdti• 197'0~1 wnturt) '&J--.CeMr Romero, Brod·
(llomr) '5&-&ril ll1rlolf r.1"1dt C11w10fll. m lllM: "I.ft MileraMt1" ldll· I W1go1 Tr1in (C)
Jiii) ·~rtclrK March . 5<:o9t (C)
Ith Slid, SH Said (Cl • Vulldadts Musit.1le1
'flit """9 kl• (RJ I l:OO Jh1t TI!o1111s, Ovtcloori (t) Andy
&ti "9cN I '-I Oitu Otvi111 t1kn llil 1111nds.on on his
11:30 t3 (I) MtrY Crlllln (CJ 1111.l duc.k hunt FIJ l1shm1 •~perta @ !l) m khnllJ CMSOll (C) btt11t 11le Allantit Sat'"°" in Qut·
llltrit: (Cl .. .,..th 11 1'11111blt, ~Pc, salt wate1 !1~111111 1s !~med in
Dllttl I.I Qtid:" (lftwinlure) '61-the Gulf of Mu;ioo; and Smallrnouth
Torry ktndlll. B,.d H1mL 81ss lishin1 In Mitllia1n'1 t1kt 0 EE Didi Cmtl (CJ I St Clur is 1ho<1n.
Q) Mlrwlr. (t) "NOOR Ofll' Ml1111n~ Q Movia; '1oo Lill for TMri"
(musical) '~I-Oen Amecllt, Betty (mp!eryJ '4!1-Dtn Ourye1, Liii ·
G1tbl1. be1h Scott.
fl) Nelk:ilr1 34 (tJ ffi MIMI: "\llltnown lsl111d" (Id·
r:G08a...il: "'TM Rfntrou~lf" lrlre v1nh11$) '.f!l-Bano11 M1cl1n1.
m1) '.fir-Rod Cunerori, [111 lla1n~1. ITDl'os CJ 0 NIWS {CJ • Bii Pld~tt tci aJ Adlon Tlltatr« ''Co11111eous • • T•bo tit !It l:lt11!l1s
Mr. Pru1n," t llflord [VIM, Dtborllll l:lO ,_..,. 1'11.atDp (CJ
klrr. I . Tr....i 1111 World (CJ
l:JO llC..11111ftlty tlifltlin lotrd (C)I Slwll111 TM11rt (Cl
!:Ill GI All.fOPI Shlwr: "lht Btcllt!or l:.a 0 Mll'llt: (C) "Blttlt .t Aplc.IM tnd thl Bobby Sore r." "t•a• 011 P•ss" (lftst!rn) ·~2-.lell Chin•
Gold," '1nw11ioft ol 1111 Y1111puu. ~, dltr, Suwn C1b0t.
e JOB PRINTING
e PUBLICATIONS
e NEWSPAPERS
Qu11ity Print ing tnd Otpendtblt Se!'"t'ic.•
fOf mot• th•n 1 quarl1r of fl century.
PILOT PRINTING
J2'11 WBT IAl.IOA l\YD., HIWPOIT 11.A'CH-Mt..Cl%1
' (" II
11The last word in thrillers. Terrific." -Look Magazine
\
~·Wf, ... ,. ••l-521-J52•
lo.I••• '" , ......
..... o;.._ ..
~·1 1o111 1 .
·-.......
!>"~ Jill
8•Md"''V Mu•«"I !lit "D!!ver" (C;) (•lo' •••
""''" Wiid. """ F,.,., !C·l co•or Greo1 Fam1rv Eo1er11.nm1n1
E~c1~,,~e O•~n<1' Co Or -In ~~'JW~ "T~• Ll""r111on al l ord !lyron
JO~to" IP\ (11101
"Ma .. ~y Junt•1" Color
I)""~' 11 mu•t be: wit~ """"'
'"' 'Five Ma• ilrrnv" tr.r\
Alt (O!Of S~llW
Po•~• O't&cl' '" ,.COOOIYE Mii . (NIPS" !Cl • "F IV[ MI N IU>M V"
!CP I
ltt Colo< ~"""'
"N.&.IC£0 UNDEll ll!:llTN[lt" !II)
"TNE WllO flUNClf" !Il l
ll""" 11 M111t bf_ '""h P•rtn!
Otlft!I C<lll"!Y P~mr1t0 E"!11911'11nt
"A M •• Call"" Norn " IG PI Color
All Cal~r ··M'" ~<l'<l""'V AWr•N Winn-.
Jolin We vne 1~ "T•ut C•ll"
'" ·~tt•l11 Cur~M"
Al l Color ~~ow
Mui,, Tllom~\ "I "Jtnnr"' !GI>)
'"' "'They S .... I f.lo•M• Oon'I T~•r'' !Gr )
All Coto• ~~""' -Stryr M<Ou~~~
''Tht Tllom11 C'9w~ A!t•ir" CCDI ....
'Yho Odtl ClvPlt" f(.I
I'
1 ·
,,
~LJJ; JolJ.es~ Raeial
l!dl"'1'1 Nolf: T 11"1>
...... guldt " P'IJ"ll'dd bf tit< filflU """""ifff• ol BorbM Council Pr A. M,,.
John Clor~ It prtrid<nl
end lfn . William W a r e
It _..in.e cllaJnnon. 11
1tlntftldftla1art/rrtnct m .,._ng 11dtal>la
fil• tor certtdta a o c
-Gftd will appear w1kl11. Yoxr vffw1 or1
10Udtfd. !loll -ta 11 .. v1t Glll<I<, _, oj 1M
DAILY PIJ.m.
* ADULTS
Tllo AAl•eatu<r1 (R): Film
vonloo of Harold Roblll' brtt·
aellt.l' aboot an intemaUOnat
playboy who -..,. broiled In the poliUcll Ule
and molulloos of a South
American republlc. Btkim
Frhmu and Candler Bu(en.
BeltBoaoela~ (X):
Bawdy lan:e Ml In Vldorian
Loodcn. Dl.vid Hemmi,.. and
Georp·Sanderl.·
Beb and Con! .. Ted -Allee ( R) : Co•l•p>nr7
social comedy ~mar·
rllli• and frlllldohlp. -
CUip, Natalie Wood, Elliott
Gould and Dyu Camon.
Tllo Girt -Cloalda~ Say Ne (GP): Georp Stgel and
Vlrna IJll Jn a coollllll!c
drema 111 In Europe.
J• aM M1117 (R): Dlll\ln
Bollman and Mla Farrow Illar
in thiJ contemporlt)' Jove
story lbout the "now" life
of a Y<l'l'I couple who become
cloeply lnvo!Yed Jn a M hour
ptrlod.
Tiie 1.a.,., (ft): y-at-
torney atlanplin( to build a
career dlfends a man ACICUltd
of murdering hll wtle. Ban)'
Newman and Robert Colbert.
Ll!Je-" L. .. '°""
(R): -Lee -and Lae J. Cobb In a loot at
• 111\ell Soutllorn town wllh
raolelc<IDf11ctl.
Ulllnhle (X): Catherllle
Spuk portray1 a )'OUng widow
who plung<1 Into promlJCUlty
aft.er JeamillJ that her late
hutband bad beon uafeltbluL
JwH.clWa TrtnUpanl elJo star.. .
MMlolpt CoQoy ( X ) :
lluol1n -and Jon Volll>t Illar lit a olUdy «
1-llnelo and llll"'llval In N..,
Yort.
Tiie -(GP): Steve
Cronkite Discusses
Coverage of .Trials
"Anywhere the publie is en-
tilled to go, I believe lhal
television should go," says
CBS anchorman W a It e r
cronttt.e in an interview with
Los Angeles attorney Kevin
O'Connell, tonigbt It I p.m.
on ltCET, awmeI J.I.
ln a 30-mlnute procram en-
titled ''CouN, WW and AD,''
cr.nklte dlaclllall the lopic
ol ellowlng t.tevlaton Jn the
courtroom during a trial. p-qi. the interview
were med CD the publ:lc TV llllrles. 1'1be Advocltes," on
March 21, wbeo the -troverslal 1. u b j e c t wu
debated.
Cronkite believes television
lbould be allowed to cover
crimlnel trials to help insure t8Jr proceedings for defen-
danla, and to help the public
better understand the con-
tioversial iuues involved in
certain trials.
1be veteran new.!1112D says
that if the public were allowed to ,.. what bappens In
aNrlrooml through telrvision,
"Chere probably would be
IOtne demands for court
ftfonn. M1ybe . that'• wtiy
,....,,, beglng resi.!led by the
eourtL"
WALTER CRONKITE
Opon "Courll to TV
cover the "Chicago Seven."
trial, the viewers could have
made up tblk, own minds
about the conduct of the
defendants and Judge JullUJ
Hoffman.. 'Ibe public, be says,
"would not now have to de-
pend on &he ex post facto
propaganda of both sides as
lo how it went on."
The interview wilt b e
repeated on Oiannel SS Sun-
~ lllan In the filmed
vtnlon ol Faullmer'1 .,...L
Tbe blred lllMt od)llllY Juda
him """' • ....n lowu Jn M1aialJ>lil to Ille tlnlUI bl(
city ol lltmjlilll darios the
early JI00•1.
llMu'a -(ft): lluA Tamblyn and S<ot1 Brad)' atar
Jn a .-.cycle -
Tiie -en.. Alfalr: Faye Dunaway and Steve
M~ Illar In this ftlm
al>out an _...,., eleulh -
becomes an tnlimlte -.
pan1on c1 a lhrllr-.,
m1lllooeln whom she IU~
of~abankrob
beey.
Tiie Wiid-(II): Pl1111
ol an ....., outlaw -lradl
his smell bud ol daperadoel
to rob the .railroad In TOUI
in 1113 go awry. Violence
follows . William Holden and
lldlertRyan.
MAnJllE TUNS
AND ADIJL'lll
Baldi CulWy ad Ille -daace llld (GP): A dell com-
'!'IY about two charmtng Jeaen-
dary bandit& who take lhe
ways of the old Wtst to
Bolivia. Paul Newman, Robert
Redford and Kal!mlnt Hou.
Tiie Dirty llotea: Shol11y
bef<re D-Day a d o z e n
American military prisoners,
condemned to death or life
impl'bomnent, are o f f e r e d
clemency if they accomplllh
a brutal. sWdda1 m.iuion for
the Army. Lee Marvin and
Ernest BorJnlne. :rt.t Mu Army (GP): Five
men attempt to steal lhlpmtnt
cl gold, headed for the Mex-
ican pemment in 1114, and
pass the (Old OD lo the ttvolU·
tion. Peter Graves and James
Dely. J-(GP): Marlo 'lbomas
partnys Jenny, a preenaot
glrl from New £niland who
I* to New York. She mar-
rlra (for-) a )'011111
man played by Alan Alda,
wbo wlalla to avoldJba dnft.
.l -COlle<I -(GP): E'ql1oh arl!tocrat 11 cap.
tur<d by Sioux early In the
nine-lb cenbxy and Ill IUb-
ject to cruelty as tie tries
to prove himself. RJchard
Harris and Dame Judith
Anderoon.
Me1!7 Maplnl (GP): Irish
miners In Pennsylvania dming
.the I170's form a secret group
to defend tblmaelva fnm
heartlets employen. Se an
Connery and lUchard Bania.
Odd Coaple (G): Uprearing
comedy in wtucb two ill-
matched U·mmfeds decide
to room togelber. Welter Mat·
thau and Jack Lanmort..
T1te Prime el Min Jeu
-(GP): Enclltl>made '·4monl other coinmenta,
Orim:lti addl: "li telt\>'ision
-had been ellowed to day at I p.m. lr~:r'
t1,(!rnesa ..
• . f l '. ' • ! . ;. ' ' ' • ' . '· ! : •• ~ '._, ;
(l'llone 541-1552 For lnformatlen) LAST WEEK
---
•'1\eumT1JIE'
COllES.Alltm-
IDEDillI WITllm
BU MOR .lKDTASTE.• --
-
~·~ ...........
PICKWICK!f D · BOOKSHOPS rama :..'\"'------............
111111 will> Mqgle smtlh In
Iba lltarrias ~ u an ...
ceolrlc butaptivatmc-
at an EclllllMq!i llrlt' IC!iool
In the..-· •.
. ' .
/ {,l-Jt( )l _...,..,_ ,.
Pul)cM,.....,., I Leve ''eOO;;)~CHtn ..
Y• (GP): Oamecb' llarrlng ,..
Ia Mc8blne, Anna CIJder.. ••• Dl-n MantWI and Jola Gavin. "'H-e , ...... -... 'MM"
ftl stertle C.C.. (GP)t ~~~-§·~"'-§'~'~•§t~, .... ~~ Ula Mlmlelll llwo a -"1••
performanoo Jn lldl llory
about two lmelY collqe kidt
-find km for !he !lrat Umt. Wendell BurlGo also
lllm.
Tiie>' -a ..... -~ no,? (AP): Drama o I
hllrtbreat d u r I n I the
Depreaian. Jae Fonda,
Mld>ad Saranln and Gli y-.
Z ( G P ) I AJieriu-made
pollticel ._ drama oel
In a ....... y,..-,
Irme Papu, Jean.Laois TriD-
Upaol.
Tn:Nll AND ADULTS
G-. Will Ile Wh•:
Margarot MltcheD'1. brt11Jant
DO\'el o1 111e old South wrtnc
tile QvU Wer en. Clerk Gable 1\-0:.. U.lr.. ••
and Vivien Leigh. lllDW IMllllilll nee Grit (G): Western set Mia r__ ••
In the lllO'• about a 14 year ICUl\JW
old &irl wt» Ls determined !,_... Oitlr'rat. llJ• ~t to avenge her fa&ber'1 murder -·
and ii helped by OllH)'td ,._ • • • •-Lhl
SOUIJI SW
lROPICAl RSll
Llqelt Sel..Uon of
Tropical 1llh •
SUppllet In tile area.
n:t.•-4.r.'U:...~-. ""Ill ........ .,.l" -:::.,..
m.o, tthwnlllt Dr: -""-' .... ~-..... oiec.1 ...-.
JR . MATl!IEE
SATURDAY, 2 P.M.
.....
GREAT RIVER" ..
"ALAKAZAM
All SIATS JI;
marshal and a young ranger. "THE Gl!IL WHO
Jolm Wayne, Glrn Campbell 'COULDN'T SAY NO" 111.arzr ~
and Kim Darby. !'======="" •L-
•1: A Spece OdJtRJ" (G): ~I II •• _, !SU!&!i • """ ··-.. ...., ..,..,
Fucinallng fibn about !hr )1 rfoooM
history of earth's formaUoa • --· and tht development of man •--•11 _...
to travel in splCt. Keir Dullel TONm A '':ti. 10:00
and Gary Lockwood.
FAMILY
Fulalla (0): Disney com-
bined ca.-and -mua.ic with Leopold Stotont1
concluclin( Ille Pll!ladelpllla
Sympbony OrchtltrL
Gootlbya Mr. CMpt (G):
Mulical remake cl Hlllon'1
dualc tlarrlnl Peter O'Toole
and Petula Clark.
-.... Gntel: German-tum, ctmi>ed in En&lilb.
lla(YoarHal10llleWled
(G): A Nanjo Indian boy
rucues a handlCXDt . race
bone from a quapnlre. He
trains tiim for his addle horse
in this Disney film. let against
the P"andeur ol Utah's M-
ment Valley. !Uc NH:>U,
MoDica Ramirez and lot& of
Navajos.
POii ADULTS ONLY
ExclutiV'I Showlne
For Information Phene
673-6260
l11t fu11 i11 ••-
"THI IDT
HOUSI IN
LONDON•
D••i4 H•1ttl'lllllfl
J •• 11111 '•tt•t
Flllt.atll __ ,_,
111 FAll'fl.AllJ CCIUll.,lR •••
wnll Aa llUlllU. ... ---SAT. A SUN.
MAT 1 ... l 17tlt
SAT.1 11:11 I J :JO
SUN.1 ll:JO o.ty
ALL SEATS 75c
LAST WEEK
ENDS
f'IEXT TUESDAY
WINNER OF 5
ACADEMY AWARDS
MY1S1CP COi.Gi IT DEWIE celilil :::':.!!!!=I
ALSO (GP)
MAGGIE SMITH
ACADEMY WINNER BEST ACTRESS
loNY ~~.!.=....-~--:oic:....-.e
-IOl(n L ..cx5 _,.._ •. ,litdllOlilt4 _ _,, lft Wini
-1u:io~-· £llO;<"CQOI "°".
Iii-·--·
--ALSO-
I "l"lliIJBEil'l:INE" I
The Spoctocle Behind The Spoctocle -«>t'_I!'.'£ n , •. ™, ns
"THE GAMES" (G)
STARTS NEXT WEDNESDAY
Rfehord Burton -Genevieve Bu jold
• "ANNE OF A THOUSAND DAYS"
·• . ·-
frld.11, ..... 15, 1970 DAILY PILOT ·ii
CURKGABLE· VIVIENLEIGH
LFBLIE BOWARD OUVIAdeBAVILIAND lWll!WfmE•w:&ilil.WMr-~·m-•
CINEDOME
..,..... --r:n . .;_',rM.w -_, J.-. L1J . \
~,.~ ... , ······ ,,,
STARTS WEDNESDAY
MAY 27
NEB Of 4 ACAIMY AW
C stereo103FM
the sounds of the harbor.
~d.S~~youVe never.heard it so good .
I
\ ' l '
. • .
. .·
. : ~
. .
. .
-:
. I
•
. .
I
i
i I ~
' .
---·-· .. .. , ---..... -~-·-
ATLAS
CllRfSUR.,
PLYMOVTH! IMPERl~L
. Costa Me~a ,
SER. • Vl29BOl2~795t
NEW 1970. BARRACUDA
' • ' q
NEW
A.te..tlc It ................. -' ...... ~. 'fl('el'' • ... • ,. • • ...... rGdj •••• elr • • • • • • • wMte
Yl..,t "" ............ .
· s.. #.Cl· .w., wolf rtr.,, 9'C. ~
j .... ~ 41LOC10lm. . ' .
SER. *' RL21COE~!l40 ..
l'70 Pl .. YMOUTH
FURY I
.
·ssion ·., • · ans ITU •utomatic tr . ·condi· , ~ d' air /FM ra 10, ing AM w•r steer . • • po ,;n;I . tion1nt • window•
• brakes, t lockl• ..
• werd~ ,· T" seats • • • po 11uto speed
vinyl top • • ~ mo.r• • • •
I • • contro . • • OC1151S1· • ' ' • Cti4:rT Ser. ·
'62 FORD .
• I FALCON
Jiuture:·2] Door, Autom-•fic, t•dio, he•f•r,
whife weirs, ••fre c/•en. IQJJIS~J
'49s .. ·
,.
'~· •\
hja6 DODGE ,.
CORONET
Seden. VS, •ufometiC, radio, heifer, •ir co+. ditioning, !SCEJ89J ':. ,f •
'995
'65 DODGE
· Sedan. VB, •1.1tom1fic, radio, h••f•r, power
steering, air condition~nq. INM~!-.OJJ : t:
'995·
-DART
'68 RAMBLER
Z DOOR
Automatic frensmission, elffrcmely IVTMS4J /
'1195
cr •• n.
..
, . ..
'66 FORD
IOAlAXIE 500
2 door h•rdtop, VB, eutometic, ra'dio, heefer,
power steering end brekes, •ir conditioning. IRSZ661/ .
'1195
'68 TOYOTA
CORONA
2 Door herdtop. Radio, heater, extremely •h"P· IWIJ/60 1
'1295
'67 CHEYROLn
IEl AIR
S•d•n. YB, •ufornatic, radio, heeter, power
steering, •ir conditioning. tXST054J
'1395
'68 PLYMOUTH
FURY 111 , 2 Door hardtop. VB, automatic, radio, he•t-
"· rower steerinq, a ir condition ing. IVDS. 641
'1595
ATLAS
SllYICI
DIPAITMINT
''Where Pride Makes The Difference.'' Dependable
•.nd ec°"mlcal repair and maintenance work. FOt'
your .. ~convenience we honor: Carte Blanche, Diners
Club, Americon Expre11, Master . Charga, Ban~A_.'119-rlt~td, gasoline credit cards,
'
" I
---..----~ -• -....----------... -------......._..... ~'"T"~ -..,........,..-~ - --
Friday, May 15, 2q70 -O~ILOT :}J
DICI WILSOI SAYS: THERE'S NEVER BEEN A amER llME TO BUY
" ',....-.. ............................... ...
SUPER SPECIALS ..
-
I 6 7 !~.~~~ cou~ TGJ 851.
'66 ~f~~~~~~n~ radio, air.
51010 8 RYC 01 6. _,' ....... U ...
I 66 !~~!~~!~~!~. :!'9~: $1388
. I 66 :~A~ ~~.~,~~~~steering. 51388
51388
'69 ~.~~~~ings,~~~,~~~~ 52588
warranty avail. XTL 486.
* *VACATION SPECIALS * *
* * * FREE • • •
7 DAY TRIAL EXCHANGE
Buy ono of our advortlnd u1etl .. ,. -
Drlvo It for 7 day1 ·-If you aro .. not
complotoly satllfletl, trade It far -o
of the 200 u1etl cal'9 .,,allaltla.
TELEPHON• APPUISAL
Un th• equity· la yaur old car to m*•
Iha down paymont on tr.. aaw ano -
Paid far or -•I
CREDIT COUNSELING --·--.._ --,._...,__ ___ _
• SHORT ON DOWN PAYM•NT?
• • SHORT TIMI ON .108? .
• LmLE OR NO'CUDm
• OVERLOADED WITH .llLLS IUT mLL
NEID AN AUTOMOBIU? .
C9MI IN OR CALL 142-6611 OR 540-7710
BUY -RENT -LEASE
RENT: WHY WALK? DRIVE A MAVERICK
LEASE: LTD 2·DOOR HARDTOP
$& ... ""' 6c Mlle
P'~w:"' stHri~g, clisc br1ke1, 390 2Y tnglne, air con-s 11505 :!'° d1tlonlng, wh1tew1ll tires, 24 montt. optHnd ltlSI. Call p111, T•~
Rental Dept. 842-6611 or 540-7780.
BRAID NEW 1970 TRUCK & CAMPER
3A T. FORD TRUCK & EL DORADO CAP4PER
l
$3488
lmmedi1te
Delivery
•
'JO 1'·2511 STYLESIOE l".U. llll
U> c.1.0. -·· t plr Uris, 1mp •. ou .. -.
S.lel Nil. F25AltH100C
'10 FULL CA8 OVEfl "OTTOWA"
• •1-r • with '"'"" sl1ed bed + ltlndll1'11 b9d. ~rte bll!"ner ~n:' .. r:1 ... ':,;1-0be, l1r clllllft•
Spoclal Flnanc\ng Avallablo
NEW 1970 MAVERICKS s1aa· 8 FULL ' · PRICE
IMMEDIATE DECIVERY
LOW DOWN
&
LOW PMTS.
No. OIC9/ V306900.
N.EW 1970 CORTINAS s17 ·aa FUU LOWDOWN
. ' PRICE LOW ~MTS.
IMMEDIATE DEUVERY No. IA92JK70442
SPECIAL PUllCHASE
SPECIAL SAV.NGS
NEW 1970MUSTANGS
CHOICE
HDTP.
OR
FASTBACK
S 'YEAR
50,000 Ml. ·
WARRANTY
AVAILABLE
LOW DOWN
&
LOW PMTS.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ~o. OR01T137713
NEW 1970 RANCHERO $2488 ~l~LE
' . ORDIR NOW
LOW DOWN
&
LOW PMTS. . .
NEYi 110 F-100 PICK UP $22 8 FUU LOW :OWN
· • PRICE
. I • ' LOW PMTS •
IMl~DIATE DEUVERY. ~; Fl OA!H "'"
NEW 1970 GAa.:ti1E 2"500''
2-Dooa SPORTS ROOF OR 4-DOOR SIDAN
. YOUR CHOICI
.. .$2588 FULL
PRICE
LOW DOWN
LOW PMTS.
ORDER NOW
1
::: 1970 THUNDERBIRD
·~
' .
4292v.~~~u~se::~~~~:ns., $
radial wh itewalls, pwr. steer-
ing, power brakes, all vinyl
interior. Flow thru ventila-
tion, med. Ivy green metallic.
Serial No. OJ83N155983. IMMIDIATI
DIUVIRY
•
•
I ..
I •
• '
• ·--·· ~----------------------'·--·.~
•
!
I '
!
I I!
! ;
•
• •
DAILY PILOT
·: DICK TRACY : ~
TUMBLEWEEDS
O I GOT1HEM I •
fJ SThNDlt'i' IN 1HE ~MIRE,
WORKlft ll' A PfRSPIREL J1
LORD, rD llKE'10 RETRt:,
'.FRA ID 1Tv1 GG'INA EXPIRE,
Sle!fRHANEAN Ill.IHI-ES!
!
MUTI AND JEFF
J ULI US, ~e's No '
DIFFERENT
-rHANVOU!
J ULIUS
IS SO
ABSENT-
MINDED
LATELY ' /'--,,--'
I SEE YoUGOT
A NEW
SPRING SUIT!
;·:JUDGE PARKER ... •'
I 'So8ERE.O BY
1 'THE C/i!ASH,
THE
DRUNKf>J
MOTORfST
SK/05 TO
A STOP.'
PERFUMES
:~'.DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by ~ ._ POWER I
)i
' ·' ,
~ A C RO S~
•1'.j..1t+Cl'~ ~Al a •. tl is lan~t
lOJ<1nd o1
:• iSSlll' 14 Whitt pop lJr
I S ,Arrivrd 1' Ha11oll'o11's
• l'\ i il' IS It
4C/ Sail tw
51 Stolt 52 Noblt man
53 Tool
54 Prono""
S7 Kunl Ol
l11;ih\
5C/ Gambl111g
dl'YIC!S
lnlG•mal
bl 61abbrt· l]-Docto1's _ mouth
• prl'scriplt011 · 6• A111a1or 1 n Un11 b7 Jai •···
• within a 68 fl'~1i111nt
; tribt ~ln9tr ~ C;1nad1a11 70 Ct1ernonv
•. oc~an (l) 71 5ono!
'.t l Mos\ r~d of Isaac
• comrll'JIO!\ 72 Ont al I
·t l Smil I D~kot~
• monkty 11roplt
·2:5 Auto of 'J Kicked
• tilt '21J ~ 14 Cosl·Ol-
2& Born l1v1n9
!7 Gont by 1trm
'Cha1acte• of 75 Calkin
e~rly radio
)1 Decay
)) Statr· Abbi
)4 Pe1111it
I l!lltty:
2 word s 36 Rove ovrr 40 Units
42 Canada-USA
: lreaty:
Abbr.
•• -· fldtl 14$ "Phooty1"
I In the 'JOs
4·7 Rr,ap lluliltt:
2 word s
DOWN
l Pr itll
Z Ovrr:
{ierm1n
3 FOfagt c1op;
2 wOfdS
'Ar istocrat ,
5 -····-point
" Fri9n 7 Count' or
'tatr •t!~ir
8 Lovr altd•t
9 Hand OY''
to a11ol11er
. -
Y~trrd•·fs Puzzlt So lved·
•
10 l enl h. Pref ix
11 Girl' namr
12 Otgradt
ll lt1ll1n pott
lB St11ewdnr ss
22 Portal
24 News pa~1 srclion:
Informal
27 8rlorr
too long
28 Chromoso"1f
part
30 Maple
product
JZ Ac,ount
35 Content of
a no111dn1I
roll
37 UnSllft•d:
Z words
38 B"e
3'l T 1tl t
41 Bit ol tYf
!rouble
5/15170
43 Pa1ty In
3ff1lr of
hono1
46 Hot ·-·
48 In
proport1011:
Z words
51 Kind or
bullet
54 COA\f Into
being
55 Sun :
Co111b. for111
5& Raise the
spirits or
58 Nol far away
60 •·•·• 11olr 62 DistOJttd
l ~l' truth
&J Ardor &~Do ce rta1n
l1ous twork
b6 lsn'l ablt
69 ··· In 1th
111.'ld
---··------~--~~~~--~-·--·-------~---------------·-·-·---~---··------·--
S -15" -~---
By Chester Goulll
•
By Tom K. Ryan
WI'/ HOW COOLV A HIGHLY SKILLf P
n:CliN ICIAN, GA\'tY /:l\WVLING AWAY
1\lE HOURS 'MIDST 1\lESE' RlSH simooN~NGS FOR A COOL lljlRiY
11 CENTS A '1AY l'llllllLV
/! ~f WNNHEAl\f<P?
11
,~
-1
By Al Smith
11 ll
By Hwold Le Doux
By Frank Baglltlkl
PERKINS
MISS P~ACH
VEftV FE.W P!OPL..E ~K ON SU'llDAYS
9&CAU5E T><E fOUl<T1.4 COMMANOMENT
T!U.S US 11) OBSEl?VI! TfE S.i.e&ATH.
STEVE ROPER
Cl.ASS DISMISSED, ANO
. M•VE A HIC& WUKINO.
VE-S •• eur I OON'T WANT
VOii TO CAll ME-TMAT!
PEANUTS
\I01l CAN (ALL ME
'.ALEX'!
U'L ABNIR
' ,.,. ..•.
-'°'" -EFHO'f. ·a~~ .. •
L.IVIN'-
SALLY BANANAS By Charles Banottl
~\.\J~~ PLUNK ~1~ ..... ~4~"" ~~~~~vNki-..~~~,~-~-~~~~ .. ·~~~~
0
GORDO
""'"'" IS PANMtro! Jlftls tArE !
'Wiv'W
lf-15'
MOON MUWNS
· SE11\'1Cf
WITll ~
SMILE-
ANIMAL CRACKERS
THE
:!ABBATI<
WA!IA
GltEAT IC'E!A,
WAS NT
IT 1
By John Miies
By Mell
l 'U. SAY.
IT WM THii
FlllS't Pi&Gi Of'
~l<llOJI: ~ EGi19L."110M
l""t HUMAN
Hl5TO!t'I-
By Saunders and 0Yervard
By Charles M. Schulz
I
CAN'r .De!AIK
ALOVE!
ONJ.V , A DONKEY
t;l<lloJ"'5 , ALONS.
. ,
THf STIAHGI WORLO
MR.MUM
• • '
By Gus Anlola
By Ferd JohMOn
-. t 1'~1NK MY
CMEEI<$ ARE <iETTIM'
MUSCL.S· OUN!> •••
By Roger Bollen
.SOMETIMES, :t
Ml6'51J.E al 1C~DIBIUiC/ G,l.~
'SPAGHEm IS MY fA\CllllTE rooo I TAAT~ Wll~ AU. 11l~ ACTlrJH IS f •
)
..
1' 1
jjl
•
' '
•
Houses FOR SALE \HOUs1s FoR SAL~ HOUsas FOR SALE !Houses FOR SALE 'fioumFoR 91\Le H<>u5Es FoR sAL.E IHousEs FoR SALE HOus1s FoR SAL ~ HOusEs FORsA'!.!..:
Gtnoral 1000 -•I lllOO 0-ral 1000 G-ral lOOI ~.!. _ --1..!!'! Goneral 1000 Goner1I 1000 Gonaral lOOOGonorol lll!!O ·
Pebl Barrell Rea/tg.
· pre611nltJ
OPEN HOUSES
Just Usted
Great 4 Bedrm family home, breakfast room.
&. kitchen open to sheltered patio. Living rm.
and dining rm. have view of garden. Asking
$43,950.
319 Santa laabol Open Sunday 1·5
Udo Isle
4 Bodrm. & 3 IMlflt -~,5001
Charming home, fea turing beamed ceilings,
warm panelling, cozy, used brick fireplace
and ''king size"" master suite. Immaculate
thruout. See and compa re - can't be topped
for value! Ken Brittingham. ~
217 Via Ithaca ·Open Sunday 1-5
Terrific View-Dover Shorn
An elegant borne! Do not miss seeing this ·
beautifully decorated, aduJt.occupied home. 4
Bedrm., dining nn, family rm and large cen--
ter island kitchen. Se parate maids quarters ..
Oversized dble garage -extra off street park·
ing. Price reduced (o $92.500.
11 24 Santiago Drive Open S•t. &. Sun. 1-5
Orient Oriented !
Family living in complete privacy, designed
by architect for minimum maintenance; 3600
sq ft house has 4 Bedrms, dining rm and fam-.
ily rm around a lush patio. 3 + Car gaarge.
1334 Hampshire Circle Open Sat. & Sun. 1-5 ·
Office Open Satunfay1 & Sunday•
1 PET~60~!~~i~r.,RN:tLTY ~! 642-5200
General 1000 0.-al 1000
NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
Just chafming, • .from !he
lush la~scapi"l: to the ce-
dar shingle roof, Rich gold
carpeting and hardwood
fioors, 2 large bedroomt,
separate family room with
panelling Ir fireplace, cor-
ner fireplace in living room,
11h baths & modern kitchen
with breakfast area. Alley
access with room for boat
or trailer, BONUS: an u-
sumable low-interest loan.
i;ll,900.
Colesworthy
& Co.
REALTOR
Newport Beach Office
· 1028 Baygide Drive
675.<930
FHA·YA TERMS
Northeast Cott• Mt••
J Large Bednru!:, huge Walk·
in closets, 2 baths, bltnB,
lam rm, frplc, crpts, drpl.
I m me d i a t f! pos1JeS11ion!
$30,!m_ Call owner 642-5570
or Realtor 548-7729.
GORGEOUS
POOL
Summer. is here, so let's t:nGe
in your old home tor um
beautiful 4 bedroom home.
What a 1etting! Pool is
brand new with an. the ex-
tras. You'll be proud to own
this beauty with new car·
petl'l, drapes, Palos Verile
stone fil"f!place and much
more, Seller haa agreed to
Bell FHA ar VA, Call
we SELL A HOME
EVl!RY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
Realtorz
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
545-0465 Open 'til 9 PM
4 PLEX
YA or FHA
Two large 2 Bdrm!. and two
3 Bdrms,, 1% baths. Built-
inl. tile in kitchen a n d
baths, patio. Low, tow down
FHA or GI,
Principals only pie~!
BROKER 545-9451
General 1000 General 1000
REALTOR
WEEK ---------,
May 17-23 BAY & BEACH REALTY
"Realtors" 'for over 20 years.
THINK • -180 degree ocean view
Custom bit, 3 BR, Formal Dining Rm. Huge
Living Rm with fireplace. expansive shore
line view. 2 patios. Owner retiring. Wants
action. Reduces price nearly $5,000. Was
$69,500. Now $65,000.
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1 -'5
4607 Surrey Drive, Cameo Highl ands
THIN)( • • Shore Cliff Luxury
Tri·level, "Million Dollar View." Elegant,
tasteful throughout Approx. 3200 sq. fl.,
3 BR, Fam Rm. Lower Jevel guest rm with
bath, 3 addi.tional baths, 3 Fp!C!. Office
excl. Shown by appt. $120,000.
THINK • • Huge Playyard
For your own "sun fun" and children's
private Playground. 4 BR, 14xl9 Fam Rm, ·
60' covered patio. Large existing Joan -
$47;500.
THINK •• Top value duplex
So. of Highway. 3 BR, 2 Ba, for owner. plus
2 BR furnished apt. to rent. Land value
approx. 50% of spec. $49,750 price.
THINK --Irvine Terrace Bargain
Roominess plus. 2,000 aq. ft. in this strik-
ingly beautiful 2 BR + 17x20 formal Din
Rm, processionally decorated home. Excel·
lent plan for entertaining. $49,500.
MACNAB • IRVINE
FINER HOMES
DOVER SHORES
ESCAPE
THE ORblNAR~
In a brand new Ivan W~s
home Dover Shores, 3 Spac-
ioo11 models lo cllOOBe fnnn.
4 Bedroom, 3 Bath & pow-
der room. Family rooms
with. fireplace A: walk in wet
bar. Eating area in kitchen
+ formal dining room. Land.
scaped court yard pools.
Finr decorated l"te~.
