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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-03-20 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa\ T ---- • ' ' . 1 • . . ., IXOll ~.S _, . e ' . , • Beatle!l Yoho . -Married . . ' . - " ~ r ~ • • THURSDAY>AFTERNOON,' "4ARCH 20,' rl969 t Wt.lo ...... f IKT9MI.. "~ . ' , , .. . ' . ' •' . ... • • .. . , * * * * '-ti * ':ti "ti: * * * '* . Huntington Kite Flier Electrocuted Beach Man Held l;n -·Pill '·'Import'. ti. eu.tol!IJ officers ancl Huntington Beach detectives Wednesday night ar- rested a 25-year-old man, believed to be a member of the Hessian motorcycle Beatle Lennon Weds }dpanese Girl in Gibraltar GIBRALTAR (UPI) -Beatie John Lennon and ~ Japanese girl friend, 'Yoko Ono, both wearing white hats and sneakers, were married Thursday in a IUl'pl'ise civil ceremony. "We chose Gibraltar because it ls quiet, British and frlendly," Lennon told newsmen. It was the second Bealle marriage in a week. Paul McCartney, one af the song-writing Beatles, m a i r I e d American socialite Linda Eastman in London last week, Lennon, 28, and Miss Ono, 34. have been 19inl together f91" aeveral months. llurini the courtship, they posed together for a nude photograph which appeared on the cover of. a London magazine. Jt w11 Lennon'• second marriaie and the third for Jllu Ono. The coupil tried to'keep the marri>(e l ...,,..~ !lying into Gibraltar from Porl1 In a ,private jot at a a.m. th!! morning. 'J'hn were married al the Gibraltar llqlltry Offjce . with a special 111.21 license and flew back to Paris almost tmmed"tely, miving in the French capital at 10:45 a.m. •unhook!'! club, OD i:harps of·Coalplrfnr to lllqaily import ,J0,000 ~ tableta. Arrdted at."1:41 ·p.m. at bit home on 409· Callfornla~st., Huntinsfuii Beach, was Charles N. Chiodo. Actordlng to the warranta, Cblodo and his wife, Bertha, a well u two otben, alle,gedly COlllpirod to JIJeca!Jy Impart lhl tablets through the San Ylldro border hf-ween Feb. 15 and Feb. 21. The tableta ...,. pbfllcaJly lm>uPt into the United Stater on Feb. :II by Mrs. Chiodo and Elktn C. Fallluf, autboriUes alle&e. Huntington Beach Detedlve Rooney Pomeroy laid the IUlpf!Ct • wu t'.Uen to city jall and Jatar lranJpe>rted to San Diego customs faclllUes by clllloms agent Robert Gore. Chiodo'• wile, who was present at the time of the arrut, wu not taken into custody. She ls out on ball from the earlier char1e ol haviilg imported the lablets. . Participating In lhl arrest were Hun- tington Beach detectives P o m e r • 'f , a.MW.~-~ GOre and six other ma from tlle11.S. cus .... office. PIWT OFFERS EA.STER PA.RA.DE Just in time f<r Euler porade llhop. pers, lhe DAJLY -PIIDI' today olfen a speclal aectkm, 'T..Uval di J'uhionl," leaturln( ads lellinc wbere lhl sprin& finery blr(ainl ll'll·aD ..... lhe-~ Coast area. The -alarll .. , ..... • Youths Who Clll. "unhoolt" yar kid 11 drup eJnoq ruie hlo Diel I~ 11111 11111 lhl .. of lhl ........... Yile:I Altoca .. 1111, •Heall'! noted -of tbe "Dnrp 1111• articler ~ .... tn the DAILY PILOI'. · --Autllortilt. ci"*' In ' ~·1 article explain lhe h1pocr1ay to- dlJl 'I yCllJlh aee In tbetr Plf"Oll' ... of alcohol, tobacco and tran- qulllim wblle paUJnc -the use of marijuana and other mind . benders. 11 It eter too late to doee the geoeraUon pp! See P• t. ~ . . . . . . La.g1Ql·a Sn '. -. : -! ··' . : I I I I n-'tL·~· u ' ,. ' ~-Victim, 29,_ er ,_.. ula.e ouse.r-. . . · .-·..._. , , · \ r ,I , '. , • ! . ' . . • . l . ·'. ' I ·' . i l ,• .. ~1 • ..l' . w I 11 l . • • ' .......... ~1 .... 1.\JNW··.,J ·- . , •• • ' .. ·•t''to·•~1,./.{ '>I':/'.~" 1 -.;~.s~_;,-~ ·pmg ' . . . DAILT PILOT .l~ff ....... WILL RAMBLING, 64-llOOM PYNE CASTLE IN .LAGUNA BECOME WHITE HOUSE ~EST? - Al Prnldonl NI-Htads for Orang• Couitty; SpKulatlon on Purchaw.1-iflll' -l ' ' • · _ Here's· 'Schedule . ' ' " Pr~nt Hunts House . in Laguna • By ilTllVI\ II. VlNIJEL .................. -v-.. war,lalb,_a viait to a pMCeful -.id• ow•c 1or .. ornate...,. mar Wldle -tn 1-_., ""' ... ~ .... 11Pl-Nlmn'amves tn ar.... CoollJ l'l1dly. Air Force One wtn n11t ht over the Pacific C.--~ &\'!·down the Mi1aJ alley lo Pliml li1igu lot touchdown at l :•·p.m.."""''~ --·iaur of· major .. .,...-. . -'lbe Prelklent and hil wife will maire1 tlleir' lleodqlmWI on the sprawling H. H. <CoUal elilt. In Sall Clftnelte, gue1I of the dlu&l*r of a mllilonaire friend of the lat. PNaidenl Fraoklln D. .... Rooeevett. Mn. Llooel E. o,dtn. of San Clemerie, bu arrangtd for tile Nilool to apend two D1gbl on the es!ate bOrdering Ibo Camp < P°"?!eton Marine' °'"J>S liue1 where yi«nam war ta1U will be he!<L -, Ellawortb.Bunk ... , U.S. amboAljdor-to VJeWm, b due to ,~ve lSalur<llor, along with' Gen. Andrew 1. Gqodpaster, out1oin1 deputy c:onimandor • of , U-~ forces ln the war tone. ' · ' • -White HOU!O Press Sectoialy llOoald, ·~ aald the Sunday --.. Trig -oo • fhe tnilil "b' a c!'t ;•to w gton -lhould oOi . tie intdpfeted a8 a major p6licy dllcUlsion, but othet top aidee wlli abo be prelenl. · ' ' Traveling. from Wash!~• with tilt Nixon party wlli be -.ry ol State WlWam P. Rog'rs and 1Dr, Henry JJ~ Klallnger , the presidential acMaer on (See NIXON, Pa&t I) l For· JNtixon Visit , ., . . , . ~ ' .. Hri · (1 1th&' ·tefttl(ttve' sc~ule ·ror PrWdeal and M'n. Nbcon~or-hia 0nnge Coul vi~t ·., IMQWlCedl by• Jlfeaa aide Ron zkcler in Washington: I \. • ' \J'ldDA ~· ' M!::~~~.&,;!·~ •for Pt. r.fiJ&'U N1 • w'sla!ion' Ow' Santa Barbaro. . . l :lt p.ni.! ArtjV• Pt. Mugu. Deparl by belioopter, to IUsoect oil on beaches ID Santa Baroara vldnlly. · . " . t p.m.1 Depart Pt. Mugu aboard A1r Foroe One ,for · El ·Toro Marine Corps Air StaU6n. . . t:11 · p.11.: ArrivO El 'l'on> MCAS. lleporl ;bf ---= <1 19<Dt. •.( ~1 1oo> a: iµ :<:o!todi•!iita!..-iil·~.. I . • ) I ,., ~ IJ; pdri.! 'Mo ...... iullj~ ,ilJ. U>i . ' ' (!loo M:elllulll,....,.. ,, Daug~ter, • A 29-~ HuntlnktOn tB•1.ltc N. television technician was eledrocuted WednesdaY while helping hi.s daUibl<i: ny a kite. . GregOl')' S. Robotby, 29, of 16512 Cooper 5*:.; was foUnd lying on 1.be. grass parkway in front of hi.s home by a nelgh~r at 11:40 a.m. He apperentlr. died of. electrocuUon. · , .. , ~en police arri"!eclr&tj tJ:le·~ ... ~1.. (ound HuntingtQn Beach, -,ad._ lllinbtaring aid •to tbe• vtcllm,' -bancf still contelned a treen ltrfilg..;flf& , a~ bright ~OVfO•lj!I foll atrJp.,.· . ' . The '~ . ...r ,ol 1tti0' ~Jiig :,waa, t®d\ing two ' power lines, tarl')1nt ~ loa<I of .12,000 volts. _ • · Roi.iitay wu rusbM to Huntln(lo1>, l ~ ' ' , ' . I ; lntercOmniWlitY, .Hospital'1 wbere1be .wu. . ' . pronqwx::~ ,dead.; · • ' 1 I ~ • ' · Mrs. Orville Caraon, the.'victlm's 1'.unt,t said that ~ay'! daUghter, eatMrme.,· canie. Into the .bquae loqiQnJ fa< . """" itrini shortly before· tbe,accident. 1 'Ille -daUlllW: 'apperaK!y; took Mn. Car1011'1 crocheting . yam, not noticln& ' . ' lhe ·bralded' melal•strJp in the mar.r1a1.- Althougb pollce repcfie<! biltn niarD Oil the poitway (l'Ua, the county COCj oner's olli.,; b ooaductlill laboratorj tests to determine If dect:ocutloo .... the ~--pl deal!\. ••• -·~ ·~ Robotki'y had ~ of 1><:1ng I recently, 'eadlng them "to serach I niore detailed CllWJe d deetJf. 1 I . Com I • . . J DAll.Y Pit.OT $ -,, 11 .... 20, 1"9 Ne:wport \.Convicts: ' ·~ Man on Rentals · .. Pay-for-play Probe Ends; Valley Womnn .Arres~d A 11r<>mooth hmlllg1tlon -cllmu· ed Wedneld>J' with the erred GI 1 Oolla M,.. dllropractor'1 1ic1e wbooo r<D)lnlne p11y11ta1 thmpy .u.,ed1y ~..._GI the law. Martha "Marek" Merrill, 21, GI 18111 E. Cottonwood St., Fountain Valley, waS booked on suspicion ol aolldting for acta ol prostitution at an alleged $5 lo SIO fee lcl>edule, inveaU,alon aaid. Colla M ... Police Sgt. Jack c.Jnon, ol tbe vice and inklllgence dllaJl, 111d m •tnveatipton worted m I the CUI lnvolvln8 Mill Merrill and up lo hro oilMrwomtn. Orange County Di1tr1ct Attorney'• hl- vestlgai<r John Gier made the an'ell WedntsdlJ afternoon at the office of Erneot V. Athenoor D.C., llZ E. !Ith Sl, Oolla Mal. Sgt. Caln<in aaid lod1y that be ii lnvestlgalhlg the poaibllity that viola· tic:m of city ordinances or the llate Bu!ine!S and ProfessiGm Code llllJ llao be enforced in the ceae, u. aaid 1 complaint would probably be illlled todAy, formally chargin1 Miis June Allyson Asks Divorce From Maxwell Adrea June AllYIOll moved Thunday lo end her troubled HCOlld marriage lo Newport Bead! barber Gleon MuwelL Tbe widow of ICi<r·producel' Diet Powell charged her llOCODd hwiband with "cruel and 1nbumP _treatment" 'in .a complaint U>ucb 'like the 'peUUon lhe flled In .the• lllDlO court on May 25,"· 1167 -a· lUll thai WU followed almoot · ~ · ~y, ~ couple'• recen-. dllatloo. , . . Mw Allyson, 4', o1 Udo lale, fir~ married Muirell on Oct. 12, 1913. A year la~ she remarried Muwell in a 1UIDptuous Las Vegu etrtmODY· Mila Allyaon 'a divorce fllinl ol Jl!ay, 1967 WU DOI pursued -the couple apparently resolved their differences. But Tbunday'a fUing ii almolt '""" for. word a npeat of the petlllon that the llllltry-volttd aiar recorded hro yeara ago. . M1aa .\tlYIDn ub for "rtuon.ble 111p- port dmtn. the divorce proC:eedings mid lherufter<r and abe ub that the name ol June AllylOO Powell be nllored. Jl!ila Allyaoo and Muwell h"• no cblldrtn. , I ' DAl lY PllOT ........... Mwta11w .... ..__ ----CALHlllM mAll9f CO\IT ~ COMPANY ...... N.WM4 ---J··· L c.r.., 'IQ ........... ...,., .... .., ........... -n.-.:.:.. '=!'· , •• 1 Nt ... ....... --~ ... , .......... ...... N ....... "9cll:ttll ................ ,. '""""'9 "9elll nt ,..... ,,..... ............. , -·-- i..;.;. ___ ----- Merrlll;· who posted ~ aller being OOoted locally and lrllllltrred to Oruge County Jill following bor -1nw11111ton aald the alltced play-! ... pay game involved tnmal rtferra.11 by buJJneao card and aubo<qutnt offers ol noo-ldvertiled pbylfcal therapy lo paying customett. · · The lll'led vlolatlOlll ·~ed in an adJacont proleaalooal balldlng oeparalo from the chfrosnctor'• own office quartm, accCllflna lo Sil CaJnoo. ' .. Frot1t .,. ... I NIXON ••• nallonalaecmily. Tho~ wtJl be the flrtt face-to-face -behreen Nimland theam- bl.-ckr, who bu been Jn Vktn&m f« the put year;Wblte llouoe aldu noted. Contlnulng hinll that Niml may mate '" ofter lo ~ the rambllng Pyne Cutle -"' 77t -Drm, Lqmm !IU<b. allO Jlllnod -wffll Ibo lmpoodfzls Orlop c-t vlllt. .,,.. la • ...-.. -in the -.. the put ., the Pmldent -Jut J_.,,. llld • apok-.n fer ....,.. 'l'llllmu A. lftrrlct, blnting ·~bit~ NIXON FAllCINATED Tho Pmfdtnt bu been fuctmted with the M-roam manlloD an a cllU owr1ooi- b>C a no.ctecree P""'1lc pooorama for ,..,. and ii known .. be -ting • Soutbiuldmddence. Built on a a,.... p1o1 wllb a parting ~ larp enoup fer • praldentlaJ heliport. l'1JIO Cutle bu been appcalaed ot 1750,000, but the 11·,.c..ld -may noC br1J!I that much. Merricll blmoeU bu indicated be will pt more preotl1e than prollt II be aella the Swlaa-Blvariu mana1on built by OC<tillrlc becbelor CliJ mlfllonaJre Wallor Pyne, • Tho -bu :a bathrooml and II now noted out u 12 aparlmeoll, but COllld Miiiy be -lo -__ .,. ~tlaf l\lell party. Flrat .. the Prealcleit'• _.,, - arrlval Fliday ii • -., - belcl>el at Santa Barban, --be and the !Int ladJ will enplane fer ble native ~ c..mty, NO O!'llD 1'tANI EarfleraJlllOUllCtllltil olthepreslcleJ> Ual vllit -Sao DI ... and the city'• IOOlb lllD1verury celelntioa, but no mentlon wu made ol that end ol ... «>Utllne todAy. Praaldent and Mn. Ni..o, Wiii vlllt Minion San Juu C&plltrao Saturday, two days after the c:elebrated retmn of the sw.Uowa on Sl Joeepb'a Day • "Ht tOjoyl villtlnt the mlalon and wanll to go tbtre," Aid Pr!u Secretary Ziegler. Huvy aecurlty mtiwru will be tn• forced oo the .......,. of the Henry Hamilton Cotloe -la San Clemente during the two-day presidential visit. Tho Cotton -te -the 0r..,.. San Diego county Unea and la well known to surfing aocl~ for Tho Tmtlea beach and Cotton's Point. GO To EITATE Following at'!i•al II Et Toro MCAS, the Prftldent will go--l>y ,.t.unonnounc- ed lrlnlporlatioo-dlrlctl1 to lhe Colton Ell&te. From P .. e I SCHEDULE •.. ()JdeD home on Cotloo Ellat,. SAruJIDAY u un.1 lltpart Cllltan Eatate for fedlvlUes at M1a:Soa San J a an Caplalrano. ' N-1 Poalblt -party 11 CapUtrano. I p.m .. 1 LePo San Juan C&platrano lor rtlurn to San Clelnonla. latuday llPI• Ninll party nmala 1! San Cltmente. U.S. 1111bllador lo South Vietnam Etllworlh Bunl:er lrrivea El Toro MCAS for nund ol talb with Nixon. 1'etreat to North ·N .. Viet Troops 'Routed by Tanks From Wire Serlvce1 SAIGON ..:_ TroopB of the 1th North Vietnamese Division begs.n retreating to the north today under pressure from allled 1iQO~· and a U..S. tank force f..that ~eel its way into a Communist · b~er c;oniplex 45 nllies · northwest of Saigon, 1:1.S. •Jntelligehce s o u r c e s reported. The U.S. Command aMounced today that 351 Americans were killed in action ' Iii' Vietnam Im·-· puahlng ·the· total of U.S. battlefield dead to 10,112 in the 10 month! since the Paris peace tatks began and to 33,063 in more than eigit 1:1!arS of war . ., . • 111e Ameri can toD lGi. .Wetl was .15 \ .1 ttm.N ~ than the-prnious week'i total ~ .. J.a.Qd .fafsed the numDir of Americans \i{le« •Ii> the first ihree weeu ol the Viet 'Ccipg's spring) Offensive to 1,140.' • \ •1240 less than the l ,38Ctt).S. troops ' repoked kilted during·. the· eight weeks ,'olti,9fo. e'fior to the offensive. ' , ',!L'M~·if the U.S. 1st ·Air\ Ca•alry DivisiOn moved into blocking pot1itlons on the northern fringe of the old Michelin rubber plantation to try to trap the force which had posed a major threat to Saigon. • , • ~ DAILY PILOT ....... "'1 P'lf ~ FOR ROMANT!.CALCY ·INCLINED, A PLACE NEAR THE ·SEA A(ad for Sclontiffcally Minded, Spring Is Vernal Equinox Front reports said the drive into the bunt e.r ~pin ~uried an 'unknown , l;Wmbei of North Vietnamese Soldiers alive ln their undergJPund 'ortifications. Communl!t rocket .fire ·hit three of the tanks in the day ol beaVy fighting. Resistance by the 7th Division had 1Wfened.sharply until the massive aJlied dri've began forcing the Commuhists back. That and a coordlnated attack on villages fonning Da Nang's southern flank had been seen a.s an indication SPRING IS FOR WADING And for Rellectlnt Judge Rejects Plea to Dismiss Narcotics Charges A plea !0< dismissal ol cl>arges by four persons accused of drug offemes after a pollce raid on a Laguna Canyon home was rejected Thursday 1n Superior Court. Judge Robert Gardner also ruled, after an aJrnoot day-long hearing, thal the defendante motion for suppttsslon ol evidence assembled against. thtm be' thrown oul He ordered Bryan Kendall McAdams, 22, G<orge Ernest Oliphant, 22 and Helene Marie Miller, 19, all of 22M Laguna Canyon Road and Gordon F. Johnson, 23, ol lAng Beach, to face jiry trial J\!ay 5. Judge GarcJn.,. rtlused lo accept the defense argument that the MITest warrant for an unJndlcted co-oonsplr1.tor was in- valid and lhot Ille aub"'IOO'I arreata and «dllcatloo ol peraooal pn>perly cl the defend&JU were unwarranted. All four defendantl are charged with ~ and aale of marijuana. They have pleaded lnnocenl. Tho foor were among a groop ol nine ,...... a""'1ed 'ii.I Jan. 17 II the Laguna home In a raid curkd out by ohirifrs deputks, l.quna pollL't and federal narcotics agents. Stx men and three women were booked lnlo Oruge County Jal1 · followins the roondup and the four accused were 1Ubsequently named in a Grand Jury ir ··•ment. Spring Arrives On the Button . Spring began at 11:08 a\m. -not one minute ~er or later -today. At that moment (Pacific standard Time) the center of the sun moved across the celestial equator from the south to the north, marking the vernal equinox (also known as the point of Aries in the Northern Hemisphere.) when day and night, in an parts of the world, are equal. , If you can't remember all that, just remember that spring lasts for three months. Can summer be far behind? C;inada Wants Treaty GENEVA (UPI) -Canada ursecLlhe United States and the Sov:iet Union today to negotiate hhmediately a treaty limiUng nuclear missile deployment. · fROrnSlONAL fNTERIOl DfSIGNERS • " Two Flee Jail; One Captured Garden Grove police captured one prison escapee Wedn"esday nlght but a second got away. Sgt. James Richards while on patrol saw Carl B. Angenete, 21, of Buena Park and Paul T. Buzard, 22, of Riverside in i be vicinity of Chapman Avenue and West Street. When the officer pursued the pair, who had escaped from the state prison at Chino Tuesday, they !led but he caught up with Buzard. Teq_ police units and two police dogs were ilalled into the search for Angenete but failed to find him. Both meD Weri serving terms for rol).. bery. Angenete was arrested by Garden Grove police in 1966 apd sentenced to Soledad State Prison. • lntenaificatlon ol t b e Qmmunista' wlnter-!pring offensive wu lntensifyin&. UPI correspondent Nat Gibson,' wiUi the allied forces in the jungled Mi~ rilbbtr plantation northwest Of Saigon, said the tanks which bad rumbled Ii> to the rescue of a trapped American infantry unit crushed ~ Commuoht bunkers with thelr mass. "We'll never find all the bodies," lit Lt. Howard Harmless, 24, of Greencutle, Ind said of thl ' II D t UcdCI. "The tanb buried them in the bunkers.'' Harmless is commander of tbe rifle .platoon which l}ad been trapped. The-Americans found ~. bod!". pf seven North Vie~eae soldiers ai:omtd lhe sma.sbod bunl:ers. · ~ Amerlcaft casualUe1 were listed I§ two killed and 14 wounded. The new shelling• broUght te llXl'9 than l,000 the nwnber of mllllary bi!lea aod loWlll bit by the Communlala. ~ the Red offenslv• begao ""'\)' !oar weeia ago, "' Bandit Robs H untingtori:, . ' . Pizza Parlol' An anned bandit, wearing a ski inuk with eye and nose slits, held up 1. Huntington Beach plu.a parlor Wed- ne"1ay nigh~ taking with him Ill estimated $1,000 after locking two pizza• makers in a refrigerator. Christopher B. Lilley, an employe ol. Me'N Ed's Pizza, 16532 Beach. ;B~~ said be was emptying some trash cans when Ille robber jumped him and told him he wanted the money. The mi-haired BUSpeCt ordettd Ulley trolde and <ll'<l<ret him and Conrad Clouse, another worker, to empty two cash drawers into a brown paper bag. Brandishing a small caliber automatic pistol, the robber' then asked Lilley if there was a safe in the office. Lilley told him if there were, "he would have to look for it himself." On opening the office door the bandit discovered. the safe, forced Lilley to open it and remove the contents. Before making his getaway, he locked the two pizza makers into a walk-in freezer, not bx>wing that it could be unlocked from Inside. Alihougb Ille actual amounl ol cub stolen is unknown, the parlor owner estimates it to be close to $1,000. a nylon shag that's young • Ill looks, young • Ill price! $8.95 sq. yd . Younrld,. ta dalp.- a wiiqUe four-eolor dcl from tpeclal dyeins <eclmiqu-. And ...... idea in tmur.-ricb. boun.,, obo1 the! ma"'- your own hiP llplr:lt.. Imqlae oinnnaar l.mill1 ""' tndilion Ind qoality of Kan.tan for bt.lf the _,.._,_ toJMY. In l&c:oI. crnbiMUW. Your fa vorite cftorfgur wiU b1 happv to a.amt '101' ••• 1211 HAHOl II.VD. COST A MESA. CALIF. -7• ~11' I Hunifugton Beaeh._ EDIIIOH • YOt:. 62, NO. 68, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ixon's Pil.l Plan Foiled Beach Man Held in Drug Conspiracy U.S. Customs officers and Huntington Beach detectives Wednesday night ar· relted a . 25-year-old man, believed to be a member Qf the Hessian motorcycle cluby0a charges ol. conspiring to illegally import 201000 amphetamine tablets. Arrtl!lted at a: 45 p.m. at his home et 40I California St., Huntington Beach, was Charles N. Chiodo. Acccrdln.& to the warrants, Chiodo and his wife, Bertha, as well as two others, allegedly conspired to Wqllly Im~ the tablcls through the San Ysidro bordu between Feb. 15 and Feb. 23. The tablets were physically brought into the United States on Feb. 23 by Mn. Chiodo and Eileen C. Failing, authorities allege. Huntington Beach Detective Rooney Pomeroy said the suspect was taken to city jail and latu transported to San Diego customs facllities by CU!toms agent Robert Gore. Cblodo's wife, whai r wu present at the lime of the. arrat, wu not taten into custody. She is ou1 on bail from the earlier charge of bavini imported the tableUl. Participating in the arrt:st were Hun-- Ungton Beach detectives Pomeroy, Charles 'If. Holllnpworth, custcxns qenl Gore and si:r other men from the U.S. customs office. Playing with Daughter Huntington Beach Man Electrocuted 'People for As Kite Hits Power . Line -Parks' Meet A 29-year.-Old Huntington B e a c h te1cviaion technician ns electrocuted W-y while helping his daughter lly a Idle. ~ s. ROOotkay, 29, ol 16572 =st., was fuuDd lying en tht crass _,. -ol hif -by a ' It ti:40 a.m. He apparently died . ., oloctro<utlon. Wlta poUce,m!ved II the ....0, they '"""' Htttlllqfiiii Beach firemen ad· mltllllerlni aid lo Ille Tid1m. Ills lwld 11111 cmtalned a green siring with a Doctor Concedes Sirhan Needed Some Planning LOS ANGELE'S (UPI) A 1>17d>ologisl conceded today that Sirhan B. Sirhan bad to do a e<>mlderable emount ol plamlng and prtm<dltadon lo <>rr/ out the slaying of -Robert l'. K«lll<dy. Dr. 0. Roderick Richardson told the murder trial jury that In a psychotic state Sirhan was capable of deciding upon the person he was going to kill, getting a weapon, practicing at a range, going t.o the Ambassador Hotel and firing the gun at Kennedy's bead. Richardson insisted, however, that It was not the same type ol. deliberation. pmneditalion and c:akulatl<m that would have marked the act of. a go.called normal person -might atlempt an Ill sfnatkn. .. lt ii simi.lm' to tile type ol thinking u.t a mental patient might ... -be -11 a key !run a ...... .., bu roaadl .so be can make a breU latn m.J' Richard9on aakl. Under c:ro&HJ:amination by Dep. Dist. ~. David Fills, Ridlardscn agmd -that there were many persons on both a;&., of the Aral> Isrneli conflict who haloed each other and that there J"ere terrorist groups wflose goal was to asassinate leaders. "Do you think all the members ()f those groups are paranoid?" Fi~ asked. "I haven't had an oppoctunity to ex· amine them. However, people who ~llfl terrorists clten hive shown a need ID e>;preJS their peroonal hostility." bright interwoven..tln ron strip. The other end of the string was tooching two power lines, carrying a kta.d of i;,ooo volts. ROOotkay was rushed '.to llwtllng!o)l lnten:mupunity IWlj>l!a~ 'fhere Ile .... pronounced -. - Mrs. Orville car..., the victim's a1ll14 said that RtbottaJ'I dlulhter, C.therine, camo Into the houal looidn( lor mwe irtrtnc lbortly before the iccldent. Tbe daqgbter ap(llrmlly ..... ·1frs. CarllOD'I crochetln( )'VII, not nolldng the braided metal strip in the matmaL Although police reporle<! burn marka oo the partway grus, the county cor· cmer'1 ()f(iee is conducting labOratory tests to determine it electrocution wa1 the actual cause of death. Robotkay had complained of being ill recently, leading t be m to searcb fO( a more detailed caUJe of death. . Bandit Holds UP. Huntington Pizza Parlor for $1,000 An armed bandit, wearing a s!d maak witti eye and noae slits, held up a Huntington Bea<:h pim. parlor Wed· "esday nigh~ laldnii with him an estimated $1,000 alter locking tw() piua· makers in a refrigerator. Christopher B. Lilley, an employe o[ Me'N F.d'a Pizza, 16532 Beach Blvd., said be was emptying IODle trash cans when the .robber jmnped him and told him be waded the-. Tbe -luoped ordend Lilley lnlide and -him and Conrad Cloule, aoolber -·· lo empty two C8lh di awera lril:o a Iron JllPS' bi£~ Brandlahlng a amall eallber -pilto~ the robber then -Lilley If there waa a safe in the office. LlDeJ': tnld him if there were, t'be woa1d have to look for It hhmell." On openJnc the office door the bandit discovered tbe safe, forced lJlley ·to open it and remove the cootenta. Before maldng his getaway, be locked the two pizza makers into t walk-In freezer, not knowing that It CQllld be unlocked from lnolde. Allbongb the actual amount of caalt stolen Is wm-n, the porlor owner es1im*s K to be clooe to $1,llllO. •lJnhook~-Yonihs r ' Who can "unboot" )'QUJ' kid Jf dntp already rule bla Hie? It Blill kn 'I the end of the road, ad- visel Alton Blakes!,., nallonlJly noted author ol. the t•nrup 1•" arlicle1 appearin( """ In the DAILY Pnm. AuthorlUes quoted in today'• arlicle aplaln the bypocrlsy to- day.'• youth ... In their ~ uae of alcohol, tobacco and tran- qulliwa while putU., down the -of marljuna and other mind benden. " It ·-too Illa to -the -atl<m pp? See I'll• " ( By RUDI NIEDZlELSKI . Of-. Dtllr Pli.t std' Several Huntington Beach ' clti!eM banded together' Wedpesday night to form the "People· ·far Parb" an «ganhaUon dealgged lo put a fl mllll.., plrt bClid· over .the top June J. . Tbe 0r1..iiefs expec\ea •·larit <mid. to j ... lbi ~ i4iliolt ............ c.M.r. Rt rilif; i lli&WI "iii'"~ lhond up for the lint meellq. .- Hoiace B. Jle7nojd11 ~1 Llnt9Ch and R<Juoldi, pWmm, _..,. .dlaid coilcopta ol -al 'the ;.:a wblcTI -be conairtlcled""'1 the·-mObey, Largest of tbelO waold be the 141-acre Hunlingtoo Central Park, 19 be located at the intersection of Talbert. A venue and Golden West Street The park would feature 'Jttterlor lakes. a wild bird refuge, a muaeum and art center, a llbrary, picnic areu and cam· pine fadliltes, playin& fleldl. a pistol and archery range and blcyc1lnc trails. Edllon. C.manltJ Park, a f.S.acre -.Odonal fllClllly to be built at the corner al EdlsClla A.,... and MqnoUa 'Atenue, wouJd tac1ude ~ mu dutllerl, tree grouplnp, an outdoor stag. !iii area. a likJ<le ~ hltin& trail.I l}'llem, Ji111in1 lle1dl aild oatdoor cluln>oma whlcll -i.l be combined "1th adjaceM.ll:dlnl mp ScbooL BoDd mooey 'O'Otlld also be Uled for the construction ol the 2.5 acre Qegg- Stacey Plrk alated for location at the lntersectlon of Larcbwood Streel and Edgevlew Lane. Inchitted in the design__concept of the smaµ neighborhood park are p1ay areas, walks, wading pools and a small com- munity center. • The "People 'For Parks," beaded by, co-dl&irmen Cris C. Cril and Ron Bauer, plan to put together a muslve publicity drive before the elecllon, Including D<WIPIP<l' and ~ .iromotlon. • teen.qe rally, neJcbbcrl>ood eolfea and inclncl me<llnp. Tbelr -public meeUnc will be held In the Recrutloa Center April JS al 7,;e p.m, Beaile Lennon Weds Japanese Girl in Gibraltar ... .• >t,,. ' Spring Arrives · On the Button ' Spring began at II :Oil a.m, -not one minUte sooner ()f later -today, At that ID<IDOllt (Paciflc Standard Time) :r. center of the IUD moved acrolls o ~ equator· from the south to the north, marking the vernal equlno< ( aJw known u · the point of AriesJn.lhe·Nortbm) ~) wtien day and .night, in all parts pf.tho world, are equal. ·. · . . . _ If you can't remember all .that, Just remember that sprlrig 'lutl for three months'. can summer be far behit)d? Who's Loveliest .,....y!J• Fl•al N.~. ic.ek& JEN CENTS 0 ~ White House West ·Pick In Qffing? By ARTHUR R. VINSD; Of .... Deltr ..... , ..... 'Vietnam war talks, a visit to a peacef~ mission and lbopp1ng ror an ornate swn- mer White House in Laguna Beach. are oa the agenda u President Nixoo arrives In Oraoge County Fri4aY· Air Force One will roar in over the Pacific Coast mountalm and .down the a..W alley to Point Mugu for touchdown at 1:20 p.m., and a swlfl coop1 tour ol major proportlons. 'lbe·President and hll wife will make their beadquarten on the IPMl•llni H. H. CoUGn eotate in San Clemente, aue3t ol the daughter of a mllllonan friend of the Isle President Franltlln D. Roosevelt. Mrs. Lionel E. Ogden, oC San Clemente. bu arranged for the Ni:m:<mS to 1pend two nights on t he estate borderinl the Camp Pendleton Marine Corps ba8e, where Vietnam war talks Will be held. Ellsworth Bunker, U.S. ambassador to Vietnam, ill due to arrive 'Saturday, aloog with Gen., Andrew J. Goodpasti!.r, oukoing deputy commander of U.S. fcxlces in the war tooe. . . · · · · '1Vb11e House Presa Secretary Ronald : Zleiler l&ld the Sunday conferenci ·--~on \lie Wgbt bac~ te w '. -lhould not be in...,,._ • a ,lllOJw polley dilcu111oo, bu\ Cllber top aides will also be ~ I' • ;~u., froia. Wlllhlncton with~ . ,. NlsGli .PirtY wlU bo. Sel:r<Urr ol c WID1mii P. ~ and Dr. "•-A. KJolinPr, the presldentw advW .. (See NIXON, Pap I) * * * Here's Schedule For Nixon Visit Here Js the tentative schedule for President and Mn. N1'on lor his Orange Coast visit as announced by preu aide Ron Ziegler in Wuhington: FRIDAY 7:1t a.to. (PS'l')I Depart Kamu OIJ' Municipal Airport aboard Air Foroa Ont !0< Pl. Mugu Naval Air Stallon near · Santa BatbarL !:Zt p.m.: Arrive Pl. Mugu. Depart by helicopter to in!pect oil on be..,iies in Santa Barbara vfclnity. 4 p.m.: Depart Pl. Mugu aboard Air Force One for El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. C:lS p.m.: Arrive El Toro Mc.AS. Depart by unannounced form o l traruporlaUon for IL IL Colton Estate in San Clemente. I p.m.; Afternoon and night 1t the Ogden home .., Colton Estate. SATURDAY ti a.JIL I Depart Colton Estate lot fativlUes at Mllaion San Juan Capistrano. _, Poalblo llmclteoo party at ' Capistrano. 1 p.m .. r LeaYt San Juan CaplatrlDO for return to San CJementl. S-...,. alpt: Nll<on party mnalns 1t SilO Clemente. U.S. J.lDbasHdar, to South Vietnam Ellsworth Bunker aniVts El Toro MCAS fOr round o( talks with NiJ:on. Oraa1e • H N. V~ets Reel ·Back Uf!der .Heavy V.S.-Attack V-Wlniiertvces aAlGON -,.,_ "' u. !Ill ·-VWlm•• llhllloo bopll rotnallnc to the north loday Wider prossure from allied tl'oops and a U.S. lank forct that smashed Ill way into a C.Ommun.lst bunker -comptu: cs mlJu nortbwt.lt of Saigon, U.S. inlelllgence aources reporl<d. The U.S. Command announced today that S51 Americana were killed 1n actlon In Vietnam lul week, puahlng Ille lolal Frona Pqe 1 NIXON •.. al U.8. 1'o'WleW dtad to lt,111' II\ Ille It -... tllr .Pirii -.......... 811 .to ·~ In ... -. tlCbt ,.... "' -. ' • • Tbe American toll laJt WOQ WU 15 more than the pr<vjous weet'~ tot&I and ralaed the number of Americans killed In the lint three weeks of the Vitt C.Ong'a spring offensive to 1,140, ooly 2jl) ltSI than the 1,380 U.S. troops rtported killed durins the eight weeks ol 11189 prior to the ol!enalve. . • • • • -61 '1111 U.8. ,lit Air ClnlrJ ~ rblrpljr -tht maaaivt allied llMllol ~ lllt "..... 4rlft ............. 1111 ~·· ...... ~-"!ii·--!!!!.~? tnp 11Jo t11'~~0.Nang'111011thern -~,.:.. .... -lie'* lilt' ... ""' u .. lndicatloa to Sal(on, lntellllflcatl6n ol t h o Communist&' Fl:ont report.r laid tht .. 1r1 .. Into. tht wlnW<oprtni oUOl)&IYO WU lntwl!)'lng. bun k e r complo burled an unknown UPJ corra:pondent Nat G!bllon, with number of North Vletoam.,. roldlen the allied forces In the jungled Mlcbtlln alive Jn their underaround forUflcal!onl. rubber plahtaUoo northwest of Saigon, Communllt rocket fin hH three o! tho uld the tanu which bad rumbled In tanb tn tbl dly of heavy flgbtbti. to the rescue of a trapped American ~ by the '/1h Dlvtston had lnlllllry unll cnllbed the Comm!"'tst btmten with their mw. ''We'll -!Ind all Ille bodler," 111 U. -an! Ranni,.., :N, ol Greeocutla, Ind., a.aid of tht I a n le tactics. "1be ta.nb buried them in the bunkers." Harmle.sa is commander of the rlOe pt.loon which had been trapped . Tbe Americana found the bodies of seven North Vietnamese soldlen around the smashed bunkers. American ca.suaJUes were listed as two killed and 14 wounded. The new 11bel.Un&I brought to more 13 Groups Sfff?"soring than 1.000 the mimber of military - .and towno bit by the CommUftlltl -the Red otfwlve began nearly four wet.ks ago. The Communist offemive in the Da Nani area flared up again tonight ond Red gunners lobbed eight rounds of a millimeter mortar tire into the U.S. 1st Marine Division headquarters and three rounds into the Marine Jir staUoo. at Marble Mountain near Da Nang. Casualties · and damaie were not bn· mediately reported. ' netional aecurity. • Candidates' Nights Set Tbe-will be the flnl ~ ... ' confrontatioo between Nizon and the am-· bassador, who bu been In Vi<tnam fer tbe past year, Whit< llooae aldea noted. A baken dooen ol civic groups will co-sponsor "Candidates Meetings" for the April 15 School TruJt.e electloo and the Huntington Union Council which will bake cookies for coffee breaks at the non-partisan political gatherings. High School Distrlct, are: ' Girl Scout troops in · ~ l1'WI arl!! distributing 50,000 bandblllr to publlc~e the dates and places for the meeUngs. Continuing hint& that Nbtm D1oY man an offer to purcbue the rambllq "1no ea..u, mansion at 'l'IO· -llrtve. Laguna Beach, a1lo gained momeotmn with the Impending Orange Coast visit. ·"'There ill a continulng lntertlt in the castle on the put of the Pre.tdent since last January," saJd a spokesman for owner Thomas A. Merrick, hinting a po.Wble negotiaUon. NIXON FASCINATED Tbe Pr..ident has been f83clnated with the M-room mansion on a cllff overlook- ing a 180-degree Pacific panorama for years and la lnown to be -,,. a Southland reaideace. BulH "" a fiVH<n plot wffll a parking lot large eoouih fer a pruldtntlal bellport, Pyne CutJe has been appraloed at f/50,000, but the 37·)'UNlid llroclure llla.f DO( bring !hat much. Mertick hlmsell bu indicated be wID get more prestige than profit U he sells the Swiu-Bavarlan m&n1ion built by eccentric bachelor oil mllilollalre Walter Pyne. The otructure bu 22 bathrooms and fs now rented out u 12 apartments, but could eaally be altered to - moel cl a pmkfenllaJ guest party. Fll'lt on the Pre.sident'a Itinerary after arrival Friday ii a tour d oil-tlalned beaches at Sant& Barbara, aft« wlllcb be and the flnl lady will enplane !or JU nallve Orange County. NO Ol'llER PLANS Earlier announcement.a: of tbe p-eslden- tial vl&tt laclnded San Diego and the clty'1 moth anniversary ctlebratiOll,. but no me:nt!ca wu made ol that end of the coastllne today. President an4 N'.rs. NlJ:on will visit MisaJoa San Juan Capistran• Saturday, two days after the celebrated return of the swallows on St. Jos~'• Day. "He enjoys via1Ung the mh:sion and wants to go there," aald Preas Secretary Ziegler. Heavy security meuures will be en- forced on the grounds of the Henry Hamilton Cotton estate in San Clemente during the tw<><lay prealdenUal .Ult. The Cotton estate borders the Oranp. San Diego county lines and ls well known to IUJ'fing IOClety fOI' The Tratlea belch and Cotton's Point Following arrival at El Toro MCAS, the Pr<sldenl will go-by ye!-unanllOllllo- ed tramportatim-direct!y to lbt Cotto• • Estate. · Apartment Size Ordinance Set An ordinance change recommending minimum sizes for apiftment room& bu been set for an April S public hearing by the Fountain Valley Plannlni Commission. Planning Dire<tor St&nley Marlllleld has recommended flOO aquare feet for a bachelor apartment. 750 square feet for a one bedroom, 950 IQUIJ'8 feet for two bedrooms and 1,150 square feet for three bedrooms. All of the recommended t1zel would be minimum requlreme:nt• for apartment. In R·2, R..1 and, R-1 llllled .,...,._ llfi11Y 1'11111 GlMOI COfol1 PUIUIMltte c:DMl'An' a.Nii N W ... ~ ....... """"..., J•c• l. C.rl"J VD,,......,....,..._ ._'" n.-., K...,I -l\e111••· A. Mwr)~f111 ~··-AINrt w. l•tM Wllll•111 a,,; A-11i. HW1Hn11'tfl hl<ll U.... City •fhr H1 ........ t11A:O,.._ JJt It• ltrHt Mdfwtt ,M4,., .. P.O. a.. ne. tJMI ---....... ""911 "'' """ ..... ..,.....,. c ......... , -W..t ..., """' ._.....~m,..... .. _ SUNDAY CONCERT -"Ir•· Connie Schuman, president of Fountain Valley Music Booster Club discu"ea llCOre with Adrian Holland, who will j>Orform, along with J.2..member string ensemble, In first ot com· mun1ty concert aerlea. .. lst-v alley Concert Sunday Features String. Ensemble •' Namea of the organiza.Uons wbk:h will work to promote attendance at the pre- elecUon rallies were released today by Mrs. Kenneth Katz, League of Women Voters service chairman, who is coordlnatlng acti•ltle•. The: Huntington Beach Junior Chamber cl COmmerce, the ·Huntington Beach Association ol· American University · Women, the Huntington Beach Jr. Woman's Club, the South Coast Jr. Woman's Club. the Fountain Valley , ~ar,cees. the West.minster Kiwani&, the Seal Beach Woman's Club, the Seal Beach Jr. Woman's Club, the Marlna Business ProfeS!ional Womens Club, the ~al Beach PTA and the Seal Beach ~lay Group Mothers. The first two meetillgs will !Se held March 26 at McGaugh School in Seal Beach and Marci) fl, al Fountain Valley High school. Ca»didates for school boards in thOie dirtricts will be on hand to make brief statement,, and answer ques- lions. · The public is invited to join the can· didates for toffee and conversation at 7.:30 p.m. Tbe groa:J>I, from the five elementary ICbool dlstrlcll In Huntington Beach, aa well u the H1mt1ngtoo Beach Union Planners Reject Nine-home Tract Over Rooftops Valley Manager to Talk To 40 Nations on BUfl,get City Manager James E. Ntal of Foun· lain VaUey will have the rare honor or speaklng to 1,000 representatives of "Love On A Rooftop'' wa& not the more than 50 nations in June. song being sang •t the Fountain Valley He hu been iovited to explain Fountain Plannin& Commisskri Wednesday night. Valley's unique 10.yl!!ar ·budget to the Commiasionera turned down a proposed 19th Congress of the International Union nine home tract because they felt com· of Local Authorities, June 16-21 in Vien- positlon roofs , would not be compatible na, Austria. with surroundlnl ~. Subject of the congress is local govem- Developer Edward Foley cl Garden ment ftn&ncillg, and congress offlcials Grove showed commlaslmers several feel Neal's presentation fits perfectly whh their topic. lndiv:iduals who plan to move to FOLmtafn Valley because of the promise of no property tax increases for ten years. "I was skeptical at first,'' said the councilman, "but I think it bu become obvious this plan Is drawing a Jot of favorable attention to our city." Huntington Hospital Faces $10,000 Suit types-cl comj>OliUon n>oll he might put In addiUon to the talk, Neal has been .., !he Spuiab l!tylt bomel be plans, med to prepare a 2,000 word paper HUDtingtoo tntercommunity Hospital but the commlsaion turned thumbs down on the subject for presentation to the and one of it! staff physicians today on an propcmll. congress. face a $10,000 personal injury suit filed Roof design 00 a vetmnary hospital Hi! invllaUon came from Orin F. by a former patient who charges negll· pr~ at EDJ.s Avenue and Brookhurst Nolting, r;enior vice president of the gence during the delivery of her child The lint of the Fountain Vallq eom. munltyc Concert fltrla be(lnr Sunday with a perfonnanct by Adrian Holland and Jiii -llrinl enoemble. Street allo CMne under a'it.icirm becaute International Union of Local authorities lut July. known ~pean and Amer i ea n the design aubmltted Wednesday nigbt and vice chairman of the U.S. seeUon. Mrs. Meredith Jane Gonzales names the orc:beltru, Including the Loo Angeles dllfered from the ociginll Mansanl-type Tuesday night Fotintain Valley City Huntington Beach hospital and Dr. f. Holland will -at I p.m. In the Huotincton Beach High S c b o o I auditortam. Tickett are available at all Fountain Valley· Elementary Schools or · by pboolng ~7' or 842-1651. Holland, a naUve of the Netherlands, baa played u floUnist with several weU. ~· roof reques1ed. Councilmen placed their stamp of ap-Page Sowers in her Superior Court ac· A.PPNriiia: with h1m at the hl&h 1ebool Q:mmi.ssioners, however, approved the provaJ on lhe trip by authorizing the tion. She claims that "negligent er· eooCer1 wtl be the 70Cllll!!'t members plan oa conctitJon that a screening 8 P" city 1o pay Neal's expensses. amination. diagnosis, treatment a n d J .,_ '""" ea ID and Jnvtd by the planning department be Colincilman Edward Ju at com· delivery" have resulted in "some w w. ·lf'OOP, 6'.0"'V usey, • pla~ on ••-~ to ~1"-·~· .... .......... Jim N--• the I t d. b'J'ty" to th hlld bor i..'QI w.. ,...,. ~ -............ -p · ented ~ on 10.year p an permanen 1sa 11 e c n ~~=~by the Foontain r~dltloolng;:::::'.:eqnl::::pmen==l=======nottng=· =th=a=t=he==ba=d=talk=ed=to="=ver=al=' =•=t :th:e:hosp=i:ta:I l=ast=Jul:y:l:8:. ===;-Valley lo!'!'lc Booster Club. Other con- certs in tbe aerie& include lbe Cboraleers, classical gultart.11 lmry and Klnttemaa and the Alr National Guan! Band. Pay-for-play Probe Ends; a nylon shag that's young V ~iley Woman Arrested A twi>month ln•estigaUbn was climaJ:· · ed Wednaday wilh the arrest of a . Costa Mw chiropractor's alde whose feminine physical tbe<apy allegedly · sarpu:sed. boandJ of the Jaw. Mar\ha "Marcie" Merrill. 28. of 19112 . E. Cottonwood St.1 Fount.a.in Valley, was booked on suspicion of sollclUn& for . act& !JI proslitullon at an alleged '5 to $2.0 fee schedule, investljaton said. · Costa Mesa Police Sgt. Jack .<:alnon, o( the vice ~ lntelllgenoe aetail, iald six invesUgators worked on' the case' involving Mls.s Merrill •nd UP. to two other 1wome.o. · · Orange County District Attorney'• ·In.. vest.lgator John Cler made the arrest Wednesday AfternOoo at Uie o'ffice bf Ernest V. Athenoar D.C., 132 E. 18th'. St., Costa Mesa. Sgt. Calnoo laid today !hat be Is Schools Planning ~nick' Programs Stai! members of the HIUllingloa Beach Union High School District have prepared 56 "Instant programs" for we by the cgmmunity. The speakers bureau programa offer Information on auch varied topJca 11 "Ol'et Control," "Youth Hosteling In Europe by Bicycle," "Spiders I n California" and "The Missing Moral Fiber In Pment<lay Yooth." Speakerr Include toachen, prlnclpalr and tnJatea ol the diltrid To engage any one of the spuken:, c:unmnnltJ groups in.,-mate 1 raerva- U.. with !Ilsa Eunlct Vertol, oecrttarr to the ll!pOrinteodent at &38-133t. Chamber Directors Change Meet Dates New m.,tlng dales for Iha Boan! ol Dtrectont of the Huntln(too Beach Cham· her cl Commerce ban been announced. Tbe dJrocton wtll bold their meetlnp on the second Woclneod&J of every month at chamber headquarters la the Town and c..mtJy Clnttr .., Beach Boolovan! and Ellls Avenue. lnvestlgatlnc the poaihility that viol•· Uoaa ol city ordlnancu or the rtate BuJ1nesa and Prolwloaa Code may a1lo be enforced In the ..... He laid 1 complaint would probably be illued today. !onnally cbarllng Miu Merrill, who posted ball alter being booked locall7 and tram!err<d to Orange County Jail following her atrell lnveall(aton Aid the alleged play40!'- pay game Involved lnlUal re!errala by bualneu card and subsequent offers of llOIHldvertlsed ployllcal therapy to payln1 CUJtomen. Tho alleged violallona occurred In an adjacent pro!wtonal bulldJng -•te from the cbiroprador'1 own office quarten, aCC<S111q to Sgt. CaJnon. GWC Band Plans f.oncert Tour Of f.olorado Golden West ColJeat't -her Sympllonlc Band will man Its third llllDUal tour l\larc:b 25 to April S. pJaytns seven c:oncerU In O>lorado. 'Ille trip will be a apedal -!" director Tom Hernandez because the band will be wearing new unlfonru for the llnt time, and they will be making their first oot.<>!4tate .....,, 'Ibey also will be -Colorrdo State College In Greeley, l!emanc!u' alma matll!r, 'W"ba't HVtJ'al mtmben will audldon for musJc ICbotanhips. Tho unt!crma, wbtcb jull arrived. are styled after the prb ol old riverboat gamblen with blaik, hllb-waiated coats, )"!Jew brocade ...ia, blade cumbel' bunds and spat&. Cott and pant. have yen .... piping, Tbe final touch Ir a black how tie. • First stop will be • -•t Du· rango, Colo., junior collep, Man:b 17. They will play In llen"'1', Mardi It. live a communltf performance .at the Gil~ Colo., bJi1> acbool, March :it. Other dates .., the lthierU)' are Meeker Janlor HIP and lladlon mp, Gree!ay, and Plltte Valley mp, Keney, Colo., all on March IL Lut stop will be at -· Colo., April t. Ftalured OD!olsla fer !be -will bl Glen Duter .., trambooe, Stenn L<wll 111 ~ hom, and Don Slln, Uliltant ' ' ' • In looks, young • In price! $8.9 5 sq. yd. y-;i,.. to dafp- • \UUqu•f~r dect rrom...,;.i <b-e!nr teclmiqu .. And 10CDll ideu in t.ertw.-ricb. bouncr lhac that matcbm yomown hi.ah spirit&. lmatine &ivinf your family th• tradition and qutiity of Karutan for hall th• prieo,... miih•-to pay. &.15 calor aimblnatianL \"our /aooriu lkif#Mr tOiU ie 11am to ...ut ,... ••• H.J.GARREfT fURNrplRE I Dtl HARQ 11.'1>. PQnA MlSA, CALIF. )4Ml71 ~27• ' ' ' • -'"'2tY PILOX 39 -. ., ' I ' . t ,. , ., • I , '• 111·1· •· : ,. ... ~ .•. '· ... :a· ·· · · , ... :. : a .. · ' -' ~! . . . ·, .. ; . "'' ' ' ' '~ .. -" . ' ~ " ' ' I • j' • • ' .. ! ,.. 'f! • • ' •. . " . ... : CElllJ:R··' ·A··· ~.N .. · :;: , . . . , .... ~ • -1. . G 1,: . -. . -· t .· • • - BRING THE: FAMILY -., •••• 'JOIN THE .FUN! rrherel":s~methina to ' . . interest evetyone ) ' ' ,' . ' . . . ,.· ~ at Bob Longpre's!! ·YEARS . OF SERVICE TO PONTIAC OWNERS OF ORANGE COUNTY & SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ' . . SPECIAL LOW . ~BIRTHDAY PRICES ON EVERY ·CA,R ! JOIN '.T.HE PONTIAC PARADE . . =~~M,,.lftt ~\~ .... ;. ·· Come S~e 'The " ' . ' . . . . .. . . -~ ~ no\ll\1ts tn OR . '·&2WANlllVIRSAY 23rd.ANNIVERSARY ' 6 9 r ., " . . . . . .. . SPECIAU sP1ci•1s GARDEN ON , 1961 PONTI.ACS -0.RANGl COUNTY'S ~ iAJGEST SEUqlON ~~illll · or STATION WAGONS ,,. $4995 lOW I · -~ AS · . uc.w•m ......... HUGI SWCTION 1961 PONTIAC ' e '61 GTO's'. 9 PASS. CATAllNA e '6l·lf MANs. lladia, bea1'r. Rydramalic. EZI ' ,w.. Whitewlll tu.. J'ull ''" e '61 CATAIJ"A'S 1«1 !"'"'""" .. ......,. Li<· • 168 il>'iiNMIU VRR II'. " . · e '61 STATION '2995 WAGONS·9PASS. · · -36 MO. FINANCING - Birthday kvillp-lft llJ·W'P" · --.-.u•-i'iN LOW-LOW Counlr]' llquir .. -Clln. lm)!'la ., . -· • ;:.~~~w·1 '1 SALE rRICES ' . . ,a :. .· -····-_: .. .. ' ' • ANTIGUE ' CARS • 'FUNNY' .. CARS • THE 'SAVAGE' PLUS OTHER UNUSUAL CARS! ANf!llYIRSART SPICIAL DREAM CAR!! NOW ON DISPLAY 1969 GRAND PRIX LA PARISIAN DREAM CAR Tiie OHL Y Soutltern California Appearance ! .... t Mhl It, TUI h.,.. YM W ,..._ T• YJnr T1ils •cCllfll D,.._ C... 13600 Beach Blvd. · Westminster (Beach Blvd. at Garden Grove Fwy.) -Call 892-6651 or 636-2500 , : " . - I ..;• .. . ., ' • ' ' l l, , I 11 I ' I I . • I -•"' .f[O DAILY PILOT H Thuncb1, Mm! 20, 1969 Fer Out lnve•imen~-4 By SYLVIA PORTER Q: What if, Instead of buyini a cro.ss-section of ~ grade stocb last year, you bad lnvested a chunk: of your .nest.ea in v.·ell chasen rare . book! and manuscripts? How woukl you have made out? A.: Very well, indeed! The value ()f your ",mtfollo" · would, in .I.let. have ..red IO per"'nt ayer lif; ~ t 4 Umes the rin in tbe familiar Dow.JOllOI lodllllrlal average. One ~ 1 il- lustration of the . ~nn trend: a 13th Century 'Eqllsh illuminated Bible .sold last year for $500,000, up_ fNml $1.:1,000 in 10 years. ALSO IN THE past decade. prices of hand-written (by scribes) books from the period around 1400 A.O., especially those containing illuminated miniatures, have tripled. In a related f l e-1 d , autographs of famous .com- posers such as Beethoven and Mozart have risen in value 10 to 15 times in 15 years. During this same I p I ft , Appointed William Richard Smith has b e e n appointed manager of the Corona del Mar office of Cro- well, Weedon & Co., a Southern California bas- ed New York stock Ex· change member firm. Gilchrist Gets Award aulo11aphs of G e o r g e \Yashlngton have ~red from several bllndrM doll1.t1 to 1tveral thousand. I Tbe soarlnj values of 1'IJl boob. m.atlu.scrlpta a n d autographs ha ve not made front-page or fi_oancial page -news and you, as an avera;e lnvutot, almost surely do not eondder thl1 an appropriate Oe1d fatJ;ir funds. SOT PRICE riau are ~blt. And what's tnort\ the likelihood J s overwht1q>'1.m&bat values will coot.l.nue to c b in lhe years 111imo'1iately ahead. Can you, an amatelD', cash in on today11 rare book boom? Are there basic rules to guide you? When I put these ques- tioiis to H. P. Kraus of New York City, the workf's top buyer and seller in this field,_ his first reaction was : "Tho book bwin<ls I s 1:trlcUy for lhe CMnOisseur; an amateur would be a com· plete fool to try to make a killing In lhil game." An<I here's wby: LE'l"S SAY 1 neoph)1e buys a prize flrst edition (or $10,000. But he thel> lilldl l U..t the "errata" l>Qe or the fb' leaf (bd.,. the tltlt J>:O&•) ii mlJt. Ing. Suddenfy, the beak's value plung" la ... DOD. Or he buys a rare book aad llndl It has be<D robound, •illhlnf '·" .la -'ourth. cil Hs value If It were lD Ill "'oif&inal )»oards." <91 the other' hond, If It Ls the only copy ol. a rl.l'I book in lls orllinal boards. ll 1U1 be worth _, tllnea the value of other copies.) Nofu Ktau.s: "Even min)' n.pert.s don't mow some or these Une point!, ao how can the amateur be expected to know?" ' ANOTHEI\ PROBLEM 11 that there are very,' very few .hard, unlv1rul rules on rare book valuea. (Sample rule: any book printed In Boston before 1700 ii valuable because tl1ele were t b e ear Ii~ st Anal~American books.) In addition, Kraus warns Sylvania Introduces Police 'Beatfinder' nel. Since beats can be con- . structed of any combination or units quick ly and easily by the computer, dillerent beats may be used by each shift. HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE MANY THAT OUR GREAT NEW MARK Ill" CONTINENTAlS, MERCURYS AND COUGARS HAVE ATTRACTED. 1961 C.t.DILLAC COUPE DE VILLE nu CONTINENTAL ~•welt• 11\wt 11111t11 wltll <11111 111111 ltftllfo l11ltf'lt• -L-111 "'°'· T~lt <t r U. '" th9 lilll"l .. vi~ "'"''· '1111 -·• ••tltry l lr, ,,_ 14M/'M. ... JUfllt -.. llJ\lllllt ti..lfll ....... .. Oft¥ .. Mly H ... Ml ... 1111111 "1( .. t. Mii IMIJ. VOUJ11 $4995 1961 MERCURY PARK 1.ANI I ..... ll1nl .. p, ltkll ,_.ftC ttlll "'ltl 1111/lfl wllfl llMllClllfll lnlwllr. L•••l"Y "illli""' ..,lfll A.T.1 lt .. H, ~.s .. , .... '•WINI., fadotry tlr <Miii .... fk, Ct,. .. tty ,,.,.1111,_ -......... Mtri! Ill Cnl._, flL A •NI lHrf. Y(.I( "2 $3195 $2HS 1'65 J~liU.U lKl COUl'l ........ ""'"' 11111.Wo .. ilolldl ........ 4 .... "'-'"• -.:. °"' " .,. ......... n..., .., '"""'' -.... ,......,. '"'" , .... Miia. (....,.,.. ..... _,,.. ..... -.,,.... ~- $3395 •••tn1 yt lltw a1l.,ltr .. 1111 .. ~ lnltrltr, 111ltmttlc trt11trn1&11..., rHlt ,,_. lltfllt r, t it-ctneltl9fllfll, twH llfWlt!", 11Mrillto lk"IJlff, I WI¥ 1tal, II" 11'Mr111t1 ...,., flVI Mii. IMlllllwlly ..,..lflttlfltjl. $3195 1 H6 CONTINENTAL COUPE L .. 11 ._ -wlfll 1111r .H.IOI tllf ..,lln,llllrlMllll Ill w.11111111 UH l11r111 0••111•· 111i... llwrry ta tlll1 -· Allllt It'• .. ," "'1""" ••Ill 111 1111 1f1111r Uc· "'¥ tf!IM~ Lk. SlllW4U $3195 1'47 COU•AR 2 DOOR HARDTOP ....., Met .. ,... ..... '-'di! tMf'J. ... wtlf'PllJ ...... . ltM ... ,........ .............. lt&M. ......... .. t.aitf"Y tW, C....-. tft. ~ • .,..i.l. TXT •t1 $2495 J'OhDSOD+SOD Lllltll HmlllTll• IWM•lllllD•HUU MH_......,_ _ _. ........ . ' --. --·-~-1--------· Thursday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York 1 -----------------~-:--. .. T-.V, Miid! 20, 1'169 H St~k Exchange List (!*.) .......... c ... °"' .... .. j ffi! 10> Jl\t List - DAlLV P!l.Ot 41 ,..., ....... a.. ... ..... .. - ,_ I ~ '• I I ---~------,--,..-.--·~---.... --..-~------------------~---~---------~-~~------~--- \ I 0 Mll.Y Pll.OT - Television Not.es York Leaving 'Bewitched' -NEW YORK (l/PI) - 'Understandably, despite that loog-time fat salary, good ac- tor Dick York has reslgntd from his job as the ra~r liOOCY huaband ol ABC's "BewUcbed" lttles, effective at conclusion ol. his flve-yeaf coolract this aeUOl'l. H e desires Ol.ber acting pastures. Dick Sargent will be the replacement as E I i1 abet b ?{ontaomery's video spouse ror 1969-'JG. • • • Joan Crawford, rarely acen on t.elev.itioa. will make • starring appearance 1n oot of UST 2 P"•al''S -TIWn.. l'rl.. ht. HSCR.'s t iM•t production" -4.A. 1tt0111.,- "A. Magnificent Mounting" -o. '· "DEATH Of A SAWMAN" 11•...,,.. -Tfft•D ST•P' THUftl:-COSTA MlitA-W-11U CMILDll.I N'I TH.AJR6-"TN• llMl'liROlt & TH• •l•lfTtMOALI'' A OfLIGHTFUL Oll:IENTAL MIME.-MATIHIEE SUNDAY· 1 f'.M.. ONLY -· \ . f , .. IN ooJy ONE mOYle tWa y_. ••• I this hos to be ONE of tltttft! FASHION ISLAND * NEWPORT CENTER •• •••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• • •• POSITIVELY ENDS TUESDAY 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS BESt PICTURE • BEST DIRECTOR ST ARTS WEDNESDAY wu~':: •• Y! ~r~~~~ K@!!~='~ "'OIEY l'AME 10 ROBU5W6'5 ELKE GJ::J','j,.,ooc SOMMER Luvm LEEJ. JACK .. POSITIVELY ENOS TUES. COBB PALANGE~• --·-~..._, those two-hour Uln1s n1<1de especially for first sho~· nc on vldeo io the-"W Id Premiere'' series UniV makes ror; NBC. The feature ,, "Night Galitry." It COO$ists cl three stories by veteran video playwright, Rod Serling each with ita own cast and with Sterling as host. In ~r segment. Mias Crawford plays ·a wealthy, eccent.ric, blind since childhood, who devises a bizarre method of regaining sight. • • • Dick Van Dyke's musical- variety special for CBS, to ~ ,"COOGans BLUff • COL.DR ~:"".0::: , I UNIVIAIAL PICTURE -, i G•r't' lodcwood COLOR ' 0MODIL SHOP" • V1nnni.. Redgr1vt "Jil0•6Y GlltL" ........ -• 147-lHJ •It ....... ~limn! Gr-oorv PKk COLOR "GUNS 011 NAYAIONl" I llK tmmencled PM" AdWlll! James G1rn.r COLOR "GR.AND PllX" Ltt Mtrvln COLOR 'lHE DllTY DOZEN'' <'I' ~'~ f ~ HI-WAY 39 ' . --··-........ "M" lttlld Mtlu,.. AllCllH<U I (Pltrtltfltl dlKAlitft ld•IHlll) Gl1111 lgllobflgl<:lt COLOR "IUONA SllA I MIS. CAMPIELL.. ' s·~·· McQtlffn COLOR I "NIYADA SMITH" / be £een April 13, will reunitt; the comtdi.an with Mary Tyler Moore, who was hi~ televl!ioo wile for the five-year run or "The Dick: Van Dyke" weekly series. The special's title is ''Dick Van Dyke and the Other Woman." • • • "CBS Children's Playhouse '' will be a new daytime series of original drama specials to bt introduced in the 1969-70 season on Saturday mornings. The network plans to use "quality" plays by established · writers. . ' ' -....... LU/.JLuz ~·· , .. ,nc: .. ,, ... "THE SUIJl!CT WAS llOSIS" -~ '"THI llOTHEllHOOD" """ l(bt; 0..,.Jal C-.oillll-t SIMH)' ~13' ,.m. NATIOHALGf~ALC~ATl()lot Fiii~.sis! ._ --,,_,. lrllMI • MN1t2 HILD OYll ZIHI Wiii OPl:N 6:45 CLIFF ROBERTSON CLAIRE BLOOM -In- ''CHARLY'' IN COLOR KIRKilOOOi.As _ .. .... -· THE BROTHERHOOD -~­·-TIE llOSION STRAHGUR -a::ib-" -·- 7 SHOWS ! SAT,, MARCH 27 17:30 & 2:30 P.M. 1 SHOW SUNDAY, MARCH 73 12:30 P.M. DAILY PILOT Denni s James Seeks Talent on Campuses program, James Is hosl ol W A N T A D S By VERNON scorr HOLLYWOOD (UPIJ Dennis Jan\ts, genial master oC ceremonies of more game and panel shows than any other Jiving man, is now at- tempting to show t b e American college student as something other than a bomb thrower. He is work.\ng against hor· rendous odds. As chief talerit scout of "The All American College Show," James has troops (non-com· bat.ant) in the field -that is to say, on various campuses -searching for acts for his syndicated show. After more than 39 weeks on the air, James reports there have been no casualties among his lieldmen. But tbtn he did not say whether they had vjsited Berkeley or San Francisco State. "We don't put any heavy rock groups on the show,'' J ames &a.id, "because we don't want to go the hippie route, or with rioters. And we avoid the shaggy, bearded types." C l ear l y, Ja m es Is discriminating a g a i n s t anarchists. arsonists a n d placard carriers among our stu dents. Doubtless. he figures they probably don 't double a5 jugglers, saxophone soloists or supervisors o( trained seals any\vay. James looks beyond the bar- ricades of dissidents lo the unarmed student. "The re is a lol of Un· discovered. talent on Campus,'' he said. "It is th e greatest source of untapped talent in the world. Where else are you going to find that many people involved in mus.ic, the arts , theater! "We bring kids to Hollywood from all over the country - fou r acts per show. So far more than 100 schools have been involved, And we don't treat tbe kids as amateurs. We pay lhe winners ot each 13-week series $1,000. 1f they \Vin the finals they gel $5,000." James was reminded that seldom, if ever, has a star emerged full blown from a college campus. He hopes to change that. "Wa tch fOf 1'-1aggie Harris," he advised. "Sh e's f r om Catholic U n i vers i t y in Wa!hi.ngton, D.C. She's going to be a star, a great singer." Jn addition to his college a daily game show. "P. D. Q." -which is 11001ethi.ng, ._...,,,,,. •• .., •••••••••••••••• different altogether from a 11 Ph.D. A college man himsell - St. Peter's College of New Jersey -James 11 y s Brigham Young University in Utah bu provided the most talent ao far. "It'• becaue they con- centrate on music up there and send their youngsters out on tour,'' be said. "UCLA is high, too, but we don't want to aive the show Loo much of a local look." James sees the l.alent on tape sent to him from his 1nen at the battlefronts. Ht is safely ensconced here in Hollywbod wbe.re the brickbats ol outraged youth are thrown at producers rather than pro- fessors. Pianist's UCI Recital Captivating By DOROTHY BA RLEY Corona Qel Mar pianist Kale Whitney delighted a near capacity audience Sunday night at the University of USES FOlt SALE ner1I 1000 ---ONLY $21,500 As.SOME 5% % V .A. loan and O\\'n this lpacioua FOUR BEDROOM, t W 0 BATH HOME. Ceramic tilt kitch- en, dl.sbmasttr aDd diah- \\'uher, draped, and com• pletel.y carpeted, c.omer Jot, fenced rear yard with accellS fron1 either atttet, SUbmit low down, let u8 amlJl&e tM: payments tor you. SUBMIT $1,500 DN •• HURRY! * * * * WTSIDE $20,950 Well located Three Bedroom home wit h HARDWOOD n.ooRS. Walk to We•tclitt • ShopPtnc Center • Enjoy the tine neighborhood, acbools, park and pl""""""'. I.art• fenced rear yard with fruit trffl. Paved all~. eU)' ac- ceu for boat and trailer. TERrtIS AVAILABLE • ACT NOW! California at Irvine with a Evenings Call 646-7887 recital built around Frederic I ii;iiii;iiii ... ;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii-. Chopin 's colorful 16 Preludes, Opus 28. Mi.is Whitney proved httsell to be a skilled inltr1'feler ol the many moods reflected 1n this work. Tranqu i lity, turbulence, pathos and sereni- ty, they are all there ln thiJ sequence of studies and the full range of emotions was superbly captured by this ac- complished pianist. No less impeccable was Miss Whitney's flawless handl- ing of Haydn's happy and ef- fervescent Sonata in E flat major. She displayed a com- mendable light touch and ap- proach in tht allegro and her rendering of the brilliant adagio fully exposed the movement's essential grace and tranquility. A pleasing, well received recital concludec:t. with Sergei Prokofiev's Sonata No. I in A major. It is to be fervently hoped that this artist will soon be heard •gain in another ol her well balanced recitals. 'Blondie' Surely No ' Scatterbrain LAS VEGAS (AP) -In the movies and the old days of radio, Penny Singleton played the comic role of scat- terbrained "Blondie." Now, 20 years later, she's in a serious role as leader ol a threatened strike of Las Vegas ea. tertainers. T he lively b londe grandmother says she's doing it for the "klds" -not her herself. "I'm not a rabble-rouser," says Penny, speaking without a trace of the comedienne. "I am not one of those far-out people. The import.ant thing is to get the kids the rights KINGS & QUIENS Anyway you fiaure it they can all tit euily tnto the largest KING- SIZED MASTER BED- ROOrti you have ever seen! Here's a 4 bdrm 2 bath home thaf is so IMMACULATE you'll v;onder that it is even 5~~ years old, Beauti- Iulily landscaped Io r minimum upkeep & it'.1 en one of the best COR- NER LOJ'S. The lovely condition Ir: many added features make it a hom• )"OU 11rusr SEE. Only $3a50 down payment n- q:Wied at a new RE· DUCED P RICE of $30,500. May we show you throUgh '! • COAn " WAL LACI ltl!AL TOllS 54M141- (0pen ihwll"tlll Beautiful 4 Bedroom5 Home in fuhionable Shorecliff 341 Evening C•nyon Rd. OPEN HOUSE SUN 1-5 Assume 5%% GI Loan HOUSES FOR SALE Chneral 1000 Htal1 Of Baycrnt lnvitlnl circu1ar drive on a Jars:e comer lot Juda to tbill beaulttully de:~ and conatrueted Iv an Wdlf home. Three ~bed­ roow lrlcludil!I luXUrioul Rp&rate muter suite. For- ma.1 dinin&" room, WnDY. room &nd ool!Venient 1twinl' or tamily b ob by room. TrvWe~ owner •sldn~ ise.ooo. "For A Wiu Buy" Colesworlhy & Co. 642-1777 OPEN EVES. Exclusive Harbor View Hills JUST uSTEo one ot tM kw. Lusk resales. Beautiful drap.. ,.s and nylon ahag carpetinr; throughout ?o.furortd cloaet doors in ma1ter and tronC bedroom. Sliding Pa docn from muter 1-droom &ncl family room to patio makes th.is home very ll&ht and alzy, 3 ---area, family room, plu• breakfut room. Gu or 220 in laW'ldry. Beautiful land~ scaping with sprlnklen front aod rear. Priced under mar- ket. Call for apopintment to "'· Jean Smith Realtor 400 E. 17th St, 646.3255 3 BR· Family Rm Westcliff Provincial dwm on Ip eor-- ner lot with H/l' pool A HP play yard. Immac condition a: ta.st~fully decora~. Xlnt value at ........ , • , .$41,"r.ll Joe Clarkson ....... Coldwell, Banker & Co. ntlLCentM .... New""1 a..o. C•........, kl Niii Olt .__ ·Real Estate Sales ALSO· RENTALS Active Sales -Good SUmmer \Vinter Rental Ottice, Per- sonnel may engage in SUea (!Xcluslvely or Rentala or both. Est/24 yrs, :n yn: same location. Francis Horvath, Rltr. 3410 W. Balboa Blvd., NB 1714) 67;).1972 lF you're thinking or s~ • chances are 1ve have an out• of-state bicyer for you r home. Call today for rre, appraisal. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 293 E. 17th St. -94 ON THE BEACH GREGORY· E\IA MARE PECK SAINT ••--"l:t ,.._.,, ALL SEATS 50c NOTE SHOW TIME li'r::::;:::::::::================~ll Dirty Ooten Once at 7:15 and benefits they haven't had on this 2 story beauty. The immaculate 4 • BR & den before." home features: sunken liv· Representatives of dancers, ing room, corner fireplace, comedians, singers and topless cpts/drpa, ownized 2 car showgirls are negotiating with garage, profeMiona1 la.nd- the Central Labor Council and scaping Ir: much, mu c h hotel owners in an attempt more. Call now for Worma- Exclusive China Cove home • year around living • best 1-tarbor area, 2 BR, 2 Ba, priced 111 sell fa.st at -i 69,500 l'nESl'ALKING MOON .~t MNM9QN" Gil ri•~;;Jw .... M~-rny ..... "-Tltnuny ..... U'l'VIDAY nA MAT1ND -ll:JO ,,._.. "'THI U LUCTAHT AITIO~AllT" -AJI '"'' SOc: -. ---.. ·---. -. -. ~ --===::.........::...:::..._ ~-- Grand Prix Once •t 9:45 TWO ACADEMY NOMINATIONS Brims With L•ughter And Te1r1 -Also- Georgt Pepp1rd Inger Sttvtnl Orlon Wills "THE HOUS E OF CARDS" Eve Show Stortl 7 p.m. Ce11t. Sist. "'"" SS•"· .,_..,. 2 to avert a strike against ma· tion. jor hotel-casino owners, set for Thursday night. "' $35,750 -PERRON . Jl 9 .~.~~ .. - A spokesman for t h e American Guild of Variety Artists -of which Miss Singleton has been the chief officer for two years -said * 642· 1 n I Anytime * neither side wants a walkout. I "'"""""""""""'"!!!!!!""~ "Tbe kids have a short NEW CITY PARK ecooomic life," Miss Singleton said. ''Many are has beens That's ria:ht. A~ city p&rk al 35." only 2 blocks from this l Miss Singleton no longer ap-bedroom .l den or 3 bed- pears in shows, bul "as soon room bowie. It has ca.rpe-tA, as I get the AGVA house drape1, !ittplace. 1% bathl, in order. I hope to -J hope built-ins, large R-2 lot with I'm not too old." easy alley acess. 1"111'! With a bit of nostalgia in enough for boat, camper, or her voice, Miss Singleton said build yourseU 8 rvital. or jw;I enjoy the well land-sht is proud \\'hen people still llCaped back yard. Only 114 r~i··· her as "Bl-.1; .... " vvve .. uc;; VllW'C b\ks. to Newport Helghtll "Chic Young was great," 1rade school. Alldng $15,500 she said of the Dagwood·Blon-phone owner at 644-46S7 for die creator. "ft was such a appt. to itee. nice part -a wonderful fam i.. ,....,..,_,_,.,._,_,..., ly picture. ''I can remember t.aklng my N. E. Cosf1 Mesa children to it. Wblle the 3 111.1-ge bdrms, 1:i. batha. theater filled . wUh children, llu'dwood doors, Iarre kltch- 1 sat down with my fam.lly. ~n a: service potth area. The kids rocked the walls with Double a:A,fSae. Big y1rd T1ughter." \\'Ith 1hade & fruit mes. Asked ii tod•y's movies art $21.950. different, sbe I I i d. "man1 w.11 ... McC•rdlt, Rltrs. people have told me they are 1810 Newport Blvd .. c.r.t. unable to lllke childrtn lo see 548-7729 E\·es. 6'14-0fi3.t picture! today ." By appt only CORBIN-MARTIN REALTORS 3036E.CoastHwy,CdM 67>1'62 New Llstlnv ~ Bedroom•, 2 baths on cor- ner -room for boat, trailer f!!C. Big GI loan to take ov. tr. Its a real buy at $2'2,850. $41·SUO ,,. cirlffnl ...,., OllfGf REALTY 1500 Adlnll 1tf1Wir,CM. FABULOUS Arti!tically designed 5 bdrm 4 bath Baycrest home. 1 bed. room suitable lor ma.kl'• room. Deligbttul pool, Amold & Freud 388 E. 17th St., C.M. Realtors 64&-775S Westcliff Area \ralk to Westcliff Shops &: t.tartners School. 4 BR 2~ ba, ta: liv rm + dining area. All built-tn kitchen, hd11.-4 nrs. ftrrplace. Dbl ran.re. A ""'°"'- RI tr. 646-39'28 or 6U-OTS5 * LACHENMYER ZONED C2 for bus, GoOd East.side 2 BA. home. ntede M!'d~. Onl1 SlS.950 • DX11 dn handles. Klnptrd Real Estate l'\11 2-2222 I I I I , ' I I , I l I -.. ,.._ ----.~--_,,,, FouQtain • • ;Valley .. EDITION 1t· YO(. ~· NO. 68, :( SECTIONS, '48 PAGES .. ixon's ·Pill Plan F oile·d ~~~ff~•~~: ~~y~p~~ ~~:~ ~~~n::iracy Beach detectives Wednesday night ar-the tablets through the San Ysidro border Chiodo'• wife, who was present at rested a 25-year-old man, believed tG between Feb. 15 and Feb. 2.1. the time of the artflt, was not taken be a member of the Hessian motorcycle The tablets were physically brought into custody. She is out on bail from . club,_ on charges of compiring to illegally into the United Stales on Feb. 23 by the earlier charge of having imported import 20,0CKI amphetamine tablets. Mrs. Chiodo and Eileen C. Falling, the tablets. Arrested at 8:45 p.m. at his home authorities allege. _ Participating in the arrest were Hun· at 409 California St., Huntington BeaCh, Huntington Beach Detective Rooney tington Beach detecti"' Po m er o y , was Charles N. Chiodo. Pomeroy said the suspect was Uken Charles W. Hollinglwortb, customs agent According to the warrants, Chiodo and to city .jail and later transported to Gore and six olber men from the U.S: hia wife, Bertha, as well as two others, San Diego custolDll facilities by cuatom.s customs office. Huntington 'BeachManElectrocu :d 'People for t • '1 . Playing with Daughter As Kite Hits Power Line Parks' Meet A 29-year-old Huntington B e a ch television technician was electrocuted W~ar while helping his daughter fly a kite. . Grtg<ry S. Robotkay. 29, of 1~72 Cooper St., was found lying oo the grass wtway in front of hi~ home by a Di!i.ghbor at. u ·:40 a.m. He apparenUy d!ed·cf eledrocutiOn. · When police arrived at the scene, they found Huntington Beach _ firemen ad- niinlsterlng aid to the victim. His hand ltll1 t'Olltai.ned a green string with a Doctor Concedes Sirhan Needed Some Planning LOS ANGELES (UPI) A psychologist conceded today that Sirhan B. Sirhan had to do a comiderable amount of planning and premeditation to carry out the slaying ol Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Dr. O. Roderick Richardson told the murder trial jury that in a psychotic state Sirhan was capable of deciding upon the person be was going to kill, getting a weapon, practicing at a .range, going to the AmbassaOOr Hot.el and firing the gun at Kennedy's head. Richardson insisted, however, that lt was not the same type of deliberation, premeditatio n and calculation that would have marked the act of a so-called normal person who might attempt an aseassinetion. "It is similar to the type of thinking that a mental patient might use when he steals a key from a nurse on her rounds so he can make a break late! on," Richardson said. Under cross-examination by Dep. Dist. Atty. David Fitts, Richardson agreed that there were many persons on both Bides of the Arab-Israeli conflict who bated each other and that there were terrorist groups whose goal was to assassinate leaders. "Do you think all the members of those groups are paranoid?" Fitts asked. "I haven't bad an opportunity to ex· amine them. However, people who become terrorists offen have shown a need to express their personal hostility." bright interwoven tin foil strip. 'Ibe other end of the string was touehin& two power lines, carrying a load of 1.Z,000 volts. Robotkay was rushed tci Huntington Intercom.munity Hqspital, where ht was pronounced dead. ' ' Mrs. Orville Carson, the victim's aunt, said that Robotkay'• daugllter, Catherine, came into the bouae.)ook!lll !Ill" 'Ill<!" siring shorily before the acclden~ The da~ghter ~ took !'f"· Car9l1ii'1~g yam, 1191 notidnl the bratdell ·mebl ii!rip in the matutoJ. Although police rtportec! burn maru on the parkway grlsa, the county ..,.. oner's <lllice Is conducting laboratory tests to determJne If electnicutJoo WM tbe actual ca ... cf death. Robolkay had complained of beinc Ill recently, leading th.em to search for a more detailed cau11 of death. Bandit Holds Up Huntingto~ ~izza Parlor for $1,000 An armed bandlt, wf'81'1Da a ski mask with eye and DOR 11lits, held up a Huntington Beach plua parlor Wed· nesday nigh~ toklni with him an ~mated tl,000 after locking two pizza.- makers in a refrigerator. Christopher B. Lilley, an employe of Me'N Ed's Pizza, 16532 Beach Blvd., said be was emptying some trash caM when the robber jumped him and told bim be -the mooey. • The red-haired smpect -Lilley lnslde and ordered him and Conrad Clouse, ~ wprter, to empty two cash dtaw"' into a bn!wn paper IJol. Brandishing a tmall caliber automatic p1s1o~ the robber -wed un., u there was a 'oafe In the olfl<t. Ulley told' him if there were, 11be ~ have to look for it himlelf." On opening the ()(fice door the bondit discovered Ibo Ale, forced Lillfy to -it and remove the ooatents. Def°"' maJdng bll. ptaway, be Iocl<ed the two pim mak<n Into a walk-In f......,,, not know1ni tllat II could be unIOcked from lnslde. • Althoogh tbe aciolll aDiount al cash stolm ii unknown, the porlor ....., estimates tt to be cJooe to fl,GllO. · • 'Unhook"' Youths Who can °unhoot" your tid lf drup alreidy nile his Ille! )t still iao't tbe end ol tbe rood, 1111- Yises Alton Blakellee, -''1 noted autbor cf the "lln!CI -·1 artlcles appearing -In lbe DAILY PIWI'. By RODI NIEDUP!l..ut °' ............... Several H1intlagtcn Beam 1 Cltbens banded ill'IMr wem-my ~to , form the "Peopie for Parka'·' an ' organhaUon deJlped to PJI,• If million • park bond over the")op June 3. . The organlurl ezpected a ,1arp and to jam the Huntlngtoii-.Ji.ch ,- Centtt. but oalyi • ldadlld .,.,poaple ' ~upfor,tht~ '..it;}:1~ Horace E. ~1 ~mw :fir IJWcl! .... . • . l:.1~.~· , ' .........-.. , -rJ of. three al tbe WO ., construeled fr01J! lhit.. oaey. ··• Largest of tbele w the i• me Huni!Qgtoa Centriil ~. to be located at the intersectiaa fl Talbert .Avenue and Golden West Slnel The pett woukl tMbire 1¢erkr lake!, . a wild bird nfage, •. mueam and art center. a library, picnic"~ and cam· ping t.dlilles, pi.,tog llelds, • piatol and ardl<ry ran;e and bleycllnC .Ir ails. Edilon Community Park, a 41'-aere reereaUonoJ faclllt)'·to,.be built at the comer ot EdllOll Aveoae and Magnolia Avenue, would include picnic arta cluaters, tree groupings, an outdoor Jtag. ing area, a bicycle and hlldng trails system, playing fields and outdoor c_~.~~~~. would be combined with adjacent Ed1-BJgh School. B'IJ!ll ·money woold . allo be ll!ed for the construetlon cf the 2:5 .. sere CI•gg' Stacey Part-alated for locaUon at the interaeeilon of Larchwood Street and Edgeview Lane. Included in the design conct:pt of the small neighborhood park are play areas, walks, wading pools and a small com- munity center. The "People For Parks," beaded by co-chainnen Cris C. Cris and Ron Bauer, plan to pot lo(ether a massive publicity drive before the election, lncludlng newspaper and telephone promotion, a teen-age rally, neighborhood coffees and precinct metUnp, I TheJr nezt Plblic meeUng will be held in the RecreaUon Center AprU J3 at 7:30 p.m. Beat"le Lennon Weds Japanese Girl in Gibraltar GIBRALTAR (UPI) -Beatie Jolm Lennon and bit Ja-girl friend, Yoko Ono, both wearlnJ white bail and sneaten, Were mi?rled 'nlnday in a surprise civil .........,. "We cl»M Glbrallar -lt ls qule~ Britlab and ' frtndly ,• Lem!on told DeWll!lm. It WU tbe second Beatie marriage In a net. Paul McCartney, one of the --writing Beatlel, mar r le ~ American ooe[.Ute Lind• Eutman In London ill! -a. ~'. ' . . , , SPRfNG IS ,FORWADif!l<f , And for' Rtfl;cllo\g • . ' ' . J • PILOT OFFERs ·:, , EASTER 'p~JUDE : . AuthoriU'8 quoted In today's article explain the bypocrlly to- day'• youth see In tbelr par<nil' use of alcohol, tobacco and tnn- quili%ers wbile Pitting down the use cf marijuana arid other mllld benders. II tt ever too late to ck>le the generation pp? See Page 4. 1-. a, and Mlil Ono, U, hat,e been pins toc<tllor lof aom-al montbO. DurlnJ the eourill!lp, thetJIOMd together for I ... pbotociaiih which appeared I on the cover of a Lmdon mq:az.ine. It was Lendon'• second marriage and 7 • the third for Miu Ono. ~"-'t.lll .tlme for Eilller paraile'"'°I': I ' The CClf!Ple tried to keep.the m~& I pa., .111~· DAILY !!tthr, today : offe!Y a teertl. flying into Gibraltar frtim . : •'.~'1 ffotton: "F~tival o( i'ublona,'' in a private jet at I a.m. this mom J rc!ltiltillt' a:ds· telling where the <91>rinc They wore married at \lJt .\ll"'~ I .fine~ bargains are Ill om the otln,e Roglstry Of!Jee with a _,.., IIUI · ~--t . license and new back 14 ,PartS. almdst ""'"' are~. tmmedlately, anivlnr Ii\ u.o. Frtncll • The leClion starll on Pace 2i. ., .;apilOI at 10:'5 a.m. · :.>! I _......::•:oi· '--------~ ....... ,... . ' . . , ... y'1 FIDal , I TEN CENTS ' . _;t ' • • . < ' I ' ' ' 0 White House West · Pick In Offing? By ARTllUR R. VINSEL Of tlle DlllY l"li.t staff Vi~ war talks, a vWt to a peaceful mission and sboP,ping f0t· an ornate ~ mer White House in Laguna Beach art on the agenda as President Nlxoo arrives > ia·Orange County Frlday. Air . Force One will· roar in over the Pacific Coast mountains and down the aerial alley to Point Mugu for touchdown at 2:20 p.m., and a swift coastal tour of major proportions: 'Ibe Pres1dent and his wife will make their headquarters on the sprawling H. H. Cotton estate in San Clemente, guest of the daughter of a millionaire frieod of the late PresidP.nt Franklin D. Roosevelt. Mn. Lionel E. Ogden, of San Clemente. his urqed for the NixOllll · to spend two nigh.ts on the estate bordering the Camp Pendleton Marine Corps base, where Vietnam war talks will be held. ·Ellfif-Bunker, ti.s. ambasaacior to Vietnam, ta. due to arrive Saturday, along with Gen .. Andrtw J. Goodpaster, outgoing deputy commander of U.S. forces in the war zone. : ·Wlilte HWle '.Presa Secretary Ronald· Ziegler said the Sunday conference - eOntinulng on tlie fiight b a e k to Waslilngtoo -should not' be interpreted as ~ major policy discaqion, but other top aldeil will alao J>e present: t 0Ttave11ni 'from Wasliinston with the "Nblj(no '1-!tY will lit~.of J!tate '1'llll""'''P, Rb(efs• aJld Dr. Henri A. . . . ' ' . "[ . Spring Arrive6 · 01i· the But~n ~pring beian at 11:08 a.m. -not one minute sOoner or later -today. At that moment (Pacllic . Sta~~d Tim') the center of lhe swt-moved \ across the celesti8I equ'ittor from the south to the ·no'rlh, marking the' vernal equinox (also, known 'a.s· the point of Aries ,in lhe Nortbert).Hemisphere) wflen dJ11 _~al· njg~~. ~all p~ .of. ~-e . w~r~~' : are equ . . If you •can't rerhember all• tha(,· just . remember tl)at spring Jasta ·for three Qtonlhs. Can iiwnmer be far behhJ.d.? Who's Loveliest Girl in Town? Fi~d Out May 2 What lovely young lass bas :the be!!. llgure ' In toWn? ' The IDOi(, pobe ! An, Orator's command of 'the langua'ge?' ~ in fllay S .,.., ~. might ~ ,Miii Huntington Belch 1969. Right DOW• that ,lovely young Miss is stUI a _mysteo-, bu~tbe woman's diYision. cf ,the .H~ BeaCh• <:balnber o~ Commerce is beginni~ · a full effort to-round up several_c~ • EUgi~le entrants .m~ Ii!' between .. tlvt ages · of 17 and 26, single, and live, work ·or attend · school within the city limits. . · API?,licaUons-may be pici,td .up .at · all local high achools1 GoldenW~ College , and the Chamber G Coounerce · oJfice. Deadlille lot enirJ II April ;I.I. 1 A mandat«y 1motbtr-Oaughter ,tea. for · all enU'ants will be held by the woman's dlvilion <Ontest commlllee; April 20 at ~='f:,."'~~Judi·· tng will be held at 8 pJD., · May. JO~ at GOiden.rut Collfge.· Tlek<ll to vlow lhe clty'.-:flulJy array al young women, 11lll .• CQ11 fl• par penon' and . will,1*'11 be availa!ie, . . , A queen .and. four prin<•t1es ·wt1l be selecled to ~nt. the cltf•lor 1"9· Ji'rlxe, 1ncl..S,·a' JllM> ."~~·tni/m the Hiinliqtoij Belch Company, ~ea from Sii!>IL Oil ComPap,Y• • a , "100. wardrobe' from · HunlinJ!on <:toter and !?• to tile. <llY. •• 'Steele , Mfil'Jem • • , r '' . NEW YORK (A!>) .L The stDek msrket clooetf • with . a . food 1A1~ Tbundiy.> Trading near the clooe W!'I mod~tely. active. (See quotaUOlll, Paflel 41Ml) . Kiallnger, ~ presidential adviser on (See NIXON, Pa1e J) * * -* Here's Schedule For Nixon Visit •Here Is the tentaUve schedule for President and Mrs. Nixon for bis Orange Coast visit as announced by press aide Ron Ziegler in Washington: FRIDAY 7:50 1.m. (PST): Depart Kanw City Municipal AJrport aboard Atr Force One for_ f1.. Mu_gµ Naval Air Station near' Santa Baibaia.. ----. -. -·, !:JG p.m.: Arrive Pt. Mugu. Depart by belleopter to Inspect oil on beaches in Santa-Barbara'vicinity. c p.m.: Depart Pt. Mugu aboard. Air Force Ooe for El Toro Marine Corps Air StaUon. .f:tl p.m.: Arrive El Toro MCAS. Depart by unannounced form of transportation for H. H. Cotton Estate ~ san·.aemente. 1 I p.m.: Afternoon and. night at the Ogden home on Cotton. Estate. SATURDAY II ,. ... ; Depart Cotton' . Estate for . festivities at Missi."1 San Juan Capistrano. . Nooa: Pouible luncbeoq paQy at Capistrano. t p.m .. : Luve Sin Juan Capistrano: ror return to San Clemente. S1tanl1y llpt: ~ party rernainl at San Clemente. U.S. ambassador to South Vietnam Ellsworth Bunklr amv•s El Toro MCAS for 'round of talks wJth Nixon. • 1 Cou& w-tller Don't look up now, but there's a 60 •pertent ebineo of rain (light r,in, that ii) on ?ilday. Tempera- turewiae, It'll be bact down to fO. oJoni the orange cout. issmE TODAY The nation;• railrooc:b are taking unprecednt.td teeMri tv prc~tions, agoina t ,threatent'd~ l)l&>toQ• of traiu '!!~!Iii Vi•~ ~ wcr mal.n.r .. Poge 17. .... . ,11 -" .-c-» --...., ...... . .-. 0..-..... · 11 -" ...,..., .... ........... , .. ..,...... .., '"" Qfll 11 -.. Ml.......,, II -. • 1 - - -~ ··---~~-~---~---------------------------~-~-----------. f DAll.Y PILOT I H I -• 'i. · t.Hmwtres.m... 'tftJJ, Wtl"1114 lltlll le)O,jlSfii _,.,.; ~.tJ.I, ~~l ea_, 111111~.-.11!111thu1w1lvea11Je<i MIQllll·-~ • Ille Tiii "'"' ... u ...... .,. ... .,.. ,..... .. ,.. ....... R!t§ *"' llilM -~ .. r.· ~-"-nir..ttqto ~--ill(loW,1!11!\-tllla ... :&:'.. ·• ~'.-• 1 J!1~·4[ .-, lbe north today under pressure from "Pl,.... al W1f1 ~-· ' " "*' ~: luitaar ~ u 811( lo= aUltd lroopo 11111 a U.S. tank force 'Ill• Am,.-!~ loU 1ut w.U wO. 11 1:'t1con. · ...,_ ID~ et I~ 1 ~· Uutl llllluhid 111 way Into a Communist more lhall lbe jftvlOlll WNi'o total Pront rtpOrtJ aald the drive Into U.. wlnllH"""' olllollve wu hitanoll)'lng. bunk~ -Pia II !Jlllol norlhwut o1 and raised Ille nwnbtr of Amerloanl bu a k 1 r oomplg burled on W1i1nowJ1 uPI -PGDdollt Not GlhloJJ. wllb Saigon, U.S. lnt1U11ence 1 our c es killed in the f1r1t three weeks of the number of North Vietnamese soldiers the allied forcea in the jungled Michelin reported. VJet Cong's spring offensive to l,140, allve tn their underground fortificaUom. rubber plantaUon northwest of SaJ1on, Tilt \J.S. CoJlllllllld llMOUllClll lodq ooly 240 leu than the 1,380 U,S. troops Co1T1JJ1unltl rocket fltt hll three of the Aid the lanka wblch bad nunbled lJI that 161 Amertcw were killed In ICllon reported kllled during the elibt weeks . tankl In lbe doy of lzuvy figbtlng. to the reJCUe of a trapped American In VlelJlun Jul wtek, puoillag the loll! ol l!let prior lo the ollwlve, Reollllnel l>Y 1111 7th Dlvlalon had ln/&nley unit crushed lhe Communist bunk«1 with lh•lr mw. •· "Wo.'11 ...., ~ 111 1111 bodlll," r11 IA. 111111111 Haljnilll.11. ol -. Ind., said O~, tb.f t I D k tacUCI. 11'1\I tanks buried tMm in the bunkn.'1 Harmless is commander of tho ri.tlo platoon whl~ had been-trapped. The Amerlcw found lhl -ol seven North Vietnamese aoldiers around the smashed bunkers.· American casualties wtre listed as two killed and 14 wounded. The new 1helllap brO\Jfhl lc moro , than 11000 the riurnbtr of mllltvy bues &n4 "'°""" 1111 l>Y 1111 ComlDWllN llnco 1111 llod olfaoalva hl(an l!lll'ly four weeka ago. The Communist cUensive in the Da Nang atll flared Up qalz> lotllght and Red gunners lobbed al(bt rounds of n mllllmeter mortar lire into tile U.8. 1st Marine Division headquarters and three rounds into the Marine air station at Marble Mountain nut DI Nang. Casualties and damq1 were not im- azedlately ropotled. Frot1t P .. • J NIXON •.. J3 Groups Sporuoritag ' . national security • . '"" ....... wUI bl Ille llrtl -f ... confrontaUon between Nllloo.lllll llJe..,. bassador, who baa been In Vlelnam for the past year WHilc Houle aides noted. Con11nutns \ziii11 UJat Nimz may mall• . an offer to purc!lue ~ ru11bllnc "1M Castl~ 'inansion at '7TO IUDciest Drive. Laguna Beach, aJao gained momentum with the Impending 0r..,. Coul viail "There II 1 cuitlnulna ~ In Ibo castle on Ibo put ol ttlo Pmldool &nee last January," aa1d a spokesman for owner Thomas A. Merrick, hinting ~ a possible ne1ot!atim. NIXON FAICINATED '"" Prllldonl baa -flldut.d wllll Iba lkoom ...-on 1 cUll overlook· tna a llO-desreo Padflc _.... f« yean 11111 II known to bl lllklq 1 SoulblaJld realAJenco. Candidates' Nights Set A bakero _doaen ol civlo croup• will co-sponsor •'Candld1tet Mattln11'1 for the April 11 Scltoo1 Tr!!lkt cleclloo ud the Huntington Union Council which will bake cookies for coffee breaks at the non-partisan political gatherings. Namoa al Ibo or1anilaUoaa wblch will wort .to promote atttndl!k!t at the pre- elecUon rallies were nleased today by Mrs. Kenneth Katz, Leaiue of Women Voten service chairman, whQ 1 a -.U.tllnl aellvlU.1. fte P'OUpl, from the five elementary ecboot dltlrlcla lJI HUJlllnl\O!I Beach, at well u the HunUn,ton Beach Un!Oft lllsb School Distrlcl, .,. : TM Huntington Seock Junior Cbamber of Commerce, ·tbe Hunjlngton Jeacb Asaoc.hrt.ion ol -AmerJcin University ' Women, the Huntington Beach Jr. Woman's Club, the South Coast Jr. Woman's Club, the Fo!Ultaio Valley Jaye"'· the Westminater XJwanil, tht Seal Beach Woman11 Club, the 8411 Beach Jr. Woman's Club, the Marina Business Professional Womens Club, the Seal Beach PTA llJlll Ibo ~ •• 1 Beach P.lay Group Molboro. Girl &out troops In lhllo areaa are distributing !0,000 b&ndbllll lo publicize &he dat~s and place. for the meetings. The first two meetlilgs wW be held ¥-arch 26 at McGaugh School in Seal Beach and March 27, at Fountain Valley High school. C&ndldatea foi' sChOOI boards In lboo• dlltrlcta will bo on blll\ll to mike brief 11ltem1nt.1 and INWtr qutt- Uons. '"1e public is invited to join the can- tlid1tea for coffee and conver1alioa at 7:30 p.m. Valley Manager to Talk Built .. I u ........ plot w11111 ...,ldni lot larp cnoulh tor 1 ""°"''nllal ballport, l'yJJI CUllt baa been appralaod et fT!0,000, but the 3T·yw-old atru<lun may IMJ( brlni that mucl>. Merrick hlrilleU baa lndlcai.d ha will • ~ lfe( more pratll• lblft profit U be Planners Reject Nine-home Tract Over Rooftops To 40 Nations on Budget 1 1 aolls Iba Bwl11-Bavamn JJJJNlon built by eccentric hlohelor oil mllllnnalra Walter Pyne. The structure baa 22 btlbroonll and fl now rented out u 1J apertmtntl, but could eutly bl alttred te bousl lllOlt ol I praldeJJtlaJ 1U41i puly. 1lral on Ibo Prteldtnf'• IUM-ary alter arrival 1'ridly II 1 tour ct oll-etalned hlocboa 11 Blllla Barbara, altor which ht IJJd tlw flrll lady wUI toplllJO for hi• aauva Orani• CouniJ. ' NO M'llEll PLAN! Earlier announc1ment1 of lh• pre1ldtr>- tial 9f1lt Included Son Diego and Iha city'• IOOth annivmary eelebraUon, but no menUon was madt ot that tnd of Iba coallllce today. President and M.r1. Nixon wUl villt Mi•llon San Juan Caplltrano Bllurday, two d1y1 after the · celtbrattd return of the 1W11low1 en St. Joseph'• Day. "lie llljoy1 9f11tlc1 lbl mJ11lon and wants to go ther11 '' Aid Pre11 Secretary Ziegler. Heavy •ecurJty mt11U.re.s will be en- forced on the groundl of the Henry HamiJton Cotton estate Jn San Clemenio durin1 the two-day pruldentJaJ villt.' The Collon eetate borders the Orange. San Dleio county lines and it: well known to !1ll'fln1 llOClety f« 'llzl Trllllea bw:b and Cotton'• Point. Followiof arrival It El Toro MCAii, the Pr11ld<nt will JO-by yfl.WllJIJlOllJJO- ed lmllportallon-dlrectly lo Iba Coltoo EalalA. Apartment Size Ordinance Set An ordinance Chango rocommeadln1 mlnimwn lint tor 1partment room• hu boen 11t for an Aprll I publlo hearing by the Fountain Volley l'llMln1 Commiuion. Plannlcf Director Stanley MONOeld baa rocommonded IOO aquaro feol for • bach~lor 1partment, 750 square feet for a one bedroom, 9&0 1quare feet for two bedroom• and 1,llO 1quare feet for three bedrooma. All of the recommendtd 1lze1 would be minimum requlreme:nt1 for apartmenta In M, IW and lW llOlled areu. l•l\11 'f \'11111 tlANll COoU1 PUlt.llHINI GWMI' .... ,. N W"' ,,..llllN Ml Ml .... J1•• l. Ctrl:r VIit ,.,....., .... ..., ... .., n.,...,, K11f'f1 -n ...... A. M.r.tir111 ~1.iW NNrt W. l1tM W1nl1• ''" ..... ""t.':;'T...:.