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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-05-04 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa-. • • • • • 1es ee Ill e -. . - E1'~ore~ 'MOs~ha~k . . . . Take Top Lanrel·s ' In Ensenada Ra~e (S.. l\e,.Jb Page .14) DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * . ----MONOit\Y~AFTERNOON,-MAY 4;-'1970 New War Zone • • SOUTH :. 0..,1,~ -~ fr. I. ~ . DARK SPACES SHOW RED SANCTUARIES IN CAMBODIA Allied Troops /)riving Into Red Sanctuaries rumbled across the Fishhook of Cam-Five Chousaod more South Vietnamese l>Oftia Monday aod American comman-troops were committed to a related of-&rs said the.lr 15,000-man allied task femi.ve into the Parrol's Beak regkln force was "in the heart" or the head-, to the south, bringing to 30,000 the quarters area where the Communists run number of men Involved in the twin their Vietnam war strategy. The head-thrusts aimed at destroying North Viet- qi.larlers itself remained lJ!ldetected. namese and Viet Qq sanduaries in Cambodia. 'I1ley included 8,000 GI!. Orange Coast Weather Foggy weather is in store ~or. coastal dwellers TUesday, with temperatures dipping to the 65 level along the beach and setUing at 75 furtller Inland. INSm E TODAY Borr~r1 'ClTe feeling the tigh' moneu pinch ag tht' small loon ii all but a thing of tht past, Pagtt 22. ...... "''-(Hdflllf u. (1.11111 .... ' ·~ .. ·~­°""' Mttlcitt ...... ,,._ lllfwl•~ ... ~ ·~­"""LI""" _,.,, .. ' • ... " " " • .. ..... .. .. .. • ' Military 90W'CeS said at least three more major forays into Cambodia were bOiDg planned. Communiques described 1he Fishhook and Parrot's Beak offensives as highly successful with 1,952 North Vietnamese and Viet Coog reported killed and 359 prisoners taken and. 250 tons o( food, munioUons and medical mpplies seized. U.S. losses were placed at. U killed and 46 wOlllded and those for South Vietnamese units at. 151 killed and 560 wounded. As Ille allied task for<es knifed deeper Into Cambodia, cfuo>ak:bes from the capital, Phoo!:o. Peril, •kl Cambod1aB ---.. tbe village of Ko.kl 1b001 where field reports said ~ major battle may be shaping up against CommwUll troops entreoched on the western bank of the Mekong River. Koki Tbom is 30 mile! southeast or Phnom Pem and about 50 miles from the Parrot's Bea'k froot. Phnom Penh dis tches said "hundreds" of Cam-~n tribesmen, trained and paid by the U.S. Special Fol't'eS, had been flown from bases in South Vietnam to beef (Ste CAMBODIA, Page I) ., ' I Gu_ardsmen ' . Use Guns, Tear Gas KENT, Oblo (AP) -Four persons were killed and at leas\ 12 Dtbers wound- ed by g u n f i re as Ohio National _ Guardsmen broke up an unauthorized rally on the Kent State University cam- pus Monday. (See.Pr-llolmdup, Paga 4). The wounded were taken to Robinson Memorial Hospita.1 in Ravenaa. The hospital reported it bad rour persons confirmed dead. Witnesses said the shooting came after guardsmen moved in with tear gas lo disperse a rock. throwing crowd or 400 to 500 students, in the Commons area near Taylor Hall. Doug Moore, a student photographer, said he saw guardsmen shooU.g into the air. Authorilies were reported holding a man who carried news credenU3ls and a gun, but It was not known immediately what, if any, role he had played in tbe shooting. Some 800 used bayonets and tear gu to break up dernoutrations Sunday night in the third straight night of antiwar protests. Sixty-two peraon.s, mostly students, were arested. Two ywng people were hoopftallzecf and eight other pel'80DS treated for less 9el'l.ous in.juries. Officials said at least one sb.ldent was injured in· the back by a~ bayonet -and oAt Guardsman was hurt by a rock. Police saJd two girls were arrested. car- rying knives and one youth was a.rruted with a rifle and bandolier of ammunition. An estimated 1,200 demonstrators were driven ·back to Kent " State's campus after m~ into town ia defiance of a city curfew and an emergency t>an on outdoor meetings in Kent and on the campus. Demonstrators took control or a Ke11t intersection for about an hour and stu- dent leat1ers tried to negotiate w I t h Guard officers for a peaceful return to the campus. They were told they would not be arrested if they returned to their donnilories. S. VIETS FETE 110 CHI MI NH? SAIGON (UPI) -The South Vi.t· namese govenunent today found it,,eH In the awkanl position of calling a 14-hour truce and national holiday on May 19, birthday anniversary of the late North Vletl'!fltle8e Premier Ho Chi Minh. Act\Jally, the truce and boUday were pl'OCialmed In honor of Buddha, whose birthday also fals on May 19 this year, .according to the lunar calendar. -. -·- . • . . . . . • -Biggest Pot Datil .-., ' - In Newport Bea~h -. Nets 730 ~Pounds • . ' . DAfl.Y PILOT Stiff ...... WHEN OFFICER MIKE McEVENEY SAID 'GRASS,' HE DIDN'T MEAN LAWN CLIPPINGS In Newport Beech, More Than 700 Pounds of Marij,uan~ in Garbage Can Liners . · Biggest Newport Raid- Nets 730 Pounds of·Pot Two men, charged with possessjon o( marijuana for sale, are in custody today in Newport Qeacb following their arrest.. Saturday during which police claim to have confiscated 730 pounds of the illegal weed. " Narcotics Jnvestigator Leo Konkel said the haul was the largest in the hiStory of Newport Beadl. If sold wtiolesale, the impounded nar- cotic would be worth about $50,000, he saJd. If sold by the lid (one ounce ), Kon- .kel said the marijuana would be worth 1125,000. AITesled were Gregory Lynn Tucker, 21, of Lakewood and David Glenn Cun· ni>on, :ti, of Cardi!. Watch Cmunander Earnest Laurin said he was making a routine check of the area when he apotied the suspects in the a11ey at 218 Lugonia St. Officer Michael McEveny who was called to the 9Cene said the pair were taken into custody when a huge pile ol large bags full of marijuana was foond in their van. The officer said he saw the bags when he went to make an in.specUon l of. &he vehicle, which was allegedly Il- legally parked. Konkel said 540 pounds of the dnig was found in the van and another 190 pounds was found in the garage, at 218 Lugmia SI. Investigation In the case h continuing, he saidt and more arreitl are·expected today or 'I'Deeday. "We suspect the marijuana came from Melico," be added." · . GG School Blaze Gets Close Look Garden Grove fitlemen were today alt· ting the ashel of a $»3,000 Ore which deotroyed the lil>nry of Boloa Grande High School early Slluroay momlOI!. Fire department •Pokesmen aaid they were almost certain the cosUy blaze was ol incendiary origin. The fire was spatted about 2 a.m. b~ a California Hlahway Patrol olflcer. ~-County ~ase .o ( Cycle ~der· Ends· in Crackup A !!