LuxW')' carpeting, Too many
LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS
320 . LIDO NORD
NOW Reduced to $175,000. Xlnt tormo
e Beautiful units. e Car garagri & utility
room, with 80 ft. fronting on excellent swim-
ming beach. Units are newly furnished.
BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR
133 Dover'Dr., Sult. 3, Newport h1ch '42-4620
Custom 4 bedroom home, high ceilings, mar-
ble entry; large, view, sunken living room;
circular dining room, huge kitchen; 4 bed-
rooms & 31» baths. Master suite with 270
degree View. $125,000. Open Sat. & Sun.
1600 Antigua Way.
An Italian Villa. Right out of a Michael An-
gelo renaissance era. 4 Huge bedrooms, 31f.i
baths, luxurious living room with 4 private
patios. Panoramic view from all rooms. $139,·
~00. Open Sat. & Sun. 1606 Antigua Way.
custom features to deacribe.1 ..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!~I lt will pay you to visit & see 1 ·
Designed by outstanding San Francisco Archi·
tect. Beautifully decorated. Large pool with
expansive terrace. 3 Bedrooms, family room,
planned for expansion. Open Sun. 500 Morn·
ing Star Lane.
Elegance & grace in this new 4650 sq. ft. Bay-
front home. Spiral staircase from spacious
entry to tremendous master suite & sitting
.i.lcove with fireplace. 4 Bedrooms, 41h baths,
huge family room. Bright, cheery, all electric
kitchen. Large morning room overlookin ~
pool area. $169,500. Open Sal. & Sun. 505
Morning star Lane.
BAYCREST -WESTCLIFF
A Herb Brownell home on lovely tree-lined
street. Sunny atrium with fountain. 3 Bed-
rooms, convertible den, high beam ceilings;
fireplace, eating area iri kitchen. Pool with
glassed-in & carpeted lanai area. Good sized
for yourseU. Open Dally.
Ivan Wells & Sons
Roy J. W•rd Co.
EXCLUSIVE AGENTS
1430 Galaxy Drive 646-1550
(Open Daily)
FOREST E.
0 LS 0 N
• Inc. Realtors
Just Toke Over
Large 4 Brm/
$18,500
and only 6 m. young. Fan-
tastic terms. Unbelievable
LOW -LO\V -• LOW down
1000 Gen•r•I
$22,500
$0 Down payment Vels,
$500 Down to V4!ts who uied
their VA's - - -3950 for
all olhl-r buyen. Nict 2
Bath home in Costa Mesa.
2 Blocks IG i;chool. With lhe
greatest increase in proper-
ty ever this home will be a
money maker.
Nichols Real Estate
s.46-9521
• JM tilCllOIS
Mes• Verde
Immaculate, aduJt occupied
3 Bednn corner home, New
crplg & drps, aprinklen:
front & rear. CI o s ~-to
schools. $28.9j(),
$32,500
5 Bdrm. + Fa mily rm.
5 l/4 °/o Loon
A31JUmf! this terrific S" ?'o
annual % rate loan. Ent.l')I
hall, dining rm., 2 firepJac.
es. Park like ylll'd with or.
S. A. Heights Use your G.I. ange & fruit trees. 540-1720
on this, 3 BR, $2.1,500. Lge: TARBELL 2955 Harbor
yd, 2 Car gar. Kingaard THE QUICKER YOU CAU..
RE. Ml 2-222'l TIIE QUICKER YOU SELL
play yard, separate Crom pool. , i!i1 all you need. 4 king 1ize Gener•I 1000General
bedroom11. 2 full balhs, ,..'ife !.=================~ Right out of "House Beautiful." A storybook
kitched with real brick fireplace & large ad-
joining breakfast room. Smooth ce~g~ &
finished cabinets thruout. Glamorous :atrium
with retractable roof. 3 Bedrooms & conver·
tible den. Decorated with skill. $125,000.
Immaculate 4 bedroom home in lush park·
like setting, with ~mple room for. J>O?l; din-
ing room -family room combination. 1 -
Bedroom & bath has a separate guest entry.
Sunny breakfast area. Adult occupied home
in beautiful condition. $65,000.
A family could not aSk f~r. more. 4 Bedr~~s.
3 baths· family room, dining room; all l1v1ng
areas· oi>en to 40 Ct. pool & lanai. Fruit trees
as well. A great value at $64,900. Open Sat.
& Sun. 1300 Estelle.
BAYFRONT
. Absolutely palatial unsurpassed vu. Pier
& float. One of Newport Beach's finest homes.
A must, fOr the selective buyer. 2-Story, 5
bedroom & formal dining room. $225,000.
Shown daily by .appointmenl
Sandy beach, private pier & float. 59 Ft. of
bay frontage. Owner will finance to qualified
buyer. 3,000 sq. Ct. in this lovely home, in one
oC Newport's most exclusive areas. Open
Sal. & Sun. 433 Bayside Drive.
EASTBLUFF
Charming 5 year old home. Expansive view.
Inviting swimming pool Family room with
parquet noor. 4 ~mple bedrooms plus a bonus
room for an office or cabana. 75 Ft. lot. Ne'v
dishwasher, disposal, hot w a t e r heater &
carpels. $56,500.
LINOA ISLE
New 2-story bayfront home. Select your own
carpeting & decor. 4 Bedrooms plus maid's
room. 4: Baths. Powder room. Family room
with wet bar. Formal dining room & living
room look out onto bayfront cantalivered
patio. From this spot, you .can sail around the
world. See our representative al # 11 Linda
Isle.
No cost has been spared in this home, decor-
ated in gorgeous taste. Sunken living room
overlooks terrace & bayfront. Master bed-
room exceptionally large, beautiful master
bath. 5 Bedrooms, dining room, 3 firepiaces,
exceptionally fine cabinet work & paneling.
$165,000. Open Sun. #95 Linda Isle.
IRVINE TERRACE
Beautiful 4 bedroom home with _fantastic
view from bay & ocean. 2 Fireplaces, 2lh
baths; new pool; Cormal dining room. Only
3 years old. $110,000. Shown by appointment.
MACNAl0 IRVINE
Realty Company
901 Doyer Dr., Suite 120
1080 l•y1ide Drive
Newport le1ch
"42·1235
675-3210
saver kitcl>en, entertainment
patio. Well kept community,
search everywhere and you
v.'on't find a bargain like
tlris, C!Jl today. Dial
962-5585
19131 8roo.l<hurst
Huntington BeAch
9UICK
POSSESSION
Do you want a "drippy-rus-
tic " 4 bedroom home with
heavy shake roof. forest
green color tones and Iota
of shade trees with lush
grass? Owner transferred
and must sell. Large \oan
can be assumed for $5,300
1.otal cash down. F U L L
PRICE just $31.900. Submit
your offer to
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
Realtors
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adrun11
~145-9491 Open 'til 9 Pf.f
5 Bedroom
Han of Fame
Completely redecora,ed In-
terior. Outstandillf kilchen,
beautifuJ shag carptg thru-
out, hardwood floon under
this carpeting, Cerlar lined
clo~ts. Wonderflil location.
Pri~ reduced to $33.500.
· co:rs
WALLACE
REALTOR$
-546-4141 -
(0pin Even intt)
CAN YOU
TOP THIS??
In an area or $90,000 homes
•.. A 1pa.cious 4 bedroom 3
bath home with fonnal din-
ing room, large Jiving room
with floor to ceiling windows.
a superb built in kitchen
with gleaming hardwood
cabinets and a family room
\\ith wet bar. A built in
vacuum, and a pool sized
yard. Can you top 1,;\K at
only $64,950.
PHONE 673-8550
IR THEREAL
'. ESTATERS
12 ROOM HOUSE
OeMr•l 1000 Generel
VA no down, 4 Bedrm. cor-
ner lot, courtyard l!ntry,
1000 sunken Jiving nn, frplc, for-
mal dining area. Patio kitch---·-----$31,350 en w/large eating area. Sep. REDUCED
$4000
'I'O L~ THAN COST
Brand new 3 Bedroom, 2
complete baths in country
club area. • BeautituJ gold
ahas carpets • Extra 12x20
tamib" room plut dining
room • 13<.500 • Try 10%
dawn, •
64$.1111
O THE REAL
"\. LSTATERS
Is the price AND the V.A. arate family nn w/v;et bar,
appraisal! No delays here! sep service porch w/wash
Large family home with ap-tub. Llq:e Master suite w/
prox. l) X 21) r A M J L y sunken Roman tub openl~;g
ROOM complete with v.'f!t 10 private garden. Exl11ting
bar and balh. 3 spacious, asAumable $30,700 VA loan.
carpeted bedrooms and 2 If
more beths, BUILT • tN
kitchen, FIREPLACE a n d ffz.+IJl I _ 1 546-lllJ COVERED PATIO. YOIU' -__
l!hoice of VA or FHA fin-CORONA DEL MAR
ancing or lake subject lo Adorable story • book home
existing IBA loan at s~ % with 2 lge. bedrma. 1% batll.'I
annual rate! • dining room frpl.
ColdweH,Banker OFFERS:
BEST VIEW -FRONT ROW
IRVINE TERRACE
S:.ome discriminating family will lake pride
in the acquisition of this 4 bdnn. 4 bath
luxurious home. Custom built. '$200,000.
Kathryn Raulston
LIDO ISLE BA YFRONT
4 Bedrooms pills maid's room ; 4 baths. De-
lightfu1 terrace room with wet bar ·& fire-
place. Separate dining r0:0m. $195,000 With
terms.
E. M. Vreeland
EMERALD BAY-$110,000
View ~ near beach. Ideal family living in
this 2--story, spacious three bedroom ; large
famjJy & dining room , wet bar; 3rd BR.
Jack & Jill room.
Mary Lou Marion
PRIV_,,TE AREA
Bayshores, w/b~aches, boating & tree
studed Sts. Lovely contemporary 2 ·sty.
home near Balboa Bay Club. Owner w/
carry trust deed. No points. $67 ,500.
Mary Harvey
TOO BIG, MUST SELL!!
4 BR.1 21h Ba., fam rm. w/fpl., form .
liv. rm. & lge. poolsize yd ., in Westcliff,
is more than present owner needs. Bonus :
assume 51h % ins loan! $55,000;
Marion C. Buie
CORONA DEL MAR W /VIEW
oC ocean; older home on back ot 45 ft. x
118 ft. lot , two blocks from beach. Jusi
reduced to sell. $54,800.
AI Fink
SEVERAL "BEST BUYS"
View, pool; just reduced ...... , ... $52,950
5'14% Loan ; 5 Br. pool , 4 Ba ..... $69,900
Pier & slip, 4 Br. 3 Ba. " ........ $85,000
Each is tops tor it's area
Walter Haase
OPEN SAT. 1-5 -
1310 ESTELLE LANE
\Vestcliff. 4 BR .. fam. rm .. walled entry
courtyard \V/fountain . Large yard w/trees
& flowers Harbor Hi District Owner mov·
ed. $52, 750.
Cathryn Tennille
OPEN HOUSE 1 ·5 BLUFFS
507 AVENIDA LORENZO. Left at Vista
Del Oro. right at Vista Dorado, right to
lovely single story, 3 BR. 2 Ba. home on
greenbelt. Brighi decor. $39,950.
Harriett Davies
2800 CATALPA-OPEN
1 TO 5 SUN. Come see this cozy 3 Br. %
Ba. home in EastbluCf near the best
schools. shops, tennis courts, pools & the
beach. Low down. $37 .500.
Lavera Burns
EVERYONE IN THE POOL
2 Broadmoor homes in Harbor View Hills
• each • 4 BR .. 2¥.a Ba. wtfam . rms. &
fonn. D.R ... each w/vicw. Enjoy pool-
side Cun & care--Cree children's play area.
Bud Austin
' THINK •• East Bluff 4 & Family Rm
Vacant • redecorate4 • n1dy for '•'e fam-ily who needs lots of room. 4 BR, luge lam.
or din. rm. 2 ba . rear encloaed playyard,
priced well under similar homes in area.
Oversized g a r a g e. Sprinklers thruout.
$43,390.
WE SELL A HOME PLUS
liiiilRiiViiliiNiiEiiiiTiiEiiRiiRAiiiiCE&.I EVERY 31 MINUTES J(!n't 2 bdnn ''""' horn<
W l.k & L beaut. yard, Rumpus !OOm
THI NKI
BAY & I EACH REALTY, Inc.
for u.UsfttlJOll ttCUrif.J and wide 1e.lection of
HRrbor arH ho *· 675-3000 Open Sat. & Sun.
3 lkdn>o ... and family n><>m a er ee , •.. and drape•, lmmocu.
• new appliances • move-in late. Alklna: $62,000 OWNER
condition • ht~ heated »t3 WntcUH Dr-.-• WILL FINANCE. ~bmit
pool -$58.875. low land lc11.11e 646-77U tr.m'l1,
-call Open 'Ill 9: 00 P!\1 RUTit SEEU.,-, ~kl tor
CURT DOSH, Realtor ~~~.:~ .!!~ ,:: sa1:!': J~~K AVEN~7G6
2130 W. Co.'\tl Hilh\\'11.Y
8'2.&172 Ev*•· 673-3468
hOMe _ • \ find treat buys In
IOdlJ''I Clusilied Ads. SOCK rr TO 'Df?
'-'------------·--~-------
133-0700
644-2430
' I
DOVER SHORES
Owner sacrificing for Q.uick sale. Hlye bought
home out of area. 4 Bedrooms, 3~ Baths.
family rm + 21x27 bonus room. Quarry tile
olrium w/14' retractable root. View of Upper
Bay. Slashed below replacement, $89,950.
5 BEDROOM -VIEW
Immaculate, spacious Ivan Wells 5 Bedroom,
31h: Ba home with Panoramic View, forrqal
dining rm, carpeted family rm w/fireplace,
island kitchen, $95,000.
SPLIT LEVEL
-------· ----
Open Houses
THIS WEEKEND
..., tlllt MM, ....._,, wltll ,.. tWs ..-... •
Y•• .. MeM'.-JiNtl ... Alf ttie lec9'M;a llllM ~
.,. 4ncriMll .. .,... .... , ~ ..tnnl ........
wlrltfe I• '"9y't DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. ,...,_
Ww.t ... ,.. ..._ ,., .. ., .. ,..., .... ,... ,. '
flit .... 1........i .. hi .... c ........ frlfty.
HOUSES FOR SALE
12 Bedroom)
*?.1)181 Cypress, County Corridor, 01'-
, ange Co. 543-5440 (Sun 12:3(1.5:30)
(3 Bedroom!
507 Avenida Lorenza (The Bluffs) N.B.
833-0700; 644-2430 (Sat and Sun)
2800 Catalp& (EastbluU) N.B.
644-2430;' 833-0700 (1-5 SUn)
**106 Linda Isle Drive (Linda Isle)
N.B. 642-8235 (Sal and Sun)
(3 Bedroom & f •mlly or Oen)
*2006 Tahuna (Irvine Terr) CdM
642-6472; 673-3468 eves. (Sat, Sun 1·5)
435 Aliso Ave., Newport Beach
642-3273 ; or 543-3323 (All day Sat & Sun)
**433 Bayside Drive Newport Beach
642-8235 (Sal and Sun)
*2048 Commodore) Baycrest, N.B.
646-m5 · (Sat and Sun 2-5)
2501 Ocean Blvd., Corona del Mar
644-4910 (Sal/Sun 1-5:30)
1927 Santiago (Baycrest) N.B.
644-4910 ISal/Sun 1-5:30)
2540 Vista Baya, Newport Beach
1)4&.8811 (Sat & Sun 3 'til 7)
2867 Velasco Lane (Mesa del Mar) CM
540-24&1 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
2989 Andros. (Mesa Verde) CM
546-5440 (Sun 12-5 pm)
2907 Harbor View Dr (Harbor View Hills)
CdM 644-2792 (Sal & Sun 12-6)
(4 Bedroom)
1606 Antigua Way (Dover Shores) N.B.
642-8235 (Sal and Sun)
1600 Antigua Way (Dover Shores) N.B.
642-8235 (Sat and Sun)
**ll Linda Isle Drive (Linda Isle) N.B.
642-8235 (Sat and Sun)
· 1130 Galaxy Drive {Dover Shores) N.B.
1142-8235 (Sat and Sun)
201!1 Galatea (Irvine Terrace) CdM
644-4910 (Sal/Sun 1-5 :30)
(4 B.itroom & Family or Den )
1430 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores) N.B.
646-1550 (Open Daily)
1310 Estelle Lane (Westcliff) N.B.
833-0700; 644-2430 (Sat 1·5)
**505 Morning Star Lane (Dover
Shores) N.B. 642-8235 (Sat and Sun)
*1300 Estelle Lane (Westclif!) N.B.
642-8235 (Sat and Sun)
1300 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores) N.B.
642-8235 (Sal and Sun)
389 Santa Isabel, Back Bay N.B.
642-5200 (Sunday 1-5)
217 Via Ithaca, Lido Isle, N.B.
642-5200 · (Sunday 1-51
1124 Santiago Drive, (Dover Shores) N.B.
642-520il ' (Sat and Sun 1-5)
1334 Hampshire Ctrcle1 Baycrest, N.B.
642-5200 '(Sat and Sun 1-5)
877 SandcasUe, Harbor View Hills, CdM
644-4910 (Sat/Sun 1-5:30)
4172 Pierson Or., Huntington Harbor
8~4 · (Sat & Sun 11·7)
IS Bedroom)
**95 Linda Isle Drive (Linda Isle) N.B.
64U235 (Sunday)
(5 Bedroom & Family or Den i
*1536 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shons) N.B.
642-8235 (Sat and Sun)
16 Bedroom)
**80 Linda lsle·Drive (Linda Isle) N.B.
644-4910 (Sal/Sun 1-5:30)
DUPLEX
13 Br. and 2 Br. J
320 8th St., Huntington Beach
538-~79 (Open Sun 1-5)
HOME + INCOME FOR SALE
(3 Br. homa + l Br. Apt.)
720 Narcissus, Corona del Mar
675-4497 (Sat & Sun 10-S)
* .... * * W••fl_, •• •,....,.. w...m...
• r
/
I
I
i • •
= • ;
·--
U~LY PILOT Friday, u., 1.5, 1970
Ht!OllS JIOR w• /H0011s 'oR llll HOOs1s Fo1t SALE IH~uses FOR SALE HousEs FoR SALE /~Es FoR SALE Hous1s ~'!... SAL1 _ HOus1s ,011 w.1 ~~011 SAL1
Oonor•I 1• _-·•I llOI -•I 1000 00...r•I 1000 N•Wf!r1 IMdl 1200 Newport llMcll 1200 hycrat 1221 C...... .. Mor 1250 Hullll. ...... t llMcll 1400
. WESLEY N. TA noR CQ ' B I B c=R= 1:.:::. CAM~~~DS HONEt'MQON
HARllOR VIEW HILLS -$14,500 ol!inda .!hie ~ ':'!:;... ....... ~ l ,,..,,....ISl.:.u conAGE
Room enough for. large lamUy. 4 Bdr=, WESTCLIFFI 5 ~% LOANI ' SL •_ 2 • y --· $16,500
tam nn w/flrOplace + 1onna1 dining area. PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES .spquess three bedroom, two balh home. Ex-Dover Shores 1227 •11 ..,~~ FULL PllCI
BeautllUI decor, 1reat patio & garden. OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY & SUNDAY Ira large living room. Beautiful new kitchen. ..,....,.. . ...., ............. ldK! fir a newlywtd ....... 177 S•ndcHllo Open S.t/Sun 1..S:JO Small dinin. room. Covered patio. Large cor-* PRIME VIEW * UnJve..i11 RWty m...UI home. Why ..,. nm -.
IOI Lind• Isle Drive ner lot. Ewting loan can be asswned at Bay Ir Mtns ~~I pvt. you can OWN your own.
llAYCREST-$11,500 5 BR, 4 baths; lam. rm. Mexican tile Ors.. 5\<J%. Price only $48,500. Exclusive Us~ Neariy ,,... "Old World" PANORAMIC VIEW Wuher. dr>" and """·
Fine quality Ir loads of glamor in lhi3 S bdrm exj)osed beam cell., cpls, drps incl. W /Pl.Jr MS-2000 Eves. 548-6966 Contcmpcney, ·-w/ l001 Bayllde Dr. Beaut-entor are 1'>c:Juded, bellow
borne wllh lam rm, 21'; baths & formal din-' & slip .. "" ...................... $135,000. B•LBOA ISLAND I ~~bl•"::::'-t 8!,:Baex· sbab ...iho1...,. '..~·' ba. It or not. can ""' .,,_ ing. Perfect u shaped kitchen wtelectric bit· ""' _..... • ._Ill~ .. "'n • waterfront me AUJt swim-it'• aone t Low down FHA
5 & char broil. Rear yard is a picture. 16 Lindi Isle Drive Needs loving care. Two bedroom home plus hl«lllna1, 4 c\' r pr. m1l'I beach. N~1 redeeol'. terin. •vall.able.
I 0 s t/S 1.J 30 New 5 BR., 5 ba home w/upstairs view of Co-one bedroom apartment over garage.. Eicel· $178,cm tum. opl W1ll trade $115.(m SHO)!N BY APPI'. WE SELL A HOME 1 Sant'" P'" 1 un : rona del Mar hills. 3 Fplcs + BBQ. Luxurious lent location. Must be sold to settle estate. for unall bouR of vacant 8111 GN'Mly, Rt•lter EVERY JI MINUTES
INDA ISLE carpeting & panelling, lndscpd. With dock '48,500. fan<\lnvk:. Owner!ls.72"'. 13.1 Dover Dr .. N.B . ......,,, W lk & L
BEST buy on ulllul Linda Isle! Owner ................................... Sl4S,000. &IS.2000 Eves. 543o6966 UNIVERSITY Par!<. 3 BR • rn••·-c 3 bdrm.,~. 8 er ee moving to another state. Spacio.us s. _bdrm. Townhouae, frplc. IU\.UUI"! ...., ... home designed for the ultimate in liVIDg .on n Lind• Isle Drive BALBOA PENINSULA POINTJ ~a..!!,IOptlon. Owott 2 baths, firepWlf, Ji. pe.do. Rftltors
P New 5 Br., 5 bath home on lagoon. l\1arble Beautiful custom·buUt five bedroom four ......,..._ comer lot, plus eory 1 7682 Edlnger this exclusive island of boating & fun . 1er bath home on two lots facing small park. bdrm. lnoome apt. Both M2-44.55 or 540-5140
& s1ip. 'lbe most tor the least! .. · .. · $135,000 entry, wet bar, AM/FM Intercom, Huge mstr Many extras. Asking $115,000. Property Unlver1fty Perk 1237 newly dtt. • cptd. Open Sacrifi""' By Dwner
101 Lind• lslt S.. Broker •t #IO Br. has beam ceil. & own frplc . Lge. liv. & clear. Might consider exchange for three ~A"" Sa.t • Swt. J.0.5. ""' lam. rms . w/lrplcs ................ 4$185,000 bedroom home Back B 15 FT X 3'0 FT, .,~, LINDA ISLE -$169,300 ay area. ' ' $31750
New Orleans charm is reflected in this 6 10 Lind• hi• Drivo 645-2000 Eves. 548-6966 MASTER BEDROOM t, Nl~H duplox ':;,,,~· Bir. nowh..;,,, 4Bednlom.
bdnn. S bath homo facing lagoon. Living rm 5 Bedroom & maid's, 5 baths with family BAY & BEACH REALTY, INC. !Aw down paymenL Exo<J. ~ -~ ~ 69 . Expe"'I"" •ha< crpta, ,....
w/unusual fireplace conversational pit. Lge room & large rumpus room. Carpeting. 3 lent tl.nancinir, 7"% ~ . $58. • 1 den kitchen. atr:tum, b.J\d.
game rm + lam rm. Fine cptng thruout. Fireplaces. 4,246 Sq. Ft. ...... , $169,aoo 901 Dover Drive, Suitt 126 petetntqe rat.. W/w car-Balbo. Peninsula 1300 acaplna: A aprinklen. Walled
NEWPORT BEACH 645-2000 pet, clcte to achooll: llndl---------corner tot with 15' wide ~~ IO Lindi lilt Open S•t/Sun 1..S:30 Occupied · Linda Isle Drive 5hoppin&. Beautiful location. VACANT_ Nr. 1eni.I dub, e!Oled aide yard, 2 Blodta
IRVINE TERRACE Cust. 6 Br., study, 5 ba1:h home w/3 frplcs., General 1000 Only$.18,995forthis2atory, boat ramp, nim'a: heh.' trom new ffi&h School.
Tremendous VIEW! Watch the boats go by circular stairway, decorator selected carp. & Newport S.1ch 1200 4 bdrm. tam, rm. home. Br, 3 &, den. trplc, 40x100• ,...,..,..,......i_,..,.., ...... 1 from huge liv rm, din rm & kitchen. Relax drapes. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·' · · $210,000. * OPEN SUN. l·S * Ai'ent: Phone m•> m-0300 kit. $56,IX». Frank Manh&U
beside lge pool. 4 Spacious bdrms. Beatrl06i1:: W•terfront Lot• C:,,~1!.":,:, -BACKBA Y LARGE Realty . .........., OP::!.,~~.~ ~~B~ l...S
landscaped & maintained ......... $1 , • No. 4: E xcellent 51 It. Linda Isle leasehold * LAGUNA BEACH* ov.,looklng the '"' ..... BONUS ROOM Lido Isle 1:151 ONE or A KINDi N•w ""
2015 G•l•te• Open Set/Sun 1·5 :30 lot. Plans avail. Consider trade .. , .. $35,000 On Hwy., store bldg., 2 apta, largest lot in the Shills, OVER GARAGE luxe Duplex, 3 blkl to bffcb.
CORONA DEL MAR N 3 car garage, View! Model E plan. 3 Bdrm & OPEN HOUSE l. 3 BR.&: 1. 2 BR. Frpla,
W b & . o. 41: Long water view facing Harbor Is· FITZMORRIS tam rm or <1 Bdrm. Too Excellent financing and le> 110 VIA PALERMO ~ bltna, crptl, drps.
Breathtaking VIE of ay, ocean perun-land wn6.2 ft. of frontage. P lans available. many features to list them cation, 7%% annual percent-3 BR. ~led family dining $45.500
sula. Spacious 3 bdrm split-level home with REALTY all. BJt.\n.o: a,ppliances re-ae:e rate. W/w carpet, 2 rm. Lee. kitchen, 40 ft. Jot, 00 den & playrm. Above harbor entrance. No. 88: \'Co rner Point lot with 118 ft. of front-Jm E .. Coast, CdM 673-9010 frig, washer & dryer incloo.. Story, 3 bdrm. home for l&:e patio, Open Sat. 1.5. LIND:: .
2501 Ocun Blvd. Opon Sit/Sun 1·5:30 age. Long water view. Plans available. NEW TERMS FHA ro. $ ~i, ~ ...... '' Phone howcm!l lowsoo jrL
CAMEO SHORES Bill GRUNDY, REAL TOR 63,500 aeoltoa
\Vill Exchange For Smaller 133 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642~20 .F'rencil ~~~:Oz Bedroom t~or appt call 644-1972, it no OWNER MUST SELL ,.""'':!i",:'*'"" Deluxe Faur .Plex
· bull h h · ansv.·er, call 5484601. Prin-Luxurious custom t ome on c 01ce cor· & lanai. Call tor further In. He ha! a 3 BR. 2% ba. town.. SQUEAKY CLEAN I.J Be(tnn, "2 Bednna, air cipals only, please. ner site. 4 Bclrms, den, 5 baths + pwdr. rm. Gener•1 1000 1 Gener el 1000 formation. =;;!~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;I houae, on • quiet strttt; JUST LISTED. 3 Br, 2 ba. cond. Carpets, drapes, walk
Huge patio & cov lanai surround H&F pool. l-'-=-'----...;.;.====----=:.:1 PERRON 642-lnl * DUPLEX PLUS * Jota o! extru. Enjoy the doll house in movie-in condJ. to Broadway 1hoppinz I.:.
Owner will consider smaller home in ex-one lot trom ocean & with leisure of planned develop.. Uon. "'Ai Blk, to club &: ten-College,
h ng ' b r B t '195 000 $1100 DOWN NEWPORT HEIGHTS "-•an"v•'•w. 2 BR. & 3 BR. numt liviog. • "wimnting n~. On ovenlu ., It. lot BRASHEAR REAL TY c a e 1n near y a ea. y app ... • , . u.: pool, tennis cts., goll, bi-__ .,_ 968-ll7S Large three bdrm, new kitchen cabinets, Adorable J Br. 2 ba. Fpl. \\'ilh fam. rm. PLUS J BR. with le:e. So. patio, R......,.. 8'7-8507 Eves: LIDO BAY FRONT F aJ d' U uaJJy cycling, or just qUiet pa.tio tica.lly priced at $59,500. ANYONE can·-··-·•--formica counter tops. Stainless steel sink . orm in. rm. nus ,t, beth guest rm. $51,500, Uvtna: CJ t shop & _...,..., ....,,, Pier & slip. Brand new 5 bdrm., lge family Newly decorated • new carpets. Owner Mov· attr, lndscpg, & patio. make oUer. IChoois. J': ~.SOO. ~ H•I Plnchin &. Atsoc. Beautiful 4 8ednn borne. rm & dining rm. 51h baths. Buy now & choose . Pri .d t nl $21 350 Only $31,000 -Xlnt terms! w• -~ .. 11 ID~· today'. REALWRS subject to 5%% VA lo&n. tng -ce a o Y • · CAYWOOD REAL TY ~ ,.. ""' E. Cout Hwy 6T.M3!i2 your colors. Call to see ........... $235,000. • . e Rid Hill Rulty · Payments 1138 per mo.
DOVER SHORES 6306 \V. Coast Hwy., NB Univ, Park Center, Irvine DECORATOR'S Comple~ apt&: " bua:e
FHA VA e 54$.1290 e Call Anytl ~ HOME 11......S m patio.
Distinclive near new Z.story, 4 bdnn & lam-• 1 .,,'!"'!!~~!",..~~!!"'!'~ I ll<!nna C:O..Ulno R•al Estai. ily rm with sunken wet bar, Jg island kitchen, Submit low down on neat three bdrm. Loads Costa Mesa 1100 * EASTBLUFF * 1' LOWEST PRICED s;:;:::rn~;~ 5
1treet ~ 536-lm * 538-1366
3-car garage. Spac rms. thruout. Superb in-of extras in kitchen and bath. New carpeting Beaut . 2500 1111. ft. home w/ 3 BR. 2 ba. in the area! Os 1trtet 45 ft. tot. $27,500/Gf TERMS
terior decor ........ , .............. $118,000. thru-out. Large lot-qu,iet street. Only $21,850. Ne•r Westcliff fan tastic view of Back Bay perale owner wants this $98,!500 SHARP 3 BEORM!
BLUE LAGOON VILLAS e' 3 Bedroom & faQ1ilY rm. & Mts. 3 Br. 3 Ba.; lge. fam. prop. 110ld RIGHT NOW. LIDO REAL TY INC. Near Huntington Center shop. rm. $55.500. Owner w/fin-Hu ........ --a .... pn·-to 3337 Vla • .... 613-7300 pq. Carpeted, tenoed, }ow.
Se h I nd . . MESA DEL MAR nestled on lovel,y, quief, tree % ''"""'"" """' '""" _..., as ore uxury co omuuums 1. __ , ""'" •• "' • sn,950 with ve-Goo 0 _ _ ly yanl, • .,.,,.,, ! On 3 bed 1 ......... street. Spa.ciows living n.... S -5 2927 Cata! ., TY e room -VIEW .............. $64,900 Th bd f I" bath r· I rm •---···l"o bn'•k 1; ...... '"'l""n un. l pa St. TERMS avaU. This ts a rue B•ll•• lat.nd 1355 HAFF DAL REAL 0 2 bed d · ree rm. am. rm. 74 , irep ace, ,._ ......... ~ ... .... othe days ca11 644-1M3 142~ ne room -gar en patio · · · · · · · · $53,SOO built-in kitchen, new w/w carpet thru-out. place, BBQ in family rm. r : opportunity .&: hi dl!fln1tely
DUPLEXES Laundry and dbl. garage, electric door open· Xln"""t ha~ ~tl$39.ng500on pes..g. NEWPORT DREAM :7',.erit:""', ket value. Don't
Call I d • 20• d ta h d t . n .1V."\1Ul.1 3 BR. 2 ba., cpl&,, drapes. us or etails on our fine selection e r. 18 x e c e rumpus room, wo patios. it now! · ' · \\lalk to 5,vim club or beach. BOB PETTIT, Re•ltor
$43,500 to $115,000 $30 ,950 -Owner will carry 1st T.D. No On Vets lo On FHA Priced 10 sc.-11 al $28,500. "Since 1946"
R-1 LOTS
4 offerings of waterfront sites
$68,500. $150,000
OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 10.5:38
''Our 25th Y••r''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Real!on
2111 Sin JNquin Hills Roa;d
NEWPORT CENTER '44-4910
e Large lot, fncd front & rear Call w; for detail<:. 133-0101
UPPER BAY l°' P'lvaoy & "''"" 3 Bod· rm, I ~' BA, shake roof, dblc gar. Call now! $23,950.
RIU.t. TOJlll
ColletN-MAln1Nj1
===11•·1m==!l'J
E•atbluff 1242
FHA· VA -three bdrm, fireplace, built·in
kitchen. new carpet. Double garage, large
fenctd yard. $23,500 -Lo~ Do,vn. • REDUCED , TO SELL
BOB OLSON REAL TOR
546-lSIO
* 5~'Y. LOAN * * BAYFRONT * Eutbluff; immac. Lusk PENrNSULA AREA home. 3 BR. din. rm., tam.
EASTSIDE • $26,500 FHA/ Gorgeous S lxfrm . 4% baths. nn., bonus rm .• w/tinted
VA. Beautifully ma.in-Private beach .-v.ith pier & glus, overlooking Th e
tained, i;parkling 3 bedroom slip. Ha11 everything? Like Bluffs. 2 Frplcs., 2% car
Near Harbor High and 17th Street shops. home on quiet tree lined new thruout plus large pri-gar; all wool cpts, &: drapes.
Three bdrm, two baths, fam. Rm., built·in street. Ov.•ner moving to vate parking lor guestt. Assume tbls terrific ~%
kitchen. Enclosed 20'x24' screened-in patio. mobile home -price & $215,000. loa n. Price . $51.500.
1000 A beauty at only $32,700. Assume FHA loan. tC'rms for Immediate sale. JONES REAL TY Call Patrick Wood 54S.2])0
/;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;. -;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;./ Call 54.f>...8424 South Coast 2001 W. Balboa, NB 673-6210 e Bill H1ven, Rltr.
1000 Generel
• • Real Est.ale. FOR SALE or lease • 2lll E. Coast, CdM 67J..3211 ~~~!!rts: .. 2~ ~l~·~·~btk: ~j~~ M M LABORDE REALJOR l~F~O~R~Sa~lo~b-,-0....~-,-.~N~i('r.: ~acrifice. Decorators bome, LUSK Home, 4 BR, 2~~ Ba. • -.-1.. ..ft ... ...._, ,_,,_ G If C ' :l BR .hOroe on large cornl'r 5 yrs ne1v, 3 Br, 2 Ba, $50,000. Appointment only. l.llS"o::v ..... u..,..,... .. .... --.0
: o ou.r1e • • ! 1"1. q"l•I -·I "a """. \V .. lk· BH.utiful pool, hure separ. F C " u .... -uc-.--. .. lrg rooms, aU elect. kitchen, 644-1440 By owner
ate rumpus room with ii&
169
••rw•y ustoms 646-0555 Ing distance to school. shop. new crpts, drps, hd1\·e. Must I :===~=====
own firey>lace &: bath. You .950 TO $97,500 ping center. Excellent co~ :o1ee to apprec. 435 Aliso Coron• del M•r 1250
REMODEL? Here's your chanc.e, A com. * BY OWNER -5%. GI
lnrt bl 2 BR ho al Loan. 3 Br, family rm, 2 a e · me on v • bath. 22101 C.pistrano Ln, uable 3Qx8S R-2 lot, A eood nr. Brookhurst &. 101 .
value! MORGAN REAL TY = !3500 dn, 2nd TD.