-................. Jtt Ifft Strtlf M1Uf11 M4rttu P.O. 111 nt tlMI --·~~~.1 W.t ............ ,. ..;;::;. ,......,,,..,~ t::. ' SUND4Y CDNClltT -Mn. Connlo Schuman, pr1ald111f of Fountain Valley Mualc Boolter Club dl1CU1ae1 1eoro w!Ui Adrian Holland, who will perform, alon1 wllll Ii-member 1tr1n11111embl1, In !Int of com· mWll!y coactrl •trlH. · 1st Valley Concert Sunday Features String_ Ensemble City Manager James E. Neal of Foun- tain Valley will have the rare honor of speaking to 1,000 represenlatlve1 ol "Love On A Rooftop'' wa! not the more than 50 nations in June. eone being awi& 1t the FountaJn Vatley He hu been tnvlted to tS'plain Fo11ntain Planning Commhslon Wednelclay night. Valley's unJque 10.year budget to the Commissioners turned down• propoeed 19th Congress of the International Union nine home tract because they felt com-of Local Authorities, June 16--21 in Vien- position roof1 would not be compatJblt na, Amtria." with aurroundln1 homes. Subjo<I al Ibo CO!lfflll la local 1overn- Developor lldward Foloy ct Garden ment llnandng, and congren officals Grove abowtd commiulontrt several feel Neal 's presentation fits perfectly t with their topic. lndlvldual& who plan to move to Fountain Valley because of the promise of no property tax increases for ten years. "I was skeptical at first,'' said the councilman, j'but I think it h.11 becotne obvious this plan ls drawing a lot of favorable attention to our city." Huntington Hospital Faces $10,000 Suit t~ ti composition rooft he mltht pu In addition to tht talk, Neal h11 been qi the IPlnlab llyle bomea he plw, aaked to prepare a 2,000 word paJ)f:r Huntinaton Int.ercommunity Hospital but the commilllon turned thumbt down en the subject tor pre1enl1Uon to the and one ol Ill 1talf phy1lclan1 today an all Propollll. congress. face a $10,000 personal injury rult filed Roof desip on • veterinary hoapltAI ' H11· invitation came from Orin F. by a former patient who charges ne1U- propolld at EUii Avenue and BI'O()khurlt Nolttiia. SGnior vice president of the g~nce during the delivery of her child SU. allo camt under cr1Ucl11n because International Union of Local authorities last July. Tho flnl ol tho Fountain Volley Com· munlty Concorl llrlM bllinl IUJ1day willl I porfcntlDOI" by Adrian lfollsnd and hll 1"-bor llrlnJ 1nnmbl1. lht dlalp aubmltted Wedneaday night and I •· · f th U S 11 M M edllh J G l Iba known EW'Opeln and A m 1 1 t c 1 n v ce Cuoll'l1lan <l e . . sec on. r1. er ane onza es namea orcheelru, lncludlnJ Ibo Loo AnJelea dllfered f?Om lbe original Mansard.type Tuuday night Fountain Valley City Huntington Beach boapltal and Dr. I. Philharmonic. roof requeltld. CouncUmen placed their 1tamp of •P. Page Sowers in her Superior Court ac- Apptarlnl with h1m at the hl&h ichool c.cmm1Mlontr1, however, approved the proval on the trip by authorlting the tion. She claims that "ne11J1ent t1- Holland will appear at I p.m. In the llun-Blacl> lllgb I ch o o I audltorTUD1. Tlcktll art 1volla~l1 at oll Fountain Valley Elementary Schools or by phoning 968-3576 or 842-6851. concer1 wtll bl the younpit members plan on concOOon that a acreenln1 ap. city to pay Neil's 11pen11es. amln1tlon.. diasnoelt, treatment and ot hi& lfOUp, Andy Causey, in, and proved bf" the plannlnl dtptrt.nunt bl CouneUman Edward Ju 1 t eom· dellvery" hive resulted in °1ome Kay-Rll C&uaey, a. placed '"' tho root lo lildo lbl air c:on-pllmenled Neal Oil Ibo 11).year p 11 "I permanent dlaablllty" lo the cblld born 'Illa ov'"' II 1ponaored by Ibo Fountain 1.~dH~U:'"':ln~1=aq=ul~pmont.=========notlng===tba=l:h:•=ba=d=llll<=ed=lo=•:":":;a=:a:t :th:• :bosp=l:lal:l:8'1=Jul:y=l8:. ===j- Holland, a naUve of the Netherlands, bas played u vlollnllt wllll 1everal well· ValJey Music &oster Club. Other COD- certa in the series include the Choraleers, classical guitarists Imry and Kinneman and 11!1 Air National Guard Bind. Pay-for-play Probe Ends; Valley Woman Arrested A tw<>monlll lnveaUsaUon wu cllm11· lnvelllsaUn1 Ibo poollblUly that otola· ed Wedn1sd1y wllll tho meal of a Um• o1 city ordlnancu or Ibo 1111• Costa Mesa chiropractor'• aide wbOH Butlnut Ind Prol111Jom Cod• may also bl enforced In Ibo cue. femlnlne w•lcal lbarapy alle1edly 11• 11ld l -plalz>t would~bly surpsued bound• ct tho law. bl i1111ed today, formally cl>ar loflla Martha "Marcie" MmlU, 18, of 11111 Marrtll, who polled boll being E. Cottonwood St., Fountain Volley, waa booked locolly and ttwfll'l'ld to Orange . . of 11 .1. f County Joll following btr mlll. booked on 1usp1c1on so c1 llll or lnvt1Ul•tor• tlld tbl alleced Dlu.for. acts of prooUtullon al an oll11ed ~ !>11 iamo lnYOlvad lnlUal nroirall by to $20 fet schedule, lnvestlgator1 said. bullnwt card and tubttquent oflerl of Costa fll•sa Police Sat. Jack Calnon1 non-adverllalll p1J711cal lbarapy 1c paytn1 cf the viet Ind lntelU1ence delall, Illa cuttomtrt six ~vesUg~tors wo~lied on the ease Tht aue'aed vtollUou occurred Jn 1n lnvolvzng M111 l(emll and up to two adJac&nt proloulonal bulldlnl _.-.to other women. lro ••· chl aotor' O(flt Orange County District Attomiy'a l.fto. m -ropr • own 1 vuUgator Joho Gier mado the errut quart..-•, •ccor41nf lo Bil-Calnon. Wednasday afternoon •l Ibo office o1 ~t'.~c'!.~·;:.~our I>.c., 111 E. 11 th GWC Band Plans Sgt. Calnon aald tod17 that ho Is Schools Planning 'Quick' Programs Staff memben of tht HunUqton Beac!I Union lllgb 5cllool Dl•trlet have preparod M "Jnstlnt program•" for UH by the eommunlty. '!be apeaktn burt1u program• cffer Information on IUCh varted toplea u "Diet Control," "Voulh Hoatalln1 ln Europe by Bicycle," ••sptden I n Ca!Uornlo"' and "The Mining Moral Fiber ln PNH:nt-day Youth." lp11km lncllldl taaclltn, prlnclpall and trolla• "' the dlttrlcl, To ent•P any one of the 1peall:tr1, communJtJ lfOUPI m.11 rn&kt • ruerv• Uon wllll Mia llulllco Vutal, llCJ'llu7 to the superintendent 1t 531·9311. Chamber Directors Change Meet Datea Now -llnl dalAI for lbe Board of Dlnclon ol 1111 llunUngtoo BllclJ Cham- ber of ~ have been JMOWJCed. Tbe dlnclora wlll bold lbllr mlltlnp on Iba -W-ai of ivory monlll II dlamblt hladqu1rt1r1 In the Town and C<unlrJ Center on lluch Boufovard and EIJl11 Avenue. f / Concert Tour Of Colorado Goldin Wiii Collll''• II-member Symphonlo Bud will inakt Ill lblrd llllllial tour March II lo Aorll I, playing aeven .-ta In OolcndO. Thi trip wUI bl I IJ)IClal -for dlroclor Tom llomandu blcauao lb• band wUI bl wearlnl now unllomu for tho llrll ttmo, '!"" tlie7 wUI bl moldnJ lbalr flnl OIM!-olala lwini· 'llzlY alao wUI bl vlllllna Colorado 5'&11 Collll' lJI Gl'tlley, lll1Jllnde1' alma malor, --al momblra will audltloo for muale acbolanbl1>1. The unlfom11, whlcl> juat arrived, are styled aft..-tho 1111> ol old riverboat famblen with blaCk, hil!>wabted coats, yellow brocade vests, blscli cumblt· bundl llJd tpall. Coal llJd p111ts have yellow piplq, Thi flnal toucJi la a bladt bow Ue. Fint atop will bl a COllCUI al Du- rango, CoJO, junior coll•"' lllartlJ fl. They •Ul p/ay In Denver, Mardi 21. pvo I commllnlly puf-II the Giil, Colo., blab acbool, IW<li II. (lUtor datea on llte 1t1nar111 are Meekar Junior Hlch and Hudlon 11111J, Orttlay, and P1111A Valley lllclz. !Waay, Colo. oll on Marth II. . Lut 1top wtll be at wtndeor, .CoJo., AprU I. Featured oolollta for lbl tour will be Glen Darter on trombont, Stevtn Lf:wll oo P"rencb hom, and Doh Sliva, asslatant ~ ' I a nylon shag that's young • In looks, young • In price! $8.9 5 sq. yd. YOUlllldoulnd..tp- a unique fOUHOlor el!d ,,... aptdal d,..... technlq-. And )'Olml Id-In-rid>, -ahlr U..1 matclioa ,.... .... hlP aplrlla. lmqlnosl.tq:romlamffy lh• tndl .... """..WllJo cit Karatan for half the price ;rw mi1bt 9'QtCt to pq. ln 11 oolor comblAallooa. V .. , /ouorlfo dlflqlln IOill b• 1iom to ..m1 ~ou ••• H.J.GARRE]T fURNflURE • ------ (_ nf • HADCM ll'11. i:olT A MISA. CALIF, 144-4111 '46-411' I ,I I ' Ii • Lag11na Bea eh Teuy'• Final ' ' . N. Y. Steeb .EDITION • ' woi:. 62, NO. 68, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES Storm Clouds· Gather Over Main Beach Plans By RICHARD P. NAIL or .. Deltr r 111t stMf Storm clouds gathered over Laguna's $!· million Main Beach Wecme.ctay as _.11m of the QYic League qU<Ojjooed both the economies aDd estbeUca of a coo.vent.ion center on the property. City councilmen defended t b e I r authorization fl a '10,000 feasibility study « a boCt.1 and convention center on • portion of lhi property. A aYic League .tatemeol read by . Allthooy Dem<trlades que<tloned both the pnipooed commer<lal development and a pendlng commerdal-bote1 ZOl1fJ the council will stu4y. ''Tbis Important coocept ( b •• c h amortization}, to wh1dt we have adhered over the years, is that any such com- mercial development would exist in ordet to serve tbe purpose of. the beach, rather than the beach serving the int.ml> of the development, II be ltated. ixon's * * * * ".ti * Can President •• Find Happiness In Pyne Castle? Can a nl!:w President and an old castle find happiness together in Laguna Beach? Report$ that President Nixon might have a boyhood infatuation with Pyne Castle, the Art Colony's historic, 64-room hillside fortress, persisted today. But so d1d reports of interest in other lltes ror L summer White House aomewhere south of Los Angeles -or north el San Ylidro. How about Monarch Bay? Or the estate he'I to use at San Clemente, or San Diego County -say La Jolla or Lon 1 Smith's five acre estate near Emerald Schedule Told For Nixon's Coast Visit Here is the tentative schedule for President and Mrs. Ni.ion for his Orange cOast vh!it as annou~ by press aide Ron Ziegler in Washington: FRIDAY 7:51 a.m. (PST): Depart Kansas City Municipal Airport aboard Air Force One for Pt. Mugu Naval Air Station near Santa Barbara. %:Z8 p.m.: Arrive Pt. Mugu. Depart by helicopter to inspect oil on beaches in Santa Barbara vicinity. 4 p.m.: Depart Pt. Mugu aboard Air Force One for El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. f:l5 p.m.: Arrive El Torn MCAS. Depart by unannounced form o f tr&MpOrtation for H. H. Cotton Estate in San Clemente. S p.m.: Afternoon and night at the Olden home on Cotton Estate. SATURDAY 11 a.m.: Depart Cotton Estate for festivities at Mission San J u a n Capistrano. Noon: Possible luncheon party at Capistrano. t J.m .. : Leave San Juan Capistrano for return to San Clemente. Sltanlay nipt: Nixon party remains at San Clemente. U.S. ambassador to South Vil!:tnam Ellsworth Bunker arrives El Toro MCAS for round of talk.s with Nixon. Bay or Corona del Mar? Second-guessing President Nixon's real estate preferences seemed the most popular sport along the Orange Coast today. STAYING WEEKEND Thomas Merrick, owner pf. Pyn~ Cas- tle, 770 Hillcrest Drivt, said · he will be staying home this weekend on the possibility that the Presiden~ his wile, or a reprelentative may vi.sit. ' ~errick said that the Nixon represm- tatives viewed and discussed the castle twict in January. Since then, negoUaUons are said to have been carried on by Merrick's representatives, Dr. Glenn \Vebb, of Long Beach, and Administration aides meeting in Florida. Bebe Rebozo, Nixon's pal, has even been mentioned as a negotiator. Dr. Webb said be felt the presldenUal interest in the site was real indeed. He mentioned a flgurft of 10methiDg under a half-million dollars. BUILT-IN FEATURE Speculation on this aspect had d!nced about a bit in news columns and television reports. Webb said be teR the weekend would turn up "someone to talk autboritaUvely on bebaU 'of the presidency," about the transaction. If the President buy1, television featurist Ralph Storey will have an almost built-in feature. Storty featured the deliciOUJ old structure on hll show following a DAILY PILOT story which piloted the way in 11166. Built by eccentric millionaire Walter Pyne, starting in 1929, there was once Jittle in California that could hold a candle to lhe massive Swiss Chalet-type structure. It has a ballroom on the third fioor, an Olympic size swimming pool now filled with dirt, guest houses, an old goat barn, a furnace room like a ship's b o 11 er room, underground pauagts, spacious grounds with staUl.ary and m. triguing alcovt.S and cubbyholes wber! a presidential grandchild mJ&ht l]fend delightlul how's. · Tbe wood tllrougboot ix B<mduru mahogany and hard wood noortni on top of. rttnforced cooc:rete. It J1 Aid there ls still not a asuW ln the estate. Now used u an apartment boule, the structure bas two mualve kltc:btnl that could feed the multitudes: If Pf•sldent Nixon really lw fallen under the cuUe'a myrt.i.que he would be the latest in a terieJ ol owner1 that have ranged from a church to a group of local lnvestor1. •unhook~ ' Who can "unhook" JOUr kid tf ijrup alreao1y rule Illa We7 It still isn~ the end of the rood, ""' vises Alton Blalt..i.., naUonally noted author of the "Drup 1•" articles appearlni now ln the DAILY PILO'l'. Authorities quoted in taday11 arlicle explain the hypocrioy to- day's youUt see in thtlr parent&' ... of alcohol, -and tran- qullit.m while puttlnc down the use of. marijuana and other mind • benders. Is it ever &oo lite to c:loae the generadon gap? See Page 4. . ' R«ognlzlng the need foe preliminary plarming, the ~ement went on: -"Nevtrtbeless, we strongly questkin both the ecooomicS and tbe esthetics of. a convenUon facility in a geographic area already beset wldi t!affic and park4 ing problems. "Combtneq with the JD0$,1 undesirable features of. the proposed CH zone, the presmc.e ol. such a convertion facility ' on Iii< Malo Be8cb may well jeopardise the Intent and ~ of the Belch purchase." 1 Thi!: Cl.vie League suggested that the most dioquietlng feature of both Malo Beach and CH zone -Is Is that they both became active prior to the "imminent formation of the General Plan of Laguna Beach." Thi!: Civic League referred to a ques- llooain! that will be clreulated to citiuns of the area .in 'COMflCtion with general ans ' ' DAILT rtLOT IWt' ,__ WILL RAMBLING, 64-ROOM PYNE CASTLE IN LAGUNA BECOME WHITE H,0USE WEST? As Presfdent Nixon Heads for Orange County, Specul•tion on P'vrchaM· lnt1Mlfle1 ' El Toro Mapping Procedures for Nixon '.s Visit A conference of high.officers at El Toro MCAS was in ~s today, map. ping out,.procedur" f« the arrival and tramponlrtion of President Nlzoo, but stlli uncertain about It. Oesplle an announced travel itinerary by the Wlllte House, a spokesman ror the bue infonnatbl office aald shortly bdore noon that the visit is not yet conflrmod. "U be does anive. we'll know In pl<mty of lime to alert the pra1 oo you men can get out here and be ac- credited," said a Marine C o r p a spobsmon. ' ~.But llC<Gnlb,g to us, It Im' certain be wtll,11 be~ lnfonnatlm S<nlce omo... M a J • Robert Bo00er WU In the lengthy meetln( on the Uhiy prealdeollal arrival and final word wu expected to come from him. EASTER WEEK (l'RIP BOOSTED • 1 To promote: an Easter week ski trip, the Sooth Orange Cow!IY Y Council will abow two 11d fJlml tOnigbt at'the Laguna !leach City Council Qwnben at 7:l0. Thett will be .0 adm!Jilon charie. Tbe old trip to Mammotll, lnlm ·April 3 lhrouiJi April I, will cOsl-fip. .Price includes l.ran~ikm, I o d f) ft I , b · • :#Iii ,.inlng m .. ls, acclde11t Insur.~ "'up to. #tOOO, and ahutUe bwt to ski -lilts. ' Add1tional lnformaUon and .registration fonns are avallabll at ·the \'MCA, 4!1 Fomt Ave., Laguna Beach. Deadline. ts March ll. ' • .. Laguna Councilmen Def et Art, Music G.roups. Funds· Faced with budget uncertainty, Laguna teach councilmen Wedaesda:'y deferred action on $21,000 11o.1pport recommended ror the art and music organizations of the cily, It api:>eared also that Councilman Richard Goldberg would balk: at f5 ,000 support for the Lyric Opera As.sociaUon of Orange County, Said Goldberg, "I'm not in agreement ~·Ith $5,000 support ol the Lyric Opera Association. It seem• le> me that for 1T1any year• we've been "subsidizing this group In what you might say is a losing cause." He •aid opera wa1 presented for only three weekends of the year. Goldberg said it would be the biggest rupport given any group. Councilman Roy Holm, who with Vice Mayor Joseph o•suiuvan bad made the cultural recommendations, said be bad agonized moat over thl!: opera flgure. Pro,Posals _for J!Jpporl were t.aiuna Beach · Art Association, $4,000; LalUflJI · Beach, Civic Ballet, $4500; · citamber Music Soc;lety,, $1,000; Commun It y Concert Association, f!,000 ; Laguna Beach CommwUty Playtn, '2500: opetl, $5,800; and Laguna Beach School of Art llld Dts!gn, 13,000. Since the fm*ll eome ou t of the ume pool u do chamber !Undo -bed tax and Feltlval ·of Artl receiptl -Chamber m an a 1 er Warren .Morpn asked if chamber ·JJ¢1et propoaals would ·have to be earlier. City Manalfl' JIJDf:I D. Wbealon men- Ul.Vled the pa,ymeall for th& Main Beach that wlll come out of the same fimd ..-. 3 Laguna Autos Hit by Thieves He said the determl:nailon of cultural support couldn't be done by formula and was a question of value judgments. "I agree that the amount of money Three Lacuna Beach autol wue d-'t appear to be Justllied," be said. burglarized Wec!Qeaday with two of than ln defense of opera, O'Sullivan aald b t I n C hit dllr1na the daJllPt bolul. the amount wu baU what was requested ; La£¥Da. Beacb polJce u1d today. was lhe amount given last yur; and A lou of. "4 for a 1tereo tape playtr, was less than the f1500 aJven prtvicualy. tapes, and accmoritl was rtpaNd by He noted thtt the .USOC:latlon hu Michael Decker, 11, Lak ... ood. His car changed its format for the yw because w11 parktd. ln the 1300 block of .atcte or economics and would prtsut the Way. popular "SOund ot Mu.sic" four Um~. Richard Gonuln, iD, of 1240 Cllf'f "f.(eel 'tllal lf,iy'~~· trying to come ' Dr •• faiUoi ,Jk~k, 1Gat ,• J41 .'1~ wl~e-and ''I'!. lhi>liUi ,allOcale , laJ!e il!Utt,aod. ',I, 11o 1"11> ,W!>en. ;Illa ~ per )>Or!Onlt1111Ce. • ve"1~ ~en mto. , , . , 1 . lj.i' r GleM .'\'.cider' ... led. iliJ fotal ~ tt..· piaii/gll' Mat,'. 1"· .,;, ·~ cultural contrlbollon li!¥(••itd w~ld · wu , taken from the v,elalckl of· '* aniount to about' I 10 _percent bictt ... , SL Clair, is. of 111 ~ s-.. I,illma o1 \he P\•)'.)?"\YW· · , Beacb. Tbe vehlck' hid' -, jiatlod 1'e aa d the l'ftent at'otnl1 had upset at a Lillin• 'qn700~ l'lpibl..,.~ lily budget preparaUons ,allli ¥Id, ;•f ovemlChL !L Clair dlll009ered ~ Uiolt oo't think we're In a·po41~on lo make , In tile ft\6rD!ni. Val,_ of ~ ~ ~-1olJd commttmcnL ~ ~ unknown.. . . , ( the q-IN resuM& are In. Vlce Mayor Jooepb O'SullhM llld the council. had hired Bud Holacliu and --to .,. wbat H any develop. mm1 for the Malo Be8cb waiJd both help acquire ~ and help the town. He llld be fek the councll ,rao carrying out community wtshos but objected to the term ••conveotioo. ceU«" llkehlng U to • .-ng room. or ballroom (for (See MAIN B~CH, P .... I) 0 War Talks Set With Viet Envoy By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of fH D•llY Piiot Stiff Vietnam war talks, a visit to a peaceful mission and shopping for an ornate sum- mer Wbitl!: House in Laguna Beach are on the agenda as President Nixon arrives In Orange County Friday •. Ii.it Force One will roar in over the Pacific Coast mountains and down the aerial alley to Point Mugu for touchdowl\ at 2:20 p.m., and a sWift coastal tour of major proportions. ., 1be · Pretldent and hia wife will matt tfidr · bead<juarten on th• spravilln& H. JJ. ~ esta~ in San Clemente. gUl!:!it ~ the daughter of a rnl!lionaire friend ol the late Prealdent Franldlo D. -vdL Mrs. Liooel E. Ogden, ol San Clemente, ha1 arranged for the Ni:rons to 1pend two n!ghts on t h t estate bordering the Camp Pendleton Marine Corp1 bue, Whe?:t Vietnam war talks wilI be held. Ellsworth Bunker, U.S. ambassador lo Vietnam, is due to arrlve Saturday. alon·g with Gen. Andrew J. Goodpaster, out;oing deputy commander of U.S. frorces in the war zone. White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said the Sunday conference - continuing on the flight b a c t to Washington -should not be Interpreted as a major policy cltscUM!on, but other top aides will also be present. 'Ihlvellng from WuhlnJton with tho Nixon party will be Secretary el Stata William P. Rogers. and Dr. Henry A. Kts.!inger, the presidential advfstr on. national &ecurity. The session will be the fint face-to.face confrontaUon between Nixon and the arrto bassador, who ha.s been in Vietnam for the pa.st year, WbJte House aJdes noted. c:onti.nuJng hintl that Nixon may mate • (See NIXON, Par• J) PILOT OFFERS EASTER PARADE Just Jn time for Easter parade shop. pers, the DAILY PILOT today o!fm a special sed.loni "Feslival of Fashion1," featuring ads telline where the spring finery bargains att all over tbe Orange Coast area. The ae~on starts on Page 25. Oraaie Weather Don't look up now,. but there's a 60 percent chance of rain (light rain, that 11) on Friday. Ttmpua- tul'twille, it'll ba back down to • aloog the Orange Coul. INSmE TODAY Tht Mtion'I roilroadJ art taking 1'nprectdcnttd aecurltv precaUUON' ogaintt ihreatcnid iabotoge· of trains CGn'lfino Vi1t- nam war mattrlll. PCJQt J 1. ..,.. '' ,....... . " ....... '"E,) 0 ~C~C..W -.1 ~ ...... I. fc.....,.: t.+ii c ~...,. • ..., ~ .. ---~ ,, ,,..._.. •• l'l"'1e """"" • 0..-........ 11 ..... News "'" ~ n ._.. n44 ......... ,. • Df· ,,....,.. 11 ... , ...... , .. '""* ..,_.,. ... , ,.._. ..... ,.....,...,.... -" ''" c.. 11 'nlMttn • .......... , . .......,. . ._ ~ 11 tltllll WMI ft ~ tWtrW ..... '-f l ' I I • t L ·~ · . • 2 DAil Y PILOT L ,. DAILY PILOT ll•H Plloti. THIS IS MAIN STAIRCASE AT ORNATE RESIDENCE Ont M1n'1 C11tlt M1y Be Anoth1r'1 S11t of Governm1nt From Page l NIXON .•. an ollu io purchase the rambling Pyne Castl3 mansion at 770 Hillcrest Drive. Laguna Beach, also gained momentum with the impending Orange Coast visit. ''There is a continuing Interest in the castle on the part of the Pre!ident since last January," aaid a spokwnan for owner Thomas A. Merrick, hinting a pos.1ible negotiation. NIXON FASCINATED '1be President bas been fascinated with tbe 64-room mansion on a clilf overlook~ ing a lll'.k:legree Pacific panorama for years and ls known to be seeking a Southland residence. Built on a fJve-acre plot with a parking Jot large enough far a presidential heliport, Pyne C...U. ha. been appraised at f150,000, but the 37-year-old structure may not bring that much. Mel'Tick hlmseH has indicated he will get more prestige than profit if he aells the Swiss-Bavarian mansion built by eccentric bachelor oil millionaire Walter Pyne. 'Dle structure baa 22 balhrooms and ts now rented out as 12 apartinents, l>ut cou1d easily be altered to house most of a presidential guest party. First on the President's itinerary after arrival Friday la: a tour of oil..stafned beaches at Santa Barbara, after which he and the first lady will enplane for his native Orange County. NO OTHER PLANS Earlier announcements of the presiden. Ual visit included San Diego and the city's 200th anniversary celebration, but no mention was made ot that end of tbe coastline today. President and W.rs. Nixon will visit 1'!ission San Juan Capistrano Saturday. two days after the celebrated relurn of the rwallows on St. Joseph's bay. "He enjoya vislUng the mission and wants to 10 there," said Preu Secretary Ziegler. Heavy security meuurea will be en- forced on the grounds of the Henry Hamilton Cotton estate 1n San Clemente during the two-day presiden tial visit. The Cotton utate borden the Orange- San Diego county lines and Is well known to surfing IOCiety for The Trestles beach and Cotton'1 Point. Following arrival at El Toro MCAS, the President will 1o--by yet-unannounc- ed lransportatlOD-<llreclly to lhe Cotton Estate. Some apeculator1 believe Mrs. Nixon herself may be flown by bellcopter to look over the Pyne Cutle property, actually discussed u a presidential residence by several F lo r I d a blislneumen. The owner, Merrick, and hl1 real es late agent, however, said the wUdenUfied e1eculives make no pretense of actually r~~enUng the Prtsldent him.sell, of· {1c1ally or unofficially. Most of the NiJ:on entourage wlll be housed in the San Clemente Inn durinc the vial:t, only the lint ol 1evual an- ticipated thJJ year, aceonflng to the Whlte Houae. President N'Jxm will vial! former Preal· dent Harry S. Truman in Independence, Mo., on the first leg ot the fllght, while he talked Wedneaday with &Wng former Prtaident Eiaenhower. Nilon said the old aoldler ta in good spirits, although confined to Walter Reed Anny H01pltal In Waatilnrtoa From Pqe l MAIN BEAOI .• 200 to 400 persons). O'Sullivan said be bad reservatlons about site aod shape but &aid the council needed a feulbility study to 1ee what cooJd be developed. '"It coold range from nothing to unethlng quite large," be said. "1 hope organizations and people will have eome faith aboot what mlght be put on that Main Be.tch," the v\ce mayor •aid. Referring to himseli as a "pure parks man", Mayor Glenn Vedder saJd. "l'm fJOt'f1 10meone feels th.Ls ls so sudden." He aaid in January and February of 1966 he stated he felt it neceuary to have an outside study of the beach to avoid local antagonisms about the beach. He saJd he felt it necessary to have nr.n r 111101 CllAHGt C(l,J,ST ruaLJIMJNO COM~•~Y R•Mrt N. W••iil Pr..sMll •11111 Mlllllott J11lr L C.irl.., Vlci9 l"nl*111 9M ,.,,., .. IN,.IH TJr.•111•1 kN¥U .... TkM1• A. h.4•rphl11• IMNtlnl ••1w lJch•riil P, N•ll '•YI Nl11111 L-letdl M-11•1• '"' • ..,.. 01,.,. ---221 ,.,.it ""'· M•ll/111 UJ1•n1 P.O. 1 .. ,,., t2•11 --~,. MfM; Jail Wnl I n' ltrftt ..._.,, hkfri1 m1 'Nftt .. .,.. .... ""',,. t4WllllleMll htodl: ... •lfl .. ... •. some type . commercial use lo a5l!list in develop,ment of the beach. Dernetri>des oald, '"The proposal did coritain the tenna canventlon center and hotel. Someone j' being paid $10,000 to plan a convention center and other "'•• .. --.. •· Peter ~ander asked, "Am l not right that proposal said study for a convention CEnter and hotel?" City Manager James D. Wheaton, who had strongly recommended the study, said that was the language in the proposal bµt "it is stl1$1ying the fee.slhillty and plinclpally the ecooomic fe8'lbtllty." Vedder 8Ugge5ted the • study might reconuneDd no development. COuncilman Roy Hohn said it was also a foregone ~lll8ion that com- rnettial development would be reeom· meDded since the firm would "get eight pereent of wbatev« ls built there." Holm Aid he was aware that con- vention centers "generally are big losers". lle added, "It could end up ,,..,. hllllding and donating • hallroom and they're building a hotel." Councilmen took no additional action on the matter and agreed to bring up the CH ZOllfl at an April 30 study session • June Allyson Asks Divorce Actress June Allyson movt<i Thursday to end her troubled second marriage to Newport Beach barber Glenn Maxwell The widow of actor-producer Dlck Powell charged her second husband with "cruel and inhuman treatment" Jn a complaint much llke the petition she filed in the same court on May 2.$, 1967 -a suit that was follO'll'ed almost immediately by lhe couple's reooo- clllatioo. MIM Allylon. le, o/ Lldo lale, first married Maxwell on Oct. 12.. 1"'3. A year later she remarried Maxwell ln 1 JUmptuoua Lu Vegas ceremony. Mils Allyaon 's divorce Ollng of May, 196'1 was not pursued when the couple apparenUy resolved their dlffertnces. But Thursday's flltna Is almort word for word a repeat o( the petition that the sultry·volccd star rtt0rded two years ago. ,, ·~ • Saturday Matinee For 'Brigadoon'. "_, ___ _ .. Illa eNvloaalJ --!oil,.._ " ·~." Illa """' -fll• forinc"' 1-B*h lllP llollool. The 11U1tlnee ts at 1 p.m. Other performanct1areat1:30 p.m.11runday, Frlday and Saturday In tbe bJab ochoo1 auditorium. 1be musical "Brigadoon" feetura a cut of IO under the dlNotlon o/ Ray Hag1ard. Jack Kreltln( will -the '!5-piece pit orebe$tra. The play centers on two American youths, played by John Chamberlin and Nick Enright, who get tool while vilitlntl Scotland and stumble Into the myotkal villace of. Brigadoon ~b reappears every 100 years. Chamberlin falll In love with the Scot- tiM lass Fiona, plaf'd by Cindy Caner, but learm that be must live up everylhlni to stay in tbe v!Ua1e with ber. Tickets are '2 for adulta and $1 for studGI. Blocu "ol 10 ad u I t Hcltets may be bought for 11.IO '8Ch ticket. Beatie Lennon Weds Japanese ' . Girl in Gibraltar GIBRALTAR (UPI) -Beatie John Lennon and bis Jipaneae strl friend, Yoko Ono, both wearfnc "bite hats and sneakers, were married Thunday in a aW']>ri.se civil ctrtmony. "We cboae Gibraltar becaUJt tt Ls quiet, BritiJh and friendly," Lennon told newsmeii. It Wii the aecond Bealle marrlqe In a week. Paul McCartney, one of the IODl·wriling Beatlu, ma r r le d American socialite Linda Eutman In London last week. Lennon, 28, and Miu Ono, 34, have been going together for Hftral montha. During the courtaltlp, they pooed to(ether for a nude photograph wbJcb appeued on the cover of a London magulnt. It was Le:nnon'1 aecond marriage and the thlrd for Mlaa Ono. The couple tried to keep tbe marrlqe • •«re~ flying Into Gibraltar frwn Paris in a private jet at a a.m. th1a morninr. They were married at the Gibraltar Reglstry Offt~ with a special l!UI llcenae and flew back io Paris almolt immediately, arrlvlni In the French capital at 10 :45 a.m. Arraignnient Set Friday for Son . Of Oemente Chief Steven Mumy, 21·year~ld ton of San Cl«itenle l'lllloo Chief Clllfonl Mumy, is scheduled for arraignment in Santa Ana Friday before Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner on five counts of nar- co<lca violatlona. Young Murray ls the leCOOd cue on the t :30 a.m. court calendar. He was arrested Feb. 2 in the driveway ol the family home, 225 La Esparama, San Clemente by stat'e and local narcotics o/flcers. • Charges are ~ion of heroin, poe. session of hwlm with intent to sell, poa- session of marijuana, possession al mar:I· juana with Intent to seil and transporting marijuana. Ag>ento claim to have aebed ISOO worth of marijuana (11 pounds) and 110 worth of heroln. Bottle Club's Pl,ans Broken Hopes o/ tbe Antique BoWe Club o/ Orange County wen fractured on the shoals <l Leg\ma Beach council prac-- ticallty Wedneoday night. Councilmen ruled no dice on the bottle digger's rtquesl to setk old bottles and gtuow.,. on city property. The relics wen: to ha"" aerved the quest for lmowledg< o/ Orange County history. "It's an 1nterelUnc idea," muted Coun- ctbnan Rlchanl Goldberg. "But, I ctn~ help wondering what kind o/ a c.an o/ warms ,they might open up "'ben they start digging ... He m e n t i o n e d an:heolo(ilts, an- thropologlas, gold dij:g.n, '"""' dlggen and "what have you." Mayor Glenn Vedder SUUested that in cue of city excavation in tht future, the bottle dlggen and other n!llc huntera might ltnd by to aee what turm up. The request to dig was received and ltled. Spri ng Arrives On the Button Sprlnf be11n at 11 :• a.m. -not one mJnute aooner or later -today. At that moment (Padflc Standanl Tim•) the center of the sun mo'Vtd acroa: the ctleatiaJ equator ham the IOllth to the north, -· tho vernal equlno1 (a!ao known u tbe point d Aries In the Northem Hemllpbtro) - day and night, in all parts of the world, are equal. It you can't remember all that. just remMiber lh1t sprlng last.a for thm monUa. Can summer be far behind! LAGUNA TEEN CORNER By _TOM GORMAN l Tlll5 HAI HEN qulte the month !0< the old Lquna achoo! diatrict. A black actlv1tt made the scene at '11'uraton, whlle a representative of the armed force1 and a comcienUous ob- ject... to the war in Vietnam loot turns addrwlng •nlcn at the blgb tcbool. On top of that, ltudents are prm:nim, to the community the musical "Brlga· doon" wJllle acbool board trustees are presenUni io the community the pros of a lkart tu ovurlde. * There are reports of disturbed parents II a ruult of James West's address lo Thuratcm 1tudents. The acUvltlat was described u "black and angry." His tallt verified the fad. Althouah there are pros and cans to lbe presentation.,· I have one basic obler.vation. Throughout the country, parents and students are being in- troduced to mJ!itancy through molotov coclrtaUs, boyoolts, and bomblnga. Laguna should be thankful that their only contact with black activism has been lhroua:h one man's speech, and. not an army of angry black men physically destroying the school 1ystem. And like Gwen Johnson, a Thurston student, pointed out, uu parents don't want ua to hear both aides of the racial problem, how do they expect UI to do anything about it w b e n we grow up',.. ' . . Enou@ with Thurston: Jet's move to the high school'. AMERICAN GOVERNMENT teacher John Dre.not arranged ror a represen- tative ol the U.6. Army to diacusa the draft and pros of, enlisting in the armed forces Iast Tuesday. AJ!. a follow up, a consclentlOUJ objector save his pos1tion on the draft and the war bt Vietnam WednesdllJ. The 22-year-old objector, a bright fellow, was graduated fJ:;om Dartmouth as ibe valedictorian. * -Both men, as CQUJd be expected beforehand, presented, biased talts. But the students heard bOth sides ol the issue, and any decision they will reach will result from studying both sides of the cGin. It was a valuable eiperience. JUMPING FROM the 'war 1n Vietnam North Viets Reel Back From Heavy U.S; Attack From Witt Serlvcea SAIGON -Troops of the 7th North Vletnamae Division began retreaUn1 to the north today under pressure from allied troops and a U.S. tank force that •mashed Its way into a Communist bunker complu: 45 miles northwest of Saleoa, U.S. Intelligence so urces reported. ' Thi U.S. Qmunand announced today that Sil Amtrlcana: were killed in acUon in Vietnam 1ut .... t. pushing the Iola! o! U.S. hatuefleld dead to 10,11.1 Jn the 10 months since the Parts peace talks began and to S3,0&3 in more than ellht years of war. The American toll Jut week was 15 more than the prev1oua week's total and niaed the number or Americans tilled In the tint three weeks of the Viet O:mc'• q:rtng offensive to 1,140, aaly llO lea than the 1,380 U.S. troops reported tuled during the eight weeks of. llet prklr to the offensive. Men of tb6-U.S .. 1st Air Cavalry Dtvtal'"' lllOYOd into blocking poaiUon1 on Iha norlhem fringe o/ the old Mlcbelln rubber plantation to try to trap the force wbich hid poaed a major threat lo Saigon. Front reports said the drive into the b u n k e r complex burled an unknown number of North Vietnamese soldiers alive in their underground fortifications. Communist rocket fire hit three of the tanks In the day of heavy fighUng. Resistance . by the 7th Division had stiffened sharply until the massive allied drive began forcing the Communists back. That and a coordinated attack on villages formlnl Da Nang's southern flank had been seen u an indication intensiticatlon of t h e C.Ommunists' winter-spring offensive was intensifying. UPI correspondent Nat Gibson, with the allied forces in the jungled Michelin rubber plantation northwest of Saigon, said the tanks which had rumbled in to the rescue of a trapped American infantry unit crushed the Communist bunkers with their mass. "We'll never find all the bodies," 1st Ll Howard Harmless, 24, of Greencastle, Ind., said of the t a n k tactics. "The tanks burl!<!. them In the bunkers." Harmless is commander of the rifle platoon which bad been trapped. The Americans found the bodies ot seven North VletnameM soldiers around the smashed bunters. to the Scottlab highlands, the musical "Bricadoon" opens tonight at 8:30 o'clock, with evening performances Fri .. day and Saturday and a special Sattµ'day matinee at 1 p.m. to handle the lar1• tumxrt. TlckecJ are going fut. Hopdully, this will lie the last pr .. ducUoa. drama critics will see froro the present Allditorium seats. U the much needed 58-cent tax override wins at the polls April 15, the seats will be replaced. A lot of o!Mr improvements will be made throughoot the district, too. For the detailf, drop in your nelgbborbood di!trict offict and pick up a brochure. Fret of charge. 'Ibere was a big &oclal gathering Wednesday night.-(and it wasni the City Council meeUng). ASB President Doug Schmitz had his !Ith birthday, and about 20· fellow teem celebrated with him at dinner. Jett Jahraus gave Doug a sweatlihi{f:. On the front was monogrammed "ASB President, Laguna Beach High School, 1968-69." And on the batk was "Prffiident of the Uoited States, lSM-1988." Ttme liijJ teU. Judge Rejects Plea to Dismiss Narcotics Charges A plea for dismissal of charges by four persons accused of drug offenses after a police raid on a Lagwl<l Canyon l"". home was rejected Thursday in Superior Court. Judge Robert Gardner al.so ru led, after an almost day-long hearing, that the defendants motion for suppression of evidence assembled against them be throw n oot. 1 He ordered Bryan Kendall McAdams, 22, George Ernest Oliphant, 22 and Helene Marie Miller, 19, all of 2286 Laguna Canyon Road and Gordon F. Johnson, 23, of Long Beach, to fac e jury trial May 5. Judge Gardner refused to accept the defense argument that the arrest warrant for an unindicted co-conspirator was in- valid and that the subsequen\ arresU!I and confiscation of personal property of the defendanU were unwarranted. All four defendants are charged with J)053eSSion and sale of marijuana. They have pleaded innocent. The four were among a group of nine persons arrested last Jan. 17 at lhe Laguna home in a raid carried out by lheriff's deputies, Laguna police and federal narcotia: agents. a nylon shag that's young • In looks, young • In price! $8.95 sq. yd. Younaideuind-1.p- a Wlique four-mlor dd from 1pecia1 dy.m, techniqu-. And JOUna ideu in ~rich. bowicy ohaa that malclm your own hish l)>irita. lmqine iivinr JOW' familJ the tradition and quality of Kuatan for half the priot JOU mirht ezpc1 to J>IY· In 115 mlor combm.tionl. y .. , '""""" derlgner toil! tie Mm io auilt "°" ... H.J.GARRE]T fURNf]URE I 0,.-.-1111. .... • } Z2 II HARIO• II.YD. COSTA MW. CALIF, '4 .. 0171 '46-027' ... . i ' Newpo~-.ftarhor ED Ill ON • YOt:. 62, NO. 68, 4 SE.CTIONS, 48 PAGES ' -. 0~6E · COUNTY', CAUFORNI~ • • .. N. Y. St.oek8 TEN CENTS Nixon: Busy Visit Ahead DAllY?ILOT l'Mtts ~ Plf'O'DeMlll FOR ROMANTICALLY INCLINED, A• FIL.ACE NEAR THE SEA And for Scitntiflcally Minded, Spri19Js· VerMl rE.quinox· Spring Arrives On the Button Spring began at 11:<* a.m. -not one minute sooner or later -today. At that moment (PacUic Standard Time) the center of the sun moved across the celestial equator riom the south to the north, marking the vernal equinox {also known as the point or Aries in the Northern Hemisphere) when day and night, in all parts of the world, are equal. U you can't remember all thaf, just remember that spring lasts for three months. Can swnmer be far behind? Doctor Concedes Sirhan Needed Some Planning LOS ANGELES (UPJ) A Jl5YChologist conceded today that Sirhan B. Sirhan had to do a considerable amount of planning and premeditation to carry out the alaying of Sen. Robert F. Ketm<dy. Dr. O. Roderick RichardJon told the murdtr trial jury !hat In • psychotio ltate Sirhan was capable of decldinc , 4 -the pel'IOO be .... going lo kill, 1ettmc a weapon, practlcing at a range. 1oinf lo the Ambassador Hotel &lid firing the gun at Kennedy's head. JUchard!Oll insisted, however, that It )l'U not •the same type of deliberatio:'I, 'premeditation and calculal.ion ,that would ·have marked the act of a ~alled ·normal person who might attempt an usassination. ' :,SPRING IS FOR. WADING An!' for ,Roflldlnt "It is similar to the type o( thinking that a mental patient might use when ht ateals a key from a nurse on her rounds so he can make a break ]3ter cia," Ricblrdsort said. NEW YORK.(AP)-The stock market close,d with a good gain Thursday. Trading near the close wu moderatel7 active. (See quotations, Pages.46-41). . :•unhook~· Youths· .. 969·! • Who Gil "unhook" your-'W lf dluis alrtady rule hll llfel It still iln't the end of tbe road, ad- vi>es AllOIJ. Biakpl .. , nationally noted author ol the "llrup JMll" art!Cles appearing noW> , In Ibo DAILY PIWI':" Authl;M'ities quoted In today 's article elJllaln the hypocr~y to- day's JOI.Ith aee ln their parent&' USe of alcohol, tobacco and tran- qulllzers while pulUng down lhe use ol mar)juana and other mind benders. 11 Ii evor loo !alt lo clooe the 1ener1Uon pp? See P11• f. .War Parley, Castle T!Jlks, Mission Tr~p on A.genda By Al\TBIJR JI. VINSEL Of ... .,..,. ...... Vietnam war talb, a viait to a J)'aceful million and shopping for an ornate swn-- mer Wbllec House In Laguna Beach are ao the agenda u President Nino arrives , 1n ~· County Friday. J Air Force ODe will roar in over the Paclflc Coasl niowt"'1ns and down the aerial alley lo PUnl lo{ugu1or touchdown .1t 2:20 p.m., and a awlft coutal tour of major proportlOM. First lliegal Renting Case lWon by City I The Newport Beadl city atl<lrney's office today announced It had achieved lts fll'st conviction in a citywide crackdown on illegal rental uruts. · Peter OeBaun, owner of property at 2520 Seaview Ave., Corona del Mar, has been fined and sentenced to one-year probati<ln for violating the city buUdina: and zoning codes. DeBaui1, who pleaded guilty . to thiee misdemeanor counts in Harbor Judicial Court, w .. accused by lhe city of adding two new bacbdar apartments to his lhree-wtll pn>(>erty "wilhoul benefit of <ilher buildlni or ioruni• permill." The :s!9 kav'tcw'f3f!;:1 ·Ii In fll R-i ·m, Ito a;lglni uDltl Wh already non-<Ollformlol bocause ooq two parking -·-• lite, icqrila« IO City Atton>q 1'lllY ~. ' Seymour llld DeBaun bad been warned m the vlo\a!IOal while lhe rtmodelln1 wort wu· in progress one m<:mth ago. The remodeling, however, continued. The city on March 5 filed a Criminal com· plaint. DeBaun entered hJs plea thUI week. ln addition to the summary probation, he WU fined f!OO and Cl<((ered by the court to remove all the illegal alterations, "We CODlider thia:~cut to be signifi· cant." said Seymour, "because Mr. DeBaun II lhe moot prominent violator · ol the city's JODing Jaws." Seymaor llld a civil odJon 1'(ardlng two other properties .i>wned b1 DeBaun II now cm file in Superior Court. Tbe ""'""' -a a permanent ln-Juncfloa. to' -.. him !nm main- t.lnlng ~ -two un111 at 40t..o3 Fernleaf Avenue and at 2* Pacific Drive, bolh In Corona del Mar. The case is scheduled to be tried in Superior Court on June 3. Seymour &aid aeveral cases involving other owner• are pending in the couru. He added: "It should be pointed out that the building department, by its inspection and notice of violation pro- cedures, h3i obtained voluntary com- pliance in many other matters without having to enlist the support of this office." ' Arraignment Set Friday for. Son Of Oemente Chief Steven Murraf, 21-year-old aon of San Clemente Police Olief Clifford Muna y, is achedu1ed for arraJgnme:nt In Santa Ana Friday before superior Court Judge Robert Gardner on five counts ol nar- coclcs violation!:. Young Murray is the second cue on the 9:30 a.m. court calendar. He was amsled Feb; 2 In Ibo driveway ol the family home, 215 Lli Elparanza, San Clemente by llaie and Jocil narootlcs officen • . Cbai:ps are -"" of boraln, poo--m. heroin wUb Intent 1o 1111, """ ;::'.Jfi.~..C:~ mlrtjualll. • Ag<Dll dalm to bm aelzed ~ warlb ol marlJuaDa (II poundl) and 110 wortb ol berofn. PILOT 6FEERS j • • ' EA.STER PA.RADE J 11le President and bis wife will make their headquartus on the sprawling H. H. Cotton estate in San Clemente. guest of the daughter of a milliohaire friend or the late PresidP.nt Franklin D. Roosevelt. Mrs. Lionel E. Ogden, of San Clemt.nte, has arranged for the Nix:on.s to 11pend two night.II on the estate·bord~ring the Camp Pendleton Marine Corps base, whert Vietnam war talks will be held. . Ellsworth Bunker, U.S. amNaador to V)etnam, is due to arrive· Slturday, a1oitg with Gen. Andr<w J, Goodpaltor, ou1golng deputy c:Ommander 'or iJ .S. frircb Jn °the war ione. • While Houae Preas 5ecntary Ronald Ziegler aaid the Sunday conference - conUnulng on the flight b a c k to w ashlngton -al>ould· nol be lnlorp<eted u a major policy dilCUlllion, but otber top aides will abo be prtRnL Santiago Approves Public Library Merge_r Nears By JEllOME F. COLIJNS ot 1111 DtllY '"" 11111 The Santiago Library System has agreed to include Newport Beach among its members, Newpi;>rt City Librarian Dorothea Sheeley reported today. It means that Newport is now but a few routine steps away from sharing fully the faciliiies of public libraries in Co6ta Mesa Huntington Beach, Yorba Linda, Placentia ana the county · library ii:ystem. , . Newport counc;ilmen just last week voted unanfmo~ly to petttipn to ' join lho Sintlagb 'Systom, • ~IJI ~ mi. _ ... ...,. •• f ""'1~ Sanllap board members, -prlllng librarians ol....,ber agencies, appmad. the petition Wednesday. ~ vote wu, 1 also unanimoua, according· to Mn:. Sheeley. ' She said proposed joint J)OWtrl agreement.II will now be submiUed to the County Bo11·d ot Supervisors and the city councl.h of Huntingtpn Beach, Yorba Linda and Placentia. The county boird will act on Costa Mesa's behall because the city is in· eluded in the county library system. N"o opposition is expected before any of those agencies or before the State Library Board, which will take final a"cUon °probably in about a month,'' said J..frs. Sheeley, As a result of the Santiago action, she noted, Newport llbrary users have an immediate benefit: As of today, they may arrange through their local libraries to borrow films and booU that are not avail&ble in Newport from the other libraries. . When final approval comes from the state Library Board, they will be able to borrow the item! directly from the , other libraries. Their library cards will be acceptable at any county library, including those ~,{;:ji~· DAILY PILoT ..... !'- 'RESOURCES "EN!UCHID' Llbrorlan Sh•l•:i' In Costa Me11, and at dty •libraries Iii Jiuniinilon Beach, Yorba Lhlda·and • j --· ' ' , • Plaainta. · . , · '1.fu." Sheeley, bead libririan , In Newport since 1H4, is deuihted by· the sanliago System merger. "This means that for the tjrst time youngsters in.. Costa . Me11a and Newport will be able to check out bookl from . (See IJBRARY, P111 I) Ban the Bump Road Berms as Speed Control Hit Bumps in the road have too many: piUalls. 'Ibat's the unanimous view today . or the Newport B<ach city 111111 following cons:iderat.ion of installation of Ute bumps -or berms -as a way to reduce speeding auto traUic in residential atf:45. Municipal aides inve.S'dgated the pro- pos:i.1 at the request of councilmen, who had received complaints about speeder9 in Lido Sands, Shorecliffs, East Bluff and Peninsula Point. ,I • that w'e will defend all claims for damages." ''They could be • -!lain .• aald Jaffe, 0 etpeclally 1n the .cue of lighJ..wetgbt f<ft!gn can. It's poealble that .,._,.,. could be thrown out if the can• bolalc-t too tll&h over the bumps.'.' Police Chief B. James Glavu em- phaalzed the point. Bumps u a speed law enforcement de~, he Said, are "inconceiv,able ... Glavas joined Fire Chief R. J, "Jari'' Bri8coe In ob)ecllnl lo the PfOl'O"'l beea\l!e the ''obstructions" would slow down tmergeney vehicla, u well • JIOSl(bly cayae equl(Xllent. to boUnce oil 0..englnelJ, Traveling from Wasblng!on with the NU.on party "ill be Secretary ol Sllto WlWam P. Rogers and Dr. HenrJ A. Klssinger; the praklential adviaer on national security. Tbe se.s.don wW be the fir.rt !ace-tc>-face confrontaUon betwetn NiJ:on and the am- ballsador, who hu been In Vietnam for the pufyear, White House a.idea noted. Continuing hints that Nixon may make (See NIXON, Pa11 2) * * * Schedule Told For Nixon's Coast Visit Htte It the tentative schedule for President and Mn. Nlzon for his Orange Coast visit u announced by presa aide Ron Ziegler in W ashJngton: FRIDAY 1:51 a.m. (PST): Depart Kansas City Municipal Airport aboard Air Force One for Pt. Mugu Naval Air StaUon near ~anta Barbara. %:2t p.m.: Arrive Pt. Mugu. Depart by helicopter to ·inspect oil on beaches 1n Santa Barbara vicinity. t p.m.: Depart Pt. Mugu aboard Air F~ One for El · Toro ?i-1arine Corps Air StaUon. (t15' p.m.: .Arrive El Toro MCAS. Depart by unannounced fmn of ~lion for IL IL Colton Eltalo .. -~cien-, ., I p.qo.: AftCmoon and nlgbt at tho open bome "' Collon Eatale. BATIJRDAY U La:1 IJepart Colton Elltlt for futlvtlJM at Mi&s.IOn San J u a n Clplatrano. Noail: Pow1>le luncheon party •t Caplllrano. l p.m..: Leave San Juan Capistrano for return to San Clemente. Saturdly night: Ni:a:on party remains at San Clemente. U.S. ambassador to South Vietnam Ellsworth Bunker arrives El Toro MCAS for round of talks with Ni:a:on. * * * El Toro Mapping Pr.ocedures for Nixon's Visit A conference of high officers at El Toro MCAS was ln progress today, ma~ ping out procedures for the arrival and transportation of President Nl:a:on, but ailll uncertain about it. Despite an announced travel iUnerary by the WhJte Houae, a spokesman for tbe base information office aaid 1hortly before noon that the vlait is not yet confirmed. "If he does anive, we'll know tn plenty ol lime lo alert lhe ~ .. )'OU men CID gel out bert and be IC• credlted," said a MariJ1e C o r p a spokesman. "But aooxdlnf to ua, It bn't certain he will," he ldc:Jed, InlormaUon Service Officer M a J • Robert Booher Wll In lhe lel\lll>Y metting on the likely presidential arrival and final word was expected to come f~m him. Oru1e Coan Weatlier Don't loot up DOW, but then!'> a IO pert<nl cbanco of n1n (light rain, that II) on J'rlday. Tempera· turnlle, It'll be bact down lo IO a1oq lhe ~ Cout. JNSmE TODAY The Mtion11 f'Gl1roadl are · 1 taklna 1uiprectct.Yiicd 1ecurltu Pfecautio~ · GQC&fn1t Ulrcattntd 1 IGbofeGe bf trcri .. COr.rillfl • Vici-· I • .....,. malcriet Paa• J 7. ' """' n ~ . " CllflnM ,. ...... • l c-c..... ., .......... ,... • t<....... 041 ~ ......... c..kt • ...... Cl9lt1 ,, IC,....... • lrMI ,._. • ............ 11 .......... ,,.,. ......... tt ...,,. ,... .....,,_ . ., ......... . ...... , 9 .............. , I-.., -.. ..... c.111 11 ""'-"' • ...._. ,. ........ . -~ ., ·---· " --... ............. • I , l --___....,--~·---- . -2 DAll.Y PILOT • 1'1Mnll.1, Martft 20, 190 Can President . • -~ind .Happiness . ' In · Pyne Castle? Cu a new Pr<ill!ont and an old culle !ind happlneu togelbor In Lquna Beach! Reporll that Pr"ldont Nixon mlgtt have a boyhood infatuation with Pyne Castle, the Art Colony's bisloric, 14-room hill&ido !ortreu, penisltd today. But IO dJd l<porla ol inlerut In otbor situ for a summer 'White House somewhere south of Los Angeles ~ or north ol San Yaldro. How about Monarch Bo.YI Or tho utate he's to use at San Clemmte. or. San Diego Cowlty -11y La Jolla 0< Lon Smith'• five acre estate near Emerald Bay or Corona del Mar'? Secoocl-gueaing Prutdent Nixon'• rul estate preferences see.med the most popular •port alOlll tho Or111g• Cout today. STAYING WEEKEND 'Ibomas Merri ck, owner of Pyne Cas-- tle, 770 Hillcrest Prjve, s.aid he will be staying home lhla weekend on lhe possibility that lhe Pruident, hil wile, or a representative may villi Merrick said that the NfJon represen- tative.s viewed and discuued the castle twice in January. Since then, negoliation1 are aaJd to have been canied on bf. Bealle Lennon Weds Japanese Girl in Gibraltar GmRALTAR (UPI) -Beatie John Lennon and hb Japan.,. gtrt friend, Yoko Ono, both wearing white hata ind 1neaken, were married Thursd1y In a lurprile dvil ceremony. "We ~ Gibraltar becaUH It II qui•~ Brllilh and lrlendly." Lennon told newamm. It WU the seoood Beatie nwrlqe tn a week. Paul McCartney, one of the 1011g..writing Beatles, mar rte d American l!Odallte Linda Eutman In lAndon Jut Wttk. Lennon, 28, and Miss Ono, st, have been Coin& together for several months. Durln& the cow1&bip, they po!ed together for a nude photograph which appeared on tbe cover of a London magazine. Jt wu Lennon's RCOnd marriage and the thlnl !or Ml.sl Ono. The couple tried to toep the marrlqe a seatt, flying into Gibraltar from Puls in a private jet at I a.m. Ulll morning. They were married at the Gibraltar Regillry Office wtth a IJleChl IIUS ll<enle and flew bact to Parb aimolt immediately, arrlvlnc In tho French capital at 10:'5 a.m. Coffee House Plans ifo Celebrate Spring The Man Alive Coffee House wi11 ctlebrate the rites of spring Crom 7:31f to 10 p.m. Friday and from 7 p:m. to t p.m. Sunday. Promising "a regular Laugh-Jn," tht Coffee House, in the Fellowship Hall . of SL Andrew's Presbytulan Church, 600 SI. Andrew'a !toad, Newport Beach, will offer music, plm, poetry readings, llOft drinks, and other goodies for the mind and stomach. Nixon Talks on War · WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pmldent Nixon discu.aed the intensified fighting . in Vietnam with JUs cabinet today In preparation for talks th1s weekend wilh high level U.S. ol!lclal5 from Saigon. ) DAllY PllOI OlAttGI CCMT P\IM.llHIM Cfl##AK't l•Mrf H. W1M .,. ...... l"llWIM' J.U I. C.rley Vb,.,... ............ .., n ..... r ... 11 .... TH-.•• A. M.,,a.1-. """"*" ...... J.,•111• P:. C.lh.. P1•I Niu•~ .._......... ....., .. i. '"' lfltw o~ ---:1211 w ... l•lkt ... , .... ,. MsW .. ...,...., P.O. 1ert IU. tl,11 --om Mllllt • Wwt .., ..,.. u.. lelctl; m ~ ... _ """"'911111 ~; .. "" -- bllA.'I" "'"°'• ......... ---.. ti•• ........ llWM .... ..., .... ... ... -....... ., ....... ..... ........... c. .. --. ..... ....... 9Mdi .... ,....... VI_,, ........ • .............. ~ "'-,____ c:..,........,. ........... 91, ... ....... ..._. ....... . _ .......... c. ..... . T 91:· 1 1n4) MMll1 Chi ............. ,. ~ tw, OrWltl ~ ........ ~ ... -................ , .. ...... -""' .,, ..... .... ... • •• Ii ........... d • .,,... ...... ...,.. ....... . _, ..... _...,,.. ............ .... ... C.. -._ Ql"'"'ll. 11 l I S If ... ..,., II,. ~IYI "' -II ISM ~I ,...,, -··"-11.n _....,, •. .. Mtrrlct;1 nprtMntaUva.' tk'. Gleno Webb, ol Laor·Beacb. and Adminiltrailon aid" meetinc in Jl'lortdL Bebe Rebozo, NiJon's pal, bu even been menttooed u a negotiator. Dr. Webb aaid he felt the presidential lntutst lA the site was real indeed. He ml!flt.iooed a flCW'e of something under • ba!!·mlllion clollan. · Jliln.T-OI FEATUllE SjloculaUon on. thi• .. pect had danced abciiit a bJt Jn news columns and televtalon repona. Webb Aid .be felt tho woekond would tum up ••50meone to talk autborltaUvely 0. bebaU of tho pre~dency, • about tho trauaction. If the President buy1, televlBlon featurist Ralph Storty will have ... n almost built-in feature . Storey featured the dellcious old structure on his 11how following a DAD..Y PILOT story cwhlch piloted the way In J966. Built by eccentric millionaire Walter Pyne, starling in 1929. there \\'BS once little in California that could hold a candle to the massive Swiss Cha let·lype structure. It has a ballroom on the third floor, an Olympic sile swimming paol now lilied with dirt, guest Moues, an old goat barn, a furnace room lite a lhip's b o 11 e r room, uodergrciund passages, spaciOlll grounds with statuary and In· lrigu.ing alcoves and cubbyholel: where a pr<sidenUal grandcbJ!d m\lht spend deligbtfu1 hours' The wood ~ ii Honduru mlhogany and bird wood Dooring on top of reinforced concrete. It ls aald there Us still not a squeak in the estate. Now UNd u , an apartment house, the structure bu two masalve lcltcbena that could feed tbe muiUllid". II Prelideot Nixon really hu fallen undtr the Caitle11 myltlque he would be the latelt Jn a serJes of owners that have rancfd from a churcb to a group ol local lnvutor1. * * Freta P .. e J NIXON ••• an oiler to purdiaa the ramblinl Pyne Cutlo mansion at 770 IDDcr..t Drive. Laguna -. allO pined lllOIDelllu!D with tbe lmpoadiq 0rlllge Cout vtalL ·-n..,11 .• -U.uing lnteral In tbe CMtla :m · tbe port ol tbe Praaldent l1nce Jut January," AJd • spobmnan fer ...m.r Tbomu A. Mmlct, hinting a poulble aoaottatlon. . NIXON FAIJCINATl!:ll The Praaldent baa heen !uclnalod with the M-room mansion on a cUH OVl!'l'look- ing a !SO<lqroe Padllc panorama !0< years and .ii known to be aeekinc a Soothland ..-. Built oo a n,._. plot with a parting lot large aough fer a pruidenilal heliport, Pyne ea.ti• hu boen appral!<d at $750,000, but the: 37-year-old structlU'e may llO('br!Jig that ·mac1i. ' Merrlct IWmeJ! hu indioated bo will gt< more . pmtlge th.on profit H he sells the Swiss-Bavarian mansion built by oCooitrlc bachelor oil millionaire Walter Pyne. The structure hu Z1 bathrooma and lS now rtnt'ed out u U apartmenti, but could ea.ily he alt.red to house mOll ol a pmidential guest party. First on the President'• itinerary after arrival Friday Us a tour of oil-llalned beaches at Santa Barbara. after which he and the first lady will enplane lor his nalive Orange Cowlty. NO OTHER PLANS EarUer announcements or the presidtn- tial visit included San Diego and the city's 200th anniversary celebration, but no mentipn w~ made ol that end of the coastline today. · President and ll'.rs. Ni.Jon Will visit Mission San Jutn C.pilltrln6 Saturday, two U,.. after lbe celebrated return · ol the swallows on St,..Joseph's Day. "He enjoys visiting the mlulon · and wants to 10 Ibero,• lald Preu Secretary Ziegler. Heavy security meal\ftl wtll be m- !or<ed on the grounda of the Henry Hamilton Cotton Wte 1D San Clemr.nte during the two.day presidential visit. 'l11e Cotton e.state borde111 the Oranp. San Diego county linet and Is •ell known to IUJ'fmg society for The Trestles beach and Cotton's Point. Following an1val at El Toro MCAS, the Prtsiden"9rill go--by yet-unannoun~ ed trall!porWioo-direcUy to &he CoUon Esta It. Some , 1peculator1 believe Mrs. Nixon hemll may bo flown by helicopter to look over the Pyne Castle property, actually dllcussed u a presidential rdldence by teveraJ FI or Id a -Tbe owner, Murlct, and bis real estate agen~ bowevor, Aid the unldentllled eiec::atlves make no prttenJI! of actually repnoentlnc tho President him"11, of. flclallJ or unolflctelly. MDII ol the Nixon entourage will be hooted In tbe San Clemente Inn durln& the vial~ 01111 tho !Int ol lleVUai ... tlcif"led thll year, 1ccordlq to the White Houae. PrH!denl llhon win vlait former l'r<IJ. dent HllT7 S. Tnunan In lndepeodtnct, N.o., on tho lint leg ol the fl\lbt , wbll• he talked Wedneadly with allln& former Preeldoot Elaenhower., Nixon aald tbe oi~ ooldier 11 In tnod 1plrltl, aitbouab """1ned to Walter Reed Army Ho<pltel In Wublngton. --~--------c--------------.,.--~-~-c7~~------------ DAIL T ,ILOT lt9fll """' WILL R~BLING, 64-ROOM PYNE CASTLE IN LAGUNA BECOME WHITE HOUSE WEST? • Al Pr .. ldent Nixon Head• for Orange County, Speculation on Purchase lntenstfln Deputy DA Tells Bribe - Attempt in Rape Caie Students to Get Free Luncli for Deaning Beach SA Heights ··Again ;\sks • To Join City By JOHN VALTERZA Of fM DlllY ,. ... Stilt Property owners in 1 Santa Ana Helll>t> area wl>ich he<arne the local point ol a !utile and bitter annexation fight last April are asking !Cl< I second chance to become a part ol Newport Beach. In' I petition to the Newport City Council, Mn. Peter.Andrews, repreent· Ing the Peguus Property 0Wr>e111' A>· ooclatlon, today asked that tha city reca:nmeod again Ebat the county area near Orange Cowlty Airport be IMHed I@ Newport. . 'Last April the county's I;ocal Agency Foi'ioati<n Comm!.lsion, which acts on ~Uon bids, turned down the re- queot. \ Mn. ~submitted "token npre· Hntation" ~lions from about 25 neigh-' bon along wlt!f .a !elter. Sbe asked the council to add the', signatures to 126 olreody· on file frOO! the lut annexation attempt. Last sprtng's annexation fight was marked by bitter exchanges between officials from Costa Mesa and Newport over which city could pro'\'ide best for the residents ol. the area, still county t<nitory. Mn. Peten aald this morning that her group ha contacted many nelgbbors who oppolOd annexation during the 11.!1 aUompts. t.t "Many cl them have aaid their oppo- sition. bal BOltened," she said. "Some have aaid that if rumors about Co.ta Mesa wanttag to annei: us are true that they · wtltl1d take Newport Beach over Coeta Meta." Costa Mesa last year filed a partially oVt!!riapping annexatlon bid for the aame """· The controveny between the two Charles John Trautwein's alleged v1e-the charges after she waa: paid $1,500 Some 150 JUgh IChool studenb who citlea centered on charges by Coeta Mesa Um was offered bribes which included and that another alleged victim "had will be dolng their community • good that police, fire and parks services a cash offer of flO,OOO and a round . her bills paid for her." tum by cleaning up beach debris Satur· would not be adequate if lhe area be- Mozley 11ald be played the recorded day will be treated to a free lunch, Ken came part of Newport. Ule world trip via telephone calla inade tape before the then defense counsel Lewis of the Newport-Mesa Unified 1be area in question, totaling about while be wu awaiting arraignment on Marshall Schulman and a John OaUey School 131 acres, is bordered roughly by Mesa attempted rape charges, a deputy dUtrid to whom Miss Scott bad related the System, said today. Drive, Red Hill, Palisades Roed and sub5tance of the Wegal approaches. "Food certi.t!.catee: have been donated Camp.n Drive. attorney testlfled today. by Lewis Simon, resident m•ruurer of 'Ibe bn.-:us lor the competition be- ! · w J M z1 aid s Tbe investigator further testified that __, t""" nvestigator . ay o ey s an-the angry Schulman and Oatley went McDooald's Hamburgef3 and free movie tween the two cities is the 223-acre !or- 4ra Scott, the former Miu Newport to the home of Paul Trautwein, the tickets inay alao be distnl>uted," he mer McDonnell-Douglas property, part Be. ach whole complaint led to the arrest •1..--of which lies In the area involved in the YOUilier Trautwe.ln's millionaire fawca, added. anneutioin dispute. of Trntwel.1t was asked by bis office that evening and lndlcated that it was 'lbe ctty of Newport Beach will have Whichever city· received the parcel to record the·phone calls on tape. very likely that the CODlltruclion magnate supel'Vi!ors at the seven locations con-would also l'!Ceive a ta~ windfall if the -MozJey said his office's aperienct of would be arrmed. sidered too dlff"JCU!t for city machines Industrial acreage is ever developed. ,.earlier shDuar contacts" which took l\fozley allO testified" that Trautwein's The latest armexat'ion request will be ~ , wife, Helen, bad "approached" Miss to clean. set for review by the planning commis- place during, previous charges of rape ScoU while the Newport school teacher Hundreds of volunteer students wbo sion. againat the Huntington Beach man led was In charge of swimming clmes. worked a month ago cluning up the If the planners wish, the matter then him ·to expeCt that lhe. would be the He did not elaborate on what took place beache1 uved the city several thousands can come up for staff study and a during that meeting. of dollars. recommendation to the city council. target for such offen. t-;=~s;:==~=============:::::::::::::::::::::;=============:;-While 'Miu Scott wu not actually I usault~. authorlUta noted, Trautwein ~,.. originally charged with attempted rape by rorc,, attempted rape by threat, Ullault with intent to commit rape and ~urglary, . : At one pol~ Trautwein pleaded guilty to ....Wt :with intent Ii<> commit npe. Other chartes were dropped. Jn his latest court ac\jon, he is attempUng to wipe o\lt tbe guilty plea. · And Moiley· tesUfied during the fifth day of a Superior Court hearing into Trautweln's bid to change his earlier plea Of guilty that MW SCott was ap- pi-oached by a "Air. Col:" and a "1.trs. Fricks" , ·Who made the offers via telephone calls. Mozley said Mist ~tt was told during several calls thaf she should take a paid trtp to Hawaii piUI 15,000, an oiler wJUch wu subsequenUy escalated to $10,000. He said 'Miss Scott was told by her caller in response to a que!tlon that she would simply be going to HawaU to "count surfboards". Mozley told defense counsel Sam Hurwitz that earner alleged rape victims of Trautwein had been the targets of slm{lar offers. He said that a girl who rued a complaint in 1956 did not pursue Jlroni Page l LIBRARY •.. U}tJr ne.arHt libr.IJ')', regardless of wJUch ' city they Uve ln. "In addlti<n to tha~ It will gruUy enrich our Utrary resources and ooitral si!oragt." And It could a!IO, she noted, lncreue conaklerably the nlDtlber of users or Newport's three public libraries. Mrs. Sheeley now has 2 S , O O 0 "customers" in her files. ."For a city of 43,000,".Bhe said, "that's · extraordinary." She sald on a clty-wlde average, 10 books per person are ttad every year in Newport. More than '30,000 boob were dlecked oot last year. Despite the oxpected, but ., yet unknown, Increase In the number of out-or-town users of Newport library fadlltlu, Mn. Sbedey foreseo no need to ralle the Utitary'1 share of the clty tax rate. The principal ,....., she &aid, Is that there will a1lo be an tncrtase in available libr'IJ'y materials. "We •111 probably add 0011 one more assistant litnrlan next yor," ahe sakl. •·And 1 don't believe one mort salaly wlll require a tax IUke." Moon Test Conducted CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -Apo)lo ti blctup estronluts James Lovell an4 Fred Halse today rtpe:ated an important vacuwn chamber test of the tpaoecrlft 1eheduled to land men on the moon In July. ' I a nylon shag that's young • In looks, young • In price! $8.95 sq. yd v...,-1nd..lp- • mtlqm foar-color .ir«t , .... .-.._ loclWqu-. Aod- idm in terlmw-ric:JI. """"" .... that --your own hiih spirit.. Jmqine ririnJ )'Ua1' familJ th• tradition and quali17 of Karaatb for 1-lf the price yw micht up.ct to pa';. 1n ta eo1or CIOIZlhiutiom. Y °"r fowrlt< d<rigft<r IDiU bt lt4J>P11 to °'rist Wo1< • • • H.J.GARRE[f fURNflYRE °"9-. ..... N. .... ,. r • ,I Dll KAIQ ll'lll. ~STA MBA, CAUF • -71 '4M171 1· ----- • • ED .ITl'ON YOL. 62, NO. 68, 4 SECTIONS, ~· .PAGES Spring Arrive1 On the Button Spring began at 11:08 a.m. -not one minute sooner or Jal-er -today. At that moment (Pacific Standard Tune) the center or the sun moved across the celestial equator rrom the south to the north, marking the vernal equinox (also known as the point or Aries in the Northern Hemisphere) when day and night, in all parts of the world, are equal If you can't remember all that, pm remember that spring lasts for three niontbs. Can rumma be far behind? Beatle Lennon . Weds Japanese Girl in Gibraltar GIBRALTAR (UPI) -Beatie John Lennon and his Japanese girl friend, Yoko Ono, both wearing white hats and sneakers, were married Thursday in a surprise civil ceremony. "We chose Gibraltar because It is quiet. British and friendJy,'' Lennon told newsmen. It was the second BeaUe marriage In a week. Paul McCartoty, me of the JOng-wrlling Beatles, mar rte d American socialite Linda Eastman ta· J London last week. ' Lennon, 28, and Miss Ono, 34, have betn going together for several months. During U>c courl.ship, they posed together for a nude photograph which appeared on ~ cover of a London mai!;a~. Jt W3' Lennon'~ second marriage. and the third for ~.1iss Ono. The couple tried to keep the marriage a secret. flying into Glbral~r from Paris In a private jet at 8 a.m. this morning. 'Ibey were married at the Gibraltar Registry "Office wilb a special $1 L.28 license. and new back to Parts almost Immediately, arriving In the Fr<n<:h capital at 10:45 a.m. Z: •IJnhook' \ . -- SPRING IS FOR WADING And for Roflocting S~k Markets NEW YORK ·(AP) -1be Block martet closed with a good gain :l'buncay. Tradin&' near lhe close wu moderately acllve. (S<e quolallom, P ..... f>.41). Yonths Who can °unbook" your li:ld ~11 - drup alreadJ rule hll l~e!' It .UU !Jn' the ml of the roid, 'ad- vises AllAxl Blakeslee; nallonally noted autbc.-of. the "Druas l•" artlcla appearing -In Iha DAILY Pll.()'I'. • AuthoriUes quoted in today's article eiplaln the hypoc~sy i.. d.Q''• youth see in their parenb' use cl alcolJol, tGbac:<o and ltln- qllillun while pulling down the u.. of marijuana and other mind benders. 11 11 t\'el' too lttt to dole the Jl'l!UaUon •pp! see Pqe .. ,_ • ' TEN CENTS Nixon: Bllsy Visit Ahead Wat Parley, Castle Talks, Misswn 'fr~p on Agenda By ARTllVll IL VlNB!:L . ............... ... Vktolm war tllb, arvillt lo a peaceful . ....... and ohoppmc !Gr ................ -J¥hlle JjOUle ID ~·Beach tr.. <11 the qenda u Pmidel!l lllm! arrives ID Orange County Friday. Air Fon:e' One will roar in OYU the Paciljc Coast mountalna and down the · aerial alleyi to Point Musu for touchdown at 2:10 p.m.; and a swift coas'tal tour of maj,.. proporii005. Tank Force Drives Over • Red Bunkers From Wire Sertvcu .-SAIGON -Troops ol the 7th North Vietnamese Divis.Ion began retreating to the north today under pressure from allied troops and a U.S. tank force that smashed its way into a Communist bunker complex 43 miles northwest of Saigon, U.S. intelligence sources reported. The U.S. Command announced today that 351 Americans wen killed in action in Vletriam Jut week. puJhing the total of U.S. baUlelield dead to 10,112 in the 10 monthl since the Paris ~ peace Wl<s began and to 33,* In -· than eight yean of war. 'The .American ton 1ut week wp 1$ . more lhlll Ibo ,....i-week's· tot.I and ralHd II>! nwnl)lr pf -... k111ed ID lbl' l!nt ~ ,,_ ti Ibo Vlei Cone'• IJlilll olfeilliq to l,ut, only 240 leu u.,a Gie-1)11 u,s~ hooJll reported killed clariiiC the elJbl · w .. t.s of 11111 prior to tbo illleM!ve. Men ol the U.f!. Isl Air cavalry DlviJ!on mo.ed lnlo bloctlng poslli4ns ob the northern lril(e of the old Mlche!ln rubber plantaUon to try to trap the foree which bad posed a major threat to Saigon. Front reports said the drive Into the b u n k er complex· buried an unknown nmnber of North Vle&wnese soldiers alive in their underground forUflcations. • Communl>t rocket fire bit three cl the laitb ID the day ol hta'Y flghlln(. Rellsf-by the 7lh DM1!on had llilleoed lharplJ 1111111. ~ l!Wlf•• allied drive bqan lordnf the Commlllllm back. 1bat ·and a ~led attack on vm..., forming Da Nana'• 11C1Uthern f1ant hid been Men u an indication lntenlHICltioD. d.; t b e Communists' win~ olfemlve WU lnlenllfying. UPI comspondenl Nat Glbooo. with the allied fo=ii ID the jungled Michelin rubber plantation northwest of Saigon, said the tanks which had rumbled in to the telCUe of a trapped American infantry unit crushed the Communist bunkm with their mass. "We'll never find all the bodies," 1st Ll Howard Harmleu, 24, of Greencastle, Jnd., said of the t a n k tacUcs. "The tanks buried them in the ~unkers." Harmless is commander ol the rifie platoon which had been tripped. The Americans found the bodies of seven North Vietnamese IOldlen: around the smubed bunl;en, American cuualfies were listed u two killed and H wounded. 'Ibe new tbelllnp brought to more than J,GOO the number cl mllllarf. baees and loWJJI bit by the Commpnlstl since the Red offensive be&an nearty four weeb qo. · 1be Cammwllst offensive in the. Da Nang .,.. flared up again to"""t and Red gunners lobbed eight rounds of J2 millbneler mortar fire Into the U.S. 1st Marine Dlvialon hel.dquarters and three roundl lnto the Marine air stalibn al Marble Moanllln near Da Nang. Arraignment &t Friday for Son Of Clemente· Chief Ste-Murray, n.yoar-old *"' ol Sin Cl-Pollco Chlel Clllford Murray, 11 ldlOdii1eeJ I« ~ ID Santa Ana P'ridlJ before 8uoerlor Oourt Judge Robert Gardner on five ccunts of oar· ·cotlcl vlolatlonl. Youni Murray ii the teeoad ~&M: en the l:IO a.,.; court calendar. U. was armted Feb. 2 In the drivewaJ cl the family home, Zl5 La Esparama, San Clemente by state and locll narcotics olflc:en. Oiaraa are -Ion ol heroin, P"" -of heroin with lnlenl to Mil, pol' -1on cl marijuana, -Ion ol mlJi. jualla with Intent to sell and transporting marijuana. Aeenta claim to have Hi.Md llOO wnrih of !ftlrlilllll& (II poundl) and $10 woc:Jll of heroin. lbe President and his wife will make their htadquarten M· the sprawllna H . H: CoUoo estate tn San Clemente, Pst of lhe daughter of ' mlJllooair. lritnct ol the lite Pr"8ld"'11 FrlDklin D. Roosevelt. Mrs. Liar.cl E. Ogden, «San Clemente, has arrar.ged for the Nlxons to spend l\\lo nights on t h e estate bordering the Camp Pendleton Marlne Corps base, ~where Vietnam war talks will be held. .. ; r . . Ellsworth Bunktr, U .s, am' s ,, n D t. · Vietnam, is dQ:e tO arrtve Sabrday, aloni with Gen. Andmr J, Goodputer, . ~ deputy commander of U.S. ff'll'Ctl iii. the war zone. Wb11o House Prus Secretary llonlld Ziegler said the Sunday COll!wePct - continuing on the ruot b • c k to Washington -should nol be Interpreted aa a major policy discuaJion, but other lop aides will alao be predellt. Chiropractor'• Aide Woman Arrested • On Prostitution A two-month lnvestlaaUon was cllmai- ed Wednesday with the arrest of a CoJta Mesa ehlrorractor's aide whose feminine pnysica therapy allegedly CHART Hears Newport-Mesa Unity Plea A sln>ng pf ea for lnter-cll!'·wiil!' wu delivered to CosUI M ... CHART .today by John Macnfb, Newport Beadl· civic leader and chairman of Newport Tomor- row. "The goals and objectives of our two cities should be and u!Uamtely will be ab30Jutely common," Macnab declared. After Macnab explained lo CHART members the workings of Newport To- morrow's study or goals and objectives for Newport Beach, the discussi9fl turn- ed largely to the question of Orance County Airport and the divergent J>Oli· lions the cities of Costa Mesa and New- port Beach have taken on tbe proposal for major air service from Orange Coon· ty to the Pacific Northwest. SEES WILDERNESS MaCl)llb. pasl pmldenl ol the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce, said the opposition to the new routes by the New- port Harbor Chamber was "Mt based on the idea of trying to set the clock back nor decreasing the volume of traf- fic at Orange County Alrptrt." · '"But." he said, -"If Increasing use of Jong range jets out of Orange County Airport is not stopped, we will have a wlldnerness in Newport Beach and in parts of Casta f\1esa." Macnab, also a past president of the Newport. Harbor-O>Sta Mesa Board of Realtors, declared that the airport ls not the lr.ey to attracting industry to this area that people sometimes think It 11. "Industry b attracted here by the ~ living available for employes and com- pany officials," Macnab said. "And if noise and pollution from the airport de-, stroy desirable Jiving conditions, lndu8try will be driven away." "We can !ill up all of our available Industrial space in this area in the next few yeal"'!I withoot expamlon of the air· port," l\1acnab said. NEEDS AIR ROUTES Jack Hammett, president of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce, said that the Costa Mesa Chamber does not .favor expansion of Orange County Airport but does feel that Orange County should have the air routes to the PaclflC Northwest. "What we really want ii relocatkln of the Orange County Airport to El Jforoi'' Hmunelt said. "Slrooi efforts Jo -lntenll tho ~e County. conil'essmen In the airport prob- lem Mtt being mada. "· Hammett Wd,. "U Newport and Costa .Mela can got loo gether on this, J think we can win lhe battle," Hammett saJd. Asked H he favur<d IJ!llficatloa ol the· two cit~, Macnab em~ that he was speaking as a private citlun on this pbibt and declared. "(. fetl vtr:Y strongly lHat our two cities" should""be one -It ii almost crimlnaJ • that 1'e aren't one-city." Macnab ·said he fell there could be great savlng;.i to the over-bunlened tu· payer in unification of police and ore protection and other munlclpsl ,.rvle<S. Envoy Meets Thieu surpaued bcMmdt of the law. Martha "Marcil" Murt!I, 18, Cl 11112 E. Cottonwood St, Fountain Valley, wa. booked on suapiclon of aoll.c•Uri.1 fQr . acts cl • prosUtuUon · at IA alltged $i to l2t fee JCbedule, invullpio,1 lllld. · Cocta Me11 Police Sil Jack 'Calnorl, of the •!co· and lntelll1enc:e delli~ lllld six lnvestlp&on worktd ori the UM tnvolvln(-M!lf Korlm ·Ud-up 'te \'!I> --\: . er.,. C-ty Dillzlct~'I .. ,_lpllr'<lllOa Gi,r ~ \l!f~ ~·zm: rl}.;lheus "· i.: 51, Caota):I ... __ ... . . . ~. C\llDon ""'1' today . 11\JI M ·II inv..u,aliDr the pOoolhlllly that ti• tiOOI of city ordlw>ca <flt ~.'Ill~ BUJin.,. ·and P):ol.U!om Code lDl1 alto be enforced in the tue: He said a complaint ...wd · probably . be issued today, formally ,cbarglq Miss Merrill, who po1ted ball >Iler 1111111 booked locally and trW!erred to Oringe County Jall loDoWlng ber arroot Jnvatlpton aid Iha alleCed .plaJ4ar- pay pme lnvolvod i.itlil .,!call by bualnns wd and ..._i · oller• · ol non-ad....u.ed pbylloal tllaj>)'•to paying customen- Tbt llieied Ylolatlilnl. ~..i-tn .. adjacenl prOla.l!oDll' ....... ~ from the cl!lroprad«'1 m ofll<o quarters, accordini "to s~ Calnon. Cotinty Sheriff Makes Security Plans for Nixon . Socurlly m""""" to IUl'lf l'nlldenl. Nixon ...,.. bellll dllcmmd today between ·the U.S, s.cr. 5lnlce and the Orange County Sbsiff'I OllJce. • "I' don't tnow" aftythlnc fo ·tell you," said Capt; J11DN Bniedbdt.' '1We haven't finished our clllculllolll witli the Sicrtt Serv:iCe men." · · . Capl. Broadbelt l&id·tbt f~al aecuri· ty men contacled the aberifrs. oll.!co earlier· in the-week about the impending preoidenlial visit. Lawmen throughout Oranae County have been called in to map procedures to 11Jard President Nlzon, w h o 1 e Wnerary lnclUdel )"11' talks and .no! -.....,.,.,... Capl. JlnlodbeK loid he c:ould Gller no _.,,.!lino Of wlddl .lllt plans """Id be --and --.i -~ 'Sailor' Bandit . ' . Ge.IS '$183 llaUI . A baodll dmled fn, the gar\ ol a sailor held ·UP the clef~ cl the North Main. Beverap Ston, 2111 N. Main Ill,· Santa Ana, W~ nlcM an<I IOI tWlf with $1U •. Portet lllld the robber, wlio wu .. ..,.. Ing a l"'1' knll lld cap, a-ihnt'quorter length Nny psa .0.1 and btll' bottoii*I, tn>uHn, ......,.. the llquor-' ll<n wlillt ........ alllom<n...,.. pnMnL Be walled UDtil they Jlad !di ~. SAIGoN (AP) -Wllllam H. SVJllvan, t11cn limulalod --ol a - U.S. ambanador to LIOI, conlemd> loo and demanded ---Pao! day with l"!sidenl NIUY'O Van Tbltu . I. O:vorldi of PIAcealla. Alter ....... and OthfJ' IOVtm-1 leaden belort tha Cllb ,..w.r. fllndl -Q:v.,ich. leaving for the Unlled Stalel. the bandit flld Gii loot. 1ravellng from Wuhlngt<n with \be Nlloa psrty will be Secretary ol state William P. Jqers and Dr. Henry A. KiloiJ>ler, the praidential advl!er on national leCUrity. 'Ille......, wiD bO tbe lint face-to-face ~ bolween !lilon and the..,. buladcr, who liaa been In Vietnam f,.. the put year, White House al<les noted. Cootinu.ing hints that Nixon ma7 make (lee NIXON, Pip I) .* * * Schedule Told For Nixon's Coast Visit Here II the tentative IChedula for · President and Mrr. N11on for-hla Oranae Coast visit u announced by prell aide : Ron Ziqler ID W.,illngton: FRIDAY 1:5t a.m. (PST): Depart Kansas City Municipal Airport aboard Air Force One : for Pl. Muaµ Naval Air Stat.ion near · SanUl-Bar)>ara. . t:lt ,.m.: Arrive Pt. Mugu. Depart by bellcoPter to lmpect oil on beaches • In Santa Barbara vicinity. & ·p:.:; Deport Pt. Mugu aboard Alr r-tlr\e Jor El Toro Marine Corps. Air......,. fill p.in.1 "'11"• El Tero MCAS.: ~ by ~ 1"'11< of· ~r B. B. ~· Jllata: I ,..,,, ~ and nlgtrt II tho Ogdeil l!om< • Collon Estate. ,.. , 1 .llATURDAY 11 ...,_, ~ Coiton Ealate for testlittlea at Mlaion San J u a a Capiltnno. N•i. PONiblt luncheon party at CaiiUb1no. ' . . 1 p.m-: Ul.ve San Juan Capistrano fOr rettim to San Clemente. Saturday at1 .. t: Nixon party remair'ts at San Clemente. U.S. ambassador to South Vietnam Ellsworth B\Ul.ker arrives El Toro MCAS for round of talts with Nuon. * * * El . Toro Mapping .Procedures for · Nixon's Visit A conference oi hlgJI' officers at El Toro MCAS was in progress today, ma~ 1 ping. ouf ~urea: for Uie arrival and transpoitatlon ·of Prosiile!lt Nixon, bul still uncertain aboot IL · Despite an announced travel iUnerary by the · White House, a spotesnan let the -biformatlon office lllld llbortly bef<n noon thal the vialt Is nol yel c:onflnnecL ''U be ..... arrive, ... 'If -In pl<nt, of !lino to IJ8t< ti J>l'Oll .. you men c:an 11'1 «II ""-and be ao- crtdled, ',' Aki a Marine C a r p 1 spokesman. 04Bul accardlr:c to us, It ian't certain be will,'" he ldded. lnlormaUon Servic< Officer M a I . Robert Booher .wu in • the length~ meeting on the likely presidential arrival and final word wa1 eX]Secled to come from him. :-........ l Cou& Weader Doa'Llook UJi.""l'• bol·thm'1.a 10 pemnt c:hance of nln Clilbl rain, that II) cn l'!ldl1· Temper., tlhwlat, tt11 bt .. don to • ...... the Orlnge Cool!. .. INSmE TODAY Tlt.e Mtton'• railrocds ar1 takiRa unpr«tdntfd aecurity pre~uttonr aga{ni& threakfled '®dloll• of 1n11 .. carTVfng VI<• nam "''" ...Uriel l'oll• 11. ....... t1 ...... 11 ~ ,. ...... . a.re... # ........... * ~ ..., ............. ... c.Mt a ._ Cilfllltr II a..wf .. • • .,,... ....,. 41 ._ ...... n ..... -...;,. .. -II._. n.tt ....,. "'"' • Dr.truru• • -... _ ---·- .... _.... *41 --. " -. .. -. , ........ " ·--.. . l ' c Can President • • :;Find H;ippines~. 1 .. ' In Pyne · Castle?· Can a new President and an old cutle find happlneu together in Laguna Beach? R<porta that Pr"ld'"I Nixon might have a boyhood infatuation with Pyne Castle, the Art Colony's historic, 64-room hillsid< fortreu. persisted today. But ao dld reports of inte~sl in other aites far a 11UDUDer White House somewhere south of Loa Angelu -at north ol San Yaidro. How about Monarch Bay? Or the utale tie's to use at San Clemeate, or San Diego County -aay La Jolla ot LQn Smith'• five acre tstlte near Emerald Bay or Corona del Mar? Second-guesaing Pruident Nlson'1 real estate prelerencea seemed the moat popular •port along the Oran&e Coul today. . STAYING WEEKEND I ~ '111onw Merrick, owner of Pyne ea .. tle, 770 Hillcrest Drive, aald he will be staying borne this weekend oo the possibility that the Pru.I.dent, his wife, « a RpreaentaUvt ma1 villt. llmiek said that the Nixon repttW!o tatives vtewed and dilcusled the cutle twice in January. Since tbeDt negoUatlODI are aid to have been canied on by Doctor Concedes Sirhan Needed Some Planning LOS ANGELES (UP!) A peydlologlsl conceded lodoy Illa! Sirhan B. Slrltan bad lo ~o a coaolderable amount d. plannlna and premedUaUon lo carry oul the alaJ!nl of Seo. Robert F. Kennedy. Dr. o. -Ill~ lold the miirder trial Jury Illa! In a poJChollc lllale Slrllan wh eepable of deeldlng Upon the pet80l1 he WU g.U,. lo kill, getilng a weapon, pracUclng at a range, going lo the Ambusador H"'1 and flrln& the gun at Kennedy's bead. Richardson lnlisted, however, that It waa not the aame type cl dellberatlon, premeditation and calculatlon that would have marked the act of a ~alled normal pmon -mlgbl attempt an ......m.tlon. "It is slmllar to the type d thlnting Iha! a menial patient mJgbt naa when he lteals a key from a nurae on her rounds eo he can make a bru:t later m," Richardsoo said. June Allyson Asks Divorce Actle.u June Ally1an moved 11lursday to end her troubled second manilge to Newport Beach barber Glenn Muwell. The widow of aclor-prod11«r Dk:k Powell charged her oeeond hutband with .. crud ahd inhuman treatment" in a complalnl much ·11ke the peUllon ehe filed in the same court on May 25, 1967 -a suit that wa.s followed almost immediately by the couple's recon- c1UaUon. Ml!ll Allyson, 46, of Lido Ille, first married Maxwell oo Oct. 12, 1913. A year later she remarried Mowell in a aumptuoua Las Vegas ceremcny. Mias Allyaon's divorce filing of May, 1967 was not pun:ued when the couple apparenUy resolved thelr dlffereneu. But Thursday's filing is almost word for word a repeat of the peUUoo that the wJtry.volced 1tar recorded two yw1 ago. 11/\ll' l'llllf Cl.AMI Cc.uT PU•LllHI,._ COMP'AHY lelNrt H. w.M "-................... Jtcli l. 0.,1.., Vlw P'rM'°"'1 -' G9oltr .. ~- Thttr1•• Ktt'f'il 1•w Tlit111t1 A. M11r,t.T111t ,,__.."" ltllw Pt11I Nlu•111 ..._1i-.o.,_. c..--3JO W•tt 1.., Street M•Tll"t M4r•ttt P.O .... 