-year-old m-cycle rider led police or two cities on a ~ high speed chase 'Sunday wltich ~ when he wail catapulted from his cf4]e in La Mirada in Loe l\Jlgeles COunty. ~ "It was a mlr3ci. he dldn 't lrill ~U and a 'f!C(.1"e of. i«hers " said1 Fullertbn police o1r-'K....U. erawloi, wbo •tarted Ille chase when he noticed that the youth's molprcy<:le did not havo a 19'10 license <ail. During lbe nine mile clwe at speeds up to 100 miles an hour, nVe, Fullerton and fOtr Buena Park police units poraied the fleeing youngster. The chase ended .. • dirt roed "' La Mil;eda alter Ille rnotorcyclUI had cul across a dirt fieki , tbrouab COlto structton barricades and over a five--fOQI. embankment. He sullered only ct>U and bruises In the crash. lit was charged with re<kltso driving and attempting to avoid arrM and lodged in juvenile hall . The youth ioid police ho fled Ille olflcer because, "I didn't want to have My mOtorcycJe:-taken away from me." He doesn't hive It today. • 2 DA!lY PILOT $ 'Qait gripint! We're withdrawing from Vietnam, aren't we?' ~rom Pa1e I CAMBODIA ••• vp the 40,CIOIHnan Cambodian army. By nightfa11 today American armored unitl had pushed at least 15 mlles from tbe South Vietnamese border on Hl&bway 1. 1be route 1& a ptvtd road that had bttn Ultd to haul CmununlJt war sup- plies throup C1111bodla lnlo South Viet. nam. 'the Fishhook forct was looking for lbe Cl>nununllll' central olftoe for South Vle&nam -OOSVN -the Hanoi heact. qulften which President NI.loo bas saJd must be destroyed. "It's here and we're in the heart cf it," a U.S. commander said. But there was no sign of coSVN it.self in the fourth day of the Fishhook offensive. Daniel satd more than IO American tanb and armored peraonnel cartiera raced along Hiahway 7 under orders from the 11th Armored Cavalry Refi- ment squad?on commander, Lt. Col. GriaJ Broobbin, not to fire unless flred upon. "We're doing what an army un it II supposed to do," Brooklhlre aaid. "We 1re breaking deep into enemy territory and blocking their major routes. We've got a disorganized enemy. He isn't fighting because be doesn't know what he is doing." Brookshire said his men hoped to un- coler more aupply complexes 1n deep thrwlla at lint light Tueoday. He aald about aoo "atrudures" were aeen and that tllay probabl{ held munltlonl and other war materie In the Pam>t'1 B<ak, hundreds of Sooth Vittnamete armored vehicle. drove into Commun.1st bue camps on· the l1sth day of an offensive in which Amerlcan forces were not directly ln- volvtd on the ground wiUt the exception d. about 40 military advisers. U.S. air and artillery support was behind the Pano!'• B-'11: tor1y but ll was mainly a South Vietnamese show, and Salp reporla oak! k was sllowlng pod resulta. Five thoulMld more South l'-i._ movod IJJlo 1he aouthem part of the Panot'a Beale over Iba woebnd. Bill Supported By State Group SANTA CRUZ (UPI) -A bill which would "lu1ale COlllAI devel-ent lw n«lved the 1._n ol the llate advlaory commlloion "' marine and coulal ...... roes. 'l1>e but, propooed by Auemblyman P-WlllOll CR.San Diego), would .. t up a new CaUtornia <X>Utal zone and contervl&Jon, and development com- millloa, with alx zoning 00.rds to work wMh local rovernments. Tbe bW wou1d alto dlr«t that a muter Nie ocean area plan be crta~.··plu1 a plan 10< lharellne "'""" with control ol land mu rooPIY 100 yanll away lnxn the hlab Ude mart. "It'• now or never," Comm!saloner Jcm E. Robb of San Franc:!Jco 111d. "HeariJlls start Mly JJ on the bills belon the lei!Jlalun, and thll II our flnal ehance to comment." n.e all. zones are the Santa Cruz- Mooterey counUes, the northern coast, San Francl!co Bay, central coasl, Southern Callfanda, aand border (San Diego) coastal regions. DAILY PILOT M.-,.rt le•• L,...._a...,11 c.... ..... HMtllltf•• hKf' f9•r•• w.n., ... C:'-•• f)llNICE COAST l'U9LllttlNO COM"°ANY P:olt•rt N, W••4 ~t .... "'4ollt.lltf' J••• •· c •• r,., Ykt l'rtf:...01 -Oc-•I Mfl\fft< 111 ..... , ic,,.,a l•!lf' l\01111• A. Mwr,hf~• M ......... 1.11« a tth1r4 '· Nt ll stwtt1 o......, c-tr 1.i1tr • C)fflt" C .. flll MIU! JJt Wu! ''' •tr"t H...,..I •••~~' rill Wnt lflllol le111c<r1rt L.lt\ll'll IMtll: nt ,.,..., ,.,...,..,,_ Hllflll"f-1Ndl1 ""J ••KA .,.,ltv1ro• a." (.._NI a.I ""111 ll (1Min. !IHI j -· M"1 4, 1970 l(osygin Assails U.S. - Rejects Geneva Meet on Indochina MOSCOW I UPI) -Premier Aleiel N. Kooya!n today rtjectod a -Geneva Conftttnce OD Jndochloa and uJd t.be Soviet Union "calls on all the peoples of the world to stop the aggression in Cambodia." He accused the United Slates of a ··~e vlolaUon" of the Geneva agreementa In Indochina and of trying lo draw SoullJeast Asia tnlo ltJ military blocs. "These are imperlaliat, a,ggress.ive aims alien to the loteresta of the people and therefore they are Inevitably doomed to failurt," be said. Speaking at the first Moscow new& conference he has held since he suc- eeeded Nlkita '8. Khruabchev in 1!164 he said: "Now Ls not the time for conferences, It is the time !or action." "Now the Soviet government calls on all the peoples of the world to stop the awesaion in Cambodia." Kotygln apoke in a government guest houae In the Lenin Hills on the edge of Motcow. •1For Wtshlntf.on to eiplaln the action in Indocblna was designed to save the lives or American aoldlen -that is stranae logic," K01ygln sakt, reading from notes before television cameras. He llJd Che American action "is a crude violation ol internatlonal Jaw, and as such it should be denounced." He 1ald that "U the U.S. government really wa.nt5 to Sf.Ve the Uves of hundred& or American soldiers then there is a simple solu tion: Do not send American soldiers to Laos, Vietnam and Cam- bodia." Speai.ln& sternly, he said the United States was expanding the war Jn lndochlna where ita: "mlilin goal is to suppress progressive regimes and subject them to American interests." He accused the United States of "Car· rylng out "barbarou1 bombings" and settln1 up t'OOCeDtratioo camps. ''Who gave the United States the right to be the judge o( what is good and what Is bad for other peoples? Who gave it the right to be an lntematlonal gendar'me? "Nobody gave them this right." He warned "the result of the invasion of American troops (into Cambodia) can cause further compllcaUons in Lbe in- ternational sltuaUoo." Noting what he tenned a discrepancy between the words and the deeds of President Ni:zon, he said, "The l!IOvern. ment of the United States in fact is strengthening even mort its a1gre1sive militarist course." He sald "the people of Indochina have Missing Discipline Cause Of Delinquency Says Hicks By ALBERT W. BATES Of Ille