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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-05-16 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa\ ! •• 1mm ~ony Pa,~lertan Medie I ~ ..... . ~ "·""''"-'·"'"-•• ' • Case ID Hftnds ol J1lry . FRiDAY ~FTERNOON, MAY '16', ''.1969 ' ' ' VOL. & MQ. UJ, 4 S•CTIOlllS.•• PANS •• l ., • • For111er Sheriff ·. Gene Biseailuz ' . . ' . Of LA Dies . I C.cupe nter' s Call ' . • Newport Told To Support Toro By J\)BN VAL TERZA Of .. °"" ..... .,.., Qlfmly Airport ~ Denni• Cargenler strongly urpd uae of El Toro Iilailne Air Slalion u \ rq-airport Weft a Newport Btich audience today, then urged his liJteners lo unire to •chieve it. Addressing the .montlhy 11aunrise bull ieulon" of. the Newport HarbOr Chamber of Commerce. tbe stralcht.t.alking com· ~er and California Republicarf leader said the idea or blending regkmal airpqrt use with military fields elsewhere Ii\ thO country has -keel "and it would wO£k well at El Toro, too." - c.,aliie< llOid .tbot "there Is ... thing to redae when ynu analyu tbe natural protest coming from residents in Leisure World, Mllaon Viejo and other housing areas near El Toro,,. the jets Ullfld'by the military were.tbere·way before there were any homes ill the · area.'' He added that he felt the noise problem wculd not be much ~ if commercial jet.I ...... 14 USe tbe mililar1. facilities, - Airport. 6 ~earqs, ; . .i.,..·~t ~l(h~ .. ll!IP. Counterfiet .lllO!" ................. .....,, __ .. • ". • ' e.rp.n,.. ~ l!r unll1 ....., all • the detractorl cl C!'!!nlY ellll'll 14 Im· · :=::.tu::.":=~ Mon.· ey· H. eld. lrovony surrouDding the ~ """"'~ ah1>ort. ' • ' He aill:ed few: lnrend to aiticlam of the COQUDissioo for_propoling enjarging park· "* ·kits II O r a n g e County Ai;port becau1e such a project woukl not' con· stitute expansiOll, but instead, make Jt easier to use for the volume ot traffic it bu now. Carpooler jocularly jabbed al the U.S. Navr llld .... the city of NftPort Beach for their opposition to many cur- remt -for alrporis, . but conceded that NftPort olllcials haft itoully ap. provod <11 lbe El TUro pi... '!be-Navy lw not. , He said that if one compared the com or converting some El Toro runways for coounerclal uae and building public (See ~T, P"f' II . By ARTlllJR -R. VINSEL .Of lflt DellJ PIM Steff Lawmen raided a Hessian motorcycle gang commune in Costa Meu Thursday. roundii:ig up 11 rperaons, $15,CIOO worth of LSD, marijuana and cotinterfeit cur-- rency, six weapons and several dop, in- cludini one 8""ed Cocaine, according lo police reports. The unscheduled raid -triggered wb<p complJcationS developed during an alJeg. eel $1 ,000 LSD parcllase by ·atate nal'CGti.cs agent.8'-aboulc;I·~ off a.major aource or the drug, inveltipt<n said. One suspect· allegedly turned on 1awmen invading the rambling residence at 2653 Santa Ana Aye .• with a shotgun, . but .wu dlslrmed1ritbout gunplay. -' -·- , lte ' ' I DtJvidK:t3nnedy"lss~D ~mtf4 'M.ore Ser w us' . . . . . . WASHINGTON (UPI) -llepemlsst<Jos -Rep. ·H. R . .,Gioia. (Jl.19!1'•1 iaid' he -The Jtistlee )leparlment .~ tt from the reslenaJiQn_ of, ~ ·eoun haped the House J uCHciary umuruttee1 made any sort of deal with imprilclied JusUce Abe Fort.as spread tbrNhout the would lnvestlgatei JUIUce • William . 0. financier LOuis E. Wolison to get mart lllree brani:hes o1 govermneni today and Douglu' relalioOlhlp w,illli tlie Albert· Information about his COlllleCtiom with thceateoed to extend to other high of· Par\tift Foundation'. Sen Stlom thurmond Fortas. ficiais. . (R.S.C.), called cio Douglas 14 resign. -senate leSders Mike Mahsficld aM There were thele: developments: -several congre~eq cri*1clied Atty. Evmttt(M1Dirksen promiJed that m.H -Wright Patman, chairman of the 9en· John N. Mitchell' for dl¢osln& he future Ulere would be more intensive a. House Bilnldnf; Committee, Aid the cqe turned over to ChJef Justtce Earl Warren amination Of pres.idenUal nominees: • tr' of Treasury Secretary Davld M. Kennedy "certain in!onnaUon" about Fort.as. Rep. and bis ailepd Ues with the bank be Robert w. Kuteomeler (0.Wis:I. ·said Fortas. 59, migned Wedneaday ~ formerly headed "seems much more the Judiciary . Committee abould in--the tmt justice in the court'• h1ltOrf seilous U... lbe Fortu affair." v.estjgare 'Mltcbell, lo quit under pressure. 'Ille .., ~t came Tbunday momlng --" 11 days after We magazine revuled. tM received, but returned 11 months later, 1 1211,000 fee from ihe wolf... Fam!~ Foundation. Fortas was on the bench • the 'Ume. ' The reaignation ol Fortas will tlM ' Preskleilt Nixon the OflPOrlunity 14 1111111 Ex-L A Co u nty Sheriff Jim 1n1ne, field supervisor for the state Jllltice Department's bureau of narcoUcs enforctmtnt, said the 2 p.rn. raid climued a month-long probe begun by Newport BeOch Police Detective Al Jury Deliberating Verdict Of Bogus County Physician !:i::rn~w:nto::. ~ ~-=· lh• .current l¢n ends. neid lllOl)th. 1 Ati:loog names tneritionecf IS e appbintees bi!' J'reilileot' Nixon ' Eugene Biscailuz Dies Epsreln. By TOM BARLEY · One woman S()Ugbt tn connection with or 111e Df1"'"11" ~ the operation ia SUu being hunted today. An audacious electrical engineer who State agents, Costa Meaa and Newport ol brl ·-••· Beocb police particijoted, arresting five UJed the name a llilnt ~~logist men_ one an ex-Marine decorated 'for while .be treated mere than 100 paUents Vietnam war service ..: and four women 1 at a Fullerton clink: may soon be oo ~ at the' Santa Ana Avenue address and two other end of a,dW~t,ldnd or di~ts SANTA MONICA (AP) -Eugene :Bucailuz, a little man with a courtly manner and wide-brimmed hat whO became "Mr. California': among "'wmen during his 2& years as sheriff of Loi ~eles County, died today at 86. He was known as a crack shot, a top rider favoring the BOmbrero and silver mountings of the stile's Spanish past. •' top admiofstrator, a relentless tracker ol crooks, and devek>per of • number of rehabilitation centen for priaoneri.· Ht retired in 1958 alter 51 years i'1.,11Jl1". enforcement and bad been in secJUJKJn at his home here since suffering a stroke HVet.al years ago. · · For decades be wu a familiar slafit. ii paradts, dressed like ll llpanlah Don, a.lride a pranclni ilorle, waving and smiling, often accomponled by bis clooe friend, the late actor Leo Carrillo. The grandsori <11 WUllam W..,.., flnt <ity marabal ol Los Aqelel, ~ lcilned ·the sheriff"• ...,_ in Ital -the force bad only '¥1 men. At the time he retired, m«'t than S,000 men were under blm. He itudJed In by night anil .... to aaiatani dllef deputy clherfll Jinl2D. • Nine years ial<r, Gov. C. C. Y-.. lled BlocalJui 14 Sacrmnenio 14 help orpniu" the lllibw•Y polrol. Wben Sherill WilU.... ~was eiecteir 'ti; c..iir-1rh llf; • ...... ·~ -.11. "" -for election two yun later and was elected unUI farted to retJre by 1ge. "f hid n,. two bolses when J was sberit(," Blac1Uu1: wu fond ol saying. "'l'ba people who elected me and my c:oo-ICience." · · Nsllonally Bilc:itUUJ won prominence as lbe S~s1Hpealtlil8 olflcer who b<ought p, fugi!M! llllll'den!ss Clara Phillips back from Honduru. Mrs. Phillips dispatched a-love rival with a hammer In 1122 for which she wu convicted and sentenced to life. But she escaped from the old """'ty jail and eventuolty turned up in Hon- duras. BiscoJliz f<uld olllcioh on the Caribbean 111'.aod coopenUve but public sympathy was for Mn. Phillipi, a woman they -bad made jull a IUtle mistate, ' I Ov~ boltllity with diplomacy" (See lllllCAILUZ, Pap II · H......, picked up .-.... -Ille v~t of 12 Superjor Court iurors. One wu identified as Ray W. Brown They left 1be courtroom today 14 25 captared on a nearby street bf review two weeks of teltimooy in the P~trolman Jact Koch, after auertedly trial « Robert ~in Brown. fleeing the raid and apporeoUy dbposlilg And the qwet codldent Alabama ol the II 000 in atare m a r t e d suspecfhu relleved them ol -decilloo money. ' by -tllng .. many -lbat be 'Ille -bu not bem found, althoal)I is guilty .ol pooinf u Dr. Glenn Lyon the ... was tborooglJ!y seercbed. F-. a Unlvenlty ol Alabama medical Booted .. a variety of charges, rang· ocmol cardloloPL Ing lrOm _..,.GI dangerous drup -t they must declck In . lhoir awn far .sale, cultivation of marijuana and clinka! ana1ysil of what bas to be the (Ille DRUG.RAID, 1'111< 11 moot slartling act Cl(, fraud in colinty I . ' ~ t Ji111111y . B~se-velt Stabbed:. • Former California Conpessman Attack~d by Wi fe;,. I ... ' ••• •• : '· . --" • • Cb'!fles S. !lhyne, WalhJ11P>n,, '· ~rest~<lll' of 1he .AmerlcPI). Bar ~· . tron ·end Nix<ln's '~ ·mrnmotel · Secretary <11.Slare l\'Ullam . P, -• Mitchell : former · A!IJ'. a.n. ·Hiiberi Brol!JIO!l;'and'U.S. cir<ult judpe.JllnrJ J. Friendly of New York and Warrerl ~ B<rrier <if the Diltrid ol Columbia. I Nixon cbose to ·elevate an usoclate justice to ... llUCCeed -Warren, speculatiol centered·on Justice. Potter Stewart .• In his manonnci!un 14 Warreo, Flihal said he a8r...i 14 ..-Ive a ... lllO aoiluil: !See l'OllTAI!.' Pop II .. ' ' Oru1• ·' .. ,} • ' t • • ' I 1o111.1 l'IL8r • 3 Astronauts Take It Easy Before Trip ~ . ' CAPS UNNlCDY (llPIJ -Tile Apollo It -Illa, tiling tt tasy to avoid Iha hlallli .,..-. of their ,-.,. bold lloal drllls tocla1 !or their "bJnhr'a ._.. lauoclt &md'1 Oii Ill <i,ltl-dq VOflal anu:ll the mOM. • • cam_,.. 1bazDM P. Staftofd, •t Jtilm 'II'. YOUlll, a; and ~ A. Ceman, 35, donned their space auit.s and Hhearsed bimch procedure 1 in 1pacecralt trainers that duplicate the oonlroll and responses of the Apollo 10 command ahlp and its lunar lander. Weathermen Wert optimistic for an on- Ume, 9:49 a.m. PDT blastoff Sunday, but Nld there was a possibility thun- derstorms could build up over the llU an llaD llnal ptpeulllona. DAn.V PILOT ........ • ...seine~ • • -Communists Call ·U.S. Plan Absurd .. PAlllS (lll'l)·-Tile COnynWllst &Ide at the Vietnam peace conference today 4ism1Med parta of President Nixon's eight-point pem plan as "absw;d.11 But U.S. negotlalor Henry Cabot Lodge said they were ""'"°..lerlng IL The North ,Vletaamese aod Viet COrtg negoUaton allo ·were &aid to bave adopted a :softer line on their own demands. Tile CommunlJll d<legat" declined to comment on five of the points epelled out by Nixon in his proposals to restore peace to Vletoam wll!llD a fear. ' lllem, called the plan an attempt to "pose condiUon1 on the withdrawal ot U.S. troops which we have many thnea rejected." "The Nixon administration continues to maintain its absurd demands ~ad c~n. tinues to intensify I.he war," Thuy eaJd.to newsmen as he arrived for the se.ss.li>n. Kiem said "Everybody knows that U.S. and satellite troops are the only foreiin troops ol aggression to be found in South Vietnam." Both c:Ommunlst negotiators repeated their demands -contained in the Na· tional Liberation Front's JO-point peace package -that the United Slates must withdraw all Its fotCes from South Viet- nam "without posing l\DY _ condition whatsoever." On the OCOl!1Side launcb pad, lecbnl- dam ·are u ntucll u ftve houn ahead ol the -ble !or pumping ·frlgld ~ oxygen IDd oxygen into the lpace- <rift. ney pused a big hurdle before datm when they successfully activated the lhlp'a fuel ctU power generators. LAWMeN TAKE SUSPECTS AWAY AFTER LIGHTNING RAID ON HISSIAN PAD 511. Loo' Horrison L-Shorry Roclwollor; Hondcuflocl Grog Elohlra W1lb Lodge preseoted the Nll<on plan al today'• ...ion and asked the Commuollt llde 1•not tO answer hastily and to think O\'er our pnlpOla1 juat as we ace thlnklng ab<iut yours." Although the Communllls oharply at. tacked tbe mutual withdrawal proposal, which is covered in lhe first three point& of the Ni.J:On plan, they refrained from at. tacking others. These dealt with in· temational supervision of the eventual cease-fire and gene'ral elections, the ex· change of prisoners of war and the neutralization of neighboring Laos and Cambodia. ApoDo 10, the riskiest flight man hu yet made into space, blazes the trail for a mamed langing on the surface of the mooo by an ApoUo 11 crew in July. Stal· fcrd and Ceman will separate the lunar l..itt from the Apollo 10 mothtr tlbip during Ila 31 ori>lls ol the moon and fly II to withlD 50,000 Itel ol the _, surfoce. * * * Co'lor TV · Camera From Pqe J DRUG RAID NETS 11 • • • assault with a deadly weapon were these resldeuts cX the home: Gary A. Rung er, 2.1, Greg E. Ellblre, 28, Brown, Sherry L. Rodweller b. Vicki D. Raillio, 11, aod Kathryn E. M-.k. 20, accc:rdihg to state agents. , Others arrested include Tbomas R. power tools and other Items which will be tr~ to·detennine if they are stolen. A ll,000 purcha!e ol l!OO ·I.SD tablets with 1,200 more promised later in the day had already been made, Irvin sa.Jd and aeveral olher buys allegedly ocaured during the past month. . 'Going A'long 'Apol'lo Mission Nlebur, 21, of 359 Walnut SL, Newport ~ William E. Rodweller, 22, of 2205 'Canyon Drive, Costa Mesa, Linda S. OR Markham, 22, of 2326 E}(len Ave., Costa Mesa, Philip AHano , 2.1, of 4503 Seashore Drive, Newport Beach and Michael D. Van Noorden, 21, of San Dimas. The total street value o! th e hallucinogenic drug haul seized at the northeast side residence amounted to ap- praxlmately $5,000, acconting to in- vestigators. Detectives probing the quaint old tile-- roofed building said lhey found papers and photographs indicating Runger was an ex-Marine decorated for a Vietnam duty \Ow'. Investigators said A l f a n o , an , BALTIMORE, Ma. (AP) -Apollo 10 unemployed mechanic, was picked µp at utn:imartl w:lll tab a color television a home at 2352 Cornell Drive, cuTying Sgl Jack Calnon, of the Costa Mesa pollce vice and intelligence detail, said he believed the award was the Vietnamese Cross.« Gallantry or something like IL camera aloog on their bip to the moon '550 at the time. ICheduled to begin Sunday. 'lbey identified Etshire 11 the one who 'lbe camera, weighing less than 15 allegedly levelled a ~ at lawmen powtdl, II to be Used . to ""°" the who burst into his room. astrmaull at work during the mission, BOOKED INTO JAIL the -lllelf, and the earth u .... "There's still a lot of checking going on today on passlbly stolen motorcycle part8 and the fraudulent. traveler's cbecka," Sgt. Calnon added. from the vicinity of the moon. Tile male suspecl,o were booked Into With the camera will !be a miniature Costa Mesa City Jail and the females monitor to be carried inside the COOi were taken to .Orange County Jail as in-LARGEST ROUNDUP mand module so the astronaut using the vestigators worked overnight Jllld into t.o-camera will be able to see the scene the day, wrapping up details of the case. The Hessian roundup Thursday was the "W ~·bl 't be b'! -•· t •-largest since last Au"'' ... , wben a total of camera ls transmitting back to earth. e ., • ....,.. Y won a e w ge w 6-· 1be monlbr, weighing less than four .the District Attorney for complaints untif 28 of the cyclists were picked up for in- pounds, bas a black and white vleWi.ng Monday," said Irvin, who supervised the vestigation after a vengeance gun and screen which measures two inches by two spur-Of-the-moment raid. chain assault on a Costa Mesa bar and tbree-qUartet lncbel. He aaid the .arresteel were relaUvely bouncer. WesUngboule E 1 e ctr I e , which iJJbmbsive after raJders forced tbelr way Most were released, except for a developed the two devices, said the thrwgb a banicaded door, during which handful finally given several• months' camera ls the first cxilor TV came:.c: a wind.O'W' was smashed and one IUlpeci: sentences ln Orange County _J_ailand the designed for uae aboard a ,~cu& byvflying glas!. taid's leader, Frank W. 1'Wua' Mouse'" epacecraft. The monitor and I IOCttQ rem " -"It wu a real Cbineee fire drill,'' cmn., Rund.le, 24, now 'f'vlns ~ Ip 10 years in also are space firats, It said; · mented Patrolman Koch, who made ~ ltate-prlsoo. ·· · · • · Tile !em bu a variable local lenctb oeveral trlpo from the sceoe to Costa · Cttrwds ol nelahbol'I plhOred· arouod ranging from 11.5 mllllmelfrs to 75 Mesa police beadquarltrs transporting the hectic ocene Thurscfay ~ari.m-~eters. There Is a .rana:e of aperture BUSpects for booking. some grim-faced; others enjoying the atopa from f 2.2 to f U. "I fee) like a Checker Cab driver," he ahoW and police bad to direct traffic On From P .. e J BISCAILUZ ••• and 1111 ability to speak Spanlah, be ,,... the lllanders' confidence and perauaded Mrs. Phillips to waive extradiUon. OldUmers recall when 350 angry sit· down demomtralonl had to be evicted from the Douglu ~alt plant In 1937, Without weapons, Blscailuz walked into the plan!, debated with the men, then got them to ~ to come out ~eu.bl:y. As an administrator, Biscallui was mdit.ed with pioneering the system of rehabilitable priaoners. The sheriff's force wore lb first cmilorms under hls admlnlmatloo and be organhed the Sheriff's Crime Prevention Bure.au·. Born in Los Angeles in 11183, he married WU1ede Hmiaon, his wife « 48 years, in 1902. After hbi retirement, he became I.he local chlef of the March of Dimes and hooted the annual Sberifl'• Pando In Loe ~'ourvtved by a -Martin. Funeral aervices are pending. DAI LY PllOT ........... lh: .............. --_,..., ---CALIPOINIA OlANGI COAll PUlllSttlNO COM,.MIV l•Mrt N, W••• ~ .... ,.,,..I..., J.-:l: I. Cwk-t Ylc9 ,,....., ... 0-.tl .,,.._ n..." ICt..U .... n-·· A. M•r.hiM • MMaelM ..... ' quipped. the street pulslde. · La arch! be I "Hey man, how's It going'." one wmen ae ng t two-a ory Hessian pad aft.er it was cleared of Hessian called out to a neighbor, waving suspects confiscated an 81"Senal of loaded wtlh one band while the other kept him weapons, extra ammun!Uon, growing handcuffed to a colleague as they were · marijuana plants, 8 laTge quantity of led to a black-Qd.white p8ttol car. LSD tablets and $4,300 ln coanterfpjt "SmUe, they1re taking your picture,'' travelers check!. aaid someone across the street. One ol the women arrestees tied the GATREllED LOOT pack of dogs to a tree in the front yard, They also confiscated an e!Umated but police allowed neighbors to take the $5,000 worth of television and stereo sets, animals later for safekeeping. Two Officers Accused Of Improper Conduct A complaint alleging improper ronduct Involving two Laguna Beach police of. ficera during an early morning field in- terrogation Thursday has been lodged with · the police department and is now FrOM Pqe J AIRPORT ••• terrina~. "the cost st.I.II would be minimal c<mpared t.p the hµndreds of millions qucKed for airports elsewhere ln the Count)'." Elaborating on awesome flnancing p~ blems for a regional airport -wherever It might be loc:ah!d -Corpmter said be doobted strongly that lh• taxpayers of Orange County wou1d not approve the spending ol ao much money. "This: ls especially clear when you realize that they turned down bond issues four Umes for the new jall and courts hlcillty, and that was an expense of only about S12 million, 11 he said. He said the El Toro plan, whether it were to serve as an interim or pennanent terminal, woold be the most economical idta. -· _ .. "AU we are asking to use at the Marine _fadlity II their runways, a taxi .... and the tower," be .. id. A new-tenninal for civilians, parking lot.I and maintenance atructures would be built at non-military ezpe11$1!1 ln what be Jokingly t.rmed th• "Carpernt.l'EI Toro Plan." Carp<IJler -atrong I • u g b t e r mldway through hll to.minute !peecll when, aflor hltUng et aircraft nob< critics. he glanced toward an opening. door In the Balboa Bay Club banquet room. The door opened and anU-nolse leader Dan Emory entered tardy. "Too bad, Dan," he quipped. "You mJ&aed, the best part." under lnvesUgaUon. Officers Larry Warren and Rich Kotzln are the men involved in the charge made by two young Lagunans. The police department declined to release the names of the complaining parties. 1be complaint contends that the youths were stopped at about 1 a.m. in the area of a Thalia Street car lot by the patrollng officers. Due to the lateness of the hour, the youths were requested to present their JdenUfication. The youths, it ls understood, lodged the complaint that night following the in- cident. The matter l!i now ·under in· vesUgatlon by Police Sgt. Wendel Faulk. Both otflcers involved are remaining on duty until the investigation is complete. From Pqe J FORTAS ..• lifetime fee for services to the foundation because of his interest in Its work In racial and religious cooperation. He sald he returned the flt when be discovered the court burden was heavier than be ex- peded, and wheo be liamed the Securities and Exchange Commlsson had1 transfernd Its lnvestlgaUon of Wolfson's stock dealings to the JustJce Department (or criminal prosecution. "There haJ been no wrongdoing on my part," Fortas said in the memo. '1Tbere has been no default bl the performance ot my judicial dutiet iD accordance with the high :sWKlards of the olt1ct J bold." Jt was letmed that from 1952 to IMS F'Ortas w1s an otncer ol Great Ame.rlca Corp., an insur1noe boldi.ng company, Ln Canon City, Nev. The papers of in- corporaUon fot the finn were !lled ln um by fomler Nevada Lt. Gov. CUUord JOOCll, whole i&mbling 'IJcense ln Lu Veaas had been suspended in 1955. ~~~~~~~~~~- ' Huntington Man's Case on Obscene Books Continued Will C0!1Slltu.-J guaranteea .o I I-of the ...... proled a Hun- tington Beach liquor if«e owner and three others dw'ged · with oaJe and dlslrlbullon ol ob•ce11e Ul«ature? A conUnuance <i the Ca.M! until May 28 \?as granted by Judge Kenneth Jones Thursday In West Orange County Judicial District Coor! to allow the deleodanll to _. an appeal for dlsmllAl ol the C ... OD thooe groUocla, Jury trial will opei. leotaUftly on Juoe 17 u the appeal for dllmlsMI ol the - orglnatlng at the Bl·Ll!e Liquor Store, ltlll Beach Blvd., falls. • . Owner William Henlbaw, 37, of 13191 Peek Circle, Westm.Dter; employe Hannon Stuart, 58, of J71U Autumn Cir· cle, Huntington Beach, and Arthur Zerla, 33, of G&Tden Grove, were arrested last October. The case led later to the arrest of Los Angeles book distributor F r e d e r i c k Weishoit, who aPs>areouy wppHed lbe allegedly OY«ly'!IPlcy llleratu... invo!V<d. Foreign Car C~ssis Taken at High School A topless, bodyless, engioelea car hai been stolen from I.he parking lot ol. the Laguna 8-11 High School auto !hop. The chassis U the small foreign car belongs to James Kausch, 16, of 841 Canyon View Drive. Value of the frame, trammission, and wheels taken was put at SISO. The theft was discovered Thurs- day. Chairs Lodge took the floor after the negotiator• fr9m both Communist delega- tions had denounced in almoet Identical ltrmll Nlam'1 e!P.~P!linl propoul that the path to peace 'btgto with a mutual withdrawal of all foreign military forces. The chief North Vietnamese negoliator, Xuan Thuy, ~ thll proposal. The Viet Cong's "forelp minl.ster," Tran Buu Stanford Pickets Try to Block Entry to SRI ~ANFORD (AP) .:..·with arms linked, more than 100 demooatrators, m06t of. ~ Stanford Uoivenity students, tried today to prevent em,ployes from entering a Stanford Research lnsUtute building. The pickets are opposing war related research at the lnstitute. About a <1<>zen employes passed pickets to go to work. Others were caught 1n a traffic snarl· C!'eated by a barrk:ade on nearby Pqe Mill Road, where an ad· ditlooal 300 penons gathered. Motorim drove across dividers and in- to fields to get out of the morning rush- bour Ueup. A few fist fights flared between demoosttatonl and antidemonstratton studel"lts who tried to remove barricades. But no Injuries: or arrests were reported . About two hours after picketing began, ·M to 40 Palo Alto policelrien joined a con- tingent on duty ewlier protecting the In. lltltute's Hanover street facilities. A barricade « aawhorees and table-ten- nis boards at uq.ver and Page Mill lntenectlon stalled long lines o I frustrated morning nub-boor motorists. About 150 of Slsn!MI Research In.rtitute's 3,000 emp4oyfs work in the Hanover facility \n the S t a n f or d Industrial Park. Many Of them have to go through the blocked intersection to get to work. The first group of about 4 O demoostcators set up picket lines about 7 a.m., displaying placards reading "SRI Kills" and "Pax not Poi." MAY SPECIAL from 20% to Compared with their representations in previowi: sessions, the statements of both Communist delegates were brief and restrained today. Klem said Nixon's reacllon to the Viet Cong peace plan was "not a proper response to the overall solution to the South Vietnam problem as set forth by the National Liberation Fronl." • He repeated the Viet Cong's oft-stated demand : The United States "must withdraw all U.S. and satellite troops from South Viet. nam without imposing any C011dition," and stop supportiµg the "warlike and cor· rupt" Saigon administraUon and let the peopie Of South Vietnam "settle among themselves their internal affairs with· out foreign interference." The replacement of the Saigon regime by a provjsionaJ coalition government is one of the proposals in the Viet Cong demaods. From Page J ROOSEVELT. •• memento of the war which Roosevelt had kept from his days as a brigadier general in the Marines. Roosevelt joined JOS in 1966, and Is president of the JOS Development Co. Ltd. He is a member of the board of directors of the parent holding company, JOS Ltd. (Panama) and several other subsidiaries . He Served in Congress for 10 years as a Democratic repres en tative from California's 26th district., and was an unsuccessful candidate for Calilornia governor in 1950. From 1965 to 1966, he was U.S. representative to the U.N. educational, scientific and cultural organization. Roosevelt's brothers and sister - Franklin D. Jr., Elliott, John and Anne- have also had marital problems. All have been married more than once. 50% off -OUTSTANDING VALUES ON DISCONTINUED FLOOR SAMPLES NOW IN STOCK ••• LARGE SELECTIONS OF QUALIT'I'. CHAIRS FROM THE FOLLOWING LINES, NATIONAL, MARGE CARSON, HIBRITAN, CENTURY, MONTEREY, JAMESTOWN LOUNGE, PACIFIC, QUALITY, AND MANY MORE. BE AMONG THE FIRST TO MAKE YOUR SELECTIONS AT THESE UNBELIEVABLE PRICES , •• ALSO MANY PAIRS TO CHOOSE FROM. IXCLUSIVI DEALERS FOR: HENR&DON-DREXEL-HERITAGE 90 DAYS NO INTEREST-LONGIR TERMS AVAILABLE ON APPROVED CREDIT INTEllORS NIWPORT IEACH Ptofanl0111l ln .. rtor LAGUNA llACH 1727 WHlcllff Dr., 642-2050 0..1 ..... ri 345 Norfh Cohl Hwy. OPIN lllDAT itl t ..._ ~=·~~~0 ~ ..... ,,,, OfJIN A!PAY 'TR t 494.6551 ! I ' 11 • • . , 1 .. Bonting~D: ,~eJi~ E'.Q llfl-0 N . voi:.. 62, NO.) 17, ~ SECTIONS, :.io P>;G~S ' JEN C!NTS ,. .. • • . Main · Street. Centerl . ., Site.: .Picked • Split Vote •• Ill .11y lllLLWI lll!ED -~ Ol • Olllr P'llll ....,. A proposed '6 million J\ew clvlC..center fa< Huntington Beach apparenUy will tie built on a 12-acre site at Main Street and Mansion Avenue rather than. in the oJ,d downtown area fullowini orders by the Cily Council 'lbursdoy nlgjll to buy U>e. site at a cost ol $360,000. and Ttius eods' years of dlscussioo monlhs o( intensive investigation of wbert ·the civic center abould i"· Tl\t Wife Stabs Roosevelt's Oldest Son GENEVA (UPI) -James RoOsevelt's third wife Gladys stabbed liim in the back 'Ihutsday night with his World War fl souvenir dagger _at the cou}>Ie's Swiss viii~, police reported ,today. The 62-year-old son of the late presi· dent was rushed to county hospital in critical condition. Doctors performed emergency surgery and later pronounced the fonner congre~man from California out of danger. Mrs. Roosevelt, 52, was admitted to Bel-Air Oinic for observation. Spol<esm<n for Roosevelt said she had been under tteatm~t for s eve re depression. First, repprts of the incident were con- f usiqg because ~ said Roosevelt had tiee1' attacked by ••a :lnentally unbalanced ;,,,m'ati•"•n!bOut. tdeoUfYfllg her; Thm repOrt8 n1eiitl~' .AD__. argument. . . Hour!i . later,• ~elt'f at~ notified newsmen: ;,I am-autborlUd to · say that Mr. RooseVel( confirfned today that the in· cident which has been reported involved "his wife. Mr, Roosevelt telephoned us from the hospital this morning and asked us to clear up this fact." Befpitag' a Boy DAILY PILOT• ....... ·W'TlnY CWIU. The couple was married in 1956 and have one child, Hall Delano. Roosevelt's earlier maniages to Betsey Cushing, a Boston socialite, and Romelle Schneider, a nune, ended in divorce. Roosevelt, eldeSt son of tbe late president, has tive children by the p~vious marriages. . ' Police spokesmen, trying to piece together detatls on the stabbing, said ~t occurred about 11 o'clock at the Roosevelt villa in the suburb or Vesenaf. Pat Downey, director .of the Hun,tingtoo,Beacll Boys,C!Qb,-belps Mike Palamaxes; ·8, With woodworking project. Downey. Thursday was named reciPient ,of·the Huntington· Beach Exchange CJµb's .annual BOok of Gofden Deeds Awanl-in recognlUoo •of his,effortsjto pfO!DOte jbvei1ile decency. • ,, Officials of Investors Overseas Service (10S), the firm Roosevelt represents in Geneva, said tii was stabbed just inside the.doorway of the big house, at the foot of a wide central staircase leading to the upper qua.rten. T'l<l' said Roqlevell was slabbed In UJe back with the Marine knife and then stUtnbled to a neighbor's house about 120 feet away. The neighbors called police, an ambulance was dispalclied, 11111· Eug~ne Biscailuz Dies Roosevelt was rushed to.the hospital. >SANTA MONICA ·<m -Eugene· tOS officials said the dagger wu • · Biscalluz, a little· .man with ·• courtly memento of the war wbJch Roosevelt bad manner and wide-brimmed hat .who kept from bis days as a brigadier general became "Mr, Caiifomia'"' among lawmen In the Marines. • Roosevelt joined TOS in 1966. and is dul'ing his 26 years a sheriff of Los prisldent of the IOS Development Co. Angeles County, died .today at 86. Ltd. He is a member of the board of He was known as a crack shot, a top directors of the parent holding ·company, rider favoring the sombrero and silver lOS Ltd. (Panama) and several other mountinJ.¥~0f the stat'e'~ ~Panisb ·pa1t, a subsidiaries. top ·admhilstripor., a~rtletttl~sa ·tracker of He served in Congrm for 10 years as a . CrooP, and t!evtloper OI' a number Qf neIDocratic r e p re s e n t a t i v e from rehabilitation centers,for·priaonets. California's 26th district, and was an He retired in 19'8 after 51 years in law unsuccessful candidate for Calilomia 'enforcement and bad beenin seclusion al .. ...,... in 1950. hl6' boUte bere alnce sullerfll& a -· F'J'om 1965 to 1965, he was U.S. .several years ago. ... ~Uve to the U.N. edl;lca~, "For decades he was a familiar sight in sdentific and cultural organizauon. 1 Parades, dressed • like a Spanish Don, Roosevelt's brothers and sister ....... astride 1 prancirig bone, waving and Fr8nklln D. Jr .• Elllol~ John and Anne-. smiling, often accompanied by hi3 cl"" have also had marital problems. All have friend, the lale actor Leo Carrillo. . been married more then once. • ~e .~. of_V('Dqapi -Warren, fipl . cily· manha1 ol"I:os Angeles, Biscalluz joined tbe· lhlrl.ff't,,~partment in 1907 • when the force bad .only 21 men. At the time he · reUred1 mare than 3,000 men were under him. ' He at.udied Jaw ·by night and rose to assistant chief ·deJJQty sheriff in 1920. Nine years later,'GCV. c . C. Young called Biscailuz lo Sacramento to help organju the hifihway patrol. Wh"9. Sheriff William Traeger wu electQI' to Congress in· 1932, Blscalluz w1~ apj>olnted sherijf, He otood for election two yeen later and waS elected until forced ' lo ·rew. by age. "I bid'" only two b:olMI wbe:n I wa.s sheriff," Biscallui was~loncl of saying. '"!be people who eleded me and my coo- ·actence." NationaUy Biscalluz won prominence 4! the Span!W..peaking olllctt who brought (~ Bl8CAILVZ, Page Z) . . . . ,. ' . . ~ of tbe _.1111e COll\J>llll' can . ail add~lonal b!\lek downtown and addlnJ rep,u-chue \be slteat 1'e111me price it ii it. ioi'tbe •present· civic cm~· to· mate receiving now if the cicy'dorl not build its enough space for a new civic center, higb schoor 111Af-lild -''ll we dall't ilo somdhlng in lllree y..n Ulla wb61e body 5hould· be recaUed:" 1 • • civic center withln· three years. The COOOcllnian Sl}ipley 'aaid he beHevecl agreement gi'ves the coni)>any six months that the city would be better seryed by COOncllman Coen had been -the key vote in tbe .matter. "l can't aee Pursuing this game of verbal ping p:lll" any longer," said Coen pointq out tha~ be has been for bearing all Uae fleU, but that "all the raets are in now." to e1~be that agreanent following the using the downtown land for private ln- eiplraUon of the three y~. · vestment father than'Jor a'Civlc qmter. Space· atudles are.already ·under way in Pointing· out that tbert has been a lot of addition to advance J)llnnlng of needs dllcussion on civic center locatklns, the and site use by Ule Planning Depaninenl oouncilman said Uie mrcb l<r 1 ....., Of. the city. • • · site bu been IOrt of a "civic crappme." • He Ulen moved· adopllon of Ille bllti school site and poymmt Gf lhe,..,,000 Dr. Kaufman bad proposed purdlaiillc--He called lw"tmmediitdr nomlill the (See CENTER, ..... lt , 'Doctor' Jury Out Panel Ponders Fate of BogitsMediC - By TOM BARLEY • 01 "" o.lb' ''"' '''" A:n audaciOlls electrical engineer who used the name of a l!rjllianl.eardlologllt W!ill•. be ueated-more lban 100 paUents at a FullertOn. i::Unic'may soOn be on the other end of .a dlll.,...I kind .of dia-1s -tbe verdict of 12 Superior ~ juroh. They ldt UJe courtroom today to review two weeks of testimony in the trial ol Robert Ervin Brown: And lbe quiet .confident Alabama . -- Lumber Strike End ProspectS ARl!flr.. ,Cl9.udy . . ~. BJ l_f;lNiqi: Jl!lll!ltN., . ...... ""':/'"I""' . '~J!'d!p!P-ed cloqde4 I" an ootl) .~of 1 lumbor llrtn Iba! majl. _..~ Qrange County'.1 huao ~;lnduslij. I Membd' of Uie Millwork,.. IJld C.blnetmaten Ulllon loCal zrn voted Wecfllesdly' l!llbt to llirlke. '!bl Union manben, ·who man Orqe GOWlly lwnbeeyards, are ,..king tncreues In wages and benellll totaling 18 cents per hour, a«;!l<dlng to Jim Maynard, a negotiator "for'eomrty tumberywd owners and manager of the Santa Ana Lumber Co. -. ' I . ' The 0 Tian1sters Union, whose members carryr lµmber~.,the yarQs~tq ~:~n~ structiOO sites, are ho~ p(Ck~ lines thr6wj\ up 7'!'ursday ~y ttie ·mi_11~ters and cabinetmakers. / T' · 1 f·· According to Al Swift, business representative fpr the Orange County t~sters, the teamsters are ~seeking an are.a-wide agreement to bring'wages in Orani•-Counly .. and Long Beach up to a par w!UJ.wqes ln·L<il Angelos Counly. Officials of Loe<!! Zl1l hive been unavailable for comment tor the pul two daya. . TMmllers and lumbor· group ollicials agreed today that negotiations are pro- ceeding bt good fa!UJ. But Ibey oaid UJat negotiatioM with the cabinetmakers and mUlworken have not yet begun . "We.. can't be in two places at once," said Maynard. All major lwnberyards in Orange County are cloied, Maynard Slid ye1ter~ day, be<:auwtbe Teamsters are honoring ihe picket linel Gf the lumberworkers. Acconlb(g to a· 1latement i:eleued Frl- diy morning by Charles T r e n t a 1 · -eiaty of !lie Dillrlcl Council of Carpeulers, Ille •Jumberworken and teamstM are negotlatlng as one. for rlll<Wal of 1 jolnl -UJat esplred May 15. . Sa1d Trtnta': •t'The employers' tactlcs bsckllrod In U>elr face becluH Instead of ll<(IOtialing In good Ip!~ and making a· · (See LUMllER1 PIP II suspect hU reU.ved them of one decision by adm!Ufllg .. maJ\Y oecasiinl Ilia! 'be is guilty of. posing u Dr. Glenn Lyon FOster, a·Univeralty of Alabama'medical ochool cari!tologUt. . • . Wblt. tlley mUll decide In· llielr own cllni~ analysis of what has to be the most startling act of' fraud iri county medical hiltory la just how serious was tbe crim~ ~at Brown allegedly ~m· mitted·aild what penalty should be ad· minl!I~ for b i s infringement of a ' . . ,: stringent code. Three Of 17 coui.ils' of. I = medicine without a licenle were · 1 .. UJe !rial progreaed. Bui Brown mu face1 poaslble ctitvlctioil on the ~14 re- mainlng lndictmenll eocb of wblc:h,could bring him one to ten years in . state prison: Deputy Public Defender . Lawrence Buckley obviously hopes that all of t:tue ci>unll will ·no! be C<llisidmd. And be is (See 'DR. BROWN', Pop ll ~each -Council _w eigm. . . . . -~ew Parking Autlu,ri,ty , ,\: //,. I ft ! I ' 1 ) ' fl f • ' , ' • ! ~of···~lllllioil. ndellqe Its pll._ralllllf,,_,; ty linl,.,i .~i. ilt!i*"'" ~ Uuoogh per~ Iola lo ~ V0<b Tl\D!1day illlf!l hUl. UlO', '."ith\tulUI ~ d~eiopinent 1i7.>pr1wa: liOpOo oi a!'ltlis! -.llllllD""""'-tltit i.e. , qpi~ of u.e bllPi.d ~ mJlhl be able to liUlid 'iut clroam. • • · lie aJid Ifie dtY mJihi p!r/' or Jore' 1' Devld Holt, wllo tog'elher wlUJ. hi3 few t1ilnland dollan per year, but .. i molher Martha Holl, bu been criUcal losses would be JOOtt than oftset by ad- Gf clly efforts to clean up the bllibted dWonal nvenue from Increased aa1tr 11111 downtown, Tbunday nlght a g a I n properly values. , presented their plw for a large twin Holt, .~alling .bis P,lan. a ttcfrtam of the I owe r c o mmerclal.office·resldential futun, said be bai flriancial boclda&' I.I d ·-•--• I ••-of ~ . build UJe project from an UlllllD1ed e.ici..,... .. -Of' .,.. corner ~ .. am "international fi:Mn.'' · " street and Plclflcceo..t Highway wbere He warned th&! any au.mp! by.ifit dtf once .al UJelr Controversial Hol~ lo acquire hi3 land for a patklnt lot HoepaWrbuIJdJna.,: . ~ould tpvol"'."e ~ COIM ·becaaal 'Counbilmeil Were · 1 0 0 k i n g at we have a ~ear lease on tbe land "-'··-· I for "'"" lol . · (See AIJT!IOIUTY, POI• II pre ......... -1 pans. • a, par_.._ ~pro-· ject whlch ·lfOU.ld include an area ,ft'otn 6.UJ Street to Lake Btreel•one block lnlaiid !>:0m · till!' hlilbway llid· a;~cte parcel east of Lake Street south of Atlailta Avenue. Jack Froggau, H1111Ungton Beach 'Co. vice president, said his company which owns the five acres eut of Lake Street, wants to develOp the comer of Lake Slreet and Pacific Coast mpway ltaelf lind would like (b t~ tlte land. He laid be .would>l>ave no .ObJection to condemnaUon of Uie mt of UJe property and that h1I company woukl agree to a coodemnatioll suit OD•~ entire parcel if the city woUld drOp the suit on the •lower half when the Huntingtcn Beach Co •. begins Its devel-enl Holt, however, would not agree to the suggested arrangement. The idea of corr demning the property fo~, a parlcin'g lot and Ulen backing off if a substaliUal devek>pment plan is produced was sug· ge8ted as a aort of 1 'teat of the sincerity anc1 1bll1ty of property cnrmm." Froaatt bePn the dilcuoa1on by IUI· gesllng tlllt Ille Puking Aulllol>lty ' ' George Baker . Succumbs 'at 75 · Rellttd·u.s. Anny Col a..,,.. Biker, husband of West Orange Co u n I :i: ~unicipal Judge Cella Baker, died Thur~ day night alter a leogtby illness. H~ -75. • Col. Boker 01J<:connbed 1t•t :!O 1'""· at t~e family home, 1203 Part St., in R11D' ltng(bn Beach. The retlted Army officer · wu · wen known for his civic activtti~ in the ~tiiJ.; tlngtqn Beach area and· h1i: numerWs ap. pearances in the Huntington Beiicti Playhouse. He was also active in hunting, fishing and rock collectlq ·and mlC!O nwnerous lrlp< to Blja Callfoml1. Col. Bater was a former member of Rotary: lnternaUonal. Funeral -on pending at' Smith's Mortuary. • In addition to hi3 wife, COi. BUer ls "'rvlyed by lwo ~ L!"'1a ~ aDd Mrs. Carl Grover. / .... - Airport Leader Urges El. _T~ro Use Huntington Man's · Case oil Obscene Books COriiinued ' \ • • '.1 I ' -~----"--~·---................... _ --· -• -..... .. --- • \ I I • " PILOT LOGBOOK Father Time Catches Up With H;untington High B1~REBD °' ... ~ ......... The majestic Spanilh archltacture and bell tower of Huntlncton Buch Hlih 5cbool bu l>eell a !aoomar~ ct lhe Talbert Valley fO< n<ariJo ftve-de- adel now. Rec<DU1, 1-....-1 the ballowed IMlilutiGn ct oor vane, bu boll! oub-Jec:led to • bit ct • physical samlnallon. The resulll """' not ., eocouragjng for lhe Grand Old Lady ct Malo Street at Mansion A veoue. * Hunt!nctm High'• lltnJctural qualltloa bave a pod tract recard. For o:ample. the two-story concrete and stucco ltructure handily withltood ravages of the famed 1133 earthquake which leveled numerous lesser achoola lo !JUI' area. Father Time and the ravaies of weather, however, . bave a way of catching up with even the most sturdy. So It was that the Huntington Beach Union High School Diltrict trustees Tuesday night hired Neptune and Alloclates to develop plans for curing the ill! of our famed old bJgb acbool builcllJ!i. Mier mmlnallm, tbe llate ~ice of 'Archlfacture susgested, "The baDding ud bleac:ber structure would be huatdOUI to oceu.panb in the event ot. a major earthquake and consequent.I)' are unsafe for use ••• " Dilltrict Supt. Dr. Mu Forney explained that the trustees have ordered the architectural farm to come up with a repair plan. "Until then, we will have no idea bow much money It might coat to repair the fadllUes." , Dr. Forney pointed out that whatever it COl!ltl the tnm&a are authorized now by ltate i.w to levy an lddlUonaJ tu ol 10 cents per $100 a.ssessed valua. t1on ea.Ch year until the repair bill is paid if there is no building bond money to pay lbe bill. * "No vtlte·of Che people Is needed for th!!," Dr. Forney aplalned. He said aucb a levy ~ ralle llbbut ~,000 each year baaed oo the pre1e11t .._. ed valuati<11. He wll'Ded, too, that the amount_ the trustees can levy could be raiaed to u much u llll cents and lhat JeglllaUoo allowing lhll II pending In tbe lqiala- tur.. He aald the fact Utat Ute building doet not meet the atandmts ct Ute alate Field ACI, a law r<quirlng achoo! bulldil!il to "' earthquake proof, II !JC11 I llW'pl'lle. "We have known It for yeare:, but our belt inf.ormaUcm ts that it la not unsafe for day to day UR, only in case of a major earthquake." "We knew it did not meet the Field Act, but it had not been declared un- safe. It was remodeled in 1963-64 to elm.lnate objections of the state fire mar- shal and it may have to be remodeled again. "I might remind lhote who ~ object to an additional llk<llt tax 1evy that the last two building bond proposals carried money for these repairs. Both were turned down despite there being no increase in the tu levy lf the bonds had been approved." Announcememt that the bui1dlngl are unsafe may have revived the uni.. flcallon Issue. -noidenUt oft be north part ct Uta city, particularly thole whose children have been transferred from the newer Marina High Sdlool to llunllnglon, are oot gath<;rlog algnatum today on petiUona calling for I unlfled aclxlol dlatrlct In the dty ct llunllqton Beach and Jeayjq Jl'OUJ>o ta111 vane,, Seal Beoch and Wmmlnaftt to develop their""" unification plans. LUMBER ••• r r 't~.1MJ-todila7 n112'M' _. mm• 1-llnC .,.,. alfw. fta --.-., ...., tlleY ...._ •1111111"'" ....... UAllt ,., ...., " ' .,,. ~ ....... ) -.. ....., to meet with lhe employm any time, but IO far we have heard nothing from tbem," aald Trenta. According to Maynard; tbe lumberyard awnera bad tr1ecl to·....,Oate wi!ll union 1epr-i.Uv01 between April IS .-cl May s; bat fe'IWeaenltUvm were not avallalJle. Maynard also aJl<Cod. lhat Uta union'• chief negotiator ~as out of town from May 12 to May 15. Mllll)'Dll'll lllid Iha! there """ S4 pl ( e I al dmwlds to be negotiated, whlcb pi'<WOted negollallom from be- In( -pleted prior to lhe c:aitract ... plrMm dlto' al May II. Trents &aid the necotJallng commll'tee roomm>et!ded delaying a aJrike for I -beyond lbe May 15 date, but Ute worken, enraged at the low wage offer, v«ed Wednesday night In a secret baJ.. 1 .. to llrike .tmmediMely. NO SHORTAGE YET Accordlng to construction officials at Deane Brothers ol Newport Beach, most work sites in the county have not yet felt the lumber shortage. 'l'bey have a flO.day aupply of. lumber, stocked in anUcipallon ol tile Strike !l*lhlllty. After tha4 IC• con11n1 to Du Sima, construction mamger for Lake F~ Hemes, Milsion Viejo, "It'll hurt, to what ext<nt we doo't know." Officials of the Building Jndustry Association said they had not received wa'd of lumber shortages at any major Orange County coostructkm sites as yet, but said they expected to hear of trouble ti tbe slril<e lasted beyood Mooday. Fro• P .. e l ''DR. BROWN' • • also bidding !or a Jury ruling Utat Brown's crimes should only be considered as mi!demeanon, a lesser penalty that would bring him a aix·month jail tenn on each count. Judge Byron K. McMiiian sent the jurors out of his courtroom to deliberate at 9: 10 a.m. today after completing his instructions to the panel Neither Buckley nor C h I e f Deputy District Attorney James Enright was prepared to commenl on the posaible out· come of the huddle. 'Instant Replay' Aids Valley's Prob km Kids Thanka to a new mobile video unit, Founlaln Valley School Dls\rlcl teachers are helping problem -to aee themstlvea and correct their problems. '11ie mobile studio, located in a large white van, contalni a closed cJrcWt TV system with remote control cameras, moniton and a video tape recorder. Il was provided through a $98,000 grant given to the district last year under Tide VI of Ute Elementary and Secondary EducaUon Act. How doea the system work? The cameras are set Up in the classroom and videotapes are Made from selected classroom sttuaUons In the van. Taping a problem cblld'a behavior later aUows tbe teachers to carefully analyu bll tsped performance In an uniJ>. temipted lltttatioa. Tbe unll alrudy bu proven llleU to be valuable In ldenUlylnc learning d!f. ficulUes, in bolaUng prablems some chlldren bave in coordinating their muacles and ljl Wlructionat pmcrlptions such aa manipulative games, word woclitlona ~ other eaerclsea. FtQl'ltain Valley •Schools peraonnel ~ave Invited oth~r area districts to partlclpate In Ute video .,..ryals'ol lbelr children, In- cluding elementary school districts from Garden Grove, Sanla Ana, Newport- Mesa, Wes~ and Ocean View. Family Fun Set At Beach YMCA I Painless Animal Death Macl1ine Used in Beach A new oxygen reduction lank has been added to the Huntington Beach Humane Society's facility at 21632 Newland St., for the extennination of sick and unwanted animals. Robert Sharkey, business manager ot the society, says the new facility was developed by the Air Force and provides a "quick, painless way to put animals to sleep by rapidly reducing the oxygen in the tank." It's called a Euthanair Chamber and ()perates by withdrawing oxygen at a fa~t rate, until the animal simply blanks out without knowing it. The chamber cost !3,500 and was instal!ed during the past week. The effect of the chamber is the same as if an animal were taken up to an altitude of 50,000 or 75,000 feet, explained Sharkey. One clller aUd "we dori't want oar c:blldren going to a dangerous acbool. II If!"""'""" cu _p rid al """·al ~ adml•lob allol In tile fcbool dJalH!ila,..., 1!111 Ila~ pmr'1i:as'llO.ip IClili!-• II I --' · But lbe burly Enright pulled out all lbe stops Thursday in a final appeal to the jury. He accused Brown of lying several tlmea on the witness stand and be lalh.i Buckley~ argument lhat lbe IOll~n Binnlng!Wn man had not banned any of the 103 patients he 1a alleged to have _ '=4 Uta run~ c11n1c. • "' .• .~ •• __ .. 11111 •1'""'"' . hid IDd~ banned S!f llti\ll!6 patlants llai.d· In the lfand J~· -~ ba would today be facing milrder'(!tiug11. ·The absence ,Of such charges, be Beach's Parade To Feature Flags For Satuiday Another Family Fun Night will be beld at Ute Huntington !leach Ctty Gymnasium and poo1, lSOO Palm Ave., beginning at 7 'Ibe Humane Society has th e responsibility of putting to sleep aick animal sent over by veterinarians and animals who stay in the shelter more than a month with no one claiming them. Previously, the Huntington Beach facility used a gas box for this operation, a somewhat less satisfactory method, says Sharkey. Fro111 PGfe l AUTHORITY •. which would have to be paJd off even belcn we alarted to talk about the price of the land. 0 We are going to protect ounelvet," be said. Holt aald bll project would cort aomewbere between II million and $10 million to build and "wou1d involve banks, commercial shops of an kinds, apartment towars, an office building, a first cllaa ratauran~ • l1rimmlng pool and even an outdoor bandstand atcip one of the buildinp ... "We want to be allowed to devtlop our own property," he said, adding that tt' would take about two )'ears to break ground on lbe project "ll lt b favored by the council." Holt u.id he would accept controls by the city, but remained firmly opposed to any condemnation suits being filed on bis or any other property in the area. 1be Holts have accused the city of being "land grabbers" as a result of the city ordering destroyed an old brick building which once stood on the nortbea.st corner of Main Street and the highway. The family alao owns tbe buUding - houslnji lbe Syndlcato 3,000 Club operated DAILY PllOT 1.-rt H. W-.4 l'ralfllll .,.. ""'41..., J•ci1 a. CwW. Ya ............ o.ri.rJ Mtlltllr' n-•• ICe•'fil ·--n-.. A. M ... -'ir11• Malvtl ... l!"lw A,.._rt W. l•t•• Wiltit111 R••4 "-I•• Hulltlntfoll ·--l!"dl• Cil\r E•t• , .. k ........ O... Jltf .... s ... .. M.lft111 "'"'•1 ,,o. an no, '2''' -- I ......... two.: m1 w..1 ..... 9c1v....,.,. c:a.. ~'*wt.I..., Stral ~ae.dMm..,.. ... ,... by Gilbert Covell. Tbe club bu been a constant aoorce of problems to lbe police and city government. Mrs. Holt present~ her plan to the council in .mid-J967, but bas taken no ac- tion since IDward bulldlnji il Councl.lman Henry Kaufman observed that "we suggested then to Mn. Holt thlt ohe could apply !0< ~wldlng permlls al any tlme. 'l'be city iJ not holding ber up. "I find k bard to Imagine that an In- ternational corporation would come Jn . a!ld inveit in lbe middle of tbat blighted area." Councilman Al Coen was ruecessful in winning council approval of studies of Ute parking authority pl&M and several alternates including one leaving the Holt property for private developmenL Investigators · Hunting Engine Of Fatal Plane FedEral air crub lnveallplora today are htmting lbe left engine of a """"'1ed B-26 bomber which crashed in El Segundo .U days ago, killing a Fountain Valley engineer and five other persons, William Glenn, supervising accldenl in- spector for the Federal Avittl~ Acency llld Thursday that all wroctage bu been recovered from the fire-blackened scene and Is being reasaembled. Fallure of the ldt """"" 1s a atronc theory for the post-takeoff disaster. which killed the tour north Amerlc1n Rockwell Corp. emptoyes aboetd and two victims on the ground. The aircraft had just taken off from Los Angeles International Airpoct on a secret electronics gear-testing mlsaion when it veered downward to the ri&ht and hit two apartment buikilnp:. u Ute left eogine failed, the other could have thrown &be craft ouL ol. control and pulled the research lll>lp to Uta rillbl rm.. of lhe cmnnea ..... from Ute !inn's Au-tic! Division, Anaheim, ln-dudlnc Elmer a. Ja8. a ; a1 10110 M"1llnl GlcirJ Ave., F-Valley. From P .. e l CENTER •.. price which had been nqoUlled wlUt the Huntington Beach Co. Councilman McCncklln pointed out that the high achool llto will cost an additional ft0,000 per ymr tor 25 Yetn and Bartlett arsued in vain Utat "for II years Uta df'wn of the -4< hu been to have a new civic~ neir the beach." claim•, is sufncient ev1df:nee of the p~ secution'1 conclusion \hat Brown's onl7 ctlme Was to pose as a qualllied. medical practlooer. . From Pqe l BISCAILUZ ••• Filly flags will Dy In Huntington Beach p.m. Satunlay. · when the U.S. Naval Training Center, San 'I'he YMCA-sponaored event will Include Diego, flag team carries the entire host volleyball, basketball, pool, chess and of state flags in the 65lh annual Folirth of checkers gamea and is open to the public July parade here. at a $.50 admission charge for adults and Navy volunteers sport a unifonn $.25 for children. delegation marching with the flags in the YMCA members Will be attmitted at order each state was admitted to the the reduced rate of $.40 for adults and Union, lead by the flag or Delaware, ad-$.20 children. mitted in Decei:nber, 1787. Swimming acUviUe.s will be provided in The llO-ltate flag team will be ooe of the Clty'a heated pool unUI 10 p.m. several marching unlt.s on dilplay in the Thoae interested In participating in the Ocean View Trustees Cancel Monday Meet The regular meeting of Ocean View School Di&trict lrustees 6Cheduled tor May 19 has been canceled. annual Hunllngton Beach J a y c e e -fun night are advised to bring their own fulitive murdertss Clara Philllps bad: sponsored event which be&ins at 9:45 bathing sutta and caps and tennis shoes from Honduras. Mrs. Pblllipa diapatcbed a.m., July 4. for the gym games. A new meeting date has been set for May 26 at 7:30 p.m. in the district board room, 7972 WaJ'IIU Ave., Huntington Beach. a love rival with a hammer in 1m far r-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~::--'llt~~ .she was coovicted aDd sentenced to ( 5 E U 4 a 1 But Ille escaped !rom Ute old county MAY SPICIAL .:~~~~al!~~ci~~ ~ ".: ch • 20% 50% ff Caribbean island cooperative but public a I rs from 0 0 f!Ympathy was for Mrs. Phllllps, a woman IO · O they considered had made just a little mistake. Overcoming hostility with diplomacy and his ability to speak Spanish, he won the islanders' confidence and persuaded Mrs. Phillips to waive extradition. OldUmers recall when 350 angry sit· down demonNators had to be evicted from the Douglas Aircraft plant in 1937. Without weapons, Biscallui walked into the plant, debated with the men, then got Ulem to agree to come oul peaceably. As an administrator, Bilcai1u1 waa c~ted with pioneering the ll)'Stem of rehabilitable prisoners. 'Mle sheriff's fprce wore its first ,uni!onns under bis, admlniltr-ation and he organized the Sheriff's Crime Prevention Bureau • Born ln Los Angeles in 1883, be married WllleCte Harrbon, h~ wUe ct la years, In 1902. After his rellrement. he became the local chief of the March of Dimes and hooted lhe annual Sherill's Parade In Los. Anl!el ... He Is survived by a son, Martin. Funeral services are pending. Musical Show On At School Tonight Can-can girls, square danctrt and gun-. fightora will add to the atl(acUoo of Fountain Valley High School's ftnt mwical production. . · Tbe show, "How the WtSL wu,Lorl" w1ll be preMt1ed al 8 I o n 11 h \ In Uta acbool l)'D!llUiwn. Adrnlssioa will bo' 11.75 !or ad u Its and $1 for cblldron.· Tkbtl will be oold at tbe door oa the evening al perfonnanct. The mus!Clll, writ"'" and prod-by students. will feature Fountain Valley HJgh'a aa..volct A C&ppella Choir and a cut of mor• than 40 atudents. Included in the program will bt such ravortte.s u "The Street.s of Laredo'' "Ghost RJder1 ln the Sky," "Buttons and Bows," and "I Didn 't Know Ute Gun Wu Loaded." The '5-piece Barona' C on c e r t Orche.o;tra, directed by Jtmes Doyle, will back up the choir ln theae numbers. OUTSTANDING VALUES ON DISCONTINUED FLOOR SAMPLES NOW IN STOCK ••• LARGE SELECTIONS OF ·QUALITY CHAIRS FROM THE FOLLOWING LINES: NATIONAL. MARGE CARSON, HllRITAN, CENTURY, MONTEREY, JAMESTOWN LOUNGE, PACIFIC, QUALITY, AND MANY MORE. IE AMONG THE FIRST TO MAKE YOUR SELECTIONS AT THESE UNBELIEVABLE PRICES ••• ALSO MANY PAIRS TO CHOOSE FROM. INTERIOltS NIWPOllT BIACH. p~-•-I I 1a~--. 1721 WMtcllff Dr, 642-2050 'wo:i':,_~ ,_ LAGUNA BEACH """ NIDAY 'm ' Avellablo 9AJD-41SID :MS North ='/::I;, 'l'fl , 4f4.6SSI .... , .. ,_ ..... 0.-.. c...., l4to116J . I • . -.. ~· MRS. JAMES E. MIZELL II Makes Newport Beach Home Pamela ·Mosier Recites Vows Escorted dow n the aisle or the Episcopal C~urch of the Messiah in Santa Ana was Pamela Ann MoSier who ex. changed wedding pledges and rings with James ElswortJ1 Mizell II of Newport Beach. The Rev. Herbert H. Weld Sr. performed the evening nuptials for lhe daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Mosier of Newport Beach and the son of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Mizell of Costa Mesa. The bride selected a Jon~ white lace gown with a siogle veil held to a pearl and lace Desserts Prepared Inviting area residents to Come for Dessert is the Southern California Edison .Company. Home economists will be demonstrating simple b u t eJegant desserts in the Elec- tric Living Center, 538 Main St., Huntington Beach, begin- ning at 7 o.m. Monday, May 19. Other evening courses will be olfered on May 21, 26 and 28. Daytime demonstrations will be offered at 10 a.m. May 20, %l, 23 and 27. There is no admission charged for the demonstra- tions, and each guest receives a recipe book. Additiona l in formation may be obtained by calling the company , 547-7581, extension 278 .. crown. She carried a bouquet ol white fiowers and baby's breath. Miss Blyn Hazel was maid of honor and bridesmaids were the .Misses Bonnie Mosier, the bride's sister; Melani Milell, the bridegroom's sister, and Lisa Tucker, her cousin. They donned white lace aver pink dresses while the honor atten- dant wore a lime green ribbed satin gown. Stephen Turley was the.best man while guests were seated by Jeffrey Leitch. Robect R. Mosier Jr., the bride's brother and Thomas Art.wJ.ian. Candles, White gladioli and pink carnations decorated the church. Followiog the ceremony the bride's parents home waS ~e setting for the reception attended by 200 guests. Mrs. Richard Tucker, the bride's aunt f r om Anaheim, assisted. Special guests were Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Christiansen of Hollywood, the b r i d e ' s grandparents and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Keene of Beacon Bay, the b enedict's grandparents. The new Mrs. Mizell, a graduate of Corona de! Mar High School, attended UCLA and now is in the Nursing School at Orange C o a s t College. Her · husband is a graduate of lhe same high school and is enrolled at OCC and in the Navy Reserve. The newlyweds honey- mooned in San Francisco before making their home in Nr.u·port Beach. ' Peeriflg Around 1'SISS AGNFJI Blomquist, pTj!S\dent ol NewPOrt-Balbo' Savlngs and Loan Association, will preside over installatioa · lupcheon cettmonies of lbe 1southern California Symphoey-HollyWOOd Bow I Association In the Balboa Bay Club nest Sunday . MR. AND MRS. VERNON Mathews of Co.5ta Mesa are visiting their daughter and son-in-la'v in Panama City. Guatamala will be one stop for them en route home. Norwegian Holiday Celebrated J\fay 17, lndependece Day of Norway, will be ceJebrated by Southern California Sons of Norway lodges with an even~ ing of dancing in Mayflower Auditorium, 234 Hindry St., Inglewood, at 8 p.m. Alfon Bergstrom's Orchestra will provide music for dancing dur ing the May 17 event and · a program and refreshments will be included in the festivities. Trygve Lle Lodge will meet for initiation of new members Thursday, May 22, iJl the American Legion Hall. Costa Mesa at 7:30 p.m. Leonard Wolfdrd, president, will con· duct the meeting. On June 7, a Ha,vaiian luau is planned by the Trygve Lie Lodge and the Coast Viking Club, and on Sunday. May 18, a fam ily picnic is planned in Sycamore Grove Park, ·Los Angeles. Anyone wishing information on the lodge or any of tl1e events may call Mrs. Ray Nielsen, 548-6888. Auxiliary BRAND NAME SHOES AT DISCOUNT PRICES! "B1111 Na.mes Yo11 Kttow, Shoe• You Love" At Cr1Uy, Cra:y Prices. COSTA .MESA'S NfW CANCELLATION SHOE STORE • UR STllDE • KIMEL • COUIES • NATURAUZER • JOYCE AND OTHER BRANDS YOU KNOW WE SPICIALIZE IN HAlll> TO PIT SIZES AAAA To D -4 To 11 SA~-ON SHOES ·------ c:::=::::J 2300 HARllOR BLVD. HARBOit SHOPPING CENTER 546-6775 ,_ .. Thrifty ..... , ' Newlywed Sampsons Honeymoon '· Tax Topic For Cl-iA-iG Jumper Jewels LEGAL NOTICE MAY 12, !Ht "ubllc lie1rl1>g5 will k held by lhe Colli M.,_• P!•nn!no (Dmm\ulofl •I !~e Cit~ Hiii, 77 Fllr Orl~e. C°'18 Mt51, C1llfor~l1, 11 l ;JC p.m. Dr ef IOOll '' POUlolt llltrNl!er on NoO<>dlV, Ml y ~6, !'H•. R1!!11rdlng ll>t lollc;>wfng 1ppllceliD'lf: lilt-Plllllkln No. R·f.4f, fOr MAX HURWITZ, 1611 lrvlllt Av""°', Cone Mbl, Ct!ll .• for Pllrl"llllllm frO ftlPll9 Ol'Oflllflf dfl<:rlbld .. I portion o1 LDI 7L NfWl'Ol'I ~lght1 TrKt. Ind loc•t.i et 1671 lr-.lns AYWIUI, CO.hi Mnt. C-1Hf~ from R·I Ill Cl.C,,. lOtot UteplilJl'I 1111rmll Ho. ll-4*, for WARO INVESTMENTS, 21to Ntwoort 81\111., eo.ia M-. c.111 .• fot ptrmlll!IOn lo «IOI""' two U ISl1!'111 lll!llty !'Ooms lllfo f"'9 "9¢MIO<' 109'1...,.... wltfl l!O 11r...-, #llklrig I IO!tl 01 1M ...,1 .. liut.M of 12 ....,1._ on Ol'DPll'f\' 1Pttftl4 1t 2110 Nft'IMlrt •1vd,, cosi. MISI, ca11t .. 111 e a iont. 4, Zont nceptiDn oermll No, ZE·~t. for HACIENDA HARIOR, 1617 Wuklitf Drive NP, 104, Ntwport lffch, CtUI,. for ptrmli.tlon to «onlltvcl I l1 Ul'lll •Plrtl'M!ll comple11 lo '""' "CP" •tQU!remei•" on prOptrl)' IOtll9d tt m ,,.,., U\ 4-...to Wett, Cott. M9:s..-c1111 .. "' Ill ... c,.._,_ '· l-ucep!lon. permU No. ZE'-•7-tt, lot LA COSTA. 1617 Wu lclllf Orlvt ND. 10(, Nirwptrl BtJJth, Clllf,. for permlulon ID cont!nxf • 2• 11111' tl)llrltn.enl Corni>fU IO mttl "CP" rtqulrttM1'11 on. proCJetl'f' 10ctltd 11 );4 AYOc,td!I Slrtet, CO!ll Mtu, Cellf,, In 111 R•·CP ion.t. ZOl'le U ctll1iDn. 1111rr11lt No, ZE-"41·''· !Or THOMIJ E, W&:ST llllfo11 C.11t Clluece. 1it11 Ju.11 C•Ph<lr•f'IO. ceu1 .• to• P1•ml)tlon frO Oftfll1 • rtr00ur.• rntrk~t In en ~hllflv 11111 l'lol.llf m e Cl rone wHh 1t1'!'1<l!Vt OUhloer dlr.plly or orod111:i. PA ,roperty loc•lcd .. 415 E. 11th S!tnl, C.lt MtH. Ctllf. F'r\d1y, M1y 16, 1969 DAJLV PILOT J:J LEGAL NO'MCE LEGAL NOTICE • • • 14 DAll.Y Pn.OT H wo..a. I Dollar Oruy World Currency 1J a\'tVU POlllD To you, an AmerlclD ~ lbl munlnc ol lhe,i.M CUI'. noey convuls!OOS<lil Europe Ii toimpl1 thlsr Tlln Is ooly .... global ..,...,, -and lls name 11 lhe Uniled Stata dollar. AROUND OUR mooey Ille cum:ncles of the rest of the world fluctuate up and down. While t be Jr OuctuatiOM, in tenns of each other are 'ritally alinlllcan\ lo the naUons and ptil)J>les directly Involved, what primarily matters to lhe safe- ty ol the world monetary syst.em a.re their fluctuaUODS in terms of the dollar. For our tn9MY Is pegged ta gold -Is u "eood as gold" because of our long-honored pledge te buy and sell gold on demand to qualified Central banks and f9l'ti&n governments at ~ an ....... Thi& m a k e 1 comforting readiq. Indeed -bul despite Ille dollar's atablllty turtng this latest Clennan mark· Fra>c:H frano-Blrtlsll pound crills aiJd deipita the fact that the dollar bu not at lllj' lime recently been under speculltlve attack, ,.. are far from flAanclally "pure. 11 Far from tl · Our balance of payments ls in a shambles. In the first quirter of 1969, we actually ran a deficit in our trade ac· counts, the first quarterly ddldLiD.J-tJja~ With this red ink in our trade nee piled Ob top ol Ille red Ink in most of our other intematiOP• 1 financial accounts, our overall balance ol pl)'l!lents chalked up another sickeningly large· deficlt in th.-· ftm three mcm.ths. OUR PRICE level Is ria1b2 at an annual rate of 5 percenl over 1968 -even worae than the 4% percent of laat year when the dollar was under brutal attack. Money Is flow· ing into our country not because of our good financial reoprd, but because our steep interest rates are, tn the words -of one mooey-market SUMMER JQB WANTED. l.CCOUNT•N• MA.IOI SAM DIMO $1.ATI UHIYIDITY Curr•ntly Pr•si4•11t ef San Diet• $tat• Youfllt R•pul.1ic•111 !============= SALA.IT SICONDAlY r . UPllllNCI PllMAIY Ol.llCTTYI 'j.,.,,u.1ri1. for l11t•r"i'"' ~riday afttf?IOOlll or Saturday w1n1 01 CALL1 ,,.... ..._.. 1101 Montnufl'lt Rd .. S111 Dla1• er cell (71•1 216°3170 • , 1714) 444.1 J07 SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Homestake Mininl Co. bu o~ tained an order f r o m Westinghouse Electr\c Corp, ()[ Pittsburgh for uranium con- centrate . ••••••••••••• et AB~::..;~:'·---'" ........ SHEARSON, HAMMILL A C:O., In<'. Cordially Invites You ' To Attend A Seminar Concerning l "It pavs to lemla from the leader. Come see." ~~.PJ~ This Is I ttCOrd-br11ikirtt Y•tr for M.clfaward Lmini. Nit• for us. B11t nlu for you;-too. It me1ns w1'rt burlni In BIG volumt In ordtt to l1n1 lo BIG volume. And the. uvin1s wt m1k• 111 pmed on lo oLtt Mtomtrs kl lower le1s1 paymeiltc. Corne in ind chick us out As tn Independent I en int: firm (one ol thl l•ra•t In the WHO, wt IMSI all makas, Ill modtls. Wt'v. ~t Just Wfllt JOU want ••• not only ths 1ljfit Cit ot tfUtt., but tfll fi&ht '"'' too. Tr)' us. St.rt by pllonina for I <OJJY of our hlndy que.stion•nd· 1nsw1r folder. It's free. OPtn Alon. t/lru Set. ----- MacHowaRb AUTO AND TRUCK LEASING 124 No. ~rbor at Bolsa •Santa Ana Telephone (714) 531 ·0607 -------- OVER'-'THE COUNTER . ' ·A· SME SPEAKER USC's Dr. Himstreet Himstreet • I ------~------------ 81.w..~I "I \ ,. ' ..... lrt• t•> Nllll L4W CIMt Ciiio I " j I • .... • . ... -; Friday's Closing Priees-, Complete , • •• New York H Stock Exchange List IMl.1-"""'n.. °'· ' -.. DAILY PILDT Jf " '\l '"' j • . . I I ' ..J• loll.YPICOT Foyt, An.dretti INlllANAPOLIS (AP) -Mario An· dritll..llld A. J. Foyt. a pair of fonner btl\cinal champions, will be tQp con- teaderl SalW'day for the pole position in tM Q'd 5GO-mlle aulo race May :II at tbe Iodlanapolls Motor Spe<dwt,y. Tbe-1 top speed tn Saturday's 10.olile time trills Will win the No. 1 starting slot far tbt ~-c~ rtgardn or petf~ ia 1ddlUonal qualifying 1111m SuPr111 and the following ... -. About $40,000 In 1pe<lai prlia will be pal4 for quaJilyin& performanw. Tiie gualllytna r-.1 for four llfll arounil the ,21·hllle asphalt C'OW'R ls 171.559 miles 'per hour, set last yeat by Joe Leonard, S.11 Jose, Calil., In a turbine-powered Lotus. Hi.s Pratt & Whitney ·engine sine< bu beeo barred ~Y new J.i.mttajiorui oo turbines. AndretU, Italian native now oper1Ung oot of Nazareth, Pa., drove four sue- .cusiv.e practice l•ps Friday at unofficial -Be's Out, Or Is He1 Kansas City Royals' Jim Campanis 1ooks like he's a dead duck as he tries to slide back to second base after over-running it. Cleveland short- stop Larry Brown had a shot at tagging Campanis, but missed the tag Open Battle Speeds over 111 in a oew four·wbeetdrive Lotus with a turbocharied'Ford tqlne. He -the 000 pole in• tl66 lllil lifl but • wu stopped both times by mechanlc1I trouble In the race. 1 Foyt, rt'<lm l:loust.oo. three.time winner ol tho !CG, WU the pole winner In tll!$ but tbat was ~ of h1a 11 Indianapolis starts when he waa stubbed by car (ailure. He ~w-ned hit·first Jep over 170 Thurs- day, 170.1ln1 Coypt~Turbocharged Ford Ol:hll own 4i1ign • Nooe ot the other 70 can at tbe. track lw been over 169.S and only Roi'1 M'cCluskey of Toeyon, Afiz:., hat N!IChed t.hat ,letel....: 1n a Jl'oyt Coyote. SlJteen cars have been pracliclng at over 165, with Some du.plication of dri'vera. 1'he full 33-car rield 1,st year avera1ed 165.498 but the sJowelt di«t. only m,ui. . . Tu.1enty tpp drivers, polled this week, made a _consensus cueas of 171.532 for '"'I Tt""""9 and then tripped over the runner's feet. For all his work, Campanis did manage to collect a run-batted-in on the play in the Royals' 5-2 \Vin. for I.ndy Pole pole wlMtr'1 speed Saturday. AnciretU called it '!7U and Foyt gueJOed 172.5. Leonard, driY!f& a tw:bochorged Eagl .. Ford thil year, predicted i'n.7. There will DOt be the usual frantic lransatlanlic conunuUna between the In· dianaPolis 1-1uallfleaUon.s and the. Monaco Grand, Prli qualifications and race this year. lndl~apolls entrants Graham Hill, En1land; Denis Hulme., New Zealand, and Jack Brabham, Australia, are in MOllte Carlo today for practlce anl qualifications but will compete. Sunday in the race proper btlore returntng to In· dianapolis. Tbe)!.-CaD sUU qualify for the 500 next weekend. 1 None of the Grand Pri:a: drivers. was a threat for the lodlanapolis pole. The opening day ot the 500 qUallfiea· Uons, JO.mile ru'.ns by one car at a time, are preferred by some speed buffs to the race. It's unquestionably the.~ best-at• tended preliminary Jn aporta,' with • crowd estimated upward ol 150,0llO. Laver, Einerson Win Gonzalez Rips NY Net Scoring Plan NEW YORK (AP) -A&inl Pancho ~ Gonza1e.z of Los An1eles and rookie. pro Ray Moore of South Africa say the net result of the new tenni.s scorin1 format introduced in the United State! at the Unknown Nabs Lead In Texas Golf Tourney FORT WORTH (AP) -It was so ap. prOpriate it was almost embarrassing. As Chuck Courtney, an obscure Jong. shot in a field of the world's best shot- makers, approached the 18th green a burglar alann went off. And the blond Californian promptly stole off with the first round lead in the $125,000 Colonial National invitation Golf Tournament. Madison Square Garden Invitational Is a bust. ·•rve had my fill of these short sco ring matches," the 41-year-old Gonzalez said after losing an opening one-set match 1-5 to Roy Emerson of Newport Beach in the $2.S,000 tournament Thursday night. --1rs the last one I'll pla y." "1 don 'I like this scoring system at all," said P.1oore, a 22-year-o\d shaggy• haired blond after losing h.is first match to Fred Stolle of Australia 8--4. "To me it's just no match al all." The six other players in this richest tournament ever don 't like the system either. It's· a one-set, round-robin format designed to spark spectator interest and shorten the program. Jn this lournament, eight games com• prire a set and if a set reaches 7-all, a 12• point playoff is used to determine the \vinner . Gonzalez had hardly unleashed his words v.1hen he lost hi s second match , 6·7, lo Dennis Ralston of Bakersfi eld , in \Vhat r~quired h\'O playoffs to determine the winn!?r. Fans Boo Slumping Tiger Hero Angels Blast Knoop Trade, Face Yankees "If I'd made that putt on 18, I'd really have felt like a thief," Courtney quipped after subduing the reconstructed, 7,17S yard , par 70 Colonial Country Club course in a sparkling 66, just one stroke off the competiUve course record. . Gonzalez also unleashed a few drives into the Garden's upper scats. Gonzalez also ripped into the lighting and indoor play and said he was through with indoo r competition. Horton Stalks off Diamond DETROIT {AP) -Left fielder Willie Horton of the Detroit Tigers, barraged with boos during much of Thursday night's game against Chicago, angrily ' departed for the dressing room in the . oevenlb lnnlni aod ldt tho ballpark. • "He'1 just emotionallf apset or he .i wo.uldn't do that," said Manager ~Mayo .; '. ; Sports in Brief • Smith a1\.er the game, won by Detroit, 2- 1, on Dick McAuliffe's 10th-inning home run. Few were aware Horton, who ground- ed out and struck out twice in three et bats, had left the dugout. Rookie Ron Woods replaced , him in the top of the Majestic Prince Ready To Roll in Preakness BALT™ORE -Majstic Prince is ready -jet speed ready -for Saturday's Preakness Stakes, the second • . leg of the Triple Crown. Frank McMabon's winner of lhe Ken- tucty Derby ioomed a hall mile over .the Pimlico track Thursday morning in 45 eeconds, just a fifth of a second off the world record set by Tamrin's Jet in a race al Sunland Park in New Mexico earlier this year. '·He is ready as a man can make him." 8aid trainer Johnny Longden. who rode Majestic Prince in the workout and then • -entered him in the Preakness where he 1 will meet seven other 3-year.olds, in- f-eluding Rokeby Stable's Arts and Letters, the Derby runner-up. • LOS ANGELES -RodoU Gonr.ales. «lisplaying a potent left hook, knocked out Joan Collado in the ninth round or their lldl<duled lkoond llghtwdght fight ,, the Olympic Auditorium 'lburaday night. Gonzales. 1331n, Long Beach. dropped Collado, 134, Santo Domingo, Dominican ~public, with a left hook to the jaw at the clOM: of the ninth. Collado took a mandatory tight count. rose wobbly and absorbed two more lefta before. referee • Lee Grossman halted the bout at 2:54 of ( the. round. . : • MONTICELLO. N.Y. -Henry Carr, former Olympic go Id medal aprtnte.r. broke e.ve.n in his two unique races against a horse at the opening of Mon· ticello Raceway Thursday night. Carr, now a halfback with the Detroit Li<m in the National Football League, was beaten by Nevele Holiday, a 9-ye.ar- old pacer driven by Bob Camper, then beat Billy Prinl1'03e., an 11-year-old pacer driven by Stanley Dancer. In the first ract Carr ran a quartermile while Nevele Holiday we. n t se\'en-six- teenths of a mile. The horse won by 32 feet in M seeonds after passing Carr in the last 100 yards. Against Billy Primrose, Carr ran 100 yards while the horse went 110 yards. Carr won by 10 yards and was timed in 10.4 seconds . · • LOS ANGELES -Tailback Greg Jones and quart.trback Dennis Dummitt led the White teams to a 27-14 victory over the Blues in a UCLA intrasquad football game Thunday, ending 20 days of spring practice. Jones, a senior, gained 145 yards on 14 carries and DJmmitt. a Junior college transfer from Long Beach. completed eight of 14 passes for 133 yards and a touchdown. Jones ran for touchdowns of 28 and 69 yards. • fo.fONTREAL -Funeral services will be held Saturday at Loyola College chapel for Frank "Shag·• Shaughnessy, the football coach and baseball innovator. He. died Thur.sday at the age of 86. eighth in a substi(ution not planned by Smith. "He took himself out of the game,"' Smith said. "He came back into the clubhouse. '"Some of the guys came in to talk to him but he Was just wild .• ; He's got friends on the ballclub who couldn't even talk to him," Horton led the Tigers in hitting (.2M) and home runs (38) last year as they wen their first pennant and World Se ries in 23 years. But he has stumped UUs year at the plate, hitting just .213 with four home runs and 13 runs batted in. He has struck out 34 times. Horton always has had a special closeness y,·ith his fans. pa rticularly children, many of whom show up lime. a~ again in tl]e left field stands to cheer their hero. Only last Sunday he handed his extra baseball glove lo one young fan in left during pregame. drills and received a loud ovation as be. walked back to the dugout. "I've never had a guy take his uniform o(f in a game like that before," said a stunned Smith. Smith said pitching coach Johnny Sain told him about Horton's departure. ••( didn"t have time to eo into the clubhouse to talk to him and find out what \11as v.•rong." }.fayo said . "I had to worry about the game. "I can't read his mind . Ma ybe it's from last night. ~1aybe it's from tonight. I don't know." On Wednesday night Horton looked bad as he fell and a single to left went past him for an error. Subsequently he was booed in that game agak(st Ille Whltc Sox. T '" Smith didn't know if any disciplinary actJon would be taken aglinst the muscu- lar outfielder. Hawkins Retires LOS ANGELES -Forward Tom Hawkins of the Los Angeles Lake.rs said Thursday he is retiring and will join the staff of a local television station as a sports commentator . llawkins, 33, will be primarily a flcld reporter for television station KNBC, a station spokesman said . 1 Troy Favored in Spike Test I CORV A1JJS f AP) -Th< Pa<Ui<~ track and fitld chompkNh!ps begin ""' today with Sol.ihern California favored to win. • The Troj1n1 are undefeated In dual I meet c:ompetiUM and hive won six of !line oonf......,. meet 00.. 0..1on lw f 1 •·on twice ad Uet.A once. ... • '-"You hive 1G co~alon& wkb Southern ='*'bl" Ill'• 8en1J W•-· ~ S11te lJnfwnlly ciotdl. H1I te&m al.lo Is un- . • betltn lo dual meet compdllltn. "But J thJnk we·re one of about four turns with a cbanct to upset lhtm," ht said. "I'd say Oregon. UCLA and Washlnaton Stalc al.so have a shot at it. Stanford and CalUornia have people who will bt beard rrom, too. In fact , they m11y finally determine who wins.'' Tbe preUminark:s begin today, wllh one flntl -tho llte<pl<chase. Five mere tvenc.t coukt be decided Fri· --Oay bectu,. cornpodm I~ tht long j u m p • triple jump, shot, dlsru! a n d javelin take the first lhreii of six countlna efforts and those mark.• carry Into Saturday's finals . Southern Gal and Oregon Slate v.•ill be fi1hting for wins in the sprinl3, tht. BOO and the short relay. , Ore,oo is expected to dominate the distance events. The milers, led by Roscoe. Dtvine. could take the first four places. Tom Morrow ts favored for the steeplechue and -Norway's A r n e Kvarhelm has the se1son's btst mark In lht threHnilc. NE\V YORK (UPI) -The angry California Angels, who are G-9 against lerthanders this season. face nemesis . Fritz Peterson y,·hen they open a four. game series against the New York Yankees tonight. · Peterson, 4-4 this year, has five straight decisions over the Angels. He will be opposed by Rudy May, 1-3. The trade of veteran second baseman Bobby Knoop to the Chicago White Sox \Vednesday for infielder Sandy Alomar and pitcher Bob Priddy was under fire by some of the Angel players Thursda y. ··They 've busted up the best double play combination in baseball ," shortstop Jim Fregosi said. Another player. who did not ""'ant to be Identified, said. "You have to get more for Bobby Knoop than Sandy A1omar and Bob Priddy ." Another player, who also did nol want to be named, added, "Knoop was the. heart of our team. He held it together." He held a two stroke lead over burly Jack Nicklaus, veteran Billy Maxwell and Dick Crawford, grouped at 68, going into today's sceond round. Tied at 69 are Bob Charles of New Zealand, Dave Stockton, Miller Barber and England's Tony Jacklin. A group of nine is at par 70. including South African Gary Player, veteran Art ¥.rail, Australian Bruce Crampton and D<:ane Beman, winner of last week's Tex· as Open. CENTER OF STORM -Fonner California Angel second baseman Bobby Knoop ()ell) gets acquainted with bis new boH, Chcago White Sox manag~Don Gutteridge. ~fan)' ti! Knoop's old teammatesllave blasted the trade which sent the G-Olden Glove fielder to Chicago !or Sa ndy Alomar and Bob Priddy. • ' But none of Gonzalez' complaints seemed to affect the world's number one player, Rod Laver of Corona de.I Mar, who also had an ailing elbow to contend with . La~er wrapped up his throbbing left arm 1n a hot towel in the dressing room and then stunned the cro\vd of 5,116 with the ease in whlch he disposed-of ~1oore, 8-l. Laver's prime rival for the SIS.000 purse •. fel_low Australian Tony Roche. also \Von his !1rst match, defeating Ralston 8· ~ . Stolle finished the evening l·l with an 8· I loss to Marty Riessen of Evanston, Ill. In tonight 's matches, ifs Roche v!. Emerson, Riessen vs. Moore, Laver vs. Stolle, Roche vs. Gonzalez, Emerson vs. Ralston and Laver vs. Riessen. Dodgers Send Sutton Against Bucs Tonight LOS ANGEL~ (AP) -Don Sulton. who had an 11-15 record for the Los Angeles Dodgers last season. can becom11 t~e Dodger workhorse tonight if he pitches more than fi ve innings v.•hcn he starts against Pittsburgh. Sutton, 4·3. has hurled 56 2/3 innings and the club leader is Claud e Osteen with 62. Right nov.', Suuon appears to be pit· Dodger Sl111e M•" 1~ -OadPt' v1 l"Hh OUrr:oll, 1:5S 11.m. l(F'l 1,~v 11 -Oodiier' "" l"llh 1Mirg11, 1:ll 11.m. l(Fl l~y 11 -~I "' l"lltiblnllll. U :i5 ~-'"· l(FI ching his best ball and five innings should be in h.is reach. In his last four games, SuUon has allowed_ just four earned runs covering 33 1/3 Innings. He h as walked eight a n d struck oul 22. He has allowed ooly 17 hits His pitching foe t0night is Dock Ellis, 2: 3. who was pounded by the Dodgen les.!11 lhan a "·eek ago. Los Angeles hitters got 13 run s and 10 hits in a rout of the Pirates. Rookie Ted Sizemore is !he man wit h the hot bat for the Dodgers. He has got.ten al lea.st one hit in each ot his last eight games and in that span ha5 collected 14 hits in 35 at bats to raise his batting average to a club-leading .316. NEEME GETS JOB AS CM CAGE BOSS Costa Mesa High School today officially named f0011er Newport Harbor and P.tater Oe.i coach Emil Neeme all its new varsity cage. mentor. The (7-year-old Neeme repl aces Herb Uvsey, who resigned the position ear II• this year to become. head ba sketball coach at orange Coast College. Neeme·s appointn1ent was an nouncerl by assistant superintendent or pcrSODil Kevin Wheeler and prine.ipal F'rtWl k Lopea,-o:iof.irml!)I an ercluslYe story wtlich appeared· In the DAILY PILOT Wodnescl.ly. • I . Founiain Valley EDITIO'N ' ' ' . -• YOC. 62, NO. '117, :t SECTIONS, 40 ·PAG~ · , ORANGE COUll!TY,.eAL'IFORNIA . FRID~ Y., MAY ·16' '1969 : • t " Main St Fee,t Center Site Picked ·in •Split Vote By WILLl.&M REED or -. Deltr PilM '*' A pi'opol<d IS million new .civic centu for Huntington Beach appanoUy wW be built on a U4cre site at Maia Street and Manaion Avenue ratber~than in the old, d-area following . onlers by tbe City C4w>ci1 . 'lbunday. night to buy the site at a cost of ~.ooo. Thus ends Y<"I" of discusalon ·and. months of intemive tnvestigat.fuo of wtiere tba civic Cf:Clter abould IO· Tbe . . • Wife Stab s . . Roo seyelt's Oldest S()n GENEVA (UPI) -James Roosevelt 's third wife Gladys stabbed him in the back Thursday Digbt with his World War Il souvenir dagger at the couple's Swiss .villa. poiirereporled today. 'Ibe 52-year-old son of the late presl~ dent was rushed to county hospital in critical condition, Doctors performed emergency surgery and later pronounced the farnier congtessman from callfornia out of danger. Mrs. Roosevelt, 52, was admitted to Bel-Air Oinic for ob s e rv atio n. Spokesmen for Roosevelt said she had . . been under treatment for 1 e v e r e depression. First reports of the incident were con. fusiJW because they said Roosevelt bad been allacl<e<I by "a·~Y 1111~ ......... -~ bet. 'llilise reports. m<ntioned an argwnenl. Hours later, Roo..1nelt's attorney notified newsmen: ... 1 am authorized to say that Mr.. Roosevelt coolinned todlly lhat Ille in· cident which haS been reported involved his wife. Mr. Roosevelt telephoned us from the hospital th is morning and asked us to clear up this ract" The couple was married in 1958 and have one child, Hall Delano. Roosevelt's earli'er marriages: to Betsey Cushing, a Bo9ton socialite, and Romelle Schneider, a nurse, ended in divotte. Roosevelt, eldest son of the lale prelident, has five children by the previoua marriages. Police spokesmen, trying to piece toge!ttier details on the stabbing, said it ocai:rrtd about 11 o'clock at the Roosevelt villa in the suburb ot Vesenaz. Officials of Investors Overseas Service (IOS), the finn Roosevelt represents in Geneva, said he was stabbed just inside the doorway of the big hoose, at the foot of a wide central staircase leading to the upper quarters. 1bey said Roosevelt was stabbed in tM back with the Marine knife and then stumbled to a neighbor's house about 120 feet away. The neighbors called police, an ambulance was dispatched. and Roosevelt was rushed to the l)ospital. IOS ofiicials said the dagger· was a memento of the war wbl~ Roosevelt had kept from his days as a brigadltr genera1 in the Marines. Roosevel t joined IOS in 1966, aod ls president of the IOS Development Co. Ltd. He is a member of the board of directors of the parent holding company. JOS Lld. (Panama) and several other subsidiaries. He served in Congress for 10 Years as a Democratic representa t i ve from CaWomia's 26th district, and was an unsuccessful candidate for Califcrufa governor in 1950. From 1965 to 1966, he was U.S. re~tative to tbe U.N. educational, sciebtilic and cultural organization. Roosevelt's brothers and sister - Frlnklln D. Jr., Elliott; John and Anne - have also had marital problems. All have beeo married more than once. ' . .. . . . ~ WU on I, y vote wllh ' Coun- ~ llonry Kaufman, Ted B.:rUeU and Geqe MOCraclcen remaiDillg aolidly betiiad leovtnc !be csrter-d<>Wntown. M""' Jack Groen and ~n n.maJd'Di Sbi.Jlley, J'l'O' Matn'ey and Al Coe\1-conlinUed to baet,placing the ciyi• center attou Main Strtet from Hun- linlfi'I' , Beach Hiib Sdlool despite • strolii. last minute bid b,y Councilman Kaufman to convinee-. tbein that the center lhould remain Whtre it ls at 5th • Bel* .. a BM• . .,. .. ,.,, -u .. Pat Downey, difector of'the· Hunting'ron ·Beach Boy1 .Club, helps Mike Palomares, 8, with Woodworking projec~. . Downey Thursday wu nanied recipient Of the Huntington !Beach Exchange Cluh:s annual . Bock of Golden Deeds Award in-re<:9illltion.of'his efforts tO'pron\ote i,uyenile ·deceiicy. · Ex~A. Co«nty Sheri ff Eugene Biscailuz Dies -.I SANTA< MONICA (AP) -E·u g en e Biscailuz, a little ma·n with a courtly manner and wide-brimmed hat who became "Mr. California" among lawmen during -his 26 years as sheriff of Los. Angeles County, died today at 86. He was known aa: a crack ahot, a top · rider -favoring. Ult sombrero and. silver mDWltillgs <II Ille llale'• Spaniab pail, a · toi> ·administrator, a relentlesl tracker of cn:ioks:, and, developer of a number of rehabilitation centers'for prieonen. "He.retired in 1958: after 51 years in law enforcement and bad been in seclusion at bi; home here since suffering ·a stroke several yean ago. For decades he was a familiar sight iq parades, dressed like a Spanish Don, astride a prancing horse, wa ving and smiling, often accompanied by his close friend , the late actor Leo Carrillo. Tbe grandlon o!·Wllliam·Wamn, first city maralial '<JI u..· Angeles. Biscailpz joined ~ lberiff't department in 1907 when-Uie force 'ti.d -only 27 men. At the time he retired, mofe than .,,000 men were under him. ·He studied· Jaw bf: night and rose to assistant chief deputy sherirf in UDO. Nine years latu, Gov: C. C. Young caDed Biscallm. to Sacramento to help organize lhe blgbway patrol. When Sheriff William Traeger was elected to Congress in um, Blscalluz was appointed aherUf. He stood for election two year. later and was elected until forced to retire by age. "l . had only two bosses when I was sheriff," BiscaUUJ: was fond of saying. "1be people who elected me and my con· science." Nationally Biscailuz won prominence ail the Spanisb-5peaklng olllc:er who brought (lee BIBCAILIJZ; Pap I) tmns of Ille ogreem<nt lbe company tan r~ U.., site at Ille &ame pitce tt Is receiving riow Uthe city does not build Ila civM:. center within lhree years; The igreement gives the comi.nY alt rqoaths to exefcise that agreement followlpg the e.ipiration· of the t.hree yea.n. ' .Space studies are .1lready Wlder way in addltioo to advance plannin, of need> and she use by the Planning Department ol the city. Dr. Kaufman had proposed pw-dwillg IO· lldcJUl..,.J •bloclt cJowrualn\ and .addl!!c. it~to tne 'prtseut civic ·ceter 'to maie -11·-for a new clvlc ........ ' .~ · Sliipley sal(f i; .. ~4*ea lbal the ·clty would be better ....,,ed by u.sing, the ,downtown ·land .J«. pdvate in-· vestment rither than for a civic center. • Pointing out that there has beeO a Jot.of dilcusiion on civic center locat.kms, the c»wlcllma.n Hid· the Search tof a center aite bu been &Ort·ol a "civk .cr•PINM· I' He called f<r imm..ilataly naming Ibo hl&h IChoot Bite and ,"u.;,,, don't o. IOl)lethinc in lhne years lhia wholia· lladY, lbould be rl!Cllled... . ! • ' Councilman Coen had been conslder,.i the key vote in the matter-. "I ci.n't tee punulnc tbis game of verbal •ping pone anl Jonaer(' Mid .Coen poinlin&·Cl!'t that he has beth for heari .. ~ all the faclli, but lhat "aU the. facts ,r '1 now." · Ile then move<i :on of tho high . IChool 1He and p ;t of Ibo $311p.llOll .(lee CEN'l'~.t. P~ 11· 'Doctor' Jury ( ut Panel Ponders Eate of Bogus Medic By TOM BARLEY 01 ... .,_..,, Pl191 l .. ff An audacious electrical engineer who used the name of a brilliant cardiologist wblle he treated n\ore than -100 peUents a~ a Fullerton clinic may soon be on the olher eftd of a <llffertllt kind of dlas-Js -the verdict or 1a Superior Court jurors. They left the courtroom todlly to review two weeks of ·testlmony ' in tbe trial of Robert Ervin Brown. And the qulet confide.it Alabama Lumber Strike End Prospects ~;~o~y BJ"IANIC,: BERMAN ' • . ,, .... D,lllr·..,.....,, .~;~ ·~ .•loacled for an early J<illiiiiiinl Of a lumber .llrille that may cripple Orun c.unty's hure coostruction induslfy. Membera of the Mwworkers and Ca-Uen Union local 21'12 voted Wodneeday night to strQo. Tbe Union members, who man Orange County lumberyards, are seeking increases in wages and benefits totaling 118 cents per hour, acconling to Jbn Maynanl, a negotiator for county lumberyard owners and manager ·of the Santa Ana Lumber Co .• 1be Teamsters Union, whose member! carrj hnnbef<rfrom the yards to the con- StructJbn sites, are honorinC picket lines thrown up Thursday by the millworken arid cablnetmakers. Accor(j.~g to Al Swift, business ~tive 'for the> Orange · Cdunty teamsters,. the teamster.:• are seeting an area.wide agreement to bring wages in Orange County and Long Beach up to a par with waa• in·Loa Angelet·County. Officials ~ Local 2172 have been unavailable for comment for the past two days .. Teamsters and lum~· iroup officials agreed today that negotiations are pro- ceedini in gciod failh. But Ibey said that negoti.a.tions with the cabinetpiti.ers and millworkers have not yet be(un. "We can't be in two places at _once," said Maynard. All major lumberyards in Orange CoWtty are cbed, Maynard said yester· day, because the Teamsters are bonoriog the pict e( lint! of the lumberworten. According to . .1 statement releued Fri· day morning by Charles T r e n t a , secretary of the Distr_lct Council of Carpenters, the lumberworlcers and teamsters are negoUating as one~ for renewal..of a joint COritract that upired May ts. Said Treola: ''Ille. employers"~ baekflred in lbelr face because instead of .....,uatJng In good 'failh and makinl • (See WllHR, Pap I) s111pecl bu rolleved them of GM decialon by admllling on many occulc.\e that he Is gUilty of poclnc ai· Dr. Gleim L'on Footer, l · Unlverolty <II Alabama medical IChool .,..rdlalot!Jst. . . . ' What tbey must decide 1n their' own clJnlcal analysls .ot-wbat has .to becllle mOsl llartling act <II fraud In county medical h1atory is just how serious wu the crjme that Brown allegedly com- milled and what ·penalty should be · ad- mlmten111 -for ·b l 1 infrtncemant o!"a Beach Council Weighs ~~ ~~~r~jng _AIJt_~ri~~ , 1~., .• i/oir ~ .... ~ "~'11s Pali hn ·ralll!rc ·m.,;.. ~ ~ for ~~~ :. F« 11J<1u1b partJnc lots to . ptu;·ldlic, ,.._~ alabl ... lwt-'lhl' ·'"'"'"1'· for ~ bJ 'JllMW ~ d at llosl ... 'ltilloriil -,. .' tlliilliJI"' lhe b1Jt1>ied --. ' ~ be 1ble to build hll -l!e llid lhe city IJliil!I pin ·ot looe a David Holt, who together 'With bis f.., lhouland dollars per yeor, bat·~ molher Mar1ba Holt, hu been cptlcal 1"l""' ,WDU!d be ~ than ollaet by ad- o! cJty efforts to clean up lhe blighted dltlonal rovenue from incroaaed llleo and downtQwn, Thursday night a g a I n property ·values. presented their planl for a ·large twin Hott,:~ his plan,• ·:c1ream" the t o we r c.o mmercial-otfice-residenUal fu~, said JM; ha.! finaDdal backing" to • · · build lhe J>n>lecl from an .........i development for the corner of Main "internaUooal firm.'' SCreet and Pocifle Colet HJahway whore He wamed lhat any-altempt bJ Ibo city once aat their .-...nw Holl-lo acquire bil land fw a J>Orting Jot Hoeptner building. woukl Involve enormous costs becqse Councilmen· were I 0 0 t 1 n 1. •\ "we have a 99 year ieue c.n u. Jm:id "-'--~ I f kin lot (lee AUTHORITY, Pap I ) . pr! .......... ,. P ans or a par .I , Pl'9-' , jet;t whlcb woi.tld inclusle, !ii area from 5tli Street to Lake Street one.hlOCk lniand from Uie blgbway and a' Hc1e p.n;.J' east of Lake Street IOlllh of Atluta Avenue. - Jack FroggaU,. HunllnstoD Beoch Co •. •ice prem.nt, Aid, hia company wblch OWM the five ·~ east ol Late Street. w111t1 to develop the corner of Lake S)reet and P,cillc Coast ll!ibway itlelf and woqkl 1*e to keep the land .. He said be would have nti objection to condemnation of the rest of Ille property and that his company would agree to a condemnation aj.dt on the entlrt parcel if lhe city would drop the llilt on Ille lower hall when the ·Hnntlpgton •Beach Co. beg!nl 'its dMJapa,eni. . Holt, however, would not .1gree to the suggested arrana:ement. The idea ot con. demn1n1 lhe pr0pe.rty 1or a parkinc. Jot and lhen bitting off If a subalalltial O.velopment ~ Is produced wu ,IUg· tested as a fOl'i of "test of ~ sincerity and ability o( properly OWDeri.'' Froggatl betan lhe dlacusiloo b~ sug- gesting 'tbal. the Parting Autliority ' Huntington Man's I Case on Obscene, . ' George B~er . Succumbs at 75- J!etlred U.S. Anny·Col. Geurgo.BUer, husband of West Oranee c e u n t 'I Municipal Judge Celli Baker, died 'lbur~ day nilbt aftu a lengthy illDesa. lie· was 75 .. Col. Baker sucaunbed .at 1:38 p.m. at the family home, 1203 Part St, In Jlmt.. tingloo Beach. The retired Anny· --well known for bis civic activltlell· In lhe llw>-lin&t<\n Beaeh area and bis .....,_ op. pearances in Ille Huntingloo • Beocb Playhouse. Be was·abo active In bunting, fishing and ntt• ~lectin( and made numerous trips to Baja Califomla, Col. Baker wu a former rqember of ROtary International. · .F.uneral services ,.,. penc!i!>i at South's Mortuary. ' In addition to his wife, Col. Baker ls l!Ul'Ylved by IWo daughters, Linda Biker and Mrs. Carl Grover. Oraa,. Airport Leader ·Urges El Toro Use Books Continued Weadier ' I I ) .. ~· • • -. -.. --, --· ..... _,,. --.. . ' ......... ._.._ lt-P =:.. ......... :: -. -. = .... "' 7 - I ' - H • ' PILOT • ------------~~ 110GBOOK ., · • . Father Time Catches' Up . With Huntington High By WILLIAM REED Of ........ "'*"' ... ' The majestle Spanish archlloclure and bell lower ol Hwtlln«lon Beach High School baa been a laodmark ol th• Talberl Valley !or nearly five d .. cades now. · RecenUy, however, the h.Uowecl tmtilulloo ct our vaDq liu been Ill!> j-lo a bit ol a pbyllcal examination. The resuli.. w.,. not ao eocourq!ng !or the Grand Old Lad,y ct Main Street at Mansion Avenue. * llunllnglon lllgh'a atntcturll qualities hove a IOOd tract record. For example, the two.etory concrete and slucco atructure handily wilhllood rav-ol lhe,lmed 11933 earthquake which leveled numerous Jeaar achoola In our area. . Father Time and the ravqes of weather, however, hfve a way of catching up with even the most aunty. So It waa that the Hunlinglon Beach Unlon lllgh School District trustees Tuesday nighl hlr<d Neptune and Aaoclatea to develop plana for curing Dae ll1!: of our famed old high school bullding. Alter eumlnatlm, the atate clti1,,. ol ~ auggested, "The building and bleacher atructure would be hazardoUI to occupants lo the event of. a maior earthquake and eon.sequenUy are unsafe for \lie •• , " District Supt. Dr. Mu Forney esplained that the trustees have ordered the architectural firm to come up wJth a repair plan. "UnUI then, we will have no idea bow much money Jt might coat to repair the faciliUes." Dr. Forney pointed out lha.t whatever it costs the truateea are authorized now by atate law lo levy u additional tu ol 10 .:ettte per $100 .. esaed vllua- iloo 'each r-until the ttpalr blD II paid U there II no bulldlni bond m<lltY lo pay the bill. * "No vote oE the people ts needed for this," Dr. Fomey explained. He aald such a levy wOlild raJse ahollt ~.ooo eacb year based oo the preoent ._. ed vlluallon. He warned, too, that the ~ the trustees can levy could be railed to u much u 20 c:eits and that leglalailon allowing thla is pesidlng In the legt>Ja. -· He aald the !act that the buUding doea not meel the atandarda of the ataln Field Act, a taw requiring achoo! building• to be earthquake proof, II not • aurprl!e. "We hove !mown It !0< ynn, but our be>! lnlonnatlon II lllal It II not unsafe far day to day use, only in cue of a major earthquake." "We knew II did not meet the Field Act, but It had not been declared un- safe. It was remodeled in 1963-64 to etminate objecUons of the state fire mar· ahal and it may have to be remodeled again.. "I might remind lhooe woo w~ Object lo ao add!Uonll lkenl tu levy that the last two building bond proposals carried money for these repairs. Both were turned down despite there being no increase in the tax levy if the bonds had been approved." Announcement that the buildinp are unsafe may have revived the unf. ficaUon laaue. Several resldentb oft he north part of the city, partkultrly those whose children have been . transferred from the newer Marina lUgh Sclmol to Huntington, are out gathering signatures today on petitions calling !0< a unified achOol dlllrtct In Iba clly ol Hunllnglon Beach and leaving Foun- tain Valley, Seal Beach and Weatmlnaler lo develop lhe!r own unlllcaUon pllW, One caller Aid ••we don't want our chlldttn going to a dangerous 1Choo1. lf 111t1flciliOll CCI pl rid ol -ct tiloj~ -In the - dlllrictl, 111n wJD be _.ii !! [J1i...W ij& tloO .~ -. " 1 ! •\ Froa Page I AUTHORITY •• which wruld have to be pajd of' even before we started to talk about the price of the land. "We are going to protect ounelvee," he aaid. Holt said hia project would cost 50me'Wbere between M million and •10 million to bWld and .,would involve banks, commercial shops of all kinds, apartment towers, an office builclit!g, a fU'Sl clau restaurant. a swlmming pool and even an outdoor bandstand atop one of the buildin~." "We want to be allowed to diNelop oUr own property," he sald, adding that it , would take about two years to break grooll<f on the project "ii It 13 lavor<d by the councU." Holt &aid be would accept controls by the city, but rtmained firmly opposed to any condemnation suits being filed on hil or any olher property ln the are.a. The Holts have accused the city of being "land grabbers" as a result of the city ordering destroytd an old brick building which once stood on the l'KrlheUt comer of Main Street and the highway. . The family also owns the building now housing the Syndicate J,000 Club operated ' DAILY PllOI lolt.rt N. w .. , P-111!11 Mill PlltllllW Jee~ l , Cllt'l.y VG '1'lti.tnl ...., c;e.....r ~ n-•i. ICet...!I .... lt.OJllM J.. ~""!fte -·-.A.llwirt W. l1t1i Wilit• tl•M A11«r•1 Mufti...,.., ._. 1!•11• City 1:.ii.r ............ OM.. Jot ltli Stte.t Mllf'l~t Ai"-M: ,,0 . S.a 1'0, 92&41 --......... ~: 1111 '#Ml hlllH ..,......,. a..,,,_: m Wnl hr $""1 ~ ~nJFftllA ......... ' by Gilbert Covell. The ~!uh baa been a comtant source of. problems to the. police and city government. Mn. Holt presented her plan to the council in mld·1967, but bu taken DO .C- Uon since toward building il Councllman Henry Kaufman observed that "we suggested then to Mrs. Holt .that she could apply for building permll3 al any !!me. The city II not holding ber up. "l find tt hard lo lmoglne that an tn- t<mallooal •corpoiattoo woold cooie In lll)d invest In the middle ol that blighted area.'' Counclhnan Al Coen was successful In winning councll approval of. 8tudles of the parking .authority plans and several alternates including one leaving the Holt property for private developmenL Investigators Hunting Engine Of Fatal Plane · Fedenl air craah lnvf$11p1«1 today are hunting the left engine of a CIJIMlrted B--26 bomber which crashed in Et Segundo sit days ago, tllllng a Fountain Valley engineer and five other pel"80DS. William Glenn, supervising accident in- spector for the Federal Avlat.ion Agency aaid Thursday that all wreclcage bll been recovered from the fire-blackened scene and is being re.usembled. Fallure of the !ell "'line Is a atrong U,..., for the post-t.akeolf disaster, wbihh killed the four north American Rodwell Corp. employ .. aboard aod two victims on the fl'OWld. 1be aircraft had Just taken off _from Los Angeles IntemauOna:l Airport On & •ocr<I eleclroolcs gear-testing minion when it veend downward to the right and hit two -ent building>. II the Left engine !ailed, the other could have thrown the craft out of control and pulled lhe -ahlp lo the righ~ 7tlrft ol. the cmnnen were from the finn'I Autonet.ics Dlvllb'\, Anaheim, In· cllldlng Elmer R. J...it, 4.!, ol 10!70 Monilllg Glory Ave., Fountain Valley. · rr.... .... e I CENTER ..• price whlcb had bten negot.fated with the llunti~ ll<ach CO. Councl1m1n-McCnclmt pointed out u.,t the high school alte will cost an addltlo!W '40.000 per year !or 2S years aod Barlletl argu<d In vain that "for 15 :inn the dtollll ol U.. people lw been lo have a new clvtc: center near the beach." "" ; '· • ........ J LUMBER'. .•• ' reu..;ltlo tller, llMf .-lo 4111111 ··~··-~ 111 ln!tdtlnl ..... pouaom •••111 ang?J tltey •olod It ·~at.oi;, . ....""''° ... ' . "ftla 'iiailier-W.) ..... ,...., • lo meet with lhe employen an\' t!mo, but eo far we have heard nothing fttU them, .. aaid Trenta • Accoro!nf! lo Maynard, the lumberyard .,...... baf lrted lo .,.goUate wtlh union representlUves betw~ April 26 and May 5, but 'represent.a.lives were not available. Maynard also alleged il,'lat the unlon'a chief negotiator was out ol town from May IZ to May 15. Maeyna.rd aald th.II there ...re M pagea ol demand& lo be oegoUaI.ed, which Pf"-negollailot;' fmn be-ing eampleCed prior to lhe coo!ract U· pirallon dale " May 15. Trtllte sald lhe negollallng """mlrtee recrounended delaying a strike for a week beyond lhe May 15 date; bul the worken, enraged at the low wage offer, voted Wednesday night tn a eecret bal· . lot lo strike Immedia<dy. NO SHORTAGE YET Accordlns to c:onslnJdJon olllclals al Deone Brothers ol Newport Beach, m<lOt work sites ln the county have not yet felt the lumber shortage. They have a Blk:lay supply of lumber, stocked in anlidpllloo ol lhe strike poaalbility. After Iha~ ac- cording lo Dan Sima, coostructlon manager for Late Forest Homes, Mias:ion Vtejo, "It'll hurt, lo whit exteol ... don't know." Officials of the Build.Ing Industry Association said they had not received word of lumber shortages at any major Orange Q>unt)' constructh:m lites a.s yet, but aoi<l lhey upected lo hear el lrouble Uthe slrll<e lated beyond Monday. From Page I ''DR. BROWN' • • allo bidd.in& for a Jury ruling that Brown'• crimes should only be considered u mildelneanon, a Ie.uer penalty that would bring blm a !b:·month jail term on each count. Judge Byron K. McMillan sent the jurors out or his court.room to deliberate at 9:10 a.m. today after completing his instructions \o the panel. Neither Buckley nor C h le f Oepuiy District Attorney James Enright was prepared to comment on the possible out· come ot the huddle. But the burly Enright pulled out all the stops Thursday h1 a final appeal to the jury. He accused Brown of lying .several times on the-witness stand and be lashed · Buekley'1 argument thal tho IO!Wpok<n Blnnlngham man had not hanned any of the 103 paUeitl he la alleged to have • .,.led at the Fullertoo <jlnic. r i~'I orpmeo\ II Illa!, II Brown · liad lnilOed baniled *11 cl !lie pollents lilt<d in the Jll'ind jiaf lndldmeot he Wotild today be fBclng murder ~arges. The absence of such charges, he · claims, is sufficient evidenee of the pro- 8eCUUon's conclilsioil that Brown'• only cflme was to poee as a qualiftei1 medJcal ll1lclloller. ' Fro!" P .. e I BISCAILUZ ••• Musical Show On At School Tonight can.c:an girls, square danctn and gun· fighters will add to the attraction of Fountain Valley lllgh School's ltrsl muslc1 l .product.Ion, 'M'le &how, '1tfaw the West WU l.o:stto wtLl be pr<>enled at a Ion I g ht In the 8Chool anuwtum. Admission wtll be tt.'15 for 1 du 1 t 1 and $1 for children. Tlclet. wtll be IOld at the door C111 the ' evmln( ol performance. ;tbo muaicat, wrltleo and prodUcrd by students, will feature Fountain Va11ty lllgh's If.voice A Cappello Choir and a cast of more than 40 st.udenta. Included In the program wiU be iuch favorites as "The Streets of ~do" "Gholt Rklen In the-Sky,'' "Buttons and Bows," and "I Didn't Know Lbe Gun Wu Loaded." TM 35-plece Barons' C o n c e r t Orcll<.s!ra, dlr<cled by J•mes Doyle, will back up the choir In these number!. ._ . . . ......,_ ...... 'Instant Replay' Aids Valley's Prob"lem Kids Thanks to a new mobile video urdt, Fountaln Valley School District teachers are helping problem itudents to see themselvea and correct their problems. The mobile studio, located in a large whH.e van, contains a closed circuit TV system with remote control cameras, monitors and a video tape recorder. It was provided through a '911,000 grant given to the district last year under Title VI ol the Elementary and Secoodary Education Act. How does the I)'~ work? The cameras are set up ln the classroom and videotapes are made from selected. classroom situations ln tbe van. Taping a problem chlld's behavior later allows the teachers to carefully analyze his taped performance In an unJn. terrupled aituaUoo. . Beach's Parade To Feature Flags The unit aJready bu proven Itself to be valuable In identifying learning dlf· ficultles, in-isolating problems some children have in coordinating their muscles and in iMtructlonal prescripUons aucb u manipulative games, word uaoclttionl and other ex~s. Fountain Valley ScbooJs peraonnel have invited other area dlatrlcts to participate In the video analysis ii their children, in· eluding elementary school distrlc13 Crom Garden Grove, Santa Ana, Newport· Mesa, Weltminster and Ocean View. Painless Animal Death Machine Used in Beach A ·new oxygen reduction tank has been added to the Huntington Beach Humane Society's facility at 21632 Newland St., for the extennination of sick and unwanted animals. Robert Sharkey, business manager of the society, says the new facility was developed by the Air Force and provides a "quick, painless way to put animals to sleep by rapidly reducing the oxygen in the tank." It's called a Euthanair Chamber and operates by withdrawing oxygen at a fast rate, until the animal simply blanks out without knowing it. The chamber cost ~3.500 and \vas installed during the past week. The effect of the chamber is the same as if an animal were taken up to an altitude of 50,000 or 75,000 feet, explained Sharkey. The Humane Society has th e responsibility of putting to sleep sick anlmM "sentj over by veterinarians and animals who stay in the shelter more than a month with no one clalmioi them. Previously, the Huntington Beach facility used a gas box for this operation, a somewhat less satis!actory method, says Sharkey. Ocean View Trustees Cancel Monday Meet The regular meetil"IR ol Ocean View School District trustees scheduled for May 19 has been canceled. A new meeting date has been set for May 26 at 7:30 p.m. in the district board room, 7972 Warner Ave., Huntington Beach. OllTSTANDING VALUES ON DISCONTINUED FtOOR SAMPLES NOW IN STOCK ••• LARGE SELECTIONS OF QUALITY CHAIRS FROM THE FOLLOWING LINES: NATIONAL, MARGE CARSON, HIBRITAN, CENTURY, MONTEREY, JAMESTOWN LOUNGE, PACIFIC, QUALITY, AND MANY MORE. BE AMONG THE FIRST TO MAKE YOUR SELECTIONS AT THESE UNBELIEVABLE PRICES •• , ALSO MANY PAIRS TO CHOOSE FROM. . I • , . • Saddlebai!k '. ., E'DITION r ' ' VOL'. 