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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-04-22 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa~ .. -_,....__ ---. ·--· ~ -~------....-...... --.-------~~-...... • • • on ·es ,-10 . "" . • ., ._ -~-.,. r • I D~"t--of County .. . ' .(-.vine Fa~-0.J-y ·_ · · I .. . . Teen ·Mother · Laid Overdose . . Votes to ~~If ·. Stu•enJ Cla.s'k .. . \ . .' ' 1 •• • .J " DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * 1UestfAY "FTEltROON, "P"RIC 21, a·969 VOL ... NO. ... I llCTtotn. :M '°AeU ' '"I :. [rrue Turtleneek .. "• '',• ; ' I ' I . •': . I . \ ~ . • • " ~ .. . .. . . .-" . . ' Htfrhor District • • By County Coast . Group '·,, • I' ' ' f ~ U•t Tl ......... Sinc'er,turtlen'eck sweaters ~. tJie-rage·wilb peap~:.. this turtle at A!buquerque"S Rio·Grande ZoO Oe~ide to see what all the fuss was about. He couldn't go formal. however, since there was no place for )lie tortoise shell cufillnks. ~ . ~ , 1:JC.1 fpcu·~ty i tQ ;A1J~iil ••• I ' . '· -. . . ' Clash With P·r.otesters I -Stand Opposes Position of Cities League By JEROME F. COLLINS Of tltt Dalb" l'llfl StMt . Brea~ up the Orange County Harbor Oislrict "wolild serve no useful purpose ," the Orange County Coast Association declared today. The prestigious 150-member a..s.wcit- tion, tepresenting coastal cities from Seal Beach to San Clemente, reached that conclusion following a siJ:·week study of the dissolution question. AAociatlon \'relldenl Cap Blackburn said the fiJ\dirigs of a 'gpecial' committee migntd the probe ~hive been endorsed by directors of the 57-year~ld organizl~ tlon. The committee, beaded by publisher 'JiJnel C. Killingsworth, recommends that the Harbor District not only be re- By THOMAS FOJr,l'UNE Aftir Font·pvef:'d:a,hllt to11Ut wee.k's tained, but that i11· jurisdiction be e1-°' "" Del.., l"l11t • .,, A~mic Senate meeting, s tu d e n t )>anded to include regional parks. Leaders o1 the uf.._'!rv~ .• ...: ...... , after dialdentullo<ited,""'e'D be back." This pits the as90dali<>n ln a direct t _ ~ ... ~, confrontation with ule County League of ~ ~th the chancellor, have 'nle only dUference this week wUI be a Cities. The Uague's ma/"ority want! the decided against any show of lonle n.... sign on the door declaring the meeUng Harbbr District diuo ved and i t s , cloaed to all but five student reptesen-· -··ib'UU t .. --> "'"' dAy when students are .eipected to crash ta lives. It b °"""''"ally conceded st. udent respou.:i.1 t · es i.u 1-.. over to an, e,,._,. · •-•-nt._ ~:z:: "---'-ed. Cowity Parks Department. a cloeed Academic ~•l'Clttfdlg._ ·, i:l.mid'ellts pn;Uably. numuumg SO or • The Coast Association committee U .... .i..-... ........._.. tO,-t;,L:.:, 't~1 .• nlolt, W!n. ' larwe 'it .. . · . · :tlUllQI~ .,................. ~pl. c -,·-·· report leads off with this nat statement: !IOS!ioa by talking wiu.;ut ~. as , By lllJl!ldl)g , the ., sign ,students .will "Abollslunent of the Harbor District they did lalt week.-~. ~ • violate university rule,,. but in , ~. would serve no useful purpose. There are Ford plans to recommend Uia't the Senile · s'ituallons dl9clplinary aCtion· atinost Clistinct advantag~ in ha ving a district." .,,;. ldjoum. . . • n, ever is lair.en without ,warning •. 1 , , Oi!aolUlion, explains the assoclaUon, .,... ..,,,.,., .will , be oo ellort made, to · would "no! nepte the fact" that the,.. Thus Ford and the 11-meniber Sena&! ~)in anyone from eotertq nor to are services ahd facllitiei to be main- oeculive committee are pre~ to 1't ~eA. ' who coOaea to,!' FCX"d llid. UJped and opuated. "U coastal citi~ are autlent.s win another victory to avoid a .-e. 'ComtritttN,~e lrp'"ot . .nquired to USW'.le them~~ and conlTontaUon:that could lead .lo -·, Al>d>'*' ·-~ ilmllnif.., Aln<lopmfpt o1,harbor lac1liUes m the ,!!'he~ -iritMll<,-., «uuntanl ~.'metM'~wltb'Chashctilo? ~'!:ie:J'=:'·J ~!" tt:'IZ , over @rtl1I .<I .,i-•· ......... D el Nilrfch Jr. ind Dean ol tudents clli\1., by resldenu ·o1 inland cities." Stephen Shlplni ind Donald Br-.n Md Robert Lll..,..nce and eamo to the no .,. The anoctellon further points out that the llnalen<d lllmllDal ol Uhlrd ulis-lorcement. decial~. ellmin1Uon ol the Horbor District's lint prof...,.., ~I" Kent. Ford md he will DOI •IN! authority .~ apecla) lax nte ;11111 phlO!nl if in' with -. • • .<f tile C\!11~-W adjaum tlio -.inc. He U. cOunly Generll Funil~lai rote -1 C , .-. "M Se will leoVe k up to the prof-. alter prime Coll ol dllloMlon backen _ nme essage t ......,. on the exectlll"" commlllee'• wwld -.it 1n projocta 11M1 programs rocommendallon to l<ljourll U the beln& depoodedl on .....,.. countJ 0- WASHINGTON (UPI) -President students pmill. cing. NJ.Im wtll send 1 mewgt to Congress "If a majority of . faculty members Thia, Ays the association, could lciU off · oo orpnile crime Wednesdly, ROJ>l!I>-pmeot wllb to conu .... metllnt willl many district recr .. Uonal proj<cls that lican coogresaSonal ieadefl reported full student participation we will do so," lhe county_ cannot embark on, because of t~. 1' he said. (Sff HARBOR, Piy• I> .... "- .. Drugs ·~a~d- 1 Beach Police Seek New · 16~year~ld: After Sunday Fracas .. . ' Riot Prevention Methods Girl"s Oeath7' · ~ . Santa Ana•polic.e ha\'e tentaU•ii ~ the e&U!O of death to I IS-yw<oM ',irl By TERRY COVILLE Of ... a.llr ~fill ltlft Police in Huntington Beach are looking at new methods today 'for preventioo of riots similar to Sunday's three-hour bat- Ue on the beach. captain Harold Mays sald this morning that the departnlent -woukf hold a special ; . R~gan Praises Chi:is.tian Schools In County Address staff meeting to consider further riot con- trol measures as the city feels necessary. Police statements today came after the Huntington Beach City Council was told W.onday night by a property owners• leader that there Is growing concern in the c.oinmunity oVer the city deillnt with • • • • ' t • • • • • beach 'jlroblema. TOUCHED OFF Sunday's 11\el~ was touch~ off by the arrest oC two juveniles for possession of narcotics on the beech. Angry crowds qitlckly (ornied atbund ·the poll c. e paddy w·a Ion ·which was transporting the suspects to t h e deparfm<nt's beacll w!;slatlon. • Christian schools today are a literal After a 45-mlnute aelge of the sub-at .. ' Maginot Line of resiltanct Jn. a rewlullon Uon, .• d~ing whl<;h Y9UJ1g 1beach1oers ~klnl u.· bai:lt :a't ·ihe ~erY ~moi-aJ va!Ues bcimb&rded \he bulldln& with rocks, bOt-,-:-Id ' ties and concrete, relnforctmentl were· Of American youth, Gov. ~ona R.ea1an called in from surroundino Cities. ~ecla'(ed Monday night In Anaheim. ·~ · dele It took about 145 policemen three hours ·:Speaking to nearly l ,OOJ gates to to bring the swirling crowd under dlotrol.· the 11189 Spring Rally of the CaJlfomia· A total ol 52 individuals were ll'l't8ted on· AaoclaUon of ChrlsUan SchoolJ, the charges l-8nglng from refuaa1 .to disperse i'Vena;or even• urged 1 federal income. to aS.98ult with a deadly weapcn. 1 tax crtdlt for parents sending cblldren to Police e!ltlinate about ·, OOO .perms ln ~ochlal schools. -. · .. ·we.' have attempted to shield our the mbb at'it.s he:laht of fuey. Five J:lun- · whose body was foµnd ~onda~' ~ to an overdose ol narcollcs1 pehdlJll !¥· tcologicat •tests by the -er,.ce, Countr. Coroner's Ofllce. · ' ' The body of Glellda Lea KamlnaM, mother ol a two.mon&h-<lld baby, ·lfu found by Mn. ~ Gast0r ol IQI · Sallivan .St. at· 1:11· ~'m. Tiie .-I' less than a block fr<lril the lirl's home ~ 1342'suruvan. ·1 .. · ·• Mril. Alton' GolPfl,,n)olher ol·tae' lf!'i, said she left home abbdt 10:45 Sunday night to go to' a' n'earl)y store. Mrs.: Golian ind .i1er· lnlsband,-1<1' their da!ijlhter All , ~ llld flnafly reported ~ miaslD&1it J ·~· ' ' I .. Oraage ,. ·<JeilH • I . W.eathr I , . ._ , I The "I" wilt lie --• port time 'W;dhe!ldoy willl cloudy akles 1 the order of, the day. Tbot'.11 drop the mercury down two notchea to 63by~ • youth.ltom such thinp u morality," the tlngton Beach policemen -suffered I• govem6r iaid ln hit Anaheim Conv..,tlon Juries, mostly minor. ·INSIDE TOD-' Y Cebter speech, '"all lhat hu reaulted hi' DAMAGE COUNT r • t th< toqol the melnin1 of ,..sponslbillty." A damage count given today by W.1y1 .. ll'hey ~HP °" comffto, "'I" 1 The'Wortd is hungry ~or morality,'~ he shows about '2,000 worth of ,dimaaes to O'"!'Oe Cnntr ii ~Ing for- conUnU(!d. 1 five police vthicle1, an uncounted. •mount ·-~ ·~r!' Co .a JH>~.1~. oj .two Wl-, '!ThlV• why we w.it.f91:'~11il! w.tp,o . ,.of damqe't>.)lle 'IR!llOiiiiboloilii> (._. ,. ~ bt',i'tn. 'Puri I. , f"'r plllct in higher i!ifiicaUOn," he al-boarded shut ind unuaable), l!Dd 11,• I•-·-' , ·-=· '., dtid. ··re bave confidence in yout erpendttureJ for overtime pay to lbt 51 (......... ,.. • ..... .... U'lda r ,. ... lo...+ Da..r~t. 'o1fi u-..1 Cefiilil9• ; Ill .... • 1,--.m. , e1tra H ......... on ~ 1c:era YKU C 1 ' 11 , •:::;: -11 .. 'IAt ~ Ood La not dead Oil. your cap>· Sflridaf. ~ ' ...._ • -1•1• ,.,.., " he d«lareil. r 11Sunday's tctlon ftS an e.xltnalon .. of J:t: ,._ I .. ,: ~~.::-!tlT Gov. Reagan said Chrlll.ian schools -youth's rebellion aga inst authority," said :::..=-., ;: ,.....,. :: with 1 statewide enrollment of J8,000 Mays. ••tt shows up in ecbooll 'and wkb A111 I.Win 11 ......, • p1..1plJI -are pacetettera in lhe field of pmnts alJO. .. • ===:. : = = ~ education and actually force public "But I can't explain why It hoppened _.. " ' lclK>o!J 10 compete 'f excelltooe. Sunday and notf"'11e other day." i . . r ..... -·-• -.• llAll.Y PILOT s 1neffective Fr1>m Win -. ' l UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. -s.<rtW1-(loneral U Thant declired today"the U.N. f:tue-flre along lhe Suet canal sector IS ibost lotally ineffective "111<1 a virtual IWe of active war now eData.tbere." 'J'bant made the atateJaent In I opeclaJ . *" lo --of t!>t U.N. s,curily CGU.ncil. 'hie report came u Israeli OgbtA!r- hfimbers kllocked out Egypt's early warn. in& radar defense .system ID soutbem 4!"1an· A military ~ aald ID JtMalem that ~ w~ ~·a only eaty warning stations agalnlt Israel (Earll.,. 81erJ, PIP II Thant did not request a council ~et~· Ing, but the urgency of the report ind> cated that members of the 15-natton council wou1d now enter into consulta· tionl .. what """"" lo follow. ' "I fed it necessary lo employ the unU.Ual means of a opeclaJ nport from the ~-generll lo the S«:urlty Counc1I, to caU most IO'pntly lo the •~ ""1lloo. ti members ti the coonc11 the Prevailing situation in the Su~1 Canal tedcr, whi.dt, ill JD)' view, II vtr1 grave... 'Ibant said. "As of the date of this report there have been major breaches of the cease- fire daily ror 12 successive days," Thant J'i!ported. "In nwnerous instances the cx· changes of fire have taken place along most of the leqith of the carial. "'Ibe weapons employed range from email arma to heavy mortars, rockets, lank (ire and ~.,y artlJlery. "The United Nations m 111 I a i y omervers, who are now operatins under gnat danger and d1!flculty, In oath In- stance exert every effort lo brin&.• ~ end lo the firing, with varying ckCrffs ii success, but no later than the following day, firing erupts again. "In the circumstances, it seems to me that the only conclusion to be drawn is that the Secwity Council cease-fire has become almolt totally lnel!ectlve In the Sues Canal aector and thl.t a virtual state of active war now n:llts there, u in- dicated by the obaervers' npor1I re- ferred to lbOVt." - From Pqe J HARBOR •.. Its taxing authority. "An eiample ls the Aliso Beach pro- perty," says the report. "It was pllrchas. ed on contract purchase option in keeping witb the District's pay-u-you-go policy. "The county would have had lo j>uy the beach!ront land In South Lqliul aatrtght and put up all tht money al once, pro- bably necessitating a boDd issue. '"l'her. Is no evidence that dlstrid dissolution and inclusion of ' it :s responsibilities within the County General Fund would result in a tax-saving." The association's recommendatlons, which will be presented to the county's Local Agency Formation Commission at a publlc bwlng Wednesday, also In- clude: -Renaming the Harbor District to the Parks, Harbors and Beaches District. -Restructuring the present f i v e - member Harbor Commission to a rune. member agency, with five members ap- pointed by county supervisors and four by the League of CiUes. -Immediate improvement of com- munications between the district and the public. '11\ls would be achieved through monthly meetings between district of· ficials and representatives of the League of Cities, Orange County Chamber of Commerce, the Coast Association and the press. The association says expansion of the district's authority to Include regional parks and beaches could be accomplished tbrougb eaabllng legislation enacted at the state level. The blcrea.sed jurisdiction .. would enable the Harbor District to develop, operate and maintain regional recreational facilities, both coutal and inland, on a county·wide basis." DAILY PILOT NewpertlMdl H• ........ •'"'k --_,..., ·c ......... CAUFOINIA OftANOI COAlt PUM.l&MIHG <OMll'AHY 'lteMrl N. W1ff '"'*"' .,.. Niii...., J91.l 'It. Cvrk., \llklt l'mllll'll -Gctltrlll -.. .... n-·· ..... n ••• 1\••• A. M1111pt.I"' ......... 1 .. -C.t1 lillu1 ail wt.I &.1 11 ... t .. ....,.,.. 9Mdl: 1111 l\'l't.I ..... kltl9WHI L..-. 9M<t1: m ,._, ..,,_ ........... '"""l • 11111 "' .. I L.:__ ------------------_!-._ By JEROME F. COLLINS Of ... ~ ''"' ,,.., ' You're prohel>Jy wo.;.i.rlog ab<i,Jl . tho p™*'graph accoropanying this coJumn. What happened is that Newport Beach COw>cilman Jloo Mc!Mls. my wile and \ 111 other people 1nsllted that the picture ot. me tb&t nn With past Logbooka .... awful. So I had aoother one taken. You'll no- tice that I removed mr.&laues !or the ~plier. i!Jmd. eom, dog, ain't t? Trudi t,.,., o! the Balboa Rogers, hu a eon at Stan- ·f«d. On< o! his .professora of English distributed copies ol a "news release'' to 1llil .-.tlla ,alJ!or doy, Ja!I !ar,Jllo . fun of Jt. The prof dldn'l sav who wrote it. But it i.s suitably idioUc far this column. Accordingly, here 'tis : EAST CLOD, VL ·-Police wm called toda,y to llelp "'!'«" onlar 11, Illa l!l<fe- a·Wee Rest Home, sctne of a weet·lorra old folkl revolt Three militant oct&gtnar.ana were tJi.. rest..i altA!r a ....me that took place la· lhe main ~Jor. . 1'be1 "'Wtie Jdeoti.fted a teacera of Mt activisl. grollp 'lhal oeized control of the parlor lhlee dl)'S ago 8nd locked Mn. Birdie McMush, assistant dielici&Q, in tile pantry. -· . I Two officers sllfletea minor injurielj lti the disturbance. One waa hlt from tile rur by a runaway wbeelchalr and olha was Jabbed wllh a lmitUng needle. Quincy TlredblOod, 8'1-year-old .spot,. m a n for the rebellious faction, told ,... porters the -OAAlration wu staged to en!Or<e deman<ls that tht old !olka be given a greater role' 1n the management of the rest borne. "We·ve.r&ql a bunch, ol, young wb;p- persnappers running things around here," tie said, waving his cane violently. He 88id the old folka were demanding that at PILOT ' LOGBOOK leut three senior clt.izerul be added to the reat home ataff. "We don't trust anyone under 15," declared Tlredblood, adlll!lfnr t h e "Senility Power" \button plmed to bis ahawL The revolt began last week when a small group or hardcor' sup;erannuates held a dodder-in at which some burned tjletr Social Stcur1ty cardl. Allboogb pe-ble In I~ early phasts, the protest movement toot a violent tum 1"ben aomeone hit Geora:e SnafOe, rest home supfu-intendent, wnh a boffie of Geritol. Snaffle blamed the trouble o n ~~:t~~~:,~u .. "Some of thim," be' Slid, '+tumid off their hearing aids." * Navy Action Irvine Ranch public Wonnation cb1e1 \ W ASIUNGTON CAP) -Vietn!m navtl BW Aldrich denies that the. Uou pruerye air operat1ona are being curtailed and the going ID· ow the Ban DI'i<> and Santo · 'IUJ Fleet ·stretched lo the limit wllh Ana freeways wJll be new headquarters deployment ot a 23-ship task fo~e to p~ °'I the Irvine Company's real ~tate teet U.S. reconnaissance missions off dtfarlmenl. North Korea. * ''We've cot 09 SIS," ~Navy officer commented alter the Pentagon Mondly John Wayne, rtsident of Blyshorea In announced usigmnen of an arma~a to New-port Beach, fell oU bis borae the the Sea of Japan where a N11vy plane wu other day. The cinch broke. He's okay shot down by North Korea last week. and filmlng con~ on "True Grit." One aircraft carrier and possJbly other _l don't !mow what role Duke is playing war ships of the 7th Fleet have been pull~ in the movie, ·but U it iln't Rooster ed from the war effort to form a new Cogburn, who Is · the touahfft, Meanest Task Force 71 deploying somewhere off and fipuiielt frontier .manbal .... i n Nort,h Korea. American 'ficUon, he's giving up ill easy Officers said thls means the Navy con· Oscar. tribulion to the U.S. bombing campaign Read the book. You'll see what J mean. in South Vietnam and Laos will be cut by roughly one-third. The United States ha5 .Me-sa Plan.ner 'Survives'· Reds ~tting been kaepl!J( tbree "aircraft cl1Tifr! on .lbe·Oriq line In the GuU ofJonkln: for lhe Ume being this wlJJ be reduced .to two. The 7th Fleet's remaining r°'P' alrcraft mrien are ·goiilg into Task Force 'll along with · lhrte crulieJ's aDd 16 destroyers . Reade Retained After Council Splits Over Politics . Reinf 011!eulents . -! • 11. N:ear Saigon -Thul, offlcen J!9lntod out, all 7th ,,._t catrtin ar._,i!oW iled <!Own on two front. -the Sea il Japan and tile Gull ol Taiikln • .And -deocrtbed tht 19 ~era U. ~ major") lbare d. the seventh's heavy combat veMels. · By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ltM IMl)J Piiot Staff Dancing along the tightrope of personal politics in a rare open p u b I i c perfonnance, the Costa Meaa CllY Coun· cil voted I loo Monday nl(ht lo puf Plan- ning C«nmission Cba1nnan Nate )\eade into a new tenn. While the majority fiddled lryln& to keep unpleasaDI poJlllcs lo a minimum, fres.bman Councilman Wllliam L. SL ctalr burned over past cam~ in which he lacked support In certain quarters. - Councilman George A. T u c k e r , meanwhile, somewhat shielded the St. Clair flame from the wind, which was considerable at times during the tense aessio11. Emotions simmered under the surface u St. Clair pressed OD with hit pre-an- Munced bid to stall selection of Reade or aD)'OM else lo fill the commWion tenn expiring Friday. Treasures must be lald up today 1n heaven for the popular Reade, based on the assessment of his civic .dedication by the council majority, as well as in a IUl'prise visit by ex-Viet Mayor Calvin Barck, St. Clair's first political casuaJty. MOTION DEFEATED The vote on St. Clair's motion to delay appointment for two weeks and study -the criteria used for P I a n n i n g Com- missioners' selection died on a 3 to 2 v.gt.e, with Tucker joining St. Clair. Neltber man voted on a ~uent mo- tion by Vice Mayor Robert M. Wilson - ' \ -' in the interest of propriety -and the 3 to 0 vote put Reade back in office for another four years. "No one should consider this a vote against Mr. Reade himlelf," warned Councilman Tucker, wbo had already made it clear be was mainly concerned with exploring the quesUon of criteria us. ed in selecUon. St. Clair alto had ltrtSled he wai not • out lo naU any hldes to tht wall during preface remarta, a claim which became more puz:zllng as the aeuion progressed. Reade is a big man and he dwarfed the podium, wailing for the council to decide something. "Mr. Reade is not only big in stature but he is big a.s a man," Councilman Tucker began, "and Mr. Reade, my ques- tion is thlt: would it make you feel bad if the council did wait two Weeka?" YOUR DECISION ''Mt. Tucker, if the Costa Mesa City Council wants me to conUnue u chairman of the Planning Commission - fine," Reade replied grimly. "li not - fine. U you want to wait two weeka - that's your decision." Obviously, he wanted action im· mediately. "Mr. Reade, my concern i1 not with you, but with the situation we're facing," St. Clair began. Suddenly, St. Clair got into the issue of Reade's aJlegedly allowjng his name to be Wied lo an anti-St. Cla& political ad dur- ing the bot campaign 13' months ago. MRS. SIRHAN NEAR TEARS AFTER PLEA FOR SON She Tettifled Mond1y in Attempt to Save Sirhan From Death ' 1.-0ng Jury Wait Bad for Sirhan LOS ANGELES (UPI\ -The longer the jury deliberates life or death for Sirhan B. Sirhan the worse It looks for the slender Arab immigrant convicted of slaying Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, the defense said today . Slrhan's chief counsel, Grant B. Cooper, aald he fetls lengthy arguments by the panel which reswned deliberations at 1:02 a.m. today made it less likely tl ls to be a Ille sentence. 'lbe penally phase of the Lrial went to the jury at noon Monday after convkting Sirhan of first degree murder on April 17. Cooper said he would have been op- timistic lf the panel 11rrived at.a decision shorUy after they adjourned t o deliberate. Blast Hits Shop Fire started by a guoline exploskln did ft,500 damage to an auto repair shop at 3711 Cerritos St. In Los Alsmitos Monday. Owntr Warrtn Geller told county flrtmtn tht blazt brokt out at S:2t p.m. when some gasoline Ignited spon- taneously. lie was not injured. f Ice Crearh Trucks Mi.ssing, and So Are Drivers Three Ice cream trvcks, those musical contraptloru that crawl through city streets, bave vanlshtd In Garden Grove. No crime has been commltt!d, ac- cording to police. Freddie Briscoe. 25, manager of FrM- dle's let Cream, 10631 Acacia st.. reported lo ottlcen tilat the trockl and drivers disappeared over a -perlod of four days between April 8 and 12.. In vestigator Gene Herber of lhe Garden Grove Police Department Aid, "No crime has been commltttd because Brisco gave tbe U'UCb to the: drlvtn to use." llerbtr said Briscoe,· in a conference Monday with district attomey'1 In· vest.i,gators, refused to file embetlltment complaints. Bri.scce said the drlvtts had all glftn tht same address, 13050 Nelson St. and had worktd for him less than two months. He valued the truckt It $5,000 In all and ~ald each w8$. loaded wlth let ertam \\'Ol'th Jl20 wholesale. t "I can't begin to put across how strong· ly I feel about this •.. " said St. Clair. ''J believe you are very wrong ," iJl.. terrupted Reade, denying that his name was used and noting that it was that of his wile, adding that Mrs. Reade has every right to~ a poli~ical~ctivilt. Big Mississippi Of W. Tennessee May Flood Parts The Mississippi River, poundi:nJ at dlke1 in Missouri, Iowa, Illlnoil and Wisconsin, was expected to overflciw to- day in unprotected lowlands of westein Tennessee. The big river's crest bore down on Prairie Ou Chien, Wis .. Minot, N.O., reported a soggy rtatus quo -12,000 of the town's SS,000 residents were driven from their homes as the Mouse River rose . Although the crest on the Mouse was lower than ex- pected, it was expected to hold for several days. While the dikes were holding in the up- per midwest, floodfighter\ had more trouble with sightseers than lrith pld man river Monday. Offi.clals ·at Dubuque and Davenport, Iowa, said bwidreds of persons jammed onto the riverfront, hampering flood work. At Davenport, many drivers removed barricades set up to keep them out of flooded areas -then had to have their stalled cars towed out of water-covered streets. Bandit Rushes In As Patrons Leave An anned bandit waited Monday night until all customers had i'eft a Santa Ana neighborhood market and then rushed in brandishing a pistol. The man, described as about 25, ordered clerk Jerry Mullins of the Stop And Go Market, 1624 Standard Ave., to "give me all the bills." Mullins placed about $108 in bills and change ln a bag the holdup man offered. The suspect ran northward disappearing into an apartment complex, the police said. SAIGON (AP) -Enemy forces northwest of Saigon are getting reiri- forcements and supplies, possibly for a new offensive, U.S. military spokesmen reported today. They said the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong suf.fered heavy losses in the of~ fensive launched Feb. 23, despite a reluc- tance to commit large units to batUe. The offensive has been in low key for several weeks. "They are now holding meetings, reauessing whit they've accomplished, plannJng new ~." said an officer in the 3rd Military Coq>o zone that stretchea from Saigon lo the Cambodian border. "Based on intelllgenoe reports, in- dications are that a IWDlller-autumn type offensive is bt the wind for the 3rd Corps." Enemy activity droooed oil sharply last week in the 3rd -Corps, the most critical of South Vietnam's four corps areas because it includes the capital Of Saigon. Military analysts have noted a new enemy strategy over-the pa5t two weekl. Spokesman said the enemy is keeping forward one regbnent from each ol its four main divisions to maintain gome pressure on allied units. They add that the other regiments are kept near the Cambodian border to be resupplied and reinforced. · .. r _ '\. -... Anal)'lls see no fmmedlate · thmt to SaJgon from the four divisions, the North Vietnamese lst and 7th and the Viet Cong 5th and 9tb. The 9lh is believed now to consist largely of North Vietnamete. With perhaps 30,00frto"40,000 troops, tht divisions are strung aloiig·an arc running from northwest of Saigon to the northeast. Most are concentrated near the Cambodian border, where they can be easily resupplied. The Cambodian bases are off limits to allied forces. The Communist command's strategy seems to be aimed at shelling attacks and haraaslng allied troops lndellnttely while negotiators bargaJn In Paris. They are counting on Americ-an Impatience at home with growtng.u.s: casualties. U.S. headquarten report more than 2,000 Americans killed in the nine-week offensive, bm also claim tht enemy has loot 31,000 killed. Mexico Wants Con MONTERREY, Mexico (UPI) -Mes- lco took the lint step Monday In tile 1 .. al process of asking the United States to return Dykes Askew S,immons lo the ~texican prison from which he escaped two weeks ago. How l<.ing the fleet can maintain both assignments undeu present conditions is a matter of concern to the Navy. With its sil: flattops occupied, the 7th Fleet has no replacement flexibility. Officers said that if the task force has to remain in the Sea of Japan for any el· tended period - a few weeks or more - the 7th Fleet would have to get some relief in the way of replacements from the AtlanUc Fleet. AUantic Fleet carriers have spelled Pacific carriers off Vietnam on occasion In the past. Officers said the Pacific Command has three other aircraft carriers lied up in training operations o(f tbe~ west Coast. They could be freed , in case of emergen· cy. The four carriers going to the Sea ot Japan include thtee attack types with aome 260 combat aircraft, the Enterprise, the Ticonderoga, and the Ranger. About one-Wrd of their planes are F4 Phantom jet fighters, best available .match for the Soviet-inade MIG aircraft used by North Korea in shooting down the Navy EC121 1,ast week. The fourth carrier in the task force ts the Hornet, an antisubmarine warfare carrier equipped mainly with patrol-type planes which will defend the group against any SUb!Jlarine threat. The Edl«prlae, ' Tlcoliderqa ·aiid Ranier were pulled off Yankee Station, the Vietnam battle .i:ssignment, when the · latest Korean crisis Oared. Two others then resting up in port -the Kitty Hawk and the Bon Homme Richard -were: dispaldled lo replace them. Disneyland Grad Parties Planned Leaders of UNI California high schools an1ve at Disneyland in Anaheim Satur. day to plan a series of 1969 all-night Grad Parties, but amusement park officials are already making some decisions. No T·.shirt.s, love beads, mini-mlnf· skirts or plunging necklines will be allow· ed, wtttl, literally, yesteryear's fashlons required for Tomorrowland. Any among the hot-bloOOed young men -who must wear coats and ties to the June revelry -will have to go to Fan. tasyland if they wish to dream of feminine charms. "U you don't have the code," said a Disneyland executive, "they'll be wear- ing dresses up to their necks." DECORATOR AND MODEL HOME RETURNS Spanish and Mediterranean Furniture All New Top Quality Brand Names A Decorator's Dream Home Is On Display Over s100,ooo Worth of Spanish & Mediterranean Furniture to Choose From! Items a• follows: Gorgeous I ft. custom quilted sofa with 1eperate piHow• with he1vy 01k trim decor ind metching chair, l m•tching oak occasional tables 121 58" tall decor1tor lamp•, hinging ch1in swag lamps in wrought iron a~ 8-piec• king 1i1e m11ter bedroom 1ulf• Jn pec•n penelad Medltett•nean .'ty1e •.it.h top quellty 15 yean warr1nty ~ln9 site rn1tfte11 ind box springs. Spenesh d1n1n9 11t, etc. Any piece can be purcN11d indlvidu1lly. Drop by and see our selection of fop qu11ity Sp1ni1h and Medit1rr1n1an fuN11ture , . , fantastic1lly prlc1dJ COMl'Ull HOUSll'UL WAS lK. $UH.OO COMPLETE HOUSEFUL WAS UCiUARLY $1528.00 MUST IACRIPICI l'Oll ONLY 11 JJ f ·'11r11if11r1• 1844 Newpo rt Blvd. Co,ta Mo•o I only l f,~,, .;._1~• •d 1 -... •. d 1a• 0. 1,• ''' l '698°0 TERMS -WE CARRY OUR OWN ACCOUNTS • AT HAHOI IOUL.IYAIO I I I I 'I I :1 .. - . . . . . ¥uniingion.Beaelf --El>TI IO N VO~. 62, NO. 96, 2 SECTIONS, 2.4 PA&fS • - " ~ • ; • Ted•Y'• Wl.!'al TEN C8llS -Riot Control" Meth.od s ' Beach P ~lice Seek New \ t. By. TERRY OOVJLLE N:ood>7 ilJibt by a property owners' ot *' Dlltr' ,.._. u.n leadtr that there is FOWina concern in PoUce in HunUngt.on Beach are looking the comm.u.oHy over tbe city dealing with at new methods today for prevention o( beach ~1ems. riots similar to Sunday's three-hour bat-Sunday's melee wu touched off by lhe lie on the beach. , arrest ol tWo JuVftilta for poseesaion of Captain Harold Mays sakl this morning narcotics on the belch. that the depirtment would hol<l a spedal · ~ ~ds quickly formed around the staff meeting to eoo&lder further riot con-police. paddy wagon which was trol me.asures as the city feels necessary. tramportina: the IUSpeCts to t be P!Xice :i:tatemenu today .came atter the d~'• beacb"".aubltalion. Huntington Beach City Cowril was told After a 6-mlnute-aelge of the sub-sta- Funds Hit Sour Note With City Legal woes or teen dub owner Gilbert Covell were i~d Monday night when tbe Huntington Beadl City Council said It wanted no part of •112 allegedly raised by teeJt.agers· during a benefit danct April 13 for a yoong Negro couple whose home had been fire- bombed. Covell, who had asked the council to panicipate in the benefit at his Syndi· cate 3000 Club at Third Street and Pacific Coast Highway, told the cou~il Monday night that he was presentmg two checks to the mayor on behalf of the Harris family, the firebombing victims. "I have been requested by Mrs. Harris to give these two money orders to the mayor to hold until the Harris family decides an the charity to which they would like the money donated," Covell began. tion, .dutln&· whic'h young beachgoer& bombarded jhe bllllfiliig with rocks, bot- tles and coocrete. rei¢orcements wefe called Jn from surroundin& cities. . It took about 14.1 policemen three boon to brifll the swirling crowd. under COQlroL A total ol 521ndividl.l&la were arrested.on charges ranginc from rtl>.'-al to d1sper1t tO assault with 11. deadly Weapon. Police estimate about 3,000 persons in the mob at its heitht of fl.JI')'. FIW! Hp.n-- tington Beach policemen suffered tit- "My informaUoo is exactly the ~ aite " said Police Capt...Earle RobiLaill~ wh~ told the counCD that he we con-- ducting "a charitable rrauds investip- tion" against Covell in coruaedtea with the beoeflt dance. . l .. ~t iot&.eT ""' ,... . . ' "I have been in almost constant cbn- tact with the Hani:i: family since April 16 when a DAILY PILOT article said the danct had raised $112," Robitallle said. "The Harris family tells mt they never heard of Mr. Covell or his dance so I began a charitable frauds invt.sti· gation," the poltce captain added. Th1J disclosure brought a loud groan from Mrs. Covell, who then said half aloud, "wouldn't you know it." · Irvin Harris had been cootacted by the DAILY PILOT on April I, the day before the stol)' thM there would be a dance was printed and he told the DAILY PILOT then that he had never heard of Covell and his statement was included in the news story. ''Today Covell and a reporter wei:it to the Harris home and Mrs. Hams told them she wanted no part of the money and 18ter asked for a criminal (See CHARITY, Pa1e %) Beach Researcher Backs Laser Beam To Detect T est,s JACK *EN\lRIGHT) IS NEW HUNTINOT~ MAYOR McCrKken (left) Is Vice Meyor; Coen (Cen .. r) Steps Down Charges U.rassmeat ( Covell 1Freed on Bail, ' Denie s; Riot Incitement ' Gilbert Covell, operator OI a now.closed teen-agt dance ball on the' waterfront in Huntington Beach, was teleased f~m Orange County Jail Mondty on $315 ball illter beiilg betd on chaliles slemminl! from a riot on the beach ~Y· Covell, who c1aiml he ~-the .victim of police harassment, said ?fonday Ngbt, "I dld not lnclte anyone to fi.ot. "I was telling them (.)oouth rioting on the beach and Pacific! Coast Highway -•Y) to-go home ...i l hove people of ~bstance llnQlli some jOO witnesses who IWUI iesUfy tliat I wal not eDcouraging ..,Yoae to Qot." t He said tNt when tbi crowds began to dispene ·II Ille diN!ition of aome t50 police oUlcen from JI agencltt, he bad sugesled to .... of1he younpten that the!' pt oll lhe .u..e. ind onto llil park· · lot at 'lblrd Street and Pacific Coast ay. -. ... ' ~ perty and the youths were welcome and did not have to dispe~." "1 only thought the youths wouJd be safer and leas trouble for everyone if they were off the atrttts and onto private property~ I told them we would have a dance next Friday nigbt and that everything would be all right if they got off the streetr,;, said Covell. ' Both Covell and his •ire , .Jeanne, claimed· that they were "doing no wrong Sunday." Both pointed out that their club had been closed by the city building depart· ment and "aU we are trying to do ts to get the repairs made and the club open. The fire doors and other r:!aterials are already ordered and ready to inst.all," said coven. ' Sun.set juries, mostlf minor: ·A damqe count given tadfiy by Maya show• about $2,ooo· worth of damqes to five police vehk~. an uncounted amount or damage to the police substation (now boarded shut and unusable), and $1,'89 ln expenditures ror overUme pay to the 56 extra Htintington Beach officers' used Sunday. "Sunday's acuon wu an uttnstm of youth's rebellion against authority," said Mays, "It shows up In schools and wllh • parents also. "Bu\ I cao't explain why It happened Sunday aod not _,. oilier <l>Y." Earlier at Monday nlgbt'a council session, Josepb_Fenn, It.Ader of the fftm. ttngtoo Beach Pl<perty Ownen Protoo- tlve League, declared, ''There ii a IJ'OW• Ing concern in tb&.communJty a'bovt the abllit!' ol the cilj to deal with the beoch• problems." ' "We can no longer '°'tpedal lhll.· Tbis .. ~ I , l!!Obltm wh\ch must be dealt wttJi before-It gits com~etely out ol bind,• Ferm declared. Mayor Jack O.... lold Fenn that "the City Council fully ·-with ,..., Ev· ery Je&al meam mwit be rabn to ... this does not happen ...... · Fenn added that be balieved the city should lnsbl ... '!SUllP<nilon ol aU business lictnatl In the section. • ( o1 bllsinesoes) catering to ~U.cnml and on "stiff handling ol. law violl&on." Green ·:New Mayor Huntington Council Vote Vnaninwus By WILLIAM REED CM flle 1Mi1r Pl• Stiff N. John V. V. "Jack" Green is the new mayor ol Huntington Beach. He was elected to serve a one-year term unanimously Monday night by llil fellow councilmen. George McCracken was c h o s e n tmanimously to serve a.s mayor pro tern for the one year term. Both took office immediately. For Green, election to the city's highest office from his vice mayor's position is in marted contrel to the biUer disap.. po.qJtment of his failure to be elected to the post last April. Green and his followers also &uffered a bitter defeat in 1965 when their bid to divide the city Into cooncilmanic districts was rejected by voters. Rebounding from that defeat, Green organized a committee which pushed fOr and obtained voter approval of a new city charter prepared by a special committee composed largely of persons opposed to Green's original effort on behalf of coun- cilmanic districts and direct election of the mayor. Green is in the third year or his firs t four·year term on the council. His cur· rent term ends in 1970, along with fellow councilmen Alvin M. Coen, frcm whom Green is taking the gavel, Dr. Henry Kaufman and Ted Bartlett. The new mayor is with a Huntington Beach real estate firm. Green and his wile, Marty, have five children. McCracken is a builder and la ~ pleting his first year on the councll. A1J' vice mayor he will aerve in tbe presiding chair on the absence of Mayor· Green. He and hia wife, Belly, also have five children. Outgoing Mayor Coen Aid II tho begining of the less than five minute& oC voling that "it has been gratifying to serve the people." With that, he nomi· nated Green. Election was unanimous. Councilman Matney then nominated McCracken. Aga~. there wu no op. position. The new mayor said he looked fcrward to ·•a fine year ahead." HelicopSquad CoQDty Eleetloa Doe? .~~H~p ~li ... #ar~or. P~tr~t l~ue Beach Ri6isr ·· A.waiiS iAFC .Ruli~g Visions of twin helicopters llCCtlDlinC at low level over crowded beacha: at Huntington Beach on hot summer days, squirting behind them huge clouda of tear gas to quell riots below, were brought to mind M<inday night by a question by Councilman Jerry Matney. Noting that the city had authorized purchase of a second police patrol helicopter, Matney asked if the police chief ~d looked into equipping the helicopters with gas dlspensing equip- ment. "It is entirely possible and It fs being planned," aakl Pollce Chief John Seltzer. Taken somewhat 1bacir at l h e forthrightness of the chief, Mayor Jack Green quipped that he "was going to sug- gest twin machine gun mount.a." Both councilmen were upset at the riots on the beach Sunday which required the calling of about 140 police oUicers from 11 police agencies for assistance. A second Hughes 300 helicopter with police patrol equipment is being ordered today at a cost oI $44,379 and is to be delivered within 30 daya, according to Ci· ty Administrator Doyle Miller. At present the city is training two pilots to handle the first machine. These two pilots will train two more police of. ficen: to fly the second helicopter, Miller explained. By JACK BROBACK Of t1tt o.11Y "'"' Si.ti Proposed dlssoluUon ol the Orange County Harbor Dl.strlct -a controversial subject ror more than three years -will be before the Local A1ency Fonnation Commission Wednesday f o r con- sideration. At the 2 p.m. session, LAFC members will act on resolutions of 12 county cities Which favor dissolution and formation of a regular county-wide Department of Jmenile Problems Set As Y Program Topic Juvenile problems In Hunlingtoo Beach Is perhapa an appropriate topic for the YMCA's Spotlight on JS3Ues program at noon, Wednesday in the VWA SWeclen restaurant. And an appropriate speaker selected for the discussion Is detective Sgt. Robert Rinehart, who works with juvenile crime and narcotics problems. Following Sunday's major riot on the beach, Wednesday's talk mJght produce a few' questions and answen on local pro- blems. Public ii invited, and the onJy price is the cost of lunch, buffet strle. Conditions OK'd Harbors, Beaches and Parks. Currently the harbor district ls aemi· autonomous and sets its own tu rate through the harbor commluion's recom- mendation to the Board of Supervisors. If the LAFC approvea dlssoluUon, the maUer will be forwarded to the Board of Supervisors with the probable recom- mendation that a countywide election be called on the issue for sometlme in August. CIUe:i forwarding resolutions to the c;ommission are Brea, Buena Park, Foun- tain Valley, Fullerton, Huntington Beach. La Hf,bra. Im Alamitos, Placenti., Santa Anll, Stanton, Tustin and l'I~~ The harbor district battle originated ln Huntington Beach when that city negotiated for many months over jurisdiction Jn the Huntington Harbour marina area. The city contended that it was servlc· ing the area wtth pallet, fire and lifeguard protection and should be relmo bursed by the county. In addition the city wanted relief from harbor district taxes. Huntington Beach lost the battle before the LAFC and subsequent JegislaUve ac- tion by Assemblyman John V . .Brlgp (R· Fullerton) died in an asaembly com· mittee. Newport Beach, which would be most directly affected by dlssoluUon of the district, has maintained that-in the event· of dissolution, "it b eaentlal that the city (See BARBOR, hp II ce officers, dowever, told a dif· fenot story 11 to Jiiiy llley arnlted the opefator of the Sj'rklicat.e 308I club on charges of: ur=·, a riot, :relwal to disperse and res· arrest. Capt. Earl &l!jla Aid that Covell "got on Ille • and bei111 telling everyone not tq i1bten l'o the police. He beg111 shouting "8t It was private pro- Huntington Ready to Start AnnexationProcedures NEW YORK (AP) -The ~ market closed about even today, paring some of its early loues. (See quotations, Pqes Jl).lt). Hunti!~to!l L WV Sh~r~. Birthday Memben If Ille League ol Women ) City officials In HunUngton Beach are ready today for residenta of lht' SuMtt Belch conununlty to begin legal steps wh1ch could lead to eventual annexation of the beach community, now in county territory. Hw\Ungtoo Beach City Administrator llofle Miller Monday night won council baCklng of a list of 12 conditions leaders of· Sunset Beach aiy must be met before the area wouJd consider anDeUtion to tbe munlty and "there Is general agree- mtht." . lier. step b for rtsldent.s ol Ille area to officially publish a nouce or intent to circulate pettt:Jons calling for an an- nexatlOn election. Tbe lbt ol s.-t demands ogreed to br. Huntlilgton Beach coonclltnen In-c ude1: :....The established kteftlity 1 n d character of Sunset Buch,' U I unique noors of living accommodaUons above a garage which Would be considered as three otorleJ. -Zontn1 for all midentlal lots in Sunset Btacti shall allow 1 maximum o( two family units per bulldlng lot, pro- vided off..Weet parking requirements are met. J · ~Tbe commetda! IOnlng for both aldet • . ..... ""' . . . oru,. ' The aun will be "°'king part Ume Wedne!day. with cloudy lkl<s the onler ol Ille day. That'll drnp the mercury down two notches to IL'I bymlda~. . - ,:.:.,~~! ·r..~l·M . .;~"'Oftd ()tang< COU!ll!I is leoklog for- ""'"' to o Jl(lpt!lotion of l1eO "'"' !16\i b~ JHO. f'oG<'3. t ' ..Jl.!. .......................................................................... ~ ......... ~~--~~~~~ ............ ~ ...... ~ ............ .....,...,. ..... .,..,,,,,,,... ..... ~.~· .... --'-'"'"' .... --.~·~·~-1''""'-'~"""'""'~~ c ~-~ ·-·"···-~·----------'-•-------------' --.. 2 DAll.Y '1LOT " T,....,, A"11 22, 1"9 A Real Turtlene~k Since turtleneck sweaters are the rage with people, this turtle at Albuquerque's Rio Grande Zoo decide to see what all the fu ss was about. He couldn't go formal. however, since there was no place for the tortoise shell cufflinks. VCI Faculty to Avow Clash With Protesters By THOMAS FORTUNE 01 tht Dllll)I Pli.t Slllt Leaders of the UC Irvine faculty, after consulting with the chancellor, have decided against any show of force Thurs- day when students are expected to crash Huntington Asks College lntf!rns Public administration majors at three colleges in the area will be asked to furnish interns who will act as aides to the Huntington Beach City Council and to the mayor. City Administrator Doyle Miller Mon. Cay asked the council for ils opinion on _ obtaining interns from Caillornia State Colleges at Long Beach and Fullerton and from Chapman College in Orange to serve as aides. Councilmen asked Miller to go ahead with the plan which would provide an in- tern for the mayor and two for the re- maining six councilmen. The interns would be available on a parttime basis during the school year and full time in the swnmer, Miller indicated. He did not set a pay rate. Maror Jack Green said he felt the practice would give the interns ''vaJu- able experience in politics and be of help to lhe council in developing infor- mation, studies and to accomplish some of the work which orten requires much legwork. Miller said that if the in~ems ran short of work In the political realm, "l can find something for lhem to do." Mayor Green agreed that the interns would be available to lhe staff for assign- ment after accomplishing tasks for the council. DAILY PILOT a closed Academic Senate meeting. If students proceed to disrupt the session by talldng without recognition, a1 they did last week, Chairman Kenneth Ford plans to recommend that the Senate again adjourn. 'Illus Ford and the 18-member se.ato e1:ecutive committee are prepared to let students win another victory to avoid a confrontation that could lead to arrests. The continuing student· protests are aver · flring of· assistant professors Stephen Shapiro and Donald Brannan and the threatened dismissal of a third a.ssis-- tant professor, George Kent. After Ford gaveled a halt to last week's Academic Senate meeting, s tu d en t dissidents shouted, "We'll be back." The only difference this we.ek will be a sign on the door declaring the meeting closed to all but five student represen- tatives. It Ls generally conceded student dissidents, probably numbering 50 or more, will Ignore it. By Jgnoring the sign ltudents will violate university rules, but in these situations disciplinary action almost n ever is taken without warning. "There will be no effort made to restrain anyone from entering nor to eject anyone who comes in," Ford said. The executive committee, made up of chairmen of Academic Senate standing comn'littees, met Monday with Chancellor Daniel Aldrich Jr. and Dean of Students Robert Lawrence and came to the oo en- forcement decision. Ford said he will not use the authority of the chair to adjourn the meeUng. He will leave it up to the profeS!on after passing on the executive cornmtttee's recommendation to adjourn if the students persist. "U a majority of faculty members present wish to continue meeting with full student participation we will do to," he said. ----·----_____.... ........ ------~ ~ ... ... -..... --- Generation C:oast Group least lhnoe senior citizens be added lo the rest home staff. "We don't trust anyone under 65," declared Tiredblood, adiualino t h e "Senility Power" button plruled to his shaw l. The revolt began laat week when a small group of hardcore superannuates held a dodder-in at which some burned their Social Security cards. Although peaceable in 11.'1 early phasea, the protest movement took a violent tum when someone rut George snatne, rest borne superintendent, With a botUe of Geritol. Snaffle blamed the trouble o n Ha.rhor Dissolution Hit By JEROME F. COIJJNS Of IM OlllY I'll" $11ff Breaklog up the Orange County Harbor Distrlct "would &erVe no useful purpose," the Orange County Coast Association declared today. The . prestigious 150-member associa- tion, representing coasta1 cities from Seal Beach to San Clemente, reached that conclusion following a !ix-week study of the diasolution question. Association President Cap Blackbum said. the findings of a special committee assigned the probe have been endorsed by directors of the 57-year--0ld orgartiza- tion. The committee, headed by publisher James C. Killingsworth, recommenda that the Harbor District not only be re- tained, but that Its jurisdiction be ex- panded to include regional parks. This pits the association in a direct confrontation with the County League of Cities. The: League's majority wants the Harbor District dissolved and i ts responsibilities turned over to an enlarg- ed County Parkl Department. The Coast Association committee report lead.II off with this flat statement: "Abolishment of the Harbor Di.strict would serve no useful purpose. There are distinct advantages in having a district.'' D!Molution, explains the association, would "not negate the fact" that there are 11ervices aod fa~Utles to be main-' tained and operated . 'U coastal cities are required to assume the maintenance and development of harpor facUitie! in the evtnt of dissolution, a question of equity is created because of the use of the fa- cllilles by residents of inland cities." The UllOciaUon fQrther points out that eliminaUon of the Harbor District's special ta1: rate and plugging it in with the county General Fund tax rate - a prime goal of dissolution backers - would result ln projects and programs being dependent on overall county finan- cing. Thill, says the 8JSQCiation, could kill off many district recreational projects that the county cannot embark on, because of From Page 1 HARBOR •.. Its luing aulborlly. "An example is the Aliso Beach pro- perty," says the repc>rt. "It was purchas- ed on contract purcbue option in keeping with the District's pay-as-you-go policy. "The county would have had to buy the beach.front land in South Laguna outright and put up all the money at once, pro- bably necessitating a bond Issue. "There· is no evidence that di.strict dlasoluUon and inclusion ·of Its responsibilities within the County General Fl.md would resuli in a tax-saving." The association'! .recommendations, which will be presented to the county's LQcal Agency Fotmation CotllJllission at a · public !!earing Wednesday, also iJ> elude: engineer; Carl S', ltegley, attorney; William D. Lusk, bulldtr~eveloper; Thomas J, O'Keefe, attorney; and lL L. Remmen, rancher. Aa!ociation presi<fenl Blackburn com· mented on the committee's work : "1 think the boys did a helluva fine 'job.'' I Thant Declares 'War' EXisting Now in Mideast ..:..Renaming the Harbor District to the From Wire Services Parkl, Harbora and Beaches District. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. -Secretary--Restructuring the present f i v e -member Harbor Comfulss.lon to a nine-General U Thant declared today the U.N. member agency, with five members ap-cease-fire.along the Suez Canal sector Ls pointed by county .suJ)ervisors and four almost totally ineffective "and a '"'.irlual by the ·League of CiUes. state of active war oow exists there." -Immediate improvement of corri-Thant made the statement in a special municaUons between the district and the report to members of the U.N. Security public. This would be achieved through Councl1. r monthly meetings between district . of-The report came as Israeli fighter- ficlsls and representatives of the League bombers knocked out Egypt's early warn. of Cities, Orange County Chamber of ing radar defeMe system in southern Commerce, the Coast As.soclatJon and the Jordan. A military spokesman said in Pr.... • Jerusalem that they were Egypt's only The association says expansion of the early warning stations against Isr_ael. distric!'it .authority. iCJ: inclu4,e regional (Earlier s.a-.i,\.L<e-·.i·i' ~-;. ~ parksllnct:beacbes could &e ace-0mplisbed Wr}' ~ through enabling legislation enacted at Thant did not request a council meet- the state level. The increased jurisdiction ing, but the urgency of the report indi- "would enable the Harbor District to cated that members of the 15-nation develop, operate and maintain regional council would now enter. into consult> recreational facilities, both coastal and tions on what fcourse f2.:l9U.oW. · inland, on a county-wide basis." "I feel it necessary to employ the The association report notes that unusual means of a special report from Harbor District Manager K en n e t h the secretary-general to the Security Sampson and his staff are already u h responsible for the supervision of the Council, to call most urgen y to t e at-tention of members of the council the county regional park system. prevailing situa tion in the Suez Canal By enlarging the Harbor Cammission's sector, which, in my view, is very membership, says th.e Coast Association, " Th t 'd .. t ll . ,, uld be grave, an sa1 •. a more permanen atson co created between city interests and county "As of the date of this report there interests. have been major breaches of the cease- "lt is abundantly clear," the study fire daily for 12 successive days," Thant committee report concludes, "that better reported. "ln numerous instances the .:i:- liaison must be deve loped between the changes of fire have taken place along public and private sectors. There is most of the length of the canal. general agreement by all who appeared "The weapons employed range from before the committee that the com-small arms to hel!vy mortars, rockets, ' milunderstandlnfs caused by difflculUts In -unlcalln' w~ the militants. , ...... " a.:lal: . laJd. ''lunled Ge tbelt bearing aldl.' ' "* Irvine Ranch RUblic information chlef Bill Aldrich denies that the lions prtserve going in near the San Diego and Santa Ana freeways will be new headquarters of the Irvine Company's real e1taW department. * John Wayne , resident of Bayshores In_ Newport Beach, fell off his horse the other day. The cinch broke. He's okay and filming continued on "True Grit." 1 don "t know what role Duke is playing in the movie, but U it isn't Rooster Cogb~, who ls the toughest, meanest and funniest frontier marshal i n. American fiction, he's giving up an easy Oscar. • Read the bopk. You'll see what I mean. From Page J CHARITY ... report to be taken ," Capt. Robitaille told the council. Covell said, ''I am shocked that Capt. Robitaille would instigate an investiga· tion of fraud. I asked the reporter for the address and the reporter said that the two of us would have to go to the home in that the reporter-as had the police-refused to give me the address. "She (Mrs. Harris) told me she did not want to be bothered with the mone)"- and asked me to give it to the mayor wbile the family decided on a charity. l went back before 6 p.m. with the checks, but she said her husband was · not home," said CoveU. Mayor Jack Green told Covell, "I don't diink the council should accept checks w i t b o u t asking the Harris family." "I divest myself or the money. I place it here on the railing," Covell said as he and his wife walked out of the coun- cil chambers. The city treasurer later picked up the money orders and gave them to the po- lice captain. The reporter said that she had been followed by two police officers during the day and had taken the license num- ber of the police car to the city admin- istrator who identified it as an under· cover car of the police depan·ment. "I was jll!t trying to dO my best at my job and I resent being followed by the police," she said. Capt. Robitaille indicated that the ' reporter and Covell had been followed by undercover officers. B~ch Mayor Call~ Stud y Meet Mayor Jack Green has called a study session of the Huntington Beach City Council for 7 o'clock lhis evening to discuss the fate of the city 's design . review board and to give official charges to thret citizen study groups. Instructions will be given to member! of the Youth Coalition, Special Districts arid Sister City Program study groups. Each group is composed of volunteers ap- pointed by the mayor. Councilmen mfft in council chambers. of City Hall, 5th Street and Pecan Avenue. Blast Hits Shop be reimbursed by the county for ex-munications gap between the Harbor tank fire and heavy artillery. pendltures by the city to provide harbor District and public ls a wide one." '"The United Nations mi Ii tar y Fire started by a gasoline explosion did facilities and services which produce Committee members, in addition to observers, who are now operating uqder $1,500 damage to an auto repair shop at regional bene{lts." chairman Killingsworth, are Carl Kymla, great danger and difficulty, in each in-3711 Cerritos St. in Los Alamitos Monday. CriUcs of the dissolution have pointed water district manager ; Hancock "Bill" stance exert evf{y effort to bring a quick Owner Warren Geller told county out that nothing would be gained by con· Banning Ill, real estate manager; Guy K. end to the £iring, with varying degrees of firemen the blate broke out at 3:29 p.m.' version to a regular county department Claire, attorney; Edwin Finster, con-success. hut no l.'.lter than the following whe n some gasoline ignited !lpOn- eitber in the way of lower taxes or actual 1-'".-Jti;n;g;e;n;gm;· ;ee;r;;;;;;E;;dw;;;ar;;d;;;;J;;a;;c:k:l;;l;;n;;;. ;;;:":":":': .• : .. :. :. :"·=··=·=·=-·=···=:I:==='==='":_:_:·:··:":··:":":w;;a;;s;;n;;o;;t ;;in;jur;;;ed;;.;;;;;;~ administration. I County League of Cities advocates have DECORATOR argued that the movt would result in a tywide recroation faclllti.,, including • OtltANGI COAS1 P'VILISMING tOMl-AN"Y ~~af~:~n ~tax" for coon· AND MODEL HOME RETURNS l{orea Task Force Curtails Spanish and Mediterranean Furniture ltob••t N. w .. 4 P!'t11Wf\1 •roll hbllllllr All New Top Quality Brand Names Jack R. c..,11:r Vic:• Prt:i~f\I •n<I Gt'f\ff IMl'lt"' n....,,, K•••fl fOIJot Operations Off Vietnam A Decorator's Dream "'ome Is On Display Over Sl00,000 Worth of Spanish & Mediterranean Furniture to Choose From! ' lJt•111 .. A. Mufpfifl'I• -....11H1nt fOll(W AfMri W, l1ft1 Willi•111 ll••4 Anoc:IOll• ti.,.,,!l,..IM a-.. Eoltw Cll~ E .. rw ............. Offtoe lO't ltfri $tr1..t M•l'irit Adlr•N: ,.0 .... no. tl•~· --No-1llKll11J11 #ttl .. ..,,,.. 1ou ....... c.c. M91: no w .. 1 ...., s1,..1 ......,,.. "-111 ttt F-M A¥'""" I • . ' • I e l • , I WASHINGTON (AP) -Vietnam naval air operations are being curtailed and the 7th Fleet stretched to the limit with deployment of a 23-shtp task force to pro- tect U.S. reconnaissance missiom off North Korea. "We've got no slack," a Navy officu comment.ec: after the Ptnllgon Mond1y announetd assignment of an armada to the Sea of Japan where a Navy plane wu shot down by North Korea last week. One alrcrllft carrier and possibly other war shlpo of the 71h Fleet have been pull· ed from the war effort to form a new Task Force 71 deploying aomttnht off North Korea. Ofrlcera •aid this means the Navy con· trlbullon lo the U.S. bombing campaign in South Vittnam and Laos: wlll be cut by roughly on,.lhird. The United States ha.s been kteplng three aircraft c11rrien on the firing line In the Gull of Tonlltn; for the time being lh1J will be ncluced lo two. The 7th Fleet's rematnlng four aircraft camera are going into Tult Foru 11 alOllJ wllh three crulJert and 11 dtstroym. I' Thus, officers pointed out, all 7th Fltet carriers are now Ued down on two fronts -the Sea ~ Japan and the Gull of Tollkln. And afflcers described the 16 destroyers as a major share of the Seventb'a heavy combat vessels. How 1c.ng lhe fleet can maintain both assignments under preaent conditions is a matter of coocem to the Navy. With its six flattops occupied, the 7tb Flttt bu no rtplacement flexibility. Valley Students Pick Chamber of Deputies Students at Fountain Valley Hlgb School hav~ picked a new group of of- ticers for the Chamber of Deputies, the.tr French-style student govt:rnmtnl Elected """ easer Spencer, pr<I\. dent ; Rlcll Manin, m pmldent1 Sandy Fultanaga, secrela!l'; JCalbe Meade, trusurer and Mike Marooney, boys' ttpresentat.ive. ElecUons were held last Friday al the acllool. Item• •• follow•: Gorgeous 8 It. custom quiltecl sofa with separate pillows with lleavy 01~ trim d•eor •nd m1tchin9 chair, 3 matchin9 oak occasiqnal tables, (2) 5'" tall decorator lam p•. hanging chain 1wa9 lamps in wrought iron, 1n 8-pl1c1 king 1i1.1 ma1t1r b1dtoom suit• In p1ca11 pa111l1d Medit1rr1nHn sM1 with top quality 15 y11r1 warranty •in9 1i1.e m1ttre11 and box 1prinv1. Spanl1h clining 11t, 1tc. i Any piec1 can b• purchased incU..,iduany. Drop by and ••• our tel1ction of top quality Sptinish and M1dit1rran1an furnitur1 ... f111f attieally pric1dl COMl'l.ITI HOUSIFUL WAS llK. $152'.00 COMPLETE HOUSEFUL WAS REGUARLY $1528.00 MUST SACRIFICE FOR ONL T '698°0 TERMS -WE CARRY OUR OWN ACCOUNTS . ' • I' ! ... •••00\ ' _ .. :-v.: •· • • DAii. Y PR.OT , • • LEGAL NO'l'!CE LEGAL NO'l'!CE LEGAL NO'l'!CE 1.EGAL N<mel!l '""lltii ctlltt o,. t11• , LEOAL J(011C£ 1110'11ci to cttaCMTOH NOTl"r TO CON-•,_..a• • ••t G ••·pb I P4*1 tTATI 0111 ULINllMloA i>OI SUfllt10t COUltT Ofl nta ... 1111 IR.M..IV'W ... .,.... unman 24 \otcphw/p ~ 'II p Dcpbw/p (lltTllllKAt• Oi' •USIMIU f'MI (01,1.,,.,. -OltAlittl tlOTIC:'I TO UIOITOl.I ,, ... ,, 011 CA.ll~,,.- ( ,. Sinta Ana, C1llfornl1 4.83& Nozzleman and ti. ~:~~ou:._,~~1~ "' ,, .. 0,1,1 :: = .. '°" l~:f:# ~J'#:.·~-== .., .. , ~'"!:... .. 6.: ' Dlte April~ 1969 rodman 24~7cph~/p !Stphwfp 32cphw/p ,_UClll'!I I Mi-. .••. r.116 .. _, PltOU.TI 0111 WILL ••o l'Olt lMI '°4111TY .. ou•• t1i.1e "' )ll!ltll!ltT MATHIEU, s• .• ™'"'""nee of a -·olutlon ol ... ~ •• ~ ol rvlaor1 f 68 Heavw duty -pair· I0111tv1fll. c .. i. M-, c.n11rn11, -1 Ltn••• 'f'UT ...... 1111ta•v • A..uM o.q..~ .I ,..-.. -.... UIC -.i-u ' pe: • 'J ... ' !fie !lctllloul "'"' 1141 .... el (Oll• , .. ,,.. • wc;,1u,a iH'."" ICAMMIUll!lt. l1l11t ., MAllClUl!lllte L MA(. NOTIC! IS Ml!ltllY GIVIH " ,,.. .. Oranae County F'lbod CooUo1 Dlat'rlct ·~ April 15, nian's helper 30cphwtp 30ephw/pf2) tocphw/p Mtv.. MOT01t1 11111 'ii•' ,,i. 11""" OK.11•. 1e101w11. o.c-.-.. """"'' 11 111e .._ _.. .....,. J9U, directi ..... this ooUce, NO'l'l"'' IS HEREB GIVEN '"'at 4 28 t..aWr of non. '' "'""'" " 11w -."'"''"" .. ,$0.'\. NOT1c;1 11 Hl•E•., 01v1w 1Mt NOY1c;1 11 HIE"llt:IY 01v1flf " ,,. "'-' '" ...,_ 11ev11w ClllfM _._.'N .-CJ .. ,. -..c. "'' ' ,,~ .,.,,_ 1\111'1111 i. 1\111fl'llll111.ta ot mlotftu WU!'-""'°""' K-w "" fllM crdltot• "' the .-OW• _,.. ~ NW dotCllHttl ,,,. ,...,..,.. " tlili ._ uie erk o.f said Board will r«elve in Room 501 1n the County metallic pipe Including 11 •• 1o11ow1: 1wrt111 • "'111t11 .... ''°"'" "w111 " ,,. ""' •If --. M.,.,. ci.i-._,.,., 'll1tll ,.... _.,. \IOIOdWf'I.. • ..,. effk• .t...t-l .. ilttaUon n..lkl'·· Ill North Syc·-·· s•-t Santa Ana se~er pl-. drain pl-Joe v ... NoY. l:I E•.i Hl'ICI Strt~I, ~ McMMI .,... ..,. ~ .... "11111 ....,.. M• ,..,...., .. Ult al 1111 cllfll "' IM ....,., tl!fl• c."t, If' ·~ °"-..... ...._ "'""'"' .,. ,... r-Cos-Mtw. Ct lltor!oi.. """1 tofllenltflttnr 11 1M Mlll!Mtr, illlfll. wl"" IM ~ ~ \II .. ,.._,.. .._ wllft '1lit ~ or be! re tbf:"bOur ot 2:00 p.m. of April 21, IMI, sultd and under1round o.i.i wrc1111. 1• ~ .. _. 1t ~ "' ""'1iltr w. •nc. " .._. c1Ht1 , .. ,.. ~ ~ .. ,... ,, Jex••.,.,..-. or P oposail for the reccnstruction oC StnUaio Creet tile 141-1cphwl p 2.$cphw/p 32cpbw/p s/A1r-= ~:;'01N1 ,.. , ::::--... ~: ,:~.::., ':: ::n--:!;.., ~' .. "":'; -: f,,A'':',.!11~1"'"~-t"&-...''~ \ nnel t Mn Santa Ana RJYU Confhaeace to Briltol Street. 4.JI Afak'er and caulker COUNTY Of' OllAHOe , ,.. •• "''· ,, •:• 1..111.o .... tollrtf'Ml'll .. ~ ., ""~ .. 1111 A"'°"""' Ullftr!lll .... , .. = • Bids .. '"'t be ·•· "· I ... f all talllc Oii ""'"-" JI, ...., IMflfo -. "0..rln\lol'I fllt. 2 ol .... c.iiri. •I Ntwllft. 1'.Ullt;rf ,,,. .-...-. 10 """'-ol ~,... i. •I ... ...,, m....., on -form prov:ided or w. purpose, o non·me ,, .. ,., ""'11c 111 ,111111 ,_ 1111111 '""· c-t11ww, 191 w. "" ,,,..,, 111 !flt. c1iy :a1 ':' ~'~~ 1un1 Nr-' ,'"' Mr1•1nlne " ..... ,.,. ., ... ¥ • addreised the Cltrk of tbe Board lft SUnarv1• .. -Or• .. •e pipe joUlls J4 \;cphw/p 2$cphwtp 32cphw/p 11t"°""1"' -•td Joe....,.,, Not MC:Wll., It"" AM. C11~1. ..~,,.,. .. ,.,, · • ..!;;-1 ,."'' ~.!.: •!11'11111-" _.,. .. ,.,. ""flrtt ~· Fl r.. r-• ._.. ...._ •JI 0 nd d IO m1 IO M llll H•tlll --Olltd ""1'!1 lt, lMt. .,. • w,_. f '1 ..... lkl!I f!l IM~ Mfl«, 1 toe ~nlrol Distrk:t, marked ••sJd for Recomtruc:tion '· peratora a ten ers 11 1ulllot•l'*I .. t11e w1111111 lnt!Nmtftt w. 11• sY JOHN, c-t'f Cltrlt 111 owr-., '"' IH'ldt"1911M "' 111 '°"'"" A9l'11 :n, tM; M ,. ti110o ~lreek Channel". ol pneumitic and •Ml .UC"OwllOllH lie "'to:u1,.""' 11nw. ••M• •· K-• -"'"' Nr•11111ri1 " Ille 1ti.1~ •1 ,...,i,.rt M•11t1w1 Jr, ~.,. .._ (Of'll'l(IAL SE.AL) . Al"'"'" II uw .. kl Mctclfnt, wllhln '-tr -1111 •01r fa.tu•""" Wiii fl/I '11 Bids sh• I be for fumlshlna all labor, equlpmtnC and tlectric tools, vlbrat· JoHSlh 1. °'"'' :J::' ......,.. ........ ,, rM -twtt !Wbl1c1111R., 1t11. 11C11n. • . -. •OM ,.,,_. .. ....,., tertals in accordance wlth PtlflJ and Spedfbtiom there-lng machines and Not.,., "11t>11c.c1111or111• 1 1..-. ~ ~ o.i.i ,..,u '· ,,... ALLI" teL1M11#SM11'w · for 'the followlni work: similar mechanical ~~~= in !:'i.r'~~..::.,111 ~M~"tfw "':i~KM~ ::.::.:=-•~ . .,.... ' ' SCHEDULE OF wo•• ITEMS tools (not separattly MY c-kli... l111•1t1 "ubMtl'lllf Or ..... C..1f 01/ty "ll•t. • ... tllow f\tll"d t«Nlnf T.,...._, 1no ~ ii Ra JV!ll 21, 1tlt Aptll 11, n. .. ,... 1'Wt IMwll .. ,.........,., ... ....... AtlwMv .., 11-'W ':'!~ 1 1 Excavation o( tme.tsentY protection m1terial on classified herein) 24~cphw/p 15cph"/p 32cphw/p •l.'llllW<I 0r ..... c .. ,, 011i., l"!IDI, n1 ...,.., m tll"MI. u"'I"'-· u-. ~*""'*' °'-c-1 Oa!lr ,.,..,, a lump awn buJJ. -4.!95 Steel beaderboard ""';1 '· L u. 21. '"' •Jut LF.GAL NOTICE ~.:i!;'~.~. ,..11 ""'u u. 21 1~ ,_,., " 12. lM ?1>4• lW" 2 15,SSS Cubic yards of imported compacted fill on a per man 24 ~cpbw/p 2Scphw/p 32cphw/p LEGAL NOTICE "·"'" !~ :-r;u._'*' LEGAL NOTICE , 11,, cuttle ya.rd basb. 4.98 Truck Greaser c1•1'1P.1cal'R °" oiscowT•NUAIKR Pl.lb•PIH 0r111• Cotst D•li'f ,.t1o1,I--------------The f,ortD"oin• quaDUtles art apt1m1rimatt only, bel•• 1iven and llreman 45cphw/p 40cphw1p 30cphwip 1"-»1u· OP. us• .r.NO!Ofl AAAMOONMu1 op M1rt11 31 ""'11 1, 1-1, "· 1Ht ~ ~ _.,_.. • ''6 £:~ ... w ck Cli•Tll'ICATI 01' •USINEIS •1CTITIOUI NA.Ml ClillTl,l(;AT• 01' llJSUfllS iP a basis for the comparison of bids, and tbe Orange County 4.71 attr tru driver ,.1c;Y1T1ous H.WE l'HE UNOlilSIONt"D llf,r.ri., ~trtlfy LEGAL NOTICE ,.1cT1Ttovs MAM1 b~ "'A~lrol District •-· not ly - b lm;£!lcall (un!U:r 2500 galloru) 45cphw/p 40cphw/p 3tJ<phwlp "" U11CHrale11M ""' otnll'I' "" 1, 11111 • .ii.eiivt Ju,.. "" 1u1 ••1Lco. •NC. ,..,. 1111Mrsi.-...-.. _fl,., ,. 1t .,.,. -VVll -• expreu .. y on, Cllllelu<llnto • bull"'H " ?tU w. Co•tt . C•llfoml• CO!f'. CfftH ... llut!MU du<llM • bu1lrliiii •• lMYI ... di l lN.. tl\at the actual amount of work will correspond rtwlth, 4.83 Water truck driver H!ohw•~· NtwMrl 11tt11. c.111or1111. ~ ,.,. 11c1111ow tlrm """" 11 IAlllj·UU Hunt11111o11 11m . C•llfflmli, ""*" ,.,. ;;1 reserves the right to ' .1 ..... 1Se th t of any (25()0 to fOOO gallons) ecphw/p <!Ocphw/p JOcphW/p ulllltr 1IW flcfllloul firm ,.,.,.,. et HOLi-SIULl!ll STIAK HOUll! NL 11 ti 1" NOflC• TO Clt•Oll'OllS nctlllou1 llnn lltlM Of AOV.ANCfO ~ mcreue or ~e e. amoun DAY MAltlNE SALES tlld """ "''-E11t Ultl SlrH1. C•l1 ,..,.,,, '''"°'"'"· SUf'l.ltOI COUl'f 0" l'K• ll:OOFINC co. •lld ""''Mid firm II_.,. class or portion of the work, as may be deemed necessary or UNSKILLED LABOR ''""' Ii~•• 11i11 t.11ow1n1 "''°"• W11lct1 bustrwu w•i ,.,.,.,_.., _, "" S1ATt. OLI' tAi..l~M11 ,.011 POtff 0, 1111 ro1111.,.,1111 ""11111; WllOM e-dlent by the said Dbtrict. $3.97 Jrla'"'"'an 24Yacphw/p 2Scphw/p 32cphwip ~ ,..,.,... 1"' lull •1111 •111(• ot ... ~ IOllowlfttl C'Cll'WtllM ~ ,..,,.,. In 1'1111 TN• COUNTY 011 0•1.NOl ,....,, '" tvrr 111C1 •11«"' ffllcleftc• i. u. .,,... °'"'• b 11 i.Mowt: tncl J>lt<f Of ~-.,.. ff folllwt, i.. Mt. A-4MfS • i.11ow1: All bids ire to be compared on the basis of the loreaoinf 3.97 Laborer 24~cphwtp 25cphw/p 32.cl'lhwt p •. L M•llw, '~ w1111, O.k 0r .. ..,111 .,11a. i11e .. 1i.w """'" L•M. E•l•1•., Al.LXANDE1t STA.AK 11u"'°" Aobtrl J. 5'111!11. 1m4 ,..,. c111n,.,1 achedule of work items. 3.31 Watchman 241h:cpbw/p 2Scphw/p 32cphw/p g:~ ~!.~,, 1,.. ,,._, '"'"" C•llfor,.,11. Nil!ll. o.. .. ..-. Cira., F-auni.111 v.1111, c1u1or111e.. ' ' ' ...... ' c .. 1111te10 .., ... _ ...... "' ""''"'"' NO'flCI: " KE1t••Y OIVEllt .. lllt O•kcl ..... 11 21, 1Nf. ,-: Minimum waie rates for this project have btenmr· Welders : .same wage rate as craft to which welding IS •· L. ~..... """'"' 111t MDw tkntto. "-·..., ... uMltor.. e1 "" •"'-' 111"'" o.cH11111 11*r1 J, ""'"' ~ined by the Board ol Su-M-.. , ··d are ... fo 1-this incidental (eu:tpl as otherwise separately classified) ~~1~ OFC.AOL~:~~IA 1, ""9¥11 Of Mllc.tlloll tlllrMI ........ flll IMI Ill -lltYl .. ·ci.i.... .... 11\1 STATE OF' (.ALl,OlllflA ) r• ,.... ' -.. , '" · · · · ti 111 !hi Ofllcl ti1 lltl C-1'1' Cicf11 f/f Mid OIROlnt _. '"'°''Id kl Ille lhtrri, COUNTY OF' OltAMCI ) u ,otice. (l) travel lime 1s considered as hme worked on ,..r11 ~. 1..,, lldor• ""· • Nof•nr Or•llff COlllllY . .,,..., ,.. -'•'-,.. •I"" ""'"~ ~ "" ""ttr1ce °" ""'" 11, ,,., • .._. _ 1 .Nal••., I Abbreviations used ln the schedule of pre(letermined wage (2) incJude.5 l0c phw/p for holidays :;:~~ :~ L~ ~~:l•k~~:; sec,i:. li: ~ .. ~~~~11.C\~1 CO.. = "::i tt ..!':.·~~~"':;:.led=~:; f'llbllc !ft .... !vi' 1e111I jl•l9, '__,,h., ,ate. in conjunction With employer payments lislt<I in the right Travel and subsistence payments to each workman needed : ~~toe =-wi"":'l"' ~"j' II ·~'*':: lll:ILCO. INCH . l/'oUdlln, IO"'• uncleral~ 11 !ht r1c· ~o-~'"11tt111:-,:.,J:~=t!"-= hand columns are identified a1 follows : to execute the work sbaU be. made as such travel and subsist· l(:•-1Wtec1 w ... :Cu1111 ,~~ •. ' ~~~.,'-::'.!:!:"" M. s11w.rt, ~''e.':"1":• :i~~1C;!"1~· ~~ ~~: K,,bed '• "" w11111"' __._, •!Id phw per hour worked ence payments are defined in the applicable collective bargain· coF-F•c~~!e::L~o""' A. L11 ao"••· .r.tt.,.,.,.., 1Grr111 n101, whic11 •• 111e •'•~• o1 Ml· T~~~ 5~Lt~lld, "" .. ,,,.. phw/p n11r hour worked or pa'id in~ agreements filed in aceordance with Section 1773.8 ot tht Nol••., ;u1111c..c111torn1• 1u1 Wffldltt °''"' iwst 01 1111 llNl•ulgned "' 111 "''"'"' Jt•n t.. Jot.I " L '"'-" Pr lnc1,.1 Olflc• 111 'ullt 1:1t •r1•l11!111 10 lht 111111 ti ••kl 11tt..i.n1, Nolt•Y Pullllc.<.toUfllrftll -Pursuant to the provisions of Seetion 1770 of the Labor a or ....uue. or-• CO<lntY H-r• ••1eh, c1N,.,ftl• wr1t1111 taur IMlllh' •utr "" 11n1 ,._11. P•tnc•Hl Offkl 1,., Code of the State of Calilomi1 the Board of su-rvi.sors has Att'ention is directed to the provisions of Labor Code Sec· Mv CornmlH!M l!J11lrt1 .~."',, ',","'! 0"··.~ .. ~0,",' ,2~111 !;~ uc,.•llcn of lhb no·I °'.·~,"w,..·• .. " "·· · ' ,. 1· ims · I · Mirc11u.1nJ ................ •,... ,. tld1.pr1111.1Nt ., °""'" """" ucerta1ned the Jenera.I pnvailinJ: rite of W1ges and emplofer Jon · .concerning emp oyment o.I apprenllces. PubllJll"CI ,,,,..., c11i1 D11tt 1"11e1. cr..iitr MIMtlblum M1rc11 2, nn payments for health and welfare vacation pension and similar It requires contracton: or subcontractors employing trades· -'••II •· u, n, "· 1•" ~ft LEGAL NOTICE Mm111111r111r •u1111111ec1 or1ne• cOMt 0111y ,.11ot. purpases to be as follows : ' ' ~ in any ~ppre_nticeable. occupation to ~~ply to the applicable LEGAL NOTICE ,11.241 :~~': ... ~~ ::c!:ni -'•11 11' ".,.. ,,,.., '· l:t. ,.., MM• Basic Rlite Employer Payments For 10lnt apprenticeship romm11ttt tor a certificate of approval and su•1.•101t c;oulll' o" l'Ht. ,. .. ,.•1cK a. ouaaaN, EMi. LEGAL NOTICE f. ' t~ t" f J' -d 11. nAT'E O" Cl.lll'O•lflA "Oil 1Nl S 11111 Sl'"I Per ROilf" Classllicadoa Hand w Vacation Penalon lXJng ·~ ra JO 0 appren ices to JOUrneymen use on ~ue NOTICE •:o•·t~.DIYOllS THI COUNTY o .. OltAM•• SIAI• ..... Ctllfl>.Wt ft7'1 CEllYl,ICATI ~ IUSllflSS SKn 11m· LABOR contract. su,.t111o• cou•1 0,. YHI "'· A"11u 111: 1110 M1-au "ICTITtOUs NAMa L • C t I be · ed l k 1 'b JI NOT1c1 OI' lft.A11wo OI' 'E1'111ow A111111.., 11r AM11111111111r The """''"'-Md -.. c"1llY 11e 11 "11· $5 33 ·Carpenter 3kphw/p '"""hw/p ~phw/p on rac or may requ1r o ma e con r1 u ons to appren· STAY« o,. c.a..1,.01tN1A ,.o. AND ,.011: l'•O•AT• 0,. wiLL AHO "'WH""41 °''"" ""'1 n,1,, Piie!, a1Kn.., • 11u11r1tu ,1 ,,.. it•,.,.. .. ...: s:13 Cement Mason 40tpbw/p ~w/p 35cphw/p Uceship pro_grams. THI co:.T: .. ~H OltANQt. :!1~1eL:T!~:~N T:s~~·::!:~ A,rll IS, n. It •1111 Mtv •. .... 111"9 fi::::. ,'i:,''n•~ll':".:'Ht u;:-~E·:a 5 46 Concrete or asphalt ~ Contractor and subcontractors shall also comply with Sec-E1t•t• of MOLLAHO LE1.cH wALKEll. NO"l'ICE 15 HEllfiv GlvF.N T1111 LEGAL NOTICE a.w 111., i•ld firm 11 cempen "' ""' · ·~ tion 1777 6 in the employment of ap rentices •k• Holl•ncl L. Wilk••, •k• Hfllllncl Enutieth M. c111 II•• 111ec1 111r11n 1 Mli-1G11Dw1,.. .erien . ........,. """" 1n f\111 •"" spreading, mecbanlcal \ : ' ' p . : W•lktf, Dt«ait<d. !ioll lar ••obllt,,, wilt ....... r IUUll!Ct Of PllCI OI rHkllllcl I•., fol!OW&: tam~· • or finishl·· . For tnformat1on relative to apprenticeship standards, COO· NOTICE J$ HEll.EIY GIVEN lo .... Ltlll'I Yesltmtnll"I' lo ,lllllor\et, MDTICI 01' IULIC Tlt.llfSltllt o-.v10 w. OAllST, U61 FulllrtM 0 ... ,...,t Dirfc•Ar of lndus'"al RelaJ'i San Fr 1··-C 1-1 · (rec11ten 01 ""' •bcMI "'""" dKetltnl ~1.,..,(1 to w111cti 11 mtcli to• wr11ttr fSlc• •111 .. 111 u.c,c.1 c 1 M ma ine operator 30cphwl p ~w/p (2) 60cphw/p ._ ... w "'' . , ons, anc .-..v_. a I orn1a, 1n11 111 ,.,'°"' ""~'"' ,1.1,.., "''"'' "" uriio:ui.11., ,,.. tM• 111t 11..,.. ,1111 111u Ne11ct 11 "''"'°" •lwll 10 1111 er.a110n o~e!. ~1 1 1 5 03 Driver of dump truck ()( DIYISIOn ol Apprentlcel!lhlp Standards branch offices, ••Id Otctdtnl 1rt '"ulred la 1111 !hem, "'hl•r1,. ""'lllM ... I lle9ll"" for""" ~ JOHN L. THOUSAND dlDI• EM,.lllE o ... :"w b~ ... ~ · wl!ll IN nectu••'I' WUdle•1, In lhl offl(I t, lfft, 11l:lt1.m .. In !hi cwr1room of Nc;INl!"EAIHG, Tr11111t..,, w Jltte STATE 011' C.r.LIFOltlfl.A ) (l& yards but less than APPRENTICE SCHEDULE ot t,,_ ell<~ ot 11111 •llov• flllllltd Cl!U•f, .. °"'•rlmenl No, J Of 11td cwrt. •' 70ll 11111"""• HWIQ II 11s Wttl Hll'I s1rm, COUNTY OI" ORANGE 1 . 25 Y•••• Waler (eveJ) '"'"'hw/p •~phw/p JOcphw/p Period and Jtale lo Prtieftl ftllm, wllll 1111 lllCftlfl'l' Wnl EllMll Slrfff, 111 lllt CllY 01 S1,.,l1 N1W-I lt«ll, Cou""' OI Drt1'\91, Stttt Oft ,_.,11 ti Ifft blton ..::· •.... ,.., aaue --.y '!II\." • vOU<lle"' lo ~ llllCl .. sltMd 11 c/o A-Callflrftll flf C.lltorflil. 11111 t llolllk ltll\lflf bi •llotlt • • 5.49 Driver of dump truck The apprentice rate is by percentage of the journeyman's YO.UNG, J>llENN!lt ANO HEWS.JU WHI O•lld All•ll ;,, ,... .. bl ..,... IO WOLVl!lttNE WESTElllf ::::c:; :"'1.'«w II~~;-,:.:; 125 ·-rate uni··· otherw•'se 1'nd1'cated Th1nl Slrtel, s.t\11 Aftl, C•ll!Grnl1 tmtl, w, E. ST JOHN, COll:,.OAATIOH, Yr'"""'"' wh••• ... ff.. .. ..... . ... ...-..~, yaru;, or more ~ Wfllch 1t 111e 1111a1 o1 bu•lllKI ., "" Cll\ll\l'I' c11r-. """'""' ..,,_ 11 tn wttt 1t111 llteet, _._ w • "'"" '" -.';'T 11>-water level) (sin•le Craft Interval Isl %nd Srd 4th Sth 5th 7th' Ith ""'611111nec1 In 111 .... 11.,. pe1111n1n11 i. w1L1ut I', outNT 1 """"-' '¥Ct'· c-" ., o...,.., ll•t. ec1,.._• -"" ,w11111n 1 ',~",,,,""'""' "" · · ~ C J 6 ••• 75 78 8t 84 87 96 the astt~ ol Hid dladtnl, wll"1n lour J (Lt,.,.O•O AllGUE, 1 ot Cllllwlllli. t tle<U t """' urut or comb111ahon arpcn ers mon .. ~ 90 93 mon111s 1ner 111. 11ri1 PUt>l1~111on ot this ,u, willltlr. 1..,11Y••-. Th• pra.ertY 1e 1111r1111fttteG 1, 1oc11. IOFFICt-.t. SfALI ot vehlcles) 45cphw/p 40cphw/p ,"""'hw/p Cement Masons 6 months 75 79 83 87 91 95 l'IOllte. su1i. N•"'"' .... •d ~• au Wtst i.1n s•rett. NewPOr1 MJ" IC. Henry . Eq I G '"""Y Reinforcing 011eo-Aprlt 11. 19ff L•• Ani11tt. t:1111tm11 ,..u BHCh, c-r~ er Orinir, 5111e o1 c11~ ~o!"i ~ug:~·C•/ilornlt 5.16 u pment reastr 30cphw/p 30cphw/p SOcphw/p u1c~1 R, Up1011 Ttl: 12111 :llt·9U• 1or,.,11. 0•M-r>1 ' " " 5 03 D l f Tr · Ironworker 6 monU1s 77 83 89 95 Ao ... 1 ... 11tretrl• anorn•Y• t~ •ttllltM• 5•kl 1 1 ~-~ ••Mt ounlY · r Vers 0 ans1t· or !ht Ei1t!e 01 1111! Publl•llld Or•"" c.Q..11 0,11., ,1101 ••. •u ·~,•1Y 1 ae1cr1...., In tenerel Mr CoMmlnklll E~Pirn M. T 1 •• (3 bl Structural b · ' -· .. ....... " trade, ll•tures "ulllfT!enr NOY ,. "12 IX NCA.:1 CU C YOUH08 :.-.::~!': :~'oeo-~;ws Aprll Jl, 22, JI, 1"' ,..,ii 11111 IOCd wlll of 1111! e111l,.,..rlftt •~ l'ubll1M<i 0~1n11e Con! D&llY ~i1ot. yards or more) 45cphw/p 40cphw/p 30cphw/p Ironworker 6 months 77 81 85 89 93 97 iis w ; Thlr<I 5.,. 1 tn•rwl•ctur1111 bu1111111 knc""' ~· EM· .l11rll 22 ~ •nci M•'I' 1 u 1,., t(t-4• 6.03 Fence erector 30*cphw (l) 2kphw(l) 30cphw (l) . The rate or compe~sation for any .classification not listed c'"'" 'l .... c'"'••~ .. 111 LEGAL NOTICE :,~~ 1:1~"~::."'~':i.:~: =-~~ c'~~ 'LEGAL NO'l'l. 'CE 5,46 Gr1dechecker JOcphw/p 30cphw/p(2) &Ocphw/p in the schedule, but which may be. required to execute the pro-!::::,.,.~11~11!~~ .,.11 ,. •. ,.. ot Orwie• srti." c.iuomi., "------------- 5 .. H du ""~.....i contract shall be comme•••rale and in accord ith th 1 • • ·•• o P11o1 ~u,..,111n• "°"'"'t "' THI!" Tiit 11iu11i ,,,,.,,,,, •111 .,. CWIWllVTl•ledl' .w eavy ty ~ ' ...... w e Publl lht!d Or-• (HI! •liY STATE o .. CALl ... Olt:NIA 110• ...... , .. 1111 hi .. ., ot WY )Ht ., c;l!ltTll'ICAta °" IUlllt•» • re . 30cphwi p 30cphw/p(2) 60cphw/p rates specified for similar or comparable duties. APlll u. 21· "•1111 M•Y I, 1"' 11•• TMIO CO\INTY OF CllANGI 175 W•t 1•11t Slf..i, HNf'or1 "~"" 'KTITIOUS NA.Ml ... pairman p · ded th t ot ) th I"· f th ·r If•. A-41111 COU11ty el Ol'tMe. 11111 " C•lllotnle. Thi Ullde•olcned 6-«rllf\' 111 i.. CllfO. 5.5' Motor patrol rov1 . a n ess an n unes e preva1 in~ rate LEGAL NOTICE NriT•C" ,.,, w•t.,.•N"' 0,. ""'TITION So fir ,, ,_ .., 1111 T,_,_, .a 1111ot.1lfll, Mlt1111 •' ~1• E. 11111 51 .. .suu. t\IV,.1tor 30cpbw/p 30cphw/p(2) IJOcpbw/p shall be. patd for any working time in exce.u of I hours in any 11011 ... 0, .. 1 • ., wn.L ANO NMt 1111,1_ -.wi 11111 ......._ _. -. •1. c.n11 Mew, ceufftflt•, ""°" .... -~ f '·· d d f Sa da S d d 7 I J h 1· •A•·1J4t L•Til•S YllT.\Ml.NT•lt:Y tr.,.,,,_.,., fW lllt lflflt .,..,. 1&11 -1, llclltlclul llrm n1m. ol MAYAN TOUllS 5.4S Pavement breaker one ca e.n\UIJ· ay an or tur ys, un a)'! an ega o I· Not1cl! To c1t1011'0•1 11"'41 ...,11.,..., u 111"''"'' rrem 1111 •booo• ,,,. "'°"' ANO exPE01T10Ns 1116 11111 w1a 11"" i. o...., ... tor 30cpbw/p 30cphw/p 60cphw/p days, to wit : New Year's Day Memorial Day, Fourth of July su•t.•10• coUIT o, TM• 1;,1•1, oi ~.1 .. Ell111M111 0eo111ue, 011H: A111'!1 It, Ifft. ' · a1111POH<1 ot 1t1e tetlowlflt 119'51n, -.tios• ~· Labo 0 V J 0 '('h' k · · Da nd Ch · Im ' STATE OP CALll'O•Nll "Oil '°"'' !1m11 k-11 M1rlo!! E. eo.qnlt, WOLVEltlNI! WES1E•N ""me 1ft full •!Id 1Lec1 GI re11ofnc. i,, ta 5.46 Piledriverman bridge r ay, e trans ay, an sg1vmg Y a r1s aa. YNt. couMTY 0,. o•aNai Dt<••'"· co11,01AT10N, • c.111er"11 cci•· 1o11ew1: or dock carpe'nter J&tonhw/ 25cph I 45cph I For !tss than I hours per day, the per diem rate shall be that lfl ..... 1411 NOTICE IS HEll:EIY GIVEN Tllal ..,,.. .. i,,,. LOUIS JAMES WACKOS. 21n" MIMr P t ""t'" P w P w P fraction of the foregoing -r diem rate.s that the number or e1111e et ROSfMAllY J T'ALE11:1co. F-rec11r1e1t w1rrt11 wer 111s 11i.ci 1111'111n • ly: J"'"' L. T11ouun0. Prt,~tnt 50'··,,.'•," ,-, ,,. ,.., 5.IS Owtr conctt e cut-,.... DKtllf'd 1tlllklll tor prolltlt Ill will 9lld fGr T'r•ft1t .. H • Pr , t tk ing machine o-rator 30cphw/p 30cphw/p(2) IOcphw/p hours worked bear to 8 hours. NOTICE IS HEllEIY CIVEN le IM "'""na et Ltlt.ri T'ttllll'ltflllry ,. ....... M, . .'.':::'" M. DOITAL STATE ~'~.ti:.~~.N~A I ~ Prov1"ded '"at not 'th t d' th l I ' c•edllo" ot "" •boY• ... mec1 decedent 11oner !IMO w11.,t<11. re1er111C1 fl wllldl .,.,. 4tt llnl011 hnle S1U1rt 5.11 Power concrete , ... , WJ s an mg e genera prov s1ons co~· ""' •*' "'r'°"" h•wif>w ,111ms •••""'""'Ill mMte tor 1ur1t1er ~1111cu11ri, •Ml lhJt.., .. .,,~ Mii• .,,., COUNTY OF ORANGE 1 11: saw'O\....-ii.trrr V-.'hw/p ~~·/p(iJ· vi.....hw/p t~betein, Flagmen, Guards and Watchmen shall be paid wld Otctdtfll •" re<1111rec1,. 11"' .,,..,,. ""time 1Nf .1..:1 of ~.,1,.. Ille,.,,,. o~~' c111tr1111 nua P,?i::kA~~11 !!; :'·..,":,'o;;.:e·,:,.::.~~ ~T--. -"""II"' : !r.tr ~ n« thah iit.(times •i.... pre all'-g rale for ov rt'-1 w11t1111e MeeH'"'' -... '"' 111ot ~1ce 1111 '*'" ''' ,., M•Y '· '"'· •* ,,. 1111o11ec1 °''""' c;.,.,, o.u., p11o1. • · 6.10 Reinfo:cinc « ·. " • • · . . I!"" 1·11•;:: v ui e ..... e over· ot the (ltni o1 ""' •bo'l'e 1n1111.a cour1 . ., 1.m.. 1n "" cour1oon> 111 Ot!l•rl-APrtt J2, lfff ",.,9 IPPt•rlld Louh Jlfl'lll N~ k-ir~••orker 30"cphw(f) ••·pbw(l) 30cphw (JJ timet shall be bme worked in excw of 8 hours per day or 40 to o~nt '"""· w1111 !hi 111cnw,.., "'''" No. l o1 111<1 cour1, •• 100 w111 -• ••,.,.'" bl! tl'lt ..,.IOI!, ""-"',,,. i. "'"' · rJ """" h kj d ••· · h 'J" I · voudlfra to 11\1 ut'ldt!rt'1"9CI et !tit tolflte Elllllh Streit In ""' City II Stnt1 .,,.., LEGAL NOTICE ' i. lhl w!tll n l""lrinntflt 111<1 5.27 Roller operator 30cphwlp 30cphw/p(2) 60cphw/p ours per wee • an .. ic straJg t pr_eva1 1ng rate or t!me 111 his .i1e'"''· 1101E1t:T H. 1t1cil: $1&S C.IHorn11, ' .UllOWle!llM 11e 1xKultd lh9 um•. s 46 Rubber·l·ire<I heavy r worked on Saturdays, Sundays and holidays where such time 11w 11...c1. ,c.,P11u. c.111orn1• '°"°' D•teo APrn "· '"' P-mst COF-F"lc~~ sE,ALJ , ' 7. doe t tit t rt• wlll-Jt I• tl'lt PIKI OI bulll\eH GI Ille W. E. SY JOHN. Cwnty Clerk ,_,... • nennr duly high speed -.. -• S ,no cons U e ove ime, u..o.r,11/ned In 111 """''' Hr11lnlnt te c11tt1n o. s111W. •a•-•u.. Nol•,,. "u1>llc·C•ll~nl1 earthmoving machine ..... ,· • .: Bldders' attention is called to the above mentioned Statute 111e e•'•"' et .-1a GKedt,.,r, w1tMft reur , .... w111"r" twll'f•rf. ce,.~~~~~~:J: .. ~~,:~~~ss ~~~:~~!:~' 111 0....,rator •l\.,ph,./p '"·phw/p(·2. l •~ph .,.,p whic~ will require them, if awarded the con Lr act, to pay not ~1111 •lltr 1111 11"' ~11c•110~ GI 11111 ::~~ "t."::\':;!r.Ni.m11 ,..11 ...!.."' unc11 ... 1•111C1 0o llfretrr ar1ity thtt My comrnl111on E••lrn ,... """" .Joi/\; VII'< "'" Jes 'd I d' t f I f th I Ii ""1 '· t 11 nu1 UMIM .... , •r• co1111u<t1n1 •n ou •nd 1u Nov. ''· 19n 5.27 Screed operator 30cphw/p 30cphW'lp(2) 60cphwlp s an sa1 genera per 1em_ra e o wages.!e or , o .a D•l•d APrll 11, '"' Ar!Orn•r i.r f'tt llltft.. riu.111111 111 c0.,.1,,ne,.J 11 1110 No. •u1111.~ Dr1n11 c1111 0111, ,1101, 5 41 Skipload t laborers, workmen and mechanics employed 1n the execution S•lvttort _John cr11tlff Publlihed 0,1n11 c0111 0.11., Pr1o1, Norolc Pl•(t, Or•11111, c.uror,.,11, under Allll"ll 11. 21 •nd M•, '· u, ltff nut . er opera or, ol the proposed contract E•ecuior -'••II"',,,,,, 1161 '""'in, uc1111ou~ urm ns...., ol C.OPELAN l-------------wheel type over l\4 • · o1 1~e wrn of "" LFM1TE0 PA1tYNE11:sMtP No 1 .ne1 11111 LEGAL NOTICE Yard Up lo .nd ·• • ~ 'I'He bidder must submit with his proposal a certified check ,,,,,\",~,",~':r.'',•<16'"' LEGAL NOTICE ufd u,,.. 11 <omPOSed of r~ 1o11ow1n•i-------------~,# b' ·d . bond d bl t •• d f th o· c I . . • . Pl!•IOnl, •l'low "'""" In tutl •nCI PltCtS incluetin& 1* yards 30cphw/p 30cphw/p(2~, &Ocphwl p or i ... , er s m~ e J:ya e o u•I!: or er o e range oun y :!..'!r!~" c"::!~-1. ftlH p.an• o•.:t1•de11C• ••• .. io11ow •. io.w11: c1.1tt1F-1c ... ~:!,': ius1MEss 5.Sfi Skiploader operator, Fthlood!Control Distr1ctf lhorbadn amount not tlessthathanthe!Ob~drdecent oilfl l'•h in"o n1·7m c1.•T1,.1cat1 OF" ius1N1ss Jo~~~~E~ L.c~~~ti~N. M.o., ...... , ,.1cT11'1ous MAME h l e aggregate swn 0 e I ' as I guaran ee t I r w A!lll'Oll'f ... l!•KVl'll' l'ICYITIOUS MAME Nrlntr.. lilt ' I."' r. Tiie ulMltrllgntel GGIS Ctr11f'f' M Is Cl)ll· " ee type over • enter into the pro""""".i contract within 5 calendar days if the l'ubllsl'lf<:I °'"'" c ... 11 0.11, PH.t, TM ""du111...a 0o ctrl!l'I' lfltY w1 0r,.,.. C•nromi. "'°· lford1<: "IK•, d!Kflnt • 11u1rn«u 11 m " ~1n st., "-11,) yarch JOcpbwl p 30cphw/p(2) &Ocphw/p . t""""~ ' Alf"ll n." 2' •nd M•Y •. "" JoP..ft ('Ol'ld.,c;H"' • IMIMll ,, Ml' EICIMI GEi.Alo T l'i.11M ll119fon le•ch. C1lllornl1, u!Oder ll'le Ile-a" Struclutal .R.1 same JS awarded to tum. ind in event or failure to enter into · 51 .. cot11 Mnt. c11uor ... 