HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-05-22 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa•
ran ur
Air Cal Exe~utives
;Resign as Merger
With RS.A Fizzles
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 22, ;! 970
\IOL. 13, NO. Ill· 4 SICTIONS. * P'AGlfS
ong Career Ends
• '
FORMER CALIFORNIA GO VERNOR GOODWIN J. KNIGH T
Grand Jur y Opposing
Upper Bay Land Swap
By TOi\1 BARLEY
OI IP\9 D•llr Pli.t S!lfl
The Orange County Grand Jury today
opposed the Upper Newport Bay land
excha nge in a report calling for a "full
feasibiltty and planning study ... involving
Orange County. the Irvine Company,
!he state and other concerned groups."
There should be no further action or
r_lccisioos in the controversial back bay
s"·ap, the iavestigative panel warns,
''Until flood rontrol problems, !he
ecological. pollution and related en-
\'ironmental problems. the legal issues
PILOT PRO FILES
:l5T.H CAN DID AT ES
111 cooperation with the Orange Coast
League or Women Voters, the DAILY
PILOT in its Saturday edition will
present biographies and \•iewpoizlts of
candid&tes for the 35th Congressional
District, rormerly represented' by the
late James 8. Utt.
tifore lhan one full page will be devoted
lo pholos and background informalion
nn candidates who submilted their own
do!a for inclusion in the voter educatioa
prngram. Look for the wrapup on lhi:.
Important congrr.~sional conle~t l n
Sah:rrtay's DAILY PILOT.
(including a decision on prescriptive
rights by the California Supreme Court),
tile financial aspects and the .public at·
titudes ar' more clearly studied and
considered and a master land and water
use plan i:; developed."
Noting that "the public is in a position
to demand Ute removal of the Irvine
islands for flood control and t9 claim
shore access along the bay by virtue
of exist.Ing pubUc roads," the grand
jury discusses at ltngth in its report
the pos_,ibility ol "a d~ision to let
nature take il! C.'OW'Se."
Such a decision, "aided by sound dla.n-
nel engineering move and the possible
<lredging away of islands for -.dequale
flood ieotitrol wou1d help )>resel've the
ecoHlgic.al balance of wild life and· lei11e
the upper tidal nats as a 'lung' to
help orgyena te and purify lower· ba'y
waters," lhe reporl st.ales.
"U a natural estuary iJ: to be preserv·
ed. a trade is meaoingless,." the jury
report notes. And the panel concedes
that "money must then be found to
compensate the Irvine Company as the
C(llJrts may decide.
"Much or the debate over the Upper
Bay land ell'change and most of tbe
rr.crimlnation," the report goes on, "hRs
rc~ulted from failure to dislinguish clear·
ly the consequences of lwo very dirferent
use.' of lht area.
'
•
Pneumonia
Ends Long
Caree1·
INGLE\VOOD (liPI ) -f<'ormer Gov.
Goodwin J . Knight, ouc ol California's
most colorful and eloquent polit ical cam·
paigners, died today al th e age of 74 .
Knight succu1nbed fron1 p11eun1onia at
Daniel Freeman J.lospitnl, \Vhcrc he had
been hospitalized since last Tuesday.
lie rlied at 6:55 a.m.
Knight was admitted lo SI. J ose ph
Hospital in Burbank fi.1a rch I for treat·
ment of an u11disclosed illness. His co n·
di!ion was said to be satisfactory al
the time.
Knignt, 1•:ho served <is governor fron1
August, 1953, to Jan uary, 19:>9, dropper!
out nf !he 1962 gubernalorial race on
cloctor's orders afler lie suflrrcd a
hepatitis attack.
Before beeon1i ng chief 1·>:ccu111·r of
1he sla!r, Knight \\-'as J i e 11 t e na n t
go\'cr nor. In this capacity h(' served
as chairma111 of the Cal ifornia Com·
mission on Interstate Cooperation and
as a member on the Stale Lands Com·
mission, State Disaster Council. Toll
Bridge Authority, and the Board of
Regents of the University or California .
lie served for 12 years as a superi or
court judge in Los Angeles County prior
to that and was actJve ill civic affairs
during hi s career as a practicing at.
lorney. He also worked as a hard rock
miner, a newspaper reporter and was
a seaman aboard a subchaser during
World War I.
Knight 's first experience in politics
was to distribute handbills in the 1910
gubernatoria l campaign of Hiram \V.
Johnson. He "'-'Orked for the Johnson-ror·
President campaign headquarters at New
York City in 1920 and campaigned for
Johnson in Los Angeles in 1924 when
Johnson was again a presidential as-
pirant.
Born Dec. 9, 1896. in Provo, Utah,
Knight was the son of Jesse Knight,
a lawyer and mining engineer. and Lillie
Milner Knight. The family had come
west from New York in about 1850.
Mrs. Knight's father, John B. Milner,
served on the Utah bench for 50 years.
Knight had a record of grci1t.popularity
\\'Ith voters of both parties, and "'JS
liked by both labor and management
In the 195'4 primary election for governor
his pluralilies set new records for volume
of votes in California .
In the 1954 general election he was
elected with a majority of ~1 .t~I votes
-a greater margin than that received
by any other candidate for state-wide
office with ma}or party opposition.
Th e "'hitc-haired fonner California
chief executive stepped B!ide under
pressure in 1957 in the gubernatorial
contest in fa vor or Sen. William F.
Know land. 1 ll·Calif.). wh:i was defeated
by Democ ratic Gov. Edmund r.. Brown
tSce KNIGHT, Pa&e .2)
a wa
DA Di~ks Keeps,
Laughing
On Nude Protests
I ·
COFFE E , T EA, OR MILK?
Air Cal's Clifford
Three Air Cal
Executives Quit
A s Merger Nixed
Three lop executi.\ICS who have been
piloting the low-altitude fortunes of
OfMge County-based Air Californ ia hfi11e
~iled out of their jobs. it Was disclosed
Thursday.
They. quit -in their word s -as
U1e result or cancellation of a planned
mer'ger With Pacific Southwest Airlines
Inc., follow ing extended delays In hear-
ings before the Ca llfornia Public Utilities
Commission.
Air Cali!omia President Carl A.
Benscoter, treasurer Robert E. Soolerin.
and general counsel Norris Webb handed
in their resignation! Thursday.
Board Oialnnan N. Loyall McLaren
said the resignations would pe. effective
immediately and offerfd oo afflcial
reason for the move .
Robert Clifford , former vice president
In charge of Air Ca lifornia operations,
was immediately appointed vice presi·
dent and general manager to replace
Benscoter.
"We are fortunate to have a man
of Mr~ Clifford's abUlty within the com·
pany to lal)e on the importi1nt
responsibllltlts of r u n n i n g Air
Cslifornla." said McLaren.
"We have gone through ~e very
tough times In the last few months,''
remarked Cllfford.
"But n-Ow, with lhe C'Cssation of the
merger negotiations with PSA . we arc
taking positive acUon to revllalizc our
(Set AIR CAL, Pa1e SJ
I
I
Keeps 'Em La!ff1hing
Hicks Discu sses Drugs.,·
Nudity in Campaign Talk
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of l~t D•ll, .-11t1 ill/I
Nudity, narcotics and c8mpus di!lsent
err.ergcd Thursday as electioneering
Orange County District Attorney Cecil
A. Hick's discussed law and order before
the Costa t..fesa Chamber of Commerce.
Reviewing the ramifications of eac.h
-especially student activism -the
young DA fighting his first etecllon ca m-
pai g11 following appointment in 1966 had
Chamber members in stitches at times.
Dru3 abuS<' wasn't so funny.
But Hicks, whose job will be at stake
June 2 Y,"hen Orange Cou nty vntcrs go
10 1hr polls, sparked gales of l:iu ghte r
in di.~cussing UC Irvine nod Cal State
Fullerton on prot est factions.
lie displaye d copies of <t Magazine
l'roduct1on st udent's final credit work •
-for those who cared to look closely
-with an illustration of 22 nude and
ha iry perso ns wa vin g individual fingers
1n the air.
The cov('r contains a111 e x p I i c i t
message.
''Some thin g-or-0ther you. Gov.
Heagan," explained the District Attorney.
"lJse your Imagination a little, folks."
"There are some tunny -looking people
in that picture," he remarked . "They
derinitely need clothes."
Severa l ferflale militants. close perusal
seems to suggest, are indeed unsullied
by the .YMCA Slim '111 Trim class or
the Weight Watchers' diet regimen .
"It's enough to turo a man queer."
he observed .
Hicks conceded the magazine prepared
aqd published for credit by CSF studen t
Bruce Bagnoli was professionally done
work, whUe Bagnoli claims the nude
part was done without his kno\l.•ledae
or· l'Onsent by others.
"11e got 'an ·A on it," the ad said.·
Bagnoli claims the publication showing ·
lhe history 'of ~nt radical mOvements .
at CSF wa.s emblazoned with the Naked
22· by mllitanb ar'ter the orialnal edition
wa s printed.
"You have to disagree with the
ph!IO!Ophy, but it was pretty well done,''
Hicks told <;hamber members in · the
general• meeUng at the Mesa Verde Coun-
lry Club.
Hicks also told or a debate invol•ing
himself and ·activist students from UC
Irvine in a forum chaired by con·
troverslal former campus SOS leader '
Mlchael Krisman, now a paid ad·
ministration coordinator.
"I said -in words to th is effect
-that I didn't .see what scademlc
freedom or free speech hnd to do with
breaking windows, writing dirty word!!
on the wall ," he explained.
He also asked how they could justify
lhc fa ct ont UC cmploye had his hands
blown ;off by a bomb and aoother was
killed as a result or dissent.
Hicks quotecr the-reply :
"Why should we care •. when there
are unpaved roads in Texas?"
"f didn't know whether to laugh or
cry.'' he said.
"The point l"m trying to make is
that they must understand we can't
have two sets of laws. one for campuses
and one for off-campus. • .one for
sLUdents an~ one for non.sludentJi .
"I think we have ,to make a point
-not by crac~ing head s." Distiict At-
torney Hicks continued .
"We sh1>uld never prosecute a slt~ent
because he is a student or a professor
beca use he ls a professor," he added,
"but .we lihould nav,er fail to P.rosecute
a student or professor if a law has
be'cn violafcd. ·•
"I •think when we get th.is idea across
"'e will ha11e a lot less trouble."•
'.'lt won 't ~appen , qver,night, but on~
or these days we 're going to turn the
corner," he continued, as the audience
broke into heavy applause.
"Bxcllent," remarked one listener.
,J.!lcks sai~ during his discussion of
the drug problem that the OJllY answer
is c!Osi"ng the Mexican border to young
people without chllperones.
Orange Coast
'We'atiaer
Make way fof the beach•bound
traf[lc. The weekend· weather pic-
lure calls for auMy skies and warm
t.erliperatures, w!th Inland residents
fleeing readings in the IO's tcr the
lG-ISh coasta1 cUmate.
INSIDE TODAY
So1neth i119 nt10 In the study
of histOry lias been added at
\Vcs&ninster High School where'
o personalized cou7se in "h~·
t.orical research" i1 in ope:ra·
tion. See lodallt Weekend«"r.
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•
2 DAILY PILOT
""'-P .. e J
KNIGHT ...
In Lht subeequent elect.ion. Knight r3n
Instead for U.S. Senator .a g a I n .s t
l>emocrat Clair Engle, but lost.
When he entered lhe 1962 gubernatorial
race, Knight tcuched orr a political wa r
of charges and counter chargcS' with
then Vice President Richard M. Nixon
~he announced his entry in the contest.
Knight made it plain he felt Nixon
was largely responsible for his ellmina·
lion from the 19~ race. He accused
Ntxon of lhrealening, in 1957, W cam·
palgn against him in every California
O)Uflty if he opposed Knowland. He said
later a Nixon emissarv had offered him
any job in the state if he would \11'1lhdraw
from the forthcoming primary.
Nixon called tile charge "false and
libelous on its face " and denied ..ever-
making any promises of any kind to
Knight or any other individuals to keep
them out of the race.
Los Angeles financier J. Howard
Edgerton, the man KniRhl later named
as the emissary, admi!ted talking to
Knight, but said that al no time had
he ever asked him not lo run for the
governorship. He also denied being Nix-
on's emlssary.
A long, bitter campaign was in pro-
s,cct before Knight was forced , by ii·
lness. to droo out flf the campaign
ohe that political observers saw as the
toughest battle of his long career in
6tate politics. Most political pundits con-
sidered Niron too strong even for such
a popular politics' veteran as "Goodie."
Cronkite Shows
'Fake'Film Oip
NEW YORK (UPI ) -WaJterCronkHe
showed a special film on hls regu]ar
evening newscast Thursday which he
said rebutted the allegerl contention of
the Wh ite House that CBS may have
faked a broadcast about a reported Viet·
nSm atrocity.
Cronkite also replayed the original film
w"llich showed a South Vietnamese soldier
pUll a knife from the body of a suspected
enemy 90Jdier. them plunge the weapon
b:lclr into the body.
The footag e was shot by a Vietnar.nee
cameraman employed by CBS and nar-
rated by correspondent Don Webster who
was not present when the incident OC·
cUrred.
·Cronkite claimed White 1-louse aide
C'ark Mollenhoff had told a number
of journalists there WU evidence the
story was faked .
He said the story appeared in Richard
Wilson's column and was slated to reap-
pear today in he column of Jack
Anderson.
"We broadcast the orig\nal story In
the belief it told something about the ha tu re of the war in Vietnam," Crookite
said. ''What has happened since then
tells something about the government
Hnd its relaUons with news media which
carry stories the government finds
di sagre.eable. ''
~owa City Hall
' ieveled by Blast
' !AMES. Iow a (AP) -An explosion
riJped through the Ames City Hall Fri-dt'Y morning. injuring at I e a s l nine
wsoos and leaving the two-story brick
b1ilding which houses police head-
l:Ji arters a shambles.
:Asst. Police Chief Tom Lyttle said,
'The bo mbing occurred between 9 and
9!05 lhis monring. The bomb was placed
no the soulh llide of city hall.
~·No tlne was kill ed that I know of.'1
hi said, "however, there were SQme
inl uries.'1
frhe blast, which rattled buildings a.!I
fat as 17 blocks away, punched out
windows in city hall and In surrounding
bliildings. Employes in lh e city hall were
:;~wered with glas!I,
1 'There was a lot o( screaming and
clb'ing." said Ellen Landon. 48, a
cJ y emp!oye who was v.·orking in lhe
~Ing when the expklfilon let go. "A
IC o( people were bleeding fmn fl ying
glass," she aa.ld. "I couldn't believe it.
Listiil can't
DAILY PILOT
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Ul'I T•l1t1r..lt CHICKENS 'CAPTURED' BY CAMBODIAN SOLDIERS
Prl10ner1 Given No Ouart~r; They Became Dinner
Baby Murder Case
Judge Orders Dr. Slocun1
To Stand Trial July 20
A Costa Mesa surgeon aecused or
the dismemberment murder of his infant
daughter, entombed six years in the
family freezer, must stand trial July
20 in Orange County Superior Court.
Dr. Wesley G. Slocum. 44 , appeared
lcxlay before Judge James F. Judge.
..,,.ho set that dale for the proceedings.
with a July 14 pretrial hearing scheduled
in his chambers.
The impassive doctor was accom panied
to the courtroom by his defense attorney,
P aul Augustine J r., whom he allegedly
has threatened to kill, il was di sclosed
in testimony a week ago.
Augustine has represen ted Dr. Slocum
in a $2.2 million lawsuit against lhe
Santa Ana Police Department. stemming
from a shootout with officers fou r years
ago.
His right hand was mangled and his
career as a clefl surgeon ruined , but
the la\\'suit was dismissed earlier this
week in anothe r Superior Court action.
The forn1er surgeon aod Augustine
Jogger Succumbs
In Westminster
A Westminster man dled this morning
after completing his nonnal joru:ing stint
near his Lrai!er park home.
The Orange County Coroner's Office
said \Vi!Ham Bertrand, 50. a mechanic,
returned to his trailer at 15521 Beach
Bou le\'ard, walXed to the b.1th room and
collapsed.
J·iis y,•1fe. \'irginia, called police and
the \Vestm ins tcr Fire Department rescue
squ.1d administered first aid in vain.
Mr. Bertrand was pronounced dead
on arrival at lluntington Intercommunity
Hospita l at 7:22 a.m.
The coroner said he had no prcviou!;
medical history of heart trouble and
had been jogging ror about two years.
An autopsy will be IJ('rformed lo
determine the ei:act cause of deaUi.
From Page J
AIR CAL ...
airline," he added.
"During merger talks, com pany loyalty
. and enthusiasm reached a new high
and it is lhis kind of spirit gene.rate d
by our employes U1at will not only keep
Alr California very mudJ alive -but
will give PSA a run [or its money,"
the new chief predicted.
Clifford said the intrastate airline foun-
ded in 1967 has two primary objectives:
better public se rvice and dividends to
the stockholders.
"Whal. we've got at Air Call romia
l5 the quickest method of traru;port.atlon
between two points and we do It with
spirit and stylt," he explained.
Clifford sald the profi t improvement
a!'lped won't a!fecl passe.ngt r service
at all.
''All we're doing Is moving lo <'On·
f;Olidate things which we have not been
able to do before -something we should
have dooe long ago.'' he 5aid.
''We're-not a big alrllnc." lie continued,
••we arc a small ai rline with 11n ex-
tremely good product. We hAve fl lot
o( people pulling for us, most o\ all
our own emp!oye!."
11e said a 1e:im or piloL~ and
stewerdesse.• h11s volunl('{'~l.'d tn pron1 ·:e
Air California oo thl'ir own frrr time,
including or~onlzal.Jon of a ~peak<·r"s
bu reau to rul ltne plan~ bcforP variou.,
groups.
"We'\'e 1101 n .roin51 Lhin!l <ind y,•c'rc
going to kc~·p 11 go1ni;:· he <'pn<:lud<'d.
were present for a pretrial hearing on
lhe matter March 27 in Superior Cou rt
when pollcE: showed up to arrest him
on swpiclon or murder.
Butchered remains suspected to be
those of Cynthia Slocum, who vanished
in early 1964 when about three months
l)ld , .,.,.ere found the day before in the
freezer.
The appliance v.·as removed from the
1'.fesa Verde home which Or. and Mrs.
Slocum occupied until earlier this year
when a company holding the second
mortgage foreclosed it.
A preliminary hearing 1n the csse
wou nd up eight days ago ln Harbar
J udi cial District Court with Dr. Slocum
ordered held for additional proceedings
at the Superior Court level.
He has been held at Orange County
Jail without bail since his arrest and
.Judge Willio.m Christensen refused to
set any last week, saying Dr. Slocum
\ll'ould be a danger to society U freed.
'Newport Seven'
Now Five; Two
Freed by Judge
The "Newport Beach Seven .. lost the
nickname given them by local police
Thursday when 8 Superior Court judge
ngreed with two members of the group
lh.it drug charges endorsed by t.he
Orange County Grand Jury should be
dismissed .
.Judge \Villiam Murriiy freed n ou.izla!'
Alnn Potter, 22, of :11 4 rie la Estrella,
:-\:in CIC'1nt'f"\t{' and ~1arth.1 Ann Glas~.
21 , of 1807 W.13alb0a Botilevard, NC'wporl
Rl·at•h and disn1is~ed charges thal they
"'f'r~ in possession of marijuana wi th
intent to sell last .lan. 12.
Their fi ve companions in the group
flrte~l y,·ere ordered to appear May 29
before Superior Court Judge J ames F.
.Judi:!e for the selling of further pro-
ceedings. They are :
Kathleen M. Bahen. 23, or 310 Mth
St., Ney,'J)Orl Beach ; Gary F.rlward C.ray,
27, of 310'h J5lh Sl., Newport Beach;
Ronald Dean f\n iseley. 27. or 25231 Monte
Verde, South Laguna; Thomas Duncan
\Vhealley. 27, of 3604 Park Lane, Newport
Beach and Clayton Francis Johnson, 20,
of Whittier .
All were arrested at the Bahen home
and indicated by the Grand Jury on
March 26.
Tl1eater Shows
Only 'R' Films
GARLA ND, Tex. (A P) -A theater
which has stloy,·n ooly family type movies
for the past three years is yielding
lo prCJ.SUre and will now sho w only
adult films.
"I'm not going to be a baby sitter
for these kids any longer." said Bill
Moy (:r. man;.iger of the theater in ~
D!l ll.as suburb.
Lnst week, Moyer, \llho has three
<:hildren of tti s o~·n. decided lo stop
shoy,•ini:: '"G," gcnt>r;t/ audience, films
and show only "R," restricted, films.
r.1oyc r said the policy was implemented
hcl'aus1• or on 1ncre11:sc in rowdiness.
~1b11~i\·f' lrinr:1tge. sl:ishcd lhealer seal<;
:ind 11:t:l•r prnper1.y d~mage, and smokin g
hy 12 lo 16 ycar-<i l!ls,
"I b'n111e the. puretlls for e\·erythlng
\\'fOn", 11 lth Ulc kids," he said. "If the
p;ircn\~ d1n'l IV:"lke ur, lh CrC 0S nothing
I i.:ar1 do ;1bout it."
-B52s Saturate 'Depots'
Little Ground Action Rerrted in .Camboditi
....
SAIGON (AP) -About 50 U.S. 8112
bom bers unloaded 1,500 tons of bombs
Jn the Fishhook region of Cambodia
today, hitting areas where new iYJ·
telligence information indicated the
presence o[ North Vietnamese storage
depots.
Little ground OiCtion was reJJ9rted in
Cambodia and Soulh Viet.Mm. But lhe
eight-jet Stralofortresses p um me I e d
ii;uspec ted Cambodian sanctuaries that
ttie sweeping ground troops apparently
have not reached.
About half the more lhan 1,000 B52
sorties rlown !his month ha ve been
against targets in Cambodia. The other
half have been split between South Viet-
na1n and Laos. A sortie is one flight
by one B52, carryi ng 30 tons of bombs.
'l'here was speculation thal the 852
raids on Cambodia are being stepped
up to get at territory American troops
cannot reach before J une 30, the date
President Nixon has said they will all
be out of Cambodia.
Earlier this week, Lt. Gen. Michael
:J. Davison, commander of the 10,000
U.S. troops in Ca mbodia, said his men
had been able to cover only 30 percent
of the territory assigned to them since
they crossed the border three weeks
ago.
.. The re's a tremendous amount of
ground to be covered," he said , ··and
in much of the area there, with the
thick jungle, triple canopy, it's e:i tremely
difficult to conduct the sort o f
thoroughgoing, detailed search that has
to be made."
Results Of the BS.Z raids in Cambodia
have not been announced , but informed
sources said the strikes have killed at
least 150 North Vietnamese soldiers and
set off scores of secondary explosions,
indicati ng hits on amm1mition and fuel
stores.
In South Vietnam, enemy troops am-
bushed a five-truck U.S. convoy in the
Central 1-Iigh!ands six miles south of
J)a\at. killing two Americans and woun·
ding 13.
U.S. headquarten: also announced that
~emy gunners shot down t h r e e
American observation helicopters at scat·
Blaze Damages
Rossmoor House
Fire did $15,000 damage to the. Ross·
moor home of \V illiam Malohn Thursday
night whe n his car backfired and set the
garage ablaze.
County fir emf"!l said the fire destroyed
the attached garage, two cars and the
roof of the home at 2661 WoodsLrock Road,
The blaze also did an estimated $100
damage to the home of Norman Lee, to
the rear at 2701 Oak Knoll Drive.
No one wa s injured.
teN?d polnl s along the U.Otian border
in northweste rn South Vietnam. Three
crewmen were wounded.
ln Pelting, Cam bodian Prince Norodom
Sihanouk told Chairman Mao Tse-tung
and a cheering crowd of 500,000 that
he is "prepared to persevere in a pro-
L..icted peopte·s ltl'Uggle" agailt.'S t lhe
Cambodian leaders who depo sed him,
and against the U.S . and South Viet·
namese troops in hls counLry.
"At the eod of the long road the re
will be victory arid the consequent libera-
tion of Cambodia," he declared.
The firmer chief of state also de-
nounced las t week's As i a n -Pa ci f i c
Cooference on Cambodia in Jak.art.u <ind
rejected Its recommendation tha t another
international conference, sim!lar lo the
Gene va conferences on lntloch!na and
Laos , be held to restore Cambodian
neutrality.
Ile demanded that the Jndochintse peo-
plebe left alone to solve their problems.
Hsinbus, lhe Chinese Communist new!
service, reported that at lea st 3 million
persons turned out for rallies in Peking,
'fientsin and Shanghai expressing su pporl
ror i.he fight to expel U.S. forces ~01n
Indochina. Mao was flanked at the Pek·
ing rally by all to~ officials of hi s
regime.
Woodcock UAW Choice
In Unanimous Balloting
DETROIT (AP ) -Leonard Woodcock,
59-year-0\d vice president, was formally
and unanimously elected president of
the United Auto Workers Union today.
Woodcock was elected by his 24 fellow
members or the UAW's lnternational
Executi ve Board to serve unti l the
union 's 1972 coovention.
llis election to succeed the late Walter
P. Reuther was assured 'nlursday by
the withdrawal or the only other con·
tender, a fellow vice president, Douglas
Fraser, 53.
The riery, red-hai red Reuther, for 24
years leader of the l.6 million member
union, died May 9 in a plane crash.
the e..xecu tive board fi lls vacancies occur·
ring bet ween conventions.
The question of electing a vice
presidential successor to Woodcock was
not decided immediately. Any one of
17 regional directors , who also are
automatically members of the boa rd,
are eligible.
To mild-mannered, reserved Woodcock
fa!ls the tough new contract bargaining
later this year with the Big 'lliree of
the automotiYe industry -General
IKE'S PUTTING
GREEN GOES OUT
\VASHING1'0N (AP) -The late Presi·
dent Dwight D. Eisenho wer 's famous
\\'hite House putting green is gone.
The smooth gree n mooltd was installed
in 19~ by the, U.S. Golf Association
as a gi ft to Eisenhower, an avid golfer.
The green required conslar1t mai n·
t.enance, a White House spokesman said,
and President Nixon, an occasional go!I-
er, di d not use il.
-
Motors. Ford and Chrysler -and al90
with the agricultural implen1ent in·
dustty. Renewal of pacts in the aerospace
industry comes up next year.
New car sales and profits or the
au tomakers have been sagging this year,
and the companies already have indica·
ted the will take a tough stance in ne·
gotialions to supplant Urree--year con·
tracts expiring next Sept 14.
Negotiations wi ll open in mid-July. The
union demands include a substantial
wage increase, earlier retirement at a
higher pen5ion, unlimited cost of living
increases geared lo the govcrn1nent's
('Q!lSUmer price index, a year-end bonus
and company-paid dental care.
OCC Picketing
Halted hy Judge
A Superior Court judge hall.ed picketing
at Orange Coast College Thursday and
ordered both sides in a building dispute
to air their grievances before him June
S -in his courtroom.
Judge Robe rt S. Corfman issued 11
restraining order after Speeds pac e
Corporation. Los Angeles, officials com·
plained that representallves or Jerry'.t
General Constructing anti Plumh1ng
Company picketed administration offices
at the Costa Mesa campus.
Their signs, notes the complaint , \\•arn·
ed onlookers, .. Don't buy Specdspacc
buildi ngs. they don'l pay their bills,
unfair to labor."
Speedspace wants $250,000 in damages
for the alleged actions of the defendants.
The firm recently successfully competed
in bidding for lhe mnstruction of tern·
porary buildings at OCC.
DRAPERY ..
SALE!
CUSTOM MADE WITH A WIDE SELECTION OF
QUALITY INTERIOR DESIG N FABR ICS AS MUCH
AS 40 ;;, OFF ON EXC ELLENT DESIGN FA BRICS.
INTERIORS NEWPORT BEACH
1n1 Wettcliff Or., 64'i.10SO
OP&N FRIDAY 'TIL 9
Profe11lon1I lntirlor 345 LAGUNA BEACH
Otslgners Avtllabl._AID North Coast H\'ty. 494-6551
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 "'-Ton ,.,... Mett et o,,... Coln'l'y 140.126!
~----~--~--------~,
I
I
Huntington Qeaeh
~DITION
VOL 63. NO. 122. 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1970
ov.
Take All Steps
HB Co. to Fight
Beach Takeover
The Huntington Pacllic Corporation
will fight for its private beach .
A spokesman for the subsidiary o[
the Huntington Beach Company today
released the corporation's first official
~lalement on the city's move lo take
ClVer private strands for public use.
"The Huntington Pacific Corporation,
•s the owner of substantial beachfronL
Complaints
Ori Schools
Go On Paper
rsy 'TERRY COVILLE
O! It>• D•Ur Pi .. I St•tl
Officials of the Fountain Valley School
District arc prepared to meet con-
troversy head-on -with an armload or paper work,
District trustees Thursday night ap.
proved a procedure lo rhanclling any eon-
trovers:r that might arise over books or
other study materials used in district
i;chools.
It slarts wilh • written application
filled out by whoever challenges an item
used by the district -for instance
ll book .
That person is lhen asked to \Vrite
clown his objections lo the book, givinJ;
details as to objections and ~·hat sections
are objectionable.
The objector is also asked what he
recornmends doing v.•1th the book !or
other material) under question .
Fron1 the wril1en stage, !he objection
is carried lo a committee of school
personnel appointed by the superin·
tendcnt. This comm1t1ee reads the ap-
plica tion, studies the item challenged,
then intervicv.·s authorities on Lhe subject
Including the person who made the
challenge.
A romm 1llee reµorl i!'I lhen handed.
to 1he superintendent.
The ~uperi n!endent makes a decision
on whether to ret:i in or change the
1nater1al ques1ion and informs the
challenger 1n wrll1ng of his decision .
School off1ctals pointed out that no
book or other n1at rr1a! will be removed
fron1 use until the Superintcndenrs
<Jecision is irtad c.
"Selection of rnaterials is :;i lso part
ol lhis proccdurr." llobcrt Sanchis, assis-
tant district superintendent. explaine<l.
''\\le have lho rough procedures for pit•k-
ing books. We wan! the parents to know
book s don't just arrive on the shelves
by accident."
property, has been well aware of the
growing public concern over recreational
land and its future short supply. In
this climate, we can understand the
pressures on the city council to attempt
10 obtain this valuable beach property
at any cost."
"However, we are greatly disappointed
lo learn that a landowner's re.ward for
yea rs of responsible cooperation v.·ilh
the city and the public interest in the
use of this property is to be a long
apd costly litigation aimed at depriving
the owner of his property without com-
pensation.
•·obviously, we will take all necessary
:steps to fully protect our interest and
are ron!ident of the eventual resull.
"We have always believed that both
public and private interests can be best
served by enlightened coope rallon in the
use and improvement of this .area. \'.'kn
the situation clarifies we intend to coii-
linue a polic y of such cooperation and
hope that possi ble litigation does not
unduly delay the transformation or th i5
art'a into the asset tot he city that
it could beCQme."
Search Begins
In Beach Death
Of Grove Soldier
Eight detec~ves today began I
coastv.•ide seardl from Ft. Lew i.'!
\Vashington to Huntington Beach to find
out who might have had conlact with
David L. McCorry. a 2G-year old Army
private foond slain at Golden West
College Sunday.
Detective Captain G.L. Payne said his
n1en would be checking with rertauranl~.
trucking companies and law enforcement
agencies in their effort to discover 'NM
saw MsCorry before the slaying.
Investigators are operating on !he
lheory that McCorry, who was attached
to the 339th Engineering Battalion. had
been hitchhiking to Garden Grove. ·wherf'
he intended to visit his faUier, Jan1es.
and his \~year old girlfriend Jackie.
His trip to Cal ifornia v.·as abruptly
ended around l:i>O a.m. Sunday wh en
he \\'as kllled by 1wo .32 ca liber
automatic bullets,
The bullets taken from t\ls chest and
head during an autopsy have just been
<.""Ompared with a similar we<'lpon taken
from a house burglary in liuntington
Beach the Saturday before McCorry"s
~~t MURDER, Page 2)
• 00 Ie
OAIL'f' lllL01 511" llllflt
'I lOYE 'A MYSTEllY,' SAYs''S'MA~Dk l<&NNED~.° "'
Third Grader Also love$ Lark Vi•w Llbr11ry
Gir~ 9, P1·oves '1 alue
Of Library at 0 V Scl1ool
Llttle Sharor> Kennedy loves n1 yscry
books.
She devou rs about one a v.cck. thrn
hustles to the Lark View School Library
fo r another ~olume.
To dale. the nine-year old Brownie
Scout has already read JO my stery book.~
and reads them as fa sl a~ th<'v arr
placed on the shelves ·
La rk View School is proud to ha\f'
a library "·here students c;in exp<t nd
their interests by readinR ;;bo11l a \'<Jrlf !y
of subjects.
Unfortunately, fl(lt many rlc111t•nl.1 rv
schools have libraries, parucularl y 1n
the Ocean View School D1stric1. ''he n•
the money must be used for n1ore prrss-
ing eduralional needs
About four years ago, nirmbcr s rd the
Lark View PTO de<"ided they 11·err go1 n~
tG !l ive the children a library any.,.,•ay
and began collecting bool.,)
Mrs. Jean Bogen . a PTO rnrn1bcr
\vho volunteers he r lime on tht" ~'hrc k-(Jlll
desk along wilh 14 other ladlf'S, ~a11 I
lhey started with 200 books and ha\'C
gradually increased the number to abou t
5.500.
"I guess they "re v.·orth about $16,500
now lf you figure about S3 for each
!Jooli,"' she said .
'·Elemf."11tary school.~ with act u a I
library rooms are few and far between.
Libraries gi\'e the children an opportunity
to read olher books than 1hey do 111
the classroom. It broadens t h e I r
horizons.''
1\lrs. Bogen cla1 rns :student p:i rtie1pa-
t1on 1n the library is 100 percent, v.·ith
t'ach child in the 5SO·studrnt school l"nn1 ·
1ng 1n at least U1l<'e a v.·eek.
""\.\'c have a pretly g1>od sclrct1011 to
ch no~e from , surh as ;'lnim:il s, prl.~.
sports. s<·icncr. firtion. mv ster ic~ and
('asy reader"' for the pr\1nary grades."'
:;he said.
"'\\'r find no relucta~cr at all l0r
kids to come to the library. \\1e ha vr
~omelhing for JUS! about everybody . And
here they can find reading malerial.~
they may not have at home."
The new policy will be imp~mented
\\'hen trustees give fina l approval to
ii and the County Counst>l approvrs it.
"Fortunately we haven't had any
serious controversy over our books. But
we want a clear policy to handle one
H it comes.'' Sanchis explained.
Beach Gets Radar
"We try to make the policy as detailed
as possiblr to eliminate confusion.··
The new policy also states that nn
challenges of material will be accepted
unless in writing.
Valley Trustees
'
OK New Lines
For Attendance
One attend a11ce. boundary S\'.'ilch. in-
volving I.he housi11g tract La Linda I,
·will be made next school year. trustees
(lf lhe Founlain Valley School District
decided Th ursday night.
Children in the La Linda I homes
will cllange from Tamura School l.o
McDowell School nexl September ,
• "ll's in our master plan for these
youngs\ers to eventually go to Me.Dowell,
11nyway .• •1 Mike Brick, district sitperinten·
dent, told trustees.
"We're begin ning lo reach a !!table
point where we can fix our pennanenl
boundaries,'' Brick said, noling the !IChool
changell thal plague most growing school
clistriclS.
"All other i;choolll caJI handle an·
ticipalcd populations next year ... he Rd-
ded
Police Unit Deadly Accurate-Even Up to 199 MPll
By RUDI NJEDZIELSIU
Of -°""' l'llott J .. ff
Look out, the cops have radar on
Main Slr~t !
And Lt. Paul Darden of IM J{untington
Beach Police Department doesn't mind
letting you know about it.
ll'll a new unit, coating about '1,800,
which has dead accuracy and is capable
of recording any apeed from 1 to 199
mile.'1 per hour.
Called the Prefect TR-e, the aystem
Is capable not only of determining the
speed but of allowjng the officer lo
hear the vehicle accelerating or slowing
down.
One of its most notable features i~
ils capacity to measure • vehicle's speed
from • 2,500 foot di.9tance. That's much
greater than the old radar system the
police department owns. • .
ThoN radar w.fn\1'11 · a.,.:;cq --. ~· Vertis~ In the' ")Otp mJtlzlrlts woti't
protect you any more dthtr. according
to Mike Wigner, a radar expert who
has been training officers In its use
this week.
'.'The r1dar waminlJ boxes begin lo
operate •bout 400 feet from the locallon
of tht radar hut the new unit givr!I
the officer 2.200 feet before that to
rix his speed."
lie ei:plained the device is so accurate
that it checks itself 10 limes within
a fifth of a second period belort' pro-
jecting the speed on its digital meter.
tG raise the city's revenue. and we have
no intention of sneaking up on anyone.
We wou ld rather have people ro1nply
\Vil h the law than wrile cilalions," the To be absolutely Cf'rtain the radar
Is operating accurately the offi cer must lieutenant said.
calibrate it each morning with a tuning llis traflic officers, a usually fr iendly
fork or through a crystal localed in <1ntl smiling lot of 11 mt!.n , tend lo
the set it.self, Wagner said. get very ser.ious about the kind or
The department's old radar system speeders the broad street wilh a speed
leJ't much to be desired in terms of range ol '40 to 2fi mph seems to en-
accuracy since it could nol dislinguish co~f1~~=-them is .another problem thou8h
between vehicle.'! traveling in ditfcrcut since Ull're arc shor! distances in volved
lanes or give lhe driver v~ual -proof il(hKfl do not allow 3 motorcycle officer
of his vlolarion. to get a proper clocking on a11y speeder,
With the ne'v systc1n, it is pos!iiblc, hen~ the radnr.
for example, for the offlcer lD l?Ck In 1 1
Officers will air.a .w9rk the new unit
the recorded s~ cal.ch the v1oltitot 1 arxt ·the okl O!)e ,.-htrever c\tipe11 com·
and prov_e to bin:'. lbat he bruke: th ,·· P.,lalnl.s. eriee bec,ause of e~~ssive sJ*d, i~ Um.~~1ng to'W11gn~r. H 1.t~·Qi\r;deti .s~_id . -, , ~(l.S>-Jtlwayl. becTI a dirty word, ';We ge\ all kinds · of cell¥. from • dlf· . 1M: a'ceofdlng to Darden it i.~ a fercnt nelghborhOQds· c.omplainin1 abont
proven method of controlling speed . of speeding. automobiles. The people are
curblni; lraffic accidr.nls and cort-usnalty wor ried about the safely .. of their
sequently saving lives. chilclren. Just yesterday we·ve ))ten cAll·
"t'tl ain Street has bte11 a partltular eti out to RottcrtlAm Ll!l'le, S.ybrook
problem fo r us, 11ince chlldren from L.'lne , and Valencia Drive al one ."
two ~chools cross there.,'' he Sll icl, ·1w~·ve "Maybe nO\v that people are aware
a lready had fi ve deaths there." of the foct that we do use. the radar
"\\'e do11·1 mind if people know ·thf! units, we'll ~e a sig nificant dcrreasc
street is radar patrolled. We're bot trylng In 1Rjury accirlents," Darden said.
P11e11monia
Ca1·eer at 7 4
lNGLEWOO D IUPll -Former Gov.
Goodwin J . Knight , one of California's
most colorful and eloquent political cam·
paigners, died today at the age of 74.
Kni ght succumbed from pneumonia at
0<1nicl Freeman Hospital, where he had
be'en hospitttllzed since last Tuesday.
He <iicd at 6:5S a.m.
Knigh t \vas admitted lo SI. Joseph
ltospital In Hurbanli March I for trea t.
1ncnt tlf an undisclosed illness. }!is con·
dition \Vas said to be satisfactory at
the tin1e.
Knignt, 1vho served as governor fron1
August, 1953, to January, 1959, dropped
out of the 1962 gubernatorial race on
doclor's orders after he suffered a
hepa titis attack"
Before becon1ing chief executive of
the state, Knight \\'as I i e u le na n t
governor. In this capac.i!y he served
as chairman of the California Con1-
n1ission on Interstate Cooperation and
as a member on the S~atc Lands Corn-
111ission, State Disaster Counci l. Toll
Bridge Authority, and the Board of
Hegen ts of the University of California
He served for 12 years as a superior
1:ourl judge _in Los...Angeles County prior
to that and was active in civic affair.'!
during his career as a practicing at-
lorney. He also worked as a hard rCKk
miner, "' ne1vspaper re?oi1er and. ·~iu ·
a seaman aboard a llllbchttser rlurilTg
\Vorld War I.
Knight's first experlence in poli*ll ·
\vas lo distribute handblUs in the 1110
gl1bernatorial campaign of Hiram W.
Johnson. }fe worked for the Johnllo'n-for-
President campaign headquarters at Ne1v
York Cily in 1920 and campaigned for
.Johnson in Los Angel"s in 1924 when
Johnson was again a presidential as.
pirant.
Born Dec. 9. 11196, in Provo, Utah,
Knight was the son of Jesse Knight,
a li~wyer and mining engineer, and Lillie
~1iln ::!r Knight. The family had come
11•est from New Yor k in abou t 1850.
1\·lrs. Knight's father, John B. i'tlilner
served on the Ut.a h bench for 50 years.
Knight had a reco rd of great popularity
y,·ith voters of bolh parties, and wa~
liked by both labor and management.
In the 19S4 primary election for governor
hts pluralities sci new records for volume
ol votes in Ca lifornia.
In the 1954 general election he was
elcrtcd with a majority of 551,151 votes
-a grea ler margin than lha t received
h,v any other candidate for state-wide
office \\'11h major part y opposition .
The white-hai red former Cali fornia
t'hie! t•xecutivr stepped aside under
pr("•surc. 1n l!l.17 in thP. gubernatoria l
<·011les1 in hl\·or of Sen. William F.
Knowland, (R-Calif.J, v.·ho wa s defeated
by Den1ocratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown
1n !he .~u bsequent election. Knight ran
in~1 c:i1t for U.S. Senator a g a i n s t
D1'morrat Clair t-:nRlc. but losl.
\\/hen he ent ered the 1962 gubernatorial
!See KNIGJIT, Page 2)
Atlanta A venue
Area Without
Phone Service
f\1ore than 300 families south of Atlanta
Avenue in Huntington Beach found
themselves without telephone service for
half a day Thursday.
A spokesman for General Telephone
Company said Thursday an excavation
cre.w working at Atlanta and Bushard
Streel had severed two large un·
derground cables about 10 :45 a.m.
One cable carried 900 pairs of wires
fro1n General Telephone's Bushard sta-
ti on lo Costa Mesa. Cans to Costa Mesa
produced only a busy isignal nnlil service
\\'as restored at 10 p.m., the spokesman
sid
Another cable, v.'ilh 1500 pairs of wlrc11
serving 325 phones south of Allanj11 and
on either side of Bushard. was al so
cut, tompletely 'stopping phonet service
there until 10 p,ril. •
Emer~cy crews patched togeJher the
wires .and ~also warned . resld~ lhey
ha6 ·no phOnt 'tt!rtlcc' and emttgency'
phones would be located throughout the
neighborhood on company lrucks.
Stock -lllnrkel•
Nf>:W YORK (AP ) -The ~tock m11rkt't
!urned sharply and broadly dol'.·nwtrd In
late: trading thts arternoon on active: \'Ol-
ume. (Stt quotatkrls. Pages 10-11 ).
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
TEN CENTS
• 1ec
Ei,ght Candidates
Due in Valley
Monday at Foruni
At least eight candidates for slate
offices on lhc June 2 ballot will explain
their \•iews for fountain Valley residenls
al 8 p.m., Monday, in the ca[ete.ria
of Fountain VaUey High School.
Four candidates for state se11ator ia
the 34th district and four candidale.•
for slate assemblyman in the 70lh district
have said they wiJ.1 attend the chamber
or commerce sponsored calldidates night.
Ban'}' S. Bauehwilz, John W. Ellzey.
Denni~ Carpenter arrd Charles H. Se.,,.·rll
arc ,seeking the scn;;i1c post now held
by Joh n G. Schmitz (H-Tuslin). Schmilr.
is running for U.S. Representative. One
state senator candidate, l)y,'ight W. Mize,
!old chamber oHicials he might appear
fl.1onday night.
Assembly candidates Lloyd Nocker, A.
A. Van Pctten and Willowdean W. Vance,
are S<;hcduled to speak al the candidates
night. Incumbent Assemblyman Robert
Burke (R-Huntington Beach) "has said
his admi nistrative assistant f\-latthew
Weyuker will appear [or ,him .
Each candidate will hBve te n minutes
lo express his views. After all candidates
have sµoken, coffee will be served during
a short break.
Tl1en the audience will be given 11
chance lo submit written quesllons lo
each candidate.
PILOT PROFILES
35TH CANDIDATES
In cooperation v.·1th the Orange Coast
Le:1gue of \\1omen VGters, the DAILY
PILOT . in its Saturday edition will
present biographies and viewpoints of
candidates for the JSt h Congression<il
District. formerly represented by the
late .Jan1es B. Ult.
More than one full page will be devoted
to photGs and background infortnalion
on candidates who submitted their ow11
Jata for Inclusion in the voter education
program. Look for the wrapup on !hill
imporlan l congressional contest in
Sat1;rctay ·.~ DAILY PILOT.
Coast
"'eatber
Make way for the beach bound
traffic. The weekend weather pie·
ttire ca ll s for sunny skies and warm
temperatures, with Inland residents
fleeing readings ln the OO's for the
iff.ish coastal climate.
INSIDE TOD/\ Y
So1nc tliing ntw flt t/u: study
oj l1 i!l!or11 hi!.! bttll added at
\Vesfmln!lter 1/igh School whtre
11 JJf!rsonaliztd cottr!e in "hU-
torical research" '' in optro--t~.. Ste itoda11"s .\VetXmwie1.
I " ' -• I ~
.. 111~t1 It c~"Nr~11 1 c~..,u..., u. ,
Clanlll... JI ...
ec-1<1 11 cr-w.nl 11 0.at-N•llctt t •thtrlll ... ,, i
~!ftl"l:t lt-11
HDr11Ut•t 11
.-.ftft l l ndtn 1)
~... i ,,_ ........ , '
,,,,.~ .. , ll•H
'
Z DAILY PllOl "
Candidates
Tell Stands
At Forum
' ..
J'ivr Republican candidale~ for the
35th Congressional District differed lit-
tle on Issues at luncheon meetin,i: Thur~
day of the Newport Harbor chap\f'r of
the California Federation of Republican
Women in Newport Beach.
Each candidate -William Wilcoxen
nl-Laguna Beach. John G. Schmitz of
7ust.in, John Ralleree of La~na Beach,
Jolin A. Stl'i'1,er of Oceanside and Ma/;!l!ie
Me'1.JZS of La.ir:unfl Beach -gave. a ten
minute speech follo~·ed by a question.and-
.answer perod.
About 15(1 women attended the luncheon
~t the Ehell Club where the:v heard
the candidates take similar stands on tpe Indochina war, welfare and campus
protest.
Mrs. Mei:z11s told the ladies that women
In this colllltry are treated as second
class citi7.ens. "WhPn I talk about women
pOwer, I'm not talkiniz about sex and
no bras, I 'm talklnll" about gettini;t the
same financial award for the same jobs
a s men," she stated.
Here'l!I how the candidates stand on
somP. other Issues:
-On the move into Cambodia all said
W.xon did the rigtit thin.ir: and urged t~ women to express the.ir support of
th .. President's oolicies.
Schmitz uried the women lo support
the President's Cambodia move., "not
because he's a Republican and not ~
cause he's President, but because he's
r\,i:ht and he needs all our backing."
-On campus violence and protest, all
said thev favor returning publicly sup-
.-rtf'd colleStes and unive.rsitie..s to educa·
tlonal, not protest Institutions. .
.. Wilcoxen. in speaking on education .. em-
phasized the need for more vocat1Qna l
1 ~~'11in.ir: ln public schools.
::On the subjeet of campus violenec
Ratterree advocater! jailing violent cam.
JlHS protesters. "These campus r~oters
-i-11d that's just what th<>v are, rioters
...! should go lo jail." he said.
-All of the candidates said the welfare
system as practiced by . the John~n
administr11tlon was a failure. and In·
dicated they backed Nixon's pr~
r ernrms.
'wilcGXefl spoke out strong ly in backing
Nixon's welfare reform bill. "As a deputy
District Attorney, I had a chance to
See what our present welfare system
does -paying families to break up.
1 think the President's re.form package iS one of the most comprehensive to
d3te."
Sing Out Slated
At Golden West
A benefit Si n4 Out by 1411 boys and girls
dedicated lo faith and loyalty -and the
Orange County Marc.h of Dimes -will
be presented Saturday night at Golden
West C',o\!ege in Huntington Be.ach.
:rtie show will be at 8 p.m. in the ewe
c•mpus Forum, with a $1 donation for
ti~kets which arf' available at the door.
a(COrding to Mrs. Elva Frederking, co-
ojtljnator. ~he said the group has sung before
tJSousands of people during the past year,
idspiring all with their sincerity and
~rily of viewpoint.
•
James J. Gillis
Rites Saturday
:'Funeral services for James J . Gillis,
72, who spent more than half his hie in
Hllntington Beach, will be conducted at
10 a.m., Saturday, in Smith's Chapel,
lf;µn tlngton Beach. Burial will follow in
Westminster Memorial Park.
)fr. Gillis, a resident of 101811: Dela·
viare Sl., died Tuesday.
:survivors include his wife, Edna: lhree
James, Dan and Patrick; three sis·
Mrs. Peggy Simpson, Mrs. Ann
Jey, and Mrs. Pi.1ary Kennedy; a
tfother. John, and 10 grandchildren.
DAILY PILOT
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MAGGIE MEGGS
From l'age l
KNIGHT •..
race, Knig ht touched off a political war
or charges and counter charges with
then Vice President Richard M. Nlxon
as he announced his entry in the coolest.
Knight made il plain he fell Nixon
~·as largely responsible for his elimina-
tion from the 1958 race. He accused
Nixon of threatening. in l9S7, to cam-
paign against him in every California
county if he opposed Knowland. He said
later a Nixon emissary had offered him
any job in the state if he would withdraw
from the forthcoming primary.
Niion called the charge "false and
libelous on its face'' and denied e.ver
making any promise! of any kind to
Knight or any other individuals to keep
them out of the race.
Los Angeles financier J. Howard
Edgerton, the man Knight later named
as the emissary, admitted talking to
Knight, b ut said that al no time had
he ever asked him not to run for the
governorship. l~e also denied being Nix-
()n's emissary.
A long, bitter campaign was in pro-
spect before Knight was forced. by il-
lness, to drop out of the campaign -
one that political observers saw as the
toughest battle of his long career in
state politics. Most political pundits con-
sidered Nixon too strong e.ven for such
a popular politics' veteran as "Goodie."
'Newport Seven'
Now Five; Two
Freed by Judge
The ''Newport Beach Seven" lost the
nickname given them by local police
Thursday when a Superior (',ourt judge
agreed with two members of the group
that drug charges endorsed by the
OranRe County Grand Jury should be
dismissed.
Jud11e William Murray freed Oou11las
Alan Potter, 22. of 314 de la Estrella,
San Clemente and Martha Ann Glass.
21, of 1807 W. Balboa Boulevard. Newport
Beach and di smissed charges that they
were In possession of marijuana with
intent to sell last Jan. 12.
Their five companions In the group
arrest were «dered to appear May 29
before Superior Court Judge James F.
.lud~e for the setting of further pro-
ceedings. They are:
Kathleen M. Bahen, 'l.3. of 310 3Mh
St.. Newport Beach: Gary Edward Gray,
27, of 3101h 3Sth St., Newport Beach:
Ronald Dean Kniself'y, 27. ol 2S23l r.-tonte
Verdr. South Laguna: Thomas Duncan
\\'l1eatley, 27. of 3604 Park Lane, Newport
Beach and Clayton Francis Johnson. 20,
of Whit tier.
All were arrested al the Bahen home
and indicated by the Grand Jury on
March 26.
Social Security
Measure Okayed
\\'ASHINGTON (AP ) -Legislation to
boost earl y and long-range increases in
Social Security benefi ts -and taxes -
has passed the flouse as a special Senate
con1mittce called for a major refonn of
lhe system In avoid sentencing retired
prrson~ to a twili11ht life or povertv.
The House-passrd bill calls fnr a 5 oe.r-
cent increase in benefits in 1971 wilh a
!"lrovision for future increa!cs geared to
th" co5! nf llvin,'t.
The bill \vas srn\ to the Senate where
('On~iderable :<enli mf'nt e:ti:i;.t.~ for f11rthe.r
increases. a fpeJin,e: bolstered bv the an-
nual report re1rased tod11v by the Special
Spn~te Oimmitlce on Aiin".
The comrnil.ee r-aid de!:nite recent hik".S
Jn Sori;iJ S~uri1V bcnPfi!S abo\I\ 7 mil-
Jion of thf' 10 million Amflrirl'lns .age 65
or nver livf' in or near pol•erty.
The re.port recommendM a sub~Rntial
~t in \hi' minimum indivirl1111l n11v-
ment. nov• $64 a monlh, and further
acrnss-thP-board inC"l'ea!'es.
The House-pil~!\ed benefit increases
mPan that in 1971 J>f'nsionPrs wouli\ l'Pt
a 5 ne.rcent raise -from S11l8 lo S20~.oo
for the. ave.rage retirl!d couple.
Cou ntv Okavs Sales . .
Of H untinµ:to n Ronfls
Sale nf SI 2 million in lluntlnglon f\clll'h
City School Dit.:trict bond.o, on June I
has ber.n approved by the County Board
of Supervisors.
T~ sale is part of $4,75 million in
h<inds RPProvrd by a two-third~ vote
nr the elf'!'lnrnte or lh{' district 111
Febru:iry 19fi9.
JOHN 0 . RATTERREE JOHN A. STEIGER
Oil Drill Plan
V.S. Ma y Buy Back Sea Leases
WASHINGTON (U PI) -Interior Secretary Waiter J . fli ckel says the
federal government may buy back oil leases il sold in a 16-mile-wide strip of
the Santa Barbara Channel.
"I think we have an obligation if possible to buy back these leases.''
Hickel said Thursday during a question and answer session following his ad-
dress lo the National Press Club.
A Union Oil Co. well that blew out Jan. 28, 1969, and spilled oil into the
channel is in the l&-mile strip.
The interior secretary said the proposal to repurchase leases sold to oil
companies refers only to the fede ral leases in fr()nt of the state sanctuary that
extends three miles out from shore.
There are no oil leases in the sanctuary, but there has been development
in federal leases further out from shore along lhe l&-mile-wide strip of sanctu-
ary.
Hickel said his proposal, which has been under study fo r some time in
the Interior Department, is in line with his feelings that "we have to figure
out the highest and best use" of offshore areas.
Baby Murder Case
Judge Orders D1·. Slocun1
To Stand Trial July 20
A Costa Pi.1esa surgeon accused of
lhe dismemberment murder of his infant
daughter, entombed six years in the
family freezer, must stand trial July
20 in Orange County Superior Court.
Dr. Wesley G. Slocum, 44, appeared
today before J udge J ames F. Judge,
who set that date for the proceedings,
with a July 14 pretrial hearing scheduled
in hil chambers,
'l"he impassive doctor was accompanied
lo the courtroom by his defense attorney,
Paul Augustine Jr .. whorn he allegedly
has threatened to kill, it was disc.losccl
in testimony a week ago.
Augustine has represented Dr. Slocum
in a $2 .2 million lawsuit against the
Santa Ana Police Department, stemming
from a shootout \Vith officers four years
ago.
Hi s right hand v.·as mangled and his
career as a deft surgeon ruined, but
!he lawsuit was dismissed earlier this
week in anolher Superior Court action.
The former surgeon and ,\ugustine
From Page l
MURDER ...
death, but the results v.·ere disappointing.
'"It looked like the hottest lead ~·e
had," said Capt Payne. The burglars
had bee11 caught by the Or3nge Police
Departn1ent bul turnC'd 011! nol to be
the killers, police said. The rifling
J:rooves of the weapon did not match
the.. bullets recovered from J\1cCorry"s
body.
fl-leanwhile investigators haYc been
intervie~·ing the dead man·s family and
friends to find a possi ble moti\·c.
McCorry's father, a truck driver, \1•as
in Arizona al the time of the slaying
but came to fluntington Beach Thursday
to positively identify the body .
Despite exhaustive checks with the
FBI and California law enforcement
agencies, detectives were unable to
determine his identity until "'ednesday
11ight, whefl a DAILY PILOT reader
recognized him frorn a picture published
in the evening paper
Police mistakenlv identified the reader
as the. victim's aUnt , but !his morning
said i1 was r-.-tichael Osuch, 16261 Eagle
Lane, Huntington Beach.
Osuch. they SAid, called !he detective
bureau at 8:15 p.m. Wed nesday !o report
that he kne"r J\fcCorry, •re could not
be contacted today to answer questions
about his relationship v.·ith the dead
man.
McCorry attended Garden Grove High
School until 1968, when he dropped
classes midway through his senior year.
Detectives said he enlisted in the Anny
In September of the following year and
took his basic training at Ft. Ord, Calif.
There is little record of hi! employ-
ment, but investigators said he Qnce
v.'orked as a busboy for the. Charterhouse
restaurant in Anaheim.
Althoogh raised j n the United Stale~.
he Wis born in Oxford, England. His
American cltize.nship has not yet been
established, detectives said.
were. present for a pretrial hearing on
the matter r-.1arch 27 in Superior Cou rt
~·hen polict showed up to arrest him
on suspicion of murder.
Butchered remains suspected lo be
those of Cynthia Slocum, who vanished
in early 1964 when about three months
old. were found the day before in the
freezer.
The appliance was removed from the
r-.tesa Verde home which Dr. and Pi.trs.
Slocum occupied until earlier this year
when a cornpany holding the second
1nortgage foreclosed it.
i
OAILY P'ILOT ,.l>e ... bl' LM l't'f"'
WILLIAM WILCOXEN JOHN G. SCHMITZ
Keeps 'Ent La·119hi1ig
Hicl{s Di scus ses Drugs,
N 11dity iI1 Ca1npaig11 Tall{
By ARTltUR R. VINSEL
01 t~• 01111 ~llel 51111
Nudity, narcotics and can1pus dissent
<>r.,ergcd Thursday a s electioneering
Orange CoWlty District Atl.omey Cecil
A. Hie.ks discussed law and order before
the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce,
Reviewing the ramifications ()[ each
-especially student activism -the
young DA fighting his first election cam·
paign following appolntment in 1966 had
Chan1ber members in stitches at times.
Drug abuse wasn·l so funny .
But Hicks, who se job wlli be at slake
.June 2 when Orange County voters go
10 the polls, sparked gales of laughter
in discussing UC Irvine and Cal State
J~ul!erton on protest factions.
He displayed copies of a Magazine
Production student's final c redit work
-for those who cared to look closely
-wi!h an illustration of 22 nude and
hairy persons waving individual fingers
111 the air.
The cover contains an ex p I i c i t
rnes...,;ige.
'·Some thin g-0r-other you, Gov .
Heagan." explained the District Attorney.
'"lJse your imagination a little. folks_"
"There are some funny-looking people.
in that picture," he remarked. "'They
tll?finitely need clothes.··
Several female militants, close perusal
secn1s to suggest, are indeed unsullied
by the YMCA Slim '11 Trim class or
the Weight \Valchers· diet regimen.
"!L's enough to turn a man queer,"
he obser ved.
Hicks conceded the magazine prepared
nnd published fo r credit by CSF student
Bruce Bagnoli was professionally done
' -
work, \1'hile Bagnoli claims the nude
part 1,vas done without his kno"'ledge
or consent by others.
.. He got an A on it,'' U1c ad said.
Bagnoli claims lhe publication showing
the hislory of r~ent radical movements
at CSF was emblazoned with the Naked
22 by militants after the original edition
was printed.
"'You have lo disagree with the
pl'?ilosophy, but it was pretty well done,"
llicks told Chamber members in the
general n1ecting at the J\1e sa Verde Coun-
try Cluh.
_Hie.ks also told of a debate lnvolving
himself and activist s!udents from UC
Irvine in a forum chaired by con-
troversial former campus SOS leader
~tichacl Krisman, no w a paid ad-
ministration coordinator.
··1 said -in words to this effect
-that I didn't sec what academic
freedo1n or free speech had lo do with
breaking vdndows, writing dirty words
on the \vall,'' he explained.
He also asked how they could justify
the fact one UC employe had his hand~
blo"·n off by a Don1b and another ~·as
killed as a result o; dissent.
Hicks quoted the reply :
"\Vhy should we care, when there
arc unpaved roads 1n Texas?"
"l didn•t know ~·hcther to laugh or
cry.'" he said.
"The point rm trying to make i.•
that they must understand we can·t
ha\·e t~·o sets of laws, one for campuse!
and one for off-campus. . .one for
students and one for non-students.
"I think we have to make a point
-not by cracking heads," Di strict At-
torney Hicks continued.
DRAPERY
SALE!
CUSTOM MADE WITH A W IDE SELECTION OF
OUALl!Y INTERIOR DESIGN FABRICS. AS MUC H
AS <O 1. OFF ON EXCELLENT DESl6N FABR ICS.
INTERIORS NEWPORT BEACH
1n1 We1tcllff Or., 642-1050
OPEN F~IDAY 'TIL 9
Proft11lon1I lnt•rlor
Oe1igner1 Av1il1blt-AID
LAGUNA BEACH
345 North Co1st Hwy. 494_6551
A search o( Huntington Beach pollce
records show he had contacl with local
lawmen on two occasions. In April 1967
he was involved In an Illegal bonfire
;iclivity at Bolsa Chica State Beach while
in April of the following year he reported
his wallet, containlnl( $50, stolen by o
gnnR <lf 11tirls who a ltackcd him on the
~llch.
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 "o"• Toll hH Moo., Or...-c ••• ,., l'D·l2•l
Det('('tives said he was known among
his acquaintances as a lone.r, bul w8s
v.·cll liked. -·
•
·'-'-"~'~'·'---"-'':..:'~'~·~'~'7~0~~~~~~-H DAI LY PI LOT 3
A bba Eban Exe~11tives Qujt UAW Picks Ground Aetlon Light
Makes Plea Clifford Takes Ove r A ir Cal Woodcock Bombers Hit Fishhook
For Planes 4-..
\\'ASUINGTON tL.:PI) -I s r a r 11
Foreign fll111i.~ler Abba £ban nll'l "'ilh
Preiiident Nixon tor 5u 1111nu1es l o l! a y
111 press l.srael 's 1>lca for n101 e
\1'1trph1nes. The Y.1h11c House said !lun
110 decisivn had ye! been reachl'd.
"The pur?QsC of the n1ect1ng today
was Lu exchaug(• views on !he J'o.fiddle
J.:ast and not to co1nrnunicate any
1ll:c1sions on !he Israeli request, .. Press
:-i~·t·rctary Jlnnald Ziegler said
~cna le H('puhlit·:111 Leader Hugh Scotl
11rcdil'!cd 1'hursday !hl' r('qu('st for JCIS
\\•ouln be granto:-d. But Ziegler s;iid a
:;-\udy Nixon ordered three weeks a~o
on the r·elat1vc n1 ilitary balance In the
~hd!l!c l·:ust bctv.·ccn Israel an<t its Arab
11cighbors had noL yet been cornpleted
~:ban v.·as bt!licved to ha \·e used the
rneeling wllh the President lo press
lh!' l ~raeli 1>00ition that an expanded
role by Soviet pitols <ind technieians
in the Middle East has substantially
c.:hangcd the rnilitary balance and brought
11 new th reat lo Israel.
Eban. "'hose governmenl is asking for
2.'i Phantom JCts nnd up to 125 Skyha\\•ks,
t·nn1ends th1Jt operational 1111ssions flown
by Soviet pilots to guard the Egyptian
lnterior from Israeli attack have shifted
lhe balance or po\\'Cr agai nst the Je\\'iSh
nation. ISec 1i1ideast story. Page :t.J
The foreign n1ini ster h<ls also said
the Soviets are nu1nning SAt.·1-3 missile
sites inside the Uni ted Arab Republic
find !hat the Egyptinns have begun con·
!\ructi on of such sites along the Suez
C.1nnl.
Nixon, 11·hn has publicly clPc:1ared the
l 'n1ted St<1tes \\'Ould not pe rmit the balan-
('C of power lo be chani;:ed beh\·een
1srael and the Arab stairs, has v.'ithheld
;i dcl'Lsion on the lsr <.1cli request pending
a cornplete rcvi('w b.v U.S. intelligence
<11i;1lysls nf th<' current military situation.
Although U S. offi c i;ils have
<il'know!edged the role of Soviet pilots
nnd technicians in central Egypt, they
ha1·e be<'n less inclined to believe this
\11iJI result in a confrontation with Jsraeli
:i ircrart unless the lsr<lc>lis resume deep
penetration missions over Egypt.
i\J a r s ha II Hccovcrin 11 0
\\'1\SHI NG'fON !APl -Doctors <ti
l-iclh('sda Naval l!osp1tal ~aid today Jus.
11ce Thu rgood l\larshall was making good
11rogress to111ard recovery from pneu-
monia.
The 6!-ycar-0ld justice is defin itely im·
pro\•ing, looks better and is feeling bet·
tcr. the doclors said, according t.o a Su-
preme Court announcement
Three lop executives who have been
piloting the low-altitude fortunes of
Orange Co 'oly-based Air Cahlonita have
bailed out <ll"\heir jobs, it was disclosed
Thursday.
They quit -in their 11o·ords -a.~
the result ol cancellation of a planned
merger with Pacific Southv.•est Airlines
Inc , !Ollowing exlcndC<l delays in hear-
ings belure lhe C.al!fornia Public Ulililies
Co m1nission.
Air Cal ifornia President Carl A.
Be11sroter. treasurer Robert E. Soulerin,
and general counsel Norris Webb handed
in th eir resignations Thursday.
Board Chairman N. Loyall ~1cLaren
said the resignations would be e:ffective
iinmediately and offered no official
reason for the n1ovc.
Robert Clifford, former vice president
in charge or Air California opcralio11s,
\\•as inunediately appointed vice prcSL·
denl and gener al 111anager to replace
Benscoter.
"\Ve are fortunate to have a man
of Mr. Clifford's ability within the coni·
pany to lake on the i m po r la n I
responsibililies of running Air
Californi;1, '• S<11<l ~1cLarcn,
"l\1e have gone through sorne very
tough times in Ille last few months,"
remarked Clifrord.
.. Bui no111. with the Cf'S~ation of the
merger negotiations 1\•il h PSA , V.'c a1·e
lilking positi11e act.ion to revit<"llize our
airline," he added.
.. During merger talks, compall)' loyalty
and enthusi asm reached a new high
and it is lhis kind of spirit generated
by our employes that v.·ill not only keep
Air California very much alive -but
\I' ill give PSA a run for its money,''
the new chief predicted.
Clifford said the intrastate airline foun·
dcd in 1967 has t\\'O primary objectives:
better public service and dividends to
the s1ockJ1olders.
h\\'hal we've got at Air California
is the quickest method of transportation
bet1l'een lwo points and \\'C do it with
spirit and style," he explained.
Clifford said the profit improvl.'rnent
aspect won't a ffect passenge r service
<1LalL
"All we're doing i~ moving to con·
solidate things which 111e ha ve not been
able to do before -something v.•e should
have done long ago," he said.
"\Ve're not a big airline," he continued.
'·we are a small airline \\'ilh an ex-
lr,eme ly good product. \\'e ha\'e a lot
ol people pulling for us, most of all
our own employes."
He said a team of pilots and
ste"·ardesses has vol uR.t<'C.red to promote
Air Califom1a on their own free time,
including organization of a speaker's
bureau lo outline plans before various
groups.
''\\'e've got a going thing and we're
going to keep it going," he concluded.
COFFEE, TEA, OR MILK?
Air Cal's Clifford
Pair Arrested '
Third Sougl1t
In Drug Case
The Orange County Sheriff's Depart-
ment today reported the arrest of two
rnen and said they are searching fo r
<1 lhird in C-Onnection with the $85.000
U·Haul van-load of marijuana discovered
in Santa Ana Canyon earl y Wednesday.
Capt. James Broadbe!t said Duane
I''. Petersen, 29, of 20901 Santa Ana
Canyon Road and Armando A. Ramos,
42, of Hacienda Heights. were a rrested
in lheir homes early this morning on
charges of possession of marijuana for
s ale.
Both suspec!s are held in Orange Coun·
t.v jail in lieu of $12,SOO bail.
Sheriff's deputies responded to a phone
call from an unnamed infonnant that
rnarijuana \1'as being transferred fro1n
;i tanker true~ to the U-Haul van JUSI
"'est of the Riverside-Orange County linr .
\\'hen they arrived the tanker truck
and the men had disappeared.
D<:puties traced the rented van to
a Los Angeles agency and found it
was charged to a third man for whom
they are still looking.
Fo1· Chief
DETROIT (AP) -Leonard Woodcock.
SS.yea r-old vice president, v.·as lormal!y
and unanimously elected presidenl of
Uie United Auto Workers Union today.
Woodcock was elected by his 24 fellow
members of the UAW's lntemalional
Executive Board to serve until the
union's J9n convention.
His election lo succeed the late Waller
P . Reuther was assured Titursday by
the wi lhdra1.1,·al ol the only other con-
tender , a fellow vice president. Douglas
Fraser, 53.
'I11e fiery, red-haired Reuther, for 2~
)'ears leader of U1e 1.6 million member
union, died May 9 in a plane crash.
the executive board fills vacancies occur-
r ing between conventions.
The question of electing a vic-e
presidential successor lo \Voodcock wa.~
not decided im1nediately. Any one of
17 regional directors, who also are
automatically members of the boord,
are eligible.
TG mild-mannered, reserved \\'oodcock
falls the tough new contract bargaining
later this year wi!h the Big Three of
the automotive industry -General
~-fotors, Ford and Chrysler -and a lso
\rith the agricultural implement in-
dustry. Renewal of pacts in the aeros pace
industry comes up next year.
New car sales and profits ol the
automakers have been sagging this year,
and the companies already have indica.
led the "'ill take a tough stance in ne-
gotiations to supplant three-year con.
tracts expiring ncxl Sept. 14.
Negotiations will open in mid-July. The
union demands include a substantial
1l'age increase. earlier retiren1ent at a
higher pension, unlimited cost of li11ing
increases geared to the government':;
consumer price index, a year-end bonus
and company-paid dental care.
Stonn Alrna Broken
By Opposing Winds
~!IAMI (UPll -Tropical storm Alma,
snapped in half by opposing steering
winds, broke up today into a patch of
squalls in the Caribbean. \Veathennen
1.rrote off the disturbance a s a storm
threat.
A final advisory 1ssueO by lhe National
Hurricane Center said a Na vy recon·
naissance plane found remnants of the
rare t.1ay tropical stor.[ll spread over an
area north and northeast of Grand Cay-
man Isla nd.
,.. ' • ';"l
Enemy Storage Depots
SAIGON CAP) -Abou t !50 U.S. BSl
bombers unloaded I ,SOO tons of bombs
1n the Fishhook regioo ol Cambodia
loday, hilting areas where new n1·
telllgt'nce information indicated the
presence of North Vietnamese storage
depots.
Little ground action was reported in
Cambodia and Soulh Vietnam. But the
eight-jet Stratofortresses p u m me I e d
suspected Cambodian sanctuaries that
the sweeping ground troops apparently
have not reached,
About half the more than 1,000 BS2
sorues flown this 1non1h have been
ag:ii nsL target s 1n Cambodia. The other
half have been split bet"·een South Viet-
rir1n1 and Laos. A sortie is one flight
by one B:iz. carrying 30 tons or bornbs.
There was speculation that the BS2
raids fin Can1bodia are being stepped
up t.o get at territory Amc>rican troops
cannot reach before June 30 . the date
President Nixon has said they will all
be out of Cambodia.
Earlier this "'eek, Lt. Gen . t.tichael
:::. Davison, commander or lhe 10,000
U.S. lroops in Catnbodia, said his men
had been able to CO\'er only :Kl percent
of the territory assigned lo them since
they crossed the border three weeks
ago
"1'here·s a tremendous amount of
ground to be covered," he fiaid , "and
in much o( the area there, with the
thick jungle, triple canopy, it's extremely
difficult lo conduct the sort of
thoroughgoing, detailed search that has
Jogger Succu1nbs
In Westminst.er
A Westminster man died this morning
after completing his normal jogging stint
near his trailer park home.
1'he Orange County Coroner's Office
:iiaid William Bertrand, 50, a mechanic,
returned lo his trailer at ISS2J Beach
Boulevard, walked to the bathroom and
collapsed.
Mis wife, Virginia, called police and
the \\'estminstcr Fire Department rescue
squad administered first aid in vain.
'.\Ir. Bertrand v.•as pronounced dead
on arri\'al at Hunlington lnterco1nmunity
Hospital at 7:28 a.m.
The coroner said he had no previous
medical history of heart trouble and
had been jogging for about two years.
An autopsy will be performed to
detern1ine U1e exact cause of death.
"
"!,~ ....... ~".:'fl:•~·
'
lo be made."
Results Of the B52 raids in Cambodil•·
ha\'e not been announced, but informed
sources said the strikes have killed at
least ISO North Vietnamese soldiers and
~et off scores or secondary explosiom,·
indicating hiLs on ammlJ'flitioo and fuel
s tores.
In South Vietnam, enemy troops am·
bushed a five-truc k U.S. convoy in the>
Central Highlands six miles south of
Dalat , killing t"·o Americans and woun.
ding 13.
U.S. headquarters also announced Iha(
e'llemy gunners shot down thre e'
American obser\•alion helicopters at scal-
lered points along the Laotian border·
in north1.1,·estern South Vietnam. Three
crewmen "'ere wounded.
In Peking. Cambodian Prince Norodom
Sihanouk told Chairman Mao Tse-tung
a11CI a cheering crowd of 500,000 that .
he is !'prepared lo pe rsevere in a pro.
\, .1cted people 's struggle" against the ,
Cambodian leaders who de poseO him,_
and against the U.S. and South Viet.,
narnese troops in his country.
Missi11 g County
Pail· Found Dead
' In Canada Wilds
from Wire Services
VANCOUVE R, B.C. -Missing for hffl·
1.1,•eeks on a flight to a plumbing COl\-
vention. the bodies of a Fullerton couple
\vere found in the wreckage of theitt
plane on a wooded island near her~
Thursday.
~1r. and Mrs. ~larold Renz were ap-
parently ki!led on May 8 after lakinl
off from VallCOuver International Aifl>Otl-
for Orange County, bul withooL filtng
a flight plan.
Relatives notified Canadian authorlti~·
J\1ay 18 that the Renz couple had not ·
returned home and a search was begun';·
with discovery of the wreckage coming-
onl~· hours later.
The viclims' P iper Comanche aircraft
had gooe dov.•n on Saltspring J:r;!and in
the Strait of Georgia, smashing into"
a thickly wooded hillside. :
A pilot flying an Albalros..<i amphibian
aircraft from the Canadian Search a~
Rescue Centre in Vancouver spotted tile·
Comanche debris. .. ' '
DISCRIMINATING
INVESTORS
AT
Look For:
Stability and Availabiljty of Principal. Max-
imum Dependable Earnings. Ease of Trans -
actions.
And Find:
Accounts Insured to s20,000.00 Reserves
sufficient to assure contin.uance of maxi -
mum permissible earnings. A location as
close as your mail box.
1000 FAIR OAKS AVENUE
SOUTH PASADENA, CALIF. 91030
Area Code 213
799-4143
5%
Current Annual
Pass Book Rate
Area Code 213
682-1131
-----· ----------
~1~~~r;;i~i;~~;:;~:~:~~~?:i:~~:::::~;:t~;:}r::;~:~~:~::;:~:~rt:~r~~::~:~~~~~~~:~:~:~;~t~::~~:;~~~~::~~~:~;:rr::~:~8~:;:j::~:::~:~:;:::!~:;:;:;~:;:~:~:~:;:~:~:::::::~ ..
:·: . Statement of Condition f :
)i December 31, 1969 t :
'''' ASSETS ::=:: s 0 ~::~:~: Fi rsl Lie n El on Real Estate .•.••••.••••••••••.••••• $63, 792,:)42. 70 :::::;:
=:=:=:: ~:~;:~JC~~~=~ ~1~d~ ·~ ·~:~~i·1it~t~· S~i; ~·r·R;;l i s,s91 ·93 ;:_:·:: .. 0
.!. .. :.~:.·.~-~ E state .••...•..••••••.••• •..................... 71 ~ •• ~'.200003.noot Stock in F.H.L.B........ •••••... •. .. . . • . • .. . . . . . ·~
•.·.·.•
:::::;: u
0
.sh. Go
1
vernmenl ~~~ds •••• .,. ••• • • •• ••• • • • • • • •• • 3 .498,7
7
07.88
;:.·.: t er nveslme nt ~u rities •• , •• • • •• • • •• • . • • • . • • 789, 14.4 l
;.::::; Cash on H a n d a nd in Banks ...................... 570,354.47 .... ~ .
. ~j.j~_:].~ Office Building, La nd and Equipment-Less Depre· .i,:_~.·-•.:._:.i ci etion .• , •.....•.........•..•.•....... -. . • . . . . • 1 ,427,964.35 ;~;~:::: Secondar y Reser ve for Federa l Savin gs a nd Loan :::;:::
:.;;_~;:_iil; ~tsh~ra~~se~:~r·a·t'.~~::::::: :: : : : : : : : : : : : : :·::::: 734,~~~:~~ ~ii~))~
T ota l ••••••••••••••••••••...••••••••.••• $71,669,175.33 :·:::::
LIABILITIES },:
Sa\'in gs Accou nt~ •..•..••.•••••..••.••.•••••••... $60,593.893.86 :-:·
Advances from F.11 .f,.B...... •• ••• •• • . • • • •• • • . • . • 3,048,000.00 -.~.:.',~,i,~,~
Other Bor rowed Money •• ,, ••••• , •••• ,,., •• , ••. ,. NONt:
l.oa ns in Process ................................ 236,972 .. 50
Other Liabili tieR ..... •• • . . • . . • . . • . • • • . • • • • • • • • • • 177 .915.5 l
Deferred Income • , •• , , ••••••••••••••• , • • • • • • • • • • 7 ,388.32
Specific Reserves , •••••• ,, •••••••••••••••••• ,... 7,240.45
General Reserves, ••••• •••••••••••.............. 6,146,036.12
Reserve for Contingencies •••••••• , ••• , , •• , • , , • • • • l 91,259.00
Surplus •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,.. 1,260,469.57
Total •••••••.•••••••••.•.••••••••.•••••• $71,669,175.33
MEMBER
FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK SYSTEM
:c-:.:: MEMB ER FEDERAL SAVINGS AND _::);
:;i;;, LOAN INSURAN CE CORPORATION :::::;:; ~=~:~:~~~=~~=j~~:~~~~~~:~~;;~~~:~:j:~~~~;~;~~~~n~~:~:j:~:;:~;~~~~=;~~=i=~=~~~:~:~:;~:~;:~:~:;:~j=~~:;:~~~~Vi~~:~~~~~j~~~~~j~~~~~;~;~:~~~~~:~~~;;~~~1~u;r:u;;:~~~;~:;:;;~;~;;;~~;;~~r~~~~~j~u1
if"'*'srwm::::;m;m~~.
r: and
j Directors
.......
0. R. CLANTON, Prei;ident, Manager and Direct.or
ROB ERT K. CLANTON
Vice-Pres'ident, Secretary and Direct.or
WILLIAM E. CLANTON
RENNETHP.FORD
W.D.GOHMERT
Vie&-President and Director
Vice·Preeident
'l'reasurer. Assistant Secretary and Director
CLIFFORD P. GRUA Director
B. DEAN CLANTON Director
WILLIAM J. THOMAS A'6istant Secretary
R. A. YOUNG Ass istant Secretary
RUTH DONALD ABBistant Secretary
MARJORIE HAIRE Assistant Secretary
I
Frid<ly M11 22, 1970
• Udall Claims
"
S11ppo1·te1·s
·I Lini11g Up
:'. c'~
·. R ~,tt.~AY'~ _NE~
When campaign po sters featur-
ing nude pictures of six male can-
didates for student offices appear-
ed on the campus of Santa Monica
Cit y College they Y.1ere promptly
removed by school officials. The
posters reappeared recently and
there was no aclion to ban the1n.
"They drew son1e lo1nclothes on
them and that covered up the prob-
lems," explained Dean of ~1cn Ed-
wards B. Degrott. • Local Nottingham. England offi-
cials have decided to give Hospital
Porter Christopher Stinnett, 25, a
new suit. Hi s old one sh rank after
he re scued a 7-year-old boy from a
river three m onths ago. •
Jacks o11ville. F'la. police /lad J
been puzzling over why an old, 1 ,
aba11doned hon1r /tad such a
!
heavy antl seen1i119/!J in<ies1r11c--~
tible Tat population. \Vednesday
they /earlled the 1noman !Vho
ltad lived there bectune so fo11rl.
of llie ro<lenl .~, she ret.urncrl
reg ularly to fed !heni cin11an1on
r:.:~-~ :·-.. --'~ • ·The Tacoma. \Vash. inayor and
four city counciln1en rode in police
cars to pick thei r candidates for
safe driving awards, an annual
tesentation in conjunc tion \\'ith
tional Police Week . Only four of
e five ended up \vith nominees ,
~wever. CounC'il man A. M. lat·
vlch, a retired police officer. told
cou ncil he had fa iled in his
rch recently. "I 'm too used to
Jboking for violaters to pick out the 4ooct ones." ZatkoYich said .
' . ! ! A priest baptize<!. 10-month·old
lf\art1n Sandall of t-:vesham , Eng-
lpnd in his bathtub \.Ve<lne s-
4ay because the youngster scream-
f:d and kicked violently recently
"hen the ceren1ony \vas attempte<l
irr a church. Said the Rev. Albert
\Yebb : "I was not prepared to car-
ry out a C'hristening by force in
<:h urch. J\lartin might have groi.1·11
(Ip to resent the church." • ~.7'-.. --:"!3:::... ~-== ___.,....~
A Lo11do11 probation officer l
told a court \\/erlne.~dc!J 11110 sis· J
fer~. aged 20 oud 21. !Jad such • 1 a oooi:t time HL llollowo11 Jail • J
that /11ey tuent sliop/ijting with-li
in n1111utes of t.heir release to
be able lo return to pris on. t
-·-· • ls1anbul. Turkey is lhe noisie!'it
'Hy 111 l~urope. says a report pub-
'is hed \\'ednesday. P rof. Hikmet
Al tug, an car ~pccialisl al Istanbul
Un.ivers1tv. s;11d in the report that
m ental 1!iness and deafness are on
the increase, due in part to screech·
Jng horn s, blaring loud·speakers
putside record shops and the cons·
tant ba\\ ling of street peddlers. • ; Dcspile doctor's flrder.' to c11t
d o"·n on eating, 252·pound Bob
S::ousins of Scunthorpe, England
~ays he'll accept a <l11 ck f;.irn1 s:
r:hal!engc lo lr,v 1o l't1 t ;1 !-tX·pou11d
d uck and four pound-: of trim·
mings. ''l just c<in 't re!)ist ," Cou·
&ins said.
\\'ASHJ N(;TON (AP) -Hep. ~1orri!
K. Udall. firs l announced contendr:r for
Democratic floor leader in the House.
says he ha;, already laken his <'ilmpa1gn
to about 60 l'Olti'agues and ha' received
c111111nitments or support fr orn "a lot
vf thrni."
A 4/.year-0ld Arizona hlleral, l1lu!I
i~ cons1dcrt>d one of lhe lop candtd;i tes
for th1· Jcadl·rship pQ:-.\ rxpe~·lt'<l tn bl'
vac<1 led in lhe wake of ~fl".i°KPr John
i\fcCor1nack ·s announcen1c11t \\'ednesday
he "'1!1 n1Jt :.cek annthrr trrin next
i\oven1bcr. Current Den1ocr<llic floor
leadt>r Car! Albe rt or Okl;"1hon1a appears
to be a shoo-in for the Speaker's cha ir
when the lea1lership post" ;ire filled
after !he 92nd Congress is seated In
January.
t:dall said plcrlges of 5upporl are com·
ing from representatives from every se<_·.
tion of the coontry, although he said
"it's fa r loo earl y and I'm making
no claims of anylhing."
lidall "'as the candidate in January
1969 of a group of llou:-.e Dl'rnocrat1c
liberals "''ho staged a Futile atten1pt
to unseat the 78-year-0ld f\icCorm11ck.
Another candidate for Albe rf:i; po:..I.
assuming he moves up to the Speaker's
th.air, is Jlep .. lanies G O'Hara post.
i\lichigan, 44. O'Hara l1<Js headed !he
l1t>eral a11(1 powerful l.>e1nveralic Study
Group in Uie !louse. A<'corJ1ng to Utlall.
!'Orne members of Congre:;s lamentN:I
the fact that he and O'l!ura arc both
c·and idates for /\lberl's job .
Other contenders an! ll1ch;1rd nnll1ni.;
of J\1 issouri, Ha le Boggs of Louisi:ina,
who is currently third-ranking IX>1nocraL
in the House, Dan Rostenkowski. Ill ,
Edwa rd P. Bol and, i'.lass., James C.
Corman, Calif., Jack Brooks, Tex., and
John E. Moss. Calif.
Udall said Thursday he thinks l1Jbbying
for !he po.<;1. 111av eo11l ln11r intensively
for the next l\ro or three da):; anti
then le vel off. Ile a1ldrd : "I 1h1nk a
sifting process will go on for the nexl
L1~·0 or three week"···
The election could de1knd on the \'l)IC'!'i
of lhe ne'.I' men1bers in Januarv, t:dall
said, barring a band11.·a~n movement
£or any one candi1l:i1r :;o;ln About 2;;
new Democrats arc expocted, he said .
Brandt Declares
Stoph 'lligicl'
BONN (UPI ) -\Vest c; er n1 a n
Chancellor \Villy Brandl :i1aid tod ay his
second talk with l::ast Gern1an Prirne
l\1inisler Willi Stoph rrvealC'li m<tny or
!heir differences are even deeper lhan
had been imagined.
Brandt described Stoph'.~ altitude as
rigid, and said he feared the East
German's insistence on international
recognition by Bonn was an attempl
1o avoid discussion of other more prac·
tical steps the \\'est proposed be taken
to lov.·er the !ensions betwC<'n them .
The \Vest German leader made his
comment at a ne"·s conrerenre aftt>r
he reported to his cabi net early this
niorni ng on talks \\'ith Stoph in !he
\\''est German city of Kassel Thursday.
(;er111au J c t C r a~h cs;
Struck hy Lii:htning
BONN', Germany (;\P) -f\ \\'est (l(•r.
man Starfigh1er crashed near K;iufbeurrn
1n southern Germany lorlay, apparently
altrr it was struck bv h,ghtning, !he De-
fen~r ~1 111i.l r.v ;1111101111r·1·d
The pi101 w:i~ ilh lr l•l b;i1] 0111 ~horl)I'
hC'forr lhr llvin·l'nginerl 11gh lf'r·h11mhrr
hit thr ground. :;Ji gh1 lv 1l;un.1ging a f11rin
built11ng, a spokesman !laid.
I ' i
It's ller!C 1\'o•t'
Actress Debbie Rcynolrl s is all
sn1iles as she holds the dress
\vorn by Jud.v Garland in "The
\Vizard of Oz". She bought the
dress for $1.000 at the i\IGJ\I
i\lovie auction for tl1e C<.i rolina
Caril>bean Corp., \\hicl1 \\•ill
loan i'L to J\liss Reynolds for
llisplay a t a llolly\v{Jod n1us·
eum.
NY Tin1es Faces
Ten1porary Halt
In Publication
NE \V YORK tAI') -The Nrw '\'ork
Tin1es. beset lJy a prinler"' v.•ork
slo1l'dov.·n, says it villi discontinue
publication tc1nporarily on Sunday u11!ess
:1 n agrel'mcnl i ~ rf':irhE>d w i l h
Typographu.:.al t:11iu11 i\o. 6.
Publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberg1·r ;in·
nounced Thursd<iy th;lt 11'1tl1nul a set·
tlcment tl1e nc11 <:p:.tpl'r wo11hl sus1>en<I
pub lication af 1l'r 1ls Sunl101y editions nrr
printed Salurrlay n1gh1. a111! 1 h :i t
emp!oyes "''ould nol be pa id beg1nn111g
\1'llh lhc Sunday morning shift.
The announcen1ent can1e as printer"
in the Times composing room con\1nut·d
lo conduct on·1hC'·JOb union mect1n~s.
nov.· totaling 19 hours a day. Negotiation"
between the pnnters' union and
publishers of the city 's four ma1or da1l1es
are deadlocked .
The printers have nnt ~uni 11t1hl1t·ly
\~hat kind of contracl they <ire 1lt'n1;u1·
ding. but Local 6 Prl•sident Brr1r;ir11
A. Pov.·ers vov.·ed that his men 11 ~111ld
not accept a contract !hat did nvl n1l·•·t
thei r need s.
"If 1! means locknu1 , 1\•r'll \\'lll1n~lv
t:i ke it unlel>S "'c grt v:!1at v.'e nr1·1 t.''
Powe.rs scild In the composin12 !'!)()Ill
20 minutes after Sulzberger·:; 0111·
nouncement .
The Times' announced in!ention !11 :-11.~
pend publication v.·as fX pc'Clrd to prnrn pt
a resumption of nf'gnliat1n1t~ lx•111·i't'll
the prin1ers and rrpre:;rnla111·es of !hr
Timrl'. tl1r 1J·1il.\' 1\r11 ..... and the Po:;t
;111d thf' !)111g l~l11 11d l'rf'ss. Talks broke
otf \!;1\ q ;1ltflr 11 19-hour barg:i in1ng
~r·.s11)n lh::l1 failed to produce an agree·
llll'f1\.
Tornadoes Plague Midwest
• • l
44 Degree s Separate A ri z ona's Flllgstaff, Phoenix
Cnlflnrnln
LM A,,..1., Wfl <OVt'ftd wll~ vet!.
-bit Cloud~ lri !h' mor~lng, l>IJ! ,.,,,..
.,., • ..,,.., ~ "' • lnrec•'t 11 '" 1n~ •""'""°"•· Tn, Pr!'dlc1td O•t•nr~h• low II SI •nd forroo•IOW'I hig~ lh""ld ....,c,, ts.
50UT11EllN CALIFORNIA -Mo1ll•
fflr lhr(IOJgh S•turd.tY but 11l<1M lt"d
••IV morning lo# tlou"' "°"'" <"""· w ........ F•liltY •'Ill lnltno:I Mtll1 s11.
UnH¥.
LOS ANGELES AREA -MD•llv •~Ir
Temperat'''"~~
All>V<>U•"<IUI
,.n(h~rf(le
lltlonl•
B•~•rill•ld
R I•"""''~ [l(li!•
Bo"o" C~l<o<>o
<•~cl"n11I•
(l•v•l•n<I
Oenvor
Hit~ Lew 1'1..:,
" " ,, •t
"' M "' ~ M #
" .. ..
" .. " " " M
~
South Viets to Remain
W 011't Leave Cambodia Whe11 U.S. Does
\VASHJi'..GTON !UPI) -Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird said today
lie Is against holding South Vietnamese
Jorces to any "firm timetable" for Jea v·
ing Cambodia and also favors later raids
by Saigon lroops tr the Communists
..:onduct a ne w building o( the .so<alled
sanctuaries.
Laird said firmly that not a single
American "ground personnel" v.·ould be
left in Cambodia after June 30, the
4late set by Presidenl Nix.on for a halt
tu the U.S. part in the operation. But
he said he felt "it v.·ould be a mistake
t.1 make a firm timetable·• for
\\ithdra"'•al of South Vietnamese.
Statements this \\•ee k by Nguyen Cao
Ky, South Vietnamese vi~e presid~nt,
that his troops had no intention o~ leaving
Cambodia at the same time as
Americans has generated new concern
jn Congress over the operatioo. ln
response to questions about a Ky state-
n1l'nt Uint South Vietna1n wou ld not
allow its hands lO be tied. administratirin
officials indicated efforts would be made
1n Saigon to get Ky and President Nguyen
Van Thieu lO abandoo any possibllity
of slaying in Cambodia indefinitely
Laird was lntervie"·ed 011 Nsc:r v·s
Today Show .
Laird was asked about the "lcrritoria1
ambitions·• t:)\vard Cambodia of Sout h
Vietnani. ra ised by Senate Democratic
leRder !\like r.1ansfield on 'fhursday.
He acknowledged that "there are pro·
blems" in that area because of long-time
f'nm1ty ;,n1u11g sonic n e i g h b o ring
Indochina 11 re<1 nations such as V1etnan1,
C:imbodia and Thailand. He added , "Th is
11ill be w;ill:l1ed very tlosely and 1ery
c<irefully "
But a~ l:ir a cunr.:urr·ent Y.lthdrawal
of South Virtnan1ese forces \1' 1 t h
Americans. an d for any pledge th;;t
neitlier An1ericans nor South Vietnaniese
Gua1·(lsme11 to l(eep 01·cle1·
At Neg1·0 Y 011tl1's F1111e1·al
By Uniltd Press International
f 11·e thousan d Natianal Guardsm<'n
l1;11e be<'n ordered to cordon of[ the
r1h10 State Unh•ersity campus tixlay
1\•hile J,300 guard troops v.·ere on standby
for the fufl{'rat of a young Negro shot
lei death in Jackson, Miss.
The 111 a yo r of [)('kalb, llL. asked
ritizcns lo stay all'ay from the Northern
Illinois University campus, scene of three
.:.Ll'rdghL nights or trouble.
1"he Ohio guardsmen . carrying loaded
weapons. were to cordon off Ohio State
to keep "outside agitators" away follow·
ing a window-breaking rampage Thurs-
da)·. Several hundred demonstrators, urj;l·
Ing a student :;trike, smashed ..,,-jndov.·s
r111d loott•rl s1nrrs on a downto1l'n streei
1!uring th e spree.
f\l 1r t1.<1l 10 persons wrre injured and
Ill othl'r~ arrested b<'lure a curfew \\'as
l'!an1ped on the l'a1n1)us area.
Uh10 Stale's 45,0UO studcnt.s had return·
I'd 0ft1r~day after a 10-day ~hutdown
bec:iuse of 'ivlrnt clashes betv•een
ni ilitanls and guardsmen.
. ' ~ .... {(
The ~fississippi guardsmen were called
to readiness to ensure "peace and tran-
quility'' during the funeral of James Earl
(;reen, 17, one of tv.·o young persons
killed during violence at Jackson State
College f.1ay 15.
Gov . John Bell \Vil lian1s said he alerted
10.000 gl1a rd troops to supplement J.:100
men already n1obilized because of the
.. sy,·arm" 0£ people coming to Jackson
for the funeral.
Negro lrader Cha rles Eve.rs urged
blacks lo be calm today and Y.'arned
them against being provoked by Gov.
\Vil lian1s' "ungodly speech."
Willian1s said the guardsn1rn would
nol he used unless locril policemen
"become exhausted and incapable of
handling the situation."
Pub!ic schools in !he city v.·ere clo~d
Thursday and today because of a "Len~
situ tltion" in Jackson, Parochial schools
11·er<' closed today.
"Therl' 1~ goi ng to be peace and tran·
ctuility in i\1issi s~ippi." \\'i ll1ams tald a
stale>n'ide tele1•1s1oi1 audtent.•e. "\\-e <ire
going to be ruled by Jaw and order."
Mitch ,ell Warns Guard
110 Be Cool on Campus
hl ~111' ('a111pu.~ <l11r1i1i:; a two-r!oi~· l:1r\·fi n·
ding and ~peech·n1ak1ng lrtp lo :'l\1 ~~1ssiµ.
pi earlier th is week.
11·ould return. Laird ~air! tl111t It bt
;i rn i!.l<Jke to s:i.v in advance precisely
1\hat would happen.
I-le stressed Lhat Nlxon·s ''tin1etnbh~
1\ill be met 111 e\·ery respect" 111.sofar
;1,; VS. forces be used again on new
raids to clear the areas.
"I dun't think it "'ould serve any
useful purpose to say in advance thai
they won 't go back:' Laml said.
Asked ir Amerrcan advisers might stay
behind 11•1Lh South Vietnamese forcrs
after Junr JO. Laird said "there will
be no American adl'isers 1n Cambodia
afler June 30.''
Asked. in Lhe backi,:round of hea'y
1·ongrcssional eritirisn1 and an upsurge
in anti11·ar deinonstrated since tl1c
Cambodian operation started th ree v.·eeks
;;igo. if he felt "it v.•as all worth it''
and whether he v.·ould "do it .again .''
Lalrd replied with a firm .. yes."
The secretary con!C'nded the CambOOia
\'£•n!ure would already have b1~en "a
great tactical success" from the stand·
1<nint of Con1n1unisl amn1unilion, sup-
plies, and food <·1tptured, and predicted
tha t ii al~o v.·ou!d prove to be an even
greater strategic success.
Laird said the re sults of U1e sweep
11·ould expedlte the N i x o n ad·
n1inistration's Vietnamizalion progra m
! the process of lui·ning over !he war
lo South Vietnam ). reduC'e American
t :isualties and expedite v.•ithdraw•al of
GJ.s.
Rap in Al ucria ~
Says Ne,vspaper
\\'ASHINGTON {liPI ! H. Rap
Brow·n, fugilil'e bhtck power leader, has
fled to Algeria. the \Va shington Evening
Star said today.
Spokesmen for the FBI and· the State
Department said they had no information
of Brov.·n being in Algiers.
The Siar said it learned fr om uniden·
1il1ed givernmr.nt sources that Brov.•n
11 cnt In ,\lgt•ria ;;iftrr 1•anishing on \he
c1·C' of his sehrdLlled tn:il on charges
of lnc1ti·,1g to riot and arson in t:am·
bridge, fild.
Bru\'111 dropped out (If s1gl1t i\1arch
7. 11ro da\·s before \"'0 friends rlif'<l
in a 1nys tci-1ou s bomb explosi on or their
;iulo near Bel Air . ;\Id.
Thi• ."\C"gru lcatlf'r sub srqucnlly 11<1~
~fY.-'c1 ally h~ted Oil Lile FBl's hst_ of
mo~l 11 an!cd cri1n1nals because he !ailed
to sho1v up for trial.
Th~ 2r,.vear·old forme r chairman of
the' s111dt'nt Coordinating Comn1ittce had
!)ecn free ofn $1 0.000 bond pendi·,1g the
tria l.
Tt'IC' Star priin1ed nut lhAt Algeria ha~
nn rc ci prrx·al ex1radit inn trea!y wllh . the
I '1111cd· Slnl r~ ;11111 no1<'d 111111 f.ldridgc
( 'le~1rcr. fonnl'r lnfo rinntion ;\linister of
thr Bl;u;-k P<.1n1hrr Parl.r . toun<l refuge
in the North Africon country.
\l.1\'-.111."lf;TO.'J (AP) -.r\lty. Gt'n.
,Jt1l1n N. t-.l1tchell, once the Nixon ad·
1111ni~tratio11'-: hard·liner on student
dt•111u11~!r;1l 1un.,. has warned PQlice and
,\'ath111:1I (;u;1n!.~rnen lo "keep their cool''
1l11nng t:.:i 1n pt1s 1h.~turbances.
~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1\nni1un1·111~ bt'!!ft'd 11µ invcstiga!ions
111tu thl' ~h011t111g dt>;iths of eight young
1~·nplr c111 thr l\('n1 Slale and Jackson
!',1;11 t' c:in1pu:--l·:-.. ,\lilchell said Thursday:
'(1111• can rrl'0gni1.e Lhc pnJ1()(';1t1ons
1\ 1111 h 11f1rn aceon1pany t'll'il disorder.~.
tJ111 lro111u'd [,1\\' enforcement µers onnr l
h.1·.11 t1 r1·~p1 111:-.1bihl y !n keep 1ht'ir cool
.111d 11t1l111· 1111 ly :-ueh n1inimu1n force
;1 ~ h rC'q.i11Td tn protl'<·t the safely
n1 thl' general publt<·, tile bystan<lcr!l
and !he1nsel 11C's.··
,\l1l!'l1r H ~proinled Asl't. Al!y. (;1'!1.
,Jl'rr1 s Lennard. head of lhc Ju~t1c~
l1cp;11·11ncnt',.; eivil righ1s division. to
pc1·!lonolly orcr:;ee the invcstig.1llons.
T!1(' ff'dt'r<il pr[lbcs now undrr 1\;iy
are a1 Jaek~ori ~talc Co11C'i;!t' in i\tissl~s1p
l}I , 11hcrr. tll'o fllatk youths '\'rre fC'l!l'd
111 a h;ul ol highv.·ay patrol bullet~:
KC'nt State L'nivcrsily in Ohio. where
~tudrnt:; were killed when National
Guardl'ml'n opened fire , and Augusta.
c:a. ,, here six Negro men v.·ere fatally
shot in th~ back during a racial
disturbance.
1-\lso under investigation is tht dea!h
of a black teen-age boy in the coun_ty
jail in Augusta. which spar k~ the racial
disorders in which the men died.
Sources at the Justice Depart1nen1 said
i'>Iitchell on•as profoundly distu rbt<l by
\\>'hat he saw and heard on the Jackson
Student, Union
Gro111> Hits War
.ff"'·
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u rl• morn!"' kow cloudl ne•r lh•
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s11hdut>d l'rnwd estin1ated at :ibout 20,000. ~·oiced !hei r opposition to th<" Vle1nan1
.t• v.·11r Thursday at 8 noon rally in City
l~all Park.
C ~ 8"<1<. Sllghll" Wfrmer F'tl<lfv.
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l\'n violence l\'D.o;; reported at the
4iemonstration attended mostly by
studcnls and union members. La ter in
the day, however, aboul 4,000 of the
war prote91.e r! clestled briefly ".!ith police
in mid-Manilattan.
Ton·o persons were arfested and nine
other:; l'Pported Inju red . none seriws!y,
in Iha\ C'nrounter v.·hich terminated the
o!herwi~ peaceful dl'n1rin~tr,11tion. .
The 1l i~rup1ion occurred 1vhen police
5topped d1'n1on.~tr!ltor~ V>'hn had ~n
slowing !raffir. 1o a crawl. frotn entienng
J3r\';lnt P:1rk HI 40th St reet and Sixlh
A1·f.n11 r. A rl'(ll!l'(I for 11 pE>rmil to r11lly
in lhe: park: had been rejected by police .
Tall Tree, Sho1·t A1·tist
True art triu1nphs as April 1'aylor. 7. in1proviscs ;i "Ju1np tech111quc"
lo put I.he finishing: t011chcs on the top of her lrc(' p;1 1nti11,t:. ~lu rl ('T\1 ~
of the 2·11h ~!reel Elen1en!ary S<·honl in \,o.~ 1\1i J!1·!r.~ 11 ere Ill\ ilC'rl hy
Pollack t'on'.'iln1c tion f'ompany l(l paint fences surrounding coni;truc·
tion site of the new \Vest Adams Community Hos pital.
U"'I Tolto~i.
Pro1ully Tliey Bena
:\t the world's largest flag company /\n1er1can flags are in full production as
Old (;Jory continues to occupy a promincnl place in 1nass den1on stralions
across the country. Literally wrapped up in thetr \\'Ork are these two cn1 ploycs
of the 1\:tnin Fl ag Company, v.·hose flags tly in United Nations Plaza and in nl0!'>1
cou ntries around the world -as \Yell as on the 1noon where they were planted
by U.S. astronauts.
Nixon Nixes
Using Fund~
For Busina 0
WASHINGTON (AP)
President Nixon apparently
does not want any of his pro--
posed i500 nlillion for school
desegregation lo be used fJr
busing students in allen1pts
to achieve racial balanec.
A lasl n1u1ulc change in
1ht> Presidcnt"s integration
statement to Congress Thurs-
day said funds should not '"be
extended to establish or main-
tain the transportation of
students to ;ichieve racial
balance.''
Nixon also said 1noncy
should not be used to promote
Forced racial busing in school
11·hen the sole purpose is to
eli minate de facto segregation
Ho,,.,·cver, the overall intent
remained cloudy. /\n off icial
closely associated with the
leg1slation said ... All we are
saying is that the federal
government can'l force any
de facto segregated district
ro bus. They can use the
money lo bus voluntarily.''
Sextuplets Born, Die
Within Hours i11 NY
iliE\V YORK (UPI) -A
pretty New York mother \\'ho
had been taking fertility drugs
gave birth to sextuplets Thurs-
day night. The five girls and
a boy, born three months
prcniaturely and weighi',,g le ss
than a pound each, died within
seven hours.
1\1rs. Susan Danoff. 27. and
her Madison Avenue lawyer
httsband, r.ilarlin, had been ex-
pecting ·triplets. r.1rs. Danoff
lelL ill Thursday afternoon and
was taken to the New York
University r.1edical Center.
Her husband. who had been
\VOrking on a case in suburban
Long Island, rushed lo the
hospital as soon as he found
out.
lie \\"as in the walling room
when a man came out and
said ; •·some gal's given birth
to sextuplets." Da.1off said it
took a moment to register
a nd then he shouted· ··My
God, that"s my wife.""
He said they understood
from the beginning the sex-
tuplets had little chance of
UPI T1lilPllGle
SIX AT ONC E
Mrs. Martin Danoff
:survival They were burn
within a 10-minute pcnod
between 6:07 and 6·17 pm
!::OT. Four died .... ·ithin two
hours nf de!iviery,
F"rld.1y, May 22, 1970' DAIL V Pll6' 3
Arabs Hit Bus, Kill 7 Children
By United Prea1 lalernaUoaal
Arab guerrillas arr.?>u.shed
an liraeli school bw on the
Lebanese frontier today, kill·
ing seven children and three
adults in an auack that reduc-
ed Israeli Premier Golda Meir
to tears. Mothers of five of
the children were i~jured in
a truck ""'reek later while
speeding to the scene .
Israel retaliated against
Lebanon by :shelling four
border villages, killing !ix
persons and wounding 21, a.
Lebanese military spokesman
said in Beirut Israeli com.
mandos au eol\(IQ. ~gypt.ian
Red Sea naval base during
1he night and planes hit Suez
Canal positions today. ,
Mrs. Meir was talking with
lwo Dutch nP.wmten when
word was received that seven
children aged sj1e to eight were
killed ;1lon& with three adults
and that 21 persons v.·ere
wounded. They said she wept
and mumbled ··horrible. hor-
rible" as she wiped away ht'r
tears.
Witnesses said a truck
1,.trfth was speeding lo the
Safad government hospital
with mothers or five of the
injured children crashed off
the road two hours later. in-
juring the five "'Omen, three
of them seriously.
Arie Elial', s ecre tar y
general of the Israeli Lahor
party, said in London_ the
schoolbus was painted bright
yellow and it would have been
impossible for the guerrillas
to have hit It at such cl().!C
range by misLake.
"'The reaction I think will
be very harsh," he said in
a BBC lnlerviev.·. ··we will
have lo go after t h e
murderers and the k,illers
where they are. .il"s not
the Lebanese that killed the
children. It 's the Palestinian
Arab terrorists."
An 1sraeli spokesman !aid
Arab guerrillas followed up
the bazooka and rifle attacle'-
on the schoolbus ~ilh an at-
tack on an Isareli army patrol
near the Arab village of Rha-
jar in ' the foothills of Mount
Hermon, wounding two Israeli
soldiers. This is north or the
area ""'here the bus wa.s at.
tacked.
A brief annow1cement fro111
the Israeli army said coin·.
Kent State G . M h c . mandos with aic suppoct "'"' eorgia arc ers ontinue ::,k· :~~:,;nE~;,~~"":.:;;:
Gl'1·} FottDd, base at Bur S:;,faga . on tht ' Red Sea 240 mile~ south or-D •i D th Pl t R the Suez Canal and returned· Going Hon1 e espl e ea O umor ~:~~;.~·~b1~::~.~ ·"'""''
Egypt denied there had been •
INDIANAPOLIS (APJ such an allack. .
The mystery girl photograph-FORSYTH, Ga. (AP) -the 26 n1iles fro111 f'orsyth other persons in r a c I a I Later today the Israeli air
ed leaning ()Ver lhe body of Civ il rights demonstrators un-to Griffin during the day, then di.!orders at Augusta, Ga . force sln1ck Egyptian military
a student shot down at Ke11l daunted by reports of an alleg-rn()VC into Atlanta early Satur-Report! of the alleged plot installalions along the Suez
State University has been ed plot to kill one of them clay for a n1ass rally cilma1dng to kill one of the marchers, Canal (or 7S minulcs a.s part ,
found by juvenile authorities pcepared today for the ncxl-to~ ne,·irly a we"" or p•ol"sl 1 G M d of the continuing Israeli ca1n-'d ·r·-" 15 Id "~ ' '-disc osed by ov. Lester 1 a -c--afld 1 enti lni as a -year-o la st leg of a symbolic 124-inilc against four can1pus killings paign lo wipe out .,,gyptian
runaway froin Opa Locka. march across middle Georgia . at Kent. Ohto, l\l"O at Jackson. dox during a news conference air defenses and keep Egypt
Fla. The group planned to rover f\fiss,, and the deaths of six Thur.!day in Atlanta, largely fron1 rebuilding thcn1. A·
Juvenile ofOcials said she wen~ discounted by their spokesn1an said all planes·
is Mary Ann Vecchio, whose leaders. returned safely.
parents. r.1r . and r.frs. Frank R 0 c 0 s d Arab guerrillas based in
P. Vecchio, recognized her in llSSia 1·1't1c e1'ze Hosea Williams, vice presi-Lebanon admitted they hart:
a widely published Associated dent of the Southern Christian ar:"lbushed a bus but said it ·
Press photogn>ph. Leadership C 0 n fer enc e ' v.·as full of "Zionist experts''
Miss Vecchio talked with f'.10SCO\V (AP ) ~The KGB book. banned in the. Soviet described the reports as and niade no n1enlion that
he• molher and father b Y U · I d b d ··absurd." He said Maddox ,., was a school'"s. They said • sec ret police dragged n1on, was smugge a r()a .. 1 . 1 . ,. l ~ telephone Thursday night and and published in the United was rying 0 1 n s 1 g a e they killed or wounded 50
told them ; "I want to go Andrei Anialrik, outspoken States and a number of other \'iolenee.'' Israelis.
home.·· young author of '"\Vil! the L'Quntries. r.1addox said he planned a The Le b a n es e arn1y
Her parents said they would Soviet Union Survive Until Taking its title from.Ge<>rge major increase in the number spokesman said Israeli guns
come to Indianapolis and ac-1984?", from his country home orv•ell's '"1!184.'. the book says of state troopers observing the opened up at 8:30 a.m. on
company her to Florida. Thursday. His wife said she the Soviet Union is a march because of reports that the villages of Bint Jbcil and
Mi ss Vecchio said that after supposes he is in !\losco~··s st:ignaling Slavic einpire th:it sorncor,e either now among Yarm.oun. lll'o miles and one
running from Florida she Lub,vanka Prison. will e1·cnlually collapse. pro-the n1archers, or who would niile respectively from lhA
hitchhiked and begged money "He \\"as expecting it."' bably afl rr a war with C()nl· join them later. planned to border. Ht' said a child, :i
and food . In Kent. Ohio, she Gi selle Ainalrik said. f\-1rs. n1unist China . kill a Negro demonstrator or \voman and a man \\'ere killed
said, she heard there v.•as go-Amalrik said the pol ice did An1alrik. ""'ho is now 32. starl some kind of violence. in Binl Jbeil, 10 person~
lng to be an anti,,.,·a ~ protest not !ell her the charges was arrested in \96S on a Maddox also said he v1as wounded and 30 ho m e I}
and \~ent to the university against her husband. But it charge of p<1rasitisn1 an<l preparing to alert the National damaged. He put the Varmoun
campus. was considered likely that he spent almost two years in Guard for duty in Atlanta dur-toll al ()TIC woman killed and
"We \\'ere sittiJlg in fr()nt was picked up because his Siberian labor camps. ing the mass rally Saturday. eight per sons wounded.
of a building chanting when ii"'o;;;;;;i;;,;;;;,;;;;=~,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;==================================:i the guardsmen moved on us
v:ith gas," r..1iss Vecchio said.
'"\Ve ra11 around the building,
then down to an vpen field,
or 1naybe it was a parking
101.··
\Vhen the guardsmen began
"hooting. she said, "f rolled
down the hill and tried to
h1dt> behind a newspaper
stand. Thars v.·hen I saw the
ma n go dov.•n. I ra11 over
to him .''
Three other students. two
of them coeds, also were kill-
ed.
• \frditcrranean ~tylcd rornpart
(·nn~n!e in i;:en1iine dark oak t)T
Prain vcn"rrs an<l hard1,·ood solllll
DnnUl1 ,,fodcrn
Dani~h \lodcru romract
con~olr in 1<enu1nc oil
fini~hed \1<1ln11l vrncl'r<
11nd h;ird,\·oorl 50Jicl~ .
Blue Plate Specials
Prices reduced on lers and
P~ouths in stock. 82 tempting
mooels. Immediate delivery.
Offer ends May 31st!
While the r.::st o( Lhc autojndustrywas cry·
.ing the blues, il1ClfC Southern Californians
bought Plyrnouths this spring than at aay
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• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Schmitz vs. Wilcoxen
The D.>\ILY PILOT normally do cs not make en·
dorsemcnts or recommendations in partisan primary
elec tions. These runoffs are. properly, function s of the
political parties, t h e i r opportunity to pick the best
man of their group to face op ponents in th e Nove1nber
general election.
In one p rimary race, hO\vever, v:e would like to
make some observations.
That race is in the 35th Congressional Di~tr1ct. the
Orange County-.."ian Diego Cou nty Dist rict served by
Rep. James B. Utt unt il his death this ~larch. It runs
from l·lt ghway 39 in 11untlngton Beach to La .Jolla
The dist rict is, and always has been. over\vhelm1ng·
Jy Republl can. ll is so much so that whoever is non1·
inated by that party on June 2 is, in effect, the \\•inner
for the seat in Congress. And tha t Congres!'man will
represent some 800JKXJ citizens -including the Presi·
dent of the United States. \Vhose home address is nov•
in the county of his birth.
Two Republican candidates emerge as strongest
c ontenders in the primary election: John G. Schmitz.
who is stepping do\\.'n from his position as stale senator
to seek the congressional seat, a nd William Wilcoxen.
a 38-year-old Laguna Beach attorney.
Republicans. come June 2, ha ve to d e c i d e if
Schmitz is the man to represent them in view of :
-1-l is intransigent refusal to support Governor
Reagan on budgetary 1natters.
-His refusal to campaign in behalf of Richard
Nixon in the last presidential campaign.
-J-l is rnuch.-discussed Jack of cooperation \V1th
ci ty and Orange County authorities on matters requir-
ing legislative attention.
-Hi s continued membership in the J ohn Birch
Society, despite that group's bitter personal attacks
on President Nixon and national Republican leadership.
-1-fis alliance with Democratic leaders in the Cali·
fornia Senate.
A f terniatli of
The Guns at
Kent State
'
\' ou buy 211 tick el and board a plane
for t.11ami, Florida. bul you find yourself
landing in lhe airport in Havana . Cuba.
Your plane has been hijacked .
You pay your tuition and sign up
f or a co ur se in
Eiha kespeare, but
you fin d you rself
J1stc.n1ng to lectures
and rap sr~~lnns on
the (T!lllllVillily ot
the American role
In Southen.~1 A.~1a .
Your educauori ha s
bttn hijacked.
"Th 1 s campus."
says a facul1y reso.
lution presented ln almost identical
1anguoge at San Frafl(!isco State, the
Univrrsity of California al Berkeley, and
t.:CLA , "is on strike to re-constitute
lhe university as a cenltr !or organizing
against the war in Southeast Asia as
t1·ell as racism al home "
ACR OSS THE COU NTR Y lhc l1de of
rmohon and the enrrgy of thr young
1>rgan11.Cfs -<ind the al\ention JH!!rl
bv TV and thr press -h;i\'I' been
,;o cnormOLl.~ lhal campus after 1.:ampus
has been sv.ept :ilong to a suddenly
changed dcst1n<11ion. College presiden1s
1s y,·~11 as st.1K!ents and !acuity ha1'"
~cceptcd a change of flighl plan 1n
:101.ens of inslitutions. From now on .
•ay 1he hijackers, this college is an
111slrumenl or political change.
Up to nov.', "restructuring I h c
1niver!rlUes,'' ''redirecting education.''
·making education relevant," have been
glogans or the radical activists. '~ho
nave only been sporadically successful
in sweeping along their groups or
roilawers. The diSfUpc.i ve actions of si t·lns
and bomb ings which these lorty slogans
were used to justify were deeply
re~llant to nU>Sl !itudents and citizens.
Most of I.he student fla re-ups burned
1hem.selves nut Y•ilh more or le!!s damage
to their instituUons and considerable
Quotes
Bob Rnehbort , l.ong Bt':ach, nplying to
crlda of pualshmenl o( c a m p u 11
demon1trator1 -''Does exi>ecling a
reasonable degree of responsibility from
the partakers of a free education create
an unreasonable pressure on them? As
mere members of society they owe some
degree of obedience to the law ."
Bloudif:U.er Cowlbran , L.A. -"\\'e
must find some v.·ay of gelling molonsls
10 U!le tht?i r signal lights as required by
CiUfomia Motor Vehicle laws. Too many
lives have been Jost that could ha\Pe been
&aved had the drivers done thi s.''
Robert J. Havlgburat. Dr:parlment of
FAue1doll. V.....,t)' ti Chkqo -"The
JT)C)!:l lmportul thlng UK: schools can
do is to dtvtlop, try out and e\1aluate
a varlcly of school and pre«hool pro--
grams that flt in with the motives of
c1l&adv1ntq:ed chiklrtn , you th 1ad thrir
parenu .·•
Loul1 S. Nelson , San QuenUa nrden,
net di(Hcultk• of n.bablll&aUon -·No
hospital, no educallnnal syinem, no
business enterprise, no other institution
o• the: lace <ll the earth has the same
f'nlrtll'ICc requirements ns do, o u r
primr.."
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
If Dr. Spock wrote a book on how
to train a dog, the dog wouldn 'l
end up on a -leash, the owner
would.
-C. 8.
Thll ... f\I,.. rtflKll rM411t.,. •lewt., -
~·-•111 -.. 91 !ht ... _...,_ s.,,.,
r•u• '" _.,. .. e11em1 ov.. 0.111 ~lltl.
damage to I.he careers of their
presidents.
BUT THE GUNS AT Kent have ac-
complished what the radical student
leaders could not. An iss ue has been
found to unite all these assor1ed protests
-and dozens or campuses have been
"redirected," taken over or shut down.
The idea that the unlversities are going
to lead the nation to peace has. its
obvious appeal. In addition to idealism,
it appeals to an even stronger emotion,
the. need to be at t:he Ci!nter ol something
important, Whal is more important than
the peace of the world?
In the face of so much ideali'im and
dedication it seems crass to ask y,·hat
all the rap sessions across the CQuntry
are accomplishing. Any num ber of
educators have solemnly announced that
there is now more real education going
on on their campuses und er the
"reconstituted"' course Lhan under I.he
nonn.11! program, and thal. parents
~houldn"\ worry that their children aren't
gr111ng 1hrir p(lrent :>' money's worth
\\'hich makes fine 1vonder about lhc
previous quahl y of th<: e<l1J('<Jl1on .
SO:\tE OF' TIIF: d1 <;C"uss1ori.1; of proh·
lcn1s or peace nnd \111'tn:irn ob1·1ously
l'Ou!d be valuable -1f 11ndrr1;ikrn hy
professors with so mething to oflt'r both
111 infotillalion and intl'lle1.:lual honesty .
But they can also be sheer self-
dramatizing nonsense. "I ean·t go on ,''
one professo r of S(){'tology announced
lo his class in dramntic 1rmes of grief
on r..tay 11, as he met his class. Bul
he managed to, for <1n hour. on the
subject of Caml>od ia. ,1bout v.•hich, one
of his students said, lie v.«1s even less
informed than thr teacher of philosophy
who had given a similar lectur e to
his class the hour l)('forl'
Or these "recoost1tuled" rourses can
be the l'rudrst form of t.hotlght control
\\li1h conclusions arrived al. in advance,
many unqu;i!ified and opini1mated pro-
fessors arc torce·feeding their st udent s
nn \1·hat is no1\' fast becomin g the onl y
line of "corrcc.·t thinking'' oo American
campuses.
WASTED Cl.ASS HOURS, postponed
graduation. in1loct rination Jn p!acr of
education -these are seriou s enough.
Eve n more serious is the acceptooce
of "'hat the "reconstit ution" doctrine
will do to our universities.
Are universities after this to be a
wrapon for :any poli1ical Ji:roup which
c_1an capture thtn1? \\lhtre 1s !11('
American Association ol' l 'n1Vt>rs1ty
Professors in all this"
What are they going to do when con-
:-lruction workers take over a n d
"reeonstitute_" Pact> Co11rgc 1n New Ynrk
according to their ~-ie"•s of 11hat cduc<1-
tion should be?
For years faculties have fought :111
toln'"ageoos fight again!tt "political in-
terfercoce.'' Academic frcedorn. 1 he
liberty to teach and seek the truth,
I.he "fearless sifting aod winnowing.''
are pov.•erf ul rig ht!! won by our prnfe~~Jon
over ctnturies of struggle. The trulh
1~ fJT1ly to I)(' cli!ICoverOO by ideas 111
rrrc Mmfl('t1tion with each o1hrr Any
pollUca l dogrna narrower th:in the fret
framr of democ:racy 11.9e.lf 1s an enemy
of the srarch for truth
Hy S. I. llayaka"a
PrP!lldPnt
San t'r;inclMo 61.11, C•tll,ge
The list goes on. Generally, our conclusion is that
Sc hmitr. is a reactionary independent, more allied (and
he has so indicated ) \vilh th e philosophies o[ George
\Vallace than \\'ilh the philosophies of Richard Nixon
and Ronald Reagan.
Jn vie\v or that . Republicans n1ay want to take ;1
hard look at \\'ha'! kind of congress1na11 Schmitz \VOuld
1noke and ho\v cffecllve he \vould be.
Republicans should consider the ironical cn1bar·
rai.s1nent it \\'ould create 1r they elected such a man
in the President 's O\Vn congressional dislricl.
\Vilcoxen strikes us as a right-of-center candidate
f'Qffitlll1tcd IQ a phdosophy ()f rca~on. lie \\'Orked hard
for Ni...,on in the last can1paign, and he has demon·
stra1.ed leadership and undcrstandi11~ 011 local to-thc-
point issues.
For instance>. \\lilcoxen
-Is responsible 111ore than any ot!1er si ngle person
for attention focu sing on saving Salt Creek beach for
the public 1 lle was a 1nen1ber of the Su~rra Club before
most anyone had heard of the word ··et:ology")
-~las ~ho,vn intelligence and comprehension or
l'<hlcational rna tlers as a 1nember of 1hc Laguna J3each
:school board.
-~[as a \VOrking-level vic1v of our law.and-order
problcrns, thanks Jo three years spent Js investigator
;ind deputy prosecutor 1n the Ornngc County Di strict
:\ltorney's office .
On national and 1nll•rnalionat issues, \\'ilcoxen ap-
pears to stand just about \Vhcre President Nixon stand.~.
\Vhilc this may not 1vi11 h'1n1 n1any IJcrnoc ratie votl!s
come November. it certainly should a s~urc Republicans
that they haven 't bought a Jcrt1vinger in the pr11nary
if they cast their lot 11•ith \V ilcoxen.
..
v~,~I
l 1i 11/11u,
\Ii
On the basis of the records. ii 11•ould appear thf·
great bulk of Orange County J{rpublicans \l'ho sland
\Vi th Governor Reagan and President Nixon on most
matters of political policy would be bcs1 represented
in \Vashington in these limes by \Vi lliam \V ilcoxcn.
~IJoue akmg there folks. This is a restricted n.eighborhood.'
H
Co1nbodia11 Hesnlts .tluy Alte1• K1·e111li11 Mi11d
Russia Holds l(ey to Vietnam Peace
Y.'ASHI NGTON -A logical move by
the Nixon Administration now, or as
soorr as the Cambodian operaLion is com-
pleted, would be a new proposal for
peace assu ring the neutrality of lndo·
Ch ma.
Presidenl Nixon :;urely will nv1
overlook !his opportuni1y lo gel a des1rc1I
diplomalic as well
as military result
from his great gam-
ble
How successful he
v.·ould be in this re.
spect would prob-
ably depend in large
ineasure on how
Russia judges the
outlook in Vietnam
following !he Cam·
bodian incursion.
If Russia judges that th e t1llicd opera·
tions in Camobodia have destroyed for
an extended period of time the set'ure
loglsticat base of the North Vietnamese
for operations against Sooth Vietnan1,
the Kremlin leaders may be more willing
than before lo thlnk in terms of a
settlement.
l\1UCH Of' PRESIDEi'oi Ni x on . ,
rhetoric appears to be beamed lo\\•ar(J
f\.10SC'<IY.', and his methods w r r r
calculated to be those \vhich would 1n1·
press the Soviet leaders Y.'ith his d{'tcr
mination .'ln0 re~ourcefulne~s ;1nJI
their n"'" inability 10 ca!!'l.llatr hi s action~
1n ad,·ance. llis use or such Lern1s a\
Ri chard Wilson
'·dcl·1si\·c dl'Llon" and !us slattlnt'ut th<il
!he 1Jn1tcd States "ould not bl.' hun11h;ill•d
:1~ a helpless giant were intended In
lie heard 1n :Vl e>stov.·, and Lht>y 1\•rrr
II was as if the President Wt:rc saying
"Look, !'m tr\ing to get uut or V1f'ln:1nl.
But therr are l1m1ts beyond which 1
rannot i,:11 I sa w thr opporlun11y 111
1nakc 11 l'asier ;ind :-.n f•·r !11 gel 0111
hy striking lnlo l'1Hnlxxl1:1. Y(lu h;i1·e
~ccn lt11' rc.~1111 ~ l><.i ynu nol U1ink 11
1>; l!ll1l' 10 1:nopf'ratt i.o that tht U111lt1.l
S!;~l(·s c;111 gl't 11111 and leave OCh1ntJ
:i rl'<•~on:rlJly lu lCrilblc situation""
!f l hf' Hussl:ins should finally JUdgr
tl1 :Jt lhl' los.~ uf lhc sanetua,ries in Cam·
hr>tl111 t:reatc:' .1 \vorscned mili!ary
0111lonk ror thl•1r Nort h Vietna1nrse
l'!1rnts lhcv n1uv l1nalJy set th<' wisdom
nf j!.r:int1ng Ille l"nlled States a dignified
••\1l frun1 \'1et111in1
\\ ll AT i\ l'I TY lT IS. fherefnre. that
l'rl'$;ldenl Nixon 1s not being gnen the
fullest pnssil)I(• chance lo expl oit this
oppon1uuty 11 l!h<lul being shackled by
1·nlh·g1ah· pru1cs1 and senatorial moves
fu hun11ht1\r ;ind embarrass him in !hr
1·-.:f'!'l!11n11 ,,f 1111· most ('rcati\'e mo\'c
\ L'I Ill (lJ\1! ! ht· 11 ii r
Thrrr 1111! tic pl('n ty or lime to hold
Nixon lo account 1f he faih. He has
set time Jimil s to whi(·h hr 1.:an be
,hcl.d t11 a1.:cou11t Uf wtiat use 1s 11,
therefore ' to adflp1 L" on gr rs~ 1 on a 1
amendn1 ..,nts 1nli·1uled lo prevenl hu11
I nun n·ta1111n~" 1 roops in Can1bod1a
•1r ro11t111111ng tn -.upporl SouU1 Vici·
11:iu11·~1· upera11011.-. 10 close I h r
:i,~Ult'IU<lrit·!o ''
'I 11e.~t· 111011::-. 11uuld only perpetual!'
!ht• delu,.1011 in 1l;ino1 and Moscow thal
'\1n~n~·.1 will provr to be anolh<'r France
:11HI \.'<IVC 1n from the pressure or internal
Jll'l''SUl'l'' of war npposil1on.
'l'll1s w1)u!d 1n1prde .iny rnoven1rnl by
tllr Sov1c1 U111un 111w<1 rd respnntJ111g
l,1v11r:1lll.r In ll1l' Rrilish propos;i l fr,r
a flt'W Ge11eva conference which was
:o.('COndcd over the last weekend by thl'!
foreign rn inisters or eleven !'asl Asian
and Pacific non-Comm unist nations.
\\'ilh or without this impediment.
however, Nixon is in a positlon to initiate
new proposals based upon hi~ peacr
plan outlined on ~lay 14 , 1969. This
proposal included com plete 11.·ithdra1v:1l
of all outside forc.-es within one ye<1r.
a cease· fire under 1nt.ernaUonal
supt.<.r vision and free elections under in·
ternational supervision 1v1th the Com-
11\un1sts partic1pat1ng in the organization
and conduct of the elections.
THE PRESIDENT SAID then anrl
v.·ould say 110\\1 that th~se tenns arc
nej!ot1able . el'erythin_g is negotiable, hr
sald. excepl lhc right of the people
or South Vietnam to determine thei r
own futurc
This 1s the n10:.1 generous offer for
a war settlement C\'e r n1adc, including
all thr offers in the Johnson ad·
n11n1slraLion "'"hi!e Clark Cliffor d v.·a~
!'ecretory of de/ense CliJford's proposA!-.
now are not .so different from whal
Nixon 1s already doi ng. 11•1\h the very
unporlant ext::!pt1on thal Clifford's pro·
posals offer \'~ry little inducement. and
no leverage , for a negotiated sell!cment
during the v.·1Lhdra11.·al process.
Clifford left his dclensc pos1 bcl1t'vinj!
lhaL lhe Souih V1elnan1csr grncr;ils v.•erf'
.. i.uc kering" us into a pcnnanenl v.·ar
and he rvidl'nlly h.1i;.11'1 1.:!1;1ng!'f1 h1i>
rn1nd bul his proposal" lur just cndin~
1l all lack the erc;Jl11·i!y nr Nixon·~
1ncthod.
THIS CRE>\TIVIT\' 1s h.1.~rd i11 largr
part on the Fact lll:ll Bus~1:1 t 11rn1~ht>:-.
inost of the mihlarv cqu1pm1•11I tnr North
Vietna1n and has the str11nges1 influence
on HnnoJ·s policy Thi' lo.~:-. of the
i.anctuaries and closing !h1• [Mlrt or
Sihanouk ville could signal lo lh{' Russian!
that their client has lost h1s securc
base and prospecL~ for 1he year ahead
are not promising.
Under those cond1t 1on!i President N1,;.
on's proposals or 0\1<1} 11, 1969, as lie
m:iy no\\' modif~ 1q· 1•\!rnd lhe1n. m:iv
look more attrae11' r Thr Prl'i.1drn1 [,
at lea~! rn111)cd tn ··~plnrr l!1r chance
that this n1ay pro1·c 10 be the c.i~c.
A Letter to Vice President Agnew
Dear r...1r. Vice President: Kn o111ng
of your deep concern in prescrvinR
America's freedoms , we are writing In
enlist your support in our cu rrent can1-
paign -the repeal of the Bill of Right :.
Otir campaign was organized only last
~1arch follow ing .1
nationwide CBS poll
on the issue. As yn11
may remember. the
poll :showed th:i1
even in those rel:i.
l ively tranquil 11n1es,
the majority fa\'Orrd
repealing the major
rights and rreedon1:-
gua ranteed by Ille
Bill of Rights.
With !he rio1s, U1r·
moil and unease nOll' .sweeping our en·
dangered nation, Wfl firn1Jy believe th11 t
we could now easily get a majorlty \'olc
on repealing all of 1hem .
THE CBS POLL. you may recall , v.·a~
a random teleph O"Oe sampling or l 136
adults, conducted ~1arch 10-12.
A majority fa vored abridging freedon1
of assembly t76 pe rcent), Freedom of
the press (55 percenlJ. freedom of speech
!54 percent), rreedom from double
jeopardy 158 percent!, and the right lo
a speedy trial !58 percent I.
Unfortunately, the maJorily st1l1 ap-
proved of trial by jury t82 percentl,
lht right to a public trial (75 percent !,
the need for search v.•arrants (66
percent). Lhc right to confront witnesses
t54 percent) and tht right of suspect.~
to remain :siltnt (M percent).
\Ve feel, however, that the question.~
11skerl by the pollsters were not properly
phrased 10 elicit the correct response.
Tllorcovt"r, Ute limes· have c h a n g c d
radically in l.hese p;:ist \Y.'O month.~ an<I
the need to prcserv~ our freedoms ~Y
rrpcnllng the Bill of Rights grows dai ly
more apparrnL
JUll Y TRIALJi AllE rlogg1ng our
Art Hoppe
1·nurt~. Lo,1g h:11rrd •igltJlor-. :1 t c
:1vowcdly co111·crt1ni: our public trial~
into circuses to subvert American respct:I
l1•f jusllce. \\' i l n t' s s the cas~ of the
Chicago Seven. ltow qu i<"kly and quietly
Judge lloffman alon(' could have decided
the fact s and dispensed ~ententes in
his chamber without all the hue and
outcry a public trial by jury entailed.
The rcquire1ncnt that pohcc oFfiteri;
obtain a search 11 arra.11 bl•fore raiding
;:i Black Pan1hrr headqua rters or ~
1\·l;io1sl youth rluh obviously hampers
nur lawmen ln !he perlormflllCr of their
duties. Can we :ifff)rd lo tit' the h;i nd1'
or our brave O\en 111 hli1r ,1, tht·~ ~f't'~
ln restore. law and orc!cr''
To allow sus1>t'cls In rcfu.'ic lo <1n~11cr
honest question~ anl.l In confront 1r,1·
dl·rco\'er v.·itnesscs v. ho h:t\'e rls kf'd th1 ·1r
lives to gather crucial 1niorinnllon 1'>111
only be described as coddhng su!}-
versives. How long can this )?reat naiion
coddle subversives 111 1ls mids l and
survive?
Surely, put this way, thl' vast silent
majority of Americans would agree that
lhe Bill of Rights muRI. be repealed
en!.irelv. For it has long outlived its u~efultiess.
lN THESE PERIU>US times, no de-
Tragic Price of .Violence
One or the most touching lhinss :ibout
the Kent State episode 1~ the report
!hat Y.'hen the firing st:trle<I studen!ll
a.ss11n1ed blank bullets were being usc1t
Coming as it does after ~ sl udenl~
h:icl indulged themselves with arson and
;ifter !he authorities had rxpl1c1tly
declared martial taw. this assumpt ion
rasts a painful p>ignancy oo the sense
or gamc.·playing that permeates so many
of the-se st udent uprisings.
~r>mehow the studt?nts :Ir(' ton\110<.·ed
th:il, whatever lhey do, nothing tragic
will happen tn t11cn\
llow shollld U1ey know 1l!hrr\v1sr, y,•1\h
lht•11· cxp<"rien<;r f'1nhral.'inp, only a· few
rloistl'red yc<irs in 1vhHI 1s slill. rle!ipite
it s 1·11rre11t pa i>slons. a $ingularly
cln1s!errd nation':'
l\'OT Hl ~G J,'l THEIR 1fn1i!ed r '<-
f)trie nt e or tcnLdlJ\'e Jcarn1ns prepar;-:1
(~uest Editorial
I hem to understand th' deadly serious
I acts -that mobs bring repression.
for example. or ev'n thal when you
1hrow rocks al armed men. evenlually
.~nmc of them will eithe.r panic or turn
inhuman .
Somehow th is ought not be too much
for a 20-year-0ld 1nind to gras p, but
it i.~ also true the failing is not only
theirs but our11 -those of us who
ought to have sorne grasp of history's
lesson~. some duly to comm (1nlca1c them
til yo11th. and also. of course . l'iOme
"'II lo gu11 rrl adequately 11gainst prerlir·
111blr breakilown!f 11rn1 excesse~ in sup-
pressing violence.
\\'all Stree t Journal
crnt An1er11:an 11ould \1•1lhngly allo"·
subversives lo orga111zr protests, puhhsh
stories dan1<Jg111g 1(1 our form of
govern1nc11\. spout propaganda 1nimirat
tu our n;it inna! interests. 1nakc a
mockery of just1re or be coddled a~
lhrir trials
No decent An1rncan \\'OUld handcuff
our police by delaying their raids through
re d tape, by requ irmg them to release
suspects while they are still gathering
evidence or by preventing them from
retrying crlminals when new evidence
is obtained.
These are the so-ca lled Bill of Right~.
And unless they are re pealed our
freedo ms are clearly in grave danger.
So, as the titular leader of the silent
majority, we ask you. ~1r. Vice
President. lo serve as honQrary chairman
of our growing can1paig n. We eagerly
await your reply.
Sincerely Yours.
The Commitlec to Preser,·e A1ncri ca's
Freedoms .
DAILY PILOT
F riday . May 22, 1970
Tiu;. ed1torio/ p<il)t fJ/ 111,, Dni/!J
Piloc seeks to 111fnr1n <Hui srim-
tda.tc rendf!rs by prcse111111g t11i.!
newspaper's opinions nncl com-
mentilry on topic.~ of interPsl
and sig11ificance, bl/ providing a
fnr11n1. j(JT t.lir r rprr.~.~inTr f'//
011r renders' op1nio11s. nu({ b11
prPSf'IJlllt(I Uic <11t•r1·.~r r11•111.
point.s of irtformcd n/1,~r1'1 f'rs
rn1d -~f>O~'f$11!1'1l on rop1r~ o/ /hr
dnfl ..
Hoberl N \\'ced. 1~ub\1~her
I . •
JODEAN HASTINGS, 642-4321 • 1"1 .. II
Luau Mood
Contagious
"Going to a huki!au" are mcn1bers and guests of the Foun-
lain Valley \Von1an 's Club. ~ .. ' 1'hey \viii venture into the Polynesian atmosphere of Sa1n's Sea-
food restaurant for an evening combining installation ceremonies. a
luau. entertalnn1enl and dancing beginning at 6 p .111. Sunday, J\1ay 24.
Special guests \Vil! be l\1r. and l\1rs. Vernon Cunninghan1. J\1rs. s y Cunningha1n. president-elect of the Calilorn1a F'edcration of \\'01n-
en's Clubs. \viii be the installing officer.
Serving during the coining year \Viii be 1he J\·lnies. \Vall<1cc
Short, president; Edwin Booth. first vice president and dean of chair-
n1en : Robert Curley. second vice president, \Vays and rneans. ond
Clarence Ste\\'Jnon , third vice president and 1ne1nbership chairn1an.
Other officers \viii be the Mines. Douglas Ryder, progra1n and
hospitality: Robert Sullivan and Donald t:d!und. secretaries. and
Curt Burnell. treasurer.
Chairmen will be the f\'Jn1es. Robert i\1oss. philan·U1ropy; Ron-
ald ~1urphy , federation extension; Laurence r::rwin. advisor: Richard
Gillum, par!iarnentarian: Gerald \Vessler. press. Norman Nieberl icn,
social, and Kenneth \Veli s. Junior 1\uxiliary.
-
,.:_;,
'
' -. ...; .
~ \
. r~ollo\ving dinner at 7 and installation of officers al 8. the group
\Vill be entertained by the Polynesian Playboys providing music for
interpretive danci ng by professional entertainers. J.·lrs. Vance Derin~·
1on, social chairinan. is in charge of arrangement<>.
NEW OFFICERS NETTED -Captured and awaiting: installation
<ire fief! lo right) the Mn1es. Robert Sullivan. Curt Burnett. \Val-
lace Short and Ed,vln Booth , \Vho will be installed as the nc•v
board of the Fountain Valley's \Voman's Club during-a hukilau
next Sundny. lhisbands and guests alsn 1v1ll attend the fcs!1 vc
luau taking place in San1's Seafood re sta urant.
.· ·:
• • '
" •'.
I • t , . . • ' • •
HUR RY, HURRY -Ocean Vie\\' Little League Auxiliary members (left to
right) Mrs. Gene Thornhill and Mrs. Buck Williams offer 1\tlrs. Bud l\!lay a
bargain in ~ickets for the benefit carnival taking place four days beginning
Thursday, May 28.
P..,uxiliary
Plays Ball
A t:hancc to (figuratively )
kill the un1pirc and UitcrallyJ
dunk the managers y,•ill be
offered all ardenl baseball
fans Y.'hen Ocean View Lillie
League Aux iliary sponsors a
benefil ca r n i v a I beginning
Thursday, t<.lay 28.
Discount tickets now arc on
~.de for lhe four-d:iy <'Ve"oll
taking place in Zody's parking
lot. Go!den \Vei;t Street and
Edinger Avenue.
Disgu1~cd as clowns,
n1embcrs of the au .-;1!iary
boa rd arc circulating among
spectators at each of the four
league fields Saturday anrl will
be on hanti <luring nighl ga1nf'<:
through Wednesday. ~hiy 27.
v•ilh ticket s providing five
ndcs fo1 ~1
In addit10,1 to teatur1ng lllll·
p1rcs anrl managC'rs 1n thr
dunking booth. food and game
booths and clo11'ns 11·ill provi<lc
r cf re s h rn c n t s and en-
1crta1nn1cnt
Highlight of the carn1v;1I will
hc tile crQ1vning of thc Ocean
Vic1v Little Lc;igue queen
1vhich 11'ill 1<ikc p I a cc
Saturday. t<.'fay 30
Ca rnival hours will be J to
11 p.m. Thursday : 10 a.m.
to 11 p.m. Friday and, Satur-
day and 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Sunday .
Serving as co-cha1rrncn nf
1he y,•ays nn<! menns project
arc l\·lrs. Jim Quibodeaux and
Mrs. San1 Stiles. Proceeds y,•ill
benefit the league fund which
provide~ uniforms and playing
equipment for the 550 players.
Funds also are used to m;iin-
tain the playi'.1g fields. stands
and snack bars.
En Route to the Festival
A Mexican Surprise awaits all visitors to the booths
spon sored by the Women's Division. llun tington
Beach Chamber of Commerce. during the city\vidc
fe stival taking place tomorrow bct11•een 9 a.111. 0:1nd
6 p.m. ''lleld up" by bandito Mrs. Phillip Elmer are
(left to right) Mrs. Charles Buhrov.' and fl·lrs. Ray
f\Io rehouse. In a dd ition to Cl food booth featurin~
Mexican snacks the \vornen \Viii staff a neighboring
city beautification booth .
l Girl Gets Bugged When Good Friends Ge t Ba dly Dr ugged
£ DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 16 and ! worried. Most or my friends smoke pot.
._ Some of them have freaked out on
: LSD l don't touch any of it. My folks
;; iol . upset once when they found an t ordinary cigarette butt in my room. ~ They have a good opinion of tne and
'( J'd hate to let them down.
Every weekend I wind up wilh kids f 'Who art blowing grass or dropping acid. t I realize if they get busied and I'm 1 with them, I will be hauled in and i: chnrgc<t, too. This scares me. ll would
., lill my folks . The drug laws are lousy
I ln this state and some good kids have
gotten themselves bugged up because
they want to :show the aulhorities ~Y
I havt no respect for unjust laws. Please
den't tell me to make new friends .
I can't. These are the kids J ercw
ANN LANDERS ~
up wit h and 1 dig them. txcept for
the way !hey mess with-drugs. What
should 1 do? -LOYAL LYNN
DEAR L.L.: If you Insist on bangiDg
around with a crowd that blows gras·s.
drops acid and defies lht law, be
prepared to accept tht consequences.
Call ii loyalty if you waol lo. I ca ll
it shlpldlly and 1hort-algbtcdness.
Tbr law is going to do mort bustin~
11.artlng now. ~faking crhnlnals out of
sick Pf'OPle Is, hi my opl11lon, a poor
approacll to the problem, but when the
citlienry becomes trlgbkncd ud ftat
takes ovtr. rationality loses ou t.
There are no easy answen to this
one. Wt cannot alford to tum our country
Ol'er to a gtntratlon of half-stoned pot
heads. Nor can we allow po~tnllal
achieve r1 to fry thtlr brains wltb LSD,
speed and heroin. Unfortunaltly. a pro-
blem lhal 1bould be handled by physi.
cinns Is winding up more and more
in Ule band1 of the pollct. So brace
yourself. The situation 11 going to get
worse befort It gtll better.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 have a
message flor the yOllng woman who
adopted my child. I don't know who
she is or \\1tere she is, but ·1•11 bet
she reads Ann Lander.s. Will you please
pr inl this'! '
DEAR FRIE~D : It wa s jusl a few
years ago that I gave yOll my baby.
I kne\v then as I know now, it was
!he only thi ng to do, J w a n t e d hrr
to have every advantage in life. 1 knrw
I couldn't give her what she was enlillcd
to.
You and your husband wanted a ch1lri
The pe<>ple in charge of the adoption
told me as much as they could wlth0t:t
revealing your identity. I was certain
you would give my little girl oceans
of love and that she would have the
kind of up bringing every child deserves.
I didn't have her long -but I knew
she was a very good baby, in perfect
health and beautiful, too. Tl took more
strengt.h to give her up than I thought
I had, but I t.hank the good Lord for
giving me that strength because I know
in my heart it .,.,.as the fight thing
to do.
Last year I married a wonderful man .
Soon I will have a baby of my own.
But I shall never forget my first 'born.
f"ll always shed a few quiet tears on
her birthday, and wonder whert !'!he
is, what she l'10ks likr and what she
is doing . I always wi!J love her -
and r will love you, !oo, for giving
her what I could no!. ~1 ay God watch
OV('r you and 1ny little girl. -NO
CITY NO STATE NO INITIALS
DEAR FRIEND: Thank you for a
beautif ul letter. I wouldn't dream of
pr In t In g a clue to your identity.
Thousands of .,.,·omen will belltve your
letter \lo"B! meant for thtm. Md l
wouldn 't want ll any other way.
Tuo many cooplcs go from malrlmony
to acrimony. Don 't let your marriage
flop before It gets startl'd. &!nd for
Ann L:c1ndcrs' booklet, "i\larriagc -What
In Expect." S('Tld your request to Ann
Lande rs in care of tht' DAILY PILOT
nc"'spapcr encl osing 50 cents In coin
and a long, stamped. self--addressed
envelope.
• • :
i l • • • • .
A Jar of Sunshine
Mrs. Marjorie l\1eyer of Staten Island, N.Y., executive sec retary of the Inter-
national Sunshine Society, looks at a de corated jar made by one of the mem-
bers of the organization. The Sunshine Society helps sick, needy and lonely
people and sells ilems made by members to raise fund s •
Mesons
Honored
At Party
A surprise garden party
feted Mr. and Mrs. Claude
K. Kirkpatrick of Costa Mesa
on their golden wedding an•
nivers.ery.
llosting the event, which
took place at the Costa Mesa
home of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Denton, were the honoret's'
daughters, Mrs. E. W .
Wheeler of Los Angeles and
Mrs. Maurice Durbin o t
Aguanga.
Among guesls were Wheeler
and Durbin: their grandson'
Pat.tick, Timothy and Wayne:
their gTeat-grandson P au l
Denton, and Mni. Ev a
Anderson, Kirkpatrick's sister.
The goldenweds exchanged
wedding vows in the home
of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Claude K. Kirkpatrick in Los
Angeles. Kirkpatrick was a
typesetter for Hadley's in Los
Angeles for 44 years prior
to his retirement.
They have resided in Co.sla
:r.tesa since 19fi4.
Republ icons
Questioning
June ballot propositions ·will
be diacussed during the Mesa
Verde Republican Women's
Club, Fetkrated meeting on
Wedneday, May 27, at 10;30
a.m. in the home of Mrs.
Bell Fudge of Costa Mesa.
Speaking Mfore the group
will be Mat thew Weyuker a[
Huntington Beach and Atty.
~1ichael Collins of Laguna
Jlills.
A legislative assi~l:tnl lo
As9emblyman Robert Burk<".
70th district, \Veyuker is prt'~i
dent o( the Huntington Beach
l ligh School board of educa·
tion.
Collins, president of the S:id·
dleback Junior Col l ege
District board or trustees. \Vas
California Republican Assem-
bly parliamentarian f r o n\
1967-1969.
Harbor Tops
Harper S<:hool ln Costa
Me:sa Is the location "''here
members of TOPS llarbor
Lighters gather each 1.fonday
evening .at 7:30. ====-1
l
Training Helped
Cool During Crisis
Karen Pulasky is one 13.
year-old miss who has
demonsl.r;ited her ability to
kff'p cool in an emergency,
and she gives fulJ credit to
last fall's baby-sitting clini c
sponsorrd by I.he J-luntington
BC'~1ch .Junior \Voman's Club.
Karen , daughter or Mr. and
~1rs. Paul Pulasky of llun-
tington Beach. was asked to
relieve a friend who was baby·
sitting for a neighbor's 5-, 3-
and 2-year-old youngsters.
\\'hi!e caring for the
)'oongest child. the two older
ones deeided to hide behind
lhe TV set and before Karen
could roll3l them, smoke
begAfl billov.·lng out of the set.
completely filling U1e room
v.·ithln minutes.
The Rancho View student
quickly herded her crying
dlargcs oot ~ the howe (as
she had been instructed lo
during the clinic ) and after
leaving them in the care of
a neighbor. raced back in to
call the fire department.
"The telephone n u m b e r
wasn't written down, so I just
called the operator," con·
fes~ed the brown-eyed, brown-
haired Junior Ca mp Fire Crirl.
Although the \vhote sit.uation
was under control in about
20 minutes, it see.med much
longer to Karen who admils
"I was scared the whole
limr:·
\Vhile the fire trucks were
still there, Karen said, a new
color TV .set was delivered
to th e home so the yoWlgsters'
tears dried quickly and all
v.•as calm when thei r mother
returned.
"It was kind of a valuable
erperience," concludes Karen.
CHILDREN'S ART
COUHTYWIOI PARTIClrATIOH
I Y OIAHGI COUNTY iCHOOLS.
tllNDlll•AITIN THIU 12th OIAOI
South Coast 'Pina
i
Vintage Voice Vibrates
Beauty's • Ear of Listener
By BARBARA DUARTE valley lockjaw," perpetralOr
Of ,.,. 0111r r1"' 11111 o( the cloaed-mouth technique.
. If you think you've heard VOICES ARE VINTAGE
1t all before, you probably .
have and still remain guilty . _.Resonance can brtng a
of at least one noticeable shrill, people -scattering voice
hangup .•. to use a word thrust down to a "wine cellar" vin.
on Webster by the "now " tage:, Miss Sarnoff pointed oot
generation. to her large female audience
According to Do r o l h y at Laguna Beach Assistance
Sarnoff a versatile woman League 's fift.h and final Town
whose 'career spans the Hall Series lecture.
Broadway stage, opera , By placing a hand on the
television and supper clubs , chest, a speaker can feel a
people must brush up on not deep tone rising from the
only the "lost art" of con-diaphragm. The l~turer sug.
versation but also keep pace gested women voice a reso-
wilh a ~odem "wordrobe" nant "I love you" to the man
composed of such words as of the. house 23 he arri~es
"mink" (a girlfriend, probably home 1n hope of produc ing
by virtue of always being an Interesting result.
draped around the neck): Miss Sarnoff, an advocate
"skyplece" {a hat ), and of making women as lovely
"mother" (a drug pusher as to hear as they are to look
opposed to dear old Machree). at, peppered her cosmetic
Commm offenders of the theory for speech with a
firSt requisite of conversation s.morgasbord of conversational
... tone •. are the fish wife Ups. whose rtii<k!nl tones ca ll her Two of the greatest distrac·
brood to breakfast; "over tors for businessmen are
precious" who speaks in a nervousness and aloofness
whisper, "lazy lips,'' the which usually stem from a
c I enc he d. tetth method; feellng of inferiority, notes the
"Jermy one-note" who drones attractive correct.or of faults
on in a monotone, and "locust who offers a six-week course
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Cancer: Accent
SAT URDAY
MAY 23
By SYDNEY OrtfARR
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Accent on career, prestige,
standing in community. Yoo
get assignment which enables
you to display originality and
independence. Lead Ille way.
Utilize pioneering inst.incl~.
TAURUS (Apri l 21)..May 20):
n1oney matter \•thich has
been obSCtJred. Could involve
mate or business associate.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Lie low. Permit others to take
initiative. Check legal mat·
ters, including contracts and
special agreements. Accent on
marriage, partnershlps, com-
n1itmeTJts \llhich cannot be
delayed. Analyze.
CONVERSATIONALIST
Miss Dorothy Sarnoff
to n1en and \\'omen in order
to improve thei r image.
Other costly detractors to
cornmunications, she point s
out. are Jack of eye contact.
poor posture, speech tics ("I
belleve,", "you know", and
"er, ah''), poor pacing and
speed talking, a l3 1/3 COll-
versation played back at 78 .
THINKJNG PAYS
"StrucLure your thinking tf>
make a point." Miss Sarnoff
advised . "It is more difficult
to be articulate than to resort
to violence or m a k e
demands."
\Vhen going out, one should
dress up his communication
as \\'ell as his body, she added .
Read current events, listen
to nt"·s broadcasts <r11d fill
the mind v.·ith events of in-
terest to husbands, children
and a~iates.
It takes forethought , she ad·
rnitted , but it is totally
necessary to .a generation
trained to be te I e vi s ion
receivers rather than
participants.
As a means of regaining
the lost art, she lists JO com·
1nandme11ts: thou shalt noL
c:o1nrnit "l " d is ea s e .
monopolize, interrupt, offend
or gossip and lhou shall edit,
discuss rather than argue. ask
stimulating questions, include
all listeners and be a good
listener yourself.
on Marriage
LOUISE BAKER
To Sey Vows
Louise Boker
Will Marry
In Summer
Lou ise Lee Baker w 111
bccon1c the bride June 27 of
George ilt arshall l\1ah urin dur·
ing ceremonies in I he
Neighborhood Congregational
Church in Lagu na Beach.
Parents of the be trothed are
Mr. and 1'.·lrs. Earl Bake r and
~Ir. and
J\lahurin,
Beach.
J\I rs.
•II
\V1llia1n
of Newport
il1 iss Baker is a graduate
of Ne"·port lfarbor High
Schoo! and a finishing school
in Garden Grove. She \Viii
attend Orange Coast College
1n September.
Her fia ncc is a gradua te
be diplomatlc. Be \v11!ing to
n1ake concessions. Then there
\viii be ultlmale gain.
or Nc\vport Harbor and is in in mysterious manner merely the Nav al Reserve. hungers for attention, af· ,jjii __________ .,
LIBRA /Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
fection. Forces tend to be
scattered.
Basic is!ues dominate. You l' l o !Ind our w"'°'• lucl<V kl• vou home, area of security re· 1n moo•1 a"" 1ov1, or0tr svdntY
quires attention, Check real-Om•rr'• booklf1 "S''''' Hlnt1 1or Mon •nd Wom1n.'• S1nd Clrlhdat• estate values. Don·t b c •nd 50 ct n!• 10 Om1rr .o..11ro109v
J & J UPHOLSTERY
MEANS! QUALITY. INTliGRlr'I',
SlillVtCE, CllAl'TSMAN~HIP .
WI LIKE BEAUTll'UL l'URNIJUlltl
WE ACCllPT CHALLINGES
64Z·S87& 646-8058 Socrett. tt>e DAil Y PILOT, Box 31..0,
satisfied with superficial in· li~c~"~"~' ~"~"~'"~'~"~"~'~~·_;•~··;_:"~"~·~~~~~~~~~~~~ formation. if pe rsistent, you .. !:.::!: 10011.
could strike pay dirt.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Accent on friendships, fulfill-
ment of desires. You gel emo·
COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY SERVICE
• WfDDINO. • PASSPORTS • rORTRA ITS
tio nal and financial hacking. • ALL IN NATURAL LIVING COLOR .
Good lunar aspect today coin-
cides vdth gain thr o u gh
reading. travel. You absorb
knowledge and can put it to
constructive use. Look beyond
the immediate. Plan ahead.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22 J:
\\'orking re I a l i.o n s with
associates require attention.
Some ma y have erroneous im-
pression about you r intentions .
Strive to communicate. t..1ake
meanings crystal clear .
• Time has come to put forth 842-4212 7511 Clay, Suite 3, Huntington Beach
demands. You are likely to jj;:;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;::;;:;;;;:;;::;;;;;:;:;;;;;;~ get what is requested . Act
GEMINI {May 21-June 20):
Versatile approach results in
finaocial gain. Have altemate
methods available. lnve5t.igalc
\'IRGO !Aug. 23-Sept.-22 1:
Romance is in spotlight . So
are creative endeavors. In
dealing with young persons,
accordingly.
SAGITfARJUS (N,,, 22-REUPHOLSTERY
Dec. 21 ): You finish project
whlch brings money gain.
Shop for special bargain. What
yo11 need is available -if
you "'ill but look. Spotlight
on finances, persona l
at Factory Prlce1 Direct
FREE ESTIMATES
f'\lrniture !\'lade To Ordtr
\Vlth "Quality Warkmansh1p"
!:)top By and Sre Our $ho\vroom
CASTLE INTERIORS
possessions. 7541 Ch•pm•n, O•rd•n Grow• CAPRICORN (De<:. 22-Jan. C1ll Collec.t_,'2-1 2Jl d•y• or 147-7563 ewe's.
19): New approach i5 favored .I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Improve appearance. Cycle
To avoid disappointment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and ,,·hite J!lossy phot<r
graphs to the DAILY PILOT \Vomr n's De-
partment one week before lhe \vedding.
Pictures received following the \vedding
will not be used.
For engagement announcements it is
imperative that the story, also accompanied
by a black and white glossy pi cture, be sub-
mitted six weeks or more before the \vedding
date. If deadline is not met, on ly a story '"ill
be used.
To help fill requirements on both v.·ed-
ding and engagement stories. forms are
available in all of 'the OAII~Y PILOT offices.
Further questions will be answered by
\Vomen's Section stall members at 642-4321
or 494-9466.
Afternoon Nuptials
Couple Repeat Vows
'fl.fr.;. Clarice Fjjher and
~111rold Eyestone, both of
Costa t..1csa, exchanged vow!!:
and rings before the Rev. Dr.
Oiarles nie:renfield in St.
Andrew's Presbyter I an
Church.
Mrs. Gloria Lucas \\'as
ma tron of honor and the
Misses J acqueline and Cathy
Fi~her, daughters of the TIC\\'
~1rs. E y e s-tone , \\'CfC
candlelighters.
Ring History
!\tan appears to have claim·
ed hl1 bride from earliest
times wilh a ring.
Thurman \\'oods was best
man and Alex \Vipf and John
Sealackle:y ushered guests to
their pews.
The couple will make their
home In Costa ~1esa .
The former l\Irs. fisher,
daughter of Mrs. Rose Nau
of Omaha , is a graduate of
C;ilifornia State College at
Fullerton and is district ad·
\.'isor for the Girl Scout Coun-
cil of Orange County.
Her husband is an engineer
with North American
Rockwell Corp. and a member
of King Harbor Yacht Club
of Redondo Beach and North
Ameri can Management Club.
high ; circumstances fa vor
your efforts. Be independent
in Ulought. action . Now is time
to coot.act people who have
been unavailable.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Secrets are revealed ; you
may be responsible for
organizing speeial activity.
Play cards close to chest.
Some who think they koow
all may try bluffing game .
PISCES (Feb. JS.March 20\·
Sense of humor is you r great
ally today. Study Aquarius
message. A friend who acts
Seniors Take
Unknown Ride
J\1embers of the }!arbor
Senior Citizens' Club, ad-
vocalts o( the California
version or "See America
First," will travel to an
unknown Southern California
locale on Wednesday, May 'Tl.
A bus will leave the: Senior
Citizens Recreation Cenler at
9 a.m. for a destination kno\\'n
only to Mrs. Ka the rine
Wadsworth, chairman, and the
bu.s driver.
Chapters Join
For Luncheon
Happiness ls Hadassah Is
the lheme of the seventh an-
nual combined Sou l h 1 :l n d
Donor Luncheon or I h c
Jlarbor. Mas<1da and Santn
Ana-Tustin c h a pt ers or
Jfada1sah at 11 :30 a.m. on
Tuesday, May 26, Jn I.he Grand
Hotel. Anaheim.
A fashion show of lingerie.
day and evening \\'ear will
be present.ed by Miss Florence
Smales. It may have been a rope
tied around her waist -a
more dlrtct means or wooing
his favor ite -but the sen-
timent to claim and then to
protect and guard always has
S • I KNIT em1-annua W k h or s op
been there..
MAY
20-29
•
• dresHs • i•clcet1
e 1ltlrt1 • ponchos e tennis dr .... s, etc
Saturday 1nd Sunday, May 23·24
LIO~twrloM 1.1 .. •0f'I•. 100'"~
orion -m1t~l~1 .,,,h •1111
clry,
188l PARK AVE.
1l •1~ w, .. 11 ..... "" '"" C1111 Mou, C•lll•ml•
'
Tomor row is
someo ne's
birthday .
When you give her o diamond ring
and him o watch, you give o losling
gift •.• and a lasting expression of
your devotion. Illustrations no! octvol
size.
115.00 100.00
Yef!o.,Gold With Matctiing Bracelet
Emy t redit 1~"'~ • tf\ldenl occounl<;
!l"D•loble •up to 12 monlh\ lo poy
)(.,~ e M11l•r Clwr91 • l1 •kAme1i<•rd
f
Fountain Valley
•
VOL. 63, NO. 122, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO RNIA FRIDA Y, MAY 22, 1970
ov.
Take All Steps
HB Co. to Fight
Beach Takeover
The lfun tinglon Pacific Corporation
will fight for its private beach.
A spokesman for the subsidiary of
lhe lluntinglon Beach Company today
released the corporation's first o[Hcial
statement on the city's move to lake
over priv ate strands for public use.