61, NO. ·111, 4 SECTIONS, o40 PAGES TEN CEMS • County Air Chief Pushes El Toro for New Site · By JOHN VALTERZA Of .. .,...,. ,...., It.ff County Alrpart Commissioner Dennis Carpeni.r strongly urged use of El Toro r,tari.ne Alr -Statloo u a regional airport befoni 1 N~port Beach audience today, iben urged his listeners lo unite to achieve lt. ' Addressing the montlhy "sunrise bull session" of the Newport Harbior Chamber of Commerce, the straight-talking· com· missioner and California Republican Down the ~ Mission Trail Capo Continues Sheriff's Pact SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO-City coun· cilrnen here, left with litUe cboice. aave the hurried organization of a municipal police (ofce, have reluctantly &greed to a five-year pact calling4or the county to provide Jaw, enforcement ·services to the city · iD-' ucbanie-for ab9ut $100,000 a year. Previously, the city paid about $26,000 annually for Jaw enforaement services provided through fbe county Sberitrs Of. fice. Couuty aµthoritles ,1 in re-e.valuaUng ttie cost of such services, upped the ante effecUve with ill' coming fiscal year. • s..i111.......... to "ote MISSION VIEJO -Saddltback College 1tudent.s will cast ballots for student government leaders of their choice in a two-day eiectioo, Wednesday and Thurs-- day. ' Candidates are John Bothwell of Laguna Beach and Bob Yount of Tustin, president ; Robin Carreras of Laguna Niguel and Mike Maggio of Tustin, vice president ; and unopposed , Eva Parrett of Tustin, secretary; and Patti Taylor 0£ Tustin, treasurer. Vying for six senatorial seats are Boyd Ames of San Clemente. Larry Bomar of Tustin, Richard Mosocwitz· of Tustin, Lou Pellor of San Juan Capistrano, Charles Rawn of San Clemente, Peter Tobin of Tustin, Fred Turnbull of Tustin, and Lln- da Whitacre of Tustin. e School Sho....,.ed CAPISTRANO BEAl:H -General belt- tigbtening in the Capistrano Unified School District as a result of budget pro- blems will mean shorter llChool days.for sOme high school freshmen, according ~ school officials. High school Principal Darrel Taylor saKI parent_, of those students affected wlll be receiving letters explaining the &iluation. In an effort to cut '165,000 from the school budget following the defeat ol a tu override earlier this year, school auUwrttles already are planning 16' In~ crease class sizes in the elenlelltar.y grades and cut from seven to ,sit the n1m1ber <i class periods offered at the junior high level. e Kiwanis Pla11 Golt 'MISSION VIEJO -Tee~ff time wlll be at•;~ a.m. Sunday, May 25 for the first Mission Viejo_Kiwania Club Goll Tourna- ment twice postponed because of wet we1ther. A •15 fee coven greens, cart, prile! and dinner. • • Funds from the tobmament wilt finance Klw8.nis Club youth projects. e Agre.,....,..t Appre.,efl 'Sf.N JUAN CAPISTRANO -An - ml"' lo< a $20,000 st\Jdy of dnillqe I'"" bleml in the Lower Caplstraoo Valley his ...... •Pl'"'* by c~y ......u-here. ,,,. agr<emenl with the Orag .. °"*'ty Flood Control .Ditlric1 calla for the dlatrict to pick up the tab for lhree·flfths .,,., .. """· while me cily P8)'1 the ...,. flll!lb"'« 16,000. Tbe study will Include poc1iooll of acljacent ~ 8each and Dana Poinl e -P•rfc-" CeMpletH EL TORO - Work has ""'1 comploled oo a ~ J!l'OJecl to improve Moulton Par\w11 in the El Toro area belween Riotle Roote Drive and 1.067 fed iilOtb of C•Mdl Road, the Board oC Supervl30rs bu been llllormeCI. leader said the Idea of blending regional airport use with tnllitary 6ek:ls elsewhere in the country bas worked "lln:l it would work well at El Toro, too." Carpenter said that "there is ooe thing to realise when ·you anal;yze the natural protest coming from resldenUI in L<iaure World, Mission Viejo and other hoodng areas near EJ Toro • . . the jets ·used by the military were there way before there were •any homes in the·area." He added that he felt the noise pr~lem a Situation Gritn would not be mod> _,. U COIDll1tttlol jets ..... to .... the mllitarf factUtles, "since combat mech... mate much more noiae and they m tbere now." .. Carpenter called 'for unity amonc all the detractors of coUatr ell-to im- proVfl the tlr terminal situation, then posed his solution to the upansion con- troveny surrowidin( the preoent coun(y airport. He asked for an end to c:riUciam of the CM)mlMIGa for pr-"'I enlarging pork• •-· ' ing lots It 0 fl D ' e CoomlY Airport because such a project WoUld not con- stitute u:paosion, but IMteld, mab it euier·to use for \be: volume of 'trafllc it baa now. · Carpemu jocularly jabbed al the U.S. Navy and even the city of Newport Beach for their oppoaitioo to many cur- rent ideai for tirporu, but conc;eded that N""'PO't olflcials bavo ltouli¥ ap- jll'O..,J of .~ El 'Toro plani, ' 'lbe.Na')' bu not: ·. s 1mm FDR's Son Lumber W alko.ut Condition • End Hopes Dim By JANICE BERMAN ot .. Ofil!Y fOttM ... ,. Prospects today appeared clouded for an early settlement of a lumber strike that may cripple orange County's huge constructloo industry. Members of the Millworkers and Cabinetmakers Union local 2172 voted Wednesday nigbt to atrtlr~. Tbe Union memliera. who nian ·0!'1111• County luinberyards, are seeking incrtases In -mt ·beoef.u tolalini 11·oent1 per biOur, according to ~hn ~. a ~otiator for coonty lqmberylfd owners ailiCmanqer ol the Slntl Ana Lumber Co. . The Teamsters Union, whose members carry lumber from the-yards to the con- struction sites, are honoring picket lines thrown up Thursday by the millworkers and cabinetmakers. According to Al Swift, busines,, repretem'.ative f« the Orange County teamsters, the teamsten are tetking an area-wide agreement to brin& wage.. in Orange County and Lon1 Beech up to • par "'Ith wages iQ Loa Angeles County. Officials of Local 2172 have been unavailable for comment for the past two days. Teamsters and lumber group officials agreed today that negotiations are p~ ceeding In good faith. But Ibey said that negotiations with the cabinetmakers and millworken have not yet begtm.. "We can't be in two places at once," said Maynard. All major: lumberyards in Orange County are closed, Maynard said yester. day, because the Teamsters are honoring the picket lines of the lumberwockers. According to a statement released Fri· day morning by Charles Tr e n t a • secretary of the District Council of Carpenters, the lwnberworkers and teamsters are negotiating as one, for renewal of a joint contract that exp_ired May 15. · Said Trenta: "The employers .. tactiC! backfired in tbeir faee because instead of negotiallng in good faith and making a (See W MBER, P ... I) * LONE LAGUNA PICKET Union's Stan Loder 't , • Laguna Buikler Fearful Of· Lumber Strike Effect "We"re alright today but as of about Monday It's l't!ally going to affect us bad·, ly," Solid Charles Be!ltoo; Laguna Buch baUdln& contractor. in: the wak'.e • 61 1 county-wide strike of lumber yard work- en., Benton, like busy coolraclors through. out Orange County, was asseulng the probablllly of -k ._,. lollowlng the '.l'bunday ·-of Millmen " c.tblnd Maten 1-1 "ii. Jlichonl Jallraul,_l .... ma ·Beach 1..um...r eo.. • .. ,If •'nl wonm had ...-· J !he surprtaestrlk<tllal\ ' y. Ulnm'>pr'd, -of !he llrpot ln-ck!>el-. ID Iha ..,111om boll of the twnt;y, Wll I 9Cflll-of coofueion tm.y U "" aod olllct -tried to fill onlen. llis milling operation hid Clooed doom. A lone picket, Stu Loder of Anaheim, marohed llowly In r-of Jlbraua' yard carri>lhtl a-~· The Jll'd wun't pftkettd 'I'hursd11. Jahraus uJd he was told by a rtpraen· tatln of lhe Tumstm Union tltla mom- 1 ' Said Okay GENEVA (UP.I) -James Roosevelt's third wife Gladys stabbed him In the back TluU'lday night with hji World Wor II IGUVenir dagger at the couple's Swiss villa, police reported today. The D-yearo(l)d son ot the late preal- dent wu nished to coonty. hooPKal In ctitical conditian. Docton performed emergency surgery and later pronounced !he former' -Imm callfomia °'1t of danger, , Mrs. Rooaevelt, 52, was admitted to MJ..AU_, .Cllnic ~b Jetv1a.tlQno , &if• i)' ~<Ii!' II , ....... '-ti i ~ bJillf··110di!r '1treitceot ·~'••:?'~r e "tint~ of the lnddeDt .;~ ·~- luslq bec"1* !hey ukl' -.ek had been aUackld·ll;•'a meoWly-noed wmnin" ,wflhoUt klentityD& Mr. ~ reports mentioned an argument. Houn l«ter, Roo3evtlt'a · attontey notified .,.,...,...,, "I 1m auihoriut& to taY tliat Mr. Roosevel t cqnfirmed today, that the. in- cident whlch11U been reported:involved his wife. Mr. Rooievelt telephooM us from the hospital !his morntog aod aal<ed us.to clear up this: ~·" '· Tbe couple . wu married 1n 11156 and have <ine ctiild, Hall Delano. Rooleftlt's ear~. marpagea. to Betll<y CUl!ilnl. a Jloston•soc:iallte, 11111 Romelle SChhelder, a Dune. e~ to . divorce. Roosevelt. eldest aon Ci( the ~te pl't!sidMt,' hu .five cbijdren by the previous maniage:s. Police spokesmen, trying to piece together details on tbe' slab~ing. said II occurred about 11 o'clock at the Roosevelt villa in lbe .suburb of vesenaz. Officials of Investon Overseas Service (IOS), the flnn Roooevell repiesenta in Geneva, said he was stabbed.Just insJde the doorWay of the big ""-· at !he foot· of a ir&de central staircue' leading to the upper quartent · They said Roosevelt was stabbed in the back with the Marine lmUe ancl Ihm stumbled to a ne(ihl;lor's house about 120 feet away. 'Ibe neighbors calle4 police, an ambuJant:e 1fh dispatched, and Roosevelt wu·rushed to the hospital. · lOS of(lclala said ~ dagger was a memento of lhe war whlob Roosevelt had kept from his days u a brigadier general in the Marines. Roooevelt joined IOS in 1966, and Is president or the IOS Development Co. Ltd. He is a member of .the board of directors of the par<ot boldin& .,..peny, JOS Ltd. (Panarnil) an~ several· other subsidiaries. He eerved in CongrtU (or 10 yean u a DelTIOClttlc repre·1entatlve from Calif~'s Jtth district, and was an unsuOceafttl candidlte for Callfamla governor in 1950. Fl"O{R 1111$ to 1911, he WIS U.S •. repr:eltntlUve to ·the U.N. educatkina.I, scientiftc and cultural organlzaUOn. Roosevelt'• brolhen and sister - Frariklin D. Jr., Elliott, John •nd·Anne- bave alio bad marilal prol>i<ml. All bav• been mirried.more .tbon ClllCO. UC I SaFg Club Plans Weekend F'ibn • J He.said that if one com~'the costs ol CGOveftinc aome: El Toro ·nn:iw1ya 1for etlauDerctal ""' and boildlrig' ·public ttinntnale, "Ute cos& stlll wOuld i tie nilidmal , campared • t~ the h~ of niUUdoa quoted for airpori3 elsewbere In U. county." . Elaborating on awesome financing pro- blems for 1 ·regional airport .,.... whel't!Ver ltJllJa\lt.be.Jocated -Carpenter "8id he do\lbted "'°""ly ·that !he ta)tpa)'el'> of Oran&• Cciwi(J w.Wd not approvt the .• spending of so much IDCIDl1 ... • 1"ntls is espedalty ·dear· when-you reallu that they, tumed down -illueil four 'llines for the new jaU and COUTU fadilty, and that WU ID -of onJ1. about fl2 million," .be aid. He said the El T ... jU., wtielher II were to serve as an uiterim or pennaneat teiniinal, would be .the molt dCiODClllUcal idea. • "All , we, are asking ·to use. it •. the: (See~. Pap 11, "Oos.eve • . -. ~ •, r1 l1 '-·r•;•t ' • JIMMY ROOSIV&~T ·STABBED BY WIFE GLADYS , FOR'a "Old•t Son, ·ShoWn".Wlih ~~,.,During Hoppfar. 'l',1'1'9' ' ' I ' :fired· Jntp. atient Judg' e , ' . ' ' . . - ' ' . Holds Salt~Greek . Fate ' ! • • :: • '' \' ' • . .. . . ' ' ' . Silt Creek Rood'•· fulure .m~. well·mt today on' a decision by a mao•;ho lia8 listened to nearly 1o·hDUrs '<!J ·i,siiri>o«W on ·the · ilnuhtting 10range ~ con-· . ,I' • • tro1<ei;sy. . • • J " An obvloualy, tired and !J:npati<nl Superior eo.rl Judge Claude .OweM cut inlo final afF.Jn>e ntl•Jn the cii'IJl!ite.Tln1r .. da'y u the third lppeaflni:t ·um . ~k by parties-iRvolved ·in the righr~of way fracas enlered ils.foqrth hoUr. He sw,8pt rftom \ho bench· after twic& actnionlslllng,Laguna Niguel <lorporation, attorney Mike McCpnn lck· to "D!'ll repeat arguments lhat I've listened to many limes already." And he marched back again flve r ,mitUes , 1a~ ' to give McCormlCk flve·rncn minutes and allow Laguna Beach attorMY WIHlam 1wncoxen the samatfn,for.iinll 1U1111'1liq: upl ' . It ai>Peared that Judge Owens was ready · to nde at tliat · point 'But he withheld bla de<lalOo to allow' ll<puty coonael:1""'111u €cl!lroy •two d~ to mo. a au~ ·pOU11on-m'• polilt wblcb. ·' f • I , J . . Conr:oy ·warited 1to cllriry. · . · . It is then ,'. Judge Owehl lndicatOii..eol tfte1y up tO WllCoxen. ~ · · Ii . Wilcoi;en d,ecldes MOllday ... u.t· Cooroy's ·further ,argument does ,ooi. lustily a reply, then Judge Ow'°' will immediately rule on the Salt Cret!k lllue. But if Wilcoxen decides that· he. wanta to respond to the coupty attorney's declare- tion,. it wJll lill:~ly take two or three more days for Judge Owips to release.bll fin. ~ .. . He wiU-do 1one Of two thinp: , -He will back Laguna NigueJ·Corpora- tion's argument that their aeiJtire•of Salt Creek Road tbrougb county ahandomnt11I J¥<cedures I s lawflJJ and cannot ba c:Dllenn<!, -opening Ille w.a 1, to unhiiidered -development of the ·11JO.aCre afea 8Uf1'0Ullding'.\the•rilhl.of Vi3Y I , That ruling wooJd offer court support to' !See SAI,T, CREEK, P ... ·I) Oru1e: 1feadaer , If you:re. slee~ln1 ~ ~·, edd tl 'U be 'nice ·wtatbftl1 -_ oaee' the UJU&1 dole-of hlle evapor:ates. • Te1Dptratures are pep!' In tM l.W 70'• few the ar..,. ca.t: INSIDE .TODAY . • ' I ~ ' i" r , If r 2 DAA.Y Pit.OT fridlJ, MIY U. 1969 : • PILOT LOGBOOK ' A Few' Bugs in I .agnna's Year-round School Plan 11J TOM llUllPlllNE or .. D9RrrtMtttfl' SCHOOL DAZE DEPT. -Principal Bill Allen, the weU·llked beadmallll' ~t at Laguna'• El Morro Elementary School. bas come up with a new varia- • lion lo lbe IJ.monlh adlool year. Prlndpa1 Btu, In a """11 pramllllon lo lbe oehool boord, pluged lor oetllna up 111 esperlmenlal """""' cm .... campua wberein -ts would .. lo oebool threo .,...Iha, then Ill<• "°" month GI!, then Ihm -. ,...,lhl Ill acbooliq 1.U.wed by another moolh off, and oo cm lhroual> lbe calendar year. In effect, then, th< ochool would op«ate yUMOW!d on the bull of three months oo, one month off. * AeyWay, U I've fil\lred It out n,ht, lbe kJda dCIO~ rtally one! up -lo acbool 1J1Y longer thlJI th• preaeol nJne.maotb ochool ye.ar. lt'1 JUlt that Principal.Bill would be spruding oi.Jt the old aummer vaca4 tion ao one lnonth of free lime falls between each three month tertn In school. Ever since Principal Bill trotted out his new school yeir proposal, I've beld the 11USJ>icion that It might draw less than univusal aceeptance. But thin, !'Ve always been the suspicious type. . I aloo lhouebt tbal II mlgl!I be a good ldu lo toor tbe local barber ahopl IJld cmducl aort d a public opillkln pall lo determine what lbe patrooa mJcbl lldlllt d the oew achoo! ,ear acheroe. But then aomebody told me that barber lhop poJla cm odlool luuel bm> tbemlelves drawn less than favOl'lble accepWtce in recent tlmel. * Lacking barber shops, then, I found it necessary to fall back on the one polling system J've always used in the put for determination on vital is.sues. I ulced my wile. · To the care!ully -quellloa d "What Do You 'J1>lok d '!!lat N.,. Scbool Year '!lllng!" Ibo replied -a delmnlned frown, I-by: "Well, fer one thing, I'd ·probebl7 have lo quit my job. I CIJI' Vll"J ...0 have our youogeet chlld -am while lier elder brothera .... away In jaDlor bJgb and bJgb ocbooL . • '"llleo too, CIJI' you lmqlne how macb aludy1n( abe'• going lo pl -wbm llhe'• plllq rud1 ler acbool In lbe mornlnp d Jmie and July while bor 1>ruthen are Pther1nc up their nrimllna and boardl fer I day al lbe -! · .. I'm rea11J turpiled," lhe eootlmaed, "tblt the teacben have come out -fer this cm lbe bull tbal lludentl IUller a letdown juit before llUl1llDel" ·-and the doldruml -they relum lo achool ofter -· · "Woo'I the klda IUffer lbe uma leldowo ind doldruma jull be!,.. IJld after each of the three oni-mantb vaeatloa•?" She continued oo at _.. leoath about what mllhl happen U lbe :SE WU Indeed ..tended lo all Laguna -IJld the bJgb ICbool klda no er bne a •1mmer vacatkm in wblcb to W'D ,a bit of cub for college er apemea. . * My thollgbts. -er. bad drlftal beet lo Principal BID, one of lbe real-11 oJce JIUYI in oor local educatlooal .,-, who planl lo dJacml IU .... oebool ,ear .,......J at a -d colfea -parents. Loll " JuCk, Bill I',... l' .. e J SALT CREEK:_RQ~ FATE ••.. ' tho .-·· lrlUJDllll that Ila ... tho......:, and ~ "1.1. d-d lbe thoroughfare WU lawful Wlloozen ...... that the - and that both lbe pJannlnc commltlloo .aupervllon aummarlly abandooed Salt IJld bWd d aupervtsors did not betray Creek Road l!ld betrayed a public lru.I Jn an acUon tn wb1ch no vole was taken a.ny public trust when they took the ac-and whlcb wu In de.ftance of all known Uoo. In g-the relinquishment of a -Or he will find for Wilcoxen and rule public right of w1y. He argue1 that fraud that the Art Colony attorney has indeed was involved in the takeover of the proved that. there was an element of roadway by Laguna Niguel fraud tn the maneuven that led to aban- donment af Salt Creek Road. Such a rul· VOTE TAKEN Ing will signify Judge Owens' agreement Laguna Nlgilel 's three lawyers, backed with the argument tha' the State Consti· by Conroy, deny that and insllt that a tub expresly forbids any action which vole wu taken and that both tbe 'plan. is calculaied to deprive tbe p.ibllc of a nm and the supervltcn act.eel properly right-of·way. ()D a full mustering of evidence. And they BACK ARGUMENT ~lute WilCOJe.n's pie.a for applicaUon ol tidelands law to the issue, It mQ include Judge ,Owe:ns' backing Whatever blppena. it appean that the of lbe lflllllltnl that Sall Creek Road Orange County Graod Jury la tak1ng a comes under tide.lands law since part of deep interest ln the proceedings. its all~nt is wl!bed by the Paciifc Grand Jury foreman William Martin of Ocean. And that argument, in itself, Laguna Beach ut throu,gb al.molt all <lf arsues Wilcoxen, ill sufficient to apur the the hearing 'lbunday tn what apputed court to overturn county abandonment ol to be a bid to supplement the informaUon the thoroughfare. offered by wltneasea from both aldea of A victory for Wllcozen at this law and the controversy. motion stage of the court battle would Sources close to the panel atale that lead the way to a trial of the issue and, County Supervisor Alton Allen Laiuna poalbly, the future setUng cf new public Nigue.l's champion 1n all 1Ubmiutona of hearinga on tht controversy. the issue to his board, wUI be uked to WUco1en will have a much more dif. testify "in the near tubae." ftcvlt path to tread if Judge Owens If that ls so, Allen'• aide John Jtllltfer throws in his lot with the Laguna Niguel stated Tbunday, he (Killefer) trmn case. But it has been indicated that such nothing about tl Supervisor Allen wu on • ruling would not end bis cballenge of a villt to Sacramento and cauld not be reached fot comtnenL OA•IY PllOT OMHOI COUt ,.UaLllMlfllO CCll&PMIY l•Mtt H, WtM ..,.,........,"'* ...... I • Jtcli •· .c,,1.., Via,.,..... ... ,_ .. ....., n ..... , ••••ii .... Tll•111•• A. M11r11~i11t ~··l­l lthtt4 r. Ntll .._ ...... Cltt l:CltW ---JJI ht.tt Aff. M•l"-f """'"" P.O. I•• .... t:t61J --°""'~I ..... ,.., l"'9f .......,, a-o.1 nu ._., ... ..,.._. IWIWIC41Mc111•,_.._ f'rem P .. e l AIRPORT •.. J\larine faclli1y II their l1IJlWIYI. a tu! area and the tower," lie Hid. A ...., termlnll le< dvillaoa, pmJoc Job and main&enanct atructuree: would be built at non-military upense in what he jokingly termed the "Carpernter•EI Toni P:an." Carpente drew •ln>al II u I h t er midway through hla 40-mlnute opeech when, after hitting at aircraft nolte crltics, be sJaneed towant an opeotog door In the Balboa Bay Club banquet room. The -opooed and l!lll·noloe leader Dao Em"'7 entend Unly. ''Too bad, Dan," he quipped. "You mllaed tbe bell part.. U.S. Surgeon General Stewart Quits Poat WASHINGTON (UPI] -Tho WhJU -.-d lodq tho !Ollpallon GI Dr. Wllllam R. Si.war! u tJ.S. 111r1em ....,..i. In a brill -· the Whit• ff-aJd Slewlll'I WU Juvlnc lo b e c o m t cbancelle< of Loulslana St.to Unlvenlll' M-C..tor In N6w Orlelnl. Prutdenl NllOa aoceplad' Ill• rellpllloll tfledift Alls-I. I • twt.:r PILOT Stiff ""' LwJaeon MotNllll Mermaids to Fete· ' . C·ity Beautifiers It's a beauUrul tlme ot the year in Laguna Beacb. ',. And &he M~. women'• dlvllJoo of t b e Chamber of Commerce, a i m lo ...,...... IJld thaok botb e<pnlaatlooa IJld lndlvld\Jab who have taken apeclal efforts to beauWy the city. Tbe Mmnalds' Third Annual Beaullllcatloo IWIChooo will be held Moo- day at the RMera Room ol lbe Hotel Lquoa. Then!, lbe wlooen of the group's beauUficatlon contelt will be an- nounced. Wbmer1 were mo.en by a panel of thrff judg~. Foreat Dlclwon, Orange County Plaoolng director; ldn. Welloa Wolker, chairman of lbe OrlllP County Blceotemlal Beautl!Jcatloo Commltlff, IJld Harry Babbitt. manqer of the Newport Beach Tennla Club. Color sUde4 of each of the winnlnc en~ tries will be shown at the Juncheon. A 1weepatUea trophy from ~ Federal Savlnp IJld Loin, and three awanll from lbe Laguna Beaob Boan! d Realtors will be g I v e n. RllMtn-up awards will be given by tbe Mermaids. Twenty·s.iJ: award! were given at the first beautification luncheon. while Jt were presented Wt year. In the past, award.t have gone for Vic- tor """''' gard..S, ~ Beoch Clty Hall'a Jandacaplng, Fuhloo Gallery'• bulldlng, Petite Fleur for colo< IJld quaintnesa: and to many individuala fot their homes. LuDcbeon reservaUons may be mtdt through lbe Cbambtt of Commerce of• nee. l.uncbeoe la 13 per - Two Officers Accused Victors in Election ·of Improper Conduct 1 A complaint alleging improper conduct Involving two Laguna Beach police of~ ficers during an early morning field in· terrogation Thursday bas been lodpd. with th~ police department and is now. under investigatiog. New student body officers at Laguna High ,demonstrate winning smiles which helped carry them to victory in campus balloting U:iis week. Standlng from left are Diane Judy, secretary; Sharman Fames, treasurer; Lucy Boyd, assistant treasurer. Seated from left are Mark Sizelove, vice president; Howard Hills, president, and Frowa P.,e J Charlie Ware, student congress president. U R ---'----"----'-------, L MBE ... Officers Larry Warren and Rich Kolzln l. are the men involved in the charp made· by two yoUJti Lagunans. The police department declined to release the names of lhe complaining parties. Capo Seeking Solution To Dispute on.Airport reasonable of{er, lhey chose to delay negotiations and make an insulting wage offer. 'Ille men were ao ailgry they voted to strike immediately. "The {lumberWorkers) union ts ready to meet with the employers ~y time, but eo far we have heard nothing from them," aald Trenta. According to Maynard, the lumberyard ownen had tried to negotiate with union representatives between April 26 and May 5, but representatives wer e oot available. Maynard also alleged that the union 's chief negotiator was out of town from May 12 to May 15. The complaint contends that the youth! were stopped at about 1 a.m. in the area· of a Thalia Street car lot by the patrollnc <lfficers. Due to lhe lateness of the hour, the youth! were reqUested to present their identification. The youths, it is understood, lodged the complaint that night following the in- cident. The matter is now under in- ve&Ugation by Police Sgt. Wendel Faulk. Both officers involved are remaining on duty until the in~estlgatlon la complete. San Juan Capistrano city officl!l]1 have joined tbe search for a way out of a tangled dispute which threatens to abut down, according to its operator!, the ~ Alrport, a small, ligbl plane strip at the west.em edge of the city near San Juan Creek. • At b!u• Is 5.4 ...., of oounty Flood Control District' property which forms a portion of the strip. It ls leued to the private _.1an d the airport by lbe -But lbe 1.-1\1111 out 8000 aad county olfldal:s aay any new leue must ,rarrt I blgllar ynce ,. ~ • ... Advmtced Cl.ass At Laguna High To Give Drg.ma operators want a Jess expensive, Jong term Jeage, They say they need the distrld land to operate lhe airport. The city Is lm.'poolng lo buy the Jaod, then lease It to the airport operators. '111e flood control district is prohibited by law from selling the land to private parties, but could sell it 1t public auctiot, or to another public entity, according to city officlala. No firm price was menlloned. City Administrstor Erne.st Thompson said lbe dly'a effwt lo ll<llle the Jll"bl<m is "an aUempt to intercede after all else has failed." The dty II lolerelled In maJniJlg 1be airport becau!e of lb p!O>jmlly to a !mall industrial zone, further Ueftlop- ment of wblcb could add to the munidpal tu base. From Page 1 STRIKE ... Manynard said lhat there were 34 pa g e 1 of demands to be negotiated, which prevented negotiations from be- ing completed prior to the contract e1-' piration date <lf May 15. presenUy follawing the work stoppa1• Trenta said the ne-otiating commitlee caused by winter storms. "We're u bUl1. recommended del•Ytn& a strike for a as we've ever been," said Benton. · week beyond the May 15 date, but lhe The biggest single comtructkl'D projtct warken, enraged at the low wage offer, In the county, North American voted Wutnesd&Y nlcht in a aecret _bak Rockwell's seven-story Autooetics plant lot lo atrike Jmmediaidy. being c:onstruoted In the Laguna Nlf\lel According torconstrucilon officials at area for more than $20 mllllon, ill not yet Ileane Brothen of Newport Beach. most alfecled. work site! in the county have not yet felt Dwain C. Freeburg, director of Lquna the lwnber shortage. They have a 61)..day Niguel Facilities for the corporation, supply of lwnber, stocked ln anUclpation said, "We have no reason to believe at of the strike possibility. After that, ac-tht moment that the threatened lumber C I M d M cording to Dan SI.ms, construdion workers strike will have any effect on our 8DCC ' OD ay eel manager for Lake Forest Homes, Mission construction -site." Viejo, "It'll hurt, lo what extent we don't If It continues the strike of about 400 The regular meeUn• of ~ VJ.,. know." · J be k ~ v..;-..1 um r wor ers is expected to have con- 'l'he advanced drama claa! of Laguna School District truatees scheduled for Officials of the Building Jnduatry slderable effect OJI the southern half of n.ach High Sch 1 will t "D May 19 baa been canceled. Association aald they hid not received Orange County where. 8 building boom 1.g ui;; 00 presen a rama A new meeUng date has been aet for word of lumber abortage1 at any major under way, Laguna Beach has an unusual Montage" Saturday ln the. high school May 28 at 7:30 p.m. m· ... ,.~ board Orange eoun~ -~·ctlon ·•tea u yet, f d auditorium. WR: wow,.;• •1 ....... ., .. " "" amount o owntown commercial con- The 7;,, p.m. show is composed of 13 ~ch. 7972 Warner Ave., Hun~ but said they expected to hear of trouble ~ under way. Work is ltll1 in , different segments from recent plays and 1---------------U_th_e_a_tr_ik_e_lall....:.ed....:.bey...:...oo_d:_M_ond_ay:..:· __ _:P:...rogr<SS.:.:..::.:.:...tod:.:.::•Y:..:· ______ _ muslcalJ, u well as some original pao- Jornime. Thia dramaUc presentation Is an ex· pertment. 1be performance ls student dlrecled for the first llm• In thla hlgb 1chool'a history. Advanced d ram a teachers Ray Haggan! (stage) aod Jack Kreft1ng (music) have remained tn the bactiround during rehearsals, and bavt served only aa consultant! for the. show. The ••nramatlc Montage'' will be presented to the community free of charge, Students participating In the producUon Include Cindy Carter, Richard Dentaon. Nlck Enright, Roger Gordoo, JUI Hub- bard, Llocbay Karg, Dannell Knapp, Rob Kronman, Darci Linkey, Meri I e e MagnlL!On, Pam Miller, Eric Miller, Huelyo Myua, C&thy O'Coooell, Ralpb Reynolds, Dani Thomu, Erle van Deusen, Rod Van Wart, and Galle Ziegler. President Lists Problems of City OUahott oil drllllog, control of hlgh rise, appllcaUon of the aign ordinance and Mlln Beach development are principal ~es now facing the Laguna Beach Clvic League, Aothooy Demetnadu, newly elected presideol, aaid today. Demetrladea, W>animOUsly .. lecled by the i:..1111e'1 board of directors, noted the group'1 sente ol. urgency in attemptina to solve the problems. New officen joining Demetriade.s an Dr. Joepb Tomehak, first vlce-prul· dent; Roger Llljestrom, second vice- p~dent ; and Peter Ostrander, .....iary. Newly lna1aTied dlrecton an Jllta. JOIJI J'°""' l!ld Mer?il Johoaon. Foreign Car Chassis Taken at High School A loplea. bo<\ylfll, eng1ne1,. car hu 1-1 atolto fmn the porl;ln1 lot of the Laguna Beadiliifh'Schoohulo lhop. The chaAIJ of the amall for.J&n car belCIOp lo Jamea Kausch, II, of '4t Canyon View Drive. Value of the frame, ~tori, IJld wheda taken wu put at f lllO. Tbe theft iru dllcovered Tbun- day. MAY SPECIAL Chairs m.m 20% to 50% off OllTSTANOING VALUES ON DISCONTINUED FLOOR SAMPLES NOW IN STOCIC ••• LARGE SELECTIONS OF QUALITY CHAIRS FROM THE FOLLOWING LINES : NATIONAL,. MARGE CARSON , HllRITAN, CENTURY MONTEREY JAMESTOWN LOUNGE. PACIFIC, QUALITY ANO' MANY MORE. IE AMONG THE FiRST TO MAKE YOUR SEUCTJONS AT THESE UNIELIEVAILE PRICES , , , ALSO MANY PAIRS TO CHOOSE FROM. NIWPORT IEACH 1721 W-llff Dr, 642·2050 .... ,.,.., ""''. '•wf111l-l lot1rW LAGUNA llACH Dlll1n1r1 MJ N9rth Coett Hwy Avolla~Ja Al-ID -.., .. ; "" , ..._ T• ,_ ... et a.mp C.-, .... lUJ 4'4.4J51 ·1 • r ---~~~~~~~~--------------------------....... ~ • , N,.Y . S.i!rk•' ,, .,.,, .... ,,.4 .... FRIDAY t;fAY 'Iii ' '196; TEN CENTS YOL 62, NO. ·111, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CACIFORNIA ' ' . s . '. . . . . L ·- ' « :-.~ • '...,.-.---. '.'.'.\t County Air Chief · Pus·h_es El -Toro f'or ·:Ne.w Site· . • ;. . r • , .• : • -' " . " By JOHN VALTERZA Of tM DellY P*f Slaff leader said the Idea of blending re&1ona1 airport 111< with military UelilB elsewhere in the country has worked "•nd it woold work wen at El Toro,' too." would not be much .....,. If ~ Ing lob at Or a •·t .e, County Airport j.U wri to use Ille lllilllpry facillU.., becauae ouch a pro!Oc\ WOllld not '°"' He U1d;that·~ -coiilP!ll'ed the '9!la'1 ~of so much-· of~cqqv,~ aome El 'l8l'o fUJiwaflfor' \ j"Dila i.' tsped.ally'·clear when )'Oii colnjriarillal l!ie ' IJ¥I . !bulldlni . l"lb!IC -thet they turned down --t.l:nlliilla, "the · "°" -~ would be , ·foot, Umes for the De';!' )ail · and tOUrfs mlnhilill' compared to the'hlinilreds ·o1 laclllty, ond that wu an-'<i'oet!1. rntlllot!l'qlliKed for airports ei..wbere .tn ' aboutltJ.m!llloe," be said. • · County Airport. Commissioner Dennis Carpelll« strongly urged we of El Toro Marine Air Station as a regional airport before a Newport ~cl} liudience today, then urged his listeners to unite to achieve il "since combat ~ mate much ~ olllute eipanalon, hut inotMd, mate: it more noise and they are tbere n6w.'1 easier to U90 for the whnne of. ttamc It 0CarpeQter said that '".there is one thing to roaJize wbeo }'OU •analY,Ze the nalur'!l protest coming frqm midenta in Leisure World, ~ Viejo and ~er h(lusing areas near EI .Toro ••• the iets used by the mi4tary were there-way before there were any homes in the area." Carpenter called for lllllty amoiig a0 has DOW. the d<trac:fors of couiity e!Joril to Im· Carpelller jocularly jabbed at the U.S. prove the air tennln&I situation, then Navy and 'even the city Or NeWport poled. his solution to. the ~ion con-Beach ft>r their opposition to many cur· the --'" -' 1..--..-y. . , r ; , H~ said the El Toro plan, whether ,It .--Elaborating o~ ••esG?,~ F,o-w~ to serve ¥, an interim or~ blems for a regional alrpoi't' -wherever. terminal, wooia be the most «UIQIDical :Addres&ing the monUhy "sunrise bull aesslon" of lhe Newpor:t Harbor Chamber of Commerce, the straight-talking com· missioner and California Republican troveny surroonclil!g-·the preoent county rtnt ldeu, i.. alrpon's, but conceded aiiport. • : that J:;'ewpo,L olflcialJ have o!Gdly· ap. He added tha.t be felt the noise problem He uked 'for an end to mticlam ol the proted d the El TQl'o pi-, -mtploq fur propoiing enlarglnt plrk· 'lbe•Nayy bu not. · It m,lahl be localed -~ ,sald·ho idea. , · doutited .strongly lb¥t ~ .tax~yers Qf ·"All we are· asking to use _ aC .. the OriJ!P. .Cilwl\Y would .DOI approve tile (See AIRPORT, Pqe SI.' · • • • . .. " .a s : •I '• Down tlae Situation Grim FDR's Son Mission ~rail ·Lumber Walkout Condition Capo Continues Sheriff's Pact . SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -City coon· cilmen here, left with little choice save ~ hurried ~organization .of a municipal polict farce, hav.e reluctantly agreed to a five.year P8:ct calll.Jlg. f!X' the county to provil;I~ "w ~t '""!'ices· to tile city Iii 'escl\alli" for aboilt 1100,000 a year. · Froviously, the city, !!Ed about 121,000 annullly · for law enforcement ltl'Vices proVided through the COW!ty Sheriff'• Of. flee. Q>u:nty ·autborities, in rwvaluating Uie cost of. such aerv.ices, upped the ante effective with the coming fiscal year. :e Saddleflaeh to Vote MISSION VIEJO -Saddlebaci College 6tudenf&, will cast ballots for student gOvernment leaders of tbe.ir cboice in a two-day election, WedJ_lesday and Thurs· day. Candidates are John Bothwell of Laguna Beach and Bob Yowit of Tustin, president ; Robin Carreras of Laguna Niguel aod'"Mike Maggio of Tustin, vice president ; and uoopposed. Eva Parrett of Tustin, • .teaetary; and Patti Taylor of Tultin, treasurer. Vying for six senatorial seats are Boyd Ames of San Clemente, Larry ~ar of TU!tin, Richard Mocsocwitz of Tustin, Lou Pellor or San Juan Capistrano, Charlu Rawn 0£ San Clemente, Peter Tobin of Tustin, Fred Turnbull ol Tustin, and Lin· da Whitacre of Tustin. • School Shot'tene• CAPISTRANO BEACll-<l<neraJ bell· tigbt<ning in the Clpblrano Unified School District as a reltllt of budget prir blerns will mean shorter ICbool days for S<Re high school freshmen, according to school dficials. High school Principal Darrel Taylor said parents of those students affected will be receiving letters explaining the iiituation. In an effort lo · cut $165,000 from lhe school budget following the defea.t of a tax override earlier this year, school authorities already are planning to ifl. crease class sizes in the elementarJ' grades and cut from seven to six the number o( class periods offered al the juaj<lr high level, .e, Ki..,anu ~i.11 Gort MISSION VIEJO -Teo<>lf time will be at t :30 a.m. Sunday, May 25 for. the firs\ Mission Viejo Kiwanis 'Club Golf Tourna- tneDt twice postponed because of wet weather. A $15 fee covers greens, cart, prizes and dinner. fi'mds from the tournament will finance KiWanis Club yo&tJh Jnjed.s. e Agreement Appreiie• End Hopes Dim By JANICE BERMAN OI ffM O.llr Pl"' Sholl Prospects today appeared clouded for an early set.Uement of a lumber strike that may cripple Orange County's huge conslruetion industry. ,Members of the ~workers and C.bipetmakero Union lo<al :t71 V'!led w~ !liibl to ••lritce.,'l".lie u...,. members, who man .Orange County ~ardo, are ~g increases in -and~·~ ea:-. per libw', ~ccolding ·to .:Jim ·Miynard, a negotiator for county lltmberyard owners and manager of the Santa Ana Lumber Co. The Teamsters Unktt!, whose members carry luinber from the yards to the con-· strqction sites, are OOnoring picket lines thrown up Thursday bjl the millworllers and cabinetmakers. According to Al Swift, business represeniative for the Orange County. teamsters, the teamsters -are seeking an area-wide agreement to tJring wages in orange County and Lopg Beach up to a par with wages in Los Angeles County. Officials of Local 2172 have been unavailable for comment fur the pest two diys.-·· Teamsters and JwnbeT' group officials agreed today that negotiations are pro-- ceediiig in good faith. But they said that negotiations with the cabinetmakers and millworkers have not yet begun. "We can't be in two places at once," &aid Maynard. All major lumberyards In Orange C.oanty are closed, Maynard said yester· day, be<:ause the Team.sten are honoring the picket lines of the lumberworkers. According to a statement released Fri· Clay morning by Charles T r e n ta , secretary of the District Council of Carpenters, the lumberworken and teamsters are negotiating as one, for renewal of a joint contract that expired May 1~. Said Trenta: "The employers' tactics backfired in their face because instead of negotiating Jn looil laitll lf!>d Jllf.ktng. 1 (See WMBER,. PIP t)' DAil Y PILOT lt•ff """ LONE LAGUNA PltKE'f Union's Stiin Loder Laguna BuiWer Fearful Of Lumb-er Strike Elf ect "We're alright today but u ·of about Ing Uiat the t.eamaters would deliver as Monday .it's really going to ailed UJ bad· long as tbere'were no pickets. Jy," said Charles~. Laguna Be.ach A short-time later, said Jahrau:s, a building conll'actor, in the wake or: a picket appearfd. Jahraus has ao in· county·wide strike oC lumber yard work· d~ in.cktr mo.king deliverie. but en. . Aid U tile •lluatbt conUnuet local - SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO-Ap qne. Benton, like b"'l' contradoro lhrougl>-tractors .will be;•l),artinc for l>nnbet in ma for a PD,000 st'udj d. d.raiuge pro OJt ~ coo,:~~ was ~ the sb'ort order· . . , . · blema In the Lo.,er_C.pistrano Valley hu•_ Pthe~.!..~ _.._~ ... ~· . -~~,,_i_•~l]_~.~-~r..': -apjiroved by, cKy ~ .ltere. ·· '":U-Y ·-~· . ·--, ·r . , ... ,.._,..,.,..,..~ !~·~,. ... 'llie-1\eat"\tb.U.~~Y; 1~~-~~~ .,rl t.ictnol ~&in,!Whrli~~llltl'lrltBlptl!t F_Io/ld CootrOI ·DISlrfcf Calli . Ml' llie lleach Lumhet 1;4./ llld t11out 11-yard ,ctmdt fD.«...-~·-Wlll;k• tJ1e dillricl to pt<k ~P the tab for -.ruthl wortm hod wallrod all tilt job In the cbureh will ~.come·to 1 ltelt MCJO' ol tie coot, wbile lite city P<YI the re-aurprlse strike ~lllpn 'I'lu!lldlY. clay UJt!eso ·~rieiotlaU.... w · .... mUllni 15,000., The study will Include Jabnt11S'"Yitd, one al the \argeot to-ctnful. • ~ "' poo1lolls ol a,diacent C.ptolJ'w lltacb dependenta In the ... llMln baH of the Bentoo II~~~~ k i nd Dina Point. coonty, wao a ICtlli of conlusloo today-as ol!lco buUdlng "'lllr'l.ooiuiia .,. 1nd • Park..,.11 Complete• he and office -!rm tried to !ill orders. Gleoneyre Strliol-·ICl.~. "th!> Hb milling ..,.rauon had elOlfd down. WOllld probably,~ · late - EL TORO -Work bao been compl«od A lone picket, Stan Loder of Anlhelm, uni»! lumbef Ji( m· on 1 IC.Ill project lb lmprnve Moolton man:hed slowly In front al Jaltraus• yard ti men world"" a- Parltwl!' In the El Toro .. , bet,.... carrying a llrlkt plaea'1d. . ji>b. ' • • Rlclll Route Drive and 1,1117 feel IOllt!I of The yard· wun't picklltod Thuroday.' Benton said moot ""1lraclon ui1 oul!- canada Jtood. the Board al Suporvllorl Jibrw aalcf lie WU told by A rep<---buQ -t - bas Ileen Informed. taUve ol the Twosten Unloo this mom-(llet 8'l'lllK!, PIP I) .. Said Okay GENEVA (UPI) -James Roosevelt'• · third. wife Gladys stabbed. him in the baok Thundiy nfjht -hio World War JI !IOUYenii dagger' at the couple's ·Swiss villa, police reported today. · The C.year-old son of the late presl· -..., ruobecl to county · hospllaJ In CriUcal <Olldition. ·Doctors performed emtrgency ""'ery·and lat«·protiottn<ed the fOrmer ~an· mm CallforQia out of danger.., ' Mn. 8-velt. ·5%, wu &dmitled to Bel'=~ ~~ ·~ o~b'•'•"i'~, .... H--.... ,It.,. ..... iald • liild . .-r·-.·~ent ~1at -1e't:t"Te 'tl>td ilan,,.~-! r .... , ~ . r, ~ .. , ~ 1'11'11,r<P!"ll,al the l,ndd!ll$ were...- fflling ~ ~ aii4 -·hid beell l!tadoid llf •;,;~,lll!bllinc!od woman" wtdil.ii ldtllUf1lnl •her, -Tblii> report.s m-an argument. l!.i.o.-· 1-'"'--9--~-•.:ts · a~ ' -. •· ~ I ~ " I I ' · • ' •. · ' " """* l;l!ICl•,r.uuKY~' ·--1 · .. l l .J•'' ,1 1 ('f'.'.r f·J · •• •r3 ·' .. ,, .. ,, ... n~-.mea: · · ": 'c . 'JIMMY"~~T~·D·IY WIFE 11t:t.DYS · · ~":\'t ::..m::: ~~~~J.. ~ · ", •, FDIUO:Or.Mit ~;.~ ~ $pol\oo. During •"°"'11-"l·:rllllfll-:' . Cident wbleJi bar been 'reR_oi:te4 'ioVotveid i' : , I ', 1 ) ·' · 1-1 ,;.. ' " " ' : . hio wile. Mr. 8-velt -i.tei)boned ua . . • · I •. .. : frmn the 11oop1ta.1 thls·molJliDI and uked •oad's 11:'-...__ .... · us to ~ear DP.~~" · ..,. . 11£ •·-~ • , . ' ' , I ' ' . . I " . The .~J~ ,WJIS. tn$nifld JD 1951 Jand " . 't ' ' =~=?~5.5~: >'.:]1~it.eA .. '':.:lm.·p.atfunt :Juiln, ._e a nurse, epjled In ·di~-Rpooevel4 ~ l!'' eld~ son of lbe late president, IJ,u ftve1 • 1 1 •• ~. • ... • • • ~=~::ii:.":~~ :·:niJ"'iJik~~zt~·crte:e·k;'Fate.: ota1rred , about 11 9'cloclt at the ' '~· l •. ;m• ~ ,, ' . . ' . ,I; J .~ Roosevelt villa in the suburb of Vesenaz. ' · · · 1 _ ·r J " • ~ ;'.: • •• ' ~ f • : : -01ficiala of Inv~ Overseu Service ; ~,Creek·~·a.·f~~:iJ.y~I't8tr Conroy_'.w .• to ci@nfy_!_ 4 =. 1 · . (!OS), the prm Rooeevelt repreoenta. In (ocfuy 00• a. declilbn ~ a ni.n who' has · It is. the~, Juslge Ow,epa i'lll!caled, eo-Geneva,~ he wao_ tlabhed Just ,inaide Ilsttned' to (riearly 10 hOutil>al'.testimonY, tlrely up to Wflcoien . . ' the doorway of the big house, a_t-.tbe foot /ort !lie : sinuhmn; ·orana(' Coast' con~ . u . wuc0xen decides ·Mondaf11that ~ a wide central stalrcase lea.ding to the ttov.ersy~ , . . , • ' Conroy's further , argument does not upper quarters. An b ·. 1 "red ·-• · " t ., __ ,. " ply "·" J"• ~ ~·1 They-said .ftooaeveltwasstabbedinthe -.---_!J ,V1ou1_y w '"""""~ unpaweri J~wy a l"e , uia1 ""ge vwens',w:t.1 back with the Marine knife and thelt Superlor oCourt Judie Claude Oweno cut immediately i;uJe .on the·Salt Creek'-. olumbled to a neJihbor'• bouae abouM20 in,lo;flnal argumen.ta ln·tlle d).opute Thurs, But if .Wllcoxm dtcideo that how~ f I Th neighbors 'called poll day u Ille third appeeranco. thl•·-k tespond •to the county alt«neyl•·cleclat'a-ee away. e . ce. by -..uu·tnvOlved in the .,,.,,,... of ·way lion,-Jt will Hi. .. 1 .. lake tWOror tbree,more. an ambulance was dispatched, and i-a~ • •...-•1 ..-.y Rooeevelt was ruohed to .tile ~Ital. fracu entered 111 fourth hour. ~:'J!.'.or Judge Oweno"to-•bll.fln. IOS Officials said the: daggtr wu a ' He ~ from~tbe bench after twice. ...... ..., memento of the war wliich Roosevelt bad admonl!hing1 Llguu Nljue1 eorporaUon Hf! will 1do1ooe ol two things: : kept from hio days u a brigadier general attorney Mike McC:<innfok ta ''not' repeat ~He will back Laguna Nlguel·Corpora- tn the r.iarineJ. al'IUJllOl!.ta. ~,'I've Illtened to · many t)o.•, argupient that thek' .. -ol Salt Roosevelt joined JOS In tlM, and is times alleady!' And be marched back ~k RAlad thrulflb .-Y abandotiment president of the 108 Development Co. again fk'.e • tnlnUtes ~ater to give procedures J s Wwful and cannot ~ Ltd. Ho Is a member of ·the board of McCormick llve more nunu~s ond a_Uow cllal~ged, thus, ~i the . w,a.y, to directors of the parent bOJ.dhtg' company, Laguna Beach attorney w~ Wilcoxen Unhil'ldered "'developmeitt ol the 100-acre JOS Ltd. (Panama) arid ·several other the "'""tlmt>f°' final 1amnm11 up. · area surroondlng.l!Je~llllt df way. aubsidlarlu. • . u. a_....s tllal Judg_e .• Qly'°' ,wal That ru'ling would .offer court support>lo 'Hemwd In Congrus for·tOyean... re.di' to ,,rj!e,,al, .tJiat ' ~ ,s.jl ·he (SM SAL~ aq;;gx,,Pqe I ) • Democtatlc representative froc'n ~ Ma:.~·,to ,allow ~ ~ 28th dlslrict, and WU ID CcJanoel Thomll -OonroJ'. lwO da)'l •lif tll~ can41data for' Ca1ifomla a ll>pllll>mental Pelftlan 'On a pofitt w'blch governor In IJlllO. . . From 11111' to J161,. he ,wu U.S. ~ to the U.N. eaucatiqaal,, ocl'"tlflc itnd cultural oriantzau.n. Rooeev'e!t's 'l brothefs and sister - Franklin D. Jr., EOfott. John and Anne - have lllo hod marltal'problems. All liave been married more than once. .{ ... __ _....., .. • * 1. -~---\ .. .... " ~ ' • . • L: -·--'--- or..,• . .. ..,.. ,If )'lllt're sleejilng In this.~ end it'll be nice weather !.-mce the usual doee of hue evaporata I T1mp0r1turea ere pegld In Ulit low 711'•~ lhe Oranp Cool!. • •' , I I ' - " • DAil y I'll.OT fn.ta:r, M" U. 1969 • PILOT 1 LOGBOOK '--' '· " A Few Bugs in I.aguna's Year-round School Plan BJ TOM MVllPRINE .. ., Dlltr"" ..... SCBOOL DAZI!! DEPT. -Prtncipol Bill Allen, the weU·llked beadmuter out at La&una'• El Momi EleJDeQtary School, has come up with a MW vart. Uoo ID the a.mootb school year, Pr1nc1p11 BlJI, ID a recent _.atloo to the acbool -.!, pluqed for ..uing up ao ~ _.., m bll ctmplll ---.. toacbool-llllllllbl, then take -maoth off, then three _. -d oc;MoJl"8 followed by uother month off, aqd oo .., lhnlugh the calend>r year. Jn efloct, then, the school would operate yell'-mmd on the bull of tbtte montha on, one month off. * , . •• A!lyway, H I've figured U "11 right, the kids doa~ ...uy end up fl'Jlnl to. llCbool aoy longer thao the preaent nlne-moath ochool year, !l's jull that Prtnclpol BllJ would he apr<adlng out the old summor vaca- tion so ooe month of me Ume falla between each three. mon!JI ttrm in school. Ever since Principal BW trotted out his 11ew school year propogal, I've held the 0ausplclon that it might draw less than universal acceptance. But tbm. I've alwl_.)'1 been the suspicious type. I aJao thought thal ll JDliJ>t be a rood Idea to tour the local barber lhopl and ccaduct IOrl of a public opinion poll to determine wbal, the paO-mlPI tiiJnk of the new ochool YfJtl' ochane. . . ' ~- • • I,wlaem1 HoMlll Mermaids to Fete· ·city Beautifiers It's a bflluWul Ume of the year in Laguna Beach. And tht Mermaids, women's division of t h e Chamber of Commerce; a I m to HCOplze and think both organiulloos and fndJ.vidualg who have taken ipec:ial efforta to beautify the city. The Mermaids' Third A n n u a l Beautlfk:atioll Jundieoa will be held Mon· day at the RJvitra Room of the Hotel Lquna. Theft, the winn<n of the group's beauUllcation contest will be an- nounced. . Winnen were ~ by a panel of thtte. jud&es, Forest Dlckuon, Orange County Planning dlredor; Mr!. Weston Walker, chairman of the Orange County BicentemJal Beautification Committee, and Harry Babbitt.., manager of the Newport Budl TeMil Club. Color slides of each of the winnin& e"" tries wUI be sDown at the luncheon. A sweepstakes trophy irom Laguna Federal Savings and Loan, and · tbrff award.I from the Lquna Beacb Boord of Realton will be g l v e n • ..aunnera-up awards will be given by the Mermak!s. Twenty-si:r awards were given at the first beautification luncheon, while U were presented Jut year. In the past, awirds have gone for V jc. tor HUjio's gardens, Lquna Beach Clty Hall's landscaping, Fasblon Gallery's building, PeUte fleur for color and quaintness and to many individuals for their homes. Luncheon nservations may be mad• through the Chamber of Commerce of· flee. Luncheon ls $3 per perm. Two Officers Accused Bui then somebody told me that barber shop polls on ~l -ban themselves drawn less thin (avorabie acceptance Jn recent tlmfS. * Victors ln Ele~tlon Of . Improper Conduct A complaint alleging improper conduct ~ation ~ursday hu been !odpf tnvOIYing-lwo Laguna Beach poUee-af .. -w1tb ~~'-:departmenl~and lJ ao Lacking bar}ler lhops, then, I found it necessary to f~ll back on the one po1linc syatem I've always used in the past for determinaUon on vital i.ssu~. I uked my wife. To the canfulJJ -qudtlan of "Wiii! Do You ThJnJ< d That N.., Scboo1 Year '1111ngT" obe' replled with a del«lnlned frown, f-by: "Well, for me ll>lng, I'd probahly bave to quil my job. I can~ my well baw -}'OUllleot child IM>me aldae wbllt her elder broUwn an away ID New student body officers at Laguna High demonstrate ~n_g smiles which helped carry them to victory in campus ballotmg this week. Standing from left ate Diane Judy, secretary; Sharman Farnes treasurer; Lucy Boyd, assistant treasurer. Seated from left are M8.rk Sizeiove, vice president; Howard Hills, preside11t, and Charlie Ware, student congress president. ficers during an early morning field in· under mvesugaUon. . Officers Larry Warren and Rich KoWn F..-Pqe 1 LUMBER ... are the men involved in the ctiarg:e m1de by two young Lagunans. The police department declined to rele:ase the names of the C<Jmplaining parties. junior htah and hllb acllooJ, • '"ll>en too, can't "'° Jmqlne mw much studying she'• going to att done -she'a gettJnc nad1 for·-ID the _.mp of June and July wbile 11or bnl4hen att ptherto( up their nJmlina and boardl for a, day at the blacb? 1 "I'm ~ IWP.llled" lht cantimted, '"that tbe teachen have come out *""' for thll m ihe ·-· thal students tuffer a letdown jllll before -mot YKatlon and lhe .doldnlma -tbeJ .-. to achool after .......... "Won't the tldl tuffer tile ume leldowo and doldrumll Jiiii before and after each of the three one-mimth vacations?" She conUnued on at ....,. J..,.u. about' what might happen ff the l1llem wu Indeed extended to all Lquna acbooll and the high ecbool klda no longer have a iwmner vacation in wblch to earn a bit of cash for college « otba' Capo Seeking Sol·utwn To Dispute on Airport reasonable offer, they chose to delay negotia.Uona and make an insulting wage offer. The men were so angry they voted to strli:e immediately. "The (lumberworkers) union Ls ready to meet with tbe employers any time, but 80 rar we have beard nothing from them," said Trenta. According to Maynard, the lumberyard owners had tried to negotiate with union representatives between April 21i and May 5, ~ut representatives were not available. Maynard al.so alleged that the union's chief negotiator was out of town from la-iay 12 to May 15. The complaint contends that the youths \\'ere stopped at about 1 a.m. ill the area of a Thalia Street car lot bY the patrollng officers. Due to the Jatenes5 of the hour, the youths were requested to present their identification. The youths, it is understood, lodged the complaint that night following the tn.. cident. The matter is now under in- vestigation by Police Sgt. Wendel Faulk. Both officers involved are remaining 011 duty until the investigation ls complete. -'* ' My tbolllbll, however, bad drifted bact to Prlnclpol BID, one of the rul· 11 nice Jll01I Jn our local educollooal ayatem, -pi... to diacuaa bll new achool year propoal at a ..rt• of coffees willl pareola. Loll Ii lucl:, BllL , . San Juan Capistrano city officiaJa have joined the search for a way out of a tangled dispu~ which threat.em to•shut down, according-to lb operaton, the Caolstrano Airport, a small, ligbt plane atr1p at the western edge of the cit)' near San Juao Creek. At bsu< Is U acn!S of county Flood Control Oi.mict' property which fomu a porUoo of the atrtp. It is leu<d to the private _,oton of tbe alrj>ort by the cliltrlct. But the Jeaae runs out IOOD and SALT CREE K~Af) F.A{I'E • • . .• ...miy ':6°1:,;' ~ '.'°" '4 .... ~ ~·''I·" .·,..l.lf ,,, I'•(·-·~ <,'1·(,t.,~ ''.f·l tbe .. .._ .. t tbil 11a • 111e _,. """""' Nlpel. • . , A. d . t ·a ~,. __ d-of the thorouahfue wu la , I!'~ . *J11!11 that tile -, van(!e (, r.:IUS and that ~· the ,._, __ --·~-~ ~ -Salt ~•• P---. ·~·-er.et 'a.ail and betrayed a publie lnllt · • and board of supervi..,,, did no1 -, 1n an action in which no vote waa taken At La n·a· H·gh any public trust when they took tbt •c-• and· whJch war in defiance or •II tnown _ gu ' Ii . Uon. law g""""" Ille ttllnqubhment of a · --Or he will find for Wilcoxen and rule public rlgbt ol way. Hear-that fraud ' To G:ve Drama that the Art Colony attorney has indeed was .involved ~n the takeover of the ., proved that there was an element of roadway by Laguna Niguel. fraud in the maneuvers that Jed to aban--· doament of Silt Creek Road. Such a rul· VOTE TUEN ing will signify Jud ge Owem' agreement lAguna. Nlguel'a three lawyers, bacttd with the argument that the State Consti-by Cpnroy, deny that and inmt that a tution expressly forbids any action which vote was taken and that both the 11lu- is calculated to deprive the public of 1 nera and the 8Upervlaon a~ properly rigbt-ol·way. on.• full mustering of evidence. And they rtMe Wilco1.en's ple.a for application of BACK ARGUMENT tici<\apds J~w to the J-. , It may Jndude Judge Owens' ba<king Whatever bappw. Jl 'l'l!'I" that tile of the argument that Sill Cred: Road Orange County Grand Jury la taklq a comes under Udtlands law since part of deep Interest in the prOcee<un,s. its alignment is washed by the Paciifc Grand Jury foreman William M•rtln of Ocean. And that ~rgum~t, in itself, Laguna Beach sat through almost .U ol argues Wllco1en, is suf8clent to •P'ur the the hearing 'nlunday in what 1ppeared court to overturn county abandorunent of to be a bid to supplement the inform1tlon. the thoroughfare. offered by witnesses from both sides of A victory for WllCOJ:en at this law and the controversy. motion stage of the court battle would Sources close to the panel state that lead the way to a triaJ o( the Issue and, County Supervisor Alton Allen, Laguna possibly, the future setting of new public Nlguel's champion ill an submlnlons of hearings on the controversy. the Issue to his board, will be asked to WUcoi.en wUl have a much more dif. testify "in the near future." flcult path to tread if Judge Owens U that is so, Allen's aide John Klllefer throWI in his lot with the Laguna Niguel stated Thursday, he (Killefer) knoWI case. But It has been indicated that such nothing about it. Supervilor Allen was on • ruling woold not end bl.s challenge of a visit to Sacramento and could not he reached for commenl DAii Y PllOI CJ;AANG• CO.UT l'UILIMUNG COIVANT l.Mrt H. W•M ............. "'*'i... · J••" •. e.,1.., 'IQ ""'l*nt .,.. ~¥ ""-- ~ .... , ..... ii .... Tk11111 A. Mv,,~111 ............ , ... aicli1'4 P. Nill ,,_,_ ("' ldllw L ........ OMM JJJ ,._,,,. A11. Mlfht M4rlHI P.O. 111 ~ tJUt --c.ttt ..... ; ,. ... , .., """ ........,. 9"dl; rtll """' ............... ........... , .. .,,. Frot1t P .. e 1 AIRPORT ••. Marine facility is their runways, a tul area and the tower," be Mid. A new termtnal for clvillam, parting loll and maintenance atructurea would be built at llOIH1lllltary e"P'M' In what he jolO!!gly tenned the "~ler·Ei Toro Plan." c.rpenter drew 1tron1 la u g h t er midway thniugh his 46-mlnute speech when, after hUUng at ail'CtaU nolst criUcs, be glanced tow•rd an opening door ID the Balboa Bay Club banquet room. The do« opened and anU-nolae leader Dao Emoiy enle!<d !Inly . "Too bad, Dan," he quipped. "You mlllod tile bat port. .. U.S. Surgeon General Stewart Quits Post ' ' . . The ldvance4 drama class of Llgunl Beach High ScbOOI will present ia "Drama Montage" Saturday ID the high school oudltortum. 1be 7:30 p.m. show is composed of 13 different segments from recent plays and musicals, as well as some original pan· tomlme. This · dramaUc presentation II an ex· periment. The performance is student directed for the om time in ll)Js bJgh !Chool.'1 history. Advanced dram a t .. chers Ray Haggard (stage) and Jade Kreftlng (music) have remained in the background during rehearsal!, and have eerved only as consultants for the show. The "Dramatic Montage" wlll be presented to the community free of charge. Students participating in the production include Cindy Carter, Richard Denison, Nick Enright, Roger Gordon. Jill Hub- bard, Linilaay Karg, DIMell Knapp, Rob Kronman. Oard Linkey, Merl I e e MqUusoo, Pam Miller, Eric MUler, Hazelyn Myers, Cathy O'Connell, Ralph Reynolds, Dani Tbomu, Erle Vao De\19efto Rod Van Wart, and Gaile Ziegler. President Lists Problems of City Off~ oil drllllog; control of high rise, appUcaUon. of the sign ordinance llld Maio Beach development are princJpal issues now fadng lhe Laguna Beach Civic ~. A!ltbony Demelrtadea, newly elected presldeot, said today. Demetrladea, unanimously selected by the Leque'a board of dlrec!or1, noted the group's sense of urgency 1n attemptina to solve the problems. New 0Uicer1 joining Demetriades are or. Joseph Tomehak, first vice-pre&i· deot; ROI" LUJestrom, second vlce- prelldenl; and Peter O.a l rand er. sectt111'7. Newly inltal1ed directors are Mn. Joan Jensen and MerrU John.Ion. Foreign Car Chassis Taken at High School WA5111NGTON (UPI) -'Ibo Wlllll -"'"'°"""" toda1 tile ... 1pat1oe of Dr. WllUam H. Stewart u U.S. IUrllOll A topl,.., boclyless, englneless car has been 1to1111 front the parklng;o, of tbt ...,..a1. Laguna Beach HIP School auto shop. In a brief 1nnounomneot. the While ne chauis of the smaJJ foreign car "-aid Stewart wu JemDI to beloop to .ramea KltUJCb, II, of 811 be c o me chanctllor ol L«lia:lana State canyon Vlew Drtvt. Value of the frame, U-ty Medical Oenter Jn New lranlmWJoo, and wheeiJ tak•n wu put OrlOIDI. Prttldent Nl<on occepled the , at lllO. The lbeft wu dl!covmif'fbun- ~ elfectln AUi. I. d>:f·. • operators want a less elJ)ellSive, Jong term lease. They say they need the district land to operate the airport. The city Is proposing to bu.y the land, then lease It to the airport operators. The flood control district is prohibited by Jaw from selling tl1e land to private parties, but could sell it at public auctioc, or to another public enUty, according to city officlala. No rum price ~as meailooed. City Administrator Ernest Tbompoon ,aid the city'• efl«t to leltle the problem is "an attempt to lnletcede after all else has failed." · The dty )1 Ji>lei;uted In ......... tile· airport because Of lb prnlm1tf to a small h::du.strial zone, further develop- ment of which could add to the mWlicipal tu base, Cancel Monday Meet The regular meeU.ng of Oceiin View School Dl!lrict truatees ocbtduled for May 19 has been canceled. A new meeting date has been eel for May 28 at 7:30 p.m. in the dlstrk:t board romn, 7972 Warner Ave., Huntington Beocb. Chairs Manynard said tllat there Wi!re 34 ~a g e s of demands t~ !Je negotiated, which prevented necot11hom from be- ing completed prior to the contract e1.· piralion date <J( May lS. Trenta aaid the negotiating commlt'lee ncommended delaying • strike for • -.Jc beyood the May 15 date, but the work en:, ell(&ge9. at the low wage offer, voted w~i!~ht in a aecret ba\-lot to atrj4e · at'ely1 . Ace<rdlhii ~ Of!Jclais at Deane Brothers of "Newport Beach, mOl!lt work sites in the county have not yet felt the lumber shortage. They have a 60-day supply of lumber, !!tocked in ant.ldpation of the atriie possibility. After that, ac- cording to Dan Simi, construction manager for Lake Forest Homes, Mission Viejo, "It'll hurt, to what e1.tent we don't know." Officials of Ole Building Industry Association said tl:iey had not received word of lumbu shortages at any m1jor Orange County construction alte.s as yet, but said they expected to bur of tr<iuble if the strike lasted beyond Monday. MAY SPECIAL from 20% to From Page l STRIKE ... presently following the work stoppoga caused by winter storms. "We're u N5)'. as we've ever been," aald Benton. The biggest single construction projtct In the county, North Amer i c • n Rockwell's seven-story Autonetica plant being 'COOSlructed in the Laguna Niguel area for more than $20 mWlon, is not yet affected. Dwain C. Freeburg, director of Laguna Niguel Facilities for the corporation, .!laid, "We have no reason to believe at the moment that the threatened lumber workers strike will have any effect on our construction site.'' If it continues the strike of about 400 lwnher workers is ei.pect.ed to have con- siderable e.Uect on the southern half of Orange County where a bullding boom Js under way, Laguna Beach lw an unusual amount of downtown commercial con· struction under way. Work is rtlll in progress today. 50% off OllTST ANDING VALUES ON DISCONTINUED FLOOR SAM Pl.ES NOW IN-STOCJC , • , l.ARl;E SELECTIONS OF QUALIT'I'. CHAIRS FROM THE FOLLbWJNG LINES : N"TJONAL, MARGE CARSON, HllRIT"N, CENTURY, MONTEREY, J"MESTOWN LOUNGE. P"CJFIC, QUALITY, AND MANY MORE. IE "MONG THE FIRST TO M"KE YOUR SELECTIONS AT THESE UNIELIEVAILE PRICES , , , ALSO M"NY P"IRS TO CHOOSE FllOM. EXCLUSIVI DIALERS FOA: HINllDOM-DftlXIL-HIRITAOI 90 DAYS NO INTEREST-LONOEI TlllMS AVAii.Aii.i ON Al'l'ROVID CUOIT 7N1.,, ~ INTIRIORS NIWl'ORT BEACH P,.,_J 1-LAGUNA IEACH 1727 Wntcllff Or., '42·2050 °'"'"'"" '45 _., C-Hwy, 4'4-6QJ OPIN NntAT -m. t Av1ll1bt1 AIO-NSIO aw ..,. .. , 'nl t ..... , ......... "' .... c_, ... ,,,, " [ I Gold, Blue Auto Plates • • L IW(YPILOf ·$ Jury Out Due Soon PaMl Ponders F':"te of Bogu!s Medic SACRAMENTO (IJPI) -The atate wiD 1..,.,new g~aulomobllellceolo plat.el in a sradull ~ ....,..,,"' In OClober, Gov. Ranal1flleqln aid la- day. ,,,. .... plates In the &late'• ofllcW oolan will allo -the lmnlllar lettor-namber «llllblnaUon, wllh - numbers !""' precedlq the lhree letten. By OCtaber lhe atete ezpecta to rucb the "1d of the 15.16 mllllon combinations poaslble with 'the old letter-number system introduced in 18 and renewed ln 1963. The new coml>IDiUoo is upocted to la!! until 11711. Transition will be pua,J, Ragon said at • news conference with buslneu and tranaportaUM oecrelary Gordoa Luco aml motor vebidN directer Verne Orr. New cars will get the new plates al ftll as cars that need new platel becmw al Jou. theft or damage of the old plliG>- blact plates, . But car ow_nen.wbo prefer to switch to the plates can order" tbtm for p, Reagan also voiced support for a bill peodlng In the l<l!alalure enabUng car owners to order peraonallud llcenae plal<S foe !20. Apollo10 f'llght Proflle -•«DMUl.fNTllUllL~llNll. M&. .. 1 ......... .,.. ""'' ..... MISSION or SUNDAY'S APOLLO 11 MOON PLIGHT S ........ Jp hi Pl-Twice Within f~ Mlloo of 11M - ' Apollo 10 Moon probe -Toughest, Most Risky CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The moon legged hmar modulo 1-., cnft In ..,.. '1 TOM: IWUY ................ An audadous tledrleal ...,.. wbo UHdtheaameolabrillillll~ wblle be -led _.. than 100 pol!Gt at • Fullertoe cllalc --be .. Ibo olbor ead of a dillt,,.i kind of M•pocll -~verdict ol u ~ Ooart Joron. They left the couiiroam -tod,.j . lo nMew two weeb of lellbnoo1 In Ille trjal ol llobert Ervin -· And the quiet coofldeot Alabama IUlpect lw ttlieved them <II one - by ·admitting oo m1111 occuions !bat be II llUilty of posing u Dr. Glt1111 L7"" Footer, 1 Ual....Sty of Alabamo medical -~· Wbat they must decide In their own cllnlcil lllllysla of what baa to be the moat alartllng act ol fraud la county medical blatory II jull how -WU - ArmedForcesDay Services Slated Around Southland orblttiig mlsslOn of Apollo 10 is the junction with the command ship, in earth F W k toughest and most risky m an n e d orbit. Marines, airmen and American Legion-aclory Or er Sll"celllght yet underiakeo by the Ualted Apollo 10 will be the lint to Dy ooth naires will be out la full force Saturday to States. · spaoecraft in orbit A1'0lmd the moon. mark Armed Forces Dey. Shot by ~Off-_i.-cer --u-BJlibunts 1o"llle nli)lts o1Apo110..-lnd-A)>0lloo·•·1111H-oboired that the-~~-to figbtlag mea.~living ApollO 9 put together with some extra speCecraft wort. Jt will be the job of and dead, will ioclude an air ahow, karate hazards thrown ln. Stafford, Yi:>ung and Ceman to pro•ie that demonst:aUons, and a parade, all open lo Off Crl•ti•cal List Apollo 10 astronauts 'IOOmas P. Staf-the two ships can fiy well enough around the public. . ford, John w. Young and Eugene A. the moon to make a landing: on the Apollo The schedule inclues : Cernan will orbit the moon three times 11 mission. MARCH AIR FORCE BASE ; 9;30 a.m. J immy Alan Henry, 22-year-old Cypress factory worker, who wu,sbot twice,early Wodnaday by an oU duly Los Angelet poUce olficer and then run over by a car was still in "serious" coodiUoa today at Orange County Modica! Center. Hospital aides said, bowevtr, ht bad been removed from the criUcal un. Henry was reportedly abot twice by police-SgL Frank Spencer, 44, of A~im early Wednesday morning after he had allegedly sb'uck Spencer In the head with an axe handle. Capt. James Broadbelt of the Orange County Sheriff's Office said today his department is still gathering evidence in the case and it would be turned over to t he District Attorney's Office when the investigation was completed. The altercation occurred on the Euclid Street offramp of the Riverside Freeway near Anaheim lhlx1ly alter midnight, when Spencer, reWrnlni fn>m duly in J,.c>o Angeles, bump!d into the rur ol the car drivea by Henry. The two drove of£ the freeway to •'discuss the matter" w b e n, Spencer reports, Henry struck him with the axe handle. 1be police offioer fired two shot.. while lying on the grou.od. Sgt. Spencer then went lo Martin Luther HMpltal nearby to report the shooting and have his head treated. After he flad left Henry was run ovu by a car drl"9m by Robert Bacuar, 29, of Anabdm. Henry is aufftting from broken legs, a fractured le!t .arm, inlmlal Injuries and multiple cuta and bruises in addition to the two gunshot wounds. Pilot, Boys Club Join in Selling Of Flag Kits One of the most concerted e.fforta ever made to turn the Orange <;Gast red, "bl!•· and blue for the holidaYs wn' lauDcbed today by area Boys' ClubO and the DAI LY PILOT. Boys' Clubs or the Harbor Area, Hun- tington Beach and Laguna Beach are of fering United States flag tits for sale throughout the "pa biotic season." It starts with Memorial Day (May !O) and includes Flag Day (June 14), Jn. dependence Day (July 4) and Labor Day (Sept. I). Kickoff of the sales campal'gn ls an- nounced in a public service ad pub~ today on Page 26. The ad ~tails bow readers can order fla& kits by mail or can qualify for a frte; nag decal by ptckmg op their orden In person at 8.11Y of !our Boys' Club head- quarters locatons. Each Oag kit buyer will receive a CaWornia state fla1 as a bonus. All proeeod• ol the big .. patriotic season" flag pm:h lPW go t.o the three Boys' ClabO parllclpating in the program with the DAILY PILOT. King Loses; Out To Rumfoi:d as Freeway Name SACRAMENTO IAP) -la a brief but heated baWt In • Senate committee. the name ol the late Dr. Martin Lullllt Kin( Jr. loot out to former Alleml>l7man William B'""' Rumlonl for the ...,. of • !Ulure Oalland P'lftWa)'. Sen. Jollu G. Schmitz (Jl.Tultln), com- mented, "It's 1 Jot to upect t.upayen -~ disagRod flgon>Ully With him (KIRI) lo oupP0rt aamil!C 1 lreewar oiler him... : The Senate Flnano< Commlite<. oo 1 1Pllt voice '1>1• Thunday, killtd a meuar< by D<momtic Sen . .Nldlolu C. P<tria of Ooldand which would hm nam· ed a poriloo o1 1 1.-.y In hll dty alter the sialD dvll rflhll leocler• longer than the lunar pioneers of ApoUo a Stafford and Ceman will fly their lunar to 4 p.m., model aircrafl flight!, stunt and they will fly two spacecraft three module on a rehearsal or virtually every flying, Pa~ a chute jumping, hot-air Umes farther apart than did the pllob of moon landing operation except the final balloon, antique aircraft, band concerts, Apollo 9. descent and blastoff from the ..-, · oomber tours, and karate . demonstra- Tbey will drop twice to witbla lO ooo tlaaa. -Is and rut rooms "Eac:b 000 baa hid • greater risk than feet of the 1uaar -and Ibey will' fly avlllable. the one preceding It and I tblak that cer-more than SlO mllel away from Yauag in CAMP PENllLE'l'ON: Del Mar area taialy bolds ll\le In this mlssloa," Stal· the Diallo.blgb c:ommoad ablp opea houae, 1:30 1.m. weapono llld equip- ford said at a recent briefioa:. Since Stafford and Ceman ~ not be ment used by Marines will be on display; The Apollo 10 pilols, however, will have landing, however, they will have eome Base S~ ~s Karate demonstra· the benefit of the experience of their eltra futl to cope with unexpected dif-tlons, movies, and karate demODllr•· predecessors. flcultles aDd still successfully complete tion&. Refreahments will be available. Apollo 8 aslronauts Frank Borman, their mlakm and pave the way for a Ian. AMEJ;UCAN LEGION POST No. 2$7, James A. Lovell and William A. Anders ding by Apollo 11 LAGUNA HILU: 2 p.m. Parade of were the flnt to Oy into orbit a.round the Stafford said the Apollo tt flight "will cadets from the Army ~ Navy moon. Astronauts James A. McDivttt, be even more risky than ours" Tbf goal Academy of Carlsbad, Calli., beginning at David R. Scott and Russell L • of Apollo 10 i5 to reduce those ertra !he Medical building at Gate No. 2, mov- Schweickart were the first to Oy the four· dangers to a m.lnimum. mg alonJ Arago!! AvtnUe to Clubhouse Repercussions Follow Resignation of F ortas WASHING TON (UPI) -ReperCUlllona from the resignation '1. Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas spread throughout the three br8.11chel of government today and threatened to extend to other high of· !icia1s. There were these developments: -Wright Pitman, cbalrm111 of the Hoose Banking Committee, said the case of Treaauey SeeTetaey David M. Kl!llllody and his a!legod Ues with the bank he formerly headed "seetns much more serious than the Fortas affair." -Rep. H. R. GtoS3 (R-Iowa), said he hoped the Hause Judiciary Committee. would Jnve!llgate Justice Wlllism 0 . Douglas' relatloMhip with the Albert Parvlli Foundallon. Sen Strom Thunnond (11-S.C.), callod on Dooglaa to mlgn. -Several coagressmeii criticized Atty. Gen. John N. MltcheU lot cliscloalng he turned over to Cl.let Jus1i,ce Earl Warren "cutaln tnronnlu0n" abcut P'ortas. Rep . Robert W. Itastenmeler (!).Wis.), oald the Judiciary Committee llhauld in- vestigate Mitchell. -The JusUct Dtpartment denied it made any sort of deal with imprllontd financier Louis E. Wolfson to get more informaUon about his conoec:tlons with Fort.as. -Senate leaders Mike Mansfield and Everett M. Dtrklea promised that In the future there would be more intensive U· amlnaUoo of pretldential nominees. Forias, 59, resigned Wednesday night -the first justice in the court's hil!ltory lo qult uoder pressure. The an- l)OUDcement came Thursday mo~ ~ 11 da,ys 'fter I4ft magaziue reveiled..be f'eCtlved, bat returned ll months later, a $ZO,OOO lee from the Wolfson Family Foundation. Fortas was· on the bench at the time. 'Mle resignaUon of Fol"tu wlll aive p,..jdent Ni.on the CIOllOr1Ualty lo name two nrw members to i6e CCJUrt abwt the same time. Warren plans to retire when • the OllTOrif""" --mooth. Among ...... -.. -8>1e appointees by President Nino lneluded Charles S. Rhyne, w-. lonner pmlden\ ol the Amtrican liar ,,_.. tion and Nlxon'1 (X)lltge roommate: ' S«tttary ol Slate William P. ~: Mitchell ; former AUy. Gen. Herbert Brownell; and U.S. cil'<ltlt judges Henry J. Frtendly ol New York and W1mn E. Berger of the Dlltrlct of Colmnbil. II Niron d'°8e to elevate an auoclate justice to suooeod wamn. _.i.Uon oeim.d"' Jmtlce Potter Stewart. la bll ...........iwn to Wamn, Jl"onu said be qreod lo .-!Ve. p),000-1 liletlmelee!<><-lollle- -of bis -In 1ts _., In radal and nllCl<>oJo --114 aid "" -the,.. -he -lhO court i..n1eo wu beav1er ilwl "" ... pecl<d, Ind when ho lumed Ille Securities and EJchange Commlllon had tranaltrred 111 lnveatJc•lloo of w-·· ataek deoliDp to \II< J..itce ~ liir <rlnilnal.,._;,uUon. - "There bu beee l"' wrnngdohlf on "'1 part," Fortu said fn the memo. '"Ibtr'I has bttn no defauJt in the performance or my judicial duties 1n accordance with the high staadards ol the olfiee I oold." Jt was learned that frvm 1962 to 19M Fortas wu an olflcer o[ Great America Corp., an IDsunmce Bolding axnpany in Canon City, Nev. The papen ol ln- corporatioo. for the Orm were filed in 1962: by fonner Nevada Lt. Gov. aifford Jones, woo.. gambling li<enae in Las Vegas had beea IUlpelldod In 11165. Reds Call Nixon Offer 'Absurd,' But Considering P ARis (UPl) .-The Communist aide at the Vleinam peace coolemice today dlamlssod porll ol Pruldent Ntnn"s eight.point peace plan as "absurd." But U.S. aegoUator Henry Cabot Lodge oald they were consldering iL The Noctb Vitbwnese and Viet Cong negotiaton also were Hid to have adopted ·a -sorter line on their own demandl. Tho' Coaumm1Jt delegateo declined to ~ on five of the. point.I opelled out by Nlioii In bis proposlis to rest«< petce lo Vietnam within a year. · Lodge preaeoted the Ntnn plan ot today'• session and uked the Communist s1de "not to answer hastily and to think over our propo&al ju.It as we are thinkine about youn." Lod&e S..k the_ !Igor arter the negotllton from bGlll (>onnmlot deleg'" Uona hid danouncod In olmoot identical terma Nb:oo'1 eighl-polnt propoaal tbal the potll to ...... be«ln with • -withdra'fJal of aD !orelp mllitary forces. The cblel North. V.Jetoamae neSolillor, Xuon Tbuv, diomiaiod this proposal. The Viet cq'"f, "forelp minister," Tran Buu Klem, calfed the plan an at&empt t.o "poeo C«>dlllona ao the withdrawal or U.S. ""°"' wllldl we bave many tllnes re;eciCd.-,f- "'111e Nisoo -... tlnua lo maintain Ito -dtmandl ml eoo- tlnuol lo lnlmllfy tho-... TllQ' aid to ¥"-u be-far the_ Klem Mid "Eva Jbacl) -tbal U.S. end 11tclllte lroopo ... the an1y lorelp troopl of .... -lo be -In South Vietnam." --Conununltl nqotlatorl ..,,._ their demanda -"oantelllld In the N'" UaoaI UbenUon Fra!l01 If.point puce packap -that the Untied Slota maol .wltbd:r,.. all HI farcet from South Vletr nam "without pollna any ....Ull.., what.toevtr." No. 1.. 2:45 p.m. t:lhiblt.ion drill for the Governor'• trophy competiUoo, followed by Tapa in salute to those who gave the.Ir li•es lo< their country IDd • battalloo moiew. ,._., ... • the <rime that Brown allepdly com· mlUod uil what peaalty 1bauld be 111- llllnotered fer b I 1 ln!rln(ement ol • lllriltllll cadt. 'llliee ' of 17 COUlltl ol practicing --·llcenM ..... ~ • tbe trial ... -. But Brown lllll -poatlbla conviction on the 11 ~ .malnlill --of willcb oauld brlD& 'lrlm ... lo tea )'Uri In atate prlaoa. llepuly Public Defender lAWTtllC• Buckley obvloully hopea U!at all ol those JOOUDll 'will not be coosldered. And "" is ... bidding le< • jury ruling that iln>!lll'I crimes oboald anly be -sderod .. ..-. •• lelaer paoalty tb&t would bring blm a lilc-inoath Jall ltl'.m on ucboouat. . Jud(o Byron K. Mc14111an -the juron 'oal of bis courtroom lo deliberate at 1:10 a.m. toclay alllr c:omplelln,f bis Rented lly Pollce lntlructlool lo Ibo ....... Neltbor Buckley - C b 1 e I Dll"rtJ> DUtrict Attorney James Enr111>t wu ~ to commeat oo the poulble out-come d. lbe hudcile. , Bui the burly Enrl&ht pullod oot all the *'Pl 'I1lursday In • final -al to the jury. Be acauecl J!rowa ol lylnl oeverd timel .. the wilnesl stand and he lalbed Buddey's argument that the oofl.llpollea Bltmlngbam maa hid not liarmed 1117 ol tbe 10.S patients he ls alleged to have treated at the Fullerton clinic. Buckley'• argument b that II Brown hid indeed harmod any of the Potleall .liated In the ·graa( jury lndtctmeat be would today be lacing manier dl&l'geo. The able~ of such di&rges1 he claims, ts sulfu:ltnt ev,ideaoe of,the pnr secu.Uon's conclua:iOn that_ e~·· oo1J crime was to poet u a qualified me:tlc•I prtodlOller • . ' . Stanford Students Bar Research Firm Entrance - STANFORD (AP) -With orms linked, more than 100 demonstrators, 1nost of them Stanford University students, tried today to prevent employes from entering a Stanford Resevch Institute buildlng. The pickets are opposing war related researcll at the institute. About a dozen employes paased. pickets to IO to wort. othen were caught in a tnlflc Rm! auted by • blrrlcadl .., -'>Y Page Mill Raad, where ID od- diUonal 300 -plberod. Motorista drove acrou dividers M>Cl in- to fields lo get out of the morning ruah- bour tieup. A few fist llgbtz llarod betweai demonstrators and antidemonstratlon ~tudents who tried'.to remove barricades. Bu.t no injuries or arrests were r~. About two hours after picketing began, 30 to 40 Palo Alto poUcemen Joined a con- tingent on duty -lier protecting the In· llltu1"'1 Hanover Street lacllltiea. A barricade of 11wbor1es and table-ten.. nil boards at Hanover and Pqe Mill lnterleeUon llaD«I 1ooc 11aa o I eomx-At1as,..,_,_..._ •• Inc. 2929 ~rb;' i~:MYY .. frustrated morning f1l!b.bour motoriab .. About 150 of Slaaford Researdi IMUtute's 3.,000 emploJ:es w<rk in the Hanover facility in the S t a n for d Industrial Park. Many of them bave to go through the blocked llltersectioa to gtt to work. "nle first group of about 4.' O demonstraton ltt up pid<tl llael about 7 a.m., di!playtni placards. rtadiDa ••SRI Kills" and "Pu not Pox:" . President Plans Visit To Carrier Saratoga WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nis· on will board the aircraft carrtet Saratoga in the AtlanUc.Saturday lo aee an Armed Forces Day firepower and an- tlair "Warfare demonatratlon. · A White Hauae announcement 'l'buno day said the President would make the trip to the carrier, 4S milea of! Norlollr, Va., by bellcopter. l\)lr Plymouth Deiler is-a.dealing rr1C11 , -. . . ._ ... -...... ·--:-·---.. _ I • I Cc..11111 ., .. Dllllr ..., ..., Cov. 11""814 Re&aan o1 Callfor. Illa; In HOultoa, Tu. fol! a 1peech, )cited about allldelll unreot a!·~ w-ID his l!ale. "I am willing to mgage ID a lllldent exchange pro- cram with aeyooe,'' be said. • llblevos -· into an Omaha; Neb., oervlce stallon and stole tires and ·~. a~ Gennan ahepbenl watcbdog, j>olice said. I 'j • • Tbe Iowa &mate decided not to ~~ ~1•.000 to make a col· or -of.llMlf at won:. The sen-ators were not 11nmindful of the wamiDil of 0..-ratlc Minority LMder Andrew Frommelt: That the movie might be a summer replace-- ment for ''Le.ugh-Jn." ' . 'l'llc follo!DlftQ --· ·cz..:k-td out DW'r the Tornmce Police POLICE FIRED TEAR GAS AND RIOT GUNS IN MAJOR FLAREUP AT llERKELE.Y Rock~throwint Demonstrators Protested Cktting of 'People's Parlif" Hur C1mPus UPIT_.... POLICE DRAG AWAY INJURED DEMONSTRATOR Officer•· Clashed With 2,000 5,..,..,h and Nor>-students Depariln<nl Trl<prlnt<r: "Tokrn flo •H PC. pollcc ""lllcla (ikm ..,.. tram unlocked police -): ~0nr -blati~ n~fon jacket 1DftA fKtf'1/ collar. 'Redondo Beadl poijce• potchfr on both tllotlldrn: TtDo -bla<k brief· case totU. 'Lock Your Vehiclt'' fog Oii Ille lop." USAF Orders Full Review Of C5A Plane Police Rout Berkeley Moh F ortas Tells Wliy He Held Explanation • Rwt Guns, Gcu Used in City's ~ orst Demonstratwn Alan Ma .... lt of London spent $12IO ID aJJDOUDCe hi.-nuptials Olt a newt screen· In. Plccad!Dy ctrcu. 4 u r I n g hill wed4iJlf reception. "Alan Ma .... li 1ooei l'"""Y Wlta and they are geWDg manied to- day,•• the screen wtn tlasb evezy fX>Ut minutes for four houn. "'I thinl: It's a lovely Idea." said Pen· ny, Betserk Worker Kills 3, Wounds ' 10, Slays Self . " Fortas · Denied U.S. Pen8ion " WASHINGTON (AP) -Abe Fortu, who l'<Siped from llie SUJftmt Court, w01 not re.;:etve • aovernment pena:km, the ...n 11111 the Civil semce Com-m~..:: .:tr;. reslped, Instead ;,i retftd, llld failed to meet olher' l<l'Yice and age nqulremenll fbr a judlclai pension. The commisSlon said, w I tho u t ampllfication, be Is not entitled lo a civil service pension. He had served in various a:overnment post.s In New Deal days. BERKELEY (UPI) - A force of 500 police uoed riot ~ llld -I• to root 2,000 rock-throwing ·demollllralln from the Unlvenlty of CalHornio campus llld nearby m.eta Tbunday in ·a four-hoar boltle deacrlbed 11 the -a in the dty'1 history. At leat IO ·penoos W«e-injured, many of them by blasU of bucbhot 0< rock ult from sawed-off 1hotgung. Three ruffued bullet wounds and a police officer, one of five among the injured; was stabbed. Authorities aaJd 47 penons were 1r· rested, Including 37 adults and 10 juveniles. 'rhe v"'1ence erupted lhorlly after noon when the demOnstntors .bepn a D\aJ!Ch to "liberate" an area ·near the eampus tbll bu become tnawn u tbe·"people'a park.'' 'lbe university Wbicb •CIWDl ·the .. -ty. bid police ciw' the put· al dawn of "llreret people" frGm Be!rRleJ'• blpple ...,. •• ,.._ fwiol.tt.. Gov.Roaald ....... _tbepmt II a "Jixlal ~med • ... acme .. r • .. ,, ' for a rkL" He imposed· an antiloit.ering regulation and mobillted .:me Nltimali Guard 1111111 under a lllafe of emergency declaratloa be illuod earlier lhll year. I& order ~ctll7 -Jolterin(, -.... --· porodes .... ·the UIOof voiooO<--= lo Berb-ley 0< on tbe cam..J; 10 p.m. · and. a.m. "These regulations are e[fective lm· mediately, and will remaJn in atect until further notice," the governor said in Sacramento. He gave no lndlcation bow many guardsmen had been called up. '1'l1e fiRhlbig bn>lt< oul ......i hours after poilc< llld .workmen demd the one-third acre park, where dissklents ,....,11y INtaDed playground .equ;-. !CUljiture and ...... '1'l1e lildv<ni!Y plan- ned to comtrvcl plqlnc fleldt,.., Ibo .... -llld .-uaQy -.u.t.r addlliooal -· Durln( a 110011 nDy on the campus, llu- dent body ~ Din Siepl lhouted: "ld'1·prdowD<ad·telre ow:r • t -• GOP Farilily Spats -Brew Over Nixon War Policy WASlllNGl'OM '(AP) -Rf!Ribllcam. who got along toplber intly well befcn winnlllC the White H-, arw haYin& .... fami17 spats -the Semte. • Sen. Barry Goldwater of AriJona• bu •sulled ''IO ca1Jed RepubUcaua," uniden- tified but obvloully lnclmlog Sen. JllCOb K. Javlll of ,New Y«t. fa< criticizing Pmldenl Nlm,.i Vietnam war pollcy. Sen. -M. lllrilleo of Illinois bu rebuked Sen. Charles E. Goodell of N.,. Ycrt 10< calllnc lllm an - Goodell -.., they tlllnk lllrilleo ,.tallatecJ by refusing to tip a telegram of support (0< New York'Mayor Jobn v. LlndSly, wbo II running kw rr-electlon. "Not IO, period," laid a Dirben l!lpokesman. And Sen. Strom Thurmond or South Carolina is angry with "certaJn liberal senators" five of them f e 11 o w federal mediator to CharlMton, s. c., to RepublicaDI. for asldng NelOft to tend a arbitrate • dllpute -the city .... strllclng bolpltal -ken. Goklwater, who had some di!unity pro. blems u the 196t Republican presidenUal nominee, kldged hill intramural complaint in a WaW:egan, 111., speech Tbul'!llly. "I'm afraid that the greatest critics, or at least the loudest critics, of what Mr. Nixon iJ·at.temptiac to do in Paris IDd in other areu are members of bis own par· ty," the Arir.ona comervaUve aaid. ' 0He ii belnl unden:ut not by the Democrall whO fought him at the polls, but by '°""lied llepibllCIDI Wbo waol political credit ••• they want pace at any COIL" Willie his sperdi namrd II!' .... Goldwater complained 1pedflcally lbout Republicara who have actWJed Nixon of following lhe policies of former President Lyndon 8. Johnson. Foul Midwestern Weather Jarita, who made such a charge a :week ago but praised NlxQl\'I Wednelday night address on Vietnam, aaid be wJIQld have no comment. Dirben'1 retort to Goodell came TUil- day at ·a -~ <I. RapabUcaa senators. Dlrklrn aid be WU11l ~· Twut-ers Sighted at Abilene and Big Springs S-, ltf_, l'Wa ·-._.... ... ••. . ..•..•.• I: .. ''"" 1.1 ~ l'lltfl ·~· flt! J.M. M l")rtll kM ,,.••••·~·-.. .•!14 I Jl'I, •.1 flnt ..... ............ lf:O J.lft. :I.A ._.. '--............. Si• '·"" ... ..... """ . ., ..... : ... till '""'', .. -'""" ""' ................ 4:,tl • .,... .. , """ ............... _ 1flJ1 I A 1-J "°""' ......... -..... 1:12 .. 11'1. t.t ............... ,, __ 11:111.m.U ' . .......... -·-... -'""'"" -·-"'-CIMI""-" , ...... .... ... _ ...... ..... F-1 W«'fl ·-...... ·-· -~ "·-(lly L" ~' lot A-'tt M! ..... 9"cfll ... _ ML-.o!ll _.._ _y .. -·---·--"' ....... -·--lt•llll CJtor '" ·~ ·-............ ''· ""' .. ..,_ Seit ...... Cltr ... _ ~,~ta -----~11•1• ' '""'--'"""· n • " " U JI .!t .. .. .. "2 ... .. ., .. " .... .... " " '' " .» 11 ,, " .. " .. a M " " !J ,. _,, .. " ,. •• .JI l!f " t .lt " .. .. " ., ,. " . u ., T . " " .. .... •u a .. " .. .... " .. .. .. -" . .... " ., ... • • " .. " " .. ., .... ...... " " " . ,. Jl " .. " .. " .. " .. Goodell bad said in. 1llronto cm May I that Dirkatn, the Senale GOP leeder. was obSructionlllt in hll opposttloa. to me Nlloo choices for federal jobs. * * * Senate Doves cautiously Rap Nixon Proposals WASIDNGTON (AP) -Presldtnt Nlx· on'• Vietnam pelOt propol&ls, lnftially praised by many-. -being cllllllously crltlclled u not ~ far enough by Senate Dsnocratle dovel, in- cludlrc Sen. Edwm'd M. ltenoecly. But lDOll of the -who .. , Nhm fell obort lo llil laleol peaoe movo alt wt111nc lo 11.. 11b9 -. -to negotilte•al-~.the No. I ~alle Jeeder •• llikl aD -bopt Ibo "'-·· ...... -. .. I bad hoped, bowe•er, that tn the m- i..... of decreulnc cuualtJes' llld Ibo hutenlQg of ,,...iiatlool -Ibo mutual wltbdrawal of trooiio. the Presi- dent woald bmi called for a a~ reducti«I !JI U.S. mll!tarr ac:livilf liod Jl'll'IClllllll In Soulh Vietnam." lt«mod1 aid 1'bttndSJ in I Ital-- the park." The . crowd, clapping and cheering, marched to the park where they were confronted by Berkeley police, etate highway partolmen llld lherifr1 deputies. Tear gas · eanisten were fired &fter several chirgei by club-swinging police failed tO disper1e ihe demomlrators. The dis$idenls !hen b-into groups and roamed throogh the streets, smaShing ~. battering cars and engaging the poller in.hit-and-run duhes. F.OI'.. four hours, the Telegaph Avenue area -wu. a batUegrouod, choked with tear 111 and reverberating with oc· cutonal llbotgun blasts. It was the fll'SI time rjol glllll bad been wied In Berkeley dlmoillb"atiooa. A..•• ! •!AO ial Herrict Bolpital Aid . 41 ----..... lliped.ln there. but JD1D1 ftrl truted for wound• and ....... 1!11'_..., could be ............. He.aid 'i!IP'~ liolpilallzed, thrrr in .m'8•wte ~ Brokers . lndic~d . On Buying S.tock With Swus Bank . NEW YORlt .(UPI) -Five Individual.! and an internatlmal brolcenge house were . ~ today on charges of violating I-al secur1u.. 1a... by purdiasing s t o c k through numbered 5---.. Attj. Gen. John N. Mitchell, in an· nounclng the lJ.count indictment, said the brokerage firm involved was Cog- geshall a. !Dcts, headquartered In New York City and' with cifices in Geneva, -and1-loo. 'Ille delondanlo· .... -of con- aplrirJC -tile Anl Bank of Zurk:h. Swt!zeriand, to -e kw' ofllcers, empl.,.. alXI customen of c:ogg.aliall & Hicks to pun:haH mott than !20 million in ltocka ljhrouih the bank's ac· coont at the brokerage firm. The Indictment alleged tbet through tile btm, oome ol Ille defe>dants and their customers put -up ooly 20 percent cl the pun:11ase pm of stock. '1'l1e F-al Reserve -ttquired 70 to 80 -I of the Jllll'd-o price durq tbe period -ored lo tho lDdictm«!L WAHSINGTON !AP) -Abe Fortas faces an uncertain future -and be doesn't. want to think about Jt jlllt yet. '1 only hope that I will continue·to Hve a good, fµll and varied Ille and do ,some good for people," he said Thursday night. ''That's what I've always tried to do." Fortas s po ke by telephone with a reporter from his home in Georgetown. It was late, at the end of the day he quit his seat oo the Supreme Court u n de r pressure and under a cloud. "I've made'oo plans at all," he said at the st.art. ''What I said in my statement is the beglnni!lg and thr middle and the end ol the story. lt'is a short story." Fortas was referring to his leUer to Chief Justice Earl Wa~en. In it Fortas ~ detailed his consideration of a $20,000 yearly fee from the Louis E. WoUson Family. Foun.datlon and said he wa1 "'8igning to relieVe the Court of the "ex· traneous stress" the incident bad caused. In a· copyrighted interview with Ben- jamiq C. Bradlee, executive editor of tht Washington Post, Fortas explained why he delayed making a public explanation of the WoUson incident. A1though he ~w thinks it was a mistake, Fortas said he waited until hl1 court colleagues coo1 d return to W asfungton from a short teeeS!l to hear bis explanation personally. "lnstead of being so damn duty. stricken," he said, "it would have been better to have quickly made a detailed public statement." . Fortas. a1so told Bradlee he 1ee1 M sinister plot behind the event!: that led to hJs resignaUon. "Jt'1 Just u if an automobile hit me u I stepped oil the curb ," he said. "I wouldn't think the driver is a fiend or an evil man. "This was something ••• a quick sim~ ple series evenu that occtilTed at a mo. ment in time, June '66. The reu tm of the check - I really delayed there just as an act of hwnanlty. I bad clooed my mind to it all. No hits, no runs, no errnr1. And here it comes back to haunt me ... Nixon .May Repl.ace Five Supreme Court Justices WASIDNGTON (UPI) -It 11 quite ~ble that Pmid<1lt Nhon will appoint flve ,,... mtnli!en of Uie Su,...... Court during hit· lmn In olllce -..,.. u Dwight D, Eilenbower. Nixon 1hwly had the opportunHy to name a replacement for Ollef Justlce Earl Wtrren, one ol five Eitenhower ap. point.es, who 11 loavlnl the ilencb .at the end of the cumnt court term in June. 1be Abe Fortu r<llpiolioa lfvfS him Ill'• certain appoiatiMU In addillan, Jmllce HlllO Black • ...UO. member <I. t1Mi court. 11 SI; William 0. °""IJu. "' bu • beorl -In bil c_helt; John M. Harlan, who turDI 'IO Tuotday, b In --Wltll 0-jj',. -.acaodel. NI« on .r.aJd be able lo fill a majo<tly cm the -•bid -i. But lllll tberl II no ueurance-Nllon "'U , accunplllb the CijiJtt 'Iii "lltlcl lnler1ftlallon" of the c-utuUoo that he Clllod for-In the "=~' , bevo liad • 'n1 <I. chancinl th r baalc ielal pbllooophy after JoiDkic the court. tvrtber t wbllt NlJ:on'1 set~ could dampen the ''Wmeo court's" accent on lndJvldual rights, ii II unllkely there Will be a rowback from the ,..,...I social, polltleal and legal trends the court has 1et in re- cent yea.rs. · lt b risky at bes( to div ide the caurt along liberak:onservaU\'e lines and the justlces tbemlelves resent such label!. But often the Warren court has been divided 6-3, with Warren, Douj:la.s. Black, Brennlil, Manhall and Fmu voting on the Uberal aide, aod Harlan , Stewart and White on the conservative. 'Ibis brtakdoWI! senes to dramatize that a President can never be sure how ooe of his appolntees wilt vote once he alts Oii' tbe cow-t. Warren, tor lnstanct, was appointed ~ 1953 by a R<publlcan Presldcn~ Dwight D. Eiaenhower, who look a moderate ap.- pro.ath to most issues. But during the nut 15 year& Warren went on to lead a court 1bat perhaps did mort to reshape A1ner1c>n lile than uy llnca Chief Jlllllco Join! Manhall -·======~~~=--......... ------------------------------_.... , I I I • -;" .............. ~ ,,,~ ... ~.-..';'1;""""'""'""'"""~"""""'"""'"""'" ......................................................................... ""''=''""~=-'"!"~-""~~~=:' .... \ C~ESf~G Girls With Small Heads Look Yow.ig By L M._BOYO TO LOOK , YOUMml\ The smaller a woman's bead lookl, !he more youthful she' seems. to be. Thal ii why Miss Ingrid Bergmu, for lnslance, appears to be far less than.her actual age. She hu I small head. And in that classic "Pot Whom the Bell Tolls," she WU characteriz,ed. aUll ,... age_d by a short balm.it whkh cn!ated_tbe illusion her bead was· et'tll smaller. A Los Angeles halr<!r<s>er therefa<e -the short baircul to 'ligl>t • hurted ladles Who want to repmsent tbem9etves as younger than their years. CERTAIN SPECIES ol but· f orflv liv.., up to 50 pe~' longer witb Its held cut all ..• . \, .~ 'i Ui a mystery, but husbands are not u likely to pet as homesick as wives. Records of matrimonial counselors indicate twice u many wives as husbands choose to vacation · w i t b parents •••• PLEASE file this: A man has about 750 muscles, a caterpillar about •,008. , • , THOSE TYPING TEACHERS in search of an exercise con- taining every letter in the alphabet might alao examine the 21st verse of the 7th chapter of Ezra. • • • "MilLIE" ii what all the ••Gunsmab11 cut most af. lectianately call Mr. Milban> "'Doc Adams" Stone. TOUGHEST of the Norse warriors was said to be an old boy with 12 sons. Every time he charged Into baWe, he toss- ed aside his annor, and went absolutely wild, cutting and slashing in all directions. His name ·was Berserk, whence cometh our word .••• SOME FOLK GET too dlgnlfied for Little Alg<rnooo McGuire But not me. How abwt this one: "'Little AJgemOn McGuire. • • Set bls ~·· beard an,. ,fire. • ,Gnmdpl, -.... 1mpm0d. , ,All bmMrrjtsnts removed.,, Man al tlill iort al tblq laler. CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q. "WHEN did mtQ st&(t wea,r. in& the creue In their lnlUlen .~ iDlleld al .. the lidel?." A. Tbl.t waan't .too far back. '!be Kin( of ' England, George V. evee -.... hll pants !bat •Ille ID the ll20s.. . .. . Q. "I BAY. HOUSl!CATS gel bluer lbon rabbtu, right?" A. A6eoh!tt'1 correct, si(. Biggat'cat I ever heard of was a ·tom mmed Claas. lie welgbed 411 pounds. Bluest ral>bU was 1 Flemlsll giant called "Floppy" that V'"'"'"P.f'l 25 •pouods. • •. , Q, "WllERB'S the world's talle!t totem po1e? Alub?" A. No, sir. Mcltinleyville, Ca I . There'• a 180-foot totem pole there. BANANAS -To put banlnu Jn the r.frlierator or not to JN! banlnu In the r.frlierator -tbal ts the question • Just checked thla out with a ban1111 specialist for the benefit of a cllent who inquired about the ipatter. "Refrigeratioo doesn't hurt their flavor," said t be specialist, "it just turns them black, that's all." 'lbat's enough: Who wanta to eat black bananas? Ioc:identally, this lpectslist ~ lucy folk, Who Wlllll I Thailand trea~ peel the bananas, dlp same in Chocolate syrup, and quick freeze them. Nothing la!tier, he says. , RAPID REPLY: Yes, Mr. G., claim is that snails do in- deed have 14,000 teeth, but nobody contends they brush after every meal. YouT ·questiom and com- nunts aTe wtlcomed and will be wed whneoa pos- rible in "Checking Up.'' " AddTess m.ofl to 'L. M. Bol/(I, In=-•f aw DAILY . Pll:.OT, Bo:t: J·t15~1 Nnopor1 B•.,h, Calif, 9Mll1. Men in Seryice Pvt. l .C. IJennlJ J. ltelsel, 10n of Mr. 8nd Mn. W. H. Reigel of m Magnolia, Costa Meso, ts BerVing with the Nuclear Weapons Training Center. Pacific located at the U.S. Naval St.aUon San Diego. The center provides training Ungton. Beach, has b e e n assigned to • unit al the Military Airllfl Commml al Mc.Oaord AFB, Wash. The airman, a COIDJllter operator. is. a graduate of Founlaln Valley High School and impection aupport for the Sit Jerry L Plenall, aon o( U.S. Pacific ~~ in nuclear Mr. and Mrs. Dooa1d pjersaJI weapons capability. • or 900 Sea Lane. Corona de1 Four Orange Coast men are serving aboard the nuclear- powered attack aircraft car- rier USS Enterprise with Task Force 71 In the Sooth China Sea. They are Seamaa Tltoma1 C. Roblon, son of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Rob.son of. 221 Geneva St., and hlerior Com· mmdcat.lons Electrielaa Fireman Claade K. Wlafree, son of Mr. and Mrs. Claade N. Winfree ol 5201 Skylark Drive, both of Hlmtlngton Beach; Swnu Appra. Jolm H. Bii· 1e, son d Mr. and Mn. Arthur Hagge al 1011 Emerald Bay, LagbM Bead.I and Flremn Appn11. nom .. N. Clark, ""' of Mr. Ind Mn. H. N. Clari< al Ml St. James Road, Newpcrt Beach. Three Orange Coast men have completed buic trai1iing •l LackllDCI AFB, Tu. ind hi•• beeo asalped to Lawry AFB, Colo, for training In the armanemtml .,.i.... field. TbeJ ... --H. s-. -al Mrl. O>lrlotte A. stocl al 1105 P...-0 Lane, Newport Beadl; A Ir m I• arilt1P•w C. Strwc. IOll of Mn.Palricll~ol 5291 Loyola Ave., Westmhwter and Alrma• J t • 1 D. Morkbm, aon al Mn. Mary PUllOl1 of 115 Huntington Ave., lfmltlnPm 1'elcb. Airman Stock Is 1 groduate ol Lowell Bill> School, Whit· Uer ; Ainnln Strong greduated fnm W_....,. lllCb School a n d 1ttmded Golden W e I t Collttt before ........ the ....tce IDCI Airman -ii ·1 groclulto al Huntlngtoe -llllh School ind I~ lended OrlllP Coul Collep -. entering the ...-.tee. Altman stronl'• father, 1181 Strong, lfrer II W Walnut St., COltl Meu. Mon more mon Alnna-E.lllbr, 1C10 ol Mr. IDCI Mn. Gordoo F. !laker al llQll A Street, H111> Mar, has been assigned to March AFB, as an ad- ministrative specialist In a unit of the Air Weather Serv- ice. The serreani is a 1165 graduate ol Corona del Mor High School IDCI lttended Orange Coast College before entering the service. Pvt. 1.c. Robert J. Arloa, 22, son of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Arion of 1445 Temp1e Hills Drive, Laguna Beach, has been assigned to the 15th Infantry Division, Vietnam. An infantryman, he is serv- ing with Company A, :!rd Bat· talion of the Divialon'a 22nd Infantry. He received his B.S. degree in 1911 from Northwestern University, m Sloftkeep<r Z.C. Jolm L O.vls, US?'l, son of H. B. Davis of 189 Plumer St., Costa Mesa, ts serving 1bolrd the attack transpoi1 USS Clmbril at Norfolk. Va. The ablp ls one ol sis !bat will comprise the Slsth Fleet Amphlhloua Tuk Force In the MedlterrlP<IDSel. Bus Drivers Win Praise • .• .. ~ ' . ,PeliCe . Clear 1 'Pe~pre's Par._k' ' . _,,.,..., 1'.>11•• -~ -·I Geo~ge .Jt.~h~~gk~ . . -W:as He Steriw? SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -syndromt ln<lude small tafoli George Wuhlngton, lather al UllUIUal height; !Olatlve stei111' our· <OUJ>qy; •!.>Y 111., ·beea-· ty IDCI ·tsi1': b...-!or 11 • lterile. male. . , . 0r: M. i .. vemoo Smith oho "It ls .not ..,. tbtent"" to told tlietlih-W .-mg ol malip tbe ·man,•lDr. Smllb the Ame1c1D 'Uiolollcol A5> Aid. ' · IOCiltion W........, wuF The doctir<11•W11>11-o1 bably bJ'Old.blpped IDCI, ' Wubingtee'; . dlllp- breasted. · " 1 poinlmen(a · lft.~u tblt The Brit.lsb-born ~'who "he ne:v!r lathered 1 o J. now resides in Rlduhond, Va.. chlldrtn." uld the palntJnp and physkal The . p h y s I c h n uld -~ii the first ""9i-Wuhingtlio wife .. Mlrtba -dent -be may tine · married IDCI wldoWecl befon beeo -· with • type ol sh< 'IDCI W asb1nc1A1i1 met. She Kllnelelter'• 1)111dnlme. had• lour .d!)l<!m by the Symptoms ,DI the comp!et pnovlou.s m~ge. •• •. . : Berkeley Police lounge .' aboqt iii <play area 'of planted gras;, laid a brick walkway and installed '~PeQple'..s Park" after' they cleared. unauthorized · · sculpttire and p18y eqliipment. As s~n. as police part•of some 1$·trespassersin dawn taid ThUrsday", · cf eared the area; w9rk crews began buildiog a fel)Ce tlte 1l~d1 ,owned ~y"tbe UnivFrsity •. of Californ~a, was: · around the land. ·turned into a park ·by residents··of ·the area who ; 737 Sunjets from 011!1de COUpty'to : • • • iSAN fRANCISCO, OAKLAND and SAN JOSE:~ . . . . !can your Travel Agent or A1r Callfom f• (714) 540-4&lf0i • .....•...•.•...... , ........ ~··.·~,.~ .. ·····-· t . . , - I 95* , ' "I' • ,.. ..... , • The llghteSt 18" Color Set you C8lil .,.. ~ So ... , to Clll'IY troni room to r0om : • Solld copper Circuits replace olf;I · '. · fll•hloned "hand wlrfng" In poblntilil • chaul• trouble •Pots · • SUpe.-.powet lul New Vista VHF tuw, ' ' . the moat Powerfill In the-lndUlilaJ; • Exh......ntve Solid State UHi\' . transistorized tuner · · • F~• New~ picture qUinJ auum locked In color purltJ • Eny color quick tuning and nplc....,tu•r•e · • • • • . -• ••• • , • • .. .. •harpneu ~ ·, '...l · ": · · • Autwllc chroma control el• cboclls q · ' .atllblllz1a color........ '' .. '· ._.. ... ..._ __ _ '., ---. ..__ l l ·1 ' ·' i ' • • /DAILY PD.OT EDITOBIAL PAGEi A Boon to the Area • • • •' . ' • • • • • • -" 11'1 &ood mw1• for Dana Point-rasldents and for boaUni enthuala.sts that the lluncblng ramps lo~ new Dana Poinl Harbor should be ...ty for lraf1lc in July, Pumps are now drahling temporarily a llllHnllllon- gaUon Jilgoon stretching across 6o acres ol water en- closed by colter' dama. • 'l'!lls sacond pl)aso of a three,pb11e constructloa scbedulo 1 ....... u\Umate' CJ)Ulp!etlon In 1971 with per· tial completjan in 1970. When the eslstln& c:o(!er dam~ dry, earth moven will roll ia and bettn carving up the heri>or -om while the sea ls hela bock by the dam. '!be earth from the harbor lloor will be used M fUl for a parting lot and lo build a center Island called' a mole. Completion of the $22.S mUllon harbor wW pro. vide a place for 2,100 boats and launebing facilities cap. able of pu\tillg ),000 boat& per day into the water. Already the harbor ii a stimulant. The revitalized Dana Poin~ Cbaml>er ol Commerce II pl1111111Dg 300 bRJCh\lr1!o abonl its bleulng1, The Dina Pojnl Yachl Club is plaaning Its clubboUie and -lllps. The major -fldlilr will prove .a •olid booo lo Ille area and will dovetlif With Ille population and lndmtrlal grvwjh beg! moln& to b<>onl <In the south county area. More Industry Will ijelp The aext dec8de shciwd see lndmtry increasing in Orange County even faster than the popu1ation. In a recent Laguna Beach talk to chamber mem· hers, County P18Dlling Director Forest Dickason pre- dicted that the coonty, which now bas about 8,000 acres planted with industry, will see that figure increased by 10,000 induslrial acres in the 1970's. In that period, the planner said, commercial devel· May · They proudly Wear t Dear Gloomy Gus: • fr heir Badge .. C By EU.SWOR111 L NCBABDION Mlabte• ;N~~Qndi . Llpu- N.,, 11111 the LIW. teape seaaon is nl1ial iround apin,. I 111ess we ~ whole homes over· look the p&rk wilJ have to put up with another long siege of noisy loudlpeoketl, brl&J>I Ughts arid traffic. No wonder Nixon didn't want to move here. -Football Fan TlrlltfMllttrt...,._...,._ ~u•••rllr """"' II • 111••••· hlMI -.............. -.DlllJPhlf. their father's occupation u 11~ man." -, "" IN A•JllOllLY klealllUc 1eneralion or ' A lull-pqe od In all the ·co11eat co11ep lllldenta, UC! tMents -i.e., the ~eWlplpera ln tbt U.S. recenUy uked. fttibawn -are m o r e idmlisUc than 11udenta to pleue write In to buslDea their eounlet'parta ICl'Oll the nation. Six· leade'8 il tbey had areat doobta -the ty -t of the eni.rtng lreshmen Slid worthwbileneas of a buaineu career. In it W1J1 111 eaeotiaJ objective to "help othe,.,._ln dl:ff'iculty," and 24.6 percent Olla, country where business ii kin& iDd said they plan to join the Peace Corps or the National Auociation of Manufao, ~ compared to 11.5 percent na-'urers is 11:IE fraternity to belonc to __; · tionally who plan to enter thoee service this kind of queotiooing makeo ooi _ orllbilltiam. Wonder. Are they suggesting that perhlps What does thla mean? It means that one c:amtlll find lulllllinent In -! tbeJ' are 1ppu'eotly iooklng !or meaning . Two yeon qo In 1 much publlcised -~ thol -.. ....,. to them. Oews Item lt wu reported that ftprelm-TbQ' art trybJa: to deve1op a reverential laUves of a major dU company bid more trutt in life. Tbey are sating "yes" to Olan 11,000 interviewi in a h!llineas llfet ICbool to uoccwer 300 men -uily·3DO GUI i~. intervl:"ed wanted to work In lfJi: SEEM TO BE members of a socie- ty ol IJ'Ut extremes. At one end there is higb idealism and at the other extreme violence and degradation. It is good to know that there is a resurgence of ideallam among the young for so often we heir only of th e i r uperlments with drup or their involvement with the police. ; THE FRESHMEN that entm.d Uni· fersity of California al lmn.i last l•O. be other lrethmen In the collegos 01 O>e U .s, answertd • questioltnaltt coo-auctec1 by the Americon Council. on t:c1ucatlon. Neady IOO queoUona 1bout their bacqrtlwxls, attiludell and ombi- 1ons were asked. I recall wbat the litUe boy with the black eye said when he was asked who raw k to tim, He replied, "Nobody gave it to pie.-1 llod to llPI for IL" I am glad that ""' freshmen at UCI have not ab- dicated their moral responsibility and an opmenl ahool4 fill llllOlber 4,000 or 5,000 acres and J'lll. deflllal development oboukl Gil llD<>liler M,000. PopuJa.. lioo, be predicted, wUI 1well from tho present 1.S mil· lioo lo a predicted 2.2 mlllioo by the end of lhe coming aecac1e. While ~resenliDg-a lta.Uering population 1rowth -wilh atteod&al goveiamentar prol>lenu of schooling J>lanniaa, polldng, etc., the pre\lictlon '"""" lo h8ve a! rea.t ..;;. •liver llnlu1 . Tb' ratlo of induatrlal irOwt11 to ~·in tho ~ aeems • promlJlng Oil& from the atandpolnf of ba .. lnc:reaae. , More t!ian doubling the lnduatrtaJ acreaie ii going lo help ~y for'those new 1cboolJ that wiU be added al the rate Of one every tWO 'weeta or Jess. Creation of agricultural preserves for 10 years will prove a real benefit although ii pinched aome achoo! .U.\rict. financially. It's going lo give planners a breath· ing spell, time to plaa for th~ protected ....,s during a period of 111Bdcap growth: Popcorn Time Again . It w~l be peanuts and popcorn and Crackerjacks time again as Laguna Beach Litue League steps up lo the plate tomorrow for season @Pener ceremomes. The venerable Jess Riddle, former La~a Beach mayor, will loss oul the first ball at Riddle Field (named in his honor) as the season gets under way at noon. . Ma}'.<>!' Glenn Vedder will be there along with other city officials, players of the Ametican and National Little League teams will be introduced as will man- agers, coaches, bat boys and team mothers. Laguna Beach High Sehool Band will play. The boys will give the sport their best. A Laguna cheer is in order. · L Decisions Do Not ·rmpede Law Enforcement People., Not Courts, Are the Villains . To the Editor: In recent years it has b e c o m e fashionable to attack the decisions of1 and the judges on, our nation;s courts:, most frequently those of the Supreme Court of the United States. Their opponenta blame the court.I for handcu.Uing the police through 'Jultra- llberal" dech1iom involving due process of Jaw. 'Ibey point to the rialng crime rate as an example of the results court deoiaion1 are havinf m law RaroumnL Many of these people fell that tl1e Constitution Is an unreuonable barrier which the police must confront in order to exercise justice quick1y and efficiently. Public opinioo 1emu to elpr• the Itel· ing that the only good criminal is tbe one who is suffering behind bars. It is to the opinions of these people that I react. IN THE FIRST PLACE , the recent decisions of the Supreme Court do not impede law enforcement afficers from carrying out their duty, nor do tbey con- tribute to the rising crime rate . All these decisions do (e.g. Miranda and Escobedo) is to ensure those con.