11, under 111e Midis"" Av.-· MtmPl!l:Nr Mo .. , ln.l 1u1oui tlrm "-01 HALF MOON CAN· .w ...... orna· uch -J ct ·d h k ·11 •·-t'· I f h LEGAL NOTICE r1c1111Du1 11"" namt ef sTE11L1Nc 110R Fll.Eoe:o ·· · "'""oee. DY 1101CERAGE 11111 11111 111d 11""" .. menlal ironworll:u 301.1-Cphw{l) 2$Cphw(J) 30cpbw(l) s . "'n ra 511 c ec Wl uco.vme •n: proper Y 0 l e llllGHYNEss •Ml 11111 Hill firm 1t E. c11t_:,c~.! .• T~1~11:, ~·1~~ comP011e1 o1 111e 1o1_1,.. PfrlOll, ~ 5.st Tractor loader Dist'l'hrlct. t f th bod I be . t f 'lhf I p."'6. ~ 0:.,::"'.~ie:~~ .. -.r"'*~= JOS!""H '· 11t1oos. M'.o .. 1Jee E. :J:.':"' fllll •1111 •lie•°' r1s1dtnc• It • rat r 30cpb I 30c h / (%) iMA h / e amoun o e n o given o secure a a1 u per· CE1t:T1,1c-.Y1 o,. 1usu11.ss .,.,, 11 follow•: K•ttli. av1., 0r1119t, ciu1e,,.,11, Fr•lllllln 1''f¥ "-"· 121 :JSlh "J opeTr _.~0 . w P P w P ...,.,.p w P formance of the contract for said work shall be 50 percent of the F1CY1T1ous MA.Ml !>ltnUtt c. Arc11u1t11, u1 ll11 St.. .. .. ~~Alto, •. 01TONI!, M.o .. 1042 E. NeWPort 1etc11, c1111orn11. 5.48 a .. wr Operator · j•• f d .. I bo . TM ufldersl1ntd Go ctrllly ll'lty ••t Cll$f1 Mew, Ctllternl• ..,......,.,, yt,. r1111t, C111i.rnl1. Otlld .APrll 11, lff9. ldra t h 1 contract price ,...,reo, an an add1bona nd 1n an amount cen0ucun9 , bu1l11111 11 •:»-A w. 1t1" s"rllnt w ,.~1111 .. 11, ''" e111e11 11tlCHA1to L. GOLOMAN, M.o .. 1000 ,,..,. T, •C11e" b ll g ype 5 ove' equal to 50 percent of the contract price for said work which s1 .. cos11 Mes~. c1mcr111~. undar •M st.. Cotl• Mu•. c1111.,n11 :· l• V•t1. Orin ... c.11iorn11, SYAYI!. OF-tALJF'ORHIA ) . U dour, tamper, bo d h IJ · · h' be ' . llctltlo'J' firm n1rne Ill f'LASH 51CN D1llCI l.prll 7, lift 11.o ,,_rll 11, 1Mt COUNTY g, O•ANGE J u .. scra....,r d n s a provide that if the person er IS su ontractors fail co. 1rw1 11111 ,11d 11 • .., 11 tomllOlt<d s11T1ue1 G. Arci.u1t11 Hlnt:lltl L CoMlln, M.O On ....,rlJ 1., 1,.,, beto~ me, • Ne"'' uabr-ao to pay for any materials provisions or other suppllea used in or 111e 101-;"" per..,.,,, "'"° .. n1m~1 s1er11.., w. l'hltll" II STATE"'-" I, C1:111tliin PubUc 1n •nd iw ••I• st.re . .e•IOflllly p tractor) JOcphw/p 30cphw/p(2) 60cphW/p f, bo ' ' lft !Ull 1ne1 pl1,t1 of rt1ldenc1 ire STATE OF (1.LIFOllNIA 1 OF' CALIFORNIA I •-tred Frtnklll'I Trey 11111e,, k/loWn fl s 27 Trenchln -A~i.1... upon,~ or, or a ut lhe performance of the work contracted to II tellr-wt: COUNYY OF Olll.NGE , .. COUNTY OF Oll:ANCE J u. mt IO llt Ille perion -"'-I•. · I "'"~",. / be dooe or for any work or labor · thereon of any kind or for wi1111m Hewell. 119 w. W111..,, A~r. Oft Aprl• 1, 1Ht, t1t1ere me. • Not•rv °" ""'11 "· lffl, bOfo" m•. • Not•rr ,u111cr1bed 1o 11111 w1th1,., 1n11ru~t •1111 operator (up to I foot ~ ' • • . M.(, Cati• M'''' C•lllo•11l1. F'ubllc In 11111 Ill" 11ld S!1te, 1er..,,,.111Y l"lrbl'lc In .,... le• Hkl CwnlY 11'16 J111e, •cll-ledvta 111 e•ecurtd lite 11,,,.. d plh tt . amou s due under the Unemployment Insurance Act With .Hctofl AMWdO. 111 w. WlllOfl. APT. ·-••td 51Mllt'l G. Atcllul~I• •1111 Sterl· M<'Mrldltt •••• ,... HE•SCHEL L. (Of'f'ICIAL SEAL! e capac ~· D'l&nU· res t to such work or labor that the suret~ or sureties will A·W, Cetl•. Ml$1. c1m..,n11. ,,.. w l'llllHPI 11 kl'IOWn 10 "" 11 COl'ELAN, M.D. 11111 JOSEl"H 1. Je•n L. Jot>s! facturer's rat~ ......,,w/p 30cphw/p(2) 60cphw/p .• . . D•1td Mtrdt 11. Jffl. 0t ,~ 11trSOM wllclM ,..,..,, ire ~cr1i.. COPEL1.w k-te.""' to toe 111e o-er....,. Noi." Pufltk·Ciu1er ... r1 T nch. h """"t'"' pay (or !he Same, and aJ50 In CISt SU it 1S rought Upon \he WllM1'" Ntwell ICI !o ll'lt within i...st"11monl tlld wflost MMe1 1rt •ubscrlbtll lo ~ wUlll~ Pr1nc!pil Ollko In 5•54 re JDg mac t bond/ ' reasonable atl0111eY'S fee to be tiJed by tht COUft Jotellfl Art'lld<> l(knewledttd ll\tY l~e<~ted ll>f H Fl'lf. IMlrumenl, Ind lcknowlefftd !o "" !~II Ortnot (DUnlV oPtJ"ator (over ' foot . . STATE 011' CALl .. OllN IA ) COffl(!tt Sell\ 111~., t•ttuleCI 1111 11me. M• CommJuJon E~plru d plh lt Jn the performance or the. tenns o{ th.is Contract, the Con· ORANGE COUNTY! ! ., Me•• ICj. Hbt~'' C Ille I 0W1t11e11 '"' ~Ina 11111 Wt! M•rch 2 tf1' e c~~C f• manu· tracto r shall not e:ng1ge In nor permit such J:Ubcontractors as On Mtrc11 n, 1t''· 11ttoro "''· • ~:l~~.1 u~rfc; in1 rn • ( Ff'IC~j1~1 SE~ll E Pu1111111ec1 or~r111• co.,1 D1 l!Y Pltof, facturer s rating) 30cphw/p 30cphw/p(2) &Ocphwlp he may employ from enaaD"ing in dilcrlminatlon in employment HOitry ,.ub11c In ,,.,., ter 11ld s111e, O••no• co""'' N 1 ~n ,. ·11 1tw1rc11 Apr1111, n 11111 Mty •· u, 1tM 7Sll"41t 5 S& Universal equipment , ... _ ~rten•ltt 1oo-etrtd WllU•m Hr well 1no Mr comml•len E••lrH ,.i, 1 Y u lk<ttllc•nl• · of persons because of the rice, color, national origin or ancestry, Jo1e1111 Artvldo kllo:#n to '"" 10. bf Na... u. 1911 0,.::1~= tn LEGAL NOTICE operato!' (shovel, back· or religion of such -nons Vlolal1'on of this orovlslon may m. 0•...on• w11o11 "''1'111• ••t s~b•e''""a Pu11111MNt O••nv1 co111 D•ltt "11o1· MY corn'"111k>n E r · hoe dra .. 1inre derrick, · ,..~ · f to 11'111 -1111111 '"'""''""'' 11111 •c~n.owll'd11· A,.,.,, 1. is.,, n. 11111 '""' A "' rn IAlt·UH , d rrlck,. ,_a:,_ • 1 result in the imposition or pe.n•lties referred to 111 Labor Code "' """' ••tcUttd ,.,. ""''· · "ub111h:u1b,!'rit~'11c,,..11 0 itt Piioi, NOT1c1 Yo c•1:01to11s • e "V4111f •. C ·~· Section 1735. IOFf'IC!:,';.,*~"';!,NY LEGAL NOTICE AP111 22, n •nd M•v '· 11, 1,.. • 11 .. ,, 1u,.e:•101t c;ou11tY OI' YKI • shell, cran:e, pilednver The Contractor wlll be required to secure the payment of NOt•"I' iouttiic.c1111orn1• '·>22" LEGAL NOTICE 1ia~•cg~NC:.,L';~·:~:N~~-~ and n:iucking compensation to his tQ\Ployees In 1ccordance with the. provisions ~~=·t.:~ lft CE•T11'1c•T1 o, 1u11M1.11 lfl. ""Sit · machine.) k . JOcphW'/p 30cphlf/p{2) l50cphw/p o! Section 3700 of the Labor ro-..1. and prior to performln1 the MY c-lstlOl'I l!M,lt•• ,1C11YIOUS lfAM• HOTIC• 01' TllUITl•'1 ... E1t•lt Of WHITF'IELO A. HAYDON! 4 95 Water true drJ\'tr k f th .. _ ~ ·"-'I lgn d fll . • .. _ How. u. 1m TM -•rtl9f'led • c1r111Y 1t1eY ••• "" ,1c J* ' Lt Dea•.wd. . wor 0 e contract UIC Contractor ~MU I an e with .. IC '1111119111111 °'''"' ,_. Diii Pl'OI colldUC:llftt • bu1iM11 '' n• Wfll lPfll, °" M•'I' ""' ,,..· ' '' N()ll(E IS HEllEIV GIVEN ,. ""' (4000 aaliOnS "'" ' ~.~ (•!1 MtH, Ctlllor111t, lll\llOf 1111 lk· WHI Sl•lll 11,' I '1 ;OO '·"'··ti llll crlelllon ol'•IM •"°"" Nltntd dtudll"lt ph ph District the £ollowlft& certification: "l am •ware of the provi· ""11 1• •· u. n. '"' ..,. 11111tv1 ti""',.."" 01 11111 sT. c•it WASH cwn" C111ti :U:''~I':: ~ 1or-;:e ""-' 111 o-erton' 111v1"' c111m1 ... ,,.., IN olNTr moreEllMED) IATE GRAISco• ~~p•"R40c w/p 30cphw/p sions of Section S700 of the. ~r. ~e which requ, Ire every LEGAL NOTICE ,,.. 11111 1.1111 11"" 11 ~ ., 111e ca.inlY 111 0r.,...,' St•te ., ;.r11on1~ wkl •e•~t ''' '"u1rtt1 ,. 111e 1t11m; D ~ employer to be \nsur~d t I b J t for WOtkm C mpe fellow!"' "''°"''· Wilete ft•mtt In full IANKElt:S LAND llfVE$YMENT' COM-wlth !tit nKtlH"I' VOllChen. In lhl oltk9 ., Ir agains 1a l I Y en S 0 n· 11111 p11tt1 01 '"ldllnc:t 1rt • io11ew1 · PANY 1 cor-11 11 111111,,.. 111 tiw c"'11 of ""• •bov11111111t<:1 c"""· •i> 4.w A compressor. sltion or to undertake self·insurance Jn accordance with the 111011c1 o" ,.:11:,~::••·s s1.L1 Jot<n 1nd Mtr«I• P•ll"'C'I', 1001 c~ 1~ .... 1:.i.r.1 ctrr.:,:.,~ , orc:on;;:,~111.,.,1, " ,. ,,."" 111tm1 w11t1 1111 ~~' pump or generator ~ovisions of that code and I will comply wtth such provisions Oii ,,,.., , 1ff, 11 n·ao AM meOo•• 1.~ .• N._. 111c11, c111fo(nl•. t'"'"'" un0v 1111•1111ef1ru11 ••9Cut11<1 'lllllt11er1, '°!ht Ulldlr11t1nec1 •11111 I 30cph / JOc h / (2) 1JOc h / · ' . 9 II' ' ' . . ·' 01!td April 10, IMt. b'r J-.MIS EllVfM HU1CHISON ANO of htr tnome~. G!OllQI! ' \. opera or w P P w P P w P fore commencing lht performance of lhe work or this con· ~NE t'c~AL se11.vicE co .. • cinior,.,1• Jo~"' P••r<Y MAll.Y Lou 1-tu1c1-t1soN. rw,1191111 •11e1 itOCM!!STER. 111 wnr L• K•br• 111.c~ Basic Rite Employer Pl)'mtatl For tract." i=••.'!i· i!~,u~~1i' t!~~ed °'Tt:: M>i•ctl• Pe1rc., wit. •1111 recorcltd M,, i 1, lff, In loot L• H~b••· c1UIP1nl1 "'31 , w111ui i. tht Per Hovr Clu•lflcitlon ff &1141 w vacidoa Peal Th . . . . a.rtd J .,. , 1,.2 1e.:1 b¥ STATE oF c1.uFo•w1A l ~""· """" N "" Ot11c111 RIC6rds of 11K1 of 1111,1,..11.,"" 1111C1tnl9Nd m •• oa e Co!llractor wlll also be required to furnish a ccrllfl· F-AEoe11:1'c E iuT1DH 1,:~EYYY L. covNTY 011 oll:AlfGI!. , ,, °""'• C011ftt.,, c.11,...,.,1., 11~,., ~ ,.,,."'"" ""'1ft1no "' ,.,. "''" °' 1111t1 SKILLED LABOR {Cont.) cate tha1 he carries compensation insurance covering his euTTON, 11u1b.nd ...... wne •M rMorded 0n """" 11. 1Nt. lllfOf<I "''· • N~'"' ,1111 lndt1ii .. 11e1t "' ,..,., et· 1'. J, '"'" ~· •"""" t,,.,,, ,,,.,,""* •"•r 1"" •~ 11 Asphalt rak 1 .L. . JlllY ,, 1ttJ •• 11111 N 11111 111 bOOli. l"Vl>ll< "' 11111 te< .. 111 11111 . ..,...,.,.11y MIHfl., ot c.1_,.,..1,, • ~•tllil ·-""1 H1111et11oro Of 1t111 ... 11ce. •• , ,.... er or emp oyees upon work to be done unde:r ~IC contract which may "'° ~ :rt1 .. ~ic11r 11~,,,a 1 ,,,. ..,...,..., "°""' P•••c., 111'111 Mt•ctlt CIW!'ltd 1na 111111 b'I' ''•~ 91' ctru.,n11, ""'" A~" H•yllM • • ironer 24'Alcphw/p 15cpbw/p 32pbw/p be entered into between hlm Ind the said District for the olfl(, .. .he Counh" ll:lfCor:,.; °' = "'".:':".,~ s!:cr~ .. ~".:1: r::..~ri,.E'1,~~-lt:!1:::.""'~e11~"::: ~.:~:~:~10f .,,. • 4.IS Concrete curtr, construction of said \\'Ork Oll:ANGE c ..... 1y, (ttl1ornl1. WILL SELL ""''U"""'' •nd •ctl-llOfK llltY f•• ,.,.,...,, $9(fltl'\ffti., C1lllOl"nl1J 11\P ............... df(;..,.,,t : Impervious membrane No bid will be accept.ed from a ~-ntra"'""r who Ir not •,',.,','•"•'•' •,ufJ'ON 10 HICHEIT 11a1•~ "" ....... re-e1 ~ b<Ndl 111 c1111111 et1111111 ..... ofo11:01. w. •OCHl•sT11. •w. 1 , \,A.I ""' R A.., IH'l'Jblt .r lllM of ((>F'~ICIAL SEAL! """f<li llleretrr, Mii« 11 wllkll w11 111 W, LI Ht1rt llft. and form Oller · 2tM1cphw l p 25cphw/p 32cphwlp licensed in accordance with the law under the provisions of ult lft 11w1111 _., fll"" unueo-s111n1 Mi ry IC. H•n,,. ~rllM' J•nu•.., 11111. 1..,, 1n loek ""3. '·• "'"''· C•N"'""' tlUt • 4.92 Concrete mixer Division lll, Chapter t of the Business 1nd Professions Code of ~:::,. ~:.=.llO~~nceo111 ;:~,~·~~.~ ~~:i:c~.:.~~!~~'°'"'1• :!:.,:21i:1: 1~1'":11c1~~,.!.',:'"''~ !~W!!4~"l=11111, .. r111 ~ operator (Skip t~) 30cphw/p 30cphw/p(2) 60cphw/p the. State of C.iHfornla. , .. ,. el C1lltorn1• Ill •loll!, lllte '"" ·~ o ... ~. ,_.., Ul'llOfllklft will Mii II IUllllc •uc:tkloi le Publllhld Or-C1111 O.lty Pllol; 4 33 Cribber or shorer 24~phw/p 'l~hw/p 32cphw/p N b'd 'fl be · d · · d th bl k f lll'fll een•••lld '0 •1111 "OW "'"' "' 11 MY cemmlnllfl E•P''" Ille hlthtll lllcld1r ~' c1t11. •·~~Ille tn Allrlt n. n •Ml !Mr 6. u. 1m 1"'41 · ..... ., . o 1 WI receive unless it LS ma e on e an orm w"°"' u 1d OM of Tr1111 '" "'' 11rooer1v No.,. 1 •• 1'"! 11wtut '"'"l' a• ""' u"u" s11ie1 •• 111t l-------~~~~--~ 4.02 Cutting torch oper· furnished by the Chief Engineer. The special attention of pros· '"~'"'· in t.t td c"'"t~ •fld S••tt 1>111111w..s Ori-,_, 0.11., •11o1, .,,,., ~' Mlf. w1111,.,1 .,.,~,,~""' ~• 1n 1111•. LEGAL NOTICE 1 ator (demolition) 24\.lcph t'!p 25cphwl p 32cphw/p pective bidders is called to the "Information for Bidders'' 0ft([~~·~, t ••ct N•. to1. •• 111ewn on "-'11 u. n , "· •"" "''' '· 11" '""" :!:':,'~ 111";..:inc,:11~:;:':,: ~~ 1;~!!, , 4.42 DrindlJers (Core, di•· ph baMexed to the blank !orm or proposal for full directions IS to ;.~,~~o1111 :e1:~",l!p~ LEGAL Nc:mCE :::=..:'~-:' =.: :~.:!."::: Not1c1W·~~OITOl:S • mo or wa&on) 24 \.lc w/p 25cpbw/p S2cphw/p lddlng, etc. rto:erd• 01 O••ntt counf\', c1c110m11. ""c;11Y °' c111t• Mtw. c-iY., °'"""' su111•10• cou•T Of' TH• ' 4.&S Drivu of dump Plans and specifications and other contract documents may .,.!:~,i:~.::~11,:,~r=-.!~~=-NoTicaW'~'r.DiTot1s 1"1t:1f::..~:ci":"• .,.....,,..,., ·~:~acru~:,~;-: truck (leu than 4 bt sacurcd without charee at the District's ornce or will be ..... ~... "'"· --JM. ., .,;. su,.111101. cou1T •" n1• • ,_,.. rKOfdw 111 ._ ,1t'-,.. ""'Wlfll 1 Yards water level) '5cphw/p 4-0cphw tp """"'wip miUcd to li ........... d -ntraotors upon te'••M-or written r~u·sl CU1J111t•11eH. " "'~ lhl •trNl"'lfit "'"" STATI Oft CM.ll'Df:NIA l'Otl u. 11. tt, " 11111 " 11 Mh1a1i.-e.i111 a1 NAfkAM AIL w•LU.IO ........... .. ..... ,.,. "" n; .... ,.,,~ ~ ... " ' ~llD•I ""'" ....... llOI• •l(Vl'ld ..... kl THI couwn 01' •Ill.NOi ...,..,., rtCWI ... 0r..... (-1'1'. WALICEll. •" H11'111'1111 VI. Wllktfl 4.51 Driver ol dump Oranie County flood control Dlltrtct .,.... .. T""'· ...... ": DYii.i"-•lllt 11'1-.... Mlllll C.Flllnll•. o.c...... I truck (4 7ards but POJt Office Bot J071 (MaHing address) "'!!' -... -.. --n''11'~ ·-1 Ill -::: 1'.11111 llf JACK Ollll•T. Ot<tlM!d, ,,.!!SEl'flNO ... Uf'ICll~kllld ~H NOT'ICll IS Hl!.llEIY Ol'IEff h rM • "ll•w •""" • ...... • ,.,. NOTICE IS KfllllY CIVEN le !flt .,,,..._, In ttl II~ 11i. '"""'"' llld credlltn of IM IOWt Mt'l'IM *"°""' lea than • ylr'dl , • 400 West Eighth Street (Street ttddressJ ''"'" o1 ... ld DMll" Trvtt. f'IH, dllrtn crM11°" .,, 1t1t •lloYf ,_..... "'"""' """' ,_,..,.,,,.,,...,, ••llliltlN"'*\ "',. tMt ,11 __ 111vi.. "'~ ... ..., '"' wattr lt9el) 45c..._lp .._,.,,, ~hw/p •· '" A c llf · """' ,,....,, ... °' '"' 11'111'" .,_ GI ""' ,...., •" MrwN "•vln. ci.1m111t1n11,,. 1tti.w • 11e1t11t 111 "' ,... •lttMM "" ..... ~ ,,. ,...,.,.. "' • "*"" ''"" _....,.., ~ -n... na, a orn1a ""'" CNtlld..,. uld Dffd Of 1rU1t, .,kl •rctClor'lt ,,, .-lrld 111 flit """" ··~.,." w•r-.... .,... ~· ............... 1n "" wilft 1111 '*'"'•"' ¥WCNrt. 111""-. 4.7'1 DriYV of dum'Mi ' l The 8olJ'd of Supervisor• reaerves the rilbt to n:Jtc:t •:, , Tht ~k.11" °' ~_:111 ~ °J w111r "" n1etm1Y WIUdltn,, '" '"' onit. ""-1r"" "•cine MW...t O.\'t• ., .,. c..,. "'"" ,_,. "'"'*' :""'·,!; " 12UC1 tth·{l 1~ .. _..~ • and all bJ~ and to walvt ariy inform1Jhy lo a.ny bid receiv . :,""~ :ri::l!.Olll• ,..T.i" :"'1.i,.,,~: ~ ~t11r ,=.i:~ '="!::rv ~,c:,··,,.; 111 c:;..'""irt' .::io: :...="' 10 ~ =:-1 ~ :!:er r:v:i) 7 .. v. ;:_.;.w/p -I f'• Noth b~er may wl~draw l his bl~-!~r a period ol G dl.ys ,,,:;.r.1,,..•~-:v ..,. o.'°:,.,,floll 1111 ~~!h!'°~ =~~rti ·~& "m; m omt~i :u-::::.•· 11 "'"" 1&11HrllN =tNJ=~:....!*'..,., ~ 4kpbw/p ._..,, . r ··· w p a Kr e ume stt for tuc open ng the:~. Dlt•un"""' DtnlMf tor S•le •• ,.,. wr1ttt1t ••M ..... c;'f1'1".., c1u1'or,.,1tt "'30. 111ev,.. "" Mlf ..,. 111e1u11111t -. ~ w111dl 11 ,,. ,.-. ,,, ....._ 4JI Drivtr of dump By ordtt ot the Board or Supervisors or the <>ranee County :::c:.:= =.,.. .. f. :.~~~v: 'l'ftlt'lr It ~ llllU .. IM1""1 "' 1111 dWI,.. ..... .,,. "-d: ~"" T' 't ......... """ Ill ·~ ~~ truck (12 yar* but l ' 11 Flood Cootrol Dislrict, Or1nge County, Calllornia. Mll•f'f' .. 11111 M11111-. •"-' 1'1t<'tt"""·"' ~~':' """ .:~ ;:'.::,.,";:="".; d:e..~1.i ... ,.;:·..._ .,.. "'.:..,. ... .,.,. •..:.:""'..,,:' ~=---- ltu tMft 11 ~ If w. E. Sl John ~~~ J':t.: ==r=-~ =' ...... !ht fl"' Mllctn.. "' ~· =-)dd.:.~= .... ~~ ..=-....= :"'111.. ..... I water ltvel) 4.Scplnr/p 40cPtnr/p IOepbwtp Counly Clerk and u~fldo ,.._... "' Molt -. ,.... ..,, 111 ,.kl o.tffl Alll'll H. 1,.. .\Ut\111 1, ,,. ,.. "'•If,..,.'""'.,. ... °""'.i:r 11i '"' • 4.lt Drlvu,ot. uault· (SEAL) Clerk ol the Board Of Super· ~:11 -:=•· =::,.~!~~ "'"=' ...,1 ,,_ ,.., ,.....~':' 1 ; mli UVcb (under visors of the Orance County llN! .. ICIAL •••VICI (0. .i "" bltts ~ Ille IANKlllS u.ND lltVlSTMllff .. ,... ....... :J:.. .. ' S cu. yd.) 41$Cphw/p tllqilwlp ~ !Ocphw/p Flood Con!rol Dlltrict ~ -Z.1111...TT:t':t •011.,;':;"' 11:~~1:''°'"' ~~,:,~Y, ;.:"''r-'~' "fou...:';:',::;t ..... .., _. : 4.07 Fine Grader 24~w/p JScphw/p ncphw/p By ?.label L. Castelx Vl<t ,, ... ~. ltl7t fl• .. 11 .~ t.,nN!IY •• CtrW•!Mll.I TMfff 111,w .. , "1!'!-'"1"...., : 4 Al[ ,, .. , chuu J4u.-i-/ •'-"""-/p l2c h Ip De c.,.,... (ll!tlnU• .... •• Kt10ll Or•-· 4 -• 1'-. ..... I • ·-vw Ml 7~·-p -.-·· p " puty l"~b!l1'1~ N1WPOl1 Nt"'°1" """ Pr ... , Tth •me! .,,:.,.,. ~IW VI(.• !"t .. IHlll ,...,......! 1110 HI-IA t G~Uac: Publish Or1nge Coast Dally Pilot AprU II, 19, 21, 22 and ~·::~'t.11:;!.~11. '!!'!Ti 1:.1~; n~ ,,........, hr_......,., .. ~ ,.111111,~ 1::,.... c..,, 0•1.., ,.11,1, A•::;r11.:.,:.• Jr!::''°&:: 0,~ ,~ l ,18$ Reboundm1n 241.>cphwlp %kplnr1p __ l2cphwl p 13. IH9 7ll-it ,n.., .;;.vo:~ ::.-IM~czsj.:•'IV ,;'~ Af'•ll "· r .,,, ""'1 ... ,,., '*" •ittll .. "' " ..... fQr .. '"' ~ LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE -" .. -' •, I .\ -----. -~ • . -. •• -• • ' ..... le GAILY ~ILOT Finance in Brief OVER THE COUNTER ··A· NASO Llstln91 for Mond1y, April 21, 1'69 MUTUAL FUNDS ' I.AXE SUCCESS, N . Y . (UPI) -Standard Patent> & Dmcts, lnc., has developed • new ~ c hemi ca J dlesive that dissipates hut but bloc:ts electrical current. II ls upecled to simplify pn> duct.loo of mhUaturizeit elec· ti'OIUc circuits by eliminating tedJous meuuring and mixing of adhesive and catalyst. , DALLAS (UPI) LTV Aeroapace Corp. has obtained a ·.ts million Na vy order to supply avionic test data a~ hardware (or the A-7E Corsair U light attack bomber. HAMILTON, Otn. IUPll Canadian Westinghoust Co. oceaoograp~ic fund*" A murual fui\Cf investin1 in the development and ust cf tile ocean and its resources -----------Mid4Jete DDtrllwton, lac:. It ll'Nll Slrltd "''"°' VerL N.Y. ltoN Pie••• 1end me I Pl'Ol~Ctus on ti•• oc••n.ot••phlc fulMI, inc • ••• St•t• Bank Branch Ready by June 'WIKi711Ki'DOWlRS $ ,Mo~ ,, TOP PRIZE , A chance to win $10,000 cash ewery time you visit any Standard Station or Participating Chemin Dealer. No pun::h-MCeSS..., ~ ...._... Mly A R11i1tr•tio• Stattmt•t r1/111i11z 10 1h1s1 1t<•ri1i1s h•1 b1111 filtil u1i1b 1h1 Str1Jri1it1 .,,J E.~rh•"t' Co1r1mission b1t1b.1 1101 )ti b1romt 1fftr1irt. ThtJt s1r11ritl11 m•y l'IDI bt so/J 11or m11100t•J 10 b11y bt •t<tf!lti priOf to tht ,;,,,,, 1b1 R1:i1"111iot1 Stlllt1'1tnl br<olfltJ 1Qt rti1•1. This "111fftii1m1111 sluil.l 1101 ro11J11/1tlt •• offt• 10 11/l or 1h1 1oliti111io11 of 111 odtr to b11y 11or 1h11/ lhtrt ht ""1111/1 of 1h1s1 11r11rili11 ;,, ""J !l•lt ;,, 11.1hith 111th D6tr, 1oliri1atio11 or S•lt t<J1;11/i lit ,,,,J11111f,./ prior lo tht •tt.i11rt11iofl or f11.lifir111io11 1u11J1r tbt 11r11ritit1 llfWI a/ 1111 iurb Jl•lr . A PROPOSED Nf..\V ISSUf: 8,500,000 Shares Common Stock ($1.00 par value) American Express Special Fund, Inc. 11 a diversified open·end investment company mana~ed by .. \merican E1.press Investment Management Company. The Fund seeks ma1.imum tt.rowtb of capital. Price S 12 Per Share Cop"' oj 1ht p,,/,,,,J,,«y P•oJfltr/111 "'"' '" 1J•t•i"'' /•om 1h1 •"J#lit•ti ;,, •111 111111 i-lf whuh it it ,,,,,,,..,tl •t" ,J.,,,J,, j., Jt fMP;1i11 """ ;, '"hitll tht P•rliMi""'Y P•e>Jptt/111 m•J f•11 ·f11ll1 '11 J1//11b1'ltti, First California Company 3355 Via Lido, Newport Beach. California 92660 Phone: 675-3940 Plcut tftld mt• Pulimin1,,-Pro1pect1u on tht Am(rican f:.sprc-u !\~ul Fund, Inc ~1mf~~~~~-~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~- City ____________ _,, ... _______ ~,, __ _ minim~ multiples of $1,DOO. ASSETS OVER $425,000,000.00 STEREO SENSATION! The colorful sound of Orange County Music RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM .... From Fash ion Island, Newport Beach . . . ~-. . ~ .. • . . . . . .. . ' . ' I '" ' H Bhl ~ MAICI IT! M SA• Ill LOAN ASSDCIA•". " CU ET ITI .. • • • • ' ' ' . . • H DAILY PILOT JJ~ ~ .. ~ •• • Tuesday's Closing Stock Exchang_e_List New Prices -Complete York • " ' .. ~ . . • ~· .. .. ... • 1:. American Stock List ., ... I\:, \:"' • ... \!:< l \j. l~, ~( ... ~· . . ~ ~ i~ " ··: .. ;~ ,j,· ·n ~ ., " •• " ,,, \ _, . •• •• " -.. •• ' • ~ '• ' " .. '" ••• •• .. '• •• -•• ... •• ,,. 1\it ' . .. , . .. ... h ~--.. ·~ . .. ~· " J!~· .. ' ~ •• " -~ " ·~ ' ... .. " l'-4: 1'11 ~':. " •• •• ~·: " " !I . it " \\'' l·~ " .. a ~ •• ~~ ,. • " " •• ... l\~ \~· '" •• "" It.: r: ... ,': . ;,: ., :1 ':\ "· "' :\ " ... '• " .. " '" ~ .. 'I ' .. .. .. .. .. ~ •• •• ' " i; " • '• l: '" l!. l: ~ ' ' '" ' -· .. ----• JI DAll.Y PILOT 1-. Aptll 22. 1'69 v .... Moner'• Worth Elderly Have Rights, Too By SYLVIA PORTER dlvidual wbo tttirtd In 11154, 1 ... ewnj>le. ii now r<eelvlnc Should you, an Oldtrly an lncrwed benefil worth _.,,. 114•• lhe · ri&hl las in actual ~ power under law to share in our n.t· tpn _hii smaller t when \ lion's risihg Jiving standards? he. first' retired 15 years ago. Should we <Vastically overhaul _ . Ooe41alf qi OUI' aged our enUre Social Security families today Kave incomes 'System to start closi.n1 the below $l,000 and one in five alarming lil!nd widening gap has an tncome below $2,000. .between your Income; and lhe Half ol all aged Americans incomes ol )'OU.Qier people! Uving alone -most of whom What's the minimum flnan-are widows -live .below the ~lal protection via Socia] poverty line (about $1,:iOO for Security that you, the )'Olllller an individual}, and one In four worker, want to be sure of has an income of $1,000 or when you retire many years less. from now! How big a slash in -JOB DlSCRIMINATION •4 your totaJ income are you because of age is sUll fo'rcing 'prepared to accept when you a majority of men. to retire retire'! before 65 -at reduced Social SHOULD SOCIAL S<curily S<curily and be!.... lhey benefits amount \0 more than qualify for Medicare. 30 pm:e.nt ol total retirement • You can'! shru1 it.off, really Income! Should we try to you can't -even though you, reverse the trm:I toward early a young man with a eraduate retirement! degree, may be ·starting your These questions -and first job in June at a monthly many more of the most fun-saJary equal to the )'early in- damental meailing will be pro-.come of literally millions of bed In hearings to be opened a aged individuals. These are week from Tuesday by the policy questions All vit21 to you Senate Special Committee on as they are to your retired Aging and to be continued grandparents. later across the country by For even if we bring back subcommittees of lhe Special our annual rate of inflation to Committee. The following an aeeptable 2 percent, tills economic f a c t s dramatize rate still wou1d slash the buy- why : ing power of each current $1 -Jn 1961, the median in· to a mere tllc after just 20 come of U.S. families headed years. by an American aged as years EVEN IF YOU are now in or older was SI percent of or heading for a spectacularly younger families' incomes. successful careu, today's ear- That ratio is now down to 46 ly retirement trend well may percent. abruptly end your working -IN 1151, the averagi yeus by the time you're 55 or retired couple's Social Securi-60 -leaving you decades in ty benefit covered one-half of which to try to survive on only the "Retired Couple's Budget'' a fraction of your earlier in- -the minimum considered come. And if you're in the vast ad~uate by the U.S. Labor majority, your total retire. Dept. to financi a decent liv-ment income from all public Ing standard. Today, this and private pensions will benefit \abOut $118 a month) amount to only 2tMO percent covers less than one-third of of your pre-retirement eam- the Retired Couple's Budget. lngs. -Inflation has been steadi· But 1 shrink from pleading Jy eroding higher S o c i a I with young Amerir:ans to place Security benefits. The in-themseh•es in the position of Crossword Puzzle ACROSS l Laund«lng MCtssllJ S tlost 11outhtd pttson · t Off lht .1 wrtlc1f ~ JC Footb1ll Infraction 15 Fftlllnlnt n111e 16 Kitchen gadgol 17 Aboundlnt Jn Cfftlin lnstcls 11 Btfort long lt Grett ··· goddoU 20 lrtslltc'I 44 l'ut Into strvlct 45 Cig11rettt: Slan11 . 1/t 4!i Routt !::"'" •7 Clltf on the Rh in e 51 Ch111plon 54 GrHk theater 56---dirt 57 Bice ribbon, 1.g. 58 Uratsi's river 59 Loopllk• structure 60 Give se-6 Special 35 Sttucllrt on curlty to . vocabultry large estalt 61 Hockev 7 Sletpln11 Jr. Household ooalle1s llke • -• -: 1ppllanc1 accompllsh· 2 words 31 Jhtllrlcaf Bevard New Controller Dale E. Bevard of Corona de! Mar ha! been named con- troller of Datalron I n c • , manufacturer of digilal data products and systems, timing lnstrumentaUon, and other computer peripheral equip- ment. Formerly vice president of finance for Abbey Rents, Bevard also has served as treasurer o{ Nelly Don, Inc., a woman's dress manufacturer, and corporate controller of H. D. Lee Co., Inc., prOOucer of men's work clothing. Bevard is a member of the Financial Executives IMtitute and National Association of Accountants. In addition, he has been a director of the na- tional boards of both organiia· tiOM and has served as presi· dent of the Kansas City chapter of each group. Legislature In Action mllleu 21 Hot .-id h111ld 122 Plquut mtnt 8 MulU1 1ttr1I group 62 Red River IJ Stalf 41 Protected c a -• \ 23 Rtstrvallon 25 Not barefoot j 27 jumbtr 121 Animal 2t Transport-ation mtdi1111 32 Poker play- tt's word JS Kind of sponsor 37 -ptaislr: 11th pltlm'f SI Holts In the ground 311 Poktr tern1 40 EntNsltd to •othtr •2 Enhance •l Timttablt 1bbftvh1tlon Rebel11on 10 lorn out '4Z Becomt lfadtr 11 Drsstrts worthy of 63 Set at 12 Tllllf of year 45 Played a lib@rty 13 Thret-spot com ic rolt 64 Observed Zl Fl1vorlng 41i Rock off 65 Ont of famed 1111terlal C.aspe 11dio le111 24 Alto, fot one Peninsula DOIN 1 Schrmlng ptrson 2 Rfl1tin9 to a ctrlaln bon r 3 Tht samt 4 Kindof Information galher!f 5Partof1 2!i BrfwmaSIH's47 Bequeath necessity 48 Former 28 Thcc.ight Russian very 111uch of VIP 29 llla~e sub--49 Atl evla\fd 111issive 50 Country ot JO Biblical Europe preposition 51 Fisherman's ll llulll gan accessory )Z Put 1 52 On! in debt burden on 53 Dwindle 33 Currifr's 55 Haulin!f associate vrhJcle contract 34 Twn to wattr 59 Thf All1r ~~~~ . . ., TIM AtMClatH ~r ... "'"""'' ...,ril 21 Uflder • 5'-nftr ••1Md 11111, news- l!Wfl ,,...,. !Ind lflemwf\lt!I Ol'I I lour· ... 111tk tltht•-· IH•lll9 tho conse- -ncn of 11or~1 1Mf wrltr or lw-otclca11. lndePCfldenl·mlnded YO"'n lft J!e1~ fon'll1'1 "rk1111ur•1 M•rtl•ftd b.lllot lor • new 11•1• ns«nblym•11 J11 1 111K11I e~IOll of cr11Clel 1!111lfk1nu lo too"' ••rlln. A Prlv•lt P<lfl 11ke11 for Orm<> cr111 'lfl'S R"""'tkf11 Gov. "'"'" Is •f1Nrded mud! more Pll1Pllv by C1!1lornl• VO!tro 11\111 hl1 two PO!fl>- t!•I Detr1«r1t o:io.llt""•l-An~m""' Mlnorllv Lt'°"' Jr-$• M. U"'ull flMI S.11 Fru1Cl1co Mt,or JOH!>h "'!Joto. Tiie SUIH'l!'!Tlr Court's dt-cl1~n lo I~ ~lld1!f resldeftCY rl!ll!lll.-11 !or 0ttll1,.. rtt!Pletif\ v.111 hllrr well,.., CO.II !n C11llornl1, UY .,.,,,., •'•'• olflc!1l1. THE ASJl!MaLY ""dlourned 111 ""'"'orv of ""•semblY· m111 Al1n G. P1f!ft. wl!o d!ftl In • Wffiitnd •u•o wreclr. THI! SIENATI! a1n1 P1111H ~...,, -Pro~litfd crlmln1I Hn1J.. II" tor "9Wl"'91'1 wt>& O!lbi!Sh or brOl<lu1t t1tw lnlorm1tlon "'•' cwld uuw violence-Sii t!. H1•mrr, 11- Gionelfile. C."""'' -Mllrn It • mlldffl'Hl'-lo ebltri.ct 1t!/dll!l!1 or ftcutty lrY· iftt to etiler 1!11t collrtoH or Unlvt t· l llY ol C.UIOrnlt U mi>Ull Sii ~. Short. D-SMd<IOl'I. ~llnlf;i... -w.1...., 11w r1-t1ulrint lelill tor .iinici.na to 1>em1ll -dlnlct111 lo llt I~; Al 211. ·-· l•rft -F-1111 l1111lor a.1-l!Mtd mtmbe• ,...., _..."" Oii h!oll sdlool lloll"ll If! .. ,,. ..-q; Al 311, llur-•. lll'·Seti D'-' Trft ..... -M•ktl N>Pllltill'flft>ll lo St. .. ColltM llolor'll of fr\,.IHI 1111>-l«t to ntnl'lfmfllOll 11r -1"11"111 votr of 1"t-~11t1 Sii •· ltkl'!lrdMll. It· Arc.die. BEST Tl.1 DAILY ,.ILOT '"'" lllftl ,f ffif b•1t ftt!Uffl, br •cfutl "'"''' ,f '''"'''• ,.,.,jl,bl• i11 t nr n1w1p•p•r 111 tti. t1•fi111. TOP I PRIZE I The Great No. ...~ •.• ., w-. Franchise Fre.e for .A .ll Set in Anaheim Show Everylh!ni 1r01n Jiu!• Corn dlspll)' models, and 1""" said. franchising b based on ••· machines to comp)etely stock-totypes of o a t I on a 11 y ..ad--Now ollidally eatlmated u Uonal corporate k n ow-how tid bridal ahope will be offtred v e r t I 1 e d rellaurants, ca. a '90 biWon per year industry flheriog d o w n to ln- f~a~thele 0L.alt~ .. ~. thefra~.~ venience markets, Ions, brake ln the U.S., trancbisinl may de p eodently.beld "branch' W1-=11 ""v a,_,.. ail\:WK centers, prinlint plants and well be the key to a operaUons, parent compirues and BuoJness Opportimltiea custom-filled bru and glrdleo, reemergeocy ol "Independent" provide their rr~i.e. wilh Show ol Orange County opens all avaJlablt for JIOIDlnal lft.. buslnm, especially in Orange all the buitt-ln advant es of Friday, May 2, at DUneylind .vestment. ~\ "lnd8"'nde•Ui· County, Gallup believea. welkapitaliud roanuf urlng Uolel, Anaheim, ~cirdiil& to owned" bJl:lneaet., ;Gallup , "Since the concept of and/or service org one." Brewste~ GaUup, pfeslde.nt ol ~~~~;;~§~E~~~§~~~§§~~~~~~~~~~§~ Franchlse Exhibits Co., lnc .• 1: Newport Beach producers ol the show. More than 75 exhibitor$ wUt Orange Coast's 1 Paper! .. The place is anywhere! Old Crow makes it a little more special. Old Crow IDTl.!Clf SIUIC~I l4UlilOll Wll!Plt ..... lllTIWD &11 IOTTW llTiltUCIGIKrrlUD:JCO..flAlllFOn.1r. ~ for travel How much does it cost to run your set? Less th an JI an hour-morninj noon or night.Any size TV. Quite a bargain, isn 't it? In fact, electricity in Edison areas costs an average family less per kilowatt-hour today than it did 10 ... 20 ... even 30 years ago. And practically everyone tod ay is using much more electricity-more kilowatt-hours-than ever before. Take washing dishes. Few people owned electric dishwashers a decade ago . But now yo14 see them everywhere. And you can wash a load for less than 2¢. Or washin g clothes. Remember when this was a hand operation? \Vi th an electric washer, you can now run through a load for less thanl li( Or shaving. Electric razor sales ore., booming. And you can shave all year for less than a dime . In Edison areas, one of you r biggest bargains is electricity. It does so much for so little. You can watch TV around the . ' clock and it hardly costs you ~ a thing. (Except ma ybe a night's sleep.) .. Southern California Edison CE " S a~ '' A.'-J fQUALOl'roRTU~ITY lMl'\O\EI. .,. •• ' ' ------~---------------- \ ' •. : .F.ouniaiu \!alley EDITION ' N.'Y. Ste•• ~ . ' ;voi:. 62. NO. 96, 2 SECTIONS, 2;f0P~6E$ . -ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 22, I~ TEN CENTS . ' Beach Police Seek New Riot Control Methods-. .. ._ -. - By TERRY COVILLE Of .. oa!IJ Pll•I Sl9" Police ln Huntinglon Beach are looking at new met.bods Wd1;y for prevention of riots similar to Sunday's three-hour bat· tie on the beach. ' ' Captain Harold Mays said this morning Uiat the dep&rtment would hold a special staff meeting to consider further riot con- ~measures as the city feels necessary. Police statements today came alter the Vuntingtoo Beach· City Council was told Funds Hit Sour Note With City ;Legal woes of teen club owner Gilbert Covell were increased Monday night When the Huntington Beach City "Council Rid it wanted no part of $112 allegedly raised by teen-agers during a benefit dance April 13 for a young Negro Couple whose home had been fire- bombed. ·Covell, who bad asked the council lo panlcipate in the benefit at his Syndi- cate 3000 Club at Third Street and Pacific Coe.st Highway, told the couf!Cil Monday night that he was presenting two checks to the mayor ~ behalf . of the Harris family, the firebombm.g victims. "I have been requested by Mrs. Harris to give these two money orders to the mayor to hold unti~ the Harris family decides on the chanty to which they would like the money donated," Qlvell began. "My in!ormatW>n is ellctly the. ~po. site " said Police Capl Earle Robitaille. whO told tbe council that he .wu con- ducting "a charitable frauds mvesti41- tion" against Covell in connection with the benefit dance. "I have been in alm06l constant ~ tact with the Harris family sin« April 16 when a ·oAILY PILOT article. ~id the dance bad raised •112," Robitaille aaid. . "The Harris family tells ~ they never beard of Mr .. Covell or his. danc~ '° l began a charitable frauds mvesti· cation," the polioe captain added. r This disclo.wre brought a loud eroa!1: kom Mrs. Covell, who then said ball aloud, "woUldn't you know i\." -, Irvin Harris bad been cootacted by the DAILY PILOT on April I, the day ~ore the 5torf that there would be a 41nce was printed and he told the DAILY PILOT then that he had never 1-rd of Covell and his ttatement wa.s uicluded in the news story. ''Today Covell and a reporter we.i:it to the Harris home and Mrs. Hams t.Otd Utem she wanted no part of .the money and later asked for a criminal (See CHARITY, Page Z) ' Beach Researcher Backs "Laser Beam 'f o Detect Tests 1 From Win Sttvk:a c. WASHIN'GTON -Dr. Jollroy Gauger, a research scientist at the Douglas ~ vanced a-arch Laborakries, !fun. tlngton Beach, says luu beam m- •.truments are better than 1ei.smographs ftr detecting undergrix.md nuclear tests . .... In a rtport Monday before the American Geophysical Union, Gauger said the new instrumentl might -pro- nt.ably be used to monitor Soviet Subsurface nuclear activity. The scientist. who rettived his doc· t.0r1te from UCLA in 196&, does research on the meaauremeilt of primary and aecondary c..tnJc ra)'I, magnetoopheric effects, and earthquake and fauU "°physics. . _,Gauger said the laser beam tn- .&niments can detect underground tesu more quickly and cheaply thin teismo- araphs. onl 11 "Laser equipment like t.his c:o-t.s Y lbouf. $20,000. whereas I IILllSlff IJTay of seismograph! which the government ms indicated it's using out ai Moatanl to detect Russian tests mlgbt run ll'lto millioos of dollars," he Wei. ,,,... pllSll>~ -"""' ...... perimeoU whkh detecWd a D ~ ·ilergroond test la Novida WI Nov. 20. ·Gauger "id Mondor In roport lo the ">\merkan Geopby>ical Union. " The oci..u.I Aid the laser. workJn& from an abandoned Cold Qllne, loated and timed the blut &om 1 dlllm ol UI -mites. ... The Atoml<: Energy Com-ooly announced thot a t..i hid 1aAn ploct. and Gauger declined lo NY whether the AEC later «>nflrmtd all ol the ln- _atrument'• find ings. He voiced con- fklence, however, lhat \hey wtre ac- curate. ' • . ' ~onday nl&ht by a er•rty owners' leader that there is irg:wing concern in the .community ov~ 't.Qe-v-cJty dealing with beacb l!'Oi>leftUI. • - Sunday'-s melee was toilcbed oU by the an<st " two juVtnlles 'for possessioo or narcotics on· the tieach. Angry crowds quJ.ckly ~rmed.around the police paddy' Wagon which was tramporting the suspects to t h e d-nt's bea<h.1ubellUon. Affer a il>minute selge of the sub-sta- tion, during which yoq beacheous bombarded the building with rocks, bot- tles and concrete, rel.n!orcements were called in h'om surroundlng cities. It took about IU policemen three hours to bring the swirling crowd under control. A total of 52 individuafs were arrested on charges ranging from cefusal to disperse to asiault with a deadly weapon. Police estimate about 3,000 persons in the mob at its height of fury. Five Hun- tington Beach policemen suffered I& jurle•. mootly mlDor. A damage count civen today by Y.ay1 shows about $2,000.'worth ol damages to five police vehlcies, an uncounted amount of damage to the police ·aubstaUon (now __ , ' ' boarded shut anu unusable), and $1,Mt in expenditures. for overtime .pa)' to ' I.be $8 ertra Huntington Belch officers used Sunday. "Sunday's acUon . was an exten&ioD of youth's rebellion against authority," Aid ' Mays, "Jt shows up ln tchools and with parenll also. "But I can't e.qilaln Why It happeoed . Sunday and not IOIDe other day." Earlier at Monday hi&ht's cauncil session, JOltph Fam, luder of t1tet1ftlft- tlngton BelCh ~rty Q.woer• P!'Oteo- Uve Le>cue. declared, '"""'° ii a ,,.,... Ing concern in the C:Ol'llliHility about the ablllty or the city to deal with the bueh _..,A_ .. t -... t'""""="us. • "We clli no lonler oollpedal th!I, Thi:s -I Q I prolllem whlch -be dealt with before u aeta completely out d hand," Ferm declared. Mayor Jock G...., told Fenn tbal "the City Council fully -with l'«l· E.-ery tegal means murt be ~ io IN lbll does oot happen again." Ferm added thot be belleved the city should !mill .. .. ... pens1.. " .n business llcenli!s In the section (of busineues) c•=nn~ peycbedellc crowd and on "stiff ot law ~ "': . - Green NeW Mayor Huntington Council Vote Unanimo.us By WILLIAM REED Of .. o.lb' '"'"' ..... N. John V. V. "Jack" Green ii the new mayor of Huntinpin Beach. He was elected to serve a one-yur term unarilmously Monday niahl by his fellow councilmen. GeQra:e McCracken was c ho 1 e n unanimously to terVe as mayor pro tern for the ooe year term. Both toot of.fice immediately. For Green, election to lhe city's highest olflce from bb vice mayor's posiUon ia in marked contraSt to the bitter diaap- pointment of his failure to be elected to the post tut April. Green .Ind his followers also aufftte9 a bitter ·defeat ln 1985 when their bid to ' HelicopSquad' divide the city Into councllmNlic diatricta wu rejected by voters. Rebowlding from that defeat, Creen organized a committee which pushed for and obtained voter approval of a new city charter prepared by a speclll committee composed largely of persons opposed to Green's original effort on behalf of coun- cilmanic districta and direct election ol the mayor . Green Is in the third year of hit fint four-year tenn on the council. His cur- rent term end! in 1970, along with fellow councilmen Alvin M. Coen, from wbom Green is taking the gavel, Dr. Henry Kaufman and Ted Bartlett. The new mayor is with a Huntington Beach real esta~ firm. Green and bis wife, Marty, have five children. McCracken is a builder and Is com· pleting his first year on the council. As vlc::e mayor he will strVe in the presiding chair on the absence of Mayor Green. He and his wife, Betty, also have live children. Outgoing Mayor Coen Kid II Iha begining of the leu· than five minutes ot voUng that "it has been gratifylnc to serve the people." Wlth that, he nomi- nated Green. Election was unanimous. Councilman Matney then nominated McCracken. Again, there WU DO opo poslUon. The new mayor said he looked forward lo "a fine year ahead." County Eleetlon D,ue? , .. ';/;OJH~lp Q~ll ,~_.Ha~bo.r. District Issue ;I·,~----~ • *'· f MIL'( 11"1~ Mlllt' ....... JACK GREEN IRf~T) IS NEW HUNTINGTON MAYOR .McCrackeft (left)·l1 Vice M•yor; Coen (Center) St.,..Down Charges Baras~ment Covell Freed on Bail, . , Denies Riot Incitement Gilbert Covell, operator of a now-closed teen-ege dance hill on the waterfront in· Huntington Beach, was released rrom Orange County Jail M6nday on '315 bail arter ,being held on charges stemming frorn a riot on the· beach ~a)'.. Covell, who claiml he is the victim of pollct harusment, sajd Monday night, "l did not incite anyone to riot. "I waa telling them (youth rioting on the beach and Pacific Coast Highway Sunday) to a:o home and I have people of suhltlnce among 90me 500 witnesses who will· teJW'y lhllt I wu not encouraging anyooe to riot." .,. He said that when the crowds began to diSJ>lll'I', II the dir.aion of '°""' 150 police offlcm from 11 agencies,· he had 11uggelted"ta IOIDit rJ. 'the )tounglters that Ibey got off th< ltreeti and onto 111s park· Ing lot at Third SU.01 and Pacific Coast lllgbWiy. • . .· perty and the youths were welcome and did not have to dis:perse." "I only thought the youths wc~ld be safer and less trouble for everyone if they were of[ the streets and onto private property. I told them we would. have a dance next Friday night and that cvecything would be all right if they got off; the streets," .said Covell. Both Covell and hia wife, Jeanne, claimed that they were "doing no wrong Sunday." Bolh pointed out that their club had been closed by the city building depart- ment and "all we are trying to do is to get the repairs made and the club open. The fire doors and other materials art already ordered and ready to install," said Covell. Sunset Beach Riots? Awaits LAFC Ruling Visions of twin helicopters screaming at low level ·over crowded beac~ a& Huntington Beach on hot 1;t1rnmer days, :squirting behind them hu&e clouds of tear gas to quell riots below, ':Vert brought to mind Monday night by a question by Councilman Jerry Matney. Noting that the city h4d authorized purchase of a second police patrol helicopter, Matney asked i! the pollce chief bad looked into equipping the helicopter• with g~ dt.p<mtng equip- ment. .... , "It is entirely possible and It is being planned," said Police Chief John Seltzer. Taken somewhat abac1 at th e forthrightness of the chief, Mayor Jack Green quipped that-1\f: "wu jolng·tio Iii.Jg. gest twin machine gun mounts." Both councilmen w:er.e upset at the riots on lhe 'beach Sunday which required the calling of about 140 police officers from 11 police agencies ror aasiatance. A second Hughes 300 helicopter with police patrol equipment is being ordered today at a cost of $44,379 and ls to be delivered within 30 days, aCcordini to Ci· ty Administrator Doyle MWer. At present the city is training two pilots to handle the nrat machine . These two pilots w1ll train two more police of. flcera to fly the second helicopter, MUler explained. By JACK BROBACK Of ... 0.1" .... ltlft Propoaed dlssoluUon of the Orange t.Qunty Harbor District -a controYerSlal subject for more than three yell's -will be be(ore the Local Agency FormaUon Commission Wednesday f o r con- sideration . At the 2 p.m. session, LAFC members will act on rMolutlons of LI county cities which favor dissolution and tormaUon ·of a regular county-wide Department of. Juvenile Problems Set As Y Program Topic Juvenile problems ln Huntington Beach is perhaps an appropriate topic for the YMCA'• Spotlla:ht on Iuues prcgram at noon, Wednesday in the Villa Sweden restaurant. And an appropriate speaker selected for the dl.scuaslon is detective Sgt. Robert Rinehart, who wt>rk11 with juvenile crime and narcotics problems. Following Sunday's major riot on the beach, Wednesday 's talk might produce a few queltiona and answen: on local pro- blenu. Public ls Invited, and the only price ls the cost of lunch, buiret style. Conditions OK'd Harbors, Beaches and Parks. Currently the harbor district 1' ...U- 1utonomous and seta ha own tu rate through the harbor commission'• ~ meodation to the Board of Supervtsora. If the LAFC approves dl!soluUon, tho matter will be forwarded to the Boaril of Supervisors with the probable recom- mendaUon that a countywide elecUon be called on the Issue for sometime In August. Cities forwarding reaoluUons to the comm.Wion are Brea, Buena Park, Foun- tain Valley, Fullerton, HWltington Buch. La Habra, Loi Alamitos, Placentia, Santi' Ana, Stanton,..Tustla Md Wertmira'•·- Tht harbor district baWe originated In HunUngton Beach when that city negoUated for many months over jurlldlclion in the Huntington Harbour marina area. The city contended that It wU servic- ing the area with police, Ure and lifeguard protection and should be rel.mo bursed by the county. ln addition the city wanted relief from harbor district taxei. Htmtington Beach lost the battle before the LAFC and subsequent legislaUve 11> lion by ANemblyman Jolln V. Brlgp (JI. Fullerton) died in an ustmbly Ci!ID-mittee. · Newport Beach, which would be most directly affected by dissolution of ffie district, bu maintaiaed that· in the event of dissolution, "it ll etleQUal that the ctty (Seo ~ ..... Z) Pollie of[icers, hoWever, told a dif· !dent lklry u .I<> why they arretled Iha operator or the Syndicate 3000 club on charges of urg!~ a riot, refUAI to disperse and re.slating arrest. C.111. Earl Robitallle '8id thot Covell "got on the mill< and began telling everyone not to listen IO the police. He began lbouttng" that tt wu private pro- Huntington Ready to Start AnnexatWnProcedures NEW YORK (AP) -The ttoclt marlet closed about d en today, paring IOmt of its early loases. (See quotations, Paaes 10-11). Huntington LWV Shares Birthday . Mep>berl cl the Leacue ·cl Women Votm camo to tht lbtlnpn Beacb Cl- 11 Council meeting.Monday nipt, bring· lnl with them a blrtbday t a k e with wliicb to C<ltl>r* tbe beclnnllll cl !be IOth Y"ll' ol ~ a11Yitlet nllfonally. Mra. Kenneth Mu11J!, local LWV preol- dfn~ Wd thot IO ,_ ... this week a propoul WU madO la -I toacue to fb>iih the n11rt f ... _.. IU!lr• and to befp newly eolno>chf>ed women adiove their pollllc:al pit. CauoC!lm<n unam-i, approved 1 raolutloa comme ..... Iha _..,, and the LWV !O< "IO WCHidtrlul nm ol service nationally, and four yetra locally." Mn. Martyn uplalned thot lt•gues .... orgl'lliled in l,250 cities In 50 llalel, the Diltrlct ol Columbia, Puerto Rico and the VIrstn ltlandl. City officials in Huntington Beach are ready today far resldentl of the Sunset Beach community to begin legal ste,:. which could lead to eventual anne.ution of the ~ach communi ty, now in county territory. Huntington Beach City Administrator Doyle Miller Monday night won council backing of ·a Ji.at of 12 conditions leaden of Sunset Beach say must be met before the area would consider annexation to the city. 1be Uat was approved with modific• lions on two of the requests. The first dealt wtth acqui&iUon ot lhe mile-long Paclllc: E1ectr1c Railway rigbt-of • .,ay lhrouflh SuMet Beach. Suneet leaders asked for 1,promlse the dly would buy the strip foe parking Ind -wldeolng, but Miller said the ell!' Dukt -aree "If It is fJNDCially feast- 1 ble. '' lie urged 111 lmmediolf appllctlion for ttate llld feileral funds to aid the city P~ Aatliorlly-lo ol>tllalng the rulp. ~ itcond thod~Cltlort lnvolvH a re- quest for commercial me 1lq Pacific Cout lflChway. Nill<r aald the city. b propoalng 1 dual mldftlUal and com- merclJI use along the hl&hWay. ' He Indicated he bad dllCIJl!led all polnta with member• ol the SW. l!Ucl> com- ·1 munity and "there ls general agree- ment." Next' at.ep ii for resldents of the aru to of!Jclally pubU.h a notice or Intent to circulate petitions ' calling for an an-· nexation election. 1 The list ol s-t demands •llftd to by Huntington Beacll couoc!lmen In- cludes: . -The establilhed Identity Ind cllaracter or Su-Beach. II I unique realdeotial beacb c:ommunlty.-wlll be in- tected In the HunUnaton Beach Muter Plan and Ill lmpltmentlng pollcl6. Thill ldtntlty would Include, matntatni,. the narM USunlel )elCfl" and lnclude: the Sunaet Bea<:h Post ornc. 1n that name. -The nahral YOO ·l>Mch will be ~ II I mldenllaJ IWlmmlng, fishing, and aurflng area, with rtllOnlble public acceu provided for -ii or the _.,uillty. . · -The Padllc Eleclrfc Railroad rlpt of way >rill.be aCquired by the cltf .00-wlll· be Uled1er wider-. andlindociped park\nc for liolh . ttaldents and bt~h. vt..iton. (If flnlliclallf feulble; Aid Mlll<T.) -The twCHll>ry belaht limit will be maintained for aJI mfdenll1t ltmduret In Sunl<I Beach. Two 1torles lhall be' defined u tlllO actlilll storiet, not 11 two noon of living accommodations above a prqe which . would 'be considered a.s U...1torie1. -Zon1nc for all resldentlal lots in Sunaet Beach shall anow a maxlmwn of two family Unib per bolldlng lot, pro- vided orf-ltreet parlllng r<qulr<mentl are met. -Tbe coJIUl1fJ'cl1l roning for both llldes cl Pacfllc <:oast Hlghway will be In :! ing with tbe .. .-u.1 ud I ·-ol -Beacb. Dual ... " . be pennlllld. (Dual ... II I -ty. accot<llng to Miller.) -SUpPOrt for the position tbal there , will be no permlta granted for, nor IQ)' actual of! drilling cl olf«iore oil olf Sunaet Baach. -Tbero will be no a>ndtmnatlon cl dtv~ land for parklor. -Muntd~I ~oes. In.~\ Beach wtD· be lncttaed to the· prlleilt kve\ cl · the City. . . • .,-The number o1 -<1!:11Uvet • living lo I tlngle dwell!ng will be1tmtted' -The Illy will (ll'OVld< """1lc partlna . on Mot ends ud lllm on Sunoei'Beodi ts land. • ... -Special IOlling for Sunlet !leach bolldinl Iota will be lmplemen\ed lb ao- cordil>ct with ibe city'• muter plan. Oru•• • Wea .. er The sun will , be worklnc part Ume Wedne.day with cloudy - the order " the day. That'll drop the mercury down two notches to 13 by mldafternooa. INSIDE TOD.4,Y They ketp .. comiog, °"d f)nmgc Covntu ii foolriao for- ward co o population of t10o mfl. 1 IIon bu 1980. Page 8. . .,_ ' --" 1 ( ......... ·'l•tt ............. M l j Qwlk-1 • 11 ..... ...., f-i .~ It .,..,._ tr' 1 o.t11 ........ • ......... '"" t ........... • • .... ...,., ...... l1>1i ........ •n ' lwt ._., ,, ,......... ll ti... I 14 ,....... W Allll....... ti ..... • ~--....... .. .......,., r _...._ .. ........ ,. ..,. . .i ... ·.~ .... ·-,.. • ...,. . ...,."'t'• -·-· ,_.:_.f '· • \' I • UPIT ...... A Real Turtlene~k Since turUeneck sweaters are the rage with people, thiS turtle at Albuquerque's Rio Grande Zoo decide to &ee what all the fuas was about. He couldn't go formal. however, since there was no place for the tortoise shell cufflinks. VCI Faculty to Avoid Clnsh With Protesters By THOMAS FORTUNE Of tlM 06!,,. 1'1111 S"H Leaders of the UC Irvine faculty, after consuJUng with the chancellor, have decided against any show of force Thurs- day when atudent.s are upected to aasb Huntington Asks College Interns Public administration Olljor1 at three colleges in the aru. will be uked to furnilh interns who will act u a1des to the Huntington Beach City Council and lo the mayor. City A.dmlnistrator Doyle Miller Mon- day uted the council for its opinion on oblainlng Interns from California State Colleges at Long Beach and Fullerton and from Chapman College in Orange to aerve u aides. Councilmen asked Mlller to go ahea! with the plan which would provide an In· tern for the mayor and two for the r&- malnlng 111..1: councilmen. The Interns w®}d be available on a parttime basis during tbe tchool year and full Ume in the summer, Mlller indicated. He did not set a pay rate. Mayor Jack Green said he felt the practice would give the Interns "valu- able erperience ln politics and be of help to the council In developing infor- mation, ttudies and to accomplish some of the work which olten requires much 1iru: Aid that U th< lnlern! ran short of work in lhe political realm, "l can find tom«hing for them to do." Mayor Green agreed that the inttrnS would be a•alt.ble to the staff for ass.lgn· ment after accomplishing tuts for the council. nMIV PIJO I a closed Academic Senate meeting. U students procttd lo disrupt the seui<11 by talldng without recognition, u they did last week, Chairman Kenneth Ford plans to recommend that I.he Senate •pin adjourn. Thus Ford and the ts.member Senate eucutive committee are prepared to Jet students wiJ\ another victory to avoid a confront.aUon thl.t couJd lead to arrests. The conUnuta1 student protests are over firing of assistant professors Stephen Shapiro and Donald Brannan and the threatened dismissal of a third assis- tant professor, George Kent. After Ford gaveled a halt to last week's Academic Senate meeUng, 1 t u d e n t dissidents shouted, i•we'll be back." 'Ille only dltferenoe this week will be a sign on the door declaring th< meeting closed to all but five student reprue:n- talivea. It is generally conceded student dissidents, probably numbering 50 or more, will ignore il By lporlng the sign students will violate university rules, but in these situaUons disciplinary action almost n ever ls taken without warning. "There will be no effort made to restrain anyone from entering nor to eject anyone who comes in," Ford aald. The e:1ecutive commlttee1 made up al chairmen of Academ ic senate ttandin« cornmitteea, met Monday with Olancellor Dan.lei Aldrich Jr. and Dean of Studenta Robert Lawrence and came to the no en- forcement decision. Ford said he will not use the authority of the chair to adjourn the meetlng. He will leave It up to the professors after passing on the ueculive committee'• recommendation to adjourn if tbe students persist. "U a majority of f1cu1ty members present wlsh to conUnue meeUn1 wttb full atlldent parlidpaUon we wW do IO," he sald. . I ··~~~ I f.n. J11'1'b''•11dirlot UeoiF .. tM••:t: IO\ .. --·r11 ~.,. ... Cowicllman DOoi Mcllmls. 1111 w11t and l!J olher people inlilled Ulel the pldln of me tblt ran with put Logbooo waa awful. SolhadlllOlher one taken.. Yoq'll no- tice that 1 removed my gluoes for Ille photographer. Hand- some dog, ain't I? * Trudi Rogers, of the Bl1boa Racers, baa a ""' et Stan- ford. One al hie profeaon al EnlJbh diltributed copies of a "nen releate" to hie studenta tbe other day, just for the tun al IL 'l11e prof dldn't 11y who wrote iL But It II 111itabl7 idiotic for this column. Accordlngly, .here 'Us~ Coast Group Harbor By JEROME F. COLLINS ot fM o.llr 1'11M Steff Breaking up tbe Oraqe Coonty Harbor Distrid "would serve no useful purpose," the Orange County Coast Association declared today. The prentgtOUI 150-membe:r usocia· !Ion, repr'5<nling coutai dtiea from Seel Beach to San Clemente, reached that conclusion following a alx-week study of the dissoluUon queat.ion. ~18.tlon PreJident Cap Bllckburn said the findings of • 1peclal committee uaigned the probe have been endoned by dlr<cton of the 17-year-old orgllllu- lion. 'l11e committee, headed by pub~ber Jama C. Kllllnpwortb, reconuneocll that the Harbor Dtstrlct not only be .... talned, but that ltl jurladk:Uoa be ez. pended lo Include regional parks. Thie ptll tbe .-Jatlon In • direct confrontation wllh the County League of Oties. The League's majority wanll the Harbor District dissolved and I t 1 reaponsibWtiel turned over to an enlq· ed County Paro Department. The: Coast Association C1>mmlttee report leads off with Ulil fiat statement: "Abollabment of th< Harbor Dtstrlct would servt no useful purpoee. There are disUDCt advantages ln having a district.'' DiAoluUon, u:plainl the auociation. would "not nqate tM fact" that there are services and facilities to be main- tained and operated. "li coastal cities are required to uaume the maintenance and development of harbor facilities in the event ol dlslolutlon, a question of eqWty II created becaUJe al th< use of th< fa· cilhles by mldenb rX lnla™:I cities." The auociation further points out that ellmlnatioo of the Harbor Dtstrlct's aped.a.I ta1 rate and pluufng It in with the County General Fund.-tai rate -a prime goal of dluolutlon backen - would reault In projects and pro~= being dependent on overall county · cing. This, U)'I the ISIOCiltlon, could kUl off many distrld recrealional project.: that the county cannot embark on, because of From P .. e 1 HARBOR ••• be reimbuned by the county for el· pendlturta by the city to provide harbor faclllUes and services which produce regional benefits." Generation • lol!T Cll.00. 'ft. Pollc< were called ~lo bdp ~ onler II tlle Blda-, :t: ... ..,..,..,.,!'*'••;' PILOT 1 .. • 'ftlnl =· oc&lcenanans were ar· ::-1ma1n~f.r~'thal took place In LOGBOOK They were ldenuntd as teaaen of an ecUvllt group that llehed control of the pario< thrtt day• ago and locked Mn. Birdie McMUlb, uaistant dietician, in tbe 'pantry. ~o olllcm llUll,... minor lnjurleo to th& dilturbance. Qoe WU btt. from the rear by • runaway wheelchair and other was jabbed with a knitting needlt. -Quincy Tirtdblood 8'1·year-ota 1pokes- m 1 n for the re\lelifous faction. told re- porlers th< demonstratioo wu stqod lo enforce demands that the old fol.kl be given a greater role in the management of th< rest home. "We·ve got a bundl of young whip- persnappers running thinp around here,•• ne aafd, wavtng his cane violently. He laid the old folks were demanding that at leut thrte !lnl.or.cilizens be added to the rest home stalf. ·•we don't trw:L anyone under 1$," dectued Tiredblood, • adJ..Una t h e "Senility Power" button pinned to hi! &bawl 'I1>e revolt began lut week when a small group of hardcore superannuates held a dodder·ln at which IODle 6urned their Social s.curity cardl. Allhqh peaceable 1n ILS e11ly pbuea, the protest movemeut toot a violent hull when someone hit Georie Snaffle, rtlt home superintendent, with a bottle ef Geritol. Snaffle blamed the trouble o n Dissolution Hit 111 luinfl authority. "An example is the All5o Beach pro- perty," aaya the ~p:>rt. "It was purchas- ed on contrtct purchue option In keeplnc with the Dtslrtcl'• pey-aa-you-go policy. "'llle county would have bad lo buy th< -land In South Laguna outrlgbt and put up all the money at once, p~ hably neces&italins a bond Issue. "There ii no evidence that diatrid dllaolutlon and loclualon of l t I n1ponalbllllies within Ille COunly. General Fund would result in a tu-saving." The a.uociation's recommendatlom:, wWcb will be presented to the county'• Local Agency ,FormaUon Commililoa at a .public bearing Weduelday, alao In- clude: -Ranamlng the Har\>'>< District Co, the Paro, Harbora and Beidlel DlltrlcL -Restructurtna tbe pruent f Ive· member Harbor Commlsllon to a nlne-member agency, with five rnemben. ap-· pointed by county supervl&on and four by the Leasue of ctu ... -Immediate improvement of com- munJcaUona between the dlatrict and the publlc. nus would be achieved through monthly meetings between di!trlct of. fic1al! and representaUvea of the Leap al Cities, Oraqe Coonty Chamber of Commerce, the Coast..AasodaUon and the ' pms. The auoclalion says eipansion of the district's authority to include regional parks and beaches could be accomplished through enabling legWatlon enacted at the state level. The increased jurisdiction "would enable the Harbor Distrld to develop, operate and maintain regional recreational facilities, both coastal 'and inland, on a county-wide basis." The association report notes that Harbor Distrid Manager K en n e l h Sampson and his staff are already responsible far the .supervision of the county regional park system. By en1arging the Harbor Conunission's memberahfp, says the Coast AJaociaUon, "a mort pennanent liaison" could be created between city interests and county interests. "It is abundantly clear," the study committee report concludes, "that better liaison must be developed between the public and private sec:tors. There is general agreement by all who appeared before the committee th1t the com- municaUona gap between the Harbor District and public is a wide one." Committee membera, in addition to chairman Killingsworth, are: Carl Kymla, water district manager; Hancock "Bill" Banning III , real estate manager; Guy K. ClaJre, attorney: Edwin Finster, ~ suiting en~ineer: Edward J 1ck11 n . engineer ; Carl S'. ~e1ley, attorney ; William 0, Lusk, . buUder-Of:veloper; Thomas J. O'Keefe, attorney; and H. L. Remmers, rancher. AasoclaUon pru:ldeni B1•ck~urn com· mented on the commlttet'a work : "J think the ho]• did a belluva fine )ob." Thant l)eclares 'War'. E~ting Now in Mideast n.m'WlftSenlca UNITED NATIONs, N.Y. -Secretary· General U Thant declln\l loday the U.N. cease-fin ·atone the Suez CanaJ HCtor.11 almost totally lnelfectlve "and a virtual atate of active war now uilta there." Thant made the statement In a apeclel report to memberi of the U .N. Security Cooncll. The report came u J.sraeH fl&hler· bomben knocked out ECYPl'• early warn. Ing radar defense system In aootbern Jordan. A military spokesman Wd In Jerusalem that they were Egypt's only early wamlnJ stations against· Israel. fEartltr Story, Pqe I) Thant dld not request a council meet· ing, but the urgency of the report indi- cated dlat members of the l&-nation council would now enter into consult. tlons on what course to follow. "I feel lt neces.ury to employ the unU6Ual means of • special report from the secretary.general to the Security Council, to call tnost urgently to the at- tention of members or the council the prevailing situation in the Suez Canal sector, •which, in my view, 11 very grave," Thant said. "M ol the date of th la report there have been MIJor breaches of the cease- fire daily for 12 successive days," niant reported. ''In numerous instances the CJ· changes of tire have taken place along most of the lenctb of the canal "The weapons employed range from small arma to heavy mortars, rockets, tank fire and heavy arUllery. "The United Nations m 111 t • r y observers, wbo are now operating under great danger and diHlculty, In each fn.. stance exert every effort to bring a quick end to the firing, with varying degrees of success, but no later than the following di>•'. f'ri .. ~ ,,~··-•· :o ~-' ... mbundentandingi caused by dlfliculllu to communj~a,ttni.wllh tbt mllltanll. _ ··-. ortMm " be .... "blrlld ott their belrtng~ alcb... ' .• * Irvine Ranch public information chief Bill Aldrich denies that the lloos prtserve going in near the San Diego and Santa Ana freeway• will be new headquarters bl the Irvine Company's real estate department. * John Wayne, resident of Bayshom In Newport Stach, fell off hi! horse the other day. The cinch broke. He's okay and filming continued on 1'True Grit." I don't know what role Duke is playilli in the movie, but jf it isn't Rooater Coti:burn, who la the touihe1t, meanest and funniest frontier marshal I n American licUon, he 's giving up an euy Oscar. Read the book. You'll see what I mean .. From Page J. CHARITY •.. report to be taken," Capt. Robitaille told the counci l. Covell said, "I am shocked lhat Capt.: Robitaille would instigate an inv~ lion of fraud . I asked the reporter for the address and the reporter said that the two of us would have to go to the home in that the reporter-as had th• police-refused to give me the address. "She (Mrs. Harris) told me she did not want to be bothered with the money and asked me to give it to the mayor while the family decided on a charity. I went ba ck before 6 p.m. with the check!, but she said her husband was not home," said Covell. Mayor Jack Green told Covell, "1' don't think the council should accept checks w I t b o u t asking lhe Harra family." "I divest myself of the money. I place it here on the railing," Covell said u he and bis wife walked out of the CQUD- cil chambers. The city treasurer later picked up the money orders and gave them to the po-. lice captain. ' The reporter said that she had been' followed by two police officen durin& the day and had taken the license nurn-· ber of the police car to the city admin! istrator who identified it as an under• cover car of the police depariment. "I was just trying lo do my best at' my job and I resent being followed bJ the police," she said. • Capt. Robitaille indicated tha1 the reporter and Covell had been followed by undercovu officers. I I Beach Mayor Calls Study Meet . Mayor Jack Green has called a ttudy seasJon of the Huntington Beach City Council for 7 o'clock this evening to d!Jcuss the fate of the city's design review board and to give official charges to three citllen study groups. Instructions will be given to members · of the Youth Coalition, SpeclaJ Districta and Sister City Program atudy groups. Each group is com posed of volunteers •P·"" pointed by the mayor. / Councihnen m-eet in councll chambers of City Hall, Sth Street and PecaD Avenue. Blast Hits Shop Fire started by a gasoline explosion did $1,500 damage to an auto repair shop at 3711 Cerritos St. in Los Alamitos Monday. Owner Warren Geller told •county~ firemen the blaze broke out at 3:29 p.m. when l!ome gasoline ignited lpOCI• 1 ,.~,. .... , •.. ~· w11s not \njured. CriUcs Of the dluol.uUon .have pointed out that nothing would be gained by C1>n· ven.ion to • rtgular county department either In the way of lower tuea or actual adminlJUallan. Jl;;mo;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;:;:;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;; County League of CiUes advocates have DECORATOR ar11.1ect that the mov6 would re.suit Jn 1 tywlde recreation facllllles , lncludina =aldl:~~~· "' ..... for cou~ AND MODEL HOME RETURNS l(orea Task Force Curtails Spanish and Mediterranean Furniture R.Mrt N, WM4 "'"'J""" .... 1""'41MW J.w:k a. Cwl.., \Ila .. m oftfll -a.-111 ~ n-a• K11•il '""' Operations Off Vietnam All New Top Quanty Brand Names A Decorator's Dream Home Is On Display Over s100,ooo Worth of Spanish & Mediterranean Furniture to Choose From! n-.. A. """'.,.'"" MMIMl"I ffl"' ~ W. lat•• Wllia• a....t ~ __ """....., Ntw Clly e:•i.r ............. OM. lO'f ... , ...... , MaHl11t AUraM1 P.O. lao 7'0, 92641 --~ ...,., nn *""' ..... ...,-...,. c-. .... , ,,. Wtt.I ... Sfrwt ~~1 m~ ... - l WASIUNGTON IAP) -Vietnam naval air oper1Uon1 are belng curtalled and the 7\h Fleet stretched to the llmlt with deptoymenl of a U.ahlp tuk force to pro- tect U.S. reconnaisu.nct millions off North Korea. "We'ft tot no alack," a Navy offlctr commentec: after the Pentqon MondlJ announced mianment of an armada to the Sea of Japan where a Navy plane wu lhot down by North Korea last week. One aln:ralt carrier and poalbly alher ""' ahlpo of the 7tb Fleet have been pul~ ed from the war effort to form a new Ta!k F°"" 11 deploying aomewlih off North Korea. Off'JCtrS aid thls meana lbe N1vy con· trlbullon to th< U.S. bombing campaign In South Vlelnam and Looo will be cut by '"""117 one-lh!N. The Untied StatH lw betn keeping thrtt aircraft carriers on the !il'ing Une in the GuU or Tonkin ; for the lime being lhts will be reduced lo two. · The 7th fleet'• rtmainln& four aircraft carriers art going lnto Taslt Force 71 along with 11\ree crulaers and t6 dcWoym. • • Thus, oUlcen pointed out, alt 7tb Fleet carrim are ntlW Utd dll'tm on two fnlnts -the See of Japa11 and the Goll of Tonkin. And officers des:rlbed the ts destroyer• u a major ahare or the Sevent.b'a beaV)' combat vessels. How kin.1 the fleet can maintain both ll!i111menU: Wlder present condiUona I.a a matter of concern to the Navy. With its all flalloPI occupied. the 7th Flett bas no replacement flulblllty. Valley Students Pick Chamber of Deputies Studenta at Fountain VallfJ HJtb School have plclttd a new grwp ef ol.· Deers for the Chamber ct DepuU111 tbelr French·stylt stOOent govtmmenL Elected wtre Casey Spencer, pml· dent: Rk:k rt1art\n, Viet pre1ide.nt : !andy Fukanaga, secretary; Kt the Mtadt, trtuurtr and Mike Marooney, bo)'a' represent.aUve. ElecUona were held last Frida,y at tht school. ltemt •• follow1: Gorgeous I~. cu1tom ~ullted tofa with ••p•rete piUowt with haavy oelr trim d•cor end Wt•tchb19 <h•ir, l t11etchin9 oelr occe1ionel ttbla1, 12 1 St" tell decorttor lemp1, han9ln9 chtln 1we9 lemps in wrought iron, •n •·piece Iring 1it• m••t•r bed...-om sufte in pectn paneled Mecflterraneen style "With top q1Ml ity II y••" w•rr•nty kin1 .1i1e mtttr••• •IMI box 1prin9s. Sptnlth dining 1et, .tc. Any piece can M purc.htstd lncfividuelly. Drop by tncf '" our ••lectloft of top qutlity Speni1h tnd MffitMT•n••n fum lture ••• fantt1tlc•ny prlcedl COMl'Ull HOUSIPVL WAS .... $11H.OO COMPLETE HOUSEJIUL WAS ltEGUAILY $1521.00 MUST SACRl•ICE JOR ONLY '698°0 nRMS -WE CARRY OUR OWN ACCOUNTS • AT HA._ IOUUYAlll • • Saddlehaek· • EDITI O N . VOC. 62, NO. 96, 2 . SECTIONS, 24 PAGES t • <• . . 0 ·I ~ ICS Down t he Mission Trail Fire Loss $2,300 At Leisure World LAGUNA HIUS -Fire did an estimated $2,300 damage to a · Laguna Hills l.d.lure World apartment Monday night, the county fire department .-.ported. The blaz.e broke out about 6:30 p.m. in the kitchen of t.he apartment of Isabella Uoyd, 714. Q Via la Altos. Damage was listed at $1,500 to the apartmen. and $800 to contents. Tbe cause is under investigation. e l'iejo Shooters Set MISSION VIEJO -Two Mission Viejo High School seniors have been selected as participants for the 21st annual Plymouth Trouble Shooting Contest to be held Wednesday in Whittier. JeU Brandenburg and Lance Young will compete with other youths from Orange and Los Angeles Counties. Trou· ble Shooters attempt to locate deliberate malfunctions in new cars. This year a wriUen test will also be given the con- testants. e Seltool Site Studieil SAN JUAN C APISTRANO - Capistrano Unified School District of. ficiais and San Juan Capistrano city councihnen meet tonight at 7 o'clock in City Hall to consider plans for ttie old junior high school site in the midd.lt of town. The city has expressed an interest in buying all or part of the lk.cre site for a new city hall. The school district has. been thinking of building an educational center on part of the land, and next year, using some of tht vacated classrOODll for &i1lh grade classes. e Golf Tourney Sla ted MISSION VIEJO -The first annual Alice O'Neill Avery Goll Tournament is ,scheduled for play Friday at the Mission 'Viejo Golf Club. More than 100 participants are· due to tee off as the tournament begins at 9 a.m. The tournameni', twice postponed because of rain, is open to all golf club mernbm. ·e 6 ,142 Homes R ead11 LAGUNA HILLS -By next .fall, Rossmoor Leisure World here will have j 942 homes completed, sold and occupi· ed, according to Rossmoor Corporation president Ross W. Cortese. "We have maintained average aMual sales in excess of l,000 units," said Cortese. He said that the proposed purchase of Rossmoor Corporation by Crane Co. for more than fll million would pla~ the finn "in an evm stronger posi.Uon to 'weather the periodic financial .storms that plague the buildinC induary ... e Guides Set P lenle MISfilON VIEJO -The YMCA Irxlian •Guides of Misskln Vitjo will hold their thJrd annual family picnic and kite flying day Saturday at the abandoned airfield at tbe end oI Rancho Viejo road. Capo School Tax Boost Vote Slated By JACK CHAPPELL ot tM o.lb' Pltllot SWJ Another school tu increue election will be held OcL 7, Caplgtraoo Unified School District trust..s decid<d Mooclay night. However, the amount of the measure which will go to voters nut WI hu not yet been detennined. Whatever the amount, it will not restore ll00.000 that trustees decided must be cut from the Khool cliltrict•s budget. School officials said the cuts are necessary because a Slk:ent override .fail- ed at the polls tut week. Board mem bas set another meeting for nut Monday night (7:JO p.m. in ttie Serra School board room} to decide just where amputations in school programs will be made. Hardest hit in the budget cuts will be the junior and senior high tcbool pro- grams, according to school officials. Students will face lon&er days, but fewer class periods, more students per teacher. and a_ eeneral cutblck in courses available. . "It's not that we are picking on the high school stud"'t or the junior high school:studeot, it's just ~t ·tbese are the, only ~es we can maU cuts," tbarles F. "~Y,.~--"""' ™e~bGil"f1''-. ht ~-w A O'!UP of ajlo<il 15 bj&h~ sdiool llludmla-theilOlftl~ind urged that ~the elecilon be be!d pior 10 the Aug. I tax rate determinllicln. Tiiey argued Lhat a summer elect.ion, if IUC· (See SCHOOLS, Pqt I) Cliffside Trailer Park Sought For Capo Beach Something new -an apartmobile - described as a "departure in mobile home ·living" wW be constdered for Capistrano Qeach, by the Oranp County PiaMlng Commission May II. Proposed by Apar1mobile Aasociat1s. Inc., or Dana Point, ·the plan calla (or slacking mobi.1' units bunt-bed fashion again.st the cliffs here, on the inland side of • Pacific Cout Highway, north uf Palisades Drive. The unique propasal startled planning commlaslooers last Wednuday and was deferred 30 da)'I for study. According to Albert Alves, of Santa Ana, architect for the firm, mobile homes will be pJacec' in • teVesHlory open super.structure lhat will be able to ho1d 14 double wide mobile unib. He said the Orm pllJlll to .. n the slab where each uoit rests ia an CTangement slmllar to "own-your~" apartments. .. Wbeo ii ll lblished, it will raemble an attraclive ~ · buildini! w I t b · balconJa UOUlld <acb ·of thi ,...., Ooon," Alves added. As proposed the structure would be IOI f..i bJP with 1Ubterranean porkiq for 20 can. How ,will the mobUe trallen get Into their perched pooitlons ! Alves aid they will be lifted upw~ on polletJ and nilled onto concrete alibi. Ti111e of Tragedy Dad Killed on Happ y Day • i J • ....... ~.· , •-• • In .. . . ...--... ,. • 'D'-1'-Y Pl\OT .,.,... 'DEATH CURVE ' SIGNPOSTS AT EL MORRO -Morro curve north of Laguna Beach. School trustees ·State Division of . Highways' cr~ws have illstalled are looking for adilili<?.n~l &afe~y a\dS ,at ELMorto •il!M!!~I>~g '"!ft'JA~tlt~~Ji;l!.'t Sctl!t'# .. .,,.,.,. ,+1 t • • ' • . • • Pressure · 'Off · :Vietnam 7th Fleet · Task Force Guards Korea Missions • WASHJNGTON (AP) -Vietnam naval air operations are being curtailed and the 7th Fleet stretched to the limit with deployment of a tl-&hip task force to p~ tect U.S. reconnaissance missiom off North Korea . "We 've got no slack," a Navy officer commented after the Pentagon Monday Laguna Planners Reject El Mor ro Park Expansion Laguna ~ch planning commlsaioners Monday vehemently opposed the: pro- poud exparWon of El Morro Trailer Park north of the city by 96 spcaces. Oppoaltion . -which _will become a teCC111iDendation to-Orance County Plan- ning Commission -wu baled chieny on adclltionil iraffic thlt wOuld have been generated and on san!Lati&n problems, becaUle of poor pr:rcolaUon of liquids into the 'soil. Tbe trailer park brackets Coast JDghway. 'lbe 96 additional spaces would have. been on the inland side. The park cantalM 2ID3 spaces presently located on Irvine Company property. Tbe comm1akln denied the variance announced assignment of an armada to the Sea of Japan where a Navy plane was shot down by North Korea last week. One aircraft carrier and pessjbly othtt war slUps of the 7th Fleet have been pull- ed from the war effort to form a new Task For« 71 deploying somewhere o(f North Korea. Officers said this means the Navy con- tri&uUon lo the U.S. bombing campal&n in Sooth Vietnam and Laos will be cut by rooghly one-third. The United States bas been keeping three aircraft carriers on the firing line in the G'ulf of Tonkin; for the t.ime being tbls will be reduced. to two. The 7th.Fleet's,remainlng four aircraft carriefs are goina: into Task Force 71 along with three cruisers and 15 destroyers. Thus, officers painted out, all 7lh Fleet carriers are now Ued down on two fronts -the Sea of Japan and the Gull of Tonic.in. And officers described the 16 destroyers as a major sJiare of the Seventh's heavy combat vessels. How llilll lhe fleet <Can maintain both asstgnmenta under Present conditions is a matter of concern to the.Navyi With its sll flattops,oa:upl<d, .the 7th Fled bu no n:placement hexibility. Officera.aaid lhai lf the task force has · 'to remain in the Su of Japan for any e.,.. (Seo AllHADA, Pqe I) .. Warning Lights Ma y Ease Peril Near El MQrro School transportation problems from traffic zooming past El Morro School may be eased by a future l)'stem of warning llghta and school signs along Cbaat Highway. School trustees, who havt attempted to secure traffic control sipals, tonight will consider State Division of Highways recommendaUons for warning lights and signs to &low traffic instead of stopping it. The divisiOn Urli~ had indicated that tralfic irom lbe JChooJ was not IUfficient to merit signals wWch might cause ac- cidents rather than prevent lbem. Superintendent WU-UU6m laid the stale proposal seemed to , bl_ve the ~test merlt1of any plap thus lar. _'I)ie board. will alao c:onsld<r accepting haU the· coat of a low bid lo the city, $4,350, for a Rt of traffic signab on Park Avenue where it dissecta the hlgh JCbooJ call) pus. . The board will take up lhe sole bid of 11,171 by Moderilfold Doon Inc. to llllWI folatng paiUUons in rooms at. Thunton lnlttp1ediate , School · to . make more rOOms. Crim e Message 81'.t . WASJllNGTON (UPI) -Presldenl NiJ:on will tend a message to Conaresa on «poized crime Wedneaday. HepuJ>. licao con,greuional leaders reported today. 1ppllc.aUon of Frank A. LaRoche, hair atylilt of LaROche Coiffeurs, fl)r a 124 oquare foot algn. Laguna, Clement~ Mason s Aid Public Schools wee.Jc Bf RICHARD P. NALL OI Ille De>!" f'Mlf II.., La.Roche, located in the old Surf &: Sand office,· 1415 S. Coast Highway, applttd for the variance because all of the .sign &pace 1Uowance for the building bad been used alreacly. · 'Commlsliooen were reluctant to allow lent bad: in January. He bad been in the sarianoe froin.-s\gn controls, even 12 MarilleCAlrl'Oilyeon. laid • Commissioner Robert Masom of Lalf\ltll B<ach ·and 'Saii MCCoy accompanied ·by student Mn. Terbont, Jail li!llnon ~ •ve, ' 'Clemente are doing their bit lo, bridp tho • Selva<!ort Lombmli. the · · VtatlilJC ' "'""""" ~ Lac\U!& wm N.Y •. Sioeb " . . I -• I Harhoi'C~fC ... Critical oJ Supervisors Superjel roes In the Newport Beach and Mission Viejo ll'eu are pitted agaimt e.ch other became ol a "political situ. tion" on the 0rahce County Board of SUperyilcn. tbe N~ Harbor .Chamber of eomm-WU told Monday. C11n1 Hoo.1<, chaltman of the Cham-betii matloa comm111ee, said a majority of c:ountf qonUon last week v!Md for "interim" ~ airport atudies ol El Toro Marine c.rpo Alr Sutloa and eou.. ty Alrpt *-they "doo•t have -sUtuents in ,e1tbier area." Supervisors William Hirstein, Robert BatUn aod Davkl L. Baker approved the feasibility pl'1>be;' to be undertaken by William E. Pereira &: Asaoci.ates, tbt county's aviation master pWmerl. FUth Diatric1 Supervlaor Allon E. Allen of Laguna Beach and SUpervl!or WUllem Phillipi, dubbed the "father" of County Airport, voted in the mlnorlty. They laid several sit.es, not just El Toro mi County Airport, !hc/uld be C01lS!d!red. 11ooee: a YOWll hardware merchant, commented : "Unfortunately, 1here are live people on the county board. Those who voted for lhe El Toro and County Airport studies don't 11ave OOnltltuents wbtttl either airport i.s loated. Hirstein maybe bu only • ftw. "Thill Is a political sltiilitiofi," lie qid. ••Because of it we'Ve got the IGUtbtm part of the counly £igbting the - Pl[!;\ """" _., ... ilOtiol ICC1llld the' <ounty ·""*'I m• j0<lly of .. duckiq Ila reeponslblliiles., by turning over to the Southern Califonll• Assoc!alioo ,or Governmenla (SCAG) the .. -or a permanent regional a!rJIOfl lite. Chamber President Richard SteveM said on behaU of the chamber he had sent a letter to iSupervtaor Alim com- mending him for his •ffort. though futile, to broaden the site Jtudies. H-noted that :!upervisor Battin ol the Fint Diatricl had added to . tbe original motion requesting a studj of El Toro. Battln's amendment st.i pullted that in event ihe Marine bue c1oea· not prove suitable ror Joint miliury-commOrclal uae, County Airpc:ri should be muter planned for expanaion. "I know what's going to happen," llid Hoose glumly. "PereJra will say in lix mootbs that El Toro lln't f-1e, •and supervison will uy let's to ahud with County Airport until we have • permanent regi001.I site.'' stevens said liter the chamber bolrd will very likely pnXeat any e1pansloq_ of County Alrporl. He !aid this would be in line with earlier retolut.ions oppoli111 in- creased jet service at the flCilityi . Hoolt's concern echoed that of Newport B<acb City Manqer Harvey L. Hurlburt and Harbor Area jet noise foe Dan Emory. Both ·aaid in recent days that a study of El Toro repreemted a gamble for Newport. NEW YORK (AP) -The stock markd closed about even today, paring aome of ila early loues. (Seo quolatloas. P- ltH I) . The Dow Jona industrial· average bid been at UI al II : 30 a. m. bal ed1ed hack during the day. The Dow loet 7.31 M ... day . ........ '[be IUD will be worklJ1I pan time Weilnelday with cloudy Kia the arder of the day. That'll drop the met<Ury doo!11 lwo notcha to llbymld~ Saturday started as a good day ror the Bernard R. Terhorst family of Lquna Hil!J. Eight·year-old Peter bad j\111 made his first Holy Communion. Thon the covemmeot's te1qr1111 urlved. hu dlildrtn hnllnl In •l'I hvm tllrte bl ofher b\Jlineu, comnuas"": comm-.tlona '8P d~ Pa b l'I o. h<iatiMi a\ :u;i;;;'iiidndq !\lahfby Jolm f ·•-to II. ~ of~--• ... at•~ ...qt~ tbellnc. ~uas.lr.~':~. £or . •-•-•1 w~•. G' y ~m ~"-·· .,_ '"''· . iWj,i. Gates ~ "Sd:..i. ~-Marlie 'ti'..,., -~,...,.way "'::::... ~t tea ( 1;,,..1 • erp., 't'"""-" -• ..., . lo -..i ia1e1 In ' tat 1r!Jo ~ I to, 111.:;=.._ .. , Ii ha ·.....: :""'~t;rom·:';~ <' arid~· 'Mr, sl"~-=~~:r wn in-Sbe llid abe will rematn In the aru .,._ June 2 IUbJeci ..,~ai" Uie.11n ..J'.~·d.~"f'.~ .,..!Oi ·1o· !Z .r" ~:1'• . • ,.._"!l'_.~,~, ~!.....-..at ' j . INSIDE TODA 'Y • Th<V ktep on C01Mag, nd <Ordl\jr c .. nr, ;,-foo#ftlt tor- .....i·1o a 1'0fll'lalio!< of hoo - lion bt1 l~IO, Page I. Major Terhorst, father of flvt .with a •mil child upecUil, !1!d been tilled. In Vletntm filbl&c · ' Mn. Terbonl, wlfi of the 11-,..r-<>kl car«r Marine. said today lier iluobond .... piJoUnc. helicopter In the vicWty of Da Nong when lntenoe poond Ore lor<lught him down. He bad been ev.cu•Ung casualties. She said the death • confirmed but r.covery of the bod7 bl still an uncertainty. Major Terhorst had Served a previous sUnt lo Vietnam two yeara q:o and wu .. ' ~I 1ehool bl out and join ber (amlly In the mmhal. _, , •. • ,,....,..,, _, ·~ -.,. ...,.,. .,__, eatlfortheblrlhofbor-~ ••• • ~;.• • ioaP.I by o.r,. •• -' • · Intmnedlat< 'and,..... Major~ a -tl.4!1. ~:-.iiiilt'~ .... !Jiii ~"!'or-, ltl •J pge -,-~,call i 1 ' to vlrk F011tltaln Valley Khooli in UM Minn.. hid ....v.d .,. 1-In tho rw. to add !"")!'ltlib· If pereent•.to an "Am-!or Commo9icoUoo In affttnOon. -durin& the -. War u ., alldn( ' Educali9o" -ol1"oay --~ are · It 1'111 be the third )'<fr that ·the -man. He WDid to tho ~-a v10111111 ~Is In Lquna,.~ Cilmeota La-Lodf! No. l7l, ,,... • ~ Unlvwalty of Mlil1<••1 and after 110CU11n1 antf-F~in Valley. . . ' M-. baa ""t ..,_ and t8cl>eh graduation joined tho Oar!ll u 1 -feaollllll1 ~ Beach· cem-'f'.l!e LqUna '-11 HJch' ~ te11115 to NOl1bero ~ornla. lieutenant merdal did~~· ~ · ~ J¥m ~ ind • 'llle''prw.im '!• 'Joilie\f this fear by He wil to have leR tbe .. rv1ce in four to come btfcn .-'.JM I 1lOCloi COin = 'f )\11\lod the 5" Clelnenie LOdlt and eipaodeil lo mon ,.... aM. Mn. -said, anJ-. .,.,......,.~ · • KMl!16'!artoal and -·Jr. an -I udlanP OI •llHora· ~-woold have ent.nd the ....,puter ICi<nce -Schoduled ~Cllaf. l , -.C 1..-· San Cltmtrite; lt!l!iol ,.,,._ .. · hope Iha! II wtD with MllOnlc becklnJ lleld. May II. llUva In tbe bay area .,.. teacher Rudy grow lo a -..1c1e procram. ' I ·-' ·-..., --If .. --. ._... ,_ . ,.._ ... ,. . .,.. ....., ,, ....,... • 14 :::...~ ': -. -.. --.. --.. :='.::"' ,: ---'*°" ------·" = i =-.. -.. L-------------------------------------~....__._~~~~--- i -- I DM.V"11T L Rev·olt • ' of . the ' ' . ~ , ,...,,~Vt .......... ···-~-·· -:.":ii..~l: ;. -. ....... '~)$ -••o!lar'f ... .. ..... .... .mm. tllol -.. It tbe main parlor. ' '. . '!'hey ...... ldtnlilled u -"' .. adMll groop lllat oe1led ...az.I ol'lllO pork>r -d.IJ<• ... and -Mn. ·BINll McMll!h, wiltant dletlctaJt, lo the pootry. , ......, ollicen sufftttd m111or injllrieo Iii' the -· Ont .... bit """ the rut by a runaway wbelkhalr and other ·~-with • lonl1tllll -· . Tlr<dblood; l'l·JMr-old -· m a a fOr the rr.beJliowl faction, told re- ~ tbe demonstraUon wu stag!'! to enforce demanda that the old folU be g1v.., a grut<r role in the manqemen1 of tbe -home. ·•jwe-ve aot a ·llUrlCb or JO'lftf whl~ persnappers running thinp IMiod hert,'' ne Wei, wavtna h1a cane violently. He WI the old !alb wn -ndln( lhat al -. lout line IOnk>r cltlitol be added to the -home ataff. "We don't trwt anyone under ts," declaftd Tlndblood, . ad)alUoa I h e "Senility Power" button pinllecf to hb shawl. The revolt httan Jut w.U when a small group of hardcore superannuates held a dodder-in at wh1ch aome burned their Social S<curity cards. Although peaceable in its early phases, the protest movement took a violent turn when someone tut George Snaffle, rest home superintendent, with a botUe of Geritol. Snafflo blamad the trouble on • = ••.•••• -... ,.. ... ,._., .... , 1-.-· ..... --... -·-.. - ' . *• .. 