1160, tl&2& --........... r mtw.t ..... ._....,. ~.....,_=m......,,._ ~IMd\1 ••--- I. ... Merrick's n~ntaU•u, Dr. Glenn Webb, of Loeg Biach, and AdmlnlJflaUon aides meeting in Florida. Bebe Rebozo, NiJon'1 pal, hu even been mentioned as a negotiator, Or. Webb said he felt the presldenti1t interest in the site wu re.al lndffd. He mentioned a figure of something '"""' a half·mllllon dollarL BVILT·IN FEATUflE SpetjllaUon on lhb aaped had danc!d abOut ··a bit In· news cotumna and t<levlllon rep<rlo. Webb said.he fell the weekend would tum up 1'~eone to tall: authoritatively on behalf of the preaklency," aboot the transaction. U the President buy1, television featurlat Ralph Storey will have an almost~.bullt-in feature. Storty featurtd the deucloua old slructure on hla 11how following a DAILY PILOT etory whiclt piloted the way in 1996. Built by eccel'ltric millionaire Walter Pyne, starting in 1929, there was ~ little in California that could hold a candle to the mas,ive Swiss Chalet-type structure. It hu a ballroom on the third Door. an Olympic aiu 1wimming pool now filled with dlrl. guest boom, an old goat barn, a furnace room Dke a ship's b o 11 er room, undtrgroUrfd -paMagd, spaciou.11 ground! with statuary and in- triguing alcoves and cubbybolea where a presidential graadcblld might spend delighUul bean. · . The wood ~t is Honduras mahogany and bald Wood flooring cin top of rein.forced concrete. It Is aaid there it still not a equeak in the estate. Now used .u "ID apqµnent house, the atruclllre baa two lllllalvo lcllchan! lllal could feed the mu!Utodea. U Pruldelll ljlxon ,...lly ha! fallen under the .eutJe'1 mystique he would be the latest ln' a IU'iU of ownen that hive ranpd from a cburcb to a ll'OUP of local tnve1tor1. Froaq ·Pqe 1 NIXON •.. . an offer \o ~ the ramblln& Pyne c..tl> ll)Ofllion el 770 Hillcrest. Dr! e. Laguna Beach, a1so gained minnentum with.the bnpendln~10tanae Coast vl!lt; "Thirt Is a CllUlllulllg lnl<rul In tho caat1e GO tho parl of the Prealdent ll1nce lut January, .. aaid a spokesman fer owner Tboma1 A. Merrick, biotin& a posalble negotiallnn. NIXON FA8CINATED The l'relldenl baa boon fuelnated with the M-room mansion en a cliff overlook· ina: a JJO.dqrel Padfic panorama for years and ii tnown to be 1eekin1 a Southlanc:f realdf.Dee. ~Built on a Ov,Hcre plot with a parking IOI Iuae enough for a prealdentlal heliport."""' Culle'bu been appraised al !750,000, bul the S7·year..id •b:uelure may no( bring that much. 1 Merric.t himself has indicated be will (el more pnstl&• , lllan profit U be Selis ti.i Swill-Bavarian llWllioli built l!y ec<:elllrlc bachelor oil· mllllona~• Waller Pyne. The atructure baa 22 bathrooms and is now rented out aa 12 apartments, bot eonld 'easily be altered lo hOUH moot ol a pmldenllal !!"est party. First on the Pruident a IUnerary after arrival Frlday is a tour c:I. olHtalned beachel at Santa Barbara, after wblch he and 'the ftrst lady will enplane for his nailv.e Orange County. NO OTHER PLANS Earlier announcements of the pres.iden· tial vJsit included San Diego and the city's 200th anniversary celebration; but no mention was made 0( that end of the coaatllne today. President and 1UL NJ.Jen w1D visit M..lssion. San. Juan CaPlstrano Saturday, two daya after the celebrated return of the swallows on SL Joaepb'i Day. "He eoJoY• mtllng the mtuioo ud wan ta to go thut," said Prus Secretary Zi•ater. Heavy security mulUl'U wlD be en· forctd on the ground11 of Uie Henry Hamllton Cotton estate In San Clemente during the two-day pre1ldenUal visit. The Cotton estate borders the oranie- San Diego cowity lines and 11 well known to surfing aociety for The Trutles beach and Cotton's Point. Following arrival at El Toro MCAS, the President will go--by yet-unann~ ed transportation--dlrectly to Ille Cotton Est.ate. Some speculators believe Mr1. Nixon herse.11 may be flown by helicopter to look over tbt PJH CuUt property. actually dlacusa:ed u a presldenUal residence by MVtral F J 0 r I d I businemoai. The owner, Merrick, and h!1 rtal estate agent, however, llid the unldtnUfled ueartivts make no prtltnle of actually representing the Prealdent hlmaelf, of· Uelally 0< unol!lclalb'. Moot ol the Nil<on entouraae will be hoosed in lhe San Clemente Inn durln1 the Visit, on1J the first of several an- tlclpated this year, according to the Wblt<Houi<. President Nixon Will vialt fonner PrtaJ. dent Hany S. Trumon In llldependMCa, !lo., on the flr1l leg of the filch~ while he talked WedMlday with ailing former President Elaenhowtr. Nil<on lald the old ooldler II In (OOd oplrlta, althoulh eonfin!d lo Walter Reod Anny Hospi\'l In Wuhlll(lon. .SA Heigpts . Again Asks ' . , To Join Cii~ DAILY Pit.OT ltetf '""' WILL RAMBLING, 64-ROOM PYNE CASTLE IN LAGUNA BECOMI! WHITE HOUSE WIST? As PMdent Nixon H11d1 for Oranee Ceunty, S,.culation on PurchaM lnten1lf1u Deputy DA Tells Bribe Attempt in Rape Case Charita Jolin TrautweJD'• alle&ed vie· tim wa1 offtted bribes which inc:luded a. cash offer of $10,000 and a round the world trip via telephone calll madt whUe he was awaiting arraignment on attempted rape charges, a deputy dhlrict attorney teatified today. lnveatlgator W. Jay Mozley said San· dra Scotty the former MW Newport Beach whose complaint led to the arrest of TtaUtwein, was ask~ ·by his offlce to record th~ phone calls on tape. Mozley Uld his office 's uperlence of ••earlle!'-alinllar contacts" which took place durint previous chargea: of rape agalnat the Huntington Beach man led • him to expect that she would be the target for suCh offers. While Mill Scott wa1 not actually assaulted. authorities noted. Trautwein was originally charged with attempted rape by force, attempted rape by threat, asaault wtth intent to commit rape and burglaty. At one point, Trautwein pleaded guilty to asslult wtth intent tO commit rape. Qther charges were dropped. Jn his latest court action,' he ls attempting to wlpe out the guilty 'pltJ!-. And Mozley testified during the fifth day of a superior Court bearing into Trautwtln's bid to change his earlier plea .of l)lllly that Mias Scot• WU ap- proached· by a "Mr. Cox" and a "Mn. Fricks'' who made \be offers via telepbcllt ca11J. Mcnley aald Miu Scott wu told during several can. that 1he should take a paid trip to Hawail plua $5,000, an offer which ·wu ..ub$equenUy escalated to $10,000. He aa1d Miss Scott was told by ber caller in response to a quesUoa that 1he would simply be going to Hawaii to ''ci:>un"t aurfboard1". Mozley told defense counsel Sam flurwlll that elfller alleged rape victims cf Trautwein had betn the targets of similar offers. H~ said that a glrl who filed a complaint tn ~956 did not pursue .Two Flee Jail; One Captured Gardtn Grove pellet captured one prison escapee Wtdn.eaday night but a MC'OOd got any. Sgt. James R!chard1 while on patrol uw Carl B1 Angenete, 21, of Butna Park and PauJ T. BUJ.Brd, 22, cf Riverside In the vicinJty of Chapman Avenut and West Street. When the officer pur1ued the pair, who had escaped from the state prison at Chino Tuesday, they ned but he causht up with Buurd. Ten police units and two police dogs wert called Into the aearcb for Anaeneta bot failed lo find him. Parents of Pueblo .Victim Blame LBJ NEW YORI( CUP!l -The parenla ol Fireman lie Duane Hocf&OI. who WU ktned by the North Korea!11 aboard the Pueblo, st1d Wednetday they blame former Pruklent Johnson and former Secretary ol Defense Robert McNamara for ttls dealh. Wrltln1 ln the current Wut1 of Ladlu' Jlome Journal, Ptfr. and Mn. Jt11e Hodges ol CrelW•ll, ()re., said Ibey bl1m- ed the Prttldtnt and defense secrttarr for "1tndlna the Putblo on lta mission, whatever tt wu, 1.od for fallin1 to do their belt to aet tbe cniw bact after the ship was captured." I tbe cbarJe1 after she was paid $1 ,IKIO and that another alleaed victim "had her bllll paid for her ." . Mailey aald be played the recorded tape before the then defense counsel Marshall Schulman and a John OaUey to whom Mias Scott had rtlated tbe :substance cf the illegal approaches. The investigator further testified that the angry Schulman and Oatley went to the home of Paul Trautv.'ein, the younger Trautwein'• millionaire father 1 that evening and lltdicated that it was ve11 likely that the construction magnate would be arrested. ~lozley also testified .that Trautwein 's l\'ile, Helen, bad 'approached" Miss Scott while the Newport school teacher wu In charge of IWimmlng cla-. Ht did not elaborate on what toQk place during that meellng. PROFBSl<lllAI. INllllOl DB- Students to Get Free Lunch for Oeaning Beach Some l!O hlgb achoo! students who will be doing their community a gond turn by cleaning up beach debris Salur· day will be treated to a free lunch, Ken Lewis of the Newporl·M.,. Unlli!d School S}'llem. said today. "Food certifie1;tm hive been donated by Lewis Simon, resident manager cf ?i.fcDonald's Hamburgers and free movie tickets may also be distributed," he added. 'Ille City of Newport Beach v.•ill have supervisors at the seven locations con· sidered too difficult for city machines to clean. Hundreds cf volunteer students who worbd a mcnth ago cleaning up the beaches saved the city several Ux>Uilnds of dollars. ·--·N.- By JOHN VALTERZA Of 11t11 DtllY 1"11tl Stiff Property owners in a Santa Ana Helgbll area which became the focal pcilnt of a futile and bitter annexation fi&ht Jut April are askin& for .a second chanct lo become a part of ~ewpcrt Beach. In a petition lo the Newport City Council, Mrs. Peter Andttwl, reprwent. Inc the "'""" Property Owners' }.Jo , ~llM, tod!y asked that the city ~-•ialo !bat the eounty .... llOlll\ Orange County Airport be amend to N"'1>0fl. Lui Aprl\ the county's Local ~ Formation C.ouunWion, which acts on ·aooeution ~;& .. turned down the . n.. quest. •, . Mrs. Andrewt submitted "token repre- sentatiOn" petitions .from about 25 oeigh- bcrs along with a Jetter. She asked the coun~ to f.dd the stgnaturts to IZ6 already on file from the-.Jast anne:ution attempt. Lut spring's 111Deution Jij;h( was marked by bitter exchanges between officials from Costa Mesa and Newport over which city could provide best for the residents of the area, still county tenilory. Mn. Peters said thia morning that ht.t group ha! contacted many nelihbo1' who apposed annexation during the last allempta. "Many of them have 1aid their Ol>PO" sition has softened," she said. "Som• have 1aid that if rumors about Costa Mesa wanting to annu us are true that they would take Newport Beach over Costa Mesa,'' Costa P.iesa last year filed a partially overlapping annexaiicn bid for the same area. The controversy between the two cities centered on charges by Com Mesa that police, fire and parks services wouJd not be adequate if the area be- came part of Newport. The area In question, totaling about 131 acres, ii bordered roughly by Men Drive, Red Hill, Palisades Road and Campus Olive. The imperu_, fer the competition be- t..-.·een the two cities is the 228-acre for· mer McDonnell~glas property, part of "·hich lies In the area involved in the annexalioin dispute. \V hichever city received the parcel \\'OU!d also receive a tax "'indfall if the industrial acreage is ever developed. The latest annexaiion request will ht set for review by the planning ccmmis- 11icn. If the planners wish, the matter then can ccme up for staff study and a recommendation, to the city council. \ a nylon shag that's young • Ill looks, young • Ill price! $8.95 sq. yd YOWllid-lndllip.- • Ulliqae fou:-eolor elftd from 1pcial lb"eins tl!Cbniqu-. And Joan.I ideaa Ut tntm.-ricb, bow>ey lhl{ lhat maldia your own hiP tpirita,. , ___ f.ael!J tl>O tra<titian ml .,,.aJilJ of Karnbm for l.tf U. -... --to J111, Ia 11 dot mnblmtica / Yovr faoorll< l!uig11<r tDill be "°PP1I to Gllisl ~ ••• , ) Tllllrlday, Muth 20, 1969 NILY PILOT f Plane Crash Kills 16 at New Orleans Airport NE W ORLEANS (UPI) -A two-engine World War JI vintage plane taking pro- 1ninent 1nembers of a T e n n e 11 e e sportsmen's club to Central America on a dock and jaguar bunt crasht!d In a th.ick fog today at New Orleans International Airport, killing 16 of the 27 persons on board. Jefferson Parish (county) Corontr Charles Odum set the official death toll four hours after the crash on the DC3. Earlier, Airport Supt. Willard Crump said 19 were killed . Only five of lhe 11 survivors, all sitting in the back of the plane, bad to rem.aln in Ochsner Foundation Hos pital for l'isiti11g Old Cliief President Nixon Jeav es \Valter Reed Army Medical Center \fednes- day after visit ing former President Dwight D. Bisenhmver and find- ing him '·in good s pirits." Bidding Nixon goodbye is U.S. Anny Surgeon (;eneral LL Gen. Leonard Heaton. . -Soviets l11creasing Threat To Missile Bases: Laird \VASJIJNGTON tUPI ) -Top Pentagon officia ls test1l icd today that Russia is de- p!oying a big improved intercontinental ballistic missile CICB1'-1) that could knock out •'substant iallY all'' of America's or- f<•nsive missiles. Ap pearing at ;i nationally televised an<! broadcast hc<1ring of the Senate Ar1ncd Services Committee, Defense Secretary t.lclvin R. Laird said the Soviet threa1 lo U.S. rnissile bases is increasing r ripidl:,. just if) ing deployment of Presi- rlent Nixon's proposed safeguard an- liballi:;tic n1issilc (ABM ) systen1. "They are installing many SS9 in- tcrtontincntal ballistic missiles -a large and accurate weapon," La ird told the committee. ··\\'ith improvements in ac- curacy and a continued increase in numbers. the Srniet niissilc force could gain real effectiveness against our .r.l1nuteman ICBM 's.'' Later. Deputy Defense Secretary David Packard displayed charts s how i n g Russian missile gains over the past three years and said: '·This analysis has broughl us to the conclus ion that the So\•iet Unio11 had tbe capability to destroy substantially all of our f\tinuteman missiles in harden· ed silos if they chose to do do." The Soviet SS9 missile is kno'.''n to be capable of carrying a nuclear warhead with an explosive force of up to 20 megatons -or equivalent to 20 million tons of TNT. That means each missile would ha\'e J,000 times the force of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 194ft. Pentagon studies have shown that America's underground silos holding f\.tinutemen missiles cannot be made strong enough to with!tand the destruc· live effects of such large warheads i£ they hit wit hin short dJstances, such as a quarter of a mile. John S. Foster Jr .. the Pentagon's director of research and engineering, ap- peared at the hearing along with Laird and Packard and said in aruwer to a question the United States al present could survive a Soviet attack. But he. said continued deployment by the Russians could, by 1973 or 1975, "render unce rtain our level of retaliation." R eg·e1it Seeks More Say ln F<ic ulty Appointments LOS A;\GELl!:S !UPI) -Regents of the Lnivers1tv of California met today. with 01ln1cu1 · F.d11in \\'. Pauley cam· paigni11g fnr greater regent cont rol of faculty ;;ippoinlments. Before thl' regents were two proposal s hv P;1ulr1·, a vrtcran board member. 10 anlt'nd. thc unive rsity's rules govern· ing f<lcU!ty promotions and hiring. One would require the regents to ap- l'lrO\"f all racuhy promotions to the ranks -0f associ<llc professor or full professor. The other 1vould give the regents the fin al say so in one-year appoinlments 'Vi tnc~,; lo Slaying }'0 1111rl ~hot lo Death ROSTON !A Pl -One of the chief t;latc \\•i1ncsscs in the slaying of three men la.<i! November in the headquarters of a Negro ~If-help organization was found shot to death today. l'olicc idcnlifiecl the victim as Ronald Hicks. 41. of Boston, one o'f two survivors of the shotlings which occurred Nov. 13 ~t the office of the New England Grass Roots Organization <NEGRO). B11t Too Late of university em ployes 67 and older. Only committee sessions were on the agenda as the tw<Hiay meeting got under way at the UCLA campus. If Pauley's proposals come up for \'Ole. it will be at the meeting of the full board Friday. Pauley's proposal to Lighten regent control over retention of overage employes apparently was sparked by the rehi ring of Herbert Marcll!e, 70-year- old ldanist philosopher, on the UC San Diego faculty on a one-year basis. Al prese nt, university regulations call for the regents to approve faculty pro- motions only when they occur above the rank or professor. President Charles Hitch is required only to report promotions to the rank of professo r and associ ate professor. Under P1uley'1 plan, the president would recommend candidates for pro- motion to these two academic ranks, but approval by the regents would be necessary before the promotions could take place. Besides professors and associate pro- fessors, all cmployes up for consideration for job tenure would have to bl approved by the regents if Pauley's proposal is adopted. • further treatment. The flve admitted for further tre.atment were HU1b Stanton Jr. of Memphh:, Tenn.. ..,istanl Shelby County public defender: John Thompson: Dan Wlllton: Will Doran. and Dr. Ken Caldwell. Stinton and bis father, who is Shelby c.ounty public defender, .,,Jsled famed 92 Pilgrims Die in Egypt Liner Crash CAIRO (UPI) -A two-week'<!ld Soviet- made turboprop airliner flying Moslen1 pilgrims home from Mecca landed short of he runway at· Aswan today, scuffed a wing in the dirt, flipped over and bunt into names, killing 92 persons. 'I1te Egyplian interior ministry said 12 persons survived the crash. the second wont in Egyptian aviation history. The worst was May 20, 1965, when a Pakistani airliner crashed at Cairo Airport, killing 121 persons. The plane, an Ilyushin 18 airliner delivered to the Egyptians only two weeks ago, was flying from Jeddah in Saudi Arabia to Aswan, site of the As\\'an High Dam 500 miles south of Cairo, when il came in for a pre-dawn landing. Officials said the pilot, Capt. Youssef Gali, radioed a requesl that the As'.'·an airport landing lights be turned on. But minutes later the plane landed short. cau ght a ~·ing and crashed. Firemen brought the fire under control but the airport was closed to traffic. Lodge Disproves Reds' Qaims of Offensive Blame PARIS (U PI ) -U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge overwhelmed. 1he Communists today with a mass of evtden· ce to disprove their charges the current Communist offensive in South Vietnam was brought on by President Nixon's escalation of the war. For once the usually talkative Com- muntsts ~·ere "not able to rebut what I said," 1..-0dge told ne\\'Smen after today's four-hour session, the second briefegt meeting si nce the expanded peace talks began on ~an. 18. Both aides agreecl to meet again next Thurs· day. lodge spoke aUer the South Viet· namese delegate accused the Com· murtms of massing "many divisions" for an attack on Saigon and then implied that if the attack was carrlecl out it could bring the Paris talks tc a close . The Communists have proclaimecl at the Paris talks, and in Hanoi radio broodcasts, that the Commurtist offensive was launched because the Nixan ad· minJstration escalated the war after he took office on Jan. 20. Lodge tore their statements apart piece by piece. Lodge refreshed their memory with the fact the c.ommunistl warned in ad· vance of the Jong-heralded wirttt-spring offensive cl 1969 and had boasted of it Snee it started. He listed public statement.., by the Communists, information on North Viet~ namese infiltration, captured Communist document! and discoveries of weapons stockpiled by the Communists for the offensive. Instead of response to increased allied military activity, the offelllSive "is a calculated pa.rt of a plan to take over South Vietnam by force," Lodge said. Senator Russell Has Lung Tumor WASHINGTON CAP) -Sen. Richard B. Russell, one of the most powerful men in Congress, announced today he will immediately undergo c o b a I t lre1tments for • Jung tumor. · "I think it is fair to assume it is malignant," the senator said in a t.ape recording played to newsmen by hls press aide. Russell, president pro tern of the Senate and chairman of the Ap- propri1tlom CommiUee, said he will con- tinue in the Senate. "The doctors advised me strongly to continue my work and to awai t the outcome of tnatment," the '1e1eran Georgia Democrat Aid. Planes Sped to Aid Pueblo WA~lll NGTON (UPI! -An Air F'orce J;encral testified loday he sent U.S. fii;hlcr planes to attack North Korean forCf~ !h.'.lt c<1p turcd the USS Pueblo but that the spy ship had been taken Into a (.'omn1unls t port before they could reach the arra. Lt. Gen . Seth J. r.1cKee. commander Nf the Sth Air Foret at the time the Pueblo w;ts sclic<I. said Ins pilots new froin Okin:iwa "with orders to attack" the North Korean shi~ and planes aHer lhc " Pntblo mc!>Saf:ltd it w;i5 surrounded 1.1nd !hat t.1 1G fighters were ove rhe11d. •·eu1, rt:grl!tt.ably, thty could oot i::r1 • there btfore the ship was captured and in port," McKee told a House Armed Services subcommittee conductlna: a spttial investlgaUon of the incident. The general, now Air Force assistant vice chief of staff, n.lated FIOS jell he 1ent to lhe Pueblo's aid began t1ktng off from Okintwe 1l .C p.m. klcal time. At 4:~ p.m., he 11dded, the Navy informed the Alr Foret that the Pueblo was estimated to be in North Korea 's Won11an Harbor. "lt w1s somewhtn around th is Ume that I eamt to the unhappy conclusion that ""' arrived too latp to be of a1al1tance to the Pueblo," McKee said, adding that the fighters were then directed to land in South Kore a. Subcommittee Chairm11n Otis Pike { D- N. Y.), brought out that McKee had •ui· gesttd uklna: the Soulb Korean Air Forte, whole plants we.rt mll(h closu to the 1etne, for help but was turned down by higher authorities. McKee testlfltd t h a t hts rtpresen- tatlve.1 ln South Korea hid been told by he1dquarters or the comm1nder of all U.S. lorcts lhtN! "not to contact" ~ South Koreans. Mc.Kee said he dJd Mt ll:now the rtasons ff' the decision . lawyer Percy ~·oreman of Houston In the defense of James Earl Ray, the confessed assassin of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr, "We were comtng in for a landing when we broke through a thick fog ," said Dr. Jack Brooks, a 48-year-old Mc1n- phls dt.rllist and one of the aurvivors. ·. • . •·we went over • small· levee. Then we pancaked and the pilot opened the throltle to gel back lnto lhe alr. But the left wing caught on sometbin&." Sitting in a wheelchair with a !beet draped across his lap, Broo)!:s said : "ll was 30 to 35 minutes before any firefighting equipment arrived. It seems ••• ' • we should hive bid-ICllne nllef ..._ lhe.n ... Tbt --· .. DCJ piano loll Memphis at 4 LrD. fer Btlbl. BrUllfl Hooduru, wl1h 111 In-le atop at New Orleans. None of -the JW11iV«S wu in cridclJ condiUori., ofllcllltl 11.bf. j • • • ' The little suit •. 1.~ ./ saucier than ever ·~··*' ·~:~/ · An abbrevi~led 111iJ>«+ftcbt aives way to lonr, • •· ·' • Made with a smart young sophisticate in 111ind. NOTKIUlllllllt ~t~J . F 1 branne ' rayon has !he I ook of I inen. Just one frlJlll O!JI collection llr " / Barbarella. Lime or navy; 6 to 14, !JM. Dress Slop, '/ EASTER lS SUNDAY APJUL g Newport Cenler d Fasbim Island • 644-2200 • MOil, Thurs., Fri.10:00 till 9:30 Oller IWfs 10:00 Mll 5':911 I l 1 • Drug•, 1969 i:::m=-..,,.="""'-A Child on Dru gs ? As k For Exp erts' Jtdvice School Bias Crackdown Set ' . ' SOUTll BEND, Ind. (UP I) -The lawt ralher than ne\~egislaUon. Rev. Theodore llesburgh, who roused ' ··with better edu ation we will get a public controversy wllh his "get tough" helter en1ployment, ilh heller empoJy. policy on campus demonstrators, vows ment we will get Utt housing and an equally tough poUcy on school with betttr housing we will get bttltr desegregation. • oeighborhoom." Hesburgh, new chairman of the. U.S. He aaid the enforceme11t wW not be ii:choJanhlps and ald to them would nbi. be effective. The new chairman said the commWion also will encourage more federal ... t.ervention into voting rights. hotaing and employment. By ALTON BLAXEfilJ!E A11ociaied Prt•• Stltnce Writer want to cure the drug problem , Ule Civil Rights Commission, lold a newt limited to just helping Negroes get an Chine"e, Rti1o1~ Clash name ot the game is commitment" to conference Wednesday the policy of adequale education. He said an extensive 0 00 U youngsters do become "hooked" or dependent upon mind-influencing drugs, what then? something else. withholding federal aid to segregated study i.11 planned to help· Mtx.ican- Atj.ion9 to spread education about schools will he strlctly enforced in the Americans and Indians who have been Again Over Border drugs are sprouting across the country. future. greatly neglected in the past NATIONAL PROBLEM As president of the University or Nolre Alt.hough 1-lcsburgh said withholding h-10SCOW (UPI) -Communist Chinese IC-lid .., _. CMIJ\o l'lltt ltaln J\ penny postcard has been re- turned to the Peoria, Jll., county .s beriil's office marked Haddressee Unk110\\1n.11 The office had been trying to collect $1 .40 from an at· torney and mailed it 43 years ago, Feb. 23, 1926. The attorney no Ion· ger is in Peoria and postal author· ities said they did not know where the card had been for the last 43 By that t.lme, a11tOOritie! advise, the problem is urually beyond lhe par<nts' ability to handle It alone. Dame, Hesb11rgh last month invoked a federal funds is the way to deal with troops opened up with artlllery again.st "The drug abuse problem co0<:erns poUcy of giving campus demonstrators segregation, be did not think similar Soviet · positions across the Ru.sso- an or us: It Is national in scope,·• J5 minutes to "meditate" and stop their action will be helpful in. dealing wit11 Manchurian border Wednesday,• Soviet "Some kind of expert counseling is calltd for," aaya Dr. Kemeth Keniston ol Yale University. It could be a family friend, a school counselor, a minister, a physician, not necessarily a psychologist or psychiatrist. say! Flnilator. "But it is not a national protest or face expulsion. campus diJorders. army major reported today. It wu the problem so much as it is a local problem, Hesburgh said the commission wUI Most demonstrators, he said, come sixth Sino-Soviet border incident since in the community, in the school and seek enforcement of present integralioo from wealthy homes and withholding March 2 at disputed Damans.ky Island. in the home. Here is the place where ifi--;i;i;;i;i;;i;i;iii;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.:;~;;;_;;;;;_,;;;~;iiii;..iiiii~;ii,ii;;;;ii;;;;i,i;i;;i;;;;;,.;;;;i;; __ _, years. • After sttaling a troiln Cruck 1 iit Chicago a'lld forcing tht 1 doors open, thieves discovered thei-r loot was 36,300 roll.s of toilet paper. • The Admiralty Building in Lon- don is a rather stern looking place. And the men who work there are usually equally stern. But, they arc at a loss to explain a cleaning \vornan's find inside the building -one striptease kit. • ll \vas a typical Texas collision. Three \v omen in mink coats driv· ing 1969 Cadillacs collided on the southwest freeway in Hous ton. • "\Vash Day Blues" is easy enough for anyone to get but think of poor Lisa Jl uston, daughter of 1'1r. and Mrs. Robert HUston , wlio appear.s to 11.avt been left holding the bag -or basket. The thought of dumping those cloihes i'11to Big Boy's huge 1oashcr must have put this rather unhappy face on a pretty l ittle girl. • A fugitive from Los Angeles was caught in Bakersfi~ld by the seat of his pants. As Charles Davis, S4, walked along a street someone called police after noticing that .aC.ross his hip pockets was sten· ciled "Los Angeles County Jail." • Deputy Sheriff Randolph Stro ble of Kenosha tuas so proud of his handl.(,bar miu:· 1 1aclu:. But he toa3 luspendtd and fired fo r refusing to shave them off. Then he went to cir· c1Ait court and got an. inj unction ordering the sheriff to givt him I hi11 ;ab back -with back paJI. j But, Stroble found. tllere ii no I agpeal from ll ruling made bu 'th e boss ot home." His wife , ' made him ah.ave it off. ' ;;;n;r H • "Doo't regard It as a sign of moral corruption, but rather u something being wrong in their lives," he adds. Dr. Dana L. Farmworth of Harvard suggests" telling Ultm that "you will not condone what they art doing, but that you will help them an yeu· can, and stand by them." DRUGS USED A college COUNelor adds: In Interviews \\1th college youths ~ing drugs in a self-destrucUve way, "it was impressive how often drugs had been 'used' to jnform parents, teachers and others that the individual desperately needed help.'' The young tend to copy the ideas, values, beliefs -and also prejudices -of parents, and so parents should 1et good examples to follow. John Fin1ator, associate director 0£ the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs remarks: "It's difficult for adults to answer the young person woo says, "I don 't know: why people get excited '\'hen I use drugs -my old man's been hung up on martinis for years." "Kids tend to tell the truth and mirror what we don't want to &ee in ourselves," says Dr. Morris E. Chafetz, Harvard Medical School psychlatrist. "We want to separate pot and alcohol, but we are of the generation that abuses so many drugs." The way parents behave and talk can seem bypocrlUcal at times to youngsters, who may then look upon mind-Influencing drugs aa a way of escaping hypocrll;y. "We leach peace and practice war,'1 • a psychiatrist sayg. "We teach equality and practice discrlm1nation. We preach ideals and do not practice them. We take pills of many kinds and forbid their doing so." PREAClllNG WON'T DO Many adults have "mad• their peace" with alcohol and tobacco and tran· quilizing drugs but give a flat 1'No" to any experimentation with marijuana or fail to give cogent reasons for youths not to try it, another points out. This see~ unreesonable to many young peo. pie. Parents are not likely to make big points with thelr childrtn If they simply say, "Wait WI you've been through what l'vc been through 1n llfe -then you 'll understand." That, uys one physician, isn't going to be a very impressive argument if it seems lo the youngsters that tbt parents' lives, jobs oc marriages are somewhat mi6erable. "Give kids a healthy pattern to follow, and start it early," a psychiatrist. sug- gests. "When and U it ever comes to a real deb&te over whether a child has a right to do BOmething, it is usually toci late." BETl'ER WAYS In the Jong run, says Dr. Keniston. ''thoSt of us who are critical of student drug abuse must demon&rate to our students that there are better and more luting ways to experience the fullness, the depth, the variety and the richness of life than that of ingesting pgyclloective chemical.s." Last presidential election year, with many yotmg people actively campaigning for candklat.es of. their choJet, raised the question whether interest in national campeJgns or «her iSSJes might replace pot and pll~. suggests Dr. Donald B. Looria of New York City. The point, he says, is that "if you education has to be done." "It would be best," he adds, ''if our schools developed programs teaching respect for drugs in general, or in particular. But if a high school, for example, suddenly puts on a program on drug abuse onJy, YOW'J€sters will laugh at it. The idea of ~ for drugs !hould be deve loped in courses or classes in general health. education." INFORMATION NEEDED The new Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerota Drugs represents a merger last year of the Bureau of Drug Abuse Control, which Finlator headed, and the federal Bureau of Narcotics headed by Henry Giordano. John E. Ingersoll is the Director. Both or the formerly separate bureaus have distributed millions of copies o( pamphlets and lilerature on various aspects of drug use and abuse, and the new Bureau continues to do so. ll lists a variety of mot.ion pictures that are available for public showing. "Today's youth demands accurate, fac· tual, Wlprejudiced information, and when givP.n such information honestly and direcUy, in my opinion they respond sensibly,". say Dr. Keniston and others. P.IORE EFFORTS In many scores and pe!"haps hundreds of communities, there are increasing efforts to spread infonnation about dangerous drugs. The pattern varies broadly. In some places, parents organize special school courses, or one-day assemblies. Elsewhere, school personnel take the initiative. Community organizations and service clubs sponsor other efforts. At least one community group also seeks "to bring pressure on local government, civic organizations, school boards, police depart.men~ and. lhe like to act in solving the problem." Numerous colleges and universities arc initiating special educational prograrr,s about mind-influencing drugs, and other drugs. "To be effective, a preventive educa- tional effort must be carefully tailored to specific population grou~, and must be based oo the best educat.ional and scientific footing," says Dr. Stanley Voiles, director of the Nation.a l lnstitule of Mental Health. "Students a re suspicious or information supplied by 'official sources.' They want author- itative infonnation, and to know where it comes from." Education as to the ill .effects of drug abuse has had some effect even Jn the ghettos," says David Gottlieb of Pennsylvania State University. MANY RELUCTANT "Conirolkd studies indicate lhal even deprived youngsters who have had mean- ing ful experience \Vilh the dangers of addiction are fearful of and reluctant to fool around with heroin," he saf8. Repeatedly, people who have abused dangerous dru gs make one significant point: They say they might not have become involved if they had had factua l knowledge beforehand, particularly when currosity and thrill-seeking were the n1ain motives for taking such drugs In the first place. .,!l=rC::.:i W~•I of thf fu!11re on oru9 !dw• St<ld tl I~ "Oru11 Booic11!, O"nor Coesl D~llv Pllol, P.O. Bo~ 5. Ttant<;~. N.J. Olu.!."' M••e dwelt' pa~ttllt Ill Atsoc:lalN Prtn. lloolt let1 will bl mtlltd d lreettv to rel<ll"•! wl!O nlac.~ !~e•r orderl thlt WI~ Ind w/11 be "turned In pll in eP1Vrl11Ht. Turkey Creek Flooded! Loup Rive r Ice Jam Thr eatens Burlington Bridge Califo r nia Mmt ol Sau....,.., C1llf<lrnle w11 -11¥ 10<!1~ t~~ l1>r H l1¥ CCMl•tll ft>f. TltPt-. w11 111119 i.m11t~1tu,. cllt"fe bllt lncr ..... Jn1 doudl"'H 1nd ""'"°" ""'"'"'°'•tu~ _,., !ortcMI for l'ridov. Loi 11._1~, And vlC:ino!v -I "'°'"" 'U""' bu! wit., •llOM i-o. unlll mld- •1v. T~t "lo~ !em1>•r1tutf w11 7f, ,... 'lmt .. Wf'd"Hd~V. Ti. 11re- lll'"'f'd low t""lflh! WIS li.. T~ ,.,, Pollllli<>n Conlrol Oistrlct 1~.a '"erl: ....,, 11th! 1m"9 In !M L .. .Antt,... lh1\., 6-""' -t• fT'<Mtlv 1un,,.,. ilttr "•f'l'r '°" tir•~ wl"' m1~l"'u"' """"" (\I,,, ~ti! "Hr 60. W1!tt Wll ,1, II wt' tu!llW Ill ~ -111 Wffll llw ,.,,.,, 11'1 .... 70t "' Iii. ""°"' v.li.vt •"" 1 .. ""' llOI "' IM ~· valltn. '°""'" """' W.-.1-•Y Incl ito..utt "'l•lmu'T!t IM~v lroeluO>• L-B"ac" 11-411. s.tnb M01t!c1 111-4.C. lluni.nll .,, .. M•. w11,..., tl-41. Pll"'ll•le 6'• 'f't. """°"IO• 15·1\. 1>1h,., Sor1"'1 U.. ::~· ,""""" ..... """ '"'"' OI ANGELES • ..... ~10 VICINITY -,...,r,.. doue. IOl'l!oM. Ltw n. tty ''°""" r rld1v w1!., 11ef!t r11n. .._ U. ("•"'• Of •1ln 1....:,~01.,. M •rant lilt ""'"~"' •t'ICI 60 11trctnl •• CO.UTAL ANO !NTE.ltME.OllT!: VAL.LEYS -,..,,.. .. ,1,... (lt .. 1!h -1.ii1 ~IY clllvdY F•ldaY Wl"' Cl\I"<.• ef #.jM ntlll. Uows 1""19"1 II 1t1 Sl W111dr .... cl'JOttt' frtdo9v. H""" to 10 l!l MOUP<ITAIN APE.Al -lnc•*tl"" dOl.'ltl ..,. ...... lt•1" _,.,~, _,loll IJott ..,.19"1 MOlnP c""""v ~r!Oltv w!l'l'I I _..,IM tcllll~Wlr\I -· _,., .. s-""" ""' •• 1 ... 1 .,.,.. y ....... ,... GI.II,., w!lld) 1"11 COll!lr .... IHTflttOlt f.HO OESE'IT PEG!ONS IMTNll... lllfl'I ckM;!1 lonl9M 1/ld !f'. 0.IKI fl/ ""' l<ltl! the...,, '"""'· ........ rorit.llt lll 10 f} "" v.llfn ~ "" to ,, """'1 .,.,. Hlt4111 F1!MY .. If 111 I PR[Yl[W or (SSA W(All4(JI IUJl£AUrOIECAST ta 1:01 l .M. (ST • c o .. tnl MM nl"' <Oi11t1I ckludlflt• clffr\nt lG ~-mOlll!r '""""' n 1lltrn0011 loM"f. Wll!Ot WflMrlv. It "' II k!IOh. Vt,,.,..,_r", •-•h1r1' r 1 n • t d '"'"' t ,,llfl Of t6 to I l9w f/l .Q, I"" 111111 i-.1turt ,.,,.. ...... 1J .. JO, Thi WtJow temll'eta!wt WU. ,,. ... ,_, Sun, llfoo11. '.l'lde• T"UltSOAT hcilo'ld "" .. •.. l ;N •-I'!\ 1.5 s.i:enf It'-.M:lf •.lft. J.) f'ltHl'.AY ' 1"!"1 law " .......... l ;.M '·"'· ,,, ,.,,.,,,1911 .............. 11:11 1,"'·'· l«Ol>CI '-••••••••••••. 4 ·~, ....... $tm11C1 hklfl ............. 10:'1'•·"'· JI ""-Ith""' 1:10 1.11'1. '"' l •Y 1.rn. lltMI 11'-$:JI•·'!!· S•h t !l5 1.m. l'lf"fl •• l<•ll Lt-it O, Hf111 "'4t. 14 All<'. 2 Allr. f A••· U I 11.S. S un1111ar11 lodtY 11 t!\t ftrll cllV ef 51ttl'11 Ind 51>11.,.11~, ..,...tMr tow'"° muCfl 1)1 ttie 111111111. ShOW w11 m('llllnt .. 11w1re1 ......... SGl.lffl Of Colvmtwi. Neb,, 1n k 1 ltm u'IMC lowllfld flood l"' •IOllt 11>1 L-ltl'HI' •fld ,.,,..i.tltd to aim ... I •11r1l"'lOll R1\lr0111 btklt,. ,lllOll- -i.n I~ lllrowfl 1 Cot11rntw1 (lty iotJ1tW~1y, Ill*!... ..., 1ll4 '"°''" ''""' ,,.. Ill ltuf 1nif Wood ""'"' '"" Tvr11.n CrtR. .,, !tit Nnotf lrorn mell• '"' 1-In H-•llll 11Nwd Ull. S1trln1 ll\OWeri 1no Pl\11flClt11o~-.­ rlCld 1Cr91 lfll Mfc1Wt'1, WI"' 1 ~•orm Cl'lllf"M In ,... ll'lhtlllt ol t""" crttll"' lllowt• lt(!lvllp I~ !~t r•"h•I Ml\1IHTC>rll V1lltv. Norlfl 11'1111 MJ1 Cl ,,.... IOWI 1•arfT1, ,,_ fltl! In ''-cOIO<'r 11•. I ~~ '"" 1llCI 1now '""" rnevt '"'O IN .,ovtll••" ~rt•I t 1kn 1ft1 Ill' • rt~•ll 1re- uitw1rll, TemperatN r e• Hlflt l"' PrK. ~lbooQU<l'r"ue " " ~ll{horlll!t " " " 1'"ll1n!1 " .. fl o>tr~itlO • .. l'l••"'••c)( " " ... fl olw '' " f!mlon " " "' Oilcaoo <o " ,. cmclrn1!1 ,. • J Cltvr 11nd .. " ~nvtl' " " 0... Mol"" ., n Ori""! ., , . ... Eutt~I " .. l'or1 W~l'I " " "~"· " " 1-1•1•~· • " H-lulw " • _ ... • " 1<1..,11 (llv " " l•• Vevll• • ,. Lo. io..,..1" .. " Mltml •"ch " ., MllWll/k ... " " " MIMt1i>Oll1 ,, " ... New Orltfll"l'I ,. .. New "Yor~ " .. Nortll P)•l1't " • 01•l1flCI " ~ """"' " " ·" "•• llobl.., " " PM!f<llll>f'Ut " .. Pfl('O"I• " • p,".llu'""" .. • "ertltnd " n ltllllkl (I .... •• " " """ lllltfl .. .. .. ~ " " S11u1.,..11te .. .. 11. Ltoult " .. s..1m.1 M Sill ~·~· ,,, ,, " ~"" C •to • ,, ~.n lrt~<•V:O " " !t•M• ••itt•• ., 4 ~·"" ., .. ·" iooio.1N-.. n T"''""'' " " wa1111.,,1on • " Shoppers Clloice 1 ·daire Appliances custom oa1oxe UNDERCDUJITER DISHWA SHER BY F RIG IDAIR E • , , with po'll"erf\JI Sopor-Surge Wa$1iing Action that realty can cut the ""1Sl¥d, baked beaM and tho !r<ed eqg, 100! LO OK AT THESE OUTSTANDING FEATUR'ES •.• • Reauce1 hand tin~ •• , a lwrd·..-nr~1rq 11~~~ and ""se cycle does It. • Spols·Awey rin~I" dh;penser . I Frlgldal•e bolhers lo build in more help 6-Posilion Fabric Selector for "Goof-Proof" Washdays • Set It for the fabric. It picks the right wash water temperature, rinse temperature, agi· tation and spin speed!, •Cold Water Selector saves hot water, help! prevent shrinking and fading,. •Automatic Soak Cycle. •SA VE WA TERI Dial full or small load. $229 95 EASY TERMS Matchlnsfrigfdaire Dryer ... s15 aaa with Durable Preu Care, Jeta you control drytn1 be" to su.lt the !•b •l ~ No .. toop D•«•• lint 1c:reen. 16.6 cu. ft. FRIGIDAIRE FROST PROOF with Giant 154-lb. FREEZER! Only 32" wide! Probably fits where your present refri9erator is now. e You'll never defrost egainl Frost-Proof system won't let frost form! Room for bul ky fr ui ts end vegetables! Tw in hydrators hold up ta 23.'4 quarts! Coor storage galore! Butt1r end sn eck: compartments, e9 9 teck11 deep door shelf. $278 88 .. " ONLY TUMS DEPENDABILITY & SERVICE SINCE 19~7. 411 E. SEVENTEENTH ST. COSTA MESA Daily 9·9; SGt. 9-6 e 64'-1614 American . . Airlines Strike Ends ...,,.,, •• ti, t~ DAll.Y 1'11.8' 5 Ray Wants Case Reopened ; ~MPKIS, T-(AP) -the aullty pita and lmpoaed Jamta Earl Ray wenta tile a If.year stnltnct. lo the ui.nt that a ""' ataJ Jn the t.111 ll warnnled. r Esprtll!nc no surprlJo .. Jud,:e to reopen the MarUn "lie ukl he's 1oin& to file ~Kini Jr. murdtr cue. 1 piottconvlcUon peUUon •nd vo~ hll plea of ~ty and 1et a lawyer," Judge BatUe •live him a trial by ury. said Wednuday In dlsclooln( NEW YORK (UPI) M 1111'• lnt.nltoo ... k a ""alpt ol tho letter. "U be -em-new hearin1 wu ttated ln doe•, tbt.n we'll have an ben of the Tra!llpOrl Wockers a lett.r he wroi. from hit evld<ntlary bearln1." Ray'a move, Jlldp Bottll comm'"tad: "EVlr)'l>ody -It." Pttlllool '-irt-t haw !looded tho cow1I In rectnt yeais in the waD ol Supreme Court decllkw mot• aharply d e II D e a ti n I Ille pretrial right. ol acCmecf pot'IOIUI. U-(TWU) loday ended cell In the llate penlt.ntlary Such a bearing would live their ll~y strike qainif. to Judge W. Prtston Battle, ltly a chance to 1how tbat American Alrlinlll an.r rail-who on March IO a<:cepled hl1 le&al right. were Impaired tybic a MW coiJlract with •,========================== 15-percent wqe -· ANGUILLANS HECKLE BRITISH SOLDIER AFTER BLOODLESS 'INVASION' Hoots •ncl JHr• of Popul•c• Were Only Opposition Encountered by lnve1lon .. Force A spokuman ror the alrlloe1 aald union employa rtWmed lo work shortly an.r midnight and lllabl operatloOI mumed at one<. He aald normal flight achedulln1 w<lllld be In effect by ~unday. The CQllUlcl agr0<ment, called 11paceaett1n1" by union leaders, was ratified unanlmooaly WN!nuday night by TWU IOuia In New York. In Washlnglon, where the votes were counted, TWU leadm said the overan 1olal wu 7 ,:.>a for the a,reement and 2,407 aplnol It. TWA preatdent Matthew Guinan u&d the ne.w: contract provides for an hourly wage increase of 5 percent retroac- tive to May l, 1968, when the old contract expired; S percent retroactive to Jan. 1, 1969; 5 percent on At11. 30, 1969; 4 percent on Feb. 141 SAN FRANCISCO, OAKLAND AND SAN JOSE FROM ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT CALL .YOUR TRAVEL AGENT OR AIR CALIFORNIA ~ ' ORANGE COUNTY (714J 540·4550 AIR CALIFORNIA Anguilla Protests Peru Hopes Talks Continue 1970; and 4 percent on Aug.I============================ 15, 1970 for a total of 23 LIP.IA, Peru (UPI) -The Irwin, a New Yori: lawyer, Diego, were caplured by a percent whkh with interest compounded "comes to 25 per. cent." 0 • Peruvian military 1overnment wu ·aent to Peru to rieaotJate Peruvian gunboat and forced ccupatlon aald k hoped ita ta!U with with the junta over lb ... Wo harbor when their skip. p,..1<1en1 Nixon's penonal en-propr!aUon of an Am<rkan-per paid a 1olaI of $25,000 THE VALLEY, Anguilla voy today would not be mar-owned oil refinery. intiDeloa"t." ...... sofpoachlng Q k S 'k (UPI) n-~1 Pr-'• I -.-U8 es ln e -iwuo:: g)ftjen red by Wednesday's seizure His dlscuesions, now in the in Peru's waters. Then the Ronald Webster today sum-of two American r Ith in g fourth day, allo involved dlf-vessels were releued. PASADENA (UPI) _ A moned British oUiciaJJ to de-veseela. ferences over the utent of A li.mllar U.S. tuna boat serlea or 10 earth q u 1 t es mand the i mm e di ate President-Gen. Juan Velasco territorial waters. Peru claims seizure occurred in Febf\lary. centered in the Gulf ot withdrawal 0 f occupation Alvarado said the incident was 200 mlln; the United States Velaaco commended Irwin California were recorded early d h I r "not provoked by us and we recognlus 12.. Wednttday as a "very fn. today on 1ei.smograph5 at the troops an l e remova 0 believe that it will not hamper The tuna boats San Juan telllgent and cu I t u r e d CalUornia l n s t J t u t e ol British Commissioner Anthony (John N.) Irwin's visit." and Cape Ann, both from San penon." TechnoloKY 1.ee. 1,. .............................. .;;;; ... ;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I Wester, whose island was ln-11 vaded by British paratroops, Marines and police to assure Ha return to t h e Com· monwealth, sald he was going through with a demonstration on the grounds of the local high school to protest the in- va.slon. The school is being used as headquarters for a contingent of police. Web.!ter sent a telegram to Brltlab Foreign S e c r et a r y Michael Stewart late Wed· neaday night saying he would negotiate the future of this tiny Caribbean island only after the i mmedlate withdrawal ol. all British forcq and after the removal of Lee. Asked today ij ho woold uk British permiuion to hold the demon.atration, Webster replied Jndlgnantly: 0 1 should aak the British ror penniasion to hold a demonstration in my own country?" ICC Official Okays Vast Rail Merger WASHINGTON (UPI) -An Interstate Commeret! Com· mission hearing examiner to- day recommended approval cf a proposed merger of the Chesapeake & Ohio a n d Norfolk &: Western Railways. In a 194-page report, hearing examiner Edward L. BolJaerte allc recommended that the new railroad: -Take direct control of the BalUmore 4c Ohio and ita aubllidlaries, now conlroUed by the Chesapeake and Ohio. -Take indirect costrol cf the Bolton 4c Maine and the Reading Company through the Norfolk and Western tubsidiary Derecc Company, if the Bost.on '1: Maine and the Reading agree. -Take the Ba1Umore &: Ohio into the new company within one year after the initial merrer is finally approved. If the ICC upholds the ex- amine.r's recommendation the merger would form a 27 ,()!». mile railroad s)'Jf.tm.. The new railroad WO\l!d operatt In 11 1lltf:s and extend from the eutern seaboard to t h e Mlsaourl River, and from canada to North Carolinl. New Clash In Mideast TEL AVIV (AP) -, Arab and Israeli fOf'Cft dueled n!f=: In the Yiole>cHca!Ted valley soull> ol the Sta ol Gtlllee: today. The lar1tll army said two ba,rder policemen were wounded. The army reporltd an laraell franUtr patrol wu the tar1et ol bl-and 1!11111 IJ1DI fln: near T\tat Zvt, 20 mllu IOUth ol the sea. Tiii patrol returned the Ort. Jt WU till -d d*.Y or acUon alon1 the Jordanian Birthday Savings for you during this exciting event!' SAVE $40°0 ON THESE THREE MODILS ''tfv:B~" ·i!v T~)I ~4's~ r,£.,r, s1yied '" u.. l•Z·~dnignershlWslyted GiN 1 tall rrwn a c~irthltwill a pneroos size chair thlt In-flt him and you'll _. • hippy smaller mWI « wonwi, vites the big m1n to enjoy fellow. Specially dtsiined for this comfort • dotlpod mafl)' hotn of lux...tous com-"" well OYtr' 6-foot.s who cfe. U·Zollol" fits -M1Y 1crt without ftelln1 aamped or sirs hllh lt)'lln1 In • comfort relnlnc mood. Thouah ht.lnChed up. It fetttns I taller chllr. Tbls La-?~ fe1hfts a smaller, this Chllr ~ baek, thlt Pl'QYidts the rlaht hi,_ beck, deipw' seat 1nd Uint .,.y comt'Of't fie-..... _"" __ utended 511 mt. No men tired !lift end 111 tht blluty when sittln1 or rwclinin .. lep ti beck whtn he hn I aval labtl In 1hl bit Ind TALL MAM cllli< 1'r L>Z-Boy.• tall..,_ - '17950 $19950 $16r0 forty YllltllO. t..~plldpd lbalf to utabfishltli • tradiflon In comfort and btauty. With the add lHon of each now c:llalr stl''-to tlleir line, they -held !innly to this promise. Tbrouat10ut the wortd, La-Z..eoye is synonymous with ln'ISistlble comfort and beluty. We are proud to offer th1s outstandinr sale. Whether you llke blrtbdlys or not, you'll Jove the unuSUll sninp avall1ble now on these thrM world·flrnou.s. pnufne l.a-2·Boy9 Reclln.Rockers. Set us today for a comfort demonstration. The tlltlO RocffllH!-otrlel pfclurod 1-... car- taln to enhlnce your dtcor. These chlirs re.tpand smoothly and l!llllly to "'"' _, with ••• rocld,., tou.Wnr, watchlnrlV, -11111 bid 1tcllnl.,.. Ll>Z·lloj's famous potenlad Comfort S11tctor provfdll Just till rilht 111 ... 11 comlort pooltlonl fer perfect r•lmllon, wllh., without rocllnlns U.c:hlir. ~·~~~ AUTHORIZED LA-Z-BOV-DEALER. PHONE 548·5131 1165 HARBOR BLVD. l:OSTA MISA ...,.. ct .... nre line. 11..,;;;;.;;..;;:;.;:;;.;:;;.;;;;;.;;;;;;:;;.;:;;;;:;;;;:;;,;;:;;;;:;;... ____ _; _____________ ..JI YOllU NAVE A FIT AT St A Wrth sizes from 4 to 11, MM to II, you'nt bound to pt fitted II s & A ••• ewn thoulh your Idell of your size may not be your correct size. (But we're very discreet about that) Our "'1 f..., storn are 1lways looded with ...., stylish "-at Y1fJ tow ~ So II you're hrrini trouble aetting )'<JUI' feet' to look IS well dressed IS the rost of yOU, )'OU're due for • visit to S & A. And for your trouble, we promise you'll poy $3 to $12 i.a thon yo11 """Id for the kllntlcol shcle It ""' other f1ncy store In town. C.sh..C..aJ. WE SELL 71119 ltm MPtlfTED 811!771f/XllN RJMP FOR ll'l.98 Go •• ,_. II> lllhlon this IPlinl -1nc tlllo -rt, -_,, P""'P wttll "' """7.-«I lntltp atnp-..i Its .,.._,.." "'""'1il>1r &Old -llutloo), FvHy lootlier -· In nft'Y blue or White e1tfskln incl 1flmmerln1 black· potent. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t 464 S. MAIN ST. ORANGE 333 E.17TH ST. COSTA MESA IDS AllGEW IQDl.f "9!1.1 IUICiiSIEI 4012W.s..to._, -"· "" -1'1!S.-"" SMTA IGlllCA ""'" 1tllUllOOO 11111111 OAIS CMOMlm 1000--n11.--• 14'41_ .... llUT--llol. llJllUIA lMCAS1ll -Dollt.Y 1:30·1:111 22IO(lll ... Shll lOIW.-llol. SHOP SUNDAYS 10-5 ) ' I Ii I • • • I OAILV 'PILOT Th"'1da1, Miid! 20, 1969 • I • ! I I See ~Y Today's Want Ads Nixon Na:m~·s O~~pka to Governme~t Post e S, o. S. Black portloUo Jolt. contain& personally valuaWe 1.ntomUtlon, i.r- replaCHble. !Mt in New. port Beach, reward offer· ed, phooe collect. e Cello Fame. Cello for We. run size. made "y '4'oll ' ; -~..: lleaJ.y. Excellent tone, in beauUful condition. • .$250. • Statuesque: Thil ii an an. tlque ... a French Mantle clock with a statue on top .. ,flS. e Victory 'Sall: Victorr12 .• r ' your own klnd of ' sail· boat .. in a:ood coodltloll, for only $251), e 'Tellt or Die: Avoid tbe. summer, rush. • .of bup and peoplt, in this 8' x 10' te.nt, perfect lor thoee weekend jaunll.. •• awa>; from it all. W ASIUNGTON (UPI} - Pmldent Nixon Wednesday 1ave a $.16,0GO-a-year job oa the Subversive AcUvilies Con- trol Board to Otlo F. Otepka, finod In 11163 aa chief stale Departm.nl aecurlly olflctr for giving secret ~ts to a Senate subcommittee. Asked tt ' Ille appo-t • ol the con'troverslal SI-year-old career government employe amounted to 11vlndication," Wblte House pma ...,.1ary Rooald Zieg~ IOid, "The Pmident IOlt that l\O<llllM '<JI Mr. Otepka's uperi<l1ce Iii the field of security, be wou)d be qualified to serve on the board." . . But Sen. James 0. EasUand (D-Miss), chairman of the Senate Internal Security sub- committee to which Otepila gave the documenlll , said Nix· . ..... D•••• .OXPORH ·GIRLl'WHITI DRl~~IHOU 6,99 value. 4a7 •Mock 1C11ffof9lbtaat uppen es.a., aM Mela gw;irom..d t. out- ..,..r the uppers or new pair frHI •Pop.ilorox~· forihtylo •SiPS 7 to•12 '·" 247 . .. ... en..-s..-, 1...-,_11m 'ef Mite lwh•pczleftt ·•Shaped r ..... , _ .•Softly""""'"" ... ··~·~ .... . . 2.99. ....... •S-rt, MW...,,.,..,,, .... •a.Id ~'"• •"" w..--•s~ • ..-ir .. '•Cli•nkyilitloMol •hi ..... , '. .......... ;;::,.,._-• .. 10 NATUIUU. 1 3GIR an.. HU~ HAIR JAi 11 llAIR911AY i a'r.AIMI .. -uw ·~IA •LA•P'. . •s;•u llATI( 79c ·2 ·7c . t:-Z9 49c 59.9S 2497 v•I•• • Venatilo, flott.nq le ... fM' ...,.... hair fmhiDM • 100" huMGn hair •Choice of 30 becrvtihl ..... CUT·All .. STYUD HUMAll HAIR WIG I SS.95 2787 value ::45c ........ • .,..w. ........ ts..-.. ""-........ ~n TOOl•P .... .. .... 'w!-. . , ......... ...... ... .... ...... ............ :.is. litlhz. ..... ,,...... . ...,........., YolW,w ... plot.-........... ~-14~~~'"'"' ..... ~CliAMENTO (UPI)' - 'Ibo -today ~ , ... April l the aale rJ. 193.1 mll&a ID bondl needed to complete the power 1enerat- lna CCJIDP}ex at Oroville and niermallto dams. · The Ale WU colkd off Feb. 5 Mean• prm:pectlve bond buyen-were unable to meet the u -t lnteml celJlng on state revenue bonds att by Jaw. Howewr,-the cellinc wu aullltUuted 1 ••s evere nprlmlnd" ond demdjon .. • f1s,ooo..-yur noooeeurity job. OlepA then look bis ap- peal to theJ;lvil Servkt Com-\ m1141on, but failed to win rtinstalement. boosted to U porcent under JIJ'llOllC)' Jegial•tlGo signed into Jaw by Gov. Reagan. State Treasurer Jvy Baker Priest, aided bt Ille .,.... cell· Ing, rucheduled the sale lor April L Security for the bond.o will be annual pa)'lll<JllS by three contracting pub Ii c utilities whicti will purchase power generated by th e Oroville-Thermalito works of the. State Water Project. . "'1000~:i [' ---.. ,. . ~-= ·r -..... u .,i.e.,_ .. ....... --;.W.lok. -Hyl IAYll1d OF FABULOUS :~~ ~. .. DISCOUNTS! .;l~ : . . . folftOUI shant-. pep helps ~·'. fight dandruff off ...... ly •. : llgfa111ily silotubo-· spedall U.Yl61d PAASORRIT '·IHC_OLOR ~ai:r.o<oa­ Wftient aeroo Sol COii of , .. liable light !G•ard doo• 'doront • . IAVl•1d• ~ ••eady.fo..Mar.~lotely..,cedW11 · 1.os .59c • 100% huN10n hair i ... i...ty ... . .... fcW.ionstyle1 :a.2s 99c ..... · 1.00 7•c 'Y•lue· ... .. !~:~29c · 1.00 57c· value •complete withltf'•f••'..,_. • Linan ITIUTCHWIG 25.00' •• 7 val••· • "Ready.ado, yet COl!lfottoble 01 a cutfolR flt .,;g •Stretch cap flll •••1.,.. •AU popular 1had. 1 00% HUMAN HAii IANOLDI •••• • •• • • .1.17. HUMAN HAIR IYILASHIS, 2.50 ••lwe •• • • • • • 97c snROfOAM HIAD, 17c ,,., .................. ... COlllPl.ETll WIG DEPARTMEl'lll'I The lateat sounds at die leal>est prieed THI LATIST &. BllT 111 RICOitDS DISCOUNT PRICID AT ZODYS T0\111 CHOICI 2 ., VoluH to 4.91 •<h THI OIUTllT HITI Of lllC aUIDON AND THI A1411MALI foatvriftt Sky Pilot, . Son FrancilCGn Nlghb. THI llOHTIOUI 810L 8UATU1 MlTI,: . VOL 2 feoturh• Yoti/re My 5"1 aitd In· apiration, My PrayW. aon AND IOUUUL •Yaw MmLn ' fecrtvrh11 Peace, lrother, P.-.. . . 7311 IMPlllAl MWY, AT lfUDllA.ltll I, IOUTM ITlln AT CMlllT NfVfl IU'f ILUKIUW AGAJNf ,., .S.itlr .. , . .,, .. ..... ,,....,. ........... -~· lNttl--l'ilpllyol• •. ...... _ 11 ........... efScope .......... _ ..... ..... .• , ...... , ..... ,.,......_. -·-... , cimp • tihsyrwc.ll stai1.r. •full 20--lnch blode 9 NotHCOlplng ''°'"* whffl deti9A • 1'1to•• loltder-" ..... _._ ·-hl9h '·,..., NlieW. t!:'·- --. for • hbhr-aahiHMI flllerP'otedM •"Laonol o-o·· •ixh11'9 , .. Mavtifllil la!Kf· scapln9I •O..h!J Alex -··-....-......, ......... ,,... ,_..,, ..... •AeH."'" 10,.... ~y.., .... ......, ·--•'"' ki·~- t ....'"'"' -..ilt chi rf ta --· ..11y.,.,, ••. .. "· ... : ," .. ""-· IAYl21d -45-PC. MIUMINI DINliDWARIUT 16.17 , ... , ,, .... ~IWIClfOtt& Ol.Hkpoool-' _ ...... .•Gatv.niz.f , steelmn •r,...4"""' lid • ""'~''" tint Killl'JUCKY ·---c..,. .. "' 5.29 '3= • ! AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.SAVINGS • .. STONI ADDITIYI 1.1s ... 1 .. 47! •Anfi·ruli •Fast flua& . •Sealer : 2.tS , .. ,7 ........ . •New ricb all• · ~ weather pt'Ofeeti .. 1hini •Lorge ll-o1. · bottle . ' ·zODYI OWN~ VODKA OR GI~'. Co111po,. at 3.19 ... TOUll ·2-CHOICI ' •Gteot •z" wdka, cltor: cool fUteNd . ~ •fdra dry 9i" for tM 111 · tiMGN in MOrth1i1 ' UDON•oauc11 ; MAwntOINI at.VD. Af IO.lAT (INfll ; ..... TAIN YA,LIJ _ LOllO •IACIL JIUllTl ... TON DIACll .UllTAAllA ........... ·---CllAIUN A lllOOKMVUI UN ............ At lUllAtn: CAllMA PAaK : MAl:IOI ILVD. AT IDINOll LOI COYOfll, SPllNO a WOODIUff ' ' ------ I 001.0IN WllT a 1Dni1411R ... ..._An. At 1trw ITllll IOPAMIA CANTON ILVD. Af ltOSCDI ! " ' ( • : • I , ' ' I ,._ ••• . ID n . ... IC -.... ... iht ••• .. .... .. ' n ·c· q• .. ... rut .. ·c-... . •• ... ... R •• c U • f 2 ... 7 •• . . ~-,, •· . ~-. I: ·' Ill : • DI • ! . ( . . . . ·-I , . , • 'Listens' to Lqnders· . . • ~l••s•r : ENCORE 1200 FT. : •IJ!CORDll!tG TAPE 9,c 2.50 value >7" reel x 1200 ft. of blcinlc retording :· t~P9 f11r qwality recording• ·' I PHILCO I Mellllel T-t1 OIK :PHILCO AM·FM ~JllSiSTOI RADIO ,., 19.95 val~e :-., FUiiy tron1i1to'ri1.d roclio :.21/J" tpeoker . ~FM telesc'oping antenna ·, ...... • GJIM UHF .. YHF-FM cOLOI AllTEllllA KIT 19.95 value 10·1 • Receivu oll 82 c.han&el• •Range up to 12d mile1-VfiF ~·milH-UHF, 80 mil•1-fM •Kit include11 pole, 51)..k. twi• 1.,d ~ ..... , 71•WM PHILCI SOLID ST A TE AM CLOCK RADIO 11.95 ~.1.. ,., •Wq ket you to mu1ic •Automatic volum• control •Wide rang• 1p•ak•r ..... ,,. . - """'•' n.'V-14 AM-FM SOUD STATE·• LUHAIE snu:iADlo 1.9.95 value 13. ·••·. •Big vertical 1tyl• luggog, radjo1 •AC-DC with built-in lina cord • ~ E11tpho..._, -pep lite batteri.s ~·1~~~.,... POITAILE ·AM AllD POUCE BAU RAllO , .•. , 15.95 value •10-traMi&tor • U1Nn to yo111r 1fandaid AM broadcotf bciad of local pOllc• ~!;Id 147·17_4 M~ _ .. M..r AP 111 . . ....... iliJoxODENt TWO.SPIED t-OTHBRUSH BLENDER . IAUNDA IOIU,AGAL "KINDNISI" HAIR SIT11R :~ ~·-95 I 0'' 1: value ~Jt9COmmended by mor• :dentistt than all other ' :automatic toothbru1he1 et.ApP,.ov•d by Council on I>.ntol Th•ropevtk.t of th• 19.95 ' 8'' value I Jumbo 1ize 41/2.cup contoiner fl Stoinle11 1teel blod•1 I A'l'OCodo gr••n a nd ~hit• I I year unconditional , ,Zail)(I 14'7 Lew Price 2,;,5 ··1·417, Ylllue •O... yo11r hair froM roll·11Jt t• IM"inb-oJfift 111inut.1 • Eli11dnat" 1le.j,irig o" rctll.itn , • 1' paten'". Not· r.taining roll.,, --=~~~~~...,..~-r-~~~ ...... ~~~ ................ ~-~.;._~--111 ;::WATEI PIK® OIAL Wl'llEllE APPUANCE replacement guorant-:Atlterican Dental Aun. • ly faMOV1 Sa undo, dean&fl.deepd-n 'fl'flere tt.Guty be9in1 I lecrtet foce bare of fMlftf 'l•pvrities .~:;, 24.9516'' ••••• • \"'[ . . • ltctC011m•nded by thou1and1 of dentl1ttl •Writer r11ir.• corriM Ofl the cleaning job your toothbru1h befin1 •Clean1ln..-· 1ibl9 plcdsrour brwh~ .... h 'MM.lllJ44 MA•llll-IOWMAN IASEIOAD· IEATEI ' ···~ ~· velue 17.95 •Lo1'19, 1 ... •'"'kW 1320 watt heater •t..1'11 lmint hlbwlar ele.nt · • Safety ,,,......, twftth .... :::1~:.·~·1 · '87 •Wanftfh wltflMt •ltht i 11•~ hS.MI .. toJH of'ld c ' •A.t-•c ,,.,..i -.,.I~ 1t1 ...... •t .... ,.,."',.·'" .. 1.d. / lllil(sdq, MW 20, 1969 . '·---DAILY PILOT 7 j lfl'S BE FRIBCDL Y Jf JOU l:\aVe De;w oeta:hbon 0t know ~ anyone movtna to our ar9I. pleqe tell UI so that M may extend a friendly wdcocne and help ,them to become aoquatnted In th!tr ~~ IUl'l"OUndlnp. ' t :"Artis' IPV • M. • ,,, . . ~J m ovmg · for, .the BES~MOYE of "YOUR 11FE Call: Hunfington lleich Visitor ... ' )oj • Hl-414t Costa· Mesa Visitor 'u1-414t So. Coast Visitor 494-.1025 . 49~79 Harbor Visitor 494-9361 1 .. ·wESTINGH.OUSE' NO·FROSt REFRIGERATOR·FREEZIR COMllLITI WITH ICI MAKIR· . ' . .. WljTINOHOUll ~CYCLI . AUTOM.f'TIC WASHIR z.~~~.! ~ 148197 o Safety lid lock • Ea1y·t1>u1e single dial control •Two wciter temperature wadi selections •Reliable )eo"Y·duty' ttci~.fni~iOn ' . PACKARD •ILL DILUXl COLOR TY CONSOi.i 295111. incho• "95 • 295 .q. inch JMdvMI with ht1h fidelity ·rar• earth color "A·fvlJ 25,000 .,.ft. ef pktwe power ,•4--inc:h front faclnt high fldellt)' 1peok•r ,etraMi1torized \,IHF l11ning, Ml'• for9" VHF fine l11ning 1 •Mondcroft.d cvstH. .h•~woocf cabinet , •OYl'·OR OIRU' ROYCI U•ION Hl·RlllR •ICYCU . ' I . . • Ufllll .. 1,,.,... • Dw-eb~ ('ffllhtr bra•• • H...y, ,...mn.proof " f1pe '"' tire • • COMf.n t..1tc1n-. .. den. I 1 •fSo•boiyant pal .. t • 1.., pffalllnt octie111 •Kick ..... ., @ 298.~' .. Huge 16-~ubic foot. capacity • ConVenient two-position adjustable shelf •Stay-cool twin porcelain et-iipers •Slinwned dowm ~alls for more inside storage Space tW\ v=; •• . WISTINGHOUll DILUXI AUTOMATIC DRYIR Zotly1Low na· 87 Price •Porcelain •namel drum •Automatic shutoff '• Ea1y to reach lint filter •Balanced air flow •Single dial control PACKARD BILii DILUXI UHFIYHP PORTA•LI TY Zotly1 Lew Price Pac k a rd e c-11 I !C J ,,., •High fidelity pkture'tub• •S.t '"fer.get fine twning •Built-in onl•nno . •Space Ag•• bonded circuill • 13,.500 ,oils of pictufe pewer COLUMlllA LIAGUI 300 ·•etWLING •ALL 127.9S·val•• ·1.2·1 • 1 ....... 11 •• pl•ti~ il'I l ..,.. wo"'94 col.,. r 1m. blue, pwrpt. • Populor 10 lb. 1i1• •Price iMlitdet cv1tofll \fining, drilling hy foctory trolned 1pec:iolltf I H• eatra dtor;• CUU'OM flt t• A -.&.a few MOllOI'°* •Y lllAllll!!t ···- :·. Ull ZODYI NIW, lllSTAllT·,IMPU•••• C•••'T OR YOUR. •ANK..,...ICARD • .-. SATllPACTION OUAllAllTllDI ; IHOP A IAYI AT .ZOD:YI MON. THU Pal. 10 ~M. TO~, .. , IAT. AND•• 10, TO .J ••• · LOTI Of Pall PARKINOI •.- -·-• ' ... • • {oAILY PILOT ~ITOIUAL PAGEi •, Pathos in Black Pride • \ Younr black acUvitiJta have bffll Invited lo speak their minds directly to a variety of Oran1e Coast aud· lences lately. Their messa(ts -blunt, direct, biller -have pretty well represented the ~peclruln of black mill· tancy, black nalionaham, black frustration, black hos- lilltles, black fears and black hope. -Flrst there was the group from Dorsey High School that brui1ed the feelings of well·meaning New· port Harbor High studtnll. -Then an an1ry Chapman Collete black student .ii:poke to seventh and eighth gr1a:er1 af Lapna Beach's 1'1w:aton lntermedlite School. -Last week· five cau1Uc black nationalists and one black student advocatinc inteerated action, drawn from several junior college campunt, held forth al Orange Coal! College. -This week three of UC Irvine's 26 black students 1poke, someUmes with hosUUty, lo womtn ot UCI Town and Gown. -Meanwhile, parents of children at Fountain Val- ley's Arevalos School have made two visits to a school in Walts and In turn Negro parenll have visited their school. , In every case the appearances by the black stu• d111ta have causld some lbock and outrage. The al" pearancea also have increaaed underatandlnf. Watclllng television news or readln§ a newspaper account of rioting or campus violence lt 1 easy to 11y, 11What those blacks are doing ii senseless.'' Some of Jt 11 just that. But acts that irow oul of despair and an1er are not easily widenlood without some attempt to !mow the emotlons behind them. Black c!Uzen1 of our counlty are keenly aware that whites by and Iarie do not un· derstand them. They contend It is because whiles don't want to, and it heightens their despair, kindles their anger. That is why it is valuable to \ear them out -1et under tbelr akin and Into their held, u they ml&bt put l~ for an hour or two. Tho•• atudenll and f~ a4111ts from thio ana who have had an opportunity to btar the black naUonallots can better appreciate that for better or wone their acts are bl1ed on f!mlly htld b•U6!1 · and couv!cUooa about tho notura of American society. Some of the more militant blacks may be poisoned in their viewpoint. Still it's helpful to know what they think. There just may be an antidote. Knowing where everyone stands is the be1Pnnin1 01 understanding. The dominant theme ol the black speakers is tllat white America doesn't care. They are threatrnlng whites, tnle -to get whites to reoct and thereby prove their ability to ba muter 10< a moment. But there i1 a deeper theme. Black nationalists by telling whites they don't can are trylnf to shame them into caring. They want whites to underoW!d, lo care, so blocks loo can balon1. This is the pathos whites must see In black pride •. A Reill on Bureaucracy Problems a Ptu!dent must contend with In deallnf with the ladenl bureaucracy are present at the state level. The Rta1an AdlninialraUoh 11 advocallng ellm!· nat!ng of 31 boards and commlaa!on1 throu1h consolida- tion ol functions by tranlferrinf them to other stale agencies or '11mlnattnc . them entirely. For 20 years the Legislature has wre1tlad with pro- posals to place all stale tax colloct!n1 !unctions under one head. They have alway• been defeated, for a var- iety of rnsont. No one knows how much tax mOMy might be aavtd by such a reor1an!ution, but likely a rreat deal. The move dt1e"es encouragement from uback home.'' Southern Polltlclans Charge 'Betra11al' President's Troubles With Bureaucracy A Messy Political Problem WASHINGTON -President Nixon's betrayal" of the South b a hot tOpic f conversation in the back rooms or ··omervative politics. Geor1e Wallace has 1ome to life again. Strom Thurmond ·'I stirring rut.I es sly. The old Umers in southern politiCJ say Nixon wouldn 't ··arry a st.ate in the South, nor a border · latt if the presidential eltction were :ield today. However much that cracker-barrel 'udgment may be doubted, it cannot · ie questioned that the CODterVaUve South · 1 baving second thoulhta about Nlson. '>oubts are ftd by two aimllar aets • ,f circumstances, lhe achool suldeline 11olicy of the Nii.on admlnlstratton and !'acia:I employment requirementa for : outhern contractors ind manufacturers. Wellate Sec. Robert Finch, 1 modrrtle 1iberal, has not permitted 80\lthern school • lhtricts to find the easy way out on 'lesegregatiO:n which Strom 1burmond's · upport of Nixon encouraged dlehard · outherners to belitve would follow hi.SI ·lection. Everything would be all rllb~ enalor Thurmond aslured his fet1ow ·'buthemers in llnlng them up far Nlton's 10mlnation in Miami last IWMler. BUT EVERYTIUNG is: not all rirht. !1'inch has erred not alone in requiring lhat "freedom of choice" plans actually ·tceompllilh dt1tptg1Uon, according 'll the 30Uthemtrs. He hu doubly erred. •hey say, by appointing Negro militants •o high posts in the Health, Ed~ation :md Welfare department. \\'orst of all, :iccording to the southerners, Finch chose :1 commissioner of education with a :-ecord in favor or ''bu s ing'' ·~··-... ... , < ... ·-·d"'«"". - schoolchildren more flagrant than that of Harold Howe, the former com- mtuioner of education, who offended the old South to the point of rebellion. The new commissioner, James E. Allen, former New York state education official, s&ema to the southerners to stand as 1 livinl refutation of Nilon'1 repeated csmpaitn statementJ opposing transportin1 school children by bus from the school dlltrlct in which they reside to 1DOthtr for the purpose of achieving • more equal 11m.i1" of white and black :studenu. OLDLINE SOUTHERNERS don't ac- cept for a minute the idea that Deputy Defense sec. David Packard has Jet up the pres1ure on touthem manufac- turers to follow equ1l employment prac- tices in the e1ecution of government contracts. To the old timers Packard'• under the counler deal with J.P. Stevens, Burlington Miiis and Dan River Pi.fills i3 no concession won by Senator Thur- mond. The pressure will C'Ome later when the te.ztlle manUfacturers have to prove they have been · n o n .. discriminatory. But that isn't half the atory. Not only in the South are manufacturers having trouble fulfilling the \'a(Uely stated requirements on non-discrimina- tion. Employers all over the country are having trouble finding their way through regulations they consider con- tradictory and in aome cases in actual violation of the Civil R11hts A.ct 11ainst sttting quotas for hlrin1 Negroes. Con· tractors claim that aeveral rtate h!pway programs are Ions delayed because the contractors can't meet the val\le re- quirtments: on 11afflnnati\•e action." AS THE TROUBLE has spread out of the South, Sen. Everett M. Dlrk!en, the Republican leader of the Senate, hu called for an inve1t11ation. Senator Fannin of Ar1lona c.ns for ttpeal of the e1ecutlve order settinl up the office of J'edtral Contract COmpllance in the Department of Labor. A recent ad- mfofatratfvt reorranlution of the Labor Department's Manpower Administration Js unlikely to do much to correct the complaint of contractors and ma.nufac- turm on DOIH1iacrlminatory employ· menl. The ellort of the Tutlle Worken Union to ortanhe In the South, reputedly rf:buffed over IDlllY years, Ls critlcally involved. There are lndications, in the South at ltut, that organized labor Js saelns the licht on creating conditions tor the 1[ualiftcltions of Nerroes fbr union mM)bershlp. This places added pre ssure on the contractors • n d manufacturers to hire more Neiroes. IT ALL ADDI UP to a musy political problem for the NlJ:on Adm.J.n11trat~. Gain! that N!Jon hu mid• in northern liberal circlu may be offMt by the court houie commtnt In the South that Strom Thurmond "lot took a little bit" In his bacldnf cl Nhon. Long Hair Bugs the Elders Tl is somethins: of a puule why cer- l.ain mature men should be bugged be- cause certain less mature men cboote to wear their trtases long. Personally, I think the way a man, of whatever agt, wears his hair Is a matter ju.at 11 private as bow he puts it. When a man is ot rttuJar features, and has a good figure, lq hair can be quite beautiful. Allt:n Ginsbtrg ill quite another matter. Tht resentment aroused 1n some men over 30 by younpten with Joq hair quite possibly has a certain element of se.xual jealoUly in ll The older lad.I 10 back to the days whtn, u they thlnk of 11, they had everythl0& SolDI for them with the ladB The lon&-hiired ones remind them, unplea1ant1y, that things ha\•t chan1ed. THE MAIN REASON !or lonj: hair, I suspect. ii precl1ely UW: fatt that It does bug the ltadtr1, elpielally lbe mtn. When a young man let.I his hatr irow ...... ~ Thursday1 Much 20, 1969 The •dllot141 page of u.. Dollp l'llol '""' lo fflf.,,,. ...s sfffll. •lcU r<adc<1 bW ~ W. MU>1papcr1 'opbdotu and ..... ... """11 Oft loplcl ., fflllrUt olld lignlflccm«, bp ~ • '"""" f11r Iii< ~ ., ov nod.rs' opffliOtu, end '' pru.,.i;,,o Iii< dtotrlC .,_ poi•fl of lnfomcd obHrt>m °"" ipo.U"""" .. '°"'°' •1 IM t1ow. Robert N. Weed, Publlshtt \ nowaday11 he is making a m09t Im- portant statement. He I.I aayifli, "I am a man." His action ls a declaration ot hiJ identity. It is a1mtd chleny at his father, &nd people like his fathtr. It hu always been thus. There is no reuon why It should chan1e. I am moved to these balry renectlons by certain anUca rbnUy performed in tllo Wutem Ltalslatures. IN CAMON CITY recently, Ammblyman JllDU Wood complllned that ctti1ln 11,clll•tlve interns froni the Un1vtnlty ol. Nevada were turnlna up in the 1e11slature with ovtr·long hilt. "I'm concerned and upstt." Wood 1ald, "over the fa~t that we are gelling mot~ and more people who deteriorate our society. " ..• Either the hippies go or 1 10.'' In the end, appartnUy, ntlther the hipplu .,,tnt nor did Mr. Wood, becawie Jea:bJttar1 meet1n1 on this Important IU.bjtct •INld U,.re were "no stan- dardJ" u lo what ""111lkited lool hair. SrANllilDI WDE not tht worry of Sfn. J. W. MIJttl when he tubmitted to the Wyam.lq: ltPJature at Cheyenne an amtndmtnl lo a propoltd con-. stttutlonl1 chaqe fiving 19-yearo()Jds the rlpt to vote. 1'hll ptlvlltf• wwld bt est.nd<d to men oaly If tl>eir hair wu not too ""'· The chan&t, whkh didn't .., an>'lhlO& about the ltn,th of womtn'a haJr, pro- vldtd that halrMa ti 7ovthl It and 20 mu.rt conform to milltary standard! cl Ille ,.,..l&r clcCfacs 0< boot c:amp ool/fur.. •~\\1 8.EN YOU ACCEPT tlie reaponslbllity of a citiun, you ihoutd look Uke a clUWi," Senator Myers stoutly declared. The Meyen amendment was voted by the Senate one day, and hastlly struck out the -doy. Prtaumably both tht Nevada and WYomlni Wftllaton are adroll and ,.. perlencod politlclul. 111ey, a I I I n presumably, would not have taten their alrona: pubUc ,stand oo lone halt H they did not IUlpect thtre WU I lhable section of ~ public whith would applaud their actions. t have no dOUbt Ulla public elilts, and It is "'l"'t!Ule I h at II ahluld. F0< 11111 II that part of the public wblch Ulerally halll ill )'OUl\I, end whkh coatrlbuta to heavily. to the so-callld- 1meratlon flp. WllEll YOU DllLDtE the leDflh of I boy'1 hair, yw Ill dbllkln1 much more than thlt: you are dlslikln1 the boy, aft(f the othtr boys who drw like him, and their whole way of life. Dear Gloomy Gw: Violence II 1111 ICI llllt b per. ptlrated "7 IrraUonal Individuals or nalklnl. Mow la It po.uiltl• "to rluon with Irrltlanal if1dMduall 0< nation!! -IL I . McD. ........... ..,_ -, .... .. _..,.,ti!-. ........... .... ""''"" .................. ........ • ~ f~ . buest G!,~ ~--· . . ' ~·~· ... ~~jJ There is no such thing as an integrated Arntrlcan fortlin Policy or Vietnam policy, and Jt ia dubious how much a President can do to change decisions arrived at by the numerous 11encies maklnl up a hu1e bureaucracy such as the United Stat.ea 1ovemment. Henry A. Kissfn1er, now uailtant to the President for naUonal securlty al· raira, comes to these conclusions h1 an arUcle, "Bureaucracy ud Polley Mak- ing," published by UCLA'• Security Studlee Project. The euay was originally presented at a project aernlnar at UCLA Jut year when Kllllnger was a Harvard uruverllty prpteuor. ASKED BV seminar participants to comment on possible w1y1 a new Pres!· dent Could effect change on Vietnam, Profeuor Kluin1tr replied that "much of VJatnam Is aolns to be shaken up before a nn Pretident Comell in." "Al 1 gentral rule," he continued, "l believe a new Presldent, in the areas where he wanta to effect a chan1e, mwt do ao within the first four months . . . he m\181 give enough of a shake to the bureaucracy to indicate that he wantl a new direction, and he must be brutal enou1h to demonstrate that he mtans il." In tht UCLA Security Studies Project aemlnar, K111in1er spoke on the subject of bureaucracy and policy making and discus1ed his years as a.n ad'1iser lo Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson. ••WREN l lint atarted adviaing ... , I had the lllutlon that all I had to do wes wait into the President's offlct, convince him I wu rlaht, and ht would natu rally do what I bad recom- mended." N0Un1 that he learned the error of th!! view and that a Pmldtnt hears many convlnc:lng arpmentl, KJs1tn,er added that even U' his were the most conviocJna, the probltm o f im- pltmtntaUon remained. "Tbert: is only '° much that even the ~dtnt can do apin.at the wl1ht1 of the bureaucrac1, not becaute the bureaucracy would deliberately tabotagt him but btcause wlll'y dltflcult lt.tut: it a closed one.'' DllCLARING THAT in a luae and frqmenled bunaucraey decilkma do not fit made untll thete ls an tdmlnltttaUve tonfllct, he aald of Vietnam, "T'hfre J! no auch th!ni, in my vtew, u a Vitlnlm polley; thtre la a Hrlu o( pro(ram!I of individual qencla con· cemed with ~am.'' '"I'tiele procrama are rtco11clltd ••.• he said, '1\\l'hert there is ao ctnflict , .. It would t;e very wusual to 1et a hlth level C0011dtr1Uon of a problem." "for uamplt, when G t n tr a I Westmottl1nd 1sked for 200,000 troops. that forotd a hlsh ltvel review." 'ftte main problem with 1 lar1e Ind complu boreou<raey Is tbat more time ii devoltd to manaitnl than dlleovtrln( the purpooe of H. -Uoh~rolt)' " Calllonla Shorts ti W. lq-llelred crne ketpo up, thl pt;ple Who mate ihl1r1 and cUppm ctn Join up wllh !he N1llonal Society of <1·Buw Whl~ Manul-. • • • '!'he fsrmtr 11ya If )'Qu 10 dlntt k wUI take y<u about "'" mlnutu. 11 you ro at the crow rues -aboot ID hour and I half. \ . . ~ . ~ 'IWo &Wtd Sword Physical Feats Vs. ·social Lacks At year'1 end, aeeking for aome aolece after the dismal record of 1961, I was reading Stewart Udall'• new book: "1978: Agenda for Tomorrow." tn 1976, of course, our nation will be celebrating - I hope that turns out to be the proper word-our 200th ann!veraary. Although Udall Is primarily a con· servaUonist, much of the book is (ne«saarily) concerntd with the urban problem in the U.S. And he points out the contrast between our physical feats and our social lacks by citln1 the Interstate Hlthway System prol'am beginnin& in the mid 19505. AT THAT TIME, the Con1re11 aulhorlled and the P"'ideol approved a 41,000-mlle intf.ntate hlJhway J)'ltlm, which the New York Times a decade later edltortally described u "the moa:t enormous public worka project Jn the history of the world. In coat, !t is likely to esceed lfO bUllon by the lime it is completed in 1972. In size and compltx.lty it dwarfs all of mankind'• previous enainetrinl works • • • AA neighborhoods are sliced in two and cemeterle1 au relocated, neither the quick nor the dt:ad are aafe." Then, in lht lMOI, Udall reminds us, tht same eneJ'IY and massive funda were broo1ht to bear on the space pr~ gram on a pre-determined schedule. He points out : 11A NATION THAT could organize and carry out such dominatina project. can, in the 19708:, genuinely bes:in the even more difficult and urgent task or transforming the. worst slums from ?ifillha.ttan to Los An1eJes into clvililinr habitats for man. "Technicians who can c o n s tr u c t spacecraft that circle the earth in an hour can al.so help us build balanced cities. If we have the expe.rtJse to engineer the largest system of hl1hw1ys in history, we should also be able to asstmble teams of ~peclalilta who can build bridges betWffll. the racea that have lived on, but never really ahartd, this conUnent for ovtr three centurl11." UDALL CONCLUDES with: "Once we apply Amtrlcan science, strength and social knowleds:e to the 1hortcomln11 of our society, we may discover that domestic progress which cleanses olll" country of malice and buHds a llftglvinl environment for all of our citilens is the most eflecuve forei111 poUcy that we can possibly devise tor the future." Our two dk:ades of "urban renewal" have improved less than 1 percent of our urban blight, and today we have 10 mJUion subfiandard units of housing. Imagine the cry that would 10 up if our roads were in the same date - yet the ro1ds we build io only from urban decay to urban decay. Truly l'Olds that lead nowhere. and back. 'Psychedelics No Threat' To the Editor : Rtferrln1 to your aeries on druas: There are two kinds, or classes, of drug& that are compltttly dJfferent from each other: narcotics and psychedelics. This must not be forcotten. The u11e of narcotics in this country Is a very serl.oua problem. The abuses of these drup (methadrtnt, beru:edrine, nembutol, aeconal, de:s:edrlne, etc.) ll frl&htening, but one. mwit remember that these drugs a.rt man\llldured daily in tht: United StalM and that many parentll that are "tryln1" to ''protect" the:ir childrtn are takln1 these drup con- aiistently. Is there no fault be.re? FROM THE l'OINT of view of en- trenched 90Clal tstabll1hment1, it is perh1p1 legtttmate to classlfy the paychedellcs (literally, mind manifesUn1 or consclousnes!-e:&pandinl compounds) as dangerous 1ubvenlve a1ente. !Sy their tcUon of fllnitn1 wide "the doors of perctpllon," !he Insl1hla they produce trequtnUy enable ooe to ste lhtouch the myriad preten3lon9 and deceits: which make up the mythology of the IOl:ill Ille. Tbua to the e:s:tent that power ltnic· tum rely upon the "'"trolled -1at acceptance of the Ile to '"°" up "ind stablllle tht1r hocemoale1, paychedollc :rubllancu do lndeld repr~t a kind ti polltlcal threat FOll1VNATi:r.:Y, however. only the most ILltle, rtprtll)Ye toclety need wor. ry about psychedtllc 1 u b v e. r 1 I o n . Consclousoe1Hrpandln1 chemlcail, In rtality, prtMDI "° lhrla~ bot "'!her otrlr ~ ud oncour1t'"11nt to a demtJttatlcoDy-orlentld sb<lll ottveture -which t would define llmpty es ooe llllt tazi1lbly 11r1 ... to wume tho role ti. bfntfolMl accampllce in evtryman'a el!ort lo're1llse his human po1eoq11. NO&. RODlllGUEZ Following II oft •«-frqm • "What YOU Should know Abo11:t Drugs and Narcotic1,'' b~ Altmi Blckt!ltt, vettran Associattd Pres! scitnce editor, now bting seri4liltd in lht DAILY PEWT: 'The claim that LSD e%pttienc•1 Jtod to great or greater creatitrltu ffl art, mutic or writing i.c not supporetd by most ob;ective ob1•rv1r1. Monv .ra11 the WOf'k lhat is produced during a drug 1e11ion is 1hodd11, or that o.ftn the trip the ptrson doe111't produa an11t1Lin0 from hi1 vUiom and in- sights. ''With 110lh,cinogenic drugs, tht pir1on ma11 feel more creotivr m.01't ~untd in on the world. But hi. fttt< mo• art not 111c111arily cqadvaltnt ta facti. Tht factual tuidtnce docrn't tUPPort cla.im1 t hat 1wch drug1 proo. duet b1ntficlal change1 it& bthaoiot or crtativit~." -Edi~ .--•• Georye ---. CONnDENTIAL TO WALTER. CRONKITE : J1:11t because nobody t1ll1 yw "Good Nip!, Wall<r" doesn't mean e\ftrybody doltn't like )'OU. (Send >·our probltm1 to Georre and 1it back with the comforttble ftelln1 th1t fi\'erylhln1 is now u of your ltinda,) - ' CUl!ME lly Phll lnterlondi CHECKING . •UP• . Canary· Islanders Bell Their Camels DOW. • . POKER PLAYERS w h o tlraw to inside straights don't always come down w i t h ulcers. Naturally not. But il is a proven fact the gambliing man who gets ulcers also Architects Appointed WASHINGTON (UPI) - 'I'he New Urban De.sign and Development Corporation to-- day named six nationally known architects as trustees or the organization designed :to help improve life in urban ·centers. The corporation, an offshoot of the Ame rican Institute of Architects, will name six more trustees at a later date. The group will suggest b o w architects can advance new forms o f transportation, renewal of older cities and design of new communities. Named trustees were : John Fisher-Smith, and George T. Rockri!e. both San Francisco; Jules GregOT')'. Lambertville, N.J ., Donald ff. Lutes, Spr- ingfield, Ore., Max O. Urbahn, New York City and Archibald C. Rogers, Baltimore, Md. Air Traff ic Soon to Soar WASHl~'GTON !UPI) More than 470 million passengers -three Umea: the 1968 total -wlll ridt lhe airlines each yur by 1980, the Federal Aviation At:J. ministraUon is predicUna . The FAA also says thllt by 1980 lhert wlll /be 3,600 airliners; 11C,000 business and private plane:&; and 1andinp and takeoffl from FAA-con- troUed alrpe>rta: wilt have jumped from 53 mJlllon Jut year to 171 millloo. NO 9 MINIMUM _ TIME 8 \,~QUIRED INTEREST FROM DATE OF RECEIPT TO DATE OF WITHDRAWAL! per annum compo11nded daily ~ ~Ok AOIJt, ••• "'*' ~ a. "'lltJlfMtL ASSETS OVER $425,000,000.00 -:!JJll!~ MUTUAL SAVINGS AN 0 L OA N ASS O C IATIO N . CORONA DEL MAR 2867 East Coast Highway, Corona Def Mar, p!if. 92625 telep~ 675-5010 HEADO FflCE 315 E. Col0f1do Blv<f. Pasadena, calif. 91 109 teleph00t: 449.2345 OTHER BRANCH OFFICES Covfni, Glendale West Arcadia TIMltsd.11y, Marth 20, 1%9 Qkl Grizzly Will Surviv e TV WEEK Tells it Like It'll be Proudly Presents BITERTAINMENT In The Lounge Featuring "The Jim Diffie Duo" Senu1tional Gu ita r Sounds & Vocal Arra ngements Mon. thru S•t. 1:30 p.m. -1 ;30 •.m. 2300 HARBOR BLVD, COSTA MESA Harbor Shopping Center -S4MS35 DAILY PILOT 9 PHARMACY TOPICS. by T!.RRY OR.ANT, R.Ph. Good nl'\\'11 from tile U. S. Public Health Service: thl~ past year we've had the lowest incidence or illnesses aod lnju1if":I ir1 a decade. • • • Th(' first shol of mcaslf!tl vacrine is ~commended by pcd.latrlclans at 9 months. then at intervals of from 1-3 · mon Ul.s, dependin11; on 1;. thr. lype of vaccine. l nocu- )latlon is available free or 8.t little cost. No pai n, no discomfort--and no measles, • • • J\1edlcal rrsl'arch bl looking for way!> to ff'f'd people with pills. T\\lo Department or Agriculture. scientists have developed cllrus fruit in tablet"forrn, 8 tablets equal~ ini: llnt' orange or half a grapPfruit. • • • THE ONE l-'lAJUH CAUSE OF OBESITY IS OVEP.EAT- ING. sflys thr A:-.1A. IL is rarely herE'dily glands, or metabolic abnormnllties. • • • One or th" brightl'St cal'eer opportunities b r ck on i n g young \von1rn todn.v is hos- pital pharmat'y. !\Tort> and more ,,·omen arr being at- 1.ractrd to this specialized field. so vilal to.. goo d 11atient L'llr('. • • • ·For 111ode1·11 scrvii:·c \V\th old-fashioned courtesy, bring your prcseripions to: PARK LIDO PHARMACY 3SI Ho1pit11I Ro11d Newport Beach 642-1510 AMl .. ICA'e LA"ctEeT rAMI LV C LOTHING CHAIN i FASHION • IS a man's ' word·' too, at Robert Hall! , ..... ~ 1 CESARE FULL-WEIGHT LARINt• DACRON" WORSTED AND SILK AND WORSTED SHARKSKIN SUITS FOUR-SEASON SUITS 64.95 34.95 Comparable value $75 Comparable value 1$ 45 Our tharluldoo tab on ...,. fashion dlroclioo.< \Vear tbcn1 in perfect <.'OnJidence round the thU .......... p,-......-t-. -and clock and round the cal011darl C.Ontcmponuy three button mocleb'wllh newly«llaed body two and three button n1odels in a rich-looking 1boplng ........ 1ape1 --cs. --blend oi Dacron poly~tcr, wool wors ted. OD pocbb and tide or ooater -ror an un-New Spring patterns and colors in rcgulan, mlsbbbla look ollll%1ll)'. In Spring's moot_ a:borts, Jongs. And, you pay no nlom for theM:: pn!em>d colors. Si.., for rogulan, shorts, longs. fine soit!i tha.n yo\l did a fc"' ~ca.sons ago! COMPLET E ALTERATIONS INCLUDED , Costa Mesa, l&ll ·Newport Blvd., at 16th II·. Garden Grove -12372 Garden Grove llvd. . 'OPEN 11 to 5 SUNDAY . . ' .. ' I· • J ' I ( I l I I I I I )t \ ( l • Je DAll.Y PILOT Arrests End Melee At Carver 80 Mllllon Asked TtWI mAHOI WOil.i . ., MR.MUM Disaster Relief WANT INTEREST ON YOUR BANK CHECl(ING ACCOUNT'? LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Ele\'en members of the Black Student! Union were arrested during a melee at Carver Junior High School Wed· nesday. Mothers of students: patroled tht campus to help calm the youths and possibly averted further violence. · .-Bill Supported At least 35 windows were broken and trash c a n s overturned during the disrup- tion at the campus, focal point of a student strike called by Negro militants agains~ city .. ~ools. School officials said the melee during the morning recess might have been irig- gere<J by. fights betwttn su~ porters of the boycott and ~ those opposed to it. • • No city police entered the Jfo."' campus, although five other ±::::::::'.'.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ youths were arrested outside - the school. A ban on police e~ tering school grounds, was ,the m a i n demand of black militants during the strike. Alleged police brutality in dispersing a student sit-in March 7 at Carver sparked the strike aimed at shutting down junior and senior high schools in the mostly Negro South Central area . The boycott gradually lost steam last week and at· tendante at most schools was back to normal, although about 10 person~ continued to picket at Carver. Reagan Orders Probe Of Credit Practices nationwide guidelines 0 r operation, Shine said: WASHINGTON '!UPI) - Caiik>rnia suffered damage of al )east $265 million in retent floods af\d faces the threat o1 disastrous new fl<>od.5 .as heavy snowpacks melt iri the mountains. Rep. Harold T. Johnson (D-Calif.), testified today. . Johnson, from Roseville in northern California, _opened testimony 'before the House Public Works Committee in support or a disaster relief bill. Johnson urged expenditure or $t;O million during the next two fiscal years to help rebu ild damaged roads that are not a part of the federal- aid highway system and thus not eligible for emergency funds under existing la\vs. The ·$60 million h1 double what is being asked in the emergency legislation now pending in committee. Johnson also b a c k e d language in the bill to increase the authorlzation for forest roads and trails by $35 million over the two.year period. Jn warning that new floods were expected, Johnson said the spring runorf might be up tO 450 percent greater than normal as a result of heavy snows piied up in the moun- tairu;. Snowfall might have exceeded the 1906 record, Johnson said, but it \\•as hard to tell because snow markers and measuring in- struments are buried deep in U1e sriow. Johnson, a member of the Public W o r k s Committee. ,praised the group for having approved past project.'