- stltutional rights to everyone, equally, under the Jaw. These rulinp have con- centrated on guaranteeing the protection ot suspects under police lnterrogaUon. Suspects now have the right to counsel during questioning, and upon arrest mu.st be apprised or this right -umler the Fifth AmendmeDt. These decisions were urgently needed. They did not arise out of any aubversive plot by "gutless," liberal judges to undermine contemporary Am e r i c a n society. They arose out of the enormous illegal practices by the Police to gain quick confessions of guilt. having little inlluence In changing in- mates' atUludea: or morals. SO IT sEEMs THAT we need drastic changes 1n our present pollciu of puniab- ment and rtvenge. Undentading and ·PGlitive encoura1ement. perhaps, might be perts of the answer to a complicated problem. The courts, moreover, are not the villains. People are. UnW we can learn to approach those problems of poverty, ignorance and pre- judlce, which have beset mankind throughout history, then our fate here on earth seems to be hang:iog on 1 thin thread of destrueuon. Al attorney Melvin Belli so aptly stated," Legislatures do legislate 'for the biggest of us, but as Jong as the supreme courts give their attentiol) to the least of 1 us, theo all of us will be protected.'" GEORGE V. INCAMPO Se"' Education Needed To the Editor: To the parents who will deny their children tbt right to know what sex is all about: something? If they did know, it might aaw a terrible milhap. k Sen. Sctunltz's statement "to rorce parents to put their children in sex courses is a denial of religioUs freedom" is to me ridiculous. WHAT DID almighty God give us sex organs for anyway? To bear children, of course. But the way people are going about it today is unwise. I think today's younger generation .needs to know more about su before they proceed into the art of love. Please don't deny our children the right to bow about sex:. They mtgbt find out the hard way. They may even learn something you don't know! KEN WEEKS Domestic Communist• To tl1e Edito. ' Some Americans urged thal we be permissive with U.S. CommunistS. "Alter all" they 8a.ld, "we have few Com .. munists. Such small numbers can't hurt u.! much. Besides, our domestic Reds are well-behaved." Some of these same Americans used McCarthyism smear tactics against anyone who reeoiJlizes the dangers of communism: "He's a fascist witch- hun\er and sees a Communist under every bed." Deliberate c h a r a c t e r aaaass.ioation befalls those who warn of communism's work . A DISCIPLINED, militant minority can be effective against the unorganized majority. Students for a Democratic Society (SOS) has only 6,000 dues-paying, national members. They have 35,0CKJ chapter members on 225 campuses and perhaps 100,000 adherents. (U.S. ,News and World Report, p. 34. S-12-69). SOS is behind ·almost all the college disturbances. SOS was involved in disputes with authorities on 200 cam- puses. Members' philosophies range from youthful jdealism to .des t ru c ~Ive radicalism. Michael K!Onsky (SDS's top official ) says , "Our primary task is ta build a Marxist-Leninist revolutionary movement." (March SO). Klonsky calla himself a. reVQlutionary Communist. SOS wants to destroy, annihilate, and tear down. Most members are white , from af· fluent or middle-<:lass families. MARK RUDO OF SOS spearheaded the . attack that closed Columbia in 1969. SDS Jed the Harvard rebellion. SOS seizes any campus issue , exploits It. upands it and stirs uninvolved stUdents into action. SOS feeds the aroug,.. ed students suggestions that create a con· Jrontation with college officials. Issues include Vietnam War. draft, ROTC, campus recruitment by com· panies making war materials and military · research projects. Or they create issues (such as over-enrolling in a class, then denouncing the university for large classes). If the uni versity grants SDS demands, the demandr a r e escalated. Unreasonable demands are Jumped with valid demands -and the whole package presented as "non- negotiable." SOS WAS instrumental in organizing the 1967 Pentagon march to protest the Vietnam war. They helped plan and lead I ' I I I I I' ! Eleven pemmt wonted to become (eaearcb sclentistl which wu abnoat lihree ti ftt e I more tbm the natkmJ iverace of 4.2 percent; 117 percent, or Mice the national average ot. 1.1 percent. tooted to become medlcal docton II OCI. Only 3 percent wanted to be<cme ---.---11.2·pe!teD11litiil wlllinf to fight for ideals. In the struggle IT IS !"~ TRADmON in this country they Will receive many black eyes but that an ind1vldual accused of a crlmlnal may U.y proudly wear their badge of ?ffense ls innocent ol that offense until he Would you rather have your son or daughter find out the "facts of We" the hard way? Would you like to go thn:lugh the course of events when your daughter tells you that she is about to be a mother? This is ju.st one of the reaso111 WhL kids today-nbel.Beeall!t1hey are dente:a the right to know. THE DANGER IS lbat disruptive Com· munist acUvities go unchecked since responsible people are muzzled. Expedi .. elll poUticlana appeal to wisblul thinking. Tbey agitate against appropriate anti· communist actions. The resultant hall· way actions (at home and abroad) drag the conflict on without solving it (instead of applying appropriate resources to suc- cessfullv end the ~U:uggle):-Thtn-tt's easier to say. "Why go on? Let's give up." the demonstraLions in C.hi.c.ago-.a.ga.inst - he--t>el'iloCfitic convention. SOS is mov· ' ' • ldenUOcaUon.wltb bonor?-Thlris·no-itnre-1s-proven-guilty .-by-a-eourt-of-law, to twtidi 1 beyond a reasonable doubt. Scramble for Housing (!'II~···. It seems as though an uncontrollable emoijonal ~ hal call lhll C011111rY Jn. to the camp of "law and order," juatlce being incldenlaJ to procedure. The eye for an eye arxl the tooth lor a tooth concept has never really left WI; on· Jy the methods employed are changed. Punishment has never solved the crime problem. Rehabilitation in our prisom is lllX EDUCATION might belp them realize the problems th.at would be in· valved lf they went too far. Most parents never tell their children wh&t aex is. They soon learn it on their own. You parents that voice about eex classes on topics you don't want them to see, are you alraJd they might learn Let's reaHinn the rights of the people. Be cautious of those who attack anyone who inlonns you of communism. Such detractors do enough harm that thef should receive no support. Disllnguish between the patrlol who speaks from facts and the tt1'ckpot who unjustty calls others Communlsl Support strong, swill action to protect the rights of the people. ing into the high schools and industry. Our "tame" Communists are doing what our bleeding hearts said could never happen here. Do domeslic Reds pose a potential threat? Are we to let SOS-type groups have their way in the U.S.? Or will we put people in responsible JXlSitlons with enough realism, common sense and backbone to make sure .. crime doesn't pay?" LEONARO IVRIGIIT . ! Sqeons have postponed operaUons. Gippies have cut their hair' and families llave destroyed their pets -all ln the in· Q?rest of finding a desirable place to Jive ;n Manhattan. To get the jwnp on other \partment-hunters, they read t h e Obituary colu.mns, bribe doormen. moving rtien and even hospita1 interns for tips. Onpublished listings have been stolen lto<n tl1e print.I' of the Villoge Voice, Greenwich Village newspaper. I '< • &litO,riaL , Reaearch J 300 Million Malnourished Children : All or urban Amert.Cl la feeling a bQus. lpg pinch, but in New Yort it tee:ml ,one than elsewhere. Uttle moderate or tnw-income housing has been built there s).nce 196.1. a year new building codes .,.----B" Geor"e ---. Dear Gforge : 1 am an 18-)'ear-old girl with short hair and I wea r jeans and men'I ab1rts blll l'm terribly afraid l sUlf give an impre!Sion of being feminine. What can I do? SUE • Dear Sue: • Evea. la tbil daJ and age some women ·'are 'Blt1Hy female and , you'll J1111 -ID liVe 'lrith ll -CONfmENnAL 'Ill B I L L BUCKLEY: ~o., .wry about what tbey 111-Juol 11 IDUY ~ pie !hint you 're f-!hu lllpo pe. (Sond )'Olll' ,.-... .. 0-.. , and p out and 1<1 -..., pn>i>- •• ieml. Sprios is !ton.) • Wtnl lmpoaed. Two-thirds <1f the existing 2.1 mlllion apartments art sUll under the -cooUol lhst wao imposed originally In World Wor U. Tbe foor tnlllloa New Yorkers who live in them stay 'PUf.; they have about the only che1p bouztnc ln the city. For the rest of tbe people, especially tbooe In Mlnbottan, me pr1<e Is high •od getting hlgber. ''A family man earning $35,000 a year hu It tou&h living in ManhaJt,an, 11 the president of a real estate oompu.y told New York ma1azinc. To e•e the plncb, the Mayor's Rent GuideUnel Board propooed oo March fo lhlt ownus ol to0,000 uncoatroUed 1portmeota llmlt futur-e llo<....... to " per<ent Otey two Ytlrll 1od r<du<e any recent 1ncreues lhll Wert hlgher. 1be real estate lndu,atry a n d R..,.i.ncon 111)'<1' John V. LiDdlA1 10 qreod. But the pnilidont ol the ~ CitJ Conactl , ........, X. Smith, ac<llted the ownm of bid fllUt when no ...i reductions ap- _. In thek AprU blllblp. Tiie UndUf ldmlnlltnlloft 111.<Wered lhll IJlOR time WU needed lllCf lhll tllcible ..,,_ would --.. ductlons 111 TtnndaJ, M11 I , That date assumes signltJcance ln a year "btn New York Cl· ty wW ~td a m1yar. More than 80 percent" of the total brain growth of the bumm being takes place during the first three years of life . If, during the mother's pregnancy and lactation. she and the cblld are .suffering from malnutrition. the lat~r mental ability of the baby may be 10 to 25 perCfht below normal. Today, it is estimated that ap- proximately two-thirds or the chil dren -XlO million -In the world are undernourished and have some degree ol retardaliou of crowtb as a result Of low nutriUoa. TIIESE STATEMEN'l'fl Oii<! figures como from Dr. Do.v1d 8, O>ursin -· during the eorly 1950s. dlocovem that low dlcW'y Intakes ol ·vitamin 86 Quotes Mn. Cborla W. Knipp, S.F. -"The n1ost Important thing ln Ill)' relatlooship Is first LO know )'OUJ'Stlf. and to make on equally grtat effOri ·lo know your partner.•• could disturb the central nervous system activity ln inlants. whi ch regulates brain functions. More recently, as he repo1ts In "Unicef News," studies from develop· ing countries in., 'Soutft Americ.a. Africa, lndooesla and the Philippines ind1cate that underautrition "affects 'tbi mental development. and perform· ance of children." AbWty tats c:tven to cbronlcall,y underaoutished young- 1ter1 showed tbf!y performed at a sig:olftcantly lower level than the well· nourllhed. INTERESTINGLY enou gh. 0 r . Cour1l.o. points out, the newborn• In some of the developing countrle~ showed ''superior abilities" on first neurolo&ical ex•mtnatlons. In conlr11st to the level of activtt1 seen ln babies from Europe 11nd the U.S. But wtthln a yNl.r ti1eir icores decreased to lower than normal leve.ls. I ApparenUy 'an. adult can w\tbstand even severe and prolonged malnutrl· tion without. permanent damage, but malnutritlon ,dUring the first years produces cellular changes that-are ir· revenlble and never completely cor- rected. These limitations of mental performance. Dr. Coursin warns us . "are therefore maintained and perpetuated into succeeding genera· ~ons." NEW TECHNIQ\JES In biocliemlstry have eDabled us to separate the factor of nutrition from the whole complex of envlronmenL and·it !1 now generally beUeved that lack ol a proper die~ .more lllan aQJtblng ebe. Mards Che mental abilities in regions wb'ere starvation Is the rule. If th• cbild Jail• to 1<1 off to a· good start. the adult ts doomtd to below...average performance In modern society. Wbat. this me:.tns, of course. Is that • providJna t.nough -food . or the right sort. to the 300 mlllloa malnourished chlldrtn In the world ls more than • ··humane" gesture; It is the only way to raise the level of performance In those countries and to prevent both the population explosion and the food shortage tram combining to bury the human race. Survival. not philan· thropy, commands our immediate at· tenUon to thU grave, and growing, problem of brain-food for babies . Friday, May 16, 1969 The editorial paoe of the Doil11 Pilot seeb to injorm ond 1tfm- 14latt readm by ~.senting thts neWf?Cpfr'a optniona o:J&d com- mtmarv on ropicl of fn tereat and fig11fjicance, by providing a forvm for tht expre1.tion of ou r readtrl'' opinions, and tiv presenting tlit ditlffie view- point! of lnfo'l11t.f!d Ob3f!rvtrt and rpoktsmen 011 topie1 of the dov, . Robert N. Weed, Publis her • • Ii I' I I I!. I ; " l I I I I I ! I -·-- ' I I I 11 • • --o-• • 1 Ti l "'""'· l ~f 4 T "1· • • •• • • • ·Cups Runneth Q;~er With -Coffee, Tea . . , • ): $- 1 l • .. • I ~ . • " .. I • • • ' . • ' f I. ~· • . ~ ~· ,,. • ' - I:~ ~ • • • > • ..: .~ " . . • ~CllJ JEAN C X, 494-9466 pnc.y, Metr 1&. 1"' L ..... 11 Fresh Sup~ort Wanted By Two Area · G:roups . . . • Coffee, tea and sympathy will lie plenti.IUI al the ~ ~· end of this month when two difierent area groups 1 ;. \VOO new support at a tea and coffee. The afternoon ;· tea for potential associate members of Les Petites ::.-. -----i"1!Ul'SA"uxiliary, Cliil ren s ome Society, will take -. • .. ~ •! ~ 'l' s g j G· • a plaC9 Thursday, May 22, Making plans for the 2 to 4 p.m. event are (above, left to right) Mrs. Donald Pecarovlch, membership cbalrman and Mrs. Wil- liam Crapo, president. The coffee, planned by La~ guna Beach Branch, American Association of Uni~ venity Women Sunday, May 25, will be offered to women in the Mission Viejo area. Depicting the many activities members enje>y are (at right, left to right) Mrs. Marv!n.Nilsen·of El Toro, correspond· ing secretary; Mrs. Gary .Leach of Mission Viej~. president,' and·Mrs. Don Tanney, hostess and second vice pnsldenl IWore clollnJ doon "" tile cumat ........ two falrly ,.,unr .,. ' l!Ollfl U. lllemilllr to dWt co11.. ond th C11J>1 In an alk>ut effort to i9cnlll INU qpolt 1w 111e1r ..uv1u... • Po1111llal ·~"1·memben wlU ncolve red carpel treatment from Lts PetKa Fleun Auxlllazy, ~·• Home SOclely, at a tea Thunday. May 22, ond -In the Mission VloJo area will get the atlonUon or Loluna Bolcb Branch, American AJl0d4Uon or University Women at • cOt!ee &!D41Y, Mat 25. Tho auDllary, whlCb draw• molt or lta membenhlp from the Laguna Nlpel -· wlll llave IU tea in the Threa An:b Boy borne of Mn. William Wbilo from z·to' 4 p.m, , ~ are being mado by Mn. Dollllld Pecarovlch, mem-benblP dudimim, ond Mrs. James Batel, IOdal dialrman, who •also will greet~ •. · . • -lillil• clutlrman1Mr1. Wllllam Cr.lqlo, ii u1ilted by the Mmea. Rolle !W6eta, Micli9el'Tii&um, Kmnelh wri,iit, l'l'8ncis Piert'ond swart Sbandle!· · • SeMn(.cll!mlPll&ne .. JlllllCh ond tea•~·be'the duty or the Mmes. Ramey Draper, Uoyd Petrash and W!lllam P .' Jtennedy. Leo Polllel Fleiin, whldi JDe111111 the uttle !lowers, ,... formed by 10 member's in Ma7, 1911'1 and onw boast. 28 active, Dile pmiislonal, two .in-' actlve'and Z4 usotjalo members. lbe aUxi),lary attempts to develop . and encourage public intereet, un4era_tandlng and sllliOort of California's olcl"t adopliou·a11ency. Toward5 UU. pl niem!len bcitft. Interpret lhe society's purpose and plan ventures to· raise funda for ill benefit. . , The L!lguna Beach Branch of AAUW, an equally worthwhile group, geared' to?unhlenity and>college ·gradu-. has cbosel> Let's Get Acquaint· ed as a theme\ror the 1 to 3 p.m. C<ilfee deligned to recruit Mission Viejo· area-members. ' , ~~OOl\J!>I of..f.ii~ and orange· will be featured> at lhe gatherlnJ to i.ke place:ln·the loot Viejo bome of Mr1. Don Tanney, new mem-· bel'shlp.cbainnan.and•1econd vice president . ?rtrs .. ·.Gary.~~ch oe~Mllaion Viejo, new president, will co-h06t the af· fair wbt?re activiti~ of the group, now entering its third year of existence, will be desert bed. tp prospertive membets. , The many facet. 'of AAUW's program Include two study topics which are pursued by the branch, utilizing many interesting and new methods, for two-year periods. Currently members are choosing two such topiCS from a list of pt~ posals which include the Human Use of Urban Space; T!ti's Beleaguered Ear'th1 Can Man Survive; American Foreign Policy -Dilemmas and Realities of l!Ower, and the Academic Community-New Look .on Campus • . In addition to~ atudy pregram, members of, lhe Laguna Beech Branch; which also serves Laguna Bills, El Toro and Mission Viejo; enjoy special.interest groups covering a wide ran(e of activities. Next year they. plan ~ in conyersatiooal French,. gourmet cooking, golf, dan<;<1· exer· cises,·boolt reviews, arts and crafts including stitcb.ery, play reading and varied activities which may be enjoyed by couples. A third pert· ol the program Is a fellowships program wbich finds branch members planning activities to raise funds to sponsor fello ws for advanced study. All activities of the group are on a voluntary basis and' members may lake part In as many tac.ts of tile program Is Ibey wisb. · Tito groop Is open to women graduat .. of accredited colleges and · universities and -verification m. graduation from college is necesscicy. If no vislblo 'proof is ·aviilable, the membership chairman will verify gradua· lion with the college or univentty. · · Furtber Information regarding membership and invitations to· Ibo coffee may be obtained by calling' Mrs. Tanney, 830-1044. . Ears .:But. H.u.bby· Can't ·._ Sing ~ !; Sweet Nothings Are Music to I DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband WU nmr ftlY demaollhlivt but - we"ft been married he refuses to 117 one Imler or loving wont to me. We are M • old fOcjes, Ann. I'm Z7. Gorko II za. ~ IA.It night we were watcblng a movie a on TV. It WU the. moVie wt bad Hen r tocetMr on our first date. I remember IO ! well bow Gorko · belil my band and squee~ It durilli the romantic parts. ' When the TV movie ended I WU OoaUng on a cloud. I turned to Gorko •IHI uked, "Honey, do you Jqve me?" He grunted, "I'm J:l&e, ain'l l?" I I Why are eome men ao inllen!jtive? How can a woman get Mr . husband to say s-Uiioll to her! -GORKO'S WIFE DllAJt WJn;: Some -.,.., modi ANN LANDERS ril wbea It CftMl ie ,_,..,_ aad.,. ,.....u,.-" -.... 11'1'911 t111i tllete' mea ~'& feel .,. I .. It'• olmolytbtlbeyan-llt•-· Won11 en· be ...,.._ .......... re r•r· 1:n1 uc1 sre•t fer dle1ec:•, 11111 ..... -.. ualyalt, "'• ...... P1 nm,... .... -Se ........... c:rlllcal, -,. la Gorh'1 words, "Jle'1 U.,., •'I~?" DEAR ANN ~DERS: A lnr dl)'I ' ... I WU r1dU.•lbe bUI to wwt. Two men wen llltlnl -tho allle -· loC their fool -oil. Tllol'e WIS I .llllft cm !hi hut that said, NO SMOK~O., Thi ftl1Wl.tion WU llJCh thlt J Wll ,.Wiii the 1mot11"rllht'ln my laoo. I fan- ned '"11111 ond mode It otMoul that lbelr smote WU --'Ibey lcJlortil • me. Tin r bepn. to &qh. 'l1ley coo- llnued lo pulf awl)'. When · tlier-flnldm !heir cipreltll 1 ' betved a tlP ol<nllil. W11hfn11iall 'a lotmolleoaa-.PooplewllobrutWt' 1111tn'tiOr-W.:ape1opeo It oil tM ·minute lbey lit up qaJn. At tb,lt point t law eu .. erT1•il. Jl'WI moaken wbo teoll: eft1m1. N..e ~went to tht bul drfvlr and repol1ed . Wll 111 Cad. 'them. 'Ibo «tnr, 'tdd :me .... -... . DEAi\ ANN LANDERS: y-loot a • noiJilnr -l ·lilMd'a ComplUit. llo I fan. I -ID lhim 1'N _.. topo, llul m • Glvt lo or,looe him ••• whoo a f01 ihw •alped. Tbe'drmr)tloaa ·--.-1 and •fl""· Reconlly, la• coalldeatW al the ,.. tlu line, look out! Forllpi m boW te 1told the meil''the,'d bav•1o j>ul oill lhllr rooc ol Ille col-. you Hfened to • hudle the "'"°' ,.. ial ,. diad< cliarellet.· ' , , , . f.::"l· mechaiJc U I "p<W monirey," Ann Llllders. Rud her bootlol, ~ Why did I havt to lio !lllllldllq? alt tiec:a,_ 1 f.U..., worb aruomd .iid P.UI -Wb At lbtUmlltl" ... Doesn't the drim"'illve·tfie· llllbortlJ·to --., that make him a ar...e . nc it • make pusencen obey the rules <i his ·monkey! You 1"l{tc with, 1 tn-rtter. your rtquel\ 1'l Alln Ludln Ill ... c bull Please expltln. -C'l'A CUSTOMJ:ll , Woukly:" ·~to bo called·~'"' Ulil lftspaper. encloelol•-•-l>EAR c!urroMia ~ .... ~L. moolrey. • . ID<I • lq, stamped a111 ... 1 &Hd • ' •R ........,. Your carelea use of the 1._ ;;u veJope, lo ~· .... Of)lii)""'I Ila lo Ill aii lmaJl to l!llJl) llne people. I fw1,.. &nil LID<len will bo .sad ID i.. ,_ U.s:, • fw •I-. -ai: nlllill) owe them 1n *PIJloo. -OAllAG!l wUll your problemL llM _lo.., la ...... (Cll?QPT ....... ...... , JillmlANJC'S WJ1E care of the DAILY PllDI', ' 7 I a 11· Ii ..-tlio 1aw (dlJ a litm01I • D&UI WIFE: nit 1ypewi11a.-,.. Iii!~ lllampal ........ ;> ' ,, " KEEPING AMERICA BEAUTIFUL -Exemplifying the theme selected for , the Gralid Council flre for CoeCa MeJa Camp flre Girts are (left to right) Mary 5ayen, Carol -. Laurie Brennan and Janet Rdeci:. Harbor Area · Council Fires will take place Wednesday and Friday, May 21 and 23. Grand Council Fires Hord.cope • Gemini: Stick To Your Guns SATURDAY MAY 17 uaRA (Sept. II-Oct. 21); You lffm cauatit between • ·prldlcallty and princlplea. By IYDNllY OllARB Key II to end -tlon, .. 11- TEEN DATING lllNTll; Uonolllp lllat you have Spotliabl II ... Q. •I• I : -·· II fllll you do, you n:waoce ablnel I« ,.,, la wllf be on comtruct.lve palh. Dole tbat .....,..,. .a'hort llOORPIO (Oct. U.Nov.11): jourpey to·Wilnoil --Be lr.depmdtnl where IDOlleJ t..t la Ideal. ...,_ may II ---., lab care be .._......, bul .... of ,.... ,. ...... But doc't a po1n1. .lrlel -a lot ol fill !or loll ll«y. S- talldng. but Tmm -the lllllY he leollq JOUl' linandal check. Leo 11 .....uble charm-acumen. Raopood aecordlngly. ing and wins -.~. SAGmAJµU8 (Nov. II-. Dec. II): Avoid uc:esa lpood ARIBll (March 11-Airil It): -not only in transporUlloo Steer cleor ol lqllments, but in arriving al declllool. , ~iallJ db re 1 at I v e 1 • Permit Jock:. to have equaJ Avoid journeys, u n I e 1 s Ume with lmpulle. • necessary. And U you do CAPRICORN (Dec.· 2Wao . . travel, do IO at moderate 19): 1Jgbt touch ar:compliahea speed. Ideas come f • 1 l. more than any heavy-banded Choooe quolity. method. Senae of humor . TAIJKVI (Aoril 20-May 20)., prov.. a valuable Illy. Stroos Dcio~ ta!<• loo much· for g.......t\y w1411ou1 1>e1ng .._ granted, especlally w h e re ttavag.wit. Key ts bllance. loans, debts are concerned. AQVAJUUI (Jm. JG.Feb. Some .,. very stubborn today 18): Friends talk much aboot about money, Play It by ear. what yod ll>ould do. o...i he GEMJNI (May II.June 20): m1opiided by wlabful tldn!dng. --POLE·ING !DIAS -Taklna lime out to rest against a May Pole wblle dis- c;ilsring ldeu for the May ·i!esttval at lbe Community Pr .. byteriau CJhurcll in San Juan Caplotrano are (left to right) Mn. Lynne Morris, Dance WOO'bllop director, and Mrs. William Honsberger, president of the churcll's Women's AnOciatlon. Bolhj!!e essociatlon.and worltoh()p are participating in the May 18 event. Some vilCmll oppoett1on in-Im-ID he awue · ol dlcated. Your ldeao, p1am op. ~. ruleo and ..,..__ --------- pear reoolutlooory. Ot1>m> art PlllCD (Fell. IMlardl II): either frtptened 0< eavloul or a.ice due and c:OOJd affect bo(lt. Heed your own OOU111tL rellideoce. You 1n home at Be forthright. dtffmmt t1m... Alligmnent CANCER (Jmie II.July 21): turnover cooJd alfect basic A family m-may he --Reollio family ._i. doing ......... In oecm. your-· But a11o ottend Keep calm. Motiws, -.UO.. to dulles. Luncheon Ends Week Pampered Strawberry Loses Festival Throne 'R . I · eservat1ons Beckon an the bell, ...,. If mllguid-U today II ,.... blrtlldoy you ed. Be diplomatic. are pradlcaJ, e ff 1 c i en t , LEO (July 13-Aug. 21): oapoble ol dlNdloc others. Argumentwllh--d ... You.,. mort int<nae tbu not mean workl is axn1ng to many might p e r c e 1 v e • an end. ~-!hot Penonal Jlllll!Otl.m! Ls strong . stresa, nerv<IUI llnln do tal<e Many ... drown to you. a toll. Play wlltbi& pme. Numeroua pencm w o u I d ConchM1ing Insurance Women's Week. May l&-24, will be the. Insurance Women ol Oranp P>unly who wtl1 pther at noon for a hmcbeon in the Jolly Roger, Anallelm Saturday, May 31. Fat, juicy strawberries are helng r<placed. IMtead of ti. traditional strawbeny f e1 ti val the Women's Asaociatlm, Com- munity Prabyl«tao Cburth of San JUID Capistrano have planned a May Festival for SIDlday, May II. barbecue pit for roastiq bot dogs at the 11 a.m. even& on the grounds of the church. Seruor high students wUl lumlsb m.erts. . , Pow wows, danclD& and tribal rituals w111·he ev1dooced around the Gnnd Cound1 .. =p ~~1r11"::°' com!: •• ; aod bead! !tr their -get. "' together of all groups. Newport Bead> gtrll wtl1 meet at T p.m. Wedneldoy, May 21, In SL Andrew's Presbrtertan Church'• Fellowship Hall, while Costa Mesa girls will gather al '1 p.m. Friday May 23, 1D. Te Winkle Park. A apecW e-during the . ' Costa Mesa Council Fire will be the award.ina: of the • WolleLo-'aDlon, !be b1p.t --""" In Camp Fire Glrll, to Elaine Kew of the Oldpocike H«llon Club. . Miss Kew has been In tbe Camp Fire program alnce oe- cond grade, and II an octtve member of the Oldponb Horizon Club. To earn tbls award, two yearo of wort la required and cu aaly he won by junlon and -in biab IChooL Preantalton will 6e made by Mn. William Main ol the Or..,0 COUnty Council. Costa MOia theme lJ Keep America Beautiful, and • lrtgblil!hl ol the program wtll be the planting of a tree in memory of a leader, the lite Mn. James Drake. Con- duding tlds -wtll he ·:. Philanthropy Selected Randlo Viejo w-·• Club ' IDOIDbora wUJ IUe l loot at -.-aiy projeotl ~ decldfne an a Jti:il!lr••opy for ' the coming ,_. durlnc • ' meelinc -Mooday ot IO a.m. in -Viejo - llon °"'*'· Speeken~- to tile -wtll he tile Mmes. Herman Scfmldt, South Cout Comm1"'1t;J llolplW; Jobn T. Martin, ABMn -llm>e; Robert llOlila, lllltrlct -Affltn; James Toepfer, ' ,._ ~ Hj>me, Patio Set For Supper Narcotics Film Shown Linda Stevens, step b' n le Taylor aod Elaine Inocuchl, memben or Mrs. Drake'• l'OOP· VIRGO (Aug.:• 23-Sept. II): mal:e oocrilka ID bock you. Coo!llct cooJd --family lllld ......... It •P. peen that, .. lbJa -· duty must «me f.irat. Thole who really caro wlII uiidentand. Speaker wtll he J ob n Wadewlld of the 1n1unnce ratmi boanl, San Froncllco who wW dilcua "'lmuraDce Pot Pourie." ReeervaUom. may be made by calllng Mn. Floyd Horton at 543-lml. Allo on the program will be the flag 181ulo by Blue Birds and the Invocation by Mn:. Ralpll Short's Horizon Club. Mn. Paul Friebertabauser Ls guardian of the fire and chalrmao ii Mn. Ricbard Brace. Mn.JohnZorgerwiJJl"'""' .. ,..,..,....,,.. .. ..,.., .... .., .. ...,...,.,.....,,.,.~5.,,.""'..,..,..,..,11!11 lead Q1e Blue Bink in ainging aod Mn. Paµ! !DU will lead the Camp Fire Glru. Qui It will llllJ he an event you can alnk your teeth into. Under the leadenhlp of Mn. William lloOlberger, preat. dent, the various committees will have salads, sandwiches, punch and cofiee for sale at food booths. Assisting them will he Meo's Fellowlhlp members who wlll provide a The event, open to the public, II helng staged to ralle summer camp and cmferenc. funds for young p e o p l e • ,Providing ent¢a.1.nmen& will be members of the Danct Workshop, direct..i by Mn. Lynne Morris. A May pole dance will he • hlghligh~ in addition to folk d a n c c features . Dress is casual. A whit e elephant booth will offer a myriad of "treasures" for perusal. Afterward coffee a n d dooghnull will be !Old by the HoriJOD Club to raise funds for 11.s Tljuapa Clinic project. American Heritap la the theme to be carried ooil by Newport Buch gtrla. A caodle ltcbtlog ·-wtll he conducted by Mn. Gerlld Klngsley'1 gn>up; Blue Blrda wW alng; the flu ceremony wtll he by Mn. Palil MllCMabon'1 gtrb, and Mn. ~ Carty'• Camp Fire Girls will perform an autben- tlc IMWl clance. Twcb bearu award wW be Pre;lell1ed to Mn. P a u I BersdaJll'• junior high group and Mn. Sh ort'• Hort~ "" Club wt11 RI•• tbe ln-vocalloo. Represenllng tbe counly councU wUI he Mn. W1llJam Main, and M ro • Kick the Habit Smokers Learn How Is amold'lM""" hallgup? Went to the halrit but don't have the "won't power" to do it alcme? The Fiv&<lay Plan to Stop Smoking will be p,...ented nightly May 22 tbrough May 211 from 7;30 to 9 p.m. In Costa Mesa High School's lyceum th-for thole wishing help in breaking the smoking habit. . Sponoor of the program b the Tuberculosis and Respiratory Disease Asoodatlon of Orange County, Individual voluntary donahlons will be ac- cepled to help defray com of !he materials but admission is free. The llf).mlnute group therapy seosion.s include lectures by a counae~ o.r-pityB!cl8n m tile physiological and psycbological aspects of smoking, fHma on omoCinJ[ and its effects on !he body and mind and demonstrations of proceduno helpful to overccmlng the smoking habit. E"""-ee of experiences by participants as they fight the habit un- der !he Ftv&<!ay Plan will be included in the program each evening. Mothers, Daughters Guests at Dinner Mothers and daughters will be guest.a and dads will be doing the serving when the Women's Society of the Jjlitst United Melhodia& Church of FounµJn Valley sponsors a banquet al 6: 30 tonight in the Peek Family Colonial Terrace Room, Westmimter, Fashions '69 will be the theme of the program, and commenting on a style show will he Mn. Robert West. munity sing will he led by Mrs. Evan McCall, ac- companied by William Drozda. Mrs. Ken McMlllan will serve as mis'tress of ceremonies, and Mrs. Frank Drozda, Mrs. Drozda, Mrs. West ed Mrs, Richard Uhler have planned t h e en· tertainment. Lelond -· guardian ol the fire, wtll ,...m awardo. .. ______________ ....,,...,,.,,._,.!l Musical entertainment will Include selections by a Sweet AdeUnes quartet and a com· Miniature replicas of mothers and daughters will comprise table ttnterpieces, and in charge of decan.Uons are the Mmes. John Gillespie, Smiley Forster, Donald Nelson and Bernie Sv~ DAR Meeting Coast Site .Selected Coordinating the e~ Is J\trs. Donald Taylor, p nt of .the society. Mrs. W. Jame~ Top Woman Honored . . Clark .ls tn charge of ticket sales. The Woman's Civic League president; L. S. Sunderland. of N e w po rt Harbor will seqmd vice president, and present its third . annu~J Allen Gee, recording M. edic"I GrQup secretary.1 .,. Woman-0!-t.be-year aw 1 r d /i.lso taking offk:e·will be Ule Every second Tuesday cl Gatberh!c iD the Miramar which took place in George Buccola, Corona de:l Tuesday, May 20, during an Mrnes. Adelaide Marchand, the ·month Orange Shorts A patio llUppe1" pariy w1I1 •~ tract memherw ol the Foun- tain Valley Chapter, Republican Women's Club, Fedtrated,at7p.m..tornanow in the home ol Mn. John D. Harper. ~ ....... ~· ~!a~a Wublncton.D.C.,andthellU Mar, aas1stant secretary, and installation luncheon in the co rresponding secretary; Medical Assistants' A.!aocia- wtll be ~ Da~~ state conference in ·Fresno. honored will be Mn. Frank Irvine Coast Country Club. Catherine CarU, treasurer ; t1oo assemble at 8 p.m. Loo A film oa. Dll'COticl wm be of the American RevOlution Orange Coalt c b a Ir m e n Edgar Lee, Laguna Hilb, An area woman will be William Warren, auditor; Paul catlm may be OOtained b1 lhown by stt. Sam Clcrielro of from 81 Southern California reportlna du:rtnc the da,y will honorary state regent. recognized for out.standing Gruber, bistorlan,-and-DanieJ calling Mrs. Marjorie Hum- A soda! boor wm precede the dinner. tbe Coeta Meea Police Depart~ chapters. inclode Mrs. 8 en R. Chaplen represented from community service when the Gilcrest, parliamentarian. her, 644-2273. ment b" members d. the Cos· Mn. Tbomu Vernmi. Coffee KleJmrlCbter, San Clemente, ~the Orange Coast area wUt be award is made during thep==='========'========; Headln( tbe canmlttoe Is Mn. Nancy sw._, and u&il:tina are the Mme 1 • Nlldlne 1-., Roa Knlll, Harper, Dml B. _.,.,. and Junes JC.-. ta Mesa Federaled """1bllc"" ~ Modeato, otata repot, wlll timekeeper, and Mn. John Alllo Caoyoo Chapter, Laguna 11 :30 a.m. event. W~1 Club. preolde «utq the on&<lay Holland JClnbkl, Dena Polnl, HlllJ; Col. William Clbell Former league prealdent TlcUll, Ill .. por -· Tbt ··111m1er ~ wtl1 Southern Council Ill• e 11 n g nallooal vice c1Ja1rman and Chapter, Newport Beach; Pa-Mn. Stanley t.Ltevre wlll he taU place ot 7 p.m. '11onday, whlcb wUJ hegln at 10 a.m. llneqe .....mi cbolrman. tlence Wright Chopter, Lquna lnstalllng officer for the MaJ II, In Fe 11 c I an o •a Hor nporto wUJ tnc1ude the AlsLs!1nl tbe state rqent on Buch, and Richard Bayldoo Mmes. E. C. Smith, president; -, Newport -.. ~'lllb~~~;~~~l ~C~o~n~1~r~e~o~1;;;;;ithe~~platform~~;;;;iwtllii;;~be~Mn~. _Charpte;;;;;;r;;;, ;;;Seal;;;;;;;Beac;;;;;;;;;b;;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;T;;.;;Duncan;;;;;;;;;;s;;te;;wart,;;;i;;finl;;' ;;;;v;;lce~11 -.-. clue by Jlq II, 11 =='=-~dldlq may he made by oallm, Mn. Oanlelro Ill llM'lll or Mn. am1e1-. ••.•. BILL WILLIAM 'S Jtttr•• Jtnfbrau I & p amrf'(IJ! Come lo ••• malAe~ Wu, anJ &aul'! Salon EOR JHE DISCRIMINATING: e HARBOR AREA'S TOP BEAUTY & WI& STYLISTS e MANICURES & PEDICURES e VIV1ANE WOODARD COSMETICS . Wallu~ Wig & Beauty Solon .. ,,,, utoe .. tM..,_ HIUMIN SQllAli _..AlllSA e IAllKAM•RtCAtD e HOUSE oi HAIR COLORING and COIFFUBES .---INTRODUCES ASSOCIATES----. CHUCK HOWARD former Hair Styli1t of EAST BLUFF AREA •"" MARIE BETSINGER MANICURI~ A PEDICURIST Formerly S..erly HHls o..! Eost lluff Are• 2333 E. COAST HWY • Coron• dol Mor -•JJ.1'46 Cl~ M...!oys · .s.n ~ Colifornio -ScoftsAah; MmM NOW IN ORANGE (FOl'fllttb' MaNI Ora•) 1835 W. CHAPMAN • AUTHENTIC GERMAN --CUISINE-- CONTINENTAL ENTElTAINMINT Nowfoaturl"I PEDRO llloflewTtwllli"I Oy;iy-Hlo Romantic Ouftar COCKTAILS• IMPORTED lEER AlfD QES ---~·. Old Bohemien "Vint and Wr•ath" p1tt1m Fret11r proof p1rf1ih, S.t oft, $10 leers tnd linen to match, Set of 4, $1.tl SLAVICK'S ~Slnce 1917 11 F11h lon lsl1nd Ntwport Beach-644.lltO Y-Clllrtt A«olint Wwlc:Mw -...,._Atntrl(trf, M ....... a..,,.. - Oj1•11 M•ftdiy,•PrJdr, ""'i1 9:JO fl.m. ' :( ( l I I • I l ' I ' ' I r I ' r f I • • l • t • t • ,• • , ' '\ Newpo:rt· ·Barhor , EDITION VOL". 621 NO. ·111, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE covNtY. cµ(JFORNJA • • ' . . County Air ·Aide PusliesEl Toro for NeW Site •. · dy JOHN VALTERZA ot .... ~lb' l'lW Stiff . \ County Airport Commissioner Dennis Carpenter strongly urged use of El T~ Marine /Jr Station as a regional airport before a News)ort~Beach audience today, then urged his listeners to unite .,to achieve It. A:ddf:essing the montlhy "sunrise bull !~ss.ion'"of the ~ewport.Harbor Ownbi!r or Commerce, the straight-talking com- miaioner and California Republican . leader said the Jdea of blending regk>nat airport use wilh mUlt:ary (ields elsewhere in the counlry has worked "11nd tt would work well at El Toro, -too ." ' Carbenter said that "there ·is orie thlng to n;a"lixe when you analyze the natural pl'0161 clJmlng lrom reildents ~Leisure World, M.issl.on Viejo and otber.._bousing areu ...,· El Toro , • • the 'fet.i UIOd by the milltsy ftl"tl there •ay befori tha'e were any homes in the area." He added that be relt the noist problem would not be much ·worse 11 corlunercia! jets were to uae the military facilities,· :·al.nee. combat machioes maJte much more noise and they are there now." Carpenter called for unity among all u.e detractors of cowity efforts .to im· prove the air terminal lltuatloo, then posed his ~ution to the expanoloa con- troversy swTounding the preteDt count'y allport. He asked for an end to criUci!m .of the commlssion for proposing enlarging park· ihg · lots ·at O r an g e County 1rport ~use such a project would not con- stitute expamlon1 but instead, make it ~sier to use for the volume· of tra!lic. it has now. Carpenter jocularly jabbed at the U.S. Navy and even the city of NtWport Beach ft\r their opposition to many,c.'UI'· rent ideas for airports. but conceded 'hat Newport officlals have stoutly ap-1 proved ol the El Toro plam. The Navy has not. He llld that U one <011\pmd the COsts rJ. ci:Nlvertin& aodie El Toro nmra11 ·tor commercial m:e • arid bWIWn& • poblic terminal!, "the cost sUU would be rhlnlmal .cmnpared ·to lhe1 hundredl1 of, mlllloos ~ for airports.ei-!Mn In the ,count)'." ,. Elaboratlag on aw_.. flnancilll pro- blems for .a regional airpOrt -wbett.ver it nii,ht be locat<d -c.rpem.r uld lte doubt<d ll!'oqly that . the ~yon " Orab(e C-, WO\lld DOI approve , tlio . . spendtna of 110 much moner. "Tllb ts · eaped&Oy clear •boo ~ -that they turned.down --!OW· times for the new jilt aod """"' fac:illty, and that WU ID -of anly about $D million," be uld. Be ..id the El Toro .,ian, ·.-. 1' wee to 1trve as ao iatertm or,........ tmnloal, would be the -_ .... IOea." . '.'IJI we mi "ldtlr· to -II .the (lee ·---Pap I) Teacher Strike Looming • Harbor Educators Favor Walkout Over Salaries By mOMAS FORTUNE Of 1111 Daltr P!t91t INH Newporl-Mesa school teadlera today· seem ready tO stage a r!volt over lalarles. · SiJ:.hundred of J,050 classroom teachers turned out at an unprecedented mass meeUng Thursday at Newport Harbor High School. And two-thirds of those pteseflt indicated they favor a walkout if the school board doesn't satisfy their re- quests. The teacher1 came to hear teacller association: officer1 give a progress report on ..iary ,negotiatiooa with the school board. To hear militant 1eacllers tell it, things aren't going· weu~ School authQrit,ies so ·far have remained closed· mouthed. on the subject. The day seemed to belong to militant young men teacherS. President-elect of the district teacher association, Gordon Becktold, declared, "This community hasn't even begun to pay fur aervica rendered." He called ·for a t.~ "body coont" at the adtopl bo!lrd·meellnl Tuel- d1y nigbl Until negotlltlou abso~ly break down, teacher _.iaum Ind the · school board have agreed not to r<veal salary dem811\fs . or counter Offen. The only announcement hu.been •of taitoUve agreement or diaaaretment on 1lde issues. "You can still sit ·muncf and believe 1n Santa Claus," Becktold cMllMpl; "But if you ire not In the rilbl plo;co• at tile right• time llon~ npecl ui IO di ,.... In- fighting .. • . '1 He was cheered. So wtrt otbet inilltant ~teacii.r ~ho spoke out · fj _,;,.; Ralph WhlUonl, mtlt (ride. teacl!er II Newport Elementary School, ...... -• (See TEACHERS, P1p I) L11mber Strike En~ Pxo.s~cts Ap~qr·. f;lo~d~,, • Newport or .1'fesa: Ji~Y ROoSEVILT STA..,(D,,IY :iv.1.fJ 'flLAR'\'.S ·_i • FDR'• Oldwt·Son;,s...wn W;th Sp;cjM·lJurJilil ,Hopplor, :rt.,.. • f• ' • ., . Jafries Roosevelt Kniled By Wife in Switzerland GENEVA (UPI) -James ~It's third wife Gladys stabbed him in the back Thursday night with bis World.War JI souvenir dagger at the couple's Swiss villa, police reported today. .. The 6Z...year~ld son of the· late presi· dent was rushed to county hoSpltal in critical condition. Doctors performed emergency surgery and later pronounced the fonner congressman from calltornia out of danger. · Mrs. Roosevelt, 52, was admitted· to Bel-Air Clinic for observation. Spokesmen for Roosevelt said she had been under . treatment for s e v e re depression. First reports of the incident were con- fusing because they said Roolevelt*"bad been attacked by "a mentally ~ woman" without identifYing her. 1'*f· reports mentioned an argmnent. . · Hours later, Roo9etelt's attorney notified newsmen: "I am authori.zeJ to say that 1-fr. Roosevelt confirmed today that the in-. cldent which has been reported involved his wife. Mr. Roosevelt telephoned us from the hospital this morning and asked us to clear up this fact." 1be couple was married in 1956 and have one child, Hall Delano. Roooevail'1 earli!r marriages to Betsey Cushing, a Bosfon socialite, and Romelle Schneider, a nurse, ended in divoree. Romevelt, eldest. son of the late president, has five children by the pm1ous marriages. Police spokesmen. trying to piece together details on the stabbing, said it QCCUrred about 11 o'clock at the Roosevelt yilla in the suburb of.Vesenaz. •otncials of Investors Overseas Serviti! (IOS), the finn Rooeevelt represents in Geneva, said· he WIS slabbed just·inside the doorway of the big bouat, at the foot of a wide central staircase le&ding to the · upper quarten. Tiley Slid Roosevelt was stabbed In the ~k with the l\larfne lmHe and then stumblfll:tto a ne.igbbor's house about 129 feet away. The nelgbbon called police, an ambulance was disp::itched, and Roosevelt was rushed to the hospital. IOS officials , said the dagger was a memento of the war which Roosevelt had kept from his d8ys as a brigadier general ib ,the~Marlnes. · Roosevelt .jolned 105 in 1966, and is president of the IOS Development Co. Ltd. Be ls a member of the board of di-.rs of the Pl""t holding oompony,. !OS Ud. (PlllW!ll) and several other ~ . -. Irrine Apartnlent Plan Wins Comroiseion's Okay By JANicE .adMAN • ............. tteff Proo~ today appe8'ed clouded fO<' an early oetll<m<nt.or • lu111bir otrtke ttiat lM)' cripple Orange County's huge construcUon Industry. Members of the Millworkers and Cablnetmaker, Union local 2172 voted Wednesday night to strike. 'The Union members, who man Orange County 1umberyardl, are seeking tncreases in wages and benefits totallni 18 cents per hour, aCcordlng to JQn Maynard, a negotiator for eoo.mty lumberyard owners and manag~r of the Santa Ana Lumber Co. The Teamsters UnJorl, whose members carry lumber from lhe·yards lo lhe con· struction sites, are honoring pi cket Unes throwrr up 111.unday by the millworkers and cabinetmakers. · According to Al Swift, business representative for the On.nee County teamsters, the teamsters are aeekln1 an area-wide agreement to bring wages in Orange County ancl Loog Beach up to a par with wages in Los Angeles County. O!ficWJ of Local 2172 have been unavailable for comment for the past ' two days, • • EX.SHERIFF DIES LA'1 Eugene li1callu1 Gene Biscailuz, Ex~LA ,sheriif, Succumbs at 86 ' SANTA MONICA (AP) -Eugene Biscailuz, a !title man with a 'courtly m8.g,Jler and wlde-brimmed hat who Teamsterl_,and lumber group officials agreed today· that negotiations are pro- ceeding ·in 1ood faith. But they said that negotiations with the cabinetmakers and millworkers have no! yet begun. "We can't be in two places at once," said became '.'Mr. California" among lawmen Maynard. during bis 26 years as sheriff of Los All major lwnberyards in Orange Angeles County, died today at 16. County are closed, Maynard said yest.er· He waa known as a crack shot, a top day, because the Teamaters are honoring rider favoring the sombrero and silver the picks lines of the lwnbenrorken. moWllll>&s of the .Ute'• Soantsh put, •· According to a state.bent releaw.I Fri· top ednllniltfator,·a telentleu tracker of day morning by Cbaries T r en t a , crooks, aQd developer of a number of aecretary of the District Council of rehaJ>illtaUotl center• for prisoners: Clrpenten, the Jumberworkers and He retired in •1958 after 51 yian In law The controversy ovor wbidi ol tn Harber Area commuahks ril •be aelected 11 the site for the new Harbor Jlldicial Dfa!ricl llegtonal Civic !¥'tor will return Tuesday to ·the roiuctati\ .. p of cowtty supervison. : ' , ' . Stanley Krauoe, county .iiirector Gi roal property ~ will bounce ~ llfclty ball back iDlo the boaM'I court with a question which appears to be ' e1rtNily camoufla,..i In bis ~ and reeom· mendaUons: Wbat do yail .want, how big should it be and wbere abaII ,.. put It! An Initial llot of 10 lites bolts down in Krause's report to two poAltile locations. He Identifies them as a aelected portion of an 80-acre. site in the Niwport Town Center, futur,e site .of. New,.ort· Bach's owtl civic .center and an el.ght.actt.por· .. ti on of Orange ' CoUnty FairplJUDdl ter.. ritory in Costa Meas.. NO ATl'EMPT But be makes no otmnpt to pick one of the lwo eqerly offered locations. CowrtJ supervisors should. he e z p I a In 1 • determine the.nt.gnfJer of courts for: which space is to be' pn>vidod, outllne. lljl ~. select one of the two locations, d,etennlne the space requirements of any ~her county funcUons to be served in the re~lonal center and direct Krauae to 10 ahead with appraisals and negotiations oa the selected site. He prov!~ a bulky folder of facts to Puhlie Tidelands Access Bill .OK'd ' leBmJters are negotlfUng as one, for enforcement and had been in 1eeluslon 1t renewal of a joint conlract that expired his 't.ome hei-e '•Ince suffering . a otioke By State Assembly May IS. several years ago. Said Trenta: "The employers' tactits For decades be wu a familiar atght In backfired in their fact because instead of parades, dressed like a Spanish Don, A bill to make mandatory the provision negoUalinl in good faith and making a astride a pranClng hone. waving and of access to Callforaia's pubUc tidelands reasonable offer, they chose to delay smiling, often accompanied by his close has cleared. the AsatmblJ by a 41..f vote negotiatioQ# and make an insulting wage friend, the late actor Leo Carrillo. and Is now In the hands of a senate. com-- 1 A crucial step in the, development of a One major dilference of op1n100 offer. The men w«e 80 angry they voted The grandson of William Warren, flrst mlttee where I( died lut year. huge, 1,304-dwelling apartment complex between· the applicant and planning aides tO strike immediately. city marshal of Los Angeles, .. Bilcalluz Assembly B~I Ml, ''Tldela?Jds AcctSS c:ip.-Jrvine Company hills on the fringe of' was teSolved 'before the .commission -'"I1ie (lwnberwor.kers) unlon is ready joined the sheriff's d~partment in 1907 B,Ul," hu ;noved into the Senate Com· Up~r Newport Bay won unanimoos con• aa eaaemeot for 1 road l~'t'!o majot to meet with the. employen any Ume, when the for~e h~ only 27 men. At the nillt.ee on ~emmental EfUcleney, ,...t 'nnlrsdBY by Newport Bea¢i plai>-~c..u..its.ln the'<f<ve1-"'lt, l:m'°, .. ~·~ heard nothing lrom time he reUr<d, more than 3,000 men ~ called. \'Tlte Gr~atd Com· _,_ • · Cttu · .11-'d they led to were under him. ,..,. comm.......,.. .., 11~ "' wan see ACCGr<lilw to Mlqmard, the lumberyard It ts .. -in the -by Sen. the firm of °"""" 8abr and either a thorougbfare area built and ,,...... loc[ tried ID negoUate with union He .tudled la~!J: ni~l__~r ,... to l\alJert J. 1-aniao (R.-Ojal). Aaoclates of San Fr-'""' • lot bioclted o1r U needed,« at least a bond 1111-_,. April x and usistant chief ~,...ty -" in 19IO. 'l1te ltill. -1d•lay don' fl"ldell-ID . . TIME FOR END Kiaule ..,.a thit It ts time for.an encl of the 11expelmtve abort term' so1ut1oas•• that have be<n applled to the coult's el· forts to cope Witll epirOIUas popiiatJoa 1rowtb and rapidly ~ -1oedll. \:UIT<Dt estlinates lhow the """'1atioa In tile jildldal,dlatrlct to be about 130,000. l\rause predicts Iha\ the figure will be •• 080 by lllO, and -that l8Dy U'biib as 370,000 wlthln 50 ye:an:. Pointing to the , poalb!Ii!y a(: u a· pansioo 00 the judldal dloli1cl'1 - dariel, Krw -tbe t1'aulltl tltat a new lite, one which WauJd .,_ b CODliderable future eqwnaf.IJD, .would be In' tlie .best Interest ol the oOorto and the communities. · ·' MAKE .CBO)CE But, the report lireslles, COWlly supervisors must make the choice. Kt:ause's analyals or. the bu.la Gt .land coll aiooe offers cast estimates ·':'l'lh.'I from 'in elgbt.<ourt buiJdinC to · the possibly favored 12 court comtructiOo and an to a 16-court structure. . On the bull al I 1kaurt buildinl wftli a dbtributloo Gi oae and -qnarltt acra per eourt, the coll at tile a.acr. Fai~nds site ii lllimated by jlraUIO ~-be $5111,otlo. Tiie sanie'litllding on~ S!"De acreqeat tlie 'fdhlonable Newport (lee COIJIIT BITE; rap I) .0r..,. If you're •~Pini !n this .. -k-, 1 eAd it'll be nice weather -eoce the utull dOse ol hae evaporates. Temperatm<s ri peutd in the low 711'1 for the ~·Coat. . . INSmE TODAY ~ tile ..-rep ii 0 Nine-•" tater, r-. C. C. Y*-called M~•-~ ~ subdivision request ,... Pl • and provl&km for a road on ma1>3 ud Ml1 J, bat ••fttntaUves were not J-· ..,....., --e rDab ·e ·eccm to tbe -...--11"1 • "Park Newport" devtiopment near the eu -• available. Mll)'llU1l 1llo alleged that the !!!!".~/~ to ~1,M"lo to help '*lanbe """" onn DllllUtorJ, 'sudt • In· tile Prtddcnl NU.. Mild ..,... northMll comer of Jamboree Road and Tlte laltor idea...,-..,.... ujiin. union'• chiel llO(Oliat« wu out o1 town ·~ ,...,.w~,UO,:· cue.,._ deielopt-1~ •tile • cciuablr ftGlllC IM -1 Supr,_ the futar.'ellemion of San Joaquin HID• Str.ssing the immediacy o1 buildiDI (See UlMJll!:ll, Piii." I) tt::~-~=l . -,f:~ ..,, ~~·. f Coort ~· -flN -•me. flood. plans,tltOdev.lopenwere~acon-·,•,i • , , "".:.. .._"""' ~= ""!!..c , •. ~ ~-t -orit/l ~. 'J'he project Involves 49 •"""·Tile ap-dltloo tliat bulldln(r ~ could he "' • .,-•.u"" ;::;:t;" • ..,.., '.,_. • lit' ~""llMiiil ~,ililiilNi '<'l plicanls -1~ed a favorable ,_,,. isSU«t blfore,.ll!e, 1flll!I ~ ,_ .. ' ,u"·" QAiK,ag . c·r··J,. ".•. 1 •• I..:, JaQ!t>:~. ·~· ',.: '~-..,, .. ~....,. . ·,-' '~~llllrli .. ~-.... ~ m<ndati«t"!imi.tl\Ooonuntssloll'to ~ """'d!OIJ:alter'd!Y.,..otiil: ,' . • "J. 'HJ"! ---"" .,.. ~ ™':o<iitsg .. lheporcellnto....alots.The._oow The~..........,.. will be .-·" _, ~!t.heit>l' .. 'ura'!Nlli 1l1;!' toi:oml!t\tbei '. -" =" .l awaluCilyCouncil approval. huce,ln•olvtttrJ• ..... lMJlfllllillthan Plan8 Weekend'Film .i.ertfI," ..,ail ·"'"'"""' ot(~lll'.~·,°llsteiWtllorslO ~tile ' ~.:.. I --·ii The lrviDe Co. is terVlng 11 the the prellftl total ot reildeD1:Jt1 ea *t : ·~ ~whO tea.n and 91 •· · .Y · " -. • ' ":--... =-= ~ • developer ol the complex. lfltldpoted to -Peninsula Point. theTber,·rUClll tlSaime'llnc• Clo,.,~ •• ~. 11 7 1 _2l:_ ~·",..i ~· ', P.. · ....,_;.}.. _...,.., -·= .:,_ ~ :0:-': ..l: hove oeveral parking buildin,gs capped Tlte developtn«rt wwld stretch to 1ht . ~.. ., , ,,.;Jl>Uona"' Bloc 1111-. ~ ""< "'..,... ~ , ,.-,. = -!!:l! with putting greons and tennis courts and • bluff llmlu towa..t Uili>er ·N-Bay o'cloclt toni&l>t and Saturday 1t the Sci.,.. t me SpanlllMpea oilier ..t<o ~ , • .. •--• -... ,~,.. -·, a recreaUon bu.llding, and spill over JM1rtl11ly into the 'Big can-ct L«tbre ,HaJJ on the ca~, tcemi1~1 .Jugitiv• Dl'derta ClUJ.'l~ blCIC , • wn .l ~ ;-'Ollli ...-.. ) r =., .. ., ::':: , ,.,,,....,,.... • Most Of the propoud aportmelrt ion am. toTomKe!itb*,prelldentGftlle*' I from H"1N. Mn.~~ ....... ~:lift-• .....,.. -,;ll -" building• wlll be threectory alruct\trb The application.,., grfnted b)' com·. Gonttal admlnion ts II oriel it .... ,_io I a iovt ~ with1a ba~ for! Jlf2""9!t~' ~-;;11n'01 • ::..::-" •: ="-•I aurTOUndlng the central area coata.ininc missioners wttb about 20 conditions aua:· ,cenb .wlµi proceeds eotnr t<;nftt UH1 whlchthe.•aconvlcied'linct~~to ~ a1mo1t•'ev111• • (Sel • qui>tatm, -•..,... •· • 1 • 1NI the f)lfldnr bulldiJlflL 1-10d by the plaaainC llsll. .llll'POl'l Gi tlle MillJlfl club,~ Did. life. Pap11HI), ' '> • I • 1 ~·! , ~ ·~~~~~~~~~~-·---~~•-•....;,~.~~,:~.~~~~·~·~"~·~M~·~··~ ....... ~,~ ... ~>·:.....AO...a~M..L;1\~,~·.:.·~-··~·~· ..... _..!..'._·~!'...,.~~ ..... ~~~~~ .. I .1 • J DAll.Y PUT PILOt LOGBOOK . Frldl1, M'1 16. lM •• • -. ' High SchooI ·F:ree-lor~ :: Dates 'Old' Harbor. Grad ' " llJ 10 018BN Of ... ,,.,..., ..... When the ..,. rullq In Newport-Mesa hi&h !Chooll lhat "1rhat you wur Is up to :rou" wu iasued recently, 1 paused to do some nOectlng and realized I WU dated. - · I om port GI the mnolt past when unifOl'llll were the Mlle ot Newport Barbor llllh SChool, -color<d blou..., ..,.,. permitted on Jl'rtdoys• and "civvle" dayl were allowed ooce a month. r ., To further show lhat I om doted, I om port GI the generations who attended Harbor when it wu the IOle hi&h -In the .,.. and oo ..-lo!"ll rlvllry eJdsted betw.,. Newport Beach and Colla ·Mesa. ' ) • ' • • .~ .... t. ' But U I am dated, my mother, a1ao 1 Harbor grad, truly b part of a bygone era (exCUIO me, mother), the molt past when Harbor llllh co.eds wore white mlddy b1ouaes, C0)11plete with stars and lltripes, with their black Sk.lrtl. There were not even colored blollle8 or c!vvle day1 then. * I om not IOl'l'Y thal I went to Harbor High before these d1y1 of new freedom, however, beca111e i bave memorles to look back to that today' a coeds oevm' will have. · What chalJengt ls there In putting on a pantsuit to wear to clan or grabbing the closest dresa and throwing it on? How can you be original whtn what yru wear every day is different anyway'? Things were tougher back in those days, believe me. What great mental exercl.se we had to do to come up with ways to change around white bloules and bllct 1Jdrta ,. they ...Wd not look just like every other white blouse and black •klrt. And then there were Fridays .•. oh what a break from ·routine when the blouse could be checker~, striped <1r pastel colcred. If Fridays were excJ-just think how we felt on monthly "clvvle days." What agonizing declsions to be made, wha.t careful preparaUon to be completed le< lhat day, so our bat, prettiest and newest draats would be ahown off to advantage. Perhap> the moot aclUng cumitauon of oor four years of bigh lchoof was Senior Dress.up Day, the Jut day of wtlforms for senior girls. This event almo5t overshadowed graduation day with Its frenlzed pttparaUon. For lhat day, uniforms were ripped and gashed, painted and dirtied, 10 they could be worn In a hilarious manner showing that we were Immune from black sklrta and white blouses forever. Most senior girls even vowed they l\"ould never wear a black skirt and white blouse together again. I haven't worn that combinaUon much since I made that decision myseU several years ago, come to thJnk of it. What singularly uciting experience can today's individualized coed have? The end of her senior school year will be drudgery, a commonplace uperience much like the end <1f <1ther school years. l pity her. Maybe there ii some advan{age 't lhis ••new.fangled" rule though that 1 either can't tee OI' don't want to admit. ' ' If I odmtl thot It 11 good, you ,.., I'll bave to pve up my fond lmpm- lion ol. the uuJiiform years" at Harbor High u "the good old daya." ,., ....... J TEAmERS· ••• --Bui_ .... _ ......... hllll. • ,,,. milarJIJ of,-.... -. Mlll1. GI -lllent ad 1"°'e IOll .,._ ... ,__....., . ....... Jllrr .......... _. rW .. 'leodirft ...... ._.. IU!ilY w..,.. Clt&rly, the men ~s with more at llake Jn eomln&w Intend to .. art the leaderahlp. No woman leocber spoke Thlll'lday. The mood of Ill preoent WM -ed Jn a lllod-0p vote with mHblrdl in- dicotiD( wtiiiagneu to pll'ltcfpole In • ........ .-Oii a pre-oalioanced day. · The average teacher 11<ary po1c1 by the Wllfied !Chool diatrlct thll year II oboolt- 11.500, -olllc:iall alid. Just bow ·rar aport the i-ben' borgtlnlng toom and tho tchool bosn1 .,.. on salaries has not been publicly reveal- ed. Negotlatlng -ions wort to resume today and Mooday. One teacher alid be wanted negotia- timl to end nut week or "after that I sure can be sick or strike." Gilbert Collins, Estancia llilh lclenc:e ttachtr, said he thlDb there ahou1d be action to put the achOo1 board over a bar· rel. Said Brad Thurman, CCrona del Mar High biology tucher, "When I wu In the Loa: Angeles district a teacher's voice waa like a 1queak in the dark. "Thll 11 the lint big meeting llke Ibis we've had. I can see people begin to loot at each <1tber and grin. "ll you believe in y<>W"Self and Uke your job, this place can be glorious down here. Sell I.he otber teachers at your school, and man we're going to be locked in tough down here." WhtUord pleaded for the meetin( not to all!ume a cirdJs-like atmosphere. •'Let's go alter things in a constructlve way 8lld not go ofl the deep end," be said. One -aaswered be ..... 1 going to worry about appearanoea. u1 have a 6Uperior obllgllloa to feed iny four chlldren.. Lincoln Junior llilh Vlce Principal Ra1ph Werley responded, "We've tried the diplomatic route. We've requeated. We've IW'Veyed to death. "We live in an afOuent area. Thm people can pay. If a circus atmosphere Is the onJy way to get them to li!ten, so be it. I think today b a good thing." Angelo Vassos, physics teacher at Corona del Mar High, said he has check- ed with realtors and learned "the cheapest, thr<e-bedroom bouse you caa buy In thll diatrlct II IZ?,000." Another Coroao del Mar llJ&h teocber, Al Schwalbe, who toocbel ecooomia and social probltms, Ul!r'ted " T h e com- munity needs us more than we need than. We have a dozen young men Jn our school wbe are ""'templaUng leoving teacblng for otbu professiona <1 r """-. And U-ore the -Frotn P qe l Ylg°"""' -lmplriag leocllon." ~9-~~! 11~.~.T,.1_~ i.'. ~. ~~,~ "i'· :', . ~-rhfi:~i!ii : ~ ·-~~ ""' ~· !uaJ delfverY Of paymenl." ~?"!baa fD·llerC"!'I GI ... -~ If llU]>Ol'Vilon weal for \lie iuif1eslion · Kraute deciln" to specl!lcally comp1re : ~ong. · OW a U-acre site would be l\lflcient;tbe the two favored sites but be does note · He Aid the ~ can levy up to ll Mesa lite would ·have 1 $480,~· tpat ~'tbe Newport Town Center site will cenlf ln penniaiv! (no public vote re- tag, 11 01'1""'"" to Newport's . share lll destiny willl aa adjacent' quirod) tu for the_·clwlJ!eover lo1tlute- ;11o. ll)unlclpal clVic center and a regional ' yeor middle ocbooii; alltb ~ etchth · shopping cieater. srll<jea. • BEDUCIW ALLOCATION "Tb I . He lald ho tb1nb there 11oenltllleat111 That estimate by Krause is also based ~ P .anned freeway interchanae, 0 be , the board to levy :for the f1nt Um• a on a reduced allocation of one acre per , afds, 'will provide long tenn protttllon permiu.lve helltb and welfare ta to pay court including building, parking and 0 the out.taoding bay view. The city ' for teacher medical IDd deOtal b1aef1t1. landacaplng. hopes to attract other l..UtuUonal "'""' HU. Aid the boord lately bu lleiua to Tbe city of Newport Beach bas in-enhancing the ~turll and pollUcal ldeo-take teachers more atri0111iy. He alid posed ocquistUoo of 19.23 acres of land tJty « the site. teacher JJO(Oltators were told la an Iii· from the Irvine Company. Current . Kr~'a analyses indicate that day bargaining lt!Slion 11 at Saturday upderstanding between the company and d.~bulion of parking faclJJtles would some money has been found that wasn't the city tndicates a total evaluation of Weigh in favor d a Newpon site. found previously. ll,llO.IM[O. .Aaalyiing the coonty fairgrounds alto. "We're sbooUng !or between llll0,000 .Thia ,figure, say" XraUSt, includes Krause de9cribea . development eosts as and $1 million in new monies," said acruge prices ranging from $79,040 per "negligible to couiity . ; . cltY Ct Costa Hake. "If We can get ci""l to 1.1 mlillon acre (.o. $l20,MO ·per acre -111: average . Mesa to provide off site deVelopment." we could have I chan~ of getting tome aCUp,va1ue of $95.1&3 per acre. Cost of He describes tenns as flexible with the of the things you seek. lind to lhe county Is seen by Krause as: property owners preferring "• tease- IJl initial 4.7 acres to $7'9,040 an acre; an purchase with financlng costa equivalent · addltionll 5.5 acres if requlre<I at $lio,MO · to county general obllgaUon bondl." an acre with any add.llional property pricing oot at $95,1!3 per acre. ACQU18mON COST Krause estimates cost <1! acquisition at BUYING LAND $40,000 per acre. 'He states that the Krau.e anUcipates lhe county buying o.wner, "a state agency, cannot be firmly land from the city at the city's cost committed until docwnents and complete "depending on the county's e1act acreage appraJsal have been reviewed and a~ ~ulrementa.'' He notes that "the city proved by the Stae departments of upects: tQ receive certain conces.!lons General Servioes and Agriculture.'' fmn the Irvine Company respecting ac-PreUminary dlscusai.ons and appralul lnvestJgat1on suggest tht price will be a~ proved, Krause states. OAllY PllOT J•1.k I. c~rt • ., Vlot ,.,....v •Ill co."'"" ...,...._ T•-•i IC•••il ..... Tft•111•• A. MvrpMn• .._... ,,,llor J,., .... F. c.111 ... H-1 ••Kii Cl,., l flltr --<>MM ,211Wett111\.11 l111l1•1tl M•UNit M•M•: P.O. lea 111$, •:t6U --c:.flt ...... : m WMI ..., ~ = .. ~.:.': ~~ ~=: "ll thla aitt is selected, the county's . ~otlatlonl lbould lnclu~e the feulbtlJty of acquiring • · parting easement to satgfy aome !"'rtioo al the county'• iaod requln:ment,' tie adds. "Such an al'- ~ COIJld 1UhstanUally reduoa the C<Mlllty's cost of acqu1sJUon." From Pare J LUMBER ... from May l2 lo May 15. Manynard said that there were 34 p 11 es of demands to be negotiated whJCh prevented negotiations from '* ing completed prior to the contract ei- piraUoo date of Moy 11. Trento llld the negotiating commlltto reccmmtndtd deJaYinl a atrlke for a -k beyaod the Moy-11 date. but the -kerJ. 'lllllUICI It the low -olftr, voted WedneoUy nlabt la 1 aecret blJ. lot to -tminedfoielY. A«onllng to ~ olfidoll It Deloe 8"'°"" GI Newport Belch, most work lites in the county have not yet felt the lumber sbonoa<. Tbey ha ... llO-doy supply of lumber, rtocked hi a.ntJdpaUon of the lllrtke poalbllity. Aller Iba~ ..,. C<rdlng to Dan Sims, <Ol\llrudlon manager !or Llke.P"9tt$! Homea, MIWoo Viejo, "It'll hurl, to what nttnt Wf: don't know ." Official• or the Bulldln& Industry As3oclaUoo said thef had not re<elved word of llJmbtr aborUg• '•I any mojor Oranae County CMstrUctton altes 11 Yet. but llld they u pocted to h<or of trouble If tho llrll<e lasted beyond Mooday. • Services Slated For Developer Milton Kelly, 79 Services for. CtJll!om.ia real estate developer, MJltonKelly, who dled Tbur> day, wt11 be htld a\ noon Saturday •t the Pacific View Memon.J Park Chapel Mr. Kelly, 1 -of Newport Belch for the plot eitlit l""1. died ot the Lari: ll:lloa !foopilol ID Covtao; Ho WU "· He came to Caiilomio la 1917 ln>m -. where he had been la the fannlai and cottle buslaeas. Acl!H .In the Dulrle-Covino 1tt1 In twwlng developmen~ he lllo developed the Klanel\NI Eotates in Peadena. The Mllton Kelly Company """"'liy provldel 45,000 groad~ ttoall for the Pasadena Rose Parade. Mr. Kelly was a member of the Western Cattleman's Asloclatlon and the Lutheran Brotherllood. Survivors include his wife, Gertrude of the home, 2851 Alta Vl!la Drive: two MIM, Itfilton o( Newport Beach and Ken- nelll of Whittler; four d111ghten. Gentvtow Quarl>erg of San Diep, Vb1Jnlo Moe MacDowtl! of Newport Beach, Ruth Lucille H .... d GI Mlnnotota, Jou H°"' GI Nobroaka; 1 brother Thorvol GI Minae3oU. ood 11 groodcblldru. The a.v. Poul Oas of the Lutberon Qiurdl of Sia Clemfllte wlli oflk:ilto 1t !U10rol...-vtcos. Tiie r.mll7 his '"""led that frlandl wlshinc to do so may mu. 1 memorial: contributlon to Hoag Memortol u .. pital. Burl.al wUJ be at Pac.we View ).1tmorial Park. Stewart Quits Post WASHINGTON (UPI) -1110 White House IMOW1Ced today the mipUm of Dr. WOiiam H. Stewart u U.ll. -' JCnttaJ. 11 Nabb ed -in LS D Raid Mesa Pol~ Confi&cate $15,000 in Cubes JI)' AlmlUa L VINSEL One WOl!llll ooqht In connection with ., 'I' -""' -<he --ii llllll being hunted today. Lawmen raided a Heaalon lllQtorcycte Silto •genii Coota Me .. and Newport cans c•mn11me In Colla M ... 'l'hurod1y, • ' roondlng up 11 -. 111,noa. worth GI Buch police participated, 1rrostln1 five LSD, marijuana and counterfeit cur=--me~-. an-n:M.1rlne decorated for reng, six weapons and sevtral dptl, in-Vietnam war aervlce -and four women eluding me named Cocaine. occonlinc to ot the Sonia Ano Avenue addreol and two poCi<e roparta. U..iml plcllod UJ> .-... Tbe-rlld-lrigtr'9d-One wu tdonllfied 11 Roy W. Brown, compltcotlou dev<ioped during oo OU.,. • II, caplured oo 1 neorby Jlreet by ed li,000 L8D ptrdllJt by lllte norcotlc1 Potr<llman Jlck Koch, alter auertedly agentr-= lf>oulittarofta'ffii)Qr..._..,~iftbe-Tlld-and opparenUy dlspcoing the dnlf, lnvestll•toril 11kl. ol the ll,000 In atate mark• d One llUlpOd aUeiedJy tumed "" money. lawmen Invading the ramblinl reoidence Tbe c:osh has not been found, olibough al 1853 Sonla Ano Ave .. wllll 1 lbolgun. the orea wu tborouihly -~but wu ltisarmed without gunplay. ~ Soaked oo a varidy of charges, rang. Jim lrYlne, field llU]>OrVilor for the Ing from pooaeaion GI dangatOOI drugs llato Jullice Department'• bureou of le< Ille, culUvoUon of marijuolbo and narcotics eafcn:ement, aaid the I p.m. aaault with a deadly wupon were "these raid cllmued • month.Jong probe begun reotdenta of the -: by Newport Buch Poli<:e Detoctlvo Al Guy A. Runger, Z3, Greg E. Elshire, Eplteln. JI, Brown, Sherry L. Rodweller, 2Z, Vicki Roa d 's Future Tired , Impatient Judge Holds Salt Cre ek Fate salt creek Road'• futurt may ...n rest today on a decision by a man wbo has listened to nearly 10 boun of \eltimony en the limmerin& Orange Coa!t con- troversy. An obvioully tired and Impatient Superior Court Judge Cllude Ow"" cul into finll lf1!UJ!lenll la the dl8puto Thurs- day as Ille third oppearanc:e thll ....t by parties Involved l., the right of way fracu entered its fourth hour. He swept from the bench after twice admonlahtng Laguna Niguel CorporaUon attorney Mike McConnick to "not repeat times already." And he marched back ar1UD1enll that. I've listened to many O eanup Weekend Slate d f or CdM Ccroo1 del Mar's cbll"ber ol com- merce olong with Ibo Citf· GI Newport Beach will lpOOllOr a cleanup weekend May 2C and 2S for the arei'i citiien,, wtahtna !roe pickup of matulall r•aned UJ> from llrlll')I. '°"" one! boMqoent&. City trucks will pie~ up'b7 appol.1men1 old furnllurt, junk, appliancea and trim- ming.!. No building materials or dirt will be ac- cepted. Cultinga, resldenll are adviled, lhould be bundled in clwnps no longer than four feet. Items must be accessible and euy to handle by city crew~ More infDnnaUon is available by call- ing the chamber at ~- Pickup hours May 24 are 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.; for May 25, 7 1.m. to I p.m. opln flve mlnutol later to pva McCormick five more minutes and lllow Laguno Beach ottomey WUliam Wilcmlib the -time for final aummlng UJ>· It opPeired that Judge Owelll wu ready, to rule at that polnL But bO wl1bheld biJ declslon to allow Deputy Counse:l 1bomas Conroy two days to file a supplemental petition on a point whicb Conroy wanted to ciarily. Jt ls then, Judge Owens indicated, en- Urely up to Wilcoxen. If Wilcoxen decides Monday that Conroy's further argument does .Jot justify a reply, then Judge Owena will immediote(y rule on the Salt Creek Issue. But if Wllco1en decides that he wanta to reopood to the county attorney'• deciara- Uon, it will likely tate two or three more days for Judp: Owens to release his fib. dings. He will do one GI two things: -He wtll bock Llguao Niguel Corporo- tion's argument that their seizure of Salt Cretk Road through !"1UDll' aband-ent -proeedutto I I lawflll and 'cl!ajot be clilllengtd, thus opening the w • 1 to unhindered development of the 100-acre area "1lrTOUnding the right <1f way. That ruling would offer court support to 1110-•countyY ~ .lhat ill ....,_ donment of the tbaicugbfare wu lawful and that both the planning commission and board of supervisors did not betray any public trust whert they took the ac- tion. -Or he will find for Wilcoxen and rule that the Art Colony attorney has indeed proved that there was an element of fraud in the maneuvers that led to aban- donment of Salt Creek Road. Such 1 rul· ing will signify Judge Owens' agreement with the argument th.a( the State Consti- tution expreuly forbicls any action which is calculated to deprive the public of a right.of-way. MAY SPICIAL D. Ralnlo, 18, and Kathryn E. Ml!Mlck, 20, according to st.a~ agents. Others arrested include Thomas R. Nlebur, 22, of 359 Walnut St., Newport Beach, William E. Rodweller, 22 . of 2205 canyon Drive, Costa Mesa , Linda S. Markham, 22, of 2326 Elden Ave., Costa Mesa, Philip-Alfano, 23, of~ Sea.shore Di!~. NOl\'l)Ol'I, Betch and Michael D. Van Noorden, Zl, of San Dimas. Investigators sald A I f a n o , an unemployed ml'Chan.ic, was picked up at a home at 2352 Cornell Drive, carrying $$.$0 at the time. 'Ibey identified Els.hire as the one who allegedly levelled a &hotgun at lawmen who burst into bis room. The ma1e suspects were booked lnlo Costa Mesa City Jail and the ~males were taken to Orange County Jail as in·· vestigalors worked overnight and Into to- day, _wrapping up details of the case. Harbor Council Sets Discussion On Marijuana Pot or Not? This is the ti Ue of a panel diac:usslon cm marijuana, scheduled by the Harbor Area Coordinating Council nm Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Hoaa: Memorial Hospital Conference Center. Panelisl:I will include two lawmen, Sgl Jack Calnon of the Costa Mesa Ponce Department vice and intelligence detail aod Detective ~ Konkel of the Newport Beach Police Department j u v e n.J J e bureau. Colla Moaa High School Assbtant Prin- cipal Bill Vaughn will represent the educators' ·viewpoint. Medical and legal eJ:Pel111 who will participate have not been named. Besides the marijuana s e m i n a r , Orange Coast YMCA representative Alice Fox and a Lions Club spokesman will disctlss i:oala: and activities or their youth service groupe. · ProPosed changes in the Coordinating Council's by·laws will be discussed and members will vote on the final recom· mendatioos. From P q e J A.IRPORT •.. Marine facility is their runways, 1 taxi area and the tower," be said. A new tenninal for civilians, parking Jots and maintenance structures would be built at non·military e:rpense in what he jokingly termed the "Carpemter-EI Toro Plan." Carpenter drew strong I a u g h t e r midway through his 40.minute speech when. after hitting at aircraft noise critics, he glanced toward an opening door In the Ba1boa Bay Club banquet room. The door opened and anU·noise leader Dan Emory entered tardy. "Too bad, Dan," he quipped. "You missed the best part." Chairs 1rom 20% '° 50% off ' • OUTSTANDING VALUES ON DISCONTINUED FLOOR SAMPLES . , NOW IN STOCK .•• LARGE SELECT~S OF QUALITY CHAIRS FROM THE FOLLOWIN& L , NATIONAL, . MARSE CARSON, HIBRITAN, CENT , MONTEREY, JAMESTOWN LOUNGE, ,ACIFIC, UALITY, AND MANY MORE. IE AMON& THE F RST TO MAKE YOUR SELECTIONS AT THESE UNIELIEVAILE PRICES •• , ALSO MANY PAIRS TO CHOOSE FROM. INTIRIOIS NIWl'ORT llACH , __ 1 lntorlot LAGUNA BEACH ~17'17 Wootdlfl Dr.~ Dool...... Ml No • --AT 'Ill ' AYlllalllo AID-ljSID rth c .... Hwy. 4""551 ..._ M "'-.,_ et ._,. C.., .... 1JU Oftlf ,...,_, 'nL t ' I • I, I I '• I I , t I • CHECKING .• -up -~ ., • Heads -Look-Yum By I.. 'M: BOYD TO LOOK YOUN,llER The mnaller a woman's head looi!o, tllio more youthful she seems 14. be. That is why Miss Ingrid Bef'llDll!I. lot instance, appears to be fn less than her actual age. She ha's a small head. And ln that classic "For Whom the Bell Tolls,"~lhe was . characterized still less aged by a short haircut whiCh created the illusion ber head was even smaller. A Los Ange.let hairdresser therifore recOmmend& the short haircut to llghl-hearted ladies who want. :to represent ih~veS IS ~ than their. years. CERTAIN Sl'ECIF8 ol but· 1<>rflY lives up to 50 percent longer with tts bead cut off ••• . h11'i IS a mystery, but husbands are not· as-likely to Pet ai:; homesick as wives. Records of ma tr i mania 1 counselors indicate twice as many wives as huSDands choose to vacation w it h parents ..•. PLEASE file this: A man has about 750 muscles, a caterpillar about ".,000 ..•• THOSE TYPING TEACHERS in tearcb of au exercise con- taining every letter in the alphabet might also ewnlne the 21st verse, of the -7th chapter of Ezra. • • . ''MIIJJEH is what all the ''Gun!:!noke" cast most af. fection8tely cali Mr. Milburn "Doc Adams" Stone. TOUGHEST ot the Norse warriors was said to be an old boy with 12 sons. Every time he charged into batUe, he toss· ed aside his annor, and went absolutely wild, cuttirig and slashing in all directions. His name was Berserk, whence ccmeth our word. • • • SOME FOtlt GET too dignified for LitUe A1gemoon McGuire But not me. How about this one: "Little Algernoo McGuire. • .Set bis grandpa's beard an · fire. , .Grandpa, toasted, was improved. , .All harsh irritants BANANAS -To p u t bananas in the refrigerator or - not to put bananas in the refrigerator -. that is the question • Just checked this out with a banana specialist for the benefit of a client who inquired about the matter. "Refrige~tion doesn't hurt their flavor," said t b ,e specialist, ''it just tu.rm them black, that's all." That's enoogh. Who wants to ,at black bananas? Incidentally, this specialist suggests fancy folk, · who want a Thailand treat, peel the bananas, dip same in chocolate syrup, and quick freeze them. Nothing tastier, he says. RAPID REPLY : Yes, Mr. G., claim is that snails do in- deed have 14,000 teeth, but nobody contends they brush after every meal. Your questiom and com-. ments arir iotlcomtd and toiU bt med wherever pot- .!iblt in "Chtcking Up." Addrt3.S ma i l to L. M. Boyd, in cart of tM DAILY PILOT, Box 1875, NttDpOrt Beach; Uolif., 9266~: Men in SerYrice Pvt. J.C. Dennis J. Reige1, &on of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Reigel of 422 Magnolia, Costa Mesa, J& serving with the Nuclear Weapons Training Center, Pacific located at the U.S. Naval Station San Diego. The center provides training and inspection support for the U.S. -Pacific Fleet in nuclear weapons capability. Four Orange Coast men are serving aboard the nuclear· powered attack aircraft car· rier USS Enterprise with Task Force 71 in the South China Sea. They ere Seaman Thomas , C. Robson, son of Mr. and , Mrs. James H. Rob.!on of 2.21 Geneva St., and Interior Com· mante&tlont Elect r ician Fireman Claude K. Winfree, son_of_Mr. and Mrs. Claude N. Winfree of 5201 Skylark Drive, both of Huntington Beach ; Seaman Appren. Jobn _H. Hag· ge, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hagge of 1012 Emerald Bay, Laguna Beach and Fireman Appren. Thomas N. Clark, son of Mr. and Mts. H. N. Clark of 641 St. James Road, Newport Beach. tington Beacb, has be en assigned to a unit of the Military Airlift Command al McCbord AFB, Wash. The airman, a computer operator, is a graduate · of F'ountain Valley High School. Sgt. Jerry L. Piersall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Piersall of 900 Sea Lane, Corona del Mar, has been assigned to ~larch AFB, as an ad- ministrative specialist in a unit of the Air Weather Serv· ice. The sergeant is a · 1965 graduate or Corona del Mar High School and attended Orange Caast College before entering the service. Pvt. 1.c. Robert J. Arion, 22, son of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Ar.1on-of 1445 Temple HiUs Drive, Laguna Beach, has been ... assigned to the 25th Infantry Division, Vietnam. An infantryman, he is serv- ing with Company A, ·3rd Bat· talion of the Division's 22nd Infantry. He received his B.S. degree ln 1968 f r o m Northwes tern University, Ill. , Stordeeper Z:C. Job L. Three Orange C.oast men Davf1' USN, son of H. B. 'have completed basic trairrlng Davis ol 689 Pl~ St., Costa at Lackland AFB, Tex. and Mesa. is serving aboard the have been assigned to La.Wry , attack transport USS Cambria AFB, Colo, for training in the at Norfolk, Va. arlnanement systems fiPd. 'The ship is one or six that They are Alrmu WUllam H. will comprise the Sixth Fleet Stock, son of Mrs. Charlotte A. Amphibious Task Force in the Stock of 1105 Pembroke Lane, Mediterranea n Sea. Newport_ .Beach; A 1.r man Orlateplaer C. 81rOn1, son of Mn. Patricia Fredericksen of 5291 Loyola Ave., Westminster and Airman J o b D D. MartUm, son af Mrs. Mary Panon of 216 Huntington Ave., HunUngton ~ Bus Drivers Win\Praise Airmln StOct Js~a graduate "Driving a M:hool bus Js a ol 1-11 High School, Whi~ tough job. In fact, I was Uod tier; Airman Strong graduated we bad ~a new driver on the from Westminster !Dgb School job at Milt other day and by i and attended Golden West o'clock he had quit." Coilqe be!"" entering the Wllh that note of ap- service and Airman Markham preclatlon for the wort· ~Y ts. a graduate of Huntin(lon ,do, Newport-Mesa S up t Beach Rich School and at· William C u n n i n 11 h a m an- ttnded Orange Coast College nounced that three tcbool before entering th~ service. _ district bus drivers p!~ctd Airman Strongs father. hJgh in competition at a recent Ra1 Strong, llvu a& %J5 • l'()U"'vwkle Driver Training Walnut St., Coota Mesa. Institute. Men more ~ Floris Greeley toot first In • 95*" -·-.. IWl.Y, !'JlOT IS Geprge W: ashington . ' . '"""W ll$ Be ·Sterile? SAii' J'llANeJSCO (UPI) -~ lnclade.mnaD laleo, Geors• w~. l•tJier ol urnasuaJ.lotJcb~ relatiff sterfU. our,~. ~ have btto .tY. and Jorge breuts for • ' stmJe: J,_: • , male,' . 1 •, Dr: Jt~.'1'8'1!111 Smith allO "II ·I• not> our, im.ti11M to ~the t4tb annual meetlog o~ malign the Jman,11 Dr. Smith , ~ AmerlColi llrolO()cal As-•"!!I," • 'IOC!a~w'aiblniloo waa pi<>-TM doct<ir n<il<d that one ol ' bably bl'Old-lltjlped and· 1111·· Waslmigtoo's . biggest dlsap- ' 'tireasted. ·: · ' . pointmei;,ts in life 1was tbal: The <BriUllHiom doctor, who "he never ' fathez:ed a 1' Y. now reskles'ln Richmond. V children.'' . pldtbe~anclpby~j T!ie· pbyslel.an aald desdiptions·"of"Uii first Pral· Washiligton. wile ~~ w~s 1 dent indicJte . be may }Jave marri~ ah,d widowed ~fore ! betnt affllcted with a' type of she aDd Wasl\init.40 met She ., Kftnefelter'a l)'Ddrome. had , four .chijdteir by the ~ SYritptomi of :the c:omples pr~lou.s marriage-. • .. . . n..-..·~IL'44& • ' ) " -·1·_-,·-I : • The lightest 18" Color Set you:Clin bUYI · · So easy to carry from room:to·rO'qm . • Solid copper circuits replace .o~ · . fashioned "li•nd wlr.ll)g" In "°'8ntl•l chusls t~ouble sPQJs .. . • Super.powertul New Vista VHF ·tuner, · the most powerful In the industry • Extr•·Hns!Jive Solid State UHF. transistorized tuner • F111mous Mew Vista picture quelHY auures l0cked In color puritJ " ' ' ' • s;uy ,color quick tunl~ and picture shilrpneu control : ' . . ' "· • Automatic cl...onia control ell •licNiklGf· stliblllm,color Mtllng . ' ' . . ..._._.... ........ ~ ........... ' .t ~ ;•,t .., ' ". • . ~ l . I .. ., .• ... "' ,., ,, "'' '· '" ' • • ' • ' • • .._ • • • • ' > , Alnau · llnUU E. Blktr, n1 ol Mr. Ind Mrs. <lordoo F, Biker ol l!Oa A Stt.el, H,,.. the sman bwl clau and Ken 1 I.lark.• placed BeoMd and joanne Evans <fgbtb In the I tar~buscl.us,~u~. ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~..:.I..~~~~~~-=================-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-~===-=-_, ... ,..._ • \\ --------· • - • ' • ' . • • • ~ • • • • • ' ' • • ·-· -- ·I DAD.Y PIL8'1' ED~B.i,u PAGE j Smooth Redistricting On May 2&, Newport Beach city councilmen will give final -and routine -approval ID a new C)Ollllci). manic dlslrict map. · The plan changes signlllcantJy the boundaries of all &eVOD dlstricll. Thal ii DO •."'11{ile; The periodJc re- dlstricting procedu.re, compeUecl by lha cfty d>anlr, always -result In mejot -UIJlllltllll. What Is surprising II the amoolllw1 wWi wblch councilmen have achieved Ille retb_, of their bome di.mids.· In sharp contrast wilh redJJlrlcting efforts of .,..i city councils, municipal Jawmaken thll time have c1oae the job with a minimum o! conlroveny and ._., And councilmen did It themselves, with the aid of the city staU. No huge citizens committee was assigned the task, as was the case six ymrs ago. No paid consultant was involved in the process, as was the case two years ago. And nobody on the council complaintl!i about the ~ of being gerrymandtred out of office, as bad the case in the ~· . · This· comiJlallll, m fact, tirougbt ·-the "geo-graphical vlofence" -as Coancilman Paul J, Gruber righlly tenned ll -lmpoled on·the cllstrict map adopted two years ago. . . That was done by the old countil, l)( f'OUl'Se. The new one has corrected the 11geograp1:lical violence.'' In the new map, for inllance, Balboa Island is no longer split into two districts. It is now encompassed by Ed Hirt.h's District 5, which is enough. AJso, Hirth's district no longer Jeaps across the Uppe~ Bay. Other improvements in the new map include place· n1ent .oL the Lido Shops area in th~ same dist:ict ({)o.. reen Marshall~s District 3)-that embr:acej Lido Isle. That is a logical pairing. Additionally, MacArthur Boule- varcl ,_ aerves u a boundary between Dlal11ct 8 (-Sbellon) and Diltrict' 1 (Llndaley Panonl). The new allJDlmenll, of C<>UrSe, a,. not perfecl /1$ .. ..,.,.ncuman !lee Coot pointed ool llwo weeks aeo, Irvine Terrace, will remain divided by districts 5 and 8. Coot, a reoklenl of Irvine Terrace (the District 5 biolf), made some~·· J.arcely Involving tba iDlecrllY of the nei '• bonlen and population balaJ)ce. His, pies bad · political overtones, bowever, since bis house. ls involyed and District 8's seal 11 up for grabs Iii lll70. · Councilmen, .bow ever, remained unmoved. For no other reason, it appears, than the fact that political wounds take a long lime to beat. And there are on to- day's council a Joto! polillcians .w!>o still carry wounds -or al least unhappy memories -collected ·during --Cook's eight-year tenure as a councilman. Dee Cook, in other words , was the wrong man to plead on Irvine Terrace'J behalf. At least with this council. But that has been the ooly ripple o! coiltroversy in the rediatricting procO!p, wblcb baa set, we hope, a precedent for future city councils. State's Sign Goofs Costa Mesa for years bas sUffered the embarrass- ment of having its Broadway called "Broadway Street" on a conspicuous downtown sign erected by the state highway people. Now those same people have renamed Newport 's famous Jamboree Road. It's called "Jamboree Boule-- vard" on all directional signs along the newest stretch ol the San Diego Freeway. NexlJ bey'll be calling Newport Boulevard "New· port Place." -- !NI [May They Dear Gloomy Gus: Derisions Do 'Not lnapede Law Enforcement ' . ProUdly Wear ' (fheir Badge By EIUWORTH L. RICJIAJlllllON Mhllater N~~o!Clmdl LopaalluU A fun.,,.ge ad in all lhe college ~ewopapen In the U.S. recenUy uked ~tudenta to please Write in t.o bninns !elders il they had greal doubts aboul the )'o'orthwbllenes-! of a business career. In lhts counlry where iru.iness ts ~ and the Natiooal A81ociaUon of Mamlfac- lurers is THE fralmllly to belont to - his kiod of questioning mates - \,onder. Are Ibey -lhal perbapo C,ne cannot find fulftllinent In hi111hwa? ~ Two years ago tn a much publiclled flews item it was reported that represen- )aUves of a major oil company bad more 11\an 11,000 interviews in a business ~chool t.o uncover 300 men -only 300 out .,r 11,000 interviewed wanted N> wort in )>usiness. I · THE FllEfil!MEN lbal eotered Uni· j..,..;1y of Califomfa al Irvine lul fall, like olber lrubmen in Ibo colleges or lhe U.S. answered a q--.Jre ...,_ ~ucted by the "-lean Council on i;ducatfoo. Nearly 200 questiom aboul )heir backgrounds, altiludOI and ambi· !ims were asked. ; Eleven percent wanted to become research scientists which was almosl Jhree t i m e 1 more than the naticnal everage of 4.2 percent; U.7 percent, or lwice the national average of I.I percent, :Wanted to become medical dod«s al UCI. Only 3 percent wanted to become )rus1ness men, whereas 37.2 percent listed Wbea ll'1 1&alnst the law In New· porl -1 ... --Illes-men to operate, why are Cable Vision door-to-door salesmen per- miUed to try to force pay TV on us? -ltF.McG. their father's occupation u "business ....... IN A BIGBLY Idealistic generation of college l&Udenb, UCl students - i.e., the ~ -are more ldealisUc than their count.rpar1I ....., the nation. Sil· ty pereent ol the. entering freshmen said ft Wtl ai -milil olljectlve to "help olberl in clllflcully," and 2U pereenl said Ibey plan to join the Peace Corps or Villl, cnmpared to lLS pereenl na· tiOlllllly who plan to enter tboee service orpolzallonl. Wbt does tbls mean? Jt means that they mre apparently looking for meaning -~ thlt makes mwe to them. Tbtf are trying to develop a reverential l:nJlt. in life. They are saying "yes" to life I WI SEEM TO BE members of a socie- ty If peat ntrernea. At cne end there is mp idealism and at the other extreme viOltnce and degradallon. II is good to kDOlf lhal then is a .......,...,. ol idul1lm amoac the yoanc for so often we hoof oriy ct their~ with drul' or their lnvo)vement with the poliol. I ncalt what Ibo lillle boy with the bi.ct eye said when he wu uted who gave It to him. He replied, "Nobody a:ave ii to ll!e. 1 Ud to flPI for It." 1 am glad that &he fresbmen at UCI have not ab- ~ their moral responsibility and are wi~ to llghl for Ideals. Jn the slruggle they Will receive many black eyes but lllllY llloy proudly wesr their badge of ldentiflcltkln with honor? This is no time to lwitchl Scramble for Housing. . i . SW"geons have poetponed operations, h.lppies have cut their hair and families jiave deslroyed their )leU -all In lhe Jn. terest d. finding a desirable place to live Jn Manhattan. To get the jump on other epartment-hunters, l they read the bbituary columns, bribe doormf!n. movinl hlen and even hospital interns for tips. J.lnpublished listings have been stolen from the printer of the VIiiage ·volct, preenwich Village newspaper. AU of urban America is feeling a hou5- fng pinch, but in Nt"W York iL aeems ltrorse than elsewhere. Little moderate or l<1w-ioo:lme housing has been built there ilnce 196.1, a year new building codes I ---89 Geo,..e ---. Dear George: I am an IS.yei.r~ld girl with l5hort hair and. I wear Jeans and m<l1'1 sblr11 bul I'm Wrlbly alroid l llJU atve an Impression of beioi feminine. What can I do! SUE Dur Sue: Even in this day aod age some -women •re buically female •nd _ ,..'ll just ha .. to Utt with It. COlfP'IDE!l'l'IAL TO llTL L - BUCKLgy: Dool worry Jbout -they.., -JUll u -,.. pie llllllUou'ft ,..,. lbaD _. pe. (Sml ,_ pn>blemt to 0-. ' and go OUI and gel """"' ,,... prob- lem. Sjl<foc 1J hen.) .. r were impmed. Two-thirds of the existing U mlllioo..apoftmeots' or• llill Under the rent control that was iropoeed. orJiinally in World War Il. The lour million New Yorkers who live In them slay pil; lhey have about tbt only cheap boulhle in the city. F,.. Ibo res! of ~ U(>Ocially -In Manhaltsn, die is hllb and fl'lllnl hlPtr• "A DID urning '35,00G a year bu It l<qb liVilll In Mam.ttu." the prtlWeril ol a re.I est.le OOIDPlf'7 told New York mapdne. To eue lbe pinch, tbt M&yor'1 Rent Gt•-Board pr.,...i on MU'Ch 10 lhal OW1lm ct 4llO,OOG llllOOOtrolled apor!ments lhnll future fncrea.., to 15 percent every two years and reduce any recent incrtases that were higher. Tbe real ..iai. 1ncMUy 1 n d RAplbllcon ~ John v. Lindss¥ .. ..,..,. Bui the pr-t " the ~~Counell , Francia L Smith, tbe......,.. o1 bod laflll -.. -nductlool •I>' --lo their Ajlril bUJln(J. The u..i.., adminiatralioo .......... lhal _. limo WU aoeded and lhal tU&lbla -----by 'l'llllndl,y, May l. '11111 da1' asrumes alplfk:ance in a ytar when New Yort O· ty wm elect a mayor . People, Not ·courts, Are the Villains To Iba Edlto" ln recent yean It has b e c o m e fashionable to attack the decislons of, and the judges on, our nation's courts, most frequenUy !hose of the Supreme Court of the United Stales. Their -ts blame the courts for handcuffing the poUco throogb "ultr• liberal" decisions involving due procea of law. They point ·to the rising crime rate u aii u•mple of tbe resuJta: court decisions are havinc: on Jaw enkrcement. Many of these people felt 11hal the CoostituUon ls an unreuonable banitr which the police must confront in order ' to ezercise jllllice quickly and elflclenUy. Public opinion seems to express the feel· ing that the only good criminal ii the one who is lllflering behind ban. II 1J to the opinions of theae people that J react. IN THE FIRST PLACE, the recent decisiom of the Supreme Court do not impede law enforcement officen from carrying out their duty, nor do they con· tribute to the rising crime rate. All these deci.&ions do (e.g. Miranda and Escobedo) is to ensure those con- sUtutional rights to everyone, equally, under the law. Tbeae rulings have con- centrated on guaranteeing the protection of 1uspecta under police interrogation . Suspects now baye the rigbl to coanaeI during queatlonlng, and upon arnst musl be apprbed of tbiJ rl&ht unlfer the Filth -~ Tbeae dedsioos were orgenUy needed. They did not ariM out of any subvenl.ve plot by "gutless," libero! judges to undermine coote.mporary American society. They arOle out of the enormoos illegal practices by the police to gain quick confessions ol guill IT IS THE TRADITION In this country that an individual accused of a criminal offense is innocent ol that offense unUI be is proven guilty, by a court of law, beyond a reasonable: doubt. It aeetllS U tllout)I ID WlCOllltollable emoUonal spasm has cast thla country U.. to the camp of "law and order," jusUce be1n& ID<ldental to procechn. Tbt eye for an eYe and the tooth for a tooth concept bu never really left us; on-· ly the metbodl employed are chan1ed. Punishment has never aolved the crime probletn. Rebabllitalion In our pilonl is having little influence in changing in- mates' atUtudea at morals. SO IT SEEMS THAT we need drastic changes in our present policies of punish- ment and revenge. Understanding and positive encouragement, perhaps, might be parts of the answer to a complicated problem. The court3, moreover, an not the villains. People a~. Until we can learn to approach those problems of poverty, ignorance and pre· judice, which have beset mankind throughout history, then our fate here on earth seems to be hanging on a thin thread of destruction. As attorney Melvin Belli so aptly slated," Legislatures do legislate 'for the biggest of. us, but u long as the supreme courts give their attention to the least of us, lhen all of us will be protected.' " GEORGE V. INCAMPO Domestic Commanl•t• To the Editor : Some Americans urged that we be permissive with U.S. CommurUst.s. "After all" they said, "we have few Com- munists. Such small numbers can't hurt us much. Besides, our domesUc Reds are well-behaved." Some of these 1ame Americans ~ McClrthYllm smear tactics agains t anyone who reoognizes the dangen of communism: "He's a fascist witch- hunter and sees a C.Ommunist under every bed." Deliberate c b a r a c t e r asuWaUon befalls those .,...ho warn ot communism's work .. 1'1tt DANGER IS that disruptive Com· munlst activities go unchecked since responsible people are muuled. Expedi- ent politiciana appeal to wishful thinking. They agitate against appropriate anti· Communist actions. The. resultant half- way actions (at b:>me and abroad) drag the confiict on without 80lving it (instead ol applying appropriate re.sources to suc- cessfully end the struggle). Then it's easier to uy, "Why go oo? Let's give up." Let's reaffinn the rights of the people. Be cautious of those wbo attack anyone who informs you of communism. Such detractors do enough ham that the/ should ttetive no support. Distinguish between the patriot who speaks Crom facts and the crackpot who unjustly cans others Communist Support strong, swift acUon to protect the rlghta of the people. A DISCIPLINED, militant minority can be effective against the unorganized. majority. Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) has only 6,000 dues-paying. naUonat members. They have 35,000 chapter members on 215 campuses and perhaps 100,000 adherents. (U.S. News and World Report, p. 34. 5-12-69). SOS is behind almost all the college disturbances. SOS was involved in disputes with authorities on 200 cam· puses. Members' philosophies range from youthful idealism to destructive radicalism. Michae1 KJonsky (SDS's top official) says, "Our primary task is to build a Marxist-Leninist revolutionary movement." (March 30). Klonsky calls himself a revoluUonary Communist. SOS wants to destroy, annihilate. and tear down. Most members are white, from af· fluent or midd1Mlass families. !\\ARK RUDD OF SOS spearheaded the attack that closed Columbia in 1969. SDS led the Harvard rebellion. SOS seizes any campus issue, exploits It. e:rpands it and stirs uninvolved students into action. SOS feeds the arous- ed student.! suggesti.ons that create a con- frontation with college officials. Issues Include Vietnam War, draft, ROTC, campus recruitment by com· panies making war materials and military research projects. Or they create Issues {such as over-enrolling in a class, then denouncing the university for Jarge classes). J[ the university grant! SOO demands, the demandr a r e escalated. Unreasonable deinands are lumped with valid demands -and lh£ whole package presented as "non- negotiable." SDS WAS instrumental in organizing the 1967 Pentagon march lo protest the Vietnam war. They helped plan and lead the demonstraUons in Chicago against the Democratic convention. SOS is mov· ing into the high schools and industry. Our "tame" Communists are doing what our bleeding hearts said cnuld ne ver happen here. Do domestic Reds pose a potential threat? Are we to let SOS.type groups have their way in the U.S.? Or will we put people in responsible positions with enough realism, cnmmon sense and backbone to make sure "crime doesn't pay?" LEONARD WRIGHT Thoughtful Couple To the Editor: On Friday, May 9, al approximately 6: IS p.m., I was walking my grey poodle dog down Marguerite in Corona del ~far. The dog impulsively darted across the street and was hit by a car. The gentleman whose car hit the dog came right over, asking if I were the owner and to apologize. I assured him it was certainly not his fault and Uiat I bad witnessed the accident. He then left and a couple driving behind him in a black Lincoln Continental came ov er to me and kindly took the dog and me to the veterinarian. THE G&!'ITLEl\1AN went into the clinic with me and berore he left told me he would like me to phone him Jetti'ng him and his 1vile know the condition of the dog. Unfortunately, in my grief, for "Neeps" did die, I misplaced the paper with the man's name on it. I do, however. want to express my sincere appreciation to this thoughful Corona del Mar couple. WARREN JOHNSON 300 Million Malnourished Children ~1ore than 80 perceDt or the total brain growth of the human being takes place during Ute first three years of life. If, during the mot.her'a pregnancy and lactation. she anl:l the child are suffering from malnutrition.· the later mental ability ol.. the baby may bt 10 to 2.5 percent below normal. Today, it i! estimated that ap. Quotes Mn. Cll•lt1 W. KnlJl!I, S.F. -"The lllOll lmpnrtal tb1ni In aey relalionshlp ts ftnt to know youraeU, and to mate an equ11Uy gre.at effort to know your partntr.'' Eleuor Bradley, S1nt.a Menfca -''No me1111 of C'l'OU-COUntry travtl is rtal1y u enjoyable 11 lhe tialnl of tll< put. They have 1 ve:ry Important place in our world." J,..,. D. Leoty, 'ftltlier -"A fr1end ls tll)'one you meet in a moment of stress wbo comfona 1VU fer the moment. who hel pa you have a more conltnt.ed Ille, who forces you · to µpand out of yoor ltend or lhinkln1 .• , , ' $i~y ' J lffi'ris · ' --,,; ... ···-- proximately two·thirds of the children -D> million -ln the world are undernourished and have aome degree of retardation ol growth as a result of low nu trition. THESE STATEMENTS and figures come from Dr. David B. Coqrsln who. durlng the early 1950s, discovered that iow dietary intakes of \lil-amin B6 could d11turb the central nervous 1y1tem acUvlt.y In infants, which regulates brain functlons. More recently, as be report.! la "Unicef News." atUdies from develop- tna: countries in South Amer ica. Africa, Indonesia and the Pbl.llppines indicate that undernutriUon .. affects the. me.ntal i1eveloprnent l.lia-perform· a.nee of children." ~bllit,y test.! given lo chronically undernourlshed young· sters showed they performed at a signi.ftcantl,y lower level than the well· nourllbed. INTERUTINGLV enough, D r . Counln polnll out. the newborn1 in &ome of the developlnc countries showed "iuptrior abiUtie1" on first neurological exami..natiOl).S , in contrast to ~ level of activity seen fn bables from Europe and the U.S. But within a year their scoTts de<:reased .to lower tllan normal levels. Apparently an adult can withstand even severe and pnilonged malnufrl· lion without pennanent damage, but malnutrition during the first years produces cellular changes that 111! ir· r eversible and neve.T completely cor· reeled. These limitations of mental perform ance. Dr. CoW'si.n • warn.a us, "are therefore malnt.alntd a n d perpetuated Into succtedint genera- tions." NEW TECHNIQUES In hlocl'lemlstry ha ve enabled us to separate tbe factor ol ou triUon from the wbole complex of environment. and tt ts now generally believed that lack of a proper djet_ mot• lhaQ anything else, retards the mental abilities in regions wbere starvation is the rule. It Ule child fail.s to get off to a good atart, the adu lt 11 doomed to below...average performance lo modun soci ety. What thia means. of course., Lt that providing enough food . of tlle rigbl sort,, to the 300 million maJnourlshe(I • children In the world is more than a "humane" gesture ; it is the only way to raise the level of perform ance in those countries and lo prevent bolh the population explosion and the food shortage from combining to bury tho human race. Survival , not philan· thropy, commands our immediate at· tention to this grave, and growing, problem of brain-food for babies. ----- Friday, May 16, 1969 The editorial pagt of lite Doily Pilot i t tks to inform and stim· ulatc: rt odc,., by pre.,enting thi• new1J)(lptr'i opinions and· com. nutntary on topic1 o/ intereA lln.d rignfffeance, b11 prot1t.0mg • fOTUm for the t.ipre.ssfon of our readers' opiniOTlf, ond bv prtltntlng t.ht dfNrse trif~ pointa of informed ob1trwn and spokesm1n on topici of t.hc daJ/. Robert N. Weed, Publisher • ;e ,. n- 1g ,. Id st V• 1g " a ,. lr " Id :'t :r ly le r. IC >g " .it d d ·k d " ic ,. n ,. •r " y JI l ~ I h d • I• t- I· • • . . ' Tickef to Mu ·sic Jn .cltide.s Pat.t¥ StopS • ' lo I " " ' • Preview,S: Prove· \ . Success Ah~a,d • ' . Orance·Cow!ly wlJl lie. aasu!ed;of bavtng:flne music again nat year thanks to the efforts of two bard-work· ~ ~ Jl'IJUl'"-wbicb have planned·traditl008;1 lund· raJ.!!DC-.events lflis monll!-. . • . The Eutbluff. Asaoclales '!'ill lfool a Cliampagne cruise of Newport.Har!Jor SUndaY,.May 25 beg!MlftJI at 5 p.m. wben·Buests boanl a toi&boal. · Mr; and Mrs. Paul J . Bergdabl will open their home alter the cruise for a buffet box .supper, and the fe!itivi .. ties will continue throughout the evening. · Mrs. Bergdahl and Mrs. Edward Maloney (above, Jeft to right) are so inspired by_ the id~ of. a crnise and box 'supper that they decided to preview the aMual event for twi.ce the enjoyment. A daytime evfllt is planDed by the Irvine Terrace .Philharmonic Group Wednelda;y, May 21, in the home and l&"dens of Mrs. Lyman Faulkner, 521 Avocado Ave., Coram del Mar, in the form of a Parisian Fi.ea Market. Bargain bunters and aboppwl will > disoover • wealth of lntereotinf and lllUllllal finds in th" varied booths and will be Obie to Ol'der lunc:h In a sldonlk cafe from a new and dlfferenl menu. Mrs. Kolman Spelleticb Jr. and Mrs. Ernest Yenz. er ~-· CJgbt, left to right) try a recipe from the Flea Market Fare cookbook, sure to be one of the most p<'>pu- lar items at the flee market. ' · What do a •P~an Ilea lll&rbl and champape cndle of N~ SU.... INrft to do with fine mUllo .... snet orclteotru! !'Italy, ior lbeoe .,. the Wilt two IUppot\ ~J: of the Orau1e County Pbllbannonic Society riiN to bolp bring the· Los An&eln Pldlbarmonlc Or<:llestra, Giiier 11cellent groups, and ouUtan"dlng arUitl lo Or· ance Colmty each year. · Th& two active support 1roup1, the. Irvine Terrace . Pllllba1JDOnlC Group and the Eutbluff PhllhafmaDlc Alloclates, will bolt the btnefit. events Wednnday, May 21. and Swlday, May 25. , Finl will be the eiJ!hth amiual'-Flea Market of ·the Irvine Terrace Group, "WednHday, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. . Mrs. Lyman Faulkner, 521 Avocado Ave .•. Cotol)a dll Mar, will open her home =llldetll"for the Frencb- lnspired event wblcb II a v · e shopper'• peradloe. Coffee and wine wlll b& ...-ved lbroUlbout the day for the enjoyment of mamben and gu..U who will ~e ,\hn>U&h booths olltrlllC band-knit sweaters, an-liquee, toys, boots and bolltlQue Items. Other booths will have olijects· <If art, nearly new clothing, sweets all baited by memb&rl of the Pbilbar· moolc group, jewelry and pelntlngs .. ,\nother favorite .booth 1'fil b& the one offering the cookbook, Flea Market Fare, a collection of the favorite r&clpes of members of the AJaoclates. 'Hard ·at work creattna. the Pjri.oian almo6pbere are the Mmes. Rod Harrod, cbalrmait; William Metcalf, antiques; 'Vllllam Car!Jon, book•; Ralph Morgan, bou· tique; ·Roy Hallberg, llowero; Harry Bal:er, clothing: Lloyd Grelory,' d&c0ratlon1; Ricbllld Nelson, Hickory P'anm; Robert lllnrlcbl, .food ; Jobn;Crlnnp, ObJOCll Of art, and Doris eemebell. "'eet s®I>--Tick& at $1, will· be avollable at the door or m~y be purchased from any member. Also busy with Jut-mtnute preparations are me~ ben Of •the Eastblufl ·Asooclates, who have calendared a champagne cruise of Newport Harbor Sunday, May 25, beginning at 5 p.m. Associates and their guests will board .a tug9<>at .lor the festive cruise, which will be livened with music by the Versailles a group of five young musicianS"arid a female vocalist. • Following thecruise, member~ and guests wij!-od· joum to the home of Mr. and Mrs, Paul J. Bergdabl to continue the party wllh a buffet bot supper. . l'larming this annual event are the ·Mme1; Edward Maloney, ways and meena chairman; Frank A. C<loney, public ·nlaiiOlll cbalnnan,. and· Warner· P. · Bor· die~. Rusaell Pang, Guy R. Reily and Theodore Tafe, ·~memben. . ' ' . " I ' BIA ANDIRSON,.'l4!1tor ''*'· """" .., ,,. • ,... n Sweet Nothings Are Music to Ear·s ::B·ut Hubby Can't · :Sing DEAR ANll LANDERS: 1111 h;-111 • nner 'Yer1 deulOUltraUve bot llnce ... been morned be t<luses t.o say..,. ~~ ·ri k>vtna word to me. We are aot foCift, Ann. I'm 27. Gorko 11 II. ' .• Lu& nigbt_ we wwe waf.ebinC a movie A N N LANDERS ~ TV. It WU the IQOvie w~ had teen • together on our flnl dole. I mnanbe< 10 WM It -ti ID I_, 1-...... il"'U how Gorko held my buwl .end pareoUy Gor111 la· -iloooii. li'I - 1queued it durln& the romantic porll. 1U1 tRM --~ le,l ~:'.'.'!!!!" '. Wheo the TV mcme eadod I wu ll8qily1M4tlloy--11-;.,_ • lloalinl Oii. c:klud. I lumed to Gorko and· w ....... -............ -, • -. .. _,,do,..""° a?" He .., ... _,_ ... ...,.,. ... _ ..,-. "I'm her<, lin, II" ....,...; th ..... "'1 ~lool , ,WllJare IOIDI mm to lnrm ltift! a.-_ ee.11. II ._'t M •atMa&, • II , a -Ill lier ......... ID RJ Gtrh'1-. "81'1 ...... lfl!, .. -tldilo to.lier! -GORKO'S WIFE riJ11AR "1n1 - --'l -DEAll AllN LAllDERS : A low dQo · ... ..... ... I was rldlll( the bul t.o Work. Two -were: lltinc ICrQfl the allle smok· ... their fooi htads oll; There WU a lip 111 tlle' ... lllll llld; NO SMOKING. · .;. 'ftll • 'IWien wu IUCb that I 'Waa litllll Illa.,.,. riil'lo iti/' fact.J , .... .... ..,..._11111 -ll-that - ---llley· lpand a. ,,_ I bePn t.o . _...,., '!'bey -' tinued t.o pull awey, -Wbon dirJ .flat .... 11101r clpretlao I h.aveit. ligh·of •nlld. ~hlll. ...-................. -alt rnlDlto they lit up qlin. Al lllat point I..-J,lt: -be arnstod- ' went lo the bus driver~ 1nd1 ~ DEAR ANN LANDERS: Y«ift •loll a them. The dr!nr told ... lie1 could ,do .....: nothina uruas I lliped a mplalnl So I f1n. I uaed to lblnl: )'Oll wwe ..,... bul no Ii ned The drMt Jhon ~ Wt• and """"· Recentty, In a --1 at the tofd ~men they'd have to 'iiut out ihtlr foot of the column, you t<lerred t.o • cigarettes. . aaraae mechaolc as • "grtue. ~·" Why dld 1 have to sJan some.lhing? Jusl because • fellow worts • ~ Docso'I Qli> driver hive fife aU1boilty to .,.... does that make him a .,_ make passengers, obty the rules of his monkey? You wotk with .a typewriter. bull Pleue explain. -Cl'A euSTOMEa~ Would.you Cfi:e to bo collecl a IJpowritot. ', • . . ' lnODkeJ'· . DEAR CUSTOMElll Tllo bel drmn y°"' ~ ..0 of the laJllu ... was Iii Oicop, ... •••t•Mit .... lo tR 'IO 1noi11 ID·"-11M people, I l<iol 7W U.S.,• I• 11 I ... , -... •llloritJ °"" them ID apoloo. -GARA<jrl &1uka19s11..,-trAlp1a'ti'.... ~Witt --• 1111 .......... Jn 1'"1-•-) DEAll WU'I: 'lltlo ., ....... ,..., .............. :., .. ,. ...... --"71wltollot--watate.W. Glvl In or I<* him .•. wbeo • IUY II"' >"II Ible line, look out! Far llpo• !low,. ' handle the. super Sel: ail I -cbtd: Ami Landen. Rud ber-1el. ''lfOcklnl and Pettln&-Whlt!'.notbe Llmilll" Seat • your nquqt to, Ai\11 -la ... "' u.. ... _ .... k·~·-· .... &f>d a loi:c+ it.amped . ...-111 d 11> "Z:· Lloden wllf.bo .... lo ... ,.. wflll ,..,. pnlbieml. floia -..... . .... of Ibo DAIL y ·l'ILOI'. -I I • • ~.llamped•••pe. ' • I I 1 · I I • L.. -' _, "' ' .. •• • " • .. .. • .. .. . ' , .. '· •' .. KEEPING AMERICA . BEAUTIFUL -·ExeinpllfY;ng-the thenle selected for the Grand COW1cil Finl for Cosl!I Mesa Camp Finl Girls are (left to rigbt) Mazy Sayers, Carol Bemllart, Laurie Brennan and Janet Rilock. Harbor Area Couodl Fires "'.ill take place Wednesday and Friday, May 21 and 23. Grand Council Fires 'Reservations'·· Beckon Pow WOWS, dancing and trllrll rituals will be evldtncild around the Grand Council Fires when Harbor Area Camp Fire·Girls don costumes and beads for their annual get~ together of all groups. Girll, to El>iae Kew ol the Linda Sttvens, S t e p bin I e Oklponka Horizon Club. Taylor and Elaine Irioeucbl, l\lbs Kew bas been In the memben of Mn. Drake'• Camp Fire program. alnce ,.. group. Gemini: Stick To Your ·Guns SATURD~Y MAY 17 BJ llYDNSY' OMAll TlllN II.I.TINO BINTS: llpa'!(pt II• Gtahl; ·--~-~­DU 1111 ludi+t abort ,...,.., .. __ _ tall II jdooL ,.._ may. ... _ .......... but - • point. -...... lol " talldn(. ... ,_ P8Y> the dlecl<. Lot ii -· chann-lnc ad -.... _._, Allll!ll (Jlarc:b JI-April 11): Slee!' c1-al . ar;iumeiiu, f'IP"C'•JJ:y wttb r e 1 1 t t v e 1 • A void Jom'nr1I, • u n I e. I a nee )'. And U )'<IQ do tn..i, do .. at ....... _.i. -1--fast. ~ 'llllll!J. TAIJIWl(Aorll»KIJID): Poni . -loo -f<r ...-. '"'1':"'1ally where ..,..,.. -... ---.. "'7 lfaliborn today about-· Plq It by eer. GElliN! (lfq JI.Jim< :Ill): UBllA (5'!>1. 2S-Oct. D)! You seem cauatit betweeu pracliclllly and prtndpleo. Key ii to end-· "la- tloU>lp l>at ,.. b.' • oullr<>Wn. u Ida ,.. do. ,.. ... ~ ..... -..pa111. SCOllPIO (Ocl. JS.Nov. JI): Be~wtm.-·---... " your ta .... Bal ..,, fill fGr .9ob ....,.. Stwnnw maybeleotlac,..rflnndal -RMpond~. IAGl1TARIUll (Nov. JS. Dec. JI): A""'1 ..... opeed -not only In b..,,onatlaa but Jn arrlvio& a dec:laionL Penni! Iocic to b&ve equal lime wllh lmpaloi. CAPRICORN (Dec. D.Jan . II): Ll&hl touc!I ............. """" -.,, heavy-handed melllod. Seme of ..._' -• valuable ally. -. ,......ity ~ bdnc ... travapd. It")' 11'1itlanee . AQIJAllllJB (Jan. 20-P'eb. II): J'rlmda talk much about ~ ,.. -do. Doni be ml..-bywilbllJI""n•-.. lmpqtmt to be aware of POLE·ING IDEAS -Tllldna time out to rest against a May Pole while dis· cuasing ideas for the Ma,y ·teo11va1 at the C<i<nml!DitY Presbyterian Church in San Juan Caphtrano are (1elt to right) Mn. Lynne Morris, Dance Workshop director, and Mrs. Wllllam Honsberger, pneldent of the church's Women'• Asaociation. Bo1h the 8'll!Odation and workllltop are participating In the May 18 event Some ..,._ --... diclled. y--. piano •P--. ruJeo ml.......-.--------- PllCEll (Feb. ltMardi ID): a... due ad could ,affect rtlldmce. You. Ire hotne at dilled tm.. Asaignment ...,,.._ could affect basic palierno. llea1be famUy needs pe. ~. Odierw are eltl!er~or-or bolll. Hoed ,... ... -Be farti!