"The Huntington Pacific Corporation,
as the owner of substantial bcachlront
Coniplui1its
On Schools
Go On Peiper
tSy ·rERRY COVILLE
01 !"-OaHr l'llol Stott
Officials of toe Fountain Va\!ey School
District are prepared to meet con·
troversy head-on -with an armlo ad
of paper ~·ork. .
District trustees Thursday nigh t alJ-
proved a procedure fo rhand!ing any co n-
troveny that might arise ove~ ~k:!I . or
other study materials used In district
schools.
[l ~tart~ with a written application
filled out by v.•hoe vcr challenges an item
used by the district -for instance
a book
'T'hal person is thC'n asked to wrj!e
down his objectioos to the book , g1v1ng
detail!; as to objections and what sections
are obJectlonablc.
The objector is also a~ked what he
recommends doing \\'i\h !he book tor
olher material) under question.
Fron1 the v.•ri!len stage. the objection
Is carried lo a con1mittee of school
pcrsoonel appointed by the superin-
tendent. 1111s conunittee reads the ap-
plication. stud1.es th<' item challenged,
rhen interviev.·s authorities on the subject
including lhe person v.·ho made the
t·hallenge.
I\ comm1ttl'e rcporl is th!!n handed
In the superintendent.
The superintendent makes a decision
on whether to retain or change thC'
rnaterial question and informs the
<·hallenger 1n \\"r1t111g of his decision,
School off1rials pointed out that no
l:iook or other n1atcrial wi ll he rcmQvcd
lrom u~e until lhe ~uperintendenrs
<l ecision 1.~ n1:1dc
'"Selection of n1:i1crials is also pnrl
of this procC'd11rt'." llobcrt Sanchis,, ass1s-
1;1nl. distrirt superintendent. explaJne<:l .
"\\'e have thorough procedures fo r pick-
ing books. We v.·ant the parents to kno w
books don't JU st arrive on the shelves
by accident." .
The new policy will be implemented
when trus!ees g1\'(' fina l approv~I to
ii and the County Counsel approves 1\.
'"Fortunately v.·e haven"\ had any
serious controversy ove r our books. But
w(' want a clear policy to haOOle (lne
if it romes," Sanchis explained.
properly, has been well aware of the
growing public concern over recreationa l
land and its future short su pply. In
this climate, we can understand the
pressures on the city council to attempt
to obtain this valuable beach property
at any cost."
"However. we are greatly di sappoin ted
to learn that a land.owner's reward for
years of responsible <..'OOperalion with
the ci ty and the public interest in the
use of this property is to be a long
and costly litigation aimed at depriving
the owner-of his properly without con1-
pensation.
"Obviously, we will take all necessary
steps to fully pn1lect our interest and
are confident of the eventual resull.
"We have always believed that both
public and private intereslS can be best
served by enlightened cooperation in the
use and improvement of this area. 'i~n
The situation clarifies \\'e intend to con-
tinue a policy or such cooperation and
hope that possible litigation does nol
unduly delay tM transformation of this
area into the asset tot he city that
it could become."
Search Begins
In Beach Death
Of Grov e Soldier
Eight detecll~es today began a
<·oastv•ide search fr on1 Ft. Lewi~
\\'ashingtoo to Huntingtoo Beach t-0 f1nd
out who might have had contact ll'ith
David L. McCorry, a 2Q..year old Anny
pri11ate found slaln at Golden \Vesl
College Sunday,
Detective Captain G.L. Payne said his
me n would be checking with restaurants,
trucking co1npani es and la w enforcement
agencies in their effort to discover v.·ho
saw MsCorry before the slaying.
Investigators are operating on thr
theory that McCorry. who was atl<lched
to the 339th Engineering Battalion. had
been hitchhiking to Garden Gmve, where
he intended to visit his fat.he r. Jame ....
and his !&-year <>Id gl rtf riend J ackie
His trip to California was abrupily
ended around l:f>O a.in. Sunday Y.'h<'n
ht• \\'as kill ed by 1wo .32 caliber
automatic buUet.<o.
The bullets taken fron1 hi s chest and
lH'ad during an autopsy ha ve jusl heen
compared with a similar we<ipon tak<'n
from a house burglary in Muntington
Beach the Saturday before McCorry's
ISec MURD ER, P•a:e %)
Beach
• 00 1e
D•ILY ,llOl 51111 '~•111
'I LOVE~ MYSTERY,' SAYS, SHAR.Ot< l(lil)INECY,. 9
Thirif Grader Also Laves l.·•ik Vi••"l.fiir•ry 1
Girl, 9, P1·ove s Value
Of Lih1·ary at OV Scl1ool
Little Sharor Kennedy loves rn.1·s1'ry
books
She devours abotJt 011e a \l eek, then
hustles lo lhc Lark Vie11· School Library
for another volume.
To date. the nine-year old Brown1r
&out has already read JO mystery books
and reads them as fa st as thl'y .:1rr
placed on the shelves.
I.ark View School is protzd to h:11·r
i!!I library where students (·an f'Xp and
their interests by reading abcrul " v11 r1t•\y
of subjects.
t;nfortuna !ely. not ma ny "lt·1nl'lltilr}
~choo!s ha ve libraries. parll c.:ularl.v 1n
the Ocean View School l)i:->trirt. \\'ll rrl'
the mO'lley rnust be used lor rnorl' pre s~·
1np, educ:ationat needs
About four years ago. n1e1nbcrs of Ill!'.'
Lark View P1'0 decided lhr.v v.·ert• going
10 £ive lhc children a library anyway
and began collecl1ng book s
Mr s. Jean Bogen, a l'TO mr111hcr
who volunteers her lime on tht> rheck-nut
desk along with 14 olhef ladi es, ~:iul
lhey starled "1th 200 books and have
Gets New
Rrodu<11ly incrc<1 scd Lhc nun1ber lo about
~ • .)00,
··1 ~uess lhey"re \Vorlh about $16,500
11(1\\' 1[ you figure abou! $3 for each
book," she said.
··Elcml"ntary schools v.·1th a c I u a !
l1brri ry roo1ns arc few and lar between
Librancs give. the child ren an opportunity
111 read other books than they do 1n
the c.:l<1ssroorn It broadens the 1 r
hCir1tOn~ "
1\l r" Hogen cl;iuns -.!udt•nt partic.:1pa -
11on 1n the library is 100 percent, with
cil r!i ct11ld in the 550-student school com -
ing IJl al ll'ilSt o.1ce a v.·~k
"',\'e h;ive a prrt1 y goorl ~C'lcclion 10
('l1 r>0sc /ro111. l>u1:h a:> anrrnals. pct~.
"fll.lr1:.. ~c icnec fi ction. mysteries and
r risy readers for 1he primary grade~."
:-hf' ~;11d
'"\re f1n1l no rt!lu ctancr at all fnr
h1ds to rnrnc 10 lhc library \\'e ha ve
:r::r.nncthing for JU.~L about everybody, And
here they can find reading malerials
they may not ha ve at home."
Radar
"We lry to make the policy as detailed
as possible to eliminate confwioo."
The new policy also states that no
c·hal!enges of male.rial will be accepted
unless in v;ritine.
Police Unit Deadly Accu.rate-E'Ve n Up to 199. MPH
Valley Trustees
OK Ne'\' Lines
For Attendance
Ont auend1n1ce boundary switch. in-
volving the housi11g tract La Linda I,
will be made next Khoo! year, trustees
nf the Fountain Valley Scl1'l01 District
decided Thursday nighL.
Children in the La Linda I homi'S
will change from Tamura School to
McDowell School next Scplember.
"It's In our master plan for these
}'Ou.ngster! to eventual!~ go_ to McD;>well,
;inyway," Mike Brick, district superinten-
de11t. told truslets.
"We're beginning lo reach a stable
polnl where we can fix our permanent
boundaries,'' Brick said:noting the school
changes lhat plague most grow ing school
districts.
"All other schools ca• han<lle an.
ticipated popul~tions next year." he ari·
dcd
By RUDr NIEDZIEUIKJ
01 !tit Dt HJ ,lllfl l!tft
Look out. the cops have radar on
fl.fain Street!
And Ll. Paul Darden of the Hunt ington
Be.sch Police Department doesn't mind
Jetting you know about it.
ll'i a new unit, costing abou t ,1 ,800.
which has dead accuracy and is capable
or recording any speed from 1 to 199
mile~ per hour.
Called the Prefect TR-4, the: system
is capable not only or det.ennlning the
spee(I but or allowing the officer to
hear tne vehicle accelerating or slow ing
down.
One of its mD!lt notable reatures i~
its ca pacity to measure a 11ehicle's spttd
from a 2,500 root distance. That"s much
greater than lhe old radar system the
police department owns.
Those radar warning devices ad-
vertised in the pulp maga:dnrS won't
protect you any more e'."·ther. accord big
tn Mike Wagner, a racbr expert who
has bten trA ining officers in its U!le
th is v.•eck.
"The radar warn ing boxes begin to
npe rate about 400 fett from the loc1ttion
of the radar bu t the nc\v unit Rive~
the officer 2.200 feel bclort that In
fix his speed,"
He explained lhe device is so accura1 c
that it dleck.s it.self 10 tin1e:r:: v.·ithin
a fifth of a second period before pro-
jecting the speed on its dlgital meter.
To be absolutely certain the rarlor
Is operating accurately the officer must
calibrate it each morning with a tuning
fork or through a crystal located io
the set itself, Wagner said.
The department's old rad:Jr syste1n
left much to be desired in tcnns of
aet::uracy s ince it ooukl no! dislinguL<;h
between vehi cles traveling in different
lanes or give the driver visual proor
of his violation.
With !he new syst.em. ii i:r:: possible.
for example, for the offirer to lor·'1 111
1he recorded speed, catch the violator
and pro ve to him that he broke tJ1c
speed limit, according to Wagner.
Radar has althlyt beetl: a dfl:ty ~ ~t aj;cordiP,& IQ Da~dcn H 1,'I Ir
pr<>\.Oli:Jiheibii<t of contil>Jllng •p<ed, ol
turbine traff"IC acciden ts an<! cnn-
!equenlly saving 1ives.
"Main Street -has been n n11r lic11lnr
problem for us, since children fro1n
lwo ~chools cr11.1s there," he said. "We've
alrt>ady hl'd five deaths thec>e "
"\\'e don't min1t if pcopl<" know th<'
s1reet Is radar patrolled . We're oot tryin~
.. I
ro raise the city 's revenut and we have
no in tention of sneaking up on anypne .
\Ve \l'OUid rat~cr have people co1nply
with lhe law than write citations." the
lieutenant .!laid.
Jtis traffic offi cers, a usually friendly
and smiling lot of 11 men. tend to
gel \'Cry serious about the . kind of
speeders the broad street with a speed
range of 40 to 25 mph seems to en·
courage.
Citing lhe1n is another problem UX1ugh ·
since there are short distances invtll11cd
1vhich do not aUow a motorcycle officet"
to get a proper clocking on any speeder,
hence the radar.
Offit'i!rs will also work tht' new unit
and the old one "''hercver citizen co1n-
plaint~ arise becau se or ei:cessivc speed,
41. ;.Darden said. .
"Wt giL all · ki1ds of calls from dif-
ferent · nel1hb0rboods complaining &bout
~rll ·automobiln. · Ttie people are
u.'11allY worrttd •bout·the safety. of ·their ·
chi ldren. Just festtrddy we've bean <n'tl·
r.ti out to Rotterdam Lane. Saybrook
l .. ane 0111.t Valencia Drtve-sk>ne:''
"~1 1.lybc now that people are aw11re
ol the fsirt thot w~ do ust Ulc radar
units. wc"ll ser. a significant tlccrcnse
in injury il.'Cillcnts," Oatden 11aid .
P11e111no11ia
E11cl s Long
Ca1·eer at 7 4
INGLE\\'OOD (UP I) -Former Gov.
Crood"'in J. Knighl. one of Cali fornia's
most colorful and eJoquenl poli tical ca1n-
paigners, died today at the age of 74.
Knight succumbed fl'om pneumonia at
Daniel Free1nan Hospital, where he had
been hospitalized since last Tuesday.
lie c.led at 6:55 a.m.
Knight was adniitted to St. Joseph
Hospital in Burbank t.1arch I for treat-
111enl of an undisclosed illness. llis con-
dition \\'as said to be satisfa ctory al
Lhe time
Knigh t, who ser1•cd as governor from
August, 1953, lo January, 1959, dropped
out of the 1962 gube rnatorial race on
1!octor 's orclcrs after he suffered a
hepatit is attack.
Before becun1ing clucf executive or
the state, Knighl was l i e u t e na n t
governor. In this capaci!y he served
as chair1nan Of the Ca li fornia Com-
n1isljlon on Interstate Cooperation and
as a meinbcr on the Slate Lands Com-
mission, Slate Disaster Council, Toll
Bridge Authority. and the Board of
J{cgents of the Universily of California.
He served for 12 years as a superior
<·ourt judge in Los Ange les County prior
to that and v.·as active itt civic af!airs
1luring his career as a practicing at-
torney. Mc also v.·orked as a hard rock
tnlner, a nev.·spaper reporter and \\'as
a seei:rian •board .a subchaser Ourinc ,
Worlcf War L
Knight's fir st experience in politics
\\•as lo distribute harfdbill s in the 1910
£1.1bernatoria! campaigl'I of Hiram W.
John son. He worked for the Johnsdn·for-
President ca n1paign headquarters at Ne1v
York Clt.v in 1920 and campaigned for
Jnhnson in Uls Angele:; in 1924 when
Johnson was again a presiden lia/ as-
pirant
Born Oct' n. !896, in Provo, Utah,
Knight was the sun of Jesse Knight.
.a lawyer and mining engineer, and Lillie
illi ln~r Knight. The family had come
west fron1 New York in about JS51l.
1\lrs. Kn igh t's lather, John H. Milner
~erved on the Utah bench for 50 years.
Knight had a record of great popul arity
with voters of both parties. and was
liked by both labor and management.
In the 1954 primary election for governor
his plun1Jities set ne1v records for volume
i'I votes in California.
111 the 1954 genera l election he was
1·lcl·tcd with a majority of 551 .151 votes
-a greater margin than thal received
h_v any other candidate for state-wide
1J ff1 cc with maJOr party opposition.
Th e white-ha irerl former California
elnrf rxecu11 1•e stepped a.~ldc under
pl"rs~u rc 111 19.i7 1n !11c guhernatorial
(·onle.~t ln ravo r f'lf Sr·n. \l.'illil1m r .
Kno wland. (H-Calif.), 11·ho was defeatffi
hy !Jcmocr111ic Gov Edn1und \.. Brown
1n 1hr subscq11rnl election . Knight ran
inslccid for U S. Senator a g a 1 n st
Dfiinl)•:rnt Clair F.nglc. bu1 lost.
\\"hen he cnlered the 1962 gu~rnalorial
!Set KNIGHT, Page 21
Atlanta Avenue
Area \Vithout
Phone Service
More than JOO families south of Atlanta
A venue in Huntington Beach found
themsel ves without telephone service for
half a day Thursday:
I\ spokesman for General Telephone
Com pany said Thursday an excavation
crew working al Atlanta a111f Bushard
Street had severed two large un-
derground c~hles about 10:45 a.m.
One cable carried 900 pairs of wires
fro m Ge™!ral Telephone's Bushard sta·
hon lo Costa Mesa. Calls to Costa 1',1esa
produced only a busy signal until service
~as re stored at JO p.m., the spokesman
sid. · ·
Another cable. with tsOO pairs of wires
st'rvh:iirl 325 phones sout,h of Allan.ta and
on either side or Bushard, wa1 also
cut , com pletely stopping phone service
there until 10 p.m.
Emergency crews patched logether the
wires and also wt1roed rtsid_ent.s they
hi:itl no phone 1er\lk:e and emergeocy
phones would be located throughout the
";Cighborhood <)rl company truck:!.
Nl!:\V YORK f/\Pl -The .'llOCk mai-ket
lL1rnecl shnrpl y and broadly down'l'fard ln
late trading lhi., ttflernoon on t1ctlve vol·
ume. (See c1uou11 ions, Pages 1i..11J,
'J;oday's Final
N.Y. Steeb
TEN CENTS
• 1es
. ··-GOODWIN J. KNIGHT
Eight Candidates
Du.e in V<dley
MondnyatForum
Al li!ast eight candidates for st.ale
offi ces on the June 2 ballot will ex.plain
their views for Fountain Valley residents
at 8 p.m., ~1onday, in the cafeteria
of Fountain Valley High School.
Four candidates for state tel ator i11
the 34th district and four candidates
for state aswnblyman in the 70t.h district
have ·l!laid they wltl attend the chamber
of commerce sponsored candidates night.
Barty S. Bauchwilz, J ohn W. Ellzey.
Dennis Carpenter and Charles H. Sewell
are seeking the senate post now held
by John G. Schn1ilz (R-Tustin ). Schmitz
is running for U.S. Represenlalive. One
state senator caodldate , Ow"Jght W. Mize.
told chamber officials he might appear
~1onda:; night,
Assc1nbly candidall's Lloyd Nock.er, A.
A. Van Petten and Willowdc.aR W. Vance,
;;ire sc;heduled to speak at the candidates
nigh!. Incumbent Assemblyman Robert
Burke "(R-Hunliogton Beach) has said
his administrative assistant Matthew
\Vey uker will appear for him.
Each candidate will .have ten minute.'!
to express his views. After all candidates
have spoken , corfee \\'ill be served during
a short break.
Then the audience will be gi\•en 11
ct>ance to submit v.·ritten queslio"s to
each candidate.
PILOT PROFILES
35TH CANDIDATES
In cooperation wlth 1he Orange Coast
League of Women Voters, the DAILY
PILOT in its Saturd ay edition will
present biographies and viewpoints of
candidates for the 35th Congressional
District. formerly represented by the
late James B. Ult.
fo.1ore than one run page will be devoted
to photos and background information
on candidates who submitted their O\\'n
Jata for inclusi on in the voter educatio11
program. Look for the wrapup on this
fmporlant ('(!ngrei;s ional contest in
Sat1:r<lay's DAILY PILOT.
Orange Coast
"'eaCher
1\fake way for the beach. bound
trarnc. The weekend weather pie·
ture calls (or sunny skies and warm
temperatures, with Jnland residents
fleeing readings In the 80'1 for the
70-ish coastal climate.
INSIDE TODAY
Somethi110 new i11 the stud11
of historv hos bee11 added Cit
\Vestminster High School where
n personalized course t11 "hia-
r.orical rt sea,. ch " is in opero--
tio11. See toda~'• \Vee kender.
'
% OA/l 't Pl lO l
Candidates
Tell Stands
At Forum --
..
Fh•P Republican candida t"~ for the
35th O:>ngressional Dis tric t differed lit·
tl(' on is~ues at luncheon meetin~ Thurs-
<lay or the Newport Harbor chapter of
the Califoniia Fe<ter::ition of Repu blican
Women in Newport Beach.
\:ach canrlidale -William \\1ilcoxen
of Laguna Beach. John G. Schm itt of
Tus1.in, John Ratter~ of La"una Reach,
J9hn A. Stei,l!er of Oceanside and ~1a,l!'irie
1ite1uzs of La"una Beach -i::ave a ten
minute soeech fo\lo~·ed by a question-and.
answer perod.
About 60 women attended the luncheon
nl the Ehell Club where they heard
the candidates take similar stands on
ti,e Indochina war, welfare and campus
protest.
Mrs. Me,i:ii:s told the laclies that women
In this country are treated as second
class citizens. "WhPn I talk about women
wwer, I'm not talkinll about sex and
no bra!'!, I'm talkin,e about getting the
same financial award for the same jobs
as men," she stated.
Here's how the candidates stand on
somP. other i!l!Ues:
-On the move tnto Cambodia all said
N;xon did the right thin~ and urged
the wom en to eipreas their support <J
th,. President's oollcies.
Schmitz urJ!ed the women to support
lhe President's Crunbodia move. "not
because he's a Republican and not tJe..
cause he's President, but because he's
right and he needs all our backing."
-On campus violence and protest, all
said thev favor returning publicly sup-
r9rtM colle~es and univeMiilies to educa-
tional, nc>t protest Institutions.
"wi!coxen. in speaking on education. em-
phasized the need for more vocational
1~-'.,in st In public schools.
On the subject of campus vlolenec
TI;!tterree acfvocalM .iail!ng violent cam-
pus protesters. "These campus r~oters
.-.. :>rid that's just what thev are, rioters
-: should go to jail," he said.
-All or the candidates said the welfare
!l)"slem as pracliced by . the John5:0n
administrAtion was a failure and in-
dicated they backed Nixon's proposed
ref"rms.
"Wilcoxen spoke out slrongly in backing
Nixoo's v.·elfare reform bllL "As a deputy
l J\stricl Attorney, I had a chance to
6 @e what our present welfare system
does -paying fa milies to break up.
J think the President's reform package
Jg one of the most comprehensive to
dite."
Sing Out Slated
At Golden West
A benefit Sing Out by 140 boys and girls
rledicated to failh and loyalty -and the
Orange County March of Dimes -will
be presented Saturday night at Golden
West College In Huntington Beach.
The show v.·ill be al 8 p.m. in the GWC
campus Forum. v.'ilh a $1 donation for
tickets which are available at the door.
according to J\lrs. Elva Frederking, c~
ordinator.
She said the group has sung before
thousands of people during the past year,
inspiring all with their slncerity and
purity of vlev.'J)Oinl
James J. Gillis
Rites Saturday
1--uneral services for Jan1es J. Gillis,
'i2. v.·ho spent more than half his life in
Jlunlington Beacl1, will be cooductcd at
10 a.m., Saturday, in Smith 's Chapel,
lluntlngton Bench. Buri.ii will follow in
Wf'Stmins!er Men1or1al Park.
J\fr. GilUs, 1:1 residl'nt of 1018 ~~ Dela·
ware St.. died Tuesda y.
Survivors inc\Udl' his v.•ifr, Edna : three
f;WIS, James, Dan and Palrick; three sis·
ters, Mr.i. Peggy Simpson, h1rs. Ann
Crowley, and Mrs. J\1ary Kennedy; a
brother, J ohn, and ID gr andchildren.
DAILY PILOT
011.frMGE COAS T POllLl~HlHG COMPAN't
ltob•rt N. w •• 4
r'ru1<1..,r 1<:0 r>ubll1h""
·J•t' It. Cu•l•v
Thomtt k ••• il
E~llor
l ~ePl\tl A. M urp~ine
M.,,.qlll§ lCll\or
Albtrl W. ltltt
AJ.>OClll• Elill..,.
H•ll'tl~t'•• a.-11 Offl~•
1717S •••c.J. l oul•••r<I
,.•ili111 Ad'••11: P.O. l o• 7•0, ,26<1
Ot .. r Offlcet
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MAGGIE MEGGS
From Page 1
KNIGHT ...
race, Knight touched <>ff a polilica1 war
of charges and COllnte r charges with
then Vice President Richard M, Nixon
as he announced his enlry in the contest.
Knight made it pla in he felt Nixon
was largely responsible for his elimlna·
tion from the 1958 race, lie accused
Nixon of threatening, in 1957, to cam·
paign against him in every California
county if he opposed Knowland . He said
later a Nixon emissary had offered him
any job in the state if he would withdraw
from the forthcomin g primary.
.Nixon called the charge "false and
libelous on its face" and denied ever
making any prom ises of any kind to
Knight or any other indiv iduals to keep
them out of the race.
Los Angeles financier J . Howard
Edgerton, the man Knight later named
as . the emjssary, admitted talking to
Kn ight, but said that at no time had
he ever asked him not to run for the
governorship. lie also denied being Nix-
on's emissary.
A long, bitter campaign was in pro-
spect before Knight was forced , by ii·
Jness, lo drop out of the campaign -
<>ne that political observers saw as the
toughest battle of hls long career in
state politics. Most political pundits con-
sidered Ni1on too strong even for such
a popular politics' veteran a.s "Goodie."
'Newport Seven'
Now Five; Two
Freed by Judge
The "Newport Beach Seven" lost the
nickname given them by local police
Thursday when a Superior Court judge
agreed with two members of the group
that drug chargea endorsed by the
Orange C<>unt.y Grand J ury should be
dismissed.
Judge William Murray frttd Dotiirlas
Alan Potter, 22 , of 314 de la Estrella,
San Clemente and Martha Ann Glass.
21, of 1807 W. Balboa Boulevard. Newport
Beach and dismissed charges that they
were In possession of marijuana with
intent lo sell last Jan. 12.
Their five companlons in the group
arrest were ordered to appear Ma y 29
before Superior Court J udge James F.
Jud~e for the setting <>f furt~r pr~
ceedings. They are:
Kathleen M. Ba hen. 23, of 310 :15th
SL, Newport Beach : Gary Edward Gray,
27, of 310~; 35lh St., Newport Beach;
Ronald Dean Kniseley, 27. of 25231 Monte
Verde. South Laguna; Thomas Duncan
\Vheatley. 27, of 3604 Park Lane, Newport
Beach and Clayton Francis J ohnso11, 20,
of Whittier.
All were arrested al the Bahen home
;ind indicated by lhe Grand Jury <>O
iliarch 26.
Social Security
Measure Oka yed
\\'ASHlNGTON fAPl -Legislation to
boost early and long-range increases in
1'ocial Securily benefits -and taxes -
has passed the lfouse a! a special Senate
con1m ittee called fnr a major rerom1 of
the system In avoirl sent encing rl'tired
pcrsnns to a twili~ht life of povertv.
The lfouse-passcd hill calls for a S otr-
cent increase in benefits in 1971 with 11
provision for ruture increases geared to
lhP cost nf living.
The bill was sPnl to the Senate where
con."lid('rable sentiment exii::t., for furth er
increases, a feelinJl bolstered bv lhe an-
nual report relrA."led todav by the Special
SeT'~te Commi!lee on AJ{inq.
The cnmmitee said d~ite rttenl hik"'~
ln Social Se('11ritv brnPfits about 7 mil-
lion of the 10 million America ns !lge 65
or nver livP in or ntAr poverty.
Th e report reeommended a !'t1b11tanlial
boost in lhr minimum indivlrlual n11v-
men!, now SS• 11 mnnth, and furlhtr
acrnss-thl'-board increase.~.
The Hou~e-pa~sed benefit il'K'T'eases
mri111 that in 197 1 pPnsionl'rs woulrf PPl
a 5 DCn:t:nt rl'list: -from $1118 to f205.llO
for the average retired couple.
Cou ntv Okavs Sales . .
Of Huntington Bonds
Salr nf SI 2 m1111nn in lfuntinRf.on Bench
C:ity SC'hool Dl"1rict OOnds on .Junt. I
has bren approved by !he County Board
of Supervisors,
The 5ale 1$ ~nrt of $4.75 mllllon Jn
bone!~ !lpproved by 1 two-third!! vole
of the rlt>rll'Jratc of the district in
J-'e.bruary 1969.
JOHN A. STEIGER
Oil Drill Plan
U.S. May Buy Back Sea Leases
WASHI NGTON (LlPI) -Interior Secretary Waller J. Hickel says the
federal government may buy back oil leases it sold in a 16-mile-wide slrip of
the. Santa Barbara Charmel.
"l think v.·e ha ve an obligation if possible to buy back these leases,"
Hickel said Thursday during a question and answer session following his ad-
dress Lo the National Press Club.
A Union Oil Co. well that blew out Jan. 28, 1969, and spilled <>ii into the
channel is in the 16-mile strip.
The interior secretary said the proposa l lo repurchase leases sold to oil
companies refers only to the federal leases in front of the stale sanctuary thal
extends three miles out from shore.
There are no oil leases io the sanctuary, hut there has been development
in federal leases further out from shore along the 16-mile-wide strip of sanctu-
ary.
Hi ckel said his proposal, "'"hich has been under study for some time in
the Interior Department, is in line with his feelings that "we ha ve to figure
out lhe highest and best use" of offshore areas.
Baby M11rder Case
Judge Orders D1~. Slocun1
To Stancl Trial July 20
A C~ta ~1esa surgeon accused or
the dismemberment murder of his infant
daughter, entombed six years in the
fa mily freezer, must stand trial July
20 in Orange County Super ior Cou rt.
Dr. \Vesley G. Slocum, -44, appeared
tod ay before Judge Jamts F. Judge,
11·ho set that date for the proceedings.
wilh a July 14 pretrial hearing sche<iuled
in his chambers.
The impassive doctor was accompanied
to the courtroom by his defen1e attorney,
Paul Augustine Jr., whom he allegedly
has threatened to kill. it was disclosed
in tesllmony a v.·cek ago.
Augustine has represen!ed Dr. Slocum
in a $2.2 million lawsuit against the
Santa Ana Police Dl'partmen1, stemming
from a shootout ~·ith officers four years
ago.
His righl hand v.·as mang!C<i arid his
career as a defl surgeon ruined, but
the lawsuit '~as dismi ssed earlier !his
week in another Superior Court action.
The former surgwn and Augustine
Frorn Pn9e 1
MURDER ...
death, but the results v.·ere disappointing.
"[t looked like !he. holll'st lead l''C
had," said Ca pt. Puyne . The burgl<1rs
had bee11 caught by !he Or:inge Police
Departrnenl but turned OLJl not lo h<'
the killers, police said . 1'hc rifling
grooves of the \l'l'a pon <lid riot 1natch
the butler s recov('red fron1 r.1cCorrv's body. .
Meanv.·hi!e investiga tor~ havr b<-cn
interviewing the dead man·~ family and
friends to find a possi ble molivl'.
?lfcCorry's father, a truck dnvcr. v.·as
in Arizona al the time of th(' :slaying
but came to lluntington Beach Thursday
lo positively ident ify the bod~·.
Despite exhaustive checks \\'ith the
FBI and California law enforce.n1ent
agencies, detectives were unable to
determine his identily until \\'ednPsd:iy
11ight. \\'he" a DAILY PI LOT reader
recognized him from a picture publ ffihed
in lhe evening paper
Police mistakenly identified the reader
as the victim's aunl , h\1t th is morning
said it was Michael o~uch, 16261 Eagle
Lane, Huntington Beach.
Osuch, they said, cnlled the detective
hureau at 8; IS p.m. \Vednesday lo report
that he knew McCorry. lie could not
be contacted today to ansv.'cr questions
about his re1ationsh ip "'i1h the deAd
man.
McCorry attended Garden Grove High
School untll 1968, when he dropped
class~ midway through his sen ior year.
Det(!('tives said he cnlis1ed in the Armv
in September of the following yeAr and
took his baslc training at F't. Ord , C;ill L
were present for a pretrial hearing on
the matter r..farch 27 in Superior Court
"'hen polict showed up to arrest him
on suspicion of murder.
Butchered remai ns su~pe<"ted to he
th ose of Cynthia Slocum , \\'ho vanished
in early 1964 when about three mon ths
-0ld, were found the day before in the
freeze r.
The ;1ppl iance '"'as reinoved frorri the
i\1esa Verde home which Dr. and Tolrs,
Slocum OC'Ctlpied until earlier this year
when a company holding the second
rnortgng~ foreclosC'd it.
!
WILLIAM WILCOXEN DAILT l"llOT P-h' 1..-,.., ...
JOHN G. SCHMITZ
Keeps 'E11i La119hit19
Hicks Disc11sses Drugs,
Nudity ll.1 Campaig11 Talk
Hy ARTHUR R. VINSEL
DI l~I Dt HJ il'lltl Siii!
Nudity, narcotics and can1pus dissent
e>rr0crgcd 1'hursday as electioneering
Orange C<lunty District Attorney Cecil
A. Hicks discussed law and order before
the C<lsta Mesa Chamber of Commerce.
Reviewing the ramifications of each
-especially student activism -the
youn g DA fight ing his first election cam-
paigR following appointrnenl in 1966 had
Chamber member.& in stitches at times.
Drug abuse wasn"t so funny .
But Hicks, whose job will be at stake
June 2 \vhen Orange County voters go
lo the polls, sparked gales of laughter
1n discussing UC Irvine and Cal State
Fullerton on protes t factions .
He di splayed copies of a Magazine
Production sludenl's final credit work
-for those who cared to look closely
-\Vil h an illustration of 22 nude and
ha iry persons waving indiv idual fingers
in !he air,
The cover contains a• e x p Ii c i t
me~sage.
··Something-or-other you , Gov.
Reagan,'' explalntd the District Attorney.
"Use your imagination a litlle, folk s."
"There are some funny-looking people
ir1 that picture," he remarked. "They
dc>finilclv need clothes."
Sever;il female militants. close perusal
seems to suggest, are indeed unsulhed
by the YMCA Slim '• Trim class or
lhe \\'eight \Vatchers' diet regimen.
'"lt"s enough to turn a nian queer,"
he observed.
Hicks conceded the magazine prepared
and pub lished for credit by CSF student
Bruce Bagnoll wa s professionally done
'
work, v.·hile Bagnoli claim.& the nude
part was done wllhout his knowledge
<>r consent by <>lhe rs.
''He got an A oo ii,'' tlie ad said.
Bagnoli claims the publication showing
the history of rect:nt radical movements
at CSF was emlJla zoned with the Naked
22 by militants after the original edition
v.·as printed.
';You have to disagree with the
p~ilosophy, but ii was pretty Wl'li done,"
lf1cks told Chamber members i1 the
general meeting at the Mesa Verde Coun-
try Club.
Hicks also told Or a debate involving
himself and activist students from UC
Irvine in a forum chaired by con·
troversial forrner campus SOS leadl'r
M!c~ael . Krisman, now a paid ad·
n11n1stration coordinalor.
"I said -in words to this effect
-that I didn't see \\"h<lt academic
freedom or free speech had lo do with
breaking ~·indows. writing dirty words
<>n the wall," he explained.
lie also asked hov.· they could justify
the fact one UC employe had his hands
blov.•n off by a bomb and anuthcr v.·as
killed as a result o; dissent.
ificks quoted the reply:
'"\Vhy should we care, \\'hen there
arc unpaved roads in Texas?"
"l dido 't know whether to laugh or
cry.'' he said.
"The poinl J"m trying to make is
that they must understand ~·e can't
have two sets of laws, one for ceinpuses
and one for off-campLIS. . .one for
students and one for non-students.
"I think we have to make a point
-not by cracking heads," District At-
torney Hicks continued.
DRAPERY
SALE!
CUSTO M MADE WITH A WIDE SELECTION OF
QUALITY INTERIOR DESIGN FAB RICS AS MUCH
AS <O % Off ON EXCEL LENT DESIGN FABR ICS.
There Is little record of his employ.
meol. but investigators sa ir\ he once
worked as a busboy ror the Charterhouse
re~aurant in Anaheim.
Alt hough raised in th e Unitt'd Slates.
he was born in O:fford, Engl and. lti~
American citizenship has not yet been
established. detectives s;i}d,
DEALERS FOR: HENREOON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
A search of Huntington Beach police
records show he had conlilct With local
lawmen on lwo occasions. In April 1967
he was involved in an illegal bonfire
<1cti vltv at Bolsa Chica Slate Beach while
In April of the followlng year he reported
hi~ WAiiet , t'OnlAinin,11 $f10, stolen by ii
gang of girls who allat k«I hhn on the
he1:1ch.
Delec!lves said he was koov.·n among
his aequ11intance$ as a loner, bul wns
\1•ell liked.
7td .1WtArert ~
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 We1fcllff Dr., 642-2050
OP&N FRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
Profession•I lnt•rlor LAGUNA BEACH
Deslgn•r1 Av•llable-A/D 345 Norti, Cotsl Hwy. 494-6551
,. OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Olle Toll ''" MMr ef O•Cllllfe Co1111ty 140·1261
I
_J
7
J
Newport B~a~h
EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. S~
VOL. 63, NO. 122 , 4 SECTION S. 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDA Y, MAY 22, 1~70 TEN CENT:;
County Grand Jury Against Bay Swap
B~' TO~I BARLEV
01 I~• Do1IY ,ilor ll•lt
The Or:inge County (ir2uc.l Jur) tod<iy
n~poscd lh1· Upper Nrwporl Bay land
<'.,change in a rrpor1 c;illing for a "full
!{'<1s11li!i!y and plannir1g st udy ... in\'oh•ing
f)range Counly. the Irvin<' Co111p;iny,
the state and o1her concerned gr-..:iups."
There should bl· no fLJrthcr ac!ion or
tlcc1sions in the ct1n1rovcrsial ba!'k bJy
l'Wap , the 1n11cstigativt• panel warns,
•·until flood l'ilntro! problems, th<'
ccolugical. pollution and related rn-
\ 1ronrnen1aJ problems, the legal issues
1 u1clud1ng a decision on prescr ipti\·e
rights by !he Cali fornia .Suprcn1c Court J,
the financ1<1l aspect.:. cu1d the pu bllc at-
li\u des :ire n1 ore clearly studied and
considered ;ind a rnaster land and water
use plan is developed."
Noting that "the publi c is in a position
!.• demand the remov:i ! of the Irvine
islands for flood control and to clahn
shore access along the bay by virlue
DAIL 'J PILOT Pholo by 111thl •O Kothl1c
IN PAIN, MOTORCYCLIST MAXON AWAITS AID
Two Injured in Tllis West Coast Highway Cr•ah Thur1day
Traffic Mishaps Hurt
Three Coast Residents
Three people \1 ere liste1! in 1:ood con-
1!1110.1 today 1n Hoag Hospital tollowing
hi,o traffic rnish;ip~ Thursday in Ne\i,•port
Beach.
l.Jla A lltl<irl f' :'Ill of 1:i! E 191h
~I, Costv :O.le~fl ~11f!1•rcd n i.:011cuss11111
1n a collis1011 w11h :i ('ar dn\·en by
\\'l'ndy I .. l>un·ht'~trr. 17 <11 3,1.!l Clwr-
rytrcr: L<in<'. !\t·11 purl Heach Thr a(·-
1·uient O{'~·un•t! at 11\l' 111te r~cctinn of
.Jambor('l' tiu:id :111d l':asthltdl l)r11·r
\1hcn r-.1rs !Juanr·~ brakes fa!led. f\.liss
norchc ~tf'r 11·:1:; nol 1111ured .
A Nrv.·111w1 rr1;1n 11 as lis ll'd in good
c·nnditio,1 <Hid h1'> pa~scngcr was 111 rafr
rondltion at1cr lhl'lr rnotorcyt.:lc collickd
'''llh an aut o in the 2100 block of '\'est
l:oasl Highway Thu rsday afternoon.
Police report that B.onald C. Maxson.
21, of 214:i Bayport \Vay and Karen
.;_ Holt, 15. of Burbank "'ere thrO\'lll
o\·er lhc hood of the car driven by
Mrs. Hanna DcnnC'nbcrg, 61. of Garden
Tidelands Lease
Gets Extension
Appro v;i\ or a one-yea r' extension of
a county tidelands ll'a se of 1.74 acre:;
JU Sl north of 1hc L:ppe r Bay bridge
1 in Newport Brach ha:; been granted
lly the county Bocr rd or Supervisors.
' The Jessee 1:; Bayshorcs Mobile Home I Park which has 68 boat slips on the
1ldelaRds, accordtnl: In rnanager Marshall
I Duffield.
\ Harbor District Dir«tor K~11~lh
Sampson said the lease has been y1eld1ng
1235 per month to the coun1y during
tht' pasl ye ar.
Ghna~ Grt' Office
I 11 Law111an '~ C ;roup
B. Jo:i1ncs Gla\':i.~. rh1rl of pohce or
~<'wporl Beach hns been elected third
''ICc president of lht· C11li forn1a Peace
OHicers As~ociatio-11
Ch1v.11s _ \vho has hcHdcd lhe deparl·
n1cnl •incc October, 1961, wa~ clccled
Tu esday at a convention of 1hr. group
1n Palm Spring~.
Grove, upon impact Both suffered
broken legs and Maxson rrcCl\'C'd a
broken arn1 in \he crash. f.·l r.~. D<'n-
ncnberg \1;l~ not 1n1urrd in the ! :Ill
p.m. actidcn1
Nixons lo H c:.~t
0. ,V. Riehards
Nl'wport Beach markr! owner 0 \\"
"Dick·' Richard and his wife, .Jenny, will
ha ve dinner next Tuesday night 11·it h
President Nixon in the \Yhite House.
Ri chard said the president has invited a
few outside people iD for a world affairs
di.~cussion over dinner with Gtnrral Su-
harto, acting president of Tndo1tesla.
The J{ichards will stay the night in !he
While 1-iouse· and then depart on a two-
wrek vacation visiting relatives in the
mid"·esl.
Richard, owner or Richard's Lido Mar-
kel and a re sident 'lf Irvi ne Terrace, is
active in Orange County Republican cir-
cles and ha5 been involved in several
Nixon clecllon campaigns. He is a rrlend
of the President's br other, Don Nixon.
a Newport Beach resident and former
market owner in Whittier.
PILOT PROFILES
:J5TH CANDIDATES
11'1 eooperation with the Orange Coast
League of Women Volers, the DAILY
PILOT in its Saturday edition will
present biographies and viewpoints of
candidates for lhe 45lll Congresslonal
District , formerly repre~nted by the
l<ilc James B. Utt.
More tha n one full page will be de \'Oted
to phntos and background inrormation
on candidates who submitted !heir OWTI
datt1 for inclusion in !he \!Oler education
program. Look for the wrapup on thi~
iniportant congressional contest I n
Sa t1:rday 's DAILY PILOf.
11f ex isting pubhc roads," the grand
Jury discusses at leng th 1n il3 report
!hl' possibility of "a decision lo let
11:1lure lake its tourse "
Such a det1sion. ··aided by sound chan-
nel engineering nioves and the possible
dredging away of islands for adequate
flood control would help preserve the
rcol:>gical b<i!ancc of \\'ild life and leave
rhc upper tidal r!ats as a 'lung' lo
help oxgyenate and purify lower bay
waters," the report stales.
''If a natural estuary is to be preserv-
t>d, a trade is meaningless," the jury
report notes. And the panel cooce<Jes
that "n1on~y nlust then be found to
compensa te the Irvine Company as the
courts may decide.
"1'.1uch of the debate (Jve r the Upper
Da y land exchange and most of the
recrimination ," the rej)Ort goes on. "has
resulted from fa ilure to distinguish clear·
ly the consequences of two very different
uses of the area.
"If the ordinary building developments
;:ire pennilled," the grand jury slates,
"assessed lund values are high; if a
n:ltural estuary i!! retained, saleable land
values may be negligible.
··rh1s basic decision st~ou!d be made.''
the Grand Jury warns, "before any quar-
reling over acreage and assessment of
l;:inds in a propo,sed swap or even over
\1•hether one is called for ."
IL is known that !he jury investigation
into lhe Upper Bay land exchange pro-
duce<! division!' ln °" panel and that
JS a nlalt.er of public record in the
forn1 of a minority report attached to
lOday ·s resolution.
That report, also signed by jury
f:>reman George B. Honold, lists three
points "'hich f;:inn the basis of dissident
opinion in the grand jury. The minority
report stales:
"The group feel s that failure to endor~
the exchange would resu.lt In 1.) Tax
lSee JURY, Paje Z)
Former Governor l(nigl1t Dies
P11eurrionia E11ds Long· Ccireer at 7 4,
INGLE \YOOD (UPI/ -fo'ormer 1.;01•.
Gooch1,·in J . Knight, one of California's
1nost colorful and eloquent political cam-
paigners, died today at the age of 74.
Knight succumbed from pneumonla at
Daniel Freeman Hosplta!, where he had
been hospitalized since last Tuesday .
Jle died at 6:55 a.m.
Knighr, "·as admilted to St Joseph
Hospital in Burbank fl·larch I for trea1-
1nenl of an undisclosl'd illness. His con-
dition was said to be satisfactory at
the tinie.
Knignl. "'ho serve d as governor fro111
August, 195:!, to January. 1959 . dropped
Harbor Doctor
Faci11g Trial
On First Rap
A Harbor Area pyhslcian accused by
i;1;11e oHicials of addicting ~·omen
patients to dNgs and sexually ravishing
them must fa ce arson and fraud cha rges
before the !ates~ action proceeds.
IJr. Ebbe Hartclius. 50, of Costa J\'lcs<1.
j, narncd in a recent formal accusation
frlrd by the State Attorney General's Ol-
fice in behalf of aoother agency.
'11le Californ ia Bureau ot Pro fe ssional
and Vocational Standards l'hargcs the
fonner osteopath in conntct1on 11o•ith a
\'ariety of incidents specified in the ac-
cusation.
lie is also scheduled for prchm1nary
hearing r..1ay 28 at 9:30 a.m. in Harbor
.Judicial District Court , stemming: from
;in April 9 fire al his Corona dcl J\lar o(-
fi<'t
Nt\l'port Beach pohcf' probed tht
blaze and su bsequently arres1ed h11n on
ltvc count!i in\'olving arson and hurning
pro perty in order to collect 1n!iurance .
"\Yr'rc waiting to sec \1hat happens on
(hal one." explai ns fk:·putv S!:itc Atto r-
ncv Gl'nrra! Nit>hola~ Yos1
Jf convicted. Or Jl arll'l1us 1·ould br
~!ripped of hrs licrnsc and prrJfcss1ono1I
~landing In addition 10 rre('1v1 ni; a s1a1c
prison sentence
J Ir bccamr a n1cdical dor1rrr in l!Mi~
under a blanket la1v allo1\'tng osteopath"
\1'ilh sufflclen1 profe~s1onaJ expcrren{'c:
to practice under that na1nc .
The accusation filed by the slate allege~
Dr. llartelius provided lhe narcotil'
Demerol to a number or patients ~·ho
should not. have received it. "'ilh several
other violations involved .
One woman was rec1?ntly released from
lh~ California Rehabilitation Center af~er
three years of addiction, while another
died in 1968 after twice being comm it-
ted to a mental hospital.
The state alleges Dr. Hartelius used
drug.,-to seduce female patients and even
injected the husband of one with Demerol
to knock him out and allow a romantic
interlude with his wife.
OCC Picketing
Halted by Judge
A Superior Court judge halted picketing
at Orange Coast College Thursday anrl
ordered both sides In a building dispute
to air their grievan«s before him June
5 -in his courtroom.
.Judge Robert S. Corfman issued a
restraining order after S p e e d s p a c e
Corporation, Los Angeles. orficiah1 com-
plained U1at representatives of Jerry's
General Constructing and Plumbing
Company picketed administration offices
at the Costa Mesa o:a1npus.
Their :iiigns. notes the compl11int., warn-
C'd onlookers. "Don't buy Spcedspacc
buildings, they don't pay !heir bills,
unfair to taOOr."
Speed11pate wants $2.'i0,000 in d11n1ages
for the alleged actions of the defendants.
The firm recently successfully comf)f!ted
in bidding ror the construction of t~m
porary buildings al OCC.
out of the 1962 gubernatorial race on
doctor"s orders after he suffered a
hepatitis altaclc.
Before becoming chief executive of
the state, Knighl ~'as 1 i e u t e na n t
govemor. In' this capacity he served
as chairmal'I of the Californ ia Com-
ll)ission on Interstate Cooperation and
as a n1cmbcr on the State Landi; Com-
rnission . St.ale Disaster Council, Toll
Bridge Au lhority. and the Board ot
Hegcnts of the Unive rsity of California.
He se rved for 12 years as a superior
court judge in Los Angeles County prior
to that and Wa.5 active in ci vic affairs
during his career as a practicing at.
torney. lie also worked as a hard rock
1nine:r, a nc"•spaper reporter and was
a seaman aboard a subchasc r during
\Yorld \Var I.
Knight's fir st experience in politics
v.·as lo distribute handbills Jn the 1910
gubernatoriul cun1pa1gn of Hiram W.
.Johnson. He worked for the Johnson -for-
Presidt'nl ca1n paign headquarters at New
York Ci ty in 1920 and campaigned for
.Johnson in Los Angeles in 1924 when
!Sec KNIGHT, Pagt 1)
Senate Hopeful Sirrion
Raps Irvine City Plan
' N~n Stfnon. itepu~l!Caft · cioii\date
for fl.s. Se'nate Thursday : obarged the
Irvine Com pany with acting in bad faith
by plannint: a 50.00().acre city, Instead
of th e 10,000-acre one expected by the
University of California Regen!s.
Speaking in a press conference at
!he Newpor-ter Inn in Newport Beach,
Simon said, "f consider it an immoral
acL II may well be illegal, I don't
know. r haven't had time lo study it."
"I am deeply disturbed by the proposal
lo move the planned city of Irvine fron1
the long settled-on location adjoining lhc
Uni versity lo Increase the size of the
comtemplated population by more than
400 percent.
"The cl1a11gcs vk>l1te Ult eltar un.
dersta•ding by a1l patties Vfhen the
University and Slate agreeu lo p\att.
a major campus in Orange Coun!y. They
arc also contrary to the plans which
v.·ere drawn up then." he explained.
Sirnon charged the Irvine Company
had agreed Lo build a 10,000 -acre ci~y
imn1ediatcly surrounding the University
when the Slate agreed to the site.
Hc claims the city as planned nO\V
1vill create ''another UC Santa Barbara
and Isla Vista" by isolating the un iversity
and the. fe w surrounding housing areas.
In ad dition, Simon noled the possi bility
of the influx or industry and population
lo the "ew cit y creating a vacuum
1n surrounding cities.
I1·vi11e Executive Label s
Simo11 Cl1arge 'Political'
lr1'1nc Company vice !}fes1dcn1 Rav
Willson today labeled as political
rhetoric, a statement made. Thursd ay
hy Norton Simol't, Republi can candida t('
for lJ S Senate.
P la11ners Delay
Newport Center
Heliport Action
A decision on a helicopter landing
port on the roOf of a Newport Center
building was delayed Thursday night by
Ne"'JlOl Beach planning commissioners
until a demonstration can be given for
nearby Harbor View Hills residents ..
Ap1>lica11t E. 0 . RO<leffer said he would
arrange a helico pter landing at the
buildi ng sire so residents can hear how
much noise il makes, prior lo the next
Planning Commission meeting June 4.
F'lnal plans for the three-story head-
quarters or the Roderter Corporation.
P land developmtnl firm , are awaiting
determination of whether the heliport
will be approved. The building will be
in Newport Center near Fashton Island.
In another. action, planning C'lm-
mlssioners approved a ptnnit of C1rden
Hall private school at 1541 Monrovia
Ave. to add a gymnasiwn, swimming
poo l and an additional classroom
butlding.
P1aMing comml"k>ner~ also held O\'er
until their June. 11 meeting a request
or Ceottnela Bank In the high-rise lower
Al the Arches !\Jarln& Prooerty to conduct
drive-U1t(luah lelcvlslon banking in their
parking lot. Cenlinels Bank will.negotia1e
wllh the !\late Division of Highways
lo secure use of part of the highway
rlght-of-"•ay for ~dd\llonal parking to
offset. that Ulat would'"tle taken by U1<!
TV banklne.
S11no11 riuc.~11'lllf'd the Irvine. Company·~
1>!.:rns to builcl a :J,1,000-acre city adjacent
lo !he UC Irvine e;impus. Simon. who
1.;; a u111versi !y Rl'gcnt. said the original
agreement w11h the co mpany called for
;i 10,000-acrr i.:1!y su rrounding the carn-
PllS
\\'atson sa1cl !ht co n1pa11y v.·orked
tl1rouji;h the proper channels at the
university . "I \lo'ould have been an act
of bad farth not lo have gone through
the system set up by the Regents."
The Jrvh1e Company. in planning the
larger ciiy, worked with lhe campus
planning board and the campus architect
he said. '
UCl Cllancellor Daniel Aldrich sup-
rvrtcd the new plans in presenting them
to the Regenrs Grounds and Building
Committee on April 17, slating that he
f('lt lhere was no apparent confli ct
belWeen the original agreement and thC
proposed city.
.A meeting for university ad -
n1lnistrators and regents who have ex-
pressed concern over the new co ntrnunity
1s beine planned, he said.
"It's just unfortunate that a man run-
ning for U.S. Senate would choose to
use the rhetoric about planning and
slum!, it just confust& the public.''
~Yal.50n said. "As soon as the primary
ti; over , maybe ~·e can sit down and
talk about it."
8-cent Stan1p Seen
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Chalnnan
r:ale W. McGee (0-\Yyo.), sald today
tll~ Sen'ltC Post Office Comniittee pro-
bably wou\11 authorize an eight-cent
stamp 1s ptirl of a prui1al pay-reform
bill. McGee said the euthori1atlo11 would
nllow a two-cent for 33 percent) increase.
in the cost of a first class .stamp as
sought by lhr. NixQn Adminislrallon to
hel11 pay for a11 claht percent pay raise
lor postal employes Included i.n the Jame
Hurlh1u·t Okays
Free Us Permit
For Rock Fest
F'ree Us may be permitt«f to hold •
rock cOncert iri Newport.Beach after all.
City Manager llarvey Hurll>urt has rec-
ommended the City Council ltfonday ap.
prove a sound ampllfication permit prt>-
vided a special event permit is cleared
by police and the Parks, Br.aches and
Recreation Department.
An appUcation filed by Barry Weinberg
in !he name of Free Us. the Laguna Fret
Un!vcrsJty and Sherwood Forest asks
permission to hold the rock concert frorn
noon t.o 5 p.m. Saturday, June 6, at Bal-
boa Pie r Park.
Previous apphca lions were denied by
('1!}.' tounciJmcn on the grounds that sound
a1nplificalion is not permitted Jn he city
amplificat1nn and continuous use Of the
park can't be granlt!d to one group. only
use for single rvents.
\\'e1nberg paid a SIO fee with his 01p-
plication, the t harge for a non-profit
event at v.·hich oo admission wJll be
charged. Otherwise the fee is $25 for the
application and $25 ror the special event.
Stan Hirschberg ol the city li cense bu-
reau said Weinberg told him Free Us it
trying to get a rock band to donate its
time and they txpect attendance of about
300.
Orange Coast
"'enther
i'o1ake way for \he beach bound
traffic. The weekend \\'Ca ther p1c.
ture calls tor sunny skies and w•rm
temperatures. with inland resident~
fleeing readings in the 8'l"! for the
7~1sh coasta l climate.
INSIDE TODAY
Sonietliing new In lhr tludy
o} his tory lios beei1 addtd at
\\.'estmilultr Hioh Sc1100I whe-re
a per!onallztd course t.i "}.i,.
tori.cal research" is in opcro.·
t-ion. Ste toda11'1 lVeekender.
... u... If
(•11 ... llfl •
(l\«klflt U• 1 Cl1nll'M l1• ..
(""'" " ( .. H .. rtl lt
Ot~ffl H"lc~t I 141 .... i•I P... • lf'llllft(I 1•11
"-""('" !4
""" LH4t tt 11 Ma!lb9• •
M .. llfltl I ,,,,_ ... i.t H·H
~ 2 DAh. V PILOT
Candidates
Tell Stands
....
At Forum ..
Five Republica n cand.idales for the
3Sth Congress ional Distric t rl!ffered lit·
tie on is.sues at luncheo n mf'eling Thur:;-
day of the !'\ev.•porl Harbor chapter of
the California Ft'deration of Rl"publican
Women in Ne>A·port Beach.
'Each candidate -\Vil\\am Wilcoxen
or Laguna Beach. John G. Schmitz of
Tustin. John Ratlcree of Laguna Beach.
J ohn A. Steiger of Oceanside and Mag"ie
Meggs of Laguna Beach -gav~ a ten
roinute speech followed by a question-and.
answer perod .
About 60 \\'omen attended the luncheon
at the Ebel! C'l uh where they heard
UJe candidates take similar stands on
tb!. Indochina war, welfare and ca mpus
p~st.
-Mrs. Meg,i.ts told the ladies that women
Jn this country are treated as second
cla·ss citizen&. "When 1 talk abool women
power, l 'm not talkinR about ~x and
no bras I'm tal kiniz about getting the
same fi~ancial award fur the same jobs
as men," she stated.
Here's how the ·candidates stand on
gome other ilJ!IUes~
• On the move into Cambodia an said ~n did the right thin.11: and urged
the women to express their su pport or
th~ President's policies.
Schmitz Uf'll,ed the women to su pport
the President's Cambodia move, "not
because he's a Republican and not b;
cause he'' President, but beca.use,,he ·s
tight and he needs all our backing.
. ~ campus violence and protest, all
said they fa vor returnlng . i:iublicly sup..
norted cclleJtes and univers1hes to educa-
tional , not protest institutions. _
-Wilcoxen. in speaking en education .. em-
phasized the need for more vocauonal
t~·;'llne: in public schools.
On the 6ubject of campu.s v\olenec
Ttatterree advocate<l jailing violent. cam-
pUs protesters. "These campus ~oters
_;. Pnd that's just what they are, rioters
-should go to jail." he liaid.
-All <1f the candidates said the welfare
,.Ystem as practiced by . the John~n
;idministration was a failu re and Jn·
cheated they be.eked Nixon's proposed
t"tforms. . Wilcoxen spoke out strongly In backing
Nixon's welfare reform bill, ''As a deputy
Ol.st::rid Attorney. t had a chance to stt what our present welfare system
does _ paying families to break up.
1 think the President's reform ~ckage
is ane of the most comprehensive to
date."
Chinese Contest
Has Area Entries
Five Newport Harbor Hlgh School
6tudents will compete Saturday in a
Chi'lcse langu age contest in San Fran-
c1'ro.
:'They are:
:.._ Sue Currie, daughter of Mr. and
l\$rs. James L. Currie, 2427 Margaret
B"ive , Newport Beach.
:._ Janice WhiUng, daughter of Mr.
aPct Mrs. Bernard Whiting. 4 5 2
Broadway, Costa Mesa.
;__Charles Beck, so11 of t.1r. and f.trs.
a;.rton Beek Sr , 620 W. Ocean Front,
Ralboa.
:-Carol Parker. daughter of Dr. and
~rs, llarbison Parker, 3fl3 Ra mona \\'ay,
Q:Jsta Mesa.
-f.1allory Marqu el, daughter of Mr.
and r.trs. Winfield MarqueL, 2 7 9
Broadv.·ay, Costa Mesa.
'The students will be the OT'lly l1igh
sihoo! students from Southern California
ii'! the contest.
,The contest is sponsore<l by the
Carnegie Chinese Project at San Fran-
cisco State College. Expenses for the
'\ Studoo.ts will be paid by the proiect.
DAILY PILOT
OlllAllGC COA~T PUI LlloHING COMPAN't
RGberl N. Wtecl
f''<11c1..,1 and Pllbh•-
J1ck R. Cyrlt ._
v~ Pteidtnt """ ~ti ,,.,....,...
l~o"''' Kttvil
Eo,tor
lhom•I A. M ~rphi ftt
M l.,.1~ Ed1\or
lhGm t1 FGdufte
Ni ....,..., e.1<:11 Cl1r I.di!"'
H ... ,..rt heel! 01/i~t
, 22 11 W11I B1lbo1 lo~l tvt•cl
M1ili111 Adclr1ni P.O. 101 1175, '1 266)
Oilier Officn
Cll.llt Mt ... : l)O W•! lt1 $!tMI
l""'" 8t•t1'; m ~"'"' "~..,,u~ ~11"111>\11'"' !It.a-· 11111 ltocl\ l ""'Jtv••lf
.. fl titm111111t Jill t;CN'1h El Ct,..lflO R,111
MAGGIE MEGGS
From Page l
JURY •..
loss due to delay of development : 2.)
increased cost due to inflation and 3.)
run.her deluy in recreation facilities."
Grand jury members today refused
lo identity the colleagues v.•ho subscribed
lo the minority opinion or lo state the
number of U1ose who insiste<l on tJ1e
act.ion.
Today 's resolutlon was hammered out
by a grand jury which was, a source
close to the jury room commented, "real.
ly up tight abou t this Upper Bay issue."
And it is knov.•n that a great deal of timr
was spent in preparing a report that wa~
acceptable to the majority of the grand
jury.
The resoluti on is the result of the grand
jury's full inquiry into the Upper Ba:.-
issue and the taking of testimony frolT'
county supervisors, key county officials
experts in engineering and environmental
fields, representatives of the Irvine Com.
pany and many private citizens who
asked to be allowed to contribute to the
debate.
"The present moOO of the publ ic and
its concern with preservation of the en·
vironment would seem to preclude de-
velopment of the Upper Bay entirely for
real estate and yachting," the report
stales.
It goes en to point to the pos!ibilily of
"some partial development along these
lines, say up to 1he narrows. without s:ir;.
rificing the main goals or beaches anr1
recreation, flood control, wild life pres
ervation and pollution minimization.
"This," the report states "would allow
the present public lands to rise in ~a!u,.
whilt' still retaining most of the privatr.
ones."
'N eivport Seven'
Nou1 Five ; Two
Freed by Judge
The "Newport Beach Seven" lost the
nickname given them by local police
1'hursday when a Superior Court judge
agreed with two members of the group
that drug charges endorsed by the
Orange County Grand Jury should be
dismissed.
Judge William Murray frted Dou~las
Alan Potter. 22, of 314 de la Estrella,
San Clemente and fl.fartha Ann Glass.
21 , of 1807 W. Balbo3 Boulevard, Newport
Beach and dismissed charges that th_ey
\\'ere in µosseasion of marijuana with
intc'.ll to sell last J an. 12.
Their five companions in the group
arrest v•ere ordered to appear May 29
before Superior C.OOrt Judge James f.
.lurlf?e for the setting of rurther pro-
crcrlings. They are·
Kathlten M. Bahen. 23 . ol 310 35th ~t .. Newport Beach : Gary Edward Gray,
27, of 310h 35th SL, Newport Beach;
Ronald De.an Kniseley. 27. of 25231 fl.1onte
Verde, South Laguna : Tho1nas Duncan
Wheatley. 27. of 3604 Park Lane, Newport
Beach and Clayton Francis Johnson, 20,
of Whittier.
All were arrested at the Bahen home
and indicated by the Grand Jury on
~\arch 26.
Prorn Saturday
For Harbor High
Newport llarbor 11\gh School's annual
Junior-Senior Prom v.111 be held Satur·
day night t.1ay 23 at the Pacific Coast
Club in Long BeRch.
Music \\ill be provided by the bands
"Tile 13th Our" and "Head over lteels"
and the prom theme will be Valhalla.
Senior girls Anita Smith. Chris Pear·
ron Chris Rebard. Concie Ridgeway , Pa~ Sherman. Vicki Brown and 'fin11
Echternach are vying for the crow11 of
Prom Queen to be bestowed at the dance.
Wallace Gerrie
Heads OCHPA
Dr. \\!allace A. Ge rrie Of Ne'f'POrl
Beach \\'as named president. of the
Oranj;lc Counly Health Planning Associ-
tion lOCllPA) Thursday night.
Or Gerrie, 1901 \VtStcliff Drive, takes
over the medi cal group's leadership July
1 from outgoing president Wfndell T. ltlll
.Jr
Also elected ta ell',cutiv' posts st th!!.
i;rou p's annu11l meeting in the Orange
County CourthoU1'e were · J11.mes T. Work-
m~n. fir!!! vice pre!lident . Pnul t.1 While,
~t.>cond vice president : l1 lch11rrl IL Ken-
da ll. treasurer and Mr~. Ada M11e Harde·
m11n., se i;;retery.
The mt'('ting v.·as lhr M>Cond 11nnuo'.ll
confrrent'e of the newly.formed health
core ~roup.
OAI LY PILOT PM!n bf Let Pl~-
JOHN 0 . RATTERREE JOHN A. STEIGER WILLIAM WILCOXEN JOHN G. SCHMITZ
lrvitae vs. Newport From Page 1
Park Plans Frustrating KNIGHT ...
Johnson was again a presidentla! as-
pirant.
Born Dec. 9, 1896, in Provo. Utah,
Knight was the son of Jesse .Knight,
a lawyer and mining engineer, and Lillie
Milner Knight. The fan1 ily had come
west from New York in about 1850.
Mrs. Knight's father, John B. Milner
served on the Utah bench for 50 years.
Newport Beach city park planners
want the Irvine Company to designate
park sites in areas to be annexed to the
citj and Irvine Company planners want
lhe city lo put more n1oncy into their
parks.
An er:change of frustrations on park
planning was heard this week when mem-
bers of the city Parks. Beaches and
H.ecreation Commissio n mel at Irvine
Com1iany headquarters with lop Irvine
ai des.
The cily park commissioners particu·
la rly wanted to pin down where com-
1nunily parks of a size such as Mariners
Park are to be located in the Harbor
View •fills area and other areas dov.•n-
coast reserved for anner:ation to the city.
"It seems each time the Irvine Com-
pa ny comes lo us with a small develop-
1nent most of the planning already is.
done." city park commissioner David
Tingler said. "We want something other
than a small-3trip park that may be vis-
ually beautiful but not too useful."
Commission Chairman Alexander "San..
<ly" Cameron chided the Irvine Company
planners for "small tract encroachment."
Keeps 'Ent La119hing
The city commissioners want larger
community parks in addition to small
neighborhood parks. Thei r standards call
for one community park of at least 15
acres for every 10,000 people, although
they have not come close to meeting the
slandard in older areas of the city.
Knight had a record a( great popularit y
with voters of both parties, and was
liked by bot h labor and management.
In the 1954 primary election for ~vernor
bis pluralities set new records for volume
of votes in California.
Hicks Discu sses Drugs, Irvi ne Company Vice President for
PlaMing Rlchard Reese said the city
needs to earmark more money for parks
:.nd that he doesn't think Lhe present
building er:cise tax is sufficient. He said
the Irvine Company opposes a proposed
interim three-year increase in excise tax
rates because the city budget shows 91
percent of th at money is to be spent on
fi re stations.
In the 1954 general election he was
elected with a majority of 551 ,151 \'Otes
-a greater margin than that received
by aay other candidate for state-wide
office with major party opposition.
Nudity in Campaign Talk
The white·haired former Calilomia
chief executive. stepped aside under
pressure in 1957 in the gubernatorial
contest in favor of Sen. William F.
Knowland, (R-Calif.), who was defeated
by Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown
in the subsequent election. Knight ran
instead (or U.S. Senator aga i ns t
Democrat Clair Eni;tle, but Josl.
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of fflt D1H1 ~!IOI 1!111
Nudity. narcotics and campus dissent
emerged Th ursday as electioneering
Or.:inge County Disl~ct Attorney Cecil
A. Hicks discussed Jaw and order before
the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce..
Reviewing the ramifi cations or each
-especially student activism -the
young DA fighting his first election cam·
paig~ following appointment in Jgf)G had
Chamber members in stitches at limes,
Drug abuse wasn't ro funny.
But Hicks, \11hose job "''ill be at sta~c
June 1 when Oca.nge County vot.e.r5 go
to the polls, sparked gales of laughter
in discussing UC Irvine and Cal St.ate
f'~ullerton on protest factions.
He displayed copies of a Mw.gai:ine
Production student's final credit work
-for tho3e \\'ho cared to look clo sely
-with an illustration of 22 nude and
hairy persons waving individual fingers
in th e air.
The cover contains an e x p I i c i l
message.
•' Som ct h i n g-0r-other you, Gov .
Reagan," explained the District Attorney.
"Use yout imagination a little, folks."
"There are some funny-looki ng people
i11 that picture ," he remarked, "They
definitely need clothes."
Several female militants, close perusal
seems to suggest are indeed un sulhed
by the YMCA Stirn 'n Trim class or
the Weight Watchers· diet regimen.
"Irs enough to tum a man quel'r ."
he observed.
!licks conceded the magazine prcp;ired
nnd publishe<l for credit hy CSF studen t
Bruce Bagnol i wa s professionally done
work, while Bagnol i claims the nude
part was done withou t his knot\•ledge
or consent by others.
"He got an A on it." the. ad said.
Bagnoli clain1s the publication showing
the history of recent radical movements
at CSF' was emb!ai.oned v.·ith the Naked
22 by militants after the original edition
\Vas printed .
"You have to disagree ~·ilh the
pl':i!osophy, but it was pretty well d<lne.''
Hicks told Chamber members in 1he
general meeting at the f\1esa Verde Coun-
try Club.
Hicks also told of a debate involvini::
himself and activist students from UC
Irvine in a forum chaired by con-
troversial former campus SOS leader
1'1ichael Krisman. now a paid ad -
ministration coordinator.
"I said -in words to this effect
-that I didn't see what academic
freedom or free speech hlld to do with
bre8king windows, v.•riting dirty words
Oil the wall ," he expla ined.
He also asked how they cou ld justify
the fact one UC employe had his hands
blown off by a bomb and anolher was
killed as a result o; dissent.
Hicks quoted thr reply:
"Why should we cart\ when there
are unpaved roads in Texas? ..
''I didn 'l know whether to laugh or
cry ." he said.
''The point I'm trying to make is
that they mu.'it understand we can't
IKE'S PUTTING
GREEN GOES OUT
WASHINGTON (AP) -The late Pre81 -
dent owtght D. Ei!!enhower·s ramoll3
White. House putting green Is gone .
The smooth green mound was installed
in 1954 by the U.S. Golf A:i;;sociatlon
as a gift l-0 Ei!lenhower. an avid golfer.
The green required constant main·
tcnancc, a Wh ite House l!JX>kesma n T>ald,
and Presid ent Nixon, an occas!onAI golf·
('r, did not use it.
have two sets of laws, one for campuses
and one for off-ca mpus. . .one (or
students and one for non ·students.
"l think we hcive to make a poin t
-nol by cracking heads." District AL-
torney Hicks contin ued .
Firc 111en on Gnar<l
During Gas Break
Newport Beach firemen stood by for
about t11.·o hours this morning \\"hile South-
ern Counties Gas Compan y repairmen
lYorked on a broken gas main at 26tb
Street and Nelvport Boulevard.
A lire department spokesman said an
<'ngine was at the scene fr om 10 a.m. to
noon while th e repairs were being n1ade .
The line apparently was ~rO"k!'il acc!dent-
ally by construction workers.
Reese said he does n't feel that is an
appropriate expenditure of the fund be-
cause fire statinns will be supported at
the ballot box but open space and rec-
reation usually fare worse.
Reese agreed the Irvine Company's
southern sector general plan prepared
in 1964 does not show park locations in
!he coastal area Newport eventually is
expected to annex.
He said now that the central sector
msster plan for the new city of Irvine
has been completed attenion or IrvinP,.
planners will be refocused on the south-
ern sector plan.
He faulted the city for not having
prepared a general plan. "What I hea.>:
you sayi ng is you have a responsibilitv
as a body ilnd you don·t have the informa-
tion and that is distressing,'' Rets~ saift
10 lhe par~. 'beaches and retre.atl Oi'I com·
missione rs.
. . .
\\'hen he entered the 1962 gubernatorial
race. Kn ight touched off a political war
<1f charges and counter charges v.•!th
then Vice President Richard M. Nixon
as he announced his entry ln the contest.
Knight made it plain he felt Nixon
v.·as largely responsible for his elimina-
tion from the 1958 ract. 11e accused
Nixon of threatening, in 1957, to cam-
paign against him in every California
county if he opposed Knowlaod. He said
later a Nixon emissary had offered him
any job in the state if he would withdraw
from the forthcoming primary.
Nixon ca1\ed the charge "false and
libelou~ on its face" and denied ever
making any promises of any ki nd to
Knigbt or any other lndlY\dual3 to keep
them out of· !he race
.•
DRAPERY
SALE!
CUSTOM MADE WITH A WIDE SELECTION OF
QUALITY IN TERIOR DESIGN FABR ICS AS MUCH
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I riO.iy M,jJ 12, 1910 OAILV PILC"' tJ
Arabs Hit B~-, Kill 7 Children
. ' 1
By UolLed PreM llternallOaal
Arab guerrillas ambushed
an Israeli school bus on the
~banese frontier today, kill·
i:ng seven children and thrte
adults in an auack that reduc·
ed Israeli Premier Golda Meir
to tears. Mothers of five of
the t'hildren were injured in
a truck wreck laler while
speeding to the scene.
Israel retalia~ed against
Lebaoon by shelling four
border villages, killing six
• perliOO& and w<>undiJ1i 21 , A W mumbled "horrible, hor-
Lebaneae military spokesman T ible" as she wiped away her
iald in S.lrut, l~aeli com-,te1r1.
mandos attacked an Egyptian , Witnesses said a truck
!lOO Sea naval base durinc ( which was speed ing to the
the night and planes hit Suez Salad government hospital
Canal positions tode.y. with mothers of fi1·e of the
Mrs. Meir wail talking with injured children crashed off
two Dutch newsmen whtn the road two hours later. in.
word was received. that seven juring the five women, three
children aged six lo eight were of them seriously.
killed along with three adulls ,.. Arie Eliav. sec retar y
and that 21 persons were gentral of the Israeli Labor
v.·ounded. They said she wept party, said in London the
1ehoolbus 'IN painted bright
ye!~ tad ft would have beer.
lm Ible for the guerrillas
to have hlt It at such close
range by mistake.
"The reaction I think will
be very bar.sh," he said in
a BBC interview. "We will
have lo go after I h e
murderers and the killers
where they are. , .it'!! not
the Lebanese that killed the
children. It's the Palestinian
Arab terrorists."
An lsradl spokesman said }
Al'lb guerrillas (1>1lowed up '
the~ bazooka and rUk atlack
on the schoolbus with an at· ;
tack on an l!areli army patrol
near the Arab village of Rha·
jar in lhe foothill! of Mount
Hermon, 'Wounding two Israeli
soldiers . This is north of the
area where the bus wa~ at·
lacked.
Prot1dly Tliey He111
At the world 's largest flag company A1ncrican flags arc in full production a s
Old Glory contin ues to occupy a prominent place in mass demonstrations
ac ross th e country. Literally wrapped up Jn their \1ork are these two cn1ployes
of th e ,<\nn in Flag Company, \vhose flags fly in United Nations Plaza and in most
countries around the \l'Orld -as weU as on the moon \vhere they were planted
by U.S. a stronauts.
Nixo11 Nixes
Using F unds
For Busing
WASHINGTON I API
Pre.s1denl Nixon ;ipparrntly
docs not "''ant any of his pro-
posed $f)()() n1ilhun ror school
desegregation lo be used for
busing student s in attempts
to aeh1eve racial bala nce .
A last 1ninulc change in
the Presidcnl's integration
,;latemenl to Congress Thurs-
day said fund s should not "be
extended to establish or ma in·
tain the transportation of
~tudents to at'hieve racial
balance."
Nixon al s:i s:.iid mon l'y
should not be used to prornote
Jorced raci;il busing in school
when the sole purpose is lo
eliminate de f<t cto segregation.
Howeve r. the overall intent
remained cloudy . An official
closely associated with the
legislation said. "All we arc
saying is that the federal
government can·t force any
de facto segregated district
ro bus. 'fhcy can use the
money to bus volunta rily."
Sextuplets Born , Die
Within Hours i11 NY
NE\\I YOH!\ 1UPll -A 1
pretty i'Je\I' York mother ll'ho
had been taking fertilily drugs
gave birth to sextuplets 1'hurs·
day night. The lil'e girls and
a boy. born three mon ths
prematurely and weighi·ng less
than a pound each. di ed within
seven hours.
Mrs. Susan Danoff , 27, and
her Madison Avenue lawyer
husband, Martin, had been ex-
pecting triplets. Mrs. Danoff
fe ll ill Thursday afternoon and
"'as taken to the New York
University Medical Center.
Her husband, 11•ho had been
1vorking on a case in subu rh1-1n
Long Island. ru shed to the
hospital as soo n as he found
OUI.
He was in the waiting roon1
when a man came ou t and
said : '·Some gal's given hirth
to sextuplets." Danoff said ii
took a moment to register
and lhen he shouted · "~l~
God, that's my wife."'
He said they understood
from the beginning the sex·
tuplets had linle chance flf
tJPt T1leP~O!o
SIX AT ONCE
Mrs. Martin Danoff
survival. They were horn
within a lG-nl\nule period
hetween 6.07 and 6 17 p.n1
~:DT. Four died \1·ith1n twn
hours of deliver~.
Kent State
Cir] Found,
Going Home
GeorgUJ Marchers Continue
Despit.e Death Plot Rumor
A brief announcement from
the Israeli army said com-
mandoa with air support sla.t;·
cd a predawn commando al·
lack on the Egyptian naval
base al Bur Safaga. on !he
Red Sea 240 miles south of
the Suez Canal and returned
aft.er demolishing "seve ral'"
military objectives.
Egypt denied there had bei:n
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -such an attack. The rny.slery girl photograph· FORSYTll , Ga. (Af'l -the 26 mJIC's from Forsyth olher persons in r a c I al Later today the Israeli air
ed leaning O\'er lhe body of Civil rights demonstrators un· lo Griffin during the day, then disorders at AuguSla , Ga. force sLruck Egyptian military
a student shot down at Kent daunted by rejXlrtS of an alleg· move into Atlanta early Satur-Report.5 of I.he alleged plot installations along the Suet
Sta te University has been eel plot to kill one o( them day for a ma ss rally climaxing to kill one of the marchers, Canal for 75 minutes as part
found by juvenile authorities prepared today for the next-to" nearly a week of protest 1 ,..,... , __ M d or the continuing Israeli cam· and identified as a JS.year-old disc osed by uvv. 1JC2ter a • paign to wi""' out Egyptian last leg of a symbolic l24·mile against four carnpus killings d d · 1 ~ runawciy from Opa Locke, h 1.i ox ur1ng a news con erence air defenses and keep Egypl n1are across midd v·Georgia. at Kent, Ohio, two at Jackson, Fla. The group planned to rover Miss., and the deaths of six Thursday in Atlanta, largely from rebuilding them. A
Juvenile officials said she were di scounted by their spokesman said all planes
is Mary Ann Vecchio, whose l leaders. returned safely .
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank R 'c -, Arab guerrillas ba sed in
P. Vecchio, recognized her in uss1'a,' r1't1'c Se1'zed Hoaea Williams, vice presi-Lebanon admitted they had a ~·idely published Associated dent of the Southem Christian ambushed a bus but said it
Press photograph. Leadership C 0 n fer enc e • v.·as full of "Zionist experts"
Miss Vecchio ta lked ·with l\10SCOW (AP); -The KGB book, banned in lhe Soviet described the reports as and made no mention thal.
th "absurd." ~le said l\1addox d her n1other and fa er b Y s ecret jXllice dr agged Union, "'·as smuggled abroad it was a schoolbus. Th ey sai te lephone Thursday night and , and publi~hed in the Uniled was "trying to i n s t i gate they killed or wounded 50
told !hem: "I ~·ant to go Andrei Amalrilt, outspoken Stat('s and a number or other violence.'' Israelis.
hoine.·• young author of '·\Vill the counlries. Maddox said he planned a The Lebanese anny
Her parenls said they would Soviet Union StU'vive Until Taking it s till(' from George major increase in the number spokesman said Israeli guns
con1e to Indianapolis aRd ac-1984?". fron1 his country home Or11·ell's "1984''. the book says of state trocipers observing the opened up at 8:30 a.m. on
company her to Florida. Thursday, His ivife said she the Soviet Union is a march because of reports that the· villages of Bint Jbeil and
Miss Vecchio said that after suppoSf's he is in Pt1oscow's stagnating Slavic einpire that someone either now among Yarmoun. two miles and one
running from Florida .she Lubyanka Pri&on. 11·i!1 eventually collapse, pro-the marchers, or who .would mile respectively from the
hitchhiked and begged money ''He was expecting it.'' hably after a war "'ith Com· join them later, planned to border. lie said a child. a
and food. In Kent, Ohio, she Giselle Amalrik said. f..1rs. munist China. kill a Negro demonstrator or woman and a {llan were killed
said . she heard there was go-Amalrik said the police did An1alrik. "'ho is J11ow 32, start some kind of violence. in Bint Jbeil, 10 person~
ing to be an antiwar protest not tell her the charges 11·a~ arrested in 1965 Cln a Maddox also said he was "'ounded and 30 home :!I
and "'ent to the university against her1 husband But it charge of parasitism and preparing to alert the National damaged. He put the Yannoun
campus. was considered hkely that he spent almost two years in Guard for duty in Atlanta dur· toll at one woman killed and
"\Ve were sittiRg in front v.«1.s picked uP because his Siberian labor camps. ing the mass rally Saturday. eig ht persons wounded .
of a building chanling when c-~~~~:E~=~==~=~=================================-· the guardsmen moved Oil US r
\l'i!h gas," l\1iss Vecchio said.
"'\Ve ran around the building ,
1hrn dov.•n to an open firld,
or maybe ii was a parking
lot ."
\Vhen lhe guardsn1en began
shoot iJ1g. she said . •·1 rolled
dnwn the hill and tried lo
hide behind a neWspapcr
stand. That's when I saw the
man go down. T raR over
(O him."
Three other students. t\\'O
of them coeds. also were kill·
ed.
~lcd11r1'ranf:d1J .~tvled compaci
consolf' in Jt:enuinC dark oak or
Ptx'an vrnettS :ind hard11·ood 1olid~.
Dani.th Mockrn
Da nish ~toclem romp•ct
console in gen11ine oil
finished \\'aln11t \"eT1ttr1
and hard11·ood solids.
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Prices reduced on lers and
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Offer ends May 31st!
Wh.ile the rc!>t of I.he auto industry was cry-
ing the blues, more South em Californians
bought Plymoulhs this spring than at any
time in recent history. lo celebration o[
~ impressi ve sales figures and to keep
1he ball rolliog, our factory has made
a \"ail:ib le to all Southern C:iliforn i3
dc:ilcrs srecial price incc n11vC"s on 82 out
of their 87 mod<'.'IS.
Wilh this added ammunition, your
Chrysler Plymouth dealers arc goin g on a
one-month selling spree .. , selling Blue
Plate specials. They're out to ffiO\'C every
car in sh)Ck! Thaf.s \'fhy if you buy a new
Chry~Jc.r Clr Plymouth bct"''"c:n f..·fay l ~I
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• DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE
Schmitz vs. Wilcoxen
The DAIL)' P ILOT norn1ally does not 111ake en-
dorsements or recommendauons in partisan prlrnary
elections. These ru noff s are. properly . funcllons of the
political parties, t h e i r opportunity to pick the best
man or their group to face opponents in the Novrnlbcr
genera l election.
In one primary race , ho,,•ever , '''e 1ro11ld like to
make some obse rva tions .
Thal race is in the 35th Congression<ll D1:.tr1c·t. the
Orange County-Sat\ Diego County D1str1<:t !iC'rved by
Rep. James B. Utt until his death this fi1arch. It run s
Crom Highway 39 in Huntington Beach to La Jolla.
The districl is, and all\•ays has been. overv,rheln11ng·
ly Republican. It is so n1uch so that "'hoevt•r 1s 110111-
inated by that party on .Jun e 2 is, in effect. lhe \v1nner
for the seat in Congress And that Co ngressman v.1il1
represent some 800.000 citizens -includini:: the Presi-
dent of the United States. \1•ho.se horne address is llO\I'
in the county of his birth.
T\.\•o Re"pub lican candidates emerge a s strongr~t
contenders in the primary election: .John G. Sclunitz,
who is stepping do\1'n from his position as state senator
to seek the congressional seat, and V.'illiam \Vil coxen ,
a 38--vear-old Laguna Beach attorney.
Republicans, come June 2, have to de c id c if
Schmitz is the m a n to represent them in view of:
-His intransigent refusaJ to support Governor
Reagan on budge1.ary matters.
-His refusal to campaign in behalf of R ichard
Nixon in the last presidential campaign.
-l lis much-discussed Jack of cooperation \\'ill1
city and Orange County authorities on matters requir·
ing legislative attention.
-His continued membership in 1.he John Birch
Society, despite that group's bitter persona l attacks
on President Nixon and national Republican leadership.
-J.Ji s alliance with Democra tic leaders in lhc Cali·
for nia Senate.
Aftermath of
The Guns at
Kent State
You buy a ticket and board a plane
for Miami, Florida, but you find yourse1£
landing in the airport in Havana, Qlba.
Your plane has been hijacked.
You pay your tuition and sign up
f o r a c o ur!e in
Shakespeare, bul
you flnd yourself
listening to lectures
ind rap sess ions on
lhe criminality o!
1he Amer ican role
1n Southeast Asia .
Your education has
bren hljacked .
"'Th is camp11s,"
~ays a faculty reso.
lution pr esented in almost identical
language at San l"rancisco State, the
University of California at Berkeley, and
UCLA, ''is on strike lo re<0nstilute
t~ university as a center for organizing
against. the war in So\Jtheasl Asia as
\veil as racism at home "
ACROSS Tll E COUNTtlY Hie tide of
emotion and lhe energy ol the young
organizers -and the <1ttent1011 paid
by TV and lhr pn~~s -h;n e bee n
so enorn1ous that campus aftl'r campus
ha s been swept along to a suddenly
changed destin<Jt1on. College presidents
;is well as sludents and fa culty have
accepted a change of night plan in
do1.ens of inslitulions. From now on,
say the hijackers, this college is an
instrument of political change.
Up to nov.·, "restructuring I h ,..
universilles ,'' ''redirecting education.''
"making education relevant," have been
!=-logans of lhl' radical aclivists, v.•ho
have only been sporadically successful
in swttping along their groups of
rollowers. The disruptive actions of sil-1ns
and bombings \\'hlch these lofty slogans
"'ere used to justify were dttply
repellanl to most students and citizens
Most ol. the :ilud ent fla re-ups burned
themselves out v.ith more or less damage
to thcir institutions and considerable
Quotes
'Bob Ru chhoft, Loni:-Beach, replying lo
critl c1 or punishment of c 11 mp u ~
dunonstrators -"'Docs rxpect111g a
reasonable degret or respon.~i bilily from
the parlakers of a fre e education create
an un reasona ble pressu re on lhrm~ ,\~
mere members of society they owe some
degree of obedience to the law."
Blondzetttr Cowlhran, L.A. -"Y.'e
must find some way of getting motorists
to use their signal lighls as requ ired by
C&lifomia Motor Vehicle laws. Too many
Jives have been lost that could have been
saved had the drivers done this."
Robert J, HaYlgburst, Department or
Ed.cadtll, Unlverill)' of Cbicago -''The
most Import.tat thtni the schools ean
do i:i to develop. try oot and evaluate
a variety o( school and pre·school pro-
grams that nt In wHh the modves or
dlaadYantaged children. youth a"d their
parents."
l..oul• S. Nelson , san Quentin warden.
no difflC\IJUe$ of rebabllllall«in -'Nn
hospital. no educational S)-'!lltm, no
buslhess entcrpri!lt', no other in11tilution
011 the lace of the earth has lhe. ~me
Pntr•nct requirements 1.s do o u r
[Jrl~Onll."
Dear
Gloorny
Gus:
If Dr. Spock wrote a book on how
lo train a dog, the dog wouldn 'l
end up on a leash, the owner
v.·ould.
-C. B. •
T~11 !Miu.. r"41Klt rttdtri' .,!.,.., "''
111tt1Mr1lr !flftt "4 tflt ftews•'"'· Sor>I YMlr ..t _.,, t. Olttmr Oui. D<IUr l'lltl.
damage to the careers of lhcir
presidents.
B1Jl' THE GUNS AT Kent have ac-
complished what the radical student
leaders coold not. An issue has been
found to unite all these a!SOrted protest:-;
-and do1.ens o( campuses have been
•·redirected.'' laken over or shut rlown .
The idea that the universities arc going
to lead the nation to peace t1a s 11s
obvious appeal. In addition to idea lism,
it appeals to an even stronger emotion,
the need to be at the center of something
important. What is more important th.an
thf. peace of the world?
In the face o( so much ideali!':m and
dedica tion it seems crass to ask what
all the rap sessions across the country
are accomplishing. Any numlx'r o(
educators have solemnly announced that
!here i:i now more real educa tion going
on on their campuses under the
"reconstituted" course than undl'r the
normal program, and that parenl!'i
shouldn't \.\'Orry that their childrrn aren"t
~l.'tt1ng their parents' money·:-; wort h.
\\'l11ch makes one \\'Onder about the
previous quality of the l.'ducation.
S0~1E OF Tiit-_; d1seuss1ons of rroh-
lems or pea ce and V1e\n;un obl"IOll~l.v
eoutd be valuable -11 undertaken b.V
professors with so111ctl11n,i: lo oHcr both
in information and inlelle1:tu:-il honesty .
Bu l they can also lie ~hc<'r setr-
dramatizing nonsen~c "I 1:an ·l go on ,"
one professor of .~oe1ology announced
ro his class in dran11111c tonl:'s nl grier
on ~1av II, as hr ITif'L his f\ass. But
he ma°nagccl lo. for <•n htJ11r. on the
suh1ecl of CambQ(t1<1 , about \\•hich, one
of his students said. he \~·;is even Jes.~
infotmed lhan the teacher of philosophy
who had givi;>n a similar lecture to
his class the. hou r before
Or these ··reconstituted"' cnu rscs can
be. the crudest form of thought control,
\Vith conclusions arrh•ed al in arf1•nnc e,
1nany unqualified and opinionated pro·
fessors are force-fC<"ding their students
on \.\·hat is now fas! becoming the only
line or "correct thinking"' on American
cam puses.
WASTED CLASS HOURS, postponed
graduation, indoctrination in place of
education -thesr <1re serious enough.
~~ven morl.' serious is 1hc acccpt11ocr
of v.·hat the "recorstitullon" doctrine
will do to our univ£'rSilics.
1\rc universities af1Cr thls lo txi a
"capon for any political group v.'h1ch
can capture thl'rTI '' \\'hcrr is the
1\mencan As.~ociat1on of Univrrsil y
l'rotessors in all th is''
\\'hat are they ,i:o1ng to do when con·
strucliOfl worker.~ lake over a n d
"re<'Onst1lule" Pace College in New York
arcord1ng IQ their vie\\'S of \.\'hat educa·
lion shnuld be~
For years fa culties have rought a
cour11geous fight against ''poli1ic11 I in·
lerftreocr" Academic freedom. the
liberty to teach and seek !he truth .
the "tcarlrss sifting and winnowing ,·•
are pov.'crf11I rights \.\·on by our profe~s 1on
over centuries or struggle . The 1ruth
ill only to he discoverl.'d by 11·!r:i.~ 1n
free C<>fnpr1111on with each oth('r. Any
political do.11 n1<1 n.1rrower than !he fr ee
frame of demoerte cy il.!ie lr 1<; :in fine.my
of the $C&rch for tn.llh .
Hy s. I. ll:1y11kf1\I :I
11rt.•ldcnl
San franci~to St:1tt Co llei;e
The Us·t goes on. G"enerally, our conclusio~ is that
Schmitz is a reactionary independent. more allied (and
he has so 1ndicated J with the philosophies or George
\Vallace than \v1 th the philosophies of Richard Nixon
and Ronald Reagan.
In view of that. Republicans n1ay \Vant to take a
hard look at 1vhat kind of congressman Scl11nitz 111outd
n1a ke <J nd ho\\' effective he would be.
Repullllcans should consider the ir(lt1ica! crnbar·
ra~!"1nent il \\'OUld create 1f they elected s uch a 1nan
in the P.rcsident's O\\'n {·ongressional district.
\Vilcoxen strikes us as a right-of-center candidate
co1nmit!cd to ;i philosophy of reason. Ile worked hard
tor Nixon 1n the last campaign, and he has den1on·
~!rated leadership and understanding on local to-the·
point issues-.
F'or ins tance. \\'1\coxen ·
-Is respon:-iih lt· 1uorc lh<111 anv olhcr ~1nglc pt•rson
for attc111lon focu si ng on saving Salt Creek bec1ch for
the publ!r I Ile \.\'as a 1nc1nber of the Sier ra Club before
rnost anyone had heard of the 1vord ··ecology"\
-l·la:-; shO\.\'n intelligence and comprehension nf
educational matters a:-; a men1ber of ·the Laguna Beach
school board.
~ I-las a working-level view of our lf.l\.\'·i.lnd -or<ll•r
problems. thanks to three years spent HS investigator
and deputy prosecutor in the Orange Cuurily Di~tr1ct
.1\Uorncy 's offirc.
On national a nd intcrnallonal i ~~ues. \Vilcoxcn t.lfl-
pears to stand just about where President Nixon stands.
While this may not win him many Democratic voles
cornc Novernber, it certainly should a ssure Republicans
that they haven't bou ght a lerl\1•inger in the primary
if they cast their lot \Vith \Vilcoxen.
'Jr,. --"'
I .lt1r1
I " •llJ!~I
\//
On the basis of the records. 11 11•ould appear lh<'
great bulk of Orange County Republican:-; 11'ho ~t<:1 nrl
\\Pith Gove rnor Reagan and President Nixon on 1no~l
matters of political policy woul d be be~t. representeC
in \Vashington in these times by \.Vllliam \Vilcoxcn.
'Mo ue along there folks. TIW> is a restrict,ed neighborhood.'
N
..
Ca111bodiatt Res11lts May Alter Kre11tlin Mittd
Russia Holds l(ey to Vietnam Peace
\\"ASHINGTON -A logical move by
the Nixon Administration now, or as
soon as the CamOOdian operation is con1·
p!eted, would be a new proposal for •
peace assuring the neutrality of lndo-
Chi na.
President Nixon surely will nnl
overlook this opportunity lo get a de.sired
diplomatic as well
as military result
from his great gam.
ble.
How successful he
\l'ould be in th is re-
spect would pro~
ably depend in large
1neasure on how
Ru~ia judges the
outlook in Vietnam
following rhe Cam·
bodian incursion.
If RU!)'Sia Judges L/1~1 the all1e<I 01X'r;,.
lions in Can1obodia ha ve destroyed frrr
an extended period of time the secure
logistical base of the North Vletni'l1TJe!):c
for operalions against South Victr1an1 ,
the Krem lin leaders may be more wlllinf:\
than before lo th1nk in terms nf <I
setUl'ment.
J\IUCH Of PRESJDENT Nix on ' "
rhetorjc appears lo be beamed lo\.\'arci
Moscow, and his melhods \\" e t c
calculated to be those whi ch would 1111-
press the Soviet leaders wilh his deter·
mination and resourcefulness <ind
thei r own inability to calculate his action~
in ad vance. His use of such terms as
Ri c hard Wilson
··decisivf' acuon " and his stilll'menl lh:il
!he Un11ed States would not Ix· hum1l1a1r~t
as a hclplcs.~ gnint \vere intended to
be hea rd in il10S('0W. and thry were
It v.·as as ir the Presidenl v.·ere saying ·
"Look. J'm lrying to gPI Olli or Vietnam
But llll·rr <ire l1m1ls ix'yond v.·hith I
1:<1nnot gh. r sa\v !hr opl)Ortun/ly liJ
rnakc 11 casi<'r and s~tf•·r 1(1 gi·I Oht
t:iy ~l l'lk1 ng into Cambocha. Yon ha1c
o;ccn the rt'su lts l)o you not think 1t
1~ tune 10 coopcralc :;o thal thr lJn1tr1t
~\ates l·a n grt 0L1l and lea\"C behind
a rcasnnahly [nlcrab!e situation?"
rr !he H11s~1:1ns should finally Judge
lh;il the lo~s or the. sanctuaries in Can1 ·
l;11d1 ;1 crctllC~ a worsened mdi!ary
ou1lnok lur 1h1 ·ir North Vietnamese
1•l1c11ls 1hcy n111y finally SCP the wi~dom
ol' gr;i11ti n~ !hr L'niled States a dignirie~
cxil frun1 \11ct11;1rn
\V llAT A PIT\' IT IS. therPfore, lhal
Presiden t i\"ixnn is not being given thr
lullcst ro~~tb!t· 1:hance lo exploit th1:>
upportun11y l\'1thoul being shackled by
t·olll.'gia1e prote-.1 and senatorial moves
In hum1h:1lc• :incl embarrass him in the
r~cc11t1n11 of Lhc most creative mo1·e
~r l tn rnd thC' 1v;ir_
l hcrl' 111!1 be plen1y of lime to hold
Nixon to account if he !ails. He h.is
se1 time limits ~o 1vhich he can be
l\cld t•l arcount 01 what ust• is it,
lh~'ref0re. tu ;1dOpl con gr c s .c; ion a I
a111cndn1~nts 111tcndcd to 1)revent hi1n
from "retuning" troops 111 Cambodia
ur {'Onlinu1n~ to supporl South Viet·
n:i rnrsl' opcrauons to close I he
sanctuaries?
These mov<'s 11'ould on ly perpetuate
!hr delusion in Hanoi and Moscow that
Am eri ca "'ill pro1 r to be another France
and cave 1n from the pressure of internal
prc~su rcs of v.·;ir opposilion
Tht!'i "·nuld in1pedr any n1oven1cnt by
tit<' Srivirl Union lr111J nt r e~pondin~
f<.1\"orably 10 !he British proposa l (or
.1 n!'.'w C.1.'ncr;i ronfercn1:r wh ich 1v:1s
seconded over the last weekr.nd hy the
foreign ministers of eleven east Asian
<1nd Pacific non-Communist nations,
With nr without this iinped\ment,
ho11'cvcr. Nixon i.~ in a position to initiate
new proposals base<! upon hi s peaPe
pl;1n oullined on May 14. 1969. This
proposal included comJ)lcte \1"it.hdrawal
of all ou1.~ide forces within one year.
a ceasf'·firr under international
super1•ision and tree eleclions under in·
ternational supervision 1\•ith the Con1-
ml1nists participating in !he: organization
and conduct of the elections
THE PRESIDENT SAID lhen and
\1•ould say now Iha! these terms are
nego\Jable ; everything is negotfabll', he
said, ex cept the right or the people
of South Vietnam to determine • their
own future .
This is the most generous offe r fnr
a w;ir settlement ever n1at.!e . includ ing
all the ol'fers in the Johnson ad·
ministration v.·hile Clark Clifford Wl!S
.~ecret;.iry of defense. Clifford "s proposal~
now are riot so drfferent from what
Nixon is alre ac;iy doing, \l"ith I.he very
import:int exception that Clifford's pro·
posals offer very httle inducement. and
no leverage, for a negotiated settlement
during the \.\'ithdraw al process
CHfford left his defense post bel;ev1n1t
lha l the South Vietnamese generals wr.r<'
··suckering'' us ul!o a permanent war
and he evidently ha ~n 't changed hi.,
111\nr! but his proposals rnr JUSt endini;:-
it all Jack the ereativity nf Ni:.:on'i
ITie thod .
TIUS CREATl\'ITV I~ ba~c·d 111 l<trgc
part on the fa r t thn l Hussi:i turn1.~hr<;
mom of the mil ilill"\I rqu1pn1rn! ror North
Vietnam and has l11c s!rO!l[::t'~I influence
on Hanoi's policy 1'hr ln.~s of the
sancttiaries and closing thr. port of
Sihanoukvi!Je could s1gn;1t to ll1c Hu ssiiln!I"
that their client has ln sl his Se{'u re
base and prospects tor th(' }ear ;ihead
are no t promising.
Under those rondil ion." President Nix·
on's proposals of ,\lay It 1969, as he
may now mcxlHy or txte.nd lhcm. may
look more att ractive The President i ~
at least entitled to explore the chance
that this may prove to lie the case
A Letter ·to Vice President Agnew
Dear J\ilr. Vice President : Kno11·1ng
of your deep concern 1n prescr1·1ng
Arnerica·s frcedon1s. we arr \\'riling lo
enlist your support in our current 1.:am-
paign -the repeal or the Bill or Right~
Our campaign was organized only la~t
March following ;i
nationv.ide CBS poll
on the issue. As ~·ou
may remember. 1he
poll sho wed that
even in those reJa.
lively tranquil tin1es,
the majority favored
repealing lhe n111jor
rights and freedorns
guarantC"ed hy lhe
Bill of Rights.
\\'ilh lhe riots. l11r-
moi J and unease now s1\•eeplng our en-
dangered nation. we firmly believe 1ha1
we could now easily gr\ a mllJOrily vote
on repealing all of thl'm.
·rnE CBS POLL, you may rc<.:<111, wall
a random telephane sampling of 1136
.<11!ults, conducted f\-1arch 10-12.
A majority favored abridging frel.'clo111
or assembly i16 percen11 . freedom of
the press (a5 percent). freedom or speC<'h
~54 percent), freedom from dou ble
jeopardy (58 percent ), and the right to
11 speedy !rial !58 percenl ).
Unfortunately. lhe majority ~till ap-
pro\·ed of lrial by jury !82 pe.rcentJ,
the right to a pubhc trial !75 pc>rccntl,
the need for search ll'arrants (66
percent), the right l-0 confrcn1t wllne.~es
!54 ptrcent) and the right of suspects
to remain silent (54 percenl).
We fee l, however, lhat the question!'i
asked by the pollsters were nol properly
phrased to t.llcil !he correct response.
J\1oreover1 the limes have ch an i:: e d
radlcn!Jy In these past 11vo n1onth.~ Rnd
the netd to preserve our freedom'.'!" by
re~aling the SUI or Righ ts grov.·s cia1ly
1norc apparent
J UltY TR IA LS ARE clnJ:~1ng 011r
A r·t Uoppc
1·011n.~. L11,1g h.11rc1I ilg1t;1turs a r f'
.11•011·edly t'!Jfl\"Crl1ng our public trial~
111to c1r1E:U:>cs to subvl'rt A111crican respet:t
!or justice. W 1 I n es s the case of the
Chicago Seven. How quickly and quietly
Judge HoHman alone could ha ve decided
the r.1cts ;incl di!"penwd senll'ncrs in
his chan1ber "'1\hout all the hue and
outcry a publlc trial by jury entailed.
The requirement that police officers
ohtain :i .~r.arch warrant betore ra1d1ng
a Black Panthe r headquarters or a
,\lao1st )'Oulh cluh obviously hampers
riur 1.iwn1cn in lhe perforn1anc.c of ll1e1r
dut ie:-.. Ciin ll't .<ttford !o lie the hund~
of r)\Jr br(l\'1• n1cn 1n hlur a;; thf'y ~rf'k
\!} n ~ton1 1<111 :ind orGtr"
T11 al\nw !'illSJX:Cts 1o rrfuse lo ;111.,lli'r
hri11(>i;J qul.'~1Jons an\1 lo l·onlron! u,1-
d1>rr·o1 fir 1\ ltnesscs who h111•c riskrd th eir
lives to g11thrr cruc ial 1nlorm;.11on t·un
only be drscribcd os coddling su b·
versivcs J-f(H\' Jong can this grea1 nation
cCKldle .subversives in its midst and
survive?
Jurely. put this v.·ay, the vast ~ilenl
maiorily of Americans v.·ould agree Uiat
the Bil l of Rights must be r'pealed
entirely. For it has long outlived Its
usefu lness .
lN THESE PERIWUS limes, no de-
Tragic Price of Violence
One of lhe mos t touching things about
the Kent Sta1t' cpiscxlr is lhc report
that when the !iring started .students
.1ssu med blank bullrt.s were being used.
coming as it does after the students
h:irt indulged themselves with arson and
afte.r lhe authorities had explicitly
declared martial la·w. lh ls :l!':Su mption
casts a painful poignancy on lhe sen~('
of game-playing that permE'ates so many
or these: "1udent uprisings.
SomehQw the slurtenls arc convinct"ci
1hat. v.·h:ilevcr thl'y do, nothing tragic
"di ho ripen to 1hc1n.
\I n\\' shoiilrl they know n!hrrv.·isi', \\'ilh
lht·1 r experience cn1bra~in g only a fe:"'
t·lots\e'red yea rs in "'hat is still. dr11pitr-
1!~ curre nt passions. a 'S1ngul<irly
t·l111 ~trrc1J nation ~
J\"OTlllNG IN TllEl!l !1nulerl rli ·
11er1rnce or Len1:ilivc lea rning prcp3res
Guest Editorial
them to understand the deadly serioo~
facts -that mobs bring repttssion.
for e;(ample, or tven that when you
thrO\V roc ks al armed men. eve:ntually
somr of them will eilher panic or turn
inhuman.
Somehow this ought not be too much
for a 20-year-old mind to grasp. hu1
it is also true the: failing ls not only
1he'1rs but ours -those or us \vho
ouRht to have some Krasp of history's
lr..s!'lnnl'I, sonu• duty lo communicate them
to yo111h, 11nd also, of course, some
v. 1t to guarrt adr.quatr..ly against _prcdic·
tRblc hreakdowns and e:r;cesses tn s11p-
pres:-;1ng v1Qlencc.
\\'Qll Street Journt1!
cenl Ameril'.i.lll 11'i;11ld 1v1thngly ;i llo"'
~ubvers1ves to fll"gan11l' 1'11'0!\'~l s. ptibhsh
stories d;.i1n~g1ng lo 0111 1orrn 11(
gol"C'rnment. spout prop:ig.1ndr1 1n1111ica t
lo nur na1 inn:il \111cn·~1--. m;ikr a
rnOC'kcry of JUS!1rr or h•' t'IJddlcd 11l
thrir trials
No decent Amrnt'<1n would handcuff
our police by del11y1ng their raids th rough
red tape, by requiri11g them to relea!'ia
suspecls v.·hile !hey are sti ll g11t her in1t
evidence or by preventing them from
retrying criminals \rhC'n new evidence
lS obtained.
These are the so-eallrci Bill of Rig ht s.
And unJess they are repealed our
freedoms are clearly 1n grave danger.
So, as the tiluJar leader of the silent
majority, we ask you. Mr. Vice
President. to serve as honorary chairman
of our growing can1paign . \\'c eagerly
await your reply,
Sincerely Yours.
The Committee to Preserve i\mcri1:a·s
Ji'reedoms,
--WWW-
Friday, May 22. 1970
Tlie editorial page of thr no1/y
Pilot Sf'tks fo infor1n a11d .~lim-
1date readers bJJ prescn!ino this
newspaper's opinions a11d com·
menlary on topic! of interest
and sign/fiCQ UCc, b11 rironidill!J /1
forun1 for !lie ezpressiori oj
our reorlers' opiuious. n11rl by
prcsr.11t i11 9 r/11' d1 ucr~•' i111·1t·
µo iu ts of infnr111erl. ob.~f'rv1•r.~
nnd spokcsr11r" "~' 10;11i:s o/ r/.,.
dfJy.
Hobert r-; \Vrcd. Puhl1sl1(·r
t
t
I
I
I
3
I.
' I
1~
1 •
BEA ANOE RSON , Ed;tcr
Anglers
Cast Off
Before casting otf on a ne w fishin g season, mem ber!
11 f the Balboa Angling Club \Viii bait a party for tomor·
ro\v evening in the Airporter Inn .
Festivities not only serve as a prelude to th e nevi
season but also \vil l include the celebration of the
i;roup's 44lh birthday.
1'itled La fiesta del B:\C. th e party is being arrang·
cd by t.1rs. llank r.1ay. ch airman of the ente rtai n1nc nt
and hospitality comm ittee. Serving '''ith her are the
l\1mes. 1-lov.:ard Ashby. Richard Thompson, Ronald Birt·
cher, James Bridges, Robert Davis, Robert Fortner, Doris
Gabriel. Gene Hill , Ron Johnson and Robert Reid.
The angli ng club \Vas or ganized in 1926 to pro1note
the conservation of fish in local waters and to promote
r od and reel fi shin,a as a sport. It is one of the ol dest and
largest fishing clubs in th e United States.
As the tempo quickens during the fishing ~eason ,
the pace again will be se t in aiding county youth organi· z ~tions. Bal boa angle rs charter boats so that boys and
girl s, under expert guidance of counselors and fi sher·
men. may have the opportunity of participating in thr
sport of deep sea fishing.
DECOR MOVED NORTH -South-Of-the-border finery
has been transported to the l~arbor Area for the BaJ boa
Angling Club's La F ie sta de! BAC, whic h is the tradi-
tional prelude party before the opening of fishing sea-
son. Ready to d ecorate the festive scene. the Airporter
Inn , are (left to ri ght) the Mmes. Ronald Birtcher, Rich-
ard Thompson and Howard Ashby.
~ I . , " . ,. Season Opens Festively
'
Swing Your Partner to o Western Ho-down
Country-style music and the aroma of co\vhand -
sized steak dinners will fi ll Bommer Canyon tomor-
row be~nn ing at 6 p.m. V.'hen Eastbluff Associates
of the Orange Cou nty Philharmonic Society host a
\Vestern 1-Io-down. Ready 1o "s\ving out" in the his-
toric canyon whi ch is reminiscent of early Californ ia
a re (left to rightl -Warner P. Bo rd ier, Mrs. Frank
A. Cooney, benefit chairman and Cooney.
)'tusic by the r.larine Corps
band from E l Toro Marine
Corps Air Station will fill the
air tomorrow morning at 10
when the '16th annual Opening
Day of the Balboa Yacht Club
gets unde r way.
(irce ling guests and issuing
name lags \1•111 be th e Ba!-
ettes, the Mm es. Blair Bar-
nette, Bill Carlson. Allen Cot-
tle, Pa t Dunigan, Gus Gornei.
Michael Hirsh, Jay Linder-
man. John Granath, James
Rudy, Roland Lohman. f\im
Kimball, Bob r..1ceord. Cared
Sn1ith, Donald Stoughton and
Leonard South
\\'hilc the boats are being
inspected. a buffet luncheon
"'ill h(' srrvecl from 11 ·30 a.rn
to I :30 p.rn.
Commodore Donald V .
Fran klin will welcome ,i;:uesll
and introduce his nag officers,
and Cannoneer Jack Grant
will fire an 11 ·shot salute to
the nr w officer.~. assisted by
Sdm Haynes, dockmasler.
~pi.:c1al honors "'ii' be given
lo wives of the staff com·
modor·es and life a·,1d honorary
members.
Junior slafl olfieers wi11
hoist the colors and offi cers'
fl ags during the I :3{1 p.m. flag-
raising ceremonies, a n d
trophies will be presented at
the conclusion of t h e
ceremonies.
A special trophy and pen-
na nt will be given to the boat
considered overall best in
fl eet. :rnd a separate trophy
will be awarded to the win11er
of the inspection in each of
the nine div isions.
SPIC AND SPAN -Boats belonging to members or the Balboa Yacht Club
will be shipshape for opening da y tomorrow. Attacking grease and grime in
preparation for inspection are Oeft to right) the l'r!mes. Bl air Barnette, Edwin
Steen Jr. and Donald V. Franklin.
Girl Gets ·Bugged When Good Friends Get Badly Drugged
DEAR ANN LA NDERS: I am 16 and
... orried. Most ()( my friends smoke pot.
~me of them have freaked out on
Tso. I don't touch any of it. My folk6
got upset once when they round an
ordinary cigarcUe butt in my room .
Thty ha ve a good opinion o! me and
I'd hate lo let them down.
Every wttkend I wind up with kids
who arc blowing grass OT dropping acid.
1 realize if they get busted and I'm
with lhe m. I will be hau led in aod
charged , too. Th is scares me. It would
ki ll my folks. The drug laws are lousy
ln this state and some good kkis have
gotten themselves bugged up because
they wanl to show the authorities they
have no re.<;pecl for unjust law s. Please
don't tell me to make new friends.
1 r:an 'l. 1'he5e are the kids l arew
ANN LANDERS
up with and I dig them. except for
the way they mess with drugs. What
should l do? -LOY AL LYNN
DEAR l .. L.: If )'9ll Insist on llangillg
artUDd with .a crowd Lbat blows gr•ss,
dro,a acid •nd dene11 the I•*· be
prepared to accept the con11eqoe11ce!i.
Call It loyally If you want to. I call
it 1tupldily and shof1-slghtednes s.
The law Is JlOlng to do more basting
starting now. Making crlmin1l5 out of
sick people 11, ln my opinion, • poor
apprNC:b to tllle problem, IMrt when the
clUte11ry becomes frightened and fear
lafts over. ratieD8Tlty loKt ouL
There are DO easy an1wtn io U.i1
one. We cannot afford to turn our country
over to a generation of bo'lf·stoned pnt
heads. Nor caa we allow po tential
achievers to fry their hralns with UO,
spttd and heroin. Unfortunately, a pro-
blem that 5bould be handled by pbysl·
clans ls winding up more and DlOre
in the bandl of tbe police. So brace
your1elf. Tbe situation ts going to 1et
worse before It get.I better.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I have a
message tor the young woman who
ad opted my child. I don't know wl>o
she is or where she is, but I'll bet
she reads Ann Landers. Will you please
print this~ ·
DEAR FRIEND : lt, was just a few
years ago that t gate you my baby.
I knew lhen as J tnow now , it wa.,
the only thing to do. I w a n t e d her
to have every a¢wantage in life. I knew
I couldn't give ht?r what she was entitled
lo. '
You and your husba nd wanted a child.
The peopl e ln charge of the adoption
told me as much as they eould without
revealing your iden tity. l was certain
you would give my li!Ue girl ocea ns
of love and thal she would have the
kind of upbringing every child deserves.
I didn't have her long -but 1 knew
she was a very good baby , in perfect
health and beautiful , too. It took more
strength to give her up than I thought
I had, but I lhank the good Lord for
giving me that. strength because I know
in 1T1')' heart It was the right thing
to do.
Last year I married a wonderfu l man.
Soon I will have a bfiby of my own.
But I shali never forget my lirst born .
I'll always shed a few quiet tears on
her birthd 11.y, aod wander where she
is, what she looks like and what she
is doing. I always will love her -
and J will love you, too, for giving
her what I could not. May God watch
over you and my little glrl. -NO
CITY NO STATE NO INITIALS
DEAR FRIEND: Th.Dk .Yoa for a
be.utifW letter. I wouldn't dream of
pr ID t I• I a dlle &e JOllr' klfttlty.
Tboasand1 of womu .UI bellew ,.....
letter "'' meant for tlma. Md l wouldn't want It ny etbtr wa,y.
Too many couples go from rnatrimoPf
to acrimony. Don't let your marriage
nop before it gets started. Send for
Ann Landers' booklet, "Marriage -What
to Expect." Send your request to Ana
La nders in care of the DAILY Pnm
newspaper enclosing 50 ctnt1 ln coin
and a long, stamped. self-eddressed
en velope,
'):'Jar of Sunshine
l\'Jrs: Marjorie Meyer of Staten Island. N.Y., executive secretary of th e Inter.
~\it>)lal Sunshine Society, looks at a decorated jar made by one of the mem~ Q.~ of the organization. The Sunshine Society helps sick, needy and lonely
J!C.'lmle and sells items made by members to raise funds.
·~esans
'Wbnored
At Party -~rprise garden party
fetf:d t Mr. and Mrs. Claude
K. Kikpatrick of Costa Mesa
on U!lr goldeD \\'edding an-
nivmary.
Hosting the event, which
took place at the Costa Mesa
home of Mr. and Mr!. Bob
Denton. were the hooorees'
daughters, Mrs. E. W .
Wheeler of Los Angeles and
1i1rs .. Maurice Durbin of
1~~a. guests were Wheeler
D.lrbin : their granWons
ck, Timothy and Wayne;
areal-grandson pa u l
and MN . Ev a ~lftm. K~lq>atrick's ~ster.
~~i(goldenweds e1changed
• vows in the home thl late Mr. and Mn.
~~=K~. Kirkpatrick In Los • Kirkpatrick WU &
for Hadley's in Los
1 for 44 years prior
retirement.
have resided in Costa
since 1954.
'1 ballot propositions will
during the Meaa
Republican Women's
Federated meeting on
y, May 27, at 10:30
the h o m e or Mn.
cf&e of Costa Mesa.
g before the group
);latthew Weyuker or
Beach and Atty.
Collins of Laguna
Ii ' • • A legialaUve assistant to
A!M!mblyman Robert Burke,
7(}th district, Weyuker Is prtsi-
dent of the Huntington Beach
High School board of educa-
tion.
Collins, pres.idem. of the Sad-
dlebaclr: Junlor Co 11 e g e
Dislricl board of trustees. was
California Republican Asstm-
bly parliamentarian r r 0 m
11167·1919.
Harbor Tops
Harper School in Cost.a
Mesa ls the location where
members· of TOPS Harbor
L}ghtn tither each Monday
evenine at 7:30.
l '
CLINIC LAUDED
Karen Pula1ky
Training Helped
Cool During Crisis
Karen Pulasky is ooe 13-
year-old miss 'ft"hO has
demonstrated her ability to
keep cool in an emergency,
and she give!ll full ttedit to
last fal l's baby·silti ng clinic
sponsored by the Huntington
Beech Jun ior \Voman's Club.
Karen, daughl~r of Mr. and
fllrs. Paul .Pulasky of I-fun.
lington Beach. ~·as asked to
relieve a friend who was baby-
sitlinR; for a ntlghbor's 5-, J.
and 2·year-o!d youngsters.
While faring for I he
}Oun gest child, the 11\lo older
one~ decided lo hide behind
the TV st-t and before Karen
could ro113t lht m, smoke
began billowing out of the set,
oompletely fill ing the room
within minutes.
The Rancho View student
quickly herded her crying
charge..s out of the house (•s
she had been instruct~ to
durini the clinic) and afttr
leaving them in the care of
a neighbor. ra ced back in to
call the fire department.
''The telephone n u m b e r
wasn't written down, so I just
called the operator,'' con·
fessed the brown-eyed, brow~
haired Junior Camp Fire Girl.
Although the v.·holc situation
wa s und er control in about
20 minutes, it seemed much
klnger to Karen who admits
"I was !cared the whole
limr."
\Vhi!e the fire trucks \\·ere
still there, Karen said, a ntw
color TV 3el wa s delivered
to the home ao the youngsters'
I.ears dried quickly and all
was calm when !heir mother
returned.
"It""'~ kind ol a v1l uable
e.tperience," concludes Karen.
CHILDREN'S ART
COUNTTWIDl PAll:TICIPATION
IT Oll:AN•I COUNTT SCHOOLS.
KIH DllOAITIH THIU 12tti GIADI
South Coast '1ua
Vintage Voice Vibrates
Beauty's
' • 1n Ear of Listener
By BARBARA DUARTE
Of .. D.U, Pllll lltrl
If you thlnt you 've heard
It all before, you probably
have and .UU ran.a.In gullty
cl at leut one not.k:-t!ab!e
hangup ... to use a word tllrust
on Websttr !>y the "now "
jeneration.
According to D o r o t h y
Sarnoff, a versatile woman
whose carfft' spans th e
Broedway sta1e, o p e r a ,
television and iupper clubs,
people must brush up on not
only the ''loet arl'' of con-
versation, but al.so keep pace
wkh a modern "wordrobe"
composed of such words 8!11
"mink" (a girtfrlend, probably
by virtue of always being
draped around the neck);
''skypiece" (a hat), an d
"mother" (a drug pusher as
opposed to dear old Machree).
Common offenders of the
first requisite of convenation
. , , toae .. , are the flsh wife
whose strident tones call her
brood to breakfast: "over
precious" 'Who speak.!! in a
whisper, "lazy lips,'' the
clenched-teeth method;
"Jenny one-note" who dron~s
on in a monotone, and "locust
va.IJey lockjaw," perpetrator
ol the closed-mouth t~nique.
VOICES AR E VINTAGE
Resonance can bring a
shrlll, people · scattering voice
down to a "wi ne cellar" vin-
tage, Miss Sarnoff pointed out
to her larie female aud !e~
at Laguna Beaeh Assistance
League'!ll filth and fina l Town
Hall ~les lecture.
By placing a hand on the
chest, a speaker can feel a
deep tone rising from the
diaphrqm. The lec turer sug.
gested women voice a reso-
nant "I love you '' to the man
of the house as he arrives
home in hope of producing
an interestin& result.
fo.tiss Sarnoff, an advocate
of making women as lovely
to bear as they .a rc to look
at, peppered her cosmetic
theory for speech with a
::smorga11bord of conve rsational
tips.
Two of the greatest distrac·
tor! for bus inessmen are
nervousness and aloofness
which usually stem from a
feeling of ioferiority, notes the
attract!'/! corrector of !aults
who offers a six-week course
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
CONVERSATIONALIST
Miss Dorothy Sarnoff
lo men and women in order
to improve their irnagc.
Other costly detractors lo
communications, she points
out, are lack of eye contact,
poor posture, speech tics ("I
believe,", "you know ". and
•·er, ah "), poor pacing and
speed talkit1g, a 33 J/l con·
versalion played back at 78.
THINKING PAYS
"Structure your thlnking to
make a point," Miss Sarriotr
advised. "It is more difficult
to be articulate tnan to resort
to violence or nl a k e
demands."
When going out, one should
dN!ss up his communica tion
as well as his body, she ac.'ded.
ltead curre nt events, listen
to news broadcasts and fill
lhe mind \.\'ith evecls of in·
terest to husbands, childre n
and a590Ciates.
It takts forethought, she ad-
mitted, but it is totally
necessary to a generation
trained to be tel evisio n
recei vers r a I her lhan
participants.
As a means of regaining
the lost art, she lists JO com-
mandme-nts : thou shall not
commlt "I'' di s eas e.
monopolize, interrupt, offend
or gossi p and thou shall edit,
discuss rather than argue, ask
stimulating questions, include
a ll listeners and be a good
listener yourself.
LOUISE BAKER
To Say Vows
Louise Baker
Will Marry
In Summer
Louise Lee Baker w 11 1
becon1c the bride June 27 of
George !\1arshall Mahurin dur-
ing ce1'ernnnii's in t he
Neigl1borhood Congregational
Chureh ln Laguna Beach.
Parents of the betrothed are
!llr. and !\1rs. Earl Baker and
fl'lr. and
fo.tahurin.
Beach.
!\!rs.
all
\Vi 11 i am
of Newport
!\fiss Baker is a graduate
of Nev"port Harbor High
Cancer: Accent on Marriage
School and a fin ishing school
in Garden Grove. She will
attend Orange Coast College
in Seplen1ber.
SATURDAY
MAY 23
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (Mardi 21·April 19):
Attent on career, prestige,
standing in community. You
get assignment which enables
you to display originality and
independence. Lead the way.
Utilize pioneering instincts.
TAURUS (April 20-r-.fay 20i:
Good lunar aspect today coin·
cides y,·ith gain t hrough
reading, travel. You absorb
kno~·ledge and can put it to
constructive use. ljook beyond
the immediate. Plan ahead.
GD1INI (rttay 21-June 2tl):
Versatile approach results in
financial gain. Have alternate
meth<>ds available. Investigate
money ma tter \.\'hich has
been obscured. Could involve
male or business associate.
CANCER (June 21-Ju/y 22 ):
Lie low. Pennit others to take
initiative. Check legal mat·
ters, including contracts and
special agreements. Accent on
marriage, partnerships. com-
mitments which cannot be
delayed. Ana lyze.
LEO (July 2J-Aug. 22 1:
\\'orking re I a t i on .~ 11·1th
associates require attention,
So1ne 1nay l1ave erroneous in1-
pression about your intentions.
Strive to communicate. Make
meanings crystal clear.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.-22):
Romance i!ll in spotlight. So
are creative endeavors. In
dealing with young persons,
To avoid disappointment, prospective
bride!ll are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and while ,e:lossy ~hoto
graphs to the DAILY PILOT \Vomcn s De-
partment one week before the wedding.
P ictures received following the wedding
will not be used .
For engagement annou ncements it is
imperative that the story, also accompanied
by a bl<1ck and \vhite glossy picture, be sub-
mitted six weeks or more before the wedding
date. If de adline is not met, only a story will
be used.
To help fill requi rements on both wed·
d ing and en gagement stories. forms are
available in all of the DAILY PILOT offi ces.
Further que stions 'viii be answered by
\Vomen's Section staff members at 642-4321
or 494-9466.
Afternoon Nuptials
Couple Repeat Vows
~!rs. Clari~ F'isher and
?\.farold Eyestone. both of
Costa ~tesa. exchanged vo11·s
and rings before the Rev. Dr.
Charles Dierenfield in St.
Andrew's Pres by t er I an
C.hurch.
Mrs. Gloria Luca! ~·as
matron of hono r and !he
Misses Jacqueline and Cathy
Fisher, daughters of the nt1v
fl.trs. -Eyest one , \\'ere
candle lighters.
Ring History
f\.1an appe ars lo ha ve claim-
ed his bride from earl.iest
Umes with a ring.
Thurman \Voods v.·as best
man and Alex Wipf and John
Sealackley ushered guests to
their pews.
'fhc couple w111 make their
home in Costa f\1esa,
The former fo.1rs. Fisher.
daughter of r-.trs. R~ Nau
of 01naha, Is a graduate of
Cnlifomia State College at
J;-ullerton and is dislricl ad-
\'isor for the Girl Scout Coun-
t:il of Orange Coun!y.
•rer husband Is an engineer
with Norlh A mer\ can
Rockv.·e][ Corp. end a member
of King •!arbor Yacht Club
of Redondo·Bcach and North
American fo.1anagement Club.
be diplomat.ic. Be willing to
make concessions. Then there
will be ultimate gain.
LIBRA (Sept, 23-0ct. 22):
Her fiance is a graduate
of Newport Harbor and is in in mysterious manner merely the Naval Reserve.
hungers for attention, af-miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. fection. Forces lend to be 11
scattered. J & J UPHOLSTERY
Basic issues dominate. Your To !Ind out wh~'' luc~~ for ~ou home, area of security re· rn mont1 '"" 10~1. order S1dn•v
Ml!ANS! QUALITY, INrEGll:ITY,
SERVICE, CJl: ... FTSMANSHll'.
WE i,.lltE lllE ... UTIFUI.. "UJl:NIT Ull:~
WE ACCEFT CHALLENGE~ qui res attention. Cheek real· Om•rr'• 1>«tk1t1 ''Sttr•I Hlrrh lo• Min •nd Womo~." Se"" ~l•thd1t1 estate values. Don't be •na 50 ctn!i to om~rr AS11olw1 642·5876 646.8058 S1cr1h, lh• Ool.ILY PILOT, 8D>C )1~0, s;:itlsfi ed with superficial in-Grona c1n1r11 sr1110~, N~.. Vor~, 1'------------'I
f or ma Lion. J f persistent, you 1 ii"ii·ii' ·;;;';;;'°;;;";;;' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,.;;iiiiiiii-.;;;;,,;;;;;.,;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. could slrikc pay dirt. II
SCO Hl'IO 10ct. 2:J-Nov. 21 ): COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY SERVICE
e WIOOINCP e P'ASSP'ORTS e P'OllTRAITS
e ALL
842-'1212
IN NATURAL LIVINCP COLOR .
7511 Clay, Suite 3, Huntington Beach
Accen! on fr iendships, fulfill·
ment of desires. You gel emo-
tional and financial backing.
Tlme has come to put forth
demands. You are likely to
gel what is requested. Act l~;::;;;;:;; accordingly. Ii
SAGrITARIUS (Nov. 22· REUPHOLSTERY
Dec. 2l): You finish project at '•ctory Pr lc•• Direct
whkh brings money gain. FREE ESTIMATES
Shop for special bargain. What Furniture J\lade To Order
you need is available -if \V ith "Quality \Vorkma.nship" you will but look. Spotlight Stop By and See Our Shov.Toom
on finances, p. r '0 n a I CASTLE INTERIORS
possessions. 7541 Chapman, Gardan Grove
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. Call Co11Kt-at2·1233 days or 147-7.5'3 •v•'•·
19): New approach is favored .J~~~~~~~~~~~~S~~~~~~~~~~
Improve appearance. Cycle
high ; circumstances favor
your efforts. Be lndepend ent
in Lhought, action . Now is time
to contact people who have
been unavailable.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18); Secrets are revealed; you
may be responsible for
organizing special activity.
Play cards close to chest.
Some who think they know
all may try bluffing game.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20\ ·
Sense of humor is your great
ally today. Study Aquarlu!
message. A Criend who acts
Seniors Take
Unknown Ride
f\tembers nf the Harbor
Senior Citizens' C!ub, ad-
vocates or the California
\•ersion of "Sec America
Jo"irsl," ·will travel to an
unknown Southern California
locale on Wednesday. May 27.
A bus will leave the Senior
Citizens Recreation Cenler at
i a.m. for a destinatlon knov.·n
only to Mrs. Kather i ne
\Yad!worth, chalnnan, and the
bus driver.
Chapters Join
For Luncheon
Happiness Is Hadassah Is
the them~ of the seventh an-
nual comb ined So u lh l an d
Donor Luncheon of th e
Harbor. Masadn and San ta
Ana-Tustin ch a pt er s of
Jl adassah Bl 11 :30 a.in. on
Tuesday, May 26, in the Grand
Hotel. Ana hchn.
A fashion sho\v of lingerie,
day and evening \\•ear will
be presented by Miss Florence
Smales.
,
Tomor row i~
some one's
birthday .
When you gi~ tier o diamond r ing
ond him a watch , you give o lasting
gift ••. ond a lasti ng expression of
your devotion. Illustrations not actual
siza.
125.00
~~~~~I It may have been a rope
tied around her walsl - a
more direct means of wooing
his favorik' -but the sen·
Ument to claim and then to
protect and guard always has
been there.
S · I KNIT em1-annua W k h or s op
E01y credit terms. ifu~nt OCCOUf'llS
0Yoik1ble • up to 12 month1 '° pqy
Kir\ • M11i1r Cl.1r9t • l1ri\Am1ri,1rd
H~1tth1tt•11 C9'1t«
hocJrio & (di"'''
H..i .. tu 9-h
OflN MON.,
THUIS., Fii.
TILL t P.M.
MAY
20-29
e drasM1 e jacket•
e tklrt1. • ponchos
e tenni1 dr•s1.e11 etc
Saturday ind Sunday, M•y 23·24
l'91\1.,,l'lM ~ .• ff\Of\I. lllCIS
l>'IG" -m•t~ln• ••Jh •,..j
"'
1885 PARK AVE.
h Ilk. "'· ... ".,.., tfl "!fl Ctll• M .. 1, Clllf'lrftll
19:1·1101
,I
I'
I •
I
'I l
\
*~-*·
VOL. 63, NO. 122 , ~ SECTIONS, '40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 22, l 970
ov.·
Baby Deatla Case
Slocum to Face
Trial July 20
A Costa f\.1esa surgeon accu~ed or
the dismemberment murder of his infant
rtaughter. entombed six years in the
ramily freezer. n1ust stand trial J uly
20 in Orange County Superior Court.
Harbor Doctor
Facing Trial
011 Fraud Rap
A Harbor Arca p)'hstcian accused by
slate oHicial!> of addicting women
patients to drugs and sexually ravishing
!hem n1ust face arson and fraud charge.!!
before lhe latest action proceeds.
Dr. Ebbe Harte\ius, 50. of Costa r.1es;i,
i~ na1nt!d in a recent formal accusation
liled by the State Attorney General's Of-
Jice in behalf of another agency.
The California Bureau of Professional
11nd Vocational Standards charg(.:. the
for mer osteopath in connection with a
\'ariety of incidents specified in the ac-
cusation .
He i! also scheduled for preliminary
heiring May Z8 at 9:30 a .m. i~ Harbor
Jodicial District CourL stemming from
11n April 9 fire at his Corona del ~1ar or-
fice.
Nev.'port Beach police probed t.he
blaze and subsequently arrested him on
live counts involving arson and burning
property in order to collect insurance.
"\\'e·re waiting to see \\'ha! happens on
that one." explains Deputy State Attor-
nev General Nicholas YosL if convicted. Dr Hartelius could be
rtripped of hi s license and professional
standing in addilion to receiving a state
prison sentence.
He became a n1edical doctor in 1962
under a blankel ta\\' allowing osteopath!
v.·Jth sufficient prolessional experience
to practice under that name.
The accusation filed by !he state alleJ:e~ nr Hartehui. provided the narcotic
J)emerol to a nL1mber of patients who
~hould no! have received it. with several
olher \'iolat1on~ 111vol\'ed.
One 1\•on1an "'as recenlly released from
the Calilorn1a Rehabilitation Center after
three years of addiction, v.·hile anolhc.r
died in 1968 aftpr hv1t·e being com1n1t-
lt!d t.o a mcn!;il ho~p1lnl
The state alleges Or. Hartchus used
drug§.JO ~educe fcn1ale patients and even
injected the husband of one v.'ith Demerol
to kn ock hin1 oul and allow a romantic
tnterlude \\'ith hi s \\'ifc,
Sclaool E.TfJf11aded
Dr . \Vesley G. Slocum, 44, appeared
today before JU,dge James· F. Judge.
who set that date for lhe iJroceedings.
i1•ith a July 14 pretrial beariJig scheduled
1n his chambers.
T~ impassive doctor was accompan ied
lo the courtroom by hi~ defenite attorney,
Paul Augustine Jr .• whom he allegedly
has threatened to kill, it w~ disclosed
in testimony a week ago.
Augustine has represented Dr . S!ocunl
in a $2 .2 million lawsuit a1ainst the
Santa Ana Poliee Department , stemming
fron1 a shootout \\•ith officers lour years
ago.
l-lis right hand was mangled and his
career as a defl surgeon ruined, but
lhe la~·suit \1-'as dismissed earlier this
week in another Superior Court action.
The Fonner surgeon and Augustine
\rere present for a prelrial hearing on
the matter ~larch 27 in Superior Court
\\'hen po!ict showed up lo arrest him
on suspicion of murder.
Butchered remains suspect~d to bf'
those of Cynthia Slocum, who vanished
in early 1964 when about three monlh~
old, were found the day before in tM
freezer. •' . ' The appliance was removed from the
~!e1:. Verde home which (>r. and fl.Ir-&.
Slocu1n occupied until earlier this year
when a . company hn!dinf the iecond
mortgage foreclosed it.
50-year Resident
Mrs. Brinderson
Succumbs at 75
Mrs. Letti' A. Brinderson, 'Nho moved
to Costa Mesa v.·hen it WaJ a villag'
of I ,000 nearly 50 years ago, died today
at the age of 7~. Funeral strvicrs are
pending at Bell Broadway Mortuary.
She was connected v.·ith many of C-Osta
l\1esa's first familie! and her survivors
i oclud~ Costa Mesa's nrst city clerk,
Arlington C. Swartz. a brother.
Born in Brooklyn, Mrs. Br1nrh?rson
c am' to Sacramento as a young woman
with her finil husband. Roy Bell. In
19"..3, lhey purchased a home on Plumer
Street, near C-Osla Mesa City Park, one
block from v.·hat then was the center
or con1munity business activity.
t-.lr. Bell died in 1936, and 10 years
later the married Thomas Brinderson.
01.vner or El Nido Trailer Park, who
IStt> PIONEER, Page Zl
• 00 1e
. -'·'!""'·'!'" .......... ;.;... , .•, -... •, • '"'""~· _ -,_..:.) .,,. .• ,,.,, ,1~1 .. r•
IN PAIN, lllOTORCYCLIST MAXCJN AWAITS AID .
Tw• lnJurtd i\ This West Coast Hlghway Crash Thur.td•y
Traffic Mishaps Hurt
Three Coast Residents
Four people \\'ere ll:-1ed in good cnn·
dJL1a11 lod<iy in Hoag llosp1tal follov.·in~
1~·0 traffic mishaps Thursday 1n Newport
Beach.
Lila A. Duarte. JS ol 1:'11 E J91h
St., Cosla f\i esa suffered a cont·ussir;n
in a collision with a c;ir dri\'en by
\\'endy L. Dorthesler, 11 (If 339 Cher-
rytree Lane. Newport Beach The at·
(·ident occurcd at the 1ntcr~C?ction of
Jan1boree Road and Eastbluff Drh r
\\'hen ~lrs. Duarte's brakf'~ laded :-.·11 ~~
Dori.:hestcr was not 1111urcd
A Newport n1an \1 J S h~trcl 111 good
cond1t10·,1 and his pas.">l'ngcr WflS in fa ir
condition aflcr lhcir niotorr\cle collided
"ith an auto 111 the 2100 hlol·k ()! \\'r ~I
Coast Highway Thuri-c!ay afternoon
Police rrporl that f\nnald (' ~taxson,
:n. of 2145 B;iyporl \\'ay ;:ind Karc•1
~-!loll. 15. of Burbank "'rre thro1•.'n
O"!L Y l'ILOT Siii! 1'"'9"°
' •'
nve r lhr hood of the car driven by
~lrs. Hanna Oennenberg, SI , of Garden
Gro\•e, upon impact . Both suffered
broken legs and ~lax.son received a
broken arm in '!ht crash. Mrs. Den-
nenberg was not injured in the 1 30
p.m. accident.
F oir Directors
Reaf!ir111 Suuicl
Not to Relocate
Sparlng lHtle t1n1e ror debale, I.he
Orange County F'air Board Thursday
night re.affirmed its president's earlier
.... t.~lement disclaiming reported plans to
relocate outside Costa Mesa
The discussion came al Ule end of
:~ long meeting by Directors of the
:12nd District Agricultural Associatt.>n.
1\'hich v.'3$ adjour.ned near midnight until
next \\.'ednesday at noOn.
Board President Cecil J . Marks i~ied
;i stalcment earlier in the week critical
t•! news stories about th~ long-rumored
1110\'C and maneuvers behind it
He said !luch speculation confuses tht.
•obhc and could harm attendance at
1l1is year '! July 14 through 19 Orange
C:>unty Fair a nd Exposition.
Marks read his "latement lnln the
:i•cord at the Thursday night:meeung.
"I don't knOw where. that sli>ry got
~tarted." remarked Diredor Tom
ltogers. who has -been among those look-
i1_1g around f~r potentia.1 ne.w fa_irgroonds
~Jtes. ' ' '
"t can · tell you a little 'about· It,''
responded Director Burr Wiiiiams.
perhaps. Lhe most outspoken· board crilic
of the ~sible move envisioned for the
~·car ahead. .
William! wrote a letter to the board
h1•0 month~ ai:O oUtlihing his opposltron
and I.he reasons. behind it. y,iJl!e calling
tor legal blocking of the proposed move
•I ~OC!"!;'?,i;:;,l., •. ·, . 1 -·~~~I=~~~ , tf.o ,.,. T t:o\mty Bblrd · ol' ;.su·~ , 1 .~wlflR a1ibt1rqm Roger~.
-1 "r .. 1-ritd"1d°of!'!eeing '('!l tnJ?"lign .speeche~
U. tht. iiftper!:!' he ren1arked. ·
-Slof'f< ~larkets
Work prog:resses on a six-classroom addition to
Costa r"l1esa's Bear Street elem entary school. \Vork
on the ~248,000 joh ill slated for completion in early
SC'ptember. bolstcrin,g the school's capacity by lfl:1
s:uc.lcrrt s. Currently 300 s tudenls. in kindera:arten
through fifth grade a ttend the .school. Dis trict or-
ficials soid it i.~ being ex-pa ndcd to include l'iiSth
,R"rad e student~ in the rall. K il c hen facili ty Dial) is
part of addition. .,, ·•
.rt!' ' 11'1'),
~ "
11~\V YORK (AP) -The stock market
~ed sharply and broadly do\Ynward Jn
'l:ite tredi "g this afternoon on active vol·
ume. '(Su quot.a Uom. Pa1e1 11).11). •
Pneumonia
E11cls Long
Career at 74
INGLEWOOD (UPI) -Forrne.r Gov.
Goodwin J . Knight, one of California's
most colorful and elcxiuent poli tical cam-
paigners, died today at the age of 74.
Knight succumbed from pneumonia al
Daniel 1'~reeman l·Iospilal, where he had
been hospitalized since last Tuesday .
He died at 6:55 a .m.
!\night was ad1nitted to SL. Joseph
l lospital in Burbank f'.1a rch I for treat-
1ncnl of an undisclos.ed illll.ess. His con·
dition was said to be satisfa ctory at
the lime.
!\night, who served a! governor from
August, 19&.1, to January, 1959, dropped
out of the 1962 guber natorial race on
doctor's orders after he suffered a
hepatitis attack.
Before becoming chief executive of
the state, Knight \\'as Ii e u t e na n t
gover nor. In !his capacity he ser\'ed
as chairman or the California Com-
mission on Interstate Cooperation and
as a member on the State Land~ Com·
n1ission, State Disaster Council Toll
Bridge Authority, and t}le. Bo~d of
Regents of Ult. Un ive rsity of California.
He served . for 12 )'earii as a ii4perior
c~rt j-. m Lo• '*'"''~I!' J!il!r tn ~l '111if"Was adtl\11' I• ·Cfvfc '-n.t;S .'
during· his ta?eer as • practlcin1 · il-
torney. He , also worked •1 a hard rock
mlner, a newspa per reporter and was °' seaman aboard a subcliaser durini
World War I.
Knight's first experience in politics
\\'as tn distribute handbi ll~ in the 1910
gu bernatorial campaig11 of Hi.ram W,
Johnson. He worked for the Johnson·for-
Presldent campaign headquarters at New
Yor k Cit~ in 1920 and campaigned for
Johnson 1n Los Angeles in 1924 when ,f~hnson was again a presidential' as-
pirant.
Born Dec. 9. 1896, in Pro\'O U1ah
Kn ight 11•as !he son of Jesse. °Kn ight:
a lawyer and 1111ning engineer and Lillie hfiln~r Knight. The family
0
had come
\\'CS! from New York in about J8:i0.
f'.l rs. Knight's fa!her. John B. Milner
:i:cf'I~ on the Utah bench for SO years.
Knight had a re<.'-Ord uf great popularity
\\'tth voters of both parties, and wa!'i
liked by bolh labor and management.
In the 1954 primary election for governor
his pluralities set new records for volume
ol voles 1n California.
In the 1954 gcnl'ral clect1on h~ ~·a!'i
elected "'ith a m:iJority of 551 .151 votes
-a J,:rcater rnargin than that received
by any other candidate for state-v.•ide
office \.\-'1th major party opposition.
The \.\-'hite-haired former California
cl11er executive slepped a,i:,id~ under
pressure in 1957 1n the gubernatorial
contest in favor or Sen. \Villiam J.' .
Knowland, (R-Cal if.). who was defeated
by Democratic Gov . Edmund G. Brown
in the subsequent election. Kn ight ran
instead for U.S. Senator a g a·i n s t
Democrat Clair EnJtle, but lost.
When he enlered the 1962 gubernatorial
rat'e, Knight touched off a political war
of charges and counter charges with
then Vice Presiden t Richard f'.1. Nixon
as he announced his entry in the contest.
Knight made it plain he felt Nixon
was largely responsible for his elimina-
tion from the 1953 race. He accused
Nixon of threatening, in 1957, lo cam-
paign against him in every c.alifomia
county If he opposed Knowland. He !aid
later a Nixon emi!sary had offered him
any job in the sUlte if he. would withdraw
from the forthcoming primary.
Nixon called t~ charge '"false and
libelous on its face" a(ld denied ever
m11kin g any promises of any kind to
Knight or any other individuals to ktep
them out of lh~ race
PILOT PROFILES
35TH CANDIDATES
In cooperalion with the Orange Coast
League of Women Votera, the DAILY
PILOT in its Saturday edition will
present biogr8J)hie11 and viewpoint! or
candidate! for tne Mth , Co ngressioflal
Otstrict, formerly repre9f!nted by the
late Jame! 8 : Utt. ,
l\1orc than one ftlll page wl\I be devoted
to phnt~ and background information
on candiclales who submitted their own
Jata fo r inclusion in the voter eclucatlon
program, Look for the wrapup on this
important congressional contest i n
~at1;rc1.ay's DAILY PILOT •
(1 ..
N.Y. S•ks
TEN CENTS
• 1es
··-GOODWIN J. KNIGHT
Coast Laivman
Sues MG ,i\1 Over
'Dirty Movie'
By ARTHUR R. VlNSEL
01 ltlt DIHY 1"1111 Stiff
:\ Ne~·port beach l8WIJlan just lMmon:d
for h.i~ coolness in a 110-m.ile-))tr·hour
freeway gunfia:ht Thunday f!J ... 1 l'JpM
studio! and an Oranl{e C.oast theater
<'.hain for $2 million. claiming emotional
distreir;s caused by a racy movie.
The action containing OUWir charge!
as well -.-•a!i filed In Oran&e Counl y
Superior Court by attorney Donald
Smal!wond, ~le mming from the. April
25 premiere of the,X-ratcd film.
"The t-.fagic Garden of St an 1 e y
~weetheart" left Orange County Sheriff'~
T)cpu1y Oa virl ~r, Skaugstad. JO, with
a snur tasle in his mouth.
,.For the first lime in a long movie-
rning career. r heard the fat.ir•letter
\l'Ord nsecl \\'hich commeoccs "'ith the
s.b.1h letter of th' alphabet." Skaugstad
11-ro\e . the Ne\Yporl Beach City· Council
aflerward_
He ~a;"' it is h"arrf repeatedly,
o;:1raugstad, a bachelor and former pro-
fessio_r\.:i l ha.~ebalJ player with the Cin-
cinnati Reds. charged the fil m also sho'\l'1{
blatant sexual scene! featuring men and
11·omt'n, si ngly or in various ·com-
binations.
Alto(n('V Smallv.·ood explainffi that the
1nu\t1-million dollar suit naming Metr~
(~oldwyn ·Mayer and the NeVo')Xlrt Beach-
headQuartered Edv.·ards Cinema chain
is baserl on the method in y,·h1ch the
fihn wa~ screened.
The sexy movie we1s shown with a
fealured r11ted only R for restricted.
He charged !he producers and th•
theater chain are guilty of fraud, deceit
and intentional 1nisrepresentation as a
result of the pairing of the two lilms.
Sniallwo.,cl said -in theory -MGM
and the Edwards organization coupled
lhe X-rated "Magic Garden of Stanle)'
Sweetheart" \\'ith the other so u~pec
ling moviegoers would see 1t.
•·f think immediate !leps aOOuld be
taken l.o chastise. the theater manager
and the Ed,vards Cinema or1aniia-
lion in general for allowing thi11 typtJ
or trallh to invade our community,'•
Dcputv "1·~ ..... ~1 ~1 wrole in protest
Six or U1e seven Newpo.rt Beach City
•~-· ,\10VIE. Page ZI
!)range
Weather
,Make. way for. Uie: beach boonii
traffic . The weekel\d weather pic-
ture calls (or sunny skies and warm
teinperatures, wiUl inland re.s'idenl8
Oeeing readlnp in the IO's for the
7G-ish eo1sttl climate.
INSIDE TODAY
Sometlli110 new h1 th~ study
nf histvry h4s bt'n added at
\Vcs tmjnster fl igh Sc11ool where
a per1onalized courae tn "hb--
toricol research" is in optto-
tion. Set toda11 '1 Wttkcnder.
~::It ': ;'!!!'··.'"= ,'"" CllK-i..oi U' 1 on;r;:' ~ ,,
Cll H!llM II_.• ftffJMM!h ff.11
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, __
I DAIL't' PILDT c
Candidates
Tell Stands . '
At Fo1·u1n
•
Five RepubUcan candidatP! for the
35t.h Congrellsional District differed lit-
t le on lssu~ at luncheon meeting Thurs-
d ay ol the Newport Harbor chapter ot
the Callfornia Federation ol Republican
Women in Newport Beach.
Each candidate -William Wilcoxen
nf Laguna Beach, John G. Schmitz o{
Tustin, John Ratteree of Laguna Beach,
John A. St.e.iger of Oce.11.nslde and ~taiz11:ie
~teggs of Laguna Beach -gave a ten
minute speech followed by a question.and.
answer perod.
About M women attended the luncht-on
at the Ebell Club wtlere they heard
the candkl•ln take similar stands on
the Tndoddna war, welfare and campus
protest.
MrS. Meg.RS told the ladies that w()!Tlen
tn this country are treated as second
c lau citizens. "When l talk about women
power, I'm not talkinp: about ~x and
no bras, I'm lalkinit about getting . the
f'iame financial award for the same Jobs
as men," she stated.
Here's how the candidates stand on
game other issues :
-On the move into cambodia all sald
Nixon did the right thin~ and urged
the women to upress their support ci
the Pre!U.dent's oolicies.
Schmitz urJfed the women to support
the Preaident's Cambodia move, "not
because he'1 a Republican and not be-
cause he's President, but beca_use,,he's
r ight and he needs all our backing.
--On campus violence and protest, all
said the:v favor returning . ~blic\y sup-
Mrted colleges and universities to educa·
t ional, not protest institutions. .
Wilcoxen. in spe..a king on education .. em-
phasized the need for more vocational
t r<>in\ne: in public school~. .
On the subject of campu.s VIOie~
Ratterree advocated jailing violent. cam-
pus protesters. ''These campus r~oters
_ and that's just what the~ are, rioters
-should go to jail." he ~--All of the candidates said the welfare
gyste.m a'!l practiced by. the John~
ariministration v.·as a fa.1Ju,re and In·
d icat.ed they backed Nixon s proposed
reforms. . b k' Wilcoxen spoke out strongly in ac 1ng
Nixon's welfare reform bill. "As a deputy
District Attorney. I had a chance to
see whal our present wellare system does _ paying families to break up.
1 think the President's reform p~ckage
's one ol the most comprehensive to
date."
From Pqe 1
MOVIE .•.
Council members called !or poli~e probe
of the sexy movie's showing, whil.e ~n
ciknan Lindsley Parsons, a motion pie·
ture producer, abstained. .
He explained at the 1'1ay 11 !'1ect.1ng
that he had seen tile controversial film
but arrestrd MGM assured lhe theater
manager it was sultable for general
audience viewing.
"I doubt the present attitude of the
Supreme Court wruld permit anything
to be done about it an}"l\·ay," he remark-
ed at the time.
Theater officials were r eportedly as
11tanned aocl contrite about the alleged
major studio preview depi~tlng homosex·
ual behavior and group intercourse as
anyone,
A date foir further hearin~ of the
$2 million suit flied in behalf of the
~eneral public -with Deputy. Skaugslad
listed as the s pecific plantifr -y,·as
expec1ed to be set later.
The young lawman was honored along
\\'ith a partner last week by ~ge
C..ounty Sheriff James Musick, slem1n1ng
from a high-speed pursuit and capture
of a swipec:ted bandit team several
months ago.
They held their fire despite the fact
the suspects were blazing away al then1
until the get.a way car was clear of
other traffic, then they riddled it with
shotgun pellets.
DAILY PILOT
0 1.utGIE COAST ,.UI Ll$Ml"G co ..... ,. ... ~y
llobe•I N. w •• d
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M ..... lnf l!•ltv
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l lO Will l1y Slr11I
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~.
r nU,, M11 22, 1970
MAGGI E MEGGS JOHN D. RATTERREE
Senate Hopeful Simon
Raps Irvine Cit y Plan
Norton Simon, Republican candidate
for U.S. Senate Thursday charged the
lrvine Company with acting in bad faith
by planning a 50,000-acre city, i11stead
of the 10,000-acre one expected by the
University of California Regents.
Speaking in a press conference at
the Newporter lnn in Newport Beach,
Simon said, "l consider it an immoral
act. It may well be illegal, I dol'J't
know. I haven't had time to study it."
"I am deeply disturbed by the proposal
to move the planned city of Irvine from
the long set!fed-on location adjoining the
University to increase the site of the
comtemplated populatio'n by more than
400 percent.
"The changes violate the l'lear un-
(lerstar.ding by all parties when the
Unive rsity and St.ate agre~ lo place
a major campus in Orange County. They
are also contrary to the plans which
were drawl'! up then," he explained.
Simon charged the Irvine Company
had agreed to build a 10,000.acre city
immediately surrounding the University
when the Sta~ agreed to the site.
He claims the city as planned now
\Viii create "another UC Santa Barbara
and Isla Vista" by isolating the university
and the few surrounding housing areas.
In addilion, Simon noted the possibility
of the influx of industry and population
to the 11ew city creating a vacuum
in sUrTounding cities.
* * * * * * Irvine Executive Labels
Simon Charge 'Political'
l rvine Company \1Ce president Ray
\Yatson today labeled as political
rhetoric, a statement made Thursday
by Norton Simo11, Republican candidate
for U.S. Senate.
Simon questioned the Irvine. Company's
plans to build a 53,000-acre city adjacent
to the UC Irville campus. Simon , who
is a university Regent, said the original
a greeuient with the company called for-
a 10,000-acre city silm>UndJng the cam.
pus.
Wal.so• said the company worked
through the proper c hannels at the
university, "I would have been an act
of bad fa ith not to have gone through
the system set up by the Regent.Ii.·•
The Irvine Company, in planning the
larger city, worked with ~ campus
planning board a11d Lhe campus architect,
he said.
UCf Chancellor Daniel Aldrich IUI>'
ported the new plans in presenting them
to the Regent's Grounds and Building
Committee on April 17, stating that he
felt there v.·as 10 appan11t conflict
between the original agreement and the
proposed city.
A meeting for university ad-
OCC Picketin g
Halted b y Judge
A Superior Court judge halted picketing
at Orange Coast CoUegc Thursday and
ordered both sides in a building dispute
lo air their grievances before him June
5 -in his courtroom.
Judge Robert S. Corfman issued a
restraining order after S p ee d 1 pac e
Corporation, Los Angele!!', officials com-
plained that representative!!' of Jerry•s
General Constructing and Plumbing
Company picketed administration offices
at the Costa Mesa campus.
Their ~_igns. notes the complaint, warn-
ed. o_nlookers, "Don't buy Speedspace
buildings, they don't pay their bills,
unfair to labor."
Speedspace wants $250,000 in damages
for the alleged actions or the defendants.
The flnn recently successfu lly competed
in bidding for the construction of tem-
porary buildings at OCC.
From Page I
PIONEE R •..
:1lso preceded ~r in death.
In later years, her home has been
at 210 E. 15th St.
During her n1any years in Costa Mesa,
1'lrs. Brinderson y,•orked for the Newport
'lci ~hts lrirgation District -the com·
munity·~ first water supplier -and
for such piooecr figures as the late
CMrles TeWinkle, hardware merchant
and the city's first mayor, and veteran
al.lomey Leroy Anderson.
Mrs . Brindet'!!Qll was a ml!'ftlber of
l\arbor Star Chapter, Order of Eastern
Star.
Death, attributed lo canctr. came this
morning at the home of Mr~. Brin·
f!f'r30n'i1 daughter, t-.lrs. Tilelma Freed,
211 Palmer St.
Survivorg. 1n addition to ht!r brother
nnrl d atrj!hlt>r. includ<' a grandson, Dr.
\Vtllierll Bllrtlett of Turtle Rock, and
three great grandsons.
ministrators and regents who have ex-
pressed concern over the new community
is being planned, he said.
''Il's just u11fortu11ale that a man run-
ning for U.S. Senate would choose to
use the rhetoric about planning and
slums. it just c<lnfuses the public,"
\Vat.son said. "As soon as the pri marv
is over. maybe we can sit down and
talk about it."
'Neivport Seven'
No1v Five; Tivo
Freed by Judge
The ''Newport Beach Seven" lost the
nickname given them by local police
Thursday when a Superior Court Judge
agreed with two members or the group
that drug charges endorsed by the
Orange County Grand Jury should be
dismissed .
.ludge \Villiam tli um:iy freC'd Dougl;is
Alan Potter. 22. of 31 4 de la Estrella,
San Clemente and tllartba Ann Gia~:'.
21. of 1807 \\'.Balboa Boulevard, Newport
Deach artd dismissed 1;harges that thr:-i
were in possession of n1arijuana v.·ith
intrnt to sell la$l ,Jan. 12.
Their five companions in lhe group
arre~t were ordcrcrl lo nprcar ~l a.v 29
before Superior Court .JudgP .la1ncs f.
,lurl.'(c for the setting of further pro-
cet(!ings. Thry are ·
Kathleen ~1. Bahe11, 23, of :JIO 35th
St., Newport Beach; Gary Edv.·ard Gray,
27, of 310',~ 35th SI., Ne,vport Beach;
Ronald Dean Kniseley, 27. of 2523! r.lonte
Verde, South Laguna; Thomas Duncan
\\'heatley, 27, of 3604 Park Lane. Nev.1port
Beach and Clayton Francis J ohnso,,. 20,
of Whittier.
All \\·ere arrested at the Bahen home
and indicated by the Grand Jury on
J\1arch 26.
Chinese Co ntest
Has A1·ea Ent1ies
Five Newport liarbor High School
students will compete Saturday in a
Chinese language contcsl in Sa n Fran-
cisco.
They are:
-Sue Currie, daughter of f..fr. and
Mrs. James L. Cl1rrie, 2427 Margaret
Drive, Newport Beach.
-J anice Whiting, daughlt:!r of Mr .
and 11rs. Bt"rnard \\'hiting . 4 5 2
Broadway, Costa 1'1esa.
-Charles Beek , son of ,..fr. al'Jd ro.fr:<t.
Barton Beek Sr .• 620 W. Ocean Front,
Balboa.
-Carol Parker, daughter of Dr. and
1'1rs. Harbison Parker, 35J Ramona Way,
Costa Mesa.
-Mallory Marq\let, daughter of Mr,
and Mrs. Winfield Marquet. 2 7 9
Broad.,.,·ay, Costa Me11a.
The student.!! v.•ill be the on!y high
~hoo' sludtnts from Soulht'rn c .. uromi;i
in the e<1ntest.
The contest 1s sponsored by Ille
Carnegie Chinese ProJect at San F'r~n·
cisco State College. Ellpcnses for the
11!udcnts will be paid by the projccL
0 41lY f'llOT f'Mh'.., l .. f'l•M
J OHN A. ST EIGER WILLI AM WILCOX EN JOHN G. SCHMITZ
County System on Way Out?
W ilson Opposes R egional Plan a t Candidate's ll1 eet
\Vil! county governn1ent be replaced
by a region al s1.1per-agency?
One candidate for Orange County's
fiflh supervisorlal district seat thought
it's oossible as fi ve hopefuls for the
office gathered this week for a breakfast
forum sponsored by the Citizens Harbor
Area Research Team (CHART) at Costa
Mesa Country Club.
Ronald Caspers, savings and loan ex·
eculive, from Nev.·port Beach, dtd not
attend.
Each candidate was given a topic
and spoke for fiv e minutes.
Costa Mesa i\layor Bob Wil son brought
up the question of regional government
in a queslion-and-ansy,·er period fol\ov.·i ng
the speeches.
"This is n1y opinion, but I think \\'e're
going lo lose county government as
we know it in favor of these umbrella
type regional organizations like SCAG
(Southern California Association of
Governments),'' he said.
Wilson noted thal legislation was pen·
ding v.illch could give regional orga~it.a·
tion powers of taxation. ''I am opposed
to this form of government." he said. •·r prefer the state, county and municipal
form that we have now."
Fred Walter, Newport Besch physici5t
added that 1he only reason something
like that \\'OU!d happen is because ··\\'e
are giving 11 (county government) away.
We're not exercising our pov.·er."
lncumbent Alton E. Allen made no
statement on the issue, but supported
the actions and policies oi the board
or supervisors.
Cris C. Cris, Huntington Beach con·
tracts administrator recommended sup-
port of state1\•ide studies "'hich ask for
local input. f-le v.'as referring specdica\ly
to LL Gov. Reinecke's Task force Study
of the Shoreline.
Mere·s how the supervisoral candidates
.. ·
stand on other issues:
\\/alter on thr Upper Bay land S'.l'ap
-··Not being able to use the t;ppcr
Bay is a crying shaine. The land sv:ap
as now proposed, does not make seMe.
Jt should be developed in.o a park with
diverse recreationa l facilities, and not
a commercial area or as a refuec for
a privileged few."
Wilson on !he airport -''By 1935
1norc than 250 million pa.!sengers will
use Orange County airport annually. \\'e
do need an international airport bet\veen
Los Angeles and San Diego and v.·e
do need a metroport, but \\'C ha\•e to
consider the problems of noise a·,1d air
pollution. \Ve should restrict jet traffit
at the airport to turbo prop.s. When
the Etectras flew out of here. you t'OuhJ
hardly hear thc1n_.;
Allen on the site for the TIC\\' 1nunici pal
courthouse -"\\le haven't seen the
figures on what it v.·i!J cost to build
buildings on each sile. Yie know ""hat,
land v.·ill cost in Newport Center and
<it the co1t,1ty Fairgrounds. but I won·t
make a decision until I know how much
each total pack.age will cost."
Cris on shoreline preserva tion -"Hun-
tington Beach is v.·orking on preserving
.shoreline right noll'. Jf 1ve don 't take
action on all the county shoreline. \ve·u
wind up with beeches that look like
Coney Island. Recreation is not the on ly
!actor. the beauty of lhc beaches 1s
important too.··
SA Panther Trial Jury
Resumes Deliberations
An OrJnge Coun ty Superior Cou rt jury
llled back into Its fan1iliar jury room
today to resume whet is now a week-long
deliberation of its verdict jn the murder
trial of Arthur Dev.'ille League.
l11e panel lefL late Thursday for its
~eventh night i'n a guarded Santa Ana
motel with no verdict to 'offer to an
ob viously concerned Judge Sam u e I
Dreizen.
But thC' judgi?. posing his first question
lo 01c panel arter more than 7:1 hours
or discussion. did get the response from
l!S rore1nan that il IS "malting progress."
That con1mcnt has today provided
fresh hope for 1he v.•cary lay,·yers, court
personnel, bailiffs and a number or
specially assigned deputies who ha\'e
been compelled to remain close to the
courtroom during the seven days of
Jury <leliberaUons.
League, 21. is accused of the killing
last June 4 of Santa Ana police officer
Nelson Sasscer. 11 is alleged that the
young Black Panther shol the patrolman
h1 the chest after Sasscer demanded
identlfication from League' and his Ifr.
year-old l"Ompanion.
DRAPERY
SALE!
CUSTOM MADE W ITH A WIDE SELECTION OF
QUALITY INTERIOR DE SIGN FABRICS AS MUCH
AS <O % OFF ON EXCE LLENT DESIGN FABRICS,
DEALERS FOR: HENREOON -DR EXEL -HERITAGE
7ed 111111/PAetf, "
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 We1tcllff Dr .. 642·2050
O~IN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
Profe11lo nal Interior
0.1lgner1 Available-AID
LAGUNA B~ACH
345 Nort li Coast Hwy. 4'9..: ,.~1 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 ,_, "'••• Tell ,,.. M"' .t Orllltft C•~•ty 140-12,)
--
ProtuJly They He11a
:\t the world 's largest flag company An1erican flags are in full production as
Old Glory continues to occupy a prominent place in mas.~ demonstrations
ac ross the COllntry. Literally wrapped up in their 'vork are U1ese two employcs
of the Annin 1''\ag Con1pany, whose !lags fly in United Nations· P laza and in most
countries around the world -as \vell a s on the moon where they \Vere planted
by U.S. i'lslronauts.