.: that he said helped prevent an estimated $1.2 billion in flood damage during the floods of tbe past three months. "Tragically," he said, "with U1e spring runoff \\'e face this year the existing flood control works, even though operated to full flood control ca:pacilies, will not be sufficient to pre· vent serious flooding." In addition to funds for highy:ay repairs and con- struction, Johnson said, the California Disaster Act would direct the Small Business Administration to grant loans to individuals and private business w i t h o u t requiring recipients to sign a ''pauper's oath." The legislation also would permit forgiveness of up to $2,500 in interest and principal on disaster loans. TOU CAN'T GET IT BUT WITH PACIFIC'S SWiTCH 'M SAVE ACCOUNT Yau can do almost a well by keeping a lot less money in your chtddng -.it ind 1 lat more in yaur Pacific 5% Passbook Account Hd awitding mDlllY back and furth as often as -you like. Because ever,. dollar earns ever,. daf it is in J'OUr Paellic. Account- even lor just one day. 5" an1nlly an PISlliollkAl:counts compounded daily and 1/4% ad- ditioMI aa 111r1,.,.., banus -Ills 111 currant rates. S11i111 in your 1ccau11t It ~uutar's end eun from the lat of any month when rac1ind by thl llltlI. Sabotage Hinted in Derailment Governor Ronald Reagan announced today he will ap- point a special Task Force on Credit and Personel Re- porting Practices to inquire into credit and personnel re- porting practices. 'The broadly. based group will be asked to determine h o w widespread abuses may be and what kinds of firms are involved in them. "Consumer protection is a vital part of our program. The vast majority of reporting finns conduct themselves ethically. But we must detennine whether regulation of these businesses by the state is necessary, and If so, what kind of regulation is re- quired," Reagan said. "Throughout the term of the study, close attention \r·" given to ·1he ability c,. industry to regulate i,_ When a citizen has a con1- plaint. how responsive is the fll'm in dealing .with him? We need answers to these pro- blems so that the role of the state will be clearly defined." PUC Grants Charge Hike Constitution Change Plan Before So Ions MARTINEZ (UPI) -Two major incidents of sabotage in as many nights have caused havoc in the eut San Fran- cisco Bay area. They resulted in seven in- juries, one of them critical, and damage estimated at well over a hall-million dollars. Southern Pacific Railway of- ficials have placed damage at $500,000 from the derail- ment of an SP freight train early Wedntsday in open area outside of Fairfield. None of the four crewmen was hurt, but two engines and 30 cars left the tracks and "spilled around like bowling pins" in the words of one witness. Six of the cars burned for several hours , Railroad detectives s a i d saboteurs apparently pulled spikes from the ties. A heavy metal object was then jam- med between adjoining rails. Engineer Dan Lewis, Oakland, saw the metal protruding from the track, but could not slop the train in time. Meanwhile, the Shell Oi1 Co. has offered a $50,000 reward for the apprehension o f whoever blew up the com- pany's pipeline near Canyon. E.F. McGee, Shell's vice l)resident of western marketing, said that four at- tacks have been made again.st East Bay oil facilities in re- cent ~·eeks, including two against Shell. The reward of- fer ends June 17. GIRLS •• - AGES4-12 WIN Many Valuable PRIZES OH HARBOR CENTER'S 2nd ANNUAL lWfEll ·AGE PRIHWS COHruT CROWNING SAT., MARCH 2'-1:00 p.m. MAMI ••••••••• ,, •••••••• , ADOlUS .••••.• , ··• '.. ,, . , '"ONI ••.••.•...•• I •••••• AM •••.•........••.••••• ftlll "" ..... ,.~ "' &-·· Sf\llflll er 0.ftet 1'111 MecltJl!'Jt "' ... ,.,. ,.,,... Ult HAllOI ILYI. COSTA MllA Before an evaluation of the need for regulation can be made, statistical data regarding the types and extent of abuses and just what kinds of firms are responsible for th.em must be obtained. • "Studies have been made," said Henry M. Shine, Jr., director of Professional and Vocational Standards, "but none have developed the ex- tensive data needed to pro- perly define the scope of the problr.ms and the best solut ion to them." Noting that the major credit reporting finns have adopted Fashion Island-Newport Center Saturday, March 22, 1969 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m . Entries may be made on day of show from 9:00 a.m. to noon . ALL DOGS MUST BE ON LEASH. Judging begins at 1:00 p.m. Prizes will be donated by The Fashion Island Merchants Association. Ribbons will be awarded through 4th place. Prizes to BEST OF BREED ..• BEST IN MATCH ... HIGH-SCORE IN OBEDIENCE CLASS ... each judged by well -known breeders. Conformation classes for: 3·6 mos ••• 6-9 mos ..• 9·12 mos._. and Open. Classes for: beginne rs, novice, and graduate obedience. Bring your dog or come and watch . 58 FINE STORES •nd SERVICES . ,. FASHION J ISLAND liEW:PORT CENTER -----... M-·--""'1· , BUY FROM THE OLDEST AND LJRGEST ALUMINUM AWNING GO. II THE WEST. AIR-VEIT GIVES YOU MORE • Buy Factory Direct • No Sub-Contractors • Local Installations Factory Trained Experts 10 PAYMENTS NO MONEY DOWN 'TIL SEPT. 1969 2· Ftrr •• o,ooo BLUE CHIP wirh Purch STAMPS c.:011110 ase of an " "'"11 ~0 ,,~ Y screened . oaen1.<1 ~1 1 In patio ""• 01 f'<a~ ' • • . " w }~ Bi 'l)., 'IC-q CALL NOW . • . FOR FREE HOME EST IMA iES Our factory trained ••perts give you c:omplete lay-ouf ~ar+.~~~~~op' plonning,urvice in your home FREE OF CHARGE. ' '· Welfare Payments Come Late SANTA ANA -Orange O:lunty's 6,200 families with dependent children w h o received semi·monthly welfare checks got them Wednesday, four days late. Wednesday's checks, mailed Tuesday, were made possible by an emergency advance from the county's general fund authorized by the Board of s·LJI>erVisors. Supervisors and the Welfare Department were swamped with phone calls when the checks did not arrive on time. The checks were held up because the State Controller's office faiJed to majl a $343,811 check to the county last Thursday as scheduled.' With $160,000 cidded by the county the checks mailed TuesdaY totaled $503,000. Those inconvenienced are on the county's Aid to Families With Dependent Chi Id re n Program, the largest of 8ve county welfare progranu:. It has a yearly budget cl ll.U million. Conservation Talk Slated SANTA ANA -Comerv• tionist Wesley Man: will be guest speaker at the Annual Cons ervation Dinner, sponsored by the Sea and Sq:e branch of the National Audubon Society. The dinner, ae\ for 6:30 p.m. Friday, will be at the First Christian Chui-ch here. Marx is a member of UC. Irvine's Project 21 a n d Friends of Newport Bay. Cajtistr~no 'Ro11alt11 . Youngsters from Mislion School at saq Juan Cap- iBtrano played leading roles Wednesday in annual 1st. Joseph's Day Pageant. King'·and queen were portrayed by Ronald Sanchez, 14, and Grace F;tchevenia, 14. Julie Hernandez, "· (background) ptesented scroll. King's crown bearer was Michelle F~ster, 6. Cs.rrying q'ueen1s traiil were Rubiii Yorbo,; a, (left) and Conrad Parsley. 6. Slum Kids~rogram Draws UCI Interest FULLERTON -caJ State, Fullerton, and UC lnlne are among ICbooll that have ex- pressed an-1ntere1t in the new summer sports program for 75,000 1lum youngster• an- nounced by Vice Preoldent Spiro T. Agnew. The two Orange County schools are among 17 Califor. Dia schools which may panici- pate in the program. Agnew Slid the summer program, the first on such a acale, would cost the federal government $3 million with an additional $1.5 million com· ing from colleges, universities and Junior colleges which will make their facilities available U campsites. School Office Promotes Valley's Dr. Sinclair "Our prime target," said Agnew, 1'is to reach the' inner city youngster who has ·no recourse but into the streets during the long hot summer." Each participant in the pro- gram would attend day camps for 8t leet fi ve weeks. The program will be ad- miriistered by the National SANTA ANA -Dr. Robtrt Collegiate Athletic Amin. under B. Sinclair will be promoted. contract with the Department to associate superintendeqt ol of Health, Education · and the Oringe County Schools Of. Welfare. ' fice to replace Dr. Willard The plan is to use gym- --r ----.,.---· ------· ---,----...-~~~· :01,...'l' °'" ==0\"'1 .· I. : • Beach Peril Holds ' Rive_r Cleanup Slwuld Take 60 Days SANTA> ANA -Rlvenlde will complete work on tta broken sewer system LbJJ weekend but that does not end the problems of cen- tamlnalioo of lbe Santa Ana River and coastal beaches, br. John R. Philp, Orange County Health officer, told supervis- 'ors Wednesday • . 'Ibe first problem remaining ls Ille linie ii will take lbe r;ivtr... to rid itself ol sewage COllla!olnation wbich Dr. Philp eJthnatea at up to 60 days. -·"We , wiJl. make daily tests t..o· determine .. w~n we can reopen the beaches in Hun- tington Beach' and Newport Beach to swimmers and surfen,"· the heaUh officer said. "As 800n as it ls safe we will lift the ban." The second problem , is a * * * Santa Ana River Flood Study Asked SANTA MIA -The cbunly Board of Superviaors bu ordered an. updated ~report on the condition of flood control devices in the Santa Ana Rive r. Jn light of recent floods, supervisor• 1aid, they wlnt to know the present condition of river levee&, check dams and channelt. Tbey _also want to know what improvements, if any, should be made in flood control lacllllies. An q:reement for the report will be negotiated with Leeds, HUI and Jewett, consulting engineers. The same firm completed a comprehensive 1tudy of tbe ·river last year. The price of the new study, supervisors said, will not ex· ceed $10,000. No time limit was set. Dietrich Film At UCI Tonight long range one. At least six cities and sanitation districts use the river as a depository for their treated sewage. They are, in addition to Riverside, San Bernardino, 0 n t ti r i o , ~.Rialto and Chino. ''These cities muat be (orctd ~ by the Water Pollution·Conttol Board to adhere to cert.a.ln . bacterlsl standarda U the r;iver water is ~ become usable for water sports," Dr. Pbilp said! • After a two-day campaip, Supervi.sor David L. Baker got Ilia feUOw bo6rd members· to go along with . a letter to Riverside urging that_ every ifteaution be taken to protect against a re:peat of lhe current aituaUoo. "If we don't let tllem know now how ·We feel things will continue along as they have for years," Baker.argued. "If Riverside's break bad heed on the other side of the city and flooded the streets, I am sure they would have moved faster to make the Decessary repairs/' the supervisor added. IS WORTH IS WORTH at The TOY HOUSE n==i1 Items Like: Arrow Copter-SiH.y Putty- ' ~het·lo-lmperiol YO· YO's ,. . . *Sorry, no gift wrapping of 1al• items 223 E. 17th tS. Costa Mesa 548-5454 DAILY '!LDT J J ,., • •o• master char~1e H. Saucerman,. assistant coun-nasium, sw~ po o I s , IRVJNE _ The moUon pie- ty superintendent who will tracks, playilig fields and ture "'Di.shonored," starriD1I!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ retire the end of June. other facilities of the tchools. The announcement w a 1 The original reJease on .the Marlene Dietrich, will be 3442 Via Lido Newport Beach 673-8530 made by Sinclair's bou, coon-program Monday fr o.m shown tonight in the Studio ty Schoo I Superintendent Washington listed Anaheim as Theater at UC Irvine. Robert Peterson. one of the clUe.s to be included Admission will be $ 2 • Sinclair, .tl-year-old former in the program but a Spanaor1 are U n i v er 1 i t y Fountain Valley school prin-1pokesman for the recreation Gallery Associates and the Art cipal, presently Is director of department of the city said Gallery. The show starts at the county's supplementary "we know nothing about IL" 8:30 p.m. Education Center. Hll ularyJp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:oil will be increased from 117,lOO annually to about !20,000. EDUCATOR PROMOTED Dr. Robert B. Slnclair DEATH NOTICES RADDEN Rldl1rd Sit.~. 414 !.·oCNnfrent, New!>Ol"I 11"9Ch. 0 •19 of dNT~. ,,.,.rdl 11. survived by wlfl, oi.,. H~. CO$t• Meu; d•u11hm, Kfrtll•n P1•, COll1 Me.YI b<'ol~r, Dol'lfild H..:tdln, Gi.ndale1 1l1t.r, Mr1. 81rNr1 Lnl<a, Mfl'ld.n, COnnedlQlt, Gr1.,...IM ltflf'- lctt S.tun1'1Y, 11 /l\M, F1lrlwl- M-11I P1rt, wllll a... J1mff ' Slt lne af'l~llM!. OlrtC'f9d bY hltl Mort\11~, 17'1 Sti'""lar, Carta Mew. BAL'l'l MORnJARIES Cor.:in• del Mar OR 3·945t Costa Mesa l\U ~2424 BELL BROADWAY MORnJARY llO Broadway, Costa l\fe11 LI 8-3413 DILDAY BROTHERS ' Huntington Valley Mortuary 11'11 Beacll Blvd. Huntington Beach SU.'1771 Saucerman is retiring from hll $21,000..per-year post_ after 21 years with the county Schools Office to teach futill'e teachers fuD. time. He has been part.time education pro- fessor at Chapman College for the past 10 yurs. Saucennan, 51, resides at 411 Rivaside Ave., Newport Beach. County Cites Marines for Flood Work SANTA MIA -A wrlU.. com mendati on th an k In g various Marine Corp1 unlta ror their "unstinting aid" dur- ing recent floods has been ordered by the county Board of Supervison. Cited for their help wW be the El Toro Marine c:orps Air Station, Camp P.endletan, the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing,-El Toro and the Marine Corpa Air Facilitv. f·nta Ana. The Marines flew helicopters into the stricken Silverado Canyon area for several days and fmnished PACIFIC VIEW men to aid in the re2'rlldlng MEI\-IORIAL PARK of banks or Santiago Creek Cemetery e Mortuary and the Santa Anl River as well as rescuing 1 e v tr a 1 Chapel families in the San Juan 3500 Pacific View Drive Capistrano area. Newport !':~0o Ca!Hornla ll-:D::-EO::A=T=u=-=N.,.O_T_l_C_E_S_ HOLll~ER PEEK F .V.UL 'Y H..t:i.rt M. Holktt. lh S W•li.tt. CMll ~. s.tvkll$ ""'°'Jflf. Seh ·~' COLONl~~UNERAL Mortu1ry. Jlf ~ONES" (Mfl Mtlt. Wllll1m Y. J-., Aft n, f1f 1111\'I 1801 Bc!lu Ave. e1ibol ll,'1\111 •• Ntwflllrt l•ac~. o.i. e1 -tm•--4--• •r•r. dffltl, Mirdl 1'. Su"'!"" try wll>r, nel m•""'r o~-Mn. Ml!lit J.,15, Grww1io. fll'VkM. Mand1y, t PM, l'Klfk View ,,.,.,...,. 1<11 P1rt. Dll"IC1M by l1ltz MlrflllrY, SHEFFER MORnJARY JS70 I!. ca.t1 Hi.,_.,, eor-WI Your Friendly Siore OFFERS BARGAINS IN QUALITY MODEL WA &GOU AIITOMATIC w~ ,... Minl·Buket" WE }• OUR OWN FINANCING • • OUR OWN SERVICING DO • OUR OWN INSTALLING NO MOllY DOWN • 36 MONTHS TO PAY Llpna Beach 4H-1PS 11-"'-'·--..;;;;;;;;----11 w aemate ..... " ..,.,.,..,.... ,...,,,. FAT OVERWBGitT SMrl'll'S MORTUARY A'l'l lllbll .. """' WltJIOvt I __.. 11"9' tcl'lptletl, OW ~ U lt.I OfrintJt. m Mabl SL You """' .... Ul'Y let IH' """' -r R~•(J!l•riA :l/""~ Net:. O.rlrlft i. 1 tt~r t1111e1 .,,,. """' -::;;:\~ _.,,..,,~ ,..._J_'!'_ hceu ht tnf llYe ..,..., M• wm_~ Q,to lltld 1 l!llW, .. ,..,. ....,.....,. tilt Nr H.ot. 8ofll ,,.. WESTt:LlFF MORTVARY 417 E. 11111 SL. Colll MIA 1111111 ,.111 wot' Wilt ftll'llll'": If 'IOI N11111111 ..,. .,,, ,.."°"' fli:I l'M'llrll tt.. ...U1tt .. ,... .,..,, " '" vow full -.., Md;,, Hit .-11llflt ••kid. OdrJMll h .... •1111 'll'lll 01141' ... "" 1>y1 CIAWPOID llXALL PHAIMACT , .. ,....,.... ........... olft °""" ,._. APPUANCE & TV SAW & SERVICE 1815 Newport llvcl. • Costa· Mela · Phone 548-7788· U-172 SHRUB & HEDGE TRIMMER 1311 ,single edge blade ad· Justable side handle and !,ii H.P. motor. ' ' ' . , 1999 Outdoo1 !iglitilJ.ll YQ.u . ' .. • never thought you could· afford! ... Nt ,.,_its, CCll'ld11it tr diqlnr •ttesUry ••• i!!t.Jl•-it! • UL lPPfMd. JZ.fttt SJ11t1111bloh1tely &hod.proof~!· That low-fOll•r• stts "' *'91ttt wilt 'kiri• stlltlf bt• llpb Mid c:olortd ltnsts (Z 111~tr. rreen, •i•k. MM, Ml white). 100 fer! 1f wadttrprt0f cable, tra•sfOOMr •Ith built·• ntom1tlc tillltf, arottd stt•n ind .. A bnclets • UM tltis tttil:ifta NW Nrhtl,. hm Alli ii dozens •f •111 tltroqtlott 1111 JtW lot '""'"' ... Olldoor """· MOOf:L ;U!ll &-fight system HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE VALUES! GARBAGE DISPOSAL • RICH, DECORATOR COLORS COMPLEMENT BATH DECOR. TREADS ARE MADE OF SOFT, TEXTUl!tD-RUBBE.R, ADHESIVE BACKED FOR EASY -INSTAL• LA TION. ODORLESS, W I L L NOT MILDEW, NO SPECIAL CLEAN1 ~6', • 011• y11r in hom• •r Ov•r tll• Count1 r R1plac1m•nl Gu1 r1nl11 e l/l H.P. ' e HttYy Ou~ Cutli"q Bl1dtt STYLE CN °"" 1r • .., "' ... COLOltSf ANTIQUE GOLO AVOCADO GllUN 90'1' WtUTt DflP ILUlt WIYtD l'lNIC Value $34.95 s23•• $2.98 WATER HEATERS • Republic "Gemini" 20-GALLON •.............• $42.88 lO·GALLON ...•.............• $44.88 40·GALLON ···-.··········-$49.8J. SO-•ALLON ,_ .. _ ..... ···-$64.88 INSTALLATION AVAIL.AILI Thi• q11•lity 911•r•11t11d 91••• li111d w1!1r h••fw It •q11lpp~ w/lh• Q~ty t•t'!lp. •t r•1l4111rt4 by l1w . W1 lo1v1 ,,,J. d1y lnrt1ft1tlon •11•ll1~le If y111 Witlo. All notm•l l11d1ll1Uo11 p•rt1 i11c.ht11I• &:,,lif'ft''· C•ll j:.y ntel\. -1!11t1U 't1'i•i, lf1y. Alte • ...,,, • P" t •"c:y fntftll•tt111 •Y1ll1 .. I .. All wor• d1n1 by f!ll tl1r pl11Mb1r.. I I ~--------------------. -------- \ For The Record ·--··~ l'Aeftlses Divorce• -· Ir: , INT•ll.eCUTOllY D9Cll91 Oltl S. UU.-\Ill ltlct.."' F, -1.ltdllt A. ""'*" Yl ••llY c. ,,,,..,,. ll1Yf!IOllllll A. OW \Ill ..._ INrle -Dor. J&M llWr1tlMll "' J-s. ........ C1rolvlt NllilNe lMllllM W 0-lf ... , ........ L..-.. .... ~ J-tttll'f " ·'TlllNM• ,_..., Mtwl M. latlflltt W .... ltll lM Uflw.r """"'°' ,,,.., "' ltlcll ,,,.. J~N AM #.MM "' 0-lf T. -llkf'lanl p, Flllk11Go Y9 t1!trt D. "'"If!" l•li. A. llfM w DMnl MIN lttM ..lo9 A. Al¥• w LMfl V, Alwl I-'¥ D. OuJMM ¥1 DorllMI L. -JMll Dtnllll MdllfYre W ~ _ ... ._ ~ lltuttl Ylerffe "9·Altlt W11W ( ) THE SKIN OF YOUR YOUTH Roceptured in e brillient new discovery from Dorothy Grey ••• Algene. Specie! formulo conteinc Irish Moss, • rich elgee culled from the sea to 9ive your skin • smooth nelurol cooling, creole e barrier between you end unfriendly elements. Algone comes in Feet Creem, 6.00, 1.00; Foe• Emulsion 5.00; Hana end Body Lotion 4.00: Cosmetics, 17. ANAHEIM 444 Nertli Eu<U~ ••• 111-1121 M-4•1 "'"' s ........ , ... ..,.to9:l0 '""' 'I • • • ' I • • '• SLIP INTO CREPESE-r LUXURY Next to you, tho cool floltery of Crepeset®' nylon by Keyser, go ing to ell lengths to pleo se you . Feotured: Full slip, loco touched bodice end hem, short 32-3b, everege 3'4-38, in •quo sproy, 6.00. Helf slip, loco hemmed, short S-M, everoge; M-l, white, :f.00. Chemise slip. 32 -3 6, white, 6.00. Street Floor Lingerie, 54. 'A ret11tw• tfM-rl ff~ blil CtrJr,. ' NEWPORT 47 fHhfoo lsl.oM ,., 644°1212 Moooy lhrv Frldoy 10 o.m. I• 9:l0 p.m. S.tvr.ley I 0 a.m. t• 6 , .... 1 • • COME SEE AND ENJOY THE BROADWAY-NEWPORT'S FESTIVAL OF ART fe•furint the works ef lapn1 l11ch Artl1t1 in oils, 1no11ic1, cerernlc1, tculpture end f1p11frl11 Thursd1y1 Fr;doy ond Sotunloy Morch 20, 21 •nd 22 HUNTINGTON BEACH 7777 Lfln9et A.-tnu. ••• tt2-llJ I Moll4oy thni S.tunioy 10 ....... 9:l0 ...... : .. , .. ·--------------------·--------·--·---·---~ ··-·~--·----------·-----~--·--.-~~..,,.,--~y ....--.,..........,.-~- r, • . I Prisons Horjzons Broaden • . , .. By JODEAN HASTINGS 01 Tlltl 0.11., r111t Stafl It could be a college campus. Green lawns, neatly manicured . .L·.ower beds, landscaped and trim. A multitude oC \vindows in low-slung brick buildings overlook· ing spacious walks and lawn_ areas. The "students" all live in, because around the perimeter is a chain-link: fence topped with ugly rolls of barbed wire. It's the California Institute for Women at Frontera, 1<>eated near Chino in San Bernardino County. It houses between 700 and 900 women · convicted of felony offenses ranging from murder to bad checkii, ality as they go about their daily routine of either work, school or both. The institution ha!! its own radio station, newspaper, little thea~ ter group, band and orchestra. Movies are shown on weekends and there is a Toastmistress Club within the facility. Alcoholics Anony .. mous and Seventh Step Found8tion conduct .!~&r_.JJ1e¢ings for tbO:' confined women. - Although many needs are f\lllfilled within the institution·, it s~. ' remains a sterile existence -untouched by the outs~de world. · · BPW HELPS , Befriending the women who even fotget what living· in the out- side world i!! like are members of the Women's Parole Advisory Com .. mittee and contact representatives in BusiDess and Professional Wo-• , men's clubs. .. ... . .. ~. ... ..... . • • Comprising the total institutional community in California are 28,000 people. Approximately 14,000 former offenders are on parole, supervised' by the Department of Corrections. One woman, confined for two years, has not had a single Visitor and flatly admits she "doesn't expect any" for Ute duration of her stay. Another, paroled after serving nine years of a 19-year sentence, was invited to dinner with frlends.-·After thoroughly enjoying the ex .. ' perience of dining in a nice restaurant, she temporarily forgot her-, sell and was thoroughly mortified aft.er reaching in her dres·~ front . . . . . ' . . SELF,SUSTAINING -All jobs within California Institute !or Women The. majority of women confined in CIW are there because o[ narcotics charges, which this year became the leading offense com- mitted by wcimen. Ranking second and third are forgery and check charges, followed. by homicide including manslaughter. . ~11'.1 cdmp¢son, leading crimes committe<'.I by men are hoi;nt- cide, r~bbery and burglary, checks, with narcotics fourth on the list. , YOUTH INCARCERATED Of growing concern to everyone connected with the Department ol Corrections is the ever-increasing youth of the people who must be incarcerated. Once the average age for drug addiction was 26 for women, 25 for men. It continues to plummet downward toward the teens at a fri ghtening rate. Also cause for alarm is the irrepressible brain damage caused by the increased use of LSD and methedrine -inducers of violent and self-destructi ve behavior. "Now on death row is a former inmate who committed a hideous crime under the influence of methedrine even though pre. vious psychological testing had indicated that, under normal circum- stances. she never ~'ould reso rt to violence," mused Mrs. Marteen ?i.·fcGuire, correctional counselor. lVhat is to become of these people whose antisocial behavior has caused their confinement and rosts the taxpayers billions? Follo,ving a recent panel study by the FBI, J . Edgar Hoover commented that neither the tough. institutional approach nor the soft method of dealing with law-breakers has worked as well as proba~ tion and parole supcrvlsio~. · , SOLUT ION IN PARO LE? P~le is weighed in each individual case in term!! of potential danger to the community. Ironically the safest parole risks are peo- ple who have committed murder, with Jess than two-tenths of one percent repeating the offense. Jn California, 85 percent of men and \\'omen are paroled - a higher ratio than most other states, com- ments Lo!tis P, Carney, supervisor, parole and community services djvision. From the time 'W6hlen are admitted into CIW's Reception Guidance Center, officials and outside agencies begin working toward their ultimate goal -rehabilitation and release of these women to resume a useful role in society. The center is a small unit with a large staff. While the women are maintai ned there during a 90-day quarantine period they under~ go a complete series of psychological, psychiatric and aptitude tests and the staff begins to preplan each individual's prison life and evell" tual parole. . \Vhile in the center the women also become oriented to prison life. Only a. small percentage (which includes potential suicides or escapeeS) are held in closed custod y, allowed only to gO ollt to work under supervision. Tu•o oth er classifications include medium custody in which th e "'omen are allowed some degree of freedom within the rompound and are permitted to attend evening functions with supervision, and minimum custody, where women are allowed access to all areas of the chained, barbed-tvire facility. MAINTAIN INDIV IDUAL ITY The \\'omen wear their own clothes to maintain some individu- f~r cigarettes she habitually kept tucked in ~.er bra. . For these reasons both :Prison officials an4 the commiftee, es- tablished in Orange County as a pilot program'bytormer Gov. Brown, encourage informative letters from stable residents in the world "out ... side." Although all mail is censored, letters such as these have an uplifting effect on the inmates and are weJcomed by both the con-:. fined women and prison officials. CIW is completely self-sustaining with all the work ddne by the women confined there, includi ng landscaping, plumbing, electrical, and even pouring concrete when required. . WITH , NOT AGAINST Working closely with the women confined in CIW, supervis.ed by Mrs. Iverne Carter, are Mrs. McGuire,. correctional counselor, and Miss Edie Farris, counselor for the State Department of Rehabilitation which is cooperating with the State Department of Corrections. Organized following World War J[ under the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, rehabilitation work in crw began 8.$ a pilot study lour years ago. Considered a privileged program, it almost went under beCaus~· of the "way out" aims of some of the iJµnates , Miss Farris explain- ed, and counseling was required to help the Women select a reason-. able vocation. "There isn't much you can do to help a Sixth grade dropout who '. wants to be an interior decorator," adds Mrs. McGuire. More than 600 women have lacked feal woik skills or job train- ing, Miss Farris continues, and a prison record becomes another handicap when she seeks employment. · Within the compound, officials continue to work on the theory that vocational guidance helps an individual's ~djustment to the com- munity. · CLASSES OFFERED Inside the institution there are classes Jn cosmetology, indus- trial sewing, vocational nursing, floral designing, clerical skills, house- keeping and laundry. "We used to have classes in culinary arts until we had our budget cut. We Jost culinary arts but kept landscape gardening," says ~fiss Farris with a shrug and a smile. Since II)• majority of 1'/0men confined Jack a high school diploma, they attend classes either inside the facility or adult edu- cation classes in nearfly schoolr. ' Illustrating the success · of the rehabilitation. and training pro-. gram, Mrs. Geraldine Gregory, parofe agent, cftes the example of one young woman, an itinerant vegetable picker when first confined. trained in Industrial sewing. Paroled, she was given an old sewing machine and began repairing sails and . boat covers. Today she has a thriving business in all types of marine sewing. (SN FIRST MONTHS OF PAROLE CRUCIAL, P•go 141 • ar'e carried out by the woroen who. are co.nfined. Darl.ene and J oleann lake their turn on the garbage truck detail. · EAGER TO LEARN -. Learning the garment business from the cut- Ung board UP, are Carlleen and .Carolyn~ whose skills are responsible for the large majority of garments used in all state mental hospitals, including Fairview, Costa Mesa. Mixed Up Male Causes Havoc While Playing. Post '. Office . . ,. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am 20 and erigaged lo marry a 21-year-old GI who now is in Vietnam. Last week I received a letter from Bruce. It was a love letter which he had written to another girl and had put1Ui the' wfunt enve1os)e bf1 rnlstake.' From the places he me'nUoned It is clear that be met this girl during bWc training at Fort Dix. He asks her to "keep fresh the memories of UKlr&e tender moments." I am ' m.ire tht9. did more than hold hands. ; I , . Should I .send Bruce l~ letter and tell him I'm through? Or ·Mould I act like everything is OK and , settle the matter when be gels home? [ am deeply • ae:x drive with the desire to beget off. abe waa lerrilled el labor paJns. spring. Anlmala can't aeparate 1e1 from Thia wlfortunale lady bas a deep- re'productlon, but people can. seated fear from which she should be 'lbere are plenty of people Who like liberated, for her own sake as well ANN LANDERS hurt and .. ould like to bruk lbe "1{!1(~ menL I don 't want lo marry a man I cap 't lrust. What do you advi.IC? -THE GIRL ill; LEFT BEHIND DEAR ,GIRL : Give nt lllnt tbat all la DOl well. Eventually Btuct will kan ol k11 mll&Ue btcaute tile , damsel wlU. wltem he df4 lilt "butc training" QD• d<nbi<dly .... ,.... .... kltu tol<oded •' ,,,. 1"· Sil -nd ........ lie ludl .. II. sex but don't happen to care for children. •• In fairness to tbe man the marrle1. 1bil attitude does not always stem from Uer mother and ~unl TilUe prob.ably • feF ot! dilldlt~· A iadr)esa:,. maritN'" . lelled~ ..,. ... to 4~ wUb tteriet ef dii&rd; or any other tlnd ol . hani(up. llldr, agootdn'r latior. I~ did .. Some women simply don't relish the &et tieUer every ytar.) ... thought of 11pendlng the best years of It may 1urprise yeu, but aol all womu DEAR ANN LANDERS Do their lives cooped up lo a bouie wilh vkw raWng a f1mUy •• spet1dlng the : you ICl"earnirtf kids .lrom momlng till night. bt11l years of tbelr llves cooped up honestly believe thal peop)e who don't What's so nutty about lhat?~AREER wllb a house full of 1ereamln• kklll'. want to raise children are psychologJcally WOMAN · •' • l Sotne women find s9Usfactlon, fulfillment dtslurbed? . · ~ • DEA·R WOMAN:' Voa Ire C1>Dfuted. a.ad pride lo raising a fam.117. And what's When you say the drive to reproduce I .dggn&ed ~ft11loo1J be.Ip for a u. to nutty about that? ls one of the atrongest In animals and 7tar-ekl ttadtt wbo •anted to adopt healthy humans, you are equating the cb.Udn1 luleld ol Uve tbem btca11te :i CONFIDENTIAL ) 'l'O HIGHLY SUSPICIOUS? Yes, Virginia, there Is really an Ann Landers, but she gets about a thousand letters every day and can't prlnt them all. 0 1bt: Bride'• Gulde," An.a Landen' boMltl, ,MIWUI IO,m& ot... ....... ,,. <!O!J•llt, ~ questions aliout wtdcllap. To rtet:i,·e yctUr copy of lhis com- prtbtllli\•e 1ulde., write io Ana IAndtn, in care of this newtpaper, ucloslq • lonRt 1ellriaddrt1Rd, 1tamptd envelope and ts l)ent5 In coin. Anh ·1.anden wlD be glH to belp you • ~·Ith, yoiar problems. Stnd lbet1l &o tier 1a ·care tf the DAILY •PILOT, en.clostng • tUunptd, sell-eddrtl!ltd envelope. I j ,. - J 4 DAlLY PILOT Zontians on Move Mart Makes Smart Move Zonti3Jls are on the move as usual, but this Ume they're moving their thrift shop, ..the Zonta Mart, to newer and more spacio~ ouarters. -·l'!?e fjve-year-old business has moved ju.st across the street from its former loca- Lion to 1885 Park Ave., Costa Mesa, and will have its grand opening tomorrow at 10 a.m. Funds from the thrift shop are earmark .. ed for support of the Senior Citizens Recrea .. t.Jon Center, a favorite Zonta project, ac- cording to Mrs. Malcolm Angell, president. Mr s. Phillip Rees, Zonla Mart chairman, has been in charge of preparations for the move. and assisting her have been Mrs. Al Forgit; painting and decorations and Mrs. Fred Peth, paraphernalia and fixtures~ SW I olhers lending a hand have been the Mmes. Robert Bacon, Roger Barrow, George E. Benz, Joseph Carlos, James Gal- lagher, Joe Hamblet, Richard Sheets, Don .. aid E. Schoerunehl and George P. Zebal. Tite shop will be open for business as usual from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily. Game Party, Ritual On Sorority Agenda ?t1embers of Xl Mu J.fu Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, are anticipating a game party which will take place next Saturdaf in the home of. Mr. and ~lrs. J ohn Huber, Hun· tington Beach. In charge of the event, ·which will entertain pro- spective members and their husbands, ls :r.1rs. Frank Stoltenberg, social chairman, assisted by Mrs. Carroll Lindsay and Mrs. Stuart Hayter. The next meeting or the group will take place at 8 p.m. ?t1onday, ?ttarch 24, in the Huntington Beach home of Mrs. Gibb Lynch. Election of officers will be the primary business to come before the board. and in charge or ar· rangements is ?ttrs. Charles Justis. fl.tembers of Delta Bela Epsilon will host a prefertn-uar tea and pledge ritual at 2 p.m. Sunday, March :ZS, in the Santa Ana home of Mrs. Randy Bauder. The tea and pledge ritual will honor Mrs. Tom Brannon of Huntington Beach. Arranging the event will be the Mrs. Kenneth Sutton, chairman, asaisted by Mrs. Riclulrd Sb<rTod and Mn. Richard Freudenthal. Assisting in the ritual will be Mr1. Don Shelton, chapter president, and Mrs. Richard She r ro d , membership chalrman. Honored guest al the tea and ritual will be the chapter's advisor, Mn. Bernard Bailey, XI Epsilon Oli, South Gate. Addltional informaUon may be obtained by callln& Mrs. Shelton, 847-3153. Engagement Told May Picked for Rites A May wedding In Laguna Beach Neighborhood Congregational Church will J UDITH BIGELOW Lagun• Wllddlng link Judith Lynne Bigelow, stepdaughter and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Burton ol Laguna Beach, to Arthur Neville Jones of Inglewood. Mlss Bigelow, a naUve Lagunan, is a graduate af Laguna Beach Hl&h School where she organized the school's first drill t.am. Put honortd queen of Laguna Beech Bethel, Job's Daughters, Miss Bigelow at· tended Orange Coast C.Ollege and took part in Chapman C.Ollege's World Cam p u 1 Afloat program. The bride-to-be was a yearbook staff member and \1o'on an award in the Amateur Film Festival last year for films taken when traveling around the world. Her fiance, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Neville Jones of Riviera , Ariz., is a graduate of Washington Hlgb School. A nnual Card Benefit . . . . . . . Horo ope ibra: Don't Hurl Charges FRIDAY MARCH 21 By SYDNEY Oil!ARR ''The wile nian controls his desUny , , .A>trology points the way." ARIPJI (!larch 21-Aprll It): .Legal propoolllon mo:r not be all you think; a.st questioos. JI you lnvOltlg1te, you turn up valuable lnformatlo!I. Doo't toe rlab with poaes11on.s, money. Pltuant evening is lndlc1ted. - TAQRVB (April »May 20): Activity that had hem 'delayed pl! oil the gTound. You see wiy clear. :V.oney ii coming your way. Doors previously closed are opened. Means you can make your own op- portun!U... Do IO. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): ON DISPLAY -What do you do when you are a Blue Bird or Camp Fire Girl? A few of the actlvi~ ties will be featured. in a 59th birthday display nex:t Saturday at Fashion Island in the exhibit area. Looking over their handiwork are (left to right) the Misses Laurie Staiger of Costa Mesa and Libby MacPherson and Julie Humphries of Newport Beach. Keep close watch behind tbe scenes. Me1111 don't accept surface values. Promlsea are bright. But IOIDe who make them are not equipped to deliver. Keep something in reserve. Be discreet. CANCER (June 2t-July 22): Weekend Display Birthday Fete to Conclude Domestic area un der a: oe 11 change. This is due mosUy to activity connected with visitors, friends . You are call- ed upon to make decision. Stick with what you know. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Ac- cent o n aeeemplishment. Greater recognition indicated; push c~. Hold of.f on journey, Finish present ta.sir. Leave no loose end.a. Don't carry burden not rightfully your own. camp Fire Glrll In the Orqe Coat area are taking full advantage of their birth- day week by having a host of a<:tiviUes to celebrate the. event. Displays have been ar- ranged in all area Ubraries showing crafts and actlvlties of the Camp Fire girls, end a luge exblbll has been plan- ned for FMhioo. Island's From Page 13 display cases next Saturday. Shoppers may enjoy group singing presented by Camp Fire Girls from 1 to 3 p.m. next Saturday while viewing exhiblt.s provided by t h e groupi led by the Mmes. Paul Troener, Andrew Carey, William Godejohn, G e r a 1 d Kingsley, John 7.orger, Fran- cis Hickey, Roy Pfeiffer, Richard Brace, Donald Minni, Chet Baugh, Gary Maiwald, \Villiam Tilly and John Vultee. Mesa Verde Blue Birds and Camp Fire Girls invited their fathers to help tflem celebrate at a father~aughter banquet Monday evening in Adams School. Mrs. John Warren was in charge of arrangements and Dave Schweitzer S1?rved as master of ceremonie.s. Special gue:sls were t.trs. Gary f.1ain, field director for Orange County Damp . Fire Girls, the Rev. Joseph ?i.1cShbne, pastor of Mesa Verde Methodist Church, and Robert Miller, principal of Adams School. Dads were entertained by singing and skits, and the lighting of candles on cakes to ct;Jebrate the organization's 59th birlbday concluded the evening. VIBGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Remain within financia l bound?. D o n ' t overextend yourself. A new contact proves exciting. Impress with sin· cerity, not extravagance. Simple approach is best one today. • • • First Months of Parole Crucial Can the women arrested for second time because she basis -the sk.llls the person a felony offen&e be paroled violated her parole by mar-has to market and the type and become p r od u c t I v e rying a man the Parole Board of job we have oper1. citizens in the commmlity? considered unsuitable. "By all means a parolee In the majority of cases, "The marriage didn 'l turn should be honest when she yH, say those connected with out too well, anyway -I applies for work. We want the Department o f Cor-should have listened,'' she to know the type of offense rectlon!. says ruefully. committed and t h e in- The first &ix months oul!ide Dorothy, 38, also will be dividual's point of view con- national corporation with a either for or against the hlrlng facility in Orange County of an individual on perole but stated that il is their policy another requires its employes to be open-minded and judge to be bonded, which would individuals on the basis oC forbid the employment of a training and skills offered -parolee. an opinion sha red by the vice Although many job op- president and general porturuties are prohibited, one manager of a leading area company official summed up newspaper, who was emphatic the attitude expressed by that the person a pp tying for many: "We have a much y,·ork tell the truth regarding more liberal approach than IJBRA (Sep!. 23-0d. 22): Take care in deallnJ: with mate, partner. Bett not to hurl charaes. Try to un- d e r s t a n d clttumstancts. Otherwise, you could b e dlsturblni: hornet'• nest. Word to wise abouJd be sufficient. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Changes due at place of employment, You could be perlOnlllf involved. Accent on bow you adjuat to challen1e. Key is to be versatile. Ride with the times. Don't oppooe progress. SAGl1TARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): You receive creat bene.fita: from rollline tub. Day when you are ap- preciated. By a pp I y 1 n g yourself, you double benefits. Key is persistence, attentlon to details. CAPRICORN (Dec. ~an. 19): Life is spiced through variety today. Kaleidoscope ol eventa occurs. R o u t I n t changes. Opportunlty present! itself. Accent on willingness to take a chance on yourself. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Avoid unnecessary trip. Gruter satlsfadion obtained close to home base. Slres.'1 on building solid structure. Means be sure of facts. You coold be challenged later by one in authority. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Guard valuables. "What you own could appear very at- tractive to others. Avoid carelessness. Tendency exists to romanticize persoos, situa· lions. Be .sensitive without being foolish. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you have flne sense of humor. Acting ability could be pronounced. Shaky financial situation ill but tern· porary. Beginning next month you rebound toward mccess. GENERAL TENDENCIES: Day features significant bre.ak from tradition. To order Syd,,..,, Omarr'f ~ booll;i.t, Ti. Trull> Altoul All~Y, s....S 50 cents to e>m.rr 9110klet, II-. DAILY PtLOT, lolt n.«I, Gr•nlll Ct!to 1r11 Stallon, New Ywk. N. Y. 10011. ADVEltT15EMt:NT HOW TO MARRY When preparing for your wedding you need lol..!i of help. Get the infonnatlon neressary in "How to Plan Your Wedding" Guide. Send 25c in coin to P.O. Box 388, Huntington Beach, Calif. 92M3 the institution ls the crucial released with seven years of cerning why it happened, so period, and aiding the in-'parole supervision. She, too, \\'e can help her not make divldual and her parole officer violated a previous parole by the same mistake again." is the Wanen's Paro I e marrying without permission The first concern with the Advisory Committee and con-and leaving the state to return aeroi;pace industry is national tact members from Orange to her husband's home in the security, but otherwise the Co 11 t Bu 1 l n e ! s and Midwest. company ls willing to consider Professional Women's clubs. She was rejected by his each applicant on an in- his parole status. Falsifying , =w;e;,;;d~id~a~d~e;c;ad~e~ag~o~.'=' ==~;;;;;;;;;;, information on an applicalion1; would be grounds for instant dismissal. t.1any prospective employers also felt that an interview with the Pflrole agent would be beneficial to all concerned. Help in finding jobs, hOlJ5.. family; her husband drank dlvldual basis, explained the Ing, or being just a single heavily and she suffered fre-manager of employment of friend in the communHy are quent beatings so to escape a major area corporation, who offered by the committee, she wrote no-account checks personally talks ,,.,·ith pro. whose members al9o volunteer to return to callfomia -and spects. One 1 e a d i n g department store chain had no opirUon their time to spMk to in· Cl\V, The applicants must be t....ted organlzaUOn1 in an When &he is released she cleared with our security I"°' Gloomy Gus Tells ii effort to educate the public hopes to find employment as pie, and they mu5t be qualified regarding the rehabilitation a waitress or short-order cook for work, he continued. As You See i'f work being done. and study secretarial work at -;;;;;;;;D;;ir;;ec;;tor;;;;;;;;m;;;;;;per;;;;;;sonn;;;;;;;;el;;f;;or;;;;;;a;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~!I E!\tPLOYMENT POSSIBLE night achoo!. II Jobs are a necessity, and Job selection ls carefully whether they are considered supervised by parole agent..5. employable is a major cause "It ·would be impractical to for concern among women place a nare<>tics offender in a hospital or drug store," ex- Hall Sizes facing parole. 1 Pat, 34, will be released Pains Mrs. Gregory. from CIW in the near future. INDIVIDUALS KEY An attracdve brun~te, she Ironically, women facing types 60 words per minute parole are more apprehensive and has been trained in about f i n d I n g employment generel office skill!. She th6n many Orange Coaat presenUy works in the records employers are about hiring otnce in the ln!tltutJon, is a them. hi(h school graduate and at· Said an official of a leading tended one year of junior col-electronics firm, "The in-c/ b e Doff Hats lege. divldual holds the key, an<! LJ wom n She la in prison for the we judge on an individual A Whackey Hat Conte&t will abled veterans at Long Beach lrr~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~J'.I Pont d,......_ gr.al - style fOf golf, grocery shoppi~ or i\11f 9<1dd ing. Step ovt in YOU•• fn:irn Holf-5.ize be featured at the th ird an· Hospital and Navajo Indians. Committee members work· nual benefit card party hosted ing on the project are the by the Coast \Vomen's club !\fmes. w i 11 i am Halliday, Thursday, March 27. at I I George Bryson, My! Hoodtn· ~.m, in the Mesa Verde Coun· pyle, Edward t.1eier, George try Club. Fox, Dale Magor, H. L. Rob- Following the buffet lunch· inson, Michael Coronel and eon, awards will be given Raymond Wood. Others are and card games wltl be of· the Mmes. Eugene Wina:, fered. Gordon KOiter, Jack Hart and Procttds are earmarked for Lyman Woods. 1)le braille-blind children's Tickets are $3.73. summer camp, Orange Coast -----------11 College student nursing schol· 1Nhips, Crippled Children and Adults of Orange County, di!-Kids, 'Ask Andy' [ °CARl'ET! CARPET! CARPET! I WOW 1000'• of YAROS ~OLLENDSI REMNANTS ! OFFGOODSI CARPET FROM TRACTS I LOW, LOW PRICES Carpet Warehouse 175J South Rlt 11wi ,.. Senta An• (frll•wp1•t ~••w1y t1 1411191r -W, to ltlcll1y ) o n111 My I ••• ht. II ...... ,. t P.M.141·1171 ROCKOUT! ilft0>1)011 MARK DAVIDSON SWINGING GROUP THIS SA TU RDA Y MARCH 22 DANCE FROM 9:00 'TIU 2:00 A Special Pu blic Appe arance at lhe NEWPORT BEACH TEHNIS CLUB 2'01 IASH LUFF DRIVE (off JaMborH) Jl01 l""1il1ff f•H '-'"'Offf), Ff•111 , .. C-.t Hltll- .,.,, Mk Jef1'1a.1rH f1 hnl. Ge t.ft e114I fell1w lMt• ,,.., ...... °'''· Shop. fron11 $9.00 ' ,· ' I -- Elf a Nor's HALF·SJZE SHOP 180S Newport Blvd., - Costa Mesa 111'111'"" Db* '"Vi ., ... ..,..,, 1lttl Street"' Houra: f:30 to 5:30, Frk11y to 9:00 AIM 114 0.1• .. l1h Meff, l'iin..t.1 • BB "•LlY'WOOD brings back an era ... Rapper-look slee s le! Vassarftte designs 1 Jook reminiscent of the TwenOes ~nd perfect for today's fahion environrl'M!'nt. Tle~ of rippled nylon trimt chiffon flutttr OYCr Antrone ~ tric~ with a shimmerin& !<>iltin bow and Wt!:•mef'S. Ewn the color comblnltions Me noJtalaicl 2717 I. C.-t Hwy. c ...... ., ..... ,.. .. ,, .. ,,,, ....... ..nu.n1 .......... a..,. JO lMl'I t. .......... IDEAL GIFT FOR EASTER GIVING s;..,,~'\ I ' -----~--~~·--~--- \ Pan Am Uniform Styles Make. Going Great _...,.,..-·....,, Forsevenyoungwomenwho created by Loper, gave way created wltl the Superjet in hereto!oce. the olberlls called became the-first ste.wardOases to a more casual took in 1965 mind, will consist of two "Galaxy .Gold" •nd is a b;eige: to be hired by Pan American when lhe original Loper de.sign distinct outfits-a gold jumper tone halfway bdw«n sand World Airways in fl.1iaml in was updated. The skirt wbich and a blue camisole-top skirt, and camel. April of 1944, lhere was no was one inch below the The hemline of the unifonn mid.summer tn a 1 I n g 1 a nOOJtop !Ugh!, the d<SllJlOt had to croate an 1cfaptahle Wll'dro!Je. place ta'go but up. kneec;ap in 1965 wa.s lifted e~ch with matching jacket -• {s ltit d Their uniform skirt$ in those to the middle of the knee plus a blue g~atcoal tailored r epresen a new a u. e This problem WU IOIVed by 1elecUng an all-season blend or dacron·polyester a a. d worsted wool for the five m .. Jor units ci the uollorm. The worsted blend is wrlnkle-.reSil" tant and suffictentiy lightweight to be comfortable 1n any cllmate, yet wann enough to provide protecttoa In chilly weather. days hung to mid~all, hair tn November 1966, and to one In a"high-~yle versiOo ot the record fur Pan Am. The .11kir1 billowed on their shoulders Inch above mid-knee h1 July classjc' Chesterfield. A bowler and jumper dress are pro. and a stewardess paycheck 1967. hat replaces the Pan Am girl's portioned to be worn up to came to a grand total of $140 The stewardesses of Pan high..c.rowp.ed blue pillbox. two inches above the knee, a month. American World Airways will . Tw\) colors have been or slightly lower depending on Today, 2S years later, thelr lead the Easter Parade with pre!erence number has increased to 4,ilOO, an all·new uniform ensemble, developed for the uniform. . · skirts are two inches above created by Frank Smith, chief One· is called "Superjet Blue'' Smee the stewardess 111 a the knee, and a stewardess' designer for Evan-Picone. and is slightly darker than girl for all Jle8SOnS, sometimes trimcoiffureclearshercollar. The Pan Am uniform, the shade of 'blue worn flylng from mJdwinter into Salary has been climbing, ~oo. and she now earns base pay of just over $400 a month. "The planes we new in those days were a bit like Pan Am's new 747 Super jet," recalls Madellno· Cuniff, f o r m er stewardnes!, n o w customer supetvisor for c u st o m e r service at John F. Kennedy International Airport. "They had cocktail lounges, sleeping berths, private compartments, even a hone~oon suite." Miss Cuniff boarded a Bermuda-bound Clipper at New York · in April 1945 to become the first Pan Am stewardess over the Atlantic. That 772-mlle flight.. now a matter of 90 minutes, took five and one-half hours then. NEW UNIFORM LOOK -Two distinct outfits will be introduced Easter Sun- day for Pan Am stewardesses. The beige jumper and the blue skirt will each have matching jackets and white, vest~type blouses, plus a bowler hat and a blue greatcoat in .the classic Chesterfield style. Miss Cuni!f flew for only one year before returning to the passenger service job she pioneered with Pan Am in 1940. Today's average tenure of a Pan Atn stewardess, ho"'ever, is 28 months. If she decides to marry and keep flying, she does so with the airline's blessing. During her one year aloft , Miss Cuniff sported a sky-blue collarless jacket with padded shoulders, a Robin Hood cap and stubby brown pumps. This r"~"·"··=="'""''"'""·=:·=-:::·~=-""""'-'--'':.-:5'l~~c::-- 1 Dinner Bell Rings j i Before Club Dance I ' 11 'I I ! I fl : I 'I A barn dance and dinner is the party fare being staged by the Wednesday Morn- ing Club of Costa Mesa in the Elks Club, Newport Beach, on Saturday, March 22 .. Mrs. William Hill, special events chair· man stated that dinner will be served at 7:30 'p.m. and square dancing wo~d begin at 8:30 with music by the Hannonaires. Do Your 'Thing for Spring will be the theme for the club's fashion show Wednes~ day, March 26, at 10 :45 a.m. in the Balb~a Bay Club. Mrs. \Villiam H. G_a;dner Jr, is Jn charge and Joseph .. Magn1n s. of South Coast Plaza \vill furnish the fashions. Club members modeling will be the Mmes. Rex Riggs, A. Forrest Dugger, Ed- mond Gaulden, Alfred Meyer, James Grose, David Forge, Bob Riley, Donald Cole, Clyde Pomeroy and Robert E. Shannon. B I b outfit was the Pan Am I a oans Uniform in the early day1. r Stewardesses \Yere added to Enterta I• n the Alask• service in 1944 and to the Pacific in 194& with the end of World War IJ. Associates of the Balboa None of the original Miami Group of the Orange County seven is st.nl in the company I Philharmonic Society will be but a composite would evok ·,1 honored at a luncheon next s. dart-haired. blue · eye .· W.onday in the home of Mrs. registered nurse, 5'3" tall and ll 1 Earl Corbett. !3 years old. Planning the occasion E Today, a 5'9" candidate can Mrs. Clarence Smith, and qualify without fear of bum· assisting her are the Mmf!I, ping her head on a low ceiling, I· Guy Cherry, Henry Brown, and only during the past year Jeffrey Briery, James Owen the age minimum was lowered .1 and Moreland Leithold. from 21 to 20. Nurses are ., For the third year, fhe still plentiful, but emphasis 11 Chantelles, a girls choral now is on Jangauages and , group from Newport Ilarbor ability to deal pleasantly with 'I High School, will entertain be-all types of persons. r 1 fore lunch, tn 1968, when Pam Am Jet t Clippers inaugurated I Secretaries American"flag jet service to Europe, Pan Am stewardesses Orange County-Harbor Aree acquired a new tr ave I 'i I Legal Secretaries Association wardrobe. Couturier D 0 n meets the third Wednesday Loper of Beverly Hills design. fl of the month in various places. ed a one-color uniform in I Further information may be horizon blue which by 1959 ;. obtained by calling Miss was adopted as system stan· Guests are \velcome and reservation.~ m<:lY be made with Mrs. James Morris at 546-8354. f Sheron Dresser, 5 4 O • O 9 5 Cl. dard by Pan Am. • 1 t Mernbers gather at 7 p.m. The"so!l s i I h o'u et t e,'' I ~~~=--~---=~~~~~~~~~ TOPS Members Win by Losing J.,osers were winners when 'TOPS Sea Sirens honored chapter members who lost the most v.'eight in t.hei.r division for 1968. Cro\vncd queen or t h e chapter v.·as Mrs. Lowell Redwine who had lost 57 1h pounds and took fir st place in division 3. AF. a visual aid to show the membership the .. ac!ual weight Joss, M r s . Redwine displayed two 25- pound sacks of dog food, a five-pound sack of flour and a two and one-half pound sack or sugar. Runner·Up with a weight Joss of 21 pounds was Mrs. Jacob Miller, one of the chapter's KOPS (Keep Off Pounds Sensibly) member. She also took first place in division t, with Mrs. Marianne Johnson placing second. Other winners are the ?ilmes, Michael Casino, first place, division 4: Donald Lusk, ~econd place, division 4. and Donald lt1cKee, second place, divisio n 3. TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) is an international organization. Area winners will be recognized May 2 and ::i at Recognitions Days in the Anaheim Convention Center. Sea Sirens chapter meets each Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Killybrooke ElemenLary School. Chairmen To Visit Two guests will be honored at the meeting tomorrow of the Costa Mesa Women's Club in the women's clubhouse. Mrs. Laura Curry, past slate chairman of television and radio, and Miss Monica Jones, current chairman, will be greeted by club members. Special guests also will be members of the Costa Mesa Junior Women's Club. YOUR OWN BUSINESS Earning Potential Unlimited We offer financial assistance Rt h • t•flllt odorl111 C"i11eh lll t1 t11 )'Oii' homf': Srrittl lflYtlf• "''"'· Comp1l1 trt i11i11g pro9r1m. Wo11't inter#trt with pr111nt 01;t11ptH011. SEND TMIS AD FOi fl:EE llOCHUaE- Universal Chinchilla Breeders 1110 r.w .wi '""'· p;1111me ... e.m. c.111ITI•l170-1011 ... Collect; 1714) IJt-21•1 MAIL THIS AD CALL FOa FREE ESTIMATE AND SHOP AT HOME SERVICI IJur Pl'G'l~•lon•lly 1r1lntd af'Cor•Nr wm "'"' to y11~r llom1 or O'lfle1 •• , a1y or ••tnl!lg ••• w1111 1111 moll c1mp1111 ••lectlon tr dr1P1ry or CfrJ"I .. mpla. NI D11Ug1Uo11, 91 CIU""° FROM YOUR AREA CALL 548-8242 OR l40·l6ll BEAUTI PLEAT DRAPERY & CARPET WAL• ENTIRE STOCK OF FABULOUS DU.PERY FAIRICS REDUCED TO 20•/• TO 40% Wiiy S.tti. ,., Ordinary Draperies? Add Colot111I E~tllfmenl lo YOllr Room Oeo:.or ••• With l!o!d N"" ldNI tlld 0es111n,1 . ,.,_.,. Plta!ed e Tit l1ck1 • SWltl • C•w:••tS PUlll • VlllMIS e Av11r1ll1R CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES OUR WOlKMANSHIP IS SUPlltl HARDWAlE & IODS CUT TO oaDrl EIUTI PLER :~~~'g CALL POI: Fl:R. ISTIMATI SHOP-AT-HOMI Sll:YICI 548-8242 NO MONEY DOWN .... " •• ., .... PAT All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday Bedding plants for year around color Choose marigolds or English primroses in a fu:J range of colors. TRAY Beautiful ever9reens Japanese boxwood, Italian cy press, Heav .. enly bamboo, and Japanese black pine in one gallon containers. 77¢ 5 gallon bottle brush......... 3.29 SPECIALS OF THE WEEK! UBEVDUA EN NEV CHARGE ACCOUNT TCCJAYI Bug·Geta bonus p1ek. 3 lb. , , • , 98 ¢ Kellog'• ttffr manun, 2 cu. ft. , . 85¢ Kellog'1 ngular manure, 2 cu. ft. 69¢ Kellog'• gromulch, 2 cu. fl. .. .. • 1. 9B All purpoH pl1nlor mix .... ,, ,, 1.09 YOUR CHOICE 6 .• 88 3 cu. ft. lawn cert, for those short hauls. 3 cu. ft. wheelbarrow for tliose extra heavy loads. NEWPORT BEACH -FASHION ISLAND T I ,I r • . . J8 DAILY PILOT lllunday, Matdl 20, 1969 Desse.'-r-:-t-:hS;:w--e-e-t~e-nd-s"-----, .... P_e_e_r,,i·n·,·9---f~ , .. ::~:.:" ·.-::.€fi!: :.: .:;~;:: .... S h I ' F · l •tcTmout ,, .. llfAM• ., ca11Wi11e.. ..... tt11 CMll'lty " or~. -ni. _..,..,_, ._ '9ffHY ,. C 0 a rs IP Un S (fdl..,.. Hde~ A C:tl\HM of_., IUllCMO SAii '0ACIUIN Tllol Vllilleh~ lieft Mrftr ""11f'f' 111 tht Mllttef .. 1M ll1l•N ot LUTHIElt ~ • 111.itlft~ 11 .... k (;Hit Mii LOW -N•'T -Flllhf t Ml). W !NII IM " ~"' • ~tct\ltll't H MAMOHIV ~Md ~M a....int affdl. C1tlfot'jlja. ullMI' d -.. ,,,.!'t'?t, LY"•"LO'HMt = l Vtll Nat, 711 P'llllli' C, JM"1: 1-.i Dlltrbrttw! 9' l'IMllC PNduch 0Nottc9 ...... ,....:... tMI 1119 -llW fklitllow flnn Mme 9' IAL.l I Aro U n -fOt' r.;• ....:: >!Ju!: 1 Nll l\11" ~ii~ "' l'lllill ~ Mn. llld'-t. In •" IMl~..-u &t 111' OttiltMll wlll ... ';" P'rt¥itll .... CHAIN Mii tMt ..W flrlll ll ~ A dessert.f•shlon !bow and card party will btnefjt Seal B each High School graduatts ptannlng to attend Golden West College when the city's Junior Woman's Club sponsors the event at 1 p .m . next Satur· day. State Day Nears Dale F··"-· 1 __ La Scarpa ltltl'll to I'. o. kll J.Yo, c.11 ~. JoM i.r. 1•1 Mra. .,., Kr..._ ~,.._ u..11 I. MtlMlll'I. .. lfMI ~ Ind _, Mcldtr tult+.d Ill ,... ~..,. w.. wfleN flt- _._,. ,.,... TM'Y mutt .. tte:e! ..... lrf IMflcllt.1 lldtMt, n. C. ....... i.,. """°''IN flctltlew flrTl'I -lit ~lloil Ill .. w ,...,.W c:wrt Ill fvll ~ ,i.e. of rw~ '-tt ill be modeled d l the ,. .... VlllOI WOMIM11a.u1 ALL 1a,0N• -"''Im A. ~. "DIMIENSJON PLASTICS o• ANAHl!IM on .. .,.... """ 24111 ..., f/11 wra: 1o1-., W UT nf lllT $101 -Cl~ M..-, IE. I'. 't.,.....l'w =~ ~~t 11• ~ ......... MW """ Is _.. If l .. .t 1M ~lor 111 Manwl Stllt1'11611• AIMANO l'lllllV, 1'"' ~r'I. t '"";"• I • ••· •t ·------------Mlcl'IHt W-~ r:i;,•o, Ml1MI-r M •• ~ 'MdJ."i.1''""4 ... foli.wl,.. ,..,._ .,_, M"" Iii f171 Wli.lllN I M., Svl"9 100f, ...,_IY lhtr'ml" o.kt. CtJH.nllt, tUOl. even ...,. .... p ace m "'n:: c1 y 'r!~ ·,,.••-.,'•" ....... , , 1 • -!r,tr,;; tr.:,.,.1si r 111111 c ,.,. •tt.rnn 1V11 -. ,1._ of ,~ i. .. tt11ow1o Nn1s ~ 111 LM ,._,., si.i. tt D•IH ,....,._, 1, 1w hall ""·-· -1 Ei•h>k tt•-AND B-.. I _..... lim.A. N.......... .. ' .. Wllli.i;. S.llloll. l!Hrllf • C.I'"'""' '"""' rleflt '""' _. ....... AIM.ANO , ••• .,. auwwrlWD, IN ..-. DAI,. .C..111 iw.l)' 0 ~I (!In terr "'6 MINI, •• , #tl"w.tt!r ";;1 ...... ',., Flltl!t 0 h ll.td!W¥ W, ltft. SJ:IS Ct•!OfYltw ,,, .... --..... it "" llnw of dM!ft STATI Of' CALl•OltMIA I St Harbor' Js'·-.1 have reveal!d . $.;~"·.,.:: ,Mil \~n. 11.r.~: Mmn WotdnJW l,,Kk .... 1'111 l: ,., A .. -· Y1tb9 Lll'U, C1llfonlll tUM. 11111 •• "" rltM, '"" .,... 111 .. '"1 LOS ANOILIS COUNTY I •• ' 1.11.UU 5o1a,._, ,.1 LM1'f' ~ ... ,, Jtlll. Cuc;~ 1•1 HllrveY MeClun, 77. ""•hbrvtrv ,,, '"'· !Ml ,,_ .,,.. If Mill tlKNHlll Ut CM l'tbn>il"I' 7, Hff, ...,_. fNI, • Member-mod Is will include that they' 1 ..ti-.. af · SANTA A•A odrwF W. l.ol'I ICl4ilrtd.,.. '"'''loot of l1w w tlt'lll'WI». No!•rv 'ubllc '" IM '-' "H '"''· e re eAuu"IS a s art MOST PAllS -Cltu .... Ill Mmtl. PlllSIDIM'h' CU' l'OUllMAM•fllt STAT!" 0" CALIFOllNIA J dlw ,,..,, .. "' adlllf!M .. ""' "-llY -'"" ARMAND Pl!JtllY' the Mmes. Seth A d am I • to the destrt the Sahara, Jdw'I Ottll. u. kllwl'l..... J--Prnld.nlt Cup Ftloht, Mn!. Htnv COUHTV OF LO$ ANOELEI ) H MW dKMMd. ,, IM "'"" " •••• kMwll ,, "" .. " ""' Hl'Mfl wllM• H di J .. ___ 1. b -C1t11,iwo", Wlll~rn IE!llr~ln. ,IUI Wan:lj a.rn~Ft,..11•1 l'llflll, Mo. Jt'"" On l'tlllvlrv tJ, INt, Mfol'll '"'' I" 11111 .. all tM arf1lrl ,..1 ~ MtM 11 11/Mc:rl.... .. .. wllfll" 111> ay e Ouuwuuaug , Larry they ••v _ next weekend. ,,.....,.,., 111 MtrM Ottmbtrll11 111 v~ flnl l"l1th1, Mi•. """ c.11er11 1 Nt11rv hbllc i.. 1nd 1.r MIC COIHllY eJflll1'tll '" OrMttO c-IY. "'"' e1 .,,.,,,,,.."' ,,. l<MIWI""'"' 111 1111&Uleif Lusuardi, Ronald Puente and ~ c 1111 e, lllt """"' "-:rrv 51tilli-5 ,.-11,~1. M"-IOllll Mouro•u '""" 1t111, ,.r..,.iy -•f"lll ll.MMY C.llforni., Hrtlalltrlt' ~lllM '' 1111 1.,,.,. J oy-Ste1•dley. They will lake their pests ShlrleF, J-lld:r SWiii, lt1 Joli~ T I'll l'llghl, Mn. E,!r' ·--~1 w. Loft MoWfl fll '"' ..... tlll ~ft 1t1iow.. ~t; ' (OJfl'ICl.i.L Sl!~L) ..., .. ,~, f!'Ntl Glti. 111 CIM1 C, ~MIM~Jtll::.....~.:j 'IJ.r:. =~ WloDit flt,,_ II IWKr1'"4 '9 !flt within Lii "11t IU !ti bled; two IM'ldf'9d NMlllf M. J•UMol Tic•e•· at $! each, may to the ·Sahara Hold lo Lu t111 M"'". Doll °"""'· aum w11.,., ...,-1111 ,..20, 1111 JL • """""""'· • ~"" "° me 1rtlrtY'-lt11 cno 111 c.n.1 &1c11en. Nottrv P11br1oC1llfrlnll1 a ...,. Dtvll "°""""''· ltebtri Ewl'll, 101 • llwl M •11twtld nw wrn1. H_. IMCfl, ,1 ,., ..... , '''""' ,.rlN:IH1 Of'nm I" be purchued at the door. Vegas for cocktail.!, Saturday Jlhn M1Ml91, ,, K11111 MMDolllld wltlltlw ,...., MnO 111i11 -L ,......,, 1" 1111111 " " ,._ "· c-1Y ., L• AM111t I. , (OFl'ICJAL Sl!.ALI 111 lftllcll .. _ ~ r-. 111 MF C11nrnlPIM llljlfr'M Among priuJ to be offered dinner, a show and Stmday ' " .\ND ,. HOLD -Cini A. b Jfw Iii. Hlc:MrMfl .. ., 0r-Ctun!Y. C1l1toml1 a-llt!' s. 1971 will be a "'--·-1-two, cut-b·-h. __ , the party -Ill ~ IWnlf. °""'" E"t"' DM\lltl Afr"1ca Su "1ect Nol•rt l'IJllllG<1tlfw11i. ,... ClllMl'l'IOl'llr ~ 11: ~vMhllld Ort"" C•tt Dtl!Y P'llef • .....,.K'l "' ·--.. "" nw Poulll11, ll~i M ,_, 111 ,.rl11CIHJ Olflot Ill JIQI' Mlrcus Aw .. Jll :sffl 5t .. Mlrdl to, n 1M Alu'll S. lt.1Nr .....,. ting board, cleani11., counnn• . Johol Adl1n1. Rtg Id .,.,,, ..01 LOI ""9•1H Ctul!IY NIWll«f IHdl. C.llfomla. -r---r eturn to the Orange County "•ul s1..se•m1r1. «Mi Cl••• B. Mv Convnrultll Eul.-TMIN "' .... eau 111 11.-M ........,. ~-and service station Sta.mp!!i. """"'-'· Wllll•rn Sdlulho, ~I JoMpfl In Clubhouse '"'· 11, \Ht " "' U"lttd SllfB .. QW!ftmlltllft LEGAL Nui- ho Airport Sunday at 7 p .m . 11n111. »~: 5NllhlM. B•rtle'I' M"""" U»« • .... _ .... ._.. ,_. "'-"------:c::=-----Those w wish to play ,..., 17; ~llltll LIMUfl, Mt Pftk. I - -_., ....... -:1 Cor r Is Guy, home Newport Beach residents on "~: c .. 11 c. ii. Mrn11. M1M1tl, -L. Mllltr. A"". ~ aw "'" MW,... rw ""°""" ,..,... ecooornist, ~·ill be lhe featured cards other than bridge are the guest list are the George J:~· :!~~M'00t~i.'' ~iocn: Variety ii the iplct of Ufe e: = :::;...~,.::: : ... "'r.:i ~'*"' .... ~~"r:i ~ -ca11TJrJfr'T~u~" .:J:~N•n luncheon speaker during the requested to tring tbelr own Hoags, Geor1e Woodford.!, 41. for Laguna Beach Woman's l'vtillsheil or_. c .. ,, o.rw ,.1,.., "".._. w1111 Mlll. ,.,.. """""• .,. ,.~ ,.,. "' deeb. Cl h membera who will follow Mardi " u , n. t1, '"' ......, aw. ., lffln ,. • "' Wfttlnr .,. Clllldt.dlM • -.111.. •t 1m1 1t11111 IA'ta Tau Alpha annual Stale Jack Caldwell.!, Bob Johnaons, u wlM "" r1«1YM '' flll •..,_IC ~ ..,...,1 s1 .. '-"1" v111r1. c.Mwft11, ~1 nexl Sal"·day 1·n the V J c t o r y a c k s , B i 11 I the fuhlon show and card LEGAL NOTICE •1 • ..., "'"' '"'' "" ttrat •uttilaflGn ......., 1111 11cttt11w ttl'll'I 111"" " ~ -Rec'ita Stars .•. J ed ·~ ·u. "'""' INi ~ ''"., .. 11. WORLCWIOI! •ALLOON ASCINSION• PrOl,ld Bird r e s t a u r a n t • C S F.arnsworths, Bob Longpres, party "' .... y en oy wuay wi. °'""' 1J111 l111 HF o1 Mlrdl. 1"' 11111 11111 .. 111 tt"" 11 _........ ,,. . . be . 1 10 acfus oci·ety Helnie Gunkier•, Gene a picture trip of Africa tom«· MOTKI To ci.-Drro11:s MAR tAL o . MAHONEY "" 1o11o.,,,.,. ....-. ...,.... Mme "' R egl!trauon gim a a .m. In th , 1 bho su••11tio• couaT 0 , TN• Ad111Frt1ttr1trhr f\IH ..w .,11e1,,. '"wi"'°' 11 .. ,.,.,.., Presidents of the 11 Wooterui, Bill RobinSOllJ and Area Student ro? e woman 1 cu use. sTATIE o• caL11'01"'" Po• •lfll wm 1-... a..... .... s1o11-1mt ..,,,, '""'' ..... Orange County Cactus and Die" .,...0m.-"lns. Others are Mrs. Georgia Arner will THI couNT'I' o" oiu.HOa ~:'o:=,"' st., r:w"'''" v111W. c.111vnda. chapters f r o m througuuut Succulent Society meets the a. J 11 ,. .. v h 1 II be ·ct Ho. A-'llM MANUI 01taii11 Mttdl 4, 1Mt. Southern California will report arriving lfom Pasadena, Next Saturday evening at s ow e ow mem rs p1 ures 1:m.t. o1 FLOllENCE D. LANNON, L 11L1tMAN Gftr'll ..._ Slllf* on activities and ac· first Wednesday at noon in Arcadia and Shennan Oaks. of Africa at 1:45. . ~'itE: is HE"EBY GIVl!N lo .... :U".:"::..'' ~ $~ ,,.M~~"""i•· ::'."':."'~. • Odd F'llows Hal~ Costa Mesa. 8 Cornelia Connelly High After viewing p 1 ct u r e • , cr.d11or1 °' "" 1tiov• ,..mid dK.ot"' :h"".l,7J::..~i:-:r No11rv Pvbllc '" •""" w """ Shit•, complishmenls. Awards will Mrs. Roy Jones at 548-5065 SEVENTEEN-year-old Min· School will present Miss Mary members will quench their 1r111 •" Pt,,_ 111v1,.. c1111N "•11111 llVll'l'r Klllt. ca1w.r'.i, -"" .,..,,,... G-A. =." be I d to ··--·tste be t I ddi . al Beth r--bron '• a 6010 piano t d b tht .. Id ~I .,. '"11lrlCI "° 1111 u.......,. .. AMII .. t ,,.. ~ .. 111• 1'11 " ""' ,.,_ I presen e uR; "" n· can con acted or a hon dy Miller has been a~cepted \Al.In "'' thirst during a tea hos e y ''*"'· w11r1 1111 ~...,. ~... 1" ,~:: n•rn• 11 IUbsalbtd t. ""' w1111111 "'" ding senior and pledge or the infonnaUon. at Mills· College. The daughter recital. The public is invited Mrs. H.T. Wilkin. :,1,i::i:u~ Z-to'~ J::m,'= l'ublltl!ICI or11191 eo.11 D•hF ~•iot, :..ni:~."111 •cktloWIMI"' 111 alt\ltM area's two college chapters. of the Clarence Millers of lo the performance In the 1111 rw:ce111rv YO\lehera. te 1111 1111-~ u, 1., io. '"' '""'' 1ol'FIC1AL SIEALI •1· G · ·d t ll school udj•A-= • _A ... 1-cltnt111td 11 IM offkl (If LLOYD I!. Ormth v. UTT "1ss uy, a vice presi en Cameo Shores wi be a June a wi,um, 1~u.1.uc1..1u. ILANPIEO, Jtt. AltOmly 11 L•w. :wn LEGAL NOTICE Not1rv l>llbl1o<1tlfll'fllt ()f Helms Bakeries and an Century Club graduate of Corona del Mar Miss Cambroo, the daughter HB TOPS Club' v11 OPOrto. N•WPOrt 111K11, c.11torn11, Pr1M:11111Ofl'lm111 f ·n fU60, whkfl II th• ,i.c.t ol' bulllllll l"-m!l Or'"'' CIUntY alumna o the fraternHy, w1 High School. of the William H. Cambrons o1 11w r.tl'Kl•rsl1111C1 1" 111 1111"•" -· c11Tt,.ICATI or •lllUt11s Mv c.n-1 .. 1o11 WI,... ,peak on Easy Entertaining. Twentieth Century Club of The coed -~n be travelm· g of Hun"-~-v•ach, ;. a sa-rong 2 Gain TOPS Club 1.1"1"" to 11w "'-" of w rc1 dltt0tnt, P1cT111ou1 NAMI M1rd'I 11, 1,n ••••· WJ ""'6""u uc -wllh!n lour ~Ills 1ttw thl flrtl publfcl. T?ll Ul>dtn.ltntd ._. ttrtlfy Ill It ~llbtlll'Mod Or-• c...11 D•I" fifrs. R obert Alezander of Huntington Beach gatben: at north this ' weekend to the senior student plaming to meets every Monday aL 7:30 11o11 o1 lh11 no11ee. C1111111uc11... • ...... 1..... 11 IOI< nn, Mtrdl " 11. • 11, ,,., .fl:t-'' H · B h ·n be ••· ••· esd In S ·u. El tary P.iec1 Fttln.llrt 2s. 1"9. N-rt II•""· c1111or"1a. Ullclfr "" llnlington eac w1 ~ 7:30 p.m. i.uo:: third Tu ay campus lo make ready for purslle a colJege degree in p.m. m1 emen M1Mtt1 Fiii',,_ L" 11tt111ow flr111 -" HA1t101t ooc:K LEGAL NonCE luncheon toastmistress. In Lail! Park Clubhouse. the comlng semestu. music education. School in Huntington Beach. Mrn1n111r11rbl w1111 Thi w111 MAJNTENAMCI! •rlll 1htt 111t1 fl"" 1s --~~=co-====- ijCiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill .t.Mtllld of tilt Eihllt M flll ~ M !Ill lollewlnl ,..,_, wtloH C.IRT!l'ICATI Of' IUllN•I LLOYD'S URSERY AND LANDSCAPE COMPANY YEARLY SPRING THING! ~~ GERANIUMS IN COLOR 1 GAL CONTAINERS 99c SAVE! 98' QUARTS IN COLOR • PRIMULAS • PANSIES • BEGONIAS • MARGAltETES • GERANIUMS • MARIGOLDS REG. 60c EA. 45' PHITZER JUNIPERS GREEN AND BLUE 79c 1 Gal. Cans PATENT BAREROOT ROSES SOME VARIETIES: Chrysler Imperial, Hawaii, Mon- tezuma, Sterling Silver, Queen Elizabeth, Mister Lincoln. BUY TWO ••• GET THIRD FREE! GOOD SELECTION OF FUSCHIAS 4 :~~ 6 Qc 1.G.1. ·····-·-~ac Basket Type • FIRST LOVE • MISSION BElLS • PURPLE HEART • SWINGTIME •VOGUE Up~ght Type • Display • Treasure • FL YING CLOUD • NEW FASCINATION • CHECKER BOARD • SLEIGH BELLS CITRUS DWARF or STANDARD • Navel Orange • Bearss Ume • Eureka Lemon • Valenda OralH)e. • Tangerine • Grapefruit 5-Gal. Containers • Meyer Lemon 4~~ch SPECIMEN BUYS •.Reg. $60.00 16 in. Box Olive Tree .... 34.95 • Reg. $60.00 16 in. Box Brazilian Pepper 34.50 • Reg . $39.00 15 gal. Olive Tree •..... 19.50 • Reg. 39.00 15 gel. Japanese Black Pine 19.50 • Reg. I 5 gal. Twisted Juniper ... , , .• 19.50 • Reg. $60.00 16 in. Box Yucca , •• , •. 29.50 • Reg. 98.00 20 in7 Box Yucca .. , •••• 48.50 • Reg. $225.00 30 in. Box Yucca ..... 9B.OO • Reg. $298. 36 in. Bx Bird of Paradise 125.00 • Reg. $150.00 2+in. Box While Birch 49.95 • Reg. $39.00 15 gal. Sycamore . . . 19.50 FERTILIZER SPECIALS GAREN BEAUTY LIQUID 119 FISH BASE FERTILIZER COVERS 1,500 SQ. FT. REG. 1.9B GAL ALL MERCHANDISE LIMmD 9UANT1TY MERCHANDISE SUBJ EO TO PRIOR SALE OPEN 7 DAYS A WEfJ(! Hours: Weekdays 8 1.m. • 6 p. m. • Sundays 9 a.m. • 4:30 p.m. LLOYD'S NURSERY & LANDSCAPE 203B NEWPORT BLVD. !AT IAYI COSTA MESA PHONE 646-7441· CHARGE IT! .; tbovt MlllM dtttdtnl "',,,. '" fUU 11111 pltet of l'ftiffntt ,.KTITIOUI IUMI LLOYD I . aLAMl'llO, Jlt. It ts folloWI : TIW undln.ltMll ..... ctrtltY' M b A"'""1' II ln' 0.MI• "•ul C.rdttl. '°' lOtl'I. Nf'Wl'll'1 condlldl111 • bllslrltu II •11 StlldV MJ:I VII a,.,.. leech. C1l'h>r"l1. llldl c 111omlt ""'7 "---' ... , ... C.llf .. "'6f Dtlld Mtn::frl S. lMt Lirie, Hunt!"''°" ' 1 ,f HUH' TtltPlllM· 1714) '11-0U. • undtr !I'll flct"loui """ "'"" • • 0.""ls l'IUI C1rd'" TINGTON a!ACH Tll.IEI! ll!IVICI! , ... Att.""" fl!' A ..... llllslrl!N Sitt. of C1lllwlll1, Ortnet Coli"IY! 11111 1.1hll fl1"' Is CO-" If tlll Wifll l'fll Wiii &JIMU<I 0.. M1rdl S. 1"9, lltfwt mt, 1 lollewlll9I ''"°" whotl fltme Ill fl/19 Pl.IDllll'>td Or•nt1• Cold Olllt Pilot, N11ll1"1' Public l" 111d for ••Id stti. ..... •llt• of ruld.flU " II lolltln: Febnillrv 27 •!Id Mlrdl '' lJ, 1'0, 1>1r10111llY tPP11rtd 0.llftls P1ul Ctre... DONALD AOl!Llll•T CANl'llLO, "" :MMt know" lo i;nt lo "" 1111 ,......., Whole an Sindy L1111, Hu"tlMIM lnd'I. LEGAL NOTICE "~m• Is 111.1bltrlbtd to lhl wllhl" 11'1-Dilld Merci\ It , lMf strum.I ·11111 •d!.Mwltd•td Ill tllKUltd O...ltl A. Ctrifllld ro1F~~~l~L SEAL! STAT& OF CALIFORNIA ) P-l2fM ~ · MlrY ltlll Mor1all ORANGE COUNTY I IS , Cl!ltTll'ICATE OF IUSFNISS Notarv Pub1l,·C1llfornr1 On J.1t4', btfcrt '"'' • Nol'lrv Jl'vbl!C rlCTJTtCUI MIMI -Prl"cl"I Offlct II\ In 11\d tcr wlcl Sltlt. --•11Y '""''' ... Tht urw:ltrolglltd <lo ctrllf'f lhtV •rt or11>1e CountF OONALD A. CANl'IELO lt!MIW!I la "'' i;cllductln• 1 bu1ln1!'11 tf 4M :nlld St.. My Commtuloll IE»lr" lo M Ill• "l'Wft """°" "1m1 II iub&Ulb- NewP0'1 Bt1ch, C1llhlrn11, ullder lht APrll ' 19n ed "' ''" wl!lll" l,,,.fnllll...t "" llctl!low1 firm n1m• of Tht m-Publltlled 0~111111 COlll O•llY l'llol tcknowledged M 111.1,ullCI !ht ttma. T!rnt Aroulld Jr. end th1I 11ld firm ,,.,.rcll ,, ll, 70. 21, Ifft .flU; •OFFICIAL SEAL) I• comP01ed or Th• toltowlnt Ptf10n1. P1ulln1 J. Ayrn who.1 nemes In foll 111d pl1ct1 of LEGAL NOTICE Nol1rv P'ubtlc:<elltornl• rnldtll(t •rt n 1o11ow1: ,.rlt1clP1I Olfl"' '" M1rllvn A. Kr119, 2007 HolldlF Rd,. Liii A"'tlin C-1'1' Nl!Wl>Ort Bt1cll. IA1·104 My Commlullln Eulr" Phvtlls A. Marris, '11 W, Bly Ave.. NOTICI TO CltlDl701lS h\tv 21, 1'10 NtWPOrl Belch SU,.l!llOll COURT OP TMtf ~ubU1~ Or•"•' Cold 0111'1 ~lie!, 0.!n' Mlrdl 12. 1Ht. STATI 01' CALll'OlllNIA POii !Mrdl 20, 27 1114 .a.,111S.1f, lM ~ Mlrlll"n A. Kr119 THI COUNT'!' 01' ORAJ+QI Phvl1!1 A. MCl!'rl• N .. A'42tf7 LEGAL NO'nCE Sllle o! Cetllwnlt , Ori"llt Cout11Y: IE!ltlt or VER~ YOUNG, tltl VIEnAl-----~=,------0" M•rdi U, 1961, btlort mt, 1 YOUNG. Oect1i.ed. P·llllM Noltrv P11bllc 1t1 lftCI for 111d Sit~. NOT ICE 15 HEllE11Y GIVEN lo tilt CllllTll'ICATI' or I USIMESS l'lt<IOl>l llY 11>1>t•red Mlrllyft A. Kru1 cl'ffltoo of 1111 tbovt 111med decedent rlCTITIOUS NAMI •nd P1w1111 A. Morrl• 11.-11 to rnt lh11 •II ""'"' lllfvt111 clllm• 11111111 TM lnldt 1 Md _.. Cff'llfy ,.. " lo bf Ille M rSOl'IS wf'lo)t "'""' 1rt IM I.lid dtcNtnl 1r1 required to flit rs 1 1 1 U&l "O" '"' •ub1Ulbtcl to ll>t wl!h!" ln1trvrnt"t ulCI !him, with tM 11tct111rv ll'OUdtff1. I" ~~': 1 M':'a ""~1ri,.,,.11 ""°"' :; tdl:-lldstd ll'lf'f tJ<t CUled 1111 llrnl. ll'll offlCt of 1111 clerk of 1111 tboY9 ' ' If 'AMEltlCAN COl'FICIAL SEAL) tnlllltd tour!, or to •r•11nt ltltll\, with :::;.~'m:il! ~oM .. ~Y' or COSTA MIESA Mlrv K Ht11rv The 111Ca11rv YOUChttll, to 1111' .,.,.. 114 llf NotlrY Public • C1!1toml1 ner1l•n1C1 11 !ht ot'llct of 11!1 1ttomtv1, :: :."~Mid~ ~c::"':,'"' 1" Prlnclp1t Otflc.t I" JOYE & COMSTOCll:. 7'10 0ra,.1li'Mll"Pf 119 u-I ~·-· Onon9e CownlY ""'nut, ll11tn1 P1rlt, C.lltornl t t'Odtl fl.Ill 11'1111 •IK• .. ,... ........ 1 " .., • MF Conwnlulcn E:o:pl... whlCll II llMo Flti:t "' M l-or ~ "hlmp c.. HO'l'!t, S11Jl 111 $1rH1, Nov. 2~. 1'72 Ur!Cl1'1'1ltl'ltd 111 111 lllllltrs Mt111111nt St., l.aWfll, Ctllfomla. Publt .... ecl Orlflt'f C011! 01llY ~Jlllf, IO IM t1ltlt of 11\cl dectdent, wlthl" 01!«1 M1rd'I 4, IHf • -,.._'c"'::...:"c·c"c·c":...: .. :::c'c~c::."c•c•c•c•_"".::._'1 '°""' mot1n.. •tt•r in. 11 .. 1 1>Ubr1u1ron 0, ','"c"•'••'•· ,"',.' of 11111 llDll._., !TATI!' A "' Dlltd Mlrdl 10, lff' ORANGE COUNTY: LEGAL NOTJ,CE ol.JJln R T,_.._ -Oto M1rd'I 4, 1"', .....,.. '"'• • Anm1n11'ir•tor or lllt EttiN Noltrt l'ubllc 1" •nd tor Mitt lttl•• MOTICI! TO CltEDITC•S of tto. lbovl l'll'l'ltdl ~ -"" IP11ttr-.I Phll111> (, W.Vll SUl'ERIO• COURT C,. TMI JOYI: & COMSTOCll: "-to "" lo M thl Hr-"""""' STATE 01' (ALFl'OltMIA l'Oll. 1ftt Crll'll'ltlltrllt A-11t .,.,,.,. h tublcrlbtd to 1111 wllftl" I"' THI COUNTY 01' OIANOE ,_, P'ir11, Ctllftmll .Nn strum'"! 11\d 1cll-lldtld I'll lllte:lllH Nt. A.fl•tt Teh 0141 111·"2i UIJJ ~1 '"' 11mt. • E1!1te Of ALICE E. MALSllARV, Atlo!'nt,1 ftr Adrnllllllrlllr [Otflcltl $1111 Dtaiwd. "ubllshtd Or•nve coed D1ny Pilot, M•l"I' ••th Mertel! NOTICE IS HEJIEllY GIVEN lo 1!11 Mlrd'I ll 20 21 nd .. II' '"' -• •• Noftl"I' "ub!lc • C11lfamt1 crtdllo!'1 of ll>t •bovt 111ml!d d.clde11t ' ' 1 r ' ._......,. l'rhlclptl Oll'ICI Ill 11111 111 ptnOM lllvl"t cl1tm1 191lt11t Or1"'t COlllltr Irle .. 14 decedtnl 1rt requlrtd to Ille LEGAL NOJ'JCE Mv C1111111!nltll 1.,1,... 111111'1. w1111 tM n1«111rv voutMra. 111 Atrn t. nn lbt oflict of !hi cltrk of the tbove "·UllJ l"ubltihecl Or'"'' COlrt D111Y PlllT, Mtllled CC!!rl, or to prtll!"' 1""'1. Wllh CIRTll'ICATI! or •UllNlll Mlrdt .. IS, :HI, 11. 1'" ''"'' 11141 Metu.rv -.dlt1', te llN 1111-l'ICTITIOUS NA.Ml! 11trs11111td at !hi ofllc:. ct hl1 Alto•11t,, Tl'I• undt,.ltlltd' *'" ctrll!F 1141 t LEGAL NOTICE J, D. T19ttr1, •12 South l'tow'r Slrttl, collductl"' • ltuslnftl ti 2400 W . .:O.i~"-------~-----Sullt Numbtr 5UO, LPI All9tlft, (1llfoml1 HIWlf, NtWtorl ltlCh, C111tornl1, undt;1 IA•·l4'1 90011, Which II "'' Pllce of b\lllf!HI !hi llc!lllOln firm "•mt of PENNANT SU,.l!lllO• COUllT ~ TMI! of '"" undtr11tMd I" •U m11!en Mf• ENTERPRISES •NI 11111 11ltl rrrrn II STllTIE or CALIPOIJUA Nil t1lnl111 lo '"' "'''' ol 11r• dtcedtnl, CGrnPOltd " lht lo!loWl"9 "''IOl'I Who• THE CDUNT'I' OP ORAllMI Wlthl" • lllOl'IT .. titer 11111 flnl t Ubl!c.tlloil 111m1 I" 111!1 Ind •llct of ,.ft~ A.fttl6 ol !hit nolla. ,, •• h lllwl· JM.,. NII 01' l'IT!Tl&lt D1ltd FtbrClui ry 10.L'"',.... EllP11t i.. Ovrntrlfl, J\10~ Neptune, N~~1;1,.::1a~~A e1p WILL &MD l'Oll 1renct · vn NewPQr't e11ch C1/Jlot'll!1 t MINTA.RV E~tculor .. !ht Win of 01ttd IN h i'1 lfff Ll!TlEll TIES ... !!It abDvc "1mtd dettdt111 e~-'L <M!rl'll ftT Etlllt II DOllA C.. HUl"l'MAN, J. D. TAllGAllT, STATE 0 , <•L"O.•H r Oect11ed. '1! s.utti Piow.r Sm.t IA, I NOTICE IS H!lllEBV GIV!N Thtl S.llt NumW Jll ' COUNTY 01' OltANGI! I 11 A LDUlll Fr1rw:l1tn, Nrntd It! 1111 WI~ Lii A•itln c1iffwm1 M017 Oii Marcl'! 11. lfff, Wfort mt. 1 1i ~rwtll11 L11ul11 F,.11111111 Mt fllt• T.t: (t1SJ 12..tJOI N11ftf"I' Public '" Ind tor llld Sf1t., ht•tln • Mll!IOll for .... obit. "' •lit A!Nflltr fW IXl<WIW l'fl•IOIL8tlr IP11t1rtd Eu;~· L. 0...irnfrfff ~11c1 for IHUllKI of Ltlt.rs Tnllmt!I .. ,., "lt·ll2\'t t tlOW" 10 mt lo bt !ht H rson wl'lost lo Ptlllk>M r, ref1rtntl to Wlllcfrl 11 ,.l.lbnlhed or1ntt cc11t 01111 Pllo!, Mm• 11 tu~rlbecl fl lht wt!'hl11 1 ... rn1de tor lurthtr Mrtlcultn. 11'1<1 !1111 Mlf'dl '· 13, 1'(1, v. "" 2l1·ff 1trumtnl 1nG ld<11Dw1"9ecl ht tJIKUltd "" !Im• •!IC! •lie• "' ht"'"' ""' 1-------------!ht lSl!le. 111nt "-• bet<! 111 far A•Fll A, ltff, LEGAL NOTICE fO!ffcltl 11111 11 ,,30 1.m.. I" lrtt toUrll'Olll\ flf C!•m•h V. Utt Dfftrtml!\f No. J ol' Jtlcl eourt, •' No!trv Public • C1tltonil• 71)(! Wnl Ehih!'h S!rffl, I" tilt CllY "-l1Mll Prl11tl111I Ol'llct In cf '-"11 Anl, C1llf9f"l1. tlOTICI Cl' DISIOLU710M 0 •11111 CctmlY D1ttd M1rd1 17, Ifft 0, ,.A.TNEllHI" ~NO My COniml1110111E1PIHt W. I!. ST JOHlf, OISCCNTINUANCI 01' M1rch 27, 1'11 Cou"IY Clwk. USE 01' l'!ltM NA.Ml Publllf\ecl Orin•• Cc1ll 0111v •rlof, lllllD •Nn ••••D, Pt.1rW1nt lo "" P!'llY11lon1 Ill Stclloll Mard'I U, ». 27 Ind APrll ). 1'•• •11M• •sn Lltfll IMtll .......... UOll.f of 1"" CO!"POr1llOlll Codi tl'lcl L .. I NKll, ClllftrR .. ""7 s.ci1 .. 246t.1 of !ht CIFll Cod• of LEGAL NOTICE 111: nni OAl'fl•llll '""" ll>t Sll!t of C1Ufol'nl1, Nollet 11 ht~by Atttrn1v1 f.,. PtHlll111r OIYtn 1111! th~ UllMf'll•ned 111rl~ri. SUN Pub!l1hf'd Or•"lle COii! O•lfY l'tkll, l'ttr~ -•Did 1" buil"lq """'' NOTICE TO C•IDITO•S Mlrdl If, 20. )6, lMt SIMt 1111 firm 11ariie ol OUILTER'5 SOUNO SU,.l!llllC• COUii'\' 01' TM• Tl"llNGS t nd QU ILTEll .SOUND COM< STATI O" CILll'O•NIA l'O• PANY 11 lfli Pl1ct"llt Avtnut, C01t1 THI COUNTY Oii' DRANOI LEGAL NOTICE Mt.a. C..llfornl1, wtl't dluo!Vtd II II ... A"'211) rnldnllhl, Ffbru1rv JI, 1Nh lhll E t ~ of cEi:IL R .... llllfllfl .. u lcl firm dllcon!l.,utf 11>t .... ..!. t OGEltl WEii, CIRTtl"IC&TI or IUSINlll -of ulcl Nmt 11'1<1 ""' llltr 11ld ........... rKTITIOUS NAM• dlslO/ulllrl NI pt,_ hid IVthlrltv to NOTICl! IS Hl!ltEBY GIVEN te tht '1'11• utldtrilt""' lie ~ ...... 1,. lllCU• o011!ii11oM tor Jtld lorll'ltf tJrm cr.dllori or llw •tiov. 111rntc1 dtcftltnt ca•Hh/Cfl119 • 111111,,... 11 , .. ,_1, Tiit Nlmtl I" full tl'lcl plic.; of ~I ·:~ .,..,_., h•vl119 tllol""' llllMI CMll Mtll, C1llfol'l'llt, Ulldtr thl fk• raldtllct Ill lht PlrlTtt" 1rt 11 IClllO'"' 11 dto'dt"I e•e ""ulrM lo flit tltlous f1ml !It"" If SUN .... thtt 1'11rlcll ._ Qullttr, 11• Emer11d :m~~~ ot"" 111:ec::_-:..rv ,/~"be!; 111<1 rrrm I• c°'""6M'lt el ltlt hllnl,... .. ,, L•tuM BHd'I, C.111or"ll ffltltltcl C9Ur1 ._ • ... 1 "not\t, "'1'loll ftllllft ln 1\111 11111 Piie• EU btlll H -·II~ 1a. E Id ' or "' Prttl!I "'""• wllh of rn!cltnct t rt 11 fcllow1· ... -.. v '· '"''1 !Ila nteftlll'Y _,..,.,., to "'' ~.,. BCllGE IE . l'ltEl!liltO JR •• m Bly, Lffllll>I lttd!. C1!llof1ll1 dtn.ltlntd 11 lhl oflkt of Joh11 E. I! 1 Th SI COii Mtw Clltrlll J. Qullltr, 11, "' e,,.,...,ld llurrl, Alllll'llfv 1nd "•tlll<1t11r 111 l'ro ·M~Hai'L R •GRAY. 7147 w•1W l1v, Lit-lttdl, C1llfornla, Ptr, 11'111 E""rl ld ltv. L19Ulll lltt(!I $1 I A ' ' ' O.ttd: Flbfvllrt 11, 1'6f. Ctllfofn!t '2U!, wl'lloc~ h thl ,i1e1 0j Oto;.:,,;.·~ s lM OUlLTIElt'S SOUND THINGS Ind bu1lnnt ot 1M unctenl1"" rn 111 ,...tt.,.1 MICHAEL ll. OlllAY OUILTE• SOUNO COM,.AH'Y 11trl1ln!"' to 1111 t1ftlt of 111d dlef'dt"I BOil.GE I! ,i•IEIEllRG JR. IY l'•Trldr Howe Quin.,. ""'"'In '°""' mMfh1 1/tw !'II• fir.I "'bllc.1: SI ~ • '"•llfoml • Or-C11;11tr llf EHJ.lbtlll ""°"" Qultttr llOll of !'1111 Miiia ,,. '-" •• • I F °"''"' J. Qulfttr. II Otlf'd Ftbrv•rv' ,., 1,., On Mtlrth J, 1Mt, Mfai. ""' • "utllllllld Or1"" C.0111 D•llr "!lot, John Ii! Bllfr1 • Not1rv l"vt!lloc I" 1M fot tlW lltNr, M1rd\ .. U, 70, 17, lH• 4U-4t E•f'CUl!ir Ill !Ill will ... rs&1111IV 16pt1..., 10"01! E . of 1111 it.oft fltmlCI dtoCH "' Fli:li!EllERG Jr. 11141 MICHAIL Ill. 8111AY LEGAL NOTICE JONN I . IUllll t ktlOWll II ,.,. toe Ill 1111 Ml'llM ""'*' Ali.m.v 11 LIW nemtl 1rt 1ulncrlbtd h lhl wl!llln Cfl!Tll'ICATIE 01" <o•,.OltATIDN POI 1701 Err11r1N llF 1"1trumt11f 1nd tdiltwltclrM ltlt'I' ••• fltAHIACJIOM OP IUl!lo!ESI UNtllll ~~4~t~Mtrt!l1 "'Jl i&~C~A1L';E':l.1 ICTITIOUS MAM.I P'lll~r I ,. I' Miry Miii llM!'I .. TME UNOERSIGNED COltPOllATIOH Pubtl•hlclR ~ .. Cettt 0111'1' ,.nat. Holtry f'ubllc-Ctlltll'lll• lloei M'*' ctl"tllY llltl ft h ~"' Mlrdl " ll. ,. ":: 1,.. ., •• , l'rlndNI Ofl:lcc '" e bu11Mst )aceled 11 ltll l !ro't ltrHI. ' • ..... Or111H C"""1 "''-' lltadl, C•llfornl1 unftr 11111 LEGAL NOTICE MF Cornmltf;IO" l»lrft lldl!lovl fl"" lllmt ol L. C. MILLER A.,.11 t, 1'71 CO. •~d 11\tl Jlld llrm II oml'Olfll Pllbllshtd °''"'' c.nt D1!1'1' ,Jliot, ol Ille tollftwlnw COl'POrt !lo!I, wllott trlft-IAlll·14* Mlrt!'I '-lJ, 20, )1, lttf '1kt tlNI •lllCt ol Wl!Mq 11 ff l11lllrwl: NOT!CI TC CltlDITOlllS LISLE C. MILLER, INC., 1'U l lrd'I 'IUPl!RIOll COUllT 01' TMI! Slrttt. Nl-1 ltldl. C1lltorftl1. ST&TI! OP CILtl'OIMIA POil LEGAL NOTICE W11NESS "1 M>rKI this lltll •rf of TMI COUNTY 01' ORAIMI M.11/'Cf'I, 1"9. .... A.flMI ,,,_ CCORPOltATE SEAL) E1t1fot IJf FLOll'IENCE LOUllE IUll.T Cllll'IPIC&Tt: °" IUllMlll U11t C. Ml!ltf', lllC. 1li:;1 FLORENCE L. IURT lb. ... PICTITIOUS lt,\llllll Lili. Ml1lf1', Praidtfll L. I UIT, Otctllttl, ' • Ttlt VNll"ltt11d IO e.rOJ' tlll h STATE OF CALl~ltNIA ) NOTICE 1$ 'fE•EIY GIVE# t. Ille ~lie t Ml,.,... ti I .. A"'l'll11'11 COUNTY 01' ORANGE I If O'ldltor1 of lht '"""' tltmttl ""'"""' 11.. Sv!N S.C. C11i. Mftl;, CtNftrftlt,' l<»'Fl'CtAL Sl!All llUll 111 """"' """'"' clllmt "llfttl ........ llw flcffttwt flfTl'I l'lf-If C & I •• °", 11111 ltth 0tv d M1rdl, A.D. lt'lf lllil Ni:Mt!lt ,,.. ........... It ni. AP'AlllTMIENf MAIM11MANCIE tM thd ' btfor1 .... Nltl('ll' "· Evt'rnl • lfltfrl, wtlll "" _ .. .,. ""'1Clltrt. Ill 1116 """ l'I -" If .... fo/"1 ... Not...., l"ubllc Ill tlld for 111d COUOllV lht ll'llct of 11111 ctt:rt 111 11111 ibow _....,, wt101t """" Ill tuft •NI pltct 11\d Sl1fot, "dill119 thtr•f11, """' e-'"ttlltcl cwrt, or te '"'""'' thwm, wllh Ill rnl4tflct II at felllwl: rrilHlollld _.,., •~ 1tne"''"' -e•rld !Ill flt('t41.1f"I' _,,..,.., 1'o ~ ""° J••-'· ClfllR. lMJ &Jlthtfllil LISLE MILLE• kflllwn te 1111 IG bt 9f"!"'"' •• lht 11111tt ff ~ l llomtV, St .. Swlfot J<, C.b Mtti, C.Hflntll lht '°miftlll Ill tho -~ll\oll lhtl =:· H, A(~trm111. ll!D L-leldl 9H'7, • ~~Kl/Nd lht w1111'" 1t1i1"""""1 Oii lltfllr , 11/Jft ''s. L-fl.t•cll. C.!ltorftlt o...,. Mlrdl 1. ttff "' lht c:or-tt'°" hi.I" l'lf#fttd, trlll wt!ltft II 1111 •II« tf bulifttu J-I'. Cefrllft 'Clf_...,..., It ~ ""' Sutfl ~lfllll d ... Uaderlftl'ltd ill 1!1 ""'"'" ..,. •tt. flf CtllMn!I&, Orl!WI C'Wli1'f1 tl(«U'-f 1111 11rnt. 111 Wtlllfff Wl'ltltlll, ''""""' "' "" ntitt If ••IC ""*"" Oii Mll'Cll .. ,,.., ....... -. I I hlvt lltrtvnte "' """ PltNI tM WlfJ\111 four "*'"" .,,.,. lfNI flfllf Pllbllw'. ,....,., hMlc Ill •M ... MN ..... ltlftli:-.1 mF olfloc:ftl till h H • 11111 t1o!1 of !'hlt l'IOl!t1, .,.._11Y _,Id J•t111111 P. C.t.111 -Ir! 1rt1, certtntti. ""'' '"" wl'llllrft. o.tec1 M•rcfl J, ,.... ~ lo "" "' 11t 1119 ---. N•""° A, Evtrnl Ftor.ntt A, LlftlltJ t'lllN If ~ h tilt "111111" 111-Not.,., Pllbt1e<1l"-11 Altrnfftlil••trl~ .t lhl ftlttll 1ll'\,lfnlllt llfld "'""'1'0Md ft lnc;vlwd "•lllCIN1 Ol'lr._. I" of !ht •MW ....... ~ IM ..,__ 0''"'' C-"r IAMI• M. ACltllllMAill. IJci, #.(lty 11111 ~ My C1>mmlHloi! l!'•t !m !M Ui1t .. Kt IMI., ttlll•rY ,llblk><1ntw1'11.1 Jutv JI, 1m lutt• '"· l'rlllc.11'1!1 Of11ct 111 f'llblllhld Or11111 Cot1I Ot"' 1'!1111, L.,. ltl'tll. Ctflfenllt ,_ Orlllf' C-ftlY M•rdl n. 11 I nd APr11 ). lt, 1Nt a, ... Tll1 (llJI UM'tll MF c-1111 ... ..,,.. SOCK IT TO 'D!! SOCK rr TO '&\t! Alfilnln fer AitMl!l/lfl'Mrl• "''" t, ltn Putl!llMd 0•-t COi" 01t1Y •lie!, ~'11•htd Or4-C1ut 01!ly Pntt, Mtrc:ft I. IJ, Jt, JI, lM' '4014t M¥Cfrl '-U. Jt. 17, lfft 4lf.tf ·-.,..--~ --·-·- • OAILY PILOT Jt Barry Treads Softly 3 lf.flDfon Letters Chevrolet Starts ,...,, Oii tfllf Jfft -., ~ A.O. (ftTtf'tCAft OP COll'OUl'ION POii IMt, ~ ..._ """"" f , Ditv1t • TIAtillM'TIOM Ofll IVStirelU UMDlll H<lllt'Y Pybk" [ti Ml .... .., ~ PICTITtOUI NAMI lfld St•,_, tftlcllnt tMN111, llulr --.. Gol.divater Finds Unobtrusive Senate Nicb.e ' ' ~ THI VNOI RSIONEO COlll'Olt.t.TIOH 1111M-... W ~ -11¥' _,.. "-......., c:wtlfY tlltl It b COllOvct!"" Jolin C. l'rwd k-frlJ -,. .,. • .......... JK.ffwf ., 1Nf "'""°" lht ,.,...,..,,, "' the COl'ptl'tl)M .,.. • .._, .......... ~,. --. C:•""'11•• ""'*' -Nd .,. Wftlllr'I ... '""""""' ... lllM• .._ ffetlllout ~ ~of ill OCM.CIN .r lht C'Or!IOnltlOn 1Mte111 Nlmltd, 1NI VILLA HAlltlTY\.ISTS. (21 GOL.Dl!Jt --""""' to -lfllll .udl __..._ By STEVE GERST!lL WASHINGTON (UPI) Without fanfare, B a r r y Coldwater has retume<fto the Senate, the quiet havt{l from which he was lured five years ago by dream of the White House. The 1964 Re p ub l ic an presidential candldate and spokesman for GOP con- servatism has come back as the junior senator f r o m Arizooa -no more, no less. As a result, Goldwater I.as had no re-entry problem and he has assumed an .mob- trusive niche in the Senate almost as though he had never left long enough to get trounc- ed by Lyndon Johnson. Gold.Water jokes about it now. One of his favorite stori es is about the little old .. lady who spotted him on his return to the nation's capital and inquired, "\\'eren 't you Barry Gold\vater'!" Goldwater could ea s 11 y claim leadership of the more conse r vative Senate Republicans but so far h3.'I made no moves in that direc- tion. The competition is so weak, however, that he could assert himself any tim e without much trouble. But in the first months of his brand new six-year tenn , Goldwater has avoided the limelight. Al'I' .... GOLDWATER BACK Jokes of Departure Senate be has used the treaty R all f A v11.1..A •IAU:TY IALON• * lt\et .. w •9(11f" "" H""' 111 wi~ ~. t ti"" II .,,_... of thl ftlllowlne COi'· I Ill.,. ht,_to Wt ll'IY 11...i Mil .. the subject of speeches ec 0 u OS _..., -ff..... .._ ........ -....... -· ... -WI around the country, ..,.""*' 11 M Iott.wt; veer In thll W'tfflut. nnf *'" wrltttn. Goldwater baa also deeply IM'c~.'"~:.~wu.~.r::"-g::r; (P,Fl'ICl-~L IEAi., ' I Mfta, CGllfon'll•. · , OW'-lmmened himself lti t"O other WITHlll 1t11 llGNI 11111 Jlfl a,. o1 Not•l'Y Pi.ettc.c•ll,_.,11 flelda, electoral reform and DETROIT (AP) -'l1Je first and coold fall into the linkage ~ra..n ~~=~: '" the draft. ·He baa teltified 1..M-..w11."-• -... ..... _ __. jam .-. e1~-JOlln c. !'row ,,,.., C-lule!t l QN ~ ~1'"irt _., U-MUI _.., WftlACC a--,, ...... lcM!lt J-21, 1'7* in favor ol a consUtuUonal three mll1km Chevrolet OWDlrl GM ............ m-1-out the STAT• Ofl CALIFORNIA hbllllled °''"" Cont D•flr l'Unt,, amendment which would give """'& .... ~ ........ ,& COUNTY 01' Oll:ANGl ) p Mafc:h .. 13, 20, 21, 1Hf ~IMf. each district one electoral ,vWe that tbtir cars or trucU may new modtt cam on February LEGAL Non CE and each stale two JI! large. bavt delecu ao Into the mail H and hu beeo producing LEGAL NanCB •~ lhan •~~ 1... '"--!..•~ Lll'I AHD ACCIOIHT AN D HIALTW He baa also co-sponsore(l a wuay, mpre -~ .... Wftllll '(Ill a thrte-sutt day, IYMOl'lll 01' THIE AIOIUAL ITATIMIHT bill, filed by Sen. Mark;· 0. aft.er General Moton an-.ven-day wtti baa1s since AMllUCAN Lll'I AND AC:CIDIMT r:IVllA~C· COMPANY OP ST. LOUIS Hatfield, (R..Ore.), calling for ·_-----------·-~ ii wu ~-•11 .... '""· •'--~ F1.111 corpor• .. N•.,. rof ··-·· •• , I ............ t:U ~ .... UJl;7 "~,. -L!Mtll ............... Liiii.. __. ~1• a p essWUAI,. "" ·VO unteer bl ,__ • w --u-them out 1c ve c~. lo~'~·~,--• Y•r 1...:"'9~ :n, tNI anny, OlevrOlet Diviaka l&hl tbe --•al &ft U wt Clll/' Tti.I ~-"""' I S.lM.llUt ~E~~~~ Citi~ -~~ ~§~:r·!:\~_=l~ ... '~;M-~:(·;!.