DllW '"" frioff P.irental love is as important and omnipresent as ever but what bas been missing is the vital ingredient of discipline. Th.is was the essence of Orange County Dbitrict Attorney Cecll Hicks' analysis of what has 1one wroog with a younger gene.raUon reeorUn1 to drugs and violence as he addrmed memben of Huntington Beach Rotary Club Friday. Hicks recalled crowing up in Los Angele3 durlfll the Gr!at Depression of the early 19308. "Life was simpler then," he said .. There was a reeling of unity, for everyone was in the same boat." "Ne:zt ca.me World War Jl .and again we were joined together as a naUon in self-denial in behalf of a survival cau&e," Hieb conUnued. "'Jbtn, after World War II, we pn>ducod a 'jilllon' ba_bles, the OOH who are in college -· "Most of u1 parentl 1ald we wanted to give our children the crtature com- forta we couldn't have in the Depression or World Wat 11. So we gave thtm can we couldn't afford earlier, and a whole aeries of labor-taving appUances which eliminated the chores which were part ol th•lt puenta' early di>clpltne." In the midst ot '11 theae parent-bellow· ed creature comfort., Hieb said, along came Dr. Benjamin Spack 1aytng, "You've got to Wvt a child." We parents Pair Arrested On Drug Charges In San Clemente San Clemente police arre1ted two persons on drug charges during the weekt:nd and aaid they would eeek com- plaints today from the district attorney. Christine Hardy, 23, of San Bernardino was arrelted on cb1r&U of poaseaalng marijuana and possessing dangerous drugs. Detectives aald a patrolilll offictr who found her asleep ln a van discovered the smaJI quantity of drugs, LS~. seconal and marijuana, in the glove compartment as she was looking for the vehicle registration. The v1n was parked at 141% Mlrador. Jn a Saturday night arrt!l, David Lawrence Coleman, 20, of 218 A Avenida Serra was booked on charges of mari· juana po.Ues1lon. afrffd but we left out another vital element, discipline, Hlckl said. ··None of us, parents or children, can develop without discipline," H i c ks asserted. "We can't run a business or an oHice of any k.ind without it. Lacking Uiscipline, employes would disintegrate, and to would the business. "I think of It In mrms ol a boxing nne, with ropes around-the four sides. Dro:> the ropt1 and someone fal11 olf, on hl11 .face. So it is with children's lives U they don 't know where the 1truc· ture ii, the ropes are ." 'lbe district attorney added that no free aoclety can exist without discipline -and the best kind Is self discipline which sets an example for children. ''Our children don't know how to change direction,'' he added. "~ost of oyr_yoilngsters' goals are very pure -but how they go · about achieving them is twisted all out of shape. This reflects the exlstente of parental Jove as far as the goals are cooce:rned but lack of ditcipllne tn the IPl"OBCh lo thoee goah I! painfully ev\dent." Earlier ln his talk, Hicks r~alled confront.ation!I he baa had with campus radlcal1, Including a panel situation stacked 4 to 1 against him. What the dlatrlct altomey learned waa that the radicals fall oo their f1ce when penetrating questions are a11ked. Hieb: aaked what CXlnnection there might be between the issue of free speech and academic freedom and the vk>lence and property de9truction by the radicals. He drew thb lnoomprthenslb!e rt!pOnSe from a member of the New Left, "Why should we care when there are unpaved roads ln Texas?" • Hlclu: &aid tJie respondent was strloos and sincere, but he didn't understand that he was not above the law, that law& llhould apply equally to au. Hlcks also recalled occasions when campus mllltarU, In the name of "free speech," shouted down every sentence he uttered before he completed It - and kept others from hearlng a dissenting view. These youngsten, too, Hlcks said, "have the notion that the law somehow does not apply to them. 'Ibey feel they are above the law as it is applied to everyone off campus." The district 1ttorney told the Rotarians that Law Day on May l was proclaimetl by President Dwight D. EisenhoYler oo purpose because fl.fa y Day h a d historically been a Communist show of armed mlaht. Law Day In the free world now reminds us that we are a government of Jaws, not men, in conlrast to the Communists, lUcks said. the right to be masters ln their own home. • "The e.xpanslon of A m e r I c 1 n aggression In Southeast Asia wfil meet 1 resolute rebuff from the side of the people of Vietnam and Cambodia and all peace-loving people. "The Sovltt government will draw the respect.ive ccncluaton1 frcm sud\ actiC)l)..S \ of the United Slateti government," Kosygin warned, ending his 12-minute statement and accepting questions from the assembled correspoDdenls. Asked whether the .Russians would reassess their position ln the Slnt.egic Arms Limlt.aUon Talks (SALT) In Vienna in view of the new situation. Kosygin replied, "President Nixon first of all ahould have thought over his actions before he started the Invasion of Cam· bodia." Kosygin made it clear he oppo6;ed reconvening' of the Geneva convention on Indochina. 'He sail that "now that the military action Is under way, it Is necessary to stop the aggressor. lt must be done by all states. "Now ls the tlJne not for ronferencea; lt Is the time !or action . "The Soviet government now call! on all the peoples of the world to stop the aggression In Cambodia." Janitor's Move Foils Robbery Of BP Store A '40,000 holdup of a Buena Park department store was folled Sunday night when a Spanlsb-BPOaktng janitor slipped ootside and got a woman to call police . Two suspected gunmen surrendered to officers after holding si:z K • M a r t employes hostage for almost 90 minutes while police surrounded the store at lJncoln Avenue and Valley View Street. Arrested were Harold F. Garr, 42, and Ronald L. Corley, 'SI, both of West Covina. Officers charge the pair were pushing a shopping cart lotded with the loot toward the front exH of the store when police cars arrived. Police said the holdup men evidently slipped into the store and hld just before the 7 p.m. closing time. They rounded up six employes but overlooked janitor Manuel Pena, 22. Officers s&ld Pefii, who doesn'f speak English, ran Into the stort parking lot where he saw Mrs. Al Garcia, wife or one of the hostages, waiting in the car for her husband. In SpaniJh, Pena told her what was happening and she ran to a nearby market and telephoned police. Eleven Buena Park policemen v.