3411 E. Coast Hwy., CdM _::cc_~~=._-~,--~, ~B~I 673-6642 67&-6459 BY vwn•:r: mmac. r,
l Ba, 3% yn old. Still under
Huntington IMdl 1400
OWNER
TRANSFBRED
bldn1 warr. 5%.% GI.
$34,fiOO. $))3 mo total.
962-9143.
BY OWNER: 3 Br, 2 &.,
Auume GI loan Sl.4 % int.
$4000 WILL BUY Tot. pmt ""' mo. 842->135.
SUbject to 11% GI Loan with 4 BR Medallion Ho~.
total payments of $181 per custom drapes I< landscpg.
month. 3 large: quee~sized 51' % GI, 962-8578.
bedrooms, 2 bath!, modem Sl4,950. Owner desperate.
brl&ht built . in kitchen, Sharp 2 Br, 1 Ba, tncd
FIREPLACE, dttp pile car-yd, Cptl, drps. bltns. 542-42117
....... and cu•tom ihpe•. FREE RENTAL
Comes... $28,000 FULL SERVICE PRICE. I
WE SELL A HOME 8""" Sharp 3 bedroom, 2
EVERY 31 MINUTES beth with btillt.IM, !..Wy ln''e Jt tO yourself lo llf't 1116 J1m1lc• Rd. Evenings 646.2259 or 64MS79 dilion. 3024 Buchanan \Va,y. ~.~e~~23N.B. &U-3773 or
ihls. About 400J sq tt herr • fea. Shov.·n by app't. 54fr3652 ... ,~
Assume• 5~% Loin turing black walnut paneJ. MESA VERDE BAYFRONT
room for $225. We h l v e
CHINA covE Walker & Lee ·.~~~-~·and· b,..... FANTASTIC VIEW •• _ .. -~
on the charming 3 Bedrm, ling galore, air cond. game General 1000G ~:";"°;r:•;;I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1000;;;;
1
COUNTRY CLUB DR . \V. Bay Ave. Beaut., newly
] .. bath ho Ith h nn w/v.-et bar in addition m1-;;:;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;; • Corner Lo!. Spaciou!I 3 Br, redccor. 4 Br.&. bonus room. ,,., me w a uge, 1 .1 ,. . I•
pool table 1Ue, family roon1. ll!11J Y. tn1ng & ~rkfst nns. BARGAIN OCEAN VIEW 2 ba. fam. rm. (ormal din. Patio . deck . beach . pier
R bl . Big Bedrms, loo. rm, 2 lrplc's. By ov.·ncr. ,f, slip. $175,00J. epu IC , I 3090 B•l1' Rd. HUNTERS Lovoly custom home 011 B'll G d• R Ito H B -' 4539 Ca1ndcn Road ~(}.4571. • run ,, e• r
ome ••v••n. \\'ill acrommodate • really In ('Xclusive Cameo Shores ~B~Y~O~W~N=E~R~4~B~R~·l8J3 Dover Dr., NB 6424620
20x40 Pool, lots of decking + large family her'!' -S nice * * * Speculators .see OPEN HOUSE DAILY Spacious 1900', 3 tiled ba's. •BLUFFS -Delightful split
411 ~· 2. bath, h1Jge Bedrm.s &. convert study * .. * I h Is 4 Bedroom & 3 Bedrooms . 3 Baths Fam, elec. kit, lush crpt, level 2 Br. dbl gar, pools,
kmil,y ~ w/firepla~. &rp. -v.•ilh fam & din rooms. Plus * * * fa m. for $24 ,900 Warm, comfortable den 2 pal. Beaut lndscpe rm, for balcony overlkg greenbelt. ant~ dining room all for sparkling pool, heated It * • * Assume 5%% FHA Pool & poolside lanai 00.il. $32.950. 54.().8376 nr. shpR centl'r, tennis club,
$49,950. Call us today. fjilered w/cliving board etc. * * • loan. $159 mo pays Great location across -~~'--'--~=c I UC!, Cd?lf HI Sehl. beach.
o ... -e.rlooklng harbor entrance Realtors WE SELL A HOME
jetty &. Blue Pacific, A 7682 Edinger EVERY 31 MINUTES
quaint. exclusive comm un. Ml-445.'i 54G.S140 Walker & Lee ity evetybody loves. See NEAR THE BEACH
this 3 BR. home, large liv. Assume ti%% VA l..oe.n.
rm., Jou of glua. SwMleck. Home. 1% yrs )'OWl(. 4 Br,
3 Garages. Asking $67,500. 2 Ba, elec. bltnJ, custom
r,~/,a-&H 1 Ill
'1''REALTY "'"~~.: ''1
Realtors
7682 Edln~r
"""" 540-5!.,
Fount•ln V•lley 1410
BY Owner. as!iUme 5*';ij Jean Smith Realtor Seto the ocean sometimes! * • • everything. N" eds the.-slrcct from 1011 n. 4 Br. 2 bath, cpt.s. .~"':'::i·;'soo~. 64~"-::"g""==~~I (o5iP'EE~Ni"House Sat. & Sun.,
' 3040 C•pri Lin• * * * some ceme~t &. car. private community bcarh drps, nr schools, shops, BY OWNER; BLUITS CON· 12 to 6 Deluxe home, ex·
Nfftll N[\\P OR I POST Oflll'E
drps, w/w crpt, bet.med
fam. rm. w/dining area,
!rp\c, large r edwood
oovered patio w/firepiL
UJw ~1aint. yard, Room for
boat or camper. June 1 oc-
cupancy. Call owner,
962--1511 aft S. «JO E. 17th St., Costa ,._leu Outstanding e1eVllled location * * * pc.-ntry repall'S, T~e: ~.500 f1'\vys. ~1esa North. $25,950. DO. 2 Br, tll'n, 21~ ba, qu!site ocean IUld harbor
646-llSS a.long a fainvay in Mesa* * *a look then decide. 54~1717 luxury +. 511 Avt'nida view from dining, living &
Verde. Bedrms 1Sx25. beam·* * * C.a.11 540-1151 • OPEN House.-1-5. Sat & Campana, N.B. Eves. master bedroom plus 71/20/o
ed ceilings, radiant heat. Sun 3077 Johnson Ave. 5 &14-2867. kitchen. :! Jg. lxfrms., l lg. VA LOAN
F.V. spacious 3 BR., 2 BA,
fam rm. dln rm, fittpl.
3 c. gar. Fenced. lmmac.
Nr achls. A.uwntt 7%, %
$4000 equity. Asking $33,500.
Leaving state. Owner.
962-9791
Sl75.00 DOWN lots of Korea grass in space 1~AGfl Br .. 7 years new, hi loan •BLUFF~S---Cho~~,..,-.,,-m. l>Athrms. Shake roof, beam Anyone can qualify, Ont year Sp•nlsh Townhouse
TO VETS for pool. MOfit unusual It ~ • man 855umnblt', by cw n r r . ...·iew lot. 3 Br. :! Ba. I level ceiling, stone r I replace, new, 3 Bedrm, 1% BA, dbi:e Tranaterred, 1t1ust Sell! n.rs right Uli1 k>Yl!ly 3 Ideal for the right fa mily. · "'11-7""' \\'tlUed patio, cus. extras private co"..+.--' & patio, -··tom dl'P• "~"-d 2 sto ' er 211 •--k .,.. ....,. "".., .... ., ~..., • uro·-'-"' ry, , ua., ..... 1
Bedrm and FR can bf' youn, ~ Save $$ . $30.950. &W-4265 profeukmal landscap'••. crpt• •-,-•-~ patio •~t drp• p~· patio· •· Sen t I I I u• ""10 """'""'"'l~""'""'""'"'"iSACRIJo~ICE Bv Owner. 4 Br, t:">.-• '-··-u"" ·, ~,. ""'~ • -r, , 11v. . l\.Z>" er~mus eavt sae. -.--I "' DON'T MISS BLUFFS i:.v<:ryth1ng spac...ua and Must sell this week! sume 7%% FHA. Reduced "you~li~bhs~~· I~ o(Li':E·Re~ Estate Sa e Nea r ~':;~ ~~. r:..:ea:W ~!:~1~ Exquisite l Br, 2~ ba, v.·et deluxe. 2907 Harbor View BRASHEAR REALTY to $26,750, Owner, 96&4019,
month or n1ot'f> this Mesal i=zZZll•l!Oimill~-ZZll•l!Halll,..llll,t.llll:I WESTCLIFF 71 ~om int. Low down . bar. dbl ovens, automat:ic 1 ~D~"~"'=·~2792~===~ 847-8507 Eves: 6f2..04.27 BLDRS SAC! Cus 3 &. 4 A•sum• :>1!1-3283 \vattr sofll'nc.-r. By Owner -HARBOR VIEW HILLS Br. sn .200. Low dn. Deal Verde home is !or YO U! Fixrr up""r • lo be l!Old In ••5 ~ Ph ,, •• """"' ' -ti ~ .• ., I THE QUICKER YOU r.1.1' ~ $23 200 •I BDRM . MeSR Venle Norn1. '" ·"""· · ""~· .....,.ase op on, ....,auti • .., v ew, ~ direct. 3 blkl E. of
PAtJL.WBill
CUJllABAft a•.&.LTT co.
1093 Baker, C.M.
BIG FIVE
VETS NO DOWN
"as is" condition. Back Bay 1 S.20.000 l0&n, assumable al \\'ATERFRONT No. 1 j 3 bdnn, 2_ bath, $54,000. Box 1HE QUICKER YOU SEU. Brookhunt on Ell.la at Las
area . good size Jot. 3 Ni~ 69/e V.A. LOAN ;1* ';ti. Landscaped pnlio, Bayside Village. 2BR, 2BA. I :M="'=· =Da='='y=P="::'=l===--=========:=,;..;Fl=:"'::'::·,:5.77=:--038.l::=:===;;-I size.-Bedrms, 2 Bat.hi, hanJ. $31,950 "iew, owner's full price i\1odem, all non-glaf't' living I·
wood floors, crpts & heavy s-500 u-7700 room ~.ooo. 673-1331 """' ...,r. FHA or VA CALL NOW ~. · ~> -
Gener el 1000 Oenor•I 1000 GMer•I 1000 2 Story modm'I home w /5
Bednns, 3 BA in t.1esa Del /:lllllZZZZZZZZZZZZ~ / MAr. Big covered patio &
home In xlnt cond. inside-,
DIVORCE ACTION -
?-.!UST SELL!
terms available . $29,500. S46-23ll C·2, 50 x 200 lot \\i th 2 BLUITS GEi\t, lmmac,
C.U 545-S424. bedroom house.' on rear ol custom decor, 3 br, 3 ba,
10 T HCREAL \~ CS'[AJCRS
lot near E. 17th St. Ownl'r on greenbelt. $ 3 7, 9 0 0. ·S@\l~~-&£~s· 4V•% VA L011nl
Grat fitesa Verde, 3 '1. farn nn on large lot _ renlly pool
abe. Owner very Bexlble on il!J'IJUI. Asking $28.500.
54"5llO ---OU!GE REALTY -·-... * OCEANFRONT * , DUPLEX
FSah, lurl • swtm at your
door! Owner will fJnanc:f,.
167,sotl
Geof'98 Wllli•m10n
REALTOR
m.4lf 645-1564 Eves
A Toudt of Sponhll
Wallild patio; 3 Bit, + din. .. + famiJy + ll'f, room ovtt
prq:e. Reduced 10 •
: $47,ISO
W•lker Riiy. 675-$280
.. Vie Lido, NB 0pta sun.
C.mpw/Boel Shelter a ....._ "'"' 1am .. n...._, ~s ,dbl. ..,....... _...
-$33,!ltltl VA/P'HA, A,t ..
Am COits 673-l9D • 6Tl-t9.'«'.l
\o~t h c OdSt
646-4563 6#-0575 aft 6 pm
COLLEdEPllrk. 4 Br. 2
ba, Fam mi. bJl.[ns. wlw Call lo ~ this year's
bargain!
$37,950
cptl & drps, no dov.'n GI. 1-z=========I w •• tcliff Are• k>w down FHA. 548-ST~
I• w~~~1!~1 ~~milyBA~m~~,; SPOTLESS TnhM', 3 BR. 21i * Under Market
Newport 4 ll ugr King !tlzt Bedroom horn<' on quic.-1 cuJ.de.&11.c •t street, Back Ba,y. 0 n I y
FairvW. 4 yrs okt. Lotl of cha.rm I
l!'xtn. storn~. Ex(.'('Ucnl
646-1111 tl.nanclfl; or rT\AJ' tr• d c
l•nytirne) tor amaller.
000 La rovet't'd pntio BA. all clec. pool. appl. hu:·bac::::~ard & ·lots of Inc. .s1..i ~ 71oan $23,500.
tret's. Garage on alley. Ask. _,0w,_"'~"-=8-=:ltt.1===-
lng S26.950. Mes• Del Mir 1105
546·5810
(Mlfdf*Nthabtl BY OWNER
OLLEGE REAL~ 5 bt'<tnns. family nn. 3
l500AdlmlltHIM, baths, carpet & drapes, over
7300 sq. ff. \\"atk to all
1.800 SQ. FT., 6 room bomt, Owner Desper••• 5 ~J"IOOls inch.1rlhig o.c.
F.A.lt1;idt. CoeU. MeM. 3 $24, 950 Co11cl!e. Very CI r 11. n ! Lochenmyer
Btdrm, 1%. ea. lc'f! livtnc 1.17 ~ -· "-J • --'!~ • -d1 .. 1.... • 4 Bdrm. + Familv rm. •"""· ~'"" ""'n uan ~..,, nn w • .,.c. _., ......... nn 1-Ne·-Blvd c.u ' "-· •r "0 1001 &: kit. Extra lat dble pr cALJ.. &i'ii' £w$'GG%Zn H'Ugt JMlljl mi. "'·ith natul'!ll .... ~!• "l'Sll . .,...,...
R:c,11101
Newport Heights 1210
Newport Heights
NEAR CLIFF' DRIVE:, On
d o u b I e Jot v.•lth large
itrecns, I a r g e landsca~
ed private pool, 2640 sq. It.
4 big Bedroom, 3 &tbs. For-
mal Dining Roo1n, Bn!aldasl
room, Laundry room, 3-car
si1erl raraae with ~r
OP.('nf'r, paneling decorator
wall paPf'_r. , .Luxurious Liv·
Ing on :i Shady, Tree-Lined
St(('('t.
546-2313
',O THE RCAL
'"-LS'[l\TI:Rs wflaundry roo m, Corrwr · brick fll"l'plnCf', f'IM!t built. =---
lot, Enlry oU aUey In "'" 6!.e,. Wiii .,.. p Ins, din ing rm , pictul'f' \\'In. Newport B•1ch 1200 NE\\T'ORT Rghts. ni.mbling
lor boll! or tn.iltt, 129,000. Worklrc ntan'1 =j No dov.<s Almost no dov.'ll C.I. --------ranch atylr 3 bemn, s~kl'
Lfoo Vibert, Rltr. ~ points, no lmpoundl. Only T$40.A l77llBE Ill H bo 18 UNITS NEW PORT roof, frplc. $2 11,950 .
anytime JO~ down + 11% Int. sunny R l ~.2_ ___!!__ !° BEACH (Wr1tcli lll ultra Klngaard R, E. MI 2.-2222
ASSUME 6•.4 LOAN 3 BR on 22.'l' lot. Zontd COUNTR\' EST A.Tl-;, dt'luxt' · prlmt re11idl'.ntlal. PLANNrNG to mow? You 'll
l.oW'ly 3 BR. 2 BA, lam. rm, for -ol motT' unit... Bk:r. Cu!florn l hr. 2 Ill', "ii 11.c:rr Fnnt11llllr tax 11.dvanla.gt':. nnrt an amii:.dng number of + .,,,.,t111,. pool It llCIPf, 648226. w/pool, Auume 6'it~ h>An. S!ttAble <lov.·n payment T'f'• hornes In todn..Y'• Oll.Slifled
!tnced plfU' yd, Ne .. 'ty pAint. ----"'CHA=llG=E~!T-!---1 HO?Ms OK, ,\t11.y trnd,, qu!rf'd . CAii ~11:>-S--124 Sourh A11&. ~them now.
ed, Ow~r ~2434. ()>·.nrr/A~I . .\il-7!06 Cn11.1:1 R"al E~tat('.
• '
The l'uul• with the Built-In ChucHe
If a girl doosn't t1QTy tho
man she wonts. plly'tho,man ,..., -::T"'AY"'I"'GE=----.1--&· is trc--rl-rl -1~1,.....,..1-1 O eo..oi.i. "" "''"~'' """'"' J:ry flllirig '" ,... "''""'° --m -Voll dmloc:i fl"Cltll #9P ~ 3 b.loo;,.
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIRCAnON 9300
L ._. ~
,,
. -i
C 101• th er•peutic 1'001, swim pool, 8BQ's, PHONE : 557.&200
LUXURIOUSLY turn. Ex· drpJ. Comp! landscpd. Baell: . Adults OSTA MESA1S FINEST s•un•• I:. lovely clubhouse w/1oc.iel ectiviti••·
ttt1tiW! 2 Br, 2 8&. dreu. Bay ateL Lease $300 mo. Ad I I
nn. So. patio, N•. Bea<h. Ml"""° -"NEAR THE BEACH" -uh p ..... From $l40. CAN1 BE BEAJ
.1. . "' .. ,, L Ca TATS Adults. 1 Yr, lse. $375 mo . FOR. Lease: New EaatbluU
.,..,...,.. •• U> ""'572 c_.wn. 'BR, 211 BA LwM-y •tnr1e. 1 • ' ""'· lochelor, 1 & 2 Bedrooms A , · · . ·, · , . , .. cc
35J~as~~~~a)', l ,,,w="'~'d=ay'°'======-1 :':d.N:t..·~~~· ~~~~ Completely Furnished from $140 ---~, ---~~-=
Huntington BHch 2400 ..,_.. privacy end land-Costo Meq JIQO East Bluff 5242
. . . '
494-7511 * I BR. ....,. beach. no ocapod ..,.....,. dub atmoo. Ad Its nJ ---
1 BDRM "°""' on ,.., a1 pell!. Y•ar te... U25, pboro lncllldlng $150,000 I 0 y, llO pets BAY MEADOW APTS.. PRESTIGE LOCATION
340 HIGH DRIVE
BY O\VNER
i\tAKE OFFER ST. PAUL'S
LuraERAN OiURClf
494-4985, 494-7421
lot. WalkiZJg dist. to beach I -'"'°"""'o,tbly~l250;:;:.::.·..:"::'c..-'400='---worth of recreational tad!· • luxuriously Furnished ~e;R.ex;:~~ n!m°~uf.:: For leliM. deluxe 1888 aq, tt.
$81.50 mo. Adults, no ~ti. l BR. 2'4 ba.. town bo?M l~ desigMd an.; operated • All Electric Ap1rtrMnt1 4 BR, ~ BA apt. Frplc,
l="'""='"'"'=======-ISwimmlng pool. l285 Month just for &inile people. • Private Glr•ge• \V~ pan'lg, &ha&: Olli&',' ma,... crpts, wet bar, pri
Laguna Beach 2705 Hal Plnchin Realtor 67&-439'J • 2 Swimming Pools (heated) ~'. '::i ::Yw~~ =~~=;::=
1--""-------· INO. BLU'fTS: View, 4 br, Rents From e Individual P1tlo1 rec bJdz, pool tables, put· to ahoi>'c 11Chl1 &: ttcreation,
Single Story
SOuth Sea Alm06P001"11
2 Bedroom t Baths
Cupelli l Drape•
Air Conditioned
Private Patios
l lt>ated Pool
Plenty cl la1vn l .=,,,.,,...,,~~=-~~1oi:=~N:U~Yw~~·:: =~. ~~s.2~~:· $145 to $300 ;~n; ~~d~~nno H::; -~~Anl~igos$!SOl"moay, .NB NEW2BR2BA+Mltlt ........ PLUS ........ -..• , u eve! 3 BR, 2 BA. Jge Uv 3 BR, 2 BA Condo. $260 1mmedi 12-7 pm daily, 646--«173, M&T. next door 865 Amigos. Carport &. Storage
Purpose Room. \Vhltewater rm, !rpJ, mod tac, ocn vw, 1R or sm by mo. Avail ·ate Occup&ziey * NO RATE INCREASE for Summer 673-1629 vi e w, Blt -ln oven , lawn, <:arport, $350 mo lie, now.* 642-2&5T* Mo. to Mo, Lure Avail. TO\VNHOUSE -New lrg. lllODEN Vll.J..AGE
range-dishwasher. Balanced Eves 2l3: 462-074 coll * Speci•l-1 Month'• FREE RENT, e MARTINIQUE e 2 BR, 2~ Baths, frplc, encl CARDEN APTS ~--·;.. sn o= -======"""==-1 N ANAHEI.... .. LHM R-ulrff gar, patio. 675-5033 2500 South Salta power ......... ""' ..... >£· ·"""· -ewport Helthtt 32:10 M ~., P•rk-Like Surroundings ---~nta Ana * 546-l525
Low Down, 4~3006 or S.n Clemente 2710 277 Sc. Brookhunt DELUXE 1-2 ~ 3 BR AP'I'S. 2 BR. Adults. "Frplc, pool l========:=.I
.,.,...... ' BR. How!<. Gu ~ w"" (1 blk. So. o! Unco!nl 1760 Pomona, Costa Mesa ALSO FURN. BACHELOR '"'"· '01 ao •• ,,,., 1200· ----7 BR 2 ha Summ·• •• =id $140 mo ""-, ,,., ~;1s Laguna_B_!;•_•h __ .;.·~·c:•1 BY Owni:r: Executive ho~. ·• ·• ""' ..-• · CTI4J 7T2-4500 PM.I pa.Oos • Htd Pooi.J;~;;:~;,;:="=~~~"_::::=== _ • ~
large 3 Br. din rm, !iv lo~r Dbl. garagl':, cov. ===Cal=l~64&-=1~4:;;09;== I {Weit of Newport, betwffn 17th & 11th St.) N!' shop'g: e Adults only
rm, ~~ fam rm. ~-:~~· golf course, adults GARDEN GROVE !!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 1777 Santa Ana A~ .. CM 5250
cept1onal qua11ly ========= University Park 3237 13100 Chapman Ave. ?itgr Apt 113 • mss.t2 ~~,;-amic view. $41,'FJO. Summer Rentalt 2910 4 BR, townhouse •••••• $340 Cf blks w. Santa Ana Fwy.) Co1ta Meta 4100 Huntington Beadt 4400 LOVELY 3 Br, 2~~ ba. An liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l
3 BR. 2 b1t ............ m:; 1714) 636-3030 DUPLEX 1 BR tum., neu STONEHENGE APTS elec~. cond~. Harbor Blvd
CLIF'F' DR. • Dix 3 BR
3 bs Aµt. New carp. &
drape~. Will lease. Family
acttptable.
CHARMING 2 BR retreat, OCEAN, GoU Course, Mobile 3 BR. 2 ba ............ $300 ))o , Qu' t d 2 B • It san Diego ~ ana.
privacy, good financing. home. Adult Pie. D.B.C. 3 BR, 2 ba •••••••••••• $350 NEWPORT BEACH 11 P &. ~~Zr~ ogs. 1 ~-2 kBai85Dshwhr. Pool. Bltins, new crpt, drps,
$..7'/',500. Eves 454-5100 Pool, sauna, b & r /rest. 3 BR. 2 ba •.. , .• , • , , •• S32J n nt 0 · $ · 2320 Florida. patio, 2 car closed 1ar, pool.
536--0321. 4 BR. Exec. home •••••• $375 R80 IRVINE AVE. 1 BR Garden duplex. $125 53&-7130 $215. Refer. fTI4) 545-0169,
Dana Point 1740 TAJONC lteRl'Vations for 2 e Red Hill Realty IRVINE .AND 16th Ind. util. Quiet, matu~ 2 BR. at beach. Adults, no (21 31 67&-5600, I 2 13 )
NEW DUPLEX Br. turn. Apt. ntU' be.ach_ Univ. Park Center, Irvine cn4> K>-0560 adult. Refs. 548-8801 peta. $1*1. l.Dq. 219 15th St, 549-0780.
(2) ZBR l" ba Split-1evt!l Sleeps 6. Ph. 139-5290 __ Call __ A_"""""'-'-.~-'"mai:IO"-'.:._.:-$o $107. Nice ainrle. Util, Quiet. DI 12th St. HB NE\V Sl~,,.-1,-,-ty-Garden
" 7:1 • • wkdays aft 6 pm LEASF.S AVAILABLE uth lay Club 1 adult. No pets, 319 2 BR. Adults only, UW pd. Units. 2 BR, 1 BA. 11hag
w/lge. vie1v deck. Dbl. gar· · • Bff t Quie
age, fenced yard. Xlnt fin-I DELUXE 2 BR. Apt 3 Br. It din. rm .••.•••.• S32ri Apartments J.iU=•=''="'='";;·.,,•='=' :'212=.== u · • t $211D. 17676 crpts, drps, dshwhr, 2 Rent1l1 W1nted 5990
-----ancing w/very low down 6/15-9/15, 1375 mo. 4 Br.&: lam. nn .•.•••• $350 --=~~,.;;;,:;;:;;:...._ Cameron, 142-6121. Patios, beim ctlllnp, trPlc.
payment. Westclitt area. GG-Q74 3 Br. tam & din nn, •• $325 REMARKABLY New~ Be_a_ch ___ 4_200_ rar. Adults, no pet~. $16.l. 2 BEDRM studio w/frplc, FEMALE Doctor w/well-
ONLY $42,500 RENTAL> 2 BR. 2 baths •••••••••• $260 UNBELIEVABLY Laguna Be•ch ,"705 2650 •. E~~=n, 531--0062 alt 7 patio, carpets, d r p ll, mannered dog wishes to
BOB PE'M'IT ·-a11 EXTRAORDINARIL y N--.. och pm K ~-67il-&81~ 644-5642 nd ·-Open Sun. 5117 Ct-a P.M.)' Hou1ff U""'"lshecl , ru: or BEAUTIP'UL ... ,... • EXCEPTIONAL OCUJ).front ,,;::..::.,::::=,,,=--'--I,;,;;,:;;:;::;::::,=== rent )'ear rou un"""·
33894 ALCAZAR, Dana Point -· "S'inc. 1946" GBHIO bachelor ~ liv rm frpl NEW DELUXE 1 ~ ! Br house w/fenttd yard tn
Lingo Real Estate General 3000 833--0lOl Vil D'IHreGardenApts Mn bedrm 1tcookina'facil' SulL apta, rhag cpts, drp!l, bit-Huntington Be1ch 5400 CdM or Lal[1lna. Ref.
I stm t 499 1397 FOR Lease/Option 10 Buy, Putting irttn. waterfall I:. bl .. :.., h. Ins, dshwsher, garages. J 673-1158, 1135-:nll. nve en -Sl90 PVT heh, 2 Br duplx, stream, tlower5 ewrywbere, a e .. ,.ter ~ v.:ec. w o ap-bdnn pvt pat i! -.lc. $235, I;;;.;;.;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I OCEANFRONT L 2 2 1 S Bdrm home. pool, tennis ~::.· 1 b""-~-OPEHING preclaleaquiet,pleasantsur. 1 bd 800 r"'$1'" N I' "'ANTED: i"'OUnd floor, 2 -UXUTY bk ~an. Nu ww It drps. u t etc Privil $340 Avail ..., POil • rec. room, .....,,...,., l rm sq t ·"' r ON B Bd t for J'!'Sponsible Br.1~; ba., nr new fi.Iarina, RIO. retr. t-.. .. 1. ok. Bkr. ' · · · BBQ's Sauna furn-unturn roundlngs. 175 mo. lne. all So n--1 Pl ·-'?"~• EACH! nn 'P xlnl tenru:. l4375 Dana 5.lH980 ......., July 1. 833-0076 1 &:. 2 'ar. al~ Si~ fro~ util. 4!K-2775 , ......,... aza. '"''"".wo couple, for July S, Penn,
S -• n• Ow <""" •n•n .,,'K eo-1 2000 ., -WK LUXURY DELUXE I It 2 Bdrm, Bit-year round, !\tu.st know now .
lranu .n.u. ner J<ri;n.v, $160 -3 Br 1%. ba RIO Irvine 2231 _..... """" t! Panom IMMEIJIATE ............ L• '"'7-1na range It dish\\1asher, • 2 BR 1 ~1 BA FROJ\1 $235 SlGO. &t.2-6020 afternoon &:.
eve!I. ch!drn & .pd welcom~. ' Rd., 642-8670. Between Har· y se '""" ...,... encl PJ'lg!I, pooli, Slll-• 2 BR 2 BA FRO!'tt $260 eve!!.
t l\fll.E So, of marina. Cstm Blue Beaoon. 645--0lll Bkr. e NEW HOUSE. CM'S, bor&Newport-2BlkN.19th OCEAN Front Apt. $170, part utll. 301 & 301 e 3 BR 2 BA FROJ\l S:\60
7 Rm + 3 BatM + 2nd DRPS, 4 BORMS, 2 BATH, REHJ FURNITURE OCCUPANCY w1..,-,. •. $30 , week. Avocado. 548-7400 c.,,.,,<J,·ape><li•hwa.h"
JR. Executive requires 4
bdrm home Ji.i.ne 15, leaSf!,
l@a&e option, up lo $215 .
5.lG-4-023
kitehn. $36,500. <196-3377. $~:. :;;;, ~u;:~~· 0:.lllls, LEASE, $300. !33-2317 494-7741 l BR. Comp! "-t. d""s, h@ated pool-sauna.tennlg .... , t' ·,.. rec: room-ocean viewJJ l ~D~~I ~!_lf~_:S~l!._!;19~7~51B:;:''='':Bea=:J''°="=·=645-=='=lll=:B:"'::·i Corona del Mar 3250 J Rooms from ll.9.95 Luxury prden apU1mel!.ll RENTALS bltlm:, heated pool. Children patios-ample parking. up exes or a e , · ---·-"-;cc_:c__.;c:.:.: Month to month RentaJ1 olferinc complete priv&C)', Apts. Unfurnlehed OK. 642-5190. .126 Monl.e Security guard!.
LG duplex in N.B. w/view, Cost11 Mu11 3100 7 BR Home, N. 11ide of Hwy. Wide Se1tttion bnutl!UI landsc:apin1 I: SlOO _.:Y.::11::":::·------FURN. aho Avail.
RESPONS. family wanta 2
or 3 Br. unt. house, Costa
P.fesa vie. To $165 Mo. ....,,., 200' from xlnt swim'g heh. $710 mo. Avail. Ma.y 26. 1001. PURCHASE OPTION unparalleled recreational Costa Mesa DELUXE I BR. Westcliff HUNTINGTON
Oversized living roe ms. RJNT-LEASE Owner. 675-3299 2f br. Delivery tadlltlea in a COUfltey ---------1 loe. Pool k bll ns. Adults.
Front balcony. rear patio or LEASE OPTION •CHAR.:\IING 3 Br, 2 Ba, 51~toml9lh ~ture ~~ club atmosphere. Now FAIRWAY $16:) mo-no IM!. St!-62'14 PACIFIC
& 4 br, 2 bath UP
00
: Nice 3 Homfll ..•... 3 Bedrm $200 crpts, drpg, lrplc:, lovely •uo w· .,.....:,. Anhm. '74-,_ Jeulnc Jn Newport Beach. LGE. :1 Br. 2 Ba. unr. apt.
O. C. male employee, non
711 OCE,\N AVE., H.B. drinker, needs rm. or ha.ch.
front yd, 2 br, 1 ha WN . 4 BeWm $250. 5 Bedrm Iux. brick patio. s:m. 644-6170 ..._ L<UA.UU., _. VILU APJS. Near beach, $215 Month
$41,9j() Tenns:, by owner. ury h?me, $350 mo. also ........................... ,J Models open 10 am to 11 pm 61l-J663 67a.-0232
673-2294. bachebrs' condo. $145 mo. Lkfo Isle 3351 rr"MD.
0
1 I QENT1 Rents from $135.$.110
RENTALS 546-9521 iiiiiiiii~jliijiijiiiiiiiijiiiiiiii lJL..I ll""' lJ'll Ill I Furnished er unfurnished
Houses Furnished LIDO ISLE Ap.rtment Rental ! -~. ll J K ~1r ~Ol5 2000 YEARLY LEASE Li•tlng S.nrke
2 Br, 2 Ba home, Can be For Information write:
semi-tum, Redee, New w/w Box 4486, Newport Bch.
$130-Utl pd, nr Ocean & Bay, 3 BR, 2 Ba, billy drped, shag crpt, dishwasher, gar. 92664 or phone 642-4656
1 Br + den duplex pets crpled, frplc, stove, re!rig, bage disposal, bltns, 2 car
ok. Sngl.s v.•elcomed. Bier. eoc1. yard, patio, dbl gar. CHATEAU LA POINTE
53.f-6980 Walk to Shopng Ctr, iresa gar. Lovely patio. Priv Lowly 2 Br Furn Apt, PooJ
bche.'I & club privil avail. rn--. Adu! " FANTASTIC VIEW Memorial. Cul~-sac: St. ENJOY THE SUMMER AT " ....... ...,rt. ~.nope .
$100 util pd, 2 Br triplex. 1235 Alo. Eve1. 673-4n2. WINTER RATES. $425 mo. 1941 Pomona, C.M.
Avail now. Children & pell NEEDED children & pets, Cail for appt: Days, 6T.i-8233, $1»-Nr. ocean. utl pd, bach.
welcomed. Bkr. 534-6980 3 Br's, 2 Ba'•. crpts, drps, eveJJ 675-8040, qtn over garages, pet ok.
Oakwood
Garden
Apartments
1700 16th Street
714: 642-8170
$12j On ocean. util pd, 1 bltns, lrpl.c, lrg walled ~· Sngl.s welcomed. Bk r
Br triplex, child &: pet ok. scrnd patio, dbl gar. unfln. 534-6980. We1tcltff Rivi era·
Bkt. 534--0980 rumpu& rm. S295. a57-Si40 Huntington Beach 3400 * APARTt'.lENTS • 1 BR. turn. bit-Ins, crpt,
$t4:>-Utl pd. 2 Br lovier VERY Clean 3 _Br, l~{i bath, 3 BR. 2 BA, bltns, hrdwd Furn ~ Unturn • from $75. drps, Hid pool. Nr. •hopping
. . * 1 BDR..\f at the Beach.
Prlvalf! patio, pool • lnchv. No pets. S125 mo. Yearly.
laundry tac. * Call 673-2256
Near Oranre Co. Airport It -------UCI Adult! only 2 BR, 2 BA. also 3 BR,
' . ' 2 BA. Mutt aee.
201.22 Santa Ana Ave. * M5-.f.900 *
Mgr. Join. Bruce 545-3894 CLEAN 3 Br, 2 Ba, cpts.
TIIE VICT'ORIAN dp!, bltrui. Xlnt N. CM area.
Nf!w, 2 BR w/ 1al-ai-'e. $150. Chlldrn ck. $169. 5:>71151
Adults only, Crpts, drp1, NE\V Apt l BR. Bltns, drp!I,
'blllUL, fncd y8.rd ' W/ patio. nr bch, 1hops. Adullll, no
Wtr pd, gardnr. 667 Victoria pets. $125. 642-4014.
St. 636-4120 2 BR deluxe. Adults. Crpl!i,
VILLA MESA APTS. drps, bltn11, pr. Priv. patio.
2 BR. Prtv patiO: 'Hid ·p0ot. 549-043.1. $165 mo.
C714l 536-1487 apt. NOW. P.O. Box 92,
Ofc. open 10 am-6 pm Daily C.M. ,-.=E=s=p=o~Ns1=B~L=E,.-~~m-a1~.1
lcachen need house for
summer. Bc111'h area pref.
2 BEDRMS. near beach-,
ne~l)' decorated, b It n s ,
rerti\g . Imme d i a t e
possession.