Nixo11 Nixes
Usii1u l<'und s !:)
For Businu b
\VASHLNGTON (AP)
President Nixon apparently
does not want any of his pro-
posed $fl00 million fo r school
rlcsei:regallon to be used for
busing students in attempts
lll achieve ra{'ial ba!t1nce.
A last n1inute change in
1he Prcs1dc11l"s integration
sl.alcmenl to Congress Thurs-
day ~id funds should not "be
extended to establish or ma in-
tain the transportation ol
lltudenl-; to achieve racial
balance."
Nixon also sai d money
should not be used to promote
fon::ed racial busing In school
11•hen the sole purpose is to
climina1e de f.icto segregation.
However. the overall intent
remained cloudy. An official
closely associated wi lJI the
legislation said, ··All '~·e are
saying is that the federal
~vcmment can't force any
d• facto segregated district
tn bus. Tl'IE>y can use the
mone y to Dus voluntarily."
Sextuplets Born, Die
Within Hou1·s in NY
NE\\I YORK lUPI) -A
prelt.y New York mother who
had been taking fertility drugs
gave birth lo sextuplets Thurs-
day night. The five girls and
::i boy, born th ree months
prematurely and wei ghh1g less
th<1n a pound ('ach. died within
seven hours.
~1rs. Susan Danoff. 27. and
her ti1adison A venue lawyer
hu sband, !\1artin, had been ex·
peeling triplets. Mrs. Danoff
fe.ll ill Thursday afternoon and
was taken to the New York
University Medical Center.
I-fer husband, who had been
\\'Orking on a case in suburban
Long Jsland. rushed to the
hospital as soon as he found
out.
!le \\'3S in the wa iting room
when a man came out and
said : '"Some gars gh'en birth
Lo sextuplets." Da11off said i1
took a moment to register
and then he sht>oted · "f..1y
God, that's my wife ."
lie said they understood
fro1n the beginning the se};·
luplets had little chance of
tJ,I Tt ... l>lit
SIX AT ONCE
Mrs . Martin Danoff
survival They "rre born
1\'ilhin a I~m1n1itf' prnod
between 6.07 and 6 17 pm
EDT. Four died within two
hours nr delivery,
DAIL V Pll~~ 5
Arabs Hit Bus, Kill 7 Children
By United Preti l•&eruti ... 1
Arab guerrillas ambushed
an Israeli school bwl on the.
LebaneBe frontier today, kill·
ing seven children and three
adults in an attack that reduc-
ed Israeli Premier Golda Meir
to lears. Mothers of five of
the children were injured in
a truck v.•reck later while
speeding to the scene.
Israel retaliated against
Lebaoon by shelling four
border villages, killing si x
Kent State
Gi1·l Found,
Going Hon1c
per9Qfl.S and woundln& 21, a
Lebaneae military spokesman
said bt Beirut. Uraeli Com·
mandos attacked an Egyptian
Red Sea naval base during
the night and planes hit Suez
Cana l positions today.
Mrs. Meir was talking with
two Dutch newsmen when
v.•ord was received that seven
children aged six to e.igh~ w~re
killed along wilh three adults
and thal 21 perS011s were
wounded. They said she wept
and mumbled "horrible . hor· schoolbw waa painted bricht
rlble" as she wiped away her yellow and it would have been
tears. lm~ible fer Ute guerrillas
Wilnesses said a truck to me· h1t it at such close.·
which was speeding to the range by mistake.
Safad governmenl hospital ··the re~ction I think v.·ill
with m9ti1Hl &,five or t~bc very harsh," he said in
injured children crashed off . a BBC interview. "We will
the road two hours later. in· have to go after I he
juring lhe hve women. tlu·ee murderers and the killers
of them seriously. \Vhere they are ... it's not
Arie Eliav , sec ret a r y the Lebanese that killed the
general of the Israeli Labor children. It's the Palestinian
party, said 1n London the Arab terrorists,"
Georgia Marchers Continue
Despite Death Plot Rumor
An lsraeli spokesman said
Arab guerrillas followed up
the baiooka and rlne 21ttack
on the schoolbus with an al·
lack on an lsarell ar1ny patrol
near the Arab village of Rha·
jar [rl the foothills of Mount
Hermon, wounding two Israeli
::ioldiers. This is north of the
area where the bus was al·
tacked.
A brief announcement from
the l!Taeli army said com·
mandO!I with air support slag·
ed a predawn commando at·
tack on the Egyptian naval
base at Bur Safaga, on thr
Red Sea 2~ miles south or
the Suet Canal and returned
afll:'r demolishing "several"'
military objectives.
Egypt denied there had been
INDIANAPOLIS (AP ) such an attack.
The mystery girl photograph· fORSYTH , (;<1. (AP) -the U miles from Forsyth other persons in ra ci al Later today the Israeli air
ed leaning over the body of Civil rights demonstrators un· to Griffin during the day, then disorders al Augusta, G<1 . force struck Egyplian mili tary
a sludent shot down at Kent daunted by reports of an a\Jeg· n1ove inlO Atlanta early Satur· Reports of lhe alleged plot installations along the Suer.
State University has been cd plot to kill one of them day for a mass rall,v clunaxing to kill one of the marchers, Canal for 75 minutes as part
found by juvenile a5uthorlti~ds prepared tod ay for the next.to-nearly a iveek or protc~t disclosed hy Gov. Lester Mad· of the continuing lsraEe!i ca.m·
and identified as a I ·Year-0 last leg of a symbolic 124.inile against four c;i.1npus killings paign to wipe out gyplian
runa\\•ay from Opa Locka, nlarch across middle Georgia. at Kent, Ohio. two at Jal·kson. dox during a news conference air defenses and keep Egypt
Fla. ·n1e group planned to cover Miss., and the dc:iths of six Thursday in Atlanta. largely from rebuilding them . A
Juvenile officials said she were discounted by their spokesman said all planes
is Mary Ann Vecchio, v.•hose leaders. returned safely.
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Frank R , c , , s , d Hosea \\'ill iarns, vice presi- Arab guerrillas based in
P. Vecchio, recogftized her in LI SSI,'l 1·1t1c e1ze dent of the Southern Christian Lebanon admitted they had a v.·idely published Associated .a ambushed a bus but said it Leadershi p Confe ren ce, •~" Press photograph. was full of .. Zionist exper ....
Mi ss v-chio talked ~·ith MOSCOIV (AP I -The KGB b-" b d · 1 " · described the reports as and made no mention that c c h b '-""'• aJ1ne 111 ! ie .... oviet •·absurd." He said 1iladdox Th ·d her mother and fat er Y s ecret police d ragged Union , was s1nugglcd abroad it wa s a schoolbus. ey sa1
I ph Th d · ht d v.·as "trying lo i n st 1 g a te h k'lled ded 50 tee one urs ay n1g an Andrei Amalrik. outspoken and publish('d in the United . 1 .. t ey . 1 or ~·oun told them : •·1 want to go States and a number of other vio cnce. Israelis.
home." you ng author or ''Will the countries. Maddox said he planned a The Leban e s c ;:irmy
Her parents said they would Soviet Union Survive Un til Takins its title from George major increase in the number spokesman said l ~raeli guns
come to Indianapolis alld ac· 1984."", froin his country home Onl"ell's "!984". the book sa~·s of state troopers observing the opened up at 8:30 a.ni. on
company her lo Florida. Thursday. His \l"ife said i;he the Sovi<'I Union is " nla rch because of reports that the villages of Bint Jbeil and
Miss Vecchio said that after supposes he is in ~1osC0\1"·5 stagnating Slavic empire that someone either now amooi:t Ya rmoun. two miles and one
running from Florida she Lubyanka Pri:.on v.·i!I eventually collapse. pr<r the n1archcrs, or who would n1ile respectively from tM
!1itchhiked and begged monC'y "He \\'as cxpcclins il." bably aflPr a war with Co111 . Join them later. planned to bo rd er. He said a child, a
and food . In Kent, Ohio, she Giselle Amalrik said . Mr~. n1unist Chin<1 . kil l a Negro demonstrator or ~·oman and a man were. killed
said, she heard there was go-Amalrik said the police did Amalrik. \1·ho is now 3i. start some kind 'of violence. in Binl Jbeil , 10 person~
ing to be an antiwar protest not tel! her the charges was arrested in HISS on a Maddox also said he \\'as 1vounded ancl 30 h ome !I
and 1venl to lhe university against her husband. But it charge of parasitism and preparing te alert the Nat~onal damaged. lie put lhe Yannoun
campus. was considered likely that he spent al1no st two years in Guard for duty In Atlanta dur· toll at one woman killed and
"We were silliAg in front was picked up because his Siberian labor camps. ing the mass rally Saturday. eight persons woun ded .
of a building · chanting when -;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;oioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::=::::::::::::1 the guardsmen moved on us r
with gas," Miss Vecchio said.
"We ra• around the building,
then down to an open fie ld,
or maybe it was a parking
lot .''
When the guardsmen began
shooting. she said. "I rolled
1IO\\'n the hill and tried to
hide behind a ne\\'S~arer
st and . That's when I saw the
man go down . I r aft over
10 hi m."
Three o!her ~lude.nts. tv.·o
of them coeds. also were kill·
ed
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\
• DAILY PILOT E DITORIAL PAGE
Schmitz vs. Wilcoxen
The DAI LY Pl LOT normally does not make en·
dorsements or ret:ommendations in partisa n primary
elect ions. Th ese runoffs are , properly, functions of the
political parties, the i r opportunity to pick the best
man of their group to face opponents in the Novem ber
general election.
Jn one prima ry race, ho\vever, we woul d li ke lo
m ak e some observations.
That race is i n the 35th Congressional Di strict. the
Orange Cou nty-San Diego Co unty !Jlstrict served by
Rep. J ames 8. Utt until his death this March. It runs
from J·ligh"·ay 39 1n Huntington Be ach to La Jolla.
TI1e district is, and al\vays has been, over\\'heln1ing-
ly Republican. It is so much so that 1vhoeve r is nom-
inated by that party on June 2 is. 1n effect . the v.'inner
fo r the seal in Congress. And that Congressman \Vill
represent some 800.000 citizens -includ in~ the Presi-
dent or the United States. \\'hose hon1e address IS no1v
in the county of his bi rth.
T v.·o Republican candidates emQiJ"ge as strongest
contenders in the prima ry election: John G. Schmitz.
\Vho is stepping down from his position as st<1le senator
lo seek the congressional seat. and Will iam \Vilcoxcn.
a 38-year-old Laguna Beach attorney.
Republicans, come June 2, have to d e c i d e if
Schmitz is the man to represent them in vi ew of:
-liis intransigent refusal to :;upport Governor
n eagan on budgetary 1natters.
-His refusal to campaign in behalf of Richard
Nixon in the last presidential camp aign.
-His m uch-discussed Jack of cooperation v.•ith
city and Orange Co unt y authorities on matters requir·
ing legislative attention.
-Hi s continued membership in ~he J ohn Birch
Society, despite that group's bitter personal attacks
on President Nixon and na tional Republican leadership.
-Hi s alliance with Democratic leaders in the Cali-
fornia Senate.
'Aftermath of
The Guns at
Kent State
! 'Ii(/~ . ' / '.}J.":;.,,;.,"
'·' Hayakawa ' ~
,,. ~t". J" M<
You buy 1 ticket and board a plane
for Miami, Florida, but you find yourself
landing in the airport in ltavana, Cuba.
Your plane has bttl1 hijacked.
You pay your tuition and sign up
f or a co urse in
Shakespeare, but
you find YOllrSelf
lis!cning lo lectures
and r;ip sessions on
the cr1111in:-il11y ol
the Arnrrican role
in Southeast Asia,
Your educa tio n has
been hijacked.
.. Th is campus."
~ays a !acuity reso.
lution presented 1n almost identical
language at San Francisco State, the
Universi ly of California at Berkeley, and
UCLA, .. is on strike to re<0nstitute
the university as a center for orgsnizing
;iga1ns~ the y,•ar in Southeast Asia as
well as racism at home "
ACROSS Tll E COUNTRY the tide of
cmot ion and the energy Qf th(' yOlJng
organize.rs -and tht' a1tent1011 paid
by TV arid 1hr pre~s -have l;M:rn
so enormous lhat campus after cnnipus
has been s11·e pt along to 11 suddenly
changed rlestinat1on. College presidenls
as y,·ell a~ st udents and facul ty ha\'e
accepted a change of fl1gh t plan in
rloiens of instltut1ons. F rom now on.
Nay the hijackers, this college is an
instrument of pol1Ucal change .
Up to now, .. restructuring th"
universities," ''redireciing education,"
"making educatJon relevant," have been
slosans of the radical activi!ts, v.·ho
have only been sporadically successful
in sweeping along thl'ir groups of
follower!. The disrupth·e. actions af sit-ins
Arid bombings which these lofty slogans
were used to just ify were dttply
repellant to m(')St students and citizens .
Most d the student fl are-ups burned
them selves out wilh more or less damage
to their instttuUons and considerable
Quotes
1'ob n uchboft. Long Beach, re ply ing to
muc11 of punl1hment of c a m p u ~·
dtmon1tr1tor1 -;,Does <'X~cting a
rea30nable degree or responsibility from
the partaker1 of a free education cre11tc.
An un~asonable pressure on them~ As
mere members or society tht'y oy,·e some
degree of obedience to the law."
BkmdzcHer Cowtbran . L.A. -''\\'e
must find some way of getting motonsls
t~ use their signal lights as required by
Clllforni1 Motor Vehicle laws. Too many
Jives have been lost that could have been
aaved had \he drivers done this '•
Robert J . Havtglta rst. Departmtnl t1f
'Ed1c•tlM, Ualven lty of Cblc•go -.. The.
most Jmportut lhln& the schools t an
do Is to develop, try out and evaluate
a vari~ly cl IChool and pre-liChool pro-
grams thllt flt In wtlh ~ motives of
dl&adv1nt.apd chllclren, youth and their
)'.lllrentl.''
Louil S. Nel11on , Sin QuenLin warden.
<m 4U'flcaltlel of rthlblllUIUon -'No
hospflll, no ediJCatlonal system. no
bu1lne11 enterprise, no olhtr lnsUtutlon
na the face of the earth has the 1;a me
~ntrsnce requirementa 11 do o u r
pri!ons."
Dear
Gloom v .
Gus:
J would absolutely love to be
around the Clay Ronald Caspers
turns 73 Bo I could tell him he ii;
"almost 80" as he does his oir
po nenl Alton Allen.
-M. E.
T~I• fl91 ur• r_.i.c11 ,...,..,, .,1...,.,, ,..,
Bfftll•l'llP no.... at '"' "'-·"'· , ....
,,_ '" -..... •IM!ltJ' • .,.. 0.11, ,.1191.
damage lo the careers of their
presiden ts .
Btn' THE GUNS AT Kent have ac·
complished what the radical student
Jesdmi could not. An issue hais been
fou nd to un ite all these assorted protests
-and dozens of campuses have been
"redirected," taken over or shul down.
The idea that lhe universities are go1n,t:
to lead the nation to peace ha s its
obvious appeal. In addition to idealism,
it appeals to an even stronger emotion,
the need to be at the center of somethin g
important. What Is more important than
the peace of the world ?
In the fa ce of so much Idealism and
dedication it seems crass to ask what
all the rap sessions across the C(luntry
are accomplishing. Any ~umber or
educators have solemnly announced that
there is now more real education going
on an their campuses under the
•·recoostitu ted'' course than under the
normal program, and that parents
should n't worry that their children aren't
J::Ptling their parents' money's 1~·ort h.
\\'h1f'h makes nne wonder about the
previous riuallty of the Pducat1on.
SO~I E OF Tll E discussions of proh·
lerns of pt'ac:-e and Vielnnm ob11iot1slv
{'r>ulrl be l'aluablc -1f undertaken hy
professors with somclh1ng to offer both
in information aod 1ntclJectual horiesiy.
But they can also be shetr se\f-
rlramalizing nomense~ "I can't go on,"
one professor of socinlngy announced
lo Pis cJass 1n dramatic ton<'s of grief
on 1'-1ay 11 , as he met his class. But
he managed to, for an hour, nn th e
subject of Cambodia. about which. one
nf his students said. he: wa s even less
informed then the teacher of philosophy
who had given a similar lecture to
his class lhe hou r before.
Or these "recoostiluted·' courses can
be the crud<'st forn1 of thou ght control.
\Vith conclusions arrived at in advance,
n1any unqualified and opinionated pro-
f('ssors are forcl'-fecrling their !lludent.<t
nn whal is now fa st beC'Ollling the only
l111e of "correct th1n k1ng'' on American
t'ampuses.
WASTED CLASS HOURS , postponed
)'.lraduation, indoctrina tion 10 place Q(
ed ucation -these are serious enough .
Even mort> serious is the acceptance
of what the •·reconsti tution" doctrine
will do lo our universities.
Are universi ties after this to be <'I
"''f'apon for any JX1lillcal p:roup which
C'Bn ca pt ur e them ? \\'hcre is the
,\mtric3n As$0Clation of 1Jni1·ers1ty
f'rofessors in all thiis~
\\'ha1 are they i;:oing In <In "'hen con-
st ruction v.·orkers take O\'er a n d
"rrconstitute" Pace Collegt' 1n New Vor~
according to thei r views of y,·hat educa·
lion shonld ht'~
F'or years facultle;s have fought a
rouragCO\ls light sgainst "po\JUcal in-
lf'rferl'nce." Academic freedom. the
hberty to teach and seek the tn1th .
the ''fearless sifting and w\nnoY.·ing,"
11re powerful rights won by our profession
O"er ctnturies of struggle. The truth
is only to ht' disco\tered by Ideal! 1n
rref'. compctitJnn with each o1her. Any
poUtlcal dogina n11rrower lht1n the free
frame of democracy it.oself is an enemy
nf lh' .!le.arch for lruth.
By S. I. lf11y11k11•1t
Pretkh~nt
S•n rranf'.iM"fl St.ite Colle1•
The lis'l goes on. Generally, our conclusi on is that
Schmitz is a reactionary independent. more allied (and
he has so indicated ) with the philosophies of George
\\!allace than with th e philosophies of Richa rd Nixon
and Ronald Reagan.
In vie\v or that. Republi cans may want to take a
hard look a t 1,1.rhat kind of congressma n Schmitz wo uld
make and how effective he 1,1.•ould be.
Republicans should consider the ironical e1nbar-
rassment it \\•ould create if they elected such a man
Jn the President's own congressional district
\Vilcoxen str ikes us as a right-of-center candidate
commit te<l to a philosophy of reaso n. !·le \\'Orked hard
for Nixon in the la ~t can1pai,gn. and he ha s demon-
strtl1ed leadership and understa nding on local to-the-
point issues.
For instance. \Vilcoxen·
-Is responsible 1n ore th ttn anv olher si ngle person
for attention focusing on savin,I! Salt Creek beach for
the public fHe was a member of the Sierra Clu b before
most anyone had heard of the \VOrd •·ccolo.E:y")
-Has· shovvn in telligence and com prehe nsion nf
educational matters as a member of the Laguna Beach
school board.
-lias a ""orkin ~-!evel vi ew of our 'la\v-and-order
r robl ems. thanks to three yea rs :;pent ns investigator
and deputy prosecutor 1n the Orange County Di str ict
.'\ttorney·s office.
On national and international issues. \Vilcoxen ail-.
pea rs to stand just about \\'here P resident Nixon stand:i;,
\Vhile this may not 1vin him mriny Democratic votes
come November. it certainly should assure llcpuhlican:i::
1hat they haven 't boue-ht ;:i lef't,vin ger in the primary
if they cast their lot with \Vilcoxen.
On the basis of the records. it \l'Ould a ppear the
great bulk of Ora nge County Republicans "'ho s1and
\rith Governor Reagan and P residen t Nixon on most
matters of political policy v.•ould be best represented
in \Vashing ton in these times by \V illiam \Vilcoxen.
'Move alone there folk;. This is a restricted neigh.borJwod.'
(Cl
Ca11il1odia1i Res1ilts May A lter Krenili•i Mi•i«l
Russia Holds l(ey to Vietnam Peace
WASHINGTON -A logical move by
the Ni:ron Administration now, or as
soon as the Cambodian operat ion is com -
pleted, would be a new proposal for
peace assuring the neutrality of lndo-
China.
President Nixon surely will n(\t
overlook this opportunity lo get a desired
diplomatic as we ll
a:i military resull
from his great gam-
ble.
How success(ul he
y,•<>uld be in this re-
spect would prob-
ably depend in large
mrasure on how
Russia judge!! the
outlook ln Vietnam
fo!lowing lhe Cam-
bodian incursinn.
If Russia judges that the allied opera-
ti ons in Camobodia have destroy ed tor
an extended period of time the secure
logistical base of the North Vietnamese
for operstions against Sou th Vietnam.
the Kremlin leaders may be more willing
than before to think in tenns of a
settlement.
l'ifUCH OF PRESIDEl"ll' N i x o n ' ~
rheto ric appears to be beamed toy,•ard
Mose<1w, and his methods w t' re
calculated to be those which would Jill·
press the Soviet leade-rs with his de ter-
mination and reM>urcefulness Rnrl
thrir fJWn inability to calculate his action~
in ad vance. His use of such terms as
Ri ch ard Wil eon
"decisive aclion" and his statement thal
the Untied States v.•ould not be hun11hat~ll
as a helpless giant v.·ere intended lo
be heard in ti.loscow. and they "'er!'
H wa s as if the President were saying·
"Look, I'm trying lo gPI out of Vietnam.
Bui there arc limits beyond which I
c.:annot go. I S3\'I the oppor tunity to
n1akr it easier and sr1ff':r to gel out
by striking into Cambodia. You havt'
11ccn the rcsull.~. Do you no t think 1t
1 ~ lune lo cooperate so lhat the Llnlted
Slates can get out and Jeavr behind
a re.'.lsonably lolerab!e sl!uation:'·'
lf the Hussians should fi nally judge
that lhr loss or the sanctuaries in Cam-
bod1<J create'\ a worsened mili~ary
fu1llook ior their North Vietnamese
c·hcnts th<'y may finally Se<' --the wis<lom
of granting 1hr. Un ited Stales a dignified
c.>1.]l lroni Vietnam.
\\'llAT A PITY IT IS. therefrire, that
r resident Nixon is not being given the
fullPsl Jl{lssibh: thance lo exploi t this
opportunity \\'ilhout being shackled by
t•ollrg1at(' prote'-t and senatorial mo\•es
to humiliate and embarrass him in the
r'li:rC'11llon f\f tl1 r m<l!'il creati ve m(l\'e
yr1 to rnrl !hi' \\ar
"fherr will be plent y o{ lime to hold
Nixon !o ;iccount If he fa ils. He has
set time lin1ils to which he can be
tic!d to account. Of v.·hat use 1s it.
therefore. to :idopt c ongre ss lo n a I
n111cnd1n•:nts Jnll'nded to pre\·ent hint
from "rl'tnining'' troops in Cambodia
ur l'u11t1nu1ng 10 support ~outh Viet-
11an1··~1' orcra tion~ to clo:.e t he
:-:ine1ua ries·•
'llH·,.~· t!lhlr:-11ould only perpetuate
jl1c <h~lu~ion in Hanoi and ~1 oseow that
\1nrnca 11 ill prove to be another France
and ca1't' i11 from the pressure of internal
prc~.~urr~ or war opposillon_
This y,·ould ilnpede any mol'en1enl h.v
11\t• !"ovirt Union towar d responding
ta1 nr;ib!y lei the British proposal for
a new Geneva conf£'rence \.Vli ich vn~s
seconded Ol'O r the last weekend bv the
foreign min isters ol eleven east Asia n
and Pacif ic non-Communist nat ions.
\\'ith or wi thout this impedimen t,
hoy,•ever. Ni xon is in a position to initiate
new proposals bas~ upo n his peare
plan outlined on May 14, 1969. This
proposal incl uded complete withdta"''<ll
of all outside forces 1''ilhin one year,
a cea~e-flr£' under int.ernationa l
supervisio n and frtt elections under in-
ternational supervision wit h the Com-
munisls participating in the organization
and conduct of the elections.
THE PRESIDENT SAID then and
11•nold say nnw that lhese terms are
negotiable; everythin,e: is negotiable , he
said, excepl the right or the peop le
of Soulh Vietnam lo determine th eir
own future,
This is the most generous offer fo r
a war se ttlement el'er made, including
all the offers in the Johnson ad~
1ninistration \rhile Clark Clifford wa$
::ecretary of defc>nse Clifford·~ proposa l.:;
nnw are oot -"o diHerent from what
Nixon 1s already don1g. 111th the very
important exc::-pl1on 1ha1 Clifford's pro-
posals offer very little 1nduc:cmenl, and
no leV£'rage, for a negotiated settlement
during the v.·1thdrawal process.
Clifford !cit his dclense p<isl believing
1hat lhe South VJf'!n<in1ese genera.ts y,•ere
"sul'kering'' us 1nlo a permanent war
and he ev1drntl.v hasn'1 thangcd hJ.~
111i11d bul l11s propo.~ali; lrir i11sl Pndini;;:
it all lack the t'rc~tn1ly of Nixon's
niethod.
THIS CRE ATIVIT\' 1=-!1asrd u1 larg~
part on the racl Illa! Russi;1 turn ishrs
most of the milit.'.1rv t.:qu1 pmrnt 1or North
Vje tnam and has the strongr~l infl uence
on Hanoi"s policy . Thr lo.i:;s of the
sanctua ries and c!nsfng !he port of
Sihanoukville could signal to tht' Russian~
that thei r client has In~! his secure
base ;i nd prospects lor lhe yc<1r ahead
are not promising.
Under those cund1lruns Pre!>1dent Nix-
on's proposa ls of \l;n 14. 1009. as he
may now moc!ify nr r xtend them. niay
look 1nnre AttrR1 !1·f Thr f'residcnt i~
at !rast enlitlcd 111 ('\plurr thr. chan ce
that this ma.\ pr o1 c !•I be the cast.
A Letter to Vice President Agnew
Dear ~Ir. Vice President : Kno"·1n~
af your deep concern in preserving
America's freedom s, y,•e are writing to
enlist your support in ou r current cam-
paign -the repeal or the Bill of Rights
Our campaign was organized only last
March following a
nationw ide CBS poll
on th e issue. As you
may remember, the
poll showed that
even in those rela-
tively tranq uil lime.~.
the maj ority fal'orcd
rppeatln g the rnaJOr
rights and freedoms
.l{Uaranteeri by the
Bill of Rights.
\Vi!.h !he riots, lur-
moil and unease now sweeping our en-
dange red nation. wr. firinly believe !ha t
y,·e could now easily get a maj ority l'Ole
on repealing all of them.
THE CBS POLL, you may recall, "'ii~
1 random telephone sampling of 1136
adults, conducted March 10-12.
A majority fa vored abridging freedo1n
or assembl y 176 percent). freedom of
the press ($5 percen1). freedom of spe ech
1 ~ percentJ. fr eedo m from double
jeapardy 1M percenl ), and the righ t to
a speedy trial ~58 percent \.
Unfortunately. the msjority sti ll ap-
proved of trial by jury (Bl percent),
the right lo a pu blic tria l C 75 Jl(!rcent I,
lht need for search warrants (66
perttnt), the right to confrant witnesses
(54 percent) and the right ol 1u1pecl~
to remain silent 154 percent ).
We feel, however. tha t the que!ltions
1sked by the poll!ter5 wrre not properly
ph rased to eUclt the correct response.
Moreove r, Lhe tim es have c h I n g e d
radically Jn Ultse pas t two months 1nrl
the n~d to prese rve our fr Pl'doms by
repealing the Bill of Rights grows daily
rnort appar11:nt.
JURY TRlA L.S ARE c\oggin , our
Art Ho ppe
courts. Long·haired agitators a r e
avowedly con\'Crting our public trials
1nto circust-s to subv<'rt Arnenc<in respecl
tor justice. W i t n es s the case of the
Chic ago Seven. How quickly and qu ietly
Judge Hoffman alone could ha\'e decided
the fac ts and dispensecl senleoces 1n
his chamber without all the hue and
ou tcry a public trisl by jury entailed.
The req ui rement that police officers
obtain a search v.•arranl before raiding
a Rlack Panther headquarters or a
illaoist youth club obviously hampers
our lawmen in lhe performanee of illl'lr
duties. Can v.·c affor d to tie thf' hands
of our bra~·c men 'in hl ur a<; thev '-Cir k
to rrstn rc law and on!t.:r ''
To allow suspects lo rcfu::.c tu an..,11rr
honest qu<'Slions anrl to confront u,l-
drrC<>\'Cr witne ss£$ who have risked th!'1r
lives lo gather crucial informi.t1on t·iln
only bt. descri ber! as coddling sub·
ver-sives llow long ca n !his great nalio n
coddle subversives in its midst and
su rvive?
Surely, put this way, the ''ast silent
majority of Americans would agree: that
the Bill af Rights must be repealed
entirely. For it has !ong outlived 115
usefulness. '
IN THF.SE PERILOUS limes, no de-
Tragic Price of Violence
One of the most touching things abou t
lhe Kent State epi~e is the repor t
that when the firing started students
assumed blank bullct,c; v.'ere being usrrl .
Coming as it does after the student~
had indulged th emseh·es with arson anrl
after the authorities had explicitly
decl3red martial law. this assu mpt1nn
casts a pa inful poignancy on the sense
of g1me·playlng th at permeates so many
of these student uprisi ngs.
Somehow the slurle nts are can,•inced
that. whateve r they do, nothing tragic
y,•ill happen to them.
How should they know othrr.v1se. v.•ith
thc>ir r.xperience embracing only 11 few
rlnistrred yea rs in whRl is still. despile
its current passion~. a singul arly
cloistrr~cl nAtlon"
NllT IUNG IS THEIR limited C'l -
pcr ience or tentati ve learnln' prep1ire1
Guest Etl'1 or.ia l
then1 to understand the deadly serinus
fac ts -that mob• bring repression.
lor example. or even that when )'OU
throw rocks al armed men. eventuall y
sorne or tht'm will either pan ic or turn
inhuman.
Somehow this ought not be loo much
for a 2Q.ye1r-old mind to grasp, hut
it Is at,,o true the failing 11 not only
thei rs but nufs -I.hose Qf u~ \l'ho
ought to ha ve JOllle grasp of hislory'.s
lts.'lons, some duty to co mmunica te lhPm
to youth , and also, of cou rse. some
1vil to guard adequately against prtdic·
t:1 ble brcakdown!t and e:rces~es in sup-
pressing violence.
"'•II Street Journal
{'rnt .o\me rica11 would "1lhngly a\lo\v
subl'ersi1'es tn org.'.1ni1c pro1csls. p11bh~h
~!orfes <fr11n:ig1ng to our torm or
guvcrnmenl. :-pout propaganda 11111n1cal
to u11r n;_itlonal interests. 111a kc a
n1ockery of iust1ce f)r be coddled al
their trials.
!';o decent Amencao \1oultl handcuff
our police by delaying thei r raids through
red tape. by requiring them lo release
suspecLs wh1!e they arc still gathering
evldt'nce or by prevf'nling them from
ret rying crin11nals y,•hrn new l!Videncc
is obla ined .
These are thP. so-called Bill of Right:-..
And unless they arr repealed our
freedoms are clearly in grave danger.
So. as the ti tular leader of the silent
majority. we ask you. Mr Vice
President, to serve as honorary chairman
of our growing campaign. We eagerly
await your reply.
Sincerely Your~.
The Committee to Preserve Ame rica's
l'~reedoms.
---iW-
f rid ay, May 22. 1970
T~tc edi torial pafle of ril e Du1/y
Pil ot. ,<;eeks lo 111fortn u•l<I stun .
u«.ue Yeodet.f l.Jy pre1eni111g th11
newspaper's opinioni and com-
mentary Oil lopics of infete.ft
and sig11 ijica11c<'. by provulo1g n
forut11 for f/1e e:zpre.f3i01l of
our rende rs' npinrons, nn<I by
preserlti llf/ 1/1r tUve r.~ft 1·1r11•,
,,oi1H$ of 1nfnr1nt-ti n/jsr r1·r,·(
ond spoke.~n1i>11 011 tupu:s (I f //Jr
doy
Roht>rl N \Vcr.d. Puh11~hrr
·1~
\
Saddlebaek
VOL. 63 , NO. 111, 4 SECTIONS , 40 PAGES ORA NGE COUNTY, CA LIFO RNI A FRIDAY, MAY 12. 19 70
x-
Oil D1·ill Ba11
Give11 Boost
By Cle111e11te
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 tho Oail, l'llO! Siii!
A promise this week of $1.000 by
San Clen1cntc toward the $5,000 fu nd
lo assist passage of the Cranston-Mu rphy
an ti-oil-d rilling bill brings the dollar
a1nount to the top. but one more hurdle
is looming before !he funds can go
lo work.
The project -10 hire a \Vashinglon,
n .c.. lobbyist to !ielp pull the oil
sanctuary bill out of <.:OrnnHttces and
lnlo success in Congress -stilt need~
signnturcs on a join1-pov.'crs agr~cmcnt
<:urrently being reviewed by coun1y lega l
()fficiuls.
San Clemen1e·s elty counc1lmcn ap·
proved the $1 ,000 allocation to the fund
after having tabled a request for con-
siderably more c<1rlier th is spring.
The city's contribution (if the joint·
µt.11\'l'rs p~cl wins concurrence) will pay
for the $200-a-day services or F'rcd B.
Burke or Industrial D c v c 1 op me n t
Associates, Inc ., in the Capital.
The fund also will help defray expense~
of trips to Washington by Orange Coast
Di! figh tt rs to present tht· need for
the federal sanctuar}-
Thc cities of Nev;port Bei.!Ch anil
t .aguna Beach al ready have comm11ted
$2.000 apiece to the cause_
The bill, sponsored both by Den1ocral
Alan Crans ton and Republ1ca11 George
1'1urphy. sets up a fed eral oil drillini:
sanctuarv beyon1I the th ree-mile limit
bet.ween· the Santa Ana Hiver and the
1\lcxican Horder.
The proposed l:i11· is nu11· hung up
In t:on11nittees of thr Sena te and the
I louse.
One veti;ran cul fighter from Ne111pnr1
Beach sairl tt1e a im is to puH the bill
fron1 thr comrnillees v.:ithin thr next
three·and-one-half months so that it c;u1
come before 1ht prcscnl Congre ss.
Thal 11•1JI be n111· 1t1rec• go<il of the
lohbv1 st
E\•en !hough thr San CI e m e n le
nuthor1rat1on l'r.IS granted. 1t was done
11·ith some rcluctancr. touched on by
t-.·layor \\'alter Evans "'ho ttild fel1011'
<·ounciln1rn 1h:it The payine for a lnbbv1.~t
11enl agai nst his p.r;i1n ... but th1!' tim~·
i! seen1s prctlv nccrssdr~·"
1'he f1~h1 In su pport uf Sena1f' Bill
:1093 has ron1r fron1 thr three coastnl
l·tties -~p:1rked by Ne"'port Beach
-and thr Coaslal Area Protel'.til'l'
t.rag11t;. 1C1\l'L11. a prival r gro11p of
highlv ~111•r·r~sful 011 f1gbtr r~
T11c fu t1d·r:'l1~1ng f11r thr l•lh~1.11s1
however. h:i s i·otnt' !'>t1·11.:lly lrom th•·
three cvns!lll c1 ti'.!s.
The CAPL 111 recent n1onths h:t:'
organi1.cd its own prog.ram lo press for
passage of the sanctu;iry bill
The grou p rcorgn nized for the f1g h\
fl fler a hia tus which followed its suc-
f.:essful passa~c nf the Shell-Cunningh<1rn
Act which set dr illing santuaries in the
stale<on!rolled offshore waters between
the river and ~'fe)(ico.
Lag una Council,
Planne rs Mee t
The Laguna Be<ich City Council. Plan-
ning Commission an.ct . Board of Ad-
juslmenl will hold a JOlnl stud y session
at 7;3fl p.n1. ~londay in city hall council
chamberi: to di scl1Ss reorganizing the
r~1anning Department work load.
The joint meeting was called followin~
!he suggestion of cooncllman Charlton
Boyd at a recent City Council meeting
that the po111ers of the Board of Adju11t·
men\ should be extended to give the-
Plannlng Co111m1ssion more time to deal
with 011erall planning problems.
The board was established !Wme time
ego to deal with minor variance requests
that had been clogging Plann ing Com-
mission agencie.'I . Noting that many sui;h
requests still reach the higher planning
body. Boyd proposed 11 r u rt her
reorganltal1on.
Slork 1Horkels
NEW YORK (APl -The stock market
turned sharply and broadly downward in
late trading this aflernoon on active 11ol-
un1e. 1Sec quot11tions, Pages 10-ll l.
Oecllning i.~sucs on the New York SIOC'k
i.:xchange overtook g11iners to lend by a
mrtrgin of approx imately ll lo 8. The
winne rs had commandt'd rt nearly two
to one lead near the ecssion's st;irt.
• ov. 00 1e
DIAMO ND FANCIER HE Ri HOFF EXAMINES 'ONCE IN A BLUE MOON' STONE
Laguna Jewelry Desig ner Says Wife Turned Down Las! Diamond He Offered Her
~~~-~~-'-~~~
Lag1111a11 Faces U.S. Cl1a1·ge
Ft:dC'.ral <illthoritit·~ 111 Texo:; ! n d ;~ 1
were preparing prosecuuon of a L;igt1n,1
Beath man chorged with stt!aling ;i
~50.000 plane frfln1 Orange County Airport
six weeks agu 1u ferry in narcotics
fro1 n l\>lex1co.
\Villian1 St1rc111<1l1. 2-1. of 1160 .Jellerson
\Vay . Laguna Bt•;ith. \\·as captured
Deadline Sc l
For Flood l<'1111cl ~
l'ropcrl v 111-1nt'l'~ 11·1~l\1ng hi 1 I.< i 11 1
1't'l11lbl!l'.St'llle111 lt1ll1I li:iil'I ;d lt1J1d: Jn!'
cvsl~ lll vuht'll 111f\'!ll'•1·a!1.i ll1x1d !lt·b1·1,
h;11c until June I 10 eon1ph•t (' Hppl!c\1l1on
l11rn1s :it t.:!ly hrtll
A special Ill"' covering tlf·br1.~ d:i111.1g1•
l':111secJ IJy 1111: J;_u\u;iry·FclJruary, J:lGfl.
lh~ods pro1 ides lt1r llll~ n1c11t 10 own('rs
for removal 1JI llebns Ii ren101;il is
judged in the public interest. The <!P.br1.~
need not already ha1·e been rcn1oved .
Examples of debris \vould inclullc
wreckrtge of buildings. r urn i t u re .
n1achinery. automobiles, parts of trees
anrl olher materials deposited by llocxl
"'a\ers.
Claims rccC'1ved by the t1ly will ht~
submittM to the prope r stale and federal
authorities
1·<.11 lier l l 1i~ 'l'l'ck :i1 ;f ,,111;ill <urport i11
l·"ort \Vorth, along 1111h t!1e pt1 ne and
a 10.1d uf drugs
()range County Sherill ~ l'apL ,J:i n1c!'.
t~ru:idbelt said today fcdl•ral authorities
.!l't' <1jJpare11tly pl<inn1ng to prosecute
~ti rl'"'all. laking the l'<l!>t' out or l0t:al f
Juri ~diclion.
St1rf·l\all, a 111.:cn,rfl pilot bt·l1C'\'1•d to
h;1·q: h1•i,:11 ll>111g lir.11h uf 1.:onlrab;1 nd
<41t!Ullll the 1·uuolry. 1;., 1 hargtd 11'1\h
1;r;1ncl thrfl <i nd unh111·111I p11~~1'!o~1on of
111<.it·11u:in.1 .ind peyntt>
1\ l11,1d i1r s;1 pounds ul p~11 .111d J ',
p111111th ot l1;1lh1l'111ogrn1l' 1nu,ht'1J11ll\1' wn ~
n'1't11l·l't't! aflt·r fc(h•r;d :1gr111~ ~1tikf'd
1JL1I !h1· l'q>(•r Cor11.111(·ii~· <11r1 •r;dl ;11HI
11;11trd 1(11' ~i 111)1•(u1c In rt'lurn II) II
··\\'1• 1r1Jrkc!I 1v11 h th1 · ~·eder11I A1'1:1l1ur1
Ad1n11i1.~trl<Jllon and 1li1· L'S Cu~ton1 ~
~cr11c·t· 111 loctillng 1hl· ~IQlrn tT<i fl and
got a honus when !hey friund n;1r11 ot1cs
1o1 II :· ;;u 1d Capt, Uroadl.w·ll
··v.·l•rC' 111a1ling to s~··· v.l1;1l llir lcder<1!
authorities <1re going tu rl u,"' hf' .said
today when asked bou1 lhe status of
Ilic rasc against Stirewa l1
.. It looks like they ·11 handle pr o--
secu lion. They have a heHer casr against
him than we do."
The plane a~ repur1trl .stolen lro1n
its tie-down spot April JO by Dr. S.
Robert i\1ystrom: ol 7632 21.~1 St .
\\'estminster. and ha s been sought e\'er
since.
Natural Color
Dicunond Sho1vn
At Laguna Studio
By BARBARA KREIBICH
or '"" D••IY ~ilo'I S!tU
Laguna Beach jewelry designer Meri
I !off is always looking for ''something
different. ..
Thursday he was su1nmoning neighbors
in !he Art Center into his Little Ingot
studio to \'iew four "once in a blue
n1oon" diamonds, just arrived from Ne111
York and Te l Aviv.
The extraord inary thing about his ne111
d1ornonds Hoff explains, is their natural
"olor. The aver:ige diamond 1s a 11·hi tr
.'itone that refracts rainbow colors "·hen
1t is cu t.
E<ich ol 1hc four stones hr proud ly
displayed lo his friends h:1s a unique
pig1ncntdtion of ils own.
The biggest. approxun<itely lhr(•f'
r:1ra ls. is orange, turning iu a fluorescent
<'ha rtreuse when t;_1ke11 i11Lo the ~unlighL
Ucl'au sc 11 Is unique. 1ls 11alue wo11ld
he t!lffi tult to establish. says Hoff. but
11 probably 11•ould retail for about $5.000.
A I 7J carat diamond. prob<ibly \\'Orth
11:2.000, veers from burgundy to cinnnn1 on
;;nd bdck . according to the light
Another. weighine J.76 carats and
11·orth $1 ,800 turns from cinnanl011 to
a st~ly grey in the sunlight
The fourth, 1.5 carats, is a soft gr<'en
color and is worth an estimated $1.800.
Though probably his most spectacular
rare ger:n find, the new diamonds are
not lhc rirst naru rally colored stone!
Hoff has turned uP in his search for
the unique. Other prized items <1re some
j Stt DIAMONDS, Page % I
Cityhood Support Asked
A pathy Sc ored b y Dana-Capo B each Comniitt~e
By PAJ\1ELA HALLAN
Of IM 0-11Y "lltl Stiff
Apathy , disinterest on the part of large
landholders and unrealistic economic
feasibility were tossed out as rcasDns
why !he move to incor porate Dana Point-
C;;ipistrano Beach mlly fail.
But members of the incorporalio n coin·
m1llee assured comn1unily I e ad e r !I
as~mbled in 1he hon1e of Dr llogcr
Sander~on Thursday that 11 1<.'ouhl nul
fail with their support.
"I'd like t~ see it COrl)C tu a vott,"
said the altoroey (nl"' Ille. grou p Scott
Raymond. "Then 1t will be settled once
and for all out> way or the olhcr "
Haymond pointi;I out two reason~ \11hy
it shoulrl not tall Tht' f1r \! ls a 11ct'1I
for local c·ontrn l 1vh1ch hr sa11! shou ld
hf' estahh~hcd brforc 11rnhlenu; <ir('
cr1•a\e1I
"The harbor will :il!r;i('I :tll rlr1ncnl \
\\'c'lJ need ij{lr own police fnrcc. You
who haV<' businesses or reside near the
business district shoul!l w11nt it most
or all.''
The second reason 1s av:iilabillty of
the 1ncans to get things done. "At thf'
present time you don·t have a convenienl
"'ay to tell government what your wishe11
arc. It's loo far aw;;iy But if all you
had to do wris go to one of your
neighbors. a city touneilm3n, you'd be
able lo present your views :incl more
cffcc!ively control your area," he .uid .
Al · Colre. on of the ov.ners or
Thunderbird hon1es and one of the lar!icst
landholcler.s in the inco rporAliDn area,
s;1lcl that only nnc fourth of his land
h11s h('(n de11 eloped and he 1tidn't feel
hl' ~ho11ld tak e a stand nn the \n-
(·nrrioraliun onr way or Lhe other .
"Thn~c pro11lc who hnve Rtil horne:-;
(':lll (!rridi' for thc.111selves but I -ston'l
think I shnuld make a ~lai(ln , for
those who will buy OU~~ hi :the , •
" I
future on the land that isn't dc11elopcU,''
he said. ' Kent Snyder, the attoroey for lhe
Chandler-Sherman properties wtuch oc-
cupies about five percent of the. in·
r"rporalion area. sakl his clients rnight
wish to withdraw from Ute proposed
map.
''\Ve aren't in favor Df having a city
~i~ect our property. \Vhy can't we be
left· out?"·
Dr. Roger Sanderson said that hi.-
pr()perty is in because it include11 the
lnnd projection called Dana PQlnt.
"Do people really know where Dena
Polnl~ i~?" nsked Snyder, "Do they
C11 re?"
"Veg.. I hC'lleve the y clo." answered
Scott Raymond .
Dr. SanderSClfl fu rther explained that
bowtdaries were drawn so that tht re
~ CITIES, raae 2 I
'
Pneu1no11ia
Ca1·ee1· at 7 4
JNGLE\\'000 (UPI ) -F'ormer Gov.
Goodwin J . Knight. one of Cal ifornia's
most colorful and eloquent political cam-
paigners, died today at the age of 74.
Knight succumbed from pneumonia at
Daniel Freeman Hospital, where he had
been hospitalized since lasl Tuesday.
He died at 6;55 a.ni.
Knigh~ was admitted lo Sl. Joseph
Hospital in Burbank March I for treat·
1nenl of an undisclosed illness. His con-
dition was said to be satisfactory al
the lin1e.
Kn ighl, who ser11ed as governor from
August, 1953, to January, 1959, dropped
out of the 1962 gubernatorial race on
doctor's orders after he suffered a
hepatitis attack.
Before becoming chief execull 11e or
the state, Knight was I i e u le na n t
go11ernor. In thi s capacity he served
as chairmal'I of the California Com-
mission on Interstate Cooperation and
as a member on the State Lantis Com-
1nlssiDn, State Disaster Council, Toll
Bridge Authority, and the Board of
Regents of the Uni\•ersity of California.
He served for 12 years as a superior
court judge in Los Angeles County prior
to that and was active i11 civic affair!'!
during his career as a practicing at-
torney. He also 1vorkC<l as a hard rock
1niuer, a . ne111spaper reJ>Orlor and. was
:I seaman aboard a subchaaer during,
World War I.
Knight'!'i flrsl experience·, in politics
\Vas to di stribute handbills In lht 1910
gubernatorial campaign of Hiram W.
J ohnson, He worked for the Johnson·for -
President campaign head quartrrs al New
York Cit.v in 1920 and can1palgr1ed for
Johnson in Los Angeles in 1924 \\'hen
.John~on was again a presidential as-
pirani.
Born Dec 9, 1896, in Provo, Utah,
t\night w11s the son of Jesse Knight.
a la wyer and mining engineer, and Lillie
Milner Knight. The family had come
11·est from New York in about 1850.
t\1rs. Kn ight's father. John B l\1llner
.ser11ed on the Utah bench for 50 years.
Knight had a record of great popularity
with voter~ of both parties, and v.·a!'i
liked by both labor and management.
In the 1954 primary election for governor
his pluralities set new records for volume
of votes in C:ilifornia.
In the 1954 general election h~ was
rll'C:ted 111i1h a majority o[ 551 .JJI votes
-a grea1er margin than that received
by any other candidate for state-"•ide
roff1ce with major party 11ppo.~iti11n.
lhl· 11'hire.h;iirecl fnrn1er California
l'l11rf c:-:ccut11'1~ stepped cisidc under
prc~i;urc 111 1957 in lhe gubernatori:1l
C"ontcsl in fa1•or of Sf'n . \Villlam F.
Kno11iland. I R-C:i lif. ), who was defeated
by Dernocrntic Gov. Edn1und G. Brown
in the .~ubsequent clecllon. Knight ran
instead for U.S. Senator again s L
Dr1nocrt1l Clai r En,l!lc. btit lost ,
\\'hen he entered the 1962 gu!Y.?rnator!a\
race. Knight touched off a political war
of charges and counter charges with
then Vice President Richard t\1. Nixon
jSer: KN IGHT, Page Z)
Tait to Discuss
Education Goals
At School Meet
Owen Teit, asslstenl superh1le ndent or
Laguna Beach schoo ls, will discuss
"Goals of Edu cat!Dn'· during a discussion
meeting ~londay evening at 7 :30 in the
district administration building.
The pu bllc is invited to join members
of the recently formed Schools Com-
munication Club, made up Df res.!dents
interested in school problems ari_d under
the chairmanship of Jack Swartzbaugh.
Purpose of the group, . s a y s
Swartzbaugh, is to seek more information
about lhe schoo ls,. raise questions of
importance to the community and to
offer volunteer help on special ·com-
mittees.
rollowing a brie f talk by Tai.I on
MO(lday .. Oie audie}1Ce win be invited
to discuss such que,slions , as: What is ,,.~ootl" :.i.dli<'&tlorl? How dO you m~ature
H? What subjects should the schools
teach or not teeth? Whal ls d!!IClpline?
Whal should LagunB slu~ents know when
they graduate ?
The subject of. goals, say! Tail. ii;
directly related to flnonclal nttds of
the district. which shou ld be establlshed
after the community hu' decided whet
It w1nt.s from its scliool!.
Today's Flnal ,,
N.Y. Stooks
TEN CENT>
• 1es
•
AP PIM>tot
GOODWIN J . KNIGHT
Girl's R eturn
To l 'lllss OK'd
After Drug Case
A f\l1ss1on V1e10 High School sophomore
coed was readmitted lo cl11~ses today
followinR a 3 tu 2 ruling by the Orango
County Board o( Educalio11.
Cbarlene Hurst had bren suspended
by hi~h school officials lasl Dec. 5 rot
allegedly being under the Jnnuence o!
drugs or intoxicants on the school
grourn.ls.
A hearing bef11re lh<' Tuslln Union
High School Districl bonrd fol lowcrl anrJ
the gi rl was suspended until June I.
Her parents, represrnled by attorney
Nathan T:irr, appealed the suspension
to !he cnunt.v sthool board and the
case was returned to the Tustin distrit't
for a fnrm<il hearing.
Thursday Tarr contended thal the
formal hearing 11•as "not fair t>ecau~c
S\11orn testimony l\'as not taken."
The board discussed the legal aspects
of the case and adjourned to executive
session to hear ;i tape of the Tustin
hearing.
At T::'lrr's ins1slcncc that lhe county
bo<"trd n1ak e ;1 dt'c1sion Ht once following
!he executhe S<'Ssio n, three board
members. 1\tr.~. Don" Ara ujo. Don .Jordan
and A. !-.'.. "Pat" Arnold voter! that
the girl be readmiltf•d to r.tission Viejo
High School 11n 111cthate!y.
PILOT PROFILES
:l:>Tfl CAN DIDATES
In cooperation 1\·ith lhl' Orange Coa.~t
League of WonH'!l Voters, !he DAILY
PILOT 1n lls Saturd<iy cd1l1011 will
present biographies and viewpoints of
candidates for the 35\h Congressional
District , formerly represented by the
late James B. Utt.
More than one full page will be devoted
to photos an d background in formatio n
on candidates who submitted the ir own
data for inclusion in the voter ed11cati(l 1111
program. Look for the wrapup on this
importan! congres~iona l con tes1 i n
Sat1:rday's DAILY PILOT.
Orange Coast I
Weather
1'1akc way for the beach bound
traff ic. The weekend weather pic-
tu re calls for sunny skies and warm
temperatures, with inland residents
fleeing readings in the 80's for the
lG.ish coastal climate.
1.NSIDE TODA l'
Son1t thi11a 11ttw in tlic study
of history has bee11 added al
\Ve.~lminster lligh School where
n per.~analized C:Oltrse iu ·'hiJ·
1or1cul rese-orc/i" 1s i1L opera·
l!p11 .. Sec t0<Iby 's Weeke~tder.
lklll... " Mu!\111 '"""' 'It C•llfornl• I NlllMlll Newt f.I
Ch-C-1"1 U• I Orl~fl (l\IRIY t
Cl1u lllfd Jt. .. ll•llWfl"" 1f.1S
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r•Uor l1I """ ' l'l"I~ 1•11
Ttlt¥)tl... H
t hollin 1._1& I
NO•OlClll 14 W1olhtr 4
•nn L-.i1itr1 U "''""~'• Nows IJ.ll M.oltM1 I Wt.r .. Ntwt f.f
M .. ll"tl I Wlllllflffr 11·lt
Movlt'1 1•·H
' I I
!
I ~ DAILY Pll.., SC
I
MAGGIE MEGGS JOHN D. RATTERREE
Over PSA Fizzle
3 Air Cal Executives
Stage Mass Resignation
Three top executives who have been
piloting the low-altitude fortunes of
Orange County-based Air California have
bailed out of their jobs, it was disclosed
Thursday.
They quit -in their words -as
the result of cancellation of a planned
m.erger with Pacific Southwest Airlines
Jltc., following extendtd delays in hear-
inp before the California Public Utilities
Commission.
Air California President Carl A.
Benscoter, treasu rer Robert E. Soulerin,
and general counsel Norris Webb handed
in their resignations Thursday.
Board Chairman N. Loyal! McLaren
Slid the resignations would be effective
immediately and offered no official
reason lot the move.
"Robert Cli fford , fonner vice president
bi charg e of Air California operations,
"'as immediately appointed vice presi-
dent and general manager to replace
Benscoter.
"We are fortunate to have a man
of t-.1r. Clifford's ability within the com·
pany to take on the important
respomibililies of r u n n in g Air
California," said McLaren.
·"We have gone through some very
tough times in the last few months,"
remarked Clifford.
''But now. with the cessation of the
merger negotiations wi!Ji PSA, we are
taking posiUve action to revl t.alize our
airline," he added.
"During merger talks, company loyatty
and enthusiasm reached a new high
and it is this kind of spirit generated
by our employes that will not only keep
Air California very much a live -but
v:ill give PSA a run for jts money,"
the new chief predicted.
Clifford said the intraslate airline foon--
ded in 1967 has two primary objectives:
better public service and dividends ro ,
the stockholders.
"What we 've got at Air California
l.s :the quickest method of transportation
~ween two points and we do it with
s¢rit and style," he explained,
CllUord said the profit improvement
COFFEE, TEA, OR MILK?
Air Cal's Cli fford
.11spect won 't affect passenger service
at all.
"All \re're doing is mov ing to <.'On·
solidate things which we have not been
able to do before - something y,•e should
have done Jong ago," he said,
"We're not a big airline ," he continued,
''we are a small airline with an ex·
tremcly good product We have a lut
of people pulling for us, mo.st of all
our own emp!oyes."
He said a tea m of pilots ant!
stey,·ardesses has volunteered lo promote
Air Caliiomia on their own free tin1e,
including organization of a speaker's
bureau to oulline plans before various
groups.
''\Ve've got a going thing and we "re
going to keep it going," he conciuded.
From Page 1
INCORPORATIO N PLAN • • •
would be no fingers of land bu t fa irly
&traight lines.
One finger that y,·as excluded frorn
the map y,.·as a stretch of land along
r ach road bumping the boundaries of
fian Clemente, TI1e comml!tre voed
Soldie rs Execut ed
LAGOS, Nigeria I AP J -A hundrrd
people watched the public m11itarv ex-
ecution by firing squad todav of lwo
Nigerian .soldiers found gtlilty ·by court-
martiaJ of killing tY•o civilians.
DAILY PILOT
N__,9" '••II L.,, .. a..cti
CMt• Mn•
H•1ttillft99 h-cll
f91111hlf1 ...... ..,
s .. C ltfMnt9
QllllHGE COASf PUBLISHI NG COMPA NI'
Roberl N, Wttd
Prui<!on! •'1<1 PuDh>ntr
J•<~ R. Cutl•"f Vitt Prt1•a..,r l nll G...,tr1t M•n•g.tr
ll.a,.,11 k11..,il
f:dl!W
Tho"'•• A. Murphtn1
M ..... elng EOl!OI"
ll:ith1•d "· Nall
:.0..!11 O••""o Cw nty Editor
C.lll i.w..: ,_ Wut 81y Str"'I
Jil ........ I ltlc": !211 WtO !lllbol 10\llnltf
1.. ....... ltK": W Ft< .. ! A~ .......
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..... "'" .... , ..... _ •• , Of "*''""·
lo include it in the incorporation n1:i p
;ind if local property owners y,·anl out
they ('Jn petition the Local Agency
Formation Comn1ission.
George Chade, C;ipi51 rano Bc:ich pro-
per!~' owner. questioned \Vhethe r or nol
.1 rl ty t·ould Lie run on less U1an a
hfllf a ml llion doll:irs, U1e new city's
proposed working budget outlined in U1e
FC':i.~tbility rrport.
lie pointed out lhal San Juan
Capist rano, a ci!y smaller in popu lation,
has a proposed budget of nearly $2
11ullion
Ray Berryman. a Los Alamitos cily
off1 c1al 1rho hrlpcd prepare the economic
fra .sib1lil,\' rcporl, s.1id that this is a
first yf':ir budget whereas San J uan's
is a le11th year budget.
lie .also said that sources of revenue
\l'l'rc kepi conservative to show that
tile new city \1•ould not be rounling
on cert:iln count y .1nd slate fund s y,·hich
it is entitl ed to.
Le~ Ren1n1e rs, longtime resident of
lhc are;i ;ind pre.o::ldcnl of thc Ilana
l'oint Civic Association, q u es t Ione d
\1'heUier or not qualified people would
lY.? found lo serve as clty offlclals. Kenny
1~awrence , Ca p is tr an o Beach
b11sin('ssman, wondered if ;ipathy wou!d
be .~o great Uia! it Y.Wld be hard to
get. 25 percent of the property OY.'ner.s
to sign Uie peli1ion necessary for tJ1e
clrclion.
Mrs. Chloe Luk<', who li\·es in
!he Palisades section, s.1icl the people in
her area v.·ould sii;::n because lhey y,•ant
nothing lo do Yo'ith San Clemente. Her
area is one the city of San Clen1entc
may ron lest ;is more :ippropriately a
part of th:it citv .
Snnderson toid the group that he "''a.!I
sure qua lifit>d people \l'oul d be fD11nd
to ser\"e, tha t tnnugh .signatures y,·ould
hr gathered ;ind he told the large pro-
perty o"'·ners that they should want to
be in ihe inC'Orpo r;ited !lrea because
11 wou lrl bt> .1 c-ood !i<'lling poin1 for
th~m whPn thl'y rll'\'r topNi thC'!r land.
. Sa nderson furtht•r t:ild th(' group th<J t
11 U1t'y <Ion'! lnr11rpor.1lc nnl\' they \\'o n'l
gM anothrr chance. "l'n1 eonv!nc:rd lhl!I
:irl'I! will h;' :i ('i1' Vl nl•'d:iy :ind If
it i.~n'I Jl rl11· h\' 11~r!f 1t \YJll br part
nf S:in l 'li·1111•ntc nr ~;in ,Ju 11 n
Cap1 o;.tr:ino '
JOHN A. STEIGER
Ho11sing Needs
For Mexicans
To Be Aired
Low cost housing tar Capistrano Val -
ley's ~1exican Americans and other bar.
rio dwellers will be the major topic at
a public meeting May 27.
fl1rs. Rita Nieblas, director of tl1e
Adult Community Center in San Juan
Capistrano, said that housing and other
commWJity problems ~·ill be discussed
at the meeting of the Community Action
Couocil of Orange County at 7:30 p.m.
in the cafetorium of San Juan Elemen-
tary School, one block from Ortega
Jiighway on El Camino Heal.
She said publlc officials in San Juan
Capistrano will be inv ited to the 1neeting.
~1rs. Nieb!as explained that there arc
several ways to obtain funding for low
CQSt housing.
The Housing and Urban Development
Agency has programs ils y,•ell as other
government agencies. TI1e ni ajor pro-
blem is obtaining land at a low enough
cost to make housing projects
econom ica lly feasible.
One public official in San J ua n
Capistrano \\'ho preferred to remain
unidentified said he recently heard of
a proposed low cost housing development
for the city but that he would oppose
it because the density suggested had
been 16 LUJits per acre.
'Ne ivport Seven'
No 1v Five; T1vo
Fr eed by Jucl ge
The "Newport B1Jaeh Seven'' lost the
nic knflme given thf'm by local polic£'
Thur~rl;1_v \Yh(•n a Su perior Court judge
agreed v.'ith two members nf the group
thfl! drug: charges endorsed by th{'
Or:in ~r-Coun!y Grand Jury should ))('
(li~n1 is~rrl
Judge \\'11li;im ~turray fref'd Dou~l;i~
Alan Potter. 22, (If 31 4 de la Estrella,
San Clemente <i nd Martha Ann fr lass.
21 , of 1807 \V, Bal boa Dou!('v:ird, Newport
Beach and dismissed charges that thC'v
were in possession of marijuana \Yilh
intent to sell last J ;in. 12.
The ir five companio ns in lhe l!'.roup
:irrrst y,·r re ordered to appear l\lay 29
before Superior Court Judge Jan1es F.
Judi:te for the sell ing of further pro-
ceedings, They arf'
Kathleen !\1. Ba hen, 2J. or 310 35th
Sl, Ncy,·porl f\(':1rl1 , \.;irv F.d w:ird Grav ,
27, of 310 1 ~ 35t h ~l , Nc11'porl Bench:
Honald !)e<1n Kniseley, 27, of 25231 l\lontc
Verdr. Sou th l.;igu na; Thomas Duncan
\Vh t>all\'\', 27 . flf ~604 Park Lanr, Nrwporl
Tle:'l rh a·nd Clnyton Frrincis Johns~1n, 20,
of \Vhi!!icr.
Al! 11•rrl' :i rrt'\trd :it thf' D:ihrn home
;"ind ind icated hy U1e Grnnd Jury on
.l\.1arch 26.
F r«1ttl Pttgc J
l\:NIGHT ...
as he announced his en!ry in the contest.
Knight made it plain he felt Nixon
\v;is largely responsible for his elimlna-
lion from the 1958 ract. He accused
Nixon of threatening, in 1957, to cam-
paign against him in eve ry C;ilifornia
county if he opposed Knowland . He said
later a Nixon en1issary hAd orfered him
any job in the stale if he would y,•i1hdraw
from the forthcon1 ing primary.
Nixon called 1he charge "fa lse <ind
libelous on its f11ce'' and <lenied ('V<'r
n1aking any prornises of ;iny kine! to
Kni ght or any othC'r individuals lo keep
thrn1 ou1 or th t' r<ice
Los Angeles financlrr ./. llowarcl
Edge rlon, the man Knight later named
as !he emissary, admitted ta lk ing to
Knight, but said th;it at no lime had
he e.ver asked him not lo n1n for tht
{lovcrnorship. l!e also denied being Nlll·
on's emissary.
A long, bitter campaign was In pro-
srect befl'lre Knight \\"llS fnrced , by ii·
lness. to drop out or the ca1npalgn -
one that political observers SRW as the
toughest battle of his long c~irrer In
stale polltlcs. M()St political pundits cnn-
~idered Nixon too s-tron,it even for ~uch
a popular politics' veteran as "C:oodie.''
" Auto Birth Con trol?
WASHINGTON fUP ll -Whnl the nR·
t':>n rC'ally nrrd.~. arrordinl! to Interior
Secrrtn rv \\'~l!rr .1. Hir.ke l. Is a "birth
C"Onlr!ll j1ill" to reduce thf' sir.e of !he
nnlion's a11tomohilr popul 1111on "\Ve Arc
rearhin~ !hr. pn in ! wllfle the autom nb!le
1~ bt•rnn11ni.? counterproduclive," l·llckcl
s:ud Thur~day.
DAILY PILOT Sllff P!ll!ts
WILL IAM WILCOXEN JOHN G. SCHMITZ
Ca11didat es
Tell Stands
At Foruin
~
Five Republican candidates for the
35\h Congressional Dis trict differed 111·
tle on issues at luncheon nieeting Thurs-
day of the Newport Harbor chapter nf
lhe Ca 1iforni;1 Federation of Republican
\Vomen in l\'ewport Beach.
Each cant1u1af p -\\'iP iam Wilcoi:en
of Laguna Beach, John G. Schmitz of
Tustin . Jnhn Ratteri>e of L1uu1na Reacl1.
John A. S!Pi~er of Oceanside and t-.1ap11 ic
T\>l~i.;.l!s of La~un:i Be:ith -J?ave a ten
minute speech followed by a question.anct.
an ~IVf'r prr()(\.
Woodcock UAW Choice About fiO women attended the lull<'heo"
;;it the F.fw>tl c;Juh \\•herr thev heard
!he candidates \:!kl' i<imi!ar stands on
tlH• Indochina war, welfare and campus
protest.
In Unanimous Balloting ~1rs. Meg.l'~ !old the ladiPs th11t women
In this countrv 11re !rented as second
class citi1.ens. "Whrn J t.:ilk flhn11t wmnen
J>OY.'er. !'in not lalkini:z abou1 se:< an<l
no bra~. l'n:i talkin1.1 about getting th"
same fln<1nc1<1J award for the same jobs
as men." .~he sin!cd.
DETROIT (AP) -Leonard Woodcock ,
59-year-old vice president, was formally
and unanimously elected president of
U1e United Auto Workers Union today.
\Voodcock was elected by his 24 fellow
members of lhe UAW 's International
Executive Board to serve until the
union's 1972 convention.
His election to succeed the late \\'alter
P. Reuther was assured Thursday by
the withdrawal of I.he only othe r con-
tender, a fellow vice president, Douglas
r~raser, 53.
The fiery, red-haired Reuther, for 24
years leader of the 1.6 million member
union, died May 9 in a plane crash.
the executi ve board fill s vacan cies occur-
ring between convenlions.
TI1e question of electing a vice
presidential successor to Woodcock was
Fron& Page J
DIAMOND. • •
vivid canary yellow diamands and a
huge 18 mm. pink pearl found off the
coast of Burma .
"They can color diamontJs artificiallv
now," says Hoff, "but this natural
pig1nentation is really ran:-"
The d1an1onds now are lotked away
in a safe deposit box and will be shown
'"by appointment only."
The proud-01Yner tntends to design
~c\li11gs for thrrn and. if they haven 't
bee n so!d by then, will include some
or all of them in his summer display
at the Festival of Arts.
One will not be sold . "l"ll gi\'e It
to my wife." says Hoff. "On ly the l.1.i;t
111n c r offered her a diarnond she turned
i. down . i\'laybc she'll like one of these.''
NllWPORT BEACH
l727 Wet t<liff Or,, 64'1·'1050
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
not decided immediately. Any one of
17 regional dire ctors, who also are
auton1atica!Jy members or the boarU,
are eligible.
To mi!d-mannereo, reserved Woodcock
falls the tough new contract bargaining
later this year with the Big Three of
the automotive industry -General
Motors. Ford and Chrysler -and also
y,•ith the agricultural implement in-
dustry. Renewal of pacts in the aerospace
industry comes up next year.
New car sales and profits of the
automakers have been sagging this year,
and lhe companies already have indica-
ted the will t.ake a tough stance in ne.
gotlations lo supplant three-year con·
tracts expiring next Sept. 14.
Negotiations will open in mid-July. The
union demands include a substantial
'v.age increase, ear!Jer retirement at ;i ~1gher pension, unlimited cost of Jiving
increases ge!lred to the govemment's
consumer price index, a year-end bonus
and company-paid dental care.
Paris Subway Strike
\Vo r scns City Ja111up
!'ARIS (AP) -A 24-hou r subY.'ay
strike made the French capital's traffic
jams y,•orse than usua l today as more
pn\'atl' c;irs came into the ci ly and
army trucks picked up suburban com-
muters. The strikers arc dema nding a
sixth \\'{'f'k of pa id \'acation each year.
At Or ly airport , arrivals and
departures \Vere delayed JO ininutcs to
an hour and several flights were canceled
because of a weekend strike by air
11:ivigat1011 personnel. They arc protesting
tli~ci pli nary action against somf' perso11-
11el who joined in an e;irlier strike by
a ir traffic controlle rs.
.... ~-~ .........
l·lere's ho1\.' the cnndidates stand 0'1
somf' other i.~sues:
-On the move into Cambodia all ~aid
Nixon did the riR"hl thine and urge<l
the \1'omen tn e!<oress their ~upporl of
lh0 Pre.~ident 's ooJic ies.
Schmitz ur~ed the women to supoort
the President's Cambodia move. ''not
becausr he's a Republican and not br-
cause he's President. but bee::iuse he's
right and he needs all our hacking."
-On campus violencl' and protP.st, a 11
said lhev favor returnin,I!" publicly sup-
,.,,,,.,Pd colleges and universilies to educa-
tion<i!, not protest institutions.
\Vllcoxen. in speaking on rduca!ion. rm·
phasized the need for more vocational
tr"'•1 lnP in public schools.
On the subject of r.an1pus violenec
Rallerree advocat"rf .iailln..I( \'iolent cam .
pus protesters. "These campus rioters
-11"rl that·s jus! ll'h:it thrv 11rc, rioters
-shoiild go to j:iit." he said.
-All of the cand idale.~ sairl the welfare
systen1 as practiced bv the J ohnson
;.,trninistration \\'as a failure and in·
dicated they backed Nixon·s proposed
refnrms.
\Vilcoxen spoke out stronglv in backing
t\ixon·s \\'elfarc reforn1 bill. "As a deputy
rJistri{"t All orney. I had a chance In
see \\·hat our present welfare svstem
docs -pay ing families to break up.
I think the President's rcforn1 package
is one of the most comprehensive to
date."
llearl Pa ti ent Dies
CAPE TO\VN, South Africa <AP)
Pie ter Johannes Sn1iU1, the \\.'Orld's se--
cond longest surviving heart tran.'>IJlant
patient. died early today at Groote
Schuur Hospital. lie 11·11 s 53.
DRAPERY '
SALIE!
CUSTOM MADE WITH A WIDE SELECTION O F
QUALITY INTERIOR DES IG N FAB RICS AS MUCH
AS <0% OFF ON EXCELLENT DESIGN FABRICS.
Profe11lon1I lnt•rior .,45 LAGUNA BEACH
011lgn1r1 Av311r.bli-AID "" Nort~ Coa!t Hwy. 494.,ss1
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 rho11, Ton "'" Mo1t of Drn90 County 540·126J
11
7
'11
Laguna Bea~h
VOL. bl. NO. 122. 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1970
x-
Oil D1~ill Ba11
Give11 Boost
By Cle1ne11te
By JOHN \'ALTERZA
Of tl>t DeU1 .-1111 11•1t
A promise this week of $1,000 by
San Clemente IOY."ard th(' $5,000 fund
to assist passage or lhe Cranston-~·lurphy
anti-0il-Orilling bill brings the dollar
amount to the top, but one more hurdle
js looming before the funds can go
10 v.·ork .
The prOJCC\ -to hire a Washington.
D.C., lobbyist to help pull the oil
sanctuary bill out of com1nittecs and
into success in Congress -still needs
signatures on a joint-powers agree ment
currently being reviewed by county legal
officials.
San Clemente's city councilmen ap-
proved the ~1.000 allocation to the fund
after ha\'ing tabled a request for con·
siderably more earlier this spring.
The City's contribution tif the joint~
powers pc.cl v.·ins concurrence) will pay
for the S200-a-day services of Fred 8.
Burke of Indu strial De vel op men t
Associates, Inc .. in the Ctl'pital.
The fund 2lso will help defray expenses
nf trips•to \Vashington by Orange Coast
riil fight ers to present the need for
the federal sanctuar~.
The cities of Newport Beach and
J.aguna Beach already have committed
~2 .000 apirce to the cause.
The bill, sponsored both by Democrat
'.Alan Cranston and Republican C.wrgP
?vturphy. sels up a federal oil. dril.lin.g
:-;anctuary beyond the three-mile 11m1t
between the Santa Ana River and the
fl1cxi c.i n Border.
The proposed law ii:. now hung 11p
Jo co1n1nittccs of the Senate and the
l /nu sc.
One vrtcran oil [1ghler from Newport
.Beach said the aim is to pull the bill
fro1n the committees within the next
1hree·and-one-half months so that 11 can
<:ome before the present Congress.
Thal v.·il! be one dircc' goal of the
lobbyist
Even though the San C I c m c n t f'!
Authorizat ion Y.'3S granted , it was done
,vilh some reluctance, touched on by
fl·layor \Valier E\'ans 111ho told fe\l~w
('.ouncil1nen thal 1hc pa~·1n~ for a lobbyist
,1 cnl aga ins l his gra in. "but thi.s time
it seems pretty ncct>ssary ·· _
The fight 1n .~upporl of Senale Bill
:1093 ha~ (0111e lrom the three coastal
t.'itlcs -sparked by Newport Beach
-and the Coastel fl rea Prolectivf'!
1,caguc, 1CflPL 11. a private group of
J11ohly sucrr.~.~ful oil fight.ers. ,
The lun<l ·rais1ng fnr 1he lohbj 1sl.
11owever. h;1s i·on1c strict ly lrom 1he
three cO;i!::tal c1!it'$
The C.:APL 1n recent inonths ha~
organized its ow11 program to press lor
passage ur lhe sanctuary bill.
The gr our reorganized for the fight
after a hiatus which followed ils suc-
t.·essful passage of lhc Shell-Cunningham
Acl wh ich set drilling santuaries in the
state--controllcd offshore waters between
the river and r.te:<lco.
Lag una Council,
Planners Meet
The Laguna Beach City Council. Plan-
ning Commission an_d. Board of ~tl
justment v.·ill hold e Joint study sess10!'
at 7:30 p.m. h'londay in city hall council
chamber~ to discuss reorganizing the
Planning l)cpartr:ienl \York load . .
The joint 1neet1ng was called following
the suggestion of councilman Charlton
Boyd al a recent City Council meeting
that the powers or lhe Board of Adjust-
ment should be. extended to give the
Planning Commission m!¥'e time to deal
with overall planning problems.
The board was established some time
:igo to deal with minor variance requesl3
that bad been c1ogging Planning Com-
misaion agencies. Noting t~al many s~ch
request.5 ~lilJ reach the higher planning
body. Boyd proposed a f u r t her
reorganization.
Stock itlarkets
NEW YORK (APl -The sl.ock marktt
turned sharply and broadly downward in
late trading this afternoon on active vol-
'1unc. 1See quotations, Pagei; IG-11 ).
Declining issues on the New York ~lock
Exchange overtook gainers lo lead by a
margin of approxima tely 13 lo 8. The
winne:ra had cornn1andctl a nearly two
to one lead near the 11es.~ion'i ttart.
ov.
"i • •
00 • Ie
DA IL'!' r lLOT $1111 '"°"
DIAMOND FANCIER HERi HOFF EXAMINES 'ONCE IN A BLUE MOON' STONE
Lagun• Jewelry Designer Says Wife Turn.cl Down Last Diamond He Offered He r
LagiinanF aces U.S. Cha1·ge
111 Texas Dope Smuggli11g
Fcdcr:il autliorities in 1'exas I o d a y
\1·cre preparing proi;ecution of a L11gun;1
Beach man charged with slealing a
$~.000 plane from Orange Coonty Airport
six weeks ago to ferry in narcotics
from Mexico .
William Stirev.·alt. 24 . of JJIO JcHerson
\Vay, Laguna Beach. was caplurcd
Deadline Se t
For Flood Funds
Property o"·ners v.·ishing to c I a 1 111
re1mbursctncnl rr<lm rc1l eral funct s for
<'OSts involved 111 rcmn1•;il of flood clehn.~
have until June I to c11111ple1c appl1catiun
form s at city hall.
A .-,;pccial law cove ring rlcbn.~ da1nagc
caused by the Janu:iry·February. 1969 .
lloods provides !nr pa y1nent tn owners
for removal of debris 1f ren1oval I\
judged in the public interest. The debris
need not already have been removed .
Examples of debris would inc.ludc
wreckage of buildings. f u r n I t u r e .
machinery. automobiles, parts or trees
and other materials de.posited by rlood
v.·aters.
Claims received by the city \l'tll be
submitted lo the proper state and federal
authorilies.
earl ier this week a1 a sn1all airport in
Fort \\lorth. along wt lh the pJ,1nc and
a 1oad of drugs.
Orange County Sheriff's (.;;1p1. James
Broadbell said today federal au1horit1c~
arc appare-ntly planning lo prQ~cutr
Stirev.·all, taking the case ouL of local
Jurisdiction.
Stirewalt, a licensed pilot bcl1c1·<'tl tu
have been flying loads ol <·onrraband
:i round the country, 1:-0 l.'.i1<1rg1·<l 111lh
grand lheft and unla11"fur po~cs~1on of
n1ari1uana and peyote
A load of 55 pound:. of pol :ind 11,
rotind5 of h;illuch1ogen 1c nH1 ~hrourns was
recover('(l af\er federal ag1•nts ~l;1ked
out the P1[>('r Comant'l11• .11n."rnf1 ;ind
waited for someone to return to H
··\Ve 1~orked \V1th the Fcdf'r;;I Av1;1tiu11
.A.iJ111 1nfSl rlalion ;ind 1hc l. S t;u~tom~
Service 1n localing the stolen (·r:i11 :ind
got a bonus when they lound narc·o\1c~
111 It." said Capt. Broadbelt.
'·\vc·re \\'ailing to sec 1,rhal the federal
authorJties are going lo do." hr. said
today when asked bout the status of
the case agajnsl Stirewal1 .
.. It looks like lhey"ll handle pre;
SCC\Jtion. Tbey have a better case ;1gainst
him than we do."
'The plane as reported s1olen from
its tie-down spol Apr il 10 by Or. S.
RoberL Mystrom, or i632 21.~I St..
\Vestminster, and has been sought ever
since.
Natural Color
Dia.1nortd Shown ..
At La..guna Studio
Hy BARBl\·RA KR EJBJCH
Ot ll1t D•!I, Pilel ti•!!
Lagu na Beach jewelry designer Heri
Hoff is al"'ays looking 'for ·'something
different "
Thursday he was summoning neighbors
in I.he Art Center into his Lillie Ingot
studio lo l'iew four ''once in a blue
1noon" diam011ds . just arrived from ·New
York and Tel Avil'.
The extraordinary thing aboul his nt'w
d1an1onds Hoff explains, is their natural
l"(l]or. The average diamond 1s a v.·hac
s1one thal refracts rainbow colors when
ll IS CUL
Each of the four stones he proudly
dis played tn his friend~ hus a uniq11~
p1gn1cntat1on of its ov.•n .
·r11e hig,r.;:est. approxin1atclv 1hrt'<'
c11rat.~. 1s orange. turning to a nVorescrnt
ch;1r1rc1JSC v.•llcn taken into lhe su nli ghl
Because 1t is unique. IL~ value. \l'o uld
bl· diff1 cull lo establish, S<t).~ Hoff, b11t
11 probnb!y \\'Qu id retail for about !J.fXIO
1\ 1 7f.i car<il diamond, probably wnr\11
$2,000. veers fron1 burgundy to <:11u1aa1011
an d back, according to the light
Another. 1vcighing J.76 carats and
v.·orth Sl.800 turns from cin'namoo lo
a steely grey in the sunlight
The fourth , 1.5 carats, is a soil green
color and is \Yorth an -estimated SI.800.
Though probably his mosl spectacular
rore gem find, the new diamonds are
nol the first naturally colored sto ne s
Hoff has turned up in his search for
the unique. Other priied item.~ are some
(See DIAMONDS, Page %)
Cityhood Support Asked
Apatliy Scored by Dana-Capo Beacli Co1n1nitt~e
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of .,. "'" "'"' ... " Apathy, disinterest on the part of large
landholders and unrealisUc economic
feasibility were tossed out a~ reasons
why the move to incorporalt Dana Point-
C3pistrano Beach may fail:
But members or the \ncorpora\ion Cfl"l-
mittee assured community 1 ea de rs
assembled in the .home of Dr. Roger
Sanderson Thursday that it would not
!ail wilh their su pport.
"I'd like to see it come to a vote,''
said the allorney for the group Scott ·
Raymond. "Then it will be settled on~
and for all ont way or the olher. ·•
Raymond pointed oul two reasons why
H should nol fall . The first Is a need
for local control whic.h he said should
~ established before problems arc
created.
"The harbor will attract all clements.
We 'll need our own police fo rce . You
who have businesses or reside neur lhe:
business district should v.·ant it most
of all.''
The second reason is availahility of
the means to get thlng.s done. "Al the
preSC"nt time you don't ha ve a convenient
"''BY to tell government what your wishc!'I
.ire. It's too rar away. But if all you
had lo do \\'BS go to one of your
neighbors. a city councilman. you·d be
able to present your views and more
clfeetively control your area," he said.
Al Coke. on or Hie owners of
Thunderbird hornes and one of the largest
lnndholder1 In lhe inc<Jrporaliun area,
Nild that only one fourth of his land
hns been developed and he dl1ln 't feel
he should lake a sl~nd on the ln-
L'Orporatlon one WI\)' or the other.
·'Those people w.ho have got ho1ne:oi:
can decide for then1selvcs but I don't
think I should m3ke a dt.-cislon for
those who will buy our homes W the
future on the land that isn·t developed ,"
he said.
Kent Snyder. the attornt>y for the:
Cha ndler-Sherman properties which OC•
cuples about fi\•e percent of the in-
corporation area. said his clients might
wish to wlthd ra\v from the proposed
map.
'1We aren't in favor or having a citv
bi.!ect our property. Why can't we bC
left out?"
Dr. Roger Sanderson said that hi~
property is in bccau~ it illt'ludes the.
lnod projeclion called Dnna Point
''Do people really know wlwre Oana
J>oint is?" asked Snyder, "Cffl thPy
care?""
"Yes, I bellt>ve they do." ans\1•crrll
~It Rnymond .
Dr. Sander~ further explained tha:t
boundaries were drawn !IO lhal there
!See CITIES, Page 21
P11eu1nonia
Caree1· at 7 4
ING LEWOOD tU PI ! -Former Gov .
l:oodwin J . Knight. one of California 's
111ost colorrut and eloquent poli tical cam·
paigners, died today al the age of 74.
Knight succumbed from pneumonia al
Daniel Freeman Hospital, where he had
been hospitalized since last Tuesday.
Ile died at 6:55 a.m.
Knight was admitted lo St. Joseph
Hospital in Burbank March I for treat-
111ent of an undisclosed illness. His con-
dition \Yas said lo be satisfactory at
the time .
Knight, who served as governor from
flugust, 19f>J, to January, 1959, dropped
uul of the 1962 gubernatorial race on
doctor's orders after he suffered a
hepatitis attack.
Before becoming chief executive or
!he slate, Knight was I I e u t e na n t
governor. In this capacity he served
as chairma" of the California Com·
rn1ssion on lnterslale Cooperation and
as a member on the State Lands Com·
n1 ission, State Disaster Council, Toll
Bridge Authority, and the Board of
Jlcgents of the University of California.
He served for 12 years as a superior
court judge in Los Angeles County prior
lo that and v.·as active in civic aHairs
tluring hi s career as a practicing al-
torncy. He also worked as a hard rock
1niner, a newspaper reporter and was
:1 seaman aboard a subchaser during
World \Var I. .
Knight's first experteritt tn . -pbiitiCs
\1•as to· distribute hanljbills in lhe 1910
gt1bernatorial campafg1t of Hfram· w.
Johnson. I-le worked for the Johnson-for-
President campaign headquarters. al New
York City in 1920 and campaigned for
.Johnson in Los Angeles in 1924 \\•hen
Johnson was again a presidential as-
pir<1nL
Born Dec. 9. 1896, u\ Provo, Utah,
Knight w;,is the .!IOn of Jesse Knighl,
a l;1111ycr and mining engineer. and Lillie
J\l1lner Knight. 1'he famlly hed come
\\'Csl frQm New York in aboul 1850.
,\/!rs. Knighl's father, John B. i\1ilner
served on the Utah bench for JO year.!I.
Knight had a record,of great popularity
v.•ith voters of both parties, and was
liked by both labor and management.
ln the 1954 primary election for governor
his ptura!1tics set new records for volume
of \'Oles in California.
lo 1hc 1954 general eleelion he wa.o1
<'lcttcd ~·!th a n1aJority or fl51,151 vote~
a grealrr margin than that received
by any othrr cand idt1te for statc·wlde
uHii·c with niajor part y opposition.
Thi• \\ h!lr·ha1rl'd former California
c.-h11'f rxt'tullvc stepped aside under
pressu re in J!J.17 in the guhrrna!.orial
~'(Jn lc:-ol in favo r of Sen. \Vilham f''.
l\11011·land. !H·C.1l1f.). who 1vas defeated
h.v Dt.•mfl<'n1t1c c:ov . Edmund G. Brown
111 lhe subsequent elect ion. Kn ight ran
111stcad frir US. Senator again s l
[Jetnocrtll tla1r f.ni:le, btrt !os!
\Vhen he entered the 1962 gubernatorial
r;i<.:c, Knight 1011ched off a polllical war
or charges and counter charges with
then Vice. President IUchard M. Nixon
t&e KNI GHT, rage 1.1
Tail to Disc uss
Education Goals
At School Meet
Owen Teif, assistanl superintendent of
Laguna Beach schools, wi ll discuss
'"Goals of Education'' during a discussion
n1eeting Monday evening at. 7:30 In the
di~lrict administration building.
The public is invited to join members
of the re cently formed Schools Com-
n1unicatia.i Club, made up of regident3
~nterested In JChool problems and under
tbL chairmanship of Jack Swartzbaugh.
Purpose of lhe group, says. s .... ·art.zbaugh, is to seek more inlormalion
abou t lhe schools, raise questions or
Importance to the communJty and to
offer voluntMr help on .!lpecial com·
mittces.
Pollowing a brlef talk by Tait on
fi.1ooday, the audlt:nce will be invited
to discu!Js such questlon11 as: Whtll is
··good" aducatlon? How do you me11sure
it? What subjects stibuld the 11ehools
teoch or not teach? Whal Is discipline?
What sbQuki LagUna s tudcnta know wbcn
they gradua'to?
·111e subject of goals. says Tait , is
directly rclat~ to financial needs or
the dls1rlc t, which should be establlshcd
1:1fler the community has decided what
it wants from its !!Chools.
. ... I
Today's Plaal
'TEN CENTS
• 1es
.. . :;-
AP PW..
GOODWIN J . KNIGHT
Girl's Return
To Class OK'd
After Drug Case
A. Mission VicJo High School sophomore
coed was readmilted to classes today
following a 3 lo 2 ruling by the Orange
CO\Jnty Board of Education.
Charlene. Hurst had been suspended
by high school officials last Dec. S [or
allegedly belng under lhe innuence 0 ,
drugs . or intoxicaots on the school
grounds.
~ /\e11ring before the Tustin Union
High School District board follov.·ed and
the girl was suspended until June I.
tier pt1rents, represented by attorney
NaU1an Tarr, appealed the suspension
to . the county school board and the
case was returned to the Tustin dis1rict
for a formal hCaring.
Thursday Tarr contended that the
forn1al hearing was "not fair because
swprn testimony was not taken."
The board discussed the legal aspects
(lf .the case and adjourned to executive
session lo hear a tape of the Tustin
hearing.
At Tarr's insistence thal lhc county
board make a decision at once following
the executive session, three board
me111bers. Mrs Doris Araujo, Don Jordan
and A. E. "Pat" Arnold voted that
the girl be. readmitted to Mission Viejo
High School immediately.
PILOT PROFILES
:l5Tl-I CANDID,,tTES
In cooper<tlion \l'ilh lhc Orange Coast
League of \\'omen Voters, the DAILY
PILOT in its Saturday edition will
present biographies and viewpoints of
candidates for the Jf>lh Congressiona l
Dislrict, formerly represented by lht!
late Jan1es 8 . Utt.
More lhan one full page wi11 be devoted
lo photos and background information
on candidates who submitted their o"'n
Jala for inclusion in the vol.e r educatio11
program. Look for the wrapup on this
imp0r:an1 congressional contest i n
Satt:rday's DAILY PILCYf.
Orange Coast
Wenther
Make way for the beech bound
traffic. The weekend weather pic-
turi:_ calls for sunny .!lkie! ar'ld wann
tem'peratures, with inland re.sldent.s
fleeing readings in the Mi's for the
70·isJ\ coastal climate.
INSIDll TOD,\Y
Son1e1hi11a ne10 In tl1e s11u!y
t'lj hi~to'ry /ias been added at
\Vcst1ni11-ste r lliOh Schoot where
a personalized cour.te tn "hi$·
toriool reitDrcl1" iJ in opera-
tio11. See today's \Veekenrler.
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Mt¥1e1 11·11
'
• ..
-MAGGIE MEGGS JOHN D. RATTERREE
Over PSA Fizzle
3 Air Cal Executives
;
•
J OHN A. STEIGER
Ho11sing Needs
For Mexicans
Stage Mass Resignation ~, .. ~~in~~.~~"° v.i.
Three lop exerutives who have been
piloting the low-altitude fo rtunes of
Orange County-based Air California have
bailed out <>f their jobs, it was disclosed
Thursday.
They quit -in their words -as
the result of cancellation of a planned
merger with Pacific Southwest Airlines
Inc., following e%tended deiays in hear-
i~gs before the California Public Utilities
COrnmisslon.
Air California President Carl A.
Benscoter, trea!llrer R<>bert E. Soulerin.
add general counsel Norris Webb handed
in.their resigaatioos Thursday.
Board Chairman N. Loyall J\.1cLaren
l'iiid the resignations would be effective
iirunecllately and offered no <>fficial
reason for the move.
Robert Clifford, former vice president
fn. charise of Air California operations,
was immediately appointed vice presi-
dent and general manager to replace
Benscoter.
"We are fortunate to have a man
f)f Mr. Clifford 's ability within the com-
pany to take on the importan t
responsibilities <>f r unning Air
California." said McLaren.
"We have gone Uirough some very
t.c.jgh times in the last few months,"
remarked Clifford.
"But now. "ith the cessation or the
merger negot.iatioos \Vith PSA. we are
laking poeitive action to revitalize oor
airline," he added.
"During merge r talks, company l<>yalty
and en lhusiasm reached a new high
and it is this kind of spirit generated
by our employes tliat will not only keep
Air Califomia very much alive -but
~'ill give PSA a nm for its money,"
the new chier predicted.
Cliff<>rd said the intrastate airline foun-
ded in 1967 has two primary objectives:
belter public service and dividends to
the stockholders.
'!What we've got at Air Califomla
is the quickest method of transportation
be(ween two points and we do it with
spb'it and style," he explained.
Clifford said lhe profit improvement
COFFEE, TEA, OR MILK?
Air C•l'1 Clifford
nspect. "·on'l affect passenger service
at all.
"All we're doing is moving to con-
solidate things which we have not been
able to do before -something "-'e should
have done long ago," he said.
"We're not a big airline," he cootinued,
"we are a small airline with an ex-
1remely good product. We have a lot
of people pulling for us, most of all
()Ur own cmp!oyes."
He said a team <>f pilots and
stewardesses has volunteere<i to proTll(lte
Air California on their own free time,
including organization or a speaker's
bureau to outline plans before various
groups.
1'\\'c've got a going thing and we're
going lo keep it going," he concluded.
From Page 1
INCORPORATION PLAN • • •
w~ld be no fingers of land but fairly
a;tl11igbt lines.
One finger that was excluded from
!he map "'as a stretch of land along
t'<l Ch road bumping the bourn:laries of
Sa n Clemente. The comm1t1ee voed
Soldiers Executed
LAGOS, Nigeria (AP ) -A hundred
people watched the public military e-,;.
eco:tioo by firing squad today of two
Niaerian soldiers found guil ty by court·
rnartial of killing two civilia ns.
DAILY PILOT
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"'HU1ty '""_'_• ~ 00 '°*''~"·
lo include it in the incorporation m11p
and if local property O\vners want out
lhcy can petition the Local Agl'ncy
r~onnaUoo Commission.
George Chade, Capistrano Beach p~
prrty ov,.ner, questioned whether or not
:i city could be run on Jess Ulan a
h;il f a n1illion dollars, the new city's
prof)Osl'd working b\Jdgcl outlined in the
fc,1sibility report.
lie pointed out that San Juan
Ca pistrano. a city :c;maller in population.
has a proposed l:udget of nearly $2
niillion.
H;iy Berryman. a Los Alamitos city
official wh o helped prepare the economic
fr3s1b1lity report. said that this is a
first year budget whereas San Juan's
is a tenth year budget .
He \JIS<l sairl Lh;it sources of reveooe
\\'ere kept CQnservative to show that
1he new cily would not be counting
on Ct'r1ain county and state flmds which
jt is enti tled to.
Les Hemmers, longtime rrsident (If
the 3rf'a and prcsidl'nl of lhe Dana
Point Civic Association, Questioned
"'hct.her or not qualified people would
hr. found to serve as city officials. Kenny
La wrence. C apistrano Beach
businessman, wondered If apathy WQUld
be so great lhat it W()tt]d be h.ard to
get 25 percent of the propet1y owners
:n sign thl! petition necessary for the
election .
i\!rs. Olloe Luke, v,'ho lives ln
1he Palisades section, sa!d I.he people in
lil"r area would sign because they want
not hing to do with San ClemenLe. Her
:irea Js ooe the city <>f San Clemente
may contest as more appropriately a
part of that ci ty.
Sande rson lold the group that he was
~ure qu alified people would be foond
to serve, that eoough signatures would
be gathered and he told lhe large pr~
perty owners that they should want to
be. in the Ult'(lrporat ed area because
it would be a good selling polnt for
th Pm ...,hen 1hey developed their land.
Sanderson further told Ole group thAl
H thl!y don 't Inco rporate now thry won't
l(('t another ch 11nce. "I'm convinced Olis
nr e.n will be a 1"'1ty 9omC<hty nnd If
ll llin'! a C'ily hv itself It "''ill hf' p11rt
nf ~:in Clt.'1ncn1P t1r San Juan c·;ipr .. !rano .. ,
Jey's Mexican Americans and other bar-
rio dwellers will be the major topic at
a public meeting May 27,
Mrs, Rita Nieblas, director of the
Adult Cnmmunily Center in San Juan
Capistrano, said that housing and other
community problems will be discussed
at the meeting of lhe Community Action
Council of Orange County at 7:30 p.m.
in the cafetorium of San Juan Elemen-
tary School, one block from Ortega
llighway on El Camino Real.
She said public officials in San Juan
Capistrano wil l be invited to the meeting.
Mrs. Nieblas explain.ed that there are
several ways to obtain funding !OT low
cost housing.
The Housing and Urban Development
Agency has programs as well as other
government agencies. The major pro-
blem is obtaining land at a low enough
cost to make housing p r ojects
economically feasible.
One public official in San Juan
Capistrano who preferred to remain
unidentifie<i said he recently heard <>f
a proposed low cost hoosing development
for the city but that he would oppose
it because the density suggested had
been 16 unit..s per acre.
'Neivport Seven'
Noiv Five; Two
Freed by Judge
The "Newport Beach Seven" lost the
nickname given them by local poli ce
Thursday when a Superior Court judge
agreed with lwo members of the group
that drug charges endorsed by the
Orange County Grand J ury should be
dismissed .
Jud~e \Vil!iam f\-turray freed Doup:las
Alan Potter, 22. <>f 314 de ta Estrella,
San Clemente and i\.fartha Ann Glass.
21, of 1807 \V. Balboa Boulevard, Newport
Beach and dismissed charges !hat they
were in possession or marijuana wilh
intent to sell ·last Jan. 12.
Their five companions in the group
arrest were ordered to appear May 29
befOl'e Superk>r Court Judge James F'.
JudRe ror the setting of further pro-
cf'edings. They are:
Kathleen M. Bahen, 23, Q( 310 35th
St., Newport Beach : Gary f,dward Gray,
2i, of 310V~ JSth St., Newport Beach;
Ronald Dean Kniseley, 27. of 2523l Monte
Vf'rdc, South Laguna: Thomas Duncan
\\lheatley, 27. of 3604 Park Lane , Newport
Be;ich and Clayton Francis Johnson, 20,
of Whittier.
AU were arrested al the Bahen home
and indicated by I.he Grand Jury on
J\.1.:irch 26.
F rona Pnge l
KNIGHT •..
as he announced his entry in U1e contest.
Knight made it plain he felt Nixon
\\'as largely responsible for his elirnlna·
li on fr(lm the 1958 race. He accused
Nixon of threatening, in 1957. to cam-
paign against him in every California
rounly if he <>pposcd Knowland. He said
later a Nixon emissary had offered him
any job in the state if he would ·withdraw
from the forthcoming primary.
Nixon called the charge ,;false and
libelous on its face'' and denied c\•er
making any promises of any kind to
Knight or any other individuals to keep
them out of the rn ce.
Los Angeles financier ,J. l-loward
r:dgerton. the man Knight later nained
as the emissa ry, admitted talking to
Knight, but aald that at no time had
he ever asked him not lo run for the
governorship. lie also denied being Nlx~
on's emissary.
A long, bitter campaign was In pro-
spect before Kn ight was forced, by il-
lness, to drop out of the campaign -
one that political observers saw as the
inughest batlle of his long career in
~tale politics. Most politlcal pundits con-
sidf'red Ni:ton loo slrong even for such
a popular politics' veteran as "Goodlt.''
Auto Birth Co ntrol?
\\IASlllNGTON (UPI) -What the na-
l'on really nttds, according !() Interior
.SeCTetary \Valtcr J . Hickel , is a "blrUl
control pill'' lo redu~ the size of the
neUon's automnbile popultillon. "'Wt 11re
reachinll'. the point where the auto1n oblle
l.c; beC'Om io~ rounterproductive," Hickel
said Thursday.
' DAILY "ILOT SI ... ,.,. .... WILLIAM WILCOXEN JOHN G. SCHMITZ
Woodcock VA W Choice
In Unanimous Balloting
DETROIT (AP) -Leonard Woodcock,
59-year-old vice president, was formally
and unanimously elected president of
the United Auto Workers Union today.
Woodcock was elected by his 24 fellow
members of the UAW's International
EXe(Utlve Board to serve until I.he
union's 1m convention.
His election to succeed the late Walter
P. Reuther was assured Thursday by
the withdrawal of the only other con-
tender, a fellow vice president, Douglas
Fraser, 53.
The fiery, red·hairecl Reuther, ror 24
years leader of the 1.6 million member
union, died May 9 in a plane crash.
the executive board fills vacancies occur-
ring betv•een conventions.
The queirtlon of electing a vice
presidential successor to Woodcock was
Frona Page J
DIAMOND. ••
vivid canary yellow diamonds and a
not decided immediately. Any one of
17 regional directors, who also are
automatlcatly members ol the board,
are eligible.
To mild-maMered, rellerved Woodcock
falls the tough new contract bargaining
later this year wilh the Big Three of
the automotive industry -Genera!
Motors, Ford and Olrysler -and also
witb the agricultural implement in-
dll!try. Renewal of pacts in the aerospace
industry comes up next year.
New car sates and proflls <>f the
automakers have been sagging this year,
and the companies already have Indica-
ted the will take a tough stance in ne.
gotiations to supplant three-year con·
tracts expiring next Sept. 14.
~egotiatloos will_ cipen in mid-July. The
union demands include a substantial
wage increase, earlier retirement at a
~igher pension, unlimited cost of living
increases geared to the government's
consumer price index, a year-end bonus
am:! CQmpany-pald dental care.
Paris SuJJway Stl"ike
huge 1s mm. pink pear1 tound otr 1he Worsens City Jain up coast of Burma,
"They can color diamonds artificially ~ARIS (AP) -A 24-hour subway
now," says Hoff, "but this natural strike made the French capital's traffic
pigmentation is really rare." jams worse than usual today as more
The diamonds now are locked av,·lly private cars came into the city aod
in a safe deposit box and will be shov,•n anny trucks picked up suburban com-
"by appointmenl only." mute.rs. The strikers are demandin g a
The proud owner intends 10 design sixth week o[ paid \'acation t'ach year.
!lettings for them and, if they haven't At Orly airport. arrivals an d
been sold by then. wi!l include some departures were delayed 30 minutes to
or all <>f them in his summer display an hour and several flights were canceled
Candidates
Tell Stands
At Fo1·11m
f'ivt Republican t3:ndidat~s for the
35lh Congressional District differed lit·
tie on issues al luncheon meeting Thurs-
day of !he N~·port Barbor chapter (If
the Callforn;a F'roeration of Republican
\Vomen Jn Nev,•port Beach.
Each canrlida!P -Will iam \l,'ilcoxen
of Laguna Beach, John G. Sc-hmitz of
Tustin. Jnhn Ratterf:>f of L11.quna Reach ,
J ohn A. Steigt>r of Oceanside and J\Ta~~ie
J\1e,1u!S of La'!un:i Beac h -p:a,•e a teti
minute sf){'erh follO"-'ed by a queslion-and.
an~1ver prrorl.
Ahout fiO wnmtn a!t<'nrle<I the J11ncll<'nn
~1 the F.he!I Club '>''herr lhf'v htard
the c\lndlda tes take similar stands on
lhe Indoc hina war, welfare and campus
protest.
MT!': ~feg-,is !old the ladies Iha! women
ln this coun lrv are treated as set'{lnd
cl11ss cit i1.ens. "\Vhen I talk ;ibout women
power, I'm not talkin~ about Sf'X •and
no bra~. l'n:i talkin2 about ,llet!ing the
same finan cial award for the same jobs
as men." !!'he slated.
Here's how the candidates stand on
som" other issues :
-On the move into Camboriia an ~airl
Nixon did the right thine anrl urged
the won1cn to express their support ot'
thn President's oolicies.
Schmitz nrJ!ed the women to supporl
1he President's Cambodia move, "nol
becaus,. he·s a Repu blican and not be-
cause he's President. but because he's
right and he needs al! our backing."
-On campus violence and prctest. nll
.c;air! lhev favor returning publicly sup-
r,.,rlf><f colleges and universities to educa-
ti onal , not protest institutions.
\V ilcoxcn. in speaking on education. em-
phasized the need for more vocational
1r-i'lin" in publi<' scllools.
On the subject of campus violentc
Rattl'rree advoca!Prl jailing violent cam.
pus protesters. "These campus rioter~ -.,.,d lh:it's just what thev are, ri(lters
- should JlO to jail," he said.
-t\11 or the carn:lidatf!'I sai<I the ... :e.lfare
system as practiced bv the Johnson
iirimini<;tration "'as a failure and in-
rl irated they backed Nixon's propoocd
rl'fnrms.
Wilcoxen spoke out s!rnngly in backin~
Nixon·~ 'vrlfare reform bill. "As a deputy
Oistrlct Attorney. I had A chance lG
sre what our present we lfare svstem
1loes -payinR families to hreak up.
r think the President's reform packa~e
is onf' of the most comprehensive lo
date."
lleart Patient Dies
at the Festival of Arts. because of a weekend strike by air CAPE T0\\1N, Soulll Africa (AP)
One ·will not be sold ... I'll give it navigation pers()nnel. They are protesting Pieter Johannes Smith, the world's ,se..
IQ my wife,'' says Hoff. "Only the la st disciplinary action against some persa11-cond longest surviving heart transplaot
time I oHered hl'r a dian1ond she turned nel who joi ned in an earlier strike by patient. died early today at Groote J: down. Maybe she'll like one of these." air traffic controllers. Schuur Hospital. He v>'as 53.
~~~--~~~~~~~~~----'~~~~~~
: ., -
.. ;
~!WPORT BEACH
1727 W•stcllff Dr., 641·2050
OPIN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
,.. ... .. ¥~ -.. • 0 RAPE RY . .,.
SALE!
CUSTOM MADE WITH A W IDE SELECTION OF
QUA LITY INTERIOR DESIGN FABRICS AS MUCH
AS 40 % OFF ON EXCELLENT DESIGN FABRICS,
Profe11lonal fnterlor
De1lgner1 Av1i11bl._AIO
LAGUNA BEACH
345 Nor th Coast Hwy. 494-4511 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 "'•"• f1" '-"'"' ef o,..... Ca1111t'f l40·116J
r rld.1,y, May 22, 1970 l DAILY PILOT 3
Humble Start Pays Off
Laguna Student Patterns Li fe A rou1ul Tlieater
By f'Kf:I) SCHOE!\IEllL
01 lt1t Ot lly "llOI ll•!I
r·rom hurnble bl:ginn ings on a
•·n1atrhho,11 ~!age" 111 Banning to the
bigger and belier facilities of Laguna
Beach lligh Si·hool, senior Dani Thomas
has patll'rncd her life around the theater,
Nov.', as the C'nd uf )ugh s('hOOI a\)-
proac:hc:; next n1onth , O;ini is directing
the spring mt1s1c<1!, "Maal Jn USA" to
be shov. n this weekend and L~ hard at
v.·ork rehearsing for thr Laguna Play·
house .Scholarship. Hy the time she
leaves 1.131/S she \\'ill h<i ve v.·orked on
seven high school dran1a productions.
Con11ng In La~una Beach from Banning
in late 1966, Dani arived too late to
be cast In the "Thurber Carnival." but
not to be turned away fron1 the stage.
1\·orked wJth the prop drpartn1ent on
the pnxluc1 1011.
The following yeur. ~11e bcc<1me sta~c
ni<inagPr for "Curious S<il'age," and 1v<Js
part of tht· chorus Jn the smash hit,
the ''1\tikado."
6pring at tlw: high school was n1ucil
ot Dani's doing. Fifteen scenes, spanning
thl! theater from "Private Lives" to
"Cabaret" \\'ere performed.
"The montage was a lot of fun, because
everyone really got into it," Dani sald.
•·Of course, it was hard for me because
I had to not only coordinate all 15
scenf's. bul I h.ad to act in three of
them, as y.·ell. ''
This year, Dani took another lead
r(ll{', this one as "Elv ira", the deceased
wife v.tio came back as a ghost, in
Noel Coward's comedy, "Blithe Spirit."
At present, Dani is dividing her lime
bet'>l'een directing the student produced
musical "~taid In USA" and working
nn tv.•o roles for the Laguna Playhouse
Scholarship A\vard.
".l\t:iid in USA·• v.·ill be shCM·n tonight
and Saturday night at the high school.
"1'hr music is excellent," Dani reports.
"and the determination thal the cast
ha~ shO\l'n is lre1nenclous. It is going
to he a \\'Onderful show."
Dfl ni 's first big role al Laguna !11gh
l"a1ne at the beginning of her junior
year, v.•hcn she v.·as cast as "Erma"
in the "l\1ad\\'Orn:_1n of Chaillot:'
"l loved it," Dani nnted wl!h a "touch
of sentin1cnt. "I really dug the play
<ind 1t \\'Hs groovy bccaLJSe I was a
lo!. like th e char<ictcr that I had to
portray."
\\'Ith ""faid in USA", Dani has had
the responsibility of adapting the script
to lhe stage, organizing the cast, "-'Orking
on interpretations and wriling production
n(l!es. Offering Bargains
"Last spring I cou lrhi't be in Bni;:-3.
f!oon·· lx·cause I can't sing. so r dic1
publicity for the 1nusiC'al," Dani said.
'THE PLAY'S TH E THING'
Young Director Thomas
As with her past roles, Dan i ~·as sue·
f'C'Ssful. and the high school was packed
for thri'e straight ni ghts.
The "Dra1natic l\1ontagc," held ]<1st
The Playhouse Scholarship which
a,,.,.arcls $500 each year to deserving
dramalic talents, caught Dani's eye last
vear. For the past six ~·eeks, she has
been rehearsi ng \\'eekly at the Playhouse,
\\·orking on one see~ from Williams'
"Property of the Condemned" and
another irom "The Lion in \Vin ler."
Gerry Matlock. Gordon Kent and Dave Flournoy {from left) d isplay
some of the h a ts and paintings and even the kitchen sink to be offered
a t bargain prices Friday and Saturday durin~ 1,aguna Beach Lions
Club Rummage Sale. flours are 9 a.m, lo 6 p.rn. F'riday and 9 a.n1.
to 2 p.m. Saturday at Laguna \Vo1ncn 's ('lub, 282 St. Ann ·s Dri\'e.
Proceeds go to aid blind children.
Capo Beach Surf Meet
Expected to Bri1ig 200
Sunday wi ll be the day of reckooing
before three iJnpartiat judges, who later
this year, at the Senior Awards'
Assembly, will announce the winner. Th is
year, much different from in the past,
Dani has had only one competitor.
Student, Faculty
Trends Topic
Lag11na W orl{ Progressi11g
On Coordi11ated Signals
Capistrano Beach's fourth annual surf. 10: 12 -~1cns Eliminations
I · · t·" I d 11 ·.12 _Bo."' Q•••t••m,·11·0 Work on a State Division or Highways ng compe!1t1on 1s expec l:'I• o ra1v an '" • ~·
estimated 200 compcling surfers on !hr. 11 :24 -Junior Quarterfina Is "Student·Facully Politkal Trtnds at projecl to install coordinated progressive
beach of Doheny ))tatc Park Saturday 12 : 12 p.n1. -l\'IC'ns Quarterfinals UCI" ~·ill be discussed Monday evening signals on Coast Highway through
lor two days of events. SUNDAY by Dr. Nathan Rynn, professor of plt~ics Laguna Beach started this week.
Surfers v.·il! vie for 3\\'ilrds in thrrc 7 a .m. _Mens Qt1artC'rrnain at UC Irvine, at the regu lar meeting Coverilig 13 intersections bct•veen Viejo ,,,.,.1 .. ,·on". A tanden1 con!cst also is of U1e Laguna Beach Dem-rat•·c Club I ' " " 7.12 -Junior Quarter1nain "" Street and Dian1ond Street, t 1c scheduled. The Capistrano Be a ch . . at 8 p.m. in the Laguna Federal Savings
Chainlx'r of Comrnercc is the sponsor. 7:24 -!\lint s5cm1.m::11 n1 and Loan Building. streamlined signalization is designed to
Scml-r1·nals for the three categories will 7·39 -Boys emirina s Dr R ·11 k th elf •· im prove lhe flow or lraffic on the 8:51 -Junior Se1nifinals · ynn WI spea on t ec..,, be held through Saturday starling at 9: 16 _ r-.1cns Semifinals of recent developments in the Vietnam highway. Each new signal wilt be equip-
7 a.m. 9:4.1 -Bo)'S Semirnain war on the college campus, ped y,·ith a traffic metering device to O" Sun1lay the fin als and award Elect·o f off<'ce • al"" "·1'11 be •-td !1:58 -J unior Scmima1n 1 n ° r" "" " •it: • moc!ify the signal according lo traffic presentations are scheduled. 10 13 ,1 S . ~·ith the follov.·ing slate presented for
1 The I'll) '· ch·"ulc for the two.day : · -1•· ens· emimain .>lume, according to \Yilti am ll<ihn. c cc· w 28 ,,. r · I consideration of the me m be r ~ h i p :
·1 10: -· ini ina s trica/ construction contractor of La compel1 ton is· 10 .43 _ \Yomen~ f inals Patrick Birkett, president: J osep h
SATU RDA Y 10 ·58 -Boys 1nal'i " " f Tomcha'·. r1·r~t v1·ce president·, Virginia Habra, y,·hose firm is handling the pro-
7 '' '"· -•1 ,11i Sernifinals 11. 13 -Junior Finab.. i\lcCollom, si:x"Ond vice prcident; G11,•en Jecl.
" " !llathey,·. treasurer: Doris Riz zo , Hahn said todav he has had frequt>nl 7.36 -\Von1ens Semifinals 11 :28 -illcn!'I l"inals conferences with ·the city staff and will R _ )loys Qu ,>rtecfinals 11;4:1 -Tande111 recording secretary; and Thelma Roy, .
11
. h
d. t flrganize ~'Ork to avoid con ict v.·1t -.'.''.::~·~li~m~io~r:_:E~li~m~•~na~t~io~n~'~~~~~~~~':2~3~0~P:·m'.'.'.:_·.:_~P~':'':'~":'•:":•:n~n2r~A:':'•:r~d:'~~'~':':'"::c"°:"::::1~ng~sec::::r~e~a~r~y:_·~~~~~~~.c...~~~
DISCRIMINATING
INVESTORS
AT
';ilt4t ~~,,-~
& L~ r/4'UJdati<ut o/ Sout~ P~
Look For:
Stability and Ava ilabil!ty of Principal. M ax-
imum Dependable Earnin gs. Ea se of Tran s-
actions.
traffic generated during the Festival of
1\r\s.
First signals being chanRcd are those
al Broad\\•ay, Oct!an Avenue and Forest
Avenue, the narrowest portio11 of lhe
"I don't k1101v \vhether I will stay
with drama al! rny life," Dani said. "1
have a lol of interest in child psychology,
so I think I '!\ n1a jor in fine arts, with
a minor in psychology... She hopes lo
attend Orange Coast Collrge next year,
•·bccau~c I like the drama <tepartmcnt
!hC'rr "
Looking al her various rolci; in the
lht·;'lter. and her hopes fo r the: future,
Da 111 said, "In all lhe things I do,
i•1 lifr <1nd the theater, I want lo be
believed. If nol, I feet I've failed."
By Simon
For 'City'
Norton Simon, Republican candidate
tor U.S. Senate Thursday charged t.hl
Irvine Company wlth acting in be.d faith
by planning a 50,000-acre city, instead
of the 10,000-acre one expected by the
University (If California Regents.
Speaking in a press conference at
the Newport.er Inn in N~wport. Beach,
Simon said "I consider It an 1mmor.I
act. It ~y well be illegal, I ~~~'.t
know. J haven 't had time to study 11.
"I am deeply disturbed by the .proposal
to move the planned city of l~v~~ from
the long seUled-on localion ad)o1n1ng the
t.'niversity to increa~ the size of th~
comten1plated population by more thaa
400 percent.
"The changes violate the clear un -
!lerstar.ding by all parties when the
University and State agreeu to place
a major campus in Orange County. The1
are also contrary to the plans which
1•1ere drawn up then," he explained.
Simon charged the Irvine Comp~y
had agreed to build a l!t,000-ac,re C!tY
in1mediately surrounding the University
\\'hen the State agreed lo the site.
Ile c!ai1ni; the city as pla11ned TlO\V
will create "another UC Santa Barbara
and Isla Vista" by isolating the university.
and the few surrounding housing areas. · ·
In addition, Simon noted the poss\bil.ity·
of the influx of industry and population.
to the new city creating a vacuum
in surrounding cities. . ·
"Land values in those cities will quick··
Jy anticipate the prospe<""live depreciation ·
of the area. Yel as the property value,.
of many pe<>ple in these cities serious~y .
decline those of the land company will
be gre~tly enhanced, In short, maj?r .
changes would occur in the eeot'lom1c
<'ncl ecological balance of Orange Coun·
ly."
Simon said one of his chief coaeerns
\Vas that the action was being taken
v.•it.houl giving area residents .and .
businessmen the chance l.O be heard
on the malt.er.
"This city is going to change the
\\'hole character of the cities in Orange
Coun1y," he said. ··r-.1aybe the character ·
of the cities should be changed, but·
it's a big issue and everybody should
ha ve the opportWlily to be heard on
ii. "
l\Ia rsha ll Hccovcring
\\'ASHI NGTON (AP) -Doctors at
Bethesda Naval Hospital said today Jus-
tice Thurgood Marshall was making good
progress toward r etovery from pneu-.
monia.
And Find:
Accounts Insured to s20,000.00 Reserves
sufficient to assure continuance of maxi-
mum permissible earnings. A location os
close as your mail box.
ASSETS
First Liens on Rea I Estate •••• , , •••• , ••••••••••••• S63, 79~·?4 :?. 7~
Real Estate Owned •.....• , ••••••..•... • • • · · • • · • 0,:-19 l .9J
l.oans and Contracts Made to Facilitate: Sale of Real
··:
and
Directors
1000 FAIR OAKS AVENUE
SOUTH PASADENA, CALIF. 91030
Area Code 213
799-4143
5%'
Current Annul
Pass B~ok Rate
. '
Area Code 213
682-1131
:--' Ycito1Y2%.,
' CERJIFICl\115 '
• VARIOUS MINIMU11$
1 llATVllTIU ·
Estate ..•.........•••• • • ·• • · • • •• • • • • • • • · • • • · · · • Stock in F.H.L.B ..•...••.••••••••••••••••.•.••••
U.S. Government Bonds •.•• •.• •• ·•· ••• ••····•····
Othe:r .investment Securities ••••••••••••• • ....•••
Cash on Hand and in Banks •••••••••••.••.... • .••
Office Building, Land and Equ ipmcnL-Less Depre-
J.14.20~0t
715.000 00
3,498. 707.88
789,7 14.4l
570,354.47
c iation • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • . . . . . . . . . . . . • . • . . . . . . • . • 1,427 ,964.35
Secondary Reserve for Federal Savings and Loan
Jnsurance Cor poration •••• , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . • • • • 734 ,!l8R. 70
Other Assets ........ ••• •• ••••.................... so;..s~
Total •••••••••••••••••••••••••.••••.•... $71,669,17».33
LIABILITIES
Savings Ae<0unls ........ , ...................... $60.593,893.86
Advances from F.H.L.B...... ••.••. •. •. . . .•• . • • . • 3,048,000.00
Othe:r Borrowed Money .......................... NONE
.•-
Loans in Process ., , •••• • • •. •. • • • • •••••• , • • • • • • • • 2:16,972.fiO t[j{~
Other Lialbilities •••••••••••••• ,.......... •• • • • • . 1777 t938185 .. 352l :.::.:::.·; Deferred ncome • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • . .
Specific Reserves , •.••••••••••. ••••• •••. ,....... 7,240.45 ::::::=:
General Reserv es ............................... 6,146,036.12 H:U:
ReseSurprvluse for Contingencies ••••••• ••.• •• ·····.·.··•· 1 ~~6·~~~:~ ~= .. : .. • .. ~ .• • .. ~ .• ·= ·····•·••·••·····•··•••······•••··• .... ' . : Total ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $71,669,175.33 ....
FEDERAL Hoili11~~RBANK SYSTEM '.! ..•.•..••.••.••. '. ..
........ MEMBER FEDERAL SA VJNGS AND ......
::•:•:•: LOAN INSURANCE CORPORATION ................. , .. ":'-"''' ~:\~\~fa;:;~~;~m~m;~;;~~:~:n~m~~1~1~~~s~:~:~:i~~=~~=;~~!~~~:;:~0~~;~~~i~i~~:~:~:~:j~~~~~~~m~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~i;~~~u~~~1~~;~1~~;~~~;:~:;:;:::~:;:~:::~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:::~:~::::::::::
.... :
0. J~. Cl.ANTON, Pre5idenL, lV1anagcr and Director
ROBERT K. CLANTON
Vice-President, Secretary and Diretlor
WILLIAM E. CLANTON
KENNETH P. FORD
W. D. GOHMERT
V ice· Presid ent. and Director
Vice-President
Treasurer, Assistant Secretary and Director
CLIFFORD P. GRUA Dicecf.or
B. DEAN CLANTON Dica:lor
WILLIAM J. THOMAS Assistant Secretary
R. A. YOUNG Assistant Seccctary
RUTH DONALD Assistant Secretary
MARJORIE HAIRE Assistant Secretary
§;:J:):r:~f;~1:1m~~:~~:~;~~~~~n~~~n~~~~:r;~)~i:ri~:~~~;;~::~:j~~:~(~1~~::i:i~:~~~~~c~:~~::::Vi:~~::i!;:~:~?:::::~j:~:j:):~
'
DAILY PILOT
When campaign posters featur-
lng nude pictures o{ six male can·
didates for student offices appear·
ed on the campus of Santa Monic a
City College they wer e p romptly
removed by school officials. The
posters reappeared recently a nd
there was no action to ban them.
"They d rew some loi nclothes on
them and that cove red up the prob-
lems," explai ned Dea n of Men Ed-
werd1 B. D~rott. • Local Nottingham, England o!fi-
clal11 have d ecided to give Hospital
Porter Christopher Bennett, 25 , a
new suit. His old one shrank after
he rescued a 7-year-old boy from a
river three months ago. •
Jacksonvil le, Fla. police had 1· betn puuliti.g over why an old, 1 abandont d home had such a j.
heavy and seemingly i ndestruc-:
tible. rat population, \.Vednesday ~
they Learned the wo1nan who
had lived there became so fo11d
of the rodents, she returned
regularly to fed them cinJ1amon
bun!.
• The Tacoma, Wash. mayor and
fwr city councilmen rode in police
cars to pick their candidates fo r
safe driving awards, a n annual
presentation in conjunction v.•ith
National Police \\1eek. Only four of
U.e five ended up with nominees,
hbwever. Councilman A. M. Zat-
)9wlch, a retired police officer, told
the council he had failed in his
search recently. "I 'm too used to
looking for violaters to pick out the
good ones," Zatkovich said. • · A priest baptized IO-month-old
Mo1 rtin S•nda ll of E vesham, Eng·
land in his bathtub \Vednes-
day because the youngster scream-
ed and kicked violenUy recently
When the cerem ony was attempted
ln a church. Said the Rev. Albert
Webb: hl was not prepared to car·
iy out a christening by force in
Shurch. Martin might have grown f,p to resent the church." •
A London probation officer ,
told a court Wednesday two sis· '
ter s, aged 20 a11d 21, liad such
a good time in Holla way Ja il
th.at th ey we.nt shoplifting with-
in minu te! of the ir re lease to
be able. to Teturn to prison.
• i J&nbul, Turkey is the noisiest
City in Europe, says a report puJ>.
lished \Vednesday. Prof. Hikmet
Altug, an ear specialist at Istanbul
University, said in the report that
inental illness and deafness are on
the increase, d ue in part to screech·
tng horns, blaring loud-speakers
tutsid e record shops and the cons·
lant ba'\'li ng of street peddlers. ; .
: Despite doc tor's orders to cut
i!Jo,vn 0 11 eating, 252-pound Bob
~ouains of Scunthorpe, England
1ays he'll acccpl. a d uck farm's
t hallenge to try ICl e<i t <1 ~i .><·po1tnd
•uck a nd four pound !i of trim-
trtings. "I just can't resist," Cou-
.l.ns said.
Fr1day, Mar 2Z. }qJo
Udall Claims
Suppo11:er s
Lit1it1g Up
WASHINGTON (AP) -Rep. Morris
K. Udall, first announced contender for
l'.>emocrat ic floor leader in the Hoose,
says he has already taken his campaign
to about 80 colleagues and has received
t'OITllllltmeol.'l d support from ''a lot
ol them!'
A 47-year-old Arizona liberal, Udall
Is considered one of the lop candidales
for the leadet'Sl ip post expected lo be
vacated in the wake of Speaker John
-P..tcConnack's announcement Wednesday
he will not aeek anoUlt!r term next
November. Current Democratic floor
leader Carl Albert of Oklahoma appear:oi
to be a shoo-in for the Speaker's chair
when the leadership posts are filled
a rter the 92nd Congress is seated in
J anuary,
Udall said pledges of support are con1·
ing from represeuLalives from every set:·
lion of the country, al though tie said
"H's far too early and !'in making
no claims of anything ."
Udall was the candidate in J anuary
1969 of a group of !louse Democratic
liberals who staged a futile allem1it
to Wlseat the 78-year-0\d l\1cCormack.
Anolher candidate for Albert 's post,
assuming he moves up to the Speaker's
chair, ls Rep. James G O'Hara post.
J\.tichigan, 44. O'Hara has headed the
liberal and powerful Democratic Study
Grou p ln the House. Acconi.ing to Udall ,
some members of Congress lamented
the fact that he and O'Hara are bot h
<'andida tes for Alberl's job.
Other cont.end ers are Richard Bolling
of Missouri , Hale Boggs of UJulsiana,
\Vho is currently third-ranking Democr~t
in the House, Dan Rostenkowski , I ll.,
Edward P. Boland, Mass., James C.
Corman, Cali!., Jack Brooks, Tex., and
John E. Moss, Calif.
Ud all said Thursday he thi nks lobbying
for the pcm may conlinue Intensively
for the next two or three days and
then le vel off. He added: "I think a
sifting process will go on for the next
two or three week:oi."
TI-le election could depend on the voles or the new members in January, Udall
said. barring a bandwagon movemen t
for anv one candidate soo n. About 25
new oCnocrats are expected, he said.
Brandt Declares
Stoph 'Rigid'
BONN (UPI) -West G erma n
Chancellor Willy Brandt sald today his
second talk with East German Prime
Minister Willi Stoph revealed many of
their differences are even deeper tha n
had been imagined.
Brandt descri bed Stoph's attitude as
r.igid, and aald li e feared the East
German's lnsistence on international
recognition by Bonn was an attempt
to avoid discussion of other more prac-
tical steps the West proposed be taken
to lower the tensions between them .
The West German leader made his
comment at a news conference after
he reported to his cabinet early this
morning on talks with Stoph in the
West German cily of Kassel Thursday,
Gern1an J et Crashes;
Struck by Lightning
BONN, Germany (AP) -A \Vest Ger-
man Starlighter crashed near Kaufbeurcn
in sou thern Germany lo<lay, apparently
af1er it was i;Ln1ck by Ji~lni ng, the De.
fens(> .~finistrv rin notlnCC'fl.
The pi lot Was able !(I bail ou l :<>hortly
be fore lhl' tw1n-eng inetl fig htcr-bomhcor
hit the ground , slightly rlamaging a farm
building, a spo kesman said.
UPI T<ltpnolo
It's H ers i\101v
Actress Debbie Reynold s is all
i;n1iles as she holds the dress
\1•orn by ,Judy Garland in "The
Wizard of Oz''. She bought the
dress for $1,000 a t the J\1GJ\•1
J\lovie auction for the Carolina
Carib bean lnrp.. \\'hi ch \~'il l
loan it to Miss Reynolds for
display at a l·lollywood 1nus-
eum.
NY Times Faces
Ten1poral'y Halt
111 Publication
NF'.\V \'ORK (AP) -The New 'York
Tirnes, beset by a printers· \~Ork
slowdown. s;1ys it will discontinue
publication te mporarily on Sunday unless
~u1 agreement is reacht>d w i t h
Typographical Union No. 6.
Publisher ArthW"" Ochs Sulzberger ;:in·
nounced Thursday that without • seL-
tlement the newspaper would suspend
publication after its Sunday editions are
printed Sah•rday r.ight, and I h ,1 l
employes would not be paid beg1nn1ng
\\'ilh the Sunday rooming shift.
The announcement came as prin1 crs
in the Times composing roo m continued
to co11duct on-the-job union meeti ng~.
now totaling 19 hours a day . Negotiations
betv.·een the printers' union a n d
pu blishers of the city's four ma jor dail ies
are deadlocked.
The printers have not said publicly
what kind of contract they are de n1a11-
dlng, but Local 6 President Berlram
A. Po.,.,·ers vowed that his me" v.·nulrl
not accept a contract that did not rnccl
their need s.
"If it means lockout. we'll v.·1\li nt:l v
lake it unless v.·e ge t what \.\'e n(·erl.''
Po...,•ers said in the composing roorn
20 minutes after Sulzberger·.s ;-in-
nouncemcnt .
The Ti1nes' annou nce<! inten!inn In ~11s
pend publication was expected to pron1pt
a resumption of negotlatrons bell\"1'1'11
the printers and rl'presentrr tives of !hf'
1'imi".s, lhc Daily Nt•\v.s. and 1he Pu!'l
anrl 1he Lon~ l sland Prf•ss. T:ilk~ hroke
off 1\lay 9 ~ner ll l9·hou r b;irgain1n~
.ses~inn that failed to produce an agree-
ment.
To ~nadoes Plague Midwest
\
44 Deg\ees Se para.te Ariz ona.'s Fla.g staff, Plioe1iix
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South Viets to Remain
Won't Leave Cambodia .Whe11 U.S. Does
\VASJIJ NG TON !UPI J -Defense
Secretary Melvln R, Laird said today
he ls against holding Soul!r~e
force:i: to any ''firm timetable" for leav-
ing Cambodia and also favors later raids
by Saigon troops if the Communists
conduct. a new building o( the so.called
'3ncluaries.
Laird said firmly Uiat not a single
American "ground personnel'' would be
left Jn Cambodia after June 30, the
dale set by President Ni.Ion for a halt
to the U.S, part in the operation. Bul
he said he feU "It would be a mistake
ta make a firm timet.able" fo r
1,1.•ithdrawal of South Vietnamese.
Statements th is week by Ngu yen cao
Ky, South Vietnamese vice president,
that his troo~ had no intention of leaving
Cambodia at the same time as
An1ericans has generated new concern
in Congress over the ope ration. ln
respoose to questions abou t a Ky stale-
meat Uaat South \1etnam woold not
aJlow Its hand! to be tJed, admini:!ltration
ol'~;cials indicated efforts would be made
In Saigon W get Ky and President Nguyen
Van Thieu to abandon any possibility
of staying in Cambodia indefinitely.
Laird was interviewed on NBC.TV's
Today Show.
Laird was asked about the "territDrial
amhitions" toward Cambodia of South
Vietnam. raised by Senate Democratic
Jeader Mike Mansfield on Thursday.
He Bi:knowledged that '°there are pro-
blems" in that area because of king-Orne
enmity among some ne i ghb o r i ng
Indochina area nations such as Vietnan1,
Cambodia and Thailand. He added , "This
will be watched"'1ery closely and very
CMefuJly."
But as fur a concurrent withdrawal
ol South Vietnamese forces w i t h
Americans, and for any pledge that
neither Americans oor Sooth Vietnamese
v.ould retu rn, Laird :.aid thal It ht
a mistake to say in advan ce preclaely
What would happen.
He stressed thal Nixon's "li.Jnetnbl!':
\I'll! be met in every respect '' imofar
as U.S. forces be used ag1dn on new
raids to cle ar the areas.
"f don 't think it would serve any
usefu l purpose to say in ad vance that
they won 't go ba<!k," Laird said.
Asked if Am erican adv~rs might stay
behin d v.·ith South Vietnamese forces
after J une 30, Laird said "there will
be no American advisers in Cambod!a
af ter June 30."
Asked , in the background of heavy
Congressional criticism and an upsurge
in antiwar demonstrated si nce the
Cambodi an operation started three weeks
ago, if he fell ";\. was all worth it"
and \rhe!her he "'ould ''do it agal n,"
La ird replied with a finn "yes."
Guardsmen to l(eep 01'{le1·
The secretary contended lhe Cambodia
\'enlure would already have bee n "a
great tactical success " frmn the stand·
point of Communist ammunition, llUp·
plies, and food captured, and predicted
that it also would pro ve to be an even
greater strategic success.
At Neg1'0 Yo11th's Fune1'al Laird said the results (Jf the sweep
\\'OU ld expedi te the Ni x o n ad·
ministration's Vietnam ization program
Ohe process of turning ove r the v.·ar
to So uth Vietnam). reduce American
casualties and expedite v.·ithdrawal of
Gls.
By United Press International
Five thousand National Guardsmen
tiave been or~red to cordon off ille
Ohio Slate University campus today
while 3,300 guard troops \\'ere on standby
for the funeral of a young Negro shot
to death in Jac kson, ~1iss.
The may or of Dekalb, lil., asked
citizens to stay away from the Northern
Illinois University campus, scene of three
straight nights of trouble,
1'he. Ohio guardsn1en, carry ing loaded
v.•eapons, v.·ere to cordon off Ohio State
to keep "outside agita tors" away follow-
ing a window-breaking rampage Thurs.
day. Several hundred demonstrators, urg·
ing a student strike, smashed windows
;ind looted stores on a do v.rntown street
during Ule spree.
At leasl 10 persons were injured and
10 othe rs arrested before a curfew was
clomped on the campus area.
Ohio Stilte 's 45.000 students had ret urn.
rd Tuesday s fter a JO-day shutdown
because of viol ent clashes between
milit.1nts and guardsmen.
'J'he Mississippi guardsmen \Vere called
to readi ness to ensure "peace and tran-
quility·• during the funeral of James Earl
Green, 17, one of two y:x.ing pe rsons
killed during violence at Jackson Stale
College f.iay 15.
c:ov. John Bell 'Vill iams said he alerted
10,000 guard troops lo supplement 1,300
men already mobilized because of the
''swarrn'' of people coming to J ackson
for the fune ral.
Negro ll'ade r Cha rles Evers urged
blacks to be cal m today and 'varned
tl 1em ag<iinst being provoked by Gov.
\V illiams' "ungodly speech."
\Villiains said the guardsn1en V.'Ou ld
nol be used unless local policemen
''become exhausted and in capable of
handling the situation."
Public schools in the city were closed
Thursday and today becal.l5e ol a "t.ense
situa tion·• in Jackson. Parochial schools
\\'ere closed today.
"There is going to be peace and tran-
quil ity in Miss issippi," Williams told a
s!ate\1•ide television audience. "We sre
going to be ruled by law and order."
Rap in Algeria
Sa ys Ne lvs paper
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -Ji . Rap
Bro\\'n, fugitive blac k po .... ·er leader, has
fled to Algeria, the \Vashington Eveni ng
Star said today.
Spokes men for the FBI and the Stale
Ikpartn1enl said they had no informalioo
of Bro .... ·n be ing in Algiers.
The Star said it leamed from uniden-
tified givernment sources that Brown
wen~ to Algeria after vanishing on the
eve of his scheduled trial on charges
of inc iting to riot and arson in Cam-
bridge. il1d.
BrO\l'n dropped out of si ght ?\-1arch
7, hvo days before two friends died
in a mysterrous bon1b e:\plosion of their
auto near Bel Air. ~1d.
.-' . "' u {;.{ ;( -tr ·tr The Negro le~der subsequently \vas
~p!!c1ally lisled on the FBl's list_ of
most \\'anted criminals because he failed
to sho11· up for trial. Mitchell Warns Guard The 26-vear-old fonner chairman of
the Stud~t Coordinatin g Committee had
been free ofn $10,000 bofld pen di"ng the
trial. To Be Cool on Campus The Star pointed Ol1t th at Algeria hall
no reciprocal r xt radition treaty \\'ith the
United States and no1 cd that Eldri&ge
Cleaver. ronner lnforinnllo11 Jl.1inister or
the Black Panther f'ar l,\·, found refuge
in the North African tountry.
\V ASHINfi TOi'{ (A P) -Ally. Gen.
,J1ih n N. ill1tchel l. once the Nixon ad·
tninistration 's hard-liner on student
rlrn1onstr;1tio ns, has warned police and
l\utionat Guard sn1en to "keep their coo l"
during carnpus dislurbanct"S.
Announcing beefed up investigations
111\0 the shooting deaths of eight young
people on !he Kent Stale and Jackson
Stale cam puses. r-.titchell said Thursday:
"One can re<:ognize the pro\·ocat ions
111hich often acCQmpany civil disorders,
but trained law enforcement personnel
have a respon~lbility to keep their cool
<ind utilize (Inly such minimuin force
:is is required to protect the safety
.if 1he general pubhc. the bystanders
:i nd the1nselves."
.\1 1!l·hrll <Jppointed As~!. All y. Gen.
.Jcrr1s LrQ11:i1·d, head of I.he Justice
L11'p!1rtn1ent's eh ti rights rl ivisi<1n. to
pcrsunn lly 111r!'~rr the inve f;\ig.11lnns.
Tl1e fi'l'lr·r:il prohl'S MO\\'' unrlcr way
are at Jackson Slate College in :'lt ississ1p-
p!. 11here two bla ck youths 11·ere felled
in a hail nl hig h"''<•Y patrnl bu!IC'ts:
Kenl State University in Ohio , where
stud(>nts ...,·ere killed when Nat ional
Guardsmen opened fire, and Augus ta ,
Gil., v.•here six Negro men v.·ere fatally
~hot in the back during a racial
disturbant'.'e.
Also under investiga\lon is the death or a black teen-age boy kl the counly
jail in Augu sla. which sparked the racial
dison:lers in wh ich the men died.
Sources at the Justi~ Department said
f.1itchell was profoundly disturbed by
"\\'hat he saw and heard on the Jackson.
Student, Union
Group Hits War
NE\Y YORK (UPI) -A relatively
subdued cro...,·d eslimat.ed at &bout 20,000,
\'oiced their oppoGi1ion to the Vi~tnam
war 'Thursday at a noon rally in City
Jlall Park,
No violerK:e "'&.! reported <rt the
de1nonstraUon atte"Jdeli mostl y b y
students and union member:i:. La ter in
the day, however, about 4,000 of the
'l\'ar protesters dashed brieOy wltll poli~
in mid-Manhattan .
Two persons were arrtSled and nine
otJ1t"rs reported Injured, none se riousl y,
In thal encounter which terminated the
otherwise peaceful demonstration.
'Mle disruption OC'Ct1rred v.·hen police
!!topped demonstrators whQ had been
~lowing traffic to a crawl, from entering
Rryanl Park at 4-0th Strttl and ~ixth
Avrnue A reciu<'~ for 11 pen11i1 II'/ r111ly
Jn the park had been rejected by police.
State camp1Js d11ring a t11·o--da.v fact·f1n-
ding and speech·making trip to Jo.·lississ ip-
pi earlier this week.
~·
,.:=;,IJ
~
..
Tall Tree, Short Artist
UPI TO••'-
Tn1e art tri umphs as Apr11 1·aylo r. 7, Im provises a "jump technique"
to put the fin ishing touches on the top of h£.'r tree painting Stu<\('11·1s
of the 24th Street .~:lcment<iry School in 1 ... 0.1; An~r!C',1; \\'er e 111 \·itt><I h,v
Poll(lck Construction Con1pa ny to paint fences 1<urro11nd1n g const ruc-
ti on sito of the new West Adams Communlty l1o~p it al.
r
San Cle111ente
Capistra110 EDll'ION
-.
VOL 63, NO. 122, 4 SECTION S, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1970
Oil Drill Ba11
Give11 Boost
By Clen1e11te
By JOlfN VALTERZA
01 !ne D•llf '°!"'! Sl•rt
A pro1nisc this y,•eek of $1 ,000 by
San Clcmenle tov.•ard the $5,000 fund
lo assisl passage of the Cranston-~furphy
anti-oil-<lrilling bill brings the dollar
amount to the lop, but one more hurdle
ls loorning before 1he funds can go
to work .
The project -to hire ::i \Vashington.
D.C., lobbyist to help pull the oil
sanctuary bill oul of con1rnittees and
into sucrcss 1n Congress -still needs
:-;igna!urcs on a joint-powers ngree1nent
<:urrently being re11ie wed by coun1y le,&a!
officials.
San Clemente's city councilmen ap-
proved the $1.000 alloclltion to the fund
;iftcr having tabled a request for con·
:;iderably n1ore e11rlier this spring.
The city's contribution (if the joint·
po\1·ers p;.ct wins concurrence) will pay
for the $200-a·day services of Fred 8 .
Burke or Industrial De 1• e 1 op me n t
Associates, Inc., in the Capital.
The fund also y,•ilt h~lp defray expenses
of trips to \Vashinglon by Orange Co<tst
oil fighti;rs to present the need for
!he federal sanctuary.
The cities of Ney,•port Beach and
Laguna Beach already have committed
$2.000 apiece to the cause.
The bill, sponsored both by Democrat
Alan Cranston and Republican Georg~
Murphy, sets Iii) a fedrral oil drilling
san<:tuary beyond the !hree·mi!c limit
bet11·ecn the San!a Ana r{lver and lh!!
Mexican Bordl'r,
The prnrioscd law is now hung up
In comm ittees or the Senat e and the
!louse.
One \'et~ran oil fighter fro1n Newport
Beach said the aim is lo pull the bill
fron1 the commillecs wilhin the ne~l
thrcc-and-0nc·half n1onths so that it can
come before the present Congress.
That will be one three• goat of the
lobbyist.
Even though the San CI c m c n I e
authorization 1•.as granted. it was done
1rith some relu{'tance. touched on by
t'olayor \\'alter ~vans ~1ho told fellow
t.:ounci!men tha t the p::iy1n~ for a 1(1bhyist
11·enl aga1ns1 hi s grain. "but this 11mc
lt seems pretty necessary•·
The fight in support of Senate Btll
3{l!l3 has t•o1nr fron1 the three roastal
i:itics -sparker! by Nc11·port Beach
-and 1l1e Coa st/'!! Arco Proteclil'e
LP:.igut.:. 1rAl'L 11. a private group of
hll!hly .'IKT{'S~f11) 01! figll!i>r s '
Tht· fu11d·ra1s1ng for 1.hl' lobb.11 ~l.
hn11•cver. lias rnn1e slriC'l ly 11'!)111 lhe
thrC'e coastal C"1tics.
The CAPL 1n rcccnl n1onths ha~
organized its 011"11 prog ram !n i)rcss for
passage of the sanctuary bill.
The group reor~anized for th!' right
after a h iatu~ 11·hich followed its S\JC·
cessful p;issage of the Shell.Cunningham
Act y,•hich sel drilling sautuaries in the
state<.ontrolled offshore ~·aters bety,·een
t he river and ~lexico.
Laguna Council,
Planners Meet
The Laguna Beach City Council. Plan·
ning Comn1ission and Board of Ad·
justment will holrl a joint study session
al 7:30 p.m. Monday in city hall council
chamberi;: to discuss reorganizing the
Planning Department work load.
The joint niecting was called following
the suggestion of councilman Charlton
Boyd al a recent City Council meeting
lhat the powers of the Board of Adjust·
ment should be extended to give the.
Planning Commission more time to deal
"'ilh overall planning problems.
The boord was eslabli.!ihed some lime
ago to deal with n1inor variance rcqutsls
that had bfen cloggi ng Planning Com·
mission ageocles. Noting that niany such
requests still reach the higher planning
body, Boyd proposC<I a f u r t h e r
reorganization.
Stork 1Harkeu
I\'E\V VORK fAP) -The stock marktt
turned sharply and broadly downward in
late lradlng thi!! af!crnoon on acli ve vol·
umc. (Sec quot11lions . Pages 10·11).
Declining issues on the New Vork Stock
E:tch:inge overtook gainers to lead by a
n1 argln of npproidmately 13 lo S. The
"'inners had con1manded :i nearly two
lo one lead n~ar the 11ession's start.
• ov. 00 Ie
DIAMOND FANCIER HERi HOFF EXAMINES 'ON CE IN·A BLUE MOON ' STONE
Laguna Jewelry Designer Says Wife Turned Down Last Diamond H. Offered Hef ~~~~~--=-~~-
Lagu11an Faces U.S. Cha1·ge
111 Texct s DoJle S1n i1ggli11g
Federal auUiorltiC's in 'fcx:is Io rl <i y
\1 Crr preparing pr~ccut1on oJ a Lagun;i
Beach nian charged with stealing .1
S5{),000 plane from Orange County AH'j>Or1
six "'eeks ago to ferry 1n narcol1es
lrorn l\.lexito.
\V1l11arn S11rrw;1ll. 21. nf l16Q JC"flC r:iOll
\\'ay, Lagunt1 Beach. 11111i; captured
Deadline Set
For F lood Fund~
l'rnpcr1y owners wish ing !11 1· l :1 1 111
rr1 1nbur~e111cn1 111)111 l1·1t«n1! fu111I, f1ir
<'osts 1n1·oht·d Jn n'111rJ1;1l ol 111~1!1 rlt'l111 ~
hcil'e until .June I to r•on1 11lr•tt• ;1ppl1r:t11(Jr1
f1Jr111s a1 t<lty hall
A ~pccial law CO\'f'flll g dclJ1·1 ~ d:1111 ai.:•·
causf'd by the J<inutJry·F!'briiary, l~lfi!l,
floods provides f!lr p:iyn1cnt to 011•nt'r~
for rcn101 :.i t uf debris 1f 1·r:n1u1 :11 ,,
Judged in the public tnle rcsl. Tht< 1lcbris
need not already have been re1nov1.:<I
Examples of debris wou ld int·lude
"'feckage of buildin.:s. f u r n i t u re .
machinery, automobiles, parts of trees
and other materials deposited by flood
waters.
Claims received hy the city will b<'
submitted to the proper slate and federal
authorities.
r·nt'!l('r !hL~ 11·ct·k ti l a stnall airport In
Vnrt \\'orth. along w1rh the plune and
a 1o;id of drugs.
()r;inge County ~hl'r1H':-Ca11t James
Broadbrlt said today rl'dt·r;il authontic"
;ire <1pparc1itly i)tann111g 111 pro~ccutr
:-i\Jrcy,•alt , lakins lhc l'.lS1; out 11f local
)un,.d1C'tinn.
Sl1tl·11alt, a l1ccnscl) pilot bclu.~1cd 10
l1a l'e been flying loads 01 l'On1raband
around the counlr)'. 1s thri rgcd v.·101
i,:r<ind thrlt and uul;.i11•ful po~sessiun ol
111<.lf!Juana and pcyotr
A load of 55 pound:. nf pol ;111d 11 !
11ou11rb •1f l1:1llue1·,1ogcn1 t 1n11,11 1·0t,111:-11·,1\
rcrO\(·ri•d ;.illt·r fL'dl'r:1I ag!'11ls ~t.1kcd
••u1 lht· l'1p1·r CnnHinth(' .111i.;r:1ll :11u.J
11u1lttl 111r ~CJtnco11e to rt•lurn lu 11
•\\c 11orkcd 1111h the l'l'til•ra! A1·111t1011
Arln11111s(rl<i l1011 und 1h1· t S ('u,toms
Seri 1c1· in luca!ing thl' ~lolt•o rr:1lt and
gol a bonus whi:n tht•y tound narcolici;:
1i1 1t. ' s111d Capt_ Broadlx-H
"\\\•'re v.·viting to sec what the tctle ral
tt ulhorities arc going to do," ':c said
today when askcd bout the status of
the case again~t Stirew;:1\t
"I t looks like they'll handl<' pro-
sccul ion. They have a better case agan1s1
J11m than y,•e do."'
The plane as reported stolen from
ils tie.tJown spol April 10 by D" S.
Robcrl Mystrom, of 7632 21~ .SI.,
\\'estminsler, and has been soughl ever
since.
Natural Color
Diarnond S hotvn
At Laguna Studio
By BARBARA KREIBI Clf
Ot I~• D•fl1 ~lloOt Si.II
Laguna Beach jewelry designer Herl
Hoff ls alwa ys looking for "something
different.··
Thursday he was sun1n1oning neighbors
111 the .i\rt Center into his Little Ingot
studio to l'iew four "once in a blue
111o0n·· dia1na.1ds, just arrived from New
York and Te! A\•Jv.
The extraordinary thing about his new
diamonds Hoff explains, is their natural
t•olor. The average diamond is a ~·hile
!\lone tlHll refracts rainbo\.\' colors ~·hen
II is CU\.
Each of lhe four stone~ hr pro11dly
d1splayeU to h'1s fncnds has a unique
p1g111cnltlt100 of ils own.
The bigge st. approxunately 1hre1•
l'.'.lr<ds. is orange, turning to a fluore.~tf'l\l
1;1i;1rtrcuse ll'la·n taken into the sunl1gh1.
H:!causc il is uniqtie, its value 1vou!fl
he diffi..:11lt lo establlsh. says Jloff. bul
it prohcibly \\'Ould r~tail for about $3.000
1\ l.i5 (arat di11mond. probably 11·orth
~2.000, veers from burgundy to cinna1non
:ind bac:k , acc ording lo the light.
Another, weighing 1.76 carats and
11·orth $1.800 turns from cinnamon to
a steely grey in the sunlight.
The fourth, 1.5 carats, is a soft green
color ::ind is worth an estimat~ $1 ,800.
Though probably his most spectacular
rare gem find, the ne\v diamonds are
not the first naturally colored stones
lloff has turned up In his search for
the unique. Other prized items are some
tSee DIA1't10NOS, Pact Zl
Cityhood Support Asked
A pathy Scored by Dana-Capo B each Cornn1itt~e
By PAMELA lll\l.IA\N
Df lllt 0.ltf l"iMt $1•11
Apathy. disinttresl on the parl of large
landholders and unrealistic econon1 ic
fea sibility were tossed out ;is reason!!
why the move to incorporate Dana Poinl ·
Capistrano Beach may fa il.
But members of lhc incorporation con1·
millet assured corn1nunity I e ad c r s
assembled in the home of Dr. Hl)gcr
Sanderson Thursday that il would not
fail with their support.
"I'd like to sCil il come lo a \'nte:·
said lhe attorney for the group Scott
Ra ymond . "Then it will be settled once
and ror all one way or the other."
Raymond pointed oul two rcaMlnS 1vh,v
ii should not fall. The firs! i.'> :i need
for loc31· control which he s111tl should
be established before problems nre
creeled.
"'The harbor will aLLract all cl<'111rn1~
wc·u need our owu pnli t·c lorcc. You
' '
who have businesses or reside near the
busine!ls distr ict should "'ant ii m().~l
of all."
The second reason is availability of
the means lo get things done. "Al the
prcS<'nt time you don't )la va a convenient
1ray 10 tell government what yo ur Wishes
arc. It 's too far away. But if all you
hacl to do was go lo one of your
neighbors, a city councilm<\fl, you'd ·be
able to present your views and inoJc
effectively control yoor a~ea." he ~JJS-
AI Coke. on or the ow riers. .or
Thunderbird homes and one of the largest
landholders in lhe Incorporation aren,
said lhat only one' rOurth of his ]encl
has be.en dcvelo~ iind he i:Udn 't feel
hr should take ,_,._'llPJld on the in·
corporHlion one wa1-W.the other.
"Those people ~bi("!~;vc. gol. hnmc!I
<·:1n tleride for the~1"'s bul I don't
t.hink I .~hou ld make a d<>ciJi:inn fOf"
thos(' who y,·ill bu,y~;our ho1n.cs la the..
'11 I
i
fulure on the land that isn't developed.'•
he said.
Kenl Snyder. the Rttorney for lhe
Chand ler.Sherman properties which OC·
cuples ·about five per~nt of the in·
cn rporation area. sairl his clients might
wish lo withdrlfW from the proposed
map.
"We aren't iii favor of· l)"aving a !'ity ~istct· ou~ property. Why· can·t vie be
Jet( Oift!'' I ' ' ~
af, Rhjar , SandCrson said that his
pn:19trty is In tmiiusc it includt!s the
Ir.net projection caU,_ed Dana .Point.
"Do people really know where Dana
Point. is?" asked Snyder, "[)Q they
care?"'
"Yes, 1 brlll!ve they do," answe1·cd
Scott R<lyn1ond.
Or, Saodcrson furtber tllpl~liiCd that
bouDdarte!' 'ftf't r•ni· io .that there
. (Ste .&; ; " L' .. t:i, ~,. ~t·~ .... 'I'.,. I r ·J , ' ,.
' I
P11eu1nonia
Ca1·eer at 7 4
INGLEWOOD (UPI ) -Former Gov.
Good"·in J. Kn ight, one of California 's
most colorful and eloquent political cam·
palgners, died today at !he age of 74,
Knight succumbed from pneumonia at
Daniel Freeman Hospital, where he had
been hospitalized since last Tuesday.
He died at 6:55 a.m.
Knight was admitted to St. Joseph
Hospital in Burbank ~1areh 1 for treat-
inent of an undisclosed Jllness. His con·
dition was said to be satisfactory at
Ilic lime.
K11ig11t , "'ho served as governor from
August, 1953, to January, 1959, dropped
.-.ut of the 1962 gubernotorial race on
doctor's orders after he suffered a
hepatitis allack .
Before becom ing chief exccutil'e or
the state, Knight y,·as lieu I e na n t
governor. Iii this capacity he served
as chairman of the California Com-
111ission on Interstate Cooperation and
as a member on the Stale Lands Com·
mission, State Disaster Council, Toti
Bridge Authority, and lhc Board of
Regents of the University of California.
He served for 12 years as a superior
court judge in l.()s Angeles County prior
lo that and was acli\•e i11 civic affairs
during his career as a practicing al·
torney. He also worked as a hard rock
mlner, a newspaper reporter and was
a seaman aboard a subchaser during
World Wt1r I.
Knight '1 first experience in polilicl
was to distribute harrdbilJs in ll'le 1910
gl•bematorial campaig-.t of HJram W.
. Johnson. He ~·orked fo r the Johnson-for-
Pres!dent campaign headquarlers at Ne1'/
Vork City in 192{1 and carnpaigned /or
.Johnson in Lofi Angeles in !924 whe n
J ohnson was agai n a presidential a!!-
piranl.
Born Dec. 9, J896 , in Provo, Utah,
Knight was the son of Jesse Knight,
a lawyer and mining engineer, and Liilie:
J\1iln~r Knight. The fa111ily tu1d come
west from New York in· aboul 1850.
i\lrs. Knight's father, John It ~tilner
served on the Utah bench for 50 years.
Knight had a record of great popularity
11·1\h voters of bolh parties, and wa s
liked by both labor and managernent.
In the 1954 primary election for governor
his pluratitics set new records for volume
of votl'S in California.
In the 1954 general election h!' was
elected with a majority of 551 ,151 votes
-a greater n1arg in than that received
hy any olhcr ca ndidate for state-wide
office with 111:ijor p:irly nppositio11.
The 11•hitc-hairrcl fonncr Calirnrnia
ehh'f ".~rcut11·1' ~lcpped astd:! under
p1'es~urc 111 1957 in lht gubernatorial
l'on1e.i.I in f::.vnr of Sen. \\11llia m ~'.
f\nl)11·Jand, I fl-Calif f, who 1vas defeated
hy Oernocr11l1c Gov. Edn1und G, Bro"'"
in the subseq11ent election. Knight ran
instead for U.S. Senator a g a i n st
Ormocrai Clair En~le, h111. lost.
\\'hen he entered the 1962 gubernatorial
race, Knight touched off a r>olitical ~·ar
or charges and counlcr charges v.·i th
then Vice President Richard M. Nixon
ISer KNIGHT, Page 2)
Tait to Disc uss
Education Goals
At Sc hool Meet
Owen Tait , assistant superi,ilc.ndent of
Laguna Beach schools, will discuss
"Goals of Education" during a discussion
meeting Monday evening at 7:30 in the
districL administration buildiiig.
The public is invited to jQln members
of the recently formed SC:hools Com-
municatlo.1 Club, made up of residents
interested in school problem!! end under
thL chairmanship of Jack Swarlzbaugh.
Purpose of the group. s a y ~
S11·artzbaugh, is to suk more informalion
abool the schools, raise questlon.o; of
importance lo the community and to
offer volunteer help on speclal rom·
miuees. ,
fo~oUowillg a· brief· talk by Tait on
Monday. Ule . audience will be invited.
· to 'discuss such quesUons ·as: Whal Is
"goodl' :Jducation? How do you measure·
It? W~l subject11 should the schools
teach or oot ·teaeh? What I! discipl ine?
Whal sOou ld L11gune student.a know when
they graduale?
The ' subject of go11ls. says Tait, Is
tlirtetly related let flnaoctel nted!I' <Jf
the dls(rh:t, which ahould be establtshcd
after lhe etllf.'munity · has Oecicled'. what
11,w~ lroli'Jls idK>ol5'
'I'eday's Final
N.'l'. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
• 1es
.. _
GOODWIN J. KNIGHT
Girl's R eturn
To Class OK'd
A ft er Drttg Clise
A ~liss1on VieJo High School sophomore
coed was readn1ltted to classes today
following a 3 lo 2 ruling by the Orange:
County.Board of EducaUon.
Charlene Hurst had· been suspended
by high school officials last Dec. 5 for
allegedly being und er ihe influence of
dr9gs or intoxicants on the school
grounds .
A hearing before the Tustin Unio n
High School District boa rd followed and
the girl was suspended until June I.
Her parents. represented by at!orney
Na.than Tarr. aµpealed Lhe suspension
10 . the coun1y school board and the
case ~·as returned to the Tustin district
for a formal hearing .
Thursday Tarr corrtended that the
format hearing 11·as "not fair because
s~·orn testimony was not taken."
The bnard discussed the legal aspect!!
or the case and adjourned lo executive
s~ssion to hear a tape of the Tustin
hearing,
At Tarr's insistence thal the county
board make a decision at once following
the executive session, three board
me1nbers, Mrs. Doris Ar aujo. Don Jordan
and A. E ... Pat" Arnold v.-.trrl that
the girl be readmitted to J\1lssion Viejo
High Schoo! 1n1media1cly.
PILOT PROFILES
35TI/ CAN DIDATES
In coope ration v.·ith the Orange Coast
League_ ot \Vomen Voters, lhc DAILY
PILO'T' in its Saturday edilion will
present biographies and l'iewpoints of
candidates for the 35th Congressional
District, formerly represented by the
late James B. Ult.
More than one full page will be rlevoterl
to photos and background inforination
on candidates who submitted their oy,•n
data for inclusion in the voter educatioA
program. Look for the wrapup on this
important congressional contest i n
Sal!:rriay's DAlLY PILOT .
Orange Const
1''enCher
~lake way for the beach bound
traffic. The weekend weather pic-
ture calls for sunny .!lkle!! and w~rm
temperatures, with inland resident!
rJeeing reading.!! in the 80'& for the
7()-ish coastal climate.
INS IDE TODAY
Something .11ew in the .tllH.1!1
of his tory has ber.11 added o'
\Vestminster Hig h School where
a per$onalized courllr. t11 "his·
torical research'' ill in o~ra·
.tioh. See todd .. '• W.eeltendie r.
i...11,,.'' lt
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I
' Z DAILY PlL...,
MAGGIE MEGGS JOHN ~ RATTERREE
Over PSA. Fizzle
3 Air Cal Executives
JOHN A. STEIGER
Housing Needs
For Mexicans
Stage Mass Resignation ~cos~~;,~.~~,. v.i.
Three top executives who have been
piloting the low-altitude fortunes of
O.range County-based Air California have
bailed out of their jobs, it was disclosed
Thursday.
They quit -in their words -as
the result of cancellation of a planned
merger with Pacific Southwest Airlines
lac., following extended delays in hear-
ipgs before the California Public UUlit.ies
Commias.ion.
Air CaWornia President Carl A.
BenJCOter, treasurer Robert E. Sou/erin,
and general counsel Norris Webb handed
Jn their resignations Thursday.
Board Olainnan N. Loy all 1'1cLaren
.said ttle resignations v.•ould be effecti ve
immediately and offered no official
reason (Gr the move.
Robert Clifford, fonner vice presiden t
Jn charge of Air California operations,
was immediately appoint.ed vice presi-
dent and general manager to replace
Benscoter.
"We are fortunate to have a man
of 1'1r. Clifford's ability within the com-
pany tG take on the i m po rtant
responsibilities of r u n n i n g Air
California," said McLaren.
'"We have gone through 90me ''ery
tough times in the last few months,"
remarked Clifford.
"But now, v.·ith the cessation of the
merger negotiations with PSA. we are
taking positive action to revitalize our
airline," he added,
"During merger talks, company loyalty
and enlhuslasm reached a new high
and it is this kind of spirit generated
by our employes that \\ill not only keep
Air Calife>mia very much alive -but
will give PSA a run for its money,"
the new chief predicted.
Clifford said the intrastate airline foun--
ded in 1967 has two primary objecli\•es:
better public service and dividends to
the stockholders,
"What we've got at Air Cali fornia
is the quickest method of transportation
baween two points and we do it with
spirit and style," he expla ined.
Clifford said the profit improvement
COFFEE, TEA, OR MILK?
Air Cal 's Cliffo rd
aspect won't affect passenger service
at all.
"All we're doing is moving to con .
solidate things which we have not been
able tG do before -something v.•e should
have done long ago," he said.
•·we·re not a big airline." he continued,
"we are a sma ll airline with an ex·
lremely good produc t. \Ve have a lot
of J>fQple pulling for us, most of all
our O\Yn employes."
He said a team of pl !ots and
stewardesses has voluntee red to promote
Ai r Califomia on their 0\1-'n free lime,
including orga nization of a spea ker's
bureau l.o outline plans be fore various
grnups.
''\Ve've got a going thing and \Ye'rc
going to keep it going," he concluded.
Frotn Page 1
INCORPORATION PLAN • • •
v.•ould be no fin gers of land bu! fairly
1>traigh1 lines.
One finger th at \\'as excluded from
lhe map was a stretch of land nlong
Pach road bumping the boundaries of
San Clemente. TI1e comm1l!ee roed
Soldier s Executed
LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) -A hundred
people watched the public. milita ry ex-
l!CUUoo by firing squad today of two
Nigerian sokiiers found guilty by court-
n1artial of killing two ci vilians.
DAILY PILOT
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C..,. Mne
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S-CI~
l)lt.liNGE COAST ~UllLISf!ING C()MP,O.NY
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Offluo
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_., d UIPro'~ -"''·
.....--d ou ........ ""(" I I N-• ''"" •• C..IO ~. (t lol(>tft•• ~r.pt-a-., """" It M ..,.._,.,, "1 .,..ft tt" _ ...... ,
lftlllt1r, lt"llN t;.,.," t} 00 ....,..,M,
tn include it !n Lhe incorporation map
and if loca l property O\\'ners v.·ant out
they can pelition the Locttl Agency
Furrn:ition Commission.
George Chade, Capistrt1no Beach pro-
perty O\\'ner. questioned v;helher or not
a r1!y C'OU!d be run on less than a
h ~lf a milhon dollars, the new (:i!y 's
propos('(! working budget outlined in th e
fl·;i~1b1Jity report.
l!e pointed out that San Juan
Capistrano, a city smaller in population.
h.1s a proposed budget of nearly $2
11111lion .
Hav Berryman, a Los Alamito~ city
o!f1<:i<tl v.·ho hC'lpcd prepare the econon1ic
fcasih11i1y repor1, s~ud that this is a
first year budget whereas San Juan's
is a tenth yea r budget.