·ere reinforced by patrol units rrom Cypress and La Palma and by Orange County sherUf's depuUes. The store parking lot became an armed camp during the tense 90 minutes. A crowd of about 400 curious people gat.bered on the perimeter as the drama unfolded. Police Otief Dudley Gourley led a squad of shotgun-armed officers into the bulldlng where the two holdup men had their hostages cornered ln the ad- min!.slrative offices. The chief communicated with the ban- dits by loud speaker and telephone and eventually talked them into surrendering. During the 90 mlnuta, Corley called his wile in Wert Covina and threliltened to kill himself. She evidently talked him out of it and he surrendered his gun to one ol the hostages. Police were to question the suspects today on two other K-Mart holdups In the Los Angeles area in recent weeks. Both of them tOOk place on Sunday nights and $75,000 in loot was taken in one of them. Suggestion Valuable LONDON (A?) -The British publishers, Joftalhan Cape Ltd., win pay former French Deputy Prime Minister Jacques Soustelle "a substantial sum'' for suggesUng In a book that he plotted to assassinate Gen. Charles de Gaulle, a London court was told today. 115,000 ita Newport DAILY 1'LLOT fllfl """" Keeping Cool Regetta, year.-old pet racoon of Darrell ·Allen, 12, cools oU in wheel· barrow at Allen home, 2569 Elden Ave., Costa Mesa. DarreU !I .stu .. dent at Harper School, found Regeitta when the racoon was' just a baby last July near the Salton Sea. Darrell was on a camping trip at the time. Citizen's Right to Reject 'Dir~y Advertising' Upheld WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court today upheld a law whiah allows a persoa to bar adverU!lng from hls mailbox if he decides it is too sexy. The law was cba~ged by It mall order houses, book p shers a111d others, who claimed it inte eres with their right to free e<>mmunlcation through the mail. The vote of lhe eight-man court was unanimous with Ch.let Justice Warren E. Burger speaking for the majority. Burger sald for the court : "In eJfect, Congress has erected a wall -or more accurately permits a citizen to erect a wall -that no advertlser may pe11etrale v.•lthout his acquleaence. The conUnuJng operative effect of a mailing ban once Imposed presents no CQSl- sUtutlonal obstacles." In other actions, the court: -Upheld by a 7-1 vote a New York State ta.1 exemption on church-owned property that is used for relia:lous purposes. The law had been challenged by a la~r who owned a State• Island properly which was taxed $5.24 a year. -Ruled that a defendant who pleads guilty in court "voluntarily and in- telligently" cannot later try to upse t his conviction on grounds that his action was unconstitutionally coerced. The ~ IJecision In three cases meant the court refused to broaden its ruling that the Lindbergh kldnaping law was defective because tt:e death penalty could be im- posed only to a defendant who underwent trial by jury. The law on unwanted mall authorizes any addressee to take steps to slop "pandering advertisements " which he believes to be "erotically aroualrig or sexually provoca tive." He can ask the post office to order ' the firm to take his name off tbe mailing list. The firm can get a post office bearing if it wishes. In the event of noncompliance, the po11tmaster ge1eral may ask the attorney general for a court order to stop the mailing. The. mail order houses told the court deletions cost SS a name because the lists are not alphabetical. ,.... Ocean Foreseen Among Nation's Top ResoW'ces The oceans and the youth studying ecology and envlronment may prove to be among America 's most valuable resources. This was the tenor of a talk Saturday by Charles H. fi.ieacham, Commissioner of Fish and Wildllfe for the Interior ~tment, Saturday as he helped dedicate the Marine Science In.stitule (f..'lSI) at Dana Point Harbor. The MS! dedication of a future facility was pan of three-day Ocean Expo '70 that began Friday. It centered on study of and preservation of the environment fi..teacham said it is conceivable in 50 or 100 years that th e land masses of the globe will be used up by mankind and his recreation. He said man may berorne dependent on the sea for hi1 food. Meacham said the ocean produces three quarters ol the globe's oxygen and said In 1969 Americans alone con· sumed 5.4 bUllon pounds of food taken from the sea. Police 1ald he wu seen handtna a package to a youth after coming ~ut of a liquor store. An officer suspe<:ting that it might be liquor checked and found a 1m1ll quantity of marijuana, a detective said. The UTeSt was on El Camino Real near Grantd a. Heat Wave Packs Beaches Speaking of dedlcallon to conservation as a way of life , Meacham said he had every hope that !J1c concerned youth will become the savit>r of an environment that in the past has been treated cartlessly. Oceanography, he said. was born dur- ing and since World War JI and it~ ranks of experts are all yet thin. The success of marine science. will depend on th:! quality or. personntl in its ranks the speaker said . ' Greek Magnate's Wife Succumbs A THENS (UPI) -Eugenie N!ll'choo, the -wife of aNpping magnate Stavros Nlarchos. died early today 1t SpeUoPou- 11 , her huaband'1 laland retreat In the Aegean Sea. She wu '4. The death, believed to ·have been cau5. ed by a heart atlack, occurred shortly after t a.m. The bod7 was flown by hellcnpter from Ult island to the Athtns corontr'a laboratory for a poat mortlln. A ipokesman for the coroner'• oflict said w1thout uplanaUon that the rePort will be delayed for two or three d1y1 whllt awa1Un1 reaulta ol toaJookJtlcal testJ. According to police JOurca, Nl1n:JKll and hl1 two elder aona, Phillip. 17, and Spyros 14, were at Sptt.topoull when Eugeole'a death eccurred. I Driven by an inland heat wnve, t 15,ooO per80011 flocked to Newport's beache1 Sllhday. Parking spots and open pat.chts or aand m which to spread a towel became prlCIOUI commodiUts. lt Was eisily lhe largest btach crowd of the yeu ind "one ol Ille bluest eve:," 1ccordtng to AW!tant Marine Safety Director Kendall Jacob.sen . The sun-scartd sea aoers numbtred only sllahtly less Saturday v.1hen the cmwd w1s estimated at as,ooo. Remarkably, lifeguards didn't make a single TC3C'l.le the enUre weekend. 'The IUf w1s nat and harmless and the wa ter cold enoush to dl8COl.lrage swim· m1rs. The coast weather wa,, balmy -1 high of 68 Saturday and n SUnday,18ut the .,;un lihone Ilk• 1 furnace on com· mun!Ues Inland. Sanla Ana on Sunday record~ I~ hlgh for the ye11r -99 ' r degrees -and Los Angeles with a high or 94 tet an all Ume record for the date. Rarmond Johnson, dispatcher for the Orange County Harbor Department, said there was plenly of bolt traUic on the weekend. "The good weather bring1 them out." 1\uto traffic prvvlded U1e usual motorists' misery. Pacific Coast Hlahw1y Y.