Trade11.i nds Rlty 811-3jll
LOVELY NEW APTS
Near ocean It Lake Park,
dishwasher, patios, 1 & 2
lxinns. 709 Palm, &47-3957.
A'ITRAC. 2 Br., cpts, drps,
gar, kld1 ok. S135. 17401-A
KeelllOn Lil, 968-7510 ,
IW7--0325
2 BORP.I. Apt. carpet!, built-
ins, garaae. no petJi. Call
962-8578.
642--09-19. 67>3213 •
RENTAL SERVICE
Frff to L1ndlord1
Blue Beacon, 645-01&\ CM
Si\fL Apt er Room wf ba,
cookg fac. deaired, CM area
up to $65 mo. 646-J519
e LANDLORDS e
FREE PENTAL SERVICE
Broker 534-6982
2 01· 3 BR house, tmmed.
for family of 5. Up to $115.
CM area. 64>21S3 --· Rooms for Rent 5995 duplex, nr bch. Sngls ok. lg cover J>l'.ltio, _rncd yd, Boors, drpg. lg-e fenced Blue Beacon, 66-01.ll BJIJ'. area. Adult.I.
Blue Beacon, 64:>--0111 Bkr. Part!)' furn. if des!l'ed. J~ne yard. Room for trlr/boal. Jim WESTCLIF DR. NEWLY decorated • 2 BR ----·----1
], Reasonable to responsible Reasonable to responsible Cost• Meta 4100 *642-361&• 2 BR. Unfurn. Newly dee. w/carport. $115, water pd. -.--------COLLEGE or working gl.rl;
2 car encl'd 1ar. Children DELUXE 3 Br, 2 Ba. Bltn.s,
welco~. no ~ts pleeeel CJllbl, drpg. Condo. 2 pools.
$165 mo. 719 W. \Villon. sm mo. Call ~3no
6.f.6.l2jl Santa Ana 5620
Rentals to Share 2005 part)'. 642-$82 aft 4pm party. 962-4391 -$30 WEEK & UP LG l Br. furn. Swim'g pool, New crpta &; drp.&. Spac 2566 Orange Ave, 636-4120 $1~ • LRG 2 BR. Studio Bal Isle. kit, TV nn incl.
l'ALECREST ' B• "'" ocean view. Pref. adult COU· ......nttnd!I. Adlts, no""· $140 -Apt. (Triplex). }·amil v si~.e ~rn. s1~~13 , . ' · "• 3 BR, 2 BA, bltnis, hrdwd STUDIO I: 1 BEDROOl\1S ... ¥ 1 01 Ad I ~ """ ,,--,;u
EMPLOYED lady •-'••-• to 2 Ba C"'\" d-• bltn~ pie no children no P<ll mo. 2283 Fountain Way E. 1 BR. Dup ex. der u I~ ktteh. w/ bllns, crnls, drns, I ----------t ' ..... ,"" · ... · · .... ' "· noors, drns. lge fenced TV • Kltch<-tt•.• Incl. ' ' ' O I "" th Call ·• · ,. 11· PER wk "P w/k1·•·•·n
h 2 •-• Cota 122< Jl i 73 · 94'2 ... '"" $175lnclutil 646-2556 IHarbortumW.nnWU..,J. ny. """per mon · frnlc., encl gar. t or 2 ·.' ~ .. """" II are Ut:"Ui'OOm s " mo. ~ -·> • yard. Room for lrlr/boal. • •--... & maid "' a··all · 25 " e~n k I · h 84"n53 ~~·-• C FF Wilson Gardens AN~. -548-13. children ok. <Nr )(Chis) No ~ w,. "1P1 ap"~~ ....,,. ?.fesa apartment wit same., .;c_:-.,c.,,:c_~-----Rea sonable to responsible. Chll"-n• & P<I --•;on BAY LI MOTEL l"'" 10 e :>-io-"'~
0 h.ld OK. =1 9796 aft 1 • .,.., ""''"u -P<lS. 22.10 S. Center St., · aa · ne c 1 ""' -er I Four Bedroom !louse party. 962-4391. ----2376 NEWPORT BLVD. * LO\V WEEKLY RATES * $171 Newport Beach 5200 6 p.m. Crpt.5 & n-s. S2.:i0 -------... _55 3 B•, l\I n .. patio, bit-ins, ~.A. Nr \Varner, J,l:;..()98!1 • LOVELY room, private .... ,.. 1',0R L~.-: To11·nhouse, 2 br, ~' Kitchen, TV's, maid 1ervice, ....,.. --2-----hon1e, empl gentleman, $50.
E:\fPLOYED g en t te ni Rn Call :i.'10-7688, 54<J.03--II 1 ba. crpt, drps, frn\c, bltns, • WEEKLY * Heated Pool. crpts, dfl>ll. Aak about our BA YFRONT :! BR. Bath, cpts, drp.;, ;;46-l7J3 sh ho J , .,. discount plan 8SO Cent · bit-In.,. Patio. Pool. !lau1111 . are me .\\' i;a~c, 2 BDR..\f house, large fenced fenced patio, at tacbt'd Love.ly apt. Bacbelon or 646-326.1 ' el 2 BR 2 BA Luxury Api.!I Laundry room. J yr lease PRIV. Home near Baker &
romp! furn. uttl pd. Nice yard, $17:l. '.!658 Orange carpof1. $17j, 962-8262 aft 5. cpl.'I. Furnishings compl. e \VINTER RENTALSe _s_t_G<_U340 __ • _____ , Prlv.'tt!rnoe, t'levalon, su~ $14:>. Fairview, P.fcFadden. F'airview, CJ\i. also near ~s:_7~1~ to heh " shops . .;cAc.'c.'·o,• '-li-•_th<c'-"=""-)'-. __ 2 BR House 11'/yd at bCh Kitchenettes. $3.i wk.pay• ABSEY REALTY ~VFfLY W~cious &.1 d Br terranean pk'g. All elec. _.:A,:d;::'i'":=·;"°'"-=':i°';;'====~O~.;C':.C~. =C=•":=S4>-3:;"'===J
MODERN 2 Br. v.·/1v crpl!, UO Coast Hwy. $180 mo, all. 9!'8 EI Camino Dr. 964~• pex. crpt rps, Pool:, soft water, dockll. 3121 -STi\.BLE Home environ._ for dri>s, gar. Adults. yrly or $800 for June, July 5'1&-04.')l ' GE 2 Bd re!rif., atove, util. $155. W. Cout Hwy, Newport. Santa Ane
?'t'tired woman wbo desires • 64" ·-C 't • • 3 ----LAR rm., tirepl. Blk. Quiet mature adults. Rf!fer. 64" ~ ............, 1• k Aug. 536-l 19 or 673-1784 SPACIOUS P I t ~ "rl •~ •-•• stimulating compe.n. & in-' · · • · oo · o ""'"an. a Y-.-N mo. 548-8007
volvr. H.B. to Lag. Sch. 2 BR. 1987 "B" Charle Sl., Ulll pd. Gal'llcn Living. 1 m.q Adults only, ~~==o-==== F'OR lease • 3 br, 2 ba,
673--2916 ll) 12131 943.2440 $130 mo. No pets. 1 child Lagun• Be•ch 3705 BR. $150 & up. 2 Br. $17J. DELUXE 2 BR, Weslcliff HARBOR GREENS Blulf1 eondomlnlun1
' ok. 642-22.59 1---------Adullll, no pets. 74{) \\'.18th Joe. Pool&: built-in!. Adults GARDEN It STUDIO APTS overlooking Upper Bay .
S HARE my el e gantl .c.~.c:.,::;:.:.c..,,.--~-OR LAS St C...\f ::.An1165 P. 644-1247 \Yaterfront home "'/ man 2 BR, Hse. &am ceilingll, * F E E * " -~~~~-. S210 mo-no lse. 642-6274 Bach, 1, 2, 3 BR's, ftom SUD. ~ • ev ·1
lHiO yrs. $150 mo. 675-4.l3l trplc, prv patio. Adults, no Spacious 3 bdrm. horn~. lo-F'URN. Apl,. Bai;:helor1 $115. L1c'_8~R~.~.,-m-.~Pool_,c:.,.'-"8.-1.,,.ck-to 2700 P1!ten10n Way, C.M. 2 Bdrm nr ocean upr duplx
ROOM.i'd:ATE Vlallted to pets. $148. &U--8520 cated on 3 Iota, lge deck w/ 1 BR's. SW -St30. 21JJ ocean. l-Adult. SlJO Lease. 546--0370 $200 yearly re.frig a:~ rv t'
ocean view, fireplace, Bil FJden Ave .. Ci\t. See '-Irr. 8J3...3535 &«--0637 eve * DELUXE * Avail June 1, crptll, Slllldttk
share 2 BR apt. r.1ust be Newport Beach 3200 kitchen. 3 car garage, S28:i Apt. 6. -----~~~ Lrr 1 Br. apt. unturn. New 3ll~ 36th St. (213) 248-1921
2()-25. Female. 67:>-lGIT l\fonth. --'~s~u~S~C~A"'s"1T=A=s--ON' B~Y -Nr Lido. 1 BR. 2 BR 2 Ba'"-l=========·IBEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom MISSION REAL TY private palio. s1s:i incl ulil. crptg, new drps thruout. 3 BR, It · uo
Costa Mesa 2100 famil)' room, 2~t baths'. 494-0731 ~:: ~ :~. :i~·N=~i-='='"".,,rl=ng=""=1=v='="·='='=3-64="'=,,, bit~ sep. din rm.~ El encl p.r. L.Anai, trplc. &I
-
--------·I Owner \\•ill lease $295 per l-----'-"---1___ Cam.ino Dr.546--061 Newport Stach. 646-01.f.7
I 1 BR + up. ale•ping nn, Blvd, CM. 642-9286 Ne-rt H~. 4210 SPAC St d" $16-2 B 6'S.2036
2 BR .. gar., patio. Quiet mo. or ease/option. ..r. v •• . u io ;:i, r, .:.ccc.;.:,:c·c_-~--=
tropical setting for adul ts. Jean Smith, Realtor crpts, drp~. frplc, Ra.nlf: $ll5 -1 BDRM. furn. Utll, Jl,, Ba., gar . patio, crpts, ON BAY • Nr Lido. l BR.
1 blk shops. Sl&5. &18-nl4 646-325_5 ____ 1 Ir refrif. P.tore furn. avRll. space. Adult•. Close to CLEAN 1 I 2 RR. Lr£ kit drps, bltn~. children ok. Py1 Private patio. Sl35 lnd util.
Newport Beach • BR. 2
"
-A, •-•··t. ,.... Walk to heh lG shops. S165 ,atore1. Quiet. ~ Pomona, Adults, no pets. $13>$150. 542--3524, noes 546--0689 Moortna avail. 613-6450
2200 23)1} aq, ft. 7 .sep. frpla, 494"636 _.:..::,,:.,:::,,_____ U E * A 11,,.c.., nvnl l1PPfl" ~ r. uo: .. ..., mo. In cl util. 673-4982, M8--0728 2m E. 16th SI .. 64&-1801. t TOWNHO S -CH N--~ • B
Id d tonnl l tnlrml . * QUIET 2 Bdrm Duplex Lu-Isle 4,,1 2 R. 1\{i BA, crpU, drps, Apt, Adult•. no pell. Year----------1 pan en. · $275 Dix &-autitul lmmac. Bltna tio E-tkte -u pa"-. Adult•. 1160. I•. 6f.,..275l. J
Y"'" Le··· -J •-•-m, dln'a. Spmklm. Gardnr I ....... · lllI'I'. Pf. • · ---------~ , euu> ...-. ueu1vu l Br, 2 Ba ... u.tom Spanish. Adults, no pets. 642-6872 543-1168 ' bath. den. extra room 'NCr pd. $325 mo. leaae. 291! .,.,aamed ,_,_ v I e... 1 BR. Ulil pa.id, G~. · ./ 3 BR. 2* Bath Apt S1vl:m-...,. • ... _., ... · 360 B 16th Pl. 642-1291 I ad IL N 11-'-pool ~~ I" olt patio, dbl rara.c•, PapuLn.GG-3637 54J..4287. 2 u o peta. i~ roo. *DELUXE l' a 2 BR m .. ,. .,., .. u , ... /w
1ardtn mtne on or befbrt Le.u..Hirbor View LG FURN Bdrm apt, yearly. 6'73--0l37 ew111. Garden ,\pt£. 'BlWns, prlv. Cf'PI&-$300 mo. 673-!183
July lS -S35CI Jlft' mo. 2 Br, .. 2 Ba., 1 yr old. Ouplnn Unfurn. 3975 A.dull& only, no peta, else -==-======= patio, heated pool, frplc:. YEARLY,-lbdnn, 2 ba,
\Vrltc 4034 Leland Rd., Prv pll1c. dubhse. pooa. -to shop. Inquire 179% Balboa l1lanct 4355 Adult!\. $1.f.5 mo. 546-fil63 cpts, drp1, h'plc, rar. $230.
Loullvil.le, Ky. 40207 Lu\U)' erptt. Rdria. Drps. 1 BDRM .. k1tchtn ruml1hed, ,Rocc;;"":::::;"""::·-=---:-:c BO --AT_Sl_l_p-.-,-9-,-. -,-;;.;;;Bil. JMMAC. 2 Br. Studh>1, crp~.1.,;,64&-i';:;,:';;;!OO"'======
CANAL WATERl'RONT ()pm cdblp in IJ• a: d1nd ,~-~·~·~nd;.!'.~..,,,.~~t!. ~==+'~BR. Oean. Attrac. Furn. aa.raae apt. $350/Mo. yrl.y drp1, pool Wrkng cpl orl· owu pVt.. beach. Lovd7 s nnc. Avd .Tub' J.. M8-052S ~'l Flo""''· C.O.ta MHA. 10. Ltue. R.eb, Cpl or or SSOO/Mo. 1Ummtr. •llJlf! 1trl1. no chldm aae• Newport Heights S21l'
Br. 2 Ba. Furn or unt.1...:::°':...:;644-4076:,.c:..,:c.·----RENTALS .2S3SNewpartBlvd. BlllGrnndyRea.llor 142-4620 c3-:,,I0:;:..,.646--0496c.,.:.-"":.,· ____ 1·--------
2 Patloe:. Yr. lease $450 P.fo. TOWNH OUSE: 3 BR. 2\, Apts. Furnllhecf I Bdrm. turn. cpll. adult.g, NEW Dix 1 It 2 Br. She crpt, $160 TRlPLEX 2 BR. 2 BA
Grahlm Realty 64&-24.14 BA. ~tc. patio, poot, 2 no pea . Patio. Call 64U742 Huntington Beech 4400 drps, bltns. Im.med. IJCCP. Studio Patio, pr, crplr
\VATERFRONT-Deluxe lrg tu pr, &Jl bltDll, crpt&, ~O""a""M'"r""•;;.l ____ .;.4000;;.;.;; ;;":;.";;;·,;;•,,PM.;,';;;·,-,,.,--..,.,..------------1 From $150. 5.f.0.1913. 5',;-.2'l21 drpc, bllM. ~03
Duplex. all romo. '*t dock. drps. Lee S715 mo. 171...UU llOUDAY PLilA BACHELOR apt, Fu r n . ..,SOL TE ROS APTS • LRG 2 l: 3 BR. 2 Bathl. ._.._ ---
Summer vac•tion ar winter. ot &U--2497 evu or wknds. DELUXE. Spacloul 1 Bdnn Drps, new w/w cpts. pool, B&chtlot l 1 BR'a, ~I. trplc, bltn1., c:rpt.g, drps. ~1tclfff 523'
6T.\.7861 or f*>S} m-1384 THE BULFFS; 3 Br,. 2 Ba.., F\u'n 1pt $135 plu~. uUt pvt ha.I. 645-0097 aft l pni . Adults, no pe ts, From St40 Encl pr., patio. St&-1034 $165-Qulet deluxe 2 Br. pool
BLUrF'S -f'Jm. 3 Br. ~ car a:ar .. cpts, drpt, all •Teattd pool, ample p&rktnJ. * 1 ll 2 Bl'. F'nrn. Aptl . up. J730l Kttlaon l.rl, 11.8. I NE'V J • 2 SR, $150 6 $170, a.dull•. no pell. ht ii las I
ltome. Ul'P'f Bay 6 Octa.n blll'llL. Avall. May ~h. Only No chtldn!n • no pets. POOL. 177 22nd St. fl blk W, ot lkach, on Ulil Incl. Adult. only. no pl'!tll mo ni11t: no Itue.. $:i1) cina: J
view. $460 mo . .,,. fi«-Ql9S. $11j. Call Broker 675-1662 1965 Pamnns, C..M. NASSAU P>JJrfS. ~5 Slater.) &ll-78.f.8. Mt Avocado * 646-0979 fM. Ht-.2514.
5620 Santa Ana
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s,_.i1h Style Lr1:xury
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,4fr c.dllioNel r; .. ,_, r..,. o.m rm.w St.
ffr.IH P-'-1:.t~ Tf AlllMIM
/\'ow R<ntin,-Fram $l40
J•tt Nonlt •I So••.\ C-.. rt ...
1000 W. MocArlhur Blod.
J Wod E"' •I 8rVfnil
Santo Ana 540./1491
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RIAi: ESTATE lll AL ESTATE RIAL I STATE
0....rol CS....rol ~•I -'===------I --Rooms fo r Roni stt! Offla Ront•I 61171 R-Property 6205
LARGE comtoru.ble room, DELUXE 1.2 or 3 rm. suite BEAU'llF\JL Northmt Calli.
conw.nlent uea. $20 v.~k. N'. Onnp O>unb' Airport acreaie i4 Modac Natl
Call &U-1158 &; lrviD9 Ind u 1 tr l • I Fwut. Calilomla Pinet. ,,:;=======:.I O>mplex. Cari>ot dnpn, """ 1tll. l2flO _,, SlS
Motels, Treller musk, aiNIGndldmW!c I: month. &t&-1587 &ftu 5:00
Courts 59'7 janitorial llttYl<e. •:P"'=· ======I ---------1 AVAIJ..ABlX NOW I • I WEEKLY ,.tu. SEA l30B P&Tm, RealfOI' Mounteln l 0.Sert 6210
URK MOI'EL. 1301 e mGlOl e 5 Ac. On Paved Road, jult
Newport Blvd, Oolt:a Mtsa. PRIVATE OFFICE 90 from O.C. Xln't terms.
Income Property 6000 S.... ...,,..,, -· • .,. • :":185.fllll price. Bkr.
* * * * *
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Want it done
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tile. Modem, dean. Mna'l.O::i::i;======I APARTMENT Venle PIUI. Bldr. l60 ..,.th R E W ntod '140
iocludet all utilities. -'-' ...-·--•------OWNERS Jim Wood. 5*S990 RHpon1lblo Porty
Wh1ddy1 Wont? Whodclyo Golf
SP!CIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS SERVIC E DIRECTORY -·---_ ... SERYICI DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY
The market ii rnati We 1 Wanta to Buy s~111 Roto · S Llnlt -S ,tlnlOI -5 .~ Bobyalttln• 6550 Corptf Loylng I Polnllng,
Ropalr 6626 Poptrh•ntlnt 61511 have clients waltina to buy Maileni OHien -"' Income· -
your income properf,y! NOW $15•: $115 2 rm wile, On or nw-water •UL•I -AD MUtT ntelUDl ........,,_MW M.,_, ........ .,... ...... _...., Mont e Viii• School
A•u * EXPERT CARPET *PAINTING INT• EX!'. I lS THE TI.ME to uJlll'&de Mr cdid. Seery .mm. For low doWn paymt >-YOY• ..,,. .... ,., ......._ ..... ..._ • ., ""'"'"-""-
~T"IHO l'Oll II.LI -TlAOU OHL 't'I Will care lor your chlld be-ln1t•ll•tion & R•P•lr Avtfl. 1 •Qr $260. 2 •IY
fore &r alter achoQ,I, , ,Grad. l"':=;;jo"'b;,;l;:oo:;.,,,.U;;;·:;6*-59'11;:=. $350. lncl all materta.1 l : or trade up or down, Call parkiJW cent:rally k>cated. fftlm Owner
for details, So. eaiif lst Nat. Bk. Bldc. Call: 675"'575
WE SELL A HOME DJ E. 11th SO...t BUSINEU nc1
To Pl•ct Your Trfftr't lt1rldl1e Ad es 1 thru 4th. I am exper. preparation. $18. per rm +
EVERY JI MINUTES °'""' ,._ 642-1"" FINANCIAL PHONE 642-5671 mother w/nict yard le. Electrlcal 6640 paint. Local refs. C&ll Jack
healthy atmoepbere. Very ;;:.;;;;;.;.;.;.;.;:.;.._____ c89hl895;;.;c=c.°':.cc837_...,. ____ , Walker & Lee DESK sPAcE Trade M' Fl-_,
lvtlMts any stage ol completion
Realtor 222 Forest Avenue Opp1'!unltla '300 from $3995. Want late Cad.
2M3 Westclitt Dr. • Loguna .Beech • il.lac, Lincoln, camper or
.... ?TU DON'T MISS THISI mo'°' home. tl'IU809.
Open 'ti.I 9:00 PM -el-9t66 Wt'r. Josi1W 1, Ca1i1onUan. COMMERCIAL prop., free * OFFICE SUITE o.... b"""" !or Hawall, • cl<u. N"'t to s.i.n. eo.
Business Rental fiOM FOl' leaae 2600 Ml. ft. Idea.I like yntmlay. Ntw bu&toeu Yin&: $65,000 ~ity. For
OCEAN VIEW OFFICES It location, do'wnt.own Lqw\& lnteTat have lured t bl s bouse, unit.. or land. Beach. Crp!d, air • cond. owner to our '9th stale • his Owner ~ SHOPS • Nicest commttcial Janlt Util Prtv dual t.. building in San Clemente. ar. · n!I lollJ ii )'001' gain~ He mlllt BEAln'lFUL ENGLISH 6
All 11&.u front It &ide, 1150 rm lac. 494-!MBl •ll hll DRY CLEANING It R.'f Home near Puadena
sq. tt. shop ht El Camino TOP quality office spmce • ln Coh>--Operated Laundry now! tor N.B., CdM, C.M. Duplex
Plaza. Busy commerlcal CdM, avail at 45c ptt sq. $2),000 Wlll buy thil man-or units. Home value $29,MIO
center. 800 s. El Camino ft, Also Dental or MedlcaJ qtt -operated bul.lneu. clear. Call 548-8532.
Real 492-2979, 492-7lKH a.tier 1u1te. Elevator I janitor Don't let Ulla opportunity 10 "'-d M 1 •-• -• >l service. 285.\ E. Cout Hwy, byl ,, .. e •. W\......., a esa.
.,6H"'"'1'Lp'°LmG""'•R.!J2..<"E""N556's"au=A=R"'E-!ll Cd ._· M.,,.,,. 6~7>-=91~31=~=-MACNAB-IRVINE Equity 115,llX! • .Wan• R·I ... _ Realty Company or home Coital area trom
2 s!Ott• avail. !or ;""""'· DESK SPACE (7!4! 642-1235 Nwpl Beaoh lo Dana PL
loue In°"' 01 dly's busiftt !17875 Beech Blvd. Call 67>6809. shopPing oenten. App. 850
sq. ft. ea.
250 E, 17th St, Costa Meu.
Call Mr. Brarn (213) PL 1-270)
•STORE -$110. 828 \V. 19th
St., C~!. Avail ,June 1st
548.-1768
Stor. or Ofc. 600 sq ft
In C.M. * Owner, 646-2130
o _. h COIN LAUNDRIES INVESTMENT STOCK Huntington oeac Frlgldeira O,.Oted approx. $10 pu
6424321. Ext 276 From exi to $37,500 it.an. arowinc computer co.
BA y UOO BLDG. 9 Buena Park e Fullertoll • Trade for Real Estate or
Air-cond. Baytront-View Cypress e Westmimter • Boat. 675-1047 after 6 p.m.
Secretary-Xmix.Janitor Huntington Bea.ch e Garden HAVE '61 VW BUG
From 17().(.000 aq. ft. Grove!! e Orange e Santa Wll.J.. TRADE FOR
3700 Npt Blvd, NB 675-2464 ~ •• c.o.ta Mesa • Ana-VAN OR BUS.
NO. C.M. office, nice. Prof. CALL CHARLIE 525-7S33 e-642-2175 e
Air-cond, cpts, dps, $'19 ea. 3 BR 2" BA Tow•hou·• Office Rentel 6070 646-48.13; aft 5, f>l7-4757 CAMERA SHOP. P rl me • n " ""• ;::;.;=:...;.==---;...;.1 Newport Beach Center • N:B· Prl. patio, pool. elec,
OFFICE OR STORE Commercial 60l5 serves WeitcliU area. Fine kitchen, $32,IXXI. Take low
15 x 35' or 30 x 35' ---------1 bmlneu with heavy gross dow:i, late model car, T.D.
oH at pking &: utll turn LAKE Havuu City, Arit.ona We. Impossible to find bet· or ?! Owner 6'6-66M,
Newport & Bay C-enter, CM C-1 .commerclal 50x2!iO lot. ter location. Call 545-8424 4 Bedtm, 2 story, 2600 zq
2052 Newport Blvd 646-1252 Selling equity &. as5ume South Coe.st Real &state. ft home. 258 Sherwood St.,
E balance, '-fw;t selJI C>< NEED Uho d DESK SPAC ,.,,:MESA Verdes Exec. with • sma use. u-Reuonable. Call · Ext. Local and U.S. oon-plex, triplex or fotll'l>lex.
105 No. El Carpino R•el 714/526-2406 tracts and exp. Will Build Fannie Frlce Rltr 548-3209
San Clamtnf• PRIME OC'ANFRONT z:. Your Business for lf.i Have $50M F.C. C-2 frntg ~-..,...-~~~..,...-,..=,..1 4 furnished unib, :roned com-Nont'!al Salary. Lei'• take Yucca Vall. It S40M eq 20
Best Location in CdM merclal, 2Sxl25. S 6 9, 500 · advantage of 1 l tu at I ~. ac't Rancho, Calif. All/part
800 to 1400 sq. ft. Deluxe Off. Owner: 673-2259, 644-5972 549-1574 for Comm"l/tt1. prop, In o.
ice Space5. Avail lmmed. FOR Sale, 1:tore building. I STR IBUTORS & Cnty. Ownr/Bkr. 544-3666
PhOne Owner. 642-9050 686-698 W. 19th St. Bethel SALESMEN WANTED to eves.
MEO. Dental sui~s avail, Tower1: atta. 548-1768 Aat.~ .sell a revolutionary new 10,....,...c.:,;~...,.---,-1n--,H"o"Uywood--,
725 &: 1215 sq fl/35c sq, MARINA Jn Newport Beach Water Bed. Unlimited finan-Hilla, equity nl.IXX>. or
ft. 5911 Heil Ave HS. w/high polenia1 $315,000. e!al pxslbilities. Sh are Azusa with pool, equity
846-3221 KINGAARO RE MI 2-2222 Water Bed. $5,DOO, for house in so. Org,
{213) 438-7967 Cnty. Owner/brkr 8JS.3850. NE\VPORT Beach Deluxe
Offices. Alr-cond., heated,
wl priv ba. 2400 W. Coast Industrial Rlfttal 6090 GREAT food &: malt shop " * * * * * * .,,. operation for sa.1e to right *
in Acre, au:tom 3 Br, 2 Ba,
pool. bones or Wllta ok.
Reasonable. Call 64U2Z3 e MINOR e1ectrlcal work, CUS'I'Ofto! Painting • ''The :
be.fore 4 PAf_ DI hook-up, 646-7613 Exterior-Interior Speclalht"
before SAM~ 6 PM wkd)lt ResJdentlal • Commttclal.: \Vant; Income propttty, mo-Wll.l. babysit for working No job too laJp or too
amall Lie. Bond. lnl. Won't I .
be v.ndttb\d! 64&-3619 '
1 STORY S'-& ovema,,,j
$99. 2 story .t.ucco I: I
overhang $149. Acst. celllnB .
$13. per rm. t.J.in. S rrna. ,
646--0fin & 637-6119
tor home, P,wr boat or ! mother, exp'd, vie of W~r Fencl-6660
531·'1636 Owner/ Agt, & Edwvds H.B. 842-5969 • ...,
8 DLX. units, cloae to Holly. RElJA. Exper, My Home. REPWOOD A: dWn lillk
'A'OOd Park. All rented. Good rates, Re:ter. Sl.2.flO per fences, licensed contractor,
$38,000 Equity; for house, child. Margaret, MS.71'.ll. free est, tut service.
land or •--ru·. 5.1Hm · usw '" BABY slttlng, my home. ~======== Owner ~9 Nice pl~ area, hot 'lunches.
2 N id -Mi c ., .,,_~-Gordonl~ 6680 · ewer duplexes, s e by -·11 net, ·" · r'"'"'" ""• BEFORJ.; You pay over S200 ;
liide; 3 Br. 2 Ba. ea.: fplcs. BABYSI'ITING In my h:>me, * LANDSCAPING * to paint your house, check i
Nr. beach. Eljulty approx. fenced yd, bot meals. Call New La\Vns 171,ic sq fl. Free with Steve & BW. Colle~
$27.000. Trade for land or • 642-0829 d I Do all •• ~ 1 indust, Realt0r"673-4350. es ans. or ru• )'OUf· studentll. 548-4549
CHILO care. my home, days self. Rototilllng. Li e. con. EX-PAINTER, now schl
1956 Jttp Wagon, 4 \\'heel & eves. Newport Beach tractor, 12 yrs local exp. teacher will paint eves &:
drive, hubs, wide wheels, area. 673-7523 -""'=.:;1215~·===='"'"-wknda. Xlnt v•orkm&nship, V-11. Value $1400. Trade for c_::::::~~::::::::_~ AL'S GARDENING Free est. 646-4519, 540-0062 l.ransportatlon car, motor. I p t · --• G---· •-· M I I 6555 or ro esslOnd.I 11.1-u.;:nmg I WILL pao·-o a 3 bdrm I, cycle or ! 646-4643 uv.t a n enance & au 1 d · " ---sm an scap1ng house for $150. Incl trlm,I
3 units equity $9000, Ofc. BOAT maintenance complete services call 646-3629 after stucco, labor &: matuial. 'r toned lot., clear. VaJ. S40M. relinilhlng, 1enl. cleaning, 6 pm, Serving Newport, Gene 557·7543.
20 llCIM, ~lb' $35?.!. Trade palnllng, varnishing, In-CdM, Costa Mesa, Dover ---------
for boat/R.E. Darling Rlty, terior and exterior alM> i,;Sho;;::rec::::'·_:':c•":::tc=li=H=---,= PAIN'I'lNG-lnl. & Ext · 714/ 686-U6l. .. __ ks w k t ed Hlihest Quality. Lov.-est, """ . or iuaran c · NEW Lawns , re-seedlllg. Prices. Fully exp. Ins. John
Trade clear Jot w/beaul 897-8163 Complete lawn can. Clean 673-lla&
view of Catalina for units, ---up by job or month. Free :::.:..:=---=~-=
sm&.ll kit Costa Mesa or Brick, Metonry, estimates. For info call METICULOUS PAINT
liubmit. w. E, Lachenmyer etc 6560 897-2417 or 846--0932 EXP. DOCKS-houses, Int-ext. rutr. 646-3928 or 642-2'l.l7 _...;.. ________ IA::;Lc,,5;:.:.~Land.scap:::.,,:::::.:ln(=.~T=--re-e' I INS. ml. students. '75-5812
BUil.D, Remodel, re Pa Ir Removal, Yard RemOO,IUl&. INTER or Ext. PAINTING, 1 \VlLL TRADE JO irrigated Brick, block, concrete, ul h ,..,_ IMMED SERVICE Loc&IJ acres in Hemet w/3 rentals Ha tru · ~an.ups. · · t earpe.ntry, no Job too small. Repalr spmklrs, 673.1166 ref. FREE est. 548-1627 1
:=ge County income Lie. Contr 962-6945 ROTOTILL I NG 30 DAY Special Int & Ext. J
Call (714) 962-2561 New I awn a' landscaping. Free est. Loe refs, lic'd 1· ---------C -:.;;•.:;b;:ln"•:.:.lm--"•'-k-'ln_,g:_ __ mo_ Shrubs & trees removed. & ins. Call Chuck 64~ J-IAVE: '58 vw BUG -I WILL TRADE for Furniture & Antiques Free est. 548-1742 YOU Supply The Paint. 3
EARLY MODEL PANEL Refinishing I: Rtstorina. CLEAN-UP----sPEC=IALl=~ST~ Br. Liv RM &: Kitchen
OR VAN. * MS-0991 * JI.towing, edging, odd joba. PaJnted, $50. Call 557-aiJS.
Call Mike 962-3689 Reasonable. 54M955 PHONE The rest then phone
HAVE, sharp 18' c.oraa.ir Carpentering 6590 NEAT & reliable, 30 yrs lhe best. Custom Painting.
dble bottom F /G w/ '55 e\ec e,.;p. Complete yd serv, 968-7!!00. , I
M V ... _.. h d ty CARPENTRY Comml. 6424389 RETIRED Painter: 26 """' ere, UUJ""'• vy iJ MINOR REPAIRS. No Job & ho • N''" ITlr. Extnu. VaJ. UXIQ. Cab'-In E<p. J•panese landsca"", exper. Neal nes... on 1 Too Small. ...... sar-..... .. ... A.... Cali <'0 0~1 Want SeaftOned 2nd TD. cleanup, maintenance.~·=-=·~=':.·=':"~~"'-~-&lft I ,o t b • r cabinets. -cRo="""'::':_::64&li269:::.:::::~~--I So&UlTS, ~ no answer leave ~tack 842-8442 PAINTING -Ext-Int. 18 yrs.
Lbt It here -In~ me at M&-2372.. IL 0 . JAPANESE Gardening exper, Ins. Lie. Free est.
What do you have to trade'! AndeTlon Se Nice. Neat work. Cleanup Accoult. Ceilings. 5"18-5325.
Coonty'• ~ read Incl-QUALITY Woodcni.ft, sml =';c•:_c-;malc:;"::_':_,· =""'::.::""'=-,__= PAPER ltANGING 1na poll:-aM make I deal. gen'I constr. It carpentry. nM'S Gardening &: lawn 20 YI'I op. Free estimate.
* * * 11•ree consultation & quote. maintenance. Res. & com-Call Keith anytime, 642-2509
CaL. Ki!:n 64S-00ff, 54M235 mercial tr 540-4831 * PAPERHANGING Hwy. party. UCI Campus. Good
H.B. Delwce otfices, w/w New 3800 sq ft. $333 l: bu1ineu now -fantastic ANNOUNCEMENTS
-------------------CA:'.:'.RP~ENTR,;;;~Y;:.C.;;:cb~..,c..,:: ... ::;Roo:=m:'.l-'J:;;O,;H;,N;cSO~N:.,,,;:S.::G"'A"R"D'°'E"'N"'I"'N°'G 6 PAINTING. * 968-2425
Nowport Beaob 642-gn>Wlh. l5llXI dn. Cootact ond NOTICES crpt!., AIC, $90 mo, 19322 .......
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ond NOTICES ,.o.;;"----
Add., Patios. Any li:ie job, Yard care. Oean-ups, Prun-
Mlke 673-1166 &: 646-2576. ing, plantlng, 962·2035 Plast1rlng: Patch, Beach Blvd. !J62.6631. 1900 SQ r ' ,/Dr muufac-Dan. 833-2470
---------1 turlng, all power. Laguna BEER &: Wine Bar for sale, Found ( F~r::ff=..:Ad=•::.> _:6400:..::: I ,P ... •:c'.:,'°"="c.l•:._ ___ 640_5 6730
Ropair 6880
NO matter what tt 18, you Beach. 494-4447 3 8 3 4 2 SI e ! r a H w Y , MALE Daigy type friendly Single-Widowed-Divorced
can sell It with a DAJLY Lots 6100 Palmdale. (805) 947-9179 abagcy doi. Adams & * MEN *
CLASSIFIED'!' Someone will I :::;.::._ _____ .:.;..;,: ,--MagnoUa in fronl of Don E . I kl I '"-
be looking for It Dial 642-MESA Verde lot on golf Investment Jose Restaurant SUnday. veryone s 00 ng or u..,
A-1 CARPENTRY
Small Job Speclali1t
Call Gordon 847-6745
REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS
* CABINETS. Any 11ltl': job
25 Ynl eXper. 5411-6713
Hau ling
YARD/ Car. Cleanup .