He also snid that ~11rces of re\'enue
v.·ere kept conservative to shnw that
the ne'\'. ci!y would not he counting
(lO certain county and s!iitc funds v•hich
it is ent itled to.
Les RemmC'rS. longtime resident of
the area an d president or the Dana
J'oint Ci vic As90Ciation. q 11 est i on e d
'vhcther or not qualified people v.·ould
be found to serve as C'.ity officials. Kenny
l~a w ren c e. Ca p i s I r a no Bl'arh
businessman, wondered if apathy would
be so great that It V.'ClUJd be hard to
get 25 percent nf the property owners
to sign the peti tion necessary for the
election.
l\irs. C'hloe Luke. ·who lives in
t11e Palisades Set"tion. said the ~ple in
her area \\•ould sign ~ause thev want
nothi ng to do 1''ith Sa n Clemenle. lier
area ls one the city of San Clemen!e
may cont.est as more appropriately a
part or that ci ly.
Sanderson told the group th.it he wa!'I
sure qu alified people would be found
to serve. tha! eoough signatures would
he gathered end he told the large pr~
perty ov.'ners that they shtiulcl want lo
be in lhe lncorporatccl area btcause
it \lo'Ould be a good M""!ling point for
Uiem "hfn 1ht'y tle\elopcd the ir land .
Sanderson further 1011! thr ~roup th;it
If they don'I lne<Jrpnrnte nov.· !hey V.'r.n'l
gf't 11nnU1er chnncc. "l"m convinced th i!'I
area "·ill he a c11\ somed11v and if
ii 1~ti't ;i, r n" hv 1,SeH it wlli bf' part
of S:in C"ltllhtllt' nr ~IHI .Jua n
C:ip1111ran11."
ley's Mexican Americans and other ba r·
rio dwellers will be the major topic at
a public meeting May 27.
Mrs. Rita Nieblas, director of the
Adult Community Center in San Juan
Capistrano, said that housing and other
community problems will be discussed
at the meeting of the Community Action
Couneil of Orange County at 7:30 p.m.
In the cafetorium of San Juan Elemen·
tary School, one block from Ortega
Jl ighway on El Camino Real .
She said public officials in San Juan
Capistrano will be invited to the meeting.
Mrs. Nieblas explained that there are
several ways to obtain funding for low
eosl housing .
The Housing and Urban Development
Agency has programs as well as other
gove1TJment agencies. The major pro·
blem is obtaining land at a low enough
cost lo make housing p r o j e c. t s
economica lly feasible.
One public official in San Juan
Capislrano whn preferred to remain
unidentified said he recently heard or
a proposed low cost hoosi ng deve lopmen t
for the city but that he would oppose
it because the density suggested had
been 16 units per acre.
'Netvport Seven'
No1v Fi·ve; Two
Fr eed by Judge
The '"Newport Beach Seven" lost the
nickname given lhem by local police
Thu rsrlay v.·hrn a Superior Co urt judge
agreed with two mem bers of the grou p
that drug charges endorsed by the
Orani::e County Grand Jury should be
disn11s.~rd.
Judge \V illiam Murray freed Doo,ela!'I
Alan Potter. 22. of :'l l4 de la Estrella,
Siln Clemente ;i nd Mar1ha Ann Glass,
21, of 1807 \V. Balboa Boulevard , Newport
Beach and dismissed charges !ha t thev
v.ere in possession of marijuana wiU1
intent to sell last J an. 12.
Their five companions In the group
arre st \\'ere ordered to appea r Ma y 29
before Superior Court J udge James F.
.lud~e for the setting of furthe r pr~
ceedinw:;. They are:
Kathleen f.1, Bahen. 23. of 310 35th
St., New port Bea ch: Gary F.d1\•ard Gray,
27. f)f 31012 3llh St., Newport Beach ;
Hon::ild Dean Kniseley, 27, of 2l23! Monte
Verd£', South Lngu na : Thomas Duncan
\\hl'a tlev. 27. nf WW Park Lane. Ne""·port
Beach a·nd Clayton Francis Johnson, 20, or \Vhitt ier.
All were arrested al the B;ihen home
;ind indicated by the Grand Jury on
fo.larch 26.
Froira Page I
KNIGI-IT ...
as he announced his entry in lhe contest.
Knight made it plain he relt Nixon
was largely responsible for his elimina-
lion from the 1958 race. lie accused
Nixon of threa tening, in 1957, to cam·
paign against him in every California
county if he opposed Knowland. He said
later a Nixon cnli.~snry had offered him
any jnh in the i;\a tc if he v.·ould withdraw
from the forthroming primary.
ti;ixon called the cha rge ··false and
libelous on its face'' and denied e\·er
making any promisr s of any kind to
Knight nr ;iny other indiviliua'!s to keep
them out of th~ r:icc
Los Angeles fl nancirr J. Ho\\·ard
Edge rton. the man Knight later named
as lhe <'missary. admi1led talking to
Knight. but said that at no time had
he t':ver asked him not lo n1n for the
governorship. He 11lso denied being Ni:x-
on 's emissary.
A long. bi.ttrr campaign \vas Jn pro-
spect before Kn ight was forced. by il-
ln~s. to drop out of 1he campaign -
one thet po!ilical oh!'ier\•f'rs S3\\' as the
tnu_ll'.hest batlle of hi!'i long career in
slate pol itics. Mnst political pundits con-
siclcrecl Nixon ton slrnng even for such
a popular politics· \"etcran as "Goodie.''
Auto Birth Control?
\\',\S\1 1;\GTON IUP I) -\\"hnl !he na-
l'nn really nrecls. acrnrcllng lo Interior
Secre;ary \Val tc r ./. Hickel, is a "birth
ronl rol pill" to reduce the siz.e of the
n:ition's 11utomoblle pop11 la!1on. "Wr are
renr'uni;i the point \\-'Ix-re thl' auln1nnhil"
\,. be<."flminii t.'<Junte rproductivt, '' Jli ckel
~;)HJ Thursday,
DAILY ~!LOT Stiff PMl•I
WILLIAM WILCOXEN JOHN G. SCHMITZ
Candidates
Tell Sta11ds
At Foru111
fh·e Republican cnntlirlnl<'>; fnr lh('
:!~th Congressional f>istrlct differed 11!·
tie on issues at luncheon meeting Thurs-
<lay of the Nr\\·oort llarbor chapter of
!he Ca!iforn;a Feder:ition of Hl'publican
Women in 1\'ewpo rt Beach.
Erich C'.anrlidat" -\\'1ltia1n \\'i J('OXe'l
of Laguna Beach, John r.. Schrn itz nf
Tustin. John RatterP.e of L:i'!una RPach.
.John A. StPiger nf Ocennsii!e and ~f:Jf!l!l r
Mf'ges of La(!1111.1 IlcR r·h -gal'e a \roi
minu!t> ~Pf'!'('h follo\\"ecl b.v a 11uesliDn.;u1d.
an<:1\•cr f)f'rQl:t
Woodcock UAW Choice Ab'>trt ,;o \l'nm('n a1tenlll"d !hr lunch<''"'
n1 !ht> P.hf'll ("l11h wlif'rf' thev heard
lhe candidates take-!'iimila r stands on
!he Indochina "'ar, welfare and campus
protest.
In Unanimous Balloting ~1r11 !\1ege.~ told !he l:id1I'!: that 11·onlr11
In this countrv :ire 1realccl as. second
<"l.1<:s citi.,ens ''\VhPri 1 talk about women
powe r, I'n1 nnt talking about sex and
no br11<:. I 'm lalkine abo11t getting !hf'
same financinl :11\'nrd for the same johs
as 1ncn." she stntcd.
DETROIT (AP) -Leonard \Voodcock,
S9-year--0ld vice president, was fonnally
and unanimously elected president of
the Uniled Auto Workers Union today.
\Voodcock \Vas elected by his 24 fellow
members of the UAW's International
Executive Board to serve untH the
union's 1972 convention.
His election to succeed the late Walter
P. Reuther was assured Thursday by
the wi thdrawal of the only other con-
tender, a fellow vice president, Douglas
Fraser, 53.
The fiery, red-haired Reuther, for 24
years leader of the 1.6 million member
union, died May 9 in a plane crash.
the executive board fills vacancies occur-
ring bet"·een conventions.
The question of electing a vice
presidential successor to Woodcock was
FroH& P1J9e 1
DIAMOND. • •
\':ivid canary yel low diamonds and a
huge 18 mm. pink pearl found off the
coast of Burma.
"They can color dian1ond s artificially
now."' says Hoff. "but this natural
p1gn1enlation is really rare."
The dia inonds OO\V a rc loc ked away
in a safe deposi t box and ·will be sho\\'n
"by appointment only ."
The proud owner intends lo design
settings for 1he1n and. if they haven't
been sold by then. will include some
or all of them in his summer display
at the Festival of Ar ts.
One \\'ill not be snl d. "I'll give 1L
Lo my "·1fc," says lloff. "Only the la st
lime I offered her a diamond she turned
1. down . Maybe she"ll like one of these..··
not decided Immediately. Any one of
17 regional directors, who also are
automat!ca!ly members of the board ,
are eligible.
To mild·mannered, reserved Woodcock
falls the tough new contract bargaining
later th is year wiU1 the Big Three of
the automot ive industry -General
Motors, Ford and Chrysler -and als:>
with the agricultural implement in-
dus try. Renewal of pacts in the aer()Space
industry comes up next year.
New car sales and profits of the
automakers have been sagging this year,
and the companies already have indica-
ted the will tpke a tough stance in ne-
gotiations to supplant three-year con-
tracts ex piring next Sept. 14.
~egotiations will_ open in mid-July. The
union dema nds include a substantial
wage increase. ('arlier retirement at a
~igher pension . unlimited cost of living
increases geared tG the government's
consumer price index, a year-end bonus
and company-paid dental care.
Paris Subway Strike
\Vorsen s City Ja1nup
PAR IS tAP ) -A 24-hour sub1\•ay
strike made the French capital's traffic
Jarns "·orse than usu;il today <1s n1orc
private cars came I!l lo thl' eity nnd
army trucks picked-up suburban con1-
muters. The strikers are demanding a
six th v.·pek of paid vacation each year ,
At Orly airport, arrivals a n d
departures were delayed 30 minutes to
an hour and several flight! were cance led
because of a weeken~ strike by air
na"igauon personnel. 1'hey are protesting
di sci plinary action against some pcr so-11·
nel who joined 'in an earlier strike by
air traffic controllers.
•
..... ~ -............... '
Herc',<: l1ow th<' candidates stand on
som" other issues:
-On the move into Cambodia all sa i1/
l\'1>:011 rl1rl 1hc right lb1tH! and ur~rd
rhc 1rornen tn e'\Dress !heir S(1pport of
!h" Prr<:ident's oollcies.
Sc:h1nitz Urj.'ed the \\'Omen In surnorl
!he President's Cambodia move. "not
becausr he "s a Republican ancl not br-
C.'.lll Se he·s President. hut because he·s
right and he needs all ou r bat kin~."
-On campus violence and protest. all
said thev favor relurninR publicly sup...
r'"l rtrcl colleges ancl univf'rsities to educa·
lional, no! pro1est institutions.
\\'ilcoxen. in speaking on cdu ca!inn . ern·
phasi zcd the need for more vocational
1r-''lin" in public schools .
On the subject nf f'ampu~ violrncc
R:iHerree advoc;i TPd jailing 1·Jnlrn1 ciim-
pus protesters. "These campus rio!erc;
-;>~11 that's JUSI 11·hat thl'v are, rio ters
-should i;!'1 to jai l.'" he said.
-All of the canOidat!'s sairl the weUare
sysl<'rn as practiced bv the John.~on
;u1Jnin1<:\ration v.•a.~ a failur e ancl in-
clicaled they backed Nixon's proposed
rernrm s.
\\.i Jco:<en simke nut st rongtv in backin_I?
N1xn11"s 11·l'l fare reform bill. '"As a depu1y
Dist rict Att ornl'y. ! hacl a chance lo
~re "·hat our preserot \1·elfare s\·ste1n
c]()('s -paring familirs to break up.
I t111nk !he Prr ~ic!enl's rerorn1 pack;iRe
1s nn" of the most c:on1prehensi\'e to
date."
I £earl Patient Di es
CAPE TO\VN , South Afr ica fAP)
Pieter Johannes Smith, Ult' v.·orld"s se-
cond longest surviving heart transplant
patient. dl(•d early tod;i.y at Groote
Schuu r Hospita! He \1'as 5J .
. -,,.,i
DRAPERY ·
SALE!
CUSTOM MADE W ITH A W IDE SELECTION OF
QUA LI TY INTERIOR DESIGN FAB RICS A S MUCH
AS •or. OFF ON EXCELLENT DESIGN FABRICS.
r.~-. 1dvent19e of •n opportunity lo make dr11tic s y'
it's • new home thtt needs dreping or 'iuit , I . a ings on c.u_sfom m~de quality draperies . Whither ---------:c=----__ ____ •p •c1n 9 • worn pe1r, stop '" •nd check th1 s1v ings.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAG""E---'---
7ttl llllt fll'Alei "
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 W•stcllff Or., 642·~050
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
Prof•s1io n1f ll\ftrlo r
Desigl\•rs A valla~l--.A I D
LAGUNA BEACH
345 Nort" Coa $t Hwy. 494--6551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TI L 9 l'lrl11te Teft "" Molf If Or11n91 Co1111y S40·12•J
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Record
l'Jfeeti11gs
FRIDAY
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Or ~noo Caa•t ll OY&I "'c~ M•Jcns tJo. 1\.6, HunU,,v1on B••Ch M,>0nlc Tempie, Le~• 1M P11m, Hunt1nu1on Beor". 1.30 "m New00<1 Am111ur R•dlo Socl•IY. R1c•1dllon Building, 111 4 ll1lbo1 Blvd . New1><>rt B1acn. a P.m.
Sou!h (G&•I P1rtnh Wiltiou! P1rln•t1•
Inc .• L1gun1 F~••1I 11vlngJ '"" lDln. 2~ Oce•~ Av•., L1gun1 811ch, J Pm.
SATURO""Y Cnti1!1u1 8u1ine»m~·· Co'1'mltl~•·
81111oa Ba~ Club tl•'·"'llO•t l o1Ui,
1.:)0 '-"'·
Lice11ses
Marriage
APJl!L ,I C.lt'EENIE R-~HAllP, Michie! F , 11,
ol 1~; J51n 51 , NewPOr! Be1c" lod Lauri E, JI, or 2-J E, lJnd
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ol \55 , Mvr11e, Tustin 111d Paul• A , II, or ''21 Ru!gors Clrr!r, Hun· r,ngton B•1c~ H.lMMA-C.lSE, Pov W. 15. or 68 M1ln ~I, F~rmln11daie, NJ • 1t>d
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ARBUCKLE 6 SON
\\'tAlellff Mortuary
U7 E. 17th St., CO!lla Mesa ........ • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Comna del l\lat OR 3-HSO
Costa l\tesa 1\11 1-ZUf • BELL BROADWAY
!\IORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa Meta
LI 1-3'33 • 0 11,DA Y BROTHEOS
llunlington Vallry
l\!ortuary
17111 Beach Bh•d.
Huntlni;on Bta<'h
3,t.n11 • PAClFIC VIE','
J\IE.\fORIAL PAI ,
Ce metery • !\for1u¥ry
Chapel
:t500 Pacific Vie'11' Drive
Newporl Beach . Califoml•
,,4.2700 • PF.EK f'A~lll .Y
COJ.ONIAL FUNERAL
HO~fE
7801 Bolt• Ave.
Westminster 193-UU • SHEFFER MORTUARY
l.aRtJn• Btal'h 4H-1535
Sftft Cl11menl e •n.otot • Si\llTll ~' i\IORTUAHY
6!1 i\lain SL
nuntlnflft11 Braclll
SJMSJI
County Bracing for Primary Election !
By JACK BROBACK
OI "'9 o.#J P'lll! St111J
Sl1NTA .o\."1.lr. -County
Clerk Will iam St John Thurs-
day ouUined plans for handling
the J uoe 2 prima ry election
which he predicts will be a
laborious proces~ due to lhe
"sii.e of the ballot anti the
inadequate equipment" a 't
Election S erv ic e .s head-
quarters.
be slow -St John Is pri>
JCC!Lng final unoff it'1al results
lly noon June 3 -ballots
\I'll! be 1\leH guarded
"Again, total security will
be in force," the cle1·k S1ates.
"Local polire and she riff"s
deputies "'ill guard ballots
during delivery !from 1,022
prec.lnc!s) and lhrough proc-
essing. Delivery \'<'hicles "'Jll
have l\vi>way rndios, and
armed deputies 1v1ll ride
shotgun~ ..
He add<•d that
n1gh1 at Election Servictt, 1119
E Chestnut St . Santa Ana.
·n1ere. results will be poeted,
begu1nu1g at 10 p.m. on large
blackboards, (Absentee baJ.
Juts from 3 p.m.1.
St John puts special e.tn phasis
on the special election to
deterin1ne a successor lo t~e
unei pired term of the late
Congressman Jan1es B. Utt
in the 35th District. A separate
ballot. 10 ht hand counted,
1vill be given voters in the
district to decide beh,•e.en
seven candidates.
Re sult! v.·Jll be telephoned to
a special group al head-
quarter.'!, "v.·ith cmpha~is Ori
speed'' frorn the 440 county
prt>cincls in this tw1>county
dislricl. About 200 precincts
are in coastal San Diego Coun..
ly
Snap tallie~ on other crillcal
contests will be. called in dur-
ing the night fro1n 11boul JOO
precill<.'ts geographically scat·
tered lhroughout the c<lunly.
Included in the snap tally
votes are: Democratic, for
go\•ernor, Je~,. 1111rutr :.i .1u
San1uel Yorty, for V • S .
Senalor, George E: Brown Jr .
Kenneth Hahn and John V.
Tenney .
Republican : l:.S. :-lcnator.
incumbent Georgt: tlfurphy
and Norton S1nlon .
Non-Partisan : Fifth Dislril't
Su per\·isor, Alton Allen, in-
cumbent , Ronald Caspers,
savini,:s anti loan exerutive.
and Jlobt'rt \Vilsnn, Cost:i
1\.1es:i ma yor. Fourth Oistricl
su pervisor . Gordoo Bishop,
Clark, Durr \\'1 lliams,
and Jamrs Work.man .
Voters ""Ill be provided new '
fa st sr r\'ice to determine their:
election place or any other!
<1uestion perUnent to the vote..
Those with a proble.n1 should
call B34·S050, Attorneys from
the County Counsrl's office
\\·ill be avallable to discuss :
legal problems, I
T() provide Utis servil'e a
bal!e.ry of telephones has been
1 lnst;•!led at Election Services
£11ch operator wt!I ha v e
tclln plete microfi!nt inforn1a-
DAILY PILOt l
UN ITED
STATES
NATIONAL
BANK
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
BRANCH
NOW O,.N
SATURDAYS
' .. fllON .·THUlS.
PllOATS
P.M.
IO·S P'.lt,
10.6 P'.M.
17 141 140.!211. LMON4 ~:
S.. c .. t rt-. C•lhl M ...
AUi. Y"ll P'm,•MI .......
E. H. LEVAN
The county's Col eman Vote
Tally Syste.in, St John ex·
plains, "was pu rchased seven
.Years ago to handle a max·
in1u1n of 300,000 ballots. We 1--------
tion on each voter .. ____ _:'~==========='
now have more than $50,000
registered voters in Orange
Coun ty."
Th e county clerk expects
about a 60 percenl turnout
of voters based on a study
of trends over the last 10
years ol off-year primaries.
Although vote counting will
Court lleors
CSF Appeol
On Rioting
SANTA AJ'iA -An appeal
by California State C-Ollege.
trustf(!S for a pennanent in-
junction against the. alleged
riot activities at Cal Sla te
Fu llerton of a r a cu It y
member, si x students and 500
"John Does" will ~ heard
June 4 in Superior Court.
Presid ing Judge. \Villiam C.
Speirs set the ne\v date. Thurs-
day after it \Vas expl ained
tha t defense attorney J\Iichae.l
C. Gerbosi \\'as engaged in
the Arthur League murder
trl.:i 1 and would be un::t.ble to
leave those. proceedings for
the length of time needed in
the. trustees-students dispute.
'J'rustees name Dr. Stuart
Silvers, CSF philosophy pro--
fessor. and students David
J\1ac Kowiak, Bruce Church,
Ted Schoenberger, Kim Kanel.
,Ji1n Cleair and Don Alavin
in their con1plaint. 'fltey ide n-
tify lhe grou p as hei ng pro-
111!nent in disturbances at the
college la st F eb. 19 during
\l'hioh the Letters and Science
Building '-\'as occupied by mili-
tant sludents.
Silvers, the. slduents named,
and 32 other persons who were
allegedly involved 1n lhe Cal
State frac:is face tri::t.l s on
varyin~ n1i~den1eanor charges
in Fullerton municipal court.
Mesan Faces
Trial Over
Auto Death
S.<\N1' A ANA -A Cost::t.
1\lt!sa 1nan who v."as charged
with manslaugh1er and <lrunk-
en drh'ing after his ca r alleged.
ly st ruck and killed a J.f.year-
old girl at a Westm inster inter.
section has been ordered lo
face a jury trial July 1 in
Superior Court.
Judge ,James F .. Judge set
that date for llarold Dean
AJlen, 26, of 2226 Rutge rs
Drive, and schrdulcd pretrial
arguinrnt oo the issue for
June 25 il1 hi~ cnur1
Police I.looked A!len last
Christn1as Eve aflcr "investi-
gating an incident at Bo!sa
Bnd Jackson Slreel~ 1n whic h
Diana Caroline Cienfuegos ~·as
killed and four · vear • old ~lichael Sean \\'right was ser.
iously injured.
\VitneS$es said Uie girl had
the little boy sea1 ed on a
bicycle and was pu:shing the
machine across the Cf05SWalk
when she ~-as struck by a
car driven by Allen. Police
booked Allen on the listed
chBrges after subjeciinl him
to a sobriety test .
FarmBw·eau
Meeting Set
At Knott's
BU E~A PARK -The !iJrd
annual metUng and banquet or the Orange County Farm
Bureau will be held at 8;30
p.m. Friday at Knott 's Berry
Farm.
Allan Grant, president of the
Cjjlifornia Fann Bureau will
address lhe mee\ing v.'hich
will be held in the Garden
and Redwood Rooms a t
Knot.l's.
Officers and directors for
the new year will be eleeled
at the meetlna a.nd en--
lertainment will be provided
In the. form of the Smog cut-
ters from the Orange ct:iapter
of the Society for the
Encouragement ot Bnrbershop
Quartel Singing in A1ner!ca.
for furth er lnform ll!lon. call
Dryant Ou1ndter at (71.f)
•Ja.2303
I
I
Ill ..
I
!
I
I
•
Women's
... c.-,_..
••• 1 Su,..,,. ,
Boat Shoes
T'1rifty
Ditcount
Prited
''T 1111' ·~d r~mrorubly dcuj'./\td Mir
• ,, ·• • Ii co•h•onecl ore.ha, opon~e 1r
'• 11 'Y d"IJ upren, ·,recul det15n '"r,t <'·l!;p, moMtd ooln . In 'U~hh•.
,, I••\ I 1d'11 B)ltt', ,;u• 4 tn 10. f~bion·
"~'•• Ir• 'f<l"' weor 0< bcloatinr-
l'ricet Good
thn.t Tunday
,_
Children's & Misses
Tennis Shoes
YOUR
CHOICE
K1ridm' •l>M< tfl.,,r 1n rnlt(ll! dcK~ "'"h
tuhbn !Of u p,-""""' ~ 10 1;, rt.d Of bJ,,, •
~filln' «>lllt in dud, 100. Wh11e "' !I'"~-"'" 12~} 10 ~. lloth htt~ 11 I
''""'"" itoocln "'•lh •r<h •uppcn• ond "c aed ru~r .,1 ... I1r•r•1on•I ,..Jun •t 1• 1 law~!
l·
Nat time you ne-N casual shoes check
Thri(ty's out3tanding: sel ection of
srrlt'S. We're not tryin.~ 10 compete
~·1th shoe cliains-th~t is, n:cept for
the vilue you receive: fo[ your money!
Compare the quality a.nd the low dis-
count pric~you"ll m 1. k e Thrifty
hcadquutca for iummcr foo~~r.
Reg. s2•4 Women's
I
I
·I
I
' Tennis Shoes 1
•·Chol<• of Whll•, llack •r
Sklpp•r Alu• $ 941 •Full Cuthio" lnui le1 with
Alth SupjtOrl•
Men's· Youths'· Boys'
Basketball Shoes
Thrifty
Oitcount
Ptic.d
n,f,1·,I 1t1·le h.,~·r1ball •hM& ••th ~h r
1 61•• k cn11nn du<"k "rl''"· 1uC1io., g•ir tuh-
hrr Mlln . f t•lvrt b11tlt·1n 11d1 '"''"''"' ., 11h
'"'h1or>rJ 11«11 '"d tu.ohion onwlt • ,\j,. ~1n• "1\h•hl• .\\•~ • l 'f!"I in 7 In I l,
YQuol11" 1n J to 6. •nd Bor1· 1n 1 ~ to l
" " ' . ..
(~SlUl favoritCI wi1lt
ru~d, he~\; duty cot-
1\tri duel.: llPf'ClS •••
Jnng v.·e,;.nn.; rubber
snl~. Sil cumfortabl~ on
)"AH fc:~I W•th !heir full
<u~hrt"I 111~··k> ~nd .adt
surpnrt•. SlltS ' tn 9.
WJ1h dt.il'I in 1 jiffy,,,
7wr "·ash<ng mac.hmc:.
-·
Men's Casual
Boat Shoes
Thrifty
Oit<ount
Prieed
$)88
1!011 •h<i,., fnr !hr "'"" rn thr fomrl'' ·n,~. 11 f1i yo~r co u•! •nJ •1·nav hf• ,..,.h
111·1~ •nd nimfort, T11t1r 1h"P ~ood l!ioO~•
•nd oolod ,omfort ~'I f<'~C!l1tr fh~"' nf
N111, 1.'l<l<n, Wb.J•e or f•dM llluo on !""
(11,; ID Jl.
Women's Villager
Casual Sandals
Cool Nylon Mesh
ladies' Casual Shoes
Italian Style
Ladies' Strap Sandals
Sr,ty ;~ 11'1' With f•1hjafl 1hr1 llll!tmtf! Wttr
•i>aNr nrlOl'I 1tnw -b tliporu for t00I «•tnforl. :;11u~1, rrold~d oolta fM •t<t in· Jt-.c.r, Qf OU1 '. l'OU 11 •ltflt • Jt"if ;n ll!•dt •.•
•l>O!hn in /\'•luul. Si>t'I ' to II). ni.,·u «i•~ ro~ lllOfC lh111 your moory"1 W'Otlb O( .... r !
Lady Wilshire
Casual Slippers
$)98
Ladies' Comfortable
Cotton Terry Slippers
98c
77c
A DIUG AND DISCOUllT
'4
i
I I
[
I
Jo DlllV PILOT SC "-"'~~~--'-~~~---"
YOtlr Money's ll'o rth
OVER TIIE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock Li st
Consu111e1~s Pay f 01· Crime
~u: J Hltll L-ClllM t=' C~I=: it' pf
By SYLVIA PORTER
The annual loss to 1111
burut~ from crimr is no\1
estimated at $10 bltl!on A.nd
I would guess th15 figure to
~low
WllO PICKS up the tab ror
<..Time and vio lence" The
roJJowmg utl ervle\Y Y.lth LoULS
\\ N1ggeman president of
f1rema.i1 s Fund A1ner1can
Insurance Companies ont nf
the leading \1111 ers of (T H\t
insurance ans11ers 1h.i! qut s
lion and more
PORTER \\hat are lhf'
principal crimes a s a in ~ 1
bus1ncss"
NlGGt:\!AN Burgl:ir\ rob
bery va nd ~llsrn shopll/1 ""-
bad checks and tmplo\c thrll
1nclud1ng embezzlement At
least 30 percent of al l bu~1ness
failures 1~ !he resul! ~r
employe dishonesty a n d
embezzle1nent alone c n s t ~
crnplovers around $.1 b11!10 i
11 \Car
1 he small busmt ~~man 1~
LECAL NOTICE
SU~!!· O• (OU•T OF lME
STllTE OF CAL FO•N A FO•
THE COUNTT OF O•ANGf
NO A"°'• l>lllOC£EDING FOii (MANGE OF N.lME
O•DEll TO SHOW Cll USE
.o.oo!c• on o JACO( l(All •rKl
El• NE SH llLE T KATZ Fo en.nae
ol N•mP
V HEll.EilS JA(I( l(llZ end ELA NE
~ .. lllEY lo:.All navP IM • "" on
wn lne <•~ ot ns (our! lo •n
o "" <hang g "" ;iin..,.s ""'"'' I om JACK. KAll •f'd [LA NE SHfRLET
KATZ lo JACK £UC.ENE CUllTIS 1...i
ELAINE SH RLET CUR:T S P'Pll'<-11¥• y
•n<l •o<h•r.o.o• on•s "'""th d on•
""'""' !rom VillEll E ilNN K.lTZ •...:I e11 AN ELL 0 1 l::ATl •o V.lLEIH ~
ANN CUlll ~ onct llll+AN Ell OT
C.Ull.TIS f S •( Yt V
; Oll:OEllEO •no a P• >on>
In e ••lfd n lhf •l>'lY~t l!P<I "• •
""""" ~""''~.<w t • 9lCl •m on Ju • 1~10 n 11'\• cou 1,.,.,,,.
o+ 0 •1>•• m•n I o J • no '°" llOIJ'-t ,. ICO W"I E gn n S HI ~~n • Im•
Ca !0<,.ll eO<I •ll<l'W '"""' I •n• wnv ..,. ... "" '"' cn~nve of ntl)1e• •noukl no1 oe g an l!<I
1 !S FURT HER 0 11.0El!EO ~•! •
coo• o m • "'"" lo •how , • .,_. oe w o ~ed n he D• y P o • newso•~• o 9ene 11 < cu•!on o Jn e<I n ne
(non v ot Or1n!le (11 IO n" or•<:! 1
"'~~ tor to<I •uc<•'~ v• we•lt• Pf or
•o "" d• 1 " '"" l>o• nr on llV p I ! on
De M Mt~ 1' 1'10
RAVMONO THOMPSON
Jll<lu• of Ifie Su<>e or C0<0rl
PLUNKETT & ,LUNKETT
"'' Hitt•• I! LI W •IT OMYt A•lnul , 0 h~ 20
Hun! nJfon •••<~ Cll lorn I 'Tt<I
Tt>111~on• 11 •l '1' JOJO or }M .itll
l'i!lor,..v1 lor 011 oner
Pub+ 1n..i O an<H Go••
MIY 21 19 •r>d JU~r J '1 '" "
LEGAL NOTICE
t inn
lU,1!111011 COURf OF THE
'TilTE OF CALIFOllNI" FOii
THI COUNTY OF 01\ilNGE
No "Ill ...
tfOTICE O'
FOii "N TRUSTEE
Hl!,\ltl!'IG OF P El!TION
0 It 0 f • APPO Nl NO
£\I• of THOM.0.S C H.11.11.0V •li.1
THOM,t,S CL FFOllO HAll.OV Ot<ttl><:d
NOl (£ S 11EllE8Y GIVLN ThA
MAllT Hil ll OV R EESE t
,.am n!•tra! • wlllHM•w h 1nnt ~d o
""' •-• ~n I f.d ""late l\A~ II ..i
"" • n • "" It on for an atder "~"° n no
fho 111l•oncr •• 1 u•tt o ! + ~·
"•<•~ tnu!ta ~v tht Ott In~••~ o
1ne P* """ d11 Vn• I'<! n rnr w
1c1 •• l u• er ~f• rnco. '" "'" ch h m1d1 r.,, lu fnff oa cu 1 ...
,.,., 111~ ,,.... "nd P &<r or """no
ll>t! w m 1 ,.., ~n •rl lo Juno l
1910 I I f )(I I m In , ... Cl><o I "'"'' ., Oeo1r mrnt No l ct ,. d cov t
11 700 C vt C.rn er O •• Wr1 ft
t 111 CWotSin 1 An• C1 t"'n 1
Dlll<I M8'< 10 1910
WE SI JOH,..
GoU<llY ( e ~ THOM,\S J JlilfFi.llS Jlt
Jlll "•nolulu A,wonuo
111"11,.w (1~!9rl>f1 9U'I•
T1I !JU I 10 no
"' lor,..1 tor Adrnl11 11t1lr •
Pull!•"-<! o •"Qt c .. 1 D• 1~
Ml>• n 1l 1' 1t10
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE 0 1'" P Uil C HE"I! NG
f<Of CE IS HEllEBV G 11 ( I
"" Tu~a•• Juno 1 ·~~!(lo
P M In I~• twnc (h•<nDf ~ l •
H• I lC70D 5,, et" Av•n ~ Ft.,nAn \/"
Ct {ID-"la "• C Y C.~~nt f u d •
OUOCNI "9"" n~r.r"'tO 8 li0i,[1 I"' "' F ~<• V•• 1~1D-l~I
Ml • lCI. t10
CllV COUNC L
C fY OF FOU ll/T -'I VilLL f V
Ml•E Co t c <C•• r b •hM 0 1n9f ((l.l> Cl• < ~··~ J:l 1910
i EGA.L NOTICE
' ,, I~
!'IOTICE OJ' P'UaL C HEilt NCO
NOT ICE ~ t EllEllY (, VtN
""" P •""Ing Comm'' on o ~· C • .. 1 NtWPO 1 lle~ch ... I ""Id • PV~ <
"'" n. °" "t ~P" to on o ll&v 181Y P•r~ In< o • u.., P •
No 1•11 on prop~ oc:M..., •
E COll!I liW\I Newoo 1 ll•~C~
IO ~uml! D I •• • DH~ n tonn~c un
W ~ • bOll l•unU> ng II<> I~
NOTICE $ liEllEBT F=Ulll .. E ll
G VEN rn1 s•d OoJbc 1111 n9 "'
be ... Id on II"" ti~ (!AV ol J~,,..
1t10 1 '"" l><lur of 1 00 PM n Ille Covnt I C~1mlwr1 or ~ No ... _
11 .. cl'I Cly Htll ti whoc:h I "'' •n<I
•IK• •n• •n<I I "" •on• " f •I e<I ""'" '"°'" Al\d M MA d ,.,.....,., Don I! ildO n1on
Secr••n " N,...,,..,, lle•c~ C v
Pl•n" n1 Comm SI "" f'~~ 1hl<I 0 An!llo Co8•t 0•1 • " o Mo>' 1T lt lO •• IO
hit hardest Burg1:in and rob-
bt>1 y losses in 1969 reaC"hed
SJ i bt'hon and of this il l
lens! s~fill 1n1ll1on fell llpon
\ht ~mil l hus\nt'sSrnan
POl!Tf R lsn I tt true th 1t
11t the cons11n1ers p iy !hf'
bill frr au ttus 1 Don I you
pas., 1t on lo us'
NIGGEi\IA.N Surro you pay
:ind liUr(' l\e pa!s it on The
111sur nee compnny ts tern
poraril} burdened with the
lO~( of cn111e but 1ns11rancc
r Vr>nl uallv pa.sses the c<Jst o 1
10 the bus1ness111an 111 the
l:1rn1 of 111crf'ased prem1u1ns
The busu1essman an tun~
passes the CO!i1 on to the con
sumer 11:1 higher price:;; You
pay in the end
I 1\0Uld esl1ma lr lhat no
n1ore th;in 10 pe rcent of those
affec led by cr11n1 n.il <ict~ are
adt'quareh 1nsu rrd It 1s no
.secret Lhal some inadequale!y
insured bus1ncssr>; rn hig h
crune an:as adrl lo lhe price
or their merchandise to ofrsrt
tic high cost of shop\Jr1 1n,.(
a 1d other forms of theft This
1s inother inst 1nce \~here the
bill for crime is passed
dirrctly to the consume r
Added la w enforcernent and
Jt1d1 c1:i l :;;ervices mad e
n~essary by crime also
create costs passed to the
consumer th1ou gh laxes
PORTER Thanks f o r
snv1ng 1l To go lln dn you
ag ree that Lhe 1970s "1\1 be
as violent as the 1960s
NIGG&\lA.N I do not
agree. The nat ion s crune rate
rose a t a slower p;ice in 1969
than tn 1968 although the
overall rate rose II percent
and armed robbers became
a greater menace
Lawlessness \ 1nJence and
tnJ Ustice h ive always exJSled
but Ule soaring crime rate
or lhe 1980s can be renlained
1n th~ 1970s I base tllJs belle( Q
on the µr eal stndes madt 1n
lhe profes.~1onali2a1ion of
police 1nstallal1on or modern
cnn1n1un crihons !iYSlt nis <:on
struct100 o! nC\\ f3c1l1lies and
1ncrtased cooperat1un among
law enforcement aJcnc1es
And of courSt-I bt heYt'
1hat effor!s by 1nsu1ance com
pan1es l(l en c ou r age
blJSinessn1en llld homeowners c••,
to take adequ ate ~ltps lo he lp
prc1enl enmr will b<' a g1e1t
hl'lp
PORTER Doe~
1n view
PORTER What are you
doin g about this?
NIGGEl\-1A.N It 1s the 1n-
d1v1dual s respons1b1hty to
safeg uard hts personal belong
1ngs "helher JI be his home
or his business As a major
wn!ei of crime insurance we
ha\e attempted to a 1 d
businessmen and horneoY.ners
through a Loss Prevention
Program Crime can be blOck
ed to a considerablf' extent
tf }OU prepare a defense fo1
11 1n advaoce
11 Pf'IO<Jl 1 ·--111.-. lftl ..... -.. -'"'""'' •I·--·""''-'~ t '"""' '-IUISO. -A--nlll" U UP
P'•k •• M •I IM-rtfilll .,. m•r1r•• l'llltlalll .. ., -11.i... Able~• ..,., 11 o • lo 11 10'~ nll. f 1f1~~ -.~ .. l!l!O\~~!L:J~ 7 1.!, 41 Jho .St~ !!:~ -l'o ;, .c:':r XII
1ec. 1
' " , ' • " "
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U\4 It,,. "'"" Mkl :111 9 1' '> JI... )I 0 -t \1 n•r, c;::, r
II U\> ActmEJ\ II~ 1l 1l • 11[• llfo + ~~ h <>m1U SO H ,., l6o A4 Miii i 20 ,, 9 . f o ,\, 'ri(htw11.,. 60 • 1 S"' Aclart>• I~ Ill JI • 2~'•, Ui V, (!Mg' I 1.4 • i
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7 :n;,,t,Gml •I 71 N l'l l~j= ~Clnn £ISO :n 1 ll h "• ntLll 1 ~ ~, ll lllo :W • >,,(In E ol •
19 1J 20 ~ .l1t,..Lll Pl 1 Joi J..I l4 .... !Inn Ml\ ''° 'l 10 ""'°'I Co I f 110 I i\-> IJFln ID
•," ~. • •'",' ,',",,,"', l • nv. » u -... s ... c 1 20 .... I \(II"' IDf"I 1111\0 -\.0 '"' Inv so
'
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• ..: 5 ~~ IG'!~•I~ n fO 4'.o ~ • ')• -lo llY " oil JI
11• 161 A ••kt lnltf1 3f n ' 1~~ l~' + t• C TY Sirs 00 S\\i i V. Alber a( :11! ll 11•• :U II> ~ i ••~Ea 1 olO 1J I• Alo.t r.n1 l6 I '' t" f • 1t.,~:; 1:1: IJV:I 1J ~ A t in" u 110 ·~~ ~~ ~ o 201,r -t ~ f ... e1 1111 l 11
16 11 , ",",',~~tn,a .J.6 ~ -IOrOX Kit "' ..., :l() I' • 11,'Hi 1 ... -•-1tPe1 to 1 > 1 .. 11 ... co 10~ 11 H-'"° ~ '•'• Aeolu<l 1•0 '.11 ill.H~JO ·t ~c ,,.11P1>1t A ,...lu<I o l ~ J/lo JI 1'' h CN" Fin SO
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15 16 ' llGSup ISO 'l '. l • • Colo 5ou P! • ~ 11 Alh Cn•m ~• 11 > 1J1.o '" Coll nc1 l ' Alll!l~PC :Ille. I IS. u1~ 1111 4 • C9ll In plj ll 711 lil Aco1 ~ t o '.>li o ,•,1t. S• -l o CBS 1.ilb I ~ Amft Su9 I .0 5 Tllo l1 CBS pl I
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AN1IG•• l 0 ,, Jj l . :tJ~. + • (OM lei l!O MUTUAL Am P"o!O 1 ](] I 6 • 6lo _ Conlro+ Do I AllNOV 06r 389 !ii •• , • .ST -~I Cn011 or• J(r Arn »a! I • 11 > 11 I 11\.'t (O"WOCl<I 1 to
Am Sl>p 60 I "• lYo U o -l'o (~l/nll SO
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The follow no quo Inv l"<lc 516 526A-me o" 60 1 lt~ lt: 11:' -1 •C l!<lllllF 11 1
1 •~I on• >UPP t'<I b lnve•• "" u v ~ie~nc'°~'° ~~ ll'• 11 , J, + 'i C•omol(n !O
the Na! onal " •otl nv•• Ile• ' 10 10 60 Al'\ ~c fO 31 211 , 26 , ? ~ 1 Crou tHlnd 1 • ~ on or ~M" "' lnve>IO • Grouo II.MK (D 30 1 1~ 13 12 , 1111 I C OW(o! 1 01' 7~ • O•d •r• 1rw: a~ OS Mfl 1 1• lS AMP lr>e ~ 101 o1J •2 1 •l 1 Cow" Co k
9 • ~ ''' M whl(I w~co ~~!~Anoe• Ceo 211 16 15 • 6 l (rw"Zo 1 6~ ~ ~~~·~ ~iv'•e<u ~P~ .Sock 1••1 566~";;;\rij.cr ~ 2,: ~. ~,'+ .~T'S~0°~•1.:i
ll Cd ~ d) <>< boughr 5•ot I I ~ '3 A~aco~U 1 t(t 1,1 ? 11 '') -Cudft hY IA S la>Atd Thu day Va py 5 JI 6 06 A"cn Hoc~ 1 l 21111 1o , II + l G~a v pf JS
FUNDS
Decorate by Nu11ilJers
With Wall Mural Kits
S I 0 Alk "~1 R•ilJ 1! ~~ : lj A.nee pNS• I 551 J I S + Gu ;en Tt
l 6 16 ,, ~ n 1 n Aot<h•CP 75 JO 1' • l n ~ Cvmmln 1e11 v Fu"<lli J Hncock 6 l9 6 7J A•toOll lll a 23 22 :nlJ. -'• CunnO u; d 517 ~'1 Jth ISM15N APL Coo I IJ~a 1\1 l +• CuHnW•l 1 l •• l/1 "'n APL pl (!C4 5 1J 13 1l + Curl YI• A ' • I O /1 Ke:~o~e F~n~s 1 II APL pl 8 50 ) 11'.fo I • 17 • -Cu! ff Ii 1 JO ~~j :',~ Cu~ Ill telf19 19 AllA Svc 96 lit 76 1•• 11 ~.c~cl!!o1 11'0
5 0, .S OT Cut 87 l 90 la61A•c3!aN O~ 1 2 \ 10 0 ? I + Cvp.,1.>,1 1 60
1s .t.O ~u; ~t ~~i '~r: ~~~~1.."11 ~ ~.; ~: ;!~ + , :~: i }~ Cus 1(2 )71 •Ol A 1PSvc IOI I 19~ 11 < II' -O..,,lllvr 71• .,9 ~,91 Cu•S 1'11B t7 il 3~•0S?O IJ'I 1 1 I •1 -0 0 en1Co .S
7 I> 1 9~ c,u• ~1 I 001 t 7l "•m<oSr ~o 1s71 ',,' '•' , ,~, , + '> g:, ,~,• .",'
A one of a k111d manulac
tunng hrm ha s opened a pro
du cuon plant and offices 1n
F'ountain \ <1lley Des11jn1ng
n1 an ufat:1ur111i; an <l
d1slnbut1ng 1> a 1 n t b y
numbers "a!l niura!s to a
1 ationfll 1narket Muraln1ast
ers Inc is somt w h~I unique
JO the home decorator markcl
Harry E Winchell pres1
dent and Paul H Lan e vice
? -Join F1r111
II Nr1I Protir;e and Jam•~
F S1111Lh h<l\C be c o1n1
:i~5or1atcd 111 1 l h ~IJ!chum
June~ & 1erriplelnn Int'
1nen1b<>rs of lhe New York
Stock l' xch11ngr
1 lir two 1ww rrgls!rrrrl
represrntat 1c~ "111 br loc::i ted
in !he 1n1tst1nenl firm ~
Lagun a Beach office Pr( u~e
rrs1des tn Los A1:imttos "'h1le
the Smiths rrside 111 Laguna
Brach
6 'i7°o TAX FREE
'"' " (• . • Mu"<lhl
• on Ou• y (o " • o BOnd1
L rn o<t o t "•
<;o~•oc L•t " G• no ~n Hotnl>ktw~ I. Wr•lo Hemp~ Noyoo
... ll.O
fie~ti ce yotiri
1Y7U i11come
t 9xes !
•
"I '"'~ 1• '"'"·····,······· •t t 11 to••11 r •••111 a1
•11,1•~'1" t~ 11 ~11ls ,
• t••u•11 ••
T l J I
lntrninlrrm"I 'f-1 lir'tf1r~ ( {}r11
J~f l Il l ~ S! , D I t J J J
Ct tl o •••• t o l I 1 1 ,21
,1 '"" .... (l],ood
Ill Rtcwck
'""' (I~ Pol"'*l!t
"'° "°""'-.. ,,._,,
(19 0tc"' ,. __
71 Uo
71 ').'1( ...
71 l o
l•h-1~ '"" ,. ..... ,, o-i .
'"'" ,...,,,,
""""'" 11 l,... ,,,_
'"'-" ... At ...... ......
MIK~.,
l1W"'
.. WontM .,,_ ,,.....,
() "' Nei11ul
pres1clcnt for operations have
spent three )ears in market
resf'arch and development or
lh1s new product
Our Jillt' of do-1l ~our~cl£
n1ural s appeal s lo :tll :igr
groups says \\ nchrll 11t!
11e offl'r l\\enty h10
d~s1gns 1n f1tty on ec
.lielections
The rnurats
Ill J 6 9
All
D1 str 1butor~ and i.Jealrrs are
1l01v being named
CdM J\'I an
In Nc\v Post
lark Couller has beeri nam
e!I \ t<'e pres1den1 or Carlsberg
f 1nanc1aJ Corp 11 "as an
nounc ed b\ Arthur \V
~arlsbrrg pre•1denl
Cou ller JOins Cn rlsbrrg nl ll'r
h~v1 ng sl f\f'd as 11re~ dent
and o"n r of \\cnC•)ll lnr1
of Pa"::id<'nn a leadt r 111 the
fll'!d nf rl'\ltlf'nHal de1 r loprr.,
l OIJl!rr al cl his f~m1lv 1i1 f>
Jn ( oron a de-1 :\l:i r
fir. hr ads ! p the ( 1rlsbc1 g
su b"1d1ar} kn1111n us lnc nne
I rn1>crt1es 1\h1t h h\\~ the
f<'~pons 1b1h!1l'S of acqu1s1r1on
ind clr1 elopmcnt ol 1nco111c
prod11c1ng propcrt1c" f or
l f c
Golden
Heco1 «I
W e~L
Set
Golrlrn \\iP~t Alth'lt'li ~rl
nrw S} stem boarding record~
lor the weekend M:i v 15 17
rarr\1ng 4 3.17 passengrr~ ac
cordtn~ to Dudley F' ~1dler
<'XCCUli\{' VI('{' fll1'~1cJC'nl
Accounl!ng for h e a v \
nasscngrr loads 11err 500
l 1nn~ Club mrn1bers 1vho flew
to Ca!ahna l'\lanrl for thr1r
c on1 ent1 011 In add 1l1on lri
Cat:tl1nr1 traffic to D1snc\ land
has 1ncreil sed Judged bv the
number or fam1hes fl} 1ng
f oldt'n \Vest to Fullerton a1'd
Sr1ntA An n for transfers to
D1sne) land
Earnings Told
E 1mu1gs of Th~ Coca.Cola
Cn for the hrs! quarter of
1970 "ere !he highest of any
f1 r~t qu;i rter 1n Lhe corn p:"lny s
history Ptes1dent J Paul
/\us!in annou nced fol1011111g a
1necting of the Board of D1rec
tor~
Aus tin said ncl profit for
lht' first quArler aflf'r pro-
\ l<ilCln for reserves taxc_<; Bnd
C1lhrr ch ~r~r~ v.ns S26 862 89Z
or ~7 ccnls per <:h~•C An
1ncrc11~c of 12 pPrc1 iil ovrr
1111 "2'.l R!lfl 23.1 fir 42 rrnts
~ sl u f' earned 1n tht 11 <:t
quarte r of 1969
'l
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!
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Flo •on 661 1)3 NEA ,., I 9Bl I. ._ .. ' ., ' lT' 0 I011Clf 560 B OMI S 0 ,; 11 )) No !~<! I -16 7 '6 6111<~ W l6 ~ II I _ 0 •nlOY JC)b 8\IHoc:~ Cdlvn "' 1 ~. 5 si 6 ]1 e~~O T ti 90 • "00 + 01 S•a1 Io II cl< 1ou1 11 ,_h <.•cur 5~, 8•1GE 111 '6 • Tl' ,, 'o w ,...r u
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u M Fa ~7) 6~l o '• >lo''' llln~o " 1 "'n r; ~<! t 6 /l Inc.;., ~00 161 llanl<l lU )5 -57~, 56 ~~-• uonno ov M c~ mr •i-1 11 ~"' ~166 Me1 bOlllSI 15 J , • .,. 2s,.,-11 ..,Dor1cco l7 c ~ '~1 1 -,~i c. ~ 611 l:'ltlgz,"c ~~c ~ ~ 15 ' i6. l~~-,~g~ .. ~.~~Yf 111 t"oo I s~ S 1 ~ ~ • W ( I J 5 ) II fl l •> Mfq ' 1 6 , A ) -Dov (t.m 110 ~-~~n n F'n8J,•~l~~wwv:g lffr. Sj'5 ~~~1~1f 1 : j '< n: :l '+ g:v,o-;,:; :g fl•n ••IO IN ,.Q~ 11118b~~n ~f?O J:J :Jll(l .j.•Or~•Pfll'O c,,.,, ~· J l 1u <{ ~, 101 ao ll•nn ~n ~ 30 JO JO~.+ o ~" /'"' C.w!~ JP••l\Nu •~t 14 J1111 e"u•t~Lb l0 !ll ll,.]l>o -1 O r•!o•ob
11 lncnm I J96•!(l,4n lll S•l81.t[L•11 10 111 n JO o ltr o ~~•ou••Pwl'll s .. ~ I I •o ... ,o~ i ll S~5 B•••M • l '.'I\ lS l~ ·~ '~' '"cna,. Gr B l 'XI r<1 1 ;3 111A Fle11F<1 1 '1 11'1 T6~ '' ="o~~~ •. rt 1~ ?~ c,"o • 11 ~ '' 101 Fit 9 01 • 15 'I•~ Ft! P • ,•, n ,r , _>, "•o'·· --u~n 6"'11 ?3(ln-Nm5 1611l!Bet~meft'IO 2 1 \ .,,..,""" 'I r ~• !>< ! SI 1' Q Np 11 l• 1 ].I Bf'CI 0 (~ JO 181 11C1 J6'• JI • -r-auP.,.,1 1 SOI 1~ Sl>»d I JO •nnnf'\' h 5I 6)5 lll'et~A 7'!> 0 10 o I 10 ~ .,c. ~ duPont <>!IW ~•SP~< ~1 f •nn f>M l ~lltJll•[co Pr ~JS'll 111 1 DuoLtl .M
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~r;.M 1~i; :it s~~~ FY~} ,6t =~1~~~cp','";~ 1! ~~,,! ~~\ ~;)_ ~~:~~~ 1i1 The l ntl'rnation:i l Council of l"f'.11' • 10 ~-n 01 •n•e11 6 111 1 oa erown en 111 '\' l it ••• + :.., t:rn~t pll 40 [g ~l t 1.S l0 6D Ut t l l166 11•ow~Coal ?t ll t H 11 -~£v~n1P l>Dtt Shoppmg Centers has ai\ arded c""' q St • lO • 10 5011t Am 1 s• 1 16 l!wnSh••a i t 10 11 • 11 11 E•Ce o 11
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C E1t1.11G h 7 3 1 0 1 S~e I05112llu<lct Co &D S0010 10 o -t F~rH!l!lt crl1(1crt Shopp n~ C<'nter E••t • 'o s ~ "" F ur>d• l'!udd c o pi 1 1 1~0 .so ,. s• -11 F• rmonl 1
EVor• In !OJ/, "(8•11 6n 6f1 8u<l<le '"I i 11 1 lD I) ID' \F1 •1I 10.. J\f anager to Ge11e A llnbens F o c.~Q • '' 1 J1 ~·~•' • n • 5l eu11Fo q 1 o 11 1 'o Je Jn .=• Fam •F in 1 Fo d • I 0 l •u• 1IO 1 09 llu~v1 W ff 93 l~• 11~ 16 1 F•n•'"" nc ofSouthC0<1<;I Pl:u:t.;il 1ts~•n,._e IOJ 79l~m n ie. 77•T7•Aun~R omo 160 '' 1 1 'o F•W~u F n "",, h IQ I s~n nv 49(1 7 46 eonl(ll l>f •o ?9 76 15 26 + 0 F8 t.r>MI tr.to ' I I ~n C~n !9l 0 1~~'-'l"Y GI ••1 Sl! Bur N~r 1i:r. 11 J l JJ FAS nl! •II nnua COll\Cn 1011 r~ Furd 111s l OS<!vr Inv 1 .io1111 Bll•'°lor pf~ 1s l • 6 • 6 . -L 11 Feckl~• ocr
T I r~1 "1111 n1t .SSSo•C1a j1I J 19 e.ur"""1tl l)'6 tts,1s .+~FO<IMO!l llCI 0 qua Ii Y CS:\1 C lllfhd~!C'S F nftn< ~1 p,.,., ~ F m GI • 11 '21 ie.urri:in1 60 110 1w• 101 , 1m -l V> F=t<IPK E •c
0 ft"' l~l 3 "95111, S 3•l..ll5 15 Bu•hUf\v '°' tu ~ I•• 11 ~-\0 F...iPoo8d 1 underwent a d~) Jon " "r1t1en fnd < l 1 l" s ·~llrn•n Funct; -C-',~,.•, ',",' ,.,~, n ~"'"' • °' I 16 Am Ind 6 st 1 TJ ex:im1nat 1on followed by oral r 11~"'11~ : {~ : ~ ~~d.u~ ~ ~ ~ ;g C•bo CP Ill r& ,. , ?t . ~.. ~=o~~'~n~
'nl''V'"", to I I t I r " " O ~ ~6 6" Sr n llce Fds f; 11~~"'M1;i. 't : , !'' 9 , _ Fe ro c o 10 ' ' e~ le i Fl nr.t. SOJ 6 !0 I!~ 1'07 1!01 '' ))/ O ?l•o -.. F brtbrcf 10 k I~ f I "' •~s ~ 6M 1 3n C:•P OP 6~ 1 s1 Cft mPl!l • F 1 ocr now >:ugc o f'asing in sur "1 11 1 11!' 7 J S•oc• 10 10 10 10 C•"'"~o 10 3•5 71q 11 • '' -1v. F" ~..u , ance O""ral>0oal pc-d e "' N111 1e.1 1ocr suo ftGr 5 1' 51 Gct&tw '°" 11 iv,' '' -+V•F •u•~ '11i2i r·-,,.,cur f 1 se • '9•1JJ~ SuolftSI 711 ,,, Cdn P•c l o • !l l 1, S ~.-"F'1 CP1rt '1'1
r1n 8nCC matnlf'nanceand con r-1 C10 SU ~vnc• GI 6 411 106$11"'1~1f ll~ol l] JS~ IS l~-,·,F .. MtE ,. ""• ll'nlf •II TMll Ao 9 .. 1031 ... 10 C) llM ll ~ l'Ol,.l, •I -,FilNCI t cr ~lfUCllOn F' • Gii> 4 ii 4 U T•~<l>f'\I 'tl 1 16 s• tw-,, ~. !A'll 13 •J'• •S lO. 7 " F')!Ntl I 151 r ~d Cl> 311 •ll Tu~ncr J 11 •1t '"•r•r "" 19 10\.l IO\• Fl•(.l'!bdl '° ~OYhll • 6•S70S l rcl>""I l 5l l O!l (8 oC&01>! t 70 ll.t t3 '' t' FllhrFct I~ F""'" 166 t :31lel'!o Cl lJ U ?•S•C~OPLt 1" 10 T•o , ..... ,':,•.,,~Flhetkl I Fr•n~ n G ouo low MA t ll • 5 Ct ot c~ 1 llO U 2 o ?,l,'1> • F!etn <"IP SO ONf( 6\ll 1 1',~nC•P S9111V C~rl1 Co 60 111 ln~ ,.''> 7fto -l/riFllnrlr.olt 1
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U I J U S96 T11dar Fd ll U 110• Ca rG" !'IOI! 1 11 • '7 '''' -',',' PGoH t"-!ncO'f> 111 I" l wt1( GI ?JJ 155 C~ lerW •ot 61 Ul.'t Ul.'t F 'ft .., F ·~ctm ~ u 7 l'lil l w"C •~c J rl6 3 7" Ce1• J! n l01t 10 10 -t\ Fl•Pj wlt ; Execllllve f"d lrM ! 1 ~1•4Un1 Mul 7 •~1H C•1htC~60b '''1 'l o ll\-'IFo ;!ffll
-• F'nlf ""' i o& 1 • U"ld IM I ll C•ttrlr J70 JO& X' JI\ 31 -V.F=...,.,.CD llll c;.,, St't 1 19 1 ' u" C.•o " 1 u 1 1.1 cc or• 11, • ' A • ,•,,, '+ .~ f Mel '":e' •'•' C. tiot!I~ l 16 S 11 U" Hf Fur>dl Cl C• "" 15 15 • 15 .... FMC. Ct
D ile E Be\!ard has been G :':,~ its 600 :~c;;, 1g~~1~~~:C:~~~oi ilJ \\\ ~~~i \\•:: ~~oodF1r.l5t0
I d .,. A~ Fl! 111 1• !ic ~n Jl?6 05Ctnt oln\,J0 ~? 70 "1 •-~FOOlt C lllO oan1ec vice pres1 en! r 1n:uicc t"'11 s1 !Oli>ll Jl v""" 6 n i flCtnl FdV a ,, 1 1 -111Foo11 Min
01 D•t•( I I Grl"Fo • l d !'H UF'd C•" 1 '1 1 11 ''ft Hull 111 r )I 'II •',"" ,Foo,. on,~ " " ron nc a ma nu nc-r. th ,,,., ts'' 11 \1 V•lvt ~In• F=d C•n!llLT 1 . '5 70 70 , '° + 11 ~~~~. :
tun•r of eleclron1c tesl equ1 1)-&~~'rJ~ \~'*\!~ r"·,~n ~~ ~~~tn\'1~~s""~ "i"i s: 51 ~ J~Ut =l ~~::"w~I'~
men ! tlm1nn 1nstniment3Hnn t~m nn so s •OO f l! CeM L• E1 s ?Cl • ~ 100 .-•, Fosrw~ of 1 " HF I l i\ JnVnc~! •ol $10 l!7cenMPw I 1 J >!• 15 1 F= bor .o dl ,llllal d11\3 systems and r; n 1 n \ ll V•~t1r111 s 10 S7 Ct<1I !NI 1 to 11 31 36 :11 ~ F~•~.._ " ~
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It !O• l tll ltlWfl! .... I" G>'O'D C•n~•A -Iii 1J • 11 • 1)) +\AC Co I SO During the'"' i car he • M"nn 11v111o1 E•o• 1J11 111•cF1 su 1!11 • • 11 ., ",,•_-,•, •,•,coro,,,. H®I"'" l '11 •)I tvl' 11 :S 1 l• C~.t!lb 0 I l-5' ~ ~ Pl "' h:i~ h11ld lhe IX'iil of l1:'11illron ICM rnt !OS 6'11 MO't '"' I U c~~,,,:s ~ )• ?1 .' • ' + ' llTIS~o 1,• \I C•~ l l l84 I-~v All Ch I NY ? l l lJI J l'li Jl~-\ aml oil S l'f.ln lrnl l{'r lie fl'Sldcs 1n ~Inc Jll •OI l u• 1 c~ .. ,,•,,,:,.~ .. ,.,. • J l o -'lo 1m 11160
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F'ldiY May 22 1970 SC DAI LY PILOT J J
Friday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
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Market Contin11es
NE\V YORK (UPI) -I nvestors and traders
\\ orned about 1nflaUon a sluggish economy and
continued depression 1n the stock market again
sent prices downhill on the New York Stock Ex
c.:hange today Trading was moderately active
The UPI marketw1de mdicator showed a loss
of 0 67 percent on 1 581 issues on the tape of these
784 declined and 524 gained
The Dow Jones Industrial Ave rage of 30 select
ed blue chips was off 3 08 at 662 17 near the close
A turnover of around 12 miJ!ton shares compar
ed with 16 710 000 shares Thursday
The market was up during the mornmg hours
but the rally -descnbed as technical -fruled to
hol d largely because of the ge nerally pess11n1sllc
news background and nor1n al pre\\ eek end caution
A report by the Na11onal Industrial Confe1 ence
board that the nation s l 000 biggest manufacturers
cut aggregate cap1lal appropriations fo r the first
quarter appeared to make bt1.le 1n1press1on on Wall
Street The NI CB f1nd1 ngs Were regarded as an 1n
d1cat1on 1nflat1onary pi essures may be subs1dmg
Martin R Grunsbur~h NICB s chief economist
said As of April netUH~r 1ndustr1at production nor
coporate profits sho"cd any upturn and the
prospect of any upsurge in capital spending by
1nanufaclurcrs for the balance of 1970 appears re--1nole
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• ..
Final Stocks
In All Home
Editions
Complete Closi11g Prices -American Stock Exchange List
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Tlu·iftin1art
T ells Dividend
R E Laverty cha1rma11
and presldenl announced thl'lt -
'Mlrlftlmarts Board of Dlreo. ~
tor5 declartd a quarterly dlvl -
dcnd of 15 cents pc:r sh~rt .,
on the Clau A and Clns11
B stocks p11y11ble June I 1970 .
to shareholders or record May
8 1970 •
Thi~ 1s !ht 14111h r.onsecutlve
cr+~h rllv1den"d rtrcla recl by lhe
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• ' I I
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JI DAJLV PILOT
Wilson Capitalizes Switch Britain's on 0
Ill Fortunes
IPlfOI•' lolOYlf.: Prom~ ""'"'"
l•r Ka"'lcl Wh>O<I ll~HI "'"cal• 10'
""" l•h1W. -II ele<l"'M IG~ Ju,.. II. H• II•~ It on ll'>t W>''
01 .,. ...,.11<1• ••verUI Of "" l1tio~
P1, 1¥'l tortu""• autlnv tti• ~'""
l"lff "'°"1h> 1nd '' "'' II'"'"' t:.I• ,01n , hr will ""' ,.,. ""l 11.,1.
1)11 1>rlmt lftlnhlor In !\1•IOI'• IO
iti·y· !Alff (OflS<'CUlov• ,.,.,n. ti
l>ltk•. In lh• t<>llo,.•nu <ll•~•I(~.
ti P I cnrru..on<ltn! Jo,•P" w
Grlev 1n1!~1n "'" rl>lnGt In w.1
u.n'I o>olllk•i fortune>.
By JOSEPH W. BRIGG
LONDON fllP I) -A b.ire
15 rT'Onths ago the British
l.abor party kiokl·d l1kt' 11
political y,•nteoff. H a r o 1 tJ
\Vilson y,•as deep in the na-
l1onal doghoust'. ra1cd 1n op1n·
ion polls as Bnta1n 's mo" t
t1 npopular prime rn in I s It r
i.1nce. \\'orld \\'ar II
The Conserv;l!ivcs " tr r
drubbing Labor in t.'\'ery local
J:Overnment elect ion a n d
p a r I 1:.imentary by-eleC'tion
t special election I and had an
:ilrnost unbe!iev.ible 2.7 percent
lead in the opinion polls. Their
leader Edward llaath, seen1ecl
\1cll on his "'ay lo No. 10
Downing St. as Britain's next
prirnl' n1ini.sler ,
Yt>t in three rnonths. the
1rl 1ole picture has changed in
1111<: of 1hc 1110:-1 staggering
fli pflops 111 British poh\ical
hi:$lOry.
Briton's ::itcustornt•d For
n1ore I h :in t"'o-a11d-a-ha!f
1 ears lo seeing Labor lagging
ignominiously in poll ratings.
learned to their a1nazen1ent
that \\'1lson and hi s party had
sraged an appa rent comeback
of historic proportions.
One after the other, all live
ot Britain's nationally con-
ducted polls pushed Labor into
!he lead over the
l'.onservaLive s.
l n~tead of being decirnated
i11 the next general election .
it looked like Labor \l'Ou!d
be returning lo power for a
N C\V Diabetes
Druo-Not tl
AJ,vav s Goo d
\\'ASHINGTON (AP\ -A
study ol pat ients with mild
clinbelfs indicates if they take
lhr most w1d('ly used an·
1td1ahet1t pills for more 1han
thre(' years they are more
likely to die pren1a turely than
H they had taken insulin or
no medication at all. the
\\':ishington Po~I said in its
1'hursday edi1inns.
The drug. tolbut,un1.1(', is
ll1krn rvcry dny by an
1·sti111 :1l('d 800.000 Americans
ro l'Ontrol blootl sugar. the
Pos! said . Th e t:pjohn Co.
•~ perhaps 1he largest pro-
1h1cer of lhe drug in 1he United
Stales. marketing it under the
n:i rne Orinase.
The stud~·. coord"1na!ed by
1hc Unil'crs1!y of :0.lar~·land.
··11 as the biggt•st. n1 o s t
sophisticat e-cl arwl probably the
1ongcs1 study of diabetics ever
m11de ," the Post said
•·The s1udy -which thr
111anufacturer of the Tablets
and s:imr re ~earchcrs
challenge -Slll!J.!esl~. on a
n1ath('1n:itical ha,1~. that ;it
ll'asl 8,000 user~ of the dn1g
d1f' prcn1aturc.~· f'\'Cry year
1n the United Statr;. ,,Jone ,"
tl1r 1 '0~1 ,\;1 1d
Tolbut;11111dt' I\ 11\u,1 •·I ·
ft·~·!11 e 1n l1;:ht1ng du1\)('l1·~
an1ong rldrrl~. 01 erw,,1ght p<1·
l1C'nts whn hal'c a tlllld lurin
l)f 11\C d lS!'[l~I'.
Thr nc11·spapt•r ~:'lit! 11 had
1Jbla1ned a copy of !llt report
resulting fron1 thr sludv .
\\•hich began 10 ~·cars agn a~d
11·as financed \\.'L!h $7 milhon
in gr<ints from the National
Tnslitute of Arlhrilis and
,_1etabolic Diseases
The Posl said 1hc report
•hsclosed the lollo11·1ng fin-
dings:
-Some 800 patients v.·erc
r11ndornly assigned lo onr: of
four groups -those given
lolbutamide, lhosc given a fix.
ed amount of insulin , those
given a l'arying dosage of in·
sulin and those given a
placebo, or fake pill.
-During !he firsl 1hrrl'
years of !est1ng. death rates
11:ere about equal. Bui af!er
three years death rates in.
creased sharply among the pa-
tients given tolbutamide.
-At the end of eight years
death rates rrom diseases of
the heart' and bloodways V.'ere
12.7 percent in the tol butamide
group compared to 4.9 percent
jn the placebo group.
-Also, at the end of eight
years. mortality rales fron1
all causes in c luding
cardio vascular d1stases, were
about SCI percent higher in
the tolbutamide group, \rh1ch
hid .a 1-4.7 percent rale. than
In the placebo group, v.•here
~ the rate was 10.2 percent. This
difference is the basis for !he
mathematical proje ct in-
dicating at lj!.ast 8,000 excess
deaths yearly on iolbutamitk.
~The death rates for !he
t wo Insulin groups were
simi lar ta those for the
plactbo aroo p.
1h1rd conseculi\'e lern1 w1Lh
a redix:ed but !)!ill eonlfor\~11Jlc
n1a1or11y. \Y1lso11 woold be the
hr~t prime n11nlstcr u1 llri11~h
hislvry tn :-l'r\'f" thrl'e l "flrl·
::.t'cuti·1e tern1::..
the bleak prospcrt of another before the disillusioned and f'lect1ons !hat is bothering Labor took ll on tht' ch111
live hungry Je<1rs In op. .iiOgry Tories turned and tore pohl1ca l leader~. There was a stiort.-llvC'tl
fir.-;\ tune sine(' 1007. 11m 1~t. Stl\'8 hi" itlways < ~~
P..'l1ed Ill• botirtt·f' bi1l·k Olll
of Lhc dogl:.iusc und \\in ii
U11rd lcrn1 y,•hen the luJ\C
Cilll)(',
position. lfeath lo pu~ces pohli<:ally. At the last general election <..'Otneback al the end of 1961:1
It ls on this vola1illty that
the ConservaUves sl1ll are ri11-
n1ng t.heir hopes of corning
back fro1n behind a n d
sruitching \•1cto11• oot of ap-
p<1rent!y inevitable defeat.
Heath, accuston1ed to being Thls was the ntn1osphere in hl f.1arch, 1966, Wilson "'as followt>d by a renewed slu mp
trealcd at hon1e and abroad which Wilson decided to cash a second term on a LabOrite in mld-1969.
as Brii.ain·s next p r i me in sv.·lflly a11d c;.ill a ge11eral l.:indshdc. lt gave him a '17 Last fall Labor narro11'ed
n1u11slt•r, lound bunself -H election for June 18 while the scat 111a1onty in parlian1cnt. th~ Conservative lead to ooly
I ll~ cx1JJ,111a11on is th~I 1hr
l'Ott!rs havt' bl.!1'11 un1)res~('d
by llrllnir1·s rc1.:t:nt econonHC
recovery a(tl'r years as "The
.Sick ~t<1n of Europe." He
thinks the voters also Mve
con1e around 10 agreeing v.·1th
Labor 's slogan for the l!lti!i
genen.11 election ' ' L. <1 b o r
Goven1ment Heal ly \Vorks"
'rhc conl1dt•n('(• uf t 11 e
Coi1ser\•at1ves 1h::it they wou ld
!orn1 Britain's next govern·
1ne11t collapsed :i ! n1 o s I
01•ernight in stunned d1:::bclicf,
1'he party, which e\'f'n out
of office tends to regard itself
a.~ Brita in's "n:itural" govern.
menl party, suddenly fa ced
the polls ;ind o1hf·r on1ens: going w-<1s good and before Yet by the end Of 1%6 about 2lfi pereent. dropped
were to be be\leved -Jn the volatile British voters Labor 's popularity was on the b<1ck again to 15 percent
The question now being ask-
ed is: what is the explanation
for thi~ wild series of swings
between the two major
pa1t1es·! No one has come
up wilh any very salisfa<..iory
explanations.
the likely role of a two-time sv.·itched again. skids. Alt through 1967 and behind Ule Conservatives and
loser. JI is the volatility and un-the fir st half or 1968 the then, early in 1970, began the
British political w r i le rs pred.ictab!lity of the voters as party's opioion poll ratings slow climb Uial c losed the
began spe<.i.ilating just how indicated both by opinion polls plumnu!led. In every local gap and finally pui.iled the
long it woold be after aoolher and parliamentary by-elcc-government election and par l y ahe ad of the
Labonte election y i c t or y tions a.nd local government pa r I iamenlary by-election Conservatives in April for the ~~-'-'-_::_:::::_~~_::__::_::~~-'--~~~~~"-~~~ \\'ilsoH, a Sl'lf-professed
PLASTIC
TRASH
CAR
297
Wh•n my rubbish guy1 bounc• lbll". th•
!•ar• run down lh•ir •y••. II won't N I I.
won't d•nt. won't corrod•. Now, -what kind
ol a lro1h can ii !hat anyhow?
ROLLEZY
HARD
EDGER
167
•
DOUBLE
HIBACHI
577
You can •tick tht• In !he trunlr and ta li:• it
cio o picok or lo lh• b-eh. Gr-I lo th•
baelt yard or II you Ii•• in au opartm•n:
!\'• Ju•I lh• right •i••.
HAMILTON
SCOTCH
FOAM
COOLER 6 7 c ·:__,-""
!1'1 a ch•opy. Good and •tron9
hondl• and rugg•d c utting edg•, -··----·------Who! do you thinlt of a 67e d•al tha1
ou1p•rlorm1 1om• ot th• h•oryw•lghh \n
me!ol. Thi1 dud• is lt. Styro!oam r•ally
malr:e• ii. (All lh!1 "Hip .. talk, wh<1t •"f•ry
happ•ned to plain Eiigll1h?).
but !h• pric• won"! Mnd us to
Europ•. II you·r• boppy, w•'ll b. loo.
WALL PAPER
Li 1t•o, w•
ha•• 1om•
groo•y
pall•rn1. T•rr
n ic•. Th•
Jodi•• or• picking
up on this. wa·r•
:n•• to 1hi1 lull
••l•c lio:n. but
c ount on us lo
Vi •• yoa wood
slut!.
~---JT's TOO
LJCMT,lfJ'5 f'llJO
A OARK.
"""~
'T
'50% orr
ATSA
. •.
5 GALLOB PLANT SALE
• Colden Arborvitae
• Italian Cypress
• Blue Plitzer
II you would lllr:• to ha•• 11ic•
lond..:opii:19 no• and don't
want lo •alt y-r• Jor th• OD•
gallon 1i1• to matur• yo"
-woD 0t mi11 this d•al. w.
p10111i1a 10 1taclr: a ll th• 1lor••·
FRUIT, SPICE, ARD PEPPER
STRINGS
'4. n•w d•a!. !ho•• orlihc1 ol truih llnd
"'•ll •lllbl•• which ju11 llhout Jool
anyone, but th• anti. Hansr lrom th•
C•iling to molt• that old H<1ci•ndo da.:or
compl•t•.
197
KWIK BRICK
Lilt• it 1oy1. a. 1011 way lo put up
brick pan•ling o.od ma.Ir• it look
good too. No tr.aky plo•tlc look.
lhl• I• r.al appe.ariDg. ln ontiqu•
or nolural bi-iclt..
CHIMNEY CHANDELIER
V•ry •l ~anl, whicch I• mo"' 1han
Ju11 good loolrlng. Tall glob••·
•woopy arrn1. turned c•nt•r poi!. A
r•al 8oao. !H•Y• my broth•r·ln·l<1w
QO! a ir:•y jab with IBM. H• locks all
lh• d0Gr1 at nl9hll.
1187
Y!,4.i;, E:llfR..YON~
~SU. -"ND
rrs~
TOO.'
.277
--~ -
',. .
LOW VOLTAGE
LIGHTING SYSTEM
Lilr• th• burg 1ay1. it mak•l
your hom• soler and looks
good loo. Th• d •ol includ•I
lh• tran1lorm•r to r•due•
c1,1rr•nt lo a sot• 12 •OlL t•a
big ligh11, and und•rground
wlr•. You eon buy •Kira 1!ull
to build !h• •y•t•m up loo.
177 .,
FREE CLASSES
May 27
•"HOW TO INSTALL ALUMINUM
W INDOWS AND SLIDING
GLASS DOORS"
June 3
•"WALLPAPER INSTALLATION''
June IO
•"LOW VOLTAGE GARDEN
LIGHTING"
REGISTER NOW FOR WEDNESDAY
. EVENING CLASSES AT THE LA
MIRADA STORE. 7:30 to 8:30 P.M. Limit .
100 Persons.
''Refreshments '"Door Priz:es
2 LITE
0 KIDDY
DRIHKIHG FOUNTAIN
;:~... ~ .. , ..... . . •,
'...-i: ·." ..
This 1umm•r you eon lorget about
lh• troll ol lilt!• guy1 running In ond
oul lor <1 drink. Ju1l alloch this to an
ou11id• lauc•t and lh•y con pour th•ir
own (A malh•r must h<1•• in••nl•d
thi1. right!)
297
BEST PLANT FOODS
87c
'd •..
~ I Ad••rti ••d •p•eial•
good thru Moy 29. 1910
{and did you h•<1r lh•
1onq I ju st wrot•. ;f•
tltl.d. '"ratb•r couldn't
llud11• Sine• H• 111 •
H•r• i1 a sluq of plant foods. Sp.cial
rnix•1 lor: ROSES. C AMELI AS.
RHODODI:NDRONS. AZALEAS.
CITRUS. and AVOCADO. Th• boic•I"
are ar• worlb 2.sg, (not th• atull, ju•t
th• box••).
GARAGE DOOR SPRINGS
9aa
12 Sq. ft.
Box
No joli•• h•r•. Rut1y old eprings au• j111l pl.:un
dan9•rou1. II on• l•t1 you go you m1gh1 g•! 1h•
door on your h.ad or !h• spring tlyiog arpund
!1k• 1hrapn•I, Ch.ck yt>u r• loday. pl.a~.
'!'l'~~\'!'~-il-r."'olh•r'• r11dg•'1.
W t;t;ll.UA f ~
149
9 lo 9
SATURDAY and
SUNDAY 9 to 6
WINDOW SHADES
Th••• or. th• ok• •n:i.bo91.d
plo1tk. look 10rt ol lin•n·lilr:•. m-I liriaa, •••nth• king can'!
ollord). W• cut th•m to your 1xoel
1i1• lrH , up to 36 Inch••·
12"x 12" FLOOR TILE
Eoll•r lo p lan tor th• Uoor la lhl1 1b •
and I••• pi1Ke1 to Joy. Vlnyl-01b.1to1
Jor th• shin• wlrh the •.arlng quall1y.
Nie• poll•rnL Th• carton co•oet"I 'S sq. ''·
5aa
CTlf.
3/4" x 60 YD. MASKING TAPE ALUMINUM LAWN FURNITURE
HEW! A •(lt~h.d ••I, ruvv•d o lumlaum lro111 •1.
•n•ltk'olor 1lcrt1. Juy lb. Mt or pick up lh• pl.c•s from
01u a,,.a 1tock.. !You k:now I wontitd lo •ad up •11b a
vood job , but you can·1 101• tl••m (IH.1 Soon'• th• ad br.alr1 we ru.o o•er a nd bur a
dor•n roll1. IW• pay I.It a 11111 ot th• orl
•uppl\•r ond hl1 d01o111'1 11lck at good), Mok••
paintiog a brH t• 100. II JOU 11101li: halo•• you
lt<lrl.
SLAT SETTEE
1577
SLAT TABLE SLAT CHAIR
477 717
' ' I
" r
Down the
Mission
Trail
Teens at Forest
To llu11t Grunion
LAKE FOREST -Teenagers l111ing
in Lake forest are invited to a grunioo
hunt.
Per:~1ission slips 1nust be in to the
Beach and Tennis Club office by r-.10P1d;1y
lor the event which will take place
}'riday al Aliso Beach.
The group will leDve the club at 1 I
ELm. and return aOOut I l :30 p.1n.
Aclivities include volleyball , body Sllff-
ing, skin diving and swin1n1ing. There
will be a $1 food charge.
Friday, May 22, 1970 I PJ LOT :J
FHte Still Vnknowta
Settlement OK'd:_
For ~luhhouse
San Clcincntc t'OUn<"'ilmen h ave
agreed to accept the $57,500 insuranC'e
seuJen1ent for the burned out community
clubhouse ;ind are trying to resolve the
controversy over its fate by seeking im·
partial advice rrom man archlte<:t.
The sum , whic h had to either be
reecived or contested by June S. still
h;:is no earmarks.
'
But councilmen, agreeing with the
complaint of slow actlon by Councilman
\Vade Lower, vowed Wednesday to start
moving on the problem of the damaged
uieeting hall wilh lhe architect idea.
\'lhile not a raging controversy. dir-
ference of opinion on the fate of the
old Spanish building has sirnmered for
n1onths since the February blaze.
J\layor \\'alter Evans -who Is the
only councilman thus far favoring
restoration of Lhe landmark -said
Wednesday lhe architect plan would helP.
Solve that issue once and for all.
"Right now we have five different
opinions at the council table and we
need one. Maybe this will help," be
said.
for more information contact the club
at 8.37-6161.
e Ca111lidales ltJ ~feel ltlHlt:itig Poppy P11rchHse
200 Expected
At Surf Meet
I 11 Capo Beacl1 City Manager Ken Carr said be would
contact architects who might wish to.
make recommendations on the feasibilit;:
of restoring or removing the charred '
building. .. SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Republican
candidates who have been endorsed by
Assembly have been invi!ed to a buffet
sponsore-d by the Saddleback Hepublican
Assembly Saturday.
Tl1e event, for which lickcls are $5,
\Vil! lake place Jn [be home O( i\!r. and
Mrs. Ted Cooper, 26531 Aracena Drive,
f.1ission Viejo.
San Clemente Mayor \Va!ter Evans purchases pa-
per poppy fron1 represenlatives of groups selling
the traditional veterans' memorial flower. Ladies
lfron1 left) are Agnes Sellman ol the Veterans of
Jloreig n \Vars (V.F'\V) poppy sale corn1nittee, l\1on-
die Ellison, prt:sident of the: San Clen1ente Ameri-
can Legion Auxiliary and Clara Larson, American
Legion poppy chairman. Sale continues through
Saturday throughout southern Orange County.
Capistrano Beach's four annual surfing
compct1L10n JS expected to draw ao
t•sl in1atr 200 cornpeting surfers on the
beach or Doheny State Park Saturday
Jor !lro days of events.
Surfe!'s wilt vie for awards in three
•lil'iSions. A tanden1 contest alsu is
scheduled. The Capistrano Be a ch
Chan1bcr of Con1n1!!rcc is Lhe sponsor.
1'he plan does not call for actual ·
hiring of an architect, but only receivini
proposals before awarding a contract. •
!'\feanv•hile, questionnaires sent out to.
citizens and groups using the clubhouse .
have been returned.
Republicans interested in meeting
these cafldidales are invited to the func-
tion which is set for 1 p.m. Tickets
arc available from the Orange County
coordinating Republican Assembly. e T.,..1ni• Heet Slated
MISSION VIEJO -Ten11is enthusiasts
Are invited to a special meeting Satur-
clay.
Present members and others desiring
membership in the Tennis Club are
1velcorne at the 9:30 a.m. meeting in
the Recreation Center.
The tennis courts have rece11tly be<-11.
refinished and more are scheduled to
be built in the near future.
F'or information contact the center
al 837-4094. e Rel.lef ~feet Caller!
SAN CLEMENTE -The public has
been invited to a tea to discuss the
acti~·ities and role of the Navy Relief
Society r.iay 26 in the San Clemente
1nterfaith Serviceman's Center.
Mrs Ceorge Kliefoth and t.-lrs. Ray-
mond Leidich will discuss the functions
of the organization at the 9:30 a.m.
meeting. !'\1rs. !toss J. Dwyer, wile of
the co1nmander of the 5th !'\1arinc Ex·
peditionary Brigade al Camp Pentleton,
will be an honorary guest.
Reservations are being a cc e pl e d
through the center al 492-1814.
Netv Park Lots
Get Quick Work
In San Cle1nente
S.1n Clemente will launch an cmerge:n-
<'Y p:irking lot expansion on two newly
purchased lots in the pier 00\1·1 area,
i11stead of putting the job up for the
lengthy public bld procedure.
The two lots, \\'hich lie next to the
existing city parking lot in the pier
.area, \\•ill be. resurfaced by city cre\VS
using a new asphalt spreader,
Under the emergency plan, the job
could be completed before the crush
of summer beach visitors.
Had the city gone through the tradi-
tional bid process, the council learned,
the new lol would 110L ha\'C beeA ready
until mid-July.
Tt1c $5 ,000 paving \\'Ork wil l be of
a relatively icmporary na1urc, la sting
perhaps five years, during \.l.'hich the
c ity will draft long-range parking plans,
perhaps including ideas for a multi-level
parking building.
Spaces i11. Lhe J11e1v parking area will
have parking meters similar to those
in the existing lot.
Cycle Ordi11a11ce Scrapped
By San Cleme11te Council
A proposed ordinance c o v e r i n g
minibikes and trail motorcycles on
private property iJll San Clemente was
scrapped this week as "unenforceable"
after Police Chief Clifford Murray told
('i!y councilmen the code duplicates ex-
isting state laws.
The ordinance, drafted by City Al·
tomey F. MacKenzie Brown, was "filed"
by the council, which later said "thanks,
any .... ·ay" to the city attorney.
Chief ~1urray, v"ho said thal miHibike
nuisances are enforceable under section
415 (disturbances) of the Penal Code,
said tl1c law would be a duplication
and would be imrossib!e to cnrorce.
0<11h codes slate that the nuisance
must be observed hy the arresting officer
before a.complaint could be issued.
The only new recourse for co1nplai11ers
about the noisy n1achincs, the council
flgrccd, is waiting to sec if applications
lor a new cycle park on the Reeves
Jtanch are approved i• coming v.•ccks
by the city.
"This \viii be a niajor step to solve
!he problen1," City !'\11.1nagcr Ken Carr
told councilmen, ''becnusc nnw v;c have
to chase kids and their bikes a11'ay
;ind tell thcn1 they n<:.1 ve nu place to
ride legnlly.
"H the park plans materi<11ize befnre
1hi'i su1nmer, \1C could tell them to
move off an en1ply lot. lhen point to
the park and tell tlicm to ride there."
The plan in the hopper no1v calls
for use of scQres of acres nf hillside
grazing land inland of the San Diego
Freeway for a network of cycle trails
opf'n every day for a fee.
The matter co1nes before tl1c planning
co1nn1ission next \V edncsaay night fur
a puhlic hearing on a conditional use
pcr1n1L.
Although the issue nasn'L arisen ofric-
lally. Carr \Vednesday said as far as the
present indications are concerned, he
fa vors Lhe idea for the park.
Srn1ifinals for the three categories will
he held through Saturday starting at
1 <Lill.
On Sunday the finals and award
presentations are scheduled .
,The full schedule for the two-Oay
cuinpetition is:
SATURDAY
1 a .m. -Mini Semifinals
7.36 -Womens Semifinals
8 -Boys Quarterfinals
9 -Junior Eliminations
10· 12 -J\1ens Eliminations
11 ; 12 -Bnys Qurtermain
11 ·24 -Junior Quarterfinal:or
12 :12 p.m. -Mens Quarterfinals
SUNDAY
7 a.n1 . -!\tens Quartermain
7.12 -Junior Quartermain
7 .24 -Mini Semimain
7·39 -Eroys Semifinals
11 :51 -Jonior Semifinals
9: 16 -fl1ens Semifinals
9.4:! -Boys Scmlmain
9 58 -Junior Semimain
10· 13 -i\.1ens Scmima1n
10 :28 -i\.1ini Finals
1():43 -Womens F'1nals
t0 :58 -Boys Flnals
11 : 13 -Junior Finals
11 :28-Mens Finals
11 :4:! -Tandem
12 ·30 p.m. -Presentation of Awards
··~·, .. ~
The information on the letters asking
for suggestions on future uses and needs
will be forthcoming at the council's next
meeti·ng June 3.
• ,
Capo PTA Group~
Plans Workshop.
For S~urday
A spring workshop for the Capistrano'
Unified Council of PT As will take place,
on Saturday,
New officers and chairmen will learl\.
aOOut their new duties during the functi~.
"'hich begins at 9:30 a.m. at Marco;
Forster Junior Jligh in San Juan ..
Capistrano.
Keynote speaker is Dr. John Crait}.
Director of Personnel Services for the:
Capistrano Uni fied School District. ;
The 10:30 a.m. workshops will includ~ 1 those for secretaries, room mothers.
auditors and treasurers and chairme11 ,
of hospitality, publicity. health, ways. .•
and means, membership and safety and
budget.
At 11 :30 a.m. workshops will be giveg ·
for teachers aides, newsette, program.~
parent education, parliamentarians and-,
PT A publications chairmen.
DISCRIMINATING
INVESTORS
AT
Look For:
Stability and AvoilabilJty of Principal. Max-
imum Dependable Earnings . Ease of Trans-
actions .
And Find:
Accounts Insured to $20,000.00 Reserves
sufficient to assure continuance of maxi-
mum permissible earnings. A location as
close as your mail box.
1000 FAIR OAKS AVENUE
SOUTH PASADENA, CALIF. 91030
Area Code 213
799-4143
' 5%
Current Annual
Pas• Book Rate
Area Code 213
682-1131
--.._
1;4to7~%.
CERTIFICATES·
VARIOUS M)"IMUMS
l llATUlm
.Estate .....•••••••••.••••••••••••••• -•• • • • • • • • •
Stock in F.lf.L.B .••.•••••.••••••••••••••••••••.•
U.S. Government Ronds •••• •.· •••••••••••••••••••
1'14.203.0 l
7 1 ft,IJ00.00
3 ,49M,'i07.fiS
7R~J.7 14.4 1
.5 70,:J:l4.4 7
Other 1nvcstment. Securities ••• ,., •• -, •••.•••••••
Cash on H'1nd and in Banks •••••••.•..•......•..•
Oflice Building, Land '1nd Equirm<'nt -L,c..;s lll·prt'·
ciation •••....••••••••.•.........•........••...• l ,42 7,964.3.5
Secondary Reserve for .Federal Savings Hnd Lorin
)nsurnnce Corporation., •••••••••• , ••.••....• ,... 73 ..t..!18R.70
Other Assets .••• -.. ••••.• ~....................... 507 .88
Tota.I ••••••••••••...•.•.••.•.•....••.... $71,669,17.J.33
.
;::
··.··
~~~~} ••· LIABILITIES i
:::::::: Savings AccountsH .. L, •
8
.....•.....•.••...•.•...... $60 ,:)9:1 ,89~.86 .~:.?.: ••
:>:::-: Advances from F .... , •••••.••••.•. -. • . . • .• .• • 3 ,0-18,000.00 ~;::::;: ?:her ~orpro\ved Money •• , •• ,, •••••.••.• ,........ NONE ~~:};
::.:::::: .J.A-Oans ill rocess •.•••••• , ••.••••. ,.............. 2:16.972.fi O ..... ::::::~ DOL~cr Ldia
1
bi1 ities • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • l 77
7
2
8
1 ~-~.~ .~.~.~.~.~ .. ~
eierre ncome .•••••••••••••••• ,.............. ,.l n .. 1~
Specific R eserves •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , 7 ,2 40.45 ~:;:~;·
General Reserves ............................... 6, 14 6,036.12 ·:->:·:
Reserve for Contingencies, , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • J 9 l ,2!l9.00 -.~.~·.!.f.~·.~.f Surplus ..••••••••••••••• , •• , . • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • 1,260,469.57
To;~~~:~;,-;;~~;iiFL~~Ej/t~·~~1~. ~~~~~$~t ,669,l 75.33 i,·~
..... ,. MEMBER FEDERAL SAVINGS ANO ':A: \' :.:: ;: ;; : . ;· : ; h)i~'.1 l/1Y~~['.})j rB~rs~tI!@} ) . : ;:::;;:E
'•. ·: .. ·.::
·:
Officers
and
Directors
; ~O~E~~~N;1;2~N~~~dcnt, Manager and Director .:'~ •• ,·.·,· .. , •. '.•·.·'···'·.~ .. :; ~:;:'.~~; Vice-President, Secretary and Director .
..,.. WILLJAM E. CLANTO N ~i!l!~ KENNETH P.FORD
W. D. GOHMERT
V ice-President a nd Director
Vice-President
f nday, May 21, l 'l70
Udall Claims South Viets to Remain
Suppo11:e1·s
Li1ri11g Up
Won't Leave Cambodia When U.S. Does
When campa ign posters featur-
ing nude pictures of six male can-
didates for s tudent offices appear-
ed on the campus of Santa Monica
City College they were promptly
r emoved by school officials. The
posters reappeared recently and
there was no action to ba n them.
"They drew some loinclothes on
them and that covered up the prob-
lems," ex-plained Dean of Men Ed·
werd1 B. Deg roff. • Local Nottingham , England offi-
WASHINGTON IAP ) -Rfp. Morris
K. Udall, first announred contender for
Democratic floor leader in the House,
says he has already taken his campaign
to about 80 rolleagues and has recdvert
commitments ot support from "• lot
of the1n."
A 47-year<ild Arizona liberal. Udall
is considered one of the top candidates
for the leadeNttip post expected to be
vacated in the ,,..·ake of Speaker John
r.1ceonnack's announcernent \Vetlnesday
lie will not seek another term next
November. Current Democratic floor
leader Ca rl Albert of Oktahon1a appears
t.o be a shoo-ln for U1e Speaker 's chair
when the leadership posts are filled
after lhe 92nd Congress is :;ealed in
Janua ry.
WASH INGTON IUPIJ -Defense
Secretary Melvln R, Laird said today
he is againflt. holding South Vietnamese
forces to any ''firm timetable" for leav-
ing Cambodia and also favors later raids
by Saigon troops if the Communists
conduct a new bu.ikting ol lhe so-ca.lied
sanctuarie!!:.
Laird said firmly that not a single
American "ground personnel" would be
left in Cambodia after June 30, the
date set by President Nixon for a halt
to the U.S. part in the operation. But
he said he felt "it would be a mistake
to malc.e a finn timetable" for
withdrawal of South Vietnamese.
Statements this ~·eek. by Nguyen Cao
Ky, South Vietnamese vice president.,
that his troops had no intention of leaving
Cambodia at the same time as
Americans has generated new concern
in Coog ress over lhe operation. In
response to questions about a Ky state-
ment that South Vietnam would n(lt
allow its hands to be tied , administration
officials indicated efforts would be made
in Saigon to get Ky and President Nguyf'n
Van Thieu lo abandon any possibility
of staying in Cambodia indefinitely.
Laird was inlervlewed on NBC-TV 's
Today Show.
Laird was asked about the "territorial
ambitions'' toward Cambodia of Sou th
Vietnam, raised by Senate Democrat11:
leader Mike ~1ansfield on Thursday.
He acknow ledged that "thert' are pro--
blems" in that area because of long-time
emnlty among some neigh b oring
Indochina area nations such as Vietnam,
Cambodia and Thailand. He added, "This
will be watched very closely and very
carefully.''
But as for a concurrent withdra\'lat
ol Sooth Vietnamese forces w l t h
An1ericans. and for any pledge tha t
11elther 1\rner\('ans nor Suuth Vietnan1ese
\roulcl return. Laird 11a1d that It be
a 1n1stake lo say in advance precisely
\\haL wou!~ happen.
He stressed that Nixon's "Li.inetable
\\'JJI be met in every respect" iMofar
;1-; CS. lvrr••s bl-used again on new
raids to rlc11r the areas.
"l d:in'l !hink it would serve any
useful purpose to s..1y in advance th.:i l
they \\on't go back," Laird said.
Asked if Ame1·ican advisers might stay
be!und with South Vietnamese force~
after Junt' 30, Laird said "there \\'ill
be no American advisers in Ca mbodia
after June 30 •·
Asked, in the background of heavy
Congression:.11 cr1llclsm and an upsurge
in antiwar demonstrated since the
Cambodian operat ion started three \\'eeks
agr•, if he fell "it "'as all worth it''
:ind v:he!her ht• \\-'ould "do it again,"
L<lird n'1>l1c<l With a finn •·yes."
cials have decided to give Hospital
P orter Chrl1tophe r Bennett, 25, a
new suit. His old one shrank after
he rescued a 7-year-old boy from a
river three months ago.
Udall said pledges of support are com·
ing from representatives from every sec-
t ion or the COllntry, although lie said
''il's far too early 11.nd J'm making
oo claims of anything."
Guardsmen to l{eep Orcle1·
The secretary eontc111led the C.1mbodia
\tnture "'ould already have been "a
grent tactical sue<'ess" from the i.-1and·
point of Co111munist ammunition, .sup-
plies. and food captured, and predicted
that it also would prove to be a n even
greater slrulegic: success. • . .
Jacksonville, Fla. police had ~1
been puzz/.ing over why an old, ~j
abandoned home had such a •
Udall was the candidate ln January
1969 of a group of House Democratic
liberals who staged a futile attempt
to unseat the 78-year-o\d ,_1cCormack.
At Negro Youtl1 's Fu11e1·al Lai rd ,s;iid the results of the sweep
'rould expedite tt1e N i x o n ad-
n11ni~t ration·s Viclnami1.alion program
tthe proces~ of !unung over !he war
to Sout h Vielna1nl. reduce American
casualties and expedi te \l'ilhdrawal of
Gls.
,• heavy and see"1ingly iltdestruc-: 1
tible Yat population. Wednesday ~
they Learned the woman who
had lived there became so fond
of lhe rodents, she Teturned ~
regularly to f ed them cinnamon ~l ,_,::~";:;<-; ll'(•: ,.;-::-·-w, ,.,_l ";'--. j
• The Tacoma, \Vash . mayor and
f our city councilmen rode in po!Jce
~ars to pick their candidates for
safe driving awa rds, an annual
Kesentation in conjunction with
aUonal Police Week. Only four of
e five ended up with nominees,
Jiowever. Councilman A. M. Zet-
Jcovich, a r etired police officer, told
the council he had failed in h is
~earch recently. "I'm too used to
Jookin~ for violaters to pick out the ,ood one5," Zatkovich s a id.
~ .
Another candidate for Albert•s post,
assuming he moves up to the Speaker's
rltair. is Rep. James G O'Hara post,
1.1ichigan, 44. O'Hara has headed the
liberal and powerful Democratic Study
Group in the House. According to Udall,
some members of Congress lamented
t he facl that he and O'Hara are both
candidatr:s for Albert's job.
Other contenders are Richard Dolling
of ,_1issouri, Hale Boggs of Louisian a.
.,.,.ho is currently third-ranking DemocraL
in the House, Dan Rostenkowski , Ill.,
1-~dward P. Boland. r.1ass .. J ames C.
Connan, Calif., Jack Brooks, Tex., and
John E. Moss. Calif.
Udall said Thursday he thinks lobbying
for the post may con tinue intensively
for the ne:ict two or three days and
then level off. He added: "I think a
s ifting process will go on for the ne:ict
two or three week~."
The election could depend on the votes
of the new 1nembets in January, Udall
sald, barring a bandwagon movement
for anv one candidate soon. About 25
new oemocrat.s are expected, he said.
It's U e 1·6 ./\1f•10
Actre ss Debbie Reynolds is a ll
i;miles a s she holds the dress
\1•orn by .Judy Carland in "The
\Vizard of Oz". She bought the
dress for ,$1 .000 a t the MGJ\'I
J\fovie auction fo r the CaroLina
Caribbean Corp., \Vh ich \\'il l
loan i'l to Miss Reynolds for
cl i'.~play at a l-lol!ywood m us-
eun1.
NY Times Faces
T emporary Halt
In Puhlicatio11
By Unlled Press International
Fi\'e thOUS.'.l.nd National Guardsmen
have been ordered to cordon off the
Ohio Slate University campus today
whilt' 3,300 guard troops were on standby
for the funeral of a you ng Negro shot
t:i death in Jackson. "'1iss.
The in a yo r of Dekalb, UL. asked
C'itizens to stay away from the Northern
Illi nois University campus, scene of lhree
straighl nighLs of trouble.
The Ohio guardsmen, carrying loaded
"'·eapons, were lo cordon off Ohio State
to keep "outside agitalors" away follow-
ing a window-breaking rampage Thurs-
day. Several hundred demonstrators, urg-
ing a student strike, smashed windows
and looted stores on a downtO\vn street
during the spree.
At least 10 persons were injured a nd
10 others arrested before a CLtrfew was
clamped on the campus area.
Ohio Sta1e·s 45,000 students had return-
ed Tuesday after a JO.day shutd0\\'11
because of violent clashes belv.'een
1nihtanls and guardsmen.
* * *
The i\lississippi guardsmen were caHed
to readiness to t•nsure •·peace <ind lraJI·
quility" during the funeral of J aines Earl
Green, 17, one of two young persoos
killed during violence at Jackson State
College ~1ay 15.
Go v. John Bel! \Yillia1ns said he alerted
10,000 guard troops to supplcn1ent l,300
men already n1obilized because of the
"swann'' of people co111ing to J ackson
ror the funeral.
Nt·gro leader Charles Evers urged
bl<1cks lo be calin today and 11·arnf'd
them against being provoked by Cov.
'Y illiarns' ''ungodly speech.''
\VilJia1ns S<tid the guardsn1en \\'OUld
not be used unless local policen1eri
"become exhausted and incapable of
hand ling the silua\ion .. ,
Public schools in the cily were closed
Thursday and today because of a ''tense
situation'' in Jaekson . Parochial sthools
"'ere closed tod:1y .
.. There 1~ gouii,: Lo be peace and Iran·
qu1hty in ~1 iss1ss1pp1," \Villia1ns told a
statewide tclev1s111n a udi ence. "\\'e arc
going to be ruled by la w and order,"
·"
Rap in Algeria
Says Nc n spaper
\\' ASHINGTON t UP I) -l!. Rap
Brow n, fugiuvr black power leader, ha s
fled to Algcriu, tl1c \\'ashington Evening
Slar said llXl<1y.
Spokesn1en for tile FBI and the Slate
Department said U1cy had no information
of Brown being 111 Algiers.
The Star said iL learned from uniden·
tifled givcrnment sources that Bro ..... n
\\'l'nl to Algeria alter vanishing on the
ere of his scheduled trial on chargeJ
nf inc1lh1g lo rJol and arson in Cam·
bridge, 1\ld.
Bro1111 dropped out of sight t.larch
7, two days belore two friends clil'd•
1n a mvstcrious bon1b explosion of their
<iulu niar Bel Air. tl1d.
·; A priest baptized 10-month-old
Martin Sandall of Evesham, Eng-
land in his bathtub Wednes-
day because the youngster scream-
.¢ and kicked violently recently
when the ceremony was attemp ted
ln a church. Said the R•v. Albert
:Webb: "I wa1 not prepared to caJ"w
ty out a christening by force in
church. Martin m ight h ave grown
Jip to resent the church."
Brandt Declares
Stoph 'Rigid'
NF.W YORK (AP) -The Ne w York
T1ml'S, beset by a printers' v-·ork
slowdown, says it will discontinue
publication temporarily on Sunday u11\ess
a11 agreement is reached w i l h
Typographical Union No. 6. Mitchell Warns Guard
The Negro leader subsequently \\'as
speciet!ly hstcd on the F'Bl 's Jist of
1110.~l wanted criminals because he fa iled
to sho\\· up for trial.
The 21i-year-old former cl1airman of
!hr Student Coordlnatin/;! Committee had
ht·rn free of11 $10,000 bnnd pending the
tri:\I.
• BONN (UPI) -West German
Chancellor Willy Brandt .said today his
second talk with East German Prime
Minister WilU Stoph revealed many or
their differences are even deeper than
had been imagined.
Publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger an-
nounced Thursday that withouL a set-
tlement the newspaper would suspend
publication after its Sunday editions ore
printed Saturday night, and I h 11 I
employes would not be paid beginni 11g
with the Sunday morning shift.
To Be Cool on Carnpzi s '!'he Star pointed nut Lhal Algeria haJ
no rcc1pr{l('al extradition lreaty wilh the
1 111trd ::;1:11e~ and nol1'd th:ll EldriGge
('lr·:n !'r. lonn('r l11lurn1nl\on ~1i nister of
Ille Bl:u;k l';1n1h1'r l'rirl\', found refuge
in th e North Afric:i n co11'11ry.
..
.. ..
..
A London probation officer
told a cou rt Wednesday 1100 sis·
ters, aged 20 and 21 , had such
a good time in JJoUoway Jail
that fhf11 went tihoplifting with·
itt miriuus of theiT Teletlle to
be: able to return to prison.
• :• Istanbul, Turkey is the noisiest
·c ity in E urope, says a report pu~
l ish ed \\lednesday. Prof. Hikmet
:A ltu g, an ear specialist a t Istanbul
: University, l'iaid in the report that
·mental iUness and deafness are on
• t he increase, d ue in pa rt to sc reech-
'ing horns, blaring loud-speakers
: outs ide record shops and the cons-
' t a nt ba,vling of street peddlers. • . Despite doctor's orders to cut
:-doY.'n on eating. 252-pound Bob
":Cousins of Scunthorpe, England
'.'gays he'll accept a duck farm's
:Xhallen ge to try to eat a six-pound
: duck end four pound .~ of lrim-
::":mings. "I jus t can 't resis t," Cou-
: . .&ins said.
'
Brandt described Sloph's attitude as
rigid, and said he feared the East
German's Insistence on International
recognition by Bonn was an attempt
to avoid discussion of other more prac-
tical steps the West proposed be taken
to lower the tensions between them .
The We st German leader made his
comment at a news conference after
he reported to his cabinet Parly this
morning on talks with Stoph in the
We!!:t German city of Kassel Thursday.
Ger in a n J ct Cr ashes;
Struck by L ightning
BONN, Ge.nnany (AP) -A \Vest Ger-
man Starfighter crashed nea r Kaufbeuren
in southern Germany today, apparentl y
af1er it was stnick by lightning, the. De-
lense ,_finislrv announ cC"d.
The-pilot Was able to bail out shorl ly
before the twin-engined fight er-bombe r
hi t the ground, slightly damaging a farrn
building, a spokesman said.
The announcement came as print ers
in the Times composing room continued
lo co11ducl on-the-job union mce!ings,
now lotaling 19 hours <1 day. Negotiations
between the printers' union ;i n d
publishers of the city's fou r major rla11it:s
.ere deadlocked.
The prlnters have not said pu blicly
~·hat kind of contract they are dC'man.
ding. but Local 6 President flcrtra m
A. Powers vowed that hfs men ""ould
not accept a contract thal did not n1eel
their needs.
"If it means lockout , we'll \1 ill1n~lv
take it unless \\'e gC>t "'hat "'r nerrl,"
Powt•rs ~nid in the con1posi11g rt11'..11 n
20 m1nutrs af!cr Sulzberger \ ;111.
nounrem('nl .
The 'fu11eS' anno11P1C'ed inl eJJtio n (11 ..,u~
pcnd publication 1vas expected lo pron1pt
a resu1nption of negot1at1nn~ llcll1't•t•11
the printers and representative~ of !he
'T'in1es. 1hr D.1i!y New~. a11d 1hc Po~(
:ind the Long Island Prl'~~. T:ilks hrnkc
off /\1ay 9 af1.C'r 11 19-hnur bargaining
~~sion that failed to produce an agrec-
n1enl.
Tornadoes Plague Midwest
' ' '
44 Degrees Separate A ri z ona's Flll g staff, Phoenix
C11llln,...1a ·. ..
le. A"9~e• w•• c""'""" wl!h Ytfl· ~ l't>I• ClouO• h• IN ..,,..."1.,., bul ltm-
•. "'''""" ro•f. It! 1 '"'"'''' 71 In !he " tit..-_,. TIW pre-d!c!ed tlYl!"<!i"'M
,. lll'W 11 51 •1>11 lomorrow'1 hlth 11\ould ~ ,..,h ts.
" !OUTHE Rl'f CAL.ll"OlllNIA -MoJ!IV
1.. ft!• "''"""' S&tun:t1v but ntoM ·~ •. ..,,y ,,_l\l.,o low clOl.ldo tolj!h <e..•r. ~ w •• ...., Frlatv 1"!1 lni.'MI 1rN1 $ti•
~ ~~· AHGE.LIEi AREA -MQl!lv !t lr
T e mperat.••r"'•
AllWQUl fflut
,o.~,~ur&g'"
All•nl•
fl•~• .. •l•l!I a 1 .. ,,.,ct.
~~"·
Hiii\ LOW "''~·
I'll ·'' I~ •J .. ~ " ~ .. .
11 .,
~l J? ., 61
u -" . I? ST
" "
\VAS HINGTC>N (AP) -All y. (jcn.
.J ohn N. i\titche!l, once the Nixon ad~
rn1n1s1r;ition's hard-liner on student
demonstrations. has warned police and
Na1ional Guardsmen to "keep their cool"
during ca mpus disturbances.
Announci ng beefed up investigations
into the shooting deaths of eight young
people on lhe Ke nt State and Jackson
Slate campusC's. ~titchell said Thursday:
"One c;1n recogn i7.e the provocati ons
\vhich often accompany civil disorders,
bul trained la w enforrement personnel
hav e a responsibility to keep !heir cool
and utilize only such minimtun forrc
:is is requirC'd to prot!Xl the safely
of tile grneral put:tlic, the bystanders
anrl !llemselves."
~·l 1 tcl1l'l l ;1 ppQ tnlrd As.~t. .A t1y. (:rn.
.ll'rris Leontird . he<id of the Just1 r.e
IJt'11artmc11rs r1v il right~ division, to
personally over~ec Lhe 1nvest1 ga tions.
The fcdcrll l probes now under 11·ay
are at J ackson State Col lege in f\·!ississip·
pl, ""'hcrr 1 .... ·o black youths were felled
in a h:i il or highv.·ay patrol bu llets:
Kent Sta le University in Ohio, ~·here
~tudenls were killed when Nation:il
Guardsmen opened fire, and Augusta,
r.a., where slx Negro n1cn were fatally
shot in lfte back during a racial
disturbance.
Also under investigation is the death
of a black teen-age boy ki the county
jail in Augusta, which sparked the racial
disord ers in ""'hich the men died.
Sources at lh e Justice Department said
~titchell was profoundly di stur!)ed by
what he saw and heard on the Jackson
Student, Unio11
Group Hits War
fll.-ou9h s..1ur0tv 1111' _..,, Ptlch1
.. ,,... ......,11111 IM ckllldi .,.,, !ht
( cvtOJI. Wtr,,.,.,. H VL L.-. ~Ith" f!t#r
: ... 1'11911 l'"r~p 11 tfld ltl,,rCltV 15.
POINT CONCl!"TIOff TO Mll!:lO(,lN
a OADEll -L.lt!tt ¥1rlt~ WlnOI t1i.t>I
#fld ,,.,,,1.., "°""' blco<Tllnt -" 10 ...,..,,.,,,... M t. II knafo lft #l1t•-•
l'rlrl#,. •fld S.Urdto¥. MOOfly !t i•
-"""" but -.... ht I "!! "rl¥ ~ loW tlouOll ,.,,i,.1y _,,., of
L-... (ft. Sll-"llY w1 rmt• F•ldav.
lffil';ms
11.S. S ummary
llo•lon
C~l(tGO
C•n~'""•'I Cl,YtlA~
0tr'UI!"
De!roll
E ~'""" Fl)f't Wodh
l'•ll'Ol'IO
Ho•ent
Mw1•on
"·~··· (l•y l •' Vetu
Loo •~9elo• M'""'' B••<h Mn ... .,._.,.
JI "
N " ~1 JI 61 ,,
" ~
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.. • • • " • ..
NE\Y YORK (UPI) -A re\ali\'ely
subdued crowd estimaled al about 2(1,000,
voiced their opposition to the Vietnan1
·'' war Thursday at a noon rally in Cil y
Hall Park .
/ l!Xl'llflME $0UTHll!:AH NEVol04 -
4 l'l lr ttw.ullh $1lv•Hv, W•r-• OtY•.
' Lowt l'li.hli jCI IO 1'. l'll•ho F rlOtJ 1 tD JO MO -.S.lunJIV "J It! !OJ.
: COAl1'AL. ANO INTl!AMll!:DIAT !
, VAl L.IYJ,..-.Molll" l1lr tllrovgh Stlur·
~ .. , Wt -""""' tMNlll'll 1-clludl l ...,,.,....,. \Ill.,.., WI.,.,,... HVI. L.-t
"lthll '5 fl! Jt. H19111 f"rld.t'f n II 15
•1'111 a.rvrt1ev " 1o n ,
' MOUNTlolN AR IAi -l"•I'" 111.-11
: S.lllrclt'f, Wtr,.,., Nn. low. nlfllll
• llJ IO JD. Hlt'I\& f"rldty 70 le II) ,,....
1 S•111rcl#'f " ro as. • 1 INTl!llllOA AN O PE:SfltT lllEGIONS
-F.ir tti........, 1trvr11..,. Wt,_,. div ..
LOWI n""1t d .. tO hi.-¥111,.,.J
• # .. 111 lowtf ¥1!1.,-1. Hi.hi l'rl<ln l M IO PS h'"" \ll !llYI ti It fOI lowfif
Ylliln. Hl9hi ltlllrlll#'f JO .. 100 hltlf>.
.. •1!lwt lQO It 110 low« ¥tlllYI.
co .. tal
M111U1 ,,.,.,., loa .... L.ltf\I ~•tloblt
WinclO <!\ .... I II"' ,,_.,,1.,. """'"' ~
<""'l"I /KWftlWMf to _, 10 lo II
....... I!! 1n..--t(oj1v tlld 'l lv"
OIY. Hltf\ to<h' .. IO 11.
COi•'-' '""'Plfttllr" '""°' •rom 5ol .. "· 1111-.....,.,....,,,, ........ ''°"' e6 19 &J, Wattt l.,,l>tft lU•t I J.
Sun, Mnnn. T id es
l'•IOAY
~ hlllft . """' ·~
1~1'o,.., 41
4.llOom, ,,
IATU•O"Y
prf"I h!t~ . 17·.it • "'· J l
P'l•l'I lew . ~'00 '·"'· .1' ~ Ml~ ... 11 06 P.m. ~ 0
.\KOfld low • 'dom 'J luoi Ill-J ........ ktl 1:11 p,.,
1"-~ht.1 10.ll O J'tl, lt11••.l o m,
Th11"°"tlO"m•. tonwo-•fld hlt f\
W!Mt hi! Pft •li DI Int -MldWt1I
Tnurtd.iv, hoOll ltll 111 tr.. C•"'••I
llocUtt •"!! h••...,. ll•1,,1Cltr1!0tm• """'" ..,,r thf ~ll>Hol 11 ln>s>ktl
1tvrm Aln'MI _,,••l'IC9" °" C\ibt, " ..,_l'I_ woo •l1Mfll l'!Mr G•ttn
~.v. Wl1 ... tull""I cl-Wtl •fl>OH&(I ''°'' °"'''· Wl1 , Incl IWQ lu-11 -.W•I "0hled l'IM• G•1nd l•••trt• +n no•Th·
w~•t iowtr Ml<hl11n l~u•1Cltv,
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'-'•rttlo·!IJfll htl! 1~11 ti "lullin,.,
(oio. *""' !'Ot-tllttl ~->I ..... , ..
PD''ed •I olfY•~o, (o•o.
"''""'•POii\ N1 .. Or•ott11
New Y0t'-O.~i.nd
""""' Pt\O lloblt•
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l•"'" Blfbt•t ~""'"e 5...,..•~· Th1tmt l
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"
No violence wns r~rled at 1he
demon!itratiOll attended moslly by
•01 ::>tudents and union members. Later in
the day. however, about 4,000 of the
war protesters cla.iiled briefly with police
In mld.Manhatlan.
Two perSOOI were arrested and nine
nlhers reported Injured. none .seriously.
in that encounter "'hich terminated the
otherwise peaceful dem<>nstr:ition,
The dlsrupllon ~urred when pnli l.'e
·02 ~topptd de1non:.1rators ""'ho had bet'n
!ilO\\'ing traffic lo a cra"·l. from cnterin~
Bn·ant Park at 40th Street and Sixlh
A1•rn1u.• A rpquP~t ro r A pem1it to rally
In the park had been rejected b)' polioe..
Slate cnmp11.'> d11ring n 1W(J·d:iy f:itt-f1n-
d1ng and spce1:h-n1nking trip to i11 1ss1ss1 p-
pi earlier this week.
~·
I -·t . . --
-. -
Tall Tree, Short Artist
Ul"I TI .....
T(l.lc art triun1phs as Ap1·!J ·raylor, 7, improvises a "jump technique''
to plll the finishin):: louchcs On l he lO !~ Of her tree palnlln~. St.11den'!J
of lhc 24th Street C:l en1c11IHl'.Y School Jn Los ;\OAl'lr s \Vere ln v1 led by
Pollack Cons truc t ion ("on1pany to pE11nt fence :=; s urro11ncl1 ng construe·
lion s ite oJ the new \·Vest Adan1s Lon1111u111 ly J lo!l p1tal.
Pro1r.dly Tliey Be111
.>\t the world's largest flag company American flags are ln full production as
Old Glory continues to occupy a pron1inent place i n mass demonstrations
a cross Uie country. Literally wrapped up in their work a re these two e1nployes
of the Annin r~lag Co n1pany, whose flags fly in United Nations P laza and in n1ost
cou ntries around the \'.'Orld -as well as on the moo n where they were planted
hy U.S. a stron<iut s.
Nixon Nixes
Using 1<'11.nd s
For Bu sinu-r"
\VASHINGTO:\' fAP)
President Nixon apparently
does not \van\ an}' of tus pro-
posed $;.()() mi llion fo1· sehoot
desesreg<ition lo be used far
busing students in atletnpls
to achieve racial b.:ilance.
A !asl niinute ch<Jnge in
the Presidc111 ·s integra tion
st;itcrncnt lo Congress 'l'hur~
rtciy sa id funds sh1J11ltl not "bP
exlendc1I lo eslabli sh or· n1ai11 -
tain the transport;1lion iii
students to achieve rac:1al
balance."
Nixon also ~<iid 111 oney
should nol be used to promote
forced racial busing in school
when the sole purpose is lo
eliminate de facto segregation
However, the overall intent
rrmained cloudy. An offi(·1:1I
closely as:;oc1ot1'd wi th thl'
leg islation sa11L "All \1 c ;in·
~ying is !11;1t thr fcder:1I
~ovemment c;in 't torce an~
de facto segreg ated dtstnct
to bus. They ca n use th e
money tn bus voluntarily."
Sextuplets Born , Die
Within Hours ir1 NY
NE\\" YOHK 1U Pl I -A
prel\y !\'ew York rnothcr "·ho
had been taking ferlllity drugs
ga\'e birth to sextuplets Thurs-
tl;1y night. The five girls and
a boy , born three months
prematurely and weigtli'11g less
lh<Jn a pound each. died within
sPvc n hour s.
l\lrs. Susan Dano!L 27, and
her MadiS()n Avenue l<Jwyer
l1ushand, MaJ"1 in. had been ex·
pcrting trif}lct:-.. illl"s. Danol f
felt ill Thursday <iftc rnoon ;incl
was t<.i ken lo the Nl·W York
University Medica l Center.
lier hu sband, who had been
worki ng on a case 111 suburban
Long Island, ru shed to Lhe
hos pital as soon as he found
uu1.
He was in the "·cuting roon1
11 h{'n a man c<1111e out ::111d
S<J1d· •·some gal 's ~iven birth
111 ~t·xtui>lct s ·• na,1olf s:ii1l it
look <1 1non11.·nt tu fl'gl'-lt•r
and !l1rn he ... houted ·· \1.1
1;o<1, tha1 's my "'1fc. ·
l!r ~aid they understood
frotn the beginning the sex-
tuplets had little chance of
~"' T•l•~~oto
SIX AT ONCE
Mrs. Ma rtin Danoff
•ur\il ,d ThC'} \1t•re horn
<\ 1lh1n ;i I0-1n1nutc ptriod
hrl ween 6 .07 and ti Ii JI n1
~:fJT. J'onr di<'d \\1Lh1n \wo
hours of deliver~·.
DAIL V "ILC'!
Arabs Hit Bus, Kill 7 Children
By United Press lot.ernaUona1
Arab guerrillas ambushed
an Israeli scbool bus on the
Lebanese frontie r today, kill·
ing seven children and three
adults in an attack that reduc-
ed Israeli Premier Golda Meir
to tears. Mothers of five of
the children were in jured in
a tru ck wreck later v.·hilc
speeding to the scene.
Israel retalialetl against
Lebanon by shelling four
border villages. killing six
persons and wounding 21 , a
Lebanese military spokesman
said in Beirut. lsraeh com-
n1and os attacked an Egyptian
Red Sea naval base dunng,
the night and planes hil Suei
Canal positions today ,
Mrs. i\1eir wtts talking "'1th
two Dulch newsinen when
\\'Ord was recei l'cd that seven
chi~dren aged six to eight were
killed along with three adult s
and that 21 persons were
wounded. They said she \\'epl
and mumbled "hornh!r. hor-
rible" a~ she wiped awny her
tears.
Wnne sses sal!l a trut k
which was speeding to Lhe
Sa fad gol'ern1n cnt hospital
with rnothers of fil'e of the
injured childrt•n l"t<1sht•d off
the road two hours later, in·
juring the f11 t> 11ornen, three
of thern seriously
Arie Eliav. s t•c retary
general of thl' l.~rach Labo r
party, srud 111 London the
schoolbus was painted bright
yell'Jw and it would have been
impossible for the guerrillas
lO have hit it at such close
range by n1istake .
"'The reaction I think wi!I
be very harsh," he said in
a BBC interview. "We will
have to go after I he
1nurderers and the klilers
vd1cre the y are, , .it's not
the Lebanese that killed the
children. lt"s the Palestinian
Arab terroris!s."
An Israeli spokesman said
Arab guerrilla.~ followed up
the bflzooka and riflt: alta('k
on the sc hoolbus with an al·
tack on an lsarel i arn1y patrol
near the Arab village or HJ1;1-
jar in the foothills of Mour1t
Hermon, wounding two lsr;icli
sold iers. This is north of the
area where the bus wa ~ al-
tacked.
A brief <inoouncemcnt lro1ll
lhc Israeli army said rom-
Kent State G . M h c . m<1ndos with air supporl :stai.:--.-eorgia arc ers ontinue ;:,::~·~:;"Ee:;;,:;,"',:,;~;
Gl'1•] Fottnd , base at Bur Safaga. on lhf'
Red Sea 240 miles soutl1 of D 't D th Pl t R the Suez Canal and return!"'(! Going Ho1n c espi e ea O u1nor ~:~;"~·::;~~~~:, ·"""'.
Egypt deni ed there had hccn
INDIANAPOLIS 1AP) such an attack. The mystery girl photograph-F'Oll..'l YTH . Ga. (AP ) -the 26 m1 1t•s fro111 f"orsylh Olher persons in r a c I a 1 LC1ter Lodav the lsr<ieli air
cd IC'a11ing over the body or Civll rights demonstrators un -lo Griffin during th<' day, then disorders at Augusta, Ga. force struck Egyptian mi!itar·.v
a st udent shot down <It KeR! daunted by reports of an alleg-n1ore into Alla nl;i early Satur-Reports or the alleged plot installations along the St1('7.
State Universitv has been cd plot to kill one or thcin t!ay for a 1nas~ rally clin1axing to kill one of the 1narchers, Canal for 75 minutes <IS part round by juven{le at1 !horilies cd lod r 1 I nf the conti nuing lsr;icl i ran1, prt'par ay or t 1e next·to-near y a 11 (·rk nf protest disclosed by Gov. Lester Mad-,·ind identified as a 15-year-old !;isl leg of a sy mbolic 124.mlle ;igains! fnai· t':inipus killings paign to wipe out Egyplian
runawf!y frurn Opa Locka. niarch across middle Georgi<i. at Ken(. Oh ni, two al J<1ckson. dox during a news conference air defenses and keep Egypl
Fla . 1'he group planned to cover J\tiss. and !he rlPalhs of six Thursday in Atlanta, largely from rebuilding them A
Ju venile officials said shC' \Vere discounted by their spokesman :-1<1id all planes
is Mary Ann Vecchio, "·hose returnrd safel.1•. lc<idcrs. parents, Mr. and Mrs. !''rank R , c , , s , d Hosea \VillianlS, vice presi-Arab guerrillas baS('d in
P. Vecchio, recognized her in LISS ia 1·1t1c e1ze Lebanon admitted they h<lll a 11•idely published Associated dent of the Southern Christian ambushed a bus but s.iid 1t
Press photograph. Leadership C 0 11 (ere 11 c e ' was full of ''Zionist expert!>''
J\·liss Vecchio ta lked with !\-IOSCO\V 1AP) -The KGB hook . banned 111 !he Sovie t descr;bed the reports as and made no menl inn th.'1.t
her rnother and father b y u0;0,1, was ,,011,gglcd ab roa d "absurd." He said f.1 add ox it was a school bus. They said se c ret police dra"ged .. ··t t 1 I t.gate telephone Thursda y night and " ;ind published in lhe Un ited was rying 0 11 s they killed or v:ou nded 50
told them · "I want to go Andrei Amalnk. outspoken States ;ind a nun1bcr of other violence." Israelis.
horne." young author Qf ··\viii the riiuntries. Maddox said he plan n~ a The Leban c s e army
tier parents said they 11o·ould Soviet Union Surv11·e Until Tak ing it s lttle frotn George major increase in the nuinbcr spokesman said Israeli guns
come to Indianapolis a.id ac· 1!184 ~··. from his country home Or\\'CJl's ··1!184", the hook says of state troopers observing the opened up at 8 30 a.m. on
company her to Florida. Thu rsd<iy. His wife said she lhl' Soviet Union is a march because of reports that the villages of Bint Jbcit and
Miss Vecchio said that after supposes he is in J\1oscow's st<ign;iling Slavic einpire that someone either now among Yarn1oun, two miles and one
running from Florida she Lnb.vanka Pn~nn . ll'ill e\'cntually collapse. pro-th e marchers, or whd would mile respectively from the
hitchhiked and begged money '"lie was expecting iL"' bubly after a war \Vith Coin-Join them later, plan ned to border. Ile said a child . a
and food. In Kent. Ohi o. she Gisc.-lle An1,11rik s;iid . t\·lrs n1uni sl China. kill a Negro demonstrator or woman and a man were killed
said, she heard there was go-Ama!rik said till' poli Cl' did An1nlnk. who i.\ now 32. start some kind of violence. in Blnt Jl>cil, JO persons
ing to be an anti1var prolcs! not tl'll hl'r the chilrges w:1s i1rrC'stcd in 1911:1 on a Maddox al so said he was wounded and 30 h o m e.s
:ind \vent lo lhr. univC'r sity agiJinsl hl'r lnisb;uid But 1t t·ba1·ge nf p;i rasilisn1 ;uid preparing to alert the National damaged. Ile put the Yarn1nun
ce11npus. was considered likelv 1h:11 hl· spen1 allnost two years in Guard for duty in ALlanta dur· Loi! at one \voman killed ant.I
'"\\-'e \\·ere sitliflg in front w:l-" picked up bcCause hi:i Siberian l;1bor c:.in1ps. in g the mass rally Saturday. eight persons wounded.
of a btiilding chanting when 1...;;,......:=;:,;;::;;,;,::,::_...,:_...,::_:.._:.._:.:_.:.:;:.. ........ ~=;~===~==================~j the guardsmen n10\'ed on 11s
\1'1th gas." !\.1iss Vecchio said.
"\Ve ra11 around lhe bu ilding.
then down to an open field.
or maybe it wa s a parking
lot"
\V hen the guards1nen began
shooti ng. she said . ''I rolled
cto1\'n the hill and lriC'rl to l
hide beh ind ii ne1\·spaper
stand . That's \\'hen I .sa\\' the
m<J n go do11n I ran over1 tO him."' I
Three other £1udcnls. 1\1·01
nf them coeds , also were kill-
•d
Dani.th f.lodern
IJ,.ni'h ~lod1 ·m ron•p;it t
consolr in p:r1111111c oil
fi nished "alnut \'l't1rr1'
11nd harth,ood sohd,,
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• DA.IL Y PILOT EDITORIAL P AGE
Schmitz vs. Wilcoxen
The DAILY PILOT normally does nol 1nake en-
dorsemenls or recommendations in partisan primary
elections. These runoffs are, properly, functions of the
pC>litical parlles, t h e i r opportunity to pi ck the best
man of their group to face opponents in the l\'ovembcr
general election.
In one pri1nary ra ce, hov,iever, v.•e would like to
make some observations.
That race is in the 35th Congressional District the
Orange Coun1y-San Diego County District served hy
Rep. James B. l 1tt until his death this March. It n1ns
from 1-lighway 39 in 11untington Beach 'lo La Jolla.
The district is. and aJ,vays has been. overwhelming-
ly Republican. It is so much so that ,\vhoever is nom-
inated by that party on June 2 is. in effect, the winner
for the seat in Con,gress, And that Congressman \Viii
represent some 800.000 citizens -including the Presi-
dent of the United Slates, whose hon1e address is TIO\V
in the county of his birt.h.
T\.\'O Republican candidates emerge as strongest
contenders in the primary election : John G. Schmitz,
\vho is stepping down from his position as state senator
to seek the congressional seat, and \Villiam \Vilcoxen,
a 38-vear-old Laguna Beach attorney.
Republicans, come June 2, have to decide if
Schmitz is the man to represent them in view of:
-Hi s intransigent refusal to support Governor
Reagan on budge'f.ary matters.
-I-Us refusal to campaign in behalf of Richard
Nixon in the last presidential campaign.
-His much-discussed lack of cooperation with ~ity and Orange County authorities on matters requir·
ing legislative attention.
-His continued membership in ~he John Birch
Society, despite that group's bitter personal attacks
on President Nixon and national Republican leadership.
-His alliance with Democratic leaders in the Cali·
fornja Senate.
Aftermath of
The Guns at
Kent State
i 4.
You buy a ticket and board a plane
for Miami, Florida, but you find yourself
landing In the airport in Havana , Cuba,
Your plane has been hijacked.
You pay your tuition and sign up
tor a cou r1 e in
Shakespeare, but
you find yourself
listening to lectures
<1nd rap SC$Sions on
the criminality of
the Ameri can role
1n Southeast Asia.
Your cducallon has
been hijacked .
"Th is campus,"
11ays a faculty reso..
lutioo presented in almost identical
language at San Francisco State, the
Unil'trsity of California al Berkeley, and
UCLA , "is on strike to re-constitute
the university as a center for organizing
against the y,·ar in Soothcasl Asia as
well as racimi ill home "
ACROSS ·r11E COUl'"TRY !ht' tide ()f
emotion and Lhe cnr.rl!)' of the youn,g
organizers -:1nct the iltll'nlion paid
by TV and the press -ha\ e bt'.l'n
so enormou~ thilt c;1n1pus artcr campus
ha s been s11cpt along to a suddenly
changrd rl estinalion. College presidents
!IS ""'1"11 ;is students and facu!ty have
::1cceplcd a change of night plan in
do zens of insl.Jtut1ons. From now on.
sa y the hijackers, this college is an
Instrument of political change.
Up to now. "restructuring l he
universities,'' ''redirecting education,"
"making education relevant," have been
slogans of the radical activists. "·ho
havf' only been sporadically successful
In sweeping along their groups of
followers. The disrupt.Jve actions of sit-ins
::lnd bombings which these lofty slogans
were used to justify were deeply
repcllant to most student.~ and ci1izens.
Most of the student flare-ups burned
them~lvcs out with more er less dama,l!'.e
lo their insUtuLions and considerable
Quotes
Bob Ruehboft. Long Beach, replyln& lo
critics of punishment of c a m p u 1
df'rnonslnitor1 -"Does expectin& a
re830nable degree of responsibility from
the partakers of· a free education create
an unreasonable pressure on them? As
mere members of society they owe some
degree or obedience to the law ...
Blondtttttr Cowtbnn, L.A. -"\Ve
must find some way of getting motorists
lo use their signal lights as required by
California Mot.or Vehicle laws. Too many
lives have been lost that could have been
saved had the drivers done: this ...
Robert J. llavl1hur1t, Department of
Educ1U., Uatvu•l.ty of Cbica10 -"The
most lmporta•t thing the schools can
do is to develop, try out and evaluate
a variety ol IChool and prwchool pro--
grams that fit In with the. motives of
dlsadvantaaed children, youth aad their
paren!I."
lovhi: S NeflOtl, San Quentin wanten , °" dUfl~ldc• of rtbabillt.tJon -'No
hospital , no educaUonal sy~tem. no
bostncs~ ent.erprl5t', no other inslitutlon
01 Uw: fact or the eorth has the S8"1e
t>n1rarl(e requiremenU as do o u r
rrt!Ons."
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
How do Wt' impeach a councilman
-or is there a "Lorr" against it?
-A. W.
T~i1 ft•lu•• •t'flKlt rt1C1tn' ~1.w.. ,,.,
"l<llMlilr i'hlM I f IM "'WU••••· ''""
YIW ••t '"y' .. GIHmy llu .. ci.nt "ll•I.
damage "to the careers of their
presidents.
Btrr THE GUNS AT Kent bave ac-
complished what the radical student
leaders could not. An issue has been
f<:IJ.IW to unite all these assorted protests
-and dozens of campuses have been
"redirected," taken over or shut down .
The idea lhal the universities are going
to lead the nation to peace has its
obvious appeal. In addition to idealism,
it appeals to an even stronger emotion,
the need to be al the center oC something
important. What is more important than
the peace ol the world!
In the fa ce of so mu ch idealism and
dedication it seems crass to ask what
all the rap sessions across the country
are accomplishing. Any number or
educators have solemnly announced that
I.here is now more real education gc>ing
on on their campuses under the
"recons tituted" course than under the
norm:il program, and tha t parents
shoulcln'L 1vorry that their ch11clrcn aren't
gelling their parents' money's 1vor!h.
Ylhich n1akrs one y,·onder about the
prCVJOOS quality or lhr education.
SO~fE OF TllE cli.~eussions of prflh.
lrms of peace ;u1d V1etn11m obviously
cotild be valuable -ii undert<ikcn l1y
professors with something lo offer both
1n infonnation and intellei'\tial )1onesly.
But they can also IK' shee r self.
dramatizing nonsense. "I ran't go on,"
one professor of sociology announced
to his class in dramatic 1oncs of grief
on 1.tay 11, as he n1ct his class. But
he managed to, for iln hour, on the
suhjf'<'l of Camborl1a. :ibout y.•hich, one
of his students said. he was el'en ICM
informed lhan the teacher or philosophy
who had given a similar lecture to
his class the hour before.
Or th ese "reconslituled" courses ca n
be the crudest form of thought con1rol.
\Vith C'Onclusions arrived at in advance,
many unqualified and opinlooated pro-
fessors are force-feeding 1heir students
on what is now fast becoming the only
line of "corroct Ulinking" on American
c:ampuscs.
WASTED CLASS HOURS, postponed
graduation, indoctrination in place of
education -these ilre serious enough.
Even more serious is the acceptance
of ""'hat the •·reconstitution" doctrine
wUI do to our universities.
Are universities af1er this to be a
weapon for any pol il.ical group which
can capture them? \Vhere is the
American Associa tion of Universlly
Professors in all lhis'.'
What Are they going lo do when con-
struction workers Lake over 8 n d
"recoruJtltute'' Pace Collegf' in New York
according to their vic\\'S ol what cduca·
lion should be?
For years faculties have fought a
courageous fight against ''polltlcal in-
terferenc~.'' Academic freedom, the
liberty to te11ch and seek tilt trulh,
the "fearless sifting and winno\ving,"
are powerful righ ts won by our profession
over centuric.~ ol struggle. The truth
is only to be discovered by ideas 111
lrt'<' C<lnpetltlon w!1h C.Bf'h other, Any
1)()(i1lc8l dogn1a narrower than th{' fret'
frame of demncracy l!Mll Is an enemy
of the search for tru\11
Dy S. 1. llayakAwll
Prt~ldenl
Snn rraoclsco Statt Colle&•
The list goes on. Generally, our conclusion is that
!:ichmilz is a reactionary inde;>endent. more a!Jied (and
he has so indicated) with the philosophies of George
\\lallace than with the philosophies of Richard Nixon
and Ronald Reagan.
Jn view of that, Republicans may want to take a
hard look al what kind of congressm an Schmitz would
rnake and how effective he would be.
Republicans should consider the ironical embar·
rassn1ent it would create i! they elected such a man
in the Pres ident's own congressional district.
Wilcoxen strikes us as a right-Of-center candidate
cornmi1ted to a philosophy of reason. He worked hard
for Nixon in the last campaign, and he has demon-
strated leadershlp and understanding on local t~thc·
point issues.
For instance. \Vilcoxen:
-Is responsible more than any other single person
for attenlion focusing on saving Salt Creek beach for
the public (He \11as a member of the Sierra Cl ub before
most anyone had heard of the word "ecology")
-Has sho\v n intelligence and comprehension of
educational matters as a member of 1he Laguna Beach
school board.
-Has a working-level view of our law-and-order
problems. thanks to three years spent as investigatnr
and deputy prosecutor in the Orange County District
Attorney's office.
On national and in1ernalional issues, Wilcoxen aJ>-
pears to stand just about where President Nixon stands.
\Vhile this may not win him many Democratic votes
come November, it certainly should assure Republicans
that they haven't bought a lef't\vingcr in the primary
iI they cast their lot \vi th Wilcoxen.
On the basis of the records, il would appear the
great bulk of Orange County Republicans "'ho stand
\\'ith Governor Reagan and President Nixon on most
matters of political policy would be best represented
in Washington in these times by William Wilcoxen.
'Move alo118 there folks. Thi.s is a re.slTicled Mighhorhood.'
s
Ca111bodian Results May Alter Kre111lin Mi11d
Russia Holds Key to Vietnam Peace
WASHINGTON -A logical move by
the Nixon Administration now, or as
soon as the Cambodian operation ls com·
pleted, would be a new proposal for
peace assuring tht neutrality or Indo-
China.
President Nixon surely will not
overlook Utis opportunity to ge l a desired
diplomatic as \.\'ell
as military result
from his great gam-
ble.
I low successful he
would be in this re-
SJ>!'Ct would prob.
ably depend in large
measure on how
Russia judges the.
outlook in Vietnam
rol!owing the Cam-
bodian incursion.
If Russia judges that the allit'd opera-
tions in Camobodia have destroyed !or
an extended period of time the se-cure
logistical base of the North Vietnamese
for operations against South Vietnam,
the Kremlin leaders may be more willing
than before to think in tenns of a
settlement.
rilUC H OF P~IDENT Ni x o n ' !!
rhetoric appears to be beamed toward
Moscow. and his methods we re
calculated to be those v.•h.ich would im-
press the Soviet leaders v.•ith hi~ det er·
rnina!ioo and resourcefulness and
thei r own inability to calcu!atf' hi!! actions
1n advance.. ~!is use of such ter1ns as
(
"df'<'iSi\'t' action" and his slalement lhat
lhe United States v.·oold not be humiliated
as a helpless giant Wt're int ended to
be heard ln Moscow. and they were.
It was as if the President y.·ere saying :
"Look, I'm trying to gE't out of Vietnam.
But there are limits beyond which I
cannot go. I saw the opportunity to
make it easie r and safE'r to get out
by s!riking into Cambodia. You have
seen the results. Do you not think it
i~ ti1ne to cooperate so that the United
:-itates can get out and leave behind
a rrasonahly tolerable situation?"
If 1he Russians should finally judge
tha1 the Jo~s of the sanctuaries in Cam-
bodia crea tes a \.li'Orsened military
outlook for their North Vietnamese
clients they may finally see the wisdom
or granting the United States a dignilled
exit from Vietnam.
"'HAT A PITY IT IS, therefore. that
President Nixon is not being given the
fullesl possible chance to exploit this
opportllnity without being shackled by
collegiate protest and senatorial mo\'es
to humiliate and embarrass him in the
f'\:ff'Ution of the most creative mo\•e
yet to end !he \\'ar .
There \1·111 be. plenty of time to hold
Nixon to •ccount U he falls. H~ has
set time limits to which he cln bre
he ld to account. Of what use is it,
therefore, to adopt congress ion a I
amendments intended lo prevent him
from '·retaining'' troops in Cambodi a
or continuing to support South Viet-
namese ope.rations lo close the
sanctuaries?
These moves would only perpetuate
the delusion in Hanoi and ltfose<>w that
America will prove Lo be another France
and cave in from the pressure of internal
pressures of war opposition.
This would impede any movement by
the Soviet Union toward responding
favorably lo I.he British proposal for
a new Geneva conference which \llas
seconded over the last weekend by the
foreign ministe rs of eleven east Asian
and PacirJc non..communifit nations.
With or without this imped iment,
however , Nixon is in a position to initi ate
new proposals base<! upon his peace
plan outlined on May 14, 1969. This
proposal included complete. v.·ithdra!,\•al
of all outside forces within one ,year,
a cease-fire under international
supervision and free elections under in·
ternational supervision with the Com-
munist! participating in the organization
and conduct of the elections.
THE PRESIDENT SAID thf'n and
would say now that these terms are
negotiable : everything is negotiable , he
said, except the right of the people
of South Vietnam to determine their
own future.
This is the most generous offer for
a war settlement ever made, including
all the offers in the Johnson ad·
ministration while Clark Clifford was
);f'<'retary of defense. Clifford's proposal"
now are not so dirferenl from what
Nixort is already doing, \\"Ith the very
imporlant exception that Clifford's pro-
posals offer very little inducement, and
no le\'erage, for a negotiated settlement
during the v.·it.hdrawat process.
Clifford left his defense post belie~·ing
lhal the South Vietnamese gene rals v.·ere
"suckering" ~s into a pennanent war
and he evidently hasn't changed his
mind bul his proposals for just ending
it all lack the crcatlvity· of Nbi:on's
method.
THIS CREATIVITY is based in large
part on the fa ct that Russ ia furni shes
most of. the military equlpn1enl for North
Vietnam and has the strongest influence
on Hanoi's policy. The loss of the
sanctuaries and closing the port Qf
Sihanookville could signal to the Russi an,,
that their client has lost his Sf'Cure
base and prospects for the year ahead
are not promising.
Under those conditions President Nix-
on's proposals of ~fav 14, 1969. a~ he
may now modify or Cxtend them. may
look more attractive. The President J.,
al least entitled to explorP the chance
that this may prove to b!: the case .
A Letter to Vice President Agnew
Dear r.tr. Vice President : Knnwi nJ.:
of your deep concern in prf'.serl'in~
America 's freedom s. v.·e are writing lo
f'nlist your support in our current cam-
paign -the repeal of the Bill of Rig hts.
Our campaign was organized only la st
March following a
nationwide CBS poll
on the issue. As you
may remember, the
po!! showed that
even in thofe rela-
tively tranquil times,
the majority favored
repealing the major
rights and freedom!!
guaranteed by the
Bill of Rights.
With the riols, lur.
moil and unease oow swee ping our f'n-
dangered nation, we rirmly believe that.
we could now easily get a majority ''Ole
oo repealing all of them.
THE CBS POLL, you may recall, W8S
a random telephonf' sampling of 1136
adults, conducted 1..1arch 10.12.
A majority fa vored abridging freedom
or assembl~ (76 percent l. freedom tlf
the press 155 percent), freedom of speech
(54 perce nt), freedom from double
jeopardy (58 percent), and the right to
a speedy trial !58 percent ).
Unfortunate!)'. the majority sti ll a~
proved of ~lrial by jury (82 percent),
the. right to a public trial (75 percent l,
the need for search warrants \66
perctnt), the right to confroot witntSSf'S
(54 percent) and lhe right of suspect!!
to remain silent (54 percent ).
We feel, however, that the quesUons
asktd by tht pollsters were not properl y
phrased to elicit the correct response.
li1ore-0vcr, the limes h11vc ch a n g (' 0
radically in Ulf11e past t"·o mnnths and
the need to preserve our freedoms hy
tt'pcaling the Bill of Righ t.s Rrows da ily
rnore apparent.
JURY TRIALS ARE clogg1n1i1 ou r
Art Hoppe
courts. Long-haired agitators a r e
avowedly converting ~ public trials
into circu ses lo sub1•crt A~caa respect
for justice. Witness the · the
Chicago Seven. How quickly a quietly
Judge Hof£men alone coukf have decided
the fa cts and dispensed se ntences in
his chamber without all the hue and
outcry a public trial by jury entailed ,
The requirement that police officers
obtain a search warrant before raiding
a Black Panther headquarters or a
Maoist youth club obviously hampe.r1
our lawmen In lhe performanct of their
duties. Can we afford to tie the hands
or our brave men in blue as they seek
to restore law and order'.'
To allow suspects lO refust' lo ansy.·er
honest questions and to confront u11-
den::over witnesses y,·ho ha ve risked their
lives lo jather crucial informot.ion can
only be described as coddling sub-
versives. llow lont can this great nation
coddle subversives in its midst and
survi,·e?
Surely, put this way, the vast silent
majority of Amerkans would agree that
the Bill of Ria:hts must be repealed
entirely. F'or it has long outlived its
usefulness.
IN THESE PERILOUS times, no de--
Tragic Price of Violence
One of tlle most touching things about
the Kent State episode is the rf'port
Iha! when the firing started studenl3
assumed blank bullet.I we~ being u~.
Coming as it does after the student!ll
had indulged t.hemselvea: with arson and
after tlle authorities had explic.ltly
declared martial law, thi1 assumption
casts • palriful poignancy on the sense
of game-playing that permeates 90 many
of thede student uprlsinp:.
Somehow !he students art convinced
lhat. whatever thf'.y do, nothing tragic
will happen to t.hen1.
How should they know other.,.:isf'., y..•lth
lh<>ir exptrlence embracing on.ly a few
eloistered years In what ls still. de:spite.
i1s current passions. a singularly
cloistered nation ?
KO'T'JONG JN THEIR limited t~·
pericoce or tenl.IUve ltarn1ng prepares
them lo understand thf' deadly serious
facts -that mob« bMng repre!Sion .
for examplt, or even that "'·h~ you
throw rocks al Armed men , eventually
some of them will eltht.r panic or turn
inhuman.
Somehow lhit ought not be loo mueh
for • 20-year-okl mind to a:rasp, but
it I~ al~ true the falllng I~ not ooly
theirs but our1 -thoM! of us who
ought to hive some grasp or hlstory'a
lessons, some duty to communicate them
10 youth, and a!50, of course, some
wit. to guard trlequ11tely against predic-
ll1ble hre<1kdowns and ucessts In SuJ>
pressing vk>lt'nct.
Wan Strtet Journal
rent Amencan would \\"!lllngly al101v
Jubversives to organize protest~. publish
stories damaging to our form of
government , spout propaganda inimical
to our national interests. make 11
mockery of justice or be coddled al
their tria ls.
No decent American would handcuff
our police by delaying their raids through
red laJlf'., by requiring them to release
suspects whilt they arc still gathering
ev idence or by pre\•enting them from
retrying criminals y.·hen new evidence
is obtained.
These are the »<:ailed Bill of Right~.
And unless they are repealed our
freedoms are clearly in grave danaer.
So, as the titular leader of the silent
majority. we ask you, Mr. Vice
President, to serve as honorary ctlainnan
or our growing campaign. We c.agerly
a.wait your reply.
Sincerely Yoors,
The Committee to Preserve Americ;ii'1
Freedoms.
-----
Friday. May 22, 1970
Tlic tditoriol paat. o/ the Daily
Pilot seeks to inform and stim-
t.date reader1 by pre1e11Ut1a this
nlwspa~r's opi11ion1 and com-
mentary 011 topic$ of fntert1t
ond significonce, b11 provid111a a
forum for the expres~cm o/
our -readers' opinion.~. and. by
presenting th11 rlioer.~t vi erv·
po inr.s of i11fn1·rncd observer1
ond spokcs,nc11 011 topic~ of the
d(IJJ.
Robert N. \Vced. PubHsher
. '
.·
CHECKING
•UP•
Take Tl1at Bet;
Triple the Cash
By L, ~t. 80\'l>
A~I TOLD there will ~ 200
million cars hereabouts by
1975. Think of that ~ If you
wane lo cross the slreet, you'd
better do il l'KJW ' •• AGAIN .
.:UST about hair of lhe U.S.
servicemen killed in Vietnam
were too young to vote • •
\\'ere rationrinalion, ogre, i1n-
pacted, embattled and sentient
-. . "PERJSCOPE'' and
"enliven" are lYlO dandy ex-
amples of words that begin
and end with the sam<' tv.·o
letters. if y()'.J have nothing
speeial to do at :;toplights.
try thinking of some others.
GAMBLE -Say some fine
millionaire fellow were to give
you $2,000 tax free. Then say
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl
''!l's nice·to run into another non-smoker at these
cocktail parties."
OAIL V PILOT 7
They Also Served
5 Major Anti-war Senators 'Vets'
WASlllNGTON (CPI)
The five flHlJOr sponsors of
a lc~islativl' altc111pt to enll
lhe Jndoch1na war are fa r
from being pat•lfists. All :ire
veterans and fou~ servt'd in
combat areas.
Th'y servet.J in \Vorld \Var
II and Korea; in lhe Army.
Navy and Air Force: in tht•
F.uropPan. Pacific and Burma·
China·lndia theaters of ~'ar.
They "'ent on bombing
missions over Europe, took
p11rt in the invasion of haly;
and landed l\1arines on battle·
scarred Pacific islands.
The five principal backers
are Sens. George S. l\tcGovern
(0.S.D.), Harold E. Hughes
~ 0.Iowa), Frank Church 1 D-
Tdaho), l\1ark 0 . liaUicld (R·
Ore.), and Charles E. Goodell
IR-N.Y.J
Mansfield noted during the j.g. Jn the. Navy and participa-or the judge advocate general.
\l'eekend that of the !:lenalors led in the landings at lwo both as a defense counsel and
who have signed [1~ co--Jinia and Okinawa. He prosecul-Or.
sponsors, "82 or B:l percent was a boat group commander =~==========,
of them arc eK·s~rvlccrnen who ferried Marines into the
serving in the Seuatr Many beaches.
of them are l' o m b a l llatfle/d once quipped he has
veterans." been against U S. Involvement
McGovern. an I• ;i r I y 10 Vietnam since he "'en!
rnember of !hf' Senate's ;111-11shorc :.it Hnno1 as a U.S.
tiwar bloc anti one •!f th<' sailor I
most persistent critics or \he Goodell, the only one of the
Vietnam conf!iC'I. was a C'On1-five who dill not leave the •
mand pilo! 111 B24 botnbt'rs rnainhjnd, also was the only
during \\-'orld War IL one who scrl'ed in both \\'orkl
He few JS bo1nb1ng 1nis~1ons \\'ar JI and Korea.
<J~, UUI \ tr
' BEllER
SLUG-EM
Jj))I
KILLS SNAILS
BU¥ 10 l B. BAG
1,1 r l \ e~. tfltl a~ilddbl• u
over Grrmany, Austria and our in g \\'urlll \\'ar II,'
ll:it~· a:; .-. 111l'll)her 11f lll•' c;oudell was stationt'd al
15th Air Fore'\' :-.1at1unt·1I in \Yilli:uns College and 111 San WHITE FRONT
Ital) Francisco. He switchrd to thc-
0 I C I · I lOU Brl1tol St. Jl i1:-: :i•: 1 1n1 ~s1011 -n\'for Air Fnrce during the Korean Costi Mesi S4S·0711
V1enn<i -illl·Col't·r11 s pla11<' \\'ar :1nll served 1111 lht• Sl.'lff '•-----======='
\1•as hit by fink b111 he n1;1nag-•-------·
t•d !•I IHlr~\' 11 lu ii l<:111di11~
on the island uf \ 11. 111 the
Adriatic. •h·· J··· l SPECIAL •h·· J ... l WHY IS a mystery, but
televisioo is outlawed in Sou1h
Africa ••• NO REDHEAD
i11 defense or his coloring
should forget that Christopher
Columbus too had red hair.
hi" offered to flip you for -----------------------
.Sen1le Dernucralir leader
~like l\tansfleld. who is a co-
-:ponsor, Is a veteran of the
Marine C'orps. Navy and
Army. llis first en!istmenl
came at age 14 .
Fur bring1n~ thr ('fqlplrd
pl:1nP h:i~·k i\1c·t;1 ,1 rr11 11·;1sl
:111·anll'd 111,, 01 \l111guL~l1rd
FJyin~ Crnl'>.~ lur "h1•r()i.~1n :1n1t
e :i. .t,raurL11111>ry achiei•t•rucn!
!)elicious Oven Re<nly
CHICKEN BALLOTINE
CONSID ER THIS -First
taxicab meters turned up in
China on ttie rickshaws. I
don't know how they did it.
bllt those ingenious rickshaw
folk devised an intricate
mechanism that caused a gong
to be struck after the wheels
had turned to cover the rough
equivalent of one mile. That
"'as 300 years ago.
HANDWRITING .._ Next
lime you suffer profoundly
from feelings of inferiority,
bear in mind there is one
thing you do better than any
other person on earth. That's
read your own handwriting.
No, don't 1hank n1e for this
inspirational message. Just
\\·ant you to be happy. Might
mention, Uie handwriting ex-
perts coMend the ll'riters or
1he most illegible script tend
lo be the most creative.
OPEN QUESTION -\Vhy
is it left-handed parrnts are
more apt lo have twins than
right-handed parenls?
LANG UAGE ~tAN -\Vh:it's
lhe longest word you l':'ln 1tunk
of wherein no letter is
repeated~ I no 1n i n a led
"pseudomythical " , .. THE
FIVE FAVORITE words of
the late William Faulkner
it. triple or nothing. Would
you take the bet? I would.
A S0-50 chance to triple your
money is not bad, not bad
al all. However, wh en
pollsters pu1. the query to Ule
citizenry, only one in four said
they would accept the gamble.
USUALLY THAT AGE at
which a woman tends to do
the most talking is 42, it's
said .. , OUR ClllEF PRO-
GNOSTICATOR thinks private
cars will be banned altogether
from midtownM an ha t ta n
within the neit several years
. • . THE STATISTICIANS
no1v report sadly that three
out ol fi ve women in the coun·
try are overweight.
TEMPER -Note a con·
t emporary states It's perfectly
all right for a fellow to lose
his temper now and then.
Can't agree, can't agree. If
you're right, you can afford
lo keep your temper under
t'Ontrol. If you're wrong, you
Just can't afford to lose it.
i\1y Sunday School teacher told
n1c that.
Yonr q11est1011s and co111-
1neu1s arr welcomed t111d
1.0111 be used i11 Check1ng
Up wherever possible. Ad-
dress letters to L. M. Boyd ,
Box 1875, Newport Beach,
Calif. 92660.
No-questio11 Treatment
For Yom1g Users Flops
Sea's Co11tct1nination T he i r amendtnent. corn-
rnonly referred to as U1e
f\1 c Govern-Hatfield amend-
n1ent . would cut off runds for
U.S. n1ilitary opera t ions
anywhere in Indochina by Dec.
JI. 1970. All U.S. troops \l'Ould
ha\'e lo be Y.'ithdrawn by .June
30, 1971.
Hughes w;is pun' "doggl c,"l
going into \\'orld \\'ar II a!i
a pri\'ale and conung ou t a
privatr_ I
(Boneless Chicken legs )
stulfed \l'ith
Believed Under Way
He y,•as an ·au t o rn a I i c
riflern:in 111lh lht' 8Jrd Chem·
iral Baltal1on 111 North Africa .I
.\pplc and Aln1onds
or
J1 ice and !\.'iushroon1s
\VASHJNGTON
Even the great
lake it.
1UPI)
ocean can'l
Man has found it easy,
"'ithoul consciously rrying, to
kill the living things in rivers.
lakes. wetlands, estuaries, and
once wild regions of the con-
tinents.
But lhe ocean! lts l~O
mil!ion square miles cover 70.8
percent or the earth's surface.
Its waters wash the shores
of n1orc than !00 nation~. In
all likelihood it wus Lhe
original incubator of I if e .
Its 30 million cubic miles of
1vater harbor an immense
nun1ber of creatures. plant
and animal. Its green plants
manufacture more than half
of the oxyg en "'hich makes
life possible on e.art h.
How eould 1nan. even 1f h<'
tried, succeed in ll01son1ng !his
1as1 tnt•diurn which makes 1hr
earth truly "a >1'at1•r plan1•t"''
The annual rt'port of !he
Pres1dcn1 's r-.1ar11H' Sciences
Counril rnilkes 11 clear !hat,
intcn!1onally or not. rnan is
succeeding in doing just that.
"Contan1inatlon of the ocean
has begun." 1!1c report says.
As a result, ii.<> ecological
bala ncr, achieved over the
millions ol .vr:ir.~ by delicate
evolution.1 ry adjustments li nk-
ing r.a eh fonn of life to all
other~. "is cnd;111gered ''
All rif lhe Jxillutanr ~ ll111n
auto exhausts sooner or later
raJ!'!S down into waters which
llow into the sea.
TV Stopped
Some Smoke
Evolutionary adjustment lo
environmental changes lakes
time. Life on this planet has
been evolving for three billion
years. The report d iscourages
hope that marine life may
be able lo adjust ~uick!y lo
what man is doing to it. ATLANTA (UPI I _ Tiie
Man Is changing the ocean An1er ican <.:aiu:er Soc 1 l' t y
envi ronment. the repon says, claims that one out of 10
"and measured in !he lime s mokers who '-''atchcd 1hc
o[ evolutionary change, lhe television series "Why You
living c reatures of that en-Smoke" now has kicked the
vironmerrt do not have lhe habit.
tirne lo adjust." 'fhe cl31111 was 1nade at ;i
Pouring into the ocean in public infonnalion committee
ever increasing quantily are meeting here Wednesckly.
Hughes partic1pal<'d in the 1
invasions of Sicily <1nU Italy.
He first '1•ent in at Vietri
vdth the British t•ommandos
but then had to be hosp1ta!izcd
with malaria.
Hr \\'<IS retu r11e1I to hi s outfit
on Lht' southern front 111 Italy
and participated 111 lhl' landing
al Anzio.
·--8 OZ. SIZE REGULARLY 79r.----.
pdcked b to a boK
65~ •"h----'
Fresh Ranch Eggs
Fresh Mushrooms
. . . 49¢ doz.
59¢ 'h lb.
642-1311
O.P.
"chemical wastes fro1n fac-The Cancer Society said that
tories, heat from Power a 10 percent decline 10 smok-\~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ plants, domestic wastes and 1,1g occurred :inion~ those
se1vage from cities and town s. vie~'ers v.·hu saw at least one
insecticides a n d fert1li~.ers or the five prograins in lhe
From l<v1d runoff. atmospheric series broadcast by the Na-
fallout of gasoline vapors, loiv 11011<11 Lducat1onal T<'irv1s1un
level radioactive ""astes frorn 1 NETf network 111 f'llarch .
reactors. laboratories, and Thr report Y.'8! based on hospitals."
CHILPREN'S ART
COUNTYWIO[ PAllTICIPATION
l'T 011.t.NG! COUNTY SCHOOLS.
tttN D!ll:GARTEN THllU 121h GRADE
the oil spills which, despite 1netrupo!itan areas, including
the furor over them, seem Atlanta. It principally at· C'OUfh '"oasf '2><aza
MAY
20-29
Then, of course. there are ti study conducted in 11 ~
likely to become more and tempted to measure th<' Pf-. cJ \,I JI
more frequent. feels of lhe programs :!o"~~~~~~~~t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Pollution of t he ocean is smokers and was based on a sample of some 7,177 me·n Jong lasting. Rivers renew and women.
themselves each year I f i--------
perrnitted to do so. But the
SACRAMENTO (UPll -A
ne w state la1v authorizing
medical lrl"a!ment For young
drug users on a no-questions·
asked basis has flopped, Gov.
Ronald Reag:in·s lop adviser
on narcotics disclosed.
'"The establishment L~n't ereatrs evf'11tu11ll.v wind 11p in
organized enough to handle the ocean. Even the lead frorn
this epidemic." he said in an
oceH n is I.he final repository
or pollutants "which 111ill re·
main there for thousands of
years." l
II "It just isn't "'<Hking,"
reported Ar I h u r Suddj1an,
coordinator or the state Officr
r•f Narcotits and Drug Abu~
Coordination.
Under the law which tonk
f'ffect last r.;ov 10. young:s lt•r<;
can be cornm itted to a hospital
ror drug 1rea1menl by their
parents 11·ithout fl'.ir of arrcsl
or a police record. Thr:>' .11.•o
can commit tJ1ernselves volun·
tarily.
Hospital adn1in1slratvr-. in
Los Angele!\ and S.in Fran·
cisco \l'amed la c;L )'t·nr they
'-'''re not prep11r'd lo handle
the expected influx. or drug
abusers seeking help.
Suddjian. appointed lo the
newly created position 1n
February by Reagan, said the
dangerous drug and narcotics
crisis bas readied "epidemic"
proportions In Ca lifornia.
interview. "The hospitals don 't
have ttie staff and the
fa cilities."
He said part or the problem
i.~ !hat hospitals "almost ha ve
to Jock 1hem idrug users) in "1
·r111s means not onl\' con-
struction of special rOOrns but
crea1ion of a climate the user
"'ould consider hostile.
··11 seemed like it "'as going
lo be the answer," Suddjian
said of the law, hailed ta st
~·rar by supporters as a !ruly
('ffeclive rneans ol ~rcilllng I
drug abuse as a medical pro-
blem. 1101 poller problen1 I
"lt just isn't n·ork1ng and
we're lr}·ing to find ways of
getting this progra1n going,"
he added. "They'rr lOQking for
help and there. is no place
to go ...
He said he is turning lo
local community s e r vi re
groups for aid along \l'ith in·
dependent self-help d r ug
rehabilitation organiz~ ions.
There\ iOIMthing very
comforting about the Audi.
Its scats
•re designed by an
orthopedic surgeon.
-·-~ . -·--
. __ . ,, ~
·,. -i.
Test drive it today.
It's more of a car
than you think.
CHICK IVERSON
POASC:HE I AUDI
900 West r.o.&I Hlahwly I NfWP(Wt Buth
646-9391
ORANG( COUNT\"S AUTHOll:ll[O DCAlCR
Comin9 .May 23
Family Weekly
Do We Need More
Aircraft Carriers?
Congress considers building another nucleor-
powered Oottop. Senator Harry F. Byrd, Jr., cf
Virginia and Senator Walter F. Mondale, of
Minnesota d iscuss their opposing views.