~:*' ... ··~t·.· .. ~,\ .. ·=;·:. :::: m~hecalledof ·several All·Am' 'eri" ca' . -· ·-"""'· w-1 ... !!>0 '• """""''''"!!!!~'1 -. -fe!Jow Republicahs to discuss ownera a.~ . w· ~~~ ·of the 2.4 ' .~ ~-.. ~, ., 1,UUO.ti 1he questions raised' by the vehicles'"t:O ·~ 1wr,"*'. Cevro1etl wbicb may have =...T.:',::•--:1J" •iitw 11t"111 •r. 1r1 k'QO""nc• Wl1'I *.......,a.... Pueblo affair. In .Conte·st ipection or sentee; ~ .. ,., , , exhal&St system defecta 1.s 11_ ,, ~~ .. !:"..,.,,.,.. ~ ~:...~ .... ,.... Ill "'-111wrw. c.141, ..... The Arizona senatm so far At that rMe It lhould take gravated by the fact that ,..C.:,.L.iJ::~ F:::_ ~=:•TY has declined to flex hii _ _ !!!!ti\. the middle cl. May to some ·~ 11115 .and .,. "' ~.~ """'· . '" ''"' •. :::.1. political muscle. There ls no NEW YORK (\1PJ)t"'1 • fiiiain all the owners. inodels. ,... :·: "· ~J' "*~· ''* &igllltvn of....,.,., !:n~.arly to make any judg-indication yet that he once Eleven cities were ~ a.' .. , c&-r •1 MIWON Since~.~ ., ~ ~;Otw .. ~'ICl•llY Pilot. Mlrd'I IL lt, '°· n. 2t. 11tt .... Goldwater Campal.gned for ~re ~ntsGOPto chart the. ac· title of Ml-Am-a """ n.. Che ~· nd 1967 m~nmi ~ maoulao. ' \:LBGAJ;l'IOTICE LEGAL NOTICE wOM Ul conservatism, ;_...---·r ~ ·:v:-vro-can a turers · 'atber i~ ,,,. dNJers • 4C • the President, especially in even in the restricted confines Wednesday in the amui1 t:U& triK:lcJ' are part of the 4.9 have been _,...i_, to ..,.•r• OAANOI COUNTY 11:0Ao oal'AltTMINT lhe southern and border areas ol the Senate. test to encourage "citken ac-million vehicles called 1n by owners of ·'~";ii;' s 1~';'~ o1t:::,~.c~~N~,r,C:::-J;~:11A which are more in accord with tion" l;hat is s.P?nsortd by GM on Feb, 28 in the auto August. 19M GM bu aton!d ot ::!~i!rs~~""'~1yr':1';',~., ""'..,.C::1k:n_~ ~1'°C,,,~ : ~ = his brand ot Republicanism the National Muruc1pal League industry'• largest recall cam-in 8 computer the •• -i.1 M_,, ~ 31u d•y tf ~•rel!, '"' '' 2:ao PM. "clock, 11 wnk11 11..,. .-i.., th N. ' B h S d nd Look M · ~uu wlll bto Pllblkly Op9<Mld •nd r91>d In tt... Offk• of 111. c1 ... 11: of !tie ._,.. ., an IXOR S. eac tu en ts a agazme. paign, number and owner's name and luPtrvlson, It-JOI, Cotlnly Admlnlttntlon 8ulldlng, SIS NOl'ffl S'fd- But on the first major issue The 1969 winners are Chevrolet sald the delay in· llddrea on every Id 11111• an., ea111orn11• fOr',f;Ol'lltr\ICtlon •t or•nt1 c-1'( Alrr>0rf '" l«Ol'llllrice C •• I tte N c c 0 t ta.. ettln ..... _ 1 ..... __ CM 90 ' wltll ""' Pllllt •rid Jf*NIC'llons ltlerttor, 1o Wl'lkll •PKl•I reflolllttl i. ,,..... ... to come before the Sena te, c· H llClr 0 • . • e g g out UJe ~· WU a spokesman said. follows : Nixon and Goldwater quickly IVell OllOr Gr~ve, Ore .. Danvill~, banKal~• caused by a shortage of a new A O\evy spokesman said the :111~~w: :•:·,~::':~':' .~';f_;:t.~1~,..'* County AlfPtrt. parted company. Edinburg, Tex., Fair .. , part the time required to put finn ii ttill in the · ng111..,... l!tt11Mt• The President ur ged Dwight Reynolds and Chris-Alaska, Jacksonville, .Fla., togeiher a list of the owners ol bolling that lilt :~ "'"; "'· 7::"~~-R11»~:!:i:;., W"1I "·-gress •• approve the ty Geiger, students at Hun~ New Albany, Ind., Sagmaw, to be notified and "just getting the 800 000 affeCted b ... _ 2 » Ton A1p11111 Emu111oo1 tTtdc c.o.11 '""'" w tington Beach's D w y e r Mich San Diego Calif ...... 1 • Y we a it,a T... AaP"e11 c:.ncm• nuclear nonproliferation treaty S ·• ah G d' S d ., "'~ mass ve paper w or k ricall. The recall DOlices on TM "'""°'"' ~111i.. .,.. 1ppni111mei. '"IY· t1t1no ,1.,... " • .,...., fOI' a•d Goldwater w-t •· the Intermediate School, b ave avann , a., an ny er, done" the 1~, and 1,... ..;..;..:i~ts will "" compor1110n et 11 •rid ""' c-1y at or..,.. dOll "°'' ~1, or 0y ~ " ....,, w been accepted as members of Tex They were selected from · ow 1r11111 ulVU!I: c•T!Ofl, ""r" ltllt "'* Klvll '"'°""'' 11 ~ wm carr .. pano maawr111 llUt ,._ floor of the Senate to argue the 1~· '9 All •·uthern c a11·· . d fl Id f ~.. The Chevrolet portion of the .ltart soinl out Monday be Hl'VIS 11'11 ,...,., •,,lllUMH or 11~ ..... ""''""°"""'Of 1ny CllH or"'"-,.; '7VO'"\I .,... a recor e o 1-con-huge recall involves· aald • TM work, or "° ¥11 pwl'lon1 of ""' -111;, •• ""' bl d""*' n«.'5Pry °' .. that the international pad fornia J u-1•0, Hi·gh School testants ·· • 111""" bV fh.I l11t1Mar. He declines to grant in- terviews, partly because he does not want to pose as a former presidential candidate but as a senator. Id k th U ·led S · " • -TWt> mi1Bon 1915 through A Chevy k ' I Tti. COl'ltr'Mf -,comani. 111111 "°"''II Of Notic. fill con1r1Cll)t"11, Form = wou ma e e ru t.ate:i Honor Orchestra. Cited for honorable mention tM• d 1 tand--i -i.. apo esman aa d pe .. r • ....-m ., ..,.,_._,, P11n1, Sptc:lll 1'1'9YllloM. •l'ICI s11rod•"' Sp.eNI the nnli·ceman for the free The two ei·ghth grade . 1 V .....o mo e • cuu--notlcea to the ownen: of •~-11ont. •II ., 1!4fllcl'I .,. "' rn. 1n ""' Oflk• ., "" °"""' Clll/lltf it..c .-· _.., were Athens, Ga ., Bristo I a., Chevrolet!· ror teTvict to the '1987 1.... n11· !...... wn;: _, ....... _ ~...,. fleftrrtd la •nd mad•. pen llotreclf. world. violinists will join junior high Columbia S.C. D a n bu r y _1_ -• ........ M.A.. • ~ I _., can Jn-'""" SPkltl Provision• •nd at11er contr1ct docurnenl -..m. wm 11e .... The treaty has b e e n school musicians from eleven ' C El'kh t' I d J k ' rear !""...,.. m ..,.. ~1 to volved in the recalls would e11r. ,., lllfimlMt!Ofl wllllOvl cri.rve. cap1es ot in contl'"Kt doainwlta '"'' -'i onn., ar , n ., ac son· prevent exhaust fumes fro tart Ing 1KwM •t tilt ,0tr1c1 a1 111e or•"" ea11nr., ll:IMICI ~rtrnOflt, co W•t 11t11• G-Oldwater's main legislative Southern California counties in ville Ill Kittery Me . . m s go out today. '""'· s1nt• Ma, cantom11, r-' ·• • ·' entering the vehicle. Pl•n•. $pedal Pl'OYloloni (not 111c1uc11111 St'111hrd SPklllcl11onf .,,. '""" ~ topic in the first weeks of concerts scheduled March 22 Lockhart, T e x • , Redlands, 723 000 m•"" 1nc1u.111111 "' r•l•rerK•l 1nd pt"GOOUI 1am11 ""' bf llOl•IMll ., ""'°'""' the session. In addition to and 23 at Lancaster and Calif Visalia Calif and -• 1968 and 1989 11w DIOd"• 1,1p1111 peymwit " • pr1n1111g NICI 11rv~• c1>ar.-In "" •rnovnt .,, arguing against jt in the Alhambra high schools. Wllll~ion, N.D.' ., modeped 'w1'"'th ~ trufck& 1..~!' Burgl.ar Victim :!·~,a:~c!i.i~;,.:~~"°'11vt;' J:~r!1'm.~]~c~s~•!.bloe=,,..:~; ______________ ...::_.::..._:._ ____________ .:_ ________ :.:::.:::::. ________ , 1.11111: our-~n::I W•U ElerPllfl Strttt. Slll'lt• -""· OIU!Gmll. quadra W car'··--·· Jn1 COplis al 1111 ltand•rd IDKNklllan1 fM)' tll pUrchn.ed for Sl..$1 In lnc:ludelf The more overriding reason, probably, is he knows he would be asked for his assess· ment of_ the N i x o n ad· ministration and feels it is S1!ta 1l2i WHITE FRONT llllllllY • S11MCE • llSCQlllll' • 11 iilMIT GLEEM TOOTHPASTE SCHICK SUPER STAINLESS BLADES Choice or lllree pleas- ant flavors or of assort· ed fllWfs.100 tablets. GILLE 11 E ADJUSTABLE TECHMATIC BAND 5 shaving edges on adjustable band t11 refill techmatic ra· .,,.. zor. Cartridge lo~d. f ~ COMPARE AT $1.~ ~5Jc ~~~Wr:.1i12c:S~~'.~~.~~~~ ....... I'' ANACIN TABLETS BOTTLE OF 100 Cool, refreshing plea· santly scented 7 o?.. aerosol can. "1'ahitian Lime". • .. 2,;.!al! .. AltlCI I COMPUE AT IAt 6 PLAYTEX TAMPONS Pack ageol 30 rig- ular or super tam- pon s. ln cludin& p1ice-off label. COMPARE At I.ft r-~ • U\U"t:l,Uf I M k p r· lrotn !hi DltMirtmtnl al PWllC WOtkl, Siii• of C•l!flornl1, .,,. tM ROid DIPlft wbkh .. cam which might a es . ro It mini, COVnly Gf Or•""· -Wiit llllhftl srr .. 1, S1nlt Alli, C1llfot'!lt1. br k Is >-I•• 1s~J No 111111 wlll bl COl'lllMrld uni .. , It Is llllldl '" • blank torm furnished ~ tfll ea ~ rep <..~. Ceunty ROid Cammlulanlr end 11 11'1141 In •econl1nn wl!ll Ill• ~lllona If 111t --tOO 000 cart which may BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -s11ndlrd Spec1tk11i..1 •ncl Sp.cl.II l'rov1s1ans. ha · both' bl Fenton Ohmann found a bed The 801rd of Supervl!MM'I of_ f1'11 eovni., of Or•111• ra•rvn fh.I right " .,.. ve pro ems. · !Kt 1ny "' •II bids. · ' Chevrolet Is the last of the room window of his a~· The blclclff'• '""''1'" '" dlrodld 111 Ill• ~vr.1om 1n sec:tlGll 2 Gf "" ''-"""' t h d bee b k SPl(llle.lllOna tor It!• r1q11lrttnenll incl cond!llon1 which ht mus! abs.,..,.. In ... GM dJvisiutt: to get started men a n ro en Y a preper111an Gf tti• Pl'OPOlaJ '°'"' 1nd '"' suttmru ron ol TM Did. · allln lls all I 1 ... _ burglar but nothing was miss-Prn111on1 GI "" 11111 01n1r1c1 Act ... Ml •PPllc.IDI•. •nd ProtP1CllV9 ~ mm I rec e ~.,. inf ~ wm not IN r.qu1rw "'IN 111.,.11111e1. • ll:mplO'(lr lllYITllnll alhtr lMn ltloM ll•mltfld h•reln, 11 dtflnod In hct1'11 MAIL LE'ITERS n fad, Ohmann told police 1m.1 Of "" l.lbOr .CGOf, ••• 111 bto peld In •ccwde11C• w!111 ""' i.rma of ""' Cadillac Buick Oldsmobile -~ thief had left, a. camer~ :'~ :"~1a ~"': ~~1~1!("" "":' or c.11M111c.1r1ort .. ...,. and ·' '1__ and ~ble·\typeWrlter• that OvtrUme, s-..,. 1nd HOlld•'fl -not less ""'" -Ind OM-111111 11\\l fl"'" 1 Pontiac art •11-.dy ,~· a~nllf had been tabn'ln IM 1111k hollrb' r1i. Pl"* 1pp11c11111 ""fllo'flr P\I'"""''· The 111:111c1 • .,. ~ lng 11 l4:,_tters to tell nearly l:il a ·burgiarj ellewbeTe. :!'.:1n':' .;::i11,::i~. '::1~1>to ,:~1c~1~:..~~!:'~1ontti.arai=t': m UUll owners of 1968 and · wort:11111n ""'*'9d on !fie pratKt. 11Y!d vehic'·· equipped -"th C..-.,, 111 coH11CllV9 1111~1fnl111 •gr""""1b ,.1111111 111 "" t¥Orlt u ..e .l.iftlll' lcot WI tortll In _ tfM w.r.n-1JonGd Lebo!' Codi 1r1 Of\ 1111 •nd 1Y1!1Gblo fol' 1Npll(t1fli the quadra jet carburetor that 3 Pi"cks. OK'd. in 1t11 otflol 11 !ht' o.pertment of 1111111111'1&1 ll•l•llG!tl, 01vtsial\ a1 Larior s1•tlltlei "· ha •I..-•1111 ll-rdl. · ;;i; wn::Y ve un:: same problem Atttnlllllj ll dlrlclod "' Slcflllft 7.1.01G GI ,.. lt•ndarll Sptc111ao11an1 proyt1. at J 11 million Chevrolet · · 4'11 '*' "11f!""1riwnt ., ..,...11ca .. It>• wor11:. Every well •ppr11111ce """ ~ · · · WASHING'roM (UPJ)-Ttle Plld 1111' 1..ncl•l'll W'fl Plld to •PPl'll'lllCll under Illa r1gull11Dm of flle ~ owners. Senate Monda · ·-J .1.. " wrill;fl "' 11 ~,.,. lftformltial\ m•1i..1 "' ttn111o,riwn1 a1 •W111tlC11 •• On Tuesday, GM an-1 appro~ cue "" oeit•lnllf,' from '" Director ., 1t11 PtperttMnt al 1nd11111rr11 1t11111c1111, ·wflt 11 unced 11 ill 1 JnominavtlonsSmoll" l(ormR-0, ti; · Rep. TIMI .::=:"~ ~~ ",.,: .. ~':ri:.::"~~1p ""'~ CGdl ., -J DO was reca ng .1 ames • ""' 1iua.), as ••tt ·of a11tam11. ni. 101n1 ot SuP1rvlS'11'1 a1 Or•rl!ll county 1111 1J.C1r11~ million can, trucks and bulles administrator of the Fanners .... 01nW•li '""•1t"'9 r1to o1 w"1ft 1ppr1c11111 1a "'' wort 1o i. dGno 111 bl .,. to be inspected for possible Hom& Administration; Henry ~=-: . i.i.p..,... "9YIMllb"" ~ prOblems in thelr braking Keams, 57 San Marino, Calif. "-•'*...,. f • NNllll a ste A Pon" di • I tre ' ident of "-C:~ v1u1111t Watt•r• ·•Y ms. w.ae VIS on en preneur, u pru . . ·~ tlflodlYO J•IY 1, 1u1,. s.,tt"""r 1, 1t•1 spokesman said they had not the Export·Import Bank; and 11.~s E11ctt1c11n 25<: p11w , yet started mailing notices to Carlos C. Villareal of Cali· s.u c.r~,.,.. 1!ff«fN• M.ty 1• "~ ,.PilM:J '' '"~ flhwt p the owners of ts7,000 1965 and fomla, as Urban Mass TrlM· c...,., "'--c1Hec11v1 M•Y 1. 1•"' Mir 1, ""' ,..... ..... n,.,. AJ-1-1.-.-1.. 5.11 ~'M110nt; lSc: pnw/p 40c: phw/p lil66 can involved. t"" -tu.111W,,..,"'•-· • 1nt1 """''" (ftfwtlwl A"'"' ,,, 1Ht ,. ........ 1a. ,,.., ~·o.,vy spokesman a.Id the Democratic wh~ Edward 1.10 ~·"' 1r·11n wort1•• Uc p11w JO\.k p11wn) , pl.JU d:elay .alfected the 1.12 M1. Kennedy ~~---. 8en•te '·'' .-..11111~,c•11~~1' ,, ,,.. i:c '::!1~ ""' 24~ p11w/p milli Che 1-· nd the C erk W8iVe «U lQl1'1C' z.omtnl· •JJ1 fl"' Orlffr (li lQllMV Ind on vro C\.11 a t.4 tlons throu..4. without a voice sirMt ,,.,,ngJ million other 1961 and 1969 &" . '·'' F1agtn111 GM vehicles equipped with the vote. J.,, ubo,., co-r111 4.11 Oper1f¥1-Ind Tll'IClm GI four-barrel q u a d r a jet LEGAL NOTICE """'\Ntk •1111 Ellldtk Tae11, carburetor. Vlll<"•ll"ll Mkhfnn , 1nd Uc: Phw/p Uc; pllW/P UC pnwfp ~\lit JlllWfP 211+c pllw/p :M\.k F/llW/p ...... 2Jc "'""-...... ...... ~ Th , 'l!sci.or Hi. 11J·!IGrU Slmlll r MllCll•nb l Tool1 not e carburetors Will have fllOTICa TO CltlDITOlS MP11a:i.1y dlUIH«I h1r1l11 :lSe pllw/p J.f\'x pllw/9'" lGc """"''' th;ir fast idle cam repJcictd D ~Olt ~~I! ~~~OljO~~ ~I' oLit~ I~; ,,II T~Olrl 1':', • ..,r. ~.·z~ 2k PhW/11 24\\c Jlllwfpl J:lt ritw/p with a new model. The old TltANSl"l!ROlt: ..... (lffKtlwl. , • .,. 1. '"'" ,_ .. IHt mod I the firm P11,.u1nl te ltdlans f10S tncl &101 ._.. .,.., I e , 11.ld, had If ti. unlfaml C-rci11 Cad1, you '-" ~=~~~11;".,')"9rm!~:'~':\';... : =::~: : =~= broken a~ in 80ml caaea ••;,~~ "f.''~1 :1::;::~ , tr1n11., •l'Wll • 1----,,-,''-C..,~..::..=:....=:::1,. 1111 ~dln!Mled J•mes P•llr , •• ,.,, '·" COncl'ttl MIXll' OPlf•IDf LEGAL NOTICE ....i ldWl11 De9l'I T"1clr, Tr1n.•-· !Skill TyPll 1----::::::::::-:,,.-==,:,,;_ __ l In bulk, •II of_IM m1torl•l1, MJPPllOI, 4.'2 l'lr.,,,.n NOTIC• TO Cltl!DiTOJ:S rnel'C/'llndlM ~ allllr tnvenllll'1, Ind .,., I IUl'IRIOlt COUltT 01' THI Mufpmlflt ., Tt11t «'flfn mtrlnl COf'I-J,11 'l!Cl\llPIMl!I GrPMf STATI 01' CAl.ll'OltlUA l'Olt l!MK'tlllllt M lntf" kn<>W!I •• Otrb'r 0,.,,.p 4 'Tlfl COUNTY OJI OllANO• I. 011111 111 at wlllc/I 11 loelled al J.27 Aspn11t l'ltnl l'fffl!V" N .. A-411161 f> 2'°' LlfllWtlt Stl'ffl, N-1 ltKh, S.JI llDllr!ll!'I Ir Mllrlf lllll Oplt.W r1t.i1 of S.llV Dunh•m 1190 kno CauntJ ., Or1net, c1111t>ml•. 1eonc..r1 or Atphlct 1'11n11 JOc: pllw/p 30c phwlp 30c pllw/p JOc: f/t!W/jl H S1llV A. 0110111111,, 11;.. knoW!I ':: Th• Jll't«nl "'"" ar 111mt1 1nd o,.,,., s Autull1 A. D11n111111, l!IO known ., bu1!nes1 •ddl'fUH el lhl Trt""-t.• Alpllall Pllftt EMi'-*° JlllW/JI Au1111t1 Dunh•m 0Kllt.ld •Ml Tt-lltN.,. M lfltiow.: S,'6 concrate ior ~llt ,fP!lldJ!lll,. NOTICE IS Mi=REaY G.IVEN ,. ""' Tll:A.NSFEllOJt -I.JI• ·'· D•rfl'r, M.ch1nlc1I T•l'IPll!I If '"'..,.. Cf'adl1Gr1 GI !tie ibo'.oo Ill/Md llfcldenl 101'2 $, llrftl St., Sllnl1 Ana, C1trfornl1; 11\1 MIClllM °""'''°' 111•1 •II "non' hlvffle d1lrm •••ln1! John GUiit. ;ioi 2CTh st .. CCIII """•· s,• HMY'j' °"" .... r~~ • th• 11ld deo:ldl'lll •r• raciulrtd 111 1111 C.llfo!'flll, S.4' Tr1c!DI' OPlr•lliri'CIUli • ~ Them wtlit !Ill MCIUltY YGlltttlrt In ' Tll:ANSF!ll:EE -Jll!l'IH l'tttr hi"-Timper, ktllW\I,... .J 1 ihl ~(I flf !flt cllrt Gf tt... 1i.e.t I'll!, ttl Kll'!lll I'll«, HIW9'0rt l11dl, 1'1.1111 TTKfllrl ,, · 1_' .f r 9fttltled court. fK to Pf"estnt tltlm wl~ c1n1om111 Edwin o .. n T•'ffor, lflO e...,,, · "' • IOc pllw/p IOc pllwfp »: pllw/p -phw/p * phw/p tt. nKIUIN \IG\lel'lll'I fie ~ ..,.. Conll111nl1I A.,.,, C..!1 Miu, Cllltoml1. J.M COntrete Ml••r OOll'llllr d1r1f~fllCI If tfM drfkt .f lill AlloMllY All Olli« bull"es1 lllmft IM ldd,.._. (PIY"" GI' MObllf) -'1fW/JI ltablrt L lillMtlhrm. uco Adimi u1ed tr'r ni. Tru1mror wu11111 1ht ll'llf• J.U Cr\l•hlnl !'I.Int •llf'" ~ "" IP Av111~. &.Ille Number !Of, Cast• Mtsl, ..... .._ llft 11111, IO l•t II kllll'Wl'I to JJ6 Motor P1tn1I OperWIDI' I• -'1.-ClllfotTll• tn2'. wllldl IJ 1t1e ll•r• IM Tr111thltH, •l'I": NGM. (Any Type ot SI.fl) ~ · "-• •t/Jl:~M,~IO of bvllntU Of !flt ul!fftrs!ined "' 111 TM bullr: trtn1,.r 11 to be COl'llUl'llll'lli.d S.Slf un1-.1t £cw~ OPlr•W .Di .\"·If·~ lfl.lllllri ·..nilt1ff!f 90 llM ,111i. of ti UNITED CALIFOllNIA IANK , (5i.v.,, 8•o:lthOlit-~1"'..c 1 ~I< ,~4; , 1111d dtcHlfll, wlflllfl feur ll'ICtnfltl tlttr M1rlntrt otf1c1, !712 Wnt Celli Olfrldl, Cllft'llllll!I ot Cr1M) JOc SlhW/P JOc -.Wll' llM llrol 1<.tbllutlan of tflls Miid. Hl1hw • .,, N"""'°l'f 8tidl, c_.., Of TM"""'" (lilfMtfw M'Y '· '"' .. A/H'll •• '"') O•t.I M1rdl I, !Hf. . Ort ntt. C1Ulornl1, Oft .,. 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W l'rM.ii IN W11'1fl SS WMl lllOf, I Mw •lllil fl 1111 (1111' er Cllnlllclt)Qft a'! fPle Wtr'IUMPI flt -'"'"le • ... 'M.O ~ " 1111 bl ~ "' ""' htM •M lfftll141 '"" tll'lld 11'1 $KttrM 1m.1 If lllt WW C91k. -...... MllWt ...,.'Tub4crltM!t ofntl•I -I il'll .. ., IM Yffl' lfl tll.. •' •V Oll:Oflt Ofl THI IOAllblOI" tt .. wlflitlll IN'""'-'t .;... .._,..... ~I~ ~tAL~ .,.in;n, • IUlll!ltVISOll:I Ofl O,_.,NOI couwn', Id thl'r l~KUlff 1'111 ....... '"""""~"'-CAl.IFOltHIA (OP'fll(IAL ll All ""'"' • ttlttwnll Cleltd: M1rdl IL "" J..,,.. '· MllM,.i tl'rlrl(IHI 11'1 W, I. ST JOMtl "°''"' ,.~,,,...,... ..._ Mal._ CWflf'I' '-"1 C*1r tM •4fftd9 ~IHI Oftkil tll M'r c:.M'lluloft e.irn Cltrll el ""' ltMl'f ti ........ ,. ........ .. ~ m.\"l'> ' ....... -• ~~·:~ or ~ • ' '!It.._ :::---..-• .... ..:r',._ ""' -....... :-.. -= 'I:"' .. "':; ,....... • '. . ' ~ M. 1'J.,. #rll I. l .. 1• iil':fi IM -..., l'Wfilliilf °""fl C..1t Clelfl' llllot, M.tl"dl 1t a .. fMt ..... ' \ • ~--OM.Y'Pll.OI' 1-, ~ 20. 1'16t' Living Cheap • Ill Atl~nta; Austin ' + -.., ~ " .quire '7;141 a )'tll', at tbe middle level 110,llCll, and al the hllha' live! 111,071. [:::11.AN'l'A.· GI. (Al') - AtWU, Ga., ad Allll1D. Tu, are the c:lleapal U.S. cllles In wh1dl to Uve, and Honolulu II the n\ool expmllve,' AYI the Bureau cl·Labor Slailstlcs' !outheulenl rqloQal office bett. apet>llW mainland .-I« (amillel In lower lncomo lncketl. New York op- parenlly II the -~fer moderale and' hipr Income families. Bnmtwlck ~ Bard o», Sootbeastern -· aald the survey was baled oa living '!be study -lolffr.11> come t.mW.. in $.In Fr» cllco -WOWd reqliJte ~,171, I blibell livtnc -""the poor cm tbe. m@lnland •. Tbe flcureJ '!be olllce, Wllb tbe help cl a llleGrellcal lamily at ·lour, surveyed l)Wlg coats • for all -b<actela and con-. eluded that the ,,,,,. metropolllM &real of ·the Sooth are the cheapest 10< lamlly livlng. San Franciaco and Olkland, Calli., llJJPl!U to be tbe - coots in tbe 1prln( ol 1117, the most up-t o-dat't tn- .formallc11" available. He.llld tbe atudy WU.done to provide a meuwinl r o d for if'OIQ)I which need to ad- jult tbelr procrama to living coats IUCb .. public wisistanco and -.... apocla, IU« FUCHSIA. • ICE PLANT •. Basket and upright ·types. I« New Ycrt'1 hllher and middle Income lainlllt1 -· f 14,lll and •.m. biChelt .. the ma!n),nd, . Bqdon,. oalil Cl!JlllJlfAllve fi(Urtl .,.... available caly I« Alllnlo, and -lncludo only lamily COlllUlllpl!On coats and mt tucb extraa as taxes and 1IOCW eecurity. ., .. 1 .... ".I . . .. ... . . To complete the colorful enjoyment of the shade garden . . . .all summer long - plant Fuchsia's now! Easy to grow -the most color for the least effort . Vigorous plants priced from 59' •• : in ' all its blooming glory! Good coa sta I ~~:~n~;:~~:;:~~;, . ..,.. . .,..,-. ~A.""'· _,....?,..,.' .""'-_,,,,A=·7 ..... ""I."'" ... ·..,,E,_,,,A-.,,.. .. s-. -:.,:""' ... '.:'"': ..,..,......---~-..., .... 5" Full flat of 100 ---~~ BARE ROOT CWRAllCE Sun and 'Shade Varieties. Treat yourself to a massive array ·of color Husky 1 gallon size plants ~ SPECIAL 6i1nl Zinnias Plent in the sun e nd r••P long ' •temmed cut· fJow•n ell ... , DO IT YOURS ELFERS! Lay Your Own Garden Path with Redwood Rounds! • ROSES FRUIT TREES SHADE"TREES ' ~ ... '. ' summer. Save 50% FLOWER SHOP SPEC I ALI . . ; ' .. , .. DAFFODILS "first Sign of Spring" freshly Cut 69< 3 _ s11t dozen .. - FEED YOUR DICHONDR A with the "WHIRLYBIRD" action Fully guarenteed . Come in Today for a demonstration ! COVERS 7500 SQ, FT. SPICIAL $ 4 e 45 HOURS: MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M., SUNDAYS 10 A.M, TO g P.M, Spoci•I Pricu good thrv Sun d•y, M•rch 23 ' "9u•fily an4 S-lc• SlllH I t O " I ' 2648 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA CALL 5e51H -1. ) ' Gosla; ·ft Hurtsl KathY Clouser, 7·, of Mechanicsburg, Pa. is "zapped" by open mouth Jolin Grandstrom, of the state Department 'of Health, as part of Cumber I and County's war against measles. Politi~s Over ABM? GOP Solons Sniff Sense of Partisanship By JOHN HALL W A.slllNGTON (UPI) · - Despite the bipartisan effort to dump Ptesldent Nixon's pn>pOISed safeguard an- tibollistic missile ( A B M ) system, s om e Republican senators say they are starting to catch a strong whiff of partisan politics. Thesellepublican.<' -Want an explanation why at least siJ: Dt?mo cr atic . 6enators who voted for .the Sentinel ABM system pr"· posed by President John: t are now opposed to the modified plan proposed by Nixon Friday. -Are openJy questioning tbe motives of some ABM foes who are potential Democnitic candidates to oppose Nixon In 1912. ALL CANDIDATES "These people who are criticizing him (Nixon) are all eandidates for 1972," said GOP dean !leorge D. Aiken of Vermont -"'They've jll!t been waiUng for something to disagree with him on." "I don't like to accuse my colleagues ol. putting politics above the security of the coun- try,'' 68)'1 Sen. Jack Miller (R-lowa), ''I simply say that .~ the reasons for voUng to give a Democratic president an op- tion to deploy an ABM and not giving the same option to a Republican president will require some· explaining." Republicans who have joined in the fight against Nixon's proposal contend politics is not involved. 'Illey note that most of those who oppose the ABM last year are against it this year, and that at least a dozen of the opponents a r e Republicans. "I've been to a lot or meeting on this issue, and I haven't detected politics in· volved to any substantial degree," said Kansas Sen. James B. Pearson, a Republican who s w it c h e d sides. "There are too many Republicans involved for one thing." HURT NIXON Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R· N.Y.), said: "I'm sure Some of this is politically motivated -of course, they see an op- portunity to hurt Nixon. But on the merits, you see, they're right. The answer, then, is, so what." Senate Republican leader · Evetett M. Dirksen of Illinois who favors the safeguard· pro- gram, said he was sure the 'Doc" Cho-Kem -Co soys: SINCE 1944 Hos been endorJed and recommended by professional gardeners a s the SAFEST •• , non·stalnlng ••• non·l>urnlng 'COMPLETE ROSE SPRAY KIT in ONE BOTTLE II kiff• every ·mojor insKt enemy of the ROM, fuchsias, fems, House plants, Vegetables a nd flowering plants. Every pest including Aphis, White Flies, Oiabrotico 8eetleJ, leafworms, and hundred• of other · Chewing ood s.cking lnsec:h. At the ..,.. time. it KIUS Powdery Mildew fungus, loM lust mtd Leaf Spot d iseaMI on Ro ses, lalb Plants, Vege ta b les and ·-b rnamentals. Aho, A111YW01m., Bii ieaf Catetpillars, Plun1 and Pear 5'ug1. VIGITAILEs't Cabbage Worms and Aphlcft, Rust, Mlldw and .... les on l eant; other insect peltt ond pldnt diHaNI, May b• used on fnM ond wgetobles up to one doy before hol'Yd. 1 8 0 1. $1 ,95 Pt. $2.95 QI, $5.50 Only one ~ In one gaDora of wottor. If you P.,.,. DUST, use DU-0-CIDE ROSE & FLOWER DUST .. l"',ll!Ptt.<Oll!P<t• dutl fonnula ''"''developed . issue for most senators was a "maUer of conscience." With the exception of the House Democratic leadership, whlch has endorsed Nixon's plan, the entire top structure of the Democratic party has opposed it. The titular .head of the party, former Vice President Hubert H. Hum- phrey, and Sen. Fred R. Har- ris of Oklahoma, the Democrat fc national chairman, both have switched from ABM supporters to AB~t opponenLs in Jess than a year. NOT ISSUE Senate Democratlc leader Mike Mansfield, however, is trying to keep Democrats from developing the ABM into an issue for the 1970 con- gressional and 1972 preside1r tial electi ons. Sen. Gordon Allott (R-Colo.), the GOP's No. 3 man, said he saw "no particular political thrust" to the ABM· argument and believes most of the growth in opposition j s traceable lo a .cgrowing con· ~rn" about inilitary ex· penditures. Sen, Milton R. Young (R· N.D.), notes that "some of the most outspoken opponents of the ABM this year were the same ones who voted for the Sentinel systems, which is a far larger, much more potentially costly plan." Says Sen. Hiram L. Fong (R-Hawaii ): "When President Johnson wanted a system that would be provocative, this group of Democratic senators were for it. Now, there is a plan that's not provocative, and the same ones arc against it. It 's hard to find any other explanation except that now we have a Republican presi- dent." Poll Shows Busing Opposition WASHINGTON, D.C. More than three out of four public school teachers oppose busing pupils from one school system to another to achieve racial balan~e, a National Education Association survey discloses. The teacher opinion polJ by NEA 's reseach division asked a sample of the nation's public school classroom t e a c h e r s which of four statements best expressed their views. About 78 percent thought students should not be bused across school district lines to achieve racial balance, 17 per. cent approved a two-way ex· change between the central city and suburban schools, four percent advocated bus- ing from the central city to the suburbs only, and one per-cent ~eferred tranSportatJon from the suburban schools lo the central city only. Opinion differed litUe among urJ?an, suburban, and rural teachers ; teachers In different regions: and those in different size school systems. . UCI Medical Student Wins Peter A. \Vest, a senior medical student at UC Irvine, recently placed first in an essay competiUon sponsored by the California Academy ot Prevent.alive Medicine. Ills winning es.say was UtJ. ed, "A Study of Trends in Health Services -Manpower, Distribution and Delivery." . . . • Sig•• of Ti11ie s San Francisco police have added ~omething new to their line of equip ment - a "potty wagon." A. mobile crime lab was fitted with toilet facilities to• service the needs of vast numbers of officers as signed to maintain order at San Francisco State College. Officer Lou Prevedello is the model. Peking Behind Cong New Military A ttack? LONDON (UPI) -Com· munist China is behind the stepped up Viet ·Cong military offensive that is intended to delay a Vielnam peace set- tlement and undermine Soviet influence i n Hanoi , authoritative dip 1 om at i c sources said today. Peking is organizing a diplomatic offensive on a wide international f r o n t , con- centrating on Vi,&tnam and measures to hit the Soviets as hard as possible, the sources said. East European diplomats with contacts in Peking and Hanoi, the sources said the Chinese offensive is only the beginning of a long process that can be expected to dominate the international scene in the months ahe.ad. The Kremlin will be the chief whipping boy for the time being, they predicted. Peking has never made any secret of its opposition to the Paris Vietnam peace cont.acts, the diplomatic sources noted. Nevertheless, North Viet- nam decided to start discussions with the Americans. The Soviets back- ed tbe i move and played an active part in promoting con- tacts since then, the sources said. Moscow's influence has been steadily increasing in Hanoi over the past ei1ht month!, not only because Russia has been the chief supplier of sophisticated weapons, but also because its policies coin- cided with those of President Ho Oti Mlnh's regime. This growing Soviet In- fluence 1n Hanoi bu disturbed Peking far more than the possibility of a peace set- tlement, the diplomats aald. They said there wu growing evidence that China was step- ping up approaches to the Viet Cong, bypassing Hanoi in the process. Coming March 22 Family ~elqy Six Secrets to Training Y~ur Dog· By JAMES NATHAN MU.I.ER A famous trainer gins ad•ict that you can follow easily if you wont to. teac h your "old dog new tricks." ALSO • PRETTY PARTY PANTS - A fashion report on the newest look for ladies spending an e-vening on the town or malting the "formal" partv Scene. e 'MONSTER' BABIES -. What makes pregnant' women dream they'll have deformed. chil~en? Science looks at the bizarre dreaDll of mothers-.· tirbe. 1 e TERRIFIED TONY -Supmtar Anthony Quinn needs constant praise and reauurance, even after 80 great years in show business. What torments him? All Coming Saturday in the I DA ILY 'PILOT I . . WASHINGTON (AP).-'llle . been lil!M .. prime tarnts n.atlon's rallroeds. u n d t r by some antiwar groups who threa~ of Abeta£! from anti, have threatened to '*, forct Vietnam • wif"'gi'iitlps-;' lilvi' 10 llll]>i!i!e'111i!"Wllreffor1." ·p1aced qie llgbesf oecurlll A railway spokesman said precautions in hi.Story on ahl~ the threaU along with~rtport. menta of munttJons and mw: ed "llolated incidents" ut tU, supplles. interference w l t h detense 'The P.:W safeguards, drawn shipments led to the elaborate up jointly by military and antlsabotage steps. railroad representatives, re-Tilt new rail securily pro- . a1.1lt'ed 'from what FBJ Dlrec-cedures lnClude: tor J. Edgar Ji'oover termed -Sending trains laden with "a ml.J'ied )ncrtasil" 'in ·a<:ts munition9~anf· defense SU~ (If sabotaae a1ainst govern-plies throuih isolated areu · ment installations. and generally:,.. at night. ' , Government officials have '~-Varylniiouting so no pa~ Lullcated rail Shlpn1ents or tern can ·be .i.tetected in de-- Vietnam-bound material have feMe shlpments. In fact, • 2666 HARBOR BLVD. 546·7080 COSTA MESA . WEEDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY 9 to 5:30 SUNDAY 10 to 5s00 Anti-Siphon_ . Valve ·cod• 1ppro.-1d, solid br111, ~ •nion with tiphori br••••r, yo" e1n't h1.-1 1 tood 1pri11kl1r 1yrt1m witllout one, IWhci 11171, 3•• PVC Sl'itlNKLER PIPE 3c Joot 'I•" 4c Foot Wh111 th1 sprinkl1r 1y1t1m ls.tvrnff 11n, #i1t1 r11lt1 u, 11ncl d11 • w1t1r d1ne11 t~1t coull h1Y1 heon ctler••tr•ph1il by M1r91 111d •Gow1r, fl11t d11wn th1y 90 wh1n tvrn.d·off.• S~RINKLER KEY . witti on1 ,you'll h11¥t 1 1p1r1 111d wo11't lt1.-1 to st11nd ther1 tryin9 to w11t1r the l1wn with tht t11r1 In yht •r••· ROMIX WIRE 12x2 4c Foot 1'x2 5' Foot • I . Jhursdq, M.,U 20; 1967 DAILY PILOT Jf • I many are routed over a mucb perlng, the boxcar i.s isolated longer distance: than necessar7 and Its contents thoroughly in order to 4v.oid detection. inspected before befug trans--TrlPle &eauilg· dOOriOl OOz -·-rema~to Ships;-· · - can containing eiploslvts l>e-Tbe railroad spokesman tore shipment. _ said ·this procedure is QeeeS- -Oareful inspections of rail-sary to guard against the way track and facilities Mar-pos!ibilit'y that an e1pl01ive Wilmington, N.C., and Oak-would be rigged to detonate land, Calit-primary embark· during shipment to Vietnam. attpn pajnts for Vietnam· Hoover says ''terrorist ac- bound supplies. Uvitles''-against government When boxcars arrive ,11,t imtallations primarily have their ~tion, a railway involved attach on Reserve spokesman said, !he lhlp-Officers Training Corps and menU: are not touched until a Selective Service facilities. military inspector checks the BUt there have be.en cases- aeats. . the FBI says it has no exact U there is any sign of lam· figures-of sabotoge agalnsl '.Ad.-1rth.d 1ptel11s 9ood thru M1rch 26, 1969, (111d wh1ra l ill l1i11y fi111lly c1m1 ho"'• ho fo11nd th1y'd put 1 fr11w1y thro119h. hi1 ho1111.) ·, . . --I G.I~ bll;UXE· STE.AM AND DRY IRON 1he fo~1 ti G.E. cl1im this t1k11 tho h•1d1ch1 t out of iraning d1y. I0~1y, ftll11, now whit .•bout th1 b1c•1ch171 If you <Jott1, might 11 Wtll Ull fh1 b11f. 1249 HOMEOWNERS PAINT KIT St1rt1r 11t will s11 yo" thr11 th1 fi11i1h1d job, or if you do11't fin i1h It'll be e bi9 111l1r ti your n111t q1r191 1111, 9 inch pi n and roll1r 111, 12" •~f1n1ion pol1, ind brioh. 198 MAGNETIC CATCHES r ' No mor..ilynemH1 n11d1d to opon th1 eupbo1rd door, no mor1 1l1mrnln9 ind b1 n9in9 lo •••Pit tlo1td. IJ111t 11~1 ft off 1ltJt91lh1r. lit th111 1h1rp c1t1h11 do it for yo11. 9c1a. , .. ENTRY LOCK SET . I Entry lock with do11bl1 k1y, modorn twlip Cl11i9n, br111 fin!1h, hutiillt q11ie~1y With ordin1ry tools. 411 Handy ·aox With Bracke t ft~,pl1n,Y 011tl1tt, thl1 t. th1 111y w11y h1 k11oc:.k th•"' in , Hit· sf11d 111iUn9 pl1ce, holdt 1!1nd1rd dupltt r1c1pt1tl1. I0•1y, now wh1t't I 1t•nd1r4 duplox ree1pt1cli·.I , utlllly towel. serving de!enM ·hl)d Its ftlllanal con-a plants. ' ~ stale l1lltHnllY. And a railway Boutte rt:--4t time, U. aI ~ ported tllat•a cacjircif1<ml!J·• lllr"' ~ tbe $l8 """'""'4 amu was stolen r~nUy from a worUbop on aabotage • boxcar ,at the Army's Aber· 14It was only a short t.lme de~ Mdtt provhul: grounds, after tblS conveoUon, 11 he ·'Governmetit otlic1als, cau-declared, "that the wave of Uous in d~sing suspec(ed bombiag and anon ~ sabotage. because of re.ara ol \hrOU&boUt the C'CIUDtry;" ~ trtuerlng an alarm.ist> reac. spite numerous cues lnvetU.. lion from !he public, say the gated, only two ~ outbreak shows only "a mark-have been re~urned. ed increa.ge.''· and·· is ·not · a HOoftr ha!· t.Ported that wa,. <if terrorW acilvllies. blueprints IOI' bomblnl ,.,. Hoover tract1• the incidents ernment installations have to last June wbeD the Students been disseminated in ...,,., tor a Dtmoc:nitiC Society, a publications by mllltanl an:u.. militant 1'!ftist youlh~group, war groups. I tHOWSZAT AGAIN71 ELECTRIC TOASTER BROltlR "'COMBINATION You t•f tho ben1flt of· two 1ppli1nc11 ftr tti1 ptid of on1 with thi1 h1ndy to11ttr broilor by fht Hud1011 Company !1r• th1y loc1tod on tlt1 R.111fon11 C1" b1~e, broil or to11f with thi1, ,or do11 9r11t iob '011 tho11 littl1 fro1tn pi11 Cy11h flffi1 chick1n lohl 9r1...y '1nd v191t1bl11.I And her1'11 gift r1mind1r el 111111;tt1 ch1r91, E11ltr ind Moth1r'1 Day ire 1checlul.d n111t, 88 SUMR cunsMAN LATEX INTERIOR PAINT · ti ii to applf with briuh or roll1r, dr!.1 111JO111h11t.1, 1oft colors 1f1y freJi 111"4 cl111'1 looking, N!' lh1gerl11t oclw {.th1t m11111 it .nly 1m1ll1 for • littt. wt.ii •• J. 447 Gal. PLASTiC DROP CLOTH U1t th•••· you'll b11 mon1y 1l111il •h111 tfl'• •id1 come him•·froM 1chool 11nd 111!:, "Wh•t you doiil9, Pop)"•• th.Y trip, ovor:tho' p-int, 10c tx1z SAW HORSE BRACKITS I lr1e~1t1 ulpp'ort o I••• of up to !,ODO Hi1,, u11 , ~ for picnic or pint pOl'lt } t1bje\. shrlfy 1111oii9h •• th1 n.. kid• ffft 11111 ' · l111t011cl 'of tli1't •irptt1d"• 91111 111t yllll ju1f-bou1ht th-.,.., \ . . W,.~r. " PNEUMATIC DIAMO''· GRILL SCRllN .DOOl Cofltlploh with P"'""'•N.sl...,, lekJi, It tocll ......... ·-1 41•"'•-' trlll, I• JO, J2,••M J• t110"-.w14'ht, (Ari4..w ,. ... I I~ Ntwport t1y1, ,;,,..•, ..-ly 0111 ™rt IMtt.r t\111 • eol4 ' 1hower b1for1 br11lfa4f, ond th11t'1 !let toffl119 SJ. 11t Jll.f ' • r • •• It A r:v. "HAPPENING" * "WOMEll FOR YORTY'' ,. • Ill - -(Cl (30) ··-~ "' -· lllr -(C) (30) m-111 (30) __ .. _(30) __ Oii thi flr1I ,.. strillp... lllltntc· ... fl'ldlricl .......... tbldents 11••-..... ClllPOlltion. ... • ....tndlc:I .. ...... -. lllCIJ_.., ~ . . . ..... ) ... 'llwsdar, Mm 20, 1969 ........ -(Cl ·--........ .., ·-........ "" lll&M-_,_ .. ,___ ._ ...... illl ()) ID CIJ Ill CIJ -IC> ·-(Cl -<•~ .. , •Q......W1llit1i £11Jatt. 111'11 Wlndw, a !Ill CIJ ID "" -tcl ·---(Cl -·-11-('"""'1)'51 _...,. ......... ~ ... ....... (""""1) 11 -lnnnll -· DAmME MOVIES ZMCD~--· 1....., ,11 .. B "llllllJ i..,.-(,,_) "JI -MMJ ltttl Mult*. LM htrkt. .. ;;:. ':;"' ,;:::",!:;,, .,.. ttl .... ·-,_.,) 'R 'Mo-Ml ........ StM Coc1wta. ~ ~ &I 1111111r. •••tt1 __ .,. ... _ - . lie'" (muilctf) ••• AfttttOfl1 Oulflll. 4:31 .... ll•"V (ftfrM) 'Sl-G1.17 Dirt 11···-·-'"~• Ha~tt. Jftflson, lthoftd• Flemift1. • .... . ... . ... . ... "lie . >t STAR T .• v. CUP THIS U AND SAYI '7.50 acA ON YOll Nm lllYICI CALL 10fler • .,.., .. Mty n, ,,.,, SAW l SUYICI DNITH . . rt ·=--~,.,, -1". 1 't·:·~ ......... ;.i·'~ t~:.:•: .. ····~·--.--.~ --. . ' ......... . .!..' :...· ___ ,..... ____ _ MOON MULLINS TUt!fBLEWEEDS . ' ' Mun AND JEFF MAN,~16 SUPERMARKET SHoPPING EVERY WEEK GORDO MISS PEACH H·MAVE VOll SEl!:JI /IP.THUR'S NEW ~· J IS MURDER! 1· I WE l>ON't KNOW YET. HE 6CES OUT R>~ PINNER. EVE.ft.Y NIGH1'- ·---·· . ·------ ' IEJN& A STIMt6R ~ 111 _"R:IWlll, TME LEAST D COll.P PO ts 60 OIT MTN 11E _, I f / I .LET'S DANCE -Audrey Hepburn and Bill Holden, · above, take time out of a busy work schedule (he's U~JI her boss) to dance in the motion picture, "Paris ly Jqltn Miies When It Sizzles,'' showing tonight on Channel 2 at 9 p.m. The comedy casts Holden as a beleaguered writer and Audrey as his secretary. TELEVISION VIEWS Andy Plays For Young By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) -Andy Williams' second special of the current NBC season contained an enormous amount of interesting music, handsome color effects and generally suggested to elderly viewers -anyone over 25 -that th'e generation gap may be wider than suspected. THE ·HOUR was a concert taped before a young and very enthusiastic audience at the Los Angeles Music Center. Most of it was devoted to music in the contemporary be-at and idiom -by Williams, by Jose Feliciano, by a young Irishman called Donovan who looked like a figure in a Renaissance religious painting and chanted mourn- ful tales. By Ferd Johnson The awkward periods were those stilted mo- ments when the star and guests exchanged soma carefully rehearsed banter between numbers. The Smothers Brothers were around to engage in some of fue'ir familiar wrangling. At one point Toi'n Smothers was listing the ingredients he put in a vegetarian dish he called "pot roast". By Tom K. Ryan · ly Al Smith ly Mel I I I I ' ''I ALMOST blew my mind over this marvelous stuff from Mexico," he said and a loud titter came from the audience. It turned into a laugh when he identified the stuff as "aspara-grass." Double mean- ings, it seems, don't have to be risque. The form and content of the hour was deliber· ate. Williams is creating a new image to appeal to the young audience since he will return to NBC next season with a weekly show in the early eve-- ning -the time devoted to young viewers_.._ The device apparently has been successful. NBC received a nwnber of telephone calls early in the show from what a network representative said "sounded like disappointed mature viewers who complained that it wasn't like an Andy Williams show." Later, however, calls came from young people, calling It the best Andy Williams show ever. THE BOB HOPE SHOW, on NBC earlier, wound up its hour at about par -Hope was a winner. The program, however, had some sharp ups and downs. The comedian's opening monologue was as: bright and impudent as_ ever, but those nose jokes between Hope and Jimmy Durante are now a little long of tooth. Hope had an engaging musical number in \Vhich he played a gunslinger and Nancy Sinatra played a frontier psychiatrist. But a sketch about outsize j(waist-watchers" didn't come o!f very welJ. A 90-MINUTE documentary based on the life of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy will be made for ABC broadcast next season. The film will mark the return to TV production for David Wolper \vho for the past two years bas concentrated on theatri· cal motion pictures. Dennis the Menace 'fu. lEU. • 'IMf 1-ADOPl"._,l:leY: '1ol SE£ ••. MI. MY UFe l tlial llllfllW 6INl<l/E4JS! •••• • Complete Prh1ting Service Top Quality ..:... Fast Service ~~(\'ft, l]Ji . 11'1·1111'11"1 ,.,. ' 642-4321 ' . . . 2211 Weit B1lboe Blvd. Newport Beach ...... 'V '• • • 1! d ) d n e y n a s 0 y n a I- >-• e 1t n :s e e l- -- e d 0 s g d e .. ' e h :I e e e < • • . ! ! 1 I J ' " • fllum.,, Mll<ll 20, lM • DAILY Pn.OT II Bruins Lop-sided Choice Over Drake Tonight LOIJl&VILLE, Ky. (AP) -Mlibty UCLA ml the awe...., Lew Alcindor -lopolded lat1ortlel .. win a record third eomecutlve NCAA basketball cham- pionship this l!etlend. The BrulnJ are I 13-point choice over llU'Prlsln& J)rake In 1he nlghl<:ap of 'Jburtd,ay's •~millnal round' doobleheader. North t.rolina and Purdue are rated aboilf even in the opener at 4:40 p.m., PST. , The winnen advanced to the llUe game 1t i:15 p.m., PST, Satu(dly. The format, playing Thuraday night .and S•lurday afternoon, ll new this year. Previously, the aemlllnalJ were ployed Friday night end lh• fi!WI Salurday nlght. UCLA'• Bruins, dubbed by Drake Coach Maury John "a super team with several ai.iper·"stlrs," take the nation's top rankfftg .:and1 a fantasUc ·record of success .into the· semWnalJ. They've -won· f o u _r, of the last flVe national titles,. includln&-two ·in 1 row. And. since ~e 7,·loot·l~ Alclndor •ppeat- e<i on the scea,e,. they've loet ooly two ' &Jm• lg, lhree lf&JOWL Aldndor, posalbly lhe moot oul.llandlnl <ollliglala player In lhe hlllory al llto On TV Tonight Cfla-el 4, 6:30 game, hu compiled an equally outatan- dlng penonal re<ord -lhreo !Im" AU American, twice Pl•yer oft.be Year. They're phyllcally heallby and, 1c-conµn1, to ~ach John Wooden, mtntaDy' and emotlooally ready to male tbalr bid .. -lhe llnl Jeam In h!lloly to win thrtt couecutlve ullioaat Utl& "Our bJcptt problem b llDal ........ Wooden said Wedneoday alter lhe 1eam arrived from Lot Anple~ Drili, Nortb C!arolJna and l'Ordtle a11o made !ale' an.n-, arrivals and each look a On.Hour workouL ·~t·a our ftnt practice alnct be.fore . the rec:lonall," Wooden aaid. "I dm't WU It will male too much dlllennce. We've reachld • point that we hadn't al.tlJned ln tome time." • 'l1le Bruins, 27-1, demonstrated lhel In lhelr -1"'1t ol lhlr6-ranUd Saota Clara In lhe IJnall ol the Weal Ra&looal· tut "e. t •• cl, -lbly tbalr bolt perfonnance since 1 'revqe . victory ovar Houston ln lut 1Uf'• natsonal semlllnals. UCLA and Drake, raottd !lo. II wlllt a ~ mark, have no Injury problema..' But 11'1 a different ltory fw North Caronna, No. 4 and 27"', -'and Purdue, No. I and 2M. Tor Hoel Coadt Dean SmHh said Dic1t Gntbar, a Jhr--. ata:tar. and quarlarllack ol the ltall1, la out with a -Jnlury. And Pwirue'a Goorp Klltt Aid 7.foot Chuck Bavla, the tum'a top reboundtr. underwent iur1ery ror a lboulder Mpal'&• tloo Mooday and dellnllely II oul Herman Gllllam, tbe No. 2 I001'l!" on lhe learn, la llSlad u a douhlllll atarter becaUJe ol an Injury to bis Aoblllel tendon. Sunset Miseries A.re Over,: A~aheim Policy Voted Out Giving His All Br GLENN Wll1TE Of .... "'"' '"" ""' Orange County admioi.ltraton voted Wedneaday afternoon to end lhe &wet League's diJemma ol 1e v en-achoo 1 membenhip by having Jhe Anaheim llich School District supply another member to the loop for the 197fJ.71 school year, the DAILY PILOT learned exclusively today. However, at the same releaguin1 session they were unable to tolve Lacuna Beach's problem of having to compete against schools of considerably larger enrollment in the Crestview circuit ao the Artis~ will have to ride out another year wlth that leaiue. Hated to Lose The ballOI .. end Anahalm'1' loq ...... cllng policy of having no more Uwt two of ila dialrlcl acboola Jn any one loop came alter Ill boon ol diaeuaa!Ob. Allhough lhe principals (0< their rtpresentatlve1) from 43 Orange County t.Jgh schoola voted lo end Anaholm'a stand on the matter, that district wu still given the prlvile1e of aaylna which 1 of ill members would be commlUed to the rough and tumble Sunset organiza. lion. Loara, Magnolia, Kennedy, Savanna and Katella are the candidates with one of lhe fonner two lbe most likely choice in view of their COllllant dominaUon of the Irvine Leap. . If Loara or Magnolia is chosen t.o Wetzel Added I 0 Years To Life by Quitting Joh ~ Toronto goalie Bruce Gamble makes a diving save of goal against St. Louis in Wednesday night Na- tiooal Hockey League ba\Ue. The two foes dueled to a 1-1 deadlock. . Bob Wetzel .probably added 10 years to his life expectancy when be chose to retire as basketball coach at Orange Coast College earlier thil year (u reported eiclusively in this column 31 d.aya ago). "Bob hates to 1ose and can't atand officials, He loves to apend hia Ume at the be.ach or at the mountalna. Baaket- ball cul into that time. So for thole reasons he decided it wu best to get out." ' Realignment Sure Thing For NFL PALM SPRINGS -(AP) -The American Football League, which thtte days ago wu expected lo approve rete°'" tion of the status quo for professional football, has turned its joint meeting with the National League around and appears to have insured realignment for 1970. The AFL prepared a plan to present to National Football League team owners today in their first joint meeting on the matter since they r e c e i v e d alternatives Monday. Although no one was saying much about the plan, the Associated Press learned that the AFL idea involves a general outline of the form pro football can take for 1970, the year the 1966 merger agretment takes final effect. For example, the 16-team NFL and 10-team AFL could be amalgamated into two divl!:lons of seven teams each and two of six, or they could be interrated into two confere.nces with divbions of four, four and five. NFL owners appeared to more recep- tive to the AFL idea Wednesday. "Both leagues worked on juggling teams from one 1eague to another." commissioner Pete Rozelle s ll' i d , .acknowledging for the first timt that the NFL was thinking of anything but retealion of the present 16-10 setup with lhe addition of inter·league games. Al the beginning of the week, all but a small minority of AFL owners were thinking the same way. But that minority, led by Paul Br<lWl1 of CincinnaU and Gerald Phipps or Denver, bu dramatically gJined the sen- timent of the rest of the teams. ~1.iaml always has been for total realignment. and the world champion New York Jets surprisingly became an early convert San Diego also started leanin1 toward reallpment, and Ralph Wilson of Buffalo more or lea capitulated Wedndday. "I pre.fer the tw~league situp with the maximum number of Inter-league games,'' 1ald Wll!On, a member of the 1ii-man joint 1tudy commlttM that unantmOUlly recommended ntenUon of the SlaluJ quo. "But tt'a obfloul we can't must.tr lufiiclerit IUpporl to get the necflSar)' three-fourthl 'Vote. It appean the AFL sentiment now ts for total reallirunent of the two le11JUH into one. "U th1s iJ wh.11t the otht.rs want, I'll not blo<k I~ n .. 1;,..ment la all riaht with mt." Oakland, Kansai Qty, Houston and Boston also apparenUy were wlllln& to IO along with Ult aenliment.. The ldu of total rtallpmr:nl canmrt make NFL ownera dcllriOUJly happy, but I.but are waya they could be lnductd 1•14 acaplln1 IUclt a 'Plan alnct tllty apparently hava bacome resl&Ded to 10crte form of rulipmtnt Bidding War Nears Bucks Put Lew on Ice Until After NCAA Play MILWAUKEE, IV~. (AP) -The ?ttilwaukee: Bucks flipped over their big- gest victory of the National Basketball Assoc:iatlon season Wednesday -but wouldn't talk about the next step. Milwaukee won the first draft pick. when Phoenix called headJ and the hall dollar tossed by Commissioner \Valter Kennedy came up tails in lhe league's New York office. The victory gives the expansion Bucks Ule right to draft UCLA's Lew Alcindor .. "I don't waat .to get speel!ic about" names," said John Erickson, general manager of the Bucks, when asked if the team would draft Alcindor. He and Wooden are old friends and he has hi.s foot in Alcindor's door. "~'ve seen him (Wooden) and talked with him many times this year," Erickson aaid. "But never once have v.·e di.scuued Alcindor or any other players. 1. don't believe it would be fair to hlm or anybody else involved." Alcindor reportedly wants a contract in a million bracket and the rival American Basketball Association la aaid to be passing the hat among it.I members to give it to him. When it came to winning and losln1 or the officials, Bob turned into an Uplosive ready for detonaUon. As he told this writer in February, ••one of the reuona ranking bl.gb in my motivation · for retlrinf ii the <ll· ficlating." And lhat would be lnlUaily hard lo believe 1lnce Bob hu put on the zebra· stripped shirt many • time. However, If you 1aw many of the games lnvolvin1 hia teams, you'd know that refs' calla or lack of calls bad 1 way of gettina: .. him. Once he alammed his first down ao hard that it smashed a hole through the top of a table at Rio Hondo College. On another occa!lon he threw a roll or adhesive t.ape ln the air. It came down ne'ar where a friend of his wu seated in lbt stands. · Kicking towela wu also a scene familiar to thole who enjoyed the aldellne antics of a man obviowly under duress from what was going on during the game. One associat.e describes Web:el thusly: "\\'e will get together aoon with coach Larry Costello and hi.s assistant, Tom Nissalke, and see what out needs are and who is available for the draft," Erickson said. ~feanwhile, the UCLA star was kept out of reach of newsmen, The team arrived by plane in Louisville, Ky., Wednesday for the NCAA tournament finals. Speeific orders were left at the team 's motel that neither Alcindor nor coach Johnny Wooden would accept calls. PGA Shuffles Standings To A void Racial Issue Erickson and Wes Pavalon, the board chairman of the Bucks, were dancing in a mutual bear hug after Kennedy said the coin "came up tails." When things quieted down; they parried questions about Alcindor or other pr1r spects. Eri~kson shrugged off tbe sug· gesUon that Alclndor didn't want to play with Milwaukee 8.ll his home base. •crrofesslonal athletes are pros all the way," Erickton said. "They travel so much they don't complain about that." Erickson said he wu going to the NCAA tournament. "But f won't talk with players until after the tournament," he said. "As a former coach at Wisconsin, I know what pressures they hive." JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -The Professional Golfers Association made a qui.ck adjustment in its Ryder Cup standlngs·Wednesday and thua avoided a possible racial isliue involvl.ng Charlie Sifford. Sifford, a 4f..year-old Negro pro, was distressed when informed here that M was 17th in the Ryder Cup 1tandlngs1 instead of 10th as heligured. "I hear they ha e given me only 35 points for winnlna the Los An.gtles Open Instead of 70 which I shou1d have got." Sifford said. The point standings determ ine tbe 12~ man team which the United States will s~nd to Royal Blrkdale in Enaland in September for the biennial series with the British. The U.S team never has had a black member. The pros are awarded polnta -70 for each tournament victory with sraded dawn points for other place1. The top 11 pros of the year are named to the team. A call lo the PGA headquartera In Palm Beach Gardem, Fl1.1 dilcloHd that S!Hord, indeed, waa 17th. "He was gtven SS points for' wtnnlnc at Loi Angeles," a apotuman 11id. "The polnta were apllt betwten Los Angeles and the tournament at Alameda (a 111t.elllte event also 1polll01'ed by the PGA on the same datea)." The PGA board ol dlrecton decided Iha! SUlonl sbould have hla lull 70 point!. But Charlie isn't completaly hippy. He 1Ull wants to play In the Mutlfl at Augusta. No Negro ever bu competed Jn the event. "It'• my ambition -I will some day," Siffird vowed. And Jules Gag~, who cOached Bob al Newport Harbor High School, describ- ed his former star as .. an intense com· peUtor who couldn't stand to lose." Wetzel is a member ol Gage's all-time 6 **A I A A"A"t "lfA""'*"" • WHITE WASH "'"'""""****""* team, aJona with Dennis Fitzpatrlct, Paul Neumann, Ed Pope and Gary Green. Bob's appointment to the head job at OCC was a aurprl!e to some btcawe he had never before coached a baabtball varsity. But .he did a noteworthy job, winnin1 two Eastern Conference cham- pionships before haviq an off-year th.la aeason, finishln1 in the second division. He had great talent with CUYI like John Vallely (UCLA), Bruce Chapman (Nevada Southern), Geor1e Yule (Mon- tana), Bart Carrido (Cal Poly, Pomona) • EdBabluch (UC San DlelO) and Cralg Fllconer (San Die10 State) performing. ~ Jt is to his credit to hive foraetJl that coachins basketball wu a shortcut to ill heal\h for a man ol h1a tem- perament. * * * Top Grill CH11le Newport Harli« HIP 8cloool'1 unal lavlJaUaoal I-all dWc h naew..i tit!• weektlld witlt 11 top -ud eollep et1clle1 oUerla« tlMlr Dew1ed1e • .. lporl. n. lwo<lay Pow t1 etftlfaDy ,... daeUve for partklputa becnte Ii II DOl-taall .... n ... -&I'" IUae atlcadiq a .U.e la -varloaa Item• at sreater leqtlt. Gaests are lloaltd ai Balbla llaJ Clull and pt 1 cruise around tM ltay u parl ol th aocia1 ,..., .... O.J. Offers Orlando $400,000 Pact ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -The president of the Orls ndo Panthers says O.J. Slmpson ha.I offered to play for hit Contlnenbl Football League team for $400,<XX>, and the Panthers think that's 1 fair Jlfice to pay Ori.Ille Juice to promote' the Sunshine 1tate'1 favorite beveraie. 1 ••o.J. and hi! agent approached Jim Dunn, the Contl ntntal League com- ml!sioner, t•·o weeks aao , and offered to play for $400,000 U O.J .'1 ne1otlaUon1 with the Buffalo Bills fell t.hroui;h,'' said Elmtr Cook, Panlhera Jftlldtnl. "We wtnt to the Florida Citrus com- • nUsslon aod asked tbem to put up. th6 money, slnce It wu a natural 1 pro-. ' motional bll to ao alona with their aloa:an -Drink O.J .. " Cook explalned. The Citrus Commllllon lffllled quite warm to the proposa~ Cook aaid, figuring lhal a specimen of manhood like the ex·Southem California nmninc b a c k would do aa much to up th• sale of oraili• juice aa all lhe vitamin.{; plup pul 148ether. "Oh, my God," Cook said n.vettnUy when a!ked how he felt 1bout the chance of his Panthers 1etUn1 SlmPIOD. "The guy'• the hotwt tNng Jn the country in our butlneas." At premrt, Slmj)IOll 11 con1111ltttd 14 rontract n')6UaUona with the Billi ol the Amtrican Football Leaiu.1 and can- not le1ally play for any other AFL or Nailonat FottbaD Letpe tum 11 tie falls to ruch a conlnet with the Billa. HoVJevtr, there's nothln& to atop him from playing for a CoollnenW or Cal>- ldlan team. Cook's CFL Dtaj' be bulb, but his bua~ ,_ ICW1llll la bil lup, and ba JhiJW then it a very 1ood pouiblllty from a bualnesa angle lhat O.J. will play !0< Orlando. '1Thi.1 la jull JDy opinion," he Aid, "but I lhlnk tllt AfL.NFL club °"""' will decide bow much O.J. 1eia pald, not lhe BUii. "loolt -rishl no•"lbere are about • !!O other top dran chDlcu who are Slalemated Wilh their clubi en CG11!ra<la. Tho playen are all wailing to -IMrw mueh O.J. fN," he explained. 'l1le blr toquea miJl[lt decide lhey really doo' li<ed Sim-'• inWI• enouah lo fork out lwlce • mudt aa they plaMed .. pay lhe otbtr holdoutt, Cook arrued, .. Sin>plOn milbl ba """ • hearty thanb for his 6me and • podby at Bul!alo. · Raipb Wilton, OWDtr ol tllt Bills, haa uld that Simpton muat beU.va that Wilton la Howard l!uatioa lo nqonl a M00,000 plUI contract from lhe 81111' owntr • Join llunlln&ton Beach. M a r I n a , W11JmlnSlar, Newport Harbor, S..ta Ana, Weatern and Alllbaim In S11111et cfrcla, Loi AlanUlol wUJ then move .. lhe irl'lne loop. And H Jhe Aoahelm District superin- tendent refuses to acetpt the vote of. bia peen:, he may then appeal to the CIF eiecutive council But one man clc>1e to the acene opines that aucb appeal would seem to stand llWe chance of being accepted. 'Ihe aeven-team problem arme when. Santa An• Valley WU allowed to drop its Su05et membership lo 10 in the Irvine League. Lasun• pleaded its case. But since no new cotinty schools will field vara!Ues in 1970-71 W!re was no way to move the ArUsts wif,fM)ut creatlnc ~o of the unwanted 1even-team Jeague 1ituaUonr. ~ The only other change In the C01111ly'1 prep athletic face was the: switching of Los Amigos to the Garden Grove League from the Orange aroup. So here'• how Orllfge County will look in Ul70-71 : SUNSET LEAGUE -Loara, Anaheim, Western, HunUqton Beach, Marina, Newport Harbor, Westminster, .Santa Aoa. IR'l.JNE LEAGUE -Conlna de! Mor Estancia, Los AlamltDt, ·Coata Mea.: Magno!I!, Foontaln Vllloy, Edlaon (H111>- tlnglon Heacb), Santa Aoa Valley, CRESTVIEW LEAGUE -Laguna Beacb, TUllln, Orange, Foolhlt, Villa Park, San Clemente, Miaalon Viejo, El Modena. . . GARDEN GROVE LEAGUE -Los Amig<ll, Garden Grove, Santiago, Bolsa Grande, Rancho Alllritilo<,· La · Qulnla, Pacifica. FREEWAY LEAGUE -Fullerton .Lowell, La Habr., Bllllla Park, &uui; llllla, K~, Savaooa, Troy. . ORA,NGE LEAGUE -:... Saddleback, KateUa, Brea, Valencia, EJ Dorado SonorL ' Eagles Rate As Favorites In NIT Play NEW YORK UPI) ~ -Collqe llkea to beat you at your own same. Coac~ Bob Couay'r 1llct band of smooth ball·bandler1 liket to play the las~breakin1 1ame Wt it's also adept at the 1lowdown, bl:ll-cc.troJ atyle. That'• VJhy the Eaaies own the naUoo'a Jonpat winnhi& streak at 11 and are favored to Win the 32nd annual Natkml lnvltaUon '.l'oumsmenL The Eailes face defel1ae-mlnded Army the n1Uon'1 top defeMive club, Jn on; seml·final 1ame tonight while Temple bettles_ Tenne1see, the nation's No. J defena1vt club, In the other temJ.flnaL The winners meet in the finals Satur- da y afternoon. Even lhou1h the Eagles like to run Cousy IAYI. lhey'll try lo bul Army at its own alowdown same. If Tenneuee beats Temple, the Eagles Will run lllto the slowdown game again -provlded BC geta past Anny, BC proved bow well it cao handJe the ball Sunday ln Its opening rame victory o v e r Kansas when 1-7 Terry Drlacoll fouled out early In lhe HCond hall. Billy Evan• and Jim O'Brien dlrectde a control game that protected the BC lead. At llral llanct, you'd flrure lbe Eql,. should eully oYerpower Army. But the Cldets usually manqed~to mate Jt dole wllh lhelr Jlsht dll.-.. · . Tho chlb'a 1,.cllng ""'"'· Jim Oxley, avera,a:ea only U.7...,ame but the Cadet. UIUatly Dilly take ,ood ahotl. The Tenneuee.Te:mple same alae should be a cloee ttruult. TtiXillR!e piaya the ume type dtfmstve &am. Army dou, but Tomtt.e does it ID a different way, While Arm.v la atrtctJy a man-to.man club, Tenntllff UNI a l~I trap IOl1e. Tho Vol.-n also have a bl1.,... In 1-10 Bobby Cnllt; Army doeanl have a player ovw U Tho raat ol lhe ,,_..,. TNm la amall. A pair 11' a...r ahoolen, em Juatus and Jimmy EnsJand, and a .,..i b<IJ.baqdlor, Bill Hann, pact Ute club. Tomplt, wlllt the aa'n'y lyplcll I( !"'"i. ol Pbllaclelphta'a b1a DYi ..-., ....... tlio ball ...u anti lbwld .... -apdlftl. John Bl1"11, a M loajllr, 1-lhe club In acorlnl and nboundJns. Zdoll• Mas~ 1-1, flvn the club pd bola!ll altltoolh ba'1 no! a pd aconr. Joe C..-II :rempll'a·-'.P~I _.,. UICI BID Slnmt kalpa tile a11ac11 mavtns. ..,. • • n DAILY PllOT Thi.rsday, Mlldl 20, 1'169 PORSCHE PILOT -Corona de! Mar's Alan John- son (right) is seen accepting a checkered. flag dur- ing recent race competition in W Vegas. Johnson will drive two Porsches in this weekend's program at Lancaster. Under Shackleford Rustlers on Way Vp After Slow Golf Start Tt didn't take Ray Shackleford very long to build a winning football tradition at Golden West College. He turned the trick in the college's very first season three years ago and 1till has never bad a losing season. But Shackleford has had a much tough.er road to hoe as G<llden We~·1 goH coach. In his first two 1easocs lhe Rustlers chalked up a perfect nt<lrd -they lost all 36 matches they competed in. Now all of a sudden, the Rustlers are keeping their drives in lhe center of the fairways and the pull! that were rolling around the cup are 11tarting to drop in. Golden \\fest has a 5-4-1 record thiJ apring and lht Rustlers knocked off ¥t •• '*." ,,., * "**" JOEL SCHW.ARZ "'"" *** **" "" "·*** previously unbeaten Rio Hoodo, 2J.l3, and lied undefealed Fullerton. IS.18. "Berore this :season It was impossible for us \o ~·in a malch," ShaclUeford aaid • "We never had more than three players on the team until this spring and mathematically we coukin't win a match. The best we could do against a ruu Learn or five players was a tie." "In those two years we never came close lo a tie. Jn one match Bgainst Citrus we lost by 10 or 12 points. That's the closest we ever got." Things are differenl this spring. Shackleford not only has a full team of live playes, he even has three alternates. MJke Nichols, Kim Kribel and Brian Jl emphHI are the top three men on the team, but Art lt1odcr and Tom Big Halibut Being Caught By Area. Boats Big, fleshy halibut are showing sign.~ of stirring up Orange Coast area fishing watcn. Schwiter!, the No.4 and 5 playcr:i, have made valuable contributlonii:. "f don't know why l 'm golf coach,'' Shackleford admits. "I kind o( like to hack around a bit so I guess l 'm the most qualified on our staff. "Coaching an individual sport like gol f Is very differenl from a team sport like football where teamwork i s necessary and everyone has to get along. ''In an individual sport kids sometimes can be temperamental, but not this group. They're B very responsible bunch and it's· fun being around them," Shackleford :says. * * * S~we Griffith, Golde11 West's fireball- Ing pitcher, wa!l in an auto accident earlier this \veek and came oat o( the crub with a lew bruises and a sore neck. Rustler coach Fred HDOver 1ald Grif- fith "wun't on bis game alter t,be ac- cident." Griffith only went four-pins in- nings agaliist Chaffey on Tuesday and couldn't put anyUng on bJ1 pltcbea. He was slated to see Dr. Robe.rt Kerlan Wednesday as B precaoUonary measnre. Dr. Kerl an bas treated a number of top atblete1 for • variety of ills, including Sandy Koufax's arthritic dhow and Elgin Baylor's knees. * * * Jaycee track coaches are alway5 on the lookout for new talent, and Orange coast's Jim Mcllwain is no exception. "We're constantly looking for guys who run a fast 50 or throw a softball a long ways in physical education classes. In a twcryear college \\'e can't rely on just the athletes who come out for a sport or the Ones we rec ruit from high school." Mcllwain said, This year, the Pirates have three athletes on their track team who wound up there in round-about fashion. Dave l\tcBridc threw a softball 345 feet in a PE class and he was re<:rulted 33 a javelin throy,·er. He's only 5-10 and JSG--pounds. but is up to 160 feet with no previous experience. Harry Carmack, a transfer from New .Jersey, wandered out \o practice for a couple of days, disappeared and then t~secl the discus 112 feet in an in- tram ural meet open to all OCC students. Cannack had some previous experience 111s New Jersey prep, but didn't intend le go out for the sport this spring. He's pow on the Pirate squad. Dave Eadie, Orange Coast's top weight man simply walked out to practice one day lasl spring and said he 't\'8S tired of baseball and wanted to try track. lle's now up to 145 feet in the discus and 175 in the javelin. CdM Driver Seeks Titles :At Lancaster Girls say he has the eyes of Paul Newman and race fans say he has the driving skills of a Stirling Moss. Put the Mo together and you have a good looking super-fast race driver named Alan Johnson. Johnson will be driving two Porsches prepared by Don Burns Racing ot Garden Grove this weekend at Willow Springs lnternational Raceway near Lancaster. Porsche driver and team manager for the highly successful Don B u r n s organization, Johnson has been racing cars for more than nine years. The 33-year--0ld Corona dEI Mar rai· dent and third generation Californian. fir st took interesl in sports cars and racing in 1960 when he campaigned • Porsche Speedster from i;ourse: lo course in Southern california. His first win didn't come until 1962, however, wlwi he won the Stockton spprts car races. \Vinning his first national championship ln 1964 at the American Road Race of Champions driving his E Production Porsche, was just the beginning for Johnson, who several years later entered the Sebring 12·Hour Enduro in a Porsche 911S and finished 9th overall. His car was the first Grand Touring Car, regardless of engine size, to finish the grueling race. Jn the fall of 1967, Johnson met Burns and together they de veloped plans for a racing program for 1968. Johnson, driving a Burns Racing Porsche 911. again y,·ent \o Sebring in 196& and did jt again, this time taking 7lh overall and first in GT class S. At the conclusion of the '68 season, Johnson had captl:tred the national cham- pionships for both B Sedan and C Produc. lion , a truly outstanding achievement. In this first outing of the '69 racing !Season. John son captured two checkered flags, one driving a newly 111cquired Bums Racing Porsche 910 and the 0U1er in a Pnrsche 911S. Johnson will be out to repeal hi5' rlual victories next weekend at the challenging \Villow Springs Raceway, a 2.5 mile up-and-down-hill road course located 60 miles north o{ Los Angeles near Lancaster. Atost experti agree that it is one of the best spectator tracks ln the coun- try. From the hillside viewing area on the turn three-four complex, there it an unobstructed panorama of the entire course. Chic \.-andagrifJ, Chief Stew1rd for the sanctioning California Sports Car Club. bas announced the race schedule for the two days of racing: a fi ve race schedule Saturday for the regional races, which start at J :30 p.m., and an eigh t race schedule for the nationals beginning at 11 a.m. Sunday. The C ProducUon contest should be especially in teresting as Jim Dittemore, driving the new TR.&, tries to b\01v olf Johnson in his Porsche. Two sizable catches of the flat fish were reporttd thi1 week by operator• o( Newpor\ Beach's two sportHshing Ian. dings, Davey'• Locker and Art's Landing. An ani;ler on • Davey's boat brought In a JO.pound hJllbut Monday that mtesurtd an even three feet in lmgth. And an Art'I fi~an boated an tPr pounder o(f Dana Point on a half-day boat Wede>d1y. Casper Guns for "We're catcbina: about one of those big halibtrt every week lately,'' an Art's apokesman reported. Art '1 boat& are reporting good fishing oU C.Win• Island h,r rock cod, red _., whlldllh and •hffpohtad. 'lbe i.nding wJU beglh stndlng the ProaUer boat to C.tallna for overnlg!lt white IN bl.la tripe ln about two weeks. 1'tle boat will lelive Tueadayl at I p.m. and relam Wedrteld•Y' at about noon. Olvey'• Locker reporu fair fl.iting. ~itf: waler temperatura nngin& in the S2~7 degreo range. ~ lf.Jl"'l1d ~ eod wu caught 1' milff off Newport Sund•y. A Landini 1pltnm1n ea.id bamCOda. bonito. "'!M and n1Ck cod oiler lll< -lbhin& now. • JACKSONVILLE, Ila. (AP) -BIO Casper is not exactly the conniving type but he admitted today he has deslgM on the Muttn. He hopes to sneak up on It. "I keep trying to.find I.he right fonnula for going Into lht: toornamtnt." the 1968 pro goller of the year said. ''OJW' yeAr l play a hea''Y &ehedule, I.he next year J lay off, then 1 pick a spot htre and there. "I'm lit.Ill looking for the "nswer." Casper. who h111s plsyed only rive rounds of ROif in the 111.st four wttks, is one of (he star-111tudd~ field of 144 teeing Ol'f today fn l.6c nrat round of the $100,000 Greater Jacksonville Open. The once rea.red hig thrtt -Arnold f'almer, Jaclc Nicklius sJJJ Gary Player .. -also are in the pack ror the first time this year plus Lee Trevino, the U.S. open titleholder, and the crowd of young turks thrcatcrUng to lake ovu the game. For many of them, this i~ the st.retch run to~·ard the Masttrl, the Rason's first major championship coming up in April in Augusta. Ga. Nont is looking toward the arand spec. tacit amidst the Georgia pines wllb srP11ter anticipation than Casper' the 37-yrar~lrl Mormon with the world's rno~t e:c:otic allergic~. Bill has won two U.S. Opens. He is liecond only to Arnold Palmer in all-time fTI(lney winninRJ!. He It: d '"rrybody last yc111r with more lh•n f.!1 l.000. J Are.a Drown ' , Swimming Opposition By BOGER CARLSOM· Of t11e o.11r """ ltetr We1lminsl<r lllib School's teO free rtlay team, wlUi a come-from-behiDd victory, tripped up hOlt Wtlleru, SIM, Wedneaday afternoon to hl&lillil>l Orange Coul area prep IWlmmlng. Other Sunset League result.a saw Newport Harbor routing Santa Ana at the Saints' pool, 6$-26, Anaheim ripping invading Huntington Beach by a U.21 COIDll and Mlrlna deollng Santa Ana Valley a 7G-24 defeat al Valley. · In the Irvine Luau< it WU C«ona del Mar over Fountain Valley at the fonner's pool, 75-20, and Colla Mesa surprised with a stunning eg.29 will over invading E.stancl'.t. San Clemente tripped Laguna B.,.ch, ss..38, at Lacun• in Creatview Uague bosUUUes. WestminJter'1 victory over Western waa wrapped up in the final 400 yard freestyle , relay event when Bruce Gardner· aped the final 100 yards with a 51.0 clocklng \o erase a J.2..yard lead by the Pioneer•. Gardiier also won the 50 free in 24.0 whlle Joel Pemle was taking the divine compeUUon wilh a 75.05 performanct. Costa Men, f1vored by five to seven points over: c:roUtown. rival Estancia iD. Irvine acUon, ·took every first place except one in routing the Eaglo. Chril Gammon led the stunning display of superiority w I t b a M.5 in the 100 fly and swam in both winning relays. Dave Whitaker was the only double winner in individual compeUtion for the well-balanced Muans. Coron• del Mar had little trouble with the Barons of Fountain Valley, winnlnc nine ot 11 events. Sophomore Dav• · Fergu&00 took the D individual medley wl(h: a 2:111 cl~ to lead the Sea Kings. Marina's Don Lippoldt set another achool record, this time wllh a 3:59.S ln the 400 free in leading the Vlkea to their easy Sanstt conquest Randy Smilher 1parked San Clemente with • 2:00.1 clocking in the 200 rree·, and anchored th& Winning ~ free relay team. Newport hsd little trouble stayinr undefeated ia Sumet C<¥Jlpelltion with illl easy win over Santa .lyta, led by Jeff Wilcox 1n the 100 lndo medley wilh a 2: 14.6. Runtlngton'1 Kim Fennell wu the only winning Oiler, taking the diving com- petition with a 47 .3 score. Eaglfl1•Mf!1a Tar1-Salnt1 V1rsl" H .. Htf ( .. I IMJ 11"'9 A• 2!111 MMl!ltY ll.t•l' -l. S1!'ll1 AM. Tlt!\1: 1 :.M~ I" ... -1. Jolltl \'ill(flt (N) L Wllto11 (Nl 1 Elr.,,,.Oll ti). Tl<N: t :OO.O. SO FrM -1. GoNllH CS) 2. Gl'ftl" (N) 3. Jall<UOn CN), TllM: 24.1 JOO JN11¥ldU1I MKllltY -1. Jftf Wllcu IN) J. W1"'9dt1 IN) 3. Glt11or1 fSl. Timi: 2:1•.6. Olvlns -I. Ovrkll'I (N) 2. Ho M'(Ollll or 1'1\lrd, 1'1lnh: S.tS. 100 Fil' -1. Dov& (N) t. Gotlt11" ISi I. Wlm«kt (N), Time: 11tlo.•. 100 Fr.-. -I. Gro.u1 ($) 2. Johti Wllce11 INI 1 Wll-!N\. Tlmt: .UJ. 100 •10: -. W•rT ... IHI 2, ,.fdl'"1nt (S) ,, Ellett (Nl. Time~ t:Ol.6. m FrM -I. JoltnllClll {N) I. Oo....v (NJ i. Elrwnto" ISi. Tlrmo 4:11.00. 100 BrtMl -1 Wiii~ IHI 1. Ktl... !Nl S. Jlttf Wiicox IN !. Time: !;U.t. * Frn Atlt1 -I. N,.,...,.,.n (J"' Wlic.. Wtrl!tt~f. Wiison, Joh"'t,1.;. Timi: ~:l•.l. N......wt IMI fU lift ... f."' HD MHll¥ ll:llM' -1. H,_,1 ( nyNr0 0..lldt. Masters But ht'• nevtr won the Mastttr, nor tbe BrlU.h Open nor the PGA. ''l usually 1et pls for myldf," the mlld·m1nntrtd lay preacher from Chula Vista, Calif., aid. "'Ibl.s year I bave determined to win 1 ma;or championship. 1 would prefer the Mui.en or the BrttJsh Open. I wouldn\ mind wlnnln« • lhlnl U.S. Open. •1To aet Tudy for the Masten, t decided to 1klp molt of the Florida lour. Before Wednud1y, T bid played only four round.I. I felt rusty but rela1· ed." Jn his official tour of the 7,211 yard, par 1:t Oetrwood Couru, Bill ahot a 68, tying South Africa'• Harold Hmnln• and Dive Stockton for, 'akond H pro honora. Diel< Sites led with 17. Artbt1.SC v_.,, '-" fNI C"I SM Ci-ti !GD Medltl' llt ll' -1. ~uni CC. W1,.., Wood, Helm, Atwood!. Tim.: 1 ;u.t. 200 lfrte -1. II:. $mllller !SC/ 2, C. W1r1 (LI ) l.. G. Smlltltr ISC ), Timi : 2:00 .• JO Fr" -1. Alwoo.d !Lii) 1. ll:enfro. IKI S. liolm tLI). Timt: 2~.2. 200 lndhtlclu!I Mtdltl' -1, •-ht.fl (Cl !. H•"""•n IK 1 c-rlll 1511. Tlm1: 2:U.•. :I. DJ:n";'(LiJ. f.l"orn~20.J} J 2. HllVll11MI fSC I 100 Fir -1, SchM!t (IC) t. D. Wtnt (LI) :l #lttJIYlft (K). Tin'M: 1:'7A 100 lfrM -1. Atwlod ll•I 1. Rtnfro. !Kl :I. C. Witt (Lil. Tlm1: .M.2. 100 BK:lt -1. lroullhflfl !Kl L l+olm (LI) I. S•blns CSCJ. Timi: l:O}.O. d FrM -1. Llevlll (SCI 2. H1rlmlfl ($c:) I. llUlf' !SCI. Tlmt: ~:1t.1. 100 8rM1I -1. ll111<Jn (Kl 2. a1ro;e (SCI I. Coonrll4 (LI J. Tlmt: 1:1•.I. GI FrM lllllJ -l. Sift Cl_,. (Loa .. Llol'" lt~r, R, SrnlllltrJ. Tlmt: S:•.J. . ·-LI-1441 011 111 C"""91!ft W Mtdltl' lltlr. -1. Lr-111 lMcC11Lt, $loft, lll:tl'ftllsd. Joh"'°" , Tlmt: t:1 f . 200 ,.,.. -1. Mlll« ISC t. Mt¥trm1n CKI I. Wei ffLI), Tlmt : 2:'2.1. • H' f~ -, 1. SUmMt (LI) 1. """'" (LB) \I c I 11 •• lrnt: :l:S • .S. 100 lr!d ,,,_., Mtdlw -1· 1folf (LI r. H11erd (Kl :l IMlllr IK}. Tlmtl :1,.;r. 4• Flf - 1. .. .. 111 (SCI 2. No ltlCOt!d W .. lrlll. 1,.,.1 1-:UA. •1• "'" -1. "'""'"' (LI) 1. Vic (K) J-.,_ tl•J. Tlrne1 •.a. •oo led!. -1. s~ -l!litt ' Mllflll tKI I. MeC11Lt (LI}. TllM: l :lt.f.--• 400 lfrw -I. Miiier \SC~ i, Br'l"lln U,.I) :l Mc:Cl1n1hln Cl.II. Tlll'I: S: '· 100 8rMft -!. ltott Ill !. H111rd {SCI S. Ne t!'llrd. Tlm11 T:H.S. GI P'rH ll ... J -1. LltllM •••ch (JClhlllOno f'f'Olllllolr Wall, Sllfti-1. Time; l:T!.'-<-...... 1111,.m.1.:r (lllMll_. 1,1on.9.w,,,,....,. ··-WlltnllNftf' (JI) 44) W .. M .. too ~It~ ..... l' -1. Wt\lm!n111~ (Cltmtn$, Wo111n1. &Iron, L-r). Time: 1:51.0. :IOI) FrM -1. Lone-rTfl fWJ ?. HtnnnltlO!\ (WM) l. Roln fWMl. Tlmt; l:Sl.2. JO F_,. -I•, G1..:ll\tr (WM) l L-r IWM) a. Nowld'I rw1. '"'"'' ,.,o. 100 lnctlvktutl Mtdltl' -I. Cl1rrld9e (WI 2. Cltmtns (WM) 1 FuU1m fW I. Tlmt: 1:14.0, Dlvlll9 -\, ""''"' (WM) l. &orll!I! (W) ~ Sml!I (WI. 1'olntl: 75.0S. 100 F~I -1. Nodc IWI 2. G1rrttt (W) 3. ••rllfl IWMJ. Tlmt: 1:01.f. •100 Ftrt -1. L__,lh (WI 2. Girdner IWMI 3. Rol11 (WM). Tlrnt: 51.t. 100 l 1dl -l. HtnnlMIOn (WM) ?. Nowldll (W) 1 G1r"n (WJ. Tim~: 1:~.1. -l'r" -1. Nodc tWJ 2. Cl.m-(WM) J, P-CW). Time: 4:l0.6. .., 100 ltt111 -1. Cltrr1'!• CW) 1. wolll~• (WM). 1 Oht11WM). Tlmt: 1: 1.6. olOO Fr" ltt ,, -1, W11tmll'lrtW {HIM!nt10n, 1.11per, llol11, G1rdn1r). Tlmt: 3: •. 5. ·-WttfnllMtor (SI) U:lll WM!trll '700 MKlltY ll•l•Y -1. Wt1!1rn. Tlmt: 1:01.0. 200 Fr.-. -1. Br11hf'I CWM) l. l'rttlr1dl;1 fW) l. MltY•t (WM). Tlmt: 1:1'·'· 51 FrH -1, Plur1l11tt CWMJ 2. Ktnworltly fWMl l. Fl1ud!111 (W). Tlmt: 2•.1. •100 lncllvldu1I Mtlller -1. TllomPMl!I !WI ,, Thlnth•m (WM). l . Polll1mt n IWI. Tlmt: :07.0. 100 lfyl -1. ThcmPMll'I (WI '1. Curll1 lWM) l. Cell (WM. TllT\I: 1:°'.2. . ·100 Fr111 -l. 1'l11nlcirtt (WMI 1. l(fftWOrlllY :-r~) 391~:••'.'_ fWt:'1·F~=~1'ct51l.J.(W) 2. lhl~1m (WM) l. u .. ..,.re (WM}. Time: l:ll .... .io Free -1. Arndt (WI l. Mtl'lf' (WM) 3, Phllllpl CWJ, Tlm1: 4:50.0. . 10) Brt11t -1. Curtl1 (WM) w. MtYI~ (WM) l . a,,.. CW). Tlmt: 1:22.t. olOa Ftn Rtlt't' -I. WftlmlMltt (MIYlf'o KlllWOO!hr. lffffleH, 1'1unktt). Tlrmo: ~:01.1. '"' Wftlml111ltl' IMI 1111 Wfttffll 200 Mldltl' Rt lt y -I, WHtmln•I_, {Phlllllllt S.1er. 8r1Nllm1n. Ht1clltr). Timi: 2:11.0. 100 FrM -1. LIM (WM) 1. W1IJll IW) 3. ~ll>lt !WM), Tlmt : 2:1:1.t . jO FrH -l . lmt•I IWJ 2. Liiiis {WM) 3. Ph1lllo1 (WM}. Tlmt: U.S. 100 h1dlvldu1I MedltV -!. I UtlOYnt IWM) 2. Alltn fW) J, H11d1ff' (WM), Tlmt: 1:11.0. ~ Ftr -l, llU•Nl¥ne IWM) l •• Bt11'1Citm1n (WM) l H11cll1r IWM(· Timi' 2'.0, \00 Fr11 -1. 1111 (WM) 2. L1111s (WMI l. Mllll IWI. Tfmt : 1:00.1. 10 Btdl; -1. Wlllh (WI 1. l'tlllllp1 (WM) ). p...,... lWM). Tlmt: :I0.4. JO BrHll -1. AUtt1 (WI t. lr1nc1tm1n (WM) l. Mlll1 (WI. Tlmt: l7.1. Li~.~~ .... 't'~~i. Tim!.:: r'~~:ri1n11"' 11urwoy"'° 10D f'r.-. -1. Hiit IHI ) 2. a1rll/'lf iAJ 3' k-S!~ l~J, l.T~.tlAl 2. w .. 1 CHI!) 3. k lnt (Hl1. Timi: 1.). SO Ir"'' -1. Porllel'llT !Al 1.. Kl11t H18J 1. llll'ltH «iAl. T!m" !';4. :JOO Pnt Rllll' -I. A11111tlm. Timi: 1:4$.i.0 1IB·Colon11 Vl"I" A11tl>tlm (6tt Ul) fl11Mlltlt911 IMdl 200 Medl•r AHllY -1. An1flf'lm. Tim•: 1:11.). "'° ~rlt -I. OWtM (A) l.. El'-!A) l. N I~ (A . T!me: l :Jl.J 50 ,... -1. ko111n !Al 2.Scflinr !H&I :l Narr!t \1111). Time; :M.l. 200 Ind vldu11 M ... ln' -l. t.1miw, (A) 1. Fr-Ir.< (A). N1 third. Tlmt: 1:1A.J, 01¥1111 -t. ·-· jHll 2. I , Cok•r IHI} S. J. Col!ft' (H l. 1'oln!1; 7j>. .J«I l"ly -1. AMII fA Ila Mtond W thO..:I. 1 l'"t : -'Y.4. 1ot ,rte -1. Nt .. IA )t. SdMer IHI) :l lddl' (HI}. Tlfnto; Sf.4. Sports in Brief Cdlll·Bnron1 V•uily CIM (7S) Utl l'lull .. ln V1llll' 200 Mtdlt~ o<tl<ll' -1. (.oron1 all Mir tf1rr, a r1aD11rn. Ho.rn. C~rt11J. Tlmt : l:)J.0. 200 FrH -I. bl<lcil. 'Cl 2. l outhev tCJ 3. :.ol? !FVI. Time; 1:~.6. ;o FrH -l. Sroowr (CJ 2. !lcflwlf' tCI J. D..-!1 CFVI. Tlmt: l•.G. 20Q lnd1vldll11 MeGltY -1, &«Ill.lion ICJ 1. ldl•tr lC) 3. Noth IFV). Tome: 2:1J.&. Clvimi -I, Zlm,..rm.111 (FY) 2, SOl!ll IFVI J. JOl!llSDll (F\IJ, 100 fty -I, Otto (Cl 2. lolfl (C) a. BrtctDutn (Cl. Time: 511.l. 10 0Frft -I .Bladt (Cl 2. HHlmll'I !Cl 3, l.ltwl1 H·\IJ, Timi; ~!.t. 100 hdl -1. $oll (F\I) , .c~rtll CC) :i. O'!&,(C~'r:.lfrll.:_ Lr:s.1.8ou1htl' (Cl 2. LDll~ IC! l. Hl.ISlhtl IF\/), Time: ':H.l. 100 lre1111 -1. Horn CC} 2. aur1non (CJ .1. HlllOfl IFV). Time: 1:11.l. a Fl'ff llelty -1. Coron. 6'I Mir t~wer, HUimt.n. Cunis. :Olllnfrl. Tlmt; J:a.l 1. ·-ClllM I' 1101/ l"-11111 V1lllr :200 Mtdltl' RtliY -• Coron• drt Mir llrl•litY• Mllllcll, Wiffl>l.lrn. Oliver), lime: 1:51.•. 200 ff'ft -1. Hl.lh~ IC) 1. MIUklli ICI :S. JOhnson !f'V). Tim•: 1:~.•. SO frH -1. Sttnel'Mllem (C) 1. lrl11tr CCI $. OllCI (C). Time: ll.0.. 100 lndll'lclu11 Miiiier -1. Ollwrr (CJ 2. Ktmmerlr IC ) 3. C1rrt1U (FY), Timt: 1;1M.,. 100 FIY -l. Winburn tC l 2. Wllll IF\/) 3-Vltrilver IC), Tim•: 1:08.0. 100 Frn -1, STCnhtjtm (C) 2, Ol!o {C l 3. Ktmmerly CC). Time: SJ .. 100 810; -l. WlnDwrn (Cj :t. Httbonl(FVJ 3. Stapleton (FVJ. Timi: 1.09.0. olOI) Frtt -1. HUllfl•$ tCI 2. M!lllch tCI 3. c1sel' CF\/), Timi: i:l~ .. o. lllO Bretlil -1. C1rtoll (FVJ :t. Sdlmkll (fVI 3. HOll'Olke CCL Tim<!: 1:16.6. ~ Frte II.till' -1. Corona dtl M.r (St~ltm, a rl1lty, Otto, Ollvlll'). Time: l :.0.1. ,_ CdM 1•11 11•> l'ounl1ln V1ll1tY 200 MeallY Rel1y -I. CorOM dtl Mir IMeNlmt, JlmHOn, Davit. llelm,rs). Time.; 1:,,.1. 100 free -I. Loltz (CJ 2, Wurt!ff (FVI l. NOif! [FVJ. Timt: J:Sl.5. SO Free -l, 8trn1rd (CJ 2. JllT\tlO., (C l 3, Gllllllhtr CFV). !SCnool rtcard), Time: 214, 100 lndlvldu1I Medley -I. NltWcomb IC) 1 Alct CFV) J. HOIYOlkd CCI, lkllooJ rlCOrdl: Ti~: 1:01.S. }.) Fly -1. 8er111rd \Cl 2. Rlo;e (FV) :L Hoali !FV). Ckllool rtcordL imt: 2SA. IFllJ l. Rtlrners IC!, Tlmil: S2.2. 'TFV) J .R1lmer1 (Cl. Time; J.2.2. 50 Back -!, Jamr'on lCJ 1. P1lmtr (C) 3. Ruler CFVl. l imt : n.5. 50 Btt11t -I. Kr11mohol1 CCI t. DtYl1 (C l 3. Hol~k• CC ). Tlmt: :n.I. - 100 frn Rtltl' -!, Coron~ d•t Mlt tkrn1rd, Ntwc;omb, l oiti., Krum..,,0111. (School rtcorcl). l ime; l :;ioi.O. l'iker-Fnl.,ons Var11!y M1rln1 !1tl (14) S1nl1 An• Vlllll' 200 Medlt Y Rel•Y -1. Marini [JOl\nlO!I, l utl!, M~Connagflay. Oon1 ld1onJ. Tlmt; 1:05.J. 200 Free -I. RtmY (M) 2. Sol/ghtrS (Ml 3. KOl\1 (M). Tim" 1:01.0, 50 Free -1. LIPPOidt (M) 2. N1wq11lst (M) :J. G1.,on (M). Time: 77.1. 100 1n<1lvlcu11 Medlev -T. McConn11uh1Y fMI 2. Jot.n10fl CM) J. Finch IMI. Tlmr; 1:11.•. DIY!nll -1. AYeryt (M l l. D1v!n (Ml ::t. King (M). Poln!I: •1.o1.1. )00 Fly -l, Oon1khcn (M) no Meo.NI or fturd. Time: 51.t . 100 F'tt -L McConn1gl\1y (Ml 2. NIW<lul'f (Ml l. Gu•on CMl. Tlmt : l .4. 100 Seek -1. Oq11ld'°" (Ml 2, Jci.n..,.. (Ml J. He"rlcl1 {$,O,V). Tltot: 1:05.S. olOO FrH -I. LIPPOid! CM) 7. !Ir ~lwte11 B)lell lM I tnd Cfl•wm !SAV). (Seti.oaf record). T11r1: l :S9.7. JOO B•t••• -l, Nt•tund CS.AV) 1. a ut ll !Ml J, ~lll!tr> lMJ. T!mt: l:ll.I. 400 Frtt R1!1y -1. MAAtNA !Lippoldt, Avtryf, Remv, Sou9her1). Tlmt : ':06.J. '"' Mtrllll (•JI 041 ilnl1 Ant Vt llfl' 100 Mtdlel' Rt l1¥ -1. M.orl111 (01vk110n, W1lll.m1, Evins, J1ccO!), l !mt: 1:53.). 100 Frtt -1. JOl'Ct !Ml 2, Bronte (Y.V) ). HOOQ$ CM). flmt : 1:09,1, SO FrN -l. Ec~m1n 4$.lV) 1. J•co.bs (M) 3. Mtrrim1n (Ml, Tlmt: :ie.1. ·oo lna1v•clu11,1 M..:11~ -1. Evel!I lMI :. Voi9t ($.A.VJ :l.T>'llllem, CMI. Time: 1:10,, 100 Fly -I. Evan• (Ml 2. Wt!!Y lSAV) J. Brtnntr (M), Time: J:Sl.6. 100 Frn -1. Eckman ISAV) 2. HolleWIV (Ml J. Mfrrlm1n \Ml. l1m1: !t.J. 100 lleck -1. 01~ld>at1 (Ml 7. HOOi'' CMI 3. Robln10n ISAV). Tlrnt: 1:041. 4.00 Frte -1. JO¥ct (Ml 't Hollower IM) 3. Leu~' (SAV). Time: 4:ol0 6. ' · 100 Brta!I -1. Wll1 iarr1 (Ml 7, Wtll\' (SAV) 3. Jl>lln>cn (M). T•mt: 11:10.i. .aOQ F'tt Rtl•l' -1. Marlri1 IHooPs, 01vld.a~. Merriman. HQllcwayJ. Timt: 4:111 l. "" Mlr1111 1'4) !UJ S1nt1 An• v111e7 ZOO Mtdley Rtltl' -1, M1rln1 EC!'ni110n. Sn•o>eka. F111renkn;g. Me!1bv). Tlmt; 2:ot.2. 100 Frtt -1. Maltby (M) 2. Brown (5AV ) J. FtrVUllClll IM.! Tlmt: 7~07.1. SO Fr.-. - . Edmiston (M) 1. Nolorl (SAii , 2. 8001t1 (M). Tlmt: 77.5. 100 htdlv•dul l Medlt~ -1. lhlo1tl1 CM) l. Mol'flH (SAV) l . F1hrt nkrut (M/. f lmt: l'Oll !. SO Fly -1. F1hrtnkrug M) 1. k ln1 IMl i. Morriss l!Ji.V). Time: n !. 100 Fr.-. -1. M11!bv IM) 2. Ptlm1 (Ml 3. Rttd (Ml. Tlmt: $1.1, $0 Bed< -J. Edml1lon (M) 1. Bl11!a11 (SAVI 3. ~ !Ml. Tlmt ; :U.O . SO Br•a1r -1. S~lowk1 IMl 2. Prlrnt lM) '· Cidre [Ml. Time: lJ.I, 700 "'" 1t.111y -I. M1rln1 (C1dr1, k in,, Bo.oltl, Prlmtl. Time: ~:S:l.1, Freehan B1~ealis Nose; Angels Top Padres, 6-5 The world champion Detroit Tigers not only loet their fourth straight d· hlblUon bueball game Wednesday, but abo A1J..Slar catcher Bill Freehan. Frtiehan auffer!d a broken nose and multiple f1clal laceraUon1 when he wu hit by a pltcbed ball ln batting practice at Lakeland before the pme which the Tlgers lost to Cl.ncinnllU t4 at Tampa, FIL ... PALM SPRINGS -The C•lilornla Angtb:. g.5 wiMerl over San Diego at HolMUt Wedneoday, hoot the Cleveland Indians in c.ctus League play today. 'lbe Ailg<b tm>ed tllelr uhibltion record It H by bulling the Padres. .. ... ... VERO BEACH -They're all opUmlstlc at bueblll traln!nc campt at lhl1 time ol year and A1 Campanls ti no exception. "If we c111 continue thJs type of pit.. china and 1pruce up our att1ck 1 lllUe, 'this ii gotni to be a hard club tD beat," the Dodger executive 1ald Wednesday after Bill Singer and C11ude Osteen combined to give Los Angeles a 3.0 win over the St. Louis Cardinals. The Dodger~ had today off. CINCINNATI -The~ Angele s Laktrs will have lo win their flnal two regular sea~on games to set a club record ror victories in one sca590. J The Llkers, who clinched the-"-Ntrtfonal Basketball Auociation Western Division tille l1sl wttkend, lost lo the CincinnaU Royal$, 136-UI, in overtime Wtdoeadat nighL ... PALM SPRINGS (AP)-Th• 1170 Su· per Bowl football g~me will be played ln New Orleans after a tw&-year re.~· dence Jn Ml.uni. Ntw Orle1rt1 won out In " spirited tu~~le wllb Mli11ml for the Super Bowl g1me. bt-twttn lht AFL and NF'l. cham· plOO$ Jan, II. / ' " • " "' " " L "' " "' " .. '"· " '· .. .. " 3. L " " 3. " " •• "• CJ .CJ '" ,, Cl " Cl " m, , .. ,, Cl .. '" • CJ CJ ... I?; rl!, "' "' "' "' " ,,, .~ " '" •• '" "· " " .. ,, " ,, ., " '"' '"· ,, ,, .. " " " •• .. d e • ' • b ,, n ~ r I• d j. ! ·I • Pirates, Rustlers Collide By JOEi. SCHWARZ Of _. Diiiy rlltt Stitt Golden West College will be batWng to stay alive in the Eastern Conference baseball race and Orange Coast will be fighting to get out of the second division when the two schoolJ get together at 3 o'clock Friday afternoon on the RusUtrs' diamond. Orange Coast coach Dale Wonacott will go w i t h hardluck right-hander Gary Dunkelberger, but Go 1 den West's starter Js up in the air because of an injury suf· fered by Steve Griffith. Dunkelberger tossed a one- hitter last time out, but drop- ped a 1-(l decision to Riverside. ln a nutshell, that loss sums up a thus far frustrating season for the Pirates. They stranded 13 men on base in that contest and Pl!Olo llY lldl IMMll Drawing tire Tie·breuke1· Cai·d Mrs. Bert Roellinger, left, draws the winning high card to give her golf team a victory in Irvine Coast Country Club's recent St. Patrick's Day tourna- ment. Mrs. Roel.linger teamed with Roy Hallberg (second from left) to tie 1vlrs. J esse King and Heber Erickson (at tight). Holding the cards is tourney chairman Courtaey Owens. haven't been able to come d up with the key hits during K conference action, enne y The Pirates are 2·5 in circuit ' Boosted Wrestling play while Golden West is 5-3, three games out of first place. Golden West has been gel· ting the big hits this year and many of them have been supplied by third-baseman Ron Richardson. Richardson is hitting at a .432 clip and has bashed nine extra base hits. O•ANGIP!: COAST KU!ln' 11' r fl rbl 1111. Sw1lm 1 O l D .SOO Wt.h!M!r 6 o 2 o .1~1 Contini 1 O 1 o .lJl t:ncll ~ 5 ' J .110 8-111!¥ 39 8 u 11 .:m Brwwl'I 18 1 5 O .:211 Renfrow 2? o ' 1 ,?ll P1ul HJ9S .no P1lm~r 37 • • 3 .71' P\MM" 10 0 :2 0 .'100 J..,kln1 •2 6 7 l ,167 SObol-llcl JI 5 s 2 .ln St lbtrl 19 2 1 2 , l~S Mor .. n 11 ! l 0 ,OH l(IMl'IOl'I IS 0 1 1 .061 Durlll:1lbtr1'r 1s o 1 1 .001 1(1.. ? 0 0 0 .000 Crill' I 0 0 D ,OC,O W11/'llto 1 000 .000 HR-ll1lhtY (2}. 33--P•u• (J), LNcf\, 1>11mer {1 H(fl). ?&--81lley. Le«fl (t -ch}, P1u!, P1lmer, Conlan! {I ""''· Oo"ktlberffr PlntH' sw,1m Contini "''' CrbP Pltchln1 lp ho . " lO 211 j..t 6 213 7 l 1/l s ' ' l l/l • JO 1111 W•f 39 H :J.2 21 16 ().3 ' ' ~ 2 I 1·0 ' ' ~ ' . ~ GOLDEN WIEST Hll!ln, 111 r fl r111 •"•· ll!lci..rdton 31 1a 16 12 ,.il2 P1ulJOI\ l9 6 14 l .3!9 Plt1tJ 29 11 t S ,310 Gflffilll '' ' 4 O .?U Dl'GPrr 40 6 JO 6 .1j(l cor,..n 16 o • l .2!0 Htt111rklff I 1 7 O .7!>0 &-n 3'383.172 s.,.une u 1 1 ? .106 TNce ?3 2 • ! .11' Hult~ln~ 6 0 I II .167 Mlrl<s JO l 4 4 .lJJ Eldllr ' 1 o O .ooo ~vnter S 1 0 0 -~ ltunell 3 0 O O .000 ~ :·: : : ·= Hll!-Rfd\ll'USOll (2), OeGetr (1). 38 _ Rlch"trion (4), Griff!!~. aow1n, TM«, Plllel. fl HC~). 211-Rlcfl1rchon fJJ, Pa~\1<11"• Bow~. 5Mllnt 12 Hdl), DeGe«r, (or~ll. Grlfflt~ (1 Heil), Plt<:~ln• Gr!ffllh .. ~. HVtd>lnMll\ P1ynll1' -· ~ommerfitld lp Ill ll bb W·l lli 21 32 1l 4-1 16 l/l 11 ,, 10 ?.0 \S 11030.0 \4 2/l • 13 13 1-2 • 113 10 ' l 1.