Remove lree!, ivy, trash.
Grade, backh(l(', 962-8745
MOVING, garage clean-up &:
lite hauling. Reasonable.
Free estimates. 645-1602.
LITE Hauling & garage
clean-up. Mon thru Sat.
Free estimate 548-5031
HAULING &: Clean-up.
Trees removed. Reasonable.
Free estimate. 548-1742 ·
• PATCH PLASTERING I :
All types. Free estimates !
Call 54Q-0825 •
5678 """l'le with view. 132,500. Opportunities 6310 847-7588 or 833-3600 days. right one, We have a way . "'".. J.:.,. ao call us &: begin to live!
I S Y OUR AD IN
Cl..ASSIFIED! Someone will
be looking for it. Dial 642-
Need ca.ah, must sell before e HORSE LOVERS e FOUND on Newport Blvd. 547-6668
July. 8, ~· W~ carefu~ Invest now in beauilful near the Pier, black a: while 24 hi', recording
cona1der I 0 ers. comm'l stable to be built in male Collie ('!') (1) *FULLY LICENSED*
GEN. repair, add., cab.
Formica, paneling, marUte.
Anythl,.f Dick, 673.-4459.
5678 (TI4) e:u.-9393 e.xt 188 or Santa Ana Hts Use permit 637·5807. Renowned Hindu Spiritualist.
CLASSIFIED'!' Someone will 1714) 54$.729S. allows 24 box. stalls. bull FOUND: Young I Ir I' 1 Advice on all matters. --
be lookin&: for it. Dial 642-OCEANFRONT LOT pen, riding arena & specta· gluses. brown frame, Vic: LoVI!, Marriage, Busineu CONCRETE, all t;n>es. FrH
Cement. Concrete 6600
5678 San Clemente, Calif. tor patio. 673-2259 on beach tn Balboa near Readings given 7 days a estimate. Sawtna:, bttaklng, ,-========'I Superb v1ew, 60 x 120' lev. 12th St. 673-&:156 week. 9AM-9PM 312 N. El Muling & 1klploa.dlng.
I corn. lot Crillobal Esplanade Money to Loan 6120 KEYS found on beM"h vie. Camino Real, San Service &: quality. 548-8668
for sale by owner. $29,500. Island &. Balboa. Inquire Oemente. 492.9136, 49Z-0078 Bob
m.5848 eves. 1st TD Loan at counter, Dally Pilot, 22ll Dear TOMMY W.W., C_E_ME_NT--w-.,-.-,~w-.u..-~&
3 LOTS, 25X100 each plus Balboa, N.B. Wherever you are patioa. whl.tevu you need
15Xl5 euement. ~12,000. Lowe:st Interest Available YOUNG Welmaraner. Vic. HAPPY' BlRTIIDAY! ln concrete the prlce la
HAULING $10 A LOAD
Clean up. Tree Serv_ Gen.
Pruning &16-2528, 543-8043
Housecleaning 6735
Low down. Panoramic view 2 d TD Loan Santa Ana" 22nd St. c .r.1. LOTS of Love, MOM right! CaJIBob642-9187aft5. of Laguna'11 Bluebird C&n-n r:Ao u.w>,, \VANT A Sunny & brtiht
1213) 6575315 .....,.._,.,. * CONCRETE \Vork, home? Call the DUTCH yon. -· 1--------· 1 C1metery Lots 6418 p llos / d Terms butd Oii equity. 640l Licensed. a rvwys, ~1AINTENANCE MAN for
Move on lot60Xl.25 642•2171 54s.o611 Lost 3 CEMETERY LOTS, etc. Phillips Cemtnt. your windows, floors & Santa Ana He!J'ht11 ~
Pyramid Exchangon 67>8800 Serving HArbor area 21 yra. LOST: Labrador. b I a ck, Westmln!!ler Memo r I a I ------~--ear p e I c I ea n in I . u::,:;;;;;;~:==:==:;.::==.1 S•ttl1r Mortgage Co. male, anawen to "Bolls'". Park. All or separate CONCRETE work all types. SPECIALIZES JN ALL
,17• :==3'6=E=. :::ll=th=S""=='= J, recov. lrom illness &: 847·2403. Sawing, breakif1i', hauling, KINDS OF FLCORS. No Citrus Groves ~ r---------3 II;-:;;;;;,;;~~~;;=.:;:;;;;.! needs contlant medical at-12 PLC1I'S, Pacific View Sk!ploadlng; Lie. Service & crew. 537-1508 aft. .
Mortgages, ten. Please 'call 646-6827 ~1emorla! Park, 1 or all. _Qu~al_;~ty-·~"-"-_1_01_0 __ ~ BAY & Beach Janitorial
COLUSA COUNTY Trust DHds 6345 Reward! $250 ea. Inc l uding e.n-MQRE Concttte patio for Carpels. \11indows, floors,
4200 Acres Of Prime Grain A:,1 _.;.:.:::;:_::.;;;o;:.:.. __ ;.:..;" -'""','-'-~~-..,..-,.-,-, c-1 d 1 54'°'~ ''" monoy. Artistic 11elllng, etc. Res & Co mm c' I . G _ _, __ Land. Ap-. 2500 LOST -Small up, fem. be ge owmen care. ~ •.,_.'6 ,,.v_ Exchan&e )'OtJt' Trust I d k b 1 · , ____ c.__c____ Lio., call Max at 644-0687. &16-l40l
acres can be fanned. Main Dt:ed for cuh today. w r nmtl 1P1 • 3 Pwrs, tfarbor Rest .:.;~~~====~
ho"._ & help ho,,,.,, Good Broadway-S.A.-Tus n atta. Memorial Park, $185 ea. in-CEMENT WORK. no jOb too JOE'S CLEAN SERV. .,... Call T. D. Center, Inc. llalJ y k' /-I M m bi ""-·-'C'.--.. ~t .. ~ .,._ •-working corral.s, xln't fenc-s~• •••1 or ie e. ea cl ding endowment care . Small, reftlOna e. r.......: We do "'"""l''-""'<o • '""""· .,.
Ing. Ranch la fenced into 12 ,._ very much to little atri. 545-5359 E1tim. H. Stufllcll: 548-8615 Com. Free Eat. 549-3126
different pasture:• I ea. po. Mo.,.y Wanted . 6350 646-6ZBTW --Q-,ho-l.,.--.,,-m-,-,.,,,--.. -1-1. DECORATIVE CONCREI'E WINDOW WASHING
ture has good water supply. -LOST; Beige color poodle, Pacific View Memo r I 1 l ORIVES-WALKS-PAnO COMMERCIAL HOME
This ranch will eull.y run INTERIOR designer needs Vlc. Adama ~ Magnolia, Park. Mu~t Sell! Make of-642-8514 Call Pete -492-1207
500 head of cows. Coluaa $5,000 to $10,000 loan to e.x-H.B. No collar. Reward.I fer! 549-0)74 HOUSECLEANING
County is one of the b8t p&nd furniture in\·entory. 962-5Z4 6-M-Aro--N-IC_p_io_~-.-p-,-d-fic Contractors 6620 Exp, Reas, Rd. 638-2354 ge~ farming counties in Secure lnvestnMnt. Xlnt Small beige poodle, very Vkw Me:morial Park, S250 ______ .,_ __
Cahf. &: Real property taxes return. 962-6i31 •ham'. Answers to "Coco ... ea. lncldlng endowment ~°!':sl~~~~~.s. F~~
are low because of e.ffldent PRIVATE party wants to vk. Newport Heights, 968-care. $6-5359 rooms, single or 2 story.
local gove:rnlng, Priced at borrow $3500 u second trust 3079. All . 6 646-2785 1.==::,;;::;:;====d ""·"-·tes, plans, J11unut &t = i:i~.:~n~ =~ deed. 646-4563 Jj() Reward ror recovery !!:!!!ol ____ ....;64;.;.:.;35 fin:c7ng. Call 847-i5'1i.
Ironing 6755
•
6890 i 1
' PLUMBING, alterations iii
repairs. Special on 'vater
htl'll & cilspoaals &16-1286
anytime.
Water heatcrs-dispo!ers
Gen. repairs $7 .50 pe.r
hr. 642-2r~
PLUMBING REPAJR
No job too small
• 642-3128 •
R1mode llng &
R1pai r ____ 6_94_0
* lF you need remodeling,
painting. or repairs. Call
Dick &12-1797
Roof;nL ___ 6:.:9::c50
GUTTERS & Downspouts
Installed Reasonable San
Clemente 714 : 492-3706
. ,,
6960 :
e Dreasmaking-Alterations
Detlgned to "Ult you.
Call Jo * 64&-6446
6974
* Verne. The Tile a.Jan •
Cust. work. Install &. repairs .
No Job too small. Plaster
paUo, Leaking 1bowu
repair.
847-1957 /846-0Zlli
Trea S.rvlc• 6980
Eckhoff ANNOUNCEMENTS Heathkit Am P • Ricken-LTVE tn s. Laguna. Need Additions * Remodelin&
IRONING Jn my home, tl
Irr. Dressmalc1ng & altera-
tions. 545-7641 ========= 'lREE SERVICE All type1 ~Ins. J'rtre E9tlmate1 ; Eckhoff & Assoc •• Inc. and NOTICES b:icker guitar. No queatlonl. ride to Daily Pilot. 3.10 W. Fred H. Gerw:ldt, Lie.
1818 \V. Qiapman Ave. Cllll m.7cL Bay St. Carta Mesa. Will 6'73--604.i tr 549-2170
Orange, Ca.IJf. Found (Free Adi) 6400 REWARD for relurn or Witt. pay. 494--5739
Janitorial 6790
.. ~!
f i
..
'
Rood CIH 1oflcotlon1
For Exptt1
Auistance
6500-6900
In tho
DAILY PILOT
I
541-26n, Eve9·wkndi! 63.1-6974 GE~MAN Short hatred ~1:nd~~!!n!:c~w!:~ SERVICE DIRECTORY Carf!t Cle•nlng 6625
------Pointer found S.i.nta Ana &42-TI7S CARPETS
Cl.EAR Vu Maintenance. We TREES, Hedges, trim, cut,
do everything! Specializing 1tump1, l't'lmoved, hauled. 30
Ir 11pt cleanup. Free est. 24 yn up. Full)' ins. 642-4030
hr scrv. &f&.269a Acr i ag! •200 Hghts district. s P~f. May Accountlnp 6500 Steam Cle.a,ned
13. Yo1111g· male, med . siu. LOST: Small lf'llY/brown FULL ,..~---bookkee"'"" For F'" Elltimales A Jnto 1---------40 ACRES Northem Calif. No lie. (213) 264-7430 bus. female mixed Schnauzer ............. ..-
Wooded mountain land. All days, or en•) 540-9454 ewa type q.·Spayed, flea co!· rftds part lime work.. .CJarKart L•n4lcaplng 6810
year trout atre:am. Nr. Nat~l an 6. tar. Name Mitzi &42-MlO 962-0527 e 642-4055 e CZYKOSKl'S Cwitnm, Uphot.
fottst $21Xl per acre. ll5% FOUND black• while male REWARD: SAMOYED HOME A API' Cleanlnc
Mwn discount for cue. Al.o kltt 3 old IWHITE HUSKY) under ~s]!!l~'---...:6550 BY DIAMOND
l• 3/3 N ad mo ntaln · en. approx. mog · 0 ev ~ u vie of Indiant A Pete.nen Vet~ Care PLEASE CALL UC'D Babyailt,r, vie \Vllson 1S7 21st St., · Costa Men
lop. Scenic view. Sprtrw School He ~ 492-7373 &: Pomona, CM. Fenced · IWS-l3lf Free eat. nearby. Good hunting coun-' · · .......
try. Road to property $1500. FOUND Ladles Watch, park-LOST: Male Sl1mete blue· ~·u· Hot meals. 6'5-0617
&a0-3213 aft S:Jl Inc lot Westcliff Plu&, M&¥ point cat, Vic: Euclid &: CltltD Catt, my home,
$9tS FULL PRICE 12. 646-8"38 ~a~1r~aetaal'' Monday thru Friday,
pi doWn, P> per month, 2ll BLACK rdblt Vie. o! Udo Laguna Niguel. 4!JS.-0829
1en with trttt C!OUllty road Sanda, LOST: Whitt fem. cat. blue CHtU> or Want care tn tn)' a: utllltl"· No: Calif. Xlnl 548-9538 eyes. Vk. Back 81,y, t/21. lovely new home, 23rd St.
hunting .l fillhtng. 644-4185 FOUND Whitt Dove, HArbot 5*-210ll, 6'~1834 A: Santa Ana. C.M. M&-5337
CABIN & 5 ACRES Vlfw HWs, CdM. 644-2SU p~-~els '405 CHn.o cani & ironing, my Only $-(995 WllAw Law Down e~es. __ horn~ vie. PlacenUa A: l!ltb
Cerpet Cle•nln9 6625
;rN) ~ ~· '~
CARP ET
STEAM CLEAN ED
IDc SO. FT.
Alto c:1u·~t lnat.allatton
SP RINKLER repairs,
cleanup, haW!nc. I ~
feuional land•c a.Plng .
Reuon. &42--0S7U 1
LICENSED landscape con-
tractor. Complete aervlce.
968-1928 or &f&..8347
El.U'Optan Craftsmanship
1009' Un! 642-1454
1831 Newport Blvd., C.M.
J & J UPHOLSTE RY
Jntel1'!ty w I I h American
know • how. &12-5876 or
646-W.
--------IWoldlng 6995
Moving & Storogo ~ ORANGE ·=-----
LOCAL I kmg d!at. rnovtni. WEW!NG SERVICE
Reas. storap, Free Ett. General wt:lding, tr a I I er
&11...0.01, O.K. Van &: hltch@s, brake $e:rv\ce, A
Stora.a-. wiriile. Custom motorcycle
.l t.h;y Monthly ~nts, DOG, small. blult A white ALCOHOLlCS Anonymous Sta. CM. 64&--&542
Breck Nott Rl':alt)'. 642-9044. femkle, mixed btted, bu Pbonll Ml-7217 or write to LOVING Catt l'OQr d\Udren
5 ACRES, tGJ'ra, good termi. fil':a collar. St&-14!17 P.O. Box 1223 Coe:ta Mesa. my home. H.B. Dey &/or
RiJhl lttxt to we.II devtlo~ SMALL mother tigtr cat, w/ SALES-Slim Gym dt1l~rs. nlle. By hr-day-wk. 96Pr$746
rommunlb'. Evc:1. &44-4870 nea collar, vie Balboa Pen· Pt or 0 time. $300-Sa'OO. Ult. QUICKER YOU SEJJ..
8kr, lnaula. 673--1983 Call Kay Ltt, MCl--0497 TIIE QUICKER YOU CALL,
646-5971 , Pl.ANNING to D'IO\l'&T Yoa.11 R=EM=ARC=~ .. ~,..~.,.-•. ~3~roo-m""s 1 find an amu!nr number of
$21.50. Fllll ruaran. <hdlt home1 In toda.y'1 Cla.ul.n..-d
6 car tn.Uen. Gu. eleetrlo
and btll-an:. After boun
and &m. by •PPO!nl. 1811
FuUerton A'·e., Colta. Mesa.
548--7173 card• OK. 847-6688, 646-1234 Acl~. Check !hem now.
l ' ' • . •
I
I
I
I
U _DAllY l'JLOT F~ MlY 15 1970
JC)il i IMl'LO'iMENf JOiS & iMJii:OYiiliNT ':ioif & EMPLOYMliNT JOIS & IMPLOYMINT JOIS & EMPLOYMENT JOI S & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOIS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
1 ..... --w-.-.. ~, Men 1111 ,, ..
E>.por: Sl<IPl'ER • ..... •
~ w-. 7100 11111 ~Wern. 7100
Malntenanct, on all b1W
or yachL NEED work.
mot<!
HOUSEMAN, Challl, E9ert,
Sec, It cook, Exe ~f'I.
Ace-42,. Live out, ~
abilities
aoUmiteb
a9e~.cty
--B.ABYSJTI'ER w a n t e d , eou,.. Ptrk Scbooi dl<lrict,
l ~· wk. 5.57-11(1. * IAR BOY*
EXPERIENCED
* APPLY *
----Job. Mii'"~ Wom. 7100 Joba..-..Men, Wom. 7100 Jobs Men, Wom. 7100 Jol>t Mon, Wom. 7100 Job>-Men, Wom. 7100 Job-"lon, Worn. 7100
J.W. Robinson
HAS lMMEDlATE
OPENING FOR A
--llm<l'1lS Emp!Y' Pf,Y5 1 .. MECHANICAL dntltlowt, 2 PROOF MACHINE e SALESMAN e -TELLER~
Ceoe:re Allt.1:1 Byland ~ocy 2 Yl"9 college '-2 Yl'I exp, COMPUTER CLERK Exper b~lnCM machlne1 Attraet1v~ opcninas arc a.,..U.
106·8 & l.Gth, S.A. 547-0395 wU1 a.ctept full or part Umt. Puillioo 11vallrtble 11 * M8-4ti33 • ab.le for experienced lellt.)v
'1·~---1 Jt1> Wonted, j Wornwii···
TRISH HOPKINS
7020 '81 E. 17th., SI.lite SM CM. Reuben E. Lee
"l E. COAST Jf\VY,
NEWPORT BEACl-1
* SAWMAN * Men's ClothillCJ
Hou.tkrpper p/time, Jfi h1'11 Call Del al 548-6643 Security Pacific Nat'I. B..Vlk, SALES\VOi\1AN full timr 2:j lu our l'V'W Jfuntln&lon
pu wk, SJ.SO hr. Vic. Brook-MEDICAL Secy-Ftont Of. So. t..aruna branch. Apply yeara or ovi:r. Cily Bil dn:ss: lkach and COsll ri.1csa off.
hurit .t Adami, H.B. 968-8129 tict, aome back. knowledge at 30812 S. Coa.•t tlwy., South ahop. l10081,\ f.l a g n ol 1 a k-e11 of Downey Savi~ I:
after 6, of aU types of med, .fDrms. Laguna. $22'24 }'oont.aln Valley. Ca.ti !Or Loan AIWlc • .lo~or full partic.
HOUSEWtVES Eam Money! A11.>n, Tun, Thurs. Fri. 9:30-Equal oppty. employer M/F appo intment onJy. 968-3&8 ul:u1. eo.U Penionoel (2JJ)
Have F\ln wl'I'ri-OM!m u. 6:30. $2.75 hr. Fuhion 111. PROOF Machlne Operator, SALES • Srrvice Est.ab 869-05l2.
quid Embroldery &G-670 Send resume to Daily Pilot A: teller p/tlmc. Mondaly Fullu Bnuh f'OUtc, $!25 wk TEL EPllONE Glrl.s-"1.-Utk
•
642-14711
AC"ltVE Pnctical
Pleuant, cape.bl.e.
Nune. I !!~"'!'""'~~"'!'""'!I
"'" Ancient Mariner ear. No amokt or
.Alan exptrlenct'CI
Ouitltian Science ......,.
d11nk.
with
C'IUll'!S.
PRACTICAL Nunie wiAhl's
bed patient or elderly. Well
exp'd. Good rds. M9--2738
or m-347!
NURSE • COt.tPAi~ION
GOOD COOK -AIDES • tor convalescence,
eldmy care or family care.
Homemakers. 547~1
DENTAL HYGIENIST
Avail M~ 11-26. 540.1481
Jobs Men, Wom. 7100
A/P, A/R Secy $425 +
l to 2 yrs constr. exp, Posl
Invoice•, procesa payables.
10 key adder. Type 50 wpm.
Newport Personnel
Agency
833 Dowr Drive
NB. &42-38'/tl
,
-NEEDS -e DAY•
DISHWASHER
APPLY IN PERSON
2607 W. COAST HWY.
NE\VPORT BEACH
BABYSITJ'ER. lite house
f<eeping, J days wkly, 1 in-
fant, own trans. 64Z-63fi6
evn & wknds.
BABY SITI'ER needed for 2
children, 6 days wk. Call
after J pm. 642-9163
BABYSIT my home 6 am-2
pm 5 du/wk, mature
Chrl5tian ScientisL .f94-.3416
BUSlESI' madletp1ace in
town. Tht DAU.Y PILOT
Cassifled section. S a • e
money. time Ii: dfort. Look
Now!
No Matter What It Is
•
SELL IT
WITH 'A '
DAILY
PILOT
WANT
AD!
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678
BEAUTICIAN. tu 11 or
p/time Guaranteed 00'/t,
paid vacatlon, Manlcurist
needed. AppJ.y in person
International Beauty Salon,
1695 Irvine Ave., C.M. * BEAUTICIAN, for busy,
popular priced C.M. salon.
Paid vac. No clientt>le
req'd. New grad welcome.
Call the Manager. 548-9919
BEAUTY 0(¥!rator, booth
apace for rent, C d M ,
Reasonable. 673--1846, eve
54>-4185
BUFFUM'S
NEWPORT
Now Interviewing
appl,lcen1s for * LADIES SHOE
SALES*
APPLY IN PERSON
2to4PM
NO. 1 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
Xlnt. Company lknt.filil
APPLY IN PERSON
J"uhk>n :Uland, N.B.
F...qua.I opportunity employer
Olshw•shers *** EXPERIENCED
No Phone Calla
Apply In Peraon
SURF & SIRLOIN
I 5930 Pacific Cout Hwy,
NewpoM Beach
Draftsman
~Unimum 2 years eXJ>eri·
encf! In layout & taping
ot art work for printed
-. circuit boards.
Coll Personnel Dept.
(714) 49+940 I
for oppointment
HCYI'EL ~ male. Box At-29. .t Fticl.t,yt. E¥per pre.I, but guarantee 10 atut. ~745 fron1 your home. Ca 1 l
Exp'd NCR-4200 nee .. * MOTEL A'lA.lO • Full not neceu. A.pp.I)' Bank ot Mr. Kay, 12131 33""6241.
NEWPORTER INN lTI4) tlmo. Apply 23"/G Newpon America 18691 ~St, H.B SfART UtfMEDIATELY TrainH El•ctro T.ch,
&K-1700 Blvd. C.M. 548-9755 RECEPTIONIST SALESMAN \YANTED .J\lllitary or equivalent tmec
J10TE1. Reservation Clerk· MO'MIER'S helper, n1ature Attractive, well groomed Own YoUr o11:n bml.ocsir, S2.i0 i11 t•ll'Ctronics. Will have 10
ft>maJe. E."(p'd .. fast typi&t. pt time, 2 hl'I, ~day wk. w/gtneral bookkeeping to get •tarted. s flgurt' ln-1iass tcsls. SJ, h1· up .
Good pay, Newport.er Inn NB ut'a. 646-U34 all 7, background. Some typing. comt f)Cl85ible wlth !heR APEX
(TI4J 644-1100 NEED Exptt. window Work for land development products. Dlreet sales &: ~I Employn\cnt Agen<'.Y
INTERIOR cleane-r A housecleaner company in lovely sur-up dealers. Training pn;. 1873 Harbor Blvd.
DESIGNER PleaM call btwn 4&7 only rooDdllvs. S alary tom· vided. Wr!re B.\\1 .8 . (1, block so. of 19tbJ' * 96Ui63l * c-=:.c.c;;::.~------menaurate W/t>xptt. lnterprlses, 1853 Port Mar. 548-M26
NIGHT CUSTO Call 5-16-8051 gate, N.B. \\'ArTRESSES Exp'd, only * LADIES* 18--60. show DIAN • ,:-.,.c_~~----SARAH COVENTRY Spring OR SUBSTITUTE Savings & l..owl ~1. & pt. ti.rne avail. a.ny
• all ""'" ;ewe l,y. PAINTER REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT ""'·App'" ''""'o I am-4
Absolutely no lnvest'mt. We Applications now being ac· TRAINEE pm, 3050 E. Coast !iv.')'.
train. 531-8631 or 962-5988 cepted. Appl)': Wes::ntinster SALESMAN WANT Dynamic Sa.vinp and 1..oan Corona de! Mar. sec Mrs.
INSURANCE School District, 14121 Cedar. ED Ailsociation i.11 seeking coJ. Utter
UNDERWRITER wood, Wl'Slminster, Calif. legc graduates for their * • \VAITRESS 7 AM to
Fire &: Casualty only. Must NURSERY HELPER. male. \Ve cover lrom the ocean to management training pro-3:30 p,\1 , APPLY: 10 A~l
the mountains with our ou. gram. ro 11 A~t. Jamaica Inn be good typillt. BU.lliness In. 6 day wk. Work with plants This position oUers chal· t.lotor J-lotel. 2101 E. Coast
(N n-. dellwry s.t•-ope Call Ices. We are a last grounna irurance Agency r. v•t:. -· ... ,,. n. -~ ... lenging and rewarding ca. H"''Y· Cdt.1.
Co, airport) Call: 540-54~. bet. 8 am & 5 pm n4: oompany that needa help. U lftr to the right pel"SOn. '"AITRESSES 'd A 1 8J0..5653. LAGUNA lllLLS you '>'1ould like to make $$$ Call _ ., • exp · PP y,
NURSERY, El Toro, Calif. 1262 Palisades Rd., S.A, TELONIC .last, please call ?\1t. Wells Mr. Hensley 12131 861-5TI3 * TI-IE DERBY *
I d • ITT JABSCO ~eG'i's'rE RED NURSE at 545-330!. Secretary to $600 -~w~E~L~D~E~R~$"'$02=.6"'7-
Keypunch
n UStrteS I . ExciUng opty, "l'ou will \\'Ork Fee Nego
lagune Beach' Expandl~c~r~·~engirlg RETIRED MAN NEEDED in Iov1et.y new ofc, i
1
n Irvine \\loman must have at lea.st 2
. Eqoa! opportunity employer KEYPUNCH opportunities, continuing ed· 3% days ea. wk. as p/time 11.1-ca or a \\..'Ondcr u1 bo:;s, yrs exp, Xlnt chance for arl. ucation prograri\. Contact HOST &. MANAGER af The co. is estbl'd & stable, vancement. Older woman * DRIVERS * 1 So Coast deluxe .self service laundry. Your1 will be a pos, w/in. OK. Fee & Free Jobs. No EYB9ftence OPERATOR ::;;eH~: 31872 ~ ICrpted-Color T V-Etc,) finite variety & interest. JASON BEST -r-~· Hwy, So. Laguna (TI4) 499-Must be sober, r elia,. Send resume or call Miss Employinent Agt>ncy Necessary! l3ll Ext. 356 likeable, have exper io Ellzabe!h, 5::1""7.fil2'l Abigail 2207 So. ~lain, Santa Ana ~fast have clean C!a11lornla 18~1 alpha and nuineri-meeting publle, live close Abbot Pel"!Onnel Agency, 230 9"2&1 \\', K.atella, An11.heim drlvinl reeord, .A:--•y cal. Verify~~ ,.me,... ** NURSES AIDES **-lo store. Very, very modest W. \Varner, Suite 21l, Santa 5'16-5-liO or 821.1220 !'l"' cuou Experienced. 7-3 PM I See bef Ana ..... ~Y!_~.~..: ~ YEL186LOE.Wl6CthABSl. CO. lated clerical dut ies. * 34!}.3061 * sa. ary. store ore ~'-'·====.----WE NEED YOU .,._,_, . .....,..._ ..,.-call ing . Mesa North Shop-* SECRETARY
h' Costa M~ GOOD BENEITl'S ANO OLDER worn.an urgently ping Center, (Baker at CALIF. CASTING CO.
Lquna Bea.eh, So. I...aium l-~E~lre-c-tr-o~T~e-c7h-n7lc-iro-n-,-I WORKING CONDITIONS l'IC!eded for child'.s care this Fa!rview. C.l\1.) Call Belly Shorthand SO, ly~ SO e!C'C· Looking for every day people
DAILY Pil.OI' su1n mer while mother Bnscoe, all 5 Pl\1 , 644-1307 hie. ?.1i111mun1 11vo yi-s. ex· like you! .For 'f.V. Commer.
642-4371 Comp,uter tyi peht Co. T0
1P "'Alig. Equal Opportunity works. 548-839:> perlent-e. cials & film ~wk. Receive
ea or r g peop e. ORDER CLERK REUBEN E. LEE 1 t t Boys 10 & Up Employ« "'" """'" cs , no •'P nee. around bkgrd. S3.7S hr up. N COLLINS RADIO N' h I I To sell candy APEX eeded to process orders and ol a sc oo, no ee.
your own area Employment Agency 1485 DALE WAY perform customer servi(.'t'. NO\V INTERVIEWING 19700 Jamboree Rd. $50 to $125 PER DAY
644-7159, 6-9 p~t & wlmdll 1873 Harbor Blvd. COSTA fttESA , CAI..ll~. 92626 Speed &: accuracy in routine l'ft:-wp>rt Beach U acccptC'd. Fo:· 11ppt phone
CAR WASH HELP (~i block So. of 19th)' (71 4) ~5-8251 mathematics, type 40, use 10 week end, night Equal opportunity employer fil<I) 835-8282
548-3426 key. Min. 2 yrs olliee exper, BUSBOYS SEC U R IT Y G u ARD s W0!\1AN for cooking & llte Penn. Poaition. Many open-~ req'd. Interviewing 9-ll AM Ne"''JlOrl area. Call 6l3-36ro housekeeping, \l'ttkends: at 1ngs· 3 Locations Orange Co. Eam $59-$400 Wk. & Z-4 PM. or 637-3070 ]J)..5 PZ..f. beach, live in Fri to Mon.
2950 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Selling l to 8 hrs a day. Local Offic• Jobs AVERY PRODUCTS DISHWASHERS •SERVICE STATlON ATT. Write Daily Pilot Box M·30.
CASHIER· Female. for New Men-Women 18 & up. 548--3271 No Cherge 1009/e Free Consumer Division Shoe Store San Clemente, 2620 So. Susan, Santa Ana -Sales .. Full & part ti1nc ;;, \\I0:\1EN wanted for part.
u 4 s. El Camino Real EXPERIENCED · Camper Please call for appt. <Near }!arbor & Warner) * APPLY * position for responsible, 11n1c \1•ork, car neixl,..d.
help required. MAJOR-Contact Pen;(Jnnel: 54~20 1:;1 E. COAST HWY. neat' appearing man. Top * 5-14-7814, 547-3428 *. Casting Agent wAYs. 869 w.18th st.. c.M. i:'~~ncy·eos~~~ PART TIME NE\VPORT sEAcu :~~.bo~~~1a~n:,~'~ WIGS
As NG Co FACTORY HELP • Male. INTER\TJEWING ROO boa-' 1 lion . \Vill re-open May Sth. Sales & Styfing CALIF. C Tl • will train, full c om p · 1:-'.'.'-.,,~-~-,,.-~fii')"'_'.'.'_.,,~-'.'.'-,;-~~-,,.-~IPle""an!. ""~ tt'm• ···o"·, l\t & •u Pus sm I" · ll "-...... t""' " '" ~-• f · vnte or ca •'-<IY Carey, We are casting directors for benefits, 32972 Calle Perlec-* Af.AlNT NANCE MAN * no selling, No experience -..,uy r"i·"''o00m•n kin ~x· 494-5857. 60-l S. Coast H'>')'. Exc1hn~ beauly center in
many Independent industrial ='=o~, =S=.J=.C=·~~~~-~ Nttrled al once. Exp'd. $100. necessary. Choo~ 0 .,11 n c angt' or Ile use eeprng Laguna Beach, Calif. Fashion 15111.nd ol fe1"S an op-
& documentary film produe. f1BERGLASS Molders, Iully 6 AM-2PM, Sun oU. Plew:_ hours. Telephone And duties in lovely N.B. home . portu1111y for ·a \\'ig expert
en. Need immtdiately gala tikil.led, minimum 2 yrs ex· apply LONE RA NC ER personal interviewing for 2 school age children. Box SERVICE Station Attendant. to style, sell and demon.
18-35 for notMtrtion ;ioJ>s. $75 per. in sailboat production. RE s TA u R ANT , 11.,0 t h 1 r 1 y . year-old l!IUl'\'ey Ml5J. Daily Pilot Full time, <'Vf' shift. Over strate a complett" selection
to $125 per day. We aft not Work with m i n lm um Bea.ch Blvd., Huntington research company. $2.00 per 2 >'" exper. Over 23, ocat of quality hair pieces.
a school or agent llUpervtsion. Apply; .1919 Beach hour, plus expe.nses. Equal See Betty Bn;ce at in appearance. Apply 2:>90 Excellent &alary slructutt.
FREE TV SCREEN rt ·1 1 m l~ Newporl Blvrl, C.i\1.. Unli111i !l'd inc,~nlivc pro. Placentia, Costa Mesa. Ph: MALE SINGER: Torn Jone!i OPPo uni Y emp oyer. Write TEST 646-4737 type voice for recording. Box M-596 Dally Pilot. ; A A X C SERVIC E'. slation ~ttendanL<; gran1 and a fascinating tu.
NO CHARGE 'IU YOU Browning.Newport Boats Call 545-4270 a.;.,;;., e part t11nC', n 1 re s & ture in this fun environment
EVER! PBX OPERATOR. Answer-Agency for Career Girls weekends, ~ood wage + ii you can meet the exacting
Wear. client paid. Ph. for FLORAL Designer, exper. MAN lo assist Mgr., local ing servtce exper. prel'd. 410 W. C.oast Hwy., N.B. comn1. Laguna Beac h requireml"nts of our young,
. . 17141 _ _ Mllllt know wedding: Ii appliance store. Must be Pt time & fl time. alternoon By appoint. 646-3939 4!H-MJO dynamic and rapidly grow.
interview ......,...,._,_ :funeral desigm. Apply in · Call 9 AM & hrs SJ&..88IJ1 CLERK TYPIST BoUa neat appeanng. eve . , Sewing Machine l\techanic tng organizaUon.
. ~!!°b~~;ins;:~ Ave., to 10 AM only: 496--2383 POWER Sewing Machine Sales E.xperienced. Opportunity 1~r Interview wilh Dian, 46 Fa.<::h-
Merketlng Dept. 1.tAN licensed C-Z7. Perct"n-Opr, expt>r. Cushion & uphol BEAUTY CARE, INC. permanent position '>l'ith lon l~hu~. ~lay 16th&: May
Accurate typist. 60 wpm elec-* * FORE1\1AN • Days, tage growing bus l n es s. expcr pref. Baxter & Exciting opportunities a1\'ait International nianufac\urer l81h, 10 am In 6 pm •
Irie typewriter. One year Apply S-12 noon, MacGregor Interesting oply. 644-t860 Cicero, t nc., 642-7238 all women who wish to of seiving machines al fl{'W THE
experient.-e. Yacht Corp. 1631 Placentia, $l OOO OO participate in a new concept distribu!ion crnter, locat<'d DEMONSTRATION
Call Personnel Dept. I _c_._M_. -------• PRESS OPERATORS of lotal body cleanliness in il'Y in" I ndus l r i a 1 644-261l2
th \\/omen work for plastics blondod wll h 1 "• u ',. o"' -=~-""'====== ** FULL TIME MAN , per mon "' Complex . All benefits. c,11 --·· (71'4j '9'9'0 I molding plant. Eve •ht.It. •-·d ( bo h ., .,... ., NEEDED, Apply at Mesa ucauty 81 es or t }loung '''· ,.,,,,,·,. ~ .. , """" Scnools-lnstruction 7600 Salary, management po~i-546-3370 I ""IJ-OUUll
for .ppol.ntment · Union, Fairview & Ne·NpOrt ,. 5 1 I"-· & o d. ___ , ---------ion, yrs. genera uc in-----------Full or part time, \\'e train SITI'ER . 8 ~T old hny, ~ TELONIC •GARDENER TRAINEE • surance exp., call Ann, Printed Circuit you in exclusive, scientific \valkg dist, t.fariflC'rs Sehl. • The Newport •
No exper. is nee. Xlnt opp. Westcliff Personnel Agency, Driller beauty secrets, High earn-NB. i\fu sl bl> flex. as ro e School of Business e Industries <TI4) 545-DS 2043 \\lestcliU Dr., N.B. Experienced. Immedia1e ings. hn &. dys. Pref 11·/ traru>.