• 'IN ' PR INTS-Cover feature examines m iniature
florals. folklore scenes and geometric patterns
\\'h1ch are I.he lates t trend in fabric prints.
e MIA'S SISTER -T isa Farro\v rind s being 1<1ia':1:
sis ter is making il difficult to build her own im·
age as an actress.
• FATIGUE FACTS -Science wants to know what
really makes us tired ... and \vhy.
All Cu 11ii11g Sa turday i11 the
I DAILY PILOT I
I
1 ·
I
Grandma had
to cook with
flames.
You don't in a
Medallion electric
kitchen.
Why put up with o ppress ive Apartment can also me"n fl;1mc-
kitchen heat c:.iu scd by open le~s electric heating. Clean heat.
flames! Or by-products of II It dot'sn 't dirty curt:lins.
combustion that dirty walls · And flamele ss air conJi ..
and windows? After <ll1 1 t he -tionin~. It cleans nnd cools
Electric Age is h ere. So arc -the air you br eathe.
Medalli on Elec tric Homes ; · -And flan1clcss waccr hc;J t·
and Apartments. Each includes a ing-without :i pilot, \Vithout a
modern, fl ameless, a ll ·elec.tric flue , without \V;1stcd :-.1):1c c. Fur-
lc itchcn . A Medallion Home or thcrni orc, ;:i Mcd:dlion rlon1c has
ample wiring for today's clectri ..
cal npplianccs, plus provision~
for the electrical wonders coming
up in the all-electric future.
Medallion Homes and Aport·
ments nre avnilablc in al l price
r~ngcc;-:.i nd clea rly .~err i ng the
trend. sa
SouthtJrn California Edison
' I
8 DAi l Y PI LOT
Bound for Senate
Tax R e for1n Bill
Clears Asse1nbly
SACRAMENTO IP. P)
Gov. Reagun 's billion dollar
tax reform plan was before
the Senate today a f t e r
Asscrnbly Republich1ns l·rack-
e d Dt'rnocratic opposition
whi ch had stalled th e tax
package on the Assembly floor
for three weeks.
be indirect property tax relier
through stale assumption of
a greater share of cou nty
1,1•elfare l'OSlS.
The plan also cuts the
Ous1 ness inventory tax by $146
n11!Jion in the th ird year of
op~rat1on.
A home owner with two
children and a $15,000 annual
income would find his total
yearly tax bill from all
sources down $90 under the
Hr agan plan.
Disruption.
In Sau Diego
En.ds Meet
2 Large G1·owers
Sign G1·ape Pact
F RESNO, Calif. (AP) -In
the first major breakthrough
in a five .year Ccilifornia table
grapes tabor dispute, two
large growers have agreed to
two-year contracts w i I h
Cesar Cha vei· un1oi1
"I felt it 's li1ne we stopped
thinking \Y]th our hearts an<l
started thinking with ou r
heads,'' one of the gro'A"l'rs.
Anthony Bianco, said sin1ply
or peace to the gtape indu s-
try '·
The contracts call for vine-
yard workers to receive ~l.7~
an hou r as a n1 rnimum wage,
plus a ~ccnt-Pl'r·boX incen-
111•e rail'. They also will ~et
12 cents an hour in fringe
benefits.
'l'hc ~ccond ye a r of thr
C'Ontrat t provides for a SI 90
minimum hourly "·age.
after Ole agreement 1,1•as an-1'~----'-"'--"----.
nounce<l Thur:;da~; "\\'e just 1 want some peace. I '\) .. ._.. OOlS 11
V BETTER
BL AC KBOAR D SC RAWL SAYS IT All AT FRESNO
Colleg' Still Tense After Violent Student Rampa91
J:Wt I~ Assembly VIClOry
came too late to get the
massive property tax relief
plan signed into law berore
the June 2 prirnary election .
the goverl"lor 's target date fur
Pnactment, said Assemblyman
William T Bagley. floor
strategisl for the Reagan plan . 3,000 Laud
Star Cridder
Flag Action
SAN DIEGO (AP / -Police
declared .11 City Co un ci l
meeting an unlawful assembly
to vacate the chambers after
The two signers -B1an<:o's
Bianco Fruit Corp. of Fresno
and the Dispoto Co. of Tularf'.
owned by Bruno Disporo -1 produced 80 million of lhe
718 million pounds of fresh i
grapes gro,vn in California in 1
ROSE
SHIELD
College Still Tense
Reagan had s ought
Assembly and Scnale approval
of t!1e tax reform prior to
lh<' priin<irv to <lbcouragf'
PH~~age nf Prop. 8. th(' ~l.J~
bi llion California Teachers
Assot iation t<1x plH n.
1969
a n I i -w a r demonstrators Chavez, "'ho organized a nationwide boycott of table
electcd"'a ''People's Council" grapes to gain union recognl-
KILLS INSECTS
AND FUN GUS
2ll Ol BOMB '00 and interrupled the council's lion , told a news conference
agenda. the contracts "'ere ··very ORANGE COAST SAN DIEGO (AP l -Bi!!
Fr es no St<1te Disruptions l'ontin 11 e
The Reai.:an 1:ix pbin 11·oul<l
inercase the slate sales tnx
by one cenl, ra ise income ta x-
es for those with inron1es over
$32.000 a year and impose
payroll 'A'ithholding or state
income taxes.
Pierson , the football player
who protected the U.S. Flag
again.-;t carnpus militants c l
San Diego Slate College, says
he has received at least 3,000
letters and lelegrams com-
mending his action.
1\1ayor f'rank Curran retcss-moderate as to terms." NURSERY
ed the meeting Thursday and But he said he was hopeful ' J80 w. Wilson
S J k P I Co1t1 Mf1• 646-3996 gt. ac earson, an1ong th ey would bring "a measure"------------'
FRESNO (Ai'l -Fre:-:no
State College is i11 lht thlrd
day of operations loday uod('r
a state of emergency oiftrr
a serie~ of disniptions.
The d isturbance~ beg a n
Tuesday nigh! with 1 hr
firebombing of 1he SI million
computer center and CQnt1nued
Thursday afternoon \\"Jth scal-
tered fire alarms that blockt'd
traffic oo surrounding slrrt'I~.
The alarn1s v;e.re actompa n·
ied by a sit-in by somr 300 stu-
dents-"'hite. ,\"rgro ;ind ~1cx
ican-Amerit"oi n.~ -111 <1 tonun-
uing protest against 1,1•hal !her
contended w;i s thr rctusal nf
college officioi l.~ tn r('h 1re sorne
professors 1n a 1111n11ri t1es pro--
gram.
Dist. All\'. \\'1lham Dal.v
said Virgil · Lewis. 18 . black
FSC student, has been charged
fMmally ""J\h firebo mbing.
a.rson and conspiracy in con-
nection vdth the computer lire.
Pil.ot Sou g 111
By Sun Diep.o
Search T(!Unt
EL ROSARIO, Me xico
IUPI) -T1A'O San Diego
Sheriff"s reserves ;ind ;i
bloodhound were flo\\'!l J1ert'
by hclicop!{'T Thursday to aid
111 the sc;1rch for a n11s~u1g
~!ud('nl pilol
Sarn Spr_v. 20. San U1rf!o
ha s been missing fur 10 da~ ~.
Hi s light plane was ap1>arcn1ly
blown off course ~1ay 13 while
tie "'as flying fr om San Diega
lo Et Centro.
The plane "·as ~een about
170 miles sout h nl :i!ln Diego
last Sundav and searchers
have con1bed !hf· H oi j a
Caliornia wildernt'~~ s 1 n t' e
then in hopr ot !1nd1 ni: thr
tollege freshman.
Spz-y·s :s1ngle-f'ng1nt p\:1111·
was slight!_\' dilmagc'<l . A not f'
found 1n it said tht• \"n11l h
was uninjured <inrl was 11 :11~
ing toward ll1r or'enn. 1!1rn
woold head nor1l1 :i)ong lh1·
beach .
\\'ednl'Sda\· ~carrlit•r -.; found
footprints on lhf' hr:1d1 i1';1d1n~
to a l<tri;l' l .JnyH11 I n
-.e.Arching Ilic 1 ·:.11~ 1111 Th11r~
<1a y, two-d <•~ olt1 lll"llll~ \l!"l"l'
found .
The search is ~chedult·d 10
continue Friday morn1n);!. "11!1
t/'le Air f orce. Coast t;uanJ,
and 1he San Dil'go Shenff"s
Dcpartn1ent participat ing.
A ~ccond t1111Uent 1 f1f'c~ pt.'l'~Or\
is .-;ought.
The Fresno County Board
of ~upervisors. rneet1ng in
t>ml'rgency sesSion . passed a
rt'solut1on conde1nn 1ng t he
dcs1ruc t1on and urg1i1g Iha!
uffenders be prosecuted.
Some 125 officers 1nl't a
gr o up o f a bout 800
deinonstrators who 111arl·hed
. '. '"'
. ,.
Poliec Car
~Fire d Upo n
FflES.\'0. Calif IA Pl -
tanipus police said a snipt!r
:shot v;as fired al a Fresno
Stale College police car as
the l'a1n pl1s continued under
a state of emergency after
11 :-:eriei; of d1srupt1ons tha t
lx'g<l n Tu{'-.da~
Thi• pohec ~:11d 1110 ofhl'l'rs
111•r(' ilrl'd upon 111 1he1r squad
1·ar lau• Thur.'-tl<1y n1ghl bul
nl·1ther 11<1 '. 1111ur .. d They ~icl
oni· ~hl)l 11 :i~ l!rrd from a
!1t·ld but no bullet was found
and 1here wen' no :-irrf'st~
The disturbances bega n with
!he fi rebombing Tuesday night
of !he $1 million CQmputer
e1·ntcr and contirlU{'d Thur!'l-
dav ;;if!c,rnoon with scattered
tirr aL1rn1" !h;.il b ! o e ke d
11".111 1<' 011 ~l1rr-ounding streets.
:~
Fo r St ud ents
RJVf:RSlUE 1AP) -The
t.:niversuv 01 C:ilifornia cam-
pus hl're· h;~~ 1hree student
bo~ty prcsld<'n1s
\l.1rgn 1'11b111
tnl'1!1b1.'r of lhe \Vnmr.n's
l .1ll1·r;111~111 Fron 1 :
Andr;ldt· J int·nobcr of the
\h'\1c:1n·An1t'ncan g r o u [1
\1J:;(Jl 1\. :.ind Pl'tt•r Gauthschi.
;111 ;1t·1111M 111 -;111dcn1 govcrn -
111cnt. ptr~t'nll>d tht•1nsc lves as
Ju111t r:1n1l1d;llt''( 1(1 thr s111denl
h111ll . Th1·,1111·n·1•l l·r1 ~·d pre~1-1
dt'n! h~ ;; 101(· of ;.7 p1•r1:1·n1 1
111 ~3 J>l'rccnt for To11y
,'i1~p1n-.~1 k11u1111 ii~ ~ 11bl•ral
•ni can1pus.
The thn·c -;aid 1twy w1!I rule
:1s 11 troika -bul ha1e not
~c11led nn cxacl div1~1vn of
du11c~.
The Audi
is breathtaking.
Its ventilation system
completely changes the
air every 30 seconds.
Test drive it today.
Ifs more of a ca r
than you think.
on the c.11npu s 1.:urporation
y<ird Thursd<iy morning, /\
fenc r separatftl the t w o
groups, howe ve r. and there
1v<1s no confrontation.
Fi fty-four officer::. 1no\·ccJ
unto the can1pus follo\\'1ng oc-
rupation of the n1ain adminis..
lra!ion bui lding. but the s1u-
/l{•nts left before anv arrests
were made. Eight officers re-
1no1ned 1:ua rd1ng the mean e11-
rr11nee
£<1rlit'r. c hargr s of
n1 a!ie1ot1s 1ni.~ch 1cf 1,1•cre filed
:1ga1nst sludcnl Uemonstra tors
•111d D:il y s;11d ot hers were
b1'1 ng crnisidcrcil .
The higher sales tax would
go into effect on Aug. I. and
withhol ding would start nex t
.Jan. I.
Other new laxe!i include a
one-half p~rcent increase in
the bank and corporations tax
and a cut in the oil depletion
allo'A·ance.
On the tax cut side. half
a billion dollars a year would
go directly to property tax
relief, about $90 million a year
1,1·ould go In state intomc lax
credits of $50 per person lo
renters, and $225 n1illion would
Pierson, vt'ho has signed a
tonlr<ict as a No. 12 drart
choice of the New York Jets,
said Thursday that the most
!.ouching letters are from Viet·
nam veterans and soldiers still
fighting in Southeast Asia .
The senior o f f e nsive
lineman. who has served in
the Navy. prevented about 150
::.!udcnts from lowering th ~
flag to half-staH on the t<1m ·
pus i\1:1.v 11
Small Truck
Owners!
GENERAL
TIRE
... for big loads
... and rough going!
2NEW I
Jumbo Sizes ~
General's NEW
JUMBO
Jet Commercial
10.16.5
10.16.5
6
8
45
60
2,330
2,750
JET AIR II WIDE OVALS
NYGEN 2 $2995 2 for $250~, for ·:~
Tire -$15.00
650 x 13 -Blackwall
'" WHITEWALLS
D 70x 14
about 15 plainc l ot h e d 1--
policemen in the chamber, .
said the near-capacity au-
dience had "ample time" to
leave. There were no arrests
or incidents.
About 50 college students
attended the meeting and lhe
council alto\\·ed one, Nelson
Carrick, 31, five minutes to
speak. He said war is "unjust,
immoral and suicidal."
Curran told the students it
is "not in our province to
sol ve all of these problems,
unfortunately ."
The students elected Carrick
I heir "rnayor" du ring a recess
<ind disrupted the meeting
when it re~111nftl .
BRAKE
RELINE
1 ~.
----~
.,
\
WHEEL BRAKES
WHEEL CYLINDERS
DRUMS RESURFACED
95
4-Ply Polyester
WHITEWALLS
MOST U.S. CA RS
915 x 15
900 x 15 2 for $590~:
KRAFTREADS USED TIRES
EXPERT
W.HEEL
ALIGNMENT
WHEEL
ALtNRMINT
& aALANCtNO
IS•YICll:
Pl•~ l lC. le,,, Ft•. Cr. T1r ~"" 1 •l!<•PPl~lt llrt1.
ANY SIZE LISTED
t..H1 IS t .Kt11 P.11•11 l .M• ti
J ,M • 11 1.ff• 11 7.JI r 11 1.1J r 11
La,ger al•H •Y•llabte •I •• ,,. coet.
Don Swedlund
Lots
Cott
of low
mlli!CU~··
5St!H
COMPLETE
CAR
CARE
Since 1959
Hours: 7:30
to 6:00 Daily
540-5710
646-5033
·-Ii
e,
n-
'' :e
" )()
. '
Fo1· The
Record
!Jleetings
l'lllDAT
M.. Vh!• M,,....,,, LO<lit, M1sonlc Temple, HC! l~lh SI. NcWl'Cr'I llHCh,
1 JO o.m.
O"ngt Co.ou llovtl """" M11on1 No. ISi, Hun!lnt1Tot0 llo•Cll ""''°"lc Ttmple. l1k1 •NI P1lrn, Hunllnoton lleach. 7:JO o.m. New1>0r! Amartur ll1dlo loclotv,
llecrta!lon llulkllng, llU l11i.o. Blvd,, N1~rr llHCh t o.m.
SCM.Jtn ,...,.,, P1ren!• wh"°"r Ptrlne••• Inc_, L1oun1 F1der11 51vlng1 1nd Loon, 210 Oc11n Av1., L1ount ktch, I p,m.
$.t.TUllDAV
(nrT•llt" !hislM:u rn.n,. Commlt1~t.
1'11lboa 1!11~ Clvb NitWPOrt t"cl!, I.JO 1.m,
Lice1ases
Marriage
"'Ill :II GlfEE"l lEll-SH ... llP, Mfcl!tel I'., 11, of ~~I l!lll SI . NewPOrt lleKh ~NI LIU'I E .• lt, Of 261 E, 21nd St., Cost1 Me•t .
llAOFOllO-CMA"IT LEll, i-tllllit "·• 71, ol "'61 Howtrd, Los A l1m1!01 trKI Wena~ D., '11, of 61~1 llHflon Av•" (VO"l !, 111.liSCH-AMBEllGUE V. Wllll1m II,,
11, Of 5601 Holl Av• .• Hun!lf'l!loO Boot/I •nd W•MI• L., 17, of 13691 01w1on, Gonion GrQve. TA llOR-MAUERHAN. Alvin l., <4,
1n<1 Snlrlev L,, J9, barh er 'Ill R~ltiph, Ca•ln Ml\a,
SCHELIN-SilLLEN BACK, Brue• 1' .. n. ,,( 16~1 Cad"n<lo• 1nd Chr rvl
H .. ?I. o! ?:>'Ill Fll\lntiin W•v , bio!h ~· CQ\IA Me'"· SAllOSTllOM MUNDT. llab .. r W, 41, ot 1U11 Re<l Hiii AV•., lu.iln •nd 01wn, J7, o! lSlJI Sr1nrard Lano, Hunlln11!an Benell. McOONA LO-FllATES, 0 1v\<l J.z. ?•, cl US•, M••rll, l uS!ln 1n<I l'IU l1
A., n . ot .. n Rut''" Clr<lt, Hun-
1jn11ton Br1~n. HAMMA--CASE. Rav W. ?J. of 61
M lln S!., Form!ngdolf, N.J , •nd
J ronn• L , 71. of 110 llnco1n SL, H•Jnrlngton Br1cll. (;ECK-CASEY, llus.1,il E , ?1, of
1.009 Oc••n "•• and Mt t• B , 1•. ot 111 l••n Sr , 11iorn or Se1r B•acn l ASSIO-W>llTE, Wllllom A., 17, af
JGI'' llln Sr ond Marianne, ;1, ~• ~ > llrh Sr . bioln ol Nrwoot! Br~cll. 5 .... ITH-CASTllO·AllAUJO, John S, il.
of JCI• Bt'kllY "••, '.\'•1!mln•t•r •nd "nq1l1 A , '1, DI tt•• Prn idlo
onvo, Lot "A'io".rr~ :rt
l':UlHEll FORO-CAMPBE LL, J~hn l , n. o• lOllS A1cftl Clrtle, Hunhn¥10"
8t1e11 1nd Jt1n A.. ll, cl 111 N. LICV. S1n11 An1.
ICOWQLCYll-C"SELLA, lllol>t!•! & , ~1,
or 6•1 Pol•lt l• Ltnt. SIMI """ i...i Otbior1n L , 1,, or 2'131 llel1ut n, I l oro. W IGHT-\IAN OE Gll YP, JO<' It., 11, ol , .. I K•r.., Circle, Hunllnell:ln
Bt1cn 1nd Joh~nn1. 1', ol '1• Svlllv•n, S~nle An1. M ILLA ~O-MU~PHY, rr 1n~ L, '4. o! 1~0 Pl•crntlA, Ntwi>0rl S•acn
•~d l In~• 0 . )i, O! JIJI Robtr1t
Orlv•. Or1no• f Olll:cMAN-CllE'T NEY, ~terlino M .
~I. •n~ Suun ". ii. bioTn or 611''> Ac•cl~, Cornnt d•I Ml'. Mt CAMMACl(-CLISS. Mlc~•tl II.,, ?D. I nd P•!rltln 0 , )D, t>Qlh ol IJ/J! low1 S1 , Wn!mln~1•• a~~c~1'j}LW~~~'fn'•1;, sri:,~.~. 0(0~11;
"'''"'" 1nd J1nlct E .• 11. or lllll Vlilaqr ot1v~. Tu<tl• F 1NLEY~OAIR, J1mt, 0 ,. lf, o! ?'II F T~rf• Fou•!h' lload. Cll!
t<;n, Colo., 1nd Ol1nt M., "· ot
t!U l!l l•c•bl•d Ave , Fovnt1in V1ll1y,
ALLEN -MAii.TH~, J1rrv l. ll. 111d {;~v~ E , n , biort. ol 11C6l Green St., Hunllno;rlOn l!l•Ath OLSON BEANSANG, Oou1l1< Ill., ?J. o• "° e 111P1 St . s~nt• Ar• I nd llllhtl~ M , :-<'. Of fl11 El V•ll• nve .. l'ounl•I~ 111111v
s ... NCHEZ-I NGUl ... NO, ~tul M . iO.
of ~ PP1111n, llfdondtt l!I••<~ '"~ M~d• N , 1', at lotlJ W1!nul SI ,
L"' Alt..,Ho•.,, ______ _
Dent la l\1oi ice.,
CfllllS
J•m•1 J. c ;1111. A~• n, ol \Qll"• 011•·
W••t , Hun'lnQ•on ll•"t~ llulo•n! •or ._.
~••" Ot l• ot d,..ln, M1v lt, Survlvod
by w•!o. [dn1 ; mrre ion•, J1mt•. Don
•ncl Pt!rl(~ c;11111: n•ol"•" Jonn r.1111.;
!~roe sl1!"" Proq' S•mP\.(ln, Ann Ct1)w·
••v 1nd M""' l<:ennt<:tv; 10 •rondthll~r•~. ~"""" .. 111 be ~~I~ Sl!u•d1v. 10 AM, ~mlth• C~•D•I lnttrm1n!. WO!!mlnoltf
M •..,cd11 P~•• Smll~• '!oo•!u•ry, QI.
•ttlor o. Hill
II°' •. '''"· l~li1 S•·•~•d~ L in~, Hun! in<;>IOI' P.e•cn Sur vlvl'!l bv wile, \llttlnl•:
son, Cl!trl•• w, Hill; d •uvMor, Judll~ I , .,~mt: ,.,,.,.1~. ll•nl•'Tl•n t nd Edlr~ Hill; tw~ l••l1r1, S~lr l•• lnot~'"""" ond co .. 1
lluricn; grondS<ln. (/\rl1ll1n O. Hum1.
\•r•lc1•, ~•!urd•Y• 1 PM, Ptd. '•mll~
ColDfllt l Fun011I Homf .
A RHUCKLE • SON
We1tcllff Merhl1ry
U7 E. 17th St., Costa !\ten
6'Hlll • BALTZ 1'110RTtJARIES
Coron• del t.lar OR I-HSI
C.ll Me1a Ml 1-UU • BELL BROADWAY
l\IORTUARY
UI Broadway, Co!lt1 Me11
LI 1-3413 • DILDAY BROTHERS
Huntington V1lley
l\forhlary
17111 Betcb Blvd.
Jluntlnl{ton fte1clt
••t.7771 • P AC1FIC VIEW
l\JEIUORIAL PA I:'\
Cemetery e Mortuary
Cb1ptl
3iOll Pacinc View Drive
Nt:wport Stach. Clllfonll .,,.t791
• PEEK t~A~fU. Y
CO!.ONIAL FUNERAL
JIOME
7801 8ol11 Ave.
WeatmJnrter m-iJU • SHEFFER MORTUARY
l.apn• Be.It'll 414-llU
Su t1emt11te OZ.flit • sr.flTllS' ~fORTIJAR Y a1 Mam s1.
llunllnrtoa ·Be1clll
$.)~
DAILY PILOT fl
County Bracing for Primary Election IJN IT E D
STATES
NAT IO NAL
BANK
SOUTH COAST PlAZA
BRANCH
By JACK BROBACK
Of ""' 0.Uf ..... , •11tt
SANT A ANA -County
Clerk William Sl John Thurs-
day outlined plans for handling
the June 2 primary election
whlch he predicts will be a
laborious process due to the
•·size of the ballot and the
inadequa!.e equipment" at
Election S e r v i c e s head-
quarters.
The county's Co\emc:in Vote
Tally System, Sl John ex-
plains, .. ...,.as purchased se1•en
years ago to handle a max-
iinum of 300,000 ballots. We
now ha1·e more than 550,000
registered voters in Orange
C-Ounty."
The county clerk expects
about .a 60 percent turnout
of \'Oler! based on a )>1Udy
of trends over the last IO
years or off.year prin1aries.
Although vote counting will
Court Hears
CSF Appeal
On Rioting
SANT A ANA -An appeal
by California st.ate College
lrustees for a permanent in-
junction against the alleged
riot activities at Cal Slate
Fullerton of a faculty
member, six students and 500
"John Does" will be heard
J Wle 4 in Superior Cou rt.
Presiding J udge \Villiam C.
Speirs set lhe new date Thu rs·
d.ay after it \\'as explained
that defense attorney P.lichael
C. Gerbosi \\'as engaged in
lhe Arthur League 1nurder
trial and \\'OUld be unable lo
leave those proceedings for
the length of time needed in
the trustees-students dispute.
Trustees name Dr. Stuart
Silvers, CSF philosophy pro-
fessor, and student..5 David
P.lacKowiak, Bruce C'tlurch,
Ted Schoenberger, Kim Kane!,
Jim Cleair and Doo Alavin
in U1eir complaint. They iden-
tify the group as be ing pr().
rninent in disturbances at lhe
college last Feb. 19 during
t1·hich the Let ters and Science
Building v.'as occupied by mili-
t:int students.
Sih·ers, the stduenl.3 named,
and 32 other per90lls y,'ho were
allegedly involved in the Cal
St.att: fracas race trials <ln
varying misden1eanor cha rges
in Fullerton 1nunici pal court.
Mesan I~accs
Trial Ove1·
Auto Deatl1
SA.\'TA ANA -A C<lsta
i\.lesa man 1orho \\'as charged
with manslaughter and dru nk-
en driving aFter his ca r alleged-
ly slruck and killed a 14-yrar-
old girl 111 a Westminster inter-
section has been ordered to
face a jury trial July l ln
Superior Court.
Judge James F. JudEe !et
thnt date for Harold Dean
Allen. 26. of 2226 Rutgers
Dri\'e, and schedul ed pretrial
argument on the issue for
June 2:i in his cour1.
Police booked Allen last
Christmas Eve after 1:ivesti-
galing an inciden t at Bolsa
and Jackson St-reel ~ in which
Diana Caroline Cien fuegos was
kil!ed and four -vear • old
Michael Sean Wrigtit was ser-
iously injured.
\\'itn~ said the girl had
the litUe boy seated on a
bicycle and was pu.IDing the
machine across the. crosswalk
v.·hen she was struck by a
car driven by Allen, Police
booked Allen on the listed
charges after subjeoUni him
to a IObriety ~.
Farm Bureau
Meeting Set
At Knott's
BUENA PARK -The !3rd
annual meeting and banq~t
of the Orange County Farm
Bureau will be held .at fl :30
p.m. Frklay at Knott's Berry
Farm.
Allan Grant, president or the
California Farm Bureau ~·ill
address the meeting which
will be held in the Garden
and Redwood Rooms a t
Knot.l's.
Officers and director1 for
the new ye1r will be elected
at ttie meeting and en-
tert.alnment will be provided
in the form of the Smog Cut--
ten from the Orange ch.apter
of the Society for th~
Encouragement of Barbershop
Quarte t Singing in America.
For furth er information, call
Bryant Chandler at {7li)
638-2.103
be slow -St John Is pro-
jecting final unoffic11:1I results
by noon June 3 -ballots
will be weU guardeJ
"Ag111n, total security wHI
be in force," the clerk sLat{'S,
"Local pol ice and sheriff's
deputies \\'ill guard ballots
during delivery (from J,022
precincts I and through proc-
essing. Delivery veh icles will
ha ve two-way radins, :md
armed deputi es "111 ride
shotgu n!"
He added th.it 2~ deputies
"'ill provide secur11y election
I
I
I
i
I
i
I • 15_
•
!
r11ght at Election Services, llll
E. Chea:lnu t SL. Santa Ana ,
There res ults "'ill be posted ,
liegin1uug at 10 p.rn. on laq~c
blackboards. tAbsentoo b:.11·
lots from 8 p.m. \.
St John puts special emphas is
on the special elettion Iv
determine a successor to the
1mexpired term of the late
Congressman James B. Utt
in the 35th Dist ric t A separate
ba llot. to be h11nd counted,
\\'ill be given \'Ol ers in the
d1slrit•t to decide betwee n
seven candidates.
Resulu will be telephoned 10
• special group at head-
quarters. "with emph:.isis on
s~d" fro1n the 440 county
pretoincts in !his tw1H:oun1 y
district. About 200 preerncts
are in coastal S<1n Dll'go Coun-
ty
Snap tallies on ot her critical
contests will be called in dur-
ing the night fron1 abou t 100
precincts geographiC'ally scaL-
1ered throughout the county
Included in the snap tally
\'oles are: Democratic, for
I Women's
Boat Shoes
Children's & Misses
Tennis Shoes
Thrifty
Diacount
Priced
'"11'111 •~J rnmfnrtthlr do ogr>•<! b<>I'
•'•"" """ cu•hmnt<I o.r<ba •P<><>_... m· ,,.. 1tr.1r dury Uf"r"", '>Pec.•1 dai~n'
'.c~~ ""!!·•lip. mo!Atd 110!n . In ':lrho•r. r-.. ,., 'f 1'1<lnl 81"'· ,;, ..... to 10. f LlhlOO• •1~lu /or •;>Orlf _, or bo.tini.
YOUR
CHOICE
K1dd1a ' ~ romr in rMrnn clu<~ ...,,•),
1uhbrr II)( ui>. ~,,.,)I<) 1:, !I'd or bl''
M11•a ' COIK fo dud;, l"''· \l;"IHIC r,r
Bloc~, ''"'" l ll1i lo ), fk,1h h.-. I '!
• u•h1~n '°"'I" 'Wllh •n:h 1ur rcnt1 011d • -.
,.d n.bttrr tola. E•orpuon•I n.Jue. •C 11. • low prier 1
governor, .Je~s L'nruli :1.1d
S;imut:I Yerly t u1· i; S .
Senator. George E. Brov .. 11 Jr,
Kenneth Hahn aud J ohn v.
'l\:nney,
anti Jiunrs \Vork.n1an.
\'oters "'1 11 be provided 11ew1 fast serv ice to detcrn1ine their1
election place or any other
question perllnent to the vote. NOW Ol"IN Republican· US. ~cnator,
incun1bent George Murphy
and Norton S11non.
Thost y,·ith a problem should
rail 834·5050. Attorneys from
the County Counsel's office
will be available to discw:s
le~al problems .
SATURDAYS
• •• MON.·THUlS.
fllDAYS
P.M.
10-5 P.M.
10-6 '·"'·
Non-Partisan -Fifth Di~lrict
Superv i~or , Al!on Allen, in-
cu111bc11!, Rona!d Cllllpers,
.s:a1·1ngs and loan executive,
and Robert \\Tilson . Cos ta
P.1f'sa mayor. Fourth Dist ric\
su1)e r1•isor. Gordon L\ishop,
To provide thi:i service a
battery or lelephone.s ha s been
in:ilalled at E:Jection Services.
Each operator \\'ill ha v e
complete microfil m inforn1a-
tion on each voter. I
17141140-5211. u-tM •:
S.. c-t P'I-. Cot•• M...
AUi. YIU f'r"llll.4111 .........
Clark., Burr \Vill iams, E. H. LEVAN
Nert time you netd ca.sua[ shoes check
Thrifty's out$tanding selection of
styles. We're not trying to rornpt"te
with sh~ d1a.ins-d111t u, ~xcept for
the value you receive for your money!
Compare the quality and the low dis·
count pricet-you·11 m • k-e Thrifty
hetdquarters for summer footwear.
Reg. $284 Women's
I ., ,.
I it;
I Tennis Shoes 1
• Cholc• o( Whit•, I la.cit or
Sk ipp•r llu• $ 94~ •full Cu1hlon ln1ol" wllh
A.tth Support•
Men's· Youths'· Boys'
Basketball Shoes
Thrifty
Di1tount
Priced
O•fnd 11rl• h•.•~""'11 ,i,,.,.,. w11h ~·f.,•e
1 ' Hl.,k •oHnn Ouik urrtn. 1ur!inn it•p 11Jf>. tot, mln. fn1u1e bu1k1n nth ru'h'''P> ~11h
• ,1h1m1!J I•<:> I< ind 'u•honn """Ii·. J.r. ''.•'I\~ .. ·11h.•h'r ~fr~•,., ... /~ 7 ,,, II,
} 11u1ht' H\ ) lu 6. In~ flora' fo l ~ lu 2
,_
···~·-' -
Cuu.il favori1e1 ,.;th ,
rugged, hovy duty (01·
ton <luck uppen •..
long y,·euing rubber
soles Srt cnmfortihle Ofl
)'.U• r~t ... itb 1htir fu ll
<..u~h1011 1ns,,k>lnd •r<h
~upporn. S11.~ ) Ill 'I.
WA~h de.n 111 ' 1•11)' in
1our ~·l3b1ng m:i.Uuoe.
Men's Casual
Boat Shoes
Tllrifty
Ditc0unt
Priced
$)88
float 1hon for tf>o mtn '" 11·,~ ful':•I~! l k..., Ii f,t rowr (~<U•I on~ •rNf'\' lif• ... .,11
•'•·I• •1'd <omlan . 1 h•>r M!Hp i ll<Jd lrio\ •
•nd Kllid romfnn AO •"l"~" O.r<it< r)
Nu7, Lodt o, Whi!t or f •ded 8ke l'I ""'
6Y: 10 11.
Women's Villager
Casual Sandals
Cool Nylon Mesh
ladies' Casual Shoes
Italian Style_
ladies' Strap Sandals
S!17 in 1tep •irh (u hi1111 thi1 SUtnm(f ~ w .. r
1p011J orfon ttn• mu b 1lip0111 for <Ol>I
1<)fflfot:1, Stu11I~ molded oola f<ir -'<:Of '"'
,Joo,, or nut! Y<;>u II ..,,nt • p1ir ;,, Hl;ad; ••
•~Oll'ttr in 1'1111ral. S11a ' 10 10. Thry'll 4ivc
JO<I ~ lhlo f'IW: ll:JOI><., ... wonh ol WOif:
lady Wilshire
Casual Slippers
$)98
ladies' Comfortable
Cotton Terry Slippers
f:"Dllli't INIC (If tnff elfin lfl
IM'Y rl11th rln t Jo~!ldtr in a
•in~. 1lif: mot! f"'fl'!Lu 11(11-
)ltn !'Oii nn find to ttl1:1 111. ~Q comfortablt 1fttt hlth w
,~,,,,,.,, llltll'. Grmi. fl!nk.
Yctko• °' Whitt. 'im )·9Yi·
99c ~
Y IS A DRUG AND DISCOUNT SIOll~
J e DAJL Y PILOT s Fnd.ay May 22 197 0
l'oar Money's ll'orth
OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List
Consumers Pay fo1· C1·ime ~"'"'"°:::=:"°::!!"'"""'"'"':>::nl NEW 'YO RK !API Thur,11tv'1 ,_1.11 ~ ·~ _"\.. ..-. ,..-_ N•w Yor~ Stack EitCN-P!"Ctl wllh
I"'°'"" et vol~,,...
,... ..
I-I Ni911 L•w C1oM C.I 1
,... ...
U.. J MitR le9 C._ 0...
NASO l1st1ngl for Thursday, May 21 , 1970 , • ..,1 Mt! C11t-1 Ohio •
tM11 Hi.ti a-ci-c111 '[;°~ei::""' 1
1
JI XI t !.Cl._ SQ• 'J :1"\ -:'o.,,~17I"" -~•GA~ I I J(I
,. 01, ·~ ,J_ '~:~~'Jb<t'J
-G-
By SVLV1A PORTER
The annual loss to :ill
bustness from crluu: 1.:s 11uw
estimated at $10 b1l11on And
l \l'Ould guess this ftgure to
be low
hit hardest Burglan and rob
bery losses in 1969 reached
•I 4 btlhon and of HH!t I
least $7~ m1lhon fell upOn
the small bus1ne~sman
of the 1960s can be contalnel.I
1n the 1970s I base llus belief 1 on the great st.ndes made Jn
the profess1ona!1zatiun o f
p1hce nstall ll1on of 1nodern
comrnun1cat1ons systems coo
:;truction of ne1\ faciht1es and
increased coopercil1on among
la1\ enforcement agencies
.... ... n•I VI ho .. M•IW .... 1.n1n• ti ......... m1!11Y t • m ....... NASO
Pfi,I• 61 M l 1111:1 ... o ••la~ .. f!llf111" 1111,,._ft I -!N"'91'1
WHO PICKS up lhe t<ib for
crime !Ind vlolenct" The
folloWlng mterv1ew \\Ith Louis
W N1ggeman president or
Fimnan s Fund Am"'ncan
Insurance Companies one of
the leading writers of C'nme
insurance ans\\ets that qucs
lion and more
PORTER What Bre the
prmctpal crimes a g a 1 n s t
business'
NIGGE \IAN Burglarv rob-
bery vandalism sh1"1phfl1ng
bad checks and ernplo} to theft
1nclud1ng embezzlement At
least 30 pt>rcent of all business:
failures Js the re sult Qf
employe dishonesty a n d
embezzlement a!nnf' c os t s
employers around $J b1H1on
a year
The small businessman is
LEGAL NOTICE
IUl'l'•tOlt COVl.T 0 1' THE
STATE Of' C ... Lll'OllN A l'OR
THIE COUNTY OF OllANC'OI!'
NO A ..01'
P ltOCl!IEDINO FOii CHANGI!' Of NAME
OtlOIEll TO SHOW (AUS£
Appj t l llon cl JACI{ I( A Tl 1N1
ELA NE SHIRLEY KATZ for Ch1t>W <>I N1me
WHEREAS JACIC IC.&Tl I N! ELAINE
SHll:ILEY KA.TI. "-"" 1 ~ 1 .,..!ll M
w 11'1 n.. clenc o1 1n11 c01Jrt tor ..,
.,,.Oer Chan• n11 <>e I onen ,..m~ ''"""
J ACK ltATZ """' ELA NE SH RLEY
ICATZ lo JA.CIC EUClE"IE CURTIS Ind
ELA NE SHIRLEY CURTS ri•s..ec1 "' •
•NI to d!inQe <>rtJlooMrs minor en dr1n 1
r11me. lrom VALERIE ANN KATZ I nd
BR .O.N ELLIOT ICATZ lo V.O.LERIE
llNN CUllT S I nd BRJ.t.N ELLIOT
CURTIS rt•~c! "'"'
IT 15 OROEREO 1na1 • ... JOl\!
ln1..,1,rK n !ne 1bc•~n• t!<!d m1Uer
l l>l>eo l>el<>rl h l C<>u I M t JO 1 m
on Jut\I J, 1' G In the COIJr room
<>I OeDartml'nl No 3 1 hr COii tl>Ollsr
" 70Q Weu e 11nrn 5 ttl San • Ana
Co lorn 1 """ • ow cou.., r 1n"
wh• !he "'"' ori ror cnan~ 0/ ,..me.
ll>ooJld not be • en!HI
I OH fER Isn t 1l true that
\1<' the consumers p 1y the
bill for all this' Don t )OU
pass Jt on to us '
N JGGE~fAN Sure you pay
and sure we pas<; it on The
insurance company is tem
poranly burdened 1111.h !he
1.:ost of crime but insu rance
eveatua!lv passes the cost on
to the businessman IJl the
form ol 1ncreased premiums
The businessman 1n turn
passes the cost on lo the con-
sumer via higher price.. You
pay in the end
I \\OU!d estimate that no
more than 10 percent of those
affected by cnm1nal acts are
adequale!y insur{'d It 1s no
secret 11\al some madrquately
insured businesses 1n high
cnme areas add to the price
of their merchandise to offset
tie IHgh l'QSt of shoplifting
and other forms of theft Thi s
1s another instance where the
bill for crime is passed
direofly to !he consumer
Added law enforcement and
1ud1c1al services made
necessary by crune also
create costs passed to the
consumer through taxes
PORTER Thanks f o r
saying 11 To go on do you
agree that the 1970s 11111 be
as violent as the 1960s'
NIGGEMAN I do not
agree The nation s crime rate
rooe at a s!o"er pace 1n 1969
than m 1968 although the
overall rate rose ll percent
.ind armed robbers became
a greoter menace
Lawlessness violence and
1n1usi.1ce ha\e always existed
but the soanng crime tale
And Of COUTSl' [ believe
that efforts by insurance <.'Om
pan1es to encoura~e
businessmen and home-ov.ncrs
lo take adequate steps to help
prevent crune y,1tJ be a great
help "'.,.1an
PORTER Does insurance .t.AA Enr
tend to reduce the insured !~,._pc°'~
busmessman s 1111l111gness lo!-.}~ ti.'
lake preeautton~ a g a 1 n s t :cmtne1~~
crune' !i~" HF
r-.;IGGEfl.1AN Yes Among Al>t " A colic businessmen to a significant ,. co L~e1 d "l ON egree there has been undue ... ed Ea
reliance upon 1n~urance in lieu !~:af"'
of prec11utions agn1nst cnme !me18~~~
This attitude discourages e:.: !ii: ~~Pr
pc11d1tu1es by the businessman !m c. .~· d
for protecl ve nieasure~ ! l''"G~
PORTER \Vhnl about peo-!~ lj'p ~
pie !Jke nH!OJ ,11."~eu~ B
NfGGt;MA.N You too Al so :~~;n1,;,
I I A <>•n M nv1t1ng t le cnmuw aie Are1e'M .,,
homeowners who leave their !.~ow 0:;
homes open while away or ~o;cga 001 automobile owners v.ho leave :~ ~o ~'
their cars unlocked with keys ~:~,P~ n•
1n view s ...... c~
PORTER What are you ~!u:;., P
bou hi 81Y P'S doing a t t s' BPechm
' '" " •
' •• • ' " " '. •
NIGGE l\1A N It 1s the Jn ::~'i.
d1v1duat s respons1b1hty to :: -" H~~
safeguard his perSOflal belong ~e ~P}~:,
mgs whether 1l be his home : 0(1\r""'
or his business As a ma1or :~<t'e ~\
wn!er of crime insurance we :g,,•1h:p c
have attempted lo a 1 d 1100, AH
bustness1nen and homeo11ners ~oJd c~~
througl1 a Loss Prevention ~ :"'"sc~
Program Crime can be b!O(k ~ ~n ~
ed lo a considerable extent 8~~1:~.11•
tf )O u prepare a dclen.se for g c""P 5 16
JI Jn ad\an1.:e f,.,,, ~s ...
C nen M C finM B
IT IS FURTHER ORDEllED lhtll 1
CoPY ol lh 1 ore1.,. ro •how c1u.., ~
Pub •hK n lht 0 1 y Pl o1 I n1wsp11>e
o Gen.r1I C fCll fl on Prln od In 1111!
Ct>llnl• of Or1n9' Ci t lorn e Of>CI 1 Wff~ lor lour JUCCfU ~I W!'f~I pr ot
Ip rne ell 1 u l for heir n• on tn1 ~· M 01 ft! May lt lt111
R.t.YMOND THOMPSON
Jud" ol nr Suoor ,... '°"1rt
P'LVNICITT .I PLVNICETT
#ltlor,..y1 ol Law
.,2 Olfv1 AY-t P o k t tit
Mu"11,..1.., •••en C1l tor .. 11 flMI
Ttl...,_ 1114) S3' JO• 1r Jl6 •111
#lrtw~1 I« Pttl! o"'''
Decorate by Nu111bers
With Wall Mm·al Kits
C~nr~d
t"bD SOH
C•P n A
(APT<" c~ Or>' " C• GD ( • ' Nr. Cb•ll c~o
C•n P~ C•~ VP5 r"~' ~A c~. ~'~
Publl•hf'CI Or"""' Co.ost DI • P lot
Moy n 1' tr>O Juno S 1 "O , •• 10
LEGAL NOTICE
T srin
I UPlllttOll COUltT Of TH£
ST .. Tl O" (.O.LlllOllN1.0. "OJI
Trtl COUNTY Oii 01 .. NGI
No .0. 4111-1
f,rOTtCll 0 ' ltlAlllNG 0' P !TITIOll
f Otl AN 0 II 0 I ti ollPPOINTING
TIUSTllll
Es 1!t ol THOMAS C H.O.tllOY a•1
1 HOMAS Cl FFO~D H.O.lllDY O~tHJf<I
l'jQTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN !ht
M .. RY H .. R DY RE ESE ••
Adn 'li•t•.i ~ w lh lh.-w •nn•••d o
tM t t>ove tn!ll ft! es lie ""' fl oo
• P<t" I H I"" tor ... ordN IPPCln "'
1he pet t °"" '' T uslee lo I I I~ "~tine• c•u••d bv '"" OK nt nn o1
tho <>e ..,.. d•• 9n1 od n rr.o w ! to
.. ct •• T u~ ff r•ler1nc1 ID wh ch
h mt<le !0< fo I~..-"" CU A • ""'
I 11 !h .. 1~ ""d P.OC~ o f'lel nf
lht Mm• n11 bffn set tor Junr J
')0. • I JO 1 m In he c01Jr.,oom
., OeDar me'll No J " •• d court
• 100 C v c CrMK Or v~ Wtst In
fh• CH" ot S1nt1 .t.n1 (II lorn 1
Ct IO M1v JO. 1t70
W E ST JQHl'j
Couniv c • i. THOMAS J JIEFFIEllS Jlt
'JU ltlnetulv .0.¥,..UI
M111t'"" Ct ... "I '1'21
T1 nut 21J->11•
#ilf-1' tw .O.dmlfthfrl!r ~
Pull! sked 0 '"'" Cm•I M1• 11 lJ 1' 19!0 DI~ P lot
'H-10
LEGAL NOT ICE
NOTICE Of PUil C. "Et R NIO
NOT CE ~ H[llEIY C. VEN I• I
<>• 1Url dov June 1 !ID. • I 001
P M " II>• (QI nc C~1m1>et' C •
Ho 01'!» ~ • e ••t•U~ f1>un • n Vn ••
C1l lorn o lnr C"' Cou~r wll Mou•
<>ub C h•o "O 0" • 1 l<>•t<I BUOC.E
l<>r h• F tO Y~• •10 II
M1y 1'(1 90
c TY cou•c L
Ct Y OF ~OUNl t fl! V•Ll[Y
M~ • E Cl>• C C" ~
P It) 1~~d 0 I nto Co111 Ot IY P o! '~•1ll90 •••10
LEGA L. /\OTICE
NOTICf Of PUil C l'!Ellt'"G
A one-of a kind manufac
tunng firm has opened a pro-
duclion plant and offices 1n
Fountain Vallev Design ing
ma nu facturing and
distributing p 11 1 n t by
numbers wall murals to a
national market J\1uraln1asl
ers Inc 1s somewhat unique
1n the home decorator market
llarry E Winchell pres1
deot and Paul R Lane vice
•) -Join Finn
H Neil Prouse and Jarncs
F S1n1th have become
associated w 1th Mitc.:hun1
Jones & Ten1p/elnn Inc
members of the Ne1v York
Stock Exchange
The t"o new reg1slt red
representat11es \\Ill be JocatcJ
1n th e investment firms
Laguna Beach officc Prouse
resides in Los Alamitos wlule
the Srruths reside 1n Laguna
Beach
6 97'Yo TAX FREE
Oualtty (If It "I M~n ( P•I ••ntl•
' •'• •n Ou•I ty Ct .,. tit lt,.t11
L m ttd oft• Int
'"" •<I L•r M Gtr ""'"" illrn~IO.,t & w,...., Mtmph If "'Y"
'H-l1'0
fle~uce )'Clllfl
1Y70 i11cCJme
19xes !
Ch • 0 C~m L•o ("r nrt C~•• Ut
C" A A.I
president £6r operritions have
spent three years 11 markel
resea rch and de\clopment or
this new product
c~. ~• s ~~
r "' ,J ( 1;><1• '
Our line 0£ do-II yoursr tl
n1urals ;ippetils lo all age
groups says \\ 1nchcll and
v.e offer twenty t"o nc"
de~1gns 111 fifty on ec color
selections
Ctr U A :n (I I U B :10
f ~ I n~ 11 c" ~ " 7 r • "" ( " M• r ~O"O
Clow CD (O• !)
(O<M (o
Co'"' E Co n F Co~n S r ro..,c• tom C' (" '" r:. Com ,,
ro" " Cam P • t"on>o A (mo C.,
'mo rmo l•
CM •
• • ' '
The 1nurals a re a1a1Jable
Jn J • 6 9 11nd 12 SlZCS
Al! instructions pa 1 n t s
brushl!s a id exact size outline
are fun11shcd in tie mural u
D1 str1bu101 s and dealers are
now being named
Con Doc~ 7 ro"! d
CdM Man
ron ~~ r0<>or L ro o S
00 ' c •• r • Mn!
( ~· M~ r ~ Fn c °' Cn (" llt " .. r,o"' c 0•~ v M
0 " D Q n• " Gr~ 0~!• n D fl••, Fd n • ., M • l• na ~· ~
Jack Coulter has been nam g;~~ ~~
Ori (•nT Cd vice president or Carlsberg !)rt I~
F1n11nc1al Corp 11 v;as an g::,.:"'r
nounced bv Arthur \\ g ':._m ~
Carlsberg president g.,~t CM
Coulter JOln" Cnrlsbcrg ;"Jrtcr g~.: ;';1;~
having Sl'T\ ed ns president gn;..; zn
and ownt'r or \\rnc;-n Corp R nlo.n"D
of P il~il~ta a Jc11der 1n !he ~~Q~~ ...
fir ( s1 dcn\\nl cir <'lopt>ts E• s
r.( t d his farni lv J11 e r~ ~ s~b
Jli Jl ld~ll\1;ir ~d;~B•
c ' • He heads up !he C11 ]<;berg r N c-
subs11h11ry kno"n as l11co1nc ~ < 0 ::;, ..
•
Properties "h1ch has lhc ~ ti.~ 1~ i1
respons1bih!tes of acqu1s1lton '--"-M-"-'--'-'
and develop1nen1 of income
producing propcr\1 e<; r 0 r
---
. " ,. !. ?$
1• 25 " .
' ' " " " " '
' '
' " ' ,.
" • •
P 11111'fl1j!1ducl~'l'SO"'"' tr•~ncS(l\of
I ~ti I~•~!"'""
(~I"~ •c 2'2°, OJI Drpt>Jotn I ""Pi CJo11
CF C Rohen ~ Gets
lOl CE IS HfqE8Y Cl VEN 1~3
llll! Pon" n1 Comm" ori of t,,., ( IY
" NowPO t 6••c~ .,. "°"' • 1111b r
h••r n• on me •011 c• en or lht~
tl•Y P1r1t nc ta • U!f. <>r r m t
No lql on ore,,.. • loc;9 e<1 1 100
f. C<>111! H"'• N,w_.I 8c&c.n c~ 1
•o ""'m I all»'-lier< Ill Con1>H_ on
.. 1 n 1 t>oal I•~"'"•• !1c llv
NOTICE 1$ HEREBY l'URTtlEI!
GVEN lh•I 1•0 l>llDc h!c1 n1 wl
~ l>lld on 1111! • n d~• at Ju,..
lool h t •ot•ll•• I l•lt •t1l10 oe
•l llllOP•l •I fltll a •5
•• •lt4<0tl •1 •llPL1t111•• l •ttl • •tt•llll ll ...
Gold en Weol Certif it· a le
ltlO. 11 tllf 1oo11 al I 00 P M n
11>1 Coun< I Ch1motr1 ot ,II, Ne,._
l t1cn CllV H~ I t i wn1cn Im• 3n!l
,.11ce 1nv -11 "'""" nit tllllCI fr'I• ,_., Ind ~ M8 11 ll>c<..,.. °"" R A<I« "'"" S«rert •
NeWl>O't BtK~ Cl •
P l1n11 n~ Comm >~lon
Publllhlel 0 1n111 Co.1 Oo
M1• ti ltlD . •' .. 0
• ..... 9 ...
frilt:ntfllt01UU ~"""'"#'!' (,,or1,
l51(11t•lt '0 •11 1 11
J I I t
C.e •l o •••~ Col I 1 1 ,ll
--------
Jlecor<l Se t
Golden \Vest A1rh1u!s sel
ne~ system boarding record~
for the -weekend ~1ay 15 17
carrying 4 117 passengers ac
cording lo Dudlev F J\hlle1
~ xecutive vice prC'~1den1
Atcounhng for h ea v y
passe11 ~cr load~ y,ere 500
I ions Club members who Oew
to Catalma l~land for their
r.on\enllo11 Jn addition to
C::i!nl1na traffic to Disneyland
ha~ increased Judged bv the
nurnher of ram1 hes flyi ng
r.olden \Vest to Fullerton a11d
Santa Ana for transfer~ to
Disneyland
Earnings Told
E11m1ngs of The Coca-Cola
Co fnr th<' first quarter of
J9i0 \\l.'te the highest of a11y
first quarter 111 the company s
h1s1ory President J Paul
Austin nn nouncl'd foll o\\lng a
mecling of the Board of D1rP.<'
tors
Austin s111d net prof t for
Uie fJrst Quar1er after pro
\ 1s1nn for r<'SCt\ cs taxes an(!
01 her chnr l{l s 11 BS $21i 862 892
or 47 cent~ ~r sharf' 1111
1ncrea~~ of 12 )>f'rcent over
ll 1 $23 /IDB 21 ! nr 42 ttnts
a shRrP t!ilrned 1n the first
quarter or 1969
Dalalron
Dall' E Bevard hns been
na inctl 1 •t:e president F 1nance
of Ontatron Inc a manu£ac
l\fUTUAL
FUNDS
-A-en M SPP
Ch MI SP !If 19 I< 11 1••-• ~mU:o 1)) l c11Pnwr 1 1 ~U ,u,.~ ~'?=1:CnHf'cl UP )II )I .,. .. 1 CnJIP tJNW ~ J l 11 11;,,~1 CP\DCFu I I~
ti l? 31 :n -• G1mS u1 ~
I 6 J $! 'f:n$<1fll0 lO 15 > 1'> 15\~ ... !Ill ~"flt ..
•3'11-1/o n-r ll Xll •1 u. n v. l , _ 10 nr 1 c11 p11
11 1'1 'I 1 I> 11'U0.1> 1 XI •t •« ,.,,, I V, -• •r oc:k 10
'
n, ,','•• 9'\o ''-" + • Cl>r• c•l>f.lur •l 20 ie'O -, Cnr1 Pfl>fi
-1 11 l< 1• -J g11ewl • Ind
1
3 1t. i17~ :~ + I" ~:~1~." ·~ i? l>.O '" I•-1 Chrom1 ~ ~G 61 1S U -'• f\Aln• I Sle l f )I t JSlo 3B> -\to Chno1lrr Ml JI t . 9 9 -1'1Cnn8el 1ol0 11' l'J I J~l'I 15111 -•• ClnnGE Isa
1 lotli lot lQI -2 ClnGE pl• Ii
IU •-llo ·~ .-.,. 11 Cnn Mii t4(1
1st n :io., , -1, AmO 60!>
JI JI Jllo + :i. AT on !.61l 51111• 1 , n A.To ~flloll fJOO •.I ~ d.'i -1 .... Gon8HK S.
1 00 Jl -So4t 54-li t ... Gnllblf.. lllr ll 16 1 loi., 16 't 1 ~, (In GE !If '
I 16 ~' 111 O ( Tfln I IO
11 l ""' 1111 -... c tie•~·( 110 n 21. 1J>o l -·r~c., cvp,11 11~ ~. ~ ~--'Cry Inv !O •> n. I• 1 u ... _,,, cu.in• pt e1
O 1911 19 , JI,_ '• CHV!n pll J I
Jo..r 3' JJ • J)\, -H nOYMfn I
61 JI/ 36 ».,-I f ft E« J.O
II l6'• 3' • l6 • -"" ~~Ot.nl ~!1
I 66'lo '"'"• lo\"' -I nl'I •D 1~
JI 1 1 /,_ -I (I• SI J 40 l7 :t7 JO 1 lO ' -1 Ca •£11 I 111 1 ll l1•1 l/1 -•0Cl11t OU 00 Jr, n ; l: , l' , I ..i ~=~~1i11111 ~ ~
Jt 11 > 11 1 '') 1" •1 Cl<>!"OX JOp 11•••2•~210 c1~tPe190 "'lJ°" U "' 111 -C~l!P pll I 3$ lO 3' Cfl!.\ f <>I 50 5t J9 1 19 19'\'o -'• (N.0. pl Al 10
101 o S 6 Co;o>l ~I G•• 90 U 14 U"o -'C>I)...,, Pl t 1 l\\1 Ii I II I -• CocaCPl I ..
Ii Sil 51 • ~•-1 •cacae1 8 1:10 Jn\ 2i~ tu =::co 1 '· " !J ..... 11 I ,. ..... -~I Co Ins A~ 1 lO\~ 11"' )l\IJ _ CoUl~sR :ro~
102 20V. 10 ~ + Cololnhl l oo
11 """ 4 !'o .,\.\ + Colo -p1 • 141 36 J• J6 +2 Con Ind 1
159 ll 71 71'4 -Coll " pU 25 61 ~ t 9~ -Coll In 111 60 US 31 JOo Jl'o+~CBS l •OD I•~ 7"/ 10, :1011 -1 (8S p "j'' llo ll\-.,CuluGa1 1611 o ~. 110 1••-•CouP c! 30e ?> 1o:i., n 4 i o..., c~ ~oOh /6 !I 13 13 1J -1 CombEn 1 •0
33 19 Jt 19 Comb Eno "' 1 J~ 1~ 11 Co bE 1>l17ll
l'?? 71~ 'S'> 7.'i>.I. -I Com So v '° 11 ll 'a ~ Cam5ol Pl90
" ,, • " '"' ~ • ,.
" " • .. • " ' ' '" • • 1i~ '" " " " • " ' l ..
" ..
' " "' ' . • ~ .. ~· ..
" ' " ' " '"
:10:'1 'Q • iO ~ ComwEd 1 'O 7 6 6V.-~C,,wEp11•2 1 , • + l•com .. o 6.a J{~ 2J I ?•. + • Com1>111 Sci "/9 • 19 21'\/. -... corn,.,, to l<t • -1 CO<le Ml s 1 s~ , ~! SI -t c...,r1(C1> 60 31 JJ l ... -'ll C011E<11 l!O ?S '\ 1\ • C0<1£d 1 Pl 6
1 lO IO CanEd ' pt J 31 Sl S o -1ConEptC<6S t1 1' 10 • -3 ConFood I JO J )Clo XI • -1'-ConFd pt•»
I• I•• '"+ ,c...,FreoM I J7 1 Ji n:i. -V. Con L••• ng
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l t 70
Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Stoek Leaders
l\IOST SHARES
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Stocks Driven
Sl1arply Lowe1~
NEW YORK (UPI)-Traders d1s11Jus1oned and
den1ora!Jzed by the steady bahage of gloomy news
on the slaie of the economy drove stock s sharply
lower Thursday 1n heavy trading
The UPI marketw1de indicator was off 2 48 per·
cent on 1 603 issues on the tape Declines over-
v.helmed ad vances I 20 1 to 219
The OO\li Jones 1ndustr1al average of 30 seiected
blue chips showed a lo.ss of 11 43 al 665 12 near the
close its Jov,1est level since March 1 1963 when it
f1 i1shed at 659 72
Turnover or around 16 nullion shares compar·
cd \Vtth 13 020 000 shares Wednesday
A.mong 1he day s mo st active issues were Bax
t<:r Laboratories Occidental Petroleum Bnt1sh
J)ct1oleum Telex Corp International Nickel and
Amencan Telephone Losses of a pouit or more
cropped up 1n most major stock groups
Prices near the close of the day s most active
stocks included Occidental Petroleum of1 about
I 1/8 on 190 000 shares Telex Corp 3/8 lower on
184 200 shares /\mencan Telephone 4/8 lower on
111 400 shares (ex-d1v1dend) Unvers1ty Comput
ing up 1/4 on 78 200 shares and International Tele-
phone down 1 7/8 on 74 300 shHres
P rices also decltned ln stepped up trading on
the An1er1can Stock Exc hanJ!e
Uil.L Inc l UARCO I D 82.'c'f..J l1ln
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Co1nplete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
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J ! DA.U,, Y PILOT
Britain's Wilson Capitalizes Switch Fortunes on 0
·Ill
l!OlfOll"\ "'0'1f' Prim• Mon"
l•r H•fOlll WHloOll U~!CI thr <loO!t tot
r\ew atlf)'lol\ -·I eletllOt.. I<"
Ju,,. 1t. HI t;~fCI II on ll>o U •I\
ol tn amtr!"' re.,r•1tl ot n•1 l •CIO'
P•rl""• 1o<·t11N• 011""11 1nr µ.>I ""'°' .._..,. •"" " "" ~·m· IN• l'•Y\ .... ••II Doc 1t1r t"" llr•I•
1!11 "'"'""' """"''' •n h•~ll)f"t In ••fYt mroe ton•eCuhYr ,,...m, c;t
oultr I<> thf tolklw•"~ a;•utt<h.
lJ p ! CO"e\pa-~! JD>tl'h W.
C:.ro11 .... ,Y,H '"' '""""" In Wll• '"'""' POlltlct! lorh.i""'>
By JOSEPH W. BRIGG
LONDON <UPI) -A bare
IS months ago the BriLish
Labor party looked 1Jk£' a
political \1'riteoff. H a r o I d
\Yi\son was deep in the na-
\1ona1 doghouse. rated in opin·
ior1 poll~ as Britain"<; 111 n :.1
unpopular prin1e n1 i n I s l e r
since \Vorld \V ar 11
The t'on:.l'"rvali1 1·.s w f' r r
1trubb ing L;1bor in el'er)' lo<·at
i.:ovcrnrnenl elccl1011 a n d
pa r I 1<1 rnenl;1r.v hy-e\et \i-0n
(Special election) and had an
ahnost un~IJevable 27 percent
lead in the opinion polls. Their
leader Ed11·ard Heath. seemed
we!l on his way lo No. 10
Do1vning SL ns Brila1n\ next
pri111e rnint~ler. ~
Yel in thre1· n1unths. the
\\'hole pi cture has changed in
one ol thr n1ost ~laggering
fhpflops in !lri1b h µol1tical
history.
Bnton·s accusloru('d for
more t h a n tv.·o-and-a-half
.vears to seeing Labor laggi ng
ignominiously in poll ratings.
learned to their ama1.en1ent
that \Vilson and his party had
~laged an apparent co1neback
of historic proportions.
One after the other, all fi ve
of Britain's nationally con·
1Jucled polls pushed Labor into
!he lead over the
Consen'Uli\'eS.
ln~tead or bein g decimated
in thr next gener;il elec:tio11,
ii looked like Labor would
bt· returning to power for ''
N cw Diabetes
Not Druo ~
AI,va ys Good
\\'ASlllNGTON !1\Pl -A
study or patients with mild
diabetes indicntes ir thev lake
the most "·idel y used an-
1111iabellt pills for more than
three years they art> morr
likely lo die prema turely lhan
if they had taken insulin or
no medication at all, \he
\Vashing\on Post said in its
Th ursday editions
The drug. tolbutan1ide, i ~
taken every day by an
estimated 800,000 Americans
I () co ntrol blood sug11r. the
Post saJd. The Upjohn Co.
1s perhaps the largest pro--
1Jucrr of the drug in the United
States. mnrketing 1t under the
name Orinase.
The study. coortJ111a ted by
the University of ~1nryland.
"\\"as !hr biggest. n1 -0 s t
!iophi~ticated and probably The
longest study or diabetics e1'i'r
rn ade. ·• the Post said
··Thr studv -"h1ch the
manufacturer of thr. 1:1blets
and some re ~e;i r chers
<:h;illenge -suggrsts, on a
malhematical basis. that ill
least 11.000 users ()I the drug
die-prernaturelv l'\'erv year
111 thl' Uni!ed S1.1tes ·a10ne:·
Ill<' l'li.'>1 .,:11d
Tolhulanudr i~ n1us1 pf,
f1 «'ll\(' 111 J1ght1ng diabclt>s
111nnng l'ltkrly. 01·rr\\"<'l)!ht pa-
lu·nl s wl111 h;11•t' ;i n1ild forin
CJJ Ill(' 111$1':.IS{'
Thr nl'\\""!)Hpl'r 'aal !I had
-0bta1ned a cuµy of !he rl'pnrt
result ing lron1 the :ilud y.
\\"hich bclo(an 10 y1•ars .ago and
11·as financed ...,·i th $7 million
in grants fr-0m !he Nation;1\
lnstilute of Arlhritis and
~1etabolic Diseases.
Th<' Po~! sa id thl' reporl
disc losed the following fin·
ding s:
-Some 800 pa!1ents were
rand-Om ly assigned to 0111· of
four groups -lhO!lE' g1vf'n
lolbutamide, lhos!.! g11·en a fix ·
ed amount of insulin, those
given a varying dosage of in-
!';Ulin and those given ;1
pla~bo. or fake pill.
-During 1he first !hrC't'
years of testing. death r a1('~
11·ere about equ<rl. Bui afler
three year!I death rales ln·
c reased sharply among the pa-
tienl..s given tolbutamide.
-At the end of eight years
death rat.es from diseases -0f
the heart and bloodways were
12.7 percenl in the tolbutamide
group compared to 4.9 percent
in the placebo group.
-Also, at the: end of eight
years, morlahly rates from
all causes i n c I u d i n g
cardiovascular dista!les. \.\"ere
about 50 percent higher 1n
!he tolbulamide gt00p, whicn
had a 14 .7 percent rale, than
In the placebo group. whett
the rate was 10.2 percent. th;s
dlllerence is the basis for the
m11them1tical p r oject in-
dicating al least 8,000 excess
deaths yearly on tolbulamide.
-The death rales for lhe
h1 o insulin groups w r r e
!>1 tnil~r to those for the
placebo irOOp.
1hird consec·ulive tcnn 11 11h
.i reduced but ... irlJ con1furlablt·
1na1onty, Wil.~u \\OUld 1.14' 1he
first prinlf' m1n1slt'r u1 B1111~!1
hislctry lo !!t•rve t!Jl"t•f' 1•011°
.st'cut ivc l l'rnl.~.
Ha· b!en k prospeti of another
/1vr hungry years in op-
po..;1l1m1.
before l~e disillusiooed and elec11011:> that is bOlhering Labor took ll on lhc chin. first Linic since 1967 tim1sl, Sa}'S he alwa}'s C'X·
.angry Tories tun1ed and tore poht1cal le<tders. There: was a short·lived II is un this volatility lhill P..'t led lo bouncr b<tck ou t
Heath to pieces puhtical ly. At the last general electiQn comeb:.1ck at lhe end of I~ the Conserv1.1t1ves still are pin-of :111.• dogh!'JU~e and win a
1·his was lhc atmosphere Jn in March. 1966, Wilson wa~ r(')llowed by a renewed slump ning U1eir hopes of con1in g U11n1 lCl'nl when tlle tin1e llt•:Hh, actuslonu·d to being
tn·:itl·d al hunil' f!1){! abroad
<is li r·1tau1·~ next J) r i n1 e
rn lnistl'r. found !11rnseJr -if
the !JOils and other onieus
werr to IJI;' believed -In
llir likely role ol a 1wcrlin1r
loser.
wh1i·h \Vilson de1·ided to cas.h a second term on a Laborlle in mid·l969 . IJa(·k from behind and 1·1.1nu'
in swiftl y and call a genl'r:il l:111ds l1de It g;1vt' hirn a 97· Last fa ll Labor narrowed snatching victory out of a p· lits c·xphiria tion is that thr
The (•onfult·nct• u( I \1 •' l'IC'cl1un for ,June 18 white lll•' scat n1ajority In p3rlian1ent. lht• Conservative lead to only parently inevilable de(eat. voters ti<J\t' been ii1ipressed
goi ng w;is good and bc lort· Yet by the end of 1966 al>oul 2 11~ percent. dropped The question now beinc ask-by Br1l111n's recent econon1ic
the vol;Jtilt• British voters Labor's popularity was on the b:1ck again to I~ pei'cenl ed is: 1•ihal is the explanation rccovt•ry afll'r yecrrs <1 s "Thr Con.ses·1•ativcs U1;ll the~· woul d
lvm1 Britain's Jll'X t llOvcrn-
rnen! collapSi'd .1 I 1n u s I
overnight 1n stunnt'd d 1:;bclli>f.
The party, 'A11ich ev1·n uu!
of office tends to regard itself
as Britain's '"natural" govcr11-
1ncnt party, suddt>n!y fa1·cd
switched again. ~kids. All through 1967 and behind the Conservatives and for this 1vild series or swings Sick ~lan of E:urope." He
It is the wl~lilily and un · the first half -0f 1968 the U1en, early in 1970, began the between the two ma j o r thinks the voters also haYe
British polit ical "' r i t e rs
began speculalmg just how
lung II wou ld be after another
Labonte election victory
predictability of the yoters as party's opinion poll ratings slow climb th.at clooed the parties"! No oru,> has come corne around to agreeing with
indicated both by opi1uon wlls plummeled. ln every local gap and finally pushed the up with any ve ry satisfactory Labor's slogan for the 1966
and parliamentary by-elec· govern1ncnt e.lection a n d pa rt y a head of I h e explanations. general election • • L a b 0 r
t1oos and local government pa r I 1amenlary by-election Conservatives in April for the. Wilson, a self.professed Govemn1ent Really Works.'' illlliiiliiliiiliiiiiliiiliiiiiliiiliiiiiliiiliii~liiiiiiiiilii~~~~
PLASTIC
TRASH
CAN
297
Whtn iny nibbi.lt guy1 bounc. tbi1. th•
1.ar1 run do""n lh•ir •Y••· l! won'I fllll.
won·1 d•nt. won·1 corrod•. No'll'. whal lrind
of o 1r1:11h con Is that anyho'll'?
ROLLEZY
HARD
EDGER
167
•
N-''T\t'4A.&.. sau.s cw.Ar
(tt•it ..
DOUBLE
HIBACHI
511
You c:mi. slid thl• ii:i the trunk ond t<i:lr• it
cn1 a picnic ot lo 1be beoch. GrMll In th•
bock yard or if you 11'1'• In cu1 opczrtar.•nl
11'1 ju1t the right s is•.
HAMILTOH
SCOTCH
FOAM
COOLER
67c
I!• o ch•opy . Coad and 11rong
handle a nd rugged cutting •dg•, ~-----_--_------~-·--
1T's Too
LICHT; 1EIS t""liJO
A 04.R:K.
What do you lhink of a 67c-d•<i:I that
outp•rlorms •om• of the h1tavyw•lght1 iq
m•t<i:I. This dud• i• ii. Styrolo<i:m r•ally
mak•• It. (All thi• ""Hip'" t<i:Jk, what .,.1ry
happ•ned lo plain Engll1h?).
but !hi prk• 'll'on't s•nd u1 lo
I:urop.e. II you'r• happy. w•"ll b. loo.
WALL PAPER """'"-
• Li11111. w•
haY• 1om1
g-100•f
pall••n1. l'lty
nice . Th•
ladi1t. ar1 picking
up on 1hi1. We"r•
111w 10 1hi1 lull
.. 1l1clio11, but
'50% OFF
5 GALLON PLANT SALE
• Colden Arborvitae It you would li k• to hoY• nice
Jn ,,d1cop!ng now ond don·1
won' to woU yeo11 lor lb• on•
gallon 1i11 to mohJ1e you
won·1 ml11 thi1 de<i:l. W•
promi•• lo 1lock oil lb• tlotll.
• llalian Cypress
• Blue Pfitzer
FRUIT, SPICE, AND PEPPER
STRINGS
/,. n•w d•ol. tho1• orldictol lru\t1 and
... ge lobl •' w hich 1u11 oboul tool
onyon1. bul th1 on1~. Hong trom th •
<'•illng to molr1 that old Hoci1nda d•cor
comp1•te.
197
KWIK BRICK
lilre ir 1ay1, a !011 way lo pur up
br ic k paneling and m1;1k1 II look
good loo. Ho lreolry pla11ic loolr.
thi1 ii rloO] app9Clrlng. hi. CHlli(jU•
or nahuol brkk.
CHIMNEY CHAHDELIER
Very el1<;1<i:nt. which i1 more tho.n
)u•l good looking . Toll 9lob••.
swoopy orm1. turn..:! cenl•r po1!. ~
•<tol Boie>. !Hey. my hro!h1f>\n.Jaw
got o lr•y Job with IBM. H• \oclrs all
1ht door• a! night).
1187
277
9aa
12 Sq. fl.
Box
FREE CLASSES
May27
'• .
LOW VOLTAGE
LIGHTING SYSTEM
• "HOW TO INSTALL ALUMINUM
WINDOWS AND SLIDING
GLASS DOORS"
June 3
•"WALLPAPER INSTALLATION''
June JO
•"LOW VOLTAGE GARDEN
LIGHTING" Li k• th• bur9 say1. ii ma k•l
)'our home aal•r and loolr1
9ood too. Th• d•ol includ••
1h• tron1!011n11 lo reduc•
curr•nt 10 a 1al• 12 volt. two.
big Hgh!1. and und•rg~und
wue. You CQn buy I XUCI 1tul[
to build the 1y111m up loo.
1771 REGISTER NOW FOR WEDNESDAY
. EVENING CLASSES AT THE LA
MIRADA STORE. 7:30 to 8:30 P.M. Limit .
100 Persons.
"'Refreshments "Door Prizes
2 LITE
0 KIDDY
DRIHKIHG FOUHTAIN
-·~ .. . .. ~ . .. .... -"r6·.:·~·~ ' ·: ..
Thi• su mmer you <:011 lorqet about
th• tr<i:il ol littl• gL1y1 ninni11g: In and.
out tor a drink. Ju11 <i:lloch1hl1 to on
out1ld1 lau<:•t and they c<i:n-pour their
own (A mother mutt ho"• in .. •nt.d.
thi1, right!)
297
BEST PLANT FOODS·
AdY •t!i11d 1p1cio l1
good 1hni. May 29. 1910
land did you h•or th•
1ong I ju11 wn>t•. lt'1
lltled. '"fath•r couldn"t
llud91 Sine• He Ate
~""-¥"' .. ~"'Mother"& fudg• .. ),
W r;r;~Ull I;)
9 to 9
SATURDAY and
SUNDAY 9 to 6
Here is a slug of plant lood1. Special
mlx11 ior: ROSES. C AMELIAS,
RHODODENDRONS.AZALEAS.
CITRUS. 1;1nd AVOCADO. Th• boxH"
QN .,,. wonh 2..59. {not th• 1tuU. 1u 1f
th• box••).
GARAGE DOOR SPRINGS
No joliea her•. Ru1ty old 1prin91 ore j•11l ploin
dong•rou1. JI on• I•!• you go you might git the
door on your h1ad or th• spring !lying around
lilr• 1hR1pn•I. Ch1elr your• todciy. pl1a1•. •
149
WIHDOW SHADES
Th11•ar-e tb• nk ••mbo11ed.
plastic. loolr llOtt ol ltn•n·lilr•.
(R-1 li1>•n ..... n the Iring can't
afford}. W• i::-111 th•m to your •llot!
1b e Jr-. up to 36 inches.
12"x 12" FLOOR TILE
f.o•l•r lo plan fot lh• lloor la th\1 1h•
and lue plec•1 lo l11y. Vinyl·<i:1b.1to1
lor th• 1hln• -.Ith the •earing quality,
Nice pa11•m•. Th• eor1oa. co-.nl ~ 1q,
''·
5sa
CTll'.
a7c
3/4" x 60 YD. MASKING TAPE ALUMIHUM LAWH FURHITURE
1'EWI A 11u1t<h•d ••l. r119g•d olum.laom ham••·
multicolor 110111. Buy lh• M l or pick t1p th. plec11 lrom
our open stock. {You know I wonted to end up 'll'hh a
good )olr•. but you con·t 1011 tb•m oil.I Soon"• lh• od britalr1 we run 0Y1r a nd b1>y a
doten roll1. !W• pay 1.19 a rail at the ore
ILlppll•r and his d .. 1n't stltk a1 qood). Mok••
painlln9 a hr•••• 100, ii JOLI ma1lr belo•• yaLI
1tor1.
SLAT SETTEE
1577
. SLAT TABLE SLAT CRAIB
477 J77
' I
l
I
!
I
r
BARBARA DUARTE, 494-946' • , ••• u
Parents Busy
With Secrets
Everything is shaping up for 1.he Laguna Beach I·Iigh School All
Night Graduation Party .. , but the shape is a secret.
Parents. \vorking under the direction of Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Judy, are keeping the the1ne of the Thursday, June 11. all·ni_ghter a
secret in order to surprise grads \Vho \\'i ll begin to arrive at the h..i gh
school at 10 p.n1.
During the evening and up unt il 5 a.tn .. Jots of surprises are
planned including a jazz band, light sho,v, rock band, folk singer s,
astrolo~y reading s and a buffet dinner.
Included in the cost of $7 per student \Viii be an auction of giflt.s
donated by n1 erchants and parents. Anyone who would like to donate
a prize may call Bob Miller at 49.\--8629.
Dress \viii be casual for the festive affair . Jn order to allow
residents an opportuhity to sec the surprise backdrop before senio rs
arrive, the j!rounds "'ill be open on Thursday from 11 a.in . unUI 5 p.m.
Comn1iltee chairn1an \VOrking on the party includ e the rvtmes.
J\'larcic! Back. secretary; Jack Sil von i. treasurer; Sam Ho,gan, public-
ity; Ba rba ra Rahino \vitsh and Janet Stic e, tickets; Eldon Foltz, locker
roo m ; Roy Marcom, decorations , aad Richard Jahraus, food.
CURRENT BILLING -Parents and friends of men1be r.~ of the
Laguna Beach 1-ligh Schoo l Class of 1970 are el bo\1•-decp in pl ans
lor the upcomi ng senior all-ni ght party . l\'lrs. San1 rlogan, public-
ist. adrnires a poster held by Mark Johns ton and Deb hie Ho gan
advertising 1.he affair \vh ich \Viii feature \•arious bands, a buffet
dinner, astrological readings a nd lots of added surprises.
Also lending a hand arc Bob Mci\1urray. security: Mr. and J\·Jrs.
Dob J\lillC'r, cntcrtainn1enl; c;co rg:e Davis. cl eanup. and Th on1as F'arm-
er. co nstruction.
Surf's Up
White-water Scene
Screens • Newport
Surf's up ... and (\VO chroniclers of the \vh1lc-\valer :-.ccne 1\ 11!
be on hand to record it. \
Greg fllacGillivray of l\1onarch Bay and his partner .11111 F·rec-
n1an. surfing film producer.o;. 1vill donate their filrn classic "Thl' (;Jciss
\\al l'' to raisC' funds for the Interfaith Serv1<.:cn1cn'!i (·enter 111 S<in
('lc111C'ntc
'l"hC' filn1 is loaded 11-ith adventure and cx<.:1te1ncnt . exploring lhe
b1,g surf from t-.·Jexico lo Ha\vaii. The "·o rld s 1nost outstandin~ :;u rfcrs
ride fantasti c \vaves in addition to expcr1cnc1ng thrills of skateboard-
ing. n1otorcycling and body surfing.
l·lelicop1ers. boats and surfboards have been u .~ed hy photo-
grapher Freen1<in lo record unusual angles in surfing off tropical !\lcx-
ico and 1n the challengin g '.!:5-foot \Vav es off Jl ;n\'ai1.
"The c:Jass \Vall" tells the story of th e surfer -his rcrsonnlll.Y
and adventures in quest of the finest \1 aves in the \1·orld .
'J'he !1\111 \\'ill be sho\vn on Saturda.v . .\lay 30 . at 8::io p .111 . 1n
~l'\1 po rt ll<:1rbor 11 \gh School. Tic ket '> n'a:V be purcha:-ied ri'1 thf' door
;11 a co:-it uf $1.50 for adults and SI for children und C'r 12 year~ of a;:.:t". -~-.
PrOt'l'Cd~ 11111 help prov1dr e.xlra service:; lor voun).! :-.crv1ccn1e11
i11cl 11d1ng dancr.s 1ncals and trif):-. 1.o Lhc beach ;:ind n1ounta1ns. L:i\L
VC'~r n1orc than 25.000 n1en 11·ere enler\a111cd by 1-15 volunteer ~ \1 !lo
put tn 28.000 hours 011 a bud get of Sll.358.
'fhc ccntC'r, a "hoinc a wa y from hon1e for tnore 'than 100.000 !\la·
r1t1c recruit.~." according to l'vl r.~. \Vliliarn D. Plo11·den Ill. chrurn1.111
of the benefit sho\1•ing , \vas organized on i\l11y 21 19fi:'i as ;1 united l'I·
tort ol San ('lcn1cntc residents.
National in scope ina.~1nuch a): ii scr\'CS 1ncn fro rn across the
United States .lhc center requires long hours of voluntcC'r scr1•1ce (Jll
a sn1all operating budget.
~ ~·, :~n. ~ t:t ~
a ~·~' ,. , ' #;:.,JI ~ -:--·:·-,-... .. :''. f .... ~. .,#
Jn addition 1o reg ul ar operation of the center. volunteers spon-
sor Operation Thanksgiving which opens Oran~e Count.v homes to
servicemen on Thanksgivin.e;.
TRIO PUSHES SURF-Surfing film. ''The Gla ss
\Vall" 1vill be show n on ~·Iemorial Day in NC \\'port
8each as n benefit for San Clemente's Interfaith
Se rvicemen's Center. Heading for the surf the hard
\vay are (left~o right ) Lynn Dowling, Laura Plo~·
den and Sgt. John Tornus of Columbus, Ohio.
Girl Gets Bugged When Good Friends Get Badly Drugged
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 16 and
"·orri ed. Most of my fl icnds smoke pot.
Some of them have freaked out on
LSD. I dnn 't touch any of it. J\1y folks
,got upset once when th.ey found an
9rdinary cigarette butt In my room .
They have a good opinion of me and
J.d hale to let them down.
Every weekend I wi nd up with kids
who are blowing grass or dropplng acid.
·1 realize if they gel busted and rm
with them. I will be hauled in and
'Charged, too. Thil: scares me. lt would
l ill my Folks. The drug la"'! are lousy
In this state and some good kids have
gotten themselves bugged up because
they wa nt to show lhe author ities they
hiivr no respect for unjust laws. Please
don't tell inc to mRke new friends.
1 can 't. These are the kids 1 grew
ANN LANDERS
up with and I dig them, exctpt for
the way they mtss with drugs. What
shQuld I do? -LOYAL LYNN
DEAR L.L.: If fotl lntl1t m1 hanging
around wllh a crowd that blow1 grass.
drops acid and defies Ute law, be
prtpared lo acctpt the constqutnce11.
Call H loyally if you want to. I call
it stupidity and 1hort-slghtedne111.
Tht law 111 going lo do ~re bu11Un1t
starting now. A-faklnc erlmtn1l1 Ololl ef
1lck people Is. In my opinion, a poor
approach to lht problem , but when the
citize nry becomes frig htened and fear
takes over, ralioaallty loses out
There are no eny answers to I.his
one. Wt cannot afford to tum our country
over to a generatJon of half-stoned ro t
head11. Nor can 'i\·e allow potential
achie\'ers lo fry !heir bra ins with LSD,
speed and hfroln. Unfortunately. 11 pro-
blem that should be bandied by pbysl-
ciaos 15 winding up more and more
In th e hands of the police. So brace
you rself. The situation is going to get
wo rse berore it gels better.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I have a
message for the young woman who
adopted my ch ild. I don't know who
she is or where she is, but I'll bet
she reads Ann Landers. Will you please
print this?
DEAR rRIEND: It was just a few
years ago that I gave you my baby.
I knew then as I know now, it was
the only thi ng to do, I wante d ht'r
to have every advantage in life. I knew
r couldn·1 give he'!' what she w9s entitled
lo.
Vou and you r husband wanted a child .
The people 1n chara:e of the adopt ion
told me as much as they coold wifhout
r!::vcaling your identity. I was certain
you would give my liltle gir l oceans
of love and that she would have lhe
kind of upbr inging every child deserves.
I didn't have her long -but I knew
she was a very good baby, in perfect
health and beaullfu l, too. II took more
strength to give her up than I lhoughl
I had, but I thank the good Lord for
giving me that strength because I know
in my heart it was the righl thing
to do.
Last year I married a wonde rful man.
Soon I will have a baby of my own.
But I shah never forget my rirst. born.
I'll always shed a few quiet tears on
her birthd ay, 11nd wonder where she
ls, what she looks like t1nd what she
is doina. 1 always will Jove htr -
and I will love you, too, for g1vtng
her what I could not. May C.00 watch
over you and my liUle gi rl. -NO
CITY NO STATE NO INITIALS
DEAR FRIEND: Thank you for a
beautiful Jetltr. I wouldn't dream of
pr In t In 1 a clue to your klentlty.
Thousands of women wtll believe your
letter was meant for them. ADd I
wouldn't wa nt H any olber way.
Too many couples go from matrimony
to acrimony. Don't let your marrfagw
flo p before it gets started. Send for
Ann Landers' booklet, "Marriage -What
to Expect." Send your request to Ann
Landers in care of the DAILY PILOT
new!'ipaper enctosing 50 ctnts In coin
and a long, stamped, self•ddreaH4
envelope.
• • • • ' • I l
I
..
•
, ,.
l r
I : A Jar ~ Sunshine
!. Mrs. Marjorie J\1eyer of Slaten Island. N.Y., executive secretary o( the l nter-
nationa! Sunshine Society. looks at a deco rated jar made by one of the mem-
bers of the or,ganization. T he Sunshi ne Society helps sick, needy and lonely
people and sells ilen1s Jnade by members lo raise funds .
Mesons
Honored
At Party
A surpr ise garden party
lcl crl t-.lr. and l\1rs. Claude
K. Kirkpatnck of Costa Mesa
on their golden wedding an·
nivcrsary.
1-los ting the event. v.·hich
..., ...
.. ' •• .. r-t:
,,
took place at the Costa r.tesa
ho1nc of l\1r. and t-.1rs. Bob
Dcn tnn. \Vere the honorees' ,.,· daughters, r-.1rs. E. W .
\\'heeler of Los Angeles and
tllr~. l\1::iunce Durbin of I,
Aguanga.
Among guests were Wheeler
oind Durbin: their grandsons
i';i trick. Timothy and \Vayne :
!heir great-grandson P au I
l>cnton, and Mrs. Ev a
.Anderson. Kirkpatrick's sister.
The goldenweds exchanged
wedding vo\vs in the home
of 1he late J\1r. and ti1rs.
Claude K Kirkpatrick in Los
Angeles. Kirkpatrick was a
1ypcsc1tcr for Hadley's in Los
Angeles fci r 4~ years prior
to his retirt'm,..nt
They ha\·e resided in Costa
r.1esa si nce !954.
Republ icons
Questioning
.rune bnllcit propositions y,·ill
be discussed during the f\1esa
Vrrrlc Bcpublican Women's
C'!ub, FC'd<'ra1ed meeting on
W<'dnesday. J\lny 27, nl 10 :30
a.m. in the h ome of Mr s.
Ben Fudge of Costa Mesa.
Spc:iking before the group
will br f\lallhcw \Veyuker of
llunt1nglon 13<':ich and Atty.
~1ichael Collins of Laguna
llills.
A le~islati\e ;issi~tanl to
As~mblvman Robert Burki',
70th dislfic t. \\'c~·ukrr is presi-
dent of the Huntington Beach
High School board of educa-
tion.
Collins, president of the Snd -
dlcback .Junior Co 11 r g c
District board of tru stees. y,•as
Call rornia Republic;i n Assem-
bly parliamentarian fro nl
1967-1969.
Harbor Tops
Harper School in Costa
Mess is the locallon \Yherc
members of TOPS Harbor
Lighters gathtt each Monday
evening at 7:30.
'·
•
I
CLINI C LAUDED
Karen Pulasky
Training Helped
Cool During Crisis
Karen Pulasky is one 13·
year-0ld miss y,·ho ha s
demonslrated her abllily lo
keep cool in an emergency,
.ind :she gives full credit to
lasl fall"s baby.sitting clinic
:spon~ored by lhe Huntington
Beach J unior \\loman's Club.
l\aren, daughter of Mr. ;ind
1\lrs. Paul Pulasky of Hun-
\1ngt on Beach, was asked lo
relieve a friend who was IJ:JbY-
sitting for a neighbor·s 5-, 3-
and 2·year-old youngs ters.
\Vh ilr caring for t h e
~ oung<'sl child, the two older
ones decided to hide behind
the TV set and before Karen
could roust them, smoke
began billowing out of the set,
completely filllng th e room
within minutes.
The Rancho View student
quic kly herded her cryin~
t.'ilarges OUt of the house (BS
she had been instrurted to
during the clinic) and 11rter
leaving them in the c:i re of
a neighbor, raced back in lo
call thr fire departinrnt.
'"The lelephone n u 1n b c r
wasn"t written down, so I just
ca!led the operator,"' con-
fessed the brown-ryed . brow11-
ha1 rcd .Junior Camp fire Girl.
Allhou,l(h the whole situation
wa s unde r control in aboul
20 n1inutcs, it scen1ed much
longrr to Karen v.·ho admits
"I was sc;ired the \\'hole
tlnH•."
\Vhile the fire trucks v.·ere
still lhere, Karen i;aid, a new
color TV set wa s delivered
to the home so the youngsters'
te11rs dried qulckly and all
was calm when their mother
returned.
"It y,•as kind of a valuable
experience." concludes Karen.
CHILDREN'S ART
COUNTYWIDI rA•TIC"'ATION
IY O•ANGll! COUNTY SCHOOLS.
llNDllGAfl'IN THllU 1 ltll GllADI
South Coast 'Ptua
Vintage Voice Vibrates
Beauty's 1n Ear of Listener •
By BARBARA DUARTE
Of lfll O•Hr 1"11•1 Sl•ll
If yO!J think you've heard
i~ all before, you probably
have and still remain guilty
of at least one noticeable
hangu p ... lo use a word thrust
on Webster by the ··now"
ge-neration.
AccOl'ding to D o r o t h y
Sarnoff, a versatile woman
y,•hose career spans the
Broadway sLage, ope r a,
television and supper clubs,
people must brush up on not
only the ''lost art" of con-
versation, but also keep pace
with a modern "wordrobe"
composed of such words as
··mink'' (a girliriend, probably
by virtue of always being
draped around the neck):
"skypiece" (a hat), and
"mother" (a drug pusher as
opposed to dear old Machree ).
Common offenders of the
fi rst requisite of conversation
... tone ... are the fish wife
w~e strident tones call her
brood to breakfas t; "over
precious" who spea ks in a
whisper. "lazy lips," the
cl en c h ed-teeth method;
"Jenny one-oote" who drones
on in a monotone, and "locust
valley lockjaw," perpetrator
of the closed·mouth technique.
VOICES ARE VINTAGE
H.esooance can bring a
shrill, people· scattering voice
down lo a "wine cellar" vin-
tage, J\.1iss Sarnoff pointed out
to her large female audience
at Laguna Beach Assistance
League's fifth and final Town
llall Series lecture.
By placing a hand on the
chest, a speaker can feel a
deep tone rising from the
diaphragm. The lecturer sug.
gested womm voice a reso-
nant "I love you" to the man
of the house as he arrives
home in hope of producing
an interesting result.
Miss Sarnoff, an advocate
of making women as krvely
to hear as they are to look
at, peppered her cosmetic
theory for speech with a
smorgasbord of conversational
tips.
Two of the greatest distrac·
tors for businessmen are
nervousness and aloofness
which usually stem frorn a
feeling of inferiority, notes the
attractive corrector of faults
who offers .a six-week course
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
CONVERSATIONALIST
.Miss Dorothy Sarnoff
lo men and women in order
to improve t!1eir image.
Other costly detractors to
comn1unic<1l ions. she PQints
out. are l<Jck of eye contact,
poor posture, speech tics ("'I
believe,", "you know", and
"er, ah ''), poor pacing and
speed talking, a 33 1/3 con-
versation p!ay'd back at 78.
THINKIN G PAYS
"Structure your thlnking lo
maite a point ,"' Mlss Sarnoff
advised. "It is more difficult
to be articulate than to resort
to violence or m a k e
demands."
When going out, one should
dress up his communication
as well as his body, she added.
Read current events, listen
to news broadcasts a-.1d fill
the mind with events of in-
terest to husbands, children
and associates.
It takes forethought , she ad·
milted, but it is tolally
necessary lo a generation
trained lo be television
receivers r a I her than
participants.
As a means of regaining
the lost art, she lists 10 com-
mandments: thou shall not
con1mit "!" disease.
monopolize, interrupt. offend
or gossi p and thou sh all edit,
discuss rather than argue, ask
stimulating questions, include
all listeners and be a good
listener yourself.
LOUISE BAKER
To Say Vows
Louise Baker
Will Marry
In Summer
Louise Lee Baker 11· i I l
hccon1e the bride June "1.7 nf
George tl-1arsh111! J\·lahurin dur·
ing ceremonies in t 11 c
Neighborhood Congregation.'11
Church in Lag111li"l Beach.
Parents of the !Jrtrothcd are
J\1r. and J\1rs. Earl Br1kcr and
J\tr and J\lrs. \\' i 11 1 a in
Mahurin, all o! Nr\\ por L
Beach.
f\1iss Baker is a graduate
of Ney,•port Harbor I l1gh
Cancer: Accent on Marriage
School and a finishing school
in Garden Grove. She \1•ill
a\Lend Orange Coast College
in September.
Her fiance is a grad ua1e
SATURDAY
MAY 23
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES {March 21·April 19):
Accent on career, prestige,
standing in co1nrnuni ty. You
gel assignment which enables
you to display originalily and
independence. Lead the way.
Utilize pioneering instincts.
TA URUS 1Apri! 20-May 20):
Good lunar aspect today coin-
cides with gain t h r o u g h
reading, travrl. You ;ibw rb
knoy,·Jedgc and can put il to
cnnslroctive use. Look beyond
lhc immediate. Plan ahead .
GE:\IlNI (i\lay 21-June 20):
Versatile approach resulls in
financial gain. Have altern ate
methods available. Investigate
money ·matter which has
been obscured. Could involve
mate or business associate.
CANCER (J une 21-Ju!y 22 ):
1Jie tow . Permit others to take
initiative. Check lega l mat-
ters, including contracts and
SJ>e<:ial agreements. Accent on
inarrlage, partnerships, com-
mitments which cannot be
delayed. Anal ylc.
LEO (Ju!y 23-Aug. 22 1:
\\larking . re I a t ion s 1vith
associates require attention.
Sonic ma y have erroneous in1·
prcssion about your intl'nl1ons.
Strive to comn1unicate. f.·lake
rnranings crystal clear.
VlllGO tAu g. 23-Scpl-221
Romance is 111 spotlight. So
are creative endca\·ors. ln
dtaling with you,1g person~.
To avoid disappointment. pros pective
brides a re reminded to have rt.heir 1vcdding:
stories 'vith b lack and while J!lo ssy phot~
graphs to the DAILY P ILOT WomC'n 's De·
partment one \veek before t_he \vedd i n~ ..
Pict ures received rollo\v1ng the 1\·cdd1ng
Y.'ill not be used.
For engagement announcements it . i"
imperative that the story, also accon1pan1cd
by a black and \Vhite glossy picture, be sub·
milted six \vceks or more before the \Vcdd 1n:.'.:!
date. If deadline is not met, only a story \\"Ill
be used .
To help fill requirements on both \vrd-
ding and engagement stories. for1ns . ~ire
available in all of the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions '''ill be ans,vcrcd h_v
\·Vomen's Section s taff members at G-1.:!-~3:!1
or 494-9466.
Afternoon Nuptials
Couple Repeat Vows
f\.1rs. Clarice Fisher and
f\tarold Eyestone. both nf
Costa J\·lesa. exchanged \"OWS
and rings before the Rev. Or.
Charles Dieren[irld in St
A11drt'w's Pre s by I c r \ a n
Church.
f.lrs. Cloria Lucas l\<l'
matron of honor and !he
1\-\is~f'S .Jacqut·line ilnll C':ilhy
Fisher, daughters of the new
L\1rs. E y e ~lonc, \\t•n•
candlclighlers.
Ring History
Man a1ipcars to have clai1n-
ed his bride fro1n earliest
times wilh a ring.
Thurman \\"oods ~·as lx-~l
man and Alex \\"ip[ and .J11h11
Scalackley ushered guests to
th eir pey,•s.
The couple will tn<ii..l' thei r
home in Costd L\·lcsa.
Th<' former L\lrs. Fishrr,
1laugh\cr of ,.lrs. Rose i\"au
or 01n;1ha, is a graduate nf
Cnlifnrnia Sla te College al
Fu l11•rtQ"11 and 1s district ad·
visor fnr the Girl Sco11l <.:oun .
1:i l or Ornngf' County.
Her husband is an eng·1nccr
\1•i lh North A 111 er i c a n
fl ock,vcl! Corp. and a member
of King Harbor Yacht Club
of Bednndo Beach arid North
Ainerican f.1anagen1cnt Club .
be diplomatic. Be willing to
make concessions. Then there
V.'ill be ultimate gain .
LIBRA !Sept. 23·0ct. 221:
of Newport !!arbor and is 1n
in mysterious manner merely the Naval B.eser\·e.
htr11gers for attention, af· o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'t
feet ion. Forces tend to be 11
.scallered. J & J UPHOLSTERY
Basic issues dominate. You r To tind out wno•1 !uc~v le• vou home, area of security re-In moflfv ~"" 10••· o•Oe• svdn•• 1
quire.~ attention. Check re;1l· z;:··~$nd ~~kOl•~tn.":s·c;:~o 11~?:~ho!~;
ME ... NS! QU ... LHY. INTEGRITY,
SERVI CE., CR ... FTSM ... NS N!P.
we LIKE llE ... UTIFUL FU~NlfURE
WI.: .4.CCEPT CN ... LLENGES
642 -5876 646-8058 esl.:ite values. l){ln 't be •no !IO crni~ 10 Om•" "'1tr o11111 v , . . . S•creh. t~r O'°'ILV PllOT. Bo• 31~0. satisfied \l'llh superf1c1al In-Gr•nd C•~''" Sll!lon, Nrw York, I L.----------~ formation . Jf persistent, you _N.v. 10011. <:ould strike. pay 1lirt. l;o--.-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,_ ____ -j
SCOltPIO 10ct. 23.Nov 21 l: COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY SERVICE
e WEDDING e l'ASSPORTS e PORTRAITS
e ALL IN NATURAL LIVING-COLO R.
842-4212 75 11 Clay, Suite 3, Huntington Beach
Aecent on friend ships. fu!fill -
n1l'nt of desirC's. You get emu·
1iona l a,1d financial bricking
Tnne h;is cnn1e tu put forth
d<'!TIHnds. Ynll <Jr(' 11kPly In
gel 11 haL i.'> r('{juestcd. 1\1;tl'-----------------------
;!l"COrdingl).
SACITTAHI L'S 1Nov. 22·
l)l't'. 211 · You l1n1sh prOJl'C I I
11·hll'h brings 1noncy i:a1n
Shop for spcci;1l h;irga1n. \\'ha! I
you nerd 1s ar<Jil:ible -H
you wil l but look. Spotlight
on finances, p c. r s o n a I
RE UPHOLSTERY
at Factory Pric•• Dirtcl
FREE ESTIMATES
Furni lurc ;\lade To flrd<'r
\\"11h "'Qu11lity Workrnan~h1p ..
.S t"P By and Sr,.. Our Shfl\\t11t>lll
CASTLE INTERIORS
po.~scss1 nns. 7541 Ch11pm11n, Gardin Grove CA PH ICU H7" !l)cc 22·Jnn. Cell Ca llect---192-llll day1 or 14 7-7563 eve 's.
19 \: New il pproa<'li 15 filvorrtt. j ':::~~,,;;:~~,,;;:~~~::;;; .... ~...;...-~...; .... ~'.'.::~~~
ln1prorc appe<irance. Cycle
111gl1 circun1s!anccs f;i1•nr
your 1·lforls. B.:o 1ndepe.1dt'nl
Jn lhouglil. <ll'\1011. Now l' lilllt:
1u rontnct rcr1pl1· y,·ho hal'<'
Urrn 111i;1v;iil;1bh·
AQL'Altl US !Jan. 21)..Feb.
18 1 Sec rets ;1rr re\'ealed : yun
n1ay he responsible Io r
organizing ~Pl"l.:ial acli\'ily
l'lay eards c!o~l' lo chl'Sl
Sonll' \\'ho think 1hf'~ know
all may try bluffing game.
PISCES rFch 19·:0.larch 201
Srnsr of hun111r 1 ~ your gr<'a1
;illy tnc!:iy Study Aq11r1rius
n1C'sSagc. A fncnd \\ho act ..
Seniors Take
Unknow n Ride
\1emb£'1 ... of thr l !arbor
Senior C 1t1..:cn~· Cll1b , ;id·
\"Q(',1 1('~ <lf th<' c~lifnrn1a
\ l'l'.<;ion of "S~c A1ner1e;1
F1r~I" \\Ill lr:"ll'e! 1n Olll
11nl-.nu11n So111l1C'r11 ('al1ft1n11a
h.K':Jlr. IJ!l IV1•(h1c~O <ly, f.lay 27.
A bus will lcavr Lhe Senior
('ilJ1cns Hct:rca11on Center at
9,. 111. for it de.~!1n1111on known
onlv to illrs. K a I he r in e
\Va.ds'"'·orth, chairman, and the
bus driver.
Chapters Join
Far Luncheon
ll appiness ls lladassah Is
the thcn1c o[ the se\"rnth ;1n·
11util t:o111bincd So u I h \ a n d
Donnr Lunchl'on of 1 h c
lla!'bor. ~t:Jsada and Sant•1
Ana.Tustin ch a p I<' rs of
Hadassah at 11 :30 am. on
Tuesday, May 26, in lhe Grand
J1olel. Anahci1n.
A fashion show of lingerie.
day and evenin g \1•car will
be pr esented by ~1iss Florence
Srnales.
Tomorrow i>
' someone s
birthda y.
When you gi11e her o d1ornond 1 •nq
and hirn o watch, you gi11c o lo >t111n
gift . , • ond o lo ~l1 ng e~prc>>1o ri of
your de11 otion. lllustrol1on\ not a ctual
~1ze.
125.00
Yellow Gold With Mal thing Bracele t
It may have been a rope
lied around her waist -a
1nore direct means of y,•ooing
his favorite -but lhr ~en·
timent to claim and then to
protect and guard always ha s
Semi-annual KNIT Workshop
Eosy credit ltrms • ilud•nl octouril\
ovo1lable •up lo 17 months to pay
l(j,~ e M,,,,, Ch•r91 e 8.n~Am1 •;c11 il
bttn there.
MAY
20-29
e dresses • jackets e skirts • ponchos
e tennis dresses, etc
Saturday and Sunday, May 23-24
L;gMwelgM ~ '"'O<°''· 100 ...
OllO" -m~(llln• v<A•ll ~"" ., ... -"'
l88S PARK AVE •
• , 01~ w. •1111•~0• "" lttl!
Co1t1 MHI. C•IN1rr'tll
H111!i119to11 C111t1r
leacll & ldi11911
HY•ll119to11 leoch
l'J·S501
Ol'EN MnN.,
THURS., FRI .
TILL ' r .M.
Horbor Sltappl119
C11111r
ZJOO H•rbor 11,d.
Ce1!0 Mn o ... -.!!"~:="-...... .._ S4S-,415
Hawaii-bound
'\board the SS Lurline are ~Jr. and TvJrs. \Vil !iam
.r . \Vintcr of fialboa 1sland. They are on a 20-day
crnise of J-la\vaii.
Term Renewed
By President
Of licrr~ and guests of lhe
Orani;:c County \Vo m r 11 's
f 'haptrr. Frc1'doms Foun-
<l.1t1on ;it VaJl('y Forg<' wilt
he> huno1·ccr ~tonday, May Z8,
rluring an installation luncheon
in the Golden P h ea s a n l
restaurant, An11hc1n1.
Addrcs1'ing the group wil!
he lecturer an d auU1or flf
'·Pass !he J~ovcr1y, Please,"
j\1rs. Ralph Nc1vn1an.
Repo rts 11·dl be given hy
the !ll111cs. Robert D.
SUSAN GLAUBER
To Marry
August Day
Selected
Susan Glauher and Dcnn1~
~!. \asr of l3<:1lbo;1 Island will
r11;1rry Aug. !I dunn~ rite~
1ri br prrtormrrl in il--lanrn:r.~
( hurch. Newport Beach.
:-.:r\\"r-o. 11! the t orthcorn1n~
r \rnt h:i~ b<'rn announred bv
.\1 1 ~.~ (;lnt1hcr., p;1rcnl <;, i\1r.
,1nrl ~1 r~ Jo~c ph ll. Glaubcr
J1l R,ilbnit
~li ~!'i C\;i11hcr 1s ;i graduti!c
nf Nc1,1,pc)rl llrll'hflr ll1gh
:-icl1ool :.ind Ori.ln/;C (;nast
('n\lrgr and wilt gracJ11atc nf'xl
111011th fron1 <.:01iforn1a St;itc
College ;ii Fullcrtnn \\''.lcrc :::he
Is n1:iior111g 1n cronom1cs.
l!cr f1ancr. an al11mn11~ nl
r ,,ty1cchn1r High School. Long
nr:1rh ll!' 1::: a ph,V);IC;il cduca-
l 1on n1aior al OCC v.•hcrc he
\\'Jll gradu;11c in .lune .. lie ha'>
served two ye;:irs '>''1th the
Army.
Peterson. Jr. av•ards banquet:
\Villian1 E. Hasbrouck, sum·
mer seminar for teachers of-
fered at Valley Forge, and
~far1 in A. Severson, teachers'
sen1inar scholarship fund.
t\1rs. Richard E. Shcllcn·
berger, 1vestcrn reg 1 o n a I
chairman, \\'ill ins\:111 ~!rs.
Louis L. Curtis in her secon d
!erm as president. Al so begin-
ning a second term are the
Mmes. P eterson and
Hasbrouck, vice presidents Q(
awards and 1'd11c;itional af-
f;iirs. and Donald I. ll ud-
dJcston, treasurer.
Vice pres idents inclurle 1he
~Imes. Harold F ~'ullrn.
commun1cat1ons; R:lbcrl S.
Barnes. membershi p: Ann
Terrlll Signor. progra1ns, and
Leon Lauderbach, youth pro-
gran1s. l\1rs. Arthur C. Schick
Jr. is recording secretary and
~frs. \\'il\iam M. Spurgeon Jr.
advisory council ch;i1rn1an.
•Tonorary member ii; l\1rs.
Adrien C. Pellrt1er of Lagu na
Beach 1,1,·ho, along wHh hrr
hu sband. is a mcn1bcr of lh"
Ward of trustees of the roun·
da1ion.
Honorary u:1l1on::il i.;hairn1an
or the foundation JS Presi dent
Jt1chilrd Nixon.
Event chairman is 1\lr~.
Signor. Assisting her ilrr the
~l mes. 11.obcrt J . f\lcscrv(',
Ray mond Thon1psnn, Leland r:. Oliver. Paul W. Bro,,·cr,
Ceorge B. Kipc, \-lamellc
Prek, W. Harold Lang, j\lf•!l
Barton and John A. Prescott .
League Views
Oil Technique
Oil \~as.h techniques will be
dC'n1011.~traled during Lhr Co~IJ
,\1esa Ar! League meeting on
Tue~ay. l\lay 26 , ;it 7::10 pm.
in Adams Elementary School.
H. E. llussell, ;in cxh1b11 or
111 the L:ig11'1!i Beach Fe~t1val
of Aris, 11·ill rxplain his 11dap·
tations of a watercolor techni·
qur.
\\l hile n1n~t pai11tcrs use the
\1·ash as a 11relimin;iry step,
llusst>l! u111i1.es lhe technique
for his total painting. lie
believes that a tranquility is
;irhieved in his '>''Ork, based
on Oriental themes.
WOMEN 'S
BROWN LEATHER SANDALS
SIZES $-10
357 • II
SAV-ON SHOES
COST A MESA
1300 HARBOR
{N1xt to Thrifty'•)
Ph. 546-6775
DAil Y PILOT 15
:t·•lf'f! I , , I . ii A .. t!Lii i ' ""-::: "•• s • ''
Tricia Pleases Her Dad
NE\V \'ORK (AP) -President Nixon outgoing, the extrovert. Tricia 1s more intr~
""f NB Teacher
Summer gride l l'iays he is pleased that his daughter Tricia verted. Or, to put it another way, ~he 1.s r€7
"bristles and stands up" for hin1 \\/hen he is served. She does nat like the !1111cllght, ~he
attacked. the Daily News reports. has a passion for privacy -like me>. Neither
The President described his daugh1er in of us likes to have a lot of people around."
an in tervic\v "'ilh news1nan Paul 11ealy for "I fee.I a great rapport with Tricia. Ev·
the June issue of Ladies J-l ome Journa1":'1fc~· -crybodr is two pe rsons. Even th ough l'n1
cording to a copyright story in the D&ily s upposed to be an extrovert -bec<.1 u ~c l'n1
Ne\VS. The paper reported : a 'political ani1nal' ;ind can get up bl"fore an
Nixon hesitated to define Tricia's polili-audience -I'n1 basically reserved. 'fric1a is
cal ph ilosophy but said, "She's certainly not just the san1e.
on tht~ kooky right. '·But Tricia has a very sl.ron[! persona).
"Son11?1.imes she argues politics "'ilh ity. For exan1ple. '''hen I say, 'Let's i;:n 111
Julie and David {Eisenho"'er). lier political church' son1eLin1 es, Tricia says, '.\'o.' And
philosophy? ll's hard to say •.. I think \\!hat s he doesn't go."
has happened to Tricia 1.., that she has re-J\lixon said he \vas the "pern11ssive 11n r·•
acted to attacks on her father by liberals. of Tricia's parents and tllrs. Nixon the "f1nn
She bris tles and stands up fo r me." disciplinarian."
The only question the President avoided. llowever. he said he overrode Tr1C'1a·~
\1 ith a laugh, 1vas whether Tricia, 24, woul d Oat refusal to be cro11·ned queen of the A7.a-
n1arry this year. J-te r most frequent escort is lea Festival in Norfolk, \'a., in 1\pr1I 1009,
Ed\vard F'. Cox. a ffarvard law sudent. telling her. "Look. they 1vant you. This is a
"Our daughters are very close but quite good state; we carried it twice"
d1ffcrcnt," the President said. "Julie is 1nore "She \vent and was great." he added.
'
;
I
.. --. ' ~ -·-----:-r-...
Play Adds
To Brunch
Cynthia
Becomes
Brown
Bride
Dignitary
To Install
California Sla!e 1leger1! ~lrs.
Leroy C. Kaun1p '"'ill officale
The betrotha1 of Helane Jlol-
lister llilton of Corona de!
Mar a n d Garnet Slerrt'lt
Smith Jr. of St. Louis, Mo.,
'>''as announced during a party
in the St. Louis home of the
HuJ{h Sem ples.
Mi~ Hilton, daughter of
!11rs. Bonnie Hilton of St. Louis
and \\lillian1 Hiltoo of
Spokane, receivtd her BA in
English and drama frorn
Arizona State University and
pled~ed Della Ga1nma sorori-
1y. She made her debut at
the Cotillion in the Spokane
Club.
Presently she is leaching
11t Newport Beach Elementary
S<-hool and is a memhcr of
the NeY.'(lOrt Be:ich Tenrus
<:lul> and the Albert Sitton
Guild.
Her fiance, .son of 1\-lr. and
l\lrs. Gamet Sterrett Smith
of St. Louis, earned his BA
in ('('()rl(lmics at Principia
CollegP, Elsah, 111., and his
f.1A in banking at Washington
Univer~ity, SL Louis.
He i::erved on the adjutant
general's staff with the Army
Ballet Taps
A brunch in the Balboa Bay
Cluh wlll be the installation
setting for the \Vednesday
r-.1om1ng Club of Costa ~tesa
on \Vednesday, !lfay 27, at
Jo·45 a.m.
During
ceremony
a double ring
1n St. Andrew's
during installation ceremonies l'r••bytor•·a· Ch••rch Cy•th•"• To1r. i·azz ·•rd ball•t \1•i ll, ~., " " for lhe Col. \Vi1Jian1 Cabell .. ... Elizabeth Brown excha'l1ged comprise a dance program.I
Following the installation o[
!11rs. Fred Johnson as presi-
dent, the Drama Section v.i ll
presenl '·Everybody's Secret,"
a comedy by Charles George,
directed by l>.lrs. !11erritt
Kevan.
\\•eddirlg pledges \\'ilh ~l icbacl Chapter. Daughters or the en!illed Variety Is Spice "''hichl
Allen Clemons. American Revolution at noon will be presented n ex t1 The Rev. Dr. Charles Die-\Vcdnesda y. ~lay 27. \1•eekend by the El Toro School
renfield performed the C\'t>n· The Sll1ft Shirt. f\'e\vport of Dance under the direction
I Li. I f lh d ht of Mn;. Sarah Derrickson. ng nup as or e aug er neach. '>''ill bf' the settirtg f '1 d 'f II B B Performances, open to I.he o 1• r. an " r.<;. · · ro.,.,·n "'·hen l\·lrs. Ed1varrl ~1. Cox ' of Balboa Island and the son puhlic. will feature tap and
of ~lr. and ~frs. Arnold ass11rn es thr offit•c of r('genL jazz in !he fir st h;:ilr \\'i\h
Clemons of Arcadia. Reports "''ill hr J:il·en o" b.i l!et. "The Seasons" with
II,. c·o"l•••n1·rl Conor•ss by "'''''.' b" Glazouno' lo follow. Serving their sister as .. " "' ' ., "· · y
I d · 1 1 h ~trs. Bn1no Norman and a F'ree Sho\\•ing will be al 7:30 ma roo a11 rnaa o onor
' ,.
1--1.: •
1"'-......
HELANE HILTON
Date Set
for Uiree years in the Orient.
In June ·the betrothed will
he feled during an open house
in the Corona ~I Mar home
of the B.obcrt F'. Harpers. Co-
/1osting 1,1,•ill be Mrs. Charleit
T. Hagslron1 of Fountain
Valley.
APPRAISALS
DIAMONDS
GE MSTONES
EST ATE JEWELRY
":io11tli Co11! Pl 1i1
Briotol ~+ th• S•11 Oi.90 Fwy.
Coil• Me1e 5~0-'1066
Assisting !llrs. Johnson dur.
ing her term will be the
i\ln1es. Louis Kozel, \Valter
Haase and Robert Ernbacker.
\'lt'C president:i;: George
~pomer, Virginia Hoyt and
David Forge, S!'tretaries, and
Philip Evans, treasurer.
progress-evalua!ion by l\1ark p.m. on Saturday, May 23 , \\•ere ~1 rs. Roy ll anima and Northt'roff. presidenl of the ;ind 2:30 p.m. on Sunday, May l\1i ss Dixie Brown.
Brides1naids 11·crc ~I i s s .-l~l~cn~·~·y:_~B~o~w~c~n_:ss_o_o~c~i~c~t~y~.:.._~2~4.:_ _________ ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
C;1rolyn l::iirl, l\1rs. Slevcn
Abad, Mrs. \Vi!lian1 Call, ~1rs.
Short Day
Previewed MRS . CLEMONS
Seo1l Pearsey and ~1 i.~s-.Jenny
Clemons, the bridegroom's
sister.
~1iss Jeanna Krty Higgin~
\\'as flO\\'Cr girl.
Best rnan \\'as Stl•phen
Clo~1ng rhe season for the Pledges Recited
Clen1011s, !he be1~cd1c1 's
brother. Ushers \\'ere Jamei;
;ind Ouane Ratzlaff, Phil
!lloongcnc, Ron Hulin. Ll'c
111cNull and ,Jan1es llro1\'0. lhe
bride's brothrr.
Lido Isle \\lork1ng Committee ------------
of the Orange Co u n t y
Philha rmonic Society '>'1ill be
1t.~ annual Short Day 0.1 Tues·
r!ay, t\lay 26 . in thr home
of 1\lrs. Cra1,1,•ford \Ves!ering.
A ndc aboard the Sleepy
Eyr. owned by ~tr . and l\lr~.
Neil Oa\'iS, will prccerl" a
brief business mcct1ng and 111·
s1:il lation Jf officrrs.
Jnco1ning officers in1·1itdc
lhc Mmes. Richard l\lcCJurr,
cliairrnan: Cedric Roberts, co-
cl1airman: J)onald Tippett and
\Vllliam ~lcGec, l'Ctrf'taries,
;f11rl E<irl Sawyer. !rcasu rrr.
Cocktriils and lunch will bC'
~rrvcd bv 1hr ~·1 mes. \\111!1a111 ~lead f.:e1I Dav1~. Oonatd
Ayres'. noi>erL Vordale and
fllcGee.
Dance Club
The first third and fifth
Fridays of tJ1e month are the
rl;i nce rlates srlectrd by Lace
'n Leathe r Squa re Dance Club
member~. The n1u<;ic starts
at 8 p.m. in the Hrt reation
Center. Huntington Beach.
New Deck
Shuffled
The bride 1s a gradu;itc ol 1
Eagle Rock High School and
her husbnnd gradttat ed rro1n
1\zu sa High School. Both al·
f d !ended Azu sa P<1ci!ic College. A varied assortme111 o car _ _ games. luncheon anrl prizes ,...__.,. _____ .__..,I
\1'ilt he offered i,vhcn the
Rcpublie;in \\'ornen·s Club,
Federated, of tluntington
Beach, spnosors a benefit
Mortday, l\1ay 25. in the Hun-
t111g1011 Beach \V n rn ;in· s
clu bhouse.
Tickets for the affair. wh ich
begins ;it. noon. may be oh.
taincd by call1 '1g l\1rs. i\il;imic
Seltzer, chairman. at 5.16-6244,
or Mrs. Marge Gage, 536-8572.
T1ckeis are $2.25 per person.
1'he public is invited lo attend.
TENNIS
I.ES SONS
h111111ctor N•w 111 th• Ar•o e U"iqu• Me•~ccl,
Re,ulh Gu•••"l~ecl
e You r~v c"lv if vcv le&rn
I No Gimmick,~
Try a l•w lfl.10111 -All ogn
l•ginn•rs t hry Ad.,onc•
For l11lor'"otion
Coll lv.11i1191 645.1,01
CORSAGE SPECIAL!
$1 OFF.I •• ""0
"'" $1 OFF' '011 AH'!' OCCASION •
Slo~ J ~ I nd Soe U• !iffft
--1)1 ll. 111~ St by Gary !J~1t 1111 of N•'"llC'I l lvd I
·~•·Ill• Flowers --------
•
OPEN DAILY, 10-10; SUN. 10.7
·' ·P • ( . ~
"'"
•. . ' t I I
Great News For Big And Little !Hisses!
LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS
88 2Days 44
Reg. 3.88 Reg. 1.96
WOi\fEN'S GIRLS'
WOMEN'S 11ylon jackets f•ahire apace-age Uylir'lg. With codet collars, zq,pet
tronti. Also, with snap frOflts. open colla r&. In navy, powder, whit~ and red. Ofie
nnd two.pocket designs.. In siz•s S.M-L S•n $1 on ccrc.h. Say Charge It!
GIRLS windbreokers, ~ nylon taffeto, h~ ~ip fronts. Some with hidden hood.s..
othe1t wilh attached regular hoodt.. Some with :o:ippered pockets and white piping
trim, Siles 3~, 7-1 A. Greot IOYl'na• on olll Wide color choice .
o"-W"'911nttr _, ...
h. Tnthl .t T.t't .._.L.tMI,..._ u. ... ,...., ....
TISS L '""" ,,.... ......... "'' u.c.t. .... ..... ,.n c ....... ...... .a ..
IMC• 11.•t Lsltw41hr ................. 11 ... M'"9f' "·et lrl ....
S>Ol ... c• 11...i, J • ..,..., ... , ........
"CHARGE IT"
lt OAILV PILOT Friday. Mar 22, 1970
Sport·s Explo sion Ma y Burst Before It's Over
LOS ANG~ CAP) -Everyooe 11
tamruar wilh the i>ports explosion Ut
tbt llltkn One sport overlaps snol.her,
tsom6 double lap and a triple lap may
be inevitable the way they are headed.
'lbe &eene in the decade o( 1970 may
burst before U'.a over.
Take baseball ln a few years the
present %+.team !letup could be doubled
-provided they do not run out of
towns to run out of -and lhe happy
owners could devise a plan fo r I "A'O
World Series, one in mid-summer, the
.. -
second to coincide wkh Fat Tuesday figure out, Le.ave It to Pele to re.solve
the following February to all ow for • 1t1ch matte.rs.
232-game season. The present setup IJ a bit confwlng,
The .a.me e:ipansion might apply to witll lhe National Conference of the
pro football with Commissioner Pcu~ Natlopal ~e playtng lhe American
Rozelle Jlll')ldlng over, say, 62 or 82 ;!erence of tht: Naat l.£ague. Or teams. ls the other way arou •
To complicate the already t.'omplicated le sectlonal loops woul need lden-
matler ol geography and non1enclatu:~ r " Uf1callon, like North, Sou East and
pro football woo.Id comprise six or e~t West, with. sub :sections to be known
leagues, eadl divided into so many t Ofl« as Red, White, Blue and Striped Orchid.
ferences and they in tum s11~ivjded All this would involve extensive
into sect.Iona or whatever Rozelle could reprogramming in television, easily
remedied. All they'd have to do is .ereen
live aames teven day1 or nigbta: a week,
at least two every Sunday and • real
innovation -mldnlght aames for the
swingshift like they work tbs M• at
Lockhe<d.
Radio in tht wee ainall houri
has proven there are enough nut.I to
sit around all night on the two-way
talk sbows, so why not a game benfeen
the Schnectady Seabtro. and the .uu.a
Aardvarks, live and in llving C'Olor.
Super~xparwl.on in baseball and foot..
Uf'IT'I .......
GRABBY ON THli MOVE -A hot glove ond a hot bat have tied down
thQ regular Dodger twrd base position tor BilJ Grabarkewitz. I-le is the
40th man to play the 1;pot since the Dod gers arrived in LA 1n 1958. His
abili1y with the glove is well illustrated here. His ability with the bat J1
aJso not in question as he goes into toni ght's game with Atlanta with an
average at .402.
Lakers Reacquire Goodrich
Counts Sent to Plioenix fo r For mer B ruin Star
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Suddenly came
fhe answers In a ~ingle package to
Ii couple of perplexing questions.
\Vhy bad Phoenix traded Jim Fo1
t.o Chicago?
\\'hy had the Los Angele! Lakers not
prulecled rookie starting guard Dickie
Garrett from I.he National Basketball
Assodatlon'1 expansion draft?
As things turned out, lhe only real
question was why did the two clubs
l:ike so long In giving the answers to
the first two queries?
<ln Thursday, the t~akers and Suns
announced a trade whereby 7-fool Mel
Counts left Los A•ge\es to jo11 Phoenix
which in tum returned Gail Goodrich
to the J~akers where he's expected to
become the basketball quarterback.
So if, you had asked why lhe Lakers -
Blancas Keeps
Hot Golf Hand
A'ILANTA (AP) -Homcro Blanca.5,
l'fho f;CQred his first PGA victory i•
ioul' years l<ist week, forged into a
'hare o( the opening round lead with
~ sevE>n-undcr·par 65 Thursday In the
JIZ5,000 A t1a·nta Golf Classic and said,
i-1 •11 take lhreiii more just like It."
hadn't put Counts on the expansion list
and protected Garrett, now you have
your answer.
ln the words of Coach Joe Mullaney:
"We certainly hate to lose a player
like ~tel Count!: but, hi Goodrich, J
feel we are gettl•g the type of player
which we probably Jacked this past
season.
"Gail penetrates with the ball very
well and is quite capable of quarterback·
ing our ball club. The addition of
(rt>ndr1ch to complement J erry West,
\Villie J\l <.'Carter and swing man Ke ith
EriC'kson gives us a well balanced back
court "
And, lo give equal lime to the other
club, J'hocnix General Manager Jerry
ColaRgclo commented: "Wilh the ac-
quis1t1011 or Counts, I feet we have
strenglhc11Cd ourselves Immeasurably.
There is no question in my mind that
winning in the NBA Is directly related
to your depth up fronl."
Counts, 29. who alternated between
center al'ld forward for the Lakers, is
conside red o• of the good outside
:-hooters In the league. With the return
of Wilt Chamberlain to the Los Angele8
line-up, Me.I became expend ab 1 e ,
Cha mberlain. who suffered a knee inju ry
in November, rejoined the Lake.rs for
the final week of the regular seaSQn
and the playoffs.
Counts averaged 12.S points per game
for Los Angeles the past three campaigru:
after ftrst playing for Boston and then
Baltimore.
Goodrich, the first NBA player ever
to return to his original club after being
lost in expansion, ave raged 20 for the
Suns la st season.
Laker General f.1anager Fred Schaus
commented, "\Ve have lost more key
players i1 the four NBA e](pansions
than any other team In the league.
I felt the }05s of Goodrich In 1968 was
the most serious incurred by our club,
and, ncC'dless to say, we're delighted
to ha\·e him back."
A stnndout with the UCLA national
championship clubs during his ju11ior
and senior years, Goorlrlch was the No.
J draft choice of the Lakers ln J!l65.
LA YER GAINS
TENNIS FINALS
WEST ORANGE, N.J. -Rocket Rod
I.aver of Corona del Mar slammed home
the match point at 1 a.m., EDT, Friday
to beat Andres Gimeno and g a i n a
return to the $200,000 Tenn.is Caissie
competition.
He will lace Ken Rosewall Saturday
night in a $10,000 wlnner·take-all match
with the victor qualifying for another
.~hol at the rich $15,000 winner-take-all
semifinals, beginning June 2.
Laver came from behind lo defeat
Glmeno, U, 4-fi, 6+1, 6-3, 6+2 at the
South Mountain Arena.
Nagel Granted
Appearance
Before Board
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) -Ray Nagel,
oll3ted University of Iowa football c<>ach,
said Thursday he has been granted an
appearance nelt Tu~ay before the
university's Board In Control of Athletics
to argue for re-consideration ol th•
board's action ln fir ing hlm Tue&day.
"I can det netUting more except to
wait for tbat meeting," Nagel sakl. "I
feel some people have been mlsguld!'d
!n thlll whole affair, and that they ma y
he blg enough to change their mind•
when they hear all the factll ."
Na~e.l was Telieved of his dutie11 'l'lHJ..
ri11y at the samt" ml"CtinR during which
Uie athletic board voted to accept the
rt>.signation of Athletic Director Foren
Evashe\'ski, both effective June 30.
The actions culminated a four-month
feud between the t1.1.·o men which
reportedly grew out of Evashev11ki'1
dissatisfaction with Nagel's conduct of
Uie Iowa football program.
Nagel, who t()ld a news conference
'Vednesday he was "shocked and in-
censed '' at the bo.ard's action, 11aid he
was told he was fired because of the
disharmony in the department. He in-
dicated he would take action to tee
that he wall at least allowed to finlsb
his five-year coati"act, which expires Dec.
31.
Several concerned groups, lncludin& the
Hawkeye football ll(luad , have asked the
hoard to Tf'('OflS!der IU acUon ln flrin&
Nagel.
Blancas. who said "the adrenelln I~
still flowing" from his triumph 1n the
Colonial National lnvitatio•, shared the
lead with tall Tom Weiskopf as the
held of 144 ripped apart the 7,053-yard
Atlanta Country Club course.
Fifty.six players t31Tied below par
scores into loday's 5eeond round, hoping
lo make the cut for the final 36 holes
Saturday and Sunday. Another 17 play-
ers shot par n.
Aussie Joins Idols at Indy
Blancas, the happy Mexican-American,
laid, "I've got the mome•tum g<iing."
Gibby Gilbert, a virtual unknown untiJ
his triumph at Aouston two week'I ego,
alao bid momentum 1oi.n1 bi• way,
shooting a Ill.
"I'm playing better now than I did
In Houslon, '' Gilbert aald.
"Winning In Housto• gave me con-
Odeaoe. I'm not afraid of the r;ourse
Jnymore."
Blancas Bald he "putted extremely
welt but missed a few J misread. If
I had gotten 90me: of my mai.eable
putts, l coukl hive been two or three
lihoU better."
l NDIANAPOLlS. lnd. (APl -"It wilJ
b. a long trip home i( I don 't get
a spot In the 500, but there will be
joy in Ausll'alla lf 1 do."
That is the wwd from Kevin Bartlett,
one of 20 or IO driven who held final
practice today before the windup of
qualifying few the Memorial Day SOO.mllc
race.
Only 11.J berths remain open In the
starting grid, limiled to the 33 f~s!C',lfl
('Br!. Twentf·lif!ven drivers qualified last
\\•eekend. but <i these al leAst two stand
in danger of being bumped from t~
lineup by fasttr ('ars.
Llke most other observers, Bartlett
bellC\Pes a four-lap t;peed of 164 milell
per hour will put him in tht field. •
Rookie Steve Krtslloff, was 1 a 1 t
Rook le. Steve. Krislloff , was last
Saturday's slowest qualifier at 162.488
m.p.h. Veteran Jim McElreath was Sun-
day's tailender at 163.592.
BarUett, a ».year.old r o r m e r
Australian sports car champion, came
to lhe U.S. e.arller thi s year to try
his luck on the. U.S. Auto Club's highly
profitable championship trail.
Originally assigned to drive an Elsert-
stock·hloc)t Ford In the Indianapolis 500.
he got a break wh en Peter Rev:1<>n
gave up hi~ Marauder-turbocharged Ford
lo drive one: of the: new McLaren car11.
B11rtlett has been running In the 1&4-165
bracket Alnce then and had a top lip
of 165.7 in Thursday'1 practice period.
"lt I• a 1ood car," the f.foot-1
Australian said. "l just hope I don 't
foul up during qu&llfylng. The car ahoold
be In the fiekt and it lholl)d Onilh
well."
Bartlett flgurcs he hu driven about
150 Jape on the weather-be•ttn old
Speedway since peaaing hil rookie test
earlier In the month.
"It la quite different from the race
tracks back homt, whtrt road racin1
I." about all we have. It took a while
to gel used to the sweeping turnt, but
it isn't too bad once you find the grooVJ."
If Bartlett gets a slarting !pOt, and
g~ on to finish well, he • wJJI have
provided his rooters back b o m t
aomethln1 to cheer about.
ball would pd quit.. • ltraln en their
Eotab!Wunen11 In their frantlc bldl r~
plafinl talent.
Slnee by 1171 all the universities and
hflh achoois may be shut down, the
ICOUta and owner1 would have to look
to the junior high level to find athletu:
to whom to pay M million on a eeveo-
year no-cut conttact
Caught In the squlnch, whatever thlt ls,
would be tennJs, which by then woold
be openly prof•sslooal, alq with .. ~.
And in the mattu" ri golf, wbkb doea
Uke • lot ol time, they may have
to I.rim an JS.bole roond to three holes
in order for the PGA to squeeze in
at least four S9QO,OOO open-invilalklnal
toumameotl each week, Christma.s in-
cluded.
And had Los Angeles captured the. 1m Olympics, there might have been
further conflict since the LakerA could
well be engaged in the National B~ke.t
ball AJ90Cialion cb.amp:lonship J1er1es lll
August to end the season which began
the Augwt before.
Olympics? Who needa them!
Six-run Eighth
Dodgers Def eat
Knuckler, Braves
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Th• Los
An1eles Dodgera agree on one thing:
a k.auckleball ia mighty 1ough to ltlt.
"You can Imagine how hard it i:s to hit lf the catcher can't even catch
it," Dodger manager Walter Alston said
Thursday nlght at Dodger Stadium just
after he'd witnessed two of ~ best
knuckleballers, Atlanta's Phil Niekro and
Hoyt Wllhelm.
Niekro baffled the Dodgers for seven
lnnillgs, while teammate Orlando Cepeda
had blasted hit niath and 10th home
runs cl the aeuon off Claude Osteen,
$-<.
But in the eighth, Nlekre> lost
something from t he knuckler and the
Dodgert erupt.ed (or six runs and a 6-3
victory over the Brave11, their third
1tralght over Atlanta this season and
the thlrd time in a weel they've scored
sil'. run1 ln an laning.
''Even so, we were a little off tonight,''
amUed Bill Crabarkewlb:, noll•g the
Dodgers collected only seven hits, their
low in their last nine games.
Grabarkewitz picked up two more hita
to climb back ovt"r the .400 plateau,
to .402, and Atlanta's Rico Carty, the
major league leader, doubled in four
tries and is now at .417.
Rookie Sa11dy Vance, 4·1, \vill pitch
tonight for Los Angeles, againsi the
Braves' Pat Jarvis, 3-3.
Until the eighth Utning the OOdgers
had been limited to just two singleg
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Cepeda's home rtlllS, with no one on
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in the fourth, gave the Braves a 3.0
lead.
Ang els Begin
3-Gaine Set
With Twins
f.flNNEAPOLIS ·ST. PA UL -A year
ago the California Angels \\'ere. already
last In the American League West. They
had won but 11 of 39 games and their
manager, Bill Rigney, was out of •
job.
Today Califorllia is a very alive second
In the race, a mere game and one·half
behind Minnesota. And the Angels. facing
their former n1anager for the St>l'ond
time this season, open an important
three-game series with lhe Twins tonight.
The game v•ill be televised over chaJ1nel
5, beginning at 6 p.m.
Now under the direction of Le.fly
Phillips, the Angels are 2:'rll -and
they think two of those defeats shou ld
have bee• wins. They dropped a 6·5,
JO-Inning affalr in Oakland last Su nday
and lost J.2 to Chicago o• Wednesday
on a disputed call at home plat e,
"I think It is healthy that we are
pulling great importance on these games,
even though it's early," Philli ps com·
mented.
"\Ile believe we are contesiders. ''
Clyde Wright, S.2. of lhe Angels \\'ill
oppose Jim Perry, 6-2, in tonight's open-
er. California and Minnesota spilt their
first two games thi! season, have takeo
turns occupying first place and h~ve
never been separated by more than t"·o
gamu.
Are They for Real?
Summer Militar y Du ty
May Damage A ngels
MINNEAPOLIS -Today the. Angels
are a matter o( percentage points out
or first place in the American League
West, a dramatic turnabout from R ytar
ago when they were (by record) the
worst team In 1he major leagues.
Now the big que:ttioM are, can they
hold that Jof'ty position -are thty
for real? And, bow badly will the Angels
~ hurt thlt summer when reserve
military obUratton.s cut. into the talent'!'
~at Manager Dick Walsh. an ad-
mitted conservative when tt comes to
predictions, say1 tht club IJ not playing
--"'W HITE
WASH ...,,_... __ _
•LINN WHITI
owr fta head and expects the Haloa
to be aerioul contendtrs for the di visJona1
crown.
"The blc thlnr now It tM rest of
the luiue b be.ftnniDI to believe we're
tough," A)'S Walth.
Man.ger H1rold ''Lefty" Phillipe
a.greet with h1J boa -whk:h maket
:meme lf he seeks employment longevity.
Say1 Phillips, "They are capable fl
doing just what they've been doing (htt..
ting llke crazy, pitching well and winning
cames). Every day I feel more and
more k'1 the retl lbfng.
''But more Jmportant, so do th•
players.
"They btlleve they are wim<n. I
read IOOlewhere the other day (In
Oakland) that we were lucky to be
doing IO well because we heven'I had
injuries.
"Well, w• htve,.but we haven't been
doing a lot ol t.a.1kin1 about them. Jim
Speocer hurt a knee late in the spring,
Jim Freaosl hurt &11 insttp 11 couple of weekt ago.
''Molt l\ijs WtUld bavt beoet!. out two
weeks with that kind of sprain but he
stay~ In there to help lhe club.
"Andy J\lessc rsmith has bcrn l:lothered
by a sore shoulder. We've h;'ld a few
surprises th at have helped us. Spencer·,,
hitling far better than I ex~clcd ( 31B)
but may taper off to .2ll5 or .290.
''We're getting some help from Roger
Repoz and J()f Azcue th..1t l wasn't
counting on and we don't have to depend
on one man in the bullpen to help
us out."
Phillips Is reartul, however, of what
will happen to his team in June, July
and August when reserve military ob\iga.
Uons rip inlo his rMks.
Pitchers Rudy May, Tom Murphy and
Clyde Wright will be playing soldier
for a rouplc or weeks and so will out-
fielders Alex John.son (the team·s leading
hitter) and Jay John~e.
However, one happy note ls tbat ailing
hurler Mel Queen should be off the
disabl!'d list and ready for action.
* * * Frank Lane, special player ~rs<mnef
l kle for lite rampagtn1 Baltimore Orioles
ud former major league. general
managtr, offers OM word or ca utio n
for Angeli followe rs: "Keep your fingers
cro111ed, lnjurie1 will do wbat Ute other
t.eam1 can't -be8t you.
"And lflmeUmes the toii1 of a good
player can de> as much • a r m
psy cllolo1tcally as It de>t1 physlcally. l
tliink Detroit's dtcllne without Denny
Mel.ala 11 llD uample. of that.
"It'll tab a miracle to bring them
b1ck now, eve n when McLain re.tum•
Joly t."
Lue te.Ds a joke on hit eye for
bueball taJC.t, refe.rln1 to u occa1lo11
when be was watchU.1 Raio relief 1em
Ken Tahon pikhlng I• H1wall.
"I said •e didn 't 1how mucti as •
pitcher but lhat he might re.ally become
a (ood bitter If be were converted to
lite oa tfleld.''
And tve.n though thf. An gels "·on'I
llM! Newport Beach's Bill Vos11 a.tainst
J10utbp1w pltcbln1. Lane flPll:lr's that Vos1
lilta better against ltfthandr.11 hurltr1
than be does versu1 ri1blbander1,
Artist G1~id
Assistants
To Return
By ROGER CARLSON
01 "" 011tv l'llot '''''
The Laguna Beach High School
roaching puzzle -scrambled fo r over
a year after a salvo of dismissals and
resignations -appears to be falling
back in plact:.
Chief benefici11ry of recent
reassignments is varsity football c<>ech
•ta! Akins.
Akins "'ill open the 1970 football ('am-
1)aign \vilh e:(-aides Nonn Borucki and
t~<l Bowen back in lhe fold and his
lightweight probrram ha:i been bolstered
hy the return of Jerry Neumann, Jack
Lylhgoe and Warren Walkins.
All fi\'e assistants (Borucki also coach-
ed varsity baseball a nd Lythgoe varsity
track and cross country) had dropped
fro1n the coaching rolls after disputes
\rit h the Artists' administralion.
Chief among the complainls was a
class load factor and the requirements
to adhering to a gag-rule for coaches
10 regards to school problems.
The issue was set ofr with !be sudden
announcement that track coach Lythgoe
\Vas to be replaced. F()\lowing the
Lythgoe dismissal other coaches fell out or 1he ranks like dominos.
Asked if he was r equired to siRft
any further statements of policy by the
administration, Boruck i told the DAILY
PILO'I', "No, there has been no mention
of it."
As it naw !itands, Neumann will coach
lhe Bee football program with Walt
L..1\11son assisting.
In the Cee division, Lythgoe witt
r eassume the role of head coach with
\\latkins assisting.
OCC Crew,
Sailing, Golf
Athlet es Fet ed
Crew. sailing and golf shared the
;o;potlight Wednesday night at the annual
i>pring sports award banquet at Orange
Coast College.
Named P irate of the year in crew
'l\'3S Len \\larneke or Costa ~lesa.
\\'arneke \.\.'as a member of the crew
this year which shared first place in
the West Coast Championships with
University of Washington.
tfe also was a member or the varsity
four~man shell which last y ear placed
~econd in the nation at the lRA in
Syracuse, N.Y. Warneke was also named
l':tptain of the vari;ity boat. with
freshman capt:iin l1onors going to Mike
DcSilva of N£>v.•pn rt Reach.
Peter Wilson of Newport Beach was
namer! P irate of the year in sailing.
\1·ith Petl!r Parker of Balboa winning
f'aptain honors. OCC this year won the
Southern Series in sailing .against the
hi'St four-year sailing powers on t he
coast, and finished third in the Pacific
Coast Championships.
In golf. Mike Reeh! of Santa Ana,
!his year's stat e junior college champion
\\'as named Pi rate of U1e yea r, with
( ;nrrlon Kent of Villa Park selected cap-
lain. Rech) fired a 148 over the tough
Hancho Canada rourse in Carmel Valll'V
to win the medalist honors O\'er 160
golfers In the state tourney,
Awards were handed out by Dave
Grant, c:rew coach; Dane Schuck, sailing
coach: and golf coach Ray RossG. The
;ithlelt's and their parents \\:ere 11·e\comed
by Dr. Norn,an !·:. \\'atson. chancellor
nf lhe Coa~t Conirnunily College District :
:ind Dr. J\obcrt B. ~1onre, president
of OCC.
BARON BATON ACE -Fountain Va lley's junior sprinter Phil Mass
failed to quali!Y for to!Ught's CIF track and field s emifinals in the
220, but he will be running legs on the l~aron 440 and mile relay
teams. The two baton squads will attempt to ln1prove on 42.8 and
3;23.2 best while trying to earn spots in next week's finals.
Bala11ced Offe 11se S o11gla t
MV Coac h En1pha sizit1 g
\V ith Jess than a week's spring praclict
ron,pl eted , J.ilission VieJO's new heoi<l
football coach Bob 1-Uvner has not had
much of a chance to evaluate his
charg·es.
In fact the only thing the ex·University
of Washington signal-caller c~n do much
of now Is philosophize.
Hivner notes that the first thing he's
doing this spring on the road to changing
last year's I-fl mark into a winning one
is to look for particular abilities in
his players to get them placed in the
rij.?ht positions for the f::ill.
He says, "ln my system, we v.·ork
()0 five basic skills -passing, receiving,
puntjng, place-kicking and the center
snap. I believe it's very in1oprtant to
develop these skills and shnrpcn them
up during the spring.
''After all th<:re is no contact work
with pads until we begin our r egular
drills before school opens."
Hivner, a South Gate native, mnves
over to ~1ission Vil'jo from his a lma
maier, South Gate High, where he was
head grid 1nentor. lie inherits his new
job from Ray Dodge. v•ho strpped down
from the post after two ~r:irs
The forn1er 11uski e quarterback ~aye::
he is a finn belie-ver in a hala nr('(t
orre nse, something which the Dia blos
did not have in 1969.
lie offers, "You should always build
on your strengths and circumvcnl your
weaknesses."
Hivner adds. "We'll be mialler than
the average high school learn overall
so "'e have to concenlrate mainly on
quickness and comparative strength.'•
The attack will again center around
returning tailback Aundre Holmes, the
Oiab\os' leading ground gainer .es a
.sophomore last year with 4n yard!! In
11 7 carries for a 4.0 average.
lfolmes will be bolstered by halfback
Danny Brennan.
The top leltenn<1n trio in lht Dlablo
line i~ composed of gt1ard Kevin ~t artin
!5-!I, 170). linebacker Doyle Douglas 15-8,
1701 and 1<1c.k!e fl.lark Fe hse (6-2. 190 ).
Hivner's at e iJl the hole on the line
could be 6-3. 195-lb. Oou2 Wheat, •
transfer frun1 Texa s \\'ho will be just
a Jl)th grader in the f;1ll.
H1 vner says, "Our line positions will
probably be our weakest as fa r as site
i;ocs. so the quickness will he 111 very
important factor in our plans,"
Sept, 18
Sept. 2~
Oct. 2
Oct. 9
Oct. 16
Oct . 23
Oc t. 31
Nov. 6
Nov, 13
1970 Schedult'
Saddleback at SA Bowl
J)acifica
Oron.i,:e
E l Modena
at Tustin
Katella
Villa Park at El Modena
at San Clemente
Foothill at Tustin
Orange Coast
Invited to IRA
''1'h<it witl be a good place to :;;l"!tle
our dead hc>al."
111at was the romrne.nl by Orange
Cua.-;\ Collc>ge cre'v coach nnvf' f;ranl,
following acct'p!.ance of a n inv1 ta\10n to
rhe Intercollegiate A.owing Associalion
(,'hampiooships in Syracuse, N.Y. J une
11-13.
The dead heat occurred last Saturday
in the finals of the junior "arsity eiHflt
race at the Western Sprints Cham-
pionships in Long Beach. B o t h
Washington and CXX fin ished deed even
in a time or G:22.4. Washington also
will be al lhe IRA meet.
AlMg with the j unior varsity eight,
the freshman four boat has also bttn
1nvited to compete in the three-day af-
fair.
New Offense for Estan~ia
"This Is the time for u1 lo get tht
right ~rsonnel in the r ight place. And,
it's a time to )earn our new slot-I
f0rmation," says coach Phil Brown of
J~stancia J~igh as his Eagles go through
their paces in spring football drills.
It's a new ball game for the Eslancia
('rew with several e.xeellent candidate5
in the fold of 14 returning varsity let-
tennen aod a total field of 98 grid
aspirant! for varsity, junior varslty and
sophomore teams.
"We're quite a ,ways ahead o( last
year's pace. The second time around
ls a lot easit'r becau~ we. know Yo'hat
Iii e1pecl and we have the nucleus
of a Mlid backfil'ld intact.'' says Brown.
Included in the array of backfield
cnnclidale!I are quarterbacks Cu rt
'T'homas t l<lsl yenr's slt1 rler) and Hank
f.foore, a blue-chip prospect who'll be
a sophomore In the fall.
Fullback! Include Btll Wagner, Bob
Cooklyn and Mark Terrin aloog with
slotback candidale Bob Kaiser. All art
in the 165-pound range.
The leading tailback prospect appears
to be last year's fullback, J im Schultz,
who'll be a junior in the fall . Schultz
packs 145 pounds on a ft.a frame.
"Perhaps our biggesl problem at I.he
moment is In rinding the right per!JOMel
for the right spot. We're a little short
on depth bul we feel like we have
al least one or two good athletes 1t
each position. Size will be a factor
.again for us, but we wlll be bigger
than last year," says Brown .
Cra ig Dennis 11nd O'Neal Brewer are
11 couple of 200-plus pounders E1nchoring
lhe line at the n1omcnt. '
'The Eagles will l'Ofltlnue :r::prinR non·
contact drllls, winding it up J une 6
with a cllnlc for the students and par~nl..!.
Returning lettennen include Lee
Fr!edersdorf (f>.J O, t6a), Cal Shores (6-1,
185), Larry li1oulU:in (5-9, 190), Louis
F!ore3 (5-9, 190), Steve Snyder (5-6, 180),
Doug Brant (5-10, J75), Robbie Van
Vlanen (S-11, 165), Kaistt ($.9, 16.Sl,
Wagner (S-10. lflOJ, Thomas IS.II, 170),
Schultz, Terrin (5-8, JSO), Conklyn (S.11 ,
180) and Dennis (6-0, 205).
Sept. 18
S.p!. 25
Oct, 2
Oct. 9
Ocl. 16
Oct. 23
Oct. !10
Nov. 6
Nov . 14
l970 !khedule
at 1\i1tin
Buenn Park at OCC
Edison et Huntington Beach . Cmit.a Mera•
Magnolia at La Palma
Santa Ana Valley
Los Alamif(l~ at OCC
Fountain Vallry at Huntington
Corono del ~tar
•at Newport llarbor.
f ridily, M1y 22, 1<17D DAILY PILOT IZ
Stevens Se ek s 880 Crown
Saddleback Star Rruts • Ul Sta.te Meet Saturday
By CRAIG SHEFF
Of .,_ hltr ~IWI ll•ff
Bob Strvens prob3bly would not be
In the posillon he is today had it not
been for 11. quirk of fate when he was
a hlgh :school frt-slun<in.
1"he Saddleback College long distance
star LS scheduled to compete in the
880 of the alate junior college l r a c k
nnd field mttt Saturday night in
Modesto.
When Stevens was a freshman nt
Inglewood High, he was $1uff!ed Jnta
a se\•enth period P.E. class.
"I had a real good schedule and the
only way I could keep it was to stay
in the sevenO! period P .E. class and
go out for cross country."
He did and the resullS have been
rewarding.
Saturday night be \.\.'ill be C'Ompeting
against the b e s t of the junior college
hall-milers and according to Saddleback
roaches Don Guyer and Tom Gilmer,
he has an excellent chance of ·winning
it.
"I'm confident he tan win it," says
Gll yer, ln his first year as head Gaucho
spike coach, "and I think he can go
under I :~. I t depends on the tactics
used in the race."
Last week "'in the Southern California
finals at Bakersfield. Ste11ens finished
1l1i rd in 1:51.7, a Saddleback record and
1h£> fourth best junior college clocking
in 1he nation.
The winner, Ricco Sanchez o (
ntoorpark, ran 1:50.S.
According to Gilmer, Stevens got boxed
in from the beginning. and :ilthough
he hart a good kick lefL at t he end ,
he had too much to make up on Sanchez.
While at Inglewood High, Ste11ens
reached the Clf semifinals in his senior
year (1968), running 1:55.3, Since he
CIF SEM IFINALS
StATE D TON IGHT
The best prep track and field athletes
in Soulhern California will congregate
<it Norwalk's Cerritos College tonight
Jor the CIF Southern Section semifinals.
Field e11ents are slated for 5:30 p.m ..
with the initial running event sel for
5 :45.
Morningside ls the fa vorite in the varsi-
ty divi~on.
Orange County powerhouse Santa Ana
has chance.~ to annex the Bee and Cee
crowns "'hile coast area member \lari11a
still has seven qualifiers left in the
Cee competition.
The top three placers in each ht'at
1onight in the shorter races and the
m ile will iutvance to next weeks finals
a long wiUl the top eight in the. two mile
and each field event.
• ' •
' >
> • ,
8 • • •
•
did not finish Hr.st In the race, it was
not a ~hoot r('C'Ord but he i1Ull holds
the lnglCwl)O(J 1nark Or I .51i.Z.
Aflt'r lnglt'W(ltltl, the 6-1, 145--pounder
n1ovr<l on to El C11rn1no College where
he lln1shl'd s1x1h in the Southern Cttl
meet last ~!'aS11n. runnlllg I :53.9,
Ste11en s' fa U1er, a meal-c11Uer, moved
to 1'1 ission Viejo last summer, and the
younger SteVl'ns transferred to Sad·
dleback.
Stevens ran cross country last fall in
order to de1•e!op stamina for the coming
track season. In the process he finished
fifth in !he l)csr rt Conferenct' meet and
was named the Gauchos' most i1npro11ed
player.
Three weeks ago, he came throogll
wHh an iron<nan pttfonna.nce -=orxl
lo none. winning Ulree long distance
events in the Desert Conference meet.
Running only to win and not for tlm~.
Stevens captured the 880 (2:01.2), mile
t4 :33.4) and two-mile (IO:GJ.l). Seil30n
bests include the""'H+:i-half, 4: lD.O ~
9:43.0. ··-
Stevens, who has had a full scholarship
offered to him by a major Northern
Ca!Hornia college track power, will make
the trip to Modesto with teammate Paul
Cox.
Cox will compete in the javelin. He
finished sixth in the SoCal meet with
a toss of 1~7. The javelin competition
gets under \lo'ay at noon Saturday with
the 880 beginning at $:28 p.m.
Only One Way t o Go
Mes a Football T eam
Nee d s Positive A ttitude
As foo1ball goes, Cos ta Mesa High
has ne11er bee" known to tear up any
gridirons consistently.
The best grid year in t-.1esa history
\.\.·as in 19fi7 when the Mustangs compiled
a 4-4-1 mark. Last season the Mesans
were only 2-7.
Uut head coach t-.1a:x Miller, in his
Sl'Cond year ol the f.1es a helm afll'r
seven years al Sacramento's Rancho
Cordova ll1gh. Lhinks the ·Mustang grid-
ders ca11 surpass the '69 record with
fe'A'er injuries and a winning attitude.
~1iller notes. "\\'e're a litlle quicker
a nd a lillle bigger than we were last
year and we 1vere bothered by 21 injuries
lo top everything o£f.
"l feel that everything depends on
the type or attitudes thilt deve lop during
the surruner 1no111hs. \Ve ha11e enough
peopJC' back lo µut togelher a "'inning
unit provldcd we have a ?05iti11e atti-
tude."
Leading the Atesa grid candidate!'! In
6pring practice and expected to be the
most prized pigsk in possession on the
campus in the f:i ll is 6·2, 215-pound
Pat Sweetland.
Sweet.land v.•il! he a senior for the
upco1ning season and !his past fall he
n1ade all-Orange County and all-lrvlne
lA·ague at defeni;ive end. He is also
an t<XCel!ent o[fens1111• tight end.
Backirig hirn al tight end and also
cavorting in the defensive secondary will
be 6-1 , 185·pound j u n i or Jon
1\tarchiorlalti.
The ~1esa receiving corps will al!o
be shortd up by the return of speedy
\\:jde receivers Dale Kubeska (6-3, 210),
F rank ·Kelly (5-9, i&O ), Ra•dy Naylor
(5-11, 165) and Dan Baker.
Tossing bullets at the talented bu•ch
of glue-fingered prospects wil l be senior
quarterback Robin Senik (5-10, 160). He
completed 17-0f.-46 passes in 1969 for
293 yards.
Biggest gap to fill is at center where
the Mustangs lost .all-leaguer Dick Ftr·
ryman,
Dale WiUiams (f>-9, 170) and Beany
Ricardo (5-9, 185) are currently waging
a battle for the starti•g pivot berth.
The latter is the team ·s punt and kick
specialis1.
A big difference in the ~1ust.angs' past
and present showings coUld be the health
of tailback Kim Wolf (5-9, 160 ), who
has been the squad's leading ground.
gai11er when he has not been sldelilled
with assorted injuries over the last two
seasons.
Says fl.!il!e r, "Wt only have one way to go, and that's up.''
1970 Schedule
Sept. 19 KatelJa•
Sept. 26 Newport Harbor•
Oct. 2 litagnolia at Western High
Oct. 9 Estancia ~
Oct. 16 Los Alamitos at Western lligh
Oct. 24 Fountain Valley at \Ves\minster
Oct. 31 Corooa de! Mar•
No11, 6 Edillon •
Nov. 13 SA Valley .et OCC
•at Newport Harbor High
•
Whats
ca.
We hereby declare"1970-Th•
Year of the Pu11ycat. Our na•
tional prize·winnina: d r ink has
#'i' become a 11.rea t aucceas. No
~ wonder. This aunny, orange ..
'""'( aweet sour makes you want to
'• purr. And mixes up quick as a cat. Just combine
a packet of "Instant Pussycat Mix," water
and Early T imes. Ask for Instant Puuyca.t
Mix at your favorite food or liquor atore...
To eet a aet of 4-l OM oz. Plwycat alauea and 4
packets of Instant Pussycat Mix," send $2.95 to:
EARLY TIMF.S PUSSYCAT CLASSES
P. 0 . BOX 377, MAPLE PLAIN, MINNESOTA SSJ5f
~%GALLON
SAVE1_§!!
NOW•U!!
Buy&caae
S&velO'X.more
JI DAILY PJLOT
Sport• in Brief JJo,v to TalCe the F un Out of Golf Coast Area Briefs Chapma11 Po sts No-~o -
1 W~& THll.EE
IN T~E TIZAP -
'JOU WE.IZE RliJll.
IN ™E I ll.AP
ANV bl~ ON
1~E bil.EW-
Ne~·port Harbor High ~chool
v.·1JI honor its basellall athletr~
.l\-1onday night wilh a sport~
awards b.Hnquet
\',1nlloorcl>ef\I' 1)1 ,\r»1IH un.
lterb J/11! of Luar.J. ,.,,, .
Yodt'r t SC a.~si~l~nl t 11,•t'll ;111d
rorn1crly ol Bl<i1r High 1, llul
Shcrbl.·ck of Fu1!1>r1011 ,!( .•• 1111
Clar£' Slaughter of l'r1·-11ii II
1111rri11 r•l .1n•t 111 o s t In·
p11 .1' ·rn1JI lor the three spor I~
2 Playoff Wi11 s Fesl1vit1es gel under \1•ay
at 7 o'clock 1n the ~(·hwl
c;,ireteria with lhc vars11v,
jµnior varsity and frosh·sor}h
luullJ;,ill li:-i~lielb:ill and
Lil~t IJJIJ
'flu•
I>" 11" I
I 111 t
\l.,1111 ,n·,
,11 ~~r.
Cluh i ~
!ii :\nn1 ~
SACRAME N'l'O -Chapm<in
College, top rankrd nationally
among. small college baseball
teams. beat San Fern:indo
Valley Slate, 7-61 in JO inrungs
Thursday night to force an
extra NCAA \Vestern Hrg ional
Playoff game today.
The victory reversed a S·l
loss lo th!' !\lataUors !'<1rl1rr
in the lourn•unenl and t1rd
the clubs al one loss apiecr.
'Ill(> "'Hiner o( today·s rvn1a11·h
goes to the !'CAA National
Pl;iyorfc; next month in Spru11:;-
f1rld. l\1o.
Chapman hild g111ten pa~t
S;icramenlo S1att !'a r ! t c r
Thursd;iy \\'J lh a 4·0 sh11!011t
from righlhander Ar! Sptn~er.
Dcspi!P bcinJ; lrom a srnall
r nllegP. the Chaf}ma n club w;is
talented enough this season
Ru stler s
Ne ed More
Pitchi11g
\\11th the nucleus of the 19i0
Golden \Yest College llasieball
4eam retu rni ng nex t year.
llustler coach Fred J loover
figu res that 1vit.h better overall
pitcing. 1971 should be vastly
improved.
lncludrd in !hr east of
returnees nl'xl sea~on wilt be
. hm and ."lohn Hog;:1n. \\1ayne
Kiefer. Buddy Moen, Sieve
Nelsoo , Rex Snyder, Rick
Barnes, Greg Jlenry, Glenn
Oslerode e1nd Steve Johnson.
The Jlogan brothers both
batled over the .300 mark.
. Ji m Hogan srnv the most
<iclion and finished with a .308
season mark, while palroling
center rield for the Rustlers.
Me also drew first te<im
All-Southern Ca 1 J Io r n i a
Conference honors and "'as
named to Uie second leam
nf the first. annual All·
Southern Cal junior t'Ol!ege
team.
Brother .lohn, !'N:"ing l1mitrtl
;iM ion, baltrd .Jl~. lie is a
thi rd bast1na11.
i'-10f'n, .a short.~klp. 11·as ;i
'-l't"ond tr;:un all.eontcrencr
.~lcct1on . Ile baned on ly .21 11
tlunng the seasoo bul '11.'as
JI defensive s1andou1
Kiefer, an ou1!1clder, hi( at
"' .:106 clip.
Osterode, a p1tt'hcr. d ii>w
honorable mcn!trin lr1urel~. Hr
had a 3-:l season record and
finished \l'tl h ;i respeetable
,_ r ;i, nf 2 i .1
ll enry c·onrllldcd th<' season
"ilh a 4.5 n1.1rk. pit ching 1n
04 1nnini_:s. li e finished \1•it h
:i :'.1.42 f' r a. J ohnson. <1lso 11
pitcher, Y.Orked in only 14 in-
nini;:s.
Gl)lden \\'e;)I "111 miss the
~erv1ccs of 1nf1rlders Nl')(>l
rau~lon and Bill Bnv.·en. both
nf 11 horn arr !<ophomore~.
Rl>ttJ ll't'T'" ;1]1-('nnfrrrnr:r fir.I
tc;in1 .c;elect ions.
P<lulsoo led tl1f' Ht1sller~ in
h1tl1ng-'"'1lh a 3~~ average
11h!lr Bo11<"n , a first b:i•em:1n.
h.1itrrf at ;i .24 1 C'hf) for !hr
;.r;i~on
.\ccord1ni:: lo Jlru111•r. !h,
n u::-lll'r p1trlHTl.C ~tr1J( h.uJ !hr
hr<;t h;isc-011 h:lll r<1t1011 11f
any {;olden \\lrc;I tram in !111•
~chml'i; ~hor1 history.
··our p1U.:her" h<1d good •nn·
lrol," says Jloovrr. "hut
1navbe it "'a" loo Ji(OCod ·•
Thus the (:olrlen \\'rst co;i(h
hopes for lx>tlrr fl 1 r r a I l
pitching next ~a."'1n.
The Rustlers f1n1,.hrd \\!lh
111 ~cason record of 1.l!6. hul
11ere >JO in Sou t h e rn
California Confrrrncr ar tion.
During the final round of play.
fi<>lden Wci;t. v.·on lour nf lh<'
fiv e games. Four of thP 10
c1mrit Josseii; came in f'Xtra
innings.
SOFT SELL SAM
to beat perennial Par~ chamf}
Sou thern Cal lwice. :; an
. Fernando is se\'cnlh ranked
in nat ional sland 1ngs.
•
LOS A:-.'CELES -Geor~r
.\Jlrn, veteran coach of 1he
1.os Angeles, Hanis, says that
he doubts he will he reh ired r-"'~-------'1
af\er his f11·e-year contract ex· ~~::;~~~~p".':=~ p1res 1n nine months.
··1 figure this 1s rny btsl ""'~
''t'<tr v.·11h the club," Allen 1~--
lold newsmen \\lednesday. "tr
1hev wanted me ba<:k. I "ould
haVe heard from thern now."
Allen. who \<Jas fired in J968
alter difference.~ with ftains
owne r Dan Ree\·es. then
·~
l
reinstated eight days lc1tC"r After the others in your fourson1c have putted out. ti.Ike a fc\v 1non1enls to
under his old cont ract, said Jlrilc.ticc lbe pull you n11ssed. This is a good place lo linger long enough to
he has not even had any in· post your score -or argue about 1t. Don 't be t:onc:crned about the foursome
formal d iscussion.~ with thr coming up behind.
lcan1 officials about .a 1971 ----"--'------------------------------r"On1 r<tc l.
•
:'\E\V YORK -·rhc pre si·
denl of the U.S. Golf Assoc1<1-
11on criticized manufacturers
of golf equipment today for
a "deplorablt act" in the wake
or the USGA action in puttin,i.:
one of the nation's lofl
amateurs on two months pro •
b<ttion.
tilarvin "Vinny'' Giles 111
nf Richmond, Va., r unnerup
in the National Amateur
Championship the liisl two
years. forfeited his arnateur
status. the liSGA anno unced
Thursday. by accepting six
flozen golf balls at Augusta .