11'\'lna Ranch public lnfonnalloa chief JlW Aldrich denies that the Uona preserve -go411 1n DW' the San Diego and Santa Ana 1reew_,s will be new headquarters or lbe Irvine company's real estate department. * John Wayne, mldtnt ol· Baylhons In Newport Beach, ~ off bis b<ne the «h<r day. The cinch broke. He's okay and l1lmlng continued on ''True GtlL" I don't know what role Duke is playing in the movie, but U it Un't Rooster Cogburn, who ls I.be toughest, meanest and funniest frontier marshal I n American fiction, he's giving up an easy . Oscar. Read the book. You'll.., what I mean. --------~ ---....:..._ -.....!_ ---------------------·--·-- -~---------~~~- ly Phll lntwi....11 -- ,. - "Wllfl All The llu1lnn1 ThoM. PMpl• Show, You'd Think Thol"d H•v• to H•v• • 8u1lne11 license lnttHd of the Poor Artist 4 • 4 ,, By Coast Association l!rUklq up the 0ranp County - Dlttrlct ''would serve no UltfUI ptll'J)O&e, ,, the OrlllP County Coul "-llUOD decland~. 'lh pnoll&JOUI llO-member aJIOCia. tion. npre1entlna coutal c1tlt1 from Seal Beach to Ban Clemente, reached that condllllon following a llz·wtek study of tbe dllloluUon question. "-llUon Pnsldent Cap Blackburn lllld the flndinp ol I special commillff aaaliDed the probe have been endoned by directon of the 17-yur-old Clflanlza. tion. The commlU.., beaded by publllher JIJllOI c. Klllinpworth, ncommenda that tbe Harbor Dlatrlct not only be ,. Wned, but that Ila jurl!dlctlon be ea, panded to faefude ftafonal parka. -plla the uaoclaUon In a dlnct <Dllfrootallon with the County IAl(ue of Cities. 'lbe League'• majority wanta the Harbor Dlltrtcl dlaolved and I I I ~turned..., to .. ..iars- • !1fil!, PllOT oaAlltel t;MIT l'Wl,....... COJIUllANY • ...,. H. w ... ---. Jae• l. Cettey Ylel '"'*"' Mii ._.II ....._, ,,.. ••• leeftl ..... Tli..et A. M••,W11e ~lrifi•H• l l1h1'4 P. M•ll .__._ ("' .... ---121 ,,_., ....... M•Uflt .4UtMtr P.O. a.. 466. t2•1J: --c.tt .....,, -.......... """ ...... 9"0:1'tU •t ...... ...... 11 17 •• •••11 ••- ed County Parks Deplrtment. Tho Cout "-llUon comm!U.. ftport leada off with thla flat atatemenl: "Abollabment of the Harbor District would aerve no uaefut purpoae. There are distinct advantages In having a dlatrld." DlaoluUoo, eaplalna the uaoclaUon, would "not oe1ate tbe fact" thlt there an oervlees and faclllU.. to be mllJt. talnod and oparated. "U C<>Oatal cllleo m required to assume the maintenance and development of hatbor faciliUu ln the •vtnl of dlaolulloa, a q_... ol equity is cmted becaU!I ol the ... of tho fa· cilltle1 by te1ldentl of Inland cities." The auoclaUon furtllar points out that ellmlnaUon of the Harbor Dlltrlct'a special tu rate aod pluUinl It In with the county Gtneral Fund tu rate -1 prime IOll ol dluoluUon haems -would result In projects and pro.,..,. beinl dependsot .., ovvall county finan clna. Thll, ..,. the .-1a11on, could kill orr many dlatrlct rtcrutlonal projtcla Illa! the county cannot em.bark 001 btclUll of Ila tulng authority. "An enmple la the Allao Beach pro. perty," says the report. "It wu purchu- ed on contract purchase option in keepinC with the Distrk:t'1 pay·u·you.go policy. "The coonty would have had lo buy the beachfront land In South Laauna outrlcht and put up all the money 1t once, pro- bably Dl<ellllalin& a bond laut. 1"l'bert la no tvldenct tblt dlltriet diaoluUon and lnclualon ol I t I ...spooslbillU.1 willtin the County General Fund would result ln a Lax-saving." The asaociition'1 recornmendallons, which wW be pre:N:Dted to the oowty'1 1-1 ,.,..,.,, termatloo Commlllloa at a publlC l!Olll'lng Wedneldoy, alM> In- clude: -llanominl tha !Wbor District to the Parka, llarbon aod lielCbel DIJl<lct. -llollructllrinl the in-t f I• e- member Harbor Comm!Jslon to a n1 ... mtmber aseney. with five memben ·~ pointed by county lllpatV!son and four by tho Lugue ol Clllel. -lmmec!late lm·-·-1111~ ....... 1 "' com. mlllllcallmw belw°"' the dlllrlct and the plMlc. 'l1UI would be achieved tbrougti monthly meetlnp belwoon dbtrlct ol· flclall and ......... lau..1 "'the ....... el c111-. Orul< Counly 0..mber ol Comm•""· Ille C..st AlloclaUon and tha prua. The UIOCllUon 11)'1 lrpanslon ol tho diltrict't authority to Include rtglonal parlil and beocl!fo could be a<'<Olftplllhed lhnloP enabllna lqlslatl'"' enaclsd at the atal• levtl. The lomued jutladlctlon ·~ enable the Harbor District to dmlop, oporate and main~astilonal ....... Uonal facllit!H, both aod Inland, oo a coonty.wldt bull." ----------L---- • l'roa r.,. l CAPISTRANO SCHOOLS ••• POSTER ARTIST CRUCIANA EXAMINES HER WORK Steinbeck Honored •t Laguna Be<1ch Llb'rary ceaful, would parliaUy mtor< aome cub Ill thtJr educadooal priisr11111. "'Ille lack al proper financing will have a very dellnllo injurious elfl!C't on the atudmla' educolloo." Martin String, fellow, a 5an Clemente lllsh School ltudtot, Nkl.. "MOil of ua are aeniOfl but we have -and sllten In llChool thal will be hurt. We have auc:h fine programs in the -rlPt -that ll you let them lapse, you'll hive to atart all over again," lludeftl Larry Sbanl: said. Boon! m!lllben agreed, but died dli, flculUel In ICheduUng a summer election. Tbty noted more Ume waa needed to ftgillar parenla. A study following the defeated overrlde abowed that only 20 percent ol the people e!Jilble to ftgisler in the dl.ltrict had done IO. SeviraI board memberhald that -Y _.. with chllclren who would he Y" voteri Would be on vacation. during the IUIDID.f.r while tbe elderly, "automaUc no voters" ftu1d be home. WOBDall Tllll!:J) ~ allo lllld that the volunteer Keep Improving Dlatrlct Scllooll (KllJ6) --..... tired aJld needed Umt lo "'f.:l'Tru.te. Stanley Kelly said he thought a summer election would just be too close to the 51k:e.nt override defeated April 15. •11 think the voters would feel that thJs thing wu beJng crammed down their throe.ts," Kelly aaid. The October daM! • was set by the trustee on · a t-1 vatt. 1 Trustee Nolie Dana Pofut Land Trade Rejected; New Way Sought Famularo held out for a aummtr eleoo Uon. ' In u'l'm'DI the defeated 6()..cent.over- rld• election, Superintendent Kenney said be felt 1 number of ~ bad been made. "When wt told the votera, 'We can't operate the same P1'0lf'IDlS without more money,' I don't think we were very con- vinclng. We didn't threaten,'1 Kenney said. Ho allo suggested that. holding the aelectoo April IJ (tu d.tJ<), was ""' fortunate. UNDER STUDY Under consideration by the tna:tees when they meet Monday are plans to reduce Ille ~ high school day ol si> and aeven period.I to five periods for most studenta and six period• for .some. Extended day at the high achool would permit more atudeola to 1llO the facility, without increuing the , number of claasrooms. TruJteu had considered nn- Ung purtable claurooml to meet enroll, ment ln<ftue. The utended ·day scheduling would find IOO to 400 students out of clua during aoy one period. Cula are eapected in transportation, the Hbrary budlel, summer lfehool, the out, door science program and elective courses. Thant Declares 'War' Existing Now in Mideast Steinhe~k · Cited Library Honors Former Laguna1i Late, great author John Stel.nbeclt lived in Laguna Beach in the tSlls when he was writing "Tortilla Flat." Friends of the Library in Laguna Beach have dedicated National Llbrary Week to the famous author. This is com- memorated with a display of Stei.Dbeck's books at the library. There are also posters, some with sketches of Steinbeck and area& where he worked, done by Miss Susan Cruciana, 19. The community meeting of the group at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Woman's Club, will be dedicated to Steinbeck. Carey S. Bliss, curator or rare books at the Henry E. HunUogton Library, will be the featured speaker. Leon Cooli!)', Laguna author and pres!· dent of UCJ Friends of the Library, will hOnor Laguna authors who published Ia _ 1968. These Include Verle Lincoln Annis, : William Graydon, William Haines and Adrienne Jones. Dessert and conversation for 30 minutes will precede the program ar-. ranged by Mrs. George Carpenter. Mesdllflles Adolph Krock, Edward Reed and Ernest C. Carman will pour •. Hostesses will be women directors, mesdames Anthony Demetr i ade s , William Longfield, Mary M a 1 w e 11. William Wilcoxen, Thomas Pole, Dora Mary Macdonald and Miss Fern Ran- dolph. Laguna Artists Requested · To Aid Victims of Floods ._ . I 'Laf\lna oeach artiJti who 91U Clonate works for auction to aid victims of the winter floods are being sought by auction organizers Richard Challi:s and Helen Keeley. · Fdntan and Ray Unger w~06f: dw~ng was demolllhed by a deluge· of watef and mud. To be held May 11 at the Festival From Wire Sen1ca grounds, the silent auction now has works Cha.ULs is also investigating additional pleas to the Flood Fund. The gallery owner recently garnered donations of more than $1,500 from l..agunaM for the flood vlcUma. That money was disbursed through the Red Cross. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. -Secretary-by 45 artists, Challis said. To make the General u Thant declared today the U.N. auction a success, he said, he hopes to have at least 150 works to sell. ceaae-fire along the Suez Canal ledcr is The showing will open at 11 a.m. Prices almost totally ineffectlve "and • virtual for the paintings, crafts, and sculpture A long-debated trade of .405 of an acre state of active war now exists there." wiU begin at haH the works' normal sell- of privately owned land in Dana Point for Thant made the statement in a special ing price. Bidding will close at 3:30 p.m. 1.-0ng Jury Wait Bad for Sirhan 1.6 acre.a of county property bu been re-report to members of the U.N. Security Funds gathered will be given to the jected and nqotlatlms are now under C ell Winston Blevins family who lost their wtiy to acqutJ'e the private property by oun • home and contents when tons of mud condemnaUon or negotlaUon. The report came u laratll fighter-twnbled down into Canyon Acres aod LOS ANGELES (UP I) -The longer County officials hid been negotiating bombers knocked out Egypt'• early warn-smashed the residence. • the jury deliberates life or death for with the Ch.and)er-Shtnnan Corp. to ac-ing radar defeme system in southern Furnia will also be dispersed to Jack Sirhan B. Sirhan the worse lt looks for quirt the acreage to aatlsfy an Anny Jordan. A military apokesman aaid in the slender Arab lmrnlgrant convicted of Corps of Englneen' requirem ent that the Jerusalem that they were Egypt's only slaying Sen. Robert F. KeMed.y, the Dana Point Harbor l>re-ater be tied 1o Blast Hits Shop defense said today. COlUlty land. . early warning stations against Israel. Sirhan'a chief counsel, Grant B. SupervllM'I have vetoed the exchange (Earlier Story, Pa1e I) Fire started by a gasoline expl01lon did Cooper, said he feels lengthy argumenta saytna they wiabed to maintain control ol 11 500 d t t 1 ah 1 by the panel which resumed dellber1tion1 all property frontlng on the harbor. Thant did not request a council meet· 37il ee~i:sg~t. oina£o:~a:ft!sr Mo:la~. at 8:02 a.m. today made it less likely it ii Chandler-Sherman had offered to pay ing, but the urgency of the rtport indi· Own W G U Id to be 8 Ille sentence. I d er arren e er to county I.ht county '58,821 ln addition to its an cated that members of the JS-nation firemen the blaze broke out at 3:29 p.m. The penalty phase of the trial went to at tbe foot of the Dana Point cliffs. The council would now enter into conaulta-when some gasoline ignited apon-the jury at noon Monday after convicting county property llu along the face and tiom on what course' to Col.low. taneously. He was not tnjl.D"ed. Sirhan of first degree murder on April 17. top of the cliffs on tha west. end of the 1-----------------'------'------------=-----'_:;,~ break'frater. The supervisors also moved t o purchue two lotl west of the county pro- perty from the Dana Point Yacht Oub !or compleUon ol Dtl Obbpo Street alOllg tho bluff line. l'rem Pagel ARMADA •.. tended pertOd -a few weeks or more - the 7th Fleet woukt hive to get some relief in the way of replacements from the Atlantic Fleet. AllanUc Fleet carriers have spelled Pacific canters off Vietnam on occasion In the put. Officera said the Pacific Command has three other aircraft carriers Ued u-p in training operations off the West Coast. They< could be freed , in ca1e of emergen- cy. 'nle four carrlm going to the Sea of Japan include three attack types lVith some 2*I combat iircraf\, the Enterprise, the Ticonderoga, and the Ranger. About one-third of their planet1 are Ff Phantom jet flcbters, best 1vallable match for the Sovlet·made MIG aircraft used by North Korea in shooting down Ille Ntl')' ECLll last ...... The fourth carrier in the tuk forct ls the Hornet, an ant1subm11rlne warfare carritr equipped mainly with patrol-t,ype planes whlch will defend the group aptnst any aubmarlne threat. The Ellterprloe, Tlcondero1• aod Ranger were pulled on Yankee Stltlon. the Vietnam battlt uslgnmtnt, whtn the latest X.0rtan crisis flarf!id. Two othen then rest1n1 up in port -tht Kitty Hawk •nd the Bon Homme Richard -WUI dlspatchec! to rtpl~e lhem. DECORATOR AND MODEL HOME RETURNS Spanish and Mediterranean Furniture All New Top Ci)uaDty Brand Names A Decorator's Dream Home Is On Display Over s100,ooo Worth of Spanish & Mediterranean Furnitur.e to Choose From! Items et follows : Gorgeous I ft. cu1tom quilted sofe with •tperete pillows with hetry OI~ trim Gtcor enG mtfchin9 chair, ] metchin9 oek occe1ion1I t1ble1, (2} 51" ftll cftcoretor lemp1, htnginCJ cheln 1we9 l1mp1 in wrought Iron, 111 1-plect king 1l1e m11ftr btdroom suite In pectn panel11d Mediterrenttn styt• with top quality I 5 years werrtnty king 1i111 mtt+rt11 encl box springs. S_pa1u1h dinint set, etc. Any pitct cen bt purchased incHvlch•affy. Drop by and ••• our 1tltctio1t of top quality Spanish and Mtditttranetn furn iture ••. f•ntestlctlly pric.dl C:OMl'UTI HOUSIPVL WAS .... $1HLOO COMPLETE HOUSEFUL WAS REGUARLY $1528.00 MUST IACRIPICE FOR ONLY .,,.00 • • TERMS -WE CARRY OUR OWN ACCOUNTS • AT HAllO« IOUl.IYAlD I I ' I • • Lag~-nc4 ... eae~ EOITI O.N":: VOL:. 62, NO. 96,i 2 SECTLONS, 24 PAGES . I • ' . 0 -1 Mission Trail Fire Loss $2,300 At Leisure World LAGUNA HILLS -Fire did 1n esUmated $2,300 damage to a Laguna Hills Lei.sure World apartment Monday night, the county fire department report<d. The blaze broke out about 6:30 p.m. in the kitchen of the apartment of Isabella Lloyd, 784 Q Via Los Altos. Damage was listed at $1,500 to the apartmen~ and $800 to contents, The cause is under investigation. e Viejo Shoot..,.• Set MISSION VIEJO -Two Mission Viejo High School seniors have been selected as participants for the 21st annual Plymouth Trouble Shooting Contest to be held Wednesday in Whittier. Jeff Brandenburg and Lance Young will" compete wilh other youtrui from Orange a~ Los Angeles Counties. Trou- ble Sbooters attempt to locate deliberate mallunctions in new cars. 'nils year a written te.!l will alto be iJ.YID tbe con- testants. e School Site St.,dlN SAN JUAN CAPISTRAN O -· Capistrano Unified School District of· ficials and San Juan Capistrano city councilmen meet tonight at 7 o'clock in City Hall to consider plans for the old junior high school site In the middle of town. The clty has expressed an interest in buying all or part of the 13-acre site for a new city hall. The school district has been thinking of building an educational center on part of the land, and nqt year, using some of the vacated classrooms for sixth grade classes. e Golf Toarney Slated MISSION VIEJO -The first ~annual Alice O'Neill Avery GoJf Tournament is scheduled for pla)i Friday at the Miss.ion Viejo Golf Club. More than JOO participants are due to tee off as the tournam ent begins at 9 a.m. The tournament, twice postponed because ol rain, is open to all golf club members. e 6,94% Homes Ready LAGUNA HILLS -By nexl !all, Rossmoor Leisure World here wiU have 6,942 homes completed, sold and occupi· ed, according to Rossmoor Corporation president Ross w. Cortese. "We have maintained average annu1I sales in excess ol. 1,000 units,'' said Cortese. He said lhat the proposed purchase of Rossmoor Corporation by Crane Co. for mart lhlD $30 million would place the firm "in an even stronger posiUon to weather the periodic financial stonnl that plague the hulldlq Industry.'\ e Gulde• Set Plenle MISSION VIEJO -The YMCA Indian Guides of MiSllion Viejo will hold their third annual family picnic and kite nying day Saturday at the abandoned airfield at the end of Rancho Viejo road. • ICS . ' Capo School ' Tax 'Boost Vote Slated By JACK CHAPPELL Of .. o.lff ll'illf ,,.,. Another school tax increase election will be held Oct. 7, Capiatrano Unified School District trustees decided Monday night. However, the amount of the meamre wbidl will go to voteis nut fill bu not yetbe<ndelermined. Wbatevrr the amount, it will not restoie 14110,llOO thAt trua\ees decided must be cut. from the tcbool district's budget. School officials said the cub are necesaary becawie • SO«nt override fail - ed at the potb la.st week. Board members set another meeUng for next Monday night (7:30 p.m. in the Serra School board room) to decide just where amputations in 1ehool programs will be made. Hardest rut in lhe budget cuts will be the junior and senior . high school pro- grams, according to school officials. Students will fact longer days, but fewer class periom, more students per teacher, and. a general cutback in cour.s available. "It's not that we art picking on the high school student or the junior high .~m~.11~~:. ·F. · Jtenoey, diltrict 1\111* b I 2!Qdent, •id. 111• il"""'tary blidatl ii lion, he added. A group of il>oul ~ h)lh IChool _ .. -tht -meetlDC and urged that tht election he held priClr to the Aug. I tu rate determination. They argued that a summer Mction, if sue· (See SCHOOLS, P ... II Cliffside Trailer Park Sought For Capo Beach Something new -an apart.mobile - described as a "departure in mobile home living" wlD be ~ered for Capistraoo Beach, by the Oran&e County Planning Commlssion May 14. Proposed by Apartmobile Associates, Inc., of Dana Point, the plan calls for stacking mobile units bunk-bed fashion against the cli!fa here, on the inland side of Pacific Coast Highway, north uf Palisades Drive. The unique proposal ~ed planning commissioners last Wednetday and was deferred 30 days for study. According to Albert Alves , of Santa Ana, atthited fO< the llrm, JMblle homes will he plactl1 In a oevtJHtory open super-structure that will be able to bold 11 douhle wide mobile unltf. JI• Mid the firm ..... la ..n the llah where each unit resll in 1n lr'rangement aimilar to '.'own-your-own" 1partmenll. ••When it ii finilbed, it will raemble an attrJCllve tparlment , buildq w I t h hilcooleo , IHll<Dld. elCil " the ..Vt11 Doon," Alves added. M proposed the atructure ~ he IOI feet high wilh ..,blem.U. patkin( lor 20 cars. How will the mobile b:allen rel into lheir pen:hed pollillons ! Alves uid they will be llfted upward on pallet.I and rolled onto concrete slabs. Time of Trage4y Dad Killed on Happy Day . ' . By RJCllAIUl' P. NAU. ""t bock in January, Ho ~ -in the Of """ °"" '"'I!' "'" Matlne Corpl 11 7Mf'I· ' satun111 otarted as • Pod .i., for Ille ll!n. 'l)olxut, mot 111-r 1ve, Bernanl R. Terhont family of IAgupa bu dilldno ranclnl lo qi. lr"'l» line Hills. Eigbt·year-old Pet<r had jllll made 1een to II. ,,_ o( IChool qe attelxl his lint Holy Communion. Then the Ralph Gata E-·7 llchool. pemment"s ~ ..mvtd. She 111d lhe wiil ....,In In the uu 1111- . Major Terhont, hither o( five wllh 1 tll ochool ii oot and ]olo her family In tht tlxth child expect..i, had been killed in wt f0< the birth al lier -ddld. Vietnam fighting. Major Terhont, a -al St. Paul, -Mrs. Terhorst, wife of the 3'1·year-okl Minn., had ltT'Ved Cini ,_, In the career Marine, sHI tod11 her hwl-Marinu during tht "-Wer 11 ao wu piloting a helicopUr In lhe Yiclnity fll iolill<d man. He -to the DI Nang when In._ .....,..i fire Unlvmiil' o( -llld al14r brought him down. He had been gradualion jolnfld tbe CGri-11 1 llCOlld evacuaUng cuuaJUes. She said tbe delth lieuknlnL II confirmed but recovery ol the body 1a He wu to hive ltfl lhe ~ in four oilll an uncertainty. , _. _. Ind, Mn. Terllom llld, M1jor Terborll bad lef'Ved a previou1 would hlvt entered lht eomputer teltnet stint in Vietnam two years ago and w., field. <I ~ ORA:NGE 00\JNTY, OAllF'ORNI.( -., 1te ~ .... . . . ' ' • Ill e DA.11...Y PILOT st.ft ,.... ,,;_ll~nj. tl,lllVi-! $.IG!1POS.JS·AT Iii, /:!1.0.~''.'1 .,tate Djvfston of .Highways' crews 'liave illstallea •pec\,al reflector-bearing posts . in the center. o! El ~~ ~urveO!Qrlb-oi"Locuna'fleach; Sd!Ool'~' are IOOking !pr additional safely aids al El .MDrm Sc~l entrance. Pressure Off Vietnam 7th Fleet Task Force Guards Korea Missions WASIUNGTON CAP) -Vietnam naval air operations are being curtailed and the 7th Fleet stretched to the limit with deployment of a 23-ship task force to pr~ tect U.S. reconnaissance missiom off North Korea. "We've got no slack," a Navy officer commentec: after the Pentagon Monday Laguna Planners Reject El Morro Park Expansion LaiUJll Beach planning commissioners M~1y vehemenUy opposed lhe pro- plied expansion of El Morro Trailer Part D!)rth of the city by 96 spaces. Opposition -which , will become a recommendation to Orange County Plan· , nm, Comniission -wu based chiefly on ldcllUanal 'traffic that woukl have been geneiited and on sanitation problems, beca\111! ol poor percolation of liqu1i! into the soil. The ,trailer park brackets ~t JDghway. The 96 additional spaces would have been on the inland side. The park conlllns 203 spaces presently located on Irvine: Company property . announced assignment ot an armada to the Sea of J'apan where a Na_vy plane was shot down by North Korea last week. One aircraft carrier and possibly other war ships of the 7th Fleet have been pull- ed from the war eflort to form a new Task Forci 71 deploying somewhere off North Korea. Officers said this means the Navy con· trihution to the U.S. bombing campaign in South Vietnam and Laos will be cut by roughly one-µLird. The United Slates has been keeplnl: three aircraft carriers on the firing line In the Gull of Tonkin; for the lime being this will be reduced to two. The 71h Fleet's remaining four aircran carriers are going into Task Force 71 along with three cruisers and 16 destroyers .. Thus, oUicers pointed out, all ?lb Fleet carriers are now tied down on two front.I -the Sea of Japan and the Gull of Tonkin. And officers described the 16 destroyers as a major Share of lhe Seventh's heavy combat vessels. How loog the fi.t can maintain both assignme~ts under present condiUons i1 a matter of concern to the Navy. With its six flattops occupied, tht 7th Fleet hall no rtplacement ntx.ibWty. Officers said lhat if the task force has to remain in the Sea ol Japan for any u - (See ARMADA, Pa1e II Warning Lights May Ease Peril Near El Morro School transportation prob)ems from traffic iA>oming past El Morro School may be eased by a future system o( warning lights and schocil signs along Coast HJghway. School trustees, who have attempted to secure traffic control signals, tonight will consider State Division of Highways recommendations for warning tights and signs to slow traffic instead of stopping it. The division earlier had indicated that traffic from the school was not sufficient to merit !ignals which might cau.se ac- cidents rather than. prevent them . Superintendent William Ullom said the state proposal seemed to have the gr:eatest merit of any plan U.us far . The board will also consider accepting: .hall the cost of a low bid to the city, $4,350, for a ,set oL traffic signals on Park Avenue where It dissects 1he high s:ehool campus~ The boa.rd will take up the sole bid o( 17 ;71 by Modernlold Dool& Inc. to install folding parlltJons In rooms ~t Thunton Intermediate Scboo1 to make more ·rooms. Crime Message Set WA,SHJNGTON (UPI) -Pr"ident Nixon will send a mes.sage to Congress on organized crime Wednesday, Repub- lican Congressional leaders reported today. The commission denied the variance application of Frank A. LaRoche. hair otJllst " ·LaRoche eomeurs, (or ... J.2- IQUIN! foot sign. LaRoche, located in the old surf & Sand office, t416 S. Coast Highway. applied tor the variance became all of the sJgn apace allowance for the building had been used ilreody. ' , , . I ,...., Laguna, Clemente Masons Aid Public Schools Week Commilllonen were re uctant to a .... ,r--ariJ: variuce' from sign controls, even 12 lnctie8, ~a , c.ommtssloner R o b e r t rr.o<h. In olhet bullnesl, the coounissloo o -Qruted the annual request for Morp.llebb, Inc.-S. Cout Hlghwa1 to conduct •lei in a teat Uom May t to June 2._ subject tQ approval ot the fire .m.nhiil) . -Olriied 1 variance 10Ught b y BrewM 'G, Evans, 2117 Rounsevel T«· rteet to add more than 50 perce.nt to an txiltlsw dwellln&. . • -Recttfed a letW "°"' the city clerk nollfyJna plannen .Jllat lbe authoriad ftlllblllty ~ " ..... Beach --merdal developnem did bOI ·le~ally need to come before plannflll ~ bill ID)' fUture dOY<Jopmfnt plans W<llld. • I -Scheduled the May 5 me.Ung for May ti. M>!ollJ of Laguna lleadl and San Clemente are 0otoc their bit to bride• the communlcaliolm pp during P u b 11 c Schools W<!!k. Tt..e teac-t feama froiniocll ~ achool-. have been sent to the San FrlnCiacd Bay area to Yisl1 hJih achoolo the're. ' In exchange. -Masons call lt "Amba.ssadores for Communication In Educalion" -six bay.,.. "lldents an! vbltlng o:honll In Laauna, San C~menta and foun)aln V a!lty. The Locllna Beach .H11h ~ It.om• -~ J.-a 'Wllkt!rton and Ret1!1a C.ln -~ 111· I~ Katfiy-SWartout toa Criu-Bfrwman; Jr. San Oeme.nte High School 'ttpmcn- t.aUvu In the bay area m teacher Randy _ .. McCoy act0mpanled by 11 u den I Salvadore LombUdl. Vll.14J/g itudenta to Laguno w~ hosted at dinner Monday nliht by ~olui G. YtcJal\ ptOctam. ctuUfman, bii Wili, "and }Ii. llicl Mrs. Geocge Pletta. ' T}le visiijr\g ~t.ams , Wda)' wtrt ln'.- specUng the Oellhle scheduling syafem al 'rhurston Jnteniiediate School and ~ \0 villi\, F0UJ1tain Valley . schoola, in lhe afternoon. • ' 1 fl wlll be the lh!ni )'ear ~lhe IAguna Lod1t ·No. 17i, .F.tee & ed Masoni, ha( sent1 studenl'.a •nd leac · rs to N«1he.m ?llfOtnla. . ' ' . \ Tis J!';WPI" ~ .... 12,1\ltd lhif yur, 'by he~ wi~ ..,....and .. ..,-10 1n'aelua! eidiOtice of v(sJtors. M ..... hope lhat tt will with MllOlllc boctlnc rrow to 1 stale-wide program. f, Today's Fba9I , TEN CENTS . • "I HarhorCofC .. Critical of Supervisors SuperJet foes In the Newport Beach and Mission Viejo areas are pilled against eaclJ other beause o( a "political aitua· Uon" on the Orange County Boa.rd of Supervisors, the Newport Harbor Ownber Of Commerce was told Monday. Clint H<>O&e, chairman « the ~ ber's ·aviaUon committee, al.id a majority Of cOOnty supervisors la.st •eek voted for "Interim" regloilal airport tluclltt o( El Toro Marine Corps Air Station and Coun .. ty Airport because they "doo't have,con- stituents b) either area." Supervisors William Hirstein, RQbert Battin and Davt<l L. Baktr apProved the feasibility probe, to be undertaken by William E. Pereira & Associates, the county's aviaUon master planners. Fifth District Supervisor Alton E. AUen of Laguna Beaeh and Supervisor William Phillipe;, dubbed the "father" of County Airport, voted ln the minority. They said several sites, not just El Toro and County Airport, should be 'consk!ered. Hoose, a young hardware merchant, commented : "U nfortunately, there are live people on the county board. Those who voted for the El Toro and County Airporl studiet doa't have coostituenls ·where 1 either airport ia loaled. Hlnttln -he·bai on]Y a few . "This is a political situation," he 1ald. ''Bec1use of it we've got the southern part al )he county lighting lhe northern part " the county." HOGie 1CCUsed the county board ma- jority of "ducking Its responaibitities" by turning over to the Southern California AssociaUon of GovemmenLs (SCAG) 1he selection of a permanent rqional alrpcrt &ite. Chamber President Richard Stevens said on behalf of th e chamber he had sent a letter to SUpervisor Allen com-- mending him for his effort, though futile, to broaden the site studies. Hoose noted that S'ltpervisor Battin ol the First District had added to the original inotion requesting a· study 'of El Toro. Battin's amendment stipulated that in event the Marine base does not prove suitable for joint military-commen:ial use, County Airport should be mutu planned for eXpansion. "J know what 's going.to happen," said Hoose glumly. "Pereira will say in 1ix months that El Toro isn't feuible, ind supervisors will say let's go ahead wilh County Airport until we have 1 permanent regional site." Stevens sa.id later the chamber board will very likely protest any expansion of: County Airport. He sAid this would bt in line with earlier resolutions opposing in- creased jet service at tbe facility. Hoose's coocem echoed U:iat of Newport Beach City Manager Har:vey L.- Hurlburt and Harbor Area jet noiae-fot Dan Emory. Both said in recent day1 that a study of El Toro reprtlented a gamble for Newport. NEW YORK (AP) -'!be ltock market closed about even today, paring some of Its early losses. (See quotations, Pages !IHI). The Dow Jones induslrial average had been at $.02 at 11 :30 a.m. but edged back during the day. The Dow Jost 7.31 Mon- day. Oraage (;out w .. 11.B , The .., will he worldJW port time 1Wedne9day wttli cloudy skiel t the order of the clay. That'll q the mercury down two notcbel to 1 u by mldafttnoon. INSIDE TODA~ .'l'h'll k••P o• ,..,,.."fl, ..,t j °T<'"I'' Co•illll 4\-f!tg· 'I~ ...rd to • poptllaliOll ., --'""-I Ii"" bM 1980. l>ollf 8. , ., I ' •-$ ~-I ,....--,-------. --......... ~ -.. -• • • ... "T -... ' I DAil Y I'll.OT L Tut!daf, April 22. lW. ~ i ... • Revolt · erito . -' · ~ Gene ri\tio ri ' 117 JEllGMI: J'. OOUJNI ........ ,.... ..... -' ,...,. • I "" -... il'Jl"!'I••.. 2 • :1110• • 2 ,., .... mlwe' 1l!lol hoppeood II that Newport Beocb ....,.._ Doll Mclnnla, my wile and tlS -people -tluot the pkbn ol -tbol ""' wllb poal LoP>oU •u a"'"1. ljo ,l bod~ -IUm.Yoo'U.., lloe 11111 I r«uG•od my ...... "'" lbe ~. 111116-_ ...... , l! Trudi tc.... ol lbe Balboa Roc<n, has a -at Siano f...S. Ono ol his pr111-. ol Eo,illlh dillri.bllted eopiea of a "news releue" to Ills lliidenta lbe otl"f @1; jllll Iii the 11111 ol IL Tiie pr'1I dldn, 11Y who ""* It. Bat Trudi ..,. . tt la IUltably Idiotic ltr this column, Accorcliqly, here ,.. , ............. - I , • ' 0 I < ~ ' ' • ilMT CLOD, 'ft. -Ni1t ~ Wiii ..... ..,. __ al ... ...._ -..... -:or'it •*• ............. . .... ' ,. ,,_ mAll"" .. 911\J " """ --··oodli· .......... the main porlor. ' • • They ..... Jdentw.l .. ....en ol .. activist .... p tluot -cooln>l ol tbe parlor three days l(O and locked Mn. llinlla McMuah, IWlatant ditticlu, ia tho pontry. Two olftcen llllflerecl minor lnJurt<o In Ibo dilturbance. Ool WU Jiii """1 tbe rur by a runaway Wfwlcbalr and -- wu Jabbed with I knitUnl needle. Quincy Tlredblood, '7-)'UMld -· o a n for the rehetlloll factlon, told ~ porters the demonstration wu staged to mlor« demlllds tluot the old folk& be lf•en a great« role In the management of the -home. ~'We'"' got a 1IUnCb ot yoang wblp- pennappen running lhin&s aroond here," °' Aid, wavinc bia cane violently. He aalll Iba old lolb won..........., that at ly Phll lntartandl "Wiiii All The lknl-a ~ People Show, You'd Think They'd Have to H•ve • -.nu• llc1n1e lnatHd of the Poor Arti1t ••• " Harbor District Backed By Coast Association 117 JDOME J', COLLINS °' .. ...,""...., Brealdna up the Orange County llarbo!- Diltrict "would lel'Ve DO uRfu1 purpose," Ibo Onnc< County Cout Aaoclation -today. 'lh pnlli&loul J»mtmbtr -llon, nix-nth>I coutaI clUea from Seal -to San Cltmtnta, reached tluot conclullon follmrln& a 111-weet study al Ibo dluolutioo queatlon, Aaoclatlon President Cap Blackburn aid the flndlnp of a special commlttto -the probe ha .. been -by directors of the 67-year-old organiza- tion. The committee, beaded by publisher Jamea C: Killingsworth, ,...mmenda tluot the Harbor District not oaly be re- tained, bat that Ila Jurhdlcttoo be tx· poded to 1"'1uclt regional parka. Thia pita the uaoclaUon In a dlttct --with the County League of Qtlea. Tiie Leogue'1 majority wanta the llar1>or 1Jlltrid dlaot..d and 111 nsponsl1>l1-turned o"" to an enlartt- • llA!IY PllO T CMtAHOa CO.Ul "-'ll llHINO C~AAY l.i-t N. W••• .. ~ .... "'*'WI' • J.-ck •• C.My "'* ,.,...... .......... " "'"""1 n. ... , 11:...U .... n.-, A. Mltf'9IH .. ......,..,._ kid•N r. Ni l ..__ ... _ td County Parb Department. Tbe Cout AaoclaUon committee repart ltada oil with this Oat lllalement: "Abolllhmtnt of the Harbor District would aerve no useful purpo1e. There are distinct advantages In having a diltricL '' Dissolution, explalnl the auociation, would "not negate the fact" that there are .ervtcea and facilities to be m~ talned and operated. "li couta1 cities are required to uaume the maintenance and development of harbor facilities in the event of dislolutlon, a QUeSUon of equity b created becluse of the UH of the fa- ciUtles by resident.I ol. inland cities." The aaaoclatlon further points out that elimination of the Harbor District's special t.a'I rate and plllgling It lo with the County General 'Fund tu rate -1 prime goal of dluoluUon backers - would result In projects and program.s be.Ing dependent on overall county flnan.. clng. This, aays the association, could till of( many district r=eatlonal projecll tluot the county cannot embark on, because of tts taxln& authority. "An eumple is the Aliso Beach ~ perty," says the reoort. "It was purchas- ed on contract purchase option In keeping with the District's pay-as-you.go policy. "Tbe county would ba .. bad to buy the beachfront land In South Laguna outright and put up all the money at oace, P"" bobly necessitating a bond lalue. "There ll no evidence that dirtrtct dissolution and Inclusion of t t s responsibilities within the County General Fund wouki result in a lax·saving." The as.wcl1Uon'I recommendations, which wW be pruenttd to the county's Lccal Apncy Formation Commlaslon a l a public bearing Wednesday, also In- clude; -Renaming the Harbor District to the Parks, llarhon and Beachea Dlatrlct. -Rtttructurlnl the preoent f I Y e • member Harbor Commission to a nlne-- mtmber agency, with rive members ap- pointed by COU11ty supervisors and four by the League of Cities, -1.mn'Nldiate lmprovem,nt ot ccm- munlcatklOI belwttn the dlslrlct and the pnbllc. '!llta would be achie>ed throup month!)' meeUnp belw<en district ol- ficl&b and repmentati.., of the League ol CIUes, Orans• County Chamber of Commtrte, the Cout -u.. and the pttSI. Tiie usocl1U.. says upanslon of the diltrlct'1 authorlly to Include rtglonal para and beachea could be ac:<:0mpllsl1'd thrnuCh enablhltl leflllatlGo enacted at the Blatt i...1. '!'he -Jurlldldlon ·--tho Harber lllatrlct to develop, _.. and malntaln reOonal ,_Uonal lacllltlal, bod! eoulal and lnllnd, on a COWltJ'-wldt bula." I . .. : ~ ' LOGBOOK leut tllree oeflklr cltium be added to the rest home staff. "We don't trust anyoot under '5,'' declared Tlredblood, edjwltlng t b e "Senility Power" buttoo pinned to his shawl. The revolt bepn lut week when a amall group of hardcore superannuates held a dodder-in at which some burned their Secial Se<urity card5. Although peaceable in it.s early phasn, the protest movement took a violent turn wben JGmeOne btt George Snaffie, rest home superintendent, 'With a bottle of Geritol. Snallle blamW the trouhlt on . ~ .. ... ..._. ..... ~by dilllculUff ' u. mnmunkdlll wllb tbe milltants. .... "'~ ....... ·-ell ~----~ . ' , . 4' ' *· lnlnt Bancll pub& Information cbld BW Aldrich denies that the lions presuve gOing in near the · San Diego a,nd Saitta Ana freeways will be new headquarters Of the lrvine Company's i eaJ ealate department. * John Wayne, -ol Biyabom In Nawport Beach, fell. oil his.bone the other day. The cipcb broke. 'He?t okay and filming conUnued on "TrUe Grit." I don't know what role Duke is playing in the movie, but if it isn't Rooster Cogburn, who is the lougbest. meanest and funniest !rontiel' manhal I n American fteUon, he's giving up an easy o.c.r. Read tbe book. You'll aee what I mean. ,,,.... P .. e l CAPISTRANO SCHOOLS • • • POSTER ARTIST CRUCIANA EXAMI NES HER WOR K Stt:inbe ck Honored •t Laguna Beach Library cwlul, would partially raton oome Ciiis In their ed1icatfoaal ........... 1'The Jack of proper finlnclng will hive • WC'/ -llljurioUI elfee( ... the ltadsU' education.'' Martin sumg.. fellow, • Sa Clem-lllP Scbool lludeot,.aald. "MOit of. ua are leDlon but we hive bn>then and alaten In -tluot will be hurt. We ba•e ouch fine programs In the ac:boobl ri«1tt """ tluot H you lei them lapte, you'll have to start all over apln," -..1 Lorry Sbanlt 11Ul. Board memben agr<ed, but cited dd- llcultiel In ocbedullng a llUlllmet electi""- 'I'bey noted more time wu needed to register parenla, . A atudy following the defeated overrlde lhowed tluot ooly 20 perceilt al the people ellglble to register In the diltrict had done IO, SewraJ board memben llld tluot many people with chlldrtn who would be yea •olm would be on vacatiee during the aummer while the elderly, "automaUc no voten'' would be home. WOllKEll8 TlllEll ,.,,._ also llld !bot Ibo volunteer K!tP lmpr<>\'lni lllltrict Schoola (KIDS) workers were tired and Deeded time to --New Trullet Slanley. Kelly llld he thought a sununu eleetim would just be too close to the 50-eent override defeated April 15. "I tbint the voters would feel that UliA thing wu being crammed down their throat.a," Kelly aald. The October date was eet by the' trustee on a 6-1 vote. Trustee Nofie Dana Point Land Trade Rejected; New Way Sought A long-debated trade of .405 of an acre of privately owned land in Dana Point for 1.5 acrtl; of county property has been ~ jetted and neaoUaUons are now imder way to acquft the private property by condemnaUon or negotiation. County officials had been negotlaUng with the Chandler-Shuman Carp. to ac- quire the acreage to satisfy an Anny Corps of Engineers' requirement that the Dana Point Harbor breakwater bt tied to county land. Supe.rvi.90!'1 have vetoed the exchange saylng they wished to maintain control of all property fronting on the harbor. Chandler.Shennan had offered lo pay the county $54.827 In addition to Ill land at the foqt of the Dana Point cliffs. The county property lies a1ong the face and top of the cliffs on the west end of the breakwater. The supervisors also moved to purcha.!e two lots west of the county pro- per\1 from the Dana Point Yacht Club for completion of Del Obispo Street along the bluff lint, .From P•1e l ARMADA ... tended period -a few week!: or more - the 7th Fleet would have to pt some relief in the way of replacements from the Atlantic Fleet. AUanUc Fleet carriers have spelled Pacific carriers off Vietnam on occasion In the past. Ofllcen said the Padllc Command has three other aircraft carriers tied up in training operations off the West Coast. They could be freed, in case ol emergen. ey, 11le four carrlen going to lbe sea of Japan Include three attack types with '°me 260 combat aircraft, the Enterprise, the Ticonderoga, and the Ranger. About one-third of their planes are F4 Phantom jet f1ghten. best availlble match for the SO\•iet-mnde ~t1G aircraft used by North Korea in ahooting down the Navy ECU:l last wttk. The fourth carrier in the task fon:e II the Hornet, an antltubmarl~ warfare carrier equipped mainly with patrol-type pi.na · which wlU ddend the group against any submarine thnat. Tbe Enterprl!e, Ttcond ... ga and Rang<r """ pulled off Yankee Station, the Vietnam battle uslpmlnt. .. ben the latest Korean crlJIJ naml. Two olhtn tbcn resting up In pen -the KUly lla•t and the Bon Homme Rldlanl -...,. dlspal<hed to replaco them. F1mularo held out for a IUl1lDlU tlec- tloo. In a11e11ini the defeated 5kent.over· ride election, Superintendent Ke!mey llld he fell a number o( errors had been made. "When we told the voters, 'We can't operate the same programs without more money,' I don't think we were very con· vtnclng. We didn't threaten," Kenney llld, He also suggested tluot holding the aelectoo April 15 (tu day), WU un- fortunate. lJNDER STUDY Under consideration by the trustees when they meet Monday are plans to reduce the preoent high stjiool day of six and aeven periods to five periods for most students and alx periods for some. Extended day at the high achoo! would permit more studentl to use the facility, without increasing the number of clusreems, Trusta<a had considered ren- Ung portable claaorooml to meet enroll- ment lncruae. Tiie mended day acbedullni would find 300 to 400 atudents out al clul during >DY cioe ptrlnd. Cull m tzpected In tramportatlan, the library b\ldlet. 11.UMler ecbool, the out- door science program and elective course., Thant Declares 'War' Existing Now in Mideast From Wire Senrtce1 UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. -Secretary. General U Thant declared today the U.N. cease-fire along the Suez Canal sector is almost totally lneifedlve "and a virtual state of active war now exists there." Thant made the statement in a special report to members of the U .N. Security Council. • The report came u Israeli fighter· bombers knocked out Egypt's early warn- ing radar defense system In southern Jordan. A mililary spokesman said lo J erusalem that they were Egypt's only early warning stations against Israel. (Earlier Story, Pa1e I) Thant did not request a council meet~ ing, but the urgency of the report indl~ cated that members of the 15-nation council would now enter into consult.a- t.ions on what course tu follow. Steinhe~k Cited Library Honors Former Lagunan Late, great author John Steinbeck lived In Laguna Beach In the 19308 when he wm writing "Tortilla Flit." Friends of the Ubrary In Laguna Beach have dedicated National Library Week to the famous author. This is com· memorated with a display of Steinbeck's books at the library. There are also posters, some with sketches of Steinbeck and areas where be worked, done by Mi.ss Susan Cruclana, 19. The community meeting of Lhe group at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Woman's Club, will be dedicated to Steinbeck. Carey S. Bliss, curator of rare books al the Henry E. Huntington Library, will be the featured speaker. ~n Cooley, Laguna author and presi- dent of UCl Friepda of the Library, will honor Laguna authors.. who pt1blished in 1968. These include Ver\e Lincoln Annis. \Yilliam Graydon , William Haines and Adrienne Jones. Dessert and conversation for 30 minutes will precede the program ar· ranged by Mrs .. George Carpenter. Mesdames Adolph Krock. Edward Rttd and Ernest C. Cannan will pour. Hostesses will be women directors, mesdames Anthony Demetriade1, William Longfield, Mary Max we 11 , William Wilco1en. Thomas Pole, Dora Mary Macdonald and Miss Fern Ran- dolph. Laguna Artists Requested To Aid Victim s of Floods Laguna Beach artists who will donate works for auction to aid victlma of the winter fiood1 are being sought by auction. organ.lien Richard Challis and Helen Keeley. To be held May 11 at the Festival grounds, Ute silent auction now has works by 4S artists, Challis said. To make the auction a success, he said, he hopes to have at least lSlil works to sell. The showing will open at 11 a.m. Pnces for the paintings, crafts, and sculpture will begin at haU the works' normal sell~ ing prk:e .. Bidding will close at 3:30 p.m. Funds gathered will be given to the Winston Blevins famUy who lost lhe.ir home and contents when tons of mud tumbled down into Canyon Acres and smashed the residence. Funds will also be dispersed to Jack Blast Hits Shop Fire started by a gasoline explosi<11 did St ,500 damage to an auto repair shop at 37.11 Cerritos St. in Los Alamitos Monday. Owner Warren Geller tokl county firemen the blaze broke out at 3:29 p.m. when some gaaoline ignited spon- taneously. He wu ~ injured. Fontan and ·Ray Unger whose dwelling was demd\islied by a deluge of water and mud. 1 • Challis is also lnvestlgatlng additional pleas to the Flood Fund. The gallery owner recently garnered donations of more than $1;500 from Lagunam for the flood victims. That money wa.5 disbursed through the Red Cross. Long Jury Wait Bad for Sirhan LOS ANGELES (UP!\ -The longer the jury deliberates life or death for Sirhan B. Sirhan the worse it looks for the 11lender Arab immigrant convicted of slaying Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, the defense said today. Sirhan's chief counsel, Grant B. Cooper, said he feels lengthy arguments by the panel which resumed deliberations at 11:02 a.m. today made it less likely it is to be a life sentence. The penalty phase of the trlal went to the i4l'Y at noon Monday after convicting Sirh~ ol first degree murder on April 17. DECORATOR AND MODEL HOME RETURNS Spanish and Mediterranean Furniture All New Top Quality Brand Names A Decorator's Dream Home Is On Display Over Sl00,000 Worth of Spanish & Mediterranean Furniture to Cho9se From! Item• •• followi: Gor9eou1 I ft. ~•tom quilted 1ofa with 1ep.rite pillows with heavy oti k trim decor encl m1tchin9 ck.ir, l matching ~· occt1ional t1ble1, 121 61" tatl d.corator lamps, han9in9 chain swag lamps in wrou9ht Iron, 111 I-place king 1la m11ter bedroom suite in ~n ,.".tecl M.ditarranttn dyt• with top quality IS y••" warra"ty king sin mattress and box 1prin91. Sp1nt1h dining 11t, .tc. Any piece can ba purcktsM indiYiclu1Dy. 0..., l:ty and 111 our 11lecilcm of top 1:1u11ity Sp1ni1h and M.dlt1rr1n11" fumltvre ••• f1nt11tic1lly pr1ctdf COMl'LITI HOUSIFUL WAS .... $1121.00 COMPL!TE HOUSEFUL WAS ltEGUAlLY $1 528.00 MUST SACRIFICE FOR ONLY II II f ·'urttiflll'f'. 184·1 N~wport &lvd . Costa MC\a (only I r ...... ,~. ,,.; ·..,..j ,.,. {~ .• •'• '698°0 TERMS -WE CARRY OUR OWN ACCOUNTS • AT HAl lOI IOULIVAID \ I • i \ ' ii 1p ri ·ate'· Planes I ~orgotten By JANICE I ! °' .. Dalb ""' • ~ ~ ~ Is 1 story about 11ho-. oU>ot _... -tbe amau.r, non-.!al planes lbat .eem to hive taUn 1 Net •ea~ tn t b • cunent'eontrovenyAV'el' ~ m,hti out ~ Orllll• cGunty At 0rqe County .4_. ript now, there are l50 pri.v~ ~ow""' planes. 11W'r '1li>ul -~!0< •V<'1 I.toll • ~II the CU11111, aCcon!I= the Ptrelra report on trw i~ <lrlll(I• COUJ\ly, lfle 1J1tlo.will ih the future u the ""'1'my •xt>alid& By 1m, there wlft b'I: twict .U rftuut general avtalioft cra1te by '*· fhltt may be 3,'50 sucb ai~fR wllhin Orange County. If, aays P~a~ Jacililies ·ftt created to support them. , .( · Orange Counfy Din<lor of AviallOll l}obert J. Bresnahan lhinks that general aviation m8y have to look elsewhere to expand, as the volume of commercial aviation increases. But that's aU in the future. Today, cf· ficiats at the airport are walkin& a tightrope, trying to serve the needs of both general and commercial aviation. Says Bresnahan's assistant, C. R. , l • "Ron'' Chandler: "Commercial aviation serves a high volume. while general avia· tion serves more of a se lect group. Clo$e to one million passer.gers move through this terminal each year. and v•e must spend our runds proporti_onately." 'IN TERMS OF TIME , COMMERCIAL AIRLINES ARE IMPOSSIBLE FOR ME ' Businessman Dun kin and Plane -An Extension of His Right Arm He sympa thizes, however, with the p I i g h t of the small aircraft o"•ner. '·General aviation people are sensitive about their situation. llere's this poor lit- tle pilot, wondering when bt gets lo take off." Chandler noted that tht general avia- tion people can relaJ: about one thlng - noise protests are directed prilµarily .against commercial air traffic. Why the boom in general aviation ? The reasons range from the intenHly prac- tical to the sublime to the downriibt emotional, and often are a combination of the three. nn an importanl contracl. they "'On "\ wait for a seheduled flight," he says. The going rate of $1.25 a mi le for a cross-country jaunt" means it costs eight executives $6,127 to iake Jet King to New York and back. That's $383 per person each way, twice the price ol a com- mercial ticket. But it means they can go anywhere at any time. And for Jet King. it means that through chartering it when Denny's isn't using it. the increased depreciation and maintenance charges in· creases the tax write-off. Keogh would not elaborate on tax ad· van tages of jet ownership as compared to the cost involved in fueling , staffing and maintenance. But he said. "Put it this way. It's expensive, but it 's not thot cx· At one end of the spectrum stands the private jet. At Orange County Airport, it's not owned by a wealthy heiress' as another little trinket. In.stead, it belongs to an oil company. or to a group called Jel King Air Service, Inc .• a wholly-<iwn- ed subsidiary of Denny's Restauran ts. The Jet King plane is a $1.3 million pensive. North American Rockwell Sabreliner. One innovali'Jn is Keogh 's plan for out- And it 's all business. The eight-passenger fitting the Sabreliner "·ith complete am- plane can do everything the big jets can bulance facilities. "We're anticipating the do. but it has to re fuel more lrequently . need of rapid transit for heart Jet King kee~ lhe plane in virtually constant motion. When Denny 's men transplan ts," he explained. aren't using it, they charter it to otht:r A twin-engine Beechcrafl Baron. "'hi ch groups. Last month, it Dew 2S,OOO mlll!:S. cost $119,000, is an exlension or The president of Jet King, Marvin businessman Lloyd Dunkin's right arm. Keogh. says there's a real market for the . services of the private jel "When time Ls He flies the plane coostanlly, as he short, and you have a group of executives manages proWfies and tr•iler parks . .in who oerfJG g~ acg>1s fie tq;~try to bi~ .• Las Vea:a:;, San Jose, Sacramento and places in between. "Commercial airlines are impossible for me, not in terms of money, but in terms of lime," he said. ''My plane's in the shop now. and I have to fly to Las Vegas on a commercial flight. That means I tu;.ve to go early in the morning and come back late at night. But my business,'' be said in an exasperated lone, "will only take two hours." But his plane Isn't all business, even though that's where the tax advantages lie. He uses it to fly to British Columbia to go fishing, an eight-hour flight that \vould take days to drive. And he hops do"·n to r-.1cxico no1v and then - Mazadan is only a few hours away. He"s proud of his plane. 1\•hich has all the cquipmen_t or a commercia l airliner and ca:1 II~ in any \.\"eather. Inside, lhere is a confusing array of dials in the corkpil. But he knows them all. DunKin learned to rly at a smali field in Oregon in 1952. And he feels safer in his plane th an in a car. "If you die before you r~ach 3fl. chances are you"ll die in a car crash," he said. In 17 years of (lying , he 's never had a mi shap. Flying bachelor 1i1ike Schroer. 26·year old accounts manager for St. Joseph's Beach Seeks Riot Curbs Police Want New Methods After Wild Sunday Fracas By TERRY COVILLE OI n.. rMI" Pltt4 Mefl' Police In Huntington Beach are looting at new methods today for prevention of riots similar lo Sunday's three-bobr bat- tle on the beach. Captain Harold Mays sakf this morning that I.ht department would IKild a special staff.meeting to consider further riot~ trol measures as the city feels neceasary. Police statement! today came aft.tr the Huntington Beach City Council wu told N.onday night by a property owners' leader that there Is growing concern in the community over the city dealing with beach problems. Sunday's melee was touched off by the arrest of two juveniles for possession of narcotics on the beach. Angry crowds quickly formed .a.round the pol ice paddy wagon which was transporting the suspects lo t h e department's btach substation. Alter a 46-mlnute aeige of the sub--sta- tion, during which young beac.hgoers bombarded the building with roCks , bot- tlee and concrete, reWoreetllel'lts were called in from surroundlq cities. It took about 1~ poUcemen thrtt hours to bring the swirlini crowd under control. A total of 52 indlviduala were arrested on charges ranging from refusal to disperse to assault with a deadly weapon. Polic:e e.!l.tmate about 3,000 persons in the mob at its height of fury. Five Hun- ftngton. Beach policemen suffered in· juries, m09t.ly minor. A d.image count given today by JY.ays ahows about $1,000 worth of damages 10 five polict vehicles, an uncounted amount Reds Get Reinforcements For New Drive on Saigon SAIGON (AP) -Enemy foms nortlnrett lll Saigon .,. ,.utng . rtln- forcemenll •nd supplies, posalbly kit a new offensive, U.S. military spokemitn reported today. ' They said the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong suffered heavy losses in the of. fensive launched Feb. 23, despite 1 reluc· tance to commit large units to battle. The offensive has been in low key for ~veral Jeeks. 1 • ·}"They are oow holding meetings, ssing what they've accomplished. anrung new actions," said an of rim in d Military Corps :r.one that stretches Saigon to the Cambodian bordtr. •"Based on intelligence reports, in- 1 Pr. Teller Due • For Coast Talk dications are that a sumnu.1·-autumn type olfeosivt ls in the wind for ~the 3rd Corps.·· Enemy activity dropped off sharply last week in the 3rd Corps, the most critical of South Vietnam 's four corp! areas because it includes the capital of Saigon. htilitary analysts have noted a new enemy strategy over the past two weeks. Spokesman said the enemy ii keeping rorward one regiment from each of its rour maln divlsklns to m1intain some pressu~ on allied units. They add that the other regiments are kept near the Cambodian border to be resupplied and reibfort:td. AnaI,.u 1ee no immediate threat to SaJcm frun tht four divisk>n!, tht North VI-.-Ill and 7th ond the Viet Coog Sth and 9th. The tth Is believed now to conaUJt largely of North Vietn1mete. With perbops IO.OIO IO 40,000 troops, the dlviakml are It.rung along I D arc TUMl.ng ' from northwe.st of Saiaoo to the JFamed nuclear physicl.st Dr. Edward northeast. Most an: concentrated near 1"U... will s]lNk on "'Ille AntJ.lllllilti<I U. Cambodlao llord(r, where they ean be Missile ~" ~ -II ... uy r<OUPPli<d. 11\e C.mbodiao buN tit! Newporttr tnn ln Newport Beach. a.re off limit! to allied forces,. !lie wilt spuk lo the World Al11Jrs The Communist eemmand'1 stratqy ~il lll Orang• Count~. , ...... 10 be aimed It lllleJltna •tllcis tor. Teller made lipllllcant """ • and baruslnl 1Uied troops ~nitel1 t.Abutions to the dtAl&n of the workl.'1 while nqotlafora bar&ain In Paria. They ~ atomic and h)'d"'l'ft bombt. Cur· are counlina oo American tmpatltnce ot !ti}' he is aMOdate dirttt.or of borne with growtna U.S. cuuatties. Wttrtt Radiation Laboratory at UC U.S. htadquartm report mott than keley. 1,00D Amerk:ans killed rn tht nine·weelt or reservations to the dinner and tali, oftmsivt, bu( al10 claim tht tnemy bu t epbon< -· loot lt.000 killed. of damage to the police substation {no\v boarded shut and unusable), and $1 ,689 in expenditures · for overtime pay to the 56 e1tra Huntiagton Beach officers used Sunday. .. Sunday's action was an extension of youth 's rebellion against authority.'' said Mays, "ii shows up in schools and with parents also. "But 1 can't eiplain why il happened Sunday and not some other day." , Earlier at Monday night 's council session, Jooeph Ferm, leader or the Hun- tington Beach Property Owners Protec· live Leagae, declared, "There is a grow· ing concern in the community about the ability of the city to deal with the beaeh problems." Green Elected New Mayor In Huntington N. John V, V. "Jack" Green is the new mayor of HunUngton Beach. He wu elected to serve a one-year term unanimously Monday night by his fellow councilmen. George McCracken was c h o s e n unanimously lo serve as mayor pro tem for the one year term. Both took office immediately. For Green. election lo the city'a highest office from his vice mayor's position Is in marked contrast to the blUer disap- poinbnent of his failure to be elected to the post last AprU. Green and his followers also suffered a bitter defeat in 1965 when their bid to divide the city into councilmanic dist.rids was rejected by voters. Rebounding from lbat defeat, Grem organized a committee which pushed for and obtained voter approval ol a new city chatter prepared by a special committee cam-largely lll pet'tOlll op-10 Green's origjnal effort on behllf of coun- dlmllllc dlstrictl and dir<Ct •loc:Uon of the mayoc. Green is in I.be I.hint ytar ol his first foar.year tetnl on the cooncil. His cur~ rent ~nn ends In 1970, aJon, with fellow councilmen Alvin M. Coen1 from whom -Green ~ taking the gavOI, Or. Henry Koufman and Ted Bortlttt. The ne.w mayor ls with 1 lfuntlng\on s .. ch real mate firm. c.... ond his wife, Marty, have flvt chlldren. McCrackep Is a builder and ls com. plOlinl his nm yeor .. the council, • hospital in Orange, uses his four · passenger Beechcraft for nolhing but the sheer joy of flying, and lhe sheer con. vcrtience of being able to \lacation in San Francisco or Las Vegas or San Diego at the spin of a prop. "My brother took lessons while I 1''1S in the Army," sajd Schrotr, "and he took me up once when I got oot. Then I got the bug." lt's a cosUy bua:, the Bonarua. In 1960, when it was built, it was $40,000. Then, Schroer took 50 hours of flying lessons. which are now about $.10 per hour. to get his first license. Before he get.s his in· strumenl rating, he'll take another 30 hou rs of Jes.soos. Maintenance, he figures, costs $18 per hour of flying time, in- cluding gas and tiedown fees . The monthly tiedown fee, or space rental, depen':ls on \\'hether the plane is on the fi eld ($10 to $15), maintained outside by a company like Becchcraft or ~lartin ($25), or in a hangar ($75). Airplane owners are a lot like b<Hlt owners. As they stride toward their planes, they become increasingly jaunty. "Please don 't photograph that wing.'' Schroer told a photographer. "The paint's a little ch~pped." UCI Faculty Won't Fi~ht ...... Rebel Students By TH0Pt1AS FORTUNE OI lfl• D&llY 1'1191 lllff Leaders ot"tbe UC Irvine faculty, after consulting with the chancellor, have dec ided against any show of force Thur~ day when students are eipec.led to crash a closed Academic Senate meeting. If students proceed to disrupt the session by talking without recogn!Lion, as they did last week, Chainnan Kenneth Ford plans to recommend that the Senate again adjourn. Thus Ford and the 18-member Senate e1ecutive committee are prepar«I to let students win another victory to avoid a confrontation that could lead to arrests. The continuing student protest! are over firing of assistant professors Stephen Shapiro and Donald Brannan and the threatened dismissal of a third assis- tant professor, George Kent. After Ford gaveled a halt to last week's Academic Senate meeting, s t u d e n t disaidentJ shouted, "We 'll be back." The only difrerence this week will be a aign on the door declaring the meeting closed lo all but five student represen· tatlves. Jt is geoeraUy conceded student dissidents, probably numbering 50 or more, will Ignore it. By ignoring the sign students will violate unlversHy rules, but in these situations disciplinary action almost n ever is taken without warning. "There will be no effort made lo restrain anyone from entering nor to eject anyone who comes in," Ford said. The executive committee, made up or chairmen of Academic Senate standing committees, met Monday with Chancellor Daniel Aldrich Jr. and Dean of Students Robert Lawrtnet and came to the no e... forcement decision. Ford aald he wi ll not use the authority of the chair to adjourn the meetinj:. He will leave tt up to the profesMirl after passing on the execuUve committee's recommendatlon to adjourn If the 51.udents persist. "If a majority of faculty memben present wish to conllnue meetlng with full !ludent participation we will do ao, '' he SAid. Mexico Wants Con MONTERREY, Mexlco (\JPI) -Met· lco IOek the first stop Mond•Y In the leaal procea ol asklnl Ibo United Statu IO return Dykes Askew Simmons to the Mfxlcan priaon from whk:b be e1t1ped l"'o week.I ago. l MLY HI.OT · 3 at ·FLIER DUNKIN SURVEYS COCKPIT'S ARRAY OF DIALS Busint11 Tripi •nd en Occ1slon•I V•c•tion The pride Is justified. Anyone who Is willing to put out all that cash and all that time and all that energy deserves, at least. a sense of uhilaration. And it's there. Dubbed "The Red Barone~" by her colleagues at Martin Piper, ahe can and does teach all kinds of nytng to all kinds of people. Her students range from begin- ners to former flying aces who haven't flown since World War II. Pleasure fliers start at these schools (there 's another operated by Mission Beechcraft), as do prospecUve airline p i I o t s. Requirements for commercial airlines vary, but all requi re a com· mercial license before training on the big planes. Tig began fly ing after she was married and her children were in school ... , got t.he bug when l was eight years old," she said. "l saw a Douglas Fairbanks movie about flying, and that was that. I just had to do it. My parents told me that ladies don't fly." But the lady did fly, learning in Rich· mond, Va. She became an Instruct.or later on. "!l's fairly easy to get a leachlng job, because there's a big turnover. A lot of men teach flying for a while to ac-- cumulate hours for their commercial license6. Then they go to the airlines." Tig as.id that a lot of professional men ny to relax. "Flying's very gentle," ahe said. "There's no pushing, no strain. To turn, you move the stick a tittle bit lo lower the wing. Then you move tt back. It's not like driving a car. You can Oy for ejgbt hours, and never get tired." "What if you crash?" she wu aaked. "You don't just fall out of the sky. U yo11 . run out of fuel, you can jwit glide don and look for a place .o land. The Piper has a nine-to-one glide iatio. That means you have nine m:ilet to pick a spot," she explained. Did ahe ever have to pick one? Tig chuckled ruefully. "Wben I had my first student, the fuel line broke. I landed in a pasture outside of Richmond, Virginia.· next to a cow." To a non-flying reporter, the first trip' in a small plane was a mind-bending ex- peri~. In three minutes, we were over the ocean. looking at the blue water of • Newport Bay, and , in the distance, lhe 1 smog over Los Angeles. It was like bein& suspended in time as well a.s ~· Tig summed it up: "When you)': an the ground, there's a lot of pressurt and 1 stres!. Then you get up here, and it all ' seems so unimportant'' s~ooped Away Ice Cream Trucks Disappear Three Ice cream trucks, those musical contraptions that crawl through city streets, have vanished in Garden Grove. No crime has been committed, ac· cording to police. Freddie Briscoe, 25, manager of Fred- die 's Ice Cream. 10$31 Acacia St., reported to officers that I.he trucks and drivers disappeared over a period of four days between April 8 and 12. Investigator Gene Herber of the Garden Grove Police Department said, ''No crime has been committed because Brisco gave the trUCk.s to the drivtra to use.'' ·' Herber said Briscoe, in a cmfennce Monday with district attorney's in- vestigators, reluaed to file embezzlement complain ls. Briscoe said the drivers had all giwn the same address, 13050 Nel9on St. and had worked for him less than two month!. He valued the trucks at $5,000 in all and said each was loaded with ice cream worth $120 wholesale. Reagan Praises Christian Schools for Morality Role Christian schools today are a literal f\.1aginot Line of resistance in a revolullon seeking to hack at the very moral values of American youth, Gov.' Ronald Reagan deelal'ed Monday night in Anaheim. Speaking to nearly 6,000 delegates to the 1969 Spring Rally of the California Association of Christian Schools, the governor even urged a federal incom~ tax credit for parents sending children to parochial schools. "We have attempted to shield our youth from Such things 1s morality," the governor said in bis Anaheim Convention Cenler speech, "all that has resulted in the loss of the meaning of responsibility." "The world is hungry for morality," he continued. "That's why we v.·ait lor yuu to take your place in higher education," he ad- ded, "people have confldence in your system." "At least God is not dead on your am- puses," be declared. Gov. Reagan said Christi.an schools - wllh a statewide enrollment of 281000 pupils -are paceseUen in the field of education and actually force public sch ools to compete for e1cellence. "Where were we when I.he decision to banish God from our publ1c schools wu handtd down?" he a1ked charg1na that prayer and morallly ha ve been banished and now raw tel educaUOl"I without a moral framework is proposed. Gov. Reagan continued to aa, thal the Percy Backs Bradley LOS ANGELES IAP) -R<publtcan Sen. Charla l'<r<)' ol llllnols, In Loo Angeles to conler wilh m1yoraJ candidate TI1omaa Bradley, uyo he'• not ollldally endorllng Drodfq but he thlnu bt allould be moyoc • present day finds American aec:ietJ undergoing a basic erosion of morality, cit.ing. crime among youth, cheating on in· come lu: and campus twmon. Drugs Said Cause Of Girl's Death Santa Ana police have tentatively llsttd tbe cause of death lo a tf.year-old girl whose body was found Monday momU. to an overdose of narcotits, pending t<n:· icological tests by the Orange County; Coroner's Office. The body of Glenda Lea Kaminut, mother of a two-month-old bliby, waa found by Mrs. Eliz.abelh Casler of 1W Sullivan St. at 8: 15 a.m. The address ls less than a block from lht girl's home at 1342 Sullivan. Mrs. Alton Gntprt, -fll u. lirl. said she left holnc •bout 10:45 SUncia)I night to go IO a nearby lloR. Mrs. Gol~ut and her husband INl'Ched lar the.r d•Ulhter Ill night Ind llnolly reported her missing at $ a.m. Soviets Fire Miuile With Multi Warheads WASHINGTON (AP) -'Ille P..,._ reported toc\ay tho Sovkt urn..·1 Iliad ol 1 big SS9 mlatle whh multlplo werhtadl ooared •bout 1,500 mlloa clon the Sovie! Pedlk: tOllin& ,..,.._ · Thia mew thal the rmattl-meptan weapon his at teut tho llrtklnc ._ Ill tbe first Air Force Minuteman m· SC' ~ed by Ille llnlled Silts la-~ F , -~ ......... ,.. ..... , Aller the lllfl Orecon Leglliature turned down a proposal to build a mansion for the iovemor •t Salem, It authorized the capii.it Planning Commlsaion to accept:CSlls !or such a house. The commission later re- Potled a total collodion of ,IS. • A trio from the Fairmount Park U-...,i!mbinf unit scaled a !ZS.fool granite cliU near Philadelphia to clear it of loose toock and stones that had threatened passing cars on.the drive below. When a repor· ter called to one of the cliff climb- er1,. as.kine if he had volunteered for the ticklish job, the man re- plied, after a conference with the others : "What do yoU think?" • \V hat in the world could cau.!t. these normally lovt!y sorority girl.! to fight for position in a muddy bath· tub? Nothi11g but the University of Colorado Sigma Chi Dtrby Mud Divt . The mud eve11t was ;ust 011e of i evtrol zany and mtssy contests. • FLags /Lt.w on public buildings 1, and royal gun salutes wert fired i Monday to mark Queen Eliza· • beth l l's 43rd birthday. With her ~· husband, fhe Duke of Edin· !l burgh, the Queen spent the day I at Windsor Castle, 40 milrs west of London. She had 110 public en· _ ~ gcgemt.nt.Y. Public celebration of ~ " the birthday comes in June wht'n there U less Likelihood of bad weather spoiling the mili- tary TetMw th.at is the high point of the occasion. , • Actor Henry Fonda, actresses Anne Baxter and Cerol lynley and Police Chief Thomes Reddin \Viii be auctioneers in a five-day benefit .sale for a Los Angeles television station which started Monday. The station is educational, noncommer· cial KCET. Items donated for the marathon auction include Merlo Thomas • sun glasses , one of Eve Arden's hats and a bikini from Barbra Streisand, Tutsd11, Aprll 22, 1969 Costs to Rise? • Welfare Roi ng- • ' To Hurt State From W1rt Strvlctt SACRAMENTO -The Su pr em e Court's decision to Invalidate residency requirements for welfare recipients will hiie welfare costs in CaUfomia, say several state officials. Monday's decl&ion came. as California , appealing a year-old federal court ruling , was seeking to have its own residency provisions reinstated. The decision seemingly doomed the ap- peal to the Supreme Court, whose action specifically dealt with the laws of eon. neeticut, Pennsylvania and the DiJbict· of Columbia but ·wu applicable to ilmUar recuJation.s in about to stat.es including Premier Asks Concessions In Irish Rotv BELFAST, Northern lreland IUPI\ - In a desperate bid to avert possible civil war in Northern Ireland Premier Terence O'Neill appealed to his Unionist party to- day to grant major concessions to the Catholic-led civil rights movement. The reaction of his Protestant-<lominated par· ty was cool. O'Neill's struggle with his party follow- ed another night of violence in Belfast where police clashed with youthful demonstrators who hurled stones and Molotov cocktails at police stations. Both O'Neill and Irish Republic Premier Jack Lynch were seeking In· terviews with British Prime T\1inistcl' Harold Wilson, but British officials said th.is afternoon it was not yet known when they would come to London. The wave ol rioting which swept tho towns and cities of Northern Ireland la st weekend. precipitated the worst crisis sin· ce Ireland Iouiht Britain for freedom SO years ago. Roman Catholics in Protestant Northern Ireland led many of the demonstrations in a drive for civil rights, Irish style. They say current laws discriminate against them and ha ve taken to the streets to back their demands few change. The Unionist party adjourned an emergency session without giving its con- stnt to the introduction of "one maa. one vote" in locat,elections -the issut which has been al ttie Center of the six months of violence in Northern Ireland. The party was to meet aga in Wed· neSday to resume discussion of lhe issue. Immediately a new political crisis blew up in the capital with political circles speculating that O'NeHI and his home af- fairs minister , Robert Porter, would resign if the party opposes them on th is issue. * * * California. tn W ashingtol'I Sen. G t o r I e Murphy (~if./, r~ ' to t h e Supreme Court's dectaSon, today In· lrodul:ed leg~lal!on wi4er which the federal governmeot would pay the cost of those added to the·well"are rolll. Murphy said, "If the government wants to impose its wUJ on the states in this fashion, it is incumbent on the federal goverment to bear the C061 ol additional payments which will have to be. made." Spencer Williams, -head ol the ~tale's Human Rtlations ~, and State Welfare Director John Mont1<1mery both I ~=nuD~~·~~.are cosb Both said that since the federa1 court overturned tht state'.1 resldeocy re-- quirements a year aao, more than 3,000 persons have joined the welfare Tolls. 'J'his, they said, h8.s hiked welfare aist!I by $26 million this fi:ical year and will raise them by an estimated $35 million In the next fiscal yea;. \Villiams said he was "gravely con· ccrned by the decision" and envi sioned weJrare recipients "moving to California solely to obtain highe r w e I f 1 r e paymen ts.'' But Sacramento County Welfare Direc· tor William S. Hay said any major in· crease in the size of California's well are rolls would probably be caused not by the Supreme Court ruling but by the wide publicity it would receive, * * * Police Power Cut In Supreme Court Ruling on Arrests WASHINGTON IAP) -The Supreme Court today cut into the power ot police to make arrests for the sake of in· vestigation. In a 6-2 ruUng. the cou rt said a judge'll permission must be given before a suspect is seized to ht fingerprinted. The decision upset the conviction of a 1-4-year>()Jrl Mississippi Negro boy in the rape of an 86-year-old white woman. It found his fingerprints should not have been used at trial. Once again. Justice Hugo L. Black dissented, scoring his colleagues for ex· panding the protection of the Fourth Amendment. He satd they should cut it back to what he called its intended size and ''make: our cities a safer place for men, women and children to live." The Fourth Amendment gua rantees citiicns security "against unreasonable searches and sei:mres." The court found police are subject to its "constraints·· when they obtain fingerprints for use as evidence. •Gi'1'e Der a Kiss~ • Parliament Welcomes Cute Neivcomer LONDON (UPI) -Britain's youngest woman parliamentarian in hi.story was welcomed into the House of Commons to- day with cheers and shouts of "Givt her a kiss !·· Bernadette Devlin, 22 tomorrow , !ltniled mischievously at front benchers as she entered the house to take the oath of of· !ice and sign the members' roll. Wearing a royal blue coat and blue and white scarf, the diminutive Miss Devlin appeared nervous at first but relaxed as I~ouse Speaker Horace King held her hand and chatted with her. Laughter rang out as King kept holding Miss Devlin 's hand . "It is out or order for the house to be jea lous','' King said with a grin. In her maiden speech, Miss Devlin blamed htr country's civil rights tur· moil on "a society of landlords." She told the packed and hushed house, "The people of Northern Ireland are being oppressed. not only by ~ Tory government. but by a corrupt, bigoted and self-interested Tory government with whom the Tories in this house should be ashamed to associate themselve~." Gale Winds Rip Lake Area National High of 99 Registered at Buckeye Cafltondw A slof"' tfftltnod owr the Gro1! l i kes -.,. Ctr1!l""" t& 1 rll0\A:t Nlol form wind$ IM!t /1 wloSto 11r11. Wtf tl\CIW IM' Aid r1!11 ,..II I" l\0111\. ''" Mld!f1111 1"11 sl>o_.,t1 •~!tl>CIMI e11tw1rd lo ,.. A1l111tlc: St11H. Pft• '"'"''*' 1"-llll. 11o..,.,,, ---'""'!. The ......,,lnclfr d Hie t.u"trv lltd -"· _., *'" wllll • "'"' "' ~ 1lr Hvtrlllf 11\t 119r!ll (fftlr1I Shi•. l<r C011lr1tl _,,.. 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Titles TU•SDA'I' 1'"11"11 llw ':• 1 m, 11 W•DN•JDAT" Fl"! flle~ , lt!ll 1.m. 4_t Flr11 lo* ITW 1.M. t.I Meell llw1 I; .. t ""'· le"' 14'1'1 111111 l :U 1,m. $tit 1;1' 11,m. IJlr'tl •• 1'"111! l,.111 0, N•w 4 •r.l• ..... ,., M11<rl M••lf = lCIS ANGfl•S AHCI VICI NITY- CIMHIV llltl\I ll'MI Pftfl"llffM le "rtlV 11111111 11 .. ,_ Wt0Mlod1<r Sl!Ofl~ ~afto< mor111nt d•IUlt ..-Cll lho IOOI• Mii 1 ... 1. l o-IOll!tM ti, ~ltfl Wtll- 1\qd•J "'· (OAITAl ANO 1NT1!:.llMEOIATE V.t,LLE'l'S -Ctoud• "''"~ 111111 ,.,....,. "'9 I• Mfll<r IUllnJ 1!~--l9" il)lll..,t Jl lo 5fi Hlt~I 1'1"91\t"'-'¥ •1 .. "- MOUNTAIN Att f•S -Lew clollcl1 f l\O I0(1I dllllt '" •Hint COlll•I 1ie..1 "WI! 1N "'°'"illt wllll •tt· 1111 1llf,,_ tlt'ttll\f WMl,.,.M11 11111 """"'" ~--. ...... ""'. 11\0 """"'" 11o1>n. 1N711U01t ANO DESEltT llEOIONI -S-W~v lOCl llV WllMI¥ ""''"" ,,,.,_ '"" '"'"r"" -""' MOit~ De1trt 1N I" 1'1fnl 1Hr111t\o ..... • ,,. •• l-...,lt~l Ml I! ,. ~ ,,.,.,., M lo ti ~, ••II~,, Nfrl!I il'llllt °'~'-""' °"'"' .. 1\0 ltllfl'•• .... 11 . ..,..1111:. "'-h il'lnJti1.or'~ Port11"11 ltt•fd City ""' l lu" ·-S1c••-1110 ~-l.ull S•!11111 5.111 lallt C•I~ s111 o~ ft" fl'rl "CIK4 S1nt1 &1rDl>r1 lf''1lil! '"""',,.. T"'''"•I WH~ll\~P~ .... ,, '° " .. ·"' ll )J •J ,, • • . " ll .. ,. . " •I 11 .DS n " ... " " . ~ • tt " " ... 71 JI I I JI H " '' SJ " " ., 11 .... ,, j& l'tl .; i/, ~. ;; . . ,. ""'' ........ BATTLESHIP NEW JERSEY STOPS IN YOKOSUKA, JAPAN, AS U. S. SAILq RS WATCH World 's Only Active Battlewagon Ready to Lend Its Muscle to American Armai11 Off Korea \ Where To, New Jersey? Big Battleship Sailing Home or Toward Korea? From Wire Services YOKOSUKA, Japan -The battleship New Jersey left Japan today for an un· disclosed destination after a seven-hour visit. A U.S. Navy spokesman declined to say if the 56,000-ton battleship was headlng for the Sea of Japan to join a U.S. task force to protect American spy flights of! North Korea. He said the New Jcrsty had arrived for "logistics support.'' or to pick up more fuel and supplies, The Pentagon in Ne 'W Protests Form at East Uni versitiPs By United Presa International The can1puses of Purdue and Columbia Universities were hit by student stri kes tOOay. At Purdue more than 7,000 students, angered by a proposed tuition increase. boycotted classes. Al Columbia in Nev.· York City the Students Afro-Ameri can Society tSAS) began what was billed as a "mas c; evaluation'' of the campus to press demands concerning a black educational program. The student strik:e at Purdue was placid in comparison to a noisy rally and two sit-Ins Monday al the Lafayette, Ind., school. The Columbia SAS said the evacuation would last until noon Wednesday and ask· ed all students to stay off campus. There \Vas no immediate way of telling how er • fective the evacuation la ctic was. Purdue ·s student government rented the Elliott Hall of Music for panel discussions on the increase. estimated to cost the school's 24,000 students an ad. ditional SS.million a yea r. Indiana Gov. Edgar Whitcomb, \\'ho proposed the higher fees to avoid a general tax Increase, refused an in· vitation to partici pate in one of th~ panels. However, the sc hool's president sa id he would try lo attend . In Washington, D.C., more than 250 stu· dent body presidents and co 11 e g c newspaper editors from schools across the nation declared in a statement "thei r Intention lo refuse induction" into military service until the "immoral and unjust" Vietnam war ends. "We will not serve in the military 1s long as the war in Vietnam continues." the presidents and edilo(s said in a state· ment released by the National Student Association. Black and Puerto Rican youths at the f.Oulh campus of the City College of New York locked the school"s gates and refus· ed lo admit students and professors who arrived for classes. The youths said they \\•ere seekinJ? "open adm ission policies ." Pol ice arrived with chain cutters and op!!ncrl one of the gates. But the pro- testers stood shoulder·to-shoulder, block· ing the entrance. and the police made no effort to pierce the line. On Mondav confrontations were stirred up by the ·s1upents for a Democratic Society at Harvard and Princeton UniversitiC.'I , and Cornell University, after a wild weekend in \Vhich armed students seized cootrol of the student center, banned firtarms from th~ ca.m· pus. Santa Barbara to File 'C haraes' Over Slick " SANTA BARBARA CAP) -Dbl. Ally. David Pi11nier says his office will file criminal cl\ar1e.s against the oil com· panies responsible for a huge oil slick formed in the Santi Barbara Channel in January and February. "Even If we lose," Minier said ~looday. "It is our Intent to file criminally agai.Mt the oil companle!! for the oil that ls now on the surr1ce of the water and on our beaches and rocks." Washington said she was en route home. The New Jersey was on her way home to Long Beach, after six months oU Viet· nam when she was diverted back to the western Pacific after North Korea shot down a U.S. plane April 15. But a Defense Department spokesman Jn Washington in· dicated Monday that the world's only bat. tleship in active service would not join th e task force in the Sea of Japan. He said he anticipates the New Jersey "\\'ill be coming home," a I t h o u g h he di tin 't say when. Communist China criticized the Sovitt Union today for helping the United State. search for wreckage and survivors ol the dov.'ned plane. The official New China News Agency U.S . ..SOv\et Colliision." When the United States asked for help, NCNA. said, the Russians "obedlently and promptly took action in compliance with the 'request' of U.S. imperialism." "The Soviet revisionist renegade clique has once again fully revea le_d its ugly features as an accomplice and servant of U.S. imperial}Sm," it concluded. UPI T""""'9 STUOENT GIVES OWN VERSION OF HARVARD SIT·IN Protesters Urging University Sever Ties With Mllftary Red Chinese Ambassador Returns to Paris Talks PARIS IUP I) -Communist China Is sendin,1? Its ambassador to France back to Paris lo keep an eye on the Vietnam talks. French diplomats said \Oday. The amba ssador, Gen. Houang Ohen, has been in China the past two years. His imminent return to Paris refltcU Pek· lng's growing interest in the outcome ~f the peace negotiations, Asian diplomatic sources uid. 4 Social Aides Picked To Accotp pany Tricia WASl!INGf()N (UPI) -·Four Whltv House soc.lal1aldes will be Tricia Nixon's · royal escorts~when she is crowt¥d Quttn of the Ai.ale.I FestJval •t Norfolk, Va. this Wffk. 'Ibey are Marint Maj. Bl Larkin Splv~ Jr.. C1pt. Jayle l'i. Lawrence an(, Lt. Richard M. ~lurpl\J. bolh of the Anny, 'and Navy Lt. Ro!Mtt D. Nichol. Tricia 8nd her party will arrive in Nnrfolk Wtdnesday. CorDC'lalloo wilt be Saturday. T\lao Tse-lung's r e g I m e has ur"1:d North Vietnam not to compromi~ wit- the Americans at the con fel"f!nce tablf!. Peking Radio recently applauded Com tr.I.II.isl demands that have aintribute4 U stalemating the talks. Ghen was called home in 1967 durint the cultural revolution domestic crllis His return here may indicate that trocbh is over and China once more will an ttntrate on roreign 1rfairs. w 1',f particular . interest on its VietMn /ntipbor, tbe diplomatJ said. I I Brftisb Royal Fa1u47 'fo See NATO ShiJlti NORFOLK, V•., IAPI -~ Eil.,.beth U al Br1uln and t.er husl>ojld Prince Phillip, have agreed to revlew1&t naval veue1l of 12 NATO nations _pn Portam0uth, England. on May 16 -.,aeu ann i'icrsary of the we.stern alliance. 1 Announ cing this ~londay. htadquartrn of the Supreme Alli~ Command All1nt if 11ald the royal couple would carry o~ UH review from their yacht, Britannia. 1 ""' ' I • . . . • .. :.11 ( ' ' " ., •<If .... ;niir '-t'tT I , ~Q I ' ... • • t " • . , ' ' ' ' ' I I ~ ' ! J • ' ' ' • 6ClOJ T..-.y, 4'"' U. IHt \. .... 1; ' , . ' I 'Bes\t 1 • .. F ri · ·rid' l . • ! It's a good thing diamonds, not dogs, bre a girl's best friend . If the situation were reversed, what ·would Riviera Club members t .... ve to replace their glamorous Diamond Ball? A Canine Caper or Fido's Frolic would hardly be the same. Luckily, things are the way tqey are, and paying respects to the month of the precious diamond, members will present their glittering annual event in the Balboa Bay Club next' Friday. A g o u r m e t champagne dinner and dancing to the strains of Milt \Vashburn's orchestra have be!!n planned !or the traditional gala by Mrs. Jim Allen, ball chairman. She and committee members wilr receive the 150 anticipated guests and show them to tables for 10 centered by white blossoms. Her assistan.ts include the Mmes. Ritchie Wilson, Bob Miller, James Martin, Vasco Batscbwaroff and Robert de Ford. The cocktail hour at 7 p.m. will be followed by a bot and cold bullet, featuring seafoods and roast beef. Black tie is optional. 0Rivierans and their husba.ids hosting tables grouped· around the dance floor will include the MesVs. and Mmes. Harry Lowe of South La .. guna, Gill>Ort Hodges of Corona ~i Mar and James Martin and Bob Miller, both o~Lall/"'." Beach. ;;;·, •. . . ;.'.. Otber table hosts. an4 ho sses will be the Messrs. and Mmes; \~Qck Lyons, Watson Jarrett and A ut Briggs of South Laguna, John~ of-. Costa Mes$ and Peter saitamacl\io of Laguna Beach. / 1,f; • , ·~ More Laguna ~ach re~dents entel"UU:ni.ng at tables will be IA: ~ot. a.nd Mrs. A. Harry Pisegna, Q>i. and Mrs. William Roley and Col. and l\lr•· Will Tubbs. rl ~ -. Details regarding -reservations may be obtained l>Y calling Mrs. Allen at 494-1810. =---~= '' ~; OAtL Y ,.ILOT l"Mtl !rt 1.M f'l 7M 'YOU ·CAN HAVE THE DOG' -Who needs furry frie:Ma when they've got diamonds to keep them warm! Mrs. R~m'i Chabot enjoys a girl's best friend, while her husi.nd niust:content himself with Dolly, (man's best friend ). However Riviera Club members are willing to share a Diamond Ball with their hu sbands. . . .