Laguno Beach * GENERAL OFFICE. typ-,.c.64~~~mc...;o=. ==~=~= opening on !!wing shiU, Call !\tr. Scott. BEAUTY &12-1807
ingis required. Experienced MANAGEMENT OPPOR . 3767 Birch St., N .B. CARE. JNC. 956-0'380. l4241 l--·s"H,-A"R=Pc-G.-.A"L·s~-
Ft>atu1~s ~kly reh~sher
t'Ou1-scs in the skills you
n~d lo ~t the job you
~·an1 .
Equal opportunity employer only. Apply: LAGUNA Full or pt. lime. Car nee, 20 Equal opportunity employer S. Altl'C SI .. Anaheim CASHIERS/l!OSTE.<;SE.~ * COSt.fETICIAN-Drug sales BEACH NURSING HOME. hr wk 836-4302
Experience only 714: '494-8tl7;) · e e PRODUCE MAN • • • Salesman Over 18 Full & P/Timr .,.. SJ6...3080 * MAIDS, r..tature. 25 or over. want~ by relatively small E _, . TV _. r e Avail. Wkends. 3 Loca!ions • Sl~ Dover Dr., N .B. •
• £42-3810 Cl ----'::C""'=~~~ I GENERAL MAINTENANCE Good salary for dependable food &re. not a supermar. xpe1,t'llCf' in auu a pJJ I· Orange Co
• cosr ACCOUNTANT • man for private school. woman. Apply 3151 Harbor ke1 A one.man job ances hc:lpful but not a must. METRO .CAR WASH
Slandard costs and inventory Cleaning & yard work. 1~ h.Blvd, C.~1. periencc is neccs ' 50 ~~ Pre(. agqs 23-40. All com-Z-102 So 8 · 1 1 s '\
rontrol. Knowledge of EDP. Brookhunit St. Fountllln e M "d e St 85 H . sary, . pany benefits to qualif\C'd · r•s 0 ' ·• ·
-----------------~
AIRLINE
SCHOOLS
PACIFIC
Manufacturing industry ex· Val ley 962-3312 · 1 aiA~PLY :. r. ~:~c~~1~0 ~e:O~k3:" N~ man. Old, well esta.blished STUDENTS! 11 \'rs &-up
.. ''
.,_ d•••'-bi• ~-GI"' · 1 <OmP'"Y· S<md your rom-To "-II Candy. ,\lake .. -A-' .... ~ •<> • W'<'e.•-~ • ....., Attractive, over 21. 13t'n Bro1vn's t.1otor Hole night.or Sunday \\'Ork, A1ed-~ ,.uvu necessary. Staple, non· w k 1 1 t Laguna 3u06 s C S Lagu plete resume to -moll('y In spare time & help
defense, Orange County H"'111 c" °"et""'b a · · oast, · na ical & Hospital benefits. Ap. Bax M-591 Daily Pilo't nl"N:ly school. No ca11h rr·
:ot un u · Apply lII MA.IDS • Experienced for ply at LINDBERG NUTRI· division of NYS listed firm. person 9601 Valencia Lag TION I ted · ba k f SALESl\tEN : Call ~s..-0335 if quired. 54-t.2!:>9 S-9 P:\t &
lJay & Night Classes
543.6"16
Send resume .,,.<ith salary ' • · housecleaning. Musi provide · oca in c o wknd!I 610 E. 17th St., Santa. Ana
1-lls. own transp. S2 hr. 642-5864 thf> Toy' World Store in !he you h11.ve the market !or · 1 ~-~~=='='S"=";~'='=O:J requirements a.nd history to C = BOX J\.t.~ The Daily Pilot GIRL FRIDAY. Good with MALL I E'S South Coast Plaza Shopping a profitable product. \\'e SR. ACCOUNT LERK Cottage Art Shoppe
figures. Apply 9 to 12 noon. Beauty & \\'ig Salon ha& open-Center. 3."l33 Bristol St., \viii r1esign &. produce it Salary $543. to $598. Art lessons, land & seascap. COSMETICS MacGre..,.,r Yacht Corn. Costa Mt>sa. on joint venture. Full charge bookkc-eper for · k i How t.1uch! Spatttime, How ca-••• ing for Hair.stylist with ~=========!.:='========"' cs, signs & true· e!tering.
H 1631 Placentia, C.M, l ll · Sal I .;; student bod Y accounts, Emnu1 Blankillllhip & Joyoc much? $5 to S? hrly, ow? some 0 owing, ary P us J bl-M W 7100Job5--Men, Wom. 7100 v.·hich 1ncludc Cafeteria.
Call now 893-5842/894-lill. GIRL Frid•Y. Sinale. p,-.• comm & paid vaca_tion, li~O~iii;;i;;';n;·;;i~o~mii;ii.iii;~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Sisler, 600 \V, 19th (At Po. .... , "' Snack Bar, Bookstorr .t &12 1689 ·~ o. Luzier. A co of Brl.stoJ.?i-1yl't Position. Growing Co. San Call !>4S.J44G olher student accounts. ltlust mona 1 • or o.:>U"<1"15.'i,
Cook-Housekeeper Clemente on heh. 492-7030 lttARlNE ltfcchanic: First TELEPHONE Y.'Ork lnc:IC'pendcnrly. Apply: IT'S \\'ONDERFUL I he
P1ush job choice Joe. ?.lust }IAIRDRESSER \Van 1 e d clas~ marine-gRS engine Orange Coast Junior CollC'i:;c n1any buys in appliances
be retiM & matutt. No Ne .. vport following. Unusufl.I mechanic with all . around The Sm1"le 1·n Your Vo1"ce Dist., 2701 Fairvlcw Rd .. yoo find In !he Classified heavy worl<. Good cooking opportunity, 61.rl.330 Atr. boa t exper. JI.lust have know-c.t.f. (714) 834-5708 Ads. Check thf>m now!
a must, Live.in $300. Em· Adam& leGge of electricity and the! h '
ployer pays fee. Call Joan. ----------ability 10 install gear com-COU Id Be Wort SchoO:s-lnstruction 7600Schools-lnstruction 7600 540-6035. Other tree & fee HOSPITALITY HO STE SS 1non to yachts in a profes.
jobs. SERVICE, has openings for sio naJ niannrr. Permanent A St • s I f
COASTAL AGENCY mah1re women lookini:; for if qualified. Good pay, good art1ng a ary 0 2790 llarbor Blvd., C.M. interesting, part time wock, bcnt>filll, good working con.
**COOK: Breakfasl, welcoming newcomers 10 dilion~&paldvacation.See $415 A Month your area. Sales e x p , &'!'Vice ~1anage.r
whee.Iman. Fut. Good pay. deslrable. l\.1u!lt ha'-e car. Pacific Marine Yachts
Apply in pef50n, 335;) Via CALL: 547-309:> 2751 \\', Coast Hwy,
Lido. N.8. BL UE N n-h DOLPHIN. ewport """ac * COOK ___ N_ig_h_u-. -A-p-ply MATURE
M"• Lane•. 1703 Supenot". * * HOSTESS MAINTENANCE
Cost.a l\1e&a. MAN Days, Some hravy lifting.
COUNTER' lady for dry 18 YEARS OR OLDER Con!act 1'1r. Laney, DAILY cleaning plant. txp'd prel.
i I PILOT, J:IO \V, Bay, Costa
Some hand n mach ne M.'W· APPL y IN PERSON t.lesa belwt>en 8-12 Pl\1 ing. Apply In per.10n. F"IY*
Points Cle11.ntrs. l8&U lltain * ~MME DIATEL Y * MATURE \VOMAN for lite
St. Hunt;: lkh. cleo.nup, some offi<:1! \\'Ork
CIJSl'ODIANS REUBEN E. LEE piokup • d•liwry. Loe&!
SUBSTITUTES. 12 mo's JSI £. COAST l-f\vY. l\leriical Lab. -194--0TDJ
positions al S2.86 per hour. NE\\'PORT BEACH * 1'!ECH1\NIC-O..ASS "A"
Call !or inlerv~W! 646-2008 llt'CnM.', O\\'n too!R. Perm,
positio(I for re!\PQn$ible man.
$12>. DELIVERY. Pe rm. ----------Top \\'agt'S, bonus plan & Hetvy \\'Ork. Training 1m.11s JIOUSEKEEPER, llve·in • .tio pt'Ofll sharing. Under
S2.00 hr. for 2 wk B, English MC. ~lust love reconsl.rucli<m. Will re-open
SERVISOFi, 506 Jilt St. chlldrtn, e:xp only, Jl\!I room l\lay 8th. \\'rilf! or call Ray
N.B. & TV. 25-35, $160 n'IO. Carey. 49-1--5857, 604 S. Coast
DENTAL M.\lst11nt -Exp'd 1117-iM:i 11 .... ')'. Laguna Beach. Calif.
prtfen"ed, pn)£!'f'S!l:i\•e of. HOUSEKEEPER/ Babyglt· t.ll'dical Secretary
flct, good hours. Mlll.J'Y le:r for 4 &ehl age chldl"f:n; OLALLENGING OPPOR for o~n. F'rlnp benef t 1s. age1 !>11. &gin Junt I, Bttracllve )'OU!IR ""'Oman in
&1~1050 i\tust have 01to'n tram & rels. N.B. offiCf', w/medical ~
DfSH\VASHCR, e1'a\'t>yard ~592 art 4 pm. turanct'. i.>oo'\keepln~. ryp-
thlfl . Cott~ CoflM! Shop, 'H~S~K=P=n--~,~,,,.-~1,-.-et...~-,~1-ul, ln1t. (No !Urf:Tl<'ltsl 548-Ji42
~2 \V. 19th St., C.!\I, d<'ptndablc, rcf'a. Fam. 3
White Elepbanta? children. on bch·Nev.'Pt. Pvt rm. ml TV. 6T"~
Tl1E SUN NEVER SETS on
DAILY PILOT WANT ADS!
•
We need people with smiling voice1, who •r•
.able to work eny shift, to do 1om• of our most
important Public Relations work -•s Tel•·
phone Operetors.
And wt'll pay $'41 S a month right from the
it.art.
Here's what else you
c•n count on:
• Extr; pay If you work S11ndcrys or Holfcfays
• R99ular raises and cltonc• for promotlOll
• Paid YOCatiDM & ltollday1
• ComprHeM.lve beftefit pion to 9ive yo•
stcwrity & r,otectlOft
• And loh o new friends.. You11 meet th-.
at work ond ht etttt-ltour aetlvltfes.
T•I~ to us soon •nd find out more about be·
ing • P.acific Telephone Operator. We'r• hir-
ln9 now b•lw••n 8:)0 A.M • .ancl 4:30 P.M.,
Monday· thru Friday at No. 1 City Blv d. E•st,
Suite 240, Oreng•. C.alif. I So. of Chapm•n1
west of Orang• County Ho1pitell 639-3260.
(If toll call, cell coll•ct,I
Pacific Telephone
An Equal Opportunity Employ•r
I The Academy .
l of~m
CAN YOU IECOME A PROFESSIONAL IN
COMPUTER SCIENCES
.and benefit from the added prestig• of id•n-
tifying with the origin al Academy of Com-
puter Te chnology? Nationa lly recognized.
l hous•nd1 of post high.school• men •ncf
women have. Their future ha1 been •ssurecf
by investing just • little more to become an
Ac•demy graduate. A privete education.al in·
stitution. Curricule •pplic able lo the bro.ad-
est r•ng• of computing systems.
Interesting, lucrative positions in computer
programing, end ~eypunching ava il•ble every·
where. For mor• inform•fion just phone er
meil the coupon
I 111'1 kttttnM Ill~ IOIAltOJI
o °'' c10 ... o l1W1lflt ti•-a .._ s~
····~---------""''"'---------"••------""'~-,,, Ttl. . ....__
1714) 547.9471
S. Tower, Suite 40, 500 So, M1in
Union Bank SqU4llrt, Orange, C•llf. 96281
• Frldor, Ml\' 15, 1970 DAILV l'RAIT S9 MlllCHAHDIU FOii :i\c'l~o~:...~11 :f~~DITS!.~11 :f~fHA~io~:...~~11 ~~fHf..'tiD~:...~~R FREE TO YOO \PETS one! LIVESTOCK TlllNSPORTlTION_ ,fliANSPO"ifTATION
SA.LI AND TRADI ~ -------Coll 1120 S.llbooto 9010 Mobile Homu '10ll
p....,11vr9 IOOO Fumllvre IOOO Ger ... Sole I022 P_lenoo __ & o,..,,. 1130 Mlocello..-1 NGO NEED-'_._ !enc<d • -1---·--l'ii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~;i;;i~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~l~~i"=s::;.-;;;;i';;~I ·~~~~;-~~=~ yard lor vtcy lovable blk 4 SIAMESE SEALPOINT SALE 30' SPARTAN 'n'aller, lo.25 II GARAGE Salt. Movtn11 CONN & WURLITZ.ER CUSTOM CASTING .oo ~h. amall breed border KITI'ENS. no each. Ollumbta 21 •••••••••• $1195' new awo!ng. $2300. Set up
• THE USED •
FURNITURE FACTORY
Mutt StU! Sofa• JoYe 11eat, Your oattema or oun, &Old Collie mbted 10 months. 536-TTT9 Col Cha.llenaer 24 .... S290S In adult park. Rent $40.
avocado $:50. OR •t. Mex· ORGANS Ot' 1Uver. Handcrafted jewel. Just 1payed. Loves childnon. S!AMES&Sealpolnt • mue-Venture 21 •••••••••••• $1900 ~ts ok. Sp. ST. 321 VI,
lean SID Commodtt: $15 ea. ey in 1tock or made to YoUl' Good watchdog, 53S-453S point, maie1, SlO u.chi, a Coronado 25 ••••••.• $:1.Y9 U WU.On. CM. 6tW923
Conn table $20 . Ap-order. Jewtlry toola:, cast-after 5:30 5118 wQ o!d, 96M.Sl4 Cor30'Free$plnno.ker,Drift--..
pllancn: watu-pl.k, trypan, Exclusively At 1Jw suppUe1, cut atones all 2 LOVABLE triendcy younc er. Motor Homu 911S
.,,..me irottr. Mendtr, \lllriaht GOULD MUSIC siza: il kinds, rouab 1tora c.ata. 1 1arp altered bllt Dogs 1115 Coronado SI, loll~. used. -.,O'l'O-R HO:;.,..,_,,... •• .,.
Sell'"9. like now f\lmltvre, Nlvrned f,..,,,
•portment rentals & modal home• at prices
below wholeHlel
A can1atcr vaewma, sun COMPANY lor tt. roclchound,. lapidary •-hi mal .~ 1 lo .. ,~ New Coronado 27-0rder Now! '-~ '"""""'
lamp, hair dr)ou, bualnet. A Quality Hou.. toola, supplie1 &: macltlnel')'. • w te e ...... va....... * LOVE FOR SALE * Delivery In May R.esenoe NC!W' For Qimmert\
P-ltii:, -pla)'pe:b. ea I el , e With A 60 Year Rt.puta· Open 't\le1 thru Sat. S.S ::r1 home:!~ ~:it!~ e PUPPIES; Brindle Great S.botl, New A: Used $2'75 642-66U or 837-3S)9
paints. records, kn ick· Uon For The Ftncl• ln SUnd~ l o-4 dosed Matt. f>·30 5,18 Dane, ?.fin . Schnaw:en, Yacht1 Royale, Inc.
knacks, etc. 431 H&mllton. Tu.ch1nl A 5avlot Facil· nvE M GEMS & • Sllk:y Terrlm, Whippets, 29l:J West Cout Hwy. Electric Car•
Apt 8 (rtar) CM IUea, LAPIDARY SUPPLY • 2 LITTLE kittens wearlna La.bradOrt. Newport Beach * ~O
MAY-\.l Price Clearance Sale!
Rear t1f ())Ue:p Cenler while boots and mittens .. • MATIJRE STOCK: st. El.EC. ca.rt & Cbargu, VtTY
SAT l SUn. M , Fun. Orient. GOULD MUSIC Shoppln&: Center Hetlth,y, happy and clean, Berntrd, Welmaraner, e SAJUNG CLUB ~ iood oond, $210.
'nnw Rup. crib, port. TV, COM NY 2750 Harbor mvd .. ll·A need YoW' low. Call after Fem. Brindle Great O&M. 22 10 25 toot taceRl'U.LMl"I. * S3&-8296 *
new Jadin goU 1hoel I: PA Cotta Mesa * $$.2039 3. 54~.llTS 5118 Martincre1t Kennels 546-0989 fl',50 per df.y. Nenort e Mettr111 I: lox,.Sprin91 -·-···--·--$21 e 2 81autiful enti,ue whit• ] piece
joclphur boots, u 7. S1Ldt 204S No. Main ar.a. SaUinE exp not nee Mini Bikes 927S ntle, rock. c:bl.lr, hobby Santa Ana 547.o611 ONE, lonely 1 wk. old kitten. SIX character pupp\ea that oounr COAST SAD..INC -------
table 1et1: consisting of 2 end tebfes, hOne, Cretceot q ., 1!ngle Fem.a.le. Black 11' Si&mese. are people lovers. 6 weeka CLUB cn4) 547-9406. POWELL 5hp SUS. Powell
matt, typewrlttr, elec. can PIANOS 11 ORGANS Jl1e-broken. 1.Dws small old and weaned. Friendliellt 11 , lhp $100, Bonanza 3hp. I cockteil f1bl1 --·--···············-$20 sat e Speniah Sofas I: love S11h both pc1. $H
e 6,..•n v1lv1t Sofe, like new -·----$79
e Gold Solo ---·--······ .. -··-·-•. $29 e Over1hlff1d Chaira ....... ·------···$19
e Color TV Console ··-· .. ·-·-···-·····-$135
oPl!-ntt, lad~ I: children'• NEW 1: USED children. &H-1407 Can see of mixed breed. 6t6-0163 aft CAL 15 KILO' brand new $110. 833-3582 &ft clo·~-LP -~ 1 • y---.. -_, ___ ~--aeyt:ime. 5115 6 PM Consistent Race \\'inner • 5.
u ... .., ~""· oys, ........ r.....-..,.. """..,... 1..olukd w I exlrall : Radi0,1-"-=~---=-hlehol.d Items. Priced to e 'l'bomut)rp.ns BEAtmFlJI.. healthy,4 MALE AKC German boa bnh I"-f 4HP ·BoMnz.a,n= ll 1231 ~-L t t , uc: ran, u. ety .......... R . i;.ell!X n., e Kimball Pianos houaebroken '·' Sit.mete kit· a.-hc!rd Puppies, S50 ea. t 0 1 5 JtP Powell, 1145. ---•ut NB ... ..,., gear, etc., e c. wner mus '""'""' , . • • Kbhler Ii: Campbell tens. 408 Huntington st, 331 MaiftOl!a Avt:,. C.M. Sac, Tom Duller. 648-2524 Call art 5, 548--0291
VIRTUE BROS. D!Nlm'E COAST MUSIC H.B. 536-8748 alter 3 • .U 612-11310. ;;:.;;-::~~~;=.=:....1,==========-
SET, hutch, 4 ebn Ii: tbl, NEWPORT A ~28SJR day wkend1. 5116 SILKY Terriers, AK C, Colu:b~~~pha~nger
whlte w/aold brul. Nude c.o.ta MHa * ~ 901231 f) ADORABU: free puppies. ch amp 1 t k , s ma 11 ' '
picture on w!Yet 24x36", Open 16' Fri, ... Sun'-" il'f" '-Cod<apoo mother. 2 males. ma1 .. 1rem. Reu. Stud 2912 w~s:·· N.B. SCRAM-LETS
9300 • Compl1te 12 pc. Spanish antique
9r••n l.drootn Set -----PIO
1115 Horbor Blvd., ot 19th St.,
Costa M11a • ~9457
2 bu ltoW, anUq. white. Beginner• Organ CleaJ ----:--,----:---2 female1. 6 wb old. "JWt Avail. 646--Tl.15
Delk Ir cbr, white. Oothe1 ENROLL NOW * * * Darling." 548-8409 or* POMERANIAN AKC ,... VENTURE 21, tr!r, aux. out· ANSWERS 11 10.ladieL Maanavox ...,__ ... ...i ......... __ .._1 673-31TS 5116 brd, galley, Int &. run'g "-1U• s._ ..... '6 •...:a., .. ay LA.CUNA doctor's eatate sale Cft&m coklr, 10 wks old, The&ter 'IV I: • 1et'e0 ' 19th, 7 pm. 6 week course by trwllee: Authenticated FREE kittens, med-length male lites, many xtras, Sac! remo~ control. andq. whlte, u o D ORGAN $2495. 962-2136 Upheld -Scary -Sheaf -etc. tic. 430T Patrice Rd, S · HAMM N anlique Colonial, Viclorian halt, 7 wk:s, blk Ir wbt, 545--00 Gal t SHE GETS
Open; Weekdays 9-5:30, Slturdaya 9..s, Coled Su.ndays STUDIOS. 2854 E. Coast " Oriental tum., lamJM!, Or. blond & wht, or gray Ir 2 ••-rahle poodle m•--.a * UDO 14. Complete w/ e Y -,
'°'N=.B=.=548-4685=_,,---,,-,-I Hwy, Corona de I Mar. iental rugs, paintings, fJ'am. wht, 5e3132 5116 pu:"'s wk, be'-, whl~te""' trailer. GOOD COND. $599. II a girl doesn t marry the ANTrQUE G• ... -Sa J ._............. r-._. ... • • 897-7903 man she wants, pity !he man ---e : o•............., es, booU (90me m~lcall, AUSfRALIAN aheepdo&: and 1 curly. Need good homes, SHE GETS. Leavtnc for Europe, •tock I.::======== brlc-a~c. household nema. mixed pupplel 6 wks old. fenced yards. 839-0853 LUDERS 16-sallboat, form. b~=7"'~~--~
muat be told thil week. Televl•ion 8205 Open Sat &: sun g to 6. 2l3ll Cypreas Santa Ana fleet champ Exe cond 30• '68 HODAKA 100, expansion
----
Fumlture IOOO Furniture 8000 Sat A-&m Ollly, 10am·5pm. 4~5016 or 64U1lil H lght 540--092s 5118 GERMAN Shepherds, AKC. &lip Incl. M~st sell/Best oU. ch amb e r . hot head.
-,-7-P_C_K-IN_G_S_l_I-'E-'-' 1 MU""' ~ • ..,,____.. ...____ ... _ ~~-all_VH'. band~ WON new 21" u ....... vox col· --,--,*:-;;;-:;;'*==~*.-,.-NEEDe ~ z:::: I lo b'-6 wb, Quality pups from MO--OCl:l} tiberglau lank&: aeat. com-5 • ->' ~ """"""" rnJVu,. ........ _ furn, -Haze.I ,.._._ """"' nome or van;: $50. LUDERS '6' Sallboa' 1'! plete dirt bike. $47 , BEDROOM clal o..ul bdrm ,., lkl"C Dr, CdM, ott Cout Hwy "' TV at rolll._ con'! use. * AUCTION * •payed. femal•. tortoi.e * 96>-7362 * . ' 557-7315 ~ 9 drawerdftaer, mlr. size), Italian Frultwood next to 5Cr'owns :~ :~ orou~ + =~ u you will aell or bey shell cat, brH.liant colors, DALMATIANs.AKC ~r:erco~~t~· cll~~m~'.''·66~~Ttl~u-m-p~h~500~=Chop,--per-,
ror, 2 bedside etands, king credenza, den :runi. cheap. RUMMAGE Sale: Multitude Re!a.lls $400, seU $350. Kfve Windy a try !1::~13· wry sweet A gent511le6. Pampered PuP,, by priv. 540-0)20 I 41XX> mi's, $1300 invest~.
1ize headboard, frame, quilt. ~. pink wool Karutan ot many types of tttaaures. 6'73-iz34 Auctions Friday 7: 30 p.m. .,._....,.. owner. 642.193'1. Oris. equip. Incl. Make otter
ed mattress, lheets:, blank-rug, x!nt cond. $50, dble Oothe1, hou&ehold etc. At . Windy's Auction Barn ASSORTED kitten.s incl. part Coclm.poo puppietl $2.50 COLUMB~ Defender <29'), 673-1916
eta, elc. bed $25. Fruitwood boy'1 Ne .. -Shore• Oubhouse, FRENCH Provlnct al Siamese .. Frisky & healthy, 1lttpa 6, u>brd, full rac:lng-. 196=9~250~M=~=~~d~irt~.-~= Cho~ of S ish bed t """ Sell $60 An~ .. ...,.. 42"X31" RCA 'IV cabinet 20'15li Newport, CM M6-8686 2086 Commodore NB X 4•• ~• 61" ""AT .,u .. uiu a "' pan COi _,..,. • · 5ll canal. May 15th, 9AM· Behind Tony"'t1 m.i-. Mat'L weaned .t trained. • ' • •tru . .,...,,.w, ~ · model. 600 Ml's. sun und.; or Modem style que China cabinet..-$].50, odda 5PM, May 16th, 9AM.3PM. for 23" screen. Xlnt coral. "5 548-4615 5/16 &U-4589
ALL FOR $149 &: end•. Come & bargain. Elect components incl. $80. CUSTOM arm cha It, Ot· I "'"'RABLE v •ne--~-........ 2 ADORABLE pure b red oe..:oc;w;;e;:.r_c.:.;;"':;:1.:; .. :;:'c.;'c__;.902;.;.;o waCalrrl ~..,.or best otter.
N d •~ Calle B l Id JONGSIZE bed, linens, baby "-AD """7 b d 175 IUJV f\.J '"""""' .. ~ ,,..___ .,, ....... ,,.,., o own pmts. only $9 mo. ...,., enven o _b ·-• hbo 1 ...,.,.....,.,., toman, ea rest . &: white and black&: white. Dachshunds Blk & ~.
WELK'$ WAREHOUSE <Harbor Eataret) 49&--3706 "''' ' crys ..... punc w set, COMBO 23" TV & Sttteo "'esti~house washer-dryer, g wk1 $25 Call 548-49ll 28' OIRlS Cre.ft, '63, twin '65 HONDA Scrambler 250.
Friday mornJ.n&: tbru SUD-kitchen appliances, books, extensive record collection All weaned and potty. ' ' · 185'1. Encl. head, auto pilot, Good Condition. $285. 600 W, 4th St., Santa Ana etc. Sat Ii: Sun. 10 10 5. conaole, black/while, Xlnt from LoWA Armstrong to trained. 536-8149 5/15 PURE-BRED black male elec winch, radio, bait tank. 673-TOOS
Daily g..g Sat 9-6 SUn 11-6 day. 202'11. Blyview Ave., Santa cond. $7'5 CdM 6'll-4769 Enrico Caruso with cabinets KITTEN~! Adon.hie ~ poodl.e. g mos. Trained. Had bow raila, awim step,, fUll '68 Yamaha DT·l Enduro, QUEEN~ mattress. box SACRIFICE all item1 ~ Oli~ Am. HeiplL GE color console 'TV. JUXI. Lee Door fan. potlo!d calk:o, 2 black &. &:fa.Y· 6 all &bots $50. 5'8-1906 oovers. Campi, l'!!tin. $'1,900. C\lltom paint GYT kit ~ ~~~~1: ~lsnbed~ch~: CUSI'OM couch, wing-back ~~J:~ planta, bed divan. 670 w. wb.old,hou1ebroken .TOY COLLIE Sbeltie pup-~m> ilock~·S600 m-&3s
9Prings Ir tra.mes $10 ea. dinette table w/2 chnl. chair, vacuum, !!111. desk, I========== Wilton, CM 644-<1688. 5/15 pies. Tri.COior. Re&:. AKC 23' BIRCH Craft fishing boat '67 HONDA ;60 ~bler
9• modem sofa-xlnt for modem bdrm wt A more. TV. dinette table, hi·fi con-HI-Fl & Stereo 8210 4 BAR 1toola, 4 twin ma!· BEAIJTIFUL ch:>colale col-1_540-<329_,,,,.,,-,,=,,,-==:-w/trir. 50HP elec start dirt bile $250
ttupholaluy $35, 2 dresser 833-2438 .me, clolhn, many mlac. treun, bookcaae head· ored kitten, male, ha.If Black Poodle Puppy Evlnrude. $1 200/offer. ~II sis.69st
w/mirrot S15 ea, Maple Sat-Sun. 301 Broad w a Y , I ---------board., lrg antique dresser, S!ame1e, halt Persian. 7 v.rttks old S30 548-9766. 245 E. Wilson Ave.
double dresser w/mirror Office Furniture 8010 ,co;·="'·======= STEREO con10le ~". ratt.an table &: 4 chairs. 4!M-fi661 5!15 *&ll--45935* C.M. 'fi6 BULTAOO Matador, like
$25, Very old steamer trunk, ---------•-tfances llOO AM/FM tuner & re~ Owner on premises Sat&: MlXED up Siameae, Toughy P"AR=T=-"co"11"1,"1"Patt="German== 25' Sportfbher ANGLER new, many extra!, $385
6 wrou&'ht iron dining rm USED steel desb $39.SO e ......,.-p~r. 4 yrs. All parts Sun. 115 38tb St., N.B. A Pandy, 1 wk old kltten1, Shepherd, 7 wb old. t10 Cnuon built. Mint oond. firm. 4~
chairs SS. 1 teak sq. coffee Posture chairs $1150 " up so. COAST KIRBY mred, $1SO. 54&-94-46 675-Ml.3 l male, 1 f e ma I e . each. ~16 wkdys aft 5. Loaded! 3 n.dlol + tnclds * '67 HONDA 90 Trail Bike,
table SS. Overstuffed chair e Uaed 2 Ir 4 drawer filing bu credit TD's &. demo Sportlnn Goods 8500 LEAVING for Europe, Mutt ~ S/15 POODLE Pups 4 httllsHble, hard to pt Newport sllp. CU.tom tank, xlnt cond.
$10, Unique tootatool, 3X5 cabl.nell e Used wood duD ~ of new •70 Kirby ... SeU ?.tereedes 280 SL, $'TDOO. 2 C1Jl'E black 1: white kit-healthy, Apricot. AKC. $15. $7250. 536-0206 aft 6 pm. _S20tl_._m-tm ______ _
sliding Klus W'indcw, Large McMaban Bros Deak lDc. Oa1mca, 25% oH. Fscl 1---------lnflatbl rubber-bo&I for lert1. 8 weeks old. Golna 541-0958 or S4T·20T2. 24' TROJAN cabln crulaer, 1970 Honda SL 350
desk SW. Ritt bric-brae. 1800 Newport mvd. wami't. PH: 536-75211222 l.956 % TON Dodge truck. waler skiing S650. \Yater to the Animal Shelter this WIRE Ralred Doxie Puppies, xlnt 1hlpe, nN.l'ly new Motorsport. Take ovu
673-4482 . Colta Mesa. * 642-8450 5th StJ H.B. May be ~n at 594 W. lkis, furn. outbrd motor, \\ttk~nd. 548-6842 5/17 not reg\a, SlO ea. Call _ encine, $2995. 644-1368 Pl)'ITlol!1lll. 548-8662 aft 6.
20 PC. ·"MADRID" EXF£, dnk, new, Millcratt KENMORE Wuber &. elec. 19th St C.M. 548--0nT '69 Chevy. Evtrythina goes. KJ'M'ENS. 2 black&: white, 646-6425 eves or Sun. Only. •PVT Pl'Y• 2'T'8" Falrllner HONDA 305 Scrambler, runa
3 ROOM GROUP w/ walnut tin. 66", side dryer. Both in xlnt cond. Scuba Tank J Valve 6'15-4442 male, t bob-tail. Fluffy AFGHAN PUPS, AKC '66, like new, n·1 eqpd. $7900 I: loob grtat, $.150.
FROM MODEL HOMES return -42", new exec. chr, $80. Also, Frlg:ldaire elec. $45. 54M825 DROP lest table, 2 leaves; tigers. All black Ir ftutfy. 12 Wies. Tenna. &t6-54S2 Sltp avail, T16-5697 * 842-8213 around 5 pm*
Include•: Quilted sola &: naugh. l"*JIOlnt ta.bric. dl")'tt, xlnt cond. i so. NEW TW" Creative Libercy enlTY t&bl~;. table I.amps; 548-7495 5/18 '64 Yamaha 250, $250
chair, 2 end tabln Ir cotfee fi7S..48"U5 S47-8ll5 or 546-8612 surfboard from Haut drapes; double &:preads; KlTTENS White blk & BASSET PUPS Speed-Ski Boats 9030 •66 Yamaha 80. $100
table, 2 lamps, dresser, rnfr. ,,:;,:========'I RCA W h Ir I pool port. Boards, S.C. $50. 673.-4180 picture trames; mink itole; ,mue, ~. belie '1i: tortol11e AKC, 3 Mo'a. 54~_7_ lT CHRIS Cra.tt Inbrd * 646-7607 alt 5:30 *
rar, headboard. quilted box Office Equipment I011 di.hwuher wbt w/blu*"' 1'T' RU$EU. Surfboard. Russian ennlne stole. Aft #hell. Bo:ic tralned. Before DAOISHUND Puppies, 6 lmmac In brand new cond' 1960 TRIUl\-fPH. like new,
springs I: mattress, 5 pc rttY top, xlnt cond. f15. Brand new $80. lO am, 675-8773. mn Mar· g f}.f Call ~1167 5/16 wks old, A675KC~~~· Call &ri..l755 ' 650cc, new chrome. pa.int. dinin&' room; . .t.able A 4 hi· SAFE, 48., .. :....., .. ~·• -".a-673-0591 ,.A., .,..... guerile, CdM. ...,,.,. ti ... •.c:=.11 ltAo 0114 "---'· ...... ... w1U1: ==~~--~~,,,..-.............,. 2 l\ITN. Dachshundl {male -re1 • eng . ._.., . .,,._..,.
-00c•MP<bl.inARE. . AT ~·· 95 by 28" dttp. USED Appllancea i 'TV's. I.::========"-BLOCK LONG RUMMAGE & female) to one: lovin& BASSE:l' Hound, tri-colored, Boat Malntena-• 9033 250 Yamaha Enduro DT-1
e:"tM •• u. 331'1 Via Lido, N.B. 173-i!DO all llJl.1'8.btftd. Dunlap's, Miscellaneous l600 &. BAKE SALE. $8.t. 10 home w/fenced. yard. No papers, great with all ,....... 2500 ml'i. Good Sha-r .,.,, to 2. Friesland Oriw, 2 ildre 6fS..7fi07 ,.... N'o down Pmll. Only $16 mo :ms Newport. C.M. 548-T18S blk:!I So. or Warner ott &:mall children. 494-8960 5/16 ch n. DE:I'AI.UNG! Our Speclalty $595. &Mi-1.559
WELK'$ WAREHOUSE Gar ... Sell 922 rRIGIDAJRE washer &: GAS refrlgeralor, work 1 Newland. Sponsored by 4 KrrrENS 9 wb old, 1 LAB. RET. Pups, AKC ~ ~:aJ~e~e~ 250 cc 1966 Yamaha, knob-
600 w, 4th St., Santa Ana dl")'er, $300, 2 yrs old. G.E. good, $10. Antiqueoodclock, Lakeview P.F.G. tortoise shell, 2 black, 1 Show & field Champs hies, !ork bra~. exp. cha.m-
GARAGE Sa.le Sat 1.5. An· refrigerator $150. 833--3517 worka good, $25. W room -~==~~~~,~V~-t tiger. Will deliver. G. Stein. Gold females. 673-8778
9035
_ber, poo. Art 5, 54s-o2'J1 LEAVING state in one week, ll ,_ --~--· GE •-6 old divider 15, Dlabtl &: little CAM:PER '64 Ford an, o • ., .... 19 5118 Marine Equip --" •-·-~" f quei, 90...., s...,.,,,, _,._, ....... ,,, Wl.llno:r .,... runs --' t · bit · ~ -· • ' ·-~~I 100, Xl•t -~, mU1t ICU ,,.,ua.:~w o lie · · • ,,.~. • girl• clothes iz 3, tx:-$2, 1U:11n.o up exens1on, ·1118, TRANSPORTATlON ---" .. v,...,
furniture & mi.&c. 2 twin power la'lllftlnO'llttl, m ' per:t'ec!ly, $35. ll9 Monte & misc item1. S42-8UO $1200; Honda SO; Model'1 ALTERED Male Sia.m~e. 2 NEW Chrysler 7HP O/B of extras. S2SD or make
beds $25 eL dinette tbl Ir 1224 Sand Key, CdM, Vi.ta, C.M. 548-4213 clothea &:izes S.10; Old gray yn old. Very good with motor. <Ast $365. Sell for oft,,ll_ 646-3.J97 eves.