(llt. CANCD CJ-JI.July D): A hmliy member may be dolllc _... In - Keep ...... -.... -... lie boot, -II miaculd-ed. Be ....... I.BO (July JS.Aug. D): A,..,._iwlllllooedonedoea not -1"lr!d II comhJc lo M end. Urldinl .. I that stress. oea fO(ll ltrain do take ,, toll. Play watllng aame. · VJllGO~Aua. J3.Sepl. D): c..ru.t mt between family ml bustneu. II ap- peon bl, In tllil .... duty muot eome flnt. '11-wtio reoDy m will und<ntand. your -· But abo attend to- u....,11 -.1 ,.. .. fflclent, directing otben. Yea ... more intftule than 1D1DJ m1gbt percel'fe. P<nonaI lfUlll"liBm Is •lrong. May .-e drain to you. NamtnllUI pel'IOnl w o u 1 d make Merifk:ts to bact 1 you. , .T• fllld wt ""°'• luckY for veu 111 "*"" .. .,,,,., ....,. ""°""' Orntf'r't .......,, .. ..,,.. " ......... Mn efld w.rMn.'" ierlll ~--• ~ h 0M.rr ~ ttcnll, flle C>All V "l~T, ...... OfMld c..tr1f ,,.,_ '*" New 'fork. N.Y., IOllJ, ' Luncheon . Ends Week Concluding ID. u r. D c e. Women's Week, l\lay lf.Jf, will be the 1-anoe Women " Orange Coun<y """ will gaU>erat-fora....,._, In the Jolly Ropr, Auhelm Saturday, l\lay Jf. Speaker will be Job n Wadnnkl al the inluronce ratli!c board, San Francisco who wUl diaclau: "Insurance Pot Pourle." . Relel"t'liloaa m1y be made. by calling Mn. P'loyd Horton at-I. Pampered Strawberry • Loses ·Festival Throne Fat, juicy strawberries are barbecue pit for roasUng bot being replaced. doga at Ul9 11 Lm. tV!Jlt on -ol Ito traditional -the ground& of the church. ~ ,._ f t 1 1 th Seofor blgb &ludents will .Dlllaw_.."' ea va e furnish dess«ts. Women's Anoclltlm. Com· The event, open to the ri:lurllty Presbyttrian Church public, ls being staged to raise of San Juan Cepistrano have summer camp r.M conference planned a May Festival for fund s for yowig p e op I e. ,, Sunday, May '18. Prov id.ing enterWnment wlU Newport Beach citla will moet at 7 p.m. Wednesday, May 21, ha SL Andrew's Pr:_e1bytertan Cburth'a Fellowsblp B.n. wblle Costa -glrll ,wtIJ galher at 1 p.m. Friday May 23, In Te WlntlePart. cond grade, and is. an active Also cm the program will be member of the Oldponka the flag aalute by Blue Bifdl Horizon Club. To earn this .and the invocation by Mrs. award, two yean of wort ii Ralph Short's Horizon Club. required and can on1y be won Mrs. Paul Friebertshause:r 18 by juniors and seniors in bilh guardian of the fire and school Presntation will 6e cbairman is Mrs. Richard made by Mrs. William Main ol Brace. Mrs. John 1.ortor wtll P-"!"'-----------------------• the er..,., County CoonciL leod the Blue Birds In 11n11o1 But It wtll stln"be an event be members of the Dane• you can abtk )'OUI' teeth into. Workshop, directed by Mrs. Under tbt leadenbip of Mrs. Lynne Morris. A May pole William llonaberger, pres1. dance will be a highlight, In dent. the varloua committees addition lo folk d a n c e will have aaladi, llDdwlcbes, features. punch and coffee. fer sale at Dre.v is casual. A white lood booths. Assisting lhem elephant booth will olfer a will be Men'a Fellowship myriad of "treasures" for members 1fbo will provide a perusal. A apeclaI event during the Colla Mesa Councll Fire will be the awarding of the WolleLo nwflDloa, the hl&heot Costa Mesa Iheme Is Keep . and Mia. Paul Hill will r..il America Beauttlul, and a the Camp F1"' Girls. I Kii;k the Habit _,. anrd given In Camp Fire hlgb!igbt of the fl'Oll'8.IU will Afterward coffee a n d be the planting of • i..e In dou-ts will be sold by the memory "-a leader, the late Horfz.on Club to raise funds for Mn. J.,... Drib. Coo-Its Tijuana Clink project. duding lhll cemJIOll1 will be American Hertlage Is the ·smokers · Learn How Mothers, Daughters Guests at Dinner .. "': .. .. .. .. .. • Philanthropy Selected and C<ra Lee Stoul, f'ro. vlclence Speech Ind Heorlnc Clinic. RandJo Viejo Wcme:n's Club .manbera will take a loot at ~worthy projects before .1.........1..0:-. Jtihi !ft f '!be rneet1n1 also will serve ~1 00 •• ""PY or u the lint umua1 Youtl>day lie a>mlng .,_ durJnc a Celelx*---.111111 lo Mn. moellnc neit Maarlq at 10 'llramaa Ccrnroy, eommrmlty a.m. In Miasloo Vlejoe.cr..-.. ~ dltlnnan. Sire tloo C<lll<r. aid ..... -wtll brine • Speoktn .,._,..,, """"" -enftlope will a l!lllllber In the group wD1 be Ire Mmes. al peonies equal lo her qe. Herman Sclm!lrl. -c-t AD .,...-i. tb11 .,_ will be C:oamumlty Raopilol; Jolm T. glvm to Girl Socut Troop as lllriln, Albeit Slllon Home; f<r its G.-1 Cmi1m trip. ildJert Martin, a.lrkt Indian Abo llP""'!!q ts an In- Affairs; Jamea Toepfer, aauat1oo banquet, and P'knoce CZ!-l!<llne, ............. _beq BC• theme to be carried out bJ Newport Beach gi.rb. A candle lighting ctremGl'1 will be cooducted bY Mn. Gerald Kingsley'& group; Blue Dinis will sing; the flu ceremony will be by Mn. Paul MacMahon'a girls, and Mn. Andrew Carey'• Camp Fire Girla will perform an authen- tic Indian dance. Torch bearer award wlll be ptamted to Mn. Pa u I Jler&dabl'• Junior blgll group and , Mn. Short'• 11«1- IOll Club wtll give the ln- vocallaa. ~the county cocmcil will bi Mn. William Main, and M r I . Leland Becbt~ guardtao " is omoldnr :your llqupt Want to kick the 11111* but don't have the "won't power" to do It alone' · nte Flv&<lay Plan to stop Smolclng will be presenttd nlglitly May 22 through May 26 from 7:30 to 9 p.rn. In Costa Me93 High &hool's lyceum theater for those wl!hlng help in breaking the smoking habit. .Sponsor of the program ls the Tuberculosis and Respiratory Disease A.wociatlon.of 01'8Dge County, Individual voluntacy donaliions will be ac· cepQ!d to help detray cost.s of the materials but edmission is free. 'lbe. ~minute group therapy seosions include lectures by a cowisel- or-pbyslclan m the physlologlcal and psychological aspects ol smoking, film• m unotlng and itl effect. on the body and mind and demons1ratians of piocedurw helpful to ovemmlng the smoking habit Exd!anles of experlences by par'ticfpents aa they fight the habit un- der the Five.day Plan will be included In the program.each evening. the fire, will preeeot -.. ___________ '!!'!l ______ """ __ -11 Mothers and daughters will munily sing will be 1ed by be guests and 'dad3 will be Mn. Evan Mc Ca 11, ac~ doing the serving when the companied by William Droida. Mrs. Ken McMillan will Women's Society of the First serve as rn is tr e 11 ol United Methodist Church or ceremonies, and Mrs. Franta Fount.aJn Valley ~nsors a r........1A b t t 6 311 t gbt In th u 'lN.Ull• Mrs. Drozda, Mra. anque a : e West and Mrs. Richard Uhler Peet Family Colonial Terrace have planned t h e ea• Room, Westminster. tertainment. Fashions '69 will be the Miniature r e p I i c as ot theme o~ the program. and mothers and daughters will commenting on a style show comprise table centerpieces. wi11 be MJ'3. Robert ~t. and in charge 0£ decorationa Musical en~ertainm~1' are the Mmes. John Gillespie. include selections by a Sweet Stanley Forster, O 0 n at d Adellnes quartet and a com-Nelson and Bernie Svalstad. Patio Set "'IJlod f<r lbe Jmie 1.-"' Mrs. Raiitr 1lurll<li. - The -will lab place at II a.m. In -Viejo !rm. DAR Meeting \ Top Woman Hon'ored · Coordinating the evening it Mrs. DonaJd Taylor, president of·the !IOCiety. Mrs. W. James Clark is in charge 0£ ticket sales. For Supper Narcotics Film Shown Coast Site Selected The Woman'a ·CJvte Leque of Newport Harbor will present its thlnf a a n u a 1 Woman<i-tbe-year award Gllherlq In the Miramar wblc!r toot p I O'c e In Georp Bucc:ola, Corona de1 Tuesday, May !ll, during an Convenllon8 .. ....,._ .... ~' ~!n t_a WublJiiton, D.C., and the ltel Mar, Ullltant aecntary,.,ind installation L~nC!in the ---. ·~1 • ...., -· •·•· -~-•----honored ~•1 be u-. -.-• Irvine Coast .... unJry ub. will be mfllnben of Dluahters · ·-"""a~-.-m-r,-.. l'l'U "'"'" r a m~ A film on narcotias will be of the American RevOlutlon Orange Coast. ch 1 i rm e 0 Eda:ar Lee, Laguna Hill!, An area woman will be shown by .... Sam~-~ r from • Southern California ~•·a ....... the day ·"ll honorary state regent. recognized for out.standing .,.... .....,.~v o ·~.,........ ......... lVI "· • community service when the i"'lld'111;•i;.· ·s. Sunderland, 5econd vice presiden~ and Allen Gee. r-ecordlng IOCl'elal')'·.l Ab\> talllllg.o!lice will I>< the Mmes. Adelaide Marchand, ~ o r r e 'sponding -secretary; Catherine Carli, treasurer; William Warren, auditor ; Paul Gruber, historian, and Daniel Gilcrest, parliamentarian . Medical Group .Every second Tuesday ol the month Orange Sh<nt Medical Assistants' A.ssoc\ao iion assemble at 8 p.m. Loo cation may be obtained bJ calling Mrs. Marjorie Hum- ber, 644·2213. A paUo supper party will at· tract members of the Foun- tain Valley Chapter, RepubUcan Women'a Club, Federated, at 7 p.m. tomorrow In the home ol Mrs. John D. Harper. A aocial boor will precede the dimier. the Coola M-"1lli<e Depart-cbapttn. · Include Mn. B en R. -pten rtpreaenltd fl'1>m ment for membefii of the Cos-Mn. 'lhomu Vernon Coffee Kle1mrachte.r, San Clemente, the OranP Coast area will be award is made during the'ir==================;;; ta Mesa Fed«aterl Republican ol Modeoto, state ,.pot. wlll llmebeper, and Mn. John Aliso c.n,.. Chapter, Lrrpna 11 :30 a.m. event. Heading lht committee Is Mn. Nancy Bwa&&OU, and ullstlng are tbl M m e 1 • Nadine Luebbon, Rm Knlfl, Harper, Dlrid II. llamey and JamesM. J-. Women's Club. prMide durlnc the ..,...._y Holland lllDbld, Dana Point, Hllil; Col. WUllam Cobell Former league president The dimer ~ will Southern Coundl m 1 et Ing _. .tee draJrman and Chapter, Newport Belcll; P• Mrs. Stanley LeLlevre will be late plaoe 111 V p.m. 1lnnday, which will begin at 11 a.m. llnef,p noun:b cbalrman. Uenc:e Wright Chapter, 1-1 installing officer for the May D, in Fe 11 clan o • 1 Her _... wtI1 brcinc!& the Alllllin( the llale repot on Beach, ad lUchtrd Bayldoa Mmes. E. C. Smith, pruident; Tlckeb, ot .. per -· may be ......... "' ""'bdlnc Mn. Krefft, 1117-1113. .-aurn, Newport Beac:lr. .. ~7'lh:~c:~""="•:•lll~C:~•~•~1~r~e~1~1~the~~pla~=tl=cx~m~will:~be=-~lln~.1 ~Cll~ap~Dler~§'~Sul~~Be~adr~---~T~. ~Duncan~~Sltw~~ut,~~fint~~-~~ R11uv-. due "1 lfaJ •·Ji ..., be made bY c:o1lln& Mn. ,, f '21-"f---= e!t...~im: 11n. BILL WILLIAM'S flff JI · ;n&1i&Jl'tu1 IJe Pa1npereJJ Come lo ..• malAe~ UA9 an.d &aut11 Salon E0R JHE DISCRIMINATING: e HARBOR AREA'S TOP BEAUTY I Wlw STYUSTS e MANICURES I PEDICURES e VJVIANE WOODARD COSMETICS mallie~ Wig & Beauty Salon 541 ,.., ,.... ... 11M "'-': Hlll.8-llN SQUAU ~A MllA e IANICAMIRtCAID e . HO'Q.SE of HAIR COLORIHG .... Coll!...,;o-Scu't•• 1 ;- Now IN ORANGE and COIFFURES 1 a3s w. cHAP;;~,, ......... . 639~754 r----INTRODUCES ASSOCIATES--~ CHUCK HOWARD former Heir Stylilt of EAST BLUFF AREA arid MARIE BETSINGER MANICURIST Ir PEDICURIST • Formerly B•verly Hilli '"d E.st lluff Ar•• 2333 E. COAST HWY • Corona del Mer Parktftt '" ftNr AUTHENTIC GERMAN --CUISINE-- CONTININTAL oom'AlllMlllT --rl .. PEDRO ""' TI.-Trwlol .. 0.,,..,-Hlo -1111<0-· COCKTAA.S. ~.AND WINES From our Gl1s1 61ll1ri1s Old Boh9miaft "Vine tnd Wfeath" pattem Freezer proof parlaih, Set oft, $10 lc•rs end lin•" •o mafch, Set of 4, $1.95 SLAVICK•s Jewei.n since 1Sii1 7 18 Fi1hlon l1land , Newport BH<h -644-fll.O '. Yfll/r Olt'lt Ac"'91'11 Wtkt1M -~Ip~ fl'Mt.I ctwlr9t. .... Op111 M.Mllf.-,; f rl4ey •ltfll till )•"'· • ..... I TodaY',Sl' ... I N.Y. ·Stoeb • ~OL:. 62, NO. 'fl 7, ~ SECTIONS, 'IO PASES ORAN6E COUNTY, tAl:JFORNIA TEN CENTS Harbor Teac.hers· Read . . .. ~ By THOMAS FORTUNE ' ot .. O.Hr l"illt It.ff Newport-Mesa school 1eachers today seem ready to sLage a revolt 11ver lalaries. Six hundred or 1,050 classroom tuchers turned out al an unprecedented man meetlnl TburJday at Newport Harbor High SCbool. And 11n>third5 or u.o.e pruent indicatld they favor a .walkout if the school board doesn't satisfy their r~ qufft;s. · The teacben came to hear teacher association oHk:tri alve a progress report on salary negoUaUons with the school board. To hear militant teachers tell It, tliings aren't going well. School autboritiel so far have remained closed· mouthed oo lbe subject. The day-...! to.belong to militant y~g men teachers. Pres-..lect of tbe dbtrlct teacher aseoclaUoo, Gordon' Becktokt, declared. '"l'biB community b11zt't even begun to pay for services rendered." He called for a 1,000-teacher "body count•• at the school board meeting TUes- day night. Unut negotiations absolutely break down, teachu representatives and the school board have agreed not to Hve&l salary demands or counter offers. The ooly announcement bu heed of tentative agreement or diaagretment on side issues. "You can still ait around and· believ~ in LSD Raid Nets 11 Hessians, $15,000 Drugs Held in Mesa By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI .. DMlr PPlll S"" Lawmen raided a Hessian motorcycle '""' commune in Costa Me$11 Thursday, rounding,up u-. $1:;,0!IO worth of LSD. mariju&n1 and counterfeit cur· reney, six weapons and seve.ral dogs, in-- eluding one· named Cocaine, according to p0lice reports. The unscbeduled raid -ttiaered when corripllcalions developed dliring an alleg- ed $1,000 LSD purchase by lllte nareoUcs agenta -~ cut off a major. source of the drug, inmtlgaton said. One suspect. allegedly , turned Jn lawmen invading the rambling residence ' ·Newport or Mesa? ., County Neutral On Court Site ' ' . . 'nle Controversy over whjCh of two IHlrbor Area complUDitics will be selected as the site :b' tht new' Harbor J udlclal District fleikmal Civic Center will return Tuesday lo tbe reluctanl lap o{ county ~pervisors. EX·SHERIFF DIES LA'• Eua•n• l itcailu1 'Gene Biscailuz, Ex-LA Sheriff, Succ umbs at 86 ' , . . • ' " ' I Stanley Kfauae; county director of rtal property services, .will bounce the sticky ~I back into the l>oan:J•s «lilt with a question which appears to be carefully camouflaled in his summary and recom- mendations: What do you want, how big abould 1t be and where sball We put it! Ail btilial list of.JO sites boils down.in Krauae~• report lo two poaslble locations. He fdentflJes lbem as a selected portion of an m-.cre site·in the Newport Town Center, -silt of Newport 0..ch's own civic center and an eight-acre por .. tion of Orange County Fairgrounds ter• ritory in Costa Mesa. NO ATTEMPT But he makes no attempt to pick one of the two eagerly c;ltfered locatlons. County supervisors should, he e x p I a i n s , determine tbe·number ol c°""3I for which space Is to be provided, oollfne its design, select one of the two locatioos, determine lhe space requirements of any other county functiona to be served in the regiooal center oD!1 dtre<:t Krause to go ahead with appraisals and negollatlons on the lelected site. He provides a bulky folder of facts to enable supervi10rs to make the decision which they deterred tw6 weeks ago when the court site controversy was shufUed from the hearing room to Krause's nal property division. Whichever of the two sites gets the nod from the board, it will replace the presently outmoded Harbor Judictal District lacility at 18U\ Street and Newport Boulevard in C.OSta Mesa. TIME FOR END Krause agrees that It Ls time for an end of the "apemlve short tenn 10lutionln that, have been applied to the: court'• ilrf· forts to """' wi!jl l]Jlrallin( populaUcia ~ and rapidly IDOUlllin&·eueloods. current eslimotes abow tbe J>OPltallon In tbe jlldictal district lo be about 130,000. Krau,. predicts that U\e ligure will be 2&,000 by lleO and sees that tally as hlgh (See COURT SITE, Pap %1 at 265.1 Santa Ana Ave., with 1 shotgun, but was dlsanned without gunplay. ·Jim Irvine, field supervisor for the state JusUce Department's bureau o(· narcOUa enforcement, said the 2 p.m. raid climaxed' a month-long probe begun by Newport Beach Police Detective Al Epstein. One woman sought in connection with the operation is still being bunted today. State agents, Costa Mesa and Newport Beach police participated, arresting five men -one an ei-Marine decorated for Vietnam war service -and four women at the Santa Ana Avenue address and two Hessians picked up elsewhere. One was identified as Ray W. Brown, 25, capturtd on a nearby street by Patrolman Jack Koch, after assertedly fleeing th.e ra,.\d and apparenUy dilpo&ing of the $1,000' · ih state m a r t e d money. The cash has not. been found, althoogh the area w'aii thc:rougbly:searched. Boo~ed oo a variety, of chargei, rl!!(• tng from po 19' 1slon Of \tangertm drUp for sale, cultivation· of marijuana and assauJt .with;' deadly weapon were these residentJ of. the home: Gary A. Runger, 33, Greg E. Elshire, 28, Brown1 S}lerry L. Rodweller, 22, Vicki D. Rainlo1_ 11, and Kathryn E. Massack, 20, aCCOl'Glng to slate agents. otben attested include Thomas R. Niebur, 22, of 359 Walnut St., Newport· Beach, William E. Rodweller, 22, of Z20S Canyon · Drive, Costa Mesa, Linda S. Markham, 22, of Z32tl Elden Ave.1 Costa Mesa, Philip Alfano, %3, of 4!!03 Seashore Drive, Newport Beach and Michael D. Van Noorden, 21, of San Dimas. Investigators saJd A I f a n o • an · unemployed mechanic, was picked up at a home at Z3S% Cornell Drive, carrying $550 at the Ume. They idenUfied ElshJre as the one who alleged1y levelled a shotgun at lawmen who burst into his room. The male suspects were booked into Costa Mesa City Jail and the females were taken to Or&n1&-County Jail as in- vesUgators worked overnight and Into to. .day, wrapping up details of the case. "We probably won't be able to 1et to the Diatrict Attorney for·complaints until Monday," aaid'lrvin, who supervised the spur-of-the-moment raid. He aaid tbe arrestees were relatively submissive after raiders forced their way through a baJ:ri~ door, during which a window was smuhed and one SU!})eet apparently cut by flying glass. "It was a real Chinese fire drill ," com· (See DRUG RAID, P11e Z) UCI Sailing Club Plans Weekend Film Tbe UCI Sailing Club Is sponsoring for tbe J1rat time a saillng film at 7:30 o'clock tonight and Saturday at the Scifn. ce Wd:UJ"e Hall on the campus, according to Tom KeDeher, prmdeat Gf the club. General admission is St and student 50 cents with procttds going toward the support oi the sailing club, he said. for · Revolt Over Pay . San ClaUI~" challenged. "Bui II are not rlaht place at the rig e~t us to do your io- figbtlna:." -He was cheered~ SO were other l'Dilitlnt teachers. A teacher who spoke out for cauUon, llalph WhlUonl, sizth grade teacher 'at Newport Eian.ntary School, WU booed and-· But...,. INchen applauded hlm. The majority ot teachen ftl'e silent. Many-or -those silent .~ t)\ose not ~t were young wQmen teachers '''"klnc pnlil they get malTled, or llllr· ded • women teaChers earning a second lamlly ~· . Cltar1y, &be. men teachers with more at staie' in earnings infend ~to ·exert the ie.dertlilp, No woman• teacher apoke Thuraday. The mood of all present was mf!aaured in a Rand-up vote 'With two-thirds m. dicattq,Wlllfn-lo< pa<lfdpate inl • ' . ' ; ' ' m{lSS walkout on a pre-announced day. The average teacher aalary paid by the tinUled ochOOI dbtrlct this yoar ls about '9,!00, school offlciall said- 3ust how far apart the tucher&' bargaining team and tbt school bolU'd are on salaries has not.been publlcly reveal· ed. !fegotiatlng .... 1ons irere lo _,.. today and Monday. ' One leather said he •Wanted -1>· UOll> 'to end nert -1t or "~.!hat I (See TEACllEIUI, !'IP I) . · • , DA.11..Y ,ll01''1'8ft,.... ' ·~ ) ' LAWMEN TAKE· SUSPECTS AWAY AFTER. LIGKTNIN!> lAID·ON HESSIAN PAD ·· - •,Ht· ~-Htf~ ~-~1 1tech!.oor; ..-~ 0.,. llthlro Walla " J cimes, Rrioseveu Kri if ed Core Analyzes $DS, Ciiticizes . ~s of GrouP, . . . . By W:if.e ·in Swilzerb;,,P, . ' - GENEVA (UPI) -James R®'evell's third wife Glldys stabbed him In ti\• back Thuf14ay night with bis World War II souvenir dagger at the couple's Swiss villa, police reported today. The Q..year-Old son of the late presi· dent was· rushed 10 cou nty hospital Jn critical condition. Doctors perfonned , emergency surgery and later pronounced the former concressman from CalHornia . out of danger. Mrs. Roosevelt, 52, was admitted to BeJ·Air Qinic for observation. Spoltesmen for Roosevelt said . s11e-ba4 Mesa Youngster s Try Skindiving Into the pool, junior frogmen! is the word for the next five weeks, as young and not-so-young members of the Halecrest Club of Costa Mesa take skin~ diving lessoM. 'nle coune covera aspects • o f · oceanocraphy, filh and11ame .Jaws and,' of course; lll'JOl'keliilg:wttti nns m:I muk.: open to all ·Club .members, 1 the clasa meeU Sltardays from t•a.m. to ·tt a.m. at tbe club pocils tor children apd t.11,. and adult sessions are held each Tuetday night from 7 p.m.' to I •p.m. For information on family mem· benhips in the club, call Mr1. Jack Smith at 541-IZM. . .A resoluUoo criUcizil!g tbe alms and been under treatment for 1'e v-e r·e a'cUons of Students f0r a Detnocratic depreaaior\,. Society was approved by a 13 to 2 vote Flrlt.i'tporta of the lncldent'were con· Thursday alter long discussion by dlreo- !using becauae U\ey, said lloose•elt had ton ot the Costa M.,. Chamber ol COm· been.attacked by "a mentaUy unbalanced merce. woman'' without .Jdaltifying her. 1hese 'J'be· two-page document analyi.es past reports mentioned an afa:ument. activity of sos chapters on campuses ,Hours later,.. Roosevelt'' attorney tbrougho\lt the country and applies the notified newsmen: groop'• staud goals for the future in •11 am allthorize..l to aay / that Mr. terms of impact on. Orange County, Roosevelt confirmed today that' the in· In' Short, SOS stands against. all that cidtnt which bu been reported involved the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce ltll wire. -Mr. Roooevelt telephonea "" 1tand5 for, tbe· paper indicates. fl'om the hospita l U\ls morntng and uked CilizeM are alao urged by chamber us to·clear up thia fact:" · -direellln lo familiariu thems<IYes will\ Tiie ~le, wai m'l'ried 'ln ·~ .•nd the controversial student orgaolulion, II ave orie ·Cbild1 H'aJI °'1aoo.1~velt's which, .according to the report,.., bal earlier' ibirrlages tO 'Betsey. Cllshibg, a ' ootlilled plans to infiltrate and ~ Boston socialite, and fti>melle SCbi>elder, American industry. a ·nurse~· ended in .. c::irce. Roosevelt, · "Such action on the ~· of SDS • ' eldeat ... or ti\• la~Pret1cfent;-hu n.. would jeOpardize ibe eu«U of tbe $lid b th · 'mArri ge.s business community through the National ren y e prevKJUs -r a ' Alliance of Busineamen to ·· provide Police spokestpeo, trying to piece tOgethtr details On''tbe slabblnc, said it 150,000 jobs for hard-core unemployed by occurfed about ii' o'cloCt at tbe Ju·ne, 1'70," the reeolu6on states. Roosevelt vtlla In tbe suburb of v ... naz. ' out or that total, 1,400 sueh joba will be Ol!icials of Investors overseas Service m Orange County, chamber of commerce (10$) the f1nn Rooeevelt r~ in ... execuUves noted. oeneYr. Ajd he was &tabbed just iris.Ide The reaolution warns that the concept the _.;.ay cl u.< ljjg -,t,the root Uiiked to sos moat r«en\IY -member• -· -•(J4·a00&Ev1LT ~p I) ol>lainlnl jobs Ii] bua1ned -and industry, 1 • -• 1 j .i. ' • • tfien comlnittini sabotage -would · ' .., __ ,_ ~ ' .~~ · d<st1'oy mUch potenllal aid to •U\e ! 119&9!1D'l5 a.m•...,-a. . ' ' loyed . . unemp , -'-----''---''"'"'---'---'-.. The recotd of SDS ·acros! the nation NEW T-YORK '('AP)· -Tbe stock (See SDS,,Pag&I) market .. with analysts reporting lnvfSt91' ~kend cautli>n e.tdent; finished almOat · even tOday. 1 (5ee quotations, Pages IHI): Oraaf e SANTA MON!CA (AP) -Eu I en e B~ailuz, a litUe man with. a courtly manner and wide-brim.med hat wbo ~e "Mr. California" among lawmen during his 2e yean u sheriff of Los Anceles County, died todllf tl 16. Airport Leader Urges El Toro .Use Weatlter . ' ' 1Jf you're sleePing In this week· e1jd It'll be nice weatl\er -once the ulUll -ol !we evapontes. Be was known as a c:niclc ~ a top rider favoring the somtnro· and ailver mountingt of the state'• SplnWI put. 1 top admfnistrtlor, I -li'acbr of c:rooU, and deft~ uf" a number o( rebabill~tion centeg fer prbonen. lk retired In 1951 after 51 yean in ltw entattement and bad been lo aecl-. at his home heft Since suffering I alrolle ae.,..i yean ago. For decades he WU a familiar licht 1n paradel, dmaed Uk< a Spanish Don, utrlde a prancing horse, ........ Ind mnlllng, often occompanled b7 bit dole !rltftd, the late ~ Leo Cmillo. The grandson cl WllUam Warnn, !Int city manbal of Loa AJt8elea, llilcalhn joloed tbe sheriff'• department In, 11107 whm lbe r"""' had ooly r1 -. At tbe Umo J1e mired, moro than 3,llOO men ...... -him. lie lludfeil law b7 nlP! and ,_ to (kt lll!CAILUZ, Pap I) • ' 87 JOHN VALTERZA Of .. °"" ..... """ .eounty Airport Commiaslooer Dennis Clrpanter !lrOftgly urged .... Ill-El Toro ~ Ali SllllaD "" • ...-i a1ri>ort belore a Newport lltacll alldleoee -y, tben urp4 his lilleners to unite to ' achieve it. Addressing tbe moetitJ "tunriae bull sesaioo" of tbe Nrwport-Olamber cl~ tbe ~CODI· m-ad Cllf!mlla RopubUcu leoder llld lbe ldea ti blondlnt ........ I oirport .... will\ mllltary !ieldl ·--in tht CGUQlr'J .... wsUd '1111n(j it wouJd work well at El Toro, too." Clrpenter 111d that ''uWre Ii one thing to naltre wlMn ,... aaaly1e the nat11t1l prUat """'"" flWll midenls In Ldlun World, -Viejo and other ~ ·--13 Two • ' ' Iha jell-Ii)' ~ mWf:u'Y were there W1y before Utere were any barn. in the ma ... Hi -thet be felt tbe noile probkm weuld not be much wone if commerciAI jela ...,.. lo Ille tbe military facilities, "since combat macbina make much mo.. noile and !bey an fhtte now." Catjlenter callld for unity among an the detraclon of county efforts lo fm. prove the air tennloal rltuation, lben ~ his OOlullon to the expansion coo- ltdVony "'rTO\Uldlng the present cowey airp<li't. ' fie Uked for an end to crlUclsm of the commlsslon for propo<lnf enlarglnc park· Ing loU at 0 r a n f e. Count1 Airport became IUCh a pro~ would not con- stitute erpaoslon, but jl'ISt.ead, make Jt eu!er lo use for the volwn< cl ttaffic H baa now. Carpenter jocularly jabbed ot ll>e U.S. ·1111'1 and -the dlJ of Newport 0..ch ror lhtlr oppo1ltlon to DWI)' Clll'· ) rent ideas for airports, but conceded U\at Newport ofllcllls have stoutly ap. pi'oVid of tbe El Toro plans. ' • The Navy hu not. He said that· tt one compared lbe CQL!U of connrtlnl ,.... El Toro nmw111 for commerdal ..,. -and bul1dJq public termlnall, "lbe -... uu l''l'id be minimal compal'f)f to lht buildndl cl millions quoted for afrporU eileWblre ID. the county.'• Eloborallnf on aweoome linlnc:lnf pro. blerns for a regional airport-wh,revtr It might be located -Carpeoter llld be doubled "'""'I)' that lht ~ of Orange County would not •Jlll<OVO lbe spendlnc of so much .._y. "This Is ...,.clllly cltar wheo )'<Ill reaU.. r t they l!lmed clown~ - fOUl limes for lbe ""' Jail and ~ '.racll\ll'. and lllfl wu an .._,of <1111)' abollt flt mlllloo,"be Ilk!. ~ " 't • I Tempenturea are .,....i In the low 70'• roe the Orange Cout. INSWll: TODA\' Pred<ie111" Nl:tlfl could, ,.,. ceioobJv Nme the m.oa1 SuP"eme Court fllrilcti -flw ~ -Prcaidnt EiltM.olott vn~ two definite and lhr .. man posriblo during" hil fir1t tmn.. Page 4. -. -.. """"' ....... ... .............. , --. IYMI """" It ......... tMS '-W ..... 1~11 ...... .... ,.. --1+-11 -.. -.. -· . =-4,t ---.. ,,.,. l , •• • . PILOT t . LOGBOOK Don't Match 'Memories With Real Old Timer s II)' AllTllUll It. VINSEL Of .. ...,"" .... Never try to entertaln yoor elden with ~ -eai)' 1111 oldtlmen among columnists can avoid being whipped pubik1y In ~·· marketplace. That'• a new canllnal rule In this corner alter Mn. Esther Dan, 12, or m w. lOth SL, Copta M-mlled to a recent piece oo Mineral KJni, a maJ..UC SlerT1 valley where man preaumes to improve on nature. She clalma never to have written a writer this way, bu\ the San Joaquin Valley naUve hu a dallPlfuI story wltb tome peppery obaervatJc:m and this 11 her column. * ,, Dear Arthur. . "Being (I hell ... ) old enoulh to be yoor mother, I sbalJ call you Arihur. I Jiiii read yoor r<por\ on the Dil- neyland pniJect In Sequoia NaUonal 'r.r..t, I, !ct mie, bave been qalnot this from the every beginning." Mra. Dan was a omaJ1 Bir! llvin& on • r...,. In rural Vellum, a !Jyopocl; on .... a detailed Vhalla -map, wheo her !other bJtcho\I up the family wagon to take bi. !amtly to Sequoia !or the first time. . "Eoch year he would take his "l and big saw mt go up to Badpr to pl a big load or·wood -all !alien desd trees. He usually atayod with one ol the !amillu up there. They would load him down with apples and cabbage ••• and belleve me, you have never tasted honey u good u the wtJd honey be found In old tree stwnpo." . . Mrs. Dan .i.o•t impressed with my recalling thal root beer wu IO ceni. a botUe 1n the high Sierra about JO years ago and wfth good reuoo. * "We moved to LJndaay -1 WU 13, a\111 horse and buaJ dayo, with a low or l!ellry Font's Tin Llzde'1 running around. 11!ere wen Ills or ol,i.t ol .. llrh that would drive up to SprJnsvllle in "!fr SUmy with the FrJDai oa Top. Ob, we W"!;" nall)' _.,,. We took a blf lunch and alwaya oq- Jenoas Jn tJie soda w-tha\ lllD bobbles up out o1 the h>cu by the mer: "Now or coune, all that bu chan(od a ,,..1 deal. But the -tha\ go up ·ther< deer bunting each year ore ....., than a blmcb of old -'Iller. Jmock down fences and cut 'yo11111 trees to plow throogb thlct places oo their 'Tote Gooh'· (some call them). They baveni a brain Jn. tbelr head and the deer run Uk• mad when they hear -motor bikes. * "It ls really a shame to NY that people are 10 lporant they doo't even want to go back nert year and see the beauty that they tore down. "I know Jiiii wbat will happen when this Disneyland projec\ otarU - grut bulldozers going Jn uprootlng -heou1llul Ines to make a 111perbtgb- '"I' ... can, you Jiiii see the bot dot stands along the w1y, nol to menUoo ID the hmch Wqons? · ' . "II will no -he a '°'ht to bebold wheo It II all flnllbed. But wily can't they Jiiii he lltls!1ed with wbat h laken In al Dimeyland! I l"'I" this hu not been boring, bu\ I love the IDOlllltalnl and Sequoia Park bu a opOclal placo In Dll' heart. . "I !eel Uk• SOlfle Umes there won't he any beauWul places left If they keep on • , • the Lord ble11 you ••• " ' * Ul'IT1..._ J IMMY ROOSEVELT STABBED BY WIFE GLADYS FDR'1 Oldest Son, SMwn With S-During Happier Tim .. Frem Pqe 1 ROOSEVELT STABBED • • • of a wide central at.aircue leading to the upper quarters. They said ltoolevelt WU slabbed In the back with the Marine knll• end then stumbled to a neighbor's house about 120 feet away. The neighbors called police, an ambulance wu dispatched, and Roosevelt wu ruabed to the boopltal. 105 olf!chh Aid the cJauer wu a memento of the war which Rooeevelt bad kepi r-bi. days .. a brigadier 1......i In the Marines. lloooevelt joined 105 bi 11188, and b president ol the !OS Development Co. Ltd. He ls a member of the board of directors of the parent holding company, IOS Ltd. (Panama) and several other subsidiaries. He served in Congress for 10 years u a Democratic repre1entative from California's 26th district, and was an unsuccessful candidate for Caillornia governor in 1950. From 1965 to 1961, he was U.S. ~tative to the U.N. educaliooal, &Clentific and cultural organl.zation. · Roosevelt'• brothers and · s.lstet - Franklin D. Jr., Elltott, John and Anne - have also had marital problems. All have been married more than once. From Page 1 COURT SITE CONTROVERSY. • • as 370,000 within 50 years. Pointing to the poaibllity of 111 ez. palllion or the Judicial dlslrlct's boun· dartel, Kr._ endonel the thought that a oew a1te, cme which would allow for comiderable future apanston, woold he bi the but biteres\ or the courts aod the communities. MAKE CHOICE But, the report llrwes, county distribution of parking facilities would weigh in favor cl a Newport alte. Analyzing the county fairgrounds site. Krause describes development costs 1s "negligible to county ••• clly of Co.ta Mesa to provide off site development." He describes terms as flexible with the property owners preferring "• 1ea.se- purchase with financing cosµ: equivalent lo county general obligation bonds . ., Fr.na P,,,,e J DRUG l\AID NETS 11 .• •• . -Palro-Koch, ...,bo made -a1 trlpo r .... the scene to eo.la MIU police budquarten transpor\Jng IUlpech lor bookJnc. "l.lall Ute' Cllodlr ~--.... ~ • 4'.dJIPld. '4f' I --I ' Lawmen searchlac tbe two· 1 tor y Hdolan pad aller it wu clutod or SlllpecU coolllcated an art<nal or 1ol<\ld weaJlOlll, ptra ammunitioo; l!<Winc marijuana planll, a large quanUty or I.SD tablei. and $4,300 Jn counterrell travelers checb. GATllEl\ED LOOT '!'bey . alao coafll<aled Ill estimated l5.1IOO worth of television and a\erto -· power toob and other ttema wbtch will bo trac<d •to delemMe If Ibey are llolen. A $1,000 purc1i.,. ol 300 I.SO tableb with !,JOO "'°"' promiaed bier Jn the day had already been made, Irvin said and aevtral other buys aljegedty occurred during the past month. The total · street value of t h e hallucinogenic drug haul ldzi:d at the noruiwt side rtaidence amounted to ap- proximately $5,000, according to in. vestlgators. • De1'ctlves probing tbe quaint old tile- n>olod butJdJng aaid they found pipers and pbotograpbs Indicating Rlmger was an er-Marine decorated for a Vietnam duty tour. Sgt. Jack Calnoo, o! the Coota Mesa From P•e 1 BI SCAILUZ ... assistant chief depuly sheriff in 1920. Nine years later, Gov. C. C. Youna: called Biscalluz to Sacramento to help organize the highway patrol. When Sherifr William Traeger was elected to Congres:i in 1932, Blscailuz was appointed sherll(. He stood for eleeUon two years later and was elected unUI forced to retire by age. · "I bad only two bosses when l waa sheriff," Bia:allnz wu fond of saying. ''The people wbo elected me and my con- science." NatioDa.Dy Biscailuz won prominence~ the Sparllsh-spealrlng officer who brought fugitive murderess Clara Phillips back from Hondµras . Mrs. Phillipa dispatched a love rival with a hammer In 1922 for which she was convicted and sentenced lo life . But she escaped from the old county jail and eventually turned up In Hon· dura:s. Blscalhu: fwnd officials on the Caribbean island cooperative but public sympathy was for Mrs. Phillipa, a woman they considered had made just a little mistake. Overcoming hostility with diplomacy and his ability to 1peak .. Spanish, he won the islanders' confidence and persuaded Mrs. Phillips to waive extradition. ~ vJee and Jnttlllpnce detail, Aid hi btUeved the award wu the VJetnanMM er ... :o1 Gallantry or oamethlna lite IL ''Tl>ert'a a\IU a lot ol cbeeklnl Piii • todA¥.., ~ -mota?Jde ~ and the rraudulftit tnveler'• ~~ SI\-Ca1no!I added. LAl\GESr ROUNDUP 'l1le Hesslln roundup Tbunday wu tht Jargut :since last August, when a total of 28 or I.he cyclists were picked up for In- vestigation after a vengeance run and chain assault on a Costa Mesa bar bouncer. . MOit •ere reJeued, exce.pt for a handful fin.Illy alvtn •veraJ months' ...tenc:es Jn Orqe Counly Jlil and the raid's leader, Frank W. "Wiid Meuse'1 Rundle, 24, now serving one to 10 yUl'I in state prison. Crowds of neighbors gathertd armmd the hectic scene Thursday afternoon some grim-(aced: others enjoying the show and police had to direct tra!Oc on the street outside. "Hey man. how's it going?" one llessian called out to a neighbor, waving with one hand while tbe other kept him handcuffed to a colleague· as they were led to a black-aod·w.hlte patrol car. "Smile, they're taldng your picture.," said someone across the street. One of the women arreateta tied the pac( of dogs to a tree in.the front yard. but police allOftd odghbon to take the animals later for safekeeping. Harbor Council Sets Pot P a nel Pot or Not~ This is the title of a panel discussion on marijuana, scheduled by the Harbor Area Coordinating Council next Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in lhe Hoag Memorial Hospjtal Conference Center. Ponells\s wiU Include two lawmen, Sat Jack Ca1non of the Costa Mesa Police Department vice and intelligence detail and Detective Leo Konkel of the Newport Beach Police Department J u v en 11 e bureau. Costa Mesa High School Assistant Prin- cipal Bill Vaughn will repreJent the educator:s' viewpoint. Medical and legal experts who will parUcipate have not been named. From Page 1 SDS • • d<ies, in fact, tnclude acts ol anon, assault, burglarly, kidnaping, trespaas. ing, and denial of freedom of 1peech and movement," the paper continues. You too, Mrs. Dan. And the aame to your mountainr, which are His too. superviaors must make the choice. Klpe's analysis oi: the bast.)! !1nd ACQUISITION COST Oldtimers recall when 350 angry 1il· down demonstrators had to be evicted from the Douglas Aircraft plant in 1937. Without weapons, Bi.scailuz walked into the plant, debi~ with the men, then got them to agree to coin~oUt peaceably. Dissenting votes were cast by auto dealer Bob Robinllon and jeweler Dom Raciti, wbo dbagreed oo tochnical pointa, not wilh the spirit of the meaaure it.sell. ' ., ....... jll-a· ·~Mini • ol!'.'.frllilloJI ., ·lodbe •• '~ . .!$ iOurl . . ctiao and an to a 16-eourt structure. TEACHERS SET .TO REVOLT. •• On .the bulJ of a 12<:ourt building w:lth · a dhtribuUoo ol· •· and one quarter acres· per court. the COit at the lkcre Falrgroonda au. h iatimalejf by Kr""" to be •.ooo. The aame Wilding on the same acreage at the fashianable Newport locsUoo woold cost fl,337,141'. sure can be sick or strike!' Giibert Colllns, Estancia High llci~ teacher, aaid he thinks there should he llC!ioo to put the school boan! over a bar· rel 5ald Brad Tburman, Corona del Mar Higb biology teacher, "When I wu Jn the Loi Angela diltrid a teacher'• voice WU like I squeak in the dark. "Thia h the lint big meetlnjJ Ute this wt 've had. J can see people begin to looi at each other and grin. "U you believe in youraeU and llke your job, this.place can be 1JorlOU1 doWn bere. Sell the otbt.r teachers at your. school, and man we're 1otn1 to be kicked in tough down hert." Whltlonl pl.,ded !or the meeting not to assume a circus-like atmosphere. "Ltt'1 go after th1np tn a construcUve way and not go off the deep end," he aaid. One teacher answered he-wasn't going to worry about appearancea. "I have a superior obligation to feed my lour children." Lincoln Junior High Vice Principal Ralph Werley responded, "We've tried the dlplcmatic route. We've requested. We've surveyed to death. \ OAILY PllOT UflA{llO• COAS1 PUILlllON• C.CM'AN't l•INrt H. We•4 ,.,......,. ........ , ... Jaclc I. c.r1 • ., Yla ,.,...... ..... ,.... .. MlrwW Th-•• IC11•il .... Tk•-• A. M,r,hi111 Me-"" 111111 ... °""'-"""" JJO W11t .. , Slrttf M11lh1f Altfrtu: ,,0 . t .. IS•O, t14H --~ lffctii mt w.1 ................ ,.. "...,. -..nii m .._, ..,_ ~9"dl1 Malllll"'9I "We live 1n an afOuent area. These people can pay. If a circus atmoephert ls lb• ooly way to .get them to listen, so be It. I think IDday b a good thing." Angelo v....., pllystca teacher 11 Corona de! Mar l!Jih, said he hu Chock· ed with nalton and leamed "the cheapest. tbr<H>edroom houJe ycu cao buy In Ibis district i. $27,000." Another eo,... del Mar lllah teac11er, Al Schwalbe, who teaches economics and &Ocial problems, asserted 11 The :com- munily needs ua more than we need them. We have a dozen YOWSI men 1n our ochool wbo are -.mplattng le1vtn1 teaching for other proleosiool o r business. And thele are Ult most vigorous, most Inspiring te.adlen." A pointed suuallon that the boan! ln- crwe the tu rate wu made by Bart Hake, uecuUve aecretary oi Newport· Mesa Education Anoclatlon. to whlch better than 90 perctnl of dlstrlct teachers belong. He said the board can levy up to 11 cents in permissive (no public vote re· quired) tax for the changeover to thrtt- year middle scllools, sixth tbtTiugh eighth grades. He said he thlnka there II seoUmeot oo the board to levy for the first Ume a pennl!sl .. health and ...Uare tu to pay ro, tescllor inedlcal and deotal beoe!ltl. Hate said the board lately Jiu begun to lake teacheni more oerloualy. He said teacher begOdatora wrt told in an all· day bargaining -la1t Saturday some money has beea·found that wasn't found prevlollsly. "We're shootln( !or r.etw ... ~.000 aod fl mJlltoa Jn -mool..," said Hake. "If we can get close to •1 mllllon we could have a chance. ol getting wnne of the things you seek." Mr. Baeskens Last Rites Held Catholic rites were cooducted todly for lcmctJmt ~ County !armer 1-nl Baes1oena of Newport Beach wbo dlod lfoolda1 at Cosla M.,. Memo<tal Hoopllal a\ the °" ol 11. Mt. Batlbnt, a native Callfomlan, formed land Jused from the Irvine Com· p111y for ao yuro. He h 111TVlved by his wife, Elizabeth, and dauahter. Judy, both of the family home, :mo Cloy St., Newport ll<och. Othtt mrvivora include four brothers, Frank of Artz.on.a, John of Brawley, ea ... r o1 Upland and Bttl o1 Willits. Calif. AIJo airvlvtna a"' two llstm. M11. Julio Hanns of Alhsmbra and Mn. Irene Gri!Olhl of Inglewood. Prtvato burial oervlca follo-1 rilet this momlnc 11 SI. Joachim'• CatbolJc Cburcb, Cotti: Mesa. II supe,rvllon weot for the _.iion that a IJ.acre ~to wCllld he surnc1e11~· the Costa Mesa site woWd have a "60,000 price tag, u opposed to Newport's $1 ,051 ,760. REDUCED ALLOCATION 'That estlmate by Krause la: al!o ba:sed on a reduced allocation of one acre per 1 court Including building, parking and landlcspbig. The city of Newport Beach has pro- ~ acquisition of 19.U i.cres of land from the lrviDe Company. CWTent lllldentandlng between the company and the dly indicates a tota1 evaluation of $1,830,000. 'Ibis figure, sayii; Krause, includes acreage prices ranging from '79,<MO per acre to $120,MO per. acre -an average acreage value of $95,153 per ac::-e. Cost of land to the county i.s seen by Krause as: an imUaJ 4.7 acres to $79,040 an acre; an addllionaJ 5.5 acres if required at $120,840 an acre with any addiUonaJ property prlcln& out at '95,163 per acre. BUYING LAND Krause antlclpate:s the C0W1ty buying land from the: city at the city's cost ''.depending on the county's exact acreap niquiremeoll." He mtes that "the dty apech to receive certoJn concesstou from the Irvine Company respecting ao- tual delivery of pl,)'menL" Krauoe declines to speclflcally compare the two favored ailel. but he doea note tb1t "the Newport Town Center .i .. will .shan JU desllny with an adjocent munJcipal civic center and • regional mopping ceoter. "the p!Anned freeway interchange,·· he adds. "will provide Ions tenn protectlon ot the out.st.anding bay view. The city hopes to attract othtr i'lSUtutlonal users enhancing the cultW'al and poliUcal iden-- llty of the site.'' Krause's analyses Indicate that Color TV Camera Go ing to Moon B>\LTIMORE, Md. (AP) -Apollo IO utronaull wtll bke a color televillon. camera along on their trip to the moon t sclleduled to b<gln Sundoy. The camera, we!ihing less than 15 pouncla, h to be used to show the ast.ronlull at work during the mission, the moon ltstlf, and the e.arth u teen from the viclnlty o( the moon. With the camera will bt a mlnl1ture monitor to be. carried Inside the com. mand moctule to the astronaut usln1 the catnera will be able to aet the scene the comera h tranamlttlng back to urtb. Krause estimates cost of acquis.Won 1t $<0,000 per acre. He slates tha\ the . owner,."a sta.te ·agency, cannot be firmfy committed until documents and complete appraisal have been reviewed and ap- proved by the Stae departments of General Services and Agriculture." Preliminary discu.u.loru and appraisal lnvesUgaUon suggest the price will be ap- proved, Krause states. "U this aite iJ aelect.ed, the county's negotiations should Include the feasibility of acquiring a parking easement to saUsfy same portion of the county's land requirement,'' be adds. "Such an ar· rangement could a1bstanUally reduce the county's cost ol acquialUon." Chairs As an administrator, Biscalluz was credited with piooeering the system of rehabilitable prisooen. The sheriff's force wore it.s first uniforms under hi.s administraUon and he organized the Sheriff's Crime PrevenUon BUttau. Born in Loa Angeles in 1883, he married Wi.lle<'te Harrison, his wile of 48 years, ln 1902. After his retirement, he became the local chief ol the March of Oime3 and hooted the 1111111al Sberill's Parade In Loo Angeles. He is survived by a son, Martin. Funeral servicea are pendina. MAY SPICIAL During the luncheon meeting Thursday, directors also approved a telegram arg .. ing the eounty lk>ard or Supervi.sora to select a 11ew municipal court site al the Orange Counly Fairgrounds. The offered site will represent a $1 million taxpayers' saving over a aug. gested site in Newport Beach, according to analysts, a fact.or emphuized in the chamber telegram. A plaque wu also awarded to John Saint in appreclatkm for his coaching of the Costa Mesa Comet. seml·prolessioaal ba3eball t.eam, since itil crea.Uoo five years ago. 20% to 50% off OUTSTANDING VALUES ON DISCONTINUED FLOOR SAMl'LES NOW IN STOCK ••• LARGE SELECTIONS OF QUALITY CHAIRS FROM THE FOLLOWING LINES: NATIONAL. MARGE CARSON, HIBRITAN, CENTURY, MONTEREY, JAMESTOWN LOUN&E, -PACIFIC, QUALITY, AND MANY MORE. IE AMON& THE FIRST TO MAKE I YOUR SELECTIONS AT THESE UNIELIEVAILE P~ICES •• , ALSO MANY PAIRS TO CHOOSE FROM. IXCLUSIVI DIALI U JIOll: HiNltlDON -DltlXIL-HlltlTAOI 90 DAYS NO INTEltEST-LONOl lt TlltMS AVAILAILI ON APPROVID CllDIT 1et1-INlDIOlS NIWPORT llACH P""'-1 I-LAGUNA l lACH 1727 Wllfcllff Dr .. '42-2050 t D•l1Mrt U1 North CM.t HwY -..,.., "' t AnJIMJo AID-NSJD -.... Ai> .,,. t ..... , ...... .,,_ ...... c..., ..... 11ti J I I I I I I j Ii ' CHECKING • ue • ~ ... Girls With . Small • Heads Lo~k Yo~ By L. M.' BOYD ,....,..a," Mort ol ihli at.of lhillc lal<r. ' ~ .. ''1dl!< Moy 16, 1169 UAIL V l'l(OT ' 5 George w mhington -Was He Sterile? SAN P'RANCISCO (UPI) -. sYndnme ._ amall leola, c-,e w-.ion. blber of u-1 balCbl, nlatlve-. GUr '91J111r1, 11111 . bave been ty and Jar&• brulll for • l!lerile. • male., . . 0r, IC J, W-Solllh also "II Is ncit ...,. im.llcll lo told lllo.Mtll -1 meetln( ol .,.11p lbe ..... "· Dr. Smllll 1be Amarlcaa Vrol<Jclcal M-. aaJ<I, , , soclaUon Wllllhlnlloo was pr'o-The d'oc!or nolfC\ lhal ooe of bably broad-hipped and big· Wa!hlngton's biggest disaP< breasted. • · poiotment.J bJ Ult waa: that 'lbe Birilllh-bom doctor, who "i, • never fJithered a n Y. now realdes ta JUcbmond, Va., children." aid tbe palalji!P and phy .... t ;l'he• , p by s I c I a n llld clescriptlona <it !be flnt Presl· Wuhilictoo !He Marlha .was dent ind1cate be may have manied and widowed before bee1r atftlctad wtlh a 11Pf ol llbe aiid 'Wuliingtoo met. Sbe KllDti.IW'1 ayndnlme. bad fllllr ' cblldriil by lh• . Symp•""• ol the oamplts .,....iou,. ·marriaft, • : • : • • • • I • • • l • • TO LOOK YOUNGJll The m:naller a WCllDID's bead loob, the ..... youUlful .... seems to be. That Is wby Ml.ls lngrtd BerJnwi, for Instance, appean to be tar Jaa than her actual age. She bu a small head. And in that classic 11For Whom the Btl1 Tolls," she WU characteriled sUll IHS aged by a short haircut which created the illusion her bead w~ ev-:n smaller •. A Los Angeles hairdresser· lbml<!<• ,_.,,.,,.,. the abort bain:ul to llght • hearted · ladla who want to repreJent themselves as younger than their yean. CVITOMEIL SEIMCB: Q. ·"WHEN did men . start wear-Intl the.creue·ln lhetr-. ~lnoloadofoa the lides?" .L 'lbll wun't to. far back. tbe King o I England, Gtorge V, even wore ' his pants • that way in the lt20s. . .. , Q. "'I ,SAY BOUSECATS il:et bigger than 'rabbits, right?" A. Absolutely cottect, sir. Bigpsfcat I ever beatd of was a ·tom. named Claua. He weighed ~ . pwncls, Blggut_ rabb~ W8s a FltmW1 giant called "Floppy" !hill y ... ;~ 25 ~ .... Q. "WHERE'S the world'i tallest totem pole? AJpb?" A. No, sir. McKinleyville, C a I • There's a 161).!oot totem pole there. ; · · . 737 Sunjets-from Oranqe County to : · Polie~· Ck~r· 'People's ·Park'··· • ' . t ' , ' . . : . . \ Berkeley Police lounge about in · play , area . or . plariled,grass, laid, a brick walkway and Installed ''People'"s Park'' after tbey cleared '1lllauthorized scu1ptute 1and play equipment. As soon as. pol~e P•J'k of aome 150 trespa~ers in dawn r~id ThurSday. cleared the area; work crews began building !l fence ;sAN· FRANCISCO,OAKLAND and SAN JOSEi '. CERTAIN SPECIES ol but· t~rflr lives up to 50 percent longer wllh Its bead cul of! ..• .h'•lr' lS a ~ystery, but husbands are not 8.ll likely to rel a." homesick as wives. Records or matrimonial counselors indicate twice as many wives as husbands choose to vacation w I t h parents .••. PLEASE file this: the land. owned. by the UniYersity of .California: was ' ·. around the ·1aDd. t1:1rned into ..i park by·.residents ,of the· area ,1ho A man has about 750 muscles, a caterpillar about •,000 ••• , THOSE TYPING TEACBERS in aearcb of an o:erciJe con- taining every letter in the alphabet might also •umlne the 2ht verse of the 7th chapter of Ezra. • • • "MllLIE'' is what all the ''GII!lSllloke" cut most af. fectionateJy call Mr. Milburn "Doc Adams" Stone. TOUGHEST or the Norse warriors was said to be an old boy with 12 sons. Every time he charged into battle, he toss- ~d aside bis armor, and went absolutely wild, cutting and ~ in all directions. l!is nlrne' -wu Berserk, whence cometb OUT' wont. ••• SOME FOLK GET loo dlgnlfied for Ullle Algemooa McGulrt 'But not me. How about this one: "LiWe Algernon McGuire. • .Set bJs grandpa's beard on fire .•. Grandpa, toasted, was Improved. , .All harsh irrttant.s BANANAS -To p u l bananas in the refrigerator or not to put bananas in the refrigerator ....._ that -is the question • Just; checked this out with a banana specialist for the benefit of a client who inquired about the matter. "Refrigeration doesn't hurt their flavor," a1:kf t be sptdalist, "it just turns them black, that'• all." . 1bat'1 enough. Who ,..ms tO eat black bananaa? lnddtotally, · illls specialisl IOiggeSts !ency folt, who want a Tbailand treat, peel the bananas. dip same in chocolate syrup, and quick freeze them. Nothing tastier, he says. RAPID REPLY: Yes, Mr. G., claim is that snails do in- deed have 14,000 teeth, but nobody contends they brush after every mea1. Your qtustions end com- mtm.s are wtleomed and toiU be ustd whertver J>O$o sible in "Chtcking Up.• ·~ Addrtss mail to L. M. Boyd, in cart of the DAILY PIWT, Bot· 1s75, Ntwparl .' Beach, Calif., 9266!. · Men in Service Pv1. 1.C. Demds J, Reigel, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Heigd of 422 Magnolia, Costa Mesa, ii serving with the Nuclear Weapons Trainittg Center, Pacific located at the U.S. Naval Station San Diego. The center provides training and inspection support for the U.S. Pacific Fltet in nuclear weapons capability. Four Orange Coast men are serving aboard the nuclear- powered attack aircraft car- rier USS Enterprise with Task Force 71 in the South Chiria Sea. They are Seaman Tllomas C. Robson, son of Mr. and J\irs. James H. Robson of 221 Geneva St., and Interior Corn· munlcatlon1 Elec&rlcl•• Flrema1 Claude Jt Wiafrff, son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude N. Winfree of 5201 Skylark Drive, both o( Huntington Beach: . Seaman Apprtn. Jolla R Hag- ge, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthtn' Hagge of 1012 Emerald Bay, Laguna Buch and Fireman Apprn. 'lbomu N. Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Clark of 641 St. James Road, Newport Beach. nne Orange Coast men have compl«ed basic training at Lackl•nd AFB, Tu. and have been l&'llgned to Lawry AFB, Colo, far training In the armanement systems field . They are Alrmu Willllm R. Stock. son ol Mrs. Charlotte A. Stock of 111)$ Pembrolle Lane. Newport Beach; Alrma• t'llri....,... C. SU.C, ""' of Mn. Patricia Fredericksen of 5291 Loyola Ave .. Westminster and Atrma11 J t • • D. M.,....m, son of Mrs. Mary Pauon of 215 Hunlilllton Ave., llonlinlt<m 1leocb. tington Beach, hu been uslgned to a unit ol lbe .Military Alrlill Command " 'McCllord AFB, Wash. -The airman. a computer• operator, i.!I a graduate of Foontain Valley High School. Sgt. Jerry L Pienall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Piersall of 900 Sea Lane, Corona clel Mar, has been a~igned to March AFB, as an ad- ministrative specialist in a unit of the Air Weather Serv- ice. The sergeant is a 1965 graduate of Corona del Mar Hip Scliool and itlleroled Orange Coast College before entering the service. Pvt. I .c. Robert J. Arloa, 22, son of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Arkin of 1445 Temple mus Drive, Laguna Beach, has been assigned to the 25th Infantry Division, Vietnam, An inlantrymail, he is serv- ing with Company A. !rd'Bat· talion of the Division's 22nd Infantry. He received his B.S. degree in 19118 f r o m Northwestern University, Ill. Sior.keeper S.C. Jabo L. Davis, USN. sou ·o1 H. B. DaviJ ol 189 Plumer Sl, Costa Mesa, Is 5t1'Vlng aboard lhe attack tran..port USS Cambria at Norfolk, Va. 'lbe ship is one of six that will comprise the Si:rt.h Fleet Amphibious Task Force in the Mediterranean Sea. Bus Drivers Win Praise Airman Stock is • graduate 1'Drivin1 a school bus ts a of 1-11 Hlgb Scbocll, Whit-laugh job. In fact, I -!loci tier; Ainnan StronJ graduated we Md a new driver an the from w~ Hlgb School job at 7 the other d•Y ml by 9 and attended Golden We at o'clock be had quit." Collep before -.m, the. Wilh Iha! note ol ap. service and Airman Markham preciation for the 1t'otk thty Is a gradua.. ol Huntlni\Gn do, Newport-Mesa S u p I Belch HJch School and at-William C u n n J n g h a m an- terd<d Orange Coul College • l10WlCtd lhal lhrtt tchocil before entering the service. district bus drivers placed Airman Strong's father; high in competJUon at a ncent Ray Strong, Uva at 11S ro1rntvwlde Driver Traininc Walnut St., ec.ta Mua. Institute. M'ort men more Jl'loris Greeley took fU'lt In the small· bua ~· and Ken I ~= ti.;:: =ln ~ I 95* " • . . • . ' . :i ~ t..n.jour Tmal Agent or Air Calllomlii·(714)-S4CM51D ~ 1• .. •·········~·~··~·~··--~····••1·~---····~· . ' -~~ ...... • The llghtnt 18" Color Set you·t;an burl So eay to any from room to room _ 1 I I j ! I I . I • " • • .. I ' • Solld copper drcults re~ace-C#:' . · · faShloned "hand wiring in ~! .. cheuls. tr0uble sp0ts · · • SuPer-p0wlirful New'Vlsta VHF tuner,· the most·powerful In the Industry' . • Extra•seultlve Solid State UHF . transistorized tuner • Famous NewVISta.pictU"9·qu9..-Y assui-. locked In color. purity . ' · •• .. .. • • ~ • Euy color quiCk tum.a and picture . " · ai..1p1:111a~,' I'.'.'"; .. ~·:«:-". • AUto....UCCtrOma.coidNlell IIMilf'c·ar • -~~ aiJBa9 · ; ~ I"' ·-· • ...... Nllllll,..__.. ........ ' . 1· '· ' ' I "• I AJ.rma Ru..u E. BU.er, ..., ol Mr. and Mra. Gordon F. Baker ol l!UID A Strttt, HW> lar .. busclua,btaald.. ·----------------------------================"===----- I I 1 l . . -. ' • • ,! ~ eeds Detaiie·d Study 1n1r1gu1ni, tase1nat1nc. pn111tsi•c -yet lrl&blenlnc -ell mljbt describe a pn>polal to HI up gil!!lt flaah screens t.o C3lT)' advertising messages adjacent lo C...ta Mose <Ueet.s. The Coote Mesa Plaru!lng cOIJlllllslion found lhal the prop>oal 1ubrnltted by Mitralu ol. Orange CountY fascinating enough to recammenil a ...., e....,tloa per- mit: 'The City Council will p"'"11m8bly take up the lal\l• al its '!leeling nut Mooday night. J . · Wbat Milnllux p._. Is nse ol a powerful pro- 1. ectOr to flash &lid es oo """'"'" or bulktings at apedtic ocations. Unlike billboards now in use, lhe m.,oa1e would be cootro!led from a projector and would not utilize poster techniques or moving objects now incor· porated in ~~ny bi;lJboa~s. I The !lash' screen.technique would permit messages to be cast on almoot any Oat surface -)>Ollsibly even on cloods, so poWerful is the projector utjllzed. The system would have an economic edge over present' bill· boards.in thot tile meu11e c:ould be more easily chang- ed, could be placed 1!11 more surfacel, ancl v,ery likely· woold use tlubier attention<ompell!Dg techniques. Were It In 1111 middle ol. Dl.meyland, or oome other amusement perk, Mitralux might flt Ille .ac:ene!Y. and indeed enhance ii. But.-b.,oad the vuy obvious ques- tion of traffic hazard Involved, there is llOOlelhlng troobo ling aboot the proopect ol llllde lliows popping up on all kinds of surfaces an over WWn. Just as the public ~hould be protected from the blare of ubiquitous music or messages broadcast a1ong the street, so does it seem it should be protected to some• degree from messages a nd "sho\vs " flashing on at nightfall hither and yon throughout the city. -. The l\litralux fi rm asserts that it would exercise ' : • • • • • • t Byll:LUWORTHL lllCIWllJllON : -' N ......... 11d Coqrecadeul a.arm ! i.,... Buell . A ~· ad In all the collep ; ......_.. lo tbe .u.s. recen\]1 uted i studenll to plow write In to buslnen ! leaden II tbey had 111Ut doubf.l 1boul tbe ~ wqrtbwbUIDess or a buamea areer. In • Ulla -,. wbere bualoess la kill& 11111 ! the . National Aalociatioo of Muafac- '. turers If THE frllernlty to beJoac to - • Ulla IWld of ci-Uoelnc mobs -! woildet. Ate Ibey-tllll perbopo ; ... ClllDOl llnd iuJflllineal In bo-! ~ Two Je&rl qo la a much pubUct.d ~ news-item lt wu reported that reprwn- : tative11 of a major oil company bad men ihan 11,000 interview• in • buainee • school to uncover _, men -only 300 out :o1 11,000 interviewed wanted to work ln •business. • • l 11IE FRDHMEN that entered Uni· t veraity of CaHfornia at Jnlne laat fall, ~ like other freshmen In tbe coUeaa of ; the U.S. wwertd a q..tionnatre can- 'ducted by the American COunciJ on : F.ducation. Nearly :IOO que8llolll about 'tbetr bac~, attitudes ml ombl· : Uons were asked. Eleven pen:ent wlllted to become • tnearch acientists Wblcb WU almost ·.~ t t me 1 more tbm tbe mtkmJ averoge of U ..,.-; IU percenl, or :. twice the national avenge of 1.1 percent, wanted to become medical docttn al : UCL Only 3 peroent wanted to become ·. ixllineas men, wberus 31.2 per<>enl lilted . Dear Gloomy Gus: II you watch Mayberry RFD on TV, you know why some people doo 't want a freeway through Colt.a · Mtu. -G.G. their father's occupation as "business man." . IN A IDOHLY idealistic generation of collel' ltudenta, tJCI students -i.e., the ffafwa -are more idealistic than their counterparts across the nation. Six· ty pemnt of the entering freshmen said it was am essential objective to "heJp othn ln difticulty,11 and 24.6 percent llld Ibey pion to join the Peace Corps or Vlala, compared to 11.5 percent na· tionllly who plan to enter those service °C::S-UU. mean? It means that they are apparently looking for meaning -IOll1eU*ltf thoi -....... to them. Ttwy Ile trying to develop a reverential tnat in lile. They are saying "yes" to lilt! WE SEEM TO BE members or a socie- ty of great eltremes. At one end there is hitb idealism and at the other extreme v~ and degradation. It is good to know that there is a resurgence of idealism among the young for so often we beat anly of t h e i r aperimeds with dna&a or their involvement with the polfOe. I recall what the little boy with the blaot eye said when he was asked who gave tt 1'0 him. He replied, "Nobody gave it to ine. I !lad lo Dpt for IL" I am gild that the freshmen at UCI have not ab- dictltd their moral responsibility and are will11ta to fight for ideal!:. In the struggle they Will receive many black eyes but may they proudly wear their badge of idenWleftJon with honor? This Is no time to swi!dil I • .· ' Scramble for Housing , j rtsld cobtn>I over format and otftt only ''tutetlil" pte- seiltl1!om. Tbal tn. ilHlf II 1 hi& rub, for control of taste Is a dllllcult maU.r to j..-ge. Mltralu uecullves .....,ede that Ibey have a "very d)'nemlc weapon -U put In the wrong bands." They pledge saleguarda to make Cll1aln errant m..,.aes wW not take ovtt lhe regular prognuni. Tbat in Itself is an admission of poteou.J cl!mc.rs:ln Iha l)'!lem. _ In a period when, Costa Meu ls t!nally beginning to ri>al<e some headway apinst billboard blight, It lffllls lnc<1ft(""""' not to .exercise conalderable caution In approving lhe Mitralux propooal. It la Indeed a powerflll Idea, ooe lhat certainly warnmts objective, detailed study by lhe ~ty Council and '°"'" careful regulation before it is approved. Posting . a Me~ge MEMO TO ·cosrA MESA COUNCILMAN WILLIAM L. ST. CLAIR: Bill, while you're poking· around In lhe c!ty ball d.,. parlments and asking questions, you might look up the municipal code governing real estate "for sale" signs placed Oil property. . The law (widely commended, as you J>robably know) calls for the sign to be painted green with wlilte letters. The sign in front of your hou.se is a bit on the bright side of the law -red. Maybe it wouldn't be a bad idea, while you're at it, to check the commercial sign restrictions to see if your barber shop manifests the spirit of that cleaner, neater downtown Costa Mesa everyone keeps talking abo.ut. <Cl Deeiriou Do Not Impede Law Enforcement People, Not Courts, Are the Villains To the EditDr: Jn recent years it has become Cashionable to attack the decisions ol, and the judges on, our nation 's courts, most frequently those of the Supreme Court or the United States . Tbeir opponenU blame the courts for handculling the polic:o through "ultr• liberal" decisians involving due process of law. They Point to the rlaing crime rate as .an example of the results court decisions are having on law enforcement Many or these people felt tbat the Constitution is an unreasonable barrier which the police mu.rt confront in order to exercise justice quickly and efficlenUy. Public opinion seem11 to express the feel· ing that the only good criminal is the one who is suffering behind bars. It ill to tbe opinioru of these people that I react. IN THE FIRST PLACE, the recent decisions . of the Supreme COurt do not impede law enforcement officers from carrying out their duty, nor do they con- tribute to tbe rising crime rate. All these decisions do (e .g. Miranda and Escobedo) is to ensure th05e con-- stituUonal right.. to everyone, equally, under ·the law. These rulings have con- centrated on guaranteeing the protection of suspects under police lntem>gation. Suspects now have the right to counsel during questioning, and upon arrest must be apprised of this right under the Fifth Ameodment. These decisions were urgenUy needed. They did not arise out of any subversive plot by "gutless," liberal judges to undermine contemporary American society. They arose out of the e:nonnous illegal practices by the police to gain quick conlessiom of guilt. rr IS THE TRADmON in !ht. C01111try that an individual accused ol a c:rimtnal offense is innocent of lhat olfenae until he is proven guilty, by a court of law, beyond a reuonable doubl It seems Ill though an tmeontrollahle •motional -bu •Ill Ulla counllJ In-to the camp of "law and order," justice being incidental to procedure . The eye for an eye and the tooth for a tooth conupt has never really Jett \II; ro- ly the me!hoda employed are changod. Punishment has never 80lved the crime problem. RehabililaUoD In <lll'-fl'lloos ill ,. ..... :1"",P ....... ,...~ •. "~~ -~. having little influence In changing in- mates' atUtude3. or morals. so IT SEEMS THAT we need drastic changes in our present policies of pmiah- ment and revenge. Undentanding and positive encouragement, perhaps, might be parts of the answer to a complicated problem. The courts, moreover, are not the villains, People are. Until we can learn to approach those problems of poverty, ignorance and pre- judice, which have beset mankind throughout history, then our fate here on earth seems to be hanging on a thin thread of destructioo. A.s attorney Melvin Belli so apUy stated, " Legislatures do legi.!late 'for the biggest of us, but as long as the supreme courts give their attention to the least of us, then ail of us will be protected.• " GEORGE V. JNCAMPO Se:r: Education Needed To tbe Edltor: To the parents who will deny the.ir children the right to know what sex Ui all about : Would you rather have your son or daughter fiod out the "facts of life" the hard way? Would you like to go through the course of events when your daughter tells you that she ls about to be a mother? This is just one of the reasons why kids today rebel. Because they are denied the right to know. BEX EDUCATION might help them reallrie the problems that would be In- volved Ir they went too far. Most parents never tell their children wlutt se1 is. They IOOn learn it on their own. You parents that voice about 1ex Glusell on topics you don 't w111t them to see, are you afraid they might learn something? tr they .fira know. It might save a terrible mishap. Stn. Schmilz's statement "lD rorce parents to put their children in sex COlITTlell is a denial of rellglous freedom" is to me ridiculous. WHAT DID almighty God gi ve us sex organs for anyway? To bear children, of course. But the way people art going about it today is unwise . I think today's younger generation needs to know more about au belore they proceed into the art of love. Please don't deny our children the right to know about sex. They might find out the hard way. They may even learn something yciu don'! know! ~N WEEKS Domestic Com1n11nia«• To the Editor : Some Americans urged that we be permissive with U.S. Communists. "After all" they said, "we have few Com· munlsts. Such small numbers can"t hurt ua much. Besides, our domesUc Reds are well-behaved." Some of these same Americans used McCarthyism smear tactics against anyone who recognizes the dangers of communism: "He 's a fascist witch~ hunter and sees a Communist undl".r every bed." Deliberate c h a·r a c t er usassination befalls those who warn or communism's work. THE DANGER IS that disrupUve Com- munist activities go unchecked since responsible people are muzzled. Expedi- ent pollUcians appeal to wishful thinking. 'Ibey agitate against appropriate anti· Communist actions. The resultant half. way actions (at home and abroad) drag the conflict on without solving it (instead 4'.lf applying appropriate resources to 1uc· cessfully end the struggle). Then it's easier to say, "Why go on? Let's give up." • Let's reaffirm the rights of the people. Be cautious of those wbo attack anyone who informs you of communism. Such detractors do enough harm that lhei should receive no support. Distinguish between the pabiot who speaks from facts and the crackpot who unjustly calls others Communist. Support strong, swift act.ion to protect the right.!I of the people. A DISClPUNED, miltlarit minority can be effective against the unorganized ma jority. Students for a Democratic Society (SDS ) has only 6,000 dues-paying, naUonal members. They have 35,000 chapter members on 225 campuses and perhaps 100,000 adherents. (U.S. News and World Report, p. 34 , 5-12.fi9). SOS is ·behind almost all the college disturbaoces. SOS was involve<! in disputes with authorities on 200 cam· puses. Members' phllosophies range from yOulhCul idealism to d e s t r u C ti v e radicalism. Michael Klollliky (SDS's top official) says, "Our primary task is to build a Marxist-Leninist revolutionary movement." {March 30). Klonsky calls himself a revolutionary Communist. SOS wants to destroy, annihilate, and tear down. ,.1ost members are white, from af· fluent or middle<lass families. 1'1ARK RUDD OF SOS spearheaded the attack that closed Columbia in 1969. SOS Jed the Harvard rebellion. SDS seizes any campus issue, exploits tt, expands it and stirs uninvolved student.!! intD action. SOS feeds the arous· ed students suggestions that create a con· frontation with college officials. Issues include Vietnam War. dra ft, ROTC, campus recruitment by com- panies making war materials and military research project.5. Or they create issues (such as over-enrolling in a class, then denouncing the uni versily for large classes). U the university grants SOS demands. the demandr a r e escalated. UnrtaS<>nable demands are lumped with valid demands -and the whole package presented as "non· negotiable." SOS WAS instrumental in organ izing the I967 Pentagon march to protest the Vietnam war. They helped plan and lead the demonstrations in Chicagl) against the Democratic convention. SOS is mov· ing into the high schools and industry. Our "tame" Communists are dolni: what our bleeding hearts said could ne\'er happen here. Do domestic Reds pose a potential threat? Are we to let SOS.type groups have their way in the U.S.~ Or will we put people in responsible position~ with enough realism, common sense and backbone to make sure "crime doesn't pay?" LEONARD WRIGHT •. Surgeons have postponed operations, hippies have c:ut their hair llJld f~ j.have destroyed their pel.J -all in the in- ,1en51 of llndlog 1 desirable pi.ce to Jive ;In Manhattan. To &et the jump oo Giber • apartment..tiunten, they read t b e !obituary columns. bribe doormen, movtns ·men and even hospital interns for tips. i Unpublished listings have been stDlen !from the printer ol the Village Voice, :creenwlch Village newspaper. I 300 Million Malnourished Children ~ AU of urban America ls feeling a hous-. \ing pinch, but in New Vert it seems flworse than elsewhere. Little moderate or tlow-income housing hu been built there !;since 1963, a year new building codes • • "• ---89 Georse --.., Dear George: I am an 18-yea.r-old girl with llhort hair and I Wtat jeans and men'1 lhirts bat I'm terribly afraid I still give an impression ot btln1 lernlnlne. What can I do? SUE Otar Sot: Even in lhll day 1nd age some women '"' buically female and '°"'D jlllt have to live with it. CONFIDENTW. TO B I LL JilJCICLEY: Donl worry about •bot tbe7 .., -jolt .. IDln)' pea. pie llllnk you're ,_ tbao Hop- pe. (Send )'Ollt problemo to 0-W. llJld p out and pt oome -p;ol>. lelna. Sprlntr ii bin.) .. were Impaled. Tw~thirds or the existing 2.1 million apartmenti are still tmder the r.nt control that was im-d"originally in Worid War n . The four mOUon New Yorken wbo Uve in them slay put; they have about the only cheap housing in the city. For the rest ol the people, especially thole In Manhattan, the price ii high and cetttna higher. "A !amilJ man earning i3510o0 a year bu it IOU&b living in Manhattan," the president· of a rul _.-""l!PIDY told N,... York mopzlne. ~O ·ea11 tbe Pinch. the Mayor's Rent Gulde!M Boord propoood on March 10 !lat ....... of 400,000 WIC<llltrolled _.tmenf.I limit !uture Increases to JS percent every two )'ears and reduce any recent lncttase's that were higher. The rtal estate lndustry 1 11 d llepla>llcoD Mayor John v. Lbtds.y .. ...... But the pnoldent of the Dtmoc:raU~led CIQ> C ounc i l . Francia X. Smith. accuaed the ownen or bed flltb when no rut reductions ap- peared' In their April bUllngs. The Uorlrl1 Mminlall'ltlon answered thll -. time w11 needed Ind that e!l&lble --ld-rentredU<:UonJby 'J"bunday, Ma:r L 'that date ail!umt-1 1iplftcance iD a year whtn Nt:w Yotk Cl· ty will fltcl I ml)'O<, ~lore than 80 percent of. tbe total brain growth of the human bela.g takes place. during the rirst three years of life . lf, during the mother's pregnancy and lactation, she and the cblld are suffering from malQ.utrltion, the later mental ability of the baby may be lO to 25 percent below normal. Today, It is estimated that ap· proximately two-thirds of the children -300 milllon -in the world are undern4'.lurisbed. and have some degree ot ntardation of crowth 11 a result of low nulrltlon. THESE STATEMENTS and figur" come from Or. David B. Qiursln who, durlng the early 19505, discovered U'llt low d1et1ry intakes of vitamin 86 Quotes . Mrs. Cllarlet 1'. Ka-S.F. -"The most important thine In "II' relotionahlp i,; first to kno" youraelr, end to make an equally great effort to know your partner." • • . " could dis turb the central nr:rvous system activity in infants, which regulates brain functions. More recently, as be reports in ''Unicef New1," 1tudies from d~velop­ lng countries in South America. Alrlco. indooe61a and the Phillpplnt1 indicate that undenlutrlUon "affect:.s the mental development and perform: ance of children." AblUty tests given to chronically undernourished young. ster& showed they performed at a stgnlftc antly lower level than the well- nourisbed. INTERESTINGLY enough, D r . Coursln point. ou~ th• newborns In some of the dtvtloplng countries showed "superJor ablllUe1" on first neurologScal uamloaUona, In contrast to the level of activity 1em In babies from Europe and the U.S. But within a year their scores decreased to lowe r than nMmal levels. I • . ApparenUy an adult can withstand even severe and prolonged malnutrl· lion without permanent damage. but malnutritlon during the first year5 produces cellular changes that are ir· reversible and ne ver complete}1 cor· reeted. These limitaUons ()f mental performance , Dr. Coursla warns us, "are therefore malntalntd and perpetuated lnt4'.l succeeding eenera- tions." NEW TECHN IQ UES In biochemistry have enabled us to separate the factor of nutrition from Ule whole complez or environment, and it Is now generally believed th at lack of • proper ,diet1 more tb1n anything else, retards the mental abilities in regions where starvation ts the rule. If tf\e child falls to get off to a good start, the adult Is doomed lo below.,.verage performance in modern society. What thl1 means, or eoure:1s---ift1t proYldlng enough food , of the right sort. to the 300 milUon malnouri shed children in the world is more than a "humane" gesture; It Is I.he 4'.ln11 way l4'.l raise the level tr performance ID those countrie& and lo prevent both the population explosion and the fO(ld shortage from co mbining to bury the human race. Survival, not philan· thropy, commands our Immediate at· tentloo to thi1 gra ve. and growing. problem of brain-food for babies. ----WWW- Friday, May 16, 1969 Tl1c cdllorial pcgt of tht Dollu Pilot 1eek1 to inform and 1&im- tdate rtadtn b!I prt11'11t1ngo this new1pcper '1 opinions and c~ m.entary on topics of in.ttrtst a.nd Vg11ificance. bu providing • forum tor the eipreuion of our ttadtr11 oPfnion..t. and b11 presenting t}Je diotr1e oiew- poi•fl Of infOf'fl!<d • 001.....,. and .spoke.smtn on topic1 of 1ht .ior. Robert N. Weed, Publisher ~--- • \ ----------------------------- Gold, Blue Auto Plates Due Soon SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The llatt wiD (-new golcl«l-blue automobile llcenJO plates In a grldual clllqeover bq!rmln& In October, Gov. Ronald Re111n said to- day. The .... pl1les In lhe •lall>'• ollldal -. will alao ,...,..... lhe fomlllll' J~number combination;· ,n.th three numbers -precodlilg lhe lbree lellm. By October the llale elpecla to rooch the end of lhe 1$.35 --l'JOSlble with lhe old Jetter.n11mber system introduced In 1951 l!ld renewed In 11113. The .... ~ ia e>]>OCled\to laat UDlllj 1978. Tram!Uoo will be 1<edual, l!<qan Aid at a news confeft:OCe with bulinela and tranlportalion ~ Gordoo lAlc:e IJld motor vehlcies cnr.ct« 'leme Orr. New ears will get the new plates u well as cm that need ..., piales becaule of loa, thell ar damage of the old gold-on- black plalel. But car owners -prefer to IWilch to the plal<S can order them far ~. fteaian also voiced support for a bill pending In the Leglslabn eoabllng car owners to order peraonaliled license plat.! for $20. Factory Worker Shot by Officer Off Critical List Jimmy Al8Jl Henry, 22-year-old Cypress factory worker, who wu shot twice early Wednesday by an of/ duty Los Angeles police officer and then nm over by a car was st.ill in "serious" condiUon today at Orange County Medical Center. Hospital aides said, however, he bad been removed from the critical li!t. Henry was reportedly shot twice by police Sgt. Frank Spencer. 44, of Anaheim eariy Wednesday morning after he had allegedly struck Spencer In the head with an ue handle. Capt. James Broadbelt ci the Orange County Sberiff's Office ea.id today his department is still gathering evidence in the case and it would be turned over to the Distrirt Attorney's Office when the lnvestJgatioo was ccxnpleted. The altercation occurred on lbe Euclid Street offramp ci the Riverside Frteway near Anaheim shortly after midnight; When Spencer, returning from duty in Los Angeles, bumped into the rear m tbe car driven bJ ll<ory. The two drove off the f r e e w a y to udiacuss the matter" w b e n. Spencer reports, Henry struck him with the ue handle. The police officer fired two sbota while lying on the ground. Sgt. Spencer then went to Martin Luther Hospital nearby to report the shooting and have bis head treated. Alter he had left Henry wa.s run over by a car driven by Robert Bacazar, 29, of Anaheim. Henry Is suffering from broken legs, a fractured left ann, internal injuries and mulUple cut& and bruises in addiUoo to the two gunshot wounds. ·Pilot, Boys Ooh Join in Selling Of Flag Kits One of the most concerted efforts ever made to turn the Orange Coast red, white and blue for the holidays was launched t~ay by area Boys' Clubs and the DAI· LY PILOT. Boys' Clubs of the Harbor Area, Hun- tington Beach and Laguna Beach are of· fering United States flag kits for sa1e throughout the "patriotic season." It starts with Memorial Day (May 30) and includes Flag Day (June 14 ), In.. dependence Day (July 4) and Labor Day (Sept. l). Kickoff of the sales campaign Is an- nounced in a public !lervice ad published today on Page 26. The ad details how readers can order nq: kU.a by mall or can quali!y for a free flag decal by picking up their orders in person at any of four Boys' Club bead· quarters locaton.s. a Each flag kit buyer will r~ive • Calirornia state Oag u a bonus. All proceedJ ol the big "patriotic season" flag push will go to the three Boys' Clubs participaUng ill t.be program wllh the DAILY PILOT. King Loses Out To Rumford as Freeway Name SACJIAMEN'ro (AP) -In a brief bat helted battle in a Senate committee, the name of the late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. lost out to former Anemblyman WJIUam Byrnn Rumford 10< the name ol 1 Muni OU!and Freeway. Seo. John G. Schmit> (R-1\Jstln), com- mented, "lt'a a Jot to upect, t.&ipa:yers --clllagreed ~ -him (~) to aupport namlni I f ..... oy Iller him. The Senalt Finance Commlllt<, on a split voice vote Thuraday, killed a meuure by llemc!mUc Sen. Nlchalas C. Petris or Oaldand which would hive. nam- ed 1 portion of a ftteway In bia city aftrr the 1laln civil righll leader. I " -T'8M-ft. ' ....... '"" ----~ /.,,-. lUNAI • ,.....1> o~ ... llir • • .. :._,~ ' «>, \ _ .. C> -... . I U.S. Force~- Day 'Salutes ·sch~uled ,frldOY, MOY 16, 1969 ' . s ' llfflaest Total. } ' 48 U.S. Aircraft Viet~am Lost • ID ----"' 1177'---"'8rinM,llnnenindAmerlclnt.epm. SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Command llllHa will bt out in flill foroe Sa!Unlay to ll100WlOed today tbal 41 American llDd inlomd altacb, • loot due to -Uonal fallurea during llle war. ' Apollo10 . Plight Profile . v,., ....... MISSION OF SUNDAY'S APOLLO 10 MOON FLIGHT Spoceshfp lo ,, ..... Twlco Within '~ MllOI ol .... - ApollO lO ·Moon Probe Toughest, Most Risky CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) ~ The moon orbiting mission of Apollo 10 is the toughest and most risky m a n n e d spaceflight yet undertaken by the United Stales. It amounts to the flights of Apollo 8 and Apollo 9 JIUl together with some extra hazards thrown in. Apollo 10 astronauts Thomas P.y Slaf· ford, John W. Young and Eugene A. Ceman will orbit the moon three times longer than the lunar pioneers of Apollo 8 and they will fly two spacecraft three times farther apart than did the pilots of Apollo 9. "Each one has had a greater risk than the one ·preceding it and I think that cer· tainly holds true in this mission," Staf· ford said at a-recent briefhig. The Apollo 10 pilots, however, will have the benefit of the erperience of their predecessors. Apollo 8 astronauts Frank Bonnan, James A. Lovell and William· Ai Anders were the first to fly bifO orbit around the moon. Astronauts James A. McDivitt, David R. Scott and Russell L • Scbweickart were the first to fly the four· legged lunar modUle landing crafl ln con· junction with the commaod ship, in earth orbit. Apollo 10 will be tbe first to Dy both spacecraft In orbit around tbe moon. ApoUOI I and • showed that the balfc spacecrafl work. It will be the job of Stafford, Young and Ceman to prove t4at the two ships can fiy well enouib around the moon to maq 1 landlng on the Apollo 11-. Stafford and Ceman •.ill Dy their lunar module on. a reheanal of Yirtually every moon .. ~ QPerOllon except the final d...,..t llld blutofl from the moon. Tbey will drop lw!ce to' within S0,000 ree1orthe1unar sur1ace 111<1 they will ny more than 350 mllel away from Young in lhe 19-mlle-higll.comml!ld ahlp. -Since StaffoM IJld -Ceman wUI not be ' landing, however, they will have aome extra fuel to cope with unexpected dlf-· Oculliea ml slfll -.accessfuUy-complete their m1ssloo and pava·.tbe way for a lan- illng by Apollo 11. Stafford Aid,t)ie Apollo 11 flight "will be fftD more rlaty than ours." The goal of ApoUo 10 ia to rodUc. thole extra dangen to a mtntmum, Ships Der •T-hing!' Beach Artist Dabbles 1in Oils By TERRY COVILLE 01 1t1e OallJ 1"1"1 stiff Norma Johnson finds it more difficult to capture a red apple in oils than a four masted schooner. i'l'm terrible on landscapes," she groans, when talking about her ex- periments in oil painting, an endeavor she 1tarted lw than two yea.rs ago. But fellow workers at the Huntington Beach Police Department have nothing but praise for her tbr6e paintings of old sea going vessels hanging in the records bureau. When not painting, Nonna works the 4 p.m. to midnight shirt as a records bureau clerk. She's only been there one month, bul baa already tranJfonned ci>worken Into her !DOit avid fans as an artist. "I feel great lei! 11Usfacllctn when I know someone really likes my palntlng, even if I don't sell It," says Norma. She can't be clusified a professional (three sale1 ia a year and a half) but Norma Johnson ID8¥ be on the thrabbold of recognition. Ships are her subject -not landscapes -and those who have seen them have high praise for the delall l!ld lmowlodge exhibited. "I'Ve really bOiled tt down to mathematics," she explains, "and I'm no mathemaUclan." Her method is to crr.w one Inch squares on the ...,...,.aod U copying a IUl>Jecl, do the painting one inch at a Ume. "It's the ooly way I could ever produce the detail in my paintings," Norma adds. "Someday I'd like to do figurtS and a few other topics," says the pretty artist who nearly flunked out of her high school art clus. "But right now I can do ships much better and 1 enjoy them," she add!. Norma, Incidentally, 'does not have a bolling background, even !hough she's spent all her We in Orange County. He l)>lre time -that which is not spent on art or work -b usua1ly taken up with music. "In high school I played the Dute, tnmipel, -. drums and French born. Now I'd like to learn the guitar1" sbe laughJ. Mu.sic plays a 11ignlficant part in Norma'• art wort too. "I never paint Without music in the background. Usually modem jazz or pop music," abe a- plalned. Norma baa never displayed ber J>:aln- tinp In a show, bUt some have appeartd around the county In banks. "I hope to · begin appearing in shows now," she nods. · "l set IOlld standards for myaeU," aays the police department's pretty painter, "each ahlp I do must be bel1er than the last ooe." "Art glvea me a Utile faith in myHlf, even though most ol the lime I'm learlna my hair ouL It's release. even thou&h 1 feel fnllttat.ed over dttalls at times,~' adds Norma. fn • brief moment of shyness Norma· -ltted, "I'm really MWed wben my palnllll& ..,.., ollt rlghL" County Boy, 6, Killed' by Auto One ol lhrto younf --"""' walktng In I ..-alt II Broadway llld Apte llreeta In AnalJelm WU killed Thund., wheol llnlek by 1 car. Deed ot -lnjtrlu on arrtral •I -_.., llolpltal, -Dovld LeFem, I, -ot Mr. ml Mn. c.cll LtFene of St Echo Line, Arllbelm. Brother -~ 7, .... only ollsb111 hurt and the tblrd brUber Dlnell, ,, taped mork Armed r ..... Dey. hellcoptin and planel w.,. loll In Viet· l<><al 11lutea to flgbllnc mea • llvlnc nam C(urlng. the pall week. II wu -ot IJld dead, wUI ~ude an o1r sjiow; Urita • ~ ~ti:!"'i:.:tbstollltba~ i:e u:lf!l ~ IJld 1 parade, all open to Stales bu been 118'ltlng In the Soulbeut .Tbe .ICliedule fnclues: ----Aaf,: l:;. raised to 1,141 the number of MAllCll AIR FORCE BASE: 9:30 a.m. Amtt1can a!n:rafl sbo\ down, dalroyod to 4 p.m., model alrcrafl Olgbll, 81unt 00 the ground by memy roctel mortar flytag, par a c bu t e jumping, hot-air , balloon, anUque aln:rafl, band COllCtlis, -ti '..t( -ti bo\mber tours, IJld karata demOoatr•· ::riawe'~sbme•ts alid "'1 rooms Rogers, Thieu CAMP"PENl)LETON: Del Mar area open house, 9::11 a.m. weapons IJld equip-' n· ;QPUSS . Mee·t ment Ulled by Marinea will be on diaylay; """' Bue Special Service. !Walt demoilstra- tions, mo~1 ... IJld karate demOllBlra .. W1'th 'Pres1'dent tlol'll. Reftt.sb.ments will be available. AMERICAN LEGION POST No. 157, LAGUNA HlLLS: 2 p.m. Parade or cadets from the Army and Navy Academy of Carlsbad, Calif., be~lnnlng at the Medical building at Gate No. 2, mov· lng along Aragon Avenue to Clubhouse No. l. 2~45 p.m. ubibition drill for the Governor's trophy competition, followed by Taps in salute to those who gave their lives for their country and a battalion review. Tlief t Suspects Nabbed by Police Two burglary ruspecll dressed In bizarre fashion were captured by Santa Ana police early this morning as they allegedly tried to escape from a restaurant-bar. Police said they nabbed Judith Ann Harmon, 19, of 12531 SunswepL Ave., Garden Grove; and Robert A. Haynes; 24, of 14701 Newport Blvd., Tustin, as they popped out of the rear door of Viviano's Bar and· Restaurant, 3601 W. Bolsa Ave. Officers said -both were dressed in sleek, black leotards. She was wearing high style mocassins and he, ballet shOes. Police allege they recovered $26.64 the pair had taken from coin operated machine• In the bar. - Officers were c8lled to the scene at 2:0 a.m. when a custodian working in a doughnut shop in the front of the property heard noises in the rear building: SAIGON (AP) -~ of Slate William P. Rogers and President Nguyen Van Thieu today dlscusaed the possibility of a future meeting between Thieu and President Nixon but did not reach any decision on time or pl~. U.S. officials did not indicate whether Nixon might visit South Vietnam, Thieu would go to the United States or .if the 1neeting might be at aome midway point. In five hours of talks at Independence Palace, Rogers and Thie~ reportedly agreed that !ollowing presentation of Nix~ on's eight-print peace plan, the United States and South Vietnam are in position to move forward prompUy in peacemak· ing at Paris if the Commu.nlst slde is ready for serious. negotiations. Rogers gave Thieu a letter from Nixon which reportedly gave Nixon's personal assurance of America's commibnent to support South Vietnamese iodependence, U.S. officials said the letter would be made public only if the Saigon govern- ment released lt. As an alternative lQ a_ negoUated set- tlement, Rogers and Thieu also discussed prospects for progressive replacement of U.S. troops-in Vlebuiin with South Viet· namese troops. Rogers, officials said, found 'some government units are ready to take. over more of the fighting, and training·is conUnulng. Tbty ad4ed that Rogers was en- couraged at finding Thieu has a very fle1ible attJtude on broadening the political base in South Vletnam to include the Viet Cong's N at i on al lJberaUon Front as part of a peace settlem.eot. -"'COit& M- Ati•s Chrysler Plymcuth, Inc. 2929 Harbor Blvd. In the year llnce the peace talb be11n • • in PW on May 13, 11181, the .United Stales Jiu loll l,i67 aln:raf~ °' rougbl)r· ~lhinl o( lite number ' f 0 11 In I b e previoua seven years. Tbe 5,141 alttraft i.ot lll"e eotfmated to . have c_ost between 1$ blillon end II billion. Tbe looses,_ llliar\>ly during llle pas! rear despllt • partial hall In lite bombing ot North, Vielnan) In April 1111, IJld· a complele -.lion lasl Nov. 1: , Of the total -· 2,1111 were llxod· · wing planes llld 1.141 were helfcoplora. Of the 41 aln:rall 11111 In the· put -~ .. 22 helic:oi>ltn -e lhol down, 11 ,P hellcopltrl were lool to other calllel, lwo fixed-wing planes ""' sbo\ down ml lfr fixed-wing aln:rall were loll to ctlber. """""· Thtte ol tbe helicopt<n "'" -• down 'l'bunday Jn Vlrioul parts of the country. One American waa killed and four were WOlUlded. Tbe U.S. Command cooJd offer no Im- mediate eiplanatiop for the. mounting , -: airc;aft 1..,.... But other oources ncl!>d · that the CommuniBI command lasl S.... . · day nlgbt sharply Increased .Ill rocket and mortar attacks up and dqwn the country, hitting several American, bales. The impllcaUon was that a number o( hellcoplers and planell ~" deslro)>ed on the gronnd. U.S. spokesmen have al!o Aid sucti lossea are to be el]lecled becauoe ot the '4enormity" of the war with mere ,than • 3,000 helicoptars flying more than 100,000 · troops a week and hauling more than 30 million poUnds ol. cargo. Meanwhile, the U.S. Conuiland lurned · . over two U.S. ~Guard patrol boata to the Sooth Vietnamese riavy today, raising to un the total number ol. naval vesadl ~ tramfmed In the pall year. President Plans Vis~t ' l'o Carrier Saratoga WASHINGTON (AP) -Presldel1\ Nix- on will board the ilzcralt carrier Saratoga 1n the Athintic' Saturday to aee an Armed Forees llay firepower llld ..,. !lair warfare demonslraljon. A While Houie litnooilcemalt TbuJ'o. day said lb• Pr:esldent would mUe )ho , , trip to the carri ... , 45 mlfOI off 1fot:f0lt. Va., by, hellcople!'. . ' ' . :• . . . . -' • . • . • '!' • • ' • . . . . . • • " • ,. SHI SKITCHIS SHIPS Artist Nomte Johnson 1~;,. llld the ICCkleni ia -1n-, Your Plymouth rfealer is a dealing man vestisatJon. Driver of the earwuJen· '--------~--~-------~----~~---~~-~--~-~~~ nlfrr Ann Spraaue, 12, of Anabelm. 1- --------------- l . t .~b.i~y W.~s _ ... Worst Don• Gov. Ronald Reagan of Califor- nia, In Houa1oo, Tex. for a speech, joked about student unrest at cam· puaeo In bis state. "I am willing to engage in a student exchange pro- gram with anyone," he said • • 'Ibleves broke into an Omaha,· Neb., service station and stole tires and "Thunder, a 100-~ German 1bepherd watclidog, police said. • • Tb~·IOWa Senate decided not to. 1pmd nearly $lf,OOO to mal<e a col• or m<Me of.ltsell at work. The sen- aton .....,.. ·not unmindful of the warning of Democratic Minority LNCler Andrew Frommelt: That the movie might be a summer replace- ment for "Laugh·ln.'' • POLICE FIRED TEAR GAS AND RIOT GUNS IN MAJOR FLAREUP AT BERKELEY Rock-thrvwlnt Demomtraton Protuted Closlnt of 'People's Park' Neu Com11111 I U'IT ....... POLICE DRAG AWAY INJURED DEMONSTRATOR Officer.a (lathed With 2,000 Students •nd Non-students Tht following me.ssage clack- tcl out over th« Torrance Police D<parlTllnll Te l<printtr: "Taken fn 484 PC. police 'Dthiclt (ium Jtolen from u n l o ck e d poliu car): "Ont -black n~lms ;o.cket toith fur r 11 collar. 'Redondo Beach Police' patch.ti on both 1ho1Wtns; Two -black brief· case with 'Lock. Your vemc~· tag .. th• top." USAF Orders Fu-Zl Review Of C5A Plnne Police Rout Berkeley Moh F ortas Tells Wliy He Hel.d Explanation • Riot G,uns, Gas Used in · Cit.y' s Worst Demonstration I• ,., I , Alon Morgolls of London spent $120 to IUlllOUllCe bis nuP.tials on a news 1<:reen in Piccadilly Circus d u r I n g bis wedding rOCt!Ption. ''Ala., Margolis loves Panny Wise and they are geWng manied to- day,'' the screen will flash every four· minutee far four hours. "I thinJc U's a lovely Idea," said Pen-ny, Berserk Worker Kills 3, Wounds IO, Slays Self WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon today formally ordered a revie~. o! .UJe CSA transp(irt plane, 'Yho:se c-d~.l has !oared far above original estim'"ates. The '1UIOUhCement came af.L¢ .Sen. William Pronn.ire (0.Wis.), accused-the' Air Force ol juggling figures on the C5A project .to hide the cost Ti!e. , • • · A Defense Department s'pokesiilan sa.iCI since ,May 5, under orders of Defense Secretary Melvin R~ Laird, an Air F.~· team of experts ha been at the Lockheed Plant in Marietta, Ga., where .the huge transports an-being usembled. In formal order for the review, dated May 10, 1"r Force Secr.tary Robtrt C, -.......,. ""° r«a1itJ "iPldllp K; Whittaker that "hllb priority• TWIN!llUBG, Ohio ·(UPI)~· Seamans Jr., told As&stant Secretary n'en •d ,hm. .a mmtll na ·· lllDuld be given to the COit lnc:reuea nm-· ba&a\ ......... • lir-'llift. . lllnil Into bundredi of mlIU-al dollars. BERKELEY (UPI) -A force of 500 polioe used riot Il""" and teer gas to rout 2,000 rock-throwing demonsb'ators from the University.of CaWornta Campus and nearby streets Thursday in a · four-hour tiattle described.as the worst in the city's history. · At teat 80 persons were injured, many Ol them by &tasta .of buckshot or-rock aalt from sawed-off &hotgun.s. 'lbree suff~ hlµlet ~and a police orucer, one of five among the injured, was stabbed. · Aulb&iijes said 47 persons Wtte ar~ nottd, -including 37 aduits and 10 juveniles. The viotence erupted shortly after noon when the demoruitrators began a march to "liberate" an area near the campus that bas ~ kmwn as the "people's park." The university which 01'?\.S the property, had police clear the park at dawn of "street people" from Berkeley's hippie colony and began fenciq: iL Gov. Ronald Retpn-the port u a .. pbouy_ Issue'' uaed u "an UCU1e l for··a ·riol"'He ~'.an anttloltenng replatkin and md>Ulrild;')ome NIUonal Guard units undete £ lllde of ·f!ftiljency declaratlti he Iudlil llatJltr llUa 't,ear, Hla ordef specllloollj ~-1i>llering, me<lll_np, ·~~" a.ie. rarid the use of VOtoe <:t soaM~ ii Berke- ley Ol" on the almpui~., 10 p.m. mxl 6 a.m.: : · . • · . ":l'bese regulations are, effective im- mediately and will.ranain;in effect until further ~.:..:tbe~&btsnor said in SacramentO. He gave nO---'Joalca~oii bow many llWd.-bod ll<e'\ <t)led up, The fighting lrot~ out several hours alttr' police and -cleared the one-third acre PJI'~ W'lm· ·disaident.s =nUy Installed playground equipmeo~ sculpture and grass. The university plan. nee! to construct playboc Odds on the pro. perty and eventually use it for additional dormltoriel. . During a noon rally on the campus, stu· dent body pruiden~ect Dan . Sle(tl shouted: "Let:'• Co down and take t:Net 11"1 Dflbl. llrlnc two ilu!Gmatlc·~ !tr Semans uld the study tllo lhould !n-, . . an hour ~ co-wa-ters. clade "a rHUIDinatioo of requirements PaUae aid Robt.rt ltmnetb Smith, 31, a for the aln:raft; the contracting met.hod, producllOn lmpector at the Otynler procedurea and history ;Jroductlon ex. Corp. otmptOI plant, killed I -..,, parience; perlormance the aircraft; GOP Faniily Spats Brew and -ID -.. rour al them ..n. and 1"r Force and Lockheed manag .. OClllr, before tUinr his °"" Ille -a men! OI the program." Bingle·-In tht j.ample. The big jet. capable ol ca1111ng 345 Tw-1 police uld Smith, married troops oo oveneas otghts. has just begun and tllo father d three chlldren, wu to come alf·th• productloo Jine, Two pro. Over Nixon War Policy r<letmid . ._,uy -a Yoonptown, tatypes "" ~-Ohio, llll!lllal hotpltaJ and WU llltll under poyohlatzle care. --the plstoll and .. _ hundr9d nunda" of ammunltkln near smllh'1 bocty. TheR wu no hmoedlate lndlcotloa wbtl .-Ille .-., -olllioacb polke uld the a.,11« CcJ11>, ..... phi, ptont ..,,_ he -half.-pmilldn( bis ....... Sir Louis Casson Dies LONDON (UPn -Sir Lewla Casson, ,.,,...._ d D11ne Sybtl ~te. dled 1oc1a1. He -83. Sir Lewis and his Wife, 1111, W!f'O the .-_, coople In Ille world with -bOllng. They last appeared on stage tccea« ln lB86 In "Allenlc and Old 1-." F ortas Denied U.S. Pension 'WASHINGTON (AP) -Abe Fortas, who resigned from the Supreme Court, will not receive a government pension, the court and the Civil Seryjce Com- mission said today. The court said he resigned, instead of retired, and failed to meet other service and age requiremenu for a judlclal pension. The commission said, w I t b o u t amplificaUon, he is oot entitled lo a civil service pension. He had served in various government posts in New Deal days. WASlllNGTON (AP) -Republlcans, who g\)I a1.., together pretty well befcn wiMing the White House, are having some family spats around tbt Senate. Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona hu assailed ''llO called Republicans,'' uniden- tU!ed but obvloualy Including Sen. Jtc<lb K. Javits of New York, for aitJcbinc P.reaideot Nlmn's Vietnam war policy, Sen. Everett M. Dirksen ol lllilloll has rebuked Sen. Charles E. Goodell of New York for calling blm an obstruc:tionla:t. Goodell aides say they think Dirk><n ntaliated by refusing to sign a telegram of support for New York M8.yor John V. Lindsay, who is running for re-election. "Not so, period"' said a Dirk.sen spokesman. And Sen. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina Is angry with "certain liberal senators" five of them f e 11 ow Foul Midwestern Weather Twisters Sighted at Abilene and Big Springs federal mediator to Charleston, S. C., to Republicans, for asking Nexon to send a arbitrate a d~te betwe~ the· city and strikl.ng hospital workers. Goldwater, who had some disunity pro- blems as the 1964 Republican presidential nominee, lodged his intramural complaint in a Waukegan, Ill., speech Thursday. "I'm "afraid that tbe great.est critics, or at least the loudest critics, of what Mr. Nixon is attempUng to do in Paris and in other areas are members of his own par· ty," the Arizona coru:ervaUve said. "He is being undercut not by the Democrats who fought him at the polls, but by so-called Republicans who . want polJ Ucal credit ••• they want peace at any cost." While his speech named no one, Goldwater complained specifically about Republicans who have accused Niton or following the policies of former President Lyndon B. Jolupoo. Javits, who made such a charge a week ago but praised Nixon's WedQesday night address on Vietnam, said he would have no oommenl Dirksen's retort to Goodell came Tusa- day al a cloeed meeting ol Republlcaa. M!nators. Dirksen said he wasn't angry. · Goodell bad aald in -Toronta on May I that DirkJen, the Sena&e GOP leader, was obstructionist In biJ opposiUoo to &OD'.le Nlilon choices for lederal jobs. Alb\IQuerciue ·-...... : : * * * c...w ~ "' ,.. ~'"' INt dml"' ... ~ ,.. °'*"' .... '""-.. y. W1Ma .. -.,, .. Ire lt ...... TMIYI "'"" 6ol,. ... "'-•h ._.._ "'"'"" .,_ • 11'9ft tf 67 " I llW 9f 1:1, I~ ... ~,.....-n,.u. , ....... ""'-etvr. -• ., ..... -. s-. 111-. Titles ..... "°""" -............ 1:44 '·'"' ,,, St<ior1111 lllftl • .....,. J:tl '·"'" SA ,,,.., ""' ............ 4:1• 1.m •• ,, Flo,.t """ .,., •••••••• 11:01.m. I.• ~ u. .............. i:ot '''"" ... l«(lfNI ttltill ............ '12l•f11.m, ,,, -"'"' .... • ••• ··•••••• .• 'l" 1.m. '·' '"'"' """ ............... 11:11 '·"'· 1.1 $«a'!ll -••• ~ .......... 1i'2 '·"'· u ""°"' fllllfl; ""''·"""" lOiOI 1.m. '·' 11 .s. s ... _"" Tiie GrMt 1"1•1111 -"*' ulldtt • •• el ~ ~ l0d9y, 11'111 tllftol deklllld "" 1111ft 11111 """'"'" "" ,, "'''' fi ... ,__,, In .._ _.,... ....... ... lill11ne. ., II--WWI ,._IM Wt te lfM twiMwa I~ ~y 11i.tit -Genlclll, H•., Lvllllfl. L.,.. a.dt. All!"'-..... •It ~ '" T•-· Hill Ifie •I• Gt buctlot"• •"'-tell ,..., ... ~ l«.1llT """"""' .... -.. ~ a!Ol'Tl'll ~ _..... '*''1 "" ~"' el fM P .. lrool. •II .. ,...~ !Am T1•11 .......... Dtk••· blttf'ld "'°"" .... ~how­...... ,.. ,.,... "°"' Monl1ne ,,... New Mf•lol ft ,,._~ 11"111 LllUI .. i.111 lllO In !Tit ilOUl!I AIW!llC Sii"*• Mort COlf ...... ~ .,, ... ''"' kif """' "' "" ""'"' """" ,,., qr ,,.,. ..... 1111 .... N..itl .,.. """' 0.. kel1, l•ktnolltld l llfN,dt .... 111111 ... "'"-c1nc1 ..... 11 Clwtlend ,,,,,_ o.., Moines OCl"'ll E~ffll• F'or"I Wortl'I ··-....... Monollll• ._ .. 1( ...... (ff'( Lu \let11 , __ Ml-i lftdl .. _M ~-· --~ _y .. ........... Ott.l•ncl ...... '•• 1111111111 PlllltftWlll -· ,,,,,_ ........ "Mild (lty ltf'll lttlff ·-__ ,, St. l.oult Se!tnn s.n t.H! Clhl !an D'"° S.11 ~ltM:IKe ~· .. '",.. S.111' $ ....... "'""""' WMfllntltll " $1 .JI : ~ ·" Senate Doves .. " " " f: f: ., Cautiously Rap II 4) ~ l! Nixon Proposals " ll !J :M .u • n Tt " .)1 n 61 I.It .. " " . " n n " N 67 T " .. tJ ,, II 5' .t2 " n ·a ,, .n n • " .. N 4 n " .... " •r .., • • " " '' SI . " ... II ., .tt . " .. " 41 SI .... " " " .. n • WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix- on's Vietnam pea<e proposals, Initially praised by many congressmen, are being cauUowtJ"•critlclm:I • not going ·tar enough by Senate Denlocratlc doYtl, In· cludiOI Sen. Edwml M. Kennedy. But most of the senlton who say Nixon reu ahOrt tn hJs, lalfft peace move .... willing to give hhn more time to negoti1te. • 'MttJemtnt. Kennedy, the No, 1 Democratic leld8r1 said all Americans•boiie the ""'5idenf1 moves succeed, "I' had hoped, honver. that In the ln- !A!rut of decnulnf cuuallltc and the hastening of negotiations towanls the mutual withdrawal of troop&, the Prell· dent would have caJ)ed fot 1 ll~t reduction ol U.S. mllilory activity and perooooel In SOuth Vietnam." Kennedy Nfd ThUnd1;1 In • .tstenenl the park." The -crowd, clapping and cheering, marctied to the park where they were confronted by Berkeley police, state highw"ay partolmen and sheriff's deputies. Tear 'gas canisters were fired after several chaCges by club-swinging police fail~ to Qlsperse the demonslrators. The disSidents then broke into groups and roamed . through the streets, smashing windows, battering cars and engaging the police In hit·and-run clashes. For four hours, the Telegraph .Ayenue area was a battleground, choked wilh tear gas and reverberating with oc- casional Shotgun blasts. It was the first time riot guns bad been used in Berkeley demoostralions. A spokesman at Herrick HQ8Pital said 44. injured persons were signed in there, but many were treated for wounds and ~ Wu. they could be regisler'ed. He 'aid ·n1ne were.hospitalized, three in ~ condition. Brokers I ndicwd On Buying Stock Witli Swi.ss Bank NEW YORK (UPI) -Five individuals and an international brokerage house were indicted today on dlarges of violating federal securities laws by p.ll'chasing s t o ck through numbered Swiss bank accoonls. Atty. Gen. John N. Milchell, in an- DOUDCing the 13-cou.nt indictment, said the brokerage firm involved was Cog· gesha.11 & Hicks, headquartered in New York City and with offices in Geneva, Brusse!J and London. The defendants wen accused of con· spiring with the Arti Bank ot Zurich, Swti:i:erland, to arrange for officers, employee and customers of Coqesball & Hicks to purehase more than $20 million in stocts through the bank's ac· count at the brokerage firm. The indictment alleged 11181 through the bank, some of the delendanll arid their cu.ncimen put up only 20 percent of the purchase price ol stock. The Federal Raerve Boanl requifec! 7G to 80 percent of the purdme price during the period covered In the lndk:tmenl WAHSINGTON (AP) -Abe Forlas faces an . uncertain fulure -and he doesn't want to think about it just yet. "I onJy hope that r will continue to live a good, full and varied lire and do some good for people," he said Thursday night. "That'·s what I've always tried to do." Fortas s po ke by telephone w1th a reporter from his home in Georgetown. It was late, at the end or the day he quit hi! seat on the Supreme Court' u n d er pressure and under a cloud. "I've made no plans at all," he said at the st.art, "What I ·said in my statement is the beginning and the middle and the end of the story, It is a short story." Fortas was referring, to his Jetter to Chief Justice Earl Warren. In it Fortas detailed his C1>nsideration of a" $20,000 yearly fee from the Louis E. Wolfson Family Foundation and said !le was Tesigning to ,relieve lhe Court of the "ex· traneous stress" the incident had caused .. In a copyrighted interview with Ben- jamin C. Bradlee, executive editor of the \Vashington Post, Fortas explained why be delayed making a public explanation of the Wolfson incident. Although he now thinks it was a mistake, Fortas said he waited until his court colleagues could return t o Washirtgton from a short recess to hear his ezplanation persona11y. "Instead of being so damn duty. stricken," he said, "it would have been better to have quickly made a detailed public statement." Fortas also told Bradlee he sees no sinister plot behind the events that led to his resignation. "It's just as if an automobile hit me as I stepped off the curb," he said. "[ wouldn't think the driver is a fiend or an evil man. "This was something •.• a quick sim· ple series events that occurred at a mo- ment in time, June '66. The reutm of the check -I really delayed there just as an act of humanity. I had closed my mind to it all. No hits, no runs, no errors. And here it comes back to haunt me ." Nixon May Replace Five Supreme Court Justices WASHINGTON (UPI) -It Is quile possible that President Nixon will appoint five new members of the Supreme Court during his term In oClice -iiame as Dwight D. Eisenhower. . Nixon alrtady had the opportunity to name a replacement for Cblel Justice Earl Warren, one of five Eisenhower a~ polntees, 11ho Js 4eaving the bench at the • end or lhe current court term In June. The Abe Fortas resignation gives him tv.·o certain appointmenb. 