·as bumper·t<>-bumper througll the mld· die of town and the Peninsula wd: elog- gcd. "We only had 30 1«klenta: this weekt.nd," Traffic lnve1Ua11.tor TOflY Villa r!mari.ed f11ctUOUJly. flfleen to 20 he said ls n6rmal. None of the ac- cidents cauatd serloua lnjury: all were of the fendfr·bf:ndtr variety, .l!!ost resullin1 from lmpaUenct. Jacobstn uld he couldn't say what the largesl beach crowd ever was but lhfl throng Sunday rinked right with the lar1est. "It ge~ so big and th1t'1 It (for estimating purPoSes)," he said. "If It gets any bigger yoo wouldn 't even knOw the difference. We go by how we can Jrlve through It (In IUeguard Jetps). Sunday we couldn't df,lve." City lifeguards sun are uslna their off-aeason force of 17 lifepard& and oountlne on mobility. Summertime, when every tower Is manned, there will be es llleguards on duty. Ja\.'Ob&en wanted to 1ay thank ao0dnts1 they didn't get Into a htavy reacue ailuaUon. "The cold water WU the only thing that saved us," he &aid. Wiler w1s 1 chilly 5S degrees, tem- perature& more typtcal ·of February or March. LUqu1rd1 performed 16 preventative rtscue action& by talking to swimmers v.·llhout entering the water. They Tetum- ed 32 loat ehlldrtn to their para1t.t .and administer~ first aJd to 80 pcrl0ll5. t ' Meacham said blSI Is a giant step In that direction wlth "the moM pr~ greN.ive currlculum Qf Its type that I have observed In America." He offered the help of hlmselr and his staff in working on the currlctilum. Meacham presented a blue and white naa to the institute as it.a pennant. There was a model of the physical facll ltles to be constructed to house MSI -as p11rt of the exhibits hou sed In tents al the harbor. Royal Fan1ily Home LONDON (UP I! -Qu"n Ellubelh 11, her husband Prince Ph 11 l p end daughter Prtnce!Js Anne returned today to a warm and sunny Britain from a two-month 40.000-mll<i tour of Australl1 and New Zealand. , , 'I ' I I J I • H~nting-on Beaeh . 'i Dl flON ' . TOday's Flnal N.Y. Ste&~ . - VOL 63, NO. ·106, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORA~E C04_~.-CALIFoRNIA~ -TEN CENTS • 1es ' Deadline Today Teachers Study Ne~ Salary Offer By RUDI NIEDUELSKI Of tM O.llr 'l"' 511ff Teachers of the Huntington Beach Union High School D!.atrict today are po00enng-a new salary offer rilade by the board of trustees. 1be proposal, which includes a $'7,293 Heat Brings Big.Crowd To Beaches A hot $U!l brought lhe crowds to Hun- tington Beach's ain miles or strands at the weekend but a cool sea and Jow surf kept them out of trouble. City lifeguards were . kept working Jeverishly wtth rescues, first aid cases and Jost children, but there were no itrlous mishaps. The story was the same for the state ~ants who watch over Huntington State Park and Bo1-Olica Beach.. "It WU almost like fo'Wlb o( July ~~ • Li!-·.....r. . Knut out u_.e, Q;'-'..... supervisor Skjonlierg Uid theii nwmlng." "I have never lefJl so many on 1lte Bolsa Chica beach Cd it wu -as bed at Huntidttoa State Pwt." "Foriwlately the surf wa. very ligllt and we had no trouble handling the crowds. It was lite a big lake out there." Skjooberg ~timated the Bolsa Chica ~ ei-owd at 20,000 and the Hunlington State Park total at 40,000. The life(Uards W1!tt kept busiest with Jost children. 'jbey had more than 50 of them. · AJ mual, the crowd was even bigger co tht mile-long municipal beach. -City liftguard Captain Tio u g I a s D'Amall had 121,000 visitors and logged 111 rescues, high for the time of year, over the weekend . The crowd was 85,000 on Sunday with Ii ...cues. The air temperature was 7t degr~ Wt its highest but the water temperature was a chilly 57 degrees with the surf varfing from one to three feet. "It's a good job the water wasn't warmer or we would have had a Jot more to do,"' capt.. D'Amall said. · The lifeguard said the high number of re9CUes was because there were many intb<re holes. "This occurs when the sea bottom ln unequal,,. he said. "A person can be walking along and then ..,dd"1]y find himself oot of his depth. This situation is almost as bad as 1, riptide fer "'·" lo $14.586 pay range, was de llvered into their bands. Friday. It represent,, the answer to a teacher~set deidllne to end negotiations by today. --- A decision on the offer is scheduled for 3:4.S p.m. Tuesday as the teachers meet in general 3essioo in the F.dison High Sdlool gymnaslwn. Carl Manemann, president of the District Educators Association (DEA) which represents tht teache.rs in wage negotiations, said earlier the purpot;e or the session will be to "either ratify an agreement or assess the situatian for possible alternatives." Last year, when negotiations reached an impasse, the teachers participated in a work slowdown and one-day walkout, the first in Orange County history. In five negotiating sess.ions between board representatives and members of the DEA oegotiating couacil, the teachers have held to a $7 ,500 to $15,577 salary range. There arc still differeoces in terms of fringe benefits, sabbatical .)eave pay, class site, swnmer work.sbop funds and substltul!On pay, !pOl:esnien'Jald; • DEA r<pn!seitatlves h..,, proi-d that permissive ta-.: override funds be levitd to eecure .deDtal •Cloverqe, life .,_, tnmaaed pald ldj)erVltiGll abd optical.eat<. The board 'has oflued In addilioDal $150 per employe for these benefiU. bringing the total up to $569. 1be trustees have also rejected a de- maod to .increase sabbatkal leave pay from 50 percent ol a teacher's s a 1 J r y to 75 percent until an evaluation st\ows v.ilether it would be worth it. In class size, the DEA has recom- meoded a 'l1 to 1 student teacher ratio_ based on actual classroom attendance. The trustees, while not accepting the DEA proposal, did agree to a review of the method by which class size is determined. Both si~ have reached an impasse on a DEA prOposal which would aUocate ooe half of one percent of the district budget for curriculum revision and development through summer workJhops. Trustee representatives have termed the demand j•too JimJtlng" and suggested that each school and department de!Jne its curriculum revisioo in terms of highest need . Paid period substltution is inother bone of contention with the teachers proposing a flat $10 per hour for substitution work. 