4 chrs J25. ttfrig, $40, couch &H-5327. BRONZE Phlloo re.frlgera-Be:; ~u~er_ $'15:Lll~~~-I· pota: and other antiques. children. Need! aood bome. Boats It Yachts 9000 cl295==°'=='-=''=!J5..4'-"798=====:=o !*1989 360 BULTACO, like
I: chr set $15. ovustuf1ecl 1llE Bluffs, 2448 Vllta tor, alnmt new. $1lS $3). Siz~ ~1~ome~~ 54s....5118 ~,._1705. S/18 ----------new, never raced. Extrast
chr $5, Weatlnghse com· Hopr; Mlac,, m.lnJ bike, * 6f6..3M9 * LADIES diamond d inner 2 f1USK'l box trained kit-WA.NT to rent. Priv. pty. Mobile Home• 9200 $750. 646-2M4
mercial waaher. Many more motorcycle parta picnic clothe1. 644-2639 h. ---1-'--C=~==~,--Follo the --rtng, set with 1% karat tens. 1 F1uUy blk & w 1te 17·211 ft ski, cruise boat. • -----1967 SUZUKI 80cc
ltems. 934 Congreas, CM. ~,2!· booFrllu.Sa~tc;., ~ w Antiques 8110 LADIES eqieraJ8 d dlamondt 112d ttnter diamond, 2 diamonds lo~ haired, 1 gray 1triped. w/trlr. 1f0 drive or out· OPEN HOUSE I.ow mllrage. runs gootf
646-8726. •-.·-· • '"' ......,, ct rina: &: c emera. _ 11 karal on each &:ide. 545-2969 5/16 board. Min 75 hp. Sl"p I ORIENTAL RUG Box M 595 ~ In Cool Clean C ter S1T'5. 545-0906 BEAUT. flOl.id maple hutch MOVING: Sears wuher le pendant &: more • Brilliant cut Sacrifice! Rep. SMALL pupplei tree to good 4 Inside or on deck. June Cotta Meia
or breakfront. like brand gaa dryer $TO, slipper Ir 12x23 Royal Kennan Daily PUot ly to Box P360, Daily Pilot. homes. 300 Roblnhood Lane, J2..Zl. Chuck Joyce 546--0455
new, cog:t $1000, now $300. wing chn, lampa, redwd 6'73--5822 REFRJG .. plumbing fixtures, CARPET left rrom Comm'l. C.M, 548-lBSl 5116 WANT FISHING PART·
Alao M>lid maple coUee gard~~.i-tuNrnB.. mile. 52] VEbuRtteyt,old1~~ian olmdarbld•est~ ahower doors, mSaisc odd7711 &. C!)ntracta. $1.98, $2.88, shag BLACK I white kittrn, ma.le, NERS!' 2 ~· will share
table, unique cloYer-leat Ro!dl ... ....., · ........ ends. All day t. W. $3.99 sq yet. Drakes Carpet 6 we eks, 1 toes . boat expenae w/boat owner
design, glu1 top $40, must GARAGE Sale: M ov In I 8f6...3792 19th St. C.M. 11206 beach Blvd, H.B. ~ 5118 Who like1 to fish. Bob,
see to apprec. Picnic table Europe. EJec. il Haehok! 8 MM Camera. & projector, W-5114 644-0330
• benc..__ ..,,.., Sofa bed -....u, p1-~-. -. Sat ._ Sewing Machines 8120 ._ ..... w . Wil l'"REE klllen.s • 3 wht , 1 -;;;=;;·-;;;;=::-;<c-;;;-;;;: _. -l'i"""'" o.ina ,.,,,. • never """"'· oman I son TRAVEL Trailer. ReJrig. blk & wht another batch BOSI'ON Whaler, 13', «J HP.
$30. 64)..0065 or 642-00fS Sun 9-6. 843 Ami.col Way, Solt clubs & bag, never UI· Norscold 6 cu ft. Comb p~ r.ady soon! ~ 5m E\11ntude'a uleclric, f u 11
CRIB $15. 2 twin beda S2S N.B. SINGER Auto zig-zag, 6 mol!. ed. 495-0tGO, IA.gun& Nlgucl. pane &: elec $75. Mariner'• .,.,
11
bal k • covers le trailer-. Uke new,
Ir $15, 2 Fieldcrest boys AU. DAY SATURDAY old. No attach needed for ORIENTAL RUGS Sextant "Tamaya 636 l\-15-2" TWIN n.itlens, a c $159S
avocado bdsprda SS ea. g• Sofa, box gprgs/mattr, %.lg·Ag, button hole1, Varioussizes.M1.11tsell Brand ne""'• comp. ~-fiuUy, ~Persian. Call ~70r 2ll: 879-llOO
Yellow dine~ aet $35. woman'• aki boota, size 7. designs etc. Guar. S39 cash 673-5822 548-644T 545-2216 aft 6 pm 5!16 ~· -• f 0-4 or ama.ll payment5. 5l6-fi61.6 · 8' PRAM dinghy w/ 3 hp "°°'"''00 1 ) Schwinn Exerbicycle. yard USED Carpeting, Exeellent GENT'S diamond ring, 2 KITI'ENS, 6 wks,, both John. Both compl recond.
XLN'T Furn i I u re, Rea•. toola, A misc. 962.-5:252 Muilcal c.onditlon. Very cheap. Call center 1lone l carat, en· ma.Jes, need lood home. Xlnt cond. $165 or trade
custom couch, oofl'ee tbl, POOL tbl, 'JV, hidcabed, 536-4170 circled by 9 s ma 11 er-53&-T179 S/18 for-Schock Sabot. 644-5346
N ~ Instrument• 112.S din. set. bdrm sets. o m •C-bikes, tum.. misc. 1T21 NEWPORT Be a c h Tennis diamonds. Sac. S 100 0 1 FEMALE kltten, black &: WORLD 'S irn&llest tw in m.
a-brae or a.ntiq's. Morning Tradew!nds Ln., N.B. Sat. Club membership for sale. 962--6631 whi le. 6 wkll. old. Free to board, only 20., xlnt cond.
'til 1-1. Evtl from SPM. 10-4 only, OUT OF Busineu Sale! $400. 675-5592 FOR Slile • Famll,y Mern-good home. 646-2169 5{15 Head. d/f, ball tank, $1495.
54&--0362 FANTASTIC Garagt" Sale Guitars, amps, acoordiona. l MEMBERSHIP To Holiday benhtp, Irvine Cout Coun-NEED good home tor 3 darl· 546-5755
DOUBLE • Bed-excellent Sun! 1400 SO. Bayfront =3 p';!ie!bly50! .. ~fL Health Spg, $10.40 per .mo. try Club. c.an be purchued lng ldttena. 9 wD old, wean--1;1;;;8,ccCRESruN=="""E'°'R;;---,w"!U5=-;HPc;;; ~":i.;.,walnma'!!_fiu'".isbl...~. Bal(~-~e.Ave at S. Ba,yfront) FENDER J·-n---, Fe~r Call 675-3807. byCall6~•2337"°te'10"am~pm , ed and trained. 646-1403 5118 lnl~m!plor motor, SUOO, 25' .... µ.... • .. ...., '"''""' &Al -~ '""' GOOD band mowers, SS. 3 .,..,. "' · TW0-6 week old sweet black slip optional. 3333 W. Coa1t
headboard• 2 nlgb6tUNI c=QUE,.:::;.;.,..,..--cof1= .. -,.=b1"e, bottom. um. wheel bicycle S2S. 188~ 21" Admiral Color T.V. with kltte.ns w l th white feet. Hwy, N.B.
stands, $50. 557-9796 After BR Ill!!, bouaehold l1em1. ~=-Call-~612"91~_6_~-new antenna and picture 54~233 5/15 =-;;;=-;;=,-;=:-7.
PM 140 Harbor llland Rd., NB BAS.S Amp • watta RMS. Merrlll Pl, C.M. 646-5206. tube, $200. Call 613-3316 MALE kittens, 1gray,1 gray ~W~~oo:cy~izl ~·~ r SOFA never used. quilted Sat 11 A.M. 2-15" Lansing spkMI. Xlnt HAND painted 011 portrait alter 6 pm. & white. 7 ... 1cs. old. Part 82S-2893 or c:n:n 183-8536 floral tc"-·-...a..1 $123. .=;...:;:,,:;.~~=-..,.--,.-cond $295 49'---S373 Evt of you or your children from Match. scc;0 ~~';t flS. GARAGE Sale: Chn. chests, ' · •· a photograph. 64&-3829 5 COICO blt atools, $175. Siamese. 962-STI9 5/16 •67 CnJ!!ler 2t'-l5.5 HP Buick
mowers I: mllc. 1-SPM, Sat I & 0 Westlnghae router S 1 0 • 2 BLOND, 1 black. male pup-eng, JB-OB, 300 hrs, Fully 'l1&-0S92. il Sun only. 821 Camphor, P anos rgan1 1130 Wedj:l!MJOCI Holly, apt iize Simmons white hide-a·bed, ple11 & many auorted kit· eqp'd. TI4-68&-8844
HOUSEFUL 01 new model pa stow, excdlent cond.i· 135 839-7356 aft 5 pm '_:N::..B=.'---~-~-847 7187 . . tens. 549-318."\ 5/15 GRAND BANKS 32'" .,,. old, borne tumlture . Reg, $683. 1. lion, Aaking $30. • !NV" m Walk '-'di ,. GARAGE Sa.le: Apt a tuMu er, ...,. ng FREE kittens • Orangt fully eqp'd, nit by owner-
now $197. IM-401 or ~fT"lg, dlshe&. Many m\lc HAMMOND, Steinway, Yam. BEAi.TT. blue-royale 10x10 alm.:>1! new. Seat. hand m&les, Tortolse-•hell $22,SOO. 673-S53l art 6 pm, c63:..7~--"='===-==o--1 hsehold ltema. 218 !th St, ~N~~.u:!tp= f! rug, fully bound. $75. brks. whls, $75. 548-4222 M7·15.16 S/16 AVALON lt1ooring up to 60
BEDROOM SET 1,;';'-B;,:·:.,=0-:-::--;;-:--::= So. Calli. at Schmidt Musk: --673-0~~"'~· ---~--t ./ FAMILY membet1hlp, FREE hone ft'rtilizt'r . Pick feet. $2,'150, ca.II 213-638-61ll
5 pcOO. "o"""tt • mahoganyNB $375. SPECTACULAR Gar a I e Co. ll07 N. Main, Sa.nfa Ana p<~R~61f'1', ~pa.ca .t:. ruCallg~. Newport Beach Tenni.s Club. up at 203ll Cypre51, Santa or 433-9762
1 1 I Dr., ' Sale! Come Ii: BroWle Sat " •'" .,.,. $400. (It 528-4222 Ana Htl. st()...0025 5/16 =========
4 L.' •r: ...._.. 548-0303 After-}, GAME table &. C1111.lf1, I; sun. 2156 Yllta ........... ' BEIGE nylon carpet, 14 x FREE kllle1111 to good home, Sallboet1 9010
swag lamp, A ainete bed N.B. (Bluth) WhW•01oree ofhaovlnaSol•e •• PIREW 2 TIRES 24 ' w/pad, $45. Gu stove 1 Calk'o male, 2 tigers. Call o---------
box ~np & mat~sa Sate Fri 165X15 SR $50 $15 * 675-5553 , 644-~ . 3 FAMlLY Guage · · on Pianos arm Orpns. * 5f>.U05 * ' aft 4, 536-9589 5115 15' SKlPJACK, XLNT cond,
Ir Sat. 506 On::hld Aw., You better come on down! ,~0 PLYMOUTII St& -· M-, • ., -. W. ont--' UlO BLACK ~ 11 panIe 1, BEST OFFER over $9!'IO
e Sat. &-Sun. May 16 & 17
Auto Service
& Parts 9400 e Refreshments served 11 --'--------
AM-4 PM In Fcah.tred Mo-33' MONTEREY $3500
del 24xfi0' Patio KllC'hen . • * 673-0276 *
• See The Flne!!t In Mobile I=========
Living At • • . lraller, Tr1vel 9425
GREENLEAF
PARK
------
537--4011
An Adult Private Oub
e Model Homes Displayed In Stream L In• '70
A Distinctive Selling Terry•Nomad•Oa1l1
From $7,850 Explor•r Motor Hom••
To $14,500 Fourwlnd1•WHkender
• 14 Model•9 Spaces "'· 11tA TEL
• ;;-;~"¥;,. 0ay 1o A Truly TRAILER SALES
Pleasant Environment 13172 Harbor Blvd. G.G.
1~ Blockl No. ot
Take Nwpl, Fwy Or Ha:bor Garden Gf'O\'e Freewa)'
Blvd So. To 19th SI. Then 537..fOJ 1
w .. 1 To .1750 Whittie' Ave.1--A-'L'-P--IN_E_ Costa Mesa {714) 642-1350
BAY HARBOR
Mobile Hom• S•f•• ALL NEW '70 MODELS VACATION
NOW ON OISPLAY TRAVEL CENTER ,
2>' WklH u low u ~ Excel ... Goldlft Falcon
12· Wide• to 34' \11da Olympia -Alpine
Parle Spaces Avallablo Apache .. WhHI Camper
1425 Baker St., Costa Mesa worlds !arrest mOft oom..
% block Eaal o1 Harbor Blvd. plett RV vehlcl• shoppiJW
Costa Mesa (TI4) S.0-9470 center
CHILDREN 8302 G&nl•n Grove Blvd, GG
196114' Wide 534-6686
Owner Must Sell By June 1 Cosed Sat. Open Sundq 2 BT,Den,Or3Br,2Ba , ,
Up to 10 YI"• Flnancinll 67 F1R!:BAU. 71 Oeanfl
A.M.S, 842-3939 9 am·7 pm Uke new! Stlf<ontainld. ~~ALpec:nnm:'~ ~na~-SPM. Good WARD'S BALDWIN SMJDIO Stm. 9 slot IW1 cabinet sro: --gt!ntle with children, ha.I thll weekend. 543-08S4
& .......,.,.,Ji.I iron hue, $250. lSl9 Newport, C.M, 64244&4 2 Rlfiet 22 auto. 89'1-?IM2 all shotl. 646-1&43 5/15 12' F1yinj" Junior 0 a y ECONOMICAL living, mini-* ~76 GARA.Cf; Sale: Crpt, drp1, Optn £vet)' Nile WANTED 16 M.M. projector ANGORA klttel15, blaclc A Kilor/ral"l!r. $9M. ** Call moblle home. Adult park.
Traveled 100 ml. onlJ:.
TandC!m whetls. uv.uov
li.irhta. R.elrfgcratlon. gits •
electric. Coat $4200.
SacrWce $2S(lll. Call a1l ..
548-4641
-·K'"'E.,N-.SK"°l"°L_,-L--
patio dlrl, baby ~p, cr\b, 1-$.lnday Atttmoon 2 LEGGm fender mim>n, W/IOUnd. Call Colla Men white, gray's. 6 wks. U~ 87S-4784 for tree demo. Wa.UtinK dlttance to Hubor
WANTED: 6 Oldie But batbinelte, mile. 1215 CUU!;RANSEN Mmlere med on:~!?'._* ExtennlnaUng Co, 64G-8734. 2462 CHINESE Junk 30, k>ng, Cenkr. Prtoed f'latiL 51>ace
Goodie Oak dininr chairs. Se11cre1t. CdM. ~1129. ebotty 1969 orpn.jSells tor ~ HYDRAULIC TAIL9 good nd $2000 rent. $40. 64&-3102
Reu. Good. Cond. 545--MJ..2. Gara&'e Salt: All Week $4D>. Going to Hawaii • BELT vibrator $75, bedirame c..a1e lor P.U. 642--0162 :lca~s.00 1 graySni ::1;'otfer. (2~1 3~ or I -7*-iiax'i24i;,C";TRAl;;..:;.LER;,.-,w°'n=.io
316 Cedar, Npt Shores, NB. must 1ac. fDr $3000. Ca.n $7, dresser $10, call 673--5.llQ I.::========= cnbona. FbUy turn. Ready
TIME FOR
9UICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
FUrn., lampo, ok. equip. finance. 96S-'710 0, ..... l589 FREE TO YOU SUPER n .. uy part ""•lao CAL 20 • $2,950 ** GAR.AGE SALE ** GRAND-4' 11", walnut nn. TEAK sot.A, fef' cream set, kittens, llGJ...4533 5/15 673-05lT
lOOI Pua Dr, H.B. Completely .....,,,.ltloned. BBQ. othe' ll•ms. Very PETS end LIVESTOCK SABOT •4746
bl "" .~7 FREE! 6 wtc. old kittens. •'lM ._...., ,.....,_ • after 4 p.m. Mldrc $800. 675-1245 ~uona e ~-... ;u. _..., .,,~......,., mixed. 546-0!i68 SIU R£F'R.IG. g c:amen.. proJ,,
q , drps. apts. misc. 91S
Sonora Rd. CM. »""7-8689
• 3 APTS or turnltUtt •
3658 ()ranae AYI!, C.M.
(in the ret.r)
MISC . FURNITU RE
enrythln& IO'I Sunday J37
\V. $1.n AnlOnlo SC. 492-8389
llAMMOND Home Model B-3 ./ Newport Beach F&mll)I
Orp.n, PR 40 gpeaktr. Xlnt Club Memb«nhlp. $225. 5 B EAU T. k I t t e n 1 . Cat•
cood. $2395.. 496-3634 Days 549-22116, "" 557-8968 673-2202 5/16
J2' LARK Flberala.N: alwn.
U20 ma5t w/tralltr. JJkr new!
16 494-66!S
BALDWIN Acro1onl c , rRANCJSCAN dinner WI.ft,
walnut, noepUon&U1 flne IPS1l11 patttrn. 5 1 I e e e
cond. !62Se, 613-0592 lll!nlltt for 4. $3). 67Wm * UPRIGHT KIMBALL, BALBOA Bay Cub Mem-
ttc'Ol'ldlUoned. s:m. ( J ) benhlp for a le at dl&COUnt.
493--t731 bet-.·n !.-T p.m. Wttkdll.YI (213) 8T~1S20 .
BABY Guinea ptg1 to iood
home. M&-9965 5116
INSTANT Jove. a.J10rted kit·
lt ns.. 494-4214 5/U
SMALL mtx.ed breed Pl.IPPY
very ll'llelllgent. 646-1037 5118
i '
.,
• l
S4mese kittens er A.
~ • $25. 549-11196
1698 Iowa SI. C.M,
PC 32' Sloop. race equip.
Top Cond. $3850.
• Co.II 84&-2577
BLUEPOINT male Siatn('te SABCYI' equipped for racing,
kitten, shots., ACE A, papert llberglau, dolly I: extru.
$1\ leq Wilhe!ul. 549--1314 $350. 67$.-262.J.
' I .
NEW '70 r.10DEL $229!S
lo move tnl Gas hot wtr 18' Fully Sell.COntalned
htr. 5'18-7421 Scott'•, 914 N. llarbor S.A.
REDUCED price! Vlklna NI __ , C I T 01 . Scandia, 20x60'. Ex. oond. mrvu epr ra ler
5 Star Adult Pk. &tMld sm. ~
alter 6· Trucks 9500
~ M 51 Pant Lane nm. mw. W!t.IM1ryr, Bottom ~ DODGE P.U. "' ton. r
tr.eur. L&ndsca.~·AduH bed, R/11, CleM. $995
Park. Appt 90-1806 * 96&-4000 aft 5 pm *
OCEAN, GoU course in Adultj'57 ClIEVY, " ton, re.bit
Pk, O.B,O. 2e'", Pool. 283, Rta110ttablt o.ller.
M11na, bo.rtrt1t. 53&--0321 • m-nu *
•
------~-~-~-~---------------------------·
Af~ PllOT Fri"1, M'7 15, 1910
·~TATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
TNCh ,500 Trvckl 9500 Trvck1 t!GO .;C.;•:..;"';:;Pl;;.";.;..----95;.;2;.;0 Imported Aulol 9600 Imported ........ N0o Imported Autoo 96oo ~!~·-Clo u lc:s 9'~ Auto Lt H lnt '!10
GMC TRUCKS '<2 !'ORD E<onollhc. New Datsun Pickup DATSUN MERCEDES BENZ TllUMPH '58 CAD El °"'· .,..,,.,.. FORD AlTl'HORIZED V enc .• &OOd llttt, belier. N l9'IO O.llwt Pick U --------1·--------l·--------I Cobv. AU or!j:. 13,oOO mi·s. LEAlON Sl'EM '67 Fonl W lndew •n Here now. Clean. C&.11: Mi..9899 ew p '65, DATSUN P .U., new '156 MERCED,£$ 110' SJ; 1966 ntlUMPll Spltflrr '56 Con't lifa.rk D, m1nt C SY
Ble g l!fWhw, dJr. automatic Immediate Dcllvtry, f z========::. J .ttb cam.pa, dlr, Fully tat> dutch, tires &: a:en, lo m.!'.11, Coupe. Mu.st ael1.. X1nt «>ad. Mari: I COOvt. WJ.r. wheel.I, cood. "26 Locomobi1t' Jr. I America'• 1atlell aeuq
trtn&mmkln, exttllcnt (.VI). J!!f'! '510 fol')' equipped, pat oppor. ll1nt rood. $90CI. Eve.11 1 $4:l00. Pvt pty. 49rr0098 R/lt Many ertruJ SlOO & Rdett:r. rully l't'lt. Fresno aystem tor lln:ux:e or nel :=: fl:!~ ~u ~~ ~~;~M~ 1 o-NE~-o-F_A_KIN_°'_·_C._t_,..ey __ .1 :ftyitr!! ~va~ l;'=."""=="16-<11;::::=6=1=:;:;;;;:::;: •===~~======1.~T~.o~.~,,,...~~U~-~6'1>-J63~~1~-,:-: j ~~: :1~~~ ~~ = of all t1Pt cm UIJ
cuh, CYLT titi$) Miat K'i! UN IVERSITY now for beach mountalrl Full pries ls $2099. Su. • ENGLISH FORD MG '61 TR.4-A IRS. oYerdrivre, day•. Or wr 1 te v. e Immedtate dcll\'fl')' from
to a~te. ClU ~ OLDSMOBILE desert work or fun. C.101 (17'798) Call 5tS-W or · ---------1 Clean. Bjorklund , uoo No. oW?r300can and buckl
or 4!K-9'772. 2850 Harbor Blvd , Jeepalf'r Convertible, VS. '96-9773. ,.. ... ,. -NQ --,'68*Tii61>-w;;j16Pt>16Tii:•:!ijl-l.~Bl;;•~cb;;;;••~"';;·:'~·,.~..,~~·93~103;;~· I• Competitive ntet •5115 CHEVY % T. pickup. Costa ?.1esa ~9640 }f.ydraM.atlc, 4WD, rad\o, RENTAL All New Ena,Ush Sa.let. Servk.:., Parta '68 Triumph Tfl..1i0 • Newcardealel'lhlpwvice
Auto., 6 C)'1. Good cond. he«ter, locklna: dllf. dlx New '10 Ford PickUPI Fcrda In Dur Bl& lmmedilte Dellwry, Immaculate! 18,000 mJ. Ra ce Cart, Rods 9620 • Fu.U '"tradeln" valu. for SSOO. '29 Carnation, Corona
164 FORD lrim, pwr brake•, hvy duty w/camper, aletps 6. ·stock Now At AD MOdell $2'XIO. Call 6'1>813.1, )'Out pre5ellt car d~ Mar VS, half ton, loog bed, t>Xct). coollna:, Kelly hubs, Cllltolll e S97.50 Weekly FACTORY l969 Triurn 1i TR-6 I ·~ HILI..MAN Sta. Wag. • All popu.lu zna.te. avail-
tent rond. in & out. Radio, rear can ol tire hOlde:r, 2bo e + 5c Per Mile INVOICE! green, 19,~ mi's, 'Pric~ ~hev. cng. slick trans, servo able
'69 FORD, * ton w/hcavy heater. Take lottign car in ft !4" cable on Be:l:l'liew Make ReservaUolll Early Pol!ltively No Added to sell S2695. ~ h~e, Mere. n>a.r end, For C.Omplete Details Call ~~loai;:.rVS~::~o. ~~~ trade or small down, \Viii elect winch,. Mlded hiteh, Scott's, 914 N. Harbor, S.A. Dealer Cbargea! J.:;;=========I disc brakes, new clutch, etc. Malcom Reid
Jinll.nct priYate party <• & more. Cost $4-410. F'lrst HOUSECAR 0 c"°""' From VOLKSWAGEN N12'.~'Finn"°' . .,~.,~°"complete Lellllne Manaaer '57 FOR,D PICKUP 654711. Ca.II dlr Phil aft 10 firm offer over $2700 ta.Ire• '3? • ne nf Sedam. Sta Wiins, 3100 W. 0out H")', N.B. .,,., ~" Theodore
wtlh 'til motor $300 am'MG-3100 or 494·1029. it, Pllone 871-42'16 '1t make 20 built by Ford. Early GT's At Dur Colt ~ 54(1.)764 um FORD ROADSTER ROBINS FORD * 646-0059 * written oiler Box 555 Tustin. •treamllne design, Original Authorized MG Dealer LARGE ~~-=.,,--,--,,-,;:c: 1 '64 Ranchrro, ne"' V..S 289 bathroom, kitchen & beds. While OVenrtocka Strft!t & show $3000
2060
u.w........ Bl\ld, ti& Ill ton Dodge truck, May tart t 4 Cal l..&st. '69 MGB/GT Gree11 wlblk, SELECTION • 64S--O:b! ..... """ ~ eng., gen., '· er. ''· · Some nut. """· $1500. O>S!a M•• 64UIO!O be seen al 594 \V. 19th St, spd., PIS, a ir spring susp., 170 JEEP 675.-6782 Theodore 12,(Q) ml. OD. Chnn •poke of VW
C.M. 548--0m P<rf. black body.,....,..,. Univonal ST=N~w""r_n._cam-~ping-uru-.,_t-, ,.,-, ROBINS FORD :.'! nulial tirn <94-689'l C PERS
'64 f'ord l ton Stake, A-OK. '55 CHEV. 1% T Truclt. New V6 engine, .f wheel drift, 3 bit, sleep deck, 5 gal water, DD Harbor BIVd. AM
Sell or trade for smaller eng. Good cond. .11peed tn.Jll. Olive ereen. 1110\le, tbl & etc. best otter Costa Mesa 6C001D '68 MGB-GT O'Drive, Heat, Harbour v.w. ~·_Wanted 9100 i """"v"!""L!!!!E!!!!A!!!!S!!!!E~V"!""~I
WE PAY TOP 1970 Fon! va F-100 P!drup
truck. 646-8:158 * 962-6631 * convertible top, 7,000 mile&. 837-&349 wire whla, white, blk. upl.
95"" Near new, (322AFXl 3 "'''°"36~",-,CAMP"°"=ER=:--,""11,.,-.,-,·bodcc-:, Muat sell. $2600. 6T;27'19 AUTPIORIZED CASH \v/camper, alr, p/a. auto
trans, 39!XJ ml, S109 per mo.
Com-r. 95211 Campo" •• K M FERRARI '65 MGB Pri Pty li~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ ustom otors 0>1eman Ice box ""-• v. . SALES • SERVICE c M ~5 646-2188, 54i-&t20. 3010 Wat• ---------Good Cond. U400/0iler. l87U BEACH BL., 84ZMJ.5 for used cars & trucks just
SOUTH COAST
CAR LEASING
300 W. Cst Hwy, NB. &fS..2182 5th
Anniversary Sale
M5 Baker, . · ren. Costa Mesa FERRARI * 494-0301 aft 6 HUNTINGTON BEACl.I call us lor h'l'e estimate.
Rocre1Yn Vohicl" 9Sl5 8' Full cab-Over compe•, ~Cooo~"""'U::...! ==::::O::::P=:E=:L==::::l-~.6,=;8.=;;YW~'-;B;iU~G:;=...-[ GROTH CHEVROLET Used Cars 9900 lact, discontinued model. , _ _. d-•-. 2 !loo ' 1969 CHEVROLET' Co 1 -869 w ... """"' ....,.,. -----------r Sedan. speed, ra-mp ete. ...,...,. e .. , SALES-SERVICE-PARTS ....... Xlnt dio, heater, excellent rond. Ask for Sales. Manager 18th St. Costa Mes.a. 3100 W. Coe.st ffurv, '68 OPEL Kadett """" 18211 Beach Blvd
DUNE BUGGY
PARTS &
DUNE BUGGIES .••
'7fl Bugetla $:i99J
Vac11uero $995
-, lrarvlp. SlOOO. Eves ol in & out. Take small down, . · CUSTOM CAMPER • SEARS TENT TRAILER Newport Beach wk..,, 6T>-J354 wm llnanco pri"" party lformngto" B<ooh
e 642-9405 540.17641 -'=======f !ZKM588>. Call dlr Phil •II 114H087 Kl ~1'11
10°/o Off On All
California Campers
?t1otor Jiomes Chassis 1'-fodels C8b·~er1
Non-Cabs Slct>J>f'rll Shrlls Trailers
Orange Counly'!i Exclusive Californian Dealer
VISIT OUR NEW
SERVICE FACILITY
Supplies R<"nlals
''Your Vacation Is Our Business'•
Repairs
CALIF. CAMPER
1Q 5. Main, Or•n1•. Corn., af Ch•pm•n I M•ln
5Jl-m7 or SJl~l
Open Dally 1:00.S:JO Thun. & Fri. Tiii 9:00
Sun. 11:00 to 5:00
Turbohydramalic tranarni.!;..
sion, 350 eri'glne. power etcer.
lng, spilt rims, heavy duty
tires with OPEN ROAD ll%
fl self (.'()ntained camper.
}"ull bath facllitie• Including
shower. s.leepg 6, has every
poss.Ible feature you \\'OU.ld
want. Cost originally $8000,
Now Only $5599
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
2850 Harbor Bl., Co!!ita Mesa
541).88)!!
Campers 9520
'63 VW Camper, Stove,
i~box. heater, good seats.
SllOO or be.st oiler. 499-361.!
Naw C•rs 9t00New C•" 9800 New Can 9800
GO
ILD
IN A NEW OR USED
MUSTANG
1970 MUST ANG HARDTOP
Vinyl hud1et 11111, <olar keyed c1rpth, floor ihift, l111lrvm1"t
9tv911, Fihtr9 l1u b1lt,d li•11. New OFOILl t 6111.
1969 MUSTANG MACH I
VI, Cliral!tt 1iyl1d wllt1l1, wide 0Y11 ti1e1, H1nd!in9 Sutptn1fo",
Crui11•0•m1li< li1n1., powtr 1tt1rin9 I br1 k1 1, 1ir cond., ttdio
I 16 other 1•tra1, 01tl1r 01ma #9R02H I 11176.
1968 MUSTANG GT/CS
v.1, r1dio, h1altr, Crui11·<"1111+ic, whi\1 well tir11, wire
wl.atl <overt. Lie, No. WYG~7 S.
1965 MUST ANG
V.1, r1dio, htaltr, a ir cand., pc-wet 1l11rin9 & br1••1,
Crwi11·o·m1li<. Lie. No. MPM9lo.
Or Prowl The ROADS
$2625
$2575
With The TOP CAT In Can . • •
A New Or Used COUGAR!
~.!~~ ... ~,~~~~.~ ... ~~.~.~!~!., .. ,. $4050
wltitt will fht1, paw1r 1!1trin9, paw1r front dit< br1!it1, tilt
1ho1rin9 wl.ttl, 1ir cond., radio, d1car. tr:m, tinttd 9l•n,
01lvx11•1t btlh, remolt mirror. New OFtlHS .. 9996.
1969 COUGAR HARDTOP
v.1, hu<k1t '''"· ,r.ctric t.loc\, l1cli., ra11tv 9 roup, 1tyltd ••• ,r
wh••l1, ttcing mirrot, p1rformtnf.t aJla, inltrior d1<01, C ri1i1•·0•
1111fic, pow1t 1l1•rint1, powtr f1011l di1< b•alr.,, air cond.,
rtdio, litalar, tinted 91111. New tF91MS67727,
1967 COUGAR
v .1. •l•reo l1pt 1Ytlt111, 1ir cond., powtr 1it1ti"t I h11li11.
¥l11yl roof, ti11itd 91111, wliil1 well ti1•1.
DON'T MISS
FROM THE
THESE BUYS
...... --OUTH COAST
FORD-MERCURY
';;"~~~ A"lboriled FelTllrl Dooler PORSCHE IO am 540-3100 or <94-1029. WE PAY CASH
'61 CHEVY!ongvon compe•. FIAT ------WANTED
Warranty, 23,WJ rni. Awn. CREAMPUFF I'll pay top dollar for your
Ing. ''°•" v-s '"to. ""' Auto Sport Ltd. 911 SPORTAMATIC voLKSwAcEN today. c.u FOR YOUR CAR
offer over S2500. 673-4923 Mr Jame& 673-9l9l eves/ and ask for Ralph, 549-3031
'69 VW ''AdYenture'' ORANGE COUNTY'S wkncta. Mfs. Brown Day1 Ext. 66-67. fi73.0900. CONNELL
CHEVROLET Camper, radial tires. stereo, NEWEST 774-61..10. '66 VW Sedan, re-blt eng,
many extra.&. 6"-6272 FACTORY AUTHORIZED 'GS PORSCHE 9ll new clutch. good cond, 2828 Harbor BIYd.
Dune Buggies 9525
VW Dune buggy. Flota tlon
tlres. Strttl. Legal. $600.
646-2188, ~
1958 VW Sedan. Ideal for
dune buggy conve rai on,
$210 •. 675-38'J9
FIAT DEALER Sportomatic, air, AM.FM'. $1150 I belt oiler. Call aft C.OSta Mesa w .. 1200
Ml.lit sell, best o JJer. ooon 6T>l92.6 WE PAY TOP 001..J...AR WILD
TRADING
NEW
"FIAT 850 SPIDER"
$2210
52G-5917 1968 9 pass V\Y Bus in xlnl FOR TOP USED CARS
'63 Ponche cpe, red w/blk ~· By owner. Below It your car 11 extra clean,
int. Xlnt cond. Nu tires, retail bl bk. Call 833-6903 see 115 first.
See to appreciate. $2400. or 673.2014. POOLE BUICK
6~2347 '69 ~nger vw Bus 2M E. 17th St.
'58 PORSCHE Spdster 1600N Perfect cond, under "'ar'. Costa Mesa. S48-Tffi5
comp!. unaltered . E.'I'. ~ty. S2590 or offer. IMPOR'J'S WANTED
ceptional. Silver/red. (n4J 548-0308 Orange Counties
Imported Autos 9600 e S4l-3870. '&1 VW Bug, new motor, TOP S BUYER
AUTO SPORT LTD ci (ch I' Su -4 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA AUSTIN AMERICA '67 Porsche, Ai\f.FM, VERY u · re1. n,,,, ste1·00
CLEAN lo m;" tape. Good IM;d• & ""'-18881 Beoch Blv<I.