1n addlUon, Jbst.lce Hugo Black. senior member al the court ta 83; William 0. Douclas, '10, haa a heart pacer in hfs chest; Jahn M. Harlan, who turns 70 Tu..cS«)'. It tn poor health. • With U.00. five poaible vacancies, Nix· on would be able to fill a majority on the nine-member court. But still there ls no a.ssurtoce NlilO. wilt occomptlsh the court of 11atrlct lnt.erpret.aUon" of the CClllllitutlon that he called for In the i'1'sidhitlol campaign. ' Hlllor1colly, Justices have had a W«J' of ChaOll1l4 _ thefr basic legal phlloooplly after Jominc the court. Further, while Nixon's selectees could dampen lhe "\Varren court's'' accent on individual rights, it is unlikely there will be a rowback from the general social, political • and legal trends the court has set In re- cent years, It is risky at be!it to divide the court along liberal-conservaUve lines and lhe justices themselves resent such labels. But onen the Warren court has been divided 6-3. with Warren, Douglas, Black. Brennan, Marshall and Fortas voling on the liberal side, and Harlan, Stewart and White on the conservative, This breakdown serves to dramati:i:e that a President can never be sure bow one of his appointees will vote ooce he sits on the cwrt. Warren , for instance, was appcJnted 1'I 1953 by a Republipan President, Owlght D. Eisenhowt:r, wtin took a moderate ap. proach to most issues. But during Lhe nert 1$ years Warren went on to lead a court Lhat perhaps did more to. reshape American lite than any since Ch1cl JusUce John MarahalL • ' • •' CHECKING • ue • ' Girls With Small ' I Heads Look Young By L. M. BOYD mnoved." Moro ol tbll oort of thing lattr. CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q. TO LOOK YOUNGEll The smaller a woman's-head loob, the more youthful she seems bi, be, That Is why M1's Ingrid Bergman, for lnstanie, appears to be far Jess than her actual age. She has a, small head. And in that classic "For Whom the Bell Tolls," she was characterized sUU less • aged by a short b.aircut which created the illusion her head was even futaller. A Los Angeles hairdresser therefore recommends the short lajr<ut to light-hearted ladies who want to represent themselves as younger than their years. "WHEN did men start wear- lng the .,,..,. rn tbelr--. froot....i.i>aek insle&d of Oil the sides?" A. That wasn't too far back. The King 0 r Englarid, George V, even wore his pants that way in the 1920s. • . . Q. 111 SAY HOUSECA TS get bigger !hon rabbits, right?" A. Absolutely correct, sir. Biggest cat 1 ~er heard of was a tom named Claus. He weighed 40 pounds. • • t • • PoJf.ce (Jlear .~People's Pa,.k' Biggest rabbit wu a Flemish Berkeley Police lounge . about in play area <lf giant called 1'F1oppy'' that ''People's Park" after they cleared upauUiorized ' ·•· .-h<>f1 25 DOUOds. • • • Q. parlc of some 150 tres~assers in dawn raid Thursday': planted grass, laid a·linck. walkway and ins.tailed sculpture and play eqUipment. As soon as police 'cleared the area, work crews began building a fenc e around the ~and. • Friclo1, M11 l6, IM DAIL V· Pll.OT f ; -0: • ·George W ashi.ngton : -Was He Sterile? -. SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) -ayndrome Include small ._; Geof1e Wll!blnitoo, !allier of u.......i beiebt. relative olerlll- our country1 may have been ty and large breut!i for a. ·ater0e. · ·male; ¥ Dr. M.i:J . Vernon Smilh a1Jo . "I't It not our lDtention t. • told U.. Mlb lljaul meeUot of mallpi Uie man," Dr. Smith 1 the Amipicl!>. Uroloileal .J.i, said,, · , •• I IOciatlon,WulilDCton WU ~fd. 'J'h< dOc!<>r noted that Meo! bably bn>ad-blpp!d anc1 ~Ig-w~·· ,lilnest c1iuJ> breasted. .P.Ointint.nts in. uTe' 1 was thaj ' The Brttilb-bOht doctor, wbo "he never latbertd a n Y. -now realdtl bi Rk:bmood. Va.. children.'" • ' sold tho poilltlnp and physical Tllo p b y s I c I I n said de!crtptioiia ol the finl l'l<si· Wuhio81on wife Martha wu dent indJcate he may have married and widowed befcie beea al!Ucted with a type ol she and Wubingteo met. Sbe Klinefelter'• l)'Ddrome. bad four children by· thtf Symptoms , ol the complu previous ma:rriqe. • • • • . . . I 737, S&injets from Orange County to ~ !SAN· FRANCISCO, OAKLAND and SAN JOSE~ • • !can your Travel Agent or Air California (7f4) 540-4550; .............................................. & CERTAIN SPECIES ol but· fnrflv livPs up to 50 percent longer with its head cut OU ••• . \r11 V lS a mystery, but husbands are not as likely to Pet as homesick as wives. Records of-.m at rim o nj a I counselors indicate twice as many wives as husbands choose to vacation w i lb parents .••. PLEASE file this: "WHERE1S the world's tallest ~ land, oWned by'tbe University of California, was tolem pole.? Alaska?" A. No, ttlmed 'into. ~ park by res\dents of the area who slr. McKinJeyville, Ca 1.1------'.:...C-'----'---:.:.:C-'------------------------------------------------< A man has about 750 muscles, a caterpillar about •,ooo .... THOSE TYPING TEACHERS in search of an exercise con- taining every letter in the alphabet might also examine the. 21st verse of the 7th chapter of Ezra. • • • ''MILLIEl< is what all the 1'Gunsmoke" cast most af- fecti onately-call-Mr. Milburn "Doc Adams" Stone. TOUGHEST of the Norse warriors was said to be an old boy with 12 sons. Every time he charged into battle, he toss- ed aside his armor, and went absolutely wild, cutting and slashing in all directions. His name was Berserk, whence cometh our word ..•. SOME FOLK GET too dignified for Llttle Algernoon McGuire But not me. How about this one: ''LitUe Algernon McGuire. . .Set his grandpa's beard on fire .•• Grandpa, toasted, was improved. •• All harsh irritants There's a 160-foot tote(h pole tber<. BANANAS -To p u t bananas in the refrigerator or not to put banana:! in the refrigerator -that is the question • Just checked lhis out with a banana specialist for the benefit of a client wbo inquired about the matter. "Re[rigeration doesn't hurt their flavor," said t be specialist, "it jwt turns them black, that's all." That's enough. Who wanis to eat blsick bananas? Incidentally, this specialist suggests fancy folk, who want a Thailand treat, peel the bananas, dip same in chocolate syrup, and qujck freeze them . Nothing tastier, he says. RAPID REPLY: Yu, Mr. G., claim is that snails do in- deed have 14.,00J teeth, but nobody contends they brush after ever; meal. Your questions and com- ments are welcomed and will be used wherever pos· sible in "Checking Up." Address mail to L. M. Boyd, in care of the: DAILY PIWT, Bo• 1875, N<1D]>OTI Beach, Calif., 92663. Men in Service Pvl 1.C. Dennis J. Reigel, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Reigel of 422 Magnolia,-Costa Mesa, is serving with the Nuclear Weapons Training Center, Pacific located at the U.S. Naval Station San Diego. The center provides tralrllng and inspection support for the U.S. Pacific Fleet in nuclear weapons capability. Four Orange Coast men are serving aboard the nuclear- powered attack aircraft car- rier USS Enterprise with Task Force 71 in the South China Sea. They are Seaman Thomas C. Rob1on, son of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Robson of 221 Geneva St .. and Interior Com· munications E le ctrician Fireman Claude K. Winfree, son of Mr. and 1'-1rs. Claude N. Winfree of 5201 Skylark Drive, both of Huntington Beach; Seaman Appren. Jolla H. H•c· ce, son or Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hagge ol 1012 Emerald Bay. Laguna Beacl'l and Fireman · Appren. Thomas N. Clark, son 0( Mr. and Mrs .. H. N. Clark ()f 641 St. J ames Road, Newport Beach. 1bree Orange Coast men have completed basic training at Lackland AFB, Tex. and have been assigned to Lawry AFB, Colo, for training ln the armanement systems field. They are Airman Wiiiiam fl Stock, son of Mrs. Charlotte A. Stock of 1105 Pembroke Lane, Newport Beach; A Irma a Chrtstopbtr c. Stmaf, son of lifrt. ·Patricia Fredericksen <lf S291 Loyola Ave., Westminster and Airman J o • a D. M~, son of Mrs. Mary Panon of 216 Huntington Ave., HtmUngton B!uch. Almwl Stock Is a sra<fual< or Lowell High School, Wlllt· tier ; Airman Strong graduated from Westminster HiJ:h School a n d attended Golden W es l College before entering the service and Airman Markham is a graduate of Huntington ll<ach Higb School and at- tended Orange Coast College before entering the service. Ainnan Strong's father, Ray Strong, lives at 2.l5 Walnut St., COSta Mesa. More m<re more Alrmu RodaD E. Baker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon P'. Baker of 1708% A S~t. Hun- tington Beach, has b e e n assigned to .a unit o[ the Military Airlift Commmld at McCbonf AFB, Wash. The airman, a computer operator, is a graduate of Fountain Valley High School. Sgl Jerry L. Pienall, son or f\.1r. and Mrs. Donald Piersall <lf 900 Sea Lane, Corona del Mar, has been assigned to March AFB, as an ad· ministrative specialist In a unit of the Air Weather Serv- ice. The sergeant is a 1965 graduate of Corona dcl h1ar High School and attended Orange Coast College belore entering the service. Pvt. I.e. Robert J, Arion, 22, son of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Arion of 1445 Temple Hills Drive, Laguna Beach, has been assigr>E:d to the 25th Infantry Divilion, Vietnam. An infantryman, he is serv- ing with Company A, 3rd Bat· talion of the Divis.ion's 22nd Infantry. He received his B.S. degree in 1968 from Northwestern University, Ill. Storekeeper i.e. John L. Davis, USN, son <lf ll. 8. Davis of 689 Plumer St., Costa Mesa, is serving aboard the attack transport USS Cambria at Norfolk, Va. Tbe ship is one of six that will comprise the Sixth Fleet Amphibious Task Force ln the Mediterranean Sea. Bus Drivers Win Praise ._"Driving a school bus Is a_ tough job. In fact. I was tlod we had a new driver on the job at 7 the other dafand by 9 o'clock he had quit." With that note of ap- preeiatioo for the wort thty do, Newport-Mesa S u ,pt William Cun n Ingham an- nounced that thtte •chool district 00. driven placed high In rompetltion al a recent Ml'"'Y'lli'ide Driver Training )Mlitule. t 'lorls Greeley took first In the amall bui clua and Ken 1 Marks placed t«'Ond and Joanne Evans eighth fn the 1 large bu! class, he aald. '' 95* ' I •• . • .. •, TIM CMllllh"9 • ,,....., 11.'441 _, • 'Thd llgKtest 1Q"' Color Set you can buyf So easy to carry from room to room • So!ld copper circuits replace old fashioned "hand wlrfngn in potential I chanls trOuble spots • Super.powerful New Vista VHF tuner, the most powerful In the Industry · • Extra ... nsltlve Solld State Utt.F · .transistorized tuner • Falnous f,lew Viste picture quanty . . -.•locked ln·color purltJ • E9ay color qulck·tunlng and.picture. ......,,.... co.,trot . • . ' • Automatic chroma control el1JllwoalCllllJ \ StetlJllzes,cofor MttJng ·, '. ' ' · . , I.' ·..-~ """""""..,... .. -..... . . . . . .. ' -. ' ' •• • • . ' ' .. ' .. ' ~ • • ' • j ' • r • • • • • • • • • ' • • • • • • •• . -... -•• . ' ' • • • t • • ' . • ' ' • .... •· . --· • • l , ... . ~ . • -· --- I DAD.Y PILOT DITOBIAL 2~AGE0 j Money to . Make Money • Ecooomic Research Associate~ Monday ml)lt point. ed a fine plctuio of the downtown •ectlon of lfuallillloa Beach between now and llllO: A dty bUJtll.ng with c:am-met'CI> and industry, well·pald wor~ers llvto_C in .upen- •ive homes and apertments and a cenerally thriving downtown COllllDUnity. I Almoot lost in tho glorious description were the words of. Dr. Thomas Ashley u he--wamect that 11none of this wlJI happen unless Huntlngtoo Beacli Is wllllng to commit some of its assets," Councilmeo met last night to learn mo,.. aboot plans fM Investment of the city's UleU in projects which might help bring about UU. desired prosperity. Councilmen ""' beginning to learn that it truly lakes money to make money. It takes action too. They are talking about buge investments -millions and mil- lions of dollars in perking Iola, streets and public buildings. Why should the ~yer foot the bW for all this speodtog! Well , if the m011ey ts property invested it will bring a return -or prollt -In ibe lonn ol. addi- tioneJ.ta>:es which C<Jll]d lillltm tbe burden oo the l)om .. owner in the years to. come • Right now, for instance, the city is considering the purchase ol. land at '50._000 to $100,000 and up per acre in the hope that mU111C1pol mvestmenl m, park!nf lots will encourage surrounding property owntr1 to develop high property tax and sales tax gainers for the city coffers. Jn fact, thus far the city bas managed to do much of its investment in parking lots at no cost to the tax- payer by arranging for the beacbgoer to pay for the parking lots he uses. In addition to providing parking for the beach users, the lots may be a strong stimulus downtown for move- ments to substitute profitable businesses tor blight. A llllllby --A HUAllJ!ltoD Bwh, -or without a civic-· ca prodai:e .._,:tr ta11• and salet 1&111 to p_ey lbr DWly ol. ~ niiocfed pnljecta ol. Ille fllture, projects tllat ~ be !lnanced b)' l'IV• DUO bondl, l1ldl U tire llationl, pul>IJc Jlbrarles llDd stnieu. . J , A lot lhould llDd can be 4-. befol9 llllO. N-of it wl!J blppen, 'llllbout bold leadtnldp In CHY Hall. . . ' . Fountain Valley Planning Decisiom by lhe ·FOWJ!ain vauey Planning eom. ml>ston and i'ecommenclMlom bY Plannlni .Dll'IC!or Stanley Man.sfield have Indicated IOllle changes In beslc attitude . To start with, CIPPOlltl1ll of l1A8ll lots have WOii a partial vlelnry wlth-~the .Cainma~·· recommendation that a 6,000 square f\)Ot m!Dlmum lot llze be adopted for all planned developmenta . The City Council bu not yOi p•Hed the rec0mmen- dation , but city planners, at least, indi~e they ha\re heard many ol the voices of protest and are willing to try to satisfy at least some Of those voices. Mansfield also said thet be Is recommending to builders that they request zoning for planned develop- ments with average lot sizes of 7,200 square feet rather than less. City ordinances still allow a builder to request a conditional use permit for planned developments at any average lot size, even 6,000 square feet, but planners have shown they will no longer favor such requests. Both trends mean the stDallest lots will now be 6,000 square feet, and the average lot size of 7,200 square feet will reduCt! density, a point desired b1 many of those who "Opposed planned developments. - • s ~lgrwrant, Dear Gloomy Gus: Derision, l)e Not Impede Law Enforcement I • • Puritanical, . ted' Vneduca . : By JOEL DREW ' "A 1e:1 education and family life course In the llullt1ngton Beach' Union Hl&b ~hool Diltrict is a Communist p\ot ued lo undermine the youth of America." ' This iDslllualioo has been made by : : A. An illiterate five-year-old livinl In ~ppalacbia who does .not. kn<M, or Clrt:, about as ar commummn. • B. A -COmmuniat llvinl In ~-town -dlscualng the !:!<-Id lnwntlon llnce the OuorldlUoo iJf ... -reserwtn. 1 ·C: A. board of lrulteel' member who bidn't fact ~ection recently. ' '. D. A SCARED, ignorant, puritanical, itneduc.at.ed, ·Victorian parent who ·ii afraid for little Johnny and Susie to learn about life. A parent who say,, "What wu l9'>d ""'"8h for me (back In the dart •Ps) ls pd eoouib fir my -and ~augbler because u.t's 1'hll my puents and grandpuents used to say to me." ~ If your answer to the above question b fetter A, yoo probably don't !mow anything about sa or comrmmtan i U your answer was letter B, yoo'rt either • member ol Robert Welch's ll- iustr1001 John Btn:h Society, « yoor lnind ls .. deranied that you acblally believe this to be true. i HAVING LE1TER C for an amwtr lneans that ,.,.,, mor< thin likely, don'\ like aome board of trustees members. ; U, by totne strange fate, stroke of blck, or just plain chance, you happen.!d to choose letter D for your allSftr. get out the apple pie, wave your American Dag, k1u your mother, sing three lines of 0 The Star Spangled Baziner," go to jail, go directly to jell, do not pass go, do not col· lect $200, and thank your lucky st.an, for you are comrl. And, in addiUon, you will win one alkipenae. paid vacatim to the land <t make-believe akJog wilh your ~111tocraplied copy <t "Mother Gcx.'s Fairy Tales." Too bed lht city ol llllnllngton Beoel) ... , affonl an American flag to fly In Late Park. The war veterans are dooat1q one. -J.C. TMI..._......_...._......._ .. ••cwMr.,.. •,... ••=•••· '-' .... "" ..... ....., ... Dllr ~. YES, l!OYS AND GllWI. Whether or not you care &o blJilve It, yoUr parents doo't wut you to !elm about that outy three littered 1'Ul'd. .. Ml." At the ume time, llleJ ......_ tbe famlly life .... lion " Ibo .,,..... Wlllcb -help 111111)' ~ ~ take ID lmeOlpnt loot at the ,..iii.ms llWTled life mltl>t praenL They cleoounco the courae which ....Wd help alleviate aome of the foolish mlsllbl they made. But. who C91'U! Why ohouldni liltle Johnny and Susie ....,,, it just u niamma and papa did! Wh1 give them a chance to mate their ~ IUCCUlful! Do they rully cart ii the dlvorce rate lncruaa daily! DEAR MOTHER AND father aeem to ht content to re.Iterate the stories about the -t and the cabbage patch. They, and the 3SO pannta who -aex edueatlon and family life course at the reoent boanl <t trust ... meetJnc, might just Ua:ten to themlelva for c:mce and praotke whit they pnach. To these ""'17 friPtened and disturbed -· tnilbt I of1rr tbeae words, "Grow up." Votnm.oa Editor"! Nott: Tht Vol- sunoa toiahtr to tmpha.rizt tht fact that if a majority of the studtnt bodt1 of Marina High School, a.i in the oc· crtcUtatton poll taktn duringi the 198148 school Jltar, fttl! that a itx edUCCJUon and family lift course would be bemficial to them and to au of Uit studnits in the Huntington B e a c h Union High School Di.strict, tMu 1houl4 ttreu this point bt1 mok- ing their vitw1 hoton ot /u,vre board of tnuteei mtttings wh{ch are optn " th< public. Scramble for Housing • Surgeons nave postponed operations l)ippies have cut their hair and families ltave destroyed their pets -all in the tn- (erest of finding a desirable place to live in Manhattan. To get the jump on other apartment-hunters, they read t h e .,,ituary columns, bribe doormen, moving iti.en and even hospital interns for tips. tJoj,ubllshed listings have been stolen the printer o( the VIiiage Voice. . reenwich Village newspaper. of-urban America is feeling a hous· "' pinch. but in New York it seems worse, than elsewhere. Little moderate or .,_.income housin& has been built there ilnct 1163, a year new buUdlng codts Me imJ>OSed. Two-thirds ot the existing SI million apartmenLs are sUU under the -control !bit .... Imposed ori,wtly if, Wortd War II. The four million New Yot:ken who live in them stay put · they .;....._ B11 Gffrfe ---. I • J>!'lr Geortt' . ::: r am an 11-ytat"Old &lrl with o sbmt hair and I ...,. jtans and : men11 ltirtl but J'm terribly afraid I lltlD give an lmpmofon <t belna feminine. Whit can I doT • SllE Dear Sue: , Evtn In W. dly and ...... e '!.women ani ballc•llY female and youJU jUat have lo live wttb tt. have about the only chap houllng In the city. For the rest of the people, especially U-io M1ohat11n. 1he price II hith and getting hl8htt· "A family mu earning $35,000 a year hu It "'""1 living In Mlrihattan." tbe prelldtnt of a reel estate t<lmPIJ\Y told Ntw Yen map!lnt. To ._ tile pinch, the ,..,...., Rall G<ddellnea -.. ...-.., Mar<h 10 that owners <t 400,0llll uocootrolled •Pli tmeala limit tatlft l11erm11e1 to 15 perttnl ......, two ytml mid -lllY recent incteues that wut ~her. 1be real estate indultry a D d ~ Mayw Jolm V. Limlll1 ao ....... But Ille ....-" Iha ~~Council , -x. 6milll, lhe""""'" bad faith whtn no r<nt rodoctloat 1p. -"' In their Apr11 bllltnat. Tbe ~ admlnlatraUon ...-..1 that ,_. time WU oeeded and that alJijble tenanta woold --r<ductl0111 by 'l'llonllsy, May I. That dote ......,., significance in a year when New Ycri Ci· ty will elect 1 m.,.... People, Not· ·courts,_ Are the Villains To the Editor: In recent years it hu b e c o m e lasbionable to attack the deciJlom <t, and the judges m, our nation'• COlD'b, most f"'!Utnlly U-of the Supreme Court of the United States. Their owooenia blamt the coorts fO< ba11dc11Wna the polloe throuch. ''ultra- llberal" declsiOOI involving due proc:ea <t I•'!· They point to the riB1n1 crime rate u an example ci tbe results court decisions are having on law enforcement. Many of these people ftlt that the Constitution is an unreu:mapie barrier which the police must ecmfront tn order to UIOciae juotioe quickly and efficlenUy. Public opinion ...... to ........ the feel. Ing that the ..i, pd -la tho .... who la IRlfl_, behind ban. It ls to the opinions of these ptOple that I react. IN THE FIRST PLACE, the recent decisiON of the Supreme Court do not impede law enforcement olficen from carrying out their duty, nor do they con- tribute to the rlami crime rate. All these decisions do (e.g. Miranda and Escobedo) ii to ensure tbOle ~ aUlutlonal righta to everyme, equally, under the law. 'lbtse ru1inp have con. centrated oo guaranteeing the protection of 8ll8ptCls under Police lnlerrog1Uon. Suspects now have the right to counsel during questioning, and upon arrest must be apprlle<I of lhls right under the FUth AmendmenL ,,_ declsiolls were urgtntly DtOded . They did not arise out of any aubvenive plot by .. gutless," liberal judges to undennlne contemporary Amer j can society. They arose out of the enor1uous lllrgai practlcu by the Police to gain quiet coofesolons of guill IT IS THE TRADmON In this country that an individual accused of a criminal offense la innocent of that offeme until be is proven guilty, by a court ol law, beyond a re830nable doubt. It seems as though an uncontrollable lmotlonll 11p11111 llu cul lllif CINDllJ ID-to the camp ol 0 law and order," justice being Incidental to procedure. The eye for an eye and the tooth for a tooth concept hu never really left 111; on- ly the m<lhocla employed are chqed. Punishment has never solvfd the crime problem. Rehabilitation in our prllonl is having little inf1uence in ciw9n1 in- mates' attitudes or morals. SO IT SEEMS THAT we need drUlic changes in our present policies of puniab- ment and revenge. Understanding and po.siUve encouragement, perb8.pe, might be parts of the answer to a complicated problem. The courta, moreover, are not the villains. People are. Until we can learn to lpproACh those problems of poverty, ignorance and pre. judice, whJch ha ve be!et rmnklnd throughout history, then our fate here on earth seems to be hanging on a thin thri!ad of destruction. As attorney Melvin Belli so aptly stated, " Legislatures do legislate 'for tbe biqtsl of UI, but U long 81 the -- l'Ollrb glve thek atttlltion to the leut <t UI, Ulm all (l( US wiJ1 be JrOtected.' " GEORG&: V. INCAMPO Su Etl11et1tlew l\'eetletl To the Editor ' To the pannll who w1l1 deoy tlielT chlldrM the right to !mow what "" b Ill about : Would you rather ha"" your son or daughter find out the "facll of llft" the hard way! Would you like to go through the course or evenu Jrhtn your dauth1er tells you that she Is about to be 1 mothtr? This is itist one of the rtlSOl1S wlly kids today rtbel. Btt1use tbey are denied the rig!it to !mow. SEX EDUCATION might help them realize the l"lbloml that would be in- volved If they wtlll too for. ~ ........, oevtr tell their-whit aa ii. Tbey """ !elm It oa tbelr own. You parentl that voice •bout en: cl-.. toplcl you c1oni Wint them to see, '"' you afraid they mlgbt learn aornelhlng? u they did know, ll might aave 1 terrible miahap. Sen. Sclunlt1'1 statement "to force parents to put their chlldrtn in sex couratS II a denial of religious freedom" is to me rfdiculoua. WHAT DID.almlghty God glvt U1 1U orgam for anyway? To bear children, of C'OW'R. But the way people are going about ti todly ls wnrile. I tbint today's younger generation needl to tnow more about sez: befcn they procted Into the art <t love. Pte... don' deny "" -the rig!lt to !mow about RL They mlgbt fiod out the ~ way. They may evu learn llOlllelhlQI JOU don't know! KEN WEEKS 'Pl-e C'aneel' To the F.d.ltor: Please cancel my sublcript!oo to the DAILY PILOT, eff..Uve hnmtdtately. I am very d1qusted with tbt way you wrote your edltortals rea:ardlnl the re. cent Huntington Beach Hlgh"School lloard <t Trustees meeting (!--). Y6u did a moot unfair and bluod Job <t reporting. '!'bl alleot majority ii flnaily tired of the vocal .u-tly being the only vioce lleard and pu bllclzed ! Tbe c!Uvens and- tupayen bed a right to be beard at thll meetJnc, Ind many were not allow· ed to speak by the cbairmao, John Benlley. - WHEN llVERAL cllliem who lried to speak wen lp>red by Mr. Bentle,, It ;, tnHI they did go up to the microphone and spell alter !Ir. Bentley cllled a ........ I raent U-cltluns being likened to • bunch of dlsaident youth. I WU a member ol the ciliRRI' committee ap- pointed to atudJ the Proiic-1 Family Ufe and Sa F.ducalion coune for our district and 1 fOl.lnd much of the material UDIUltable for our youth. Let's not waste UJe tu:payerta money on trash lite this. MARGE GAGE l'he DAILY PILOT editorial of April 29 crittcU:td the ·use of mob tac· tics at (I Huntington Beach Union High School di.ftrlct board meeting to prevent calm pro and CO'fl. di.!C1'3.rion of a propoitd curricul11m for a vot· wntarv FamilJI Lt/t and St% EdMca· don coti1r1t iohkh .toe# undf:r rtvitw b' o 731'<"'" cltlnm' od""°'ll """' mittcc, TM t<Utorial empM.slttd that "iht: U1ut of 1tz education b buide I.he point. .• TM 6dto that 4nJ1 oroup, under an11 cirCMm.1t.ant11, could to 1hov.t down raCionol di«1udon of an11 achool problfm if subwr.rive of Utt American 1111um." Th< 1t1f .. ppofntcd leod<r o/ th• dl.truptive group hat la~l11 been d,... ndatino #1hock" handbills which o.t· 11rt fabrl11 tM: the tniimott 1enol maUrfal nprlnttdl to0uld be o pari of the locat Family Lift currfc1'lum. -Editor C'lal .... a Majorlt11 To Ille Editor: Re: DAILY PILOT editorial "Disgusting, Frightening", published April 29, about the HBUHSD board meeting. r agree, but also feel it is "dlquatiog and frightening" when our elected of· ficials, in any capacity, so flagranUy ig- nore tbe voices of the electorate. Mr. BenUey suggested hearing from nine in favor alter hearing nine against, "to ~ (air''. But WU that really fair? 'nat. gave the minority, most al whom were studmt.I, an equal voice. Some were .... st\-•. -right to be heerd is questionable since this did not concern them penonally or financially, being they were neither parents nor taxpayers. IT SEEMS THAT those who are in favor of sex education in the schools have aaumed that we who are OPJXISed to it ·are opposed to it in any form. This is not so. We reaUze our young people must be informed, but we want to decide the "bow, when. where, what and by whom" they are lau&J". Many of us have gone through the pro- poeed COW'Se of study and find much of it objtclionable, particularly the suggestion that pre-marital sex is acceptable in this changing society. This is so contrary to \he concept of love and maniq:e we pr91ent to our children that It can only create confusion in their minds as they auess the moral standard they will follow, and will add to the conflict betw= parent and child during these crucial years when the conflict is at a peak. THE HBUHSD Board of Trustees not only overruled the majority opinion, but also ignored the administration's recom- mendation, which was to tab le further consideration of a "aex education and family life" course until such time as the majority favored It. Since you have labeled the board meeting "disgusting and frightening" Jet's put part of the blame on UlQSt who so Oagraiily dllregarded the will of the people. MRS. CLIFFORD MOEN Dr. Lortn Moll, director of cu11i· culum at Hun tington Beach Un ion High School District, .!ay.! he does not know where Mr.!. i\foen got the idta that the cour.!e outline BUggesu that pre·marital &t% "i.! acceptable in thtl Manging aociety!' He added, "'I didn't see that anywhere. I t'i po.!· lible that aom.eone matt havf read that into the outline." -Editor Dotneatlc C'on1n111nbt• To lhe Editor ' Some Americans urged that "e be permissive with U.S. CommunlsU. "After all" they said, "we have few Com· munlsts. Such small numbers can't hurt us much. Besides, our dGmttUc Reds are well-behaved." Some of these &ilD'ltl Amerlcans ustd McCarthyism smear tactlcl against anyooe who rtcogniRs the dlogen of communism: "He'I I fucilt witdl- hunter and aees a Communist under every bed." Delibera1' c h a r a c t e r assaainaUon befalls those who warn of communism's work. THE DANGER IS that dlsr\Jpt!vt Com· murUst actJVllies go uncheclttd 11.nce responsible people are muzzled. Expedl· ent politicians apptai to w111hful thinking. They qltate •gai"*1 approprlale anU· Communist actions. The resultant half- way 1ttions (at home and tbroad) drq the con0k1. Of\ without aolvlng It (ln,tud of applying appropri•te rtSOUl'Clts to suc- ceufullY end the struggle). Then It's • easier to say, "Why go on? Let's give up." Let's reaffirm the rights of lhe people. Be cautious of those who attack anyone who informs you or communism. such detractors do enough harm that lhey should receive no support. Distinguish between the palriol who speaks from facts and the crackpot who unjustly calls others Communist. Support strong, swift acUon to protect the rights of lhe people. A DISCIPLINED, militanl minority can be effective against the unorganized majority. Students for a Democratic Society (SOS) has only &,000 dues-paying. national members. They have 35,000 chapter members on 225 campuses and perhaps 100,000 adherents. (U.S. News and World Report, p. 34, S..12-69). SDS is behind almost all the college disturbances. SDS was involved in disputes with authorities on 200 cam· puses. Members' philosophies range from youthful idealism to d e s t r u c t i v e I radicalism. Michael K.lonsky (SDS's top official) says, "Our primary task is t() build a Marxist-Leninist revolutionary movement." (March 30). Klonsky calls himself a revolutionary Communist. SDS wants to destroy. annihilate. and tear down. ?dost members are white, from af· fluent or middle-class famWes. ~IARK RUDD OF SOS spearheaded the attack that closed Columbia in 1969. SDS Jed the Harvard rebellion. SDS seizes any campus issue, exploits it, expands it and stirs uninvolved studen ts into action. SDS feeds the arous· ed students suggeslions that create a con· frontation with college officials. Issues include Vielnam War, drart, ROTC, campus recruitment by com· panies making war materials and military research projects. Or they create issues (such as over-enrolling in a class, then denouncing the university for large classes). If the university granl3 SOS demands, the demand! a r e escalated. Unreasonable demands are lumped with valid demands -and the whole package presented as "non- negotiable." SDS WAS instrumental in organizing the 19G7 Pentagon march lo protest the Vietnam war. They helped plan and leall the demonstrations in Chicago against the Democratic convention. SDS is mov· ing into the high schools and industry. OJr "tame" Communists are dol~ what our bleeding hearts said could never happen here. Do domestic Reds pose a potential threat? Are we to let SOS-type grouJ>.' have their!' way in the U.S.? Or will we put people n responsible position! with enough realism, co1nmon sense and backbone lo make sure "crime doesn't pay?" LEONARD WRIGHT ....... ~ Friday, May 16, 1969 Tht editorial page of the Doilv Pilot 1e1k1 to 'nform and stim· idotf readers bv prrsrntino th.ts ntwrpaper'1 opi11ions and com- mfnta.rw on topics of intereat and •lonlficanct, bu prmrldlno • forum /cw the ezpressfO'll of our readera' oe!Jiion.t, and bv prestntfna thl dlt1crst uttw- pofnts of h1Jormed obscrotn and spok«tmeP1 on toplct of the c1cu. Robert N. Weed, Publisher j Security Meaures B ~e·f~d For Rocky in Nicaragua Nuclear Sub .Sinks At Dock MANAGUA, NI c 1r1 I !l• (AP) -Increased prolectloil was ordered for Gov. Ne1900 A. Rocketeller'.s visit to Nicaragua today after a se- cond flareup of violence dur~ Ing the· New York governor's llay In nclgbbotln& Honduras. ReaHobe sourets said · lhe Nicaraguan governmeftt ordered more pLaioclothelmen to duly amid ... ports lhat university ~tudenta were plan- ning protests during Rockefeller's fact-finding visit for President Nlion. A sizeable group ol U.S. Secret Servicemen also was detailed to protect l h e governor and his party of more than ZO experts. Press reports from Honduras said the Secret Service handled local newsmen roughly and would not let them near Rockefeller. &. in Guatemala earlier, there has been sharp criticism of the Rockefeller mission by some poli t icians and businessmen. The S o c I a I Christian party ca.lied the visit useless. University students, some of them carrying p I a c a r d s critical of Rockefeller, held a closed-door meetinC to discuss the visit, and there was a report that t,hey planned to demonstrate in front of the governor's hotel . In Tegucigalpa, the lion· duran capital, students burned a Honduran flag Thursday night on the steps of the Na· tional Cathedral where a youth WU killed by I policeman d1.Jfo. Ing an anti·U.S. demonstration VALLEJO, Calif. (AP) -A the day bero .... The 3r ISO millloo Navy aubm4tlne ...,jccted a l400 scbolarabip • bring .....OOcled al Mare rered,by the Rockefeller pa , y Island Naval ShJpyard Sink . Thuroday ni&f>t Into the Napa ln meg>0ry ot the slain youth, River. No one was ir\lurfKt. shouful&:"Tbe blood ol1a Hon-The Navy said lhe USS Gult- duran cannot be bought!" taro was at dock!kifl for out- Violenct broke out for the fitting as a nuclear-powered d I d I fast atlack submarine when s e c o n t m e u r n g she started to ahtk bow first 1n Rockefeller's vlslt when about the 34-foot~ river. 500 students left the sanctuary There is no dqer ot of the university campus and radioactivity, the Navy said, marched through downtown since tbe nuclev core for the streets chanting, 1'Dtath to the military dictatorship.,, power plaat had not yet been Club--swinging police charged in~~;_ into the crowd, but no serious ......... u.. started in • injuries we.re reported forw ard compartment, Navy Rockefeller said the death of officers aafd,~and the crew and the 19-year-old student ~ Lsland workmen were ;>,, .• , Wednesday was a tragedy and q~kly forced f~ the c~t ...--~, sent Dowers and a message af which was launched hert m ,.. • sympathy to the boy's family. July 196&. * :e..l • Police sa1d the shooting was No cause for the flooding -~ !~ , \ accidenl(ll. Medical ~dents Wa.t given immediately. 1 .• ~(" disputed this, cornmentittg in a Workmen.and the crew were "~ r~ • statement: "Will the public unable to close hatches quick· ¥ ' believe that a firearm can ac-ly since welding lines and air cldentaDy shoot three bullets hoses had been puijed through into the upper part of the body them from the sboi"e. of a running person?" The 3,500-ton sub sank in five minutes, an official a.aid. Asian Stretcher Si.net ahe ~ oo a tilt, the rear sail fin and the mast remained South Vietnamese us a pole and a makeshift sling to out of water. carry a wounded Viet Cong su spect back to base at Fridll, M,y 16, 1969 DAIL v P[l DT I by U.S. sion. Marines during a search and destroy mi&-Russ Capsule Lands On Szirface of Venus Bystanders said electrical J-A:n Hoa. South Vietnam. The suspect was wounded <quipmeol appeered he<ivily -------------=--------;;;------------------. damaged. MOSCOW (UPI) -An 1.1n- manned S o v i e t spacecraft completed its 160 million-mile voyage to Venus today , releas- ing a small capsule that parachuted to the surface of earth's nearest p I• ne t neighbor, the news agency Tass said. The Venus 5 capsule touched down on Venus "as gently as• book falling off a chair," Tass said. Soviets have given exploration beyond the moon whereas the U.S. Space Agency is .con· cenlrating on reaching the moon. The Soviets launched the Venus capsules earJy in January. Tass said Venus S functioned perfectly. relaying the temperature, Venus' at- mospheric pressure and the chemical composition of the air to scientists on earth. Dr. Blaiber g Hospitalized Czech Censors Close Dissenting Magazines For Fat;gue PRAGUE {UPI} -Late in application for registration." ., 1967, two Czech o s Io v a k Both journals gained renown YES MAM: We do have the largest stock of SHAG CARPET at the lowest prices! ' DON'S CARPET SHOP ' 12 II.ch N.mt tf ,_..i.1114'...,.J 426 SOUTH MAIN ORANGE . The Soviet accQmplishment duplicated the feat of Venus 4 in October of 1967 and gavt the Soviets a wide lead over the United States in the ex· ploralion of Venus. Venus 6, launched six days after Venus 5, was expected to land on the planet Saturday. Hurtling toward the surface at about 10 miles per minute, the capsule blossomed its parachute and after 1 53- minute descent landed on Ve'nus, Tass said. CAPE TOWN, South Africa political magazines helped stir for stirring up ferment among (AP) _ Dr. Philip Blaiberg, up the dissent that eventually intellectuals that contributed the world's klagest surviving toppled dictator, Antonin to Novotny ',s downfall . Listy 's heart transplant recipient, was N ovotn y . Today both barbs at the time brought on taken to a hospital by am· magazines were dead. its suspension, but the reform bu lance today. Three. days ago, Ooctors Government censors closed regime of Al exander Dubcek\~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ordered the S~year-old former the magazines Reporter and allowed it to publish again. l~ dentist to bed in hi! Wynberg Listy Thursday in a purge th at The closures, suspensions apartment for a week's rest to suspended three other and firings rollowed numerous recover from "exhaustion." Malaysian Riots Grow Bloodier According to t h e an· nouncement, the c a p s u I e "delivered to Venus" a pen· nant displaying a hammer and sickle and a picture of Lenin. It touched down at 7:03 a.m. Moscow time. Mrs. Blaiberg said her hus-n:i a g a z i n es , r!red two warnings from the new Com· band was admitted to the newspaper editors and left munist regime of Gustav hospital for X-ray examination cartoons virtually the only Husak that anti-Soviet .com· which could not be performed fonn of political criticism in ment in the press would not be Venus 4 quit sending .com· munication to Soviet scientitt.s before its voyage was finished but Tass said Venu.5 5 con- tinued sending infOl'Dlatioo "unintertbptedly." in their apartment. the Czechoslovak press. tolerated. His conditioo was satislac-The orders shutting Listy Informed j our n a 1 l·•t i c tory and be was erpected back and Reporter claimed the)' sources said more editors and borne M<mday, ahe said. "deviated from their own Communist party officials KUALA LUMPUR, Malysia !UPI) -Gunfue resounded throughout Kuala Lumpur to· day and fire swept factories and entire city blocks in the worst outbreak or violence sin· ce racial riots between Malays and Chinese erupted four days 'Ille successful landing on Venus on the eve of the U.S. launch of Apollo JO cm· phasized the priority the lf all went according to plan, the 2,4!H·pound Venus s landed on the dark side of the planet, one of the plane.ls where scientists believe the atmosphere could s u p p o r t plant or animal life. Bl.aiberg was given oxygen aims of their p o I I t I c a I would be dismissed soon to in the ambulance on the way ideological program. . .as bring about complete adheren- to Groote Schuur Hosptal, stated by the publishers in the ce to that hard line policy. where he was given a new•----'---'--------------'---'--- •g~loling also broke oul in 7 Launching Campaign Malacca in the f Ir st wide.spread disorders outside the capilal. D; p I 0 ma t; c For F1·ench Pres1'dencv sources said Prime ~linister Tengku Abdel Rahman wa s t1 under pressure tothresi'h.d · PARIS (UPI ) -The official form er premier v.·ho has the Police reported ey a ar· campaign for the French b · of ) rested 305 person s, more than ackmg De G au 1 e 's double the number reported a presidency opened today lvith Gaullist party, was leading off seven candidates, s o m e few hours earlier. serious and some not, in the the broadcast campaigners Police said 89 persons were running to succeed Charles Cle tonight wilh Michel Rocard, a dead and 272 injured in four Geulle. Socialist splinter candidate. to dboday~ o~ riots t.sbut dth1eh ~any During the Is.day campaign, follow. 1es 1n stree an e Jam· all will have access to 100 Picking radio tor their -first med morgues and hospitals In· minutes ol free time (l'I na-volley.! were Ga.stoo Defferre, dicated the actual toll was ' ma"'r •-•-"~ candid~e. and tioowkle radio .and television 1w ~ ..,, much higher. to make their views known. Jacgues Du.cJos, a Communist. More than 50 Mala ys set fire E h h " · ed .1. There was no word on when [ lb to ac as unumit ma1 1ng to a series o ree-s ry privileges and can put up acting president Alain Poher, apartment houses in Kuala posters at govenmient es--now favored to win the elec· Lumpur's Chinese district to-tioo. woold appear on the day. then waited with drawn penC:.ges Pompidou, the state-controlled networks. He heart_ in Dr. Olrmlan N. Barnard's second c a r d I a c ' transplant on J an. %, 1968. Oakland Okays School Head OAKLAND (UPI) -The ap- pointment of Dr. James I. .r.tason as Oakland's new school superintendent has been approved unanimously by the board of education. tlason, 4:t, has b e e n superintendent for the past year at Las Vegas , Nev., where he currently is em- broiled in a dispute with• tu- payers' group which 1crused him of a conflict. of interest in a $1 million book purchase. No w in Sweden daggers as screaming Chinese accused them Thursday ol fled the flames. A dagger fight biased political rt?Jrting. TREU.EBORG, Swe d en erupted in the streets. Police Kiesw· ger Plans Poher, the Centrist can-CUPIJ -'Ibree East German said many of the Chinese didate, charged that f 0 r youths defected to Sweden in a escaped. v·s•t t U S several days the network sailing yacht Wednesday, Diplomats said the pressure I I 0 • • reporting had lost all ob-authorities said today. on Rahman to resign came WASHINGTON (AP) jectivity and impartiality. The trio, 21 to 23 years In from the Malay lving of his Chancellor Kurt Kiesinger of Political sources saJd he was age, lefl Wolgast, Eas t ruling Alliance party. Youn;1:er \Vest Germany will visit angered by what he in-Germany, aod sailed 100 miles and more militantly pro-Malay \Vashington officially July 2t-terpreted as pro-Pompidou across the Baltic Sea to elements consider Rahman too 23 in response to an invitation coverage because of Gaullitlt Trelleborg en route to even· liberal. They want to relegate from President Nixon. control of the goverrment. tual uyhun in Weat Germany. the Chinese to politJcal im·.-----------------"----------'--------'-1 potence in affairs of state. Rahman had tried to e<1m· blne Malays, Chinese and In· ..., dians in his goverrunent in a attempt at hannony. School Bond Fails by 'Two' BRAWLEY (AP \ A $550,000 Brawley High School bond Issue was defeated by only two votes this week, su~ ject to a canvass by the Imperial County e I e c t I o n department A two-thirds majority was needed to approve the building expansion progrcam, and the vote was 870 to 437 with eight ballots rejected. . , , Youbetlhta Green Stripe backer • It's DAILY PILOT '• -for -1 Day ·· OUT AT THE OLD .. ,. BALL GAME · ., . PILOT PETE INVITES EVERYONE TO : .. SEE THE ANGELS PLAY BALTIMORE SUNDAY, JUNE 1, AT HALF PRICE G,f fwo r111r¥od 1111 liclt1h for 1111 S1111d1y 1ftor110011, J11110 I, Aftgtl1 ¥1, Oriol11 g•mt of An1h1im Stadi11m for th1 fttrmol price of on1 li,k1t. !Ivy'"'; th• DAILY PILOT 9i¥11 vo11 '"'.I 2-$3.50 2-$2.50 TIC lllS FOR TIC Km '°' $3.50 $2.50 Yo11 c111 r11tr¥1 '" '"tire 1•,lion or 1~11 two •••*•· l ut got ye11r party togolh•r ftOW •"' mail in th• orill1r bli nk h1l1~ with chi ck tr mo"•Y 01d1r !no e•1ll, plo111 ) •ftd hurry. Do•dl ifto for tick•• ordon i1 M•v 20. SEE THE STARS -, ~ .. L r· L r I~· '1· J ;,r· I- Ui tht tlirt 111ldo Y••· Svd"'Y 0f!larr, 0111.•f tho ..,..,14•, f.._ 1111tf 11fro/09tr1, wrllt• th• 41llr h1r•tco,1 col•,..111 f11t•tN, in tt.o DAILY 'ILOT. • • ' ' ' r • • ---~ --. • • ··-... Warm, Humane Man 'Foll Confidence' Regents Meeti~ l" ~ ~Judge Plan • ~Heading ,, ~For De feat ~ '."'SACRAMENTO iAPI :Qov. Reagan's plan for chang-.. tog the "·ay judges are ap-r.,,, inted is headed for almost rtain defeat again, the 1lepublican chairman of an •ssembly committee said to-- ~ay .• t "The ouUook is fairly bleak, :t'm afraid," said Chairman ;l_ames A. Hayes. IR-Long ~each,) of the Judiciary Com- itittee which normally would ~ass on the plan after it clears 't,he Senate. "' The plan, which Reagan :fays would take politics out of 'the selection of judges. won ~pproval from the Senate i'inance Committee Thursday ;#ind headed to the full Senate. •• ll· failed in the Senate in 1967 ··jnd passed the Senate in 1968 llut was killed in As.sembly ~diciary. The Assembly com· inittee. i's even more heavily ;Pemocratic this year despite ;tepublican control of the -lower house at the start of the 4ession, said Hayes. -Hayes guessed there are on- iy two out of eight members of ~his committee favoring the ,Ru,agan plan. Hayes backs it, . btK·not enthusiastically. ;~ponents claim it merel y ..uld trade politicals of Lhe .lif association for political ~onage. ~~e bill nonnally would be . ;i&signed to judiciary if it '.{f!sed the Senate. Hayes <quistioned whether it would ttt through the upper house, :v.&re it had the bare majority 'o!11 votes last year. ."'.lteagan's plan provides for m commissioners throughout ·01e state. composed mostly of judges and attorneys. to i:creen potential appointees to the municipal, superior and ljjipellate courts . .. .nie governor would get a ~ of three nominees -five Mlle most populous areas -;1#.1 he would have to pick a ')Lidge from that. --'The proposal by Sen. Donald ;{.;.. Grunsky, (R·Watsonviile I, l"9!l over a competing plan by .$i!il. George Moscone, (D·San Ji'Tancisco.) ,;Jt. would keep full appointive :~er with the governor - ~h MosCQne said is his du ty ..S . well as a right -and :§tablish review commissions to pass on the governor's ap· ~:::~~t~.oui~"be ~~t:~~red . :'Arm y' Gets· .:$700,000 Fellow Patholog ist Defe1ids Noguchi Discusses Protest ) LOS ANGELES <UPI) -A fellow pothologist defended ousted coroner -T h o m a s Noguchi Wednesday as "a W'1'm and humane man" at a ~hearing on . his appeal of the dismissal. Dr. William Q. Sturner of the Vnivers.ity ot Chlcago said he had known Noguchi since 1966 and had oever heard him "make a bizarnl statement.'' Noguchi was fired Match II arler county administrative of· ficer Lindon s. Hollinger com· piled a report that includei:I charges Noguchi expressed a hope for major airpJa~e crashes that would bring glory to him and the coroner's of· lice. Several employes testified he d!Ulced in his oUice as Sen. Robert F. Kennedy lay dying, exulting UU&t he would get to perform the autopsy and bt famous. Sturner said Noguchi was regarded with hlhe hi~t esteem by pathologists in this country and the rest of the world." He said Noguchi in all ways lived up lo the LaUn mot to carved ovtr the door to the New York City Coroner'& office: "Where death delights in teaching lhe living." Sturner was a , defense witness called out of turn because he had to ny back to Chicago. The county _resumed its presentation Tb u ra d a y af. ternoon by calling Charles Maxwell, chief of the cor- oner's orfice m o r t u a r y division. , He described a conversation In 1966 wilh Noguchi eon- ceming thecaseload handled during the )'tar and 1 how It might reach the lt,000 "'l"k . •·Someone was wonderi~ il we would hll the 14,000 ark to help benefit the budiet nd somebody also said it piba ty would," Maxwell said-. "Dr. Noguchi said, 'What \ve need ls an airplane crash,. ,, Maxwell testified. "I think it was just a facetious remark to accomplish the total mark he had established· as a target." LOS ANGELES CAP) - After new violence at the University of I Callfomia in Berkeley, the J;lead of UC's regents lo pay more attention "full confidence io the campus admlnlstratlon a.nd local Jaw enforcement." Cbiitrmao D<Wilt A. Higgs or San Diego talked to t newsmen alter a committee of II regents discussed the Thurs- . day tun.nail in closed session. ·;~ The full boBrd wUI discuss •;!' th'at is well as 'iti c10n· 6 Arl•ested troversial decision last montn to exert veto power over cam· pus hiring and promotion of I S' f • 1k~rt professors. n I ·ID . Gov. Reagan planned to al· tend .today~s board meeting. Chancellor Roger W. Heyns of Berkeley was not at the Regents mee ~~·on the UCLA campus. Bu ·his exeeutive vice chaneeUo , Earl F. Cheit. told newsmen be was appalled at the new outbreak. Regents• committees acted Thursday on several issoes ranging from credit cards for use for extension courses to funds for speeding up Pb.D programs sciences. in the social Police Ready For Protest A S f ' Earlier Thursday, a sludt!nt · Medi -Cal's Soaring Cost Probe Reveals High Bill s t a eway lead" told tbe regents that STANFORD (UPI) -. Palo N M Fl• ht . proposals made by some · Alto police today. were on the OAKLAND (UPI) -Six 0 0 re I ri s poHtical leaders that a student alert for a posSlble Stanford farm workers union delegat~. 8 member be named on the • student siege of a 1 bstiranchtut board "may mea n nothing." Stanford Researth n e including a Catholic priest, 'A ls' R ·z d Clo • Paul Sweet, student president office. were arrested Thursday after nge QJ, rOa Sing at UC Santa Barbara. urged Charles Anderson, president they staged a day-long sit-in at regents to qay more attention of SRI, said he had asked ~?r s ( LOS ANGELES (AP) -and Angels Flight is being to student opinion. police protection for the facul· SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Med i-Cal. the state program of health care for the poor, paid eight California doctors more than $1 00,000 each in 1968 fees . That was one of the facts revealed in a report to the U.S. Senate Finance e om· mittee, which requested a listing of all Med i -C;i l payments totaling $25,000 or more to doctors, dentists and pharmacies. The committee is in- vesligaling soaring costs for the federall~ s u ppo r le d medicaid program operating in 38 stales at a c ost of $5 billion a year. The report for California's h1edi.Cal prog r am u·as prepared by Blue _Shield· California Physicians, Service, the agency processing Medi· Cal clai1ns and payments. The report disclosed that Dr . Bert A. Ducote o f lnglewood topped all medical practitioners in 1968 Medi-Cnl collections with $125,453 total on 11 .569 claims. Ga.noways Pharmacy in San Diego was paid $240,817 in prescription fees on 5't679 claims. Three o t her pharmacies collected rr:ore than $175,000. Dr. Dean L. Whitlow 1., 8 eway Stores' national head· Angels Flight, 8 tiny, t\vcrcar dismantled to make room for lliggs said the regents' ty in Stanford industrial park, Fresno collected $135,101, on quarters building. cable railroad only 325 feet high-rise apartments and of-Finance Committee discussed south of the main campus. 1,653 claims. He was one of ' The delegates sat in a base-fices. legal action involving the Some 500 militants v~ted at four dentists paid more than ment conference room from long, will be closed down after Rides this weekend will be s tudent-created "People's a meeting Wednesday night to i100,000 during the year. the end of a rooming meeting. this weekend. free. The dismantling crews Park", focu s of the Berkeley disrupt the operations of .the As the fee report was being when the food chain rejected At five cents a ride, the start Monday. violence. Campus 11d· facll lty as a protest against made public, the State Senate their demands to stop selling cable ca rs, relics or the horse Cily officials say th is is not ministrators took over the co unte~-insurgency '"arfare Finance Committee in California table grapes, until and buggy days, have been tlle final goodbye fo r Angels park Thursday to begin \\'Ork re search it conducts. Sacramento killed a Reagan officials called police late in one of the biggest touri st Flight. They promise it will be on turni ng it into a soccer The tactic a!so was intended administfation bill intended to the afternoon . bargains in s 0 u th e r n put together again in a couple field. as a protest against the curb abuse in the h-1edi-CaJ The si x: an·ested were part California in recent years. years. after the redevelop-··\Ve have full confidence in decision ·of the school board of program. of a 14-member delegation The cable cars groaned and ment work is finished. the Berkeley administration trustees on Tuesday to sevei;- The bill would have made 1 r om the United F arm moaned up and down a 33-and in lav.• enforcement agen· Stanford's ties \vith Stanford· the suspension of a prac-Workers Organizing Com· degree incline to the delight of cies." lliggs said. Research Instit.ute. The titioner from fhe Medi-Cal 1nittee, AFL-CJO, who met thousands. Natalie lo \Ved "\Ve consider it of para· n1ilitnnts hoped that SRI program gr o unds for with six Safeway officials at Jn Its heyday, in I.he early mount importance thaL. law \VOUld be merged \Vith lbe suspension or revoking of his the food chain's invitation lo 1900s, It carried passengers SANTA MONICA (AP) - and order be restored." university. license to practice. discuss the union's grape between the down t o \V n Actress Natalie Wood and film,==============='=======o, "I'm not going lo vole to boycott . business district and Bunker producer Richard Gregson suspend a man's ability to The union's leader, Cesar Hill . then one of the city's best plan tn marry May 30. Miss cam a living just because he Chavez, was unable to attend residenlial districts. Wood, 30, and Gregson, 39, got himself crossways with an the session because of a But with the years, Bunker said Thursday the ceremony For a Gift to Uplift Don 't Ov erlook .a BOOK! agency," said Sen. Stephen P. chronic back ailmenl. Hill became a slum area, abd . would be in a Russian Tea\e (D-West Point), a physi-Outside the Safeway head· !he railway's p a ss en g e r.s Orthodox church in L 0 s The Bookstall lll r. 17tll St., Coito MMCI 541-4,l l cian. quarters, a noisy crowd of seldom disembarked at the . _:A::n~g::e:les::· _______ ..'.======================; Blue Shield reported 1968 about 200 farm workers union top. 1- payments totaled $ 2 4. o 2 supporters marched and wav-Now things have come ftlll million on 1.19 million claims. eel the red and black union circle. Bunker Hill slums are The report listed 588 doc tors banners b11t Safeway did not being replaced by a $600- paid more than $25,000 by request police to arrest them. million redevelopent project, Medi-Cal during 1968. 1---------------------·I Thirty-three d o c t o r s col- lec ted $75..000 or more and 104 11·ere pai d $50,000 or more. Eighty-four medical groups were paid $4.6 million on 221,975 claims. r Motorists May Select Own L icense Numbers n SACRAMENTO (AP ) -As far as Gov. Reagan is con· cerned. a California motorist should be able to name his car after a baseball team, his col· lege, his \'t'ire ~ or even his 1nother-in·law. That was the effect of the governor's announcen1cnt at a ne,vs conference Thursday that his administration backs proposed legislation allowing personalized license plates, al an unspecified extra cost. The special plates could be any combination of two to six numbers or letters. except those which "violate common motor vehicles deparlmenl considers the maximum possi· ble -under limits of good ta ste -will have been used up by the natio n's n1ost motorized state . The change "'ill come as ne\V cars are registered or as car 01vners want to switch. But -the new combination \\•ill last only until 1978. Enjoy BIG SOUND plus lasting SOLID·STATE r eliability! ONLY $69 90 with new Bonus Balance checking Senate Faces 'Job' Stand LOS ANGELES (AP) standards of decency or con· Mbst of a spinster 's $700.000 nict with present P 13 t c SACRAMENTO (AP) -The estate will go to a Salvation number runs." Assembly has adopted a Enjoy beautiful music, fin e ~y-administ.ercd rest home Reagan also revealed lhe resolution urging President for women who don't drink or state will begin phasing out Nixol\ lo intervene lo pre vent ;smoke. the present yellow-on-black the elosi ng of several federal .. A will hand-wrilten by plates and replace them with Job Corps centers and con· perfo rmance-at • """' L z h took ti gold-on-blue-which i·ust han. dest cost t .~ ... er . a n a orneys " servation camps in California . very mo fi d t d · h Th pen to be the colors of the · ve ays o ecip er. e The action came Thursday , \Joman. ~·ho died in 1967 at University of California an1I l\V{l days after Sen. Alan You'll be a mazed-at the 1rulv remarlcab'e 1onal the r 69 ·d ti the state. They also are easirr age 0 , sai a orneys Cranston 'D-Calif.). failed in depth, dimensio na l realism, and fidel ity of this out-• too bo to read, experts report. t .:elrter tl~~e ~f·f\fiss Zahn·s Motorists also v.'itl starl Lhe an attempt to p~t the1Sen.ate standing Magnavo x value! Model 233, with two BONUS BALANCEchecking meansjust · d h d long-planned S\\•itch in the se· on rccorrl against I ic Im· extended-range speakers, plus a precision player 1hat what it s ays. Whenever you need extra ~ms conteste t e ocu· mediate shuldo1vn or 59 J ob tDent, declaring land for the quence of numbers and letters Corps centers around the banishes discernibl e record and Diamond Stylus wear, money, you've got it. Right lr1 1he ·otd -i ho h d b on plates beginning i " 1 1 nd d d i·d ,,..,, me 'vas pure ase Y October. ~ country. le1s your records last a Ii etin1e . A , a vance so• • checking account. Bonus Balance costs the Los Angeles Communi ty t · slate circuitry replaces 1ubes, elimin ates heat-assures th' tll 't Y ' t ~eveloprnenl Age ncy. a t~rom then 011. plnte~ ll'ill The Assembly reso ution you no 1ng un you use 1. OU re no SQlvation Anny attorney said read -for cxan1plc-123 Hop was approved on a split voice tugged "go-anywhere" dependa!;>ility. Easy-to -cai ry fOJCed to borrow one penny more than t)le home \Viii be bu i It instead of lhc present HOP vote after several legislators luggage-like case. See and hea r it nowt you need. And you don't pay finance .tl-Awhere. J2J. said it would be a reprin1and'---------------------il ~e woman 's father owned a This is because the present to the Nixon admini stration. It 11 charges one day longer than you have Qgar factory in Los Angeles 15.3-miUlon combinations the now goes to the state Senate. Convenient to. It's like writing your own terms on ,.oo Jeft his. daughter $40,000 in J.-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; your personal credit card. · )p.!4. She pyramided if to THE FAMOUS BUtLOtNG AN D SITE Optional tt'snotonlycheap,lf sconvenientMore 1700,000 through investment in Magnavox convenient than credit cards or· other lJ'.1151 deeds. OF THE fSuperior Court Judge Accessories similar bank systems. Instead of writing Mcintyre Faries in his ruling B LA c K KN I G HT even more checks, you pay back your Thursday said h1iss: Zahn loan the sensible way. You simply make wanted t be home built In Mobile Ca rt-model 8503, with record storage or a de posit in your checking account. memory ol her parents. magarine rack: deluxe eastern-$15.00. Portable Record Storage b se--model 9166 ~olds up 10 Andyou get only one monthly statement !:Mosk Poll Says • '!Je's a \Vi1111 cr I • .1;(15 ANGELES i AP ) -~ Stanley M06k of i hc • Sj.lfe Supreme Court could .Weet Sen. George Murplty, (floiCallf.), tr an eH!ctim wm· tlWd todtoy. a pott poJd for by lllO<l< .._un said . :;ne survey by Opinion -.n:1i of CalJromia •aid 11u-sday thal Mosk , 11 Otmoct'lt would get 4U per· RESTAURANT and COCKTAIL LOUNGE - NOW BEING OFFERED FO R SALE CALL 1111 Scott or Kermit Riq95 • c<nt of the.tote,. to Murphy'• :12.3 pen"111 with another 13.3 293 E. 17rh ST., COSTA MESA 646-4494 J)Cfttllluooeclded. '"-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 26 LP 1eeords-take ill whef.(!V'8t you go-$19.90. to c ope wl~h. It Includes your checking 11)-------------'''------~I and Bonus Balance transactions-a ll on KERM RIMA MAGNAVOX t~actory Direct De ale r 266' Hcwbor llvd. Costa Mno ~6·1HI ••as Wutmh1sttr V(n tmhtst• H4·2lSO 121 U So. lroolthunt Gcnn Grove Sl0-4HO IJlf l Chopmon Gardfft Gro•• 63'·1250 one piece of paper so you know exactfy where you stand. There's a bu ilt in se- curity to .Bonus Balance. In the event of the borrower's death, the money used fro m Bonus Bala nce Is insured. The out- standing balance is paid ott In full with no obligation to the survivors . Bonus Balance offers a bonus too. A Uni ted States National Bank Courtesy Card. Use It to cash checks at any of our 52 Full Service offices. Use it like cash. Jf you need extra money for two or three days before payday-or two or three months or more-don't live off your cre dit cards. Don't s pend time fumbling through a wallet full of plastic. Just use Bonus Balance with low United States Nationa l Ba nk finance charges. It'• cheaper and more convenient. , ' l Man Gets I to 15 In Death • Jl'UU.ERTO~ - A Fullerton man found by a Superior Court · judge to be mponslble for the death of bls infant san bas been sentenced to one to 15 y!ars ln sta~ prison. • Judge Howard C. Cameron Imposed Iha\ term on Victor Rani:lall Schmidt, n, after con- sidering Schmidt's plea of guil- ty to redllttd charges of volun.. tary maealaugbter. Schmid! wrui booked on IUlpiclon of murder at &he time of hls ar-rest last Jan. 21. • Schmidt's 20-month-ol.d son. David, died that same day from internal injuries caused by a blow to the stomach. Of- ficers said Schmidt admittea beating lhe chifd 1but claimed he was suffering 'adverse re-- actions" from drugs at the time be punished the baby. For The Record Meetings 'lllO°'Y M•rlMrs LI-C!ul:t, SM! $111rf, rt~I W. Coa1! Hltlnlll'I• NtwPOr1 ll11ch, 12:1S II.If!, Mir \'"I• M1'6flle lod••· M.•nle Templl, 141(11 15th Slrwt, NIWPOrl 11 .. c11. 7:30 11.m. V.F.W. Pollit No. "36. Amtl"lun Letlon Hill,~ W. ltlll Sfrforl, COlll "'"'· •:oo 11.m. I S°'TUllOA'\' C~rl1l!111 llu1lnn1m..,•1 Cammlllet, B1lbOll BIV Cllltt, Newpor1 llft~, 11.m. Anchor ladae, VOA. $enlo• Cltlt&ll'I R.C .... tlM Cit$. !Siii Strl'tt Ind 1rvr,,. Avenvt, New"'1 Bue.II, 1 p.m. • $M1 of 1111'1 In Amfril;I, Mir Vlsl1 ladlil•• 11111 StrNI Ind Or1t111e "-· H1111fltl9t1111 Batctl, • p,m, Or1nsi1 Cllllf!IY llEACT, 1G1'1 G1rd911 G~e Blvd .. G1rden Grvve, 1:JO p.m. Divorces DEA'l'H 'NO'l'ICES KELLY Mitton Ramrt KtllY. •'1 Alli Vlltl Df"lvt, NIWP!lrt ll•ch. 0.le <If dMTtl, ,,,.., IS. $UfVlwd llY Wlflt, Gertrude. at ._ home1 .,,., Mitton O.vld k~l'f, ~r1 llittelll Kenndl Robert K~f.. ly, 'Mlltlltti dl!Ulflttn, Geflev!f\le ~' S1n Oleffl Yl11tlnt1 M 11 MlcOoweU. """""'°"' 8Nch; Rvltl l.11- c!ll• Hul'lllld. Ml~ISI JOlln J-H_, llncoln, NllbnsU; bRilMf, Tllorlel Kiiiy, SI. C'IDllCI, Mlnneol11 incl 12 9flflddllldreti. S«vlces, 12 NOOn s.N!'lf.v, P1dllc VllW CflM>el, W 1111 PMter hill On atrld911"9. I~!, l"Klfk View Mttn«lll P1rk. F..,,11., •-It "-wlstill'ltl to m1k1 ffte-fl'IOrill contrlbo.rll-. Pie.te contr1bllle to Hoa9 /Mrnorl1I ~!Ill llulldlllt Fvnd. Pacific vi-Mor1111ry, Dlr.c;o ·~ ARBUCKLE & WEUIH We1tclllf Mortuary U7 E. 17tb St., Coeta Meaa -BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar OR S-1450 Costa Mna Ml 1-UU BEIL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadw1y, Cotta Meu. LI l-3W DILDAY BROTllERS lluUagtoo Valley l'lfortaary 17111 Beach Blvd. Huntlngtoo Beach SU.7771 PACIFIC VIEW MJ!MORl'AL PARK Cemetery e M-..Y C..pel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newporl Beach, Calllorola Mf.:700 PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL J!OME '11Cl Bolu Ave. We1tmlnster .._ SllEFFEll MORTUARY Lagaiia -· •tm Saa Cleme.ite '11Wlll llMITll'S MORTUARY G'I Mota SL Rullo .... BelC\ U:M13t ------------.---~~---~----=~=--~---- • lJCI Complex Risinfl Giant: loog-necked craues hover over site at UC Irvine campus where $6.2 millloo complex d .. igned to house UCI's School of Engineering is under con- structioo. Complex includes an eight-story building, an adjacent tl!ree-story structure and connecting plaza. It is to be finished in the spring ol 1970. Youth Home To Expand ORANGE -The Albert Sil· ton Children's Home, in Orange, which is geared to ac- cepting dependent children who are not juvenile of- fenders, will open its expanded 8G-Oed facility Monday, with an open house at 361 S. Manchester Ave. from 1 p.m. to i p.m. The youngsters at Sitton Home, who range from five days to 18 years, are aban- doned or abused or come from broken homes, and are in need of protective care. With the assistance of the Albert Sitton Children's Guild, a volunteer group, the new quarters will provide more ac- tivities foi: the youngsters, in- cluding arts ani:l crafts, sew- ing, square dancini, groom- ing, knitllng, and a library can. Olympic Pool Approved LOS A L A M J 'I'. 0 S A speciaJ county service Construction of an olympic-area had been created by !bed pool •t Loi Alamitos supervisors last October to High Seh9Q)' is back on the Jeyy r21.5-cent tax rate to track today alter the signing fibance the pool constniction. of a three-way joint powers It was a lingle purpose agreement by the county district formed for one year Board of SUpefVisOrs. onlr· Pool construction waa held -""--------- up for s&Veral weeks because a ct1St e!Um1te indicated the job would· cost $134,000, or $25,000 more than originaUy budgeted. A new slale of officers for the 1&70 year has been elected by the Optimist Club of Costa Meaa. New Optimlst leaders are Bob Jessen, president.. Jim Garviy and Barney Davis, vice. preoideats end carm .. Sal-. Kaetary~. lnvo1ved ln the three-way pact are the county, the City of 'Los Alamitos and the Anaheim Union High Scboo1 Dislrict which includes the Los Alamitos High School. The schoo1 district agreed to pay the additional $25,000. "(° .,. f ., .. ... . t~· . . JayceesHunger Walk May Attrtuit 20,000 GARDEN GROVE -More than 20,000 persons are ex- pected to join in a Garden GrOve Junior Chamber of Corilmerce -sponsored w a 1 k May 30 to raise funds to he1p end hunger iD thb naUon and Fund Drive Announced For Palsy +rood. City councilmen ~ay night proclaimed May "Walle Down Hunger Month" and deslgnaled Memorial Day as the date of the walk. The eight-mile rout for the event begins at Santiqo High Schoo1 and ends at the Straw- berry Festival grounds In Gar· den Grove Park. A Jaycee spokeman said l!JlOll'On will be asked to back walkers with cash and the mc:ney will be l:tonated to the Meell for millions Foundatloo. SANTA ANA -A door-to-I QRAffTT1 door fund. raising campaign • from Saturday through Mon- day is. aimed at providing funds to Continue lhe .work of the c.erebral Palsy Develop. ment Center at 3020 W. Harvard St., Santa Ana. Front End Alignment • C«r9c:1: cater, CM'lber' • Correct toe·in, ~t • Inspect and adjust steerirc DAILY PILOT .9., .. Sympathy-flµt Nt! S·hirts v: ' ""' ' SANTA ANA -It'• 81\ old shirt, !Avis, toeb and I pair we can't ~lain euetly ~ , COlll' -olainl that unaym. ol teMJs ilhots and had to goes' on with . ...,., ~ palbedc fallen Just about lake leave without lbem. Well, nol clotbeo," •· jail olf...,, <#,, '!be ahlrt oil Y"l~·baclt .whin euctly, but 1\9 didn't leave In mentecl. "We just toll -· they bool< you lri and It seem· the same garments. not to wol'l)!, ~t wUI all ~ 04 to be borne OUI by clalm> "It's liaPllODed before and •out iii t/IO waSh." •'."" that county supervisors re-'iii~~9i~iiiiiiiiiii9iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiif: Jecled Ibis .... k. 11 They denied Edward c. Lowe'• plea for $IO to replace 9'X': ·~ Man two woolen ahlrWwea~ro that ~e ' !p ·says: the Santa Ana man aald were dan\litd beyond repair by jail One is as Old as he j.ooks perlonnel. And they turned an • • Before Breakfast ••• and as equally deaf ear to Henry l.o'8"'>;~ Young as He Feel~ when Maldonado of Santa Ana when Working on a Stamp that former tnmate of the CoUeclion. county jail asked for '28.19 to (turn back the years wilh us.) replace his" entire wardrobe . Maldonado said he wen1 to. the jail in ,a T Sblrt, iweat FAIRCJllLD ST .. \.~IPH : 2'7·P Btdadway • lag\lna Beach • 171~] ~94.()$44 Man FaciDg. Trial in StQCk Fraud LOS ANGELEi; -A former Newport Beach man accused or selling m.ooo worth of worthless stock dui'lllg bis Harbor Area operations must face a jury trial July 15 In Los Angeles Superior Court. James M. Hansen, 3 4 , formerly of 919 Bayside DriVe, pleaded not guilty to 16 counts of grand theft 1n an ap- pearance before J u d g e William B. Keene. He was ar- rested last Feb. 21 in San Francisco. InvesUgalors allege that Hansen sold the stock to Orange County investors dur- ing a two-year period or operaUons at the Bayside Drive home, He sold stock in non-existent companies for as much u M50 a share ln the name of the, Hansen Brokerage Co., investigators claim. Open Noon"tO ~O ·•"CI~ Wtdl'\Csd°iyt &---sb.n!fayt , · Edn1und Fairchild • Walt~ Mensch, CWO USMC Ret. ; REGISTER NOW ,,,, ·.FOR . FALL SEMESTER Summer School July 7 • August 1 t I• 12 delly -...-.dlDI ,..., ... wltti ,. .. ," -,.. l!Mdl•I -''*""""e y,_.,.!Hri .. JH'••i4"1 • .. , Day Camp June 23 • August 29 · \'. •10J..ily-fef~ tbro1tfi 11--flehl tt'lpt. ptc•·· 11lts, wott •P• llWt ......,, .• .... ...a .... lefofe 9lld _,.., sclloel ... 6:JO ....._ .. 6:30 p.a. Call t*1 fw 1"""99Hea , . Hawthorne Christian Schools " •• follllhll• v.i1..,: 16135 11oo•ir.11m St. / t6J.1J1J COMPLETE BRAKE RELINE s499s ""' U.S. C1n Don't 91ntbl1 on brak11 thtt pull •.• grab •.• fHf spongy •• , nttd pumping. Stop in (the bt1t way you can) •nd let our str1ice 1peci11i1ts reline the four whffl1 on your Car ••. rebuild whffl cylindtn, r"urface 111 drumt ••. Mid quality hydrauli.c fluld ._ •. adiu•t brakes to full contact ..• and inspect and adjust the emergency brake. Then you can stop any where, 11fely. The World's Most Advanced Tire •••••••••••••••••••••• * Provlda llfltJ ot ................ . . ' ' .. The center provides training for children from age four thro~h teen age. to prepare them to qualify for admission to public schools desipte their handicap. An adult develop. ment program at the center trlins the severely han- dicapped to assume vocaUonal skills and self -reliance in the community. only s 50 M•I A-11:Mll C•n. • Wllfle11I ........... ,,. * Gm. °'" twice 1111 t111IM1• •• • * s...su,1oo1 New funds to the center · may be used to begin a pre. school-age growth and training program. I See by Today's Want Ads a Polte.ry Patte.r1n&1: De. llghtfUJ job in a Pottery Place in Laguna, , ,accu. rate, enersetie, pel'I01lable 'Wtlln•n needed for cluk. fWI time, 5 days, tnclud. Ins; either Saturday or "11n1Jay. Fuo job! a .rome. &. oub 1 Then YoU need this standard ottlce eqUipmenl • .large: heavy steelcaae deak I: _cha.it, 165: o111ee m. noya1 -. wrttt:r with ttand, '30; hand !»< a. ......... adder,$20. • l'n>otecl °""'"' -de-lldooll 'Mlat'1 lf>e color (I( thla CU'Jltt!J'W, ntw:r' hen .. ~ • .to .... -· -a aacrlfice at '6.15. e EKotlc l'e-: 8..,.,... ldttent, to keep eomPIJJ)', 'Nltbout much bother, •• $50. STORE HOURS: 7:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Don Swedlund \ ALL WEATHER SPORTS JACKET • kkt•l for an ovldoor tctlvllltt t Hlgh-vltlblllty y.llow Ylrryl II r1lnpr00f, Windproof • Ont 1lz1 fltt sll PHONE 646-5033 COAST GENERAL TIRE COMPlm CAR CARE Since 1959 Hours: 7:30 to 6:00 Dally --------------------------.. -----c----------- \ I l r' • • • It ..... PILOT O.range Coa~t· Area Vi·tal .Statisti.cs MAY 18th I Wins Honor JUDGMENTS &rW• Lou U 111.19 tit. " Alt.rt U llue, Jr. (.,Ul\lflnef!O lltuth Ann C.01• VI Enc ScClll Colol , .... ~~I) llZIECIYotl-HIEOltETE, • ~. K, o1 •n ()(""° Apt, A Mii Vl"'ll!Mi. 20 ..... , ~ ..... A, ... Of~ ...... MALL-WEiii:, Mftfl V., W. ol m O<-llnd, Llilil\mt' llMdl ,.,. ~· l.,ls C... U, ti '1Ht Slfl A-.. ,._ '-· f0l.S1'AD-MICMMA.. JKk W,. n. .. 1611 Cot'!..,... 0r1w, c--o.i "'--' 1ftd OltN J,. 'JI, ol ISUJ a.lloid l,Mll, H...,,IL""loro llMd\. flETA-TUCKEJI, D...,IH ll,, 11, of 1'.01 U.1 Flores fl'd CYllTl'll' L. 1 .. ot ISM! U. Fior... bolll tf WNlmlnlltl'. Jl'YAN ~E. "•!If A,, :0.. of llftl ....,,,. Drive, Loa A~ ..... Slll<i.v A.,, 22. of ;Mtl W, OUw A¥•·• Fvllll10!<. SEYSTEtt-cAMAftA.~ .. ffY II. JaM, JI, Socl91 5"'wk• "''""' Ulllwnlt-r •I (1/ll, 11 lf'linll Ind ._ S .• 2ID. Of 10<1 v..-1 ... P1.U, ltvW.. llllOOKs-HOWIE, lr1 IE ..... of 24tl1 MGl!te Vetlle Drrvt.. Lil9Ul'I Nl9wi a&'CI C.rolirle M .. 21, Of J1:u2 U.-C-ltNd, L...,,.. k-Kl'L. LOVE"-U.ltHf:TT,~ftoooMtd H •• SI. .. 311 Ordild, C~ del MM ·~ JM!lce H.. 47, of 1151 111""° Orlw , a:.rii. -""-· HA.ltlUS-FllE'Y, Mel\tlft IE .. 2S. tlf 2"5f Hftll'Ort llMl., Apl. 1 •I'd ~ L., ''· .. ,.. .._.. ......... ""'· ,, bofll ol Co$11 Mew. RISH.ER-T.t.OiELL, MerYI G., JS. ol !Gt Gofttlntftl1t Drlw , ttilftlinllorl 8-'! Ind lrl1 C., .U, of 2'1" Almont, AMllllm. MORTON-Mc:OON.U.O, 0.Vld L., 1.t. d Jt2A AYenld1 C.rynel Ind Oor• H •• 6f. ol, 211~ AYenido9 c.rn.1, boTh d LISlllnl Hiiis. RANSOM.-GREENOUGM, Albert J .. 30, of )lN,3 tfll .St., Sol/th LllDUN .,.. ...... /'lllf'9t-;:, 31, d 212111 PMk Allt.. l.69uN Bead!. · OUNN-RIDGE, Clrflord E .. 2CI, of 1''65 Lemon Aw. Incl JIM P .. lf. ol :22'6.S LlmOll Aw .. both d El Toro. HOWAR~R EASOH. John M .. 21, of '11 tin ~t.. HuntlnolM ftt•cJt Ind R0111"1n R.., 20, d 11511 ~11 l..llnf, G1roen G-. DISIENO--A.Sl-IFORO. Mlcll1el J .• 22. of )Ot Cillo! Rlc1, Sin Clemenlt Ind SNi!"Oll A., It, o1 IDU Flernl"l'O llOld, L111uN Sod\. TEllllETTS-STEWAJIT, Herbert E., ~. of 27t6 Ml""r St, ~-1, CMl1 Mesa Ind All« C~ 51. ot nu RONllll RcN, Hunllnetoll kid>. J(INNAIRD-O'CA.LLA.HAN, Ou~ G .. 4!, of lf•7 R11moowi, AP!. A, Cost• MeU Ind P1lrld1 M., ..0, of 1051 St1nley AW .. ~-4. ~ lleKI!. Al"lllL tJ GEE.-.C.ORllOY. Mld\tel J,, 21. d 114 w. Wll$0ft. AP!. •1 Ind Consl1nct J .. 11~ o1 IM W. Wiiton. APf. •1, both .. CMI• Meta. KELCE--f'ETERSON, Buda'I G~ 11, of 11"3 Cl\erleslon SI. !Ind JIM l.. 1 •• Of )0;1) Klllrllrod<.1, bolt! of (Diii MHI. ELLISO......ORTIL Allen R., :Jl, ol 1'2S Tllhlll ......... ~ hlt!I Ind T•lftl c .. 2CI. ol 5 de Ferebrll. No. 12 $IN', Me•ko. CRAYCRAFT-LIBUTTI, R1iP11, ». d 16002 P111lla11 L-Ind C.rrntll, 2', o1 16002 F1ntasl1 Llrot. boll! ol HUil- tl'*'°" &Nell. TEN ,J:YCK-U TORRE, Fre6 W~ ... o1 'Ul HOIPllll Roa4 Ind RenH A .• '12. ol 521 Vl1 Lido Nord, boll! ol NtwP«I &Heh. llUSWELL.-.C.USSlNS, Edward L., •1. of 16-UI Bolsa' Chk1, H11nl1110ton e~ach •nd Ocrcltw, Sol. ol 3d E, Jolwlton, He.,,.., Jll-'ldt, TAKATE-TAKASA.. Jeff Y •• 2j, Of 117' Oranve: AV.. Ind ll;IYoka, 2', ol 2l1t e~t':~~U~ c1..C:1v ~; 1 o1 1421 ISlll SI., API. t, WntmlMll!r Ind En11, 32, d 1~ c;.ldMIWftf. H""'" 111'19kM BNCh. ~cKENl1E~K1NS,'Jttold t.., If, of 21to Or•"'lllt Ave, ind JC¥ M .. )II, o1 11M Or•ne• Ave .. botti ol Cm.II .. w. G<JSs-AUDOLF, 01viO W,, )II, ol 2Cll ~Ill $1. ltlG Ellftn R,, :rl, ol 201 1'Yl11 'St,, bolh ol Sell BMcti. BANKS-PLATTE, Arll L., to, ol 10N2 JHfl $1~ IVlallelm Ind L~ L. 20, ol 1m2 Loi J1r1111111s Wat, Flllllftl•ln Y1lle'f', ' • ALCAl..A-ALVAJIA.00; .,...,,.._ A., 21. d 1.tm MID,.llit, ,ft., 'WHll'lll,_tff ind OolDre J., 21, Of m ~· Wllloll, Cotti Noe$11. -a STAUFFER-FUTll.E\.L. J-W., 2'. ol '111't NardJWS. c~ RI -· 111111 Ar!N, 11, ol"lll Mltl St .. ~ BHdi. NICHOU-IAltNES, G-ff j ,I 71 •• cl '3922 Strtit't ol the Sltwor Luiter" 1...t c....t1ce s~ 11. -o1 )J6ln Del Obli.pe R.Nd, boltl ol Clint Polnl. SHEAR-TUDOR, Mfdleel L, 1,, of 21' llrt St., Hunllllffon 8e1ch 1...i P1lrld1' L.; 22, of 2t6ll Andros, Ca.It ..... . CENICEROS-CORTEZ. Alfr.00. 14. ol 111 Ja.rm Ind M1ry G., 21, al 111 Ja.M, bolh ol Coll!• Mffl, .. ,ltlL. 11 LETTS-BENOIT, WU\l1m H .. ?l. ol noo Dell""''· I.pt, c end Llna1 llitv. 11. of 116M C-ran $1~ tooth ol Hunlll'IOlan llNCl'I. RIALE-TURNEA, Wlllllm L., 2Cl, ol 15051 P1<:1flc, Mldw.... Clly 111<1 81rblr1 J., 11, ol 4M1 ()ptrtll1 Ortw. Huntl,..lan IHdl. VERGERl.-COLEMAN, G1ultlero N., 27. of 361' liiYrivold St., SNI Such 111<1 Janel E .• 11, of 1D71t MHllCll1, I.Pl HM. Alllri.irn. ANDERSOfol-8EAUDOIN, P1wl H .. '11. o1 151\'t N. H1rbor 8111(1,, AllllMim itlld '°"""' L 15, ol 'IOlJ Mlple, CO.II Me$1, "'II.IL» «:~ic::..:owll~ L~~ Se o1 ur.i ErnllY H .• lf. ol ;1rH. 'lmflY ~ A ... 11e1rn. •ow~ttos.m, HA. •~1.!. o~,."· • 651 Uih 1 ... Ca.II .._ 1 ~rf1 F:.-..!f.• o1 101~1 81.,.,.rdt. li"""llllJtoll y.t,."tt-J"C:-SON, ~A,,.:-ot 11S ~~."o1 ~l'OM'w1¥·-~~ li:U~1t~:w.voR. TtrrV L~ :llL. ol 111 VII N\tlbel, LIW Ille. Ind Sh-~ S .. =1 Vll Alll111n. LllM 11111, bOlll w,. ~ ,olfN.t~sMoR .. •, •l'.'1-".!. c,, .. ,~. • .r..-:tcl ''" r.L2l of 11 ... 11vo. of Cltrfltn,., Te Winkle Sch~l Lists 3rd Quarter Honor Roll The third quarter 9CholarshiP' list and honor roll bU been announced b y TeWinkle Intennediate School Jn Costa Mesa. Six students 'in seventh grade received A grades in all wbjecls. They are Mary .. Broker, Nancy DePasquale, Cynthia Holm, Robin Huffine, ·Mart Law and Stephanie Maeda. No eighth grade slu· dent made all A's. Students named to the eeholarship list received at ._.leuf. as many A's as B's. They are: SIJll, La11r1 Smllh, ktrlfl Sot-"· J11111 TH.11--•· LWS. Vtnlln. lon-fllll W!liddo!I. K-'11 W-. Students who received al least a B grade average and were named to the honor roll : \ Kaiser Lists 3rd Quarter Honor Roll 'l'he thir d quarter scholarship list and honor roll has been announced by Heim Kaiser school in Colt.a ~ Students named to lhe scholarship list received at least as many A11 as B'i. 'They """ 5'¥lfltll """"' Mort111 Abboft, l111I a.rtor1, Jlnt BltrO. T1rnrn'I' flull1, c-11 F11111b, D1wld Fredrltban, Mttwl11 Gllblrl, Vlclll HanlOn, Dini HU~ J1nl1 Hlr1!1, Julie H1,1nl, Lori M11Wr, Nancy N1wton, Toni Rf9!1, C1tllerlnt SmlTh, Tweed SI-.. CllhJ'Yfl WI!.._, Jll'llot Wolfll, P1lrl<la Wool!. •• Ill 1rtc11r1: Andrew.. Elltn lllf'c:aYll1, Jll\f! 1111 kwocd, O...lu Church, ''' Con""'' Div Evil. OenlM Fev • .klh11 Fretrna11, Dtl I FunOMll, C1th1rln1 Grltr, Rollf: I Hlle'I', Lindi Hesllt', Mlrk Mlll, '11!1 HUI, 5ulln Hadlm1n, Bon· nltl How : Vld<le rnll'lfl'lf, Wlllllrn Ktnl, OIWll Litt lo/In, Holly LllH'HY• Jclfll LoU1r, Llw M•Wr. llrld Mc:Don11d, JoAllM Mc:Oowell, Sf\erry Mil .. ,, Miii MlldtlllT, ""l1nl1 Mlql~ Clllrm1l111 Morck. 8oMl1 Molllf. Rldltrd Per tin, RDbtrt Pl•l .. r, J1net Potier. Torn Prldonoft. K1th'1' Reehl, Oline Rt<ienJlil, S;lr•h 5ch11m1n. Dltdr1 5mllh, !lob 5Pel'1. Mir~ Sut-ton, Cllllleen Tllafuol, G1ry Wiid. IN$EltT t pt Students who received at least a B grade average and were named to the honor roll : •IGH'TH GllADalll: Jud'I' AllM,.,.,., Dibble Alllln, DIYe A.mold, Chtrvl 8'1combt, Vicki Birr, Sob 8""'•"· O.vld e1nc11v, Jo/111 BtnlltY. G1ry llereer, Clnd'I' C1rlcol, GV'I C11tor1. Jdf Ch•mln, Mtllnd1 CctfQfl, Dl1n1 Crvw1!. L.lt.1 Din, Pim D111erl, C1!hy Dtnkt1n, Davia OO'Jler, Slevt FrtlWlld, M11"1:l1 Friend, Dtvld Gon11lbn, Cris Hanlllton, SuHn Hamll!on, OeMl!e Heerw, \lernt H1,1n!, J ulie JackMHI, Olvld Jordtn. R1111 Julius, Sui.n Kint, S.nclr1 Klftrn•n, Cltr!On Kr1uw, P1111 Kr1lblcl!. 01vfd L111r11, 8 rodl L•cadc, Din L1nnlnt, Al>rll LIVtllf, 11i1ren Mlltn-w.1111, Lorelli /'NN1y, K11tly M~, Ttreu MarttNIM'I. A\IOrtf Mudra, , KllllY Mullen, Sut Ptllflllrlnl, Chrl• ltlchlnls, $1\1ron llf1n. CtlllrlM Sctltl, CalT Seal!, Mike Sktlch, 11111 S!Nltwoaa, Ktlll Srn!ltl, Kt"'( 511!1111, Mike SllllMlfl, Tr11cy SUdWML T9f'n' Tak1a. J im Vinson, 1.-Voborll, P11tll WuW1'. G•f'f• Wl'lttltr. Jotln Y1rn1I, W I t 11 1 rn . .... s•v•NTH GllADl.ltS: SM"" 1.11tt, !lf"11n Anoterwn. c1n-d!ct Arnold, PltlT Brown, Deborlll C11wf'1, Sheri COUllCllmln, Otn!Jt DeVrlK. Siii' Ft111klln, T 1 r r y Fl'ftfNl11, J1ckltl Gnlll. L. t 1 I I• Hl ..... lton, JOIMI HllrrTIMll, (lrll'I Hl/'Yl'll', C1rol IWlmolo. JIN Jtcktan. Todd Joh111C111, Lindi J-. RCllllff Ktrnplft, LVl\ll Ktndle~ Jlffr9Y Kr1wllt, Ooi.t Llrn1, KllTI Lll(e llltbl•1 L11tl'-tr, Robert Mee.t111y, liiYrlll'lt McCllr, Jerry N11lly. P1trkl1 Oam..., Te<tl Plellff, 1.¥1 Roselllnl, Nancr klloen,.,...1, Sim Slrn1kl•, Allll•H SorlftJtn. C•rrltl SllV· ~. Poll'I' ThclnMa, P•rntll TrOllH, 1"1ttlui W•~llledl. Teens Elect New Officers Member1 of the Westmin.mr Tetn Club have elected ofricers for the newly reorganbod Teen Club eou... cit. New olf~n are J l m Clemens, president; Sandy French, v~denl; Kathy Crouu, secffiary; Den l 1 e Adama, ire.surer aod Tim Edwards, parliamentarian. The Westmlnstu Toen Club Is open to all le<naf• ltuclmb living In Westminster or al- l<ndin( 8 o Ii a Grande, La Quinta, Fountain Valley or Westminster High Sc:hoo1s. .. \ "MNING far YOUTH" 8 P.M. ''THE AC HTS'' e ED C.HAYEZ-Plaoo II-• e IUSS l'IAVT e IOI CULL e DA VE l'ITUS 1--.·JIM-PlmOH. LAGUNA BEACH Take Legipn oft S. Coast Hwy. to corner'of through stre1t COME EARLY-ONLY 200 SEATS NO ADMISSION CHARGE REFRESHMENTS GRAND OPENING OF IVERSON'S NEW PAD! It's finally happened to Newport Beach (and to the world)-a genuine, honest-to-goodness BUG-A~ BALOG! Nobody's ever had one before but, it was bound to happen, and Iverson thought of it! lverson's "pad" is his brand new Volkswagen building which is the larges~ andJTioSt beautiful in the United States. Conceived with an artistic flair, it houses the very latest in service and diagnostic equipment, and is a perfect showcase for dis- playing the la~est changes in.the Volkswagen line (that is, if you can spot the changes). A FREE BUG! During the world's first BUG-A-BALOG, Iverson will give away a sparkling new 1969 Volkswagen (otherwise known as ''The Bug"), All you have to do is pay us a visit. If yoU've never been to a BUG·A·BALOQ, now is your opportunity to be omong the first! At the BUG·A·BALOO, you'll see the latest in Volkswagens and Porsches, within a layout the likes of which you've never seen before! BUG·A-BALGO refreshments await those that CARE to see something different! Now's the time to put a 11Bug" in your house! The harbor area•a only authorized Volkawaaen dealer. - l. • . . . • . ~ r l I ' ' ' ' ·) ,. . ·~~~~~~~---~~~~~~~~~~~~ • ' • .. • JODIAN,HASTINGS, -1 f..W., .., '" ,.. • '; ..... Block S.are . . . " . . . -- ~--·-------- Ai ds Thi-if ty . . It's going to be a bargain-hunter's delight! _ lmaginl! a whole city block will! an assortment of items to please a vanety Of tast~,,,,,-bave ·the-block-long garage sale wb1cb will take place 1in Santa Isabel street, Fountain V3lley, tomorrow. ' Between JO.a.m. end 6 p.m., the Huntington Beach City. Council of Beta Sigma Phi and the Orange County Mu11iple Sclel'06is Society members will combine forces to sponsor the sale. Proceeds w,ill benefit the area MS unit during the national fund· raising drive, according to'Ralph Stelling, director of the county group. Among tb1r·w1de-assortment of objecis offered for sale will be a complete hou!eful of nearty-new furniture donated by Mr. and Mrs. Byron H. Thompson. Chairmen for the sale are Mrs. Steven Bonnet of.Fountain Val· ley and Mrs. Robert'Goff, Huntington Beach. Serving on their comrrii"ee are Mrs. Wayne Updike aiid'Mrs. Alan Milligan. . 1 Mts. Roger Denig, president of the Bet'a Sigma, Phi couneil, bas · anl10Ul)c¢ that anyone wishing to make contributions to .the MS.nJo may 'c~ ~er at 842-4387, and· a mem~r will pick ·up the articles: , MS,_ a disease which primarily attacks young .adults, curr...Uy -1 is being researched. The national drive for ·funds a .conducted frOm ' Mother's·Day, May:ll, until Father's Day, June 15, in an etfort.to dis- cover a .cure for the.~rippler aQd killer of breadwinners or mothers of growing families.- • ~ r -' '1 BARGA IN HUNT.IRS' DEUGHT -A wbole ·block bulging with an as"*"'1ent of'objects -. including a houseful' of neerly·new fumiluro'''-will be waiting for sboppers When ·the. Huntington Beach CI!Y Council of Beta Sigma Phi combint!;I With 'the Orange , ... ' County Multiple· Sclerosis. Society for a .sale tomorrow -in .Folin- tain Valley. Preparing for customers ate (left to right) Mrs. J,Ucbard Boyle, Mrs, Steven Bonnet and Mrs. Graham Inch. 1, -· ·: ·~ ~ ,. ~ ~ .. t1 • " d ii • • !-t ~ ~ ,, ~ )· • :'> l • • • ' ,. , . • • •• 1 • • • ' • • • . •' .. \ ' ' . Sorority Sews S~ms of Friendship ' 'And in the Second I'd Suggest' • • I I ' . .. . Lettini'the ycung women iri Orange County Juveoile Hall know that there is sllll 11001eoiie wllo careo are members of Beja Gamma cbOpter, Epsllm Sigma AlplJii sorority, fountain Valley. Mrs. Bob McGlam· f1rY (left) philanthropic cbairmall, shows Mrs. Wii· liam Guthrie, president, some of the m.morial the group is providing !Ile girls. Enough bolts. of tatmc have been dOlfated for each girt lo mate a dreSI for herself. The sorority recently lpOllSOred the fonna· lion of a sister cbapltt, Delta Iofa, also located in Fountain Valle~. Getting a sure tip)on.who tbe winners will be are (left to· right) Mrs Meryl W'mans, Mrs. Bob Good· son and Mrs. Cy Petersoo, w!lo will join other mem- bers ol the Golden,Key ·for · a trip to Hollywood Park Thursday, M:4y•22. Members of the support &roup for the Child Guidance Center of Orange County will leave at noon by chartered· bus (rom the Huntington Beach Community Methodist Church. The just-for.fun \rip Y'ill be tbeJast' s~al activity, for. ~· ~up l!efore Ibey, .start ' plaruupg their annual fund-raising fall fashion show and bazaar. Sweet Nothings Are M·t1sic to Ea rs .:Bu:t Hu:bby· Can·'t · Si ng, . ' . . . . . • . . • 1 ' . . ' . . ' . ' . DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husblnd heave<! a sigh or relief. Within half r-lllltru be am~. orten ber h1mhle apoloeiet 'lo lll 'lllt wu never very demonstrative bat since mlnule they Ut up again. A't ttlat point I ~ ·creue m.Heys who tool ·offeue. NOii we've been married be re.ruses to say one went to the bus .driv.er 8.Qd. reported DEAR ~ LANDERS:. You've !Oil a ' wu taitwded. ..__/ tender or loving word to me. We are not them. The driver told Qrie he ~d do fan . J used to think you were topt. but no old rogtes, Ann. rm '¥1. Gorko is 28. ~ ~~es:J ~lgn~ co~f1::i ~ m<ft. RecenUy, tn .a confldenUaJ,at the Last night we wen w~tching a mo¥ie :f; t~ men O:(cs have ::°put out their foot of the coluqin, you referred to a oo TV. Jt was the--mov1t1"wt hid -.n , hi · " monkey " •....-.....r on oor ftt1t date. I renlember to wbe1 it cOmet: to(-., i....o ... .,. .,.. J wu ~·· 'tbei~·-to 1.. -cfpreUes. prage mec rue as 1 grease • ~j~h.w Gorko held my band and Pol'O•lb'Gorbblulo.. ..... 11'1111 ..,._,,,diij:...;"111e 1':L..;.;i.~ Why did I have lo-sign 10melhlng? Just because I fellow worh .aroubd squeeze<! It during the romantic PortJ, IUt -.,.. ch\il'I Itel ..,n'k~ 11•1 b'l tbett !ootheads.bfl: The(e w};J •·llgn Jloejjl't"the di'lvtr have the aulborl!y lb gr..,. does thal make him a 11'''° When the TV movie ended I .wu· • dmPb' iUI ,.., .,. -11 •«I b , en u. .._ tbel tild, NO SMOKING.. nuike passengers obey the rules o1 hi.< monkey? You work with a typewriter. llbating on I cloud. I tu~ to Gori<oand Wonta cu be MVl-w• ..... rt FF • Tbe tml(atlcn ·wu IUCb !hit I 1waa but? Pl ..... explaln. -CTA t:;¥Sl'OMER Would~ou care to be called a typewrlier osl<e<I, "Honey, do you love me!" He lq udgreal lt<tlleep, flollallll-~=-•• rlghtiomyfr,co. llan-DEAR CUSTOMER: Tbe bu driven monkey! grunted, "I'm here, aln\ I!" llUIYafJ, 11'1..., ... 1'11 _ ,_ .,_ Did llld madellOb'floul.thot their lo Clitcqo(ud '"''""'' ebe ta Ille · Yoor lllRias.,. o1 tbe Ja-wu Wby.,. some men ao tn,eil&iUvt! How -So dee'I be ... ..ttkol, .....,.111 -wa ~-They' i,.....t tl.S., oo lar.11 I kMw, bYe,.. oatlioi'tty an tnault ·to many fine peOple. i"f .. l }OU can I' woman get bet husband lo uy Getb11Wtrd1,••fk•1$fn1 all't"1" me. Then t 'began to cough. They con-t.o uk1paueaier10ttop1moklag. owe' _them an apology. -GARAGE ..net thlnM!I to~3 -, GORKO'S·WIFE Umled lo1'Uft 1w117. ,.1 •• ll l1 "11al11I Ille law (city enlfluce) · MF,CHANIC'S WIFE DEAR WIFE: Some ill<a 11tt1~ ·mac• DEAR ANN LANDERS: A tew day1 . When they ·nnlahed their ctgafettes I lo 1m1h on 1 bis. P..,i. w11t 111 .. t tldt DEAR WIFE: 1'bll typewriter -., Glvt In or l°" him., .when •Pl''P"' you thlJ llne, lopk out! For-llpi an bow If hlndJe the IUpet -......... ctiec\ AM Lahden:Readiier 'boGtlet; "llocldoi and Petting-Whal Are tbe ·Lbnlll?'l- your requeil to AM 1-1 1"r care ol this newspaper, e~ II~ in coil ibd a Jong1 stamped · .ett...-en ed ea- veloPO, • AM Landen will be.Pod lo help Y"' with your pr<>blerno. Send -lo her i. ..,. brthe DAILY PILOT.~ 1 lelf-tddrt-i, mmped en~ ' ' I HorO.cope Gemini: Stick To Yqur Guns SATURDAY U111A tllopl llMlcl. 21): MAY 17 You teem coqlll be1woen !"IClicallty Incl prlndplea. IJ lfDllEY OMARA Key II to tad ....iation, reJa. TEDI DATING llll\'J'll, tlolllillp llal )'QI b av e Spotll&bt ii on G e m I • t ; outirown. ll 18 you do, you .......,. -for.....,_ will be oe-polh. Dole llol lpcl1*s 1 ho r t 800al'IO (Oct. IS-Nov. ll): ,..,..., to ---Be lnclepe--mooey teal la ldeol. locltlalloa may 11-...S. -tQo cant be -·•Ive, but mab1 of.,.... !air....._ Bal doni a point. Arleo does I Joi of foll for IOI> fll«1, -~ but T.,... paya the may be tatlo& ,.... llnaorial cbeck. Leo 11 aoclable, c:Jwm. acwneo.,llapond,~. Ing Incl wins new allmlren. llAGl'ITAIUlJI (Nov. Do Dec. 21): ANI! C1C011 apeed AIUl!:ll (Jlardi 21-April It): -not ooly ID ....._lion -deer of .,.........., but In .......... at dec:lllooa • ...,..,.,.1iy with r e J a t 1 v e 1 • Permit Jocic tt hlft equal Avoid journeys, u n I e 1 • time wttb imp._ nec111Ky. And lf you do CAPRICORN (Die. a.Jan. trivet. do 11>. at moderate If): lJght tcucb *'"t"Pliebes apeed. ldeu come last. more then Im'/ beavy-llmded a-quality. . -· -of -TAURUS (April »May Ill): prover a vlluable ally. 81ress •-- 0oei take loo much for -Olil!' -beblC ex. I • Jll'lllled, -where tnvagant.Keyllbetaoce. POLE·ING IDEAS -Taking time out lo rest against a May Pole while dis- lolal1 deb&-are -conct1ned. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Jl'eb. cussing ideas. for the May Festival at the ~wiity Presbyterian Church in 8-... v<ry Ribbom today II): FrJeods talk much about San Juan Capistrano are (left lo right) Mn. Lynne Morris, Dance Workshop about money. Play It by ..,., -Y'l'l llhouJd do. Doei be director, and Mn. William Honsberger, president of the church's Women's GEMINI (l!ay 21.June Ill): rnlapllcied by wlahlul tldnking. Association; Both tile association and w orlt•bop are perticipating in the May 18 Scme ~ ~ J:n. Important to be aware ot _e_ven_t ______ _ KEEPING AMERICA BEAUTIFUL -E1~Jlfylng the theme selected for the Grend Counc:ll Fire for Coot& Mesa Camp Girls are (left lo right) Mary Sayen, C8rol Bernhart, Laurie B1'<11118D and Janet Rieck.' Harbor Aree Coundl Flmo will take place Wednesday and Friday, May 21 and 23. ~· • ·-Grand Council Fires \ . •· I Reservations Beel< on Pow wows, dancln& and Girll, to Elaine Kew of the Linda Stevens, S t e p h a n le Oldpooka lloriJon Club. Taylor Incl Elaine lnocuchl, Miu Kn baa beeo In the memben of" Mrs. Drake's Camp Fire. program sloce se-group. di-y..,. ldw, plans •!> -· rules and regulatbig. ptal' NV01-,. Otban are PISCBll (Feb. IMWdl :II): ettber frllll*ned « envioua or a..,. due IDil c:ould affect both. Heed. ~ own counaeL reeidmce. You lft home at Be lor1brljJl!t. I dllltn\111 t1m... Alllpment CANCEB (Juoe 21.July 21): tumova" c:ould ·affect basic A family metnber may be patlerno. RMl!le lamlly needs doing IOtlled!lng ID .....t. your-. But alao atttnd Kaep Clim.,Motlvu, -· to duties. J ... lie boil, even If. m!JCuld· U todaJ ii )'IOI'..,_ you ed. Be diplomadc. ... pnldjc:al, elf I c I en I , LEO (July IS-Allf. 21): copobJe of directing others. Arrument wi&h. laved me does Ypu are more lnten9t than not meat world ii cominC to .~ might per e e Ive , an end. Underlll8ia:I that Pti'lonal magnetism l! strong. stress, mnout 11tnin. do take Many art drawn to you. a toll. Play waitbJ.1 game. Numerous persons w o u I d VIRGO (Au1-23-Sept. 22): make &aerifices to back you. Coollic:I c:ould exist between family aod business. It •!> _. bl, In thll .... duty mUllt come fnt. Tbo9e who really core will undentand. Luncheon Ends Week - Concluding Insurance Women 's Week, 'May lS.24, will be the Insurance Women of Orange Counly who will gather at noon for a luncheon in the Jolly Rogu, Anaheim Saturday, May M. Speaker will be J oh n W adewski of the l.murance rating board, San Francisco Who will diacms .. lmurance Pot Pourie." Reservations may be made by calling Mn. Floyd Horton at 543-9251. • ' . trtl>al rlluala will be evidooced around .lhe G<lncl Cocmcll Fires when Harbor Area Camp Fire Girls doo costumes Incl beadl lor their annual gel- -of all groops. Newport Beach g1ri. will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday, May ' 21, in SL Andrew's Prt1b7terlau Cburch'• Fellonhip Hall, while Costa M... girls will gather at 7 p.m. Friday May 23, 1n Te Winkle Park. cood grade, and is an active Also on the program will be member of the Okiponb the flag salute by Blue Birds Horizon Club. To earn tbls and the invOcation by Mn. award. two years of work is Ralph Short's Horizon Club. required and can only bt won Mrs. Paul Friebertshauser is by juniors and seniors In high guardian o{ the fire and achooL Presntatton w.tll be chairmao is Mrs. Rtdwd made by Mrs. William Main of _Brace. Mrs. Jobn Zorger will r------------"""""'""'"""""'"""""'"'"'""""""ICm:="""""ll tbe Orange County Council. lead the BIUe Birds in singing Costa Mesa theme is K<ep and Mrs. Paul Hill will fead America Beautllul, Incl a the Camp Fire Glrla. A opecW eveol during the Colla Mela C«mcll Fire will " be the awarding ol the . WolleLo nwlallloo, the hlgbes! -..... In Camp Fire highlight of the irogram will Afterward coffee and be Iba planlinf O( a tree In doughnut. will be !Old by the memory of a leader, the Jate Horizon .Club to raise funds for Mn. James Drake. Con-ita Tijuana ClinJc project . dueling this ceremoay will be Americon Heritage la ~ Philanthropy Selected llmdlo Viejo w~·· Club • a Cora i.e Stoot. Pro- _.. .... will take a Joolc at vldenco si-11 aod Hoarlqr ..-al w<riiy projecU before Cilnlc. deddlnl on 1 ~ for The meetlni llao will ...... ... .._._ d•-'-as the Ont amual Youtl>day -'/Mr ~-• Celelnllon ~ to Mn. meotmc nm Monday al 10 'Jbonw c.ntoy community a.m. In -Viejo Jlecreo. 1m..........,.. dwrman. Sbe 111111 °"*"· said eod! member will brini a 7:-~g """""' -envelope-· number lo -will be the Mmes. ol pmnitl equol to her age. -SdnJdt, Soulh Coal AD proceo4a tllll 'JM< will be 01mn111lty HOlpilal; Joba T. g!Vfll to Glrf -Troop 135 ~ AIIMn s-Home; for Ila Grmd "'"""' trip. theme to be corrted oot by Newport Beach glrla. A candle ligbtlac eeremaa,. will be """"oded by Mn. GenJd Kinpley'1 groop; Blue Blnla will alng; the liq ...._will be by Mn. Paul MacMabon'1 girb, and 111ra. -Carty's Camp Fire Girls will perfonn an authen- tic lndtan dance. Torch bearer award wW·be prtsented to Mrs. Paul Bergdahl'1 junior hlgh -and Mn. Shor&'• lb'i· ... Club will (I•• lhe Jn. vocattoo. Repreaenllnc the cowrty council will be Mn. William Main, Ind M r I • Kick the Habit Smokers Learn How IS amcldng your hangup? Want lo kick the -JU don't have tbe "wcn't power" to do II alone? The Fiv&<lay Plan lo Stxlp Smoking will be presMCed nlgblly May 22 through May 28 from 7:30 lo 9 p.m. in Costa Mesa High School's lyceum theater for those wUhlng help In breaking the mnoking habit. _Sponsor of the program Is the Tuberculosis and Respiratory Disease Assooallon of Orange County. Individual voluntary donations will be ac- cepted to help defray costs of the malerials but admission is free. ~-!JO.minute grou~ the!"PY s .. siorui include lectures by a COWlllel· . o_r·pbys1cian on the phySlologtcal and psychological aspects of smoldng, films on smoking and its effects on tile body and mind and demonstrations of procedures helpful lo ove!):Oftling tbe smoking habit. Exdw!ges of experiences by perticipanls u they fight the habit un· der the Fiv&<lay Plan will be included in the program each evening. . -lllDtln, Dillrld Indian Alao upmnlnf· II '" Jn. ~ Jmnea Toepfer, •UatJm banquet, and FlonDoe ~ Home, ......-... ..,. being ... Leland Beckett, --of the fire, will pmeot awards. a..---------------------...a Pampered Strawberry Loses Festival Throne Fat, juicy strawberries are barbecue pit for roasting bot being replaced. dogs at lhe 11 a.m. event on Instead of iLo:: traditional the grounds of the church. Senior high students will strawberry f e 1 t I v a 1 the furnish desserts. Women's AssociaUon, Com· The event, opeo to the munity Presbyterian Church public, ls being staged to raise of San Juan Capistrano have summer camp and conference planned a May Festival for · funds for yoJ,lng p e o p 1 e • Sunday, May 18. Providing entertainment will But it will atlll be an event be members of the Dancli you can a.Ink your teeth into, Workshop, directed by Mrs.. Under the leadership of Mrs. Lynne Morris. A May pole William Honsberger, presi· dance will be a highlight. In dent, tbe various committees addition to folk d a n c e will have. salaIDs, sandw.icbes, features. punch and coffee for sale at Dre.ss is casual. A white food booths. Assisting them elephant boolh will offer a Will be Men's Fellowsb.ip myriad of "treasures" for members who will provide a perusal. Mothers, Daughters Guests at Dinner Moilien Incl daughlers will be guest. Incl dads will be doing the serving wben the Women's Society of the. First United MethodlM Church ol Fountain Valley sponsors a banquet al I : 30 lonlgbt in the Peele Family Colonial Terrace Room, Westminster • Fashions •• will be the theme of the program, and commenUng on a style. show will be Mn. Robert Wesl Musical ente.rtainment will lnchrde. Rltcti.ons by a Sweet Ade.lines quartet and a com· munity sing will be led by Mrs. Evan McCall, ac- companied by William Drozda. Mrs. Ken McMillan will serve as mistress of ceremonies, and Mn. Frank Drozda, Mrs. Droula, Mrs. West and Mn. RJchard Uhler have planned t b e en- terta.inmenl Miniature replicas ol mothers and daughters will comprise. table centerpieces, and in charge of decoratioM ""' the Mmes. John Gillespie, Stanley Forster, D o n a l d Nelson and Bernie Svalstad. Patio Set cepC<d for lie June t .... t by Mrs. Ralpb H.-. 1117-65711. The Jmcbeon will tab pla<e at ll LUI. In -Viejo DAR Meeting Top Woman Honored Coordinating the evenJba b Mrs. Donald Taylor, president of the. society. Mrs. W. James Clark is in charge of tickel sales. • .. ·~ • • • Inn. For Supper I d The Woman'a CMc League ~dent; L S. Sunderland, Coast Site Se ecte ~.!:i"1~0 ~ ~n~lll ~ ~ p~d:;~di~ Medical Group Narcotics Woman.U-the-year a w • r d ~king ollice wlll be the of A polio IUpper party Will I~ INcl 111m1ben of the FOllll- taln Valley Chapter, Rep!Nlcan Womep's Club, Federated, et 7 p.m. tomorrow In Iba bmne of Mrs. John D. Harper. Gathering ·in the Miramar which took p I act ln George Buccola, Corona det Tuelday, May 20, during an Mmes. Adelaide Marchand, th~~on~~s&.:! film Shown ~..!'.~Tllc;::r. ~anta Washlngtoo,D.C.,lnclthel969 Msr, assistant secretary, and 'inslallaUon luncheon in the corre sponding secretary; Medical Asslstaots' AsaOctao wfilb:~:; nau'ibt!'~ state. conference in Fresno. honored will be. Mrs. Frank Irv1ne Coast Country Club. Catherine Carli,. lreasurer; tlon assemble at 8 p.m, lo A fibn on nareoUcs will be of the American RevciluUon Orange Coast c h a i rm e n Edgar Lee, Laguna Hllls, An are.a woman will be William Warren, auditor ; Paul cation may be. cbtained by shown by Sgt. Sam Cordeiro of fnim es Southern California reporting during the day will honorary state regent. recogni%ed. for outstanding ·Gruber, historian, and Daniel calling Mrs. Marjorie ffum. the Calla -Pollce Deport· chapten. include Mn. B e n R. Chaplen "Presented from ~""!~ servd iced "!='~ ~L-=:G=il=cr=est,==par=liamtll==tarian=· =· ==ber='=644-=2273=.===:::;;::;==; A oodaJ hour will precede tho-. ment for members of the Cos-Mn. Thomas Vemcm Coffee Kleinwacbter, San Clemente, the Orange. Coast arQ.._ will ~ aw .... u .Q ma e ur .. ., u.;:r ta Mesa Federated Republican of Modesto, l\ate re.pot, will timekeeper, and Mn. John Aliso Canyon Chapter, ....,.ma 11:30 a.m. event. lleodlnc the committee la Mn. NlllCY Swanoon, Ind Women's Club. preside Wring the Olle<iay Holland Klnbtd, Ilana Point, Hllls; Col. William Cabell Former league prosldeot The dJnn<r g--., wlll Sootben! Caundl meeting national vice chairman and Chapter, Newport Beach; Pa· Mrs. Stanley Le!Jevre will be take place at 7 p.m. 'l1nnday, which will begin at 10 a.m. liDu.ge research chalrman. tience Wright Oiapter, LlluDa installlng officer far t be May 22. in Fe 11 c I an o • 1 Her reports will Include the Asala1ing the state regeot on Beach, Incl Richard Bayldon Mmes. E. C. Smith, prealdent; n!!Nurant, Newport Beach. 78tb Coatillmtal Con 1 res s the plaUorm will be Mrs. Chapter, Seal Beach. T. Dunc.an Stewart. Brit vice ' ..,..tnc we t.be Mmes. Nadine Luebben, Roo Krefft, Harper, Dovld B. )lumey Ind James M. Jolmson. Tickets, at 12 per person, may be obtained by contacting Mn. Krefft, 847-71163. - Reserva.Uons, due by May 20.1,-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;,l l~--------------;;;;;;;;0ft may be made by calling Mrs. • Cordeiro at 546-4713 or Mrs. Charles Benton, -· /Je Pampered/ Come lo , , • mallie~ Wr1 and &autg Salon EOR JHE DISCRIMINATING: e HARBOR AREA'.S TOP BEAUTY & Wl6 SffilSTS e MANICURES & PEDICURES e VIVIANE WOODARD COSMETICS ~ mallie~ Wig & Beauty Salon 141 M4' a .... ._,,. ..... HILLC•EN SQUA•I COITA MllA • IANKAMIRICAID e .. BILL WILLIAM'S HOUSE of HAIR COLORING and COIFFURES ~---INTRODUCES ASSOCIATES--~ CHUCK HOWARD former Hair Stylist of EAST BLUFF AREA •"" MARIE BETSINGER MANICURIST A: PEDICURIST Formerly BeY•rly Hill1 and East lluff Ar•• 2333 E. COAST HWY e ~ dol M•r I R .. r 61 .. d•I• Fod•r•ll Clo1eci Mondays lftttr'.s Jlnfltrau ·a..or...c•.--Suun J fu·Arlllam NOW IN ORANGE l'~rf) Ma,...· Ora•) 1835 W. CHAPMAN 639-3754 AUTHENTIC GERMAN ----.-CUISINE-. - CONTINENTAL ENTtllTAINMENT Now-~fti ·PEDRO '!1lo lltlot , ....... OyJIOY Wltll Hit ROf'Mnric Oultor COCKTAILS e IMPORTD> RER AND WINE$ • I • From our Glass G•ll•ri•s Old Bohami1n ''Vine and Wre1th" p1tt1rn Frea1er proof p•rfaits, Set of 8, $10 lc•r1 •nd linen to m1tch , Set of 4, $5.tS SLAVICK'S J~'91•~nm1917 18 hshion l1l1nd Newport Beach -444.1180 '-. Y-°""" ~I W.ICWN -8•11ll;Arlltrlur(. Mtlllt' Oii,.., ..... Op111 Meffay, Fridty 1111til t 110 ).m • • • • -----·--- • • Peering Around ' • MISS AGNES lllomqU~t, pmtdent ol Newport-Balboa Savilljs and Loan AssodaUoq, wUI j>rel1de oyer installation . luocheon ceremorues of the So·uthern California ·Sym~-Hollywood B o w I ~ AaociaUoa in the Balboa Bay Club .... Swiday. MRS. JAMES E. MIZELL II Makes Newport Beech Homt Pamela Mosier Recites Vows Escorted down the aisle of the Episc1>pal Church of the Messiah in Santa Ana was Pamela Ann Mosier who ex- changed wedding pledges and rings with James Elsworth Mizell II of Newport Beach. The Rev . Herbert H. Weld Sr. perfonned the evening :nuptials for the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Mosier of Newport Beach and lhe son of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Mizell of Costa Mesa. The bride selected a long white lace gown with a single veil held t.o a pearl and lace Desserts Prepared Inviting area residents ta Come for Dessert is the Southern California _Edison Company. Harne economi sts will be demonslrating simple b u l elegant desserts in the Elec· tric Living Center, 538 Main St., Huntington Beach, begin· ning at 7 p.m. Monday, May 19. Other evening courses will be offered on May 21 , 26 and 28. Daytime demonstrations will be offered at 10 a.m. May 20, 22, 23 and 2:7. There ls no admi ss ion charged for the demonstra- tions, and each guest receives a recipe book. Additional in· farmation may be obtained by calling the company, 547·7581, estension 278. crown. She carried a bouquet or white flowers and baby's breath. Miss Bryn Hazel was maid of honor and bridesmaids were the MWes Bonnie fl1osier, the bride's sister; Melani Mizell, the bridegroom's sister, and Lisa Tucker, her cousin, They donned white lace over pink dresses while the honor atten- dant wore a lime green ribbed saUo gown. Stephen Turley was the besl man while guests were sealed by Jeffrey Leitch, Robert R. Mosier Jr., the bride's brother and Thomas Artunian. Candles, white gladioli and pink Catnations decorated the church. Fol l owing the ceremony the bride 's parents home was the setting for the reception attended by 200 guests. Mrs. Richard Tucker. the bride's aunt from Anaheim, assisted. Special guests were Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Christiansen of Hollywood, the b r i d e ' s grandparents and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Keene of Beacon Bay, the b en edict 's grandparents. The new Mrs. Mizell, a graduate of Corona del Mar High School, attended UCLA and now is in the Nursing School at Orange C o a s t College. Her husband is a graduate or the same high school and is enrolled at OCC and in the Navy Reserve. The new l ywed s honey. mooned in San Francisco before malting their home in Newport Beach. FOLLOWING in bfr famous lather's "IJliht" ,at.ps b Ellzal>eth Piccard, daugl>Ur of Mr.· and ..Mrs. Don Piccard of rle,.P.rt Be{lc)i. Miss Piccard, tt, has ar· rived la Copenhagen-to dfl.lver a balloOn to a flying club, Sbe will visit Sweden and l h e n meet her parents in Ireland where they ar~ deliVering another balloon. A student at Prana:~ Coast College, Miss Pk:card is a Newport Harbor lligh School graduate. Pt1R. AND l\lRS. VERNON Mathews of Costa Mesa are visiting their daughter and son-in-law in Panama City. Guatamala will be one sLop for them en route home. Norwegian Holiday Celebrated May 17, Independece Day of Norway , will be celebrated by Southern California Sons of Norway lodges with an even· ing of danciltg in Mayflower Auditorium. 234 Hindry St., Inglewood, at 8 p.m. Alfon Bergstrom's Orchestra will provide mu sic for dancing during the May 17 event and a program and refreshments will be included in the festivities. Trygve Lie Lodge will meet for initiation of new members Thursday, May 22, in the American Legion Hall, Costa Mesa at 7:30 p.m. Leonard Wolf;rd, president, will con· duct the meeting. On June 7, a Hawaiian luau Is planned by the Trygve Lie Lodge and the Coast Viking ·Club, and on Sunday, May 18, a family picnic is planned in Sycamore Grove Park. Los Angeles. Anyone wishing information on the lodge or any of the events may call Mrs. Ray Nielsen, 548"6888. Auxiliary BRAND NAME SHOES AT DISCOUNT PRICES! ''Bu11 Name• Vou. Kno..,, Shoes ¥011 Loc e" A t Cray, Cro%y Prlees. COSTA MI SA'S NEW CANCELLATION SHOE STORE • LIFE STRIDE -• KIMEL • • COlllES • NATURAUZER • JOYCE ANO OTHER BRANO$ YOU KNOW WE SPECIALIZE IN HARD TO FIT S1Zl5 AAAA To D -4 To 11 SAV-ON SHOES ----- c:::::::::1 --- - 2300 HAlllOR BLVD. HARBOR SHOP"NG CENTER 546-6775 • New(ywed -Honeymoon Tax Topic For Clin ic Jumper Sampsons • Tahiti MA.Y 11, l"t '~k hNr~ .. 111 lot "9lcl by !""' Cosll Mn1 Pl..,nlft9 (ommlHlon '' the Cill' Hl!I. n F•lf Otlve, Coste M-. C11Uorni. .. 1r 1:Jll p.m. or '' 1oon •• DOUlble rht•Hfltr OI> Monday. M1v :., '"'· l'l~nlillg !ht fllllowfng tPPllCl!lafll: Z-U«pllon 111rmlt Ht. Z6·•Mf, flOr WAlt O IHVESTMliNTS, ,110 NtWpOrl •rw .. COslt Mn1, C•lff,, IOI-H!"mlulon lo conYert 1wo nltlll'!O ullll,,. room. lroto two btehelor 1p.irr""'n!1 wlltl no "''"""' "'9klno 1 toll! ot •• unfit "'''ud Of 12 unri, on preperty locl!tll 11 1111. NtwPirt BM!., CO.It M-. Ctlff., In 1 C2 ZOM. 1-n c1ptletl Pttmll kl. ZE"*"9, IOI" HACIENOA HA.lt901t, 1611 Wuldlfl OfTYe Ho, IU. Newioort 8Mch, Qllf,. l'llr ,,...m!Mlofl lo ~lrllt.I I # """ l!Nr~t ( ......... '9 -"(fi"' requlr.menti Ol'I (lt'OJlltl'ty llctlM 11 ,,. Hiii 2'1 A1'Ktltt Sltte!, COllt Mn., C.111 .