'lbe trustees, on the other hand, have offered to "develop guklelines to best meet "the respective needs of each achool." ,Culmre to Get Att,ention ' With Valley Obserpance Cultur~ will have its week in Fountain Valley May 12-17. • A children's production of the Wii.ai"d of Oz will start the heart of culture week licking on May 12 at Fulton School. The womien's division of the chamber of commerce has initiated the .city's lint try at • weel<·iong display of talent and exhibits by echools, clubs aod resklents. ~ · On May 13. music and art tttl.ivals are ICbedu.led at Bushard, Cor, Fountain Valley, Harper, Niebla!' Ind Monroe tlem<otlry. ld>ooll. Fountain. Vlll<y library wiD ._ a boot discussion ind an uhibit of liquid embroidery in the community --ail! atallabl• -the .,..,. day. Newllnd Sctiii>I will display an essay projed anOI stud""' a! McDowell School Will celebnie pioneer day. A Jl"'ductlon of "'!lie Crucible" wlO .tart May H •t Fountain Vf]ley !Ugh School and run Uiree days. A speaker on stamp coDectlng will appear at the community center en M11y 14. Travel films and a pre-school story hour at the library will be ftaturtd that day. In the evening, rt sl.dents may aUend a performance by a Germen barid and bear speakers from the Al'S students abroad program. Art 1nd musk: fcstivats will also takt· place May It at Arevalos, Glsler, Lamb and Tamura Schools. A wider range of activities will be cffered Friday, May 15, with a children·s ballet performance and madrigal singers at the community center and the opening production ol "Out cl. the Frying Pan'' that night and Saturday at Lo5 Amlgos High School. Travel films will also be shown' at 1he library and Wardlow School will put on a dance festival. On Saturday, May II, a full achodule of events are planned at. the commUDlty caiter. 'lbde wlll be Dower, hobby Ind ar1 shows from 10 I.JD. to 5 p.m. Jilnior organliatlons and junior conummlty · theilii''Wlll ilso dllplay their wutL A bridge tournament wUI stat! at I p.m., Saturday, followed by the first Mayor'• Inaugural Ball it 1:30 p.m. In tbe community center. Price of tlckets to tbe ball ls 110 p<r couple. Sunday, May 17, IJ the but day of scheduled acUviUes fer Cultural • Wttk. From noon to 5 p.m., l'epeata of Saturday's exhibits will be shown and throughout the day Japanese, Mexican, and tap dances will be featured. At noon the publlc 15 invited to enjoy a "pioneer picnic" ln the civic center parking lot or jcin 1 bus lOW' of lht city. • lll ' . .. --·- D.\llY PILOT Sl•ff ....... .. OFF TO MOBILE ~~. Mitt C11ndidat• Martyn Beach Beauty Rhonda Martyn To Seek Title 'By TERRY COVILLE ot ... O.llp •• Skiff --- -qllt ~ ""*1Ud W.:8111' tinrtm BeOdi lan!'.C'llle,~)~­~ .. P_.,t.. 'l'l>I ;question on · ·u.e.. minds -cu • bieautlfal young; lUs Iron\ this dty caplllre lint !or the s«.ood ltrat,bt year? Rhoda Martyn, a blonde senior from Manna High ·School, left Saturday to attempt )us11hal She has already won the Calllornia crown held by her predeces90r Jackie Henington, the reigning Junior Miss of America, also from Huntington Beach and Marina Higll School. Miss Martyn is-currently i n • Washington, D.C .. with the 49 other state Junior Misses , all on a White House tour, Tonight they fiy to Mobile, Ala., where µie Junior Miss Pageant will be siaged. . When they arrive In Mobile, the git"ls will be given several days to pnpare for 1he May 9-13 contest. They w1ll also tour some of the scenic sites iri. Mobi1e. Rhonda, who has been a long-time friend of Jacll;je's, will enter her fir st national competition Sunday night, with more preliminary judging next Monday night. The Junior Miss fina ls will be televised Wednesday, May 13. Meanwhile, back home In HuntinglQn Beach, the Martyn family is busy laying out an intricate set cif travel plan1. "I'm going to join Rhonda in Mobile on Saturday. Her eight-year-old brother Rick will go with me," Mrs. Kenneth Martyn, said this morning. "Her grandfather, Sydney Cooper, is driving down from Detroit en Saturday, then my husba'nd and Rhonda's aister, Lynda, 19, will leave for Mobilt Tuesday, May ll," Mrs. Martyn added. Mni. Martyn said Rhonila was having a great time in Washington. 1'She calltd us last night and told tis how wonderful it is there." Mental Retarded Vie in Olympics More than 100 mentally · retarded youngsters took part In FOW1?4n Ve.lley's ~ first "Special Olympic!" Saturday .at Foontaln Valley lllgh 'Scllool. · Members of the sponsoring Founta.Jn Valley Jaycees called the tract and field compeUUon "a treinendous ·adc-'. ... cess. . ' , "All the work was worth .1t. -They: were really a grateful bunch . of , kids;" Mn. Oris Schnekler, whose huabaod helped organil.e the event, said this mom.. ing. Mentally retarded· yooth! r r ·o m Fairview State Hospital, Coota Meu, RunUngton Beach Vnion lH1h School, Oce.an View, Fountain Valley and Hun- lington Beach City school districts partici pated. All thooe who took par! In Saturday's events are eligible. for the Orange Co.lilt)' "Special Ol)'lllplca," May 23 In Gard<n G~"··. Pair .Held In Biggest Pot Raid Two men, chargtd with possessjon of marijuana. f(lr sale, are 1n ~st.ody today in Newport Beach following their arrests Saturday during whieh pall~ claim to have ccn!.itcated 730 powlda ol the illegal weed. Nan:otlcs Investigator-Leo Kolll;el said the haul was the largest in ~ bislocy · of Newport Beach. If sold who)esale, the lm~d nar· colic would be worth about $50,000, be said. U sold by the lid (one ounce), Kon. t el said the marijuana would be worth $125,000. A~ed were Greg Or')' Lynn Tuck tr, 11 , of Lakewood and David Glenn Ci.in· nison, 22, of Cardif. · Watch Commander Earnest Laurin said he was making a routine check of the area when be spotted the suspects in the alley at 211 Lugonia St. Officer Michael McEveny who was called to the scene said the pair were taken into custody when a huge pile of Iarge bags full of marijuana wa1 found in their van. The officer said he saw the bags •·hen he went to make an inspection ol the vehicle, which was alleged!~ il-~P!IY,~ ... . 1fi' "' -~~'™t...,,.-...M •flil T ~ ..... f~la"1~' !p".;;;i~--:ii pounds WU ound· in the latqe al 2tl~st. lm'Mt.lptlcioi in 'the case fl coofinuinr1 he sakf, and more arre1ts are expec:iea 1oday. at Tuelclay •. "We SUSpect the · marijuana came from Mulco," he added. Beach Council Plans Action On Billboards Huntington Beadi may &Ive the state a nudge to flelp tbt city remove highway billboards. ' At M>night's ~ting . city councilmen wllr consider a motion asking the state Division ef ·Highways to remove the billboards from state~wned property in the city. The billboards are along C o a s t Highway and lower Beach Boulevard which the state owna as freeway right cf way. A city sign ordinance banning the billboards recently became effective after a five-year· amorUutlon period but the boards have not been removed . ·The outdoor advertising companies have lndlcated that they plan to fight the ordinance in tile courts. . -. • 'Qriit;gripingl We're \ withdrawing from . . ,, Vietnam, aren t we. , Valley Seeking More Space For City Work The staff at Fcuntain Valley city hall is looking for more elbow room. City Manager James Neal Is ready to ask the city . coonci1 to approve a $4,000 contract with Barry and Associates ~of -:i~e1:!i1.for a space ullil?tion ''.