· ~ .:.. . . .. ... . ' .. T Is for Thanks Patronesses Adopt Spirit of Generosity Patronesses, generous fi nancial supporters of the Adoption Guild of Southern Orange County, will be gratefully thanked for their con- tributions during a tea Monday , April 28, in the Newport Beach home of Mrs. John W. Klug. • • Funds raised by the guild through patroness donations and by the major event, a tennis tournament and ball, benefit the Holy Fam-• '-... iJy Adoption Service of Orange County which handles adoptions for CHECK LI ST -As patronesses arrive at a thank you tea, to be given by the Adoption Guild of South- ern Orange County, they will be greeted by Mrs. \Yalter R. Gayner (left), tea chairman and Mrs. James w. Hlnes Jr_., Pftroness chaihnan. one of the patrooesses to be bd\fDred is Mrs. William Rabbitt who receives a wann'Welcome from the planners. all denominations. The second largest private adoption agency in Cali- fornia provides care for both the. baby and natural mother. Honored guests include Miss Agnes Blomquist and the Mme!. Bewley AJl~n, Dwight Anderson, Robert Beauchamp, William Holstein, Myford Irvine, Dana Latham, Richard Nabers, Denis Sullivan, wu ... Jard Voit, John Wayne, Carl Neisser, Jack Wrather. Paul Connally, Paul Burchette, William Stabler, Kendall Knight, Robert Lynch, Larry McDonnell and William Rabbilt. Others are the Mmes. Joseph R06ener, William Scbollie, Cliarles Thomas, Charles Wheeler, Jean Bedell, Walter Seibert, Ralph Ander· son, William Barker, Fred Bice, Frank Brick, R. S. Callender, Joseph Dulaney, William Farnsworth, Charles Franklin, Warren Gibbon!!', Allan Grubb, Kenneth Hartley, James Rines Sr., Kenneth Holloway and William Moseley Jones. · SWI others are the Mmes. Melville Keim, John Kel sey, Jean Loubet, William Moen, J . Howland Paddock, Hubert Rouselle, Bayard Ryder, Byron Tarnutzer Jr., William Thompson, Robert Crowner,, Malcom Cutler and Harold Devick. Tea chairman is Mrs. Walter R. Gayner and patroness cbai'ri- man ls Mrs. James W. Hines Jr. Cuckoo College Campu·s Cap.ers Cause .~of Consternatid fi .. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have the -••-II a ...U --'of home from.the RrVlce. No...,,.,,.., Just Mite..,.,, ''Tliey 111.-•-la~ feeling that I've fallen asleep and die ....._ bitty. 1'e .,....., IUt brother and lister lt\df, Well, an en-ty add&." ftere JS tr $' I.., Cll awakened in a slrange new world. I'm Ruka oaL tertalner got up and aana a 10f18 about do lbo.t tl wile• u.e,. _. idel tf ...._ not an old woman, Ann. I'm U. Yet I am how hll m .. lfriend wu JO flt that whtn 1-ii "-"'' ~. I .....1'--.... lolaUy unab~ to accept the weird DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am aettlnl they~ be had to man her ofl -' ~ "':..~ i;;";::. _. ... changes in our society that are golng so sick and Ured of crve.1 Joket about fat chalk to make ture he didn't mJa a spot. 1aap tt tff. almost unnoticed. people 1 could die. My slater 11 fat-not 1 coukf hive cnwled under the table. 1 "plwJnily plwop" or •·_.iy ..,. If you have trouble pllinc alone wllh Here ts a quoce lrom a UPI story: m0rt,' was lht explanation. One buhlul Whit do you hive to say about this, dowtd," _but plain. ordinary,~ Isn't it a shame that a .pretty fue:and your parents .. ,tf you can't pt them ta "More than two dozen students. one a nmner was wearin& a sk1 mask. He Wd, AM Landers? -MARYLAND MY fat She 11 IUCh a t.errifit IJa'*l'1 and IO bfalnl aod pel'IOCl&llt:y ~ a lot of let you Jive )'OW' own life, llDd f<r A.Ill coed, sttttked through College Park 'I'd hate for my parents to find out about MARYLAND kind and wondlrfUI that it breaks m)' chartcltt a'ttit'l enough any more? A titl Landen' lxlokltt, "Buaed by Pan:n&a? carnpas wearing ~ sneakers. The cam· this. They wouldn't understand.• heart whenever IOO'lebodJ mUes 1 crack hu to have • figure or lhe'I nowhere. How To Gel More Freedom." Send a pus daily repited that lhe woman was DEAR MARY: N1kedaet1 also caa lat •bout her ll11t. She SJ::t doesn't Pleue MY SOl'Dething, Ann. cents: In coin wUh )'OClr reqoat ... a 1boul 5-feet.e inches tall, brown haired, 1'Folir or the sprinters who were aplut· the law. It h: caUed "iadecftt bother her -laugbJ louder anybody SKINNY BUT SYMPATHETIC long, stamped. 11U-addr!l!'llf ea'lllope. ind flat cheated. One of lhe males in the freshmen said It was an impenonal way •..-art.,, -but t know deep down er1 1 lot. pack said he was responding to a to be nude -lhal after a while nobody -...--.. DEAR SKINNY: Of c.wne,·· lt'a 1 AM Landers will be llad to ~Ip YC9 challenge rrom a friend . Four students even looked at anybody else. The coed or eo1rae dlete kids •rt t11tkoo. And Last nlaht a smaJJ group o( us 1ftnt to "1Ullt, bit fldl' are fiet.t, Nteety..... with ygur proWtQw. Seed 111m • .., ii said they took up Jaybird jogging because giggled and added, 'Nakedness can be Iii< Nte-i, "Nobody llDdlea ny a lrttle supper club. My ollter wu thtte fat people ... of '" ... fat bee-llley care of the DAIL'\' Pllm', entfosms 1 l lJIJ...!,,.,_,;;.,;,tbe,..ymwmem~;;;;;;bored;;,;, .... ·N·o•bod;,,,y•s•tud,.ie•smon.;;.;yiiiii•lu•n•.'m'm',,;,.;.;;.;,..;;.,o..,,;,.~.;..~,;:;,•m•on:;;,•.;;;11;e~v;kle:;:ac:e::;;;.;llll;pfli,::....:.:tkl;::1:1~1=«~y;;:;=w=l~::::1=:coull::.:;=n==w~i.,_::had:::=~j~ual.::::;r=e=tumed:::::::;~e~•=t ~tee==m=oc::;;:-~l nd:::.:,::.::11.,.,Dr~.~P~•~•~l ~~~-=y,...Es~l•~m~ped...,, .. l•l~.dd..,l<lltd,;,.~en~v-elo!oe~-·~!-'._:. , 3 • ----,,-.---r-~ ... 3 ,,. . . ' . . .. . . .. ' . ' ' . . '. . . . ... , ... . ~ .. ~.. . . J~,,#;.._,,_DAlo.l.:.V...:P.:ll::O.:.T ~-----_:T'_".ut~ld~a" AP<ll 22. 1,69 Kathryn ADderson Weds Horoscope Former 0 ~ , ~tudents To Say Vows 1n June In Costa Mesa. C~remony -Leo: Dine Out WEDNESDAY APRIL 23 lions as they actually exist Don't deceive yoursel! with wishful thinking. Budget con- Unues to require attention. Make adjustment -gain cooperation of mate. partner. I 'i rA June 21 wedding date bu ,been chosen by J u d y Kay JoneS of Los Angeles and Ran- dall H. Rolfe or Newport . Baskets ot white daisies and carnations ado!Ded the altlr of St. Joachlm'a Catholic Church when Kathryn Heleo Anderson became the bride of Scotl Montgomery Mather. The Rev. Thomas Nevin performed the double ring rfllpt.ials f o r the daughter of Mri .. Alice Cyr . of Newport Beach and WiUiam Anderson •of Co:1ta Mesa llJ]d the son of Mt. and Mrs. Leonard J. Matper of Long Beach. ~ Given to marriage by her ~j~I father. the ~de wore a gown of. aati.n with ~encon lace ap- phques, trimnied with sequil)S 89'1 seed pearl!. Her chapel :e :~ct"u caugl)I lo tbe ~~bubble 'veiling was held by <t fabric flOraJ headpiece and she c~ied white carna- tl.on~ and l oses. Sbe wore a cµamond cr01$,. a gm of her stepfather; the late Mr. Henry F. Cyr. Gowns fashioned with white ruffled lace bodices and nile green chiffon skirts and bou- qu~ts of white daisies were selected tor her attendants. Mrs. Rita Perkins of Cosla. Mesa Y.•as the matron of hon- or. while bridesmaids were Mrs. Ronald Pierce of Alham- bra, ~· David Carey of San Diego and Mrs. Richard ~enedict, the bridegroom's ..,.._ sister,_ ol· Long Beach. Bar- MRS. SCOTT M. MATHER · ·~ bara Mather, another sister o! Exchanges y.,,,, ·Rines ,... .:· ~ the bridegroom, was the flow--------=--'-e,;:,..:.=~-'----"'girl. . ·• , Atlendlnj the benedict as BARBARA SMITH To M•rry Summer Wedding Plans Set A June wedding is be ing planned by Barbara Smith and Air Force Lt. Daniel R. Clark, whose engagement has been announced by W.:r. and Mrs. Woodrow Smith of Huntington Beach, parents of the bride- elect. Miss Smith, who presently is teaching school ill Waianae Hawaii, is a graduate of Hun: tington Beach High School and Wh.ittier College. She' attended Coltey College, Mo., and did 8'6duate work,_ at the University of Hlwali. Her fiance, '111 <i the Rev. and Mn. Heri>ert W. Clark of Pueblo, Col., ls statiooed al Ellsworth AF Ba, S.D. By SYDNEY OMARfl RECREATION TIP ' Fine for dining out. Grea~ pleasure alto lndJcated browsln1( in an- tique 1bops. Lunar position to- day lavorable for fl shinc, plant.Ing. ARJF3 (March 21·Aprll 19): By attending to basic chores you bulld solld base .. Be prac: tical. Stick to proved pro- cedures. Take care o f necessities at home Cancer indJvidual of!ers sage advice -follow it. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Journey of short duration in· dlcated. Guard possessions while in transit. Acceiit is on what you say and wfite. Not w~se to make Jong-range com- mitments. Have fun torUght with ramily. GEMINI (May 21.June 20 ): CAPRICORN 1Dec. 22.Jan. 191: Higbllihl publle relatlon1. Be sure yOur statements art p r o p e r I y interpreted. Op- portunity for advancement ex- ists -but Y?U n~ coopera- tion . Know this and accept aid. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 • feb. 18); Finlsh job at ruindt:me try to distract you. Y are foolish if you qu.it now .1 ' I is in sight. Know lhl.S and res. pond aceordi~ly. Accelit on reward from task well ddne. PISCES (Feb. I~March120): Personal magnetism soars. Oppoliite sex is attra4ed. Pursue creative projects. Get out tonight -be with one who is stimulating. You make '"'.aluable discovery. Be percep- tive. · JUDY JONES Future Bride whose betrothal has been an- nounced by Mr. and Mrs. Sheppard R. J ones of Santa Ana, . parents or the future bride. Miss Jones attended Costa Mesa High School and Orange Coast College ·and was a song leader at both schools. The benedict-elect, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Rolfe of Newport Beach, is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and Orange Coast CoUege. After his J u n e graduation from UCLA, he will enter graduate school in hospila.I administration. Rolfe was active in crew at occ· and is affiliated with ·Theta Della Chi fraternity and Air Force ROTC at UCLA. The couple will exchange vows in Lutheran Church of the Master, Corona. del ,Mar. New starts in new directions prove profitable. Emphasize originality, independence of thought, act.ion. Fin a n c i a I return on recent effort is 1urprisingly good. CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Treasure Sought at Tea ·Aid could be sought by AR IES Unwrapped gifts or cash t ti ·11 individual. Be generous. You rac ons WI include a fashion will be repaid in more ways donations will be the key to show of clothes for ma ture than one. Follow basic in-the fifth annual Treasure Tea v.·omen from Lo is -p a u I sUncts. Cycle continues high. presented by St. M a r Y ' s Originals, Laguna Beach. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Be ltpiscopal Churchwomen of Mrs. Jack Lyons w i 11 versaUle. Don't feel there is Laguna Beach in the Lagun a d. •~ only one way to accomplish coor ina""' the show, and Niguel home of Mn. John B. me ber od ling tas~: Theater and dining out m s m e will in- tonight perk up spirits. Social Lawson next Thursday, elude the Mmes. Robert L. activity .acts as tonic. All interested women are in· Carter, Robert F. Schnitzer, VIRGO (Aug. 23.Sept. 22): vited to the 2 to 5 p.m. event Georgt: Cunningham, Chesley Accent on hopes, friends, at 32621 Sea Island Drive. At· Evans and Miss Edith Red.i t. O'Connell, Robert McCarter, Milton Chapman. Ralph R. Raymon d, William L. Ullom, John Chamberlin and Harry G. Parker. Club Hears Vice Mayor Spirit Convent'ion· 'Mardi Gras' Coloring best man Wu Robert Trout- man of Long Beach, while usher duties were assumed ·by Benedict, William Greenwood' of Lonf Beach , the French .Contest brid•sr90m's cousin. ··n<1 -Wr'nners Feted Pierce. John Mather ~ ~ridegroom's brothl..., w~s ~e wishes. Some obstacles can be Gifts collected at the tea overcome if persistent. Be will go into a special room Costa Mesa F e d e r a t e d with congenial pe rsons: dine T' G" during the group 's annual Republican Woinen's Club will out. Break rouline. Get new I pS I Ven thrift sale Wednesday, April gather for a general mttting lease -change ootlook. Be of 30, and Friday, May I, in the and a talk by Vice Mayor good cheer. F church at 42ll Park Ave. Robert Wilson . LIBRA !Sept 23-0ct. 22): or Beauty l\-1rs. Howard H. Adams, Mrs. Bruce \\'alters' home Jnitructions received tod4.Y. chairman, is assisted bv the in Costa Mesa will be the set- The color and excitement of Mardi Gras will prevail when Orange District California Federation o i FBEE Hickory Farms of Ohio HORSERADISH .SAUCE With 1 lb. of World Famous :em.mcK Hickory Fanni oi Ohio · DLEPANnlY CHEESE " ft'.~r:. •1.1s lli. -FBE:E JWWaC:EIPS Wllh lhe pvn:hue ol $3.00 a.,,t more at llt«"1 '8.!l!' wmrctnT 1.w.?!Cll TOWN l COUSTRr OAANGB J'.-..JtME:Rs MAR.KET LOB AHOSL.ES l'ORTS OF CAU.. VH.LACB 6AN1BDRO l'IDPOINT LANillNG l.DHODIACH 3 =· • Women's Clubs, J u n Io r Membership, stages its annual convention Friday and Satur- day, April 25 and 26. in the Disneyland Hotel, Anaheim. Registration at 9 a.m. will open the two-day session and M_rs. Gary Ratzlaf£, president, will gavel the meeting to order al 10 a.m. The morning agenda will in- clude introductions, a report by the nominating committee. presentation of candidates and election. · Luncheon at 12:30 p.m. will honor Mrs. James MCalla district president, c I u b pre ~i dent s, outgoing coordinators and s p eci a 1 guests. lfonored will be the Mmes. Jack Christensen, coordinator ; Adal e Lyons. DeAnza Junior District president; DeForest Cutler, state coordinator, and Douglas Brown, Area D vice president. Other honorees will include the Rev. Stanley Jones, and the Citizen-of-the· year, who will be announced.. Following the luncheon elec- tion results will be revealed, and the Mildred C o r b i t cooperation award will be presented. In charge of the program will be the Brea Juniors and the winning sex- tette. ring bearer. J~ - Attending the ~UOn 1h. the church hall <'we r .. e i5o wellwishers. Assisting \Vere Miss Becky Gunderson of San Diego, Miss Lynn Angle of Costa Mesa an d Mrs. Robert Omerod of Hun ti ng t on Beach. Special guests were the bridegroom's grandpar· ents. Mr. and Mrs. Carvel Erickson of Virginia, Minn .• Mark Montgome ry of Long Beach, and th e bride's broth- er, James Anderson of San Jose. After honeymooning in San- ta Barbara the bridal couple now are at home in Costa lt1esa. The bride is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and Orange Coa~t College and attended San Diego State College. lfer husband, a graduate of St. Anthony's High School, Long Beach, attended Long Beach City College and Nevada Southern University. Concert Follows Luncheon Alliance· Francaise · de la Riviera Calif~nienne w i I I me~ Friday, Api'il 25, ~t 8 p.m . in Lincoln School, Corona del M~r, !or the awarding of prizes 1n the French speaking contest. Georges Duca. executive secretary and Charles·Louis le Guern·, cultural attache to the French Embassy, will preside. Duca will discuss T h e Profile of American Youth as Seen by an European. add up to cha.nge or llSS!~·:. Learning about cosmetics Mmes. Robert L. Cornelison ting next Thursday at JO a.m. ment.. Be ~lex1ble. ~uper10~ will be the Harbor of Ho Baird B. Coffin. Donald H'. Tickets are $1 and a spaghetti observe actions, reac~io~s. Ac-Chapter for the City of J;fo= Arvold, . Schnitzer. Evans. luncheon will be served a.t cept added re~ponsibhty ·-next Thursday · th John W. Favour, Gordon noon. you can handle 1t. c l'f · 1" · e Forbes and Leighton French. All bl. SCORPIO (O"I 2J-Nov 21 1. a.1 ~rn1a Federal Savings Repu 1can v.·omen a.re ... · . building c la. M Others are the iv.mes. Lewis invited to aUend . Good lunar aspect today coin~ . -' os esa.. R. Gillette, William C. Kinder, ---------- cides with long-distance .Miss Kathy Occbi~grosso John B. Phillips, Orval Wileoo, messages. Keep in touch with will pr.esen t a~ Evening in John L. Mudge, Francis M. Now in Our family: family member. Harmonize Cosi;ietics_. A display of COS· Nau, Glen I. Suzzard, Robert rela tions with those close to melics will be available for Dameron, David Orr, Ted family Weekly you . Key is to be diplomatic. members and guests. 1----------------'----:__- SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 2!-The chapter raises funds for Dec. 21): See persons, situa-patient care at the ho!iJlila.I in Duarte, which is free and Presidents Called nonsecla.rian, designed to fight cancer. leukemia, blood and heart diseases correctable by surgery. For Annual Exchange / Six Assistance L e a g ·u e leaders from Newport Beach, Hwitington Beach and Laguna Beach chapters wUl attend the 11th annuai Pres Iden ts' Conference of Nati o n a I Assistance League next Thurs- day. represented by Mrs. Thomas H. Jooes, president, and Mrs. Williston Bradway. Registration at 9:45 a.m. will be followed by sessions on public relations, r e g i o n a I finances, a u x i I i a r y rela- tionship, importance of region- al alternate and way! and means activities. The conference takes place each year to bring chapter presidents up to date on NAL procedure, review expansion activities and discuss solutioos for problems that have arisen during the rapid growth of the Membership is open and ad· ditional inlonnatlon may be obtained by contacting Mrs. \Villiam Savage at 648-1917. ADPis Meet Wooien affillated with the Orange County A l u m n a e Chapter of Alpha DeltAI Pi will gather Thursday, April 24, at 11:30 a.m. in the Costa Mesa home ol Mrs. Ronald Barnett. Assisting 1..-with . hootess duties will be Mrs. Wilbur Allen. La Quinta High Scl»ol's foreign exchange students will talk. JC you Jong for foods of 1lmple and easy going daYJ, you'll find them in the cou_ntry 1tor1 atmosphere 8t Hickory Fmn1 of Ohio. The decor put• you in the mood of yesteryear. The friendly service is a delight To cele- brate, we offer thes~ tpecials e.nd invite you to visit Ulil ••••••• FBEE Hickory Farms of Ohio New ofricers will be in· st.ailed and a special ceremony will honor graduating Juniors during the evening program. Following the theme of the Unmasking, the Junior Women 's Civic Club of Garden Grove will conduct a tour as awards are presented. league. The Anne Banning Cool· mu nity House, home of Founder Chapter, Assistance League of Southern Californ ia, will be the scene of the gathering. Presidents and presidents.elect w i I 1 be welcomed by Mrs. Burton V. Collins. national president. Orange Coast members or Attending from Newport Lodge Meeting the Wom an's Auxiliary to the Beach chapter will be Mrs. 1 HORSERADISH SAUCE Ame ri can Society of Colin Reynolds, president, and Overeefers Trygve Lie Lodge 90, Sons of Mechanical Engineers, Los 1'1rs. Robert Crowner. first Norway, will meet next Thurs- Angeles Section, \viii be vic e president. Huntington Every Monday at 8 p.m. day at 7:30 p.m. in the among those attending a piano Beach delegates will be Mrs. members gather in Anderson American Legion Hall, Costa concert presented by Mary Norman Warner, president, Sc h oo I auditorium , Mesa, according to Leonard Spaulding Hense, pianist. and Mrs. Harold Buck, Silver Westminster, for meetings of Wolford, presidenL Anyone Special banquet guests will include Mrs. Douglas Brown, Area D vice president , and Ratzlaff, husband of the outgo- ing president. The Grand Finis will take place at 9:30 a.m. Saturday when new officers are honored and Junior a uxil iary presidents are insla.lled. Mrs. Harold S. Spaulding of Anchor Auxiliary chairman. Overeaters A n on y m o u 11 • wbhing information may can Pasadena will open her homelf;;L;;a g;;u;;n;;a ;;;;;;B;;ea;;ch;;;;;;;;w;;il;;l ;;;;b;;;;e ;;;;G;;u;;e;;sls;;;;a;;re;;;;w;;el;;e;;om;;;;e ;;;'o;;;.•l;;;l•;;;•;;;d;;. ;Ml'S;·;;;R;;•:;;Y;;;;;N;;le~lse~n~,;;;543-t811l;=:~·;;;;I fur the informal event next11 Thursday, which will begin with a business session at 11 Auxiliary awards will be presented and Miss Teenage Citizen. Hallmark art contest winners and district sewiiig winners will be named. Workshops for officers, the Junior auxiliary and press representatives Y.•ill take place at II a.m. Saturday, and the closing ceremoncy is schedul· ed for 1 p.m. a.m. Lwcheon will be served at noon by the co-hostesses, the Mmes, Robert L. Graham, Frank Donnelly, J e r o m e Simson and W. W. Alexander. The piano program will £0\low the luocheon. The artist, a graduate of Pomona . College, received a Fulbright Schola r s h i p to the Conscrvatoire National d r Musique de Paris and earned he~ ma~ers deP:ee from thf University ol Michigan. ti.irs. Josepll C. Widmont Jr. NB Auxiliary ol Newport Beach, 833-2711 , is taking reservations. Newport Beach Police Aux------------11 lliary gathers the )Jist Tuesday of the monlh at 7:30 p.m. LocaUon b available with Mrs. Robert Wheeler, 675-1129. Gloomy Gus Tells it As You See It Only 9 More Days Until MARGIE WEBB'S Gigantic 'Once-A-Year' Tent "SALE" -E-BRATION DISlGNIR FAHICS ,.T TllMlNDOUS SAYINGS AIM tnmtlfMlou• cl.....vt waluet In our loYtlC1U• lhol' So, Rem•mbtr th• Date MAY ht A"d he lp 111 "S1ll-E.8t1t e" 2094 So. Coast Hwy. Laguna leach MASTfR CHARGE jHtl C/\R IE BLAH CHE r AFTER EASTER \ SllLE Price Reductions Men's, Women's and Boys' SPORT CLOTHES LINGERIE -DRESSES -SUITS SLACKS -SPORTSHlRTS I 300/o • 400/o • 500/o OFF & MORE PAii CON¥1NllNTLY IN OUl llAl INTl'f PAlllNI ARIA OPEN DAILY 9,30.6, FRIDAY 'Tll 9 PM IN COSTA MESA IT'S 1816 NEWPORT Bl VO. BANK AMERICARD AND DINERS CWB I 01.-491 va/u• With the Purchase ot One Pound or More WORid fAMOUS BEEF STICKr.~ All all-beef, h!Ckorr smoked 1ummer HUl lJ .. Mq bl llf'Y'ld ln1ny w1y1. -----~····-------- Hickory Farms of Ohio SESAMI STIX Hickory Farms of Ohio .PIZZA FONDUE n:,~i~~k:9 e 2 f~ /9¢ •1. 49 ':KOi. SRegullnbr . •· J.79 . I """ ____ ,;_ Hickory Farms of Ohio t OLE PANTRY CHEESE -llegular 0119 1'! .. $1.39 lb. • 4'1. OIM ,.-ck~ of lfldtlr'I' ,.,.,... 9t Oflllt BANANA CH l PS 4 OUNCl l . • • Jk YAlUI WITH TMI l'URCHll$1l 01' Sl.00 oa MOlE. Wt R...,,.. "'-Rlttlt t. SW.!llVll Bristol •t the S•n Diego Fwy. 1 Co1ot• M11e, Phone 540-6tfl AMEBICA'S LWJNG CSEM STOm'.S • t ~· ' I \ I I r I I Newport Barbo~ voe. 62, NO. 9 By JEROME F. CQLLINS Of ,... o.lb ........... Breaking up Ille Orana< County Harbor Di.at.rid "would aerve no useful purpoee," the Orana< County Coast A&soctation declared today. • . ne prestigious 15&inember aaoci&· tion, represealing coutal c1UesJrom Seal Beach to San Qemtnte, reached tbit conclusion following a siJ.-wet.k study of Ule dissolution question. Association Preiident Cap Blackburn * -tr· * LAFC Gets Harbor Dispute By JACK BROBACK 01 Hie o.111 Plitt Stiff Proposed dissolution of I.he Orange County Harbor District - a controversial subject for more than three years -will be before the Loc al Agency Formation Commi ssion Wednesday f o r con· sideration. At the 2 p.m. session, LAFC members will act on resolutions of 12 county cities which favor dissolution and formation of a regular county-wide Depu.rtment of Harbors, Beaches and Parks. Currently the harbor district is semi. autonomous and sets Its own · tu rate through the harbor commi.ssiou's recom- mendation to the Board of. Supervisors. U the LAFC approves dissolution, the matter will be forwarded to the.Board of SuperVisors with the probable recom-· mendation that a countywide election be called on the issue {or &0metime in August. Cities rorwarding resolutidnll to the commission are Brea, Buena Park, Foun- tain Valley, Fullerton, HunUngton Beach, La Habra, Los AJamitos, Placentia, Santa Ana, Stanton, Tustin and Westminster. The harbor district battle originated in Huntington Beach when that city negotiated for many months over jurisdiction in the Huntington Harbour marina area. The city contended that it we servic- ing the area with police, fire and lifeguard protection and shoukl. be reim· · bursed by the county. In addition the city wanted relief from harbor district taxes. Huntington Beach lost the battle before the LAFC and subsequent legislative ac- tion by Assemblyman John V. Briggs {R· Fullerton) died in an assembly com- mittee. Newport Beach, which would be most directly alfected by dissolution of the dislrict, has maintained that in the ev~nt ol dissolution, "it is essential that the city be reimbursed by the county for ex- penditures by the city to pr?vide harbor facilities and services which produce regional benefits.'' Critics of the aissolulion have pointed o•Jt that nothing would be gained by con- version to a regular county department either in the way of lower taxes or actual adminlstraUon. County League of Cities advocates have argued that lhe mov~ ~~~Id r~t in a tywide recreation rac1hlies, 1ncludlng better distribution « ~ for coun- regional parks. Crime Message Set WASlUNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon will send a mesuge lo CongreM on organized crime Wednesday, Repub· Hean congressional leaders reported today. Orange Cout EDITION aatd Ille fmdtnp ol • ~ tommltlff -Ille prpbe ha .. --. by dlrocton ol u.. '$7-year..W i>rJulia· tlon. • The committee, beaded by publisher Jamet -C. JC.jlllr.-w-. recommends . thal Ille, Harboc Dtilrict' not only be .. tainod, but that lta P.atacll<llon be ... pandect to Include ~ pltb. This pita Ille -ttoa io a dirod conlr;ontation with the County League ol Ciliet. ~ 1Aacue'1 majority "IDb the Harbor Dtatrlct ,dlaolved and It I l'elJ)OIWblltties. turned over to u enlarc· ed County Parb lle~t. Tbe , o.ot ,\-1ati.•n ~ report leads oil •ltll tllll llal llalemeel: "Aboltabment of the Harbor Diatrlc:I would serve no 'Uleful ParPose. 'Miere. are distlnct advantqe1 ,ln bavtng a dlltrict;'' Dtssolutlon, ~ap1'1nl-'the assoctauon. would "not oeg1te the fact" tblt there are lltl'Vieu aa:L facfHtw to be !!WJ').. tained and operated. "ll oouta1 cltiea.-ar• !. .. ... . '• . ¥T •IL.OT Mllff ,,_ ~fe)Jat;'iftfJ /er. SfaoW ' ' " ' · · T0m Gi/!Jel> . left), director of Newport Harbiir A.rt Museum, end Bruce Piner, Orange Coast College art instrilctor, look ovet entry in art contest sebeduled for May 4 on lawns of Newport City Hall. They are judges for CO.test sponsored by city 's Arts Committee. Entries 3re being sought from Newport artists. Harbor Chamber to Study ' . . Sex Education · in Schools By THOMAS FORTUNE Of 'llt 0.llY Plllt Staff "The family life anti sex education Issue has been dumped in our laps." With lhat statement Dr. NoWt Frizzelle announced Monday . a Newport· Harbor Chamber of Commerce iJfquiry into school sex educatioo programs. Dr; Frizzelle explained to chamber directors why the educaUon committee which he beads hu voted unanimously to underlake the ltudy. The controversy has ariJen and .harsh feellngs have developed in the com- .nwnlty, he explalneci, The Newport·Mtaa sohool board bu been placed in a dllem- m.a by t&se wbo are V«J mlll;h for and thole who ire. yery much IP~. aH educaUon, so the committee dec;ided to bej ,. ft.:· .;. 'tllo ~ .,.,.:.,.,; Ilion hid cooltdered ltodyinf the e but becalise of the intensity ~ feel- among members turned to tbe educa- committee. • 1 /Fri%zell~ said his 14-mem~r com- mittee will make every effort to be to!Allly objectiye .. Medical . prldl(!ooen, school people, otherls both . pro and con will be asked to submit to quesUori!:-.g, be said. ~ . . "I can't overemphqize the need for maintaining compleW objecUvity on this," he told chamber,d,irecton. ·~Peoplo;i either Hem to be totaby for or totally against the ..-.gram. 'Ibey aay either keep the whole thing or "throw tht wboJe thing out." He uld Schools Supt. William Cun- ninl)lam told btm Ille pl'Oll'am aa a,;. bein( a!u<lled b)' the school boerd ;., not yel I~ l!flOUgh along to be put Into effect nest fall. . "So there. is plepb° of lime fO !.3.ke teolimoa,y;.from upert-." he aatd. tie pr-111 ,lbHlojltb tjudy and , canlul ..,.iyalt' ~...._ lbe .eommi°" will make I recommendaUon to the full chamber. , . Friuelle expbined later that a function (See SEX, Pase Zi -~ ewpo rt CofC Approves ) urchme of New ,Home Weadler N.,.port . Harl.or•, ~ber al Com-,,,; merce haa a acw home. . -the bi( move II expected to bl nie llUll will be working put It's the old· Newport 'Bllll!oo Savinp completed. , Ume WedneadaJ with cloudy 11kies and IMO Aaodltion office in €orona del stevens cited leVtnl. reuons for the tbe order of the day. Thal'il drop Mar. , acqulattlon. -'-& them ta Ille cham- the mercury down two notches to TIM l,GllO«luan fool buiidtoc al, 21• ber'• need lot exponalon, partl<ularly al 63 by midaflemoon· E. Coast lli(bway 11 qe ~ in ao-porldni and ~ facilltlel. commodate the chamber Iliff and It the ''Alig,'"he 11kt, "we haM kq wlflted ~SWE TODAY same time ....,.. aa a maillnC addras ultloaalely to localAI -,«JL~ new · and meeting place. for dvlc and cMt'-ltte to Newpi!'l1<A!Mr. 1'"* o!~~ c":.~1v°"u"::!-: /;:_ ·:::~~~~WI·~·,.-=~·~":'~": word to a pOJ)11lcUon of two mil-Stevens' boatd al dlrecton _,. bulldlna It. ';!.' • · \ lion bv 1980. Poge 8. unanimously appmm ,._ al tho The !ranaocilon with Balboa C•N"""lfl 1 ... -halft 11 structure from the AVinCI ¥" Mo ftnn, ML ildudll, llld 'lfii:IM clMl!fW 1•u ...,..... ,..... .,. whlcb (tCetltly opened 1f a ~ fUmttarl. _. of tht ... b =:.., ~: EC=" 1: newbranchdtewblretn~MIMlr. \Idol; ............... 0.1' M9tket I ..... T>l• Purchue price Wll •••• ftl 'ftl •• ud IDa ~= ,_ 1 .. ,; =:.,.... ;~~~ chambtr pakt '8,flOO down IOd wiD P'1 mted ttime-WI.• h1 ..,_., n ,_... 11 the rest al POO a morlth. 'Mle chamber Chamber directcn r<qulred ·to aasume the mllnttnance and deve!Opinont' at harbor fadJIUes tn' the . ' . ' . ......... diuolulloo, • quealloo al equity Is C!Ut.d b<ca-al· the -al the,.. cililles by r..~· al ·lrtland dtteo.'' ' "l'be ~iuon lurtlier potnta out:that elimination ,·of , tbe "'1'.boc pjltrict's spOciat· tU rate and ~higgll\g it in with the County General Fund tu rate -a IN'll!>e 1oal <JI. dtlsollllton ,beckon - would re.Ult.. In projficts and programs " .~ d~ndent on overall county ·finan- cin&. ' . Tbi., A)'l:llle 881Qclatlon, c:oul~ kill oil many district rterealional projects that the county'Winot.~hlµ'k onr because' of ita taaIDi aqtborlty: · . ''An~· li .the,Allso' Beach ..... perty,"·Uys the rtport. "It was purchu- ed on contract purchase opt.ion in keeping with tbt,Di31rlcl'I pay .... yqu.go pglloy. "The county would ·have had to boy lhe Today's Final . . N.Y. Stoeks TEN c~s . bioochlroat land in South·Lquiia oul!flht ·l!l'i.Rul PP:•ll.i'h!! rpoiiey .a\...,.,,...,. .bably nectsaiLatinf a~bond iaue. 1 • ""There • is' no · evidence · that district dlasOlutlon . and · lncluslbn of · i t 1 ""'llOP'!lblliUes within the'Cdwlty G<il<rll ·rw~(would result iii a lai-s.1vlnl:.". 1' · · The WociaUon'S "rtcom~ndaflons. which will be presented to the cotmty'a Local Agency fDnl}ation Gommialion.-at (See HARBOR, Pap I) . . ' 'POiitics' ·· Charge~ S-qpervisors' Airport. Vote Assail:el!,,.:· SuperjeUoes'in'lbo·Newport Bacb and Mlaion Viejo anu are pWad qainll each otb'tr betaue of a "political litua· tioo" on Ibo Oranp County Bolrd of Supe1 •*"'· lbe Newport Harbor Cbamber,al Coi)lmerca,.wu.told Monday. Clint "-• cbatrman of lhe Cham- ber!1 avlaUon committee, aatd a maj(lrlty of county auphviaon last week voted for "lntetim" rqlona1 airport studies of El Two Marine. Corps Air SIAltion and Coon- Stricter River Sewage Control S~ught by City ~~If~~· deinand ~-lncf•ued ".lier quality ~ lli'lhi IUta AJti•Rinr and aloq lbe cltY'I illf.eBnt,, nie requests a bet .,.tid. to the Santa Ana River ~onal Wa1er Quality Cootrol Board at a public hearing io Newport City Hail The belr1Dg,.ala~ to get under way at 9:30 a.m., was caDed by the trt-county agency as a reault « ~ polluUon of Newpc:rt's and Huntington Be a ch' s beachlrunt ~Y ,.,,..,. pouring out of Ille Slnta.~pa Ri~tr. · . • . A lfOUP of Newport Pier mer,chants will polnt out to the board, representing Ille counlles of Orange, San Bernardino and Riverside, that a ban on Rimming· in con\aminated waters betweeO Newport Pier and the rive? already bu (Qat them an estimated income loss ol hZ,500. If the beach quarantine continues •tnto June, COlll!dertd a pooalbllity b)' county health offlclal11, the Jou wlll leap to $46,500, spokesmen for the merchants aaid today. · City Harbor Coordinator George Dawes wlQ praent the city's point of view to the board. He aald be will piea for upgraded bacteriorlogical standards for the river, which now receivea eewage discharges from at lut nine upstream agenciee:. In addlUon, Dawes 1ald be will uk the board to conekter raisin& water quality lltaOdanil from the river all the way to · the. city's south city limits in Corool del Mar. He noted !bat the board bu jw:illktJon in this area. ;'•the ~ in our marine (S.0 SEWAGE, P• I) ty Airport bec:aua Ibey "don't-con. sUtuents in either area."' Supervisors William Hirstein, Robert Battin and David L. Baker approved the feastbllity probe, to be undertaken by William E. Pereira & Associates. the county'a aviation master planners. Fifth Di.strict Superviso~ Alton E. Allen ol Laguna Beach and Supervisor William Phlllips, dubbed the "father" of County Airport, voted in the minority. They said : . several &Ila; not jllltEVl'ord ml:Coomty Airport, 5hould be .consldlnd. . -uoioee; .• , young hardware merchant, commented: , "Unfortunately, Were are five p,ople on 1he county board. 'lbo&e who voted for the El Toro and County Airport lludiel don't have constituents where either airport' i! located. Hirstein maybe bu only a few . "Thµ is a political siluation," be said. (See AIRPORT, Pase I) · Pressure Off Vietnam 7th Fleet Task Force Guards Korea Missio.ns lft;""""SI~' '\. I If ~~ .1 ' ' WASHINGTON (AP) -Vt.tzwu uval atr --ara betril curlall<il! aJMI the 7th ~ stretched to the limit with deployment of a 23-ship task force to pro- tect U.S. reconnaissance missiom off North Korea. "We'.ve, cot no slack," a Navy officer commentec:: after the!-.Penta1on Monday anriounced. asslgnmeilt of an arinada to the Sea of Japan where a Navy plane was shot down by. North Korea last week. One aircraft carrier and poasibly other WU lli!lpo al•the 7th Fleel h1Te been pull· ed from the war effort to fonn a ·new Taak Force 11 deploying somewhere off North Korea. Olfictts aaid this means the Navy con· tributlon to the U.S. bombing Clnlpalgn in South Vietnam end Laos "".Ill ~ cut by Beach Pollution Topic at Meeting Newport Beach city aide Phillip Bet- tencow1 will discuss the topic, "Beach Pollution ," Wednesday at the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce 's Women's Dlvlalon luncheon at the Irvine Cooll Country Club. Allo speaking will be J. K. "Dusty" Fowlkes, ol Value Analysis, Inc., of Newport. Hls subject will b·e "CreaUvity." The public Is Invited to the meelinj, ~g to program chairman Patricia Bray. ,. l'OOllliY '!'tthird. The United Sla!p bu """" Uepl!Jc three aircraft wrliin ... . •' the (Iring 1in,,1n the Gull of Tonkin; for tbe Ume being thl.s will be reduced to two. Tbe 1th Fleet's remaining four aircraft carrien are going into Task Force 7l along with · three· cruisers and 11 ' destroyers. Thus, of!icus p\llnted out, all ,'Tth Fleet carriers are Jklw, Ued down m tWo frontl -the Sea cit Jawi and tho Gull of • Tonkin. And offictrs deacribed the 15 destroyers as a major share of the Seventh's beayy c;ombat veeels. How Jc.n& the fl~t can mainlaln both us!gnmenta under present condltiOClll ii a matter of concern to the. Navy. W-rtb ita• six flattops occupied, the 7th Fleet· bu no' replaeemetit fJWtillitY: · . ' Ofllcers sald that ll Ille task force bu to remain In the Sea of Japan for any"ei:· tended period -a few weeks or mctt - the 7th Fleet would have1 to get ·~ relief in the way of replacements from the Atlantic Fleet. Atlantic Fleet ·carriers ·hi.ve spelled Pacific carriers off Vietnam on occasion in the past. ' NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe stock ma/bt closed about even today, parlnc aome .of ita early losst1. (See quota1l9os, Paps 11).it). -=--L I I ~,:·.·---°!\ If.:.... -.. : .. : -l--tlpped-it.J bWldJnc fund (Of \be JllOl'lieY• tbat..tba HdelJ.ll bl Rtnt on tho pmtnt chamber head-..,. for the • · i":· <' ~~f'fi.!'l ~~l•7'':t: ::::::" ,: _,. --<t1J1rf.tt1 11 tlOO w. Coaat Highway b The land wtn remain In I~ o;,n. paid up unUI May 11. By then, said pany ownenblp. I I ' ... . . . ' . . . . . ' . . . . . . " ..... ,J.,l._.:.DA..:l:::LY~Pl::;LO:.:T _______ '._'Tu".'tld~ay, A~rll 22. 1969 Kathryn Anderson Weds In Costa Mesa Ceremony Baskets ol white daisies and carnations adorned the altar of St. Joachim'• Catholic Churth when Kathryn Heleo Anderson became the bride or Scott Montgomery Mal.her. The Rev. Thomas Nevln performed the double ring tfUptials f o' the daughter of Mn. Alkt Cyr of Newport Beach and William Anderson •of Costa Mesa aild the son of Mr. 4nd Mrs. Leonard J . M,ather of Long Beach. ~ Given ln marriage by her father, the bride wore a gown .DI. aaUn with a!encon lace ap- phques trimmed with sequil]s "¢ seed pearl!. Her chl!pel le~ train was caua;bt to the wailtin·back. ~er .btibble vdling was held by :a-fabric fJ'oral headpiece and she cavied white carna-tl_on~ and i'oees. She wore a ~amond cross .• · a gilt of her stepfather, the late Mr. Henry F. Cyr. C:llll'lllllltttl"~ BARBARA SMITH To Merry Summer Wedding Plans Set Horoscope Leo: Dine Out WEDNESDAY APRIL 23 By SYDNEY OMARR RECREATION TIP: Fine for dining out. Grea~ pleasure alao indlcaled bro"51ng in an.. tlque abops. Lunar position to- day fa vorable for f111bin1, planlin1. ARIES (March 21-April 19): By attend ing to basic chores you build solid base. Be prac~ tical. Stick to proved pro- cedures. Take care o f necessities at home Cancer individual orters sage advice -follow it . TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Jou'rney or short duration in· dlcated. Guard possessions while in transit. Aceeii.t is on what you say and wrne. Not w~se to make Jong-range com· m1tmenta. Have fun tonight with family. GEMINI (fl.lay 21-June 20): lioM as they actually exist. Don't deceive yourself with wishful lhinkina:1 Budget eon. Urwes to nqm attmtion. Make adjustment -galn cooperation qi mate. partner. CAPRICORN illec. U-Jar.. 19): ffigblijht pubUc relaUons. Be sure your statements are proper I y interpreted. Op- .portunity for advancement ex- ists -but yoU need coopera- tion. Know this and 'accept aid. try to distract you. are foolish U you quit now.' I is AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 • Feb. 18): Finish job at h3Ql:d Some in sight. Know thL! •• '. res- pond accordl~ly. Acee t on reward from task well d e. PISC~ (Feb. 19-March'20): Personal magnetism soars Opposite sex is atlraded: Pursue creative projects. Get out tonight -be with one who is stimulating. You make v.aluable discovery. Be perce~ hve. Former To Say JUDY JONES Future Bride o c;~ ~tudents voV)s tn June " .. I '•A ,.ne 21 wedding date hu ,beeti ch ... n by J u d y Kay Jones of Lo,, Angeles and Ran4 I dall H. Rolle ot Newport whose betrothal has been an• nounced by Mr. and Mr11. Sheppard R. Jones of. Santa Ana, parents of the future bride. Miss Jones attended Coria · Mesa High School and Orange Coast Collea:e ·and was a song !eider at both schools. ~e benedict-elect, son ot .. Mr. and Pi1rs. Edwin Rolfe ot Newport Beach, is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and Orange Coast College. After his J u n e graduation from UCLA, ha will enter graduate school in hospital administration. Rolle was active in crew at OCC and is affiliated with Theta Delta Ctii fraternity an(! Air Force ROTC at UCLA. The couple will exchange vows in Lutheran Church ot the Master, Corona del,Mar. Gowns fashioned with wtUte ruffled lace bodices and nile green chiffon skirt! and bou- qu~ts of white daisies were selected for her attendants. Mrs. Rita Perkins of Costa Mesa "'BS the matron of hon· or, while bridesmaids were Mrs. RonaJd Pierce of Alham- bra, ~rs. David Carty of San Diego and Mrs. Richard ~enedlct, the bridegroom's sister,. of ,Long Beach. Bar· hara Mather, abother sister o[ the tiridegroom, was the now- ':-June wedding ls being planned by Barbara Smith and Air Force Lt Daniel R. Clark, Whose engagement ha s been anoounced by W.:r. and Mrs. Woodrow Smith of Huntington Beach, parents of the bride- elect New starts in new directions prove profitable. Emphasize originality, independence of thought, action. Fin a n c i a I return on recent effort is surprisingly good. Treasure Sought at Tea MRS. SCOT:T M. MATHER Exchenget VfMt, ·Rfn91 i '• Spirit 'Mardi Gras' Coloring Convention: The color and excitement of Mardi Gras will prevail when Orange Di s trict California Federation o i • FBEE Hickory Farms of Oh.lo HORSERADISH .SAUCE With 1 lb. of World Famous :em.mcx Hickory Farm• of Ohio · CLEPANTnY CHEESE ~ :iT.:. •1.1e lb. Women's Clubs, Jun Io r Membership, stages its annual convention Friday and Satur· day, April 25 and 26. in the Disneyland Hotel, Anaheim. Registration at 9 a.m. will open the two-day session and M.rs. Gary Ratzlaff, president, will gavel the meeting to order at 10 a.m. The morning agenda will in· elude introductions, a report by the nominating committee. presentation or candidates and election. · Luncheon at 12 :30 p.m. will honor Mrs. James MCalla district president, c I u b pre ~i dent s, oµtgoing coordinators and s p eci a 1 guests. Honored will be the Mmes. Jack Christensen, coordinator ; Adale Lyons, OeAnza Junior District president; DeForest Cutler, state coordinalor, and Douglas Brown, Area D vice pres ident. Other honorees will include the Rev. Stanley Jones, and the Citizen-of·1he· yea r, who will be announced.. Following the luncheon elec:· lion results will be revealed and the Mildred C o r b i 't cooperation award will be presented. In charge <lf the pr<lgram will be the Brea Juniors and the winning sex· tette. New ofncers will be in- st.ailed and a special ceremony will honor graduating Juniors during the evening program. Following the theme of the Unmasking. the J un i or Women's Civic Club of Garden Grove will conduct a tour as awards are presented. Special banquet guests will include Mrs. Douglas Brown, Area 0 vice president, and Ratzlafr, husband of the outgo- ing president. The Grand Finis will take place at 9:30 a.m. Saturday when new officers are honored and Junior auxi l iary presidents are installed. Auxiliary awards will be presented and Miss Teenage Citizen, Hallmark art contest winners and district sewing winners wiU be named. .... girl. ' . Attendin( the benedict as best man Was Robert Trout- man of Long Beach, while usher duties were assumed 'by Benedict, William Greenwood of Long Beach , the Miss Smith, who presently ls teaching school iO Wal811ae, Hawaii, is a graduate of HUJ1o. tingtoo Beach High School and 'Vhittier COiiege. She attended Cottey College, Mo., alKI did gpe.duate work at th e University or Ha'.WaU. Her fiance, )IOI'.! of the Rev. and Mrs. Herbert W. Clark of Pueblo, Col.. is stationed at Ellsworth AF Base, S.D. French Contest bridegroom's couain "and . W1'nners Feted Pierce. John M!thtr. t!l,e bridegroom 's brothiii, w~s the ring bearer. ~ -.. Attending the ~non 'fil the church hall vie r,e iso wellwishers. Assisting '"'ere Miss Becky Gunderson of San Diego, Miss Lynn Angle of Costa Mesa and Mrs. Robert Omerod of Huntington Beach. Special guests were the bridegroom 's grandpar· ents, Mr. and Mrs. Carvel Erick.son of Virginia. Minn., Mark Montgomery of Long Beach, and the bride's broth· er, James Anderson of San . Alliance· Fraocaise · de la Riviera Californienne w i 11 meet Friday,·APril 25, at a p.m. in Lincoln School, Corona del Mar , for the awarding of prizes in the French speaking contest. Georges Duca, executive secretary and Charles-Louis Je Guem, cultural attache to the French Embassy, will preside. Duca will discuss T h e Profile of American Youth as Seen by an European. CANCER (June 21-July 22): -Aid could be sought by ARIES individual. Be generous. You will be repaid in more wavs than one. Follow basic in· stincts. Cycle continues high. LEO (Jul y 23·Aug. 22): Be versatile. Don't fee l there is only one way to accomplish task: Theater and dining out tonight perk up spirits. Social activity ~•els as tonic. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Accent on hopes, friends, ,wilhes. Some obstacles can be overcome if persistent. Be with congenial persons ; dine out. Break routine. Get new lease -change outlook . Be of good cheer. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Unwrapped gifls or cash donations will be the key to the fifth annual Treasure Tea presented by St. M a r y ' s !Episcopal Churohwomen of Laguna Beach .in the Laguna Niguel home of Mrs. John B. Lawson next Thursday. All interested women are in# vited to the 2 to 5 p.m. event at 32621 Sea Island Drive. At# Tips Given Fo ~ Beauty Inftructions received tod~ ,, add up 10 cha.nge of ~~~.. : Learning about cosmetics ment._ Be flexible. ~uper1ors will be the Harbor of Hope observe actions, reac~1o~s. Ac· Chapter for the City of !;lope cept added re~pons1bhty ·-next Thursday . t h you can handle 1t. C ·r . in . e SCORPIO (Oct 2l-Nov 21 )· a.ll ?rn1a Federal Savings Good lun ·1 tod · . · bu1Jd1ng, Costa Mesa. ar aspec ay coin· . . cides w i t h long-distance .Miss Kathy Occh1~grosso messages. Keep in touch with will pr.esent a~ Evening In family member. Harmonize Cos'!1etics: A display of cos· relations with those close to meUcs will be available for you. Key js to be diplomatic. members 811d guests. SAGIT1ARIUS (Nov. 2f. The chapter raises funds for Dec. 21 ): See persons, sit u a· patient care at the hospital in Duarte, which is free and Jose. After honeymooning in San· la Barbara the bridal couple now are at home in Costa Presidents Called nonsectarian, designed to fight cancer, leukemia, blood and heart di seases correctable by surgery. Mesa. The bride is a graduate or Newport Harbor High School and Orange Coast College and attended San Diego State College. Her husband , a graduate of St. Anthony's High School, Long Beach, attended Long Beach City College and Nevada Southern University. Concert Follows Luncheon For Annual Exchange Six Assistance L e a g u e leade rs from Newport Beach, Huntington Beach and Laguna Beach chapters wlll attend the !It h annuai Presidents ' Conference of Na ti on a I Assistance League next Thurs- day. The Anne Banning Com· munity House, home of Founder Chapter, Assistancf; League of Southern California, will be the scene of the gathering. Presldents a n d presidents.elect w i 11 be welcmned by Mrs. Burton V. Collins, nalional president. represented by rt.rs. Thomas H. Jones, president, and Mrs . Will iston Bradway. Registration at 9:45 a.m . will be followed by sessions on public relations, re g i o n a 1 finan~s. a u x i I i a r y rela- tionship, importance of regiorr al alternate and ways and means activities. The conference takes place each year to bring chapter presidents up to date on NAL procedure, review expansion activities and discuss: solutions for problems that have arisen during the rapid growth of the league. Orange Coast members of Attending from Newport Membership is open and ad· ditional information may be obtained by cont8Ctl.ilg Mrs~ William Savage at 646-1917. ADPis Meet , W001en affiliated wMh the Orange County A 1 u m n a e Chapter of Alpha Delta Pi will gather Thursday, April 24, at 11 :30 a.m. in the C06ta Mesa home of Mrs. Ronald Barnett. As.5isting her with hostess duties will be Mn. Wilbur Allen. La Quinta High ScOO.l's foreign exchange student,, will talk. Lodge Meeting the Woman 's Auxiliary to the Beach chapter will be · Mrs. American Society of Colin Reynolds, president. and Overeafers Trygve Lie Lodge 90, Sons of Mechanical Engineers. Los Mrs. Robert Crowner. first Norway, will meet next Thurs- Angeles Section. will be vice president. Huntington Every Monday at 8 p.m. day at 7:30 p.m. in the among Ii-hose attending a piano Beach delegates will be Mrs. members gather in Anderson American Legion Hall, Colita concert presented by Mary Norman Warne r, president, Schoo I auditorium , Mesa, according to Leonard Spaulding Hense, pianist. and Mrs. Harold Buck, Sliver Westminster, for meetings of Wollord, presidenl Anyone Mrs. Harold S. Spaulding or Anchor Auxiliary chairman. Overeaters A n on y m o u 6 . wlshing information may call Pasadena will operi her home Laguna Beach will be Guests are welcome to attend. Ml'S. Ray Nielsen, 54U811. for the informal event next lf;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;:;;I Thursday, which will begin with a business sessioo at 11 a.m. lAlncbeon will be served at noon by the co-hos4.esses, the Mmes. Robert L. Graham, Frank Donnelly, J e r o m e Simson and W.W. Alexander. AFTER EASTER I. tractions will include a fashion show of clothes for mature women from Lois· Pa u I Originals, Laguna Beach. Mrs. Jack Lyons w i 11 coordinate the show, and members modeling will in· elude the Mmes. Robert L. Carter, Robert F. Sclutltzer, George Cunningham, Chesley Evans and Miss Editti Red.it. Gifts collected at the tea O'Connell, Robert McCarter Milton Chapman. Ralph R'. Raymond, William L. Ullom, John Chamberlin and Harry G. Parker. Club Hears Vice Mayor will go into a special room Costa Mesa Fe d e r a t e d during the group's annual Republican Women's Club will thrift sale Wednesday, April gather for a general meeting 30, and Friday, May t, in the and a talk by Vice Mayor church, at 42.11 Park Ave. Robert Wilson. Mrs. Howard H. Adams, Mrs. Bruce \\raJters' home chairman, is assisled bv the in Costa Mesa will be the set· h1mes. Robert L. Cornflison ting next Thursday at IO a.m. Baird B. Coffin. Donald H'. Tickets are SI and a spaghetti Arvold, Schnitzer, Evans, Jurich®n will be served at John W. Favour, Gordon noon. Forbes and Leighton French. All Republican women are Others are the W.mes. Lewis invited to attend. R. Gillette, William C. Kinder, ---------- John B. PtUllips, Orval Wiloon, John L. Mudge, Francis M. Nau, Glen 1. Buzzard. Robert Dameron, David Orr, Ted Now in Our Family: Family Weekly _,,;..., __ ,.. ~1~/M,1 i'«t!~ff·1 J OLD-FASHIONED Wlllfll_MD APil. 2S ·APB.. SO 1£ you long for fo ods <lf simple ind easy going dayi, you'll find them in the cou.ntry 1tore atmosphere at Hickory Fanni <lf Ohio, The decor pull you in the inood of yesteryear. The friendly aervice ia a delight. To cele· brate, we offer these 1pecials end invite you to visi t u;I ••••••• FBEE J.Iickory Farms of Ohio HORSERADISH SAUCE I 01.-49; valu• With 1he Purchase or One Pound or More WORid fAMOUS BEEF STICX T.~ Ala 1ll·beet h!ckol'J 1moked 1urnm1r HUllJt. M11 be 1ernd many w1y1. Hickory Farms of Ohio ----·---FBE:E Workshops for officers, the .Junior auxiliary and press representatives will take place at 11 a.m. Saturday, and the closing ceremoney is schedul· ed for I p.m. The piano program will follow the luncheon . The artist, a graduate of Pomona. College. received a Fulbri ght Scholars hip lo the Conservatoire National d e Musique de Paris and earned hci: ma~ers de~ree from th<' Un111er&1ty ol Michigan. SllLE ~SESAMI STIX wwacms With the purdiue of $3.00 f more at tflV#lillfl!!llllJ!tlK wmcrm Jli?!CH TOWN a COUSTR!' OMNGE PAltMB..ctS MARkET LOSAN0£US PORTS OP CAU. Vil.LAC'S BANPIDBO l\1rs. Joseph C. Widmont Jr. NB Auxiliary ol Newport Beach, 833'2711 is taking resel"V'3tions. ' Newport Beach Police Aux· -----------11 lliary gathers the last Tuesday of the month at 7:30 p.m. U>catioo is available with Mrs. Robert Wheeler, 67$.-1129. Gloomy Gus Tells it As You See it Only 9 More Days Until MARGIE WEBB'S Gigantic 'Once-A· Year' Tent "SALE" ·E· BRATION Price Reductio rtS Men's, and Women's SPORT CLOTHES Boys' UNGERIE -DRESSES -SUITS SLACKS -SPORTSHIRTS I 300/o • 4()0/o • 500/o OFF & MORE PAii CONYINllNTLT IN OUl llAl INtlT PAlllN• AIU. OPEN DAILY 9,30, 6, FRIDAY 'TIL 9 PM IN COSTA MESA IT'S BANK Rcgulor 0119 11. $t.3p lb. • ~. OM l'Hbtl• et HltUn' ''"""' flf Oll1t Bl.NANA CHIPS 'OUNCIS ••• nc VALUI WITH TMI: l"URCMASI 0, SJ.00 Oa MOii. W• R-¥1 !hi ltlfM .. lullfllM9 POW>Oll'!' LANDING J.DNG J&ACH DISIGNll fl.lllCS l.T TREMENDOUS 51.YINGS Alto tremeMIM.lt c:l91MM1t ••luts In evr lovtl41ue lhe, MASTfR CHARGE jlfl) AMERICARD AND DINERS CWB ~~~~lk~r1 *~,~~. I South Coast Pl~;r• E••f Wing Lower CarouMI Mell I a t t t == So, Remember the Date Ml.Y hi And help us "Stll·E.Bret1" 2094 So. Coast Hwy. Laguna leach CP,R IE BlAHCHE Costa Mesa, Phone 540-4"1 AMEBJC!'S LWlING CSEWE S'mBES 1816 NEWPORT BLVD. • .,. 'r •I .. , ~ • • Newport Har~or 'EDITION Today's '1aai \ N.Y. Steek8 voe. 62, NO. 9 • 2 SECTIONS, TEN c~s Harbor Breakup USeless, SaY •• . -co·a:st Leaders: . By JEROME F. CQLLlNll Of "" DM1r Pu.t IMff Breaking up the 0r..,. County Harbor District "would serve no uaeful purpoee," the Orange County Coast A!loclatioo decta...i today. 'I'Pe prestigious 150-mem~ aaaoci• tion, repreaeoting coastal cities from Seal Beach to Sao q.emente, reached thlt conclusion following a all-week study of the dissolution question. Association Preaident Cap Blackburn * * * LAFC Gets Harbor Dispute By JACK BROBACK Of ""' O.llY ,.,191 lltff Proposed dissolution or th' Orange County Harbor District -a controversial • subject for more than three years -will be before the Local Agency Formation Commission Wednesday f o r con- sideration. At the 2 p.m. session, LAFC members will act on resolutions of 12 county cities whlcb favor dissolution and formation of a regular county-wide Department of Harbors, Beaches and Parks. Currently the harbor district is semj.. autonomous and sets its own tax rate through the harbor commission's recom- mendation to the Board or SuperviM>rs. If the LAFC approves dissolution, the matter wW be forwarded to the.Board of SuperVison with the probable recom- mendation that a countywide election be called on the issue for sometime in August. Cities rorwarding resohrtiOM to the commission are Brea, Buena Park, Fobn· tain Valley, Fullerton, Huntington Beach, La Habra, Los Alami tos, Placentia, Santa Ana, Stanton, Tustin and Westminster. The harbor district battle originated in Huntington Beach when that city negotiated for many months over jurisdiction in the Huntington Harbour marina area. The city contended that it was servic· ing the area with police, fire and lifeguard protection and should be reim· bursed by the county. In addition the city wanted relief from harbor district taxes. Huntington Beach lost the battle before the LAFC and subsequent legislative ac- tion by Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R- Fullerton) died in an assembly com- mittee. Newport Beach, which would be most direcUy affected by dissolution of the district, has maintained that in the ev~t of dissolution, "it is essential that the clly be reimbursed by the county for ex· penditures by the city to provide harbor facilities and services which produce regiona1 benefits." Critics of the aissolution have pointed 011t that nothing would be gained by con- version to a regular county department either in the way of k>wer taxes or actual administration. County League of Cities advocates have argued that the move. would result Jn a tywide recreation facilities, including better distribution of taxes for C1)Un- regional parks. Crime Message Set WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon will send a message to Congre!s on organized crime Wednesday, Repub· Hean aingressional leaderJ reported today. Orange Weadaer The llU!I will be working part Urne wedneaday with cloudy skies the order of the day. That 'll drop the mertUrY down two notcbel to 63 by midaftornoon. ~SIDE TODA 'l' Th<U Jr<!<P ol! c:omillfl, and onrno• Countv ii lOokinO for• ward to a population of two m.U- !101t bu 1980. Page B. fillWtMI ,..... ,, ................. .... .-. . ft'MI "'""' ll ........... t>U ,....,. . ,~,. ·-,.,.... 1•11 T..,._. II -" -. --,. --.. I said the findlnc• ol • ~ <ommlltee Harbor Diltrlcl .diuol\OICI ud 111 . ualpe,d the Pl'.obo 11a .. -..-• faPOllllblUU...-turned over to an enlara· by cllnicton of the0 '7-yqr-old ......,iu.. <d COunty Pilfa Deportment, ticG. The • Cot!ll ~ committee The mmmlUM, lleided by p>bl'*" report leads olf wltb Ibis Oat-: J._ C. Kllll-"'111, ............is "~ ol the Harbor QW\ql thal tbe Harbor lllitrid' DOI oaly be .... would oerve no iDtlul p0rpaee. The!. are ~\· bill thal Ill j\a1ldl<!loa be u-dls\IOCI ldvllllqel In bavlnl • dlllrjct." -to ·Include ft11ou1 paria. DissoliJtlon, uplalns 'the -tion. This pjll the -In a dlnct would "DOI negate the fact" that !her< c:onf~ witli lllO. \)ounty i,._ ol are oervi<OI .lad, flclllliel to be mail>- C1Uet •. The l..eque'1 m1Jorit1 ..,-ants the taiDed and operated. "U ~ cltiea..are ; • .., ! P.~e)Nlr.'tlfl /er. SJUHl, T~ Ga lie1'·~1eft), director of Newport 11,rbOr Art Jljuseum, 111d Bruce Piner, Orange Coast College art insttocts>r, look ovet entry in art contest sclieduled for May 4 on lawns of Newport City Hall. They are judges for contest sponsored by city's Arts Committee. Entries are being sought from Newport artists. H~hor Chamber to Study Sex Education in Schools By THOMAS FORTUNE Of .... O.il'f ,., ...... "The family life and sex education Issue has been dumped in our laps." With that statement Dr. Nolan Friuellt. announced MondlJ · a NewjXrl Harbor Chamber of Commerce inquir.y into school sex education progrants. Dr. FrizzeUe explained to chambtr directors why the educaUon committee which he beads has voted unanimoosly to WIOOtake the study. The controversy has arisen and . harsh feelings have developed in the com- .munity, be uplained. The Newport-M.,. school boanl bu been ploced in a d!Jem. ma by ttiose who are Vfl'f much for and thole who are. very much against, tel education. so the committee. decided to help It out. ., · l ~ , ' He alJo 11111 tl\f, dwnber W-'1 Dlvilion hid COlllldend studyln& the ipue 'oot beeatiae of the tntenalty ti' feel· in& among members turned to the educa- tion CGl'l'lmittee. Frizielle said hi:s 14-member com- miltee will make every effori to be totally objecttye., Medical . practitioners, school people, otbel'S both pro. and con will be asked to submjt to questioning, he sa id. • . "I can't overemph~ the need for maintaining complete objectivity on thll," he told chamber <lir«tor•· ':People either llffDl to be totally for or totally against the program. 'l'bey say either keep the whole thing or'lllrow the wbole thing out." He said Schooll Supt William Cu~ ningbam told blm the pnlll'llll .. ~ ii belni! lludied by the IChool, boerd ii not yet far enough along to be put Into effect next fall. · "So there. Is plenty ol time to toile ___ .from""'"~·" he uid. lie podilled ao)lo..;;pu, liudy and cortlul w1yll( belift.·the "'mmittoe • wl[ mate a recommendatlOn 'to the lull chamber. \ FriDelle exj:Uined later that a function (See SEX, Pqe II New port CofC Approve s Purchase of New Home requlrtd ·to ....me the maJiitonance .•"4 develOpin<nf .ot ~bOr . lac;tllliea tn: ~ <veat of dialollltioo, I <luesl\00 of, equity is created becinee of the Ule of the fal-- clllties by Mldentl' " ·Wud cttlll." ·The al.dciauo. fiathe. p)tnto out :that eliminllU.._ ,·of , the lllfrbor pialrtd's speclil tix rate Ind pluuhlg it in with lht County General Fund tax rate -a prlJ!"" 1oaJ <JI. dlaqlU.U... )>acilers . -would ruult tn' projects and programs beln& ~ent"on ovtrall coUnty:finao- '. f ' C~I '~tbe,llfoei~ion, ~~kill oU many district recreational projecb that tlie Cowit)''Cannof ~t on,, bee-· of :1111ax1ng al(thorilf. _ " · • "An ~· la the Aliso· .Beach pro; perty,• .. aiys the ripm{. "It Wis Purcbu- ed on contract 'purcbue option in keeping with tbe,llislrict'~pay .... l'l!"-1• policy. "The county would have had to buy the ' ' . beaddronl,land !" 9outlj·Lqw\a oulfllhl .apd,put µp,~ ~ \D'?D'Y .a\ """i""" ,bably necesaitotin1 • ·bqod ilaue. ' ' '"There · is' no · evidence· that district diasOlution . and · Inclusion of ( i t 1 reSJ>OMlbilitles wlthlit the ·count)'. Gdieral 0fi'und1would rtsult Ji\ a lai:-savfng. "' 1• · The ~tion's ·recom.rpendirioiis; which will be presented to the county's Local Ajency FormatJoQ Commlllion4 t (See HARBOR, P11e I) 'POiitics' · Charged Su;pervi:sors' A~rp.art V. ote Assailell, .. :: Superjetfoea·m·U.·Newporl e.cb ud Miaion Viejo arua are pllled qalnst each otbtr becauae of a "polltlcal aitua· tloo" on Ula Oranp County Board of Supervllon,. tbe Newport Harbor Olamber,ol CoiJunerce. wu told Monday. Clint Jloolte, chairman of the Cbazn.. ber!1 aviaUon committee, said a mljorJty of caUnty aupttviaon last week voted for "interim" rqional airport studies or El Toro Marine, COl]>s Air Stotion and Coun- Stricter River Sewage Control S~ught by City ~r-•.J:~·ll deinand ""'1V lncfuled ..... -··'~ ~'li 'tif""to~~ aJoq the ctit'• ~ The requeoll ... be~dlieit*I . to the Santa Ana River R8clonal Wiler Quality Conlroi Board ~ a public hearing tn Newport City Ha1L The burlnt •. llatced to get urider way at 9:30 a.m., was caDed by the trt-county agency as a result of the pollution of Newport's and Huntington B fl a c h ' s beachfront by aewa,e pouring out of tbe Santo. Aita River. · . A group of Newport Pier merchants will point out to the board, representing the counlies of Or1nge, San Bernardino and Riverside, t.bai a ban on IWimming· in con"'tamtnated ..,.aters between Newport Pier and the riVer already hil COit them an estimated Income Joos of IU,500. It the beach quarantine continues -tnlo June, conliderid a pooalbllity by county health officials, the lou will leap to $46,500, spokesmen for the merchants llid today . ' City Harbor Coordinator George Dawes will pruent the city '• polnt of view to the board. He aatd he will plea for upgraded bacteriorloeical lltlndards for the river, which now rectiva sewa1e discharees from at lut nine upetream agencla. In addiUon, Dawe. uki he wUI uk the board to constder raising water quality standards fl'om the riwr all the way to ihe. city'1 aouth city limits in Corona del Mar. He noted that the board bu jµriJUction In this area. 1 "'fbe ~in our m1rJne (Sea SEWAGE, P .. I) l'• "( !. .. ' • ty Airport bee•UI< they "deo'f-<00\- stltuenta In either area."' Supervisors William Hlrattin, Robert BalUn and David L. Baker approved the~ feasibility probe, to be undertaken by W"t11iam E. Pereira &: AMociates, the county'• aviation master planners. Fifth District S1i1pervisor Alton E. Allen of Laguna Beach and Supervisor William Phillips, dubbed lhe "father" of County Airport, voted in the minority. They said : ' sev.nl lilel, not-juat E~Toro ancl1Comty, Airport, should be .c:onalda'ed. . · Ho:oee; ,a ·young hardware merchant, commented : , 0 Un!ortunately, there are five P'OPI• oo the county board. 1boe< who VOied lo<. the El Toro and County Airport atudtetl don't have constituents where either airpon' is located. Hirstein maybe bu only a few. ''This is a political situation," be uid. tSff AJRP01\T, Pase J) · Pressure Off VletnBDl 7th Fleet Task Force ' Guards Korea Missions ' ' ,~-;1 ,lf'' ••, ~··( ~ !' w.1$n;GroN (APl -v""""'1111va1 atr .n.-are beln( c:urtolled and lite 7th ~ llretclied to the llmlt with deployment of a 23-shlp task fOrft to pro- tect U.S. recoMaissance misaioM off North Korea . "We:ye, cot no alack," a Navy officer oommente:: after the Pentagon Monday aruiounced. auignmeili of an atmada to the Su of Japan where a Navy plane was shot dOlYD by. North Korea last week. Oite. altcraft carrier and possibly other war ,llhlpa of-the 7th Fleet hive been pull· ed froni the war effort to form a new Task Foret 71 deploying somewhere off North Korea. · Otncers laid this means the Navy con· tributlon tO the U.S. bombing campaign in South Vietnam and Laos will IJ;e cut by Beach Pollution Topic at Meeting Newport Beach city aide PhiUlp Bet. tencourt wW dilcuss the topic, "Beach PollutkJn," Wednesday at the -Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce 's Women's Divlaion luncheon at the Irvine Cool! Country Club. Also speaking will be J. K. 0 Dusty" FOwlkes, ol Value Analysis, Inc., of Newport. Hll subject will b e "Creativity." The public ls Invited to the meeting, ~anting tp program chairman P~Bray. !OUllliY ~· The United states bu ~ keeptq thm lircrlft carrljn .. the firing line ID the Gull o~ Tonkln; for the Ume bOii\i this will be re<iuced to two. The 7th Flett'• remaining four aircraft carriers are going ihto Task Force 71 aIOf!g with · three· crulsen anil 16 destroyers. Thus, officer• ~nted out, a1l.7th Fleet carriers are now Ued down <11 tWo frontl -the Sea di Japan and the Gull of Tonkin. And of1icers described the 16 de1troyers as a major share of the Seventh's heavy <:<>mbat vessel!. How lc.ni the fl~et can maintain both assignments under present condJtions ii a matter of concern to the. Navy. With 111 six flallops occupied, the 7lb Fleet )lu no' replacement fiWtilllty., ' Officers said that U the task force bu to remain in the Sea of Japan for any,u. tended petiod -a few weeks or more - the 7th Fleet would hlve1 to get~ .Orne relief Jn the way of replacements frOm the Atlantic Flett. Atlantic Fleet carriers • bAvl! •Jled Pacific carriers off Vietnam on occasion in the past. ' NEW YORK (AP) -The stock malbt closed about even today, parlna tome .. of ila early 1....,. (See quotall9M, Pqes 16-Jt ), I llAll V PILOT • Revolt happened Is lbat Newport Belch ('.oundlmaa Dan Mcinnll, m:t wile Ind tl2 -people lnsist<d lbat Ille pk:bn el .,. lbat ran with put Lccboob .... awM. So L hid another oottwtL Yoo11po- Uce tba( I removed my ..,... ·lot· Ille pllotosrapber. Hond· tome dog, atni I! * ~ Jlolm, of tl1t -Jlolm, w • -ai -fan!. Ooe el bis pro!-. el l!lniUoii d1lb'illd.ed copies of a ''newl relelM" to bis, -Ille other day, jllll for the fun of It. ,,,. prfll didn' 113' --IL JIQI Trudi aaya tt II IUltably Idiotic (ot tl1il column. Accardlngly, !>ere 'Us: ........ P .. el SEWAGE ••• praerv11 9ff CM'ona del Mar,u be a· pJatned. "now are at the level of water <Olllacl lporll. Tbls should be lncr<a!ed to the level required fw lhellfi&h gather· Ing." CONCERN Ul'Rfl!SEll Dawes upr1•e~ concern about the ne<d to "insure Ille protection of the tidepool sancluariel u population In· creueii and more aewace and pollutkm problems are created." If increued atandarda are adopted in ~ Corool del Mar area, they could hive an impact on Irvine Company con- alderatlon of a sewage ouUall a few miles IOUtb of the marine preserves. Dawes said he will also ask the board to Investigate the oil poDuUon problem off Newport. U the board doea enact upgraded water quality standards for the rJver, it could compel upstream agencies to build U· perWve sewage treatment plants - tither that, or be fined. F,,_ P .. e l '.AIRPORT • • • ''Bec1nae of it we've gol the southern part al tbe county flghllng Ille northern part of the county." HOOBe accused the CtiUnty board ma- jority of "ducldng Ill responllbilille1" by turning over to the Soutbem ~omia Asaoclation al ~ {~AG) Ille seled.ion of a permanent regional airport lite. Clamber PreaJdent Richard Stevens llld oo beball of the chamber he had sent a letter to Supervilor Allen com-- mending him for bis effort, though fuUJe, to broaden the site studie!. Hoose noted that Sllpervi.sor Battin of tbe F1nt· DiJtrlcl bad added to the original motion reqllelllng • study of El Toro. Battin'• amendment stipulated that in event the Marine base does not prove 111ltabk for joint mllitary-cornmucial ""• CoWlty Airport should be muter 'planned 1 ... expansion. "I know whit's going to blppen," llld HCJOR glumly. "Pereira will say in sh: monthl that El Toro isn't feasible, and supervisors Will say let's go ahead with County . Airport until we have a permanent regional site." Stevens said later the chamber board will very likely protest any expansion of County Airport. He said this would be in line with eai:lier resolutions opposing ln- creued jet smrlce at the !acllity. Hoose's concern echoed that of Newport Beach City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt and Harbor Area jet noise foe Dan Emory. Both said in rectnt days that a study of El Toro repreaented a 1amble for Newport. DAii Y PILOT OllA.NGa CO#.l1 ~lllMUNG COMl"AMY ••'-1 N. W•14 ,.,........ .... ~ .... J•cli L Cll'ttY \'kt,,..... .. 0.-11 ....... Ttt.111tt IC•••il ·-n·~=l1t1 .... ,... •• C.lll• --<llr ...... ---1111 w ................. ,. ................ , ,,J) •... 1111,tt'6J --~--! ........ ...... ~ ..... I Ill,_. -'--I, ........... , ....... ' .. . . ... ·- ' • • • • * s s a 4111&41®4 ... • o I ' 'I ' • • • • .. . . .. .. ' .• .. --· .. _ .. ,~ aa1oasc uca e a ~ 2 c .: ·~the ~ Gerito Generhtion • ""' Cult>. 1'I. -Piiio --....... ..,_ ....... ::"° ... ~~ , -"• •ir~I * ""'.:!':: ..... ~ malD ,.;.,,"!""' .. ' ~.'" They"'" --.. -of .. actlvbl """" lbal Hlud control of the pvlor three day1 qo anil locked Mn. Blnlle Mdllllh, ll&iatanl dlelldan, ID the pantry .. Two officen IUfftrta ~ Wuries ta Ille -One w• lilt fiain tho fur by a runaway 'wbeelchalr and other waa jabbed with a knitting needle. Quincy TiNldblood, 87·~ spot ... m a n for tbe rebeJlloua factioD, told re-- ~ tho d-atlon WU lllaged to •-demaodl that Ille old folb be lfYeo a -role la Ille ,...._.I "' tlle -bomL ''.We·ve goc: a bUnCb or YOllDC whip. pennappen running thiJl&s llOlltlOI here," lie aald, n\'lng bis cana vloleollY. II• WI ibe old folb wen deinan41itt that It • .. least lbtte 1enior ctUzcns be added to the rest home llalf. •1we dan1t -anyone under cs.·· declartd Tlredblood; adjllllinl I h e "Senility Po""" button planed lo bis &bawl. ' The revolt began lut week when a IDWI /lfOUP of hardcore IUJ!O'OMlf'les held a dodder-in at wblch .Ome bui'ned lhdr Soclll Security cudJ. Allhoogh peaceable la 111 early pbuel, the protest movement·toot a violent tum when IOIDeOne bit George Snaffle, TtSt borne lllj>Ulalendenl, with a bollle of Geritol Snaffle blamed the trouble o n •Yale Girl!' Now CdM Lass Will Make Hi.story Amoret Cardeiro is a cute, lf.year~ld brunette who nm fall will add a new dJ.menaion to Yale Univeraity. 'Ille Corona del IW ljJah School lau is ooe al 500 glrll wi>o will break • tradition of pipes and twftd coall, a manly bulldog mascot ~ never a skirt around except Oii weekendl. It la an all.male tradition that dltea to 1701, 75 ywa before ibe American revolution. .. It wun't the proapect of all thOle men around that decided Amoret to attend the venerable campus at New Haven. Rather It was malnly orie man, her father, Charles Cardeiro. He 11 • Ya!< mon. Amoret b the eldest of sh: children at the Cardeiro home, 2116 Bay Farm Place, Santa Ana Heigh~. She la an outstanding student with a 3.1 grade point overa1e (4.011 llralghl A, 3.0 llrllgbl B). · She abo swims competitively. And if Vile lln't plaMlng • dillaff llWlm team lhe says lhe may orpnlze one. Amoret will major In physics. She likes the theoretical aspect of it and says she hopes someday to do research. Gotng east will in Its.ell be an ex· peri~ for her. She has never been east of Colorado and she has never ridden on an ah:plaoe. . There is another Corona del Mar High 111Udenl 1olng to Vole la the fill. Bui he is a boy, 17·year~ld Rick Neisaer, 'lbole ba1la of ivy have aeeni hil kind before. DAILY PILOT ltlff ......_ HEADlfi'"i f PR HEW HAVEN Futwire.tt •tii b.nleiro NASA 'Voice' Paul Haney Reports He's Been Fired SPACE CENTER. HOOlloe (AP) - Paul Haney, the "voice of Apollo" bu been fired, be 11ld today. Haney, 40, said that after weeks of what he called harassment by his boss, he wu notified Monday that be was being relieved of his postUon and ordered to report to Wuhlngton to take a reduced position. Choral Concert Slated Friday . lrvtM Rudi publJc Information cbiel Bill Aldrld1 denlea that tbe llcw praerve going in near the San Diego and Santa Ana f~way1 will be the new headquar· ten of the Irvine Compuy'• real estl.te departmenL * John Wayne, mident ol Bayshoru in Newport Beach, fell oU bis horee the ~ #fay. The cinch broke. tte:a okay and filming contimled on "True Grit.'" I doo 1 know wbal role DuD II playing In Ille movie, bu~il tt lln'. l!qoller Q)gbum, who ls the st, meanest and funniest marshal 1 n American fictloa, be'• &ivlnl up an easy Oscu. Read the boot. You'll see what 1 mean. From Pllfle l HARBOR ••• a public hearing Wednelday, allo in- clude: -Rorwnln& Ille Harbor Dlltrld to Ille Parb, llorbon ud Beachel Dlltrlcl. ~_.., tbe pr_.t f I• e • --Commlllloo to ...... member qency, witl1 Ova'. memben JP- ~ by. c:ounty oupenllan ...i four by the 1-al Cltieo. . -lmmodlate ln>piovemeot GI com- rmmtcatkm ~ the dldrict and tbe public. Tbls would be lldde•ed tllrouah monthly ineetlnp bettr..., dlltrlct of· fidall and representaUves of the Leap of C!Ua, Orange County Oounber of ~. Ille Cout AuocllUon ond Ille pral. . The uaoclatlon 11)'1 <zpalllion of Ille dlalrict'I aulbority to li>clude reponal parkl ud beacbs cwld be O<iompliobed throuCh enatiling leslel•lkll enacted •I lbe. ltate level. 'Ille lnmoled jurlallctlqn "would enable the llort>or Dllilrlct to develop, operate ...i mal!>laln reg!Gaal .......Uonal l•dl!UOI, both .-.i ...i inland, on a count:J-wldl bMil." ,,,. _._ nporl ..... lliot Barbot Diltrict "-Kenneth Sampson ud 1111 --lire llready respon1ible for . !Iii' IUpll'Vlllon <t tl1a county regional ~ .,-. By enluglng t11a· -c.mmiul<o'• membenblp, 11ya ·tbt Cout Auoclollon, "a more permanent llailon" could be created between city interests and county interests. "It is abundantly clear," the study committee report concludes, "that better liaison must be developed beLween the public aw:t private~Httors. :.There is generif qreemeat by iU JYhO appeared before the committee that the com· mwilcatiO!UI gap between the Harbor District and public Js a wide one." Conuniltee mtmben, iD addition to chaim\an Killingsworth, art Carl Kymla, water district manager; Hancock "Bill" Banning III, real estate manager; Guy K. Cle ire, attorney; EdwlD .Ftnaer, con- sul Ung engineer; Edward J act 11 n , engineer; Carl S. Kegley, attorney; William D. Lusk, builder-developer; Thomu J. O'Keefe, attorney ; and H. L. Remmers, rancher. Aasoclation prtak!ent Bl.ackbum com· ment.ed on the committee's work: "I think the boys did a helluva fine job." Front p .. .., J SEX •.. UPIT..,._ , Since turUeneck sweaters are the rage with people, this turtle at Albliquerque's Rio Grande Zoo dec:ide to see what all the fu&s was about. He· couldn't go formal. however, since there was no place for the tortoise !ihell cufflinb. Senwncing Not Simple- Two Judges in Six Days All DoqlM Rlcbard Dorr wont.cl to do WU plead sullty but II -Ill d•YI ond -before two Superior Court judges to pl -I be wanted -Im· mediate sentmdng. Judge Gardner looked at Don"s d<mier and refused lo accept the plea. He ordered Dorr to raoe a jury trial Monday before Judge James F. Judge on thll charge1 as filed -allegaUona that motorcyclist Dorr tried to run down two police oUicers before he was sbol in the leg. Dorr, 20, of ,1517 Superior Ave., New- porl eBaeh, olffftd • guilty plea a week ago befcire Judge &bert Gardner. The "deal" called for Dorr to plead guilty lo charges or assault -sealed down from ll didn't take Judge Judge long to ac- suspiclon,of P,51ult with 1 deadly weapon cept Dorr's plea and impose the sentence -~SM~ of 90 ~ys lnr,l!M fl~e ,. that ~tflced OU' last Wte~ between years probation. "-l "} .. ·· ~ ~ 1 •• the Ne _ i~ch man and the dlatrict · --attomey's-otnce. Judge Judge also ruled Willi&rd Killian Rites Condi.cted Funeral services: were }w:ld today at Paclnc View Memorial Park for Williard F. Killian, well tnown Newport Beach real estate man. Mr. Killian died SUnday at Hoag Memorial llosplla! oiler a lengthy lllneaa. that Dorr's motorcycle -impounded 1t the time of arrest la.st Jan. 26 -must be returned to i~ owner oo his ttleaae from jail. Barbara Byus Rites Conducted He was M. Funeral services were held today for A resident of Newport Beach since B ba 1936, he was a fonner member of the Los ar ra Byus, 18, an Ora111e Coast Angeles Sheriff's Department. College · student who died Sunday at He served with the U.S. Navy dwing 8ellwoocl General Hospital, Bellflower. World War JI. She had been ill for several weeks . Survivors include his wife, Virglnja, cf She ls survived by her parents, Mr. and ~y aaid he had not yet decided whether k> go but did indicate be ii con- sidering an appeal and has talked to an attorney. the home, 2000 Vista Cajon, a son, Arthur Mrs. John F. Byus of 2433 Vista Hogar, Newport Harbor Hi"., School's choral D. of Newport Beach; sisters, Cecile Newport Beach ; a brother, John. of the .,. of the educaUon committee Is to take the Neekamp of. Lake San Marcos , Harriet ramily home; a sister, Mrs. Joe Ann He is under Civil Service status. Haney said bis boa, Julion -·the National Aeronautlcll and s p a c e AdmlnlltnUon public alfllr1 chief In Wuhington, started lorlnglnf lat.Ole pressure oo him to change pos.iUons dur- ing a meetlni at &:beer's office March 28. groups will present lheir annual spring school board and admlnistraUon off the Klatt of San Marino and Nadine FQreater Hiltabiddle, and grandparenta Mr. and concert Friday at I p.m. Mrs Golun Trudi Roger!, publicity chalnnan far spot. He aald that when the board takes a of Okla; a brother, Emory KiIDan of . H. L. ert of Teti!. the Band Boostels, aald the proll'am In stand on somethina: In which it bas a Marysville and one grandchUd. Servicea were held at the Church of the school auditorium will feature the A vested Interest It is in an witenable posl· Burial was at Pacific View Memorial Our Fathers, Forest Lawn, CyJreas, wilh Cappella choir in Schubert's "Mass In 1 _U_on_. ____________ P_u_k. ___________ burlal __ •_I F_or_e11_La_wn_M_em_or1a1_· _P_u...:k._ 700 Harbor Area Boy Scouts Ready For 'Camporee' A~ilmaWy 700 yOunptul from 27 Boy Seoul ...... In Ille Barbot Ana will pllch camp this weekend ...th al C..- del Mor la Ille Del Mar Dlllrlct's big Clmpone. 'llle~-ionww ftolute 10 UID .... 11. IUch u .. ......,. knol-lying, flnl llld, Whlnp. -lllu4y, --... ;p11on ud -pln(lkllll. Ad!Tlllll "'8ln Satunloy ........ with .. ~ ...... ..., , .. u. ~-pine compeUtlon on • bluff over Ille Pocillc Ocou. 11111-" CiyN1 c.... ,,. °'""" Enlpln Council'• dlllrlcl compor<t encls ohortly ofter ,_ Sun-doJ, with •nrdl to be praenlld to the 10 top Boy Seoul ...... ud Ille top -Individual patn>ll. Blast Hiu Shop G." Solollls wiD be Kotl>y Coku, KaU Gagnon, Sally Owen, Davkl Van Houten, Bruce Johmon ond Nick Furtlcella. The IZ.voice group, the Chantelles and the Madrigal Singers will also be heard in religious and aecular sel~ons. The public is invited. Donation at the door is $1, wilh proceeds going lo student music programs. Thant Declares 'War' Existing Now in Mideast .._Wino_, UlllTED NATIONS, N.Y. -Secretary- ~ U Tblnl decllll'Od today tbe U.N. ......fire &!Olli the SuOI Conll MCtor lo --totally lnelfealft "ml • vlrlull state of active war now uista lhlrt." Tllanl made Ille lllllmenl la • tpeelal nport to memben al Ille U.N. Sacarll1 Council. - 1be report .,.., u Israel! flCbt... bomben knocked out E(l'pl'1 eorly wun- lng' radar deh.,. lfllem In IOUthern Jordan. A mllitory tpokellllU illd la Jenoalem tl>al Ibey were EcYPI'• only early worntnc lllliooJ qlllllt land. ll'ln llar1ed by• poollna uploalon did . IEorlltr Story, r.,. I) SIMI 4-to °" outo npalr lbop •I Thont did not --o .....U mMl-ml eemtoo St. 1a Loo AllDtftoo -.,. • -.-· 0.-Wmtll GtUor bid ....,ty toe, but Ille urftDCll al ibe nport lndl- Dreu,.. tbe blom br.a out ol J:• p.m. coled tho! m<rnben <f the lkalloo wb!rl oome p80line lgnHed ._ <OUnell would now tntu lnlo coosulto- la-'Y. Ho "u not loJurtol. tionl on whst coone to rou .... \ I DECORATOR AND MODEL HOME RETURNS Spanish and Mediterranean Furniture All New Top Quality Brand Names A Decorator's Dream Home Is On Display Over Sl00,000 Worth of Spanish & Medit~rranean Furniture to Choose From! ltewi1 a• foJlow1 : &or9.ou1 I ~. evstOm '!"Ut.d aof• with ••p•r•f• piltowt with heavy oak trim cleeor and matching cheir, ] matchint oak occasional taW.1, (21 &t'' tall dacorator lamps, hangin9 chain 1wa9 lamps in wrought iron, an l·piK• lr:ing 1i1e master b.droom suit. in pec:an p.1n•led MecUterranean •ty'• •1th top quality II years •arran~ khtg 1fie m•ttr.t1 Md box springs. Spann.h cllfting s.t, .+c. " Any pi.u c1n be putch•1.d lndlvidvarty. Drop by and ••• ovr ••ledion of top quality Sptinish and M•clitarrant1n fumlturt .. , f1nta1tlcally pric•dl COMl'LITI HOUSll'Ul WAS IM. $1Ul.OO COMPLETE HOUSEFUL WAS REGUARLY $1528.00 M&iST SACIUPICE POR ONLY • 5698°0 TERMS -WE CARRY OUR OWN ACCOUNTS I -• . • Teday's FlaaJ· Cos a . -Mesa • • • EDITION . . ' r .... t l)aily, ,Pil~t-.~.~~ ) • ~1 !"' ~ •• , • ., ' • ~ t . FRESHNESS GUARANTEED BY THIS llRAHD !)F COOKIE Conftle Hfrshon, 12, Mrs. Frank HrvM P•ck Goodin ' ' • ""41$ OUTFIT ALWAYS VOLU"T ... ERS FOlt'DUTY Traop 340'1 Lori Waldon, ltinllfa !lauder L .,._,,,_ --~-- ... 1 ~-..- OlA.Y_....,l!liillltW...._,lliillltw • CANs"FltL CAlt-TONI l'Olt°~lattl'T MAILING S..-Cecceal, 14, 11-sii'y Gfrl Soout ·' ' N.Y. Steeb TEN CENTS . ' Tell Gls 1 Story of Cookielif t ' Tllfl la a ll<ty lllout cocikkl and -le '--le -..,. about other -le -, l particular!)' ,young _.., fllhilnl a war 'r'that wu being wqed before many of them were even born. ·. 11 la lhe ...., ol the We Care · ·.Cootielift. a·tale follow,,.:& in recent weeks 'by people ol lhe Harbor Atta and being told once again for GD in Vietnam. A special edition of lhe DAILY PILOT , ' wUL tell how i\ is, from the outset to the " present, with hundreds of copies to be printed for mailing to the guys in the war zone. The story ·starltd here when a dark· haired woman named Mrs. Darrilyn 01· Iver went forward to erpl&ln her IDQl'ale· ~ Clmpaian lo the Costa Meaa Cl· _ty Council ' • She ......i very timid about lroubliJ!I city fathers busy wtth the task ol Jooldn& art.er a growlnl: town of 73,000 persoos, but ~ went ahead. They loved it. Mn. Oliver, ol Y.rrt Y.ukon Drive, Costa fl1esa, organized a similar cookielift to the war r.one, commanding a task force of volunteers in Rancho Cordova, ·near Sacramento last year. Moving to the Harbor Area of Oranee County, the busy y01U1g mother· figured the people of Newport Beach .. -home of such ~ u Jollll Wayne, Buddy Et-. and. I..,. Ally.., -and doota ' M-coOld join In anotber project. Cl.tC '-n, .......,.;,.,, w- ' Vietnam veterana now home comalelCing and even 1chool' children respooded with a flood ol cookia, cash, malling materiall and other donations. They rlnlfd from time· and energy easily spent on more personal projects, to donaUon of Y.cant offkle lplCe on the Costa Mesa Civic Center'• fourth flcior, to a handful of rubber bands. Presumably the rubber bands were ac- companied by a note of warm en- Reade Wins New couracemen~ but the. fn'ldiooler'• -·wrltln(, println( or whatnot B was -·""'~ 'le be read. • ...........,.., qw '. Suddenly II was O.Doy (for Dellnr7l the fourth o1. A;riL . • pawn ~ ~arb' 'to April, bu\ lhe Civic Center i:loesn't 9Pft! unilf I Lm., at wblch time Mn. Oliver Md ..,. fonO blib school girl out · for Eater v1e1tion marehed upstain•to begin mane\mn in .. tbelr Operation Mcwa&e-booat. , "Mrs. Oliver is a conacientlous cqotie.. packer," reported 1DAILY PILOT cor· respondent Janice Berman, arrivtn1 back (See COOKIELIPT, Pap I) ' • Term Council Plays Down Politi!s as St. Clair Burns lly AR111UR R. VINSEL Of "" Dllllr '"" ltefl. Dancloi aJonc the tightrope of penonal poliUcs 'in a rare open p U b 11 c perfonnanee, the Costa Meaa City Coun- cil voted l to 0 Monday nlaht to put Plan- ning cOmmlsaioo Chairman Nate Reade into a ,_.. term. WblJe thO majority-fiddled trying lo keep unpleasant politics to a minimum, freshman Councilman William L. St. Cblll' burned over past campaigns in ..