• In tn l'l•CP -· r ~dar. Mq 16, 1 '169 DAILY PILOT l1 LEGAL NOTICE U:GAL NOTICE LEGAL N Jf .MILYPILOf S • Dollar Only W orl~ Currency llJ IYl.VU HMIBK To-•Au ....... _ tbe m e a e1 t1tit 111111 Clill"' """".....,_ .. r...... .. llmPb' Uli!: ._. .. ..., -&loW --mdlb.-lstloe Uollel -dollar. ' AllOOND ova -r u.. -" Ille .... "' "" world -.. ... .... don. WhUe t ll e I r tmdultions hi ten:ns of eadl otM-are .ttally siplr.cm' lo the ........... .....,i..diredlJ'm..i..d,- prinwlly -lo the ..r .. ly "' Ille --'T 5)'S&ml are their fhJdu10om in toms of the dDlla:r. For our .....,11_.,i1opild-is .. "pod .. gald" -" our .... ._.... pledp lo ""1 and ..u .. Id .. -lo quoli!lod c.ntrat banb and f~ pe11uueata at $35 an ....,., This m a k e 1 comforUng ......... --but dapilt lhe dollar's sllbllity GuinC this latest -mm. ""'1ch· lnnc-Birtbb pound crisis and ~ "" !act that the dollar has not It· llf11 ti.mt recently been under speculative au.ct. we art far ftmJ fiaandl.Dy "pure." Far fram It Our ..... " paym<nts ii in a abambles. In the first quart.er of 1969, "' actually ran a deficit .in our tradt ac- """''" u.. nm quarlerty drficit in 19 yean. Wlth this red ink in our trade balance Pied on top of the ml ink in most or opr other intematiooal financial accounts., our ottrall balance ol payments dlalked up another -gly large deOcit in the first three montlls. OUR PRICE level is rising at an annu1l nte ol i percent Ottr 1161 -even wor.ie than the 4~ pen:ent ol laot year when the dollar "as •under bnrtal attacl<. Mooey ii now. iQ1 into our coontry not becauae of our good fmancial recont. but because our stoep tDt.rrest rates are, in the words of one money-market SUMMER JOI WANTED ACCOUKnff MA.IOI SAN DIHO ITATI UNIYlnnT C..tr•t'ltly Ptni4•.+ •f S•• Di-t• espert. "aoctmc _, ... " Europe." Still. !he llWld has (oomd -that ol all """'9l:iell ..., the dollar is !ltq eooo&fl and represeot.s a natiaD great enough lo qualify as • nrld ~· 'll>e -mart certainfJ can't match m <nor. .. Som has just dramatiud, can Gennony's illlmlaliooal flDOllCW polid<s)' the -· franc certainly ..-moldl us. dtbtr. Olbtr CUJTencie:s ara't even near our league. We are lar from purt,· but •e are the best there is. M one astute banker put it to me this past ·-· "The world·s Central banters look· td into the abyss ill eorly 1• and saw the eham that. would be created il they brougllt dowo Ille dollar ood they drN back in horror." SO WHILE we stum ble Irom CW'Te"ICY crisis to crisis -and we're in the fifth fuD. fledged cnm in only · II months -we have managed to maiD1ain the s 1 s t e m created at Brettoo Woods in 1944 and now we are "'° on our way to fundammi.l.l im- provemarta. Within a few monlhl. the free nations will have paved the legal way for the issuance o( "paper gold" (Special Drawing Rights) wlUch will supplement gold ood U.S. dollars in world trade. There o1so will be vitally imporlanl modillcatiam in lhe tedmi- ques for fP.lligning cunucy values SOCll. But at thi! moment. if ~ttt• Y., ... l •,.,l>lic•.._ !=============: SAUllT SICON•All' IXPftflNCI PllMAIT ot.llCT1ft ,..,.jJ ... ,. ,., 1..+.rwi .... F,;1111 • ., •ft••-•' S•h1Nrt wam oa CALL:,,........,. 5505 M~• lJ., S•• Diet• ...... 17141 216-1170 • ... 1714} M-4-1107 SAN YllANCISCO (UPI) - Homestake Mining Co. bas I& tabJred an order f r o m WestiniJ>ouie Eledric C«p, m Pittsburgh for unnimn - centrate • ••••••••••••• SBEARSON, BAM.'lllLL A CO., he. Cordially lnvit,es You To Attend A Seminar Concerning I ,....,. a w.mal As V.C. ,.. __ _ i • aa8' .,..., .,. .. , --Q.-CAN_dallor .. calkd--·11 .... ___ ...,.._ A. -lhe dollar 1111111 ~.,._-1s111e­.,,... ""*" -,... -ad s.-i la Ille -nwt.t pla<r. T b e ID- ternatJoDll dollar a I a j II I t _,....... __ tbeit ... ClllTellCJ .. -lo terms m gold. 'll>e U.S. dollar bos DOI btel -lo tams " &old ..... ....,,ly 35 HEADS DIVISION Patrick F. c..,.... )'Un. .... Iha·--Q. -'• lbe lob"'* nlue ol car dollar! EECO IJnks A. NOi' llOllE than tlx paptt.. lt ii wrlUm cm. What glws GUI' dollar .... -Is the fact ibal ,.. will -tt in .e1marwe far lhinp am -2 Divisions ........... Wbat -is -GUI' dollar will buJ', 'Doi ill intrtDlic YUie.. Q. What bacb lbe -Anylbioc? A. Not Pd and silver. 'Ibey hav. lieeo di .,.,..i amplelely as direct bad:i• for our cur-rmcy. altboch our gold reserve is in a sense still behind our money. 11lis meta1 backing. lhoog!I, is ol minor slgnlficanc:<. What bacb OW' dollar is our ecmomic power, our industrial milbt-To quote another foreign ecnrwnkt, "No one doubts tbe power bdlind your dollar. All wt doubt is bow you will u.se that power." In Old Coin WASHING'ION CAP) -The Trusury is coing to make a bundle, this year or om, by going briefly into the old coin business. ~ v anlts down in the boweb d the Trta1ury Buikiing contain nea.rty 3,a hap of old silver dollan that make coin collectors drool. All« decades ol wondering •'hat to do with them, Treasury officials announced th.is 11'1'tek they will seek coo- gressional permission lo sell them--nol at a dollar apiece but at something like their market value u collectars ilems. 'Ibere's a bi& difftrenct. If they were ha.oded out at SI each. the i.a mlllilon coiM would brinl in just lb~.I mlllion. But with srices set ac· cording to their r a r i t y • n<asury officials soi<!, Ibey cou)d bring u much as m million. The coins were produced at the mint in Carson City, Nev .. in the years 1171 through lllS and in 1890 and 18111. The ones the 1'reasury ii holding have never been circulated, which makes them that much mort valuable. The most valuable ol This i1 a rce11rd-brukin( yw tor Mldioflrd ltislrc. Nice for us. Bi.rt ni(t for you, too, lt mtans we'rt buyint in llG Wllmlt in 01dtr to ltlSI ia llG Wllllllt. And lht uvinas wt1 Mt .. pmld on 10 OUf t1.1stocPtri In lowtr lt1se. payment\. Comt in and clltcl "'' out ls 11'1 lndePtndent 11nlnc hnn lone of the lafltU ill !hi Wn l), wt l1•M1 tll Nbt, 111 inodels. w.·.,. 101 just what J'Dtl wtnt ••• flOt _,, lie 1i&ftt tli or Ind. but Ult rlPt NM, IPO. Try VI. 5111'1 bJ phonltw I« I ton ol °"' lllndy ~~­ lflSwtt lolder. 11'1 fttt. Optn Alon. thru S.l. ----- MacHowaub AUTO AND TRUCK LEASING 124 No. Harbor at Bolsa •Santa Ana Telephone (714) 531-0607 OVER 'THE COUNTER -A· Himstreet ·Pri41f, M• 16, l'M s Thursday's Closing Prices-·U.mplete New ' Yo~k·-Stork Exchange List American Stock Ex~hange . list ,. • I .. • • • • • • J• DAILY PILOT rrldot. 11., 14. 1M Fo yt, Andretti JNDLINAPOWS (AP) -Marlo An· dretU and A. J. Foyt, a pair of former naUoul champions, will be top - tenden Slturd>y fOt the pole position in tbe 5.1rd. 500-mlle auto race May )Cl at the lndlanapoli! Mol<lr Speedway. 'J'be top speed in Saturday's 10-milc ume trials will win the No. J starting slot for the 1750,000 classic reganilw of performances in addilional qualifying _ .... , Suod1y and the following weekmd, About Sto,000 In 1pecial prlies will be paid fa< qllallfyl111 performances. Tb< qualflylna record for fair laps around the 21-mlle aspbali course Is J7L559 miles per hour, set la.at year by Joe Leonard, San Jose, Calif,. ln a turbine-powered Lotus. His Pratt &: Wliit.n<y eoglne slnc.•has been birred by new limitations on turbloes. Andretli, ltali&D native now operating out of Nazareth, Pa., droVe four suc- cessive prac:Uce laps ,Frid.I)'· 1t~unoa1cta1 He's Out, Or I s Be? Kansas City Royals' Jim Campanis looks like he's a dead duck as he tries to slide back to second base after over-running it. Cleveland short- rblp Larry Brown had a shot at tagging Campanis, but missed the tag - Open Battle ' speeds over 171 ln a new four·wbeel drJve Nant ol the Olber 70 cara at lbe track LolU5 wilb a lurbocharged Ford ..... I bu been over 18.S ud ooJy RoJ<t He ""' the IGil l!Ole In ·1111 and 11171"1! MQ\:lulby of ~. Ariz., Illa reacliod waa atopped bolll times by ::\ lhll levd-in a FOyt Coyote. trouble in tbt r1et. --~ cars have been pracUclna at Fo)"t, ff9111 Houston, tbree41.me "inner oVer· 11$, with 30rM duplicaUon of of the 500, ""the po)e winner ln 19'5 but drtveri. The fii.11 U:Car flekl 1 last year lhll was one of hQ 11 lndianapoUa lllar1' • • -. · when be was •bibbed by.cer f1llure ,averaged•l65.4tll but ,the alow"t did ooJy He baned his fint liip ovd-170 Thurs. ·lll.124. day, 17U in a Coyote-'l\lrbochar1e<1 Ford TWen\)' top driver" polled this ..-.;, ol bis own deaien. • made a ~ guess of 172.532 for and then tripped over the runner's feet. For all his work, Campanis did manage to collect a run-batted-in on the play in the Royals' S.2 win. for ' Ind y Pole Po~ winner's speed Saturday. AndretU called ii 1n.2 and Foyt 1111"'8ed ll1.5. Leonard, drlvln& a turbocharged Ea1le- Ford lhls year, predicted rn.7. Theft: wUI not be_ the! usual frantic lra\llaUantic commutirrg between the In- dianapolis quallficaUoos and the Monaco Crand Prix qualificaUons and race this year. Indianapo_lis entrants Graham Hill, England ; Denis Hulme, New 7.ealaod, and J1ck Brabham, Australia, are in Monte Carlo today for pracUce I'll qualifications but will compete Sund1y io the rice proper before returning to ln- dianapolis. They can still qualify for the ~ nut weekend. None of the Grand Prlx drivers was a lhreal for lbe lndi~polls pok!. The cpening day or the 500 quall~lca· lions, 11>-mile runs by one car al a lime, are preferred by aoroe speed buff! to tht race. It's ui.que!tlonably the best-at· tended .prtllmlnary in sporta, with a crowd estimated upward of 1$0,000. Laver., Emerson Win Gonzalez Rips NY Net Scoring Plan ' NEW YORK (AP) -Aging Pancbo Gonzalez of Los Angeles and rookie plo Ray Moore of South Africa .say the net result of the new tennis scoring format introd~ in the United States at the Unknown Nabs Lead In Te xas Golf Tourne y FORT WORTH (AP) -It was so ap- propriate it WllS' alnlost embarrassing. As Chuck Courtney, an obscure long. shot in a field of the workf's best shot- makers. approached the 18th green a burglar alarm went off. And the blood Californian promptly stole off with the first round lead in the $125,000 Colonial National invitati<>n Goll Tournament. 1'1adison Square Garden Invitational is a bust. "I've had my fill of these short. scoring matches," the 4l·year-old Gonzalez said after losing an opening one-set match 8·5 to Roy Emerson of Newport Beach in the $25,000 tournament Thursday night: "It's the last one I'll play." "I don't like this scoring syslcm at all ," said lt1oore, a 22--year-old shaggy· haired blond after losing his first match to Fred Stolle of Australia 8-4. '"To me it's just no match at all." The six other players in this riches' tournament ever don't like the system i!ither. It's a one-set. round-robin format designed to spark spectator interest and shorten the program. In this tournament, eight games com• prise a set and if a set reaches 7-all, a 12· point playoff is used to determine the winner. Gonza lez bad hardly unleashed his words when he lost his second match, 8·7, to Denn.is Ralston of Bakersfield, in what requi red two playoffs lo determine the ~'inner. Fa ns Boo Slumping Ti ge r Hero Angels Blast Knoop Trad~.~ Face Yankees "lf I'd made that puu on 18, I'd really have felt like a thief," Courtney quipped after subduing the reconstructed, 7,175 yard, par 70 Colonial Country Club course in a sparkling 66, just one stroke off the competitive course record. Gonzalez also unleashed a few drives into lhe Garden's upper seats. Gonzalez also ripped into the lighting and indoor play and said he "'as through with indoor competition. Horton Stalks off Diamond DETROIT (AP) -·Left fielder Willie Horton of &be Detroit Tigers, barraged . wllh boor during much of Thurlday _ ,qbt'a game against Chicago, angrily departed for the dressing room in the ... -inning and left the ballpark. "He's just r.motionally upset or he ~·t do that," said Manager Mayo Sports in Brief Smith afler lhe game, won by Detroit, i. 1, on Dick McAulil!e 's 10th-inning home run. Few were aware Horton, wbo ground- ed out and struck out twice in three at bat!, bad kit the dugout Rookit: Ron Woods replaced him in Ulf! top of the Majestic Prince Ready To Roll in Preakness BALTIMORE -Majstic Princt: Is ready -jet speed ready -for Saturday's Preakness Stakes, the second Jeg of the Triple Crown. Frank McMahon's winner of the Ken- tucky Derby zoomed a hall mile over the Pimlico track Thursday morning in 4a seconds, just a fifth of a second off the world record set by Tamrin's Jet in· a race al Sunland Park in New Mexico earlier this year. "lk is ready as a man can make him," tsaid trainer Johnny Longden, who rode MajesUc Prince in the workout and then entered him in the Prukness where he • will meet seven other 3-year-olds. in· eluding Rokeby Stable's Arts and Letters, the Derby runner-up. • LOS ANGELES -Rodoll Gonzales. ilisplaying a potent left book, knocked out Juan Collado in the ninth round of their BCbeduled 10-round lightweight fight at the Olympic Auditorium Thursday night. • Gonzales, 133Yz, Long Beach. dropped 1 Collado, 134 , Santo Domingo, Dominican RepJ.blic, with a left hook to the jaw al tbe clD!lt of the ninth. Collado took a mandatory tight count. rose wobbly and abeorbed two more lelts before referee Lee Grossman hal ted the bout at 2:54 ot • the rowxl. • MONTICELLO, N.Y. -Henry Carr, J former Olympic go Id medal sprinter. ' broke even in hi~ two unique racts against a horse &t the opening of Mon· ticello Raceway Thursday night Carr, now a haltback with the Detroit Lioos in the. National Football League, was beaten by Nevele Holiday, a 9-year- old pacer driven by Bob Camper, then beat Billy Primrose, an II-year-old pacer driven by Stanley Dancer. In the first race Carr ran a quarlermile while Nevele Holiday "'en I seven:six· teeoths of a mile. The horse 1von by 32 feet in 54 seconds after passing Carr in tht: last 100 yards. Against Billy PrimrOSt>, Carr ran 100 yards while the horse "'ent 110 yards. Carr won by 10 yard:i and was timed in 10.4 seconds. • LOS ANGELES -Tailback Greg Jone~ and quarterback Dennis Dummitt led the White teams to a %7-14 victory over the Blues in a UCLA intrasquad rootball game Thursday, ending 20 days of spring practice. Jones, a senior, gained 145 yards on 14 carries and Dummitt. a junior colleg~ transfer from Long Beach. completed eight oC 14 paues lor 133 yards and a touchdown. Jones ran for touchdo"·m (l{ 28 and 69 yards. • MONTREAL -Funeral services will be held Saturday at Loyola Colfege chapel for Frank "Shag" Shaughnessy, the football coach and baseball innovator. He died Tbunday al the age ot 116. eighth in a substitution not planned by Smith. "He took himaelf out of lhe game.'' Smith said. "H~ came back into the clubhouse. "Some of the guys came in to talk lo him but he was just. wild •.. He's got friend:i on the ballclub who couldn't even talk to him." Horton led lhe Tigers in hitting (.285) and home runs (36) last year as they won their first pennant and World Series in 2.1 years. But he has slumped this year at the plate, hitting just .213 with four home runs and 13 runs batted in. He has struck out 34 times. Horton always has had a. special closeness with his fans, particularly children. many of whom show up time and again in the left field stands to cheer their hero. On1y last Sunday he handed his ext ra baseball glove to one young fan in lefl during pregame drills and received a loud ovation as he walked back to the dugout. ''l've never had a guy take his uniform off in a game like that be.fore," said a stunned Smith. Smith said pitching coach John'ny Sain told him about Horton's departure. "I didn 't have l i m e to go into the clubhouse to talk to him and find out what was wrong," Mayo said. "I had to worry about the game. "I can't read his mind. Maybe it's from last night. l\taybe. il"s from tonight. I don 't know ." On Wednesday night Horton looked bad as he fell and a single to left went past him for an error. Subsequently he was booed in that game against the White Sox. Smith dldn"l know H any disciplinary action would be taken against the mllSCU- lar outfielder. Hawkins Retil'es LOS ANGELES -Forward Tom Hawkins of the L<ls Angeles !Akers said Thursday he is retiring and will join the st.arr of a local television station 11 a sports commentator . Hawkbis. 3.1. will be primarily a field reporter £or television station KNBC a station spokesman uid. ' i Troy Favored in Spike Test ~1 CX>RVAWS (AP) -The Pacinc..a ;: hck and flekl dwnpiOO&hips begin here f ,itodly with SoudMn C.lifomia favored to ' lwfn. ·; f 1be' Trojans art undefeated in du•I • ~ 1'*!( compeOdafl and hive won m ol , tllno """'"'""" mt<I tillts. Or.con lw ~twloem!UCLAonce. • ••vou .have to 10 aJonc with Southern : tal." sayi Berny W11ner, Oregon State Unlwnity coach. l~is team 1Jao is un- booten In dual meet compedllon. • "But I tblnk we're one of about four teams with a chance ID upset them,·· he said. "I'd say Oregon. UCLA and Washington State also have a shot at il. Stanlord and California have people who will be heard from, too. In fact, they may finally determine ll'ho wins," The prelimlnlrla begin today, with one fln1l -the steeplechase. Ffve more events could be decided Fri· d1y becau11e: competitors In the long l um p, triple jump, !hot. d\M:us and avelin take the first thrtt .or sht C0W1Unc rUorts . and those marks carry Into Saturday's finals. Southern Cal and Oregon Staie will be fJghting for Wini ln the sprinls, the 800 and the shcn !'Olay. Oregon is expected lo donUn11e the distance events. The milen, kid by Rl)!ICOe Divine. could take the first four places, Tom Morrow is favored for the stee,,ltchase Md Norw1ty's A rnt KoJalbebn haa: lhe season's ht.st mark in the 111r ..... 11 •• NEW YORK (UPll -The angry California Angels, who are 6-9 against lefthanders this season. face nemesis Fritz Peterson when they open a four· game serles against the New York Ya nkelltonight. Peterson, 4-4 this year, has five straight decisions ove.r lht: Angels. He ""ill be opposed by Rudy May, 1-3. The trade of veteran second baseman Bobby Knoop lo the Chicago 'Vhite Sox Wednesday for infielder Sandy Alomar and pitcher Bob Priddy was under fire by some of the Angel players Thursday. "They've busted up the be.st double play combination in baseball," shortstop Jim Fregosi said. Anolher player, who did not want to be identified, said, "You have to get more for Bobby Knoop than Sandy Alomar and Bob Priddy." Another player. who also did not want lo be named , added. "Knoop was the heart of our team . He held ii together." He held a two stroke le.ad over burly Jack Nicklaus, vett.ra¥ Billy l\laxwell and Dick Crawford, grouped at 68, going into today.'s second round. Tied at 69 are Bob Charles of New Zealand, Dave stockton, Miller Barber and England's Tony Jacklin. A group of nine is al par 70, including South African Gary Player, veteran Art Wall, Australian Bruce Crampton and Deane Beman, winner of la.st week's Tex- as Open. CENTER OF STORM -Former Ca!Jrornia Angel second baseman Bobby Knoop (left) gm acquainted with his ne" 00.s .• Cbcago White Sox manager Don Guttendge . Many of Knoop's old teammates have blasted the trade \l1hich sent the Golden Gklve fielder to Chicago for Sandy ,Alomar and Bob Priddy. But none of Gonzalez' complaints seemed to affect the workl's nuniber one player, Rod Laver of Corona de! ~1ar, who also had an ailing elbow 10 contend with. La~er wrapped up his throbbing left arm m a hot towel in the dressing room and then stunned the crowd of 5,116 with the ease in which he disposed of Moore, 8-l. Laver's prime rival for the $15,000 purse, fellow Australian Tony Roche, also \Von his first match, defeating Ralston, 8· 3. Stolle finished the evening 1-1 with an 3- l los.s to P.,farty Riessen of Evanston, Ill. In tonight's matches, it's Roche vs. Emerson, Riessen vs. Moore, Laver vs. Stolle, Roche vs. Gonzalez, Emerson vs. Ralston and Laver vs. Riessen. Dodgers Send Sutton Again st B11cs Tonight LOS ANGELES {AP ) -Don Sutton "'ho had an 11-15 record for lhe Lo~ Angeles Dodgers last season. can become ~ Dodger workhorse tonight if he pitches more than five innings when he starts againsl Pittsburgh. Sutton, 4-3, ha s hurled 56 213 inning" and the club leader is Claude Osteen "''ilh 12. Right nolY , SuUon appears to be pit· Dodger Sla te Mtv 16 -Dodger• v• 1"111•b11r..h. 7;SS o.m, IC~\ i.~T" 11 -Ooc!gers v• l"lrtsburo11, 1:1S o.,..,. ll(FI c~1" lt -°""9f,, .... l"Jttsb!.H"gl!. U:U P.m. KFI chi".11 ~s best ball and five innings should be m his reach. In his last four games. Sutton has allowed. just four earned runs coveriog 33 1/:1 innings. He h a s "'alked eight a nd stru.ck ~ut 22. He has allowed only 17 hits. His pllchlng foe tonight is Dock Ellis. 2· 3. who was pounded by thr Dodgers less than a week ago. Los Angeles hitters got 13 runs and 10 hits in a rout of the Pirates. Rookie Ted Sizemore is the man wllh lhe hot bat for the Dodgers. ~re has gotten at least one liit in each ot his last eight ~af!les and in that span ha.~ collected 14 hits m JS at bat& to raise his batting average to a clul>-leading .316. NEE/HE GETS JOB AS CM .CAGE BOSS Costa Alesa High School today officially named fonner Newport Harbor and Mater Del coadl Emil Necme. as its ne:w varsity cage mentor. .T'he 47-year-old Neeme replaces Herb Ll\•sey, who resigned the posit i-On earli• this year to become head ba.skctba ll coach at Orange Coast College. Neeme"s app€Mntment was announced by a~t superintendent of person.ii K e v 1 n Wheeler and principa l Frank Lopes, conflnnlng an ei:clu9ive storv ~·hkh appeared Jn IM DAILY PILOT Wednesday. --------------- Frldlr, 1111 16. 1969 OAILY I'll.Of J 7 .. . The-Painful . ' Art of Bloeking Plate " • • l • DAILY PILOT ......... ltibiai1f ...... NEWPORT HARBOR_CATCHER BOii CURRY TOOK HIS LUM.PS FRoM MARINA'$ PAT CURRAN BUT HELD DNTO BALL. TARS FACED SANTA FE IN C.IF 'PLAYOFFS· TODAY '' " .. Wood Heads Area ·sailor, Lion Stars -' . . " Spikers A lmlll cooliZJlent of varsi· ty track and ll<ld athletea '""'1 the Orange Cout area will Invade Cerrilol College Fridly afternoon IJibtln( for aurvival in the CIF eemiflnals. Starting ilme !or 11 e Id e...ia and the llnt nmnlng event ii 5:45. ladlng """-to qullify for the llM1a a week binc< al the ume site 11 Eltancia High School low hurdler, Rieb Wood. Wood ps Into hil heat with a U .1 record in the quarl<rilnals along with an early lU wind aided eflart. He muat finish in the top three ol hil heat to aclnnc<: and he~I be laced with at least two -. with ~ ol IJ.1. Santa Ana Valley's Carl Fielda chalked Qp the same time in Jut week's qarterflnal9 at Watmlmter and Dame J-ol - -haa • 11.1 cloddng along wilb G-1>a'1 Deen 11 could be the IJihtal beat of the evening. • CIF m Wood's teammate. Geoti' Barnett, ii in a IUoog tieJd of Jong jwnpen, but -bis best of 2UIA, ii given • pod chance to make the finals. Mater De:i's Paul Muldoon is in two events -the 440 and am while San Clemente ai.. has a double ~ In Rick Geddes, who11 p Ill the 100 and 220. Marina's Dave Lacy, with a best of 9.1, has a batUe on bis hands In bis heat of !he 100 with Willie Robinson r1. El Centro the leading candidate with a 9.&. Other area performers .. are Tim Funk ol Fountaio V~ In the mile, Jim G111pan ol Marina in the 440, Joe Ven- timiglia of Marina In the l:IO, Marina's 440 rtlay team ad Newport Harbor's mile relay team. The i-mlle could be ... ol. the bell . ..-ol Ibo nltbl with both beats loaded with outstanding performen. ~e ru='o., ~t ~.'!':~ Irvine League Claampions DAILY ,ILOT Sl'llff 1"""9 On All-County ·Nine Neirport · HBrbor !11 g h School's Steve. Scllootller and Westminster's PtiU MCcartne were ruuiied b> lhe first ~ of the of1lclal AU-Orange County prep bueball le.am selected by the Orange County Sportswriters .Association. SchoetUer wu overpowering as a pitcher for the Sailon: in their drive to the CIF A.AAA baseball playoffs. For most <lf the year he was virtually a <lne-man pitching staff for the Sailors, finlshlng the league season with a 7·2 mark. ' His ERA was slightly over <me run per seven innings. McCartney made the first team with I .366 batting average. Player ()f the year honors went to Kennedy High School's tremendous infielder, Alan Bannister, who ripped the ball for a .sn avenle In Jeodlng his mates to a t•J. l record and the. Freeway League champion1hip. His C<lach, Dick Sluetz, wa s accorded coach of the year honors. * * * * All-Orti,nge C<)unty Fir1t Team Player .School Cle11 ·Pos Steve SChoettler Newport Harbor Sr. P Art Sanchez Ken.'ledy Sr. P Tom Heierle Santiago Sr. C Bill Sterling Anaheim Jr, lB Alan Bannister Kennedy Sr. Inf · Dan Hansen Western Sr. Inf Stan Russell Villa Park Sr, Inf Gary Atwell Kennedy Sr. OF Keith Marshall Loara Sr. OF Phil McCartney Westminster Sr. OF Andy Bielanski Savanna Sr. Utility R-rd 1-2 a.o ,520 .407 .523 .431 .490 .455 .475 .366 .289 Player of the Year -Bannister, Kennedy. Coach of the Year -Dick Stuetz, Kennedy, Second Team Lowell Sr. P Santiago Sr. P Lowell Sr. C Troy Jr. 18 Pacifica Sr. Inf Newport Harbor Sr. Inf Los Alamitos Jr. In[ J.ln«uletler (19.0). ?< * '* (9:05.8 ), Roo Jobnaon of West Torrance · (1:1:1.1) Ruben Estancia High School's varsity golf team \Von its second straight Irvine League ,.°" .,,tnniu Chlpplnl et Elcellior (l:Ol.t; tiUe and will defend its CIF team championship May 26. Shown (from left) are 120 HH -u1rtt tie1t1 DlllW • and Ruben Mejia of La HabrA coach Wally Chute, Gary Schulte, Walter Brown, Jim George, Lee Doud, Steve (Ale!Mm) 11..s. Joi!-Is •" t • ..,.lb a t ·l:I 0 u~~ and ••·ve Ryan, Other Orange Coast area athletes winning honors were Howard Struble of Newport Harbor on the .see<>nd team, Adrian Witt and Dan Meyer <lf Mater Dei, M1ke Gray of Mission Viej<l and W I I I McCartney <lf Westminster on the third team. Larry Herman Bert Blyleven Norm Kepner Dave Colton Tom Sandt Howard Slruble John Hamilton Dan Parma Tim Sepulveda Kim Cates Ted ·Bolton Kennedy .Jr. OF Santa Ana Sr. OF Orange Sr. OF . Brea Sr. Utilily 4-2 7-2 .341 .347 .438 .316 .429 .500 ·~· .348 .395 Moollcal 1._t. Hiii frcteewaocll JU 1-·----· -·-· -------·-~-·-~--------..:..-----------------------C*ld llMll Grawtt 19-1 1U, MtNMI ( .. id'wl11 Peril) 1U. ..... II f,._l 1.U lltltrd ..... II L.Ml'lll (S.n-t1 ...,...... •• 1 .. t, Delltlftml ,~, 1u, uw {Pomontl 1u. 11Ml11 (Mul•I ,. .. ... ltlllY -Cflrwt hell) C-IM .t:l.1, , __ "·' ( ........ IWllll Slnf• ...,.. 42. W.lftlt Al (ltllrd .... ,, c ... 1tt1n11t 42.1, Blllr .a.I . ... -(f\m ...... , ~ ,,.,.,..,.,, 1:SU. Meddox (Werknwn) 1:55..t. ltebl,._, C'"*l 1:,.,_I IWCW!d llMll Le"'"*' IMllllU") l:M.2, ,....,,.111 IBllllW MMt.) 1:N..S. f rWMll: {I-I l :N.I (tlllrd hMt) Keell,. (Metll- 111911*) l:SU. Med .. (teltwl) 1:51 ... """" CW.tmll 1:11'.1, 111 -!rim """ Whit. 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' Tar Netters Score Win Third Team .420 Average Adrian Wilt Mater Dei Sr. P 6-4 Kevin Fox \.Vestern Sr. P 6-2 Turns Trick Mike Gray Mission Viejo Jr. C .356 120 Bowlers ~,:;eH'o~;.'n ~:=.Grove ~: l ~r :m Dan Meyer Mater Dei Sr. Inf .379 J T Gary Mack Western Sr. Inf .408 . ll Ourney Will McCartney Westminster Sr. OF .351 Leavy Nabs Batting Crown Flnll labulatiom foe Orange Cout area baaeblll batten reveal Newport lllrbc< Hiib School's Bob Lea'fy as the top hitter <lf the year with a .G:I average. 1"8vy was:haodleapped with a broken m3!e . l!ld· mbsed the~· Jut .~ pme!. Stcond p'lace -. to .Will McCartney· ·.<JI .Westmlml.r whcl fuhiooed a .311 average. wbiJe three players tiOd 'for third with identical stall. -·Viejo'• Mike Gray, Estancla'r 'lliD Powtll and Mater Del'! 'Dan Mont all went ZZ.fc:r..~tor .~..min.art. -ard-. luder In RBb with JS, wil lillb on the lilt with a ~-amt in • trips to the ~ fllMM ~ ti AIMA\1$ 1:-1-Yll, fllM Jt " .GI 1. W. MCC......,, Wm ~ 2A _,., · 1. 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P'OUM'TAlll M I t .160 se ' 1 .1u " ' J .uo 14 J • ·'" 11 2 0 .KIS JI J 1 .... 1 ••• 000 • ••• 000 V.ALLIY 01·111 A9 /'I ltll AYO GModlktr ' 1 • .500 Oltnt .SI 70 U .1S7 It..;,. ,, '' , ,lll , .. ,.. ,, 11 11 .lDJ Y111M.NM U ' l .211 Wiiie-4, 11 1 .111 C1t'TOll 11 It 11 .2'1 ...,., $1 IS I .16.1 Ool!t,,,. 4 I I .HO Cerllil9 • I 1 .U• :PlllM lt 12 ] I .150 "''letlll• 111 11 ( .:m Slllln II 4 2 .nt Hell 11 I I .272 Hbr 21 J 2 ,11' Ttr" I I I .l'H H11111t11 t 1 t .UJ ..... ..,. I 1 I .ltS Dwll lf 1 1 ,QEI "'fJ11'HftTOfll llACM 1•1 .. 11 Al M lt91 A'19 .... ' l t •• ,_.. 17 J J .JI• ShWlll l3 • l .ni It.,..., '° 11 1 .'H1 McQ110wn 12 11 1 .UI ..... '""" 71 20 l .2S6 c.-a 12 , •• 2'1 e.;-.;r·; .. 11 ' .zse Wl'lrtfttld " lJ 1 .1<U ""' JI 11 J _., ,,,_ SI 11 I ,!OJ W1111W S I I .211 lt11lr '' 12 S .lU ae"°"'t fl J I • Ut Joflet 1• 1 I .1'5 c111tren ,, 1 • .on "''-" J OI •• ~ 6 I I ·* Tyllr t I I .... Cln" ... i./ I I I ... Horwt l ..... HttiNftr ' • • •• u.•UM l eAClt 1,.1 ... 11 Al H ltll AW. "' ,, • .an ' 1 •• :m ,. l l • .2S1 •tt .ZSt ,,,,,.m stlt r.m 11 ' •• 112 6.1 II I ,11' I.I 11 • ·'" :51 11 • ,tn "' ••• 111 , 1 ' .1'1 lt •••• J ..... I It -' ... .. 2 ... .. MAltlllA (1»-11 Al M ltJIA't'9. .. " ' .. • ' 1 .m 1'114 •• ,. .... Mll1 ."tM • ' 1 .tit IS lS I ,1Jt u 11 1 :n1 ~ ::,r ~1 .11 1• )0 s ' ,!ft 11 , 1 .10 A 1 I .l::t N • The "'"th a"-"' West r ••• 1 Kent Rasmussen Garden Grove Sr. OF .340 •I t 1 I .111 Miine 31 11 1 .IJJ ,..,, WJ\Ml.I ....ua:i G W I Lo ••n•r i • i .coo HM•., 4s 11 i .u1 Match Game ElimlnaUorui at ary o verton ara Jr. OF .389 F11rr11111 MAT11t o11 n~.1111' o .OOCI Pi.11 • i • .uo Costa Mesa's Kona Lanu is Jack Cleveland ~oy Sr. Utility .S57 1..,1,. A•3M:1:a.~~ :i.'':lldlf:i ~ 1! ~ J!! onlytOdaysawayandtourney Honorable Mention: .Ron Boehm (Troy),. Lou Ran .. Mm• 3t on 11 .Jn ~~ •• u l .m originator and director Dick dall (Garden Grove)._ Mike Roberts (Fountain Valley), =11 ~ ~~ ~ ~: w~1i.. ;: 1! ! :;i~ Stoefner hu his J.20.man field Bill Powell (Estancia), Dennis Haughn (Fullerton), w1tt11"'"" •z " • .2u »:ebtr ' ' o .1,, sewed up. Steve Provenghi (Western). Jefi Ticehurst (Los AJ'a· HtVIM!tf 67 1• H ·''' 8tM 4S 1 ' .IS6 •t ) D Sh H G d G ) R d ' s1m1uo11 :n , , .n1 M<:Ooro•kl ~o • 1 .uo Topping the field is Bob m1 os , uane a er ( ar en rove , u y Sgontz ~:::,.. ::· 1; : :~ ~"' ~: l ; :i~ Ramirez of Oxnard, the only (Loara}, Paul Llefennan (Katella), Dan Clark (Costa ~~ ~! ~: ;::: ~<~•:"' l5 • l .iu man to have won the Mesa). Greg Kinder (La Habra), Gary Wann (Orange), McMfllor'I zt s , .111 lt•kl 'i ~ : :: pre..sligious tournament twice. Steve Fate (Servite), Schict (Savanna). Hnltr 11 • l .14 r--------'--'--'-=-:...._::__ ____ .;__ __ .;__:::::.:..::...:.=.:...~:.:..:=ioii~~;iii~;;;;;~~-------. Hwnllttti 1 I I ,143 J. l lnn.rl •o 4 1 .1111 ... ,.ltlorl 11 1 1 .0.1 l'towlk I I I .000 6-'f 1 •• ,000 T. l'-l't I t I .000 MISllO/'I VllJO 0 1 .. 1 A• /'I lt91 AVe 1 I t J.OCIO .st n i• .ln .. 21 IJ .)0( ff " • .211 50 12 ' .} .. Major League Standings -Cr1y Gird...., Letlt>er HtDll ...... Hldtirr , .... Hlllnlferl NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE Eut Divi1io1 --·--.... ~ -· ..... "-........ .. 11 ' ·"' ri 1! : :~ CH ICAGO 11 • 2 .111 PITTSBURGH :; : : ::: NEW YORK " l ' ·°'' ST. LOUJS :! : ~ 1: PHILADELPHIA ~ : : ::: MONTREAL W L 23 II 17 15 15 11 14 11 13 17 JI 19 .... ftrwl"OltT 1S t t .OOI HA.IOlt f1J.f41 At /'I lt91AVe LW!I'>' JO 21 12 .-1» ATLANTA =.11-:• :' ~ J: SAN FRANCISCO Wat Division 22 10 19 13 18 13 IS 17 ""-'11'10ff •s is • .,,. LOS ANGELES Wtlftfli ,. 'l'O u .2111 CINCINN'TI 'Mmllll U 11 I .,111 n ="' ~ : : :~~ SAN DIEGO H...... 11 '' ' .2H HOUSTON JS 21 13 23 Pct.GB .676 .531 .455 .438 .433 .361 .688 .594 .581 .419 .417 .:Ill $ 7Y, t a 10 3 31\ 7 9 11 Eut Dlvtoloo BALTIMORE BOSTON · WASIDNGTON DETROIT NEW YORK CLEVELAND W L 24 1l 20 II 17 11 15 16 13 2J I i2 Wut DtvlslOll OAKLAND MINNESOTA CHlCAGO , KANSAS CITY SEATI'LE CALIFORNIA 20 II 19 11 13 13 16 16 13 11 JI ti ....... 1'1111 \ ff U I .71) TrwnM It 2 I .1'1 Tlw""IT'I ... ltl 1' ....... l't'I lte•lt• cum w 10 s .u• .,1111111 1, Hew Ytrll 5 Kenu1 Cltv s. Cltve+Md 1 HOIMu l• • I .Ill P"119d•llllll• J, Orodnnen • ••lllrnore I. MIMtlott • Fotltr :It 1 J .I~ Onl'f' ,_ ldm\llM. Dtlroll t. Chlc9t 1, 11 lnnltm ,,...,.,. • • • .olO Olll'f ·-l'Chldlli.t. Pct. GB .667 .1145 11\ .486 6'n .414 6~ .382 10 .211 II .645 ,Q,! ,5()0 ,5()0 .419 .379 \\ 4Y, 4\<, 7 a Ptnttn. 1 t I ,Ollll T...,.., .._ ,.....,.. ._ McMlllll 1 • • .• Ati....11 , .. _ WI ,, Mofttrtel cs""""" .. ~ (Herdln NJ ., K•-CHr (NlllOll CIPr 1 I t -WI , 11i.t1I N), 111ttrt , ._. 1 I I .• Sell '''"'I'°' t'MtC«mldc 1•1 et ·~lltde_,.i. om.it ' IMtL•ln J.U ,) MINinat• tai-1 U.fll CLIMl!fTI , .. ,,_,, !P'fY!l'lln ).!),. nltftl MIL_11leflt A• ..... "" ..... Ylrll {McGrllW Ml ,, Cl'ICI-'! IP'llher W•"'"""" !Coltmell 241 II OliuM (lnll Allet I I I Al I.fl, 1'119111 W I, n1tf1t """"-lt " 2 ..m Olk ... 1"""-J.1) et Holutlon 10~ OMin COiiom 6-11 11 Clrttlatld !Piii! l~I. 1969 h"'• Awnca L I Avatlable w/AutomaUc 1'ranlm1lllGn T-·• 11 I .111 WI. llllht 6 nitflt KM!• II 1 1 .nl 11. ltvls IC.,,,. ,~, '' s... Dlloo ,._ Ctlttlmle IMIY hi) ,, ..... Ywtr. IPl!e... GOLD SIAL USID CAIS ~ 2t • • .u4 111"1111 1.11, """' ,..,, """' ...,,. !5 11 • ·* Plttlbv,.... '''"' ).JI ef los Mft"' lktt.I "Mlle (f"tttlll ,.,1 ,1 '"'-' llltlltrt :t-Jl, FINUT SILICTION ltltdlllll ,, ,, , .1 .. ..,,, """' ,. .. M --uSID ·~r ~·-.... It I I .1. yr ...----., " • ·'""':"-------------------------l l IN SOUTHDN CAUPOUllA DflllNN 0 1 • ·~fl ......... ,. J I •1" .......... ORIZID Wrlel!t ,. • J ' ·'" """." oo,..":..:::. ,; : l ::= 'ULL SERYICI AND PARTS ,OR ALL IMPORTID AUTOMOBILES 41 s 1 .1n • =~~II I : : :: J1M WIST COAST H....WAY -,NIWPOIT llACH ~=• l : ; ::: MZ-MOI &40-17'4 ••1TMtlffT1• 111.1t-11 A..._k s• Ma e AUSTIN-HIALl1' holor ..r.• 111 1ta1 ave ,,___ ~ ~" ... .......,_ ....... -. -· Stnlc• .-. M<c.,,,,..., ,. u 11 .:u1 1"----..i•iiiiiiii _________ .;..;...;.;.;.;..;...;.,;,,;,.;. ______ ,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiia' • • 1. ---..-:---- ----~~-----=---,...-~ .· • 12 Major ·Events .at Sea Fete Twelve major boat i ng ·events -Including poww, sail and water s~ comP,etJ:tion· ,ill be tea\lli'•d ~I \he California lntema~ Sea Festival at 'Leng Beach ·during the ~ of August. ~T~will~a ­ regiobal champloalblp 10< the Soling Cl.., Aug. 11-11. ni0 regatta, sponsored by the Alamitol Bay Yacbl Club, will 1 be the flnt major event In the . West I« die new lnlemotlooal Olympic CfaA sailboat. '·'Jbe Wlter«iented !pOl'tS will start Aug. 1 with the Westem Regional Sid Cham- pions featuring some of the top water skiers in the coun- try. This event will Jut through Aug, 3. LONE LY ·VOYAGE Bl!GINS -Sharon Sites Adams bids farewell to friends and·well·wisbers at Tollyo Bay as she sets sail on16,000-mlle,solo ·voyage to San Diego.~e was last reported nearly 100 'mlles.fmin.XOkyo. : · . The Pacific Catamarans will take tbe spotlight Aug. ~ with tbe Southern California championships sponsored by ABYC. 'Ship Rock' ABYC will also be hosl to the Internat.iooal Sabot Regat· ta AU,. U . 'lbe event is sponsored by the Leeway Sail· Ing Club and will feature races Housewife Sets Out In TranspQclfic Trip R SI t d-in-the sporty I-loot prams for a ce a e -~andac1u11s. TOKYO (Af) A California housewife w h o hopes to become the first woman to sail a~ the Pacific· alone was reported making good progress today in her 3l-foot ketch outside Tolcyo Bay. 'Jbe· Maritime Self Defense Agency said one of its patrol t --planes spotted Mrs. Sharon Tate ~ 70 miles outside Tokyo Bay sailing in brisk winds and calm seas. Mrs. Adams, 38,. of Marina Del Rey, near Los Angeles, IOld the plane's pilot on her r adio-te l ephone that ''everything is go," the agency reported. Mrs. Adams left Yokohama inside Tokyo Bay Monday. She hopes lo reach San Diego within 80 days. The agency said the.pilot of Saturday the patrol plane spotted Mrs. The 60-mile Ship Rock Race, Adams' .white-and-pink k~h the second in Newport HM'bor -"Sea Sharp Il", -and Yacht Club's Ahmanson Series swooped Jow Over it. 1be pilot ' will get under .w.ay.-.saturday at repcrted Mrs. Adams waved 11 a.m. 'lbe Btat1 wW be from and appeared in good spiril!. a commlttee ~ .,. hall inile In 1965 llln. Ada be southwest ol··t!"> ~allioa Pier, • ms came While t b e Ocean Racing the first woman to sail solo Fleet"is makihl the windward· from the U.S. Pacific Coast to leew'ard circuit.'.(lf Ship Rock Honolulu . off the Catalfna Isthmus, two P enn Favored NEW YORK (AP ) Pennsylvania is favored to win the 24th annual Sprint Cham- pionshlps Regatta of the Eastern Association of Rowing Colleges Saturday at Lake Qu.insigmond near Worcester, Mass. · other fleets of aalling yachts will be bound for Point Fermin. These will be the Pacific Handicap R a c i n g Fleet, sailing in the Dickson Trophy Series, and the Midget Ocean Racing Fttet racing for the Corlrett and Elon Brown perpetuals . The PHRF fleet will start at 11 :20 and the MORF at 1J:30. Navy gigs (-.00.ts) will compete In 1 boat-baoilling and maintenance exhibition Aug. a. , Speedboats will· compete for the natbW dmnpionsblp in E Racing Runabouts Aug. !HO. '!be lnternaUooaJ-o-n e • Deoi8n 0.., ooe ol die last of the all...,... classes will com- pete in a dmlplomhlp regal· ts Aug. f.10, I <\ modtl lallhoat reptts will be held. Aug. IS at Col· orado Lagoon, .sponsored by the City <i. Loog. Beach Recreation Oqll. The regatta will featuna U to 36 inch .noc1e1 aallboots b u 111 by younptera In Ille city crafts _.... , The ..... Beach to Catalina Dory and Outrigger Cilnf' Marathon will start from Long -Beach at 9 a.m. Aug. 16. These are two-man rowm lifeguard dories and six.man outrigger canoe teams. Too Late To At stake in the Ship Rock race are the Dori Lee Trophy for the overall wimer, the Viking IV tfo!Ey for the first tn class not winn\ng the Don Lee, and ~ Web s ter M"""""'1 Gabbooo lor tho next class not winning the l>on Lee or Viking IV trohpies. These trophies are exclusive of the awards given for the Ahmanscn Series. 17 Nearing End of Race The hol drag boats .will be seen in ICtioo Aug. 11-17 at Loog Beach Marine Stadium. Boat apeeds up to 290 miles per hour are expectod through the quarter-mile electronic timing traps. Climax of lhe festival will be the Long Beach Hennessy Cup race foc offshore powerboats. This spectator oriented event will start at 10 a.m. off Bel~ rnont Pier. Classify HOUSES FOR SALE Mesa Verde 1110 5 BR. Tri-JewJ, 2100 eq. ft. Me-sa Verde PaCE"setter. 00&! to bch, ~~ nli to golf courses. Has all cxlrtlii~ Jo~a. buJaus lndscpg, Cose to all schls, college, !rllrys. Sun (AM) 546-3081, Sun 1-5, 540«i66. 2038 Calvert Ave. Ofc. 637-3930 • Sat. Newport Beach 1200 WESTCLIFF BEAUTY ! BR. & tam. rm. in mint cond. Beaut. 111.nd.Jcaped. Major appliances incl. "' l.l1W. LOW, LOW at $42,500. Open hoose Sat., Sun., noon til S. 1300 DoYer Dr., West- dH!. SEMPLE REAL ESTATE 2515 Eut ea.st Hiway, CdM 615-2101 543-4166 Newport Shores 1220 4 BR, ~ ha, nu decor, A·l cond. nr beh &. clubs, street to at. lot-)l?d. $32,00>. Owner, --RENTALS Apto. Furnlohod Newport Beoch 4200 AVAILABLE Ju!y 1111. yrly, aoc.I: ref&. ' bdrm, 2 Ba, ~~ bit to beach. 6'15-12M. RENTALS Af!1!: Unfvrnlohod Ceola -5100 ix Ip """""· 2~ be, -..,.. .. ---· -. __ ,.. __ For Dau, Pllol Want Ad5 Dtlll:..1G-6811 for R&WL TS OIA.RGE IT! L_ _______ _ REAL ESTATE G.ner1I Office Rent1I 6070 llXlO SQ ft, or will split to 500 sq ft each. 50' from Pacific Coast liwy. Perfect for beer bar, anHque shop, art studio, Good foot traffic. 420 Oceen, H.B. 536-2579. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Help W1nted, Men 7200 Meter Reider T rnee $577 month 1\rarried. draft exempl JO-LEN Personnel Agency 625 S. io:uclid Anahcin1 635-5042 MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRADE Mi1e9ll1neou1 8600 6 H.P. CRAITSMAN ALMOSf NEW $50. • 543-6643 • BEAtrrlFUL light gold trim Med. dining set w/6 chr&. Ex. cond. '57 Ford wagon, good motor $50 CM. 548-8467 TRAN SPORTATI ON Boob & Yochts 9000 T AKJ over bill. $l192. 22' I..apstrake Century, SIS n. dk>, Jots of f!XtrU, 546-9872. 9525 MODEL A Dune BUUY I o r Silk ot trade. * -* lmportocl Autos MOO VOLKSWAGEN ·85 vw Perfect cond. cieen. 11unrf, atl!reo ..,m, AMI FM radio $UOO. 673-4615 evn 2 T kflOohrdluetaolncmtw Stag Cruise Announced ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) -A field ol 17 swift rat· ing yachts and a press boat, unsighted and unheard from Newport Harbor Y a c h t since SWlday morning, today Club's annual stag cruise has were reported nearing the been scheduled for May 2+25 Mexican coast and a beJated at Moonstone Cove, Catalina end to their 456-mile voyage Island. from St. Petersburg to Mex-The yachts will leave the · harbor after a special hunt lCO. breakfast and arrive a t The U.S. Embassy in Mexko Moonstone in time for an ex- City said two Mexkan mine · tended cocktail party ashore .sweepers had been in oontact t be f II ed b t k d. with the fleet and that the 0 0 ow y 8 s ea tn- first boats should reach Isle de ne~e same procedure in 1'1ujeres sometime tod ay. reverse is th e order of the day The race began Saturday Sunday, May 25. After a and was expected to end at breakfast the yachts will leave noon today. for the mainland at noon. S P_.E CI AL! SAVE ON NEW CAR CHANGEOVER S 8 F GOODR IC H or FI RESTONE DELUXE 3500 EA. PLUS 8.55115 FED. EX. TAX-WHllf WALLS 7.35 X 14 FIRESTONE W/W DLX 4 FOR ggso PLUS FED. EX. TAX 30°/o DISCOUNT ON GOODYEAR P0LYGLAS FOR All CARS IF ACT BLEMISH! IE 100% SAFE! A D ...... tlc Cootor Toot Wll Sllow Tov 1lto h oct ~ .. of T-Carl Wtlth 011 yo11r •Wfl ditl1 wliilo wo t i•• ynr ••t IJO Ylt•I .. its i11 S.. C•lif.'1 n,..t For4 Dl•ffl•titc CeftfH. J11d9e yo11r t •r'• nfety e11cl perfonfl•nu for Y•~ntlf, s99s COM PLITE THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2061) HARBOR BOULE\IARO -CO':>TA MESA TELEPHONE 641 U01 I) ' ionship regatta. Last year's championship regatta was held on San FranciS<O Bay. COMPETITIVE CLASS -Actioo like this is expect. ed to<b.e rep4!8.led Aug. 2:!-24 at Newport Beach when the Corooad<>-25· fleet tangles in its natioruil cbarilp- ~~~~~~'--~~~~~~~1~~~~~~~ C-25 Title 8ud Aronis Reele~ted I Race Set Marine Group Prexy For August c. J. "Bud" Aro n i<, The Coronado-25-e ) • & ~ kqJtime J~er in i h e chamJijonshlps are 'lclledul!d P~ boat industry, has for Aug. ZS.24 1ritb ·h!lld-, he!ll reeleckd president ol lbe quarters, at the Babta Bay Soutbem Oa.Hfornia Marine Club. : ,-.: ~en The regatta is lilnfted ~ 30 v . · . skippers and crews wbo. ,wiJl Arodis bas been a dll'ector be selected by regiAQl!lcha~ c!_SCMA, California 's leading pionship 1aaikills P,:ior tp the _pleuJre boa&: industry trade nati~ cb.iU:n~ ol'l{ioizatm for the past stx CJ'eWt'mim as far a_way u years; He bas" served a s Annapolis, Md., Jlooal<jn, Tes. d>alrmtn d lbe Loo ,_1 and Seatt1e, Wash. will be I'&~ ... es psrticipstlng, Largest lleets Boat Show and hail he!ll active repreaented will be from on several other SCMA pro- Marina del Rey and San Fran-giams. SCMA has .a mem her.ship of 210 companies ehgaged in the pleasure boat· industry and ~ an office on Cedury BOOl!ivard in Los Angeles. Dave Ullman Ends 4 th In Reg atta clsco. each of which numbers Aronis owner of Boat & Dave Ullman of Balboa about 100 ~ts of th~ class. . MW>r ~es. InC.,-"EI Segundo, Yacht Club was the only ski!'.>-Last year s cbampton. E. R. distributes through his com-Huschi:a• of Alameda is ex-'pmiy Glastroo and Alumna-per to jllace in the stormy peeled to trailer 'his ~ to Craft boats in California ·Hurricane Gulcti Snipe Regat- NewporUor, the de(ense of thO ·Afl>ooa ..,d.li<voda. ' Ja at Loo Angeles Harbor last title. • . . • ~· The ~ year ~; ''Wt!Ok. theA<jdltiooallla lnl<l'mbe~~'-~ to be the 008iest. io SOMA · Ullman placed fourth in a rep may .......,.... hislory with die first. Loog ,., • by contactlng Ray Garra, 1707 BeaCb SaiJboat Show Oct. 24-· i'~eld ~f· some . 26 entries. The Tradewinds Lane, Newport Nov.. 2 being added to th e ~field w~s_,decu.nated by_.25-30 Beach. calendar to join the traditional . Mot winds which contributed Dana Point Yacht Ouh Plans Told boa.i. show at the Pan Pacific .~o.six capsizings, several gear Auditorium during the wK:lter. failures and many dropouts. David L. Goodman, dlstrict Only six boats finished the manager ol Kie k h a.e f e r final race suDday. Mercuey was elected , vice pre&aenl; Jo_sepli C a r y e r , The winner was J e r r y Carver C r ·a ft distributors. Thompson of Alamitos Bay secretary and C I a re n c e Yacht Clu b Ylho finished I· I· J· Hermann as treasurer. 3·2 for a total of 8.7 points E. P. "Ed" Nichols , SCMA under the Olympic sooring Preliminary plans for a new d boa I. 1 executive director and &how system. Second was .Jrff clubhouse an t s 1ps or the t58-member Dana Point manager for the pa st Lenhart of Mission Bay Yacht ill be . 1 five years, was named assis-Club, and third was Bix Bixby, Yacht Club w . on d1sp ay tant treasurer. ABYC. at the organization's upcomingi------------------------------annual dinner. The event, which includes announcement of n e w I y elected officers, will be held at the El Adobe Restaurant in San Juan Capistrano May 24. Coinmodore Bob Hoyt said a social hour will begin at 7 p.m. with dinner at 8 . Dignitaries invited. s a I d Hoyt, include A1ton Allen, fifth district supervisor: Ke n Sampson, Orange C o u n t y Harbor Department director ; and Jim Ballanger, harbor department chief engineer. , . with you r LOCAL Mobil DEALER m > 14 Mobll 11·3 s1310 ._..CK NYLO!t CORD TUBELESS -· ·ruggtid worked.,-tire. - S ET O F 4 -s -400 1n1goestlldnll~llliQ6,ph1stt.~ .. a cll•ta•pt .... MlflslU/Ncl'I~ See the Mobi1 •c ushion", "Wide .. and ~'Premier'" line of tires.Ask }'Our dealer aboul a "TIRE·IFFIC" BONUS DEAU The yacht club, which plans to grow to 200 regular members, is cu rr e n t ly negotiating for lease of pro- perty for a clubhouse and boat NO MONEY DOWN · 12 MONTHS T O PAY slips, The county will purchase ~1~1 ""'" ~•tr)'i11g di.,... All Mobff Df!'•t.r~ resem the tight to eSlablish th.eir CtWn prfce. the club's property at Dana/ r===::::;::;::::::;;;::::;;;;:::;;=;;;:;::;;========!.. Point Harbor, Hoyt said. II DON'T 'BE···FOOLED Cal-40 Champ Defends Title The Cal-40 NaUonal Cham· plonship Regatta will be beld Saturday and Sunday in outer Los Angeles Harbor off the C8brillo Beach Yacht Club. Art Walker's Tetua from CBYC is the defender. Cal-40s from San Diego to Santa Barbara are expected to com· pete in the chami>ionships, Tbert are no entries from ou t of state. '" Oold, ... ot 1,-.ei:mo. 11' ot p.jte ~M.· wllfl •!Vie •1'111 ealh -1• HJ•~ lourltti •tlh. btw r111, -Nrve w11etr tl"llltr, Ovt-•l•nd!N. THIS WEIK'I IPl CIAL ONLY $3,595 1'+ TO CHOQSE" ll'llOM Clfh,_,, S.. 11:..,., atww11tt, Ln .,..... wrlodt. ""'°"' Cltll .. ~ .. Git1tNfl, Mfr<. ~ 1 O.ya, E-. ........... ,.... ,...... . I ••• because we're a specialty shop. We' can give you better .servJce !AT COlll!P£11TIVE PRICES! because all we are concerned with Is the camera business. Sales, servi~e, rental, s u p p I i e s and processing. We don.'t sell clothing, lumber, hardware or appliances as a sideline. You wouldn't take your toothache to a fOot doctor and •xpec:t good results, now would you? Free Film K-135-36 with each camera I, . MINOLTA ' PENTAX NIKKORMAT SRT 101 SPOTMATIC FTN . w/fl ,'4 lent •'"' C11t w/fl .t ltnt •M Ci t• w/f2,0 le111 .~ Ce1t with :n;_ .. 522'-° lef. $267.SO • Auto I 35mm fl.5 Telt pltoto l.t111 519999 ::?; ... 528950 . llVANIMAN CAMERA SHOP . ft31 Aclem1.,A.,.., (Adem1 •t Megnoll1 ) next to Albertson's Mkt. HUNTINGTON BEAC H 96 2. 5959 -----~ . '"""'· ""' 16, 1969 DAILY I'll.DJ E DER A Complet·e Guide . . Where to 10 1 ••• · What ••• do • •• • • UCIAlumni To · Join 'Fandango'· .. UC Irvine· alumni will get in on the .ac-- Uoo during "Fandango," the second an. nual student spring carnival in the works for Sunday, May ta. The UC Irvine Alum- ni Assoclation will h o I d lts first home- coming weekend to coincide with the "old Califunrla RiiiChei'o" festivities. The association has sent .invitations to Its 350 members for Saturday and Sun-, ' . day's aocial events and a ~port on cur- rent University i&s':'es. Courity education and community .leade~ also· have been asked to attend the event. Students and community members of University support groups have plaMed decorations and activities for Sunday's "Fandango" calnival which ,is open ta the general public. Alumni and com- munity as well as student and staff parti· cipalion will be emphasized. Primary beneficiary of the event will be the student..conducted Unicamp pro- ject to provide a summer camp • ex- perience for disadvantaged children from Orange County. The carnival last year raised $1,200 for this ~-An a<J. 1 diUooal Swn will be 30U_ght tills year to .\go to Biafran relief. Scheduled lo begin al 11 a.m. Sunday and ·>to conclude with outdoor en- tertainment in the evenlng, the "Fan- dango" 'Will feature booths sponsored by organizations, games and contests, rides, mu¢, retresbmelU, and a barbecue din- ner. JUny porliclpants will WW' coo- tumet·of early California. 'Ille camlval will be held at the In- . ter!Odlon o! Bridp !load Uid Campti> Drive on the UCI campus. Decoration1 will simulate an early Callfomia pueblo, with a canllna, corral. ~panlsh arches and a fount.ain, and a "bandito·1 hideaway." .. The carnival steerinj: committee in- cludes UCI students and ·staff and representatives from the various com· muntty support organizations. Student chairmen of the various subcommittees are' Bruce Richards, San Bernardino, on- campus publicity; Saody W a I I a c e , Laguna Beach, off-campus publicity; Lanny Scott, Corona de1 Mar, and Kathy Cou.a, Santa Clara, finance; Kurt Mengel, Santa 1t1ordca, contests; Karin Lindberg, Huntington Beach, theme; Nancy Laurie, Beverly Hills, (ood and refreshments ; Woody Macias, Fullerton, aod Mike Minkoff, Glendale, plaming and construction ; Mike Anderson, WlUttier, booths, and Judy Motes, Cannichael, printed program. Alumni will gather on Safurday for their own day-long round or events, cli· maxed by their first annual banquet in Mesa Court Commons on campus. The schedule includes open use of pool and gymnasium facilities 9 a.m. to noon, box Junch in the campus park and a tour of the campus on a double.decker London bus. Dean of Students Robert Lawrenct, Professor Bernard Gelbaum, Auociate Dean Patrick Healey, student Diana Janas and the Rev. Cecil Hoffman ol the University Interfaith Center "ill leadoff at 1 seminar on "What's Happening on Campus" from 2 to 4;30 p.m. A social hour with faculty will be held at the Town Center from 6 to 7 p.m. and the 'banquet begins at 7:30 p.m. In existence only one ·year, the UCJ Alumni Associauon -hOpes to double its membership with the graduation of UC1'1 flnt full four-year clasa · at com- mencement this June. WEEKENDER INSIDE FEATURES Prwchool children wlll be of· fered a new method of learning nu:t fall when non-commercial KCET Channel 21 television station starts UJin1 entertalnmtr< teclmi- qua: to teaeh three to ave year-,. old children. See story on Page 20. Tnnl Pap ltt "1-P I•" Pap %1 Golde lo lru Pop ltt lo 11M Glllorla Pap ltt u .. ftetler Papltt Oil 'N' Abost Pqes Zl·T: Solo Travel Pop ts lceC........ Papl3 !'.do(y A...W Pop 13 Col Stole (lptf• Pll' 13 Golde lo Mma Pll' 14 C.ViiW•4Pmk Pqoll ClledOM a • 11 Pqt U Qw<ellle Pop~ Cemlet Pop I• TV Vlew1 Pip !$ '• Televl1le1 Log fait ti" -DAILY PILOT 5"'" ....... . ' DIA DORSEY SHOWS UCI ALUM CARD NO. I TO MASCOT LILIA SERIO AND FRIENDS BUILD BOOTH FOR FANDANGO INTERMISSION ' .. HOLLYWOOD One Book Gives Birth To 2 ·Movies By BOB THOMAS A-liholl Pr"' Wrlftr HOLL VWOOD -The Mirlsch Brothers have discovered a gold mine in James Michener'• "Hawaii." The big bestseller has now inspired a second motion pie· lure. Film buffs can probably find an es:· ample, but I can't recall an instanct where a single novel has provided plots. for two movies. Sequels, yes -"Return to Peyton Place,'' "Beyond the Valley of the Dolls," etc. "But I want to get the message across: 'The Hawaiian' is not a sequel," insists Walter Mirlsch, the professorial-looking producer of both Michener films, "A se-. quel uses the same characters and moves them beyond the time span in the original movie. Our picture will UJe entirely hew characters in another period of Hawaiian history," ff MICHENER'S tale or the 50lh state has had a curious career in the f i I m world. Fred Zlnneman was originally scheduled to make the movie. Over- whelmed by the immense story -from the geological ~ginnlngs of the islands to the statehood -he decided it could only be told in two separate films. "But our financial people decided wt could only do one picture at a time, /jO Fred dropped out af the plcturt," recall- ed Mirisch. George Roy Hill was enlisted as director. lttidway in the localion filming, !he Mirisches decided llill was proceed.mg too slowly, and bf: wat removed. But a threatening mutiny by the native actors restortd Hill to command. "Hawaii'' finished far over badget and opened to rather uriklnd notices, even in Hawaii. ''NOBODY LIKED k but lbe !'<"!'I<," Afirisch remarked happily. Aided no doubt by the popularlty of Julie Andrews. the film has already grossed over $20 million, wit h more expected from reissues and television. The· producer admitted that he was too weary at the completion of "Hawaii" to think about another flbn based on the Michener novel. Bul the picture's receipts buoyed his spirits, and last year he began. preparations for '•The Hawaiians". James Webb wrote the script and Tom Griet ("Wlll Penny") will direct. The new story covers 35 years, picking up about 30 years after the end of "Ha· waii." Charlton Heston wlll p I a y Whip Hoxworth, son of the character por· trayed by Richard Harris in the first film. The only other casting thus far is John Philip Law. as Heston's son. "MOST OF THE story is centered on the Chinese,'' said Mirisch. "I plan to c.ast the picture true lo race, as we did with the first film. and I have been in- terviewing Chinese in London and New York; now I'll be looking al those in San Francisco and here. 1 plan to use largely unknowns, and so far I've come across some very promising talent." Filming begin! July 1' on Oahu, then moves to Maul. The bulk of the locaUon will be on the l!land of Kauai Mirisch declioed to reveal the budget "because I'll look like a jerk If it geta changed In the middlr: of shooting." An educated guess: $1 rrumon. Rowe Back From Triht< SOtriehow it seems only fitting that the LagUna Playhouse lhould call on Doug ROwe to ck>le the trunk lid on the old ocean Aveitue theater. Alth<JQa:h he's been absent ·from the scene at 3lt throolh most •of the pasi couple teucins. there was a time in the middle sixties wben every sbow that mounted tile Lqtlna boards wu a Doug -· product. ' Since l!•ll11 up the managin( clirec· tor's reins three yean ago, Doug has plcktd up ·• pockot- ful ol.aian,. by ... tollil11 the virtues of c i 1 •-r 1, ·t.e.levlsion .... one! lttnon·lim• shave cream. Jn [let, sioce he left lb e playhouse l'•e -mon of hbn In mJ ll•lnt room than I ever did In Laguna. ooue •ow• A NOW DOUG Is back home to mount the plllj'i»J8''1 production of "Dylan• and to direct lhe man who'll pick up his discard· eel mantle and carry it to Broadway - 606 Broadway in l:.aguna, that Is. John Fenac:ca., who's directed some ·of, the theater's bl&gest hits since the Rowe era, ta taking the title role of Dylan Thomas in the biographical drama. For D o u g Rowe, retUrnlng to the Laguna 'Playhouse marks the resumption of a relationship which began in 1963. Then a aumtitute teacher in Watta, .he came down to read for 1 part in °11le Happy Time." Be got It, and a role in the next 1h0w 1s well. Then, In May, 11164, Doug filled I part in "The Mousetrap" on !ix days' notice, and while In town he applied ror. and aublequenUy filled, the vacant poslUon of maneglng director !or the playhoui<. From the !alt o! 11164 untll June ol 11114, Rowe staged every regular sea110n and summer production, with the exception of "The Chalk Garden." He had his ups ("A 1t1an for All Sea~") and his downs ("r.1y n1ree Angels"), but things were never dull, IF·vou ABK Doug Rowe to pick ,out the high spot& of his two-year stint in Laguna, he'll point to "Raabomon," "John's , Brown's Body'' and "A View From the Bridge.'' 1lthcJuib I'd go with "Seuons" and "Inherit the Wind. n And, althoueb bis C<:1necUe1 never were u sue· cessful u hit draml1, bit ''Mary, Mil')'" with Mike and Judy Famll st1IJ brinp I c~clde In retruoped. . When Dou& left the ploy-. he hil the pavementa ol llollywood -along with the a!Ol<lll<nltooed Farrells -with peanut butt<r and unemployment checks carrylq him through 1 year's dry apolL He mado lour p1lot !lhns !or televlslon, all ol whtcb died on the drawlnt boards, belore he dllcovmd that the rtal ~f !or llnlfillnr· ,._,. acton In TV lies In the "PIUlt Uuit depreues" between ICts. !Mt 7ur Doua took ot.f for Ne" York, plunpel held !lrst Into the commerdal pool and come up IOl~lng with cosli. He dot1n1t, hoWever, pl1n to lhlft hit slghts trotn Broldway to Mad ison Avenue, tSee ROWE, Pop 14) .· . .).; OLIVIA DE HAVILLAND, CLARK GABLE, LESLIE HOWARP 'Gone With Wind' Jusi· l{eeps 011 Coming Back "Gone With the Wind,'' David O. Selznick's classic film based on the popular novel by Margaret Mitchell, has been referred to as 1 "show business phenomenon." On the occasion of its previous release In 11181, Selznick was questioned about the amazing popularity of the classic. "There are several reasons," he answered. "The story has tremendous scope for one. Audiences vicariously live through the ante bellum days, the war and its aftermath, a whole colorful and dramatic era.'' "Then, there Is the great depth and richness of the characters;and their rela- tionships. l feel that tltis was arr im· portent turning point in motion pictures. The audience really lives the lives of these people on the screen. In fact, the remarkable dramatic trick of Margaret Mitchell 's novel was that she took lwo modem characters, Rhett Butler and Scarlett O'Hara, and placed them against the old viewpoint as represented by Leslie Howarrl as Ashley Wilkes and Olivia de Hav\lland as ~1elanie Ham11ton. "But there's much more to the story. Jt has drama, spectacle, roman ce, suspense, comedy, the full catalogue. As a retult It has an audience appeal for all ages." "Gone With the Wind" won the Academy Award as "best picture" of the year, and Selznick was awarded the prlz· ed Irving Halberg award for "most con- sistent high quality of production." On this occasion, however, Selznick gave unrtinted p'raise to. his staff. "It was a dedicated group of men aad women," he said in his acceptance 1peech. "'Fbr a Year and a haU they worked exclusively on this one picture, and their enthusiasm never flagged." Academy members voted ten Oscars to "Gone With the Wind" -best picture, direction, screenP.laY. art direction, film editing, Ctllor_ ,photography, a speci.al award to the production designer and to Selznick. Vivien Leigh won u belt. ac- tress aod Hattie McDaniel as bl!lt SUJI"' porting actress. "Gone With the Wind," considered •the genesis of modem, big-scale s~tes, boasted 59 prin<:ipal parts, ~s of extra and bit players and massivr: sets ahd scenes. Lorig remembered among these are the burning of Atlanta and the wounded Confederate soldiers stretched across a publi·c square in Atlanta. whJle doctors attempted to help them. "I think every extra In Hollywood wu in that latter scene," Selznick said. "But there was' no camera boom with suf. flcient reach. \Ve had lo Import a hlgh ship-building crane from Seattle, and put the camera on top. In this wpy we were able to get the scope we sought." Today, a new generation will see "Gone With the Wind " In Orange County with the added ~mpact of 70mm ~ide-screen &l')d stereophonic sound, Audiences will see the memorable performances Clf Clark Ga ble as Rh ett Butler, Vivien Leigh as Scarlett O'Hara, Leslie Ho'jVartf ~:..: as Ashley Wilkes and Olivia de Havilland as Melanie Hamilton, fictional characters who took the country by storm. "Gone With the Wind" is a motion pie~ ture experience for everyone who sees it, a film that imparts lo audiences an ex· citing awareness and dramatic un· derstanding of lhe glory and greatness of this epoch in An1erican history. 'Camelo t' Castle The "Camelot" castle at the WaroerBros.-Seven ArlS Studios In Burbank, Calif., where Richard llarris, Vanessa Redgrave and Franco Nero played at love, is beng refurbished for the comedy "The Phyn;:1." • The imposing structure, which coSt a quarter or a million dollars to ~ struct, will become the scene of ia endless bacchaaal thrown by Gears• Tobias and Joan Blondell who return to the studio for the forei~iotrigue fare<. ~,·a;••& Weeken·d Highlights I PEER ·GYNT -The Orange Coast COUege Drama Department ls .,._,ung their IP<il\i imWcat Fri. one! Sat., May llH7, 1t a,1s,p.m. in · • the IChool auditorium, l701 Fairview Ave., Costa Mm. It will , mark the clolo ol Lucian Scott:• 6cc theatrical car<ft which begen I~ 1955. H< Is leavlog to teach In New York City. Tlcuta are free but muit be picked' up at tho campus boobtor<,belore the perf>irinanct1. ·' , • EDDY AllNOLD -'Ille ~ Arnold Show wltli Billy de Wolle ind • Hu!IO Montenegro one! bit on:bestra one! chorus are oo llqe. al Melody•. land Theatr'e'-tonight and Sat. and Sun., M&y tf.11. Perfotmance times · are Frt. at 1:30 p.m.; Sat. 7 aod 10 p.m. and Sun. at 5 and 1:30 p.,m. 'ncketa, '3.00 • '9.50 are available al the theater or at ticket agencies."' , SPRING FLO'flEI\ SHOW -The Golden West Cardon Club Is .,,.;,. IOrin( 1 ""'"" Dower "1ow that p<oml!<a to be • pogunt ol color. It )s let for Sil May 17 lrom I to 5 p.m. In the Founllin Valley IJbnty. A-cu.i..-Ind jun1on under ti yean wUI compete for rlbbom. Proltlllonal arranam may exhibit their llltnll but wlU not be lnclQd..t In the competllloo: Tiie IJbrll'f ii located II I Tie& Loe Alamo<, ,..,.. loin Valley. Set Gulde te Flin, P'ace ti - ) t I, 'GVIDE TO 'E'VN •< ... Old Town ·'Peer Gynt' Opens ~ ~cp .... , ..... . •. '·. .... ""5 !· l ·s Modern MAY 1'-11 OCC Pl.A Y -The Oranp Colsl COllego Dramo Deportmool will in-t "Pt<r Gynt" In the IChool 1udltorlum, 2701 Falt· view Ave., Costa Mell, at 1:15, May 18-17. Tickets are free, but aMIBI be obtained at the COUqe booUt,..., --lly STAN DILAPLANE MAY 1'-U I , PUERTO VALLARTA. Mttlco-The old. quaint fishing vlll~ge we Dew to in wheezy DC-3s bas dis- appeared-among the new tourist hoteJs. The airport is being lengthened to take m jets. The road is pav- ed from Tepio. A new styocraper hotel IS l'ISing on the beach. Much moaning from the people who- knew-it-wbe.n. ''Another Acapulco,'' they say. But we must face it. I went to Acapulco when it 'vas the unspoiled fishing village. The food was lrlghtlul. I was ·so flea-bitten in the local hotel I bad to get up and walk the street in the middle of the night. COUNTllY MUSIC -Meloclyla1xf Theatre, 10 f'Hedman Woy, ~· Is pnoentlng Eddy Arnold, with Billy Do- Wol!e ind Hugo Montenegro and his orchestra .and chorus, May 16 · 11. Show times are Fri., 1:30 p.m.; 7 and 10 p.m. Sat; Sun. 5 and 1,30 p.m. Tlc:ktt.., '3.50·15.50, at the bol office or ticket qencles. Phone TIS-1220. ' " MAY 1'-1! GOLDEN \1iEST PL\Y -Golden West CoUege will present ''Tartuffe0 aa 'lls SPfing drama productlon on Fri. and Sat. nlgbtr,May 16 and 17, at 8:30 p.m. in the PatH> Theater on Campus, 15744 Golden West Sl, Huntington Beach. Tickets, II ~t the hookaton or the dOOl'. Phone 192-7711. MAY l'-25 a.All8IC l"ILM8 -Open End Theater, :1115 Villa Way , New· ' * II you luck out, you find the places with warm beaches that are just beginning to get tourists. A couple ol good places to stay. Reasonable food and drink. Zibuatanejo north of Acapulco is one. The Portugal beach towns. Some of the Greelc Wands. Bora Bora and Raietea in French Polynesian. Raro-· longa in the Cook Islands. Western 'Samoa and the t port Beach ia presenting origins of the gana:ster hero Jn a series ol. c1au.lc.1anpter films. Show times are Fri. ·and Sat. at 1:30 p.m. and sun. a( Z:OO p.m. James-Cagney in "Public Enemy," ls scheduled for May lfr.11' and the "f\.faJ. teee Fakm" with Bogart, May 23-25. Tickets are $2.50 for adults ~ 11.50 for students. Phooe m.mo. Tonga Islands. All just on the edge. 1 * "Our d•ughter, 18, insists ah• and Mme other 9irls' c•n go to Europe cheaply. We are undecided to uy the INtf ••• '' . Well, it's true. That is, she can do it for half and maybe less than what it would cost you or me. Students get big discounts -including high school and college graduates within the last two years. They fly cheaper. Get cheaper rates on tours. Eat cheaper. And I suspect have more fun. * I think you should write United States National Student Travel Association, 79 Filth Avenue, New York'~ N.Y. They have two books on European travel -each $2.50. Gives you a good idea of costs, where, when and how. LAUGH-IN'S HENRY GIBSON He'll Be In Anoholm Moy 31 Star of 'Laugh-in' Gets Away at Sea Even though he's a well-pa.id like to be able to do things performer, there's one Juxury without a crowd at my elbow, so I thought sailing might gl ve Dan Rowan ~ly enjoys -me some solitude," says Dan. privacy. Wherever he goes in His decision to take to the public tber:e'1 a well:meaning sea w a s n ' t balf·hearted. * mob clamoring for autographs Following sailing school and a 1'We 111re thinklftl of buying • c111r in Europe 111nd and exclaiming how much celestial navigation course, selUnt Jt when we luve ••• '' they dij "Rowan & Martin's Dan and his pretty wife, Difficult becauSe when you sell the car it picks Laugh-In~" Adriana, eventually moved to the I al •--Tb t' th •--'ded by be.. The ~lem was "where to tbe oceanfront-yachting com-up oc wu.. a s e wu. you avo1 t<•""' munity or Marina Del Rey ing a tourist And that's why the car was cheap -go to get away from it all!" where they -uld tie up !heir h th "It's jwi:t that sometime.! I'd '"" for you. Some countries tax a ·car as muc as e boat just 100 feet from their .• -car costs. front door. Now he sails the MAY II· II • DODGER B~EBALL -· Dodter Stadium, 1750 Stadium Way, Loi Angeles. Day games start at 1 p.m.; Night games at I p.m. and Twi-night double headers at l .p.m. Doda:ers vs. Pitates,-·Fri. and Sat. night and Sun. afternoon, May I&, 17 and 11; Cube, May 20, Zl and 22 in night games. For ticket inlormatJan phone (213) ~1411 or ticket ~encies. MAY 17 ROME TOUR -The American Field Service Club of Estan- cia Hl&h School, Costa Mesa, is aponsot'ing a tour of Mesa Verde bomes, Sat., May 17, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sii: homes will open their doors for the tour with Octets, $1.50 by dona- tion, available at Mesa Verde Realty, 2850 Mesa Verde Drive, All funds raised will go to the Estancia AFS Club MAY 17.JULY.23 HORSE RACING -Thoroughbred racing at Hollywood Park, Century Blvd. at Prairie Ave., Inglewood is sched- uled Tues. -Sat through July 23. Post time weekdays 12:.:i, Sat., 1:15 p.m. $100,000 California, Sat., May 17. MAY 17'11 FESTIVAL OF SOUND8 -Talenled young Soulhllllld JlU· formers will .,.....1 en!<rtalnment May 17-11 in the Festi- val of Sounds at Knoll's Berry Farm, on Beach Blvd. in Buena Park just south of the Santa Ana Freeway. Shows are scheduled for 2:30, 4 and 5:30 p.m. Sat., and Sun. in the Wagon camp area. J\fAY 17-31 PADUA JllLLS PLAY -The Padua Hills Theatre is pre- senting "Fiesta a San Ysidro" with authentic mwic and IN THE GAi.I.ERIES dances from Melico, =liq ll ~:•a 11• ,.... on Wed. and Sal N1 .... ~-*"'r@'111t theater is the Padua dlnlllC ---~ -during lllllCh and dinMr. -•' leod ii "P-ed daily, ezcept Mon. -11111 Iii ., l'lduo Ave., three miles north ol Foothlll'·~ lllor<moat. ""°"' 1.Q6..QU. ' • MAY ti ' !PRING CARNIVAL -UCl is siaglng a Spring Camlval, called "Fahdango," on Sun., ,May 11, beginning at JI a.m. It will be held at the intenectioo of Bridge Road and Campo& Drive Ofl the campus. IJ'here wW be booths, games, con.testa, rides, mUllc, re:fresbmentt, evening entertalnment and a barbecue. 'nleme of the fund ralsing event Is "Old Cali!omla Rancho," and fuods will go to the at.udent-con- ducted Unicamp for disadvantaged children. MAY 11 SUNDAY CONCERT -Works hy Hindemith and Mnurt. Mu.sic for fOID' hands will be performed by Kate and Thomas Whitney, pianista, ln Room 178 In the Fine Artll Bldg. at t p.m. Sunday, May 11, on the UCI campus, 7601 Irvine Ave., Irvine. No adm.iasion charge. MAY IZ NOON c:oNCER-r-:'"On Wenloci: Edgt:" -poems tet to music -University orcbtstra~ Steven Warner, tenor; Larry Gor· don. piano, at noon May 22, in Room 171 of the Fine Art! Bldg., at·UCI, 7801 Irvine Ave., Irvine. No admission charge. Phonel3Ull7. STORY BOUR -Every Thur" ·the Laguna. Beach Library, 363 Glenneyre, Laguna Beach, conducts a story hour for children two and one-half to five years. It starts at 9:30 a.m. l\fA Y !1-31 CHILDREN'S ART -More than 400 schools in Orange County will dlaplay over 1200 pieces ol art in the largest single show l1l it.I kind in the county at South Coast Plaza, May %1 Ulrougb 31. Grades kjpderg~D through 12 will be represented in varied med.la. The 300 wmning entries will be eihibited in the Anna Mary Beck Junior Gallery at .the Fes- tival of Arts. from July 11 through Augwit 24. A dJ.SPlay ~f teachers' art will be included in the South Coast Plaza I "Ten Days in May" exhibit. MAY Z4 IRON BUTI'ERFL Y -Anaheim Convention Center Arena will rock, May 24 when tl1e Iron Butterf1y concert g~ on at a p.m. Others appearing with them are the Chicago TranS'it Authority and the Blues Image. These three groups will be playing rock 'n roll, rock-blues, solid rock, folk-rock. poJH'OCk and whatever else the aud1enct wan~ lo ~ear. Ticket!, p.~ -$5.50 are available at the box office or ticket agencies. I MAY 2'J.ZI ANGEL BASEBALL -In the Anaheim Stadium, 2000 State College Blvd., Anaheim. All night games are al a p.m.; ~y game!' start at I p.m. Tickets available at all ticket agencies and the box office. Phone 633-2000. Angels vs. Cleveland. May 27 and :II. All night games. ~~ Then you must take, time to advertise. Time to Pacific Coast regularly. .Jind a buyer. Now, there are C<111Jpanles that will Show to Help "OUr boars a 40-ft. kelch UCI Holds 3rd Annual Student Show ~liell you any kind of car and guarantee to buy it auxiliary called • A i s 1 I n g . • back. (Repurchase price is based on time and mile-y That's pronoonced 'ash-ling,· " cClell age used.) Whether this works out to. your advan· oungstet•s Dan e.xplaineP. "It's an old UCI STUDENT EXJIIBIT -The third &MUSI UCJ Stu· ings by Fem Miller and Betty M an. tage I don't know -and J've·spent a lot of time and Gaelic word which means dents Art Show, spon10red by the University Gallery Asao-ZULCH GAU.ERV -1835 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. pencil lead on whether to buy, rent, )eas e or ship it J iE S h } something like 'dream'_ A lot ciates is on exhibit in the Fine Arts Gallery on campus, 7601 Currently on e.xhiblt, American artists who are honorary lrvl'ne Ave Irvine P111'ntm' gs --"pture cersm1"cs and o1•--members or the American Institute or Fine Art!. Hours: 10 •. home. You can bet it's no starUing bargain. They nter c 00 of Irish poetry IS devoted to .• . ' IK:W • 1~ aisling. media are represented. Hours : ·1 to 5 p.m. Tues.· Sun. Cloaed a.m. to 5 p.m. Tues. through Sat. Sun. 1·5 p.m. • have a computer and plenty of tilns, You don't. But · M ~ f C.M. ART LEAGUE _ Members of the Costa Mesa Art • I think buying and reselling on the open' market ts Detailed nlans for • new "It's a real tranquilizer for on. on ree. League, 5l3 Center st., Costa Mesa. Houn:: Sal and Sup. wfuJl h t' me. Sometimes when I'm hav~ 'S IJJRARY -2005 Dover Drive, Newport in ari ~;. ~ . ...a Y C ancy. · daily television series, called . had night 1 " 111 Beach. On exhibit. throu&b May in the Jr_ Ebell Ezh.ibi1 dllr'· 1 to$ p.m. Continuous exhibit o( art work v Olli u~ ;-"Sesame Street," designed to mg a s etpmg ing regular library hours, oil paintings by Wade Zint .Ni oils .... by Art League members. No admission charge. * help prena,.. the nation's nt"e-bed down Ob the boat and drop and · b J Cl k. occ ART GALLERY -2'101 Fairview Drive, Costa Meaa .... t'-• "" off like a hahy. Never fails. mosaics Y oyce ar M N -•-;· : ~-''For two boys hitchhiking in Eu..-what can school clSldren for school, .. n:-arnn.8 N Tl Houn: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily; 7 to 9 p.m. on. o llllUU&O" · -~ eil~ U · 1 "! like to have my morning i,£.n.cv T A ON.\J.. BANK -l090 Bayside Drive, s1·,.n charge. Currently on --•;h1"t "-ugh May, the annual •,,. vau eat that's chHp?'' were unv ~ recen y a N t Be ch Curr U ••• ;h't thr ugh J d . • o;;4.1.u uuu .., KCET .Ch I 28 by th coffee on tbe Aisling," ~ ad· ewpor 1 · en Y on ~u 1 0 une, urmg student show of class work paintings, drawings, graphics ~}.:; You can find student r~staurants from the NST,A C hi 1 d rae°:• s Te 1 cvlsio~ ded. "so 1 can watch the early regular business hours marine oil paintillp by Gerald Loring. and sculpture. ~{~see above). In Greece, you'll'find stands where they Workshop. morning fishermen · chugging COFFEE GARDEN GALLERY -2625 E. Coast High-so. CALIF. nRST NAT'L BANK_ 17122 Beach Blvd., l l t";tuff a tough, dougtiy roll with spiced lamb. ID Ger-"Sesame SLreet,., created out on their boats. A few hours way. Corona del Mar. Hour1 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Mon-Huntington Beach. On eihfbit during regular business ~wrs, :,. Y it's the stands witli:warmwurst. The trick is and nroduced by CTW, will of sailing fortifies me for all Sat. No ad mis 1 ion charge. On exhibit through June thro gh May ni'l pai"ntings hy Lillian Caln , · !l· · g() ~ the local market place~ Where you'll find use e"ntertainment techniques the phone calls and script 25, oil and water color paintings of James Warren. ~GUNA' ART GALLERY _ 307 Cliff Drive, LalUJil . Jt:ie ·local equivalent of onr lkent hamburger _common to commercial TV reading 1 have to tackle when MUTUAL SAVINGS -2867 E. Coast Highway, Corona Beach. Admiuion so cents. Members and one guest rre:e. ': jtands. (Looked. filling. lndigeatabJe. But at yoi.lr _ to teach the nation's 12 I get back." de! Mar. On exhibit through May, photograph! of the peo-Hours: Mon.-Sat. noon to 5 p.m.; Sun . 1-S p.m. On exhibit, .( fge, internals work like a cement mixer.) In most million, thret, four and five-Although Oan 'i wi fe (a pie of ThaiJand by photographer Jon Kingaard, who was May 10 through June 22, a show combining the annual mem-: '! ~lDltries, bread, cheese and \\'irie are your cheap. year..ald children. The hour-former Australian fa s h I o n stationed in Southern Thailand while in· the service. Open bers Sculpture Show and the works of Tapestry Weil,~ group iest fuel. • long color shows, to be broad· ffiodel ) was basically a during regular business hour.1. of 30 So. Calif. artists who banded together to revive the ·' t· cast by more than 160 public landlubber before she becam e ~PORT HARBOR ART MUSEmf -400 Main st., ancient art of \\'eaving, into a contemporary concept : t ;: * TV stations, will st a rt P.trs. Ro\\·an. Dan says, "She Balboa. Open Wed .• Sun. 1 to 5 p.m. Monday I - 9 p.m. Peruvian textiles, art of Africa and ceramic and sculpturt ,: : -· "My husband will r•fir• this year. Not with November 10. agreed lo attend sailing school Currently on exhibit art of seven Southern California artists of KeMelh Brunn, also are on exhibit ·'}. much money, but we would like to travel ... " James L. LoJ)er, vice presi-right along with me. Adriana's exploring new materials and ideas in a show titled "The Ap-LAGUNA SAVINGS GALLERY -260 Ocean Ave .. La· • You get a good start by beginning 3 small libra· dent and general manager of a good sailor, but she's not .· pearing/Dlsappearing -Image/Object. guna Beach. On 'exhibit during regular business hou~ . ~ ry. "How 2 Globetrot on One Retirement Check" non.-commercial KCET, said quite as avid as I am.'1 GRAPIDCS EXlllBIT -The People's Gallery, a travel-through May, arts and crafts· or the Laguna ~ac_h H1g ~~· • .cost .->,50 Crom Diablo Press. 440 Pacific Avenue, lhat the series would be setn "Oh. l ~njoy s a 11 in g .'' ing show of commercial and non-commercial art, ls on ex-School Adult Education cl~1and the work of the.tr 1nstruc· "~ in Southern California on Adriana C?ntends, "it's just hibit in-the mall at Fashion Island Shopping Center, New-tor, Nelly Allan. CollageS., papler .mac.he, melt!!d crayon :~-~ Francisco, CA. First-hand account of how-ta-. ChaMel 21 each weekday at 7 that Dan will take the boat out port Beach, through June 7. Displayed on triangular ki&sks paintings sculpture and block· paintmgs are Jncluded . . , da-.it. The writers say that if you have $250 a month, and ll:30 a.m. with a repeat even on the rough days, while will be 20 serigraphs and 20 graphic designs. No charge for CHAN.Es BOWERS MUSEUM -2001 N. Pi.fain St., '.t you can do it. showing at 4:30 p.m. Sunday J prefer smooth sailing." admission. Santa Ana. Hours: TueJ. through Sat., JO a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; ; ~ * broadcasts will f eatur e ··u we ever get the time, I'd ~A VERDE LIBRARY-2969 Mesa Verde Drive East, Sun. 1 to 5 p.m.; Wed. and Thurs. evenings, 7 to 9 p.m. No : : I'd get into some warm and CHEAP country for repeats of the previous week's like to take Adriana on a sail-Costa Mesa. Currently on exhibit during regular library admiuion charge. CurrenUy on exhibit Juried1 ~how of T.;~a ;1 programs beginning at 10 a.m. ing sabbatical to the South hours, through May, oil paintings by Jane Huffman. Art League, painted china by members of Ca ·· China amt- .• ah base. (Portugal would be my choice. 'Vithin an Joan Ganz Cooney, ex-Paeific or Greek Islands," COSTA MF.SA LIBRARY -566 Center St., Costa f\.fesa . ing Association, and painti ngs by Ernest Tonk. 1 our's run from Lisbort. l First, it's cheaper to sit ccutlve direetor of th e dec lares Dan. On exhibit during regular library hours, through May, oil SADDLEBACK GAU.ERV -1660 E. First St., Santa ~ in a foreign .country tha n travel in it. Second, you Workshop and 311 Emmy "Right now I'm sho pping for paintings by Ola Meredith. Ana. Open Tues. -Thurs. 11:30 a.m. -JO p.m.; Fri. to 11 make a fe\v m istakes the fir st months. Make them Award winner, characterized a motor sailer that has more CROCKER CITIZENS BANK-2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa )i.m.; Sat.. 3 . JI p.m.; Sun., 5 - 9 p.m. Currently on ex· at the lo\vest price. Move cautiously on trips of a the $8 million project as "un· space and more power than ~fesa. On exhibit during regular busine1s hours, oil paint· hibit acrylic oils by Luis Amendolla. \veek or two. U you get too much financial pressure, precedented int e 1 e vi s ton the Aisling. \Vben I find the lijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiiiiiiaaiiiiiiiiiiii·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii•ii,•iii10iwii·1iii•iiiiiiP<i•aiiiiiii1 iiiiiiiliiam•iii""iii~ you can run back and recover. . history'' on several rounls. boat I want, I guess our first •••••••••• ~ She noted the workshop not logical trip would be to sail £; * only enjoyed a full budget by <kiwn tbe coast ol Mexico, L • ' ' i'" ''Whera can a 9irl 9et in travel bu1ines1 and even commercial television through the Panama Canal IVe trav•I?'' standards, but had been given and around the Caribbean." r A. I' l d ' Th t { t I a year of lead time in which to Although Dan has crewed on -, lf 1ne ~ ewar esses. ey ge ree· . rave or develop CUITiculum and lest someone else's boa t for a cou-Th l t!Oormous discounts during vacations. So do restr· le f es • h d bl ea e1· · 1'deas, a i"•ury few television P 0 rac · e ou s ations cJerks for the airlines. Big·turnover in these .... h 11 1h · b "II ..,. projecls had enjoyed in the .,,,. e ier .e rnc1ng ug w1 ~bs, too, since girls quit to get married. ever claim him. lo:• * past. "I'd prefer to be just a j Cartoon animation and live-cruising sailor." he says. "C 1 1,_ h 1 Id action !Um shown included "Racing is com-iuve so It an you g ve m• an _.a w at wou pay several short commereial-li)te . , 'de f .. 1 1 .. 1or a good tailor • made suit in Hong Kong?'' spots designed to "sell" in· isn t my J a o re uat on. • I've got a recent report from Robin Kinkead of f h 1 h \... That's the re6SOn 1 gave up dividual letters o t e • P auo;;t being a serious golfer.'' _( PamAm who checked Hong Ko1,1g for me. "Be sure and numbers rather lPn pro-As a boater, Dan has ada-.. ! to allow three days and five fittings. Fenwick in the ducts: live-action 'Ii I m·!I mant views' concerning off. Hilton lobby made me a s uit of cashmere -wool for created to teach the concept of shore oil drilling like that '65. Henry the Tailor on Camarvori street, Ko\vloon, round ' objects and bod Y which produced.an oil •llcJt pff ~~is a favorite of Pam American crew members. Suits movements, and a comedy-ad· the California cout, killing sea ~I about $51. Sports: jackets, SSS. Slacks, $15." \'tn\Ute spoof designed' to ap-life, coritaminaUng beaches . :S. * peal to small cbildten. as well and ei>dangerlrlg marWa. • , as ·their older brothers and "I'm basically -a · ' CQn· aiaten and parents. servationist," nap said, "and · • "Shoos run $10 to $IS handmade at Lee Kee's on '· Hankow Road behind the Peninsula llotel. Shirts in '.·'.J~, lustrous broadcloth with a monogram on the ·.-et, $5 to $'/. An airline captain in Hong Kong :j a handsome Chinese monogram on his shirt ')pOckets which people think Is bis name in Chinese. '..\ ¥tu8DY it says, 'No starch'." ,. . * : ' ''What 11 tht tipping In En1l•ncf -London to f.i.. exact?'' \~ A •hilling and a ''thank you11 to the doorman. :'{(Shllllns'• ll cenll now.) U you can work out 12·per "ict11t in " pOllJICls and shillings. that's right for the ~ waiter. Give the maid three or four shillings -(a tilra. Cooney described the I doo't think the amowl\ o( oil program as an experiment being collected o f {. 1 h o r e primarily d e s I g n t d to justifies the lhrtat to the demonstrate w h e t be r en-marine IUe, sanors and swim· teNinment techniques pre-men ." school children are known to "They 5houldn'l allow •Qff- enjoy on television can be put s hore drilling for the same to meatUngful educational reason the Los Angeles CO Uh· _ purpo'sea. She said, "American try Club won't let them drill "Room Service"_ A zany comedy about the mad, mad 30's will be on stage I al South Coast Repertory, 1827 NeVtpOrt Blvd., Costa l\tesa, , through May 31 . Performances Thurs. -Sun. at 1:30 p.m. 1L Reservalions -466-1363. r • "\\linter Will Aak" I An original drama by the t Irvine Repertory. Theater on stage in the Studio Theate:r on campus, 7601 Ir v In e Ave .. Irvine. Pe:rfonnances at 8:30 p.m. Fri. -Sat. May 1S-17 "Madwoman ofChaillot," \\red ~ -Sat., ~tay 11-.SI. Reserva- tions -83W611. "Once for the A.1kln1'1 A modem fantasy wlll be on stage at the 'Vestminster Com· munlty Theater, Westminster Center r.1111, Goldt:n 'Ytst at \Vestmins~r Ave .. Fri. and Sat. at I : :xi. through May 24. Reservations au.srm. •"J'be Tender Trap'' WE HAVE EVERYTHING! Her• at NEWPORT PRODUCE. it's like shopping at th e world famous FAIMllS MAIKIT. !Only our prices are ridiculou1ly low), b1cau1e we sell all the regular produce items, and we have •II the fantastic things you don't see anywhere else! Papayas, Mangos, Sweet Cherries, Strawberries with Stems, Crenshews, Honey Dews, Peaches, Japanese Cukes, loquats and many, many more ••• AND AT SENSIBLE PRICES! SAVE 2 WAYS WITH THESE COUl'ONS • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• NIW cao,. NOWI • Wl'RI PAMOUS FOR • FIRIT OF THI YIM • : KEBERG • STIAWBERRIES • SWHT • • • l,PTIKE : ''OUR OWN" : OIRRIES : 1oc... • 5 '°' $1.00 • 39•... : • Ll.mlt ' • Llmt J h•• • wfth tfill1 c.u..-• with thl1 c:ew,.n • win. nite ,..,,.,, • with theM c.u,.,. • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS IXl'lll MAY 2ht Don 't com• hom• end ••y "Wh•t'1 cookin' Mom?" Te~• h•r out to dinner et on• ol fhts• lin• rtsl•vrent1, shtll lovt the food! Thty strvt ~llfMhty - ""' Now,_. l'rodocol U -s.rrico (wllll ..totorles lo'°""· Collln ... dlo a. Otlmttlc a-.i.1, aM.., .....W.o't two ,..tw,..ts Now-a. Or· °"'e CNlty Airport, .... nor 2ot otl11••s. PHONE: 673-1715 HOW AIOUT YOU CALUNG US? NEWPORT PRODUCE uu " ........ ..... shilling a day rate) -when you ltave. Same for 1 Ille ball porter who banded you your keys. Tip him baJC crown extra for e1tra .service· -theater J~tll -when you get it. c~lldren are ei:posed lo on lbeir golf,courscl'' 1 television during their first Dan Rowan and... partntr lout or five years of life ror a Oklt Martin, stars of \ht greater amount of Ume au., Rowan & Martin S h o Vt they will opend alle!ldlna aU will b< playlnl The An«btlm lit: rrades of elemenw, COavcnUon Center. S.11turday, lchool." Sile add<d that the Moy 31, al l :IO p.m. Ai> educational content ot ~ peu1n1 with lhe dUo will be •""1ow should b< .,pc:clally the Sock It To Me G•ng and valuable in meeting the need• 1 the alnglng-comtdy act or A romantic comedy by r.tp Shulman will be on slage at the San Clemente Community Theater. 202 Avenida Cabrillo, .. "'" P .. -S.an Clemente. Thurs. -Sat., Orantt C.unty'• f•••t flfay 22 -J une 7. Resen>a· 1~,,.·:.'.;;:;:;;;:::~;;:;;;; • ..,~""':•:':"':.;"~IW='1<=•~0;"":•;tu:;·"°"::· --~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;..,~ ol the dlladvantqed child. Gaylord and Hoildoy. tlons -1492-0465. j, --------------·-· ' . , rrruy, 111116, 1969 DAILY l'IL01' :II i--~~--------------------------------~~~~~~. WEEKENDER OUT By NORM ST.\NU!Y ' , . • , • ORANGE COUNTY'S REST A URA NT, NIGHT CLUB AND EN TE R TA I N· M ·EN· T SCENE . . • Wu Ben's A Chinese restaW'8Jlt, you say, ~Ith its most commanding interior feature ~ massive fireplace 'that appears to be straight out of some Spanish gr3ndee'3 palacio? Believe it or not, such an,~·. probability is veey much a reality at Wu Ben s m Newport Beach. What's more it works fits handsomely and ar- tistically into th~ comfort3ble and relaxing decor. And if a few other architectural embellishments aren't exactly the commonplace trappings of Ori- ental dining establjs·hments -well -they're part of Wu Ben's uniqueness too. .......A bit of mear<h ~y out 'n' abouter found these touches didn't stem from aforethought. design but rather a distinctive plan for incorporation. ' THERE'S A REASON During the initial construction stages, it see ms. the building was planned to house a Mexican res- taurant But.when Far West Services took over the structuTe it was decided to establish an operation for Chine5e cuisine instead. Utilizi.ng the already existing installations, modifying others and adding appropriately new Cllinese omamentatlon, 111e transformation resulted in an imaginative original. As a consequence, diners are treated to an atmosphere three parts warm, luxurious and different. . . Cenainly another distinction that's immediately noted here is the size and extent of the menus. The number of selectioos is quite limited c~mpared to most Chinese restaurants, but the offenng~ reir resent the very choicest dishes. And the quality of the food is not likely to be exceeded anywhere. MENU SELECTIONS Six dinner appetizers are egg roll, crisp gau gee, rumaki, crispy-fry shrimp, teriyaki beef sticks, COMING SOON CORONA DEL MAR ENTERTAINMENT IN JHE LOUNGE FEATURING MARY LOU TUIS. THIU SAT. PIANO.VOCAL STYLIST VILLA ROMA SpecJ.llzln1 tn ltallaR Dlnaen HAVING A PARTY, A GATHERING OR FAMILY DINNER? Our st•ndard specie! spe9h11tti dinner consists of our delicious meet seuce end meet bells, topped with im· ported permesen cheese, end includes ou' delicious gerlic toast. No di1h•1 to w•1h with our di1po1.bl• •lumi"um c;ont•I"'"' N•nibet ef tlltlffft nd 11Jrlc-T• t• et1ly. 100 -$141.00 6 -Sl.70 50 -72.SO 4 -S.10 25 -16.00 2 -2.90 10 -14.50 1 -1.41 445 North Newport Boulev•rd, Newport Beach Open 4 p.m •• 12 p.m. Ml 6-4929 CLOSED TUESDAY $1.50 each, barbecued loin ribs, $1.95, and a comb!· nation plate for $2.50. Four Canµmese family style dinners (with the price quoted tbat per person for two or mori} are the Taipai, $3.95; Kowloon, $4.50 ; Peking, $4.95 ; Mandarin, $5.25. With appetites topping ou.t al the maximum, our party cDose the Mandarin. To the table came a savory profusion of items that included egg flower soup, mushroom chicken, lobster Cantonese, Man- darin duck, fried rice, blended tea, fort11ne and al· mond cookies. Rounding out all of this was an a Ia carte order ot mac:adamia ice cream, 35 cents, so tasty we speculated about the desirability of taking several gallons home for the fi:eezer. .. -. OTHER OINNERS Glancin~ at the other dinner possibilities, the Taipai provides egg flO\Ver soup, pork chow mein, beef tomato, sweet-sour shrimp, fried rice, blended tea, .fo,rtune an_d almond cookies. The Peking offers egg flower soup, Jobster cashew, chicken chow mein, sweet-sour shrimp. and the rice1 tea and cookies. SPECIALS Three special Wu Ben's dinners, all served with fried rice, speciaJly blended tea, fortune and al- mond cookies, are island fresh mahi-mahi, $4.25; brochette of beef teriyaki, $4.75; top sirloin steak, $4.75. Thirteen dishes on the a la carte menu range from snow peas and water chestnuts (Chinese pea pods and water chestnuts quickly stir-fried with thin pork slices) $2.00, to the lobster cashew (Aus- tralian lobster, bite sized, blended with crisp Chi- nese vegetables and topped with roasted cashew nuts) $.1.50. Others at random are pork chow mein, $2.75 ; beef tomato or beef broccoli, $2. 75 each j chicken almond, $2.95; chicken chow mein, $2.75; sweet-sour BALBOA BAY FRONT DINING STEAKS -SEAFOO D -RACK OF LAMB 5-ati-1 BOBBY HOLLIDAY VOCAL-GUITARIST Tun. thru S•t. -t to 1 :30 OPEN DAILY 11 :30 e.m. to 2:00 1.m. J. J. MACK ENTERTAllillNG NIGHTLY TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY SDYING SUNDAY HUNCH Alont with O•r R .. ular Mtou 11 a.m. to Z p.m. (Across from the Arches and next door to Villa Nova) 642-4298 Dining with An Ocean View SEAFOOD, STEAKS AND GOURMET ENTREES * * * * FROM $3.25 * WAYNE GAIRIEL Gvltarl•t·Yoc•ll•t l :lO to I :JO Tuff. thrw S•t. BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE PHONE SJWISS 117 OCU.N AYI. HUNTIN•TON llACH Overl00Min9 Tiie Pecific Oceen At The Pi•r Entert•inment Nightly Tu9sd1y throu9h Seturd1y THE FABULOUS GEORGE and LARRY DUO * BANQUET FACILITIES FOR 450 • SERVING LUNCH AND DINNER DAILY MEADOWLARK country club GOMll SIMS, CfCIL H0ltlN6$WOlTH, Co.Ow~••• 1'712 •U.HAM STRUT HUNTINGTQN HACH l'or R.t .. rv1tion1 Call 846-1186 or 146-1416 shrimp, or shrimp foo ·yong, $2.50 each; mandarin duc.k, $2. 75; lobster Cantonese 13,50, LUNCH, TOO' Six Cantonese offerings on "'" Juncheon menu, all served with soup or romaine salad 'and blended tea. are beef tomato, $1.95; cldcken chow mein, $1.95; chicken almond, $2.25; shrimp loo yong, $1.115 ; sweet-sour shrimp, $1.85; Wild shrimp, $2.25. There are also ,four ,Wu-Benese combir;lations, served with the soup or .salad and tea, at a price range from $1 .95 to $2.25. .. By way of exotic tropical drinks, the restaurant offers some very potent concoctions like the m•i tai, scorpion, sakitwm, berry-ber.ry, chi-cbi-and lapu-lapu. , OPEN SEVEN DAYcS \Vu Ben's is open seven days a 1week for lunch and dinner. It's Jocated at 3S3 Bayside Drive in Newport Beach, II you haven't been as yet. plan to go soon. Excellence is pegged at the same par a s all other Far West Services' enterprises. 0 We Get Letters We received a letter from Maria Escobar of lrvine calling our attention to an error in this col- umn -here it is. "[ feel I must make a correction on one of your statements of May 2. You wrote: 'Cinco de Mayo, Mexico's day of IndependJ!nce, ... .' "This is not true. Mexico's Independence Day is September 16, when Miguel Hidalgo gave the famous 'Grito de la Independencia,' (meaning Cry of Independence). "Cinco de Mayo celebrates the victory of the Mexican troops over the French in a battle Jed by General Ignacio Zaragoza at the forts of Guadalupe and Loretto, in 1863. .. This battle took place in the city of Puebla ~ cap;tal of the state of the same name, which is located 85 miles southeast of Mexico City." A pootscript to 1the letter reads: 14 J'rn,.from QcMnlnint dl11"'9. •top Towan Wl!lv DI Swl •!'Id S•nd He1el ••• Reservations: 49"574 Open Daily rHel~wers • e LUNCHEON e OINNElll • amAUIANT AND e SUNDAY •1tUNCM e LATI! SUl",.Elt • COCKTAIL LOUNOI • OINING KATE PORTER, G•lt.rht .•• ,...,. & Slllfl W•••••d9' tin S.I••""' a..i ... •:J0°l:lo-1w SOUTH COAIT HIGHWAY LAGUNA 8UCN. CALl,CHllNIA ~ VALUABLE COUPON ·FREE "~~W1~'~.!. .. s... 1rr111e ..... D...., Olllyl HURRY! ONlY 4 DAYS =:-~ .. Buffet Style luncheon (ALL YOU CAN l!ATU GEllRAL YEN'S CHINESE RESTAURANT 1500 Adams Ave .• Costa Mesa ll!HONI 140·1 fJ1 , ... T1 0.-1"""""'"' INtloit Au"""1k ,. ............ ,,. Dllllllt ltMm DON JOSE' -prHdly pr..-- BILL McCLURE DUO CONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT DANCING NIGHn Y IN THE A ESTA ROOM ( Doocl°' s ..... 11 p .... Nitlllty I ENCHILADA & TACO ......... $1.30 CHILI RELLENO-ENCHILADA .. $1.45 e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Adt.,. (•I Mt .... 11•1 Hunl. Boch 962·7911 Vina Harmer Trio Mond•y thru s.tu..ley Mike Jordan Duo I 17 FASHION 1SW1D lllWl'OIT CDfTll --·-.., """"' PM!laj" ·--........ Pubela and went to school with the great-great· granddaughter ol Ignacio za,.goza.'' Tndttd we are inttrtstld Maria and · we a.pprtdGU your coUi11g thi.& error to our alleniion. Com.ti Serr tember 16 1Dt" will have to renumber to mention that it U Merica'' Dau ot· Indtj>e1Wtnce. Jolly Roger There may have been a day when the pirates' Jolly Roger flag was hoisted to strike terror in the ~earts of seafarers, but thc!nkfully such action now 1s pretty much confined to old Errol Flynn movies on the late-late show. _ Besides, it shouldn't be necesslll}' to fly a flag of any kind for diners to find their way to today's Vl!r'f ditferent and welcome type of Jolly Roger, t.We excellent restaurant bearing that name at 2300 Harbor Blvd. in Costa Mesa. A ORANGE COAST PRODUCT As a dining establishment, of course, the name is probably unfamiliar to very few natives berei- abouts since the Jolly Rogers started on Balboa Is- land and noW there is a sizable nwnber of the res- taurants throughout Southern California and Ha- waii. Each has j_ts own individuality, however, and the Costa Mesa location is quile distinct among the others . For one thing, y9ur out 'n' abouter was some- what surprised to learn there's a general but quite erroneous belief in some quarters that this place is a brighUy-lit colfee shop type of opentloo. Notbi.111 could be further from the truth. BREAKFAST TO DINNER As a matter of fact, Costa Mesa's Jolly Rofer :ates as a first~lass restaurant in every way, offer· 1ng more than many. They serve breakfast, luncb. and dinner, provide counter or dining room service and have a strikingly attractive cocktail lounge - Continued on Page 22 {;/ Porron NOW II NEW LOCATIOll 6600 W. COAST HWY., NEWPORT BEACH ' NOW APPEARING . • • RENOWNED HAYDEll featuring VOCAL STYLING$ .. JOSIE end the P leno Artlstey of CHARLIE Nllely Except Mondey IN 'THE LIDO LOUNGE BILL McCLURE DUO 5:00 . 10:30 p.m. -Mondty thru Fridty t:OO p.m •• I :00 e.m. ~ SUndey LOU NORRIS & The . . JERRY ROSS TRIO .! 1:30 p.m. • I :JO t .m. -Mondey thru Setu..lty I Meke 1 ni9ht ef it -Dine in the beeutlful I ' MARINE RESTAURANT '44-1700, ext.154 for reservatiol'lt •\ I ' ' 1107 Jamboree Rd., Ne'IVPort Beecli • • . • • •· DA!l.Y rJLDT • v I N E. y A R DI s l.ES1AURANT e PJ!ESENTS e * LARRY RO~ERS * A,T TMI PIANO U.•-MOH. THl\I Pll. 4:ll t. 7:1t THE STARS OF VEGAS: * SHANNA and NORM * Tuts. th"' S.t. l :JO p.m . to I : 30 •. m. ' ITALIAN r. AMER ICA CUISINE , by Chef ANTHONY SIRAMARCO • • .• • Lvnch Oiily (Mon. thru s.t.) ...... from $1.25 I Dinners Nightly .................. fr~m $1.75 843 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa PHONE 642-0712 UNDll NIW MANAGEMINT f:AMILY RESTAURANT :.~ .J 2200 Harbor Blvd., Cost• Mesa ~ lK Mort Center) 642-8274 i COMBINATION DINNERS ' ~ • ' -: ' . ' ' ' • . ' ' i ~; OR A LA CARTE DAILY LUNCH SPECIAL IMPORTED & DOMUnt BURS FttMy ll :JI -.m. i. t:ll (ll;lft. 1n11n1n -i. t :» ,,,.........c...,. MO!ollt't-!ll!Nr -i. i :lil , ..... '"-1: TIMllMY ... ,.,..,..., ll•llf·•.fll. '9 I:••·"'· j " l Huntington Beach ~ Costa Mesa , COUNTltV HILLGRl!N SQUARE : TOWN & llEHINI> TEXACO STATION 1 \UU ....,. •• ff2.,,n a:ni 11'11 • Santa ,,_ 441.,, ' 1 ' CHILD'S l'OlTIOll Hllf PllCE (Cllil4111 ,..,, 12) PltORI IN ... IU ITEllS AfAIUBlE TO TAU our • • Wt]EKE'NDER • -Continued.from P• .. 21 with entertainment Monday through Saturday. ' Soft lighting, dark paneling, comfortable booths and tables in the dining ·room provide as relaxing an atmosphere as you'll find anywhere. Add to this always top food aod excellent service and you have a place that stands the test with the best. LUN°CH CHOICES Luncheons offer a wide variety of de Juxe barn· burgers, salads, specia]ties, sandwiches and several seafood and .broiler 'items. There's also a full line of fountain and bakery goodies. , Chiet pi.rate oftbe hamburgers ls the buccaneer, one.third pound fresh ground beef, served on a tOa sled sesame l'>un with tomat_g, lettuce and spe-. cial dressing, Ftench fries and ·fnixed green salad with choice of dressing, $1 .35. Salads include the chef's, $1.65 ; pineapple boat, $1.~5 ; crab Louie, $2.35 ; shrimp Louie, $1.95. Sev· eral prime specialties are ttie French dip, $1.45 and s teak sandwich, $2.45. Ten tasty sandwiches include hot Kosher.style corned beef on rye, 95 cents; shrimp and avocado on rye, $1.25 ; Reuben, $1 .45. AT DINNER All ol the same hamburgers, saJads and spe- ciaJties are available at dinner but the evening bill of !are is augmented by 12 entr~es. each served with soup or saJad, choice of Frenth fries, whipped or baked potato and hot home-made bread. A random· sampling of the dinner entrees dis· closes such choices as buccaneer cut of prime rib. • Wttlulay! IUVed in the Grlllld M tlllM1' • Continental Cuisine Cockt1il1 Senriflg Lunchton and Dinnlt Monday thrOug'h Saturda11. Closed Sundays Open for Private Parties Only S7 t S. MAIN, OllANGll ·-· S42-3S9S (a-I Sunday) We are loc•ted next to ·+h• May Co. in South Coast Plaza. ]JJ] s. lriltel c... .... 540·3140 llqitr llinr!lr lltttt Real Cantonese Food eat here or take home. STAG CHlllSE WINO Beach ORiole 3·9560 3295 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach 673-1374 ' CATIRlllG fOR AU OCWIOHS DINING & DANCING To the "Cool" MICHAEL HERRING. GROUP Wednesday thru Saturday MO""DAY NIGHT SPECIAL PRIM• Ill • • • • • • $295 'N ABOUT au •jus, $3.85; one-ball ftaVo<-crisp chicken, $2.10 ; m\Js'btoom-burger steak, $2.25 j teriyaki 'steak, $2.85; New York steak, $4.SO; steak and lobster combo, $4.95·; grilled halibut steak, $2.35; Catalina broadbill swordfish, $2.65 ; combination seafood plate, $2.45. . -RELAXING ATMOSPHERE sim another beneficial !~lure about ti!• Jolly Roger is the all·purpose n,ature of the place, Ideal for young daters, families or old·marrieds just out Cor a good dinner in relaxing surroundings. Manager Betty Caldwell is to be commended for running a tight Sf4p -so to speak -since everything bespeaks the fact she's one of the sler· ling female restaurateurs in the business. Of the baU dozen or so 'times we've eaten here recenUy, the highly palatable food was made all the more so by the extreme friendliness and qu.ality of service. I eveiy appearance of _havin~ been Jilted right out ol a medieval casUe -ts available by reservation, for private dinner parties up to 14 people. Wrought-iron gates edtbellis~ the arch~ ~ft. trance. Amid the cache oft precious bottles lmmg the walls, a single long table is surrounded by high- backed cbajrs with intrica~e hand-carvmg. Banquet menus from tohr to -eight courses can be ordered in advance, with entrees from roasted duckling or sauteed chicken to breast of pheasant or beef We llington with pate and truffle sauce . Cbez Cary's regular amner and a la carte menu Is also served itl the wine cellar. Germaine Sauce Thq~ drifting on into the lounge for a nightcap will be more than amply rewarded by the entertain· -ment lhlit's currently on tap. It's the Jim Dillie Duo who ~ive out with some rather extraordinary guitar and vocal arrangements. Their Monday through Saturday gig finds them on from 8:30 p.m . to 1:30 a .m. Continuing out 'N' About's review of the sauces that befuddle some diners regard.in~ precise ~n­ tents. th1s time around \Ve'll look into Germaine sauce. Used on seafood cocktails, the ingredients of Germaine sauce are rnayonnai&e, lemon juice, cat· . sup, heavy cream, cognac, salt and pepper. An im· portant factor -the mayonnii.se should be fairly light in consistency. Witches' Brew Jt may be many months until Halloween but a number of local pubs appear to be getUng ready early this year. They're offering an intrigumg new drink with the no trick or treat liUe of Strega Witches' Brew. • There's probably no grounds for debate about It being a treat but there may be some trick to do\VD· ing the Strega \Vilches' brew in any quantity. And \Vatch out for those who find it a bewitching sug· gestion to try. This new libation is billed as a mystic mixture of fresh lemon, orange, gin and Strega -''the leg. endary liqueur of eternal Jovers." That being the case, the whole thing may in- deed be a stirring experience you'll want to repeat -but without trying to set records of consumptive conquest in any single evening. Dinner in the Cellar AnyQne looking for the unusuaJly fashionable and ditl'erent setting, to host an elegant dinner party for very special guests, has a spot made to order at the Chez Cary in Orange. And to say it's out of the ordinary is making an understatement when you discover it's the restaurant's wine cellar . Nonetheless, this uncustomary location -with --~: ~· In its preparation, the mayonnaise is first sea- soned with the lemon juice, sa.It and pepper. The catsup and cream are then added, with constant stirring. Finally, the cognac is added for taste and seasoning. While it can be made with an electric mixer, a discriminating chef prefers the use of a wire whisk. Out 'n' Abouter solicits comments, criticism ,and praise about Orange Coast restaurants and rnight clubs. If you have something you 'vould like to say, write Out 'n' Abouter, Weekender, Box 1875, Newport Beach, California, 92663 YOU'LL ENJOY OUR MIDDAY FAER SUNDAY 12 I'.i'I. ·ro 4 P.;'-1. 3801 L~T 0JbT H!GllV.'Ar C.0RONA 01;1. ~iAll, CALIFOllNtA PHONE: (714) 675-1374 ·································: : f@ Caribe Room • Think of hish clilfs overlooking the Pacific -ot beautiful French garden• • • • • • • • • : ~ {jj'~-~ ©1'. PRESENTS : ENTERTAINMENT -l SHOWS NIGHTLY -DANCING • Monday thru Saturday GARY GRANDE' Electrifying New Balladeer & Vocalist • • • • • • • AND THE : LOUIS 8ENNm TRIO : • 21112 OCU.N Avt. IC-Hwy.1 --HUNTIN!HON llAC-H-1421 • • • '································· SUNDAY BRUNCH CHAMPAGNE BUFFET SUN DAY , MAY I 8th Served I 0 a.m. to 2 ADULTS $2 .50 p.m. In The Caribe Room CHILDREN $1 .50 RESERVATIONS 536-1421 21 112 Ocean Ave . (Coast Hwy.) -Huntington Beach M and golden beaches. Think of Victor Hugo Inn -an UD!oqett1ble ..ttlng for diJlins ple1sure1. Qi! Drh•• at Cout Hiahw•J Lqua Baat:b-•U.H77 _ ... Ludll-. tNuer, Cockt&ll1 A~ Rertauranl Jei• ill tll. b~ ri•• .,-~ .. ....... ~ "' .. ............. , •. • CIGICE rlllf I ll tf •u, CIUCUL IHIW S'IWS, lODTEI, l&CI rl Ull Ill CllCIB. For Ad .. rtlllnt In The Weekender Phone 642 -4321 ----------------. - Pla•nlnC Easy . . W o'men Do Not Trapfl All. Alone Tbll lime ol year ~ts ot tnvel betln to tab' fmm and for ~ mature women w.ho fiod they Jlll¢ travel alone Jt no lonJer is a dizzying experience to ~Ian a Crip. l • Whether il is a short jaunt fJr a trip around the W9fld. so many accommodations have .. been devbed fi>r the ·solo lemaJe tra~ler that about all she really bas "' do is pack .her bag and close up the house .. · Every detail of the trip can be prearranged, covering the moment sbe lea•es thl! hot1St "' the day she returns. About the oaly problem left for her is w.oabing 1111.the drip,dry bun- dry. Ewoi male companship CQ be. arraacect. On 000 tour' • a handlome Emopean man welcoma the American woman travtler with a cocklail party. 'lbere Is oo guarontee that cocktails will lead &o romance, but "if uie wcman wanb &o 10 out wtth the boot, that too can be ar- ranged," said a tnvtl qent._ Some! tndlcatlOli ol the Im- pact "' -.. -Oii the tourilt Incle ill -in the --lbowtnr Iha! mlitur< wldcnn, c11-. and slqle _,,,,. ... .., .... -iWal>IJ ••• million. \ Opera Bowte Tr19eJ q<nta '*""'llY ad- vise the less -worn.an tralleling .-for the fi?1lt Ume to cboOle a cndle or a gniup tour, Jlr<f•rably not with people !tom ha> own cmmnmjt:y. Tbele two popular'" methocll ' of travel -le the irirllnls that eao spoil a trip for the unseasoned traveler: reservations, cur- rency, baggage. language and tipping problems. Glenn Daniels and June Hutter, casting directors But for the intrepid for the Pageant of the Masters, stand ready towel· journeyer, all son.. of ar-come all prospective cast members at an open house rangements can be made. in Irvine Bowl, Sunday, May 18 from noon to 4 p.m . Maureen T. Hillpot, a ·travel More men are needed for the "Last Supper," "Al- expert with American Ex· bert Memorial" and the two Iwo Ji.ma specials. press, said: "The choice ----------------'------ depends on the woman and ber SINGER EDDY ARNOLD Performing at Melodyland Eddy Arnold Dresses Up C&W Music background, but there'! DO place in the world that she cannot p. 1 always like to think of. those marvelous British women of a century ago who went out" to Africa and Arabia when conditions were awful. Life is So much easier for women now." One travel consultant sug. gesls that women tra"Vi!lliag alone prepare themselves by requesting literature fro m their travel agents on the places they plan lo visit. They also should brush-up on the language and particular in- terests which can be pursued abroad such as art, architec· ture, music or theater. It also is possible to join group tours of special interests. These Eddy Arnold, one of the top range from art and opera three recording artists of all tours to those 0£ famous Euro- Lime, has sold more than pean gardens. 