Ga., before the ~1arl of th('
19i0 f.t asters Tollrnament 111
April.
This, said Philip II. Strub·
ing. president of U1e LS(;/\,
viola ted Ru le J.9 which re;id.~:
"AecepLlng golf balls, clubs .
~ o I f merchandise, i: n I f
clothing or golf shoes from
anyone dealinr;? in s u c h
rnerchandise without paymenl
of the current markct price."
Strubing said Giles· a1··
c.·rplance nf lhe halls frn111
a representative or the Dunlon
Tin" and Rubber Corporation
\\'as a •'thoughtles.o:; a<:L n•1
more and no lcs~."
•
PITTSBURGH -:i.·1a r1 v
Bl;:ikr. !he t'olorf11l gf'ner;il
manager of the Atlan!;i H awk~
"'hn resigned thref' \\"eeks ag...,
today, 111111 be nrcn1rd grn<'r:ll
1nanager of I hr P1 Tl ~burgh
P11X'rs of the .-\ n1 c r i c a n
Basketball A.s.~oc1a !ion . it 1r<is
lr:i rned.
Blake. in h1" 40". hnd brc>rl
\\'l!h !he lla11"k ~. or lhr \;a.
r1on;iJ Basketball As~oc1:1l1on
for 17 year". joining Hi., l'lt1b
111 1951 \l'hen lh<',I' v.crr in
\1 1h1·aukee Hr slartrd ;i(
publicity rhrcclnr anrf <l '•l~·
tan\ tn Ben J\rrncr thrn
owner of the team.
Ne,v Cv l'l c
Feature Se t
". n1·1•·, ~pet'1:ll weel..h l'iir·
ing lca1 urc rkhuts tn111gh1 ;ii
lh 1' Ora ng e Cnun!v
~·;11q::rou11ds in Cost;i Mesa.
1111:;!1 ·/)0wc rrd Cla~s I\
spi~t'dway motnrcyrles ro ar 111-
10 th(• fairgrounds ::;\ad1u1 n
v.11 h r;iring starting at 8 p ni.
:J:J Seniors Lost
CdM Enthusiasm
Pleases Holland
Foo1b11ll fortunes a1 Corona
tlt:I l\1ar l/i~h hav(' hit high
and low f'bbs sint.'t' thr school
firs! orened it s doors i1t !962.
The low po111l in Sra King
gnd1ron «nn.-il s \V as the first
yrar of compct1tion ( 1962 1.
11·ht·n Corona wa.~ 11•inlrss in
l'ighl tries.
Tile '66 ;ind 'li8 TH:'!rks nf
~.:J.t .a11d S·~ w1•re the school's
lop !>Crcenlages.
The 5.4 mark in 1%8 w;is
;iccornplished undrr lhe rcin.s
of headman Duve Holl:intl.
11 ho begins his lour!h ve<.1r
;it the helm of thr :-iea King
football ship.
Las! :>ruson tlir r1•t•urd
11·;is re1·er.,e(I to 4.5 but :i~ Hui.
l1111d f}ut c; IL "In 19!i9, 11 r
h<id wine \'>llll'VS and so nH•
hill.s <1n1t \\'P ~ol-t of finishrd
111 ;1 valle.v ··
The Sr;i l\ing~ drffPlll'd 1hr1!'
Lt~\ lhrf'e -;!art' of 'ti!! 1n
li·v1n(' Lc;ig11£' "'Inner l.nar:i.
~.1111a t\na Valley and <tn n-
1'11''11 Esl.'.lnl'Ja.
I lolland says. ''Thus ff1 r 1"
~pri11g f}ri1el1<·r, 1'111 1·rf)'
pleasrd with the cnthu~iasm
U1e kids havr shown . And I'll
be c1•cn 1nore pleased in the
rall 1( these s<1 n1e ktds do
lh r job f'Xpcc lcd of them.''
Of·J.15 <ieri<iJ.~ ror /!Ill _y;1r1!~
<ts a junior and Hollarl<I would
likl' In gn to the ;1ir <'ICll
more 11 ·70 1! Snmu•·ls "t:iv~
health,1
S;,imuc1.~· pnn1:1ry l.11'J:1'I 111
the fall i~ cxpl't:!rd 10 br
fi.Q. 170-pound ~fllll trld Kar·I
Kil!rfcr. 11•hn doubles :i~ .:i
defensive back.
J oining K1llelcr in rlie S(';i
King secondary i.~ 6·2, !!JO..
pound senior .Jeff Heichr·r·t.
a tight end on nfft•n.~r.
Alt>c f{amsey es lhe f1111r!h
returning stc1 rl<"r. The f!.10 1~.
220-pounder pl ays l1n1•b;1rl..1·r
nn d('fen~r ;ind 1~ :1 ~ou1t
b!0ckf'r at une11~11f' r :ii:ld~·
f!olland lan1en1s 11·hen Llunk
ing <1bnut having lo rt'pla<'f'
al111osl his entire of1t'n!'l~f' ••11d
d£'!ens11'f' hne'
1970 Schedult
:-1·111. Iii Nrwporl lliirbur
SCp\. 2.l s:in1;1 An:1 •
()l'f .. 1 S<in1;i r\n;i V;dlr1 •
<let. !I ~:r!1~on dl \\'r~1n11n.~1t r
Oct. Iii 1'nu111a1n V.d lr1
Oi.:i :?:l .\L1g11ul1.1 ()('\ ::1 ('r),~\:t ,\'11·.~;1
,\'01·. r. l,1,. 'i l:un1 !11' :11
Nov. 11
• at ,\c11'flo11
\\'t\,1,·rn ll1cll
I·' l<111c1:1 •
I !,11 l1or
R11 stler Ace
011 SoCal
JC Squad
(iolcien \\lest College oul·
ficldf'r Jim Hogan has been
selected to the second team
nl lhc first Sou!Jiern California
1un1or collegr all.star b<tseba!l
~q uad
!J ug<r11, wli o played c<:nll'r
l1cld for the Hust.Jers, hit .. 106
101· ll1e 19711 camp<llgn.
.\ /rf'~hinan, Hogan balled
:1:!!! dunng the Southern
C.il1fornia Conference season
;ind 1vas named to the circuit's
fJr~t train.
tl'rntos, :l8·1, the: &:luthern
l'aliforni;i t:h:impion. was the
only ~ch110! ro Jnnd two pl<1yl'r~
on lhe f1r8t lr:ini. pitcher Cliff
\ .11uJ1·1·u1I anr! 111 ~l basc1nan
·11rn ~1t'l'lt·
r"" T••m f',11 Woo6 tLA Ydll•V . It-r,,,.,
•l·•lf ((•<•11<"\, lnl O""' Cto"C" f.V.1
\An An•<>n,oJ D<u1~ Dtc1nc•• l"·••C•l.
·•••• GulOth l~•D ttona<>); or J••• v .,,.,~,, f(h•H•1J, O•ve l'A>oc .... ·.••
1•~.,.,.~~r>.1, I'" 8~'""'· l'A•. ~.ln
1.~1 <• ,,1, u1.1,,, Gl•n B•rb•rot no•·o
ll·4r•11, r> ('"' V•uat~·• ((e.-.•c~•.
J•+•., MrJollo" ILA((•. l~O• .S;,e~t
Snono l••m
' fl•I\ M<Cc1 •I~ (Ml ··~ J·~·~•ni, "(J,,,.,1 ""I"""' IV•n l ur••
I'' '~"t GO••lo.01 '~"ll•r•Ofil. ("r•n• ll•<n~oa•' l(.,rflo•l, V•(lor H"'"'
"~ v•l1•v1, OF Jom flo<>•n fC.N•I•••
Wo·rt, B•n !J••n l\lot•or VMl•t•. '"'Q r .. ,, •• , l(IMH•vl, Vt•I"• L·"''
''"" 1nn1r<oo• V•l1•vl. r>-B<ll
('/"'"m"a IEl••••'f,.1n1, John G••I~·~ rn•!fr v) ••C 1,.v•n M(Konrr; IR '"
Ho~on
Corona 's grid rank.~ 'vcrr
c!rcim:1t<'d by tht> loss nf J.1
Sf1n1or.~ including lullb;ick Rick
l'etros ;ind l1'1r st;irs .JrH
1;0C'IJ1z. J11n North :ind Dou~
II 1lhil ril.
lloll;ind hp;11rr~ r1·r r.v ga111r
his lram pl;iy.~ 11·111 br a 1n11gh
nn11 tvith rach lrvinf' IMP
~chf1()1 irn r rOl'l'd 1n addition
10 !A;ira tw1ng replared hy
l.0<; Alamitos 1n the right-tea m
1•1rcu1!.
Trojci11 , UC LA N i11 es
W i11 1,o ur11 ey G£111ies
lie "ilY"· ''Therr ll'nn't h('
nnr rasy 12:;1mr nn ntir
'C'h<'1lulr 1nf'h1d1ni;: n11r Tll)n-
11.,1~11(' ffPl){lnrrH ~ 1.\P11 I)() rt
;ind S:u11a Anal. ~o \\r'I) hal'f'
Ill hf' nn ri11r 1u<'~ a!I \{';1c;on
lnr1~ .,
Thr Sr:1 l\1ng<;, 11 hn i·)ri,r
ftlll spring pra•t1rr .J11nr 11
11 111! .in inlra~qund ~f'rlm·
fll;Jg(' h;] I I' ;11) l'\Jlf'rl-
l'll('Pd !1;111cl ;i1 ci11<11·1t'rh11<.:k in
lrfthandrr Kr ith S.11n11Pls Th•'
11fl .I' ~nuthp.'.lw <"on1p(eted ~II·
LOS A.\!,El.ES ~LPl t
Dave K1ni:m<111 h;id ;i hoinc
r un an<I lhre<' tltJuhl<'~ 111 four•
trips Thur.~rl.~v a~ ron11·n·n1·r
ch amp1nn l n 1 1 •' r \ t I \ uf
Sourhrrn < .1l1fv1n1.1 IJ~1111h1·d
f lrr~(Jn :-;;1;11(' 11 : . .111 1
l (I.:\ t·d gl'd \\ ;1 \ Ii ! n i: I " 11
:--1;1 (1' ;).! Ill 111• 111"1 i,:,11111
11 l ,1 d nu h Ir 1 1!111111,il11111
}'Jl<'llil'-1) b;1,,l'h:'lil l11uri1:11111.,1I
'l'hr. w111nrr (If th1• thn·(• i1 .. 1
;d!;i1r 11111 n'rrr~t·n1 I h ,,
h'iJ!;UC in !he NC,'''' n1~ll h'l
8 plavnfl~ nc-;t 11 r1·kcn<!.
l\1rigm;in , an null1rldcr frnm
Prospect. Ill, tlou!cd a thrcr·
run h111n1'r 10 the fourth inning
:1s th1· 'l roJan:-.. rated the No.
I 1 ullr_t!c b,'isCba11 ll·an1 In
lllt• r1.1tu1n, p1!Nt 11p ~ JI) I
11 . .tl
h111g111;in, 11!111 ;il.-o "'111 i't!
f,,111· 11111\ ,1ga1n,1 OrrJ::o r1
c-.1.11 1· h1111,,1r1~ h1' h.1111n~
·"' 1,1;..:1• 1 .. i:,.; :111(1 i.lu ;.:g1ng
J wrr 1•11L1jil' lo !Iii)
""1•ll(H1lon' ~;rrg \\'1dn1.111
I 'i1 ' ,\n. :! p11<·l11•r gol I Ii<'
11111 1111!1 relit•! hr•lp !roll\
:-t• 11' 1111 ... bv i\!tkt• !\eek \1 as
lhr lo.,rr
~1 ams in the sp<1Uigh1.
Included 11 the agenda v.111
the narning or 1110.,1
luab!e player!> ;ind capt;1111~
HI all three divisio ns. • ·rhl' Ne11'porl l lad1(1r L;i11'n
Bowling Club dr;11! 111vudi11i;
llecrca!ion P<irli of Lon,.;:
llf'a<:h a 2tll . 157 de r r a l
\Vednesciuy afternoon.
Jteg1str<:1 t1on for 1111· 1110 11.J\
;1 fl<ur 1s 9 a n1 . Sn!urd,.\
•
A sports <iwards !'171nr1 111 I
honoring athle!t"~ u1 S I .
Catherine Sc/1110I 1~ ~r t 1111
1hc \\i11n:in·~ Club 111 l. 1g1111,,
Brach tonight.
•
Th,.. Fo11nt,•1n V;illey C:irrls
'·t•rn l)lf'l'o l,ci \rb,111 lr lifll IS hJOli·
01:.: !i•r .i i-pun~nr lor the 19i0
.' i·.1~•1n
l11if·11 •i 111l p:u111·~ i;hnuhl
j "l\tt1• l f;.,IJ r h;11'f11 11r1 <it Iii:!·
'1\1,11 ~Jt( 11 i·t •l 'l .'!fl ii Ill , itn•I
, p 111 'f1Jf': 1!uy thrOtlbh
The hosts 11·011 eight. Inf.tr,.------------------------. thrt>c and tied three in the
!:i<tt11nJ,1~
FC.\lil'J!ll'~ J.:('l l!()o!( !' \IJ\'
<ii 7 :IU "'llh award.~ :111 111 .. ~1
1·a1uable pla~C't'. f'llfll,11n. 111u~t
14-g;ime set.
• 50°/o DI S COUNT
i~ dunt b~<;<JY bod''' qo on ,~I• lt>dd~ All ,1vl e•, oll ,...+.I
fldk1 cclo••. Al' ,.,1,. fl' .~.i l?b1 bu9<1v, 1H1tl •t•dv. 1q10
b~9·]1 1tr•el ••oldy, GT 5,,fi,,..., ,,..1, ,.nd oH<•••Cti•>.
ASTRO A UTO C ENTER
J OI E. FIRST -S.6-NTA ANA -l"l!one' !.41 ·2,•Z
OPEN SATU RDAY & SUNDAY
l\lore lha11 300 entric~ trom
;ill over Southern California
arc cxpeclr d In a.ssemblc ;itl
Tustin·s foothill H i~h S:ilur
tlay for the r1rst..cvcr ('IF
SoUthern Section i;irls sw1n1
11rcl imina rics. I ~ .... ,.....,,...,,,,,....,,,,,...,.,...~..,,,,,,....,.,,,,,.,,...,,,,,....,,,,.....,.,,,~....,,,,,,1
First event is :.cl1ed11led for
9 <i.m. and con1pf't1tinn is 1•x.
pccted to lasl al lc<Jsl four
hours.
The girls v.·dl h<' .~plit into
two C<ttegonC's-varsity ;ind
Frosh-soph-'11.•ith lhr('e nr fou r
hc<1ts in c<ich event drpt"nd1ng
1111011 the number of cnlncs
in each.
The. varsity torrna1 1•·111
folto1v the sa111 c order 'ff
events used in lhf' CIF' boys
varsity S\vim progra1n wh ile
the frosh-soph group \1•ill
operate with the norn1al Cer.
boys system.
The lop six qu<1l 1r1r rs i11
e<1ch evenl \Viii earn llert h~
in the !\l:.iy 29 swimn1ing .ind >UJ1' ' :~
diving fin als fnr girls :11 .,,,.
Ileverly I fill~ Nc1talor1un1 ~~
Surinv llills i.~ l:i\'llrrd 10 1 , 1.~adr :hrn11gh 11~1' prr!ir~l\ nn:! -· ,,., ·
r,iplu1c !lie lc,1111 11lh 111'\I O.olrotr-.>(ed bylk• ,._lfr~u l'i "'' comµany , S<l f'iut.!. 100 ;. c,,,.,, ""'°tralSporitlt 11·cek. Thr L;.nH:c rs :ilrc:idy '
11ual1f1ed l\Vn girl~ in l;1sl
Saturday's diving f}relin1.,.
Tofl individua l compt•titor ;it
Foothill "·ill be Lak ewood's
~u~lc Ahvood , t1 1r Arncric;in
r<'cord holrfrr in thr 1110 and
2()0-y:ird !);1t·k.;tn1k l' c1r111~
•
1 ii•' .'crnnrl ;1l1H11.1l Su11.l11 I
l111•1r:d1nP1 <1I :1IJ.s1ar lr;11·1, :1t1d!
11cld mer! 1v111 br h!'ld .Junr
20 al Cerrito~ Cntlr;.:c Ill
Nnrw;1lk
Th<' lllt'CL li·allll'f'' 1l1r
011L,tanll1ng ~rad11a11ni.: ...:r·11u1rs
frnrn the LA l ily ;11111 ('JI"
Sou1hcrn Seet 1011 track prn-
J.:r:in1.~ v.·ith ;di prnl'.·"t'd' !!ttl'll!
tu 1 IH' S11n:11r 1 lo111r 1111·
Asl hni<itir· t'hlldre11 111 'I 11·
jUflg,1.
L;i,I y1 •;1r·-; 111;iugur;1I ilrrll'
nvrr 5,(}00 f;.i rts 1'1 the Crrnto•,
lrl•i'k \11th lhf' ~r1111hr·rn Sc•f'
llnn dr!r.;11111,li lhe LA {'1L)'t
l1'<1 1n. ll.1· 1·1
•
l<.;,l;111r1.1 I l1~h S{·li1111I 11111 ;
f('l1• 1!\ ~pririg spnrl ~ .ilill<"lr•1 1'11£'sd.'.ly 11ichL 111th ;i ;J\1·;1rr!;;I
h:inq11rt 111 rhr "rh nn l
1•;1f•'len:~. Vest11·1t1<'' g f' 1
under v. .+v ;11 6 ::n !
Included on thr 11r11gi ,11n
11·111 he lhc n;11111n g •ll 1110,1
1.1h1;1hlr ;:1nd rupt.11n c; of '11r
~1:!\U l!j l,\l ~1!i~UJ!il.!l l ljj !!!j 1I
THE BIG ONE
·sEE
who will
WIN the ...
INDIANAPOLIS
S AT., MAY 30 "' MEMORIAL DAY
HURRY' BUY YOUR TICKE TS NOW!
.FIRST TIME IN COLOR!!
DOORS OPEN 7;30 AM . RACE' BEGINS 8:30 AM
All Seals Re served -$6, $7, $8
Ti•>Ct.TS ON <All N'}'.'I lit 'Ill" 0~1'1(( "ll "'UTUAI..
T l(t!(l AC:.l'<Cll' ~•·O llt~tllo'O'I OUll l T~ A001110Noll.L
1N .. 011~·•r10N •is .1(111 •
tr:i<'k . ha<:r/);111, i;nlf arid !rnn1.<11"------------------------.; !(':till~. 'I
Tlir Ell~lr uf 11!1· ~" 11 11111
:il,,1 h,. .111:1!111n1 ·1·d
•
Tl1r ~·-J 11nrl ,Jllt\11.,1 f.11';:
nr,1rh I (•(•!h,1 !1 CI in 1 r
')lllll''l!T {l hy ( ',11 St.ii•· 11.ll!l!!
ilf'ilt'h I IS Hl1 l.ifl f1i(f,11 ;111(!
.":Ht1rrl:1v .ii H r1 1' h !' 11 f! •'
H•·,J;1111 ,ltJI IP I .1111..; llr:11·!1. I
I n < I ud r rl ,11noni: fhr
·PCilko'r' '1111 l1r i\r>11·r<•rl
1 l:irbnr ..... r·:11\11• .fr1hn~n11 ( ·1:1rri
Make
THE
it a family
SEE
affair!
SHOW The special featurr 1s ;:i
mntrh rare nl the "·eek 11·hiell
11111 hr run e\'ery Frid;iy n1gl11
!hrnughout the mn1nrcyclr
n1c1ng se<ison al the f;11r
.croundc;. 11 \l'ill nl:Jlf·h !111\
ridrrs ;:ig;11nst each nrhrr rnr
l\1·0 toui;h laps arnu i.d lh r
l;t~t. JOO· yard dirt ov:il
DEAN LEWIS
Jn addition to the regular
lr<ilure. Rick Wood.~ of Hun-
t1nglo11 Beach will be on ha~d
1n demonstra!e once again
rh;if l"vt>n a fiO-yard handicap
r;:innot hamptr hi,i; chanre.~.
By Marvin Myers
\,\TIONAL LEA(;UE
East Oivisinn
\\1 I, Prt. fiR
ChH·a~o IR lfi .. 129
Nevi Vnr~ Ill 18 .5!4 ''
SI , Louis 18 !8 .500 1
Pi11 sllur~h IR 22 .4~ :I
l\1ontreal 1.l 22 ,405 ~ 1::
PhiladClflhi;i IS 23 .3!15 5
( :111i; 1 llllil\ I
l)od~er~
t\tl;inta
lloustnn
\I r~I
San Francistu
~an 011'.!JO
Oi,·i~ion
29 11
2:\ 16
21 17
19 22
lfl 22
18 24
l~11rod•y .. IU•wll• l<i~o•-.AI 7. Pd!>bJ•D~ A
r~1!•dc10~·• •. \1 loul1 i
Dofjl'• l , ""n~ll .1 (•n•l~n•t: 1, Hou''~" ~ 0~1v ~,.,., •. ,~~tc111re.1
TM•y'o Gom••
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.5.)~
.~S:l
.4~
.429
7
101 ~
II
12
l'•ll•tk/'•U" ry,<1<1't JJI •I MO"tro.tl !Srti"""'""
1. '"~"' (">t:•Oo IHolhm•" ~JI fl NfW VOi~ jl(oos"''" ' !I , .. Q.,,
~: LOii•\ !9tll•I l I) •• l'hil.Oflfl.,11 JC,, Jo~•· ton I j) n•11M
Cl11tln"*'' '"""'"" 1 1! .i Hou•lon fD;.,.•ttr I ii. h>Qhl
/\tl1ft10 IJ••••I l J\ 11 0.0,t~ IVMIC.t • •). n·o~' ~.n 0 1.,.,, IOobl(ltl l ·•) •I Stft Fr•"'•Kt tR<>lt
••II"" l ll, '"O~t
.\,l f.ll U'A:'ll Lf..\f;Uf.
i\=rw York
l)<'tro11
noslon
\\'a:-;h1ni::tnn
(lr1TlanO
\l l!ll!t'.~lll il
,\11;:rl.~
(>:1k l:111d
Cl1ic.1.f;!n
r..11hl';111kf'"
f\ar1sas C11\·
!';;1~1 llil'ii;inn
\\' I , l'rl.
:!Ii t2 .iiiM
21 IR .5:ul
17 Iii .4illi
16 l!I .·1.'17
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1:1 2n :m~
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1.1 2:i
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711
.fi;lfl
.471
.432
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f'l•,cl·~~ In, llO""" I
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"'''"' n~• LM•d tO<ln"' l·l) •t Ch1c100 r J•n••~1 l n.
"'~°' ~ •• .,.no1on f"•"""" 1)0) 91 O.lrn 1{N•r•reJ11, '"U"' ,. •• )'a•• (f'•1C•1on \))•I (.lf¥tl•nd l(h••<•
l J\ .. ~~!
8fl"O~ !Pr'•" J j) ~· ll•lhmo•• !!•1rd•n 1·11.
"'OM
DEAN .·LEWIS
1966 HARBOR BLVD .• COSTA MESA
Service ""d Paris for All lmpor led Ctr$
Modern Body Shop for All Cars
646-9303
MA.'r 51"(CIALS
[!J[O]]Y)~l!J~l
COROLLA 1970
$1697 +r .. & l ie.
AU Orh•r Mod•I• ht Stock
Mork II-Hilu• ,.ick11p-
lo,.d c.-.1,,,.._coro1u1
VOLVO
1970 DEMO
$2759
141 1 ii• .• radio, ~eot1•, •·•ri e•d !'•r.
·~7•01
US([> CAlt SP'lCIA.L
1967 TOYOTA Cor.,n•
\•d•• II•~·• ht••.,, •h•r~ •·~ l•••s• l•~ olll AUV
AT
• • •
NOW
Thru FRID AY, MAY 29th
lh~t • 1 ,,.1r,e1I .oncl "'~dti"'"~' /01 (•r•v "'""'b~· e( lh,
f~r~•lv <1 ! ll•e 1070 Chtl'" S~ow. pl.,,,,,.,.,""'"' lh'"'"'I~ f,;.
d•v M •v }~ S ... the •b1n•b•n'l M ~nj,. C.•rlo ~,.+, <1> ~,.
h,h,t, .. ,, "'t'IJ'""-91 "'r•• .. + •~• "·"I cl• 1 •~•'<" ,..j Mon••
c .. ,1~ .,,, .. 1 iv '"d r"""'"''""'"· r~.i vc"' .1 .... , ,~,11, ""
• "~""'V cl ,.,1.,,+,.1,, •nd ""' n lh~ "l""'"'I to .,.;" • "'0"·
derf..I ""'~ of ,00 'l•l!a"' o r "'"'· 81•n') ti. "'~ole 1 ..... 1.,
•ncl bl'. P '•P~ff'd +n ~••• !.,.
FR F. ~
200 GALLONS OF GAS
5 LUCKY WINNE RS !Licerised d rivers only)
N/11'4! .••.••.•• , ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
AODll[S~ ... , •••••••..•.••••••.•• , •. ·, • • • · • • • · · · · • • • • ·, ·
f'HONE .••. ,, •••...•.......•• , •.. , •.••.••.. · ••• ··•••• •••
Dl l"OSIT AT ~HOW-D ll.&WING ~111 . MA Y' 7• ,,
'';w liJJ1T 7D 11.ETJRE f.ARl Y?.1 FKOM IJll4T?! =----=
Oran,c:c Cnun l y'~ r_..irt::C'~I .'.l nr1 rirn.~1 rii·!nrlrrn ·rn,·nl;i ,1n r1 \·nlvn IJra!rr 11095 300 HARBOR .BLVDJ~;.tOSTA~MESA
• 1
I
' I
F icker a t Launch
Intrepid S tarts
Battle for Cup
T11e 12-nieter yacll! Intrepid,
carrying hopes or a repeat
RS the Ame rica's C u p
Defender. 1yas h1unchl!d in
New York Thursday.
There was a brief L'Om ..
missioning cerem<>ny as t.t:e
yaclit slid into the waters <>f
Long Tsl;ind Sound at ~1 ln ..
neford Shipyard on City Island
and Ulen 1vas towed awav to
have her mast stepJ}t'(L ·
On hand for !he coin·
m1ssion1ng \\'as \Villiam P.
(8111 ) F icker ol Nl'"']JOrt
Harbor Yadll Cub who wa:>
chosen as the 1970 he!rnsn1 an
on Intrepid to rep'v'e Bus
Mosbacher, the 1967 skipper.
f\1osbache r was unable to han·
die the ch<lres again this yea r
because of his \Vashing!o11
duties as President N1xon·s
chief of protocol.
In 196i Intrepid wa s t'u11·
~idered the 1vorld's f:lstesl 1:!~
meter by virtue ol hr r
r!ects11·c \vin iu lhe Arnene:111
trials plus her lopsided viC'1ory
uver Auslralia·s Dame 1':1tl1l'.
Mess ages
On Boats
BACK TO THE WAR S -The 12-meter yacht l ntrepid, 1967 defender of the
A1nc rica's Cup, is decorated with a good luck \vreaU1 sent by forn1er helms-
111an Jlu s Mosbacher Jr. and placed by a crewmi:ln shortly after her recoinmis-
sioning al f\.linncford Shipyard, N.Y. Thur.~day. Intrepid \\•ill take part in the
1970 Cup trials under the heln1s1nanship of \.Villian1 f'. (Ui!l) !-~ickcr of Neu'port
Harbor ''acht Club.
Intrepid was expeclt'.'ll to b\'
unde r sail toda y or Saturdav
ror preliminary.sails th;il 11iil
lead lo lhe trials for thr
J\n1erica's Cup starting ~111
Long Islan d Sound in June.
'l'hc s o u t h c r n California
Yachting Association \1 1t..
Coast Guard to Ba1i
Kliz Rudio Clieck s
i\1annc "radio checks" on
2182 Khz, Lhe Coast Guard c::il-
ling and distress frequency arc
now prohibited , according to
Char les Tighe, commander of
the 11th Coast Guard District.
Starting June I the Co~s!
Guard \.\'ill noL answer re -
qucsJs for radio chtcks and
Make P l an ~
For Ar rr osv ~ _,
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club
·of Newport Beach and Cabrlllo
B<'ach Y<l<elll Club of L(J~
: Angeles a rr 1n:1kl'dg plnns f(J r·
· 1hr 4th t1n11u;i l Bahi a tl{'
:-·Cr1brillo Hev1•rsc· A rgo~v .. Ji1nt•
•• JJ-14.
BCYC \1'11 1 br h(1<.I 1t1 11\1·
:; rlrcl frurn Cl3Y C \1 !i1ch r;ice:;
' frorn l.Qs :\ng('lf'S' 1(1 Ntwporl
·n1e Saturday night dinner and
. dance "·111 be held :11 BCYc·._
: lern porary club hcadqua rtt'rS.
1hr forn1er Villa ~1~1rina
. Restaurant on R:i)~ldf· J)ri\t•
After !hr S:iiunlily 111ght
fcstivi!irs Ilic llt·t·l 11111 racf•
•• ba1•k to Los 1\ngclrs llarbur
~.:('fl Sunday.
will report tile oil tndl'r\ 111 tlir
1~etJer!1l Corn1nunicr1Lions Coin·
n1issio11 as a \·iolat1ori of r;.11.J 111
regulatiuns.
Only exception of the nr1v
regulation \\'ill be /or lf'S\ pur.
poses by }~CC representalJVl.'S
or \Yhen qualified technicians
are installing equipment or
correcting deficiencies.
The new order does nut prn ..
hihn :,talion calls ul'l'r 21/ll,
but Vl'Ssels calling each other
11111 be rl'qulrl'd tu s1111ch 10
.111olhl'r fri•que ncy as soon a\
l'(1p\;:ie1 1s rnade.
Thr daily 1narinr inforn1;J·
lion bro<1dcasts transmitted
fro rn lhr Coast Gu;inl radio
station in LQng Beach are
given at 10 p.rn .. 7 30 <i n1.
12 fl 111. a nd 4 fl 111 on :.!6ilJ
Khz 1111h a priur :u111utull'l'-
ti1C'n( un ?182
TiH! bro<t dt;i~ls 01 Iii p 111
:ind 7:30 a.n1 . lnthJ(l l' 111•1Jtlh'r
:111d marine lnforr11ati11n and
thr transmissions <J! 12 p 1n
;inrl 4 p.m. will girc onl y 11'l'.I·
ther infnnnation.
The Coast Guarc!. in cnoprr.
;)tJ011 1\'llh 1he P<ic1f1c Tele·
pho ne l'n. trani;n11ti; 11·<·a!h'.'r
;ind 1nar1nr 1n £nrn1alion frnrn
1he Coa$t <;11.1rd radio s1a1ir1n
u1t'f $;111 P~·tlrl) Opcr.11or IJt'·
{j\ICJ1l lrS 2466 <Uld 2566 t•l !J
a ni. nnd 9 ['I tn.
Cc1111 pb ell l'iclr e£1 for ill <'<'I
Argyle
11111ntr tn
C;1n1pl)('I\ \\3~ 1h1·
ll:1llk1 i1 Y:u·hl t"lu!J ~
"C'rlCS lo C 1 ] Ill I 11 :I t I 0 1l
~r 1rr 1111 11 r
rE'pre5enl lht·
111\<1 l\Oilld
(·1i1h i11 the
~1.dlorv ('up •111:i1!! r 1!11,1!~
for 1J1c 01r•n\ \nrih Arncr'1r;•ll
~iH11 lin~ <h;11n1>1on~h11•"
·c ampbclJ'o;; r rp11· 11;1<. 1·•1111
posed of Bruce l \urnann ,1nd
Toni J)urec\L
'
•
I
ln thr l1n;il l\\n rarr~
\\ ('ti 11 I' .., ii .! \' (' ,1 Jtl p!J(•il
<·l.11unulC'd H1l'k .Jenness "'1th
i l'l'l\11)!'11 l·'lt•tr!1f•1· p,,',JCh :.•lld
l !n~r11 -ind HnntlJ Tht• ·~rqc."
11 ;1" ~<llil·d 1n Sul111g ('1:1 ~"
~1.u1p~
CJu11rl1 ·r f111:d<, for 1hr \1,11
ln1·y 111IJ he hcJd at h 1n:• Jl:.r
ho r Yaeh! Cluh .June l:l-11 '!hi·
fina l!> \\·i ll be hrld in f\'e11 '
.Jer"ey later in !hr ~11rn11H·r.
,I J
.Ji''
.f'
..
Quee1a of Fl.eet
\'a Turko, the C'n!un1hla .. 5Q yav.:J that placed second
in the 1970 i\cap11l co lt.:icc under the con11nand ol
(ieo1·ge An(.1r1', J>~il'ifi c 1\1:-i rinc,rs '\'achL ('l11h. ,i ll !
head a li st o! ct'al'k }'<lLlhs \~1k 111 _1.! ofJ lrnrn l\l~1 r1nt1
dcl Rey f\llay 28 on the .~crond nnn11a1 Ouler Island
rn cc co..spo11'>nrC'd hi· l 'J\1'\'(' ;ind Billho;;i 't'nchl
1 ·luh, 'fhc :-!fi:l-1n1lc r.Hi;C \\ill c11d al i\e\vpor 1.
Sc ott Alla n
Wi ns Meet
A r. Academ y
!.t Scri\l Allan r r o 111
;'\('11 port Br:ic:h won thr U S.
N;1r;i l 1\e:1d('111y sailtng cha111.
p1011nsh1ps tll1 s \1·cek 11 1th
th n·P str;ilg lil firsts. qualif)'·
1ng h1n1 to n•11re~cnt the Nava l
Aeadf•111y 111 the Mall<>ry Cup
lin;1ls fr1r the men's North
A111t·nr;1 11 s a i I i n g l'ham-
p111n:-.h1ps
Lt All.in has ;ilso bl'rn
<.elt•t·le1I !u ~Cr\'(' as s;iil-
111g1nas!cr ;ilxl:ird the yacht
Hagc> 11htl'h 11 111 bl' !Ill' Na1,il
Aeadr n1y !'ntry 111 ! hr
forlhl'onung BennlJd.i ral't>.
An1ong his crew will be
Ensign Carl Van Duyne, tJ S.
Olyn1pir reprcscnt:i!i1·e in
\lie Fu111 Clas~. an d Scarn;_;n
Embry Black from Newporl
llv;1t·li , fu nnc·r l'CI sailin g 111-
~1 r111·1•1! (Hh,•r rnernbers 11f
llh' t'l'l'W 11·1 11 rn1dshipr11cn
LI Al!;in i>l<-il'ted his sailing
1·nrr1'r :1t Nr11 por! Ma1'IH11'
Y:1elil Cluh 11 he re 111' wa:-. .i
tun111·1' 1'1 1~111 nl ! 11 1•
Sn1111IJ1rd~ 11 111ner. n for111r1·
:-;1';1r~ Cup 1\1nncr ~NorU1
An1erit:an j lJ n i o r cham-
pinnship I and a funnrr All·
1\111erit·u11 s<ulor lrQ111 l,,1)C,
,J .. tl incr
Besides Ficker, other loc:·Ll
members ()f the Intrepid cre\1'
are George Twist and J in1
Titus. Jon Andron of Santa
Barbara is also a \Vest Coast
('fe\•:man .
Intrepid has undergone ex ..
lensive changes b.v 11 a v a I
architect Britain Cha nce Jr.
since her successful !967 cam ..
paign_
lier bow , stern and bili;e
arens remain lhe s a n1 t' .
acC<>n:ling 10 Chance. but a
11e1v keel has been added anti
her after'body made fuller.
Intrepid is lhe last of the
1970 Cup campaigners to be
launched. Two new boats.
Heritage from Fl<lrida Rnd
Valiant fo r a New 'York Syn·
dlcale \\'ere launched Sl'\'Cr:1 !
ll'teks ago.
Defense of the A1nenc;1's
Cup ii; i;eheduled to g£'1
un1le r ll'ay Sept 15 111f
Ne1vport. R.I .. against either
a French or Australian
challen ger. Yachts from these
\\\O countries must hold their
own elimination serie!I to
deter1n1ne the challenger.
H e el ~ Ui" Cana l ,...
TOKYO !UPI\ Co111.
n1 u111s! China said tfKl ay tl
l1;1s du g a canal longer th;in
r1 thP1' lhe Suez nr the Panamft
tanals.
Tilt' 1\Jr11' Ch111a Nc1vs Agen-
t'Y said 111 a broadcast heard
111 Tokvo thr1t the 156-mile
L'<111<1I \\•as built 1\·ilh 450,000
laborers and was designed to
prc1•ent fl ::>oding of the 1-luaip<'I
l'l<11n The canal ends 160
u11les north1~·esi of Shanghai
HARBOUR
OLKSWAGEN
TRAVEL
BUCi
·1NC.
• ,--==---
' I
..
-
Make a travel bug aut of your Volkswagtn. Buy a Tralls
West Campster. A light, easy·to·haul travel trailer with
a king size bed, designed especially for lonely bugs. See
on e now at:
HARBOUR V.W.
1871 1 BE ACH BLVQ, HUNTINGTON ACH. CALI F. 842-4435
(St~ll
GARV o , IN HIEATC•OFf
'" 1 111 Ctlo•H o l lYd ,..,,_no. c 1llk,,nl1 '110!
Altotnov tor ,..l1lnllt!
Put>li•"td Ur.r1w. Co~~I D•lly
M~v n. io •nd Ju~• I, l), 1t10
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NC1TIC&
DAILY PILOT J
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
IHU
NOTICE OF INT!MlllO
"•I', .,, 11!1
Y•AMSF E• ANO llAlllACK
No!lcr h hprrbv Qlv•n 1 ... 1 C"-•T•t L Hell~•. 1rnn•l.,or. ol lOOfl AQ m'I,
Cllv DI HYnl lfl0!0<1 8•1ch. C1ll1Wnlo,
ln!•nol1 lo 1-tll c•t!tl" P1•oon1I p.0per·ty
lo' l o1HQ\/lp CcrJ>Otlll0<1. 1 (1111. Cor p ,
lnlrndtd Tr1n•f•rr• ll1uorl. of tlOI
Wllshue lloulfYtra, cnv of a~v.rlv Hiii•.
C"ltornl11 •"" !1111 11ld lnh ...,.., 1ron1I•••~ !L•uorJ. Le1~qi.olp CO<-•·
lion, IMend• 10 l~a"'b~-ro 11ld (hor!•I
L. H•lre•. Tr•n•leror !l~Uffl. ti. H ..
"""on•I pr°""'''· • Qeno•1I cloKrlp!lon of which i• •1 lollow,, !o-w!I: O.O.••I
Paul""""nl, o!llC• e<l\llpmenl, P\irnllu1t
•""' fb1Ulf1 o"" IOC1led e t 10Dl1 Ad•m1,
CITv Of l-1unH"(llon 8••<1<, (•lli.tnl~.
l"d 11<~1 l l ld ulo t nd l"t•1t..<~ ltt ftH<•
l!O" " ra W (on!umm11t!d "" 1~.
191h ""' of AAIY. ""· et 10 • "'. •' lh• orlk• or L••s.11~•0 cor-•1.o·•, u •JOI Wlhl<lr• Boulov1ra, (tty ~f
l•v•rlv H·ll1o C•ll lor"I•
Otttd IMS lltl! d1Y ..r M1•. 1'10.
Loa-.q.,lp Coroorotl..,.
• C1lll. Corp.
fly M•lyin !!"'"'"" ll!ASlllUI ... COl'l ... O"Al!ON
U11 Wlll~1t1 1 1••· l overly Hltt1, Coll!. ,.t11
PuDll<l<•d Q•~n9, Co~i• Oollv
Mev n. 1010
LEGA i. NOTICE
J8 DAILY PILOT
; ;t ,1-.
FIRST TIME
OFF ER ED
EXEC. & ,DEM·o.·
\ 1,' ~
CLEARANC E
HE RE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES:
'70 WILDCAT
Cy 1tom ~ Doc.t h•<dtop. full PO ,..<•
equopmenl incl ydonq w•ndowo J •e•h. •••
condition•n9, "'"YI fool, '''' 1e1t 1p1•L ·
e r, tih o t11 "~9 w~~•I, etc. I !Ob889J
'70 OPEL WAGON
D•lu•• •t~l ,on "'"90" Ayla.,.~l•C l1 •n•m"-
l•O", PO"'f' d,;< 1,.~k ~,. 102 ho ... p~wpf
""''"' lut 9"9" ••<~. wh•te .. de .. ~u
1 ..... •'<. 17)1 1 ~8 !
'70 SKYLARK
c .,,!om 1 Door h•rdtop. Auto.,,•tic lrtn1.
mf\11on, •" conditi o11 in9, power oletri119,
power br•~e<. ••dio, he•ltf, ,,;fly! roof,
1.h ••••""'J whee l, c111lo"' interior, t ic.
I 108~27 1
'78 SKYLARK
C111lo"' 4 Door ~erd lo p. Aulomtlic. paw-
•• lie••in9 I bral-.11, ••r conditionj119,
rt•• •••I opt••er. powar winclow1. tilt
tle••in9 whe•I, ,,;nyl roof, tic. I tOl t 511
'78 ELECTRA
Cu1tom 4 Door h,rdtop. Full pow•r in-
c:ludin9 window1 I •••I, •ir conditioninq,
,,;nyl roof, AM.FM r•dio, tilt dt•ri~q
wht•I, P"'"'' doo r loc•1, •"'-·· •le. I 1 l l·
2521
JA,GU
CLEAR
NOW DRASTICALLY REDUCED
1969 JAGUAR XKE
Roadster. Les• tlta• 1,000 mUW15. AJrnOlt brond new.
Fulfy equipped i•cludint chfome turbo wheek, AM·FM
Shortwawe radio, plu15 much mortt. • 1421ASG I
'70 RIVIERA
Cudom. Full power equi!I"'""' •ncl~d ,nq
window• & •e•!, l~clo!y d" cond,t•onina,
chro m• wheeh. AM.FM ••d•o, I II •tee•·
Onq wkecl, "'"YI 1001. plu• muck m!l•e.
!9170801
R
CE
l:OO• n1~, I•• ~ t" ,, '""lot•',,..,,,,.. n~•"'"~' · ·,. " 'eo ' " T" '' " .. ,., "' • ', .. , ... ~
'""an •o• J6 ""' '"' To'"' '·' ~ ~'" ' ~•9o· '1 • ,,. • • '"" I '"'""' """ ,}7]/ '!I $ "'"'""'"" -11 <•''''"0 <"l'O~>. "~"'· ,,..,,e ! ,, •• • r • <" •·~ • ""D'D•~'-!'••Jol•l~I .0.!<)<I U.0.l PE NC(NT•Ol Nl>.Tl 101~
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
'68 FIREBIRD 400
Still under f.t c tory warranty. 4 ~peed . r.t dio, he.tlrr, power ~l rcr·
ing, vinyl top . Very low milea ge, loca l I owner 9 cm. I VT L51B )
'68 PONTIAC GTO
vs,,.utoma lit, rtid io, he.,ler, power steering, power br11 ke1. f.ac ·
tory air, !ow mileage. I owner, loc.tll y owned ca r. lmmdc.ulti!e.
tWXE519 1
'67 JAGUAR 2 + 2
Coupe. Awlom dl l ic !r.t n~mi11•on, A M-FM shorl wti"e r.:idoo, r.hromc
wire wheel1 . Pirelli rtid i.tl t ir es. 27.500 miles. N.t lural ledt hcr in -
terior. tTRH075 I
'68 JAGUAR XKE
Coupe. 4 speed lr•nsm•11ion, chr ome wirt. whe'.111, r"djn <l nd hco'l l·
er, I owner locally owried C<'lr. Be•utlft1I Arc.tic whit e e ~teri or w ith
bl ac.~ full le.tther interior. (XOA774 )
234 E. 17th St.
·~-" ,. ·~-. '
l t t
t
Custom. Full power, fa ctory a ir conditioning , vinyl top, c hrome
wheels. ( XB K3 40 )
'69 OPEL RALL YE
Aulom o'Jfic. tro'l nsmission, 102 h.p. lfHJin e , low, low mile1ge. !Pl77)
'67 ELECTRA CUSTOM
4 Door h.t rdt op . Full power •nd f•ctory •ir c ondit ioning, Yinyl
1oof.
'67 COUGAR XR7
Automat ic. lr•nsmittion, power.steering, r•dio, heet er, e ir condi·
lioning, vinyl roof. tUTLIJ9! '
;IUTllORIZED
1' r. I (' 1,; .(I l'f'; f,.J 11 GU .4 ft
!\. l),ES n11tl SERVICE
OPEN
SUNDAYS •
2 Door hardtop. VS, automatic, po.wer 1leering. power w 1n dow1,
radio, heater, factory o'l ir cond it ioning. (0TU633 )
s995
'68 BUICK WILDCAT
2 Door htirdlop. Auto., power stee ring , fd c.lory ct ir, r11dio, hcdicr,
26,500 locally driYen mil es. (VFR598 )
'67 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE
2 Door hardtop. Awtomalic., pow er ~leering . f.tc.lorv .i1r , r.,d10,
he.tter. I owner, !ow mil ea ge. Just immti c.ul alc. I UP$3 7 I '
'64 THUNDERBIRD LANDAU
Full pow1r 111nd fe ctory eir conditioning, I own er, 33,000 loc.tlly
driYen e ctu•I miles. IOML586J
548-7765 • ! • • ' I • • I ,.
I I I
I
_______ >_A_IL_V_P_llc:O.:_T_,:t,.,J
DER
A Complete Guide • • • Where to go • •• What to tlo • ••
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CARL TON JOHNSON ANO DANCE COMPANY COMING TO OCC
lntermlssl-.n
What Makes Al flart R un
lie Likes to Kee11 Busy
By T0,\1 TITUS
01 I~• Dally '°llel S!t!f
There are lhose in community theater
upon whom the bright lights produce
a sort of narL'Olic eff~l -they can'L
seem to gel enough oI it.
One such example is Alan liar!, who
has all bul set up a col backstage
a l the Laguna J\loulton Playhouse. "SJXlf·
ford ," which opened th is \VCek, marks
his fou rth <tppcarance at Laguna th is
season.
Laguna, hov.·cvcr. has no monopoly
on Al Hart's services. During the pasL
year and a half,
he's been seen in
nine slio\VS at five
different theaters,
h;irdly pausi ng for
brcnth aftl'r opening
in one production
lx!fore !;tarting re·
hcarsal for ano1her.
.t He's been doing 'f, · · r h AL H.t.lllT this nr I (' past
eight years in Orange Coun1y. ever !lince
arriving here in 1962 after throv.·ing
in the towel on his hopes for a pro-
fessional acting career -the Ci rce 1vhich
lured hi1n v.•est from J\:lissollri nearly
20 year s ago.
''I GL'ESS I'VE dooe about 30 or 35
shows since then," he sunnises in his
casual, almost bashful manner v.•hich
sharply C{lntrasts t h e ultra-serious
de1erm1nation with which he approachei;
each performance. "I love to work, aOO
I lry to do the best I can."
WEEKENDER
INSIDE FEATURES
F'rlday, May ZZ, 1t7t
An intimate view o[ Peggy Lee's
behind·lhe scenes preparation for
her night club and theater per-
formances Will be shown io a !0-
minute documfJ{tary on Cbannel
28 t.onight an4 'Saturday .,Stoty and
picture on ~qe 22. .a.. Tra~I I Pag:e 2z.
Wbeel1 aM Camphic Pale ,ZZ
Art In &lie Park Page ZZ
·~~e ~:~t p~-~:
Noel Harrison Pqe 15
Cllanntl ti A~ion P a1e IS·
t .tan' llalrdresser Pare 2$
1n the Galleries Page Zl
'l e.le.vision Log Page Z'
Gulde. lo Fun Page !7
"Alrporl' f\lovie Page. !7
'The Loser~' ttlo\•le Page U
(;ulde. lo fl.fovl's Page %8
Pollutl09 on TV Page U
Comlt9 Page It
Tt is, perhaps, this aUitudr \rhich has
made Al Harl one of Lhe n1ost soughl
after actors in Orange County communilf
lheater -for there are few roles he
cannot do and do well, This versatility
has led him into a plethora of character
parts -this season he played, in swift
succession. a silver-haired undertaker, a
young ~1idwestern factory owner. an ag·
ing Indian chief and a proud Scots1nan.
As a comic, !!art has few peers in
local theater, but it is in heavy dran1a
that he feels mosl al home. Tv.·1cr he
ha.~ played the defrocked ministe r 10
•·\ight of the lgua.1a," though he pto-
hably is most reme1nbered for his th1rry
Berlin in the Orange ~1udio Thea!C'.r 's
long-running "Lui·," a performa nce
v.·llicti earned this colun1n's accol.1de as
lx>st actor of 1967.
FOR AL llART, performing has been
a part of his life since his early hi gh
school days in SI. Louis, when. as he
~;iys. "someon~ talked me into going
into the forensic league." Al y,.·on thi rd
place in hi.~ first conies! -and first
place in all his ensuing matches. in-
cluding the ~lissouri st:ite championship.
This led him to the na!iona l fin;i l~
where he finished fourth in the category
of humorous declamation v.·ith a
monologue from "Green Pastures"
which, with a little prodding, he wi ll
deliver at a party today. He then came
to Hollywood seeking a movie career,
but was: hampered by the ~fact that
he hadn't done any theater work. He
promptly enrolled at Los: Angeles City
College where he won the school's bc~t
actor award and captured the LA area
contest in lhe National Society of Arts
and Lellers speech tournament.
This latter prize is one which he
regrels today, for ii sent him to Ohio
for the national contest and he had
to turn down a role In a movie, "The
Oregon Tr11IL" W)len ht reac.hed the
fi nals, be foUnd he was a few months
over the age lim1t -~sh he c.ompeted
anyway and took third place.
Returning borne. he snared a role
in NBC"s MaUhee Theater, tn which
he appeared with an actor named
Marshall Hutchinson. HutcbiMOn was
taket off the show, rechri!tened Will
Hutchins and sent into television's
"Suq:arfoot'' series.
TODAY AL llART is a shipping clerk
1o.·ilh Buzza Cardozo in Anaheim. his
dream or "making it" in the movies
or television all but dead. but his love
or the stage vi tally intac t. His early
training has left him l'.'ith a strong
sense of professional dedication which
elicils the admira tion of those who work
(See INTER.\llSSION, Page %5)
Jazz Da11ce
Wo1·ksl1op
Set at OCC
..
One of the great names in the ja'lJ
dance field, Carlton Johnson, will be
holding a tv.·o-Oay workshop JI.lay 29-30
at Orange Coast CoJ1ege. The session
11•ill end with a dance concert vn Satur-
day. Jl.·lay 30 al 8:30 p.m. in the auditor-
ium, 270 1 Fairvie1v Road, Costa ~1esa.
Johnson, who has appea;l:'(I on many
television shows and in several mo-
tion pictures including "Can Can," is con-
s idered one of lhe ou~5tanding teachers
of jazz dancing on the v.·est coast.
Thf' workshop will begin a t 10:~5 a.nl.
on May 29 \Vith a one-hour session on
jazz techniques followed by a repertoire
~ession. After the lunch break there will
be another j:izz technique class followed
by a lecture on jazz choreogr<iphy.
On ~lay 30 the v.•orkshop will resurne
•with programs sin1ilar to l hc Friday
sessions ""ith an added afternoon lecture
on Carlton Johnson gi ven by Lynda
Da vis, a former OCC faculty .. 1embcr .
The concert v.•ill be choreogra phOO b,v
Johnson and "•ill open with a series
cntilled ''Collage" which 11·itl inclucte
"\Valk,'' "Kool," "The \Vay I f>~ecl,''
fea turing Lynda Da\'is. and "The Ghet-
to "
Another number, "Patch of Blue" 1v1l\
h:ive three scenes: "\.\'ailing,'' "Friends"
a nd "Alone." The fin<il number. "Po1vcr
and Light Company," also wi ll be sl:iged
and choreographed by Johnson.
Persons v.-isl1ing to rnroll in thr
11·orkshop may call 834-5766. There i~
a $15 charge ror the two d~1ys v.•hicll.
includes a ticket to the concert. Those
1vishing to attend the concert only rnay
purchase lickels at !he box office on
the night of the event for $3 per person.
II" II II "'"'"I
TV 's La ss ie
No 'Patsy'
A11y More
By VERl\'0:"-1 SCOTT
l,11'1 H•llyWNd Ctrte1~"deftl
llOLLY\\'OOD -Stop I~ vig1 litnt,.
mo\'erncot to io restigate The Patsy
Award.<;'
Lassie, unnominatcd this year for Be11t
Ani1nal Actor on Television, has not
been wronged after all. The faithful,
talf'nted collie has been retired fron1
cornpctition.
The American llumane Association
\1•hi ch sponsor,<; the Patsy Awa rds. ha.~
rn.~hri nerl La ssie to The Patsv llall nr
Fame, the fi rst and only suCh animal
performer thlls honored.
1.-et us pause for a moment of silent
appretialion for this noble beas! who
has losl Patsy Av.·ards in the past to
horse~. dolphins and. most recently and
ignobly, to a pig named Arnold.
Obl'iously, I. a ss i e's pt'rform:i nce~
overshadowed the meager talents or ~I r.
Ed. F'lipper and Arnold.
But the Patsys would have been v.•rec k·
ed by presenting Lassie the award every
year.
fl is analogous to having Richard
Burton compete for the Osca r annually,
say, with The Three Stooges.
A Mr. Harold Melniker, ·d1tcctor of
the Hollywood office of The American
Humane Association, was shook up by
a United Press International can lo arms
on behalf of Lassie's best interests.
"People are So accustomed lo La11.~ie '11
great appeal they either tak~ her z.:ting
for granted and fail to vote for her,
or vote for her every year,". Melniker
said.
'!We had to do something. So we
retired her from competition by pulling
her in The Hall of Fame."
Js Mr. Melniker sure an this is kosher?
"Yes indeed,'' Melniker u s ·s u r e d .
"Aflet 15 years in compet!Oon, it wa11
time Lassie got a break. Since the TV
Patsys began in l958 she has won lhret
first places and five seconds.
"Tht re w11s no dim inishing of her
great work and impo rt?ncc. It was just
1h.1t the public was attracted lo new
animal :ictors.';
Ba llots arc ~nt out by lhc AHA lo
4.000 newspaper C<:llumnists. critics, pct
magazine editors. C<:lmmentators and
reviewers who vote on nominees 11elected
by a board of AHA memtiers at Denve r,
Colo. hf:adquar tcr11.''
SHELLEY WILSON, EVERY INCH A QUEEN, AS SHE PORTRAYS ELIZABETH f .. ..
" Researching R e naissance
Students Stud.r Cl111ra c /,er .~ of fl isto ric al Period
A group of students :it Wl'st1n1nst1'r
High School ;1rc stutl y1ng history 11·11h
different techniques fron1 those usu:1llv
employed by classe.c;. l'hey ;1rr Pnrollt:d
1n a seminar class. ca lled ll is1orir;:il
Research. 1vhich is devoted IQ th<' stL1dy
of the HcnaissAncc in t:;urop<'
Garfunkel Ge ls
Role in Movies
Ari Garfunkel, the singing and lyricist
half of Simnn and Ga rfunkel. ha~ been
signed Lor the c()-starring role with Jack
Nicholson in the ~1ikc Nichols Film,·
"Carnal Knowledge."
Nichols will produc e and direct for
Joseph E. Levine and Avco Embassy
Pictures from a screcnpl:iy by J ules
Fciffer.
1':;11'li 11 ill wri\P ;i c11ll1•gc-h·1<·I p;1J1f'r
11n till' t·ours1• fror 111' grnd1· ;11ul .11
!he 1·ud 1JI lhc M'!-.1;1un 11111 rt''1 •ar·c11
(1111• fl! th!' 1·li;1rat:l!'fS 111 111 .. IWriPd
111 wha:J1 l)H' ('l.1~s hn~ lh•1·Jl 11 nrk111g.
l·;;1<·i1 11ill k11011 Ilic p1·r~u11 IH' h:i.;
ff"H·;1rchcd so lhornughl,1' !li;il !h1•
ch .. 1·:1C'lc•r will lit' a!>.~i1111lal('1 I 111 1111•
S1t11J1•111 .
i\I ;1 hnnqucl 111 be l11·!d 111 lilt· llarhu1'
Vi ew lir~1111 :iboard 1111' SS Print!'.~ ...
l\(Ju1se !ll Tcrn11na l Island on ,\l;i\ :l\,
each stu dent 11·11! cornc 1lrcssc1I ;is the
charactrr hr has hL'l'llllH'. S11n1r wdl
r~1ake thi" costurlll's, othrrs 11•i\J rcnl
:ill or )lart of the rcg:tta :\1:innl•rism~.
aoimo~itic~ and <1 t1 itudcs alt 11·ill bt·
a part. of the cha raclcr. anrl 11·ill he
ea rried lhrouJ;(h the timC' of the Uanqu<'I
The seating arrangemrnts ;it the affai r
will be according t(l protocol with
everything as authentic as possible. even
to lh1· rnu~i(' wh1rh will h~· pl:1y!•d rft1ring
d1111 a·1
'l h1 · ~111di:il\S 11;111 • l1;uJ Ill·· ll~C nr
lh•· Li ' (1·11111· l1hr:1ry ;1.~ l\L·ll ;is the.
h11~ti S..'hool :u1d 1·1111111.v l1b 1';1ru·s lur 1h1•ir
11 ork 011 tl11· p.1p1·r anrl !!11· 1 h:1rt1rl1·r
I! 1s ;.1 l(lr rr1· frn1n n·;1r!111~ hi story
lu nks ;i nd nt••n1or11.1n;:: il:1l.t·.~ ;ulf! the
st udent.~ sHy lht'y lovf'd th•' upp11r1 uni ty
1•1 •'\('I I'\'.!' \111!1 " 1111!1 '>1'\ I' 'l"'i (11 li•t
lhl'll" 1111:1~1n;1t1nns run 111111 It /1;1 " 1n;1de
111 .. ll1 •n;11."~a11l't' p1•1111d 1·11111•• all11 • for
this scholarly group.
If y~1u ha ppen lu bt· :11 1h•· !'r111ecss
Louise :.ibout 5 ~ 1n on ~!;1y JI you
must no! think 1h~! ~11111· nf the 1v01ic
motll'IS frorn tht• Cro1vo .lt'wcl Room
l•a\'e <'Om(' alive It 11 111 Lit· \\'csiminstt!I'
HiJ?:h School"s H1~toriral fh·scarch Clas!'!
on its <innu;il outinl! and wh<i l better
place than here. 1•1hl'rr lhev ean view
the t:rov.·n Jewel rl.'pl 1ca~ of !he period.
"Carnal K n ow I edg e ' ' mark~ ,.,.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Garfunkel's second·motioo pictu re acting
asslgr)ment fo)Jowing his role as C<lnt. N~tely in Nichols' ''Catch 22."' Jn col·
laboi"atlon with p;:1rtner. Paul Simon,
Garfunkel wrctC' !he musical score for
"The Gradnn !~.'·
"Carnal Kr•owledge" will begin fihning
in Jul.v (J11 !ocations in Vancouver, B.C.
and 1".c1v York,
French Pil:ttu;e
' ,. .
.
Getg· Top Awa'i"d
"Les Choses Ge la Vie," starring Romy
Schnek!er a nd,.fl.1!cht l .ficcoli. has just
~ · a\V!lrded the cov-eted Prix Loui~
Oelluc, the most preatigious film award
in FrAnce.
Pre~ntcd annually to the film's direc-
tor by a p:inel of oth er directors and
members of th"e press. Ca lude Sautct.
director of "Les Choses de la Vie'' v.·as
this year's reci pie nt.
Raymond Danon produced the film lor
Lira Productions, from the novel b)' P aul
Guimard.
, .
Weekend Highlights
' ' '· UCI CONCERT -The UCI Orch es tra, under the ba ton ••
of P eter Odegflr.d, \\'ill .be,IJeard in concetl toniyh~ and t9~~1.if
ro'v ni ght ot 8:30 p.m. in.the Science Lect~e J~ft!1 on .~"OO'Jf
I rvine campus.--~ -r' '1" ' • ~ ' ' t! I I " •
l(. ' .. ~ ·'· i.~ . HARMONY-The Nelfporl f\arbor C~apter J\!.SPE , , .~.,j
,
Is hosting 1t-s ann ua l "Parade. of Q~{lrtets""'ih is 'mrturday;-~'jf; (
at 8 p.m. in the auditorium or Newport 11.arbor High ·~ ioblt\ 1
600 Irv ine Ave ., Ncv.'pOrl Be<tch. ' ;~r
ART IN tHE PARK -A l\VO--day "A!l in t he Park'',,.fe:&-~
lival \vin be held in Cos ta Mesa's Vista Park . fllatni lton-Vic!.
to ria a nd Canyon Road intersection) • .s l<trl tn~ a t tO J .n1 . eac h
da y. O\•e r 50 a rtllit s and c r aftsmen will be there to show , d em -
onst rate a nd s ell the ir work. '
S1e Guidi fo Fun, P a9t 27
' ,.
0.llL'f PILOT
Travel ..
Riding
By STAN DELAPLANE
LAil.\ll\:\, 11av.•aii -.A. blue 1-lawaii day in this
uld whaler-and-missionary to1\'n. :ind \\'e've been ~
\\Orking on the railroad ... just lo pass the ti~,•, 1
J v;av.
;r he l.ahaina-Kaanapali and Pacific Railroad
ii> t\\ o a ntique engines and six miles of sugar cane
track. ll runs grandly from La.baina town to the
plush resorts on brown su gar Kaanapali beach, p url-
ing smoke and nostalgia: $2.50 for the ride. A little
more than taxi fare.
\Ve fie,~· over for the grand opening: Golden
:;pikes driven into the narrow gauge bed. r~onor
guards of Jlav.•aiians in loin cloths and carrying
spears .. .\ti maui island turned out in frock coats
and high-buttoned dresses of lhe d ays of sugar cane
railroad ing. '"
(Now cane is ha uled in trucks. Tourists bring in
~
the sugar that s~·eetens Hawaii.) '
* Kaanapali is lined with r esort hotels. Shera-
COUPLE ENJOYS COUNTRY BIKE RIDE
Can Be Used by Apartment Dwellers Too
BI KE FOLDS TO COMPACT PACKAGE
F its in T runk or On Car Top C•rrier
Cera11iist at Work
Oliver J o hnson. Huntington Beach, ce ramist, author
and teacher at Fountai n Valley High School is work·
ing hard to get r eady for "Art in the Park" festival
to be held Saturday. Sunday in Vista Par k .. See
Guide to Fun, Page 27).
TV Follows Peggy Lee
For Documentary Show
"'NET Presents 1.!iss Peggy
Leoe, '' a n intimate \'iew of 3
consummate artist at v•ork.
will be seen on Channel 28
lonight at 7 p.ro. and Sa turday
at 10:3') p.m.
The 90-minute documentary
In color takes a bthind-the-
sceoes look at the preparations
for .an important night-club
act by Miss ~e. including
a previe~· preformance at the
Mark Taper Room of The
A!usic Ctnter.
A \'eleran performer . ac-
claimed by all who have ~·or k
ed ~-ith her for her meticulou.'5
attention to e\'eI)' detail, Peg-
gy Lee spends months llo'Orkin g
with music:iam, arrang ers,
chortographets and lighting
e1:perts when preparing an en--
tirety nrw act -whi ch she f:· does as often as three times
a year.
For this program. cameras
recorded the preparation~ and
'
people involved in developing
¥ills Lee '.'5 show for the ope n·
}1.ng of the International Hotel
• ·! in Las Vegas. The cameras
: follow her through many
st.ages-work sessions at her
: : beautiful home Ln Beverly
··~ llills, a preview performance
;: of the show at the i\t ark Taper .~ r,orum. backstage activities al
~the Forum. l ast-minute ~ preparations in her dressing
.S:. room al the International ~:: Hotel and. finally, her ap-
pearance on ~tagr
Included are 1Jluminat1ng
~: ~cenes with composer .Johnny
1.tandcl. 1n u s i c supr-r\·isor
Mundell L.owr. p1<1r11st-<:on-
rluctor Lou Levy. producer
Robert Fosttkn :ind cxecuti\'C
procluctr Da vid Prow11L .
MISS PEGGY LEE
On Channel 21 Tonight
'Throughout. the program at-
tempts to minimize the bar-
rier between ,·iewe r and sutr
ject -to heighten the reality
ex-perience and participation.
.. We undertook," says Foshko.
"to treat lhe \•iewer as a
special guest or Peggy during
the prepa ra ti o n s and
rehearsals in her home and
at the Mark Taper Fonim
:ind International Hote l. Our
approach is not to manipulate
reality. but rather to careful!.\'
select from it -to obscrvt:
the artist synthesiting !ht·
m\·riad elements of crcat1 \·r
1>o.ssihili1ies that go into a rn<1·
JOT new endeavor. ..
Among the songs l\·!1ss Ler
~ings during the show :irr
"Is That All Therr 1~~ ...
"Spinning \Vhee!," "Didn 't
\\'e~." .. Lean on l\le,'' and
".Fever."
ART IN THE PARK
A l-OA Y OU TDOOR ARTS & CR AFTS FAI R
tons and Hiltons and banana pancake palac es of the
tour gr oup route. ("Bags outside your door at 8.
Sightseeing begins at 9. F1y to the next island at
2. ")
The little red -and -gold p uffer railroad is a
"Tap" P ryor project. (He has the ve ry successful
Sea Life Park a t Honolulu.) Cost $1 ,7 mil!Jon. Ex-
pects to give a t least one ride to 636,000 tourists by
1973.
And fr om ther e on it's all downhill and shady.
* Outer island transport is not up to metropolitan
1-lonoluJu -where four-fifth s of all Hawaii c hoose s
to live.
\Ye rented a dune buggy for $10 a day.
Lahaina is a wonderful shacky old po rt. A great
sha ded s quare. Old missionary hous es. The Pioneer
Inn on the waterfront is a good pla ce to stop for a
beer. The sandwiches ain't no big thing, brudduh.
But d on't cost much either.
* The '''eather is warm. The trade wind streams
the coco palms tow ard the ink-blue sea looking
across to g reen Lana i island.
Ther e's the old jail on Jail Street where sinners
~·ere sent from Honolulu. (The missionaries per-
s ua ded a Ha wa iian K ing to jail people fo r such
things. \Vha t \Vith whalers a nd s a ilors a nd willing
wahines there 'vas plenty of action .)
The sinners were put to \vork building road s on
Maui.
\Vhen you drive y our dune buggy down t o La-
h aina town, you know y ou a r e r id ing on roads paved
"'ilh good intentions.
* "On our first trip to Hawaii, should w. ge it
alone or take a tour?"
If you don't mind that "bags outside the door at
8." the tour is t he cheapest '''ay. And you see
E \1ERYTHING . I took one recently -$359 for nine
days from the \Vest Coast. Just about \Vo re m e out.
The sightseeing and moving on is a 10-hour \\'O rking
day. But you get a lat for your money.
* There's almost NO repeat business on these
t ours. The next t ime these people come to the
islands. they kno'v e xactly where they want to go.
T hey've seen it all. They've mad e a c hoice.
* I'm a buff for the outer islands. J change p lane~
al Honolulu and keep on going.
If you go on the sam e d ay -don't overnight in
l·lonoluJu -it's the same air fare. Stop overnight
and you pay to ride to the next island .
* Th• low fare from the \Vest Coa st no'v is $85
t o the islands. We flew it on Western who advertises
that they put a tray in the m iddle seat of the three-
s eat economy section. 1\1aking it just like fir st-class.
* 'fhis turned out exaclly as they say. And for SBS
\1·e rode as splendidly as the S142.50 first-cla ss. Pay-
ing $1.50 for our meal. Seeing the same m ovie.
<This 'von·t last forever. \\lestern is making it at-
l rart1,·e so they can Fl LL that th ird scat 'rith a
µa sscngl'.!r. Rut r ight nO\\', you'd be out of ym1r
rnind to go anything but this S85 u1ay.)
* "We are driving into Mexico with a fo re ign
car. Now if it breakl down how hard is it to
get parts?"
p!<'tr swwc;21111£..~
1 Live
l i· Theater
,,
L " "Girl In Freudian Slip·•
A comedy about psychiatry
(Jll stage at the San Clemente
Community Theater, 2 O 2
Avenida Cab ril l o. San
Clemente, Thurs. -Sal. al
8:30 p.m. lhrough r.fay 23.
Reservations 492..()465.
"<>De F1ew O\•er
the Cuckoo's Nest''
A comedy on stage at South
Coast Repertory, 1827 Newport
Blvd ., Costa 1.lesa, Fri.-Sat.
at 8:30 p.m. May 22-23.
Reservations -646-1363.
''Waltz of the Toreadors"
A comedy of marital in-
discretion on stage at Hun-
tington Beach Playhouse, 21 10
Main SL, Huntington Beacti.
Performances at 8;30 p.m.
F ri.-Sat. through May 23. Res-
ervations -536-8861.
The Apple Tree"
A musical trilogy on stage
at the new Tustin Community
Playhouse, in the Tustin High
School auditorium. Thurs. -
Set. through May 30. at 8:30
p.m. Reservations -:>44-8890.
'·Bus Stop ..
\\'illiam Inge 's roman ti<'
co1nedy on stage at the Santa
Ana Community Theater, 500
\V. 6th St.. Santa Ana, at
II JO p.m. Fri. Sat., through
f..la.v 30. Reservations -54!-
2188,
"The Trial of ~taxine Lowt"
A courtroom drama on stage
al the Fullerton Footlighers
in f..tuckenlha ler Center. 119
Buena Vista Drive. Fullerton.
Fri -Sot. :Jt 8:30 pm, Through
l\lay 30. J{eser vatlons -528-
ll927.
''Spofford''
A comedy about a retired
doctor on stage al Laguna
l\loulton Playhouse. 6 C 6
Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna
Be ach. Tucs.-.5at., through
June 6 at 8:30 p.m. neserl'a-
t1ons -494.-0743.
"Rimers of Eldritch"
l>rama ol a s~all tov. n on
:-ctaJ:(C' at lrville Repertory
Thc-ater, Studio Theater. LC!
carn1>u~. al 8.30 p.m. \\'el.I.-
Sat . Julle J -6. fteserva-
tions -833-6617.
.. She Stoops to Conquer"
Oh\'er Goldsmi!h's Restor<i·
lion comedy on stage al
Orange Coast Co\ le ge
auditorium. 2701 Fa i rv ie w
Jtoad, Cost<r Mesa. at 8 1;.
p.m. l\1ay 22-23. This 1.~ the
Drama Depar!rnc-nl's spring
pley. f\o charge for ticket s,
pick them up at College Saturday & Sunday, May 23-24
10 A.M. • 5 P.M.
Like impossible I'd say -unless it's a
Volks,~·agen. They have those parts. !? spent th ree
d vys in a :-;n1nll tov.1n \1•ailin_g for American auto
parr.i;. 1:1nally had t o go do,1·n <ind get lhem at
~I hi~ rity, l'rf J ,.;k ,\"Ollr dea!er if he CBO ny
pa rl s (lo11•n if you have lrouble. Don't depend on
::;hipping by t rain. 'Your car 'rill be \vorth 111ore
as <111 antique by the tin1 e you get then1.
-" ---+-'L --;;-~w::p;~;;;-;-;;:no~~u.;:-!i:-::;< ,_. .. :":. .;:-. ,.._,.,1o;•.,,.,....r \ l't ~ ~· ' UI;, ·'«.
bookstore.
VISTA PARK
1200 Victoria St., Costa M•s•
l ep,_•111tl" Art ly o ...
SJ Artl1h l Creftl-
LIYl DIMONSTU.TIONS
CllAMICS -PAINTING -STONIWAll
-SCUL'1Ull. MOSAICS. Gll:Al'HICS, LU.THll, nc.
W-4<tri119 Ml"'tttls & Tr••b.do11rt
OLD FASHIONIO HOMEMADE
FOOD, PASTlllS, llfllSHMINTS
••••••••••••••••••••• ••
~ ;;..-.
~~ Jt ~· :::: . ~ • SINCE 1888
PLAN YO R
TRAVEL VACATION
WITH US
• CRUISES • STEAMSHIP
and TOURS
Ckarge Your Trav•I
At Robinson's Upper Floor
FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH, 92660 "' . ~ .................... .
~ -
' j
I~ ,.
•t • • •
•M • • • •
DECORATION DAY IS NEXT WEEK
Don 't for9 •t our flower shop for your Memoriel Da y flower1 e nd bouquef1 . We·n
h•v• 1000'1 of fr•1h cut flowers. Florist qualit y •nd e t our low pric•1! Com•
se1t ... C ome save !
O ur Produce Dep1rlment is proud to b1 chos1n distribut or fo r "TRIM FllSH"
reedy tos1ed saleds and t hredded l1tfuce to 90 with our foil wr1 p ped potatoes
e nd col11 sla w! No f u1s, no t rouble a nd 1peci•lly low pric1dl Cell 673-1711 for
a ll th111 low priced services.
YOU ALWAYS SAVI WITH THISI COUPONS
··········1·········~·····~··· • • New Crep Sin 01.,. • Alw1y1 • fev.,lt• • In Our Flewer Shop
• ORGANIC GROWN • GIANT 5111-ICllllll:G • Flerl1t Qu•llty-,ll:ESH •
• CUCUMBERS • LETIUCE • CARNATIONS • • sc u . • 1oc •A. :2s,.,$1.49·
Limit 6
• • • • With ftli• Coupon
:· Limit 6 • Limit 25 •
a With thl1 Ce4.l,.n • With thl1 Ceupen = ••••••••• •••••a•••••••••••••••
COUPONS IXPlll MAY 27
Thes• rest•urants dem1 nd the fin•st for their cutfomer1. Th•fs why they fe1-
tur11 NEWPOt.T PJl:ODUCI! Patron i1:• them! CWI• lfttro, Corona d1I Ma r;
Th• Topp•r Steakhouse, Santi Ana ; L&• Foo4 Stnice, wit h caf•teria1 in A f.
l1nt ic Re search, Bertea, i nd Collins Radio, Newfort; Clliew left, Coste Mesa;
A.Mey Wftt, Newport. How about you call in9 u1
"'ORANGE CO UNTY'S FA STEST GROWING PRODUCE ORGANI ZATION"
l'hene
67:1-1715
67:1-1711
67S·6lf1
fr NE!f9~~!w!~~~~CE
2414 Newport ... ,.,.., .. " TJlt P•Rlnsvta ~----'
"35 Yrnrs of l,roduct
J\11ow l/010·•
"\Vhtrt QualHu Is T he
Ordtr of the l-lous1:" . .~--~~-.-
Camper Checks Mail
Part uf the fun of being
:i columnist 1s reading the
news rele11ses v.·hich land on
the desk each \Veek . Some
of them cover sornc pretty
unusual items and subject!:i .
One such item is a Batafold
Folding Bicycle. obtainable By JACK KNEASS
abuul lo vanish. During th
firsl 4 1nonths pf 1970, !ay ·
'l'CA. 89R recreation vehicle
spaces "'ere added in fou:
from Gloy·s, 10 Le wis Street. ~----------•
Southern Cali fornia counties.
Orange got 387: Riverside-.
156 . San Bernardino, 6, and
San Diego added 349 spaces. Green\.l·ich. Conn. According
ln lhc release this folds to
28 x 2~ x 10 ~ ........
inches in 30 W-'}
seconds ~·ithout ~--'· ; t he use of
tools. The main . t ·
drawback is the 'F
price, 599.50.
Plus carrying
bag for 124.95. J ACI( l(f'I E ASS
The main ad\·antage 111 a
camper trying to get a !1tt!c
morning sleep. is that it has
no motor and makes no noise.
* Something n1ore 1n our price
range <lre the nc111 Fo!>1er
Grant polarized sunglasses
that nip do\\'n over regular
eye glasses. A ''ariation o(
this \Vraps around to prolct't
the sides from sun glare. At
$5, the release says. the.1·
are "1·irtually indestructible.,
J\lore importantly lhcy
* Then there ;in· about :-.1'>:
announcernents u1 thl' 1n;11I
calling :ittcnt1on to the t;iel
lhat various big t'n\erpr1sr 'i
are entering lhl' recreal1unr1l
vehicle leasin~ field . Avi'i. 1n
Los Angeles. is one such firin.
More imprt's~i1e ts a rc!ca ~1·
headM, ''Sightsctr m :i k 1•..,
largest sale 1n molc1r hon1t•
history:· rrff'rnnli ti• 1:.n un11 -;
~old to Chr1 slr·r L.-1~1 ~Jt1g Ltd .
a subs1rH~ry Qf Chr.vsll'r
Canada Ltd.
These units "'lll be used
by .. Camp Canada,'' i n
cooperation with Air Canada
and other airlines. Vacationers
\.\'Ill fly to a destinati on point,
transfer to a completely out-
fitted Sightseer i\1otor Home,
tr uck camper. or Dodge f<1n1i·
Jy \\'agon, and go on their
\\';\}'.
Sume suc:h announccrnents
leave us t·old. but "'ord that
15-0 units have been purchaset1
by Chrysler lends validity tu
lh<' idea that this is an 11n-
prcsslve entry into the field
of recreational vehicle renting
for seasonal use.
Oh. yes. Sightseers are built
on the Dodge chassis. as one
might expect,
* /\ news 1te1n fr orn the
flecrcational \'ehicle Institute
:-.ho11 s that 001 t 1 r n1 s
1 1n a nufacturcrs. suppliers,
press ancl J;l·u.;1 •1rgan1z:i11on~ I
"ere represented by 4680 1n-
d11 id uals <it tht' It\'! 1970 Sh•1111
in LOUISl'illC'. Kv. Tlus IS the largl·~t n:crealinnal 1 ehK·lc
show 111 the world. but el'en
so the totals arc imprcssil'c.
* Yl·t nnn1 1lf'r 1le1n, !his n11e
frn111 the Trailer Co a<· li
1\,t>Ol'IH!lll/l, ~!l'lt.f·~ Ill 11 I" f'
clu:-.c ly I•) thu,1• of us won·
<lcring lf parking spaces arc
* On(' of the best way.'5 o'.
judging the quality of a
recreational vehicle is to study
the storage space. Look for
the number and size o 1
1~ardrobe cupboards, 0 pe n
doors and observe a c t u a I
unobstructed space available
at floor lever. See if overheaC
cabinets are 1nsIa1 l t c:
11 hcrc•,,cr possible.
No1v look at the finish, in·
~1clc and out. of all cabinets.
Arc lllcy strnight'! \\'el l hung'?
No rough edges or splinters?
One excellent way of telling
what prier range rec reational
\•chicle you are looking at is to
j11dgc ii by the cabinet work.
l l is ahnost unheard of for a
low end product to have
magnificent cabinet \1·ork.
Naturally a van conl'ersion
~hould noL be compared to a
30·foot trailer, but betwetn
\an t·on1·crs1ons and bt>t11ccn
trntlcrs there 1nay be quite a
di!ferencc in both util!zation ol
:.p:i«1· .ind 11ork1na11 ... l11p.
\\"hen stud}u1g space on('
~houtd :1l"·ays consider the
possibility 1.1! installing a
J<1rger refrigera!or. Those ~·ho
!01·c luxury, or drink a lot of
beer. m11y consider the small
add111onal cost and the extra
prnp:111£'
l'C'S!1nt'lll
pC'llS('
con.~umed an i~
rathcr than an ex-
Matson's eight great summer cruises
I OSAngeles to Alaska
June to Septembe-r-per1ect time for
tt-iis e•cJIJng 13-day CTulse-vecaUon..
Maison's Hotel SS Mariposa sails
for Ala ska rrom Los Angeles June 14
and 27; July 11 and 24: August 6
and 19: and September 1. Matson·s
Hotel SS Monterey sails from Los
Angeles for Alaska June 21.
Check into your floating hotel,
and begin a great adventure.
Your luxurious hotel cruises lo
Victoria, Juneau. Skagway, Glacier Bay,
Sitka. Vancouver and San Francisco.
Then back to Los Angeles. The pace
is leisurely, the run con1inuous.
Everywhere lhc scenery is spectacular.
You 'll enjoy cruising !hrough 1he
famous Inside P3$sage, surrounded
by stalely beauty. And yo1f n neYer
forget the sheer grandeur of Glacier
Bay, ils icy. pure waters pierced by
magnificent glaciers.
It 's the per1ect "two-wee!.:"~.
t,,fa~e your reservation now.
Fares from $730.
Matson
• • -;--, ... -
i . ; -.;
CONTACT'°""" TM'lflAQINT.
Or Mrld 11'111 eoi.tOOl'I
dirltCUy lo us for
, , ~ddlllot'\91 Lnlonn.tlcM. 1------------------
P•ul Tilomptctn. Cruh11 Coftsult• OP/UID./.IYZ2 I
Matsoo Lines. ~23 West 6th Street I Los Angftle ... CA SIOOl4
lelep/lone 213-626--0501 :
Plea~• send lliOt9 inlQl'mation about your I I Alil~'· CfUISlll. I
: NAYE '
: AOOl'IESS I
I
I ClfY STATE ZIP I I I I 1'RA.VEL AGENT I
L--------------------l The SS "411riposa /Ind SS Monlcrcy are 1eglslored Jn th• u. s.
WEEKENDER OUT ' N I ABOUT
Di\ll Y PILOT 2.l
By
NORU STANLEY
''"'' ,UU,EY STEVENS
" i
·' t
ORANGE COUNTY'S RESTAURANT , NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE
Pri1uc U.iJ> I an
Back in 1854 lhe editors of llarper's \.Veckly
reported, <Jfter a reg:ion<Jl squabble as to "'hat
1vas A1nerica's la vor1le food . lhat beef \Yas the
fnosl 11·idl'ly enjoyed di s h. Fro1n every indication
the prt1f£'rc11cc rcn1ciins unchanbed more than 100
years later.
'fake, for in stance, the e vidence "'e spotted
nne night las t 1vcck at the Pri1ne ll ib Inn in Costa
i\lesa. fron1 our vJnla~e point near the front and
center station \Vherc a chc( carves the giant rib
ro;ists.
The evening's 1110:-.t enduring sight \.vas order
ilfler order of prin1e rib being sli ced for waiting
cusl.onlers. In so1newhat less than two hours nf
casual watching \Ve sa1v a substantial quantity
of meat cut.
STEAKS, TOO
Nor coulfl 'vc fai l to observe the sizeable
nun1bcr of steak orders carried past our boo l h
hy the 1vaitrcsscs. ,<\11 of 11·hich led us to conclude
that any survey tnday 11·011ld still find beef al
lhe lop of the popularJly poll s.
OUR SECOND VISIT
On our first visit last November it was pri1ne
r ibs all the 1vay and but for a last minute c hange
of mind "'outd have been this ti1ne too.
One order held ~le::1dy for prime ribs but
the other 'vent to the Ne\Y York cut sirloin.
'/"he generous port ion of prin1e rib. a regula r
cut for $3.B!l. \\1as again eminently sati sfy in g, 011
:ill counts. 'l'hc large Ne1v York cut, $4 .95 , 1va~
equally deliciou s and cooked a superb n1ediun1-rare
as ordered.
SOUP OR SALAD
:\!1 dinners s ta rt off \.Vith a choice of sou p
or tossed chilled greens and a "'hole loaf of \v a rn1
sourdough bread. Son1e day \Ve '\'ill ~ct around lo
trying the soup but it is d iffi cult to pass up·thc crisp
savory exce)lence of the salild.
FAMILY DINING
COMPLETE DINNER UNDER SJ
"Cl-JOI CE 1l1 EAT"
Op11n 6 A.M. to 10 p.m. D.1 l1y
3JSS VIA LIDO. NEWPORT BEACH 673-1101
LUAU-SUN., MAY 24
5 TO 10 ,_M_
AUTHENTIC POLYNESIAN
ENTERTAINMENT
ALSO
POLYNESIAN FOOD
$4 .00 ALL YOU CAN EAT
COCKTAILS
FREE LEIS
fOR TH( MEil
YOUR HOST
FREE ORCHl:lS
f OR THE LADIES
" V!"ST A
RESTAURANT
843 West 19th Sheet
. CIE,.Tlf'l • ' ~
(Vista Center) 642-0712
3Juu
DINING AND DANCING
ENJOY THE FANTASTIC
MICHAEL'S TWO
JOHN SAYS ,
"'W• Have The ...
•• 9realest pr;me rib .. 9r•afest enterlainm•nt
••• 9reate~I ~' "' f
9re11lesl dri"lk1
9rc.,!esl lunc h . . . 9re.tlesf cu1lomer1
Tre•+ Yourself To A Great Night Q,1
BE ''INN'' WITH us
MONDAY NIGHT SP ECIAL
COMl'LITl l'RIM! RIB DINNER $3.25
3295 Newport Blvd., Newport
Rtservotions 671-137'4
leot h
\\";it rh fnr •opr11i1u:: {lf !hr \\l'h1,,llin)? ()yi;;l"r -
('nmtnt: "'"''"!fl f<l 1!11n1in~l ri11 Jl:'!1'h.-,111
'fhe prune ribs \Vere acconlpanicd by peas
and carrots, fluffy \'.'hipped potatoes. nalural gravy
and crca1ned horseradish sauce. 1'he steak ca1ne
"'ith onion rings, the fresh vegetables a nd ;:i chou.:c
ot J·'ren<.:h fried potatoes or ~paghett i.
EXTRAS
B;:ikcd Id aho polato. \1'1th butter, sour crean1
;infl chives, ts offered a.s a substitution !or ;i!l
cents ex tra. 1\11 ;J la carte skillet of sautccd
n1ushroon1s is lciblJ<:d al 75 cents.
:\dditional cnlrl.'c pu~sibi\itic:-. ;ire clloppc<l
:-.ir\0111 , $2.85 ; barbecued beef bonl.'s (1ncaty pri111c
rib bones ba ked 1n a special barbecue sJuce. C\S
rnany as you \1'3111 L ~2.95 ; top si rloin steak. $4 .~5.
pr1n1e rib steak, $l4:), lohs \er tails or slcak ·11 ·
l0Usler1 ~5.25 c:.ich
1·1icrc's al:;,o a U1;:11no11d .Jun ~rady cut nr
pr1n1e ribs fo r $4.ti5 and ci c:h1 ld"s port1nn, fnr
those under 10 ye;ir~. ~~t $1.50. On the early b1r1l
special ~·londay through r·riday fron1 4 lo 6::10
p.n1 ., diners arc offered the regular cut full dinner
for only S2 .95.
MEET JOE PUTNINS
:\s \VC \Vere fint.')hing d inner the pcrson;_.ihlr
n11 rt busy 1nanager .• Joe Putnins. droppe<l by 011 r
booth for a fe1v nlon1rnt!' Beyond rec<illin g thr
seven yeilrs he spPnt ;:1t the Balboa J:>avilio11. 11r
c·x pl'c>1'Scd our .'lrln1!ration for tl1e capah!r dircct1 011
hc>"s de:11on strnt1n g in his present. posl.
~~
ENTERTAINMENT
:\loving: to 1he Inn's cocktail lnunge, \\'hic.:h
hadn't been conlpletcd 11·hen 1ve n1acle our ini!i<1t
visit . \re s<it through several sets of entertainment
--~
LUNCHEON DINNER DANCIN&
0'ENINGo MAY 1,
O"• We•• Only
JACKIE JOCKO
SEE THE GUN MOLLS AT~
PRJnce
O.f. wh~les fAMILT RESTAURANT
SEAFOOD and STEAKS
DINN[ RS f1om $1.75 lo$4.9S • OPEN I l~m lo \Opm (closed MondiyS)
LONG 8tACH: 6790 l O"ll Beath Blvd. 632·1366 (~e~lood 011ly)
SANT A ANA: 15975 H~rb!>I Blvd. 839·6770 {I block N. of Ed•"ll'')
Doi
PRESENTS
FRANKIE
ORTEGA
AND HIS MUSIC
NOW PLAYING
11 07 JAMBOREE ROAD
NEWPORT BEACH 644-1700
111th a pair of engaging young perfor1ners . non
<1nd Don \Vho constitute the Ronnie Chisholn1 Duo.
l~on displays a gifted touch in lus piano
~ly lings \Vhile talented Don .Jolly adds the drurn
beat and son1e n1i ghty fine vocals.
You can catc h the Chisholn1 Duo rron1 8 :30
10 ~-"J'hursday through Saturday, and 1ro1n a It)
12 1111dnight on Sundays.
The Prin1e Rib Inn, located at 428 I·:. 17th
SL. l 'osla t-.·lesa. opens for lunch at 11 a .n1 .. r.tond ay
through F"riday. and at 4 p.1n . fo r d inner on Satur·
da.v and Sunday. Dinner until midnight on Friday
and Saturday and until 10 the rcn1ainder of the
ll'Cek.
Ora ni::e l 'nunty"s ::;econd Pr1n1c /11 h Inn JU :-.t
recently opened at ;{28 N. St<Jntu11 , ll11c na JJark
;in d another i::; 1'C hcdulc soon for :\nahc1111
1\liy ako
.lapan .. lnnd of beauty. tra nqu ility and g racf'
has been transported across the Pacific to a c harn1-
111 g-restaurant in Orange. One slep insid e th<'
d0or and you are ln another country. Across an
;1ICO\'e 1s an antique Japanese cookin g vessel and
10 11s left a graceful arrangen1enl of chryscan·
thc rn u1ns ~ind d aisies \l'ilh frl'Sh siJ,iercd pin l'
IJrJnc:hes for fo rn1.
WARMTH AND BEAUTY
One is 1~·a rn1 Jy g recll'd and escorted lo the
lr<idJ!ional d ining area and asked to exchange shoes
fo r slippers. A pretty \vaitress in flowered kiinono.
se;1 ts you arounfl a \01v table in a roon1 designed
for relaxed dining. The lighting is subdued. Soft
colors of sand, bro1v n and pale gol d prevail. broken
h<'re and the re \1·ith a simple piece of Orienta l
art.
l>cfnrr d111ncr 1vc ordered :i 1'okyo-rila
i.Jrtpa ne.~c n1argari!a) and ;i ~eisha (0rienlnl
<laiquiri ). J~ach drink di ff ered deliciously fro1n lhr
ori ginal rec ipe.
ENTREE S
'J'he choice of enlre<'s \\•as difficult , c,1ch
1tl'n1 sern1ed n1ore tem pting than another. 1\
rl cc1sion 1\•as renched by a choice of the sukiyaki
imperial. a C'on1bination of C'hic ken \criyaki, shrin1p
trn1pura and sukiyaki. !S5.9El.
1.l .'\(.Ill·'.()\' h~ the ,..,r;1 .••
.... ('r•rd tffHll 11 ~00 In ·l ~IMI p.111.
l,f)l "~ ... .,. '"''''ll'
•.• 11111111 \ //.\\
I .. 1.-r1.,, ... ,,,..,c
\ •:.:l1rl,1
.~,...,.! !n • l .r•n·I
'•·"""' 1n~11 -, l•l 1 ..
\ I no fl '" II ··• ~ .-11r!~ ·, l ~I HI I_ 'l'I
!''"·
TH E ELE GANT
i~~"~
Now Beer & Wine Cocktails
MINESHAFT
GRUB
TIRIYAlll , ..•.... 4.50
fllET , .. , .•• , ••. , 5.50
LOISTI" . , •• , •• , 6 25
IEEf kAIOI •... , . l .50
MILE SQUARE
GOLF COURSE
RESTAURANT
BREAKFAST & LUNCHEON
7 A .M. to 7 P.M.
545-3726
DAILY
Banquet Fecilities Avail1ble
le,•l•d o~ Wt•~•• A·•~u •
a.two•~ (11~l id •nd 8r1111k ~"'"
FOUNTAI N VALLEY 962-5541
Our second choice \Vas the gourmet dinner
C'onsisting of lob~tcr tail 1nisoyaki and steak-yak1,
~'·"°·
'fhe ku i;hiy<i kt (hors d 'oeuvrcs ) '"ere lea n
~lices of broiled beef and scallions, brushed \Vitti
a teriyaki sauce. Next ca1ne su1mono. a clear
broth garnished \\'ilh artful slices of lemon peel,
1\'a tercress and cubes of 1ncat. Sunono (vegetable
sa lad I was crisp le ttuce', sliced cucun1 bcr. avocado
<ind carrots tossed in a light vinci;:ar drcssin£.
CHOPSTI CKS OR FORK
/\ p.1i1· of 1rooden chopsticks a s 1vcll ;is fork:-
rtre p rovided for those "'ho \vish. Our kneeling
\Vaitress offered instructions a nd encouragement
J11d soon the 1111\1·ieldy sti c ks hecan1e sure pinchcrs.
The graceful n1an11cr in \vhich ou r 1vaitres5
pr<'pnrcd the foods kept u." fa sci nated. Each iten\
offered had an r .ve appeal as 1vcll as flavor and
1cxture. Dinin~ becan1e a lei s urely experience -
a tune lo cnjo_v the subtle flavors of n1eat a nd
fish and the c ris p fresh texture of the various
l'egetables. 1'hc sake, s ipped hot fro111 tiny cup ....
had a mello1v dryness th<'lt enhanced the flavor
of the food.
\t.0·
UNUSUAL DESSERT
lJC'sscrl \1;1s rirh. f'rr :·.·1 v. grcrn Ira icf'
1·rcnn1. scr vf'd 11·1th ihin rice rnnkies and lea.
('her J·~itnro Ki111ura fF.d ) hns good reason
In be proud of his culinary efforts, his in.Jnaculatf'
ki!c hcn is a shn\1·c<1 se of effic iency.
·rbe l\1iyako rest~uranl. is located n1. :13 Tov..·n
;1n d Country" Plaza. Ornngc. ll is necessa ry t.o
rlarc reser\,ation.o; \1\'o or three 1vccks in a dvancr
1f you 1vi.~h to d ine in the lrnditionat J apanese
d1111ng roon1 on \•'rida_v nr Snturclay.
(Continued on P age 24)
\lisi t ·r en1ple l:ar,l c ns' Reauliful Nc1v
RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE
PIANO BAR ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY And SATURDAY
'l 'e1nple (;111·1lt•11~
Clii11e.otte R est1c11 r•c 111.
lSOO Ad•m• (At H1rbor) Cotti Me11
S-40-1937 S-40·19'23 ' ..
0'(N; I 1 ;JO o.m. le 11 p.m .. Su11doy fhr~ Thwndo~
11 ;JO o .m. fo 2 o.m .• f1iday arid Sahudey
DON JOSE'
pr esen ts
SPANISH FLAMENCO DANCERS
featur in g
GENARO GOMEZ
TV & Mov ie Per~onali ty
EVERY THURSDAY, FR IDAY & SATURDAY
3 SHOWS NIGHTLY
e COCKTAILS e
Enchilada end Taco .
Chili R•lleno . Enchilada
Sen•ed wlfh IUce. l eaM, To11odi10J a nd Solie
Sl.35 s 1.50
9093 E. Ad1ms (at Magnolia) Hunt. Beach 962·7911
Mon. thru Set .
DICK POWELL T RIO
wHh ARLENE SK ILES
Sunday Evl'.'n111;:
37 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT aNmt ••tw.11 •uffum• & Ire•••• A111oi. ~•f"kln•
.,,._,....•tl•n•
•144-2030•
I
l
-....
J<j DAILY PILOT fnday, M.tJ 22. 19/0
:
FRENCH RESTAURAHT
OPEN FOR LUNCH
11:)0--1 e Tu•1d1v th•v Fr •d•w
DINNER s ,JG-10 P.M.
Cl OSEO MONDAY
Cer-of ACllMHI,. oMI lrbtel
Cosio M-540-J641
ARCADIA
~l,..CE It»
-AIRPORT
Feotvri8C) Steak • Chicken • ltaliat1 Cwisi11•
Serving Late DinMrs
MM.·Tloyr, 11 A.111.•l :» A.M,
IJU PALISADES RD. COST A M EM. ,.._.m
''~ t. S.I, 1t:•l:3t .-.. M. lJJ E, HU,..TlNGTON 011:. .. ll:C ... OIA
"47 .. l)l
COME IN TONIGHT
'"For Tlte
Pri111e Of Y ou1· Life''
·Roast PRIME RIBS OF BEEF
WEEKENDER
.
~uz•% W Ii* f""_ftL •
!Continu•d from Pa9• 23 )
Tcarou1u (:ha ugcs
The practice of departing from th e norm
in the operation of a department store tearoon1
isn't exactl y new with the May Co. in Costa 1\1esa's
South Coast Plaza. As a n1a \ler of fatt. they're
beginning to make a habit of it.
Lale last summer the J\·tay Co . successfully
introduced soine pace-setting innovutions tha1
changed the conventional. tcaroorn i.111.age for all
ti1ne. As a result so1ne enti rely ne''' dining patterns
came in to being for such an establ islunent.
COCKTAIL SERV ICE
Now the store has come up \rith a sta rlling
departure from standard operating_ 'prcce~ures. 'rhis
titne it's the introduction of coc ktail service.
\Vith this addition, tearoom pat.rons can enjoy
their favorite cocktail s either "'ith a n1eal or Ct."
a pick-1n e-up bet1veen shopping bouts. !la rd liquor
sales follow in the wake of beer and 1vine service
t hat the ~staurant has been offering for ,<;on1e
time.
AT TABLES ONLY
The ne\v setup makes drinks available lron1
a service bar for customers seated at tables.
~crvice is not offered at a sit down type of bar.
Bartenders are pouring all name labels as "'ell
as a number of private brands. I.fours for the
May Co. food and liquor service are 11 a.in. to
8 p.m., Monday through Saturday.
Al ong \\1ith last year's management decisio n
to upgrade food service, the introduction of coc ktail
service accounts for a r eally big ch;inge in the
OUT 'N ABOUT
scl'.'ne lha t's al"·ays characterized a department
store tearoom. Jf you ha ven't observed the dif·
fe rences they're well worth a trip to view.
Gone. for instance, is the representative vie\v
or a roomful of lady shoppers eating delicate
fi nger sandwiches and daintily sipping tea. Women
a rc al!nost equaled by the number o( businessmen
present.
FULL MENU
In place flf the one-time menu \\'ilh a Ji mj ted
nu1n ber of li~ht offerings, today's d iner in the
~lay Co. learoorn can choose from a \1ride variety
of items \1·h1ch t:over the full range of appetites.
And the bill of fare pro vides different entrees
every day for as long as tv.•o "·eeks \Vilhout
repeating.
J\Yaster chef be hind the store's program to
turn its te<1roo1ns in to fi rst·class restaurants is
Chris Ras1nussen, former executive chef \l.'ith
J-lol!yv1ood's Scandia restaura nt. Prior to his
association \Vith the l\'iay Co. a nd Scandia, he
11'as affiliated \vit h a number of Europe's top
rcstaur~nts .
Tlw l'ainlcd Pony
The Sunday jaz1_ 1natinee at the Painted l)on y
has been dra11 ing packed houses for the last fe1v
11'Cl1ks . The response has been so overwhelmi ng
that the 1natinee ,1·i\l be offered ns a regular
feature. sho\l.•casing great jazz artists.
This Sunday the Frank Rosolino Quintet,
featuring Fra nk on trombone, Conte Candoli on
trumpet. F rank Strazzeri piano. Dick Berke drums
nnd Jack !)rather. bass 1vill hold the stage.
GREAT FAVORITES
To his n1any fans Frank Ro solino represents
the most articulate, driving lrolll.b:l:m.t_ ~Lyle of our
ti1ne. His reputation as a singerana Slfng writt :.:
has grown through the years. Frank has played
1vith some of the greatest names in jazz history;
Gl enn Gray, Gene Krupa, Tony Pastor and the
recognized dean of all of them Stan Kenton.
The performance starts at 3 p.m. The Painted
Pony is located a t 12565 Harbor Blvd., just South
of Lampson in Garden Grove.
The Mob's Place
Don't let the name fool you, the only gangsters
you 'IJ see at the J\<lob's Place a re safely ens hrined
under glass as v.:aU decorations. The authentic
looking bullet holes in the ba r are a put-on and
the l·lum phrey Bogart \Vide brim med hat turns
up on a pretty cocktail \Vaitress.
The special menu features such i\ems a s
the "Bonnie and Clyde," better known as a teak
and lobster, including salad and choice o{ potatoes,
$4.45. Not only does the decor talr.e you back to
the roaring 20s Lhe menu prices follow suit.
DANCING
Entertainment and dancing a re also on the
bill at the Mobs place. The latest special attraction
is Jackie Jocko, a long time favorite in Orange
County. Reservations are suggested.
The Mob's Place is located at 1019 South
Fairvi ew, at McFadden, in Santa Ana.
Out 'n' Abouter solicits comments, criticism
and praise about Orange Coast restaurants and
night clubs. If you have !iOmething you would
like to say, write Out 'n' Abouter, Weekender,
Box 1875, J\'ewport Beach, California, 92663
Flllt THlll HOUlS
OF CONTINUOUS MOVIU
SEAFOOD, STEAKS AND GOURMET ENTREES Pizza Palace
c:-"4 "••GIANT lll ROA.Sn. s...d wltli ....... $385 ., ...... let., fluffy whlppod potGtaH, ,,..,.,,
.~ ··~l•h I01t(.•, loup ., 1alod, c1r ... l1tt
Now Appearing
The 1't21 H.,lter et 1.r1...,
(N•rt '-lotly'1J
139.7290
' DIAMOND JIM BRADY CUT , • , ... 4.8S
CHILD'S PORTION .......... , .... 1.50
EARLY PRIME lll DINNER SPECIAL , • , \i;'S
MONDAY THlU FR IDAY ONLY! ~ to 6:30 ,M,
NOW-TWO LOCATIONS
OPEN 7 DAYS
KING· SIZE COCKTAILS
RIVIE.RA
ft£5T.AUMNT
Continental Cuisin•
Cockt.1ils
St1'VUl{1
Luncheon and Din11er
i\Iondoy through Saturdau.
Murchison
Co.
Nightly
Tuesday thru
Saturday
DANCING 117 Pa(.ifi(. Co111t Hww .
Hu11ti11vt•• IHCll
Rt1erY•tian1: S36·2SSS
1ratteois'
CONTINENTAL CUISINE
WI HONOlt All PIZlA COUPOl'tl
SPA•Hml
SANDWICHIS
SALAD
IEST PIZZA
FAMILY
FUN
Foll! M"'lc
Fri. " Strt,
328 N. ST ANTON
ANAHEIM
fH .. r S11en1 P1r~l .;:°<JpH MMdcry thr• Saturdey
11 A.M. lu11(.ll
428 E. 17th ST.
COSTA MESA
0,.. M...t.y llw1I htdey
11 A.M, U1tell
Opoti ~ P.M. s.t.rclrt &
S11"4ey -Dl11-M0111i1
Phone ~5-0990
FLAMING DUCK
Closed Sundays u•9un ••c"""'
We aro locat•d ne xt to 11~;;;;~;;;;;;;;~~~~-~;;;;~;;;;~~-;;:;-~;;;;~~~-~~~~-~11
;
~
I ~ ~.
o,.. 2 P.M. Su.6ey
Dl1111H Mn•
Phon• 821-48 I 0
th e Mey Co. in South MAY 23-BAVARIAN NIGHT
Co•st Pla:111 . DlnlP & Danco with
nu s. ''''"' THE ASTORIA TRIO c... M-140.Jl40
••••••••••••••••••••• ff.' ~S>~~@kn
• • • • • • • • • • ••
~
ENTERTAINMENT -DANCING
BACK IY POPULAR DE"4AND
Two W"kt Only
DAVE MERTENS
80HIE GENTRY'S GUITARIST
~:l0-1:30 p.m .. Man. thru Fri.
Caribe Room
PRESENTS
Mondoy thru Soturdoy
The
Sensation.11
MURRAY
HORN
TRIO
21112 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY-HUNTINGTON BEACH-536-1421
• • • • • • • • • • •
•••••••••••• Ii •••••••••••••••••• .,
''GRANTS BRADFORD HOUSE''
EVERY FRIDAY
s129
ALL THE FISH
YOU CAN EAT
W'illl ''""'" ,, ..... C<NlllY (t ll Sltw. HI!
111.U 6 l vNt <, T•<l•r -··
l' 011r F'r1111ily n,,,,taura nt
EVERY TUESDAY
AND THURSDAY
BUCK
NIGHT
YOUR
CHOICE $
loan To111 T•i11'1'
Gold111 F•locl Chic•"
ll:oost hef A1 Jn
Ha111 SNali
w nll
,,,.,., ............. 11&11
., crtom y .., .. 111w.
HM ll•lt & l •lllfl'
OPEN FOR BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND DINNER
8:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Monday thru S•turd•y -10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sunday
GRANTS HUNTINGTON BEACH BROOKHURST & ADAMS
F~OM MU,..ICH
ANO: TM[ 'AME !VE,..ING
OPENING Of THE HOFBRAU ROOM
THE BERLINER
Gen11r11 1 F'a 111.il y l?f's/H11ru11t
Famous For
SAUERBRATEN wifh DUMPL INGS
Op•n Dally Fram 11 A.M .
Saturday & S und•t From 5 P.M.
Cla11Pcl Mondayt
18582 BEACH BLVD. -Town & Country Center-
HUNTINGTON BEACH 968-5800
Al•a II• ~lit• la Villi Our ,_.,.,~y l Vl'IHlll
Dtl•<•!•u•" In faw" a (OUnlry Ct nltr
; PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES
iHAVE CHANGED A LOT
SINCE THE
OLD DAYS "ow Me 'n Ed's mobile-, ovens spetd delicfous
piping·hot pizzas to your door in minute$.
Open I I :00 A.M. -Clo1ecl Monday
HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFORNIA
1815 1 BEACH BLVD. 8~2 -1919
Fine Europoan Food1
Op .. 7 Doys
M-1¥ !lo .. lit. 11'1"' 11 A,M.
h1M1y I 19 t P.M.
Co111,i9" Dl1111on ''""'
$250
Iii ' -j;;:::""~"""~::::::~~;;;:::~~~~~~;;;:~ill H11n91ri1n 8111 Gou I 11h, Ill Chicli 1n P1prili:1oh,
DELANEY'S S+11 1f1d C1bb191, 110101 Duck
JSll W. U. MAIRA ILVD •
LA HAIU SEA SHANTY l1nl1 An• Pry. i. I••<~. 'I, " L• H •~n cc ... tr11) l "~' w 111 L•
Serving Orang• County's Fin•st H•H•. 526-6294
SUNDAY BRUNCH
Ch'oico of Entroe Only $1.65
Lobater B•nedict • Shrimp Rench•ro
Scempi Und•r Gless e Ch•f's Om•l•t
e Sh.1nty H•m & Eggs e
Champagne -2Sc Per Gl•ss
630 LIDO PARK DRIVE
NEWPORT BEACH 675.0100
ROYAL CREST
Proudly Presents
Specia l Guest Appearance of
PHIL DE SANTO ••• "THE CORPORATION"
FRIDAY & SATURDAY NITES ONLY, MAY 22·23
1700 Pl•c•nti• Av•nu• {At 17th St.)
Cost.1 Me1.1 Phone: 642·7160
EXCITINCOLY NEW AND DIFFERENT!
lE"40D!LED PACILITIES
NEW COCKTAIL LOUNGE
SPECIAL FEATURES
COLD BUFFET LUNCHEON
Mon. thr" rrL 11 to 4
ALL YOU $2 •00 CAN EAT
Nl!OHTLY SEAFOOD·O·lA"4A
5 to 11-AJI You Cu Eot
SUNDAY BRUNCH 11 to 2
$4.25
Or try ••r Nf•lor l.-cile111 011.r ~ _.,. fMt1rl11t rite S••"
Co .. t'• flMtt Mfocrie«r of M.t...r c•ltl .. , 1...U -4 Moi.. .• ,.,..
NOON FASHION SHOW
WEDNE SDAY A,d FRIDAY
JACKIE
At T!rrt Plo110 ler I I• 7~Jl-WH., Th•r., Frldo'f
lllJ W. Cocnt Hl9hwcry
N•wport leach 642..f2fl
OUR CHEF
IS A REAL PRO.
"l'FIV HIS l.08STER. IT"I
TH E FINEST OUTSIDE
MAR INEl.ANO. STEAKS,
TOO. A ND A F1'.JC.IT.
'VOUFISEl.F SA L AD BAFI,
TRY OUR NEW COCICTAll.S
TOO. LI KE A FOOT OF
VOUFI FAVORITE MARTINI.
A GREAT DINING OUT
VALUE AND SOUTHEil'll\I
CALIFORNIA'S MOGT
BEAUTIFUL OCEAN VIEW.
...
ENTERTAINMENT NITt:l.V.
TAKE SAN DIEGO FRWV.
"10 HAWTH0AN £ •LVO.
ANO GO SOUTH TO
MARINELAND
015COVER THE ALL NEW
c'.:."::''::':..· _::M::":..::1:::1·c.':_"'c.::o ________ _::::OATL :._ '1t!f 2 :;
Noel Sets TV Special Nobody Pushes This ~
Hair Stylist Around · ..
Singer-aclor Noel Ha rrison,
plagued by a proble m of idt-i1-
tit y, solves it once and for
all with a musical special
v.·hith showcases his versat1 lr
talent and e!.1.Sblishes him as
a first-rate entertainer in his
own _right.
Ht11Tison's color special. ap-
propriately ti lled ""Jiex llar-
n son·s Son : Noel," will be
<1ircd as the first h:tlf-hou r
of Channel S's "Showcnse 5"
presenta tio n next Sunday at
7 p.nl .
NOEL HARRISON
In TV Special Sunday
Guesting on the spec1;1I is
S1efjn1e Powers portraying an
Real
Cantonese Food
ea t her• or
take home,
ST AG
CHINESE CASINO
111 21st pl., Newport Beach ORiole 3·9560
Open Yee' Rrownd Dally 12-12 -Fri. ond Sal. 't!l l a.m.
IEAUTIFUL RESTAURANT
MOUNTAIN/SEA ATMOSP'HERE
0<11ncing Nightly Tu&sday thru Sunday
THE NATURALS iB!M MONTH
311 DI
Special Sunday Brunch
COAST HIGHWAY
South Loguna
10:30-2;]0
RESERVATIONS
499-2663
MR. MIKES
HOUSE OF PRIME RIB
PRIME RIB . $2 95 If You W•nt
• Mar• SI Mor•
DINNER FROM 5 to I I P.M.
SUN DAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH
10 A.M. to 2 P.M.
209 Palm, Balbaa Referv1tion•
675-5774 C•I !lie BlltlO• Ferry L•rwlift!I)
COSTA MESA
GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB 8
II ALL FACILITIES L ! . I OPEN TO PUBLIC I '
' Now Appe.1ring
VIC GARCIA LTD.
Vocals by GERMAINE
ENTERTAINMtNT • DANCING
Tltwrs .. Fri., Sot. 9 p.m. lo 1 :30 o.rn.
.. . ' ... ~:;:, ·: ... I ....
Now Serving Dinner
'-.. ~-
•1
6 to 9:30 p.rn. -Tltwn;., Fri .. Sot.
Phone 540-7200
Happy .. Dowble l oqey" Howr, Monday ttini frldoy, 4 to 6
enjoy a cocktail at
' May Co. Costa Mesa
We now serve cocktails with
luncl1 eon or dif"tner at out
Costa Mesa store restaura nt .
Ef"t joy one as • perf ect comp lemen t
to t he gourmet menus of
Che f Chr istian R•smussen,
formerly of Scandi•.
OININGROOM OPEN MONO.t.Y lliru
CLOSE D SUNDAYS
m•v to t oulh to,,I p1•1'
••n cli•~O lwv. •' b,;,101
to•I• mllt
S.t.TUROA.Y
inquiring r~portcr "''ho ask~.
"What it's like to be the svn
of a fa1nuus at·tor?" Folluwtng
a few words of explanation,
Noel sings h•s origina l t'(tm-
posit ion, "I Don 't Live \\'i!h
f\fy Daddy Anyrnorc'· -thus
selling the scen e for the rest
of the show.
Co11ti'Clu111g in thl' role uf
a reporter. f\11ss l'owcrs rr::id:-
Nocl's press clippings wh1t'h
u11dccidcrlly refer !o h11n as
"folksinger Noel Harrison. son
o! hunous actor He x , ' '
··c;.1typso-singing Noel . son or
:u:lor Hex I larr1son," French
cabaret singer Noel Harrison.
!iOn of Hex " Ncx·I laughingly
J)()Jnts ou t that II{) 0.1!.' rnultl
ever dec1rl r ho1o1· lo label hin1
cxt·cpt <is "Hex 's son ·· llr
:-.ays he was 1uo l'1nborrasSt"d
10 sing in English \.I hen he
fi rst starh•d. Ml h!' ~ang 111
French. This lat ti! 11\-
lorina tion provides a lcad·lll
Vis it a bir of Olrl Japan •• ,
"/ '. )
I 1JJ ,;Yib,
1@MIYAK01
I LUNC/·l F.Or>.:S · 01!\!\ERS
·COCKTAILS
1.:1 1-:;;:o.1
3:1 T1111·n & Counlry, Orano.:e
sunday
BQUnCh
11 ,\.111. to 4 pm.
!FM~
J!)O! J·:A ~T("P \·!' 111',ll\\,,.
Co110:-·" 01.L ).1 ..,~. CA 111 uM '>1 A
J'1U'l~L· (i!-1 ) (i;;;.JJ/.j
I '~ ~ Qui ntel wi1~
-\
Conte Condoli
i.. In J a 11 Con cert
• Sunday
-Mi1 y 24 & 31 -3 P.M.
'P:::.M''' ' \
~ . /) '1 •\'('.f \'(;
' 7 i\:IGl/'f S
I. }0[ & I/ERi! '/'RiO ~ Wed.-Mon. l :JO P.M.
, Heo.,., Roht 111es.
' ' ~
\
~ 12565 Ho1bor llYd.
4"•"' L•m-, G1r<ltn G..,,t >
Phone Number
534-,,1 9
lu lu~ Frcnth rL·nduiun Uf
··~1 adelc1nc
Stcf3'1Hl' asks 11 h;1t 1·lse he
docs, and Noc! tells hrr he
unce did the news 10 Calypsu
on 1·:ngl1l>h l clev1~1on ;ind san~
at c<ih• tables [or lips. To
1h:111unstrate, he · picks up a
guilar and rnovcs tu a t<1ble
whcf'c ht• .~ercn~1dC!> gul'sl
stars ~l 1ekey Huorw:-i ;ind
l\·1arie \\'1lson l'l'ilh the Cal,vpso
Slihld<ird, "'NCl'Cr !-.l:1kc• A
Pretty Won1a11 Your \\l ife · •
Queries ubout his see ing
l:leatlc Gt' or g e Harrison 's
lather rt'Ceive a negat11•c rerly
bu! provide an opporl1u1ity for
t\oel tll s111j! tht' l:lc;1tlt·..;· '"llf'y
Jude ·• 111• fo!1011•s 11•11h '"\'111
1 ;oing to br a Country ll o.v
Ag;un." '\\'1nd1n1lls of Yo11r
~11nd."' and at1u!11t•r of 111~
ung1nal MlllJ::~ -"Tin \V1·d·
d111g .
An Enghsh l\IUSll" Mall 11 1111·.
"A l.11tlc Ull or \\"hat Y1111
F:1ncy r>oes You (:uod.'' flfu
\'ld~·s ;111 t'.'\CUSI' for a p1·01
dt1l'!1on nu1 nbl'1' 111 wl111·h ill 1 •~
Powl'rs dues so1111 · f;1nry ku-l.-
111g and strult111g
·1:rtJ111 tt;a;.::t• 2 1
11·1th llirn ~a.~ 1hc \vt1lcr ha::; on
1 wo occasions 1.
\\'hen h1's not on s1:1gc', Al
can usually bl' found 111 the
aud ience, v.·atching the olhl'r
<"(]mn1un11y playhuu:.1•s For,
as he says ··meet ing [ll'ople
you"\"e worked with 1n n1hrr
then tcrs is :i lot of fun too "
\Vould he evC'r ta kr ;in11ther
cn1ck at !ht• proft'ss1on;1I entl
(if thr businrss'' ""l dou b1 11.'
he shrugs. ··J dun"! think I've
go1 the nrrve to start uvrr
again '"
But then , he adds hasulv.
"l f son1elh lng ever happr11C1!
like n1y losing my job, I mighL
try lo grl into corn1ncrl'ial. .,
Untll such an l'Vcnt11al1 ty,
Ala n Harl is kcrping hunsclf
busy 1n cn1n1nunily thc:11er ·-
and :i lot of directors in \)r:1t1ge
County think thal's jusi lin('
RESTAURA NTS
COFFEE SHOPS
COCKTAIL LOUNGES
LIQUOR STORES
Alf T,pe• & Cla.,P• A•
Re•l;,1ic Prot~< & 1.,,..,
FOR FOOD A NO BAP
OPPOllTUNITIES CALL
NEWELL AS SOCIATES
481 N_ CotrSt Hwy.
logu"o l each 494 ·b59.i
"W• l(""w Tiie Bu••neu "
Su,,.rb Oceo11 View Diftinq
0 1,.NER F ROM 1• 10
.~rl ~oyp Ou Jou• 01 ~Al~d
V«;iel,1DPe, l'o•~to or R .r~
PAN, ING
Cl"l U• ~II
TAlE1/1tr'NHAlE
SEAFOOD RESTAURANT
WITH /I. SWE EPING V !IE W OF
NE~PO RT 1-i /l.RBOR
f1
y ,/;,.I
Jli' . . 11.,,,,,
FINE
ITALIAN FOOD
COMPLF:TE DINNER
FROM $1.85
Continuou1 Sl•g•
Show• From I p.m .
NO COVER
NO MINIMUM
212 W. CHAPMAN I 532.9111
I~ • Thi Circle In Or•n• ~
II'~ ~~ l!~··~Fi11i~e FLING:--=
ENTERTAINMENT • 7 NIGHTS A WEEK
KELLY GIRLS' SERVICES AUCTIONED
Channel 28 Auctions 'a Bi t of E verything
Everyt hin g Under S 't111
At Channel 28 Auction
• J-:vcryttung f ron1 ~ a 11 t" y
Sinatra's fabled boots and Jo
Anne \Vorley "s •·1..augh-ln"
tca thrr boa to the sweatshir t
Burt Bat•harach \\" r o I e
""\\'hat's New l'ussycat"."' in
au au hones1 -to -goodness
c·heek fron1 J ack Benny fur
:!!I el'rrts \Viii go on the auc11011
in1ag1nablr: chauffeun;; din-
ners at nearly f:' v r r y
restaurant in tow n: couturier
fashions; driving, flying, sail-
tng. fc nl'i ng, Karate. S\\"in1 -
rning and d:incing lessons: a
suit of :irmour: a dune buggy:
a freezer-full m 31 f lavors
hlocl. to raisl' operatn1g funds lcr Cream: a ride in a
for Los Angeles' non-con1-{:oodyear blunp, and a $1 000
n1erc1~1I Cha nnel 28 television pin fr on1 Tiffan y's.
:.t:111on beginning l\1ay 31st For those who want to
Thr sel'on d annual auct ion. tr;ivrl. there's an JI-day cruise
hilled as ·•A11 intrrt•s!ing auc-10 il·lexico. an Americana
lu\11 of interesting th ings fron1 Tour : a trip to Jhnvaii; a
111 1crc:>lln g pt:'ople for an in-tl'ip lo Acapulco, 11nd eve11
ll'rcsting reason ." wi ll be the v a IP tour of Disneyland
h1 gges1 r vcr to hit Los Angeles \\'hich Mickey Mousr hiinself
lclevision. wi ll auction off.
Thousa nds or ite1ns, fro1n For those who are less
lhf' bizarre to lhe verv adventurous, there <ire the
valuable. tl'ill go to the higheSt usunl iterns· an1 iques, art and
bidders 10 raise son1e S300.000 sculpt urP: 1 ir e s. fu rs,
lo support the educational c :i r p e 1 1 n i:: . s l 0 v e 5 ,
ch annel KCET. I re rigera1ors, w;ishers, dryers.
The nuction. which \1·ill be dish\vashers and other a1>-
telec;1st lire on the channel, pliances, sports paSS('s and
runs !hrough .lune 6th inuch more
S111tlt" uf thc ite1ns goin•: Last y<'ar's auc\Lon raistd
ti\' lor gr;1bs 1n('"l11de: a gorilla so111e S\50.000 1n oprrati ng
:-'.1i1. thl' hl'1T1ces of five Ki>lly luods for lhe $talion
1.11'ls a $7.000 rarr hhrS(' -
two 1n11}(1rted "a1lboat~ al ~\(>cll'l-T ' <I billl.~1ard. ~I ll'hl'l'l l
HOLLYWOOD tU PI )
When Jim o ·Rou rke styles the
hair of a movie tough guy , it 's
a safe bet the star won 't com-
plain.
O'Rourke is a ro rmer
Go lden Gloves winner and a
bonafide attorney.
The handsome Ir Is hm a n
learned to fight with his
brothers and studied the
refinements of ha ir stylhig
fr om the late Jay Sebring who
was brutally slain last August
In the Sharon Tate mu rde rs.
In Dece1nber O'Rourke, wit h
fi ve o t h e r Sebring-traillt'd
stylists. opened his ow n
tonsorial p<irlnr , with an lrlsh
pub flavo r. in Beverly Hills.
llis chentele includes the
S1nolhers Brothers. Rohert
Vaughn, Peter Falk. Hoss
t.-lartin, Ricardo l\fo,1talba n
and Raymond Burr among
others.
O'Rourke's slory has a ha Jl-
pier ending than !hose of most
young actors who come lo
llollywood see king a ca r~·r
only to drift bark home or
becon1r short.order cook~.
lie came \\"est to play the Ii·
lie role in "The Jack De1npscy
Story ," because of his ring ex-
perience and his a c t i n g
training \\'ilh the America n
Theater \Vt,1g in New York Ci ·
ly and emoling classes wilh
Stella Adler.
The picture dea l failed to
materialize.
"I won the Golden Gloves
\\'eltenveight championship of
Long Islan d \\'hen I was 1!'!
years old," O'Rou rke said,
"using 1n y older brother's
name because or n1y age.
'"After that I fought a few
professional fights and in the
ariny. F'or a time I thoughl
about becoming a full-t in1e
rig hter. But you don't see
many successful ex-bo11:ers:·
O"Rou rke turned to barber
college when his acti',1g career
st:illed.
After graduation he worked
with Sebring, putting himself
th rough l\\'O years at Los
Angeles City College.
He cut th e hair of telebnties
!ly day and studied law al
ni ght.
T\11: nativt> New Yorkrr
Rtaduated fron1 !aw school 111
1968 and passed the Califo rnia
Bar in 1969.
Now his various careers are
raHing into place.
JIM O'ROURKE
Hair Stylist to St ar1
'"Right now hair stylin g 11:
more remunerative than la~;
said O"Rourke whose pricf :
r;l'o1ge lrorn $)I to $!6 for S::
h<1ircuL "'But l"m gradu.:11t ;
c;is111.c: into l"Orporate J;1 :
prat l•l'C through !orm ation , '.
rn v own con1 p;iny. ~:
"\Ve hope lo open branch~
across the United States. pr!t;
ducing men's grooming p~
ducts and toupees. a n S:
oper ating styhng school ant
fra nc hises." :
'Eagles' Ne
TourofDut
S c r e en so ! d i e r Cli
Ea.slwood srenl lus Arn
days :.ts a s11•imming . i
s t r u r t or ;1L f ort .Or
t:alifornia. far frorn th
military·typc action. But aft
"\Vhere Eagles Dare'' 5
now "Kelly's \Va rriors," Cli
s:iys · "[ feel like I've d<11
h1•0 tours or active duty . Brl·
Jl u11on makrs 1t all pret
re;ihstir
f.·laki'o1g 1nov1cs is so rnct
like being in t:1e A r rp
.nyway We're 30rt of a v.t
paid platoon." In ··x elly
Warnors·· Eastv.·ood leads ,
uo·ordered al\ack on a go
c:ache. worth 15 milhon dollt1r
.
'
·~ ,.
~ ,.
~ " " 1·li;11r J)Cd1~rced Ungs: Com-I
putcr serVll"Cs for c1·cry th111g
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LIZA MlNN ELLI
WENDELL BURTON
Tho.flerile CucHoO
. '·.r
At.ID AT 1:10 ONLY
Joh11 Wcry•e • , , i11 Ids
01co• Wi1111i119 '•rfor111011ee-
"TRUE GRIT"
o.i11••0"t.L C,[>.l(PAt C.OPPQP•TIO.,. Fox ·!~!r.~~~.~
s.~ o .. 1., , ..... 11 11 1 ,;1101 · !>46-2711
1-
LAST S DAYS
NOW -ALL THE
SUSPENSI!" & IXCITEMENT
IS IN ENGLISH
Ope•
6:45
7lf I. laU... .. ,. '"''"""•
Now tt-tru Tuesday
IR.UE GRIT
JOHN WAYNE ' ft,
TECHNK;Ol.Oft !jD·.,-·
*
AU NEW COMPLETE AMHSEMENT CENTER!
Cala Crand Opening Party Tuesday Mag 26
llSHN TO RADIO UZY DR Cff!CK YOUR lDCAl WHIH FRONT ADS.
!REGULAR SHOWS START WEDNESDAY, MAY 2711d
4 COMPL ETELY *** 4 AUTBMATEO LARGE NEW·OELUXE
* .
**
*
HI· KID DI E ULTRA SEPARATE GIANT PROGRAMS IRIDESCENT INTENSITY PLAY LANO MODERN TA KE YOUR SCREENS PROJECTION ***** SN ACK BAR
THE FIRST BRIVE·IN IF THIS TYPE
IN TNE ENTIRE WEST!
PICK
NOW! AN AMUSEMENT COMPLEX WHERE YOU CAN TAKE YOUR PICK Of THE TOP CURRENT
AT TRACTI ONS. CONVENIENTLY LOCATED IN THE HEART Of ORANGE COUNTY OPPOSITE
THE ANGEL·s STADIUM.
l't1Ut. H~WMl\M ~litKT llillfORQ
KAlllllRlNE ROSS. Blfl"CHCASSIOV ANO
THE SUNDANCE KIO
STARTS WED., MAY 27
DA~CING * HAP HALL DUO * Larry Lake Pororrovnt Pi<turaPresenl~ MON.0TUIS .• WED.~
' Si""" i'l:iiJl\l..b~·="' ''"'"\•"''''., .......... ~ ...
Wiii! J ... ft l19'n lft It»
Thur. tlilr• Sun. Gult11rls1 1r. ~
MESI\ C f "-Rear-Mesa Theater 5011,. .... e os • , ... una
145 I. 19tll St, Jwtt off Nt•port llYd. v
... rt'., ••-..: ,.,. ' ,1....,1\ ..
RllJSl fl -------------·----II let'.l>nOCC!b"'A~P>el\.f"C ~ MA V C Q -''' ••••~ r+.trt l llil !tit 11!11•..,_ O"" I 1.m. te J • m . 011!y 1
•
j
I
•
..
' H DAl\.V Pll01" Frl!11y, May 22, lQ70
\'T '_,r~1 :.1
'
MAY2.!
e JOB PRINTING
e PUBLICATIONS
e NEWSPAPERS
Quelity Printing and D•p•ndable Service
Mt ..,. than • qu•rler cf • century.
D11 WIST U.UOA 1t.n .. MIWPOn llACH -64J-4J2T
' •
111 the Galleries
Burkhardt Works Shown
COFFEE GARDEN GALLERY -2625 E. Coast High way,
Corona del A1ar. !lours: 11 a.m. to 3 p.1n. ~1on, -Sat. Oil
exhibit, through J une 25, the works of Haus Burkhardt.
NEWPORT HAltROR ART MUSEUM -400 Ma in SI., Bal·
t>oa. Hours: Wed .. Sun. I to 5 p.m. r.tonday 6 -9 p.n1.
Currently on exhibit through July, 36 works by A1ner1can
sculptors from the Wh itney Museum of American Art.
LAGUN A ART GALLERY -307 Cliff Drive, Lai-:una Beach.
Admission $1. r-.tembers and one guest free. I-tours: I to 5
p.1n. daily; docent tours Sundays ·at 3 p.m. Currenlly on
exhibit, "Panorama '70," a mixed media show of pa1nl1ng.1i
and scul pture through to.lay 24.
BOWERS MUSEUJ\1 -2002 N, 1'.1ain St., Santa Ana. Hours .
10 a.m. -4:30 p.m. Tues. -Sat.; l to 5 p.m. Sun.; Wed. and
·rhurs. eve. to 9 p.m. No charge. On exhibit through f.tay ,
:in ecology show by UC! students and the f.1useurn titled
"fo.1an: the Ra ce we must not Lose''; Collage paintings ol
Juanita Hislop.
CHALLIS GALLERY -J390 So. Coast Highwa y, Lagun;1
Beach. Hours : 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. On exhibit th rough
May, oils and watercolor one-man show by Jack Dud ley.
CROCKEll -CITIZENS BANK -2300 Harbor Bl vd .. Co~r;-1
t-.·1esa. On exhibi t during regular business hou rs through
June 15. oil paintings by Pat Ingram.
COSTA l\1ESA LIBRARY -~6 Cent c r Sl.. Cn~Ut ~h:~;1
On exhibit during regular library hours through J11n(' l!'i ,
oil, watercolor-ink work of l'\lary G. Long .
l\·JESA ART Ll::AGUE -513 Cet1ler St., Costa t11es;1. !lour.~·
Sal and Sun. I to 5 p.n1. Continuous e1'hiblt of arl "·ork 111
va rious media by Art League members. No admiss ion charge.
~tARJNER'S LIBH.\RY -2005 Dover Drive. Newport
Beach. During regu lar library hours, the Jr. f~bcll Art ist !J[
lhe J\1onth exhibit featuring lino leum cuts, pen and ink
~do ...,,.,,.,. ••.cM -...... _ .... ,. t••-'-u.i. l•lo -• gl . J.1)111
EXCLUSIVE
FIRST RUN
SOUTH
ORANGE COUNTY
MOST NOMINATIONS FOR ANY PICTURE
"four stm * * * * Hig~est ratin[.
A pruduction of qu•TIIY and a · ·
2ratifyinE achievement"
-Wand1 Hale, N.Y. D1ily News
"Epic battle of the sexes."
-Vi11tenl CaibJ. N.Y. Times
• RICHARD BURTON
•• llF,'>i•T VIII
GENEVIEVE BUJOLD
•• ... s..:t ~l.JU:~N
Ir-111L HAL WALLI S MlOIJll('llf)"'
t GA1111e ef tfte 11/oasarz~ De,rs
Mo11d•y th•~ Sgt11rdoy "ANNE" Sho'fn 111t 7:00 11111d 9:JO
1lr;1w1ncs uf Leslie \'.'ayne. siudenl at Newport Harbor Jligh
Scl100J, lhrough A-1<1y
lit..: IH\.'INE LIHitARY -The lrv1ue hbrary on ca.nipu:i will
!>.how "'OOdblock prints by Un1ch.i lliralsuka, through May 29.
NE"1POH'f NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside Drlve, New-
port lll'11ch. On exhibi t during rC'gular business hours lhrough
i\lay, u1l p:untings by Bert Blanchet.
t;CI GALLEHY -UC Jrvine Fine Arts Ga llery hours: I ·~
p n1 . dally ex<·ept fl.ton. Currcnlly un exhibil in Uic art Gal-
ltr")-', through M:1y 24 : annual student art exhibit.
,\IUTUA L SAVINGS GALLERY -2867 Easl Coast llighway,
l'uruna 4lt•t f\olar . On exhibit during regular busu1ess hours,
through ~1ay. \Ya\ercolor and oil paintings by Violet Clark.
ll U1''1'1N(:1'0N BEAC H LIBRARY -525 Maln St., ll unt-
1ngton Beach. On exhibit through May, oil paintings by Eliui-
lx·th Nt1dor. during regular library hours.
l)CC AH1' GALL.E ll)' -2701 Fairview Road , Costa tl-lesa.
Hour~. 7 3(1 a 111 to 10 p.n1 Mon. • Thu rs.; lo 5 p.rn . Fri.
;111d I -;, p.m. Sun. In the Library Gallery prize y,•1nn1ng art
liY Edv.ard Uakcr , through ~l ay 31.
t :OLOEN \\'EST CA LLERY -In the Library of Golden
\\'t'SL <.:ullcgC', 15744 Golden \\'est Ave, Huntington Beach. On
r\h1b1t through 1\1ay are v.·atcrcolors by Darrell Ebert and
t1gural1VP dr<1w1ngs by Kay f\.lortenson, r~culty members
uf U1e college.
\'It ('l\IJC CENTF:R GALLER Y -J:!OO W. Newport Bl vd.,
Ni•wport Ara ch. On exhibit dl1ri 11g regular b!Jsincss hollrs,
:.!:1 pu111t1ngs selected from the NB Arts Fesllval. On exhibit
llit'flUJ;h .J1111e
(.;A,\IElt.\ "'OBI\ GALLEflY -'.H(l{t IV. C n a s l lligtl\\'<l,1·.
Nrwpo rt Brach. Hours: Thurs. and Fri. 5 lo 9 p.111.; Sat. anfl
Sun. nuon to 9 p.rn. t:a!lfry limi!etl 10 photography, \vilh
work nf Victor and Ellen Land\Yeber on exh1bl t through f\.1ay.
UNITEU CALIF. BANK -3029 Harbor Blvd .. Costa l\1esa.
(ln c>:h1b11, during regular business hours, through June 15,
otl pa iutings by Marvel!e Coleman.
(( \'1"••"'t ~ TNl=ITrt
~; 4i 7l -4i24i0
2905 Eost Coost Hwy •
Corona del Mar
Program Rated IGP)
EXCLUSIVE SHOWING
For lnforma iton Phont
673-6260
ALSO
PLAYING
MOST
EXP'LOSIVE
'" STORY
o•
THIS
CENTURY
Alfred
Hlt(.h(.oc:k'•
"TOPAZ"
The DAILY PILOT-
•
IRVI N E COMMUNITY THEATRE
p tt 1111!• i l'I p,."'it ft ........ <11011
"AN EVENI NG OF ONE-ACT PLAYS"
c~.-0.'1 -"OH THI HARMfULNISS op; 101ACCO"
lo!•llty'• -"A.1114 DA CAJ'O"
& Tho Awtrd Win11in9 Cc..,tdv
"HOW TALL IS TOSCA NINI"
Frida y & Saturday at 8:30 P.M.
M1y 22. 23 · 29 · 30
CORONA Df.L MAR H lfiH SCHOOL LITTLE THIA.Tiii
Ailuli1 , .. SJ.00 'itudtih •. , S\.00
Coll 8Jl-07f l f•r lt.,.twatlo"
ed1y-cdre active wed r
foo
men .!ind boy1
whi te levi bell~
<11re gredt for golf dnd
io11 iling or for iust
plain old beach w.!ilking.
b 1 ft~tm1••c •rd • m~tl•r cli1•9•
7 ft1h;.," i1lt "cl, ntwporl bttch 044-5071'.1
tl1e-rnesa ~ .. -~r•: :: F-... l: NEw Ap po1ntm2 f1_ts
NE\.'/POPT AND HAR BOR ltrrCOSTA.MESA
...... 1~m...: Sir Michael Redgrave
[!} 63' p..,,..;.io<l• ll!ld MttrocoO!r Q ~
~~!"!'!~!!!!!!'!~°""'~~!<!!""'-:· ·"'.:" ~t""l'f"'• ..
First Run Feature
~Kn.m"l!<.Jl\
I )llJ:JlllD HARRIS SW c~mBY SWNTIU EGGAB
, 'i'WMO'J.TMAGuMPES
Conll11uo ui Show Sot11rdoy a11d Su11clo1 from 2:00
ST ART S-NEXT W EDNESDA Y __ _
WALT DI SNEY proc!uclions· ,$
HlNGoithe ::~,,
. I ,
ff1\,
T£CllN(:OLOR" ~~l 1 •' ' ,
• I '.#. I :J..
Al10 Walt Diinty'i ' <
I
"THE COMPUTER WORE TENNI S SHOES"
The One Tho! Caros I ~111111111111111111111111111111•1111!1111••••••1
•RC 1',r111'"' Co<~ ""•UM••'•".,., l'1'0"'t• I'<!~"' ~,.,,~ ..
•• °'HOC•llOI ""' °'l(i<.;~ "<Otlwt•""'
,, Robe11 l.l<l••c~ ,
-· -Michael Caine :::,~""'Cliff Robert son
Ian Bannen Harry Andrews Denholm Elliott Ronald Fraser
-.. KenTakek ura ----Henry Fonda
• ..........,. .. Robtofl AIOrdl ..,L,&,11 Holl•r -..i.~1 Aldrich -R~ si..o-~l"(! 10! c
70 ~~·i.. et11dl"td _ .. ..,._..,Robit<'L Aldricti
MM WodtSu .. ,.. ... ~-,..., ............ 1 • I dlt>obl.Ootlbot rriil .., __ 6 1•.K~St.,ea _.. .. _OO!MO C--"" 1o1o1....-c .... .,,.,1i.i..10•'-;IC:...__~---
~ '5712 HOLLYWOOD BLVD
~ /Jhon• HO 7·6167
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT ! EGYPTIAN::~~~
.l UNlflO AA t1~T~ flll.lHll NOW PLAYi NG!
SHOWT1M£S DAILY 11:30 • 3:00 • 5:25 • 7:55 •nd 10:30 P.M.
BARBRA
STREISAND
.. ,,,_,.,. "'""""" ........
DAYS
WALTER
MATI'llAU
STARTS
WED .,
MAY
27th
e., .•. ""'' '"'' •·•·~ •1• ,.,, •I'•" 111~ f.,t•·1•11 h c1•11
Guide to ,.,,,,,
Barber Shop Quartets to Harmonize
l\IAY tt ,
.Tt.JNIOR TEEN Di\,l\'c;E -'l'l1e J11111or-Teen C'Jub of West·
nilnStcr wUJ have twu d:ince~ caC'h rnunth -on I.he :;eeond
11nd fourth Friday:-i -from 7·31) 10 9:30 p.n1 The second
l"rut.1y uf the month Jtl \\'rstm1nster 7th and 8th grade
~Ludeuts <tttcnduig Y.cs1n1nstl'r sehoo!s eust of Beach Blvd.
rn:iy .'.ltlcnJ. and on thl• fourth F'riday night all 7th and 8th
grade students attending \Vest1nin~ter sehools west or
Bea('h HJvd. may attend. All :>chuob; have t11e new schedule.
On r-.·lay 22 "Pure J oy" \1111 pL1y for doncing.
1\1.A'I' 22
GUESS \\"110 COl'\CERT -A concert Jeatur1ng "(:ucss
\\'!1u" witl1 Cr11llby Appletun ;111J !)inaU ~·;.ices is set for M;iy
'.:'2 at 8 p.m, Jn the Arl·na of t!1c An:.ihein1 Convention Cen\('r,
llrlO \\I. l\at1·lta A1•·, 1\11ahrun. Titkcts ;11 the door or frotn
11(·kct ;,igerii::ics are $,lriiJ -S5 :io.
i\l,\ y 2?. 2:t
t:CI ORCllESTBA CO~CEllT -Tht CC Irvine Orcheslra
under the 1l1r1:tt1nn ul Pt·lc'r OdCAard, \Viii perform works
nt Slr<:Jv1nsky, B<:c(hv\'t•n . Prokol1eff ;ind ltossini in the
Science Lec:11u·r Hal l on L':l111pl!S i.1t a JO p.rn , May 22 and
2~. AdJtllS~1un JS ir'l'l'.
ti.tr\ y ~2. 2:1
BAZ.\AR -A ba1.<1;1r :.ind h::indicr::if1 s:.ilc fflr the benefit of
< 'r·eativL' Oil y C11re Cl'!l\L'r 111 San la Ana, will be held at the
1·C'ntcr J20:l \\', Fir:;t St . on S:ilurday, !'11ay 23, all day ending
11'1lh a {lantt• ;uld bci rbetue dinner. On Friday. ~1ay 22 a
barbecue lunehc(in v.'iJI be scrv{'(t frorn n11Q11 to 2 p.m, wzlh <1n
.'\fro fashion shuw at 5 p.in. ;incl contest gaines for the chil-
dren. SC1i..urd;1y, booths and gi.lrncs. a rummage and handi·
1-rart sale will occupy lh1· :.putl1ghl. 'J'Jckets to each dav
barbecue arc S2 ftir adults, $1.50 tor children. Phone 836-7666
or 548-1590 !or further inlorni:1t1on.
!\IA\' tt · 2·1
RODEO -The Forunl Charnpionship Rodeo will be present-
f'd in the Fo1·11n1, 3900 West Man chester Blvd., at Prairie. in
!11glc1vood ~'lay ~2 -2·1. l3C1reln1ck bronc riding, saddle bronc
r1d 1ng, bull riding, calf roping. steer wrestling. team roping
and cowgirl barrel racing \\'il l be included in the events.
Exhibitions or trick rld!ng will be shown and lhere will be
clowns on hand too. Tickets HI the Forurn or ticket agencies,
$2.50 -$5 wllh those 16 and under one-half price. Phone
(2!3J 673-IJOO.
--"'-' i\1.4 Y U-%4
Ai\1ER1CAN SHO\llCASE -Twenty-three displays sponsored
by lead ing industrial organizations will be On view in three
specially designed traller carriers at Newport's Fashion
island , May 22-24. The history of greeting cards, progress
of home appliances, a display of sporting firearms, the
story of chocolate and hundreds of authentic antiques from
museums w!ll be among the many exhibits shown . Hours ·
10 a rn. lo 6 p.n1. daily; noon 10 4 p.m. Sunday. Admission
1:;: free.
f\I A Y Z2.JUNE 5
FRIDAY CONCE RT -The music department of UC Irvine
presents concer!s each Friday afternoon at l p.m. in Room 178
of the Fine Arts Bldg. on campus. There is no admission
chargt'. Friday, t\.1:iy 22, Conser vatorie de la Voix : Students
of Vnicc; May 29, 1\'lu~ic for Small Ensembles: Bartok and
Franck: June 5, Instrumental Recital: Students of flotus1c
DcpL
~IA Y 23
NII Cl!APTER OF SPEBSQSA -The Newport Harbor Chap-
ter of lhc SPEBSQSA is hos ling its annual Parade of Quar-
tets in the Newport Harbor }ligh School auditorium. 600 Ir-
vine Ave., Newporl Beach. h1ay 23 at 8 p.m. Reserved
t1ckels, S.1 and $2.50: gener<1! admission, $2. available at the
dnor .
t\IAY 23
HARMONY DAY -Knoll 's Berry Farm, 8039 Beach Blvd.,
Buena Park will b(' the site of Harmony Day when more than
:lOO voices of Sweet Adclincs eight chapters will be heard
rllro11ghout the park tl11 s Sat. A three hour prog ram starts
:1 6:30 p.m.
!\IA Y 23
!,A QUl"'TA DANCE -The La Quinta Teen Club holds
chaperoned dances each Sa turday night from 8 p.m. to mid-
night al lhe La Quinta High School, 10372 l\1cFadden, \Vest-
"Airport' Ope1iin9 i11 Newport
• Jetliner pilot, Dean J\1artin and h is er e"·· Gary Col·
Jins:, center, and Ba rry Nelson. are informed the.v
are carrying a sto\\'a \\iay on their flight to Ron1c, in
"AIRPORT IS TOP FLIGHT ALL THE WAY!"
-c~;<ogo Ooily N•"'•
"You wlll onjoy AIRPORT lmmonHly,
•nd you wlll find youraelf blklna: •bout It
enthuai1atic1lly to your friend1." -o.,, • ., ,..,,
, ?OS; Hll~H--. • .,.
AIRPORT
BURT lANCASTiR • DEAN MARTIN
JEAN SEBERG JACQUELINE BISSET
GEORGE KENNEDY H~lEN HIVES
\'AN HEFLIN MlUREEN STAPLETON
BARRY NELSON llOYO l'IOlAN
DANA WYNTER BARBARA Ht.LE
A lJlirvlllM ~:Clu.i:. l(CJo~ICIXl)I!" • ,,~"' 1()0~ ro~o.uo ~ '"~::::::;::@t
e EXCLUSIVE -Starts Thursday, May 28 e
"G" RATED -IT'S FOR EVERYBODY!
a scene from "Airport'' which is opening
wards Ne1Nport Cinema next \>Vednesday.
at Ed·
POSITIVELY ENOS
WEDNESDAY
10th end Final Week
2nd Top Feature
HELO OVER I
Starts Thursday, May 21
o IOSS Jl!Mltl _,.,,....
AIRPORT
BURT UN CASTER• DUN IJITlM
~UN SEBERG •aCOUEUNE BISSET
·--~-............... _.. ~ ~""='=="'Emi
minster. All teens are tnvlt.ed to attend. Admis&on is $1 for
members, $1.50 for non·members. Drell! ls restricted lo
school wear. For further information ph-One 531-3583. The
"Faith Crusade" group will play for dancing.
l\o1A Y !3
TEEN CLUB DANCE -The Westminster Recreation and
Parks Department will bold a Teen Club Dance In the et:im·
munity Center, 8200 Westminster Ave., (for Westminster
tee n s) each Sat. from 8 p.m. to midnight. AdmJsslon, $1 .
!or m~1nbers. $1.50 for non-members. "Der Zeppelin will
play for dancing !\fay 23.
MAV Z3-Z4
Ali.T IN THE PARK -There will be a two-day Arts and
Crafts Fair in Costa Mesa 's Vista Park, Victoria St., west
of Canyon Drive, May 23 • 24 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. !\tore
than 50 artists and crafts1nen will be displaying their wares
for saie. Included will be paintings, stoneware, leather,
cand les, sculpture, weaving, mosaics and tie and dye fabrics.
Many cr.:fL<;men will be demonstrating their art during th e
two da ys. Music by wandering minstrels and troubadours,
appearances by harlequins will add to the festi ve occasion
which is sponsored by the Unitarian Universallst Fellowship.
Phone 642-5308 for further information.
J\IA Y !4
STUDENT CONCERT - A senior recital by students of the
f\~usic Dept. will be held in Room 178 of the Fine Ari s Bldg.
at 8:30 p.m. Sunday, May 24, String Quartets: Jiaydn and
?\1ozart.
MAY%7 ·31
STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL -The annual Garden Grove
Strawberry Festival will take place in Garden Grove Park,
J\1agnolia,. and Westminster Ave., ?o.fary 27-31 featuMng live
entertainment, carnival rides, a rcxleo and a paradf': (on Sat.)
vd!h Karen Jensen as Grand J\1arshal. Phone 633-7950 for
further information.
MA YZ9·30
BIG BA ND FESTIVAL -Disneyland will present its an-
nual Big Band Festival Friday and Sat. May 29 -30 from
9 p.m. fl) I a.m. in various locations at the park. Bands will
include Lionel Hampton, Woody HermM, Vaughan Monroo
<ind Buddy Rich joined by Sarah Vaughan. All is included in
the regular price of admission.
MAY 30
JAZZ -DANCE CONCERT -Carlton Johnson will present
a jazz dance concert in the auditorium of Orange Coast Col-
lege, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa on ~lay 30 at 8:30 p.m.
Tickets at the door. $3.
MAY 30
INDY 500 -A closed circuit telecast of the Ind ianapolis 500
race \lill be shown in the arena of lhe Anaheim Convention
Center, 800 W. Katella Ave .. Anaheim. Doors open at 7:30
a.m. Tickets $6 • $8. available at the door or from ticket
aE:encies.
Cloris Gets
Star Role
Cloris Lf':achman has been
signed to costar with Richard
Benjamin in Joseph E ,
Levine's presentation for Avco
Embassy release, '· The
St eagle."
The actress plays college
professor Benjamin's wife, a
suburbaM housewife o n d
mother or two . She recently
completed '·The People Nex.t
Door."
PauJ Sylbert is directing
"The Steagle" from his own
screenplay with James Di
Gangi producing and Frank
P. Rosemberg as executive
producer.
LAST WEEKS!
MOVIEMnNos
FDR fWIENlB AND
'VOUNO PBJPlE
f,,_ N/ftl/N ol rile ,..,.,... Jo 10 ~
,...._ elooll ,,,. _ __,, "'
-i. c........, lw ......... .,, "*' .......
All A,15 ADIUTTlD ...,..,., Aull•""''
""'
--------------------
························••··
.... 111 .. -im-----..... ... _ ........ ,._ .. ....._._
• POSITIVELY ENDS TUESDAY
1.,.111 •1111111 ltll aat llllDe Annllrm" ·--.ICIB 66 .. LSVINmi I rn ,,. ............ °'
THE ADVENTUREKS fii1
.... • Ill.._, "M: ~ -IWGD IQll!9IS ~ ·-bi... ..
CHAlt:.U AZNAVOl e ALAN I.ADIL e CANDICI ll!llCllN
THOM MY ll!RGllN e DILIA IOCCAllDO e 1lNllT
•OllGNINt e ltOllANO IU.ZZI e OLIVIA deHA'llLLAHD
llUUM FIHM!U e ANNA MO•llO e LllCIH TAYLOlt·YOUNCi
• Starts Wednnday, May 27 •
''An import1nt movi•. You will laugh until you cryl"
-Cosmopolitan
~d~evenire.,...;d,~cJthe ~
N\art CJOW!ey's ··m.: l3VrS
1-iTtil:
~ ...
. .. is not d nu;id
' '
l'rlOa)', may 2'2, l TTO
Coast Trio
Art Winners
Ken Knut.ton of La run 'I Beach, Tracey Catn,
Westminster and Brad Aldnl·
ol South Laguna were "Best
of Show" award winnen at
lhe ninth annual La Mirada
Fiesta de AM show whidt
runs through thls Sunday tn
the Mall at La Mirada.
Wade Zint, Newport Beach,
won the $500 top purchase
award for his "Moss J.arwUcg"
and Pat Engl@, Huntington
Beach, WOil a $300 purchase
award for the painting "What
DAit V PILCJT !7
is True," a study of a guJtar SAT., MAY 30th,. 8 P.M.
player. George Blanchard, .,_wpart Harbor
also of HunUngton Beach nW'
received honorable mention in Hi9'1
lhe juried show, 16" & IRYINI, N.I.
Tracey Knight, 12, of Corona Ad..., .. :.._.,.. s1.11
del Mar captured second place K!dl u ..... 12 s1 .OI
award In the Junior Division ••Nt l'•T _ twtwt•• ..,~,,-_.,,
for 9-13 year old artists with c.,..,.,., a. c .........
her drawing of "My Horse."
Honorable menUon awards r
also went to Mike Campbell Buy Tho DAILY PILOT
of Los Alamitos and to I , ,
Everett McDonald and Jack Just for Pe•nuh
Taylor of Laguna Beach. .
BUBBLES THE CLOWN
CHILDREN'S PARTIES
MAGIC SHOW -PUPPETS -FAVORS
REASONABLE RATES 644 • 4290
* * BEACH BLVD. AT ELLIS * *
HUNTINGTON BEACH* 847·9608
PRESENTED IN STEREOPHONIC SOUND
Only four men have
walked on the moon •
For the rest of ua,
"2001 " la aa clo1e a1
we're likely to get •
-KEIR OUWA • GARY LOCKWOOD ..._"'STAHLEY KUIRICK-AATHUR C.ClAU.f
---"'STAHLEY KUBRICK
SUl'fl l'AllAVISIOll" • METROCOIDI
Direct fr.,,, tft RoHllMw ln911ement In Clntram11
PLUS
2nd TOI' HIT
C stereo103FM
the sounds of the harbor
~d~~7 youve never heard it so good
•
I
.
DAILY PILOT Friday, May 22, 1970
"Tlie Losers'
A story o f fivc-1nan 1nolorcyle g~ng \Vhich t~ies lo
rescue man held by \'icl Cong is now playing a t
Harbor Drive-In Theater. It is rated "R".
'1985' Depi~ts National
Crisis Over Pollution
Yo111• Guide to Movies
Cyclists vs. vc • Ill
\
\
'\ 'Los'ers~
Editor's Note: Thl .~ ry her off. An affrtir with Lockhart and J anet tick •.•. llck ..•.. 11t k ..•.• f~)·
movie guide is prepared a married 111an and 11/c in AlacLachlan. A Negro ls elected sheriff in
by the films comm.ittet of Greenwich v1·1raoe give her lbl G a s1nall Southern to\1111. Jir'Q e "l'hr Im poss e Y cars I I: Jlarbor Council PTA. Tlfrs. :;elf-assurance. Brown, GC\Jrge Kennedy and
John Clark is preiident fJavid Nivfen starhs 1
35 a prho-Fredric Aiarch. Naked Uader Leather IR l: I •ssor o •0yc o o•y w o a1,d Mrj_ \Villiam \Var e c I"' ti Topai (GP ): Hitchcock's
is comm ittee chairman. Jt ~Tt~e a~~~ ~~r:c. ~fotorcycle" ~1~~~~~~:~~e !~d ~~:~~~e~~ t~~ production of Uris's spy novel
is i'111e11rled as a reference Th GI' S ,.,,1"5,.00 lceoagers can inflict starring Frederick Stafford
'
"' detenni11i11 n sui"table e Reiver5 ~ ) : • lcve "" and D"ooy l'ob1·,, • Qu r ,.,.,, on the most enlightened " ~ · films for certain age Mc een stars in the l!ln1ec TE'"NS ANO ADUI TS version of Faulkner's r1ovel. lli.lrents. "" ' · groups and will appear Gone With thr WI n d · '·/ Yo><T "' The hired man's od)'Ssey lead~ I iGPJ M I Tho a tveer.. y. views are · enny '. ar o m s l'\1<irgaret i\'litehe!l's brilliant f . ·1 d •I ·1 th t M him from a small town 111 J t · I so 1c1 e .. a1 em o O· portrays cnny. prcgnan g11 novel of the old South 1l uring
11ie Guide, care of the Yississippi t-o the si nful big fron1 Ne w England \\'ho goes the Civil \\'ar era. Cl <:1rk Gable D '/LY PILO... city of l'\temphis during t:ic 1 N y rk She rn°cr1·es :• ~ • 11 1 C\\' 11 · " and Vivien Leigh. early 190C's. r · I i·ouog * 1 ur convenience a One 1\lill ioo \'ears B.C.: A
ADULTS The Wild Bunch IR ): Plans n1;1n played by Alan Alda, Stone Age story of two
The Adveoturers tRI : F il m of an aging outlaw '>''ho lead ~ '>'"ho "'ishcs to a\·oid the draft. cultures, cfln1 pletc iv 11 h
his small band of desperadoes d d I \'ersion of Harold Rob1·n•s A ~Ian Called Hor~ (GP): 1nosaurs an earl 1quakes. to rob the railroad in TeJCas bestseller about an in-1 English aristocrat. captured * in 191.1 go il"ll-'ry Vio enc1: . lernational playboy w ho follo"·s. \Vi!!iam •!olden and hy S1ouJC early in the N1nC'-The lcllr,. i1111necliatel11
becomes embroiled in the Robert Ryan. tcC"nlh Century, is subjected OJ !Cr lite title iudu·oies 111~.
politica l life and revolutions 1\tATURl': Tt<:ENS to t ruelt\' as he tries lo prove rutlllf/ give11 the pict ure by
of a South America n Republic. AND ADULTS hirn.seH. · H 1 ch a r d Harris. the Afoliuu PicLwre Code.
Bekim Fehmu and Candice Dilme Judith Anderson. '/'lie Motiun Picture Co<le Beruen Anoe of the Thousand Days 1 h "' · !\lolly J\laguircs IG P): ris A11d Roti11g Program 111a11 d C I d fG P ): Genevieve Bujold and d ' Bob an aro an Ted and n1iners in Pennsylvania uring be fou11d ott !he n1ot1u11 Richard Hurlon as An ne Al ice ( R ) : Contemporary Boleyn and King Henry VIII. the J870's form a secret group picture pa9e .
social comedy satirizing mar· Tbe Dirty Dozcii : ~horll y to d('fcnd thf'rnselves fron1,='--=------======.I
ri:::1ge and friendship. Robert 1 1cartle~s c1nployers. Sc a n
C I N-• 1. w-• El . before D-Day a do ze. n 11 . up, mate uvu. · trott Connery anll Hit hard arris.
rd d D C American military prisoners, Gou an yan a nnon. Si·cret iJf Santa Vittoria condemned lo death or Ide
1'he Cycle Savages (R): A irnprisonment. arcoffere il (G l'I; Anthony Qu inn plays
motorcycle epic starring Chris clemency tf they acconiphsh Ill!.: newl y appointed n1ayor
J{obinson, Bruce Dem, and a brutal, suicidal niission rnr of a l!llle !tn!ian village \1•l.lich
Melody Patterson. the Army. Lee Marvin <ind Ines to prevent Nazi con-
Tbe Good, The Bad. and Ernest.Borgnine. f1scation of its treasured wine .
the Ugly : Outrageoos violence Downhill Racer (GP): Study Anna ~1agnani .
in the Sp an is h ·I t a Ii an of a young American's strug-The Sterile Cuckoo IGP):
\Vcstem. gle lo become a champion Liza l'\1innelli gives a sensitivel
The Lawyer IRJ; Young at-skier. Robert ll.edford. performance in this story r1f
torney attempting to build a Halls of Anger IGP): Black two lonely college kids who
THE NIFTY THEATRE
pres ents
//J • '' f<.evi ecv
career defends a man accused and Whi le confrontation 111 find love for the first time. FRI. & SAT. 8:30 P .M. "l~." a l'\1 el r om e d i a Active citizen groups \\•ill of murdering hi s wife. Barry today's schools. Ca I vi n \Yendell Burton also stars.
Television fictionalizrd ne'>''S· CQnfront the authorities in an Newman and Robert Colbert. _:::_::::_:___::::::=::__:_:_::_::__::_ ________ _ 307 MAIN ST.
· J f open forum session designed The Loser! (RI : Five man HUNTINGTON BEACH
·-·~ .. , __ .,
.. -~JSJ~
All C1l1r ~~ow
Miii& TMn'll• I~; "JENNY"' !GP)
.y
"ME. N.ATAlll!"' (Gl'l
Euluol•1 Orl "111 Cl. Or•ln SMwlnt
.. VAMPlllE ll!A~T CllAVES
11..000"' Hll Cole"
'M '"CUll~E OF TH[ I I.OD O GH0\11..1"'
10l Colo•
I ll Color ~~ow-flk~•rd lurlon
"ANNE OF A 1HOUSA/rl0 OAY~"
!Gl'I
·~ "ON E MILi.iON I C •• !GI
0••"9t Co, Pffm•f<I O•·>n S~1won9
"A M•• C•llt<I Hont " (CPI Colo•
'""
All Colet• Show-11 oc~••O l urro"
"ANNE OF A TNOUSA/rl O OAYS~
!GPI
'"' "THE GOOO, THE ttAO II.NO TH I!
UGI. y •• !Gl Colo•
E <elutl•t Or•n9• Co. Or·ln Sltowo•V
'"HAl~S OF ANGEii" lGl
"THE GOOD. TH( BAO AN O
THE UGLY"" ((l) Colo1
All Co•o• '>lllw
'"CYCl..E ~ ... VAGES .. (Ill
''TICK e TICK • TI CI(" !Gl
U"6t• 11 Mu1t It wor~ P1r1nr
·~ "CUASE OF THE llLOOO GHOULS" documentary spec1a o a to develop al t e r n a Li ves motorcycle gang tries to pre<licted tragic nati o n a 1 rescue a VIP held prisoner
pollution crisis 15 years from available today lo everyone. by Viet Cong. \Villian1 Smith
now. airs June J on the in· Overall producer Hixson. in and Bernie Hamilton .
FOii llESEllVATto•n
CALI. (11 4) si..t1H
1213) 429-9868
IGI B ~llllllllllllllltttltlt!llttt!ItITITlttl1jtl dependent group's coast· lo-summing up contents of his !\-le, Na talie (GP): Patty
CQast stations. "1985'' special. warns: Duke p:trtrays an adolescent
'"The things we will describe who is hurt and embarrassed
W i th M a rk Ev a n 5 • rr h r by her lack of appeal aod have not actua y appenec, 1.1etromedia vice prcsidcnl for but they could!" lier parents' attempts to mar·
public affairs, as anchorman o=~=====================;I
LAST 2 PERFORMANCES -FRIDAY ind SATURDAY
"ONE R.EW OVER
THE CUCKOO'S NEST"
"A Theatrical Sllock 'freatrne11t"' ... Daily Pilot
11'011 11.EJl!llVATION S: CAll 4'6·\lU
19l1 Newport l l•a., Coll• M•••
l.lO •tua1n11
of an 8 p.m. hour-long
simulated newscast. "1985"
dramatically portrays a na-
tionwide emergenc~ resulti ng
from man's lack of concern
over the importance of
ecology th e in·
terrelationship of all Jiving
things and their environment.
And. immediately following J'=======================:O::.-----------------------
lhe simulated newscast. all
f.1elromedia s I a t 1 o n s , in·
eluding Channel I! in Los
Angeles. will present a loca!ly-
produced one·hou r in-depth
revel<:tlion on the current
pollution in their areas.
Em m y /I w a rd-v.·inning
jOllrnalist-anchorrnan J\laury
Green wi!l serve as hosl-
n1oderator for the 9 p.m.
Channel 11 presentation, to in-
('[ude graphic film sequences
i;howin g lhe actual air, land
and waler pollution ""hich ex-
ists in Ute Southland today.
Writlen by Don Bresnahan,
new spaperman and special
\11riter for The Alex Dreier
News during its highly-ac-
claimed tenure on KTIV, the
opening hour n at i on a I
documentary has 1985 as its
lime period -11·ith 1najor
power fa ilure in New York,
Los Angeles being plagued by
a killer.smog. there's a tack
of \\later in \\1ash1ngton, D.C.,
<ind the f\1id'.'·est shows com·
plrte paralysis of agricu!turr.