-·hlch he lacked support in certain quarters. Couocllman Georg' A. T u c k e r , meanwhile, somewhat shielded the St. Clair flame from the wind, which was consideri.ble at times during the tense session. · Emotions simmered under the surface as St. Clatr p~ on with his pre.an- nounced bid to stall selection of Reade or anyone el.se to fW ·the conunis.rioo ·term expiring Fr~aj~' _ . Tttasures must be laid up today In heaven for the popul~ Reade, bufld on the assessment of his civic dedication by - the council majority, as well as In a surprise visit by ex-Vice Miyor Calvin Barck, St. Clair's first political ca!Ualty. The vote on St. Clair's motion to delay appointment for two weeks and study the criteria used for P I a n n i n I Com- missioners' selection died on a l to 2 vote, with Tucker joining St. Clai,r:. Neither man voted on 1 subaeqyent mo- . lion by Vice Mayor Robert M. Wllaon - in the interest ol propriety -and lhe s lo 0 vota put Reade boclt in olfJce fO( another four years. "No one ahould consider-this a vote against Mr. Reade himJelf," warned Councilman Tucker, who bad a1Noo!; made it clear he was maintY coucei:Dild with exploring lhe que1Uon ol criteria u. ed in selection. St. Clair abo bad &treaaed ho wu DOI !See READE, Pase I) Mesa <:ouncil OKs Summer ' £jik Riees . - . ···1 Pressure Off. Vietnam 7th Fleet Task Force ,,, a ~,.>."" t. - G.uards KOTea Missiom Molortycle •no!i. ~ COminl lo the Qranie Coiinl1 •Jl'altjrounds I« Costa Mesa on U Coolecu6ve Friday nights this summer. but not the brand <Xlmmonly associated with loud exhaust pipes and rowdy yahoos. The C06ta Mesa City Council Monday voted to lice~ Mi,lne Bros.. of Pasadena, to promote Class A racing, after a S~y demonstration of the sporl. . ~·in mid-May, depending on how fast the trac;k can be ahaped up, no more than six cycles may race at once, with a mandatory 10:30 p.m. closing boor. Harry Oxley, general manager for the race promoters, told councilmen Monday night that the racei have drawn no ob- jectionable o u t I a w 'cyclist elements elsewhere and provide a new approach to an old sport. Fuel tanks loaded with two quarts of pure akobol, the cycle. circle the track a muimum ol four Umes, with the top rider starting far behind the newer, in· experienced men u a handicap. See Here WASIDNGTON (AP) -Vietnam naval air operatlonl are beint curtailed ud the 7th Fleet lltetched to the limit with deployment of a 23-ahlp task force to pro- tect U.S. reconnalslance mlsalons oU North Korea. "We've got no slack," 1 Navy officer commented after lhe Pentagon MondaJ announced Ulipment ol an arin.da to the Sea ol Japan where a Navy plane wu shot down by North Korea lut week. County Politics • • Charged in Fight Over 2 Airports · SUperjet foe1 in the Newport J!Uch and Mtuion Vl•Jo areaa are pittM' againlt each other because of a "poliUctl situa- v~• T_... tion" on tbe Orange County Board of Supervilon, the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commeree was told Monday. He must catch them-<lr try to-and the 1J>ane fuel aupply burns otll wtthln four ahortJaps. Oran'ge.-biunty Fairgrounds General Manager Alfred Lutjeans .accompanied Oxley to the council meeting, but city of· , flcials ha<! alftady previewed a Clau A nee Sunday nlghl Big frames for come-hither look and blue li\Jled lenses. for big baby blue eyes reflect new, non!unctiOnaI use of sun glasies · in U.S. Uied for psycho)ogical reasons and as fashion acces. sories, sunglasses topped 20 million figure in pairs aold la1t year. Cttnl Hoooe, ehalnnan ol the Chan>- ber'a aviation committee, aaid a majority of county aupervtan lut weet voted for "inteiim" regional alrp:irt. ltudi.el ol El Toro Marine Corpe Air Stalloo and Coun- ty Airport becaUM ·they "don'~ have COll- stJluerrta in either area." Wordina: of the a,reement also calls for !lotted mufflers on the 111GLorcycles, which councilmen aakl wtre unusually quiet. briJ18h>I Ozley lo annoonce that thole beard Sunday ti.ad no mufflers at all. Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, Councilman Willlam L. St. Cl.air and Planniag Dil'f:C- tor William Dunn listeoed for the roar of the cycle from various spot.a.around the fairgrounds, but heard nothing. 1bey were ln police cars and could hear by radio when the machine. were abootlnC around ·lhe track, with 1 top speed, incidenW!y, ol only 35 miles per hour· (loJy In -place near the fairll'O<JlldJ could the cycles be faintly heard, the city leaden noted, and then only when the -WU drtftq in lhe right direction. Billiard Parlor Asks Beer Sale A Costa Mesa billiard parlor owner who ift•loulb' -not to try to .. u beer uked Monday night for City Council bllc~ In hia bid lo inltall taps lo,COII>-. .... wf111-houlq pool tables. Art Jadlc:e, .....,. ol ll'amllf Bllllard Cooler, Ill 11', 11th SI., llit out by a P'•'t1MJU1 vote aplnat die requegt, wlildl wlD be forW-IO llata of6clals u a dlJ pldeliDi. ,,_ hll #Plied to ille Aloobollc: !leverage Coolli>I hoard for an OIHale beer llcenle. wblch would eliminate 80mt f"'""1 .....-. from the Faml17 BUiiard Cenler, Harbor Chamber Begins Inquiry Into Sex Oasses Supervisors William Hirstein, Robert Batun and David L. Baker approved the feaathillty probe, lo be undertaken by WllllaDf E. ·Pertira • Auoctates, the county's tvlatlon mailer planners. Fifth District Supervlsor Alton E. Allen of Laguna Beach ~ Supervi>or Willlam Phillipe, dubbed the "father" of .County Airport, voted In the mlnorlly. Tbey said several ailtl, not just El Toro and County Airport, lhould be -ed. Hooee, • young hardware merchant, commented: "Unforfunatety, there m five peopJe By THOl\WI FORTUNE on the county board. 11.-who voted for °' "" °""" ,, .. ...., the El Toro and County Airpm:t ltudiu "The family life and 1t1 educlUoa don't • have coiuUtuenta whefe etthir baue ha• been chnnped In .... 1a.,.." allJIOI'( la Jdcated. !Dnteln maybe baa Wlth tbat~t Dr. Nolan P'rllleUe only a f ... a~ Monday 1 NewJ*t Harbor 0 nil 11 a poUUc.il tfluatkln," he aid. CIJamber of Commace loqulry fnlo .. __ ol k ..... got the IOUlbern -I ,.. edlltlltlon (lnllnma. part of the county fighting the oorlhern Dr. Frizzell• nplalned lo clwnber part ol lflo'eonnty." dlrocton why the educatloo ""'1lmlllee -aa:uled. the county board .,. which ho headi baa voted llnardin.n,Jy rO jortty-ol "duckinc Ill mpooulbllitlea" by undertake the lludy. tumlng ovrr lo the Southefn Calijomla The -...Veny hu arilen and -Auoctauon ol Govtrn-c. (SCAG)' tfle f,.llnp bave develooed In lhe """" oeJeetiao ol a -!tlloMJ ilrpott mulllly, be upialned, 'rhe Newport.Mesa site. ' IChool hoard baa -placed lo a -Chamber Pr-~ Richard -ma by U-who are very milch far and aid on behalf ol tht chamber ha had -who ... very· moc11 oplnat ,.. oent a letltr lo S.pervllor Alleo .,,.,. edualllor>. '° the COllllllttee -lo metldini bbn for hia eflort, tllqh !utllt, holp It Old. • lo bn>ailen the 11te otudiloi. He ollo Mid the chamber 11'-'• -noted that Sl>pervllor llaUJn ot DWtllon' l>lid ... dll'Od lllklrllll lhe the Ffrd Jlfltrlct bad -to the llllie but_.., Ille ..... ..., " -ortstaaJ motion req-.. a _, ol El tac.._ -i.n lurnod to tfle-. Ten. Batlln'I -411pulltad that tliln commlttat. · ' in e...i the Marine bole doll not·pme •Frtlzolle oald hia l~ber com-sultabl< for joint mllitary- mlttee wtll make .. ery eflart .fo' ---. Coonty Airport lhould bo mUllr (llel SU, r.,. I) ., • plaanod for hpllilion. One aircraft corrler and pouibly other war ablps .;, the 7lb Ffaet fiave -pull- ed from the war effort to form a ·DIW Task Force 71 deployb:ig tomewbere 'ti! North Korea. Officer• said trus means the NiYJ coo. trlbution lo the U.S. bombing ~ ln'South Vlelnam and LM will be c:ul•"1 rooghly one-third. 'Ille United Stata Ml been leepin1 three aircrall earTlen .. tho ftrlnc Une tn the Gulf ol TOUln; for the time lleing lbls will be -lo t .... The 7th Fleet's remalniftl four aircraft carriers are going into Taak'1Foree •71 along with three cruisers .Del 11 destroyers. • TJtu', olficera painted out, all 7lb Fleet caiil,irs m n0w tied down on two tniills -the Sea of Japan and the Gd ol Tonkin. And officen ctacrlbed lhe II destroyers as a major ahafe al the Sev~·· heavy combat veuels. H011 k.ng' the fleet can 1114lntain bolh assignments under ~t condltlGm II a matter of Concern to the Navy'. WJth .its aix flattops occupied,, the 7111 Fleet baa no replacement OexlbWly. OHlcers 11a1c1 that If thetas~ ford.,baa lo remain In the Sea ol Ja~ lor &IQ' ... tended ptfiod -a few weeks er more - the , 7t~ Fleet would have to set · IOIDI relief in the way of replacements from the AUantk Fleet. . AUanUc Fleet carrlen have 1peDed Pacific carrien off vtetnam cm occuioo in the put. NEW YORK' (AP) -Tbe stock m.n.t closed about even today, ')tlrina IOme of its early Joaes. (See quotatlono, P• IQ.It ). Oru1e w ...... ' ' 'Ille sun wtll be wortfns. port time Wedneaday wtth cloudy lklet the order ol the 'doy. Tllat'D drop the ipen:ury -two notchel lo 13 by mldaf- INSmE TODAY T~ey k<rp .. '°"""P• nd Onmge Cou~fv ii lool<f•g for-ID<lrd lo a pop1doU011 of 110o ..a. li01l br 1910. l'llQ< I. = =... --·---... -=~ -=-~ • ' ....... ,... . tt-U ............ 'f " --11 • ............ •.1• I ........ ~M . -. i . --''•,...... .. -" === . . -" . .... .. M ' • • • • • ,,.._..., ______ ~-=-==;;:-:;::;--;_;::;-:;"'.:-;.--::: •. -~----.... ---. .. . .. .. -... .. . . ' ~ .. ----· .. . ..... -.. ' . .. ' ~ .. I • L I O&ll.Y- Harbor Diiput.e· By JAC![ IROBACK Of ... c.llf' .......... c • ~ dJJsoluUon of tht Orarige C....17 Hlrbcr Dlltrict -a <Olllt0'""'1al oub~. lor men tbaa thrte yean -will be -. 111t -Local A;ency FOl'llllllliD Commiiaion Wedftuday · f o r Caa- &ideraUM. At tht J p.m . ...,Ion, WC membera will act on .-JutlOm of 12 county cltlol which lav« clluolUtlon and formatloo di a i:qular county-wide Jleparlmetlt GI fflrbon, Buebts and Parks. , CUrrenUy tht harbor dlltrlct la oemf. •Ut.onomout and aetl Jt1 own. tu fate Utroucb the harbor commluJon '• reco. mendatioo lo tht Boan! of Supervllon. U tht LAFC appm11 clluolutlon, !be matter will be forwarded lo lhe Board of Supervilon with lhe proboble recom- meDdaUon that a c:ountywide elect1on be called on tbe Wue for IOUlitlme in Augua:l Cltlel forwarding reaolutions lo lhe conunluion are Brea, Buena Part. Foun· l&ln Volley, Fullf<loa, Hunlinilon Bead!, La Habra, 1"I Alamlloo, Pllcentla, santa Ana, -loo. Tultln and Wealmlnster. The harbor distrid battle orlglnalod In HunUn"°" Beach when that city negotiated for many months. o~ jurlsdlction In !be Huntinglon Harbour marina area. The city contended that it wu lervlc- tng the area with polict, fire and lif~ard protection and-sl!ould be rdm- buned bY lhe county. In lddition lhe ~ty wanted relief from harbor diltrict taxes. HunUngton Beach loe:t the battle before the I.AFC and subsequent lqislaUve ..,. tioo by Aaemblyllllll Jolm V. Brlgp (ft,. Fullerton) died in 1n auembly com- mittee. Newport Beach, which would be most direcUy afleded bY dJJsolution of the distrid, bu maintained that In the <Vent of dlsiolutlon, "tt is ""'1tlal that the dty be reimbursed by lhe county for U· penditureJ by the city to provide harbor facilities and services which prOduce regional benefits." C:iUcs ol the dissolution have pointed o•Jt that nothinc would be gained by con- venlon to a rqular cowtly deparllneot either in the way of lower tuea or actual admlni&tration. CountJ Leacue of Citiu advocatea have argued that the mov~ w<Md result 1n a tywlde recreaUon faclltties, lncllldtne better dl!lrlbutlon Ii tans foe CGU11- re1ional parb. ,.,.... P .. e J SEX •.• lotallJ objodlve. Medical pnctlll--. echool people, othen both pro and con will be uked lo 111bmlt lo queotlonlq, be aald. "I cu~ overemphaalae lbe need for mainlain1ng complete obJeetJvlty en this," be told chamber dlrecton. "People elthe-seem lo be totally for or totally •p.inlt the program. They uy either keep the who.le thlna or throw the Whole thing out.'' He aald S<hoolJ Supt William eun. nlnpam told him tht program u tt ii beinft studled b1 the llChool board la not Ye\ far enough alo"i lo be put lnlo effect next fall. "So there la plenty of time lo take teltlmdny from ezper1 aourcea,'' he aid. He promhed an ln-<tepth study and tareful analyals before the comm1Uee will make a recommeodatiao to the full chamber. Frtmlle mrplalned later that I !unl:tlon of lbe eclocaUoo commlUeo la to ta'• !be sebool -and ~tkrt off lbe apel_ lie aald that when the~ tueo 1 1tand on 10ntethin1 ln which ft bU a vested interest tt la in an untlnlble pm. !Jon. DAILY PILOT OIU.MGI COAll NllllHIMG COMl'AMt l•Mrl N. W•IHI ........ Mill l"lllllllllW J••" •. C.11.y Viet "'"'*"' _, 0-11 INMl'f Th•111•1 IC•nU .... lite••• A. M,,,1ri; .. -·-----JJI WM lly ltrt .. Malll119 All!'"': •.o. r.. 11to. tt&H --""""" ...,: m1.., ..... .......,.. ~.._.i nt'--'~ .......... 1Md!1••-- ')!;• 11141 Ml..CU1 0 r .W:al' I 6 """'" s: .... Or ... '"" ~ .. -.......... . .................. : ... "'™ ............. ............ ......... &.:r::~ .... -c.tl ..... ' So*lcl' ..... OW« .... ......,,~ llUll! a.It.....,., ...,., .,..,,.,.. et.rt --. • b Z a of -tHe · Geritol , • • It~ three senior citizens be added to the rest home staff. "We don't truat IO)'OM under 15,"' declared Tire<lblood, adjuatlng t b e "Senility Power" button plMed to b1J &bawl. ' The revolt began lat week when a small group of hardcore superannuites held a dodder-in at which &0me burned their &tclal Security cards. Although pe1cuble to lte early pllllll, the protest movement took a violent turn when someoite hlt George Snaffle, rest home superintendent, with a bottle of Geritol. · Snafne blamed the trouble on Irvin• Ranch !'lll>llc lnformaUon chief Bill Aldrlcb denlea that !be lionl -e aolns In n<ar the San Dlt10 and Santa Ana frHwaya will be the new btadq&lir· ten Ii the lrvtoe C<>mpa11y'1 real eetato dtptrtmenl • * ly JEROME 1'. COLLINS Of .. ...., 11111 ""' ·-.. BtUldnl up the Orantt Cilunty Harllo<. Dlatrk:t "would serve no uatrul purpoae. " .... · the 0r•nst County Coast Al>OClaUol . declared loday. • ... 'Ile pleatJginlll llO·member ._i;:: !Ion, repmentlni eoaatal dUea mm Sal, John Wayne, r<sJdeot of Bay1hord In Buch lo San Clemente, r<acMd tllt,t Newport Beach, fell off his borae the conelustoo f.Uowtog I lix-weel< 1tudy of other day. The cinch broke. He'• ~ thO dlaaolµllQo qtl<ldcn. -' and filming coaltoufd oq "TM Grt~" -Olton President Cap Blac'!"irii:'. I don't lmow-wbat niie DuU 11 l'llYbll · .aald 1be fthdtnp Ii 1 tpedal ~ lo the movie, but U U lln' llociatar ullped thO probo bave - Cogburn, who ~ the toqbeo1, -bJ dlncton Ii the 57-yur-<>ld .........,0 snd funniest fnatlor manbal lo tlon. -- Amerlcao ltcUon, be'i limr up an •aar The commijlee, hladid bY publllhl<. Oscar. -James · C .. Klilhipwortb, recomnieodl Read the i.m. Yeu'U ,.. wbat I mean. !bat the Harbor Dittrtct oot onty be ,... • talllld, but that lta Jtttildlctlon be .. . •• paneled lo Include r<glnnaI parb. .. . Thia plte lbe uaodation to • dirt<:t confrontatlolt with lbe County League of CJUea. 'l'be teaaue'• m1Jorlt7 wanla U., Harbor District clluolved and I t ~ rerponalbQl.Ua: turned over to ID etdarl~11 ed County Parb Dlwtment. ui ,.,.... P .. e J COOKIELIFT. •• ' from the fourth Door front to report on the campaJgn. "But sbe looi<I awfully lonely up there," Miu Berman added. No one was apathetic, hawtver. Mrs. Oliver and her first co-worker were simp- ly early. Shortly afterward, reinforcementa ar- rived and the We Care Cookielift ·~ mand posl was bu5lling with volU11teer1 getblg tanltters and cartoM of cooties, gum, Kool Aid and other items ready. Merchants and business flrnul oI every size got behind !be camJ*lln, with one of Mrs. Ollvtr'a top ldvlaon, Mn. Polly Vasquez, contributing some cartons from the liquor store ahe manages. "Thoee poor guys ••• " aid Miu Berman, the newspaperwoman wbo covered COokielift'a first day of opera. Uoo. IJGBT MOMENTS "Can 't you just see their facea when they open that big, heovy Old Grandad carton and find lt full ol such Jow- potMcy treats as popcorn and oatmeal cootiet?," she joked. The cooklelilt campaign bad other light momenta. Tbeodort C. "Ted" Bologh, twice- WllUCCelSful candk:l1te for city council, criticized dooalion of the vaeant civic center space to the Cookielift crew on 1 pw-ely philosophical basis. He beliave1 City Hall is for city busineu -e.r:clusively, no matter what. He responded to the Cookie.lift aC.. commodat.Jon with a suggestion that nobility ol a projed should be discounted w~en CJty Hall use is not limited to strictly cfty bualneso. Bologh IUllest.d It might JUlt u u..lly be used u a llOUP kitchen and anti- vepettal diseue clinic for aojourning hlPOtel and Harbor Area runaways, Jeia!ng to various public and private reiction. Two day• later his wife -saylq: Iha 1polle for ber husband -heartily and un- qualllledly endoned lhe CookleUft and 1be would help out berseU U not con- valescing from a fractured leg. 1be broken limb occurred ·before her husband '• Cooklellft tommentary. PINKLEY SUPPORTER And eo It goes today. Costa Mesa Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, whole ~in-law, USMC Ll Col. Mu Adrian la flying jet combat missions in Vietnam, is one of Mrs. Oliver and CooldeWt'a moat vocal supporters. "The more I get into it, the more I find out how much the top brass likes it and considers It a major morale·bool!iter," says the Mayor, who is organizlng a din- ner Friday for another Cookiellft booster. Army Stall Sgt. Joe Hooper, decorated in Prealdent Nixon's flrat Medal of Honor ceremony, ia driving in from San Fernan· do lo vtalt tht CookleUft beadquarten. Some Gls in front line outfJta,.rear sup- port unlll, and military boopltals In both IVetnam and tht U.S. have already responded with thanb, men who &rt'I gone to war but know they are not foraot· ten. And for those who can't manqe time for a thank-you note or put It off unUI thty forget, the We Care Cooklelllt ttoop1 know their own minion hu been ae- compllaMd. Not only do they care, they also un- dentand. Child Injured Escaping Bully A IDIAD boy trying lo eecape I nelll>borhoocl bully seelti"i a fight cUmb- ed a tree Monday and was nearly knock- ed lo the fl?Ollnd when hit In the bead by a 1hnlwn bottle, Coeta Mesa police aald today. Eric D. Blacklont, •• of 111 E. 21at St., wu trulod II Hoag Memorial H01Pltal alt.er I.ht Incident ntar h1s home, with thtte 1Utcbel requtrecl lo clOle !be -Parenll of the victim went lo pollct, •ho listed the incident as an usault with • deadly wuP'.O" and art conduct.Ina a foUowup tnvesuaauoa today. Bla&t llits Shop Fin atar1ed bY 1 1uolln1 mrploolon did tl,900 dame• to an auto repair shop •t 17U c.rriloo Sl In 1"I Alamltoo Mondar. OWnet Warren Geller told county firomm the blato broke oul at 2:11 p.m. lfhm -, ... 11.. lgnlled lpon- taneowlr. He Y.'U not lnjun!d, -= "" b =Nimtr> • -- •Yale Girl' Now CdM Lass Will Make History 700 Jlarhor Area Amoret Cardeiro is a cute, l6-year--0ld brunette. who nezt fall will add a new dhncwion to Yale University. The Corona del Mar High School lass is one ol SOO girls who will bleak a tradition of pipes and tweed coats, a manly bulldog maacot and never a akin around except on weekends. It is an all-male tradition that dates to 1701, 75 years before the American revoluUon. It wasn't the prospect of all those men around that decided Amoret to attend the venerable campus at New Haven. Rather it was mainly one man, her father, Charles Cardeiro. He is a Yale man. Amoret ii tbe eldest of alx children at the Car~ home, 2338 Bay Farm Place, Santa Ana Heighll. She ii an outstanding student with a 3,a grade point average (4.0 la straight A, 3.0 llraight B). She allo swims competitively. And U Vale lln't pWming a distaff swim team she says she may organize one. . Amont will major to pl>ylicl. She likes the theoretical aspect of It and says she ho~ 10111eday to do reaeercb. Golni eut will In ltaeU be an U· per1ence fer her. She has never been east of Colon.do ..,d she ~.never ridden on an airplane. There'b another Corona'.lel Mar High student going lo Yale In lhe fall. IM he b a boy, 17·year-qjd Rick Nelsser. n-ball.,.I .Ivy bave aeen his kind before. · ~ :t DAILY l'ILOT Iliff l"Mte HEADING FOR NEW"HAVEN Future Valle C.•rdelro Boy Scouts Ready For 'Camporee' ' Approllmattly 700 yoonpten from 17 Boy Scout lroopl In lbe Harbor Area will pitch CIJDP thtl weekend south of Coron1 del Mtr In the Del Mar Dlltrict'1 bll Camporee. The Friday-~•y leaion will feature 10 skill events, IUCb u astronomy, knot-lying, flrJt aid, llshlnp, nature study, compau navJgation and camping skills. AdMtles begin Saturday mornio( with an openin1 ceremony for the big cainplng compeUUon on a bluff over the Plciflc Ocean, just weJI of crystal Cove. The Orange Empire Council'• dlatrlct camporee endJ shorily alter nooo Sun- day, with awards to be preaented to the 10 top Boy Scout troops and the lop three individual patrolJ. Selim Franklin Marriage Told Col. Selim Franklin 8'., Costa Mna 1~ tomey and dvtc leader, b booOymoonlJli In lhe Hawaiian Islands with his llride, the former Mqdallne Po!t4re Ii BovalJ llills. - The Cout Aaaociatlon conunltteo11 nport leads off with UU. flat statement: ,~ "Ahollahmerit Ii tht Harbor lllltrlct woWd """ "' uaelul ~ '""'"' -dlatlod advllllqee In havlo& a dlatrtct. 'I Dluolutloo, HplalDI tht 18*11tkio,. would "not negate the fact" that thin'' are service. and fadllUes lo be main-• ta1ned and operated. "U coutal citill ue ""IUired lo ........ tht maintenance aOlf development Ii harbor facilltiea to the event of dllloluUon, a question of equity .. is created because of. the Wit of the fa· cilffiee bY resldeola of Inland cities." The ll&Ociation further points otJt that -. etimlnaUDD of the Harbor Dlrtrid'I spedal tax rato and pluging it In with the County ~al Fund tax rtte -• prime IDll of dlloolutlon backen - would reault In projeda and programa beinl dtpeodeat on overall county ftoan. , clng.' Thia, 11)'1 the auociaUOn, could kill oU many dlstrtd recnaUonal Pl'OJeda that the county cannot embark on, because of lta taSing authority. "An eumple Is the AliJo Beach JlfO' perty," uya tbe report. "It wu purcbu-- ed on contract purcbue option In keepinl with the District'• pay-U-yDU110 policy. "The county would bave bad lo buy the beacblroot land In lioutb Laguna outright and put up all !be ..-y at once, pro- ba.b\Y nece8'1tatlna a .1>9ad lisue. ·:~ ls .~ ~'that dlatrlct diSloluUon IDd inchllion of i t 1 mponslblllllt1 within tht County ~al Fund would resuJt ln 1 taz-avtna." .. From Page J The coupII were married in a civil t:~remony in Nevada fo114'ed by a reUpous ceremony In tht Clllpel Ii .tbe Kawatahao Church, HOiioh_.pm~ by the Rev. Abrabam Alib." Upon lbeir return, the Franklin1 will make lbeir home at UIOO E. lllh Sl, San- The ~Uon'I rtCMUnlqdatlom, whtch wil{ ~ preaeolod lo the county'• Loctl Agency Formalioo Commlam II a public beario& Wednelday, allo in- clude : READE REAPPOINTED • • • ta Ana. ' . Franklin b tht falh<i-Of &ttomey Sellm "Bud" Franklin Jr., a member of Newport.Mesa Unlllecl School .Dll!rlct board. -llnamlna lbe Harbor Dlllrld lo tbe Para, Harbors and Baacbel Dlltrtd. out lo nail iriy hidee lo tht wall during preface remarks, a claim which became more puullng u the ses&lon progre&!ed. Reade Is a big man and he dwarfed the podium, waiting for the counctl lo decide something. "Mr. Reade ii not only big in stature but he is bl& u a man," Councilman Tucker began, "and Mr. Reade, my ques- Uon is this: WO\lld it make yoo (eel bad if the council did wait two week!?" "Mr. Tucker, if the Costa Mesa City Council wanti me to conUnue as chairman of the Planning Commisalon - fine,'' Reade replied grimly. "If not - fine. U you want to watt two weeb - that'• your declslon." Obviously, he wanted action Im· mediately. "Mr. Reade, my concern Is not wlth you, but with the 1ttuaUon we're facing," St. Clair btgan. Suddenly, St. Clair got into the issue of Reade's allegedly allowing his name to be used In an anU-St. Clair political ad dur- ing the hot campaign 13 months ago. "I can't begin to put across how strong· ly t feel about thla .•. " said St. Clair. "I believe you are very wrong," in· terrupted Reade, denying that his name was used and noting that it was that of his wife, adding that Mrs. Reade has every right to be a poliUcal activist. . Viet Mayor Wilson was to scoff that no one in C.0.Sta Mesa knows of a couple more div ided polilleally than Nate and Thelnia Reade, but the big community leader had more to say . ''l WU not awart that In appointed of. ficlal like a planning commissioner gives up any ri&hts when be takes office." Reade conUnued, noting that paid municipal employes themselves are limited bY the Hatch Act. "I think Nate Reade will do his )ob f'ffll'dless of politics," countered Coun- cilman Wlllard T. Jordan, "I am tired ol lh1s character uussinatlon and I think It is ten1ble." Reade -In retponte to st. Clalr's crlticlsms of non-support -countered that he oUtrtd him aid whenever pouible right after the elecilon and the brand-new councilman aaked if• Reade would be in- ·temted, should a vacancy open on the Clty Council. Neither elaborated. '"lbat'a correct," St. Clair rtplled, "I always want to know of 1nyone •ho ii wlllina to oerve." Taking the pod1wn lland opposite Rtade, the fonntt vtce mayor uid he read of Ibo lmpendln1 clash and c.,.., not becaust he (elf the councll couldn't make the rlght choice, but out of a aente ol duty. "I don't thlnlt the city can f1""11>1y find . a beUer man than Nate Reade," Barck said, while Vice Mayor Wilson had already enumerat:e<t about a dozen major Reade civic contributions. Mayor Pinkley noted that Reade, as commission chairman, had been one of the expected delegates t'o send to the cur· rent American Society of Planning Of- ficials' convention in Cincinnati, Ohio. Franklin divorced bfi former Wlfe, Mariela, under Nevada statute Wiler this month In Lu Vegas. She bu a.. flied against htm In Orange Countir Candy Sale Firm Wins City Okay Commissioners Jack Hammett and Don Hout, as well as Chamber of Commerce Executive manager Nick Ziener went. "Nate ask ed not to be sent because It would be worthless to the city," said Mayor Pinkl ey of the recent days in which the chairman's new term seemed In Jeopardy. Johnson's Lectures Postponed Until Fall HOUSTON, Tea. (AP) -Former President Lyndon B. Johnlon ha decided to defer unw nezt fall hil planned ltl'1t1 of lectures at Rice UniV'll'llly. A candy sale bum.... aimed at t.acblnl disadvantaged boys from Watta and South-Central Loi Angeles lbe free enterprile l)'ltem wu llcemtd and ap- proved bY the Coeta Meaa City Council Monday. Following the three-man vote of con- fidence, Councilman Tucker, who h•d a~ stained, wu the first to congratulate Reade, who ~ a total ol nearly eight years as a ~loner. Johnaon had hoped to -.. ...,,. ment in a IUlea of talb during the cur- rent academic term, but a W'Llveratty spokesman aald Mooday be had -unable to fix on a IUltabte date. Scboo .. age youngtten are driven to varioua Southland commun!Ue1 after clalaea:, With a •10 per peraon. Ucenae fee, under tht Boys Eoterprtaea Inc., "I"'•· Uoo. The DrpnlaaUoo ha Op<fltad In Coela Me11 and IU!TOUndlJli lownl before. . DECORATOR AND MODEL HOME RETURNS Spanish and Medite"anean Furniture All New Top Ci)uallty lrancl Names A Decorator's Dream Home 11 On Display Over s100,ooo Wotth of ·Spanish & Mediterranean Furniture to Choose From! Item• •• follows: &or,totn t ft. ~ 4"1lltH Mfe wltt. •.-re+• , ..... wffl. hMvy oalr trim ""°' eH m.tchiftt chtlr, J ••tdtlitt oelc ec~I t.W.-. {21 58" fall d•cor1tor l•mpt, hangtn9 ch•ht swig litftl" 111 wroutht ltw, •Lii 8-pi•c• lr.in9 si11 mist• Mdrootft sutff ht. ,_un ,.ne1ec1 MMlttn'eftMll ttvfe with top qu•llty 11 y••n wal'Tlltty •Int 1ln 11Mtfrns eM .... '"'"''· 5,_,.1 .. dining s•t, etc. Any pl•c• c111 b. R!'rch4sed 1M1¥1clatfty. Drop ~ anti ••• eur 1eJ.ctt.w of top q•ollty Sp••l1h .,;;i MNll..,tnH• lvmlture •.. hotutlully ,n.MI COMl'Ll'll HOU.ul. WAS -· SllU.00 COMPUTE HOUSIFUL WAS U•UAILY $1521.00 MUST SACRIPICI POa· ONLY '69800 II II .--.. r .. i,,.,.,. 1844 No wport .Blvd Co>to Ml'\o I only· ''"•. "·,,1 i ..... .f \~· ' •••• I TIRMS -WI CARRY OUR OWN ACCOUNTS • AT llAllOll llOULIYAU .. ~~~--~~~~~~~~------------------~--------~~1111'.11111 ........ \ ' Private Planes -Forgo1t~n By JANICE BERMAN Of tile Dellt f'lllt St•ft ' ' This b 1 story about the other airplanes ....:. the smaller, noncommercial planes lb.al seem to have taken a hick s e a t in t h e current controveny OVU' passenger flights out of Orange Couniy Airport. At OranJe Coun~x Airport right now, ther.e are 850 privately ownl!d ·planes. That's about one airplane for" every 1,000 persons is the.county, and, accotding to tht Pereira report on air lran!portation in Orang' County, the ratio will increase . in the fut~ aa the economy expand!. By 1977, there w1ll be l\Vlct; as. many general aviation cralt; by . ,915, there may be ~.450 such aircraft within Orlnge County. U, says Pereira, facilities are created to support them. Orange County Director · ol Aviation Robert J . Bresnahan thinks that general aviation may have to look elsewhere to expand, as the volume of commercial avialion increases. But that's all in the future. Today, of· ficials aL the airport are walking a tightrope, trying to serve the needs o( boLh general and comrnercial aviation. Says Bresnahan 's ass istant, C. R. DAILY "ILOT ,_Mt.a b'I' lllc~enl KH~lw "Ron" Chandler : "Commercial aviation serves a high volume, while general avia- tion serves ntore of a select group. Close lo one million passe r.gers move through thi s terminal each year, and we must spend our funds proportionately ." 'I N TERMS OF TIME , COMME RCIAL AIRLINES ARE IMPOSSIBLE FOR ME' Businessma n Dunkin e nd Plane -An E xtension of His Right Arm He sympathizes, however, with the p I i g h t or the small aircraft owner. "General aviation people are sensitive about their situation. Here's this poor lit- tle pilot, wondering when he gets to take aff." Chandler noted that the general avia- tion people can relax about one thing - noise protests are directed primarily against commercial air traffic. Why the boom in general aviation? The reasons range from the intensely prac- tical to the sublime to the downright emotional, and aften are a combination af the three. At one end of the spectrum stands the private jel. At Orange County Airport, lt's not owned by a wealthy heiress as anothe r little trinket. Instead , it belongs to an oil company, or to a group called Jet King Air Service, Inc., a wholly-own- ed subsidiary of Denny's Restaurant.s .. The Jet Kin g plane is a $1.3 m1lhon North American Rockwell Sabrcliner. And it 's all business. The eight-passenger plane can do everything the big jets can do. but it has to refuel more frequently . Jet King keeps the plane in virtually constant motion. When Denny's men aren't using it, they charter it to other groups. Last month, it flew 1.5,IDI miles; The president of Jet King, Marvn\ Keogh, sa ys there'll a real market for the services of the private jet. "When time is short, and you have a group of executiv~ who need to get across the country to bid Learn to Swim Program Still N eeds Youngsters The Spring "Learn to Swim" program still has openJags. announced tHe Foun- tain Valley YMCA. This program is ope nto boys and girls, tsl through the 6th grade. All children will be tested in the water as to their swimming ability and then .placed in a. class acCording to their skill. Tbt pro- gram will follow the National YMCA Aquatic Standards and classes will con- sist af approximately JO students per olass. Upon completion , progress and YMCA l\\'ard cards will be issued . All awards will be presented at the final class ieSSioo. Cluses will start April 26th and run for ?'~Saturdays -rain or shine. Instruction · will be held at Fountain Valley High School -9:00, IO:OOand ll:OOa.m. The C06t is $5 for YMCA members - $10.00 for Non-Y·members. Advance registration is necessary. Can- t.ate the YMCA -14776 Beach Boulevard, Westminster -893-8$11 for further in- formation. . Percy Backs Bradley : LOS ANGELES (AP) -Republican Sen. Charles Percy of Illinois, in Los Angeles to confer with mayoral candidate 1'bornas Bradley, sa)'li he's not officially ~dorsing Bradley but he thlnb be should !': mayor . ' llOY OF THE MONTH M1rlna Hlth'• Av•ryt on an important contract, lhey \VOn 't wait for a scheduled flight ," he says. The going rate of $1.25 a mile for a cross-country jaunt means it costs eight executives $6,127 to take Jet King to New York and back. That's $333 per person each way, t\\·ice the price o! a com· mercial ticket But it means they can go anywhere at any lime. And for Jet King, it means that through chartering it when Denny's isn 't using it, the increased depreciation and maintenance charges in- creases the tax write-off. Keugh ~·ould not elaborate on tax ad· \•antag~s of jet ownership as compared lo the cost involved in fueling, staffing and maintenance. But he said, "Put it this way. It's expensive, but it's not th at ex· pensive." One innovation is Keogh's plan for out· fitting the Sabreliner \l'ith complete nm· bulanct. facilities. "\Vc·re anticipating the need of rapid transit for h e a r l transplants," he explained. A twin.engine Beechcraft Baron. which cost $119,000, is an exten sion of businessman Lloyd Dunkin 's right arm. He flies the plane constantly, as he manages properties and trailer parks in Las Vegas, San Jose, Sacramento and places in betwee n. "Commercial airlines are impos.\iiblt! for me. not in terms of money, but in tenns of time," he said. "My plane's in tbe shop now, and I have to fly to Las Vegas on a commercial night. That means I ht.ve to go e~rly in the mornini; and come back late at night. But my business," he said in an exaspera ted tone, "will only take two hours." But hi.~ plane isn't all business. even 11\ough that's where the tax advantages lie. He uses it to fly to British Columbia to go fishing, an eight-hour fli ght that 11·ould take days to drive. And he hops down to fl.1exico now and then - Mazadan is only a few hours away. He's proud of his plane, which has all th e equipm ent of a commercial airli ne r and can fl> in any weather. Inside, there is a confusing array of dials in the cockpit. But he knov•s them all. Dun1dn learned to fly at a smali field in Oregon in 1952. And he feels sa fer in his plane than in a car. "If you die before you r~ach 35, chances are you 'll die in a car crash." he said. In Ii years of flying, he·s never had a mishap. Flying bachelor Mike Schroer. 2fi.ye;ir old accounts manager for SL Joscj}li's Council Seeking Coun sel In Larwin T1·act Lawsuit The City Council needs 1 city counsel says the city manager and that'• one of the main items an the agenda of the Fountain VaUey City Council at 8 o'clock tooigbt. Councilmen will be asked to approve the hiring of apeclal counsel to defend the city against a Writ of Mandate filed by Eugene· Van Duk, 11151 Santa Cnu Cir· cle, -one of .the leaders of the opposition to the controversial Larwin Tract. Van Dask flied in Orange County Superior Court, asking the court to halt construction of the proposed sma 11 lot Larwin development, approved in stonny planning commission and city council sessions. Van Dask's suit is set far hearing April 29. In it he claims approval given for the Larwin Tract is invalid because or Park, R ecreation Meeting Uates 'fopic Parks and Recreation Commissioners in Fountain Valley will discuss a switch in regular meeting nights at the~: monthly meeting 8 p.m., Wednesady. Parks aod Recreation Director Stanley Stafford will ~mend c h a n g I n g meetings from the fourth Wednesday o. lhe month to the fourth Monday. , Commissioners said al their last meet· ' lng, that a time 1wltch was needed to bet· ter coordinate their action.!i with tho&e of the ciiy council and the planning com· mission. several illegal acLions taken by the city council and the planning commission. City Atty. Edwin Martin ha s withdrawn from the matter because of his declared Interest in the Larwin Tract. He served as agent for the owner. Wilford Lewis, in negotiations for sale of the property. In other matters. councilmen will also consider a proposal to cut the size of the city center area nearly in half. It has been recommended by special consultants that certain areas originally listed on the city's master plan for city center (land near the city hall) develop.. ment be eliminated. Debutante to Wed Adam Powell III NEW YORK (UPIJ -The mother of Beryl Slocum, Newport socialite and 1960 debutante of the year, con!inned Monday the engagement of her daughter to •darn Clayton Powell lll. son of the con- troversial Harlem congressman . ~1rs. John J. Slocum, who can trace her ll nceslry back to Myles Standish, said Beryl, 26, and Powell, 22. wouk! marry sometime in May. Powell's father, pastor of the Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem in not expected to officiate at the ceremony which will take place in Washington, D.C. Powell, a procluct.r for the Columbia Broadcasting System. is the eon of pianist Hazel Scott who is divorced from . Congressman Powell. She's Junior Miss Miss Henington , Averyt Top Marina Girl , Boy ... Jldle Benmgton' and Bryanl AY<r)'I b 1 • e bffn llll!led Boy IJld Girl ol the Month for April II l"1ntlngtoD -·· Marini High School. Mia Bonlngton, 1 ...Uor, will repruent California in the Junior Mlu Paaeant •t Mobile, Alablma nerL month. She ls I.he cumnt Oranae County Junior Miis. Last iummtr &he visited Honduru u 1 foreign exchangt atudtnt and how holds olfke1 n pre1ldtnt of the Marina High School Amerie1n Field Service Club and the'Clllfomla Scholastic Federation. -l .. In eddition ahe has rtprtstnted the .school u homecoming queen and wu allo named Kty Club sweetheart. She ha1 1ilo been act.Ive ln modern dancing, aa • aong leader aod has been named one of this yw't thrtt valedictorians. Marina's Doy ol the Month, Bryant Averyt, also Is a senior and bu been ao- Uve ln alhle:Ue1. He iJ Marina'• com- mJss:loner of athletics and compett:s with the varsity swim team. Averyt is alto a member of the Key Club and an honor 11tudent. hospita l in Orange, uses his four· passenger Beechcraft for nothing but the sheer joy of flying, and the sheer con· venience of being able to vacation in San Francisc:o or Las Vegas or San Diego at the spin of a prop. "~1y brother took lessons while I was in the Army," said Schroer. "and be took me up once when I got out. Then I got the bug." It's a costly bug, the Bona nza. In 1!160, when it was built, it was $40,000. Then, Schroer took 50 hours of flying lessons, which are now about $3(1 per hour , to get his first license. Before he gets his in· strumcnt rating, he'll take another 30 hours of lessons. Maintenance, he figures, costs $18 per hour · oI flying time, in· eluding gas and tiedown fees. The ntonthly litXlown fee. or space rental, dcpe n'1S on whether the plane is on the fiel li ($lD to $15), maintained outside by a con1pany like Beechcraft or Martin ($25), or in a hangar t$'i5). Ai rplane owners are a lot like boa t owners. As they slride toward their planes, they become increasingly jaunty. "Pl cast: don't photograph that wing," Schroer told a photographer. "The paint 's a little chipped." Open House Set A t Los Ala1nitos Stution. Sunday The Los Alamltos Naval Alr Station 11.'i/I open its doors to an ex~ed 10,090 l'isitors Sunday during th e annual military perso~ncl inspection ·by Rear Admira l William S. Guest. Guest, \\·ho is Commandei of the U.S. Na val Reserve Force and Chief of Naval Air Heserve training. will be assisted in his duties of inspect ing the four thousand officers and enlisted men by Rear Ad· miral N. C. Gillette, Commander of Anli· Submarine Warfare Group III. The activilies will begin at noon with r1isplny tours of the various types of aircraft fl own by the Los AlamitcJ,., reservists, l~luding the supersonic F-4 Phant om, the A-4 Skyhawk jet attack aircra ft and the "Sea King" anti-sub- rna rine warfare aircraft. Other activities will include Navy and NASA films presented in the theater at noon and an ootdoor ba nd concert with a drl ll team performa nce. Receptions will be held after the 3 p.m. inspection and a "sock hop" in the station gym for the younger people. GIRL 0, THE MONTH Morini Hlg/1'1 llonlngton r .... .,., •"11 n, 1969 s at Airport? FLIE R· DUNKIN SURVEYS COCKPIT'S ARRAY OF DIALS Business Trips and an Occasional V1cation The pride Is justified. Anyone who is \Yilling lo put out all that cash and all that lime and all that energy deserves, at least, a sense of exhilaration. And it's there. Dubbed "The Red Baroness" by her colleagues at Marlin Piper, she can and does teach all kinds or flying to all lclnds ar people. Her students range from begin- ners to former flying aces who haven't flown since World War II. Pleasure fliers start at these schools (there's another ape rated by Mission Beechcraft), as do prospective airline pi Io ts. Requirements for commercial airlines vary, but all require a com· mercial license before training on the big planes. Tig began flying after ahe was married and her children were in school. "I got the bug when 1 was eight yean old," she said. "I saw a Douglas Fairbanks movie about nytng, and that was that. I jll.!I: had to do it. ~fy parents told me that ladles don't fly." But the lady did fly, learning in Rich- mond, Va. She became an instructor later on. "It's fairly easy to get a teaching job, because there's a big turnover. A lot o! men teach flying ror a while to ac· cumulate hours for their commercial licenses. Then they go lo the airlines.,. Tig said that a kit of professional men fly to relax. "Flying's very gentle," sbe said. "There 's no pushing, no strain. To turn, you move the stick a liWe bit le lower the wing. Then you move it back. It's not like driving a car. You can Oy for eight hours, and never get tired." · "What if you crash?" she wa1 asked. "You don't juSt f8U out ol lhe aky. U you. run out of fuel, you can just glide doWlt and look for a place ..o land. The Piper. has a nine-t<><>oe glide raUo. That means you have nine miles to pick a spot," she explained. Did she ever· have to pick o~? Tf.c chuckled ruefully. ·~When I had my first student, tn'.e fuel line broke . I landed in a pasture outside o! Richmond, v~ next to a cow." To a non-flying reporter, the fint trip in a small plane was a mind-bending ex- perience. ln three minutes, we were over the ocean. looking at the blue water of Newport Bay, aod, in the distance, the smog over Los Angeles. It was like beUJa: suspended in lime as well as space. Tig summed it up : ''When you're on the ground, there's a lot of pressure and. stress. Then you get up here, and it all seems so unimportant." s~honls Open Ocean View Lists Schedule Public Schools Week in the Ocean View School District began today, aceonting to district and Masonic of f I c J a I s coordinating the event. Open House hu been scheduled for tonight in · moat dlstrict schools. Ex· ceptions are llaven View, scheduled for Thursday and Rancho View, Wednesday Circle View 1ad Lark View Open Houses were held on 'April 15. The d.istriC:t's newest facility, GI en View, whicb-featUttS the "Open Space" design earl"l'la.rked for use i.n all future district schools, was open Monday. Prin· cipal Perry Chapman explained the edu- caUonal opportunities afforded by the "open spacti" concept, and new teaching methods wUI be demonstrated for vi sitors. Special exhibits and displays wlll be Id up in each school, and faculty members will be orl hand to discuss aspects of the curriculum with Interested visitors. A special program to fOCW1 on Pu~lia School! Week will be presented an Thun- day in the Huntington Center. Studenti from eight district schools will M featured in a variety show in the ~ with ho,'O performances scheduled for a :G and 7:30 p.m. District Principals Sherman Elliott and Cecil Klee are responsible f o i: coordinating the activities for the week, which is being sponsore-1 by the Hun- tington Beach Masoni c Lodge. Pleasant View teacher and Lodge member Harold Nagle is the Masonic representative. HuntingtonLWVSupports Ocean View Tax Override The League or Women Voters. Hun· tington Beach division, this week gave iU support tO a fl.25 tax override eleclion the Ocean View School District will seek to win May 6. Their recommendation was based oo a Valley Students Pick Pep Squad Spirit at Fountaln Valley High School 1vill be guided and boosted through next year by a brand new pep squad selected by the studets. Two divisions, varsity and junior varai-- ty pep girls, were. picked by the 1tudents after a student and teacher panel nar- rowed the choice down to II girl.I. New song gtrli are Lli Borngo, Lyn Lafferty, Debblt Nrlson. Unda Ntlaon, Perl Ranatl and Nancy Wtldenhammer. Varsity ye!ll leaders include Cyodee Crozier, Diana Ray, Janet Seybert, Yvon- ne Wada and Ginny Weber. Leadln1 tl1o Junior vorolty 1plrlt are ytll 1 ldtn lrent1 Be.nev1dex, Jan Kato, Pauline Khun, Sharon Murphy, and Jan Petk. one-year study of the fi ve local elemen-- tary school districts and the Huntington Beach Union High School District "As a result of this study ol local educaUon. League members support a high level, both quantitaUvely and qualitatively, of educational se"lces for all studer.ts," the statement said. "If fund s from federal, state and private sotirces are not sufficient to finance a high level or «lucational Services, then League members are wilt.. ing to pay higher local tazes to finance such a level." Members or the. Lea&\le agreed lht1l a basic tax revision which would plact leas reliance on property llx to Unance public education was necessary but feh that such a shift in the tax 1tructure was not coming in the near tuture. "In the interim, we support the May I . w overridt elecUon 1n lhe Ocean View Elementary School Dbtrlct oo !hit 1 111&11 level of ~ucaUonal aervices can be ,_. vlded for au students," Ill< ... ~ conclttd<d. Should the diJtrlct fall to be IUC<Olllul In its efforts to gain the tu booll, ldlool officials prtd.lct a "subalatence Jnel'' at educaUon for Its pupllf, which would bo forted by ai.gnlficant cuta tn OPll'libm .....,, probablY Including all pupil traMportatlon. ) I 1, I ··-----~-~=,_,,.......,,_= ............ -..-......,,.-..... ,,..,,.-...... _------~ f DAILY - tci.-11111 .., .. 0.Jt¥ ..... 5MHI After the 1967 Oregon Legislature tunted down a proposal to build a mansion for the governor at Salem, It authorized the Capital Planning tom.mission to accept gilts for such 1 house. The commission later re- ported a total collection of S15. • A trio from ihe Fairmount Park tree-climbing unil scaled a 125-foot &ranite cliff near Philadelphia to clear it of loose rock and stones that had threatened passing cars on the drive below. When a repor~ ter called to one of the cliff climb- ers, · asking if he had volunteered for the ticklish job, the man re-- pl ied , after a conference with the others: "What do you think?" • ---• W ho C in tl1e world could cause 1 Jiese normally love!11 sororit11 girls t.o fight /01 position in a mudd11 bath· tub'.' Nothing but the University of Colorado Sigma CJ1i Derby Mud Th~. The mud event was just one of several zany and messy conlf!st.s. • -·--·--.. · f'lag.T flew o~ public bt&ildings l' a1td Toya l gun salutes were fired I~ Monday to mark Queen Eli~a· , ii' beth ll's 43rd birthday. With her ~ husband. the Duke of Edi11-~ burgh, tlie Queen. spent the day at Windsor Castle, 40 mile1 weit J of London. Sheb/uJI. d n1obpub~ic tn· t• gagement.s. Pu re ct e ratwn of the birthday comes i11 Junt when there is less likelihood of bad wtather spoiling the mili· fi tarv Ttvitw that is the ltigh t point of the occasion. it _.,._.,. .,,. __ • Actor Henry Fonda, actresses Anne Baxter and Carol l ynley and Police Chief Thom111 Reddin will be auctioneers in a five-day benefi t sale for a Los Angeles television station which started Monday. The station is educational, noncommer- cial KCET. Items donated for the marathon auction include Merlo Thomas • sun glasses. one ol Eve Arden's hats -and a bikini from Barbre Str•i•enc:I. Costs to Rise? Welfare Ruling To Hurt State From Wlre Services SAC.RAMENTO -The Su p r e m e C-Ourt's decision to Invalidate residency requirements for weltare recipients will hike welfare costs in C.Ufomia , 5ay several state officials. Monday's decision came as California, appealing a year~ld federal court ruling, wa.s seekina: to have 11.! own residency provisions reinstaied . The decision seemingly doomed lhe ap- peal to the Supreme Court, whose. action , specifically dealt with the laws of Con- necticut, Pennsylvania and the Distric! of Columbia but was applicable lo similar reguJations in about fO states including Premier Asks Con~essions In Irish Ro1v BELFAST. Northl!:rn Ireland IUP/\ - Jn a desperate bid to avert possible ci\'il war in Northern Ireland Premier Terence O'Neill appealed to hi s Unionist party to- day to grant major concessions to the Catholic-Jed civil rights movement. The reaction of his Protestant-d ominated par- ty was cool. O'Neill 's struggle with his party follO\\'· ed another night of violence in Belfast where police clashed with youthful demonstrators who hur led stones and t-folotov cock tails at polic e station s. Both O'Neill and Irish Republic P-remier Jack Lynch were seeking in· terviews with British Prime Minister Harold Wilson. but British officials sairl this afternoon it was oot yet kno•,o:n when they would come to London. The wave of rioting which swept the towns and cities or Northern Ireland last weekend precipitated the worst crisis sin· cc Ireland fought Britain for freedom 50 years ago. Roman CathQlics in Protestant Northern Ireland led many of the demonstrations in a drive for civil right s, Irish style. They say current la"·s discriminate against them and have taken to the streets to back their demands for change. The Unionist party adjourned an emergency session without giving its con- sent to the introduction of "one man , one . vote" in local elections -the issue which has been at the center of the six months oC vioJCjtee in Northem Ireland. The party was to meet again Wed· nesday to resume discussion of the issue. Immediately a new political crisis blew up in the capital with political circles speculating that O'Neill and his home al· fairs minister. Robert Porter, would resign if the party opposes them on th is issue. {:[ tr tr California. In W Uhlnfloo , Sen. G e o r & e Murphy (f!.Calit.), 'reacUt>c to th• Supreme Court's declsk>n, today In· 'troduced ltgi.slaUoo Under )¥hich the federal government woqN pay the cost ol tho.se added to the welfare rolls. Murphy said, "Uthe goveriunent WJnls lo impose its will on the slates' in tl\is fashion , it is incumbent on the federal goverment to bear the cost ol additional payments which will have to be made." Spencer Williams, be<Mi of the state's Human Relations Ageocy, and Sta~e Welfare Director John Montgomery both predicted California's weUare costs would continue to rise sharply. Both said that since the federal court overturned the state's residency rt· quirements a year ago. more than 3,000 person!'! have joined the· welfare rolls. 'fhi s, they said, has hiked welfare costs by $26 million this fiscal' year and will raise them by an estimated $.15 million In the next fiscal year. \\lilliams said he was "gravely con- cerned by the decision " and envisioned welfare recipients "moving to California solely to obtain higher w t r , a r e payments.,. But Sacramento County Welfare Dirtc· tor William S. Hay said any major in· crease in the size of CaWomia's Vt'elfare rolls would probably be caused not by the Supreme Court ruling but by the wide publicity it would receive. tr tr * Police Po,ver Cut In Supreme Court Ruli11g on Arrests \\IASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Cour! today cul into the po11•er of police to make arrests for the sake of in- vestigation. In a 6·2 ruling, the court said a judge'!! permission must be given before 1 suspect is seized to be fingerprinted. The decision upset the conviction of a l~·year-0ld Mississippi Negro boy in the rape of an 86-year-0Jd whi te woman. It found his fingerprints should not ha ve been used at trial Once again, Justice Hugo L, Black , dissented. scoring hi s colleagues for rx· panding the protection of the Fourth Amendment. He said they should cut it back to what he called its intend,ed si ze and ''make our cities a safer place for men, women and children to lh·c. ·• The Fourth Amendn1enl guara ntees citizens security ''against unreasonablr !iearches and seizures." The courl fountl police arc subject to its ··constraint.~" when they obtain fingerprints for use a.~ evidence. '"Gi'1'e Her a Kiss" Parliament-W elcornes Cute Newcomer LONOON (UPI) -Britain's youngest 'il'oman parliamentarian in · history was welcomed into the House of Commons to- day with cheers and shouts .of "Give her a kiss!" Bernadette Devlin. 22 tomorrow, smiled mischievously at front bcoche rs as she entered the house to take the oath of of- fice and sign the members' roll. Wearing a royal blue coat and blue and white scarf, the diminutive Miss D<!vlin appeared nervous at first but relaxed a~ House Speaker Horact' King held her hand and chatted with her. Laughter rang out as King kept holding ~liss Devlin's hand. "It is out of order for the house to bl!: Jealous." King said with a grin. In her maiden speech, Miss Devlin blamed her country's civil rights tur· moil on "a society of landlords." She told the packed and hushed house, "The people of Northern Ireland are being oppressed, riot only by a Tory government, but by a corrupt. bigoted and self·interested Tory government with 'vhom the Tories in this house :iihould br ashamed to associate themselves." Gale Winds Rip Lake Area National High of 99 Registered lit Buckeye C9Jlfert1I• A .1lirm ~ _, tM vr~•' l""'"' ._., cenll-to ''°"""'• ..... l•r<• wlfMb -· • wide ..... W~I ,,_ or cflld l'llft toll lft ftott,,_ Of'ft Mldl .. •ft •1'111 .,_.,., •-'°"°"" -liloN lo ,.... 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".,,,, ,. .. tt. ...... ..... ,. ... 11t•lfi ~ll1•1111i. -~·­,.,, .. NI lltl ltld (It-, It .. ltu" .. M S.Cr11NMo S!, L.,h S.l)rw!J S.11 Lokt Cfty a..~ O'arct 1'~ Fr.roc!n~ 1'"'' l•ttlttf s~,.,.., ,_,,,. ,. ...... W''<fl"'t'O~ ~ • " ~ .. " u .. " .. " .. ~ " " .. .. " n " " .. " " ~ " » " " • • ~ • •• " •• " .. • " " • .. H " • " • " " " • " ~ " " ., .. •• ., " .. " " • •• » .. ~ " " .. • • " " • " " • " " • • • ~ " • " " ,, " " ,, .. ~ . .. " .u •• •• • ... I Where New Jersey? Big Battleship S<iiling Home or T o·ward Korea? From Wire Services YOKOSUKA, Japan -The battleship New Jersey left Japan today for an un- disclosed destination after a seven-hour visit. A U.S. Navy spokesman declined to say If lhe 56,000.ton battleship was heading for the Sea or Japan lo join a u.s: task force to protect American spy fliglits off No rth Korea . He said the New Jersey had arrived for "logistics support," or to pick up more fuel and suppli es. The Pentagon in N e'W Protests Form at East U11iversiti"s Hy United Press International The campuses of Purdue and Columbia Universities were hit by student strikes today . At Purdue more than 7.000 sll1tlcnts. angered by a proposed tuition int reasc. boycotted classes. AL Colurnbia in New York City the Students Afro·Amcrican Society (SAS) began \\'hat was billed as a "mas ~ rvaluation " of the campus to press 1len1ands concerning a bla ck educational program. The student strike at Purdue was placid in comparison to a noisy rally and two sit-ins ~1onday al the Lafayette, Ind., school. The Columbia SAS said the evacuation \\'Ould last until noon \llednesday and ask- ed all student!'! to stay off campus. There wa s no immediate way of telling how ef· fecti\'e. the evacuation tactic was. Purd.ue 's student government rented the Elliott Hall of P.1usic for panel discussions on the increase, estimated to cost the school's 24,000 students an ad- ditional $6-million a year. Indiana Go~·. Edgar Whitcomb, who proposed the higher fees to avoid ;i general tax increase. refused an in- vitation to participate in one cf th~ panels, However, the school's preside nt said he would try to attend. · In Washington, O.C .. more than 250 SlU · 1lent body presidents and c o J 1 t' g e nC\\'Spaper editors from schools across the nation declared in a statement "their Intention to refuse induction" into military service until the ··immoral and unjust ·• Vietna1n war ends. ·:\Ve 11•i\I not serve in the miliLary as long as the war in Vietnam continues.'' the presidents and editors said in a state- ment released by the National Student Association . Hlack and Puerto Rican youths at the south campus of the City College of New York locked the school's gates and re(us. cd lo admit students and professors \\'ho arrived for classes. The youths said they \vere seeking ··open admission policies." Police arrived with chain cutters and op:ned one of the gates. Bui the pro- testers stood shoulder-to-shoulder. block· ing the cnlrance. and the police made no effort to pierce the line. On l\tonda\· ronfrontalions were stirred up by the "student!; for a Democratic Society at Harvard and Princeton Uni versities. and Cornell University, 11fter A wild weekend in which armed students sciied control of the student renter. banned firearms from the c•m· pus. ~anla Barbara lo File 'Cha rge~' Over Sli ck SANTA BARBARA IAP I -Di.st. Ally. David Minier says his offi<:f! wlO file criminal charfe.s against tht oil com- panies responsible for a huge oil stick formed in the Santa Barbara ChJnnel in Janu1ry and February. "Even tr we lost," Minier said Monday . ''It Is our Intent to file criminally against !he oil companies for tht oil that Is now on the surlact <>( the wattr and on our bt'a ehes and rocks." , - Washington said she was en route homr. The New Jersey was on her way home to Long Beach, after si:m: months off Viet· nam when she was diverted back to the western Pacific after North Korea shot down a U.S. plane April IS. But a Defense Department spokesman in Washington in. dicaled Monday that the world's only bat- tleship in active se rvice would not join the task force in the Sea of Japan. He said he anticipates the N"ew Jersey ''will be coming home," a 1 t h o u g h he didn 't say when. Comm unist China criticized the Soviet Union tod:Sy for helping the United Stal.e.1 s.eareh (or wreckage and survivors ol the dov.·ned plane. The official New China News Agency U.S.-Soviet collusion.'' When the United Stales asked for help, NCNA sald, the Russians "obediently and prompt1y took action in compliance with the 'request' of U.S. imperialism." "The Soviet revisionist renegade clique has once again fully revealed it.s ugly features as an accomplice and servut of U.S. imperialism," it concluded. U'°tT .......... STUDENT GIVES OWN VERSION OF HARVARD SIT·IN Prot11ter1 Urging Univ1r1lty Sever Ti11 With Milit•ry Red Chinese Ambassador Retu1·ns to Paris Talks PAHI S IUPI \ -Communist China Is ~endinR ils ambassador to !>""'ranee back to Paris to keep an eye on the Vietnam talks, French diplomats .said today. The ambassador, Gen. Houang Chen, has been in China the past two years. His imminent return to Paris renects Pck- lng·s growing interest in tht ou~e: ~f tht pcact negotiations, Asia·n d1plomat1c sources said. 4 Social Aides Picked To Aceontpany Tricia_ WASHINGTON (UPll -four White !loose social aides will be Tricia Nl:1on't royal ttCOttl when !ht Is crowned Queen of the A:a.lea Festival at Norfotk , Va., this wtck. They &re Marine Maj. B. Larkin Spl\I)' Jr.. Capt.. Jayle A. Lawrence and Lt. Richard M. Murphy. both of the Army, and Navy Lt. Robert D. Nlchol. Tricia and htr party will arrive in Norfolk \Yednl!:~ay. Coronal Ion will be ~1urd11y. P.IJo Tse-lung's r e g I m e hu urjed North Vietnam not to comproml!'!e will the Americ•ns ai the conference tabl~ Peking &dio recenUy 1pplaUCltd Com munist dtmands that have contributed ~ stalematiog. tbe talks. Ghen was called home in tit/ durin1 the cullural rtvolulion domestic crisi:ii His retum here may lndicate that ~· is over and China once more wUI «Jin centrate on foreicn affairs, ,. I t I particular lat«tst on its Viebtan neifhbor, the di:pk>mat.s said. British Royal Fauilly To See NATO Ship8 NORFOLX, v,., ;AP ) -~ EUAbeth II of Britain and I.er has Prince Phillip, have. agtffd to re• , st n ... I -1 ol 12 NATO MU°'lf",Oft 'portsmouth, Englll\d. on M•y II -, '11 aoniversary of the weM'm allianct. t Announcing lhiJ Monday, htlldqu1'1"n of the ·Supreme Allied Command AUanti1 s11id lht royal couple would c1rry out tht rt\'ltw from their yacht, Brltannla.z...,, L • • Israelis Bit Radar In Jordan JER6SALEM (AP) Israeli warplanes streaked ow:r Jordan again locl,ay, IDd en J.waell military spot...,.. said they knoc~ed out the ala- jor part ol ,EIYPt's • ~ •arnirti radar DdW~ Am- man Radio said it wa:s hrMt't heaviest air attack in mare than a year. A senior membtr of the Israeli general stall, said the attJCk on two 'Egypttan radar :sites in aoutb Jordan f/U I partial inswer to Egyptian artillery bombardmeof.11 over the Suez Canal during the pall month. "There are still a lot or op- tions open to us, ·and 1 think we will make use o/. them in due time," he added in a warning of further actioo. Egypt meanwhile reported that its patrols croued the Suez Canal again during the • Ul'I Tt ....... night to attack Israeli po;!-a.. ... en of FaUies 1969 Uons on the east bank. 1"ael ~ ~ said its planes also hit 1wo One candidate for "Queen of the Fatties" weighs in Arab positions on the east as other girts wait their turn during the annual con- ' bank. Israel said its planel test in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Mrs. Sixta de Mar-also hit two Arab guerrilla bases in north Jordan. tinez weighed in at a winning 442 pounds to become Miss Gordita 1969. The contest was followed by a free meal for all contestants which consisted or 1,760 pounds of barbecued ti..!, 1,000 sausages, 600 blood sausages, 440 pounds of tripe, 265 pounds of bread, plus dessert and 10 barrels or wine. The I~aeUssaid one plane.....:::=.:....~.:.....:....~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ was shot down and the pilot was presumed dead. Jordan said two other Israeli jets were damaged, and Red Cre&- ce.nt officials said they bad been told the pilot of one parachuted into s o u t h e r n Jordan and was captured by Saudi Arabian troops stationed there. The Israeli spokesman told a news conference the radar sites hit today were Egypt's sole watch poihls for Israeli aircraft and had compe.naated to some extent for the loss of the Sinai Desert during the ' 1967 war. Another spokesman said the sites blanketed Israeli air activity from Tel Aviv south to the Suez canal. It was believed Egypt's only radar stations left are within its own boundaries west of the canal. PO Thefts Ort Increase WASHINGTON (M') -Tbe Here's Tax Package At a Glance WASHING TON !UPI) - '11le tax package at a glance: Surtax: 10 percent surtax would go to 5 percent Jan. I; would be repealed effective June 30, 1970. CredH : The 7 percent iD- vestment tax credit would be repealed immediately. Poor : 2 million of the 4.3 million poor taxpayers would not have to pay taxes. . Rieb: People with high deductions would not be allow· ed to write off more than 50 rcent of total income, with some exceptions. FoudaUoas: New rules lightening watchdog activities over tu exempt foundations. Farms: Restrictions design· ed to stop gentlemen farmers from writing off nonfarm in- Post Officl!. says an apparent cc~ty: Chaiitable con- JumP in Jllail thefts bas forced th<. to 30 'It to lllre•new steps to "*'-vent trlb.ations !"W '¥"ited · -•--1 r-. -h perctnt of income would go to emplo)tes Croin .-.ilng t e so· percent; but re~ons ap-g~s they are supposed .to...plled ·to some who now~are deliver. . : allO\fed to.deduct 'up to.all~ Tbt. deJ:Sarbnent 1s screening their income. new -ernplo)'es in ore clolely Mevtag: Job-connected mov· ~ In~ new ~vices-tag experme d-: d .u c t I o n.s mclfklin,g computers -to ,., liberalized to allow for such detect workers who steal or indirect costs as · house·hun· pilfer · the mails, an oUicial ttug. living expe~. says. . Heading the crackdown on Internal mail theft is former FBI and CIA man William ,J. Cotter, appointed chief postal inspector earlm" this moolh. Cotter said he is vitally con· cemed with "theft, rifling or other forms of mistreatment of mail" by postal workers. ·ne~ord Return to Work U.s·.vEGAS (UPIJ -·About 3,000 public school teachers in southern Nevada returned to work today, ending a two day strike and reluctantly obeying a court order. Voyage ~Solo World Trip Finished Nixon Changes Lauded Congress to 0 I{ Tax Plan WASHINGTON (UPI) - Pres.ident Nixon's plans to shake up the income tax system won friendly reaction from both Democrats and Republicans today, and it ap- peared Congress would ap- prove the proposal before the year ends. Some Democrats said Nixon had come around to their way ti thinking on the matter: Republicans praised Ni.J:on for what looked like sound Republican policy. Reaction in the business * * * * * * Investment Tax Credit -Why the Turnabout community, whlch stands to Jose a $3 biilion lax subsidy, was less enthusiastic. Democrat ic National Olairrnan Fred R. Harris said "lt seems to me that Presi- dent Nixon has now abandoned his previous position and the Republican position ... and in principle a d op t e d lbe Democratic position on these issues." The Senator from Oklahoma aaid Ifie plan mil appeared lo be "not as good" as the Democratk: position embodied in three bills he iocroduced WASHINGTON (AP) awaited slowdown Is coming. last week; but, he added, now President N ix on , s an· Nor were there any doubts that Nixon has "joined the ef. nouncement Monday that he fort, there Is no questioo. that favors repeal of the In· about the potent I a I ef· we are going to get some tu vestment tax credit marked a fectiveness ~f ling the tax reform this sest1ion ... " complete flipflop from the ad· credit. It as suspended in S p e a k e r Jo h n W • ministration's policy of just a 1966, for the me reason. The McCormack said Nizon's re- week ago. result was essy, but the quests seem to be "pretty con· One after ."olher' top ad-· 1 · boo sistent with good Democratic capita investm t m was · · I " It --' the ministration officials who met pnnc1p e. af'l"'-<" _. quickly deflated. Everybody House ~·Id pass "· ~-··e with AFL-CIO leaders in White .. .,.. w11: .. ~ .... S I h s ings w Va last knew that, too. by August, the ~te later. up ur pr ' · ·• So ht ded th w1·n1·ams, "-senior week recited to newsm en the w a persua e uic reasons why the credit should Wh ite House, finally , to move? Republican on the Senate I Obviously, it occurred to Finance Cmunittee, said not be repea ed. somebody that if you wiped "something has to be done" The labor chiefs disagreed. out the investment credit, about rictJ persons who escape So did Democratic leaders in which was no longer needed, taxation through loopholes. Congress. They charged that you might persuade Congress The administration plan would the tax credit, created in 1962 to replace it with an incentive make nearly all the wealthy as a stimulus to business iD-that is needed. pay at least some tax. vestment, when it became Nixon's answer to the ills of In general, it appeared Nix· clear that President Nixon 's the cities _ his central on was only asking Congress advisers were having a rush of economic strategy, in fact -to approve legislation It second thoughts, the official is a tax credit to induce alreedy seemed determined to replies were always the same: private companies to build pass. -The credit. which lets a plants in ghettos and give job-Hoose GOP Leader Gerald businessman chop from his training to idle slum dwellers. R. Ford said Nixon's proposal tax bill 7 percent of his outlays Said his tax re (or m "will move America toward a ror new machinery and equip-message: "The gradual In· common seme and fair tu ment, is a long·term in-crease in federal revemies structure." ducement to investment and resulting from repeal ol the Some spokesmen f« the growth. In more years than investment tax credit and the business community warned not it will be needed as a job-growth of the economy wiU that the end of the Investment creating stimulant. also facilitate a start during tax credit couki damage the -Its repeal would be fiscal 1971 in funding ... tax economy iMtead of putting the equivalent to a $3 billion tax credits to e n c o u r a g e iD-brakes on inflation. It ap- increase. On top of existing an-vestment In poverty areas and pea.red businesses woold Jase ti-inflation restraints, itwould hiring and training of the hard inJtially if the tax credit is provide too m u c h squeeze, core unemployed." lifted, but would gain part nf it might cause a recession. That was one reason. There back after Jan. 1 when, un<Ser TiltldA1, April 22, 1'16'1 DAIL v I'll.OT G Russ Med Fleet Now 60 Ships u~s. Withdrawal Program Outlined WASRINGT!>N (AP)\-Tbe ll'Wlam P. llot!trt ht In Id- NAPLES, Italy (AP) -The Niaon admln1.uatioa bu ...,_ drta lo the A.uoclat«f l'r<sl so v t et .. vr booetod 11s rnllted Jue~ 1o a double trock ht New.Yon. Medlturaoean n .. t to about procram l<!r gradually reduo-~ cleclu<d that the Ill ahlpt today, roughly the Ing the U.S. oombal role In NIJm Adm In I 1 Ir a I Ion ame number partlclpat!ng In .......,0,.. ·-.·-'"'·t ·~ North Atlantic T r e a t y Vietnam even lf lht Parll .......-u.J ---··-~... .... Orpnization war games in the-peace talks fail. ' other llde ii now prepared to area. Admlnlstration leaders are negotiate lltl'ioull)' for an end lt is the second ~tralght day trying to tell North Vielnlm to the war ... that tl)ree Soviet sl\ips entered and the Viet Cong, however, the Mediterranean through the that U they want lo get United "We have not, however, Turkish straits, and t h e r e States forces out of Soulh placf.d 111 oqr qp in <me were reports frorp Istanbul Vietnam quicijy . and com. basket," he said. that another ship wa.s on JU pletely lhey will have to make "We have .to be prepared for way. a negotiated setUement. the unwelcomed contingenct U.S. Adm. Horacio Rivero, The prevailing belief in of-· tliat the other aide does not commander ol NATO fort!es ip. ficial quarttn here is that yet want to negotiate a southern Europe, has said the Utousands ol. troops wilJ be peaceful ~UemeoL We are Rusaians may be planning brought home this year, not prepared to assume that naval maneuvers in t h e The broad elements of the the only alternative to early Mediterranean also. program were sketched-out of. progrem in the peace talks is One-of the ships that amved ficlally for the first time Mon-an indefinite extension of our Monday was the · 18,500-ton day by Secrelary of State present role." helicopter carrier Leningradno. ~~~~;iiii~~;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~ which, with Its sister ship theli Moskva, i!J lhe largest warship in the Soviet navy. The arrival of the Len- tngradno gave the Soviet fleet helicopters to keep a close watch on the l~ay Dawn Patrol maneuvers begun by the NATO forces Monday. I New Czecli Chief Flies To Kremlin PRAGUE (UPI) -The man the Soviets chose to lead their crackdown on "anti-social.I.st&" in Czechoslovakia flew to Moscow today with a pledge to closer align his natioo to the Kremlin's way o( communism. It was Gustav Husak's rirst trip to the Soviet capilal slnct a Soviet powe r play installed him as Czechoslovakia's Com- muni!ll fint secretary in place of Alexander Dubcek. Before he left for the Moscow meeting of the Sovitt bloc common market, Husak cabled a message to the Kremlin leadership pledging his . nation would become a "strong link" in the bloc. "At the same time, t want to exoress our f i r m determiilallon to d e v e I o p rurther and deepen the tradi· ti o n a I Czechoslovak.Soviet friendship, based on the priD- ciples · of Marxist·Len1nism and proletaria n in- ternationalism,'' he said. A new order was taking shape in the nation whose en- joyment of some b a s I c preedoms under Dubcek prompted lhe Soviets to ir>eade on Aug. 20 and demand "normalization," or a return to communism Soviet style. A few hundred students began the second day of sit·ins on two campuMs to protest the Husak regime today, A Czechoslovak Olympic hero was the most outspoken nl· tlonal ft gu re agalnat the removal of Dubcek. They were the only voices of dissent. "He WU a symbol ol humanity. He could only rule with genial words. He could not handle a whip," former Olympic distance dlulplon Emil Zatopek said of the d<pOOed Dubc<k. Marks 30th Year UNITED NATIONS ASSOCIATION Coootllne Chljllor Dinner Meetlne TONIGHT, April 22, 7:00 p.m. LAGUNA HOTEL SPEAKER: Willard Johnaor\ TOPIC: "Hunger -People and P-or W•" ReHrv1tlon1 -6~7.33 Reduce monthly payr'hents 50%ormore. 'L' '1J ' IF YOUR BILLS LOOK LIKE THIS: CAR LOAN • • • WASHER-ORYER CLOTHING STORE • CREDIT CARO • DENTIST BILL • • Amou nt Owed • $ 880.00 • 210.00 • 110,00 220.00 • 280.00 $1700.00 . Your Paymenla $118.00 35.00 15.00 25.00 15.CO $1158.00 use our money! . Borrow $1,700 to pay off all those bllla ltl1d repay only $62.00 for 36 months. You may bo,. row from $1 00 to $5,000, or more, with - ments scheduled to flt your Income. You mar have your money the day you apply-with no repayment for 45 days. Morris Plan FALMOUTII, England (AP) -British yachtsman Robin 'Knox.Johnston battled his way through a near gale into this man who suffered Incredible hardships in his solitary day:s at sea. A golden globe and possibly $12,000 in prize money awaited him. -A repeal would disrupt in· was still another, and it may the proposal, the 10 percent in-WASHINGTON (UPI) - dust.ry 's investment planning; have been the decisive one : come tax surcharge, for cor· Associate Justice William 0 . · old Comish port today to ccm· -plete man's first known solo nonstop voyage around the world. It's not fair to change the tax Congress probably w a 1 porations and Jndlvidual11 Douglu: has becilme one of 11 N Bfvd 673 3700 rules in the middle af the going to kill the Investment alike, would be sluh«t to 5 men wbo have served 30 yean Newport Beacli • 3700 ewport · • • _ Unshaven, dressed in rags and down to his last few cans of food, Knox4ohnson spent his last night anoat drilting 30 miles from home. game.Anditwou~beanad·, ~cred~~tt~a~n~ya~y~·~~~~~_!:ptt~-~tet~n~l~~~~~~~~on~the~~Su~pr~em~e~Court~~·~~!.:::=:=:=:~~-==:..~-~~~~~~~~.:::: mlnlstrative nightmare for the\- A harbor cannon boomed a salute to the rugged 30-year· old merchant marine officer ... be cr......i the finishing lint in bls 32-foot ketch Suhaili after 1pending 312 days at sea -longer than any sailor alone on record -en a 29,®"miJe upedition. High winds and a heavy se.a foiled his attempt to sail directly into Falmouth harbor. Northeasterly winds forced him to zig zag over the 1ut Jew miles, delaying his entry ,by over seven houn. , The m a y o r of Falmouth. civk officials and crowds of • Jlritons gathend lo honor the Officials said his last fear was that someone in a boat would touch the Suhaill or try to hand him a celebration drink before he docked, tecbnkally ipolllng·the singl .. handed aspect of bis voyage. Despite his ragged garb and the battered condition of his l'lllty boat, Knox.Johnson k>ok· ed fit and cheerful as he strode the deck Monday night, !houtlng lo bl.s thn!e brothers ln I circling preS!I boat. "I could use a beer," be yelled lo well wisbers . Treasury. AU thooe arguments could be heard from tile secretary of the..........,,. the budget dirtc· tor, the chalrman of the CouJl. cll of Economic Advisers - even from economist Arthur F. Bumi, counselor to the ~t. when he talked lo newsmen just one week ago. So what changed things? Jt wasn't last Thursday's report on natiooal output. It showed, by a SI& billion rise in the first quarter, that the economy was still overheated; tha t •aJ already known, and a few more recent indicators suggested that the I o a I - I' WllCl'111111MHUUIS $ Mo-. ~ ' ..... .. A chance to win $10,000 cnh f!ftf1 time JOU ... .. an, Standard Station ot Participitlnc C2lem>t't Dealer. u-r-1 ........ """' ... ,....c .... ........,~:::::c:::E J TOP PRIZE • If you're casting a wider shadow tbese ·days you could be in trouble. People in our "Stress Society" t<od to over-indulge and as a result overweight and high blood pn:ssuro arc common problems. If yo u're in your 40's or S011 tbe odds ar< high you have one or both of these problems. If you identify younclf with this group you'd be wise to do something about iL Like getting r.gular check-ups, finding out your limils, and sticking to them. If you've been thinking about life insurance. and discovered that the cost in your case is high. or even difficult to ge~ Manufacturera Ufe may be able to bclp. We have always believtd that life insurance should be available to the largest group of pcop(e possible and at tbe lowest possible pri<e. You will fiod . the Mao from Manufacturers well qualified and helpful in your selection of a plan to suit your p&rticular ru:ods. Call him soon. MllUFICTURERS LIFE INSIJIW<CS COMPANY ~-------------------------------~~~~~~~~---- • - J. I • -I I DA.D.Y PROT EDITOBIAL PAGE I • Harvard's Abdication Newspaper headline, April II: POLICE, HARVARD STUDENTS CLASH; 196 ARRESTED, AT LEAST 75 HURT (\Vire dispatches described how students protesting on-campus military training seized the administration bullding after forcibly ejectin'g nine deans.) Newspaper heed.line, April 18: HARVARD BOWS ON ROTC ; STRIKE ENDS ("The Harvard Corp , •• agreed to Uie demands of faculty and students that ROTC be reduced to an extra- curricular activity ••• ") • • • Somehow, more could have been expected of Har .. vard. It's a strange image, the venerable, prestigiously proud Harvard bowing to malcontents and changing its curriculum to satisfy them. It really matters not wheth .. er the courses being protested were ROTC or political science or the future of celestial exploration; the fact is the courses were pared from the curricuJum because 500 or 15,000 students found them ideologically unsatis .. factory. Harvard is one of the last places in the nation's academic community where such an abdication of lead .. ership would be expected. As a privately-endowed uni· versity, not responsible or beholden to the taxpayer, it is in an enviable position to uphold and defend academic freedom in its purest form. Public popularity or unpopularity of a course of in· stru ·on at Harvard should be no consideration in that circumstances. The test is public need - case can be made for continuing Amer· Attractive, Interesting And Sensible f ... Ii i, ·~an~y;. ' . • When one hears people complaininl about the new types of clothes being worn by young men and women these days, it is easy to take the view of the old lady who derided airplanes and wondered "why people don't travel by train, the way God intended them to." h1any o! UJ act as if God, or IOmt im- mutable Jaw of natw-e, ordained clothes as they are today, and that any variatloo represents a vhllaUon of morality, com- mon sense, and the Con1Utut1on. IN A BOOK t mentioned a year or 10 ago, "How Did It Begin," the author points out that even such commonplace objects as trowers and umbrellas crune into existence the hard way. Yet what could be more accepted today lhan trousers and umbrellas, those symbols of morality, common senae, and the Constitullon! "Even as late as 1814 ,'' the book tells \JS , "the Duke of Wellington was refused admission to his club because he was wearing trousers . . • In Sheffield, a spe<:ia\ clause pertaining to the clergy ruled that 'under no circumslanci!:S shill any preacher be allowed to oceupy the pulpit who wears trousers.' Indeed, anyone so attired would not a:o to Heaven!" 111E UMBRELLA w1a introduced lnto Britain by Jonas Hanway (1712-1786), a Persian traveler. His use of it, aboul 1760, caused a disturbance among sedan chalrmen and CQachmen, who rioted at Dear Gloomy Gus: SeemJ tO me if we would supply South Vietnam with equipment and arms to at.art guerilla warfare In North Vietnam, we might be able to talk to the countries now sup- plying North VJetnam with arms. -E. M. Tlllt fMN'9 Nf!Ktl ....._,., View&. Ml M<MUritr .... .. ,.,. .. -. ...... ~ "' ,.. .. ,. OltM!r 0111. o.ur PllM. the ai&bt of this strange object. Preacher• and lecturers derided It as a .. corruption" from the decadent East. According to the author of "How Did It Begin?," Hanway "bad lo suffer ridicule and almost assault" when he first began carrying an umbrella through London streets. "Only when his example was followed by one of Britain's famous dan- dies, popularly known as B e a u Macdonald, did the umbrella at last catch on. He, too, though was at firat subjected to ignominy. His own sister refused to be aetn with him in public." TODAY, OF COV~E, lhe very epitome of British respectability is the gentleman striding toward the City in his atriped trousers and his furled umbrella. A man who walked through the rain in breeches and without an umbrella would be looked upon as demented. J happen to think that the new clothes being worn by the young avant-garde are, for the most part, attractive, Interesting and sensible. Those who complain about them should 1t least complain on aome other ground than that they are radically different from what we are used to. So ls the lunll module for space traveling. 'Down With Obscenity' Hl)own with ob9cenity11 15 t 1logan which rises almost inevitably I! a reac- tion to the spate of nudity, sexual put-ona, obscen1ty. and hard<0re pornography being offered these days on stage and screen and in books and magazines. The last frontiers have all been crossed. 1be sexual act, with variations, is displ~yed explicitly in film and flesh and described in meticulous detail in print. There will be no attempt here to c11t.alogue the current goodies being of. fered the sexual fantasist or voyeur. It shoold be enough lo report that just ;ibout the hottt.St bo1-office property at the moment Is a Swedl1h film that, how· ever candidly It pictures sexual athlttlcs, is described by most critics as dull, de- tached, and cer"l!br1J. PERMISSIVENESS ln tbe am •nd ~ntertalnment lnvttes protest, as the night the d,y. When the lead singer ln • rock group txpot<d hlmleU bolo~ • Mlaml aud.if'nce., the ractloo was allllOlt calcul•ble. Mlaml ._ ... organ!ud • "Rally foe Decency." On March 2S some 30,000 bancklapplllc young poop!< turned out In tbe Oruce Bowl to wave the American liq. while -spu.ken ca•• tbn!e<nlnl!IA! talks. FiYe vlrtuel ltkded u the keyno&e of the rally wm "belld In God ind that He loves us: love ol oor plaM ind coonlr)' : "1\'e of our famlly ; reverence of one'• ll<XWllilJ; IOd oquallty of •II ,_, .. &nleNlnono Jldle Gl<uon, Anita Bryant. .llld The Ldtttmen lp(l<ared .. •ppiaud Md ..-.rag• the teen-agen. The A-Le&lon and various church groups .,pported the rally, and Pmldent N!Jan -• leCIB ol CAJllll'•tulailom to tho ti.,_..ld orpnlur. F-MIAMI THE !du ol ~ out'lcr dece:ney -or against otiteNr:y ..:. -Editorial Research I _, spread to Baltimore, ClnciMati, and other cities. The 32,000-member Junior Clubwomen of U'le Indiana FederaUon of Clubl was among the Urst to announce lt.s pJedce of active support lo an ln- c!ianapolls raUy. Gov. Edgor D. Whit· oomb Aid: "When young people lead oul with pooiUve viewpoints obout decency, adults take a new look at their own stan- dard•. '11.e tlleftoagers have aald whit we have betn. thirlking all the: Ume. but they took tJme to 1peak oul" Of the chan1e1, in moral lltandards, Newsweek magazine observes; "Sheer numbe.n tell the tale -there are more explicitly uoUc fllma:, more blunt-spoken novels, more nudity cm stage, mort ap- peals t.o the Ubldo in adYertising than ever btf'art. This 1narchie increase ln sexual ouupokenness has lncalculable importance for the arta, for c:ulturt, and for the community." EVEN THOSE WHO we)e()me 1 new freedom in communleaUon1 In regard to health, sex, and tht hum1n body tend to deplore the utttmes now being -.P' pro1ched. Yet. dtsplte the outbreak of the decency rallln. there appears no In· dicalion that lhe ~ndulum ls about to lUrn back -or indetd, that It bas reacb-- ed U1e 1pe1 ol. It& (altward .wlng, Finally, a mall note of Irony. Ir Mloml soem.s. • rather odd spawnln& ground for UJt decency movement, what o t Baltimore, wide open for pro4lllutlon and with the sh&bbiat ol ~ t>u-lt-a11 .. 