50,000,000 ·records during .a Here ' are some ..fdditionat career that stretches over a tips for traw1 : ~ quarter of a century. 1• Ignore advice of well And he's pro!Jably doner k' meaning friends. The minute more toward "dressirig up" you tell people you are going country music and. making it to Europe they will 5;1y, "Go acceptable P:to .~ers.al au., here, Go there: stay at this or die.pees than IJ)Y i t 'b e-(• that hotel;" until you are performer. · • •, driven frantic. "Yes''1hem all The "Anytime," "Bouquet cl. over the place and then let a Roses" and "Cattle Can" well trained traveJ agent guide singer is making a rare in· you lo the. places you wish to person appearance May 16-17· see. 18 in Anaheim's Melodylaod J)on't share a room with Theater. a stranger. Her habits, even Wan'ing as varied a show as such minor ones as going to possible, Arnold will present bed early or teepi.ng the wiD- not on1y his own specialized dows wide open at night, may brand of singing but the more irritate yOIJ and spoil the trip. "pop" stylings of Hugo You can't ~e your room - Montenegro, his orchestra and mate, so always book a single chorus, and the comedy of room on a group trip. Billy De Wol"Vi!, as well. After· .)'out fifsl trip to The three stars will be seen Europe to take in the large in five performances onJy th is citle!I, take a ,trfp lo' t h $ off- weekend: 8::1> Friday night, 7 beat p I aces. Here an and 10 p.m. Saturday and American woman is treated asain at 5 and 3:30 Sunday like a celebrity. night. If yoU want to meet men , Tickets are available at the pick the season, ~ tpo'..s 1or Melodyland boxofflce, and at the sport :..... eCluc'ation -arid all agencies. nature-oriented toUrs the men Fess Trades Coonskin For Plane prefer. Or try an around-the. world cruise which seems to be preferred by affluen t widowers. Before the trip, visit your physician not only for the necessary vaccinaUons re- quired, but aho for advice about diet or medication if necessary, What They Put On Ice Is Better Than Ever Proclaimed as the best ever, Jee Capades will have its gala Long Beach premiere Monday night, P.1ay 19 at the Long Beach Arena. There will be a total or 10 performances, clos· ing Sunday, May ZS. Show. time from Monday through Thursday will be at 3 p.m. On Friday , the action starts at 3:30. The movement will be hectic on Saturday with two matinees at 1 and 5 p.m .. plus a· night per£ormance at 9 p.m. The grand finale is set £or Sunday at two matinees, al l and 5 p.m. This year'·s Ice Capades in· troduces several innovations. Multi-Vision, a three-screen action film in color, serves to Wolper Set For Film SOUTH SW STEREO· SENSATION! I ' TROPICAi. ASH Largest Selection of Tropical Fish & Supplies lo the area. Tiie co1wru1 uand of .,. Or•11t1• County Music RADiO KOCM 103.1 FM From Fashion Island, Newport Beach ' . - L ~ ...... . --- • Frtdq, llo)' 16, 1'69 ,IWLY.PILOT H .New Opera Nears . Prof Raps Foreign Language Styl,e · &.._.__. ==. ·•am ""',...,_ ..... Of .... TIMll Cl9rli: Mllll V'Mllll a.Jiii -1 WllN THI- -·· . •1111 __ ..... ____ _ -·==··---· -' .__ "HILL IN THI, PACllllC"" ·--"'LADT .. CIMmn9 E'IElllRS 118:30P.ll• IATllfD "f.:.~.111:30PJI. llOUDAY IATllEES 111:30 P JI. ' ........ ·--Fri~On1J-l.a11Showsllll:30P.M. lll't.---....... _ .... ___ _ PART I ;::::,::::::,:..STARTS MAY 14111 THE lNTIRl PRODUCTION OF '"WAR ANO PfACf" WILL ll SHOWN IN "TWO PAlfS. IA.CH PAlll:T WILL If SHOWN FO~ ONE Wilk.I PART II ;::-._::::.: .. STARTS MAY 2hl SClllDUUS OI' -llCll •• ,. ...... ., ......... Mn •• ...1-11• ...... n ll ' -----··-·-.,.,... ' ···-·-·-·-· -,,. & ·--.... .., 17 1-..:•1trlll ..... ....... ..., .. . -12:1M:-~ ~. Ml'J '' --·-.:_·-·---...... --·-.. ~-...... T-,, Moy • ··-····-··-········-····-················· 1<11 -IA.Ml ICHIDUU POI W Wlla . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I PILOT l'nE INVITES EVERYONE TO SEE THE ANGELS PLAY IAtTI~ORI SUNDAY, JUNE 1, AT HALF l'RICE . . Set tw. ,...,.,M •••f ti1kett fo~ t+it S1Mlrt 1ft.l'9H11, J1111 I, A1191lt "' Qn1IM -911119 1f A111hlllfl Sli ,iiliii ...... .,. tffe 11orm1f f""i11 1( IM tlcht. fluy on1:"th1 DAILY PILOT ti,,.t yeu 1111,) 2-·suo 2-$250 ?ICUll -TfCllTl POI $3.50 $2.50 Yoy 1111 '''''"' 111 111tir1 ••1fi111 1r l• .. t tw1 111t1. M ,.t.,..,. ,.tty ..... , MW llMI 111111 fl fh1 lr41f .. ,.Ille Mt .... wffli ~ or mo111y -,,,,, (,.. 1t1h, ,1,1111 1rt4 l111rry. 0.~H ..... ti1ht or#.,.. .r' MIY 20. . r-----------., I Clp ....................... ..., ...... : ............ ci-c..-..... I .,to,,.....,..._. ... w .... ~. c--c..""' I • .I I . I I I I I I I I t.U.U. """' • • 1 ' ,.,_ ~,,, .. ,, ••••.. _ ..... .,. .......................... r., ....... ,_ • • . . ,.. ..................................... -................ ~········· ,,.., ........................ -................... -.. ........ --. ._ -·-... ·~···_ .. _.....,, __ ,, ___ , .......... , __ _ • • 1.-s.41. .. -. ...• , ...................... .... w, .. -.,,. 1 """" .... --................ ,.,. --t::E I wtll ,..._ail ......... 9'tt""' h DAILY ,, T. I ,... _,.... tdrctit ................ lit ............... 1 ..... 1 , ..... ~ .. .., •• ., ..... , '""'"....., ~---...... ) .......... ..... --~ I I ! I : I ------- -_I • ' • I. . ' . I ·: • • J ! l l • I 11 _; I . I Jiii MOllClll PIC1Vll -AllD IA,_. Frldoy, MIY 16, 1969 Your Movie I --· ,. ---· ........ 1 • Guide I PROIUlll 1\t M.._ PSdw. C... •fld l•H111 M..Z•lttir1ft11 •ppliM ft.t f.!L.wi., rlflflvt to fllm1 41.tn .. ..W hi ti. U.S.A. Pie• hr•i H-' 16., M •r R ,.v~llfr 'War .and Peace' Shown in Two Part,s ., -t.:r ~. cu. ·s •• 1~ ~ ..... ""' x ... "''' '"''" • SMLi:-1\e ,,.,. .,,!Jo •• pl~ "''"·"' ,11R.r ·""'•"'· W 11· 119\1: Pict..,.., r.1•1114 ~ ~· ..... ·re·-HKrtb. .4~ ;, ,,...,1,u,ly I ~ .~4/W SMAI. j ~t1t .. 1t1d fir GINIW t ,•IMlll111~··· 11-s.""tM f•r MATUll titdi .. ut l Plrt11ftl <dit-1 ,er.ti .. tdwl&HI. (!J-llSTllCTID -P1r.so111 •114..-16 111f •dmifttd, unl111 tecemptnit.. by ptrt11f or ad11lt gu1rd0 1111. ~-·· ... .......... Tlli1 .,. ,,. tfricflH Mt'( Ii.• hitMr i11 c1rt1h1 ,,...,, Chock the1tr1 or 1dnrtiai119. -* HEY KIDS * llt ..... s.r. ]"3110 •KIN4l ION•.._ GODZILLA" ,.. c---c....11• ftW•Nlii ... M1m. ... lthWle .. ...,..._., /Eclitor'1 Nol<: Th h mooie guide U pr81)Grtd br ih1 tu,.. commttl.e of Harbor Council PTA. M11. John. Cta.rk ii prestdtnt and Mr1. Hart SwetM11 is ~mitt.ti;e chairmmz. Ji ' _j.s 1i;tleftdidlcu a reflf'enee '" '&fterminino Mt.able /UfM : for c;ertam a o e gro~ps and will appear tDe(kly. Y:ouf' t7ietDs ,are solicited. Mail ~ to Mo- vie Guide, care of the DAILY PILOT.) • • • ADULTS Cudy ( R ) : Uninhibil..r adaplatioo ol oex-cranuned novel 8bout a baby•faced teenager who yields to a long succession of lovers. Ewa Aulin stars. Fraulein Ooklor (M): Suzy Kendall play!' Anna Marla Lesser, the beautiful and deadly woman who w a s Germany's top es pi on a e,e agent during World War I. Lady la Cement fR): • Privite eye Tony Rome (Frank Sinatra) finds a blonde encased · in cement. H i s girlfriend also iJ murdered in JUNIOR MATINEE SAT. 2 P.M. Sciellce flctfott ''FIRST MEN ON THE MOON" ... eom... ALL SEATS 50c Jiiiies flobertson...lJ·Genevleve Page ~ri~ AndA11bl&1caw•••IRGil1rier° m IMOW STARTS 6.41 COffT, IUN. PIOM I P.M. . ' ACADEMY WINNER IEST ACTOR CUFF ROIERTSON SEiiiillCltJm in r:olllh<nliool'lilh ROllER!SllN A.ISOOAT!Sp/1111/fs CLIFF ROBERTSON-1 CtfA~~· .... -CLAIRE BLOOM. Ulla tale of violence and the acquittal of a raptat.. crime,wlthRaquelWelch. murdered on Jeaal Ptodr... aod Ille Pill: • tecbnJcaliUet, llnda hlmlell Impudent, frivolous :British cbiet IUSptcl. in a doable farce aboul the pi~alb and murder. G<orge Peppard and advamagts of the ptll. It preks Richard Kiley, into the Pflvate lives of five . s.ain W.key M): Widow couples, and turns' lnto a com· wants to 'recover gold tiar1 edy of errors which upsets from a steamboat wreca: "•nd coovenUopal moral attitudes. put 'tbemi bact into a Denver David Niven, and Deborah rninl before uyboey mJua Kerr. _ ~., and..Jlilcovets her late RE EENS hUBband'.s only-!all from MATU T grace. Stars Burt 11-.nolda, AND ADULTS ·-• Bllllltt fM): Slf"" McQueen Angie Dickinson and Clint 11 BulllU, a San Francl.sco Walker. police .detective assigned to 'Ille SlalkhoJ M-(G): On protect a Chicago mobster hiJ: last nU8sion, an 8f1DY needed by a polit:iclan as scout (Gregory Peck}, rescues prime Wttnoss 'in a Senate a white Woman capUve (Ev1 crime hearq. Robert Vall8)m Marie Saint) and her half. b'l"'d """ from • ' !>and . ol also &tan. Apaclles, and the vengeance ol Dr. nlvqo: S tor y of her brutal chieftain husband. young Russian -and poet 'Ille Wrecklag Cmr IMI: • caught in his country'• revolu· Dean Martin is super-tleuth Uonary upheaval with which sent .lo Denmark . to find 1 he could not" identify becauge billion dollar shipment of hi· of an intense belief in the righll and privileges of the in-jacked gold in this typical d. ·d 1 Om sh ·I Malt Helm comedy-<pOO!. 1" ua · ar a" • TEENS ·~ADULTS" CINEDOME THEATER SWINGS" TWINS INTO PLACE Geraldine Chaplin, J u I i e .rw"u Christie. Cllarly: CIU! Roberbon Is A Fine Pair !Ml: A cops Charly, a mentally retarded and robber comedy in which YOWlg man who, with the help New York, Rome and the of a nigbt school teacher- Austrian Alps are turned Into psychologist. has upertmental a romantic playground. Rock brain surgery. He becomes a Hudson 111d Claudia Cardinale. thoughtful brillianl adull wllh For Ltte of Ivy : Romantic new and serioua problems, comedy In which t w 0 Goae With &k Wlad: - teenagers set up a date for Margaret Mitchell's brilliant their .hou.sek. eeper in order to novel of the old south during Ji; Mr t. Je the Civil War era returns to eep rom aving the the screen. Clark Gable, Vi-household. Sidney PolUer and Abbey Lincoln. vian Leigh, Leslie Howard, Olivia deHavilland. Han•lhll Bnob (M): An War and Pe9ce: Superb, Twin Domes to Slww Different Film Each Those twin dcmes are rising fast al state College Blvd. and Chapman Ave. in Orange and . will soon house the Cinedome 20 and IL Thealers each ol which will abow enUrely dU· fereot moUon pictures of the road-!l)ow variety. schedufed in Cinedome ,_., on June 17, sponsored by the Providence Speech and Hear- ing Clinic of Orange County, and the .. Che" premiere in Cinedome 21 on Juoe 18, spon!JOl'ed by the Friends ol Friendly Circle of Orange. AC....0...,_.Nlliorwl ..... P9i ... ._ lie !GREGORY. EVA MAAE~·-"-- PECK SAINT "nlE SWJaNG MOON' @•....-·-~ E!Jillsh prisoner ol war, alter detailed, English dubbed six wortin.g: in the Munich Zoo, and one-hall hour Russian be&ins ~~ mBe walk dramaUzaUon o f Tolstoy'• out of UUJD!l01, with four I bout eza Ru · ·compan1om ind a pr 1 z e nove a rist ma at elephant Thil adventure story the time of N a p o I e o n • affirms tbe,.fact that human (Presented in two parta.) Lud- values can surmount the mila Savelyeva, Sergei Bon- A project of Raymond Syufy of San Francisco, the theaten are scheduled to opeo in June with a premiere Of "Oliver" 'A pi~ in the · double•I':;:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:==¥== dome conatructlon forli theaters, Raymond Syu I y opened lhe fir!! ~ lhiB type on the outskirts. ol San Jose in 1~. The venhll'e of .showing rOad-sliow motion pictures, with · reserved seal! i n suburban area!, bu proved to be very auccessful for hlm . The theaten have a ccmmon lobby, but .separate box of - darcbuk. brutalities of war. Oliver Reed Mayerllag (M): Lavish new and Mfdlael' Pollard. version of the late 19th ·cen- Interhide: Te m P f: rmentat tury Viennese r om a n t i c brilliant conductOr devoted to tragedy about a diSSipated his work and his family, Hapsburg Prince who finds becomes Involved with a fulfillment in a tragically young Journalist. 0 s k a r doomed love affair. Omar Werner a,nd Barbara Ferris. Sh " J JJoa i9Wbder: Clash o! two aru, ames Mason, Ava Gardner and Catherine stroo&-willed monarch!, King Deneuve. Henry n of England ind his * * ,. * qu~ Eleanor of AdNJtaine, TM letter immediately mak1iJ a brllliant, e~Josive after the tiUe indicates the dranlt out of fragmenf& of rating given the picturf:' bt1 l2lh.., century history. Peter the Motion Pict.' Ure Code. O"l'Oi>le and Kalllarine' Hep-burd. 4 The Motion Pictuf'e Code Nodllilun (M): An enaross-Aod ilating l'Togram ""'¥ lng1 wipeme.thrlller in which bf' found on the flfotion a ponce· captain, who resenu picture page:. 'B~n-H..µ.' Wins Honor The Southern Callfornia Mo-fices, and will seat 900 in each tlon Picture Council thb week structure. honored MGM with a Ted Perkins, who has been certificate of award for er-associated with tbe Syufy cellence for the production of Enterprises in Sacramento for "Ben-Hur" currenUy playing the put aeveraJ. years ha! in an exclusive reserved seat been named managing dirtc- engagement . at tbe F o r tor of the Twin Cinedomes in Wilshire Theatre in Beverly'•-;:Or=ang;;;;;;e;;:. ======;:;II Hills. ,, Anady hailed IS tbe most honored film ol all lime; "Ben- Hur" won eleven Academy AWards, including Best Pic- turt. For Advertising ROWE •• I Directed by William Wyler, the ' film st.an Ch:arlton Hestoo, J:ack Hawkins, Haya (Con&lallld' From Page 19) year-old story at 3111 Ocean Harareet, Stephen Boyd, Hugh in the Weekender Phone M2--432 I HIS MOST pressing project, Ave., Laguna Beach. For this Griffith and Martha Scott with after .taiu;na's "Dylan," is a reason, if nothing else, Doug Cathy O'Donnell and Sam Jal· 8Cl'eeD play based on the short will be hoping to slam this' _r'.'.:'-:._ _______ ~==========-'11 story, '"!be Wind is Music" by trunk lid shut with a bang. • Otello di Bolchona. Rowe and * collaborator Stephan Jahn ac-BACKSTAGE -The first of quired the rights to the pro-• the county's c o m m u n i t y perty and hope to start theaters to pa.u out honors shooting nut summer. this year is the Lido -Isle Crossword Puzzle Before coming back to Players, who distribute their Laguna to direct hiJ first show ''Wac ad em y .Awards" ACROSS 44 Mnlml in 15 mqnths for t be tonight. , .it's all in fun, 1 ,~110,n Fleld or playhOUJe, Doug finished a though, since it'd be hard to •Hindu ~::!hy role in the movie "Flare Up" pick the best show from a two-{lttceplot 4& Fruit with Raquel Welch, no less. play season. • • 10 Extcuted concoctfOft It's due for release in August. Diane Dumas of Huntington b1stb1ll 47 Astonish Bul for the moment, he's Beach has snared the title role 14 ::~UYtr .. , r:::~ ''borne'' again and helping to in Brecht's "Mother Courage Vletn111 52 "The Stas write the final chapter in a 45-and her Children" at Cal State capltal & Strlpts Long Beach ••• the ~ow goes 15 Preposltlott Forntf" or ,, . ~' ' ,. . .. . LtML111 I" ••. ~ HILD OYll St•v• McQ11.•1t1 111 ''BULLfn11 pl11• NIW SICOND PU.TUii "THE WRECKING CREW" with o •• fl ~rllit CM!tl .... ~ 1:10 ,.-. I' LI • • "o•, c_, .. on stage May 21-24 at the col· "''"' '' Jege's Little 1beater. . . ll {'::~~t VII' SS:,:~"' Another HunUngton Beach 11 P1ss111e: s• Gold In thespian, Bill Richardson who, Anal. Ft1nco'1 · at 21, has some SO 3hows to his lt For an lddl· land credi• has aigned wlth the t1on1I 111111 57 London wta ., 20 Stttft map SS Kind of Coeur d' Alene, Idaho, Sum-abbrevlaUon security mer Repertory Music a I 21 lltdlocrt dtpo1ft Theater. • .he'll do four 2) Diner •o Sm1!1 musicals-11The King and I," 25 Fabtlc land body "110 In the Shade;• "Show ~~~~~f~ '2 ::t:~~~ Boat" and '"l'be Uminkable 27 Posstss 63 lllsfot"tunes Molly Brown" -from June 28 28 Consumed •4 "Tht - Yttterday'a P1tnlt Sofwd: 5 Hairy 6 Se1111bl1nct 7--d.it~ l words a Lob1ter .... t Stlll on tht stalk 10 "ooftr 11 ltll--drtllntd co1trst 511W•9 35 .. _ -• bird?": Z words 1• TWllYt I 39 British - 40 Half: COlllb. form 42 Name tom~I' 4l l'lannln11 of ' . MAJOR STUDIO PREVIEW FRIDAY-9:00 P.M. Win:: M••HTS: 00015 Ol"IN 6:41 t SHOft SUl.llCT 7:10 GONI WITH WIND 1:00 P.M. CONTINU.OUS SAT. & SUN. flOM 1 P.M. ····Nder l'er&fe through Aug. 31. • • 29 Young busl· Mutiny" 11~""""""'"""""'""'""""""!:..~~~~~;.;;;-.~='il neuman 65 Lot 33 s1ndr1per's 66 Drunkard: 12 Cite decontor 13 -tytd; N1lvtly credulous a baHlt 45 On land 46 Cnlllntr •• lllflllMrll of ..,.,,_ .,l'fY :o.G- PORT THEATRE-Soturdoy Nlfht ot 10:30 MAJOR STUDIO PREVIEW FEATURE BIG COMEDY STARRING ALAN ARKIN Come at 6:45 S.. All ThrH; No Adv•nce Price NOW SHOWING '-'"--.. ''The Secret W1r of Horry Frltt" ... ''HannllNI Brook•'' C11111 w11o·~ .. ._.WOU1mr-• s-c1-va.t1.u1111ypera11 ~ ........ £.I "--··-····- ..,.. -rtlHIUa .lM' 'R 1MMMllil.8RtDOICS~ A -~ Film " tl1e-rnesa "7 ' ' ; • ' • \ ' t ' t-.f\'•f"<-l'l :.'l[1 1•,'~[\~>;\ I', C,''ilt• \'1[)A rt111 vt SIM' 36 Engli5h •7 Sm1I bl1Ck· resort lsh fruit 37 Comp1ss polnl . DOIN 31 l'llCt hi I studied l Dululh or 11Ut1.1de l'ort Atth• '' lnU111ldattd c1roo 40 Food for J: Cu{ Into hro 1 computer equal pltets 41 Cuckoo l Book 42 Defraud secUon 4) Course of 4 Cnlltge In 11tanln11 Ctdll" R•Ws n--r...-ri-rr..,..... 49 Ltaf of 1 manusalpt 22 Slltt: Abbr. !50 Byzantlnt 24 lnslstnpfll· t11Press tic11ty 51 Shtlltring 26 -•nSUtt strucbJres 27 Asylu11 '2 At or on: 29 Enrrw 2 wotd1 Jo Soup lngre. J) loutlt clltril ulctr1t1a, 31 Preposition 54 Proftovn .. 32 Tille period SS Important )J lustrot.11 foOd •ln«al S9 £wry._.., J4 Te no ••tint 61-SOiia CiARKGABLE VIVIEN UlGH I LF.SLIE HOWARD OLIVIAdeBAVILLAND . 1' w,.,.., olTtll ' ~ ANDY HAS ANSWERS ! •• fh1r1'1 011ly 011• pl•c ,011 c;111 find 111ot1 .,...,...,. fh•11 Y•.;, ; c;hlldr•it h•"• ~111Jtton..,_ Chtcl th• At\ AIMly f11 tvr1 '"'" s .... c@rio1tty.fill1d yo11n91tt11. • I 11rcl1, 111 th• DA ILY PU.OT. You'll 11\e It -•11cl 11 wlll Y•"' • ...J....j~~· '---~----'-~~~~_._ ----....... ~----------- -. .. " • - • -• • 11:11. lllfir. (C) "Tlle lady TM.as I · ,~?'flJrlr (rom1nce) 'SB-Lin• Tarner • F i Dl1ndllf. -• • !D@ mTINlllflt SMw (C) J:m!B TH Ntw StdltJI (C) ( iiiltiii: (C) "lltttnllld" (Cira-M•: "TM K1fn '(tan~ (dr1· n'll) ·~•J.P.h Miilar. m1) '50--Dein S!Ocbt!~ Ouryl · · 1 ~rn mJMJ l fdltJ (C) Hicllm1n, Scotty s.uett. DaNli O'Cefl1or (C) I !JI Ctltr hrl £1\11 Ph1 • • U9 B MMt: "nit hit tf llHhpnt" I ii P'ldllr1 (C) (1r1TN) '51-Mlchftl Miils. Jolln ...... 11IMtl1 (C) Hoyt. S:JO B MIN: CC> "flM ..... 111111"' u-.-....... n..n: "Ti. l llQ (W9ltlm) '56-Cl1yton Moort, J1y W'l\i Sllnrt!Mls. •· 1B eow nutn <Cl ''Hom1 lft l:IO ID""' (C) llldi1n1." 15Utry Mldlt (C) · 8' TIMI the Wll'll (Cj · f,.. a. lllllff Olt (C) El 0--tit Mfllflrt (Cl 1:15 • ...-. '"TM Fidltil1 WilKlb" 4:IOlllW Pri1 5 (C) (ld\.'tllllll't) '57-itllfi Brtsstlll, ..... Tr* ('C) Kliy C1!111d. lie MtlO. 1:11m11s-t• '.,. .Sllflt~(C) ..... .._ --.,_ ..... .. • (C) •lftia Mt1 aM1 Ott MDMttr" 1flf t:lfl1'1 01Metl9lll (C) .,... llaci DIUtu." · ... U-. . ' -.. . --jC> MAY 17 ··r ....... """ .... IQ ..... -(C) , ~ a J' -t-...... CQ £11'1 tlld Joi Joll!ltl w. TIM tfatlhl• 111d Tom1111 Tvttlt. -~Iii Ill!"" .... w ..... •. -Ill 1-lttll• (II) '*llll@D--,_,,_ · "'" ...... , -. HI I= ..., tCI (I) llr: ..... (C) ..... 1w (C) ' • 721 • ..;. Ut NI ia., (C) WI ~ 11111.,.. (C) Diel! Mtr· NlfJ--(C) Ii:: ... -(C) tlll @ &l--(C) ... , ... -.. (C) ~ .. CieMrltion." The bttlll• fbl N• .... (t) 11in1 ol lilt la Ult •ftlall Mqdo111 ......... . It Mowll throulfl ...... ...U. f ..... e JOB PRINTING • PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS Q111llty h lfltlflt 1 111 O.pe1Hf11'l1 St f"t!ce f., 111"9 ff11111 • 0•1rl1r 1f 1 C.J1f11ry. Ut1 Wiit IALIOA &ft. ( NllWJlttn llACH ,. PERKINS ' TUMBLEWEEDS WAAAft! GORDO MISS PEACH -------------- Frld<Y, May 16, 1969 DAIL v Pilaf .2$ -. ly CliarlH M. Schulz ..-~~~~~~~ QUEENIE lly Phll lnterl-'l • NH MURE 11118'(, TUMBl.fWEEOS, HAS LEFT TOWN! I COUlPJUST -' !>IE I . • YOU DICN'T LEND ME Fi\/E BOCKS LAST WEEK? DON'T 60 QUOTING SIW'.ESPWE TO ME! i,._ ' ly John Mhs _,.,. ~ 1--f~- 11 \.. ~ iy Tom K. Ryap WHY YOU SWEET TlllNCf! I JUST AOOMA SYMPATHETIC MAN! _ ..... By Al Smith By .,Gas .. Arrl~la · 1 -ly Mel ---·------TELEVQl!N VIEWS Major Shows Meet Headon ByRICK~W HOLLYWOOD (UPI) ~ere will be some de-- cis ive head-t<>-head competition among major shows on the television schedule for the season starting this fall. . On Mondays, for instance, NBC-TV 's "Leugh- ln" once again will go up against CBS-TV's .cGun ... smoke" and Lucille Ball. And the qU"!'tiOn is wheth- er "Laugh-In'' will be able to maintain its enor· mous popularity, or eventually will crack against the Gibraltar-like steadiness of the CBS-TV entries in the ratings. POR WHILE "Laugh-In" is undoubtedly tops In ratings, it would also be noted. that "G~smoke" and Miss Ball still are very high up themselves, and have ouUived tough competition before. "Laugh- ln" by the way, will be challe.nged also by .a new ABC-TV entry, "The Music Scene." a combination of hit records and satirical comedy. Also on Mondays, there will be a major ratin.gs collision when ABC.TV's new series, "The Surviv· ors " which stars Lana Turner and George Hamil- ton'. rurui: up against CBS-TV's 41M~yberzr R.F.D." and Doris Day show and NBC-TV s movies. On Tueod~ys , the new NBC-TV Debbie Rey- nolds comedy will compete with the CBS-TV Wesern "Lancer" and ABC-TV's ''The Mod SQuad." The same night, there will be a real dogfight when AB~-. TV's new 90-minute movie originals compete head· on with CBS-TV's Red Skelton and NBC-TV's "Juli~"-~~d .Tuesday nigbl rpotion _pig~r~. ON THURSDAY,.anoUler bit ~! fierce compe(l· 'iloa is caused by CBS-W!srnew Jim Nit,bon' variety itlour. For en one side, Nabo1S··wfil be'-oppeeed by ABC-TV 's "Tha t Girt'.' and "Bewitched," and on th e other by NBC-TV's "Daniel Boon e" and '4Jrcm- side." The "Daniel Boone" show will also be op- posed. earlier in t~~ evening, by C~~V's "Fam· ily Affair'' -meaning that, one of these two steady ratings-getters may just get hurt. ' Later Thursday nights, there is a ,re~rettable scheduling collision when tbree·prograJJ\$ with adult appeal-NBC's Dean Martll:I hou.r, ABC'.s "It Takes a Thief" and CBS' movies-go "Up aginst each other. ON FRIDAY .. there will be another late-night 1 showdown When CBS.TV's movies are challenged by two ne.w one-hour series, ABC-TV's ~ennon si~· ters vari_ety ·program~ and ·NBQ-TV'~ Brackens World," about behind-the-scenes going s-on at a · motion picture studio. The Saturday night showdown is simple and di- rect: NBC-TV's Andy Williams, with a weekly aeries ol his . own again. will try to knock off CBS· TV's longtim e winner, Jackie Gleason. They are on aL precisely the sa me time, opening the networks' evening schedule. On Sunday nights, two new series will cause a bit of a, fuss. NBC-TV's Bill Cosby sho\v \vill take on tw o vet· er.an winners. CBS-TV's Ed Sullivan and ABC-TV's "The FBI." And CBS-TV's gledg!ing Leslie Uggams variety hour will try to hold its o"'n against NSC. TV'11 "Bonanza" and ABC-TV's movies. At this point, industry opinion is that Cosby is virtually a cerUin bet to have a hit show . ' I l' ,, '1 ~ . Dennis the Menace .,, ~·,I O j ' .. - I -- - • • . ~ .. "'.(. ·1·':, ..... • . . r , . .. . .,, ... ,_ ' ·-- ·l I ' ,\ ' 'I ,. -' ;i . ' I • • • '" I• • . -. . . ' . . ,I .,·.~.' • 1,..!. ~lellrGle • • I ' • ~aet ' . ' • a • .. • MEMORIAL DAY , • • • •. MAY 30th .. Fl:AG DAY • • • JUNE 14th . INDEPENDENCE DAY ••• JULY 4th LABOR DAY ••••• SEPTEMBER 1st I "•• .. -· " Delp Yourself Help The Boys~ Cl ohs Fly a new flag at your home or office during this patriotic season. Here's an offer -that lets you save money Cfnd help your Boys' Club, too. Participating in th is public service offer are the Boys' Club of the Harbor Area, Boys' CI u b of Huntington Beach and Laguna Beach Boys' Club. Here's how you can help t_hem and help yourself. Just order this beautiful deluxe flag kit, at a fraction of its retail value, and get as o bonus a California state flog -all delive r- ed ta your door by Boys' Club representatives or mailed directly to your home in time for holiday use. .. - Order Now At Any of Four Boys' Club Headquarters HAKIOK AHA ICINTK.f.L HANCH l IMC-S- c.tot M-c.llf. __ ,117 H ... KIOK AHA curna IAY> 2131 T-A•-• c-·M-Ceal. l'tlooe·Ml .. 112 HUNTINCHON RACH IOTS' CLUI _ ,,,, ....... H••lott• _,,, C.llf. ..... 536-9411 LAGUNA HACH IOYS' CLU.1 175 N .... C:-r Hl<Jhwoy Latowa -· Celif. . """"•4'4-2535 u .. m,d °"'" COupcHl ·below, •nd sencMt ·directfy to club heodquerl•rs nearest you. Your flog kit and bonus slate flag wiR bo der.vored or moiled directly lo your home or office. Or you can pick them up in person at the Boys' Club headquarters in r.our 1ara1. Pick Up _Your Own RGg Kit and Get This '1-H Gift 0 :'. _ .. _,.,, .... -----.... --. ...... ..., A I .. , .-. .----------------,. Ju•t clip out thi1tm1il erder cMpol'I and fill it out. S.ntl, eloftt.w3h check er "'°"•Y ·•ref.tr, to th• Boys' Club heedqu1rtors ne1ro1t ~· I I I I I M1·k• checks ·pty1illo·to ''loys' Club." · l· • J ' --................ _ ,.., ....... ""' ""' -$191•,. kl!. ·1 ••a11wi:ll I_. rectlwe ••••Illar rt.. •C..,....IMte .. --.... 1 · I , I N1mt ........ -........... ·--·--········· .. ·····-··-············· .. ··· .. ·····~··-···· .. ····-······- I Strtef Addrt1s.,.-·-·--·-·---·--.. ·-·····--···-"··-···-···-·-····-·- I City ... ____ ._ ...... ___ • ______ ,__,.Zlp ... -'---·---· .. ·- I . I I I I I Phono .Enclotod Is '····---···--··-····-····-·- II This s,eci1I holid1y 9fftr is 1 public ser.,i~• of the DAILY PILOT i nd the loy•'' CNl:.1 el tht Herb-or Ar .. , H11t1tln9ton lt1'h i nd L.f\ln• feoch. I L.-~-~-~---------..J • lTH1S IS ACTUAL DICAL S1Zll Free Decal • Whilt th•y last, tho Boys' Clubs offer you this spocl1l1 fret 9ift •• • t doctl of the Amtric1n Fl19 like +hot• you ••e •vorywho,.. on cir windshields, homo 1nd office window-.. et •Y•n on the f1mily bo\t, Visit the Boys'. Club ne1rest you (pllone for hovn of op•r1fjon1'. l uy I fl19 kit; get the .d1c1I fret, Supply of dec1l1 11 limit•~. Hurry . . - ' . __ , ·' • -------·---·------------........~---·--------~------~----·~~ , 11 • • . Wl~SOH ·FORD' 1 sit1:.1:S .~· ... ••I ) ..... . ,18255 BEACH BOULEVARD . (Hiway 39) . HUNTINGTON.BEACH 7 • • ' • ' . , .i i/:.;.··· .OP•NtA~.!Ol 'OP.M.-7~AYS · .: · ... ,.:_ ·.: ... ORANGE CO' s. FASTEST GROWING·. FORD DEA:tl·R :-: . . FIRST OF TH£ 70'1 AT 1• PRICD .. · · ll'S A UTTU·GAS -M-lck. prkM ....... tho ... ,..,., 11¥M ,.. .: ..... tot ...,. pncticol or, MMy -It wu't put 111 txtn '"" lntt M...,-kk .,.._. It's 111 ..... A boslt - trick II .,. thllt 1 Nsk c.-. ,. ,IRANI). NEW 1969 CORTINA $1888 199 ..... * ........... DeW9 .,. •• -. COBRA $27 '88» 11AND NEW 1969 RANCH ERO I $99Down $2298·· $71.30 3.6 Mo. • l"IUI T• a. LIDrllil • ....,._i MM ~ .. " · -~ . l 969 THUNDERBIRD ' . . '· . ., . : . s' PORTATJON SPf' CIA'L··s: . oooiT .CREDIT -OWN PAYMENT A PROBtEMi TRAN . UM -.11.IW-. plMI. Ow'""''"' c.-.ltn will htlp po ""~' P'1' . , wt .. thlt = Mlt' weU 1ff.n the w er truck ef y::r dtoke. 1'-&l-FA-LC_o_1 2_.a_R. _ _,.._$_1_8_8~,.-~:u-. MUSTANG & COUGAR ROUNDUP 'RocHo, h"'"· HJC 984. 1-. -!5.!~!!~ .. ter, buck•I seols. , ~ ~ 8 8 ~~;~: '82 RENA•LT .4-Dr. s1 a·.8· ·Fvi•",:,,, •NMK ~.2u.sTANG 2$449MDo•s·' Stick shift tra·ns. Vtry good. YGT 001 . "' $49 Mo. ''82 FALCOll 2·Deor 1 Deluxe Sedan. Radio, helter. IRZ 963. ''84 BWllE &00 FutUck v.a, auto. trans., p. st11er, radio, heater . I PCB 124. ''84 CUSTOI &00 1v.a, 1vto. tr1n1., radio, he1t1r. OOT 313. "' 24 Mos. $35 Dn. $29 D 200 togine. Radio, heater, bucket seats. $ S3~c!'O· $ 5 8 8 $2'J.~~ :; 6 ;USTAll8 . :2M=: $62 'Mo. Radio, helttr. Accent group. WIE 960. 36•Mos. '" COUSAR $72 Dn. " 1 '$72 Mo. V-8, evto. trans., p. steer., AM.fM radio, l'Oll ___ s_u_P_E_R_S....,.P_E_C_l_A_L_s_..,.. __ . :;, !~~~::.~;r::.~;.ci, $ " ·1-.... il1:i. 1 ;~;F~~~u~-~~ ~Hr, V·B, $788 ~i "'w'•"·•"•'il .... rw,..H•;-;·;..UC_K_D_E_P_T..i..-S.-PECIALS ·Mos. '87 FORD IWI. &00 V-8, auto. trans., new car wa rr. aY1il., rad io, heater, TMG 005. '8& T-BIRD I Factory 1ir cond. Full power., RFY 728. $1188 .~~ '&I FORD FIDO $38-·8· . Fin. V-8, 3 speed, radio, healer. 9555813. ,Avpil. $12 8.8 f:: ... ~. '84 CHEY. % TOI Pllll1p lt: ~~: 24 rMos. 8' bed st111 bumper, 4 speec!, htoter, . $12·8 8 ""' --------1-.-....=-;:;.-7, -:-. '$66 tin. . 19lit rims. (perfect for "'!'per)·L26028. . 24 Mos. :~,~~~!~id~~1tir.~om. $1988 ·-~.,..-~~Mo-.' :!7~.E~~~~!i~N Hewfi~ .$148.8 t8J~: --------i---~-·~ · ish. 029218. 30 Mos. ~ ~ '68 FORD f250. Fact. air. 38711 lC •'ll CllEY. 11PW iOpe. foclory A/(, -slaering, R&H. Tiii ~v ,- BRA~D NEW 1969 'FALCON ~208$. '99 ..... * 184" ... hwfl ,",-· l"lUI T .. I. llmllt ti\ ....,...... Nllk uRlt BRAND NEW 1969 TORINO G.T.- $ 25 ·88 ' ... '""' * ...... hw.i M M... '99 ..... . * '11'' .... '0.-,. ..... . ' lllCIUllll 111 IMllllf9dwWI 1!INll,. -""*"'· l'reth 1lr. hMM.'w.it'*t;.tw MCllU,,.;,... ...t -"!• _ilOhl&. "'tleo)'UI'..,.. ............... wllorl •lndslilekl w~tw.. ~ I ~ ..._. BRAND NEW 1969 GAlAXIE' 500 ''' -. $2 _4·3·3 ' . IMPORT / DEPT. SPECIALS . '&7 IU R11•.ter $288 Fln. Just the ur for fht young at hHrt. ,. ... JI*. 353. '&I ALFl~RDIEO R~r; $488·' $32 Dn. ' J I ' • ~ ~io.~· oi speed, radio, h~)er. GTZ 921, 181'os. '83 FORD C.pri $488 ::u-· Mo. European Div. Stick shift, bock•t seats. TXS 228. ' · 11 Mos. '84 DATSUN Wagon $688 ifs°"· ~Mo. 4 Speed trans., bucket seats, wsw. OTV· 948. . . 24 Mos. 'll CORTINA 'BT $1·288 f::Dn. Very low miles, _. speed, bucket seats, ,10. radio, heater~ TSk 290. , 36 Mos. WA'GON ROUNDUP ' '84 CHEVY Not1 Wgn. 's5.ss ~. Automatic,.radio, heat1r. OSJ 836. 24 Mos. '86 FORD STA. WBN. $788 $40 Dn. $40 Mo. V-8, automat ic, popular ranch wagon. -NOY 679. 24 Mos. '86 FORD Collll'1 ~uke' . $49 Dn. $988 ~Mo: 10 Pass. Wagon, V-8, au to., P. stnr., -radio, heater. NHE 911 . 24 Mos. '87 coumY SOii. WGN. $1888 1:2 Dn. LMo· Automatic, radio, heat. fact. warranty ava il. Uc. 82789A'. 36 Mos. 'll coumY SDll. wa11. :1·• V-8, auto. P. sfeer. factory air cond., _MO. 739. . . $1988 : radio, heat. Lie. VRS 360, 36 MOS. °"1888.36 $6J•.M°"'. o.· -. ----ALSO-AV~All.AIU~-~~-- . '67 fCONOliNE VAii. H96773. ''.67CHEVROUT I> TON PICK UP. V39391. ' llliiiiiiloiiiliiioiiljiii,liiiill ____ ._ ....... ijmiillliiiilliiiiim ' • • · , , .• I • • o.-I. Ust ~ ef our ~ woys to ~· YllMr .'1"', or. Ulttl Cit' or fn!C k includ 1,. Bini< of Am1rlt:1, Unhld C1llf. 81nk. or Ford Motor Credit Corp. With y~ Appro,vtd ~ii: . . . . ' MAKE, Y,OUR CHOICE AND SAYE ATWl'LSON FORDTODAY . ' . -. . . . . . .. 182-55 B EACH BOULEV AllD HUNTINGTON BEACH OAWAY Jtl · J. .. . .842-6611 tU.~~.:';..,. £'°~~~ T-J~;~O;~M~r~ -592.5511 -· 1 . . . ' . . . . .. ~ . " ..... SES FOR SALa HOUSU l'OI SALi HOUSES l'OR SALa HOUSIS l'OR SALE ~::.:.::..:..=;:;.;:::::::.:.-:;:=.::=.."""';.=;;;.;;......: HOUSES l'Oll SALi HOUSES FOR SA~E ~;ii~iiiiiiiiiiiim1~oooii;i;;~°"""'"'~iiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiii1~000iiiii0ono~~r~a1iiiiiiii!iiii~··1•oooiiiiio~·~·~r•''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1~ .. ~1 i·o2 .. :.,:;':1:::· \1=;:-:;;i.1000:; ~o~ .. ~,..~-~a1~iiiiiiii~1~aa~e~o~,~-~r~·'~iiiiiiiii~'~"°:l~°"'~•~n~17:::::-7.~10~-GO -Gona~-r·-'~--1~~- Bay & Beach Realty, Inc. ~~MS~~ FINER HOMES :y~~~::·1~!~~~ Ol'~ORTUNITY KNOCK. S. . •. room, F,_, lll .,... DOVER .SHORIS llAYFRONT PATIO edj_, ., WnUy room with """ brl<:k wall built.ta ld:tchen, •1• car-Owner i51:ys, •'sell", this. 'beautiful Dovv rooni make au. Baycm;t and fireplaee ii featua o1 IT'S STILL A BUYER'S. RKE.T; SO DON'T LIT TH. I CUR!llNT IN-pat., .,...,, wulWll t.. bo " · a: n-~ •--· ·~· •--~-~~•-. th" attnctive M•,. Del BU OM o ou cill" 1n .-doubl Sho"• 5 bedroom me w,th pier -·· ·--~ --·-• ~ TER.IST RATES DETER YOU FROM YING THI! H ! " Y R ~. 8pr1.nkltn tr 0 0 ~ Formal dining room, large brWfilt area;t !:mdoul..:~n, d 1 !7~.-~; ba1::,l!i .. !!.urkl~ DREM\S. NOT IN THE FORESEEABLE FUTURI Will YOU MAKE A complotely fen«<I...., yw exceptionally spacious waterfront terrace. •·~· -all builMn -:::;;,,,_ Juit BETTER BUY THAN NOW. with IS'x20' patio. Only min. •••• OOO Call f . t t -Priced at ..... IS5.--~•· 1! vni1 are in the 25% Tax Bracket an annual Interest rate of' 8 % works out ""'• · or appom men Open Evenings painted outaidl!, Owner AYI '-· if Ules from major lbor>Pina: --" fllA, VA, conventional. to6%netaftertaxes .. or4.88% youareinUle39%bracket. _ __, -~1 A!L FO R LINDA ISLE acu .,.,. .i""'"""'· or assume present 5" 1' WHY NOT CHECK THESE VALUES OVER THE WEIKEND? ~!..$21,9!0. FHA • VA New 2-sty. ba~t home with .lge. pier & loan . .. ~...,., slip. 4 Bdrms., dining rm., beautifully decor-646-nn CORONA DEL MAR OFFICE NEWPORT BEACH OfFJCE * * * * ated. $135,ooo. ca11 for appointment. lfWPORT HEGHJS 101 LINDA ISLE -' ON LARKSPUR ' tlractive 2 beQroom home with frplc. and ust enough pane!Ung to give the home a feel· of warmth. A surprisingly private hea~ )md filtered pool; located on an R-2 lot. Price .................................... .,$31,500 I· ON FERNLEAF A very neat duplex co nsisting of a 2 bedroom )qne with fireplace; Forced air heat. Also a 2 ~om unit completely furnished loca.ted BbOve oversized single garages. Nice patios. ~excellent price· at .................. $34.,950. ATTENTION All llRQl<IRS! OPEN HOUSE DAILY 1 • S P.M. Comfortably arraog<d II••• 13SO E. Oceanfront-Ball>oa Penln. 5 beclroomJ, bedroom, ..... bath home. 4 baths, den lush carpeting, radianl ~I le 1-e _,..,.,,, with 11tt. all elec. bullf-irul. Appro•. 3150 sq. ft.• .. $99,500 pla<i, "'°""" k!tth<n, larre ALSO ' .. detached inclOled Jliltlo, 1354 E. OCEANFRONT-BALBOA PEN!N. with tlttplaee and ,,,,_.. 4 bedroom & den home many extras· elec to entertain surats. Two car · · · ' • ' • earaae. Comer lot. good 'fin. built-in~. ·wet bar, 2 fireplaces, one m master ancing, Here'• • sleeper • bedroom. . ........................... $97,000 ACT NOW!! Hostess, Lucile Bastedo. * * * * Owner might consider exchange! IJPPER BAY 5 Bedrooms, pier le slip, asking .... $125,000. Open Daily. I 1 CAMEO SHORES Fabulous white water view, private entrance to beach; 4 bdrms., 3~ baths, formal dining rm. Teakwood paneling, pool ....... $157,000. Open Sat. & Sun. 4645 Perham 645-0303 PANORAMIC Vlr,Y of C.tallna, SJn Clement and almOll Hawaii, It'• spectactL tar and only four yeani old, an immaculate 4 bedroom home in a real prestige area. It's a "mu.st~sce'.' at only $37.500. ' '1'l!f ' R l~A f , ~ 1,:-,'A TlR.~ . 2 STORY 5 BR 3 baths, cpts/drpfi, elec- tric built • ln1, shake root Near ALL ICbools. $.16, 750. OPEN SUNDAY 1·5 1032 PRESIDIO - ON GALATEA, IN IRVINE TERRACE custom built 3 bedroom and family room ome. Tl1e living room is most elegant with cathedral ceilings and floor to ceiling windows 1 overlooking the harbor & ocean. Price .. $69,500 BEST DUPLEX BUYI FEW STEPS TO OCEAN! Titt<I of main,..,...., Live 3 bedrooms upper unit-2 bedrooms & den Jow-it up and enjoy Hie In Your er unit. Swedish fireplaces. Price reduced to b!~~~~rta~ · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · $49,500• YoUr trlenda. in the relaxinr Please call Harold Arthur • 642-3287 swimming pool, attractive DECORATOR'S DREAM! BALBOA POINT! clubhoUle or putting ""''"· Open Daily 1-5 P.M. 318 "L" Slreel Delightful S. a part of tltis EXCIT- & appealingly attractive-. home! 2 bedrooms, ING 4. .. year. New uPPER 2 seCfuded patios, beamed celling living room, BAY O'.lloOWNJTYI Our HIGH LIVING· LOW INTEREST Assume present 6.6% loan & enjoy high )iv· ing in this spacious home on corner lot. 4 Bedrooms, 3 baths, plus famDy room & for- mal dining room ; 2 firep1ace.s ; a new, custom home at 1018 Nottingham. $72,500. Open Sat- urday & Sunday DOVER SHORES ESTATE Ultimate in gracious family living &: enter- taining in this 5 bedroom home wJth large Jiving room, richly paneled family room with ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 293 E. 17th St. 646 4494 Well1-McCardl1, Rltr1. 18l0 Newport Blvd., NB 548-m9 anytime DAILY PIIm' OJME.A- LINES, You can USe them for jult pennies a day, Dial ......,. I ON SEAVIEW Just one block from Ocean) 2 spacious homes 11'.i lots. Both homes front on the street - is a s bedroom 2 bath home -the other -a 4 bedroom 2 bath home including a sepa· ate room and bath for guests or owner's bide· ay. . ............................... $89,50C ~~~~f _1_~~~'. ~.c.~~~~.~~~~~.~: best bey for $25,~. · brick fireplace. View from all rooms. $144,liOO Open Saturday le Suilday. lSM Galuy Dr. WESTCLIFF Lovely 3 bedroom home with den; newly painted inside & oUt. New draperies, Dew electric oven, new d.isPosal, new water heat· er. Near Westcliff shopping & schoOls. Aak· Ing $42,500. Call for appointment. ON OCEAN Bl VD (2607) Please call Dick Tryon· 673-7999 OPEN HOUSE 1-S P.M. SAi . & SUN. 4018 & 4018'h Channel Place, Newport Island! WATERFRONT DUPLEX! Pier & Float! 2 is dramatic 3 bedroom & Den home with a arbor and Ocean View will be open Sunday 11'5 P.M. l!O' of frontage on Ocean Blvd. Price · uced to .......................... $98,500 bedniomJ, 2 baUis each unit. .......... $87,500. Jllf.11111 ... Your Hostess,, F1orence Mccue ~· ean :568713' ' .~ .. i~hn macnab ' lay & leach·· Realty, Inc:. 2407 E. Coast Highway, CdM Evo. S411861 1ay·;& leach ,Realty, Inc:. CHOICE BACK 901 bovor Drlvo, Suito 126, NB IA y LOCATION 64~2000 Eve. 548-6966 Immediate occupancy on W. ' REAL TY COMP.NY 901 Dover Dr., Suite 120 64U23.! ir.;°"';;;;•;r;;•l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;OOO;;;;;Gen;;;•;;r;•';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I o;~;;~ Gener al 1000 Gonoral lovely large custom built home. Spacious lam.Uy room 1000 P1lls dinlnc room. Huee bed. rooms, 3 queen-size baths. Owner anxiow. Will scll --------liiijjijiij!iijiiijijjjjijiii $25,750 $32,500 Lovely 3 bdrm home in Mesa Del Mar with a •parkllng pool for family fun. Many plus features . excel terms. CALI MR. NELSON 546-1151 topen ! ~ Herltee-RMI Estate eves) 1000 General 1000 Niie Club Patio Room I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;, t A room •• ··~ type Is .. ,,. First Time Offered ' r mpeclaJ for It saves \\'ear •""' '"" of "" "''' 01 ""' 5 BEDROOMS 1bollle. Besides being-a fun U-ce for adult parties., it's Only l year old Ivan Wells' •ft. splendid, ~ntive for the custom built home in Dover t younger memben to enter. Sholft. 5 bdrms, 3 haUu, 'taln al home. nil spacious fami.1$ room, bright kitchen :and sparkl~ 5 bedroom with eating area. Professk>n. 1 home reflects rood value for alfy landscaped. Shelte:red ($31,950. pool. Unobstructed Bay view " " OD elegant 0.itxy Drive. $87 ,500 incl carpets " dnl~ e1, $15,000 will handle. Westclill Your own tropical parad~ clOM! to shoPI I: school1, 3 bdmu. 2 baths, beautifully landscaped by Beemn & well kept by proud owner. Call lot appointment toda.y. IN COST~ MES'A Now ~der construction SEVEN CUSTOM HOMES from $21,575 WITH SUCH FEATURES AS: • Fireplaces ·• 4 · Large Bedrooms • VA & F1lA Financing •Wood Roofs • 20 Year Guarantee Dishwashers • Oversized Lots • Roman Tubs & Showers • In Prime Area e PLUS MUCH MORE SELECT YOURS NOW & CHOOSE YOUR COLORS & STYLE~ Yes, we ~Ye a trade-in program for information call COATS & WALLACE REALTORS 1491 BAKER STREET 546-4141 COSTA MESA, CALIF. ----------- 'su'Nbmlo OOWN1 ~~· ?.!:.~~,132..:.~ VIEW-VIEW I' OPEN HOUSES ~v-_,......, ,...,.,"' Shi~ & sails &: ocean & hi)' on our guarantee sa.Je plan. &: lights ~ pavilion a, Cata. OcMn view .. pool. CdM. WE SELL A HOME 1ina Island" Pala! Verda. $19,9!0.,<tll-SW..1-5 EVERY 31 MINUTES too: you ean ,.. them all - Walker & Lee lromthla-llaJ'bor <BR .• poo~Co.taMesam 20t3 Westclilf Dr. 646-mt Open Eves. R-2 AT BEACH Ovenir.e Jot, 35'x90', South of Balboa mvd., i,~ blk. from oce&ll, Priced at a bargain price of only $24,500. * * ... * COUNTY R-4 83'x435' • Without varianCf', zoned for 12 units • sharp, 3 BR. 2 Bath hoUSc plus 2 Br. 1 bath house. Perfect for the buyer looking for nice home pl.us ineomf!, with land to expand. For full de- tails call • Robinett Rltr. 645-0121 View formt'r model home. E. 20lh. St. SaV&m D-5 4 BR. &. family room with - -""'· lntscom, 2\1 batho, ..... " Inoome: t:i6.'1l0 '28 Professionally decorated &: Ord:lid, CdM Sun. 1..S landscaped. and a fabulous bey vie• to boot! $6.5,0Cll. Baytrom: 2600 -Cow, China Open hou.9e SUn. 1-5 .. 1245 Cove, CdM. SaVSun. 1-5 Surfline Way, Corona dcl Mar. UNUSUAL DESIGN On wide, sandy oceanfront; dlfierent &: charnllng 3 bdnn older home on w»de, Newport oceanfront beach. Home has vaulted ceilings thruout & a mezzanine bdrm. Large brick frplc. Best area, 2 BR, N'pt Bch. $32,000, 1012 Buckfn&ham. Sat. 1.S. CORBIN-MARTIN REALTORS 3016 E. Coast Hwy,CdM 67S-1'62 °"'" Sun. J.s R· l LOTS 70lll W. Octanfront, N.B. CHESHIRE REAC ESfATE ARE SCARCE ~25ro l\1orning &: Eves. Especially one u &ood as 1'P'aradi1e'' $31,500-I 'iiiiii646-iiii2629iiiiiiANYTiiii0ilMEiiiiiiiiol this one ln N~rt HgU., Pool-Family Rm. size 45.6 X 127.5; &eMlbly FamUy fun &: entertaining. priced at $12,500. $4.ln'.I • bodroom" heavy "'8m<d 1518 Dolphin Terr Down. aw,,.,'"'" <arty "'' «!Ding, built-in bar, Brick T.D, 25 Yr. Amorizatlon or patio with BBQ, \Vatcrfall, May 17th & 11th 1-5 wilt subordinate. Better fish pond, Soft lighl.ing • Spotless 2 BR, 2% ha, den, tenns you can't tel. tropical paradise. 540-1720 elec kitchen, PLUS hUge TARBELL 2955 Harbor covered boat-port, min. land- DOVER SHORES 6 BR. S BATHS NEW 2-STORY VIEW! $119,600 scape maintenance. Slashed to $39,500 CURT DOSH, Realtor 1730 \V. Coast Highway RED lllllll" REALTY 2025 \V. Balboa Blvd., N.8 . 67s.6000 "For A \Vise Buy" Roy J. Ward Co. (Baycrest OUi~l General 1000 General 1000 Frank James Rltr. 5484611 642-6412 Eves. 673-J468 NO matter what it ts. you can 9!ll Jt with a DAILY Pil.oT ctaMitifd ad. · l · Colesworlhy & Co. 1'130 Galaxy Drive 646-1550 ""'"'"'-!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! BUSIEST marketplace in JS YOUR AD IN CLASSI· town. 'I1le DAILY PILOT nED '!' Somf!One will be Ou:sWed teeUon. Sa v e Jookir:w"for il Dial 642-5fi78 mQn!Y, timt I: effort. Look • for quick, dfl~t results. now!!! 1DAD...Y Pll.01' WANT ADS : BRING RESULTS! General 1000Genar•1 1000General 1000 • COLDWELi:, BANKER & COMPANY·. REALTORS • • • • Annovnces The Relocation Of Its • Newport Beach Office • On Saturday May 17, 1969 • • To • 550 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE • re111 ff.. ,..,1t1.., 1.t ,iJ. of +tie'"'''" To-I • • NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA 92660 T1l1ph-(7141 lll-0700 and 17141 644-2430 •• Generol IOOOGenerol lOOOGenoral 1000 Pele Barrett Realty 1.;;;;;;=========;;;;;;;;==;;;;;; prestnts NEW BA YC'RES'l' IJSf. ING. This home has ewry. thing for family enjoyment. 4 txlrms, family room, for- maJ dining room. den & 16 x 36' Anthony p 0 0 ). $72,txll. ~ ~ PRICE REDUC· ! $3000 off m&kes this charming home on larie comer Jot a very good buy . Sunny pat)o, maxi- mum privacy, 3 bl:lnns, din- tng room, 3 car garage • Ca1J to ~- NEED A LARGE ltOME with 11. small price! 5 bd- nns. 4. be.thl, pl.us den I: family r o o m. Ba.ycttst area for $41,850. CHOICE PENINSULA BAYrRONT , .. , ...... Jcue pier 4 slip 5 bdnns. 3"' baths + makl'• quar- tl.'n. C.ontact BW Jknt&. SUMMER SEASON LovdJ 8a,ytront rental in prl~ area. Exc:t":tlent bet.ch a pier. 4 bdrm&, 3 t.tm. $5000 for the wuon. l 160S w .. 1cllfl Dr. NEWPORT BEACI ~ 642-5200 THREE BEST VALUES VA OR FHA FINANCING -$30.700 ••• Seldom can you buy a large 4 BEDROOM. 1800 sq. ft. home in this price range, on these terms ... No down payment VA or $1800 down FHA/ VA. This is a large beautifully lanclsc:1pecl home with an excel· leht floor plan. Master bdrm is on one side of home, separated for privacy. Plan makes for family activity away from the forma1 Uving room. Conveniently 1ocated for the whole family -the children can walk to school -kindergarten thru college •.. Someone is going to get a wonderful home this weekend, call now & let it be you. "' FORMAL DINING ROOM--31~1.-llOO Sq. Ft. of "LIVING" Located in Mesa Verde's finest sect1on. This immaculate 3 'bed· room home is helter than new. Brand new LUSH CARPETING. All repainted inside & out. HUGE FAMILY ROOM with fireplace. AND 1 31' POOL you can really swim in. Only half block to PARK & SCHOOLS le near l-0 golf course. With the library, shopping cooveolenUy nearby, everything just fits right for living enjoy- ment TIMES UP •.. MAKE OFFER ••• Huge trees & beautiful land- scaping outside, Immaculate inside with highly polished fl oors, all reflect the care & ucellent condiUon of this home . You'U like the Ooor .pl11> wllh lhe isolated living room, famil y room le big bedrooms. Located in MESA VERDE on 1 nice quiet street with achoola oear by. Elcrow Is closing soon on new home so owner says BRING AN OFFER. Call right 1way le you 'll be able to make a big savings. Listed at $26,800. But ? ! ? 546. 9521 Eves. 540 • 6631 J. K. NICHOLS" REALTOR 3015·A HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA Open Houses THIS WEEKEND K.-p thl1 handy di~ with .,..; this WMk• eM u y•u p howa-hufttlN-All th• locatl9ftl 111tM lt91ow •r• dNCrlbelll 1.n trNt«' d.tall lw adw•rtlllnt al ........ 'In toAJ"• ~ILY PILOt WANT ADS.·--· --'°' Al• or to rtnt an Ufled te 11.t tueh lnhrm .. tlon In thl1 cMllMi Melt P..W.y. (2 BedroolnJ 318 "L" Street Balboa Point 645-2000 ' . (Daily 1·5) (2 Bedroom & Family °' Den) 1518 Dolphin Terrace (Irvine Terr) CdM 64i-6472 . (Sat & Sun 1-5) (3 Beclooom) 3100 Samoa Place (Mesa Verde) CM 549-4225 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 2141 Vista·Entrada (The Blufis) NB ~2370 (Sat le Sun 1-li) * 1101 Ebbtide, Corona de! Ma:r 675-2000 (Open 1-11) 7008 w. Oceanfront, Newport Beach 646-2629 (Sun 1·5) 464 Serra Dr (Corona lllghlands) CdM 6411-3255 or 673-4098 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 344 Holmwood, (Newport Heights) NB 646-3255 (Sat & Sun 1·5) (3 Bedroom & Family or Den) 1300 Dover Dr. (Westclifl) NB 675-2101; 548-4166 (Sat., Sun. 12-5) 2034 Baltra Pl. (Mesa Verde) CM 546-0353 (Open Sat. & Sun. 1-5) 618 Kings Place (Cliff Haven) NB 642-5749 (Sun 1-5) *1701 Galatea Terrace (Irvine Terr) CdM 675-3000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1014 Santiago Drive (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 301 Evening Star (Dover Shores) NB 675-2000 (Sun 1-5) 1147 Gleneag1e, Costa Mesa 546-1720 (Sun 1-5) *2510 East 23rd St., Newport Beach 646-3255 (Sat & Sun 1-5) (4 Bedroom) *2015 Galatea Terrace (Irvine Terr) CdM 675-3000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1148 Santiago (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) (4 Bedroom & Family or Den) 1245 Surfline Way. Corona del Mar 675-2503 AM & Eve. (Sun 1-5) 1101 While Sails, Corona del Mar 675-2000 (Sun 1-li) 1338 Santiago Drive (Westclilf) NB 642-8235 (Sun 1-5) 2341 Irvine (Back Bay) NB ·540-1720 (Daily 1-5) 1518 Antigua Way, Newport Beach 646-325.1 (Sun 1·5) 1430 Galaxy Dr (Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 (Open Dally) (5 Bedroom) 2038 Calvert Ave (Mesa Verde) CM 540-0556 (Open Sun. 1·5) 1032 Presidio (Mesa dtl Mar) CM 5411-7729 (Sun 1·5) *1536 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sal le Sun 1-5) 101 Linda Isle, Newport Beach 642-8235 (Sat & Sun 1·5) *1520 Ruth Lane (Westcliff) NB 675-2000 (Sun 12.e) (5 Be:droom & Family or Den) 1350 E. Oceanfront, Balboa Peninsula 645-2000 (Daily 1·5) 18893 San Felipe, Fouotain Valley 540-1720 (Suo 1·5) DUPLEXES FOR SALE 12 Bedr0om) 4018 & 40181<. Channel Place, Newport Island, 645-2000 (Sat & Sun 1-11) CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE (3 Bedroom) 2141 Vista Entrada (Tho Bluffs) NB tlff.237V (Sat " SUn 1-5) ...... ** ..... ,, .. ***,..., •·W • ---------..,..--•---~--~--~----~-----------...--.--• • ,.. ••• -w•• --....,...--""*"'.-~·-l"l!'~-#*J>'fi'>'F.' '.'hi,!t.":• •t *'!""'t *, i ·~·J.,;. -~;-.,. •••• , . ~ ...... -·•-•• , ~, ....... ...... • .. ,0 •• , ~. ..,.. •• ~ ....... ., -• FrldU. Mu 16, IM HOUSES FOR SALE -HOUSES FOR SALE '"' HOUSES FOR SALE -HOUSES FOR SAL I .. HOUSES FOR SACI ~ HOUSES l'OR SALi! -HOUSIS FOR SALE HOUSIS POii SALi DAILY PILOT RENTALS ._,u........,. ' " rGeiiiiinoiiiiir•iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiOOOiiiiG~oiiniieiiraiiliiii/iiiiiiiiiiiiiil~OOO~i/•G,;e;no~ra~l~;;;;:;::;::';OOO;;;,l~Ge~·~ne~r~al~:;;;:;;;;;;;~l00~-0 Moeo dol Mor 'liOS Nt~~: ..;ch :Ju~ H""tlntton ... ,h 11100 'l'ovnlaln Yllley 1410 2 STORY ~ BDRM, 3 Balhe:. JI• RIGHT JRKE Water .,.....,, <I« bltM, BEA\lTIFll• homo .In the 1 WHAT A BUY Summor lloottla 2tl ! , DON'T MISS THIS BUILD OUJ oown!d pallo. Walk lo all Bl.no. Otalltandb\s Bay 122.600 Full l'rie. lo. lhio ! achls. Priced beM>w market \llt:\1'. S Br. 3 BL By O'A'N!I'. bedroom, 2: be.th beauty. PRIVATE IEACH : . COUEGE PARK \ tho balance or thi.a hU&e R-2 lot, 310' deep. LIYe In the exlslinf ho1nc, 3 BR 1',l baths & construct 5 more inoomr. producinc: homtl. Call now lor J)lrtil;'l.llan, valut. By owner. SM-549'l 1 ~~===--~--'Featwini 2 ctr prq:e. BAYFRONT 3 Bl' bee.ch Dffp plle carpel.I, Dnptt. COTTAGE Bolh •wim I: boa1. Larp: • BR, bia pat1o, ~ : RANCHO LA CUESTA -U you've missed the closeout of RANCHO LA CUESTA'S 3 other unils , , •• DON'T MISS THIS!! Try a &ood 2nd TD I.: pne cash for the down payment. Exctllent sold. 5haa'. carpet. in&: & a teal Hnc family home on cul-Oc-se.<' slrttt. Mff• Verde 1110 howle, pvt beach, Bayahare NlceQt landscaped with h~e ·;.;;;=..;..:;.;.;;;;. __ ....;.:.;.;.1 Park, ltuebold S13,500. cow:red patio. Situated on a OPEN DAILY $1>-1391 cuk1Hac lol. GI no cuh July A: Auawil. 646-2577 or , 834-585t. ' RENTALS ' $14,000 3062' Ceylon Roff down or a.aume a low tn-Older 2 BR {th valuable 100' !rontaa;c center of boomlna: area, CPrice ii). d1Jde1 lot I. H..,... Unfu rnithM • : ' $28,950 F/P ITRY 1or. DOWN) Llth! & Ail'}' -3 BR, 2 BA Weatctlff 1230 tett&t FHA ot $~ ~ with ~ Gener ii ' Each succeeding unit cosls more, so take advantage of these prices, Corne & see our models on Brookhurst at Atlanta in Huntington Beach. There are l & 2 stories, 3 & 4 bedroom homes with 2 or 3 b aths, Mission tile or shake roof, fire- places, concrete driveways, heavy rough cut beams. built-ins, family roo1ns & dining rooms, CloSe to Huntington State Beach. These beautiful homes are priced from $24,995 to $34,200 wilb VA or Con- ventional financing as Jmv as 10% down. No 2nd TDs at 7.2% interest Call 968-2929 or visit any day 10 M t to 7 PM . Full Price $25, 950 hOme near Country Qub. ---------1 lal payment of $111 per Paneled liv rm, huge tam HOME • R-2 loL Excnl month lncludlrw Ines. K1lell1 Realty BEACON BAY , Newport •• Victorl1 Hewport al Victoria nn, bo~ wl lrplcs, It entry, Wt•stalde. 3 BR 2~ ba, room WE S!LL A HOME "·alled 'yant, ahrac l,ndacpg, for ' °" S units. 54,_1623 EVERY 31 . MINUTES 0""'' 5<>8l55. ..... Walker & lee .. .,. 9't.;~r·· "·"· l Bdnna, con1munity beach~ • plll!r, tenniJ court, $450/n'°- 4 BR PACESETTER. on Ire, quiet comer lot. Rm for' Irvine 1231 boat. trlr, etc. Lois of Palos ---------7682 Edil\let 646.&111 john macnab REALTY CO~IPA.;'IY 642-1235 ?.1AGNIFICENT Vu on 1.', ao, , ... ••"" "·"" "140 Verde atone. l'ofust see! 'U-1....., ot ~ .. ~o:.900 • S4G-Ol53 3 mln/UCJ. 4 Br, faro rn1. Open Eves. 1475 $89. 1 BR, garage, w/w, !en. : ced yard. Child O.K. Broker' 534-6980 646-1811 MESA DEL MAR 5'/• 0/o LOAN 3 BR, 1% Ba, din rm, ~,i;i WALK TO BEACH f • $2000 dn, $157 mo .,.... $49,500 by ownr. 833-2616 =-.--BYflt -3 Br, 1% be, shag crpt, beaut landsca~ Eo1itbluff 1242 !i'A 'fh GI interest, payment o tract. F'HA·Gl ok, $150. 3 BR, fenced yd, Stove, children welcome, Broker .......... Ing. By oy:ncr. VA ac-1 ;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;~1 SlOO per month Including --========;:: ceptahle. 549-4225 I• everythlni to anyone, 3 BR .. "Pick of tht Litter" "12 bath d 1· S Minutes To Bt•ch $19,950 Assume IO\Y 5,. loan on this I !ere is an ex<.oellent oppor-4 bedroom ti.tesa ·Del ?!tu tunity for the ~wly \vcd:s beauty. lillgf' family room or the retil'f!d folks to get a 1yith raised fireplace, l '~ O\\'NER • 4 BR home ?i1esa • carpels, rapes, U'e- Vcrde View of soil oourse $27 ,500 place, electric built-in range Lo19uno1 HUI• 1700 $1lj, 2 BR, I ~' ba. ..,... ()\vner oilers choice Bluffs l oYen, ahake roor, double ..,.,, ,500. Principals o n I y. Pl l 3 BR 2 , AIR-Cond.. 5 BR. plus bonus rm. $34,500: ar lse/option. Bkr. 1)'15-.Ql; ~9f-n61 eve Townhowle, W/W, RIO, chUdn!n O.K . Broker "l!':'!!l~!!!!"'~!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!'l!!!!!l!![!!"'!'J lo1v price hon1e in a.n ideal bath!, service porc:h, fenced = location. Larg<' lot \Vi1h ac~ yard, Ne1v outside paint. Big 5-lG--0761 aza. -story , ua, carage. $26,500 Jull prlci. dbl patio, best loc, lowest n1aintc11a.nce fee & lease hold avail. Call ti44-05Cfi -Gene:rai 1000 General 1000 cess tor boa t or trailer on kitchen has alt built-in appJL 1;:;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;1 s22,coo quiet cul Uc sac s\~1 Se-anccs. SJl.500. 1200 I• of eluded <.'01Ullry atn1osphcre, &&n11 =-•16-2313 JUST REDUCED! B,\RGAIN & QUALITY ''' yo" can walk lo shop. HAPPINess IS •.• r·or in1m{'(iiatc sale, this 1~1~1ACULATE 4 bechoo111 cu1·ncr hon1c beautifully lrindscaped for LO\\' UPKEf:P & L-Z California living. Covered patio 1v i t h BBQ &. loads of cement \vork n1ake the outside a real delight. Jnside i:; enhanced 1vilh dining roon1 & HUGE AIA.s. 1'ER SUITE. All lhis & more Ior only :529,900. Don't \\'ail !o see it call S-1&4141. COATS " WALLACE . REALTORS -546-4141- (0pon Eveninp) -s:q $135 Per Month OW ner leaving area. 3 laigc ping or be on the beach in bdrins. hRrd1\'WI floors. rninutes. Should st'll fast at hugl' 20x24· fanuly roo1n wilh this 101v pliCt'. ~tt toda.v. !ireplacr, built-ins, 2 s inglt> WE SELL A HOME 1-0 THE REAL \'"'\.. ESTATERS ' . ·. garages .~· lo1s "t ruorn for EVERY 31 MINUTES B' F ·1 H bo111 & tn1iil'1". Brau!!ful 19 am1 Y ome Ea.stsirlt• trve-lined street. Walker & lee Just listed .-·5 ~rtllS, 2900 sq ft Colonial WJth Anthony • Sprint •t the le•ch Lido Sands -Block lron1 Beach • Con1n1u11lty Swim- ming Pool -3 br. '.! bath plus bwlk rooni. 2 Jo\·cly 1ialios - kitthen \\'Ith bui\tins incl brand ne'v dis hwasher. All Jor $32,500. Owner on prcm. lses Sun. ,.lcy 18, noon to 5 pm. 5-101 eruce Crescent or Call or \Vrite O\\'?!Cr, Dick ERNIE ~l{).tl \VcstcliJ( Dr. pool. Near Atesa Verde CLEVELAND Gl&.7711 Open Eves. Country Oub. °"'Tier trans---=~=--====--1 lcrred . best offer. THE BLUFFS !., B''""''""Y s· I "-... _ . . ~ 546-5110 Coffin, P .O. Bo:"t 745, Pa.Im . .., .,.. .... L""' e story ""11""m1n1um (n!artinematheat-' ' • 6 '6 4-79 ·-.. "" Desert. Cali(. TI4/340-6525. ~vl'~ ... -:i P rofessionally df'f'Orated. LlEGE REALTY I ::;=====:::;~== ATTENTION 0101cr grccn-l>clt location 1500 AdlfflS at H1rbor,r.M. 11 2 Ek-droon1~. 2 baths, !~~~~.,.~~~~ YACHT OWNERS Eoc1°""" 1aoai $26,500. 10°/o Dn. 40' Pl'ivalc d0<:k adjoin~ pro p_ Eloquent & worry-flTI? crty, Capl' Cod ~tyleo honic niay lease 11:11h option This home i~ nestled among has hu,.c! livinl? room over-. S42,950 otlk•r beautiful homes with 0 " Call J c b" a 5~4 ~;, FHA loan, payments' looking 1vater. ()my 1len \vith : nn o " used brick fi rcplacr and ·I Res. 673-1864 :5159 pays all. 3 BR l~ baths locatL'<I east of Tustin Ave. large bedl'oo1n:;, For appul.nt-mcnt catl Large living + family roo1n. with sliding glass door to a Ike cov patio, Quiel sl.ret'l. IORIST [ Ol \O\ 1860 NewPort Blvd .. 0.1 R.ltr. 646-39'>...8 Eve. 644-ll)Sj 2 YEARS NEW Spacious 4 Bl'. 3 Ba. home plus dining rn1. &:. family rm, Features alumpstone I.: S"·edish frp1C8. Wet bar, luscious landscaping; qui~! CUIDeSac street; ideal for family • $53,500. 142.C • PROPERTIES WEST 'NEW BLUFFS 2 BR, 2 BA. Split level, 1.Iany euston1 feat11tts; au elet., etc. Lowest maint. &: lease- hold. BY 0\VNER. Call Dick Dyer 533-4456 exl 401 or 5.'16--3532. E BLUFFS • Fashionable conOO. 2 story, 4 BDRlf, 2 bath; luUy carpeted &: dt'Bp... ed. Frplc. Pool, patio, blln!. $3.1,<XKI. CaU afl 6 pm l wknd1. 644--0816 Coron• dtl Mar 1250 PRETZELS & BEER Around 1ht! pool in sea air- condilioned comfort. 2 BR, fun house w/modern island kitch, Easy on the pocket- book, too. $3300 Do1vn put! you in after the tenant on AUg. 1st. Hal Plnchin &. Assoc. 3900 E. Coast H11·y, 6Th-4392 BEST BUY IRVINE TERRACE 3100 Lo19un11 leach 170S Cotti Mttl --''---'-"-'C.....-.c..;;;; Income Units Blue Ribbon Specl1I H•ndyman Speciils Inviting 15x30' pool. load,! of Loe n-• ...i...t-decking, encl, patio. 2 Story · on ...... ..., ... ,,.-= of Hwy. 150 )'els from Beach,. 4 lge 4 BR, prestige area. .Blt-i111., Ap t. unit!!, needs paint & cpts/drps, Mly landsc_ As-good general cleanup. ~ sume 51A, % GI loan • owner TENTIAL INC 0 AI E EX- PREE RENTAL SERVICE for example, 3 bedrooms : baths =s.oo per mo_ Call will help fin. $.15,500, CEEDING s10:000 ANNUAL- Paui Jones RHlty • ORANGE COUNTY'S ' 8 1 i..Y. Price $69,!SO. 4 -1.'>66 .......... Eve, 963-3.167 M1SSION REALTY 494-07l1 LARGEST OPEN HOUSE 985 So. Cou~ "''""" m E. 17th St. '46 HM ' , SAT. 1-5 LOVELY l i,t BR, fully furn. 2 Br. U<la -3 Br. SJ75 _ New.1. 20121 i\tarina Lane So. Laguna-Oc:ea.n vu , cpts, drps, paint, gar, 2 • $2'J •. 'ia0 Frplc, secluded pa t I o , Chldrn Oij: No pets; 111t &. J : 1'~.1'1.A. • V.A. aundeck. \Valk to bch & last plus deposit. JnQulrt , or shops. \Vood pancllng-bl!1tm 1700 Newport. Judy Su.sale. As~un1e excellent as;, VA cei.Jlna•. 423,900. Ca1J collect -._ LOVELY 3 BR 7 ba homeo Joan. 3 bedroom, Carpeting 213: 254-2394 with dble garage '= wt..,; throughout. Lco=N°'T"E~>7.IPO=RA=R~Y~2~Bd~nn-, carpets. $175 per ll}C). Alto FORECLOSURE ' Ba, convt .... excel rood, S4G-4141 I ' $50 total to GI b~r or aell Mbcaut garden, patio. One of 2 BR; garage, patio; cPts·,. ' FHA & seller. pays all dos. onarch BQ's finest. Save drps, stow, rtfrir. TropiCal ing costs. 3 BR l~ bath11, thotlsands buy direct from setting for adulta. 1 Blk• it! 21xl6' family room. NEED OWllt'r at $65,<XKI. 4!&-2349 Shop!. $160. 544--4780 QUtCK ACTION! SUPERB view, newer cust. 3 I 'l'°'B°'R,,;.-d<,-°"l'°'BA""°°"Cl'p,-,.-.,,...,-- BRASHEAR REAL. TY Br. Sale or ex c hange. n, · ts, ' : blW. frplc. Lease $275.:, , 8•7-&"ill Eves. t.11-3769 $15,000 equity. 6 T 5 -6 5 91 ; Reta. 642-7061 494--TI61 Rei. 1 ~=-------J Pays All! I When you asi;un1e 01i.s ex- cellenl G.I. Loan, an)'nne qualillcs. True fatm style kitchen 1Yilh n11xlern featur- es. 3 1\ing !'llzc bedrooms, '!. Baths. 1-Jugc fan1ily rootn. New Carpets. Covered patio. Also No Do11•n GI available priced at r12,ooo. Call. .. WE SELL A HOME "' R£AlTOR> * LACHENMYER OPEN HOUSE 12.5 1(1211 Biyside Drive Newport '8'-ach 675-4130 ln1mac. 2 & den or 3 Bdrm., ~'!"" ..... ~....,~ ..... ~~· I 2\~ ba's., just reduced to • NEWPORT TOWERS 139,500 CUSTOM HOME I;,;="""==,.,,,.....,...-2 BR house in court. Crpta: • VIEW Mooarch BaY home, 4 • BR 2 bath, $22,500, All BR. 2 BA, dining rm, family drpa, prv patio. 976 \V. ,1 . I i~-.__ • ... St., CM, 548-2839 Landmark ol the Ne,vport DeL1ncy Real Eatate ~line. 8 stories ot breatll-2828 E, Coast Hwy, 001 645-0303 oa.age romns, .... autifw cor-rm. Owner, 499-3411 ner fireplace. On large k>t. $35,000 DUPLEX, 2 and 1 Beautiful p<iol. 3 lar~e bed-laking bay & ocean vie"ing 613-3710 rooms, fireplace, J.rge liv-from luxurious 2 BR, 2 BA, AS!\ FOP.. DAN LEE to show Big 4 bl'droom model \Vilh ing room. A1t ttit?'f0r131.~-all elec apts, 2 Highspeed $21 , 950 with POOL Better ~ this one! G[ or BR, view, just remodeled, FHA terms. pvt. wild kitchens! 4JM-97U you 1his iantastic Cost.a added 26'x12' lamily room. 2005 Valley Rd. elf:vaton, subterranean &. ~lcsa Condoniiniun1 fcatur. Island kitchen with all built-(off Vicloria) top deck parking. Thcrapeu- EVERY 31 MINUTES ing large bdrm.~. built-in.c;, ins, l ~ baths. sci'. porch, Rltr, 642.9730 Ev<'s. 5-18-0720 lie pool & boat docks. Open plush C1ll"J){'ling & dt'apes. fenced yard. Assume pn>s-• KENNEDY dally. Sale or lease. 3121 \V. Walker & Lee Owtll'!' offering jus1 $1400 ent 5~ •;;. Joan or buy <.'On-Coasl lligll\vay, TI4: 642-2202 crown payn1<'nl $181 per ventional, 1-'!IA, VA. Ne1v _ _ _ _ __ OCEAN FRON'r-- 768'2 l!:</ingl•r 8~2-4-1~ 01· :i.10.;i\ IO Open EYl's. n1onth 1ncludf's t'V<'l'ylhing. outside paint. $19,200 • S3/4o/o Loan HOME CALL :i10.i l:JJ llf'nragc Rcal 51&-2313 646-TI7l Payments $137 Month Corner, young age, o\'ersiz. Esz;..tr. includes <'verything. 4 l)c(J. ed dbl. earage & patio. Room $20,950 -WOW! Absolutely Beauliful roo111s. 2 baths, electric & zoninz ror additional apt. built-in kitchen. Prctly shut-Choict-\Vei;1 Newport Joca. "Apple Pie" order. King sj7,. lcrs. tion. Sacrifice $57,500. ed bedroon1s, urcan1 kicch-,,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•ITARBELL ••2 "91 . BROSE REALTY r.cribes Lhi~ adult OlTUpied en, buiH ~ in a pplianccs.1• --.~~~--~-4~ '" C 1, N B Handso1n<' snac k bar. ''A" Frame BALBOA BAY P-ROP. ;,.,;,. · oast .wy., · · bdrm rustic hon1c located e 673-3012 e on cul-<ll'-sac & clO!>I? to Sprinklers, boo l gale. Unique 3 bdrm home with N~s sale~peop.Je: all rc- everything. ~lust sec lo ap. 540-1720 shimmering IXIOl I: plcnly pl ies conf1denliaJ. Please OCEANAIRE-- preciate. \Von'! last long al TAR BELL 2955 Harbor of space Ior badminton courl call: DUPLEX this prit:C' or I .,_,...,.._._ .... .., .... I or ganlen, Vacanl & rl'ady ART GIOVI..i'llETII · 673-7420 4 BR. & 2 BR, apt1. Ahvays $26,950 BALBOA POINT for you. le.I AleFadden Pl., Npt_ Sch. maintained in lmmac. cond. Newly painted 3 Br. home. Arnold & Freud Owner :;ay11. "sell no\v." Lge. patio ror sun & rw1. ~ Cos ta Mes• 1100 Asking $39,;iOO. t.ltJ.!f sec to Best loc. ,\buy! S42.500 388 E. J7th St., C~t _ appreclalt'. B alboa Real E state Co. Realtor.i 646-7Taa BROSEi REAL TY 100 E. B•lbo• Blvd , Bal'°' ONLY $18,000 4509 IV. eoa.t Hwy, N.8 . REAL TY COMPANY * 642·1771 Anytime* 673-4110 EASTS I DE Fnr all I his: nearly l'l('\v 1 e 673-3012 e ~~~~~~~~~•Ion beau! i r u I Robinhood Br. & den, frplc .. & carpet. BY O"·ner: 4 Br., just BA YFRONT APT. Plat'<', a <ruicl clll-de-w.c. ing & drps., kttch. bit-in~. redecorated ho111c:, in choice $19,500 U . < lk' d"' AND no la\Vns lo niow or N•"'"""( >le•'g"-1-. Mam· Vista !){'! Lirlo. Pit•r & slip nique · str ing a w!-oc.. . ..,,.... """ ""' . 1 p Id k 1 .. outsidr painling AND a king. """lh froot yanl, ,.,,,,.., '--am 3 bt'droom. :t baths. fireplace. All electric built-in kitchen. Family room. Park • hke available, Enclosed garage, cup1e< at uc poo 110me. · 1 d ""' v,,._ .. "" $28.500. $35.T:iO. SlZC pool • AhNtD. &_~ain~eln-cc.ilings, nc\v carpets, paint ancc-rce g........, nctg l-& drapes. Incl. 111atched George Williamson ~ 5-46·Sl80 bor.= & a friendly atmos-stove & TI'trig. Needs only R<'altor ( · t~·-1 pl•••'" 6n..4:~·i0 ll!ffttnem.1 •ouu~ ._. sitn ple exterior painting, !===============E='.="=·='=13=-l=SG<-I 1};!~:!~~a~T.J. 9: ~~ Xlnt investment 1.t $26,900. General 1000 General 1000 """' ~-OJdC. &l&-07B9 grounds:. TARBELL 84(>.0604 Coldwell, Banker OFFERS: OPEN HOUSE SUN. 1 • 5 Elegant Waterfront Home 301 EVENING STAR, DOVER SHORES. 3 BR's., paneled den \V/frplc .. & wine cel- lar. Pier & floa t for large boat .... $155 ,000 ]11rs. naulston OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-6 415 BAYSIDE DRIVE. N.B. Beautiful bay· front 4 BR. 4 Baths, \\•ith private dock for 59 1'"'t. boat. Immediate possession. .......................... $110,000 \Valter 1-l aase OPEN SUNDAY 12·6 $57,500 1520 RUT H LANE. IVESTC'LIFF, N.B. 5 Bedrooms. 31(2 baths. 18x38 Pool. ~1rs. Marion OPEN SUNDAY 1-6 1101 WHITE SAILS . CdM. Terrific view froni this lovely 4 BR. ho111e \vith family rm .. din. r1n .• po\\·der room. Don't mis!i this at ..... -.................... , S53,500 Chuck Place HARBOR VIEW -OPEN 1-5 High on the hilltop! Visit 1101 EBBT!DI':. Cdl\.I., & you'll never wanl to leave. Pool, patio, Janel & extra lrg. fam. rm. \V/(ire- ptace in separate \Ving. Mrs. Harvey COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. 2200 E. COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT BEACH Kl 9-3351 B Of Th Y I • I A L ' y CLIFF HAVEN UY e ear• NC'ar NB Pwit Ofc. &l6-:2414 3 BR home. lq:: sunken tam \Vaterrront • Vie1v o! Cata-1 -::::=~====== rm \V/ handsome fireplace&. lina & Bay. 2 BR, 2 bal• rock wall, panel!!.'<! din rm Channel Rec.I '01vn your Th ee/F /P I W/ beamed ceilings, Large O\vn· Penthouse Ap1 , with r am 00 well landscaped lot on quiet Frplc. $62,500. 1 s11-cet. $34,000. 612·5749 Ask for: \Vh ch means l\'e arr oUcring OPEN l-IOUSE SUN l-~ Chester Salisbury, R1tr. a lovely 3 BR, J';, bath 31 5 ?ifarinc G'il-60Cl0 home \\•i1h fam nn, and a • .,..,...,._..,_.,..,.., 1 S1\'irnmi11g pool al 1 price you \viU hardly believe. S55 950 Call Us To See: ! BURR WHITE , Rltr, liOOD TER;\1$ 6 Units Clos• In 2901 Newport Blvd., N.8 . 675-4630 Eves. 67:1-015! Rllr. 642-9730 Eves. 548-07201 :"\'~~"'"~"'"~~"'"• I • KENNEDY FHA /VA NO DmVN ""''"""'" irn:l"d" p • 1. . ~~-~~~--=-I l'~antasiic 3 bedroom home Near Harbor HI on 1ve11 kept comc.r 101. VIEW Panoramic vie1v or Back Bay + new 4 bedroom 3 bath. Best location on cul-de-sac. Delta ~al Eelate 646-4414 DOVER VlLLAGE. 2 1.tory Condo $29,500. crn'fl land. Adu.Its. $195 mo. Incl. taxes. 2 bdrs. ~~~ ba, beaut patio, dbl gar., pool. Ptfaint. $25. Owner Bkr. 646-UM!I La~ covered & enclosed Fine 3 BR 2 ba homr. Spac. Ilalio -sunken living room lous living 1'00111, fl•plc, 1\•/1v fully carpeted, sparklinc cp1 s/drps, Top ru'Ca New-built-in kitchen & in im-l--~=~~~-- po1·f. Harchvood Ooors, pa-maculate condition. Price & OPEN DAILY Ho. S28.500 • EZ terms. tem1 for in1mediatc u.le. 10M1 to 2PM PWC ~5440 CALL 54~ll51 <open eves) 3 bedroom, dining room DUPLEX ___ , Hcrila~e Real Es1atc Built-iM, Iarae lot East Costa 1\1csa. 2 Bdrms. VA .. FHA $28.900. 629 SI. Jame1 Rd. f'aCh apl, G.l.'!f no cuh $ Armld 8' Freud, Rraltors do11·n. FllA tl'rn1s. \Voold ex.. 20,950 WEST CL J FF C 0 N· chance ror Fullerton. DOM!NlU?if 2 BR, 21,~ BA. FORTIN CO. Assume loan. Open Sat &: 170\·A \Vc stcllrl Dr., NB POOL • l Bdrm • Fan1 rm. SUn I l.o 6 P}.f. 1509 642-5000 $130/nw pay$ au -S~(i;\ lnl_ Cotn1\•all La ne. ~8--4806 or l BR :2 balh home, t'Ol'TM!r Rand Realty 645-2340 499-1806 lot 130x180 -add !1 more 1Vi0 STORY :ltiOO sq fl. ;; Reduced $3!0-Now $38,750 4 units. Drive by l~ Santa. bedroom~_ 5~~ lo8n _ex-Br.. l B11, fAnl . din, Ana Ave, then l'all isling loon s 2 l 8 Im 0 n I h ulll/laun rm. Total 2400 IQ. totnl-F'ull price S36.930. It. J2;; Vist11 Bll.y1.. 0\Vntt• CALL 51()-.1151 (open cvca) ews 646-lM2 ilnnin llralty """"' OPEN SAT/SUN 2612 Redlands, CC 369 Viste Bo1ya, CC Heritage Real Estate THE BLUFFS MONTICELU).. Ba.loony BR. Overtookin; Back Bay: 1 yr. 11, bR, custom drps/cph1, old condo.: 3 Br. 2'' Ba •• bit-Ins, dbl gar. E.~cel cond. cust. drps. I cal'J>els. By \VOODWARD, Realtor owner S5i).900, 644-2370 , 2218 Lo1urel, Npt. Hts 962-SMl Bl UFFS. tabuloua J.~·plan on OAVIDSO~ Realty _ BY 0\1.'NER 3 BR Homes. 2-grctn belt w/bey view, ~~ Evc:11. 6~ E. side, 2-\V, 1idc. VCTY Ire P.Iany C\lllf. fea!Ul'e!I. 3 Br. ~ $22,950-4 BEDRM ltllru;fcnble loans 5-14-fi~J~;,. Ba. W .500. 6444265 AU I.he ''Trimmings". :? Need ca..~. M&-1059 S BR Walerfront No. 62 baths, family room. lk:llght-CHARPt1NIG Duplex on ribl Bllboa Cove1. $ 6 O, O O O. !u1 <..'Ovtmi patio. La~ lot. ~. of H11o-y, Owner. Prefer trade tor acrt:&&f! or yard, Wklc concrete d.rjve. s:;s,ooo. 673-4169 MU consider other. MS-ml 540-1120 11. Your Ad In our clusltlflls! PLACE YoW' want ad where TARBELL 2955 Harbor Someone 1.,.iJJ•be lookina for they are looklnc -DAILY DAILY PO.Dr \VANT ADS! il Dial 642-M'il PU . .<71' cl.uihd 642.sG1I ...;;....;.....;.~..:.....-----~------• , OCEAN VIEW LOT. Emerald Bay area ot expensive homes. Owner may subordinate. $37,500 Or•nge Coest Property 33:! Marguerite i:i73-8350 SHORECLfFF 3 BR. 2 BA. Qui:it lrN lined area by the sea. Fee shnplr. A<·cess to 2 hPachcs. Undcr $50,000. By o·,,·ncr. G'il--3681 BY Owner. Hnlecres1 3 BR, l ~ BA. Palio, lire place. 4!~'io lnL 3091 t.1urray Lane., KI S..9117 s~.ooo -10•1o Do11'Jl, 6~;-:;, Jnterest. 'i Houses, Jt.2 So. of flighway. 6T:>-6M4 Bkr. OWNER-Open hou~. Beaut. 2 BR, 2 BA t den. Will finance. 535 Hazel. Cd~t. B•lboa Ptninsul1 1300 LARGE LOT, PENIN PT. Thrtt & family roo111 2 BA, 2 lireplaces. $.."19,500. In1n1ediate occupancy BETTY DAVISON Shore Propcrli<'s 673-9060 675-3658 MtitUAL Realty 842.1418 1.11ytimC' ApartmentiN. -:;:tw;;;po;,;;rt;;;Bt;;;••;h;;;;;3;;;;~ GI RESALE _F•_r_s_a1_e __ ..,c1.;,.91:.:o • B/B On Huntington Street 6 UNIT apt house, 2 mo old. TOWNHOUSE $3000 cash do~n lo exiBUng Grou $900 per rhonth; Cori- Gl Joan. $168 per mo. includ-ta.ct Dave at 64~1251 SPLIT-LEVEL 3 Bdrm, 2 ; es all. 3 BR 1~;, bath5, btt-1-;;==~=------bath Uni1. Faces po o l;• ins&: large lot. ilENTALS carpets, drapes, lireplace,'.; TRADEWINOS RL TY Houses Furniahed elec bit-ins, $265/mo. , 8~1-s:i11 G---1-----2-000-1 ~--ener1 2 eoru.1, 2 baths. new c11r· Great Game-Room ROSSl\-100-R-.-..... --A-la_m_l_"'-'· pets, newly painted, adults Grand 4 BR P R F. ~1 I E R 3 BR, 21.~ BA, furnished or only $225/mo. 1-IOME. Gigantic Irregular unturn. Pool. Ettt pr dr. Please call Mn. Fay lot. Covered patio. 4\4'/ll loan $325-lcasc. 644-031.7 Bay &· leach lor you to lake over. :535,000 FURNISHED, pvt. cottqe. l , R••lty, Inc. . Rex L. Hod911 Rlty. Jgc. room & bath, patio. 901 Dover Or., NB Suite 126 847-2525 o:~o .,.,,,., &It "" P'I ' ""=°'=='°"".,,.--~ ......,.-,,_ . ,;...., " . 645-2000 Eves. 548-6966 , A.RTIST 0 1vncd & decorated =========·I ' ' 3 bdr1n., 2 ba .. Dutch Haven Rentalt to Shir• 2005 NEAR ne1v 2 aoory. 3 1 Co. Club, on cul-de-sac room 2 baths_ Double gar-: reatured 1 n Southerland $IS Natlono1I Roomo1te are. 1~ blocka from beach. r.tagazine. $29,900, 6<;C. loan. Hi Rent ? Sha.re! 673-1166 Lease only, $300 per mo. 1 ()\1-ncr 897--6460 or 893-7237. 1860.Newport Blvd., QI , • Principals only. Cost• Mesa 2100 Ritt. 646-3928 Eve_ ~165a : OPEN HOUSE Sal .• Suo FURN. 2 ...... n; ba. Co...,, * LACHENMYER : 2 Story, 4 BDRl\1, 2 bath, cul-Pool. Adults. J.st & last ?Ito'• de-sac. By owner. 536-1965 1'Cnl, $350 Month 549-3760 8031 Ebbtide, Ha 0 \VNER'S 3 BR 2 bath. Nice clean home. Am.tme 5% % 1''HA loan. S22,500. 19802 Iatbmus Ln ., HB Coron• dtl Mir 2250 3 BR. duplex; :2 ball.1 bltns, : dstiwshr., new paint, cpts. ' drps. NT. beach. Year lse. $230. 510-7573 1351 PREmGE home by 01mcr; Lido Isle 2.100 sq. ft., 4 Br. 3 Ba. 1'"HA ,;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:I 61,!i'iO; under a ppr a I 1 e d value, $39, T.,O. 842--7941 CORONA del ?t1AR. China 3 BR 2 bath, cpll!, drp&, bl Cove. Pvt. bch, magnitlcenl Ins. Near beach No pe view or bay. Furn 3 BR, 2 $240 yrly lease 642-3196 BA. Avail. June 1st to Oct. I====-;-===='! 1st $1500. mo. (714) 745--0640 Newport Shor• "" (1141 61~ •216 "' ...-.. 3 BDR?t1, 2 Bath, 1und .... NEW LISTING! Modern 6 year old 4 BR, convert I. den, sewing rm. Newly carpeted. Beautifully tllcd entry l: dining rm. $76,500. Call for Appt. Walker Rlty 675-2676 SALE or Lease: By 01vner, J BR, 2 BA, frpl c, new cpts I.: pain!, pool 1!1.ed lot \Valk lo schllbeach. 96J-.ri611 2 BDRl\1. 5 blk lo beach, :513,850. Lo1v do1vn, 11.s~ume lo::in. $100 mo. 505 l:Jth St. 11.B. :t BR. 2 Ba. 2-Story \Valk to beach. Poola. $275 ~ S2.'iO ?!fa. Ne1v C-u-pct~. Jse. Avail lmmed. 962--717 514 Femleat. 61.>-6044 Bkr. or 96MOOt Lido Ii i• 2351 Westcllff · 323g ---------FOR rl!nl • 224 Via Lido Nord. $1500 mo. except August $2000. Phone 213: (\Vebslcr 4-09201 or Zlo.4547 LEASE w/ oPlion· 4 BR, 21Ji.l baths. Pool. RcfJ-1. 1 • 543-9477 * 323 I Huntington Ho1rbour-1405 Sumnwr Rent1ls --"""-----2910 University P•rk EXTRA SHARPI Very at1r. 3 Br. & 2 Ba. honie on strcct-10-s trr.cl 101. •-il' d' \VATERFRONT -by owner · .,.,am ce !., scp. 111. area, elc. 4 BR. -2 BA .. dock , 55' on LIDO ISLE Bcsl bay!ront location. FUm. 2 BR. + den home: pier &: slip, June 1 lo Aug. 311t, , $4,000. Occupancy can be ex. teudcd. , OlANCELWR llorne -J ;' BR, 2 BA. elec kitchen. · Landscaped. Pool &: tennis . prlvl. Yrly lease. · ' aft 7 p.m. &. wknd!I. $5:"i.950 11•:1.IC'r enclosed patio $74,500. LIDO REAL TY, INC. Also 60' on main channel 3•100 Via Lido 67J.SIJ30 lai gc 3 Br. 3 Ba., dock. """"'"""'"""'""'""!!"'""'I $110,000. Consklrr lcasc/op-JUST LIKE HOME! """· 592-5''8 Broker ~2000 Dial 642-S678 for RESULTS NE\V Condo in Village ur. 3 BR. 2~J Ba. lrg dell.c . game room. Pool ptjv 1 $315. Mo. &r>-2996. NO BEACll CO'ITAGE !! While elcphan~! D1me-a-line BIG comer Joi. BIG 5 bd. hse, Din. k ramUy rm~. Ex- tra car/boat space. $11).),000 R. C. GREER, Real ty 3355 Via Lido 673-9300 LOVELY BAYFRONT 4 BR + makls, southern ex- posure, pier &: slip for lge boat. 2-story \v/view from m&!ter BR. Call for 11.ppt. Walker Riiy 675-5200 Btlboa l1l1nd 1355 FIXER·UPPER EXTRAORDINARE Corner lot duple11' at hu1(1 cost! S·tl.500 BOYD REALTY 3629 E. Coast Hlway, Cd~I 675-5930 LUXURY a,nd gnve.nitnce is Y0Ul'1; ~x. l Br, 2 Ba:. each 4 yr•. new. Xlnl aurnmcr rent· al. Easy Tcrn'lll. CANON REALTY tii~I Huntlnelon Btach 1400 GLENMAR home, 2 story, il 81t, t•rn rm. 3 balh POOL. Frplc, pal}o. MW pa.In! ln- .ilM., $34..950. 96WOOa •h • PM ' G1ntr1I 2000G.neral 2000Gen•r1I So!vt • Simplt SCT4"'blod Word Puzzle for a Chuck!• O ,_ .. ,.,.. ""°" "' "'° four Krambled wordt ti.-· low to form fout simple wotda. 1~0NllC I .rr11r. ILUIAM ' I I I. I I' I' I 2000 • • . • ' • • • • •r:~w~r r r r r r r r 1 ~: • ~f=\lETlUsl J I I I I I •I·· I ~·1 -·~-,..,......~-.. . ·, .SCltAM·Lm ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION tSOO ' • I ii I I ! \. ll\IUtY I '1!J,f1 ''"'L •• lb, l ~, !":"'"" . lllNTAI.~ K•NTALS 1ENTALS RIAL ISTATI RIAL ISTATI 'H• I! """°"""" ~ "'"'I"'°" AptL UnfurnlthM Ajth. UnfurnllhM Chnorol G1n1r1I Adv•rtlH,. n\a)' pt•oe thslr •"'lily teltflhtna. 3250 "-' ~ ' 4200 Cat• Melt s100 Hun11,,..... -h 5400 1-r._iy_6000 -Off-1-... -1t.-.-1.-1--60-7o li:WiiNii~Bi;--;;;;;;;:11 ., -Ap!J. NEW SPANISH UVE RIGHT • Phollft Are o,.. 8:00 a;111.-5:30 p.m. .f --· !,.:..J.:'::i Kll·1"·Poo1""1<1 '"'" VILLAGE APTS. ON THE I"' acH be MprW $2 nIE MESA 1 & 2 BDRM. Furn or un-, ' • Ult. ~-*· Li. 415 N. N~' Blvd 646-96Sl rum. AiNOnd, d$h"'•hn, aeU l!'ISll, suru·. SWIM NICE 3 !>dno. 1 \I bll. 2 two bdM untu. All 011 samt lot. Owner will deal" ot trade tor vacant propttcy. 2J 3 : a&>-591.1. 714, !!21-3411 CllEERY Alt ... conif ,oWets. lla.bg &wndi»'(IO( v.!{lll$, U'OUltlc ceillnga, e 1 'fl v , be.loony. !roµi $63: Mtdica.I 9 to Noon S•tu.day-CloHd Sund1y DIAL DIRECT 642·56 78 1--=='-:-=-:-,---ID~RATOR'S PAD, l Br. cltan'r ovens. paUo, breaJt. ln YoW' own flvnt yard Unlllm 2 BR. 2 bll C _, :,~C.:~0~;~~1~;: WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540·1220 _,. Stereo, . ~"• tr'M y. Avau fut bars, private tundeckJ. .....,, • 1/1, IM. 6'13-3$40 lrc slorqe closets. Heat¢ PriV1.te clubhoult, heated ' UNIT a.pt, 3 I blocks trOm beach. 1 QR. larae, ilen. newly decotl'°4. 1000 sq. ft . per unit: In90me $400 per mo. 41U-7th St., H.B. 536- 2310 Arerit Oevidenct, •· '15;-«M4 pool, saunas. bu-boques. pool, aaunu, private cate C del Me 4250 Sowid proof walls. walk ln with 24.·hour u curl ty JUard, BEAUT. air-oond. ottlces. \Val n u t panel'r. amp)( park'g, utll & maint. 1·1160 Ml· ft. 1-smllr. 35c 1q. ft. Huntln9ton BHch 540.1220 L•t••• Buch 494-9466 Hvntingt9n &etch l400 oroM r cloac!tl, eovered cu pot1s. Mediterranean adult Uvina. Hours-Regul.ation•-Deaciiinsi AVAIL now. t.rg i-nr, l Ba Adul\3, no pets. STOM HOME -2 l.aJ'gO Irr P,"iv ,Ullde<J<, Pool. Phone 54'-2n7 2 Bedrooms, 2 8atb.I From $250 613--2102 ERRORS; Adv1rtltel'9 ahouli choelc th•li. ad• ctall)' •nd rop•rt: lmmtdlctoly err•l'I ! BR's le den, w/ rumpua I'm OOlt lo bcb l ahp'c. Beaut. 1--~"'· -="'' ==~~-1 in P'"I"· un %' ...... loc ·-·~ I • RENT • llu1inoat Proparty 6050 N.B. STU010. S p a c i ou s, •r mlKlaaslflcatlon1. THE DAI LY PILOT a•umot 11a~lllty far 1rr9rai •"'!)' to ~! furn., paneled \V/ lav tac. tn• ••tent of Publl1hln9 th• advert:IMmant eorNCtl)' on• tim.. 1 _...___ ; l it• -JOO. -1• II Ae', Acroa from Mea..,,.. Lark Adults fftlY, 615.-1970 or J ltNirh Funtitur• INCLUDES \V/W ahlr cu. toll "'"""· Leue, w/ •P:-83.'l-0171 or 6!4-3461 $20 • 525 ·& UP -petiog, o.E. buil~w. with \VW aublet mo to mo. 64J...9657 DEADLINE FO" C~PY A.ND KILLI: f i:SO P.M. th• day War. publlootlon, •xotpt f•r * 1£-WillKU * tion, or ...ie. 52~n81. I-::==:::::=:===== I re.frlgerator a. dishwasher; Sho\\'n Sat. 16551 Grah&m, lalbH 4300 ?tfontb·Ti>?.fontb Rentals Hunti,.ton P•ciflc DELUXE oUio! iii Costa Wc:ek•nd lfltton and Monday· Mqtlom whan cil .. lng 1tlme t• l :ID P.M: P'rld•y. '1 !l'fesa, 1500 sq ft. Air oond. VOU MUIT HAVI KILL NUMiE"I When kllllrtt en •d'bff11tM of'qulck rMultt. I HB. WIDE SELECTION Ap•rtment5 BR 2 ba, W/W (:pt1, 1ncd BACH. Apt., util. pa)d S75. Applian«:s A TV'1 cvall. n 1 Ocean Ave. (3 Blk1. W. BUILDING FOR SAU Crpts &: dr-ps. 5'f8..6761 be 1ur• t• make • r~ord or th• lclll r1umber glv•n y•u by y1ur •d t•k•r •• 1 300 Sq. Ft. Offlc. verification •f )"IUI' call. -r )'It'd, I: (1U11 st,)'le din I: kit, Month. El Mar Motel, 310 No Security Depo1Jt ol H · Be p combo .. Jg liv nn w/frplc. E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa HFRC Fumiturt Rent.ah unun~ton ach le r) OOSTA MESA 64$.2130 Ev \>' effort 11 madt te klll or correct a naw cd that ha• be1n t rf1f'td, but wt can· I Btwn 2 zhop c enter a , 517 \V, 19th, CM 548-3481 PHONE. cn 4J S36-l487 '250/mo ~-968--4541 ..rt i ~lbH" ltleM 43$5 1568 w. Lncln, Anhl't\ 174-2800 2 BEDROOM, 2 b a '-h, Commtrcitl 60IS not guarante• to do 10 unlll tho ad ha• appear•d In th• JNiper. I OR BDRM, convert de:n, 2 ba, prden, l"OOn1, eiec kitcli. Water .-:ittener, pnge dr opener, !rple. 962-2716 ..._ _________ 1 .2-B~D~R.-,-1,-,~b~,-,.-,,-,,~,,-~-aa-,' carpet.I, drapes, blt.W, l lJTl'LE L<de. A~. 3 roc;im blk to 5 Pts., atores, O\Vner DIME·A·LINE Ad• ar• strictly ca1tl In advanct '11 man .. , •t 11\y e11••f our•fflcea. FOR LEASE NO pho"' 0'""' l_....-. ' ' lWE u.-r. Avail. M'.ly 21 kl n&ar OCC. Sl.f.5, 645-0151 or key at 7701 Ellis _... 546-5019 Aft. s 1100 N1wparl Blvd. CALL BILL SCOTT OR KERMIT JUGGS 3100 sq lt prag Bldr on Th1 DAILY PILOT rotel"Vet the right to claulfy, &dlt, centor •r Nfllao any •dva,.., JWMt 21. S50 wk. 67S--0331 Apl. D. 2 BR dlx:, cpts, drp5, bltns, N~El""'•"2"ar""'~d~u~,,~"'~.-.~,ov__,•, J{arbor Blvd, 4 d:uble d~. t l1em1nt, 1nd to ch•ng• It• rate• and rttulatlon• wlth1ut prier not .... nt• An• 3610 .Hvntlnaten leech 44QO ~· $155. Adults. 3005 dshwhr, crpt/drp~. S150 F°"'.::....:..::~---'= ~ ~ 546-402!, 6'i~ adult!i only. 1508 Olive. $600 Per Month. Broker Mall Addre11: lox 1175, Newport leach, cant. 675-6591 494-U61 eves. .• 2 Ba. Xlnt QUIET II BEAUTIFUL $150-2 BR. 2 Ba.' Studio. 536-0523 Ad~b oriiy':, 2 Br., util. paid, Carpets, drapeJ,. garage. CONOOMINIUM Apt. 3 BR, Pool. PIO. 141-2l.25 Adults. 01vner. 213. 592-5227 bltM incl washer d~r &: COMMERCIAL Lot • l.St time oUe'i'ed. '105 E. Balboa Blvd. !Next to Balboa Theater.) Ca.ll 642-2203 CLAl$1FIED COUNTERI •r• located•• followt: 962-966'1' 17676 Cameron, Hunt. Sch. LOVELY 3 txtr 2 ba Wwn· retrlg, Crpl8, w-Ps. Avail A Htl h 3630 BEAUTIF1JL 2 Bdnn. $135 house. Newly dee, pools etc. June lat. $170 mo. ~228,j ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST Delly Pil ot Clauified ' nt• n1 I t1 mo. adult!, 508 Huntington $210 Lease. Call 546-3710 LARGE 2 Br.; l or 2 BR. crptJ, drps, 2 car pr. Ave ., H.B., 536-11165 N •~ h 5200 Children OK, pet OK; cpts, luelnou Rtnt1I 6060 2'3 E. 17th SI. -94 CLASSIFIED INDEX lnelustr1•1 Re:1t1I 6090 Sl.65 mo-ht A: lut, mo's, .,..X'DC ewport -·~ drp1, range. 962-7637 FOR lease Laguna Niguel, rent 548-1362 O•nlen Grove 4610 NEW SPANISH STORES for leue Villag'e oU San Dieeo Fwy at Crown tfOUSES FOR SALE ::::~:~ ==~~s ::: =~~f:!::N•: llNTAl.I .... '"' .... , ~gun• 8t1ch 570S Shopping Center, cor. ot El ·~~e~-~uniw co~lercialEI & ~=:T~~L.,... Ult WISTCLI'" 41!1 fl'ENC1NO •·-IN h 3705 SINGLE Young Adult! LtL'<· VILLAGE APTS. -Camino &: Mendosa., CM. luuUllU'uu. ts . ......, ta ec-MlllA DIL M.l.I ::: UNIVl!lllTY f"AIK 4H7 'LOOIU 11---"u_ .. __ ~•-~-'.'."'-UI')' prden apts with coun-1 &: 2 BDRM. Furn or un-FOR LEASE, near ocean, 1 Suitable Deli., TV, variety, tric. Days· 831-1400. Eves.· ~:~t.::•::.ic. 1111 ::~: :tJ,,., ~!: :~:=~~.:~,~~"o'iu:: -UH BR plua study, Victor Hugo try club atmosphere and turn. Air·cond, dshv.·hrs, self BR, Vie\V, large, Channing Hobby, etc. See Liquor store 49'.t-4198 :: COltONA DIL MAI 41M • lt lf"INISMIN• "" ·-a, 1-month. complete privacy. SOUTH clean'g ovens, patio, break· apt, singl• person o"'"· Sl50 ' N•lw•,.••,•, 111"' 0 ',, 1,,, IALIOA •• o,1,1tDININO t.U1 ...... ..,.,,, y CLUB APTS 13100 ''Y for key. l.1-1 SPACES 1250 2500 5000 N w H I H IAY ISLANDS .,,. GINlltAL llltVICIS fltt * 494-52911 * BA · fast bars, private fundeckll, unfurn, available furn . Al Wagner 213: 981-6510 sq ft, ne\v bldg.' lOc ~ ft, =~~-:o'.~osi~••s :~: LIDO ISLi •lSI GRADING. 01sc1N• '"' CHAPMAN Ave.. Garden Jrg storage closel!!. Heated References. 494-8392 S 1.1.1.10.-. 1sLANo 411$ ouss 6ut , G (7141 636-3030 Balboa Island complete in June. Logan t, IAYcJt•n iuJ HUNT1NoToN ••ACN -w• 11REiJ11 THUM• 6r• 3707 rove pool, saunas, har·b-ques. REAL ESTATE C Jl,f 646-0681 •AYSHO•ls tw ,ouNTAIN vA UIY 441' GUN sHOf" •111 i IF;!'::::;:..:.::..;:.:::.._.;;~ 4705 Sound proof walls, walk in Generil Slore or office. 1621 wq ft · · ~ovE• 1"0•11 ~f~ 5EAL •EA CH 44M HIALTH cLu•s 61• ) 3 Br. 2 L1qun1 BNch. closets, covered car ports. ----------with w/w C"-tll. 1600 pr. 4000 SQ l'"I' new bldg, nr H!":!~~1":•oNU.NOS im LONct ••.1.cH •SM HAULING 61• 4000 40 1 BR, lower, W/W, close to ocel.il:-Broker. ~ -. 2 BR 4-plex W/W, iit;;·~ocation. ·-· 4100 NEW SPANISH VILLAGE APTS. &: 2 BDRM. Furn or un· turn. Aif..cond, d!>hwhrs, self 1clean'g ovens, patio, break· i1ast ban. private fundeckll, ! 1rg storage closets. l.feated 12901, 88.Ull8.!, bar·b-queS. 1 SOund proof walls, walk in ~closetS, covered car porls. I Adul ts, no pets. I Phono 546-2727 $27 .50 wk. up Oceanfront Apt Small ootta.g'" 1tudlo, $160 monlh includes utilltiea &: fumisht!'d, Perfect for single ailulta or elderly couple, 494-3949 or 675-4070 Stuart & !tc>bbiM Realtors LEASE only. 2 BR Ocean front apt. All electrie. Also Studio. No pets. <192-1845 4740 CHARMING -Spacious 2 Br. <tint Apt. Adultl!I only. *496-3670* RENTALS Apts. Unfurnl1hod Gonoral 5000 SI 75. 3 BR l ~~ ba. tludio. Garage, patio, A . C . , children I.:. pet O.K. Bkr. -$110. 2 Br. l~~ ba. sludio. R/0 , A.C., \V/\V, Patio. Avail 6/1. Bkr. lJU.6980 , •Day, week, month. Co1t1 Mell 5100 : e ,Studio &: Bach. Apts, I tiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiii : e Incl Utils Ii: Phone aerv. 11 e Maid Sendce, TV avail HAR BO~. e New Cafe l: Bar Newport Blvd. 548-9'155 GREE s OD attractive u p p e r 1paciou11 2 BR. new w/w. . drps, adults. $121.50. Also 2 Br dnstn $124.50. 54.S-3643 ()r 6f6..5961. Key: 2260 Maple Apt E. ROI.IDA Y PLAZA ELUXE. 1pa.cious !·Bdrm. Furn. apt. $135 Plus uW. t Heated pool. Ample park.in& No chil~n -No pets 1965 Pomona. c r..1 . BACl-IELOR UNFURN . from $110 ALSO AVAILABLE 1.2&:38Dlllif. Heated Pool!, Child Care Cenler, Adj. to Shoppin1 - No pets allowed 2100 Peterson Way, at I-Iar· bor & Adams, Costa Meu 546-0370 •* Vlllo Pomon• Apll. AVAILABLE MAY 22 Costa Mesa'• newest A: most l'1uxurto • f 1 &: 2 BR 2 bedroom with carport $110. us. urn. ' Disposal, wa ter paid, Near .apt!. Adults only. No pets. . :1760 Pomona Ave., jwit south schools. !lot 18th St. 2194 "C" Placentia. Avt, '"" • 636-4120 • i.ARGE 2 Br., w/W, bllns, _ ~htd. pooi. Adults, no pet&. UNFURN-immac 2 Br. apt, 1$145 Mo. plus util. 2212 enclosed gar, Orps, crpt'd --..-Baker &: Harbor. Also '5000 UNIVl•SITY f".l.lt k 1 o•ANOi COUNTY .... HOUSliCLIANINCI •1u Adults, 110 pets. Rent•lt Winted 5990 mo. or will divide. Bkr. 12J oA•DIN 011:ov1 .,,, tNTlll:to• Ol!COlt.l.TIN• •1n Phone 546-2727 642-9555 sq ft nr Bristol " Baker. ~-...~·:e ... y ,1::: WISTM1NSTliR 4'12 INCOMI TAX ., • •............................ QUIEr ENGLJSH FAMD..Y,17.==-,,=-=,..----.,., 540-44.29 EASTlLUF, 1241 MloW.-Y CITY .,,. lll:ON, Ormmt11t1I, lie. 61M 2 DORMS. 2 Baths, fr-pie., tv.·o children, require un-fOOJ SQ }'.T. M·l space with FOR lease, new industrial ~"o~1;: .. T::~'i!.:R :~= :::~: ::: HllGHTI = ::~~~:~1u := D/W' -~,.· .·, new ,.,.....,.,h, furnished house Aug. 1, office•. New bldg. Im· bldg., 2 5 O O sq. It. 16.19 &ALIOA f'ININSUL.1. 1:1t1 T,u,,",,'",L , ... INIURANCI '"' ' ...... ~ .. ~... mediate occuponcy. Logan ••• , •• IAY 138 OH IHVlSTIGATIN .. O.ltdlY• 61• draP<s. Steps to beach. $27;. yearly lease. Lido area Monrovia, CM. 613-9017 ''·' ,,. ••os LAGUNA •IACH ues JANITORIAL ,,,. Ave. Costa Mesa. 546-6530 _.. IUI .. tit "" Mo. Adults only, no pets. pretelTtd. Good I 0 ca I LIDO ISLI 1»1 LAGUNA NIGUEL 4111 Jt:WIUY ltl!f"AI c. r ••• "112 e LAGUNA OFFICE e Lot 6100 u.1.•0A ISLAND US5 SAN CLEMENTI! ~n• U:MDSCAf"IN• '"' BURR WJUTE, Realtor re erences . .uT"'U I ' HUWTINGTON ti.I.CM 141f DA.NA f'OINT -41~ LOCKSMITH 6t!f 2901 Newp(Jrt Blvd., N.B. UNFURNISHED l BR apt Attractive modem bldg, cen--------.---HUNTINGTON H.-.. aou11 14tJ Tlll,l.IJI, ttc. MAlONJIY, •lllCK ... 61s-4630 6'12-225.1 with stove &. refrigerator. ~al loc, air oond, $95 mo. LAGUNA ·woodsy view lots, ,DUMTAIN VALLIY 1411 CONDOM1NIUM ttM MOVINGo• .. ~·-... :: ~ µp to Jll5 w/ulil. 22024~ on lse. 4942466 ~19250 u~!u,.,7~. pvt. :~~1~•:i:cH ::: RIENTALS ;::~::c;; 111._ •• .,. MODERN 2 BR, 2 BA, frplc, s. ~1ai n, Torrance LEASE: atore or office, 1914 ...,,11¥.' &: • • ~ ..., GARDEN 0Rov1 10s Apts. Unfurni1hld ~~~~o:oltAf"HT :;: d'•h .. -·•-relrig •leps to -ft. ~ 1-tlon "" E l · •M lot .. room tor 11 LON• llA.CM 1JH lltNl!RAL Alf , •• ,,,,, ... ···-· ...... .. "' .. ""''""'• ' WANT TO BUY/RENT -.• •"""' ""4 ' ,).lo.I ' IU.l<,I. ' U.Kl!WDOD • 1»1 COSTA Ml!A 5111 .... ..,. bay & ocean. Yearly. $250. 17th St., C.M. 962-8559 units. '311•E. 21st St., Costa O•AMGI COUNTY 1111 MESA VllDI 5111 ;~~M:~:~ING =: 673-1990 213: 271-4220 • Eut Bllill only. 4 or s bdrm Mesa 01vner 494-5072 eve. OUT Oil' COUNTY u• NIWf'OllT 11.-.CM J20f l'OOL Sl!•VIC.E ,,1. homf' July 1st poasesii' n MODERN 3 rm o.ffice. Newly . OUT Of' ITATI .... Nhf"DllT NllOHTS 5111 tll DELUXE 3 BR 2 ba. lrplc. • IO ' decoraetd, drps & apts. ... ITANTOlf Ull Nl!Wf'OllT SHOlll!S JUt f"OW•• fWllf'IMG • I N •• , Hoag H .. p. &: Patk 213/474-0197. 9'.,n·~i~e· 6150 Wl!STMINtTl!ll 1,n WllSTCLlf'il' Silt :~:INs:•vic• ::: I S100. Mo, N.8 . 64£.172~ t I ;;;:;;;;;::::;::;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;,1M1DwAY CITY 161' VNIVER"TY f"Alt k StU RADIO, R•'9ln. lie. 6t• I Lldo Bldg, Adull.!1, $210/mo. UNFURN house Costa_J.1esa SANTA ANA 5 000 ft Al 11 SANTA ANA 16M •ACK ... ., SH• REMOOELING & lll!l'AI• ,, .. M'". 4201 Hilaria \Vay, NB or Newport areL 3 BDRM. ' sq • • NORTHER. N SANT.I. ANA H•Ts. u• 1.ur •Lupi-sto JtlMODILtNe. KtTCHINI 6,... 1 •• ..,,,, havo ton--" y-~. location, ample parking. ORANGI 14JI COllONA DlL MAR Sut ... "'" 1 & 2 BDRM apt! unturn "" ... ...~ cuu ......... 541 2412 uo 1512 ruSTIN 1641 IAUOA SlH ',::,~G ... '* I · ' ~·· $25Q.S275. 646-1420 _,.,mo. -or .....r .CAL..1.F. RANCH. ,•.•,•,•,•,.TusTIN 1Mf •AY 1su.Nol sm ss:wtNG MACHIH• ••,Ails 6tn ly lse, also ha,ve choice 2 IUf LIDO ISLE S:IS1 Slf"TIC TMKS. Se-."" lff.!' v.•inter rental!. Winilred L. \VANT br, untum or p&rtly Office Rent1I 6070 Show raMh fully fenced \llith SILVl•ADO CAN'YON llH HUNTINGTON •IA.CH Ult TA.ILDltlNG ' ••H }'oS!, Agt. 642-38;)(1. furn. Cosla Mesa atta. SllO approximately 100 acres (If ~::~:~ ~:LI(~ . lHI ,OUNTAIN VALLIT SOI TEltMJTE CONT•Ol .. n or less Lady & one child LAGUNA BEACH ~ H UM • .-1..toA ISLAND s1ss TILE. c.r1111k •tr• 2 BR..Jlpr. duplx, range, ref. $175. yrly, cpts .. Avail 6/1. W!Ph 36th St. 213: 24&-1921 . . . permanent pasture. as an LAGUNA llACH 17M SIA.L llAC.H SUI TILi. Ll"ol""' • Mll'WI .,75 G4G-4063 Air Condftlenod l'Xcellent 3 bdnn home hay LAGUNA NIGUE L on LONG •EACH u• TllEI se•v1cE ,,. b ' f SAN CLl!MENTE 1111 Oii.ANOE COUNTY Sltl TELEVISION, ltlHlrt. lie. •1U e LANDLORDS e ON FORES''' AVENUE storage barn and arn or SM JUAH CAf01STllANO 1m GAllDIN o•ov1 su1 Ul'HOLSTlltY ,,,. , FREE RENTAL SERVICE Detk .pace• availabl• In registered ca ttle Total of CAl'ISTtlANo •EACH 11H Wl!'STMtNSTE• sui WILOING '"' B k 53• ~2 Dt!'llMll ottlu bui1..M ..... a: 110 acrea locaied ~ miles ,0,',',',,',001"'T UH Miow1..v CITY 111' JOBS & EMPLOYMENT East Bluff 5242 ro er ~ .....,. 1'* SANTA ANA snt ::::...::;:::.:... ___ ..c:c::.:::1;;;c;;-.,.,.-::;-;;-;;-;-:-7<.::I primt location ID downtown north of Madera near Coa· OCIANSIOI UJI SANTA ANA H!IGHTS JUI •o• WANTED, M•• -... GARAGE wa n ted for ,,., ''' 001.. '"' • NEW DELUXE e Laguna, Be•cb. Air condi-chclla. Full priCt-$1.;u;,000. ••••••••• coUNTT TUSTtN ••* JO• WANTao. W.mH storage, NewportrCM area, . f • pl , ... COASTAL ., .. JO• WMrro. 3 Br. 2* b& apt. for lesae call collect (213) 331-4105 tioried, urpeted, bel.utifuJ For more In ormatton ease MOUll!S TO IE MOVfD UH LAIJllNA. l tACM 1115 MIN • WOMtN , .. Incl 1pac mstr suite din . paneled partitianina::. T. 0 call Glenn Thompson wiU1 ~~;~:~~·u,':. SALi[ ::!: LAIJUNA. NtGUl!L '',", OOMl5TIC HELf' JQI · · · · • ONE BDRM Unfurn Apt tor -.... --•·· Eckhoff & A•soc., Inc, ••••T••-s ,0, '''' s.-H cLl!MINTE s 1 AOENc111, M•• n• rm & dbl. garage, auto. . en ... -a: ... no .. ._e on "' ,,.. SAN JUAN CA.f"ISTJIANO "" Hl!Lf" WAHTID. Milt "" doi;:;r opener avail, Pool &. employed lady up to Forest AYe., rear leadl to 1&18 W, Chapman Ave. RENTALS ' DAlfA f"OINT Pff 1..o1HC11s, w-1»1 -". ''''· Nr. catholic SUO/mo, 642-0086 Munclpal ~ lots. SSO Orange. Calif. Houses Furnished REAL ESTATE, HILf" wANTID, w"".. '* '" , I Josl-Mttl a w-" 1511 Church & achoo! & Corona · per mono. for space. Deak 541·2621 Eves-wknds ~r.n ctlNl!IAL DH Gener• AGINCll!S. M" • w-,,.. d.I Mar H'•h. Rooms for lent 5ff5 and chain aYallablt for $5. ~~~· ~~~~~~~1·•NTALS TD IHARll'. 1"5 TRlf'Ll(JC, tft. JtM SCHOOL$ a INSTltUCTIOll ''" ..., ~ COSTA MESA 21H COHOOMIN tUM St$1 JOB f"Rlf'Alt.1.TION 7 .. e ONLY S260 e PLEASANT Room In prt Bllline11 !lours auwerillg R ... rt Pro-rty 6205 MEIA DEL ,.,,.... ,us RENTALS wA1tT10 sm rHEAT1ic.1.1. "" service avail•ble for $10. ··;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~·-·~:;;;;;;;;;;;;l~ESA vi11:o11 111• JtOOMS F01t 1tENT stfs MERCHANDISE FOR 837-!TI Amigo!! Way. N.B. home, kitch priv. Phone in All ut:Wtl• .. I.id uc .. t • COLLl!Gll! f".1.tlJI' 11U llDOM & IOARO "'' room 646-1393 " MAMMOTH MT. N•wPo•T •EACH ",,•, MOTELS, T•A•Ll• cou1tTs '"1 SALE AND TRADE Corona clel M•r 5250 . telepl.one. Newf"ottT HGTs. t cuEsT HOMES sm f"U1tN1ru11:11 -l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iil l Sleeping Bedroom ·with DAll.Y PD..OT CONDO FOR SALE Nl!Wf"OltT 5HOtll!I mt MISC.1tENTALs sn• 011,,1c1 il'URNtTUlll •1t •~n-. .:_.. rol't/ IA'l'IHOtlES 1"1 INCOM! PROl'l!ltTT .... Of',ICI l(QUlfOMl!NT •n private bath&: entrance m FOR.EST A'l'-~V.Eo Lux\U'IOU.! ~,... home, p I DOVS:ll SHDJll!S m,,,.' lUllNISS fOROf'IEllT Y ... STO•• l!OUll'MlNT •n .. ; Nice. 673--0946 LAGUNA BEACll pleasure investment, Split. w•sTCLI'' Tlt.-JLER f"A•xs 605s CA.flt, Jt•STAURAAT •u 4.9f..IM6 level 2 Br. with quality u,, ........ •SJTT f"AIK !!~ •UllNIESS JllNT.1.1. .... •Alt IOUlfOMINT lt\J ... BEAUT. rm. for gentleman: ..... 0'fllCI ltlNTAL ..... HOUSEHOLD OO<IDI ..,I ""' •N• garage, patio, col. TV & ONLY $2"/MO ci'aftsmanship, sleeps 8. 11..c1e •AY ~_: •NDUSTlt•AL f'•Of"IJITY '"' QARAGI 11..1.I! •n I.I'. 160.•tonlh. , •• "'"! F • -a1 I Year round management, ",,".,',,",",',',,,, -·· COMMERCIAL 6tu flURNITUlll AUCTION MU " ..,,....,,,., or lop uoor cenu oca. ... ,, INDUSTtllAL ltEHTAL 6Dfl ,6.l'l'LIANCIS .,. ON TEN ACRES PRIVATE en-·, men onl)". lion, 3 rooms &:. large pvt recreational complex.aauna, collONA DEL MAa i 1.on 61• .tMT1ooes •n• ... ., whirlpool, swimmi~ pool, ::;·~:.ANDS !Mt ltANCMIS ,,,. SIWINCI MACHINll •n• l • 2 BR. Furn &: Unfurn $45. month. 548-3696 after 4 balcony, w/w plush crptg rec, hall. Close to lifls, ov. LIDO ISLE :,3ri C.ITllUS GllOVlS 6115 MUSICAL INSTllUMINT ans Frplcs / prlv. patios/Pools. pm. thruout, walnut panelif!i, ERLOOKING POOL. $ZS,950. BALSOA ISLJMD 2,,, ~=~=~INOtll! !!: ~~~gs • o•ctANS !: Tennis · Contnt'I Didst .. put· ROOM for renl for y,·orking drps, view ivindows, sliding Also for rent. (121-C\ ~~~Z~~~zo:1..~L1:.;H 14°" 11:Eso11.T il'ROl'lll1"Y .,u TELEV1t10H llll ~ snm . CdM ~·~ ..... ~ lady, kitch. privl. 1 child glass drs, pvt exit, oU street PROPERTIES WEST lliA.L IEACN r~: ORANGE co, l'ROl'l!RTY 62tl +II·'• a STEllEO .,,. WU Sea ~e. ........~ OK. ~CM CaJJ NO-··· parking, cleanina: servict LON• llA.CK UM OUT 01' STATI l'llOfO. ''" TAl'I RICDltDlltS ll1t z;r .,...,.."°" 'd·· ·-lhl 1028 Bayside Drive •••••• , ••• ,, ... MOUNTAIN a DISIRT •211 CAMIJIAS a IGUlf"MINT 1311 (l.facArthur nr. Co1!!1 Hwy) I"=========' I prov1 ""'• ~e or mon y. U>ITA ANA SUIDIVISION LAND '"2 NOISY SUPf'LllS .... R I S-Qualified applicant!! reply Newport Beach l'llSTMINSTER ~:i; RIAL !ST.I.Tl SEIVICI 6tlJ il'Oll:TIN• GOODS UM ! BR, )"" liV nn, •-(o, dbl Mil(. enta I 777 for appt to: OmCE, Box 675-fl30 MIOWAY CITY ,,,. R.I!. EXCHAflGE WI •INOCUL.l.RI, SCOf"lt UH •• "' ~~~~~~~~~!:':'l lANTA ... HllONTt ilSt II. l . WAKTIO ,,.. MISCILU.Nl!OUS l6M gar, w/w crpts. Yr lse. $185 GARAGES for rent. Costa 1774, Nwpt Bch, :: COASTAL ,,H BUSINESS end MISC. WANTl!l'O Nt• mo. Adult.!!, ttf. 646-4005 Me1&.. Near QCC, S20 per 6240 LAGUNA ••ACM uu FINANCIAL ~u·~=~ ... l.llY, •tc. ::: mo. 962-5050 PRIVATE Offl(E ~R~·~E~._W"-'•~n~tod=----'--' LAGUNA Nioui1. 1,',",, aus1Nl!SI o,,o•TUH1T11s '* 1To111..e11 sns 5300 IA.N CLIMINTI aUSINESI WAHTID 630$ •UlLDld MATIJllALS 1'60 B __ •_lbo_•-------·IGARAGES for rent 10 x 30, Sellin9 Your Home?? UM JUAN c1..~11T•AND Jm INVISTMl!NY o,.,.r1vr11t1e1 •ltt 1wAf'S ''" Secretarial service, air con· 1 \" h ver 300 •-• .... CAf"llTRA.NO al.I.CH Jr.JI , •••• , •• ,, WANTEO ,,,, $20 mo. Smaller $15 mo. Nr dltioninf, &: parking, · ·~e ave 0 ~ .,.. DANA f'OINY ,,,.. MONEY TO Lo.-N 6:;:1 PETS 1nd LIVESTOCK -------- GULF OIL aple. 54o..51J66; ,&12--180'7 thru-ou t Adults. Contact ELUXE Apt Spacious 1 owner. 3008 Apt A. Royal )!l:R pool. ideal for ba~helor. Palm Dr .. CM iSl20/mo. 1993 Church ' LGE clean 2 bdrm, rt!lrig, Service Station for lease 1548-9633 range. New paint l crpt1. Palisades Rd. 5e-5044 people. RIVIRSIDI COUNTY = f'l•IONA.L LOA.NS •lll il'ETS. GINl!UL lit( Orange County Bank ·Bldg. 2 We are the 1,.,....est in Or· v.1.cATIOK JIENTA.1.s : -... JIWEL•Y LOANS ,J.H CATS 1111 , 23() E. 17th Street ' -• CONDOMINIUM """' S WJ DOGS ft2J Cosla Mf?sa 642_1485 ange County, oui1'1.1x11 11uaN. sns ~~~'t~~;!i.1.t~~Nt ,l• Ho1tsES 101 3. \Ve can GUARANTEE to JtlNTALS MDRTG.-GES, Tnnl OIMs ''~s LIVESTOCK Ifft t sell your home. HouMt Unfurnished MON£Y WANT•0 wa CALIFORNIA LIVING WE SELL A HOME Ol!NtllAL s .. ANNOUNCEMENTS Nu11:1a1111s .,,, TES cosTA MISA JIH ind NOTICES sw1MM1No f"oou _.H ' EVERY 31 MINU MISA. OIL MAR lllS l'ATIOI ttU W lk & L MISA Vl!ltOI Jilt POUNO 1''t'M .I.Ill '"' AWNINGS "1f ' a er ee COLLEGI! f"A•K JIU LOST "'11 V,t,CATIOlllS ltt.I NIWl"OJIT 11!.l.CM llM :::~i~~~'MtNTS :: TRANSPORTATION NIWf'OJIT MOTS. :t'Jll llltTHS 6411 aoA.TS & YACNTI ffH 7682 Edinger NIWl"OllT IHDRll Jut f!UNIRALS '"' SA.IL•OATS fl11 842-4455 or 540-5140 ~~~"'.·:::... ~~: fOAID OlltUAllY 6"111 i-owtll CllUISIJIS tHf Open Eves. "''"''"'" >731 PUNltlA.L Dlltl!CTDRt ,., •. Sl'llO-SKI IOATS t'3t l'LO•ISTS '41J IOA.T TRAii.iii •f>JI HAVE Cash d~ payment u •• ~~·IJISITY l'A•K = CARD 0, TKAMKS ..,, .O .. T MAINTlltMICt HU IN MIMORIA.M '417 ltOAT LAUNCMIHG f~ fol Triplex or more in •A.Cit S.l.T :tttl CaMliTEllY LOTS 101 M.llllN• 11'.GU lf", "" Orange Co. Pyramid Ex· ~ ... ::H:L:::aACI ~:: Cll'.MITl•Y CltYf'n '4\t •OAT SLli-, MDO••N• fllf rAI:! .......... CllM.l.TOJl.llS f4)1 •o .. T SERVICES '"' changors .....,..."°"' CORON• Dl!L MAii 11$1 MllMOlllAL fOAllKS f411 IOAT ltlNTALS ffn . ••• =l8 ri. .. -•ALIOA Jllf •UCTIONS .. :JI llOAT CHA.RTEll ,._ DIAL du-ect --...... -.1? IAY ISi.ANOS lJSI AVIATION SIRVICI ''" ,.SMING tOA.TI ... )'OUl' ad then sit back and LIDO Ill.I! lJSl TltAVIL •W •DAT MOVING fffS listen t.c: the phone ring! '•'•'•'•°'•••"Uw•,•,T J::. Alll TJIAMSfOOJIT .. TION ..... IOA.T STOJIAO• .... AUTO T•ANSf"DlTATIO"' 64U 1o•n WANn D ..,. '41/'4TINOTON ll!'A.CH S4ft Ll!GAL NOTICIES •UI Alll:CRAl'T tl• KVNfllibTON NA.lllOlla ,.... OlllMAN a TUTilll!Ne 14f1 111.'l'ING Ll!SSONS tlM ,;~·~,:~~c~ALLtv ~J: SERVICE DIRECTORY =~L .. t.':,~~s = G.1.ltDIN lltOV• :1411 •CCDUNTING fSlt SIC'l'CLIS t'll LONO •IACH :HM Alfl'#l!lllNG SlllVICI UIS l:Lll!CTlllC CAltl "" OJt•HOI! COUNTY "" Af"f"L!.l.MrE ltEl'AIRS. , • .,. ••11 MINI a1KES -·----·-,,,, SANTA ANA Ull AfOf'RAISIMG •ts MOTDRCYCLBS flit W!STMINITl ll un ASf"HA.Ll, 011• .,,. MOTDltlCOOTlltS ,,. \O.tOWAY CITY ui. AUTO lllf"AIJll 45lil AUTO SlltVICIS I l'.llft t• SA.l'ITA. ANA HllGMTS *'20 AUTO, Stat 1•11• T., .. •tc. tSq AUTO TOOLS a l!OUlf'. tilt COASTA\ )1'11 IAIYllTTINO 65$1 fRA.11.l!lt, TUYIL tUJ L.1.0UN• l lAC" lMS toAT MAINTIN.IHCI! lSJJ TtlAILIRS. lrnllh tut LAGUN A NIOUlt )111 •JtlClt, M.i.toNltY,-" U6t TJIUCkS tHI ~ M ... _ du! 1100 Freeway Location Income Property 6000 il3o CLEAN Jo"urn 1 BR. utilir .. ,,~'vu.I·" •rl "s' ~A~!~;.... · Paid Dealer Training -I incl. Bacht!kir only, no pets. ~ icto a I. .,......"""' Insurance plans available Choice E'tide 4-Plex OFF ICE SPACE \VANTED. \548--0522 2 BR l'h ha, cpts/drps, bit· Contact Ron Hampton Near 17th Street. 3 • 2 BR sale.!1 rep. building products BACH A t frpl bea ·i ins. Pool use. $162/mo. No, 541-614.1 or 894-2656 1 ba & 1-3 BR 2 bath \vilh co needs 250 to 300 sq 11. nr t · .P " 00·• 1 Ad"!:itcei' CM. Bkr 546-5460 Eve. ==========ol fireplace, AU units h11.11e Orange Co. A i rport cpts, pnv. pa . ' no 54~1'''"' •-h 5400 b ·11 . •-/d vt '"/pbo"" an•wonn· i • .pets. S95 Yrly 613-1629 """' Huntington .,.,c w ·•n.<>. cp..,. rps, P . y .... "" QUIET, t'lt!luxe 3 Br. irtudio patios, 1arages, $55,500 secrttariaJ servlce available. i BDRM .. c omp I et e I Y w/sundeck, pool: n r ' 2 BDRMS 2 BAJH Call D. Moffat 213: 86&-3.122. '"""""•led 1125, Mo. Seo 'h<>p'g. Ad"lts only. no "''" ' • $32,000 Trlpl•x $340 3345 NEIVPORT BLVD. [Mgr at 2131 EJden. C. M. 1-1 S ( •"-A e•• m 2 'f th "-bo C • 11 an a ,........ ~. _ _. $l50/~10. $!25 il 91ay 1 yr . ., on near u.r r enter. Office! suitable for C.om· ' NICE-2 BR. $140 FURN & unfurn t bdrm. un-POOL, cpt/drps, Kids OK 2 BR 1 ba. blt·ill!, 2 pvt pa-mercial, Medical. Dental. 1613 Santa Ana Ave. J"m 2 bdrm. M-· d•I Mar ti05 3 1ar Call quickly )n Alr-cond .• crpt!l, elevator 54.3-8572 evt!S. ...... Dela\vare Studio Apts. . ·, · Apts. 998 El Camino Dr. 2620 Jklaivare, 11.B. .thlil. 3Sc PER SQ .IT. j.TEWLY ~ted Bach &: 1 C.M. 546-4).tjl G42-'m.l anytime 5J6.J816 Bob Olson Rltr. 546-5580 I ~~54~"-""'='-0~R-6~1,..5-_2464_,~ ~BR apb.. all uUJ.97Iu.rn. 3 BR. 3 BA, patio end gM. CllEZ ORO APARTl\1ENTS NO matter i.vhai it is, you N: 8 !' 560 Sq. ft. w/pri. r~Z-3400 Eves. 5f8..()'1 bit-ins, crpb, ctrps, cau 8234 , Atlanta can sell ii v.1ilh a DAILY panelled ollice. 30x50 yd i:ASTSIDE: Quiet 2 Bdrm, 540-3374 Sat ~ Sun. Nev/l .2 Bedrooms . Pay ~ PILOT WANT AD!! 642-5673 space avail. Owner 642-2809 1Elec. bltm, r-tio. Adults MODERN 2 l)r W1hlrn. 13.1 electric only 1only. 36l·B Olle. 642--1.298 Albert Pl. $150 mo util Incl. ~ or 536-2727 1r ! BR Trailer 1125 + ulil. No pei. 642-6121, 546-1968 P ool-WuhcrsD""" g STAR GA~ER l<"" Manied cpl. 30orolder. •BR •--1 . Private Garages BrCLATl.PO'LllN----,-""'~-1 132 W Wil CM 548-9:177 • crpu., • enc pa.ho. 'i.J • son, · ' Avail !\.fay 19. 725-B \\', 18th. THE QUICKER YOU CALL, M_ Y-Daily Adi'11"1 G.tiG. M _,. 675--1821, 6'13-C:i1 THE QUICKER YOU SEU.. Y Art1rcli11f t. lft• 'Sl•n. y '.!!•port leech 4,,_ I"='="""=='="=====.!========= io develop messoge for Soturday, I r NEW SPANISH · C•tt1 M... 5100Co.te Mn1 5100 reodwordst'Otrespc:irdi1"1G tol'IUl"l'lber1 TAUIUJ ofyourZodioc birthsign. "' f.Ll!Ml .. TI 1'11 IUSINISI SIRVICl!S "'' Jllf"S tJlt C.1.,1 TRAMD IN •Ull.Olltl '"' CA.l'l'l~l!tlS tUf CAl'ISTltAJtO ''""" Int CA.Tllt lMI un CAMf'lll JIENTA.U t .Jt2 l OANA. f'OIHT Jr• U •INITMlllUNG •HI DUNE •UGOlll' IJU j VI LLAGi APTS. • m.20 1 v~ 31 Mt 61 Supo$ll le 2 BDRM .. Filrn or un-CONSTRUCTION JUST COMPLETING w.Y'JIJ 2wook 32A. 62....,.11111 !tum, Air.cone:!. dahwhn, et:'lf ._., 31\iih JJTmoy •l it_.. ekan·1 ovens, .-uo. break· -· -... FOU • Jt-65-n ~~·4 J;~ :;~ tut ....... _ .. .._ H'.,.1111 HEIGHTS -·-,..... "°' -·-•• ..... UDUll 1 For 31 Ji.wt 67 It lrs storaae ..,.,...,ta. ..eal.:u 1 Mey -3t 1too1w.t~ "tr1~ pool. ~~-n~~· LUXURIOUS 2 & 3 BEDROOM APTS. 1:~:-~~ ~~ .., ......... ._ w .... tn • 11u.-AlW-"-''"' ctoocts. co~ cer porls. e Flrepl•CI!" • Spa Clow ca.blneu ~1 1-.. .c2 o.rww n hl4 •~••-no peU • Dlshwa5hcr e ""''fers & Sattlen l3111'1"""" 43""" 13°" ,,... ..... , ' "'I ...,.... 1•Vou'!1 '4<4 11 7•V--.. ,, Phone -..2717 • "'ammoth mast('r gas built-ins 15w,11 ,.,H_ 75~ -; bedrooms e Bala.need pov.•er living 16\lnludo.y •6s.i--'• 76FMreblo .!Nf. lt • ~ Y-Adult$ l.x'u· • 2 Bathroom• ,','s~ A1H"PI 71~ 1 · · -e Enc:lottd parking ... , "'"'* 710.ltlm _,. prdea ~ 1'1th court-•~ntral forced 1t$1o.!p "''°" '19N.c:.-y .5JN1 u, dub 1~ a.nd air he1tlng • Olrpets l drapes :201"1•"" 50N...• eOKi~, J.QU.WUS. mmp&ele. 'Jll'Wlq. SOU'nt Four -~~ n::m-4 :i=:-JAN.20 DAY CLUB Al'T$. lrvln< •I HARBOR HEJl!Uft a rm" ,..... .,....,,., I--.Blaell. Wt.I 2•v_. s.oo.... 1cor;oi...i -2'Yw"rt "T-'• *5'""-" (7l4l 1 1611:JO RcntA I l\!anaier-~trs. Chrltuemcn lflM,,_tt 5'S111M 86t:oi1-.. I A C I M 2'°"'981•'11 S7Teclny lt~ly us :Mh Oaor' 1 Br 31.ij.·A C nn•mon ve., -ot • es• 2tA 'A"'-,,.._ ...... Of1ooldlll t.,y, l )T l5C '.,.. tl block \\'1!9t of Hctbot Blvd, 2'MloM ,, . .., atYout1 J ""'~ Utll lad. ~tt 2 blocks soiith or tht' San Picao ~way1 JOAuoci.i.. 60W•11 90Llktlv :-::--.,,._.mini Pllono14'-10J4 ®Good @Ad-()NWJ.1 1-mz. CONODMINIUM JtJll CA.llf'l!NTIRIM9 fftt tMf'OITID .IUTOS t6* i>Uf"L•••• VM,U•fll. ms CIMINT, ~ , ... POIT CAlll tllf RENTALS c11111.o u.111 . Lie•... u11 AHT"1eu1s. cu11ic:t ''" 1 CONTllACTOllS .,.,. ltAC .. C.l.IS, ROOS tfJI Aptt. Furnished cu:i-•T cL1A111•• "" •uTO rv1Nn ,,. OIN•JtAL ... CA•f'l!Y U.YING & Jllf"AI• Ml• AUTOS WANTID ti• I COSTA Ml!IA .,.. OJl.Af"lltlll ... lflW CAllS .... I ~··· VllDI Ult DIMOLIT!Ol'l .. ., .-.OTO LIAllMI t•1t NlWPOlll l lACH ._, DJIAll'TINI llltVICI! 6Q) USl!D CARI "" HAVE YOU LOOKED FOR THE HIDDEN DOLLARS IN YOUR HOME LATELY? I I BUSINESS and FINANCIAL tUSINI SS -FINANCIAL aUSINI SS and F INANCIAL aua. Opportunlllo1 6300 Bua: OpJIO"IUnltloa '3GO lua. Opportunltloa '3GO ESTABLISliEl> Dt<:wator DES1GNER,..8UILD£R l\'a.nla to expa~ Io OPERATfON buiilnelis & Newport/Balboa area. \VIII equipment Craio fcfuale partner with C. Ed·Soule -~ f'U.nda I: direct aetlvilies to 327 Marine Ave. llet'Ure. Investment. 635-1470 Bo.Ibo& Wand I; ll!Qbile 1135-Qil "eo=A"T,-,B"UJLD="'ER==.-.. -,,"'-,..-., WANTED: OH·We liquor required, peed exp. glass liceoi.e. Oran&e County • .,: builder to Mf.e line of amaU Call: 642-8139 l>aysailera. \Vrite Da i I y Need a Gardel'ISta.ngle ~ Pilot Box M-03 Find It \Yith a want ad! CHARGE IT! NE\V TO \VEST COAST AutQma.Oc CAR WASH btvsh 4 p1'r.U, t:nvtat, re~. 40 to 507. Fits lit moat fill, et&· lion bcl,ys & small bJd&S. No labor, \Vill wash ft. WU ln 90 lleC. 615-4158 aft 6 pm. BE.AtrrY Shop. Lase wit.b optloU to buy. Fully equip. ..... --.· bath.' like new. B k r . .....m I'm The Kind .Of Woman _Who Gets What She Wants •• • Because I'm The Kind Of Woman Who's Smart Enough To Use DAILY PILOT Class~ Advertisi"g Believe me, there's nothing around our home •nymort · that isn't being used -because the minute I discover something is no longer needed, I sell it, while it stiO has maximum value, through 1n inexpensive DAILY PILOT Classified Ad. That way, instHd of a clultor of things wo don't use, I have tho extra cash that lets mo hava tho newer things , , . the "extra" things my whole family e njoys. Here's What I mean. The cash I got for the good clothes and lrys tho children had outgrown bought me tho decorator lamp I'd boo~ wantiiig . The musical instrument no one played paid for e big part of our portable stereo unit. Tho power tools redecorated our daughter's room. And, just for tho fun of ii, the good c hair that just didn't match anything an ymore took m·y husband "nd me out for • fab ulous d inner at the f1nci1st rest1ur1nt in town. Go through your homo. Male a lis t of ~II tho worthwhile things you find th1l 1ren't being used. (You'H bt surprised at t ho number you turn up the first t imo.) Thon, dial 642-5678 any t imo botwoon 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. and giva your r.st to a friendly, oxporioncod Ad W riter. That's 111 there is to jt, It's ine•pensive too! It can cost you as little os PENNIES A DAY! W ell, now that you know my secret -isn't it t ime you got started toword bettor, H !ior, ha ppier r.vi~g with DAILY PILOT Oossiliod Ads? Start being tho kind of woman who gets wlwot she wants today! Cal1Now642-5678 ~-----.... -------------~------• '!1..,.--*!pl-•*..--•*..--•*pm-mp* ANNOUNC I MINTS 7 ,.. and NOTICES -------Hauli"! 6730 Help Wanted, Man 7200Holo Wonted, Mon 7200 Whadclya Wont? Whodclyo l;iotl SPECIAL CL.ASSIPICATION FOR N~TURAL IORN SWAPPERS Spoclal Roto 5 Ll--5 ffmM -S bucks lt\fl.Et -lr.D MUST INCLUDE '-Wllft ""' ,...,., .. trt• I-Mitt ""' •tftt .. ,,.... ~'rOIJllt ~ •nd!W ....,.... "-5 II~ 9f M'f_,lttnl. ~OTHINO !'Oft.Si.LI -Tlt.a.Ol!t OHl.'fl PHONE 642-5671 To Pl1c• Your Tr1tler'1 P1r1dlse Ad \Vant Travel Trailer for eq. on 3 BR + bonus. room home in excel. cOnc1. w/ fantastic landscapirig, Bkr. MG.1151 Heritage R.E. '68 Mustang, low mUeaae, air, R/H, washers. auio trans. Will excbanre equity tor remodeling or carpeting. a47-0859 days, 546-21?6 eves. Xlnt opportunicy • take over cleM Beauty Salon, Lido area, long establ., 6 sta· lions. Trade for lot or su~ mit. Owner/broker. 