Jn addition to KTIV news
anchonnan George Putnam,
disaster stories also arc 1old
by Metromedia scirncc editor
Ken Gilmore in Ne\.\' York ,
Bill Jorgensen, \VNf.\V-TV
a nchorn1an : Glenn Hansen,
KMB C ·TV ne11's cor-
respondent, plus Alan Smith
and r.taury Povich. \\'TTG
anchonnan and n e w s m a n
r espectively.
In Los Angeles, producer
,Jim Gates calls for lop
ecology experts and scientists
10 describe present conditions
and point the '>''ay toward so lu-
tion during the 9 t.o 10 p.m.
segment.
-"l'llff O'TMll
"GOODIT"E ML CHI'S"'
,11 ..
W•" OllMY't "'"-t T"o11r H_. .. rt.. WllMI"
CIMI. Sal. 6 51111.-I P.M.
SOUTH SW
TROPICAL FISH
Lll'pst Selt!ctlon of
Tropical Flab &
Suppll• In the area. ..... , .......
fllW. •ILIM. COITA MllA Mii falrvilrW ltd,, Ul<P'Hl
•11.0, •1vwrtw. Of", -~ .._..
Cbt!llllll lftt "l'etl Ol'flQI "4MJ'6
BERNIE HAMILTON wiluAM SMITH ADAM ROARKE
u Capf•lri J•ekson ., Duk•
--· t:-•1_.. ... ,e .. _.,. ,._..,,, ...... _, -"°''""""" lllUSTlll SAVAGE • All.\ KDllTA. -wwoao . PAIL KOSlO • KllE CGlll[LJJS In CCM.OR
"roduold"'JOE SOLOMOft • MocM1ef'r«1vt«VINCEHT MYYE •'*"'tdtiy .lM:K STARRrn • Sc:~bv ALM CAillOU
NoJlleClorrrpoM<I n Conc1uc1&111rr STU PHIWPS PfKlDUC:£DAHD RE.LEASED BY FAH1Alt! mM l'ftODUCT10HS, PNC.
CO.~I T "TllE LOSE R~"
"KILL THEM AU AND
COME BACK ALONE"
w lll be •hown •I I : A 11 :~5 SI"'·
"KILi. TIIEM ALL·•
It 10;00 II·"'·
A t omplete show may be
Ken a1 late •11 1:00 p.m.
In person • ~
PAT BOONE
DAVID Wl~KE~~ON
and other
gueat 1tars/
.
AN EXPLOSIVE
; MOTIO.N PICTUR,E
~IN CotOR
' :.-I' ~ ~· ' ' One m..,_n's bsttie ·a'fl!lnst the , --
raw h'iiman passions of the street gangs. ~ ,.. ' ...... . ' ~-. ... .. ~ A a/ct< ROSS & ASsoel/\TES,~OOUCTION ,.., •"t~'t-"· I .,.
STARRING
PAT BOONE
REGULAR PERFORMANCES START THURSDAY. JUNE 4
LOEW'S CENTURY 21 THEATRE
810 N. EUCLID, ANAHEIM
SUPPORT THE ADVANCE TICKET
SALES CAMPAIGN FOR
RESPONSIBLE ENTERTAINMENT
Mon. thru Thurs: 7:30, 9:30 PM
Fri: 6, 8, 10 PM
Sal. and Sun: 12, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 PM
---------------------------------------------
indicated :
Good for ...., l*foml•-{oflw 9wl benell•l •laltlng J1H11 ~ •nd e<>t1Um.lnt IOI' 11'11 NII ol ll'le plct\lrl ,
6~ """' dllldnin'• Dcllllf ..... n.bi. 9f bo• oHlc• t..1..,. 191:h "'°""'
GAOIJP TICKETS AVAILABLE. TICl.lhl 1110 1vaJllbl1 at 1!1 l JCKElROl'I O<J11e:-"
Total Amount Enclosed:$ __ _ M•k1 check°'-.,.. on!.-~
lo Dick flloq l AMOCl"-.
"'"'"----~~~-~--,---~~-~----~~-
Addre11 ________________ c11y ____ ,,, ___ _
,l..~demy members end• guest will be admlftod lree lo rog11l11r f!'!•lormEtncr~ /,'~~~,. , . ~ -
I
~blCK TRACY ly Chemr Goald U'L AINEI :. --= r.==':'."I"'~~~
'TUMBLEWEEDS
J lN A10NEMENT10 BUTTF-RFLY •
I.OVERS E:VER'IWH fRE, FOR YOUR
WANl~ SCALPIN&OF1MT !l'LOIED
INSECT._L,IMPID UZARV, I HE'REl>Y
'PEDICA I t1\1E FOLWrl'ING Ol>E'Tll!.ED:
'.'RF-QUlfM Fffi A SCALl'fD 0'JlTERfL'f':
•
MUn AND JEFF
..,.WENTY
SECOND
OAYOF
HEY, NOWI
CAN GET OUT
MY BERMUOA
S>loR.TS AN'
I DEOUCEYoU
ARE STILL
WEARING
I AM?
HOW
010
IT'S H!>.NGING
BELOW YOUR
BERMUDA
By Al Smith
WELL, ITS STIU.
I ~ MAY!
CAPE !
PLAIN JANE
1 ~
'>OUR WINTER
UNDE~EAR' . 'iOU
!(NOW?
SHORTS!
,_....,.,,,. -· .. --......... .._.__.
TME GOAW AT TME GATE SAW HIM r---.d
SNE.U: OIT. MEAPEP 10WAR'I? Tl-IE
FR:EEWAY! I WENT OtJr LDOk:IN6
MT C.OULDN'f A ND HIM. '51>.M !
61.M, Wl-1.ATtl I PO ?
PERKINS
A LITTLE
Cl-tlL.LY OUT/
By Harold Le Doux
ME'S ~W.lrr E+/OOGM llOT TD
00 AJrrlVWHER'E NE.&.~ TMAT FREE-
WAY, ASIEV: NOW, STOF' CRV1N6,
Will YOll ? tLL 6ET tlrrl MY CAA
AND 60 LOOIOM6 ~HIM !
I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by ••. POWER j •• ~·~";,~::. ~,,':1~,, J (f)i!M S·
ACR OSS
I F.Jmllv
mtmbtrs:
Abbr.
S Olst harge
from the
1rmr : Informal 10 Comp lt te ti.ns: Abbr.
lt Miturt lS Ust other
t nd of a
pencil
16 Char It s
Lamb !1 Ma n's
nlcknamt
18 Oo a
mendi ng job
l't Black
20 Football
pl"" 22 Chin. mon t)'
of account
24 Hoary
ZS Compact in
substa nce
27 Transportation
mtdltrm
2' Conupts 32 Fe ma le an Ima I
31 Yellow bugle
34 Serf of
Lacon ia
'' Mmarnblqia's · ne ighbor
40 Group
42 Postp011e-
•
1
"
44 Fabric
surfact-
45 T ht bt5t
pa rt
47 EuroPta ns
49 Entang le
50 Sass
Sl Llbtralors
5~ Gave a
salts pitch
58 u -
59 Stovt
<"lCCtSSOfY
f>O Pulltd
bl Fin~l1y:
2 words
tis Ov~r ~ga i11
f>7 Bit dorm~nt
t.<J Fit
70 Jufit
Aridrew:;
:s\arririg rol e
71 Fruit
72 Swam p
73 Pious
74 Nostiils
75 Group of
animals
DOI N
l Boic-:a--
2 Make angry
3 Glade:
2 word!>
~ Derrnst
area 5 Rtmovtcl fro m ofl ict
fi Ptr iod in
histoty
7 New
l t slamtnl
book: Abbr.
8 Nr.
Hilmm!tsltin
IJ Kill in
ce1ta in way lO Fe male ruff
ll Albtrta
rivtr
12 lnstrumt nt
13-Hook
21 King of
lsrBel
23 Ctltbrity
26. Rrmovtd
285~ip
29 Record
J D Always
31 Untll now:
2 words
j 5 Btli rl J7 Schrduli!
J8 W lnoli~e
.,3') Allows
s122no
41 Pitcr ol
fiction 4] Puts 1n!o
di ffercn~
lorm
40 Not harsh
48 Cornm~nd
to a cat 51 HJman
being
53 l oosen something
l ied last
54 Cu1 tail
55 Horse
Sb \11sionary 57 Ptrry
Mason's Glf
ffjdily
~l Dam
t.3 Drfamt "-"r Of of
66 Twisltd t.B TlrM of dly
"
MISS PEACH
I j
i
l
STEVE ROPER
nns IS MISS OHARE
-TttE SPECIAL MJRSe
~!Ni.OGED, Mil.
R ER.'
PEANUTS
l MeAN , r DON'T
HAVE A FRle'NO JN
TH!! f!llJTIRE WORLD·
MY PS~50NAWTY l<U65
IWMYllOOl' THE'
W"""6 WAY.
15 TH•lfE
ANY HOPE"'!
DO YOU TM/NK
e'il!l"TUALLY
F0&.#6 WILL. ~UP
TOMa1
By John Miles
By M.a
By Saunders and Overl)Cll'd
By Charles M. Sclllllr
..-~....-~~ ..... ~-.,, = ~ C~SE l · A LOT vou KOOW!
~~~~~L...,!;W ~~~·.dlll,,'. l~
r .-ldq. MaJ 22, 1'170 6All Y PILGT .!1J
ly Al C•pp
By Roger Bollen
.. ,,.,__..
M
MR.MUM.___
•THE 'TlllNG 1 OONT LIKE AllOtJT !>TEW IS LEmN'
6000 lftAT GET AU.MIXED UP WllH TIPSC VoG'MfSI'
FridaJ, M11 22, 1970
ATLAS
CHRYSLER
Pl¥•OVTH/ IMPERIAL
Costa Mesa
SER. # Vl2910Sl2605l
HEW 1970 BARRACUDA
•
Atil•M.tlc. ,,_..,lui•I • :_~
Mbr•..,. OWlf tr.erilf •' • ,.W
p r•dl• • • • oir c:o11cf. • • • • • • 1111• I _. body 5'ilo 1no1IM11f, •
"" Se #Ct:·
"
tires etc:. r. tide WO '
41LOC101721.
SE-. s Rl21COEl15340
NEW 1970 PLYMOUTH
FURY I
I
... '1tySLER
': ": 19'0 qi " ... 10• 110 llE'K ooo• · BRA_ to~•. 4 ··" .
ission • ' . transm . Automatic . air c.ond•· ~a r1d10, • "M./frn steering ,.. wer
• po and 1ioning • • windows
brakes, tocks, • • • r do0r
_., ..• , paw• I speed se•• au o
I top • • • • vinY d more • • an contro1 • • • OCltslSl
• cH4'JT Ser. ·
US,ED CAR SAVINGS
'62 FORD
FALCON
Futura 2 Door. Automotic. r.edio, he.e ter,
white walls, extro cle•n. IQJJ 15 / J
'495
'66 DODGE
CORONET
Sedan. VS , automatic, radio, hooter, •ir con-dit ioning. f SCE389 /
$995
'64 PLYMOUTH
VALIANT
Economy plus, sfandord t r.e'n1rni1s ion, rt1dio, heater. 10MB286 )
'595
'68 RAMBLER
2 DOOR
Automatic transmi1sion , e:irfremely cfe.en. IVTMS<JJ
'1195
'65 PONTIAC
TEMPEST
V.8, dutomatic, rddio, he dter, power steer~ ing, power br.,ke~. I PKA542 J
'795
'68 TOYOTA
CORONA
2 Door h<"trdtop. Radio, hedter, extremely 1hr11 rp. t W/J I 60 J
$1295
'65 PLYMOUTH
VALIANT
Si•nd•rd transm iss ion, rt1dio •nd heater. I PEJ4J2 J
$695
'68 PLYMOUTH
FURY Ill
2 Door hardtop. VB , .tutorn.ific, radio, heat.
e r, rower steeri,,g, <1 ir conditioning. I VDB. "' $1595
ATLAS . \' . I _.,.
SIRYICi . ·'
DEPARTMENT
''Where Pride Makes The Difference." O~ndable
and .Conomica.1 rtpa.il' and· maintenance wof"k. ftor
your convenience we hanor: ·Carte Blanche, Diners
Club, American .. "l:xprisa,:" Master Charge, Bank-~ ~ l An,etica.r•, 9-?•0"f\e credit cards.
.. .... Do
·~ .... ~
RM
• • • • : • • • .
; • • . .
• • .
. .
•
t
'
··-. :::· .. ' ·-· • ·~~ ~·, . --·"" .. r-: .-. ·-:~1·
' •• • ~
" ~·· i'!• •• ' -. .... ~ .. . ...
~:
> .. . . . ' ·. ·-
:.· . .
...
-.
•
•
. . . .. -. ' . ' . -·~
j :
,. '
DICK WILSON SAYS: THERE'S NEVER BEEN A BmER TIME TO BUY
SUPER SPECIALS '64 FORD STA~ Wii.
·Country Sedan :Wagon~ Y-8, auto:P. ~teer.,
air cond. HSY 568.
TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS
$188
'63 !~~-CURY Marauder
'65 !~!~OUTH Valiant
~·
* * * FREE if. if. if.
7 DAY TRIAL EXCHANGE
Buy ono of our aclvortlaod u1od cars -
Drive it for 7 clays and If you aro not
complotoly satlsflod, trade It for ono
of tho 200 usod cars avallaltlo.
T-ELEPHONE APPRAISAL
UM tlio -..llF la :r-r .W -to llMlko
tloo down pa.-oat -the -•--
Paldfor•aotl
CREDIT COUNSELING
• SHORT ON DOWN ,AYMINT?
. ' . -• SHORT TIMI ON '°"'
• Lmu OR NO CRIDm
• OVDLOADID WITH BIW BUT STILL
NUD AN AUTOMOBIU?
COMI IN OR CALL 142-6611 OR 540-7710
BUY -RENT -LEASE ..
RENT:vWllY WALK? DRIVE A MAVERI CK
LEASE: LTD 2-000R HARDTOP
$& ~ .. Doy
6c Mlle
Power stffring. dh c: br1lce1, 390 2Y engine, •ir con-s 11 sos Fe~
ditionln;, whitew1 1! tires, 24 month open-encl le11e. C•ll ,.,~ • .(.."i
Rent1I Dtpt. 84 2-6611 or 540-7780.
BRAND NEW 1970 TRUCK & CAMPER
% T. FbRD TRUCK & EL DORADO CAMPER
$3488
Imm ediate
Delivery
'Ill 1"-1SG STVLES!OE P .U. ''' 1.-i C,1.0 . •~• .. I pl1 Uru. 1mo I. oll N UH O.
s .. i•I No. l"l:S.O.Rl<lOOi.l
'Jt Fl.I LL CAe OVER "O'TTOWA",
4 11 .. N r · wllh .. ......, >l•t'd Md + olandllrd -· Ti>r~ tl!""~~r ,,,,.. with hood. Cen1~ <11..ert• " • lffn w1rd•-.
1970 M AVERICK $1788 FULL PRICE Mileage.
YRE 71 6 .
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY No. OK91V306900.
NEW 1970 CORTINAS
FULL & . $1788 LOW DOWN
. PRICE LOW PMTS.
IMMEDIATE D~(IVERY No. BA92JK70442
SPECIAL PURCHASE
SPECIAL SAVINGS
NEW 1970 MUSTANGS
CHO IC E
HDTP.
OR
FASTBACK
LOW PMTS.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
5 YEAR
50,000 Ml.
WARRANTY
AVAILABLE
2388
No. OR01l13 7783
NEW 1970 RANCHERO $2488 FULL PRICE
LOW DOWN
&
LOW PMTS.
ORDER NOW
NEW 1970 f· 100 PICK UP $2288 FULL LOW DOWN
PRICE o
. LOW PMTS.
IMMEDIATE DELIVEllY N• """" ""'
NEW 1970 GALAXIE ''500''
2-DOOR SPORTS ROOF OR 4°DOOR SEDAN
YOUR CHOICE
•292v ~~~"~"~Am:~~~.:os . $
r<1d1d l wh1rewalls, pwr. steer-
ing, power br<1kes, all vinyl
inlerior. Flow thru vcnt1ld·
tion, med. IYy green mcld!lic.
Serial No. OJ83Nl55983 .
FULL
PRIC E
LOW DOWN
LOW PMTS.
ORDER NOW
IMMIDIATI
DELIVIRY
Use one of our many ways to finance ~oor new or used car or .truck, includ ing Bank Of America, United Calif. Bank or Ford Motor Cred it Corp. With your Approved Cred it.
•
I
•
;I&; DAilY Pll.OT fnd•Y. M•r 22, }q7o .. ousts FOR SALE
1
HOUSESFOR SA LE-~SES FOR SAL E rHOUSES FOR SALE
Generel 1000 General 1000 G•n•r•I 1000 General 1000
VIEW OF HILLS
1-'rom this tree shaded half acre tn the hearl
of -Newport Beach. Looking for large bed-
roo1ns? This one has 5 BIG ones & 3 baths.
'l:'ou own the land under this 3000 sq. IL C(l!TI·
fortable family home. S55.000.
SPLIT LEVEL
On large corner lot. Block fron1 Upper U<.1 y,
3 Bedrooms. 3 Il:-\ + office. View from l7x
23 fan1ily room. 2 double ga rag~s ·1-\V~rk·
shop area. Space for boat or trailer. Priced
lo sell. .S45,900.
ROY J. WARD CO., Realtors
BA YCREST OFFICE
1430 Galaxy Drive, NB 646-ISSO
Ope11 Houses
THIS WEEKEND
1..., ttiis tioNy directory wittl you tkit .......... ct1
ro• 'JO houw.ll•11tl'"). All th• loc:•tions lfsted below
-dtsetibed I• 9reot1'f detail by od¥•ttid.., el~
wtt.r• i11 today's DAI LY PILOT WANT ADS. Pcrtroin
dtowilNJ op" houses for ial• or to tl'llt or• vrfM hl
lbt 1uclt hrfo~o• i• tlll1 c:ol1i1""' _,_ frldoJ.
HOUSES FOR SALE
(2 Bedroom)
*20181 ('ypress, C'ount.y C'orriclor.
Orange County
546-5440 /Sunday 12·30 to 5:30)
(2 Bedroom & Famil y or Den)
2590 Orange, Cosla ~1esa
642·1771 ISal & Sun 1-5)
{3 Bedroom)
*-*106 Linda Isle Drive (Linda lslel N.B.
642-8235 ISal & Sun )
2006 Vista Cajon (The Bluffs) N.B.
675·1662 (Sun 1-5)
1967 Rosemary Place rEastside) C.11.
646-4129 (Open Sat & Sun 10-5)
(3 Bedroom & Family or Oen)
1927 Santiago (Baycrest) N.B.
644-4910 (Sal. Sun 1-5:30)
2501 Ocean Blvd .. Corona del Mar
644-491 0 (Sun 1 -5:30~
500 Morning Star (Dover Shores) N.B.
642-8235 · (Sunday)
H433 Bayside Drive, Ne;vport Beach
642-8235 (Sal & Su n)
1701 Port Abbey, 1-farOor View llills. CdM
642-8235 (Sal & Sun)
22 15 Aralia (Easlbluff) N.B.
642·8235 (S unday)
2907 Harbor Vie'v Dr. (!-!arbor View I-fills)
644-2792 Corona de! Mar
2137 Aralla (Eastbluffl Ne\vpo rt Beach
673-321 t (Sat & Sun 1-5)
*2006 T:thuna (Irvine' Tcrrarel Cdr-.1
642-6472: 673-3468 eves. jS:il & Sun 1·5)
*1827 G:ilatea 1'erracc {Irvine Terrace)
f"orona del Mar
673-6900 /Sat & Sun 12·5)
3100 Breakers Drive. Corona del Mar
644-2430: 833-0700 (Sal ll·5)
*907 Aleppo Sl. (Easlblull l N,B.
644·0288 (Sun 1·5)
720 Narcissus. Corona dcl 111ar
675-4497 I Sat & Sun 10·5)
{4 Bedroom)
2015 Galatea (Irvine Terrace) CdM
644-49 10 (Sun 1·;:30)
1600 Antigua -\Vay (Dover Shores) N.B.
642-8235 /Sunday)
1130 Santiago Drive (Dover Shores) N.B.
642·6235 !Sal & Sun)
**JI l.inda ls!e J)rive (Li nda Isle) N.B.
642-823!) ~Sat l~ Sun)
160fi . .\nl i~ua \\'av tDovcr Shores) N.B · 642-823~ · (Sat & Sun)
109 \!ia H:i\'Cnna. Lido l~Je. N.B.
675"l fil"i2 rsat & Sun 1-4:30)
342 \'i ~ta Bav;i , ('o~ta '!11esa 64~·030:l · (Open 2 to 7 p.n1.)
**342 Ru ena \"i.•1:i . Dalboa
333.n7on. (i44 -2430 rfri 1Sat1Sun 1-5)
2515 \\'1 ndover. !Bro:-ulmoor Harbor \lic\1•l
<"o r<inri drl ]11;1r
1Sunday 1·5)
(4 Bedroo1n & Family or De-n l
111 2 Nottingha1n 1\Vcstcl1ff) N R
644·4910 'Sat l'V Sun 1 ~ri)
877 S:indC'aSltl' 1Ha rbor \1ie\v Tillis) Cd~T
644·4910 !Sat & Sun 1-5:30)
1430 Galaxy Dri ve !Dover Shore~) N.B.
64G· 15.50 (Open Daily)
1930 S:inl1a~o Drive (Dover Shores) N.B.
642·fl23:J (Sunday)
1330 Galaxy Dri ve (Dover Shores) N.B.
642-823f> ISat & Sun)
**1300 Estelle Lane (\Veslcli ffl N.B.
642-8235 (Sal & Sun)
*1015 Goldenrod. Harbor Vie\v Hill s,
Corona del f\.1ar
675-2101-jSun 12-5:30)
1507 I.,in f'ol n -La ne. Baycrest. N.B.
642-5200 iSa turdav 1-5)
1527 Anita t.ane. Baycrest. N.ll ·
54fJ-5440 !Sunday 12 lo !l;30)
2700 Li gh thouse, T·larbor Vie'v )-!ill ~, C'dM
833·0700: 644·2430 ISal l ·5)
(5 Bedroom & Family or Oen)
1815 Santiago Drive /Dover Shores) N.B.
642·8235 (Su nday)
*1536 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores) N.B.
642·8235 (Sal & Sun)
5077 Johnson St.. Costa Mesa
642·1771 (Sa l & Sun 1-5)
{6 B1droom)
'**80 Linda Isle (Linda lslel N.B.
644-49 10 ISal & Sun 1·5:30)
DUPLEXES FOR SALE
12 & 4 Bedroom)
251 t Seaview, Corona del Mar
644-4910 IS•l & Sun
HOME & INCOME
(2 BM:lroom & Ap•rtment)
508 Acacia, Corona del ·Mar
675-5726 !Sal & Sun)
* .... *. w...,,,. ... • * * ,.... ..... w...,.-rold
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO
WESTCLIF F
l~.xce_Jlent location for quiet fan1ily livi1_1g.
Spacious 4 bdrn1 & 3 bath home. Exterior
11ey,ily painted. Pool size yard. $52,500.
1112 Nottingham Open Sat/Sun 1-5
BAYCREST-$81.500
Quality & Beauty in this 3 bedroom & family
rm home. Separate dining rnt & 2 Y~ ba th:;.
J3eautiful rear yard seen_ from most rooms.
l!rl7 SaJJtiago Open Sat/Sun 1·5:30
HARBOR VIEW HILLS
lmmaculate & smart decor in near ne\v 4 bed·
room & family 1·m conte1nporary, Formal din·
ing, electric bit-ins & lovely yd. $54 ,500.
877 Sandcastle Open Sat/Sun 1·5:30
LINDA ISLE~l35,000
Private pier & slip. Ready for "fun Jiving"
on l>cautlful exclusive Linda Isle. 5 Bed-
rooms & !am r1n. Quality built w/Mexican
motif expresses warmth & friendliness.
101 Linda Isle See broker at •80
LINDA ISLE
See this grac ious new hotne with 5 bdrms.,
maid's rm & 5 baths. Spacious Jiving & d in-
ing r1n s open to patio deck facing lagoon.
J-'an1ily r1n + run1pus rm, wet bar . $169,300.
80 Linda l5le Open Sat/Sun 1-5 ;30
IRVINE TERRACE
Unobstructed View of bay & ocean from beau-
t iful 4 bedrm home. Large pool. Professional
landscaping. 11nmaculate! $106,000.
20 15 Galatea Open Sun. 1·5:30
CORONA DEL MAR
Spectacular v1e\v of bay, ocean and penin·
suta. Spacious 3 bdrn1. den & playroom -1--·
Bring your binoculars when you come to see.
2:>01 Ocean Bl vd. Open Sun. 1-5:30
BLUE LAGOON VILLAS
View of surf & sand from elegant split level
condo. 2 & fam rm . $64,900.
Another 2 bedroo1n condo. with 2 baths. Beau·
t.iful garden palio. Sharp. ~53,500.
CORONA OEL MAR DUPLEX
A new Exclusive. Real pride of ownership
Jn quality duplex. Beam ceilings, bll·in range
& oven. 3 Bdrm. 2 bath frt unit & 2 br rear
unit. South of hwy. By appt. $57,900.
CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX
South of h\vy corner duplex with View of bay
& ocean. 4 Bdr1ns up & 2 dn. Many extras.
25 11 Seaview Open Sat/Sun 1-5 :30
CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX
C?cean _ view. quali ty construction & good
!1nanc1 ng. 3 & 2 bdrms, 2 baths each unit.
4 Cur gurage. See today! $75,000.
OTHER DUPLEXES-$43.500 to $115,000
WATERFRONT SITES-$68,500 to $150,000
BROKERS & SALESMEN
\Ve have an opening for one experienced
n1an or woman in our Residential Division.
Applicant n1~~t possess integrity. enthusi-
asm & ambition to match our O\\'n high
stand~rds. \Ve also have an opening ior one
e~per1enced rnan in our Investment Division,
\111111 th.e san1.e qualifications. JC you are a
professional, 1n lerested in a beautiful office 0 the fi~est Jocation, working with congen·
1a! associates, we are interested in meeting
you.
OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 10-5:30
''Ou r 25th Year"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hills.Roa d
NEWPORT CENTER 644·4910
MATT LABORDE, REALTOR
TRIPLEX
'l'l\'n 2 bdrnt -J~ .~pacious 3 bdrm .. 2 bath,
unit \vilh bu1ll·in k ih'hens and private patios.
Garages and off slrrct p:irking. Located near
l1,.1·0 shoppin,e: 1·cn1crs. Ahvayi; rented-J>riced
to sell at $42.::ioo.
TREES & SPACE
\\'ooded 100 ·~1 2~1' lol. Co1.y 3 brlrm .. 2 bath.
dining rni_, built-in kilchen \1'ith breakfast
ar('a Covered patio and double garage. l)riced
lo sell -No Finance prohle n1s!!;;
NO DOWN VETERANS
3 bdrm~. nursery. 2 h:ilhs. fain . rrn. plus 13'x
23' ~C'reened-in bonns room. VA. appraised al
$31.350. An Upr>er Bay stea l -1-!urry.
THREE UNITS
2 bdr1n unit -l bdrm un it -hachelor col·
tage. Double garage -Large laundry rrn.
Near schools and shopping. A steal at $36,500.
SPIC· N ·SPAN
l ,ike ne\I', 3 bdrrn., 1 % b;ith, dining rin. B/N
kitchen and covered patio. 13eautifully car·
peled a nd draped. Sparkling: <.:ondition
will sell at FFJA apprais:1l of $2n.500.
M . M. LABORDE, REALTOR
646-0SSS Eves. 646-22.S9
1000 General 1000
$6000
CAN YOU AFFORD IT?
t.uxury i11n"t C'hcap hut youi·
n1oncy can't bu) (114'.lf(' lha11
what is offeN'fl in 1his elt·
ccp\iunnl ('Xf'culivt• homr .
Thret" grand bedrooms, mas.
ter has drei;sing above and
pr\\•ate sun de"k halrony.
Thn.•e OOths. High N'iilr\g
living room 1vith lin:-pl1u.:c-.
Formal dinini,.: rocu11. HU}::('
pool :i;irlc f:11111ly roorn "•ith "'"t l;11r. K1t1·h~n1•!1r, over-
look111g lovi•ly twn11•1I pool.
Vlf'"' of tit\'.!' ancl lrrrared
go1~trn fron1 all ivonnu1, P11 .
tio nn<I port1ro "'l!h built-in
17 ft , Bar-B-Q se1'\'1og table
end eler tric grill. Spsc.., pro-
hlblt11 llx> mrntinn of thl'
lnvini;r <'&re f•x1rlls a<ldOO ;it
no eon~ider:i.tkln of cOtit, Ov.
rr lOO(I ff'•:• of b'T'n ciou!I llv-
1nR: $·1;;,000 Trrrn~ of
NJ11r~ ... ~·nr Al)[XJ1ntm1•1•I to
'«'•" A~k ff)r K"n Hr11,~
OI CK BERG REALTY
3 Bedroom
Doll House
$21,350
Stop ttnling NO\V! ltcre.'!I
your Jirst home in model
l1nn11• condilion \\'\1h hrnnd
l'IC\I' shn.i: 1·iu1x•1i11g. lilOO
bi11h. \\"1fc s.iving, rcn1ode1.
(•tJ kitcht>n. S('J)llra!r ff'nt'f'd
ynrd, ll!lll lh&l'!ll tht' f u 11
11rlet-. SZl.3'."ill, Call lonlght.
Open 'Ill S;:IO.
REALTY
15366 GOLDEN WEST
894-5313
OPEN EVES TILL 8:311
ASSUME 6°/o LOAN
Lov('ly J nrt 2 RA, fnm. rm.
1-~rn1·k!11\1.' r.,.....,t .t· sr pr .
r.•111 ·•"l l'lt1Y i d N1·11·1y ri111nt.
11rl ()\\llPr :-iJO-:J l,S~
&i • urit ay -:-n 1,viL=-A-CJN13;'
1000
HOUSES FOR SALE IHOU,SES FOR .SALE_ HOUSES FOR SALE /.':fOU5ES FOR SALE
Generel llOO Gener•I 1000 Gen.ral IDOi General 1000
HOUSES FOR SALE
WOW!!
.• , LOOK AT THIS ••.
POOL HOME
with 3 Mailer siu-bMroonis,
2 tUlt balhi., step Sttv .. r
kitchen, n1l'e carpets&. drap.
es. Lots ot pool decking.
GI rHJ nioriey down or lak••
OVl!'r lo1v rnA loan. Subn1il
$2000 do wn. S26,950 .1-~.P. -·-BIG
DO YOU WANT •••
Eltgant 2 lllury with 4 Ma.:1\.
er sized bedroorm'~ '.I fu.!I
Ualtia, w/w carpeting &-
draflt'S, Built !ns + dish-
washer. Beautifully land-
11caped like a private estate.
$29,500 full price • takl· ov{'r
low inleres! Joun. -·-CHE AP?
ONLY IN PRICE! I
This bevuliful 4 bdrm home.
Nice carpcti11g lhnJQUt 2
full baths, push-button kilch-
cn. Situale<l on an oversiz.
cd Joi. $24,950 full price .
no cash down to Vels or
take over low interest CI
Joan.
FARROW
-REAL F.STATE -
894-5313
_£_r>c'n Daily unti ~~
Le•se/Option
01vnf'r moved, needs help.
Opt1un or buy, your choice.
~pacious '.l B~h·m, 2 ba!h &
ramily rn1 \.\-'ilh luxury lea.
tun:-i;. Quiel residcn1ia1 area.
Only $29.600. For all details
call 540.ll51.
BUILDER'S
AmNTION
11)2,300 Sq, ft. with 165 rt. on
Placentia : 1.oncd M-1. Close
1t> lloag ·11ospital. Ideal for
convali>sccnt hospital or
apar1m£'n!s. $200,000.
MACNAB-IRVINE
Rt>alty Company
(714) 642·823S
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
OPEN HOU SE SATURDAY & SUNDAY
Occupied-Linda l•I• Dr.
(~usl. used brick 5 br. 5 ba. 3 fpl ., w/fam.
l'fO. & brk. nook on water. Sep. din & !iv
r1ns. W /deck & slip ................ $210,000·
16 Lind• Isle Dr ive
New S BR., S ba home. View of CdM bills. 3
~plcs + BBQ. Luxurious carpeting & panel-
lmg, lndscpd. With dock .......... $145,000
n Linda Isle Drive
New 5 Br., 5 bath home on lagoon. Marble
entry, wet bar, AM/FM Intercom, Huge instr
Br. has beam ceil. & own frplc. Lge. liv. &
fam. rms. w/frplcs. , ............... $185,000
80 Lind• Isle Drive
5 Bedroom & maid's, 5 baths with family
r~om & large rumpus room. Car ptting. 3
Fireplaces. 4,246 Sq. Ft. ....... $169,300
101 Linda Isle Drive
5 BR, 4 baths; fam. r1n. Mexican tile firs.,
exposed beam ceil.. cpls, drps incl. W/Pier
& slip. E xceUent Tern1s. _ ......... $135,000
Waterfront Lots
No. 4: Excellent 51 ft . Linda Isle leasehold
lot. P lans avail. Consider trade ..... $35,000
No. 41: Long water view facing Harbor Is·
land w/76.2 ft. oI frontage. Plans available.
No. 88: Corner Point lot with 118 ft. of front·
age. Long water view. Plans available.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
833 Dover Or., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620
General 1000 General 1000
3 bedroom, 2 bath
$169.00 per
month total
\Vhy rent, take over existing
low interest VA loan. Your
lo!al do\11n payn1cnt will bC'
$4000 v:ithout ~i:>cond Hnanc.
ing. Your to!al monthly pay.
n11•nl will be $169.00 lnclud-
in~ taxes and insurance.
This one will go in a hurry,
REALTY
15366 GOLDEN WEST
894-5313
OPEN EVES TILL 8:30
Assumable Loan
Just Listed
Great (amily hon1~ in f'hoice
Newpor t Beach area. 5 Bet[.
rm:o;. 31,ir Beths. wet bar,
3000 sq (I of living srucc,
large lot. llomc can be pur.
chased subj£'ct to an exist-
ing low interest rate, high
halanct', insurance loan.
Call for dctalls, Full price
$j,'j,950.
JCa.. co:Ts
~WALLACE
REALTORS
-546-4141-
{0pen Evening1)
General 1000 G,ntral 1000
1000 General 1000 General 1000
DOVER SHORES
Sp;1rkling: new Jv<1n 'V('ll~
h<JrnrJ> w I 1 h .. FON'VC'r
V1,.11·s.'' :; Sl)flC:iOus mo.-lt'1$
111 i·hnos.• froni. 4 Bcdr'l'!l\111,
:i Ga1h ,!",.: powdl•I' roon1 . f nn1·
1ly n1<nn~ '>l·i1h lirep!ar(' .~.
1\alk 111 \\'1•1 h r1r_ Eali nt;
al't'il •n ln1cl1•·n + forn1:il
<1!11111~ !'Olllll 121 \V1lh ('llUl'l
.vard h\\'lm ["IO()l "'. l'l'tih•ss1ri n-
11lly d p1 ·tu-a!Pd 111l erinrs.
L,u>1unous "arpr11ni::,. Tno
ni<u1y 1;u.~tnm lc111urr.s !o
1\1'"'Lnllf'. 11 11•ill pay .v"n 10
111>1\ ,i;, ~r'" for ynur~clJ.
()pi'!l [)ftll .11
Ivan Wells & Sons
Roy J . Ward Co.
l•:XCl.t.:SIVI•: Ali ~NTS
1•130 G;il;i xy 1Jr1vr 646--JJJO
10p('n D111lyl
FOREST E.
0 LS 0 N
lnc. Realtor.,
4 BDRM + POOL
A Must See Today
Open 2 pm thru 7 pm
3·12 Visla H;iya, Quiel CUI de
s1 u· slri'f'! off of San!ll AnH
i\vl', Custon1 hu1lt 4 l)N!·
l"(lfln1 hnrnc \1n1h fo1'mR\ din-
ini:. R11t1t'h kil ('_hrn v.•1lh all
th(" lri!"st hu11l ins. l '.ven a
self rh.·11ning ovrn. /I hranrl
11('\I' pool. U,11· inl<'l"PSI ln~n
-.i·ail. $cf' 1nday Qr for mor('
details call
645·0303
at JIRrbor Cf'n\l'r
2299 Harbor Blvd ., C.i>f.
SACRIFICE!
:i BF:DROOMS, sacrifi ce,
O\Vnl'r trAllJ!fe1Ted. f'Hi\ as-
sumable Jonn. S.1000 lkJ11•11.
Qp<'n House s,,,. f..· SlJN J.!j
5077 Johnson St., C.M.
EASTSIDE
Furnished ·l·ple:... AP, 7nn-
111ir. $64,500, O.vn('r •1 lll
c;irry.
2 BEDROOMS
Eastside Custom
Nr111 pa1n1 ins1d(' & nul. lOV
[l<n111. $2:-1.0QO.
Qpt'n 1-lnu.<.o;: ~/IT.~ C:p}J" l J
2590 O range A ve.
EASTSIDE LOT
Jl(•ady 111 build 011
$9,750.
Mediterranean
Charm
:::~::~~~~~:I ~ sq ft of clc-ganl 'P('tfCI"-• - --·-lion designed and built by
ONLY
$2S,9SO
4 Bc•(lrnom. :i ha1h home on
huge CQrner lo!, 100111 for
bo;1l or lrt11!Pr. Gnrngr
~tressed for second story.
Co11veniently loc<1il'd ro shop.
ping. This is a lot of hOTil£' ror the molK'y. Please call
now, this one will sell fast.
Nichols Real Estate
546-9521
Why Buy This One?
\V('ll, nll we kl\l,1w is t.hll.I ii
ha.<1 :1 B«lrm11, fl f11m ily
T'l)(Jn1. 11bol1t th~· JB.rgcsl 101
ln MeAA Verdr. and lhe own-
er "!! llSking $2!!,500 fln mflsl
-!lily !('r1n~. anti he nnd h\~
si-irl tril'nd Mve bousiht 90.
othtr home trom us + yes,
lh C')'r" gC'ttlng n111rrlctl!
5•6·!>SIO
fnr1r tintrN lhn!rt)
LLEGE REALTY
l!iOCI Ad.lms 1! Harbo!,CM.,
Dorsey F'ick. -I bcdroorn, in· l ::::::;:::;:~::::::i~~:::i::ll teresting 26xl7' family room -------
with firt>plnce, formal dinin~
area. Room for J)<)(1I , Over
$5,000 in decnrali1t.! and
J11nri~f'api n~ !Ast y1•ar. Qf.
fC'red lit $;!6,ffiO. Ca!I 10 st'C
this Nr11•po~1 tkauly.
Colesworthy
& Co.
REALTOR
Newport Beach Ofrice
lO'lS Baysidc Drive
675-4930
BAYSHORES
Cute ranch !1\ylc
llolX'ymoon Co1tagr.
2 Bedrooms
1..nvcly private patio
\V11lki11g dislall{"C 10
Privatr Con1n1unily Beach
$49,300
REALTORS
673-4400 IRVINE TERRACE
S Bedrooms and family room I ;;:::~~~;;;::;;:::;::::II
• new applianC(.s -mo11e-in
condition -lllIYt' heated
pool -S58.875 . low land lease
• rall
CURT DOSH, Realtor
1730 \V. Coast Highway
642-6472 }.;Vea. 673-3468
$24,500
Own•r Desptrate
Rrautlful f\ll'd entry hAll,
hu~c lam1ly m1., lil't'plac:t>,
2 h;1th~. hu1tt .ln~. rli11lni;: rm.
l I x :'.ll fl. 1'<1\'!'l'l'fl JHlll•I,
BET YOUR SWEET .•
THIS WON'T LASTil I
Anyone can eJforrl this t:utc
l IX'droom &_ ra1nily in Mf"sa
Verde a t i27.ROO. 10% Dn
tcnna are available. Home
has been fre1hly painted
within last 1(') monlh~ so ii
ls in move-In condition All
hltin5". C.t.11 now 1or comPlete
dCtlllls.
PAUL•WIDns
CARNAHAN
l.&ALT l' C O.
Jl11rk J1k1• ynrd. '.>lt)..1 720 ir~.i'.l f1al<r•r. (' ~l
TARBELL 295S Hubo• ,....,. ... ...,.,...,..,...,...,
P ete Barrell Jeaft'J"
pre:Jenl:J
Great New Usting -Lido Isle !
Handsome 5 Bedrn1 family home on 'v'ide
street lot. Large back yard \i:ith room for
pool and dog run. 3 car gar. Good prlc•e and
terms. Call Ken Brittingham for delaUs·.
Baycrest-New Usting
Choicest Ivan We,Us 4 Bedroom plan. den
with wet bar, PLUS family room. Large din·
ing area, sparkling self cleaning pool. Large
tree shaded yard, easy n1aintenance. Call
Eileen Dinwiddie for appointment to see.
Santa Isabel
Off lhe beaten path, but so convenient. 2
story, roomy home, 4 Bedroon1s, dini ng roo n1
& breakfast room, nice yard -perfe('t for
a family. Asking $43,950. Contact Jean Rit-
ter.
Baycrest
Beautifully kept family home -\ighl, b.ri~h t
and spacious. Sunken Jiving roonl, d1n1ng
room and large family room. 4 Bedrooms &
3 baths. Large landscaped yard \l'ith separ-
ate area for pets. Bill Bents.
1507 Lincoln Lane Open Saturday 1-5
Offil::t Open Saturdays & Sundays
PETE BARRETI REALTY
1605 Wastcliff Dr., N.B.
642-5200
Coldwell, Banker OFFERS:
~
FIVE ACRES-MESA DRIVE
OVERLOOKING BACK BAY
ZONED FOR HORSES
For the family who \Vants privacy, easy
life, yet quick access to finest shopping
areas & freev,·ays. Truly a pleasure lo offer
this 4 Bdrm .. tack rm. & lrg. for1nal d.i n.
rm. Lrg. barbecue at end of I an a i '''ith
many blt-in features for the gourmet cook,
off spacious pool area. $240,000
Kathryn Raulston_
BALBOA BAYFRONT
OPEN FRI/SAT/SUN. 1 ·5
342 BUENA VISTA. Exclusive area. Near
N.FL Yacht Club. 4 BR. ho 01 e. furn. 70'
Pier. 40' dock. sandy beach. Call office for
directions. $169,500
Cathryn Tennille
UDO ISLE SECLUSION
Privacy fo r the discriminating. Oversize liv.
r m. w/beam ceil., overlooking Jge. landscap-
ed patio & sparkling pool. 5 BR. Charm &
elegance galore. $1 15,000
Mary Harvey
OPEN SAT. 11 TO 5
3100 BREAKERS DRIVE, Corona del ~1ar.
Turn off Ocean Blvd. at entrance to main
beach. Ocean & jetty view fro1n 3 bcdroon1
& family room home. Space for 2nd view
ho1ne. $1 10.000
Ca rol Ta.tum
FOR THE GROWING FAMILY
F.xtraordinary 2-story 5 bedroom; spacious
famil y & dining room. Brkfst. room over-
looking large pool. Bonus rm. upstairs. 1tay
trade for smaller. $98,500
~1ary Lou Marion
NEW LISTING-LIDO ISLE
Ne\vly painted & draped thruout; 4 BR. 4
Ba. Big 2-s tory family home. Enjoy the Lido·
Life at its b cs t! Call no\v to see today.
596.500
~1arion C. Buie
CAMEO SHORES VIEW & POOL
Absolulelv i1n1naculatc 3 RR. 'Yith conv.
den. form.al din . r1n., large fant. rm, pool &
~plendid ocean vle\v. Private beach. $89 ,500
1 \Valter }-laase
EVERYONE IN THE POOL
2-Broadmoor homes in J-.J.arbor View Jlills-
enjoy poolside fun & carefree play area.
Each 4 BR. \V/fam. rm., din. rn1s. & a view.
OfCered under $70,000
Bud Austin
NO LEASEHOLD
CORONA DEL MAR
Great home -lge. 2-s tory: 4 BR. 3 Ba .•
fam . rm. Beautiful landscaPing -3 car
garage \V /door o pener -ready to n1ove
into -You own lhe land at $66,500
HARBOR VIEW HILLS
Corona del ~tar. 3 BR. 3 Ba. View or the
Canyon & Harbor. Popular Lusk n1ode\,
Best schools, shoppin g & beach close by.
Only $55,000
LaVera Burns
CORONA DEL MAR
South of Hiway. Small t'vo story upsi de
down home w/gr eal ocean view: on rear of
45 ft. x 118 ft. lot. Just above Big Corona
Beach. $54.800
Al Fink
BEST BUY IN BLUFFS
3 BR. 2 Ba. Popular single story on Cul De
Sac -greenbelt -new carpets. Great de·
cor. Owner anxious. $39.950
Harriett Davies
83J.0700
644-2430
,
f"nda,, M•Y 22, 1970 * DAILY PILOT .::a
HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE I ~E!._FOR SA':!_ Ho_USES FOR SALE
General 1000 Gener1I 1000 Genera l 1000 Gen.rel 1000 Meal VercJt, 1111
HOUSES FOR SALE ,~ES FOR SALE Huntington lluch l400Huntlngton lluch 140t
Coron• clrtl M•r 1250 Coron• •I Mar 12SO :::::;;:::;;;;;;;,:;:;;;;;;~::===:;~;;:;::;;
MACNAB -IRVINE
FINER HOMES
DOVER SHORES
For th e buyer who de1nands sheer luxury.
Quality built 4 bedroom 6 bath home. Enter-
tainment kitchen, butler's v.antry, extensive
new terrace. The finest built home in New-
port Beach. Call for app't.
LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS
320 LIDO NORD
NOW R.duced to $175,000, Xlnt t•rm.-
6 Beauti.ful units. 4 <;ar garages & utility
room, with 80 ft. fronting on excellent swim·
ming beach. Uni ts a re newly furnished.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
133 Dover Dr., Suite 31 Newport Beach 642-4620
MESA VERDE
MASTERPIECE
£xtra harge l bedroom +
t'AMILY ROOM wi1h 1-IUG t~
ma.stcr 11uitt", TILE entr)'
ha.II, PLASTEfl JnterlCJr,
rutty carpett'd and draped.
Excellent qu1<'t neighbor-
hood juiit a block off Coun..
lry Club Drive. Just listed
al $32,500 wHh e.i.:cdlenl
trrms~
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY JI MINUTES
WAS $64,500, NOW $59,500
THIS WILL MOVE FAST
WILL YOU -
Be the lucky one! 4501 Roxbury, Can1eo
Shores. 3 Bedrooms, den, 3 baths. Vie,v.
Low, low leasehold of $500.
OPEN SUNDAY
UNIVERSITY REALTY
3001 E. Coell Hwy., CdM 673-6SIO
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1 . 5
9652 Cle1rbrook Lane, Huntington Bea ch
So. of H1mllton & West of Brookhursl
ELEGANT
EXECUTIVE HOME
Walk to beach -4 BR, Jo/4 all Lile baths w/
Roman tub, upgraded crpts. custom drapes,
spac all elec kitchen w/formal dini'ng area.
Large cov patio. beaut yard 'v /sprinklers.
ASSUME FHA LOAN Office' 847-1507
BRASHEAR REALTY Eve" 968-1178, .S.2-0427
2-Story Spanish quallty ho1ne. lleatcd & fil-
tered pool, wine cellar, 4 spacious bedrooms,
wit h excellent closet space & extra storage,
plus fa1nily room; all overlooking Upper Bay.
$98,500.
1000 Costa Mesa 1100 Walker & Lee Baycre.-t 1223 Coron• del Mir 12SO Lido Isle 1635
Alagnificent vie\v • pool -retractable atrium
roof -4 bedrooms plus sewing room. A home
that has everything, Newly decorated by
Cannel & Chaffin. $139,500
;:OREST E.
0 LS 0 N
Int: Rc11l1ori;
Realtor
~3 \Vt.'stcliU Dr. FHA. VA
Buy the sharpest 4-Bedroom, 64&7711
2.Bath home m Costa Mesa. Optn 'til 9:00 Pl\1
Rf>au tirul shag carpeting, big BY O\VNER • l B 2 Ca
br<lrooms, hu&r lot. CaU . r, ·
11111v for sluw:ing, 0 n 1 Y huge family rm, extra lri:;
S2.\500. drive .,.,., dbl ii:ar. Back
546-2313 yard sprinklers. Existing
6.% loan. See &. make ollel'.
* BEST BUY
----
* * * * * "THE BEST OF
EVERYTHING"
DECORATOR'S
HOME
• • •
OPEN HOUSE
1127 Galate1 Terr1ce
Irvine Terrace
In Baycrest, 4 Bedroom, 71.J • bath, separate d ining room,
Beautttully done. 5 Bdmu. * FamUy rm. Xlnt 1treet to
atreel 45 ft. lot. gl'eut family r m w/tireplace
a nd eating area in kitchen,
lean Smith, Realtor • • •
$98.500
LIDO REAL TY INC.
• * 3lJT Via Lido 573.7300 \Veil designed 4 bedroorn home overlooking
the cnllre !lay. Large living room & dining
room; n1arble fireplace; 4 baths; all electric
kitchen. Tleady for immedia te occupancy.
$89.500. Open Sat. & Sun. 11 30 Santiago Dr.
5 Bedroom
GI Loan "&-01" \-0 THE REAL
'(' Ef'}'.I'ATE~S Small On BY 01vner: Tri-level .f Br,
.fOO E. 17th SL, Costa Jl.Jesa
646-J2SS
f:xriui'<J le panoramic Bay, Oc:~·an, Cat11lina. view, Huntington Beach 1400
SPACIOUS -Rustic hon1e
in IM'auUful Orans:e PRrk
ACTf'~. Surroundf'd h y
orani;:e trees on w e J 1
landscaped l 1/3 Oat U!l&.h!e
acres. Completely remodel-
('d \1·/~hake roof, alt clec
kilchen, J giaol Bedroorns,
1 lrg tiltd ba1hs, paneled
dl'.!n, ne1v crpfg k tonnal
diTiin~ rm & living rm
\\'/custom built used brick 3 BA, lrg fnn1 rn1, !urmal I!!!!!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ l.ar~e hcatf'd, tillered ----------
LINDA ISLE
Ownl'.r l!I °"'alk1ng our of this 10.;;;iii;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;I d in rm . 2680 sq, fL Elec
lll'<11· new ~i lit.><!roorn hon1e. Transf•rr•d Owner sprinkl t'rs. i\fany rxtras. Dover Shol'91 1227
1)(){11 • , • 3 laCJ,:c bedroonis
,1·ith huge 1nast1>1• bed-
roun1 \1'ilh vlc\v; 3 balh-
roon1s, 2 tubs, 3 sho\vcr:i;.
Storage a11d clnsels ga . !or~. 1.ari.:e fBlllily room,
vie\Y d ining roorn, shake
ruof. 3 cur l{nrn1:e plus
Exciting C'ustom fin i.s hed 1-story Mediter-
ranean home on 52 fl. of Bayfront , 'vith pier
& sli p, $119,500. Open Sat. & Sun . •106 Linda
Isle Dr.
Only 5 y~ars young a ~1 d Near \V..;stclilf, (lull lily 3 Bed. Xlnt colld, 645-1848. 1----------
\uadrd \\'llh cha.rm, lOr:il rin., fu!J \\'all frplc in huge BY O\\'NERr $.."9,500. 3 Br , BAYCR.EST -Dover Shore~.
for lhe hirg(' fan1i!y, Hu~e liv. l'Ul., BBQ Ill tumily 7 Ba . dbl Jrplc::, ne1v erp1~. 5 hdrm, 4 h;i, includ ing
LJC!dl'oon1s, lan;IJy roorn, de. ri,1{1111. Xlnt slmg crplg, lncd yard. 5 1~o/o loan. Cash :iepara\e maid's qlrs. 2.
h1xe ki !ch~n with all built. Load~ of closets & storage. to loan. 673-:>809 fiN'places, paneled liv'g,
Ne\V 2-story Ilayfront ho1ne. Pier & Slip. Se--
Ject your own carpeting & decor. 4 Bed-
roo1ns plus 111aid's roon1; family room \vi th
wet bar; formal dini.ng room. Cantilevered
Bayfront patio. See our representative at
• 11 Linda Isle Dr.
ins, n111kc a sn1all down 2' c d. · & I ·1 .~ ar i;:_nr_ Prrstige ad. Ex•cuti--'s Trensfer 1n1ng nm1 y rooms.
v•urkshOJ). Expensively
Jnnrlscaped , ba r \1•it.h
payn1en! and take over GI 1 $3" ~ •• H< l'>.h' I ' 1 5'4 allnuaJ ;. rate loall. No ( rr.~s. '"·""'· t~orces We. -4 BR, 3 BA. 1' 1 cu R 0 m poo ·
hull!-in BBQ. Plrnty of
rnrirn 111 add on to if de· i;irr1t, I BOB OLSON ~EAL TOR Dill rin, ram & all ele~ Solar glass. Carnii:e ctr. lr•es! Nu 11ua ilyutg~ Close S46-5S80 opener. t..g lot PLUS molly
10 rve1ything. Call now for Island kit. Patio, p ro f luxury features.
rnore details, lanscpg. Bring your paint TEENY BARGAIN hn1sh & make oHtr! Broker By O\l'ner Asking SS9,500
"OPEN HOUSE"
SAT-SUN. 12-S
Exc:lusiv• with
SALISBURY REAL TY
(7141 673-6900
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
Portofino 3 Bedroom, family room. Just re-
duced & cheaper than new. Pool & clubhou se.
~43.500
Charming, well decorated home \V ith panel-
ing in living room. 4 Bedrooms, 21/2 baths.
View of Day, ocean & Bay Islands. $76,000
BALBOA ISLAND
<;reat location on Ruby. 3 Bedroon1s. Invest
for rental or future building. $47,500.
BAY FRONT
Fabulous 5 bedroom & den in Dover Shores.
Space for your billiard !able. Large. p ier &
~lip. Swin1ming pool. Intercom in all roon1s.
Call for app't.
MACNAB0IRVINE
Realty Company
1080 Bayside Drive
901 Dover Dr., Suite 120
Newport Beach
Gener al 1000 General
67S.J210
642-823S
1000
FOREST E. TRANSFERRED
TO FLORIDA
D";iufiful •I ber!roon1 hnmp in
645..0303
at Harbor Ccnfer
2299 !!arbor Blvd., C.~f.
$31,350
Is the price AND the V.A.
appraisal? No dcla~ heN'!
Large family hon1e with ap.
prox. 20 x 20 FAJ\llLY
ROOr.f ('fl!nplcte \Vith wet
bar nnrl li..1lh. 3 :;pai:if)us,
carpetec\ licdnxun~ and 2
mnre balhii!, BUILT . IN
kit<•h('n, FIREPLACE a n rl
COVEllCD PA'flO. Ynllr
choirr of VA or FHA fln.
ancinr. or lak<' 111bjC'el lo
f'xisting F'HA loan at ~\4 ',~
111111ual rat!'!
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
2!WJ WNllrlill Dr.
646-7711
Oprn 'Iii 9:00 P~i
$23,950
FHA-VA
0 LS 0 N
1nc. Rral!on:
Spanish Villa
chuireo IOCH1ion nPar th<' Sparkling 3 Bn(trm homl' ·
~acb. Built In '69, Lush frrshly painted insid~ & our .
dcl'P pile c~1l'pcts \l'ilh Plus 1le1v carpe!ing -niet'
lllfllChi11i;i drapes. l O':r. down family rn1, Priffi(' Eruitsitlr!
Will handle Lhe purchase of Jocat1on. Cail 5'15.&124
$28,500
IIcavy walled S1mn11(h 111ast.
f'rpirr·e. ::! gi:in1 l11.'dt'001ns,
hf'aVy lih«I ha!hs, ronnat
dlnln~. ('n!crr11u1rr's dl'n.
D!'eam kitt•hrn w11h 1ft1ci;I
buil!·ins. unu1ul' f1N'pla t-e.
"'ilh 11 1vaJI of slon!', 1:..0 11.
lot o r J:rt't'n, lowering Trees .
Ncstl!•d among otlu•r Spnn...
ish homrs of much highrr
value. F'anta.~hc low pn<.'f'
of S28.500. Name yo1.11· 11'.!rms~
Call 0011•!
645-0303
at 1t.1rhor Cr111t·r
'1'.!'l9 lh1rhnr A!\'d .• (' :'<1
lh1s C.ORGEOUS homr a1
S~2.!IOO'
WE SELL A HOME
EVE RY JI Ml NUTES \outh ,, (. oast
--Walker & Lee11 ................. ~ .....
WALK TO .BEACH RraJIO~ \Vith Juvini:; C<il'r the owner
?790 Harbor Bl\·(!. at Arl nms ha3 add<'rl $,ml of extras ~i.·,.!}.l~t O!lf'n '1il 9 P\T lo Hu.'i 3 ticdroom home
\l'hich 1~ only 4 mnnlh~ ohl.
DOLL HOUSE Brinusr"I ~Rlore. i11eludin_g
IN NE\VPORT BEACH applin nrrs. A rr11 I snvings Charn11n~ Hnlt home in great $'" 900 o I •-al -~. . n y nrCi'IUSI'
locar1on on he;,u!iful trr<" o\iTler 1.~ lravin~: fnr ~urope.
J1nerl ~i~n11I P.•I. ldral for FllA rrrms, Jo\v rlnwn . A.~k
rouple or small lamlly. Prn. for Ken Reas
fu.~inn uf pl11nts. shn1bs & fl62·2121
f!n\1rrs. Flcxihle tern1s, DICK BERG REALTY
pn('{'d Ct :};IO. -~•l.
5.Cfi·5!BO NO DOWN PAYMENT
D I 4 Pl fnurclnen'9 thtttm $23,SOO Full Pric• e UXe -ex LLEGE REALTY Room'"'"°"'· rn,,1cc. come·
lSOOAdams1\H1rbor,CM er. Neat 3 Urclr1n~ k d1n111~ $1900 DOWN I ~!!!!!""'"""_"""_""'""'"' area, lll>aut1ful bnt'k y:u,-J,
r.Jndl•rn li11111i:; at nindt':<I 1''1~1 4 PLEX ratio. Vets -dnn't <.11.'lay.
You c1111 llvr 111 ont· uni! un11 O!hrrs -h11m·. 100'
\\'~ r•un ;:i·! you a. 10;111 <•I ~ 546·SIBO
S•l;•,Gno FHA l('J"lll~. LP! !hr VA FH /ntirtillt!N tlleltn!) 1cnrint~ hPlf' yn11 huild 1111 Or A LLEGE REALTY
e:;l ritc, \\HY \IAl'I' T11n l11n.!E"2 Url rnu; and lll'o lSOO Ada!llltKaitior,CM.
BUY NO\\': 3 nc1rn1i:~ 1~ .. helli~. U111H-r:========= $47,500 in'<', Iii<' in k•1 rhr11 11. nd)•
h111h!>, palin. Low, lnw •Jown
t'HA or GI. VA 6% Percentage
612 '816 1600 Santiago Dr, Ne\\110rt
$16,500 . ~ =-~---"'"h. l Br, 2 barh, Sl300 N QUE SC Cute 1 bexlroom cottage 011
quie! F:astside cul-de-sac
Panelled interior -
646-7171
AS!iume si;., loon *U I • ENIC*
By o"·nr.r 546-274!1 Unrivaled Vie1v or Bay &
==='====='====I i\1tns. w/priYacy. Sp.acioull,
College Park 1115
BY Owner: 3 Br, 2 ba, fam.
rm. dhl frplc, blrn.~. $17,950.
67:>--0'lj!j. :;~.',;, AVAILABLE, spark.J.J-;;;..c:;:;_,======
nearly new "Old 'Vorld"
Conten1porary w/ court &
atrium. 5 Br's e:icpandable,
5<W sq 11. 4'h ha, hi -ceiJ.
in~s. .f car gar. $173,000
fUl"n. \\'ill take small house
or vacant land 11rea. 0\1'11t'r
~IR·7249. 111g 3 Bdrm, 2 Lath home
in gorgeous ronrlitiOll. Ne1v
\1'/W ('l'Jllg, ll'<'Shly Pfii!l\ed
h1s11lr .!:·out. all b!tns, faniity
r11i ,r.., lnri::e :v:•nl exper!ly
lanctscnpcrl , Total price
~25.9JO · f'HA trrm~ 11.1•all.
Call 1\lr. i\!cl!ammoll
:-~l~r-.~·12-1 South Coast Reill
1':~1~11f'.
Newport Beech
BEAT HIGH
INTEREST
1200
12J7
15 FT. X 30 FT.
MASTER BEDROOM
Low dO\Oo'n payment. Excel·
ll•n t fi nanl.'ing, 7\1 % anllual
perctn!age rate, \V/w car.
* * * * * *
VIEW
FROl\1 ..•.
SAN CLEl\IBNTE ISLAND
TO. , . ,SIGNAL HILL
1'0. , .. l\tT. BALDY
4 Dedrooin!I, large family
roon1, OYersizetl garage \Vith
V.'tll lighted \l'Ork area
ON
One or E~s!bluff'1 loveli•~t
pride of 01vnP~hlp 1treel1
ONLY S·l7,930
673-8.:uJ
\-0 THE REAL ~ESTATERS ' , , . E!,JATF: SALE. Cozy col·
la~e. F'L'lrr upper -to he
sold in "as 1s" conr!i!ion.
Back Bay area -good .siicd
loL 3 Largr Brdrooms, 7
h:ilh~. hrd1\·d floors. c11tTK'!S
i· hr:1\y llhake roof. FHA
or VA 1rrn1s avail. Call
5-1~12·1 South Coast Real
!:::<tare
Don't le! increasini:;ly inflal.
f'd Joan rn1 e.ci, taxrs, rl~ ..
keep you fron1 en,ioying
your own horne! A duph:x
1vill meet & keep pace \\'i1h
thest" costs, plu~ retl11ee
yow· net mon!hly paymenL~;
or p!'ovidl' 1nvl's!ment in ..
con1e. Con~idcr lhr bonuM-:<
in U1is co ntcmpor<1ry duplex
one block from brach: 3 br'll
& cab1nt"!s & all electric
built-ins; carpelll: la~" pl\·
110 & cleck. Price r>f 154,000
f"<!Uals only S27.000 prr
ho111r! ()v.·nrr 171·11 6~2-3226
Jl('f, rinse to sehools aod --========== :;hopping. B<'auliful location. F'AN1'ASTJC, UNCLUTERF:D
Dllly $3ll,99S for rhls 2 story, OCEAN & HARBOR VIEW: ~ lxlnn. fam. nn. hon1e. PRESTIGIOUS HARBOR
Agent: Phooe ITI4) 833-0300 VIEW llllLS:
l Lii!;r . BR'.~ •. 1 l..gP BA'•,
LARGE J.ovtly, pv1. Courtyard &
BONUS ROOM Pa110. Liv., Din, & Fam.
area..~ arr all deluxr ii11.e
OVER GARAGE .t·. \rteat r o r Pnlf'rlai11ini:, REAL BUY!
$2J,SOO
•.JI BY OWNER Ext•f'llrnt financing and lo. Br aul. .~tnnr hrrpl, kram .,,.. · 7,, ,,, al 1'Pil. & many other plusell
FHA or VA ~
~,·m· 1-..... ,1,1,.11 VIII••., c;1.11on, '" ,o anllu perren!. ,., "' "' ..... " \V/ 2 in lh1.~ .::harnung & l'heerlul outstallding l BR Condo apt, age 1·a!e. w carpet. St""' 3 bdrm •-.1 lo homr: Hrrl. to S67,000 for l BR. J Balhs. Good an•a,
Call Agent
645. 1070
xrra h: '1 beaut 11ppointf"d. "'~' · '"'" e r quick s;1lf'. Open Sat & Sun.
ll11gf' l\f~lr suite, 7 ba, f.fillc, only $34.!l!l:i. Agent: Pholle 12-5. 2007 !!arbor View Dr.
l'<'iling lo flr drps/crp1 11 -'-'-"-'-'-·1_,.._300 __ . ----644-1792, Owner.
ASSUME LOW 601• VA 1hn1ou r, 8pac a.II elec kit,
wet bnr, dble c11r gar 1v/
LOAN on imrnacula!e 3 ER, opener. Lush )lldSePii!:. Olyn1.
1 'i 81\ horn!' on quiet resi. pie ST. hld pool \\'/BBQ &
clcn!i;tl :;!rt'I-'\. 'Vlw crptg & entrrtain1 ng c n1r. Leaving
rlrps 1hruuut. \\'l'IJ landscap. area & want o rfer~. Asking
erl. close to schools & shop. $411,;oo !or d<'lail~. ti7J.4434
<P~'"~'~·~B~y~o~w~'~"~'~·~~'~:f;".~~~-l ~~Tii -= 109V ia Revenn• FOR Sa!e by Owner. Nil'..'t' Lll)(i ISLf;
3 BR hon11' on large corner 0 5 t /S 1-4 30 101, quic! cul-dE'·l'ac. \Valk. 1 pen • un : 4 Bl?. 2h ba.. Builder's ini;: distanre to school, shop-E oivn honic. $69,950.
pin~ center. Excellent con-•
rlition. 302~ Buchanan \Vay. L 2006 Vi5t1 C1jon
ShQ°"·n by app't. 546-36,'>2 ~ Tll~: BLlJffS-
OUTSTANDING 2 BR.
With l\fANY l'X tra~ illcludillg
cu;;lf'1111 quality carpets I.·.
Urar~-.~. a l1 ! o. sprillkhng
.\ys!rn1 ,t l'IPc. gar. Uuor
opener. Vrry allrnc!ivt'ly
Jandsca~I. 2 Bat hii!,
firrplat'<' I::. built.in-". Only
Sll,950 INCLUD ING Tli f:
LAND , Be sure !o ~cc !hi!;
one!
BOB PETTIT, Realtor
"SINCE 19-i6"
833-0101
3 BDR~f & family in l\1el8. s Oprn Sun 1-5
·' I •t ,. I d I d I ;'l DH 2 h11 . B11 v v!r1\'· I oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii>
ui' "ar. ''"\\' Y eeora e ~istin~~ $42.000. 1, f'arp 1•1r11. ,\~~11111r SITUATIONS
r'l:1sr1nc FHA loan 1\·/ 51AA M !\lake harga1n~: llrn>'.~ onr:
'
-·iOO OfftllN· "'"'"11 .l BR. 2 ba. \\'i lh f11.111 ll.1• n11 .• fl'''" n10 pymn1s. '"'" , l7l·lllUZ=~==· l'rinr-111,~1.~ r>111y. 011'!1er1Agl. ~=:;':': _ _ a! S30.9JOJ Varan1 , o...,11er
71 Ui E)f~J r\'C.~. BAYFRONT 1vil1 cons1rll'r all n!(ers.
--MESA VERDE--\V. R;iy Ave. &>aut., tlf'wly e Red H ill Realty
COUNTRY CLUB OR. r••decor. 4 Br. '1 bonua roo:n . Univ Park Crntrr, Irvine
Patio • rlPck . hcach . pier Call Anytin1e l(lJ-0820 Cnrnrr Lot. Rpa1·1nns 3 Br, & r 1175 000 , _________ _
BRIGHT
CHEERY
BLUFFS
Top BluH.~ wn1lo, upgraded
Jn aJJ rcsprct.~. -Heavy
shag cnl'p('ts, dra~s. ithut.
!ers, all the b{'.~!, Overlook.~
11. gorgroui; greell·l~!t sur.
rnuni.lcd 1virh co lorful
bk10nli'!. Ownrr h11.~ purch;is.
r1! large home nnd 11•nn1s
oiler.~. A~l>ini:: $~7.950, F'or
de!ails cull 646-7171 .
OPEN SUN. 12.5 ,3-0
IOIS GOLDENROD
Harbor View H ills
i\1i!hon si.i v\,.w. " Bdrm ... ,.
:l'~ haths; hid., fil!. JJOQl :
cnvt'rrrl p11t10. O\l'r\4'.r may 2 I I I I I. ... 1p. ' .
• )/I 'l am r.ni. nrina 1 in, Bill Grundy, Re1ltor
r n1, _ frpl c s. H.v nl\lller. 8.1. Do , D NJJ li-12-4620
:i BR fton1e. C'rp!.11 & flrps carry l.~r TD.
:.1u.4 ~11 · ·1 \er r., 1
2 ST\.-~,; nr. 2 Ra, A s~un1e MOBILE HOME
~,1 1 1 , l{1an S17R ninnlhly ON T!IE BAY
!\1arlll11 Pk, 1770 Bulboa Blvd. P IT I. 5·12,9(.(l 0 "'' n f' r , (See Mgr\ Sp. 2 E, y,~!h 2 ~11:>-21i":i 11·i00 parking 11p a c::e1 ....
COLLEGE Pk. 4 Br. 2 BA, 67~24!19. Op t: N HOUSE
lam. rm .. bl!.ins, v.:/w cpts SAT. & SUN. !JO 'lil 61.
inr!. \\'rll l;u1rl~t.'aPf'•I. ne:1r SEMPLE
~r·!iools & shripping-. Grrrn REAL ESTATE
Bl'I! Comn1unity 11'/pniii~. 2;11:-i E. Cua~! ll11•y. 67;,..2101 l rnni.~ rnurt~. tot lots. !!IC.
118.000. 833-0076 I-OF-A-KIND
Colonla! .f b!lnn. un rib!. lot.
Eastbluff 1242 Nt'll.' k\tch .. ne11' earn .• nr1v
hra1in:::. shu!!cr-". 21'.i car
OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-5 ii!;aragr 1v/dre.~-"-rooms, Newport .. Principals only plea&! &· flrp.~. Nfl dn GI. lo dn .
Spir: and Sp11ll :l lg" BR'!;, 7 FILA. $27,;,oo. 54~@1 * BLUFFS -OrhghUul llplH
I II B \. 1 J2 "" le\'E'I 2 Br. dhl gnr, pnnls,
2137 ARALIA fliio\\·er. t.RJk . to bf'iich. Be
51~% Loan! Jmmac, Lusk 3 1he first lo .~rr lh iii! new,
Br. & fem . rm. home 1vlth exclusive offf'rillt:'. Fairview BHOKER 545-9451 11 ' !I, iv rtn + X£v SPOTLESS TnhS<", 3 BR, 21~ fain rm., rr11lr, hltn.~. nYer. balcony O\'t'rlkg gTP,~nhf':lt,
looklng a k1dney.ii;hRJ)('(l f100I BA. all elcc. pool. appl. nr. shp~ ccn!er, t~11nis club, 646-8811
(anytime)
COLLEGE PARK
SPECIAL
SMALL HOME in~'. J•.'; loan S2.1.500 UC! Cd'l II<' 0 -hl bea'h new cnrpclll 8.· ilrnflf'.~. · ' · ~ ' ·
In ru::ht area. "'tilk to ewry. La h Rlt Owiwr 549-2037. SZ'i.500. 644-2422. thins ~ 2 BR, bit.in Birch C enmyer r. BY-0\\'NE~ran.sferrM PARK LIDO
k:itl'hcrt. R-7 lot. room for Call 6't6-J!l211 ~:vl'!I. 64-l-l655 Ea..s1 sidl' rul-de·sac, 3 Br, 7 Br, 2 bn. TownhoUl'f'
-'<"N'lll<l unit or trailf'r. East ]~. Bil . $25.500. 64&-4129 r.-tu.sl sell all ofrs c::onITTdered
l6rh St. Only $19.500, $27 ,500 3 ,_ DEN bit.ins. r!rp~. crp!, 644-M88
CALI, TO SEE 646.7-t\4 Assume 5314•;0 Loan R2 lot, nr business. 1903 •BLUFfS _ Cho:~,-,-,..,-rn-.
FAREL WALKER, Take over Ibis tclTilic fi·'.0 ':~ OranKe. 642--9il64 vlc1v lot. S Br. l Ba. J le~!
Realtor allnual "k mle loan. Enrry Mesa Verde 1110 walled patio, cus. e.<tras
WE MAY NOT BE hall, 4 bedrooms, rr11r liv. :;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; S.1ve $$ . S29.9~i0. 644-42ffi
THE LARGEST Ing rm., La1nily rooin. xtra • -----
BUT NOONE bath~. 2 flrrplaces. n rd GREAT FAMILY BY 0~1NER: Blutrs Colldo.
WORKS HARDER! brif'k patio, Prime area. HOME 2 Br. dell, 21 i b:i., luxury . +. j 11 Avenirl!l Campana, WE CAN :l'l0·1720 4 Redt'Of!m'. ·5ept1ra1e d1n1ng, N.Jl. Eve.~. 644-7867.
r.lA NY exrm1! SEE IT! Hal Plnchin & A11oc. e Bill Hav•n, Rltr. REALTORS
2111 E. Coast. Cdl\l 673-:ml 3900 E. COatlt Hl\')'. 67M3!12
BEST 3-Br. 2 Ba Hume CAMEO HIGHLANDS
!11 E11at bluH. Lf1: pool, AITR.ACT. SPACIOUS 3 BR,
paneled tam. nn \\'/frplc, 2 BA, lrg liv nn, flcp11rate
d ill rm, view. 64.J--02811. 9()7 din rm, glall~ encl lanai,
Aleppo St. pool ~z. lot. lmmac. In Ii
Our. S1'.i,OOO. 675-5507
~~. del Mar 1250 I FULL OCl::AN VTE\V
OCEAN VIEW F:XF:CUTIVF; TYPE J.IOME,
4 BR. 2 BA, 3 car gar, A onr (Jf a k1nrl rnnch style lornil clin'g, lam rm w/
home. Cu~L bit. 3 Br., 11!-.1, lrplc. Q1vn~r. $55, 000 .
bii. Formal tlin . rm. All 6'l4.-ro44 . lnrgl' rooms, many 11peclal I cc.:..:::c:_ _____ _
FOREST E. firtpl:.ce. Acre.~ of room for
0 L S 0 N ="""=1.="=,~="=' "='"=;, =~·=,1.I Ow!lt.'I' \\'ill finance (1)
633-97(;6
Inc. Realtor~
Beach Lovers
Choice of Two
Jmmnculale ~ bedrooms near
the Beach \\•1th boot access.
lrncnse kitchc'n \\'ith bar !or
fanuJy sna('k:;, slep up din.
ing Jor formal occasions.
Sunken Jiving room, plush
carpets, e.asy care ~ yard.
Loads of decking, All lhis
+lo\\' illtere..~t rale VA loan,
thftt can b(' laken over.
Thesr lll'l' gonlla go, Be
la.sl, c::all
962-5585
19131 Brookhurst
llunlingtnn Beach
Laguna Beach 170S
BY O\VNER: EXl'C. Hom,,
large 3 Lr. d\n rm, Hv
rm, hn~r lam rn1 , Ex-'
\\'/panoramic view. S41,750.
t•eptionoil qua I i Ly
w/panoran1ic v1r1v, $11,750,
~!J.1-28-17.
=--~--NF:\V \\'hi1(' \1'11.ler ocean
v1f'1v home~. 2 Br, 2 ha, , :
playroo1n, 18x20' liv. nn .•
bhn range & ~en ,
dishwashr. crpl. Balanced
Po\l·er. F'rom $27,950, 10%
down. l!f.i1 Noria. 49'-3008
or 492-408·1.
RARE ilen1 In LRINI!a undeT •
JJ0,000 · 2 BR, privat•
gar<lell. S21.500. Good lina~
cing. 49-1-5100 evl's
.17Di
MAJESTIC 2-STORY
FRANCISCAN
FOUNTAINS ~1agnilice11t n1astrr suite 0\VN~:R "'ill h<'lp tina~ ·
"'i!h re t r t: a !, PRIVATE -4 BR. 2 BA, film rm hOme., :
BATH, and v.•a.lk·in c::loset, on bt•aut prirne view lot,
Four kinR gize ~drooms ill "'='='-="='='=· ======='I
all , 3 baths, r oRMAL din. San Clemet1t•
ing ronm. Service poreh,
FIREPL A CE, TRIPLE
GARAGE, Cugtom designed
drape~ and l'arpets, dt-cora.
tor m1rro~. easy care ya.rd.
1710
$44.900,
ON Golf Coursr with oee!ll'l •
Vif'W, 3 BR, 3 BA, dl n rm,
f>l'lt io. all elec custom bit ·
horn!'. Broker, 642-4816
WE SELL A HOME Dani Point 1740
EVERY JI MINUTES 1--------
Walker & Lee
Real10r!J'
1682 E<lillgCI'
84:!-44j.""1 ;;.t0-5140
LAZY HUSBANDS
PLEASE NOTE
Thi!! 2 ~tory, 4 Bcdrm homt
11tar1!1 Jookillg good fro m
the frout ~ide1va.lk. Lanr[.
11c11pcd tor ca!ly mainten.
anet'. For the kidi. • walk
lo !hr beach in 5 min. Your
terrn~.
I' dlage Real Estate
"1-4471 ( ::::.1546-llOJ
Assume GI Loan
O\\'NER NEEDS QUICK
SALE! Anyoiw can qualify,
3 Brrlrms, 1~<. balhs,
upgra!led crp!:<, drps, Large
rnrlt.l!>ed pa110. Like new .
847·8~i07 f::1·,.s: li12-0-1?7
Sacrifice By Owner
137,750
Bi~. new 2 story, 4 Bedroo1n,
Es pen.~1vr shnii!; crpl&, gar.
d,...n li\lchl'n. atriuin, 10.n<.1.
~cnpini: ,r,, sprinklf'rs, \\'alle!l
carrier In! with lJ' wide ('I\.
1.:lnseLI sirle y11ril. 2 BIOC'ks
from n e 11· ll igh School.
;..tfi.5.1.'"11
Own•r Transferritd
Spac, 5 Bedrms, shake roof,
!!tone fireplace, ceramic kit
& bath w/aJI desired bltn.•.
Take o~ labt.Jlous a~~%
loan.
Pacific Shores Realty
847·11586 or ~8894
* BY OWNER 5\~ Gl
Lo11.n. 3 Br, !amily nn, 2
bath. 22101 Capistrano Ln,
nr. llrookhurst & 101.
S~.500. S.3500 dll, 2nd TD.
.f9Z..:m:;
BEAUT 2 slory Glc.n 1\1ar.
3 Bil. 2 BA, panelled dC'n,
crp111, drps, Jnllcpd , Prir·
1 itn.E So. ol marina. C!tm
7 Rm + J Baths + 2nd
kilc.hn. $3G,500. 496-l177.
RENTALS
Hou1es Furnished
200I
S200 - 3 BP.. 2 BA Home,'
Back Bay. Child 01<.
Blue Bearun, 645-0111 BkP.
$11 0. LRG fl;il'h., ll\T dupbc,
Ulil prl. Al"I oow, Sm! pet
ok. Bkr. 51-1-69.itO •
R•ntals to Share 2005.
SHARE A JfO~IE
\Vorking girl~. priv, ~lio,
roncrel r fenced yd. Compl
!urll. U.B. ;i.ren , $30 wk,
~."1()...3000 or 846-4175
Stahlr )"OUlll: 11"0n1an to
liharc condominium,
$100 mo. 548-7817
REF'lf\f.O-lafty · .. --,-h-,-..,.-1
ho1nr in the Bluffs, NB.
All privil. ini·J'rl . +;~4-{)?,G.q
ROOJ.1~1AT~:-wnnted-.0
11hare 2 BR ap1 . l\tust be
20.2:1 F!'n1ale. 675-10-17
Cost• Mesa 2100
ATIRAC cornpl !urn Muse.
fi 1110s ~ublra.~r. 2 BR, 2
BA, lgc liv rin w/open
frplr , P riv patin Adults on-
!~. 11n pct.~. 1?2~, 1no. 475 ·
A Fi)rrl Rd C?-1 . 612-41TI,
61G--0~·19
------~-2 BR.. gar., p,a.i10. Quiet
tropical selling for adults.
$18~. ~,.J.11-7134 , 5'1~·0.K12.
Ntwport Beach 2200 ·----'I
YEAR lA'ase • 3 Bfiiroom,,
3 balh. den. exrra room
off patio, dbl ga ra ge,
garden mtnc on or befOf'e
July 1:1 • $3."l(l pPr mo '\'rl!f
103-1 U>lnnd Rd .. Louisvill~
Ky. 40207
CANAL --w~A~T~E~R~rn=o~,~.T~
\Vitti beach. F'urn. or unt
Vecy riice 3 Bt· 2 Oa.
l\lo. Yr. l1W!. Boal dock avail,
Gr{lham Realty &46-lU-t.
BLUFFS -furn. .1 Br .
Jlon1e. Uppc.r Bay le. Occrn
view, $460 mo. * &44-5398.
Tlllg<' 4 berlroom horn <' clnc-:r
to rollei.:e. shoppi~. f'tc.
ENOR1\-IOUS heautiful hack
yard 1vith rnVf'n.><1 petio.
&nutiful n1orlC'rn kitchrn
with bulH-in BAH·B-Q. l!u-ge
D 0 UBL~: f'lRF.PLACF:.
Ca11>('1s and drapes throui;ih·
out &>lier transferred. i\1ui:t
S'Ul Suhmi! your dnl';n on
$27.!i.O price to
Sell your Property TARBELL 2955 Harbor huge famdy rm + 2():.(40 __ _
il>lULTIPLE LISTING LUXURY p(X)1 To Sf'<' call STEAL FOR CASH! 2 BR,
64s.1010 TowN HousE lean Smith, Realtor !~ .. ':.;',.~'.~,'t,,~"'"m
fenlurr~. Sli7,!"i00,
MORGAN REAL TY
I CJIAR1\1ING 3 br, den, e·1 f'1r quick 11alt:! Owner
JUNE thru Labor Dll)'. M~
ern 3 BR. 2 BA house. l
blk oc:eall, club tac. cm>
HO 7.3200 wkday1.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY Jl MINUTES
Walker & Lee
Realtors
1790 llarhor Blvd. al Aflami.
:14~....016.1 OJX'fl 'til 9 P,\I
, CORONA DEL MAR
Open Sat-Sun. 1-5 P .M .
620 ORCHID
·Adornblc STORYBOOK horn<'
Dinlni.: Rm. Yrpl, 2 Bdrm.
P LUS 2 Bdrm ~ased homr
OWTl<'r v.111 carry loan, Ask·
Ina: $62,(0). Submit
RUTH SEELf;Y, Real1or
1306 Pork Avenu<'
Dalhoo \slHrld 673-4766
1'.A. Mr1gh!.~ UN-.'f'lll!r G.I.
on 1hr~. 3 Bil, Si1.~'ffl. Let'
y1 I. 2 C11.r l!llr, K1ng11.a.r<.1
RE, f.-11 2-2222
~~/~h)I! 2 1 1 ~
\f"ileALTY "'v~~~tlH
JAY W . YATES CO. 2 Beclroon1~. l'-1 baths, tn·
I ~... • \VALK to beach. t bdrm.
NEWPORT HEIGHTS c udillg ·~·H I'll/\ 10 8 n. 400 E. 171h St., Cosla i\tesa Z.stv. J ba. Rec, center. MonUily pavmcnh; Sil l bl-L,.1.325s · Adorable 3 Br. 2 ha. F'pl. ch.»(lell P.I.T.I • Ask for -$37,!IOOov.•ncr, 64Z-.3204
Formn.l din, rm. Unusually Ken Reas · artr. lndscPI{. &. patto. 962_.,21 JAVA Rel . Custom designed Newport Heights 1210
o I SJl IXXJ XI "'' 4 Br + ii!;llffif' rm/°"·et Nr,
llY · · nt terms! DICK BERG REALTY d.;.,·0 • rm, <•<lf11nt heat. *VIEW to CAYWOOD REALTY 1 ........... _....,_____ " •
6306 "'·Coast ll\i~ .. NB 1• $60.000. I.Aul~ Brigg s LEASE-OPT! N e 548-1290 e FHA-VA TERMS Realty, 673-8110. Panoramic Oceall Vie1v, Clift
-*~o""c~E"A~N~F~::;Rc,O~N:;,T~*-1 Northe1st Costa Mesa TIME FOR Dr. l..11.rae 2 BR "-DEN 3 Large BCl"lnn!I, hUR'C' i\lalk· p~u~ GUEST RM. 2 bal/111,
DUPLEX in clmelll, 7 balh.~. bllnll, rl1n1llg rm. Court yan1 pa. F~~~~11:,!r :i~ri::.1' ram nn, f.rplc, trpl>1, dll>'I. QUICK CASH ~~r.~n•n= :;:;~ J m m e rl l 11 t c f'Ol'l~!'lllion:
$67.500 S.10,(0). C11.1l o1v11rr 642-5570 THROUGH A ~ opmot.k>n money, leMe al George Williamson or Realtor 548-T/29. .,.,UV
llEALTOR
67~350 64S·IS64 Evu HORSE PROPERTY DAILY PILOT
ASsUME 6% LOAN •\ Ao 3 h< 2 h• 1"°1 "" ml ~ N l'i'PORT PO '>! Offill Lt1111•\y 3 Oft, 2 BA, fem. nn OwnrlAi::I r~11 ·71l:lG, 641·~. WANT AD
+ Sf'Hll'kli nl? pool & "~_pr. DON'T glvP 11------;way, irel Nl·:\'VJ'Oll'r lli;i:hl.!1, rt1n1hlinir
f«n~i'•I 11ln.y yil. Nrivly f».ll!JI, QU)Ck est~h lnr i! wf!h 11 r{lnrh atylf" 3 Mclrm, ahake
f'rl . Owner 540·2~.ll-I. DAILY PJLO'l' WANT AD. 642-5678 roof, frpl r.. 1211,9SO .
P1LOT\\1ANT AD!! 6-12-5f;78 Cnll 612·~ i ehnr'.t:" 11 ----------' Kinga11.rd R.E. ~11 2.-7'02
673·Gl1 I'.! 67!">-64:;9
PANORAMIC VIEW
2001 BR)~·1de Or. Beaut.
ghakc roo f I-sty. 3 Br. 4 ba.
\1·atc1·front borne. :dnl swim·
ming heach. Ne.\1'ly rMl'COr.
$17:1,"«J SHO\\'N BY APPT.
Biii Grundy, Rtaltor
S:~ Do\'er Dr., N.B. &l24fi20
-*OPEN 1-S *
Saturday Ir. Sunday
503 ACACIA. OQZ)'. tt:modtl·
t'd 2 Bdrm. home + 1400
sq, ff. new apt. Ocean iiide
ot H\\'Y.
\Ve Ha\·e Othf!n From $49.~
Scenic Propf'rtle.• 675-572fi
C/\l\1EO SJIORES. Beaut.
vll!a type home. 7 BR 2
BA, r!rn, f"IP.\\•ly c:'pl°d &
drm111lr1I. E!ltalier ~d
i;cnrrlrn~. Ca.II o wner :
67>5698
I
2 ha, frplc, Jrg ~lio, corn.
1
_96_Z..0_7'3 ______ _
lot + nice I br tnC(lme
apt. Both ne"·ly dee. t.
c::rpted. 67~97, 6-t4-12.14.
Broadmoor Harbor View
ExN!llent View, Large lot
4 bdrm ! BA. Gd fillance
2515 \l.'lndover Opell sun 1-5.
I SECLUDED BEACH
llOME. .f Lrg BRmt +
dl'n. Shor1. walk to Bay,
Ocean. Private 8each. Bolt.I
Ramp anti Tr.nnl8 Club.
$."i.'l,oOO. FRANK MARSUALL
REALTOR. fi7~
BUSIEST m1rke.tpl11 c:. ln
town. The DAILY PILOT
Clags!ficd i'lff,tlon. ~a ye
rnonty, llml' Ir l'fforl by
shopJ'l\na from Y'l):ir
11r11l(:halr.
2 l!OUSES on R-.1 Lot .
1J. i\11/e to beach
Fortin Co. Rllt'. &l2·j()()Q
Founteln Valley 1410
BI.OF.RS Custom J l· .f BR.
S.Jl.200, lo\\.' dn. 2 Blk~ E.
or RrookhurAI on f.llis 11
Lu Flore~. 537-03&\.
5 L& IR 2300 SQ H
$32,500 Pvt ply. 962.9';165
[)Id )'OU "er thlllk or awap.
Ing that \\rh.ltt Elephant IJ1
tan u~! Try the Traden:
PaTfldis.t column ill the OA1·
ly Pllt>l \V11lll Ad.•.
•
2237
.f Bdnn1 I-family room
June 15 to Ott. 15 s:l2:i
4 Bdrm•. il. family room
June 20 to Sept. l'.l ~
BOB PETTIT. R~altor
"Since 19-'6"
833-0101
2 BR rum .. 56. or tTWJ.
.flS~ C11rnallon. S163 leut.
No g11r. 54s-nztl.
'Ill SUM~1ER °" Ytl'lrly. 6
Ua,ylront Balbo11 Penln. furo
5 BR. 4 BA. Pler--lloat;.
Ava \I Se.pt. ls! .. C11H fi7l-J)S9
•
·,..,.W.'I PllOf rnd.11. M., 22. 1970
RINTALS
Aph. Furnl1hed
Ali RENTALI RENTALS RENTALS I RENTALS 1 -..!1~1!'!!!''!!'!'.!F~um~~lu!!"..d~-1 Houw Unfurnl1t..d Apta. f""'llMcl ~ Unh.lml.,_ Apts.. Unlurnl"*I
l.tbctt-2lOO University P•rk 3237 Cod• Me•• 4100 Corte Meta 4111 Cott• M.1• 5100 Cffte Met. 5111 l "'""""'=-~_.::=i ~~iiiiii;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1J~~~~-"-::;::::~-;c:~ P ENINsut.A Be,yfront. S BR l BR. lt din. rm, ...... S?.25 -
+ maids qln Pier. Call 4 BR. I:. flun. nn .••.• l 3:.0
Mrs. Slapl~s 12131 79.>-7575, 2 BR. 2 bal h.s ........ STJO
or t2lll m.1u.12 l"Vl'I. BOB PE'rl'!T, P.ealtor
----"'S1nC'C' 1!:1-16"'
,.L_.,~"-"-•_B_._•_<_h __ 2_1~os """"""="""~'=="=II~~==
NE\VLY Furn split l£>vel J Irvin. J238
BR 2 BA. J.ge liv rm, (rpl, ~
mod, facll, oce&ll Vv.', dtt.k 4 BDRMS, . 2 hath'
& paUo, carport lots or land!;caped, tn Culverda.lr.
~tJu. $350 mo lM', lO:W Community rec, &: pOOJ
Miramar. Ews 213:462--42'14 pr1v, Leue, $31~: Im·
coll. rnediat~ occupancy. Sll-2117
LG E J Ort. parUy fu rn, 'h
blk lo beocll . $t1:'i v.·r.ck.
Reservauons-6Th--5.')85
RENTAL)
HoUM1 Unfurnished
3250
* NEW-PLUSH * Elegant
Living . -·-1 BEDROOM FURNISHED APTS.
ADULTS ONLY, NO PETS "Or•n9• Ce11n ... '1 M•1! 1••11·
lif11I Ap•rlrn•fth"
-"•el•nlonar l lllllllN'I Ml .. l ll\I
• merr1mac 2035 Fullerton, Costa Mesa woods
4000 Co1ta Mes• 4100
Lu1h litnd1capin~ wf. 35' Pina tr•••· 1p•r•lin9
wit t •rl'itlls, bubbling 1tr•am1 &: ••r•ne pond1
m•ke M•rrim•c Wood5 th• p l•ce to live. Th•s•
I & 2 BR , 2 BA , fur n. or unlurn. •p+s feature
air-c.ond, ••lf-cletning ovens, b•am c eilin91,
d i1hwa1her1, pr iv. 9ar•9• w/1torege, elevator1,
I 01" th•r•p•utic: pool, 1wim pool, BIO'•,
saun•1 I• lovely clubhouse w/sociel ecfivities.
Aclults pleese, From $140.
Just For
Single Adults
• \VEEKLY *
Lovl'!y apt, Bachelors or
,-pill. Furnishings C"Otnpl.
Kitchenette~. $3J ll'k·PllYS
all . 998 El Camino Dr.
5"16-lMJl
v MOTEL·APTS.
$32.50 "'k, &. Up. Kits., hid
pool, air-rond, queen bed1, -* . ' '
l ~·f;;~,,~·{ ••' f :,-I '"J' o '
'' . '• ' ' I
ph. se1·"'· Daily Ii. Wkly rnte9. RENTALS
2080 NeWpOrt BJvd, at 21st. Apts. Furnithed Costa Miia• 5100
I ACA PULCO APTS. At. -~------
lrnr. Pool. Utl! p.:1. Garden N•wport Beach 4200 BAY r.IEADO\V APTS.
J.ivini;:. A1lul ts. 110 pets. 1
Bft. $1'.).), 2 HR. $1 75. 1800 1-BR. duplex. 1 Olk. O«an
\Vallace Ave .. C~L & bay, $150 Yrly. lnc!. util.
NICELY .Furn. 1 BR, apt. $12.1 fl lo. 11t11nmer. Avail.
Garb. displ. Gar, Pool privil. J une !Olli. G42-l272 ·
RENTALS RIHTALS Af!!· Unfumltthed Apt .. Unfumltlie4
Ne"'!'"'! .... h 52111 Hunt....... INch S40il
ON BAY ~ Nr Udo. I BR.
Prlvat• patio. JIJ5 lnc-1 ulll.
M.oortac ~val!, 67J....&.150
./ l BR. 2~ Bath Apt. S11·irn-
m ing pool prlvil. \\' /W
crplj:. $.10D mo. 613-91&1
DELUXE l BR. \\'e.tieliU
loc. Pool A bllns. Adulta.
ll.6S mo-no lse. 64~274
3 BR .l 2 BR. 2 BA. Encl
1ar, patio, lrplc. N B .
H>-0147 or f>CS-O:Di
2 BR, 2% ba. 2 Car :u.
Condo. Pool privll. $240 ~io.
Fortin Co. GU-5000
$165 • QUIET delu."e. 2 Br,
pool, a.dulta, no pebi. 1st
&: la.1t mo. rent. No lease.
SjO clng fee. 642-2:il4
Eas t Bluff 5241
~-~-·~-~--PRESTIGE LOCATION
For lease, deluxe 1881 sq. fl.
4 BR, 2~' BA apt. Frplc,
drape!, crpls, Mt bar, prl
balconle1, dbl gar off ldtC'hen
d~h1Yhr, dbJ oven. Pool. Conv
lo .shop'g sch11 .I: rc.::r'!ation.
Only $350 mo.
A35 Amigos \Vay, NB
1-fltl'. next door 86.'i Amigo11,
5250
2 BDRM. Apt. carpel!, built-
ln11, :an.rt. no peta, Call
002-8513.
LARGZ, dean apt, eocl'd
gar11g"· Adulrll. 2604 Eng.
land St. s::G-12.0j
2 BDR.:"\f, J balh, Nr H.B.
llo.pltal, 2 am. chU<lren ok,
no pm, Sl30 mo. 847-4349
2 BR. Crpt. drpl, oven,
rani", no pets, l child OK.
Sl.30. 842-15«
ADULTS No peta l BR plus
den.. Retrlg / 11tov~ Sl15 mo.
Close to beach. 536-178.3
3 BR. 2 BA.. nicely turni.shed
home; wanted for month of
July 6 Aug, Beach a.tea.
Call 492-99-17 aft 7 pm.
e LANOLORDS e
FREE PENTAL Sf<:RVIC£
Broker 534·G98'.!
WANTED: Gara~ to rent.
Lido-West Newport area.
Call 673-2916.
Renlal Service
F rM to L•nd'°rds
Blue Beacon. ~183. CM
Rooms for Rent 5nS ------5'20 $15 PER wk up ""/kltchen
· ~ ' $30 wk up apl1'.
VILLA MARSEILLE$ i\lotel. 548-97»
BRAND NEW FURN Rm, CM . IdeaJ tor
SPACIOUS """"'· """' lo oa:. s,; I & 2 Bdrm. Apt1, mo. 642-8520.
Adult Llvln9 s·~211,-,1°'VE=E~K~I-~-,-. ~KJ'°'tcl>o..,.-n
Furn. & Unfurn. privU. le laundry. C:O.ta
Oi.dlwuher • color eoordfnat. Mesa. 548-3725
ed appliances • plush sha& COLLEGE Or working girl,
c~ • cl'!oice o1 2 Mlor Bal. Isl, Kl!., TV nn incl.
schemes • 2 baths • stall $65 mo & up, 67;...JGlJ
showers . mirrored ward-
robe dooI'I _ indirect l!;h!-
ini 1n kitchen • breakfast
bar • huge private fenced
patio • plu~h J'l.Ollscaplnc •
brick Bar·B·Q's. larg;e heat-
ed p00ls " Jana1.
LARGE Corn fortablt! room
rir. Harbor Shop'i: center.
$15 11·eek. 642-1758.
ROOr.t &. Board f o r 11in&"le
prrson ln our home. Reas.
References. 9G8-4686,
General 3000 3 BR. 2 BA. bltns, tird1\•d -_:_ ____ ...;;.:.;c: fioors, drp~. lge Ir.need
South Bay Club i.~ a "'hole
new way or lite dPsign<.>d
JUst !or 1>1ngJe people, It's
run living-wi..rh ""'an11, dY·
namic 1wlghbo rs. Jr 's a
S7;w:J,OOCI Clu bhou.~c wi t h
hc11llh c:Jub, ~aunas, ~'\\'in1.
111111g pool, pur!y roon1, l.11J-
li11rds, indoor goll driving
rang!", 1en111s tourt.~. pro
~IMJp and residrn! tennis f!ro,
Single.", J & 2 Bl'droom lU.'I:·
ury apn11mcn! wl!h all Uie
n1odrrn ror1\•Pnicnc;es avail.
nb!1>. furnished ond unfurn.
i811rd .
Adull gentleman pref'd. 2344 STE1PS 10 bcarh, Ytiy. Lrg.
J-:lden Ave. Apt c. 2 Br, beamed ceilill&', lrpl.
STUDIO A W• t I Adul!11 $220. 642-3490
Ne1v exciting 1 Bfl, $140.
2 BR, S16J. Beam ceilings.
Wood pan'lg, shag C'rpti;:,
priv. patio, some w/ frplc11,
Pool, !!And volley ball crt,
rec bldg, pool tables, put·
tini green, Adults, no pets. Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiii 387 W. Bay. Open House
12-7 pm daily. 646-007.1,
3101 So. Bristol St.
(~~Ml. N. ot So. Coa::t P1u.a)
S•nt• Ana
PHONE: 5574200
PRIV, Jlome near BaRr. I:
Fairview, 0.1. Oulaide entr.
54;;...32911 btwn .f-7 pm.
5 MIN. TO OCEAN yard. Room rdt trlrfboat.
f1 46 • 2 BR. Yartl. Patio. Re.11sonable !o responsible
RIO. \V/"·· drps, Sml lots party, 962-4391
&. pet ok. Sngls al.so. Acti\lf', $155 -J BR. Leas('. Int &
Bier. 534~. lasl. r-;r. Beach Blvd. &
DROP IN Slater & schls. 2 c/Uld. ok.
and browwe through our rent. Sml tncd. yrd. 17660 Van
book. Renral'\ Jrom Sill to Uuren. Y"ater Pd.
$500 per rnonth. Call 894-5.'lll FOR Lse-2 sty townhoui;r..
$UO • NICE l Br. 4-ple:ir, 2 Br. 2 Ba. crpt.. dill!,
wfw, drps. Avail oow. frp!, bltns, lnd patio, ~!-
Active Bkr, 5.1H980 ~~2. carport. $I 7 .i •
$1» CUTE 2 Br. hse. gar, 2 STORY, 4 bdnn, df'n. J fncd for kids & ~r.
Blue Beacon. 6-lj.{!Jl l Rkr. ba, all extra.~. walk to beh
$100 • 2 an.
Re!rig. Baby
Bkr. 5.34-6980
&· nit schools. Avail July
Yard. R/0. l , l~~c/$.150 mo, 962-74~:'t
ok. Active, 4 Br, 3 Ba. b!tn.~. !net.I ynrrl,
nr schls-, $215 n10. :JJG....1192,
$190 --4 BR. '/, BA, cpls, ;.JG....68S7
Rents from $150 to $350
ANAHEIM
1G1·and Openin~)
'!i1 s. Brookhurst :-1.
1 ! Olk So. of Linco ln!
(714) 772·'1!'i00
NEWPORT BEACH
l\80 frvirW? A\'P.
lrvinr t1nd 16111
171·1) &CKJ:.\~J
GARDEN GROVE
pl. u • urn. m-
n1ac. $00 Ist t, last mo'g I BDRfll 11.pt. Close 1o bay
+ clng dt>p. 614-461• Bit & bt'ach. F'urn or un turn.
~. 6T.>-7876, 49.i-9471 Robinson
] BR, Clean. Attrac. Furn. ON BAY -Nr Lido, 1 BR.
SllO. Lease. Refs. Cpl, in-privale patio. SIS:> incl util.
fanr ok. 2..)38 Ne\\'JlOrt Blvd, t.-Jooring avail 673-M50
Cil-t . 2 BR. ~~ blk. to beach. Yrly. * I & 2 Br. Furn, Ap!s. lse. S~'2:i . .Avail. J une 1st.
POOL. 177 22nd Sl. °'\'ll/Bkr. 67:t-1642
NASSAU PALMS. 642-3645 --
1 BR. NE\\', beaut. furn. Newport Hgft. 4210
i\lo. to mo. Adib only, 22l1 CLEAN J & 2 BR. l.rg kit
Elden. ~9Z78 eve. Adult&, no pets. $1~Sl50.·
~10BILE Hotnr. Evrry Com· z.i n E. 16th St., 646-1801.
fort. Jun 15-Sept 15. * 61:'.....0I'i.19 Eve~. • B•lboa
1 BH ftn·n Apt. Q~rl adul!s. ;\'n IJC1R. SUMMER Rental -2 Br.
691-A Victoria. :H~613S Ba.I , Pen. Blk to ocean, bch.
4300
673-7629
FAIRWAY
VILLA APTS.
Private. patio, pool • indiv,
laundry lac.
Near Orange Co, Airport l
UCT. Adults only.
20L?2 Santa Ana Ave..
l\fgr, f.l~. Brut'.'f! 545-3894
• MARTIN19UE •
Perk·Like Surrounding•
DELUXE 1-2 ,, ::i BR APTS,
ALSO FURN. BACllELOR
Prv patios e Jltd Pools
~
ON TEN ACRES
1 I: 2 BR. Furn Ir Unfurn
Fireplaces I prtv. pat\ca J
Poola. Tenaioi. Contnrl Bldst,
900 Sea Ll.ne, 01M 6-tt-2ti11
(Mac.Arthur nr. Cooi.t Hwy)
e NOW lea!!ng, new 2 BR.
It. 3 BR. units. Cpts, drapeG,
bit-ins, frple. Open daily
316 -318 l\fARGUERITE
Don Franklin Realtor 673·22:?2
2 BEDJL\1 studio
p<ttlo, carpets.
67J.:i911 , 5:>7-7-40i.
IV/lrp!c,
d rps .
CAN'T BE BEAT
Single Slory
SouU1 Se.a Atmosphere
2 Bedroom 2 Ba Ila
Carpets I: DrapeB
Air Conditioned
Private Patio!
J.leated Pool
Plr11ty of lawn
Carport t: !:itorai;e
LARGE, Pleasa.nt; prlv .
bath. Working man only,
C:\1' area. 646-750.fi.
SLEEPING room, rmploy~
&'entleman, $20 w«k. See
manager, 309 Palm, Balboa.
Room & Bo•rd
SR. Citizen care, my home,
C.r.1. Temp. or Penn. Make
my home yours. 548-6955
Motels, Tr•il•r
Court• 5997
./ \\'EEI\LY rates. St.:A
LARK i\lOTEL. 2 3 0 l
Nc1\'port Blvd, Costa l\1eu..
nice yd. Famili1>.~_wetcrime. 11~B~R,c.::. '1~1,-,-.-~,,-nai.--ri:lo
10Bilu=•=Be=•~ro="~·=64=>-0=W=B=la-=-.1 •·t & t t , mo. _..,, es TilO s.
1:noo Chupma.n Av•·.
( 4 blk.s \\'. ol
San!B Ana f."'rwy1
(714) 6J6.30JO
-~~-~-~--.--Avail. June Jj for 12 wks. LRG, 1 Br. 2 BA. u111 pd. $1000. 67:>-1070
Sl:li. V.'estside. Pool, Maturi! """===-~~~-~ adulls pre!'d. 548-2~7. BACHELOR apt, util pa.id, -=~~~---.~~-$85 mo, 310 E. Ba.lboa Blvd $135. 1-BR. clean, qu1ct. Gar . Balboa. ·
Nr shop'g • Adults only --------
1717 Sana Ana Ave., CM UNFlJRN 1 DR apt "'/
l\lgr Apt 113 e 646-55U litove, tttrig. YEARLY.
1-IJDDEN VILLAGE
CARDEN APTS
2JOO South Sal!a
~nta Ana * a4!).Jj2;:
5911
Call (}) 639-392.t Cort• Mesa 3100 =-=~~~~~--------3 BR_ 2 Ba. Frplc, nC\V
VERY CLEA.i'J home. with crpt11, drps, nr. beach. $200
3 LARG E BEOR~IS & mo. 1173-1873, rveB 5-114>206
LARGE back yard. Plush ==========-
crpbi/custom drps 100~ VA-Coastal l70(J
CANT l.:. SllARP. $200 pt"r '-..CC-"'-----"=
month take5 11 . Call Agrnl NEVER Lived In-Brand
VILLA MESA APTS. c.n 67'-1976 PRIV. mom now avail In
$150 • LRG 2 BR. Studio licensed guest home for am·
Apl . (Triplex). Farnlly si1.e bulatory, i;enior c i t I t en .
kitch. 11'/ bllns, crp1s, tlrps, Lovely yard & patio. Good
frplc., encl gar. 1 or 2 food, rongenia.I atmosphere,
ch ildren ok. INr schls) No C)! areB. 54g..5n:;
SOUTH BAY CLUB
APARTMENT S .
Deaur. fum . Nr. mkt. No(;-o.;--=::--=--o~=-,
p<'ls, 1922-B \\'allace. O!. I BR. furn ap!. 1.~ blk to
----.---heh. For J une & Ju!y. $165
BACH. Unll oil garage; mo. or yrly lsc. 67;',..lSQi
b:t!h, no ki!ch.; retr11.:. U11l.i~=========
pd . 150 !Ito. &l&-214ll Balbo. Island ~355
2 BR. Prlv paUo, Htd pool, H , B h 11_._
2 car enel'd gar, Otildren --~nt1ngton ••c .,.._
546-4141 nrw, 4 Brrn. :! OaH1. wel
3 B bar, Jand5<1><1, Cfllld, drpd. DR.'1., den. 2 h11lh honl('. y · rr· 1270 panoramic OC't'an \·irv. .. pn· 1e11·. iv.:icy. ino.
vacy. l Jan11Jy only. 1st & Avail JunP. Refs. 833--0_714.
last mo'B rent + dep, SZIO mo. 17141 15.'J.9233. 1949 Lagun1 B••ch 3705
Whltlit>r A\'<'. * FOR LEASE *
3 BR, l % BA, game rm, Spacious 3 bdrm. homr, lo.
dbl gar. crpt, drpis elc. 200 cated on 3 lots. lge deck 1v/
bl.It Flower ~l. $200 mo. oc:t>an Vi<>w, flrrplaCT, A/T
Security depos. Ref,. kitchen. 3 car gnregr. $2&5
548-1809. ~lnnth.
l Br, n l' w, \1·/w crptg & MISSION REAL TY
drps, palio, Walk 11.ll shops, "494-0731
L I\"(: IVhf'l'f' 1111" run IS'
REi\IARl\ABL)" 1. !'!\JALl::--tfir-. -A~111 .l---------;c.c:
llNBELTEVABLY Jwl . Adulll!. no pe ts. $120 NICELY .-urn. bachelor Bp1.
EXTRAORDINARILY 11iv. &12-841~. or 51~29'4. yr-round $8.» util pd. 1
BEAUTIFUL 1-8.,. Furn. Crpts, Adulls. j>mployed a.duh ~ver Z7,
Val D'i••r• Gard•n Apts N p 1· n (2tl• non-smoker. No hippie or o per~. a IO. ays t d 1 121•1 '"t--0~· 3.11 Putlini: ~rel:'n, waterfall I: 469--8859, aft 6 642-6742. 11 11 e.n · ~ ...., "'°" · ~tream, flo1vcrs everywhere, Apole.na Ave.
'l:i' pm!, rec. room, billiards, Newport B•ach 4200 ~~ Blk to South bay lronts
BBQ'.s, Sauna, furn.-unrum, --'---------1 on 11treet & litre.et level,
1 ,{. 2 Br. also Sing!e.s from Newport B•ach 2 BR. fTplc. July '70 thru
$1.1:-i. ~ ii! 2000 Parsons June. •n $27:; mo. inclds
Rd., &1:!-8670, &t1Yeen Har-GRAND util. Call 644--0984 aft 5 pm.
hor !.· 1\·ewport • 2 Blk N. J!l1h BOAT Slip It. 2 BR~B..i.
g~ apt. SJ.'iO i\lo. yrly
OPENING or $500 mo, 1un1mtr.
B;t( Gru tt<ty R.~t°' 642-<620 ~DMP-LJ.LIBT
l\'f'l('(lmC', 110 pels please!
$16.1 1110. 719 \V. \Vilson.
GW-12:>1
$170
l Br, jl., Ba, patio, bit-in~.
crpt~. drp~. Ask about our
1li~c."Ount 1ilan. 880 Center
S!. 642·8340.
HARBOR GREENS
GARDEN &:. SJ'UDJO APTS
Bach. l, 2, 3 BR'•. from tl10.
2700 Pe.le?Mn WAY, C.i\l
5.16-0.370
TIIE VICT'ORIAN
Ne11', 2 BR \\'/ gara:e Sl50,
Aclult.s only. Crpl~. drpi;,
bll ns, fncd yard \I'/ patio.
\\'t:.-pd, gardnr. 667 Victoria
St. 63&-1120 Adults, DO pets. $11 J. $275 DIX &autlful hrunac,
548-1098. 3 Br, 2 Ba Custom Sp11.ni~h.
'2 BR. h!:e in rouri, e1·pts, Beamed, JrpJr, v 1 e '".
drps, patio. 1 child only, 54.2-4287.
Apartment Rentall
Lilting S11rvice
NOW ACCEPTING
LISTINGS
IMMEDIATE Huntington B••c:h 4400 2 llR. Unturn. Newly dee. Ne1v crpts & drps. Spac
no pets. $1l'i. 9j£ \V. J7!h 4·-ca~R~.~,~B~A,--,b~lt~,.-.• -crp-~-. VSOL TE ROS APTS. i;:rouncls. Adlt.5, no pe ts, $140
Bachelor 1:: I BR'I, Pool. 1no. 2283 Fountain Way E.
AduJta, no pets, Jo"rom $1-40 tllarbtlr lu111 \\'. Qn \\'ilson).
up, J7301 Keel~n J.n, ll .B.1 "'tv~i~l'~°"=G-""'...,.~"'~A~p~~~·-~
St . Apt D. drp.'I. Immac. Ocean Vicv.'.
lID!\fE For Ir a s P . 2 S?9J mo 833-079'": I 'hone 6,1246:.1; OCCUPANCY
~mom, dining room. 2 BIL duplex, blk. to brath
patio. <'lose 1n br:tch. only s22.; ,\to. incl. utilities.
Sl50 month. Ag1. ~(;-9j21. Pinet" Realty 4!H-97(}.I
LARGE 2 Rdrn1, 2 bath,
g11.r , patio &6idt. $~'00 mo Laguna N iguel 3707
ilOLlDA Y PLAZA
DELI IXE, Spacious 1 Bdrm
Furn arit S13:i plu~ uUI.
lfeated pool, ample parking.
No children -no peti;.
Luxury c;arden apa.rtmentll 11 bJk W. of Beach, on NE\V Dix 1 & 2 Bt. Sh&
o(ferinc complete prh·acy, Sl11.ter.J 842-7848. crpt. drps. bltns, immed.
beautiful landscaping & LARG E 2 Bed. 2 bath, good oct:p. i'"rom Sl50. ;;.m.1973,
u nparaJleled recreational location. 1 blk to :1 Polnt11 54;>.2321
s~;;...l!WR -1965 Pomona, c.~t . · :l BR, 2 BA's, separa!r din l~=~~------7c,C.::"'---2 BR. Hse, uni. crpt~/rlr-p~. rm, family rm. $12.'i -KR ocran 1 Br. lipper.
fncillties in a country stores. $180. 7711 Ellis. Open SPAC 1 Br. Crpts. drps,
club atm(l!pheno. Now da"y Or call uwncr. 6iJ.3293 bl!rn;, nr 1~-y. shop'g. i\lgr,
' BR d I ~~' l\lrudoza Dr. No. A. yrd. patio gar. r.1 11 rure epl. * C11.1l 499.2545 • Avail Jun1' I. Ac!ive, Bkr. l('asini: in Ne"·pol't Beach. • • A u ts only, Ulil pd. ~:i-3421 Beaut. . Quiet.
Jnq 38'1~ E . lfith ~r. ;:'==;=='=c:;;-:-;c==;::;:; 'I _:'.-,~~4~-£~98~0~====== !\lodeJs o~n 10 am to 8 pm 17676 Cameron. 842-6111
HALECREST • 3 B~. 1lrn. Duplexes Unfurn. 3975
2 Ba, cpts, drps. hl!1\s. 3725 --·
mo Il l 7:t~!H:l2, 8·12-il~ 1 nrt db:, Adults, !'.CJ P<'I~.
• BR II B 1-Yrlv lr11si'. Patio. ~!1Q1< S.11 • . ~1·. r 11m re1 1ngs , ~ ~ 1 J 3 • .,01 fr-plr:. prv patio. AdulL~. no , .. \In nn), · 11111 .• 1. ~
4705
Rents trom $1J5.SJ10 1 ~========
•IOO r urnished or unfurni11hed L1gun• Be•ch ====
pets. Si-18. 642-8:)20 /\l'(l("llrlo /\\·r. RENTALSc-----
Mesa Verde 3110 Apts. Furnished , ________ _
3 BR. 'i BA Mmp! rt"t.-on<l. Genar al 4000
Patio & Jsndsraplng, ~ -
Furnished Apts.
V ILLA POMONA
from $140.
ADULT:: ONL'", NO PP.TS
ALL i\IODER.~ 1\M1';NtTJES
1!60 Pornona, Co.,!a r.lcsa
\V. or N11'Jll. bet11· l7!h &. J8t h
•prlnklon, bll-""· ' "" RENT FURNITURE gar., lellCf'd ;yrd. S2f •. , 1no. $30 WEEK & UP
By appt only 549-21J:i2. .l Room~ from $19.9;) STIJDIO & I BEDROO~IS
Oakwood
Garden
Apartments
'1700 16th Street
714: 642·8170
siNGLE ibblfs!
$3l WK. VILLAGE INN
PresUge Living. r.taid srr,
pool, i;te.ps beach. 494-9.\36
l\fonth lo month Ren!al! TV & l\itchl'nettcs incl.
N!,wport Beach 3200 \Vide Selection l..iflf'n~ & m11id ser ai.t1il e \V.INTER RENTALS•
1 or 2 BR Furn. or unfurn.
Unusual rental• a1ain avail.
Yearly rates. Beaut i f ul
Play& Laguna Apts.. Pool.
l blk l!hopg oceRn & park.
From $175. Re!ire forever.
4!>1-4488 TOWNltOUSE: :I Bil. 21 i 100% PUROIASE OPTION Childrens & pet section ABBE\' REALTY
BA, trplc:, patio, pool. 2 24 hr, IJ:elivery 2376 NEWPORT BLVD. e &i2-3850e BACHELOR apt, light hskpg.
car gar, Ill! bltns, crrits. Cu~lon1 Furn1tun Rental 541-9755 BA YCLIFF MOTEL $90 mo., I adult. lJ31
drps. Lse: $775 mo. 8il-'!8ll 517 W. t9th, CM , 543-l481 SUS CASITAS * LO\V \VEEKLY P..ATES '* CataJina No. S t.vr.~.
or642-2497cvcsorwknds. l568\VLlnooln.AnhmTif.2800 Furn. 1 BR Apt!. Adult11 Kitchen, TV's, n1aid set\ice. t<t:NfALS
FOR Lease: New EastbluU ntE SUN NEVER SETS <WI only, M per~. 2110 Ne"JIOrt Heated Pool . Apts. UnfurnlthM
Condominium. 3 BR, 2\.i BA DAfLY PILOT WANT ADS! Blvd, CM, 642-9286 6t6-3265
$350. Nr. &ehool, mk1, pool, Gener•I 5000
tennl1 ct:I. Owner 644-4gJ4 Gen•r•I 4000 General 4000 Gener•I 4000 1.:::::::::..:::;:;;:;;;;;..;::=:::::::...1-=;.;.;.;c.~-----'-c:_;;_...=.::;..;;:__~~=====::..::.:..~~_;.:~1 EL CORDOVA * BLUFFS * NE\V ADULT AP'TS AVAIL
4 BR, 3 BA . Fm Rm, frplc, C./'i'Q-Q .£\"t... ( /)"C ~ Liu'&'e l & 2 BR Unlls !:. yd.,,;. ~in~x 2 story_ \:)~ J..'~ ~I--~ pq•s• Color coordinated kHchcn!I
LRG 1 BR. New crµt11, compl
redec. Re&p. Adults. 116.i.
470 N. Npt Blvd, &12-58.'il
1t 2 BR. near bench. no
pet:I. YN.r leW! $ 2 2 5,
monthly $250. 557-8400
J BR. 2% ha. town homP
Swimm\nc pool S28S t.1onth
Hal Pindlin Realtor 6Ta-4l92
NO. BUIITS: V1rw, 4 br,
lam. Al'!a, 2\1 ba. ~hlJJ,
pools. "temi11. S'3!15. 644--0215
Unlwnlty Park 32l7
2 an. 2 mu. • . . .. . . . $7T.i
:Z BR. 2 batt. •.•••••• S300
C BR. t~ • ••••• $340
l BR. 2 t. • . . . . • • • . . . • S2l5
! BR. 2 be • • • • • •.• • • • • • SJOO
3 BR. 2 bl ••••••·••: •• $350
' BR. 2 bl. • • • • • • • • • • • • $325
' BR. Eue-. Mme ••• , •• $S1!> e RED Hll.L REAL TY
Univ. Park C.eoter, Irvine
Cl.JI Anytime 8lJ.-OQI
NO mattn wn.1 JI I~. YoU
Tl featuring dl1po1al &. deluxe ne Punle with the Bui/I-In Chuclr.le dl•h~'""· o .. ,.,.,, d"P-
• "\':t',,~~s UTIERS IN I' r I' I' I' r I
6 u~~Rtrje~~~~E lETTERS j I I I I I J
l iT• j j I 1 A brldclaytr gott;rod of h;a -:::::=:::::::::::::..., otlnltnJ<tlctn fob; .. "" -rl llnhls -. l'·U
:zyo I .I' I 0 ~::::~~-=' LL -~ . . vou d...,,lop from lf'9P No. 3 .,."""'·
ery & ctrrpeting.
Complete rec center w/ pool
lt11ble, large rwimming pool
le outdoor bbq, Priv ruare
included. Rents: from $14\
207'7 Charle, C.M.
(1 bJk W, ot Harbor Blvd 6:
J.?amLlton). Call 646-21.lB.
$125-1 BR.. yrd, car. R/D,
wtw, child • pet ok. Active
Bier. 534-0980
* APARTldENTS * rum • Unfunl • rrorn S75.
BIUt! Bffcon. 645-0W Bia.
$Ll5 • PREF1l'D areL 2 Br,
RJO, •/w, drp9. Avl now.
Chldn'l/pel BkT. 534-e@O
SIOO
* D!:LUX!: * t.q t Br. -.pl. unf\Jm. Now
c:rpl:&, ntW drp11 thruout,
bltns, tep, dln rm. ~ El
Camino Dr. 546--04;)1
F~·~~~D~ ~~:...... _s_c_u __ M_·LET __ s_A_N_s_w_E_R~·-1_N_c_LA_._s_s1_F_1c_A_TI_o_N_•-+e-oo_
• LRG 2 l l BR. 1 R•fh~.
f'rJ!lc, hltnt. crpt11, 1lrps.
Enc.I pr .• patio. 3'16-l!XW
* DELUX!'.: J & 2 BR
Gnrden Apts. Blt-ins, pril'.
pa tio, heated pool, frplc.
.\dull«. Sl4:i nio. ~516:;
!\!Ofl. 2 Br, all elec, cpl!!,
<11-p~. (;('.; k1!, pin!' tree!!,
rn..:lil g>1r, nr hu11 $140
Adul!i::. i\lgT. J24 20th SI.
2 BR T11 nhse, l Y,i ba, new
rr-pl. drp.~. rcrlec. C11.r, pool,
AduJr ~. no J:l('I.~. SJ~ lease.
Avl 6/1. 54s-G607.
2 BR deluxe. Adults. Crpts,
drp.<1, bltn~. gar. Priv. patio.
549-0433. $165 mo.
I SPACIOUS 2 Br. I ~ Ba.
Pool. Kr. schl.s. $160 mo.
64&-z;Jl
LRG, 3 Br. crpts. drp&, 2
kids ok. $160 + dep. 2'.114
College. Ave , 646-0627
NR new 2 Br, 1% Ba, crp~.
drps, Blove, dsh11•hr, gar.
766 \\.'. WU90n, 641-79511
1 BR duplex. Large yard.
N.F.. CO!ita ~tesa $115 mo.
8..1S-7381
N•wport a..ch 5200
e NOW RENTING e
Beaut. new 2 Br. 2 bath units
w/qual. cpts, Ir drpe, Plan.
~ for privacy plUJ outskle
Uv . ~u, pool I: rec. facll.
Dbl. garaz111, ln the heart
of Npt. Bch. W/nlfJ acees9
lo shopping, bt-ach, fN'Y!.
f250 .. $300
BOYD REALTY
644.1617 675-5'>0
,; BAYFRONT
2 BR, 2 BA Luxul)' Apls,
Priv, terrace, devators, eub.
ten-antan pk'r , All elf'c.
Pool, IOl't water, docb. 3121
W. Cout Hwy, Newport. .... ..,,
l BR <>c.nfront "'-tr
duplelC" $250 yearly, Crpt:s,
drpa, blU.. 5009"' Seastxn.
Pat)(). iar. Avail June 14.
(213) 248-1921
\YATER.FRONT - 3 Br. 11~
Bii. Ira balcony, Vrly.
Adul1 ~. No pet.1. $263 .
Dial M2-65i8 tor RESULTS
ON BEACH!
e 2 BR l !h BA FROJ\.1 $23.l e 2 BR 2 BA J-"ROJ\.I $260 e .l HR 2 BA FRO:\! $360
pclc;. :!'.!:IO S. Center St.,
1 _s.~. Nr .\\'arnr~. 5-J:i...-09~9 ~m1_!-rop.rty 6000
Ligon• B .. ch S70S * 4 UNITS *
Carpcts-drape1-dish"·a~her \'EHY Nice ] BR. Beau!.
heated pool-uuna-1ennis ocean view, close to nice
rec room-0a-an vie11 5 be ach, Pvt. sun deck, v.·/w
p.aliO&-Ample parkin&. carpel!!., drps, underground
Security auards. gar. Rent or J~asc. 494-74-47
l-"'URN. also Avail. or 494-9633. l\lr. Brack.
HUNTINGTON REAL ESTATE
1·.1 Bdrm. &. .l 2-Bdrm.
Ea!'h 1l'lth tent'.'f!d-in back
)'ard. S:ime; tenants l to 5
yt.a1·s. Grossing $540 per mo.
A1king $51,000. Principal&
only. Call owner lor add,
in fo, Bkr. 645-0128
PACIFIC Genenl Bu·~~·~~-!'..~perty 6050
7ll OCEAN AVE .. 1-1.B. Jtent•1• Wanted 5990 ···or. • I fTI4) SJG.1"87 \;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1r · .,a e by ownrr, 7-uni t
Ofc. open 10 am-6 pm Daily modern :\1EDICAJ, DEN-
EXECUTIVE TYPE TAL CENTER. Good
WALK J blks to beach. Summer R•ntal Wantff return. goocl 11 r i t e -o ff .
AJmoet new Ira: l Br apt, For l\lo. 01 August Or }.[ore Con~ider hornr or '!' in
dbl gar, trplc, "'/Iv CJ1ll5, PREFER lra•le. Sre 5911 Hrd Ave.,
drps, dl'-·hr, 2 b;a., $225 mo. Lid•, On Be•ch, Bay H.B. Cal! 011'Tler <TI4.l
Chldrn ok. No peta. 536-1711 Or B•ck Bay 846-32'.!I e1•es. <2131 696-1810
2 BEDR..,lS, near beach, Cell W•ltah Clark riays.
newly derorate.d, b It n s, '44-0022 Builnesa R•ntal 6060
re t rig . I m med I a le I ~""!""!~""""!~~,.,.~·I -----" poaession. f\IATURE \VOJ\IAN E~J.
Tradewinds Rlry 84i·8511 PLOYED BY 0 RA N G E
NEAR lluntlngton Harbour.
Triplexrs. Quiet area. Lrg
l BR.. dlshwashrr. S\40.
I'rtll children ok. (213 )
592-2623, (TI4l 346-35.)9
BEACH BLUFF APTS
Ne1v 2 &. :I BR. p1!1011, pool,
View, d!shw;isht'T.
8231 Ellis. 842-8477
LOVELY NEW APTS
Nenr orean &. Lakr Park,
rli:::hwasher, patios, l k ~
bdrn1s. 709 Palm. 847.3957.
NEW U~tain 2 BR, &Un·
deck, fu lly crpfd k drp!'.
3 blks braeh 405 8th St.
$175 mo. 536-3592.
NE\\.', lg, '2 bdnn. duplex
10 blks. to be1eh. Crpt,
drp&., bll·in11. No pets. SI5'5,
(213) 439-9957
A TTRAC. 3 BR. Crpts, drp1,
gar, kid11 ok. Sl'T,j, Pool.
968-7510 or 8"7~5.
Sent• Ana
CO. tor 3 >TI "'ishe.~ lo
ttnt home. trom Jun"
6th-Sept. 6th. 673-0·104 afl
8Pi\l.
NICE fully furn. 3 or 4 ER.
hsc or apt. Ne\\l>Ort, (.';\J
area on yrly lease. Ha1·e
own bus~s.1 in a re 1 .
673-88iO
\V AAIED: Lease or rt>nt,
E~ec f.leslrrs l or 4 bdrm.
furn home, Lagu1101 Brh llJ
ltu nlln~!on Bch, to ~:1~10.
71 ·1: ;rro-g.1:;,1
C.)I. College Pk. AN'a pr~rd,
3 or .f BR, lea11e ok, Up
lo $200. Ne~ed June 1st
f>l:t-1448
YOUNG married cpl desire
sml hsf' \\'/ pr, unfurn.
NB, CM area. r.1'ax. $130
mo. 646-8693
NEED clean l Br-. tum. a pr.,
June 71-8ept, 7th for ma.le
domestic. 61=>-2101 itgt.
5'20
mJ""' U11..r
.A,-1-i.
s,..,.;.r. Style L•n.-y
J•l•-'-
TruroW.• -" Vaflanablal
""-'' un ••
HILLGREN SQUARE
2 storr.s avail . for imme.d .
lrasc in oil!? or city's bush~s1
shopping centeni.. App, 850
sq. ft. f'a,
2.~1, F.. 17th St., Costa tTeAA
Cal! i'>lr. Bram (ZlJI OL l-7700
STORE OR OFFICE
1800 or 1200 ~-ft. Parking.
Rea~onahle. 64S.2414
2630 Avon St., Newport
XLNT nppor. rnr arlist or
cra[t~mRn, Lag Br h, J un.
J11l, Aug: . 1'f",1son11.ble. 102(]
~. Coa~1 ~9-1-684~ a.m.
II-STORE -$110. 828 \V. 19th
SL, C:0.1. Avail June J.sl.
548-1768
Store or Ofc. 600 sq ft
In C.:-01. * 01\'nrr, 6~&.2130
Office Rental 6070
DESK SPACE
222 Forest A"enue
Lllguna Beach
49<l-9466 * OFFICE SUITE
Fo,· lease 2600 IQ'. fl. Ideal
location, dov."TIIOV.'Tl Laruna
Beath. Crptd, iW' • eond,
Janitor. UHI, Prlv dual rest.
rm fac. 4!M-9481
TOP quality office 1pe.ce , in
Cdi\f, avail 11ot 45c pe.r sq.
ft : Also Dental or 1\fedlca.I
!mite. Elevator .i janitor
11ervice. 2S5."i E. Coast Hwy,
CdM. 673-9131
DESK SPACE
'17875 Beech Blvd.
Huntington Be.ech
64'2-021, Ext 276
IKCOP.lE Tu ortlee on Har.
Blvd, Of ha! space avail
for R.E .. Jnsuranet'!, 1\t1gr'a
Rep, etc. For inlo call Qw.Ji17 .5M1 Cw~-•.a ,._,._.
l:.ttlll-. lal•tior o....,.. I 64>-0212
.,. ....... , .. ,.,..,. I: a-..
,.~ Dedi ......... _,
.Atr c-..llri•• ... •-"'11 ,_ 0..,,..... ...
ll..W1'~TJ'A..__
New ltentl"'
/M N-.tA ./ .J..1A C.-,,_
1000 IP. JIKArlltur Blod.
I W-.. ~-./ .,..,..,.,
Soni• Ane 54'>-8497
om CE I: APT, combo.
Rtstde A tonduct buslneM
both. Only $]45 mo. Crpts,
drpa, m.A Slh St., HB.
M&-LUS, 173-1784.
BAY UDO BLDG.
Air-cond, Bayfrnnt·VU
Secreluy-Xerox.Jan!tor
F"rom 171}4,000 lq. fl.
3700 Np! Blvd, NB 675-.2-464
OITICE OR STORE
1~ x 35• or 30 x 3.i'
oU 11 pk!nii Ir. utll furn
Newport le B11;y Centr r, CM
20j,2 Ne ... 11por1 Blvd 846-~
I
I
rr la.llJ M.llf "22 1970 DAILY PILOT 3 5
SERI/ICE DIRECTORY 'J1Jas-&'E;;M;.PL~o~v~M"l"'N"'Tcco.J0"'1"s"&0EM,LOYMlllT kEAL ESTATE t•--... --"!11--lf!ll--.'!'"'--.!!"fANNOUNCEMENTS SERVICE DIRECTORY I SERVICE DIRECTORY
G-••l 1f * * * •n<i NOTICES --'==::.:.._____ ~...;;...;.;..:;.;.;.;;..::::. ____ ICement, Coner••• '6001 Housecl••nlne •7lS
Offic• Rent1I 6010 I f. • Found CFrff Ad1J '400 TrN S.rvlc• '"' Jobs Men, Wom.. 7100 Joba-Mtn, Worn. 7100 _._c...;_;....._~~-~
TREE SE:RVlCE All type!
Lise &: Im. Free Eiitlmates
~
DEWXE 1-2 or 3 rm. sulle
nr. 0ra!lb>fl County Alrpl'lM
& Irvine Industrial
Coniplt:x. CarJl('t, drapes,
rnusiC'. ait-cornfitionin;: &
JaniloMal i;e,..,,.ice.
AVAIL.ABLE NO \V
BOB PE:rrrr. Realtor
• 833-0101 • --.... ~ .... _
CONCRl.TE, all l,ype&. F'rff
h."EYS lourld on beach ".1c· ~&tlmate. S.w!ng, bttaJun1:,
Ii!a.nd & Balboa. lnquitt hauling t. s k I p Io :ad l n c .
al oounter, Daily Pilot. 22:ll Service .l quality. 548-8668
Ba.Ibo&. N.B. Bob
Jo'OUND s111 . while dog 111 *CONCRETE Work ,
BiuHs, Sun 5/17. 644--1197 Lic::?ns~. Patio! f drvwyi;,
to identify etc, Phllllp1 C e 111 e n t •
\\'ATClt In plaslic container ~
w/kry. Va·. ~dison H.S.c =~o~~~C~R~ET=E~,,-.,~,.-al~l-1_y_1<_•·
96S-40Sl. Savdng, breakin&. hau ling,
COLLIE SkiplOM.di~: Llc. Service t.
HOUSECLEANING
Exp. Rn.. Ref. ~S
\VlNDOW 'YASWNG
COl\IMERCIAl. ., HOl'i.tE
Call Pele • .,,_Ull
Ironing
IRONING In my hamt, Sl
}Ir. Dttssmakin& Ir Altera-
tions. 545-7641
TREES, Hedge!!. trtn1. l':UI,
&lump~. removed, hllu.led. 30
yn e:-rp. Fully in1. 6-12--40SO
CZYf\OSKl'S Custoin. Uphol.
European Cralt.~n11nship
100•/o fin! £.12-lt;}ol
1831 Newport Blvd,, C.i\I.
BOYS 11 • '4
Can-la ,.,., ... Opn .,
.............. So. t.aruno
OAll.Y Pll..Or
6<l-4J1I
DENTAL C HAIR S IDF.
A~STANT. Pre11Mxl.1 ex·
perience Is requirtd. Call·
>16-2·1JO
DISJl\1,'ASllF.H • P11lmctt11t
Convale.5cent -Hoapltal,
1307a Blackbird St., Garden
Grove, 837-3863.
PRIVATE OFFICE
Shai; <"<u·pcts. phonr., drsk &
file. l\lodcrn, clean. fllesa
Verclt' Prof. Bids;:. $60 n1onth
1neludrs all ut1lil1es.
Jin1 \~'ootl ':i.li;..;)991)
Whaddy1 W11nt? Wh11ddya Got?
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Speciel lt•te
Approx. 7-8 lll06. old, Quality.·&12-1010
5-18-17~ ~twn 2 I: 5 DECORATIVE OONCRETE
lo1t '401
DRIVES.W Af.KS.PATIO
CAU.. DON, 642-1514
MORE Coacre.te patio !or
REWARD F'or return of less money. Artislic :selling. ladir.~ 11'allet. losl \Yt'd. Ur., call P.tflJ! •I 644-0687.
rhorn. j/'.!'O. ~ea d c r s h Ip CEi\JEl\'T \VORK. no . b 100 ho111e tra<"t, F •. of ~_lag11oJ1a. Smalt, reasonahlr. )0 ~ ~ladE"lauir i\iadel1nl" or E f JI St tr k 518-86!.
\"ork1011n to Carheld 1nu·1 __ .s ~ · ':!. ~ --"
IRONING ·steadies only 2Qc
ea. piece, Pick up il del,
jOc ea. \vay. 646-9.3.53
67'0
J & J UPHOLSTERY
Integrity I\" It h An1erican
know . how. 642-M76 or -
BUYER For the. Capistrano
Unified School 0 is tr I c t .
l'llust have expcrlencr in
purchasing. Stnd letter of
11pplicaLion to Olreetor of
Personnel, C ap l atr a no
Unified School D i atr iet ,
:.'Gl W Vi ctoria Blvd,
Capr~traoo Bf'ach, Calif.,
~72 beJore June 15, 1970.
Civil EnginHring
Mapping
Draftsman
DJSJl\\IASJIER, graveyard
shift. Cottage Coffee Shop,
562 W. 19th St., C .. \f.
OOJ\1Egr1c -11;1P s20 a day.
Adlt family of 3. DovPr
Shore11, N.B. Jlousccleani~
Ao ironing, 3 day1 v.·k. Mu.~t
be dPpendable &: bondab~
have 01vn tramp. :>-18-7765
OOto.'UT LADIES "''anted, 25.
4j. No exper. nee, J\IR
DONt..rl', 135 Jo:. 171h, C.M.
Modern Offices 5 LiMS -5 times -5 buck1 Cl.EAR Vu J\laintenarice. \Ve
do "verything! Specla.lizi11g
ir apt cleanup. J.'rtt est, 2~
h1· scrv. 646-2698
Weldlna _____ ,_,,_s ltU\.l!S -AD MUST INCLUDE
S7:J sin~!e. $175 2 nn suite.
Air cund. Seer y serv1('(',
parking, Ct>ntrally locatl"i:I.
So. Calif 1st Nal. Bk. Bldg.
I-~ .,..,, "'" .. ...... ~., JtJlo ..... In tr••·
1---TO\Jll _,. ,.,._.. -·· •4 It.Ms o1 tl••r111Mla. ORANGE COASI' S-MOTHll'IG l'OR SALi! -TltA011!:5 ONl 'l'I \\'E:LDING 5ERVICE
Ge.ne1·al 11·elding, I r a t 1 e r
hitche~. brake servicr. &·
wirinJ:. Custotn 1notorcycle
& ear trailers. G;,.s, electric
anll hcli-arc. After hourio;
and $011. by appoint. 1817
J"ullerton Ave., Costa illeu .
J.IS-7173
2'.lO 1::. 17th S!J~I
To Piece Your Trader"1 PeradiM Ad
PHONE 642.5671 ~ndtc•pint ,.,0 e J\TUST BE
*DRIVERS•·
No Experience
Necessary! Coola l\lcioa 642·1~85
DESK SPACE
305 No. El C •mino
Sal'I Clemente
492-14~
Real
Best location in CdM
800 10 l 'l(JO sq. fl. D<-Juxe Off.
f<'t' S11aces. Aval! !mined.
Phone 011ner. fj.12.9!J:xl
2 Nc\1 rr dupte.-...es, side by
s1dr; J Br . 2 Ba ea.; fplcs.
Nr. beach. Equity approx.
$27.000. Trade for land or
indust. Realtor 673-43:xl.
8 DLX. uni!s close to Hot.
lywood Park'. All ren!l'lf.
S38.000 E!1uity; Jor h<HlSl',
land nr incon1r .
01vm•r fi7:>-62~1!l
LOVELY N-:-s. Bldg has of-Boar. 20' Century Bay cruis-
lir.(• i;u1tcs ,t,. ground Lilnl· er. rrfini.~hed inside Ji ou!,
n1rrc1a! space avail. TRADE ~·oR const:ructkin
67:>-J3.'ij lumUcr. :?x4's, pl,V\VOOli, et•~
NEV.'PORT Br111:h Deluxe * 548-9661 *
Offices. A1r-rond., heated, BEAUTI1''UL ENGLISH 6
11•/ pnv ba. 2·100 \V. Coast Rl\I Home near Pasadena
H1vy. ro.-N.B .• CdM, C.i\1, Duph.•x
DESK space foi· ,. r. 11 1 : or units. Home value $29.500
8t"CJad1v3>'. CM . Reas . can 1 ""~'-"_·._c_'a_ll_><_S-8_53_2_. __
incld. ph. Call n1orn1ngs, Clean "67 Tempest V-8.
6·'6--0333 Auto., PIS. SI.JOO. \Vant
OFFICE space~. heating S: newf'r ca1'. NO impor!s or
air rontlirloning. plcnly ol n1a11uuJ shirt. 673-1569 after
parking. AtlJacen! to SeC'ur-~'or Saiurday all day.
ily Paci ll<' Bank. 188 E. Prime 3 Store con1. C.~I.
lith S1. C.7'.f. 6.12-4210 01vnr Ore. bound -lrd for
SJl,\RF.: 2:>1J ~q fl. r·urn &
U111's. Air . l\1usic. \V('S\cliff.
s1:1. 6~2-381 1
NO. C.i\1, office, r1icc. Prof.
Air-rond, cpts, 1111~. S79 ca.
6~G-1R3.1: aft 5. S.17-47;,7
Industrial
Pro~t"y ___ _;60l_o
r-,1.1, ,; RENTAL$ on Placrn-
1ia /lvr, C:lt. S1nall dov.·n.
Sfi9.~{l(). Call n1ornings
6-16--0J3J
Commercial 6035
vac. land. \\'ill carry 1st TD
Call 545-842~ South Coai;t
Relil Esta1r.
fl.Frame cabin, Big Bear.
:l Br. cpt~. bltins. v1e11·.
Jq1lc, ~~,300 or mort• <'rr : For
~n1. "iinils. h~o. ('tr, Call now
lr1 ·~ dt'aJ. 968-:1.-,97.
\V lLL TllADE to irrlgatrd
acres in J.lernct ,v/:l 1'en1als
for Orange County incon1e
propt"rty.
Call 1714) 962·Z:xil
!\1cintosh 240 amp, 1'>'1 R65B
tuner, Cl pre-amp. Ampl'x
1200 tape rec, JBL 001 spkr!ii
C..i3 ('ncl, Sl 300 val/boat
PRf:\·JE OCEANFRONT or ~ 67J-76&1
I rurnishrd unils, mncrl co1n-
1nrrcial. :ljx12j, S!i!l ,:iOO . Sharp 71,.· Sailing dinghy.
Ownrr 67~-:l2.-i!I. 611-:,972 comple1r. Tradf' for 11'
--alun1. Srn1i V fishing hoal t.l/IHINA In N1•11•por1 Beach 11•1111 rnotor.
" hich p111cn1:al t i1.·1.000 fall ;1;,j.6~.iOi
1..;JNGAAHO RE i\11 2.22'121 ",----,~~=--=~ llavP 4l)x40 Bldl!. on 6J1:x
f'OR LEASE: J2:..0 ~fl tt. :.>,RO !\1-1 In!. Want vac11n1 1
nPar Nr1vport Fnvy . &l8 acre C-1 or rcsiden<:e 111 Or-
Baker SI., C.!\f. :-~-17-79.'l.'i an~e Co. P.ay Gault, Hrn-
Indus trial Rental 6090 tagc Real Estate, 540-JJ:jJ
l111portanr caJ'tls, r ! e. DISTH.~U ISl!f:D Concrete
\\•anl Cn•cnbrirr Bu~ <lr 96&-2927. design patios, \1•alks &
:i;1mtlar. \\"Ill u·ade above . . driveway~. Gary 493-lOlS
book 8~ a cr«fil on 2~1 LOSf: Mtxed-Ten1cr puppy, I ~=========
acres nr. Paln1 Sp""'s. Ba.I. \Vhllr. b!'tl\\'fl spois & he,ad, Contractor• '620
·o 'l'hiskered face . Needs med. ----------payable $25 mo. 5J&.1131.
00!\r!\fERClAL prup .. frl'r a!t'n. Vie. Monrovia & ROO;\l A.D::IITJONS. t.. T.
SUnse1, C.711. R ewsrd Construction. Family
& clea1·. Next to &ars, C0-612-2696. J'OOni s, single or 2 :story.
·inJ; S6:'>,000 cquit.v. For C_H_O_CO_LA_T_E_p_, __ S ____ I Estio1a.tes. planl!. layout &
LICt:NSED landscape. 1>0n·
lractor. Complete :iicrvicc.
9fi,l!...J928 or 64G-8247
Moving & Storat• 6840
LOCAL &: long dist. moving.
Reas. storage. free t:st.
83 1~1 , O.K. Van &.
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Job Wanted, Men 7000 hllUS(~ units or land • lll.me~e Oin;,.r 675_62;,9 · cat, ~ltered ma!('. last seen financing. Call 847-15lL ___ f;):pcr. SKIPPER _ Eng _
1vf'ar g l.D. nr Adanis & Add ition.~ * Remod('!ini p · -il1aintenance, on a!I type.
Storai:e.
\Vant clelill late n1odel van. Bushard, tlB, RE\\''ARD! F'rcd H. Ger.vlck, Lie. ainting, or yacht. NEED 1~·ork.
Au!o, pi s. 1>/b, pop iop. Jou-962-2137 673-00U * 5'19_2170 __ P~•~P~•-'h=•~ng'-"in~g,__6~1"-'50 I ~'~"~""'=·!~.;======°'
vcn:-d i1'lndo1vs. Trd gr! in-O~LD--.-.,-,-li-,1-,-,-h,-,-,-.-,-g, * PAINTING INT & J.:XT. ~~me ~u~cshdi~~~osta black & \\"hire, AKC reg .. C•rpet Cl•anint 662S Averg. 1 sty $260. 2 sty
esa. as · · 51., mos. rem .. 11!! shots. S,.'\;J(). lurl all material &
JobWantff,
Women 7020 'frade clear lot v.· I beaut Name Sasha. IS ILL . :;.rn.I) ~ p~paration. Sl8. per rm +
oct"an vtc1v in Laguni1 for REWARD. 49-1-3436. ~~ -~ paint. Local rels. Call Jack \rANTED: A (Rmi!y l\'ho
units .. sn1all 101 C.f-1. or GRAY 111ale ..,.,.,1-.,-,,'-w-/-b~l,-r " .. -··· 119-1-3895 or 837~ nttd!i a. rf'sponsible Collrge
bm'I WE ' •• ,,, •• ~ CARPET "'1rl lo live In t· holp su · · ....,.,_ my~, l! r• Id nd CUSTQi\{ Pain!'"" • 0 '1'he ., Rltr. 6'1&39'Jli or &12-2237. com•d•,.~,1 .. !..e~a;.' 0RE'iv"AR 'o'.· STEAM CLEANED M"' \\"/housr\.\-nrk, babysit etc. ,_ ...... , Exferior-lnterior Specialist'" Cas11andra 51:>-1178. E. J7U1 SI, 10 desk Rltr11. off-49-1--4:& or 646-1424 10c SQ. FT. Residential • Commercial. ~=~~---~--
icr , fur~. equip & sign, $3500 L.Q:,J; Yellow & Green AJso carpet lnslallation No job 100 large or too AIDES -for convalescence,
f.p.; \\ant camper, ~ravel Parakeet. bronze leg band. 646-5971 small Lie. Bond. Ins, \Von'! elderly cu,rr or fan1 ily care.
trlr, lot, T.~; or submit. CC Vic. of Calif. & Oregon St, REl\fARC Services. 3 room~ be underbid! 64&3679 Homemakers. 547·G681
Doyle rutr. 543-llGS. C;\l. :>-J!J.-3489, ~2J !21.50. J.~uu gual"an. Credit NEED your yard revamped? EXP"D, rellablr \\'Om an
~ Units, l \\"ith J Bdrtns. GERO\fi\N Shepherd, male. card~ OK. 847-6688, 646-1234 !louse need a new roat? \\'ants gen'I. oHiCf' pos!Uon J::x~hang<' for mob1l home, black &. silver, blu<" palnt HOi\fE & APT Cleanina: Tht> Peninsula pa.int and IWG-2134 eve. or \\'eekcnd.
FORTIN ,co ... ReaH_or!! 011 rump, .• 5 tr id e r••. BY DIAMOND yard designers arc on call. DENTAL HYGIENIST
1711-C \' estchH Dri,·r 6~6-3798. 187 21st St., Coi;ta ~tesa 673-9!'1:14 -ref. Avail May 11-26. ;140-1481
Ncv.'J)Ort Beach 64.2-5000 LOST: GREEN '\'ALLE'f& 64:">.-1317 Free !;_~_I __ l ~IORY Sturco &. overhang
. ~7000 VALUE ehec:k bk. Approx. J.100 blk STEA7'.f Jet carri:et clcan_ing. $!19. 2 story stucl'O & Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 2~: Al'n~s Clrar Coast l\lvy, N.B. RPward! Cl11.rl\arr n a 11 on -w 1 rl e O\'f'rhnng $149. Acst. cr.iling
Fl11gs1ar1, Ari-;;ona Call 832--007·1. srrvlcr. Fr,..e r:-1. G42-10J.i $1 J. 11f'r rm Min, l rm~.
f'or LU!\'Ury Car Or ~ 646--0:171 &. ti37-6119
11 G-1-1-&ISR • Sll_ELTIE I BcaglP , n1 a Ir, f•ncing 6660 No \V,.01,.,. abilities
unlimiteo
agenc;v
. . tr1--color. n1ost!y b!k. 1 yr, ------" •
:i6Chcv2!13 rebltcng,sl1cks Blk collar &· fll'a coll"r RED\VOOD & ·t link *WALLPAPER*
·03 Ford PU 4-sl'(l ov ~nadrd Vic: Collrgr. l~ark . .54()..609..I: fences licensed \.~~:;~c.ctor \\'hen you clltl "Mac··
srn anl1qtU' UJl!'llt' piano -' . ' 5'18-1-144 ;>49-0449 \V 1 r _ 54(}..~'"'9 .,..,361 TA N Col\le/Boxer, 4 n10 old lrer est, Iast ser v1c~. an UJn. ,~,.,, u.J • ,1 V-" .,._.729 Ling Dr. S.A. JJrs. pup. \'IC ' esa eaue area, ...,..
.3625 E. Slauson Ave, 101 . Gardening '680
12'2'xt20'. 1600 sq 11 bldg, Person11ls '405 '-------
i\fon. Rewan:t! 546--0577
inr. lsd SSOOO. Clrar. Ideal AL'S GARDENING
for <lepn-•·. S.'~:i.000. 01\·ncr. for Profl'ssional Gardening
Trad('. '19!J.2:j34 *Al ne .. &. smal! landscaping
b I 0 ~ scrv1C'es rail 6-16-3629 nflt>i 160 ac Hl\'f·t·sidr. n10 1 r •
t; nm. Serving Ne"·1»r1. horn<'. 7.0ncd. .s:~ ac. Cd~!. Col'ita '.\1('sa, Do\·er
lr;i(tr all or part Only 3 Yr~. ir!I your lault. ~·or rr. Shores, \\'rstcllH.
OH cctll('I' Rh·t'l"Sillt•. t"Ord!'d ml'SS81i(P lhal \l,'JIJ -199--2.l~·t change your 111r. * LANDSCAPING *
J()() llP i11endocino Co .. 100
1111 north S.f·., l1r11.vil.Y trr1•d
xtrran1 Trade for housP or
.ap1s. Clear.
•19:9-2:l:'A
f'all Nr1v Lawns 171 ~(· Sii 11. Free
;.17.6(i6i dr:-ign~. Do 1d l ur part ynor'-
'.'·I llr. FlNcord11111: l'f'lf. Hocolillini::. Lir. •'Oii·
-. FULLY LICENSED * tral'!or. J2 yr:r; JO(•aJ rxp .
Renownt'd Hind u Spiritualist. _5_3_o_L_'2_:.. ______ _
2 College students Will pain!
a.vrrage 3 BR ext. lor $14:1.,
including labor &. malt'rials.
Call Stevl", 548-4549
TRISH HOPKINS
4!!8 !:::. 171h , Suite 224 C.l\f.
642-1470
EX-PAINTER, now sc h I ADULT For lltr houst1\'0rk
tracher will paint eves &: & rotnpanion fl)r \J yr old
1\knd11. Xlnl 1\·nrkmanship, inrl. v.•kda~'~. Q\\•n lran~I'·
Frrl' ~sl. 646--(.;19. ~2 Call 962--0396 a.rt 6P~1.
METICULOUS-PAINT: Anlbitinus g, l·lard11•ork1ng
Bl.lJE CHIP STAi\IPS. INS i\lrn ,t: \Vo111C'11
•Tew l'nl. sruden1s. Int-rs! 1:.00-.SIOOO/mn
housr!I. Exp, Docks. 67:!-!'.Sl~ T01H Alk inl>nn 61:....c:ll)~
l \\'ILL ~iiiia-J-Wrm A1tT l ~,--T-;-di:.play-•\O~k
hnu.~r for $1:)(), incl lrhn, pl'ofe-ss1onll.l or no11 pro.
stt1cco, labor k material. fe-ssioniil. 962-5HH af1 :1.
l;cne. :-i.'17-7543 or ~9082. A°ITR ACTTVE GfrL~-rOr
EXPERIENCED e
llealth, accident and life
insurance, vacation, SaJ.
ary open,
Only experienced persons
call lor appointment.
ARROWHEAD
ENGINEERING
CORP.
:i98 North r. S~et
San Bernardino, Calif.
1714.) 889.3674
* Ceahier * LocaJ ofc. needs nice appear-
ing girl Friday. Lite typing,
Outsranding opty. G nod
working conds. Many benfs
+ profit sharing. To $42J,
Call Gloria Kay 54(J.60:-~•
COASTAL AGENCY
2700 llarbor Blvd., C.\l
CAR WASH HELP
Perm. Position. l\lany open-
ings. 3 Localions Orange Co.
29.10 Harbor Blvd .. C.?11.
CARPET cleaner &. helpe.r
\\anted. Exp'd helpful, full
lime. Apply Stram J\lasler
Carprl Cleaners,, 147 E. 17th
SI., C.i\1.
-CLERK-
PRooucTION
CONTROL
L.OOKJNG for bright gil·l "''ho
likes 1vorkirti with tlgurcs.
Will type invoices, process.
purchue orders, use. car-
dex, add. mach. .t. calc.
Exp. rqd. Good oppty. !or
advancement, $400/mo. lo
start.
f.1ust heva de.an Callfomia
drlv\nc re<!Ord. Apply
YELLOW CAI CO.
13' E. 16th St.
Cosla Mesa
DRJVER: Pllimc, over 2l.
Neat appearance. Aplly Mr
I: Eds, -110 E. 17th St.,
C.:\t .
Earn $50-$400 Wk, ·
Selling I. lo 8 h~ a day. :
f\len-\\'omPn J8 I:. up. 548-3271 :
e ESCROW
OFFICER e
Po8ilion avallabl~ in our
Cc..<;ta l\lcsa. olli<:e lor ~r
sonablr, 11·ell·groomed, ma.
lllrl!' individual. Mini mum J
yrs. sale escn:nv and loan
processing experience re.
quired.
XLNT. FRINGE BENEFITii
Plea.'>f' i:a l! Rod Le\\•I~
/or 11ppo1ntincnt. ~714)
642·-171 1.
-GLENDALE-
FEDERAL SAVINGS
181.l NEWPORT BLVD,
COSTA t.IESA
Ei\tPLOYl\IENT openinp •
\VhisUing Oyster Rf!llltaurt. .
16903 AJgonquin St., H.B.
Only apply in person, Sat,
Sun, '1 l'llon. from 10 a.m.
XL.NT. working 1>0nd., all Busboy -\\'a1trcss -
fri11gf' benellt1 in('l. prolil I cd~\,~hc•c·'cslc"c'~·_..:c'~:..::"'~·---
~haring. EXPERIENCED WA ITERS
California \\'AITRESSF:S BUSBOYS
Injection Molding Apply Ren Bro11.·n'.• Rcslau-:
~'00 Briggs A\·~ .• C.i\1. rnnt. 31106 S. Cs!. ll"Y., So
~1rv1nf' lndu111rial Con1plrxl Laguna,
CL.~RK-TYP1 ~7 in public *-f':XPE_R_l_E_N_C_E_D_.-,-lo_l_d,-"
accountant o/lir~. Bkkpg. anrl Bondt'r~. Apply,
kr.owlerlge pref'd. J\lu~l be W . D. SCHOCK CO,
(IV 3:i. 518-7040 for tntv. 1102 S. Grcenvillt, S.A. ' Advice on all niatt l.'r.~. NE\V La\vn5, re-Ht~cding.
IMO ,.. II r r II .. * * * * * LoyP, J\ilarriaJ:C, Busi~:, Complelc la1vn Ca.I~. Clefln
"'"' .~1 or 01~. a [i~!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!f!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!i"l~!!!!!!!l!!l!!!!!!!!!!!I!!![
PAINTING-Int. & Ex I . pltline work. Musi br 18
liighl'st Quality. Lowest or· ovrr ~·o.-,: Sn. Co11.~1
PricPs. f'utly exp. Ins. John Plaza Thrall'e. 3410 So.
·-• COLLECTION \V 0 R 1,; .
E.~Pf!I'. 5 days a wk. J-7
PM, for five 8urgrons. Call
6'6-AA24
Femal•
Readings glvrn 7 day~ a op by job or n1on1 h. Fn:~ ro11rr, in snioit-frrr i.Ai"'una
U1•;1ch .191-4,111 ° REAL ESTATE BUSINES~ and v•eck. 9AM·9Pi\1 312 N. El cslin1atrs. f''or info ca.II
General FINANCIAL Camioo Real. San 897-2417 or 8-16--0932
673-1166 BrilltoJ, C.l\.L *COOK*
* * * .. • • --------~-t N TE R fir E.-,:!. PAINTING. BABYSITIER. ~xprr. need.
Nc.>11· 3800 sq ft.
Nc1vpor1 B<'ath
S.11'.3 mo.
6-12-J-IS.l
c1cn1entr. 492-9136, 492-0076 ROTOTILL ING
R. E, Wanted 6240 Investment * Newporftr Sauna * Nc\V Ja w n s, landscaping.
Opportunities 6310 For J\fcn & \Vomcn Shrub~ &. lrer.c; removed.
li\11\fED. SERVICE. Local I'd for II nio's bahy, your
rct F"REE est. 5-18-1627 homr-, 6 da.v wk. Costa i\tesa.
30 DAY .Special Int & Ex1. aN'a pref'd. Cal all 6
Fr<'" ~~•. Loe rrfs, tic.'d pni/646--0172.
COSi\IETICS Plrasr .1pply In per!Qn
How i\tuch~ Sparetlme, Ho1v
muci1~ s; to S? hrly. How! Driv ... ln liquors
Lots 6100
BAYCREST
Only " fr1~· l1kr this 0111• Jr/I
. SZG • .JOO
Jean Smith, Realtor
.JOO i::. l71h SI., Cns1a
641>-32!5
i\lrsa
Res ponsible Party
Wants to Buy
Jlouse or incon1c property
On or near 11.·a1er
For low 001\'n paymt
front 011'Tlf'r
Ca 11 : 675-8575
BUSINESS and
FINANCIAL
Busine1s
Opportunities 6300
:llESA Vrrrle In! on .col[
t'OHr,,. "1rh \>1r11 S~l >11() A:I! ·"'·l!i"g niy Bus1nr!I.~
Nr!'d 1·a.'h, n111~1 srll b<'1nr" Canv:i$ sllvp. JuHy equip-
,Jul,1 s, 1970. \\'ill <'11rrlully flC't!, :! pwr eush1011/can\'a~
r111t,1d1•1· ,11 1 o(f"r' C:ill 1n11th111ri;, J II\\( s1uhnak1n1::
1ill1 f,:::l-'}.~~1.1 r\! J~8 Qf n111t h11w. l1ihl(•.;, 1·11riou~
1711 1 ~~L1-72"J."i. olhrr ll)oll,, lloo1· 1!P['krd
CdM
'~ Blk Dr.'lc:h, :! ;ulj. r~.J
IOI<: ;Hl 111(' h'<' /I i;:!
Ann Co.Lt-., 1ii:1.)l!J,~~ OJ'
67:>--l!l:'UI.
Acreage 6200
:; /IC, lrvrl \\'/ xint v1r11·.
I 111 li·1~rst prirC'(I pnrr·rls
It\ 1U'('il, Nt•. Rny HnJ:t'I'',;
Inn $6.llX) 1rrn1s. 673-Ufi6
Bkr.
\1ro~i;c~ :ipprnx $l :i,OOO )'rly .
S(iOOO or h<'sl nff<'r-13000
du" n. tia lanl'r <Ill
rir rcC'n1:•.cr. /lllh11
&1&-102·.
gross
/\Ur11.
--.--,--,,---A-I Oprr1111ni; ~T a nage r ~
w 11. n ! r rl rnr au1on1ate-d
rhildrens' 16 mm oolor
Thra1t>rs in or ncar shopping
rrntf'rS. !\lust havr firm
finii.ncial N'ip()nsibility. Call
or 1\Tite Crlebrilles lnlerns-
lion.1.l, 213. 461-4111. Suite
106. 1800 N. Highlarwl,
,R:.:.:•~··~·~•_;_Pc•c•P~•cr~tv_:__c62co5~1 -1_1,_11~y_.-_ood_._c_,~"~1·~"'°-".·--
1· COIN LAUNDRIES
LA!\F; AllRO\\'J{EAD ~S~iOO Frigidaire
niovr5 you into brautHul 4 Front $6500 to $37.500
\1·/all modern ronvrnirnc-cs, e Buena Park e Fullerton e
Incl S~.000 \\'OrH1 of 11('\Y lurn. Cyprc"~ e 'Vestmin.,rer e
& draprs. Ahio dishwashrr, IIuntington Beach e Carden
disposal. blln va c uum, C:rove • Orange e Santa
Ai\1/Fi\f iri!cr--com in r11.. Ana e Costa Mesa • Ana.
r m. Call J4G-1867 fl r tw.im •
c54~8-6_7_°'~·-'-'-"-·-----1 CAL.l. CHARLIE 525--7833 BE/IUTl1'0UL Nor1hcrn Calif.
acreage in Modac Nail.
Forest, C&llfomla Pines.
i\fu st sell. S2fi0 do#n $35
mon!h. 646-1~187 a rter 6:00
P.M.
I.IVE nv BAY
SUnique Jn,•estmnt Oppor$
Yields 10% up to100% return
In only 5 yrs,. Invutmentt:
backed by i;e\etted income
properly in So. Calif. For
details, write Box 4501.
Irvine 92fi&I
Br furn co11ag!'.! S7:i \1'k. CLEANING Bay11horf' Park.. 112 \V. Service; a 11
Pacific Ci;!. ll\\'y. 64~...(.666. rquip. avt1i1.. new truck.
S4~j,jjl Desire working partner with
small Investment. Call col·
Out of Stat• Prop. 6201 lee!: (7141 327-7180 AIL 5
P:\1.
msFUL L PRICE , .................... ...
" Ac1•r Pinr Tri'r Cover<'tl S STATION
Ca.bin s ue \V Roari. Short BEAUTY SALON
.,.wk lo 2 lukri;. Surr1>unded t•or Len~ Or Sell
by Nat'J Forest, So. Oregon. J."11r lnfomiation
Only 3 Avail. 644--41115. Call 612--6523
Mountain & Desert '210
l t,t M11 .• ES l.rom Vtdlf'y·Hi
l. nt>1v J.lilton J-loti:-1~
$.l000,000 Inn. 10 /le., l<'v"I.
$6.77S J.~uu p1'H~f'. 1r1ns. Bkr.
RJ8-RTR:1
DAIL V-PIT .OT -\\'ANTAO~~
Dial &12--5678 A-ch11ri;e il.