(1 1 2)1 0.0 Pro Cage Standings Area Prep Golf Results Prep wrestling around the Orange Coast area was set back a couple of notches the tlther day when it was an- nounced that Jack Kennedy or Marina High School had resigned his poeition as head mat coach. It was i Kennedy who initiated and ran the highly successful Marina High School Five Count.ies wrestling ex- travaganza the past four years. His efforts to bring in the best talent available in Southern California pajd ROGER CARLSON ••••••••••••••• tinue as the toughest wrestling tourna- ment in the state -possibly under the Fountain Valley banner. • • • Can anyone imagine why a television 1tadon would bold up a_basketball game with an "official" Umeout for the in- sertion or a commercial when the game is belng taped for viewi ng the following day? That'1 what happened three times dur- ing the n:cent CIF AAAA showdown between UWst Compton and Sunny HiUs. It'• bad enough to interrupt athletic contests for e<lmmercialism during a live broadcast. But to do it wbefl aJI that is required is to simply insert the commercial at random later is lailne111 and gall by the boob-tube people. Putting prep basketball ga mes on television is reaJl y a good deal for all concerned, but the television station lihould be held responsible for keeping ctus Intact * • • distance the competitors were attempting in the field evenls. ti1ost of the crowd was t"OOtinua!ly in the dark concerning field events until fina l results were given over the public address system. The crowd was S(lrnewhat smaller than usual -but considering Uiat the ClF basketball finals and· the UCLA cage showdown at Pauley Pa vilion were com- peting at the same time, and the absence of Santa Ana, Santa Ana Valley and Westminster from the meet, attendance was subiStant.ial. • Orange Coast Mat, Hoop Aces Honored at Feed h _, d" "de ds r-··-Orange Coast Edison High School becomes the 13th auusome 1v1 n u• "'"' Orrange Coast College basketball area. school in the Orange Coast area this players and wrestte'rs Were honored Wed-u.. h fall and two more ~ppear to be on In the past two years, w..:: area as tap the follOwing 'year. nesday night at the winter sports award been blessed with five individual CIF banquet in the OCC Stl?dent Center. University High -scheduled fOf' the champions. Turtle Rock area ju~ north of UC Irvine, Approximately 100 athletes. facult y and Doug Casey of Corona del Mar, (178) and Dana High School _ at Dana Point, guests saw Mike Flaherty named Pirate Huntington Beach's Ed Bond (141) and of the Year in basketball, and Mark are in the planning stages. Ch ist' · · 1·k h · 1· Gabe Ruz of Costa Mesa (136) captured * * * r 1an ga1n1ng 1 e onors m wrest 1ng. ••e co••et-• crowns m· 1968. Steve Turley was elected basketball u1 y cu A la Earl Guatkey -here's two not t · b hi t This Year a -·pie -• Fountain Valley in ... •• Tr •. cap ain . Y s eammates, with Dan ._,,.. vi to be vi~ to .... e same party: ac.. H'll· d led ti· · standouts, Chris Sones (106) and Glen coaches Matt Leonard of Fountain Valley 1 ia r vo wres ing ca ptain. Flaherty, named to the th ird team Anderson (123), came through with CIF and Wayne Ambrose of Pacifica. all conference squad. fired in 444 points championship medals. ' * * * Alf f th bo pt C The 48th annual Southern Counties in 28 games this year for a 15.8 average. o e a ve exce asey were The 5-11 guard was most fffective fortunate to experience wrestling the track and field meet, switched to in the second half of the season, averag- very best in the Five Counties and Westminster High School this yeAr ing 23.9 during one 10-game stretch, then ·went on to post their win.!i in because 0£ renovations on the Huntington going over JO-points twice. the CJF finals . Beach foot.ball field , ran off without Christian was an outstanding I !5-pound Kennedy's touch on the tourney gave a hitch. wrestler. The little man won eight of it the status required to make it the It was a brilliant sho'N -as usual. 10 conference matches, taking 3rd in best of its kind in the Southland. However, it was surprising not to see the conference and earning a trip to Hopefully, the Five Counties will con-any markers to Indicate the height or the state championships. ------------------- ~'."c"~~S 4, 95 TO 45,00 WILSON -BANCROFT -DAVIS DUNLOP-CRAGIN-SIMPLEX Tennis Balls Mens Tennis Shirts Boys Tennis Shorts 3/1.29 to 3/1.99 4.95to13.95 4.95 & 6.00 4.95 4.50 CONVERSE TENNIS SHOES MIN'S 7.75 LADlll' 7.25 Jack Purcell Tennis Shoes Pennsylvania Tennis Balls 8.95 doL 7.50 WHITE NYLON WARMUP SUITS fOI TINNIS 24.95 Reslrlnalna • Nylon 4.00 . 6.00 -7.50 GUT ••• 10.50 • 1 Z.SO .. 15.00 • ~ I --- MASKS -FINS-SNORKLES DUCK Fill FINS tlt9. I.ts Diving Masks Snorkles Skate Boards Sleeping Bags Handball Gloves Handballs Baseball Mils Baseballs Soll Balls Blemish 6. 95 5.95 lo 9.95 12.95 to 24.95 9Sc -1.49-1 .95 • 2.95 1.65-1.95-2.75 B111ball & l ittle L11gue 81t1, C-.tch1r1 M•1k1 & Chest Protectors, 8111ball Sh041, S1nlt1ry Host, 8111ball Undershirts, Speedo Swim Suits & Trunk1 Letterman J1cket1 & Sw11t1r1, R1J1 l9h Bike• & P1rt1 Bike Rep&)r. DAILY PILOT 23 Southern California Streams To Receive LS Million Trout St xt Y·O'n t 'Southern CAlllornia roadslde lakes and streams will be stocked with nearly 150 tons of catchab!e- size rainbow trout by the Departmenl of Fish and Game during 1969. This 3.dds up to some l.5 mllllQn trout averaging eight incl}es in length but includes a good number "'eighlng up to a pound apiece. To maintain fishing quality, many of the waters will be restocked on a weekly basis when water Ctlnditions are sUitable. High, muddy waters and road wa~houts caused by record rainfall have dela~ed the 1969 big planting push until April. Some major. lakes and streams are scheduled for stocking throughout the year. Some reservoirs are suitable for .trout only during the winter months. Some small streams may be plantable only tlnce or twice before they become too low or warm. ·Changing stream and road conditlons, w a t e r tem- peratures and water releases from storage reservoirs may require adjustmenls in stock- ing schedules as the , season Iv o1 O•fk C1n,on Cf1t11>, l'Ul t l••llroOLt. (RIEi( IM•r.<Aw \ -Stocked (11 .. 1c111lty of Fuller-Miii Crffk croti1"9 '"" camp9rcund on llt•p!no·ldVllwlld lld . FUlMOlt LAKE' (Ffll.-NO\O,J - Op ll1~n1.n11.iuv11w119 •d. HEMET V,ICE (Jtn.•NOll.l -On wttt •Ide ol HWY. 1' 1boul J mlln south ot M0Unl•lt1 Cent••· Fr"-flt~!l\Q from 11'1o1'1 Dl'I 1'l<rl'1'h tide of·l1kt. SAN JACINTO •IVER. NOii.TH F'ORI( (A,pr,) -ACCtll from ~illf Cove 1rt1 on ll1,,.,1119·tdrllwlld Rd .. ~""" 1tuO: trill llOfllll $lone Cretk. STJl:AWllERRY ClllEEK (Mtr,-Apr l -A(C... WQI o« ldrl!wlkt Rll. 11 '°u!h ~e ot 10.,..n of ldV!f'lrlkt!. SAN lliJl:NAROINO COUNTY ARROW8EAR LA.ICE fAPr.-M1•l In S.n fl•mtrdloo Mlt. nortl\1111 ot S.n 1len11rdloo, !urn '°""' oll Hwv. 18 lwo mll11 1bov1 Runnln9 Sprint>. Lake Is """"" milt off H.wv. 11. ARROWHEAD LAKE !Ftb.-N!N.I - tn Sen B1rn1rdlno ML, turn oor!ll off Hwr. 11 al Arrowl'le•d R1no1r SltllOI', F•et 1c~t lo !hare lbhh>ll ln Ylcllll11 ol dam 11 e1u JM ol llke, &llQ ta 21,I, , milt-$ ot lool·lrtll •~re from lltwjay lr111¥ Plr1: w .. 1 tnd oortll lo • Movlt Pollll on tt.e Wftl end of ltkt. BIG llEAR l:Al<E (Ftb.-"4<J<.l - On HWY. 11 In Sin 8ern1rdlno Mh. &EAR CREEK LOWEii SECTIO"f On 1rt• u•w1llr dosed to acc .... <1ur!119 sumrMr bf(IUll ot Mgh flrl f\1urd. Stocked to provldt 111~11111 1'1er f1!! r1ln •nd In wr!r19) -Flows oul of lllg 8ttr LtKt. Sloc.kfll In vlcll'lltv of Sii~ Lile C1""9 reached 1111 rou9h 1r~vel rOld trom C1mp Anoe1u1, on Hwv. JI l\D•lllN•I ol Rfdland9, progresses. Any remaining COLORADO RIVER (Oc!.] -Stocktd allotments for streams or 111 Ntte11n 1"1• lakes that become unsuitable CUCAMONGA CREEOK (Ff_b,·Mavl -NortMut ot Uoland. From Upland for stocking will ~ switched to norrh on Eu(lld Ave., 1urn "''' to nearby, suitable waters. on ll••e LIM Rd. tor 11~ ml~s. turn nor!h on 5.IPPMte Ave. tar ? F ti · · ty b mlM!s lo Hi •!Id. !Otl • quarT't o owing IS a COUn -Y-mile 1111 10 oet •round pr1v11e Pn>- county list of S o u t h e'T' n ~''"'· n..., oo flOrth on v'rv ro1'9h Call.forn1·a· waters ,·n the 1969 "•Nd'' to ioc-ed Foret! s.rv1,e '""· P1rk 1nd hike In 1 milts Oii lrutk "catchable" trout stocking trau. StatlOI' •boul ac.orn '"'' Hoolu (r"k Rd .. v11 Crab C'rffli: (,....Int 11'd .. 11 hulnh R11\d1. ACCtlS frOl'YI '"-rf tld• IO 9ftnl~ .,.,. U1111r•~m trorn "'°""" 11 Mot••• Rlvtr Pu011( (lfTIPOfllU"" MNl'Mt't 'Ii Vl,l0t11Ull. of lrOITI DM<lrfllln P•lnt Ol'I HwY. ,. llllw"" APPlf VII"'" 1rwt lu<erM 00 '°""' lo 1,..,n!• R•nth 111d hlkt oown lr1!1 lo ilrtlfl'h G•EEN \/ALLEY LAKE (~,,.~,t -llt~n Arrow~e1d •"" Bl1 9Hr, 111rn flarth off HWY. 11 1tiovt ""' milts 1biive RunnJov ~lngJ. GREGORY LAKE oseto.-Nov.1 - Otf Hwv, 11 101! eat! QI Crttllkl•. Fr!I f'1111ng from unlenced IOl1!on ot 11<1•~·' ~r,, MOLCOMB CREEK t...,• . .fMv) - Trlb\<!lrv to Dffl' Cfffk norttowat of lllo lie.or L1kt. From Ftw1nl<!t1 90 t\Orlh NII Ha""' Flit camNl'ollnd iv, m!M!t ta Hol(omb Cteft. er••fno c~ lo.rest ro1d JNIO. Slock9d In be1rtt Pond 1tH1 !•om IM•• deWn11r .. m 6 ml!n lo Crib Fl1! Rd. !lN\tJ. s.me 1re1 ree'fled tr~ Bit II!"' Flat c1mP11round DY 0011\11 i.ouf!IW"I on JNlt /Gr J mllu lo HolC:omb Crttk (fQSS(ng '"" llshll'lll UPllTHm. JENKS LAKE !M.llr.-Jvnel -i.lt l ltoni Redllndl 11t1 Hwv. le ti> 81rt1111 F1111, Mar 81r1on F~b t11np. • LlTTLIO BEAfl: CREEK IM1t..M1y\ -FIOWI l(l1m dim ti Mii _..., or L11<t Arrowhnd, Stotked below lhl dam. LYTLE (REEK MIDDLE FOltlC'. IJ1n.·NO~. I -North from F011l1n1 vie !l.,r• Avt. lg Lvllf CrHk c1bln &tel. Tvrf'I WISI Oii flfll d(rt ""'d p11! C1m11 llonll• Rd, S!Od;td for I mill up1tre1m, - LVTLE CREEi( NORTM FORK fJ111.-No ... l -From Lv!lt Crffk c1bln 1tt1 1nd campground, fish !rem divtr•lon dim up•tretm. MILL CREEK IMat.·Junt! -f.IJI ol Rt<:1land1 on Mill Creek Rd. Planted ln lmmedlt!e ~·••• ol Forts! H""'e Ind F'1lltv11t, program, with directions on DEEP CREEK {Ftb.-Julv pluf No~.l SAN Dll!GO COUNTY h to h th Sh -Rlt.fS between Llkt-AtrOWfltld OW fCaC em. OWn ll\d Big llttr Like In Ille' Sii\ ~ANE PONO !Ftb.-Jvlvl -Verv in parentheses are the months 8ern1rd1no Ml!. end 11ow1 to "'" ~rk~ l•k• In f>IJom•r Mt. S11ta h . dtMr1. Stotktd In 111r10u1 ilellon1 Stn Lui• Re Rlv1r (J1n.-J11.,.I during whi ch eac · water IS on alterM!ln-u weelu. one area 11 -Fl-•°"' ol L1k1,Hen1h1w. S!ot;ktd II t k~.1 A water lu•t off HwY. 11 1t RJMnl..., Sorlng1. OUT norms Y SOC =· Inquire 11 Like Arrow1>e1d R•netr (Set TR , Page %4) normally stocked f r o m l -j;Ol~~;;;;;;'.:;::~~~::':'~~:":":":.~i February into June is shown 1r as (Feb.-June), etc. r However, stocking may run a month late this spring on some streams. O•ANGE COUNTY SAN JUAN CREEi( !Mar.-M1v) Alone Mwv. 7t t1e1w1tn e111no .. and S~n Juen C1ol1tr100. S!ocked from San Ju&n Guard 5!1!1011 lo Lower San Ju•n Public C•lnP . SILVERAOO CREEK (M.lr·M•Y) - Sou!M11t ol lrvl,,_. Llk~ .. 11 S111\1LlliHI C1nyon Rd. lo Sllver1do C1nvon Rd. S!otktd above Cltvtland N11lon11 forts! 01te, T•A&UtO CREEK {M1r.-M1y) - "·m """ ....... ··~· ''""''· PAN PACIFIC take El Toro Rd, turnotl, 10 not!~ 1 miles ffltn bttr rlg~I on Liv• ~ Oak Canvon Rd., !!left I.ii en Trabuco I Ctnron Rd, •! O'Ntlll P1rk, SIO(kM BEVERL'{ AT FAIRFAX I trom 21'> mil" 1bove O'N•lll P1rk UP to and lntludlno one-hilt mile WEEKOAYS jSATURDAYSI SUHDAYS of Ho!V Jim Canyon. 2-10:30 12·10:30 12·9 P.M. •IVEll!SIDE COUNTY I ~ ... ______________________ ,,. DARK CANYON CREEi< (M1r .• I Mey) -\Ila ,;ir111tl rOld e1•I llfl WH~IL BRAKE SALE! RAYCO ONE-PRICE RELINE JOB 13 JOBS IN ONE• UYCO EXPERTS WILL: 1. l111t.l1 M.,.ti 1• 1. CllMk ••,._, Llnln1 111 All 4 CJlllldtt STILL AT 1968 PRIClll Wllltll f. lnq1t1t t ll ll•M1 1. Mtthlnil .... •rfna 111d 111111 •an drv"'• 9. Chick •II 19~!, J, Att ft'ind •lld 1d)lill1ri & C.m• ti! 1 tf1111 10. Clnn 1111111 ..... , ••• trOllt .... k ...... " .. " ..,,.., .,..,1 .. 1, 11. c i..,. 011d ...... I . Chick •II Nt11"' ltMk •leftt 1ptl1111 12. 11.,1 ........ . •• Ch•c 111 whl•I whHI 11h11 eyU11d1n 1J. •H• t11t cir. Full 20,000 Mlle Gllirntee CAR.I 2 HOUR SERVICE! DOUBLE ACTION Shock Absorbers e M1lpt NffOM II ... COP !ldt • ll•d11tc1 ••n11 •••• 111 li!'91 111d frtt1t 111• e They and ,..... t1111fort ••d ll•lllllty to JllPI cir • • 1nrt1l1tll1 1>1ci.<1td. CONVERTIBLE VINYL TOPS • Cottto"' ln ... tLld llJ RIJCI t,.cl•littt •I 111 ••11'• cltt e ,iflnl lo111vy 1•u11 ffllrlct • c-•-11•tw "'iffl 'l'l•rf wh•d" •"• .. ;.,.. .. RELIANT MUFFLERS • ••ill " .... , ... '" • 1 ... 1111114 .. , •• , •• •1>11iltlth •llllt .... ....... • l"'ll-"' •• •• , ........... lfit1tlwoo. CUSTOM RECOVERING e h11t1H•d 11J ll11t• ..,..1o11th whllt ''" ••tell e ClllMt ,,_ • ,,._,, ... .,. •-rt· """' •f "'"" ttfltl, "'"'"' .. , ........... . 1kf•l11t .... h. 2 FOR 16~~ 74~~ .... c ... 1095 '" Metf c ... YOUR CHOICI OF TWO ORIAT DlllGNS N~~ ~n!.LY TIRES Wl~~n~osVAL 95 s1 .... '· .. , .. 1.tl-1S• WWhw ... t,ff...,._.t lrend New Cuato"' LIM ANY 51%1 IN STOCK .......... , ..... °""' .. COSTA MESA ~ "'""' ....... ,_ .....01" II•'-ltttr a Aftllll) s15ss . ••• I , LT•• n. .. , ... D·70S.rin•14" a.1s .. llH " Wllltl ....... 0.'1 lM AHi*-' Mouft·ti•1 Included AHA HEIM 1US W, Llftt•lll ,._ ,, .... 1, r \ • " • fl DAILY PILOT by Deke Thursday, Mart11 20, 196' Start Yow· Engines! Hou/gate What torture man will endure to relax. He'll wade hlp deep in 35-<:leg. water waiting for ducks to appear in the dawn's twink1ihg. He'll sit for hours in choking cigar sµioke over a poker table and scarcely notice the pain of poor blood circula- tion in his back and legs. If he really has masochistic tendencies, he'll drive out on the desert or a nearby riverbed in a dune buggy. A lucky fellow can bruise h'h .kidneys, knock himself in I.be bead once or twice or bang sideways into hard steel rollbars and raise welts on his shoulders. That's really Jiving, as far as the nation's lS,000 owners of dune buggies are concerned. The odd part about it is a dune buggy driver doesn't really get much chance tO enjoy the scenery as it bounces past him in a blur. If he takes bis eyes off the road ahead, he might wind up in a hospital bed or worse. "Yoo have to learn how to look ahead," explained the ~x-grand prix driver Bob Bondurant, one of the latest expon- ents of dune buggy driving -and racing. · "You never can afford 1o relax completely, because ii .you do, that's when trouble is going tO strike. A driver gets more tired racing a dune buggy than he does any other kind or a vehicle, because_ he has to concentrate harder and adapt to changing conditions quicker." Bondurant's dune buggy racing secrets were actually learned during last November's race from Ensenada to La Paz in Baja CaJifornia. That's like taking driver edu~tion at Ind ianapolis Speedway. Now he teaches dune buggy race driving at his school in Irvine. "You get to know the road by the change in color up ahead. A darker shade of dirt usually means a pothole or some other hazard. You know you have to slow down or risk breaking the car," he said. "Always around a corner is something unexpected. You have to be ready to slow down or to find an escape route. But J still say dune buggy racing i!I fun because the pressure i! not as hard, and the danger ill not as great. "You drive a sports car Jn a ract at 180 or 190 miles an hour, and it's not fun, because you know if you goof yoa will g.et hurt bad. Bu6t la • dune buggy even If you roll ever yoo're usually enJy going 35 or 40 miles an hour. and you can't get in too mucb trouble physically if you are properly atrapped in." Dune buggies have been a boon to car thieves-one of them stole a Volkllwagen I owned not long ago-and to • few manu· Factun!l'I like Bruce Meyera of lttidway City, CaW. Jim Btltinck, 1ale1 manager of Meyers Manx, aignUicantly, is a former racing team manager for Carroll Shelby. Racing sets the mood for the whole Industry. Revmaater. another manu.lactarer, ha1 eight factory-backed ean in the Mint 400 to be beld in Nevada next Monday and Tuesday. Beltlnck, a Michigan farm boy at h.emi, thhW d11ne buggies evolved out of "DoodJe Bugs" that were the fun<ar1 of the Mid- west during the 1930s and '40s. "A farmer uJed to take an old car or tnlck that bad rusted out, atrip it down to nothing and put big farm implement tire• on it," Beltinck recalled. "He would use bl1 'Doodle Bug' to go chase cows in a roagb peture, where be wouldn't wut to take his nicer equipment." Beltinck believes the dune buggy craze is nationwide, even though it has only been a couple of years since they have been offered through dealers to the public. His company has franchised dealers in every state but North and South Dakota, Rhode Island aod Vermont. A couple of other companies are not far behind. Turning from the big business aspects of dune buggying, the attraction to many of its enthusiasts is that a dune buggy is little more than a safe substitute for a motorcycle with the advantage that you can take the wile and kids for a ride in it. You can satisfy the thrill of bouncing around rough terrain In one of these silly looking four-wheel gadgets just as easily as you can on a two-wheeler, and if you get in a pinch the little woman can drive it down to the supermarket and do her Jhopping. P or1rlae Uas Neto Car On the eve of the Sebring 12·hour-it'li on Saturday- Porsche of Germany Jet out ii.! secret, that it will soon show up at leading racetracks with a 4.5 liter prototype sports car, the Porsche 917. Thal means that Germany will soon citallenge America's powerful S liter Chevy powered Lolas and Ford powered GT-40s with an engine capable of producing nearly 600 horsepower. Th.is Saturday's race is expected to be a Ford.Chevy duel, with Porsche's 3 liter cars an outside possibility in the event of attrition. Both American and Gennan cars compete on separate levels because they are in different international classes, but not many people care about anything but the car that finishes in front of everybody. Group 4 prototypes, today's one-ol·a·kind Porsches, are apparently a good speed n1atch for the Group 6 Fords and Chevys, but the Ford team of England's John Wyer won the 1968 world title and a Chevy team entered by Roger Penske won the Daytona 24-hour last month. So now Porsche will build 25 of the new monsters to make them eligible to race against the American engine rivals in their own class and theoretically become more than even money bets against them. For lovers of endurance racing, the odd duck of motor sport Y>'hich some folks claim is as exciting as watching the grass grow. there will be some genuine pizzazz in 1969. The flaming red cars from Modena are making their return to international sports car racing. There will be a three-car Ferrari fact-Ory t'eam entry at Sebring. Already there is a Foret-. Chevy-Porsche-Ferrari battle. The Porsche 917 will not be ready to make an appearance until later in the year. It will make the scene, naturally, at the 1000 kilometers of Nurburgring, in der Black Forest. In other words, before a hometown crowd. SOFT SELL SAM I By Marvin Myen "' .. .. .. Relay Meet '. ·goe£1~9. 111tt~ D. ~edi-• d Arn Id Palmer cate 1 To Toomey TROUT ..• {Continued fnim Page 23) for •baut ~ mll111 •lont ltl9hw1y below H1Nllaw. SANTA MARGARITA RIVER (NDV.• Ju,...l -Horth111I pf F1llbrookf F=. r,:~n ,!~i ::i 3n~.,.f,d w11"k11Ft::brorn1i E111 Minion. Con11-••rt to ~mow Glen Rd. Ind WO norlh "' lllt llTHrn. StockHI tor tbaul 2 mlltt UPtlr"m •nd 2 mlles dowmtretm from thtl • ... .... SANTA YSABEL CREEK o:eti.·Mtvl -Stod<.ed 3 mllet tbovl Slnlt Y1a!Mol Mlulon, fol Hwvf '9 betwffn Henshaw •ncl 5"1nl1 Yubt, SWEETWATER RIVER 1Feti.·Junel -Stocked In Grten Vt itY Ctmp trN pf C11v1mKt Shit P•rk. SANTA SAll•A1tA COUNTY CA.CHUMA LAKE (Nov.·Fab.l -In t c011nt\'.-rtltd r11Cr11tlon Ire• .,.. Hwy, 15"4 1bo11t 2S m!le1 north-st of S•n~· llarb.lr1. Fr.e ICCHS If :;,~1nD•~ •• ~" :.!J• :~?k~~ 1il~~ ~~,!~; 1>er ctr f" 11 vou drift Jn1lde, LOI ANO.LIS COUNTY AllJIOVO SECO CREEi(. Low1• IMIV) -From •11! llde ol Oe\11'1 Giie O•m norlhftll of PINdltMI, drive north o~ Wlndtor Ave. to locked 91fe, hlk• lV. mlltl UP ro.d lo Coon C•n 011 SrldH. .Sfv('kfd from brldte UD,lrtlm tor 2 mlle•, Ct<>Jld lo llll'llnci Mlow Coon C•rll'on rldut. IUG llOCK CREEK (111 iurl -on nortn 1lde of San G~br el Ml1 .. ~'"v.~,,:O...,.inci1':o •:outti11?1~~ ~:.-;~:grr:r:~1",;,Tr •. For•1t baundlrv 8 lG TUJUNGA CllEEK, LOWEii. !Jun•) -l mlltt nortll of Sunland. Stocked In vlclnll't pf Bii Tulun11 Gu•rd Sltllon. SIG TUJUNGA CllEEI(, UPPER (Feb,•APr.) -Off A.not!n F-st ~~:fw: .• ~~'.,!., no.";,'!'d °'to 'U.,'Fc'r~l1Y11'~? Wlckl11t1 C1rT1111round. BOUQUET CANYON CREEK (APr.· Se11t.l -Norlti••tl of Slutin. Road e1r1flel1 1trt1m. Slockfd from 80t.111uet 11: ... !"l<llr dow111t,..1m for ' mlln. CRYsi"A\ LAKE (M1r>Nov.l -In Sin Gtbr •I Ml1. 2• ml\tt """' ot ~.. y;._ 5tn G1brl1 C1nvon Road. JACKSON LAKE (Ml t.•JUfltl -In 9111 Pl1>n Re<:re11!pi1 Ar ... b<tlween V1lvum1 •rid Wrluhtwood. LEGG LAKE (Nov .• Jun&I -In counlY recrNtlon tr.,, on ~·• llde ot Ro•-•d elvd. """"" El Montt t r.d WhlUltr. LITTLEROCI( RESER\10111: !J1n.· Junel SoulM11t pf ·P11mc1111 on dt11r1 side of San Gtbrl•I M..,, T..,rn ofl ~wv. 131 fwr milt• we1t of Llttlrock, "'°IOI.Ill! lo Ille rtilrwlr, PUOOINGSTONE ll E $ !!: ll V 0 t ll {NO\l,•Mtr.l -Ngrthwnt of Pomc<r.a, Turn off Sin 8•rtW1rillno F•eew1~ on San Olma1 Ave. off rtm<> •ncl 110 norlh l mll• lo r••••volr. SAN DIMAS RESE RVO!ll !~tb .. "Pr.) -Norin of $1n Olm1s1 f•om L~'~!~~l~dinv:. Gg~h l m 111 on SAN GABRIEL lll\1£R EAST. WE~T .ANO NORTH FOii.KS C~!t Vllr '"C!PI North Fork M•r ,..,,.,..,. ) -All ~ ... ch~ vlt Sin G•br/•I C1rwon ild. norlh from AIUJI. 111 Fllf'k enters Stn G1brlel R11trvolr tbo\lt 10 m 111rll Of AlllJI, Is rtockld from .... r 111 mou1h UPsttetm tor l miles to C11tle C•~Yon Guerd S!111on. Wnt Fo'11 •nd Nori!! Fork lundlon 11 h41H mil• Oii UD m1!n UnV'On •bovf Jl!r.con Gu1ra Sltllon. P11'c cat at mouth of Wtl! Fort Incl tl1h llflllrtlm 1 mil••· North Fork P1r11!el1 "11tn tln~on ""'d tnd II J!OCkl!d tor 3 m1111 lust •boft Ill h•ncllon With W11t Fo>rk. Area Tennis SumJllaries SHAt, CWIH!AD DESCENT NEEDED flOM Bl!llED LIE WITH THIS COUPON BEAM & BLINKER LANTERN 99~1TERIES EXTRA • Pow-1ul whit• bl•m plut •eel Hf1ty blinli:I!' • OoNblf twrndl• doublH u 1u1nd • • fo1 .. homi, auio. bo~. ampin_G C\'ent. Later, on the 387·yard 13th hole, he birdied the par-four AUTOMOBILE STEREO INCLUDING FOUR 5" SPEAKERS e FACTORY CLOSEOUT LIMITED t;>UANITY 2995 e NEW-NOT REBUILT e NO GIMMICK e COMPARE WITH ANY A & H Instrument GUARANTCL h•" ... IU ,,.,.,,,r<• """""'" "' ,,,. ooc ........ ...,..., ... '""'"-'" .... "'' ........ ~ .. , .... ~. .. ................. , ... llt.•11 .... d•''"'''"""'""' "'' .... . """'"'"·""'" _,,,., """"'"""".,'~' .,.~'"'" "' ""o·"""" '"'°'" "'""" bo ,..,. "''"4> lf<>I •x'"""' '""""" •-'""" ·~ ............. ""'"· .......... fff .. """'"' ~ ....... ,. .. , ... wl'''"'"'· '~"· ""'" ........ -................... ""' "'" .. '""' lo,,,., ......... , .............. , ..... ' ......... , .,,...,,,.,.,) " ... ~'"''''h"""'' "~ .... .,, .. "' ............ "''""" ...... . • ......... ""' '""'" '"' """""'' ... "'""'"I '"°' 10•"0 I ' "'" .... "' ..... ·~· ............. 1o •• " ... -,.,, .. , ...... .,, ......... ~ .. 642-0564 Save s~4 to SJ OO ~~t:~:~::s4• HFG Silvertown BRO I Size j Reg. Price for 4 I Sale Price I YOU SAVE I • Our standard nevJ car tire! 8 .85-15 179.00 99.00 8.45-15 157.80 99.00 8 .15-15 143.80 99.00 7 .75-14 131 .80 99.00 7.35-14 123.80 99.00 TIRE 80.00 58.80 44.80 32.80 24.80 BRAKE • Built ll'Jith Dynacor® Rayon Cord! "ionger, smoother, more comfortable ride! NO MONEY DOWN ON TIRES AND SERVICES W1'fffiT.r1s·cbliPoN . .. REPACK FRONT ROTATION ADJUSTMENT ~ WHEEL BEARINGS 11: c c i• c ~ 1· ..... ,.tflt ' 111 I ur11 ... .., ... ~ 1.ii.11 ....... u. ' APlllf•tll ·-· t1r-O!<C C1r-l)l1C &-lfl'IUll'I I r•-•·• M•&ber lrlkff MIShrt C+llPtM Goocl MCM'l.-frl, C1M.1pon1 Good Mon . .fri. Co11pon1 Good Mon .• fri. hp[r1 Morch 31, 1969 E11pir• Mat(h 31, 1969 I· E11pi,.. Marth 31, 1969 COSTA MESA WESTMINSTER JONES TI RE SERVICE L. J. LITTLE'S Bi~ 0 Tire 2049 HARBOR BLVD. IAt Bay! 7352 WESTMINSTER AVE. PHONE 540-4343 or 646-44 21 PHONE 893-5572 DAILY 8 am· 9 pm • Sat. Til 5 pm DAILY 8 am. 7 pm • Sat. Til 5 pm OUR OWN BUDGET PLAN e BANKAMERICARD CAA2' e MASTER CHARGE Soe MISS RADIAL AGt Pf!Sent Monday A Tuti!ld.ay Ni11h1 1 tt the Movoe11. The N1mt ol tl'lt Game, T~• Ou11Jd1r, 11nd lron11dt1s on NBC· TV. ~ ~ ' - ' ' ' \ • '!,. ' i ' i • \. I f " ! .. ' l ..::. • • • • • , ·, J ' • ' ~ -.-- 'l FESTIVAL OF FASHION They 're oil on para de ••• delicate subdued I pastels ••• resonant, vibrant, smashing hues · ••• all sunny colors that herald Spring! New lines .•. new looks ••• all brought together in this specie I Doily Pilot edition! { Fashions for the family ore here; reflecting the newness of Spring! DAILY PILOT • ........ --·-•e plte Pa~I• No Changes In Militnry Code ' Y.AYDM:lltf <CPn -,,,, _ _.,. codr " --..ar """""' ......... lor ... 'ta: '"' ew. fst•re ..,ar ~ a:iCity S!!P.IP tilt c.s. ~·· • lillp P1ll!!bh .... .....,1'!'1'-~ !"rd Bar5ma. ... -~· Mlj?l!nit cmatld i. dtqr " ... ""'"7. Ui\11 l'PJ Ir! u ~..ies tmt mY l ~ main n:aam: 1CI'" reWnq w mdr izi r.. Jft:S5 tum.· • _,, -" .,. kDon ,.bid :icD prucun • JI 4 ..-.. ~­Zl cmsmc: n ;~ ~ , lit !'el}·q «Ill aDld cir,P ·llC • ~--!mn. l.. lC •llJ' ; llC'"1 :a:::8 tm.' lilt Clill5r Dr • .liea!""- ,~ -ttbsl~ . c:rin·.mctd tbr aidr'• me ==-0 p<r-D. llmi!iO& • ~ ill iiiini -MllR.. rrl.----d. blr5I ns mCle!' nr ~ H d. ti1r la:!. tn£.cn k~ ""~mpre•f cicit rmfhC"• imfV'TA!d ti::ia1 !b! • ;rlStlDl!lD d ~ .. ~ ~ :.nil £mid ma ~-­ Bzr±no ..;a, addioc• . -a .hm:D • &llW ::m- ~ a. t•)l:•ti Te . ,.W lll:l'J tfG11"""1 • J :t'lcl;d imD matmc DDt DY":lf"UI U" Cami ••INdn'1' ~u~~. ""E"rell if be fnt aWJ am-- mm i::i~ • ~ 1!it ~ pPfl"l" er 9iim ctn~ !Be drcneu!J .. ·-i.,i...i....-. h:l i:nzm mr a :rrsc....,. 1.&I ~ 'l's"*®' ... Brtm> ,.;; tho ... Is ~ • liwili•c ... • -•• ••@-'J -~ e.-•-•P. ~ j h .11 •5-1 llJfl1ils: tlrllZlll &al•"--. ~ --P"l*--meam fll iitt1z•tar. _.. ....i!r..-m. B.111 jii+•a• a r e m- lW..,C lt .me ---tit:& Prial: ... --~·and 11d1•1•w:Scm c•a<eersi.Jl fie::wdws ti 6r Dll!!lll'J'-Tbr! art' IJl"' 1fio11J - ~ 111 ta1k la thr ~ ....... lloal:ll ...i """" ~mE;ln ---.... ilra!. •'""'nl" it ii a ':itilal!itm at tbr eudr.. ~ ·-pmalrJ' Ir~ •m1t•laa - aaliml. ii c a e be limn ... .11 .... q. tDr Str.o .. " il!Iio.-)' - ~-........ -!ht PaW .-en sub~ 1121 ~ DllllliqJ ..........,. --....... t:ie .. .._. ~ •• SPllH on11SS? FllST STOP -IEllEIT'S • ' DOUIU PEASTBl JACXET ~ $17.11 ...-.~ ;srx~1<, ! • • IH SIZB 1-11 120 f f I i ' nlMMER PANTS ,, .... Y•••• I T•I \'iecit o..:r ~ r4aba,e F,...-.. ~ from Kam: of C.i'!otnia. Put klje'Oe a "'""1 cd1o:Uon of __ ........ .., ....... ...., -dot -mlud """ --!i05 eoa..,e ""'-· -"'""'"..., .. lnGir• --cty. v • ................. ' .... c..t.-,. smtr · Dl~AftTMlNT STOlllt::::J 1114 lilWPolT IOUUYAU PARK CONVfHIEHl1.Y JUST A STEP FROM OUA WT EHTAAHCE ••• OPEN DAILY f ,J0-6. FRI. Iii t a may co • little sleeveless voiles with hat gloves and purse A; • / ) • • . . . . . ' . . -. ..... :~::·:. . . . . : . . .. .. ... . ,. .. • • .. Voile far spring ... crisp and clean. For no. sleeve dresses, brightly colored and hlgh- lighled with while. Easy-moving little shqpes pieated. belted. and bowed. Moms will love tl:e easy care of cotton crnd polyester. a. shoulder bag, white, hlacl: I.SO b. while nylon stretch gloveS 1.50 c. SCJaw hat" lrom a collection C.11 d dotted swiss. white. 7-14 11.00 e. navy and white, 7-1 411.00 f. yellow with white, 7-1211.00 south coast plaza, san diego twY at bristol costa mesei; S4'-"21l shop monday through safurday, 10 am to 9:30 pm ' • • • ' -~------..... --~---_ ~ -..... --,--..-.. -.,-.. _., .... ._...,.,.........__.. ___ ~~--~-"' • •-• e ~or---·-,.,----. ~---· MeNamara's Pet No Fight Penmgon Ending Du~ on Plans for Plane Debt ~e ' ' ' WASHING'J'0'1 (UPI) - Pruldt:nt Nlua bU 1aban- dooed his ' pl1li to ttJluer the nitiooaJ debt Jtinlt .JM wW urge the Senate to pull qn. changed 1 scal,td-dow~ ~ billion increue 'vol«! by ttie House, key, Ra.pub 11 ca a_ sl!nator.s said today. · WASHINGTON (AP) -The new Pentagon leadership has all ·but shot down the FBlll stratepc bomber former defense chief Robert s . McNamara insisted would be a a:GOCJ replacement for aging Bsl~· . . ·' S~etary of Defense Melvin R. L&'ird told Congress Wednesday he is cutting plans for · the swing-wing jet to only four squadrons -a nominal 60 planes. Three years ago McNamara was proposing 250 FBllts - var;anl3 of the controversial TFX design -contending it ""'OUld be about as good, and Jes~ expensive, as another ad- vance bombtr the Air Force could de velop· to haul its nuclear bombs in the 1970s. Laird made plain he w,a.11 buying the four squadrons mainly to recover somethi ng from the vast funds spent on the program -"to salvage what we can of the work in Process," as he put i1. Despite months of wort, Laird said, the FBlll 1'is 1tlll experiencing development and production difficulties and the cost per aireraft continues to mount." In an even more damaging comment on the McNamara theory, Laird asserted tha t "the FBllI will not meet the requirements tor a true in- tercontinental bomber." "Pentagon officials said the SO planes will cost $1.7 billion over-all, which includes heavy research and development ex- penses. McNamara originally estimated 150 models would cost $1.9 billion. Laird said he would ac- celerate efforts to develop a complete.ly new nuclear-equip- ped plane. the Air Force calls the Advanced M a n n e d Strategic Aircraft -AMSA. Laird proposed spending $100 million to move toward full-scale engineering develop- ment for an AMSA in the next fiscal year. B·aj & (li,.Jlej . {J'J {jojjUl'C{ · In separate 1¢t~, ~ John J . William• of Dtlawm and W'1)aoo ·F •. -ti ol u~ predlcled 1peec1y Senate>. approval of the bill -paSled by the H..,.. Wednesday - to boost tbe cfebt celllng tem- por-arily from the present $S65 biDlon to f3'17 billion. The limit will drop to the "penna'hent" ceiling of $345 billion on June 30, 1970. ,- Nixon originally a s k e d Congress to change book- keeping rnethods to exclude about $80 billion which the general treasury owes to special government t r u st funds like the social security and highway funds. The President's plan would have, in effect, increased the limit by $17 billion although it would have looked on paper like a reduction. Williams and B~nnett, the seniol" Republicans on the Senate Finllnce committee, predicted t h e Nixon ad- ministration would not ask the Senate to reverse the changes made by the Democratic-con- trolled House Ways and Means committee. POLITICIAN DIES L,Hnder '""" ' L(>uiSwna Political Czar Dies NEW ORLEANS (AP) - LeandU H. Perez Sr., a short· tempered political ciar once excommunicated by t h e Roman Catholic Church for resisting racial integration, is dead at the age of 77. The mu!Umillionaire boss of oil-rich Plaquemines Parish, whose .wrath at various times centered on Negroes, Jews, political opponentll and the U.S. Navy, was stricken with a heart attack Wednesday night at his Idlewild plan· talion. Legislature in Action Filipinos Withdraw . Viet Unit MANJi.A (UPI) A IPOblman !or the Pb!Upplne -loday llUIGUQCed Uie ~lpr.:.thdr.::. ~.! Vlttnam, to be nplaced by docton and nunas. • President Fmllnand E •• !f,tl'COI and a de~allon ol conarWiobal leadm made the decision in • polley mettlnc; Wednesday, ap- parently for economic reuona, the spokeanan said. .Philippine troOpi have been In Vletnam for 2~· years, seldom llghtlna on the ba~ Uefleld but ins\ead worldna ·In -whit they call "civil action groups," or pacification ·teams, among t be Viet- namese. The spokesman, an aide to . speaker of the house Jose B. Laurel Jr., said MarC06 left the final decision to the con- gress, since it made the decision In 1968 to dispatch 2,000 troops to the war. There was no doubt the con- gress would pass a bill in its current session pulling out the troops and sending in a medical team instead, the spokesman said. There was no indication how many d!fc- tors and nurses would be sent. Who Can Read Just One 'Peanuts'! DAl\.YJILOT rt. Seandal Just Aussie PM Linked to Liza Minelli CANBll:RllA ( U P I ) -by Labor member Albert Prime Mlnlater John Gorton Jamea, who quoted t b e today duiled "u a paci of macazlne '"ntlngs I Hear" Uea" a.:.maautne artlcie Which ~ut the private life or hinted at bla mldconduct with Gorton. LIJa. MIJ>etlJ> the dauplef of James raid the mogazine S1-Judy Garland. publlsbed an article llatin( In an emotl...t J~h that an Enalish publication btlon parllamtn~ ~Hld , <alled "Private Eye" had In·. "as ·far u I am concerned, tended rwmln1 a story about for .,yS.K I am perfectly an alleged Incident In Ball, 1atlafled wtih my conductl ' a' Sydney nightclub a n d nie prime m.inlster~I eJ· Clnberra . planation followed Wednesday "I have beeh the subject niabt's 1peech in the house of a scurrilous whispering campaip of sren · bltentlty /' Goriflll told ,.__ "'lllll publication hn beeo tleocrlbed Q 'Th' SJ Smear.' If I "One i:.! not. like to brlnl in narnes of iodtvidua!J Into the bo""' wt ~ ,lndlvldllll referred to by Ja.mes bu bttD interviewed (in New Yori!:). "I' refer to Liu Minelli, the d1ughter of Judy Gar1and,d: Gorton said. "St.. d""'1bed lhe story a.s a pact of Jles." Deputy Prim• MJnlslor.Jolm Mc Ewen said Gorton hid assured the house that his conduct had bee~ proper. SB A Ch• f s ud "l have no d<i(Jbt thlt the ie to t . y ~~~:~1~i:fl:~ed"'.n": u their prime minister and Re ported Mafia Loan ,.=:=;l~=···=Wo=" b=1m= ... =Mc=Ew=oen .WASHINGTON (UPI) Small Business Administrator Hillary J, Sandoval Jr. said today he was inve.stta:atiri'g , personally the charges ·SBA loaned $34fl,OOO t.o the sOn of an alleged Mafia member In 1~5. The case sparked criUcism in Congress and a demand for a Justice department in- vestigation. Sandoval pledged "forceful and immtdiate ac- tion." Earll er, SBA spokesmen confirmed two loans had been approved in 1965 for the A.N.R. Leasing Corp. of New York City, whooe principals include John Anthony Masiello Jr. A New Ycrk state crime commlssiOn recent I y in- vestll:ated Masiello'• father and hiJ part in an -extortion case and Maiia<'OlUlected Joan sharking. "I am most destressed by recent reports ot_ ctrtain ac- tions which the Small Business Administration has taken in the past," Sandoval sald. · "It's obviou.s to me althOugh I have been administrator' of SBA for only two weeks that we have some problems," he said: Sandoval h e 1 d late-night met.tings Wednesday with top aides reviewing the loan files. THINK EASTER EGGS Wttkllff l"llli H.W,.rt I• W.UM •1* A All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday. ~m~~~~;:~.·-·.·. ':..· .. ·.·:·~·.---·:.-·_..·.·.· ..... ·.·,~;:·:·~· .. ·.::..· .. • .. ·~·F.~· .. ·.i· ... ·:·~·,1 Al~!!n£n• 8, C, & D . . . . . . . . . . 5.00 DD ................. 6.00 qossard ~psu'fmerico ".Beautiful Veta's 1rmun Alftlll. .................... --- Ntw, dtrin9, clipped sid• •f throtf. Bite~ Ptftnf N"y Coif . , PHONE 642-1197 A ,._ "'O'Ve 1!•rl1 lo moclernlte Juflclary -WI feffl'll !If munlclHI h 51111 C0111lltullon, shorn ot 1ome CO<Jrt ludtK 11 11• _,.. 1no' re<111IA\ll t'(lllf~ ... 111 1sP11Cl'!I. conllrmatlon 11' w11erlor ano' munklP•I A111.,,,,bly tommltlee klll1 l>rOPCGll court IJl>POlllm-ls bV 1 eomtnlHIOfll lo ieNllllt bln<>O. ACA ff, tl1•le¥, lt-S.t'I A,_tlme. THE !ENAT& l"lck9ll~1 -Mlkfl 11 1 mlsdtmMflOr COftflrmt<I 36 of Gov, lt1t1•1n't to pJcnt or clem1111Stl'lte wl11'1ouf ~ 1POO!ntm..,t1,. mlulan In Hie lobby or htllt di tl)e Pe&lpor>ed il\cleflnl!ely 1 vote Oii 1 .St1te C..Ollol llulldll'ltJ All lOlJ, It.. pr-~ed cortslll\ltl<>MI ,,...ndmcfll Jcfln1on, lt.(hlOI. l-rln11 !ht votlr19 •~• lo lt; SCA 1, Pr.flr"tl-11 -Pralllbl~ PtVftsslo,,_ MC>Kono, O·S.n Frtnc:!sco. •I-1tk:li:ell1'1111 All 1021, ll1dll1m, JI. JtnolllfltR Afowtte N••'""Otl Be1c11. C•fleffl -Orders lnvKl!tl!lon of C .. ltlH -AUfllorlzes tru1l&e• o1' hcultv tenure rules by Coe,.lln3tlnq !Ille col1it0e1 lo dellt'lllle 1ny 1f119 Cwncil of Hluller Educ1tlon; SCI!. ~l. c~'l'fe • 1t~te onlver11tv; A!I lo:lt, Stier", 0-!11k•rdleld. M~ll1s, Jt-Glln>Y. SIUt 1"1tM11 Smtt-Aulhorb«t Sllte Air Rtooorc- Ttl -lloooh 11sollne 1.-.a dle~el es Soard to "" Ind ~forq 1t1nll1rll1 fuel TIK -ce<1I 1 ~Ilion fOT tll fQr Jil"IOf dwlte, fGr 11ed c:.ra; All m11nlh1 lo fl'll/\Ce 111>1111 lltm•P<! 11»1, kllolbtrum, lt-CilVlnl . ,...,.1r1; All 7!, 01yfg, O-Portol1. W1l1hll -M•kt1 II unl•wf\J! to 1d- 11'.-not1r1phy -Se!1 new, tlthl st1,,_ V«t1$t ff $ell lood 111 1'1111111 111>re1 dtrd• for ludlllrtll parn1111r11tllY for 11n1tts tile Pr\ce 11tr PCll.lt'ld it sllown '(llUnq•t.-n Ind 1py.g11..,. POt>!OllffPllY "'" Ille Nd<tH or 11'1ell1 A• 10$5, llw for 111u11u Sii '2, U 63, Lnom1,. Culi.ti. D-l.ori1 1 .. m . 11i., lt-011!. Mlllr: -l"rcivldH 1lt1rT11le melhod 11'11111tlts -A!IOWI prosecutG!'• to for "1ennlt11ne minimum Wl'Jol-.le dNirtt crlmln111 wllh 111 ottenws !~ inf 1'1'11JI '4'1C<ll for flOld milk 11\d vol'!'ed 111 1 1lnt1le 1t;T1 ~t :H. H1rmer, c,...m 11Mf lllC.-flr1t1 for vlol1- R-Gltl'Mf1•. Stlff...s 11w n1ln!I crlm-liol>I !If Iii. milk 1l1bllli1tlcl'I l1w1 At lnt!t U1l111 deedly • ~fPO!lll Sii 2', IOD, P111N, lt.-S1U1111. Htl'fl'lef. He911.-C• -Pl'O'fldM no d•IN9n •1111 h11T'Wiuftf s!Mll bw •warded for P•ln •nd 1ul'fe!'- IOllb -RtYIHI 11roctdul'W!I fOr 11'1t. Intl ln 1n 1ctlon tor .,..,_1 l11lul'Y lnlbook adollllon 1no' ~lltr1lwllOt'11 A• er d"lh Clllsed b'r "'-dtfel'ldl11t'1 UJ, 1-tim"M. ""JI'*"°'' Al 1045, D!ddel'I, O.Chult Pl•"""' -Requires Hc-111111 o1' Vhlhl, ltlost 1tlllll'I 1ny flrHrmt, 11tn1 clwllv-T.inl1JM --l"trmlt1 unlwrsltr ,. erl"" flf'ffrms 11ntll U clan 11i.r 1,ale, 19'!11 ind 11'1'9 a:ille9e trull"" I• makH 11 , m1.,,_n« to vloltk con!rKt tor lldua!lontl ;erw111on1 flrt-trm WIK l'ltllllllllMll St •$2, MllS-Al JM, "Qulf'rltly, 0-111.ll lto, cone, O.S..11 Frtncli.co. trl1111 m1d'lln1 Wt• -"'""'',.. minimum WI- t un ll<lrh 11110 1e>111 rMVllfllln ~ mt-Jet b'r 1t1te. -'-to be no "'hff <tlfne ou"'; Sii U1, ll&lltllSon, D-lev-lhtn thole Sit II\' fMllr•I 11PW•11.....,11 .,-iy Hlllt. lncludet plllol Nrtl IR <""" Al "1043, KttchWITI, "ll•l"l lO ~- «otlM WHl>(WI rnu11t1on1 S!l '50, Dtlcl1mln11i.i -l:eciu!l'l!'I conior• a.11~. 11 ... urres silts ..-rt fO be tlon to flit 1t11t It does not 'r1ctlce flied wllh ltw tflfclrc.menl In conefflo <llKrllTll .... tllln 1f It cl1lm1 d11Cl1rt!IOI' 1ble -!>al s1les; st i.n, ••Ii.ft-. 111'1' e~ffl'IJlllon lll'lffr Ille tt!'lk 1!'1d &Xtll'llll• -f'ortikl1 cltltl tnd Cooionilloll TIX Lww1 All 102I, Mii ""°, CDUnTIK from t9911l1tlnt « llXlt'll D-lltr111\ty. ltlthway urrllfll Sii 64, Ctrrt!~ D-AllMrMtY -Ch1nte1 d'1lnltlot1 !if s.n F-ndo. ut1ltwflll 11...-nb!Y to 1n •cllon lhtl l llb ....... occur& ~ two « moni ""'Ollt IRlll1tl.,. -Mtk" It 1 crime tor 1~ to do 1n unltwfut 1ct1 Al I "'""""' to Ulll contrlbutlll'l1 .. '" 11122. MoorhtH. 11-Glel'Mltle. ln!ti.ttw, ~m « rte1ll um-lttMIUI'-l111nofuct1 Nltn f« _.._1 e.1111e1111111 All "" V_.. -1teciulrt1 hl1hw1r ~tral Htw. lt·ltll9 9"ch. to liludy ~ 1t1ndtrd1 for l'ICfH -w.w.,. -El'llllll!t t;Ollnty .,.lftrt th1ntl vtlllclel1 AClt t7, ltvu ell, lt- d.,.11'1,._,,,l to ,...,., 'lll'llfl!'e rtel11f•nls TlllU"9t. to bo'll 11rtv1r1 -IOVITIOt'lf lttM1"' lllcfttftl -Reciue.R Cont•ftl 11\d 11\d lht Sllfie O...rtlrl&t'lt 1//1 l!"m111ov-tt>e Pr .. ld.nt to enKt 111llonal 11rn- n-11 All a, 1r11ts. 1t-Fullertot1. ldti"lltl primer-, tllctlOfl ltw slm!l1r lfllc..""" -L-• mlt11murn 1oe to 11..,. "' Of'ttOll ind WlKOntlt11 '9'1\lh..,.ntftll for SJllClel lduc.t!IOll AJlt 17, 0Ul"!111', D-NIH. -1'1111'11 for h1fldltMlfatf Ind olhll'I V9'1111 -R ...... R (CJlltfe!IJ 1n<I from llttlf to 11• to rl'fllcl 111tnl1nU1T1 P'"l-l fe ~ 11w •rl'Y.,!ll"lt 119 !If 11• 1or comP11l1pry 1""11da11Ct C011nllt'll tf l'l'ltllftntltl ....i" 1,1~111 '" ti P11bi1c ldloolsi Al J4, l . G_, ..,..11 II"! netlcm .,. clote'Cll AJlt 32, 0-S.Cr111"1e11!0. ou.-.1 ... c:.n1n11ti.ntl AmMlflMtlll Tr1-11im -A•rc.rl11ts S10l"50 '""-''""' for Comm~ 9'I n,. Tr.Nllllll!l'lt l'lfltnctll -GIYlt mtill'ltr tf lltle !If VJ11I O!'Nf'll fe rtvd'( lht 11roblflTI• 1111 lor 1ubllc 1Ch1111!1 to ,,,..,II "' lt'IYol-...1 tnd rtC-..i 111v ctllflte$ stuck!ntt r11htr 111111 fCllMI dlrtrlc11 lt1 st1i. ltWl1 AClt ff, V1scon«llos, ftW llM 1t 1'1"'9r Pllbllc "'" 11r lY11t O.S.n Jo.t. $20.00 ' ) GIRL'S EASTER . DRESSES RE U E I • 1111111 SAIURDAY •LYI SIZES 7·14 'SIZES 3-6X All our '7 dre1se1 · NowS.99 . All our •a dresses Now6.99 Allour'6d~ NOW4e99 \ Allour'7dNSMS NowS.99 COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH · (F .. hion lsludJ (Harbor Shopping Ctnl•r) (Hunlin9!on Cen!trJ • I \ -· .~ ... ·-~,.~-o·~·l·V·.-l-LO-~':""'.~~~~~~-,.~ ..... ~-~·~-..,.~.-zo-.-1-96-9~~--~~~~~~-·~~~~...-...... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~r----~----.~--- ... lfaltlllg for Thaw • -Much of Nation , . Faces Flooding ' · W ABHINGTON IURI) - 1 For a goo41y )>Ortion or the ( coontry, one of. the cruelest wlnten .. rtcord Is likely 1 to tlve way to an ' even crueler ~ 1prins. ' Partkularly vulntrable is the upper Midwest. '#here within a mooth the bluut anow accumulations evtr will be turning to water and overtaxing the rivers -arid tributaries lh<it drain the ... tion't bu.rtllDd. 'lbe floodi.nc threJl extends from the Great Lakts to lhe Pacific Northwest and southward • thtodgh most of California and _ about hall of Nevada. M11cb of N e w England also ls erldangered, though not as seriously. DANGER ZONE Federal officials estimate that a fourth of the nation's land area. o:cludJitg Hawaii and Alub, 1les within the danger zone. has reached al arming pro. portiom.'I Already a federal task force headed by George A. Lincoln, director of the Office of Emegrency Prep~.ss, ls · working with local oUiciaJs.. in threatened areas a.crou Ute counirJ to brace for· the' tor· reo!J. F ACIIJTIES CHECKED Sandbau are being stock, piled, fliOtl , control !acllltiei checked. earthmoving machinery and. medical sup- plies made ready 1 e...acuaup11. aw· mOved in. 1 1 The Army Corps o f Engineers. is supervislng most .of the flood p"reveotion and alleviation . e f for t , With a11\stance from ESSA and the departments of 1 n t e r i o r , Agriculture, Housing a n d Urban Deve1opmenl and Transportation, along with the lntenlate Commerce Com· million (lCX::). Small Business Administration, Bureau of the Budge.t and the American Red Cfll&. HEAVY EQUIPMENT USED TO COMPLETE 37-FOOT DIKE ALONG MINNESOTA RIVER Crest From Spring Floods la Expected to Ring• Between 2911nd 32: F .. t 11t Menk1to aJ.i-eady· blanketed with record accumulaUons. "Based on the inlonnation we now have," said the Weather Bure.au'a Cressman, "portions of North and South They Put Teeth in Welfare DakotB, Minneaola, Wisconsin, LOS ANGELES -They call in a Ford Bronco with a Reservations in California. i/ .dick FOR I YOUNG ELEGANCE SUN-FWWl!J!S ••• A-ditocdonilllll, , cotton dotbd-• dreu willl a built-ill 'ba, 'rn.,Lanzln~ or~te .•• ( 5.13·::. •:is. I . vernon s spo!Uwear We1tclilf Pl111 Newport B1ec~ low41, Nebraska, Missouri, and themselves 'the Dent a I portable X-ray machine In one day the Dental Illinois can expect river stages Ambusado'rs. mounted on the back. Ambas!adors tre.ated 2l9 pa·i ~=============~:::Sr===;:;; at least as high as those ex· USC students teaming to be tients and had to turn 50 morelr perienced during the severe They are sludents and pro-d .. "~-and deotal hy"'••••ts away-when it . became too floods of 1952, and they could fessors at the University of ~~ ,,.~..... dark. ANDY HAS ANSWERS - ''There is no doubt thal there will bt severe - perhaps record..breaking - floods on the upper Mississip- The ICC, for example, has ordered railroads outside the area to provide 700 boxcars a week to the Grea.t Northern and Northern Pacific lines to evacuate tons 'Of grain and other foodstulfs from the northern Midwest. go as high as those during Southern California School of joined faculty members in the d'· t 1~. floods · , visiting Visalfa, Porterville. On another weekend they '3a5 rous ;:rv;i in Dentistry who in the last six Tu! d S I d the same area." Earllmart, are an a u saw 40 patients, did so lh1r•" only en• pl1c1 yov c1n find 11\or• 11uw1ft th111 'll•"'J- children h1v1 ciu1ttion1. Chick ihe J11k Andy f••fur• 1w.ry Set. , pi, Red River of the North, I and portions rl. the lower MWouri," Dr. George P. j Creuman, U.S. Weather urd1y in the DAILY 'llOT. You'll lik• it -i n.I 11 will yelllf curio1ity-fill1.! you11~1l•r1. The Weather Bureau said months have made 15 trips in Callfornia; Lt Presa and amalgam fillings, 35 fluoride that in 1952, 11 persons died lo impoverished rural and ROsarito Beach in Mexico and and tooth-cleaning treatments, during flooding and damages isolated areas or CaJifornia,_:the::,.;Tu:l:e_:an::d_:Bu:· ho~p_::l•::dian::' :_.;•:;:•d::·,::•i:!gh::t.;•::rtr::_:act:::l::o"'~· --~=============:!::::===== Buelu director, said. A spokesman in Lincoln's office said, "This is the first time that the federal govern- ment has committed . such. a massive effort in advance to combat flooding." amounted lo $1118 million. In and Mexico and treated more \ 1965, 16 persons died in the than 1400 patients, most of "When the spring thaw begins in late March and April, the rivers and streams -ln this area simply "Won't be able to carry the water that will be released from this hugh accumulation of snow." The Environmental Science S e r v l c e s Admlnlstration, (ESSA), or which the weather bureau is a part, summed it up succinctly: "'nl.e threat of massive floodlnc in the northern Midwest this apring springtime flooding 8 n d whom had never seen a den· .damages amounted. to $181 tist before. million. The use volunteeri take The threat ls somewhat less, free dental care to migrant but no ltss real, in the Pacific workers as well as Amedcan GROWN WORSE Northwest, northern and cen--i}id'M~an Indians.' The situation has grown tral California and the western It all started four ytar1 ,ago even worse in the Midwest half of Nevada . with Dr. John Ronnau of Long aince creation of th e task Weather Bureau officials Beach, professor of o r a l force was announced at a said New England could g~t auriery at USC. Dr. and Mrs. Whlte House briefing March" b7 l'ith Utile damage -pro-· Ronn:au, a nurse who speaks J -still more snowfall in v1ding it escapes substantial , Spanlab, and their children the J00,000-square-mile areas futtMr snowfalls. made &he first trip into Mex.ico ~-' Beauty Salons CAPTIVATING CURLS ... CAJ>TIVATING COLOft • .INSTANTLYl , Amlio.~Uf. --· __ _,, ·-- I 75c Curls to caress your head ••• and inatantco)or to. caress your curls with eoft glowing beauty t Jt's our "Fanci-fu'U"oolor; in ridl, natural , looking hues to cover tray or ref~ dUp hair. in soft pastels to tone lightened·hair. J:io 1 peroxide, no .ft.er-rinse, no waitini': Fana-!ull I works while our atylist &eta ~our hair_:!, ~~t ~~-~p~~ ...... $2H Morid•y thru Thursd1y ,IAlt .. 5 p.m. ···-······-·-$2.25) Fti.,1 Sit., Sun. --· .. ·--·-$1.50 :;1.~ta . "b , .. ,. '"' • ' j j I ~· h :.it.', c .. ta -. Calif. 1'1 I . 11111 $IJftf -·"""' Phonf MHM1 Costa -. Ctlif. UOl;I H9tbW '"""· 11:.Mtrf fl'ltu -...... S.nto AN, Calif. 1M~IW ,._ , ... ,.. ,_ "'~' COiia INN, C11if. ,. w. lfllil '""' ._ ...... S.nta Ant, C•llf. nit Ne. felrvlN .. ,,..,,... (""" "'*-.... 11 Fount1ln V1lley,'Calif. ,,.. _..,..,. vm .... CeftfW Phont KNiii Fount•!• Vallty, Calif. inf 1111._ .. M !H ..... -. ............ A All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday lenne••J ~;tf'~\ ALWAYS ARSTllUALrrv... ' ' • ~ i Why...,...,_ • _ ~ '"iJ Atfnmic pmm? • / I YowlwMr's• ~ ""''-"-' SPECIAL PURCHASE! Scive now on boys' Easter duos! 9.88 Sizu 8 to 12 Regular and slim sizes CNlntt .... 0-'t .. thil gr.at~ to oytf'it yow boy ill• hoi ...... lpOff duo byT-+t -ot --·Sow ptictlsl Our JlodiliotJOI a.ti,""'" '""' tpOft CIOCllll en cnailabl. ill • 3 Wt. mod.I iJi "'""'1• Of ... plaid with ~,., .... ~ .aoas 13.88 Sizes 14 to 18 Regular and slim sias and a 2 W. .....,. ii IOld W.. with coard'""""9cf died: dod& loch • fuAy ..., -to*-cl ... dwotM. blend of ligl1tullfghl ffr/Oft/fltMtttL Alie V¥ailabl9 M ... c.t. Hurry iii Gflod -. 'fWI ,W: """"" .... ...,_ ii wide! COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH (Fuhion l•l•nd) (Harbor Shopping C1nltr) (Hunlinglo• Center) ' -~ ,,/ • UC Team Scientist Warns Archeological Sites in Danger " :STUDENTS HIT BEACH Michigan State stu- . dents work out on beach at Daytona, Fla. as spring break starts. First ro\v, left to right are John Murphy, Tom Burdick, Bill Gibbs , Jack Nanry: .second row, Dave Birchler, Rick Marston, Todd Etter, third row, Budd Hallett. Unwind, Ca'lenda1· Says It's Springtime Probes Oil Pollutio~ SANTA BARBARA •(UPI) - Seven Ulliverslty ol .southern Callfomla scientists Wed· ne9day sailed the school's oceanographic research vessel into the Santa Barbara Chan- ~l to study the effect of oil pollutlon on ocean plants and iohnw. Since late January, aboul f00,000 iauons of crude oil have apewed lnto the 1ea from a le.at under a Union Oil Co., plaUorm, tllllng marine life and larrinl miles of Southun Ca1iforn!a. btacllts. 1be 1eientists are on a iiI- day crul.se u part of a yur- k>ng Study, fm,anced by I $150,000 arant by the Western Oil and Gu Association. Previous survey trips werl!! made Feb. 21).Zl and ~larch !l-7. The scientists will collect badUia samples, b o t t o m lfauna aad sediments and study chemical composition of the water. "Although there is much speculation the effect of the PUILMAN, Wuh. (UPI) - A netlonall,y recognfud ,,.. thropotocilt has warned Iba! the loss ol tbt famoua Marmea: arcbeolOgical site wa• not a freak lpcldtnt, and more such loaes are U\ely Wllal more money ti provided to salvage , Import.Int sctentUlc data. · Dr. ~d Da171herty of Washington StaUl University said the -ol ·throe-!OW'lhs of the s<ienUflc dala at Mannes should be blamed on the lack of adequate salvag~,funQ,s, ·and not OD the failure of the hastily con· structed coffer dam. Daugherty said lf money had betn available earlier far the project, the salvag• opera· ti6ns would have ru.ade the protective dam unnecessary. The lite was inundated by the backwater ol the lo'oli'et monumtntal dam in Januuy. Daugherty said three more dams are being built •on the Snake River in southeastern Wa shington. and archeological sites behind them face tht aame fate lieca"" of In--arcl>eo!oglal ulvase -· Aant!JJ, Wuh,. Is upected1o the booes ....,. acantoly adoquale ~· tiooS. The Army . eno-n be aaved. Usually II 1o Ill doted fut fall, the Ill• - The pro('"'°' o f ... said the money must bo •!> ,..rc.ot of the moat Jmpo<tlnt Jlltlooall,y f11DOU1. thropoJoiy ,.rv,. on both the· propriated by Co n 1 r e s 1 data Is takeo out o( an "1'' I Dr. l1oald Fryxell, a WSU J'rtsideol's Ad•i"'Y Coon<il ,.paratel,y, \Undtr tha AllU. before It la flooded by 1 danl. t<olOC!st and the man wbo \ and the National Committee qultfet Act f'I 1935, and ~ The Mannes 1lte locati.f dirtcted -atlona at the alto. for ,Re<overy of mheological it• Ion& and involved_.... nur Waslllucna prod u c e.d said the anwlntl Ume cm- wnal!iJ. DaJlllbti1Y pointed out tbat bO!le' lr•gmonta of humMJ tlnuity of lnlonnaUon tbat hu The lack of adequate money only abollt five ptrCUt of the who lived appruimately come from the Mannes l1te for h.lstorlcJI data ffix>very; hlstorically ••lu&ble d a t .a 11,000 yea.rt aao, and .a few made it even men lmportp' Daughei-ty said, has always behind the Aaotin. Dain near lloDe and bone tools. WKo than it• aae. been 1.oerloua lll'Oblem In thls11;;;=====================::0;;===== country~ He uid there i• usually enough time to save this data, but not enough money to finance full.ecale recovery operations. This ~ espoclall,y 'true with dams b\IJlt by the Army ~ of Engineers, which doW iJot include the cost of salvage in its · construction budget. Daugherty said money for salvage behind these dams comes from a special fund provided by Congress, which he called ''woefully in- adequate." Federal <.'OOStruct.ion agen- cies do not provide funds for • Saddleback Discloses WHAT'S BETTER Tl!AN AN OMEGA WATCH ? A DIAMOl'jD OMEGA! Its Courses for Spring AtOmeQl,ONofewrJtaur~ia I quolftycontrol lnapoctar.11'1 ·-•-In fine timepi-. . And these two bMuties .,. • atylab as they are ac:curata. ' oil on animals and en· w T · , • 10. Mw nd M t11 V'-run' ent in the S a n t a inter quarter .tl Sad-r~~rv,Mu~k nc ;,.,.•,.,. c11~, Both avalllblo In-or,.now 14 karat gold. Round model wtth eight diamonds, $500 . .. ., dleback College comes to a 7·:t, lh1 Mu11e :tee co1~e ~11oru,, Barbara ChaMel, no one can close this v.·eek )'o'ith regiatra-~:~.~;.. '~1': T.Mu11t o11-predict accurately what the Pht'l,.,'°""• -'hi~" 1A •~tro, effects of this pollution will tion for the ~ring qua rter '"1'011.:.· klenct -po11c1 kl '10a A.. scheduled ~1arch 31 and April cr1m1t1a1 L1w, u . w; _.o ,.o11ot be," said Dr. Bernard C. lr 1 kl na Cr!mTrwl Evidffl«, 6-t Th. bott h d of the ). ect and ' ,.olttlul :Sdenu -Poll! k l 2 Slxdiamond rte1angular1tyte, $450. t SLAVICK'S .iftftlers Since 1917 , ea pro Registration for day classes ComNrMlv1 Govt, 1-10. TTh. By ~e As1oci1ted Press ~1orage chests for ihort· director of the Allen Hancock will he f g ~ J:••,a-,;~~nd-.. ~:~ ~",.:;:ne~~ ~· .. -rts. Butler U n i v e r s i t y Foundation for s c i e n t i f i c rom a.m. to " p.m. Soc u 11.1t1, .. 10 MW. 11 F11hio" lsl•"d Ntwport lt•ch -644°1310 $pring arrived today with .,,,.... and evening classes from 6 soclolotv _ Soclolon-t soc111 ,.,.. mild v.·eather prevailing in studenl'I have dueled .on cam-research at tJSC. p.m. to 10 p.m. Late regtstra-111~10:.._TT~i>Mcri t Pub s,..~ many parts of the oat.ion, but pw with shaving cream cam. Abbott said pollutien has oc-tion will be held April 2. •'fh~r·~rr~e. Ju.rier efl<!i J...,. 2,, with many areas preparing But state ofriciS.ls say the dry curred in an area "";\Jere USC Classes are open to hlgtt 11 W'ln 11e "'' 11n11 '"''"" 1or '~' Yeut Chi rt• A'ceunt W1lce1'it -ltn\:Amt ric11d, M11t1r Cherg1, tto Open Mond1y, fri••Y until 9:10 p.11'1, f 'bl flood ~ b winter h~· ;..,creased forest sc1·entists have collected in· --'-J d t 1,. .... •t.1•m1e YHr -.:..,1.1: o1 me or poss1 e s caus..u y ..., ,.., ;':11.;JJOO gra ua es or persons1 ...i!~·~:;,i~-~,1~~1~,r::_.'t;'"~::I~."--':_":_'_' _':_'_m_-_'.':================================ me!Ung record snowfalls. fire danger. formation for 19 Ye a r 1. over 11 years old. , .. At 2:08 p.m. EST, the run Milwaukee, l't'ls. _ Flocks There for e, he added, About 90 different courses crossed the equator and mov-of geese headed north to researchers have pre-pellulion "·ill be from I a.m. to 4 p.m. ed wanner temperatures into Canada early this year. 'I'hc data to compare "dth ocean and U different courses dur- the Northern Hemisphere. city braced for heavy flooding bottom samples being ing the evening. Jt'1 the vernal equinox -because of the possibility of gathered OD the current Evening classes of one and the coming ot spring, one of a sudden thaw. cruises. two day-a-week combinations t.he two times in t.he year Las Vegas, Nev. ....... Jt's are conducted lif o n day when days and nighti are nearly 1............,~ble to gtt a through Thursday. Classes .. .,.,...... Lo F d are: equal. hotel TOOn\, as good Weather an 1lD AntllrOPOlotY -AnlhroPOla•Y 1 Before the official seasooal got the spring season off to Cul~r•1:... .... A~w5, P11n11n1• 1"':~0. Change, however, warm, sun-an auspicious ,start, hott:I of-MW; Art 20 AoPrK l11ior.. 7.10, w1 E hlish d .,... Art ~ Gfil•r•I Cr•fTI, 7·t, ny Skies Characterized mucb ficialS say, sta e ~y _ ,l.slrol*n~ I G1M1r1I. of the nation's weaiher. Dur· Asbevllle, N.C. -Two 16-•10, TTll. Ids ~ ()bi •--'d-.1 llololY -l lalOllY 20 Intro • tee. ing the fuW ~ys of vdnter, year-o uvm o ua:J cu A loan fund •-help ·~iring •·10. T, L•b, 1-10 Th. und •--..1 •.I~ •-J W -r lus!n~t -lk11lnes1 lA Prln l'.W, thawin& was already er ..., wo::u ouwuo..-:. w we come d d ts 0 1-t::io. TTh: 1us1Mu 111 1111 L-. snring. So the ~·-·•ay wed-rama stu en at range ._1, MW• i us1,.. .. 11 lll'lro M1rk11111t1. \ray. ,.... .lu=ou Co••t n-!Jegc has be•n .. 10. TT111 • .,,1nes1 '' l'rln Mlrct1. Y "nt ' d d'•g part of \'" d -' r ·-....., '-'V J.\~, MWI IU.llnotu 10 Or• Amir et, WI er s rec or .. , Y ,Tffi Teo.> i,ire t bl'sh d b th Newport ,.,,, "'· TTt1; 1ur1...u '°' Int•• ~1" ~"! ·•· t · N SmJ'th and .,_ bride »-··Ua es a 1 e Y e Ty,1n1, 7-t:». TTto.; 1u1lne!s •lA IOOW•• l:'J, i!ft..1.1 ev1ucn m ew . ~ • ~ Harbor Child.ren'.s Theater 1us M.ld'I, 7-t:», MW1 •u1Jnn1 ••• England and the. north cenlral Jo l!foeller, both of Curtice, Guild. • 1.ov •u• Midi. 1-t ::io. MWi 1u11n~" k hea 10.I. l•ln Shottll1ncl. 7-t :JO, MW: pl.anes where dirty drifts lay was soa ed by a vy rain. •nd 1 u11nes1 u G.n Acci, 7·t ::io. on the ........ ....1, """~ flood Buffalo, N.Y. - A Ten-The Guild hltS donated $250 11.11r.m1 -t>r•m• "' &:1."r1m1n111 "'~-,,.,,,_ belle · -•th the lor ·-•oJarships •-he given ,., , , •• MW threats for ...... i""· nessee , touring .,, au..i ...., 'E:,;..,m1ci -·E-lct 1c ,.,,!>' ·r ·~ Maryvill 11 drama ltudents on the basis Here are r.......,rta made Wed-e. Tenn., Co e I• dP1,~,·,,!:.1 '.!!'·e-, ... earn• ,..., Lit, -~ cho· · · find of need and achievement. E M, ... ,.. ,,, nesday by cities around the tr, was disappomted lo '"· TTh; Enl 11 Com• • ' nation on the departing winter she didn't need the boot.! and In setting up the fund, Mrs. ~i1!'ru~' 7.t, "to.w;" .,:, .. g1: tfi f t h b gh The Ladislaw Raday, president of Como 1...: Ltt, Fur.c1. 7..f:JO. MW. 1 and the coming spring: ur coa s e rou t. the Children's Theater 'Guild, • f::'r.fo, M. t~:.:'~'~ w2. Hlll0r1a St. Paul, Minn. _ The City only trace of snow Pamela G""''" -G1rm1n J E!\...,~n11rt, Council authoril:ed borrowing Huskey, 21, of Gatlinburg, said; 7'U~·1~7~ H .. llh 1 Eauc1t1D11, 7.10, $300,000 to prepare for possible could find was in the shadow "We are particularly pleas· ru"iillll"f _ HI•' 17" Hllf u.s~ "'· rd floodi whe th or a friend's garage. Warm, ed to make a contribution to MW· H111 11• Hlst u.s., ..... nh, reco ng n e Hist' l!2 1111c u .s .. 1.10. ~w10•r.:' Mississippi River rises. Funds sunny weather has a 1 s o Orange Coast College since Hl1t JOA Amer H•rll•e • crv • brnught the " I •-1't has a"lst•d us many times 1·1t T, · will be used to plan floodwalls, gouers ou .iu so,::~~~~ ,,.,.,,. "' eiem A,1, construct dikes and place;Ji=:dro~,.~·~· :~~~~=~::=ln=m=a~n=y~w:a~y~s.:":::::~"~'~· ~-~·~'-~''~"~· :"":'~~:•:i'I sandbags and plastic sheeting .aloog river banks. Des Moines, Iowa -1-finor floodlng mi\l'ked the end or wintef' and Jov.·ara braced for major floods expected from the heavy snowfalls. Salt Lake City, Utah - Residenlls were smiling at spring, despite the r,rospects of record flooding rom the 88 inches of snow, the most to fall in a winter in 41 years. Oklahoma City -Tem· peratures rose into the mid-709 to signal the end ol a winter of.heavy snowstorms. ?biladelphla -The last 1 trace of snow vanished Crom city it'reets as temperatures climed to the high 60s. Cheyenne, Wyo. -Snow still CO\'ers tM range w h e r e wildlife were the hardest hit in the severe \Vyoming winter. The Slate Game and Fish Commission provided feed for 17,000 elk to help them survive. IndlanapoU!, bd. -, Warm spring aunsh.ine has sent suburban \\i\'es to t h e i r BOAT BUFFS Al111111 l•ckelley h the enlr fwll • tl11tt1 ll••tl11t elllitor W.,.lflf ... •llY lll'WllHIJltr lit Ort111• C•1111ty. HI• , ... clud•• c"''''' tf lle1t. Int 1114 y•chflnf '""'' 11 I <ll1Jly ft1t11r1 af th1 DAILY PILOT. THINK JEUY BEANS "l'•kffft .... ,. ""....., .... 11111 Ml-1.W U•1M s11so ~'°' C1lf .. '1350 lf1cl C1 lf Accer.li111 te ,1,. B to EE A pretty shoe that ' . ' doesn 't.fit isn't pretty. . . . .. "" . we· lear~ed.!,hat,..many, shoes ago. So when your . . . daughter, comes in to pick out a 'pai r; of Stride Rite party shoes- we make sure they fi t. we· carr{,lots of Stride Rites in· the latest fashion ' .. styles and, colors . To-please anylittle·girl. E BE 1131 NEWPORT BLVD. COSTA MfiA All Penney Stores Open EYery Night Monday Through Saturday All year suits for the •••nof •stlnctlon ... A. Our T-Plvt i-r ''°""" ,..;ght Pis .... l!IOdo of °" incompaJ oblo blend of 90% wool and 10'4 ,;11< thol'o ......., reoi•"""· lmpt<C>Obfy toilond 2 button models in green, gold or'*-.olid& or pattera #Mlti's $80 a. Towncraft Young Gentry wits taiforecl in the,......... of today of • comfortobie i-r •r......i pdywl«/""fO" blend. Uf>'l""""'1nute 2 button modtlo In greon, bluo or blcx:k IOl"idt, or 9fetn, blue or brown patterns in young men's Mies. COSTA Mf?A (Harbor Shopping [j:enter) $50 HUNTINGTON BEACH I Huntington C1nterl ----~ , T a.mctaft-PM is r...,. ..-far_,. -,.,.,.tolfao .... ,.,. _ _, .... loohmo ........ en ... I "8 - NEWPORT BEACH (Fesh ion Island I I ----- DAILY PR.OT T!Hrsdl1, Mardi 20, 1969 UPI Te1'PNI• ll' aiki·ki Tlien and Now The difference the years make is graphically illustraLed. in a comparison of \V'aikiki in 1926 (top) and as it appears today. Jn the earlier photo, recently turned up in the files of l\1atson Navigation Co., Waikiki was mostly a se~. or palm trees. The major building was the Moana Hotel and the Royal Hawa.11an Hotel (L) was just under construction. '1,'oday \Vaikilti is a community of steel and concrete. Part of the Moana is still there and much of the Royal Hawaiian is visibie amid the newer and higher·buildings. Solon Knows Russians Ellender Disappointed With ABM Decision WASHINGTON !UPI) -"If we go to the RoSsians and sav we want peace, and then als.1 are preparing for what I think is the biggest race in history for anns, that won't work." The words came from Sen. Allen J. Ellender (0-La.), flo- or leader of the Louisiana House o f Repre.senl.atives when Huey P. Long was governor and now No. 2 man in the U.S. Senate in terms of service. Ellender can remember the days when be was suspicious o( every move lhe Soviets made. But several trips lo Russia have changed his mind. And now he is deeply disaPo pointed with President Nixoo's decision to proceed with an Antibollistic Mi!sile (ABM) System. "li President Ni:J:on thinU he has softened up the Russians to the point where this Would not hurt tile talks, he is sadly mis ta ken ,'' Ellender said. Ellender aa.ld in an in- terview the situation now is similar to the early days o( the arrils race, but he hopes the outcome will be different. "Years ago, we were the victims -the captives -of the. d e f c n 1 e deperlment," Ellender said. "They said wt had to em- brace the Germans a n d JapaneR and isolate Russia. They had in mind that she would dry up and go away. If I bad known in 1948 what I found out In 1956 and 1956 and 1957 when I visited Russia. I would oot have con· 600ted to that course." He said. "We put up bases all around. We were told they were purely for defense. But you could not convince the Russian people of that. When 1 went around Russia, they asked about it. I told them it was for defense and they said, 'II could not be.'" Ellender said the same isituation applies now. "If we go to the Russiaru1 and say we want peace, and then also are prep'iring for what I ttrlnk is the biggest race in history for anns, lhat won't work." He t.ook another Soviet trip 1ast fall and i!'I just putting the finishing touches lo a report on 1it. Ellender, 78, a 6lll81li.sh, bespectacl<d laW)"'!', ha.! been In the Senate since 1937. Only one illll-active-S e n a lo r , Richard B. Russell of Georgia, ranks ahead of Ellender in letJgth of service. Eilender's eyes crinkle in intensity aad he waggle!: his finger as he talks about when he first took his "let's get alon& with Russia" stand. "Oh. I got the worst editorials. I was branded as being taken o v e r by Khrushchev," be said. "[was called a Commie. But you know, you have only a few people -who feel that way, and I had an election soon after and got re-elected. "I thlnk my constituents feel all ri8'Jt now about it," he &Said. Some trends in the Soviet Union are capitali stic. Ellender said. "I have said for ~ that the Russian people are ac- tually accepting the cor- nerstone of capitalism -in· t:entives," he said. "'Ihis was started by none other than Nikita Khrushchev." Ellender recalls a time dur· ing a Khrushchev visit to the United States the Soviet leader entered a room full of members of Congress, spied Ellender, walked over and em·· braced him. .. 'Mial did not make it on television," Ellender recalled. "BuL I was embarrassed - well. not embarrassed, but taken aback, you know ." He said, "That old man did mo~ in responding lo the will of his people than any other." EUender said there are two things the Ullited States should do: -".Help dispel the fear between Uic people of our countries, the U.S. and Russi.a'" and -"Let the RuMian• have our know-how in agriculture. (Ellender is cl>ainn<n ci the S e n a t e Agriculture Com· miltee). I would go so far as to let them buy some of our machines. Anything to gel their people closer to us, and show that we don't have ho™ on our beads. Now, make it clear, I em not advocating taking any part of their system of government -I abhor il "But in my book , peace will not be attained this century unless the fears can be dispell· ed." fashion's rim ••• the collar •GOLD PIG SKIN •BLACK & WHITE SPECTATOR '2600 by ntiiipelym 'lllh ., .. 111 e1-dt tlegance-lhe beautiful bnoolet edgo. .. Wear it for lho Jiut bmk day ••• yOll'U be utep ahead otlheenthe fashion scene! CONLEE - pj..,\, y•11 ew, e 11 ft91, ''''"'· be"'•• rid, ~•"Y• bl1,k ,,11, bl1,. p1+1 .. 1, whit•, t11fy. ES 1831 Newport Blvd ., Costa Mesa India Says Birth Rate Controlled NEW DELHI, India (AP) -Prime llllnlJl<r Indira Gandhi said 1'lt>doy that India'• birth rate, long a key factor ln the naUon'a hunger problem,. "ii under control and we are trylng to bring it lower." "Our population iJ srowi.ne only because fewer babies are dying and people are living longer," Mn. Gandhi al.id in an interview. "The number of babies bc1og born on a per capita basil is probably 1oing down ralher than up." Throughout India'• 500,000 villages there is a growing awareness of the nctd for br· ihging down the rate ol births, Mrs. Gandhi declared. "It is not something you can force," she added. "Tact must be used to persuade peo- ple. It is necessary. But once a villager realizes that his child is likely to live, he won't have as many babies as he did when they were likely to die." The birth rate st.abiliza. lion-India has about 525 million peopl&-is helping to overcome India's chronic food shortages along w i t h ir· rig:itlon, the use of better seed& and fertilizers, she con· tinued. ;'Our No. t problem is the gap between the rich aad the poor in this country," Y.rs. Gandhi said. "We are tying vety hard to help the poor, but every stop we take sums to open another gap that has to be filled. When we bring wate.r lo irrigate farms in one area it increases the di!parity between that section and the one that does not have water. When you start a free library, the people who can read Why shop Gbout At frantic pace? Your Easter's at the Easter Place! ,...,. ..... ..,. ... ! ................. . ....... .,..kz4. t .... ..c.Grmt,,_ .. _. ,_.,_,, .... ..... ... ......... _t.q, ............ ,_,. ........... ,y • ....,i ...... ~"'-.. benellt mote lb.an those who cannot read. "When the economic 1ltu1~ tlon lm.provu there will be greater self-rdlance for the individual and lcss tendency !or people to band together •into groupa which can be ti· ploited for political reuons." Mrs. Gandhi expressed hope that a new attitude of patience and nexlh1llty will enable India lo live at peace in 1 troubled world. "Whose borders are quiet?" the prime miniJtcr dema.ndtd rhelorlcally wtien Wed about India's relations with Red China and Pakistan. "In the state. ol lbe world today, even if the borders are quiet, a country like India CIMOt relu. It must be prepared for whatever comes." Mrs. Gandhi cxpre11ed hope, however, that whatever comes will not include renewal of the wars which flared with Red China in 1962 and' Pakistan in 1965. but to learn to take some things lighUy,'' she said. 11But the houri do become Ion,, especially when Parllament 11 in seuJon. 1 come to the office at quarter to I in the mornin1 and stay often until 9:30 at nlaht."' The 51·year..old w l d ow declined even to speculate 11 to whethtr she would remain in poUUc.a for the rest ot bu life, Her f1tber, Jawaharlal Nehru, was prime minllter from the ilme lndla became Independent of Britain In !HJ unUI hil death In 1164. SM lndi<:aled that lhoo ~· one th1ne to come is a more modern fma.ie ol. the COqrt11 party. "One of the troubles was that there were rigid attitudes on both &idea in the pa.at," she aald. "It was the sort of thing where I swear at you and you awear at me. That doesn't get you anywhere. I don't know if the softer approach, the altitude of not getting irritated when the other fellow swears, will work either. It ia really a shot in the dark, but it iJ worth trying." STEREO SENSATION! Clad in an orange sari and with a broad gray streak in her dark hair, Mrs. Gandhi smiled when it was remarked that she seemed to have learn- ed to live at case with the 1;iurdens of belng p r i m e minister. "There has been no choice The colorful sound of Orange County Music RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM .,. From Fashion Island, Newport Beach All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday ' EASTER SPECIALS • We've got "Spring Fever': •• bath towels, that isl Cob ..... , ....... ~ f_.o tt.m9d .... ..,.,. ticlMol -~lhat-•riot " ..... flower1, b.oetihilly hi..g.dl ~ • ,..... bath iii blUD, .... gold ... ._....,, ...... ....... _ 1.66 Hand towol ~doth 86C .-.c Penn Prest• pre-school boy's pants U-Grad styk ....... ...,... __ .. ,....., .,., """'*''--bl.net that._... .... ~ jutt _...~_,.,.... 0.--•• olM. tw.. bru.m U-GfOd ..,.. ..... a.I ~ k:rar ... S......t 1.99 Clulch p.,,... to rnat<f, oll yout" ~pring and summer d0thn, gals! This is vwy opedol wluo, -I Girl's sheer nylon ponty he.el SN'• '°""' ....... ,_ ~ ._y,. .. W Glrl'a Penn ......, lvft 111,.. th;ot "OJ ,....ny without _, lroninvl ,.. _,,.,""""""' .. ""' ,...,.,. ... .._""""'" _ ..... ,,_,,...,,..._ ...... -........... _,..... __ ~ '°""°" ,._.. ..,. ._ Ill ......... ....... ......... Ho ......... ,...,. ........ a.M.. ri.. ,..,....,cota.. Wtood ._...,. .... _. ...,_... ........ .,... ..... ..... .._...u. ...... ...., ........... ,._. 99C 99C •1 2.99 COSTA MESA HUNTINGTO N BEACH NEWPORT BEACH (Harbor Shopping Center) {Hunlinglon Center) (F•ahion lsl•nd) -- Build That Business In the Sky ·----•• , Ii ., ... • • • ..-&=7""• 0 •.• 41" ....... Tl ---·· I ~AILY PILOT IJ A~my to Act With Leniency on Mutiµies ·- WASHINGTON°(AP) -The -prooecuted UndeT' the mutiny made the fw'ther reduction 8-'s chief <OOCmJ WI$ l, each bellli dish0norab1Y obey an ofllctr't order-lo~ Anny plans to ac1: with con-charge brought prison terms in sentence by actiJlg under that tho public mtght lose faith dJBcharged an<! forftltlng au "l'· and begbl tlltlr day't -II &i.dertble kmieocy re:vlewing -of as much aa 16 ytars. a rarely 1ppUed cltmency--tn the mllitary -system or' pay. routine. Army MP'• ~ - stiff court marUal oentences ~' of the flrSI case authority. justice aod Ille whole legal The Presidio demonslratlon th<Jn Into (be bulldlll&. ~ • . tnvolvmg Pvt. Ntsery SOod, In the l'lOlmaJ cour&e of setup would be undermined occurred Oct. 12, 1968, three p r i 1 o n e r 1 olferecr M B given 10ldttr1 convicted of who originally got 15 years, events, he wouJd have left by disunt. days after a stoc~ade cu•rd resistance. 1 !1;,?!.,~~ motiny lo a C'.llforn la were flow• to \Vashlngton it to lhe Anny Board of Rall>er than pass ctown Im-fatally shot a prisoner who Under the advo~ stockade la.st'Ociober, it was Tuesdfly IO that the Army Review to pass judgment on p~ and quite poutbly U.. began running after moiking gnener11'1 decision ~J; The abs~ of gravity and learned tOday. advocae general could cut the the appropriateness of the legal edlct.t lo !int-level legal taunting remarks. Sood'• diahonorable dJJclbar :iir in outer space may some-The decision re eels a high-senteoc:e to two years. sentence. olOcera handling the cases, On Oct. 14, 1968, when and pay ~orfellure sen day make it possible to level Army conch.~ion on that Only 24 hours earlier, Lt. It is wxlerstood, however, the Army dcclded to let the stockade priaonen were still stand~ , · manufacture products wb!ch muUny cbargee agalnst, Z7 in-Gen. Stanley Larsen, Sixth that Secretary of the Army triall run the course. assembled for roll cell it 7:3' The Army la not pnd.ict.tnl' cannot be produced on earth, mate. of the San' Francisco Anny Commander, had reduc-Stanley R. Resor bas been Be a 1 des Sopd, Pvts.' 1.m.1 the 27 sat in ooe comet· what effect the Sood c~ according to a sclenllst of l>residlo stockade wtre 1114<1.· ed" Sood's sentence, from 15 gravely concerned about con-Lawrence Reldtl, Lout 1 <A. the stockade enclosure ·may have on courts mart.tal Huntington Beach's Mcfloonell vised aod that ln!tlal con-to 7 years. Top Army officers troversy ourrotmding th e Oscipinskl and John Collp .all tinging prolul :scogs. Later c:onfronling th • ... ma1°1n1 Douglas CotporaUon. vicUons brought "outrageous" felt.,ven.that wu to harsh. Anny's handling of I h 1 w.,.. convicted of mutiny. they complained of stockade PrKidlo actused. It coold l...t phDr ic•_!landnmo ,_'f.:,, Wah 1 • St d fMJ t S .,.tenets. Maj.· Gen. K•M•th J • Presidio matter and wanted Olczp!mtl wu asseued 11 coildltlom. directlY encourage If I b It t ys ~~ .... """ .. manager U !I -. a e• Trials of the first four men Hodson, advocate genera I, nc delay in making amends. years, ,Reidel 14 and Colip When the group refuaed to sentences. ~ m the experiment ~annlng ·-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~....:..~---------------"--------------------------....1, division of the astronautics S u s a n Heckman, of . . . '·t tt,':;':8"~;.~;~:ciu:~"'!.:: :,: ~:~~d":~:ii All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Satu•y l. as he addressed the Sixth this spring semester' on Space Congrus in Cocoa C h a p rn a n College's Beach, Florida. floating college. She He described four tqanufac-recently wrote to her turing areas as "promis.lng" parents, Mr. and Mrs. but warned that from a, cost Walter Heckman, 1rom effectiveness view, any pr~ Honolulu, that studying gram for developing space manufacturing techniques will aboard ship is exciting: initially stress 11 pr 0 ducts _d_•_sp:..i_te_rou_gb"---•-•a_s_. __ 1 which are !Wible only in space." -· Dr. Wahl said three of the areas appear as likely can- didates because of the absence of gravity in outer space. They include the growth and refine- ment of crystals, preparation of homogeneous matures and suspensions, and manufacture of perfectly shaped spheres or other bodies. • The fourth possibility could be the ultrapurlfication of refractory metals because of the inherently high vacuum and ultracleanliness of space. Other unique characteristics offered by space envlronment that could lead to new manufacturing techniques in· elude a low vibration level and a natural solar radiation spectrum. Eventually, th e scientist said. space manufacture may be able to compete with earth- bound manufacturing techni- ques, providing that the cost of space delivery and recovery can be reduced to acceptable levels, 9 on Coast On College Dean's List Nine young men from this area have been named to the Dean's List for , the fall semester at Claremont ?...len's College. A minimum of three and one-hall courses and a B average is required. They are: Huntington Beach: Jo n Henricksen, junior, son of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Henricksen, 618 Adams; Stephen Keith, :iiophomore, son of ?\-tr. and Mrs. Joseph · M. Keith, 6041 Cortez Drive; Charles Lomas, sophomore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Milton A. Lomas, 7062 Sunlight Circle. Laguna Beach: W i 11 i am Callaway, junior, son of Mrs. Jack B. Callaway, 675 Dia· mond St.; William Hitchcock, freshman, son of Mr. John R. Hitchcock, 1115 Emerald Bay; Robert Kawarantani, freshman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Takashi Kawaratani, 5 5 7 Mou n tain Road ; Lyle Robertson, junior, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester L. Robertson, 156 McKnight Drive. Tustin: William Cox, sophomore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jay Cox, 14201 Shasta Way ; Stewart Mims, senior, son of Mr. and 1.-trs. Lisso S. :ti.tiins, 11391 Arroyo Ave. Youths Work Well Witli City Aides CORONA, Calif. (AP) -It's been two months now sinct teen-age :students were made nonvoting members of 'city commissions, of this Riverside County city and both the studentS and commissioners agreed today .irs wogced out well. John Collins, chairman of the planning commission, say& he'd like to see hiJ "advisers" become regu]ar v o t i n g members after a bit more seasoning. "We need the view- point of the younger groups," he said. Max Jam.es, chairman of the Human Relations Com- mission, says he's elated over the development. "The young people sparked our la.st meet- ing and many commissioners felt the kids made the meet- ing." Sudie Figueroa, a student assigned to the Human Rela- tions Commission, says she "thought it would be only sit· ting around and talking about nothing interesting, but we get to voice our opinions -we are heard not ooly seen." Richard Mejia, student on the planning commission, says "When you first start out you are all confused. I've bttn reading up on it, trying to understand what is happening at the meetings." Betty Cunliff, student on the Park-Recreation Commission, says "I think teen-agers should have been added to th.is commission long .ago, because Corona is lacking in providing recreation for teen- agers." Corona Is a city of about 15,000. The idea of student commissioners was establish- ed on a six month trial basis by the city council. MayQr Tony Bollero appoin t e d 18 young people as ex-officio members of the four com- missions. Their attendance, a city spokesman aa.ys, has been· "80 to 100 percent" Tricia to Rule WASHmGTON (UPI) - Following in the footsteps of former White House daughter Luci Johnson Nugent, blonde Tricia Nixon will reign ts Queen Azalea XVI at the In- ternational Azalea Festival in Norfolk, Va., April 23-27. UCLA Sets Inaugural For 1st Half Century LOS ANGELES -UCLA's first fifty years will be celebr1ted. th.ii spring with a serie9'of special academic and cultur1t events culminatlng May 23 with the fonnal in- augur1tlon of ch an c e I tor Charles E. Young as UCLA's seventh chief administrator. Most events of the 50th An- ni versary celebration will be conCenlrated in the week of the inauguration. They will in- clude dedications of Ra1ph Bunche Ha.JI, an experiment.al play by the center theater group, an opera by the ·UCLA opera workshop , and a golden anniveraary celebration honor- ing Chancellor Y OWli and distingutshed alumni. a concert by the UCLA Con- cert Band. The series of events will celebrate the growth and pro- gress made by UCLA aince 1919, when the St a te Legislature voted to convert the Los Angeles State Normal School into 1 campus of the: Un1verslty of California. Beginning with a two-year curriculum and a Co1lege of Letters and Science with an enrollment of. 1,250 students, UCLA has grown Into the: largest of the nine UC cam· puses with 28,210 studtnts, t 4 schools and colleses, 7 1 departments of lnstrucUon and 38 research units and: pro- grams. At the tame time, UCLA has progrmed from a virtually unknown insUtutlon to one rated in the top dozen - THE WORD FOR MEN'S AND BOY'S TOWNCRAFT KNITS OF FORTREL9! Comfortablel ' Guys don't know what they',. Mi11"ng 'h1 they er ......... the easy -· and good looks.of Fort...r "°'1'ellef bits. Bodi dad and son wm enjoy the trint- 111 -'>i,nd comfort of th-fashioiiL Mo. will enjoy their easy an. They wash and wear t.ke nothing else! Doa't -Med iulllble drying ••• drip city without puckers or wrinkles! A. Medt T...t•w:k Stripe lc..n. ;. • •an ' 1 Clllp9 tMdtr. >-Ated .... wl ,.,.,.. ....... , ... of ...io..1o dooooo "-. S-6.ll .•.. 3.50 .. ..,. .. -con.. la c-. -- or• cool wt.lie« OtlCM'ted ~ H•1tJtd *"t ,-...... ~ 6 .. 11 .•••••••.••••• ·····3.50 c . ...,.. Tipped -Eto .... w....I -....... ~ IOidt to choose fr"OI? C. wd -........ M • ~slaoight l• C-. IMch. SiE•6-ll •• 2,.99 D. ~ ~ W Mod: Tlll'fl1R1dE ill,_. ---·----beiflo.s-SML-Xl. .............................. 591 . . E. Mell'• Sa au:ble Stitch Mod:T ..... wilf1 tipped -.-""" ---· -· - '· ..,.., -of_,. po1,... .... '""" ...... "°"'· dMlk9 ef ......... ....,, .... ,.,,,, ..... - --. Slat a to 11 .••.••.••.•••••....... 1.98 A wies of colloqUla will bring prominent scbolan from leadin& un.iveni.lies in thl$ country and abroad to dJICU!S qutsUons ot science. social science, medicine Incl Jaw. 01.htt tvtnta Include pttscDo tatJon of the Dumont aw1rdJ for excellence in journllism, a number o1 mot.ion piduru by outstand.lnl film makers ~mong UCLA graduates, and by lhe American c.uncu on :~,:~1o;··v:':ate'':!1 ~~ .-----C-O_S_T_A_M_E_S_A _______ N_E_W-PO_R_t ___ B_EA_C_H _____ H_U_N_T_IN-G-TO_N_B_E_A_C_H--....-- u.s un1vtrsltlt1. The same • study riled Ult UCLA library (Har bor Shopping C.ntu) [F•shion lsl1nd} [Huntin~ton C1ntor) as fourth in the nation in '--------------------....:.---------------------------------------' 0\1erall resources, _ i . -----------·-- --.. --------. ·~-------------·-.. --- • ' -- I•· • • •· ' • • . . , , I NORWALK ........ L MWT. AT SlllDllAKll ro•MT AIN VALLIY MAllOI ILVD. AT IDINGll ·.<i SAVE OVER 50%1 MIN'S RIYERSIBLI CORD .JACKET A. Save over SO,.I Cowal coHon corduroy jock•t 14.95 valu,• by a fomou• mo~•r reversff to wot.r ~•p•ll•llf ~ylon · 6' windbreaker. Knit collar, cuff and wo11t back; zipper front. In cocoa, whiske-y or olive; si~n 36 to 44. • NO·IRON CASUAi SLACKS I. Sav'e •2"-1 Popular fast bock we1tem style dock• in PERMANENT PRESS sturdy coHon twill that needs no ironing. B1ue, w*iiskey, olive, ton. 29-38 woirt. NO·IRON GINGHAM SHIRTS · ,C. Save ~7'611 Zod)'I own .,M_r, Jeff• PERMANENT 1 PRESS 1port shirts haY9 regular collar,witlt penna• ,nent stays, matched pocbt, full M for COMfort. Wosftoble, never n-.ds ironing, Unconditlonolly guaranteed. Woven gingham plaid1; S, M, l, Xl. HI CREW KNIT SHIRTS O. Save 37'411 Solid· color combed cotton knit lhirtswith striped hi<rft' neck and sleeve. Completely washable. With pocket, hemmed bottom. Blue, gold, white, nayYJ a.ailable in si:r:n S, M., L ACRYLIC KNIT SHIRTI E. Save 30'411 Panel ttriP.d 1pert shjrts hove smooth fitting ribbed hi-crew 'neck, short sleevea. Full fosft. ioned for comfort and fit, MQc.hin' wa1hoble acrylic knit. In ouorttd c:Olori; S, M, L,XL 2.99 value: ,.7 3.99 ...... . 2~' BOYS' SHORT ILIEYi NO·IRON SPORT $H.RTI' J.99 137. ~a''·~p ....... :.:~::".' d • ., ,.u., •port .h;,,. .i ~ cotto11 an~ po.lyester wit~ a PERMANENT PRE~ ~ .fini1h 10 they never nffd' Ironing. ATOilable In /. your choic. of blue; lllOld, whlabyJ Sins 6 to 11. -~~ ~·~~~ BOYi' FASTBACK NO.IRON ILACKI :t.99 . 227 h. value S•ff 42'411 Westef• fastbock tfJI• pants with ont Koop pockets ate 1111C1d• for· extra wear h• . j heavyweight diagonal twill Pl!IMANENl PRESS pot,.:.' e1ter and cotton in blue, oll", wfttskey; sin• I to 18. MOCK TURTLI KNIT IHIRT r97·c 1.99 value C. S.v• 50"1 Short 1lffff Mac.IC hirtle neck sport s_hirt. o~-s~aP.9: .retaining cci:ttci:n tho_t's stretch and .1hrinllag• controMed. Macftin• wa1hoble, Jn 1pring ahadH of blue, gold, oli't'e; Slze1 6 to 16. COLORFUL DRESS SHIRTI 157 2.99 value D. S••• 41 ~1 Boys dre11 Jiirts with spread collar, tapered toU1 come in PERMANENT PRESS cottGn ond polyester. Blue, mo i:r:e, rospberry or gree~;. 6-18, ./ SPRING FASHIONS FORGIRLsANDBOYSt Ll'L BOYS NO.IRON 'SPORT SHIRTS A. S••• 16'6.J iUtton down· collar short slee.,. sport 1hirts of · 12f PERMANENT PRESS cotton and polyest,r that ne't'er nffdt iron- • ·ing. Orange, blue, gold, whis~~Y! s~~··~ t~ 7, 1.ff v•I••• · · aOYli 91LL BOTTOM PAN.TS . a. h~~. ~~~ H_~es~ look i'! l_ittl •. boysw~r_I Bell ~ 2rJ7 · poeb; ttyled with easy boxer back wairt, PfiMAN!NT PRE$S , fOnr.I• polP,119r &. cotton in ass't. plaids;. 4 to 7. 3.99 v•l~n . . . · LlnLI aOYS IHORTALL ,C. l•ff aa-1 two'.piece shortall Ht has a mock turtle" solid 26.7j.. color Pitt er tpoff skirt with a choiC. of plaid, cb•d: or striped · ,cotton i(:tortolL Blue, r.d, oli¥e, gold; 2-4. 3.99 val••• · . LIDLE SISTER 3-PIECE SKIRT sn "·D. kn·:t2~1 Periert Easter parading for a pert litt!e miul 289 Unen-look wetklt top• a short 11 ...... blou••.With puuy cal bow, · •nife pl.at.cl 4klrt. Nayt and white ac•tafe-rayon with rwd b~;$1z•3to6.. \ . . . 4.t9val•• llRLS' 2·PIECE KillT SHORT sn 'I. hff iO"l·Two-piec~ stnttch ~on knit 1port aet com6i~•• a 2.77 striped slHnl• topwitt. coonlrnaf9d 1olid color Jamafca.shom. ·, Bright fashion Mad" of °pink, 111ai:r:e, 11ceenr· red, llG't')'J 7-14 . . . ' """'•• ~ . . . . . -. FANCY IAITIR DRESSES. J .... 11 •• ;n.-.;te·s2~T.Bfsi -·1' .. fittte siater .d reun in 3· 8.7 prints and wlln in easy-care Dacron polye1ter, nylon or cotton • ' "ch~ Q low tCM'IO style print or 1i11y ruffle front with printed "akirt. Pink, lllac, 11reen, mai:r:e; Size• 4 to 6X, 7 to 12. Yaluu le 12.99 • ZODYS 'EASTIR PARADi OP PASHION MILLINER ... 