548-mJ :.ake Arrowhead waterfront free & dr, $50,000 val. Pa. !ific Palisades Ocean vu lot, (~ & clr, $27,500 val. Nant: Income. Bkr. 548-n111 Wanted: Glass boat up I? 20'; Have cboice 2-6 ac par. cc1s w/fantastic vie\v of Pauma. Valley in N, San Diego Cnty. 642-3573 100 ACRES, clr.ar, $35,00J Equity. \Vant income prop.. erty, Please subn1it offe rs. Art Giovinetti, Realtor 673-7420 30' O\VENS lwin 225 !IP, louble·planker, radio, depth. finder, bait tank; lo\v.houra; For sailboat to 36 Ft. or: lL :al property. Owner 615-4392 What do you have to trade? lJst it' here -in Orarige County's larRest read trad~ Ing post -• .... ,,,._. deal. Trade mink stole for C.B. radio equipment with an- tcr11ia or !! * (1) '493-4617 * TOWNHOUSE 3 Br. 2~ ba. Beaut. appt'd, Priv. palio, pool: nl'. bay, VaJ. $32,500, 1orT.D., car, camper or!? Owner~ Laguna Beach. clear apt bldg. \VIII • take modest home Palm Spriogs area o~ Vista in exchanae. Bro. ker ~ 494-1330 Beach home, stone's throw to ocean. Exchange lot' small house in Cost.a. Mesa or San Diego. FORTIN CO. Der \Vienen;chnitzel, 1951 Harbor, CM. Land & bldg. Income $500 mo. net. $45,000 equity for Jots, Back Bay. 67>6130 12 M-1 shops in 2 tilt-up btdgs on Placentia, C.M. Value $150,000. Trade part -for property. Balance ? Call 548-ls.t! 200 Scenic acres north of San Francisco. \Vill trade clear for clear, or submit uP. Equity' Sl00,000. Ownei· lrudous. Seach ·494-8563 I'rade $80'.XI, equity in 4 tmit apt Costa b-1esa, in- :ome $600, with good net q>endable, !or late car & trailer. 5484604 eves. Po_r_ao_na_l_• ___ 640 __ 51 GENERAL HAULI NG FREE! & CLEANUP $12 J)!-r lOOd. 962-6848 aft, 3 " wkenda. lfAUUNG, ~rienl. Top. trim, remove ~ Ii bedgta. Big JOhn 642-40» lallo BMtlnt CIUNt OHered to the publ~ by the Balboa Pow- er Squadron startlng 7 P.M. Monday )°une YARD/gar. """'· I«!'"""' 2, Newport H a r b 0 r trees, ivy' dirt, tractor be.ck hoe, g'l'&dln(. 96~45 ·vacbt Club, 120 West 1:;o;=r;;=--t===-1 Bay Ave., Newport c1 .. ,; Up 'nd Houli"I Beach. En r o II a I i"'=S=lo= .. =r=""'=•=· =..._="'._"·=I class. For additional H.-loanl"9 673S Information p bone I ~--:----'--'=! 675-0407 or 673-1855. CARPETS. WU\do~s. nro, LICENSED etc. Res or C.omc't. Xlnt work Reul Rfb. 543-41!11 Spiritual Readlns:11, advice on all matters, ~ct S. El J Ito I 1 Ounino Real, ~ Clemente in r 1 · KNIT MECHANIC JANTZEN lw an opportunity for a kniltlng mechanic or techniCian. experienced on 5' variety of clreular knitting equipment. in, cludlng doublelrnits. Must be capable of d .. ve.topm~nt and set up work. This position is located al our world head· quarters plant ln PorUand, Oreg'on -exceJ .. Jent fa mily town. mountain ana ocean rec· reation, good schools and air, reasonable traffic. Good frlnge beneltts and excellent working conditions. Please send complete resume With salary requirements to : W. C. Ladders, Personnel Manager JANTZEN INC. P. O. Box 300.1 . Portland, Oregon 97208 492-9136, 10 AM·lO'PM SPARKLE Janitorial Serv. SPECIAL $2 READING WiJ$w9,, rysict., come I , Help Winted, Mtn 7200 COUPLF.s. singles; Jobel.9! const. cleanup. Free est. , Holp Wonted, Mon 7200 N•w 1 • .,.a, Join the"'""' ,.._,.., • pnQOUCTION • ID fun & plcuurt C'OUPLE. Ottict cleaning & ~ • ~l • l!Wntenane<. Family man S(Lll:l\lllfR & wUc. \Vk or month. f1U1U Travel 6435 549--0530 FREE Ride. Help drive as1;co=UP=LE*'"s...,="w"u""'"""'"1n,.-,01~.I far as MicUand 'fexas June fices &< apartments, day or 1st, Driver's iic. req'. Ret. nlght. 494-25.5i exchanged. Lady. 642-5976 \V00Eo: Rider ro help Paperhlngfng drive to Danas. Call Mrs. P11ntin9 6150 Stephens, 897-2154. EX-PAINTER now 1eacher, SERVICE .Ol~ECTORY quality painting wkend•, , vacation. Free e s t i m a t e Apph1nce Repairs 646-4519 or 540--0062 Parts 6$10 PAINTING Int li:1Ext Lowest Good opportuniry !or l'lS grad, w /2 yrs, experi· ertt in material or pre> duction coDtrol. · Good fringe benefita, Pt' o f I t sharing plan, MASTER SPECIAlTIES CO. EXPLORER MOTORHOME CORP. NEEDS * ELECTRICIANS *MILL MEN * CARPENTERS * CABINET MAKERS *WELDERS * GENERAL HELP * LINOLEUM MEN *CARPET MEN Ovtrtim~ ~·Day Sh i~ SUPREME Appliance Re. contracted prices. FUUy ins. pa.Jr, Refrlg, •vasbers, dry-Satisfaction guar. Free f. ers, Tom. 546-1363, 547-6691 Jim Weeks 673-1166 PAINTIN~mmercial BabYJitting 6550 ~residential, 23 yr 164Q Monrovia Ave. Costa Mesa 642-2427 Excellent f r I n g e benefits. life insurance, paid holidays, etc. · Average exterior slue IN~IVIDUAL, imaginative trim 3 Bt. $2SO. Joe An equal opportunity employer child care by experiencedll;>:Fn;;;;;;-;;;;;--=;;;;;;;;ii;:;-T.~ licensed kindergarten PAJNTJNG, Pa 16 Yl'81----~~--o-- lea<he•. No 1n''"''· ,,..,.,.. 1n Harbor · Lk & ..... Eletlronic Project Will bal..-' ed. Reb 64Z.2356 .,.r.,1t by the week. . You lurni'h """'"'"'"°n. NEAT, exp. Pomter, no Eng1'nee'rs . Wanted Call 642-1407 drinking. C.Ollegc student. I or 2 S~I chldrn or infant, Lo\V prices! St~\'.C .548-4549 tlay or nile. CM area, my ~AIN'!ING & maintenance, \\'e are a small company (400 APPL,Y IN PERSON 3021 Newport Blvd. -Cost• Mese, Celif,' - UNUSUAL Opportunity, .. home. 645-2515 .inlf'nor 4 ext er i 0 r • people) located in Orange CHILD C . ho . Reasonable rates. 646-3185 County 'near N"'11TV\rt Beach The Independent Order bf are in nty me, v1c . ~··..-· Beach Blvd &: \Varner HB. PAINTING interior, exterwr. Our electronic project en-Foresters have opened • I Xlnt care. 847-3431 ' Work guaranteed. Free est gir:eers are given lull re-ne\v office in Orange Coun.. =:;:;:=;:;=::===.=~=I !R~c~nn~an.~642--0~~132~==-l sponslbility and support, \Ve ty, Require intelligent man Brick, Masonry, etc. Painting & Electricl\l have ma.ny challenging p~ 25 • 59. C.ollege not nee· 6560 Licensed &: insured grams that must be started essary_ S h o II I d have e~-* 642-0427 * immediately. Should have at perience in meeting publ!C. 8 UJ,LD. o··"Tu!model, Repair • INT _ EXT, ANY SIZE least 3 yr!!. experiei1ce in Dignified life lime position. * * * , * * !~~~~':· ~bo ~ r 1~1'. J~B.J~n~;.:'9 ~7~ee ~~r~~~~ngor1°!~~i:'!cC:r':i'i: =~'.1'~=~nc:: ~~~~ ""!!!!!!!!!!J!~!!!!!!!!!!!!"1. !!*i!·'!!!!!!l!!!!l!.!!!'!!!\lli!!!!!!!!!!!!\ll!!!!• I Lie Con tr. 962-6945 es · ' and playback circulls. of $250 weekl)I, BUFSININa~c·1' ~! ; ANNOUNCEMENTS Pl•steri!',!• R9P1 lr 6810 Pllone Ernie Flec\ry, Person-Telephone bt!hveen 10 am. 2 i ,...,. """ end NOTICES Business Service 6562 e PATCH PLASTERING. All nel Manager for details. pm, Mon. thru fri.: 10 am. '! But. 0-~·rfunftiJ.~oo Found (FrH Ads) 6400 Sec:y~Typing Service types. Free estimate. Call DA YS: Cn'1) 642-2427. I pm Saturday for appoint. -MY HOME 968-ll23 540-6825 NIGHTS: (Il4) 542-1304 , men!. , _ , FRIGIDAIRE . VERY Tame grey bird m th 1::::======:: WANTED, SALESMEN ..,..,.. "1•1101 \ JET ACTl.ON white patches on wings. 6590 Plumbing 6890 If you are a good salesman, •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Pl! Some color patches on face. Carpentering Frigidaire 18 min. cycle is Please identify. Found by PLUMBING REPAIR and really &. truly like peo-TECHNICIAN SR the fastest in the industry, Orange County A ir P.o rt . CARPENTRY No job 100 small plc. this meeting ntay be , • SO Frigidairt!s do the \Vork Arter 6:30 call 646-492.'l ?o.1INOR REPAIRS. No Job * &12-l~ • \VOrth $500. to Sl,000, to you. I ol 40, SQ min. washc1'S. Find Too Small. Cabinet in gar· II may completely change out ho\v easy il Is to own FOUND, Vic. Ensign Jr. ages &: other cabinets. PLUMBING REPAIR. your life, even lo the dismay ~ 11 s on a,·u Dr NB . P•rt "". ~ u I DRAIN CLEANING I ., .. a paying launary. · · ·· , .rw-ol,.,, no answer eave 546-23B7 ~7217 o your w1 e (who may pre- Glll'den Grove, Santa Ana, Beagle, dog small, male, no mu at 646-2372. Ii. o. or fer security" to a mink Tustin, Orange. Anaheim lags l5"-13). 673--2792 aft 5 Anderson Roofln 9 coall, \Ve deal in helping Coin-0-Matic ;;P:cM=""'~-=-oo--· I ~lASTER carpenter, S4 per I 6 50 other people. This Is not BLACK &. v.'hite Ma nx hour. Remodeltno. Repairs, LICENSED Rooli"'"' Contr. pots &. pans, lile insurance, Equipment, Inc. r 1 1 00 1 2 ·~ ·~ 1 .,.. d •to. ema e ca a u mo ago. 642-6409 or 536.3000 ,viii trade roofing \\'Ork for encyc o la.<J or oo. · 2334~ W. Valencia Have to find owner or ===,.--,.,====! boat t " G42-ffilO door sales ot any kind. A Fullerton 714: 52a-7833 anyone else who wants her. REPAIRS. ALTERATIONS ' au 0 or · presentation will be held NO\V is the season to start. 839-3397 CABINETS, Any size 'job. Friday morning May 16th at R&D. rour years sc n1!.- conductor arld IC circuit, hreadboarding and trou-f' blcshooting. Sy s I r. m checkout experience de.._. ~irablr.. l l . Best l,,,_tion. o-·ge Julius, 25 ,vrs. exper. 548-6713 Sewing 69'0 10:.05 and again ~·riday a1. ....... • .... , BLACK male Pl)Odle, may be has parking space. blind in left eye, limps. Vic REPAIR, Parti~ns. Small e Dress:makinr • ..Alternations lernoon at 4:35 in the San JEAN SMITH, Magnolia & \V a r n e r . Remodel, etc. Nile er; day, Custom Designs Juan Rm., Sheraton Beach 5.16-6144. Reas! Call Kh'N 54M679 *646-6446* Inn, 2lU2 Ocean Ave., I1unt-Realtor lngton Beach. Attend either. MASTER SPECIALTIES CO. 1640 Monrovl• Ave. Coste Mesa 642-2427 l l l ·! l 646-32S5 SHAGGY Black J em a I e Cement, Concrete 6600 Alter•tions-642-5845 Bring your wile it you wish. Cock-a-poo typ€.'. No tags, Neat, accurate, 20 yrs. exp. Bus. Wanted 6305 Vic. Victoria & National, e NO job too small, J dol-========= CM G<>-li03 1 l t• RETIRED MAN I.hem a I! SI dew a k 1, Upholstery 6990 MAA'"cd., part "-• manag" CANARY Yellow with black. drvwys, cone saw etc. · •n=.i "'" , An c11ual opportunily employer & brown streaks down back. 642-.8514 czy __ .,.K_O_S_Kl_'_S_CUs_t_. _U_p_ho-l.1 ol most deluxe sell-service Found vicinity Mesa Verde, • CONCRETE work all European Craftsmanship Ja\tndry ln Calit; (carpeted, B b CM 54~2687 types. Pool decks & custom. 100% fin! 642-14.54 color TV, etc) He will work * us oy from Wed, noon thru Sal ! HA VE $15,000 10 invest in ac- tive or inactive O , C . business. Background In teaching, electronl·cs management & sales. Write Daily Pilet Box M 326. WANTED: 1959-62 10-wheel ,dump truck in good co~ dltion, preferably with job. * 837-175.1 * CR I P P LE D Fem ale Call 548--1324 1881 Newport Bl., C.M. evening only each week. He • Dachsund Vic. of Victoria 4 * CONCRETE work, bonded JOBS & EMPLOYMENT must be sober • reliable -• I I Ii l M ,.,3....., "'pp y n Person eyer ......,.. "" & lie. Concrete sawina:. likeable, have exp!!tience in FOUND All white 1 yr old Phillips Cement 54U380 Job W1ntecl, L1cfy 7020 meeting the public 6 live REUBEN'S Poodle. P.ed collar. Very e CUSTO?o.1 PATIOS e IF You need a sharp EX-close to the 11tol'C. Very, very friendly. 542-8021 concrete sa\~ng & removal ECUTIVE SECRETARY 10 n1odest salary. See the store 1'UUND • Parrot. 1~14) 27th Stale Lie. *842--1010 assume full time responsi. bcfon! calling at Mesa North COCO'S l Mo L 6320 St. Newport Beach blr PART TIME shopping center, Baker al · ney te oin .,.... .,~12 Contr1etor1 6620 ity on a Fairview, CM, Then call .,,.,..,.., basis. 644-4994 1555 W. Adam• ls! &. 2nd loans for quick ==~~~----1-:;:::;;;;;;:::::;:;:~;;;;;--1,~7,;-.;:;;;:~::;-=::--=.I John Briscoe he!ween 5 & l 1-'0UNO Ladies pre!!cription ADDITIONS-REPAIRS COMPANION 1-'or elder. 01· 5:3(1 pm, &14-1307. Coste Mes• cash. Borrow on your pro-.'!'Jn glasses. Near bcacb in REMODELING \viii cook dinners. Referencesl!~~~~~~;:;;;:~I ~SE~~~~~~fJCifi-1 pey:! l~~ :::stt ~~~~~~g Laguna. 494 -3908 Designing & Planning exchanged. 492-1815 SERVICE STATION Kitc:hens.Baths, etc. PRACTICAL NURSE ATTENDANT Also buyers for 2nd TDs. • f'b I M Id For cut rate serV. 3ta. Older l Sattler Mortgage Co. !no. Loll 6401 Lic'd " Bonded. ,.,., .. 1. A""'I. doy or nitc. I erg ass 0 ers man pref•"""· Mw;t be I Se •• ; •• Har~-, -a 20 yrs. --------'--'-' A & B CONSTRUCTION LocaJ ref. 8J6.$028 bo~ bl • v--.. ....... """ 1122 p J · CM ,,.,.a e. Steady job tor the 336 E. 17u. St. PART Schnauzer pup p y au an.no, Experienced only, top pay, right man, Apply in person l 64Z-21n 545-0611 \\•/hair eut, 9 mo old male. *545-4941* Domestic Help 7035 large custom work. mornings only, EW 2 s AR Vic Seashore Ii: 48th, N,B. Willard Boat Workl SAV·MOR STATION "RAJN NGED~ .., LOAN h 1 • Little girl in hospital VC'ry Dr•ftfng Service 6637 • COM~AN101N Good 1295 Baker St. Ci\f 620 OcDelaSnHAWveA.,SHfRHunt. Bch. ' •0P cas or anxious. Re,vard. &'IZ-0077 Cook. Drive ' seasoned 2nds. a!L 3:30 DESIGN Drafting, <'lee~ e HOUSEKEEPER Live ln, TRUCK DR t VER S Ii: 5434381 Bkr. mech P/C layout & detail-5 or 6.dlll'~ . . FE!>.1ALE Cocker-poodle mix ing. Ken Sr. ij~llgl e PRACTICAL NURSE • HELPE~S One dr.1ver w1lh l M TD 6345 lost May 3, Lag. 8."Black . . class l l1cense & diesel exp. 4:30-1 AM shiit. Good pay l ort9191s, • .'1 w/\vhitc, Ian ctM!st & pa\vs. G1rdening 6680 Live m, sl~~1'; long term \Ve "'?'1'd prefer some con-and working conditl~. \\'ILL PAY TOP $ for "Yoly". \Vearing expired HOMEi\tAKERS 547.Qi81 struction experience, or will MANNINGS, INC. ·TRUSf DEEDS. S acra me n Io tars .. · traJn, Contact Mr. McKay, El'T'oro Rd. (Leisure World) j *642-7898* RE\VARD. 621-1734 ALLEN BROS. 'George Allen Byland Agency ll43 Legan Av., Costa Mesa. Laguna Hill1 837•1m4 !I GERMAN Shepherd. black & Empoyer Paya Fee 549-3025 Monoy W1ntecl 6350 'vhite, female. Left lower G1rdeners Students 106-8 E. 16th, SA 547~ l--''ia<:o'°v"s"'1"0--'14.--• Account•nt• • kin u II ~· li . ~--~ I Credit Man•1•••• ' tush brok~n. Scar on side. wor g way 1ru co cge. • .. u1nese ve-1ns. •··"'""'''u Carrier Routes Open T hfD and partner need short Arni"l''t!Nl to OaUy. Lie No. Exp. Llc. Reasonable! Permanent Experienced !Or Admlnl1tretl~ rnees : • tenn $37,000 lst 'I'hlst Deed 9617, 546--0957 or 642-5876 Phone 646-4203 Far East Agency &l2-8703 Laguna Beach, So. t.aiuna LOCAL JOBS l on 8 aCres close t o CALL BOB. 5'8-7796 BLACK Persian Cat llo•ith --.,====,.--DAILY PILOT dO\vntown Big Bear 'vorlh yellow eyei;, vie A9 Surf.~ide ANTl-iONY'S Help W•nted, Mon 7200 642..t32t AR.GUS AGENCIES . over $80,000. Call 1'.1 r . C 1 S2.\ -~ 213 G •-S • 1869 C NeWTV'lrt Blvd., C.M. 1515 E oony rev.· ... -u . : 1r-n erv1ce TRAINEES. Full er part ··r-:;r1~ Days 642-vc 592-5060 646-19~1 PART TIME HELP, 3 nitc11 ; time. COOK -. FOUNTAIN. STOCK CLE-R~: ~ GERhlAN Police, 6 \Vks old The be11t. costs no more! Fri &-Sat 6-ll, Sun l-12. Hi OIS!i f.1ACHINE . T H E $450. per month to start. No ATI'Y. Has 3, $15,000 lst pup. ~losUy black. Vic 7th&: Afontbly Maintenance Time Deli, 548-9314, 495 E. zoo, ·W. Coast Jlwy & experience heeded. Monday ~t>:o::n~~~ = $10,000 Olive, H.B. 962-7220 Budget Landscaping . 17th SL, C.M .. see Terry. MacArthur, N,B. thru Frlda.Y. Chance to •sL Exp. Horticulturist AU.EN BROS. WANT college boy 0'r v~. Write·: 8o.1' M-506 The ANNOUNCEMENTS e EXPm J J' p a n es e GARDENERS STUDENTS pensioner for motel night Daily Pilot. - and NOTICES Personils '405 Gardener Complete servioe. working .w~ t.hru colle&e. clerk' in cxchanle ·Joi\ apt. KI TC H EN H E LP - EDUCATOR (AB. LLB) will Free estimate,. Call 540-1332 Exp. Lie. Rea11! 646-4203 5t8-9'ffi5 -. Dis.bwaaher. 6 ,dayi, 7 llnt'5 found (Fr .. Ada) 6400 HI Tl ~" u o ~. attend lo real estate, etc. CUt 4 Edge Lawn EXP'O Service Station man. MAN, gtca<\y, part time j{>b pm. · me .......,.., ~ • GIRL'S Or \\'Oman'• watch. while you vaca·11on In e;.:. ?o.talntef141'1Ct:, Licensed Houl'l~ \Vagt + commlulon. tor rtliable adult. XJht f;.A 49J E. lTth St., C.M. Set t•ound~ Monday May 12, change for U8e of bt!ach pro. 5C8-4808/645-23l0 alt · .t Overtime pay after .tO hr. Tlmeit route open Corona I ;:•T,;,MTY,,.=,~· =-.:...,.~--.:, Costa Mega Park. 642....&,r,'13 perty. 624-6735 JAPArnE. Garder.er, oom· 900 E. Coaiil ltwy, NB. dtl Mar. Top pay. 962-4633 ~x eor, week-day morW. FOUND: White, msk Stan· Attr•ctlve Expert plcte 'yard ll(!rvice, free l!ARD\V~RE Man for "tail * KNOWLl::DGABLE per:t0n ~ngsbe upfi:. 40R~~· ~= dard Poodle. Hntg Sch tap. YOUNG \V0~1AN estimates. 540-1332 sales. RJOn Hardware. 102.4 in 11i-l''I c:omponeni.s. SalH-M k~ :Wl3 V~ Lldo 8 N a Call lo iden!Uy 962.-."JOfiO dlncer will teach YoU all i\fO\V &: Weed. Labor by JrvJDe, Newport Be a c·h . trainee. Call ·Mr. Van at • ~ FOUND ThOTOberd grey dog. J.atest steps. Call Antell capable College Students. 642--U33 uk for Phll. betwn. i.4,, 6t6-8897 YARD Sa~esruan -Over tt. Vic Ward 4 F.dlngtr. }~.v. 713: 591-4538 1·10 PM Rell&. Call 675-7785, 9-6 PM. MECHANl_CS-OvtbMrd e As~mbltrs ;e Pe~=~ct~C:R.tr! 10745 Morning Glory, F.V. l-:*"'*"'*e7.v"t "'w"tNTERS=="*"'"*.,_,.*-1 AL'S Oardenlnr Se r v Ice CftU 644-4545 btwn 9-6 e Night Shift Foreman tah 2167 Harbor, C.'1. FOUND i lrfY YoW'C male Balboa Pavillion IA'W maJntena~. garden. OFFSET PRINTER 612-6830 cat, pleue pick hlm up. Frtda,y & Saturd~ ltlF .\clean ups, 846--3629. Full or part time. e DISl-fWASJlER . KITCHEN DON'T JUST WWH for mmt. ,Call=-~==~-=~~· 1 ALOOHOLICS · Anoeymoua CLEAN·UP Speclalfllt! Mow. Call 714: &12-4007 liELPER. niu tkne day•. thlna ta tuml!h )"Ol.lr" home 'T1rE QUll!KER. YOV CAIL, ' Phonit 542-7217 o.· write to lru:. tdglnJ:, odd Jobs . Need a GardenstanaJe.'! 7-5. See Ttrry 400 E. l'ith. . • , find l)'UI bun la to. l THE QUICKER YOU SELL P.O. Box 1223 O:itt. Men. Re~nable. 548--6953 Fiod rt with a want Id! C.M. 648-9314 • d.ay'1 Classlti!d AJil, , I \ I I ~Li .. ~"~·~,--..-.... --.... ~ ... .._ .. _..,_ .. _ .......... _.""r-•••·· .. -.;-.. .... ......... ~c-:.7. .• "' .. "'"'··"""~'"""'·"'·-"'·"""'-_ ........ ___ .............. -..... -~~-------- I I I . . i ' ! ' . ~ l - • • ' ' i • I -• Summer Rentals? ,• These are some pretty exclu.sive cliff dwellings. They're in Mesa Verde National Park , Colo., and they're estima- ted to be 700 years old, not exactly in the some class os the charming bungalows all a Ion g the Orange Coast you'll find advertised da ily in c Io s s i f i e d ads of the DA}LY PILOT. But, you know someth ing ? We'd be al- most will ing to bet you could re nt these Indian relics .. They Could Be for the summer if they overlooked the fabu lous beaches of the Orange Coast . . . AND, if you placed your ad where people are looking . This is no cliff hanger. "Buy- ing " or "selling ," the market is in the DAILY PILOT. Dial 642-5678 and we 'll drop you our direct rope ladder to • the Classified Advert ising Departmen t where a courte- ous specialist will help you with your "smoke signal." ---~-~~~--------------- ICN Has Just moved into Its new location at Irvine Industrial Park and has OPENINGS FOR •Chemist • Biochemist •. Microbiologist •)Technicians BS or MS experience In bloch!mical tech· niques ·. Ability to handle sqiall laboratory animals, Lab technician experience in small animal care taking and basic lab procedures. Lab instrument technician experience in operating nuclear magnetic resonance spec- trometer UV & IR instrumentation. Coll for oppointment (714) 833-2500 International Chemical & 'Nuclea.r Corp. 2727 Campus Dr., I.Vine, Calif. 92664 ,,.,,...o,_...,_ Help Want.ct, Min 7200 rlelp W•nted, Mtin 7200 STOCK MAii FULL TIME • 40 HR. WK. 8 TO 6, 5 DAYS Excellent Employff Bonof111 APPLY Po-I 9ffica Third floor Ill BROADWAY NEWPORT BEACH 47 Coum of Foohlon FASHION ISLAND Newport Beech An Eq"'1 Opponunity Employtr PLASTICS MOLDING MACHINE OPERATORS Perm. position. X Jn t. working cood'1. Overtime Ir. all fringe benefits, Jm. mediate openings on 2nd &: 3rd shifts. ~need preferred. No phone calls after 5 PM. CALIFORNIA Injection Molding 200 Briggs Ave. Costa Mesa $4£...4.4£iO An equal opportunity . , e TELL ER e EXff?UENCED ... PROOF #6 ~rch Boy Plou . OPERATOR e ' South .Llfuno UNITED CALIFORNIA UNITED CAL IFORNIA BANK 496-1273 BANK E4ual op~ emP1<>Yer --* - • tlOTEC . INSPECTRESS (Experi--.aryf. Apply tn person to Mimi Kine THE NEWPORTER INN 302t Harbor Blvd. co;;:,~ .. Equo1 PPPOrtwlllY ~· e <XlMMISSION SALESWOMEN e Wanted by electronics manufacturer. We ve an aerospa~ company • n d 1 blve developed a uniqU(' home burslar a I a r m , llDT Jamboree Road. Newport Beach. Calit. system. -'==:.:...::=:::...:==--I In advance to a national EXPERIENCED e ESCROW e SECRETARY nuuiu!Ung PfOll'lll1l we are intttested in retearcbing a conawnet"' ttJclion to our product, in Soutbern Ciilliornia. Sales ranp from door to UNITED CALIFORNIA -tJuu retail wu.i.. No BANK gimmlcka. Your eamings 3141 E. Cols! Hwy Corona def Mar 673-'240 an: dependent upon )'Otll'leil. For personal interview, Call Mr. Callahan (213) - SMAI.J.. Newport Beach Mfa. Corp bu immediate Opening F.qtmJ. opportunity employer for Executive aettetary-ot. Work -& whoN you wontl INTERIM PWOHllB. SERVICE 445 E. 171h St. Cos ta MMe, C•lif. 642-7S23 GENERAL PRODUCTION Apply In penon 1987 Placentia Ave. Coat.a Mea lnj ... lon Molding OptratOr1. Tralneu 4 pm to midnllht lhifl lntervlewlng Appl)' in pel'IQll · Mon. thru Fr i. Orange O:iut Plastics SAVE ·1•1 'OF SSSSSSS Tur"" -lul"""'ll ~ . ' ' lvwylhlnto Mutt Go-EVEN THE BUI LDING . f9 ""'k• ,_for -NEW STOR E II (Controctor Wont~ to lkllld' lmmedlotely) SPANISH ** MEDITERRANEAN $$0,000 CLEARANCE e Game Sets e Dining rm sets • Bedroom sets · • Llving: room sets • Corner units • Tables • Lamp& e Recliner c!lair• • Dec- orative Spanish chairs • Buffet w/cllina tops, Mediterranean • Pictures • Wrought Iron * '11111 Solo F~r·Si...k on Hind Only~ . . . I o.m. to S p.m. -8SO W. Ulh St., C.M.. JOBS & EMPLOYfilENT ·f I F.qual o{iportunity emplO)'!!I JAMAICA lNN H 0 TEL ' -. um fv,. _ 800I ADVERTisrnG need.I 2 mott:·makil:, run or Jobi Men, Wlll'ft. 7500 UOUIDATOIS CLASSIFIED SALES ..,. time .... 25 or over. -* DRIVERS *' Immediate posU:ioo available . Ap~ in P!'\9°n 2101 E. m ~Huntington Beach ott-Cotu!t Hwy., eorooa. del Mu No Experience roa BANKS-FINANCE en·. ice for agareasive, alert MALLIE'S · ESl'A'J'ES.llODEL HOMES aaleawoman with pleulna: Wig•tr Beauty Salon bas op. Nec~ry! Quality Fumiture persotlality for inside 4 out. enln(t for Manicurist 11:/or M'uat have deab Califorrtia Banks C.n't .s~de sales. Must have new.. Pedicurist, suanntee Ii/or driving rreord. Apply o. it F paperOaasified Sales exper· commi•lon 548-3448 YELLOW CAB CO The Pf» um. ience. Lucrative teITltC?ry HouSEKE;,ERt live _ in; 186 E. 16th St. • • Y Demand C•ah 1 with salary + cornml.aaion. motberleu home be&eh Calta Mesa Regardleu Of Lots l • MATERIAL • PLANNER SR. • * =----•m_p~l.,......;:.~-­ Temporary EmploJment --..=====-·I fice manager. Applicant KEYPUNCH must have broad . ba~ in tieeretarial I: OPERA TOR .. """' om"' proced""''· State ~. ~d vaca-• Sp.1nl1h-Mecllterr•n1.n tion. Air-conclitiontd ottit"e, area. 2 tet:nap ~· NEED ambitioua tr a i n e e Maple-Mah::ipny-Modtrn All comPMY benefit&. Call Woman w/ 1 small child couple, ages 45 lo 55, who Brand name bedrooms 11, Bernie Uuardo for app't. OK. Pref u/45. 50--1223 would like to learn to ki1W or any &ii.e box sprizlga. ORANGE CO. EVENING SF.cRETARY: Part·tl:me for become ~pt mgre. Man A: mattrns, custom ma« Good opportunity fcir man with two years experi· ence in production or ma- terial control and some college background. some data processing experi- ence helpful. MASTER SPECIALTIES CO. 1640 Monrovia Ave. Cost a Mesa 642·2427 An equal opportunity employer J. C. Penney Co. Fashion Island Newport Beach NEEDS CAMERA SALESMEN Recent succesafu.l experienef! in reWI sales preferred. Full time employment, excellent pay ~ement, outstand. ing benefit&. OJ&nCe to par- ticipate in growth of this new, expanding line, Apply in person 10 A.M. to 9 P.M, Monday tbru Friday J. C. PEHllfY CO. URGENRY llfDED · •LABORERS Some ewperience In book· Experienced In IBM 0268, Wping desired. Forward Burroughs E400 and varied resume to: 866 .w. 16th St, duties in accounting of:fice ·~ &acb or call lrlterviewing Houra 10 AM to 6:30 PM: MB-0161 far appointmenL Alon thru Fri., 8-5 P.M.. Call Mr. La.rcome, 545-n17. INTERIM WOMAN Clork 6 "' 71! ... WAITRESS • Personnel S.rvice hours, 5 day week lncluding NEWS.INDEPENDENT consulting eng!nett. Exp. in mult have inside p&inting sofas A lave seats, exquWte- 537.7510 aerospace du. Salary com-exp. Submit resume A dlnin& rooms & butches. * mensurate with e x p . referencti. Box P 486 Dally Guaranteed trostfree refrig- "Al.DS 548-li837 "P"ilo~t=. =--==""""--1 .......... color TV'•, lat. .... M BABYSJ'ITER tor 2 children WANTED: TUTOR for 9 yr del washers & dryers are; Night 5hi.lt 4 a c mo'a. JO .in to 1 pm. old boy, the new modern all on sale at acri&e pric.: Experience neoessaey Live in flt out. $25 wtr:. math method. 646-0603 ea. -BUY ANY PIECE , 645--0730 aft 1 pm or bet 9:30 445 E. 17th, CM 642-7523 Saturday or Sunday. Ac. ORDER PROCESSING, curate, ~· , per.;m. • Apply in person App~:i ~ to am. A19f'Cle1, Men A CLERK able., Pl....,,t,wori<, iOod ·-• ....;W=om:::to::;•::,_ ___ 7:..:5::;50 OR HOUSEFUL ; Warehouse Sale ' Some ol!lce e x per I e n c • beoetii.. P'-'494-4515 '°' RllJBBI E, LIE Jobs-Mot\, Wom. 7500 PO_SITION IS preferred. Must be good appoinbnent. THE POT· THE AOK IYP••t. Porm. pos111on In '!:':'.1" SHA';", L~1••• t'SI ·E. Pocillc Cit Hwy NEWPORTER INN prec1,k.1on holpora EVERYTHING 7722 G•rden Grove Bl. growing Mfg. co. Xlnt. ~ Newport Beach UO'l Jamborft! n~-.. to work in m•,,. IN LIFE'. . Westminster (i,9 Block West ' benefit., arlvancement op. Ri cfio ... -•-"Ri.....a GIRL FRID ay •-from .,.,,,.. of llMch Blvd.' portunlty. Contac< M", ,.,.,.._ ,. Newport Beach, Cali!. focturlng deport-WHY NOT neai G.G. Frttwa.Yl. Open 01.sc INSTRUMENTS INC. voice. Good witlt figures, uni""•.. tron1c •ssem Y• 1 ; -.,.210...._1.,.s~. H,;;all,-.,,_ad°=y.,;S:ct...,;S:.;;.A,;;._125 or over. Must JcnOw low Steady. Opportunity for aQ. p•-nnal FEMALE ~u-R_:~ -•~at CAREER -DI.JU PREVIOUS ASSEMBLY OR Secre• .. -· lo"'...... ._Ala ~---area. Apply in per'So1'. • vancement. Company bene-SOLDERING EXPERIENCE .... ,., "",... or con ... '"' Ira than wbol-ie! Group. • I Wlndlinge• Dispatch -Girl Typln(. Illini<. rood pbnne ~n-'"°"~· imollbl oloc-BETTER YOURS? '='"".,.,·=-~~· ~-'-"·-- OPPORTUNITY! YELLOW CAB CO. tit. inclodlng h<allh Insur. agency -~"= Good •kllli. lllte people, Include& beauttlul 1 s• • JONE'S TIRE SERVICE 24 F h 'd "·•• t r~•~w-I pd. ~ ••~ as ion lsl•ncl 186 E, 16th St. ~. pa1 vaca ....... ..., e c. young tt •••••• ,.., .,_., quilted 913fa A love aee.t.. ls exri,~~~~~uiru An equal opportunity Join todayz fastest growinz Costa Mesa Write Box P-485 Daily Pilot, For top paying Temporary Jr. Secretary, lite S/H work 3 Span1lb oeJI: deccrator * Retail SaJesmen employer profession-Mutual Fund Wet SAR.AH COVENTRY has Newport Beach. Positions see Jane Carvill MACHINISTS for Sales Promotion Grs.. tab&es, nae ar table laml!Bj * Tire Servicemen * * No experi!ttee necessary. openings for full or pert • TRAlNEES • in our Temporary Divlaion. RE'"'UIRED Fee Pd, • • • ·~.· • •• ··' $433.l3 wall placque, kinf, queen. * Front End and ""!!~~~~""'"""""' We train· full or part Ume time sale&. Mm. a&f: 18. \VAITRESS~ OR 133 Do D N B T Oerk typist, handle phones, er full liJ.e bedroom suite * Brake Mechanics CONSTRUCTION Mut11al Fund Advison, Pleasant work, no inwst, no CAR HOSTESSES 642·3170 ver r54,:.2743 type so+ Fee Pd. to $476.67 complete Ind ho:x eprklp. Salary plus bonus and com· Receivinn c•-rt Inc. deliveries. For interview Mu.rt be neat, attractive and : ~=k~~ ~~!t~ ~·~ ~ =s mattress. linens & boudoit pany paid benefits. Op. ., ts Npt a J60! WesttlW Hl"22 call 5'0-0614/ 831-..4749/ have happy diqloeition. Full _,... n lamps. Spaniab oU 6 ~ portunliy "" adv....,,m•nt: (Newport Buehl 8.A. 1212 N. ~ 847-8950 oc --· '.fllE WO, SEAMSTRESSES • .Miii Opor-°'"'< ,.._,, l r!rl office, -oel prlcod....,.,,.,.,: Apply: 2049 Harbor ·Blvd., Individual lo receive count 547.a331 PART "-• olfi-g•..i Cout Hwy ~ MacArthur, mature woman with aood at QPrOX. $11!15.oo· AL( • ,..· ·-lwnbe ..... .:. .. ,.....:.• ..... ..... ..., NB "' t be tt. cloee tolfr. alclJls $5.1> FOR ONL~ --C.M. "" ..., • ""' ..... l"lfl,I * bookkeeping exp. 2-3 dll)'I . . . Eltp'd power macb~ optfto .ISlUS " uw Statisti~ .. .;~-·i;;· 60+ .... --down. 1 --*-=se=c~u~R~l=T~Y~*-,-to construction framers & HOTEL DOORMAN per week.. Knowledge ot real GIRl.S, 19-25, to work u:i boat •tors to aew naueahyde boat Exancen~tainlt 1...1~ ·~·-& do tome inventory control, U.• per •eek / out of keep accW'll~ recorda. Some estate &: bldg 1 0 u 1 I • • upholstery shop. Will train. cushions & caovau -~U'l'n ,,. .. ..,e ... atate cndlt OK. W 11 J OFFICER · Ex · ,,_ .. 1m-i.. .... .,u.1<25 _,..,.,. ...... ..,_ -• For Patrol Duty expenenee Mceaary. per1ence necessary preferred but not nee. Om. Apply in pen. Job.amen & ducts. Top ~1, pd hoIJ.. CALL '42·2400 PIT Gal Friday, type 40+, Cbtury Furntture, ;;;1 $100• A W .. k + . OONTACT MIKE McCAU. tractor. H<m'1 9 to 5. Can Christensen, 898 W. 16th St., days, vacationa,_ _ ina:. Xlnt __ .. IOI' Jim H-M• "le S/H and do 8...,. ..... -. • R & D Constructi Co APPLY IN PERSON NB Corner of Monrovi &: king condit ....,.. .1~· u """'' ·~ Garden Grove BI v d ., Ov•• '0 ~. P•nn. Radio 1l!i70 w-ot on LA. work into !ull time job. 6· • a wor ions. Apply Servonlc Dlvillon of •·· •••··· •• • to $2.50 p.hour Garden Grow n..n .. ,"-•• "'• ., .r·-Or-Call• ~pectic, 53&-2579 l th. ~ack Cole Co., 1163 Placen. GU"TON INDU._...........,...,. MALE: Sal ,ft.JI ._..,_ ~ ~ car provided. ~on smoker, VN THE tia Ave CM 646-2451 "' .,,~ ....,..,. """" .I.JIN .__ drinker. Unifonn all'nce, 213 478-1021, Ext 201 RN OR LYN TYPISI' -General office. ., • INCORPORATED Draftaman. arch, 6 months in er call {n4) S!l).QIO • Appl,y: 4 PM . S PM, Rm. Equal Opportunity Employer NEWPORTER INN ~nly~::.~ = 16" Whittier Aw. exp. Fee PcL ... :to $1,000 I RE.-r==URNED=='""'~1rwn""""=mode'-j 405, 325 N. Broadway, Santa Apprentice 1107 Jamboree Road Excellent salary, hours & try Qub, 5494171, oo lfu.. ~ Frn ... ~~~ ~1-~ ~t;"· ~· Jn ~ home diaplay. Exquili~ Ana. Newport Beach, Calil. fringe benefits. Doctor's oit. dents. i;,.--.,....,..... ._ .. ..., ....... _,,..... ee • '' Euttm brand name 1: ASSISfANT Linotype Mac hinist MarlagemMt Tra.ineel ice, Westmlnater. Call Mrs, ADULT woman to work as =r :;7roc!:: Complete bowtefuls of qualil Part Time Eves. Th• DAILY PILCYr has an NEED 18 MEN D<clre•, 893-132l caohiel'<lerl< In K•-ky * COOKS * !.,":,~· "r·::.;:.:.:.····d ... .15K ~': .......... "::;-=. Must be dependable, 19-25, opening for a young man IMMEDIA..,LY ====-=~~--1 Fried Chiclren. Apply 29'29 z.n •ttND•u , 1___, A,_. ·--:-;-· ,...,,."""'• epee, custom quilted 90w & love sharp in mind & appearance, with mechanical background, I~ SECRETARY For Laguna E. Coast Hwy, CdM. 'JOO c_,.,. Dr. • 11..,,.,....., :rouna: Fee Pd. •••••• $650 seats Jampe, tab I e 11 area resident 6 mo's., have Must be willing to work Part or full time, age 19-35 Hills law oUice. Corp:>ra.te PART time Real Eltate "-18'1,::,7;/JjJf .,_ EXPERIENCED and Drlvtr, no exp, DeCel&IU')' beautiful din.i.ng aets, Chlna auto, and money motivated. nights. 35 hour week, excel-3.30 HOUR or probate exp er le n c e Sales new homes. M\llt be NON-EXPERIENCED •.•••••••••••• to $3.50 P.H. a: 6 chairs, au t 0 m 8 t 1 C $3.50 PER HR. terit company benefits such preferred. but oot required, licen~. &t? 'lU1 968-3454. Pleaae can For positions open All jobe are in beach area _,..._.__ Will Call pers. clept. 547•7782 5 pm as paid vacations, Kick leave, Good 1killa:, salary com· HB -......., An Appointment. (alao fee ;!obi) + many more T:d:.'•AJi-..fm. a 'f!"""~ t 8 Mon thru Fri paid group insurance, credit mensurate with ability, age , Apply In person jobs. com PI et e ~ A 0 K 0 pm, · • urrlon,, etc. 1-ffi HAWK 547·Tl'82 25 to 40. Telephone 83G--0150 BAR MAID, nektnds, attnc * SALESLADIES MERCHANTS WAlt EH-0 USE, 7722 ?>1EN to work full time in 330 w. Bay SL, C.M. =sMAIL=~~F=RJE=N~D~L-Y-'"'co-"'M=.1 for appt. mini aldrt, apply in pell-Full and •• ~ .. _ I lo REUBEN'A ronnEN """VE BL -rental yard. Must be neat 6424321 t 310 . llOJ1, Escapade Room, 1664 _., u.iue PCJ$ t 111 .0. PERSONNEL UAn.u ......,,.., VD., in appearance, no long hair, Larry Mille~. ;x AM·i PM PANY, YOUNG MAN, light • N~ f u 11-t 1 me &: Newport mvd., Costa Mesa available for experienced @ G.G., % block West from and have neat handwriting. mfg, $2.10 start, rer. in. part·timeex p erienced salesladi.estoworkinl..ANZ coco AGENCY the corner ot Beach Blvd.; ill POSITIONS AVAILABLE <.'l'e8.llelJ, medica1 le other cashier 4 sa.lesladin for EXPERIENCED cbalnide NEW FASlilON ISLAND 'S Newport Be h NEAR G.G. Frwy. · 21 -55 ·-. W train. Sorn• d -• , ___ , 1•• -• ac .1•~ DRAFTSMAN SENIOR benefit plans. RT S.Tifll groovy Laguna Beach store, en1&1 aaa ... ...,, ""' pneuu Sl'ORE, OPENING JUNE Open to.to 9 Sun. 1o.6 • mechanical k now J e d g e ti u· L 565685 &f5.21'lO preferred.$475mo,6days .. INTERMEDIATE SECURITYGUARD See Mn. Ttmpe, 221 pracceo ice, aguna lSI'.CallcolJect(213J 1555W.Ad•m1 . 0.1k1eDesk1eDe1k1 ' -DRAFTSMAN Broadway Beach, 5 day/wk. 494-9737 934-7325 or """ ,.. ... ~ ·-H1'1r s1y1·1s1 Apply 1930 Newport, Costa 40 boor week. ......, "' Costa Me.. Flllzw cabinets, office ~ fl.1csa. Ca1J 548-2211 e WAITRESSES SAN~~ ~ wi!tme&: 6150 Wlllhlre Blvd., Lcs An. NURSES AIDES Must sell all at s.ilcrifi~! ** COOKS ** (All positior1$ in Corona dcl Balboa B•y Club WANTED e pene ' e gelel, ca.JU. 90M8 And With followine needed by AOK WAREHOUSE, 1122 XLNT perm oppor. • top 1'1ar office) EXPERIENCED area. ORDER TAKt!RS, women. Busy Newport Shop, enluv-Garden Grove Blvd., G.G. --• •-il VILLA ROMA Restauranl Contact Mr. or Mn. Zimmer 646-3882 girls over 19, days or even-~RDERLIES in& & completetY redecorat-% blck Weal [rom the corner \vages. N.,..-u 2nd, .,." er •. Send P/time dishwasher wanted, Ex rienced · tall t ·Experienced or Traineet 7 saule pantry relief & resume or can collect evenings. Call MI G-492S Flying Butler pe 11• men ings, part or full time. ~. ot BEACH BLVD., NEAR . · P t d·_,1 .,.__ David N Leslie £73-0077 loan clerk & plaUonn PlelUl8Jlt Y.Wk, no ex· AM to 3:30 PM a.nd ll;OO PhOM 646-1345 GG -.. ., Open 10 to 9', tra1~s. as •<U age.~ \Vill' L. Pe. . '-=al=t'='='=p=m===== Security Pacifi PM to 7·30 AM ,,. ,.,.~ Chef Ernle Brock, Surf & lam ~U'll & Assoc. I' . steno. c: perience necesaary. Salary PA.RK LI.DO &qK1a.y lCMi. Sand Hotel, Lag. Bch. 5657 Wilshire Blvd. Hel W ted National Banlc. 536-9371 $1.65 per hour. Call KI Schoof•lnttrvctlon 7600 ;,RA°"TT='AN"'°''"'F'°'u"r"n"l"'t ... u_r_e_,,&I ,0, °'74 Los Angeles, Calif. 90036 P an DENJAl lfflSJANJ COUNTER GIRL with 7-1323before4 pm. C.Onvalescent Center ~ 21 Women 7400 A.NI •""' Flag~'-• N.B Garage Sale; Davenport 3: 933-8341 alteration experience for Medical A&aistant _, ..... p, • Bed. Easy Chain &: Ot· Li~nsed Real Estate Sales- man needed for immediate employmenl New unit now relling in "R ED HOT TRACT". F our-Seasons Homes Huntington Be•ch 96M500 =--1 *SALESMEN* lPart Time) \Vith car. Leads fum.ished. Work any four holll'I 'and average $100, per week & up. Call aft. 5 PM for int. .. .....,., DRJl.L PRESS OPERATOR. Lite, close tolerance wen-. sman. clean shop. DISC INSTRUMENTS INC 2701 s. Halladay Santa Ana 549-()345 Service Station Mer: Hnta Beath area. SU~ tial salaty + profit .i;.,.. Ing. can 842-49116. TOOL & DIE Excellentpc15ition,Mu.sthave cleaningagency.1636380lu Mature-Pediatric ex· &4Z-80ff The Ntwport tom.ans. 3-Pc. Sectional, PROOF fnml d .. k .,,.,~.... O>lca, H.B. perl"'" ............ Front • a' b1·11·c1·es School of Bu1lne11 Tab! ... etc. King .... Bed,' C111546.5613 SALESWOMAN. Ex-ha.ck ottice. Send resume: FEATURES: Wall Minors. large. Othet M·AKERS OPERATOR • PANTRY WOMAN. P'rl•oced In ,...dy to wear .... exp, •le"' Dally Pilot t.tl'llimiteC> • El...,., Typewrit... Good~ •. Friday, Saturday, XLNT perm opp.-top wages. & 1po1tawear. Part time. Box p.325 agerJCV e Dtctatlna-equipment SUnday US Diamond, Bal. EXPERIENCED ' }lours '1-3. See Chet Emle Cotta Mesa. 546-24'2 MEDICAL ASSISI'ANT a e Brush up Grear Sb. Isle · Excellent 'vorking cond\. ~. overtime Ind fringe benefits. APPLY IN PERSON Brock, Surf &. Sand Hotel, EXPERIENCED PQr1. tiine (Back offioe), able to type, Quality Po&itiona for • Modem Otttce procedure&~ ~PC~W-alnu_t_B~R~,.-,-$85.~0cc-1 United Callforni• Lag. Bch. 494-6574 mai<h: possible full funt. plelUl8Jlt penonality a neat ~ed Appllcanta • Letter writing •killl chair $15. Couch 1$25. 10'4." Bink NEED reliable sitter for 6 yr 642-2670 appearance more impcrtant 488 E. 17th St., Suite 2Z4 Your aoall can be achleY-couch $195. -70" coffff table old eirl 8:30-5 p.m., Mon-HOUSEKEEPER • G ood tbsn experience, Write Dai· Costa Meaa &C-1470 :1 e: k ~ m~un:u::' : $40. Coffee table $10. 2 lawn 4525 MacArthur Blvd. Fri. Start June 2d. c d M cook. All adults. ly Pilot Box M 412. COUPLF.S -Learn about uni· weeks. Aalc for NOtla chaJn S4 ea. Birch din'g rm 1987 PlacentX,, C.M. 54o-«24. area only, yo u r home or * S36-35S5 * e Seamstress needed to KW que plan which o"t f er 1 Hoffman at 642-3870 tor set. $350. 64J..1B19 A Div. ct Evenbarp Schick mine, Must have car. P/TIME nWd, 5 ~· wk. in ehecrfUJ surrowdinp: in money and eeeurlty wJtb • tWJ. partieu1ars. 2 MATCHING Bam:l chain, THE HARTlfY CO. Equal opportunity employer 6ff...27'96 Apply In penon. 2 2 8 5 Lquna Beach. Must be tut lltUe time and inltiatJve. TH£ NEWPORT ro1e wtvet. down cuahions. Atrro TRANSMISfilON PLAY Job w/pos1lble ASSEMBLERS le-INSPECT. Harbor Blvd, Of. and accurate and qe lJ to &K--0986 SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ExC'tl oond. $1DO pr , adventure for Jnr.xperienced OR, age 110:. to 4.1 d•" or 35. 49-i-8179 R. E. SALESPERSON; in-133 Dover Dr Ne-DA.._ 549-t288 Rebuildcn-lnstallen t ... -. t · ,,. _ _, ..., "" Seerf:tary/Bookkeeper DESPER t-" -'-''" .,_, V " ... .,..... U\>& .. ""~""'~~~~--I aecre .... ,, o wnter LOU• night shift. Ex 'd. Irn edlate nine ATE n e fl d ...... ewa \NUP,,len1.>a1. ttY Quality kine bed, quilted, Top Wqe • Insur Benefits Wllaon, 421 8th 4 Pecan Av, * 642-6830 * P * ~2050 ;_vt · reuonable sitter, your active ll'ff. hi cornmi.uion. Educitioaal Vecatlon 4th comple~, uftWIC!d $98: wor1h AMCO ~n;ai~~~~tel, H.B. ~t.ee: :~ID, ovw :vJ, perm/put !:~~·~~aideHwy,CdM ::mlJ'ain, Pbont mw ~·~=~ ~=E~MT:: 33990 Doheny Parle Rd, Exp ERIE N c ED per. in insurance, billinc ~I ~~ .. k~st:n Bcb MR OONUT needs women MANAGER; dlx:. apt., Co.ta Trlal LtllOft.. 173 Del Mu Launce Oia.11'1 $35 .... Capistrano Beach 49&-12U SEAMSTRESSEs Part or etc. Pre!er over 30. 6'5-0liO mo • • 25-4.5, no exp nee. Nlgbta. Meta Comp I etc main.. CM MSJS59 •90-340'J• YOUNG man, l)merably col· IUU or eves in )'OUf hOme. DENTAL .ASSISTANT.I DENTAL AAt. put time. Appl)' ln person 135 E. 17th. tcnance a palnHnc. votO: preparatk>n tor BLOND StneolTV combo ,_ (l1'0d .... _ ___._ .... .-. .,__ Clill f.or a pp o I n t me n t. Exptr ch llde, Wed Attnoon, C.M. Califom.la M.an&gemtnt ·•--•A•• .-r-"* -.n1_. _._ _ "'&" "' ~ ,,... ~ usur: 64.i..6975, Newport Beath 6ti-5C.1 Eve A Sat. IT3-9169 after I 128--MJ (213) '1'7"'11> popular ar ...,__. sin&'IJ'lr, .......,., J """'"ni _.. -'· wtth posstblllty ot full time WORKING mother need1 . Bf!1j,nnet th r u advanced * 564194. * · • EXPERIENCED flbrrt.la1 in YMCA. Mwi:t mttt and TELEPHONE Solicitor-CM e SALES Part Ttme. $2.00 p.m. cblld tare live-in <r out 3 e TEAOIERS Sm a 11 tn.lniaW: ~ 49U3«J . .• bondt!:ts &t boat earpenten. MJtk w11b people euil.y Md office. ~ 5 d a '1 s, Pt!:l' hour to start Over 21. BABYSITI'ER 7:30 am-4:30 children ·Mon thnl Fri. Private Jr HJgW{i&h Sehl. • . SOl'A I: Qdr, --~ Islander Yachts, 17th II: have aome bu, 10•1 , permanent. $2 h 0 u rt y. Call 54&-6i4S pm 5 di.VI my home C.M.. $SJ/mo 546--$390 Oldtr teacben ~ PIANO Lneom: Thi ftr.J' Ulfd, Mll&e Offer, Pia -c ta M ..... .. ,._ • ....a -. Box .. ·~~"-PU • best In lnltNcUol'll. cau orlll).3Cmn9CllQ. ( cent111. OS esa. bacQn>und, also draft.ex.. '""1"'VU'7 PART TIME u.:nenl Ottlce. 1 ptt,<IChler. _..,_1 DENTAL Ass Is TANT Pl -........,.. ot ....... s E R v I c E s TA 'JI I 0 N empt. (94..94.11 BEAtll'Y OPERATOR ne«d· Good with Ii Ill re.. * CASKIER * Pedodonicl. N • B. Ex'. MANAGER • m. tu 1' fl. .. . ouurs mlPle dlhk • ~ SALESMAN. Apply: 3100 E. CLEANUP MAN, over l& ed, apply in penon. CaU tor ShortNlnd helptuL 675-5333 Part timt. Car wub. perknce desil'ed. N 0 n t'tll.able cple. tor 17 dlx. MIRCHANDISI FOil : ~ :.:u= bar • Coast Hwy. CoronA dtl Mar, ~ 6 AM. No exp. Will appt. 5'5-cm9 BABYsl'M'ER. . W1nttd my CAlJ... MS.:m:: • amoker. ~ a-pta. C.M. 2 Br. S Ba. ffffl SALE AND TR.ADI ~ cati1. trall'l. ntE ZOO, E. Cout • PRESSER • Silk 0 r _hOme. Mon Um.a Fri. 1-lnta LAD y w. n t e d f 0 r LICENSED Shampoo 1111. to·mar. 64&-eB54 \ fvm""'9 IOOO 2 GOLD textured na~ Kennel man, over 35; Must Hwy A MacArthur N.B. com.b. Gua.rantmi aatary. Beach Atta. 96&-6256 houaework; l or 2 day week. Top SMI.)'. Newport Be&cb HAIR STYLIST wtth' IOme . dlvana, like new, $35 '*"'! tl\le ln Laguna Beacb. Appl¥ "'JOUNG MAN lntetttted ln MR BEST, Cd M, ff15..3306 e COUNTER GIRL. DAYS, Own trana. Rds. "73""836 area. 6Q.68St folJowlni~ ltlth comm. Clll F11'1!l' "MPopny Dininc. Call~ -=---~ In person, SPCA, Dil2 La-leuning traM:. MUil have EXPERIENCED seamstress MR BEST CLEA~ CdM OPEltA'l'ORS SALESLADY tor jeweby Mon tbru Wed. m..alh. Table l a.in 3 pc SectMiNf $35 , guna Can¥on Rolld. Jtd.. ref'•· Cd. pay a: btn'1 & cutter's au.istant nttded. 61.'J.-3306 SPEC. MACH. S~ady. Top 1tore. Over 31 yun. WANTED: Calley Cook. for 644-1679 " Call &66-7089 after fi. YMCA buUdlna custodian, 36 Steady em()lmt. &f&.Tl21 Reva'• F'ash·;ons, 6'ffi-5761 C:Ou.EOE ea:e girl, batwork ~· Gr'mt Mfo'. g.u....26£S • ~ put•time, on lpOft rlsb!na 8' SOFA It matchlnc chalr. BE 1 GE Prov Inc l a hr wk, 2-8:30 am.-Employn HWon..MetaJ flnilhlr11 GIRL Fnda,y, bWJn&. Qll>lnj, A child care untU Aug. 15 LT. ofe. cleanilW 4 1n. wldy. GOVERNESS, ~ boat..~ 4 • aood o:incliUon. ~-naQPh1de hlde4-bed., Sl.00. be~fitr. 60.m90 CltARGE )'Otlr want ad now. It. bkkplllg., ~ phme. 4 b0)'11·1t. S60 wit. ~ $7, Own trtna. ffoutewtte Gtrman girl with CaUtornla TIIE QUICKER. YOU CAU.. 96&3lri9 Good ccnd. ~19150 - DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! BRING RESULTS! Call WM. or Fri Sfl).6990 White elepba_nl51 DimH.llne pfd, 5f&-7331 drtwi"' llcen&&..t~ Tlt& QUJCCER YOU SElJ. CHARGE )'OUJ' nnt ad now. 9:lQ( rr TO 'EM! ' " I I 'f " l r I I I -. '"GaJ, Mil U.. 1~ ~~MliOiANNDfDI ~&:-n~~INDISI -MlltCHANDIH POil Pm ..... LIVISTOCK · TllA'NSP04tTATlON SALi AND TIADE -=SA=L=l;..;ANO=;....;..TIAa=;,:o.-r :-IA-.-L.;;.1 .-A ... ND;o.,.'TIADl;.o;;.;~· TRANS_.,ATION TltANSl'ORTATION TllAN.SPORTATION l~i~~~~=~~~~~~~~I 0.., llU ...,. & Ytdito ~ l'wwior CNIMl'I 9020 Molorcycl• '300 I~ Auloa IOOOl'uml'--Pl•-& ~ 11*1 Milc9ll111-NfO , :-::='"'.:'"-r-:::-::-.-11 ---~w·.....:..· ----· --~---.,.--1 r-----~--1-~P • .,., .... ,1 ", FIEEf ., i * 1111!1..,tboln\ 1r 1ohns. ''5 HONDA AL1A ROMEO GULBRAN$1N mlT 9,,x 12, ~ W,. "'11 AKC, f -Jll. -• ~RT 1JO hp. 10P or l!>l Scnmblu, aood c:ond- PUBLIC NOTICE DECOIAt OI GETS CANCElllTIOH OF 11 WXUIY APAITlllEllTS Sp•isli & Modil•1 t1 •• hnihll'1 AU BRAND NlW •• -~._._ ...... ..... . " ·~;~,_,.., .......... o;y,• ..... !o1'1._~~ .... ~·:<·:'!~Ml~;~: .. :CC:'.',','.'.' ....... ,. . ri1:f .. • .................. . . ...,_eo..u:: ...... ~I... ,tij.,.......... l ME • ........... ,.MOW ·,A oecorator dream liouse on display - 3 lrooms of go<geous Spanish furniture (was ! •reg. $1295.00 . SACRIFICE •••••• $398 1 t mm·~Riiti1rui 11144 llwport Blvd • ._:.-., COst1 Meu only 1....., Niglot 'Tll 9 -Wed. S.t. & s ... 'TB 6 ~ f umitvre 8000 Go•!tt• Solo 8022 r MOVING, muat aeil; Sal &: ! RETURNED FROM S"n. lO "'""""" flat .... i MODEL HOME tom OOat $90; expensi~ SAVE $225 Spanish Din'g brown wig & •eue $45; ; octagon tbl, 4 side ctu·s power mower $25; new 10' 2 host chrs, buffet & nose rider surlboard $70; hina $495. SA VE $100-King clothilig & misc. 195 Monte iSiz.e BR. Incl triple dresser, Vista. CM 642-0052 Fnumir, hdboard, ~comm.ad-NEIGHBORHOOD Gar age ;es, mattress. box springs & Sale: Fantastic tmpins, :trame $295. SA VE $100.Sofa. every tiring lmag:l.nable. Sat fiove seat, chair, hex com-May 17, l-6 Sun May 18, ll· .mode. sq. c ommode, 5. l7lS Port Sheffield PI. NB E 'match'g coffee tbl. $298. (Harbor View Hom .e 1 ) & E FURNITURE. 2ll N. MacArthur Blvd~Ford Rd. ain, S.A. 0 P e n Sun. FINAL garage sale! Leaving SJ,S.-1311 State. 1718 W. l:lall, S.A. fWo New velvet Hilton Bar-May 17th &. 18th. 12 noon. rel chairs. Cost $420. Sac! Elec saw, typeYirtr & miscl. OttGAllS 15. ---8'1-Gla alW I pm. ' ~ · 11lM. Wilt 9'11 lor $310.oo,-!rill" ALFA "Ro'""° Sprin 'WUR Lml!R ~ ~ -taw, . 11etJc BMtlnt Clu -MUST Seit 31 ~ boat Call alter ,,30 p.m. Coupe, val,,.., brak,.. Red, PIANOS&ORGAHS .~' . .,.,.:;_.~.~ FREE TO YOU ~y••-~·JJUbUc,..er PrivExceDoo~~~~·.""u. 847-nrr xfnt.177>.6'13-318S EVERPW>oo,_!.~GIN~l!IC ::$4.l'llr.:;ca';a.: SFflto•·-~Wool ~ .. --aw:: ... ~ •v ~ ~ HONDA 160.;, .mm-. . . • "~ mu lllht 1ixtuftoo $30; --lJ •-· u.o ' -• ll<blt-. new OWN!bed' • • IMW Wa neod a 1-. -mom --. !\fond~ June -• --· ,,..... tires: make oiler. m.323B, PretJdtootial t)Dtn Mt .$10. hat. bad it w/'w:! We are 3 2. Ne"P9J't H ar bo r Belch Music Center Whito • .,... dMo abo ll '°"'hair -I'm Ille Yaclit ciub 720West MARJNE)latn.t••••••'l9RONDACbo!OO,!Wthan o!'u.~:..:,~94 !.~r=~·r1 ~a~~ ~li..~~~·r~~ =~i.! .. var: ::io:o11~~·1950· 11.ot Beach Blvd.. <HW7 39) make o&r ·oe a'b1J" item. white, the OCbeT' ttuff1 cmr. class. Fnt ad41tiooaJ ·;., e:u~.~like ~· 1.ll mt. So. :;an Dlqo Fwy. 833-2317 • • --_, ... , .....,. lrootiltc Information p b o n e MIHM'·t!"'""' 9035 * Call 96>.3113 1. H<ltt-Beach 84M53f MOVING SAi£SJ ,\ Stm Call 1M "' -.,..,. S . 17~ . .or l'n,1855 ~""-Y --50 HP .,,f ;======= " RENT NEW Bell • Hewell ~ ·• a at .fl3!8CM. ' • S.122 i»HP~ ~-ti and Auto Servlctt SPINET PIANOS '1Jde """'! $«1. 1'iln. belBe, PUP, 7 mo, old -~·.. D1'VID l. FRASER bictret ,...,, All 1 .. .,, are & Pim 9400 lrom l10 per monlli _,,,.,.._-$12 ........ ......,. bi t,pI :';i., 21'· KlOs ~·Sloop now -li\boaril · .. Putchue Optional ea. a.t .of, draMn $5. must 11Dd gooc1 b 0 m. e l~culate· pniltlorH cu. tanks,. _t to t velvet · '3M iCHEVY CORE' 1'68 8.MW 1600. AM/FM tape, Swv'OOt. XJ111. coqd.~ CORTINA '67 FORD CORTINA GT 4 speed, Pof>itiyel)' like brand new, (8EE5371 $1395 lfuU price. Bank financing. Con- nell O\evrolet. 281:8 Harbor Blvd., C.OSta Mesa.~1203 ***'.** Maple deak ••. $15. Pr. 8f7.:a61'l betr.J.O Lin..... -Alkllw-tt•. • dlWe tniM:nillDit up to al() Be9t otter. mw ./ SALE USED ~-.. ~ $*t ea. Wht p.m. iiu C&ll:·o.t Awry HP. Airpide lnltrumtnts; . . D &JTSUN HAMMOND ORGANS ~••-cmt.IDlnkoollar, THESE ARE 3424 Via Oporto, Newport -wb•e l ~. and Troller, Troy1f 9425 " e New guarantee size '.12 $50.. Cot.bee, 3 ds KJtte . 2 '"'--'-SPECIAL m..5252 * *'3911 ~ ~. eontrola It LUXURY -. ..,_ __ , '-'-. Liberal boob. 1om,......,,, 0111er ·"'; ~ -""" cab! --. ~ ... ~ •• DATSUN • ,. •c, A l00'1"""'M lllO ' i~ma. 333K Am e: thy 1 t White bootl and baby fAces. WHALEBOAT Hull 2 6 • "'--'~-. -resin ·11 Eqtrip'd w I e~. :""100s·, ,,.:__. •, ' ,.~ Bal~ Ialand. ~ ' Call for us eves ot wkenda. Mabog. Planked$250: Petter :-_,.·_-·-•.• ·All-·.•-~"-. ~us!,_, see to apprec11te.. '61 PICKUP.$1695 ~ ' ~~· .......... -* ...... 18 \ 5119 711 HP llt.J<l !250 ll<v -·-· --~·~ ' """' Llc # VWV561 In ro=g: MAR . AUCTION * WOOD Pallet~ You plclt up. Gea!-, Shaft .. Shalt inc ..: 'Sf EVlNRUDE 3.1 hp .... PROWbER, IB'. FUUy '67 SEDAN $1395 2854 E Coast' Hwy 673-8930 U YoU. wfll -U'or bu, See Laney or Martin. Sat. cJ.· Frtoe. Could MUe Dan;. Rectntt •• overhauled. Good !'!'~t. Xlnl conct. J2lOO Near new. L~ # TYT36G • eive Wfm7 a tr:• urday at Dat!Y Pilot otnoe, dyLittleM.o t ora·ailer oq _.;iw '66 WAGuN $1395 WE'RE back in our new Auctionl' Friday 1:30 p.m. C.M. · : ' · 5117 ~?m ' cond. 4 dr. All extras :· Bi& Celebration ~ BJc Windy's Auction Bem FLUFFY p/Persian kitteris, 30• OIR.18 Qoatt. ~. o1.Tl'BO:nn ~.: Sean Trucks 9500 · Lie # SQ\7553 CLOSEOUT of ooriaoJe Pian-Behlnc2 Tony'1 Bldg. Mat'L 7 '!ka old, I blk male.1 wbt ~twin screw, fJ,y ~.dual hnElgln • .,.! .!!_P~.':::. ~~lsc·--.-'-.-M-.. -L_E_T_,S~ '65u~·'-~~~!.'5 os at savings to •••••• $400 2075% Newpoprt, CM StS-8686 female. Ask tor Billy. amtrcQ. dee ftfrigen.tion, .. ~ .......... .--iii~ u'..w:"-yvuN,·MW-.uu',.""'• O.OSEOt.rl' of Baldwin over. FULL tte 642-0239 5117 Grea~ MariUJ 1ilhinc boat '" "° .,"" agepidosatnvinp tQ $.'W9 Ip :rz ol turJt-up 3 DARLING black Ii: MUte Sc.u tbwlnd M arina NEW PERKINS DIESEL. 4-ANSWERS §lllllll L1...:1 CLOSE0VT ot 1968 Orpna ;!:p..qn air ~e: ~-· ld~m & 4 yr. old 'Mom 'J'i213mnH~ .~ No. G 32. 107. 2-1 W~r gear. '4111, UlllO at saving, to •• , ••••• , • $236 wrench $235. CompL Jet with •bott tail •. ~ pro-==· ="=~===== Crated •. Sl?a'.I. 714: 879-5044 No down oac, 5 ,.,.. to pay. ai>-<ond'lno< -p & stoc1t d11Ction ""°"'· 642-0'8 5/17 s.11•--~ 9019 Corner -Albwn -Viper -111f'ORTS WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO '150. Other mbceU. Call ·.. "DUCli.ESS" Lab, Re---_..,. _ Boat Slip Mooring 9036 Eldest -AIRPORTS TOYOTA·YOLVO 1819 N au. .....,v,.i--It would have helped a Jot l!wport. CM; ·642-MM 5 PM 897-4837 9 Mo. Old Black Fem. Vtty SWEDISH built Royal viJdng CAL :14 for CHARTER if the pioneers h&;l located 1966 arbi:ir, C.M. 646-9303 e SPECIAL PURCHASE e OZARK'S Hk:kwy cbipa tar Lcrvabl!!, W/doc ho u •e. 21 aailboat. No. :36 solid $25 day. $150 wk. cities closer to AIRPORTS. '69 DATSUN WURLITZER PIANOS smoking & JI.~. 3 trg" 96U'IS6 5116 mallopny, 2 cyllnde.r 2 t'Y· I ==~·~840-~295'1~·~==-liw~ANTAN'ifEED~' }1959-<l2~Q°iiii0-w:WOh«i<lt Big ,...._ 96 hp, overtoead Whlll! they last! lb hap $2. Includes Partial 1 DARK Manx kitten . left, cle inboard aux. Main, jib '= I": dwnp truck in good am-ciµn eng., dlr, 4 spd, radio, ms Walnut consoies delivel')', 'Send check or waiting for good home. &ttJOB. Pulpit-lift! lines. 75 Boat-Yacht heater, WiW tire1, loaded! now •••••••••••... , • . • • $699 M.O. to H.A. Komulai1'1!, ~1909 aft 4 wkdays, an watt Simpson SS. This is an Chart.Fl 9039 dition, !rel:i~ ';'th job, zro Miles. under factory plus bench 209 W. Carlton. Ontario, day Sat & SUn sns exceptionally warm le warranty. Bal to fine. $1775. f1'97 Spinets, all • Cal. 91761 4 KI'ITENS, 2 orange, l blk. bl!S:utiluJ boat. Will aell with NE W P 0 RT H ARB 0 R '63 CHEVY ·1h Ton Panel, ex· Take $75 cash dels, or older tinishe1I ••• !rom $549 to $579 GEIGER ~ ...... , Oarine• 1 ,·~~. -'-·d, ..;.aned, or without ~ .. Boat b CRUISE eel. cond., new paint job & car .. LB YNW 087. Call Bill , .......w • .. ..-.~ ••twa: "" moored ott "1" St. Balboa Inyourownyacbt,Gpass tires'$695. 548-3677 Aru """"or 545-0634 · plus bench Teaching ·machine w i t h 7 wks. LI 8-2462 5/19 .. <>"T",,, "' , Tenm ~e Rent SPanish courte, Projector ..,..,_ Peninsula. Will take :newer l.ic'dnns'd, res 646-9000 '57 FORD %. ton Pick Up. 1968 DATSUN, 1600 Canv. Gould Mu11c Comp11ny stand with plug in, other ni• lENS. 6 weeJa, weilned Ford Truck k camper or BLUEWATER CHARTERS Good cond. New short block. Only driven 2800 mll~s, 2045 N M-'h SA •• 1 and bo:l trained. 1 Calico, 1 properly in trade. For 27• Trojan, Pow>er $499. 545-1959 or 54o--l086 m"•t ••U ~005, """"78 • ........ .n7-0681 small terns. ·58-0530 or 2546 w'"'"·' ••--". ••• -· -d •-"-• · -n "A" ,,.. • ., "" ~ •~;, ====-''="~--"'"I G brifto ..., UUIC& _....,.....,.. ...._ e,.... ""' pnce ._. ~ 2i' Thunderbird. Sail '61 RANCHERO-:-=~ ~!:ctaypi:.: c~ (Colll!le P ark) Orange, C.M. 8 Am to 6 PM. alter 6:30. Skipper avail. 646-S(OO A u to mat i e trarismls!ion, of all maJcH. Belt 'tiu;ys In 2 .YR. old female B/Vf 645-4¥163_-+ .. , radio & heater. 549-1058 ENGLISH FORD $245. 6T:rl653 eves OR Sale: Plano, dishwasher, TV, ba.ir pieces If misc furniture. 548-6852 So. Cali!. right ..re. · l(NITTE() fABlll(S SamoY<d. spayed, all,...., 1965 IVESTWIND Sloop No. Alrcrolt 9100 •66 EL Camino /Ge to Appliancn 8100 SCHMIDT MUSIC CO loves children. 646-4326 a.tt. 13. 18' all fl~ all Dl'W w . m p. ~~------"'-' ·• 6 • ~ \1 ·1119 dlliiii -~~-""' 1t. SUPER Cruiser TA 12, .new Deluxe cab, auto, &.11'. p/s • ORANGE COUNTY'S VOLUME ENGLISH FORD DEALER SALES· SERVICE '6'9 MODELS Immediate delivery LARGE SELECTION Theodore ADMIRA.l.. Automatic ice 1907 N. Main,. ...,FOR.SALE BL.A.CK Fem.a.le....-... ~ -~..-,~r.:;=toun-cover, completl! engine extras.1$1895. 648-2944 maker rebigerator. ( 3) Santa Azia, Remnants,, samples &. Mill _......,-, 'tftUl ~· l n c I u d es wertiauL Omsider P. Cati========= t.r• Equipment 8012 from model homes. Save •LARGE heavy SteelCU! ends ~Lea°J!!!i ~m. to 2 ¥:~ ~: ::~ ~· .al)1 ~ 1-i,; HP as trade. 673-ot911 JMps 9510 $100. Du n 1 a p's, 1815 ofc desk A. ~ .. ~. ~ ~ • · Mesa. · ahmum.n:n ·outboard A run. T Deli-Dairy case. Newport, C.M. 548-'Tl88 ofe si.u Royal ·fypewiiter 4 CRPrS. bookcue, dbl bed, 3 CUTE Part Penian.ldttena Di~ n&t!t*. ~Pio 2. Bi& Mobile HorMI w/stand $30. Hand type dual headbrd, lamps, cur· 6 wks. old. 1449'J ·Sahara enough tO g0 10 ci.taJina _ Remm. Adder $31. Near tains. drps. other household Lane, HB. 897~ 5119 Small el)OUCb to attoid! Day new Doughboy Poot filter. items. lCk: to $15. Ada.ms & WHITE Kittens. 6 Wks. Old ~l(_ig~ 6,fi 2-~ ~ 9 4 . Call 892-3681 BrooktvrJt' rarcS:. Eves & Trained, weaned, -fu r r y . Loca.ted ill-Nl!wport &ach. 9200 '65 JEEP J-300 P'lck·Up. 6 cyl. 3 speed. Runs. good • ·drives like a truck. R28657 Sl!Xl. 301 Main SI., Balboa ... 673-21'MO * NEW F r igidaire dlshwa.shers, special tract surplus, $148. Deli ve red arage Sale 8022. w/service or SfllPped out $173. Alt 5 pm 646-1588 ATIO SALE Of many I ~~~~~----­~. Sat. May 17, 9 AMANA Combination ref:rigeralor _ t re e z er. Lm. to 5 p.m., at 905 Park A~. Items range Jrom ~~t~ cond. $l!5. GENERAL Electric automatic washer,· f Io or model, $159.88. Dunlap's, 1815 Newport, C.M. 548-7788 BALDWIN 25 pedal mahog.' w1ai41. ~'1653 546-1570 . 5116 $2200. ~an Ready! Like new, make oUer. 1fi60 FURNITURE -All newly CUTE kittens, mo.Uy white SAILORS' DELIGHT Whittier Ave No. 9, C.M. upholstered. Sofas, hide-a-ma I e , Io n'g ·ha Ir. ltY ~GLAS SLOOP beds, chain, love seals, an· 842-2176. 5/16 Sleeps 4. :fU1.l Kalley, idl!aJ Hi-Fl & St.reo 1210 tiques, dining tab I 1!. LOUIE Need& a hDml!. 9 for 10caJ. ocean sailing, auto Polaroid camera. 54G-D957. weeks old,. puppy, small &. pilot. many custom featur. COMBINATIO~ 1P~no-radlo. 3281 c.o1orado Ln. CM. fiutty. 540--0718 5116 es. See this attractive sail Good '°.bd.ltio&.. Ni(e small SURFBOARD 10', bolds 200 boat now! Priced to sell cabmet -$40 ~ DARLING Calico kitten, 7 · • lbs, xlnt cond $60. Crib & weeks old. housebroken. $700'.t. furnlt\lre to camera equip. ment, including H y l a n d strobe, $45: Swinger camera $10; 4 x 5 negative slides $2 ea.: bowling ball $10; typing 'table $5; antiqued table S2; 1"4pl• bod """"' $2); maple chest le rnilTor l25: barJS20:; two bar stools S3 ea; ~er $5; full wig & Cue $20: television $25; , rack or 'dresses $10; rocca Jn.irror $i2; d i s h e s , oinaments, books, bed spread and other items. Tli-Reeorde. rs 8220 mattresa xlnt cond $20. 83S-76SO 5 lT Ardell Yacht Broken 17 cu ft Cop p ertone ,..., Portacriblr mat.treu,good / 2101.W.COe.st:Npt 612-5735 Refrigerator 'Frl!ezer. $100 • ./ TAPE Jlecordu. 1ll!W cond $15. Sat aft 10:30, 16551 ADORABLE Kittms to lov· Xlnt cond. -al\ 6 l Wollemoak, 3M, ,........ Gnlwn, HB. Ing homo. •·wk& old, -Price Cut $10,000 pm. with all attachment& l80 N.8, TENNIS CLUB -•n. ......,82 SEA.Rs deluxe elec. washer (origin.al cost $130}. 83().()'l!ll Membenhlp for sail!. sr,oo. 8 ASSORTED Kittens. Free OCEAN :RACER & dryer, 5 yrs old, good Regular Sl<IO. 642-057 eves. f or Goo d H ome s. 39' ~Stephens working oond. Terms . Sp0rtlng Goocf1 8500 OFFICE Safe 40x47" $25. 600 646-2169 5/19 .~1c~A~1~~. '675-1.500 12 GAUGE auto ma t I c St Andrews Road, N.B LIVELY 8 Yr Cocker, needs 3446 Via Oporto, Newport G.E. washer &: tiryer, small Winchestu, model S9, prime: 64&-7147 home. :t"me watchdog. Leav· 213: S97-5568 n .f.: 673-l570 settee, elec bl a n k e t • condition, $130. Call Dan FULL membership Newport ;.'ng=',~can~';,t .;:tak::::•·c.968-::;::1801;::.~.1--,;""iU;;;;;:;ao;:;;.--;;;- NEIGHBORHOOD GARAGE SALE Bargains! No Junk blender. Make o l fer, 646-1500 Beach Tennis Cub. S450 + 3 FLUFFY kittens_. 1 black, l CORONADO 23 67"1621 SURFBOARD, Mwi mod•! transfer lrff. 673-7019 .,,. w/blk stn,.s. 6 wk,,. IS HERE! $3195 1 Everythi.nt imaginabJ('. GAS STOVE, double oven by Greek, Excellent con-GO cart $125. SUrtbQard 9' old. 646-4629 5116 NO\V ON DISPLAY elec rotiSM!rie. very dition 5'3". 54fl-2555 eves, 6 .. $50. Drum set $60. :zs27 FREE jpttens, .7 weeks · old. N SAT MAY 17th. l.ti p.m. SUN MAY 18th. ll·5 p.m. Ins Ptlrt Sheffield PJ, NB clean! $75. 645-0861 kncl $45 Toilet trained. Look;ing for ew Sabots starting at $265 SMALL M ~-· h I w S, • Vassar Pl .. C.M. a home. 548-3422 5/17 2912 w. C.OUt 1-Iigb\V&y (Harbor View Home- a., -c e e '61 DODGE $100 '"li:i'i'rEiiS,noify&<Uio:li 1 ,;N~e:'.wpo~rt~&~a~oh~G<\.M~-~~O!_ l:reezer, in good . running Mi1cellaneow 8600 •c,• Wood Boat, gl-~ •~. 5 KITTENS, fiuUy & cute. & nd·uo· 135 uo97A• ... ......... .... r"' k lned 15.5' COLUhIBIA 15 class • Mac Arthur at Ford Rd ) co 1 n. . .....,... ..... * S45-094l * wee s, tra to sandbox. VERONA Artiste beginner'a 646-5473 5n7 fbgls center boa.rd sloop . G.E. Automatic washer. xlnl condition $40. accordian, xlnt oond $150, COMBO refrlg/freezer. Xlnt Salls & trlr. Lapworth paid $300. 2 arm cha.in, $lO oond. New 24·• barbequc. FAT & Friendly, choice of design; ·teak bright"'-ork. T. & Sun., 774 Camellia -1..n., C.M.; Port. Zenith TV :& stand; 30/40 Krag rifle: 351 mag. revolver: left 1handed 75 lb.' Kodiac bo'v & arrow; fishing tackJe, misc. household i t e m s • All Teasonable! • 847-8l.15 • GENERAL Electric Dryer, floor model, $99.88. Dunlap's 1815 Newport, CM 548-7788 ea. SectionaJ corner pc & * 673-7452 * Jong or short-haired kittens. Must sell $1050, 646-4732. I 5-9 wks .. old. 54&-9963 5117 tab e $15. Staulter table $20. DIAMOND Solitaire wedding LIDO 14 " uphol.s bar stool& $20. Elec set, have appri $775, sell LONG HAIRED SI'URDY Trlr, cover, 2 sets sails clothes dryer $31. 642--0558 $250 caah. 675--4111 KITI'ENS 673--011.9 5(17 * $900 ·* GARAGE ,& Rummage Sa.1e- Misc, dishes, furn it u rf', ...bc;loks, tools, a n t i q u e s , Wh irlpool Ga1 Dryer $40. .. 545-4887 . SEARS \Vhirlpool Bath $.15. Toasler, Blender, Waffle Iron. $5.00 each. 962-3402 ,J>W1ts, Fri&: Sat, IO am to 5 Antiques 8110 pm. 408 Holmwood, Newport I ---"""'-----'--' Heights. Alley b e t we e n 'Ce.talina & Holmwood. 6'6-731U. S TEINWAY Piano , Rose1\'00d, Square. St 111 Playable. $500 or Oller. 673-7431 , SHOP machinery: '49 Ford, free: '57 Nash $75; 15• CUl'V· ed sectional beige sofa $75; Sewing Machines 8120 comer maple tble. $25: · an-1 ·1969"'-'-5'-IN""'G,..ER-'-W>=.,h=,;g-'.,..=,, tlques, etc. SUn. only; 2327 walnut console. Makes but· · !Tustin Ave., off 23rd, N.B. ton holes, designs etc., $5.25 646-3546 mo. or $36.00 cash. 52f>.6616 J"URNmJRE, antiques, sew· iJC machine, l!i gal fish tank Musical Inst. 8125 ~cixnplete w/ stand, lots of I;;;=='-"='---'-= bric a brae from 2&c up. Also patio furniture , 1 Jtverythlng must go, 2l2D ·,Raleigh CM . FENDER Bas s man a mplifier cipher Guitar. Besl offer! Will trade for small motorcycle 545-0906 GE SaJI! May 15, 16, KENT Druma: be.ae, 61\1ll"t', ~1. lB K.iL range, dishes. 1on1 tom. cymbals, music ~ bl!ds, furniture, stand. Minol' ttpn. $100. .t)teyeles, many other itemt.1 =830-=1,,""=.,,..==-,,,=-: Olif l..aR & Acacia ST'EINWAY Spine! Piano&: {downtown)', Hunt Bch. bench. m&Mg, perfed cond. l(ANY BarpimJ including Pri pty $9tl0. 644-2681 .\.apidar)'. May 17 & lBth. 120 BASS Accotdion \Yith Bids on entire stock Friday· ca.st'. Cost $500. Ilk~ new. -15119 sin Berna.rd.in> Pl, Make Offer! 548-fi:Dl o.ta ..... stS-3993 ID ,.:,R::U::M::S.,:..;;,,Sc.pa;..-,c.c.=Bl~,,.-.~Sl"i""-. HEAD skis, ski boots, ski clothes, No. :l Spa]ding Mi•c. Wanted 8610 wood, Martin Barit'o n e Ukelele, dishes, antique WANTED bric-a-brac, many o t h e r Items. ~ We need quality (no junk LIKE New, Famous please). Fumitwe, color "StroU...Q..Chair" o u t f i t TV's, stereos. appliances, oomplete. 2 yrs old. Paid tools and office equipment. $322 new, sell for $175 TOP CASH IN 30 Minutes! F'lRM. ~2180 531·1212 * 893-0555 COMPlEI"E set maple bunk $ WE BUY $ bed•, girls 20" bike, =all bike with training \\'heel. $ FURNITURE $ ~~binet. Goo<! cond. APPLIANCES -===~-----C.l•r TV'~Pl•P10'1-St•r••'• LAWNMOWER $5 Portable I 'i•t• •r Houi• Full dishwasher $35 & S 2 fi • CASH IN Jb MINUTES ::::.::10 ~ $25 G~l'. • 54 1-453 I • NEW carpets. Dupont Fiber WANTED -used 6. to s· bar I. for sale cheap or will for home. 675-1345 eves & trade for elec refrigerator. wkend11. Aft • .... ,..71134 1P'"E"T"s ~.-"""""L~1v~E~ST=oc=K~ 90 SQ Yds nylon earpetil1g, C frosted cocoa, new, not cut. ab 1120 :acrillce $6.35. 714 -673-778S SACRIFICE beautiful 6 vmtngs months cream c o I o r e d NEWPORT Beach Tennis papered male Persian $25. Club Membership for. sale. 644-0331 eves. Saw $310. Call Harry *PUREBRED Siamese kit· Buller .. 81l'>-482-3882. tens. S20 each. * POOL TABLES * Call 53&-0013 ll.l\Ytime. CUstom :: antique -modem B · -• lL'led. SPORTS "100". urmt H K1tte"s $50 (TI4) 6.36-2730 12-8 pm 546-0010 or 962-2633 ~ an Estate. tumlture, erland. Complet~. · illlhes. t1sbmr equip, \>OU * ~133t * BARGAIN! ltfembership In Qop 1125 IW.IDC' It. we haw it! 2442 I========="° I Newport Beach Tennis Oub.i'=·-""------.::::=: ~--Place. Colta lieu.. Pianos & Orpnt 8130 S700 )IOU pay transfer fee . GERMAN Shepherd puppies. GE Sale _ 3 Fam.ilirt 6Q...3417 aft 3 pm. AKC. impori~ sttt, sci- TY. film etc. 362 Grenoble, • PIANO RENTALS e DIAMOND wedding !Jet 2 entilically raised, large bon- e... ar TuaHn & Monte SUMMER sPECIALS Cts. T .W .. perfect, fiawless.,~<d~·~-'='-21'"'-140-,--~~-7 · ., • Low u $7.95 per mo. 1: V-uta. s.t-Sun "11).4. 548-48.tl. A ppr $2350, •c S 6 S 0 • 8 MOS old female German hnlal applict ta Purcha.$e 67J...3600 S h e p ti I! r d , a.1.fectionate. GARAGE Sile -F\a'nllurt, Goukl Music Com-ny ~---••- FREE kittens, very cute. TOMCAT BOATS 531-l!i72 after 6:00 pm. 5117 7614 Npt Blvd, NB 675-2400 BASE drum -good cond. VENTURE 17 54().-5996. 5/16 Nrly new, all extras $1795 FREE Kittens to good home. TOMCAT BOATS 96Z-UZ2 5/16 :ltilol Wpt Blvd, ·NB 675-2400 BEAUTIFUL, FluUy male 1968 13 ' SAILBOAT kittens. 962-453.1 5/16 w/trailer. Like new, best offer. BU< Male puppy to loving 1r2ll • 59?-3500• home. Call 642--0856 aft 4:30. FREE MINUTEMAN 12". n e w ; Top Soil. -Will help beau\. blue & while • dig & load. 842-4825. S/19 divorced, must sacrifice LARGE lemon and orange $595. 675-6953 trees. You di&. 646-6697 5119 Shoregoer-Sailing Dinghy FREE 2 lovabll! kittens need $165 a good home. 839-3397. * 675-233& * SOLID mahogany scraps &.. KITE No. 651 fir plywood. 646-:l377 5/16 1969 Model $825 SWEET kittens, m i x e d . *'"'i3&4100 • La.gun.a Be~ch 494-89CM 5n9 TRANSPORTATION 26' SLOOP Porpoise. Sips 4. Xlnl cond. 962-1126 aft 6 pn1. BD1t1 & Y acht1 ~ I ·L"1"00"""~14",-""-,-,.~ilo-s-2~,.-~,... 1958 25' ES S A N E g S rigging, trlr, Xlnt oond. Sportfisber • ovemightl!r. 1 _S995~,.,· ,,.m.=1°'111,..1====-- ll5 hp Chnyier Crown. HOURLY RENTALS Fatbometer, shlp to shore * Rhodes 19'• * radio, s scoop bait tank. Fun ·Zone Boat Co. Balboa Mking llGSO. Call 646-1545 ME!'CALF, oo. 65. Xlot coo- Dayg & 64&-4994 ev6. dl~n. $400. Call eves or 1963 30• TROJAN. Radio, 'vlct1<b. ~4 l&lbo..,tor, oqulp I 0 ' PLASTREND·-s=o=L~lN=G~ ·fishing. Slps 6. Xlnt cond Available 6 weeks lll500. 34U Mar=. NB. Sl!OCK. N>:IVPOl\T Bll-2000 675-084:l, 534-JTIO 23' c.c. Good bull. aw. APACHE SABOT $125 overpty. Not NM1nc needs can eves or wknds ~ work. Hd Ir bait tank. Good 28' CAT. CIJO)' d ts an , fi$hing boat. Finl p)O Ensienada vet. btnu. mx>. takes. 675-Zm val.. sac $0095. 7141893-1019 '59 FORD, 2 Dr. IIT. Pis. 24' AUX Sloop. Top <.'Ond. brakl'i Ml. Xlnt trana. S19$ Dile&. Newiiort slip avail. 6'4-1437 Call M6-3365 llUUWa IM oveo a mi8c. ,..7... PRESTO Air coaler $20. 9xl2 IA'llUL u,.. .... ,.,.. Al<C reg. !Ill. May 17 10 •.m . .S p.m. 20CS N, Main, SA 54 -O:i81 cottoo Wunda Wnoe l'UI $75. 13'7-&238 14' FBGLS twin bull, 2-:ZS hp Power Cruisers 9020 ' me RedLands Dr., N.S. NEAR new 1plnet piano. xlnt ~7536 1 ~ hnier pup pj es. mtn. hdy str'g. w/trlr.1-----'-''----" ====== ' GARAGE oa1e, 11115 w. Utb -• """· po. ~: Quality JU"" """ qWJt..i. AKC """'.....,· CbampX>n ~. 5IM697 30' Monterey It.. C.11.. Silt A SUn, Mq <i94-tt61 ne&. complett, UDUlf!d $91: worth &inod. ~00 a>LUMBlA 29, 1/3rd in-llS hp 6.l)'S MOBILE HOME $10,000 -OR- $35,000 ' HOUSE! . $695 JOHNSON & SON Lincoln-Mercury 1941 Harbor Blvd. 642.7050 WIU.Y'S wagon, 4 w/d, 6 cyl, wn hubs, 42M miles. Trlr hitch $1~. 642-6432. Corne in today and see Ju.x· Recreat'n' VehiclH 9515 ury living at down 'to l!arth -~·------.,- prices. Especially DOW duf· • T~ v~o """"' cleariu>oa ·l"l• ... ·Fa.,,1.>rw., ... all display model!-they're A CAMPERs DELIGHT priCl!d to Rl1 imml!diately. Rent by the day, week, or Pub available in all anaa month. reason.able rates. B•i Harbor Saddleback Dodge _ Mobil• Home .Sales 1A01 N .. Tustin Ave. 1425· Baker St. 547-9~1 % block East ol llarbor Blvd. I========= on Bake>< Campers 9520 Costa Mesa (TI4) 541).94701,;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; DRIFTWOOD H.B. Facing goU COllf'Se. 3 bed· room, bath. built.ins, 1'arge patio & garage. Dwner Mov. t'tl! Must sell! Will carry balance alter down payment 548-6604 or ~7342 '68 • 12 x 60, 2 BR, 1* BA. appliances, carpets & drapes, awnings & s k i rt s. Huntingtan.by-the.. Sea. Adult section. 54!'-0557 CAMPER Sales • Rentals Authorized Dealer Eldorado • Four Winds Scotsman • 13arra.cutta 8', Cabover Low As $199 h-lodeJ # 600 Theodore ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd. ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 642-0010 '67 CORTINA 1600 • 4 speed .. radio. Low mile~. The de Jox model with bucket seats. WFV196 $1350 JOHNSON & SON Lincoln· Mercury 1941 Harbor Blvd:. &42-'ru50 j l=ERRARI t'. . FERRARI I Newport Imports Ltd: Or-! ange_ Comity's only author- ized dealB". SALES-SERVICE·PARTS 3100 \V. Coast Hwy, Newport Beach &42-9405 ~1764 ' Authorized MG Dealer I FIAT '67 Fiat a.so Coupe Black exterior & interior. 4 Spd~ dlr, prestige steel wheels, Pirelli tires. $155 cash de ls or older trade. Will fine priv prty. LB VHE 743, I ean Bill, 494-9773 or 545-0634• WANTED: 1'1obile home to Costa Mesa 642-00JO JAGUAR rent with option to buy.l!!!~·..,..,...,,....,,..,..,I nave owo '"'""'""·&.ch DAILY RENTAL --------1 area prefen-ed. 2 2 O 2 4 1h. J AG u A R s. l.fain, Torrance. * Lease or R~nt * ===--o-=-c=~~ Vans, campers, pickups & VC:RY Clean 10 x so Skyline cory cruisers motor horn~. X K E'S With large cabana. C.O'mpl Slide ins walk tlUtls shells: with skirting & ~rt & availabl~ at reduced' prices'. patio awnings. Call 53fr2081 Ask about ow-Iamily PBY· 20X55 DBL. Ex p a n d o , ment plan. redecorated, new hot water Saddle Back Dodge tank, drapes, air cooler. 1401 N. Tustin Ave. Space 108, 890 W. 15th NB 547-9381 10JC46 l BDRM, xlnt cond. Rent A _C_•_m_po_r __ Crpts, drps, alum awng. * CORY CRUISERS '* 1600 Whittier Ave No. 9, Rent by the day, week. or C,l.f. month. Reasonable rates. 27" x 8' MAYFLOWER. ·ss Saddlehck Dodge model I.· awning. $700. 1401 N. Tustin Ave. * ... 2-t880* PhonO 547·9381 '64, lOxSO, 2 BR in quiet adult COACH • TRAILER park, crpts, ctrps, semi·tum. RENTALS :$3=750=·=~=·======1It'a none too early to make 92 reservations for Spl'in&' HoL Mini Bikes 75 idays! 'G'9 BONANZA Hoidaka 100 WEEK-END OR WEEKLY CC. in warranty, y,•fexlras. 546-0291 >Ont cond. Aak'g $250. \\fill lDEAL for % ton pickup, 8 ft trade for larger b i k e • campe.r, sleeps 4, ~695 incl 642--&-n evea. butane tank & camper PRICED W &ell! 1/3 hp 1968 jacks. ~1949 Powell Desert Trail bike VW '64. Exceptionally clean, $125. l·S hp 1968 P-Owell Extras. $1650 or best oHer. Oestrt Trail bike, $150.1~ ...... ~~,,.,=· =~~--- 675-002S 8' CABOVER Calif Camper TACO Mini BUre 'vith 5 HP Fully equipped. $.DI. West Bend. Ex. con d. * 642-TI-40 * Sacrifice. Fer information call 34)..2342 Camft!r Rent•l1 9522 Motorcyclu 9300 MOl'OR HOME-'19 """" --~-----·1 Travoo 21·. Fu.JJ,y equip. Self 'tl9 lOOc:t HOOAKA dirt bike. oont&ined. Now taking sum· JO.pd boy's Schwinn blcy. mer reservations. Private cle, both In xlnt co'od. party. 714/ 644-l2ll -494-1324 t1ftt-r 6 pm DUNE buggy. Build yuur HONDA 350 OfOPPER OYt'fl. 4 sp Corvair engine & WTS OF CHROME b'Msa.UI $150. ~. '67 2 ..J.. 7. 4 speed, chrome \vheels, AM·F'~1 radio, spot. '"'· • '66 Racing AC'd. Like nc\v. • • '6,J Horizon blue, All extras. DOT DATSUN! 18835 Bl!ach Blvd. liuntington Beach 842-7781 540-0442 YELLOW ·ss Ja11:. 3.8 s. chnn \V I W, PS PB, 1 o'vner. $2350. Xlnt eoncl. 54S--OJ6(I ·62 XKE Reis. 11nmac conrt. New top, tires. Best offer over nxxi. Drafted! ~or 846-ll90 KARMANN GHIA 1966 KARMANN Ghia. 33, mi. AM/01. New cond $1400 or best of:fe:r. 67l--929l MG $39!1. 646-8959. Sf0..1488 ~1488 YAl\WfA SO Dir1 Bike Xlnt f'Du==B==.===9=,.=, Cea.n 'fi6 ~IC Mldid. low cond, many cxtru. $115 or ne Uft* ~-mites. Nt w ttra best offer. 494-6732 vw Dunc Buagy chusill, * 838-W-JO * 1Tth A 180i. 1J •Mff56. SQUARE Grand PI an o, $%10. Aft 5 or Wknds 847-00! SABLE Coll". AKC. 11 tert11t. Top mnd. extras. 3 Nu Da~54+251105 •hp SAll.E Sa. Sun l"OSewood. Very good tont. R.ELAXlCIZOR _ Lllce new, monlh• fem&le, sht»J. rn;. $100) dn. 642-3795. 673-7211 -, ~~a ~~llC. 6(3.'.-1913. au btlt&. $1.SO. 968-2763 Wanted: -u~ sabot. Pitcific Yacht 213: 597-5568 17m1"ROtlmlun, H.B. HAADfOND ORGAN *"~*. SCOM'ISH Terriu puPIJ!ca. 644-2474 (Tustin). 20· CABIN cruiser. twin ''7 lJONDA 160. ~ited eng\nt 6 all running gear in I ·1~>;:1~~,~,G~T"'o'". c,Xln.;,;...t-nmnl--•• tiru. Much cltromc! Xlrll xln1 cond.. Body nlrnoved. condlllon. Nl!w top A f®' goodies. 54g,..1411 Dana S300z 83.S-53)2 neau. ~d orff!t', M9--200Q GARAGE SALE Spinet. modcl. • $625. e 'TIS Troplca1 Fish .. Slmw quality. U wb. JD' GLASSPAR Rull8.bout. Crays, ·2 bunks. heed; tMUo JtJNK TO ANTIQUE 9624611 <H.B.) Openinc 'bout May 15th •&K-lll3• ' extra equlpmf'ht, like newl ~ bfl lt tank. $1950. ~155. 'DI A. Vk:lddl. CM kt ,..ar \\'hile elrphanit! t>1me-a-line Fount.I.In Valliu' 8G-U:ll White tlephants! OlmN,tlnt $2.'50 • ..._aft 4'PM SOCK IT TO 'ENI ~..:::~.:.;::::::=..;:;;;.;=..:~--'-"'-'-~~~- 1963 • SUZUKI 12> cc -• .,....,vw=-=oo=NE""B"U"GG=v~.-1 ·5:1 MG 'rD - Bearca1. 2.IKXI miles. Ex· bfovini-Must 1eU.! XJnt mndition1 cetltnl cond.,i:us. 5.16-1&11 S.fCD * 6'1l-42S1 Best otter! 675-0330 • • .... -.. --. -~=....; __ - -----.. --- I - -------·-.. ---------·-·---·---------~~-----~---~----.,..,---~-=-..,.., ....... ~.--............. ~ I TRANSl'OllTA'l'IOM TllANSPOltTATION -.............. -,.. '1297 -/~~66 MPG S.1390-50 .... -Pf ....... , .... H W 1M•. ... +Ta l l.JI SUBAkU M ~ki S SIN S£ SUBARU of Calif. Inc. -Rotoll Division 11100 W, Coot! Hwy. -Newport llHch 64M050 * 540-2733 MG '51 MGA. Good meebal'Uc&lly $250 * 67"629 '59 MGA &ood cond. Dratted! l9XI 01' best oUer. ~2330 ' MGB _l~t \ll[ILll I _11 111 ~111 ri ·· !JOO W. CDut aw, .. N.B. 6CMl5 540-176t Autbo:rized MG Dealer '65 MGB, BRG .ext.. Blk int. wire whll, o/driw, R/H. Orig """' $1600. !ie-llOO OPEL '66 OPEL Station Wagon PORSCHE pORSCHE • '66 912. 5 speed. Xlnt condition. Extru! 613-0054 SUNBEAM · '67 SUNBEAM Alpine Rd!lr. Sell/trade for VW. 675~1362/633-4280 ext. 713/~7705 TOYOTA '67 TOYOTA Coron• 4 Door ... -Oioite o11tick or automatic, TRJOl7. $1399 l.tmi6 TOYOTA-YOLYO 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 TOYOTA Looded. 4 ""'· dlr; <11x ""'' $ SAVE $ rack, blue e:xtedor I: inter- >r. $75 n.i. • take pymnll Executive Cor Sale $36.B& mo., LBSMG 416. CID Hurry Whllo Thoy Lotti em '94-9773 or 56«34 PORSCHE "flll Ltmi4 ·:;s SPEEDSTER 1500. IHPORTs Perfect <mrall cond. $1500 TOYOTA·YOLYO or bat offer. Sf2...li569. 1966 Harbx', CM. 6£9303 TIWISl'OltTATION ................ .TOYOTA TOYOTA HEADQUARTERS ELMOIE IDJO----·--- TRANSPORTATION TllAN.SPORTATION FINEST SELEalON OF PREVIOUSLY BILL MAXEY OWNED AUTOMOBILES !T!glY!OIT!A! 11111 BEACH llLVO. '68 ELDORADO '67 LINCOLN Hunt. leech 147.&5!.5 (oc•I ctr, e" e.-..r, f1r;t olr, COUN S ml N. of Cout Hwy, on Bch hill pew•r, ~1t.reo rodl1, "'"" Fwll power, f•ct •Ir, leethlf' TRIUMPH TR 250 1968. Very clea.nl ...... $2510. r;1r w1nt11ty, XCJ -46• lt1t, vi11yl top, btltt w/t111 J11t. 15850 TPXS l$3297 fridq, "'" 16, l'M TllANSPOltTATION VALUAIU COUPON DAIL' PILOT COUPON SALE $100 IXPlllS" MAY JI, l fff G·MAC MOTORS • ONI Pll CAR • ONE nR CUSTOMll USE AS DOWN PAYMENT '$6 IUICK HARDTOI' ·---$1H ... $ 99 PAYMIHTS $00 MO. ...... 631..Jll98 ~. : •IOI MORROW • '62 IUICK CONYUTllU .... wot $SH •"' $499 PAYMENTS $2t MO, '66 OLDSMOBILE • Yrs. ..... -· Special....... ... ... 8 Ll'ltd I" H•rller ArN1 • , '68 CADILLAC VOLKSWAGEN full po:~·~c~o~~ 14,000 1964 vw clean & sharp HI mile1, Iii• blue w/derll: blue mileage' but has recent q , Int. No. ~It 11110 ~~ "i".w"':. ~ s47z5 Alt. 6:30. 646-12'ZS J67 VW "Buj"' Lt bloo-grey lnl Many Ex-M .. t '66 CADILLAC Sell! 6'15-Z15T aft 6. Ask for R DAN DI YIW Chris . Full power, f•c.f •ir, m•roo• 1967 VW Jsoe eng. AM/FM w/blec:k vlnyl top, ltSK 951 ndlo. Wht w/ blk "''"'" s3399 ~650. Xlnt cond : '66 VW CAMPER. Fae &m- S Hc r.ussc 6 • 1 .. t v..... 62 FALCON SPRINT .......... w• 11 H •"' $699 PAYMENTS $Jl·MO; 11P'•"'• 0 1 •'I ,... '""11 M I ..__ • Convert. V-8, 41pd. CMPM w/bla(k Ylityl top, foe.I air. • .., S I ... SYN "s2146 : Month •or : 'SI CHEY WAlj(IN ·········--$1H-..:';!. $ 99 PAYMIHTS $00 MO. • Tra-'f-1 • '61 T-llRD ·······-················· wot $4H •'" $399 PAYMENTS $U MO. • • ••;1 Stock No. 14~ CM,.. 167 MERCURY W• •• ohllit Mw• • •allo-• .-. 60 RENAULT ·······-··········-··· .,. $4H ... $399 PAYMENTS $U MO. CAPll i Door, ~Ito w/bl1ck •i11yl top, Uk• MW! One owner, 11ew c.tr WOM"•rtfy. UJC IS• s11os •made • IM .... ...... 4 Door CM,_ . •Vocllleo Days. • 'U FORD •Al.AXIi ....... -... .,. $6H •'" $599 PAYMENTS $l4 MO. • · BEFORE YOU Wll(on, ak, pa, auto., 9 -. ,..,.. • BUY . : '60 CHEY IMPALA ................ w• $3H •'" $299 PAYMENTS $11 MO. • Check Our • 'H CHEY IMP.. • . ...... • Savin-• --·····-·····--$3H -$299 PAYMENTS $11 MO. • '2.. • c .. ,.. • YOU CAN'T • 'SI THUNDIUIRD was '2H "'" $199 PAYMENTS $12 MO.. • BEAT THEM • ······-·····... • , .. ,.. • ANYWHERE • '62 FIS CUTLASS ················ Wot $SH .... $499 PAYMENTS $21 MO. dial equip. Scoops, exbst, ... "" mi. Xlnl $2'1Xl. °"'' A. L L E N 548-1673, 646-8289 aft 6 pm. '65 VW CAMPER 1600 -· $1275. ""'""vw ,,-s ... -=:.--= ....... =-· • = ..... 1 OLDSMOBILE -CADILLAC tires &. battery. Nttds body work & paint. $595. 64.5-0BlD '65 vw 1150 SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY • • Coupe c..,.. • • • '61 OLDS HARDTOI' ············?"" $4H "'" $399 PAYMENTS $22 MO., a ·OUR °"EL PRICES a Air, full power CN P.. , : $ 1 STA 7 RT 7 AT 7 : '6~"._0~pd.IA~-8GlAND .......• -$SH ,..::::.$499 PAYMENTS $21 MO.', LAGUNA BEACH ··- .65 vw RIH m; good • • '65 PLYMOUTH __ ........... ,. woo $7H "'" $699 PAYMIHTS $36 MO._ Porsche chrome wheels $1000 * 64&,1196 '°"""Pvt ptY, good tires. 494• 1084 • 547 3103 • • 4 Doo,, V-8, auto. '"'" , new mutflor. 536--0372 • . • · • • • '62 FALCON WAGON ........ wot $SH •'" $499 PAYMINTS $21 MO, ,58 vw B ' • ORDI R YOUU • ,.,,.. us TODA YI -----• -MO Mako oUtt! '4>-6832 IRA.ND NEW • '6k=v~~:!~p;:····--····wot$6H ,:,:.$599 PAYMENTS_. •: 1959 VW 32 000 actual miles · • · · • '6t IUICllC Orig ""';, l<lnt oond. Imported Autoo .. -.Ro<0 Con, Rods 9620 • $2444.. • '62 Yl>.L!AN1 -···· .. ·······-·······we $SH "'" $499 PAYMENTS $21 MO. 842-5969 , , · · w • • -!' · . 2 Door, 6 cyl, auto. u .,.. VOU<SWAGIN "5S •atEVY 2 "'· 324 c:u •• • 0·'1-~.x~rs •• OVER 40 c•Rs TO CHo-· -oM '68 VW SUNROOF rb,. WW $1695 aft S 673-4984 TUE HUB of activity Jor service buaineses • • • the Oa•tfted Adi. Dial 642-5678 tD otter )'OUI' .ervice NOW. ~kbJ eSigryg., !:,~ads, Malorytr! • " v-rft '69 ~I mg. c.a.,,,.,n cam, . lllllilEllIATE DELIV!:RY powre. c & 0 •tiok hydro. • • WHOLESALE TO THE PUBLIC Bank ---"""· ..... ,.... Alt • • $113 OOWN 3 pm all 64Hll8 • uk tor • • $41.0I * ,.,,... Johnny. '66 DODGI FilMli<bot Afflioblo oo o1 ..._,to 36 -oo AppnrYod Credit 1 ALL CARS UNDER $100 CASH ONLY Plua 1 final PJmnl fcm-'41 FORD coupe 371 Olds 8 Moft•eo, F11ll pow..-, f,e.8 I .l~m~po~l't;od;;;A;u;lfot;;;;;;-~;b~111~po1~1't~od;;;A;u~rtoo;;;;9600;;;;1;mporlod~==·;A;utot;;;;~?600~~ title. 1'UlJ. 2 yr, 24.,000 Hooktt headers, 6-two l tory ,;. co!ld. ll'U 031. I II mi ....... .,.. Avoil onl1 at "fb'L $2lO. -54S-6945 • $169 5 • T& MMOTORS • • G·MAC MOTORS WHEN YOU SEE THESE ·~ 75 BEAUTIFUL BUGS C"lck Iverson unnot Hll tlrtd bugs. He Is evtherl1M not t.. Mlttw fJf feet ht ch-.k.t alMll nclMcks his usM c•r.. s.M• them threuth evtherla4 cllnlc ....,._ they tet that fameus 11 ,olnt check-u' alMll any ,.,.1,. ....._ T!ten ht ch9clu aM recheck& theM apln •IMll then 1wu whlltt He ~ them In the ,.,..., (P.S. If a lut la tff ttrM t• make you ttappy ••• H• Ith MW to •Mthrlr d•lw) '66 GHIA c..,. Y11low wit+. bl•c• i11ttr· ior, Showi on•llo11t c:•rt . So 11ict on th1 to•d. R•· dio & ht•f••· l ie. No. Y,Sl2J. $1699 '68 vw .... l lu t with off-whit1 1im• ul•t•d •iwyl roof. R•dio I h1•l•r. Your ow11 di1· ti11ctiV1 liHl1 c•r. lie, N .. moi2. $1899 '62 PORSCHE ''"~ 1\i1 ci r 1how1 pone"•'· llM CtF'I. Wt htl th1t it w;lf tfYO fftilf IWltllf 1•f• J1f•cfl•11. Hurrvl Uc. No. RP'V2t1, $2199 • '68 vw Red with bl•ck inte ri or. fr;onomlc•I summer fu11 ,.,. lt•die .. h •••••. e ... fr• room for kiddi1' & pth. Lie.. No. VTU544. $2299 '66 vw . IVS SuPfl!'ll•• f1111 for the •n• tire ftmlly, Com,l1t•ly oquippM. R•dio l ht•f· •r. Drlv•1 9re•t. lie. No. ltVI 572 . $1199 '68 vw --1¥Ut fNm •II 111• '61 !MMtMcol Jtrh. E11<Jl110, ...... 11.1... 1fe••f1'19, o..i-. '''· An 1111w c•m· ,__h wM• ••-.. IM. II'• ••"'· Uc:. Ne. WCY t10, $2399 '66 PORSCHE t1J c..,. l •ht1t1• yellow w i t h bl•ck i11t•rior. Chrome wh•ol1 -XTUS -l1w ft'liltt t •· R•dio I ho1f1r. Got mil••9• i1 t •o•t en thi1 mod.I. lir; No. SIA 725. $43'9 '67 vw .... Gr••ll with conh•1ti11t inlorler, r•dio & ht•t1r, l•1utlful 01i9i11•I c•r. Come i11 tllll te•t llri•• thi1 t 1r. lie. No: UJHIM. $1699 '66 vw --l •it •· 11.c.k l11t.rior, Tiii1 It th1 Top of Our l lno. Dri•M Ilk• • llretm. Re. dio •• h••ter. Ur;, Ne. SOl 22t $1699 445 E. Coast HkJhway At layskle' Drive, Newport Beach 549.3037 -°" 673-0900 " I ~ 8081 Garden Grove Blvd. _A°'"ul_01_W_an_tod ___ 9_7_oo a '65 OLDSMOllLI a 534-2284 at Beach 89'J...5551 ~ T F 1 3630 W. ht St., Santa Ana 531-9183 OPEN SUNDAY WE PAY • • • 1 4 aoor H. • •etory • r,1 CASH powor 1+•••!~9 Ir br•ke1, '68 GHIA, AM/FM. gm W/ wbt int. Oirm whll. 11,000 mi U/warranty ·Must Soll $11SO Fl'm 516 Femleaf~ CdM 67S-(ll9 VOLVO far U9ed ears Ii trucks :tllll caD mi Jor tree nttmate. GROTH CHEYROlfT l111to, !MOY 1461 •1========-:-::========1-=======:;~ : __ $~1_3_9_5 __ : A."to Lonlnt 9110 Uood Can 9900 Uood Car. 99C1d • '67 IUICI( • F!Rsr TIME! CHRYSLER •Rivf1r1. F1elory oir eoftd .• Leaae a Nn-'19 for 6 Montha CHEVROLET a f1111 powor, bueket 1ooh. & return with no obllpUon. '64 CHRYSLER*'° . elQY 199 a C.aU Mr, Maloolm Reid for AJk !or Sain..._., • $3695 • Full De<all.o Now 182ll Beach Blvd. -~~----· 6U-OOlll I VOi.YO '67 CHEVROLET IMPALA Sport Sedan. Automatic, ,pow. er steering, radio, beater, like brand new. CTQS3851 $1695 full price. Bank Fin- ancing. C.Onnell Chevrolet, 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.. 546-1203 Hardtop. Factory air, power sleerifw, 111toma.tic, raWo. beater. Beautiful eondltion. IXEV9!1) $1395 IUll prlcoC Bank tina.ncing. Hun-Boach • 'H IUICll • Ford Authori><d NEW 164 KI s.3331 •Wifd(•f 4 door. F•(fory1 Leasing System & WE PAY CASH ••ir, •Ufo., p-•r 1fteri"'' Theodora NEW.lioo •""· ISVX '"' • ROBINS FORD Chevrolet 2828 Harbor Bhod. OJSti Mesa. 546.1203 NOW ON DISPLAY FOR YOUR CAR • $2395 • 2060 -Blvd. tu L • ...: I CONNELL •. --.66~T-EM_P_ES_T_,: ea.ta :·~EASE :"'" '65 IMPALA 1008 OIRYSLER New Yorker, Town A O:nmtry. Complete in every detail. Xlnt cond. Will comlder oi. fer. St&-1457 lWIO •custom c:p•. RIH, •vlo.,. '68 Cad CdV lull""' -•-Sport Coupe. V8, 1tick &hilt. OLET .,.S,, f•c:lory •ir co"dition· •c:50Q 1 's1.19 '....-, #51499 IHPORTS CHEYR . !STDl771 • ~. m. ""mo. 2828 Harbor mw.. 8 1"1· '69 Old1 Delta Royal. 2 dr, $975. 1966 Had>O/~'l:.T•·=, __ O>ota="'-M~•-oa~546--1200 __ • $1595 • .6HT7 F• al.,r-,ITDl.2:1 P'4 dr moHT. '66 MALIBU CONTINENTAL . 9610 •• o ... , r, , ''396'' $uft9r Sport A RARE Find! Grab thll Will Buy • '61 CADILLAC • ·~. $69.56 "'"mo. r--!"'6 Marl< n Onnllnontal '62 ALPINE, hard top, win! wheels, $100. ShopaoIUt V extru $125. 548-6687 •s.J. D•Vil1 1. Fvll power .•• SOUTH COAST 4 speed, sharp, Lie SKV222 C&Klc. A-1 condition. Em- 6 "°" ... dollln. Paid for • $995 • 300 W. Cat Hwy, NB 645-2182 ..... a °"' ln • mllllon ........ w DOt. Call Ralpb MUI-Ca11 6'13-5882 aft 8 PM. Y<Nr Volklwaam or Por"ICM mf•c.t. 1ir. I HXS 7421 • CAR LEASING " l1mu prea white. $3495 Mata )'Oii 673-1190 • '66 THUNDERllRD • Utod Cut 9900 IMPORTS '66 CONTINENTAL 0>upe. Antiques, Cl1ulct 9615 IMPORTS WANTm •F1ctory oir cond. Full pow-• '56 GMC' P/U, •SJ Ford ata TOYOTA·VOLYO Full,y loaded + itereo ti.pf FORD 1930 Stardard Coupe. Or.nee Counties •er, •i11yl fop . XLV491 • wag, $300 u . Both rood 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 deck. Still under warranty. Ru•t "" body, ttblt '""· TOP S BUYER • $2795 • nmrun& «>nd. 509 llamllton, ''5 CHEV. CUSTOM !:::1 "': ~:" u~.:!° $'110. ,....,.., BILL MAXEY TOYOTA • • CM. EL CAMINO 645--0446 --. DAILY P1l.DT WANT ADS 18881 Beach mvd. • '65 SKYLARK a '31 MODEL A Tudor Sedan. VS, automatic, radio, heater, ,65 CONT 4 dr ll==_;;AI;;ways~;,;a~Go-Go==' :=;:::71L=Beo=.=o=:h.=:'.'::Pb.:==:ll'l;;-&5;;;. a4 dr. Autom 1tic. pow•r 90% n!llk>ttd, Call after 6, very clean. (R37660) $1395 Juli · • Fact. air, I I 1t.etin9, , r•llio, he1t1r.• f714) 833-2653 full price. Bank Flnancing. pwr. Priv. party, $1215. 9600 •111.GV4t41 • Connell Chevrolet, 2828 Har. 67J...88.l); 49&--2939 eves. II""';:;.;....= ::=._..::=..:~::::::::::::=:=== • $1395 • BUICK bor Blvd., o..i. k-. CORVAIR • 54&-12CXI TOYOTA BUYERS ATIENTION!! TWICE A YEAR SALE ON ALL '69 EXEC •• DEMONSTRATORS I CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 1 CORONA 4 Dr's e AUTOMATIC'S 4 CORONA 2 Dr's e 4 SPEEOS I . COROLLA 2 Or e AIR COND. I COROLLA WAG. e VINYL TOPS LOW IANK FINANCING AVAILf.ILI. LOWEST PRICIS IN ORANG E COUNTY ON THI ABOVE MENTION I D CARS. BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 11111 BEACH BLVD., Huntington l oad! '68 MUSTANG • '66 BUICK Riviera. Like 2'"ooo="'R'°'11"'n=v'"'~'""•"•"'"'""".,_,"",.... '62 CORVAJR s p )'d e r ) ip"d. new! Air-c:ond, fully equl~ R&ll, exceptionally clca~ Convert. •!WTAOlll • ped. S2350. * 644-2448 abarp car, exceptionally low super ~r.Ex..c::':i $1995· . • "611 OPEL mu..,., well malntalnod. o/hauled. "'" "'aku, --~-----<••I 2 door, ttaUon wagon Muat be 1tt11 to be ap. lhocks. Needs TLC, $«50; • '65 CHIYSLD • ~6315BUICK EJ---*16U-2l32 ~~ed6 ~ ~:~i,,~548-5'44~==~~--• New Yo1ktr Cpt. FvU pw1.. ,..;ua. cnmn'. ~l235 62 CORVAIR StaUon WlrCOf1 •f•r;fory eir cond. MHA 1&4 •'ull power I: a..ir. ~ extn, clean. RIH. New • $1795 • '3.000 mL $795. 673-6640 '86 MALIBU 2 o,_ HT, V~ titt<. Mo'°' A-1 13 9S , '--''------· ltlck. blk bUcltet lea.ti. l 546-2855 . • '67 CAMAIO • CADILLAC owner, must sell Jeav'g 1962 CORVAJR. Good mec country, $l495. 494-2730 aft cond. New .ttrea. clean 1n ·~.T. Cpo. Auto., ,S, Ftc.t.I 1965 CAD Coupe de Ville. 5. out. Priced to tell! •'"• R.IH. ITfX 76tl . • FulJ powe!', air com., /tlr.el. '62 2 OR. Impala hdtp. 327 54S-7DI eves A wkndl • $2295 • l xlnt '°""· Eol&to ..,., 1 VI, aulo lranl., PIS. P/B. ,86 MONZA. Cd-cond.. ·--''------. owner. $2600. 536-2651 Radio. tact &Ir. New brake ttrea. lhOcb. mutnen. Aiko • '64 WA~N • '68 CADILLAC """""""'· llnillll $115. Good oond. 329 .... $1000. m..- • 990 kt1t1ble1, .f•c.t. elr.. PERFECI', leather interior, E. ::t.rt. C.M. • PS .. Pl. IOVT I Ill • U,000 ml. M111t ldl. Belt -'----',,.;,64_,0..,_-,~oll~o~377~-'64. CORVAIR Monza. R/H • $1395 • o!for.41)4.$1) Air, new rubbo' • bnloo~ ~tionm:'c.':.·s:=• • '64. CAD Convertible El Be.low book. 646·8959, ========l • '67 COU•AR • Condo. XInt an!. Pri .,_ 54Dol"8 . COU•Al Fttfoty 1lr 10•. Fvll ,ew·· b. 6t&-&T ftH 5;»1:30 l96S IMPALA Wqon. 1 •,,, ucx t12 196.1 CADILLAC Sedan de owner, '°" ~ hilly equtp, '67 COUGAR $2495 • Viii•. Air oond, -· SUI& n< bnt, .S-1197, OWned by 11111o 'olo bo""""' • S1lll5. $46.-3585 evtt. "'-0611 trom San .Tuan. eu.r, 'H CAPRICI • FOR Sale , '!I °""Y. Good low..-, -- mAvt-••i•, ••et. •ir, I"-• CHEYIOLIT c:onditb'I. s:m. ter1or, t..ct. a.1r, pwr ~ ~tt.,1119, r•dio, h .... ,.. Call alt 6. 961-31.ZJ dlr, $125 cub dell Cll' ISIMl71l '112 CHEVY Suptr Spon. 317 19620U:V Be1Alr4dr, V4, -lrlde. Wiil .lloc • $1995 • q . Map. Steno lape. pwr 11'1!, .,. -A poly, VUE 743. Coll • • * IG-48IM * HM. $450. 548-1530 *'7'13 f6 56CM. • 23' E. 17111 ST I ~ atEV., s1a waa. Gd V1 'li3 cm:vv 1mpa1a. N .. ·•1 a>UGAR Xll 1. • , • e~. t.d trar.. $150. or ol· motarmq-wheotla. $IOO. equ.tp. atr. OMO · tlkll .. "541·7765•.:=~·:.,..; ·-· -61>-Q54---1 ._,,_,_. AM.FMnd ... a l r-cond. CHIYSLER · DODH v .... , ........ ..,,. __ ----'---- BUSIESr DWI<-in 1966 CllRYSU:R Town 6 'OS CORONET 2 Dr. W toorn.' 'Tho DAILY . PILOT Oountty. T<a-SeJlliw .... !)'. P/~ -l'1 O&allltd Rctlon. s..ve Luxury Waaon. Evny n-ttm, cbnn wb1a. Xb'lt cond r:notQt, time A .ttort. Look tra. $2)l(l/offtt. 675-.2581 S1295. 89i..a.m -Ill __ Wbl_1n..o-1:1<_,_ ..... _ .. _, __ oi.a-"_111'--'--""'-ll£!UL-"'-~1~ P"'!~J"" ................. ~~ ....... .-... ~r;--:;:--~··~~·~~---·-__ ~~~~~~~~~·-~~~~"= .... •"••••"•~=~z'"""""""'.""""'-'P"'•••••"•Y~•"'""•"""'"'""•'•u~=.,.,c"s-••ss"oc""'P""'<@@~•<~.~.,"~ ...... =•"'-"~"""'"5~W< ..... •~s"<~tc~1~.••~•~1•;"0": .. o•••"*"""""""'"•'~' .... '~'"''""'"~·~~~0"""W r I. l • _T~RA~N~S~P!:'.O!'..RT~A::,:T:.:;IO:::N.:...:::::::-T~R::;A::.;N;.SP::.;0:.:R:.:T.:.cA::.;T;_;IO":N;;;;;.· tlOO -Co" 9t00Now Ct" 9800 • • , CADILLAC NINETEEN SIXTY-NINE 1966 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille. Shlmmerini ailver with &il\'l'r cloth and leather interior, full power, factory air conditioning, .M.1:-FM radio, cruise control, pwr. vent windows, pwr. door Jocks. (RRN297) 1967 CPE. DE VILLE _ OJymplc bronze firemlst with saddle leather upholstery. Full powtt, factory air condition- inz, tilt wtieeI, door Jocks, etc. Drive it -and you will buy it. CULC321) 1966 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille. Desert beige w/saddle leather 1Dter1or. Full Cadillac power equipment plus factory air conditioning. (YWRJ83) 1965 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille. Grecian· gold with matchln~ cloth and leather interior. Full power, factory alr conditioning, signal aeekglg radio, etc. fYPS141) 1963 CADILLAC Coupe DeVillc. Blue exterior with matching blue cloth and leather Interior. Has full pow- er equipment plus c.adillac factory air con· dltloning. (RDV309) '1965 CADILLAC Coupe DeVllle. Royal blue exterior with mat. dling cloth and lNther interior. Fun power, factory air, Wt and telescopic s~g. show• exceptional low mileage, CPGN663) ON DISPLAY AND READY FOR DELIVERY TODAY! SALE $2777 PRICE SALE $3777 PRICE SALE $2777 PRICE SALE $1999 PRICE SALE $1111 PRICE SALE $2111 PRICE OVER 80 QUALITY AUTOMOBILES TO SELECT FROM • • ' I NABERS CADILLAC, Where Used Cars Are More Than Transportation ... THEY'RE A GOOD INVESTMENT! 1967 OLDSMOBILE Custom Delta 4 Door Hardtop. Silver blue with 4ark blue vinyl top and dark blue cloth and vinyl interior. Strate benCh St>at, power steering, power brakes, power \11indows, fac- tory air condltioMg. (TYY744) 1966 TORONADO Custom. Forest green with dark green cloth and vinyl interior, ful power, factory air con· ditionlng, tilt steering wheel. CSVX120) 1967 EL DORADO Finished in phantom green with green cloth and leather interior. Fully equipped with pow· er' steering, po\11cr di.sc brakes, power seal, poWer windows, tilt and telescopic steering wheel, wonderbar radlCI, factory air condition· ing plus many more c.adillac optional features.. 1967 RIVIERA Forest green exterior \vith black vinyl In- terior. Has full power equipment plus factory air conditioning, tilt steering wheel (TSD498J 1968 EL DORADO Beautiful Chestnut brown with beige roof Md beige cloth and leather Interior. Full power and factory air conditioning. Stereo AM·FZ..f, tilt &. telescopic steering wheel, P-door locks, etc. Lovely car. Local one owner, CUNB466) 1965 Mercedes Benz 220 S Sedan. Automatic tcan&mission. radio 11nd heater, po""·er steering, air conditioning. Snow whlte extertorw:ith black vinyl interior. This one has 11cry lo\11 milcs and is in out- slanding condition. IOTV909J $2444 PRICE SALE $2222 PRICE SALE $4666 PRICE SALE $3222 PRICE SALE $5888 PRICE SALE $2999 PRICE ----------SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN----------- sALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH TUESDAY, MAY 20, 1969 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY -9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SUNDAY Your Factory Authorized Cadillac Dealer Serving The Orange Coast Harbor Area NABERS 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-9100 New c .. , 9800 Now Ctro 9800 Uood Ct" 1;;;;;;~=====;;;;il 9900 Ua.d Cert 9900 Used Cart 9900 Used Ciro 9900 Used Cars Used Cars 9900 Used Cars 9900 MEET THE AMBASSADOR FROM AMERICAN MOTORS WEEKEND SPECIAL '91tv ~ulp,.., i11c!Ulitt •Ir coft4., Y0I, ;wto. tr1~1. llt02to ... ND NIW '" IAMll.H $1998 IMb 6 MOT4-1a HI. , Big Dl,_,,,1, On 37 Brend New AMX • JAVELINS • REBELS • RAMBLERS ' Tiie Action Sto,. 'for Greeter Stvinp ••ll ... HOLIDAY ~::r. AMlllCAll MOTOU FOR Siles & Senlce YOUR SAUi Oflll 1 OAYI CAI --·-POI TOUI CO..,.llllCI 19ff lllrhr, Cost1 Mesi, 6'2=6023 ·------FALCON PORD FORD MERCURY MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE RAMBLER '68 SHLEBY GT 500 ' '65 MERCURY '66, MUSTANG V'8 HT. Pia, '62 FALCON. MU8l 5(!11. Leaving country. Cd cond. New motor w/19,000 ml'8, ~till on guar. R&H . $375. Call 613-1310 ./We Can Help You R/H. Auto. Spal'kiing Navy '68 OLDS 98 4 door, HT, fully equip. 16,00'.I mi. 7 1 4 ; 495-5617 an 7 pm. Conv. J'S, Jirc engine rt'd/ ParkJane 4 dr. H.T. Bh.\e. Wire wheels, tinted e If others have turned you black lop One of a kind! V-S, auto, P.S .. P.B. and glal;s, dual ~tires. Stallion down • lf YoU have no down VXY797 . fact. air. Turquoise blue w/ horn. Orig owner. $187S. PLYMOUTH PRE-0\\'NED BIG SELECrlON 'Gt THRU ·~·i; ALL !\.fODELS FROJ\1 S295. payment • ll you are em-' $2599 rnafching lnt<>rior. Con1plete.. &14-0985 --------~MANY !\.10DELS fl ly reconditioned PBGJ43 '67 MUSTANG. AT, pl1. '55 PLYMOu'tH V-8, good TO CHOOSE FROM•• 6/IM l~ $1450 Plency_ clean car w/ loving trans, call for inlormatlnn. "'IL nttenuon. Prv • prty. $1800. ~3014 '66 FORD Country Squl,., · • ·Call Mr. Ulmer JOHNSON & SON M>-7$3 =c;,S3~P""lym--cou-olh~Sll5""'". -=~· ::'re:"' C:; p~~ * 893-5038 * IMPORTS LiricoJn.~Tercury '65 J\fUSTANG. For sale by Ask for pa u I. ns Topaz FORD 846-2204 '66 FORD WAGON TOTOTA·YOLYO l!).11 lh1.rbtlr Blvd. 642-7000 owner, auto tran~. pwr slr, 0Bae;"-lboa~il~:Cand::,C.=::--==:i-==~64"'2:0:-602:;o:;"'3~=- '49 FORD engine &: body 9 pasa Ctr:v-Squire. Au to., 1966 Harbor, C.!\.1, 64&-9303 l!f66 ,.TERCUHY Colony Park new_ lires, peak c 0 n d · '63 PLY. Valiant stat.ion '62 ·RAMBLER $1 00 parta. $125 or make oUer. Power steer & Brakes. $1795. '66 FORD Stnlion \Vagon, 9 pass. F'ull.Y· '-=838-=5938======= I wagon: new tires; clean. Runs good. 548-6624 ~~ RPL 237 cquipd, 64&-3493 1 $400. ~1006 After 5 PZ..1 ==========I 1955 FORD w...,~ a""' Country Squire OLDSMOBILE ...,.i. SI50. Wagon MUSTANG PONTIAC STUDEBAKER 642-(121 art 6 pm. With dual facing rear seals. '63 FORD Wagon Pis. brkll F.quipl with iact. air, P .S., le rear wndw, top carrier. P.B., po\vcr \\•Jndows, €!tc. Good .cond. $675. ~7863 SVX770 ''1 MERC SEDAN. Original. '61 FORD WAGON $1895 13X), 311 Irvin<. N.8, Allor CoW1try Sedan, VS, factory JOHNSOJi & SON ~'~PM~·~·=~~---air, J)O"--er 81ttrillg. n.dkl, 1960' FORD Convert. V-8, heater, automatic, like l'M!W l..lncoln-Mcrcury auto, family moving, mull condition. (VLT8n1 $2795. 1941 Harbo.r Blvd. 642-7000 LINCOLN sell. Make oUer. 53&-1964. full prlce. Banlt financing. '65 FORD LTD. Loaded, Connell O!evrolet, 2828 Hll.r'- fact air, 390 e:ng, New bor Blvd., Costa Mesa. -----'--- podnt ruoo, -. ""'1203 "63 LINCOLN "36 FORD COUPE '64 FORD XL CONTINENTAL 283 ENGINE $375 HT, fact air, xlnt condition 4 dr, Sedan. Full facl. C!qU\p. • 548.-3173 • inside & out. $75 Ca.sh dtls. Leather Int. Slk. CKZ?l.5. UNIVERSITY ' G • I '60 STUDEBAKER. Lark 8. '66 Mustang Hardtop 65 TO Convert1b e Solid ''"1'POrt>tloo. 35,l!l) FACTORY AIR COND. Auto SALES & 'SEIVICE orig ml., $.fOO, 64Frl769 trans on the fioor. 289-VS. OLDSMOBllf Full pwr, xlnt concli1ion, lop Vinyl roor. New prtm!um lilc.e new, dlt, $75 Cub dell T ·BIRD Ures. Deluxe tn1ertor. Entire or take foreign car in trade. ----::.:.:=---·! car in mint condition. 2850 Harbor Blvd. N~C 2M, Call Ken 494-!1773 WJ.UTE 1966_1'.~. ps, dilic $1595 Cotta Mesa or 5'5-0634. brlcs, at, ac, nu ~s. Jo mi. Jfollday 1963 1-larbor Blvd. M0-0040 Ueed Can 5f0.8&Cn '6.5 GTQ, all power, Jae air, Stilt like new. s 23 9 s. Coll111 l,'l(!U 642-6!1l3 '65 OLDS Vlsla Cruiser, 9 AM/FP.1, vlbi·asonic, air lift SW-7591 or eves. 644-.2706 '65 !\.tuSTXNG Brl1h1 red 6 pass, Rn-1. Air. pwr. Top 11bxks. !\.tany extras. Auto. ·64 T-BIRD cyl .. 11tk. Milli. Lo ml"s. ~ ~ $l8!l5. PN prly. !\.fw;t sell SliOO or <>Ucr. Good rondillon. Sll25 maintaintd. $995. ~ Call alter 5. 673-9168 5C8-4045 '67. OLDS. Delmont 88, 4 dr, ~68 flREBlRD fully t'Qtlip-'55 T Bird 2 1 rt-" Air cond Auto !rans P/B ' · ops, new u..-Sacrlricc! '67 1'.tustanc S219S. ~ Pt a.t5-'1riJ · pcd. 10,000 mllei;. orig mnt, nu1omal.ic. $1350. CaQ Xlnt cond. Extras! · · Y · owner. $2695. 642--0419 or GTh-165.1 eves $1750. • 49-1-9929 '60 OLDS. Power !.tr'g, pwr 548-23.'ll I =="='=''=====I '64 FORD. ldnt cood, auto. dlr, take low pymnts, \VIII Fact. air. 11..-------!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!! .... ,,._,,,I """" ""'· -Pr!..... fino .... pny, OBM 3'5. $1295 YOUI AD REACHES -~ RANO!EI!o ~ "!,~56';,°: JOHNSON & SON VALIANT ---1967 MUSTANG V-8 Aulo, bra.IK!s. G 0 0 0 CON-'00 Polltl.lc Grand Prix R/H, w/8/W, Pis. Xlnt OITTON. $150. 67S-l829 j loaded pith eX!Tu, musi cond. Asking $1899. 5.'l).-7308, '63 OLDS lIT, Pis, P/b. ! SacrifiCe.! 147-6193 '61 VALlA..1'\'T Good mndllJon. $595 your ad, then sit b&dt and L1ncotn-Mercury 61,tn HOMES EACH WEEK SU-0419 or ...mo 1111e",. th•'"""'""'' 1941 """'°'Blvd. &1'-""' 1--c.;.:'------------- '6.'i Z..fUSTANG Ii, good rond. Riil 44,200 miles. Call 1000 PONTIAC. Convt. Auloma!k . Sl"iO. Orig owner. 41,000 mt. $995. Steve at 962-6639 aft 6 pm. • Powe.r, alr _ aew aulo Call alt S pm, G~ ~1!1 or 5-18-2.\10 Whlte: Elephants'! t"ns. $275. ·962-ST91 • DAILY PTLOT .\VANT ADS! ---'-"-"'-"--'::.;,;.:;__,-==-:=:.:.::.::'.:.:..'.:::::: • )., ,. 1 ~h r ,_, e· +t+'"::c·=·Aw e n _.1•A>:-+4 g n1>o9c FPrcnzAsra·=·-·· -~ . ·------------· ...... ---·--"~ . • ,. All Star Sale I . This year we have had a numb er of sales at Ro y .Carver Pontiac. Each time that we had one, we would select one car model, say a Grand Prix 5 I iiili:; it or a Fire· bir d ~ and then we would establish a low, competitive price on that model and advertise it. Usually we offered for sale those cars that we had most of. · ~ Now it's just about the middle of the model year. And we've got a lot ·of cars. All models, t hat is. "'i•itgiiib Station wagons and GTOs and Bonnevilles and just a boU+. every model and .car that Pontiac makes. ~ Now we are going to have an All-Star Sale. Every one of our Pontiacs is a star in its own right, so it wouldn't be fair to leave any one of them out. ~4 '2p All of them are on sale ••• the Catalinas, t he &;cutives, Le Mans and Custom SS as well as the Grand Prixs and Fire· birds ........... We're having a real All-Star Sale! You can save a lot of money if you buy now. · . ' • DAILY PILOT 11 -- ... and for t he best o f local trade-ins; loo k at these resa le spec ials! • '68 CHEV~OLET $2977 '68 PONTIAC Le MANS $2777 '66 CHEVROLET MALIBU $1977 2 Door Htrdtop. V-8, 1utometic, EL CAMINO V-8, power steering, power st1erin?, radio, he1ter, V-8, 2 door H.T. Radio, h11t1r, radio, heater, white will tires, fie-white side we l tires, factory •ir eutometic, power steering, ftc· tory a ir conditioning. (lll64CI conditioning. I UTL 560) tory air, buc~et seats. I SLU 899 r '68 PONTIAC EXECUTIVE $3677 '64 CHRYSLER 300 $1077 '68 RAMBLER $1977 o4 Door 6 p11s. w1gon, automatic, Convertible, V-8, 11utomet ic, pow-Rad io, heeter, automatic, white radio, heater, power steering, fac-er steering, radio, heater, white side walls, 18,000 miles. IWIB tory air. New Car Warrenty. side wall tires, factory a ir condi- IVHB5591 t ionin9 . I SKL 8241 2771 '67 PONTIAC CATALINA $2877 '67 PONTIAC $2277 '68 CHEVY CAMARO $2877 6 passenger station wa gon, V-8, Brougham 4-dr. Hydramatic, pwr. V-8, automatic, power steering, Hydramatic, power steering, ra-steer. & brakes, /'.wr, windows, redlo, heater, white 1ide wall t.ire1, dio, heater, w1w, factory air con-R&H, wsw tires, act. a ir cond. factory air, Warwick blue with ditionin9 ITJX 6041 IUE>C 8431 wh ite vinyl top. IT4l2AI '67 PONTIAC LeMANS $2277 '66 PONTIAC $1777 '68 MUSTANG $2677 Bonneville 4-Dr. Hardtop. H~dra-' 4 Door V-B, Hidrametic, power matic, power steering , radio, eet-Coupe. Radio, heater, automatic, steerin9, radio, eater, white wall er, white side wait tires, factory power steering, factory air (WIP tires. fTUP 186 I air condH ioning, ISBW 2961 5691 '68 PONTIAC GTO $3977· '65 CHEVROLET IMPALA $1777 '66 CATALINA $2477 V-8, Turbo Hydramatic, jower Hardtop Coupe. Rad io, heater, •-door 9 pass. v.a Hydra., pwr. steering, radio, heater, Re line automatic, power steering, fac-steering, radio, heater, white walls, tires, 8,645 miles. IXCI( 751 I tory air. Ivory I PIG 2471 factory a ir condition. INAY9661 PRICES ARE, OF COURSE, PLUS LICENSE AND TAX j • ------- • ·: " • 1: • 11 •• i: •• •, ., ., ~· •' ' l • 11 ·' Sl !! !! • ! • • l l I - I I ' f I I I 1 I t l • . . UNIVERSl·TY ·: OEDSMOBILE'S ~ ~. I .-, RI.HT ·NOW ·WE .H ... E A ... FANT~·TIC -.~l:E(TJO.~ OF 1 ~69 OtDJ.MOBllE$_ A'! • ~ • · . · . • FA NTAStrc ;.SAVINGS! . . . 1969 TORONADOS . .-• 88's •-9'8's -. CUTLASSES • DON'T YOU -BE'~ .. · LEFT OUT ON THESE O~NCE , A ·_ YEAR BARGAINS!! - . . " PLUS TAX AND , LICENSE · -. t . . .,, ' ALL THESE CARS HAVE AIR COND:ITIONING & MOST HAVE -· FULL POWER EQUIPMENT ON ANY USED CAR • '64 MERC. Wa9. '67 RIVIERA '64 OLDS 88 . '66 SUNBEAM '62 CADILLAC '66 MGB Rdstr. Power win dows • steering • Yellow w/black top & black Sedan. Power ··steering and Alpin"e "Ro&dster . 4 spd, R&H. s d D v·n F II . I 4 ' d ~r h 't fYPS brakes, fe ctOry •ir. IYWJ s+reto "bench seat interior. brakes, factory a ir. llOY Exc elle nt concf. ITHK525) ~ •(Y PT~4~1•· u power, spee 'ra 10• 811 .er, . i~a.~as~~_OBILE "$1399 ij']99 "'$399 $1299 .. $999 "$1599 '66 TORONADO '65 Chev Impala '65 MUST ANG .: . '63 OLDS '59 FORD Truck '65 OLDS li8 f . IRRY 4 Dr. H.T. Auto., P.S., P.B., 2+2. VS , auto:, rad io, heat-Starfife. Full power, factory . ' 2 Ooo; H.T. Power steering Full power, actory a ir.. F t a· N f'<, IRHK ,, IC ISS94 1 o!i ir IHBOOSZ I V-8, auto., radio, heater. & b k f t . IPIV a c. 1r, •w 1 e . · , IJ'4]IS4J ra e1, ac ory air. 430 1 068 1 663 1 • I '' • • t ' - . ·2850 HIRBOR .BLVD., COSTA .' MESA ~~~ 540-9640 ·~:--540 ~8881 . . ' i. r . • • ----~------·-·---~-~- SpectaFular 1C1Ving1 are you" during Atla$ Chrysi.r, Plymouth fabulous sale. Atlas' entire stock of n-'69 and reconditioned used auto"'obHu, priced with maximum saving• for you • ~ • BRAND NEW 1969 $ AUTOllATIC TRAllSMISSIOI, V.S Elll I llEA TER, POWER STlERllll, ., . :IT~ WW. TIRES, FACTORY AIR co11am011 •. $ ' • liCii1se No. WfH 812 • l TUE TIE RRY OUT OF YOUR USED CAR PllRo1ui •• i All an.is 1m:11Tiam um . . CARS WRY A FREE & DAY TRW! EIORAlllE. • '68 Mercury __ ,.. COUGAR XR7 COU'i v.a; 1utorn1tic, f1etory 1ir, power steer· ing, power brakas, rad io, hea ter. Kt:U ,18. ~2895 1 '66 Chrysler NIW YORKIR 2 Door hlrdtop. V-8, &Utomatic, lieeter, ' poww steering, powtt br1kts, fldwy ' oir. loaded. (VZl 646). '67 linooln . CONT1111NTAL-c-DOOR-·-- V-8, 1utom1tic, f1etory air, poww JIHr· ing, power br1kes, power windows, pow- er seats, r1dio, heater wsw, vinyl top, tinted gllss. Loaded with "txtr15 & ex· tremely cloon. TGZ 751. < •3495 ' , ~ r· ·•· 'II.Ch.let ClllVall'·-. 1 ~tie t~1nunission, o & ·hater, . iM>it< sido wtll tim. (S1'T 802). ·91995· "l1295 , .. . . :'66 '1Hge CORONIT WAllOll v.a, automatic, radio, httttr, power ·11Wing. (TGH 053~ 1595. '66 Plymouth IAUACUDA V-8, autonwtic, radio. hitter. beef. lent c:onditioo. low miles. (TaZ 596~ •1495 '64 Men:ary. COMIT CAUINYI v.a, 4 spoed, power sl11ring, radio, h.,t. er, whitawolls. OOI. 896. •19·5 - . '. . ~ ( '67 Dats11i SEDAN · 4 lplld. Full ·~dory oquipped. TUP 945. •1295 '68 Plymouth . FUIY Al 4 OR. IWJTOP v.a. IUtomat ic, ftcfory 1ir, power ., .. r. ing, power brlkes, radio, heater, wh it• wolls. YOP 033. ·2·495 '65 Plymouth VAi.WiT S~ AulOl!Vtk, rodio ' hnttr. (ROB 592). •109.5 • DA!l.Y 1'11.4T '&!_Ford !ALCON WAGON Acrtametie transmission, radK> & helter. OPS> 705). •895 '64 P'"9outh • v~. 1utom11ic trwmiooion, roclio & hie!· "· (OOT 921), '86 Plymouth VlP 2 DOOR llUlllOP Y-8, automltic, r1dio, httter, power stwing,' poW.i brakes, vinyl top. (S. 061~ .. . •1391 · '64 Ponti1e 8TO v.a, 1utometic, ftctory air, radio, hllt1r, wh itewoti.. OPS 355. •1295 . FREE 5 DAY TRIAL EXCHANGE t:HBYSLER I PLYM~llTH . IMPERIAL • r, • ' ~ ' 1 ., I ~1 ~ .. .. . ~ ~ ti , .~ ~ • ' •• " . i § ~ ~ ·~ ~ .. ) ~ ' i. ~ ~ • . ~ ! I ~ ' ~ I ~ .. ~ F : t , . • • • • • • • • • • • • I • + • t • : • • • I • l • ~ :i l ·: • : • : ~ ~ E ~ • ,• ' ; • • ~ ~ • a ~ j •• ll 1 . . I. ir • • . ( ~ .. i: • . ' " ~.-OUT ' THEY"-GO .! - • , • 'SPllNI ·DEMONSDATOt . . . --~sA.t ·ET· 1969 MUSTANGS e 1969 WAGONS ' i. • • 1969 THUN.DERllRDS e 1969 LTDs ' 1969 FAllLANES ·It is our policy to change our staff cars every 6· ·months (or 6,000 mil.es l in order to pass on clean fresh cars t o our custome rs at · BONAFIDE SAVINGS Offer llmltecl to cars on haild! FULL YAL,llE FOR YOUR' TRADE· IN I ALL REMAINING 196S SHELBY GTs NOW AT ACTUAL FACTOR IN.VO.I~~ -. • . IF :YOU ~HA VEN1 BEEN ABLE TO FIND THE. COLOR,_ ETC. THAT YOU WANT ON ·YOUR NEW ·MAVERICK ••• TRY :US!. RE~ISTER FREE! A HllD OF MAVERICKS TO II GIVEN AWAYI ALL REMAINING NEW 1968 ENGLISH FORDS SLASHED FOR FINAL CLEARANC.! . . .c . . .. . -~ .. ' . . . TU..N .. ORTATION ' '. 1964 FORD GALAXIE 500 ~ . TRUCK'-CAMPER 1964 CONTlNENTAL • N-.. er aging I 5 can i:' Wffk thot _can )>e rel• 1t wholesole to SM, VI, 1vto .. l&H, 1..S .. 1iT COlllCI. IOMMJH) Full power, 1ir, 1-mi11s. Ilic\ ext.riw. CUl.f779 Jf SUPER .· CENTER the pubGc. Stat the dH . on th.so older c1rs. 20·'4 ,,_ ., trHe. 20 'J. ,_.., or tr H o. PICKUPS TO 'HEAVY DUTY . SAVE!! $795 :~.~ ... $33 ::-.. ~ $1595 :~.~ ... $55 ::-.. :. TRUCK WfCllL NEW 1969 . . 1966 BUICK LE SABRE 1968 CHEVROLET MALIBU TAX REFUND DUE? . 1967 GALAXIE 500 F· 100 Fsih it0••r. f1ctory 1ir. 2 Dr. H.T. IR:PMl60J 20'£ · 2Dr. H.T. VI,,., .... PS .. llH, (WPCIJI) 20% WHY WAIT? l Dr, H.T. ~IH, •uto., P'.S .. 1ir, S>it •rtt· IUOE7071 PICKUP ...... or tr1d .. --.. ff tr1d1, 20 % do-Of tr1cl1 • BUY NOW-PAY LATER . $1 $95 :~.~~ $56. ';:!.' $2195. :~.~~ $59 Z,~ $1695 :~.~~ $49 ::..::. Fl1r~icf1, 115" W.t .. J 1,.I. n1tel'6. EAS Y TERMS · AVAILAlltE tr111s. I 055 Mprinfl, ''' l-1pri1191, . ,. -etc • 1968 FORD 4 Door Vo8 . . C•ht111. 190 •ltf., 1utewi.,;c, 11'1clr w/wt.ite top. . flJSIZ1149111. 20'J. 4-11 w•tr-4• . $1395 ~~:t. ' $39 =-:. 1967 VOLKSWAGEN ' 2 dr. Sid. E11ctuhite. J111t 'o•erlt•ided,. IUQLJOIJ 2D Y. dow" or tr•cl•. $1595 FULL . $$8 ::-.. :. Pl lC.E , . ' .. ' 1965 CHEVROLET -H.T. l"'P•l1. 4 Dr. VI, 111to., PS., 1ir, ltlH. (UICU 157) 2DY. down or tr1a1. $1795 ~~:t. $49 ~ . . . Almod a dozen 1968 Ford Cus· 1962 CHEVROLET -H.T. . 1962 CHEVROLET '12·TON to m Costa Mes a Patrol cars to 41peecl, VI, ci 111il,., RIH, 41,000 fllil11. IFWZ2151 fic•11p. 6, 1+.IKl1rd tTt1t1., equippff, {JJ94111 choose fro m at fantastic 20 % dow .. or tr..i1. . 20% llowtt or tr1d1 • sa v-$79.5 ~~~LI $33 ~ in gs. Interceptor . perfo rma nce! $695 ~~,~ ... $29 ::-... ::. • , .. , "''· ~~~-8 • .!~~.,~~~ ........... I c, .... ~,~~~,.~~~~~~~TX~;~;, ... , '"" •. ~:~,9.~,~.,,~.~~!~~,·~~~ ,,., .. No. IJ5124491JI. 2D'-' aow11 •r tr•a•. clow11 or tria.. tr•a•. $1795 ~I~~ $49 ::-...::. $1595 ~~~LI $46 ';:.,~ $1795 ~~.~~ $63 ':::..~~' VI •• ~~~~'· ~-~~~~-l~U~~~~~-· I -tr1c1 .. $1695 ~.~~ $58 ::..:. HAVE A CAREFREE TRIP! RENT A ROBIN S CAMPER MUSTAl\'G SALE . ' . 14 to choose fro m. "6'' &: 1'811 cyfinclers, 4' speeds, automa tics. Some witll po-slttrin_g and air conditioning. 1965 through I ~68 mode~, convtr· tibles, coo~s and 2+2 fastback . . Why , LEASE · your car for 24 months until you've tried it for 6 MONTHS? $2099 . OIDll TODAT I • CAMPER SPECIAL! BRANO NEW 19691 F-250 PICKUP. ond IARRACUDA CAMl'ER $3495 I OTH FOi lbt. Ne. F2111110tll1 l11rrJCUa amptr II cgmp1.i.~ f\lmlslled WI~ let ba•, 1to,,., lie. SI"" •. ·2JO pldtup 1191 300 trl{I., ,..., a. on ODuees. lt50 re. r•r 1f1ffn11s UI l.Clllj(NJI "91'1' i.a.ttu tires, dbl. l!Mter, 1rd cla1J'Of;llr, etc. Ma.nt to a-. 1-If ltllJ ~ .. , 51"' on Eldol'ICIO, F~, Goldlll'HI ll1rracuda. '°"f'lr lll Vlried flow p~ Gii lllPll'I' MCI rwd'I' tor immM .. '9 IMttwr'I' • a..t; ... Law MHtWy ..... f·lllDS •••••••••••••• S1Jt TORINO , ., •••• •• ,, ,,, S10J GAL.AXIi ••••• •• ,. , , • Slff FOlD sq u111 •••••••. $129 01 ,.,,,...... w....,1 LTD •• , •••••••• ··••••. $119 ,You 91 wh1r1 yeu w111t, 1t•y wh•r1 yo• w1nt without 1ch1d .. l•1 •r r11•rv1tlo111 wh111 you rent 1 R1bi111 D•· lw111 Pickup C1mp.r or Condor Motor Holl'I•. C•ll for r•••111bl1 ,, ... , • , "-HERVE U."-LYI Makes sen••• do•sn't it7 ·tt's ow-low "9•t ... cqu8int .. ad" off..r ~And th•r•'s n•Var bMn anything lik• it in ·ur 1 .. 1Rt9~ history! C19t Mro Melcol111 lt1kl' fot" 4.t1ik;. MUSTANG , ••••••• , •• , $ff All. Cll'I '""""" wltll Y-1 "'°'""' "'"" II"--po'ftl' ""'""' '"""' .....,.. .......... ,OllD AU'TM09;1ZID ~,...,~!-. . • ( • ' ' ' I• . I• ' " I • • ~~'>-= ,!. h -· 11 t = .. I ... t; ,. t •.: f 4 ~I I t ,;.,, !.I ( ,I~ _i_ ":} .. -~~~------~~----J, ._ ~.J.. ----~--~~--O O ·-.. -~ O ,, . . --