11 strip joints? I lea's tradition of keeping Uie military dependent upon a clvlllan supply IQr some of lls leaderlblp. No -Harvard's rolo and stance mlght far better have been: '1Not only are we going to continue ROTC wltll academic 'Credit, we're going to upgra~e It and make ours )he best program In Uie naUon. W '11 do our best to provide broadly-educated young om . ers who will be avaUable for leadership In Ume of war." But Harvard's present academle leader1hlp abdic- ated. These men gave in to youths who weren't even born when Hiller rose to power. No matter how many tllowands of words of rhetoric Harvard may put forth in defense ol the actlons, the fact won't be changed Uiat tlley have let down Harvard, other universities, the n•tlon's defenses and the tmpor· tant cause of academic freedom from coercion. Fair Harvard, what batll tarnished Uiy Image? Public Business in Secret ''The extension of the Ralph M. Brown Act to cover Uie state Legislature has been kllled by the Assembly Government Administration Committee.'' This April news is sad for John Q. Public. He elects public servants to conduct the public's business in pub- lic, as required by the Brown Act below the Legislature level. What he gets is a majority of legislators bent on operating in private. The resu1t? Multiplying rumors and suspicions of shady deals, of corruption, of conflicts of interest, of all sorts of distrust of government. If the public has the right to fu11 information of gov· emment at the local level -which it certainly has - then it should enjoy the same right at the level of the state Legislature. '' l'M A BRAVE: 1 l'M A • .F Co11rse Designed to Supple11ae1at Parental Instruction Sex Education: 'Get Facts Straight'· To the Editor : As a teacher of family Ji!e and sex educiation , l have been very Interested In the letters, articles and editorials that have been appearing on the subje<:t. Certainly everyone has a right to his own opinion, but with that right goes a responsibility to get the facts straight. A number of people are twisting the facts al the present time to get others to jump to conclusions. l\1AY I GIVE some facts about our unit on family life and se1 education? t. The information presented in this unit is essentially the same as I received as a junior high student over a quarter of a century ago. (Physiology, anat-Omy and "growing up" do not seem to have changed much, nor are they something "new.") 2. This unit is designed lo supplement parental education, for, of course, parents have the primary responsibility for teaching about this sensitive area of life. Parents are informed and after hearing about .. tfle unit they have the option of whether their youngsters should have the unit or not. Less than one-flail of one per· cent have asked that their students be ex- cused. 3. A SINCERE EFFORT is made to present the truth honestly and forthright- ly, with correct information geared to the needs of physically maturing adolescents. (U truth and honesty seem a little too strong for some, then they wish to look to the alternatives ol jgnorance, fear, hate and hypocrisy.) 4. The special and important plaC!e of the family in our lives is stressed -also, high Ideals for the future family that will be established at maturity. 5. A sense of the miracle of life, cf spiritual and moral values, is an im· portant part of this unit as it is presented. 6. YES, ALSO IT is important for young people to be aware of the dangers risked by those who go against the moral codes of society. Though these suttjects are not pleasant ones, \hey, too, need frank ex· planallon. Hundreds of favorable and thoughtful commenls and evaluations about this unit have CQme from our young people and their parents. They give sound evidence, 1 believe, that this knowledge fills a valuable and important need in the education and grov.1h of a responsible, mature individual. WAYNE HOPKINS 'Horror•!' To the Editor : It has con1e to my attenUon that many parents are concerned about the tex edu· cation the children are receiving at our public schools. Being a concerned parent myself, I decided to investigate these 11- legations for myself. Well, everything people say is true! The children are Indeed learning that puppies come from dogs and kitten! from c11ts. Pretty soon they will be learning th8t children come from people! flor· rors! lf this sort of subversion continue! our dear young things may leam lhat some girls, v.·ho are not married, ha ve bables and lhat some people get married for less than righteous reasons. .---B11 Geor"!Je ---. Dear Georgt: There have been a Jot of snide remark! againsl ptrmlssl\.'tMS!I but I think ttpressfng a youth wil aive him frustratioM that can ruin fiis Hte. M. R. Dear M. R.: You ltnow, that's exacUy what I used to kffp telling my wUc be· fore \\·e w~e marrl.cd. Bu1 you know how It is , .• yoo can 't rea· son with people ~·ho arc set in !heir Wl)'I, ,.. \ of health by hJs silence on their criminal acts. "Very interesting!" Letttn from rtacUr1 art welcmM. Normallu torittrs should conveu their messagt in 300 words 01' less. Tlie right to condtmt letttrs to fit space 01' eliminatt Jibel is reserved. All l.rtttr1 muse include 1ignaturt and moiling address, bui ft41'mt may be withheld on requ1ri if sufficient rta. son i8 apparent. I urge that all schools have this dread· ful sex education severely censored by a committee: of concerned parents such as myself. JEANNE G. BANDES A 15· Year·Old'• l' lem To the Editor: Again the movement for the lowering or the voting age has begun and many teenagers have j u m p e d onto the bandwagon. Well, here's one 15-year-old who isn't and this is why. Many argue the point that since 18- year-o\ds can kill in Vietnam they shoold be allowed to vote. Although yC11J. must admit these young men are sent to fight, many people forget that they are trained beforehand how to do battle. But no one teaches them bow to vote ! There are no classes In which young adults are in- structed how to choose a candidate wisely (a class that is nationally required, that is). TEENAGERS ARE too easily swayed. which was proven at the Democratic con- ventiOn last year when a peaceful march was turned Into a riot by one lone man . Besidell, only a small percentage of 18- year-olds are mature enough to vote. There are, of course, some 30, 40 or 50- year-oldll who are not mature enough to vote, but here lhe percentage is smaller. There Is also the idea that if the voting age is lowered, 18-year-olds will also be allowed lo buy liquor , If this shoold come to pass, then they should also be tried as adults in an adult court and not as juveniles. J. RALPH QUINTANA, JR. f'aYft¥ Logic To the Editor: I have just read with fascinaUon the Associated Preq dispatch from Umdon (DAILY PILOT, April 14), headlined ''Colonialism Again ?" Arnold J . Toynbee takes greal pains to vilify the United Stales and Israel with that loaded term, "colonialist" in his ntw book, "Experiences," My flrst reaction was th.at senility has a nrm hold on Mr. Toynbee's reason - unUI a light d1wned. HOW DOES Mr. Toynbee classiry the present 1lluAllon In Poland, Hungary, Bulgari•. Romania, Albania, E a s t German~ and Ozechol.lovakla? How does he cl11ssify these nations -and I use the term loosely -since the recent invasion and ·complete throttlln1 or Czechoslovakia? But to go a sl.tp furtbtt, how about 1Jatvla, Estonia and Lithuania, the tiny Baltic natk>n! Russia ju!it annexed outright after World War 11 ? OF COURSE, China's invasion and oc-- cupation of Tibet could not be considered colonialism. Armed robbery Vf ld be CIO!<'r to the tn1lh. Yl's, 111~ very intertsll that t.tr. Toynbte takes th e U.S. and rael to ta.sit with his faullr logic, and t glvts lhe So\·le:t Union flld Rtd Chln1 cltan bill D. V. PICKER 'Quit Kidding' To the F.ditor: I would like to CQmment on the two new airport stories that c o n c e r n them.selves with the prolound statements that are being tos.sed around once more as to how to further complicate an easily solved Orange County airport problem. First, I would like to suggest that "gloomy" Daniel Emory (chairman of Noise Abatement Citizen! Committee) has his problem solved if El Toro is presented with the airline triPI 1hat Orange County has to have. It looks to me, if the airlines leave Orange County for El Toro, Mr. Emory is out of something to talk about and this has him upset. Supervisor Alton E. Allen cf Laguna Beach is mounting "an effort to broaden the study to seven regional airport sites." (It would be more proper if he had said. "El Toro and six sites I wish I could find so that t can hold those Leisure World and Mission Viejo votes together.") BUT FINALLY, the really weighty statement comes from General Thrash. First he finds joint use of El Toro and the airlines, "difficult to under s ~and, particularly in view of the stated posi· lion." (Of, I presume, the Pentagon, or their representative, General Thrash.) Then the General proceeds to state the balance of reasons which briefly say: 1. "The definite and continuing need for El Toro as a master jet fleet all-support, aJJ.weather station." In plain talk, thll means that they are going to have airplanes taking off and landing that will be doing weather hunting of some S<Jrt, Let's give them the benefit of the doubt and say this lakes in 15 landings and takeoffs a day. A busy airport is doing this every five minutes cr so. !. "IT WAS FURTHER stated that airspace requirements base loading nex· ibility of flight cperalions, and avia_lion safely, precludes considerations for joint usage." Whe.1 you read this one your sense of humor has to take over. The general probably doe!m't know any more about thi.,, ooe than I do. Only the RC· ond lieutenant who wrote it could decl~ er it. Why don'l we quit kidding ourselves? If the airlines move to El Toro, the good people of that are•, I honestly think, will have no more noise than they do right now. This noise thing has been blown clear out of proportion. JOHN BAKER El Toro'• O"'"er To the Editor: I keep readlng about the ownerah!p of El Toro being veiled in the U. S. Marine Corps. I alwa'}'s thought we owned IL WM. P. BOLAND, JR. ro lht. Edilor: Robe.rt Bresn1han, airport d1re&lr of Orange County, h.u Initiated• new move to In=• that Orange C..011 Airport will be<omo a major oommm:ill alrpori. He Is proposing to the alrporl c:ommilsloa th!t fl )'lng clubs 1b1Uooed at Orange County Airport be ........i IHOO oach yrar . ind that llyinc lnsCJuctan, tnltlJ or whom ... aMOCl•led with nylng Clubo, be required to obtain a pennlt at the cost of $500. These proposalJ, Ir •doptod, will d"1roy rtying club! at Orange County Airport. It lhe clubs le1vt, traffic will diminish at lhe airport, and the lltuaUon will ~ipe for an Increase In CQm· mercial alt traffic. AS A ME~IBER of a flying c I u b 1t Orange County Airport, I realize the value clubs have in training safe private piloU. I would hate to see UU.. tralnln& disappear from our airport. All those concerned with safe, quiet, quality flying from Orange County Airport should insist that the airport commission reject the punitive measures proposed by Mr. Bresnahan against flying clubs. U the people fall to respond, they will find that their airport has become only a major facility for the commercial airlines. RICHARD E. WHALEN P-in Our Time To the Editoc' We have just heard the latest outnigeous provocation of American military aircraft into peaceful North Korean air space. That the airplane wa.s shot down should surPrise no one. Yoo would think that after the Pueblo assault oo North Korea we should have learned our lesson. Tbe F.stablishment's corwptracy agaiMt the youth ol the natioo, fathers and mothers delibentely tl!rusting their own children into the maw o! innoctnt North Vietnam is truty too ghastly to CCllll-- prehood . There is ooly one solution for these atrocities --to the yoolh of Ibis country! Harken to the Tocsin! ~ SINGAPORE and Combod;a copt with the Chinese and the Far East prob- lem will be no more. Stop tpending our treasure on war·mongering activities. Hear the cry of the 5'tudents for a Democratic Society! Shut down all the universities that breed fa.sci!ilic military officers, and searc •nto war activities. Call 00 t.be fro Vietnam and let the f ocracy there In Asia spring fu I b unhampered by U.S. troops and U .S lnduetry and the military·indll5trial . ICY. Return the military bases to Japan. Let Hawaii seek its own freedom from the U.S. Army-Navy overlonls. Return Panama to the Colombians and there will be no canal problem. , . Bring the boys home lrom Europe ... INSTANn.Y, we WO have shed an animosities from abroad. We WJI have no furdler foreign entanglemerts. Hav:lng no further foreign commitment, we can abolish oor Air Force, Army and Navy. 1"e draft will be unnecessary and we !!hill have tmlimited funds to accomplish Ol1f domestic needs. ll requires Mly courage and leadenhlp t.J attain this goal by tlle:.'Je almph! moves. We 9hall oubhine AtheM in 410 8.C., Cartha.ge in It& e.c., Rome in 471 A.D. and Paris in 1940. Mr. President and Q)ngrus -act now to achieve Peace (n our Timt"! GORDON DALE --WWW- Tuesdl)', April 22, 11169 TAt tdUoriol pooe of tht Doitv PUot setkl k> Inform and 1hm· wla:Ee rtodn1 by prcsnUng thU nt'WIJXJJ>fr'I oph\ion.t a'ld com- mtnt.o.rv on toplu of tntere1t and sfgfllfl<:cne<, b~ provfdhlg • forum "for the 1.:preui°" o/ ovr rcat'krl' opfnion.r. and bit prest!ttfng tht dil>frte vitw. pointi of lnform«d ob11rver1 and tp0kemw11 on topfci of thr da~. Robert N. Woed, Publl•h•r t ' ~----·-·----------.~-.......... -.... ---..... 111111111!9 .......... ..-ii ... lll! CHECKING •UP• Mosquitoes Seldom Bite Alcoholic s \ By L M. BOYD SO YOU FIGURE you're the possessor of a highly logical mind, do you ? All right, let's say you're given the following set of letter1: ottUss. To make a logical sequence, what shou1d the next three ' letters be?. . . . "WHY DOEii the typical fellow called Don in- evitably fall for a girl who bi,bies him?" inquires a fe'minine subscriber. 0 u r Name Game man is at a lms to explain it, allho he knows such to be the case. . . • ADAM J. NICHOLAS of La Mesa, Ca l., was born on May 23. Some years later, so was his son. And two years after that, so was his daughter. Remarkable, what? fi.tOSQUITOES don't often bite alcoholics. In fact, almost never. Such ls the claim of Dr. T. K. Lindstrom. Fascinating, if factual. Don't say that It's because there are so many alcoholics in Alaska, that's not. it. Say it because there are so many mosquitoes there. And bigger mosquHoes, too. 1n researching a thing like this, you have to go where both alcoholics and mosquitoes are in adequate supply. In San Francisco, for instance, you find too few mosquitoes. CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q. -0 AT what age does a baby start getUng ticklish?" A. -- About three and a half ... Q. -"llOW fi.fUCH DOES • Johnny Carson get?" A. - How much ~·hat? Money? Last T heard it was $.10,000 a week plus one million dollars worth of insuranei! .... Q. - "HAS ANY UNITED STATES President been an only child?" A. -Not a one. LOVE AND WAR -"I hold my love but lightly for I know . _ . That things with wings held tightly want to go." Jewell Bothwell Tull said that. Our Love and War man ad- vises you to remember it, young lady. Nothing frustrates a boy so .p::iuch, he aay1, as a gir1'1 posses1i vene11 , "Peculiarly," he adds, "lhis is not true of middle-aged men -they want their lady-friends to show a streak of jealousy. It reassures them." JOURNALISM -A good reporter never writes his story in ruch a manner as to raise a significant question without answering same. Take that report out of ¥,inneapolis recent1y. We're told a gentleman there gave hJs wife on their 1ilver wedding an- niversary her weight in silver dollars -exactly 2,196 or tbem. The end. How much does she weigh? How much does she weigh? Shoddy work. Leland Williams, our mathematical consultant ,says she must weight 111 pounds. AS FAR AS crime goes, safest big towns in the world now art said to be: in Great Britain. . . . A VERA GE AMERICAN MAN lives &~S years after hlS retirement. ..• ONE PUBLISHER of western novels sprays his book bjn..: dings with the imita t ion aroma of saddle leather .•.. IN THE IDIOM of 1tie legal profession is the common e1- pression, "He lies like an eyewitness." ... INSURANCE STATISTICIANS claim the safest. driver is the 59-year- old. RAPID REPLY. Yes, tlr. G. K., the medicos say their body shops now list 33 human parts tliat can be replaced by spares. Your questions and com· ments are welcomed and will be used wherever pos- sible in "Checking Up." Address mail to L. Af. Boyd, in care of the DAILY PILOT, Box 1875, Newport Bea<h, Calif., 92663. Barkeep Slayer Suspect 'Guilty' in Third Trial Protests Irk Taxpayers LOS ANGE~ES CAP) California la1payers. "alarm- ed and di$1Uusioned" by cam· pus un~t, are reflWn& to Pl1 for higher edUcatlon, 1a11 S. 1. Hayakawa, act.Ina president al San Francisco Stale Collep. "'1'btrt LI clear c u t evidence," H1yakaw1 &aid Monday night, "that llthoulh the American people baltcllly and profoundly believe ln tdutallon u a 90lution to the problems of the Mu.,,, they a~ alarmed and disillusioned by disruption on one campus aJter another." na:yakawa denounced the California Democratic Councll1 ........... .... , .. .... ..,, QJW.wller ....... w-.n.. M- Families Of Big J Get Help I LONG BEACH (UPI) - More than! 180 local residents have offered to 1 be I t e r families of crewmen aboard the USS New Jeney which turned back to ·Asian waters instead of docking bert. The Navy uid Monday an emergency usiatanct cen~ set up to aid dependents of New Jersey crtwmtn had received more olltta to help than calls for assirtanct. The New Jersey, the world 's onJy active baUJesh.lp, carries a complemtnt of l,llOO mtn. It was scheduled to arrive here Saturday, but it was diverted en route to Korean waters Tuesday aft.er a U.S. recon· QUEENIE ly Phll lntirlciit.n naissance plant was shot lS.:!:!!::=::!:=~:;.::::;..::=:.=.:::::.------_. down. Because the change in plans was not announced UllW Fri- day, many famHles o f -'Tve asked you not to call at the ~t cui't. keep au eye on llr. Barcl&y and talk lo you at the aame time -•• • crewmen had arrived hert ex---------------------- pecting to meet the vene1. It was deployed off Vietnam for 3 5 seven mon{hs and w a s· scheduled to spend the sum- mer in training off Southern Ton Joyride c~~•'l!•ncy ce nter Marin e Takes A rntrac Jaunt received a total of 183 visits i and telephone calls from relatives of the crew. Most of the calls were to request hel p ln finding housing. Seven wives were given money - one for tranaportation back home and the others for foed. . Cit y Seeking Injunction On Airport OCEANSIDE !UPI) -Eigh· teen-yur-old Marine P v t • Randall B. Waldrop decMied to go for a midnight joyride. Unfortunately for the nerves of Oceanside residenla and police he took ~ jaunt in a ~ ton amphibious tractor. Waldrop commandeered the amtrac from the 5th Amtrack Battalion where he i& sta- tioned near here and headed for the sea. With the armored vehlcle barrelling along at it! top speed o( 30 miles an hour through the quiet night it sou nded like an earthquake - and enough Oceanside residents thooght it was a disaster to light up the police switCbboard with dozerui of calls. The trail of Waldrop and his amtrac wasn't hard to find. He left behind him a diwter of gouged pavement and crushed curbs. Police caugbt up with him as he lert Oceanside and head- ed for Carlsbad. But once the.y had caught up there wasn't much they could do. There was no way ol stop- ping the amtrac. By the time Waldrop and the amphibious tractor had gone through Carlsbad and started down Interstate 5, the main north-south route between Los Angeles and San Diego, there were seven patrol cars in futile pursuit. The amtrac went home on the back ol a natback truck. News Story Tightrope For Reporters Due? GI Striker Gets Hard Grilling FORT ORD (UPI) -The only hl&h 1<11001 graduate amone 14 OI prlsonen on trial for mutiny faced a tough cross-eumlnaUon M o n d 1 y concerning a s!t-down strike at the San FranciJco Presidlo's Stockade. Pvt. Stephen Rowland, 21, who said he wu a con- scientious objector, testified be was placed in the stockade after be went AWOL rather than go to Vietnam as a com- bat medic. Rowland said his lither Is a Ueutenant coloneJ in the AJr Force assigned as a nuclear chemlst to the hydrogen bomb project at Alamocordo, N.M. (Officials at Holloman Air Force base at Alamogordo said they bad no Lt. Col. Rowland on any roster. ) Under croas-e:xaml.natlon by the Army's prosecutor. Maj. John F. Novin1er, Rowland said he entered the Preiildio Stockade Oct. 12, two days before the sit-in demoruitraUon which led to mutiny charges against 27 prisoners. The defendants claimed they were. protesting conditions at the stockade and the fatal shooting · of a fellow inmate during an escape attempt. Rowland said he entered the stockade on a Saturday nltht, was visited by defense at- torney Terence Hallinan Sun- day morning, belped ,plan the demonstration Sunday night and participated in it Monday morning. However, he said he and Hallinan did not diJcuss the demonstration . During questioning b y Hallinan, Rowland aa.ld he was a pacifist and was desirous "of doing my thin&'' for the peace movement. Novinger asked H the soldier was doing his thing for the peace movement when he took part in I.he demonstration. Rowland said the demonstra- tion had nothing to do with peace, only conditions at the stockade. Novinger a 1 k e d why Rowland and the other defen- dants made the peace: sign with their fingers during the demonstration. "I don't know, sir," replied Rowland, the third defendant to tesWy at the current trial. Stanford Talks Set on Sit-in TOP PRIZE TUESDAY NISHT ONLY· 5 to II Y•H ..... --...... Ut.O ••• /ncludH nltd with cholca of drealng, roll ind buttw, brlerav•. s125 WEDNESDAY NIGHT ONLY •• 5 r. 9 fish 'n chips a favorite of Old England BteadMJ fish piecta Hrved with Fr•nch lrlu~ colt a/aw, roU and butler. 99~ Include• bevet•Qr. OPEN 11 AM lo g PM ~;:: t~~,~~t"J,f\~11t:,1:~: 1912 HARBOR ~. (11 f91h) COSTA MESA syate:m. CDC resolved Satur-,..... 641,1117 Wf 11-t, s.r. t.a 2247 f AIRVI EW COSTA MESA 642-4732 df1¥ to 11sk for Hayakawa·s11,, __ ... ,_ __________ .,. ... ..,.,.., _______ ...... _ .. , re.,\ign.alion. '' ' $500,000 Of FACILmES FOR MIN AND WOMEN DAILY '1LOT 7 New low Rate PRICES SLASHED llYB'l&OIE OfFlllD AT THIS NIWLOW un FOR LIMITlD TIME ONLYI Anyone who purchases their Health Spa Program will receive absolutely FREE an additional camplete fitness program for ~ny immediate member of the ir family. "PAID IN FULL" HEALTH SPAS CAil ot STOP IT TODAY FOR A 1111 TOUI I HUNYINGTON OlAC" '' "I ... t .. '' " > 84'J.14S1 If ANAHllM I\ OG ANGI ' ~ ( l •· • • . . . . ; 016-0381 6]0-1441 .. • I • ' . • I .... ' ·, DAll.Y I'll.OT Saving Eyes Econo111ic Stud1 Predict• Two .Million for Orange County ·hy 1980? ANAHEIM -By IMO, total employment, ,value of Orange County will hive a production and land use1 Jn populaUon ol two million, a 1955, the total value ol farm labor force of more than output amounted to more tbaD 'TM,CXXI and its residents will S106 mllllon, wbereu it came have a penonal income of to only $83 million in 1967: nearly $11 billion, according to "'Ille conUnued development an economic study by the of manufacturing is tbt key to Bank of America. the future growth or OrlUIC!I R. Gene Conatser, vice County," said Conastert. pr e s i d e n t and senior Manufacturing account.ed;-for economist for the bank in one of every three new jobs Southern Calilornia, outlined created between 1950 ud. 1968. details of the study here. During the last decade or so, "Orange County will con-manufacturing has gr o w n tinue to be one of the brightest about 10 times as , fast in ~ economic spots of the nalion Orange County 'as in Californil for profitable investment in a In terms ' of employment, and wide range of industries. Its five times as rapidly in terms economy will continue to ad-of value added." vance at a faster rate than Manufacturing. he Indicated, that or Ca1ifornia as a whole, cannot continue to grCw at this which, in tum, will grow more rapid rate, but even so, new rapidly than that or the na-factory growth in the county tion," he said. will expand employment to Underlying much of the · nearly 200,000 workers by 1980 future growth of the economy -an increase oI more than 50 \\·ill be rapid expansion in job percent over current levels. opportunities. Between 1968 This expansion also will have ind natural population In-1be rapid expansion ex-county's growing popllat!Oft.. creue (tbe number of per'sons peeled in employment and However, because mlgratfon born in the county), the total output will be reflected ln a will slow some what, the de- populatlori should reach nearly substanllil increase in tot,al mand for homes will not be as two million by 1980 -an in-personal hrome and I rise in strong as in past years. create of «t percent over the the Uving sta~dard of Orange About 200,000 new homes wjll current level County residents, Conaster be needed during the yean A close loot at the. popula-said. In 1960, be added, the between 1969 and 1980, com~ tlon growth • in the county county was sixtb Jn the sta!e pated with 273,000 b u i I t shows that the g r e 1 t e s t in terms of total persooal in-between 1957 and 1968. Percentage increases occurTed come. In 1961 it reached se-Conaster said the future or between 1955 and 1958. During cond place among the 58 coun-Orange County is not without these years, the population in-lies in Califomla and It should its challenges and problems. creased by more than 11 per-maintaln this position during "The rapid rate of economic cent annually. However, the the coming years. By 191Kl, growth and the resultant greatest. growth in absolu~. total personal l n com e , pres.sure on the county's land numbers was between 1960 measured in 1968 dollars, and other resources make it and 1965, when the average in-should reach nearly $11 billion. incumbent to plan ahead and crease was nearly as,ooo an increase of 140 percent devise solutions to such prp- county's important ddense-persons each year, Cona.ster over current levels. blems as air and water pollu- space related i n d u s t r i e s said. A large number of new lion, freeway and a.ir corridot appear very favorable said With an additional J80,000 homes will be built during the rongestion and rising demands Conaster. These. industries ac-persons in the county by 1980, 1970s lo accommodate the for public services." count for roughly 60 percent of density will ~ease sharply: .;::=====================>1 total manufacturing activity and should reach more than and they have been by ffr the 2,500 persons per square mile. primary growth element in the This compares with a county. During fiscal 1967. population density of t,500 firms in the county received persoo.s per square mi\e in Fight the Brain Dra in .•• READ! Dr. Martin Dales, Costa Mesa optometrist, ex- amines eyes of Ensenada, ?.-1ex., boy during recent clinic conducted so u th of border by 17 Orange Cou'nty optometrists who also are Lions Club mem- bers. Doctors will return to Ensenada Thursday 'vitb glasses for 116 children with serious sight prob- lems discovered dutjng earlier trip, and 1980, the county's work an important effect · on in- force is expected to reach dustries that are directly 764,000 persons, an inctease of dependent on manufacturing, 77 percent, or more than twice s uch as transportation. the growth expected in the wholesale trade, industrial state. construction and bu siness Agriculture continues to ac-services. count for a declining share of Long-run prospects for the * * * * * * over $800 million in prime con-1966 and only rrt per square Tile Bookstall l l l 1. 11tll St .. Cw• Mne 141""4611 tracts for military hardware. , _:m::.::il•:_:ln:_:OOl=·~-----'~===================:==i "It is well known that the1· defense-space ind us tr I e s historically have exhibited considerable instability. No problems oC this nature, however, are in sight for Orange County," Conaster said. County Firm Seeks Workers From Japan For The Record The projection assumes a resurgence of defense orders afler the Viet Nam war is over, particularly orders in· volving research and develo~ nlent, missiles and the elec- tronic communications equip- ment. TOP , PRIZE ·· Meetings DEATH NOTICES ANDERSON ld1 M1y Anciff-. JHOI Vli!I d! C1t11ir11, S.011'1 l.ffuM. Dl'lrt u1 d!-1111. APrll ?'I. Sl/n'~ lw 1i1'"1, Mrs. Nellie O'Took. Miu I'. C. Andefto11: nilql. Mfl. Dorotlly W. Andtnon 1nd Ml'I.. l'l trlc\e Wll'ldlH!ff, 111 Ill $a.lftl L...-. Mr1. Al'ldenot1 w11 K'llve l" P1clllc Arb AlllOCltlkin 1flll ll'lf trf Proirr.mt Jn "" LOI Anvete5 CllY kllllobl. l"rlv1te '''"""-W!'Vlcl!I will bt held w~1.,, 10 AM. P• cltlc View ~morl1I P1rt. 81111 Mor· , 1111,..,, COront del ,,,.., Direclors. BYUS l1rblr1 8¥115. Ave 11. ol 1•JJ Vi•I• Hottr, Newl>orl l e1c11. lelc- dllltfller Ill Mr. tftd Mr1. John F. l l'Uli tfslt!r ol Mr5, Jo Ann I-Hiit· bioddlt, tnd Jolln 1¥\11• Jr ,J gr..-.d· d111v!llef' ol Mr. ttld Mrs. H. t. Gol>- mert. So/rvkti, ] PM IOdlY, TUHdtY• C!lurch ul Our F1.,,.r, Fon.11 L1wn CYPftu. F""' L1wn Mortu1rv. Fam· 11'1 i.unuh !hose wlshl1111 to mill• 'llO!mori.I contrlDullon1,.. Pl•tH con. tributw 19 the Cll!ICI~ HGwiHt l, LOS A~les. HEAVNER s .. 1 .. 11 M. tteevner. 1561 G1rtio!ld AY11 .. H11nl~on 8"dl. Otte ot <IN'"· APfll 20.' S11rvlvl!d by llVSblnd, Lt- rO'fJ Ml\, Stew1rt L. Nlclloh. Hunl- lntlOfl 8ttC11 d1vt11i.-r. s.,1vlt J. Arder1on.. OI Gerdel! Grow. Rosary, tonl ... I, T....otv, 7:30 PM. R!Qllitm Mu.t, Wed!lftdly, 1:311 AM, bo!ll ti $1. Pol'l'ano Clrt>olk Cll11rci'I, Stinton. lnl9{fl'leftl, V11hell1 -..Oriti Ptrk, "lor-tfl Hol1VWQOd. Otreclftl by P1clllc Vl!w Mor1iNrr. KIT.LIAN Wllllrd L. k lll11n. 1000 v 1st1 C1Jon. "1-rl l t.U.. Otte ol ~Ill. ""'II :II. Survived by wllt, Vir9J11itl: i.on. .vttiur D. Killian; 1ls~rs, ~cllt Me<ellllT\ll, Ltk! $.In M1rtoo1 H1rrle!t Klttt. Sin ,,.,.rlno; "IMlll! Fore$fer, -· Oklet>ornt: brctller, Emory kl~ litn, M1rvivll1e: vrtnc11on, Will1rd A. Klltl1n, NewJIOl'I 8ttcll. 6trvlcei, I~ dlY, J Pl.\. Ptclfic Vltw CMPtl. In. lermef11, Ptclfic: VW ~rltl P1rlt. DJteded by P1cllk View M.,,111,Y. VARGAS Ernest \11r1111. llilf lltldl 11"11 .• Huntlnvton Bltd'I. Aw 32. Survived bY wit.. Lollie; Mrentl, Mr. Incl """· P!le Vu'"'· S.n!1 Ant; 11• Clllld~ Mn. II-le Lunt, Wutm;.,. '""'' r'onv. $.lllY. Ernie Jr.. Lind• tftd lllCNl'd Vlf91tl brGll>fr, lg,.. c;o; lmH' i\IMn,. Mo. Jl!nfl!f. R.,... oelt. ConirMll Mn. Cf'lll Rf,11. Mr1. ~ On""'1 11111 Miu Marv Lou V•r"lll~. 111 Ill $.lrtll AN: lftd - 11r1nddllMt. 11.-n. 1:JO PM, W.0. l'Hdly. Sllllltlt °""'· lll'O!.llem Mmn. T111,1ndly, t AM, $$ Simon .i. Jiiiie C1111Dllc: C""rdl. I ~terl!Wftf, Goocl S........,. CllfT!tkrv. 51'1ltllt Mlrtalrv, ., ........ AJIBUCKLE I< WELm Westcllff Mortuary U'I E. 11111 81.. Colla Mesa -BALTZ MORTUARIES Co_,. del Mar OR :I-Mii Colla MeA MI 1-ZCU BELL BROADWAY . llORT'UARY UI BroaCwa:r, Costa Mesa LI l4m DILDAY BROTllERS B--Vllle7 Morlnr1 J'1tll Buell Bl•d. Hnllll_..1 Buell semi P EEi FA MJLY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME 7111 -Aft. •-m15ZS WDFla llOft'l'UARY ._ .... tM-IW .. a a .. m.tt• year, but usually move at their own initiative, or with Japanese government assist- ance. While the defense-space oriented industries will remain the bulwak of the county's economy in future years, there is growing evidence that manufacturing will diversity. • FULLERTON -·Kaynar Manufacturing Co., a Fullerton firm which makes nuts and bolts for airplanes, is trying to recruit s k i 11 e d workers in Japan. Kaynar is seeking 15 to 20 skilled workers, b u l a~ parently is prepared to hire more if they are available and quaWied. Fullerton Man Heads Suh Fleet "Such diversification is ex-l-------------------------------- pected to continue at an ac- celerated pace during the Casey Joins Dimes Group A spokesman for the firm said a variety of jobs is being offered the Japanese workers, but declined to discuss wage scales. However, the Japanese Emigration Service in Tokyo said the firm is offering Japanese machine too I operators a wage of $3.50 an hour or $560 a month. One U.S. Official in Tokyo said this is equivalent to the monthly salary of some top Japanese exeeutives. In a survey conducted in mid-1967, the Japanese ~tachine Tool Trade Associa- SANTA ANA -Dr. Robert tion said that, for a 48-hour E . Casey of Santa Ana . has week , the monthly wage per joined the Medical Advisory employee of its member com- Committee of the Orange panies, including bonuses and County Chapter, Na t i 0 n a I fringe benefits, amounted to Foundation -March of Dimes. the equivalent of $t60 . But since the survey was The plastic s u r g eon taken Japanese wages graduated from the University generally have risen to an an- of Oklahoma School of nual rate of about 14 percent, Medicine in 1945 and interned according lo the Ministry of at Cook County Hospital in Labor. The Japanese Emigration Chicago. He studied plastic Service said many Japanese surgery al the 1'tayo Clinic. emigrate to the U.S. each FULLERTON -Ll. Comdr. Dudley L. Carlson o 'f Fullerton, has been named commander of the newly con- verted USS Grayback, the first of a fleet of submarines capable of deploying un - derwater commandos a n d troops for "unconventional warfare," the U.S. Navy bas announced. The Grayback will be co m- mi!ssioned May 9 at Vallejo. She is now the largest of A m e r i c a · s conventionally powered submarines. The Grayback and her con· ventional sister ships, once part of the Pacific Fleet's Deterrent Strike Force as guided missile submarines. were taken out of service in 1964 and replaced by nuclear- powered subs anned with Polaris missiles. The Grayback is 334 feet long and displaces 3,800 tons submerged. She carries a crew of 87 officers and enlisted men. Rochester, Minn. He is a'.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii member of the Orange County Surgical Society and a Fellow in the American College of Surgeons. Or. Casey will help plan and direct the medical service and education program of the Orange County Chapter. 1970s and should provide a stronger economic base for the county, acting as a cushion against possible cuts i n defense-space progra.tn.'l,11 Conaster said. One of Orange County's most dynamic growth sectors in the economy will be the service industries, which in· elude private as well as government services. Th e service industry consists of a wide variety of activities, ranging from services pro- vided by the highly technical establishments to those pro- vided by the entertainment- touri.st industry. The widening of the Orange County market will a I s o stimulate services, so that many of the specialized ac- tivities formerly i m p o r t e d 'Ii-om the Los Angeles area will be provided by local firms. The net addition of 680,000 people will push real personal income to nearly $11 billion by 1980. Population and income growth will exert considerable pressure on the demand for services like medical and den- _tal care, legal, accountir).g, and air transportation services. Expanding work op- portunities mean expanding population. Based on an an- nual job growth of about five percent in the next 12 years Are You A 3rd-Grade Reader? All ORANGE COUNTY SCHEDULED AIR LINE A noted jiubllsher In Chicago reporU there is a simple tech- nique of rapid re.adiJli which should enable you lo increase your reading speed and yet re- tain much more. Most people do not realize ttiw much they could increase their pleasurt, success and Income by reading faster and more attaralely. According to this publisher, most people, regardless of their present reading .skill, can use this simple technique to Improve their reading ability to a re- marbble degree. Whether read- ing stories, books, technical mat- ter. it becomes possible lo rtad sentences at a glanct and entire pages in seconds w 11 h this method. To acquaint the readers of thlJ newspaper with the easy~ to-follow rules for developin& ra.pld re.adJng skill. the eompany bu · printed lull dttalll DI Us ~ ,.u.ualnin( mtlhod In 1 new booklet, "How to Read Futtt aod e.wn M.,.." mall· <Cf free. No obUgaUon. Send yoor name, addrea, and tip code to : Reading. 835 Di""""1· Dept. i111Hl4,-0ol .. ll0, toll~ A pos• <an! will do. SERVICE WILL OPERA TE OUT OF LONG BEACH AIRPORT FROM APRIL 21 THROUGH MAY 2 (APPROXIMATELY) • During th• closing of the Orange County 'Airport for Re- pairs, flights will depart and arrive at Long Beach Airport. Passengers should go there until construction is completed. Check in time at Long leach will be the customary 30 min· utes befare departure. AIR WEST 1 The next time you buy a car, get something you don't pay for: --. ---------- " . a free checking account. , . If.yo~ get one of our car loans, you get a free checking account for th~ durabon of that loan. Now that may not be the biggest deal in the world", hut it's nothing to sneeze at. ,., It can save you $72. Easily. Say you decide on a·thrcc-ycar car loan'.' And say your chcding account charges average $2 a month. When you're not paying those charges, you'll save $24 a year. In three years that adds I up to a tidy $72. I ~ch might lead you to suspect that we recoup the $72 by raising \ our interest rates. Not so. Our bank Interest rates are a saviDCI In themaelvet. Because we l:.now the lower they arc, the more loans we make and the bigger we gei • ' ' And even though we're a I $900 million bank, we're Low, Low stillamhirious.Soge1your Car car loan at a bank that wa~ts lo get ahead. By Loans savmg you money. UNIVERSITY P.uut OPFICE: 18022 Culver Drive, Irvine HUNTINGroM BIWlH omCE: 16932 Galden W .. t Su.et, Hunl.in(too Beacli ,, I of lUI lie int nd il nd ... h• ot a. ' LEGAL NOTfCE LEGAL NOTICE t D.IJLY PILOT f LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE. LEGAL NOTICI • .. j I , I I JO DAll.Y l'iLOT TuHd•r, A,<n 22, 1969 Finance in Brief OYER THE COUNTER -A- NASO Li1tln91 for Monday, Aprll 21, 1969 SU<X:ESS. N.Y. (UP I) -Standard Patents &i Devices, lnc., has develoPed a new one-part chemJc a 1 adbe!lve that dissipates heat but blocks electrical current. It is expected to simplify pro- duction of miniaturii.e<i elec- tronic circuits by eliminating tedious measuring and mixing of adhtsive and catalyst. DALLAS ,Jlf, LTV Aerospace Corp. has obtained a $6 million Navy order to supply avionic test data and hardware for the A·7E Corsair II light attack bomber. ' HAMILTON, Otn. (UPI) Canadian Westinghouse Co. ocea!!l!llraphic fun~ilc. A mutual fund lnvestinc in tht development and use of the ocean and its resources -----------Mldgote Dkfrib11tor1, 111<.. II at11H ilrHI H ... Vfr'lt, fif.Y. 10004 Plea~• 1efld me• protpeclul o" th• ~1naar1pl'llc. fund, lnc. Cit~ Sl•1• lip Bank Branch Ready by June \. TOP l PRIZE i A chance to win $10,000 cash etery time you visit any Standard Station or Participating Chemin Dealer. No purdl-L~ff '""'"' -Ir A R11iJ1,111io• Sl.UtlfJntl r1"111i11i 111 1bt1t s1t11rili11 h•1 htrn filnJ tVllb 1b1 StcllrrlitJ •Iii Exrho11tt Co,,,Miuio• 611 h1U "'°']ti l>1fo11111Q1t1iv1. Thn1 J1niri1111 m•J n111 bt so/4 1u,, m•y "ff 11110 hllJ bt ;. "'''"'"prior lo 1.61 tiint 1b1 R1ti11F111i11,, Stlllttntl'll btromu 1fjtt1ii:t . This .J111rti1tmt•lf 1h,,/l t •al ro1uti1Jil1 "" 061• lo srll or 1h1 solicil•tiolf of •11 ,,g,, to buy 1101sh.di1h111 ht •111 .i•lt o/ ~ 1btJ1 Jtruritrts 111 1111 Jl.Ut ;,, whfrb 111th offt,, io/1ri1111io1t or .u1/1 wo11/J bt 1u1ltuuj1d ~ prior to tbt r1ihtr11tir111 (It '1114/if,rtllio11 """'' tbt Jt ril'iJitr l<1ws of •"1 uirh 1/11/t. A"PROPOSED NEW ISSUf; 8,500,000 Shares Common Stock ($1.00 par value) American Express Special Fund, Inc. Is a diversified open~end Investment company mana&ed by American E1press lnvestment Manaaement Company. The Fund seeks maximum a,rowtb of capital. Price $12 Per Share ClJp111 o/ 1br Pr1/n111tttV1 PfC1'f''''" ••1 lit o/Jl11JH14 from tlit •N4rr111,11;J ;,, ••111.:1 itt whirb 11 iJ ,,1;11rr11I ,1 , ,,,/,, i• ''"""'''•Iii i• ll'hicb 1br p.,/j,,,;,,,,y P101 prtl11s .,,,, l•U.'f11//y "' 'i11r1h~1tJ. First California Company 33.55 Via Lido, Newport Beach, California 92660 Phone : 675-3940 C.~·--------------'"''-------~'P•---- on """"911111 ts in multiple• ,ooo. ASSETSOVEF(' $-425,000,000.00 STEREO SENSATION! The colorful sound of Orange County Music RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM .... From Fashion Island, Newport Beach • ' ~ OTHER BRANCH OFFICES · 1 ~ Wnt Arcadia • Covlntt '"" Gl•ndale Ea111t!Pc~ .10 Eaat Air ,5(1 Ea1tG~ 1,H! E'esl s 50 .'IO East U!ll I •O E Ko<laW .Ill!~ E'a!onYa 1 AO Ee!on f/l.lf Eba.co Ind 1 E(MlnMI .n EckerdDt ,2S Edi..,.,Bros I EG&G .10 EIMutl( .09, Elt>o:I Anoe Elecl S• Elol~N~! lfld EIP•s<'NG l Ell••C~ 1.tO 11 ::UV. ::Ul o J•l'e -V. El!ra nil AO 36 10~• 1o>1 10>\ -:i. Etnl!r EIK 1 7l U'~ 21"' ~ -1 EmEI pl B.90 ~~ 32~ ~~ ~Iii + Iii ~m~•vtl• »J!4 l09 ll''o 1HO 11\'i _.,,_ E~Pb!st. l 60 2 tAV. 8A''> MV. + 'h Emoorc .tOD • nv, 77'.~ 11''? . 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F!11or f1f e J 6 :1'I 1!'1• :1'I t '·~ Fl'I Tlttr .10 3 1S 11'-21 '' FMC Co .IS 11 ?l\'o " 11 -\1 l'MC 017.25 1 63;., 63 63 . FllOdFair .'Ill 90 16V. 15'> 15'\lo ->,, Foci• CB 10 JI '5 .Ul-ll .Wi -"" Foore Ml~ l .U'h ((~ (('f> -V. Foc!P Dl1.10P 1 t.11'1 22\'J t.1\11 + .... FprdMi'll 1 -'Cl 11 39\11 lll'o 31\'o -•• ForMcK .75 ABS 4 '7'h u ;i.;. -v. FMrM: on iw 16 21'h 26~ 27111 +V. FMl'WM .60h ll5G 67,,., 116 6'14 + "• FMI Wh o! 1 51 56l0 56 56\'o -\\ Foicbor<• .60 • 4 4 a · . l<ra"k Sir .n A] lt JIV• 31\lo -·~ FrttoS11! 1.60 15 611> 60\/o ~ -'h Fru•hC.p 1.ro l 196 196 196 __. F11~u• !"II »• 2no 21~ '' -"" 11 ... '5'" ... +\ro ~ 11l4 11 1m +1 r..a.c co i .~ -31\.11 37\AJ 37'1 -'ii GAi' Cor~ .-'Cl 111 A] .U1,o .i!"' t llo r..t.F Pll,l'O U tf\'J '9 tf Vi <>•m Sko 1 30 71 J.IJ 31~ 3S -+ \~ G1mS pfJ.75 '50 $3 53 SJ . G•mS Dfl,60 no,, lGto Jllt'o XI'• + 1.\ r'l11nn•tl .6l 90'" 19111 to -1 Ger Wood 6 90U tO to -1 Gird~ l ,JO t.12 21>1o 21 11\lo + ~ G1flO(:k .!4 25 XIV. JO JO -" Geml"' CaD J 21\~ 11"• il•• .. ~ "'" .,Ka 11 ~\~ tf tf~ -1"' GnA!nv 2.20o l~ ~&Ji~ p~ -1~ ~!~11D'.!: s o .a .n -1 (':.,Tr1n 1.60 110 11»\ 61 6t•h +I c>tn eanc .56 6 31 30\.\ )(1"1 -\io Gn Cable 1.20 tf 50V. '"' 50 + YI t.-.:i Clo l.l'll 45 '61'> tJV. '5 .. -I Gn~~l :>61 1U 611\ mt $9\l -2\11 Get1Dvn•m I '1t »tii 50\11 50\11 -\ro Get1 l!!IK 2,.0 11:111 $IV, w:• $1\11 + ~ ~ Flrtp!~ l9 611\t 5'1.1 -1~ !"of'n Fiil '·'° IM M!lG,nHMl 22• SJ"• S7>1o SJ\.\ \'/ G~I"'' 1.l'OI ' !Iii~ ~1" n o., "" r.et1 Mll)I .fl'I Jl :t•t, 2t'lo \II r .... MDl J.40 115 ty 32\6 :12 -1\ '°' Mo• SP! 5 '" • " " ' ' " ' " , " " • "' " • " '" ' " • m " • " "" .~ .. ' • •• ··-n 16"• '"' "'" q.. J5'1t 3~1• lolt\""" ' "" "" 30\4 -• r, • ).I -t~ " ~ •• C;'~ ~-.. , I "' "' -" "" " 3l -tl "" "" 21"-~ ·~ .... '"' -... ,,. 111; ' 11 ·~ ~-Jr• -\' • " ~· •• M•'< .,..1\1 ~~"" " ~1 -) "' isv. ,, ... -,, ,,. ,,t, 1n·, _.,, n "" ,,,,.,_ ·~ ... "" ,,,~ -~ -• .(!"-,+-h "'·' ~-~··-11 "" " 111 -• M• "'' 7''1 -~ 111'1 2ll\ lt +' . '"" ,, ... int. ·~1. :1,.11~ " :!"'~ +.•. n~ IJ,~ ltt :::~ ., ,,,, 17\.\ ,, IQJT ·Y·ll ta DAY·OUl; ·, "I ' . • ... CU MATCll IT! ' • " "' SA• 1111 LDAM A~CIATd UI IUT m : .. -.. ' ____ ,L_ i. I ~ t· ! I i " ... .. •• " ,, " •• •• ;1 " .. " :t " ~ '• ... • '• . " ., ,. '• :I ., :\ " .. ~ " '• •• ~ -" ·~ '• .. .. ~­·;-: " .~ .~· .. .. " ·• •• •• .. .. •• • " "• .. • * •• •• • •• :f '• • •• n " ,. " " " '• ' . ... • . , 'I I .. • .. Monday's Prices-C.Omplete /New York Stock Exchange List r I - j! l>AllY PILOT Tutlday, April 22, 1969 "Yot1r Motaeff's WortJa · .. Elderly Ha;Ve Rights, Too 117 SYLVIA PORTER Should yoo, an elderly 1American, have the right ·under law to share ln our» tioo's rising living ·standard&? Should we drastically overhaul :our entire Soci4] .Security System to start closing the alanning anp: widen~ gap between your, income:: ahd the incomes of younger people? What 's the mini.mum finan- cial protection via Social Security lhat you, the younger worker, ,want to be sure of when you retire many years from now? How big a"slash in your total income are you prepared to accept when you retire? SHOULD SOCIAL Securi ty- bene!its amount to more than 30 percent of total retirement income? Should. we try to reverse the trend toward early retirement? These questions -and many more of the most fun- damental meaning will be pr~ bed in hearings to be opened a week from Tuesday by the Senate Special Committee on Aging and to be continued later across the country by subcommittees of the Special Committee. T h e following economic I a c l s dramatize why: -In 1961, the median in· come of U.S. families beaded by an American aged 65 years or older was 51 percent of younger families' incomes, That ratio is now down to 46 percent. -IN 1950, th e average retired couple 's Social Securi- ty benefit covered one-half of the "Retired Couple's Budget" -the minimum considered adequate by the U.S. Labor Dept. to finance a decent liv- ing standard. Today. this benefit (about ftt8 a month) covers less than one-third of the Retired Couple's Budget. -Inflation has been steadi· ly eroding higher S o c i a I Security benefits. The in· dlvldual who reUrid In 1954. fOr example, i9 now Teceiving 111 lnmued btnefit worth leu in actual buying power . than his 1smaUer ~fit when he fint retired 15 years ago. ...... Orie;hatf of · our aged faw.ilin ·today hive incomes below fftOOO and one in five baS ,ail ,income bitow a;cmo. Half of . all · aged .Americans living alone -most of whom are widows -live below the poverty line · (about $1,500 for an individual), and one in four has an income . of $1,000 or Jess. -JOB DISCRIMINATION • because of age is still forcing a majority of men to retire be.tore 85 -al reduced Soci.111 Securily· and before they qualU:y foi' Medicare. You .can't shrug it off, really you can't ...... even thou,gh you, a -young man with a graduate degree, 'may be starting your first jOb in June at a monthly s!tary equal to the ye:a.rl!: i.1)- come of literally m.iurali!""6t aged individuals .. These are policy questions as vital to yoc.i as they are to your retired grandparents. For even if we bring back oor annual rate of inflation to an aceptable 2 percent, this rate still would slash the buy- ing power of each current $1 to a mere 67C" after just 20 years. EVEN IF YOU are now in or heading for a !pectaeularly successful career, today's ear- ly retirement trend well may abruptly end your working years by the time you're 55 or 60 -leaving you decades in which to try to survive on only a fraction of your earlier in· come. And if you're in the vast majority, your total retire- ment income from all public and private pensions will amount to only 20-40 percent of your pre-retirement earn- ings. But 1 shrink from pleading with young Americans to place themselves in the position of Crossword Puzzle ACROSS l Laundering necesslt,' 5 Close fl'IOUthed person · 'Off thr ·' vertical ~ 14-Footbilf in friction 15 Ft111lnlne name 1& Kllchrn ...... 17 A.bounding In certain lnstcts 18 Before Jong 19 Gttek ... QOddess 20 Wrestler's 44 Put into service 45 C igarelle: Slang · j 46 Route .~'1 47 Cllff on the Rhin• 51 Champion 54 Greek theater 56---dirt 51 Bh:e ribbon, t.g. 58 Ur1tsk.'1 ri\let 4/22/69 59 Loopllkt structure Ml Give se-6 Special 35 Structure on curlty to . vocabulary large estate 61 Hockey 7 Sleeping 36 Household goalie's like ----: appllance accomplish· 2 w0tds 31 Theatricar JOINS DATARON Dale E. S..vard Bevard New Controller Dale E. Bevard ot Corona .del Mar has been named con- troller of Datatron I n c . , manufacturer ot digital data products and systems, timing instrumentation, and other computer periptieral equip- ment. Formerly vice president of finance for Abbey Ren.ts, Bevard also has served as treasurer of Nelly Don , Inc., a woman's dress manufacturer, and corporate controller of H. D. Lee Co., Inc., producer of men 's work clothing. Bevard is a member of the Financial Executives Institute and National Association of Accountants. In addition, he has been a director of tile na- tional boards of both organiza- tionc and has served as presi- dent of the Kansu City chapter of eadl group. Legislature In Action milieu 21Hot1nd ht.111ld 122 Piquant ment 8 Multilattral group 6Z Red Rivtt llJ State 41 Protected Rebellion 10 Worn out 4Z Become D'Ullft&Wld t&WLJ4QC l'f n. AIUC:l•ll<I ht,M 1 23 Rtservation 25 Ncit barefoot 127 Number 12a Animal 29 Transporl- atlon mediu11 32 Poker play- er's word 35 Kind of scionsor 37-plaislr: With pleaSll'e 38 Holes In the grnund 3, Poktt temt 40 Entrusted to .-iother 4Z Enhance 4) Timetable abllrevi1tion ' • .. • 23 . , • " . .. leader 11 Desserts worthy of 63 Set at IZ Time of yNr 45 Played a liberty lJ Three-spot comic: role 64 Observed 21 flavoring 46 Rock off 65 One of famed ll'llterial Gaspe radio team 24 A.Ito, for one Peninsula DOWN 1 Scheming person 26 Brewmaster' s 4 7 Bequeath necessity 48 For mer 28 Thought Russian very much of VIP 2'J Make sub· 49 A.llevlaled missive SO Country of 2 Relating lo a certain bone 30 Blblical Europe preposition 51 Fisherman's 3 The sam e 4Kindof Information gatherer 5Parlofa contract ' 31 Mull!gan ac cessory JZ Put a S2 One In debt burden on 53-Dwlndlr .)3 Currier's SS Hauling associate vehicle 34 Tum to water 59 The Altar ' 10 11 12 13 c • I• Ml'Htaf, ... ,,II 21 Under I SeMlt NU.0 bill, news- f!'l!!ft ..,.Y flllCI' """-1~1 on 1 lour- ro11T1!lc lfghtrOI><!, feerlnt I~ conse- <IO't'llC9' rll st<>rie's ther Wf'l!e or bro.to!Ull. l~nt-ml~ vot.n I" ~IJ.. tornl•'s 111rlcuttu,..1 Mertlelld bellol for • -II•!• asurn11rv....,n Jn • 11>eci1! t fK'lkln of cr..cl•I sl1n11runce lo bolto 01rtln . A orl•tlt 11<11! !eken for Ol-mo- cta11 WY• Re!>Utlllc.n Go•. llHtln 1s reoan:ltd mud> mort hlthlY b\I Calllornl1 v~r1 thin Ills two oe>ten- 1111 o.i.mocr1! C11allt noter1-A1l'!mbly Mlnor!ty Ltadtr ,Jtt-. M. Unrvh 1nd Sen Fr•ncltto M•tor Joseoh .f.lloto. T~ SUPl'fl'!1e Court's docislon to !n- v1!ld1lt rH!den<y reciulremtnl1 tw W<!llare r@Clolenll will Ill~ -lf•re CO'lllc 111 C1llfornl1, !llV se.,..rll 1!1!e offld1b. THE A$SIM9LY .f.dloumtel In memory et """"'blv-,,,.n Al1n G. P•""-· wllo diecl In • Wffkend IUlo Wrt('.lc. THI Sl!NATl •1111 ...... ~ "''"' -P~vlded crlmlnel "1lll-lin IOI' l'ltWSmtll wllo 11Ubll1ll Of broad'''' 111se lnfonn1t1on 11\at coul!I c1use v!Ol-Mc-SB ll, H1rmer, R· G~na•lo!. c1 ..... u1 -Mikes tt • ml5dt..-nor to °"struct 1ludents or l1ttully trr- ln• to enter it.it <olle"°' or Vnlvef"· slty rll C1Ulornl• ampus; se ,,., Short, D-Sfocklon. Pllrsltllm -Wt!,,.. l1w r9Cllllrll'lll IHb fOf' llflvsltl•nt lo permit Olle phys!cl111 IO lit lfttnlf<:I: AB 21', H1rmtr. IMnll -F01111d1 lunlor l»llt'lle bo.lnl mtmbet" trom lffVin9 on lllvll scllool tio.ro Ill Mini 1'1!1/ AB J:I, Bur-r, Jl-S.111 OIMo. Tr111i... -Mlke1 1-in1 ..... n11 f1I !t1i. COllft.e lotn:I el TIVll ... 1111b- lect to CO!lttrmetlofl b1 '-thirds V'lllt el ttw Sen1t.1 SB & R k::~tnbon, Jl. Al'Q41-. BEST Tli1 DAILY 'ILOT eff1rs 1•111• of Hie b•ll f11h1111, by 1d111l '""'~ .t , •• c:1 ..... ev1i/•bl1 f11 111}' 11ewip1per 111 t+.1 111tle11. TOP I PRIZE The Great No. Franchise Fre~ for AllSetinAnaheimShow Everything from Jiggle Corn display models, and pro-said. franciril'ing ls based on ''na· machin~s to completely Mock-~ypes ol n a t f o n a 11 y -ad-Now officially estimated as tional corpora(e kn o W·how ed bridal shops will be offered v e r t J s e d restaurants, con-a $90 billion per Ytar industp' filtering d ow n to Jn- lbr sale or lease to the public venience mar.kels, inns, brake in the U.S., franchising may de p eodently-held "brancb' When the 3rd annual Franchise cenrers, printing plants. and well be the key to a operation$. patent companln arid Business Opportunities custom-fitted bras and girdles, reemerg~y of "independent" provid their !ranchi$es with S~ of Orange County opeDS aU available for nominal in-business, especially in Orange all the bu.ill.in advantages of Friday, May 2, at Disneyland vestmentt as "independently· County, Gallup believes. well-capjtal.l.zed manufactUring Hotel, Anaheim , according to owned" I businesses, . Gallup "Since · the concept o f and/or service organizations." _Brewster Gallup, president or=~~=~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~=~~~~=~==== Franchise Exhibits Co., Jnc ... 1: Newport Beach producers o! the show. More· than 75 exhibitors will fqr.people gomgplaces 6i 521 f~ TRAVELER re:-1 · ' I ~ '"' The place is anywhere! Oid Crow makes it a little more special. Orange Coast's Paper! 1 Old Crow rorhome ll/llUCU SlUlGlfl BOUiBOll 'llHISKEl M /'ROif, 0~11U£0 JND 80HlfD IT Tflf IX.0 CiOW OISllLWiY CO .. fWIKfORI, KY.' for ttlM:l How much does it cost to run your set?: ·· I Less than It an hour -morning noon or night. Any size TV. Quite a bargain, isn't it? In fact, electricity in Edison areas costs an average family less per kilowatt-hour today than it did l 0 ... 20 ... even 30 years ago :And practically everyone today is usin g much more electricity-more kilowatt-hours-than ever before. Ta kc washi ng dishes. Few people owned electric dishwashers a decade ago. But now you see them everywhere. And you can wash a load for less than Z¢. Or washing clothes. Remember when , this was a hand operation? With an electric washer, you can now run through a load for less than In¢. Or shaving. Electric razor sales sre., booming. And you can shave all year for less than a dime. In Edison areas, one of you r biggest bargains is electricity. It does so much for so little. .. You can watch TV around the ' clock and it hardly costs you " a thing. (Except maybe a night's slcepJ Southern California Edison sf:.E:l I• A."-:tQlJAlOl'l'ORruN1rY lMl'l.OYU "' .. , " l I I •• " ' l I " I I ---=== • ,. • • --- JOOEAN HASTINGS, 642-4321 '" ... '' """ u. 1Mt • .. ... 11 Sneak Preview Predicts A peek into what fashions are forecast for fall will be offered during the 14th annual Spring Fling sponsored by the Assistance League of Hunt& ington Beach. · Emphasis will be on the spring and summer creations from the col· Jection of designer Sidney North, who also will comment on his fashions, but piece de resistance will be samples of his fall collection. The~fashion show and luncheon will take place Saturday, May 3, in the Balboa Bay Club. Festivities will begin with a social hour at 11 a .m. followed by a noon luncheon and the fashion spectacular. Modeling North's creations will be the Mmes. Nick Apple, Richard Burgess, FJoyd Hair and D. R. Parsch, all members of Assistance League. Other models will include a member of the designer's staff and Mrs. James Orr, representing Shirley's Fashions, whose efforts made the special showing possible. Tickets for the event may be obtained by calling Mrs. Hair, 544-9648; 1t1rs. Richard Crawford,.847-6104, or Mrs. Norman Warner, 53{H;ll3. Providing back~round music for the luncheon will be the Hy Tones, and among many pnz~ to be awarded during the program will be $50 and $100. Mrs. Hair, general Chainnan of the affair, also has· revfaled that guests wi\1 be invited backstage to examine the fabulous new creations, try them on and make purchases following the she.iv. All proceeds from the ma"jor fund-raising event will be used to con- tinue a variety of community services including Operation Merry CDrist- mas, a speech center, service at Huntington lntercommunity Hospital and general welfare work . 'Watch Us Grow' Platform r -~ :J,'•"' -, .. • . -:-d. Out 1ne t If .. -Looking toward fulure ex· pansion is the new president of the Westminster W o m an ' s Club, Mn. Patrick Skoropada, .,: wtiose slogan is ·"Watch. Us ,.,. Grow." '~ • f' " She and her board will be in- stalled during a banquet tak~ ing place Saturday, May 10, in the King's Table. * An Gld-fashioned flower Cart fb filled with violets will accent lr the lheme of "My Fair Lf,dy" "" which will be carried out for the dinner dance. :t Also taking ollice will be Ill< t~ Mmes. John McShane, first ~ vice president; David Ames, ._. 1econd vice president; Rly- 1'-mond Wollrom, third vice ,._ president; Edward H y a t t • ,(' recording secretary; Le s 1$.l. Miller, corre spo n ding " secretary; Sherman C o :r , ·~ treasurer, and Edwin Alex- ander, parliamentarian. New officers and me.mbers recently were honored. at a party hosted in the home of Mr. and Mn. WoUrom by the Carousel Section of the club. Mrs. WoUrom, chairman of the instaUation committee, was assisted by Mrs. Kenneth Heggstrom and Mrs. Jo Shook. • The nut activity planned by the club is a nunmage sa1e which will take place Wed- nesday, May 7, with proceeds benefitting t h e scholarship fund . Anyone wishing to doUle usable items may can the ways , and ~means chairman, Mrs. Miller, 897- $,120. WANTED: NEW MEMBERS-Pointing with pride to !heir new sign are incoming officers of the Westminster Woman's Clu b. They will be installed during a banquet taking place in !he King's Table, Saturday, May 10. Seated will be (left to rlgbl) Mrs. Sher- . ' , • SWING TO SPRING -Emphasis will be on spring and summer fashions, but a peek at the fashion forecast for·fall will be offered members and guests of the Assi.Stance League of Huntington Beach dur- ing !he 141b annual ·Spring Fling. Sidney North will comment on bis own designer collection during the luncheon showing. Preparing to swing down to the Balboa Bay Club are league members (left) Mrs. Richard Crouch and Mrs. Thomas Broderick. Surf Sounds ~ ~ .. pf ~ • • ":~"~·""' ' ~O~~ Val,ley Wo,men , e4 t 'On the Move' ' man Cox, treasurer; Mrs . Patrick Skoropada, president, and Mrs. Edwin Alexander, parliamentarian. Women interested in learn- ing more about the club are invited to call Mrs. Ernest Fresquez, membership· chairman, for more information. I i By JODEAN HASTINGS Of rtw ~llr l'lllol Stall MRS. HAMPTON Hutton of Huntrington Beach will be in- cluded on the Republican Mem<riaJ that has been placed Choraleers In Concert Famous voices and fabulous songs may be heard when the Cboraleers appear ln concert at 2 p.m. Sunday, April 27, In the Huntington Beach High School auditorium. 1be appearance of the 91). voice chorale is be i n g sponsored by the Fountain Valley District Music Booster Club. Directed by Sheldon Diarud, the group will. sing sacred music in addition to selectlom from the Gay 90s. Orgati:lzed In · 1956, the Cboraleera won a Dlsneyl•nd award in 1963, toured Europe at the request of the Vienna lnstitute, and sang at the opening of the ~ Diego stadium and the Anaheilll Convention Center. Tickets for the performance a re now available at a n y Fountain Valley elementary school and will be on sale at the door .. at l h e Gettysburg Memorial site. Commissioned in 195a, the m e m or i a I com.mmsates delegatea and alternate s whooe decisko have in- fluenced the course ol the GOP and worid events. THE L08 ANGEU3 County Arboretum will be the destina- tion rl the Prowlers Sedioo al the Huntington Beach Monday M~ Club tom orr o w. Members wWling lo join the automobile safari will meet at 9:30 a.rn. at the Fivt Points "-"I ce-, Mn. Martin Deery, chafman, may be con-. tacted for addttJona l in- fonnetlon. COMBl!llNG SHOPPING a n d sociability w l t b fund- raising were -members d lb8 Hulilnglon 8ooch Hilb School F a c u 1 ty Wives' Club. The &nlUP gathered in the home "-Mr;s. James Axton for a plastic porty and 'd....n_ and all proc:<eds wW benefit the American Field Service program. Asaist.in& Mrs. A 1 t o n , chiinnan, were the Mmes. Thomol Hotlow, C. Clyde Jamer, Wayne J«gemon, Ken M6et.s. WlllJam OMiand and Robert Rice. Mn. Harlow is p«Cdent rl ll1e F ac u It y Wives' Club. Cuckoo College Campus . Capers Cause of Consternation DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 have the feeling that I've fallen asleep and awakened in a strange new world. I'm nol an old woman, Ann. I'm 42. Vet I am lolally unable to accept the weird changes in our aoclety that are going almo&t unnoticed. Here ls 8 quote from a UPI story : ''More than two dozen students, ont 1 coed, streaked through College Park campus wearing only aneakers. The c1un- Jllll daily reported Iha! the woman wu about Meet.& tnchee tall, brown haired and Oat ci161ed, One of the males In the pack aaJd he was responding to a challenge from a friend. Four students ,.Id they took up jaybird jogging because , lhey were bored. 'Nobody studies pnY ANN LANDERS more,' wa~ the ezpla.natlon. One bashful runner wa1 wearlnc • akl mask. He said, 'I'd hate for my 1»1rents to find out about this. They wouJdn'& understand.' ••Four ol the 1printers who were freshmen said It wu an lmperaonal way to be nude -that after a while nobody even looked at 11nybody elae. The coed giggled and added, 'Naittdneu can be fun.' '' · What ~ you have to say a'bout &his. AM Landers! -MARYLAND NY MARYLAND DEAR MARY: N1ktdne11 also c11 be a1ala1t lite &aw. It 11 caned "llMlttttt e1po11n.•1 ' ()( t:oune dte11 kJd1 an cuckoo. And the liailf:mtat, uNobod1· ttudles •dJ' mon ," 11 evkinct. Happily tb.11 111Uy eleme1t rtprt1eat1 1 1mall Hgmtnt or die atudeac body. Tbe 1ecment that nm1 ouL DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 am getting ' so sick and Ured of cruel jokes about l•t people I could die. My sister is lat-not "pleas1ngbr plump'' or ··generou.s!y ~ dowed," -but pl-.in, ordinary, everyday fat. She ii such a ttrr:lfic person and ao kind and wonderlul that tt brew my heart whenever somebody makea a crack about her size. She prtttnds lt doesn't bothr:r her -laughs louder than anybody -but I know deep down she 1uffers 1 lot. Last night a small group of us went to a little supper club. My slater was there with a cousin whp had Just rtlurned home from µie sttVlce. No romaDCe, juat brother and .lister stuff. Well, an en- tertainer got .up and sang a tong ebout how his girl!rlend 1wu '° fat that when lhey necked he hao to mark her rlf with ch<Jk to make rue he dkln'I milt 1 apot. 1 could have crnled undot the 111>!!. Isn't 11 a ahame'that 1 pretty fr.ce and brainl wl .,._.iily &Ill( I lot Of character aren't enough any more1 A girl has to have a figure Or sbe'1 •nowhere. Please say somethlnc, Ann. SKINNY BUT SYMPATIJETIC DEAR SKlNNY1 Of twrte, lt•s a 1hlme, but rtcta are ftctl. Nlnety-alle fat people out tf ... art rat ll«•ate theJ eat too mu.cb ·ud, u Or. Paul Dudley ' Wblte ..,., ,.,,..,. •It ............. fit- ly addl." ~ Ill -llllq IM)' ... da -1K wllta lMJ '&el dct o1 .... I ftL• Aod .-day I Mpe ,_. --oomellllq.,..ldetbea ·l"ld~-laap ll olf. • u you have trouble cewnc ..... •1111 your parents, , .If you con't l<l lbem ta ltt you live your own life, lti'd for Ana Landtn' bootltt, "Buued by r ... n111 How To Get More Frtedom." Send • c:tnLs In coin with ~ -md a long,stam~1 teU~-"lepe. _AM Lander1 wlll be Pd to help Yatll with your prob&tma. SIM u.n. tt '*' In cart of the DAILY PILOT, enc:loslnc • stampcd1 self .. ddr.-onveiope, 1 t' I ' ' • 1 J DAil Y l'!LOT T.....,, aprft ft, 1,.., !Kathryn Anderson Weds i\ jln Costa M~sa Ceremony Basketa of 'While daisies and carnaUona adorned the &lt.ar of SI. Joachim'• Calhollc Church when Kathryn Helen Anderson became \he bride qi Scou Montgomery Math<r. The Rev. Thomas Nevln performed the double ring nuptials f o r the daughter of Mn. Alice cYf OI N0wport - Beach and William Anderson of Costa Mesa and the son of Mr. and Mn. Leonard J. Malh<r ol IAng Beach. GiVen ln marrlaie by her father, the bride wore a gown of saUn wi~ alencon lace ap. pliqoes trimmed with eequlos and seed pwls. Her dlapel &en~ train wal caught to the wata:t 1n back. BARBARA SMITH - To Marry Summer Wedding Plans Set Horoscope Leo: Dine Out WEDNESDAY APRIL 23 By SYDNEY OMARR l\ECflEATION TIP, Fine Cot dlllnt: out. Grea~ pleasure alto lndtcated brow1lng In an- dqae ahopl. Lunar position to- day favorable for flshlog , plullar. _ARIES (March 21-April 19): By attending to 15aslc chores, you build solid base. Be prac- t1cal. Stick to proved pro- cedUrts. Take care o f necessiUes at home Cancer lodivldual offers sage advia: -lollow it. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Journey of short duration in- dicated. Guard possessions while in transit. Accent is on· what you say, and write. Not wise to make long-range com- mitment.a. Have fun tonight with family. G£MINI (1'1ay 21.June 2t1): lions as lhey actW1lly exlrt. Don'( d~ve youraelf with wllhllll thinking. Budget coo- Unues to require a~ Make adjustmtnt -pin cooperaUoo ol molt, ..,.-. CAPRICORN (Dec. 21-.ran. 19): Highllght public .. 1at1on1. Be sure your statements are- p r o p e r I y interpreted. Op. portunlty for advancement ex- ists -but you need coopera. lion. Know lhilUl!l<i &cc<pt aid. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 • Feb. JSJ : Finish job at hand. Some try to distract you. You are foolish if you quit now. Goal is in sight. Know this and ~ pond accordingly. Accent oo reward ~om task well done. PISCF3 (Feb. 19-March 20): Personal magnetism soan;. Opposite sex is . attracted. Pursue creative projects. Get out torught -be with one who is stimulating. You make valuable discovery. Be perctp- tive. Former OCC Students To Say Vows • June In JUDY JONES Future Bride A June 11 wedding date bu been chosen by J u d y Kay Jones of Los Angeles and Rm- dall H. Rolfe of Newport whose betrothal has been an- nounced by Mr. and Mrs.. Sheppard R. Jones of Santa An•, pa.rents of the future bride. Miss Jones atlended Costa Mesa High School and Orange Coast College and was a song leader at both schools. The benedlct-elect, son ot Mr. arXI Mrs. EdWih Ro lfe of c> Newport Beach, is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and Orange Coast College. After his J u n e graduation ff911 UCLA, he will enter graduate school in hospital administration. Rolfe was active in crew at OCC and is affiliated with Theta Delta Chi fraternlly and Air Force ROTC at UCLA. The couple will exchange vows in Lutheran Church of the Master, Corona de! Mar. Her bubble veUini was held by a fabric floral headpiece and she cal'litt while carna- tloD;S and !'06q. She wore a diamond crosa, a gift of her stepfather, the la\e Mr. Henry F. Cyr. Gowns fashioned with white ruffled lace bodices and nlle green chlifon skirts and boo- qbets ~ white dfiiaies were selected for her attendants. Mrs. Rita Perkins of Costa Mesa was the matron of hon- or. whJle · bridesmaids were Mrs. Ronald Pierce of Alham- bra, Mn. David 1Carey of San "Diego and· Mrs. Richard Benedict, the bridegroom's slster, of Long Beach. Bar· bara Mather, another sister of the bridegroom, was the now· er girl. A June wedding is being planned by Barbara Smith and Air Force Lt. Daniel R. Clark, · whose engagement has been annouDCed by Yu. and Mn. Woodrow Smith of Huntington Beach, parents ol the bride· elect. New start.! in new directions prove profit.able. Emphasize originality, independence of thought, action. F i n a n c I a I return on recent effort is surprisingly good. Treasure Sought at Tea ·-- CANCER (June 21-July 22): Aid could be sought' by ARIES individual. Be generous .. You will be repaid in more ways than one. Follow basic in- l!ltlnets. Cycle continues high. MRS • .,SCOTT M. MATHER Exchange• Vf/11111, Rings Miss Smith, who presently is teaching school in Walanae. Hawaii, is a graduate of Hun- tington Beach High Scbool and Whittier College. She attended Coltey College, Mo., and did graduate work at t h e University of Hawali. Her fiance, 90n d. the Rev. and Mrs. Herbert W. Clark of Pueblo, Col., is stationed at Ellsworth AF Baee, S.~. ·· LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Be versatile. Don 't feel there is only one way to accomplish task. Theater and dining out tonight perk up spirits. Social activity acts as tonic. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Unwrapped gifts or cash donations will be the key to the fifth annual Treasure Tea presented by St. M a r y ' 1 Episcopal Churchwomen of Laguna Beach in the Laguna Niguel home of Mrs. John B. La'NSOfl next Thursday. All interested women are in- vited to the 2 to S p.m. event at 32621 Sea Island Drive. At· Spi,rit 'Mardi Gras' Coloring Convention Attending the benedict as best man was _Robert Troul- man of Long· Beach, while usher duUes were assumed by Benedict, Willlam Greenwood or Long Beach, the bridegroom's co us in, and Pierce. John Mather, the bridegroom's brother, was the ring bearer. French Contest Winners Feted Alliance Francaise de la Riviera Californienne w J 11 meet Friday, April 25, at a p.m in Lincoln School, Corona del Mar, for the awarding of prizes in the French speaking contest. Accent on hopes, friends, wishes. Some obstacles can be overcome if persistent. Be wilh congenial persons; dine out. Break routine. Get new lease -change outlook. Be of good cheer. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Instructions received today add up to change of assign- ment. Be flexible . Superion; observe actions, reactions. Ac· cept added responsiblity ·- you CflTI handle it. Tips Given For Beauty The color and escitiment of MardJ Or• IF1U prevail when Oru1• \)11t .. ict, California Fed ... don of • FBEE Hickory Farm1 of Ohio HORSERADISH SAUCE With 1 lb. of World Famou1 :am.STICK Hickory Fanni of Ohio · CLE PANTllY CHEESE ." ::r.1t:. •l.lS lb. -------FBE:E: BANANA ems With the purchase of $3.00 i! more 1t _..,,lillo~IMI!!'~ WISTCLin' Jll?!CH TOWN a COUNTRY ORAN GB P'AAME:RS MARDl" LOS ANCEL.ES JIORTS OP CAl.L VTLLACE 6AH PBDllO : JlfUPOJNT LANDING IDNGJIUCH .. ' Women'! Clubs, J u n Io r Membership, stages its annual convention Friday and Satur· day, April 2S and 26. in ~e Disneyland Hotel, Anaheim. Registralion lit 9 a.m. will open the two-day session and Mrs. Gary Ratzlaff, president, will gavel the meeting to order at 10 a.m. The morning agenda will in· elude introductions, a report by the nominating committee, presentation of candidates and election. Luncheon at 12 :30 p.m. will honor Mrs. James MCalla, district president, c I u b presidents, outgoing coordinators and s p eci a I guests. Honored will be the Mmes. Jack Christensen, coordinator ; Adale Lyons, DeAnza Junior District president: DeForest Culler, stale coordinator, and Douglas Brown, Area D vice president. Other honorees will include the Rev. Stanley Jones, and the CitizeMif-lhe· yea r, who will be announced. Following the luncheon elec· Lion results will be revealed. and the Mildred C o r b i t cooperation award will be presented. In charge of the program will be the Brea Juniors and the winning sex· tetle. Attending the reeeplion In the church hall were 150 wellwishers. Assisting were Miss Becky Gunderson of San Diego, Miss Lynn Angle or Costa 1'1esa and Mrs. Robert Omerod of Huntington Beach. Special guests were the bridegroom's grandpar- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Carvel Erickson of Virginia, Minn., Pi.1ark Montgomery of Long Beach, and the bride's broth- er, James Anderson of Sa n Jose. After honeymooning in San- ta Barbara the bridal couple now are al home in Cost.a Mesa. The bride is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and Orange Coast College and attended San Diego State College. Her husband. a graduate of St. Anthony's High School, Long Beach. attended Long Beach City College and Nevada Southern University. Georges Duca, executive secretary and Cbarles-1..oois le Guern, cultural attache to the French Embassy, will preside. Duca will discuss The Profile of American Youlh as Seen by an European. SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov. 21 ): Good lunar aspect today coin- cides w i t h long-distance messages. Keep in touch with family member. Harmonize relations with those close to you. Key is to be diplomalic. SA.GlTrARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): See persons, ailua- Presidents Called For Annual Ex<;hange Six Assistance L e a g u e leaders from Newport Beach, Huntington Beach and Laguna Beach chapters will attend Ille 11th annuai President•' Conference of N a t i o n a I Assistance League nen Thws- day. represented by Mrs. Thom.as H. Jones, president, and Mrs. Williston Bradway. Registration at 9:43 a.m. will be followed by &es.!ions on public relations, r e g i on a I finances, a u I i I i a r y rela· tiotuhip, importance of region- al alternate and ways and means activities. The conCerence takes place each year to bring chapter presidents up to date oo NAL procedure, review expansion activities and discua solutions for problems that have arisen during the rapid growth ol the Leaming about cosmetics will be the Harbor of Hope Chapter for the City ol Hope next Thursday in t h e California . Federal Savings building, Costa Mesa. 11-tiss Kathy Occhiogrosso will present an Evening In Cosmetics. A display of cos- metics will be available for members and guests. The chapter raises funds for patient care at the hospital in Duarte, which is free and nonsectarian; designed to fight cancer, leukemia, blood and heart diseases correctable by surgery. Memberflhlp Ui optn and ad· ditional inlonnatlon may be obtained by contacting Mrs. William Savage: at ~1917. ADPis Meet Wcmen affiliated with the Orange County A I u m n a e Chapter nf Alpho Delta Pi will gather Thumay, AJll'il 24, at 11 : 30 a.m. in the c.oeta Mesa home of Mn;. Ronald Barnett. Assisting her with hosteoo duties will be Mn. Wilbur Allen. La QuirU High School's foretcn exdlange studen<I will talk. New officers will be in· stalled and a special ceremony will honor graduating Juniors during the evening program. Following the theme of the Unmasking, the J u n i o r Women's Civic Club of Garden Grove will conduct a tour as awards are presented. Concert Follows Luncheon league. The Anne Banning Com- munity House, home of Foonder Oiapter, Assist.a~ League of Southern California, will be the scene of the gathering. l>resjdents a n d presidents-c:Ject w i 11 be welcomed by Mrs. Burton V. Collins, national presioient. Orange eoa .. members of AUeflding from Newport Lodge Meeting the Woman's AWl'.illary to the Beach chapter will be Mrs. America n Society of Colin Reynolds, presidenl, and O vereaters Trygve Lie Lodge 90, Som of ~1echarrical Engineers, Los Mrs. Robert Crowner, first Norway, will meet next Thurs- Angeles Section, •will be Vice president. Huntington Every Monday at 8 p.m. day at 7 :~ p.m. in the among those attending 8 piano Beach delegates will be Mrs. members gather in Anderson American Legion Hall, Costa concert. presented by Mary Norman Warner . president, Schoo I au d Ito r i um , Mesa, according to Leonard Spauklin.g Hense, pianist. and Mrs. Harold Buck, Silver Westmituter, for meetings of Wolford, president. Anyone Special banquet guests will include Mrs. Douglas Brown. Area D vice president, and Ralzlaff, husband of the outgo- ing president. Mrs. Harold s. Spaulding of Anchor Auxiliary chalrman. Overeaters Anonymous. wishing information m1y call Pasadena will open her home Laguna Beach will be Guests are welcome to attend. Mrs. Ray Nielsen, 54MISll. The Grand Finis will take place at 9:30 a.m. Saturday wher. new officers are honored and Junior aux JI i a r y presidents are installed. for the informal event nextf;;;-';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;-==;;I Auxiliary awards will be presented and Miss Teenage Citb.en, Hallmark art contest winners and district sewing winners will be named. Workshops for officers, the Jun ior auw:illary and press upresentatives will take place at 11 a.m. Saturday, and the closing ceremoney is schedul· ed for l p.m. Thursday, which will begin with a business session al 11 a.m. Luncheon will be served at noon by the_ ~esses, the Mmes. Robert L. Graham, Frank Donnelly, Jerome Simson and W.W. Alew:ander. The piano program wlll follow the luncheon. Tht 1artist, a graduate of Pomona O:>llege, received a Fulbright Scholarship to the Conservatoire National d e Musique de Paris and earned her masters degree from !ht> Universily of Mk:higan. f\frs. JO!eph C. Widmont Jr. NB Auxiliary of Newport Beach, lf.13.2711 . 1, taking reservations. Newport Beach Polk:e Aux· __ ;:_ _______ II il lory gathers the last Tuesday of the month at 7:30 p.m. Location is available with 11-frs. Robert Wheeler, 67S-ll2t. Gloomy Gus Tells ii As You See it Only 9 More Days Until MARGIE WEBB'S Gigantic 'Once-A-Year' Tent "SALE" -E· BRATION DISICiNlll l'AIRICS AT TllMENDOUS SAVINCiS AIM tf9fMfWI..,. cl......vt 'f'•I"" In IMlf" lwtl'f\19 Shop So, Refnember the Date MAY ht ~nd h•lp u' "S•ll·E-Bret•" 2094 So. C!IG1t Hwy. La9una Beach ' MASTER CHARGE AND CARIE BLANCHE AFTER EASTER St'\LE Price Reductions Men's, Women's and Boys' SPORT CLOTHES LINGERIE -DRESSES -SUITS SLACKS -SPORTSHIRTS 300/o ·400/o·SO°/o OFF & MORE PAIK CONYINllNTlY IN OUl llAl INTIT PAllUNG AllA OPEN DAILY 9,JQ-6, FRIDAY 'Tll 9 PM IN COSTA MESA IT'S sin eris STOfllll-- 1816 NEWPORT Bl VD. ' BANK AMERl~ARD AND\ DINERS cwa tractions will include a fashion show ol clothes for mature women (rom Lois-Paul Originals, Laguna Beach. O'Connell , Robert Mccarter, 1\-lilton Chap1nan, Ralph R. Raymond , William L. Ullom, John Chamberlin and Harry G. Parker. Mrs. Jack Lyons w i 11 coordinate the show, and members modeling will in· elude the Mmes. Robert L. Carter. Robert F. Schnitzer, George Cunningham, Chesley Evans and Miss Edith Rec\it. Club Hears Vice Mayor Gifts collected at the tea will go into a special room Cost.a Mesa F e d e r a t e d during the group's annual Republican Women's Club will thrift sale Wednesday, April gather for a gener~I meeting 30, and Friday. May I, in the and a talk by Vice Mayor church at 428 Park Ave. ' Robert Wilson. Mrs. Howard H. Adams:, ri.1rs. Bruce Walters' home chairman, is assisted by the in Costa Mesa will be the Id· Mmes. Robert L. Cornelison, ting next Thursday at 10 a.m. Baird B. Collin, Dooald H. Tickets are SI and a spaghetU Arvold, Schnitr.er, Evans. luncheon ic:ill be served at John W. Favour. Gordon noon. Forbes and Leighton French. AU Republican women are Others are the N.:mes. Lev.'is invited to at.tend. R. Gillette, William C. Kinder, ---------- John B. Phillips, Orval Wilson, John L. Mudge, Francis M. Nau, Glen I. Buzzard, Robert Dameron, David Orr, Ted Now in Our Family: Family Weekly --- If you long for food• cir 1imple and easy going dayt. you'll find them in the oou_ntry alert atmosphere 1t Hickory Fsmu of Ohio. The decor put• you in the mood o{ yesteryear. The friendly service ia a delight To cele· brste, we offer these apecialt and invite you to vlsit w l ••••••• FBEE Hickory Fanni cf Ohio HORSERADISH SAUCE I OL-•!Jf! YO/Il l \VHh the Purchase ot One Pound or More WORid fAMOUS EEEF STICKr~ Aa 111-beef. hickory 1molu1d 1umm1r 1au11gL M•r b• 1erved inany w1ya. '------.. ··--------1-lickory F1nn1 of Ohio ful~~ Hickory F1rm1 of Ohio SESAMI sm I 01. Plq. .Reaular 49t 21or19c •l.49 JJ oa. Regufor ~ ... $1.79 lb. ______ :.... Hickory Farm1 o.f Ohio OLE PANTRY CHEESE • FBEE :,'.fg1;~, •l.19 lh. OM PKt<-.. 91 HkQr¥ '••!!II ., Otl19 BANANA CHIPS 4 OUN(ll e e e ~ ~ALUI W"H TH• PURCH.Ut 0, SJ.00 Ol MOii. Wt fttl-IM fl'tflt le iuMt+!llle ~~«~lk''' ~~r11~. South . Coast Pl~;,. , Eatt Wint Lowef' C•rousel Mall I r Brl1tol at the San Diego Fwy. • 1 ' Coste Meta, Phone 540-69t1 ' AMEBU:l'S t.ElnmG t,BEffiE STOBES : I • • ----~,.. ··-~ -------- TUESDA Y APRIL 22 1vr.N lNG 4:30 91Cl1 -jCJ C.H IIDl 626-2.tn to •w. •'*. , ...... .,. 0 "EYEWITNESS NEWS"! * Bill Bonds/ Stu Nahan UD0131JJ"' ...... (CJ (IO) lo 1 medi~ll fantfq, Qttn IUdid1fl• hopper ll'llilil In I joustlnl '!Jlldt with Ille Black Knilhl (Jillllf Strrto frtnchl) for tlMi 1111111 " UM dluih- 1.,. ot Kllll Bourboft V (1N Ar1111). In 1nothtf slit, Skelton 1111 Jlmmr Crou pl., tipsy tour1sh •llo tinalt with IM !Yloua ~!Id ol 1 fiery Muica.11 11rt. (Rnthlduled) o .... --(CJ ~O) Buffy Slinte-Mvit 1U1St1. a @CIJ lflJt_T ... _o 1'"' (CJ (60) ~Mid in Jlpart" Nahd 111n 0 •••• (C) !!ill !lond1, Stu N1"n. m 4:30 FIRST REPORT * Putnam-M iller-Kelly m 4 1'11ln .. News IC) ' comment.tar Ale Dreltr (UISb ts Chartu C.ttlett, ' Ooub11-detllfll SIA 1a:ent who Clllfl'l*S Alcnder Mundy's etlorts ta chedi Nt tht possibility that the C!llntM ltedl ha~t dt'ltiopecl I laser hand CUil. Sharon Aeke1 1l110 cunts 11 Edwin• Hopkins. S:OO m 5 PM RONA BARRETT * REVEALS ALL ON THE GEORGE PUTNAM NEWS m '-il111 l'utn111 Nl!Wl (C) t :OO 6 The l it flltw1 (Cl (6<1) Jerrr Dunphy. 0 El;) Huntlt,·B1in~ltJ (C) (30) Q Stl'lit Allen Show (C) (90) Ed· die Fisher, Ch1rles Nel$0n Reilly. John Byner and tarot W1yn1 cues!. D Six O'Clod Movil: (CJ "SWNI ~d et Youtll" P111 II (dr1m1) '62 -Paul Newm1n, GHaldlne Pa1e. , D wura "' LIM? 1c1 t30l m l'•J Cards (C) (30) m 11bn11• 1CJ 130) m ...... eriftil (C} 1901 ID 11:111 lw t .. Ult (C) (60) ''" 0 QJ 00 !l.l ... ,_ .... , "'NMr ti Sltndlf' (comtcly) '60 -Mdi111 Mtft(luri, Juln O.auln. Ali Ameri~1n ph ilOS01111ef·tol.INI •I· tempts tht cultur•I tdlJCl!ioft ti ll1Y1, 1 rounc Greek pMilut1 whl laves lov1 ind lift. (R) 0 Slltwclw 5 (C) (60) Misi Ctrvl lawrenct •nd Julius WechlH •n4 His B1ja M1rimb1 Bind •rt tht ingredients of 1 ont-bollr color .., tertJinment sp1ei1I. tli) KCEk A11Ctie1 <ct CtJI 1213) 62&.2,7fto plac1 bids. ([) Clludlt Awllallft (C) 9:30 0 5 (j) Dolli D1, (C) (30) Doris 1nd Buck decidt th1t Ju1nill needS to hm 1 nictrt Ollt and 11· 11n11 to hm F11nk Gotiln, tilt owner d lhl sportin1 roods store, ad hei for 1 d1te. (Rnclleduled) O @@ lf)NYPD ctl (JO) '"Naked in the Streets." Milt• H1i111s, Jelf Ward and Jotin Cofso 1r1 handi- upped in lhlir investi111ion al 111 1m11lt wllen 1 JOUnl will t1h1sin ta sia:n 1 complaint (R) aJ 12 Cl'Dttk Hip (60) IE Ho, Cll 00 Merv '1iffin (C) E!)l#jiiC1Alillta Auction (C) (6 hi) first ewnlnt ol llCO's TY Aue· lion. Tha11t.1nd1 of ilms Ill up IOI biddin1 bJ viewers sll ove1 Southe!'n C.lilorni1. Cttel11ity 1uctionHrs, In· cludin1 Steve Allen. Anne But«. R111er Ca~I. Henry Fonda, Henry Gibson, Didi Whiltina:ton and M Stidenb1um, have donated their lime. Many celeb1itie1 have donaled pe1son1I items lot 1uction. Wilh 111 p10Cftds aoin1 toward m1 irrtainin1 1nd e1t1Mndlna: tile p101r1mmin1 and facilities of Channel 28, Bi1 Boa1d Items for viewe1s wllo want bi1 b1r11ins on expensi'fe 1etail PfizH hlvt been donated. l hese include trips. hotels, tlolhina:. the•· !rt lickels. jewelry, restaurants. hoosel!old a:aods. ~ortin1 2oods, 10:00 0 ~ (jJ 60 Min utu (C) (60) art and 1ulamobilt 1ppU1ncH. Harry Reasoner and Mille W1H1e1 lhese 1r1 just • I~ of tht items repnrt. th1I wl!I be displayed tnd demon· strated with retail p:kt or value noted. Just dial (213) 626·2477 •nd 1 batlert 111 40 telephone aper· 1t1t1S ~ ready to 1eceive your bids. EE Un Coltr 1'1r1 bt.1 Pili alKPLM ..... (C) 6:30 0 11.NIC HeW!frtiu (C) (6<1) D Splrts Speci1I (CJ {90) kit frazier b1ttles Dive z,a:!ewia for lht World He1V)'\llei1hl Bo~inf Cr1t1111n. I m I lne L.q 130) aJ v.,111 te Ille lattom •I tbe S.1 (CJ (&OJ ti) 00 HunUeJ·l rinkle' IC) ~())!El i!.l "'"' (C) t!D fllrwlywtd ,,., (CJ m KTTV'S RONA BARREIT * REVEALS ALL ON THE PUTNAM NEWS at 10 PM om .... tti <"l o @m m r...r. Lift <C> <60) "Bll)'inc the Hou!!e.