4.00 values 2'' ' OROAllZA NTAi. ~AN, rain· bow of aoft organic P.,1al1 cOvers jer• 1ey ttr.kh baM. Wll iM, block, yello"# and two-lone blackJwhi'-, two-ton• pink or or.ange/yellow. PROTllY HATHIR COYDUP.of white Maribou feathers. $oft, packable great fottrcrvel. ' •-Kmt .,._All, a ·com- P!~M. CO't'tlrup of no"f'llty fobtic beaut!-.• fully d,rap.d, elodicl1itd bock for perfect fit; taffeta ll"od. Bloc.k, whit~, beigo. NORTH LONG alACH ANAHllM·aUINA •ARK ANAHllM•PULLlllTON WllTCOVINA AZUIA AVI. AT PUINR ilORTinllMI RIDONDO alACH I. IOUTM ITlllT AT CMlllY llACM ILVD. &. LINCOLN . OIANGITMOlPl AT LIMON llllDA ILVD. AT OfYONINlll . MAWTMOlNI ILVD. AT SO.UT CINlll LONG alACH HUNTINGTON alACH IANTA ANA GARDIN GROVI aURaANIC CANOGA •ARK LO$ COTOTIJ,IPllNG & woopaurr GOLDIN WIST & IOIHOll H. GlAND AVL AT 171H ITlllT ., CHAPMAN&. llOOKMUllT SAN •ltNA°HDO llVD, AT lllllANK TOPANOA CANYON-ILVD. AT lOICOI ' ( • • SAl'E 24% TO 30% ON ZODl'S FIRST-IN-SPRING FASHIONS! • LOW·TORSO POLKA DOT PETITE DRESS A. Save 30o/o! lace edged white linen-look collar and wide cuffs accent this low torso dress with deep front pleat skirt and long placket trimmed with buttons; easy-on long zipper back. Crisp navy a nd white polka dotted ac etate and nylon; petite sizes 3 to 11 . 8.99 value PIN DOT HIGH·BODICE PETITE DRESS B. Save 24%1 Sli·m: high bodice dress features taitored bow, dipping V-neck with a fanciful flounce edged with dainty black lace that repeat1 on long sleeves. Black aceta te and rayon skirt with black pin dot top a vai lable in petite sizes 3 to 11 . 10.99 value TAILORED 2J. LENGTH SPRING COAT ' C. Save 29%1 Terrific Spring coat, trim and tailored with military collar, double breasted styling and body seaming front Ond back with raised welt detailing in front, two low vent back pleats. Novy or white laminated wool -nylon Shetland; sizes 5 to 13 . 21 ,99 value . . . . ,. FASHION ii 647 827 1547 2.99 v•lue 237 Save 21 %1 Whife fashion handbags with the rich look of real leather in smooth plastic that wipe1 clean with a damp cloth. Choo1• fr~m a group of handbags with shoulder straps or carry handles, all with zipper openings, some with Conven• ient outside pockets. ZODl'S HANDBAG DEPI'. ........... ~ .... , .. . -. . .. . ~ \" D . WI.DE LEG PANTS WITH A FASHION FLARE! NAUTICAL STRIPED KNIT SPORT TOP A. Save 22%1 fash ion goes co 1ual with this long sleeved sport top of striped cotton kn it. Choose white striped red , navy, yellow, li lac; S, M, l. 5.99 value DENIM WIDE LEG HIPSTER PANT B. Save 25%1 low .slung hipster pant hos a wide leg with welt seam detailing in front. Navy, white, P.ink ·or brown cotton denim; sizes 3 tp 13. 9.99 value BANDANA PRINT .VOILE SHIRT C. Save 22,.1 Coforful version of the shirt look, bandano square print shi rt tailOred with high shirt collar, two button band, long sleeves with wide three button cuff. Easy-care Dacron® polyester ond cotton voile comes in red or navy print; 32 to 38. 5.99 value WHITE A•NIL® SHARKSKIN SLACKS D. Save 19'4bl A .. summer favorite, sharp, smooth shl?rlukin, now mode easy· care in no-iron Arnel13 triacetate and styled into fashion pants with 26-inc:h wide leg, seam control back, slim band·free waist, zipper and tab front closing. White; sizes 6-T 6. 6.99 v•lve SHllt0 IHAPE SAILOR C:OLLAR BLOUSE E. and F. S•v• 24%1 Fresh and crisp as " 1ea breeze, long sleeVe blouse with sailor collar that dips to a deep sqvttr• in bock. Crisp white cotton ~ith red and navy ribbon trim en collar, cuffs and matching string tie; sizes 3-2 to 38. 4.99 value PRINTED SAIH WIDI LIG ltANTI G. Save 22%1 Twill pants sport a pol ished cotton print .sash, loop holders and a 25-inch flare to the leg. Sunfost,. shrinkage controlled rayon and acetate In _black, white, navy and pastels. Sizes 6 to 16. 9.99 value conoN GABARDINE STRITCH PANTI H. Save 23,.1 Flare leg pants have five shiny gold•n buttons at ankle for added flare. Styles with three Mam control back, mooth fly front. Thom- aston stretch cotton gabardine In white, navy, brown, yellow or turquoise in ·sizes 6 to 16. 6.99 volve 747 417 5'' ' 3'' 647 4'' USE ZODYS NI , SIMPLIFIED INSTANT CRIDIT OR YOUR 8ANKAMIRICA•D1 ••• IATllFACTION GUARANTllDI SHOP & IA I AT ZODYI MON. THllU FRl.10 A.M. TO 9, IAT. & IUN.10 TO 7 • •• LOii OF FRll ltARKINGI ,_ ... • r"' I ' - ' • • ....... 1 ... .. .. ' U OAl.lY. Pn.GT Th~J. Mw 20, 1~9:-:-~-::--:-:.-;,---:-:--·:,:--.;.~_.":'. -: •. -:-'. -: .. -,~.-:.:, •.;.:, ~. -:.-.-.-:"._ -:.,~.~. :.,·.~. ':'. ':.~,.~ .• "":". """.:'"':._':',~.~'~'~"~."'. ~ .. -=:~~:;."."'11'!!!!""'~~~!!'!~!!!!~1!!'!"!''!'!!!!!!'!~!!!"-!"!'!''l"!'"!!'ll!!" .... 1969 Snow )Jeats 1==1=Hl=NK===; 1952 'Big ~ne' SPRING FLOWERS Stop Everything German Way to CutSmoking BERLIN (UPI) -Want to slop smoking! Then cut out alcohol, coffee, tea, pepper, mustard, paprika, vinegar, hot Uucts and big meals. Also avoid people who smoke. That's the advice of the German League for combating the dangers of tobacco. The league bu told persons who want to stop smoking ciaarettes to dial a number for help. A two and one-halt minute taped message tel.Ls callers 11 a first step to repeat • several times daily, "I wW not smoke any more. I will bring my body undtt the con- trol of reason." Then the message advises cutt.lng out such tbi'!-t:• IJJ alcohol and mu.stard which It says tempt you lo &alOke. Jt says they shouid be replaced by apples, bananas, other fruit and fruit juice to break the desire to smoke. So many West Berliners ap- parently want to stop smoking that the number given by the league almost always l.!I busy. Not 1' ery Shipshape The 12,:JOO.ton freighter Manchester Courage finds itself in a very tight spot -firmly wedged in a loCk of the Manchester, England, Ship Canal. 'The vessel became trapped while leaving Manchester for Montreal, and it will be at least a week before the ship can be moved. SAN 'FllANCISCO (UP.I) - , Plcllicl Gu .a llectrlc Com- pany alld Moodly Jillt "wiO j• down lb Ille record boob ' flvallni or l<l,ea rrceedloc 1'61. lbe "!UI l>oe' t u oat •of the worst Sierra winters in hlstory." A aurvey made by PG&E bellcopttir·b'ew1 indicated the snoW is deeper ln many mOlm- tain places this year than ever before. • Now in Our Famil y: I Fa mil y Weekly h. EASTER '!'~ BUYS FOR :';:/ BOYS/ I ls the American Navy Over the Hill? 1 ' 1 ' '. i WASHINGTON (UPI) - The American Navy is an ag· ing collection of warships, older and smaller than the Soviet Navy and unltt for bat- tle, congressional in· '.'..·4. vestigators said today. ~ 'Mle House Armed Services subcommittee on :seapower said the Soviet Navy boasts ' hundreds of new vessels I: searching for new seas on ;, llillch to sail. "'. "The U.S. Navy ls In a "'"< serioua situation primarily ), .i because of. the age of its .,.. ships," the subcommittee con- ' ' ' cluded Jn a 67-page report graphically underscored lllilh photographs of deteriorating metal plates and corroded wiring. The subcommittee, headed by Rep. Charles E. Bennett. (0.Fla.), a decorated World War II veteran, proposed the United States promptly start spending an unspecified sum of money so the Navy would have a fleet of 8SO modern ships by the 1980s. The report said: -Fifty-eight percent of U.S. GIRLS' ENCHANTING , EASTER DRESSES , WITH SO MANY '. EXPENSIVE DETAILS! 5.99 comp. value 6.99 combat ships are at least 20 years old. Fewer than 1 per· cent of Sovjet navy ships are that old. -The average U.S. Navy vessel is 17"2 years old. No comparable figure was given for the average Soviet ship. -The U.S. Navy has 894 ships, of which 521 are more than 19 years old. 'The Soviet Navy has 1,575 ships, all but 69 of them less than 14 years old. American ships are so old, the :subcommittee said, that in some cases crews have difficulty getting spare parts because o r i g i n a I suppliers have either stopped malting the item or gone out of business. Vessels are rotting so badly many Navy crewmen work as much as BO hours a week coping with rust, corrosion and other manifestations of deterioration. While praising the "splendid devotion" of Navy men to keep the ships running, the panel said: "Unsatisfactory living con- ditions (have) a detrimental Romantic to the tip of your toes Block Potent $17. - Sudi charminr d-, ,...11...,,1 both for your East.er chick.! A printed nycm. A-liner with box plea.ta that start frcm the ltitched Yoke. ndled neck and cull& Or a betiste-like .Dacron9 polymter, nylon and cotton bk?nd flock dot with double cryotal pleated ruJIIo&. And both pee.i values! Sita 1 IO 14. 0--...:::: -''WheN Shopping la A Real Plta1ure" • OPEN SUNDAY 11 to 5 ' Costa Mesa ,' 1601 Newport Blvd., al 16th ' IN WESTCLIFF PLAZA 1052 Irvin•, Newport s.1ch G1rdtn Grove -113n G1rd1n Grove Blvd. l I effect on re-enlistment rates." The report bore down oa the ability ol t!:le ships to face the demands of the war in Vietnam. Many of the ships in the Pacific fleet. it said, "do not meet combat stan- dards of readiness," prin- cipally because they are too old. .~ Jn addition, the report said, L -; the ships ·are not bu ilt to han-1 ; die sophi.Sticated equipment i barely dreamed of when they L · were christened. i "The war in Southeast Asia ~ { ·--.. 1~ developed TequJrements · : many of the older ships simply ~ f cannot meet,'' the report said. i (· ' i SMARTLY STYLED QUALITY SUITS 17 95 Comp. ·value $22 Ja -ne' presen ts n 11 t.1;.citing 11tw colltctio11 of drtssy knits. /!and crotclitltd cuffs and 11tckli11e .. , pearl b11t/0111, loo / Krislon yor111 • . . all.IJcnd- was/1able. Pastels ond TV hitt. • 'SO 342.t Vi1 lido, N.wport ~h e ''3· 197(1 Dil~o..d 1-lo!el, Mohtlim e 638·S1 42 •20 Clll'!I,,.... Or,, Irv!~ Compv. e IS3·0333 Hohdar JM rorrn Sprong-i Spring fabrics and colors ••. 1ingle and double.breasted mode&. with colorful print lining and pull.up . pocket hanky to match! 8-12. Prep sizes 13·20 · and husky sizes 10·20 slightly higher. • • r ded pf us we i Alterations inc u 1· •· after free as he grows t__::.=..:-:::-__. .. FINE FABRIC SPORTCOATS BLAZERS 1499 Comp • value $11 Purewooh, \\ool blends ••• 2and 3 button spo11.coats in soUds, patterns ..• sqlid "'001 single and double-b~sted blazeno. 8-12. Prepsiz*IS-20, 18.99. HAU-PREST' NO-IRON DRESS SLACKS 449 Silt$ 549 SllK 6-10 . 12.11 b PEN SUNDAY 11 to 5 . ;;·_ • \ -...... .. . --.: ... Cosla Mesa , 1601 Newport Blvd., al 16th G1rden Grove -12372\ Gard•n Grove Blvd, \ • '' ;~ , .. rt \ r. " ,. ' l J Jans to Travel 1Jean of Women At OCC Retiring Mn. Matit Howt11 dtan cf at Ortnse Coaat p lince the colle1e open- ed JO yean .,o, bas an- aounced lbe will reUre in ,,_ f1bo ta!d Ibo will "have Lucrative Offer Really ls Fraud TURIN, Italy (UPI) -The c1att1fjed ad In a Turin ~ caused •bachelors all O"lt:r Jta1y to sit up aftd ... -1un,• tto..i to the Orflent and South Padfle, and then mue claold clmalt televlslm tapes for -I In ocbooll, hospitals aod -homes. 1blnkin& ol lludenta lhe bu known In II years at 0CC. she they haven, .1 OCC D, UH R!TIRIS changed but,' t ii ollertd to them ch81l(ed their Mri. Marlo ltewH Interests. P one thing, she t said, tete <m has entered ..,,.--+--.----I their lives~ .. She aalc£ It b a shame that {)CC Pia all studtol1 are either blamed ' ces or srai.aed for what • few ·- do ot are. In T , . "For instance, whtn there i, Oumey is • SDS on caippus the tntire1; · .. cam!"' b indicted/' aht 111d, 'lbe cir-'C!>ul Collep turning lo an uperienc:e fneh 1-C oqoad pt the aprlnJ ____ 1,, GO btr mind--the recenl: It aid. :u.1amlly--L'"f~· thwlllillg al • SDS aUempt ...... off lo • WI tlart take notice. director of • f ~ess, to .6i ., · b lac'·· "--In wuted lo eornapond with un-lllUU ee campu. Y P -••~ persons married men. O b j e ct : .... Not many ltudents hive the alx-m.an Ona1s at the re. Matritnon)'. 6ecome radicals, Mrs. Howes cent Rlltl'llde City Colle1e Mote than JOO men rushed said. "The majority of stu-Invitational Speech Tourney, •If lettm to the post 9'fice dentt renaln what they a~ bot number given ~ad. ways were .•. in their late Ray Gendrin ol Newport Tben 1 JeCOll If{ apptared. a~lescence, ~ with Beach took second place in The woman I filled herself their own world. ' champiomhip e i p o 1 i t or y 1 u a form beauty contest Mrs. Howes, a widow, Hves lpeakinl(. DIYe Annlltrong of . wiJUlef asked that each at 181 Broadway St., Colta Costa M:ua ,,.. second place 'tftterested man send a Mesa. . , photograph and $48.80 4'for Before coming to OCC ahe m after dinner speaking. aecretarial ei:penses." was assistant dean of WMlen The OCC Novica also made The mall poured in again. at UCLA and dlredor Gt a stroni lhowin& at Rivenidt. But a Turin police officer, guidance and eoonseling for Lculse Kennedy ol1 BalbM. who tent one of tbt first let· Cleveland high tchoola. hJand won a sup• rt or ten, Sot suspJcloul when he To her televilloa ta p e certificate in the oratory saw tbe leCODci ad. undertaking lhe will apply finaJs. Willie Collinp o f Pollet wen waiting when previous experience as a Newport Beach woo an tx· Osvaldo Jtua:erl, 31, went to drama dJrtct.or and teacher cellent certificate in oral U.. lhe post office to collect bis of radio broadcuting. Tapes terpretatlon, and P e n n y mail. He adrrlltted be bad could be 111 tr at i., e, a-Carter ol. Newport Beach won placed lbe adL He WU charg· planatory, lnsplrttlonal or an uceflent -In tht ed with fraud. eveo bumomm, aht aalcl. flub" espooltory. J' , ..... Quakes,Erup~f!nsDon'tl;_atchA"!limalsNapping MOSCOW (UPI) -Alll:I pick 11J> tl>elr -tOd move out of anthill.I In a mus before earlhquatn. Shrimps· crawl on dry land be!OH a tlonn. Je!l1flah hod fot deep water. Buri leave before volcanoa erupt. Pbeuanlt ch<nl an alarm belora earlh tremon. Even ·~ appears ·to blve bW.lt•ln· W~ mecbainltlM ' for natural catuciOphes, but I.Ii too ln,eMitlve to note them, Soviet tcleotist.t 111. 'Ille medical service in Ashkhabad, neU the IranJan border, reported a dramatic upsur1e In htart complalnlt ln IHI but cardiocrama show- ed the paUeolz bealthy. Within the ne1t two moath1 catutroph!c earthqual; .. rlp- .ped ~ reston. Soviet acitntiltl • I I I d cauttou.ly IOIDe ~ with very mlnori e a r t tr.. regu!ar!Uu mil t perceive amall 11rlatlon1 in popb,yalcal factors, such u tlatlc and masn<tlc llildJ, cauted by the buildup towJI'! ID earth tremCI' • Bui alarm 1171tems m much more widespread amon1 otber living crutuNs. A youth ' I ' new.piper I n quake-prone Ulbeldatan. reported on Soviet aludiet 1n forecuting natural dlauten. It "porttd one Tubkenl woman uld her Spitz deg uv· ed htr Ule In the Tuhkent earthquake " 11111 by drag. gin( bu <NI " doort and away from the house jlut, be!.... the ground becan lo tbake. • The softened suit shape of the costume The costume takes a suit look when ll!e longer, de:ni·fitled jacket ls wom over Ille gently c:rved dress. Worn alone, ll!e dress is great • fashion in its own ri&11t. Cotton jacquard woven checks of navy, paprika or mimosa on white; 8 to 16, l&,IO. Coat and Suit Shop u ' -A Tullll"'! l!hool-- reportad anta --pupal .. thttr ..... .. bepn ..... ---an boar before tht qaal;e. Mountain aoata ... • ~ta tbl Tdl :I • re!Utedto'b.l:'::-~ fotmonlht tbl aod U,on ud oClllr eall later ...... lo .., ' Illa open. •. ms~ ' '· ' '· '• • • .. . " • • '• 1= .. ;; ' " '. I• ,, ' Ir I .! ' J I ! ; • I I I • I l •• i J I ! l j ~~~~~~---.-~·.-c~....-.,.-,r,..-. • ...,,-..,..-,~,...,,...,..,...,.....,,.,,,..,...,.,.,.,.. ... ,.. .. """.,..""',...,,..,.._.,..,.. .... .,., ............... ,.., .. ,..!"".,...,11111• 38 OA!I. Y PR.OT 31 Cars Derailed Two diesel engines and 31 out of 40 cars litter tracks aft~r 'vestbo~nd South- ern Pacific freight train derailed Wednesday west of Fairfield, Calif. Several fires started on cars carrying sulfur. but firemen ignored choking fun1es to douse the blazes. No one was hurt in the derailment. UCI Sets 3 Lectures For P.uhlic The following public lectures \\'iii be offered by University of California Extensioo, Irvine the Y:eck ol f.1arch 24 : Monday, ~1arch 2t - Alienation and Lonellness in Modem Society: Forces of Alienation : Resolution o r Revolution? C. Ray Fowler, marriage and family coonselor and coordinaor of I . the series. 7:30 p.m. 101 Physical Sciences Bldg., UCl Campus. Tickets: fi1.50, suir jet1 to available sea\ng. l\fonday, March 24 -Land I n vestment Opportunities: Managing and Marketing the Property. Peter L. Marr, Ran· cho California Project Sales Manager for Coldwell, Banker and Co. 7 p.m., ~ Fine Arts Bkig., UCl Campus. Tickets· $5.00. 'Tuesday, March 25 -The Mentally Retarded : .ft. f t e r Childhood, \Vha\ '! Irvin~ H. Stone, chief of 11sycho!ogy. l''airview State HospJtal. 7:311 p.m., school gyn1, Fairview State Hospital, Costa ~1esa. Tickets: $4.00. South Co.ast Pla1a ..• 3333 Bristol, Costa Mesa, Phone 545 • 0724 H1rbor Cenltr • , • 2300 N. Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa, Phone 545 • 65l•t --- . Public Tired of TV Ad Gimmicks? Betty Fur1iess Says Consumers Need Help Fro1n Government W ASIUNGTON (UPI) - Betty Furness said Wednesday she really 1 didn''t k n o w anything abo ut the refrigerators she sold so suc- ee~fully on television until she became the Johnson Administration's consumers expert. Testifying before the Senate 9 Die in Japan Traffic Crash OKAYAMA, Japan (UPI) - Nine persons were killed nnd · four othera believed missing Wednesday after a local city bus collided wilh a truck oo a mo1;-1ntai1J highway and plunged into . a reservoir, Seven persons were rescued, including the bus driver who told authorities he was unable to avoid hitting the onCQming truck as he rounded a curve. ExecuUve ReorganltaUoo su~ committee, Miss Furne!!• said she believed It was a "trine premature" to upgrade the job she held to cabinet level. 'Ille subcommittee is hol4ing h~ring!I on a pro~ cabinet level consumers affairs office. But she made clear that sbe thoo,ght the American e<>n· sumer needed help from the government, and she urged a central office to coordinate the federal efforts and pro-• grams de!ligned to help con- sumers. Miss Furness, who made her name selling Westinahouse ap- pliances, particularly refrigerators, on TV com- mercials, told t b e suir committee that the public is tired of the gimmicks ad· vertiser!I use to sell their "pro- duct. Turning specifically t o i'efrigeraton, she said: · "Industry cries, 'Well why don't people read the in· rtruc:tions, why don't they read the warranty before they complain to us?' 1be rea!IOn they don't ts because they can'L Everyone ltie.s to read the warranty at least once and then they give up, You feel like a fool; YfU can't understand it. "l must tell yo\i tllat Wltil Radar Probed To Catch Crook LONDON (UPI) -British police are cMslderhig fitting radar devices to thelr laun- ches to help catch naval crooks who operate under the cover of fog, it was reported Wednesday. The P 0 Ii c e newspaper The Job· !aid river police had 'not ·yet been' atile to find a system ihat fully meels their needs. CHD.DREN'S SHOES Stelsorl hats. l can 't believe any human being buys ~n automobile because a girl wears a white Stetson hat." She referred to a wide,Jy televised series of (Dodge) car commercial& done by a prtUy young woman wearing a whlte hat and short white dtess. very late in my job 'here I thought that a warranty was a plus. I was here a long time before r learned that a warranty on ~ product can very well be a minus to the product. 'It doesn't tell. you what the manufacturer will or the retailer will do, it teuslr==========; you what Ibey won1 do," Miss THINK Furness said. "l didn't' ~now that it can CHOCOLATE BUNNI~( cost 'more \ to run· on e Ir.I refrigerator tban another .. • It turns oth that it costs 0 more to nu\ a frost-free · refrigerator th~~ one in which you do your O\,'fl defrosting. And it e<>sts a go.¥1 deal more to operate a reCr erator that makes its own ice. They don't tell you that. Y get ' the thrill of discovery en ·you get the bill," she ad ed. Urgihg advertise to "use their genius to ' hEilJl the con- sumers," Miss Furrt'ss warn- ed they were baQl)' un· derestimaling "the degrel\,,the public is getting tired I.. ?f TEEN'S FLATS 2~6 They win wea1 our 1fioos proiid!y' Dis spring •nd in the Earl~ PMade. Hundredi of styfes <· .:., r~ New styl~s Md colors in these Oats ~. fOI' "Teens". Weer FKl'W, f« Easter to choose from.. arid 'thrG09h s.ummei'. 96 I.fITl.EHEEL EASTER SHOES • INFANTS DRESS SHOES Shoo ,i.-,, ;. bvt one of sway stykrs. Button s sho-•re pink, blue, yellow. 2~6 EASTER HANDBAGS N_. S~ ..,d E•1te1 colon, style1 end 1nate. riall Mi:r or metch to your shoes. 2~8 ... _..,... .. .,. Newtt.t styles., cof«s ...d beek fo.- spring ·~ Easter pM•ding. Stylei: sl.own .,. but two of m4M'y styles. WOMEN'S SANDALS A. This daSIY ..,.. s.-. ....... _ dal ts m•de ..special- ty for us ie I t • I 7. Stylish, shlrdy little b .. k. sa.3 513 • 691 • MEN'S CASUAL OXFORD or SLIP-ONS NLW "UP-FRON! MEN'S FINE IMPORTED BRITISH BROGUES l ightweight soMs. S o"' t with cushion imoMs., Selecl tell, 9rey, ql"98'ft « b1oww .\uede. LlnLE HEELS This i.s • ••It 9etter •n "Up-Front"' 1tylin9. P1tel pink QI' i<.e blue. HUNTINGTON BEACH 5891 EDINGER at SPRINGDALE 847·9125 Haiw:h.ome br-ocj11e-s with dotrble te.fl.er solet ..d complet..., le~ Med. M•de i" Engl•nd. HUNTINGTON BEACH 10051 ADAMS at IROOKHURST {N1xt tG Se¥-on Dru9) 962·9178 WEEKDAYS 9 A.M. until 9 P.M. • SUNDAYS 10 A.M. until 7 P.M. I ? • ~lieve s an girl .. ide!y ) c.ar ~Uy while ;. i • • • • I I , DAILY PILOT 37 Medical Records Fiel,d Extensive BJ JOYCE LAIN MIM l.1111 •WM"<lll • Mlf'awy -'911it, CIMll1etY ot the lt~I TY-'llilf' C.., lo Mn. ...,a L.wl1, Nnarlllo. Tn,. fw lltr r~ ...... 1: .. , ........... , ... ·~ 1111 -. ""'I• ,...,.,. tltlfl ... triltf' I .......... ._ .. LI ... ,,.. 5a11 llt.lt.L.) ... .. Accntll!M ._.. Tacllaldlll (l.,lt,T.Jf Mtw tMI ~· dll .... 119 Ill ~t, I'"' c-1"'1111 I c•,..... 1111 flll• flti. _.......,.., ........... ...._...,. .............. ' A. -You 1 aid It! The shortage, a n d anUcipeted future need kr medical record librarians ii 18Vert. So severe, in fact, tblt this Is one ol. Uonal preparaUon at the bac- calaureate level, obtaining a bichelar'1 degree in med1cal .....,.d aclence, and passing a naUooal registration es:- .amination. The 1968 median aaliry was nearly $8,000, aUhough aome few -a very few -earn as much as $%5,000 and up. Advancement may be to department director, medleal r<eord coordinator fO< several bospit.al1, or college facuhy positions.. THE A.R.T, .Accrodited record technicJooa bondle the 1.,. complu; phloes Ii the workload, gmtrally worktng U usiJtanta. $5300 WU the median salary in 1961. You can become an A.R.T. by (a) attending a one-or two.year program available i n some holpftals and many junior cot- the few fields I know of in Jeges (wjth the ~year pro. gram, you get an associate whlch you can b e c o m a off arts degree in medical qllllllfied (on the t.chnician reccn1 technolo1!}'), or (b) by level) through a completing the cor- professiona11y-sponsored COi'• respondEnce school course of- respondence course. fered by the profeMlonaI M E D IC A L D A T A • organlzatl~. the American KEEPERS. The m e d i , a I Association al M e d i c a I &cord.! Librarians (AAMRL), record librarian is not a medical librarian, who works to high school graduates who chiefly with publicaUoos, but are employed Ua a medical receives and records the in· records department. Whether dividual medical records of you train in scbool or by mall hospital and cll.nic patients. you n:iust. aJso pus a natiOoal The!e permanent records in· 1 ex~netioo. to become ac-- clude auch data as case credited. histories of illnesses, physical FOR MORE INFORMA- e1aminalion findings, doctors' 110N, the AAMRL has kindly orders, ri,xrts on X rays and agreed to provide free, in sin. lab findings. The records are gle copies, my readem with u.5ed during treatment, and any or all of these materials later for various purposes in· •.• (1) correspondence course eluding increasingly important information to become a tech- medicare and insurance com· niclan, (2) a list or schools pany requlrtments. Medical for librarians 1r teclmiclans record librarians also work (!) 8 career pamphlet for technicians, (4) a career ln medical research centers, pamphlet for librarians. Send the medJcal departments of your request to me In care insurance companies and in-of this newspaper, enclosing dustrial firms, and in local a long, -wtrite, stamped, self· and state health departments. addreMed envelope, Ma r k i\foot are women but more "medical records'' 00 your men are entering the field. outside envelope. Please allow LIST OF UKES: accuracy, several weeks far delivery. detail, and hanging-in-there to * * * get information despite i.n- temlptions. me ll . ll . L • Registered record librarians generally have completed tbelr educa· llf'lf ~ """lllfll tlr MMre <111- fftftll ,...,, ti JW<t Lalft, c-r cw- -· c/1 DAILY PILOT. Setf'Y, 111 "'IH ---dill ... ·~Ill. ....., "'*' ...... lltfff II fM Mii• 11 I fut ..... 1 a""'" will rec•~ • fr" llorll Mtr· CUIJ "rt11>1e 1Y"wtll1t, Lazy, Healthy, Flt Exercise for Young, Not for Older Folks By P. J. 8telambll, MD Are you phy1lca1ly lazy? Are you cmlcllDCHtricken and appreheD1ive becaUJe yo u don't exercise? Are your troubled btcau.st you've been hearing (from doctors and friends alike) that you'll get sick lf you don't jog, play tennis or golf, do pushups, ride a bike? Then hNr this: I have balm for your hurt. I am on your DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE side I do not believe that e1erclte ii easenUal for good health. To pt down to 1pecifics, I have borrowed the UUe for today's column from the title. of my lattJt book: ''How to Be Lazy, Healthy and Fit." Whenever I publish a new book, I am at first hesitant lo announce it in my column. But I am like. the proud grandparent wllo, alibougb be may realize. he is being a bore, can't help showing pie· tures of hiJ latest grandchild. Doctors themselves have been most guilty of spreading the exercise contagion... Too many of my own friends and colleagues ( w i t h o u t in- controvertible sufficient scien- tific evidence) have embraced the idea that daily, studied exercise is essential for good health. I have not been con- vinced. In my book I try to present each side or the pro- blem fairly (When I disagree with Dr. Paul White and other exercise enthusiasts I give my reuons.) As of this writing, publica· tlon day of "How to Be Lazy, Healthy and fit" (Funk and Wagnalls, New York City) is March 19. If you a r e phytlca1ly lazy, buy it to salve your conscience. If you are a mldd1e-aged overexerter it may save your life. In honest arrogance I repeal: read the book. See if you don't agree that we Americans have gone hog-wild about e1.ercise. I believP. lt'a time we saved our tired. o verworked muscles. I con.sider that a half-hour nap is worth much more than two hours of physical gyraUom. Offer your muscles the reluatlon and ease they deserve. I contend that the lazy man or woman can be the healthy man or woman. Exertion is f o r youngsters not f o r grownups. But llow can I hope to COD- • b~ousy jumper with weskit looks like a smart 3 pc. ensemble Compare at. ~12 9ss ·'' R99ulor or torso sltlns with Dllached soft-look blous• tops, plus; new tonger weskit, Rayon linen or bonded crepe, 2-ply conon~ in :;olids, ploids, ~ check1! Jr. Peti1es, J~niors, Misses. Girls' culotte jumpers + sunglasses or hats! sizts 7 to 14 ••• 3.97 3!!6K Bright or pastel florals with hecdbond. Some ~ith floppy hats or sunglasses! . Sa'le 2.5'/o\ Men's sportcoats 1 in seersucker or · sharkskin weaves! WHY PAY.MORE $ SEE THEM SELLING AT 19.98 .+->---I· ! ? Dacron ® polyester cot .. ' ' 1on seersucker or rayon & acetate sharkskin in 3. butron single ' breosted1 fully l;ned. 36.46. DARK BLUE • TOAST • GREEN • GREY Sll!l 121 · e :WHITE FRONT , f I · I 1· -~ , the shirt plus scarf! ~· ,• belt it! tie it! button it on! groovy! I Sizes 32 to 38 PICK YOUR LOOK & DO YOUR THING! Add o dosh of scarf for news! Apaches choose neck scarf or belted waist scarf in prints & solids. Honky Panky® (solids only) sports scarf buttoned to breast pocket: White, pole blue, maize, liloc, melon. stretch polyester doubleknit capris 97 / , , / / i f compare at 8.99 ~ ' ' ·, his spring wardrobe priced for a sellout! BOYS' PRINT-LINED HOPSACK DRES~ SUITS Single-breasted 3-button mod. els with flop pockets, center vent! Ivy trousers with stretch waist insert. Rayon acetate in :si zes 6-J 2. Blue or whiskey. COLORFUL SPORTCOATS IN PLAIDS OR SOLIDS Single or double breosteds with flop pockets, center or side vents, rayon lined. B· 16 in blue, bronze, green, whiskey. . BOYS' NO-IRON IVY OR CONTINENTAL SLACKS ' EASTER SPECIALS FOR JR. BOYS! YOUR CHOICE BLAZER SUITS -c,.,,. on-pocket 2-butfon jack- ets with contrast slacks. Black or red. EASTER SUITS -2·but• fQD flop-pocket models born for spring! Blue, brown. WUt pves me addi Uonal courage ii lo recall what the. great architect Frank Lloyd Wright said. in discussing his philosophy of life. It went something like this : "Early in life I bad to choose between living a Ufe of honesl ar· rogance or h ypoc r it i ca I humlUty. I chose the former and I've never regretted it." vinco you disbeliever• m the Men's new look 1azy ute that exercise 1s not Girls' vinyl patent Boys' leather military strapper! necessary? II 1 succeed at The curved leather monk strap • all, It will certainly take mOl't cut-out T·straps! And so I n:fuse to live In hypocrtUcaI humility at a time when my boot emerges. I bring my book lo your al-o lenlion becaute 1 am so rreaUy concem<d about the oe:rclse crue lhat ii sweep- ing the Uolted States. Like a contagion It hu invaded every comtt and uevk:e ol than I can put into • abort look Is news 8 50 colu.rnn. 2 88 f special for 5 89 Btfore you condemn my •J> specially or spring '691 thi• event! parent nonconformity, a fair · priced! •Walsal Ii my vlewpoinl 5 so Grained leather depends upon a calm, con· , special lldered ttadini ol my book. Spring '69's "'-.illliiil1111 .. ...,JI uppers have purcha .. I say "calm and considered" newest $hiny • hi-rise vamp. bec1use exerci!t-worshlppel'I black! Sizes & sides, blunt grain leather uppers, have a tendency to become 8}1-1 2, Curved diogonol strop, toe. Block PVC• sole guoronteed for irritated and impaUent; with heel and toe in smooth or brown, shoe's life. Bicek, 10-3. cur sodety. , \ Aldtaaalil I btUevt In ei-· e.rclae for growing youngstel"!J, and 1n moderate e.i:erdae for U-'tfbo like I~ I do not support the theory t h a t everyone should exert - rttardlw of age -whether they like It or not. anyone who disagrees that 12 ~·3. blue vinyl, Sizes to 10, ~gglng (and other u· /~~~~~~~~====~::::::::=::::::::=::::::=::::::::::::::~~~~6:~~·1:2:.::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~·•~~~~·~""~'""'~~~ pendltum ol -111) an Ill formal certilicatlol\ that they d.,.rve the status .. mblem: CHAOG! IT COSTA MESA STOH HOUlS mlddle4ged athltte. 3088 BRISTOi AVE. • JUST OFF NEWPORT A. VI. Rocking chair, anyone? Witt! ,.,, · · • D•il• 12 te t ... .. __ BITWllN SAN DllGQ IRWY. AND BAKIR ST. So>. 10 •• t WW.. Ptoat Cd S1111, 1 l t. 1 Who Can Read Just One 'Peanuts'?l\!:====:_---------------------------=====-!l • I I -------- ' " .. ' ' I I ' I ' ' l I • • r ! l I I • I ,1 • ' " • " • • .. " j· ' " •I '• I• ·' ' i, '1 : .1 :1 l ,, • I ! • •• • ' T , • ' :ta DAILY PILOT Tbundiy, Mll'dl 20, 1969 ~ , • " • 1r ._\t Who's Fairest o! ·Them All? ;~. ,, ~,::;~' Girls en~ring their names in thF Harbor. Shopping Center's Si ~ on d annuat~· Tweenage Princess contest are .(teft,1jo"' f!:ght) Laney Thursto;u.p-'Cara Bowley, · i., Marla Eis~. ,Bob Sumetet,. Deb!)~J:<*thuin, Sha~n Evans a~d P;atflJ 1 ~ Miller. sati!atll HarP:?~ Cerlt.eri coorillna:tdt Gwen Williams. 1',e .winner will ~ receive a-91!arprobe ·and ·$25 s&Y!p,.gs J>pnd. The event will begin 'af I p.m. Sat· urday, Mai00'211·wilh..a fashion ·&Jid.w,foQo)Ved by the crowrung. ' -" -. ' • Anyon~::;W alit a Burro? • i Roundup Set 'tO TJijn Death, V al.ley Herd DEATH VAtU:Y (AP) - Like a burro as a pet for the kids? There are perhaps 2,000 wild ones in or near the Death Valley Nallonal Monument area and the National Park Service says that's far too many for available food sources. So it wants to reduce their number by holding a roundup where you can own a burro -if you can catch one of the little, wiry critters. There's also a problem of finding them -only an estimated IS to 20 are in the 50,000 acre roundup area. "There's no problem taming them," Dr. Charles E. H~n. research biologist for the park service, said today. "They are not too wild anyway and tame easily by just being around hum&Illi and being handled." The roundup actually was scheduled for last weekend on the Nevada side of the 2· million-acre national monu· ment area. But, while the park service okayed il, the Nye County, Nev .. commissioners did not, saying individual and group applications hadn't been received in -time. No new roundup date has been set. The wild burros, for the most part., are deSce.ndants of those left by gold and sj,lver miners yfars ago when claims petered out. Another main source : Folks who decided they didn't really want one and released jt in Death Valley. Hansen says there Is not too much problem catching a wild burro. J " ''They move pretty slow·," he esplaim. "They usually walk, not run." A-1ostly, the burros travel In herds, anywhere from a dozen to 40 or 50. Once they reach natural feeding grounds, they stop and eat unUI the grass is._ elhausted. Jrecause they are multiply- irlg so rapidly, the gass - never too plentiful anywhere in thi! desolate region -is disappearing. Groups wanting to round up the burros include the Wild Mustang Association, which is dropping hay from airplanes to mustangs se.aled off from natural food sources by deep snow. The association hopes to sell them for $40 to pay for that airlift. Although the burros are ovecpopulated, the mustangs are underpopulated. •, " .. ~1 l VERSATILE SHI RT CASUAL Our classic stepin tokes brassy buttons for added dash ••• • sht.ipes up beautifully vit.1 smart welt-set.iming. Washable polyester knit, pink, to fly, green or blue, sizes I 0 .. 18, fo accessorize es you will, $20.00 Moil •nd telephone orders invited. Misses' Sportswear Dresses, 12 ANAHEIM H4 North Euclid ••• 515-11 l I Moncf•y thru S•turd•y 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. I .' . . \I •, ' • HOORAH FOR THE RED, WHITE AND BLU ES . . . BY KORET OF CALIFO ~A .#!, Fun 's a-coming , •• in big, bold banner stripes that round American revelry. All in Arnel® triacetate.' to drip-dry smoot leg cuffed pants, 8-1 4, 18,00. White brovodo shirt, IQ.lb, I pleated skirt, 8· I b, 13.00 C) Wrapped pantdre <S, 8· I b, 15.00. Meil and telephone orders invited. Misses' Sportswe ar, 89 NEWPORT " ' ;~ • ~t' f ' ,, i" .. i .... ,, l •' • :'..· .-t. ,, ... • -47 Fashion l1land .•• 644-1212 Moncf1y thru Frid1y 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. S•furday I 0 •.m. to 9:30 p.m. HUNTINGTON BEACH 7777 Edin9•r Avanu• •.. 892.)331 Monday thru Saturd•y 10 •.m. to 9:10 p.m. I I I -. J-. -.;, iii. lM ' · lllltY I'll.Ct 39· ---~,. • • • , I • • . ' . . . . IT'S OUR 1~1 ... G -~ t -•. \ i \;. ' ., : ' .. .. . ' ,. ·-· . ' . . ' • "li :. . ' ~ ·,.,_:t ' I . • ~· . . . . ~ ~-" .... -. .• l '; .. . ---c ~-----~ I \ . , I,~ ' ' " . . (ff.EBRAr1NG .. . ' ' , ' ::. ' ' ;• ' ~ . • BRING· THE FAMILY ~ ' ' •· .-•• JOIN THE FUN ! . YEARS ' :There's something to -· interest everyone it Bob Longpre'$!!· ' OF SERVICE TO PONTIAC OWNERS OF ORANGE COUNTY SPIJTHERN CAllfORNt SPECIAl LOW -BIRTHDAY PRICES ON • EVERY (AR! JO.l'N" THE PONTIAC PARADE ' •I '' . , . I . . , . . . • . . : . . . . . . -' " • ' • 1 ' ' . . ll\£ · 1 , ~lt9R no~l\ACS \ft OR,+M§2W~NllVIW j 2ir•:,::~RSAlY 6 , f " · :SPECIAIS 1111 19~ PONTIACS . 5 MUSTANGS . , 4 ' TO CHOOSE fROt,jl '66• •nd '67•. · OIANGI COUNTY'S 64 PON11AC .<;ATAUNA All ,;cely •q,;pp•d. Som• willi •i• "lGlST. • S"'.,..ION 2+2 HARDT~P. SpKr•l .tJg•r. 9old. conditioning. ~ 5~. 4 •pHd, •le. Uc. OSO l98 s;lclll llr!MI Pri eS OP $];] 69 '67 COUGA~.'G: . STATION WAGONS ~w '1995 '64 LE MANS va, automatic tran1m1111on, radio, ~ LIC, YUi,,, , . . haater, power 1taering, tinted tJ111. ~ . 2 Ooo_r , HU"dt°'. V8, .1uto'!'1tic Special wh11l1. 81l1nc1 Of new car ' "' HUGE SELKTION tr1n1m11110.n,' radjo, 'h~t.,-, t1nt1d warranty. Lie. UAKlll. ' 1961 PONTIAC ~l1u, • $'1!·~·1~~6~GEV610. . : : . '2369 .' PASS. CATALINA : :: ~:ANS __ _z -----------· --.... Rldio, boll«. Hydrlllllllc. E!l -.,3-C-HE_VY ..... NIW!O-YA_ll_ '67 CHEVY BEL 'AIR -sJuo. ivbi~lll _,NI'"." • '61 CATALINA'S SUPER SPORT. Automa#C· transmis· STATION WAGON. VI, automatic. tarJ .rtm•1ams wl:lnltf, Lie. e '61 IOHNMW sion, radio, h11t~r, air conditioned, t~1~1mi11io~, r•ctio, h11t1r, air con-VU IM. '61 ST'TION 1;nt1d 9l•s lic. LZPl~5. '· • d.1 .... d, $2469!1u, 91'!•· 7204. "'-995 • WA~-9 PASS. 1169 , . ~ · .· -3~ MO. FINANCING - • lirtbdq-.. Yinp .. lll'- CataliDM ~-"-Fcri LOW-LOW C4wllry llq\lll<t-<lbn.,lmpalo ·. ;:.~~~ olr.' •' ·sitE PRICES . . Come See The . II : ' . . r • ·aN,T·IOUE C'.ARS • 'FUN.NJ' CARS •THE 'SAVAGE' ' ' PLUS OTHER UNUSUAL CARS! AN'NIYIRSARY SPICIAL DRE'AM CAR!.! Now : ON blSPLAY 1969 GRAND PR.IX LA · PARISIAN DRUM CAR The ONLY 5outhenl CallfOrnlo Appearance ! hll't M1M It, 1'MI h nit O . '"WM ...... Te '1w TWe l1c9llht ..,._"' C•. 13600 Beach Blvd. · Westminster (Beach Blvd. at Garden Grove fwy.) · Call 892 -6651 or 636-2500 I .. . . . •• . • . • ,. • ... 19 DAll.Y PILOT By SVL VIA PORTER Q: What U, instead of buyinl a cross-section of top-. srade stocks last year. you had h1vesttd a chunk: of your nestea In well chosen rare books and manuscripts~ How ·would you ha ve made out? A.: Vtty well, indeed.I 1be value of . your "porUolio" would, In fad.. have ~td to percent '1Ver Jlll7, about 14 times the rlse in the familiar Dow..Jones indmtriaJ average. Onf strlt!Jig . il- lustration of the 1ong..term trend : a 13th Century £ngllsh Illuminated Bible sold last year for $500,000, up from $180,000 in lQ years. ALSO IN THE past decade, prices of hand-written (by scribes) books from the period : around 1400 A.D., especially those conlaining illuminated miniatures, have tripled. In a related f i eld. autographs or famous cam· posm such as Beethoven and Mozart h&\"t risen in value IO to 15 times in 15 yws. During this same a p a ,n , Appointed William Richard Smith bas b e en appointed manager of the Corona 1 del Mar office of Cro- well, Weedon & Co., a ~ Southern California bas- ed New York stock Ex- change member fi rm. Gilchrist Gets Award .. . "' ... . . ' .. ,. IS) Th.-.day, !!11th 2Q.196? alllographs ol G t o r I e Wa.s:h.lngton havt soartd from several huodrtd dollars to several thousand. The IOlring values of rare books, manuscripts a D d autographs have oot made froot-page or financial page news and you, as an averqe invtstor. almost surdy"do not coaai,tler this an appropriate lltld !Or J'OOl' funds. JtJ'l' TBE PRICt rlaes are lndispullblt. And W b I t ' S mort~. the 'Iitelihood 1 s o~helming Qllt valuti wm coatimle to climb in the year1 immediately ahead. Can you, an amateur, cash in on todaY'S rare book boom? Are there basic ru}J:s to guide you? When I put these ques- tions to H. P. Kraus cf New York City, the world'.& top buyer and seller 1n this field, his first reaction wu: "The book blliinw I s slrictly for the connoisseur; an amateur ,wQ.Uld be a com- plete fool to try to mike a killing in tbls game." And here's whf: '. LET'S SA V 1 neophyte buys a prlu flrat edlUon Jor f l010l'JO. But he tbtll l1Ddl !hit tbe "errata" paae or 'the 0,. leaf fbelore the tltll -) II mis. Ing . Sudden!)', the boot's vllu1 plunges to 11,900. Or be ~· a rare book 111d finds .It liu been robouod, aillb!na ii. to one-IOllrth of Ha value: jf lt weti ill its "~ bolrds." (On -the otbtr, bllld, If, It Is Ibo . ohly co~ ~ a tare book tn lt$ ortitn&I' b o a r d I, U. $11 be "'orih 211 times the nlue of . othe!' coj)lea.) , - Npta .Kraus: ••Even maay expert• don't know some ol these. fine point!, so how can the amateur be erpected to know?" , ANOTHER-PROlii.EH II that t,here are v.ery, very few hard, univeraal rules on rare book valuH. (Sample rule: any book printed in Boston before 1700 lJ va lua ble because these were t b e e a r l i e 1 t A.qlo-American books.! . In addition, Kraus warns Sylvania Introduces Police 'Beatfinder' The Greatest New Cars Attract The Greatest Trades! HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE MANY THAT OUR GREAT NEW MAR K Ill•, CONTINENTALS, MERCURYS AND COUGARS HAVE . ATTRACTED. 19'1 CADILLAC COUPI DI VILLI UH CONTININTAL ......, •iw llftlolt wttll •enc •Ille ltf111tf lll!ttllr Ml LIMtw rotf. Tfllt. Cet' M1 •JI ....... .,,,, ... 1,. -'• Piii ,. .. , fl<IWY t lr, •I-~l,.M. tell- K9t« ... •l•ltl>le •'-11111 ..... 9't. Dr,._, •'¥ ., ... '"11" U11 ""'"" • "' .....,, veum $4995 laatllf YflYW ut•ltr wl!I llN ....,..,., ••-tk tr•~t111!111t11. Ntli. .,.,. Met..,, .., ctMtlltlllllt, l•ll ... .,, ""'""· .,.~ .... ' •• , ..... ff.I 1twlllt W11tt1. (IV.I f411). IM•tlf1Uy 1N-"""1Mf. $3195 • ' . ' •' l HU MERCURY PAIK LANI 11 .... ._,.....,, • k~ ADI( .... Miit llnllll wll~ !NIOllll lfllWl9f'. L•••"f ".1,,... wltlo •• T., •&M, P.t.. ...... ,.... ...... ,.,,.,., •Fr c ..... 11 .... ttc. ea,... ' .. Jlf -illllf"'°" 1M 1r.-. .. Mltll Ill C.t~ ..... A n1I IMIJ'• V(K tn $3195 1'67 TOlONADO $2195 1u1 JAellAI xn coun ........ ..... .... .. ....,~ '"""'· 4 .,.. II I I $0 4lk. Git ~ .. ''"-'· tr...., .,. ............................... ~ ....................... $3391 UH CONTININTAL COUPI LKll -tWl'ltt wllll Nll1 )1,tol H l'f tnl'",llnlWI ... lft .,..vtllul 1t•t 1111'111 Ott.._.. ltfttr hurry •• !Ilk t nt . Al'MI lr'1 IMUy "'I'"" wllll 111 tllt llflMI la<:• 1ftY "'""'· UC. lllW~ $3195 1''7 COU6Al 2 DOOi HAlDTOI' • ...., ~ ...... Mell• .... ....,lhl!:'f ... !•lul ~. A$ .._., tt.aM, IJ,I .. P.;a.. '""" ..,, c--. .. ,.,.... -....... ,.,. 11• $2495 10bDSOD+80D Ull LI lllTllUYlt • liG m • IEICHY • IHUI _,. MUIOe MVU'f&u, nftA Ml ' ~. • • 1• 1 • '.:cldo:, r·, ' . ' ···• I; DAJLV PILOT Wednesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List American Stock Exchange List '.f2 DAILY PILOT TelevisJon Not.es York Leaving 'Bewitched' Denni s James S~eks - Talent on Campuses DAD,Y PROT NEW YORK (UPI) 'Onderstand11bly. despite that long·llme fat salary, good ac· lor Dick York has resigned from his job as the rather :.toogy husband of ABC's "Bewilchcd" series, elfeclive at eonclusion of his li ve-year contract this season. H e deslres other acting paslures. those two-hour films made Dick Sargent will be the etpeeially for firlit showing replacement as EI J J a beth on video in the "World V.ontgomery's video spou~ Prernlere'' serlea: Universal By VERNON SOOM' l!OU..YWOOD (UPI) Dennis James, &enial muter ol ceremonies of more came and panel shows than any other living man , U now at. tempt ing to show t b e American collef!e student •~ something other than a bomb thrower. _...,., Jama II boot of a dally flJM ahow, "P. D. Q." -which II ...,.thing dil'ltrtnt altotetber from a Ph.D. WANT ADS for 1969·70. 1nakea for NBC. The feature • • • is ';Night Gallery." II consists Joan Crawford, rarely seen of three sLories by veteran on television., will make • video playwright_. Rod Serllng starring appearance in ooe ol eacb with ii.a own cast and ~ :=====================,,I with Sterling as host. Jn her LAST I l'lltl'"I -1'1l9n.. l'rl,. '-'· "SCR's finest production" -5.A. 11: .. 1,i.r "A. Magnificent ~fottnting" -o. ,., "DEATH Of A SAWMAN" f :• ,_.,., -TMllD :ITll" THl!ATltl.-COITA Ml!SA-6*l1U CHILDIEN'S THIUTl.ll-''THI! Pl'El.DI. & THE HIOHTINGALI" fl, DELIGHTFUL OltlENTAl. MIMl!-M.ATINEE SUNDAY· I l".M. ONLY • f you ste only ONE I mowl• tflis yaar ••• this hos to b• ONE of them! segment, Miu Crawford plays a wealthy, eccentric, blind since childhood, who dev ises a biUU're method of regaining sight. • • • Dick Van Dyke's mwicaJ. variety special for CBS, to ,"COOGans ~LUii II COLOR Elf.!¥t'"'-• UNIVIR8AL PICTURE -' ''MH ••ltd Malur• ""'I-· ll"l rOHllal ~IM:ret!N Mhl1all) Garv lotk*'OOd COLOI!. "MODIL SHO"' Vanne-ua Red9ravt be seen April 13, will reunite Ule comedian with Mary Tyler Moore, who was his television wife for the five-year run of "The Dick Van Dyke '' weekly series. The special's title is ''Dick Van Dyke and the Other Woman." • • • ··cBs Children's Playhouse" will be a new daytime series of original drama specials to be introduced in the 1969--70 sea!IOn on Saturday mominga. The network plans to use "quality" plays by established writers. " " '... , ............. ,f~luz 1"' • ....!1 l"alrkla H .. I "THE SUIJICT WAS IOSIS" "~ "THi llOTHllHOOD" willl Kint Dloufla1 c.1'-iklM•r 1:• '·"'· NAT10NAL Cf:NfRAl COM'ORATtOM Fiiii!!.a.s!!! S. °"Cll ,...., II Mdal • Mf.nlZ HILD OYll 2"1 WlllC OPEN ':45 CLIFF ROBERTSON CLAIRE BLOOM -In- ''CHARLY'' IN COLOR ·-lf'(Yl!l..sl'1t KIRK DOUGLAS _ .. ... -· '11fE BROJ'HERHOOO --·-~1-l'Cflllf ~ IALIOA 673-4048 .,,.. 1:4S 7ttl.a.IMll .............. He is working against bar. rendous odda. As chief talent scout o( ''The All American College Show," Jame.s bu troops (non-com. batant) in lhe field -that is to say, on varioua campmes -searchin& for 1cta foe bis :syndicated ahow. Alter more than 39 weeks on the air, JarpeJ reports there have been no casual~s among hls fieldmen. But then he did not say whether they had visited Berkeley or San Francisco State. "We don 't put any · heavy rock groups on the show,'' James said, "because we don't want. to go the hippie root~. or with rioters. And we avoid the shaggy, bearded tYPes." C le ar l y , James Is discriminating a g a i n s t anarchists, arsonists a n d placard carriers among our students. Doubtless. he figures they probably don't double as jugglers, saxophone sololsts <lr supervisors of trained seals anyway. James looks beyond the bar- ricades of dissident! to the unarmed student. "There is a lot of un- discovered talent on campus," he said. "It ia the greatest .source of untapped talent in the world. Where else are you going to fmd that many people involved in mu sic, the arts, theater? "We bring kids to Hollywood from all over the country - four acts per show. So far more than 100 school"l have been Involved. And we don't treat the kids as amateurs. We pay the winners of each 13-week series •1 .000. If they .win the final!J they get $5,000." James was reminded that seldom, if ever, has a star emerged full blown from a college campus. He hopes to change that. "Watch for 1.1aggie Harris," he ad vised. "She 's from Catholic U n i versity in Washington, D.C. She's going to be a star, a great iiinger." Jn addition to his college A co!Jeae man him.self - St. Peter'• Collete of New Jertey -James s a 1 s Brigham Yowig Univer11ty In Utah hu provided the -t talent ao far. "It'• because they con- centrate on music up there m1 tend their youn1ster1 out on tour," he aald. "UCLA is high. too, but we don't want to give the show too much of • local loot." Jam~ sees the talf:n1 on ta.pe sent to him from hi! men at the battlefronla:. He is Nlely ensconced here in Hollywood.where the brickbats of outraged youth are thrown ~t. producers rather than pro- feators. Pianist's UCI Recital Captivating By DOROTHY BARLEY Corona del Mar pianist Kate \Vh.itney delighted a near capacity audience S u n d a y night at the University oC HOUSES POR SALi G•neral 1000 ONLY $21,500 ASSUME W % V .A, loan and own thl.I spacloue 1'0UR BEDROOM, T W 0 BATH HOME. Otramic tile kitcb. en, d:iahma.st:er and disbo wuher, draped, and COlQo plete]y carpeted.. Comtr lot, fenced ftU' yard with acceu from elthf:r 1tft1l submit 1ow down. let ua arranse fue> ~nta 1or you, SUBMIT $1,500 DN .• HURRY! * • * • EASTSIDE $20,950 Well located Three Bedroom home w It h HARDWOOD FLOORS. \Valk to Weatclitt Sbopplna Center • Enjoy tht tine neighborhood, IChool&. park and playiround, Larae 1enced rear yard with fruit t:rte1. Pawd alley • euy a~ ce&s for boat and lraller. TERMS AV All.ABLE • ACT NOW! callfcirnia at Irvine with a Eveninp Call 646-7887 recital buik around Frederic """"'""'"""""'""'""'""'"' Chopin's colorfuJ 16 Preludes, Opus 28. Miss Whitney proved heraell to be a skilled Interpreter of the many moods re!Jected in this work. Tranquility, turbulence, pathoe and terenl- ty, they are all there in thilll seqlltfl~ ol stud.Jes and the full range of emotkm w.u superbly captured by thiJ ae- complislled pianist. No less impeccaiye waa Miss Whitney's flawless handl- ing oC Haydn'a happy and ef. fuvescent Sollata in E fiat major. She displayed 1 com- mendable tight touch and ap- proach In the allegro and her rendering of the brilliant adagio fully exposed the movement's essential gra~ and tranquility. KINGS & OUHNS Anyway you figure ii they can all tit easily Into the lqest KING- SIZEO MASTER BED- ROOA-1 you have ever seen! Here's a 4 bdrm 2 bath home that is so JM?tlACULATE you'll "''Onder that it I& even s~~ years old. Beauti· tullly landacaptd 1 o r minimum upkeep & tt'1 en cne of the best CO&. NER l.Ol'S. The lovely ci>nditicn A:: many added features make it a home you MUST SEE. Only S31XiO down payment re- quind at a new RE- DUCED PRICE of $30,500. May ·we liihow you throuch ! POSITIVELY ENDS TUESDAY 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS BEST PICTURE • BEST DIRECTOR "GEOIGY GIAL" Holf'lll ~(,!fJ~ Bflr~ WARNER W..-W.lf -• 14T·lstl I 1!rID]D!of1f A pleaa:ing, well rece.ived recital concluded with Sergei Prokofiev's Sonata No. I in A major. It 1s to be fervently hoped that this artist will soon be heard again 1n another of her well balanced recitalll. J&... COATS ~WAL~CI REALTOllS _..,..54"''"4141-(0,.. .......... ------·--:rn...ro Zf.tTIREU, -ROMEO t>JUUEr N->ordln11.r:r io-"'UO"'."- POSITIVELY ENDS TUES. MrDW..GfJmW.P'ICT\MEl"- GREGORY· EVA MARIE PECK SAINT ... ....___~ '1HESTALKING MOON ~!DI [!Jo~·· , . ._G 1'HEYaMEM ROBUSWEW ELKE GARY SOMMER LOCKWOOC LEE J. JACK _ COBB PALANCE_m• • SATUIDAY "A WATIN(l -12:JO P.M. '"THI llLUCTAHT ASTl°l"AUT" -All S..t1 lk I I It llltw"• ltlltn r Gr~ry P11elr COLOll. "GUNS Of NAYAAONl" Hanry F-a COLO ll: "tAnU Of THI IULCil'" .. •Mn I R11etmmendM ~ff Adwtt11 J amt1 Garrier COLOR "GI.AND PllX" l ... M1rvln COLOlt "THI DllTY DOZEN" W!)T~l~\l!M Hl·WAY 39 led MllUrt Awdltncll I ll"artnlll d!M:l"t!IOHI ldYl-l G'o• '"'"'•"• <OCO• II "IUONA SllA MAS. CAM NELL .. S!~v• MC'Ou.•n COLOR ''NlYADA SMITH" ··~················· ALL SEATS 50c snuww• ·-.. """' -eolc:r" -·-- 2 SHOWSI SAT., MARCH 22 12,30 & 2,30 P.M. I SHOW SUNDAY, MARCH 23 12 ,30 P.M. ltEWl'OltT IEACM • OJI. 2 BIG ONES ,-----,, '''.'". --.... ·c,.;· 111 IUl'D PMAYISIO« fillll INnlOCCIUll l''r================================::-'11 NOTE SHOW TIME II Dirty Oo1en Once 1t 7:15 .... JUUi -----_,_ -~­,, Grand Prix One• •t 9:45 fhlPMOHf M l ·UJI ro• /NfOIMATION TWO ACADEMY NOMINATION5 Brims With Laughter And T11r1 r&,, llllJFA.. 'flrJI.-~· ~--... -AIM>- G1or91 Peppard Inger St1v1n1 Orson Wells "THE HO USE OF CARDS" Evt Show St1rt.1 7 p.m. C•irt. s.t. tr.111 I S.1. '"• 2 ' 'Blondie' Surely No Scatterbrain LAS VEGAS !AP) -In the movies and the old days of radio, Penny Singleton played the comic role of acat- terbrained "Blondie." Now, 20 years tater, she's in 1 serious role as leader of a thttatened strike ol Las Vegas en- tertainen. Th e l i vely blond e grandmother says she's doing it for the "kids" -not her herseH. "I'm not a rabble-rouser," say' Penny, spealdng without a trace of the comedienne. "Jam not one of those fa r-out people. The important thing Beautiful 4 BedroomJ Home i.n fuhlonable Shoreclill 341 Ev1nln9 Ci1nyon Rd. OPEN HOUSE SUN 1·5 See thiJI custom home with many desirable feature• such as: Fireplace in mu- ter BR, luge private aun- deck, cheerful breaktut nn and access to private com· mwlity beach. $62,500 Call: Jack Scroggy Res: 644-2250 Assume 5%% GI loan Js to get tile kids the right! and benefits they haven't had on this :l slory beauty. The before." immaculate 4 BR &: den home featurts: sunken Jiv. Representatives o{ dance.rs, tng room, ~ fireplace, com ediam, singers and toples! cpb/dtpl, oversized 2 car showgirls are negotlaUng with gan1.1e, profeuional Jand- the Central Labor Cooncil and scaplng &: much, mu eh hotel owners in an attempt mon!, can now tor ~tonna. to avert a strike against ma· tion. jor hotel-casino owners, set for 'niursday night. A spokesman for t h e American Guild of Variety Artists -of which Miss Singlet.on has been the chief $35,750 "' -PERRON . ,,. "' .. · .... , .. ofticer for two years -said * 642-1771 Anytime* neither side wants a walkout "The kids have a short economic life," Mis.s Sing leton NEW CITY PARK said. "Many are haa betns That's right, A new citv ...... k at 35." only 2 b1oclcs from vthl;" 2 Miss Singleton no longer ap-bedroom a: den or 3 bed· pears in shows, but "as JOOn room houae, It hl!I carpetA, as I get the AGVA house drupes, fittph1.ce. 1% baths, in order, r hope to -J hope bullt·iru, la.rae R-2 lot \lo-ith I'm not too okl.'' easy alley aceu, larie With a bit o( nost.algia ln enough for boat, camper, or her voice, Mm Singleton said buikl youneU a rtntal. or she is prood whm people lllll just enjoy the well J.ando recognize bt.r a.s ''Blondie.'' .capN back )'U'd. Onl;y 114 blks. to N-u .. 1..t.tt "Chic Young was gres1 ," .... t"''' • ......,. ... -~ 'd ol ... ~ rrade """"''· .. kin( "''""' "'-"' sa1 urc ~gwood-Blon-phone O'lmtr at 644--46S7 rot die creator. "lt was such • appt . to tee. nice part -• "'OnderfuJ ram._ o;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ly picture. N l ( sl M "I can remember i.kl., my • 0 I eSI chlldre:n to it. While the theater filled with children, 3 Jarre bdrmt, 1,,._ batht., ht.rdwood noon. 1arp ldteho l sat down with my famlly. en l ittVice porc.h atta. The kids rocked the! waits with Double raraat. Bir yard laughter." wtt h shfde It rnrl t frttl. Asked If today '• movif'! art S2'J.!rJO. different, 3he s 1 Id, "many Wella-McCardlt, Rftra. pe:Ople have told me they art 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. tmable to tau chlldrta 1o ittt ;,e1Tl9 Et..-n. ~ pictures today.·• HOUSES ,OR SALi Goner al 1000 Hecut Of laycrest lnvitizlc cln:ular drive on • lute comer lot "ad• to this beaLrtilully dealsned a n d comt!Uc:ted J v a a Witlll home. Three queemiud bed-o rooms lncludtnc luxurious separate mutn suite. J'or- maJ dlnhw ...... -room and eonnnit:nt -wtiw: or tamfJ,y bobby room. Trandlmd owner uJdnt $S0,000, "For A Wise Buy'' Colesworllly & Co. 642-77T1 OPEN EVES. Exclusive Harbor View Hiiis JUsr usrEo one ot the tew: Luiik resales. BeautituJ drape ea and nylOll ahag carpettnc fhl'oUghoul Z..fimlred cbet doors in muter and front bedroom. Slldina 1laa doors · Wm muter bedroom and lamllY room to patio nWan thls home very li&:ht and airy. 3 Bedrooms, dlnu. area, fa.mil.y room, p I u • breakfast: room. Gu or 220 in laundry. Be:autilul land .. 1capin1 with sprinklers trone and rear. Priced under mar .. kel Call for apoplnbnent to .... Jean Smith Realtor -400 E. 17th st 646--1255 3 BR • Family Rm Westcliff Provincl.IJ charm on Ip COl'- 11"' lot with H/F pool I: 9Cp play yard. lmmac mDditson A: tastefully decorated. Xlnl value at •• ~ ••.•.•••• $43,750 Jot Oarklon ...... Coldwell, Banker & Co. ..... c..r ....... .......... letdl. c.....,.. Kl Hiil Olt ..... Real Estate Sales ALSO · RENTALS Active Sales • Good SUmmer \Vlnter Rental Office, Ptt· »e>nneI may enaa,ge in Sales exchWvely or Rentala « both. Est/24 yrs. 22 )111 a.me location, Fr11ncis Horvath, Rltr, 3410 \V, Balboa mvd., N8 (TI4) 675-1972 IF you're thinking o1 WHnc. c~s are \.,.e have an out- ot-state buyer tor y ou r home. Cali today for free appralsal. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 2tJ E. 17th St. m4494 ON THE BEACH Exclusive Ollna Cove home • year around livilll' • bt&t Harbor area, 2 BR, 2 Ba. priced to sell fut at • $69,500 By appt only CORBIN-MARTIN REALTORS lOl6E.Co11tHwy,CdM 67S.1M2 Now Llstl"t 4 Btdrooms, 2 baths on CGr- ner • room for 00..t, trailer ~tc. Bir GI loan to take OV• er. Its a real buy at $2:'1,SSO. 541·1110 1---LLEGE RfA!iTY l~Adlnll.. ,CM. FA BILOUS Artistically de.tcned 5 bctmt -4 bath Baycrut home. l bed. room 1uUaNe tor maJd't room, Oe:lichtflll pool.. Amold & Freud 381 E, 17th St., C.M. RWton 646-ms Westc:Hff Area Walle lo \\•tatcllff ShoPll I Ptlarlners School 4 BR 2% ba. ls Uv rm + dlnlrw lrf:a, AD bulll·b!. ldtchtn., hd""C fln, flttplace. Obi pra ... Altlk>u:. Rib', 64&#28 or '42-0ll6 * LACHENMYER WNE:D C,: for b111. GOOCi F.a1tslde 2 BR home, 1*<11 """"-Only llU!O • -dn hanclltl. 1C1npard RMI Estttt Ml 2-Zm I • , t • • I ' • < ' : l • ·-......, ________ _ HOUSIS l'Olt SALi HOUSI S l'Olt SALi 16111 & Tu•tln -COiia Masa ADULTS Mo1t bomH are built with only child..., In mlnd. We have five homes designed for tho comfort• and fun of adults. BeautlfUI to look at, room for hobbies, private office, separate dining rm, guest room with bath, 3~ car ga- rage, walking cllstance to churches, We1tclill shopping, ~d restaurants. 7% wlfll 20% down -7~% wlfll 10% Dn. no 2ndt -M points -2t yra .,. balance Priced from $30;950 to $33,950 Exclu1 lve Atient HOUIU POii SALi 0.-al 1000 Pele Barrell RNlty PNHnt• l'ANTASTIC VllW with l $panllh fll,\'Or. nnt tlmtt otlutd by urta:lnal own. ers • thlt tutetully decor- ated adW.t occupied 4 bdrm home, dlnlnc room I: tam1J.)' room, llll'P ctnltr lilt.rid kitchen, separate mt.kl'• quarters, 3~~ batbl, oU street parkJ.na A; oveniled •araie. Dover Shores. 1600 Westclltt Dr. NEWPORT BEAOI '42·5200 p. a. palmer incorporated 3177 VIA LIDO Tract Ph: 540.511.1 From L.A. Coll MA WOS4 .!!!!"""~H~O!!!R!!!S~l~S!"I !!!!-I ------------------- Gantral ) l'LL GIVE IT TO YOU STllAIGH't I 000 Gontro I 1ooa 3 GARAGES · LARGE LOT HORSISI Santa Ana Hl:i&hta. Q) x 200 w1th 2 bedroom home + 2 car 1arap. Com.~Wy fenced. Great tenns. $2J,JOO OPEN EVES. 'TIL 9 ' 546-2311 "'6-nn ----·-- 'T'HF Q EAJ. E~;·rATE:R ~: ------- Three Wlslies u ....... comfort, locat!oll ate important to JOU, look thll owr. ~t t.o Newport II e I I h l I pade -· ond 111-.• bl.le to uew part. OnlT $25,!SOO; a.nd all thfM "plua" ftahnti. 3 bedrooms, 2 batm. fireplace, cpll. and drapu, double 'Pf?i':, con- crete drive, larp fenc@d back yard on 50xl30 11'. R·~ LOT. Thert is not too much available In thls part oi' euts~ C.}t. lfurry. 644-468'1 INDOOR POOL 3 Bedroom on laq:e comer lot. Ne w I y decorated throo(hout. Complettb' en. closed 1wimmiu1 pool. $29,tSO try 1.-;. Down OPEN EVES-'1'1L I Sf6.2!1l ""nn ----- 'I'llE 'f"JEAL ~ E.S TATER:; --~------- -~ ------- DAILY PILOT -T., Quality Dupltx CONDO_ ! BR 3 "°th. 2 ,.. I ELDW MARK IT NEW ON !rlARlCEI'. J BR., !Joe A: W1'ICc. O&I eke. Own. J BR 14 bt.th $'160 per month $95; 1 B1t. aice)y furn. t BEDJltOOlf A dlll ttt S bdwd ftn, trplctt, J'A heat. •r. $39,950,. 646-1097 lncl\ldU. taxei with S1M2 Gl.np. Teooed yard. bed ro 0 m ~ •IW bit.JA kUcb., S&nl'• belwn down, M~ home wtth Broker. 534-6980 ct.l'Jl'll, drlpei, ~ Wllta.., la tncd yard. Quiet Corena clef Mar ltsO blt-in electric. --as oven. n-1a "' • -·~ ••-c -~ -·--·• 1-;;;,;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I ·-·· Ront1l1 t• Shar• 2-• ~ -. -~ ~·-..;;~ ca1t~· . ._ ...... r I 1arbqe dltpoe&J, 1u FA -kdt yard ClWl'J'f4: p&do, "I TR.ADE" Now 11 T The Hour beat, cpu/dpa, dble prqe YOUNG slnlle work:lrta pt qu.iet ntl&hbarbood dOM '° Bob O•••_• Rllr. ,,, ~-Pro'-t T--· ...... w/bo&t door. Fenced, 1.1.0d-_._ ... _ Newport Jlel&htl 1 r a de ~.. . ~ -.: your ....... vu..,., """'" tcaped aprlnklen.. wq'"'' l'OOtt1 mat• ti.t. 11 achoOl Ir 2 blkl lo ... COLLI GE PARK '1"'"· •nd ~ tlomff. • 34 lema!L c.u ' to 5. Cily Pule. Avoltalllo,.. Im- ARI A 1 p1U1 Rental Unifi Avail. \!II~' pj0 WMWI 645-0101, afttr s, 213 : medlste occupancy. Drtw •. '" $'5,000 to $65,000 ----· ~ 326-01'6-~ ~· -·--the -~ 4 BR. hi Bo. :.. II livJno 0 Co •I P rt ~~'==-,;,..,--,,,.-1 .,. -r~-. n .,_ nn, bl.tJ.nl, w/w ~ta. m,i., ranp a rope Y ·YOUNG Worklnr Girl or S~ Box 612 c/o Dall)I PUot ''"""· W'1k to 111 ""'°" :W M"'""""' S13-IS50 FOURPLEXES dent to 1han 2 Bdrm. Od>I .ivtnr part!cuJ&n. ...... 1 ..... .,,. 500 ma Cot Apt. S10 Mo. 6#-4049 Att.1========= .,ll. ~Ail. · • BY OWJ'IER:' 1\1 loll, mood , 6~~'o LOAN 6 PM 1Nowport -., HOO UNITS .$",-~.."000Small315H-l Jn'"'-ND VACANCI ES ~IRL~~-~tod~!o~"""~f·~er::·l~~;;;;:~;;;~j ••7--· . e iotrope. ••tiHA ( 1 Jl-hl 2 BR ho\lN: pl\11 l BR rear \Vrlte B. Deane, 555 W. Mid· ~ ,,_ on Y ... , Apt on beach. Avail nOw. hoUJt, lot 60 x 165. F.utside. dltfleld Rd., Apt E-3)9. FIRSI' PIONEER. Call eve• A wknd. f'l'5..1428 I/I By owne,. M&-1224, Mountain View, C&l. or call l-,==="""21::;:;-;c,_,~~ ROOMMATE tel'\'b, male TOWNHOUSE By....,,.,,. BR. 2 BA, ''"' (lli) 901-7621 PRICE REDUCED ... l•mole. Ellldent ~ SplU Low! ' """"' : ..... rm Med&llion home. l'Ully COZY, elder 2 BR borne 5%4* loan avan. w/10me ~. ps..m Double rar•1•, euptte. crptd A drpd, all blt-lrui. With pool calh. 3 BR 1%. ba, Uxll' ROOM matt: needed im· dnDl!3, l'iteplacf, e 1 e C. BeautlfUlly land1caped, xlzlt I====-='"'==== I aep. fam nn, lrple, C<lV. pa-mediately. Hep per 1 on built-ins. ADULTS ONLY ., loc. $32,900. Call 5'&--0214 Uo. Ov.>ner transferred-VA (male pret) ~1061 ••• •••• •• •• ••••• $26.Vmontll.. HOME -R.-2 tot. Excel lalbN Jlen1MUla 1300 or FHA tenna. Mn. Fl:/ w .. tsld•. 3 BR 2\i bl. room I RASH EAR REAL TY I ;';";•;;;rpa;;;rt;;;l;•;;•"';;;;;;;;2200;:;;;;1 lay It hacll ~ 4 or 5 units. !WS-1623 847-8531 Eve•. 968-1171 •a 1ty I .Uy ' "• , nc. evt&. lye lye -_ . BY Owner 3 BR, 2 bath, 901 Dover Dr., NB Suitt 221 ADULT SecUon CONDO, 3 Doll · House on pen: .:ula wool c&rpetil!I', custom F REE NS-2ClOO Evff..~ Br., 2, Ba. Opbl, drpa, tiee point; three bedrooms. one drp1. frplc, covered patio, Proptrty Mmna .. mtnt cat door. Owner. 549--3594 and a half bathl, fireplace, lndacp&, near Be a ch, AV'lllable io all Owntn iohn macnab House 1or alP. l&e dble l&l'l\P• Near chan-$29,950. 96l-7995 for a limited limf' &11 Governor, C.P.I. nel and public beach. A 59'% FHA LOAN Gortrous 1-C.oolmplete ... ~ep~dl "-IDO ISLE LOT * MS-4079 * Jev.'tl Reduced to S-38.250. s BR l baths, all nylon 2 . V ume _. ... -In,r a. BURR WHITE, Rl+r. carpeuna:. Savt money on countt. If you ani interested ln a 1ood locatloD (Colla Meaa. NeWpOrt Helehta a re a), clo" to Newport Hela:hbl srade •chool (111!i blka:) " new city park (2 blkl), lho~ Pinc, S min. to beach. a very quiet 1trfft, bl& R2 lot (room ten boat, camper or rental unit), 3 bedrooms (or 2 &: a den ) 1 ~'-baths, !ittplace. sidewallu, paved alley, dou- ble 1arqe, latte fenced back yard, then phone me at 6"-4SS7. I am ukinc $25,500 but U YoU oome run-trln& (I'm. ln a hlttt'Y) with check book ln hand, I'll five it to you 1tnJ1ht, I 'll save you $1000. (That's u straqht as I can retl. Zoned R-2. Great for the handy ml1l. (:ompact 2 bed- room• borne on 56 X 194 ft. lot for more unita. Roomy &incle 1araa:e plus la.rse de- tached double garage. Own- er saya: Sell!!!! Submit your deal _ $22,950. One ot the Jut larJe Ullo Mell Verde:. __ ..c-.1 l:.1c:O 2901 Newport Blvd., N.B. lnltrt:st. C.OUIUnt 536-3711 3 • FultY bonded WOULD Iola with" ft_ ........ _ Ex-17~ EYH '42-2153 53&-1366 • -Yr rnwxl" "''"""' 1<36•U•500nt flnanctna. Aaking CORNER lot, 2...tory, 4 BR, 2 LG. lotl M. Nr 5 pbl. rental IV .\LK to oco&n. 4 111t, BA. ')T old. A·fl'l.roe homl, w/trplc, crpta thruouL Blc:X to Comm Club houle w/pool It tennis court. S300 mo. Eves 6 wlmll 61S-15M, da,)r1 646-0593 3 BR POOL HOME. 1 b1oek from beach. No putrina; problem. Broker 5'S-Cltl Ask for Don -"' _., WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES You BELIEVE • 21> BA ..... din rm, tncd Call NOW lo bo<t (714) 642-1235 Lido Isla 1351 unita-medtcal. $l9,900 ea. t"-s·-----"' A •1 JO R ~---'th pool, play yd, nr Cntry " ~--"--Bo .. ~. ,... '"'"""' nD>• Walker & lee " x wnpua.......,. .. "'' 901 Dover Drive, Suite 120 rnu.-n..u.'\:•u•..,yr x -PROPl8 TllS WIST GI t I'-·'· A B '"·t Club, many extras. Avnll Kula Maui Hawall " • an .... _ce ar..... Newport Beach , .. , .. •Aa""" n.. uo: ·~19 1-v ...... ide Dr. -~~ seats s -A 4 lriroom + !!!!!!!ll!iil!l~'!i~ij!i.lllJ!!!!!I ~ .,_,......,, '"'"'JU" .n.ro.J ~ ~· 111~ 200 Wettclltt Dr. lamUy room, 2!IOO ... '"' MAGNl~ICE-NT REPUBLIC Hom•. ' "'°' Great family Home Hulttlngt<n 1 ............... ...., ........ INtwport Helghh HID all totaled. A 75' x ~·lot. PIN .. HOUSE old, 2 1tmy, •BR, 3 BA, H•r bour 1405 OCEANBdFRONT(J ft_AJ1t..,J1---------l '646-nu 'Open E\"ea, A ~ x 40' work """"' for 1 tam rm, retreat rm. 3 Car 4 BR. lam •-U IArle rm. geul -CHARMING 2 bedrmm le ........ aalbN B•y Clu ... NI. rm. eirtra .... V• ---------incl. util. wrtU June 1'-den, 2 bath home wtw $29,950 . You C&n! p I I B & ~905t. ~,900. By ov.rnu. ine rm with dlnin&: area. SALE-•Y OWNllt. m.aca ... -la, •-..,, .;_~ ~2313 M&-nn •nor•m c v •w •y ...,.,..... Nice bir patio _ ~ 1 o t. TRANSFERRED -.... ..... ~~ THE REAL ESI'ATERS 0ct8n. Lu xurloU1 tvtry As.SU?.fE Low FHA, 3 BR, i 19,500-Xlnt tenn&! C.0.ta ¥tu..Clme to abap- YOU OWE IT TO YOUR,. H talls. Pan. den A fam. $26,300. LIDO REALTY, INC. 2 Story• BDRM, 3 BA Colo. Corena hi Mar 2250 Pina • park. Nlc e l1 , SELF TO INVEmGATE Marble floors, deep carpet-Owner "ill l&kr 2nd. MOO Via Lido 613-8830 ~~·!car .. eari:;:rpo~~'. PLUSH HIDl•A.-WAY ~'f:~ v~':'!: ~ OUR 4 D I FF ERE N T ins, frplc. 40' li~nn, .ep. 540-4722 Low down: avail. June lSlh. REAR; Wilk to everythlnc, Mia:hborhood. $195 pr. mo. This one'a a charmer! 4 bdrms (or 3 l a denl, II.tie family room with beuned oeill.ftp:, panel- led livin&: room opens onto luab atrium. De-- lWl:e appointment!, top area. easy terms. TRADE IN PROGRAMS. din nn, den, Irr CU1tom kit. ------16131 J~arkneu Circle. ocean 1ide of Hwy, Penon-AV&llable :tor lmmedlaite ~ 3 BR. 3 BA w! Cold fauoets Celllf• ,ark 1115 60 0.rpoUI fHt 846--0144 allty plus, with avocado cupancy, Wrti. Bax 112 c/o SEPARAlE FAMILY ROOM! Ideal far comfortable family llvlna: • a..lao 4 p>d 1lze bed- rooms, newly c111tomlzed bl.L in kitchen, 2 balhl, hich quality beautiful w/w car- 13U50 "1' . ,-. -~ 1· . I ":-• , , . ' , ' ' 546-59?0 petlnJ, ftreplace, fenced I '"'iiii ___ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii , .. , raro ""'' patio. Fin• htrGOrdlnarv location • Price only $29,500, blocks EZ tef'!tlS. Newport Beach, only 2 b ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 $26,900 Immaculate 3 BR, "A" frame, beach home, '1 yr1 )'qU.lli', steps to Ocean, prl- \'4te recreation center. Caywood Rlty. 541-1290 6306 W. Coast Hiway, N.B. r=::::-:-tn caan. Beautiful 4 bed- )~ room, family room, dlnlnt< DELUXE DUPLEX I' \I I • \\ I 11 I 1 ~I \1(\\11\\ room, 2 dtli&:htful balconya, New 3 BR Units P enlrulula 214 bathl, Ctnter pool, tt~ adj t t ""~--11.. u .... riis, ttireation. Only 10% acen o ..... ~, • ~ I ! \ I I > , $59,950. 7% financtnr. down, $33,900 or will trade Ball:aea Real l1tate Ce. for income property. 700 E. Balboa mvd., Balboa -- EUREKA! OPEN EVES. 'TIT. 9 6'J3..4140 516-2313 "'6-nn !"""'""'"""'"'""-""...., Yes •e've found it far YoU. A Cotta Meaa 3 BR 2 bath, HARDWOOD FLOOR cor- ner home. Sharp! Sharp! $21 ,990 P.S. Owner will sell to veter. at11 with $600 down + c1o .. in& cost.II. New,.rt 11 Victori• 6464111 -="'..:·-- 'T'HE \JE A L ESTATER S ------- VETERANS Try thia on for size. Bi& family Colonial borne in Me1a Verde, may So VA terms. Need1 IOme work, but what a bU,y you'll mm h~! See it today -near Mesa Verde Country Oub, S1l11peapl1 Noodod S45·5110 1 IR DUPLEX o(i.£G°ER~ Oran older units with dou-JSll,...lt f.M, bJe dttadwd prt.&e on ~ •!!!!!!!!!!~~"'"!!!!!!!!!!"" 140' lot. Auume exilt!n& $13,<00 • 6% !..,, -no Joan BUILDERS ! flt. Only Pick up thil Eutlide M kit $18,750 w;th •mall cute ......, "" rt:a.r, Sl,500 down. ' ' ---~-----PE RR ON . ..11 ... ~ ..... , •• * '42· 1711 Anytime * JEAN SMITH ltLTR. '46-3255 Llko le Entertalnt call to -this 675-5200 3 BR, plus 3 Ba.. cozy dinlnc/ family rm. 2 tn>lct + P1'Y nn. Encloled pool separate Play yard, $52,500. Walktr ltaalty DUPLEX Near Beach A Shopfltnc Excellent Value_ $34.950 G"rl• Wllll•mHn RWmr 673-4l50 Evt1. S?l-1514 ---=~=- DUE TO CIRCUMSTANCIS Beyond our control. -you may auwne preHnt hla'h Joan at 6%. No points! Old- er duplex, rew doora from beach. Good rtnlal area. A-136.950 -I.Dan 129,000. 1111 Ir ' ' . . . lt&ALTY 2crJ3 W, Balboa Blvd., N.B. 67~ OON'T si .... ft •• ..,, p t auk:lr CUh ior • wttb • Dall> Pilot -Adi "2-W Experienced RE Salesman EXCEL. COMMISSTON Rltr. 642-9130 Eve1. 548-0720 I '."~!'!~!'!'!!!!'1!!!!1!11!!"" • KEHNfDY ~T::::...IBH.== ... l!nd ..... buyl lntc> For Dally Pilot Want AdL Dial ""'611 DIAL ..... 64Mm. O>lltt i _;;•;::""..:'c;C=•="'=fl::: .. ::_::ML=-- ...., Id, -Ill bade .... THE QUICKER YOU CALL, !lot'" to the """"' riql TllE QU!aa:R YOU m.t. Otntral 1000 Gener•I 10000.norol 1000 S(t:\\~lA--l&£~s· Sol,,. a Simpl< Scnimblcd Wonl 1'1m!c for• Cl111tkl• ITI WAt: i I SCRAM·Lm ANSWER IN CLASSIPIC ATION 1000 I: appointment&. Avail Ltue on North Bay w/ten-ace to Iha& cpts, avocado blt-IM, D .. 11 .. Pilot b a a Ii by appointment 3 BR, 1% Ba, ram nn, frpl, pier/slip plus beaut inner 55' WATER· front w/flJ' beam cellinp, break1ut •-ii=-=======•I 540-0666i or 521.1132 new w/w crpll, drps, patio. prden. 3 Bd, 3 ba ori one dock. 3 bdnn, den. Jam '-·-23 .. _, -· •'' ••-A *" •· FHA •-k n Could -M ~"000 11 2 ha DI ..... -. ..-...... • "• paUo Back l•y • .,.., uume .,,., 7rJ • .. e · ex_. ... , -. nn, v nn. • wrce 1mall prden. 2 BR. All new----''-----·I Low Down Paym•nt ~,900. owner· R, C. GREER, Realty u.le S74,ooo. 3392 Gilbert ly decorated, Yearly leaae 2 BDRM duplex, fenced yrt 4 bedroom.1, 1%-tile bath. l=c======= i;33'5!!!!!!V!!l•!!!!Lld!!0,..,.,,,.,,613,.-,.9300,..I ,:Drl:;":;·,,;11:;;1;,";:1;:34::;:=== $196. 673·Mll Eves. liv rm c:rptd 1; drpd. $130. Room for boat &: trailer. 1~ L h 1705 2 BDRM house, close to 2292 Orchard Dr. 31082 Aaume bl& $11.300, S"-'il Nawf!!rt Beach 1200 BY Owntr 2 br, 1 ba. tplc, 11un1 B••• loan, Full price $D,500. bltn1, plyrm le ba. Best 1tore1 beach, $145 monthly. C ,.1 Ma BAYSIDE Vlllqe \n Back Lido buy $«,500. (TI4l Rent W end of June.1:;";;""';;:a;;;-;;;;;;;;r;;;;;;;1 IRNIE"-,. CLEVELAND R••ltor 143 Bro1clway '45-0111 En•. '42-Mll 646-45?9 POOL a. VIEW! Exclu1ive Jv&n Wells Dover Shore• model. 4 Br. 3 ba., tam, pool, patio It view. Roy J, Word Ct. (Baycre1t Office) 1812 Santlqo Dr. "'6-1550 4 IR HOME 2 baths, double prare. R-4 7.0n1! 17th Street Shopplne area. Ctn build 2 or mort units. $24,950. Leon Vlblrt, Reatt•r 548-00U an)1im1! Spanish Vila Beaut1ful Meq Verde Con- dominium with cW1tom fea- tures. 2 BR 1~ ba, d1nlni room. $29.850 DAVIDSON R111ty 546-5460 Eves, 546-3851 OCEANFRONT Lease w/op.. tion 3 BR + Jam. rm. $64,500, 833-2087 Owner. TWO 2 BR HOUSES R-2 wnl!, 2 lots 10Cbd35', can build 2 or 3 mott unltl. Price $30.'1'0. LMn VllMrt, Reatter --· =======-Cea!•-llOD Boy, N.B_ l BR-2 BA, 61>-5023 PINTHOUSE 67'4923 I,;---, patio, carport, crpted, drpd, F01t. Tb e dllcrlminatinr A Charmine CdM HMne turn. Priv beach, pool " Hunt1.,.ton Beach 1400 buyer, v.·e have a Lqun.a -"·::•:....;C::lt::::.manfe:::;.;::._.;2::7..:1:012BR.2 baths, prqt, Frpk, clubholl!e. Boat 1Up avail. --Royale ~nthouse ln So. ... brick Door / Uv Rm, A pan. ~~1;nta1ir1:3 ~ ~: SHARP Laauna. Decorated by J. 'rn!te~. 22 :~ ~ :'! ~; Avail 1lmmeclla.ttb' AdultJ, no petl. Sales oHk:e, 3 BR 3 Ba, blt·inl, dis.ho ll. Blgers. 2 bdrm. 2 ha, Jn v.'OOCled caft)'Oll. -mo years eue, HI NB ... ,,":r. fain nn. lrpk, c:ov-prioed at $75,000. Property 497-1875 or 491.1517 IOYD 300 E. Cout wy. . . .. ""' ,_ ~--W ,._ t~ patio, $26,500 _ no down Cn:ar. vwucr w oona....,r ~TY POOL It TENNIS? GI 0, !3750 down ond u-arey1"'1'lltUll"ffd_Call, •••"AL> 3629 E. Cout HI..,., CdM Plenty or room. 4 bedrooms sume 10an. Jell B1·ltry, Jone1 Realty, HouHS Unfurnl1hN •JJ..SHO • 3 bath a: forevtr vitw ol POOL Inc. 2«1l W · Balboa Blvd., l "-~n~t~r~11~;;;;;;;;;;;;~3~0-~00~li~~~~~~~i!~l Back Bay. 6'M414 3 BR. 2 ba home • 1ieeds1 'lil6'13-62::ZZ:10 ::::·:"""=:::::-::::613--0834::=::::::;;:. :Z: 1; 2 BR. duplex; redec. W/'11 [l i;~ J lOVin&: care and paint, $3350 hi IRVINE TERRACE .. 2 BR cpll. drps, ruce. rd., fpl, Dilt• -..t£stlt~ cub to loans, FUil price lncom. Units l den, Fantastic View, pr., patio, Adults, no pets. _ _ _ _ _ $23,960. H•ndyman speC;.11 beautiful conditior: -fJiiO Lie. $210. m.41189 WOODWARD Loe. on Oowuiide ot Hwy. per mo. 2 BR home, extra wide lot. 3 000 RNl Estate 150 yell 1rom Beach. C l&'e BEACON BAY .. 2 Bit 6 frplc, 1ormal d1nlrm, dbl 2 Units • $2 1 8843 Adams, Huntlnrton Bch. Apt units, need1 paint 6 den, ot 3 BR. Community gar, patio, 1nC!ry arta, $215. Close to Stach A Oiannel _,,,,..!1!!!'!'162-3313'!!'!'!!"!"!"!!!!!,...1 god general cltanup, PO-beach. pier, limn1I ooul .. Scenic Propertle• 675-61JI Uve -in one l Rent one ~ TENTIAL IN C 0 M E EX-$450 $221500 CEEOING 110,000 ANNUAL-Jo.:' h b 11<'11y Co. Huntl ..... loach MOD LY. Prke 169•950-I 6IW235 ,REE RENTAL 1~ A•sume 5y4•/e GI Loan y iSION REALTY' 494-073l "'!~~!!!!!!!!'!"'!!!!!!!!I[!! """" $3500 Cash Dawn 985 So. Cout, Lqwla FREE Rental Service for Drop In and BrewM Newport Harbor Cot ta Here'1 one that probably Tat1I pymntl $152/mo. THE OLD GRAY MARE Mela uta. Call ~ won't lut lore. Real dW'p 3 BRs, 1%. baths, buUt-lM, "She Aint What She Used 3 Bedroom. HuntinP>a V~ IRVlNE TERRACE carpets, drapes, new paint. to Be" and neither b th.la ~. 2 Battui, Fiftpllice. Spacious 2 BR, 2 BA home. Illness torctl salt. co n t e m p / m o d home, Double Garqe, $115 mo. !""~~:· :::;=.J~ :::: Brashear Realty \v/Vlew of Ocean. 3 BR, ORANG! COUNTY'S rent tor abort period. Tem- L' I covered pat i o, 841-85.11 Ev 968-1171 sunkl!n Lh•/nn, muslve L•Ro•st porlr)' transfer. 1....,......,,.... ...... ....,. .... 1 ••one Frpk. 131.950 A ~ ~ Walker & lee =~iun:y ~Ui~ a r.~~ LEASE OPTION. Cute An-REAL SI'EAL! Mi 11 Ion 2tJ E. 17th St, '46-44M tho.,v Pool Home. Pain.i.... Rlly. 985 S. Cooasr 11""'Y· $195; 4 BR. 2 Ba, lov·'" trees. $32,000 by owner. ''I •u•• 49'--0731 ~ 7682 Ed.lnpr 6M.a.rT1 or 534-4232 in pl'Olf'f:U. Immediate oc-1............................ are1. Frplc, air mnd. 142-4&55 or M0-5l40 n NE§T Family artL Well cupsncy, $190/~ \\ith INCOME UNITS Children It pe t OK. BkT. Open Evea. dt11--' S BR, 3 bath J.lac-option to buy @ $2'l.500. Out.stand1-, belt rental arta, 534-<!ISO ,,--.;B-.;R.-2;;-.-•• ~-;;2--:--' '6'"'" "'5 $130; 2 BR dupltx, w/w, -. I t 7 • co )I o m e . C a r p et • , ~ S41·5110 occup)e(I ftl&r around, yields blttns. Quiet area. F•-d 1 w hr I b 1 t n 1 1 ftfda, draperies, finplace, private Mir t'*"' tllubl) In exceu of $U,OOO rrou:. _.. ts/d ltt J: lat m11ter ruile. View of hllll. OUEOE REALTY Owner say1 "aell now" and welcome. Bkr, 5.14-6980 ~S75 ~e deP. m.im 2836 Alta Vl1t1. For a~ ,.._ll:H"'*,CJ& will al•' in financing. $100; 1 BR duplex, wfw, aft 6 wkdyi. polntmtnt 644-ll92 LOS PADRES Realty clean l fresh. Available ====-::=-:-,,-:- ! 6-So C H g• ...... now. Bkr. 534-6980 SPARKLING, 1unny, walk to B1 ycru1 lar1aln Shike Roo Beauty " · out wr .• • ·~~ 1> .. "' A '""••lnr: , BR: Ideal famUy home; 4 BR. SUPERB Archltecttd Gem, $135; 2 BR, 1~' Ba studio. bltna, secluded patio, pool 6 den, plu• tam. rm, plus Lal'ie cuJ..de-sac lot, room Ior on 4 levels. Dramatic 16, Patlo, w/w, drp1. Children 6 maintenance: m&Jl)I ex- CD ~ I I A LT Y Ntar NB Polit Ofc. 64&-2414 3 Ba. SJi-)% loan. Owntr 00..t or tral11r, 3 b<lnns, 2'il ceUin«, 2 Br. 2 Ba. Bil OK. Broker. 5M-698ll traa, $185 Mo. 133-7954 Sp1c~us tran1. $42,950. Prine. only, baths, clean l sharp. Priced dtck. c.outllne v t e w, $128; 2 BR. duplex, pr. * 4 Bit, 2 BA, crpll, ctrp., Spll t-11.,.I Home 16U Irvine. 60-1231 rtght at GI appralll.l ot $39.%0. Owner. 4u,.9821 Stove, nfrirerator, w/w, paUo. Lf:ue $235. 2400 Ill It of llvinc nn. fam. 3 BR Waterfront No. 6l $24.SOO -no dOWD to Vets. telecord pald. Bkr. SM-6980 . 644-2277 Uy rm. 5 Bdm'l1, 3 t.thll, Balboa Coves. $ 6 0 , 0 0 0, P1ul Jones Re•lty $35,000 DUPLEX, 2 and 1 -LG ~ plus dlnlnc nn 1or enter-n-..1,, -•, ~ """''' 841 '~' E 841 OfH" BR, view. juat remodeled, C•ta Melli 3100 E 4 BR ba, C\ll-de-nc r i-.. ..-.u 1"" ·UOG vei. -o;:r•;r pvt, wild ldtcherui! 494-9748 1tttet. S 2 7 SI mo wt =~~::!; ~ wW COIUlkier other. SU.. PRESTIGE OUR AD a.AS8J FOUR BEDltOOMS 2 bathl, prdener. Paul Jone1 Rlty. to public &. private tchools • 1 ,;~~,,_--,,..,,--.-=-::: ~! S4meon~ wfl1 _; 1unken llvina room, all 847-12156 HELP! Kawall bound, must . bullt-inl, A qujet rt1idential ro=IVNH=~o~U~S~E-1-Bt-. -Bl~bw-, (:~ u11 my lovely 2 BR. 2 TWO STORYS loolri?W tot It Dial NVA street. Lease $225/month. RJO. Wihrldrytt. Pool 1 PROPlllTllS WIST BA Condo. Immed. pos. 4 BR, lowly cptl/drpa. In. for QU!ck, effk:l~t r'NU!t .. I CALL AL BL.lCK ~1151 tennil, wtr pd $110. IT.J..1715 lt:r2S Bayside Drive $27,500 ttmu. 494-60l1 It tercom tbruout, Electrlc kit.. Herlta&e R.taJ Estate __ _ N-..... _.. no ans f73.Ul6 Act. chen. SHOWS LIKE A MOO. NEWLY dee 2 BR. -"·t. Pountaln v.11-3410 ., .. .,.....ix..... EL. VA or rnA tenn1. ..-.. , 675-tlJO Bayalde Vlllq:e, trplc. AS EAR ovtl'iookbl& SA toll coune. · ~-----=~--- Treat Your family to a home with a IWimmtrw pool tor • hot .ummtr. Nkt 3 BR home with firtplac:t and new carpetinr. Located on the Euttkle, quiet street. Euy fin&nc:ine, take over 514% -· 126.500 ~ 2 BA. blt-tn., pool, dub lllt H REALTY Mldd!Hpd . 00 pe!a or HOUSE wrn1 POOL me priv. Asking $11,ro:I U7.aS31 Evtt. SJ&.2123 child. $140 'mo. 201 Me1a Beaut, hon'w: 3 Br. 2 Ba. l'Bl2.SC or i1U03I LOOKING for a iood buy Dr !)U...J(fi? Family nn; dllhwJl:Mr: ift. Jn .... on a home. .,._, thlll 3 · door/outdoor frill; ~ OUTSTANDING View u..,-1 '1 C111'E 1 bdrm. ,wfw carpet., -tr.·. bid. --~. --·~ er 3 •-'"" Bdn. All electric kit. wlU!i J hlm ·• -·-Bliwa 3 , EM.. 111 owner. nr St. oac 1, avail April pool 111'Vic. Incl. 962-"915 $4200 dn. ~ built-Ina. Rd. carp e t e d '90 6M-lll5 throuahout toa> covend 1't. · * BAY VIEW Fee lot I!)' patio, Ian.rt 11 paneled a.net 1 ~ with fireplace, 2 car l .. una ... ch 3705 :x 195' wl plans. $34,900. lhaldt!I wlU!i a 1ood pantry 1arqe. $125/mo. 351 E. . Owner 561-7149, ~ ott kitcheo. Assume our 6% 16th b"treet. Open Sat/SWJ ! BR, view, yr. old, frple. VA lo&n. montbly pymtl. J0-5 or (213\ 35)..21JO bltt'll, dlahnahtr, beamed $134. P .1.T. Ft.ill price. onlJ' 3 BDRM. 2 H. den, fenced = ipuloua. $l!S . ft •~nNT -'th boat slip 1_:121::::·"°:::.· _::96>-:::.:1639=---yard, privacy, Panoramic ~==-'-~-----1 QAa,"'n.u WI O(!ean WW. $190. lftao n.f: 2 BR. VS.., rtmodt!lled, ..,.. 'BR •• BA. !60,000 SPACIOUS 7$$-9233 phah """ "'""'-Uni. a.1~c .... 1211 imi ... '29-1100. ·-1 NOW'S THE -lurn.17'>. <l<aT" S BDRM, 2 ba, w/w carpet1, ;:"="'=::=i::;;:::=:=::::t Near NB Post Ole. '*2414 ~W"a;.;;oto.;c;.:.llff=----1-2_30 4~~ti."°sn~: G~ ~ near St. Joadrlm'1, Avail L91"M Nltuel' l'Tt7 nJI , ,, , April lot. ll90. Sl&-all5 5%0/o. LOAN PLANMNG ta IDO"ftT YOll'U Ml UI aJW!l\c ounthtt al ...,_In""'°"' Cltos!W -a---. White elephantl! Dtm .... Une SPA1lKLl:S A ahlnea h111kk ...... n.tr..,.a mwittotee. TIME FOR MONAROt SAY AREA 6 ouL Llvlnc nn • dinll'C CALIPOltN IA RL TY. 2 BR, pr, polio, """'drpl. ADULT COMMUNITY -· • ..-; -• tlec 1n4l H7-1 005 ,.,.., ftlttr, Troplcol ,.._ '"' ...,. .. .., ttnr'· For adUlbl, 1 blk. 10 3 BR, d~n, 2 BA. home, bl!"'-Cl•"' apto 6 dr>o * l l AT THIS * 1110 MM'l10 blt-Jns. lrplc, lttl•t .. pool ::-:: •. ""',::. ·~ 8: $5150.-"H. ·---QUICK CASH ~:j':_'i,1;BR.ii:'i~§;·~ .. ~lhop~·.;:.12-~mo.~2!1t1!..!"'~~_!-~1XI!!_ maint. ""' children'• ~ AuUme.. ·lf1 __,, pr. crpu. ftUICk c S )'Id a l"' .,..,, Heovy $211t/Ma TDTAL THROUGH A 6G'39toft5pm_ 'P AH lhakt-roof cotnpletea thil LAJtGE 3 I OF.N. &&DE 2 er.' fpl. blam ctil, ,..,,. ... --., °""" PiAP~DAL ltEAL TY yd .... !lo. Adi ...... l".. HOW'S THE ,:,:-:..,642-.;:_ .• .,. ::.~:·6u .. ':: DAILY PILOT i::::~... TIMI l!Olt """ .. -..m s.. tho thins to 1unt1o1t ,.... hom• -auow .. ., oct1cn ..,..._ DAILY P11D1' a..m!1od -·-·llnd-tbuylln'°' WANT ' AD For,. ad to •ll l1wltd 1HltOU•H A ~ NOW! day'a Claulfttd Ml> tht cl«:ll. dt&I "2«71. IT'S A Oit\liilTION ... PIACE ,.... .... 14 ..... l8 IOUll IJ) Ill Q..\SSI• DAIL y PILOT maey -""' 11,.f to 11"1 .,. -._ -DAILY 642-5871 ~~.! lor~Dtal ~ ~ Cl"•llled Mo> Cllc:k !Mm PllDr du~IW ....n -~ •• _., WANT AD .... 1..:tt2=-lfll.:;.:;;_ _____ ·-----,---.;;'°'o-.:"":;:;le.;;t;;.·.;;-==-'-;;;;;;~·------'·=-· --1 ------------------------------------------- . I DAILY P!LaT 'hllridlj,,._.20,.1"'9' ' K•Nl ALI' ouiNTALS lllNTALS 11(4 ISTl!TI RIAt ISTATI Aph. .........,.. ' Aph. '""""""" _ Apts. Unfu"""'°" , Aph. Unfu....-1 _.,_o.._-_..,_,_1.._ ___ l·-Geo"-"""'"'"r'-'o'-1 ------!""°" lleMh 4400 Ceot1 Me!> 5100 HUllll ...... INch 5400 11w1-11on11I -Leh . . BNT UVE like a K!tw er Quea. $155. J.ce ddaxa a bdrm. CHEZ ORO A.PARTKENT8 $l.«O DOWN oa mWl 1l¥el ~ m 1 b I at a r • --__ fc ..t Qllntl*· tram, ,t.c:h. 2 lMi bl., G.E. JQt. 2 cu l2U At1anta C•teMeteAlldrns ~ kit Laaona timW PoolDI pap. Well 3 ROMll rumltuN bdnn, 1"'6. ba. a~w1y pr. Adults. no pel&. U> New1·28edrooml.lPl,f ~ IM a profltabs. operadcm. Beach. Balance $4 950 11.ioa'9ci.Narro'lf'bl.ackcm.. $ZS Mollfll "'"'!shed. hit·""' call """ E. 16th Ptoee. $Q im ..,..,,., on1f 19 x . Cl It w)th 1 :i.. ... t poyeblo ISO mo. tnd..4..; lat. VI< Santi -A,._ FULL OPnCJN TO BUY S. Ml..auD GROUND ftool' 2 BR with 538--3927 (IC' 536-ml expc:ll\W, plm pll'kinc, ~ bl.taut. Owner, ( 7141 2Sth block. MWO:lr5 ~-A•lllabkl QUIET & BEAUTIFUL ,.p/yanl, .,....; to ""°Pl>lns. J'ool.w-..Dr>en mo. 491-1%11) BLAOC Booton Bull male. No .,_it.,...~ Mui,. onlf; 4 Br~ utll. paid. Mat... .0.ple ~ Prlvai. c.,...,. IOJD White ,,,_ OD llco. H.f.R.C. Pool.·14"'1125 1135. Owner/Art 61M39I SHINY mw apla. 3 b1ocU REALTY AcrOlto 6200 ::.,l"°"' A11tt 4 pm. ' Fumllure R1nt1l1 1'1616 eam.r.a, Hµnt. Bch. NEW • BR. l BA, ........ lr\>n> ....... cpll/~ hit· S629 E. <lout }llway, 'CdM I-;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;. ..::::...=:=.------ 517 W. J.9!h, CM. s;a.Nt -all hi"" kid d>ftr .... patio • aundtd!. 2 BRa 61Wftll I• • TAME blod< I white rabbit 1568 w. Lo<:ln. Allllln Tl..000 "'G-"1'-"rdt~n-'G"'"'"''c: .. _-'"46"'1"'0 ,.P patio, ... ,,..;. iiS$'. IJ50, 3 _Bit llOO. Art. NORTH OF VI<. 2llh I Onnp, CM. ""' 1140, 2 BR. ..,...., ..,,.,, A••• ,April L -1 s.16-2519 FREE DESK • SPACE • ESCONDIDO 66--0239 Whlddy1 Went? Wham• Got? WM to -~•-. --"· SINGLE vN,_ uu1•· • ·-3 BR. l" n. d vleblll>' of &Dr • n d -BOSTON T ........ F..W,. SPICIAL (' •SSIF CATI N FO ~~··~ ·--•-r, -Q -n ~. ,...,, rpa. L19un1 IHch 570S Briltoi (C.M.) in ntum 10< Approx. ~ · Acu, -VI< Ym1do"" I Delawan. -I R • welcome. Broker. ti34-69llO ury &arden •Pla with ~ crpta. $1'5 mo, elee & wtr taldns me~ ud ~ b.IJls; beautit\11 tettlnJ: can HB. Call ldenttty fD..4lll NA TUIAL IORN SWA,P&U 195: W.. 1 BR. lower, lrY flub atmospbett and pd. 893-4<SI 100 CLlfP DRIVE ,._ de!lvftleo. i.. plani.d bl ,Awcadoa .. lptcl1I Rite , yard. Qrild .,, e I com t: • comPJete pi\vaey. SOT.ml New-.. leach 5200 •WXURY FURN/UNFURM Nolar)' • 1ncom1· Tax • lne.. bold for appreciation.. Anx· FOUND blade: Poodle W:. 5 Lin. -5 times -5 bucks • •Broker.~ BAY CLUB APl'S. 13100 r"""' YeartyLeue.1A'2Bdm& etc bateDerlluim.a •• ~Wl,-:.....~ Col1& . ltU\.11-AD~MUIT...a.yof $8).TRAILERborne~ ~f)A~ariJeo APPUCATlONS now ae-stei-: to~ A Sbape Cali Bill Robinson (Eve&.) lO~Ooftwtthintaa:td!b' t:a':-~~-~ ~-l:':''::.t'::: ed in lovely park. Newport cepted., 2 bedroom. 2 bath, Ocean'view from nn Apt. M&-4471 on t:i.lance>. For more illlor-LOVABLE Siamue Fmiale . 1-HOTHING ,0111; IAI.! -Tlt.lDEI ONLYI Ana. 64MllO L1gunl &och . 4705 lwnay apt, enc!Ooed guqe, from ll50 mo op. leuo lalboa Isla d mall<m. pi..,. ~ K. W. Cat Meaa V.,.,. AftL PttONE 642-5671 rant a 1 t1 c Octin/Harbol' ~2"' II Small w1th -..en Te Plac. Y°'l' Trader's P1radite Ad Costa MM8 4100 $225 MOmtl yr. Oarmlnc Ww ln no~1ted att:a. REAL ESTATE $150 w.w. :!"L Eckhoff & Alsec., Inc. m.A.CX Cot.a,_.. w/Iadiut $25 un. U 2 bdrm No. """· adulta. l ar 2 adults. "',..., pool. Gtntral '\ Rltr. "'E '\ U1J w. Chapman Ave. bead _... ... ....., I 2 M.l tl\1"'P hldas on Pia· HAV£, New span"1> 1)0. n &. P Newell A.-e. ~ Lease re q u i re d • $265c ~art.... ) Oraiwe. Calif. ring inside. m-nu cenda. C.14. Trade eqty plex; 419 31th st. NB. It Studio A Bach apta. ATI'RAC'I'IVE. Cean 1 Br, monthly. can 646-J580 hntaft W1nfecll 59'0 Sauna • Gym • Maslaee 5C1·2Gl. ~ 53Wt'11 PEKINGNESE Doc. VldnlC, ~~ .. P!_Cf{»lOOO t;y, ph&s $14.00J eq, + cub Ft>R' e Incl Utils k Phone terv. b8&I' Beach £; town. near NEWPORT Island Deluxe EMPLOYED ht.a,.; wilh!9 1 Health Studio at X26 New-T llo p ... Su_ Fair • NeW'porl. C.M. c~---~J.5.u • 3-5 well loc. ft..2 lots In 0 . e lilaid Service. TV avail. new. $145 teue. $-2882 upper Duplex 3 .Br. 2 Ba. BR wmzm Apt. ...,.btach atta p)l'f: Vlvd, C.M, Ph. Bkr. r• r ·~~ nw IDENTIFY. MG-16&2 Cnty. 6'13-&W, ~6l e New Cale Is Bar ' RENTALS CrptJ.. drpl, trplc., elec to $ll0. Carport or ..,,.._ 673-2&$4 Zoned for Traner Pm -'BROWN Wallet. Estanda ~.,.. Vac. Auto Sales l Re-San Fernando Valll'!y 3 Br, Newport Blvd. 5CS8'l55 bltnl re1rl& Pkr/ alip. ·---29\iacrM, Deal'IDWIJl'l.01 Ul..I. Sch. Owner tA....i-.. pair Bide. Harbor mvd. 2 ba pool home S9(Q) eq; , HOLIDAY PLAZA Apts.. Unfurnished Adult.., no peis, $325, lease. nee. 64Z-0086 a!t.J 5 p.m. Offl ll t I L1170 Malar.offao. • Kt•ua:: ... -_.,.....,. C. M. Equity $53,500, Wa.nt now lied $275. For"-~- DELUXE, spaclowJ t-Bdrm. 5000 64Z-3425 YOUNG Woridnr Girl or Stu.> ce en a -OTHER h•ch Blvd. ................ Re's, Income. Hollywood County bo111e or }Ot. ........ 