-i'hey may find ·us more elbow room by rearr~g dfkes within city hall or telling. "' to~ the building; ~>' "liii<I tb ~· A'lll HOUYWtM~ '~lsC' ~~ plali1ect 1oct•Y·-· , · ·. '- ,,,. ~UI -the -act al ltllt •p'.m: iiioelthi;;'l\Mdoy. , Holl~ Mid ilie _.. study b llf«led p1marlly to Und· more storage room for machines and old records. "We're ~ 1hlnklng about microfilm for the atorsge ol a Jot of our old reards." "Our own ,atafr hall been looking at the problem of crowding for about aix months, but before we offer ideas to the councll · we'd like to have a pro- fessional opinion oo wba.t to de. We're not architects," Hollywood added. He U!ted public works, building and plaMing departments as being the most cramped. "We also need space for vault storage, a conference room aod perhaps m1croi.ilm equipment." · "Once the space study is: complete we pl"-1 to hire an architect and expand city bill to lb fun· growth this tbcal year.'' Neal explained. City hall will then be ready to handle Fountain Valley affairs when the city reaches its full projected population cf 70,000 in the neit few years. STOCK MARKET Task Force Routs Foe In Cambodia SAIGON (U PI ) -Scores of U.S. tanb rumbled across lhe Fishhook of Cam· bodia ~londay and Americ an comman- ders said their 15,000.man aflied taslt force was ''in the heart" of the head- quarters area where the Communists run their ""Vlet.nam war strategy. The head- quarters itself remaJned undetected · Five thousand more South Vietna~ troops were committed to a ulated of. fens1 ve into the Parrot's Beak relfon lo the south, br!nging to 30,000 the number of men involved in the twin thrusts aimed at destroying North Viet- namese and Vjet Cong sanctuaries ln Cambodia. They included 8,000 Gls. Military sources sa id at least three m~re major fora ys into Cambodia were being plann<d. Communiqu es described the Fishhook and Parrot's. Beak offensives as highly su~ful with 1,952 North Vietnamese a~ Viet Cong reported killed and 359 pn~~rs taken and 250 tons of food, murulions and medica l supplies selzed. U.S. losses were placed at 12 killed and 46 wounded and those for South Vietnamese units at 151 killed and 560 wounded. . As the alJJeo task rorcts knifed deeper into. Cambodia, dispatches from tbe capital, Phnom Penb, said Cambodian commanders rushed rehiorcements to the village of IWki Thom_ where field reporta ,said a ·maJof' batUe 'my, be shaping up !&•inst ~unist troops ~nt.renc:htd cin the wes · bani: of the Meion& River. loti Thom Is 3t miles 90Uthelst of Phnom Penh 1od about 50 mllt1 from the Parr~'s Beak front. Phnom Penh dispatches said "hull$freds" cf Cam- bodian tribesmen, trained and paid by the U.S. Special Forces, had been flown from bases in South Vietnam to beef up the ~O,QOO..man Cambodian anny. By rughtfall today American armored units had pushed at least IS miles from tbe South Vietnamese border on Highway 7. The route is a paved road that bad been used to haul Communist war sup-- plies through Cambodia into South Viet- nam. The Fishhook force was looking for the Communists' central office for South Vietnam -COSVN -the Hanoi head. quarters which President Nixon has said (See CAMBODIA, P•ce 2) C~pnty Approves Bulkhead Repair The replacement of rotting bulkheads NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market on the Sunset Beach Canal in cooperatlOn re1umed It& steep decline thlf aftempon with property owners in the area "ilas after strengthening at nUdday in the wake been i:pproved by the Orange Coonty of Sovltt •Premier Ale1i!!i N. Kasygin's Board cf Supervisors. slatt•t ,concerning · lJ..S. involvement The project, king debated, will cost in Cambodia. (See quotations, Pages 20-il!e county an e&Umaled $23,tOO to be ll). , provided from Road llepartment fund s. Beach Builders Feeling The county .assumes responsibility for bulkheads at street Ind alleY. ends' only Dock Masten Inc.,· a &inset Bea°ch • firm · has offered ta replace the bulkheading at $112 .. 50 per" lineal foot. Previously, residents of the area had attemp~ to. fonn ·an improvement district to carry out the project, but dropped the pla n when cost estimates came in at $250 per lineal foot. • National Housing Slump By ALAN DIRKIN Of tlte-IHlllJ' l'lllf Stiff Home builders ln lluntJngton Beach are feeling the housing slump. Building permits ls~ed by the city for the first four monfm of tbe year show a drop or more than $5 million in valuaUon over the first four months of 1116i. llullding du.ctor Jack Cleveland said this moming. "There'• no ·doubt that the shlmp has reached here, but you ca• never tell, things might pick up for the: r•ll. of t1Je '.}'ell"/' . . Cleveland erplltned what developers are doing to eoUJ1ter the short.age of financing. "They ... trylllg 10 t>tt""11 boo ... Instead of building them Ill at once and then selling them. Just u many tractJ are btlng developed but ftwer hoUses are bellg built on .them. "What a developer will do Is that ho will put up the models and thell try tn 1tll the lob with tbe buytr stlpulaUnf which model he wanU. The build<n lft scmd of [Ml11lnf U]1 a lot of hom<s, and . !lndlllf tMy can't dtspoa of them." · ' · Cleveland aald the situatldn, was simpl.Y ' .. I due to fewer prospect ive home buyers qualifying for a mortgage. "In some cases I've heard that the developert are having to .pay 10 percent intere!lt for their. funds. At _thole rat111 you don't want homes sittJng empty." Tho building permlta show that the valuaUctl for the fint Jour months of 1970 was !20,13\'.,17'1 'wtth the permit valuation In lhe Ja11Uarj·April period of 1969 being IU,323,laO. Cleveland remelned Gpf.lm lsUc on the future. "If· this·~eellne oonUnues,,lt piay give us a brtalhlng ispell ao .we. can . better plan .for tho l•Oux of J!OOPle . HIUlungton Beach ii getung. We woo't have to put out today'• fire1 ·today." Real estate agenta are not feeli.nc a slump. Mn. Eyelyn··Wll<ox, secretary of the HucUqton Beacl>Fountain Valley Board of Re.altorr. commented, 0 0Ur bualnen Is extttmely good, both tn the nllmber of Ustmp and aales. We're ahead of Jut yur alU...,h that II partly due to an tftcreue la our mtmbtl'lhip." ljrs. lj'llcox iddtd, "With f1wer ho!M1 being bulll. people have· to biiy llonios , that are ~ey constructrf:' l Oraage Coast Weat•er Fow weather