~ Sid CaKlr l[llHIS II I 11rrulous. 11li!'t"-kHlo!!l1 home nwrier, ar.d Paul Lynde 11 an oily real estate al[enl ea1er to m•kl 1 deal. (R) 0 Newi (C) (30) led Meym @ 1\t NIW Sound (C) (30) EI:) 11cn Auction (C) Call (ZJJJ 02&.2477 tn place bid!. @II Mlfi1n1 7:00 fJ cas lnn1111 Newt (CJ W1ltrr Crnnkitt. 10:30 0 MO'lie: (Cl "TM ll1t111" {dt1· m1) '55 -Kirk DCIUr\IS. Cllbert (30) Roland. m ,.,..,d (C)o (30) @@ All«iu! (C) m NIWI <C> 1Jo) tm Fllra,-CenzM m 11.C[J lutlilln (C) lht number 11:00 0 0 0 IE I'm Nm (C) to c1ll is (213) 62&24 77. g l lfrtd Hitchc:od: soon. lotd ''" 1C1 m Lilri c111b <t> ED lll1ftds ill ltll Sun (C) '6 Morie: °'llltbs, Inc." (dr1m1) ·s~Reed NtdltJ, M1rjnllt Rey· nalds. tJJ Let's M11tt 1 Dul (C) @m@oo aoo• ... 1c1 7:30 IJ ~Cl) L111C11 (C) (6<1) Mur· -. ICET • ~ c H 113) docf'I Lsncer'1 uttle-buyina: trip lo W AllCtiH ( .. , I ( Mexico likes an unupected turn 62&.2477 when tit bKOIMI thl 'liclim Of I t!i} lnittNd (C) siltt holdup ind 11\tr tltt pri$0ner ..,. in 1 boss·t:0nt1otled bolder town. ll:JO 0 Morie: "AnN KlfNil•• (d11· 0 @@ m I lfiC1AL i Ord11I m•) '48-Vlvill'I Leilh. R1lpll Ridl- 11 lb• Ametica1 City (C) {90) ardsan. "Canrrontalion." Proa:r1m tocll!tl O @@ ft!! TNlitllt S.. (C) on strife.m1rktd ~n Francisco Statt 0 MM: "Cllalttl" (adventure) Calle11:1 IS 1 microcosm ol urb an '47-Alan Ladd Gl"I Rusaell lurmail. In "Roshomon".stylt, !ht • 1 • • prOl[flm has nine. "persons lelllna: 0 @@ m..,. l 1sllof (C) lht same story: 1lt lllk about !ht m Dan11d O'Coftlllf (C) eYtnl. the same crisis ol urb1n life. the sam1 crisis of 1uthorill, . . • but set it th1au11h different eyes. l 2:ZD 0 Movit: .,... hi Ill b in Funk McGee reports. (dr1~a) '63....fory C..lhoun, Marl111 Berti. O lost in Sji1e1 (C) (60) 0 @ (1) t!D Mod Sqiad IC) (6<1) t~·lO m Actioll l'Mflt1: "Britakdawn.• "Bid Man on campus." Pe!e, Linc · 1~d Julie a:o back to school to in· vestia:ate tilt mysterious dealt! of 1 hilh school te1cht1. IR) CD Trut~ er CotlMqutnta (C) (30) t!) l'MTJ M1Mn (6(1) l:ODOON.., IC> O Com111unitJ lullctin 1011"4 (C) m frOM DI ln.W. Dot (C) E!) llCU l 11elilln (C) Thi llJ(tion I :15 IJ Movil: ''C:lltst Dlnr" (1dvt~ runs tilt mi4nithl. lure) '57 -J1me1 Cr1l1. Audtl'I Totttr. II) El Cutril Mand1111 ient1 1:00 0 MiHit1 $ Mnil: "01wid 1n4\ 1:30 m 77 Slliutl SVi' Liu" (drama) "62 -Kt11 Du11ra, J1nd M11pli1t 1' 2:30 m AJ~NiCkl $Moir: ~M1dt lel11• m Hazel {C) (30) 11Ki '\UttllJ in Ht! h11rt.• WEDNESDAY DAmME MOVIES t:oa a "N••,. Nill!" l111Jil•ryJ '54- s11111n1 Hty1!1n, Glo1il Cr111Jm1. t:JD 0 ... , ...... 1 Millinl" (comffy) .,~lll'lis O'Kuf1, Htlen Walker. mil '55 -Ricll1rtl Burton, Joh1t Dlflk, R1,mond MISltJ. 12:00 O 'U llilll4 Cni1t .. " (western) '50--James E!H10n. 12:30 m '\lttlr rrewi •• U1tk1111W1 W.11· 111" (drlmt) '41 -Joan ront1ln1. z:oo m "tin ...._.. 11t1rst•l'f> ·s2- Doftttt1 Houston. Nltlslll PtnJ. S:OO 0 {Cl .... ,, ... ltometlJ) '4' - .1t1nn1 Ctaill, Nu Younc, t:lO 11 "tlrt"" Surlttt" ('4¥tntur1) '53--'tidllrf GIHM. • JOB PRINTING • PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS O••llf'f Prl t1ti"9 '"' D1ptt1dt.,f• S1noic• for 111•t• tt.1n 1 Q111rlt.I' of 1 Ctnl11ry, 2111 Wl!T IA.LIO& ILVD. NIWPOIT IUCH PEANUTS ly Cliarles M. Schull ........... ~~~~~~ PERKINS j JUDGE PARKER SM.t.ll W( ~TOf' FO« ~ UEAICFMf IEFORE 1 T.UE VOii 1-K)ME, I C-'W Mt.ltPl..V KEEP IAV EYES OPEW ~ OOtl'f VOU e.vee ruw oor Of -"-- ~TE>.M, lllCE? llCIE ? ' ® PR"ETZEI.. 90Nt. FULL.--9AR. RAG ~E:CENTLY WRLlN~··· STILt..·-SOMfTHJNG SEEMS TO Se" t..ACKING ... ? TUMBLEWEEDS LOOKS LIKE MY TRIP INTO THE Wll.PERNESS IS OFF_l'M 100 BROKE TD 6UY SUPPLIES! l'.lllJl..WT nu;: GENERAL STORE GIVE \00 lll<V FOOi> . ON CREDIT? MUTT AND JEFF I'VE GaTAN AWF=UL COLO.' GORDO ~UNCLEGUS HAO~E KING KONG Fl.LI L.AST W EK! NIAT! 1 60nA &eT ME ONE, 100! HE DIDN'T KNOW W+limlER 11:> l'EEP A COLD OR STARVE IT/ MISS PEACH : GEM • • 0 • •"' e •• • • B'l.JOU • ,-;.1S: Fu .. M HAf ""'~ >A1lll>@ • (IOLDUtJ Oi'~ 0 , , ..... I.. ... "'°' '' "fl'I< APl1"ri• c,IMt S"( pte1UiC ~ 11<'-"_M)I'' p.A1l:O flf fMtl:Cll t' •.C. 00 "'~"'""'"'"'· Fo"-,,.,..rvi.£ j.1Jt1~f C)/'I\., ... ALL RIQIT, 'IWA...I Datr llMT.AINLETOOl.W NOlll.. 60T A SW 60116! ly John Miles ,, By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith By Gus Arriola By Mel \'f.i.i~~s1 ._ ---1 , ijl f',1.c..Al£ HEED YOU ? (g} L:.:.J ~ . ~ .......-----...61@ @ __./ . : fRAN!· WHERE A~f YOU, WALT OtSNEY1 NOW THAT Wt: @j 'l .. ':ll. J ,....,,_IA_ I JAPANESE HOLIDAY -Sharon Acker and Alex- ander, above, star in the "!\fade in Japan" segment or "It Takes a Thie!," tonight at 8:30 on Channel 7. The duo goes to Japan on a dangerous missi!"l .and finds their lives a( stake. Robert Wa·gner IS per- manent member of show. ., ' TELEVISION VIEWS . 'Spoon River' Lovely Hour By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Although sharply trun- cated, CBS-TV's Monday night production of "Spoon River," adapted from the classic free verse volume by Edgar Lee Masters, was a lovely and artful ho~r. The recollections and views by persons buned in a cemetery in a mythical small town in ~uthern Illinois were acted splendidly by Charles Aidman, Jason Robards, Jennifer \Ves t and Joyce Van Pat- ten. This quartet, plus the deli ghtful folksinging by Naomi Caryl Hirshhorn and Hal Lynch, ~rought a special poignance, a rare flavor of Americana and a frequently earthy humor to the long-awaited video production. "SPOON RIVER" originally was scheduled to be shown on C~ TV last season, a s a ~minute en;" try. Shortened to the hour form . it finally got on the - air Monday night under the sponsorship of the Con- necticut General Life Insurance Co. As with the stage version of "Spoon River," the · driving force behind the televisiol) production was.,, Aidman, who not only starred in it but adapted and · directed it also. It was Aidman and Miss Van Patten who pnr duced the dramatized version of Masters' "Spoon River _.\nlhology" with members of the Theater \Vest \Vorkshop in Los Angeles. UNDER THE NAME "Spoon River," the play -basically a collection of acted-0ut readings-then moved to Broadway, where it was a critical hit in 196:l-64. Ma sters. who died in 1950 at the age of 82, was a lawyer who once was a partner of the famous de-- fen se attorney Clarence Darrow. ·And the anthology of verse, which caused a literary sensation when published in 1915, enraptured Aidman sin<:e his stu- dent days at Ind iana University a couple of decades ago. As for Miss Van Patten. it now seems difficult to think of her in her regular role in CBS-TV's slap- stick comedy series "The Good Guys," aJthoµgh it is also peopled with such good performers as Herb Edelman and Bob Denver. Poetry is nice, but you have to get the bread somewhere. TO WATCH Aidman in "Spoon Ri ver," even in truncated version, is to get that special thriU of see-. ing an actor who loves his work so much that be bas merged with it. As excellent a performer as Robards is, the ni ght's acting honors must go '\'ithout question to Aidman, whose variety of impressions were in- delible. Miss Van Patten, of course, was very good too. And Miss West, a lady of stunning beauty, is that rare combination of looks and talent. She has had, like everyone else, her off-moments on the stage, but Monday night was not one of them. THE MOOD FOLK songs that were woven throughout the C~TV production grew on the view· er until, at moments, they were sublime. Aidman wrote the lyrics, and Miss Hirshhom composed the 1nusic. Miss Hirshhorn's soul-piercing voice was an acting feat aJI by itseU. The production was staged as a play before a live audience. which was a good idea because it emphasized the Jack of pretension and the emphasis on the performances for their own merit. Dennis the Menace '1 6UESS WlmrtS NOT OJER. ~T. HE'S S'f'/t/. WEAAll'I' 'EM !' ~-· • I !1111111111•£ ............... a ................. __________________ •_=----..... ----~~~~-- t I I I ' l ,152 Starters, One Winner · Yoshiaki Unelani , a survivor of the atomic bomb blast at Hiroshima in 1945, won the Boston Marathon Monday (bottom photo) in the record time of two hours, 13 minutes and 49 seconds. Unetani was nine months old when the atom bomb exploded 15 miles from his home. A W ilt l s Key Reason I. . starting tield o( 1,152 began the race. Ambrose Burfoot, the 1968 \vin· ner, finished 17th. John Kelley, 61, running in his 38th Boston Marathon, finished 186th. Big D Hurls; Mays Shifted LOS ANG~LES (AP) -Willie May1 la happy with bis old, familiar poa:JUon in the Giant lineup bul he's not too enU1used about his club's current position in the National League West Division standings. Especially after what happened to -~tbe~m Monday night atJlodier Stadium. Mays was back at hls No. S spot in the Giant batting order Monday -and he responded by eollecting two hill in four trips and upping his average to .33S. But it was sUll not enough to overcome Dodger Slale "pr· 72-0oclllef"• ,,. S.11 Fr1ncl~G. 7:'5 •·"'·• "'"' (...01 ,.:ir· ~I "' ClnclnMll, 7:ll •. m .• KFI a couple of costly errors and timely Dodger hits. All of which added up to a 7. 51:.oS Angeles victory, their sixth straight at home and one which kept them right on the heels of the league.leading AtlPnta Braves. The twirgame series concludes tonight when Ray Sadecki of the Giants opposes Don Drysdale. .. I enjoyed batting leadofl," Mays remarked, "but I think it will be better for the ball club if I bat third. Although I was getting on base ( 12 times in 19 ap- pearances as a Jeadoff hitter) I wasn't driving in many runs (3 in 10 games)." The Giants, now U and tied for third place in the west division with the Cin- cinnati Reds, committed two costly er- rors in the sixth iMlng when the Dodgers exploded for five runs to move into an in- surmountable 7--0 lead and knoek Juan Marichal out or the box for the first time since June 19, 1963 . All five runs in the inning were unt:am- Titan Cage Coach ed but the Dodgers alto rteelved timely run.producing hlts from Te d Sizemore, Andy Kosco and pitcher Bill Singer. Wlll.it: Crawford's second homer of the year a n d a run-scoring single by Paut Popovich accounted for the f~t two Dodger runs. J 11:ie Giants made ll close With a single run in the seventh and finally chased Singer with a four.run burst in the eighth. But Jim Brewer and Al ~1c8ean put oot the flre. Singer, meanwhile, chalked up ~s third straight victory. He slrutk out eight and walked three before leaving the scene in the eighth with the bases loaded and none out. S""I FRANCISCO •• r II .-1 LOS AN••t•I 1•r11rW IOlld~. d J 0 I I C .. wtorll, cl Out!1rre1, 3D J I 1 o Ru"tll, ri Mt•llMlll, 1111 I Q o O P1rk•r, lb O!Dbon, fl 0 0 0 0 Kosco. II Mty1. cl 4 I 2 O H11i.r. c Mcco .. t y, lb • 1 o o Slld•kll, lb Hlttl, c J 0 0 0 PopCIYlch, n Hirt, II J ? 1 1 Sl1emort. u MllOn, :lb J O 2 I l ll'gtr, P °"""port, lb 1 I 1 2 Br•wer. fl Ltnltf". 11 ~ o o o Mee""· o Mlrlcht l. fl 1 I t O H.rbtl,p QIO O Eltt1rldge. pit I o o o Robltiwn, p I 0 0 0 Hunt, ltl O o o 0 • 2 1 1 • 1 1 • l 1 0 0 • l t I l I I t J I 0 I • 0 1 I • 0 1 J l 0 ' 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Tot1l1 :J6 J I • To!t ll Ji 1 I I Sin Fr1ncl"o 000 000 J.10 -J l as "nutlH 000 IU 001!-1 E -s111more t, Mf>Of'I, McCovtv, Robtrllo". 01' -LO. ,l.ngtln 1. LOB -Sin Fr1ncll<O t, LOI Af19llH 5. 211 -Ht lltr, Hirt. HI -Crl•fflrG (2). $ -l'•rk1r, H1U"';j. H 1 lt:lt 11 SO Mt rlc111I (l .2·1l S.J1J 1 I 1 I • Htrtlel l/J 0 0 0 0 1 RolHtrhon I O O O 0 I Gibbon 110 000 Singer IW.l-0) 1 7 4 • J 7 ll•it'Nti' 21) 1 0 , 2 Mta .. n l lfJOOOOt 5tvt -MclHn. Hll' -by ,,.._, !Htrt). WJI -Slf'llltr. Timi 2::H. Afl,..,1nc1 -21..201. NoA spirationfor Bigtime, Lakers 11-5 Pick Over Celts Omalev Likes Challenge LOS ANGELE.5 (AP -Odds·makers In Las Vegas, Nev .. w re betting is legal, have established th Los Angeles Lakers as ll·S favorite s to beat Boston in the National Bask~a\I Association finals. The reaSOfl -: Wilt Chamberlain. Acquired by Los Angeles from Philadelphia in an obvious move to cap- lurt the tiUe, Chamberlain has averaged nearly 2S rebounds per game in the playoffs in which the Lakers beat San Francisco four games to two and Atlanta <f.J. In the finale against thf: Hawks, he scored 16 points and on 10 occasions blocked ahob, three coming in succession Sports In Brief late in the game as Atlanta tried unsuc· cessfully to pull an upset. Lakt:r Tommy Hawkins declared , "The fact we have Chamberlain this year is much mort: important than the fact v.·e havt: the home court advantage. There are so many. things that he has done for us .. , Wednesday night the Lakers meet the Celtics on the Forum floor and Los Ange- les hosts the besl·four.of-seven cham· pionship stties again on Friday night. The third game o( the series is next Sunday in Boston and the fourth the following Tuesday in Boston. I! further games are needed, they are scheduled May 1, 3 and 5. Laver, Emerson Aw ait Anaheim Pro Mat ches Rod Laver and IWy Emerson, a couple f"lf Australian tennis stars who now hang their chapeawi: in Orange Coast area homes, will be seen in action this weekeqd ,aL ~im Convention center in Wo tournament play. LaVer, the world's leading player, will face ex·USC star Alex Olmedo Friday at 9:30 while Emerson, in his second year as a pro, draws Spain's Andres Gimt:no al 7,30 .. Then at 10:30 Friday night it'll be l..aftf and Emerson combining efforts in doubles hostilllies against Dennis ltatston and Glmeno. Oihel-Frid1y pairings have Ralston openlnC the nlgbt'11ctivities against Earl Buchholz at &:30 and Pancho Gontalez dueling Pancho Segura at 8:30. 1be tournamt:nt Concludes Sunda~1• .... .... .... B08TON -Kn H1mlton and Gabe r Pm. • .a.. 11 pmldenl of Ute In· Jldlaal, were upeded $o meel In New Vert ....,. tm u •Utmpl lo unravel the t..W ..._. tM!fued by lhe ei:-Boston Slum ping Angels Out to End Skid t:llJCAGO (APl -The C.lllornla ~ hoped lo break a horrendou1 ilx· pme losi"' lllttllil htrt today when th<y were to pi., Qdcago's White Sox in the bqiMinc of • two-came seria. ( The Ansell have 1vtraged only S.3 hits ! and 2.3 runs over the put six 1ame.<J. A••el Slate MesmrhUe, th< ltarti"I pitchers h a v • looled I toUl ol ooly ll 1/1 lnninfS, an averaae ol leu than live per man. The Angela hid Monday oil lo catch lhdr-1111. MeGlothlJn. O.t. WBJ to pitcb today against Cblcaao"• Sammy Ellis, 0-1. ( 1lu1ger's declslon to retire. Paul. general mana~er of tht: Cleveland dians, said be b a d tried tp rue" the Haft ln Bolton by telepbcme Monday, but "he's not available ript now. Ht's playing golf." ... ... ... VIENNA -Col. Em.ii Zatopek, one of Czechoslovakia 's greatest Olympit stars and now a hero of his country's op- position to Russian occupation forces. reportedly has been suspended by the Cr.ech Defense Ministry. CI'K. th!!: ofricial Czech news agency . said 1t1onday the suspension followed "well--founded i!Uspicion" t~t Zatopek had spread "untruthful reports and for conduct in variance with the relevant orders of the f.fi n.ister of Defense." ... ... ... PARIS -Tbe management commiUl'c or the lnltmtllonal Lawn Tennis Federa· tlon reported rtfonday tt rejttted I pro- posal to abolish the distinction between ••rtgislered playtn, •• who are at an times under the control of thetr 11stitul associations, and "touring prtfet1lon1l1, '' wtlo are not.. Now It's By EARL GUSTKEY Of .. 011" """' .. "" With Dick Davis now lit keted for $1.n Diego State btglnn!ng September 1, it's UCl's turn now to 10 throuah the procu, of stied.in,-1 v1rslty coach. It took lbe Azlecs over a month to of· fer the hoop openlnc to Davis. San Dltgo Still' is undergoing org1ni211ional re- allenmcnt and needed time to draw up • job dtscriptJon for the new eo1ch's du· ties. lJCI won·t nttd that much lime. 111. thouab It will be •t leas! 1 week before 0 1\/ls' replacement is named. UCI ath· lelic director R1y 'n~rnton Is In ~fiamf alttnding an athlttlr dirtttor'lf coo1·c~ linn and won'1 retu rn until ntxt "'etk. Los Angeles Coach Bill van Breda Kolff say s the Celtics depend more on linesse than did Atlanta. lnttresting again will be the ht:ad and head matchup of the Celtics player-coach Bill RuSSt:IJ and Chamberlain. They've met scores of times before when Wilt played for Philadt:lphia and San Francisco. In 196.f, the Celtics defeated San Francisco and Chamberlain 4· l and five times since they moved to California in 1961, th!!: Lakers have fallen to the Celtics in the finals. "It wou ldn't setm like a champiOnship if Hoston wasn't involved." commented Laker Captain Elgin Baylor who scored 29 to lead his club's 104·96 victory in Sun- day's finale againsl Atlanta. Area Players Dot South's Grid Roster f'ourteen Orange Coast 1rea high school football stars have been named to play for the South team in the Aug. 14 North-SOulh prep all·slar football game at Orange Coast College. the DAILY PlLOT has learned ei:clusively. The annual game pits the best gradu'ating seniors from the northern and . southern sections of the county. Westminster's Sunset League cham· pions toQped the selection \isl for the ~ man squad toached by Tom Baldwin. Linemen Chuck Suter and J o h n McLaughlin will pair up with Lion backs Darryl Berg and ·Ron Shepherd. Laguna Beach's 10.l team sends Steve Klosterman, Brian Bagley and Steve Wleibowsld to the game with back Jim Kuhn .as an alternate. 90!"' Or•ndt -l(!rlt Wiison. au1ro. El MOC!trie -Darvl C1rlton, Gettn1l11t IMt~ Foo1t11U -Rodl;y F'9kh1r. ll~l>lckt•. Hunlltltttn lltKl>-Tony lon-.wll. <1111r!trblt k: lltrl l'r-clt-. teck!t. · l .. _ le1c11 -51t11t Kkllttr""'n· ct n1 e" llrl1n lllGlt~fllllblck; SleVil WltZ~kl. ouertt•N tk LI lnte -Ml•t Olllnn. ,...,, ""'· Mir,... -Ancr. v-QU41r11; TQllY Vt nt1mi<1li1 C.Otk. Mttt<" Otl -0Dot Htll<ln. ""'; H1rV<1V 5\IPl't ... 111 Q~~ ... Nt.,.._.1 H1rbor -5!11 A!4rlch, !l9M '""· Or•n11t -Gl rY Wl"fl. lltleM1¥t N e-.... t 11u1t•Nck, S11111 AM -t111c Cur!11, 11ll1Nt11;; lt1.-cl11 Howt'll, ct nt.i:; J111 McC•I!•"· •ertlt; P1'""'I "'•~lo. Doo<>\. TVIM -am t!~ll. , .... N . 51..tt AM V1lley -C1rl l'ltlGI, N CI< Mc~.:::rr:',.~lt, c:::-~n.. '=~~~· °'i:.,1 ''""· ""'-· ""'rNPlt$ -Jim l(uf\ft l "911111l J<ll'tft GrltW, lii\11tr Otl; J°"" "'111. s.dil1t1Htc-; 1rr• llri1m1tJ 111119 A,,.1 ("9rln lldll11'1d. Wnt.,,lnlle<. MESANS ELIGIBLE FOR CI F SWI MMI NG All Costa Mesa High School swimmers will be eligible for upcoming CIF competition, the DAILY PILUT learned today. Originally the Mustangs were on U1c carpet for alleged illegal practires and a ruling was passed down that partlcipanll!I in such practices would not bl!: allowed to enter CF compe:tiUon. However, that has since bctn mod iHed to rend that anyone who regularly 111· ttnded those illegal "'orkouts would be ineligible. Anteaters' Turn Assistant flthleUc director Al Jn-·ln said ~fondly that the uni versity i.!I accepting applications for the job but he also •c· knowledged that freshman coach T I m Tift. :xi, "would hive to be eonslde.rtd a strong candidate..·· By a pecul11r t••l!t of circum.!ltallces. both Davis ind Tift wtre In San Die.go ~1onday. San Die.go State 'lt'U unveiling Davis to the San Diego area preu 1t lhe collegt while Tift and his lJCI coif team' v.·e.re. meetin~ Cal Wtstt:m at Whisper· Ing P1tlrns Country Club. Opvis ~alrl that he made up his mind lo lakr thr Ait.ec job Monday rnomlni: aft· er scvrral days of analysls or the situn· lion. Jte was orrtred the job Ja~t \\It'd· ""~d;i~ "It was a tough docision. 1'11 tell ynu," hi' said •• 1 round n1yself to ~ in a situation where I h8d a job I really liked only lo be. offered ooe thal I liked better." 011\/15 indicated there \\'OOld be no coo· fli cts over the t11.-o jobs. ··r.1ost of UC l's recruiling has b ee n done,·· he said. "The kids "'ho we wenl after for UC! sre all set. What I'm going to have to do now Is to st1rt recruiting the S i\ n Olei;:o are1 for San Diego Statt." two prtud junior collrge players in fhe SAn DieAn ar~a . Qscar Foster and .llm Otbi. arr 11ald to \ave enrolltd at tlnivt:r5lly of Snn Diego ~<'llUSe I h ey grr\Y "·cary of waiting lo find oul "'ho I Alex Omalev, now 43 and Just a step away from his old age pension, has ob- viously mellowed since the days when his Fullerton Junior College basketball teams were mopping up the hardwoods with all opposition. During the era 19~1 when Omalev guided F JC fortunes, winning became a way of life -the Omalev way of life. Jn that period his teams won eight Eastern Conference championships and showed an ovt:rall record of 261·77. At home they were especially tough to beat. with a IOU mark for those 12 years. It was surprising to many that Alex 'vould give up the great program he built WHITE WASll *****"********"*. al Fullerlon to take over coaching duties at Cal State (Fullerton), a four -year school with the athletic future of a palsied pauper. Omalev had one good year at Cal State -his first season at that post -because he recruited most of his good F JC players. But the well quickly went dry and Alex learned what it \vas to be a consistent lose r. Yet he has no regrets about surfering through Cal State's misfortunes on the field of compeLillon. In ract. Omalev says he wouldn 't ex· change places with any coach in America -including UCLA's John Wooden or Kentucky's Adolph Rupp. From lhe tone. of his voice , you know he is not joking. "Wlial are yoa 1olng to buy v.·IU. a won· loss rtt0rd," he 1ays. "The record is • !iilal.e of mind. Wbat ttn you do with It, show olf your scrapbook? "There is a veat challenge and satisfaction In taking tbt: boys who aren't quite good enough to make tbe bll Ume and belplng them progress. "Takln1 • boy no one else want1 and tryln1 $o mold hlm tnto a good player Is very rewardlo& II he develops." Omalev says two things ha,·e helped Titan basketball -one is !he school's name change to Cal State after it used to be known as Orange State and Fullerton to Hunt the Ailee t oach would be. "I don 't think the ArtteS have lost those two yet.·• Divis said. One v.·ho v.·lshed Oarls well ait S • n Diego wu Jerry Tarkanian. head coach at Cal State <Loog Stach). "I'm rtal happy for Di&.'t -that's • grtait job down there ... 1Tark1nl11n re.- m:irked . "San Diego his more scholarships (Il l to olfer plavers than any ~hool In o u r conrc:renct. 'wt only have 11 lt'lf a great jnb ... S8n Diego State joint Cal St1t.e • n d four othtr school!' JlfXt se1SOT1 in the. P11· rUle CoAsl Athletic Association. State. Ht: feel s that the other tv.·o monic kers mad e tht: school appear hickish. The other aid is 01nalev's innovation - a good road trip each season, which has helped in recruiting. The first trek was probably overly am· bilious as Cal State was blislered by htichlgan State, Neb raska and Kansas. But now the agenda has modined somewhat and the Titans are in tough but not completely over their heads. The 1969-70 season trip has them at Wyoming, Creighton (Omaha ), Northern Michigan and Toledo. So Omalev, who maintains he still has his quickness and shoa ling eye, derives pleasures other than v.·inn1ng from coaching basketball. Perha~ he can make tilis unique ad- justment because he was bathed in suc· cess for so long. Or maybe it's simply because at 48 he's found a n1ore bland way of getting his kicks. Frazier Pick ' To Mortify Bricklayer HOUSTON. Tei:. (AP ) -Unbeaten J~ Frazier is an odd-on favorite to defend successrully his portion of the world's heavyweight boxing title tonight in a stheduled 15-rounder against unknown bu~ undaunted Dave Zygle"·icz. who Jays bri cks v.·hen he can't get fights. Both men predict the bout won't last the full 15 rounds in Sam Houston Coliseun1 with few betting men willing to On TV T anlght 6 :30, Cha11nel I) w11gcr that Zygte~·icz. a former Na\'Y Atlantic Oeet champion, will be on his fee t when ifs ove r . . New York oddsmakers 'A·ere listing the fight at 10.lo--J·and--out meaning there was very little hetting interest. A few J..to.l quotations were floating ! ·around 11ouston, lhe second home of Zyglewicz. who is a native of Watt:rvllet N.~ • Zyglcwlcz, an aggressive brawler wh'o likes to go to the body. says: "the fight won't go more than 10 rounds." Frazier, the 1964 Olympic heavyv.·eight champion who is undefeated in 22 bouts 11nd llas 9COred 19 knockouts, said "I'll do my best to tnd it as quickly as possible. l'1n going lo knock him down:• Zyglewlcz, who l\as a record of 28·1, has never been knocked off his feet. A cro"·d (promoter Earl Gilliam eslim11tes at east I 1,000 is expected to pay $1Ml,OOO to see the fight. Fraz.Jcr gets a 40 per eenl slice of the gate and Zyglewl tz 20 per cent. nie fighers also will share similar percen. ta.ge1 of television and othc:s ancl llarJ rights. Thf! 24-year-old Frazier. a nllli ve •"" Philadelphia, is rec:ognh:~ 35 champin~ In Sil states and Mexlc:o and Argcnt!na1 lie Is expected to weigh 20ll in his l!Urcl title defenst qtlnst Zyalewto: 193. l Frazier, whoM. but puncPI is a bTi~ left hook , ha5 a two.Inch reach over th4 tighter Zyaltwici. wtm 1.t;y11 this shot al !be llllr Is "a dream come true.·· -.... .._.._..._ .... __ . .. ------- Bosox Shoot Down The Boston Hawk --As a man or eminence in the city of Boston, Ken-- neth Smith Harrelson occupied 3 station only slightly behind those of John F. Kennedy, Carl Yastrzemski and • Oliver \Vendell Holmes. A basebalJ pl ayer bearing impressi ve credentials, Harrelson arrived in New England two summers ago amidst much fanfare. Unable to achieve a satisfactory relationship with his employer at Kansa s City, Charles 0 . FinJey, Harrelso n was fired. , Incredibly, Finley did nDt attempt to trade his player or to sell him to anDth er cl ub. Harrelson was then. free to dick er ,Yith every American League Club. He came to rest in Boston (pr a fat bonus. . Promulgation of Harrelson's name died a~ay, how- ever, after his highl y publicized arrival. He hit .255. 12 homers and drove in but 54 runs in '67 . But last season he played the game like a man pos- sesse{!. He drove in 109 RBI's to lead the major leagues. He v.•l s the American League's No. 3 home run hitter '"ith 35 -20 of which put the Red Sox ahead when they were either tied or losing. He hit .275 for the season and .322 'vith men on base. For those exploits. he \Yas voted the league's outstand- ing player award. Top JC • Cinder Marks ~ £Ol'nOl'llClol. fe\¥flll Oeee. Mew, Atll. Jluff, GfOISmanl Jloberle. Mol'U , Afll. o·c-. •11nn. Ttll. .......... ,, hlltf. occ .. WllSOll, lll!nn. Tex. Jlomo, S.n DltvO S.OUtherlt l'd. I"•~ llt sev, CMft9Y E1i.1, LA Vt lley 1.r .. •n1: Sdlmlll. OC: • •• ES111 LA VtUey Monrfng, S1nl1 Monlct c11111m, P11tc11"' Wl!IO"l>tcll, LA v11i.1 Rosner, P111dtn1 AtM 1111: DtN11ede, GWC •-Ml• Waaonblck. LA VtlleY Hltcl>codr, llt!Ctr•llt!d Murlll, Stnlt Alla Rodtl<111e1, lltktr1!11ld 11111!!1111>11, Mt.U, Adi. Ard ... 11 DtN.,.;cl9, owe ,,. "1~· ~~1:1~~\c~U~\f~~l~j,_ tn. £tbb. LOs AnQtlu P91111, Jit W Meilco Mclucas, v..,tur• Ard ... h s.r-, OWC-... , ............. , .. ... ••• ... ... ••• ... t1.t '1.l 11,1 "·' 21.4 "-' 11.1 ..... 11,t l ;ll,t 1;$3., , :51.1 1:S4.:lft l :Sol.S h JJ.I t :OI.? t ;Ol.1" ';°'·' t ;O'.On t ;11.• ,, ... St., H.1 .,... "-' ~ .. ----- GAILY l'ILOT J7 • l, • A colorful type, Harrelson sports long hair and v.1ears mod clothes. Infatuated. Bostonians dubbed him "The Hawk.'' It comes as something of a shocker then, to learn over the weekend that Boston traded Harrelson and pit· chers Dick EllS\YOrth and Juan Pizarro to Cleveland for catcher Joe Azcue and pitchers SDnny Siebert and Vicente Romo. GM.tr;MI, Mrtll, Nil. s.r-............. , Ktllet, Mew, Arli. Mnlcl(lulc:. llllrwl, Tt-.. ICl!og, S.n DIHl:I Mew Wt!Mn, M-pert; Riel. l"tlomtt' Nitti JtmJ SJlll'W.. o.1 ...... , a:r~·i:. "'~';.te~T1x~ ~· ~ ... ... ... • ru "' .... ... OLYMPIC CHAMP TRIES TEACHING Cathy Ferguson Cul- lum, 1964 Olympic swim gold medalist, is now teaching kids to swim at the Orange Coast YA1CA in Newport. Here she is seen giving instruction to Kellee (5) and,,David McKeever (31h ). The kids are the offspring of Washington Redsklns' football ace Mar- lin McKeever. Obviously. no reason for the trade can be found in 1-larrelson's battin g statistics. You check out his fiejding dosier and find he was 1.000 in the outfield and .980 at first base. A right·handed hitter \vhose home run shots go hi gh in the air, his swing was ready-made for Fenway Park's high left field wall. At 27, he might have hit another 150 home runs for the Red Sox. Boston has responded lu stily to the S\\'ap. The Asso· ciated Press carries reports of ugly mobs gathered in front of the Red Sox's executi ve offices. Harrelson says he won't report lo Cleveland and that he's retired fro m baseball. "Boston is my town - I've fallen in love JA•ith the place." he said at a press conference. The feeling is mutual throughout New England and regardless of whet he r he goes to Cleveland or not. the Hawk \\-'ill always fly hig h in Boston. • • • JEISY DEPT. -A story came over the wire r• cently th1t should warm the heart of San Clemente High trick coach Don Jeisy. Y alt heed coach Bob Giegengack was named last Wffk es a co-coach of the 1969 United States Maccabiah trick teem. Giegengack was the 1964 U.S. Olympic team coach who booted Jeisy off the decathlon team In favor of Russ Hodge. Jeisy had qualified 111 the team trials and Hod~• had not, due to iniuries, But 111 Tokyo, Gjegeng1ck m111de his move. Hodge, he ruled, had recovered from lnjuriis. • • • BO\VLING DEPT. -Kena Lanes general nianager Dick StoeUler says hi s summer \Yes t Coast Matcli Game Elimina tiobs may soon gro"'· · Already, the winner of the Costa Mesa tournament plays the \Yinner of a similar event in San Francisco. No,v, Stoeffler is getting requ ests fr om bowling houses in Honolulu , San Diego and Seattle who want some of the action. Area Sports Calendar l t1111, Et1! LA RODe"-VKlma. Wtsh. , .. , Vt ¥1t Jllcl'ltrd1. Mt. SAC Ditz, Rl--.r110t Crvck!r, M~•t. ar11, HerdlMl!I, Fresno McCot..,, Me .. , Arl1_ A~ l11h •1tM, OCC lent JU"ll" H!MI, Secrunento (';oln, Ml. Hood, Ore. Rt td. Mt .... ,-.rli. Ffllow1, Chtlle~ lh11llnMll'I, Stn 01111<1 Melt A .. a ant: H1nte1ft, oc Trlp\f JU"lll Hlne1, Sac•t menlo Vtntev, Mtu, Ar!L Mt•Well. Fresl'IO lle•vll'o. Plll'ttrvllle, lleaOer. 811k1,.fleld Flll'em•11. P:•-..,. ... a .. t: LWUM. GWC ....... Howtrd, P11sadeM Krtmolln, Blinn, Tei . Rkihttll, Mt.u, Arlr. Clll>Ctrl, C.Mffe't 81rblfr, Glendale, Arlr, Art• a 11t: L•1-. c;wc Olt.e111 Htll,,...,r, S!tml~. Flt . l-nr>Ml. Foothill O'Su!rlvt n, C.omlJIOn Mosl11, M.,.rlll l.eahv. Stn 81'rn1rdlno llrtt ae1I: l!Hlt, OCC J1v111.1 Dunn, Stmlndt, Flt . llrown, Muti;hlM-, K•n. H..-.,, P!.enl•, A•IL """k. Semlnele, Flt. F!eml1111, GronmOlll ,, ...... ,, l!tll!e, occ Los A"11flt 1 Mtrrll! Mt5t. Arlr. Me••· AriJ. ll!lnn. TP•. ... J11l.l1 Sin Jtclnlo, Tix. lanl'Y Ard .. Ill Ott~ .. Cel•I Miit JltllY MeSt. Ar!r. M~rrlll San Oleoo Men Phoenix, Arlr. Blinn, Te•. Arn a11I: Gelffol Wnt ... ,,_, ,,_. 1 s.s1~ "' 1•.• '9·11 '9·10 4 ·• i •.•• , ·~·!'. 4 ·Sl7 '" un.1~ 161·11 ·~. 1U11 161· l 14$. 6\li 5>' .,, m.1 1111·5 1n .o Uf.t Jl,I '" ,,,. j l,' '1.! 'l.6n '1.6" ~1.t 3;15.6 J:U.• 3;16.111 ];J~.'" J;11 • 1:1 .1 Public Can Get Angel Movie The. Angels will have their 196! ';Angel Highlights" fibn avallable for public showing. starting Thursday. The 2&-minute. 16mrn sound. color film covers the '61 Angels from their minor league camp at Holtville, through spring training at Palm Springs to the regular season. Dick Enberg. the new "voice of the Angels," narrates the film . Civic groups in tere&ed in obtaining the film shoukl ron- tact the Angels' George Lederer at 633-2!XXI. Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE East Oiviskla Chicago Pittsburgh Montreal New York Sl. Loui! Philadelphia Atlanta Los Angeles San Francisco Cincinnati San Diego llouston . "'on Lost II 2 ' • 5 ' 5 • ' • • ' \Yest Division 10 3 ' 3 6 ' ' s • 9 J I I _...,., iltt.Mllfl PM'*'-ltlfllt 1, HfW Y-I, II CIN:lllMll II, Hwllen S SI. Lwll J, """"'rNI ~ All.,,11 S, S•11 0'"-I Lii A-lei 1, S... Fr111<.ltc0 I °"" ''"'"' tdoldvltd. , ... , .. 0•- Pt t. .8~6 .567 .385 _335 .385 .JlJ .769 _750 .SOil .SOil .308 .21• '""'"'~ GB 21: 6 6 ' S1rJ A~I ERICAN LEAGUE Easl Division w .. Loil Baltimore IO 5 Detroit 7 • New York 7 5 Boston 7 5 Washington • ' Cleveland I 10 West DiYlslon Minnesota Chicago Kansas City Oa kland Seatlle California 7 ' ' • 5 3 • • ' 6 ! 7 ........ ..,., ·~ N~w Yo'11 " ..,""' ' AA.1-tofa I. Ott.ltnd ' Sffnle t. IC-City 1 811111-. 11. Ciewl1"" t Detroit l. W1dlifl910n t Ptt. .567 .636 .583 .583 _400 Jl90 .6.16 .600 .500 _500 _455 _JOO GB I ~~ I ~ • 7 'I 11,;, I\\ 2 l'\ OCffi Sets Full Week Of Racing Orange County lntemational Raceway has one of its busiest-ever weekends pro- grammed this ~k. Top fuel dragsters will take over the track Saturday n.ight while the Ford high school meet and off-the-road event! highlight Sunday's action. Arter experimenting suc- cessfully w i t h tournament st,>le racing in B ·ga s superchffged, injected funny car and super stock classes, Orange County will apply this type of competition to the top fuel division Saturday. All cars entered will qualify side by side, on a one-shot. do- or-die basis. The e i g h t quickest will return at 8 p.m., I and 10 to determine positions one through eight. Raceway general manager Mike Jones said OYer 40 cars haYe entered the Saturday niRht projram. A p.irse of $.1,500 will be up for grabs. On Sunday, high school drag racing drivers from 34 Orange County high schools will arrive on the scene for the annual _Ford-spon.sored racts. Scholarships and $ I O , O O O worth of tools will be at stake. Garden Grove's La Quinta High won last year's team championship. While the high s c h o o l drivers are performing on th e drag strip, dune bu~11ies and jeeps will be cavorting about OClR's t.S-mile off-lhe-road course nearby. Gates for both events open al 9 a.m. ""H*""'I• 1Jo/lft10A t.JJ 1r Norw Y.,,. IK8-Mfllf .. , Ontr •-~ultlll, T•r 1G11M1 Avallable w/Autornatk Tr&nl!lmlssloft ClllC-Cl-I.I,.,.. , .. -JIOM. Ml 11 p;1riwrt1r CMMN , .. ft E1111 1•11. 1 MontrMI lltlD!lt111111 1·11 ti M. l-lllill !Gknll 1·11 ClftclflMll !HOien 1-1 Ot 0-HI 111 ttou.!Of' 1w1i-1·11. 11i.tr1 .at11nt1 IJ.,..\i 1·11 fl Slln oi.,. (Kelln l•ll, ni.til S... F~tndtca tSldtdl 1.11 ll L,. A,,..ltl !Ory., ••lot l•I), """' kllttla f'"'11 1·11 111 IC..,lal Cltr IHNMlt H I nllht Ofllllncl IF"'"" Ml 11 Ml_,..t !Hiit I .. ! C=W IT!tftt WI •I •tltlrnert fl"""""' 1 .. 1, Oottl'll! IOobMfl •t Of' HI""" H) 111 Wallllfltltlit {,_ .... 0.1), .. 1-111 NfW 'I'-ltltln-.1 •11 111 hlll)n (Cwll' 2-tJ C.1,..,.,.11 IMl;Glltfltlo\ 0.11 11 0.k .... IEllla 0.11 AUTHORIZEO FULL SERVICE AND PARTS FOR ALL IMPORTED AUTOMOBILES GOLD SlAL USID CAltS , 1 l'INIST SRICTION • Of' USID SPOIT CARS IN SOUTHllN CALIFOlJllA I ' I J~rlllPlll I illliflLll _l~i 1100 WIST COAST HIGHWAY -NlWPOlT llACH J~ l'lll p Ll rl .il111po11 ~-. '4Z·t405 540-1164 Retired '64 0 lympic Champ Now Teacl1ing YMCA l{ids More Sports Page 18 MYSTERY AUCTIOR ~ Assuming from the very beginning that young parent.! are generally quite t hoosy Pair Grabs Honor Roll Spike Lead Newpoi-t AldrlCh ha! Harbor's S t u broke n into the Orange Coast area prep track &nd field hooor roll with a 152- 101,!: heave in tbe discus to take over lirst place in that even t. And, Paul Muldoon of Mater Dei High School took over the 440 lead with 1 50.4 effort to replace Fountain V a 11 e y ' s Oeoois Maas. The honor roll continues to feature three double leaders. Ma r ina 's Dave Lacy dominates the sprints with 9.8 and 22.4 times and Estancia's one-two punch ol Rich Wood in the huniles and G e o r g e Barnett in the high jump and Jong jump rema i n un· challenged. ...... about who is assigned to teach their pre-school age dlildren how to · swim, the Orange Coast YMCA'& Bill Brown searched far and wide for an instructor. He wanted not only someone adept at handling y o u n g children v.iio had never before been in a swimming pool but also one who was well known in the aquatics world. He came up with Cathy Ferguson CuUum . a double gold medal winner at the 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games. Mrs . Cullum is working at the YM- CA part time now on Tuesdays and Thursdays while auending school al Cal State (Long Beach). Nearly fi ve years have slip- ped by s.inct Cathy Ferguson broke the workt record in the women 's 100-meter backm.roke final at Tokyo. Yet she is just 20-ye~rs~ld, Indicative of the age at which swimmer s become world th amp i on s these days. In addition to her 1964 100- meter victory in tht batk, she swam a leg oo the United St.ates' winning women 's 400- meter medley relay entry. She broke two world records in her competitive ca reer - clocking a 1:07.7 in the 100 at Tokyo and a 2:27.4 In the 200 back prior t.O l'he '64 O!ympicg. Mr!. Cullum -her husband, Frank, is ·also a physical ·education major at Cal State -has proven lo be a hil with the youngsters and parents in her first. two wee.ks of teaching at the YMCA. "Cathy is a very personable girl, she's good with both the kids and the adults." says Brown, the Y's physical direc· tor. • "She works mostly v.'ith pre- school kid s and it c a n sometimes be a very difficult assignment. Often a 3-year-old child will become terrified when he di9CCVers he ·s going into the pool. "But Cathy gets a great deal of sati sfaction out of seeing the child's first smile and his 1-0sing the fear of the water." This summer. when she'll be at the Y from 9-t~5 eath day and instructing 75 to 100 children a day, Mrs. Cullum wlll teech both pre-school and .school-age youngsters. (Who_,,.....,) ... aRombnodlblW Wednesday April 23 9:30 a.m. We'll be auctionin~ oH 1. batch ~ mystery bo- Who kriows what they contalrl.? They've never been opened. We're also auctloninq off some things you CML see, like appliances, tel• visions, IJvinq room and dinlnq room furniture. ruqs, etc. B~.!S 7572 W•rMr A.,.. Huntington 8e1ch No longer too1petitive ln swimming herself, she limits her swinvning lo k>w-pressure races for Ca l Stat.e's women's ';===========::; swimming team. ''Staying in training for Id I • · Ne11rty 111ryon1 r••th tM w•,' •.. ""<: ~s fswll ~r"!'~~ ~mj OAIL y PILOT, llo1r11few11 pe ion 15 a u "'m J n1w1pap1r for the F11H.. just don't have the time for it j 10~, or111g1 Cottf. now," she explains., _ PENETRATION Only wl11Jl(111 tNlt\tt !ft vllnll't c_. ,.1111e11 ,.,, .. ,... ,.,. ftenw ..ii. , csl:°I' .;, ~. ~. ((~rll 1:::. 2. ~· ,WIADWI WHISKT. A IUJID • EIGHTY PIOOF • IW'OllTUI" IUrnotW.. DISOURS NOM'fS co no -\. i..c:v 1M1rl n .1 2. P. l"111s (FV) 22., 1 J. V1nllmlol11 (Mir Ind Gtdd<I• tSC) 11.7. ...,g -1. Muldoon CMOl ~.' 7. 0 . Mt.11 CFVI !0,6 J. Godbo! !FV) 51.l. l lG -1. Hu1tw!ck ILBI i :se.5 1. Mui-IMO) l;St.t 1. Diii! (CMI 1 '.ttr~ -1. Akl11ma twMI 1:t6.1 i. OlslOll (WM) ,,1'f,2 J. J""' ng1 tMD) l:~~iliie -l Ohlon (WM} f :'°.t t. LlnetHk cscl t ;11.1 J. v et0t IWM ) ''Hot.HM -1. wooct lEl U.t 1. 8111cttr (SCI li.1 l. T!1 bllwttn Mtltf !SCI. Stubbins !H81, Wli.t (H8)\t ll U.l. 1IO LH -I. Wood (f) If,, 1. Hellan CMOI r.·2 l. DunJ111 CCdMI 10.l. .UO elt Y -I. Marlnt IGtwtisn, T. and J, VenU1r1loll•, Lk'l'I "3.2 l. F_.. !lift Vttln G.S J, Ml'! C.llfTWA'-44.2. Mii• Relt• -l. N-PO•I Htrbor 14cltmi, l ogers BuH':!.r llloodl l ::tt.e '· F-""' v t f .. v J:;u.l 1 .Ei••ndt l:lfj•·. 1. 81~!1 fEl 6-Jllr ?. ChUdl IM1•l, Lemmon MtrJ. Mc:G"'"" !H8l. H•vett IHH), l tltMI! (E). t M 6' l .LJ -I •1rntll IE) ft.IV. 2. LllCY (/Mr) 1.wl Wll.lclllll 21.w,, PV -1. Wiid MHI lfl(I Sltlom IEJ IU 1. EIWIOfl I ) Mid Molwav (La U5°; -1. Cl-=118) Jl.Pl1 IOtdt!I ICMI st-<1"1 l. "'' IWMl fa.'I OIKV• -1. ,6,Jdr (NHl 1ff·f~ t. l.oo.rflk IEI 112 .. J, -""'-(CAIMI UI- , 11. LET'S BE FRIENDLY 1f you have nC'W netghbora or know of anyone moving to our area. pl~ te.U ua so 1bat •·e may extend • friendly welcome and help them to become acquelnttd in thflr rM'W 1Urroundinp. Huntington Beich Visitor t61-414t Cosl1 Mew Visitor tMl-4149 So. (Olsl Visitor 494-0S79 Harbor Visitor 4'4-9361 Introducing The smoothest whisky ever to come out of Canada! Compare Windsor with your usual American or Canadian I whisky. Once you do, you'll never settle for less, or pay morel 'I'bnirht, make the compariaon·: make one rraina a.nd pure, clear slacial waten. And drink with your "uaua\," the other with OftlM Windeor ia aced in Cah.ada'1 mll•hlJh, Windsor, You'll be amazed at .........., ~ dry Roelcy Mountain air. All the 1lp pin' 1moothne1-1 of thie v.y thf•, ye t Windsor 11 prlct4 remukable1Nwtmport.That'• J5.~9... rfrht ln lint with IMd.int do-btcause O'lllr Windsor 11 made , -· meetlc whiskies beuuae wt lm-- trom hardy Ca nadian prairie J)Ort ft. tbtn bottle it llere. , IAN ' • l • AvlllorlH4 MG e AUSTIN-HIALIY D•I« A-11"4 NlU.ll Dooler, W..,i. S«Ykt ' \ ) • ,II IWLY rllOT TUfldoy, April 22, 1969 Top Gymnasts to Complete LONG BEACH -Olympic Games l)'IDftll1I from th na- llolll will beglD their final on- lhHctnt drilll tocloy at Long Beach City College lor their confronlalion with Arntrica '1 a-In the sport al Lcmg Btac:h Arena ,SAturday. G~bopplng A k In or I Nakayama and Eizo Ken- -· THE STALKING II MOON • 11QeClCUll"•• ~· • J,,, Fo\cl .\ H\ldl\IUI[\ ACADEMY AWARD WINNER - 1m I DITING __. ........... w i!I iiiidrto kill iifLili MDCNCU~ AIMClhitlatwoMlll "COOGAN'$ BLUFF" Ro MEO cS'JULOO' llMltmlff/llMMm llB111D/IDl!lll n TIClllCOUM e}t STARTS WEDNESDAY ~-' 2nd FIRST RUN SHOW GEORGE PEPPARD JEAN SEBERG RICHARD KILEY "PENDULUM" SlAUI WIDNUDAT COff l•Mm°" "CHARLY" JediAIMrtloN ''The Subject Wet Rosas" ,._ U. M..-ritl I• "POINT BLANIC" motsu of Japan lead tht ~ tlnrent of oon-U.S. mUlclemeo and women who will meet Yank heroes in the flrst an-- nual Invitational World OJp, spon!<lttd by the U.S. Gym- nastics Federation . Nakayama was third in the Olympic Games all-around at Me1:ico City, Kenmotsu fourth. Drills at LBCC will begin.,at 2 p.m., and continue daDy through Thursday in an- ticipation of Saturday's 7:30 p.mc;-and ""1tlnue daily through Thursday ill an- Uclpation of Saturday's 7:30 p.m. event and a full daf of domestic competition Friday in the U.S.G.F. NatiOrlah. Also expected on the LBCC noor today are Miroslav Cerar of Yugoslavia,. winner of the Olympic slde horse com· petition and ninth in all- around. and ~tauno NisseOen of Finland. NCAA champion as a student at the University of Washington. Invading women are Agnes Banfai of Hungary, Sandra Hartley of Canad> and Nield Oda of Japan. Dove Thor ol Rueda Hip and Michigan Stai. U. and Cathy Rigby of the Long Beach SCATS have been in- vited to repreftnl the U.S., wltb the fields of six to be flll· ed Friday following t h e U,S.G.F. meet. , Other U.S. entrants for Saturday will be determined in the U.S.G.F. sectioo ol the two-day event. Lea-c11ngeandlctates on fh e masculine side of the roster are Chatsworth Hi&b's sensa· tional Steve Hug, former UCLA star Kanati Allen and Bob Dickson, star of the NCAA champion University of Iowa team. Miss Cluff is considered a strong possibility to join her longtime friend as one of three U.S. women, along with Joyce Tanac of Seattle, among others. "It's the!: most important and most lnternaUonal gym· nasties competition we've had ~Fo-'FsoUTHCOAST ~ iA. ,.LAZA nt-IRK San Diego Freeway et Bristol e ~2711 ._ ., .. ,.. ........ au. Otfkt 0.... 1:4'1 ·u.w st.rn ,, .. ,....... ;'i(i~!fl!Ji.:~: .A WOid.AN WlTll .A '' ·~i, j PASSION.ATE BUNGER! .Jjomrum ~ II llMlftlll_.111 SEllllJR PICTIJRES in c0labor~ioo•ilh llOtlERTSOll ISSOCllTES ~-~ CLIFF ROBERTSON. CtfA~l)/ ! ... -CLAIRE BLOOM '-··1-· ·-G·-.... ,·-~- rachel. rachel :... .. .r='=.=.1 ALSO PLAYINIO ---------- ACADEMY AWARD WINNER JACK ALIHTSON Supportillt Acta< la "THE SUllJICT WAS ROSIS" A~HMt~..._/iLCI 11_. PICIAL L!ll!!I!> l!!IM?llfT! 2 DAYS ONLYI TOOo\Y & TOllOllROW 2 DAYS ONLY WED. & THURS. 2 PERFORMANCES DAILY 2:00 P.M. & I:,, P.M. In tht Unlttd Slattt slnce the 19l2 Olympica." de c 11 red Frank Bare, the Tucloo-based execuUve ~Luy of the U.S.G.F. The format is slrictly in- ternational. All ~ or so men and as many women in the Friday U.S.G.F. meet will perform once In each of the Olympic events -six !Or men, four for the womtn. Awards will be entirely on "all- around" bastl,"and.all -will be optional nerclats. At l : 30 Friday, the men will go through Ooor exercile, long horse vaulting and &ide bone routines while the women will wort on the blluce beam and side horse vault. The 1; '° evening seu1on will include parallel 'ban, rlnp and horizontal bar for men, ·floor exercise and uneven parallels for women. Tickets are now on sale· at Long Beach Arena at tl and $2 Friday, $1, $2 and S3 Saturday. Information Ls available by calling HEmlock 7·fnl. Baseball's Top Ten MATIO .. Al llAOUt: •1tfff ciu. • "' 11. " ht. li>boY Mii 13 JI 1 n ."1 H.Mren Alt U •5 I 13 ..d1 C.JOMI NY IJ ,, U 21 .112 Menke Hin u ._ 4 11 .1'1 Jentt Mii lJ H 1D 11 .llO Sll~ntler C~I 9 21 4 11 .31'0 Jr.,Jol'I"'°" Cln 10 ~ 10 11 .lU P•r1t.,.. LA 17 39 11 U .~, Sw~ NY t 71 l TO .3S1 ll uuell LJr. 10 l4 10 12 .lSJ -·-"lcC""''" San Fru1c!KO. ,, Cl'Peda. All1r'll1, •: I tiftl with l . ·~-Sallelll 111 MC.C-Y. S... Fr1nc1sco. U r ~~. l"tlil.oe!Pf\11. U; 11.tder. Hour!en. Ur JD!!H. Montre1I, U; L1tioy. Montr111. "· Ends Tonight CIUlrlten HISTON "PLANET OF THE APES" AND THOSE MAGNIFICENT MEN AND THEIR FLYING MACHINE B1rg1in MetinM Wocl. I PM Fr" Refreshments MAT. ADMISSION 1.00 ~do •t'M'Olf l lAOI -.... --........... lift •• -...... , .. Ends Tonight ALAN IA.TES "THE FIXER" ALSO PITER USTINOU 1 'HOT MILLIONS" GAlnY •• VlllAHCE IADIANCE/ ........ JULIE ANOR£WS COi.OR lllllSlrMI Pl.UMMER•DCLUXC .a1.A.rQ•~ Cops Duel Coaches Sgt. Kelson McDaniel of the Newport Beach Police department gets in a few practice shots for Fri- day evening's second annual Civitan charity basket- ball game at Corona del Mar High School. McDan· iel and his fellow officers will take on a team of Harbor area coaches in the 8 p.m. game. Tickets ($1) will be available at the door and proceeds from the game will go to the Hope Haven School for new play- ground facilities. Harbor Baseball Signup To Begin Wednesday Registration dates for se- cond through fourth grade boys for the Harbor area baseball program have been announced by Rod MacMillian. baseball commissioner. The registration sessions. which start Wednesday. will be conducted at m i d d I e schools in the Newport Mesa Unified Sd:Y>I District. Slgnups for second graders will be held at 6 p.m., thlrd graders at .6:45 and fourth graders at ·9:30 in the multi· purpose room! at the various schools. Registration schedule dates by attas: April 2.1 -Rea School at- tendance area which includes Pomona, Victoria, W i I so n , Whittier and Canyon elemen· lary schools. April 24 -Kaiser School attendance area which in· eludes Lindberg. Woodland. Bayview, Harper and ~fonle Vista elementary schools. April 2.8 -Ensign School al· tendance area which includes Newport Heights, Mariners, UCI Tennis UCI !SI l•I tu SllM Iler.. At191it.I ilntltt O'Nelt! (t.ICll I01t. M . )·6 NnleH ruc11 10.1, "'· ,., tltl'tlint (UCll -· .. 1, :M. l·I N1d'l1ncl {UCI) -· W , W O!VOI (UCll _,, 6-1, .. 4 l"tvlfl IVCIJ WG'I, '""" M ...... o•Nf.111 1nc1 N-11anc1 1uc11 i.1. •·•· .... )-1 H1n:l!1>11 tr'ld NHi.,. (i.JCll Wll~. P·S. ....... Olvot1 1nd PIYtn (UCU -· .. ,, .. I a&•aOA 67~041 .,,.. ,., ...... •:41 . ......... 1:11111 , ELKE SOMMER n1na111m, -Ul"8'8 --• e ITAln WIDNDDAT e A MACNIFICINT NIW SCA(IN MASTllPllCI "'THE TWO OF US" -WINMll Of TIN INTllNAf10MA.L AWAUS -ALSO- ...... t ....... "MODE SHOP'' Newport &ach elementary schools. April 29 -Davis School attendance arta which in- cludes Bev, College Park, Pres.idio and Sonora elemcJr tary schools. April 30 -TeWinkle School attendance area which in- cludes A d a m s , California, Balearic and Mesa Verde elementary schools. May I -Lincoln School at- tendance area which includes Harbor View and Corona del Mar elementary schools. Knievel Top Auto Exhibition More exotic machinery than has bttn shown locally at any previous edition will be at lhe Los Angeles Sports Arena for the ninth renewal of the Custom car, Motorcycle and Dune Buggy show, 'Ttiursday through Sunday. Show hours are 7-11 p.m. on Thursday and Friday, 1·11 p.m. on Saturday and 1·10 on Sunday. The show is sponsored by the Tridents Car Club and Cycle W<>rld magazine . Se~ral million dollars of the latest in customs, cycles and dune buggies will be on display amongst the HiC,in> square feet at the Sports Arena. Eve! Knievel will headline t h e show. T h e motorcycle daredevil will perform four times during the run ()( I.he show on a ramp being specially coostructed for him outside the west entrance to the Figumle..Santa Barbara spo<U palace. Knifvel will attempt to hur- dle a long string of motm:ycles and trucks. He crashed several months ago ln a spectacular jump over the fountaitu at Caesar's Palace In Las Vegu. But Evel plans to atllck that again alter his Sport!: Arena stinl and then it's on to the Grand Canyon j u m p , bop<lully, ht &a)•. Among tbe prominent customlterll who'll show their lattst c.rHlklnl are Deao Jel- frits, James Oevb, VI c Kickey, Dick Bean, "Big Dad- dy·• Ed Roth and Oavkt Cemy, Sure to ht a show Mopper ia Roth's "Mailbox Car." a uni· que crtatioft he hu built tole- ly to go out and pick up hls ma.ii. ..,, • DAILY PILOT WANT ADS H\.IUSU FOR SALl HOUSES FOR SALE Gonor=•l:._ ___ 1000 'Gener•I ------1000 Newport Beach· Pool Home This pool \.\'8.S bull! by an exet'utlve of Anthony Pools fr his own use. 11ealed 11..nd filtered 'M'ith extra decking set on a home size Jot. Brand new carpetii and dra- pes. Two queen sized baths. with master dressing room nating tnn1cndous closets. Fireplace set in 1nammolh living roo1n with aliding gla&s doors leadina; to pool area. One of a kind!!::!. S 3 l . 7 5 0. Try GI NO DOV.'N! ! ! ! ! Submit your smaller hOme on our guar- antee sale plan. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee 2043 \\'cstclilf Dr. 64&-Till Open Eves. john macnab MEDITERRANEAN Impress ive ruslom quality home adjacent to Oo\'t'r Shores on choice cornt'r. Spacious living room \\'ilh beam ceilings. Fonnat din- ing rm, 4 bedrooms, family rm, with fireplare and \vet bar, beautiful master suite with separate dressini;:: rm. Steam bath, heated I: til· tered pool. $97,500. Call for Appointment 17141 642°8235 GI Resale Take over 6<;<. GI loon ol $18,600 with payments of $157/mo. incl. lax &: Ins. 4 BR & family room on cor· ner -room for boat, trailer etc. Listing is 122.650. but make offer! Owner Oregon. bound! SALESPEOPLE NEEDED =z 1 BR DUPLEX Oean older unit! with dou- ble detached aarq;e on 50x 140' lot. Assume existing $13,400 -6% l0&n • no loan fee. Only $18,950 .. PERRON --... 9";;<T'· ... * M2-1n1 AnyHm1 * RRST TIME ADVERTISED One of ?.Iesa de] ?.1ar '1 finest, 3 Bedrooms plus an outstand- ing added family room with extra fireplace. Has heavy shake roof and han:l111ood fioors . -$31.500 and owner will sell FHA Tem1s. - 646-7171 • 546-2313 ----. - 1;:':>·THEREAL '''< ESTATERS '• "' Rare find • $54,000 Newport Spanish Beaut lnd scpd _ 4 BR, fam rm, 2 BA home on large 77 x 120 corner lot 2 [rplCI, crpls, dJ1)S complete. 2300 sq. ft 11·/aJI custom extras. Eliniinall' middle man. Call 549.0507 DUPLEX Nl'ar Ocean. 3 BR 2 ba. each unl1. 3 Frpk"s. $52.500 George Williamson Realtor 67J...4350 Ews. 6il.1564 EASTS I DE Picture Book 11001(' . 3 BR. lam nn, frpl c, nr P\u:a !lhopphia; ~nter. prof/lnd5pg pa.clop. sprklrs front &: back, 129.500 FORTIN CO. 6-12-SCOO liOl -A. \\'ntcllJI Dr. NB PENINSULA POINT Paint, decora!l' or charm? Good 3 BR hme on 50 x 100 ft. lot. Xl.J"I",. loc 5'12.500. Belboa Real Estate Co. 673-1140 100 E. Balboa Blvd., 8&100. . BUILT roR FUN 4 BR + f•mi.ly. h<-1111'(1 fil· ltred pool qu~t C'Ul....._c. &ck &y, DAVIDSON R1alty ~t60 Evril. S49-11& Bl.IILDi:R.1) ATTENTION! Choice 3j' lot •t 1.18 3Sth St. &lbonlinate part. BArtain if told at oner.! 67l-5693 DAILY PllJ1T WAlll'l ADS• BR.ING RESULTS! It's Sparldlng . Vocant and Ready For a pool table in the huge custom family room. BiE comfo11able dream kitchen. Livin,g: roon1 has panelillg and bookcases around ~ \l'ood burning fireplace. 3 bedroom 2 be.tlui-l!llorap galore. Harbor HeighJandt area SJ.1,500 "F'or A Wise Buy" Colesworthr & Co. &.12-m7 OPEN EVES. 61 LOAN ASSUMPTION Big 4 BR Sorthside Col!t& i\tesa 2 year aid home. Sprinklers. 2 private patios & looks like a model home. $28,000 GI Joan available to anyone -Full u.le1 price $32,950 Newport al Vlctori1 Ml>llll Country Club Estate lmmed.late possession. I..ove-. ly big 4 BR near Mesa Ven:le Country Club, About 2200 sq ft. C.Orporate owner tramrerred employee out· of-stall'. Nttds paint I: re- decorating, Make oUer on listing of $41,950. SALESPEOPLE NEEDED Maui Hawaii 3 Bedroom plus family rm. near new home on FEE lot. Property is tree and clear, aJO ft to beach. Will sell for small down to re- liable party or trade for good seasoned trust dttd. SALISBURY REALTY 673-6900 315 1'.larine Ave .. Balboa h . Mesa Verde 4 BEDROOMS This home is settled among other beautiful homes. Lara:c FHA loan, 5% c;;, int. Any- oric can astume. Bit-ins, FA heal. lireplaC'f', 12x24' sun room with carpets. Dble garage. 1860 Newport Blvd .. CM Rltr. 641).3928 Eve. 541).0088 * LACHENMYER LRG SPANISH 4 Br Fomily Rm Impressive 4 yr old Newport home w/ custom ste~ Is .,..acuum system thru.out 2 frplcs ; crpts, drps complete, 2 back yrds. S54.000 INr Trvlne & 22nd) 405 Francisco Or. Owner. 549-0507 ONLY $24,0001 l'OLl.EGE PARK AREA A real cle11ner upper wtth a big 5% "i> assumable lo&n @ only Sl56 per month inc. taxes.' 3 BR.I 2 baUm, dbJe garage. l{urry! --'aERNIE.._ '-. CLEVELAND 1 Realtor ... 143 Broodway MS-0111 ITEDRM. +FAMILY RM. $11,500 O\'er!ized room fhrourhoul . 2 puUman baths. Ele1ant brick flrtplace. all electric "Award" bullt-ln kitchen Patio. Park !Ike 'andscapeci yard. 50-17211 TARBELL 2'55 Harbor JUST LISTED •BR + FIR . l.1esa ~ M~l'• 1-\ baU\I, 1WJ 1howt-r, ~ euslom ht•led pool mt-ln kitche1t, w/w c,,u 4 drpc. SJO,ffiO -lO'*' dn. PWC RLTR. ~- DAIL\' PlLOT Dl.J(Z.Aw UN&!. You CM Vie 1 ... 1"1 fnt tust permln t d'1· Olal 612-5671 1-. AP'll 22, 1'169 DAILY Pll.01' Jt I HOUSES l'Olt SALi HOUSES FOlt SALi HOUSIS POR SAi.i HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SAL& HOUSES FOR SALE lloycrost 1223 Owner Mnt Sell LcM!ly Coloolal twnJl)' borne, Choice Baytft1t location. Formal dlnl!v room, den. • bdmu;, 2 firept.co, mo. tric bullt-lna. 3 car praat, boll or trailer acee1S. HOUSES POR SALE HOlJSiS POR SALi illNTIU 0.-11 -1000 .~ .. ,.. 1ooov-...1 1000 llolboo ....,J.;;;j;liOij Hunt! ...... ....hi40ij -l'un!- ·-~ • -Mose Doi Mo 2105 Or•• County'• ' . ·Lar"91st 2n E. ptt. s1. "'-44,4 ONLY ·~·.!;.~ 110 quall.f)'ing anyone can w;sume £'Xi.sting GI loan at 6% int 3 bedrms 2 baths dou- ble garage, eo .. ·ered patio, be&t c06\.a mesa area near catboJic church, $22.000 Panoramic View immaculate 4 bed- room h ome ~'ilh breathtaking view cf catallna. 2'-'00 sq, ft. of prestige living only 4 year.; old. asking only $37,500 Country Home in the City 1..; acre of your own forl'St, 2600 sq. ft. 4 bedroom ranch estatl' tivo massive ro c k fireplac<'s accent the 640 sq. ft. living room. try $57,000 Formal Dininq soo total doWll to vets, 40 fL pine trec-s line the street of this lovely 3 bed- room 2 bath home, sep formal din. rm. sep fam room, enor- mous kitchen all for only $25,400 It's Party Time made for £>ntertaln- home has what it takes, lush troplcaJ ing, this executive landscaping around the pool, lighted v•a- terfall. bar-b-q, fire pit. a terrific 3 bed- room m e s a vcrde pe.c~ttr.r. is $41 ,950 about right. Frolic at the Beach it's only one block away, charming 2 bedroom with den asking $25,500 WE ARE RESERVING THIS SPACE FOR YOUR HOUSE ......... $137°0 ••. gold medallion Island kitchen, anyone can ac;sumc 5'-'% VA loan no qualifying f u 11 price 524.500 Exec. 2 Story Townhouse DON'T MISS THIS RANCHO LA CUESTA -U you've missed lhe closeout of RANCHO LA CUESTA'S 3 other units .... DON'T MISS THISll Each succeeding unit costs more, so ' take advantage of these prices. Come & see our models on Brookhurst at AUanta in Huntington Beach. There are 1 & 2 stories, 3 & 4 bedroom homes with 2 or 3 baths, Mission tile or shake roof, fire- places, concrete driveways, heavy rough cut beams, built-ins, family rooms & dining rooms. Close to Huntington State Beach. These beautiful homes are priced from $24,995 to $34,200 with VA or Con- ventional financing as low as 10% down. No 2nd TDs at 7.2% interest. Call 963-2929 or visil any day 10 AM to 7 PM. 1000 GeMral 1000 General liiiiiii!Th!iiriiilu!iiiliiniiigiiiiiiYiiileiiiwiiiiiiiio I <1( all Newport Harbor with it's beautiful lights a/Id boating activity from fashionable llarbor View Hills 3 Bedrooms & family nn home is built around spacious swimming pool an exCE'llent value at $69,500 Call: Jim C.obb BA YYIEW SPECIAL $22,500 Assume 5¥4 Loan 5 Bedroom Prettlg•I This luxurious 3 bath home with great muler bedroom boasts PLUSl-f CARPETING throughout, Beautilul mass- ive MARBLE FIREPLACE in lovely living room + FORMAL DINING AREA! Large 15 x 21 Family Room! Ranch sized kitchen & all built ins PLUS di!hwasht'r! Covered ENCLDSED PA- TIO! It's immaculately land- scaped and surrounded by tov.·ering shade trtta. NEAR PARK & PLAYGROUNDS! Take over this $24,500 FHA loan or VA Tenns.~ WE SELL A HOME EVERY ll MINUTES Walker & lee 200 Westclifl Dr. 646-m.l Open Eves. Bucco/a~ GngliJk Uffa'J" Utt. A Tualln -Coll• Mno ADULTS Mo•l homes are bUllt wllh only children In mJnd. We have five homes designed for the comforts and fun of adults. BeaulifUI to look at, room fo r hobbies, prlvate office, separate dining rm, guest room with bath, 3 car ga~ rage, walking distance to churches, WestcliU shopping, and restaurants. r;. wit+. 20% do,tn -7Yt% w!th 10-/. Dn. no 1nds -no pointt -2f yrs on bal•nce Prlc.cl from $30,950 to $33,950 Ext:lu1lv1 Agent p. a. palmer incorporated :13i7 VIA LIDO Trocl Ph: ~IQ F"'"' L.A. Coll MA 5-IOl4 -----------~------- 1000 Cone -1100 FREE POOL TABlf AUTHENI'IC $2,500 PROFES. ~ONAL TABLE like the Pro$ USe FREE with this spaclout Four Bedroom, Ex. tra large Game room, dining room, breakfast room cus. tom home. Tiie kitchen is all electric including dishwash- er. EXTRA LARGE MAS. TER BEDROOM with pri· vale bath and three sets of wardrobes. Large iuage with electric door opener. All of this can be yours on this spacious VJ ACRE on cul.<fe-sac street for only $52,500 • Financing is no problem • CALL NOW! 4 llodroom--$35,500 2865 Chiol, ti.1esa. Verde Quiel Street; 2 balhs fireplaO!', .ahake shil!ile l'OOf: fron t &: back yard sprinklers: 1 block to elementary school, near Estancia & park, Patio &: play &Ta. By owner. call: M0-1155 3 • 2 BR Units $18,,50 J garages, 9 yrs old. Fix it up for prolil. $950 DOWN $10,500 3 BR 2 ba Montie. Condo. CpUdrps, blt·lns.. dishw, dbl pr. Pools. lmmed. potiS. ''l TAKE TRADES" Bob 018on, Rltr. 546-.5580 REDUCED TO $20,950 POOL • 3 Bdrm -Fam nn. $130/mo pays all • 5'-' % Int. Rand RHlly 645·2340 Roy J. Ward Co, 646-lMO 64&-0228 Woskllff 1230 :: AL l Y Ntar NB Post Ole, 646.2-0.4 SPARKLES Ii lhlne1 lriaicle Lido Isl• 1351 & out Uvln&" rm &: dining --------- nn: servk:e porch, 81.ec 80' BA~FRONT. Finest heh bi tna. Oean crpts &: drps .t ~ on Lido. Will aell 40' thru out this 3 BR 2 Ba or 80' 3 or 6 units. ldtal for home. Prof. lndscpd le J-lomt & lnrome. 100~ malDt. w/ children'a pla)r depree. 29'/e dn w/ CUT')' yrd & pet uta. Heavy bal at 7'ho . Ownl!r wl ac- lhake-rool complttes thb cept clear Unproved prop. charming home. By OWner u dn pymt. Ori\~ by 320 $'12,950. 642-lS!B Via Lido Nord thtn call HOQ -R-2 lot. Excel 673-03(5 or 615-3243 Wt11tskle. 3 BR 21.4 ba, room JUST LISTED I for 4 or 5 units. ~1623 Extra &harp 3 BR, 2 bath eves. home. Sep dining area, 1237 •~t'lotd ~ilings, street tO University Park .. ..-~ Pools.-Trail .. Golf Shopplng·UCl-l Min. 2 BR, lg liv room .••• $23,900 3 BR 21Ai ba. 2 story •• $24,950 3 BR, atrium ........ $27,500 2 BR, den sgl lam, ••.. $32.950 Doug Joy RE l:J3.4504 3 BR. Condo.: xlnt Joe, by adult pool; many extras. By Owner $29,500. 833-0729 "'·""' LIOO REALTY, INC. 3400 Via Lido 673-8830 WANT A 2nd HOME? Immaculate 2 Bedroom home w/beamed ceiling, good crpts, Drps South & East patios. Only $42.500 R. C. GREER, Realty 3355 Via Lido 613-9300 Back 81y 1240 Hunllngton llooch 1400 hat The ltent r 1U8 month ..,. all. Sba'1' l'llO .• LOVE!-Y ...U lospl 3 BR 2 be.th buUt-lna, ear-home lor ltaa. 3 Br, dea.. J " • ,_ •·-tlo Ba. U1r bled""-°"""' TV. pe un1Pft, .... ae pa A U Mil 15-0cl l. Rs& Sf400 down, &~ Cl loan • ~ 12$.300. ~======'l Poul Jone• Roolty Newport ._h 84.7.J2fi6 Evt1. 847-8919 $23,960 BEST BUY Corner 3 BR 2 batm. Boat 1torage. Nf'ar park. HAFFDAL REAL TY 8740 Warner, F .V. 842-44Cfi CUTE and Cozy, 4 Bdrm. stucco, near Lake Park Rm. fol' boat OI' a.mper, $20.500. Mis. Terry 356-2519 Huntington H•rbour 1405 WATERFRONT -by ownrr • •. BR. - 2 BA., dock, 55' on water tnclosed patio $74,500. Also 60' on main dmmel large 3 Br.1 Ba., dock, SU0,000. Consider leue/o~ tion. 592-5998 SUMMER RINTAL Swnrntr and )leu round mervatlOO. betaw taken. PROPERTIES WEST 11118 -DT. m.-0J0 RENTALS H-Unhlm"'*' -·· 3000 CORONA DEL .MAR 2 BR. new paint. nt\¥ 1 b a a: carpets, $180/mo Newport bHch • 3 BR. 2 ... pool. $27S/mo. c.au Non day ?ifadge O&vla, A&L 642-'l'OOO LEASE • 2 bedroom A den, 2 bath. La.rp: praa:e ~ kne- ed )'ard. Cloae to O:lutche9 and Shoppln&'. El Toro. \l'etkdayl 8.n...(191J aft IS PM Weekends after 9:30 L11un• Be1ch 1705 $195: 4 BR. 2 ba., gar, W/W. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I Fncd yd. Children A pell • OK. Broker 5J4.6980 fncom1 Units H•ndym•n Specl•ls Loe, on Oceanside of Hwy. 150 yds from Beach. 4 lgt Apt. unill, needs paint & good general cleanup. PO- TENTIAL l NCO ME EX· CEEDING $10,000 ANNUAL. LY. Pri~ $69,950. MISSION REALTY 6f.073l 985 So, Coast, Laguna $90; l·BR. Cottqe: pr, stow, refrl&, trplc, w/w Broker- $175: 3 BR. gar, fncd yd. Range &: oven, w /w. Peta A childrtn OK. 534-6980 Bkr. 3100 OWNER 3 BR 2~~ bath, tam rm cpVdrp.<i, bit-ins. Ntal' everything. Large lot. $28,500 "2-931! * Owner Tr1ntf1rred Elegant WtStmont with Bonus room, custom bit.ins, lovely draperies, carpeting. FHA I ~ZZZZZZZ=:i= terms or VA. See & make of.fer. 1.'vea. 1974191 FREE RENTAL SERVICE for example, 3 btdrooma 2 baths $225.00 per mo. Call E11tbluff 1242 Cute •• • Bug's E•r 3 BR 2 ba ctmom home, few bl.ks to bch.. Sep. Jna!ter suite, bJtns, lg. priv patios. View bdnns. Beam I post const. Cptd & dl'pd lhroout. $39."10. ORANG& COUNl:v'S LARGEST Los Pa~a Rlty m E. 17tt. St. '4M4M TWO brand new ocean view 3 BDRM, 11n. ha, patio, fenc· Upper Bay location With large enclosed yard. 3 BR home with hardwood floors. AT· TENTION VETERANS use your GI loan here, no down. Call right now, day or night!! Eves. Call 545-2833 BY OWNER 3 BR tam nn, i .;;i;;.;;ii;;;;;;;,;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, I bltns, hd.,.,·d firs, patio, CDM • COTIAGE '1" "Pie, "'1>•-N•wly "'"'"' ' 9R homo w/ln< urut ...... MODEL HOME ditio"'d· ''"""'· $23,"10. 3093 Fernhealh Ln CM, EASTB LUFF Cor> dominiums. 2 side by side. 2n> sq. lt. ea. 3 BR &: den, 2 BR & den. Extra deluxe ccndition w/ choice location &, vitw. SSl.000 I: $67,500. Shown by appL Mark Les Rltr. C.M. Invesbnent Co. 54g.7711 BLUFFS Pacific Shores Rell1ty homes, one Contemponry, ed~ll:" .!...,,~ ... ~! Nr Huntington Beach one Spanish. Each bu 2 BR sc a ...... .,. .... 15 • .,....., ptr 841 ·~~ 2 ba ••-"-and all Mo. Avail May ht Kl -' ~a-U.161 If!_ A""" t/!_A'> lf!_C:..., --•l ol builtira. Don't mis:I these. _,,,., or ..............,, ..-- Newport et CLASSIC SIMPLICITY Instant money maker in ador. able 2 bdrm corner home. f'enced yard, enclosed pri.. valt patio, Owner says de- tached garage stressed for a~partment Acn:>s1 street from bay & near best ocean. $36,50() with low down, Va· cant • ready to move in. BWRJ'I 2(12.j \V. Balboa Blvd., N.B. 675-60QO · Four Bedroom • $19,500 Move into this large family home today!!!!!~! Close to shoppU\g, schools and chur· chcs. This one w o n ' I last!!!!!!! $153 per month includes tues aru:I insur- ance!!!!!!! ONLY S700 T~ tal cash required?!!!!!!! WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & lee 2043 Westcliff Dr. 646-mt Open Eves. some TLC. Wllllting distance But loaded with •·CADI-545-3530 :m:.ecything. $33.500 • ~c~ste:P~~=n~: ~3=-"'B"D"R~M07·"$""1""9'", 9=5-=-o Just unlisted &. reduced. Linda Model, 3 bdmt. 2 Ba, cove~ enclO&ed p atio. Greenbelt. $36,900. By ~ er. 644-1191 4 BEDROOMS Mun see·ro appreciate. F.ach -'°""~~"'-"~w._. ___ ~- 3 baths. x104 aq n, kitchen! m 950 ey 494-952 VA R ---• family room combination, ,, • owner. 5 eposssaaron By appt only Pl.an with separate Wume 51,4 % FHA loan, $1ll CORBIN-MARTIN "OWNER'S SUITE" mo. pays all. U.""" yanl, or 499-3006 Ev--q··-""·-_ ·-built-in range, oven, disb-1 ;;-===,_,.,,........,--• .,__ ~ - washer, sentlce porch, luge FABULOUS v.il:w home, 4 down. 4 bedrooms. c ALL entry, living room with tirf'-BR 2'ni be.. all builtin ~llil (open eves) Herl. place, slidlnc glus doors to kitchen. luge pool-table tage Real Estate. REAL TORS separate living room, newly redecor, Owner. 548- 3036 E . Ca.st Hwy, CdM loaded with accessories 5227 Coron• clel M•r 1250 675-1661 Ir. all in like-new condi-BY OWNER: 3 BR, 1% BA, I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;; lion in ooe ot CoSta fam rm. Back Bay home. I• patio. Large wardrobe. size playroom, wet bar, FOR • ··--M 4 er completely carpeted and ~ ....., o. ·• Room for pool. Carpets le draped i ttreo 9 p e a k e r • newly redecor. bteaa Verde drapes, land.scaping, curved home. Park·Uke yard .tr: driveway, double carar:e, ayltem. By Owner. $39,500. di!h\\'Uber. 830-4828 fur SUMMER FUN Around this shimmering pool with BBQ & pool side \vet bar. DelighUul 4 bdrm Baycrest home with family room & formal dfning room. Amold & Freud 388 E, 17th St, CM Realtors 646-7755 .-.·Baylront Hotel In Fabulous Av1lon Dining nn, 2 bars, 35 rooms pl115 View owlle'r Units. BURR WHITE, Rllr. 2901 Newport Blvd., N.B, 675-46:111 WANTED R.E. Saleswoman We have the 11.dvantage of the exctuslve agency for Ivait Wells' new Dover Shor?s Developn1enl + a captive audience for resales. OUice in new, exciting, furnished model on Galaxy Dr. Roy J. \Varel Co. Ask for M. Pinover 646-1550. Mesa's finest areas. All Take over my 5~i 'l'ct loan, Sparkling View for only $29,950. $133 per mo w/o laxts. If you appreciate the finest, aee 2716 Windover this \\"eek· end. Professionally decor. ated 4 BR., lam. room, lonnal dining room, tri· level,. magnificent harbor view. Separate childrens wing. $69,500. • COATS Pri""' al 128,.,,. "'16 & Redlands Dr., CM. W 'LL •c OWNER, 3 bdrm, 2 ba, East "' "' ! Side, nr shopping A achoola. REALTORS 546-4141-$3!,"10. 54&-9'00 (Open E.Wngsl Pele BaneH Realty PRESENTS Ex~•ption•I V•lu.11 3 bdrm 2 bath home on Jove. ly Eslelle Lane. Tile entry, spacious living & family room overlooks tree shaded yard. Kltchen cabinets & COWltets galore. 16(6 Westclilf Dr., N.B. 642.S200 YOU owe ii to )'wrRlf lo In. wall.gate our 4 dWerent lrade·in programa. Mesa Doi Mor {IOS 3 LG bdrms, 2 ba, 17x23' Jtv. nn, Jg sun room, fam/ din rm, bit-in kitchen w/ load.I Del•ncy Re•I E1t1t1 2828 E. Coo.st rtwy., CdM 6"'1T10 of cioseta Ir lg pantry. Pool-Tr1dition1I CMrm siied lot. Garage he.I floor Plm coast's most enthalling of dcNleta & J&.pantry. Pool. view! 4 BR, 51n. bath, fonnal Brand new cptl/drpa, paint dining, 2-35 ft, tamily room• inside 4 out before you $.139,SOO clear. Submlt tenns. move in included tor $30,500. H1I Pinchin & Assoc. 5!&--0605 ~ E. Coast Hwy 6T:.439'2 3 eoru.r, 2 ba, very clean. 1 :=:z=:=zzzzzz= I $26.500. low down. Owner. 1 • 2709 San Lucas, 545-1740 W•tch The Bolitt Met• Verde 1110 PAY $177 mo! 3 Br, 2 ba, firm, panl den. Auume FllA; ownu-w/carry 2nd. $26.500. 3771 I n d i an a. Go By in this charming home. Frplc. rustic 3 BR, 2 ba, $75,000. Orange Ca.st Property 3.12 Marguerite 673-8550 61-"'25 shingle roof. $3000 below App 'I. market • $27,900 lull price. BY OWNER, north end, 3 WANT to lease exceptlonally SOLVISTA-- Acroa I r o m l:luntinrton Center. Priced below others In area. at $24,900 tor quick sale. Beautilul 3 ~rooms on cul.<fe-sac. No Down tor GI or low down FllA. See thlg one! WE SELL A HOME EVERY JI MINUTES Walker & lee 7682 Edinger 842-4455 or 54{).5140 Open Eves. JUST CUT PRICE moo BR 2 ba, playroom w/wet clean redecor. house w/2 bar, buillin kitchen, 2 tireplacn, outside gas baths'! ~1675. Eve 1 . 54&-9536 barbq, carpclA, drapes, lush lruit trees. $42,500. 494-9525 3 Br. House. $1Th mo. \VHALE Watching Qceetf). 1944 Pomona Ave. CM after view lots, Laguna Beach, 3: 30 pm. $5,950 with small down pay-REDECORATED 2 BR un- ment 497.1021 eves. tum .• utilities pd. Vacant 2 B R C I-I A R M ER . $155/mo. 286 Knox St, CM redecorated, new shag cpt, $235; 3 BR. 2 ba. Completely drapes. $27,950. Owner, redecoraled; w/w, Avail. 49'-8463 now. Broker 534-6980 $35,COJ DUPLEX, 2 and 1 FOR Leue 3 Br. 2 Ba. hu&e BR, view, juJt remodeled, fenced yard. $225. pvt, wild kttchens! 494-9748 Call 64l-5294 VIEW 3 BR, 2 bath borne 2 BR house 1987 B $48,000. Sale or exchanie. Charle St SUO montb Bkr, 675-6591 Res. 494-n6l 642-2'Es9 or 646-7017 D•n• Point WAS $l2,500 DANA POINT HOME NOW $20,900 Owner must sell. 3 Br., wet· 8/8 3 bf!droom, 1 bath. Carpf'tln1 bar de 2 tbrougho "··--' P n, eame room. uL ....,¥c.i~ atio. fireplaces. Great v i e w TOWNHOUSE ..,..m Lots mon! extras! You own ocean &: hill!!. Undtr mkt. at ORANGE COUNTY'S llolboo Ponlnsulo 1300 !he land. "'""'" m,y &% $35,!lOO. <"'"'500 LARGEST V.A. $4300 down. $1.U Split Level 3 bdrma, .~ bl.tbs Doutle 1 a race, carpeta. d."8.pe::. Fireplace, e I e c. bullt-lna. ADULTS ONLY •• 2'l E . llth St. 646-4494 Newport Be•ch 1200 P.I.T.I. Pr Iv ate PATly. RENTALS EIBLUF'F, bay view: on PETITE 962-76.S9 or 9ti84J4o Houtd Furnl1h9CI 4 BDRM.+ FAM. RM. GLE"'ING wide green belt; 3 Br. l i,y """'" WITH FIREPLACE ba. spa,. Hv. • dio . .,...,. PRAmCAL HARDWOOD FLOORS Rontol~ to Shore 200S $21 ,000 Many cust. feattlt'l'!s; mir-3 BRs & den. 2 baths, Clean ROOMMATE servioe, male •••••••••••••••• $265/znonlll. Mn. Fay Bay & Beach Re•lty, Inc. Pier & Float Priced far below l'Cplace-rored wardrobe, but I er' 1 & 1Jharp, hee.vy 11hake root, or female. Etticlent 1: """"'""""~""!!'!!""'""''' ment on today's market. 2 p.qntry, abundant 11torage; PRffiY large fenced yard with 2 qualltied. 835--2tOO I '."!!!!'!!!!!!!!!'""'""""'""'!!!!"I 901 Dover Dr., NB Suite 221 645-21D> Evet. 54M966 den \\'Ith "·et bar, elec kitchen "·all to '"all c ar pe t i ng U1ro11i;:hout. 2% baths 2 kingslzed bedroom suitn, enjoy tennis. sauna bath, pool and luxury 11 v i n r for $2856.00 totttl dov"n to assume low Int. loan. + 2 Units CUstom 2 story borne. J Bed· roo1ns. n\aster Br. up \\•ith 555 sq. ft. and view. Ni~ apartment over garagt. CM'Tler anxiou.s, price re- TWO STORY batht. Massive brick fire. luxury cpta, drps: nr. pool, patios, Priced for fast llllle LADY to •hare home with 3 BR. duplex; 2 ba'a., bltns, $35,950 place In huge lamily room. cabana; below mkt. $42,500. 2 Bedtooms, Ph baths, near at only $23,500. Better check ,_--i dshwshr., new.paint, cpt.. le. ; • Built-in stereo & tape: re-&;4-4265 D l ~-p · ula this one1 one or more mipw,.cu drpa. Nr. btach. Year be. 4 Jarge bdnns, formal dinJng corder. '""'"""""""""'"""'""""" P~nt. '"""""an on enllUi MUTUAL REALTY ladle•. 536-l986 $250 50-7573 Income Units t riplex -3 t"'·o bl'd· rm. units annual net $4284.00 askini S37.· 500 Duplex two bedrm uni ts VA no dnwn only S32J150. live rt'nt rrec 8 unit!I only 6 y{'ftrs old, zoned for tour m o re unlb. 23.!53% return Meet Our Staff I••" , • ., •• , L. I:. libb'f rey11e.,d Gic:• pe11ll blll tc:ott "•" t orl11•c: k1M'P'lil "''' pll,..llit ••ly1r t••''J• teyl&r 111ikt .;1111nerlft efl 110¥• 9re1111it mgr. Or1ft19 County's L1rye1t 2'l E . 17tt. St. 64M4M ' • room, separate den, dinelte TARBEL~ M1•tt FEE corner k>t, best Joca. Only S38.250 842-1418 anytime Cost• Mey 2100 TOWNHOUSE 3 Br.,~ bll. • area, 2'Ai baths &: excellent --~W~A=S~$~22~,~500=--tion, $28,!IOO BURR WHITE, Rltr. SOtrrn Shona -2 BR, cpts, w/w cpll, drpa, fp). Fncd duced ••. , .•.•.•.••• $79,500 ?.Iary Lou Marion ~~;"·oo8:t.1i' !!:1~":: NOW $20,900 3 BR & fam nn w/POOL. 2901 Newport Blvd., N.8. drps, blti1111, FA heal. dbl 2 BR., gar., patio. qUiet. patio; dee. bllna:, 2 car pr, CALL. AL BLACK 540-USl 3 bedroom. Carpet In r Lovely family OOme, near 675-4630 Ev1s. 673-0859 pr. $14,500. Wood w •rd Tropical set~ for ad.Its. l pool. $275. 842-1219 Alt. 4 pm (open t\'6) Heritage Real throughout. 10 x 20 covettd IChools and Wt1tcllH Sbo~ '""""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'' Realton, 962-3343 Blk ahops. $165. 5«-4780 DIAL dired M2--58li. 0-.t Estate. patio. Ali built·in kltchtn ping. $52,500 TI!E QUICHER YOU CALL, DAILY Pll.DT WANT ADS JOI.Ir lld, ba att t.dc mad -~~~==~--I including refrigerator. ff.&. WALKER RI.TY 675-53JO rnE QUICKER YOU SEU. BRING JlE!ULTS! IJmn to 1tw oilloDe rial! BAYCREST "'""' oalm•• 1naide and ~=============--'-=========! Modem 3 bdt·Den Home. out Jwie l move-in pl.us Ill-BOAT & TRAILER Genertl Some View • Ftt Simple. sume 6% V.A. loan. $4.300 Plenty of apttce f bedroom 3 Owner anxklu., a.sklng $49.· down. S134 Pm Private bath. Te1TUk: vh of Back 2000 Gen.rel 2000 Oonarol 2000 ""''!"""'"""""~~!O!! j 500, Cozy &. O\annine with Party. 962·7689 • 96M640 Bey, Exclusive. MG-+t14 Country Uving "'"'" Atrium. Near COUllTRY CWB · Dtlt• 1110\ fstau RIGHT IN TOWN JEAN SMITH, Hall • .,,,, with daody 2 bed. Realtor 646·3255 Tulelul ,.,, .. 3 BR 2 bath room • Forced air beat • family room. 2 fireplaces, •hak• roof. """""'''"' kil· 6 UNITS -VISTA BAHIA entry hall. HU&e patio, at. chen has built-ins, -The tractive walled yard. $31.500 OPEN 2-5. Panoramic Bay buy of the week. • $29.0C!O. $60 OOO R to B 'Id • Prind,plea only, S4S-&1S5 Vkrw. 3 Br. 2 bJ., eJec. bllns, 646-7171 e ~1313 • oom u1 __ -· frpl. Nu-tone Intercom. Be8t Convenient to JII. Cotti Mesa l lOO loc. :420 Unlvenlty Dr .. \oTHEREAL "" ESTf\T~ Rltr. 642-913() ~. 54S-<l720 I;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I N'pt Beach. Owner 642-2809 • KDllDY TOWNHOUSE BY OWNE!l: R, du cod , -· -· - -Near new, light and alry 6'h%LOAN LESS THAN RENTI Ht11e bedrooms, 2 bl.tits. drMm built-in kitchen. Screened ' COYeffit patio. Spacious living room &: Lfun. ~room. :>tG-1720 TARBELL 2'55 Harbor PENINSULA POINT lu&• h<dn>om, Ill 0.. cu• Pain!, decorate tor charm! tom dt'PI, cptg,, Bll·lna, dtb.. Good 3 B Wlhr. A real soo(fle! $19,500 R home on SO x 100 WOODWARD Rltr ft lot. XLNT kx:. $42.500 ' B•IM. Real Ett•fe Ce. j 1Ml Adam~~tnrton Bch. 1!1J..41<0 I '!"'~~~~~-?Uo E. BalOO.. Blvd., Balboa OWNER 8AllJNG OUT. Slops to 11 .. t Beach $25,iSO 4 BR., 2 bl. 2 car gar, 6 yn 5 BR, 2 blllh, tX~I. location. yourw. onl)· $29.000. Auumc nlA @ $141/mo .. C1ywood Rlty. ~1290 or aubmlt f1lA, VA 1mns. """" ,., ,. __ _. 11· NB CALL MR. N'Et.SON 540-Wl !'~~~"!!·~-~~·~·~w"lay"·.,.·,..· I (ope n evttl HfTltaae Real BY OWNER 3 BR fam nn, l'Atate. bliM. .... tin, pa1;,,, WESTCLIFF-416,400 frplc, drps. Newly ttron-4 bedroom, 2 be.th hotne. tlltklncd. lenced. $23,SOO. Al o d c r n bull1-ln ldtche.n. 3093 Ft'.mbelilh Ln CM, o o u b I e dellched aarqti. )t\..3SJQ 5t0-t1'20 DAtt.V Plfll)TWA.'<T ADS' TARBELL 2'SS Horbor Bttrc yoUI' paint bruah. SDlll mowa you In, low ln- ternt IOM • no Joan lttt. 3 BR 2 bn.~. excellent &lft. CALL ~115.' (optn eves) II~ RHI Estale BY OWNER 3 BR Homes. 2-E. a'tde, 2-W. 1\dt. Very 1.,. lnlnalrrable kians 51.4- S~i%. Need cuh. fi4!J..lffi9 5 BR. Dy OWIW1". ?!°" "' ntA k>&n, Full pri(.'e: U4,500 w/ CONidtt 2txl. 56-1103 White Eltphar.ta! CAPE COO 4 BR. pnol. $59,000. c.n af1•r $ PM 548-94" $1Clll. DOWN 2 odrm. 2 bl.. dtluxe condo. Immediate po1ae1aloq, ........, 3 BR Wateliront No. 62 Balboa Oovn. $60 ,000 . Prtter tnde tor acttap or will conalder otbtt. MS-mt 8ACK BAY OJttiom 4 Bdr, 3 8a. r1rm, :tin, f r p I c . Modem 2Dl 1/I $40,750. Ownet/tw:S. 6t5-1M2 BLUFFS Bat buY. ~·tfl~ m .. vn. s BR.. 3 BA. B1 owner, $4000 dn. 644-0778 BUSJ.tSI' n1•r1Cef;llatt ui o...inect ~... s • " .. IMrWf ti"" • 11ffari. Uint towTL. Tbt DAILY PWJI .... , NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY· PIL_OT WANT AD 642-5678 S©\\41~-L&t-!fs• Solve: 11 Simple Set11mbltd Word Puzzle /or 11 Chuckle O Reorronge '°"•" of the four tcrombr.d wordr be· low to fotm four ll1T1ple words. INIEVIT I I I I I' I' I IVANHE I IPUMI O I 1--1....-.l""""Tl....,,l'-i HU1bond'1 a>mploinf, ~ '--'·'-.... -·'--'·-' men rtpent when they morry I In ho1te, espectolly cit --.. llUFMEL . ~-~ ..._ ..... ,....,, ... , -, ...... ,.r ..... r .. -."" ~ 5!1-:~ :i:. ~ A Pl!INT N\JMMl!(D I' V \E.TfERS !N SQU~Rtl rr1·rr1'1·1 SCRAM·~ ANSWER IN CLASli!ACATlON 8200 ' .. ' --------------------------~~ --------------------------------------....------·----·---------~--..--~----- • OIJLY PILOT T""4'1, April 22, 1969 µ;;.T;.,A~L57'-'-'-'----=11'"EN"'T°'A'""L"S --"---;--,fAL5 REAL ESTATI RL\L ESTATE IUSltjUS.... ANNO\INCilll{NJS W.-Unfvrllilhool A911. Foml-Apta. Uft!U"'ltllotl General Go"°ral PINA,NCIAL •"' NOTICl!S ---··-----1 c..;..;.;_; ____ _ Huntt'!~ -_!I~ Hvnll""°" BN<h 4400 -port lltlL 5210 Gofft HomH 5991 Loh 6100 ..... Opponvnllio• alt Laot 6401 P:llEI RENTAL BOOK QUIET & IEAUTl~UL ;..DUPt.-'"-EX-.--.-=---.,-2-BR-.1 PRV nn In t~-,.d-boen!-& (..-WDY SUP,;L:Y -LO ;;;:.:5'1'.;..-AIJ-.,..--,...-"mai=.I D•Ot> IN & BROWSE Adlllb only; 2 Br., •til pald. Stow, ,.lri&, •nCloeod pr. ..,.. home "" •ld•rll'. .,.,. 2% fQ ~ ACRES ROUTE Siamfioe. V~ Sarflld• Con-R.Ji Sharp 3 Bedroom :J Pool. $200. 847·212& Adults onlf. $1J:'.l. ~ bule.lOr)' ma.n or 'A'Om&n (Part or Full Time) dc.'1., HS. Rewardl 536-?DI &th. Near ~ i.nd 17676 Cameron, Hunt. Sch. --NourlMina: meal&. coogenlal R1ncho C1platrane C.Codkqt lacome tor rew LOST Mkl Apricot Pcodle, 15 lhopplnc. Sl'ZS mo. ·rent, re. East lluff 5242 atmOiphere. J..rg Jrd & ls OQw otleril1&. a llm.ilecl SS bn. weft\y v.'<ltk Cday1 lbl. b1k eoll&r. Vie Ell13 a qui.res Lat and tut month Ga __ rden __ G_ro_~--~O • NEW DELUXE • paUo. Avail now. 543-5225 parcel.I ol Jab\&loua, _oak or evm.), RefllUtJa and Birch, F'V. Reward. 96&.wr. plua a. SM&ll dcpoeil. Option SINGLE y...,,...,. Adulll! Lux· 3 Br 2,, b;t. a.pt. for Jeiue REST bo~c for la.dies or $luddcd. ra.nch 11b:t s~1<tadl. CQlleCfin& money from 1..o9t Ynr Cockatiel. Avallable. ~-... . · '11 _ • ma.n A: wife. R It 8 le laun-The o"1y ones or lhelr kind Coln Ope.rated Olspen-VW: Ant& Beach. WI SELL A HOME ury prden aplli with coun-tnct ipac. mW. IW~, din dry, lal1'c room k. IJ:ht tn the aers in Costa Mua and 342.WS ~VERY' 31 MINUTES try club atmospkere and rm. I: dbl c~. auto. nunitlg b eau t I I u I sur-XIIITOUndin(: are a. No W lk & L r.omph!te privacy. SOUTII c.100" c>pener avail. Pool I ~ close in. 494-2425 Booming South Coart sclUng. (~s n •me Peraonal1 640S I er . ee BAY CLUB AP'l'S. 13100 "'"" ...... Nt'. C.lholicl====· ===== btud ,...,. • snacks.) --------- CHAP?iIAN Ave.. Garden Olu.rch &. BChOol '-Corona Miu R.ent•lt 5999 "'"b above A~~~ ti""°"' belt. Sl@ total cub required. 7~~ lNTEREST Grove (n4} ~3030 del f.lar I-tigh,. 1-=~'-"'-'·"-''---'.;.;..:.1 -e. '"'" ... -. i'or m 0 re lnfonnalion \Vrite for free brocbUtt 1682 Edlni:er ~ Ot' 540-5140 Open EveJJ. :t-410 3 BR., tlen. fam-din. rm·.: bl.tins. $215/month. t.eue. fl VJi l. April 20. 839-I665 L.,un• Nlguel 3707 MONARCH BAY AREA ADULT COMhfUNITY , l BR. den, 2 BA honll.'. btt-ins, trplc, heated pool $25(1 mo. 10 to 5, 496-1243 OtARMING 2 BR. din nn. view home. Private beach, 3 ·Arch Bay. 67J..0097 aft ~. .. "'IAL) Apts. Furnished Gon..-•I 4000 $115; l ·BR., Vo.'/\t/. All paid. Available no11·. Broker 534-6980 util. SI55; 2 BR .. new furniture. Pool. Family welcome Broker 534-6980 Cotta Mew 4100 $30 WEEK UP • Conunercial Rates e Maid Service -TV's avail. e Coclcta.il Bar -Pool e Western trio Fri., Sa t. SUNNY ACRES MOTEL 2376 Newport Blvd., 548-9T:i5 SUS CASITAS FURNJSHED 1'.BR. &-. Bachelor Apt.!1, 2110 tiEWPQRT BLVD. Medallion by Hotpoint * Villi Pomona Apts. Cos la 1'fesa 's nc\vest I: most luxurious apts now renting. Furn & uururn. Adults only· nu pel.l!i. 1160 Pomona Ave., just south of 18th St, HOLIDAY PLAZA DELUXE, spacious I-Bdrm. Furn. apt. $135 Plus util. Heated pool. Ample parking No children • No pets 1965 Pomona, Chi BEAUTIFULLY FUR.i'\I lmmac, clean! 2 Br, pool Ad11lts, no pets S150. 2272 1\taplt . ~5566. 642-4807 oEIUXE Ap!. Spacious 1 Br.. pool. Ideal r or bachelor. ·s115. 1993 Church. 548-9633 CHATEAU La POINTI; Lovely 2 Br. furn. apt Pool, carport: adults, no p<!ls. 1941 Pomona, C. M. LGE. Bach., pool, util. paid. Mature adults. 2115 Placen- tia Ave. 543-2407 • ONLY $270 • FAAflLY Vae. 'n'afier, on Private roads and locl<M 4705 and details, &end na..rne, describlnf: 1% I n t e re a t Legun1 &each $37.atl Amiaos Way, N.B. betch • Ensenada, 3\i hr &ate guarantee the nt\tural addtt:11s and !)hone num-church bonds, beirt;: mid by fro1n N.B, Comp Jurn ex. beauty of this (ornier spa:n. ber to: Valley &pl:h1t Temple, P.O. 100 CLIFF DRIVE Corona det Mir 5250 linen. Day, ,,.k, mo. 642-3387 lsh Grant surrowided by "ROtrrE DEPARnIENT'' Box 5002, Skn Jose, La.rte bachelor Apt furn. beautiful-Gevelaod Nation. P. O. Box 3846__ CnJUomia 95150 All Oclu.1'e Features Income Property 6000 al Fore11t. All utilities avail--Ocean View. \Valk to beach .., ; able. J Anaheim, California 92803 Attractive Expert $170 -yearly lease ~ OFFER: Removal by April HARDWARE YOUNG \VO?itAi"l 494-2449 ~ i•rt• 30, 2-story 3-room apartment PRICED FROM $&,000 STO dall()Cr will teach you all PANORMIIC view overlook· -* · · · • ! garage building from Clop. 10% DOWN -15 YRS. RE latest steP11. can Ardell tng Ali!:lll Beach. 2 BR turn. ON TEN ACRES isb-ano Bea~h Oub si~e. For true country living, re. HuntillC)to'n lffch 21.3: SSl-4538 1•10 P~ all t'lee. lo.lature adults, no I l 2 BP .. Furn &; Untum OHer:s Jn writing to Cap1s-tire-mentor ju.st plain imreat-8000 llQ. h. 8111)', shopptna hlAN 40 \voul.d like to n1ee1 children, no pets. $185 n10. Frplcs I priv. patios/Pools, ~~p~~~ lnvep"'"w~ntp':';· ment at a bargafh price, call center Lots f kin;. T "'Oman, 30-40. Send name, Call eves, 499-3755 Tennis _ Contnt'I Bkb\I put· . """ ""1~i.re, ac c ...... or write for CQmplete details ritic I~. ~ :ti has bee:~ address~ phont, picture If LA'""G~UN=A-c---0=,~,~.~.=,~r~o~n~t I Una: ~n. · •sades, ~1f, ~ ___ and lree col or brochures. built over period ol 44 years possible. P.O. Box au, Bachelor ApL Furn or 900 &-a Lane: CdM 6«-26ll NEWPORT BEACH i:aneho Capistrano Fin. aviil. For further infor-C.?tl. - Unful'n S160 mo./Jease. Sgle 1r.JacArtbur nr. Coast1twyl TAX SHELTER : 4570 Campllll.;:Drlve, ma.lion. COUPLES, sindes; lonely'!' adult. 49'-3223 l !!'!!!!i!!!i!i!iii!'~i!!!l!~!!Detuxe 8 unit just be.in: C(ln. Ne\vpoi't Beat~, 9'2660 BRASHEAR REAL TY Ne'v in area? Join the ,,vm; LARGE bachelor, v 1 e \Y, 3 BR. & den, 2\i ba., 2-Sty. structtd, overlooking all of 546-7143 847-8531 Eves. SJS-2123 to fun &: plea.sure de<:k, SllO. includes util. cpts, drps, bltns. Adults O/lo Back Bay. J?iive by 745 \VANTED: Active man In thl': e 635:9291 e Single only. 49S-3464att6. ly. Lease: $250. 61s.3943 Dontingo Drive, lhen call 7,onJ1orU:~nil!. furnit.µre atripping & \Vood LONDON-Laguna Acto rs eve. owner/bldr, &15-1260 bl """ Wor"·hop' Jnq·",._ RENTALS .'