16~ . Furn. apL $135 Plus utlL General , ). BR Duplex near Beach, dent to ahane 2 Wnn. CdM front.,. from $25,00Ct RED .Male lrllh Setter. * 6?5-6591 * 536.8740 H""" -Ample parklns newly painted 6 cleanod. Apt I» Mo • ..._..,.. Alt. fxC(US(Ye R. D. SLATES, Rltr. Marcia I CG.._ -- No child1'!n • No pets VENDOME vacant $250/IM Mu 1 t 6 PM 847-3519 EveL 962-7369 LMt • '1 .. 6401 In ACl't'-Or&np Grovl'! near vu:S~::n ... ~ IMMACULATE APrS! ~~u"ho~ tor sale. ~~~~R~VI~ leisure World Area Ne:1~t:i=%ver LOST ~n ,. ye110; =~~~kr~~ C.OSta l'ifesa'a newe1t le most IMMED. OCCUPANCY' TOWNHOUSE 3 :er. 2% ba. Bro~ S34-69B2 Se ( B in heart of the Redwood Na-~t in Vic. 2 0 01,,,,,._,""",...,~-~~ l\mlrious apta now rentina:. ADVLT .• FAMILY W/W cptl, dtp1, frpL 1ncd, Rentals Wanted 5990 I each tlonal Park. Call Glen PoinSetha. CdM. ~ 1958 Cabin Cndler, 215 hp Furn It unfum. Adults only-SECTIONS AV AD..ABLE p;ltiO, flee. bltns. 2 Car Thompm tn4) 532-25.18 Qr. to Pete or Momma'• Pfttt)t stJoo ft!; 196' O>met. • 1pd no pets .. 1760 Pomona Ave., Close t o Shopplnt,. Park gar, pool $275. &U-7219 U!tra modern, dl'!luxe ~ ance. Calif. or write Harold Boy. He will ~peat h1I ad-S500 val. Trade for later just south of 18th St. e Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ba 2 BR 2 bath Deluxe CDn-2 • 3 BR. boua. Co8ta MeA IUlte. 1000 11q. ft., walnut Del Ponte Box 35 Klamath, dreu. Reward. 5f7-M31. model car, truck, camper l'RIVATE aleepina: rm. • 2 ~ domlrilum $250/mo , untum area. 1~7 yr old. Reu ntn. panelllna. (Jlllt orr Sa.a Di· Calif. 955'8 • 6.13-4516 =°'~'~-..;..;..c....~~-- w/bath. j\llt pajnted, S60. '9 Swim Pool,,PuVctttn $715/mo turn. 494-5091· 598--m2 (lf.ichard) eco trwy. at Los Alamitoe:) VIC 4500 Campu1 Dr, N.B. Want late model Sportsman per ma. See Mer. :n.n e Frp1, IDdiv/lndry fac'1I 2-t MOS be&. April IS, Udo at 13820 B1,y mvd. RelOff Propt!!Y 6205 Black portfolio contains i.r· Van. Have as part trade '60 Elden Ave. 1145 Anaheim Ave~ East Bluff 5242 lale, (Remodeling Lido 'rtpl&Ct!able material. Iml*la I: '60 Olrysll'!r Sta ""' COSTA MESA 60-2824 home) 67l-l395cr521-8416 FOR RENT "1rn Mammoth Reward Pbone collect Wamon w/Ur. $......... LRG. 1 Br., clean, e NEW OE LUXE e Also 488 sq. ft. avail. in mod-Mou pt a In Condominium .. , g 30 •--• s 30 ... ·-quiet. Beaut. furn, ore : am.""' ... : _........., 642"'°'5' Wshr./ dryer, aar. Mature Costa Meta ·slDO J Br. 2% ba. apt. IM leue R•mt hr Rent 5HS ~~=.=::ac"i!.05 E. slel'!ps 8. 6'75-il30 pm OI' wkl'!nda. (213) 21.75 Ac, NoSD Co. San adults. lnci. apac. nutr. IUi~. din ROOM FOR ~'T in nice, Mount. & 0..rt 6210 789-5862 Marcos Adj Fwy, R/R. Util 19'.n-D Wallace, C.l'il. rm. le: dbl. rarqe, auto. quiet borne for workin&: C.ontact Dohn Trem-n1. BLACK i; white lona: haired Trd for 30M sq ft I.ad ind. BEAUTIFUlJ..Y FURN HAR'BOR door opener avail. Pool Is penon.. Kit. prlvl. &U-t'19i 414. 831-29'10 .--dog, one black eye ' ear, unit&. Onr Mrs. Bingham • rec, area. Nr, Catholic 5 A. Nr. HemeL Hideaway 7 moe. wearn. black co!· PO S93 Balboa 673-8417 3 BR 1% ba, ?i1onticello Condo; cpts/drps, blt-lns, 2 pools, $3800 equity, Trade for 3 or 4 BR home, TD1, car or ! Owr./Aa:t. 546-5580 17 Ft. fiber 1Jass outboard and big wheel tilt trailer. Will trade for landscaping. PHONE 644-4687 HAVE Unita &: Trailer Prk, Tuc8on Ariz. 5 ac. All rent. ed. nn/35 more 1p, $72,500. Trade $30,000 eci. for ? in S. Cal. OR J..3045, 11 Ft. outboard for station ¥iagon or auto of equal val- ue. Phone 644-4687 Immac, clean! 2 Br, Po01 Oiurcb i1r 1Cboo1 .Ii c.orona ,. ___ ..a H1Gtm1M 5991 LAGUNA BEACH 3,IXXY el Wtr. same $5500. lar. Vic Maanolla le Adulll, "'"" nso. rm GREENS c1e1 Mar Hlrh. ~· Air Condltlontd 155 Dn. 633-1110 g.ID UL BUlhard. 11ewan1. 51&-1141 * * * * * * Maple. 540-5566, 642-4807 e ONLY $2!IO • GUEST HOME • Men or ON FORES'/ AVENUE qt oor~96h1191~~==..,-==lj!j~!!!l!!!!i!!!!!!!l'~i!!!!!!!!!!J.!l~~!!'!!!!!ii!!!!!!!!!l!~I e t:;-:ft.P.-=. e BACHELOR. IJNFIJRN, . 13T~n AL>lroo Way, N.B. wom•n. M•ah Hrvod !am> Desk eot "'".=a= In BUSINESS 11111 Li:Jgr, B""""'1ored !emal• SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY IT1 E. 22nd St 6'~ from $100 Ceron• dll Mar 5250 1y '"''" 543-S992 :;:;,. k>e•tlon 111 down~ FINANCIAL cat, 5 "'"'" Stitches on 1 BDRM furn. pool I: rec ALSO AVAILABLE Mite. Rentals 5"9 Lquna Beach. Afr cmdj. But. Opportunftitll 6300 :~~· Vic Balboa w.,.a._b_,._i_tt_lllf..;.. ___ 6_55_° Cement, Concrete 6600 area. $1"5 le. $153. incl util. 1 • 2 . .l: 3 BDRM. • tkned, carpet.d, be&uW $lOO REWARD _ 2 :nutty BABYSITI'ER 1959 &: 1961 M.tple Ave. l!eated Pool.!. Olild cu. ~·.,,, TRIPLE Gan.re. $45. or paneled P&rtttlontna. Two ''LITTLE BUSINESS'' Persian kittens/ l-<nam Fenced yard. MWt included. CEMENT Work, no job too small, reasonable. Free estim. H. Stuftick. 548--8fil5 l BR. Coznnl ,,,,,_ .. ~ Center, Adj. to "Shoppine -t\. • ' -. •' sale, lilXJO, $20 Mo. Nr, teetrantt9: Froatlp ca e Operate .from )'WI' home • W k .:i •• -.. 1.. v•~-,., ~ .. "" ... ma .... ., Nopet&allowtd -is• OranpC.01111tyAlrp ort, Forat:An.,reuleadlto•Fullorparl-time · 1-arey.Noquestionluked. • .....,.o....,, """"-Y ~ ~ ~ ~tk· '85· 2700 Petel'llOJI Wq, at Har-54&-5044 Mundpal parldns loll. '5(1 e lfi&h eamlnp 897-9102 ~ilbop St, S.A. * CONCRETE work. Bond- ed & Licemed. Concrete bar &: Adami, Costa Mea ' ON TEN AOU:S WANTED per month for ~ Desk e No experience necessar)' MAN'S walll'!t c ont a i ninr ·==~~-~-- NICE 2 BR apl 1613 Santa 546-<l.31'0 1 1-2 BR. Fum • Unfum and chain available tor $5. • fue train1nc program sl'!veral credit cards ii: YOUNG mother will babysit sawing Ana Ave. $140. Call 646-Cn I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Frplca / priv. patioi/Pooh:. ~~ :U,bca~, NB BlllinHs boun answerma: •Earn while Jumin& driver'• lie. vie. Laa Bch --.ttk.days in own home on Phillips Cement. 54U38Q or 543-1572 Mll:IMf Tennis . C.OOtnt'l Bkflt. put-service avan.ble for $10. e $3500 Investment buys or S. Lq. Reward ff.UOll ~~Pt;m..~ Sand)' NEW 1 13¥, low:ly furn. All VllLLAIU tine areen. Gar&l't far rent All atDJtite ~ except complete inventory LOST black I: tan 4 months =='=----'---Custom land1capJn9 eltt. Quid:. Gar. Adulta 900 Sn. ......_ Olli tij4.26ll ~. Colt& Meaa teltpbone. •For information aid male beail:e. Hamilton CHILD care, any age my BEST IN OONOlETE $150. 2220 Elden. ~1251 lftJS (Mf.cArthu:r nr. C.O.st Hwy) viclnity. 548-1156 DAILY PilDJ' •Call: 546-6740 eves. • Bushard Vic. Call ho me. $ 25 week,· -~~·=""=""'==·-- $1.SS. 1 'BR Houle. Den. ..... ' Income Property 6000 2Z2~B~ TERRI~IC opportuntty, 968-5210belore12noon. Teacher/mother. M.5--0156 e CUSTOM.PATIOS e pool. patio, pr. Adults, no ·lalboa 5300 49&-M66 &mall COUI Opl'!rated car Slol Grty female Poodle Vic CHILD Care, vie Paularlno concrete sawinl It removal ..... ....,.. .. -3 BR STUDIO ==:.._ ___ _:;:.:.:; Sell or Trade w .. h. Owner -· "'"~ of Beaoh ~ McFa.id.n. School, CM. Day or Nght I ===Sta='•=Li="==·=""='01='=1 DELUXE apt. 1 BR, Pool. GRo\CIOUS Adult Livins. * Modern Offices make oHl'!t. Locatl'!d at 19th Reward. 893-6914/893-Ql! ~S4=S-~1928~~~---- $US. ldw fm bachelor. 1993 POO~ Ocean~Bayvtew.Spaclom Outstand1"ng Sill()e .......... Air cond. & N•wport, C.M. ,...,753 LOS'r. Inky ..... blk I WilL Baby~t ........ or ContrlC!ort 6620 Church. St&-9633 2 BR. 2 BA.. walk in itionin&. parklns:, ~tarial aft 5 P?.t wht caL Tq' from Jncfiina niaht& Vic Hoq Ml'!morial Additions * Remodellna:: I========~ I ADULTS ONLY .-...... ~ ....... ~ Investment ...vice, c:entml location. • BEAt.rlY SALON • Vic F.V. Rewanll ...... 19 HdlpttaL MS-151> alt 3 pm. """ IL Gerwlclt, Lie. ~ leadt 4200 draperiet. Pool Boat •liPll C. Rehm: Na.ttren Realtor N. end Lqu.na Beach, air BABYSl'M'ING in my home, 67l-60il * 549-21'10 1741 Tustin Avenue b-tenants. Subl!mlnean 230 E. 17tb Street cond,. I atatlons established, l'•rNMls 6405 $20 per wk. Near Pomona SINGLE Younr Adults Lux· ury prden apt• with coun- try club atmosphere and complete prl.vaey. SOUTII BAY CLUB APTS. Jmne at 16th. Newport Beach. (TI4) 6'5-0550 l•lbeo 4300 CLEAN Bachelor Apta. All uW incl f15 up 315 E. Balboa Blvd. BALBOA m.8915 l BR. Furn. Apt. Avail Eut- er week only. Call """"' -Wintl'!r - t BR. $$. Utu Paid. AdWts. 9'l6 E. Balboa 6'1J..9'JG Huntington leech 4400 2 BR-2 BA Spanlsh style, decorator furn. Shag carpefuW, 1eU clean- .ins ave111, private entrance 6 private ~ Adult living, near beachta. 1 &: 2 BR. 2 BA from $110 to $225. ' ~uWl= ""'""'°""""' (just No. ot Adami)· Hunttniton Beach <ntl 962-25181 ---··-·----BLOCl< TO Beach, f1lrn. l BR pool, me utilities. $125 up 536-3TlT ~7282 BWIESl'-to ........... ~y PILOT 0•""""" ~ •••• ....... -..... ""* ~--111 off 17th StrHI pujdna.·•13-3003 Property Cblta Mosa 142-1115 ..... equip, amp!•......... Sehl, CM. 51&-95.12 C1rptl c1 .. nin1 662S Coit• Mesa '42-4£41 NEWPORT CIVIC CENTER $6500. Owner. 49'-9972 • LICENSED BABYSITI'ING youl" ho Huntlngten ... ch ·5400 Large strategic corner, O:UiCt!:I lfUitable !or Com-EVl'!I, 494-00.9. Spiritual Readings, ad'llce by the week. You fu~ PROFESSIONAL Rua: It EXCLUSIVE ON·THE·IEACH . 2 & 3 11ec1...m l,to. NEWLY DECORATED 2 Br. w/earport--IUXi Disp .• water pd. • DI'· schls 2194 "D" ~tia A'!lf!. • 63Mllt. 1'lxury llvlnr "' ...... "" LOVELY 2 J$r. Drpa, crpts, 9\0St dilcrimlnattnr. NW wood Ors.-pr. Adults. ro available at ::-;;:;.~:":v. ..... ~., 2: lhe Huntington 5 pm. 2 BR unfum, ~g. blt·in 11tovl'!, carpets, d r a p I'! a , redecorated, no pets, S130 mo. 568 Wilaon. CM. 545-0760 2 BEDROOM, 2 bathl, wall fD wall C&r'Pf!fs, drapes Ir: bJt-inl, laundry r o o m • Adults only, $140. S40-4622' atter S P.M. S40-86l6 2 BDR new dee I: drps. unfurn Adlts $145. tge·be.ch furn $llS. 546-6716 P1ellic ~ ill Ocean Ave., H.B. (n•> s1U? Z IR-2 IA Spanish 1t;vle. lhlr carpet. in&:. self cleaning ovens, private entrance A-private Fundecks. AdWt llvln&, near beaChes, l &: 2 BR. 2 BA from $140 to $190. LGE. Un.fw'n. bach. bit-In rangf!, cpta, dfpll. 545-5421 2885 Mendoz.a Apt. A, C.M. SPUT-Level 3 Br. 2~ ba, cpts, drps. bltns. No pets. U822 BrookhUl'll 288.J Mendom, CM 545-&121 (j111t No. of Adami) m4>962-2981 2 BR apt. downsta.in, clean. "!!!!!!!l!!!i!!i!!!!!!!!l~!!!!!I!!!!!! ~~~~~Ire ~ 2 Bdrm. 2 Bath Ca.rpts. Drapes, buUt-lns. 2 BDRM, drp:::, new crpta, Best location. 1 block 10 •Pis. pvt patio 1-prqe,Cblldreo 1hoppinc thl'!ater, etc. fur. o.k. $130. 5§8..'lS§CI nishl'!d or unfurnished from 2 BDRM Ml'!sa V•rde, $l25. $130. C'alJ owner 642·2833. for Adults, no pets, Immac. lnlonnation. * 546-8866 * l9Q.1Brunl,upstaira.Ava.il 4/L :P..lature only. 122 Magnolia Sl 4!M-469S DEJ.UXE 3 bdrm. lam rm, ltlldio w/garap, no pets • $245. Mo. Ooee to Douglas Plant. can 531-7226 125'x200' <+ 15• alley), with ml'!tcial, Medical. Dental LIQUOR License Orange on all matters, 108 S. El transp. C.M. area. 6U-l407 =~~e~~:'ct~u~p 2 good office buildinp on Air-cond., crpta, elevator County I: quality .lixturt1 Camino Rl'!al, San Clemente. ~=="='°'-='=.,:...,=::.:.::... major street. Near the heart FROM fro for complete ftltauranL 492-9136. to AM·lO PM BABYSI'ITING My home, E-Allen's Maintenance of th!'! fabulous O, C, Civic 5'1-5032 OR 6'1>-2464 Newell Aseoc. 494-6594 'SPECIAL $2 READING side C.M. Preter wttkly. ~ or eVl'!S 6f2.-352S Centl'!r l boominc financial .OFFICES BEAUTY Shop, Newport, LONELY unencumbered * 5t8-l557 * CARPET & Funi. cle~; dlatrict. Great traffic flow Sinlle or 1Wte, parldlJ&, cen-small, busy. Top location widow wishl'!1 to form a BABYSIITING D1Y home. for 1 day service & qtJ&llcy &: exposure for hl&h rise tral. cor Joe Oranae AV!'!. .l let.II'!. $3250. 646-4088 widow's club. Internted Pttfl'!r Ulldtt 4. CM. area. work, call · Sterllnc for oUi~ building, or bold for 100-500 sq ft. 548--6m. eves. parties write o.Dy Pilot 642-5540 brightness! 64U5Xl Carpet & Upbol Qennlna; If it's done JirhJ .•• • It's "DUNN·WELL"! a.s!Ured appreciation. Price OFnCE 1842 A 'Newport \V H 0 LESALE Distributor Box P-318. WllL Bablsit in my home, $25!>S:Mrr TERMS OR Blvd. ldeal for IMurarice, needs fund• for larpr in-Attr•ctlve Expert week days. EXCHANGES Income tax or employment Vl'!ntory, Will pay hiP in-YOUNG WOMAN * 548-!l298 * RICK ALDERETTE qency. 543--0588 tere1t rates. ~7015. dancer will teach you all SHARE ollice w/ eat, FOR SALE SAW SHOP latest steps. Call Ardell lTI4) 547-6469 I n co m e Tax co. Reu. GROSSING over $10,000 213: 591-4538 l·ID J>M Boat Maint•n•nce 2 TRl-PLEXES 1 block from. ocean in su.n- set Beach. 10 yrs new, all 2 bdnn, OnJy $42,000 each. HARBOUR RL TY "'""" * Nl!:\V FOUR·PLEX * Nl'!ar Beach, Huntinrton Beach. $65,900. 841-3957 Busi-• Pn1p1rty 6050 Professional Medic1I Building l30C sq ft, 4 Suite• on choice comer ln desirable arta. Immediate occupancy $94,IXXI ~ excellent terms Will exchange:. THE FOX OOMPANY 2863 E, Coast Hwy, QlM 67J.M95 or &CU:969 BUJLI)ERS, inveator1 60X300' poslible 7 units, choice atl!!a. Real bU)' $19,500 Bkr M2-58Sl Buslnen Rental HUNTINGTON BEAQI OOLO KEY SUITES Executive & Sales Offices * Air~ k utila * C&rpets It drp1 * Reception Rm * aeamrw 1t mainL ™l'!pbone Anlwtrtna It Srcretvlal Service avail Town & Country Shepplllf Canter 13582 Besch Blvd. (at Elli.al Huntin(ton Bch '61~7 STORES ALSO COMMERCIAL Bid(. 3100 SQ. tt. Good location on New. por! Blvd, In C.M. 5'&-S817 >Mo. Shop on E. llth SL Costa 1'-1eu. suitable for 8'rvk» buslrwu. 546-SCMO mnthly rent. 1806 Nwpt ~1530 aft 6 pm 847-7174 Blvd, CM. 642-7301 17th & ORANGE, C:.M. Top Money te Loan '320 location, arnUnd floor: only PRIVATE party will loan $60. lTI6 Orana:I'!. 548-5Ml $1500 up on R.E. equity or 300 Sq. Ft. Office buy TDs. Ca)] my arent • Costa Mesa. 64&-2130 Anytime Ph. 543-1311 NOW LEASING • Nl'!w :r..1.J Industrial 1350 square feet $155/mo. Arent &U-148S •• --------~- 6555 Free E5timates • , , 548-3544 Carpet Layint & Repair 6626 C.'.RPETS (nylons, \\'OOl.s, polyestl'!n,) Vinyls and TU- I!!!, Latl'!1t st)'le1 and colors. Commercial and Residential. Expert installation. BLANKINSHIP FLOORS 642-1403 54()..72;2 EL E CTRICIAN Liceru.ed, bonded. Small joba Malnt. &: repair. 548-5200 \ r ... 8. IR o. Ir, q; "' Uo 2 d• "· .. rd ... 'k, ,. ll. in on iJ. Ir • r i)Q .00 ,. .. I !O 7D 15 • op L g; '"' br !6 ~. j). ~. u. I 62 ID d, , .. IO :'S ·-•• "' " •• •· ,, -' ,. l -·. d I • • • • T-..... !II, lM SERVICI DIRICTOIY u~v~ DIR£Cl'Olt_!: JOllS.••D1!'1.0Y..., JOIS I IMl'LOYMl"IT JOIS I IMPLO\'.lloWNT JOIS I IM~LOYMINT JOU I IMl'l.OYl\Woil '~I 0.-•I ...,,.. Mn ~ockl, Rtpolr, ff4i Htlp 'wt:;')M,, noo Htlp W1nltd. Mon 7200 Holp W•ntod. 'Mln'7200 Htlp WOftloll, -hoo Htlji -11111> W- y 1-------~ • -· .. , . . r "'~ · w..,... 741D W..1.n GOLDEl"WUf S<ll.--ARE YOU 'l'HINKING ol ORDER DESI ' H u G H E s ~ Lauadryi~ UJJ ~tbei lllJ'l)l' l'...U. rmr ·* OAY B.USBOY -HOUSEMEN A,pte. Bal lale. Open~ Bedroom? Du rm! • MUI · · MICHANICAL AsRMILERS SECRETARY' UNllAll d&>1 Sam ,. '""r:~J'd'>" Be,_, Ac:tMIY' ·,,.., * LEAD NIGHT . Aft 1 s.m to lpm. s..,...,.1am Pat>. ·rm! U\>n!7' ~! COOl< Immediate~ b pandil'lc 1tatt for en- lara:ed hotel. Call or ae Mim! Kina. to 6prn. Pcrhl.PJ-Just 1')0tc•JU)()/lf'! JapontH GardanOr ....,.,, Eot!lo&i.r'-...,.,.. * DAY NEWPORT BEACH l...W_G_ TIR£I> QI' A LllHG ExJ>e•. c:ompl >ard .. Mc.\ G"'""~ ~, . ' DISHWASHER Free et:timateo t>ti-'l9G&. • 1A1.tttrbacb & Mioc. ' IS GROWlll6 We hlv. a few openhwJ lot e:qiedenced mechanl- $440. to $545. COM>llJ'l'E f u-n.w.-0...,.11 Xb>t. . ........,.,, "' ..... -hbq "" ... -ell-JAPANESE ~ ilA E. ,.., St •• CM $40.1'97 * NIGHT • exp. It's almoet spriitg A we koow • Wt haff P,!Uons available 'for THE· NEWPORTER INN ' ca& ~en who are Jamlllar with hand and PG'W't , t.oal . auembb' wor1r. and lite drill pRll operatlonl, Duration of employment wUl bt lhree- •bc montlil. Houtl 7:30 AM' -'.PM. -(lrt. t:lt<L ........ vWono!ll<o-....... er, tborthand. ~ tl15/'Q tn lf ~ n t In 1 ton reUabl•->1ainto..,,.,., n.u ""''th .. !hi . .,..,, DISHWASHER mo. rates. 892-3lUI 18 " • mcnt oJ)(lty, Bue~ m ll:dlZWfr at lltacb' · Blvd., joat GU t1ie Su I» " itAULING. Cleanup pragies. Rooftnl ' 6950 odd johl etc. Frff eat. Jlm --~----'= APPLY .IN PERSON TOOL AND DIE ' MAKERS PUBLIC AGENCY "" i'wf, ~ pool"'"' will require a~~ MS-5325,aeytime 1 H1ulln1 0730 Gentr1l .. H1ulln9 & Clt1nup $10 per load. Free prage cleanup tor usable items. can Tom. 5!1-3757 SA VE MONEY -behft you take it to the dump. Call 64.2-$&i eveL HAULING, Toppin&', Trees, Hedaes, Proleulonal. Free UL Big John 00-4030 CLEAN Lota/pre.gea etc., tree remov, dUmp skip backhoe, fill grade. 962-8745 HouMcleanino 6735 CARPETS. windows, nn:, etc. Residen. or Comc'L Xlnt work ~u! Refs. 548-llll WILLIAM'S CLNG. SERV. C&rpets-fUI'Jl<Ompl Ilse, And Apt clng. 642-8164 A Root.er. not a llllesman. Leak& atop{ltd, all type roo11nc. New or repair work RfUBBI E. lfE guac. 536-8444 I• 151 E. Coast Hl9hw1y -. Now port Belch Sewing 6960 WOMAN Deeds &ewing work. Lite alteratlool & mendings, hems & clothes made. M&-24-05 • Dreumaking-Alteratiom;. """"" Ile< .... ·-· Alteretioht-642..$145 Neat,, accurate, 20 yrs, exp. Trff Service 6980 Elt•t• M1 intenence TrM Service Tree tt'moval k trimmifl:p Free estimates." 64U300 842-2993 TREE Trlmmin.g, EXtractlng k Ornamental Pruning. Ex- pert. Reas! 84&-0779 • * CARPENTERS * ELECTRICIANS * CABINEl SEITERS With mobOe home eitperi. ence. Ex~ent benefita. , APPLY JN PERSON qPLORE~ MOTORiloMr CORI •. 4000 C•mpu1 Drive Newport Beach CONTROIS I D\Y"1on ol l!;x.C.!lo Co.,.. 1166 WHITTIER AVE.• COSTA MESA 646-2491 An Equal <JPportun!'> Employee . Fonnetb' €adillac· Gap JANIJOR EXPERJENCE D \ ~xcellant );ii1P,t.~ · Banaflt• ' •APPLY Personnel Office Th ird Fl0or -The Jroanaf NEWPORT BEACll 1 47 Courti of Fashion 1 • F ASHtON ISLAND L with ln,ltcUoo mold e~ """'· AUTOMATIC ---m MACHl!ft , oPERATORS with abllil;y ·to do 1etups nn Tomo& or Brown A Sharpes. Ope: Jnp on tint and seo- oOO ahljl!I, EUCTRO . PlATW OESIGIH fleclro-Mechinle1I J. C. CARTIR CO. Exp·d ~ '"' colle.. 671 W. 11th St. level edUcatbl 'ln' meche.nl-Costa Meu cal e~-qn&. Recent laY· 5414421 out l delign wdi'k on draft. ing board cequlred: F&nll!lar w/ mil!Wy -t!olu. AD ....i npporlwU'> Radar exp prete!rred but' rtlt t-~--'"'-P~lo~"'--­ easential RADIATRONICS Div ol Wb!ttaka(lrp. 18842 Teller. J. ve. .Newport Be~h. 833-2100 • EXPERll!NCED e ESCROW e SECRl!TARY Maintenanc:• Man UNIT!'O CALIFORNIA ., BANK Six Days 1 Yf'4'k REUBDI ~. l& 3141.,j. Coa•I Hwy Corou tlel ·M.r 67:1-9240 151 E, :&'.at Hitl.way Equal..-.. •mployu Nawpert Baach FULL BENEFITS perlod or •-f.ob' - Call Mr. Sylvestu: 54C).29lD or 86U4U Non. tbru Fri onl:v· SECRETARY S.C..tary for ..... """"· IJ(uot be -to all ----WU! .. ................ ~ ... plinlmel'ltil, l"fiCOl'dl • re- porta. Win budW IODle tor. reapoodenoe on own initia· .... Cadillac Control• Division ol Ex.cello C.orp. 1166 Whlttlar Ave. c_r;:.,'t;i' Anequal cliipoctunify employer The. Rlaaer Now ta~ applications in FulUon blalld Jor month 1n. our i... Arwei- -~ Die """'-~will be ...... ....... lmmeollato Oi!enlne• In the following ..... STA 11S11CAI: DATA """"'need or tralnN 'I fire, and/ur· c:Ull&lty 1ta&.: tlca1 codinr. Prepare com- plier ift.ptlt data il'I our op. eration1 unit. Deta.11 flaur9' -!nwlved. POU CY SERVICE Income Tix 6740 Televis:ion,. R•p•ir 6985 RESPONSIBLE pnparation RAINBOW TV..COklr, blk ·&: & filing of all income tax wht/ alereo repair. No returns by Celrtilled Public charge il V.'f: d o n • t Accouqtant. Available tu -.-pair~50% less on rep&irs! se""' tht' needA ol Corpora· 54&3770 EQUIPMENT MECHANIC CITY OF LAGUNA BEACH Newport Beech An Equal OpRQrtunity Employer with a minimum of one year's cadmium plating ex· perlcnee. TOOUNG !llSPECTORS • Waitresses • *DRIVERS* No Experlenc:e w .... k>oklow tor • '"'""" lady • am apeak and Nec:essciry! t>pe G •cm a n ""'"°"· EXPERIENCED ONLY GERMAN LADY Part Time Workers M..t have °"'"' ~ Should haw""""' o!l!to.,. FULL TIME SALARY:. ;516. TO $61!. . driving reQ:ll'd. >.pp}J . perienee &nd a pleuant WQ' ' ' · Pemument. Experience In To man the Huntington 8 YELLOW CAB CO. with our customen. 1'1111 APPLY lN PERSON ~fer at ieUt one rear ·o1 fire, cuualty or 'multtp]• line raUna experirenae. Plea.· tant phone penonality t • 11t:ntial, Exctllent ~ il;y for advance:~t. • POLICY TYPING . . lions. small business en-====-==== terprises and individuals. Upholstery 6990 Your complete satis!action ~---"-----;, ......,,,,.., * LOOK ;Jc l'll'rvicing a.nd minor repair· =~ ~u!; ~ ~~ • , 186 E:l61h St. time ;lob. CallMr. Pfahler or #16 Fuhion Ialand ing automotive equipment with experience in the use Costa Mesa ~frs.• Schmitt at TRANS 'Newport Bea.ch required, App 1 y: Public lie Library~ of height 1aups, tool mak. * PLATER * GLOBE Tn.vel Bureau. CORPORATE IMPROVEMENT l5 yrs. serving Orange C.O, COUNSELORS BIG SAVINGS W "~ De L ·~ F t A Working hours will be be· ,,~ ~ o1-;q p i>N ores ve. tween 5 pm and 9 pm Mon-er's SCOJ?H and compara· EXPERIENCED ON .PREC _........... COLLEGE s tudent, d&Y throQKh Friday, and tors. , · JOUS ~IETALS FOR cm.. MOTHERS PB>S. RrS e 612-9937 • \ CUSTOM · UPHOLSTERY· ANO ORAP~S penn,,,.n! poo;illon, part from 9 am to 5 pm Satur-MAINTEN I llrt curr BOARDS. EXCEL-School • -· <»<rdlnatins Ume durlnK sctvxil, full time days, • AnU LENT OPPORTUNITY. worlc. To lo thirty hrs a . ' ' NIGHT SHIFT AT KEY PUNCH H. K. Clark Acctg Serv. Income WI, personal or business, your home ar ofc, 20 yrs. exp, loc !inn. 642-6183 or 66-0742 eves e Th• T i1x Advisors Year round olc. 328 No. Nwpt Blvd, N.B. Reu! Call 645-0400 fol' appL MACK HARRIS Tax Serv. 9th yr., '3ll7 ~velt. C.M. Appointmts, SCC}-2911 e INCOME TAXe Done in your home $5 And up. 63S-2600 INOOME Taxes prepattd your home, long form com- bined, $15. 494-342'J Walter H. FahrenOOU P.A. Income Tax Service 642.-6204 or 545-1398 eve INOOME Tax Se:rv., Notary Public. Reu. Eves. SG-1340, 2361 Ze~itli, S.A. Hts. Ironing ,6755 IRONIN'G A Repairing. Pick up A .d~very~ , ' * 54G-0074 * Our other services include; * Carpet Installation * Carpet & RU:g' Cleaning Your sa'tsllaction is .1 our most important uset Reva's Upholstery 305 Palm, Balboa PPnn. 673-2794 968;4797 CZYKOSKI'S CW1tom' Upholstery, E•1ro pean Crafts ma na h tp.100% Financing. 60-1454. 1831 Newport Blvd., C.M. lpBS &. EMPLOYMENT Job Woritad, Lady 7020 i1ulnmer, at Chevron Sfatlon AppUca.nts must have CHEMFLEX wetk. Schoo~ Church. ot f.H on Beach in Laguna. NO completed , two yean ol col· MECHANICS 3767 Birch St. work helpful, ExOf!!U,nt eam- Hipi}ies . Or Icing hair. Must lcge. Students, however, wui Newriort Beach , 546-1190 inaa U accepted. Call Jim be 18, u.lacy ,.~ :;!mmission oot be aCT:epted. ' WANTED· y t Burgard 9 A.M. to 'l P.M. with raises. 4.,,~3 -'"-d. ed B . OUlll , man o 835.4044 ..,;,,... Inquiries may <>!! irect leam electrical estlmating1-.,.·,..-..,· --,,---.,..-.,.-- • lNSTRULTORS -l' \W tc>" til' w1th a potential 18.lary o1 Sh1r~·C•r'ffr Gali m""/and part time. Neat a~ HUNTINGTON BEACH ,witb a,t leut 2.year.'1 • ..... ..__will. .. ... ......_. ..... ""--11·-Gal peara.nce. Mue:t be abte to $800 a mo. M ..... ""' mg _....., •• • .... •111 ..,, LIBRARY cent e-xperlence In the maln. to work 60 boon a week Fridays, Recpts, Bkkp~ ~t and deal with the ,525 MA\N STREET tenance and repair ot au~ at minimum waieg while RNs .ftL'VN1. Both fet & fee public, good figure. Apply (n4) 536-93'27 mated machirterY. training. Write Dt.ily Pilot pa.kl '*· Top co's! Call in person. Holiday 1-lealtb , Box p.317: Dorts,.641J.7796 ~i. ~ H..-bor Blvd., Progra11lvt Menufacl• ELECTRONICS ONE , ALERT ARGUS AGENCIES HAND POLISHER u•ing Company hH Im-ftiHlllQillS e UPHOLSTERER e 1869 C N..._ Blvd., c.M. Recent n:perience in small medi1t• openings for IR Aft TRAINEE WANn:;O DEmlERATELY: builders hard~. Apply In~ Mahn, reliable babyslttrr KIWKSET T t Lathe Ope with a aound knowltdp of .lobansen ~ Cllrlatensen (unwed mother acceptable) 516 E. Santa Ana .St. Urte r. electronic theory. Industrial 898 W. 16th St., N.B. ·Uve in/out in lovely home Anaheim EXPERIENCED experience ,hflpful but not Comh of Monrovia: A 16th "'/pool. Hn. 3: :II to ll PM. PRACTICAL N $3 ~ I ired Own tranap. Nr Douglu, urse, iu . An Equal Oppty Empoyer Withabilitytoconstructproi ~~ssttM!neeesaary PROFESSIONAL. salel.Ca· H.B. Good pay. Call: =·" .,~~ ""l~pital.. 4>cal LOT BOY totype ee-rU to ~ctin& tol~ -·-i:""-Uons &nd are in.~ reer. Seardrinc for man to 841-)405 bel 10 anH pm ~ ~ learn our bullnesa and hand-=.,.-.,.-----'cc~ ======== New Buick Dealer. Excellent erance. uted !h joll\lng an ouflt&nd-le ialel' encutiw .-;tlon. T.elepltone r.ceptlon Domestic Help 7035 working cOnditlom. eea,_i;h •' Ex:Ciillent company ing electronic component! ""-1....... Iticome p~ed. work. Apply ·betwHn . . •--J k 8 ~1 benefits plus overtime. m·•ufac"·"ng o,..an•··11on "-"·~ 1 I 5 1••• area._.., ac rqwn,ruue • •4' i ~ 1 ° ,,, "'' •U-I • """" College, aales or busine111 p.m. p.m., ._ • Oilldren's Hospital of Orai:we County in Orange career openlnc .for operafnrl. County. :Excenent .ai,.ry • wttt:i at le~t one YIU ex· benefits. penence on Altha Is Neuo KI 7.(Qll meric IBM equlp'ii:IL DQ HUNTINGTON VALLEY CONVALESCENT H9$P. NEEDS Full Tim. 1 HOUSEKEEPER 1.182 Newman Ave., H.B. ....,.., SECRETARY llhllL· -I· '. Ex<ellentir..bendlla,Per- manent,. 1tead;y work. Our policy la .......... from witbin. Your futi.n ii deter.: mined entirely by you. Nrwo modem omce, fritndb'. .................... . ror Deta!ll and Aw'L Call C4lllcl l'IRIONNl!L 12131 384-1213 1 UNIGARD INSUllAN~I GROUP; ; l>ll>IEDIATE OPENING.! . George Allen Byland Aieney Buick.~ .E. l7lh. St., Costa •, ._ I . ~ . • that provides excellent.N."Ork. exp. Marrled.. 542-5623. Ext. E. Mev-ood,. Santa Employer Pays Fee M 54&-7765 l"llPP V ""t: 1 ing conditions and good ' - lm-B E. 16th, SA 547~ ~ · . 1300 E~ Normndy Pl. J • bencl'lh1, apply In person for 3Zl. Ani. NEED OFnCE GUU. tor Chinese llve--i.as. 01eerful WAN T·E D :. Re 11 r ed Senta Ane : bnmediate comlderatioii to: MATURE man needed by 1"'"1--~U7pho~l.t~e-.,.~ .. -...,-.,-.. -.,- Experienced person needed to manaae oftlee of small bulinea in Newport Beach. General Seeretarial a: Book-...,, ... .,.,....._ ....-. Salary open Send ruume to ""' 511, Balbo<. FOR ' L ,..__...._ _ __, gentleman or colle~ gtu· c1·B!ook -rth uf McFadden, · • lurnit~&ign store for 1 -n-pery Se1UN1tre1a sen. bkkpJ. Prefer exp'd., ible houn. C.Ontact TAB -lated duties. ~ence T-1.--.-........... _to··- Permanen "":"~""~ dent for cutsidc aalel. Fl"'· ,.., H u G H E s dell . la!lallon & -·r-on .i:cctg. macb., addtna; Far East Agency &f2...l103 Jh hlbc. k West of. Grant.) \ , . ' very, ma ExRerlenced. App. in pen. mach. l typewriter. Pd. PRINTIN• & v••-p "" ...,.t""~· ·--• ....,..-.., '""'.. vacation, ~ hcilp. plan, •-• ~--7200 "' .IU'l.I~ .. " ' pre.ferred. Salary open. Call 891!1 W. ~tb,St. H.B. L1ndsc,plngt ~ 6810 Help Wanr.u, m.n · ING. l664 Babcock, CM. 49'l-4131, San Oemente for Corner ol 16th l Monrovia. toad nps. 3 Pi office. * '42-S027 FIREMAN NEWPORT app't Tues lhcu Sal OPERATORS w A NT ED , :.::!" .,!;. ~"r.:."i::. PA<;KING and INSPECTION DEPT. cI>aY "!"'>. L!~~~~i:-s WAITERS Cupentar Foreman $667 ta $I09 mo. BEACH CANVAS MAN 1'XJ>eri•..,..,, •inll• nttd!o, 17th, ou1i.1-c. C.M. r need landscapina', and \\'ill Needed by custom builder Boat coven l tops, Alu.st be overlocll: and bllnd i!J.tch. S LESWOMEN lnduttrial OI)' ProdUcW 11765 nber Glau Rd. • USBOYS for dl~lled ~e.Coun. AGE: 21-30 HEIGHT: 5'8" 500 &.iperior Avenue exper. or as an apprentice. 863 Produetkin Pl., N.B. A trade a 17 fl outboard with B ty Work. For aJipt. call 497. minimum WEIGH;I': in por-Newport Beach, CaUl. 5 day•, good ""'"· Call (rev bid&) 6t6-Q3(B • Immediate openina in our big \\·heel trailer for your 1665 '"--tw s l 7 ~ So ,.. __ .,. ..., __ ......... •-.,.... services. Uts set together ' r . ""' @ell p.m. portion to height PHYSI· F.qual opoprtunity George Thomag, 5e8755/or SHIRT Preaer wan~ . .__... • ..----.................... -~------·· t Huatin(t ... llud>, C>l!t. befon. your busy season. Immediate openiQp. Exped. ··="".,.''=·=--~--~ 1 CAL REQUIREMENTS: employer_ MI: Ii" eves, 548-8951. Exper, pnferttd ID' will fuhlon-mlnded. mature .U. Phone 644-4687 ence necessary. E>:pe..tirg WANTED man for morning Higb school grad~te. valid SAIL BOAT trairt U neeemry. Udo Good~on,.tett.~. eo •. !;,2°~· •r JllE FIRST stall for enlarged tl:ltd GPU· newspaper ·delivery, mu.st Calif. operaton licenll', .U.S. * FRY COOK Oe 1776 Newport Bl """ ~ m1A ..._. K Poor Man's Friend ation: Con~ J, Ravil:a 'in have depeOOable traruporta· cilizep. File-.ap~tiou at Full time for Snack Shop. ·""' SAl.,ESMAN anen, v. olll)' at CHRIS', So, Cout . CUSTOM LANDSCAPING person. tion. Area Seal Beach/Hun-City Ha11, 1200 Wr1tmfnster Over 21. Libera.I benefits.. Youns, aureutve. Fibelxlu C.OSta Mesa.. 548--tolC PJau, C.M. McOONALDS 11 h Ir ID I * "'"'""' * p A w · 1 Calif sail boats • in Newport. BABYSITTER needed every COUNTER Womtn to wort ,,_...._.. tington Beach. hone ve., estm nst~r. .; HUNTINGTON ~i•M ~· A-'• u 1969 5 Write Box M 40I Daily Pilot day-or evrry other day for Set ne-Bruce at MOlllia¥ tbru Fridq 11 &ZQ: Masonry, Brick 6830 PRICE&. QUALITY CUfil'OM L.ANtiSCAPING THE NEWPORTER INN 1107 JamborM Rd. .....,... .....,, UCJ.O!"e t-•.. , , p.m. ., 12 ... 11 .. _ •v 2 rt..1-. ~"-'· Concrete Forem.n, (714) 893-4511 Ext. 200 SEACLIFF Account•nts ~~ ~) ·""~~n>. m tx' tr!m~;i.-.... ---. Wol"klog., "'°""' by "''"'"' • , • Country Club Credit Ma'naprs : '6 ~c APPLY. IN PERSON bu i Id er Jor cl.iv~ CAREER Administr•tlve Trnees GOOD opportunity for live-In "" ~ McDONALD'S • 646-1234 • l ============-1-~~--=~ P h I PART• FUU. TO.tE Newport Bl'edl Orange C.Ounty work. For 3obof Pelm Awt., H.B. CALL BOB, 548-779G houaekeeper. 2 Adults: San-A,irncy for Cuw:r Ghil 168&6 Beach mvd., appt. "" 487-1665 belw• OPPORJUNITY! D0E s p ERA TEL y .... ARGUS AGENCIES ta Ana .... st:l:"'' ""w. c.ut s.,,,. N. B. Hunll-.lon S..ao~ 5;i1,p.~onlJ , ., Join todays fastest g:row1n&: outside sa l esmen, ad· 1869 C Newport Blvd., C.M. By appoint. &t&-3939 w k u. u---aper ang ng CAR WASH HELP Painting 6850 1 A" ~ ....... fesitcin.M. utual Fund sales . mlnhrtratlve trainees, ac-WOMAN to care fOI' 3 ,-.or ... er "9Jf19 0 ~J: H nt •ex· .... v d-'t t k SERVICE STAT ION ~hlld,.n agH 10, I•-7. PAYlNG .andRecelvln1 e .\ccoun-IDi.i.- PAINTING Int &_ Ext. Lowest contracttd prices. Fully ins. Satisfaction guar. Free eat, Call Jim Week&, 673-1166 VINYL wall coverlns speciallal Kit, b a t h 1 • MAterial &: labor. Est 847-1659 Paper hanging, 45 years experi~. Call Fred! * 548-4Sll3 • PAINTING e11:t-lnl .AcoUlt. ceiling. Llc. Ins. 17 yrs exp. Flff eal 548-6325 PAINTING. Paperirw 16 yrs In J.larbyl: "l'f\· µo, k bond- td. Refs'bn.~ INT. & EXT. Painting. All 11euon f'atet. Free est, He'd A lr11. Call Charlie. 54&--0405 INTER or Ext. PAINTING. JMMED. SERVICE. Local rtl FREE est. 548-1627 Plasterine> ste,..ir 6880 INT. Plut:lr ,, ut. 1tvceo, dry M.ll taplns. ama"Uc Illar te:o::tured ceillnrL ~ e PAT'S PiUtttfu&. All ...... ,..... ....,.,., c.n ...._ EXP'D. POLISH and DETAIL MEN Top pay, 2 loc. F\lB. -.ut •·k. METRO CAR WASH 2950 Harbol' mvd.. C..\f. PUNCH PRESS OPR. KIWKSEl"· 518 E. Santa Ana St. -An Equal °"""' Em,,.,., _...1-....ri Ptrtn t . b No Operienee nl'ttSS8l')'-countantl, • ..._ smen, s oc SALESMAN 25 y .... • -•' anuon ..,. •...... -:r-_. ' · ape:o JO ' We :..~ • lull or p·~ •-, clerk.,, and machlnisl1. Ap-· tlll'll or Llve·in or out. L t 1 h t Teller w/some Note Dept. e Secretarial Move to beautiful Lake Ar-u-...... ...\ uu• L older. Foll time, swing hdusekttp1 .... , 839-2Tt2 aft. exp, -v ...... _ .. w.... ........ e Rectp""• roWhl'adl Call Collect n.ti Mutual Fund AdvllOn, ply Merchants Pel'80nnc 1hlft. See Clyde, 2590 1 Pllt .. ,. c1eatred.'~ ~:",.pacific e -b'b· -~ Inc. 642-2770 agency N -Bl·~ ~~1a M v •1• ...,,_....,...L e" ""·•......, eu. National-Ba.nfct I:.al'ttn1 Superi9r •---N-O~W~,-.-,.-,-v-,,-w-,-.-,-.. -. Npt 8. 1603 Westcliff 6.Q..&422 S'r~LE Boy. Steapy part WOMEN ID help aullt me NI--' Branch... -...eot .,..._, S.A. 1212 N. Bt'09dwQ dme Job. Care tor 20 OOrse1. A•tnc1es Women 7JOQ in my bUIJnea. N•w ftnn 5~ F.lta.blilbsd 1N6 perlenced drapery, c pt 5'7-8331 Need night & mornlna: clean ., ' · opent,. in thll ma. For INJECTIQN MOLOING ts57 Harbor Bl. Cotta Ma. salesmen. p; rm an e~ up dally .. Musi be 17 or lnteniew ca 11 646-.5536 OPERATORS OR C&ll tint &a.n.fl =~or S:~~~ lJSB) CAR over. Only clean cut hard WHkend Typist betwNn 10 am• 4 pm. .. TRAINEES RNS & LVN~ worlm's need apply. GM Wade 8:30 to 5:10: in •-1.. Rn1 E1t1tti S1S. Ope~ on ' 4 to mklnlabt REAL .JiS,l'ATE.. .~ldn'I referencet. WRITE Box 612. -IUvn.J' ..__._ I W thUt. A""'1 lit Pft'IOD. 850 you bl •Uiie t1* hotted LOT AnENDANT local olflOl'. Leam Pox. "119" · ~ w. Uth St. c.M. PM & Nltfrt ShHt ,,., ·Huntington Beach! SERV. STA. S•LESMW, 12.r.o bour. Emp..,.., ..,. El<pandinr again. otfioe # 08 -and !CtJ.CCU MAN AGER Of Home YOWll men, eves • wk !ff. (Mlllt have.·exc, appe&r· 4 opentnp a'f'&Ol.ble for TWO chlldr@. 31 'ibol and on • Rela.les, HIW~ BeadL. V"i&lqe1 llfal ~ gg:zµn Muat have experience. Exee!· ends. Mwit bra neat m a~ ance) Abo ff'l' jobs. llcenaed meti Is womm, In-10 mt11 need c::IJ"l', n hr E:itctlltnt ~ 6 ·bendltL Old established ottice. Call EXPEJUENCE!S Man,' to lent company benefits and pearanc-e " handwriting. 642-38'10 IWrt blcame • tntn:bJC. Mt days, 5 ·days/wk. Older .St. JoM,.'s 1 'Mr. Jol'll'S 817-18 eWI.. 'tlOrit" In 'furn.It~ sti¥ &: wurkUw conditiona. Appl,y ID See Clyde, 2590 NeWpOrt NEWPORT Ganlner, Sp r1111 RUlty, 494-81 evu. H Ital 67>-5839. All 1nqu;n., hold i.o 1ruck, ..U tlmo. IDvor penon to·Bob l\ogal9ki. Blvd., c.>1. Parionntl A-n~ 54Ml24 · child needo c:ompanlon. ~-Olfl - tn ·-o< oontld...,._ 21· 642-ml NABERS CADIUJ( TOOL I DIE MAKER 833 DOVER D~N.a • BAB\'SITl'ER'.....,t.d, r.dM ..._.... evu. ' In v•~•o<· KI 7 ·. Plant Exp.11nsio l\ DISHWASHER ovtc u, KIWKSET .,.._ uo to 5 PM Mon NEED part-ttm• OOMl!STIC Hl!LP · same ·exp. In machine ~-516 E. Santa Ana St. thru Fri. Your home or mine houakttper a: child care All ldnd.s! u ... •-"-pen.' Experie.nced carpenten .and olf'Uhinr. Fnl) nr f &rt rim. c, Ml'\IU' Hatbor Blvd. -M Wed ....... I ~,. 00.. ·~ .. ruill wof1lera. · AppJ,y m.M ?' ' ir·· Coeta Me1& Anaheim Help Wanted 873-1350 on, • :r~., · :.-.: Cooka, M.akfl I: Com.panlonl.1 LUHRSBOATO). An F.qua1 Oppty ·Eml'lloYtt W-n·. 7400 WAITRESS, Part time Emerald BIY.,Lacu~pa, ~ft(.J'eelt'°te ='-"~w_. 11..,..,lh~.St..,.'"'· c,.....,M..,.-' ~ ~~!;..., ~ i::..: ~~ ~D ~~c:c,:_ WAREHOUSEMAN -·M'~lCAL ASS'T-DiYS OVER n CW-0':"2000NT1C ....... ~· Cao'"" Abb,: EXP. SeniOe Sta t i on «6E.17thStftet,C.M.' RIGl-IT MAN. MUST BE Expettencenett:SllllfY. Kam Back offlce, experience in ~ oevr21.e~Jftfeto. AROUSAGINCllS ~ Salesman. Nfl'W' ..mode"n 1 ...:::.,:::.,:,~:.::..:=,,;.._,~.,., CAPABLE, MATURE~ Rlma Hardwat'!;, 2661 EKG X·ra.y injeetioa I: lite DENTAL Froht Delk, exper. nd not ne-PU. wtn lratn 1889 C N-Blvd., CM., fAcillt:lu. Owrtim& after~ SERVICE Sta. Att. Exp'd, ltELIABLE A. SOBER , Harbor Blvd, C.l.t. 5.fS-nBl lab. PH. 34f.2547 . SpecLaJl;y pnctM;e, H~ qu1Ck tn•:1'1~ -..: LJ • m.....:Vl·~SION" l .. _ + aim.m.. Fall timt ·O limn dty ahtft. umon SUGGEST S£:No SECURITY OFFIC"RS fl.....t--Beach loc 961-6611 ~ .... _,..--&on •• • Sta"--•-~ '·· l c SALESWOMAN . -~ part -•-· ' ~37 ... •• WORK e pernwftnt t90· E. Cout .__-,. .,...,.. IU• BACKGRotJll;D', RF.sUME """'• MEDICAL ~ Hwy., N.B. Palisade• Rd. O.M. A REFERLN'ct:.5 TO BOX Full time. $l.75 .per. hr. Ap-lime ln atore. Some evenfna JUX!EP'IJONISr RELIABLE babpitter in llU' Full timt. Must have neat $All.MAKER. Dif. desnd &t 409 DAILY PILOT. ' Pb': 230 E. lTth. Costa Meaa. work HlclGory Farm&. lQ62 lor dental spidalty oft\ce, bome t:Jr 2 ~ T I. appean.nct, able to dnl SECt1RlTY GUARD. Rtlid NORTH SAILS 91.J neo: 642-1069 for appt. J~, NB Hunlfnltoft Btich. m.aTt S ')Tl: from 2<5:30 pm. 5 wNI people. A°ppb' in P'f't Man. all shifts. 40 hr. 'ltlt. eo-aJ Bet.di (2131 c; ~RD EN & MA I No • Cook GENERAL OmCE Girt • MAID Pltii&e. • lnquft la da1I wk. Call Mrs. Bdl IOl1. . ~'.u..,... , TENANCE 90me Qp'd I.a H••'""-'-Shorft: -BALBOA BAY CLUB , -· aulomallo .,,..._,., eat e Olthw.,her/Busboy T•I-'"'"""• l ..,._.. -·-.-· · all5;30pm.~'3Z Hali.lay HNllh Spa ~,;.=:,-.;::-:=-:..,.=-;)o:;bo I 536-<714 or ·o-'•111' A••~ SURF l "IRLOIN °""' lai<low· One 21.· l'I" Mot>! ZlmD O..an Hwy. 118 ........ C-lara 1100 Harbor-., CM. 1221 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. MAN, steady part .,....,--,-n...-u•-,. __ _. It NB •-•-BABYSITl'ER ~ l ll •. , S&Zl1l Ed U'f ltJr reUa1M a.dull. Xlnl L.A. ta, 'tJB aft 3 pm Wed, '11lun;. 59'J(I ~-..uo.; .....,.,., '11>'·• -....:io.Ji-.1 •omma '1e OOSME11CS. Xlnt eamliv. D!SPEIL\TELY need ~ Pl bl 4190 NEED 2 to at ftlD 'nmes rollle opeo. U30 mo Fri. t FRY COOK ew. ht1tt. NURSE$ rem · PRIVATE txluelteeplQJ. My ~. Ila: hrl, no caavus. f'J$. dtrtr -tr1i'lt. Jr. See. ~." .. ~---'-'--time ~ 811.Uon. ll\&ll +. !162-4633 SERytCE station att.mda)rt. Odlet R.etLaurant. ZU.,E.17tb DUTY •At! types. all ab1f'tt. own transpm1atkm. lf5...1112 51~. Rteep, • lr. 8xW pn Pt.t.1MBING REPAIR a,. e.xp 'd and O\W 2S.. NO -,.Al!B=ULAN=-=CE;;:---;0;;;ruvm=;;;;--I work grave yard ll pnl .st., QI. M6-J40.1 kr. hosp. I ho m "· .Mut Wanted: OlAIR. SJt>E LIVE-In Houlikittper, lall P1M11t lffl(Y No Job too small phOne calls. TUchfiekl sta. ~-be fuDJ _ I am. Must have ap. mIDDn'S, part tlmt, 11 haw ft'ra. Call lf2..8955 DENTAi =ANT ~-2 llCtd. ~ cblktrn. Pt:twww-1. IQ..27'10 ll'tftC1. e &C2-l12I e Oon, lJlb • Newporto Com Lk:'d. Top P11 for right A{lplt at Chevrorl Station: A over. KMitudQt F'rled STVDEN'I'Si part time, 11 Ph. Pwt. nn. No Dlllitb nte. DRAPERY' WORK ROOM PWMBtNC 24 N' Nrt'. Mtse.:, Calif. man. Contact Bob. $37..cESl IW'bor Blvd' at Sln JJ6eao Olicken, '93 S. Cout Rwy, ll ovu. Kentucky Fried MAIO OYtr JO. -pmnaneftf 54M4f7 fJDmed ~ tir -:::1 Work suar, Uc, Ina. remod, M 0 L D E R ; e x per. I rou. Tlrne-d~WBshtt .t ,,"""',,,....,· =:-::---,.=:--:=-I i.,una Bea Cbldtn. ~ s. Coall HW)', part -time, ' dl1' I net&. llOUSEREEPER I b&b)rsll· wad:. .ii ....... Ml •• , tt'pair,.-ooltr lel'V. ~t~r.B pmnanent.molder fotalwn. ~ utt. Al!lk forJlamld rRY COOK. ftUet abl1t. FRY COOK.: Grawe ya rd Lllpna ~ $L7S hr.~ ~ needed. 5 lc:bool ... 8e9Ch tln"'1 Smtb. It lllq1W&ium ~Cl or Terry • .f.6 E. 17th St, Sbtrt S2 Hr. 18 or <>.-tr 11hlft. t -yn up. nee. Ovet DENTAL "-11ta.nt, Chatr nTrOR • ·~ lor chtl4ren, live hi ar: out. Ref. WANTED: Wa1U.., ~ Rtmodtt, Rep1lr, 6MO foundry. Udo CUllnas IhC. C.M. , Clottap Catffl'e Shop •• 1 ti. $100 w1t to 1tart. "1Jply side. lo Ntwport Beach ewL, N.~ , MJ..12111 time. APP.b O.at cu., 2211 n.oor.1 AD 0 I TIO N & 6'U333 BOAT '562 w. 19tll ~·· ~ Mna l In pmion. 562 w. Dth C.M. am.. X·RA,y expu. dellrtd. * 61$-1454 • BABYSll llA Wan t•d : Newport~ CM. rtmodelln;r. Attract 1 Ye PLACE YoOJ' w.ai ad wbitt CAlt.Pl'NTER EXPDUENCEO Ht·FI Mth SER.V. Sl'A. A'n'. De,y m111 To &ppl.v, Ph: OR3-llll BADYSMT!k ltfMtl'CI for s.5 Week cl&fl T:SJ am.-3:M DENTAL aailtut owt ~ prtees. f'rM elllmaltt. Call tt.ey an 1oOldrw -DAfLT F~nc:ed pontnt aall'I tn..ibefl. Salary1 W/CUOllM op1 oYtf 2L Ottu. for A\'&ftt Gvde .ftlml. diYI wt. l'ttxlble bDurlt ·pm. •MJ home, Rt t t . Oral ......,,.lflat ta1ll and ~ P1lOT ctwtned '42-M71 I~ P11chltla C.M. xlnt fl:&bh.,..... -400 E. 11th. Cotta Mna. Clntma - X 496-5TIT own trana. 6M:-21&7 80-*9 alt 5. f'lld X-n.)'L M-ntl ....;..;.;..;._ ______ ~----.-~,~---' I ·. ---------- " . - . . . • • • ' . ' ,• .1 • r .- Tlwrld'1, Mll'dl 20, lM ~!!:![!!~~!!!!!TI~~!!!~~~rM~CHANDlll l'Oll MIRCIWIDlll POR MllCHANDlll l'Oll MlllCKAHDlll 1'1111 MlllCHANDISI l'Oll l'ITS ... LIVllTOCIC TlANll'OllTATION Jo•• Mon, -7500 l~~IA~L~l~ANO~~""°'~~-ilA~Ll~AflD~~TllMl~!lil IALI AND TlADI W.I AH9 ™!! 1AL1 AlfD TMll.!_ D!p llU MoWi....;;;;. tltl 7400 Position lnvolv• dttaJJ work, maln- lellance or ruu and some lite typlni • COLLINS RADIO CO. 19700 J•MMtM llelll Newport ... ch AD applicant.I J"llvie~ on mtrit with no blu toward Ract, War, Creed ot Sex. * NIGHT HOUSEKEEPER, INSPECTRESS AND MAIDS Imm~iate openlnp. Ex· pandlni at&tt tor e~ tarred hotel. can or lff Mimi Kin&· THE NEWPORTER INN EXPERIENCED C-, 1Xporienl04 "'"'INN dllf"""I""' ~ '!! .,,!l!~".11 lllO ~!l'!'I.... !!" !!'!ll\l!~li!'! ""!'"9 lhtrlover, MOllLS ,_._, • fmme41al0 ~ Al>llllW. -by ol4o suilno.ulD lfoaloelmtr LIQIJIDA.110N ... _. ,.i. l•IUlt. 20 DIM. pod Jlolel """ "J:I -· Be ... -""'le< -..-.--"' 11 ~ io. ""Yloc. -Ill .it....._ ..,. -· Ao-l!oo dll,.._ flt. m-lD all .,. .qi. or -. All • 100 W. !Tiii --· lfoW°llDli>t ~. In ltoo;k. VOid -.,e.. ID --· ..... re11, I JID. W:ll!U., privete mw. lJdo Oft "--s. .. $200. l*l'I mlN tl>lll oluo 11111. ..-..._ 115 W. ---· ....... llldlao NDD Qillli w/ m b hP. liaUo,.ble, Cuh ,. SADDL$iA(i{ Inn. L&JunA DunlQt 1111 New' or I , Utb II., 0..ta --II, co1Joeton 1...... .,._ !lpulll. Vltltlls tuma. l'IMSU or Ill ISll Beach .,.. hlrlos .. nonl °"1a -WANTSD: lO-Ooomtry -. lllttllmtlll ol ....... -pdYL Foo4 & ..,. ... 10xlO COii}triJ:Ly Nm. ................... .....,.. .. • : ;u1, ...... 10ioo ... ,'° n1dq. s.~ ,_ ll>ol<e ....... ...,, -. Ml c.u "" -t ~!!.'!..... 111 ~. Slll1 Cwt 111\'Y, AMllMLI: ~ Toy l&th -· -· 2111 -VAS? fidr Amir. Ell> Sooth Lll••• (°'poollo --A cnam. HerborBlvd. EXP. Landwpt lalftmn flam 6 dida. Larr't Mlt•"'"llVI ... ~ JtHtam&nt> IOIAut---'J'J\AD.EWINDS Sp 9. CM. or .....,.., Saw, + comm; Moipo Antlqllff. 24 21 80Mit ""''" toolo 6 ota. DC'liRiiili -Mlle · lied PAJWIOU!fr 12 x 55 Ex- qualllled lteclo. rr101• Ntwtort-.,c.M. * &I.,_ * *""lWnw,&1111.power• AX!;. ID .i.o-, 1~·-. peildo, lQdJ cebue, ,...,. bene!ll. Call -Aln'IQIJJ: ,_ Jianlle -·--_ loolt, ID" pollmu .... • _, . lnp, llldrtll>r. a! r •con d, ·•-• / ote !oriidea taW. 6 4 dliJn, ............. """1nl. Adult OLDER°""'" to..._ ~· i..oo1o~ PlllDAY-MAlt. CM2liT m1DA....,_.-.U11 lC T•rrler~. AKC p&rk.$1995.111-:W.7 ;; :.~"':!.-:.':: :-.::: $3ftll rq. •If.fl """"" 1i P.M. ilCiS &llm with cw iii =·" = .:·.::-· N1CW 2 Ill< Skyline: tn.atlJ 7--~ ANJ.l'fUI: 6 ~_.. ~ !ttfl\IMC van· 6 Stolql: JCnlcht, ktt au.to ualpet "5. ..,. ~ ~11/drps, on a ap. rent llomt, • -ple(o -.i. ~nod · -4ltbpelar. "'°"' Pl1 c:1u111, boc. '°" ="'"" 171 Jncl utU. Jn Driftwood '::.' ~ = = One or Our M1nr llrplnd llo dln. ae.nw. ~-~llllflol-liN-a .. Ill -PO. p-~ L• •:,:.•·:. l!ch Club, 118. 53&-mt "2-1100/tc-'ITll Mutlcol INt, 1121 ~ ...... ~ -llMll!. """ LOVELY callena A tn11u BLUEPRINT l!HOP _,.... MIDITlltllANIAN SPANISH ....,. = c1t';, ;;;t;i me-3 l\GiiO"" tablet, 1un,., :"~ 4JWJ5l do, 4tM5l2 lo lJdo Puit. 2 ........,, bluellne trlmmtt operator. G~':w IDll u~'ort:n clWlel. mbTorl. ~. =A~, !u X: DOiiRiWi.x PuPI 1 ~':! ~w A private ..,.,"' New ShoWl'Hlll S.111ples Feadtt •Vex e IU!el dllett, -· -121 • -..,_ n1sl4-,....._ Fine _,........., F:.::;;.;;o,:~..,.,....,.....,..1 Wiii loll Any Ploff lnoll.Wuelly e ~--u e u_•e TJll RCA colot T'l't. ni., black' ollo ,i -•-~· 111 lho,. llO iMW2l9 ""2 DECK, Molal A--Schoolo-lnetrvctlen 7'00 The "-rt School el lutl- rEATURES: ·---• Dictatinl equipment ·--proctd .... e Brulh \II Grta 8borthalld e Persolll.l l>ettloprnent ~~·i::r:~~ instruction.) ~IH ... ~.n _,, sfiMt ,SUo AcrotOntc bp · •--.. _...... ' ' A Storaa-, Vert Neat. JS3 8' Wood cuved arm dlnn, hr. man'• chair or • WILllON • YAMAll.\ Baldwto. _,,_...,, 111\V diiidaz, l ijiid: i:x. Wl!!'l'J: r....i. ..,, -·· w. a., st Sp. u CM. love 1eal S Pc Octagon darli Olk din IOl w / Drlllll =Here .., ., ...... ..,..,. a wai ..U..t -tlolll l1IO-Coll Al!C :Rtr, 10 -old. black or avocado framed chatrsiD!riW· I pc BR It~ e NEW ml -e MOlllCI .,._1117, CdM . ~ l4Mllll • Mtlereycl• n10 9 • 111 L II d I 2 ~ LUDWIO, 11001:111, AITRO COME 111.0WB AllOUND 6Ni fi.., WHI iOnd ..... .<rcllAN HOtJND PUPPIES u••• _ n •. ... r. -rt. -.r, • • ..... r Wp ---4 •rs AlK1loll -··---~~-Jl1S ~~ ·~ Ibo~·-· ...... -11.11 74, moda, decorative headboard Ill ....... ,.h oat · .. -~ -~ ---lo,. o1 -~- wl ~-w.--:...._ L pc, -tad ....... ...... illlell • ll0 Coll ltll .... .uotcolOl'I 0 ~ .. l8QO. Finn, delfrn th matcbin1 boz apnup, m1tw-·• Ins., ...... Ndala, 111.Jiell • • ;;, · Ai1CJ50iiiiiWi M•-1 Murt '" 1o e;p...iai.. frame. llld ,.,. .. -. All 1111111 . :io\s11 N...,..n Blvd. crtb • ,.._ ...... ·~· 51$-lm ONLY $529.91 paiU, -• qmball ~ TonY• llll\.":.l'i'· Klttllt: :a~: $1.00 =.. ";'!" =-~·1-,.~'7~R~1.-.-...... ~~---.-{ SI O's 95 V 1 ••• ) in itock. _. .. Mela * 50 cc like new Onl1 • .,.. EVERY'nl!NG 111 MUSIC OPEN bAILY I to 4 _ AKC T<1'i Poodle -plao. pm * su.ms * ., TIRMS .. ..._ .. '4M w• W MuJtc Canter i•" -INDumu.u: d • ,, FREE TO YOU :_ii~·· ..., -11. .,. HONDA m s.r. U11 our -. che,.. plin er llank 11 .... 1., Radial -. • r., *"· FllES maJo Gmiw> a.,. WaTCll roa $330. '800 mu.._ A d F •1 F<eiory lllleti A ""1ce .. twee -oontrtlt 111 )1'1 .. ~a till.-. 'Tll OPINING IODN Coll !MU1ll LIFETIME GI !I. pp rove Ufll •re Olll)o 12 .... 'tll ..... .a .,,.,..,,,, ottubmeJllO, c..t loll el Nll'I ""· ..... ... KAWASAKI 173 cc !700, =n. c;i~;; IN• Piney froilt-IUT Ouallty Vol-lnot••> ~:im18:8:'.'::'o.:i.:~ ~:.'l; .:::.:S1u:'.i =·P~";\i.~17 'C: ""• IUO ~~ett~~-1or Ill;. Individually tutottd 215t H•rMr 11\fd,, Celfa Meta 541·"60 ~~n Btidi i4T.a5! Sln1•r,ort . ••win* 1:3' p.m. only 3/22 QUARTEJt HOR.US: '6' BSA. 250 New Ridden Chilcoat lll i-'>'Pins OP'ft t-t .Dal!J-'lln4ity 11.S ;mi;1'ii&f M • 1 h •I machloe, $IO. 2 SckwlM Fn:li Puplllto: •me 11, 1·Whlll W. w/ wht ..W Only O.C.. ssoo. Evteo ~~l7S Del Mar, CM, 12 y.,,. l81M lecatlen tltnl •nert GultarAcut.SlJO.orbfst ~Uc:.. w/ e~~M Bolton Terrier, Bull tlJO, 1-Budalldn marldni *~251111' e ===--.,....,==-= ou ... IU-4711 . ' SU 6 •-motller. 6IU1l3 all S $330. ·APPOI-Slalllon. HODAKA IO Man, Extru, •COMMERCIAL WANT To opeu French like olil&i ;;:ii l>l:IPEllATEI ilOliMiiill e1 p.m. 3122 .nr. -..zy...,.....,. lllO. sm. KAWMAKJ 15 like TELLER a native! Thin c:ome to 0 I022 with H&f4ahell cue, Mot. medltt.: h1d....w. "ilJitNri" 1 yr oJ4 lcrVabll D'f"."'D!O new, S200. IU-3713 • ""' French Coovmallon PumllvN .,., tr"9 1ai. $120 new, 1'00 or oner. pool talllt, I' sofa A -malo child'• dos -., • T 'fl: OU Gfidliil . will ,15 HARLEY lull·• UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK Cl.-~ Rl""SSUHWllllS GA· .... s •u Eric mmo ""' • PM 1eat a>llte tllL • I ... ..... ...... -llC-2!24 trawl. y .. will ..... lcldl c.u .• ""' .... * PIANO LE!SONS *· WU-U.11Uft "" " ' , commodu. occ. chain, Mk 1121 out ol b1m. ~UIO eve P p Wa 21.t ''B" n.AT Comet wltb -1bl A I chlln· S Ir •ta ;an * IU-4581 * lor .....,_., lo my r Y cw,..,, incl 1 ldni ~· 1 PLANTS, y .. Dlc s.t or COll,...LI POil lllNTl=========I home. C.U d>0'191 Jn ex-nt """'!Ion. lib lttwHn 11 AM 1114 PM ~ credemu, lunP1, P•tlo 11w1. Oltendtr, Bii•-Ill> A $25. 54Mtl1 Trell••• Travel f4U M::~.~':,~5~=-::;; ~~\qull,.'.".:: ::: 2U ~OVINO -Wurlltm Buns. -1'1m!lllnl, choir •• -... Pblax, S\lc<\llOll!e 1CI Anita ftANIPORTATiON ll' ROD. REEL sofa 6 iov. Mel 1119, 5 pc. •• ~-•-~ .~·--·~•· bft•llllll - -°' All_,, nlce.176-12111 IA 118 .. <.~ ....... VERY ~ .... Fumlhlre . ICIOO dlMtt. •• 124. 5 pc bednn. ..... ~ • ."; ;;; ""'1-· tiMia. itRDs ot PU04lle *** LOVING mtatd 211 1"· dol _.. & Y~ """' 4 ......,, -=a brlr. "4U&I oppomurli,. employer •t llf, bo< 1IW1 A matlO book c.,., bft"1Y rtit d;.. CEU.O Iii: t:Jt, lllii -· Hulthy b-••II ..,.... "' lun · w/ -.,, . 11' IAY IOAT Dbl tlok, •loc WH, o1ec 2 WOMEN, """ A cool<'• 20 PC, "MADIUD" (ID llH•I ll .... KflW olat bit bed. I twin hod, -· I.yon 6 HH!y, Xlnt tone. --2 plulO to • to iov. her. I0-7'21 Mwll Lllro 11415 n!rlc Ice box comb Nr ::;:H::"oal:~~ 3 Room Gl'Cllp ~ S.UIDoranypert ::.,.~~··= 12S0.11S-S!l4 ~ .. ~on .. :,"=·:;;::.; Mt: 2 J;nt&ii co~"! coi:';;·:·:::·::'.~"so :'~~-.1-=..;, .l w. P Fri. _,, -Ho~· . EllOUSE ·~ -· .. oo ,,. 2 -_,, ~· .,.. l>baord .................. , ·-2,30 M Mon lhru -FROM MOD~ ~ Al/Ill WAR llow•n, VW -~-lor Pia-& ft::ane lllO _, ~· · -..... old. -..... ve ePAcmC YAM llALESe -Jn!Or. Tnvellll, Mr Welch 847-:JGSS 10 AM Includel: Quilted Ilda • Vft llJVll), 1bot1 lb'e ·~a 1, .:.:..! aftft I P.M'. or all dQ' lhott. ~'1125 S/2l Utt Via o,lrto, NtwpOrt ....U experitneed, $.190. ..,, 2 PM w .. •..,.. ..... chair -' ... tablas•'°" = G""'• o.... Blvd.. '"" c1o-. nice •• ot • Naw rt.-• ·-... .....,. w iiiiffATUlii --· .,. II HOlll' ,_ •• m.mo • 56-<1111 • llfAroRE S&lftlady, Exp. 1'"llble-2lunpe--1-W.nla..dlBl.a., ,_ ......... f,_clolh-WllRLITZl:llAlllWlllUllY ~-St..S.:loAno.. eellont with chll4r••·ComlnrCUBl'ONIDLlCX(lli' SllASrA, n!rlc, l•ll•t Lacllel' Appenl Shop Bl er-mlmlr---ot: Guden a .... -.. ... , .... loll nl -· .... All llil'lte • _..., ell .....,J:COµTlll<i • llmlll -S/22 :n: "'II' "''r .... ' .......... .itc -hll « Prr can Col1ect quilted boa: 1P!irw I: matt-rue. prblce di,,_. (n. Amuican mad• •note dtl couch I: matchlnc chr ll 1'RU Mal• au.tt Hound '""~.R US T"CnTS E-Z lift httcb. Brak• contn>i Ew<.ett.7PM.m.:1'11 ,..,._5pc,dJnlosroom: 20 ,.C. M.,le tor II .... I, -"""w-titneh•....d.Prlol.;.... -tlll.Pr""41o"'•'"" -.,,._.,_ w/!n«i lJO'!-'-"'::'.~~~.:~::~ lncllldtd.$9'0.141-1111 lablt A 4 hi-bade cllaln. O M GltOU cblM -bald boerd, ~ 1 ·-l>oltlOr pillows ~ • --· .. -·•-~~··-WANTED Moi.I mold, 5 dty COMPARE AT $149.95 J It 0 p ~ iUClm, lo)'I. ,... ••a -lunP, ....... ,· w/ U1rt, ...... -14 3~ 21' C1W c-!e '9.."800 15' HOUSE 'llalltr wllh elec w .. k. Experience n ° I $399 Jnol-: lJvllle ......... ™ mlecell. Ind. I' x Wllftlller 0119111 ... ~ • -.......... '· ·-olUm1.i. ,.,..... 25' aw .... '&s Rll' .. 13100 ....... , l530. Xlnt ,, ..... necesW')'. 54045n No down-Pmta ~Ill mo. tablM • lampl • btdnam 10' tent. ttnnll raclc.H. Ht-11 • Nl:W • Pamt ~· ~ ~ Pooc!Je, lrrwt 6 23' Owens '57 •• 11150 1...,-====,....,-~~ .lob• Men, Wom. 7500 Wfl"'S w•-lff .... qulllOd ........ • .... ... ... Sean .... , Hand M..,. olhlr ...... L -ATTIHTIOH lovablt, -3/n :r?ll·W. o...t Hwy, -SANTE FE, tips'· twin 'IA AlllJIVW Ille ~ room. All lor • • • mow e r , w h • *' burow ""'" A Onllhtt. Prices TlllAIUlll oii!Wi Shtp-. !emale, 11 IT. Pftfonntr. lateadu beds, D.,. ~t -· $449 undtr S1mpaOn :1111 VOM, ...,. et HUNT91tl I -old. Shot• • l>elwce model (ID &.... -•. "' ..... -~ * * IOO W. 4111 St., ..... Am No down. Pmll. only 111 mo. 10 pleoe clWw. "~ ell lo $191 C-r ele<:tlonla -.. tll-Olll S~ Ilea! e\ltbaord. cu.tom HloLO C...pr. Tri. /JI Aluin. . J. C. P,nney Co. Opto Delly M wr111rs WIMWllllf xlnt ccad. 441-..... La. SVlCll'lTlllNG Ill MUllC tor melll -· -.I EAi'itii aunme., ell oolon, -down cvvor. 81& wheel Sips 4 llke new. S..'514 ruruo• 1111nd s.1... am u..-"" MIJIVW o..1a -. _, ...... M-'-,..... 200 Ma -4 ft. wm 7 -e1o1 ,. .... ,..,..., 1111 traUor. mo .. ..., e11- Nnport lltaclt SPANISH -tnxo 5 PC.,_-· I& .... --._ ..dulc.. 115. Call 1111-~ 3/22 et.~-after7pm Trucb '500 Modt:l Homtl cm all at l>O W. 4th It., Santa Ana tion&1 couch. po. Keamore hctor)' ll1tl 6 lemet prr alter I p.m. LG Redwood ()an. 4'XI' ~\I iiii :3[' OWENS, DC Hu optnlnJ for :::-=1 ~ s.tr.~·J.1 wuhtrl~ • ..:. '!; DlnliwMi.c ~· Delly 12 -'Ill I, 1111.a "lllTllD Jl-f mnow, locl.IOd Mlllt. Cal J'bopain~IO·~ .. ~~·ulw * COOK * .. ---~ -·-·~ 1-llolcll Blvd (R •> " ~ e..,., CdlL Ill 5111 S/22 • m• ~·-. qullltd sofa • lovO -~ DJ:8PERATI:! H....tul ol IUI Mlclla•ls. Dr. Apt .. ll' mt. ... Ila ;:._ '1..... · iJIXff) CoW04hiilt". I MW -· -ell I IUND NIW 1fft 1/J TH Plck11p With some experl1nct ana -to ....,, ... llmlled menu. Cotnpetlt1ve wap .. outltlndlns beneftts 1ncl1Jd. in& protl.t •hari!W· Apply ln pe.non 10 A.M. to 5 P.M. 1-tondq thru Friday J. C. PBINEY CO. S -clllt .._..,. be .. t Mtdltt.: hlde-a·bed, Hunllnrton l!eUh. ""°-~-... Kia "'l'Oll IALI -.. ...,. lho>ll, 1owe p.m. :\"·.:::.or=.._ :::. ':',;;. •·.~ ~ ::: GARAGE .SALE: -• Pil= i OllOAN -... ... ....pin • Mill chldm. -m• J/22 80/;;::;sro=N::-::Whal=" .. '"'n=-.. -..,::-:-.. ol P • • queen, near ntw clot bl n 1. l'IV endl Sat. On1J I a.m. to 2 iiALPOINT Siun t, mtr <•ltc), 1 yr eld. F'UU¥ ~~.."'°1nc1 "°:':.J.: ~·~. ~ ::i: lllrnl..,., di•"" A mllc. IAllOAIN HUNTIRll p.m. llt ll&ker, ec... Moa. mal 3 .,. ~ equip, !rs ""' tilt tr!r. ::::·::::...., ,, __ • ~~-·-Wed. 1llh-llel 22nd. I om 0...,. eo.n.,., .....,, TUT'Allli NriiJi-1 -le '· ,..., 0 •1':"212 .. /:'=-=llll======•I $99 DN. pluo Tt.L. ooc n-••• ~••m • -Incl. 1 kins """' 2 • 5 pm. -k el -6 -.... _ 11 pliHo ... -~ -!/111: = .. sr=.-:.:~ cndenau, lunpi, Patio 2257.9 1'1mone Ave., CM. l'lwt A orpn. tlnj:, pluo ecconory pllCOs, 2 YR. o1• lllel• tT11x oo&ot S.llMlte MIO CONNILL Furnllllnl,chalrAottbrnan. IMOllfNAUL'i' ll"cortilU SplMt pi.-!rQm .. 1311 simple dul1n "0" 6 duhthund, blade. C.Ukm: "HIVltOLIT ~:~ .:~: ~ All vtry me.. l~lD drill car n.41ot 4 TVa. Baldwin 0rsM ........ $3t1 monatnm. $225 .'.re. ns 14147• aft. 5. S/22 N•. S01 w/pod ..U. .., IUI per ~-/ out o1 20 PC. MODiRN o...;.. couch A mi.o. l,.ms. Cllclmlnr Plano • ..... 174.I 43&-00 ' Bl.ACX It.by ....... 3 mo. r.-,i:, ""M• ~ '°;!~ 0~ 2121 llubor CU. "''" credit OK. w 11 1 3 ltOOM GltOUP 924 Ev•...,..• Pl. CM Conn C.prico Orran SUllJ1IOAID Fut run old. Nffll loYlnl poop!•. am ;., .. •t NllYC Alan 546-1200· $2195 se--te for -·'ck Nie. 20tb 5'l-03tl 10 AM to 10 PM Save ''''' •••· ··''' ·• ··' MOO 1'10" SM..-.... p II 11 5'5-2TOl S/Zl · ' I I I nd .--,..... tntp!u· nonJ. 10ta A chlit tbrw&h s.t. 22. all WurUtstr A CoM tloor ..-uz l'r'Utt. '5' FORD Panel diamond 24 l'alh on I I Century 1'urnlture, 911' :J -Waln~t tables • lam.Pl • . aamplt1 llffdy nd11cedl :tdwudl 1n Jllands, COl't STU RD y, Ill~ a1se SNOWBIRD # s71. All wuod. button nnJc interior, rehuut An equal opporlWUI;)' Gudtn Grove Blvd., completebedroomwtthquUL I RUG•, Imp. Per1lan Low b&nk ttnna ~N1w. Stll $100. Doattou.w. f1S.COSS !/20 d&c:r.n ..u, tulb' rtipd, 212 ena,, 2S,OOO miln. Must * emplQYft' * ~~~Gr;: ~ c!: ed mattr'tu • J pc. dintttt, 1 Oe•tsn S22. to "9· Sallboat No dOM'I payment DOG Heue tor Mldimn Sia-fHdy to ..U awq, S2SO. "" to believe. Best otter. SAWPEOPLE PART TIME. DAYS. !'QR SPRING PROMOTION· . Apply Pt:rsonMl Olfi~, 3rd floor, 2 to 4 p.m. Moad .. lhru Frldty The lr01dw1y 47 Courh of l'aohlen FASHION ISLAND Newport Beach S!LL FAMOUS KNAPP SHOES * Your own bu•ineu full , or part.time * Liberal on the spot -* No deposit or invtltmlftt 'ft FHe bonus and inaura.nce plan • F!tt odull ....... CONTACT WALLY UVIN lo« all (7U) -.1~ ... !or. • • ~.;.::' :. 1f~ ~':':: o...w Mutlc c .... ,.., Sllnr fo1 JICkll e.i Dof. ..,._ sno ~ -~ $277 llw'dt llot.C.. Set. Sat l<N5 N. Main, Santa Ane LAWSON Do-N .... fillilE Nowport Be Och oo=°'FORD=~~Plcku~-p--.-.)· 17 Pc, KlllCJ Siii No down• Pmll, Ol1lf $10 mo. Only. mr llolly Lant, NB So. nl .....,..., 141.tJ!'l Olrt $350 • M1lrt MU l50 '""°'I''· lolMI01 3120 Triplex, lalce Ml!Wt down, some ....,, ....n.. Sell !or ledroo111 wr111•s WAREHOUSE i'!iliEO • .,11,_ addlnr Open M;;,.• 'i: ~ Ill I -"""""' 11" OAS ..... with ..... min 30'. 2l"'75-tll4 ..... • third ol what I .... 1Azp t drawer drtnlr, mlr-UA chlne° plcniCt° ab 11 · &f' QUAL. Kn& iU Q w/ old bu.t dean • .....U S/22 NiWPOAT nM, US No. in It Sl2S.OO. U13 Falrway ~ valtit D'I. ode i ~tecl mt.ttrttl, comp . 211. tniler, eovu, new MU. Dr., C.M. U 1-1162 :;'!; .:..=. =·= IOO W. 41h BL, Stllta Aol """" mi.c. ,..j Beja, The I J JIE SAlf I J mver ....i 111: ... r111 1254, MIN. Wenletl 1610 -ceadl 1111111. 113-ltlll 'II FORD plclN>, boa"> dui,. "' mat1na, lhoets, bl&nll· Open Dolly 1 • 9 Blulb. <bohln<l 00< HI.), IMf-' WI PAY MOlll SAIOT iist 4 IJ>Hd. !250, eta, etc. Sat.t.I !un.U.6 NB OUr aorPOUI ntw lton 81i..liBXLi: Jlllttblnc CASH * m2ITl * 'SC TR. 3, Id runnlnc corid Ool.c. or SpanlJJs RCA ColmUa1 • t. r. 0 • Ex c J TING Barp1nl lnunedl The planN • or-mtchlbt, manll&l, \I I. Vlct'ORY 12 • Sallboat $ZO. -- or Modern style AM/TM, like new, 1113 Clothe• like n1w 1; new lt.nl IUfffNd no watv 4&m. anywbtn, slllt, lltt1t 1fllUI * so.aim * '60 FORD F ·100, I cyl PU An Fer $249 (COii llQO). Welnut -.. She• • -12. Fri ..... but thty ... -· lllNhlldlOOl.11!.IOMTll ·-W/ ..... ctmper, Gd l!mporar;y dtnina room Mt, I: S.t. 10 AM.t:IO PM. lo& dirty. dust)t A 1Cfttcb7. We rib:WOOD For •a 1 •, J'or Ml DW' new • u.ttd ,..., Crvlltrs f020 tiru, nw pod! $515. Nod"".Pmtl.onl)'Pmo. ~!~~:~cbaln. VlaUdolo!Jd,m:tt2l :.a:.:::n .. 6!.=:..= Wabl•t. 1:1ueal!•'.:a~ ~tww. a,,uanc.., eolol" 5U...sJf5 WEll'S W AREJIOUSE LIKE •-bed <LOTllJNG • Ladltt, me thins at mu: .SAL!C PIUC. .\pdco~ II JO co~, -n td TV'~ -· ,i-. "" 12' CRAND l!ankt Dl"'I '"112;-;ECO:;;;;>;,,N"'OL'°'IN=E°'F"°o°'..i"'P"'lcJo...,.I New -=lae-nalll 12 Oiilch'tftl. Xlnt C!Ondl , ad. SWNl\tr prtc.t: hlf ..,_ stovtt. ~ CrulMt, M!1 eculJlped 1ncl up, new ttrea. 600 W. 4tb St., Santa Ana divan $12 5. ~ 2Sf()upi:&tt.n. Ave. Apt B C.M. El! ~ U )"Oil die that ~ a: Au,autt. $Sl.?ll mf, DtL wft.om •ti. dblll!I nom ndv. ITW17' 4to1' tm. uoo 49'-'1190 Open Dally I .. t royal bl111 6 avocado sm aft 1 TUne Smohy FI a"• r , A ttl.ck'• frM. 11) SU-OMI' lftl, oUlct fu.mtturt, 1 plte't '82 JEEP l'C-11'0 pl·~.. " Sat. 9. I &m. ll 6 . chair A Ira match'& ot-pm. come a pt 'tnt, and at ' 1· rn ° or houllflll. Dl)', njpt or Mlrln1 l11ulp. toJI wbH1 ..._.,.,, hu~-.-.... -~~~~~=· = 1oman 1175. -1 GAii. s.1e, .n ....i ,.. "" prtcee ,,. ...,., bellevo. 01 ION ,,_ ~· ~ SCRAM•LEJS 10tb St .. H.B. S.1111 Sat WARD'IBALDWIHl'IUDIO w!Ut.Kardsbtlleue, a&nday •• -3821 CMC 1·1'1 Jt1cently t'Ond.$800494--0388 QquU~~n!~ ~mvtp~ aD.Q)'Cll'callbdora. ll01N1wport,C.M. IOICIC IS20MW,Pltcrofttr Om-hauled. l'IMdt IOlll•'RiCHEVYVan.R/H,Med! Els lCrlc. f1Wll0 etter I PM. Won to Co!Ql•lo 6 Trani. .,.., -....n.. 11>1. ANSW ~~ UMd DI; worth $330. Ari"·-1100 IWIMOND. ......... v .. &»ti\ V'..,..., &: I&• $ WE IUY $ S.c.11,IOO. -lltl45a • * -= * ...... -• .... ..... ... -...... colon. Clio>-.. ~· v.u ··- Midday-Aheed-Wheat-2 SECTIONAJ.8 4 J:ech. e SPiX!W. PIJllalASE e o( ID """"~ llHt ~ lo .....;;;i & lllaldoct111, IC><• $ FU"ulTV"E $ ... I lllp MMrl!'f 90$6 CAi:L5'M.lJ\='s c;:· Unholy_ NUDE DAY Ll&ht G,..n 11!. Gold O•b ._....... evlam•tlc 8o. c.111. rich! "-· ""' !rdll&llon. r " Slopnol'"-OWrllO;llktnow . ....-WUhonAothtr-ep-IClllODTMUSICCO., ~ll<ll 540-lXI APr IANCU eaALBOAP-..... , .... HIO pnp.thl:rw: "Thll la the dawn LOVELY wbit. WrtlU&ht iron ptiancel fNm model bomtl D71 N. Main. .mmrm C•l•r TV' .... P1111•'-St1re1'1 fllr 40 flt a'. can~ 1;.;;!'!'='----....:=1 of a NUDE DAY." bnakfut table ••t, f15. at tantuUc: dilcountll Nt Sota Ana UftWW'fRW'fU • '1f.JO. J I Pf•••.,. H•••• fvll '67 lltONC0--13'1 DoWll. Wt Mnloo. See... w'1Nl'i:b: flUIOi 6 Orpna. "' (~ -·· CASH IN II MINUTIS llMt 1erv1... tau . * $2'.44 * FOSTDl'I CUii Id FM .i., dol, -· 2U • 54 I •4531 • HU.Stop l'w ' ~ llroldtd Offl p lhl IOIO 17111 -J'tn Voll., * ~ * Mala. 118 ·~ Ora ... C-Marine I c:y1, 4 -driff rear e ()VAL R.UC srr • Cll um r'9 (So. of Wamtr) lll-12U MAH,,_,,._:· ._bm _... __ JUNGE '10. ftdtlpn.tor WANTEDI Older Travel Complete :.icatlne Stnrkw -t. radio. Hu bM~ oob' N)'lob blend. rtve:rsl.ttl•~ INS, Croupdllpotttof: 1\ftl GE: Rl:friprt.lar, bottom ~" . ..., r..,_ WIC:tett Top n.a.-125. tralkr; UI)' c:ondUio.n. jult br: S:.,.rifncotd, KICh cnce to the bill.I!! '1113. ......, ..,...,_, .,..._ • •'OOcl """ A StcnWlel -· ,.,... llM ,. lood lllnt CClnd. Ptlnla -· MW · IWrlrorator I 15. u lonl u tt rolls. ·-QuelllJ -P-.,,_ Shu: 1 x 10. 2 x S. 2 x I deakl, chatrl. tablet., ft1tl. acUon. New conqnurit * ~ * Howltbold fttmt. 16o5C10 rRD%ER. nMdtd: bl I te • Hlul CNtl. Mil A JOWft' (-========= AL'I UNUSUAL llhtlvlos, 1oc1ttn A draftlns uni~ 1 ,.. ......,.., on •IL te........ IHI 11rm -'1a1ce ._ 4 -b. !pftlorahb' 1'1111-e 11 ~ ~""'.-~!!"',. tno PUllNITU:! '°""Mc~~.-··~ «I unit -w!d... P1mt1 . Heelth 1,, dalttl U.-<llYlnll l<T-·l>rl Nowparr '6f VW 11Sll Btecb ~· .,__, Dwilaps.1115 Newport, COLOR TV'1 .. GI: A 1\CA N1mbtnhlp 1 n . Ldt. f11..2tt0 ~ """"-"'"'" -mo s. Anehtlm Blvd. m o..1a -• Trede lo'•• .. __ 5IM1ll MachlMty, -1700 or CAMl'lllS Knapp Shoas, Inc. ""'"""" -""'"•• ~ ~~ s.A. KENMOiE AUTOMAnC • Choote !rom 9 _..., Wt01>1Na ,.... "" ~ 'TOl\K1JJTI'" ,... .,... Alroralt tlOO 1 0.1.,. 8\lndlali of Ca:iforni• ...,, ---... u·~ WAll!Dt -........... -erirlnoD1 !2!0. Sac:rUlce . Total down ..... ' ~':'=~etc I Fr. Exeeutiw dealt• lat1modll.1xcelltbtt'Orld. rlCht tor quick tale, Nll&WCITedlftftlno. !:. ~ ~Ooo"':'J.::DM <:EUNA no. 215 HP. Jamo.@11$.too.a.e. ~J's.~ Sl'RlCET ..--melchlnr toblt, -$40. * 141"115 lluolapt, llU N' w' or I ' j SUllJ1IO.lRDS· I' lll" t1no,' )'Ull lift. -ltotrad. -411ll mark + final pymt ... title. Dir. ANGEl.r.s, RD PUltNITURE ::'':.!..chair lllJI. llWl20, G.U ,_ • *' Hwwlclr, 1 a.... -IT', • -11. 10-I''. 115'. ':'. 11111. l.lllO lb. .. ,. ""''" llO ...;.,,.~ IO cha1> 0> _,, or -· CALIJ'ORNIA l<Kll2 1144 Ntwpert 11 .... , CM ··~·· ,..,. old. l>nmaoull,. 6 II.CA 20" M>lO <ollt TV All lllnl -. 1141-1111. eltcUic f110. «»-• -Ml Al>F, Other IF!\ -t OPEN SUNDAY llMI E•t•,. s.1.. ...., ntr•t Ill ' Office , ... ,~ IOll tooa Wee lnad • • w. -...i.1 .. ,_. ..,""' • ms a ..,. ... Alano 111.-i -llO -Alftnlt '1...,.. cillOViR c "" .... -. & Women Wtd., Stt •..., '1111 ::!: = "'"1113 A -"'°' -ll)oloma -u low u "'-"--oont1. """' IMuo .-. Ice box, .,.. EqanUrw are!n. Otllca # SELLING compltll -T Y PEW 111 ·,ER· E Ice -Dryer. exctUtnt NEW 23" P-Oolor 198, Can..,._ Pm aM LIYllTOCK tact. hole lelloy, -twice . ieo. IMM2!4 ....., 4 openq, availaWe for hoktturn1thllwt.Eatat9aalit. Ro)'al. Ott. Mod. ••/Wkle c:ondltlon. MO. TV. Scand1a mo.ti. Ida' M\ft' Peel Tl.ilii A -orMMaO S ~. -........... lo. Inqullo-. PM. !Ill Pia. COIT llO. %112 N ......... ~11. .... mo -• lllO· MM!• -• -old. -Cm ll20 1117 ClCSSlfA li6: N•-·''•""'•.w.*""ro"PS.=--.ID:-•"'t-.-.1 ...... -1 ln!nlnr. 8W Ollllla, Apt, T, CM. ~lltl ~GIC Chol IU stow, & I ftlO * -" ILIJS 6 -l'elnt IQ...._ >)(). Oal ........ Xlnt oaad. '1>1111. Stleo 6 nn<alL 1119 c.now..,. •P•••• Jlali,., ooLD 1· oota •IM ... t U----~" ~ _ ytllow. 3 Yra. old. 11", Jm. HI-Pl • ..!!"" n• T.vOili 1iJi """'"" 1 - --. po. l&100. eoatad; •••I• .,. llllJ loctm7 dlnct.1010 H)...ID4 Quality con 1 tr 1 c: t Io D ~· ._... ._. tutNl.at. $100. m.«0$ srDJX> Jiit 1D11it lltlltt J10. Vuit)t w/alnw $10. -0. •tm. s.Dey, ..,._ llr Ml-a30 It. Ru'bor, I.A. MlTURE"'"""' ••.....,. Merllucu.._xlotcoad. roR Sal<, U'"'1 rm liUiiiliri .;...,_.,. ,. tlel_..,.._I Clllkl'•,_IUO._ l<'t ' ' iftj HtiH TIMI PILOTS "n.....,.. cab.,., 'qt. tn tbe 0.ta ._ J,"dO, MMnt 1 u, n It u r •. f'l'b1&trator, .,.... Thi twt.T PILOT 1P4 chuPI'· Left on lAtY fiiii Jiii WJllf • .... !!II! lhars d)ltnMJ. NI. lnl wry dan ~~ ~ C1llldttn '°' COUCH, S1ondud Ilse, x1111 wuhllw madllM, clothff C' 11'W -11 .. ....,.. hY~ ~.'•"· '*'., -,.. -Al!C bf. -. nn a .., __ _,, * '4Wl"9 • ur:.--· eond. $'5. eonn. 21·• T.V. drylr, etc. 56-(1611 or aou ...,., C.1 •.an. La aaee ot •-• ... ;,. •••• 8" 11'1111 ._,.a• M1nl'1. .SO..._ ';' / 8'Ncl Str, H ... • ~'I J"w ~ f9o1 Want Adi. ' • ( W1t111 _.,..., r.ct...s &n, 114. 11U11T O>oll<I ... ..,,. n. c.M. _,, crtdlt !)opt • •• a-..i aa 111-*1 ., 1<1.-i ,,.. a ett1> , -.,1 ll1inio T\Jl!VLT.11 1 ~ t I • 11. • ' ' . • I • r • I .. I . . I I " " • . =·· • . . . = .. oz = a 0 so 22 .. • .. • 5 222&42£ a s a qo : a ;g a :a :l I· •' DAri:V ""-O'l 47 l'WISPOITATION . ATIOI( " lMt!!:Oi!TA-_ l~~~IA!fl~r:. .... ~·=·~~ff~22~ 'llltt rrlo( .._ -......... • ........ ..oo/;;!;-;~~~~!J·-------~--I : ·~":N~ MElCIDES IEfilZ TOYOTA t~• ,_ 1oo eu1J to maJce 1-·--H--~--'"c""M..;.;..;. .... ---ti vw BUG wlth rodlo + ... VOLVO '63" OLDS. ,..,.rYI11ona "" -uoi. N-. · · --'" c·L-.. 11 c--·••• 't6 TOYOTA Crow1l W&cono txtru. Lllre new. WUh ttall , , s, dlr, 4 apd, bucket 09 ...,__ 'L1 DODGE 9 PU1 Sta Wp. fdayt! Radio a: i:.e.'ter, ~· ad $1¥1. Uc. # csx:no.. aeata. Extdlent ~con-ES'l'ATE W.4.(fON. 16.000 v.a, p/1, p/b_. auto. $8915. '-door SS Sedan, VI. an.--, WEEK·EN0~1 WEEKLY _. ""' ............ ""'"' m H' .. "''R .,m •. ftfT -THE • a1tlod All orialJ>ll. iso casb ·or1&1na1 rnllff. 3)1 ......... KE._.,.. "" ....... -·-· t nice:. $1395. Stk # Pl99. I.ii AllDVU g •. IUI UIUll • deliver., will tab trade. power 1teer1ns, po.{tr bralc· '51 DODGE 2 Dr. hdtp. poM:t lnba, radJo and l Quno Buggie• 9525 m HARBOUR '? VOLKSWA".1;11 IMC •• MINI • ~RUTE • ~:.. c::..~ l.B. :li.'~~=~!..j;·~ RAii, ":;.;."" $Zit). ~~'!'bl;_i;. ~ I · '\9:'1 • P VU'tr • , • Chick Jverion awntr car_ Lie. 1TJ256 j 1963 DUNE Buny, chrome 'VOLKSWA".aa INC . d • • • , JUST ARRIVED • '<7 VOLVO waao• auto, alt· 1910 """"°' Blw . FALCON · $7'5 ::1.~.';"~!<~'.· ;,':"",! 196>-l>l s. All "'"""· x1nt "'"• ' sai:S".:~~rvi« , Ii ANOTHER BIG '! :!'.~.~:",,..:· ~ _ c..1a Meaa . · JOHN.SO~ l SON g curtains rud> for the road. oond 12.100 o< h<•t oiler. AuthoriZ<d 18111 Buch stw. WM3S • SHIP!itENT· OF • ''5 CHEVY IMPALA '62 FALCON Llncoln-Momdy l ~: =; '~lck~~ =~~~:: 19611 Di. l87lls;:::c::~~~rvi~ Last Of· The • 1969 • Antiques, c11n1cs 9615 ~to~. ~ea:: c!n~ i.ooor Deluxe Cc>UPt. 6 cyl-1&q J{arboi Blvd. sc.'IMO ~ Pbdne ~ f door sedan, $1150. &U-4926 • • l 16 Ford Oi1Je, 2.rear doon $5f Cuh dela: or tab forelp lnder, aqtomade trl.nlrnJa. illYERSllY " or 8J3...6M8 ~67 Toy ota Coron• '68 VW'S • • complete with claa. 1 hood car in trade. WW tlnc prvt •Ion. i:adio · and heater. -; MYER'S TOW'D lmmedl•f• Dellveryl MG $349. 100% f.lnanclng, Dir. 1--------H l "2-5551 or 534,2284 OPEN SUNDAYS EMPI ~ter. Coi:valr ........ -.......... ~""'"' wido .tln!a. fop Condi Wlll trade. ~ ~ e VW DliNi lllIQOY, l\ii1r lo ao. Wfe rlml and tires, ~ exbi.ust. $600. 495-4833 OUNE lfuiY, T&S Curtains, New Enrf. $1550 or Best ll!ftt. m:.m. MG Sales, Service, Pu1J: Immediate Dellmy, ~MM~ . . J~n11~1 l11: I\ Ji" 'I ' ' l) I ' 3100 W. C:OUI Hwy., N.B. 642-!MOS 540.176' Authorized MG Dealer '52 MO TD 4 Door, autollli&tlc, radk>. • • ll!Ptb' beat, 1 bell boua1zw party. LB TXJ 434, a.ma Brlttan,y blt)t with rnatchlna SALES I SIRVICE , C ~te:~7~ ow~ car. Uc. BANK FINANCING • QDELS '!' = :fuxe en:-11·~ ~ ·= ·= Im 4 dr lnterb'. U$.fsRTT4. OlDSM08llE = $1415 sm Total 0own PymL • f-• 1 .... Set o1 .... .,..,. "" !lard ., v .. pa1ai.m.1Jc JOHNSON & SON · ! I a-!. 36 at $44.78 o.a.c. • w1nl AUTOMATic • v.w. eua P1>oPo ·~ P1s. P1:: .. ~ ~. ,...; Llncoln-M•rcwy =:-.Blvd. I tu Lf,4l1l4 + 1 final payment for H~e • TRANSMISSION • H.B. Ask for Bill. cond. White A: maroon. ~Harbor Blvd. &o. 7000 5'l)..8MO Ultd Out 5tO-ISb • ~VAILABLE ONLY AT. • • • Auloo W led 9700 Sl!'5-See at 3.10 W. Bay, '63 FALCON V-1, Rani.... '6" OLDS JlfQRTS il, T· Jl. M . . an c. M. P_arklnr lot 11 AM auto tnna. pa. "'-., !' --m· tt .. ::'9:· .-M ·1. . ; : WE PACAY •.• SH i:.·~., .... w---·.::::· = ~·~· . .: . \ · GTI ·. · · · 0 ars · :· : . · · . .,,,, =~i . '"~·; .. r:. 6 a· · ::-... -~ l , ~n Grow'BlYd. at Be&cb ' -..... • ' . at~'-Tth st.CM. . • FRJU5T, : l•E>.OQU~RTt:RS. .i.il'm= ;. -·· ou1tor,JLPllCIS ·· ~--"-11>'1 i . . ··~tick Sbltt. I .O•D . . . ins. : ELMORE _ oPENSUNDAY ' STAllTAT''" _.a11 .. 1oo:--~· · 1 •• ,1 •• , . r JOHNSONlSON .i •f'\iW BUG. Economy._• 7· • l:llftlll nmlMllT · . .,..,, -· < .( '""' •y2 l.lnoob>MemtrY > l lmmaoulat<, gloamlnggtffn lS31lQB=•~"'"'"'" ~!.,n;..'l:~bla ~·. ~ 1·1 ' ,.Vfl~Y -9'·: . ''. .. H:i ~'.~~~~ ;. :.~~;6':'.: 1 b<auty! 4 Spd, di<. radio, BILL MAXEY ~· HARBOUR -• !'' . . • . .. . . ' !.:. ) . llf• l1111!ll!lt.•. ~·· .~T,,_;'tl.~ ""''.!"'...; ~ new tonnca1: cover. S50 Ca.sh 171 a Orll• y..,,. T,,.q~ Ii ~ · , r1 . . er. lh sooq,, tOncUtion. Lie. """• "'!!ft' 1 ownr, -...1 ·~ ''1 A~1tln Huloy :;:.;;"ili::Sl'..,C:"~~ !TlOIVIOJTJA! SWAGBI, II:• : llAN! ~iW'''· : Yn PlY1ISll . ~i iilif &ni\ ~,,. IOX9\ 7 . Mt. · ·aft L~fS . ! !00 -r. Radnr """"' <94-9!13o<54>-0634 18881 BEACH BLVQ. A•tllorlud . • '6' &UICK • I · . JOHNSON & SON CUtlaM, H · hardtop .; prlVHWcedl~ blU< book. Lie. '!,. MG,:',;,.,~'."· .. :;'ll ..!:.: Hunt. Bo1eh 847-1555 Sqln. and Service $2444 fOR YOUR CAR 'II guim;w: Sup« Sport. Llnooln-M•...,,,,. Coupe, VI, a tic trona. ; -Xlnt mech colld. S4n. l mi N. ol Coai!lt Hwy. on Bcb 1ffU Beach Blvd. ~ • • Wht Vfl bl~ int. Stick, 230 l!Ml Harbor Blvd. 642-7000 air ~nd1 . , Po W' er ( $27'5 .,..:rm "' TOYO'TA. 2 doo<. • ~'65 V.W. lUG' • .,..,,. ... ,., • CONNELL !~. _\'l, •rill· A>k 'g 1750 '67 Cortln• :~:;:·,:.t' ~': . ~ !~.Autos 9600 ~USTIM HEALEY Lemi4 Ol'EI. . Speed, "at h<I~. buck•t red ~~·•· • • CHEVROLET -. GT Coupe wllh maroo• '•im.r Lie ' aeata, tinted 1lul &n.-75&2 4-OQt. ....,,.,.._,~ ~ • I ·r~ 4 dr hard Red with black buckets 't t'I • · '! ' -tlon. Uc PIJ032 2828 H i,., stw ,_ ' ' RAS260. · I · J ...,;..;.._..,_..,,~--$1ifl • • ar uOo "".J'i' ~It, l25 hp. Turbo. Economy plUI. Uc. TSP 247. ~Ill , I~ : '66 OPll. ·;_, ;!!!n.tPH;, JOHNSON l SON• • • Coata ',''" "'" ~·~/':~"~, "'"" $1395 JOHNSQ l SON ~ toYqTA-YOLYO lll!Joa ,....,. llM PIN._ t '?; ,64 'tlvm"" . . Lincoln-M'"""" . • •s OLDSMOBILE. • Will B.!IY . .61 •. 1 c1r, v-a. good ti L • Li . . '' 1966 Harbal\ CM. .... ipd, tltt, N.11._,, Mi~--· TR 4 A Jt.oad t l'"Spo!tk ,u, Harbor Jllvd. 642-1050 .4 door H.T: Fe clery e1r,. """"!. '-Mak tf . 11111 Alfti I 1941 I-larbor &0-1000 'I •as AUSTili Healey, 3000MK blue exterior. All original . . 1 er, 11 ~ . power •*••"119 l br1ke1, Your Vollawapn or POl"SChl ...,."'t n. e 0 er tW't. UlllO , . ,< Ill .1'ull fq\lip, XI. Q:lnd., lnterior. S75 Cash dels. WW inside & out. Uc. FVG 892. ·j· VW CAMP~ with ap •euto, !MOY 1461 • 6 pay top dollan.. Paid for . ~2.198 * IMPORTS . 63 OLDS _eugu, cc,iv. xlnt :.fl '•t book price. $1800. fine prvt p:ty. LB SWG 416 , $1595 4'W T many~· $16'6. • $1595 • or not. Call J'talpb ,, tti QRW. wagon, auto, cond, $575.l· ~QJJ Minter ~ '"' A.Ii .. rl>lt eng., "" OPEL L.S. Sport cou~. • .... 1 • ...: I m HARBOUR' lllil • '65 CHRYSLER : "'"'•I 1H'1· ,.,.,,,. . 1966 Hubo•. 'c.M. 646-930.1 PLY;:l'il."ut" H -:" ·H).$06 , AsJc for Ken 4S4-9773 "' ye. # UKR089 • 67l• l , beatef-\i'f, runs good, $300 TOYOTA0YOLVO 642-9511 aft _M0-71JI · '1 Radioii~~te~~ ooOO. =tio~~~r, :;~~. . ~PO~IO vo'"'LKSWAGDI UK. : ''" .. t~;~ ::~·~.., '"· : ll\$Z ~"'ir ;. . . .:. c!: ..• t.~ Galax~~ !?.RV~ aut.. 1967 p~I-Oum :~ $1595. Dealer. 18835 Beach TOYOTA-VOLVO U.r • $ BILL ... -y TOY~A ,( _.•~ Mar Traci). t ri BELVD 1•"11 .. ·.1 .. ~------~. · · · Authorized ~ • .<0001 Qo: • door ~ brakes & titts radio and heater, Ebo.nY c • I war· · .. ~ . DATSUN Blvd.Hunt.Beach.540-04421966Hllrbor cr-.t 646-9303 •• 1895 • ""'~achBl"d,VI 6J ~IYJ~Impala SS 2 matJctraM.poWCrsee fl&, Modi ·=" 1a"11on' -~ 1---~----BRANW D Nl;_whOpeMI Stta~ TRIU1t1PH Spitfire '6 7 Saltl and Service • ft. Beach. Pb. Ml~ ev .... i. """"· Sl250. 847_:1657' black with white top. Lie. on. Equipmq • power ltftr. •1. ''4 Dtt1un Pickup agon, ,,. P· us '""""' almost new cond. Wire · .... ••w • '65 IUICK • --==> "T_-.,. -"""M · 1IBX969. l.rii. J.utoma tralmnillion,. s. 4 Spd, ®' radio, red paint ='=2000=·=67'-=1297==== whla, luga: rack, \\'Ood atri 11ru kl.ch Blvd. _._... A t L I 9110 ·~ CHl'IY. Tri-power 4 apd. $795 vinyl in~~· power ~u ;· ... tlcallJ new tires. $50 whl, 10,000 mi. S l 7 5 0. '69 YW • (;lectre c:~u119, Full pewer,• '°' 0 •.•~ ng ----. Poel·tf'M~ $375. window, whi , tlru. it c.uo deli. " tak• mWl PORSCHE .,,,..,.. alltt' PM. CAMPERS . .t .... ..,$"·" • *AUTO LEASING* ... 86f-'19l JOHNSON & SON Mil.EA • :i&,581 ~' ' Ip qr in trade. L.B. . • 1895 • 'BO 1aw11tt;T w/eve...,thini. Lincoln-Mercury UCEN _ UJB 3Cll ·!. .... ...,..,.. '60 TRJ. xlnt body shape. ... llt--..,.. •.1 bo Bl·_. 642-11fal • VEZ 521, Call K,., ~'" 1966 PORSCHE 912 good "'"' See to ap-5 Doi""" SUndlals • ' . • I ALL MAKES ~!Ml' t<ad• f0< .an O< 1>11 Hu ' '"· OJNDITIO!f· Ez<allent '.l °' ~ -Pl'OQ\alt ~ · Total "°"" $36i. • · · I OJMPETmlVE PRICE!I I ~.)fltl ~ '65 FORD COUNTRY PRICW.> $11'15. '.I. '67 DATSUN"""Ff1Cil0P09 • I to ChooM· From I '59 TRitiMllJrm. i ·cl~ 36 mo. @ f15.60 o.a.c. '6' IU ICK • Cort Fox Auto L111lng .• ettfNY Impala 4 dr SEDAN · See at tti.-D.\UiY PllDI', 3.3CI ~..:~ % T, 4 apd, dlr, lWd1o A: hta'-+ flna1 pymt.for titlt. ptr •• Wl!4c•t 4 ~por. Fecto'l• 224 w. Oiast-Hi&hW'-l' In, pts, alr-cond, R/ll. Sla waa, dlr, V-i. pwr 1teer-West Bay Si:fttt, C.M. or call ~:~ .... Ez<ellent cooidi~ ~~ .t..,111'J:J ~"f Sh•':!!.. I•.:;_-· --·--"'·"'-1 ,.'.,'.,.'· Ul m= ~2284 • 11 .. IUI• .. , .... ""'" .• "-...... -.-SticlU! .... °""'' -""· ·-· -1-llill oc.4321 ..-\ti\ ... 1 ~ =--Jlotllt~ o' .. ,.. .oP0E' N(l 1su""'N .. DA ... Y.1 VOLKSWAGEN •Iii vw°~ooF. -one : U H. ,·uv2x 5°"9' s· • • LEASIN,G • OH-YSLIR ~ ~ ~ i.:-..:=.; 1:.J..~ ~::;o .:;!."VI~ ;l dU or tf.ke fo~ car tn hu many extru + ii ln '69 Camaro, air •••• $89 m11. _ · Month. 'l.B UEV 484, Call speed, *'°' heater. Sharp. irade. wt.1l fine prvt prty. '68 PORSCHE 912, s--spd, '67 V\V Sunroof. Radio, Wal· ~ce~nt cond. W!6end • . • '64 Cad OfV, air ••• : = ll\OI. Wt.n:•• No ,,, wner. Nnr Kep., ~ ar 4M-m'1 Lea than 19,<m miles. ~ ·~1;!,8 ~Call Ken, 494" tinted glau, M1tFM radkl, nut wheel, w/w tires. extra p.nly. ~Price~" • '46 TliMP llT • ~rf~lr~Qf' "'Ot· =' 1#W ;;. 114 '~ ··~~· lnoe~;r· :m 50: ~ 'ff DATSUN =j~;"'.,;'.'.~lr,$4895. ~~ prioe $l695. Uc m .HARBOUR ·=~·~:.?1·,r.•!!14lAi~:: IOOW·~,~·~"· •1~ iil,'lf21\f''lft. Wltl:·~:~rtar.1111 ;"*' il'C' "°~~ ~ Bis ......,, 96 hp, ••em•ad '68 Ponci>e 911 T f:lll HARBOUR ""' y/\l ll'fWAr..ICll lllC • '"· 1Tffi1'1! • Beach 1l!fll 115-:1111 n .~'... l.ltft> • ....., .I ®Iii tiilCllil.iliilf. .tlllt. . _ , cam q.~ dlt, 4 spd, radio, 5 spd trans, radials, low ~ ~ vuun um , •1595 Newport ~-' J:l¥I' fark Dr., air. ~ Cub dela, will ttnc •g , _ RUNNER 15 '• ~ heater, WJW tires, loaded! miles. $.S895, dlr. 89W551 I • • , !!! '1100 ~ par17, ~ta $29.815. Mq I Ml'Jbx GT 11ret, 3.'1 ,.;, :!:..~Bai ~:;:,,ra~~'! .:; ':""w;th ..... ., sc. VOLKSWAGEN, INC. ~ai:.·.~~:.'.!n.. • 1111111 GI" . . 9113A1'11541': "'8 4"1 =.. ~ w:zi:.": ! $15 cub i!ela or olt.fer car. Engine, chrome wheels, Authorized um Beach Qlvd. ~ • .,, T~lllD • TRANSPORTATION ' ~'!:~ ,':'r::i1v:~. :~ FORD()rMOTOR co. '68 EX· paymts. cttt 548-7983 Aft. ~ .L.B. Y'NWoB7. Call alter 10. AM I FM, leather seats, A Sales and St.rvict. "8 VW •Squaftback iii Full powtr, f1clory eir.• l!Jto. JtM: Party, Take pay. ECUTIVE resale earl. 5 PM . :Ji 494-9773. steal at $2500. 646-8713 l8ru Beach Blvd. 842_4435 down, 38 · mo @ $54.19 + • 1 SLI 491 1 • CAR SALE menll Qt SU. mo. LB QUR HUGE SA VIN GS on a w\de 'S2 V ALIAifTJI •tldt War. f. 1>ATSUN"166 Sta. W6, Xtr. '68 ~rscbe 9,11 L ,62 VW, SulU'OOf, chrm whls, 1 Hnal pymilt f~ title, ~ .. • $2695 • .ft.1 r:.11 Kin 494.9773 or 545-. choice of neu new '68 Ltn. ~ =t rbwa. Gean! ·~ · '4-SP. IS "1'· 38,000 Mi. Red S~rtomatic, radials, low wide tires, exhaust, rl!h. ~.a.c. New car warn,pty. • •Credit problem? See us ror OIM rolns. r.-1ercw')'. Cougars. · 'I · W:/Blk Int. $895. 646--8131 miles, dlt. $5895. 892-5551 Sharp! $995. dlr. 8$2--6561 pi..5551 or 5.34-:2284 • • instant delivery, low pri~ • For details call Mr. Brochu. '60 PLYMO l'urJ, 4 dr, ~ 'Ill Oaloli!I !11\11!!1-., ll'olllt · •• '1lt llbllll -•!9 VW Pick-up, good tli'tl. • ''5 CHEYELU • eoay "'""· We dodde fill QOJfillET 540-5630 DI<. ak, p/" -cond. ~ · r Ii: h.•prlvate party, VVI needs k>w • n!vene. p .• S.S. Radio, heater, auta., your credit. Call or come 1n 19118 FORD RANOIERO 51JQ, $%39. Call 46. .1 Call 645-1405 SUBAIU 'IS • .,..,,, ~tlon w,.. Call M•. ,...lh U Ho4I PS. CRGU440) • today. '61 i::.met, al<. "'bit <ng. Mamon wllh black lnte-. PO~TIAC '156 DA'l'iUN 1':1itr hardt(Jf '"'-''---•-·••-• ___ .,.. 'Yery U. lil'ew tirn A days. 673-5736 eveninai. • $1595 • 540-4392 Xlnt cond. '395. Factory air condltionina;, "-· .,.. lh xI t nd s\898. dlt 1Ht9U8Alt.U ~. l\smk!•~ iii vw, rlh, custom Diint.• • BLUE CHIP ll4DU'fellBt.,C.r.-f.548-2'i35 radlo,heater.41peed.S2585. ~~ ~lnt!r ";',.._;;,. . from $1297; 66 MPG moo ...... , ""'· oompl "'°""'"°""'· 11'95· • AUTO SALES o..i.r. 18835 Beach Btw.. ''5 PON'tlAC OTO i l.:o==iil=o==== Complete foreign.car serviee '65 TR.fA, BRG,1wlre, Mich. dlr. • "66 PLYMOUTH : 2145 Harbor, Coata ?of~ CONTINENTAL Hunt. Beach. 54()..-0.Ml Sky blue eXt\;Nle top, V-1. i FIRRARI Kosta Kustom Kars ~94.i~u!,:;1·6~4!50. (TI•l 892-5551 or 534-2284 •" daor. Aulem1fic, reilo, WE PAY CASH FOR :n UNCOLN Cont, 4 dr. '62 FORD Station Wqon :!t..~cluen~-= ~ ... ,, Baker CM. 5W-5915 ==----,,..,...--...,.-li62 vw. Good oondition. heeler. ITEZ 5121 • YOUR CAR, PAID l -r local Beaut cond Country Sedan, auto trans. ed by lltUe ltiie , ....... ta San ~ . PaRRARI ~ ' · '64 VW oonvmible, now top, * $550 * • $1395 • FOR OR NOT I .,,_ • · · Pl•, P/b, new '""· "bit -_, • ··~· ~-~ SUNBEAM Sharp. 646-5271 . -•ur.uu1> '61 ' on ac, II PM hura/Frl; bef 2 PM UlAe fore . CU'1 can .fine I! . N-Im-· Ltd. ..._ paint, interior. 55,000 mi. "'"U aft 6 pm. . . -·-• • OLDS '63 P u· ,\! QulollT IJ)1. 646-7709 aft t eng. M25. &48-1531 ~.~mente,:ltllO Cub dels or ~,· anae Caqpty'1 only author----·------~-...,,,=:----fli5l9 vw eonvm. fin;. • • Chtvy for sale. All good lit. '64 .FORD Cntry Sq, w~, prvt prty, NRC ._Call " lud dN.ltr. •66 Sunbeam • Alpine Tiier '61 VW Radkl, clean, lood m.ech. • '62 CHEVRO~IT • cond. 642-3754 "'" ct ..... ,, ---auto tram, r & h, Pit P • Ken ~9 or s6<lti4 j' SALES· IERVICE • PARTS ?.take ofter cond. 613-7059 Pick-up. Plumbing or COlVAIR air cond. $900 a!t 6 PM. """" BON"*"", r 2 Dr. S100 -.;. C.oast Jiwy. <Ford pwr) radl.als, 1tereo, * 549--0541 * ,-I 1 t 1 1 · 1 • BUICK all day Sat & Sun 842-4692 ......., ,,flj,........,_ ~ N...,nrt Beach $2400 • offer. 497-1844 "'"" V V 1600 lll67 Vw 1500 ·DeJuxe iug. •e ec i· c~K6'.Js51i1. . HT. Full~· &iNlond. W LllUO \ • ' with mag-9, Exceptional, all acceJI. • '61 ,.CORVAIR FORD '67 Country Squire, Vlnyl top. t c.<ond. $1!i:i0. J .842-9111\ 54~1164 TOYOTA ·"· FM, auto. 122 0 0 • $1650 673-3524 • $1195 • '63 Bu 01ck Rivier1 " paa•. Alr-cond. "'" ol """"' '" • Authortud MG Dealer 644-16U · 700 Oa\lpe. 4 speed, radio extras! Pampered! $2,'P.IO. · · • ' ,57 VW ·~ VW Sedan, I • New color. Black jade, faol, and Mater, runs great. Uc. 5'5--07G3 '65 BONNEVILLE 2 cir hard I FIAT ·sa Flf.T, Good dean cond. Low mllaqo. °"" .. of> len. Weekda.YI 9 to !5 P•DJ-• Mr. Brown. M0-2111 JA•UAI '69 TOYOTA 21! C ,, N · $275 .,.._ VERY Cl.EAN. $il6. 1 '66 PONTl.l.C • equip!. &nd nice. Lie. TYlo Bl:l'Oll. ,57 ~ •·d. P/S. P/B, top. Del~ equip. $1450. ,' euar·A. ewport ~ ..... -..-s IJ03 Hidden Valley Lq. lch· 245 $495 "''., """ 67l-5156. 5" Carn ation, ,, .' fl()M $jJJO 1" VW * = ~ Meoi YOLY~ ::~~~~~~;,,4 p'e";;~ ~;,c~rl:~:: . $1295 & SON JOHNSON & SON ~'E.I>e~~~~ car. ':; Gro~lliver A black t C.nd. $llO. Ul\I Mlh SI., • IVTP 1411 •JOHNSON . Unroln-Me...,,,,. CLEAN '51 Falrlano $125. 1n·~ S ,~ R/11 \ L•rto Soloctlen NB, m-1111 • $1791 Lltt<OI~ oo IWIX>• 81vd. IQ.1}1119 ,. bait olfor, <iood <Ott<ll ~N•·,,,..r,;· · ; l!rimodlato o.11w7 ·• suo:moo: ldl\t "'""· VOLVO . . • 1941 Harbor J1t•d" M>-7* 'ti ilbllvO\m swae.. 4 IPd. Clll 54S4l3 aft s ' 91!1! us TOllAYI ... Yn]ll Int. ll/H. NIW 142 A 2 o r: $219J • • 1961.1\lVlERA•.all -· ~bo -· ,yellow '"'FORD, ro.U>m<Y.~ ~~c BoMevute, • I -'""",,... prty. 962-05~ Now IM on Dlspliyl ·Ill . U OUIS • 6..., -~Aloi/FM•-w/blea lltl. ll!tit COO\d. l!UI. ,,.11on _, Goql Iha .. ! blue.' ll50.~""a11"::"i: I,, 'eo-3.a lld. Auto. Pwr s 1c Glflll Lemia ''8 vw 7 pusenaer bus. .. l •• c,.1 ... : •••· ,.i.1 fWfH-~ ei~:·cru11e, atr ~ • ~ • · · .. OX> • .,, ~m ! B. Xlnt ~1;;;· party ;;;: ~~ty.x,';';_.~ruout. fJllU •_"". •••• ·: .~;a'i;,... 1:'~ ~· !!_ ': 1..,~~~1111t.''!O·~ ·~~=-pa. Pb. I 'lnaruar XKE lHPORTS '66 VW Bua. 9 pau. Xlnl llfllR'l i · · dllilf ·-llati all r" In on.-, m.tlll ~ ~.I!,_ IAMI' •1 ' Tbp cmJ1t1onl $2DJ cash. T0Y0TA·VOLVO mech. cond. Very clean. 'l'OYOTA-VOLVO · . , , · c1etn. SIJO. ~l •ii ll&ftii cony. Aifit" rnll tJoING bi-; '.iillil: ... ~ * 646-38<2 • ..., TOYO'TA. • -O<dan. $1650. Alt 6 PM ..... ,.,. 1966 -· C.M. -.'M . 62 MD.CYIY • BUICK Slt>lad< 'C3. ... ... bltt .... 11,IOO ML "" . Ford tatrlane, ,Gootl ...,,. llEW "9 Ramblor. NI ""' 1 '611 JA~UAll 3.4 Sedan std •hift,$1295. Call altu THE QUJCKER YOU CALL, DAILY PILOT WANT ijli "lt.!i :"; '1'• uto.,. Cll1( -· Xlltt eolttl...:,.1!5• """"• liliO l1to3Gll' ' . MUii :r.or, ptll; 540:!14' --~ Poll-j• GOid rond. S800 6· 5'8-Sm THE QUICXER YOU SELL BRING Ra'UI.111 • • ,... '0 • ~·.tter. PM, l:l:MITO. • . ' .w::m ... I 54Ml16 alt" 1 p.m. Whit• ~•phanta\ Dim ... -llne ' 11 =-• $695 • '61 BUICK C 0 NV EJiT. CORVETTE MERCURY r-==-===-===~======= Imported Autos 9600 lmpo1'tod Allfoo -• XLNT SHAPE. $495. I • lmoorf9d Auto• 9600 Imported Autos 9'00 :eeeeeeet. ,6_ surc0:7~=~a 2 dt. Bla~Obe~!,~v~.~~~ to ~!~ ,!' .... ~~~0~Ji.1, .... ,..,.. • -,.•' 41/2% l 111k fit1et1cif1f ..... u.i.1, •11 N11k •Pflr•••I of ct'tiit. FREE -FREE Lts Ve111s Vacation 3 DAY,S l 2 NIGHTS FOR TWO 15300 Beach Blvd. W~minsler ~-3322 . OP 'f DAYS ·'· Ell'a CHICK IYEISOll, IC. ;· II· • JAGUAR • hdip. Al......... full ..... ~~:.· dlr::; ~· ~ ' ... -... V8. automatlc ~ OFF ERS THISI ... ~ • • xlnt oond. $2395. &«-1852 Mien l d Call tran1.,11.ircond1tlontna-,pow. ~ : I. W:IDQUARn:nr .• -CADILLA-C== v . ~"' n t"'QO" -· " •tff<l•r. powu braku, l9lll RAMii.ER Stilton ! OUJ~!ANDING SP ECIALS RUI IUU -• 1•w• 10. LB B -"'dloandl>eate•.Lic.IOX1<7 w....,. 6 q~.-good 111GS ' GHIAS· •complal• s.1 ... s.... ""'"' .. 54><1;34. $1095 tnNp<>rtalloa .... Mun ' . •ice ••d Porh Oep11I· • '63 (ADILLAC °"'P'" F.. JOHNSON & SON aojl •• !!so "' bett olltt. I: .,$~ . s1999 •men! for JAGUARS .• tocy "'· Ezcell•nt cont!. CQUGAR ,.;._ "-~7,,, ,. . • $11j(), 642--0US Lincoln-Mercury '63 RAM1il& Stat Ian l ' · • s" "" b,111,, '61 COUGAR 1941 Uubor BMI. 64>-7000 w....,. 11/H. aulo trans. , I e P~rKh,I • aw.1 & C•mp1r1 • It•• J11tu•r T-4•'1 • CAMARO Ume W'ttb bltck padded t• FORD MOTOR co. '68 o· make oner. m..fT23 ~·:,:i::~1c~~"'!~ ''4 YW .. ••• •• • 114" ,., ••••• : '67 CAMARO ~ ~ ~~=: ~~~G~a ~e ~: ~tl'Y = ~-= ( 'It ..... ftff SJJ•t SuR re•f. A•iie. IKDlttt l • • 2 Dr. hdtp. V-8. RaUy rpt. bti. 111-JCM of near new 6& ~ Redbud Qr F.V. ~ c,,, AMthrte.., li\-e "'"· Sky bl 1 bUt Oft -Mercuf')', O>urara. For ===c,=-iO'==== IWYW "" I .. • 23, L 171h ST • dlr. "' .. "" ;,.., 'IT X!\.7, full "'"'" .... d"a"• call Mr. -.. ,61 :':t: ~ l2ftt ·11 YW ._ • •• •• • 1 t e • blk. lnttt. Cµ hu had t '°!'* mO... Xlnt cond. ., ... u: .... Dir T-llRD Reultw Ky. FXZ 1111 141 7765 antr pm ..........._ ::::: t ''"'"''' lH9Lt71) • =e, 175 Cub delt. or wGI ~ 5 ..... " ,~~=~·;,,,.....,.,=.,.-, ·~~· -ttl $42" • • • lak• f«'el(n car In "'4t'OAll: a1'.:,,.., RAii 'i2 MERCURY, lmmo<, 4 • I eei tte111111l11lo11 12 t• .,, YW ....... , ''"' • . • wlU fin. prtv, pt)r. Call Ktft ~ ~. lo Ml ~·1 pM-dr, air cond., heater, radio, ch •• fre11d lSIA 7211 '"''"• •¥t rfuilM j11 eur • OPIN• • .J-8. TPP9!J3 «M-rnl. ll'710. in.aw: ~ ;..~ !! ~~ ownu. S 5 0 0. IS 1'11 thtp IOJL0471 • '61 Camaro SS 350 r,,,;,,=----.--, -"='~='"===== '61 ,.,,. .. •11 S'4tt I 7 DAYS • 4 apd, cbrm wbfit:Ja, big lirll. IUil~ rDKt°11ctplace • - s,ertell'leflt ffe111111lule11, I AND • \'ery cle&n. $2l9:; d l r, '°""' 'ftlt DAILY Pl'Lm' f1ctery elr ce"4ftle11l111, ''I 'tW a. 11"' MNINGS • 892.$. at 534-'2284 OUtUlild ttedm. $&ft FM lteile. Dime. N11ter hh1 tll1r,. Ctler "'• Vt~ • :::X: ~. 1Ww A t~frrt. Look •••11 rtthttrtd, Ne. ••12 1..,, 1Pf)(f4tl CHEVELLE .. ill ~......._-,.,.~,.~nna-'-SOll-'--IN-C~~-~QU;"'""'y',PILOJ"""'-=ulME~~ • =J~~N MMJOi'. 1111 ... CHEVW:'E"';;i~ ::: ::.:a~:..i: .~ m ""· ~ ..... ""''tncilon, ..wm 1•10 He1 er 11'°"., C.1te Mete •1J.lltO lndJ ftNtone, 'pft'f. oond. . 842-1327 alltr 4:30. DAILY PllDI' W ADS! !/)J;o.!R OUICW ••I I • ~ -1 ">f' COSTA MESA MUSTANG '68 MUSTANG, 289, air, dllc, auto, MOid wfvtnyl top. 7SOO Mllt1, S2IOO. 60-1.W daya. ...... '""'· j • ,, •• ' ."" :1. • • THE NEW POLAROID COLOR PACK II INTIODUCTORY OFRR s2.&.1s COMI AND ID THI ALL NIW POLAIOID UNI BAKER'S WUTCLIFF CAMERAS " J./oujehofJ ITEMS~ :~:.r~ FLUFF & FOLD ONLY c lb MONTGOMERY _Cleaners & Laundry >WE;DO.<\VATER PROOFING 'Clpll.•~i~:.,,p.,..,.Slit;l.--4:p.m. . ' MARKO BASKET ' . ' TENDERA Y BEEF U.S.D.A. CHOICE· FuD Cut ROUND 79cLL STEAK CIONI INI U.S.D.A. CHOICE RUMP ROAST CIONI INI 79~. Market Bnket . ' . ·Wtm:&.lf ftAµ' I • ' ' ~ . CMIU>Ciild 81119 • 1051 llVINE -NEWPORT llACH Printed Name Tapes • 1.., ... CWl ... '1 detMs W.1ttnH \ lr9..0.., S.W..O. l1 "1Sc1dr. .... ., ... NAME 6 DOI. $1.50 1J DOI. $2.00 Add 5% C1llf. Sil .. TIX STOP IN Ol MAIL COUPON TODAY ...................................... ADDllSS •••••••••• I •••••••••••••••••••••••••• CITT , , , , , , •••,,,,,,,, ,, , , , STA.Tl , •• •••• ., ,,. PHONI , •• , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ••• ZJP , , , , , , , , , , COLOI •,,,, ,,. • , .,.. , IN• ..... ,, •• , , lew41 .•••. . . . "' 11•'°"'..l, Gift~ -Party Goods PAPER UNLIMITED 541-7'21 J , • WA'!'.C4,f,'I'. ;Pl,AIA . · J~t' :Mtrloot<ll.,i.,tJ1 • • ''. 1'•'1 \ :· G.<1·•::. ~' . PANTY HOSE 88' fot 9!rl1 on tllo t•I 11tey oli111i11•f• tho ue4 for 9ortor1, ,;,., tho ·Cftor-•t• of 1h11r doc•in91 • , , o 1m11t flff' 111 1ld11 • fittint f11!tl11t1. Auertff 1h1d11 111 S·M·l. _,.. __ _ ... · ~t ·i~s :finest! OPEN'•J'Hl!JRSD!'.Y" &: MONDAY. EVENINGS 32 Gal. Trash C1n 'e-7•v.,;,~.,...;...;.... . , . . . . " . '"" ,,;'l"'?'I":. • ' . ' . . . . . ·•·Loc:iJnit'\:1d~.:!~.b~;~ '' .~ '.' ~-' ' '' ' I ~ • . ' • i ." -j i "·" $4' 99·· . . . ' YA.LUI · · • RION HARDWARE ·'42-1133 . MEN'S FORMAL WEAR SPECIALISTS dorre!I'~ ~eel~~~. Tl,11<. S~OP . . ~>;I.ES'. ...;. -~pXE-QENT,ALS · FASHION SQUARE S1nt1 An• 5'17-634 I l1 H1br1 691 -0735 , I' I •. · , ,··" .... .' _,,.,. ·"'1~.1' :, .. :.L·~,!;·1 ~ ... t. WEStellFf·.. ' PLAZA 1110 Irvin• Newport B11ch 646.1891 EXPERT Professional . ., .' ' ; : . D.A,DHRlu~ I ' •A. !•.I l ', I D'Ml\DE 111'1 .... ) " ••·• ' ' •.-' • ."; '• ·' I •· "'' .. ·For th.·M>n·'Whci •Car ... Westcliff Plaza BARBERS 11 16 I.Vine 646-9941 ' Optometrist ~•'or!' l:ou-~Ro;y .... ..u•r .. • ? •• , I -i--• ' ' • r ' '" 'I•), ; ,\ • • . • • ~oNT.;i;c'n tENses · ec:i\rt~¢r1~G. • EYE WEAR STYLING •"P~ESCl\JBING WESTCLIFF PLAZA 1124 JRVINE NEWPORT BEACH 642.0720 cheese . ball . . ......