AUSTIN AMERICA
Sa.lea, Sei'vice, Parts
Immediate Delivery
All Modeb
J1rtuporr
jl111port ~;
3100 W, Coast Hwy., N.B.
9625 Garden Grove BIYd., .ir 592-lsOO * Just tuned $901). ~I H. Beach. Ph. 847-8555 Garden Gl'OV'e
537-7777 89~7561 '67 912 4 SPEED. Xlnl. 196.f VW Bug, Xlnt cond, New C1r1 9800
AM/FM s. w. radio. l.£lw $69'J or Best oUer. ZJ.18
1970 FIAT Spider Conv. 5 mi's. Call 637-4589. Rutgers Dr. CM, bl\\'TI 5&9J ---~----c--
mo's new. 2600 actual mi's.. pm '70 Chevy Be la ir
Red. $1985 Firm. PriYate '67 Ponche 9ll S. wnuh'.le * * WA NTED: Reliable par· 4 Door Sedan. VS, automatic, I' w/blk inter. l4.000 s c rl -nd arty. 673-6702 ty lo assume payments on power see ng, air co .
'66 Fiat Roadster llOO Xln'I ,;$4~100"."51=&-;1;;563;-·~=-= '69 VW can 642-1003 all Blue Book S3495. Will sacri-
c:ond. ·~MPO~E, ~~· AM· 6 pm. ' fi6~ S2til?·k(385APSk IR)k DI 545-6519 or 962-1782 • very ean. ~. ,63 VW Good cond'f ' 9 Buie Y ar x .
Al.SO:
'6!1 vw &ij: $1495
'68 VW Conv S1350
'59 V\V P.U. ~
'69 Bl\1W-1600 $2095
'68 Ford Cortina $795
'63 Ford P .U. ?\take Offer
VW P a rts ComJMny
1804 \V. 5th St.
Santa Ana, 547-6246
BUICK
RlJJCK Riviera, 1966,
.f irebird grt"en, full powt!r,
straddle seats, tilt steering,
undercoated, Xlnt mnd. Call
847-6852.
66 SKYLARK, 2 dr hdtp V6.
Au!o, PIS, air, Rift.
Ru1itproofed x'lnt con d ,
$1250. Moving. 833-3517
'68 Le Sabre 4 aoor, hni
tp. Air cond. PIS, P/B,
R&H. Be!o,v wholesale a t
Sl850. 846-6120
1956 Super Hanllop.
RunJ good. S75.
•642-1467•
06.l BUICK Le Sabre, air
cond, p.b., p.s. 1 O\vner,
51.000 mi'!!. Sl175. 6T>50l6 * 673-2624 * 1 1:.c, Al Du '•ion , 3 speed • mothers lillle gas 'fi9 FIAT 850 Spider, "'hite c can, 1:.u. so oc ug· 1 ·i · F IJ
w/blk conv. top. Xlnt cond. '64 PORSCHE C. reblt eng, gy. needs t.fpair S700. Call sa~er$,·,,,:w,CNVm1 ~!~el 's ull CADILLAC
l l9ii0. w ,185: new paint, crpf, 2 Pirelli!, 642_7243 aft 3 m price "."'" . """ .ma
VT..-.. batt. $3050. 63fl.-24ll P · down will finance pnvate ---------1
fi-12..MOO 54().1764
Authorized MG Dealer
AUSTIN HEALEY
'61 Austin Healey HT.
Good cond. ~. * 536-2746 *
DATSUN
'66 Datsun
1600 Rdstr.
Very low mileage, extra, ex.
tra clean car, Must see.
<SQS.7271
$1077
AUTO SPORT LTD
9625 Garden Grove Blvd.,
Gan:len Grove
'68 FIAT 850 Sedan. Xlnt 1968 VW Sanroof. Lo patty, Call dlr Phil aft 10 1959 CADILLAC PARTS
cond. U,CXMJ Mi. Radio. RENAULT mileage. Sacrilice. $1350. am 54().J100or494·1029. FOR QUICK SALE
494-5617 after 6 P .M. .~",100-24Q3""-,,,-~=;,-.,-~-'70 REBEL Battery
'62 VW, Xln't For Dune Bug· \Vindshicld Wipers JAGUAR
JAGUAR
HEAD9UARTERS
The only authorized JAGUAR
dealer in the entire Harbor
""''· Complelu
SALES
SERVICE
PARTS
Poole
'59 REi'lAULT. re bu 11 t gy. $2j(l. 6,803 Actual Miles Radio
engine, SSO. cost S22CI. 2965"' 962-1782 or 545-6:il9 AulOma tic trans, power slt~er. \Vheel!'I
Terry Road, Laguna Beach .66 Volkswagen ex c e 11 e n t ing, pQ\\'er brakes, radio. Transn11511on
condition. S975. heater. (249AEEJ Air Conditioner &
C.all 492-5818 $3199 Full Price Heating Unit
Kustom Motors And Many Other Items '63 KARMANN Ghia. 70,000 542-31Jl f 5 p M * 170 SUBARU mi's. Xlnt Cond. SOOD. Call 84::i Baker, C.M. S<ID.5915 =~c-c,,-A~C•_'_~-~·~
510-1413 J!l10 CodHlac Co"'" de v;u,,
Here Now • OLDSMOBILE fully eqp'd. like new $6000. Imm~iatc Delivery '68 VW. lo miles, .11unroof, CTI4J 675-2030
• 90 MPH Capability S500 of extras, xlnt cond. '-~-'-----:--:-: ) ~~=~~-~~= e 35 Miles Per Gallon Call 675-1753 1 '68 CAD El Dorado, 26,000
• Be (]ju! St I. 1971 OLDSM9BILE 98 mi's. Xln't Loaded, i-t8!15, au Y tng BL~E '69 'W: Bug. New. TOWN SEDAN 833-2255 or 833-1103
SUBARU
Test Drive Today At Stick, has radio. Best oUer. Facto..., ai r conditioning . . · .
K to M to 54.S-6392 °3 . • ' CAD 65 Coupe cit' Ville. BUICK us m 0 rs ~..;;C:.:::-:---=c=:;-=c:::-I automatic, racho (rear $1700. White/blk leather int JN 845 Baker, C.M. 541).5915 '67 VW bug, original owner, speaker), heater. po\ver Full pow Air 644-l04l ========= [ good rond. l"lt'W brakes & steering, pc'o\'er disc brakes, · · COSTA MESA TOYOTA '"''· $1095, 540-6287. whttl .. ~ ..... mo t. m~-TIME FOR
234 E. 17th Street --:e"'·•",~v"i"'v-:.:;.8;c,,.= .. -:•;--1 ror. tinted gless, w.s-w.
537-m7 -893-7561 548-7765 Good Trans. Best ofier Serial Ne. 3846roM27639l
DATSUN ·~~G~a 3·~~:aa:~rt. ITIOIYJ()ITJAI l9&> v~~~:~!. ~ng. $4694
Priced For Quick Sal• $Jj(J, just reblt. SacriflCt'. can UNIVERSITY
9UICK CASH
_ntROUGH A
'69DATSUN4DOORW/AIR * 6ia.ia32 * Mark 11 Wagons 5'ID--0292.Aft5.644-0'104
'63 DATSUN 4 DOOR -;======::.[ H " L p · k OLDSMOBILE ... I ux IC ups '62 V\V. Body Dam .... ed.
'67 DATSUN STA WAG Auto KARMANN GHIA Land Cruisers OK Mechanically. "5o. ~~a.:t;;y~I., Cost~=
DAILY PILOT
WANT ADS Example W 1gons can 962-1782
9600
'67 Datsun Sta. \Vag, 4. spd. ---------DEAN LEWIS
VCX>l50 Sa.Je Pri~ SST:i. '58 KA&'1ANN Ghia, all syn-, '68 V\V, auto, 1200 mi'11, like Imported Autos 9600 ,....,'lert@d Autot
Barwick Datsun ~~an~S~ !~ :!1;; 0~~e1:. l!lllf' Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 ~;'.J1J 1~~r.s1mmaculate! liiiii~iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijj
998 S. c..,t Hwy., 962--0933 BIIJ.. MAXEY * '63 vw ""'· moch pcrloct.
Laguna Beach 1965 KARMANN Ghia Convt. 44,000 mi's, R/H, nu brks
546-4.061 or 494-9971 $995. Original ow nl!:r , ITfOIVIQITIAJ 8t good lire!!. S82j. 642-5864
DOT DATSUN 6n.sto3 ""· •" '· • ---~ e ·51 vw e
OPEN DAILY 18181 BEACH BLVD. Imn1aculare $5C10
AND MERCEDES BENZ Hunt. BHch 147.a.155 * oft ti pm 548-0503 *
SUNDAYS lnrlN.ofo:iutHwy.onBdli MUST Sell '64 Volk!!wagen.
18835 Beach Blvd. TOYOTA, ·59 Corona H.T. $675. C311 Fred Milne: work
lluntlngton Beach auto trans, lge. a i r, 536-2561. home 536-89S4
842-7781 or 5':!0-0442 >:-MtF?l-1, vi~y\ top, $1650 '65 vw Bug, mags. headera,
firm, 968-2055. pin striping. Offer. e '69 TOYOTA Crown Wagon. Call IHS-1432
t11a DATSUN -R/H, disc brkl, luggage '63 VW $585
·rack, Xlnl cond. $2300. * 673-6865 *
"'Leader ln The Cear.b Otlel" 968-.oG60 aft 5 pm '69 VW. $1900
ZIMMERMAN ~"""";;;=:;;;.=;:;:=:;=~ J '69 TOYCYTA Corona. 4 dr, Xlnl cond. 6446548
uto .i.m. '/h. 12,000 m;·,. ==~==-==--2845 HARBOR BLVD. Just like ne1v. Sli75. 164 VW GOOD COND. ====-~~1~0~~~~~~~~;~~;~;6~15-39<0~~~·~""'~--~==:'""=·1 $635. 49'2.8713 • '69 VW, Extm~. blue, •
• !\take offer •
STAR. GA'ZEK1<~ ""''" ~:;,---By CL\ y It POILAN---.--,,,,..--t "·61"'Vl"•;;--;;Bug. 1-m-m-,-.,~,,-.. -,-.
· UllA 33,tl)I} nil's. $1325
M Yovr Daily Atfiritr Guld.. 1f.: Sl'!'· ll rh * 673·1106 * Y AttarJing lo lltt &tarr. ocr. 11~
To dew1op messoga fer Saturdoy, · ·s.; V\V Camper. 1600 motor, ___ , .. ~ ---~1 __ ._ > ,4 •• .s. 6
regg ......... s.....,,.,,..,......., ng to.-,.,,.rs 7.1).56 new lraltl!i., AM/1'·111.
of your Zodiac birth ~lgn, * SJ9.646S * , ,,.,_,. l l Mai. 61 w ,11
25utp•M l2ln• ft2~ ·57 VW BUG \\'11500 cc enJi:.
3 si-ll 1i ftl Caol sunroof, :tdnt cond, l owner, '"'° a.v-6'Md 51....,.ioloiy 35 ~1..., ~ Wortt. I $1200. 494-82)1 •h ,36W~ 661.-.,
7Folr J7lo 67 ~ SMnT.utUS
: :iM ~ ~........., :: ~ H~.11../J.&
10~ -«IYw 10~ OfC.. Jt Q!'!
110.0.. •lfDl"Qri 1,,'~~ lf..2'1-35-0 . 129-42WriftnQ
IJ 1., 4J St..,,.. 7) And
• ,, ""' 4'4 °"' 74 JIWtllf'll 150.. .. sw_,.;ri, 75N 16~ "60t 76·Ta 11 s.,. ~, Of n ,.,,_.,.
II»-4Ta 71'-hul 1tri.i;.. ..,w,..., nv-'°'-:'!OhwoOUI 81)$piocW 2 I More-5 I 8t 11 fJIP"'W n si-1r !12 r"""' 12 WM!ltllol
2) AtfKrian '.U Y<:NI al,.....
2•~ ~~ 84~ -ts C... 5) Modi IS lllt
VOLVO -·--Be!lt Stock ol VOLVOS
in Orallgl' County
DEAN LEWIS
1966 Jlarbor, C.ttt 646.!Wl
'59 VOLVO. 4 cyl, 4 1pd,
new brks &: valve job. Runs
good S7ti 557...Q)l?
~ue1, Class ics fflS
l6TQ ~Dtolll'Cll Mf-71 /lwf ~1 v,,... 111_... '37 JI OU SEC AR -One flt
,. c-~ Y....,. 11 Wr..m 20 buill by Ford. Early • 29 Alett )9 Mo!, " lnlt<w1b .wr. n lOS.. .oc.u11...... 90~ l!trnamllne l!e~ign. Origlnl'I
vw
DOMESTI C
TRADE INS
AT NEAR
WHOLESALE
'61 Monza Cpe.
Auromali( 1r1n1rnln..., tQB~~~ N >
$399
'66 Datsun
Pie_~ UP ... ,pftG, ••11pe dtdi"
1$8M..al
$899
'69 Chevy
$!ylnkk "" Ian Ok k11p, 11·1,
IUID. •~n1.. r.cllo, ""'~" CUllDm Cll>, C!lrOITWI wheel•,
mountlil on t!!lrl hf••~ dV'
t'I' """· lull cl't,_ P11<~1g1, aim vncttr IA<1'ar'I' w1rranty. lnclvdft ""1<111\1 cov11, (215'
''" 52499
'61 Pontiac lt111Dt1I, l\u!Dlntllc: tren~~
1~ •Mio, ""'tr U'XV.Jll11 $298
'66 Buick
$~yl1rk. II .. , <Milo, l'tMlw,
l1c. air, lilt 1!1ter!119 """"'· °""' ow<11r, vlrf' low mu...-.
$1399
'66 Thunderbinl
Towt>1 1.0an, 1u11 oo ... r. ,_ 10r'/ l lr Cl)lld!llOll"'9, attso-
1\l~ly !ikl new, !RPl<-'32)
$1699
'65 Ford
'68 MGB·"C"
GT (pe, A111o!Mtlc: tr1111mllo slon, rlldio, wrlrt W!!etli., 21,.
ODO rnlln. (TXF-RI)
$2499
;-: 4i~. ,. tOtGood @Ad""' ()NJt'r!f hfll hroom. kitchen ,. ~1. •• -... -•.""'••'•n•..,. ... •." ... -..,.•.,ow.,.•.,•.,· .,'".,•.,•.,•.,•.,.-..,.•.,•.,...,.,. ... .,..,..,.!!!!! ---~-~~~~~~~.,;$/~::::::::========~----! ~::m rust, n1ns. Sl!IOO.
1970 H1rbor Blvd., Costa EJtt. 66 o r 67
MoH S49-3031 S4t0 lHI
• • •
l r
I I
I
TRANSPORTATION
Used C•f'9 9900
Frld11, M11 15, 19'ro DAILY P'll.OT 4J ~NSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION I l'RAN5P ORfATION I TRANSPORTAfUlii
Used C1r1 9900 Und C•rt 9'00 New Ctrt: 9800 New Cart 9800 New C1r1 ,_
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTAT ION
~~---~~ ~~--~~~~~~
l!U:::ood::;:...;:C.;:•'..:'---..:9900:.:;;: Uood Cort 9900 Uood Cort 9900
CONTINENTAL FORD MUSTANG CADILLAC CAM ARO CHEVROLET -
'65 COUPE DE Vlu.E. AU
xtru but air. Lo mlle•. 'nt£ moot bt!•utilul '68
c..maro, Pa.y-ott $1'115, Call
aft 6: 494-9816 ~~nd. $1695 f irm.
CA MARO CHEVROLET
'68 CAMARO '63 CHEVY Impola 3'T eor.
2 Door Hardtop, 3 speed, ex. 2 BB cllrb, p/1, p/b. $625.
cellent cond. Goddess iroki ~*~5'J&.~2388=='-~~-
ext. w/matching int, Take MUST sell '67 Chevelle SS
ama.tl down, Will finance prt.. 396, like new, many xtras.
vale pa.My, Full price $1299. A1kin& nsoo. ~26tH.
(UQ0027l Call Phil dlr a.ft '66 S.S. !96, red Chevelle
10 am 540-3100 or 494-1029, conv. Auto, Great Shape.
'69 CAMARO Z28 h \. $1250. Owner, 84U7lf
performance, fully equip-'57 Chev. Xlnt meeh'I cond.
ped. $2.800. 638-8429 $250 or ofter. Call 673-9211
Used Co11 9900 Used Cars 9900
FREE
las Vegas holiday for two
lllNG IN THIS ADYllTISIMINT
AND llCllYI YOUI YALUAILI
TIAYIL CllTlflCATI WHICH IN·
CLUU: WITH PUICHASI
Round trip 1ir tr1111port•tion to ind
from l11 V1g •1! Gro1111d fr•n1po1•
f•lion in l•1 V•9•1! Fr•• <;ht!l'I•
P•CJn•! Free hr11kf11f, lund1 or
dinntot! V,ljd J .Jayl I Wll~! 111•
1t1nt r111rv1tion by phon1f
VALID ANY TIME
7 DAYS A WEEKI
NEED A CAR?
W1 1p1cl1lli• in ••lllnt tfotl ''''to 9•M
P•opl1 who m•y h•~• h•d pro\tl1m1 11•1
lukruptc, -a:.,o
Stete Aid -New 11 Tew11
If you 1r1 wor•ing 111.J witli119 to m••• p1y1J11!1h, lot't 1t1••• I de1I. W1 <;1rry our own 'onlr1th.
Blue Chip Auto Sales
214S HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA ' .,
'57 CHEVY, Sharp! '63
Chevy 'n T. + shell. G••
dryer, German Shep pups,
champ. sired, bl.k ,\ tan
& blk &: silver. Color TV.
89'7->IO!
'68 Chevelle Malibu, 2 dr
hdtp, V!I, aulo, p/1, p/b,
bucket seats, lo mi'1, new
tires, VERY SHARP. SZ150
LATE '61 Continental, 1
owner. c lean, run,
perfecUy, air, le11.lber, &
powtor. Priced lo 1 e I I ,
646-4400 weekdays, 64.2--0768
V.ttkends 6' IV~.
'66 CONT'L, PMced to S<'ll,
Jo mi's, full pv.T. air, im·
maculate, $2050. 6T>6999
59>-1660 CORY AIR
'68 CHEVELLE Malibu, 21----. .C..------
dr hdtp. vs, auto, pis, p/b, ,.._,,. 1961 CORVAIR
bucket seats, lo mi's, rl('W UUUQ cond! $250
tires, VERY SHARP. $2150 ==="*'°64=>-"'5.5=="=*==; {213) 592--1660 -~-~--CORVETTE '66 CHEVEl.LE 396 cu. In.
450 tip. Extra•. Ora.Heel! -,65-_-Co_rw_tte--3Z7~~1-;w
Best oUer over $1 350.
FORO 1963 Ctry Squire, 9-MAOl l 1969, 390. t &pd,
pan, Good. N11v rebuilt AM/i"M atereo, air, P/S,
auto, trans. Po.,..'f'r-~tcer, P/6, 12,000 ml., aqua
etc. Alr cond. Flrtt $350 wf\\•ht int. By &du.lt owner.
takes. MS-OW~ Pert cood. 540--HM
'70 l\la\'erick. Auto. ,000 1965 Ford Muatana:, new
1ni 8 track stereo, 4 kn, motOI', trans, radiator, bat·
new D70.14 J>OIY&IU Ires tery & tires, by owner,
& .f, chrome astro rims beklw bl bk. 833-6903,
$1995. 5'1>1592 aft 6 673-2014
FORD Ranchcro, 1969, 11.ke .. ~ .. ~MU=~!<r~AN='G~~,~.~,~V~ ..
Ile\\'' Asking $5(X) Cllsb &: 57M, 1tick, ;pee, hand.I~
take over pay n\ en Is . packqe. Sell or trade,
M~~~ 644-20.ff
'63 Galaxie XL. R/H, P/s, '65 ?t1ustane oonv., vs auto.
p/b, t."OOCI rond. $500. Power Brr -··tom •-1 l'-1;_'><C.•1 • • ..__ ... "
===="~=~=~===""-I X clean &: X cond. 830--0901 eves.
MERCURY weli. & 1poller, mags ovals,
,,.._l983, 6IZ-8092 2 k>P', AM·FM, aulD "'"'" OLDSMOllLE
'64 Chevelle Malibu, 6 cover, whl locks. alan11 ----------!·---------1
t"yllndcr, 4 dr, auto, R/H, system, lov.• mi, xlnt cond . 1960 :\lERCURY. Engine & 1970 OLDS
new tires & paint. $575. $2350. 897-7932. transmission recently rcbh. SPORT CPE.
837-3634 SEU.ING a 1967 Futback Also '57 Ford trans. All $2498 $100. 3QJ2 L"al"brook Ln, '64 Nova VI Stn Win. auto, Corvette, 1 owner, under ,........,
air, R/H, Lugpge rack, warranty, must sell-movlnr. CM. 5-m-3.Sll m 69 MON11tl.Y PAYMENT
very clean. $675. 644-{)552 cau aft 5:30, 67)...2054. '66 Parklane convt beauty, ·
54 CHEV COUPE .68 CORVETTE 4.?7 conv. 428 HP. air, lull power, S299 is the total down .,.,,.
Good OOl:ldltlon. New tires. Xlnt cond. !\lake offer. Call Sl.200 pvt ply. 646-4370 ment. $77.69 it the total monthly payment includfna e M&-6204 • art 6 pm. 833-275.) '61 ~1onterey, 4 Dr., radio, taxes, llOOtSe and all carry.
1967 Impala SS heuter. po\\·er, $400 cash. ing charges on a_pproval of
4 spd. $1450. Xlnt cond! COUGAR 4M-2l57 Bank cttdlt for 36 months. * 84&-3939 * Or, Jl you would prefer to
"" 2 DR. Chevy Caprice. '61 COUGAR. '""' '''"" MUSTANG pay"""· the lull cash pd"' Has e~ryth~. $1795. new tires & shocks, p/s, 18 only S2661.90 incl~ all --,.-==*~"-,2-889~-'.,*:o-,== I >..Int rond. $2050. 830-5ll5 1---------taxes and 1970 license trans-~ '6."i l\JUSTANG hd!['I, 4j,000 fer, Nolhlng more to pay. '54 CHEV Conv. Co CLASSIC. 1967 COUGAR full powrr. l\li, Sacrifice, must sell! Deferred payment price is
283 Eng. Xlnt nd, $4.95 air. $1600. cau after 6:30 "'"""""' 367 Grenob'-Ln., •-84 . clud' all or oiler. 494-5811 PM. ·~ •135. u-..... iwo .,. ~.,.,, m in; carry.
_. Costa Mca, bet. 6 A I PM, ill&' charpf, tu.es and 1970
lice~ transfer. CHRYSLER
'69 CHRYSLER New Yorker,
4 dr. fully equip. incl. air,
ant/fm Ii: .1ull power incl
windowa. S 3 5 9 5 . Call
642-0590 or 644-4746
1969 CHRYSLER, Xlnt rond!
Town & Country sin \\·gn,
all extras, pvt owl)Cr $3150. -
CONTINENTAL
DODGE
1969 Dodge Super Bet'. xlnt
rond., 5.000 mi. must sell
$2~9~ cash. &12-5505
'68 l\10NACO s·c".:c· "'""'"-::,-. 7A~,,
cond. Xtras. $2500/best of·
fer. 847-2867.
·69 DODGE Van-cust. Int.
Elec. rcfrlg·new tirecs. Tape
deck. Bob 613-2098
FORD
REE
L.P. STEREO ALBUM
'65 ?i.1Wi'tang, r/h, auto, V-8
28S. Good Shape. $950 Call
~a.5741.
1965 MUSTANG 289, auto.,
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE
RATE IS ONLY 11%
UNIVERSITY
ps/pb, ta~ deck. Good OLDSMOBILE
cond. Call after 5. 548-8420 2850 Harbor Bl., Costa l.lesa
'·
OPEN 7 DAYS
CALJ. 540-9640
PLYMOUTH
PLYMOUTII 1968 Roadrun-
ner coupe. 4 spd trans,
R&lf, polyg\ass t i res,
headers, 11hure gr I p.
673-6075 alt 5 PM.
'63 Plymouth 2 dr hrdtp,
auto, pis. Xln't C.Ond, $600
645-2118 after 6.
JOHN CONNILL
"NO GIVEAWAYS
NO GIMMICKS"
••• J1,11t21 Yto'f of Hofl..t
D•ellng, S11lin9 Ch1Vl'ol1h.
WITH A DEMONSTRATION DRIVE OF ANY NEW
1970 CHEVROLET AT CONNELL CHEVROLET
'69 FURY m 4 dr HT,
Wdcdt $1l95 or beat oUer,
Pvt Pty must 1111! ~2461
'55 Plymouth, good running
cone!. SlOO. 2221 Harbor
Blvd., C.M .
WHILE THEY LAST -COLLECTORS ALBUM
F&ATURING: Burt Ba~haraah •Glen Campbell· Dionne Worwick
MONTE /CARLO
The Money it
doesn't cost
will amaze you.
NEW '70 NOVA
NOT STRIPPED. Tinted glass, evep. emission control, push
button AM r•dlo, Gobi bei911. 1273788 )
NEW '70 CHEVELLE
NOT STRIPPED. 'vs 11n9in11, turbo hydremetic tr11n1mis1ion,
tinted 91111, etc.
LARGE SELECTION OF USED CARS
''4 CHEVROLET $695 '65 CHEV. WAIOON $1095 '68 CORVETTE
Impala. Automatic, radio, Malibu 1t.atlon wagon. 427 4 spel'd, Al\1-F~f.
heater, rwu stttrln1. Auto., R&H. factory air rally \VhC'els.
(IQR263 cond. ((FDK301) (YQU639l
'68 CORTINA $995 '66 CHEVROLET $1095 '69 TOYOTA
1600 deluxe. Bucket seats, lmpe.la Cpe. 1 o~. \Vagon. 4 speed, radio,
radio, heater. (ITK354 l Automatic, R&H. l\'t'r heater, bucket seats.
steering, CSLU331) (XE\'9101
'67 OHL ,95 '62 VOLKSWAIOIN $695 '66 CAl'RICE
Kadette deluxe. 4 !IJ)f!ed. 2 Door. Automatic, radio, heater,
bucket st'aU, stereo. ('rYC71ll fllc~alr cond .. 1 owner.
<BTS365) ., (${.; ,11
'66 CNRYSLIR . $1095 '67 PLYMOUTH $1795 '68 FORD TORINO
N~rt. Auiomatlc, a.tr Fury ID Coupe. Auto .. Coupe. Automatic, radio,
co ., P.S., radio, hee.ter. R&H, P.S .. f.actory air heal.er, P.S., faclory a.ir.
((YCL677l cond. (TWN162 I (W){R839)
•
IMMIDtATI
DIL.IVERY
IMMEDIATE
DILIVIRY
$3895
$1395
$1295
$1695
PONTIAC
'68 PONTIAC GTO
Conv, Orangtr w/blk top.
P .S. P.B. Air, Good con<I.
18,000 ml. Mwit Sell tbia
v.·eek! 494-5739 after 5,
'69 GTO. Ex. cond , 4 sp.
P/S & P. disc brakes. Posl.
trac. R/H. Tach. Av. gm
5'8-15..'i9 aft 6
'65 PONTIAC Tempest
\Vago n. 1 owner, x Int
transp ortation . $1000.
673-8103
19&1 LE MANS 4 Dr. Hrdtop
$2295. Power •. air cond.
Ov.-ner 673-2259 E v e 1
644-fl972
'68 PONTIAC Catalina Wag.
PIS. pjr, fm stereo, new
tires &: brks. $2900. Aft 6,
673-543.')
1970 PONTIAC Flreblrd 350,
green, auto trans, p.1., p.b .. '
2 mo old, 2800 miles. Must
.~eu. Ptv. Pty. 846-3221 (TI~)
'68 Firebird 400, landau top,
air, pis. p/b, 1 owner,
Consider trade. TI5 VlctOria,
C.M. aft 6 or wknds
'65 GTO, p.s .. p.b .. air cond,
~ speed, rceeotly M!blt, &
many extras. 64&-3655 .
'64 Le~1ans. Saqillcef 326
eng., 4 spd, new paint. $175.
Call 646-2577'
'64 GTO, 1 owner, 37,IXXJ
mi's, $1350. Qlll after 5,
646--0365
'67 F1REBIRD 400, p/1,
r /h. 1 O\vncr, Mags, $1690.
642-3970. (213) 867-2605
'61 PONTIAC Tempest, auto,
R/H. Good cond. thruout.
S195. Call 540--0062
RAMBLER
Rambler Ambassador
station wagon, pwr steer
&: brakes, goOO cond, •
962-7690 --
'85 RAMBLER 2 dr, 32'1 V·I.
Good cond. $8j(), * 6(2..8649 *
'61 R.Ai.'1:BLER. Sta . .,. Wag.
Runs good! N~ pa.Int.
$175 or Make otter! 64J....3122
'67 RAMBl.ER 440.
Air cond. F\tll powet, mas
wheeil $1f75. 847-.6745
'60 RAMBLE R$180 ~ 646.1343
T·BIRD
T·Blrd, motor j ust
'Overhauled. T11kc owr paytJ; + some cash. 548-1627 •
BEACH CITY DODGE MUST NOW
DISPOSE OF THEM QUICKLY!
NOTHING HELD BACK! EVERY ONE
OF THESE CARS MUST IE SOLD!
68NEW
1970's
REDUCED
OFF WINDOW PRICEI
, ••• ,
ELEPHANT RIDES
PLUS, LIVE & IN PERSON
·"POGO" THE CLOWN WITH
HIS BAG OF LAUGHS!
WOW!~~~
BRAND NEW
1970 DODGE
DART SWINGER
$
$
1968 DODGE DART GTS
'~" ........... ~0 .... 0~ ~---. ,..~ •.. ...,_ ..... 1.,, ...... "<Ht-"· lo• ,.1i. .... tXlU6ll HOW ONl
3 BIG DAYS! FRIDAY,
SATURDAY & SUNDAY
'TIL 10 PM!
'FREE!
*POPCORN*
PEANUTS * SOFT DRltlCS
PLUS BAUOONS
FOR THE KIDS!
BRING THE WHOLE
FAMILY FOR A
DAY OF FUN!
Here's 1h• luxury car ,With tbt
economy of • comptct •• r~\ly f«:· tory equipped with th• f•bub.11
slont 6 1ngin1 11 thit illllttllevtblt
prict. Beech City DodQt ,wM1 &M"t
you 11 bundle, Spteifl '•HowMCI
during lhi1 ule. tStr. Mo. L1:238°'.· 202357) ~ .,. . .
1970 ~· ;•
DODGE
CHALLENGER
H1r1'1 th1 newest sensation by
Dodge. It'• the exeiti/lg Challeng· er. Yo u'll have to cfl1Yt· it to
really 1pprtci111 this fentestic
1111omobil1. It's fec.IOl'f equipptd
ind pr iced right down by Brach
City Dodge to sell fnt. Uitd, low
mif11ge. (S.r. No. GH23COE105·
092)
NEW 1970 '/• TON PICKUP
CAMPER
I
-....
·~---·----~--------------~--------------·--
.2t@J I' c ; ~i . ~-. .
JllHlttlll*lll.-•IMr ~ , • \! ~ :'-,a\t..,f:_
Costa Mesa ®6'4'2:(JC)'1ij'
.. ',f l .\
• ' t.. ,. " 1
• •
I . . /, ,.
l.: I . . . ~. . . .' ,. ,; -. -' '( .. •. '' ,; '. '. -., . ' I • , .' • • ! '
OPEN
SUNDAYS
~. '· .:..· '1 ~' .. J ·'•,J .~.',
· · NEW 1 P70 tHUN.DIRBIRD
. 2 DI. LANDAU
Full power equipment, Air Conditionin91 AM-FM Stereo Rodia, etc., etc. OJ84N IQ.
7579.
LIST PRICE
DISCOUNT
$6623.00 . .
. . , " '·' ,, .
$1324 ,en.· . .-.. .7..,.... . i ....
BRAND NEW
ENGLISH
FOIDS .
IE~OW
FACTORY
INVOICE!
LARGE
I . • s
ou• PR1c1 $s2ta.••; .:" .....
. -.. . . ' ' i r.. I l
LIST PRICE $4056.20 . . .,
lj ' '
..
DISCOUNT $ 66fi20 . ,; . , .· __ ....... _ '> •
OUR P•1c1 $3388.,0
NEW 1970 FORD CUST. 500 UST PRICE $3559.50
4 DOOR SEDAN ~ -DISCOUNT $ 684.50 ... ,. iil!tliiJ ;;::~ t:i:::··.::~c:t:::/~~.;~r:.; ...• PRICS •• .,... .
JUST 3 EXAMPLES OF WHY WE ARE ECONO~t ·~9.;..w,·~:C)~ER •;Jp~/J ~·9~0·;'.lo,a~1 &
FORD TRUCKS NOW A'f ROBJNS ECONOMY 6fSC0UNff!· · : ' : ' . . ~' ' '"
------------· ml!l_•· .• _!im' "!I.!"'. -... .'1.'
. THINKlNG OF L•ASING?
Visit our complete car and truck le1H depairtment. FORD AUTHORa
IZED LEASE SYSTEM means competitive fees, i~ealership service,
and "'Of~f>lfpr yol"" present earl
"'' < .. AtL POPULAR MAKU
Let cR.rolle ... ·:•xperts give you fUIT detaits on tfle pl'»n best suited to
ypur partitUl•r nMds, withoUt obll9ation. . . , "' '
A THIODOll ROBINS DCLUSM
LOOK FDR THE DIAGNOSTIC
.. · . ~ENTER .. SEAl D~, JHE , WINl)S~!ELOJ . . .
. .JUST ARRIV•D
1970
ELDORADO CAMPERS
~~'Vo .. .,,, .. L.~ ' •• ::,.,;~ JI' ' s or .
'64 ~.~!!• A~t~~~'!.,.
1te1rin~. R&H. IJAKl24l
lOO•/e PARTS AND LABOR
WARRANTY 4000 MIW OR 90 DAYS
Coven ell ....U.lcal p.m lld•tll11 ... lite, tro111111lhlo• thlYe
llne, '"' nd, PLUS brak•, ilatt9ty i1ll exhant 1pt.111. All , ..
'6~-BUICK _ Le SabrJl $sa· ·8:
, ~· 2 . . tGt• ~1R co~~JION-· i • \ ~ ;.. • IN'~r .i't.,,~9 . ldKNM61 · 1 ~ ,,;r 1,' • •
0 '69 !.~!CORY . s2• 098. , 2 Or. H.T, VI, 1ulo .• P.5., ll&H, "ii r1m1 i<1d1r of f1cl, w1rr1nly 1v1it. ~ 1174ASKI
t I ) ., • ";; > • ; .
FINEST SELECTIOI OF .
•
'67 OLDS CUTLASS Supr1m1 4 dr. H.T., vinyl roof, fie·
tory 1ir, P.S., P.B., u1dio, h1it1r.
ITAXl74l
'65 S~~~'~Sod~A~l~!.~,~IH,
AIR CONDITIONING. IYQA9751
$1677
I 6 7 ~~:~~.~~i~,;~•;;· 's.. $12 7 7
'66 !~~~ .. !~~~.~-•-• .. $1295 11dio, h11t1r. IS9L9271
•
LATE MODEL USED CARS
TRUCK SPECIALS
'60 2.~~_!E V-8 s59·a
·1~1461) '"' . ~~.~;~~~·~.~ .. "'588 tic, r1dlo, h11t1r. lUOFll7) I , . , '67
'66
'67
'68
'66 MUSTANG HARDTOP
• ] 1p1ed, "1di1 1r.d h11t1r. IZXW
779 )
'64 COUNTRY SQUIRE
W19on, VI, AIR CONDITIONING,
Auto., RIH, P.S. IOXTJlll
$1077 • • •
'6·7 -~9 ... ~~ETTE $29. ·99·
4 1p11d, AIR CONDITIONING. R1· ,
dio, h11t1t, r11l 1h1rp. fTTPll91
•·