----Phil Sullivan, $48.6761 eac .... ,. service on 70% ... · w. ..., ... ll40 lifO.yearly. l BR, bltns, 4 UNITS basis, rernov1Jl¥ finish froni 494-4404 Apts. Unfurnished gar. Adults. Avail about Prestige area Corona del CHOICE . bui.lding s ite ' furniture & interior 5/18. 548--m92 aft 5 pn1. Mar. Attractive 01~·ner's panoramic view. U PP er wood'\vorlc. All work done on ====-======I sui te Asking $125 000 Call Newpc~ Bay. Cor. l\lesa k CU!tomer'11 premises. Sl51XJ. Huntington Beach 5400 FrruiJ< Szabo, ;;s.-9350. JN. 8 a Y v Jew· By owner req'd for entering estlb'd 1 .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 VEST~fENT D l VI S I 0 N. =7_l4~/5=Z7=-='~"-'7·_____ business &. the professionaJ ALCOHOLICS AnoJ\ymous Phone 542-1217 Of.· write to P.O. Box: 1223 Costa Mesa. SERVfCt DIRECTORl Gener11 5000 RENT 3 Rooms Furniture $20 • $25 & UP J\Ionth-To 1\fonth Rentals \VlDE SELECTION AppJiances I: TV's avail NO DEPO.SIT O.A.C. H.F.R.C. Furniture Rent1l1 517 \V. 19th, Of 548·3481 1568 W. Lncln, Anhm 77f..2800 $140: 2 k DEN f·plex. 2 Ba, range & oven, \V I '"' . Children OK. Bkr. 534-6980 EXCLUSIVE WALKER & LEE, INC. • VIEW of ocean, corner know-how. can ........ $45. 13 UN . . blu!f, possible 6 at Y • per da.y aJter 3 wk! 1mo,,.. ON.THE-BEACH ~~ ITS. good condition. medical or apts. \Vill build bo,v. Call 114/~7963. 4 to Appliance Repiiin P•rts 6510 100 ,q rented. Large 6% 1 ·1 53&-3555 2 & 3 Bedroom Aptt. loan, Bargain al $106,000. 0 sui · . 1 pm. SUPREME Relri&eration " Luxury livb'lg to please the Phil Sullivan, 548-6761 LAGUN A \1;oodsy ~e'v lots, CANDY .wpply route, part or Appliance Repair. Ask for lnost discrirninabnz. ho\Jo *NEW-F0UR:PLEX* und~rground utilities, pvt. run time, days/eves. Refill l ,,T,,om=. "54>-=1363==· "S4"7-<l6=',,'== il bl ' $6,950 & $9,250. 494-9748 & collect money h'Om coin ava a e a Nea1· Beach, Huntington _ · labyst'ltlnt 6550 lh H I• I OJ¥'r. Dispensers in Costa e Un IOI ~R S.ach. $65,000. $<7~957 AcrHqo 6200 Mesa • vk. No 8'llmi.1-~--"----- 8 UNITS, 2-4 unit bldgs. 11 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;,;;;;;;;;;, $1650 Total cash ttq. Send COSTA 1'1esa Pre-School BR f 11000 I• Lieense4-Ages 2-6; open 6:45 . urn. per mo. in· COUNTRY name, addreM It pholll'! to: $87 500 to 5:45; S'l8 Per \\'k. Pacific oom•. . '.P. 64S-<039 Rout• oept .. P.O. Box 3846, COMPARE! 54&-9803 ACREAGE Anahe;m"'"' .830-5237 Business Property 6050 23 Plus acres in valley cent. FOR We 5 Venda·pak, lGc 'lll Ocean Aw:., H.ll -all bl ·"th t • v•nd;•g ma•h'·-, HandJ,, BABYSITrING, day or (n4) 53&-1487 MEDICAL BLDG. er; usa e, 'Y• wa er"" "' " u"' . , night, no minimum a&e, l 1 1Cllioiisiilii•iiiMiiasiiiaiiiiiiiiiii5iiliiOOil I :~~~~ ... ~~~~~I higlnvays right al the prop. Nabisco Producll!, cookies, TWO STORY 1 ""'' OC"U t F·"I . "'" 600 .,. etc. Best oUer O>"<r l'Ji;,, or 24 hr. basis if necessary. CHEZ ORO APAR1'MEi'ITS · bv ' " . er y, w price ., . ..,, '"' 540.9200. 8234 Atlanta pied ~ dentist, 1 vacant \viii trade for income. For each. Call aftE"r 6 pm. HARBOR GREENS BACHELOR • UNFURN. from $110 ALSO AVAILABLE 1 - 2 & 3 BOID.I. Heated Pools, Child care Center, Adj. to Shoppi.Jl& - No pets allo\ved 2700 Peterson \Vay, at Har· bor & Adams, Costa blesa. '"""370 * Villa Pomona Costa Jl.fesa'a 1.ewest ti most Ju.xurious apts now 1-cnting Unfur. 1 & 2 BRg, Adults only No pets. 1760 Po1nona Avt, just south o{ l.Blh St. 3 BR I~ ba, bit-in range & oven. \Y ilh raJ'aie. $150. New 1•2 Bedroo P ~ PLUS sumptuous 3 bdnn more information, please 53G-602S BABYsrr my home Mor.. electric r:1 ay apt Easy terms. call Glenn Thompson with BEAUTY Salon, 1\Iodem, Sun. Fne'd yd, reliable. Vic 536-3927 or ~2727 R._D. SLATES, Rltr. Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. ne\vly dee, 5 sta~ Very reas. 1\tagnolia &: Slatl'r, F.V. S3 Pool-\Va.shers-Dryers 847-3:>19 Eves. 897·5465 1818 W, Chapm~ Ave. 613-2835 days, 640-4608 eves. day. 962-2816. Private Garaaes Q Orange, Calif. BABYSITI'ING in my -hon1e NE\Y 3 ""-,_B_u_s~i~""';;.;;;:..;.;R~•~n~ll~l'-...::6060:0::~ 541-262I, Eves·wknds 538-67'l7 lnve1tment Oppor. 6310 5 days a week. Exp0d 1noth. U\l.nn. 2 bath,1 er, lunches, fenced yard, firepla<.'t', priv, patio dble. APPROX. 720 sq H store 640 ACRES S13 Tll6 R16E in GRO\VING t.1fg. <.'O. needs l\lcsa Verde area. 545-0649 garagt'. \Valk in closets, few a.cross trorn Vista Shopping Navy gunne ry range. soor.1-private investor, 'interested XLNT child care, my home, blks. from Beach, 210lh Centl'J', ~:icecl. for real $2;°11\1 6~-li note .. trade for ir. capitol invest. of up lo hot lunches, fresh fruit, lease. t.Irs. Terry. 536-2579 est.ate 0U1ce, acCQuntant, Ne\vpe>rt or Balboa pro-$25,000. Please reply in-certUied ntilk & real butler. Agent paint slOl-r. etc. SllO/n10. perty · dicating tel'ms, etc. Box t · 89~ 2 BR 11tudio apt, crpts, See at 826 \V. 19th St., CAI. . (2I3) 333.3733 481, Daily Pilot d1·ps, blt·ins, ren<.'td Bkr. 6424422 ---·-· -INVESTOR \Vanted for N.B. patio. laundry rffi. gar. _Resort_Preperty 6205 growing spol111\vear finJl. nr Huntington Center, Office Rent1I 6070 nat'l distributoi'!, Need 1 yr old. $150. 897·1313 · FOK RENT Furn ~lammoth S25,000 \•:orking capital, , BR apl All ... , .. LAA.GUCN~ BEACH ?ti o u n ta in Condominium. secured by new eqUipment. ¥ • on ..,; uoor, 1r onditioned sleeps 8. 675-4I3C laundry facil. Near Beach ON FORES'J' AVENUE P.O. Box 2203 N.B. Blvd. & Slater. 962-7637 Desk spaces avallab!e tn R. E. Wanted 6240 Money te Loan ~20 IM?ifACULATE 2 BR near neweat office buJlcttna a; ----------- t"'nvy. Crpts, drps, stove, no prisne location ID dov.11town WANT TO SELL? pets. $120. 842--3.'i27 ~na Beach. A.it ~ Call Farrow and start pack- BRAND NE\V 2 £ 3 BR. boned, carpeted, btautiful ing' froin $150 mo. Cpts. d~. paneled partitioning. T w o · dshwshr. Nr Beach. 84-7-3957 entrancea: Frontaae on ===,.,,====== Fores1 Ave., reJU" leads to Dina Point 5740 i\1uocipal parking Iota. $50 --------per month for space. Desk 1st & 2nd loans for quick cash. Borrow on your pro- perty eq \\~lhout disturbin&: your low interest Is! TDs. Also buyers for 2nd TDs. Sattler 1\lorlgage Co. Inc. Seaving Harbor Area 20 yrs. 336 E. 170, St. \VILL BABYSIT your child in my C.M. home by day, night. or week. 5£-6734 BABYSITTING in my home, S4 daily. 642-8728 BABYSIITING r-.·IY HOr.fE * * ANY AGE • 842-8631 all 5:30 Pl'lf. ..J XLNT day care, A!\1 to 5:30. Hot me8.ls, i l c . Harbor/Baker. 546-1539 Brick, Matonry, etc. 6560 BUILD, Remodel, Repair * * * * * * ""' Wtu.kiy• W•nt? Whoddya Got? SPECIAL CLA5SIFICATION FOR NATUllAL BORN SWAPPERS Spo<l•I R•to 5 Lin•• -S timn -5 buck• IULE$ -'-0 MUIT INCLUDE t-Wllal '°" Mv•. lo lr•ot, ~Wlltl !'Oii Wint Ill 1f'lff. ~Y()Ult ~one •RO/Or Udte$1. .._5 tfllt1 of •dVtl'1!s1n• S-NOTHING FOJI SALE -Ut'-OES ONlYI PHONE 642.5671 To 191ace Your Trader'• ParadiH Ad 17 1'~t. fiber glass outboard and big '"'heel tilt trailer. \VW trade for landscaping. PHONE 6H·"87 5 acres nr. Turf Paradise track. Phoeni.1', for local res. or eon1. prop. Val. $15,. (I()) cir. Owner: 546-9358. Der Wienerschnitzel, 1!!51 Harbor. CM. Land & bldg. Income S500 mo. net. $45.000 equity for Jots, Baek Bay. 67s.&30 F.qulties lotallng S65)1 in Motel, T.D, + home for CUstotn home-, income or ? ? ? O\VNER. 541-2164 or 613-5929 Laguna Beach Comniel'cial Building, $118,000. equity. Want buildable land. Bkr <94-1J30 JIA VE $60,000 TF on 10 acres or Oceanview land, TRADE for dear house 497.1210 WANTED: Lullkey's Harbor area or Pacific Orange Count,y reverse telephone directory. Trade for ? ? ? ? Call 54G-25.S5 Eves. Clear Il lots Palm Spri.ngs, north .of airpo11 • tor beach property. Equity sao.ooo. John Seaeh, Bier. '"""' Clear 200 acres 1\fendocino C'(iunty, 2 creeks, soda gpring, oaks, aspen, holly • tor clear beach prop. Equ.. ity $100,000. Bkr 494-8563 Oea.r bank & oflice build· ing Bald1vin Park, equity $150,000 • for clear beach properly. J o h n Seach, Broker, 49"1-85G3 2 Vacant San Clemente Lots zoned for 7 Units. TRADE for Npt/C.M. In- come, and/or romm'I lrce & clear $24,500 equity, Prop. erties \Vest, 67i>4130 (7.19-c~ HAVE : Land N.E. Antelope Valley, 237 ac. all or pa11, \'al S~ ac. \VANT: Hous- es, units or ~ ? l\1ytrs S73-67";i& 6 nicely Furn Apts. E:'\c Cond, ahvays rented. Ex- change for small house or land 'vlth future. Fortin Co. 170l·A. \Yestclill Dr. ?>.'B 642~5000 Palm Sp1ing!I for Newporl or vicinity. Havi: 3 nice homes, take an,y type prop. rrly. Ov.·ner. 645-2005 o.r eves, 642.5855 Fun in sun plus Income. Desert Hot Springs Duplex. 1-2 br, SU.000 eqty. For 2 bi· hOuse nr shopping Cos la Jl.'lr.sa Area. 642-32I4. San Clemenlt' Jneome 2 Stores 2 Lots 2 Offices 2 Apts. Take TD's or tradt' Good financing. Make oiler. Call 4!»-3..'>62 Elec. i:olf cart with top, 1vindshield, etc, OK !01 stl'eet; val. Sl75; for tw·n., fishing tackle, etc. 548-2018 See at Tewinkle Hardware. Ha\'e Con1m Joi St. to St. on old Ne1vport w/small bouse. \Var11: 2 or 3 Wllls Easl Costa Mesa. Bkr Englund. 673-4114. 1961 SUZUKI :QO. Exeelltnl condi tion. Luggage rack, motor o/hauled. Swap for scuba gear or '! ? ? 8~6-9J\8 2 Jndust. bldgs on Plaeen. tia, D!. Value . Sl50,00ll. Trade ~Z of $95,000 eqty for prop anyhel'e. Bal in TD or ?? 543.1542 Oceanfront Duplex, 4 and 2 bedroorns, $21.000 equity, \Va nt vie1v lots in Laguna Beach at-ea. Balboa Bay Properties. 673·7420 $3000. Cabin Cniiser, 2 bunks & head, ship lo shore 135 Grey r.Iarine. Perfect cond. Tt"ade for pr'Op, T.O, or '! 539-507'J or 527.fi15, nave: Medical Pl'of. bldg ; Rialto. free &. clear, val $125,000: tt·adr. all or part (!(!. \Vant: land , TD's or ? ? Myers 673-6756 Ship's radar (2), RCA Pathfinder. 45 mi radius; cost $5700 ea. exchange for R.E .. late inoclel car or ~. Owner. 541·2164 or 673-5929 17 Ft. outboard for station wagon or auto of equal val- ue. Phone 64+4687 Deluxe 4 BR. 3 bath, den home. 35,000 value, in Red- lancls. Exchange for r.om- pai·able home .beach ail"a, (7I4) i93-6125 WILSON West: 1 Br. fu111. All ulll incl. $135. Pool, Adults. 54!l-262'7: 968-1740 Wells·McC1rdle, Rltrs. 1810 Ne1vport Blvd., C.1\1. 54&-7729 DELUXE 2 bdnn. 2 ba, triplex apt, ocean view, ter- race. garage. $I6.5. !'llo, adults only, no pets . 642-4192 or f96..5319, aJ:l S:30 49G-1036 and chain avallab!t tor S5 Business bours answering service avaiU.ble tor SlO. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 G42-21n 545--0611 "NE\V 2nd LOANS AR- RANGED" Top cash Jor seasoned 2nds 543-8381 Bkr. Brick,. block, eo.ncret~. * * crpntry, no job too small. -~ * * * LicContr.962-6945 J ~!'!!~~!!''l!!~!!!!!~!!'!!!!J!!!~!'!!!!!!"!!!~!!'!!'l!!!!!!J!I!~! All urtlltfu paid except BUSINESS and tel~pi'.one. FINANCIAL DAILY PlLOI' -·--· --- Z22 FORF.ST AVENUE But. Opportuniti .. 6300 LAGUNA BEACH _,__ -------·-- Small l·BR. trailer FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. C•rpentering i590 Mortgages, T.D.'s 6345 ----CARPENTRY l\tlNOR REPAIRS. No Job StiKYICt OIReqDRi )EKVICE DIRECTORY Carpet L•ying & . Repair 6626 ----G1ner11 Services 6612 PROFESSIONAL Gentleman prelerred. S65 133 16th St. C.M. 64Z.12G:i 2 BR pear shopping, Ea.st 17th St. SUO mo. Bkr. 546-504-0 MOBil.E Home, furnished. Adults. Four Seasons, 2359 Newport Blvd., CM. Sp 60. Near 0. C. Airport. 2 Br. Apls, Unfurn. 20122 Santa Ana A\'C. • 546·7602 • Gracious AdU!tliving 2 Bdrms., 'v/w cpts, drapes, pool. S1uden1.!I 0.1\. REAL ESTATE GeneraJ "'4-9466 SALES EXECUTIVES Rentals Wanted 5990 AVAILABLE August. 1969. r.todern, s p a c i o u s , pro-AND MANAGEMENT 2 BEDROOi\1 a p a r t nt e n I fessional offices to renl on near beach, 1 Month plus, monthly basis. Located in starling no\v, Phan(' D. prin1e business area of 21,000 1st TD on Oet'an Vie\v Lots, payable $210 month, 10% due 3 yrs. 10% dis- count. 494-1137 $4500 hi TO, 8S-0-due 3 yrs. lI % discoun1. Too Small, Cabinet in gar-C''.RPETS (nylons, wools, ages £ o .t be r cabinets. polyesters,) Vinyls and Til. 545-8175, it no answer leave es. Latest stylE"s &lid colors. msg at 646-237'2. It O. C.On1merclal and Residential. Anderson ~pert installaliol1. Tree & Yard Servic. 847·1843 H1uling 6730 I-BEDROOM, FURN. 998 El Camino Dr .. CM * 546--0451 * Newport Buch 4200 MESA EAST APTS. 145 E. I8lh, C.r.t 642--3474 OCEAN BREEZE uppt'r apt. Large 3 BR 1% ba. bit-ins, c pts /drps , swxleck. SINGLE Young Adults Lux· $160/mo. 2286 Canyon Dr. W'Y garden apts with eoun-No pe:ts 545-32I5 aft 4:30 or try club atmosphei<t and \reekends. or Ml 2-2222 complete privacy. SOUTII AVAIL. MAYT._t_ BAY CLUB APTS. Irvine al ., BR / ~ • w i:ar .. fenced yd. 16th Newport Beach. w/Patio .. \Vater pd _ gar· <7I4) 645-0050 dcner. 1,: BLOCK to beach: 2 Br .. 2228-A Placen tia Ave .. , SlI:i modern kitch., garage, ''"''''"' SEE and then tall epta. Xlnt furniture. 1\ta.y e 636-4120 e ht to J11l'\411 15th. 833-1234 NICE sep, Townhouse; 2 Br Ext 313 Days; 675-5928 r·rp1. cpl~; garage. Adults, evenings. no pets. $140 i\fo. 548-M28. llONEYlo.IOON Haven; vie\v 2652 Orange Ave. from ever Y room. two LGE, 2 Br. split le~l S.150 bcdroon1: fi r c p 1 a e e: Upper 2 Br. $135. No pets ~: stunning furniture: 2885 Mendoia S4a-M21 prlvatt'. $215. 548--2394 aft. 6 PM 3 BR 2 ba Condo, cpl~. I=====""====-I bit-ins, dii;hw., dbl gar. 2 pools. $190/mo 546-5580 Ceron• del Mir 4250 \VANTED: matut't', quiet, emplo)'~ \\'Oman to renl 1 Br turn apt. Sn1. but attrae, lit fir. Utll pd; use or washer/dryer &: nice palio. Moderate ttnt, Cd i\t. 11'13-5784 AVAlL !.fay bl!, large 2 BR, J Ba, Ire priv sundttk, pool, clo8e to bee.eh & shopping. Beauf k>cation, pragt', m mo. year's lease. 67>7970 or 83l-1234 Ext 301 t BR ne.r AhOpping, adul~. Sl35 mo. 602 JleHotrope, &U-3295.. 673-7211 lalbe• 4300 -----a..£AN Bachelor flpts. All utll ind $7l 11p 31.5 E. e.Jboa Blvd. BALBOA li'll-9'4;i -....... -4400 BAOI. apt. tum.: .,•attr A IU paid, AdliH only. fi'l. 91& Palm. Hunt. Bcadl 5J6..46T8 « ~ 2 BR. 2 BA, .......... pool. b!Uud.. Ad\111.t. (IO pell '""-23211 ........ - Villa Fino Apts. 3 BR Unf. Children \Velcomc $150 874 W. Center Apt 1 2 BR, 1 ~~ Ba. Patio, crpts, drps, blhlS. Adulls, no pets. $140. Avail ?<olay 1. 54M506 STUDIO 2 Br. newly dtc. S145 • \\tater paid. 98-4 El Camino. 0.t 962-0050 QUIET, deluxe 3 Br. studio. Adults only. Hid pQOI. tm Santa Ana Ave., ~ 2 BOJU,fS, drpa, crpts, pvt pot.to le p.rage. 2 children ok. No peU:. $130. 543-1540. i & :l' BR •PLL Brand new. Trcmf:ndoell 8" v l e w • Around June 15th. L..ease on. 1)'. 14! Oomi111l9 Dr. 645-ll'GO 2 BR, new\)' dee. dl'p11:. w /W ¥ sn. 2 BA. fple. S2l1. 213. 9SJ-i\'.IS9 2 en 2 BA tlGS • Slil I SI&\. l BR 2 BA. ft-pie, $23.l. 11l-!18t-'Xl39 ' ' Reyno I d s, \V hi I I I e r beautiful Mission Viejo. Call Looking: for a no lin1ita1i.on 696-1124, or write Box 4038, lo.tr. Lapp, Downey Savings career. and a future 'v1U1 \Vhittier 90607. &: Loan Ass n. 837-4911 g:rowth ? Any background . you n1ight ha ve in sales, PRC>_F. w1f~ l :J daughte~ $BO/MONTH publle I'f'lations, manage· desire 3 or 4 BR hse in nt aecounting or book- C.1\1., N.B., or H.B. areas, ~e i Id be' 11· starting June ls!. \Viii pay 1st floor, s1nall office \Vith eep ng ~·ou , a pa icu· U to $200 mo, Call 645-1966 balh, Ideal for Real Estale lar beoehl l<l )OU. i\~cn ~ p Bk~. Insurance elc. Ed Rid-\Vomen V.'~ are seeking 'viii \V~TEO: 3 BR unturn hsc, die Rilr. Ask for i\1r. Hesler rnakc-$15,000, to $25,000. per yrs lease. P1-efer CM. G46-88ll year or mot~. Call r.fr. Kap. * 646-86&1 * Ian all day a n d evening 1 soRr.t unrurn Apt in Private Office !TI41 537-8500. Stach area for emplayed Secretarial service, air l-On-AFFILIATE lady up 10 S 11 o I ni o . ditioning, & parking. IMMEO. INCOME 642-0086 Orange C.ounty Bank Bld;-. (NO SELLING IN°VOLVED) e LANDLORDS e 230 E. 171h St.reel _ Qualified Individual \vill be FREE REIITAL SERVICE Costa Mesa 642-l485 selected by r.tulti·Stale Inc, Broker 534-6982 NE\VPORT CIVIC CENTER to supply estnblisbed busl· ii=::'=;;==""=""'=;;;;;:;IOUiccs sui(able for Com-ness wi!h fine~! triple A·l ROOm1 for Rent 5995 mercial. f\:Iedical. ~ntal. nalional producls (candy & ROOi\I for rent. \Vorking Air-rontl .. crpts. elevator snacks). $1.450 Cash requir. 33c PER SQ. rt'. ed. ror personal inte\'Vle\V lady. S15 per \\•eek. "' ~"~" 6 2 Call after .f, 64:z,7697 .nl"'1W<' O~ ·164 ~ Costa f.lesa & surround· =~~--'--7, --1 300 Sq. Ft. Office 1ng al'Cas, send name, ad· LRG. Prv roon1 .. sen11 prv COSTA ?tlESA a 6'16-2l30 dl'ess & phono number to ~th, house pr1v l. i\11'sa ~tulli·Slale Inc., 9075 E. Im· Verde area. Slr> ""'· M:>-130-I LEASE: slore or oUicc, 1974 pcrial H"'Y oo'"'"'Y Cali/ SLEEPING roo1n for man. i;q. fl. good locution. 333 E. 902-42 ' ' Prv hn1 &. entry. By nio on-17th SI. C.~t 646-4033 FRIGIDAIRE ly, $40. 1543 Orange, Ci\t. --·-· • · · Commorcl•I 6015 JET ACTION Room & S.0.rd 5996 FOR Sal d -Frigidaire 18 niin c)cle Is --'-"...;..---'! c or tra e by ov.•ner. th<.-fastest l.n the indusu-y. ROOM & board, t"Omp. prlv.; ~· x 1so.;i· i:oninicrcltil pro· 30 Frlgidalres do tht 1vork TV & telephone: s I u dent perty. 19th St., Costa f.Iesa. ol 40, 30 min, "'8$hers. Find p..,ftrred. 646-2708 next lb ))(:pt of !lo1oto1· out ho1v e1t~y It Is l,O o1v11 ==========I Vehlclros. Tncom(' $470 rno. • lX!ylna: hlpndl)'. Motel&, Trlr. Crts. 5997 Owner "'1 lcuse back at Garden Grove, Santa Ana. -same. $45,Sj(I. 494--9;.2:) Tustin. Orange. Anal'IE'lm Sunny Acres Motel f-Or. )..ease. in tt:"n of r.t-1 Coin·O·Matic • Kitcbcncl!('lt property ,vtth small otflet". •TV and Pool Completely fenced "'Ith 2 Equipment, Inc. e Commercial It "'eckly lar::tc gatc11. 543-0J4 2334 ~ \V, Valencia 1111ell FuTier1011 714: 525-1833 e Cocklail Bar -ASS0cl ATE-- • D ...... &-..... .._ Sa• Industrial l•nt1J 6090 a'':"'"' ~ • '· .., ·; .. i\f1U1a.acmt'nt poslllon open 2376 Nt'wpon Blvd, 548-9"1a» f'OR lca!!e Laguna Niguel. with company In the mli off San Diego F'\vy llit Crov.'lt ot equip In tht .!;t,'rv1ce ri,.ld . Guftt Homes 5991 Valle)', ne"· comint'ftild 1c. N1tlan1tl Scopr, 11nlin1lted 11--,-.-E-......,,----ln--co-m-. lndu~triol units. De-Ila Blee-potential. $10.!XXI lnve8tment fort:abl e lk'enffd home for trte. 0"Y3 • 831·1400. Eves. • req. &tCUl"t'd. Start at $27S elderty lAdy. titust M am· 4~198. '"'H'k + shal"l' of pmctt1 & buletory, priva1a r o o 1n, l'l7X'90 CORNER f.1·1. hlo.1. co. benefils. 1~;4, t:xt board It care $13:1. Near iOO' bldg. 191 h Ii \Vhilt~r. A'M'RACTrvE SALO~ 11hups &. park In O>llta ~I~. Co!ltn fltesa S~ mo. Very Rta.OJOnable . • MG--Slll. 6424400 c.au: 962-.,.,.32 t'L.All:. )'Utlt ~'imt •d ""'hen N~O~\~V,-..,L~l:.cAS=1N=·c.',--~N~,-,,,-,.\\1'."1 1 \VM'TED: off-sale liquor t.1:.e' .,.. tookin; -OAll.Y lndnslrial 13511 aqti1u'1' reel. llt.tn...e. Onintc r.Gunl,y. Pfl)rt' ~l•Mifled '42-QSTS Jll'>/mo. A~nl &42·14S.-l Ca.II: &4Ul39 --------r • _J 497-1210 SIJ.000. tst. TD s•ro $\000. 1st. TO 85~ Box P-627 Tilt! Daily Pilot REPAIRS, ALTERATIONf ~~SHIP F~~ CABINETS. Any 1ize job, ::=:=:=;======~ z; ·m. exper. 548-6713 G•rdenlne 66&0 QUALITY Repairs -~Hera--ANTHONY'S -- 6350 tlons . Ne\v const. by hour G "· •-• or Contract 646-3442 ar-n ~rv1ce WANT $20,000 oollateral loan lvilh $50,000 TD on 10 ac:tts oceanview hilltop I a n d . 494-1137 ANNOUNCEMENTS •nd NOTICES . . 646-1941 HOUSElIOLD repairs of all The besl, costs no more! kinds -fast, reasonable. Pt1.1ne Plant Prepatt Bob 615-7!26 l\To~ihb l\fa~ie'nance r.lASTER carpenter, $4 per Exp. Horticulturist hour. Remodeling· Repairs. ALLEN BROS 642-6409 or 536-3900 GAKDENERS STUDENTS v.l)l·king their waY thru rot. Found (Free Ad1J 6400 Cement, Concr•te 6600 1ege. Experlence1o, licensed. FOUND lady's gold \\·atch Sat. afternoor: ~ 1'~ashion Island. Please i d e n I i f y , 54$-J<ln BLACK fe male p u p p y , S c o t e h Tt'IT/Daehshuncl Vic. 30th St. NB 121~~ 30th. Lost 6401 * Re\\•ard * e CUSTOi\I PATIOS e concrete sawing & removal State Uc. • 842·1010 * CONCRl.'TE \\'Ork. bonded ~ lie. Concftte sawtni:. Phillips Cement. 54&-6380 e CONCRETE \\'Ork all l)Q>es. Pool deeks l.:. custom. Call 548-1324 Cement \\.'ork-all kinds f'rec Estimate • 636-0374 .. REAS! 64&-4203 TAKATA JAPANESE ,'iURSF.RY 546-0724. Completl! ga1'dening service. Headquarters for all your nursery needs. WEED control, lr.wn care. light hauling; Exper'd. Jer· ry or Marc; :)4(}-5.580, GARDENING. clean u p, r.to1v lz edge. Call l\.L, \Valter. 642-4-121 --GENERAL HAULING & CLEANUP $12 per load. 962-6846 alter :: P~f Af\lBITIOUS College Boy Has Truck \V iii Haul. Exp. Est. Free. Prompt. 833-607;; HAULING, General, Top. trim, remove trees It hedges. Big John 642--40?.0 Housecl11nin9 6735 CARPETS. \Vindows, fin;, etc. Residen. 01· Comc'l Xlnt \\'Ork lkas! Refs. 54:H111 \YILL1A1.TS CLNG. SERV. Carpets·furn-compl. hse. and apt_ clng, 642..Sl64 e HOUSECLEANING e Excellent '\'Ork. S2.50 hour. Cail 546.5995 e HOUSECl.EANTNG, x I n 1 rclet"Cl'l('(!S. By day or hour. Call 536-2115 --" Income Tax 6740 Lo!!t In Corona de! Mar. Cocktr "-Poodle mi."turt', a.ns"'era to the nan1e of San- dy. Please return, no ques· I.ions asked. Re\\'ard, Phone ~!03 LARG=.E~REW=~AR=D=! CEP..tENT \Votk, no job loo small. rea.aonable. r re e estill)o. H. stuntclt-548-8615 e JAPANESE GARDENER MaJntenance & Cleanup Call 548-2:il2 INCOl\tE Taxt's prepattd your home, long form com. Sml\U bro\\11 &: wht mull , \\'/ red collar. Vic N, Nt\\'()Ort Blvd .• NB. Call 642..3222 or 2225 Canyon Dr. #3. O f. Contr1cton 4620 ADDmONS-REPAIRS REMODELING ~sla:ntng Ii: Plann.ine Kltchen>-Batlu. etc. PLEASE find our dog. Sha.a· Lle'd " Bonded. Free eat. 1Y Blk/\Vht male Cocker A k B CONSTRUCTION Spaniel, "''ar'c Dea collar 1122 Paularino. CM . nnly, Vk: Sturgeon It. 20th * 545--4941 * S.~. Ans "Duke'· Rt\,•ard! AUD-A-Room, apt, units, 54M279 aftns ~ evt!s. eust homes. l\\.'O t1ory D,\QISHUNO •. feml 1 nio 11~11.llst. ftte I a yo u t , Red "''/ hlk t ail clesJan .. '28 Yrs in the "Pun1pktn". Blue oollar, hntdlle!lll. PtcUlc C o a a i Vic Ad~n1it &· ~la;nolit., 118. Bids 673--7191. \Veekdays, ~ .. vard. P I e a 11 e call Sat k Sun •t yuur sen•let 892-9S89 Q u AL 1 TY rcn1odellne. .l\llSSING Cocktail Rina. custom desl&n .ervlct. Reta arts ~·/small diamond•. or; ft'li. Frank M. ~ ic B:tbolll Ill. n !'iO. rew. No O>rultr Co., l-639-lf66 all question!. ~73-03S7. .•_,P_,,"'~--~-~~ ~ bird <lesign pin. Adlll.loM * P.tmodelina: RE\VARD: F'i'ed H. Cen\'\ck. l.k. * * 61:i-6726 • • 61Hi(Ml * M9-2.l'ltl DAILY Pu.or WANT-;;,os DON'T JUST WlSH tor aome Dill 6'2'-56'i1 (.!.:thtrw -!° tum~h yoor home DEPENDABLE: r i n est bincd. $15, 494-34!1- Yard Care. E :<pe rt · 1======='-=== Reasonable. 64:;...1931 Ev-<'l'I I roning 6755 Reliable lA'vn service, mow, edge, trim. JAPANESE Ironing 20t i., • 531-1404 * 2."ic by pieoc. Bring hangen ~"'XPER J&pllnCSt Gardener 64~:; 11.ft 6 pm, , f.1on1hly l!f!rvior-. re• s , Ironing S2 do~n 832--0'lOij or M0-1867 i\ty hon1e. Bring hangers. :~18-4300 JOHN .SON'S Girdening Sci-v. Fines! equip, t xp('rt yllrd r.att:! n taS! 962-2035 C\lt & Edee lA\\'ll :-.tninlcnanee. Llctn~ 54S-40081~2310 art • AL'S Cardenil'li Ser v Ic e l..a\\'ft nialnlcn;&Tl('t. g:u'llcn· mg &: clean upi. 6·1!1--3629. Ct.EAN·UP Spccle.l.ist! M"O;. lni;. edgl~. odd j o b ~ , Rea.>Mblc. 548-GSM JAPANESE Gattlera. pll!ft )'81'11 !W'!Vlt'('. est1rn11•es. ~·~ 1332 rom free CO'.\Jrt1EnciA~ ttt-~-;,1,.n, ti([! lA\vn mJiln1 . l.A11 n & .-~u·agt elE"1tnup. 5'18-.iS19 ) J1nitori1I 6790 -l1ndsc1ping 6110 -------"= LANDSCAPERS ATTENTION I Uf"f'd iandsc:iplnit. and wID ll'<ld{' a 11 11 outbo11rd 1vith bl::: .•rhrt"I I-railer tor your ~('\'ll.1'~. Le1.• get I02'Cthr-1 befflr your bull)' se•~. Phone 61"-4687 -. . --. -·-. . . . . -~~·~----·------. '. SEIVICI DtllCTOllY ,.,..;t.Onglng JOIS a IMl'LOYMINT 1015 a IM,LOYMl l'IT Help wantOcl, -72ilo riot• wa~. ~ n 0o' TllOlday, A,,U 22, lM _ DAILV "LOT,!{ JOllS a fM,lOYM!NTIOIS a IMPLOYMIHT JOIS a llULOYMINT ,~J~O!;IS~·~~l~MP~LO~Y~~T'°~llS!!J&QIM~l'~L~O!!T~MiN!!!J ~as a IMPLOYlillln' °'r"<'''• Wom.. 73GO AQwlos, Women 7'00 Help Wani.d Help Want~ Hotp Wonted Jo~ Mf'!-_ w,...., 75GD Painting 6150 ·~d. !J\t ~ Er.: Lowe1f conti-ac.ted ~ ~l' .... s.u.t.euon ..... "'°" m. Oill J1oJ w .. a. f13-DGS ' ' 1 Y~ F'f'( Cook or 'Kitchen TNI- ITT JllSCO • Employers Overload INT~OR . Paliitinc u )Tl • ffet -EX,T, ANY SIZE JOB. Xlnt wwk; rela:, tree est. JIM. f0-4669, 646-3749 INT. & EXT. Palntln&. All selUjOn rates.}~~ esL _lic'd ~ Ins. cau Charlie. 548-0405 INTER or Ext. PAil'lTING, JMMED. SERVICE. Local ret r·REE est a4S..1621 PAINTING, Papering 16 yn i.'l iflirbor llftJ... Lie .t bond- ed. Rell turn. SU-~ PAINTING & maintenance, interior & exterior, Reasonable rate!. 646-3185. PAINTING ext-in!. Acoust. ceiling. Lie. lnB. 17 yrs exp. Free e11l. MS-5325 -· ' Pcrm1.nen1, lull time job. ChallCt for advancement APPLY IN PDsON . Bob's Bit Boy 1M E. l Tth So-eet Olata Meta PRODUCT ENGINEER Dot•• • J.5 yra. axp. ?tfec.hn.nlcal ena:lneertna: for detlgn and deV!lopmerU of fluid ha.ndlU. pumpt and 1Y1tema. ~porulble !or compt'ete speclfJcatlons for mot.ors, tltiina1, materials, etc. Prefer worlrine know- ledge of motors and l!X{>f'ri· ence Y.1th metals, plulics, and lutomers. TEMPORARY HELP SERVICE S COAST TO COAST & CANADA URGEl'.fn Y NEEDS SECRETARIES TYPIST FILE CLERKS KEY PUNCH OPERATORS & ALL OFFICE SKILLS CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Interviewing Wed. only M PM at 1714 WestcliU Drive, ( ~ block IV. of Dover. Newport.Beach). J oin today1 fastest growirlg professJon-Mutual Fund ules No experience necessary. W• tnJn • full or pJrt tim• Mutual Fund Advisors, An equal opportunity employer. Plastering, Repair 6a80 e P A T CH PLASTERING. All types. Free estimate. Catt 546-"25 ~l..;n::.g ___ ,;,.68:.;90.;; PLUMBING REPAIR 'DRAIN CLEANING 546-2387 or 540-7217 PLUMBING REPAIR No job too small • 642-3128 • Sewlng 6960 • Oressmakini. Alternations Custom Designs *646-&I~• Altlrations-642-5145 Neat, accurate, ~ yn. exp. Trff Service 6980 ESTATE Malnt Tree Serv R@moval & trimmings, tree esi'.. 64Z-0300, 842-2993 Upholstery 6990 Inc. Npt B. 19l3 Weatcll.ft &a.6m s_A. 1212 11. e.-.,. 547-3331 ?t1ANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITY CHEMICAL C:O. Exec\llive type person ..-.no has had experience in ad· ministration. s a 1 e s or businest ma nag e ment. Compensation will be ex- celli nt to the man whtt bu the ability. Fringe benefitft Include insurance, retire- rrent illt'Ome & a luxury car to the man who qualifies. Call 673-&171 SECURITY PATROL Over 40 yrs. Perm. Radk> car provided. Non smoker, drinker. Unilorm all'~. App; 4 PM • 5 PM, Rm 400, 325 N. Broadwa,y, Santa Ana. Paris-Counterman Apply in per1on EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER l~ DALE WAY COSTA MESA. CALIF, 92626 tn4J ~1 1-IALE OR FE?ttALE BUSBOY TOP WAGES AND BENEFITS OVER 18 APPLY Don Qu.Lxotc APPLY AT Mannings Inc, Laguna Hills (Leisure Worldl 831.ffiOO DOCK MASTER Prestige location, exceltefit facilities. Applicant muat be eicperienced, affable & cap- able of comunicating' with private membership. Call Mr. Nyerges at MS-2211 exL 160. FRY COOK Must be experienced Apply in person DENNY'S No. 121 12924 Beech Blvd, Garden Grove BLUE COLLAR Machinist.I, Driver.i, Welden, Factory \\'OrkeMJ & Factory Trainees. Call Bill, 548-7796 Local Jobs. Accountants ARGUS AGENCIES Credit Managers 1869 c Newport Blvd., C.M. Administrative Trnffs DOOR" •N CZY.KOSKI'S Custom D l ' LOCAL JOBS ~ Cphoi''"'" • Europeon ean ew1s Imports CALL BOB, '48-Tl96 PARKING ATTND'T Craftsman . h i r 100% ARGUS AGENCIES Full ot part time, day or eve, Financing. 642-1454. 1831 (Parts Dept) 1869 C Newport Blvd., C.M. 18 or over, lie, Calif. driv- Nf'wport Blvd., C.M. 1966 Harbor Blvd. er. Neat appearance, rtfs. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT -~~C~o...:•...:t•:...:cM...:•::•:c•~-ARTISTS Call 644-1700, ext 555. 4 to Due to expansion the Penny. 6 p.m. Sale1 Repre1entattves · · pl' I==~~~~~~~ Job W•nted, Men 7000 .saver lB accepllna ap 1ca-COOK, Fry-Broil; $20 day $150. Salary tions for part time LAY· startln .. pov, Un'-n n.u.,, EXPER Motel Mgr or Desk Plus commission while In OUT, PAST&UP & PRO--. ~ "' Clerk wanl.!l to relocate training. Fraternal organi-DUCTION Arttsl.!l. Experi· H<>11pital & dental plan. Ap- along ora,ge c 0 a 11 t . zation eslabli.Khed 1897, Ap. _.. 1 "' A 1 1 ply in pel'!IOn ONLY! eni.:-=u pre etT · PP Y n 1-Ioward·s Restaurant Presently managing motel plicants should be over 25. pe~n Wed. thnJ Fri. PEN-400 on Strip in 1..as Vega.oi. Write X1nt management opportun-NYSAVER, 1545 Newpor1 l \V. Coast Hwy, N.B. G. R. Fleming. P. O. Box ity. lfigh income potenUal. Blvd., Costa Mesa. COOKS: Saute, broi1er, relief 14141 Las Vegas, Nevada Call personnel manager. =~'------~ & prep man. See Ernie 89114 615-4570 TALL, young man, H.S. Brock, Toy,'el'S Restaurant, graduate, 5 days a l\'eek "'"" s '-· H • ·-· Job Wantod, Lady 7020 CONVALESCENT AIDE Posilion open in fash-. I Sa • S K I ,,,...,., . ....,.,st wy., '--6"na inc · t "" un. now edge Beach betv."ren 5 •-9 pm io11able Ne""""rt Beach 1 1au· 1· h b · • .. ,,.., o rt is u s 1 n e s s lcloaed Tue ...... ) restaurant for ambitious, helpful but not nee. ~ personable young man, BAYSIDE FISH ~tARKET FIBERGLAS "''Ot'k PRAC. nurse or companion • . _ .. experienced in restaurant 2800 Newport Blvd per1en ... -.:u g e "" ""· I c oat • available lull or part time, pl 1·~ I management. Re y to Neumnrt Beach. 1""'"rg as repa Jong or short ternl. Bonded bo # "~ 1 9 43 / e I d " me n , 'and insured. x giving resume. PLANT EXPANSION 1 MAKERS •• 1 "'"'' Box M-621, The Dlily C.M. ' . ij/Placentia, H_O_ME ______ ~_-_, P ilot. Opportunities for A bl C SERVICE slltio PROFEs.SIONAL t y p i !ii t' 1 ---=.A~R=T~T~IME=-. --• Siem y 1rpent1r1 Bondable, experl n salesman. General Ollice & a 11 Retired gentleman. and Molders 21 yrs. F.V. a specialtie~. Pick u P & LITE MAINTENANCE ··~-LUlffiS BOAT C:O. part time. 962-1 enced, o~ rea, full & deliver. Reasonable rates. 849 W. l.Sth St., C.M. 4 ~ 9 am-12 pm. :.,., pm. S4&-0461l k Th $1.75 per hour. •t~ISTANT MANAGER, SERV. SfA. S 602 9:30 am- DAILY Jlouse wor un;., Contact 1'.Ir. Dinius, fm'·~staurant. Young, neat, Young ni~n, Fri., open. $2.50 hr. 8 hrs. 3141 Harbor Blvd, Costa gd. "personality. ambitious. wk.ends. Must ALESMEN. & eves own tra.nsp. 536-6801 H.B. Mt'sa Exper. not nee. Full time. appearance & 'il!J'f'a Lit Paisano's, Hwitin&ton 2590 Newport Bl be neat in handv.Titing. 'tYPIST, college· student. 7(). ·.-r. , If YOU Harbor. MG-0693 FRY COOK. 80 wpm, accurate. My HARDWARE man for aale1, exp'd, who d vd., C.M. "l.'ng. man, csires .,.._ J:iome/your oHlct, Part· .r;eceiving & pricing. Good w/lul. t'or iJ:I time. 671-2622 aft 3:39 Can manage men and up to p~liical cond ition, 6 day Schierhold ''Mr Iv., i1.r • FUX>RS itrippet. & waxed. $500: per \\-ttk (and morel wee}t. Experienct'd o n" I Y Fairview C.M. ~ Cp't cleaning. 'Valls y,·a.sb-doesn•t scare you too much, need apply. Call Ph YI WANTED : ed. Guaranteed. 531~ ~8f.s590. Mr. Kaplan (TI-4) I ~i!l-o=l~l!l~·=~~~~ Shipping 1; Rece Steak" 2261 Experienced lVllL :sit with, read to} con-1-'~~"'-:=-""'-o-=-YOUNG MAN lnlf'rested in Apply !J.ll am. i vale:scent or blind. Chrful, FRY COOK-relief shift, learning trade-, Musl have SI., Costa MHA iving Clerk. 825 w. l!tb ·non-smoker. $2.hr. &1U1'12 18 or over, experienced. gel. ref's, Gd. pay&: hen's Start S2.00 hr. No phone Steady emplmt. 64fr7721 SERVICE Station Attendant, Domutic Ht lp 7035 ENGLISl-1 Nanny avall Im· med. Live in. Top loc refs. ,·j\.gcy. 642-8703. , Chinese live-ins. Cheerful ,PermanenL Experieoced Far F.ast Aeency 642-8703 George ·Allen Byland A&;ency Employer Pays Fee ', 100-B E. 16th, SA 547-0395 Help Wantod, Min 7200 ' . YOUNG MAN interested in learning trade. Must haw g'OOc1 ttft'rences. Good pay & benefits, &teady employ· ment. 646--1121 ti IX S 0 N Jf/AL FINISHING. ~ER. W&t"thouseman in plumbing I: heatina;. Mr. Dick West. ~7100 please. Apply in person. HIX S 0 N MET AL exp'd, full tim e, Chevron airvie..-.-. C. C.'oltage Coffee Shop. 562 I "'FlN~l,-'SH=fl'l~G~·=~=--Station, 3000 F W.19thSLCostaMesa EXPER I ENCED com-?\1. rienced In Experienced F RY binatlon cook. Apply bet. 9 LABORER, expe 11 '" B e ' cement work COOKS. Apply JOLLY & :..., 11..m.. en rown s prelened. ROGER Pe rsonnel Of. :~t., 31106 S. Coast, Lag ~r 4.~~ flee. 1297 Logan Ave., EXP'D. DONl!I' Uon, Call MAKER Costa Mesa. STEREO & Radio installer. Must know t o o l 1 • Op-Apply Dolly.(). * Exp'd Counterman portunity p Ju 1 . ANH 19148 Brookh Donuts, ti~t St. * Full l.ime driver Instruments, 1749 Newport l1untington Beach CITY AlITO PARTS Blvd, Costa Mesa Full time . .,,. -=="'-"~"-"-ce_n_•_m_. _c._M_. t SHEE1' metal shear " form-STOCK • DELIVER ~fATURE Man, pennanent • ma: operatot. Drill press Ask for Harold - draft exempt. needed by ~ratur, also arc welding. C.M y 495 E. 11th furniture-design store, for ~m>. ask fot C. Bates. delivery, inltallatlom • EXP. Setv\oe Station At· related duties. Exp e r . tendant, full time, Palisades pre.le~. Sa1My o p e n • ca.ti: 49Z-4l3l For App'l Union 76, 1416 Palllades Rd, Santa AM lleighb. • DISHWASHER • KIT· CHEN HELPER. Full time, ASTROTEK CORP. d 1 < •-T 491 E Openings; Lathe mill J.D. ays, ~. ~,. erry, , 17th SL, C.M. 548-9314 1i°0P pay. A-1 machlnist only. 1261 Logan Av, C.M. WANTED ire al So. e SALESMAN Singer Co. lnqu Coast Plaza, Mr or call ~2633 . Devid8on SERV. Man, $120 wk. Penn. Av Sl.2 :xtn YI. + bmus. deliveries. SERVISO 31.!t St., N.B. FT 5116- RY * H'1lp Wantod, Min 7200 --·------·-~.!!~ntod, Min 7200 EXP·o Service StaUon hc!.lp. Apply in penon L & E * DELIVE DR JV ER 540-937 3 ' 'HUGH ES 'N EWPORT BllACH has urgent requirements for SWISS ''scREW MACHINE OPERATORS : th Torno experle~. Ulty to do own 1et· Ups; ls requltf'd. Top dollan for t op men. Opl!nlnat on F1nl and S«ond Shll1s. .PICMe apply In person. HUGHES NEWPORT BEACH hu 8n opening for a DIE MAKER with a minimum of 2 )'C$1'1 or e.cperienct 1n ~lffl rol.1 dJt maklnf. Pic&.'4! apply In pe_non. tt.: Perm., Servi~. "DIG Harbor Blvd, SERVICE Sta. A Co&a Mer.a. 646-55M full time. Urtio EXPERIENCED Tm Olm-Harbor Blvd. C. ber needed ln Blabop, C&llf. LIDO CAR WASH. Eun $3.00 hr. 6TH18t 11th, Costa. Mesa. n Sta, 2248 M, "' E, A.. JJ. 1'pply In pet,ion . ~p Want~ 7200 M~H= .Outbo•r d btwn il4 HUGHES -N E WPORT IEACH ........ ELECTRO- PLATERS -- n noo REA* ............ \.-* IEACH A Girt Tri. Im. Oma Typo, II. 8/H Rtteptlonist, It. tr-.to $500 , II. BkJci>i, S/Jl.,J47S/ Slllfl.Conatr. VA W/tmFIW ....... islO Sec~. public. nla PoUcy Typist w/ train to S350 with a minimum or one fhaur. n tt>r trai .... $30011325 H U G H E S r,ear of cadmium plat-Accll. clerk. type u G H E s ;.:.;.l<JX,:;a;~ '"'"""' ii.RN~ "r' N E WPORT BEACH • •• ' •• $3911 -Agency .M. """'° NEWPORT BEACH 5 1 A ff U G H· E S Help Wantod Ml Sunrrior Avtnut. 500 urier or venue Women N""'°'t 8'M:h, call!. NIWpO<l ll<Och, Calll-N I WPORT I E ACH EQual opportuf'l11,)' ·Equal .opportunity ~ SuPf"J"lor Ave.nur WAJTRESSF.S J ~mplO.)ler -M A F ~mrlo)'rr -~1 A: r Nr \vport Be&c.h, Olli!. apply at ()(f1,·1 rcw Dally Pllol Want ML Equal oftPOrtuf'llty SI., Cmlta Mesa OW fW™1t ID!?:l~~GWG11~~_t:tor~llES~~U~L:!TS~· 1i.,,;;'m9"11i"'ii"',;..iiMi.i4o.!r!!!!ll DfaJ '4U61I for 7400 ·- or t ll shltls: , 212 E. 171h RESULTS •· Hefp Wanted, _'If!_ 7400 CLERK TYPIST Immediate op!ninc for a clerk typist to work within our purcha&ine department • ta perlorm such clerical functions as typlna purchase ordl!n, filfng and postlnc. Must be able to type accUI'- ately. We will accept appli- cations with a minimum ot six months clerical working experience. Good ata.rtlng salary and bvleflts irJclude 12 day1 vacation durina first year oI ~ployment. varian data machines A VARIAN SUBSIDIARY 2712 Michelson Drive (AdJ. Orange Co. Airport) Irvine, Callf. 92664 An ~ual opportunity employer M &; F *HOSTESSES* DAYS and NIG llTS Apply In person REUBEN E. U:E 151 E. Pacific Cst. Hwy. Newport Beach FEMALE CLERK Apply In PerlOn Drive In liquors 706 Pacific Coast Hwy Huntington Beach TELLER Savinp: & loan needs 1irl for Tellt'r I New Accounts Clerk. Working expet1ence and good lyplst prelerred. Excellent worklng condl- tlo111. Apply World Savl~ & Loan, 292 ~, Coast Hwy, Laguna Beach. NAT I 0 NA L Corpora.lion desires neat, attractive, well qualified e x e c u t I v e 1ecretary lor Vice President Sales & General Sales Mgr. for new offlce11 opening In Nev.'J)Ort Beach Financial Plua, N.B. \\.'rite c/o Box No. 352. Dally Pilot COMBINATION, Sharp Bar Maidl I: Go Co Dancen. Top wages $3.Q0.13.50 lo start. Ph. for int. ~9983 SASSY LASSY, 2901 llarbor. C.M. BAR maid, no experience lleCCSllllrj, d•y & night 1hHt. Apply Vikki's Lounge. 17911-' Nt'wporl B l v d . Between 10 & 6 pm. No phone cal111, * CORE WINQEJI Mechanical apt. Knowledge of Cractions & decimals.' Gd. "" hen's. App: 853 Pro- duction PL, N,B, YOUNG lady "" Ii g h t dellV1!ry, own transporta- lion. Apply 14.15 N. Coast Hwy, Rm ·~ Lac Bch. . .....,,,. HOUSEKEEPER, u .. In. Motherless home. _,h area. 2 teenagers. Prefer under 45. 531-1451 EXP'D """"' & ""'"" woman wanted. Arpy's Cor- fee Shop. 30'll 8 J{arb)r Blvd. LIVE-IN or out babysitter, for 4 children. Lite hie- keeping. Ret1. Send re11wne to Box P ~7. Dlt.!Jy Pilot. OLDER \\'Oman care for 2 children, room A: boa.rd, fZJ/ wk. 494-1363, frt&.8001. HSKPR llw In to help moth- er, a children. Corona de! Mtr. fi75.4552 ews. MAID, full time, pleasant 1urroundlng1. L"auna Betch, 494-ll911 W Al'ITEO' MOTEL fdAIDS. OVtr 25 . 5 day week • ""85n Beaut)' open.tor tull mo pa.rt tlw , Balboa I.atam. ** m.3701 ** JAl'lrroR Vitamif!ll f.lfg, plant (or appt. call 6*-3931 EXF'..CUTTVt_; SECREl'ARY, Capable or takll'lfl: dJct1Uon S4fl-93T.! JJY&-IN 001npanlon. non amoktt or .drlnhtt. PJr.uant 1m1TOUndlnp. 962.-6224 F'OR f'l<IM'\y ..... ""'' mesh, .. ., nights; '°"" term; Ute hlework. 8n.-s284 w-n 7400 w...... 7400 w-7400 -'""'"c;.;.~~--'--'1-~~~-~-- H Ol&L INSl'I CTltUS (Day SllHtl MAIDS (Doy a Night Shift) SECRETARY A llVNinK computer com- pany, locatat in new air COlldltioned facilities o1 the Irvine lndu.strtaJ Complex, For Jarae, lwnny hotel. AP-hall IUl Immediate openlna; ply to boulekecpln& dept. for a Ae<.'ttllry to Engineer- ina Admlnb:tntor. THE You &hould ha"' •""' &hort· 'NEWPORTER INN .... and """'" oklli., with ... 1107 Jamboree Road from tv.'o to four years Re- Newp0rt Beach retaria.I work experience, ---------1 We prefer a mature, re1pon. Rl'S ·KU atble Pf:l'IOll with the abillb' to hani!le a number or cltr- lcal and adminislraUon du. ties. Exoellf:nt work:in& oondiUons, abo\'e averaie aa1ary aM Good •tartin& rate and an ex· frin&e ~eots Call perao~ oellent compal\)' benelit nd dept. bel' 1:30 am • 5 proaram tncludina; twelve pm0 Mon. thru Frt. 521.7744 ~· vacation durlne fint year ol employment and a Christmas to New Yean poliday vacation. Stanton Community Hospital J . W. RobinlOll Has Openings for: • SILK FINISHER • Full time poflition. Excellent company bentllta. APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. Fashion Island Newport Bea.ch Equal opportunil)' employer * WAITRESS EVENING INTERVIEWS MAY BE ARRANGED Varian · Data Machines A VARIAN SUBSIDIARY 2n2 t,\lch1lson Drive (Adi. Ora nge Co. Airport) Irvine, Calif. 92664 An equal opportuhity employe:r M-F Assei1iblers ' URGBm.Y NHDm •• • Clerlcs • Typists • Rtpro Typists • S.Cretarl~ • Keypunchers • PIX Open. • Assemblers Work wMn &. wher• you wa'ntl lllllRIM PERSOMNR SERVICE 445 E. 17th St. Costa Mota, Calif. 641·7523 Interview ing Mon. thru Fri. a a.m . to 5 p.m. Equal opportunity emplO)'l'r ARTISTS DU!! to expansion the Panny. saver Is accepting apptlca. tlon.o; for part time LAY- OUT, PASf&UP & PRO- DUCTION Artists. Experl- efle@d preferred. Apply in person Wed thru Fri. PEN- NYSAVER, 1545 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa General Office Experienced preferred. Good workJng conditions. Fringe benefits. We have an immediate need APPLY IN PERSON Busy Hotel Collee Shop. 6 Aft -2 PM. Must be experi· enced. Apply In person only. for electronic assemblers with a maximum of 1 yr. KIRK'S JEWELERS exp. 2300 H1 rflor Blvd. Abilities Unlimited Agency FEMALE l!xM:utlw Secretary · from $621 1'1usLJiavJ tqp akllla. Executive S.Crt'tary MGO Orana:e Count,)' AJrport .ma. S.Crllary $500 Prefer under 30. Nurs e• Aide to $521 Personable and able to work with children. L191I S.Crotary $450 Type 80 plus wpm, legal 1 f'X{)('rience not nects· ..,., Secretary Production Control $450 Intere1Ung poglUon. Insurance secretary $411 50 wpm typlng, 90 abort,.. hand Escrow SteM Trainee to $400 E:x~llent opportunity THE NEWPORTER INN You mus t be willina; to work. Cotta Mesa On the ht &h1tt from T:30 •-II a.m, lo 4 p.m. Knowledge of """"""""""""""'" Typi1t $315 Law firm, UOT Jamboree. Road Newport Beach MANAGER I'~ J I"<i l119al Secreta,.Y Trainee from WS Light shorthand a: dlct· a.phone. FEMALE color code, component parts & soldering ~ mandatory. Good starting rate + excel- lent bcnelitft includlng 12 days vac11t\on during the ht year of employment Varian Data 1J% 11.llNDl1'$ • hr•JINI Art..., .noo c-.,111 o •. • 11 .... _, ,_,. Receptionist -'-,_ Ot#Olfl C•""'.J Air,.,, For PICKWICK FASHIONS, Fa.shion lsland, N.B. Mod- erate to bettt'r sporta wear & apparel for the ''new adult". Salary + bonus. Machines Call or write Mr. Guttman, A VARIAN SUBSIDIARY 33 Fashion Square, Sherman 2722 Michelson Drive Oaks, Ca1if. 91403. (213) {Adj. Orange C.0. Airport) 872-1048 Irvine, Calif. 92664 Sharp Carffr G1l1 An equal opportunity Sectys, Cleric Typists. Gal ___ •_m_p_l<>Y<_•_M_·F __ Frida.l-'.. Reclita. Bkkpn, RN1 .\ LVNs. Both fee & fee paid jobs. Top co'1! Call Doris, 548-1796. Local jobs. ARGUS AGENCIES 1869 C Newport mvd., C.M. *WAITRESS* 18 to 35, neat appearing. F\111 time. No experience necessary. Apply in person BOB'S BIG BOY lM E. 17th, C.M. lkkpr/Secy Challengina: job mature &:: steady apply 1750 Newport Blvd., C.M. SEVERAL OPENINGS for women in Housdteeping Dept. of PARK LIDO Convalescent Hospital 1445 Superior Ave., N.B, 642-2410 SARAH COVENTRY has opening& for full or part time Wes. Min. age 18. Pleasant work, no invest, oo deliveries. For interview call. 541).{)614/ 837-4749/ 847"'950 LOVE """"' a cute gb-1 under 23, who ls a 1uper typi11t, can lake shorthand I. is able to work in the store onee in awhile. LOVE, 3041i Marine Ave., Balboa bland. JAMAICA INN HOTEL needs 2 more maids, full or part lime. Age 25 or over. Apply in penon 2101 E. Coallt Hway., Corona del Mu MOTHER'S helper in vt• change for room & board. Spanllh 1pk'g OK. Mesa ,.mle area. 5G-131)t DENTAL a111 l1tant, chalnkle, under 30, Hu~ tlngton Harbour. Call Mon or Tuel. M6--061T COOK for sm11ll kitchen h1 cocktail lounge. call lor appt. between 10 am & 6 pm. 642-2826 HOUSEKEEPER • child c::are:, live.in; prtv. rm. • ba., n.r1. $50 Wk., S'ii: ~ wk. 540-W RELIEI' COOK Experienced, tor convok~ cent hospital. 642-8044 DENTALChalr-slde AssiStalll Exp'd. H.B. OF· FICE. Call 96'J.3ll9 TELEPHONE tollcitoQ ex• per. Wark at home • no 1ell- ln1 top dGLl&r. <2131 m-xm DENTAL --,,.,,. fine wor~ condltlom, xlzl:t ·~oaltry.- BABYSITTER . lite houtekeeplng. my borne, '1 ta 4:30 wk-di.YI. own trana. $40. wk. MS--0962.. Aft 4:1>. ruu. t I m e , experienced •nkr aa'OW clM. P.O. Box 100, ·kn aemente l1IE QUloa:R YOU CALL, mE QUICKER YOU SEU. r EXPERIENCED -. e ESCROW e SECRETARY UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK 3141 E . Coast Hwy Corona del Mar 673-9240 Eq1N opportunity employer EXPERIENCED STENO UNITED CALll'ORNIA BANK ' 3029 Harbor Blvd. Costa Me.sa . "~'°" Equal opportwtUy employer ' STORE Managt!r; te.rr1Iic opportunHy to Join fut growing, medium priced women's apparel, fashion specially 1hop chain. Must have previous women ' 1 numagerial cxper. See: Mr. Berohn, Chris' I 9821 Cha~ man Ave., Garden Grove. * MATIJRE SNACK BAR GIRL. Pref. age 2:5 or over. * CASHIER-HOSTESS. * WAITRESSES. Exp'd, and ov•" 21 APPLY in PERSON BETWEEN 1-4 P.M. 1101 GoU Cout'!e Rd.. C .M. 77 YR. old blind man wants competent woman to OC· casK>nally clean trlt, oook a meal, drive sm. car; 4 hn., 4 times a week. S36-0068 SEAMSTRESS experienced power machine operator. NORTH SAlLS, 9U Elec- Irk, Seal Beach. (213) -WAITRES.SES Da.Ys. Yng lady for family ftst. Exp. p~f. App ln per. Thun. "Mr Steak" D3'1 Fairview Rd. C.M. H.lpW1-w-7400 HUGHES NEWPORT BEACH KEYPUNCH OPERATOR With• minimum ()f one raeu·s vcperSellCI .. ~f equipment. HUGHES N E WPORT IEACH !SO() Supttlor A vtnu11 l'lewpor\ ll<Och, cal~. FA;uai OOl'()Ttuntt~ employer -M A r j PllOtW 546-llll Girl Ff!lday $375 Some accounts receiv-Please Call For able and accounta pay· An Appolntni.ent. !!!!!P ll able. SAW (IJ:RK R1<1pt ionist $315 Good telephone, 11 g ht typing, Huntington Beach Aroo Sellin&: exper, necessary Full time employment, company bene!ita. App. al aen. otficet PALM STATIONERS 1604 S. Harbor Blvd • Fullerton, Cali.I. Work Near Home e Accounting/Bkkpg • Secretarial • R~ption •T>Pt.i. Superior .Agoncy Established 1946 1857 Harbor m, Costa Mesa Call lint 642-71(1 TEUfR CdM. Experience PreferrM 67S.501D See Bett;y Bruce at mi66Gxec .. ""YforC......G!m 410 W, Coast Hwy., N. B. By appoint. -SECRETARY Auistant to owner Near Orange County Airport. Sborth&l\d 100-UO, ... Ing 10- 80. Salary based on expert.. ence. Call 546-0038 PART TIME RECEPTIONIST With i eneral o~ee duties. Under 30. Ph: 675-6100 POWER MACHINE OPERATOR SAil• by Schock 501 29th Street, N.B. * 675-1823 * TRAINEES . Sportswear factory. Xlnt. opportunity. Knowledge of :sewtrw euen- llal. Apply 4001 G., Birch St., N.B., 1 blk. E. of O.C. ...... LOCAL I a w firm. miuires part time typist ior automa. tic typewriter. Eves pf'&. lemd, houn to be arrane- ed.m9900 C:OMBINATION, Sharp Bar Maids Iii Go Go Denctts. Top ...... 13.00-$3.50 lo start, Ph. for Int. 545-9983 SASSY LASSY, 2110l Harbor, C.M. MEDICAL Exp'd b 111 I a I clerk 4 lite bookkteper for medlool tacllf.,_ Send re111me P. 0. Box ZS. South 1.qwla. DRAPERY operate.., txp'd, • ..-. Cluo1& Drl>triel. "'3 Birch SC. 11. e. • 541-tm • SALESLADY. Experle- QO!y. For bal!eey. -l\EAUTlaAl'I Nl!eded lo take owr dlentele. f1S.aSS di.ya, A tVff l4&-460l 0 PERATORS-Sp1c. machine. Cool ""'· st..a,. G!'rment factory. &U-a W AfM\.QS wanted Apply tn Penon. Mel& I.Ants, 11'03 Supt:rlOt Ave., CM. I . F 111 Clerk $300 Hi&h achoo! graduate. 10:30 am to 6:30 pm shift. Coder Keypunch TralnM $346 Good opportunity. Commercial Multllln• Rotor $433 Age 25 or over. Data Proceuor $450 As:e 21 to 35. Minimum ohe year alpha numeric keypunch. MALE Personnel Director to $1241 mo. Must be degreed plus three years experience. Admlnlllratlve Tr•I-to $1DO Muat have deirff. Store Mo .... , Trill-MG0 Prefer married, between 25. 35. Branch Man•r TralnH $4.50 Prefer aggressive young man. Blueprint Oporollr from $3. hr. To train for Aulatant Manager . Shipping & R-IY. Clerk from $2.0S hr. Lota ot overtime. Route S.le1man to $1 ....... Excellent opportunlt:J. Chemical Tochnlcl ... Clork from $2.50 ~, High 1Cbool cbemlatry ttquh'ed. ' Car lotm•n - Prefer qld~ man. Kffp autos clean. · Janlllr $J.25 hr. MUlt be bondable. Abilities· Unlimited Agency 411 E. 111 SL s.He zz' Cosll Mesi· 6'2·1,70 • I· I ,t,t DAILY Oll.4T JOllS &!Mi Premier PWONNll. AlilHCY 4U L 1M St. C•ta MIN -· 111M l. 17th St. Saftt1 Ana 541..tnl MALE Appllc1nt Poy1 fff Laminators $4. hr. Experience in laminating re- quired. Po&tion often excel- lent cpportunity lor ambiti- ous man. R1frigtr1tion Mechanic $3.50 hr up Need somecne .,.,.Ith experi· ence in air conditioning. Own tools, will install and re- pair. Salary depends on ex· perienoe. lnvtsti91tor Trolneo $.1.50 hr Investigative or police be.ck- ground helpful Know 16 mm camera, Will train in thrir """""""'· Lib T och $550 2 yeen college math-physics 4 chemiitry. Military com- plete, medwrical aptitude. Chief ln1pec:tor to $700 Know sheet metal and pa.its Jeclion. Familiar with mil specifications. Some expe1·i- ence in mechanical field. Handyman $85 wk To start. Recondition rental equipme11t, know some car- pentry, el.ectrical. painting, "" Ttch Train1t $2.50 hr Good electronic backg1'0Und required, Will train to test equipment, military com· plete. Offlct M•chlnt Mtch1nlc to $800 Experience in repairing type- writtn, adding machines, calculators and other~oHi« equipment. Salary depends on ability. Tr•de Trainns $2.75 hr Learn a trade at a good sa..1. ary. Mechanical aptitude, ma.chine operations and weldlng. FEMALE fff RolmburlOd Stat Socty to $550 Type 60 IBM electric, short- hand IK), Will be typing in- surance fonns, answering phones, filing. fff Split Stcretary $500 Background in real estate, &Ome statistical typing. Type "'· """""""' 80. Applicant Pays Fte Property P•ckage Underwrlttr $600 One year experience aa in- surance undenvriter or two years experience any kind of unduwritina: tire & ca- IU&lty Policy Typist Tr<1inff $350 Type 60, numben tio;.< touch. train for polioy typing. An excellent opportunity for oktrer womtn. Rocpt/Typiot $365 up Type 50, 10 key adder. SmaU -lighl bookkeep"'<, teaci> PBX Escrow Stcty to $450 Type 50, !horthand 80. Clfle ~ experience working in e8Cl'OW. WW be typing es- crow inrtn.tctiona: and cleri. <&I worl<. Fiio Clerk Trneo $216 $"4" tall, flllna: only. Excel· kilt cpportunity 10 advance to bttteT Job in the com---Typiat to $500 .. " -. -;. ---~--.. :,:,; ~ --.-.-.. ~. -.-;..:_~-;.;..· ;;-_-;...;-;.;··-··-;;;·.:;-;;-::-=:;:.:::;::;::;:.:::::::::::::::::;:;::::;: ... -:-;;:.-.--.. :-::"":-.:.-'I--:-. -;--, .-. -.-. :.. ; ... -;. -: · .:...---·-----·-• TUfldq, Aprq n, H69 Ju~ r. •-YLO T ,; r. EMPLOYMENT MERC:HANDIS! FOR MERCHANDISI FOR ~~~E .f?D!STI ."!'.,R1 MIRCHANDISE fOlt MERCHANDISI FOR FREE TO YOU SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE ~ -.._ SALi AND TRADE SALE AND nADE J School .. lnstNdlon 7600School1-IM1!'V_dlon 7600 bl!< ' ~--· Furt1ltt1re IOooFumiture IOOO ~~Or..,. 1130 Mlace111neou1 l600MJSHll•neout 8600 i:ee~L;l.x,smyr ~~~· lo\'t's ~ 117 J \.'I: J e N,w ~--e li:iiiiiiii. iii. iiiii~. -~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiml ~,.';"'""· '""'d yd~}';; Michael John Whlltemore .. 1995 lrvine Avenue Costa Mesa, California r-' M.:i:=~n ~ ~mJk!§] F U R N I l U R E :,,g~~~~~ lng at $499, Carob. (Eastbluil) NB 4122 ~~HO!T~~~~e~~Jyping ,:;u:~:,..'=~t•;:~:1~: Piaao8eren:Swop~t,, bi'1 A u c T I 0 N ~~~ ~al:~~·1e!J: Costa Mesa, California 8, w:J•:V!d°':.:, ~n".°\'g. ::rs chair Wurlitzer Organs ~ ~ 1>omo wl ,:'{,. Dear Miss Chilcoat : or love seal 5 Pc Octagon dark oak din set Many other . makes. Many TO GOOD homes, Am;tr. w/black or avocado framed chairs; 8 Pc BR =• at"~.ni&hca. Price.s TUES G T Dingo Pups, 5 n1os. Real r am fifteen years old. BEFORE NOW l set. 9-dr Mr. & Mrs. dresser. lg mirror, 2 EVERYTHING lN MUSIC . DAY . NI H Teddy Bears. S39-1521 allf'r DIDN'T REALIZE HOW EASY IT WOULD BE commodes, decorative headboard in Spanish Beach M , ( 3 PM 4124 TO LEARN HOW TO TYPE. I ALWAYS oa k design with matching box springs, mat-USIC enter I NEED • "'w hOm•. My THOUGHT IT WOULD TAKE A GOOD YEAR tress & !tame. · 7 p M SHARPll ownen< ,,. ,u,,..;, "'""· AND A HALF TO LEARN TO TYPE, AND ltemt Sold lndividu1lly Factory Sales &: Service Altered female, an shots. THEN IT WOULD BE A MONOTONOUS, Shop Around -Bef<>re you buy --USI-oa;ty 12 ""'" 'Ill 9• Sat g.; '!, • __ •• 4>1-2797 4/24 KNOCK DOWN, DRAG OUT, FIGHT. But Mlss VALUE $1095.95-FULL PRICE $529.95 f~~1~~~ ::~diii!;0'1!'. SMALL, lovable tilack dog, Chilcoat YOU HAVE DEVISED THE MOST IN-or ttrms •slow 11 $4.66 ptr wffk Huntin&ton Beach 847-8536 Inspect EARL y abt. 1 mo's old, female, gd. GEN lOUS WAY TO LEAR.N HOW TO TYPE. Use Our St0<e Charge Plan or Bank Financing A W S II 9UICKL y1 w/ohildreo -need• •P-My mother rs so enthused with your method that No Fancy Front -BUT Quality Values Inside ':~';!:,; ~;day,,.;,;; 5 e • • predate hOm•. 64-1--0442 <n< she is going to send my sister to you next sum-ot an makes. Best buys i.n LAB./Dant': male, x l n t mer. MY MOTHER HAD TO GO THROUGH . • • • • So. CaHL right here. AOK Commission Gallery w/ohHdre"' good w•!chdog. THE HIGH SCHOOL METHOD AND YOU SCHMIDT ~rustc co., Needs la1-ge yard. M&-7MS. KNOW HOW THAT IS (ICK). THEY REALLY • I007 N. Ma;n. 7722 GARDEN GROVE BOULEVARD Call all<' 6 PM. 4124 OUGHT TO TEACH YOUR METHOD IN Santa Ana 1 Block West of Beach Blvd., off G.G. Frwy. ~UEBIRD uniform, size 7, SCHOOL. • . THE BE~T DEALS includes skirt, blouse. vest • : • • ' 1 On P ianos & Organs ----• and suspenders, 54(}.8638 TO THE ABSOLUTELY MOST PATIENT S r1· Good 1500 M. 11 1600 <tn Are Always Al po 1ng _ _1 ---· _ "ce 1neou1 _ TEACHER I HAVE EVER HAD THE PLEAS-I ~~~~~~~'\""~~~~""'!'~ 2 UNUSUAL ku '"'" URE TO HAVE. 1' -----SURFBOARD * AUCTION * 1'ained and,:..~".'~""; Furniture 8000 Stwi~g_Ma~~~'!..." -~20 \VARO'S BALDWIN SI'UDIO E.xcellent corxl, JO St. Russell, u you will sel! or buy 5 please. 646--4698 4/24 Michael John Whittemore SPANISH Returned from '68 SING ER, Zii-zag, auto. l80l Neivport, C.M. &42-8484 :;-te~~ for beginners give Windy a l~· KI'ITENS: FluUy 1v h l I e , Model Homes on sale at with walnut callinel. Take CONN ORGANS · ' a Auctions Friday 7:30 p.m, Gray ~~ Pers. & sold Blk. -===='"'=====,-:=========I less than wholesale! Group Ovt>r 5 J>)'ITlnts, $7.25 mo. ALL MODELS * RIFLE, Browning Auto Windy's Auction Barn Hsbrkn, weaned. 592-1596 ~ includes beautiful 96'' Call 526-6616 anytime. 30-06 (new). Make offer. Jobs--Mtn, Wom. 7500 Agencies, Men & quilted sola & Jove seat. NEW & USED 213-S92·l787. Behind Tony's Bldg f.lat'L 3 UGLY kittens, 6 weeks old, HiTEL DESK CLERK- CASHIER Heavy ~pel'ience on NCR 4200. Good salary, 5 days. Apply in person. Only experienced nCC"d apply. THE NEWPORTER INN 1107 Jambc:fte: Road Newport Beach 644-1700 NOW IS THE TIME This prcxluct not only sells itself, but is non-competi· tive! It YoU think $250. per week is big money you are in for the shock of your life. (That's only part time) Call t.tr. Kaplan all day & even- ing (TI4) S.17-8590. DISHWASHER TOP WAGES AND FRINGE BENEFITS APPLY AT MANNINGS, IMC. Womtn 7550 3 Spanish oak decorator Musical Inst. 8125 Hear the NEW 3 Manual! --2075% Newpoprt, CM.646-8686 !rained. 5 4 6 -913 8 e~;~ ··-t<'.b!es, swag or table lamps, Gould Music Company Miscell1neou1 8600 GIBSON J-50 :.,'""'°•'·==~--,---..,----,., newport . personnel .. , agency wall placque, king, queen. Guit1r He1dquarters 2045 N. Main, SA 5•17--0681 ·u.. u,.m hell GER/SHEP. 8 wk. female or fuU size lledroom sui1e • NE\V and USED • GI BScfN J -50--G.E. dishwasher $75. Washer S320W1 ""t'""~ case.. puppy loves chi Id re n · I · I bo · F -~ e V e St d-' d b I ood) 11r.n new, ~ or 0 er ""o ~29 <124 comp cle inc x springs, euuel' ox an .,. with Hart.:shell case, eyer, com g ...,.,. Eric, 675-5160 alter 6 PM. """""""" mattress, linens & boudoir • GIBSON • MARTIN $320 new, $200 or offer. Naugahyde chair, good $50. QUAL. Kng 8. •-• / FEM. Blk. Cocker.Terr. Had lamps, Spanish oak 6 pc •WILSON • YAMAHA Etic,675-Sl&Jafter &PM Naugahyde recliner. . lZe ucu w sholS, good watchdog , dining set priced f'lsewhere Drum Headquarters vibrator $50. Adler zig-zag, quilted matt·, complete 642--8848 .C/2~ $]195 00 ALL • NEW -• USED e PIANO, Baldwin Acro90nic. M I b. t · Never used $98; worth $250. ·~~~-,-,--,---;,-,=:;:-at approx. , . , auu · ape ca 1ne s e w I n g 847 ~~ 3.:il YR. o!d male Collie, Professional Service 1'"'0R ONLY $399. $20 down, LUDWIG, ROGERS, ASTRO Contemporary walnut, like machine, cost $336, now -vsvu n d for th •• mploy.r $, 99 k 1 1 La 1 . .lh ncY.'. 968-4947 aft 6 pm. Pd 1125 "'" "°'" CARPETS. v· 1 Til 1 1 lows childttn, nee s coun-~. per .. ee , ou o rge se ecllon w1 new 4 · tn-..oou mys, es, a· try yard. &12-9171 4/26 and the applicant slate credit OK. W i 11 pc, sets with cymbals start,. Sl200. Asking $6?5. NE\\'PORT Beach Tennis est styles and colors. Com-. 833 Dover Or., N.B. separate for quick sale. 20th ing at $99.50. Pcdab, hi-hats BEAUT Antique White Baby Club f.1embership for sale. mercial & Residential, Ex-100 SQ. Yards St. Augusj;: 642-3870 549-2743 Century Furniture, 9 7 7 2 and sets repaired. All small Grand Piano. Will sell $700 Save $200. Call 1-1 arr y pert installation. grass you remove. =========I Garden Grove BI v d . , parts , acessories & cymbals or part trade on good spinet. Butler, ~82-3882 0 r 642-1403 54().7262 Parsons St. 548-2898 4122 Schools-Instruction 7600 Garo.en Grove Daily 11).9, in stock. 5484801. Y.Tite, 1956 East Bancrott, e VACUUMS e CHIHUAHUA, pure bred, Sat 10-6. Sun 12-5 Come EVERYTIIING IN MUSIC PIANO TUNING & Repair Camarillo, Calif. SlO up. Repairs & parts. darling 8 "'k. I em a<I e26. in or call (TI4J 53G-S240 Beach Music Ce fer Expert. reasonable! GIRI.£ bicycle, good l.'00-Reasonable. Coast Vacuum, 642--0239 J Tht Newport 20 PC. ''MADRID'' . n Albert Aarness 615-S967 d\Uon, $15. 333 E. 17th, C.M. 642-1560 KITIENS. free to good School of Business .; l R G Fl\ctory Sales & Se.rvlce KIMBALL Consolette piano. 549-0046 STAUFFER R d .-home. Trained. 6 wks old FEA'I'URES: OOnl roup Daily 12 noon 'tll 9, Sat 9-5 Light finish; like new $675. PL.ATE gi.a!s show-ease, 4 MACHIN~ uc1ng 9624775 4/22: •e ~:=~.~. ;"',~~~t' fnFROI d M MQOullDE1~_, HOME1 S •~ 11404 Beach IDvd .• (Hwy 39) 54&-9688 shelves, 5x2x1'. $75. Call 548-47Sl NEED gd. hon1e fenced yd. ..... cu es: "'-' &o a <>< l 'h ml. So. San Diego Fwy. -•· ** 673-4241 ** for Jov. male beige Bird •Brush up Gregg Sh, chair -2 end tables & col· Huiitir.gton Beach 847-8536 Radio 8200 UPHOI.SI'ERING _ (Eu~ EARLY Amer. couch & chr. Dog, Jge breed. 835-216.14/24 • Modern OUice procedure r~ table -2 lamps -dress-• ~-----pean craltsmen) Free est., 2 _e~. tables. coppertone FREE CAT. 1 year old • Letter writing skills er -mirror -headboard -Pl1no1 & Org1n1 8130 SCRAM-LETS df'~, pickup, 215 f.lain, HB Fr1~a1re, mod; tables & female, calico, al!ered & Your goals can be achiev-quilted box spring & matt-cha1r, etc. 546--0653 has shots. 54~296 eves. ed in a minimwn of 3 ress _ 5 pc. dining room; ONCE A YEAR Bernard's Uphal. 53&-6405 weeks, maximurn 6 table & 4 hi·back chairs. WURLITZER ANSWERS MIRACLE Sauna, xlnl cood. KITTENS born f\1arch 11th weeks. Ask for Nona COMPARE AT $749.9S PIANO & ORGAN SALE ' $150. 310 22nd St., Costa Misc. Wanted 8610 need home & love. 1-Jo(fman at 642-3870 lor $399 New Pianos from ...... $579 Invite _ llaven _ Opium Mesa. 548-5842 $ W-E BUY $ 545-6519 4/24 full particulars. N p nl $ 6 New Organs fron1 ...... $699 -Fumble -MEAL Tif.IE. NEW conipl set Great Books. KITTENS. rree to you: THE NE\VPORT 0 dO\vn-mis o Y 1 mo. \VHY BUY USED" · Hu sband's complaint: Value $.100. t.1ake otter. $ FURNITURE $ beaut. 6 1\·eeks c Id . SCHOOL Of' BUSINESS WELK.'$ WAREHOUSE Open Mon & Fri eves '!ii 9 "Some men repent wbcn Uwy Zl3-$92.l781, APPLIANCES 54~6 4124 833 Dover Dr., Newport Bch. e Rental Pu1-chase P lan e marry in haste, especially at SEARS Ex lik C•lo• TV'•-p,·,,,.,_,,,,,,., POODLE _ Te1T. r-.tother &. 6 Govld Music Company MEAL TIJ.tE. 4-22 ercycie, e new ~ 1 1y -• ood ;-;==='""-""'=-1600 W. 4th St., Santa Ana ~========[ $45, I 'i•c• or House Full ove young pups"'-'· g LIFETIME Gift, Open Dally 9-9 2045 N. Main, SA 547-0681 -Call aft S. 494-9509 CASH IN 30 MINUTES homes, 642-5808 -4/22 ~~~':en,Co~iyl!~~l~; Sat.9-6 Sunll-6 SPINET WURLITZER, Sporting Goods 8500 e FIBE & Burglar Alarm • 541-4531 • 2 YR. old toted. sized male •·~~ RD f\IRNITURE walnut & leather wilh Systems installed as low as dog. Has tags&. shot!, fami· Ind Iv id u a I I Y tutored bench. $325. 548-7668 SCUBA equ.ipment i n cl , $99. Call "'" "'90 Luskey Criss-Cross Direc-ty pet. 642-2124 4/'ll. Chilcoat 10 lessons typing 1°" Newport Blvd CM d t 16 ""w--.J't .__, N Be -... ,, un er "'a er mm camera. ""'1es • ewport ach, San FREE to good borne 6 cult' :;~285.9 113 Del Mar, CM, every night ti! 9 DAD...Y PIUYI' WANT ADS! Make offer. 549-1339 DAILY Pn.crr WANT ADS! Clemente. -492-43.17 . ..n... B I -W d Sat & SU 'ti! 6 ~========~"'=ii"'=iiii====~ puppies, _., ea g P.. e ·• · n -546-7610 .f/22 NURSES Aides are ~~d! Furniture returned from dis-Mlscellantout 8600Mi1cellaneous 8600Mitctll1neovs l600Mi1c1ll1neou1 8600 Comp!, accred, trng &_ ~b play studios, model homes, -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~12 ADORABLE ltittens, "·ean-• plcemnt. NuTiiCs Tra1n1ng d-·••--.. -llatioo. • ed, trained, shots. 646-4698 Laguna Hills !Leisure World) ""V' """' ........... alt 11 kd .f/22. 837_0090 Institute 4016 \V. Com· Spanish & Mediterranean etc • M; er 1>1, wee ays REAL=you~be~EST=,.=,~~~-°i~heSho~,"::~:-;1·1 1 ~:~Ith, Fullerton. l-t ~2~0~P~C-. ~M~O~D-E~R-N-CURTIS I C I M I MATHES La::;: :.~:hL ~7' I< area Huntington Beach'!' PIANO. J..e.ssons: _The wry 3 ROOM GROUP .. .. 1 BED spring le mattress. Nr Call Phil McNamee Village ~~ mstruchons. Call Includes: )"Ioral IOfa & chair Bristol&. Warner. 549-2309 REal Estate 962-44n or -~----~--1 · walnut tables -lamps • TELEVISION FREE kittens. 673-4236 .C/22 54°'103 GOING To Europe this year'! "" plet •-•--·1h quilt ......, .. vm e ui:uruum WI AFf.ECT. mature female Brush up your French ed mat•-s pc ,, __ ,,_ EXPERIENCED d i n n e r r:onversalion in my class. el" All"r'.!'. •• • · \W"' u::, Siamese cat. 546-9850 .C/22 v.·aiters & waitresses, ban-.... ,,,. 1~~\y wa~~~;se;. ::. boJ:s~ ::~ANDISE FOR Nv dO\vn _ t2!.~n1y $lO mo. B REA KS TH E us~;enS. ~~t~~72.clot~J;j ~~~t ~:~u:'.1ia~~ SA.LE AND TRADE WELJ('J WAREHOUSE ~~~v:s."~~3~d kittens. Furniture 8000 95 MAN or WOMAl'~, lor quality p;, shop. lull Hm• 9 am lo 17 Pc. King Size "' wope'~ ..;".';; .... , ~ ... Ana p RI c E 12:00. vrs PIE COTTAGE, ........, 191 E. t6th c .M. Bedroom Sa.t. 9 -6 sun. 11 -fi HAIRSTYLisr w/following. Large 9 drilwer dresser, mir-QU!'L. Kng Size bed wt Better your income by a ror, 2 bedside stands, king quilted ma t I · • complete BARR I ER bigger %. New shop CdM size headtioa..rd, frame, quill· Never used $98; worth $250. 2640 E C<rut Hwy. 615-7321 ~ mattress, shttts. blank-~"~'--~~~---- WAITRE$ES & BUS BOYS ell, etc, ' SOFA & Chair, new. never Compare at $700 NEEDED. CALL r o R Choice of Spanish used. Make offer. ~ APP'T. 841-2531 or Moclern Style or 962-3059 eves only. GIRL or OOy for general All For $249 USED sola $10; used dinette &Ion! \~'<Irk & deliveries. No down. Pmls, only $9 mo. $22: pair la1nps $9; ma!· =:~~wlonl• WELK'S WAREHOUSE ~~£ox $22: HFRC. SALES -Part time $120 wk. 600 w . .Cth St., Santa Ana Office Furniture 1010 \Vork from cwn home, v.·e Open Daily 9 _ 9 - ,tra=in=·=C=al=.l ="='"=""'===== [ Sat. 9 _ 6 Sun. u fi INS. Group disposes of: slccl -====-~~~-~ dt•sks. chairs, tables, files, Agencits, Men & PRO~~NCIAL_ sof_a $85:. lge shelving, lockers & drafling Women 7550 reclining chair $.10; antique rooni furniture. organ $775; console TV $3.'.l; l\1cMahan's 772--84~ FEMALE Call after • p.m. f714) 1830 S. Anaheim Blvd., in Bkkpr, (fee paldJ •• to $600 84&-2702 Anaheim (alongside S.A. SIC, malutt, stable USED FURN ITURE Fn\'llY at Katella) Stock Cshr (split fee) to $5SO Low Prices!! &16-9188 INS. Group diSIXISC'S of: steel Exper, mM I -~1550~~A~s-",_P'_,_;._, __ c_.>_•_· _ desks, chain;, tables. files, ~~~f:~ !:~> to $3'15 20 Pc. Maple shelving, l_ockrn & drafling Secty (split feel •••• to $525 3 ROOM GROUP roo~c~~~::· 712-84;,0 SIR. type ~~ lnclude1: Living room set . 1830 S. Anaheim Blvd.. in EniJMtr M/E dea:ree tabl" -lamps • bedroom Anaheim {alongside S.A. set -quilted mattres& • ma· Frway at Kate Ila l (Fee pd) ... , • •• .. • Jt3,SOO All Dye & mold experienCe pie dilring room. for ... Cabm.J ""'°''(lee pdJ 14 ph $449 Office Equipment llJll Heavy exptrl(lnce No do\vn -Pml•. only $18 tno, CASH REGISTER M~~~,;i:~.:~':~bl $585 WELK'S WAREHOUSE Co~~·t,o~ ·~~:!• ~ AcccUfltti.nl (fee job) •• 12K Resume required 60C \V. tth St., Sanla Ana Gi 1 S 1-· 8022 Open oa11y 9 . s r:. .. P~"-=1"'"'----'= THE IBERIA - GENUINE PECAN • Automatic Oe9eu1lin 9 • Full 1iz1 console • Hi-Fl Spe1kers • 8 Ye1r Werr1nty on Picture Tube Massive Mediterranean styling in genuine pecan veneers and solids. i WORLD'S LARGEST ' • lnste nt 1 utomatic, no •nnoying warm-up deley • Autom1tic fine tuning COLOR PICTURE • l i9hted Diel • Allo evailable in Northern Roe~ M1ple 1s "The Gloucester" NOW • • • FOR ONLY A SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENT For The First Tirne In This Area! A product so superior th1t w1 will pl.tee it ln your heme fer a fre1 home d1monstr.ttion. We also Invite •ny ether dealer to • side by side c;omp1rilon· of color, ind sound reproduction. The cnly obli9atlon on your p1rt is 1n interest in color TV ind the 1bility to p1y if you should clecide to buy. PETS ind LIVESTOCK · C1t1 8820 LEAVING for Europe, r-.tust sell beaut. yng Himalayan neutered male Bluepoint $50 494-2376. Dogs 8825 ALASKAN Malamutes, for &how or breeding, AKC registered, healthy, Black & White coloring , • ir;; and Up. 492-3513 SILKIES -Lovely n11lles - cute & peppy, AKC, Perm. shots. Jordan's, Cd M . ' 6'13--2430 SIBERIAN Husky, AK C, male, all shols, pro\'en stud, blue eyes. 642-8464 eve. TOY POODLES. AKC, M/F, 6 weeks old. Call· 675-1787 LAB. Retriever Pups AKC Registered 538-6727 Eves; 541-2621 Days Whlte TERRIPOO pups, 6 weeks, 1 male $15, I female $25. 545-5351 13-5 pm I CHAMPION stock AKC miu. Schnauzers, shots: trfm: m~. 8 "'ks. $80. 839-5140 AKC, female poodles, toy, $25. Also mini c.:hocolale puppie~. $30. 89:h1.J06 GREAT Dane Pups, AKC fa"'ll & brlnd)t'. WW bf t,yping ledmical man- aala and fotmulaL Some at&t1l6cal typing involved. Type 60, 2 yean experienc.e u ttcbnictl pubHca tioo I~ 1lf. Merchants P•rtonnel Sat. 9 ~ fi Sun. 11 • li * GARAGE SALE * GRAND OPENING THE EHTIRE MONTH Of APRlt 9· BISCUIT colored pillow 3 Room sized rugs & After 15 ytars of serving the beech are1, I hive finally realited • lift time dr11m. * 893-tl95.1 * rRA NSPORTATION """""' 6-r•I Office $330 204.l \IJestc.liH Dri\·c Type tS, answer pbonei & rt--Celmer lith & rrvioo ~ can.. Exctlle111 oppor-MS-2770 -St0-5685 1urdty to advance. --'-"-'---'--'--- ...... Sedy (2) to $521 Two )'Mrs inlnJmuni l~al leCttW1 operitr>C't. OM tor trial. ODe for ~al e1tate. Top-allkills. Socntory '6U '!\'Pt 50, tlpihand 110. ~ ol olficf JMlh· odo ...s proceduo:... ,._... doe,.....,._• lufn&. VW> ---••• 1lnd "ll"eaf bll}'I fn to- d11y'1 Ol&Uitl«i Adt. back couch. Nire cond ., 1ni~llanoous. ·~ --_;.;.;.;;.::.:..:__ 1 Bo.ts & Y 1chts eoi..1 m . 5C!I Slll5. 9xJ5 DAILY Til sold, furniture, A beautiful new store in a cent ral location with the finest p roducts 1 v1ilable today. flliVf"/ turquoist shag rug clothing, mw:'.h misc. 504.'rii 1963 30' TROJAN, Radio. 165. ""'""•" ''Y'' bo11e1 Mongold. eorono dot Mar. • PREE DRAWINGS FOR PORTABLE TV & OTHER PRIZES • ratoom""· """'• ro r 70". ;r.;. Roul'ld d b I r --. -fi11h1ng. Sips fi. Xlnt ccnd pffit':slal mah<>g 111.blr, 2 Appliincll 8100 S!5i00. 3412 htarcus. NB l~Vll:S, $95. Anl\(lU' Urned 6T:MJM2, 534-3110 . OGk chest fr.,. Swt'dish &tyle, f\'ENt-.fORE Auto wnsher & 64-27' CHRIS Craft, iclnt blue. )®th bed & chair, $55. eloc dryl'r, nmtch1ns; M"I. HAR od 67>i364 Recond & i'IW'· $80 . T TV co . Full oover1, ou111R;-841~115 Rtn. radlO, ha.it tank. $6tDl finn, Lr Mi68J IT'S A rtEVELA'nOf:J tM Vul s tock Amer/Eur film It maey barratn.t ,10u find tn cl(l(<ks. Lt\ny ?.-lorgan Anti-t" 22' Day Cru!Aer Century 24. aaulfltd Adi. Oleck them lfUf'J, 2428 N""'P Bid., C.M. All ex1ns. Recr'nt overhaul .... , · 8921 ADAMS HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-3384 •1500• • 546-!1872 • TllE mm Of 1ctMty toir KEN~tORE Wubcr:. aood Z:' CABIN Cn1ifttr 215 HP cond. guAranteec1. S35. (N lb , ) 1 ~ bllldMuH . -, Ult ., R47.gi~ "* ext to A erhon s n1rrt't'p1or. Ttebu\11 lil68. Ouaifted Ma· DlaJ 6«2· $1075. 6-&2·5582 kl clter J'OW' auttce NOW W:;hl~t~•_!•~l,~phan~~ta:._I ~Dun~H~-~1;,,.'.!_lll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,,,l[While e!r-pba:nta! Dime-a-line • • 1 ( I -, ·,------~ ·-~··~ _.._ .._,,__.,., .-..,_-r,... •.· ·-·•· -J<:_"•Y -• Turlday, April 22, !'169 * OAILY PILOT 11 TRANSPORTATION TllANSPOllTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANS PO RTATIO N !OA NSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TlllNSPOllTATION TllANSPOlifAfiOH , Auto Servi-lmporttd Autos -lmpomd Autos 9600 NeWCira 9t00 lmporttd AulOI MOO N1w c.,.. 9100 Uotd C1n f900 Uttd Ci ra ftOO ; rr. Portonnn. lslll'dft 1 ' 1 "' 9400 ENGUSH POltD ?ui ARU VOLVO -.---........... CHIVROllT UN~LN Deluxe model (all fiber-l95S-S8' ~ HOLIDAY ~=~~ :.':.=~·~ ~=~~~'t1J;: SUBARU YOlYO · ·''5111YW&I. .'~~.Daya"\..~ ... -............... T pm ""'"" St.. Apt. J. """ FORD DEALER ' RAMBLER ........ ... I Sta 49<-2'03 M..a. Allor •PM cDMPLETE Retail DiYis1'on $ SAVE $ . ., = -ait..Al ll 41 ---- AT SAl.Eo All typH ol =======-1 • BRAND • v .. ,' ft41tH'!!...,."' -' MIRCURY boall oU....t '"' w•, Tuei-Trolltr, Trovo l 9425 SALES .SE RVICE 1000 W C HI h • • 11!:..0C.:._;,,.llo, ~ SoLutlt" IN ,...,. MU ~.-· "'". $>n, April :JJ.77. Bo&ts """' =-..;... PARTS CENTIR • OH i 9 woy • NEW 1 -• , "" ,,_, , AMX . . ·'. 1111 ' •, 'D JISRC °"""'' l'ark I be v~w<d at S.. Scout 6T ROU.S -II' oell·C<m· NEW • USID .... ~ Bo1ch • 1969 ' • •' L • .~, -tllOlloa -: ,...,., Ila,., lll3l W. Co.,I Hwy.. ,,,.....,. ......,. * 540-2733 ..... --be t N.B. =...~1"'1i:~~i 1~; ROBINS FORD • BUICK • UlllO JA .. IUll A•'tt.•' ~11• • ... , •• 1c.~:·~ 9010 ~.!' ... ""~';,,..''": = :!®Harbor Blvd. TOYOTA • $2444. • IMPORTS Wl ~ 2· ...:lT' ';:t t; :;, ~": F;;.41=0'-IES_EL_Y_A'.".W:::L--Practically new! S2 100 . Costa Mesa 642-0010 • • TOTOTA·YOLYO • 'fOU. ·~~ 'Mt ¢ ... Ff ~ dl1vtn by -' I I "'" •o~ JOYOJA • • 1966 -· C.M,, 6IM30l -fllll "• <L =·ldf , + dlll;T,n In 2 state nna, vec re r I· .....,....._, . _ , ......., ..,.., R/T, Jatho, bit '67. Sac. 1966 NORTH Western o.ch, FU·'"RI • • 1'5 VOLVO 1llO s· ...,...n ~ 'W p.m.. ' c • - 28• SLOOP 1 h!ldl. mimli ,... $ SAVE $ • IMMIDIAn Do/fllT • Sport 0..,.., 4 ,.,..., d!r. Mtmlo•nfll~ to ~ 'II au;vy itallon ......,, 1 -ew1wi..oc11 Aux. Try s.eoo. ~~e;:_ll10 ' PIRltARI ·Execut ive Cir Si le I e • over drive, bucket set.ts. ~A'V'~i'N 1~'l'U'i with pan, low miles. V-lt auto.,. COLONY Parli: Sta. PACIFIC YACHT SALF.Se '61 DALTON •. 14' Trailer. NtwPGri lmportl Ud. Or-Hu Whll Th l ti • • Brown beauty! ;15cuh de.ls, ur purchete. ~ flnn. l&Z \ol Olcll .....-a ·9 Paa., .,tr, f\lll 3446 Via Oporto. Newport Slet 4 Call after l 30 Cowlty' ClDl1 tboi--rry e ty II DRIYI IT HOMI TODAY take older foreign car in ...--. .... , COit& M-I A¥ to P'frT., k> mile.; $ 2 2 0 0 . 24 Hour Phone 613-1510 WM~ -..na : ::i' dH.lu. 1 au fl I .a-! .. • • trade. LB SAB 625. Call Ken IRAND NEW ti PM 8"13-&782. ""Evts I 642..4104 Comine CUSTOM DLX K 41 SALES-SERVICE·PARTS tQll Lfa1l41 =~· .....,.,, °' 545-0634 '69 AMX wkodl G:J&.1446 """"'Im. O'Day lT Trucks 9500 3100 W. Coe.at Hwy. • v.1. • 1Pt•d. F11ll'j' f.,,.,.,. 195r5 CHEV Btl Air 2 dr. MUSTANG DAY SAILER, ••• $1295. • Newport Bffch ltfORTI I Sport Cars 9610 <Hjulppod. ONll•t tff•'i'· lvtlp. Original condition in-·1---- HOURLY RENTALS 6'2·9'05 ~D-176f · $299 side a: out Ex:celltnt motor, ''7 MUSTANG HT • RHODES !J'• • .., roRD VAN (Club Wac.) Auth ....... NG -.. TOT -'° I • '67 MERCEDES 9 tn"'. tires. $415. 142-2342 Goddou "'"' ..... pfooh •-<•--Mil. Good rondl-l65Q. 1966 Hari>o,, C. -• •2444 • "-·" Fun Zone Boat Co. PILIUQS 613-1Dli1' DIESEL 200 D Auto.rnatlc, e 1960 Impala Convert. Red. ~int, pwr steeru., dlr, 15' SAILBOAT with extru FIAT BILL MA I -•• 44.00J actual mUes. I.ikl!' I RA ND NIW 1-owner. Beat Off e r. auto, excellent cond. S9D including trailer. v a .1 u e JMPt 9510 . . • • new. Her b Friedlandtr. ~ '69 Rambler· Call &42-3664. cub ddt. r1 take foreign $l%il -STEAL, $850. ~e ~~ f:~~I~ ITIQIVIOj"tlAI • ' • • ~~ Bes:I~~s.,~1!':?; 39) ~II 1ru . , .... 6, 121 H.P. ,64 El. CAMINO .. 233 .. 4 car. Fine prvt Pft1, 1..8 493-4467 or 496-3144 '51 Military type jeep. New new Flat. All modela avan... • ~ ...,,_ • .,.g -0 1d1 r tod1y. apeed, Tach .. very clea.n, ~O~ CllJ, Ktn *"'9713 •"""' A tint•, -ill xlnt abl• lor lmm<di&t, dcli""'Y· ~~!:.1B:~c~CH -~~:is"' •• $199 DOWN : AnHquH_, .• c.1-la 9615 $2043 now tint" M<-2381 '&S MUI-Ooov. dilo ihape. $1150. Can be eeen Service ti: Parta too: .. 1960 RED co n v e r 11 b 1 e braktt p/a 4 br1. harp after 5 pm weekday a, Cellfo mle Sporta C•rt 3 mi N. ol Ctlasl lfWJ. Clll Bah •Plui W.. • U.,,.._ en ap.• lM!\tACULATE 'f!' Red Ford IRA.ND NEW C~vrolet Impala. New top. car• sifOO '75--cen N~ ~T. 2278 Placentia, 901 Eut l at St. SIJlla Ant. fieen )Q!tklng tot 1, ..s.nf I~ ertGtl~: thtam C.Onvertible. '69 Rebel $400 alter 4 PM. &M--0521 wed ~ 4, any\lm~ C.M. 542-3801 Stop ap!Mlng ;oui wbitlt ~hl/ • fQk I No. Call 673-1m 1'rt &: Sun. .,,. CHEV. Van, like ·new wk_,-•-, • 1..1 • •~ I I Th t P1tplt Cir. 11712 12. IA nut ¥UJ'I'D(y '"'' -lJbr( V-t, f&tnt bHrt ae'er 'jVOn fair arxl Spin hlme (Ns new 1.,. $ . mecb&ni~; mus~ tell! "''68'""'M=u°"sr=AN=G~2-+~z,,....,v=~. Nri 116• • 11 h illaltt rlt~ ... lltlt 'ti llO •Plll•r r 1a1 '°"'" '°' 1191$ t•> • • Roco Cors, Roda, 9620 2436 $595. 548-1285 fad air, po, r • h. Im- -alJ'U. '"11 -& 'II wob fat ll19t C•llhlrnl• Sperll Clrt • THI r.t.tlJ14UI • '55 CHEV. lnJ<ct<d, 396 enc. • 1968 EL Camino, V_., low mtcutai.. Sacrillcet Call I r,'' . IQl'llut b t st. Sanio ,... 1 OPIL • wll•"!Utftllt ·-~ • .,.,IUID.JllW . • ,.11.,..., -··""' ..,.,, -·t -"'3-l.606 • p '" It... • • l!n~I w/411 ,pan; ·1\im ~v · .. -WV -'1'PM1iMiE 390 \ck J ... w -1 ll110t11 C1r1 · 54'~8lll . ' •.1.e =·-t ~-· . , . r,.. =·=~~· ...... ~-·""" TOYOT·I : •T'I : ~::~~a;,;;' It n::i:t· .. ~~~"f;.:8 =~=~~.··~; SH -. ... !ti lll'AllO"A"Tl'!~I ltU HIU • w/lob"~ ' ~-1 !lb•·-··. J!!S!lll-. 543-1269 m> m. ~· · ...,,,. i ' -II ·"!r' MIU.MAN EL E • ·r front •'11, """'*~--tf'l\'pe . >• I __ ..., No. ''"""[;· -· C•ri ' " -.•Ill MOR • Sii THIM TOIAYI. I"': .......... ,ult m .. -,· ,· cwn-i•-·" ~~ 0 ... lr ..... ~ $325. ,Ml-1111 • • • • .....__ • • "'1• a tor wiiij.-;inc1..-. M .l, ··-"1 ..UAD·' • .. ,.. -. --• · ~-'"'" ......,E •"'5:2 ifi , ' .'If JlllJ4'AK ' Olltvl. lllw • 77• """" , • 1:. -. ~ • . , -· --.,......, ~n .,,~ ......... ·~ •-~•It '"'' ,.,,~d'e --Bi·~ •M'•"' I • ~ -Cl!ll~' -To """*'A' much "'1· e AMPB -· ---· --:::--.. ~ -CARS ~· ·~ wn • 'lb MUSl'ANG Fu t Bade • - l " economy $185. Sl)...f121 .-._... ............., • Country 9 pan Wagon. + _, ' ' 0 er. Sales . Rentils Is )'OW' two-car 1•NP fnb' I Autos W1nt9d 9700 Radio air Rack. PIS. 2 2, C "I., 3 IPffd, lmmac. Powtr Clul. •rt tOH ,.._ Dtoltr MEICEDIS llNZ hail foll! ''th~ J'ial In ~ur I • SILICT YOUl P/B, ' ""'' tints. -· Belt °""'· Oj&.2812 Eldorado Four tu tute ! '67 850 sport cpe for • • WE PAY . • MONTHLY 83()..-05gl '67 MUSTANG C.Onv. V--3, 34' CHRIS CRAFT Wine". Scot.man $1295 <UPGS!2l • '64 lAMILER • CASH PAYMENT -air, pvt Pt> IJS.0400, a1 4 • 30,000 Feet of cam..-.-California Sports Cars ,,0 St •. Wt9on. Fie!. t i!, COMET 847--074& altft 6 pm $7,950 0 ;...,lays r--• 90'1 East 1st St. Saota Ana •P.S., •11to. fOVK 1111 • '65 CICllSiC BR., stateroom &. galley; ... ,. '"2 """1 • $ • a Theodore ~ -' 1495 !or used c"' l truckt just < D•. IOAN .Q,ylng bridge; eng. xlnl • • all VI , ftetorv •ir collil., pwr, eond. By owner. 675-4570 ROBINS FORD c us for free ntl.m~te. 1+1•r., r•dio, he1ter. INU. 2;)' Meridian, fbrals, equip. ped for fiahlng or cruilling. 2000 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 642-0010 Asking $7300. Owner anx-1 ~~~~~~~~~ k>us. 646-9739 '64 FORD ~ ton, custom cab MERCEDES Btnz 600. "The Speed-Ski Boots 9030 SKI Boat l.f' fiber&lass, (Dolphin). 75 hp Mere. w/ trailer. $650 or be•t of· fer. Call aft 6 pnf 673-4199 14' GLASSPAR, trailer, nearly new. 50 hp Mere:. SIS. C. G. equipped, best ofier. 64~7359 after 4:30. CUST Ski boat, l ,OOJ Mere. Low mi. xln, skis, hll)' duty trlr, Divorce forces sale! Mu.st see to apprec. 6.f2-3232 w/8' camper. Lo ~lileage. ultimate motor c:ar", 4 door, Sac. Sl:lOO. 642-3666 air suspension, disc brakes, SHELL Camper, fib 8 lt bed, power evecythifl&, a u t ~1 perfect cond. $150. call FM/AM n.cHo I heater. WW alter 3 p.m. ~'1583 take trade for late model American auto or submit. Camper R1nt1l1 9522 Roy Ward 646-<tl78 MINT COND. '63 ms 4 dr, COAOI • TRAILER leather int, tilt s e a t a , RENTAL'S am/tm, auto, air, n mil It's none too earl1 to m!lke :pt==, ~==·-=49>-="'='===o I reservations fot Sprin& Hol. MG ida)'I! WEEK-END OR WEEKLY 1---- 546"'91 MG Bolt Slip Moorln~~ I====-===== BOAT SLIP FOR RENT Dun!._8~i•• 9525 Sales, Service, Parts Immed iate Delivery, All Modelo in Balboa Cove area DUNE buggy; atr legal 536-!743 Compl w/ tow'&: hitch, tand WANTED boat slip for 43' tirea,-etc. Must aell; beat at- Cruiser. 646--0264, S-5. -'-"-· _96>-=l-782~==-­ DUNE BUGGY .l)rtup 111 I jl111po1 t·:i ~I· Y tcht M•la!f!ako _,._ ,_, Ch•-• ___ 903_ 9 $=""=· =====-== ~· C.Ut H"Y·;;j'ii, BLUE\VATER CHARTERS Imported Autoa 9600 Autborb:ed MG Dealer ~t-Drlve sail or power boats. Happiness is owning a 52 TD !Wlm ='"'''""" Qoh. AUSTIN HEALEY (MBV542} ., • 54 TF IPMD £¥ilY -Weekly 1r 646-900'.l 042) Fishing Boat1 9040 ---26 SPQRT F~her plus slip fully equipped, $ 4 0 0 0 611H039 60 A-H candyapple red <JXE California 'Sports Cars 1981 this is no sprite and 9a1 East lst St. Santa Ana isn't out ol sight at n095. 542-8801 · California Sport• Cart · 001 Eut 1'1 St. Santa Ana MGA 542-8801 TRIUMPH I ... OLOIMOiJU ,.. GRODI CHEVROlft "I, .,.. TR IUMPH 4 I L11111ry 114•11, ~II 11•-r.• $ 1395 " •'•ct•rr •It, tSU ' 1111 • Ask for Sale• Manaa;er J\datr, dJr, 4 11pe«i, over-..... ,. I • 18211 Beach Blvd. drive, wire whem. "'w dilO I •• J-IunUniton Stach brake•. Jet black ext. new I ' • KI S-3331 lop, "'"' rubbor all UOUnd, • 'H OLDIMOllLI • Xlftt c;ond, $100 cuh dell or trlde. Will fine prvt party. LB RIV 291. Call Ken, 494-9773 or 545-0634 WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR·w VOLKSWAGEN '69 VW's IMMEDIATE DELIVER? Bank Financltta; $213 DOWN "4.03 * .36 mn! Pl.ta l final pymnt for title. Full 2 yr, 24,000 mi warran\y. Avail only at T& M MOTORS IOll1 Garden Grove Blvd. llMJtl4 at Beach 892-5551 OPEN SUNDAY •• .loot H.T. Fteft ry olr,• •powtt •'••rin q l ltr•ke1,• t uto. CMOY 146 1 8 : $1591 • C0t4NELL CtftVROLEi' ,.,. Harbor Blvd. Costa_M'... 546-1200 •1-...::;=:::;:o:;;;:_.:..::.;:::::.......1 • Will Buy • • '66 IUICK • • •Wildc•t 4 door. F1ctory ••it, t 11to., pow•• tltt rlnt.• • RlH. ISVX 0161 • • $2595 • • • Your Volbwqm • Ponche A: P81 top dellal9. Paid for Ot' not. CID ~ 673°1190 IMPORTS \\'Am'ED Oranp Counties TOP I BUYER BILL MAXEY 'i'OYOl'A 18881 -Blvd. H. Beach. Pb. 8'74555 9810 / LWE 'EM I '68 Cad Cpe deVWe, tun pwr, a ir, vinyl root, Driven onJ,y 14,500 ml. Looks new, 24 mos l~ at $149. mo. New '69 Eldorado, lull ~p. Incl air & vinyl top. $220.87 per mo. 24 mo, I.Se. also '68 Eldorado n 79.40, SOUTH COAST CAR LEASING 300 W. Cout Hlgbway 64f>.2182 Newport Beach LEASE -R&NT Al l POPULAR MAKES FORD AUTHORIZED LEASING SYSTEM Get Our ComP!!titlve Rates Thoodo,. ROBINS FORD '64 Ford 2 Door VI, 111!0, !r1n1., pwr 1l1tr· ing. OVC t59. $995 '65 Dodg• 2.,.., VI, t uto. tr1"1., ,wr 1letr· i••-RRZ 661 . $1095 '65 Mustang 1 Dr. HAIDTD P VI , •uto. h•"•·· t ir t ond., Vin.,.l roof. NHA 171. $1595 '63 Rambler AMIASSADOR 110, 2 dr. VI , t11lo. tr•nt ., jHIWtt 1lt1ri"t • RVL '60. $895 '65 Rambler 2 Dr. HAIDTOI" Xlnl 2"d c.tr, NPF. 011, $195 . '66 Dod9e 441 STATION WAOON Vt, t uto. ht111., P~, I brkt. Lie. TRD 676. $1595 '64 Classic WAG-O N. 6 CYL. Ov•tdrivt, 1t dio I httltr. OST Jl I $899 '65 Classic: 4 DOOi SIDA.It VI, f1ctory 1ir cond., pow- t r 1te1rin9, rtdio, he1 ter. INU4 31. $1395 '64 A111erican 2 DOOR. 6 CYL. A11lo. ltt n1., r1dio, h11!1r. low '"il••t•· OSJt 011, $749 '66 Rambl1r Ct.AlllC ttO 2 dt. H.T., VI, tirfo. tr111t., PS, A l.r•kt t. lie.. SMR 262 '61 COMET, 2 "'" ti<U, ""' OLDSMOllLE bru••·. Ex •. "'""· vatuel--UN-IUD--flJY--1 $650, sell S-t95. ~ 1 LIU CONTINENTAL 1963 CONTINENTAL. Bluto gt'l!y, bl11c:k leather int. Full SALES I SERVICE OLDSMOBILE power &: air. Very clean 2850 Harbor Blvd. $995. Call alt 5. 494-SCI09 Costa Mesa ------540-9'40 Used Can -.mt CORVAIR '67 OLDS Ci Delmont. 2 dr, radio, tac air, wsw, Landau 1960 CORV AIR. encfne xlnt, top. $2100. 837~ evea I body IQOd, intcior sad! \\'ttk-ends $150. 67l-7621 MANY-=-.,.-,-. ~,-.-.,,,.-,-. ~1!16=71 "62 Monza, 4 1pd, ~ Olda II Wqon, good' c:ond, bla: tirn. Many o:tru! Tim, pcrNtt 1/b. Call to- • 1542=3151 * -dey. 673-811:6 CORVETTE '64 OldJ 88 Convertible, R&H. w/w, p/1, aood c:ond. 6.f2. 1583, '66 VETTE, yellow, 377, 2:1========1 tope, xlnt cond. Mab offtt! Aft 5. 2131S91-f131 PLYMOUTH '61 PlYMOUTH DODGE __ ..:;_,_:._--I '6.4 DODGE ROADRUNNER V8, 4 speed, radio ii: heater, new wicf&. oval tires. Fine DART 170 2 DOOR perlonnonoe c". CVT!ol (Ill}) Rad;• .... , ••.. w ... ,., • , .. ·s•195 clean economy car. CNYHl "-• • 859) ' $795 :-: ~.~ .• ;ATLAS ATLAS CHRilit.m-PLYMOtml 2929 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 5'6-1934 CHRYSLER -PLYMOl!J'H Open Dail¥ 'm 10 p.m. 2929 HARBOR BLVD. ,65 PLYMOlrl'H 9 COSTA t.1ESA 546:-1934 -'W&IOl'l, 0 D il ' il 10 . pas_,, $50 and take OW!' pen a y t p.m, p)'flUllll Bal $1.200. S4)...Q09 'Gf: DODGE Polan.: air, 1968 PLYMOU'lH GTX, lift pwr., low mile., have Co. new. 536-19'10. $29l50. A1ttt c car, must aell. Ask.. $2700: pm. ·~- FALCON PONTIAC '60 FALCON. N•"'""• bal· '66 PONTIAC 610 tery a: mu(f\e(. "'I~ tap $175. 548-4315 alt & 2 door H.T. VS, automatic, --·---radio, heater, tac:tory air. JOPS3'5l $1295 ATLA' FORD '66 FORD GAlX SOD 2 DR. HARDTOP V-8 , radio, healer. Nice con-CHRYSLER -PLYMOU'l'H dltion, WXF C62. 2929 HARBOR BLVD. $1195 COSl'A MESA ,.._19.14 "1>t'n Dally 'Ut 10 p.m. ATLAS O!RYSLER -PLYMOUTH '62 PONTIAC Tem p eat, Rl:H. auto tn.na. cood cond " VffY c:leu! $3?). ~. ,,,. HARBOR BLVD. RAMILEI COSfA MESA 546-1934q -------- o,,.n o.u, ·t1110 p.m. •ii n1u11 m '63 Ford tut bade H top, dlr, M 1UU'lut.Ul $1191 '64 Classic WAGON. 6 CYL v~. pwr '""· own<d "1 lit· STATION WAGON tie 'oJe lady trom San 1 Clemente. Take foreign car Automadc t?antmi8Slon. ra- I . I AUi•. h-•11'1., r•JJo, h••l•r, 11.,,.,. , •••. $899 MANY bTHl l MAKll & MOO ILI LOW-LOW DOWN , AMlllCAN Jll'OTORS Sein It SHYlc• 0IN'I 7 D.-,. I ,..._ ... , .. C-11811111 in trlde. LB pf'G 937 Call dio A hf•tfr. fOTW M31 Jam" 545-0634 $795 '65 Font °'"" Sod, v 4. auto, dlr. pwr ..... xlnt ATLAS cond. $:iO Cub ddt or take ti:n1sn tu 1n trade. eau Ken LB UEV 414, ...._ CHRYSLEI! -Pt. YMOUTH 2929 HAJ\SOR BLVI>. Tlke over pmll. on 'f7 Ford OOSTA MESA $tS.l934 Gal_ 500. Vinyl top, racHo, Open Da1J7 ·w to , m I I brakta. Gaod cond. Call . . llfttr 5:» p.m. SJtr.9240 'el RAMB' D\ O:>nYt. l\111 I '5'7 J'ORO WAGON pwr, &INlond, auto, new S2M ..... _ ---• ~ e NEW ·e Ramb5n. 1'all abt '&C TORO Sedan. V.f. auto.. c:oalJ*I, GOG. "'°'-. -Wh>l...i., T•D Ja50, ~7821 I • ' -. . ... --. If DIUl.Y>f'ILOT • . -.----. ·---- TutsdoJ, April 22. 196t . THE··FAMIL ~DISCOUNT SAVINGS CENTER DllCOVIT , PR ICES and TOP QUALITJ 1 ·, . . . Pt1C1S EFFtCJM ·WEDNESDAY ·lhni TUESDAY,.APRll.23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28 .& 2') · ·F.RYING c·HICKENS ·U.S.D.A. GRADE A . WilOlf 'BODY ' ... ·~ • " . ' ' . . . ' NO STAMPS• NO GAMES• NO.GIMMICKS• JUST EVERYDAY LOW DISCOUNT PRICES plus 4 STAR SPECIALS ., OSCAR·WIYn. • T ·lB. PACKAGE SllCED . BACON fAMflY SIZE e INCL 6e Off I CREST ~ i "' TOOTHPASTE li ·fil ~. 64 c DELUXI e 1001. COTTON e 34" 111: 62'' ASSORTED PRINTS l COLORS e JIEG. 2.1 t BEACH Siii TOWELS · NEW l lKINI STY\.E niROW-AWAY l'ANTlfS Mode tram rayon oulv,. flti.B, canfonobi. DISPOSABLE ;•; 79c FAIJOY PAITS '= 3 : 100 O'MI . I ll·GAllON llQUID O SAVI 7c PUREX BLEACH FOREMOST • FAMILY PACK • 1'1 -GALLON ICE CREAM SAVE TOc SPRINGFIELD • SAVI 30c • 10 DOZEN BOX •CHOCOLATE. COOKIES : CHOC. CHIP OATMEAL · RAISIN • l,ICI! NUT e PEANUT aUTTIER OSCAR MAYER O All MEAT OR All BEEF T ·l B. PACKAGE MANHATTAN'• 5_-0UNCE PACKAGE.O 13 VARIETIES LUNCHMUTS • SANTAANA 2-120 SO. lllSTOL AT WARHU COSTA MESA 2200 HAllOI 'ILVD. AT WILSON ' SAVE 10c 31c 59c 89c ' • I ' ' • ' ' • • ' I I ' • i I I I ' ' • • . I ·1 • I I I ' ' , ~ l J "' Ii ,F IT " Ii II t i •• 8 a 11 " S' " sl h • ·Ii p q ~ 11 J 1 l ' b e A I ~ s b ~ • u • • ' " ~ I • • t d • •