GREAT food &; malt &ho p
open.ti-On for la.le to rll(ht
par1y, UCI C.mpu!, C.ood
busint>B& nn1v -f11.ntaJ1tic
growth. J5000 dn. Contact
Dan. 8,~2•70
5 C::OOKTJ.:: VENDING
c:hlne~. l\fud M>ll!
. \7:;..r,tM~
m•·
-:.!:::.;.c.;.:.::;.:;.:::...._..::.:..:1 Professional Fcmalr St11ff Frcr est. :>-18-1742 e HORSE LOVERS e N I H t I -~-Call !10\\1 893-5842/894-1112. 706 OCEAN AV~.
ewporttr nn o • Al.0S Landscaping. Trrr Invest 11C11v in beautiful Rd NB ~-----~----&· ins. Call Chuck 64:>--0809 B/IBYSITIER. lire housr Luzier, A <..'O of Bristol-f\fyer l!UNTTNGTON BEACH , ............................ , 1107 Jaml.IOrcr , . . rrn1oval. Yard rrmodf'hnR". l'Omm'I stahlr ro he buill in &14·0960 Tra~h hauling. lot cleanup. s.·una Ana Ht ~ Ui<r permit
a.JIO\\'S 2.1 box· ~tall~. bull TIIEP..APElITIC LJSTEi\"11\G Hepair sprnklrft. 67'.\-IJ6G
pt'n rithng art'na & spccta-lnt:lud<'s hslening !o and NEAT .\:. n:-liablc. 30 yr"!
1or
0
patio. 673.:n;19 rliscussion of )'~ur life . s1. exp. Co1nplc!c yd srrv.
_ lua11on. Fnr 1nfom1at1on Con1ml. 642-43.i!!I
Money to lo.n 6320 call 5-16·7627 8·10 evenings. JAPAN~SF. c·-,-,-.c-,-,-,-,-,
• A LCOHOl.ICS Anonymou~ S(>rv1cr i\ea! work. Cleanup 1st TD Loan Phone :>12-7'.?17 or 11'fttr lo yd main!. fl611·2:10.1
P.O. Box 1223 Cos.ta :llc~a. CLEAN-UP S°'PF:ClALI ST
l!'. INTEREST SERVICE DIRECTORY i\1011·111~. c<lg111g, •J{ltl i•1hs.
2 d TD L --·~ Rras....nahle. :~9.·)~• n oa n Babysitting 6550 1 /YAHD Car" . relial>lr.
T b I · Cnlll'll;P .~ludf'nt CAii all !"1 f'rm s asf'i un <•qu1ly. \\'EEK-F.ND b11bys1\l1ni.; & ~!G-!":o 90 ·
P AINTING. Ex!.-lnt, 18 yrs. keeping, :I days wkly. I in-
rxpcr, Jn~. Lie. Free es!. ran!, 01\·n !rans. G42--63ti6
AecousL Ceilings. ;..iS-3:12:1. eves &-w~'"~d,_<_. ----
YOU Supply Th,. Paint. :l llABYSfTIER w a nt , d •
Br, Liv R~I & Kif('hrn 7:30--5:00, $30 1 \\'ee:k, Baker
Pain!rd. s.·i0. Call ~i.17-86.18. & Bri~tol, 5;;7-8782 a!! 3
RETIRED Paintrr: 26 yrs
f'.'fprr. /\'rat & honrst. Non
drinker. Call 536-6.Wl ----~-PAPER H1\NGJNG
20 yr~ ":-:P. f'rer c.qtima1r.
Call K"i!h anytimr, 642-2~'°9 * PAPERHANGING
!.· PAINTING. * ~242i
p.n1.
BABYSITIEP., llvr in. 11
work. Spani~h OK. C~l .
;,1:,..9983 or :>1~~723
&42·21 71 S4S-061J 11·k days alt 6 p.111. Avail.~·~" "'·.----S<'IV[tl~ llnrl;or ar•'.1 21 yn;, 1\l~ninrial Day ,, k -end . JJ;>.l'S Gurdcnh1g If· lawn ~ting, Sig~~68S~ BAB,'SITIEH--. -·1;~;-1;.
Sattler Mortgage Co. 6-llrli218 niaintcnanrr. Re~. & con1-CUSTOi\-1 SIGNS -Jnrloor
BARYSITrF.fl wanled, R-li
J\lo n 1hn1 Fri. L.akr f'orr~1
area. 83o-1993 alt 6 pni.
BABYSlri"Ellror Sn1 t., Sun,
,, hi'~ 3 day ~Ty hilmr.
\\'ill plrk up &lZ.OSZ!I
tW. E 17!h Slrf'rl LOVING t<lrf' :iour ('h1!{it l'n mcrciaJ * 5'10-48,Ji ~ Outdoor magnc!ir, rtr.ct De~pl'rall'! Hm & Bowrd
0 G rl SlOO mn. (C.~f.) 83~1667 ·~-1ny ho1nr, H.B. Day &·/or PR F'. ar tnf'T rslhl lgr & quanlity di5cOu nt!i. S~>. !o
Collateral Loan1 6335 nitr. By hr-day-11·k. 963-6746 rL Rra.~.. r x p ' d & $10. Rl>-3:'93 * Back Ofc. G irl *
------. kno,vledi.:rahtr.rr.fs-fi4:1-2i:i4 for bu~y Dr.'~ ole. Ttnific NF:\VL.Y lie. Brnkrr will buy BABYSITTING 111 my Mn1c. . -·---opty & plt>aRanl 1nlrround-
**COOK
APPLY JN PERSON
REUBEN'S
COCO'S
~6-17 l\tAC ARTHUR
NE\VPORT BEAO{
COO l'-Exp t'r . nP c,
Pa Im r r <:st Convalesetrit
I losp1!al, J:ID7:i Blackbird St.
Gnrdrn Grovr 8?.7-3863 '-"''--••cooK TRAINEE. :'11U!iil
br 1 8. THE ZOO ,
!'-facArthur a.1 Coast Hwy,
N.B. Apply In prn;on on!y.
• COOK • Nights. Ap ply
Mesa Lilnes, li03 Superior,
CoHta J\1esa.
-Gates -
Learjet
Corporation's
Static Power
D ivision
his th• following
job opportunities
INDUSTRIAL
ENGINEER
1,s!. 8, profitahk· R E:. ft>~erl yd. hot meals. Call JOHNSON'S G/1:101'~!\'ING Pla1terin9, Petch, ings. Start now n·i0. Call bus1nrs~. llunt B <' n., 612-0829 V:ard carc'. Clean-ups_, Prun-Repair WO 'h" ~ ... ,. .,,. I t ....,.,..,.,~. 1--'"--·------Gerry \I. ife, .. ..,.....,;xi COUNTER Girls, 1h i r t i\11d1vay or \\'r.~tm1r1111rr BABVSfTIING in my hon1r, ing. pan ing. ""v""'""1 • PATCll PLASfERING COASTAL AGENCY
Degree preferred. Exlenslvt' ===~~~--,~-I exper. in production syalem1
1213 43~2823 presser. Wiii train. Apply aN'a . I 4Lon.c: Slatrr &. \Varne r arra, FV . Gene •I Services 6612 All lype~. Free. estimates 2790 }{arbor Blvri., C.M. in person: EX P ERT
&arh' i\h':'i. Slrvens. 968-2218 r ===Ca=ll=""""'==-===-I BARi\lA !O-COSTA J\fESA CLEANERS 333 E. 17th St..
BABYSITTING n1y home APT CLE ANING -Painting :;;: Sat. Ii_ Sun. 11 111m to 7 Costa ~le.sa. ~~!s~g~~ds Costa i\fcsa a.rea. Day or -Rug Shampooing &-LilP Plumbln9 '890 pm. S2.j0 hr. Call &42"-9981 Countf'r WAITRESS .•• _ •U5 night.Fencedyd.64~ Repair~. REMARC atlOAM. Par!Time/\forntng11 -SERVICES .. 7 ""00 '\'acer heaters-dispo''"' F.xc-han11:r .'\•our Trn.~t ' -• ..,,.,,,., BAR i\T A ID -n i i h I• SCOTTY'S PIE B · k M --Gen. re pairs S7.50 per t)(>ed for c11.sh loclny. r1c • asonry, CALL TiiE HA NDYJ\1AN hr. G42-l7a.->-642--0506 MAVERICJ(, rm Newport 1510 W. Baker St. 0 1.
Call T. D. Center, Inc. etc 1560 Gencr11I l.Jomt' Repair Bl\'<l., Ci\f. Apply an 6 p,m, Counter Girl for dry clean-S4Ulll • 675-1341 * PLU~IBJNG REPAIR ..._ 1 I I ~ H ----BUILD. Remodel. repair I========== No job too mall * BEAtrrICIAN, for busy, na Pent. App y "-ar·
Money Wanted '350 Brick, block .. co n c re 1 e., Hauli"I ,.,. -==='•""6'2='=·!=!28==·===-popular prlet?d C.M. 11alon. bor Blvd, ~-2, C.M.
--·-·-carpentry, no JOb too small.I ---"-·------.... Paid vac. No clie.nftole COUNTER G JR L. exp'd
NEED Sl.23,000 2n11 TD (rrq Llc. Conlr 962-6!!45 YARD/ Gar. c I ea n u p. Remocl•llnt & ~'d. New grad welcome!. prel'd. Part time Pl\f h~.
$10.000 now 6/1/70, bel. ... ., .. Remove ~ea, .ivy, tra11h. Repair ''40 CaJJ !he Manager. !'">48-9919 Call 6'14-2j12 CLO\VN
later ) Secured by IRO. ac Cablnetm1kln9 -Grade, backhoe., 962.--8745 BEAUTY Ol>f!ralor, l>ooth CLEANERS
In L.11. ll'. u n .11. Beach, Furniture A Antiqu"s MOVING. garage clean-up & *TIIE REMODELERS* space f-0r rP.nt. Cd!\.f. Reas. DENTAL ASSisrANT.
One -Miiiion val. approx. Ilic hauling. Rral!Ollable. Free et!! -100% Financing 67J.J646, cvc 542--4185 chalnldt>;orthodol'illc olliCC!.
S700M f'q. 'VIII """ ma.x. Reliniahing It Restoring. ~~ ,,,,,·m•I••. "'"l"-. Kllchen11 . ga<age~ • c•"·N">rls ~ ~ "'"-1 * r .... _... '" u-•.,..ut•~ -.-BLUE DOLPHIN Top salary, congenial Pn-altnw. Int (10%) Box 72j ,.. ~ ~~~~~-~---1 Complete. Re--.. elln". ""iali-LIT.c E ff 1· • "M.I • ..,, \VAITltESS, ....._ .. d. Ov•• 25. vtronment, Df'n tal t'X · 1-1.B. 53&-1319, 673--I7S·t au 111i' rarage ... Cootractors. &l2-36eo .........
C .. • 6'-cl M 1"-· "-"~ 11.5.'"i Via Lido. N.8 . per!ence is rl!quired. Aae. ANNOUNCEMENTS--irpen ring ~n1 ~S::ihnaio0~3i .-t. • IF you need remodeling. -----===--'--»-30. 642-2626
1nd NOTICES CARPENTRY HAULING &: Cl _ painting, nr ttpa.lra. Call BOYS * DENTAL ASSISTANT *
F nd (F Ad I .1.AAA MINOR REPAIRS. No J°"' Trtts removed. ~;naubfe: Dick &fJ.179'1 CARRIERS WANTED Experienced. capable. girt lor
OU '" 1 -Too Small. Cabinet ln IV'-F rre estimate.. ~1742 -Dana Po I n I, Caplttrano fror,. t1e8k Job. Dental v;.
SHAGGY I ,_. ..., • other eablnet&. Sewl-IMO Bneh. Alf!S .JG-14. -r. ~. Beach 1 re a . ma e. pup ......,.s . HAULING 110 A UlAD ·~ ~ ' 56-1175 tt no answer k!aw CONTACT JOHN HllM ~. bet IAM-9PM &http doK type, but small. O\!IS ~t 146-2312. H. o O eM up. Tree Serv. Gen. • DrtMmak:ing-Alt~ratio11.1 4!n-4420
Body black, i\'Ory Pll~'s. Andtonon • Pruning 646-2528, S.13-8043 Designed to ;uit you. ~--._;=.:=----1 Dept. Stnl"f
Hu collar. Identify, Vi~. _ . _ eau Jo * 646-6446 BOYS & GIRLS.Over 11
i\1Rplp .tr llamllh>n, C.M. QUALITY \l.'oodcrall, sm1 Houueleanlng ,7l5 ;,.O:~.======o~= To Aell randy
642--1479 gcn'I coruitr. & carpentry. .. -Tiie, Cer•mlc •t74 your own a.re.a.
!\.IAN'S watch. Vic. P?Tsldlo •'~ i;oruiult!.tion It. quntr:. JOE'S CLEAN SERV. 144-2159, S..9 pm '-Sar~.
Sct.ool. Cati & ldenlify in-Cal Ken 64:Ml044. ~ \l.o"e. do Everythlnc . RH, &: * Verne, The Ti~ Mt.n *
scripHon. ~1228 b<:fore A·l CARPENTRY Comm. F'rtt Eftl. !>49-3126 Cu11l. work. lnatall l re.pain,
'4:JO ~mall Job Speciali51 BAY ' ~a.ch Ja.nllorial No jOb too tmal.l. Plute.r
C II r-~-.,7-4r. patio. l.f!a.kln" ehower WHITE F'emalr '"" ~Ir, a uviuvn ...,, a Car-~. wl.ndows, nooni, • ~ 1"""' ... repair. vie 19th & Harbor, CM. REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS etc. Rea .I: Com me 'I. 847_1957/84&-020&
Call 642..-9-)67. * CABINETS. Any siie job 646--1401
F'OUND • b\ryclc Be1tc-h 11.rwl r.> )'Ml exper. 548-6713 J~w7.1171 71ro-,-yo-"-,~17t,-m-,-,lro-m
Wnrncr plcur. Id c n t I t y . GF:N. rrpair, 11.dd .. cab. A -Z Sl.00 hr. Do not
847--3723 Formica, panclln~. m11rllle. call alte:r flP;\f. 492.-119&1
Uphol1tuy '"° PERRON'S TREE SER.
r OUN D Int rnalr Bas1e.t Anylhlns:! Dick. 67:\-4459. OUTC11 Lllcly tn rl 0 Orrt11mental Pruning
IUSIOYS
APPLY IN P!:RSON
REUBEN'S
COCO'S
4647 MAC Ani\un
NE\VPORT BEACH
J, W. ltOllNSON
N•wport
LADIES
AL TE RATIONS
Experienced Fitter&~r
Xlnl. Company BtnetltJ
• Apply in perwon *
F11hlon lala.nd, N.8 .
Equal opporh1nlly en1 pl1ytr
TifE SUN NEV£R SE'TS on
analysts. production m ntrol
analy!i~. tool design, l1bor
standards & procedure Mit.
ina:.
PRODUCTION
FOREMAN
l\Tu~t haw J yrs. reet'nt e.x-
per. in electronic a~,cmbly.
PRODUCTION
CONTROL
PLANNER
f.lu8t havr. :l yrs l'P.~nt ex-
per. in production C'<Mltrol
planninir II ache.dulinc,
ELECTRO·
MECHANICAL
ASSEMBLERS
f.ru~I hAvt. ('Xp('r. In En.f
Ulll!mWy v.1irk, pre.f~bly
po1~'tr 10pply type e.QUfp.
Excell.,,t •al•ry, ~
fits • n d -luftlly
for adv..-.cament.
2005 S. RITCHEY ST,
SANTA ANA, CAL!f,
Equll.I opportunity employer
Hound, ,·ic K·,\lflrt, Costa THE QUICKER \'OU CAU.. hot18eclr11 nin~. E)(fl"l"Jencrd. 2j yr, l'Xp. 642.-63.'M
f\1r~11. CaJI 673--714f!.,. 11rE QUICKER YOU SELL ~ --*-°'::.:.'-..c""='-'---'CP-'l.:L.:OT:...:W:.;.~&;N.cT:..::A.:D.c: !_642-567:..:._-"--_ R DAILY PILOT \VA.NT ADSr,.. "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!t!!!!!!!!I_,,,,~ .
I DAILY PILOT * I ncUy, '~•Y 22, 1q1c as l fMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPCOYMENT JU8S & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Men, Worn. 7100 Jobs-Men. Worn. 7100 Jobs-Main, Wom. 7100 Job.--Men, Wom. 7100
JOBS .. EMPLOYMENT MERCHANOISE FOR
Job5---Men, Wom, 71 00 S~!E A_ND TRADE
MERCHANOISE FOR
SALE AND TRAOE
MIRCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE
-TE LL E RC-Furnitu... 8000 Furniture 1000 o.r ... s.1. MECHANIC USED CAR FRY Cook, txper or trainees
w/110me re1tauranl exper
Above avg pay. Ins . ~nelils. Apply ~nny's, Tnp 1vuge& !or tup 1nan E..:
imc Beach Blvd, G.G. 1,'E'!J«nl \\'Ork111g cond111"11.~ I
-------'-----1 vacatlQn, group 1nsuraJJ!.'i'
F'ULL or part ! Im'. plan Call 81'.lb illay,
•"Ol!staurant, ovl!r 21, len1alt CONNELL 1
!>4~1.685 bf-I, l-5 PM. CHEVROLET
FULL ti m ;• 1nu1n1cnancr ;.io.1200
man, at Amlin.g's Nursery, • N.8 . 644-2573 )1£0/CAL Sl!<'Y·l''ron! 01·
REUBEN E. LEE
,'\(l\V INTEflVIE\\llNG
week end, night
BUSBOYS
DISHWASHERS
• APPLY tr
]:,1 E COAST H\VY.
NEWJ>()RT BEACl l
See Betty Bruce at Attract"'" o1)('nin.;s a.re ava11.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I m fl 11.blc ror exJ)"rit-nc('(f 1etlen; ESTATE SALE i~J C xec u1 our rx·w 11unt111gton e TllE USED ~ Ntwpo~ ;i~:_~ c .M.
Beach iincl CO!ita rt1csa ofJ--5'18.-1807
Agen('y for Can . .,~r Clrls lt't!S ol Downl'y Savings g,
1101" ~ ... ,,, NB FURNITURE FACTORY 6 Pc M.lho£br&et S~,bl'E'ak •· .......i.s wy., · · Loan AsSO('. t'or lull 11arhc.
B pol t '"~ ""'~" front w/curved oPln 1 $125, Y •P ' · ~~== "'""·'· "" I''"'°"'"' 12111 -rrultwd &ec'y, ma.hog clroµ-
1169-0!H2 .. ~~~----I leaf din. tbl, chn:, end tbl, ;~OOLt:s ,3 000 •• I TELEPIJ ONE SOLICITOR 5tUln9, like ntw funtltlM't, rttun..t from aport. coff~ tbl. 21'' Silvertone TV
f'" 10 ~., . "o sa es ex p. h & nred!"d 10 take orders t, Girls, experienced, work oul mtnt r.,.ta model homn at prlcn below t'Oosole Jj(I_ Antique trunks,
coi•e r lrad ~ !or world's or your hOlllt'. p.1rt t1n1e wholnalt! quilts, line collecrors china,
faslest sell ing-home ex· rnaklng apµo1ntn1enl.!! for &liver painting, oriental rugs
... ,.,., •. 11 ·.·•]]• 1,.,, i;-aJc1ma11 . All leads "'C pit ff ttc,f'IC.Sal&SUnJ0-5. ,, ~. . .... ~ ,1 .om e e rooms o urn1lure ........ $169
I022
1-',~~~CC-C,,~----11<-'t. SQme back, knowledge
GEL.COAT REPAIR:\1AN-ol all 1ypes o! rnf'd. lornis.
day ~hill 1 -J P Fil . Ex· illon, Tu~s. Thurs, Jo'ri. 9:30-
perWncl'd. Apply. 1631 6 30_ $2,7j hr. F11.sh1on Isl.
Placenlia, C.M. i\1ac Grt'gor ~-rkl n'sumr. to Daily Pilo1
Yacht Corp. u.i,. ~1 ·29, _____ __ccc___~~~~~
banana;., in bunches, for furnts™'d. Salaried position. S . ~VEO Through SUN. r-.lll.pl• '··11 817 1'"1 Sal • s I pan1sh sofa & love seal ......••••••. $179 Sa!r.~ Sl03.50, with 100~~ finan-~ _._._"" • un. din. table, captains thairs
REAL ESTATE eing. Call: 897-1986 or 6--1& TRUCK DRIVElt wanted. 1 Spanish sofa & love seat .......•••••. $1Sf & hutch. Galeleg
GARDENER -Japall(>S{' • .. TEN e JOB OPENINGS
Ass1stan1 for 11pl. 1.-'0mplcx. YAST ADVANCE~ENT
CAUSEY & RHODES i'\u c~per. requtred
400 Ne"'Jl0r1 Center Dr. ~t.irn1 n1; & Ev;•ninJ.: !"h1frs
Nt"\\'por1 Be11l·h f\J)p!y .1n Pcr.,un ~G~.-n~'~I ~Off°' ice S3SO. up C'OA:"T C1\T/\i\IARAN
lrUCJ't'&hng. 111u'1ed dt.L!IC;, ~3011 Callt" Perfec1n
Pleasant ('(}.-WOrkrr.: Sari Juan Capislra1111
JASON BEST MOTEL MAID
Employn1ent Al;t!nCy 1967 Ne\\1)0rl Blvd, C'.:\f_
'l'llll So. Ma111, Santa Ana :\i OT!IERS Hl'l""r. I
54i;.:,.iio ,.., ma urr
"·om;in. arrcrooons. st•hool
GENER.AL i\1AINTENANCE age children, $2 hr. aft 6.
1nan for priva!t> ~chool. &33-3139
Clraning & yard work. l~:i i\-,-011-,-E-R_S_h-,-1,,..-,-.-.,-,-1-,.,-.. -,..
Brookhurio t St. Fountain " ....... f 1· · v JJ 96l·.J:il? ,,umn1rr. r1 t' l'r I\''' 111. a t>y. • 84&--2942 al1 6.
GlRI.;:5: Al1racli"'.e· ~inglc, MUSICIANS n-,-,.-1,.--1-0-,-0_
JS-2J hill or p/t1mr. Must
hRve 1'ar. For appL calJ
675-Slll an 9Ar-.t.
GRAVEYARD Shi ft PIT
1elcphonP oper ator. Female .
Mrs. Brown 49S-4nO
HAIR STYLIST-
&>auty &: Wig Salon has open.
ing for person with sollH'
follo~·ing. Salary plUs comm
& paid vacatwn.
MALLIE'$ 548-3446
HSKPR -live in. Cheerful,
dependnblr, rrl's. Fam. :I
i.:hildrcn, on bch-Npwpt, Pv1
mi. col 1V. 675-0704
HOUSEKEEPER. I i v e-in
eompany singer; Pia no ror
guitars. O\.'('r 21. elran C'U1,
no drugs. Send rc11un1r !n·
1.1rs. Esqued11, :.!692
Riversi<lP Or., Costa ?.1esa,
Cal. !12627
newport .
personnel
agency
Prof•ssional Service
for the employer
a nd the applicant
833 Dover Dr., N.B .
642·3870 549-2743
lnvely hom1• overlooking * * NURSt:s AJDES • •
oN'an. $150 mo. Sm. fani. Expenencecl. 7·3 P1\I
67J...244:.. • ~~1~-3061
HOUSEKEEPER -I) a ':I s. Nursing
Pal 1n t rrs ! Convillrscrnl REGISTERED NURSE
!losp 1.1075 Bla1·kbirrl St. 1.C.-C.C.U.
Gnrdrn Grovr .. S.17-386'.\. Expanding unit. Challenging
1 lSKPRS Emplyr pays f!"t' oppGrf'Unitie11, contintJing ed-
Grorge Allen Byland Agem•y ucation prograr-1. Contact
l(J6.B E. 16th, S.A. ~~17-0395 peMJOnnel So. C.OOst Com-
HOl.1EWORKERS WANTED munity Hosp, 31872 Coat1l
(Envelope Addn>sse['!I). Hwy, So. Laguna cn4> ol99-1311 Ext. 356 Rush stamped, ~ e I J -ad--
d r rssrd envelope . OF;FICE Managrr · Rook-
LANGDON \VORLD kerpcr. 1 gi rl o fl irt•.
TRADERS. P.O. Rox 1127-Prelerably \\'/Properly r-.lgt
A21 . Redondo Bearh, Calif. rxper. Ne"1>0rt Cton!r r
90278 a!'('a. Salary oprn. \Vrite
-"'-'---------1 Box i\1·70 Daily Pilot. NB.
ITT
JABSCO
e TYPIST e
Typr-~iO wpm a(·cura!rly.
f.ome d1craphone prc-frr-
r rd
c;ooo BENf.F!T . .; /\Nn
\\lQRKJNG CONDITI ONS
Olf1ct>/Temporary
* SECRETARIES
*TYPISTS
*STENOS
Par1 lime & Temp, Posilions
SERVICE CENTER
Employment Ag•ncy
500 Newport Center Dr., NB
Suite 200 By appl. 6'14-4981
OLDER \\"Oman u r ~ e n ! l y
11~rdrd for t'hild's care this
sumn1er while mother
1\·orks. 54>&39;>
Equal Opporlun1ty ~~n1ploy1·r Parking A!lendant
148:1 l)ALf. \V/\Y TI-IE FIVE CROWNS
COSTA fl!ES/I CAl .. lf'' 9'.l626 -RESTAURANT -(71~1 ~15-8?.il · ln!rrv1e\\•1ng lxiy5 17-19 ln
' · lhr Parking lot ONLY! for
'I> LADI ES 11 I~. ~111111
SAJlA!-1 COVEN TR V ~pnng
,'.: al! st'ason JC'l\'rlr~.
Ahsoluli•ly no 1nvest'1n1 \\'••
train. :1.11-1\631 or '!6i-.• !!~~
L.J\'F: In 1\lanled I•\ r
Housrkf'f'pin1; & Chilrl C.1!'"
~:Kprr K· rrf!'r nrrr~s. '\!111
homr _ 1'r1v. hr .t· Im. \In~!
"'·k nd.~ o!L Call 64'.!-:l:tO;!
hr roN' ooon or al 5 P\1.
l ocal Office Jobs
Superior Agency
r~1ahhshrrl J!'l1(;
CALL 642·714 1
Parki ng At1Pndanl. Sl.6.'"l hr.
to slart. :~Ol E. Pacific
_£~1._1_h_vy._Cd.cM~·---
P ,\RT Tl~1E Pr r m.
&crr!ary, Girl Frl. Estll.h'1!
r.. 1-i .1rlv a~c & ar! studio
:-:.011v• ;it:enrv or art r . ...:prr th·~ .I '·1~-i~,;;;,-~~--
• .. PLASTICS
lr11Prtinn Mnlrlint:"
( 11x•1 'i; or Tra1nf•1');
F1•n111lo• over 25. r.11.1st hf>
1lrp<'nrlul1!t'. D1<y shift.
Apply $ :Ill In noon.
On1ngr Co11sl Pla~\n'l\
NJ() \\'. l~lh St., C.tll.
PR ESSERS. i>ll k "r Cn mbL
S ALESMEN WANTED lo"~"--~-----~mall pickup & 1ichvery, 1 Cold sofa .. $29 I Green sofa •..... $39 table, chain & cornrr
t:slablishcd RE. Firm Savings & Loan g..;,,JU pm Call~7800 1 Blue green sofa & chair ............. $119 cabinet. Clothes, polaroid ~r,ct·iahzing In hstlnr, & .~a le MANAGEMENT TO\V truck llrivt•r, exper. 2 Talney Bedroom sets .....••..• $139 each cam., Encyclopedia Brit-
o! undeveloped aC'l'f'BGt' for TRAINEE pre! .• over 21, days, A C tan!ca, mirrors. pLcturr~.
r ~ s 1 flent111I dcvt•lopmcn!, Dynamic Savings and LQ11n Auto Ser\'lCe t70j N. t:J Dressers · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • · · • • · $29 & Up lamp tables. lamps. i\luch
C I I S Cl 2 Chests Of drawers $-h niore. 2?l7 ChU Dr. nf'l'ds L'Oni.clcn!Lous, honr~·. Association is i>Ct'king rol-<HlHOO {l.'a, • an rn1ente · · · · · · • • ....••. ~7 eac
f111l !i1 ne ~alrs1114•n, ll.E-lege 1;1"aduates for their *Typist to $350--1'.lattress & box s prings .. ·······---· .$12.SO 4 PC Samsonite luggage M!t. l1trn~e rt" quired , Coin-1nanagc1neo1 training pro-Exp 001 nrc·. Xlnt opty for 1 Dinette table & 2 chairs . , ••. , •••..... $lS reas. O!lire desk $50, ,vater mis~1on basis. gram cooler (hot & cold] 11'11 · acc. t.11111st 1 GE R f · t t-ollo\\ing po~1 t ions av11\ 'fhis position orfrn chal-JASON BEST ' e rigera or · ·· ····•·· ·· ·····-· ·· .$69 So1ne je\\·elry, hsrhold
•Salcsinan to l1andlc N. lrng1ng and re1v:ird1ng ra-Einployment Agt•iwy Several table lamps ..•...•• , from $3.95 up arlicles. Some junk! 20:l71
Easl Or1u1gc County 1rr· re<>r 10 the ri"ht ""rsor1 1 'f V Color Emerson $l Bayview Ave. S.A. HghU. "' r-· 2207 So. J\la1n, ~n1a Ana ---· · · · • • • --. ·... . . . . 35
rilory. Use our r :tcellent CALL -~IG.5'1lO l TV, B & \V, GE portable .•............ $JS ~5-5359·
huild4•r f"Ontllc ls for i;alf's f\1!'. Hcns](·y (21.1) R61-~i713 -~~--'-'-:.C,cc~~--!l!IRRORS. 8' CUstom sola,
F.11'.pPricncr-pr<'frrri.:d Uut S c.1.N1 Unhappy With Your Assorted end & cocktail t ables ... $4.95 & up ol'iglnal oils, twin bed set.
\vii! 1ra1n othrrwise qualified ecretary to"""" Job? Come In and Talk hanging: lights, Gemian wall
persons.
•S.desn1an lo lu1ndlc ~.
Orani::e Coun1y.Norlhcrn San
DiPJ::O Counly territory. I::x-
pencnr<' u1 11.~!i ng & s.-tles
ol Jari.:e s1K"l'Ulative part'Cli
& rstabhshed i nvrstor
clien1ele prelcrreU but will
1rain.
•Salesman to handle land
su1t11hle for comm.·1nd .
1!t"velopmenl. Must have ron-
sidl'rable experi('nce 1n this
l1clfl & l'Stablished c.!ii>n1rle
preferred. Perhaps f o rm
nucl!'us for con1n1 .-ind .
Division.
DIKE AND COMPANY
INCORPORATED
PHONE 17141 6.JG-!1631
WEEKDI\ YS FOR APPT.
REAi~ F.S'TATF. SALESMAN
wan1cd expcrirnced. Active
r.~1 ;1hli~hr1I offi1·1·. l'h•1l1·1'
lQCallon. Advcrt1s111~. pn1•k-
1ng, rt'fr rral~ C11ll c·ollf·tl
for appointmrnL 492-ti\4~1.
./ REAL ~:s1ure Sal··~ t ~uly
for vl"ry busy n-nt:t l "ff'1cl',
gu:iran1ee + c;on1m1sl'ion.
Full or part time. 644--0532
RESPONSIBLE woman. mn
smoker, hvr in . Lile house.
"''Ork. Call 673-841\2.
* NO * Experience * NECESSARY
Today's rompt'ti1ion ls stilf-
wi!hout proprr g11idance you
ean rall rl&1 . But 11o'ilh the
powrr of 11 n1ulti·rn1l!1on dot.
lar pul11lr l'Q. l)('hind you-
1llt' only "'II." tr. go ii; up.
\\'r'll show yo11 how to rarn
up !ri Sl00,000 11 er yrar
t malomuo1 l.'01npcnsal1on
froin sah•s rommissinn and
iw1v 1rr ff't'sl against i,in
ra.~y $400 to S600 f'Xtra rvery
n1on1h 1n purt.\ime "'"Ork,
day or nigh!.
+ U~ our pruvrn lormula .t:
gu11rant1-e yourself 2 sales
per nion1h ,
+ Cadill ac rfil' pl:in at onC'f'
Group lll'a l!tl lns11r.1m·r -
S2i,OOO majflr mrd1cal, J1f('
ancl arcidenL
-! (;u;1r;1111eed s2:io \1rrkly
dr11w pl11n
+ Unlimi1rd flnnnc1 ng pro-
vi1!1•1! hy compuny
4 lt11'rnt1vr rlun for lln\\'l\i-
18/l Vo rat1on.
CALL NOW
FOR
FULL DETAI LS
MR. STANLEY
Exi.:11111~ opl.Y. You will work Over You r Job 1885 H •--in lovely nt'W olc. in Jl'\llnl• Ol'UVI" llvd., at 1 fth St,, clock, many mi! ct" l I.
area for a \\underrul boss_ Problems Come-makf' o!ler, i\lay 23
E 0 0 I Co1ta Mesa e ~1.94•7 2 ~-The cu. is eslbl'd & stallle. F' ~E .Sr rE:f!: I' . J BS, (·al "' -4; ~ Lighthouse Lane,
)'ottl'li \Viii be a pos. "''/in-Ann or Lora1rw.-, \\'cslclifl Cdl'vl. Pei"'IQnrlf'I A .. P n r y, W43 Oprn· \Verkdays 9-5:30, Saturdays 9-5. Closed Sund•i•s rlnite variety & interest. ,.. 2 MAPLE s"·ivt"I bar stools,
Send resume or call ?.1iss \l'csti•hll Dr' v t", N.B.Jf!!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!'!!!'!! milk glass, de p r rs s ion
Ellzabeth, 557-6122 Abigail &15·2770 • J.15-~ Sa!, Morn-1: gla!s, lots o! goodies! Sat
Abhol Personnel Agency. 230 u1g by appo1n1ment. Furniture 8000 Furniture 1000 lM only. 2082 Valley Rd,
\V \Varner, Suite 2ll. Saola * WANTED * -----Cl\1 (Victorie, lelt on Valley 20 PC. "MADRIO" 17 PC KING Ana. Licen~ real r statf' sales-• SIZE Rd .)
JK'Op\r for general real es.-l ROOM GROUP BEDROOM GARAGE SALE : Sat "-Sun
SERVICE
cxp'd nian .
prrn1anenl. Good
coud's. Union Oil
J 7th St. Costa l\lesa
n f' rd s
days.
\\·orking
3!13 J::,
SERVICE: S1<1tlon al1endant:
days: prcfl•r marricrl. i\fust
be n'liable. $-150 1\fonth, paid
\\'l.'rkly. /\µply ~ AM !o ;;
PM ; Lagun:1 Hills J\l oh1J.
2·10M:J El Toro ltd., Laguna
Mills. 11.1()-1750
SEftVJCE sta, full &-pa1'1
lime ht>lp \\-'an1etl. Plai.:e of
rn1ployment ; &-ach ,f;,
Edinger, II .A, Apply a l
1-larOOr !'.!ob1le, Gisler &
llarOOr, C.i\f.
SHARP GALS
CASHIERS/HOSTESSE!;
Over 18 Full & P/Time e Avail. \Vkends J Locations
Orange Co.
METRO CAR WASH
2402 SO. Bns10J, S.A_
SR. ACCOUNT CLERK
Salary $543. to $598.
Full charge bookkeeper for
studenL b o dy 111.:toun1 s,
11•h1<:h inelude C1frll.'r1a,
Snack Bar. llooks1orc &·
olher student accounts. l\llusl
work ind('~mtently. Apply:
Orangr Co11sr Junior Collr~r
01.~r.. 2701 Fair1·1r111 Rd ..
C' ,,, 17141 RJll.~i70ll
••SECRETARY-Part lin1r
At!ornry n~quires skillrd
!'O rrrspQndcn1 ~re}. No
prior Jc1;al t"~pcrienre req'(I
Pern1. l:l hr wk . S:l.2~· prr
hr. Exprr. with 1s r-.1 r~
(•rutivr, lype 80 \\'pm. Sil
12Q "'Pm, age 2 5-~0 .
J\'e\\.'Porl area. Call 61J-3772
hcl. 9 A:\1 & noon. SECRETARY-:~n·:.;_c~,-"-"-,.-,,-,,.
Co111a1•t 11·11h publir. ni•ed~
i.:r ncral kn o 11o•le d~f' ol
p11 y r n ll rr rf\rr11ni:,
rr<'r1v<.1hl1·~. salr~ ,(· hilling
!.1r;hr lyp1ng, sharp, rnus!
h(1vr o:ood pl'r ~on<1 l ity .
·1!!1~2
Sec'y Receptionist
Fas!, elf11·1r nt. '\\'orko ·r Br r"
ncrdrd ln husy nrf1rc. Ar·
rt1n11r !~·r1~t fin Jn\1 "'<l'I'
:->ninr S I I JT'!l fi7.,.fl177
tale, lull time; housing tract FROi\:l l\IODEL 1-IOMES Large 9 drawer dre&Ser, mir-\Vomens quality clothing,
sales. rull time or Sat. & Inc:ludes: Quilled sofa & t'?r, 2 bedside stands. King never \\'Orn, all siz ra .
Sun.'s.: saleslady fa miliar chair, 2 end tables & cofrre size headboard, frame, quill. Lowest prices. 10201 Kukui
'I ith area 10 handle rt'ntals table, 2 lamps, dresser. m!r-e<l mattreu, &httts blank. D . H h d ~.-il -" •· ' J ~n='~'~·,c:;-·="~· ~9'~Z-~1~8~27c_~ (lilx:'ral !'Omm \. New oUice ror, ea ......... ,u, qu h:u uux els, etc-.
-rww ideas . new onPortun-springs & mattt"ess, 5 pc Choice of Spanish SAT 10-4, Solid oak desk
il ies. dining room; table & 4 hi-or ?.lodern Style w/chair, ltalian prov i
Riddle & Ross Realtor$ back chair!. ALL FOR $249 chair, Cptn's chair, dinette
CO•lPARE AT 1749 9-N d set, brlrm set & lamps. 17831 353;. E. r:st Jl11y ,, Cdf-1 · ;i o own pmts. only S9 mo. 67S.722S $399 WELK'S WAREHOUSE Gillman, Irvine. 833-2438
-~--=---~---1 No down PnHs. Only $16 mo 600 \V. 4th St., Sarita Ana ~·RI, Sat. Swing St"ts, ping
ViAITRES.'i -Ovrr 21. ex-WELK'S WAREHOUSE Daily 9-9 Snt 9-6 Sun J l-6 pong table, dinette, clothing,
fK•n1•nt•eU 111 lrrr.ak fast & 60ll \V. 4111 ST., San!a Ana dishes, n 1g&, toys, books,
lun t·h . /\lrrt . r1eat, SCRAM LETS misc. 546-7919. 1878 Rhodes plcasalltly ;iftr:u·1 1ve. i\11,o~~N?_.,~ast27: i\lust sell '69 • Dr .. C.i\1.
TilE 1\IEll flYt-.1AC, Cd;-.! O!iuil ...... e S ;,, Refrig S·tl.
67'.1-7722 ~Jor TV, f'X. cond. Slj{), ANSWERS YARD Sale: Fri, Sat & Sun.
decorator booksheH s;, (I, 30" gas stove, assorted furn,
\V0\1EN. J.1le qclivcry work. gr~n niasier chair Sl'i. un. clothing:, cook1vare. Goodies
r.tust havr own car. Ap-ique gold leaf dln. tb! S7J, ~;~~ = ~~~wf:Z~oray -Galore. 818 Delaware at Jn-
ply:32.1 N. Broadway, Room "olfllt"llf se"'"' ·ob. I". dianapolis, 11 .B, 410 Sa t /\ "' ' " ,>,} A bricklayer got tired of I c~ce'-c=~=~==~ · · n,, na wrought iron tbl lamp com-his romtructlon job; so he Y'ALL ARE \V'ELC0:\1E At
\\'Oi\tAN \\llh know!rdi.:e of b1nat1on S3J. lr1; artificial lhrew in his TROIVEL. "THE" Garage Sale, 210
plan t~ 10 \\'Ork pl t1mr al plant s:~\ "Thf' GN't"k" CUSTOi\I furniture. g· "''" "42nd St.. N.B. Fri., Sa.I., Aml1nt:·s Nursery, N . B . hi•!ly board $33, dbl bed & Sun. JO 'Iii 5.
6 " ·2-11 120 'I h hold sofa , 2 orange s ilk ct·~;·s. .-.-J .. • any more ouse "'u GARAGE 5a1, .. , bi..,,,.··•b .... ,
I & f · h 2 cal'\lt"d wall lamps, dining ·-~-· ~. \VO~IEN wa ntr1/ fo r part-1 f'lllS · urn l s 1ngs . i\lo\·ie Camera, Refrlg.
I '.·'" _,_1 room fixture. 646-&IOO 11 me wnrk. car ner1 C'cl . ~,.,....,, F' 0 ·d· 20"' "·-II 20\/ERSTUFFED ,,,-,,,,, 2 reezer, '"'""" io. ,.., '-"t"" a ~·""~'~'';,1-~>~12='· ='""'=-="='='='= Spani1h Furniture . 1 .. Ct, c .... 1. "-J ccunple!e roonis 3 monlhs oera.~1ona chairs, I single
S h I I • 7600 ' IX'd. J Pnd table, m isr. 821 GARAGE SALE: Including c oo J-nstruct1on okL GN'en velvet rh1vrn-bd I '63 c d & Can1Jlhor St .. f'B. 644-Q98.1 rn1 se , a . many
AIRLINE
SCHOOLS
PACIFIC
Duy &: Ni1::hl Classes
purl .l love seal. :'inl1d u;i k 111teresting items. Sat &
1·nfrrl' table & 1•n111 111udr . 2 STUDIO couches. J2x74 s ~ 'f Cd un, ,.,,,, " arguerHe. '.\T.
Exotu:; 4 It Fern pictun•s. \\.'Ith bolsters S20.
I di · 1 • 67". o,· 1 * ASSIGNED Overseas, selling 11mps. ning roon1 M'. ,,.....
Complete v•ith hedroom set l\lOVING E everything, furn i I u re . • asl: I.iv. 1111 b housew11res, etc. Some wirh new Sunmons king-size br '''''' •-lo' TV · :~1:~.f.!'i!li · ·V • \\Tinger things almost new. [i.\6-tii6l bed. Sl lOO. Privalt" party. washer .. l69 f'h1wt•r. C.M. 610 E. li1h :->l · ~anta Ana 1142-1128 or ~·6946 aft 9 Pl\I GARAGE Sale: 1009 No.
}!AND Carved chest or Bsyfront. Balboa Island. Sa.!
NE\\1 -sr-;l-; a I In ~Onl· s Ac R I rICE: Decorators rln1111('rs. $50. Wht & Gold ,. Sun, 10 'Iii 5.
pul cn i.ed h1•i nf' kn i I I i n g formal collector's l1e111~. lf'af. 111lny mirror. 673-9228
111::icliine, unlim1\cd df'~1 1<n~. il-1inured colfee thl S2'2J. DR -GARAGE Sale: Householrt
L . d b IJ I ESSERS, desk!, bewlng , .... 0-,1 .. ,,. Th"""-S"". 17891 anyone can opcr111r. School rg nurrore u e, 11oas 1 . ,., " ... ,,... ""
11000 I''" ,1. _ _, n1ac11nr, night !able.~. Top Sky••-. lfB. ••1.~•1 r•I Crcat1vi> S l' w 1 n g. · now ·111• " UTO'''" cond. r~l&-4650154;..2245. ;~~c~+'-,cc::..~-~":~__:_~ :~1s-1;.lf(2, :"1S-lJ.116 .~creen $400, Italian carved GAR. Sa.le: Sabot. · 6 I
Bombay chest $.'iOO, )rather 4 Colon1aJ bar ~tools, maple, l'o"'•'·. •lolh••. '"'"·Sal & SE\\lJNG Classes ~tar!1ng I ,.,..,,.,." '"" . · · . rhr &. ottom. SJ7J. J\lany x n! confl, S20 each · Slln. 706~~ Marigold, Cri'.\f. now, l1ml!rd TI'J::lSlra11on n1her items &lfi-'.!96? * 545-3!188
Call !or brochun'. School _c::::c:::·:::::_· :.::c·=:·---11 ~"""",:::,=--~---~-LOS Rummage Salt ,.i Crea rivr Sew 1 n g , BDRM Set. Danish i\1od., COUOI, F.xrellenl cond. and Sat. r-,111y 23, lOAJ\l-aP~f
:,.lg..R.1$12, :.48--0-llli incl. _nearly new matt & f\\'O chairs St25. Double bed lli E. \Vil!on, The Art S!lllp
bxspl'Lngs $175 illaple br S·IO. 54!}-2037.
Theatrical 7900 ~rt incl. bx-spring.~ & mall ,."F."'C_l_l p:--==~-GARAGE SALE: Sa.I. ~123. • ,1, · rov. RDR:\1 M't , Ca r/trlr refrig. bric·a-brac. -----SlOO Also, misc. furn. 11 ·~ \\'h• ~.. h I 2 ·~' ,-,u~ r "' .1::1 llan1il1on. Cl\t. ACTING ~}l_>-_S-O_r_, =-----Drsks. Bulft"r , m isc. 546-;'>189 "UST <ELI II OIATR!;, t"h esls, mo"·er. &-Jlrl \111111ant lo bc a !u1\ l1mc · · • ~. a nr w GIRL'S bed r oon1 ~1. misc. 1 .~, pm Sat & Sun
111;rkitt1t pi-olessH)nal ~ Do N'fr1.11;/fr~;zc-r S8S. 11!ud 10 Pink/gTren Singh~ ~d. $50. 1 821 C S "
O"'h I• dbl bo" I "' ~ • on y, amphor . !., ,,9,
;.·•111 h.1V{" 1hr S{"\f rlisrirl\f\(' l: " J , • "-""'• ·' ;~lfl-083!1
10 l'llhJl•t·t yn11r.;t•lf 10 a rig. 1_Jan1 sh chairs S 3 J /lot.
1d !\r1tts!i 1ru1n1n~ coUT'M! & til4--0TIR ____ ~~-Office Furniture lOIO Appliance•
USED stePI desks S39.50 •
Pooture chnirs $12.5(} & up
• u~erl 2 & 4 flr11\\·er lillng
rablncts • Used \\'ood desks
J\lc'.'1-lahan Bros Desk Inc.
1100 I
ts:i7 Hal'bor, Cosll.I ~Jes.a Full & parl 1Ll!l". Yes J (7141 83S-3233
-----_.... !lour ftranrri;., ~MZ!I SA L.ES Sforvlce Es111b
Sl':CflETARY· PPnn, Po~i·
l1<ln, 111·!' !l/\)1-11'_\I, L11r
S.I I I.· hookk1•pp111g: rrq
R<'.~umr Box M i i Dady
Pilot, N R
rt1r ar11.~11c humility lo ac-LRC. B«1gc ~c\1onal, 2 ~n
f'C'fl! 1ninur roles 1111111 Hie ~rn1 t·lir~. 2 grn rccl!nrrs,
11•111nin1~ p••r11 1d 1i; ro111pletc~ ~ pcl'.'nn 11·d end tbl~. !Orq
H ~o ·nit·: LONDON LA· Frigi(jn1rr rrlrig. tJpright
llU :-iA 1\ CT 0 R S \VOHK-trerz 67.3-l:i711 hy 5/2i
~1111!' 1111ct1( l)f' Ahl!' 1o help \\'ANT ED lo buy· tw in S l~Crt
you Nu pl'C\'11/llS experir nc<e hookt'ASt' headboards l.t.
nro·l'~Sar_y, 11n ng-c hnrrirr. S•l l\"rl hv. rm cha i r .
1800 Newport Blv1:.
Costa l\le.sa * 64Z-8t:.o
SINGLE door \\'hi!e N'lri.1;.
12 cu ft, cross top freezer.
Jst SJO takes. Alt 6 pm
or Sat, Sun .. :\ton, 5'1fl.--2676
STOVt. v.·/30" o\'en S·15
P.l'fr1g_ w/00!101n frericr
SJi Alr,o roL11ry la v: n
n1owcr $2;'o. 646-~2. ~---;-i,:-.,-. 11-IE QUlCKt.:RYOU-CALL. •. F'uller Bru11h route. s12;, 11k
Pa Im r r" s t Con,·11trs1."rnt Tl:IE QUICKER YOU !;ELL guarantee lo start. 5-16-~114;,
l!osp. 13075 Blackh1/'IJ St. l~=========~.:.C""========== I Gan:k-n Grovr. 837-3116.1
#I"* MACHlNI S TS-F'ull
time. Experie~ 1~ not
ne~Mry. Call: 616-9611
l\1Al.E !'INGER: To~Joncs
1ype vo1rr !or n-mrding.
Cail fl"l:>-4270
l\tAN to u.~1t 1'W .. locsl
appliance st~. Must hr
neat appearing. Cal! 9 A ~1
to 10 Ai\1 only: 496-2".83
MAN J..j yn or over with
know1cdgr '111 \\'OOd \\'01'kini:
& l'l'llfl.~ 10 ins1ru~·• ;vuulh .
1112-8372 ~pm.
Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100Jobs--M9n, Wom. 7100
TELEPHONE
The Smile in Your Voice
Could Be Worth
A Starting Salary of
$415 A Month
We need people with ,milin9 voice,, who •r•
•ble to work eny 1hift, to do 1ome of our mo1t
import•nt Public Reletions work -•1 Tele-
phone Oper•tor1.
•SF.CHf':TAR~'. 11rlvrr11~lnl!
i;all'~, N B. puhl1shcr n{'eds
hrighl s1cnn. Call ,\.loo. tor
11ppt , Mr. Shulman &t2·9470
STUDE~IS: 11 Yrs & Up
To St-11 Canrly. !'.1akr ~ond
money 1n s pare lime & help
11redy srhooL No ra:;h rr .
quinxl. 64·1-1Li~ &.9 PM &-
Sal.
Alr1nbrr~ 11! !IU~ rxl'lu~ivr 673--4191
grour 1,·11! only hr accep1ed 8. SOFA-0-,-,.,-,-,-,.-,-.-.-0-,-1],-d
upi'n a AAhsfac!ory fl('rsonal 11 1 1 h _ d 11,.
I or11 , sco c guarue •. ~.
1n1rrv1rw 11o•11h lhe 11rector. l\lalch. lovcseal S1;:i.
Call ·l!H-4404 !or :ippt_ 776-0592.
=cco-=~--~ r-.tAPLE Din'g rm set, ~ Cap-Use D1mc-A-Une Ads !o buy
or srll "Budget Priced"
ta in chairs, 2 t>xl leaves,
.11;ood cnnd $100. Sun or aft
6 pm, 839-2631
SchoO:s-ln1tructlon 7600 School1-lnttruction 7600
liOUSEFUL 01 MW model
1ion1c fumilurr Rel!. $683.
nnw S197, 894-4417 or
6.17-6200
ThcAcadciiiY .
dCompula
Tcdlriology m
CAN YOU llCOMI /4 PIOFISSIONAL IN
COMPUTll SCllNCIS
1 3-PIECE sectionat. CU!tOm
built davenport. SlOO * ;..16-9860 *
Dial 642-56711 Jor RESULTS
Office l!qulpm•nt I011
---·----NCR cash rrgis1cr, 4 dr.
1 1!\~ sale!. subtotals, etc.
$950. 0]1\·etli multlplier,
add5, subtractl, multiplle1
S'.t2j. Both good con d •
~96-1286 So. Lagune
Household Goods I020
BEAUT. ne_w 100% linen Hn.
ed draperlra. Decor. print.
Cust madt . Cover 38'.I" wd
by 84" hi. aacrlf price.
644-2037.
./ WASHER & dr y rr.
Frigid11 in" deluxe mode!,
aqua, S175 hoth. ~T;>-46
TIME FOR
0 UICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
SAYE
~ASH!
c
L
A
s
s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
ISEST
1111\'S!
:'11AN l ~rrn1 rd C -27
l.,11 ndi;caJiing. Percenlage
1.:row1ng bUlilnH~. 64-1-4860
}1AJDS, F\Jll or p11rt 11n1r.
s 1.8;, lra ln1 n g . $2.00
PeJm8nen1. Pa1rl vaca!Jon!!..
4\M-.11521 .
And we'll pey s.-1 S • month ri9ht from the
1ta rt.
Here's whet eh• you
•nd benefit from the edded pre,tige of iden•
iif yinq with the original A cedemy of C om·
puter Technology? Netione lly recoqniied.
Thou,ands o f po1t high-school• man end
women hev•. Their f uture h., been •'iured
b y inve1tin9 just e little more to become •n
Academy 9red1Jafe, A pri.,.ete educetionel in-
stitution. Curricule epplicable to the br·oed •
e,t re"nge of computing systems.
GOING BUST!!
e J\f11.id1i e Sl .85 llr.
APPLY:
8'n Brown'• Motor Holrl
31106 S. Coast, S. Laguna
._ MAID • P1r1 tin1to nov.".
.'-;umrr\8' full tit"M. Call lor
11ppt: 6T>34fi.1
;!A.RINE ~1ochun1c. t'u-st
cl&M rnarlnt 1:11~ r11ginr
mtthank: 'v.11h aJI • lU'QUrK/
M t i:xpcr 1'fuMI M.Vt knn\\'-
)rdi(~ ol rl~tnc1ly anti lht-
1blhl.)' to ~nata.11 r.ar oonl-
mon to yacht• in a prof~•
11ional maftnt!T', Pttmt1rw:nl
U quallfl@d. Good PflY, good
""".pcfll#, KtJ(l(I \or'OrklnJI: co~
chtlont A-pa.kt v111ca Uon. See
Servlo, MeM2"r
P•ciflc MarlM Y achtt
rr:it W, CoaBI ll\\'Y,
1 N,wpor1 8f'11eh
Tfir. ruN' NF.Vf;R ~ on
DAILY Pll.DT WANT AD!;'
c•n count on:
e lrtN ptry if you work Su•doys or Holldcrp e let• rolsa Clftd choflce fot promotl•
e P.W -...... ....,. • c ... pr .. ...,.,e ltettefit plctti to ,1.,e you
SKMfity & protectlOll e AM ..... of ft9'W frluds. You'll med t .. em
ot wort •d ht ofter-hour octiwltln-
Talk l o u1 1oon and find Ollt more •bout b•·
'."CJ • P1cific Telephone Oper•for. We're hir-
1nq now between 8:30 A .M. a nd ,<4 :30 P.M.,
Mondey thru Fridey •t No . 2 City Blvd. E•1t,
Suita 2.-0. Or•nqe, Calif. (So. of C hapmen,
we'* o f O ren9• County Ho1pit1ll 6)'1-1260.
llf toll cell, c ell c ollect.)
Pacific Telephone
An Equ•1 Opportunity E,,..~loyer
Interesting, lucretiv1 p o sitions ;" comp uter
programinq , e nd keypunc hing •v•i1able every-
w here. For more in form•tion ju1t phone or
meil the coupon.
e 'ti"!'~' ~o•~' r--------------• 0.1 O' I IM lo""llhol lfl: (01.1.11051 E11~~l"t c1 ... ,,
• Ct11Ulod Dli>lo,,... e Noll"""'
Pll (l m•M
... , _________ _ ,,., ________ ....... __ _
'" hi.
171 41 S47.9471
S. Towor,t Suite 40, 500 So. M•in
Un ion Bank Square, Orenge, Calif. 96'288
4,080 Rolls of Wallpaper
Values to $15.00 per Roll
Take Your Pick at $4.00 per Roll
ATTN: Housewives, Landlords,
Builders, Decorators.
Vinyls, Grass Cloths, Flocks
1882 HARBOR BLVD.
lbetwHn Newport & 19th)
•
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE
MERCHANDISE FDR MERCHANDISE FDR
SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE ----'-"'-'-'--I -------
Appllanas 1100 P i1nos & Organs 1130 ~ll•neovs ~
LADY Kenmore wa.1htr, late
niodel, :dnt oond. $85. tlot·
polnt \\'asher, xlnt i.."Ond.,
$-10. No11:c Elec dryer, xlnt
cond., $3J. 847-8ll5 or ,......,, '
SO. COASf KIRBY
lw credit TD'a &. demo
model& of tl('W '70 Kirby
Cla.s~cs, 25~0 oU. Fae•.
warrn't. Pll: 536-7S21/222
Sth SI/ 11.B.
KELVJNATOR Relrig. Lrg.
t.z. Top freeur. xln't ..,."Ond.
Runs ~·ery quiet $110. l!Kl-1
CoraJ Pl, N.B. 548-J758 alt •
USED Appli&nceli & TV's,
all guaranteed. Dunlap's,
1813 Newport. c.r-1. S-tB-71B8
15 Cu ti Wesllnghouse relrll{
L;ke new. Cos1 $250, .sell
$6J cash. &1;...1628. ---·----Antlqu•• 8110
ANTIQUE
ESTATE AUCTION
KIMBALL CONSOLES
Thi~ W~k Only
NPll' '70 A.rlillt Consol('
Jlr1~d Al $'995 .••
Oo Sall'" For $699 .• ,
Hurry! Lilnted Quantity
COAST MUSIC
NE\VPORT & HARBOR
Costa Mesa * 642-2851
We are having a
Whal• of a Sal•
on Pia.nos and Organll.
You better rome on down!
WARD'S BAl..DW!rf STUDIO
1819 Newport, C.1\.1. &U-8484
Open Every Nile
& Sunday Afternoon
HAMMOND M-2
ORGAN
This Popular Organ
P nt:'t'd For Quick Sale
No'~ $595
COAST MUSIC
NE\VPORT & HARBOR
Costa htesa *' 64.2·2851
8205
\.VON New 21" r.tagnavox
tolor TV a! r afflf', can't
use. \ViU sell or tr11rle +
Sat. night r.111y 23rd. 7 run ('ash tor sml outboard boat.
• J..argf' Consignmen1 of An. Retails $100, sell $350.
tlques frorn Sou!h Dukota, • 613-1234. e Owr 500 items to be sold lo I c~~-------23" Btark & \Vhite Zenith
lhe Jughcst bidder. _ . remo!(' L'Onlr<.>1. S3J.
BOB'S AUCTION • "'~,., • 20-1 W. Chapman 1 =c=o7LO=R-An-,.-,-,,.--.-,-.,-~-. J
Orange, Calif. an1plilier . new $110; sell
Phont': a.18-ll~l $35. 6-1-l--0567.
Auctioneers: Bud Garretson ALL Channel 19" porlablf'
k Bob F'ord TV $35, 21" portable TV
$'15, !'r18~529
TIFFANY SHADE
BUYERS
Don't Miss Our Fantastic
Sale This \Veek. Originals
& Reproductions. Anlique
Tiffany House. 122 So. Or-
angr. Santa Ana. !)41-:l7S1
1933 MICKEY MOU SE
'''atch, link band, mint cond,
madr hy lngl'rsoll Watch
Co. ~""15-6759 cvi;s.
BRIC·A·BRAC SHOPPE
Specializing in d1~press1011
glass. 8a4 W. l!lth St .. C.M.
642-76.16
PERSIAN Brat:clPI $75; Civil
\\'ar carhin1·s, revolvers;
Victorian b('ds. 4~2947
ORIENTAL RUG
12x23 Royal Kennan. Other
Various Si;res. 673-5822
-----Sporting Goods 1500
NE \V '"Fa1 Albf'rt''
Surfboard. 6"2"'. a sk in i.::
SIOO-, call 6Ta-&137, ask !or
ft11kc.
1~56 i)4 TON Dodge truck.
Mny be ll«!n al ;)94 W.
19th SI. C.M. 548-0TI7
'* EL PAIPO *
KNEE fl1ACHINE 5-1"',
Brand new. 644-2677
SC1JBA Equip. Comp! llf'!,
top hr1u1d. Must sell. Call
536-8:?6:i af'. 6.
WATER skis, llfW and 11scd,
$5 to $30.
.. 497-1692 *
SCUBA TANK
J VALVE
$45. 548-4825.
S•wing M1chln" 8120 l-'=========-
SINGEP.. Au!o z11?·7.3A', 6 mos.
old. No attarh ne<'decl fur
zig.za~. Uu1 ton h oles,
cl("Sii;:-ns ctr. Guar. $.10 cash
or ~mall pa.yments. 526-6616
Musical
Ins t r ument.-81 25
Misc•llanHUs &600
PRICED TD SELLI
Antique gold orlginal hcd-
room set, vanity 6', 2 end
tubll's. Orig, green hutch.
Sten..'O recon:l player, AM-
FJl.f. NPw set Encyclopedias.
57 Triumph, baskc! $150, 113-
FENDEll J\1l1stang" ~ F~11drr 2!'Uh St., NB !1-7.
P rinrr1on urnp Sl ~JO. C:all 1c~;=e-w-,-~)-1i 1-,,-. -m-,-,-h-,,-,-. -,-oo-d
5'1!1-2193 1111 6 pni. Al~•) eondition $'.lO. \Vhirl pool ga!>
Speakrr ho.~ \\'llh 11\'o 12" dryer. new motor $25.
Jensrn sprakrn; $:\0. ft1eyfair 4 piece drum set 1-~~==----" GRJ-:TCll n1Q1)f•I ·100 with rymbals & stool $100.
Gul1ar. Xlnt rnncl. :>4~}-33:>2 1162-6363
or 494-9734 1\TOVJNG Mlr: Rldr's equip.,
'l SPEAK""'E~R~,-,-b-,,-,-.. -.~{8) shingles. poWf!r & hand
JO" ~!J('tikPrS in •·a. Brand tools. household Hems. ZR.14
tle\1'. :;J&..-3106 art :1. Ch1llon Way (Top of World),
GUITAR &. Amp; 2-12" Lai:una. 494-4437
J ensons&t"f'vrrti.S:nJ. FURNITURE, Lamps,
962--03 18 pillows, twin size roll away
UPRIGHT P mno, Student's
La.Blanc clari11r1.
~~892 1
hcd, luggage, dishes & e-tc_
4.17 Seville, Balboa
(Peninsula\. 6(5-189-1
-==========I CARPEL IE'lt from Comm'!.
contracts. $1.98. S2.S8, shag
S.199 sq yr!. Dra;kl'.~ Carpet
Ji2(;0; Beach Blvd, H.B.
g.12-5114 CONN & WURLITZER
ORGANS
E xclusively At
GOULD MUSIC
COMPANY
A Quality Hous~
• \\'ilh A 60 Yc<i r Hrpul11-
fion For Thl' Fines! ln
Teachilli & Service Fac.i.t-
it1es,
Commute? Fr•• Rid•I
J/B·LA, vie: \\'ilshire/Wl.'st-
r111, you dri\"I' my (·;ir.
;,~1;~1~i6Z.
LlELT Ma$Sagrr $7;1. Rc.llUl·i·
t'!sor $75, Sch11.i nn Lil' T1gl'r
$20. S11r 12 \1·omcn'5
c'luThr'-&14-231i~ -EXQUJSIT~; F'11\l length.
v.•h1le lace \l"f'dd111i::: gown,
CUSTOM CASTING
Your pattern& or ours, gold
Of ioilver. Jlandcrwfttd jewel-
ry In 1lock Ul llLJidl!. to your
order. Jewelry tool&, ca.st.
ing 1uppl\es, cul atones all
sizes &. k1nd11, rough stones
!or the rockhound, lapidary
tools, 11upplics & machrnery.
Open Tues thru Sat. 9.8
Sullda,y 10-4 closed t.1on.
F'rvE h1 GEMS &
LAPIDARY SUPPLY
Rear ol College Ct>nler
Shopping Center
2TJO l1arbor Blvd .. 11-A
Costa h1esa • 54S.:im9
I II
894-2312
*AUCTION*
11 you will sell or buy
give Wlndy a try
Auctions Friday 7:30 p.m.
Windy's Auction Barn
2()751r.i Newport, CM 646-8686
Bel\lnd Tony'z; Bldg. Mat"!.
~IINK Coats. Dressrs. Sizes
10 & 12. Long & Short.
Some completely beaded &
sequined. Cost $200 to $500.
Worn once or twice. $25.
up. Others $2. to $15. Ap-
pointment only. Pho nc
61a-0850.
PATIO Sale: Bric-a-brac &
n1isc, Beauolul cuti::,la.~s
\•asc, colon-d glass, sterling
pe's, Chint'Sf' b111ss bowl •
Nippon. candles11cks g. niat-
ch. bowl 8r much morr.
Sl'c to appn?c, Pr1v. pty.
~16-()\98.
YOR Beauty·~ sakl", Turtle
Oil & Avocado Creme &
other ori.;:111111· prod. \\'hsl
price11 1nea11 lantastic sa\'-
lngs. F'or nn'lcring & inlo.
Ca!! anytim1•. Qua 11 ly
Hra!th P1-00Ul"!.~ 49;-,..5688
LADil::S d i<tr11ond n inn c r
ring, set wHh l \~ karat
Ct'Tller diamond, 2 dlarnonds
-1,(. karat on each iildl'.
Brilliant cut Sacrlt1cc! Rrp.
Jy to Box P360, Dally Pi.lot.
MOVIE Cam. Bo!rx Sn1n1
Turn>! 3 Jen~. :\1 1rro~rope
Turrct l 1.~n~. Ur11\1•r11·1!.
typ ev.·r1trr, S 1au!lr r
redurrr. 131·s\ or fe r.
642-526::.
ONE . Twin 1.nnn1
can1<'rn .~. pro.w1·to r. fl'llS.
\\'on1cns ~nlf rluhs ,f, baA".
nc\'('r u~rl. 11~as. 49;}.-0 160
Lai;:. N1~'1l"I. -----i iii--;1~-;.'if·d. 1'l0a11. l\yl0n
1·pli,:. Sl.i. ~l)i Zil~ h'l'Tlllll'l'C
maplr sr11•1ni: rn u c :1 inf'
S37.:lJ: 10" 111hli• 1'fl;\I , 6"
jn1n1•r &· .~hnfl(<r. 4~2-26G:t
REFRI G~ 1-<tr-S~. Pon ab)r
19 .. TV .$.1::i \n Xln1 Nnrl.
12' boat lrlr s1·1, Varu11m
c:lrancr Sil. IJ2 Buoy SI.
c .r-1.
REEL JlQ1\rr 111011·!'.'r ; r-o11·p r
edgerftnmn1rr; \\'ll11r &
szold dbl. t.•anopy hc-d frame
(no moll l, rn:.t l'"h . .sprr111I,
lop & pillow c0vrr.; 96'.!-:.033 ---ALUMIN\;r,t A11 n1nt: 11 1!h I
side scrrrnril -~· sturn1 "111.
(!()\I'S 11.•11h <:!nr;i1.:1• 111 111h•'r
end. ~:11 \I'. R"y No. II,
C.'.\1. 011.•ne.r a! No. 12.
NOi\' you can ~llm 1nchel!
awa,y '>''ith ju5t minlllcll a
tlrty•
SLIM GYM
Ru1h1e 6'12-642tl 64£>.3341
r.·IOVINC: I JI u us rho 1 d
lurn1sh1n1:,s f0r ~11le-A pc
d1111ng room 1wl, end Tahll'~.
lampK, ii;ofa. rrlrig, ,.tc. 9097
r.tallan'I. FV. 9GIH9!10
GOULD MUSIC
COMPANY
2045 No. Main
s11.1• 11, paid $200; $30. SONY Color TV S:l50. Ivory
67:1-:1009 \•·rn11~hl 1mn i!il ~r! for
S,\C..1l!FICE: N.B. Tennis 6 $J50. Powl•r n1Uv.•rr $33.
mrrnbership, s 3 8 o + Call 6-12-QOOli.
Santa Ana 541 -0681
All•n Carousel Organ
Like Nev.'. Exclusivl' lra!ur-
es. Be l!un' lo see !his fab-
ulous organ. Savc over $1CXKI
f rom /1('\\' prier.
COAST MUSIC
NEWPORT & llARROR
Co~lll r.teAA * f142-2R!"1I
1ran.~ter. 547-8211 exl 3:.0. 21" 1\ritnlrAI Color TV. with
"'Cla ra" nrw antrnna and picture
BEDS. Ches~ or <lrawen, !ul>t', $200. Call 673-3316
TV, refrig, washer, f'lr. ="=l="='c'~p~m=. ~~~7.-_
Rf'11lly ch~p! 2683 Elden PERMANENT f'rcss \Vai;h•·r
C~1 a.ft 5 pm. & Dryer, s:.n. 12xlJ 6"
lfVY Dty We sting h s llrrcullnn carpel, S 6 5.
washldryr. Kenmore A'llS ~:t-170.I
rnng('. llideabed. 96&-5226 'w=ro=o7JN~G~Go~w-,~s~,-. ~,_~,~1°'.;o.
an 6 I Sun. Brirtr11mairi dN'SSl'~. ~1 isc * Drapery remnant-25c clothing sz 7-12. 28-1 S\erks.
HAMMOND, S!rinway, Yam-yard A up . 120 Virginia _c_.M_.~ .. -~_:n_.-._·_. ------,
aha. New & USl:d pianos of Pl, CM. 548-6671 SAILBOAT JI", llherglass,
mOflt niakes. Best buys in -c;--,,,--~~-~~~ I lk~ nr.w dacro" i;11il . r-.1ini· So Ctllif. ol Schmidt t.1usic ./ Nc\••porl Beach F amily a b M '-hi ~'l"l-bike; 10 tennis rackclli·Wood Co. 1907 N. Main, Sant& Ana U emuo::a p . .,, .. .i. Days $49'22116, eves 5."i7-8968 & steel. 540-6Sll7
~-,----..----,.,--,..-:-,-:-1 BALBOA Bay Club Mem-1000 BUSINESS cards SS.9~. B.ginMrs Org1n Class benhlp for sale at discount de 11 v ere d. Simulated
ENROLL NOW Weekdays (2l3) 879-IS20 l'ngravlng, FREE SAMPL-
Clau l!larting Tues., May COM'• IERCIA' , ,. • -m-ES, 3 day ~-54(}.3924 26th, 7 pm . 6 '11.'t'eka cour::e " ... • ........
Sll. HAMMOND ORGAN prenar on whla, tlec starter cabin al Mammoth Lakn
STUDIOS, 28&4 E. eoa.1 w/ equi~. S60ll. 642-86« F'ull wk flOO, Sips 7, F'rplc
I Furn. ~serve naw 53.l-3.174 lfwy., Corona d e Mill'. G.E. Freezer, avocado, $50.
673-S9XI 0mf!&:a auto. &a master FRANCISCAN dlnntt wve,
SPECIAL SALE wstch.S75.64S-1044 apple pattern, 5 piece
e New K. UllCCI Grand Pianos DISH\VASHER $45; TV $25: ll<'rvke lor 4. S30. 673-6757
e Mf.llY h.moos Brands $300 S~akt'!r $35, MOVING Sale: Everything
Buy Now A Save $.1.00-$400 ~ p11! 2 Fum.. appliances,
Tf"nTll SKILSA\VS 77 & 367 models. ii:arden tools, etc. •94~
COAST MUSIC $5:'> It $60 ea. R41-261W wi(nds Newport Beach Tennis Club
NE\.VPORT I llA.ll.BOR or after fl :lO wkdl,Yfi. Membulhip for 58..le $500.
Costa Meta *' r.42-28!ll OPAU by profeuional cul· 644-I034
BALDWIN Ac.rolOllie Plano. ter, Whole5al11 price&. Aii RADLAL Snw 1' stand,
Quality lna:trumfflt, l ike 2:30 P?-1, 638-4766. new. Onil $200, 11eU
new. $425. M~ aft 6. ,58 P LYMOUTI{ Sta wna. Call ~1628.
Hke
175.
Ygmaha ?ta.nos & Orw11n1 9 11lot gun e11hlllfll $50, :.i ---
Coe1t M1.11lc, Ne.wpor1 & 1'Utlei 22 auto. 897·7!M2 ~c. Want_od ___ l6_10
frldaJ M1y 22, 1970 DAILY PILC>T :;7
FREE TO YOU --------PETS 1nd LIVESTOCK TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TR.t.HSPORTATION FREE TO YOU ---...__ Hor••• t830 Powtr Crulurs to2G Mobll• Hom•t 9200 Trall•r•, Utility MSO
DINA/I'S ~vtn k1llens need -·--·-----• -homes. Lo/ll: hair tabby BEAUT Welcli Pinto Pony 28 CJIRl!; C'talt, '63, !win 1!!60, 10 x «) fUrtl trailer
lll r lpo · &: black. lO >J I" matt, re.nlle, 6 yrs. Good 185'1. Encl head, auto pllol, w/~ alum awning .
HEAVY duty trailer, $" x
11'. 'l ft h!gh 1\rtes $110.
962-7057
NEED Good home Io r
JovaWe lpit,yt"d t e m a I e
torto1-hell cat. Bnlhant
l'Olors, Hoosebroken. very
lll'eel and !ova ble .
children. Al!IO f~ 17, v.llh ch.ildtt.n. $165. 557"'9359 elec winch, radio, bail tank. Enclo~ pe.Uo or 1!(1rage
a1rch<:i·a.tt hull . 642-9799:;125 TRANSPORTATION bow rails, swim 11trp. tull buUd1ng. 351 W. Bay, Spa.ce =========:I
-E -0---Ct.l>Jers. Comp!. re!ln. $7.900 12. C.M . Trucks 9500 518--0813 5123
BEAUTIFUL black and
white II wk. old fen1ale
killl'n, house-trn1ned, inside
k111y lo qualified home
~S-0813 5/2J
6 ADORABLE 8 wk old kll-
!f'l15, mostly black, slx>M
hair, 1 grey lone: hair, good
JX!rsonallues; box tra!Tll'd.
fi.16-8~05 afl 3;30 :./'tl
BEAUTl'.FUL loving. spayed
b!k and \\'hite long;ha1red
i•at. rr1endly, good compan-
ion, a n d house·~t. Nreds
a good home. 548-U813 5/25
Need good home tor lovable
spayed lem, tortoise .~hC'll
ca!, Brilliant colors. Hou5l'.
broken. Very li\\"ttl & gen-
tl l', 548-0813
ADORABLE 8 ~vk old pufr
pies nf'ed good homl'. Tf"r-
rlcr mi,.,;ed males and
female . 847-2340,
!!97-SISO 5/'r!i
LOVING Crntlr ~ 111 al I
Schnauzer mixl'd female.
Beige & black. Loves
ctiildrcn. Needs good home.
548--0813 5123
BEAUTIFUL All-white
s payrd cat. Tigrr striped
m11.rktngs on back and face.
2 klHen& black and tiger.
548--0813 5123
BEAUTIFU·L German
Shepherd and Lab mix. 7
mo. old male. Needs good
homr. 546-7202 5125
BLACK ,'ft. \Vhitc Female cat
needs good home. Friendly
& nicely markf!d .
1130-075.J 5122
* FREE *
h.IITENS part Siamese .
Days 833--6801 eve. &
v.-eekend. 6-16-4637 'Jl'l'l
NEED Good hon1es for malr.
ancl female n1lxcd hrred
puppie!I". Cute and healthy.
8 A Tlf11L kittens: 1 Boats & Y•chtt 9000 673-ntiO ---~=~~~-orange, 1 hlk & white, 1 1964 COLUMBIA double ex-
gray, \ Cahco. Long hawed. t:OR Summer leue or sale. 25' OWENS '66, xlnt cond. pe.ndo, front porch A a\\'f\.·
hot1S<'broken. &12-37Sl . 512l 26. 1111 tbgls Character boat. Low hi-s. loaded. Call Owner In r. Cent er po re h
---4 , 1 1 d' 1 (7141 673-77B8 or 5J6..658J w/screened-ln awn Ing , fltt'.E DIRT -You Haul. ty grey mar ne 1ese, wk..i~ .. 11. Fncd • ..i ti ok. 6(2.6•"~
9.:)-l W 19 h s c 'I lrl'.sh water cooled u-v \~=='="· "'=-~===-~ . · t t., "' ·5/23 un.~inkable, comp! f'Qi,11p' 21 ' ~abin Cruiser. Chry11. ~ --
b11.y no111 & tillhing. Compl. Manne eng 90, Good cond. Mofor __ H_om __ •_• ___ n_u
TlllS llu To Be The Clites! n'rinillhed . £75-73(15 11100. 536-62J8. -
Assortmenl Ever! 10 darl-CUSTOM 18' Chev :.192 6 cyl,
ini; k1Hl'n1 (2 Jllle~l 6 v.·ks SELL ~r-.tradl' !or your !~nd 5 .cl-Ski B t 9030 111\JI under wan'Mly, many
old Ci!.ll('(J. oranges, blacks. l'q. 35 Ohlson saihng -;:po-:;;:;:-c:i;:;~o-•;;;;•;;;;~~I.~'~""~~· ~l6000~~·~.,._~.,,,~~= tigers 64&-4102. 5/23 C"ruist•r-rn~r. Sleeps 5. i ;· ALL GI O/Brd '6% h~·11d, galll'y, tully found. ·' ass · ·I BLACK 1ilky kitten~. 1714 , 985-t88l da s, 1714) 75 HP John90n Electrom11hc. Mini B lk•I 9275
mouwr S1amf'lle. "1 m11le. 60'1 ,832 Y &: 1'rlr. $llOO or besl offe.r.l----------
2 female. !»S-5122 1615 Kt>nl _...... evt's. Call 646-0352 1910 POWEL Tr11.U bike, 4
Lane, N.B. at26 12' BOAT, 51,, HP J ohnson 14· Ski Bo t Sa ·r , Boal HP Tecomseh, knobby Urea,
DOGGIE Nf'Cd!i homf'! Part ou'.boe.rd !: trailer. Take_ ii & Motor a :.W~n ~. sell swing arm A. te.le5COpie
nnrwlJr, n"rl territr 2 Y"l'I''" 11\\ay for SJ95, 316 Orchid, $2"50 Cash 645-1628 ! u Ip t' n. Movin&: $175. ,~~ ··~ ' ·~ CdM. 673-3859, 543-5020 . . . 675-1497
old. female, sho\1, lows 8' Ra H·" I -~~~_,,,-,--.,,=~--,, · 1960 30' Chris Craft, Loaded. _ .. cinRg . .r"ro•p 'ha11«',:.. Xln't PO~ WELL Shp 1125 ~ .. -U children. 546-0ni 5/23 W'll .1. , T k conu. egi11. , .. ware • .-v .. "
Loving genUe lffilall Snaui-1 &acn ice· a e. over incl $70 962-3965 3hp 1100, Bonama :lhp,
zer 1nix female. Beigf' &. blk. pymts. Call 8.16-4367/ eves · . · brand ne w $110. 8J3...3592 att 8·16-5280 5. Love! ch!tdrcn. Needs gd Boat Trall•rs 9032 -~===-~----
home, 5411·0813 . 29' DIESEL Montl'rey fantail MINI BIKE with or without
reasonahle, terms? May BOAT Trly (tllU for .,. rt. helmet. Excellent oondllion. LOVING gray &. white m11le-I d I u ~ ~ ra C' or sa . uo..-l9TI, boat. Ilea"" duty. 1225. 15 Call 644-2677 cat !ll'eds good home, 673-4911 ·~ :::::::::::::::::-:=::::::::::::== Frlenclly, nice marking.~. · F't. ski boe.t $3!i0. 642.-1272. ----
1130-07!'>4 5122 24· Yacht, fully equip for Motorcycl•• 9300
cruising or rae. Reee.nfly Marin• Equip. 9035 1----'-------ADORABLE k1t!ens 2 orange
and 1 gr11y 6 wks old
housrhroken and v.·eaned.
644.()13!\. 5/25
3 \.\'HITE kiltrns 2\~ mo.
1 male, housrbrokf!n, 2
female, 5-ls-1756 aft I!. r
5:00 51?1.
ADORABLE KH!cns, 6 \\"kli,
weaned & housebroken • or-
ang£' gray / white. black.
&l.2.-3340 5123
5 Fluffy kittens, need J;OOll
home and loving care. 7
wk!!. old. ~8-6202 5123
1 7 11·k. old male klUen wran-
ed and ready for a gOO<l
homr_ S48-0l!KI 51Z3
rt>ron keel to n111.s!head .. 1-----------
4!m-2066. DIESEL h11lr!ne Eng, 8)11P.
GRAND BANKS 32' yr old, $600. 9AM·l2, Call (714)
fully l'<Jp'd, sale by 0\1·ner 67.'>-2i14
$22.500. 673-5.531 att 6 pm. I"°========
-HOAT AJ~D TI{AJLER-Boat Sllp Mooring 9036
$295
4-15 Oak, Laguna. 494-61148 SLfP Space Avail ln Nwpl
20. Dory. 10 liP, outboard Harbor. Ap~llcation.s being
motor &. trl.iler. $750 or taken tor 11hp ~ntal_s. Sall
be 1 II 968--067 & pwr. Submit size &
s 0 er. ' descript., Box P-72, Daily
Pilot.
LIMEY CHOPPERS
& MOTORCYCLE
REPAIR
Hon•1t Price•
Honest Work
217 Avocado, C.M.
£42-7022
Sailboats 9010 \"ANTED·. '68 Honda CL 4~. Excellent ·~ Pia« to keep Condition. C a 11 after 5,
I • • • • • • • • • amall catamaran. Prefer &37-4498 CORONADO 27 '"'" '" '" "'"h· "' o• I c::;'="'O---,-,=~-w.r.4>1-6486 0'494-8414 • '67 Yam•ha 100 CC. 'l"I
cone!, very fast. $27 5.
Now On Ditpla6 WANTED: 24' SIJp. Leeward 675-3259 alt 6 pm.
B A I t I Pret. So. Peninsula &M!a. Y ~ n ment n Y Call S45--0550 YAMAHA I1l1B 69~ 1900 YAC TS ROYALE , ml. Show Rm. cond. Xtru. INC . \.VANTF.D: Slip or dock for S695. Call to see 67~2805.
GMC TRUCK$
Ht!re now.
Immediate DeUw:ry
Southern Orange County'&
only Auth>rtzed GMC Dealer
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
2850 IIa.rbot Blvd.
Costa Mesa 540..9640
'61 Ch•vy Sports V•n
VS, auto, R l.: H,
$1999.00
You'll Uke it (Lie. 91084.Bl
Try it at
Kintom Moton
845 Baker, C.M. 541).$15
'58 CHEVY Panel. Good ~
dit!oo. UICI
548-8097 aft 6
'S7 OIEV. P.U. 1,1 T. Xlnt
cond. New thru-out $595.
642-1410
'70 Ford %. T X.LT Ranger,
390, auto trans, air. Loaded!
536-9672.
~~~~~ '59 OIEV. %. T. P. U. V-8,
aulo. r/h. $595. C a 11
642.-57&3 or 675-1085.
Recr•at'n V•hlcl•• 9515
1969 CHEVROLET
CUSTOM CAMPER
Turbohydramatic transmLs-
sion. ~engine, power 1t~r
ing, split rims, heavy duty
tires with OPEN ROAD UY,
fl. reU contained r:amper.
1''ull bath facilities includilli'
lhower, Glee ps 6, has every
poasible feature you would
want. Cost or\g!naJly $8(Dl,
~~18--0813 5/23
DOXER fl1ixed len1ale 11,;
yr_ olcl househroken. good
v.1ith chlldrrn. 893'-26.53 5/23
BEAUT. spnyf'd blk & whl
longhr. t"al. Cr! companion
f,. hse. fll'I. 548-081.l ':1122
Kl'ITENS -8 v.•ks old.
9G2-313B ':1l'l'l
ONE white rahbit and one
hlack rabbit. S49-1.'ll4 5122
* 645-0810 t zs· sailboat. Call eves. (n4; HONDA 50 175 I • • 982-7821 or WILL
• • • • • • TRADE for a Powell bikl'. 2850 Harbor Bl., Cost.a Mesa CAL 25 "KILO" WANTED. Boal 11l!p for 28' 962-7057 541)..8881
Now Only SS599
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
FREE Puppirs: M ! x e cl
Shepherd & Lab. 6 \Vks
old. !ISS-1&92. 19061 ~la!hev.'
Cr .. 1-1.B. 5/l1
BROTHER & sister kittens.
Loving. 7 \Vks, housebroken.
chocola!e brown &. black.
6Ta-19S8 :1123
Consistent Race winner • sloop. Call alter 6 PM. ·==========-\
Loaded w ; extras: Radio, 673--0177 '69 HONDA 350 CB rec tune-
boat bath, lile raft, se.lety _ _ up. Blue wlchrome lenders 1 _C_•~m~po'-'~'-----9-520'-l
gear, etc., etc. Owner must Fishing Boats 9040 $625. J2S 25th St. -Let
FfTS and LIVESTOCK -------
HELP, 3 gwect little kitten~ Pat1, General --------uoo
net'd gd homes. long hair
caliro. Ing hr grey, tiger
~tnped. s:>S.76.50 5/25
3 ADORABLE p up pies ,
assorted sizes, lf'male 7
v.•ks. Call eves. 536-l~ 5/25
LOVABLE l.ah mix 6 mo.
EXOTIC Macaw ft1onkey.
Beautiful pet, lriendly. $3!>.
Call 549-2638. * 1· bed d'1van,
Sj(}. 54&-1906,
543-1~7.
turquoise.
after 5
old male needs good home. Cats 8820 54&-7202 5125 ~ :;:_ _____ _,,:::::
2 Ni{'(' mah~ ki!tens 6 wlcs. ""'e Are Siamese, Jr You
old, To good home . Pleasr." Sralpoint. pxcepL
!'>40-2l!t.5 'j/Z::, fine. brcl'ding. Looking lnr
just rhc r ight home.
KIITENS, 6 Wk~. \'z S1amcsl.' 6·1·1-{);i.sfl. 1~ Prrsian, blk &.wht . =~========
114&-1432 5125 Dog!-. _____ 8"8"'25
7J'7Q Dl'aglf' 25% ?' 1\1ale
lo 11:f'l'lli home. tias ~ho!s. OLD ENC:: LISH SHE E p
5-12--1047. 5115 DOG PUPPIES, Al\:C. In1'1
t. A1ner, Chan1p Sired.
FREE Housr rerWizer. 20311 Avail. lo approvrd }10m£'s
CyprJ>S~. S.A, l~ghts . aft 5131. Inquiries Invited.
;Ho.-0915 5125 (7141 431--0475
HAPPY. heal!hy k j I I ens' 'P~oc=o~c~E~P~U~P~S~.-re-,-,.-1,-re<-I.
wraned &. tra ined. \\'hi«r. 6 11·k.r;. Sm ell
!l-18-461:) 5122 m1n•ature I male 7 ounce
FREE Kil!C'n-part PC'rsian. Teacup $200. 2 remale I
2 nios old, greyl'>''hit<". lh t.. 1 1 ~ lh $100. 1030 \V.
female. !)62-6358 5123 Balhroa Blvd .• N.R. 6i.l-4S-l3 - -ADORABLE, Fluffy k(l!crn;, SILKY Terril'rs, /\KC.
Sac. Tom Butler. 646-2524 ·--· ----* '67 HONDA 90 B i k e. 33' MONTEREY $3500 Custom lank, x.lnt cond. If CAL 25 Xlnt cond. Calley,
dlx halC'h, sails, knot meter
elec. system. eng, pulpit.
lire lines, stove. etc. $5!UJ.
At Balboa Bay Oub. Owner
644--0688
* 673-0276 * 5200. 673--4923
~~b~o:~m~•~•---'92~0~0
OPEN HOUSE
250 Yamaha Enduro DT-1
2SOO mi's. Good Shape~
$545. 646-lSM
'58 lfarley DavidllOn, lull
SNIPE 1j'6'', sailboat, full In Coal Cl••n Cl•ar dress, xlnt oond. S750. AJt ra~ gear, 2 sui1s sai\1, Coat• Mell 5, 673-1352, da~ 548-9694 .
No. 14641 , located Nell'port, * ·70 I-IONDA 350, low
SlOOO/o!fer. Pete Crary. e Slit. & Sun. r.l ay 23 & 24 milea~r. SfiOO. or tak~ over
(213) •~ <~ Jl • Refreshments served 11 "~·co eel A~14 PM In Featured Ma-payments. 968--7229
e SAILING CLUB e dcl 24x60' Sherlton Manor RlCKh!AN Matisse-Tri 500
22 to 25 foot raeer-crui&en. e See The l''inest ln Mobile wlLucns mag. 21" fmt whl.
$7.50 pe.r day. Newpor1 · Living At • , • Shani.!_ $895. 540--0466.
area. Salling orxp l'K>t nee e 2 Trail. bikes e
soun1 COAST SA!UNG GREENLEAF 150 • 175 CLUB <n4J 547-9-106.
RK 280 E. Wilson. C.M.
SABOT, glass over wood, PA '66 TRnJMPH 6.';Q cc, r:hrom·
sail, oars, yarrl dolly. 1.7 An Adu!t Private Oub ed. All re-bit. $85(), PearJes.
hp motnr, all xlnl cone!. cent. 846-3238
~·-6_7'-_7689_,_____ • Modrl Homes Displayed Jn 1n70 SPORTS'J'ER Ilk
LONE Star 13. Near new, A Di11tinctlve Setting $500 down & iakee :;;
!mmac. w/trlr. $825. Near From $7,850 paymenls. 548--8776 Ile\\' 1 \~ l!P motor also To $14 SOO
avail. Ca!l (213) 592-23.34. • 14 Models • 9 Spaces Re. '70 Suruk! 50CC Trail Bike.
SABOT &hock racer, 1968 ms.Jning. 400 . ml '11. S245 wlbumper
lop condition, comp I et e • S~nd The Day In A Truly caml'r. 642.-246"1.
11·/trailt'r $300. 675-5Z85 Plea!Qlnt Environment '69 KAWASAKI 90. Perl.
1•vr5. !)ry clock also avail. Conrt . $275 finn. Call Greg,
--------Take Nwpt. f \\'Y Or Harbor 67;>-675.; after 6. PC 12' Sloop. Rarl' -------Equipped Top Cond. Blvd So. To 19th St. Then e "62 BSA 500 e S38~ \Vest To • 175o \.\'hittler Ave. Good condillon. $475
64£>.2577 Costa r.1esa (714) 642-1350 * !'>46-4479 *
ORANGE COUNTY ;ill Sl'.'(I.'<;, 6 wks, 1ra1ned champ s lk, 11m a !I
ffl sand bo,.,;. 646-~7] :1123 males/lcm. Rl'as. Stu d LUOF.:RS Hi-sailboat, form
II l E Exrlu.sive Dealer F'or
'69 HONDA 350CC, xlnt cond.
$589
Call at1 5, IH'Z-3070 Avail. &46-733j l'f'1 t" 1amp, xc ~·oiid, 30'
NO. Gd. h Omf's fl'lr 3 -----I · I 'f Jl/"-II LA PAZ S Ip Ill( • l> US! SC <>-<:SI 0 , 1111'('('1 kilten~. Wea.nee! ,(· AKC Chorolate poodle pups,
1ri:11nt>rl. 64&-1403 51l1 $85. Also want to purcha~ ~-0-00_20_______ B II C h Auto S•rvlc•
nr (n:l do• •roomg '•"'''· 26" \.\'hale boat k: et c h, Custom u t oac •• 4 Adorable kinrns. J027 OD & Parts 9400
K1llybrookc J..anc, Costa ~'"~1~-"':.:c"~·~83~'-c.::-°'='~'---~~~sembled, needs ll"Ork. + ~~~;Y 16t~er S~i'~ups ---
i\1esa , :i.t~·0401 5123 GERMAN Sht'phenf pups, • 714 1646_9024 * Guarante.d Spaces CORVAJR engine. lrana, dJ f.
./\KC, 7 wks, chanip, hlOOfl , , In Tustin rnmily &. Adult teren tial. front M!ar SIAMESE Cat,
malr , rail
:i..1&-3390
C'ltTF: Klllens,
673-8963
1 1~ yrs ,
11 ft. 5.
5/23
7
MYRTLE hushe~. hring. yaur
own shovels. 545-AA37 5/23
2 Bt>autiful kittens 7 wks
old 613-2202 5/23
1,~ SIAM F.'5E kit!eos
& ln1111{'d . 646-1910
l111e. Top quality pllp5 trom J7 0 DAY Sloop, A-1. Trlr. Park. Buy your COllCh from su.~pen~ion. Cha~sls. All or
S~i(l. 962-7362. mntnr & hoat mvrr. Slip uii; nnd 11avc nn faclory di-part. Musi sell by Sun!
av11i! $1295. 540-5523, reel 11r!ces. Over 100 mo-548-8!);18aft6. At\C Shellie (n1in l"Olhrl
look., like Lassie, yr old ~>4&-8B8G. dc ls to ~Wrff;Jrom. ~EW -American Ea~de l'l.d-
a ctlve 1nale. Sac $60. J ;ii...,,· SNIP!:: JO.ailboat & MOBILE HOME-.Sltt:£8 _ Justablc Rftctng Wln.c tor
641,..1276 traller. New r igg i ng , 237 So. Tustin, Orange ~-175. 642-7958
FEr.fALE miniatu r e Hcautl!ul. Asking $llSO. 6..13-2961 633-2974 536-1448
Daschsuod. J yr. Very good 6-15-07116 nr 494-1893 BAY HARBOR '!!!ll•r, Travel
with children. $15 8-17-2852 CHINESE Junk 30' long, Mobll• Home Sal•• -
DOBERMAN Pinschcr pUp!i teak, good rond. $2000 or ALL NEW '70 MODELS ALPINE
C be~t offer. 1213> 39(}-.4653 NOW ON DISPLAY
9425
AK , 6 Wk!!, $51) & ui;i.
6 Wka old kil!ens, trtt to • B-5260 * CATAMARAN 14' Piver V--4. :.IO' Wlde1 u low U $5995
'
rood honiea. 962-9622 5125 Alum. ma~t. licensed trlr. 12' Wides to 34' t.Jlde1 VACATION
r.1 ALE Pond 1 e, blaC'k s395. 673-870l alt 6. f'arlt Spa«s Av•llable TRAVEL CENTER
4 YR OLD Calico spayed minialurt, 5 monlhs old.Call Col bl 26 ,1 k ll 142:; Baker SI., C.O.ta Meaa E l Gold F 1 female. cat. 540-7161 51Z2 546-1906 after 6??11. um a "ar 'Ai block East ol Harbor Blvd. XC• • -•n •.con ~ \VK old tluHy Kitten.,. LAB. RE'T . Pups, AKC Fu!! race Costa ?.1eSA 1714) 540-9470 Olympia -Alplnt
nt'l'd good homes, call Show & t!eld Champs * 642--0906 * l0x50 FLEETWOOD 14730 Apach• • WhMI Camper
962-7M'1 Gold femaJea. 673-3778 ~g<' ~~6;/TRAILE~ Bltns, crpt, bunk bdll, ruti Wf'"ldt ~nt most C'Om-
GIANT Blrdll of Parad\s(' ./ LABRADOR Stud StorviC"e * fi7~122 '* length cement pallo lJ &llVTl-Pen~ R vehicle shopping
-ycu d ig. Zl.51 Orange Ave., Avallabll!. AKC. Registered. -~~~_c_~-~ ing. A-1. Re"dy to move ce er ·
C.M. Apt. D, 5/22 _C_&l_l _,..._. __ 9_76_____ Hobie Cat. Branrl New. ln. Sp . .fl Driltwood, l146l 835.:.1 Garden Grove Hlvd, CV
6 MONTH Doberman loves 2 BLK &. Ian male AKC 111 $IOCID lakf's. Pacific Coast Hwy, H.B. 534•6686
children, needs room to run. Mlnia . Dach1hund11 $50 t'a. Call 64~592 .l..:'1&-:::,~71~20~.~=~~==-
675-0931 5/22 S.'Wl Pr. 962-9!151 LI DO 14, xlnt. cond,. tra.Uer 24x60' NEW MOON
GOOD top iioil in alley of SI'. BERNARD. C h amp. & co;e~ $=7861 * '* Owner MWll Sell By June
490 E. 19th Costa Mesa bred pupplea. 438 Mqnolla lit. l Br & Dtn or 3 Br, 2
Ooaed Sat. Open SUnday
-537-4011
642.3W7. Come 'n get It. S/22 St, C.M. Call 642-4586. 20' Gh1.11per Privateer kctch, Ba. 19,750.
FREE puppies to good home. YORKSIDRE TERR I E R Seagull aux, wfoH!hore Up to lO Yr's Flnanclng Strt•m line '70
Cocker/Beagle mix. 6 wk1. puppies. AKC, cha.mp 1ired, mooring, SllOO. 7l4./64&-90l4 A.M.S. 84l.-l939 9 am-7 pm Ttrry•Nomad•0.111
831)..6266 5122 * 644--0425 * CAL 20, Extras, $26511. 15' lOxtlO Tuirtln .Adlt Pk, 2 br, Explor•r Motor Hot'Tt9t
LONG haired, black &. white OLD Engllah Stiet>p dog, ~.""u ~75 "°"'67, "' w17loutboard 2
1 ""· kl'""', d''!"h • ""d';~· Fourwlnds•WHk•ncMr
k itt en, r l!a l t lu fl y! AKC, 1% yr, mall!. .. ·.., · .,....,,., · eec ' "'"'"· .. .......,, TRATEL 5o1;.._mq 5/22 962-04611 alt 5 pm. STAR BOAT, No. 4064, Rae-waah/dryr, carprt, cov, pal,
'
•m's. l<>g CoM .. MU>l S.ll, mak< '"""""'· lh<d, 541-0.Tlll 111 TRAILER SALES
LOVELY young alterecl cat SHEL TIE PUPS. 2 otter 64>10ll 10 AM. IJ!n H1•bor Blvd. G-G--Frtt to iood home. 8 Wlui, AKC Regis. • . . .
&46-7096 Eves. 5/2.1 Call 9£8...3770 12' CATAMARAN (hgb1/ SHARP l Dxll' l}S Blocks No, of
plywd, ('11rry in S!a \Vag. 2 Br &. Den. Nr . Cos!e Mes.a Carden G~·e Frreway
CLAY F'lower poll, ynu takf! 2 Male AKC Germa n $200. Il l 524-3479. A. H.B. area. Adult Pet Pk. 537--4011
1.1wll.)'. S36-6169. 6t2 10th ~t.. Shephttd, Puppies, $50 ea Owner Oeipenitl!!
H.B. 5123 337 Mai110lJa Ave., C.M. LfDO 14, No. 961 trlr, boat U to IO Yr' F1 In 1969 ARISTROCRAT 15' low
&fl...3310 cover, a{'C()md. 6 bay P 1 nanc g liner. SletP8 6, butane ref., ADORABLE Short hainod,
11m11.ll bred p up p I e 11 , I BOSTON TERRIER, 3 yr
816-S.~:W 512.1 old, male, rood w 11 h
-· chtldren, Call &i:.1--6168. J ET blk. 11 mo., % Slamete,
box traiMd & w/shots.
M&-2148 5125
RED aprlc:ol miniature poo-
<lle puppy. $75. or be11t olfer .
1alllna, $600. 673-:\265, A.M.S. 8"3--3939 9 am--7 prn 1tove w/oven, pres 1 u re
Spartan Mobile home , water, tollet, llJtll! brakea.
Power Crul••rs 9020 1o·x45·, 2 bdrm, wuher, Like new. Secrttlce tor only
-----dryer. air, F11.m. plll'k. $1395. lGB27161
•PVT PTY• 27'R"" F11irlinrr 1•1200, :i-16-3498 UNIVERSM'Y
*SIX PACK*
$795
FULL PRICE
Standard model lnclucle1 2
burner stove, ice box. delUX!!
cablnelll, cab over, butane:
heater & lite, best vaJue ln
""~. Kustom Motors
845 Baker, C.M. 540-5915
Datsun Pickup
New 1970 De.tsun Pick Up
\\·Ith camper, dlr. Fully lac.
tory equipped, great oppor-
tunlly, Will take tradr. or
will tlnance privote party.
Full price 111 $2099. Ser, •
167798) Call 5'16-4052 Clr
494-977.l
'68 Ch•v. Van
*CAMPER*
V-S, au!o, stove. !cnt, almOIS!
brand new, save on thia one
at
Kustom Motors
84~ Baker, C.f.1.
RENTAL
New '70 Ford Pickups
w/camper, aleeps 6.
• $97.~ Weekly e + 5c Per h111c
r.rilke Re!IC~atlon! Early
Scott's. 914 N, Harbor, S.A.
1961 FORD camper Van.
needs tune-up. S425. See at
10th & Virginia St. Owner
11t 3'ZOR!i S. Coall'l Hwy., So.
Lag. a.It 4
19G9 V\V Deluxe Bus. Sunrliki
Camper. AMIFM radio.
Stereo tlll)f'.~. 11 !'ad c rs .
Clean. $29;.(). &12-3762
1962 Chf'v. von camper.
Re-bl! engine, x!nt cond.
Isl $.'>25. lakc11~ \V III consid.
er gd . trade. 675-4332
!' Full cab-Ovt>r camper,
fact. dl5COntinued model.
Complete. $895. 869 Welt
18th St. C.osta Mella.
1!161 ~ T. Ptckup & Camper,
non-cab over, sell cont.,
rood cord. $100 &: T.0.P.
642-<640
'63 DODGE V&Jl. Custom In-
ter. Elec. relrlg .. new tire&.
Tape deck. Bob 67J-.2)98.
Dune Buggl•• 9525
50"-' DISCOUNT
~ Dune Buggy bodlet1 go on
sale today, All styles, a.II
metal nake colors,
ALSO We pric@d: 1962 bua.
gy, 1treet ready, 1970 buiO',
1treet ready, A G StUetto,
parts and aeceeortes,
AST RO
AUTO CENTER
301 E. hi Slrftl
Santa Ana
(114 ) 541-2942
OPEN SAT. & SUN.
CORVAfR enc\ne, trans, dl!-
ferentlal, front, rear wspe.,.
sion. Chulla. All or part.
Must aeU by Sun! 548-8949 ,
aft 6.
SALE/TRADE: Renault
duf'M! buggy Sl~ wltow bu,
will oonalder tnde tor am.
dirt blkt. 548-4648 aft 4
DUNE Buggy Bodle1 SSS.
B .. ckel Seats ff. 2 Weeki
Only. Call 540-1280
ll11.rhor, C.M. 642·1A5l PO\VER lawn iweopt>r. Xlnt
BEAUTIFUL &°r;;i~~ cord. $.1(1.
Maho1t. Spinet Plt lV). $350. C811 548--7288
CAii fi7.>-J8.l2.. ~~ll~O~SPITAL bed, ws.Jker
WAN1' p:l)(ll'I used
m11r:hlne $2:'1. or
11ewlng FURRY half Slamcse, 1 !Jc!l-3638~~-----~~
I e fl 1. rnal", 1 fem11le, beaut\lul MIN. Schnt1u1.er PUJ>8, AK C,
kl!tr.1111. 494-.'i.'\64 S/:l!i lovln111: r:omp11ninM, $100.
NEED ~ home• fnr 3 6-14--0_:1 4 11~ pm. ----
&42-6Tn aft 6:3(1 Pr.f
wANT ..:o: 1tEO\vo'o o
TABLE It BENC IES •••
'fi6, like rtew, 11'1 f"Qpd. $7900 REDUCED-pr_l_"-,-cV-lk-1"-g OLDSMOBILE
~ nvnl~!n-_ Sc11nd!a. 20x60'. T..ic. cond. 2850 Harbor Blvd,
2-l' TROJAN cnbin c.rulller, 5 5ltar Adult Pk. MM142 Co111.& Ml'aa ~9640
xtnt 11h11.pe. nc;1rly l)ew alter 6. -K-E-NSKILL __ _
•'ni:tl t'\I", $2995. 644-1368 12-,-,2--N-A_Sl_IU_A __ 2_B_l_i.1 N~~V '70 MODEL $2295
TIIB QUICKER ''OU CAL:i::, furn Adult NY1pt rich park'. IR' Fully Sr.U-Contal~
'69 DUNE B\JCY. Cu1tom..
Rcbu!lt engine. SHARP!
fl ti-1•1-4TM •
DuNF: D111to. unti~.
Corvair r1tl. $150 or trd
for &mall blkt . !M&-7231!. W1lnut Spln•t $1SO " tra,PSe. Good oondltion MS-~ 11.!~r fi PM -\' 543--2562 • ntl: QUICKER YOU SF.l..L Call ew1: 646-271.S :!lcolt'a, 914 N. Harbor, $.A.
mlxed·breed puppies, ~t; • DAL.\1ATlANS •
flWI lllV11hle. 546-7202 5/2.i !lo Mo. $100 962-4303 _ _;_;.___;__;_:.;.;._-'--nn-2111i; All s
··-~ PllOT r rld.iy, Ma~ 22, lq70
fUHll'O'"l T"'A"T..,l;,.ON..,---'"T"'RAN="s"PO"'"'RT"A"'T"'l"O'°Nc---.T'"R"'ANSPOR TATI ON TRANSPORTATION TRAN SPOR TATI ON TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTAT ION TRA NSPORTATION TRANSPORTAT ION ----1~·~"''.! .. ~•t!_!od~-~~-~-~ lmport.d C•rs 9600 I mport~~ 9600 i'.mported Autos 9600 I mport~ C.1 rt =~~---MG FIAT
9600 lm port.d Autot
TRIUMPH
HOO lmportM Autos
VOLKSWAGEN
'67 VW BUG
WE PAY TOP
9700 Used Cari 9900
AUSTIN AMERICA
-,61 Au1ttn-.merican -
Glacier 1"t\lte, "/blk inter.
'Fw.iy equipped incl automa-
tic 1.rAn... Weekend 1ipecial
.at
$1195
_t~r luporl
il111ports
3100 W. Ccut H\l'Y .• N.B.
142-!M05 54().17&1
Authorized ~I G Dealer
AUSTIN AMERICA
Sales. Service, PArtll
~iate Delivery
AD Modeb
J~l'llljJOrt
!l111µorts
3100 W. C.OU:l Hwy., N,B.
(J.12-9400 540-17&1
Aulhorittd MG Dea.let
AUSTIN HEALEY
'62 SPRITE, new paint. new
battery, good 11rcs. Neerls
upho[, \Vill lradc $3:.l;i.
548-7141.
AUTllORIZE D
SALES, SERVICE
BMW
BMW
Largen BMW Se\echon
O S&le11 • Psriit e Service
t~or ihe surTOUndU\& arc.a.
OVe.rseu delivery s~ciJil·
isls. Salt•.!! open Sund11y.
Bob Autrey
1860 Long Beach Blvd., L.B.
(Zl3! 591-8721
CORTINA
CORTINA
Largest 1970 Cortina Selec.
lion. • Sale& • Parts •
Servl!".e. f or the surround-
ing area. Ovcr.;eais drl1v1•ry
s pecialists. Sale open Sun·
day_ 5f>e
Bob Aut rey
1860 Long Beach Bl\'d., L.G.
213 -591-8721
67 CORTINA GT Rely. llrf'S
R/11. Good cond. SIOOO or
Best offer. 548-7891
DATSUN
DOT DATSUN
OPEN DAILY
AND
SUNDAYS
188la Beacb Blvd.
lluntlngton Beach
842-nSl or ~().(H42
'69 DATSUN
Big Sc-dan. overhead cam. 4
sJK'('d, AM/f'J\.1 radio. Takr
srnall down, \\'ill finance pri.
vatc party fD4264 J Call Phil
dlr ~0-3100 or 494-1029.
e J!J68 510 \VAGON _,
Radio ,r._ }!eater
• $141;1 •
83&-4243
DATSUN
'66 Da tsun Pickup
$895
' spd. lra/'lli. i;tcl"L'O tllpe deck,
Lie. SBN 8/QI.
o~,~-' ~-'" ~·1'1-3(131 l':xt. 66 or 67
1070 HAHBOR HLVD.
COSTA f\1E:SA
-tDAfilNJ--
.. Leadcr in The Learh Ci lies"
ZIMMERMAN
2845 HARBOR BLVD.
54G-4410
i11USf ~··II '6fi 1600 Rclsrr.
Both tops, 11c1v 11rrs. xlnt
cotld . 13rst nffL'r. 96S-6!lll7
ENGLISH FORD
,\JI New .English
Fords In Our Big
Stock tlow At
J."ACTOll'.
INVO ICI::!
l"'("l~il1vely No Added
l.Jf>all'r Chan:-1:.s!
Chooi:e rrorn
SNlans, Sta \\'gtL'i,
GT's Al Our Cost
\\'hile Overstocks
l.asl.
Theodore
ROBINS FORD
2.o60 Harbor Blvd.
---Auto Sport Ltd.
Ol~ANCE COl!NTY'S
NEWEST
f,\CTORY AUTIIO!t!ZED
FIAT DEALER
WILD
TRADING
NE\V
"FIAT 850 SPIDER"
$2210
• AUTO SPORT LTD
962j Garden Grove Blvd.,
G;1rden Grovt'
537-7777 893-7568
'61! SPY DER. air ~1·•X>p,
r adio. good co nd,
$1:,i;)(J/ofler.
• 612-3CM;S •
1962 Fial, Jl('W paint. good
1·n~. ,11, rra ns, 42,000 m1 ·s.
Call 675-1776.
JAGUAR
~--~----
JAGUAR
HEADQUARTERS
The only authorized JAGUAR
dealer in the entire Harbor
'68 MG 8C I!Ki!I Triumph TM, Ivy
G T Coupe gn'f'n, 19,000 m i's, Priced
Au!orn1111e 11•a11~rrt1ss1nn rx-to !it'll S269a. 67:r.6238 Convertible
r!10 healer WJl'f• wl;l'Cls 1964-Tr 1 -OOd-Yellow Y.ith bl11i:J.. lu11, lulb :l!l,cioo u1·1glr;al null·~. ' h .. 1 iunip .1· g h "°00
1 .. <i! e:<lras. Very i;ha l'p, ra. a r,. op, wire w ee 11. dio healer 4 '""'(.'<I , .. f, 'J. 612-833;, or 81!>-0051. 360•1 • :;,~ .....,
:,19 3031 t:xl 66 01· 67
1970 HARBOR ALVlJ,
COSTA ~IESA
MG
Sales, Serv1c..:, Parta
lmmed!att DeUvery,
All Mode!Jr
J2rUJµort
31111µorts
VOLKSWAGEN 18711 BEACH BL., 842.443'
llUNTINCTON BEACll
LARGE '69 Bug, 6 mos new, 4iKJ
n11, lull 11"&.rranty . $1 00. SELECTION ... ,wn, b.i or , 1 o;o .
of vw 6'16--7953.
CAMPERS '61)-V\V'--;;Ko"o.,.>b-i °"'b-~-. -.Enlpl
rxhaust sys. Ta1K' deck & Harbour V. W .1 -'=""~' =-""~"'·-=-"~'-=""'"--' ~ '68 V\V bug. ln1maculate
AUTI-IORTZED 14,000 mi. $1"50.
M LES & SERVICE * 494--032: •
18711 BEACH BL,, 842-4435 l o.~69c-cV\~V~.,-.,.-,..~b-,-,k-.-$2300 or
HUNTINGTON Bt:ACH bes1 offer. Teardrop trailt>r
'69 VW BUG 1121· ,,._,,,. .
3.\00 \V, Coast ll wy, N.B. Radio, hcatf'r, aulornalic
&12-9-105 !l-10.1764 slick sh1f(, 1vh1le \val! !Ires. VOLVO
Authorized J\fG Dealer Low t.!1lefu;r. (VCY961 )
'(i9 J\1 GB 'GT Green 11'/blk, $1699
J2.000 llll. 0 .D. Ch1'1l1 spok1.· Ha b v w
\\hb . radial lll"Ci;, '194-<.'92 r our a a
---·----Best Stock ol VOLVOS
in Orange County
DEAN LEWIS
cvr.~. 1871 l BF;ACJI BL .• 842-44:{i 1!'66 llal'bol', C.i\f.~•lti~J:~:
'60 J\1G/\ 1600 l;Uul l Cond llUNTINGTON BEACJ I 1!)6~1 Volvo, .\ Di·. Sedan.
Huns \\lrl!. S:i:iO ----------1 Good t:ondi!ion. $~5!l. Call
c.-.u '.J6:l-U::'2 I '61i VIV rur sale or lradt> aft 6 pni. <i-.~I
.=~~-. c~--t for Dodge or f'ord V<.in. Just -, -----~~-,-'62 .'llGA Con1pl. 1<·bl1 t·n~. had neil' brakes. tires, tune-67 Volvo. 122-S 4-Dr ~r~n
Complef;; .R/1 1. New 6 lllY 1'3!t1al up, lube, & oil change. Must 4 spd. X
4
1nt L-Onrl. $122J
SALES lirrs. l\11rr 11·hC'cls. :~1&-2::.62. i;re to appreciate, VERY * 9+-0322 _• __ _
Arca.
SERVICE J\IGB-ROa°dstc;:-:6,~hcrry CLEAN $9'J). 642,...00?i "69 VOLVO Sta . IV<.ig. Au10,
PARTS Ex. conc1. Ui\1' mileage WANTED air, :i000 1111·s. likr ne1v.
Ri ii \\Ir 11•hls . 962-1030 aft 6 S34Jt'.l/best ofrer. 546-3617
Poole l::=========-IJ'll pay lop dollar for your BUICK VOLKS\VAGEN today. Caul---------
IN OPEL and a sk for Ralph. 549-3031 Autos Wanted 9700 -------COSTA MESA ;;a:;:;;:TRANSPORTATION E>t 00·67 673-0000 WE PAY CASH
CASH
fer uscU cars & trucks just
call Iii; 101· ll'l'f! estinia1l',
GROTH CHEVROLET
J\l>k lu1· Sall'!i M11nt1Ge1"
Hl211 BC>ach Blvd.
lluiilu1gto11 Beach
847-60.'!7 KI 9-3331
\\IF~ PAY TOP OOLLAR
F OR TOP USED CARS
If yuur car LS extra clean,
see us first.
POOLE BUICK
231 E. 17th St
Costa t.Iesa :t.13-71GJ
--L\li'OR'J'S \VAi'ITED
Orange Coun1ics
TOP $ BUYER
BILL ;\IA.'<EY TOYOTA
18881 Beach Blvd.
IL Beach. Ph. 1Yl7-8555
New Cars 9IOO
Fl Y lilce a b ird in this
cana ry-yellow '70 Mav-
erick tha t is. Auto·.,
Jo"'ORD AUTHOR IZED
LEASING SYSI'OI
Amerlca'1 lar&e~I Jeasln;:
systern lot rtfl3Jlce or ncl
lc!lsin; ol aU type cus and
11'Udts.
• lmniedia,le cic.lh't'ry from
oYl!r 300 cars and l111clu
• Comrcrlr1ve rate.!!
• New car d~alcrship scrvil'e
• 1-'uJI "t1·ade!n" valUc for
your present ca1
• AU popular m11kes aYa.il-
a ble
F or Complete l.>elalls Call
t.faloo1n Reid
Lea.sing: l-1anagor
Theodore
ROBINS FORD
'.?060 Harbor Blvd .
Cosla t.lesa 6~2-0010
..... LEASE .....
'69 Cadillac Coupe De Ville,
Jun po1~er, air , vin)I 1')(11,
;1111/fm ~trrro. New wtutr·
11•1ills. tilt stet·1·1ni; 11hl. $1 69
per nio.
SOUTH COAST
CAR LEASING
JOO \V. Cst Mwy, NB. 645-2182
PS, R & H, $2399.00. Bll•CK Owner must liquidate .1 _____ "l"c._ ___ _
48 act. miles, See it at ·£6 Riv1rra . P r1v. ply. Clean.
Kustom Motors cau .. ir1cr 6 Pi\1
-------OLDSMOBILE
1970 OLDSMOBILE 98
TOWN SEDAN
1-'ac lory a i r rondilioning.
auto111al1c, radio (I' ca r
fi~~-47!J9
'66 RIVIERA. 11ir cond ..
A.\11r;,1 , p1-i· 1111111's &
M-at~. 1:h1•111 11t1ls. G·l:>-I~;i
1t11ys ·1~~1 .8891 el'<'.
-~ e·6:: Buick a1v1cra, all
ro11 ~·r & ;111· .. ~8.iO or hr~!
O!ll'I" 2SIJ E. \\lilson, C.:'11.
speaker!. l\C'a1cl', pci11c1·l----------
stccring, po11·er dii:c br.ikcs, CADILLAC
T& M MOTORS
t 0 1'J('n Sundays I
808 1 Gardrn Grove Bl vd.
J.-Blk. E. of Beach Blvd.
534-2284 892-5551
'66 DATSUN Sia \Vag.
clutch. b<.itL, funf!-up.
co rnt Call 6f:>-31H:i
Nr\1' Costa r.lcw. 642·0010 234 E. 17th Street "68 Opel K<Hlrtle $9.iO '69 VW, Rad. l1rc. Ch. rim_s.
548-T165 * rvj's ,r,,. 11•knd~ 67~1-3:{;.,1 * Ai\1/F~l . lmmacula!c. \Viii
11 h~I o..'i)l'Pt"l:;, l'('!l101e 1111r-
l'OI'. tin!ed i::l.ess, 11·-~1v.
S<:nal Nu. 3.'i4!i90:'1I:!763!11.
•66 DcVll.LE $2000. 0 n c
01\·ncr. lull pll'r. fnctOl'Y air.
A:\11~-L\l. v111yl top. I1nmae.
Own·~r huyu1;:: new car.
Eve!.. 673--0823 FC:.:•::m:zpe:.:'c:'-----'9-'-52"-0 Campers 9520
'69 Porsche 911 S
----~---'66 VW BUG
--s"!l 1!us v.·cckcnd~ SI~ '63 XKE H.dster, ne1v niuf. OPEL DL·lux i:oupi·. !1!•1v 675-0128
FERRARI fl et·s & pipes. Radials. GOO<! ~PL 'Ii~•. pi:rf1•1·I. eo~1 32!0.lU, 1·,-· ,
Sh • p . t $1500 JJt'ICf' SIS.'JO fi·12-.-,2!Jl l.11.J.1 V\V Bug. Xlnl cond.
___ · 31X' riv. PY-· l======:-::.::::::::::::1 A-I n1rc:hanical cond. 1\lov· f.42-2281 FERRARI I=========-i11g E;isl niu~1 sell ! Newport lmpocta Ltd. Or-PORSCHE Pn\'at~ party. 8-IU.001
ans• c.unty·• °"" '"tho" KARMANN GHIA
izcd dealer.
Xlot FOR YOUR CAR
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
Costa J\lcsa s.ir ... 1200
$4694
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
2~.lll Harlior BL, Costa i\lr~~1
OPEN 7 D1\ YS ~"10-96-lO
'67-i::1-::-UOJtAD~ca~.-,~.,-,,-,cir,
lull pll'r. lilt strn~. am/fni.
ftll! leai11r·t' inlrr, 1·1ri. rf.
;\·lu~r sell 67~ .... 23H8 a lt11s.
sALES-SERV1CE-PARTS '68 Karmann 3100 W. Coast Hwy.
TARGA Ra1110. ht"<.i 1cr. '1·hi!c \l'a ll New Ca rs 98GU New Cars 9800 1New Ca rs
Gl 1st1• n nit: 1 a ngPrl ne r ..:Ir r1or ! h'l'~. 4 i;peed. 1 TBXS39) I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;::;;:;;;;:;;::;;;;:;;:;;I 9800
Newport Beach Ghia
642-9405 540-1764 Authol'iZCd Ferrari Dealer Coupe, radio. hcatC'r, \l'hitr
1va1J tires, 4 spcC'cl, IZUX-
762)
FIAT $1799
FIAT Harbour V.W.
1 L.1ri;c,;t }'"1at Sclcct1on 1871 1 BEACH BL .. 8·1'.!-443Zi
l!UNTINGTON REACJI
S.1111 • ll!llAIS • llP.lllS • a=-
CAMPERS
ONE OF THE 1.A~GEST SEU.CTIONS
•• Dilf>llY in All Orange Con!J
TUVll. TUILOS
~~~SAUS •! AU. •1.' ,. 531-3997 • .
Sll.ootl 1
10 J.11111 ..... -· tAr·aw!IUHJ
THIS IS YOUR
O Sales • Parts • SC'tv1ct'
For the surrounding art'a.
Ovcr!'f'lls delivery SIJC'tiaJ.
ists. S<ilcs opi•n Sunday, Sec
Bob Autrey
1860 Long Bt:ach Blv1I .• LB
213 -~·!ll-8721
FIAT 12-1 Cp. 5--;pd, rnai::
1••hl s. am/hn rad. Sport~
c.xh11u.~1. Only :1wn 1n1's.
S:!!l!fa. ~Jan1.~1pn1, G·l~ .... !ll2'l.
\Vkrn1s 6i3-1:1969. L i c •
3·1R-ASP.
~=~~-~ 1!170 Finl .1150 ·"flYdP r c·nnvl .
:; n10 ll"w, 2600 11 ct. n11 's.
r<'d, $1!).i7. Pvt Ply •. \lust
!it'll , 673--0702
1968 FIAT l~OADSTE:R
J.ikf' new, One o~·nrr.
$13!1:l. <!'.16-9200
O range County's
Larg<'sf Selection
New & Used
Mercedes Benz
Jim Slemons Imps.
War ner & Main St.
Santa Ana 546·41l4
GOING To Europe.
r'l1C>rcedcs Benl, S.1:iO. 4 l:i
Oak, Laguna, 4'.'1-\.-&!·1~.
'6!'1 ~~FLJ-1;)°p~. 111LJll
x!ras. i\linl. $7500. 64-1-J:J,U
l'vr & \l'kr.nds
9800
LAST AND BEST CHANCE
TO BUY A '69 OR '70 PONTIAC!
LI.ST
NEW '70 GRAND PRIX
Gold. P ow~• equ ;J>ped, i11dudin9
in<;t. di1~ br~~••, rdd ,o, el<.
$3979
"'w , ,,,
RREBIRD -
11Low FACTORY INVOICE
lei! ont fo , •• , • l•r<;t• ,ul'l'l of lftO"ty.
UST 0, .,, AND ·10 ro"TIAC
DEMONSTRATORS
TO IE SOLD THIS Wllll.
TOr VALUES
ON fULLY GUARANTIED CARS.
'61 PONTIAC $2095
Bonneville Broui;:ham 4 Dr. ll.T. S parkling ivory
exter ior with con11·eslini;: black cordova top 8:
matching bin.ck Brnu~ham custom intt>rior. An ouL<:landl n~ cur suld new & scrvicl'CI by our dcal-
rrsh!p. I UJC843 I
'6B VOLKSWAGEN $1695
Automallc. Thli; rlenn one 0"'ntT ear Is r.qulpf"'d
with radio. heatrr nnd th" convenient autom111tif•
t.rarwmhuilon. Originhl light beige finish \vilh
matchlni tan lntcrlor, r\VIE924 )
'6B PONTIAC $2095
C..tellrw. 4 Dr. Srdan, This Ideal family car I~
IP.Quipped with factory air conditioning, ?O"'C'r
glefrlng 1:-brakes. t urbo hyd ramaUc, ndin &
hfeter. Sold nrw &. 111rrvl~ by our dealership.
Orlgina1 gold with contrbting black Interior.
(WFE920J
'68 PONTIAC GTO $2595
1!.T. Thi!> hcou11ru 1 lo"· n11t,·11 i::r t·11.r "·n~ ~··Id ,t·
~·'rl'll'l'rl hv n11r rlr•alrrship, l.i.:hl tl ll'l'IU\ll~•' l\llh «unt ra~lin~ hl;i("k 11111.1·1 l•1p & IJl.i,·k b1H'k1·I ... 1·:<1
ih\l'l'TOr. r r11·lorv a ir, [1(11\f'I" ~l1 •1•rini::: & h1•r1kf'•,
t111"h.-1 hvd1·an111 i1r·. r;1nin & hruto-r Bolal1•·•' ,,r
fal·lnt·y -1,·a rn1n1y is transfe~r;ihlr nn lh1s ,,,_
fr('n1<'l.V nti:'C' c·::ir. ~\VX~:.'\75 1
'66 MUSTANG $1895
':J Dr. H.T. Ttus rau l\IC'ss cnr i~ a •>nr 011-n"r a u-
ton1ob1lc. Equipment inr lurlPd fai·tnry llir cun-
d1t1on1n~. VS rncinr, po11·rr stcci-inc: and autn-
ma.11· transmi~ion. So[l yellow ('IUISid(' 1vi th off
11 hlle interior. ( RVJJ3l 1
'67 FIREBIRD 400 $2595
J.lardt.1p eou111•. Thts IX'au1ir11I locnl car h;:i~
every eor'ICC!ivable l'Xlra i!l<'I. \'inrl l op, r11slofl1
trin1, fa<lory air, !lit \\'h"rl. J)()\\Tr sle<'rin~ A:
hr11krs, 1•on.~olr, Jui:::~11gc rack. r lc. 1UJH987'
'67 FORD $1895
f'11irla nr 2 Dr. li .T. SpArklini: ivory rxt('rior l\i!h
hleck vinyl tor and black interior. Onr n1v nrr
CJJr rquippl'd 11·ith f11 elory air. 390 VS <'ngine.
pt>11·"r slN'rini:: &. brakes. comfort & pcrforn1-
an<'c. fITl\17'1~l
'66 FORD $1195
Fa1rlanr 4 door. A11lom11ti<' trAnsmlssinn, radio
e 11d heat.er. A i:;ood car a t this lo'v price. fR YS-
452 .
'69 FIREBIRD 400 $3195
2 Dr. 11.T. This sporly competitio n nrani.:(' lt'-'th
black vinyl tnp is rquipped 1vilh desireblr <t
s1><'ccl 1 rtln~n1!ssion. f.IOWCr 61ttrlng, radio &:
hratl'r , fut'lorv \\'Ar-ranl y avatlablE> on this fine
rar. Thr llf'rfcirinpncr ent.huslasl gpeeiaL f\'Cr\-
4'6•
'67 PORSCHE 911 $4795
Cnupr. 5 :<fl"rrl tr11nsmission, rni;:int jusl rPhuill.
"""uliful blt1C' f 1111~h \V!l h black interior . {ZJK-
"'" ROY CARVER
Rolls-Royce
2925 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA
S46-4#4
•ALL Cl.IS SHOWN
Cl.lRY OUlt 12
MONTH GUAlll.NTll
1\'/blk ll'alhc>rrtlr I nt r 1·. $999 II """'., "",.,,"" ""'·· """Harbour V.W. local 1111Je~. i\b$Olutrly tl!ill'·
!c...s t'(lnd.
J1rtuµort
1l111µorts
19711 BEACH BL., 842-4435
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'62 V\V hus. bi'cl space,
cah1net.<;, toolrr. Xlnt rond.
rrhl1 r ni; .• '6,i trans. SI09.i.
•19·1--S2 17
ln'\nll'd1iitc Drlil·rry 1~!70 \"\\' bui;-lac. wan;;inty
• !)O J\lPH C11pol1il11.v :1n1-rm ract1n--stJnr()(]I. clf'an • :i:. J\l1l r.<; Per {:allun s.:_.<Jlfl Call fi7::.:-.s1s. I
• Bcaulilul S•yl111~ ·:1!! V\\", A-1 throui;:houL l<;t 1 '/\·.~I !)rive Tr.!ny At
K M s:~'.!:1 1r1k(':, IS12 Oeeanh·ont. ustom otors N B
S-li K;ikr1 . f' i\l ;,1ri.~:, '64 VW-GOOO CONO.
SUNBEAM sr.:::, 1~2.11112
'67 V\\· Ru~. Imrnacula!c-:-
;1.1,M'J nll·.~. S1 32a lfl!)ti Sunhi•,1111 1\ I fl i n,.
l?o;ulstrr. \'l'r y 1011 n11leai::c.
hnrrl S.: sOll h/ll~. nrw p;unt. '69 BUG. auto sliC'k shift.
I t l s1~~x1 6l":.-·190'l ~~xcrp1, ClC>an. Priv. Pty. x n COil!. .. . -. .:.__ .. _ Call 5.1h--0278.
1i7 ~unbru1n Alpine Cnnv :cc=-~-~,11
"·/roll l)nr, ,\"\1/Jo"i\1 Radio, '6!1 V\\' Squarc baek. radi11l
clean, ntust srll 494--002:1, tire~. A:'ll/F:\I, Xlnl l'Ond.
8·16-41~8 or 67j...j()38
TOYOTA '69 vw $1545
• 64 $-6378 *
ITIOIYIOITIAI 1!169 Volk~""'°"""" 9 ""~·
. Jl,000 n11. Xlnt aind. S2~93.
SU &1~]139
Mark 11 Wagons '64 V\~V~s.d~,-,-. -x~,-,,-, -00-.,.~.11
H I Lux Pickups $7~JJ.
Land Cruisers * 642-0418 ,.. I
Wagons ·fr6 V\V, [Jo:cellenl Cond11ion DEAN LEWIS Low niilrage. s102a. &14-11s2
196f Harbor, C.M. 6·1fi-!:l:l03 _:r_t.~'='-m--~----II ,70 TOYOTA'S '68 V\I'. Au to. Clean. Lo11·
In !\tock. ln1n1rrl1a1e d1'lil·rry.
n1iles. Sl•IOO. * Ph, .YJ:M.28~ *
'64 VW VAN
X\n't Cond. 838-2.567
'51 VW, ,\lint Cond. '63 V\V,
Good Eng. Be~I offer. Call
67;Hl7jJ Laguna Beach
900 So. Csl. H ighway '62 VW Bug. Sunroof. New
494-7503 * 54~3100 h;ake:i. ~lrreo, Ex. Cdl'ld. ----~~----t $500 .. ~1.~.'JO,~·I
BILL MAXEY . ., vw "'"'"b"k. """ ,;ct], sarrifi('£'! 11. 700 1\11. I lr:T"'IOl~v:":r.IO:'lll':T::'il""A .. 11 Sl."'11. v""-"1""' 6'>-8605
• _ ~-.. ~ '61 VIV BUS
11111 BEACH 8L VD. $300 01· Bits! Oller
Hunt. Beach a.474555 • 673·11709 •
1 ml N, or ())uf llWy. on Be.II '6.1 V\V r/h. Good cond. S600
TOYOTA '6!1 Corona. hrdlp,
AUi<> !tans. In: 111r. 111n ·1n1.
o~ best offer . Must sell.
833-S:....19
\'Ill. lfT. $11.;o. Pvl 11ty, '56 VW. '&1 Trans & engine,
$11-2057i. good condUion.
'f,7 TOYOTA Cnrnn11 , •I Dr, 646-3798
3 11pri, ju,;t likr nr111t * '60 VW BUS *
• r'n 11 1"1fi ~~HI • :,i:-~R.177
1i!l TOYhT1\C'•n111il.1~lr!11~r. DAILY r1L0Toc--D=1,~1E~-_-,.
GO
ILD
IN A NEW OR USED
MUSTANG
1970 MUST ANG HARDTOP
v;"yl bu<ket t ••h color •~v•d c~·p~h lloor ,h.Jt 1n1ir11me nl
9ou9 e1. F1b1<<;t l•n b.lted l11e1 New O FOIL! lbll8 $2625
1968 MUSTANG GT/CS
V-8. r..:l io, l.t~•~r. c,.,,, •. o .m~l:c, -~•h will ''•t•. "'"•
.. ~tt l co~tf!. lit. !'l e WYG ~7~
1965 MUSTANG
V.8, r1doo, l.•1it r, •" cond P<'-~• 1tee••ng !. br ~~es.
Crvi1t·o·m11i,. Lie. No. MPM9 JO
$2195
$1495
A-1
Or Prowl The ROADS
With The TOP CAT In Cars , • •
A New Or Used COUGAR!
1970 COUGAR HARDTO.P
l uck1t 1eth, Cr11;1t ·O•lfttlic, el•clric clock, courtesy light t •611p,
whitt w•lt 1;..11, power tt•t ri"9· p6wtf front d;,c br•kt1, tilt
1tt1ri"9 wt!ttl, eir cond., 11dio. dtcor. tri m, tinted <;tl t n .
0111111 •tel bt lh, rt molt miiro•. New OF'llH54'''6·
1969 COUGAR HARDTOP
v.1. bvdret ltlh, .1.c+.ic cl•ck. 1.c~ .. ft lltv gro .. p, 1tyled .. ,.1
w~ttl1, ••,in9 ,.,:rrar, p1rfarlft t nce t~lt, inh•rior decor, Cr11i1t •O•
lft t tic, pow •r 1lttrin9, pow .. r lro11t d••t brt~t l. •i1 cond ..
redio. ~•••••· li11ltd 91111. Ntw 9F'l 1M567727.
1967 COUGAR
V-1, 1lt tt o ltpt •Yllem, t ir cond., p"wtr 1!t er•n9 I bt•~tt
•iftyl 100!, fi11t1cl 9l1u , wtlitt wi ll firt h
DON'T MISS THESE BUYS FROM THE GOOD GUYS
..... SOUTH COAST -FORD -MERCURY
ci111n, l11cl i11 r. Sh;1q1. $1765. -LINES cost you Ju:d pen-4t -151S )OJ l•OADWl.Y, LA• NA Ill.CH 549-)851
r714 f ~~;..i1!1111rt 7. ·~·~·~·~·~'Y!'._ _____ ..'~!!!!!!!!! .. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..!!IJ
TRAN SPORTATION
IJ 19Cf Cars 9900
CADILLAC
1959 CADILLAC PA RTS
ron QUIC'I( ~ALJ:;
f\alt(•rv ~nti··1.i \\ iper.
l{.ad111
·ri·a11sn11~slo11
Air Cu11d111U11Pr ,(,
ll<'U lllll.: U111!
And i\lu11y Ull1f'r llcnis
542·~120 Al1f'r 5 P.J'.1.
~ACRJFIC:E! 1~.167 Cad CDUpt!
tie Vlll r, lik1· rtt•w, or1gi11al
1.wner tl1U1>t ~t'll or lradr.
Fae air, A~!/F'M sterm
radio, .•II powrr 1 n c I
s.-•azs I "1ndo1\'lo, 11cw tires.
Heau11ful turquoiSC' ,,_,.,.,.,,tute
1·1nyl 1op. &-low Blue Book.
S2995 ,,,. Im.de !or 1;inaller
~·ar. 8-lU--1 lj2
CAMARO
CHEVROLET CONTINENTAL
'66 Che W '66 CONT'L Exc·l'ptional! VJ GCJOft Full pwr, Moir. Must .see to Bel Air, rllr, Air l.'Ond, V8, · 67' ,,_, appn!Cl.8.le! .......,_,""
auto, r1<l1Q, he-ater, Joa.d!"d . ~~-------Mu:st sell will take forei~n '61 CONTINENTAL . .A ir ~'011-
car 10 trade or finall('f' p;i-dltion, power, It/fl. ;:..oo,
vatt-part)'. fNY0482J61 Call • 675-1564 • ~6-1052 or 494-9772 aft 10 11rn .::=========
l.OOK! Jw;t Sl095 tor 1hls CORVAIR
'!iJ Chevy Supt-•r Sport V-8, ----------
auto tr11ns, poWC'f' & air. '6.l Cn1'V111r ('011vert1blr>, 4
Call 842-8728. spd. Fuie run'g rondlt1on.
\Vire whls. Jj7J I 11· 111. GOING 1U Europe. '66 Capri 673-1484,
Wagon $2100. 445 Oak,
Laguna. 494-6848. 'IW CliEVY Corvair, 4-.Sfli'.'(!(],
$264, financing av a 1 I. <•) 1970 Custom Chevy 64!>-1000, 2200 Harbor Blvd,
Impala.!. Loaded. S2000 Ea. C.M. "Chuck" or "Van"
•635-5480* ,M"r;c;co;;;i'7-'0::,C-=c--I '64 Corv1:1.ir, 4-speed, nu
'62 OIEVY Impala. 327 eng, lires, B./H, Xlnl cond~ $500.
4 dr. P/b, Pis. See at 425 J',ten-ima.c, No.
$400 * 646-2865 A30:5. c r-.1.
CORYETIE
'56 CORVETTE, good cond.
All original. $950 or beat
offer. £2-tops) 64&-37ti7.
1958 CORVE TT E
$!>50. ~92-7078
COUGAR
'68 Cou9ar XR7
flll'lury a i r conditioning,
JIOWl'r d1se brakes, vinyl
rnp, fllr, lo!s or goodle1.
1\'Z/'1151!1. \\1111 take trade
01· flnailt'.!e private party.
l'al! ~lfi...4052 or 494-9773 a rt
10 !l.!l\.
(4) 19i0 Cougars. Loaded:
Low ;\l!leage. $3000 Each.
•635-5480*
1967 COUGAR lull ll(J\\'t't".
a ir. Sl600. Call ?flct· 6.JO
Pi\1. :;..16-47'35.
5'19.:'SOOl Ext. 6ti or 67
1970 HAHBOI?. BLVU.
COSTA i\1ESA
'63 ~-ono Van, air cond.
bunk & mull, drawn,; & OLDSMOBILE
tlPsk. S$7j/b~r ca~h Olt'.1-----------,
54S-(.().l!I .. _ ~--~~ 1970 OLDS
'67 CAMARO
G REAT 2nd Car. '61 Chev. 1961 CORVAIR, rc-blt <'ng.
Xln't Shape. S300 or bst A real good runner. Best
olfer. ~7. offer takes. 675-otl32 DODGE
* MUST SELL! * A REAL cutie! '66 r.1011La ----------
'66 FUTURA Sprl Cp, V·~. SPO RT CPE.
••u!o trsns. air. p/s, p/h, $2498
Loaded 1\1lh au!nn1at1c rrans-'59 01evy, good trans S23i0 2 rlr .. r/h. $550. Private
1n!ssion. '.l27 VS. tllr. Full or Of!C'r. 64.j....16(16 party. 67>-5660
price s149:,_ \Viii lake fore-. l----------1J.:n car 111 !rud('. (JQR-
613) Ca ll ~,.\!)..4052 or 494..n773
;1ft 10 a.111.
CAMAHO 'GS Z-211:, 4 spd,
dsc brks, lo int, Xln't cond.
$200'.l. 53&-8560.
CHEVROLET
CHRYSLER
'68 Chrysler Co n v ert .
Newport, marine b I u e
11'/whilC" top. Sharp $179;;.
'67 DO<!ge Dart GT, ligt1t
blur. buc. seats. Clea11.
$1380. Priced in your in-
lert'st. 546-1009
'63 IMPALA, xlnt rond. Air, '69 CJffiYSLER, 9-pas s.
p/s, p/b. S::i95, See at '110 \\'agnn, All f"X\ras, lo mi's,
Riverside, N.B. 36j HP 440 & 4 brl. Orii:.
·a7 CHEV. 4 Dr, Good cond. oy,·ncr. days 5-10-40.)8, ('\'('S
$j()(}, 8281 I layrs Circle, &16--5&81
CORVETTE
'68 Corvette 2 tops
Beautiful n1etallic bluC' w/
n111 rching inter., Jully equip.
ped Inc. 4 SPC'f!d, "427" eng,
full power, etc. One 01\lner
new car trnde in. Specia.J
$329S
J1rtl.lµort
31tnµorts
llun lington Beach 968-73·16 '63 CRQ\\'N 4 Dr. Hrdtp.
'62 IMPALA, 4 dr, air cond., Load<'d. Good cond. $750. 3100 \V, Coast H .... 'Y., N.8.
xlnt buy! Leuving 5la!c. Owner, 557-652-1 . &12-9405 540-1764
S47j. 962--0T.iJ Authorized MC Dealer
'61 CH EV STA WAG COMET GOING into Service. f;lust
'till Drlu . ..:e il-fonaM, vinyl lop.
+10 l'U eng. Air-<--or1<l. All
µ11·r. lllpt' d<·ck. All t•xlr11s.
5 llr;irwl new tlrt'S. $2700.
R<l7-9,'j7·1
'6·1 Uar·1'.-,,,~b~Jt,-,~.,,~ •. --,,~,.,~,~,.
i;:ood tires, new 1nuffler,
JU-al ('il'an. 494--6869
'60 Dodge l)arl \\'agon
Auto. ll<'alf'r $140
540-1579
radio. $1200. li7:'t-060' __ 1. __ _
1966 FOl!11 Squlfr \V11.gon, $77.69 r.tONTHLY P AYMENT
9 PflSS, a1r-<~1nd , all C.'(tras. $2':)'.} is the total down ?HY·
$1600. S37-67ti2. nient. $77.69 ls 1he lotal
'62 Ford Gnlaxy ~~Kl, H/11, mC!nthly pay1nen! including
nC'll' sc-at t'(l\'rrs s:i25 taxes. license and all <:C:l.IT)'-
61G--1120 a rt 6 lng ch1u-ges on approval of '~6.-~, -,~.,-,.~<l:c.,\V°Kn-. -P/S, P/B, Bank credit l nr 36 months.
a lr ~bock'>. 3!IO. H&ll. $1150 Or, if you \\'OUld prefer to
or bcsl offer 67j...757!1. pay r•as h, 1he fuU cash price
----------is enly S2667.90 includini; all '61 t"'ORD, 2 dr, air rond., ta...;es and 1970 license trans-
xlnt ('Ond. IA'flvin~ slate.
r.lust 15eJl . S37~. 962--0753 ~~fcr=h:.::: ~~ic~f~
'62 Ford Truck t Econolinc) $:1095.84 including all rarry.
'64 Falcon 2 door, Stick. Ex-1''e1\' enJ:,·htr-good 1 i res . ing charges, taxes and 1970
c<'llenl cond!lion. Asking Clean! &12-9899 license tran.oift'r.
FALCON
$395 ph . 642-1189 ANN UAL PERCENTAGE
MERCURY RATE IS ONLY 1!',, 1967 Falcon \Vagon V8, p.9.,
p.b .. '"·good ti~•. Clean> 1--------UNIVERSITY s121:; 772-fi&IJ Anaheim. '63 A1ERCURY •. xlnt run'g OLDSMOBILE
cond. fully equipped. 'le""' 2850 HHrlxlr Bl Costa Mesa
tlres, Alikinp; $500. 548-6970 OPt-:N 7.,DA YS
-----CALL 540-9640 FORD Po .... ·cr. S.11J. 646-6446 sell '68 Fastback. Under
l·~o58"°'"~C~--~-~'--l '6.1 Comet S-22 -New G70 wan-. Air, compl pow,r. '68 Cutln~s hdtp, p/s. p/dsc hevy, good condition, Ti 'l n'--a.m/fm stereo, pwr .,.,,in-1948 Ford Pickup. ll('W trans, clean. I 011·nrr. $320, res, " ags & "'uvme rims, -------brkll, buck. seats, Con.sole.
MUSTANG
* RJ6-5SJO * Many extras, over $1500.00 dows, wide ovals, $3875. runs good. Best C!ller. '65 MUSTANG a~to, V-8, New lires, r/h. 2S,OOO mi's.
invested, must see to ap-548-6451 or 646-9328 5-18-8615 289, P/s, p/b, 11.ir. 38,000 Like neY.'. Prieed leM lhan
I 1963 ChPvy I[ Nova 2 Dr. preciate, Sacrifice $995.00. '65 CORVE'f'TE. Al\1-FM. '62 F'ORD fAlRLANE. n1 ilrs. $8.<i!I, Call aft 4: 30, book. 64j..2.115.
Hdtp. 6, :iulo, 540-7;il9 Disc brakes. Clean. Lo w * • $395.00 * * 6·12-fH.18 C 11 "'2-~~ '62 OLDS 98 &>d. Rea.J gd 11 O"• .,.,,=> 1966 Mer e. Comet. R/11, Pwr miles, Make orfer. 6T;r57R7 I c~~~~6"_&-_J33~7____ MUSTANG '69 Fastback, cond. Vl'ry clean! Xln't
'6S Biscayne stick $795. '63 brakes, steering, t i nted '64 Corvette :111-4 spd, n1ags, '67 Ford \Vag., 1(1 passenger, 11,000 miles. Loaded w/ ex-rranllp. $400/bst cash ofr.
Impa1A •I door air r/h $575. glass, nu !ires, brakes, bat-AM-F!\f, irh! locks $2300. all J>O'l't'r, lo miles. $1 695 or trt11;!, inc-ld air. Best offer 51S-0048
96&-4201 tery. $1050. 642-290:1 67~27R7 a.II 6P.\1 hrs! offer 646-&!01. 11v1•r S2q()I), Ph. 673-5&19. -·-------:"'=:=o=======-1--======"====-=~~~======,_.:.-==~=======--=========::::::oJ '64 CuLJass, V8, Xl nl cond, p.s., p.h., air. t-onsol e,
Delux i11IPrinr 675-n JJ
JOHN CONNELL
"NO GIVE>.WAYS
NO GIMMICKS"
MONTE CARLO
The Money is
doesn't cost
will amaze you~
••• Ju1t 21 Y11rt of Ho""''
01alinq, S1Uinq Ch1~rol 1h. NEW MONTE CARLO
NOT STRIPPED
Turbo hydre m•fic , power $feerin9 1 2 50 V8, AM radio, tinted gla,s, c:loor
ed qe guards, white 5ide well tires, r•lly wheels. I 1903366). Stir. ~842.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY.
NEW '70 NOVA
NOT STRIPPED. Tinted g!a~s . evap. emission control, pulk
button AM radio. Gobi beige. 1273 788 ) Stk. •758
NEW '70 CHEVELLE
NO T STRIPPED. Tinted glass, AM push button radio, •vap.
control, a utumrt gold interior. ( 17675 1 ), Stli.
$3298
IMMEDIATE
D ELIVE~Y
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
REE l .P. STEREO ALBUM
W ITH A DEMONSTR AT ION Dl!!VE OF ANY NEW
1970 CHEVROLET AT CONNELL CHEVROLET
WHI LE TH EY LAST-COLLECTORS ALIUM
FEATURING: lurt B11ch11r1ch-Glen Cam IMll-~«IM Warwick
SEE THE CHEVY SHOW AT
HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER
MAY 22nd To MAY 30th
LARGE SELECTION OF USED CARS
'61 CHEVROLIT $399 Power st~rt n11:, automatic,
H&.1-1, excellent trans1XJr tation.
'66 CAPRICE $1599 2 lli. H.T. AM·FM .odlo,
power sl.l'C.rlng I: brakes,
factory nir. Blue book $1 835.
Fury ill ~ POY"eT r;tffr~ '67 PLYMOUTH $1699
Ing. factory alr, new car con·
dltlon. .(TWN162)
'65 CHIYIOLIT
2 Dr. H.T. lmpa.111 . VS, fac-
IC!ry air, R&J-t, P.S ., P.B.,
vin)'I roof. (NRD665)
'67 OPIL IALLYI $1099 Ka.dett 2 Dr. Sed. 29,000
mik<. Heal olce enc. Blw .
book price $146.'l. (VTS3fi~I
·u VOLKSWAGEN $599 > Doo• "dan. Ex"'lleot ''""" portatlon. Special. (TYC11 I J
'65 CHEY. 'il·TON
Pickup. Nrcd ll s:ood work
pickup? Good buy. (H71712)
'66 IM~ALA $1099 VS, 2 Dr. 1-1.T. Automallc.
Rl:H. power s leerlng. Special.
(LSU331 t
'64 MERCURY $699 Comet ""a£oo 4 Or. VB. auto ..
H&H. pow1·r steering, air cond.,
refll st rni~h1. c0Pfll31 Srreial.
2 Dr. Cpe. F11ctory air, P.S .. '67 PONTIAC GTO $2099
vinyl roof. autnn1atic, R&~r.
real nir •·. IZVD<$2 ,
'67 OLDSMOllLE
Delmont 88 2 Dr. l l.T.
Decent miles, factory air,
full power, vinyl roof.
''7 CH!YROLET $1399 Impala 4 ~· V8, auto., ~&I~.
factory air, power steering.
Blue book prlce.$1740. ITYJ101
'67 Cu!!ass with every!h1ng!
Low 1nl!et1ge. Lo'" price.
002-3384 or 962-2811.
'61 Olds Super 88~.-~-w--,tl~..,-,-,I
ul r-cond.. be51 otlf'r over
$200. Aft. 4;30. 847-s551
PLYMOUTH
'61 Plymouth GTX
VB, auto, P S, PB, air con-
ditioning. JI.lust liquidate
this week. I Lie. # TPL133)
$1399
Kus tom Motors
845 Baker, C.M.
'69 PLYr.f. Roadrunner. New
Poly F60xl5's, n1 a g .~,
Cyclone henders. Hol l<'y
dual feed. Edelbrock Hi·
RlM'. SW gaugf'S. Xlnt
Corxl. T.O.P. 548-6843 aft 5.
PLYi\1 0UTII J96!1 Roadrun-
ner coupe, 4 spd tram,
R.&.H. polyg!ai;s t l re ~,
headers. :.hurt' gr I p .
673-8176 a rt 5 Pi\1.
'511 Plyll1fl1!1hS1~1-o-o~\~l'•-.,,-,-.I
2 dr, GOlld Cond., S200.
8'J7-79'12. -------'62 PLY. •t Dr, sedan. 6
C~ 1 , ;iu1r1., R< l-0v.·ner.
Sl.(XX) ill l. $325. 846--05ii0
PONTIAC
'68 FIREBIRD
Loaded. Po1\·er steering. Mu~!
sr!I, 'fake 1rad1 • or smnll
r!nwn • lnw payments, will
rint111ce privarC' party, dlr.
l\VQL 2121 Call 516-4()52 or
4!f.1.~)77~ aft 10 H!ll.
·:1i l'ont1.ir Stallon wagon
hotly, 111tcrinr & tran~. good
rondi1ion. Nee-els starter &
1unr-up $45. 64f>-2·U3
'fill TEMPEST w11gon. All
pwT., air. ne w lift's: 16.000
Mi. Xlnt cond $2450.
&IZ-7970
1968 LE MANS 4 Dr. Hrrltop
$2295. Power " air rond.
Owner 673-2259 E v e s
6#-5972
=~~-o'68 TEMPEST, Exira Sharp,
19,000 mi's, nu polyglass
lires, $1 99.'>. !168-76:J2
1962 Pontiac Le Mans. Good
condition. $150. 5 5 7-9879
after SP..,1.
'64 LE MANS. Sacrifice! 326
engine, 4 !!peed, $750. Call
64\f-2577
'64 CTO, 1 owner, 37,000
mi's, $1350. Call alter S,
&:s.-0365
'68 GTO. T.0 .P.
673-1842 aft 5 PM
RAMBLER
'68 Rebel Rambler i 70, 4-<lr,
Riii, p.s, p.b, 1:1,000 mi's,
owned by Adull "''Oman.
$1475. 646--5602
1965 RAMBLER 770. Xlnt
cond. P /S, auto shift, air,
4 dr. $!lXl. 543-8776
T·BIRD
1965 T-BIRD, Loaded! &!It
o ffer over $1075. wholemte
book price. 536-1562
'55 T-BIRD~S.~ha-.,,-. --I
$2200 cash Or 1'rade * 846-3976 *
'61 T-BIRO, All \Vh lte
Like M W COl'ld. $4~
C\wrn'r ~~1fi-.R2:l-I
r11~965 CHEVROLET STA. WAGON I • •P•Clouo l·N urn • <IPW111., ·~~lo •rid ~ '"'•gon ~·• wtollt ~•lu.. Lie. No, l'BR JOS. ,., • An u c1llear
NOW ONLY
$688
H•"" !ht !u•u,... c•r with tlwl
f<fltlO<n• or • c-c! Full~
l•CIO"V ..aul"""" wltro •h•
IOllulOu• •l•nl • •no! .... •I lhl•
unt>eol•voblo llt'lCo. a11m Cll~
DOCIQe ... 111 ...... WN I ~Olo.
\oi(!tl tllow11>C• dllflng mf1
••1•. Ll?JROl!:l072.n1
lmmtidlt lt Dllivor.I
LOOK AT WHAT
NOW ONLY
$1288
1965 V.W, IWMA ..,,. a c:-1orw.u., cl NN GHIA .,., ~ Lie.: 1ur"..,car --.010, 11U1.
NOW ONLY
$788
1967 MERCllRr COU&A• A i...uuh.1 co~ wu~ 1 I\ lr1n1mlsol°" r di •lldew loo a n le .-.1i:i co,,.01t1&,,.1"N<.~'.'!!:1.,_.,;, 11:' ... '
• UVNI )JS. NOW ONLY
$1488
1968 OOOGE OART GT$ = TM1 to ~ fo~ th door ~ro'rOt> WJrh •,~• m..,.,.., _ !-,..,lo, ~Nie•, 000-,°{'M111c tr•n•rnlos..,, Mt fL Lie.. WTj :lltl. ..,. ng, •na IM>ckof
NOW ONL Y
$1588
l:M II Ille lot•I On. '""'"'· Uol lo
!hi Tol1I Mo.""""· Oii _, Mlflcl $3 4 $ 3 4 ::,'";'~~':'...~: .. :::· .:~
crl'dll !or Jd mont~1. "' If ......,
Dl'flW~ IO DIV (II", !he h,oll (1111
'o•I~ la .... 1~ IKMO . ..O. lncludl"'
DOWN "' .~ •·~"'· """'" -MONTHLY ,...n! Pl'lCI !1 Sl251.llO, lndUlll"'
I L CITY I •II lntt,.t!. t111 Mid tr-,.,. ,.,,,_ W L BUY AT BEACH _ ~" --·-.... """
1966 COMEr ClLllMTI
Th11 1Wo door l'llrdl'* 1'111 Nlo!Notlc. trt,... m!Hlon, •llClll t nd .,,,~~ aJ_.lrl9
Ind i.ncll~~~· lM'MO"Nl1:·
NOW ONLY
$988
1966 MIRCUU STA. WAG.
TM1 ~trd lo !Ind -~Fi "" 1u!.,,.,1llc 1r1,..mlQlon. r .,. tfld .-.!It CONOITIONINO. Lk. llJ.
1M 00\1{~/ 1M NO" 0 LY
S988
l
rn
-a
'" z n
. ..,.
•c::11
VACATION PACKAGES
FROM $348800
1970 FllO STYLESIDE PICK UP
l i9 240 C ID •rMJin• -I ply~,., -Amp I oil 9•119•1
PLUS
1970 FULL CAB OVER "OTTAWA" EL DORADO
4 Sl••p•r -Q 1111111 Si11 ~d -1lt•11·ll11rn1r R11191 with Hood --C1nl1r Oin1tf1 , .... ,5099 500 TO -
NEW 1970 FllO STYLESIDE PICK UP CAMPER SPECIAL
T--,.lftl, '-I ............ 1pfl9M' YK-_,_,, r-..... l..i-1111 -MYtl I ll•
,...., lllrlW 111u , ,,.., 11g-.., 2' 111, !rim• ""''"'-' 111>1. llnlt, power 1fM•ll"tl, Crw..._ -* 1r-11Mon, fKMrY air coi.-ttk!Mr, ut cu. "'-v .. -IM . 12MI ,.,..,.. Sprl11t••
ltJflfl llNr Sprlftl1.
PLUS
NEW 1970 FULL CAB OVER 11' "SHAWNEE" EL DORADO
P•llY Ml cen11.,,.. Catnptr, 4 no. n . 11t1tltdrlc rwlrl9.,-1tar, •-.... fl9W« -~pfct
llNI -P11iy ... ,... I. ....... , fer c1m,i.o,. Sl9Ck lfl 4ft -TC2Sll.
OYIR 40
RECREATIONAL
VEHICLES IN STOCK
A.-bod Sales
For 12 Top N11m•
Campen aod
Motor Homn.
Complete Camper Rental Department.
Reasonable Rates. Reserve Now To Assure Dates.
~ .. ~~~,, ! 1:. ~o~.~~~~E .. ,,. • ,.,,,. $1 9 4860
lit• 1t11I 1tov1 co'fer e M1ttrn1 c;o¥•r e Boot. 1969
CTCl59l
~S~~~' ~ 1:, ~tH~~.~~"'· "'' e Ch•· $215845
t11u r1 n91 • Ch1t1111 hoo~ e M1tc;hi"9 m11tr1u.
lt6f ITC21Hl
'69
'68
'67
MERCURY MONTEGO
2 Or. H.T. V-1, 1uto., P.S .. R&H, r11111inJ~
of f1cl. w 1rr1nly 1v1il. !174ASKI
VOLKSWAGEN
SAMPLE SAVINGS AT • • •
1o
.. me
' ... L•'-· '•" LIST PllCI S662J.ot
P9Wet ~11ip-', Air DISCOUNT S1J24.ft
Co1ullrio11I .. , AM ·FM s,., .. •••H•. m ., .,,_ OU• $5298.01 0J14N1G7179. PllCI
lo
NEVI 1970 MUSTAN G
Sportroof. A.111 .. tr-., LIST PllCI S405,.20 ··-I t-., diK DISCOUNT s ,.1.20
br••· AM-FM rodlo,
0114 MHll -re, OFQ. ou• $3388.00 2F111136. PRICf
t:EW 197 0 FALCON
1 ••. club CCIV.... AUii· LIST PRICf $2199.71 m•llc, r•dlo, •ll .. 1n,r
• SEE AND DRIVE THE FABULOUS
BALBOA FOR .1970!
WE ARE ORANGE COUNTY'S EXCLUSIVE
DEALER flOR BALBOA ..• POWERED BY FORD!
.--MOTOR· HOME SPECIALS:--. 3 lr!m, wnl!e Wiii" dtlv•• DISCOUNT S400.51
Wllftl coven, lln!. t llH
$2499.17 Q & mort. (01ClOT17""1) • OU•
PRICI
All English Fords In Stock Now
Reduced To Our Actual Cost !
2 Doors, 4 Doors, GT's, Station
Wagon.s. 4 Speed & Automatic
Transmissions.
OVER 350 NEW CARS AND TRUCKS
NOW AT ECONOMY DISCOUNTS
OPEN SUNDAYS
STANDARD EL DORADO
FEATURES:
Full screen door on •II modeh -New scul ptured pre-molded
counter top -Slid in g dinette seats convert into big 50'' bed
-All new vinyl c eiling patt ern -All uni ts 7'/1-' wide with 54''
overceb q ueen-siz e bed -I 00 lb. ice box -One sky-dome
roof vent plus standard roof vent -Bright new curta in material
end styling -Textured hardwood interior veneers -30 gal-
lon water tank with I 2V pump 19' models -20 gallons J -
AGA •pproved stove with thermostat -Double stainless steel
sink and room d ivider1 loxcept Pawnee) -And much more.
SALE PRICE
NEW ECONOLINE
MINI HOME CONVERSION
:)t2 VI, AMM .... tll ,_., ~If lrlnt., r1oi., l ull m.i.I ftllr~rt.
t •t•.,.Mll b..,~.. tMc, "''"' •n<I wntr t,111m1, r•~"' tVlfl, '"'"' Ort,.S, Olnt llt, .ic. IEHOHEi11U j
NEW ECONOLINE
CONTEMPO SPOILER
it2 V-1, ...,._ lrtM., AMM 11111 .ii JWtiill .. ,,,,...., olTt CIOHnt rid.,
•1111 -I mlrNn, ...,.,_ .-. & ...... , '"'"""' tt1'191, IVefl, tk<.
A'lri,., drlpn, dlnltll, 11~ 1Hf fl:l4GHl'l1M'I
NEW ECONOLINE
CRUISEAIRE CAMPER CONYHSION
11? v.a, ·-· tnnt •• AMM .... tU ''"""' ••I. cMlhlt , .... l•ifl '""' rtn, 1...,,,,.... ""'*'· tlKll'k, tff •M w•l•r 1y1t1m1, 1C1 M•, tnrtt
Mm1r ••"II• IJMollt, drtpt~, t1C. 1Ht 11HN2EMt)
SALE PRICE $5199
SALE PRICE s4999
SALE PRICE s479 9
~~"'D~!~~,,1,1:,.~,~~~.~~ • """""'' "•'" $171500 e Cli1i1•11 ''"II' I hood e M1tchin9 1111ttr1ts/p1d1.
1961 ITC2799)
~,~,D~.~~.~,.1~~: ~O~~.~~·'·" .,,,,, • $193 845
M.lchin9 m•llrtu co•1r e S1lf c;onl1in1d. Pk9. S I.
1969 tTCJl 651
fl DORADO 11' COMMANCHE
PLUS FEATURES: 4 cu. fl. b~t1n1/1l1cl. r1f9. e 6 11
li9~I e M1llr111 co"''· 1•69 !TC2481:d
5175995 !,~~~.,~~~~~ ~~~.~;~ .9~.2 ,, "'"• .... $1629 00
ford m~tel!in9 f~rni11!in91 e 12 V W1ter p ~mp. 1969
fTC27671
A THEODORE ROBINS EXCLUSIVE
LOOK ron THE D AGNOSTIC
CEIJTE R SEAL ON THE WINDSHIELD!
100% PARTS AND LABOR
WARRANTY 4000 MILES OR 90 DAYS
COY-oll -lia11lcol portt. l11<l11dl11t on9l100, INll•111 lu lo11 dri-ff JJ ....
'"' lfl4, PLUS llor"'-"' battery 0114 111lia111t 1r1t..,... All repoir work
done lo 01r oww Ht"flco 41parhllll11f.
TRUCi~ SPEC IALS
s~386
$18 98
81/2 acres of the most moderri Ford sales and
· /'-.1/ ,.. S§J!!.J b''co ~ ~ I n S
/ ADAMS
I lli:J. -,f-' ~ :~!:. ~~ SINCE
II? g ;g I/.~ ': \.\ ~1e21 , co~r HtCifw. "' ~ V-4"' \ e D
, ~r ~d11m .... ¥5
I .· """'"-----.. ..... --w 2060 Harbor Costa Mesa ~ 642-001 •
,,., •.I .... ···"'IRL'A •• AfClll••t.YB AM TOl·PM PARTS&SERVICEHOURS PARTS ONLY
·,"Jl~', l(J,, ... iob r,rn 7 AM ~09P M MOf'JO AY •!AM T06P M TUfC,("'.''f'~R1D A ) 8At....A TObP M '-A.,i[Ju[JA'