Is in •tore for coastal dwellers Tuesday, with temperatures dipping to the 65 level along the beacll and &ettllng at '75 further illland: INSIDE TO~A.Y Borro~r1 are feeling tM tighl moneu pinch aa tht small loon is all bu& a 1hing of the past. Page 22. " • • U·~ u " " • " .... " " " r--~ ~l~PILOl --------------. ------------,------------------------------------ H 1 •· 1,~00 Boys Ptayillg sill ·· . . In 5 Areas 'MOre lhi:n t,000 boys are pl11ina LltUe League Baseball WS summer in Hua· ,; tington Beach -and Fountain Valley' ia 'five dmerent territories. With such a high interest ill local teanu· tile DAILY PILOT today -olfera ! the ~ fu,;t .Jn "periodic lilting&. of team ... ~standings. Staftdlrfis of major divislou . , in· i:"ountaln Valley1 Huntington Valley, Ocean View, Robinwood and Seaview leiiues will be listed. Major division teams are comprised of the boys who are selected each year to compe~ la a series of all-ttar games leadlng·to fhe Little League Worlcf Series. The"re ar~ b\l.Jtdreds of boys also playing ball in divisions othtr than ma· jor .. With some leagues baving seen action /or two weeks and others for only one week, here is the DAILY Pll.OT'S list .. of, outStandlngs through Saturday: • DAIL V PILOT lltft l"MN . . . LAGUfiA PARTYG!)ERS GRUNT ANP GROAN AS }'HEY BEAT RUREAT UP RUTTED ROAO Outdoor Soiree on Top of the World Ends In Cloud of Dust to Mutic of Slrtnt ~r:1~'°""'''" ... , ........ l 1 I Police 'Crash' Missing Discipline Cause 0'fi. Ill H'll P · ".or.:·~.···"""'0" ..... , ...... i \; 8 1 toAp artdy, Of Delinquency, Says DA It.,;.. 1 l ! oy -rreste · -· ··~ • · OCRAN -v.1•w AM111c.1.N L•.1.ou1., L T . • By ALBERT W. BATES to gi ve our children the creature com· fe1: 1 I ' I . Oranie _ CQunty Sheriff's: deputies, 01 tll• o.uv rii.t 1••11 forU we couldn't have in the Depression :11,.. j o police -and highway patrolmen _routed Parental Jove is as important and or World Wfl" II. So we save them :: r, ::IOI!· · . : · 2 about JOO young people from an outdoor omnipresent -as ever but what has been c11S we c;ouldn't afford earlier, and .. ·-. oc',.• voiw .,,.10,,, ••••' •• •· ,' ,: party com plete with two bands in a missing is the vital ingredient of h 1 1 of 1 bo . 1. brushy hilltop area northeast of Laguna's discipline. a w o e ser es a r-sav1ng app 1ances j i J Top of 'lb~ World SUJlday. This was the essence of (>range County wtllch eJiminated the chores which were I 1 0 Laguna BeacQ police called to assist District Attorney Cecil Hicks' analysis part of their parents' early· discipline." l I sberilfs deputies iuTested James Andrew of what ha.!I gone MODg with a younger In the mid.st of afl1hese pareilt~stoW: Sowa, J9, of Anaheim on charges of generation resorting to drugs and ed creature coniforts, Hicks said, along kO•IHWOOD UA•UI SIA VllW LIAGUI 'Pizza Benefit .BQosts Ath'lete i j 1 I . I . i.iore than f1lO ...... r~ •I a· plm party last Tu..<Jay n!lht for Injured Ediaon Hilb School athlete Sam Fu&•· : · 'llf6. EclfiOn Boolt>r . CIOb ral•ecr the :mo.,.y with' the help of :111111c.y•a· P1iza Parlor, 19300 Beach BM!., Himtln(too Beach, which held a benefit lliibt for Sam. Family size pim.a were sold Sl less than normal from 6-9:30 p.m., at Shaiey?s. Atrangemeata for the special niglit and donations were made by : ~s~r club members with Frank Colley. _owne_r of Sha.key's. -The mqney wilf go into a fund to .. help p_ay hospital expenses for Fuga who was paralyied Jn a . varsity football --g111qe last fall when he suffered a broken -neck. Valley JCs Subject Of Fair Injury Suit 'I11e father or an elgbt-year~ld · boy who allegedly suffered serious injUries in a carnival accident has sued the Fountain Valley Junior Chamber of CoJn. me!'Ce and carniyal ~rat.ors for m.ooo. L. Arthur WOl)J.er Jr., 9791 Peacock Circle, Fountain, Valley, holds the Jaycees . and Calll<rnla Amueement EnterprlieS rt.spon&ible for injuries suf~ fered by David Kevin Womer on June JS, 1968. The Superior Court acUon ln-- dicates · tha~· the boy fell while viaiUng the Jaycee-~ed ca.riivaJ. DAILY PILOT OAAiGl'. COAST PU&ll5HIMG CCIM'AM'I 11:•'-•rt N. We•d Pn11dfnl •r.d '""ltlwr '.Jee\ II:. Curl•y llioll'l•1 A, Murpl.i111• ,,.,.,..,1.,, t"1or A1b1•t W. l1t•J Auotl1tt l'lf!\1)1' H•111th19t•• .... OHie.it 1117$ l••ch l•ul1w1'4 M•lll11t >.ddr•••: r.o. I•• 1•0, .•2•'• °'"'°""-........... 81tdll: 22J F ..... t A- C.JI• Mtu: »0 WUI Illy $1fftf N .......... •1 .. 11: 1111 Wont 9111e1 -.Ulf'f ... ltll ~I »J NOfllll CJ c-ir. ll•I mariji.lana possession. violence as he addressed members of came Dr. Benjamin Spock saying, A sheriff'• deputy at tbe scene said Huntington Beach Rotary Club Friday. "You've got to love a child." We parents the property was leased by Redwood Hicks recalled growing up in Loi agreed but we left out another vital Stables and said ofrice.rs had been called Angeles during the Great Depression element, discipline, Hicks said. because of the fire hazard ·involved . ol the early 1930s. "None of us, parenl3 or. children, can First reports made to Laguna police "Llfe was simpler then," he said d<?velop without discipline," J{ i ck s were of 80 or 90 persons said to be "There was a feeling of unity, for asserted. "We can't run a business or in the node. everyone was in the same boat." an office of any kind without H. Lacking PoUCe and .. bighway patrol kicked on "Next came Worl" War II a.nd a&ain ...;iscipline, employes would disintegrate, their sitenS ·"eri route up Park Avenue we were joined together as a nation and so would the business. Sunday afternoon as many Lagunans in sell·denial in behalf of a survival ''.I think of it in terms of a boxing came out to see what was happening. cause," Hicks continued. "Then, after ring, with ropes· around the four sides. '1be pa.rty area reached over a nearly World War II, we Produced a 'jillion' Oro;> the ropes and someone falls off, IQ'l pas&able dirt road was a mile or babies, the ones _ wpo are in 'college on ·his face. So it is with children's more from· Top of the World. A member now. · lives if they don 't know where the struc- of the routed party, "Tall" John McGann, "Most of us parent.! said . we wanted tu re is, the ropes are." 22, of 1214 Falrywood Walk, said the The dl$trict attor~y added that no party.~hact-been'. put together -On the free ~y can.exist without discipline spur·or tile moment· Bill S t d -and the best kind is· self discipline "We were trying to find some, place ilppor e which sets an l!Xample (or children. to have a boogie," McGann told. a ''Our children don't ·know r.rter. ••we!d llkf! tG have the police B S · G ho'!' to change d l r e c t i o· n , ' ' he 11 lhey'd leave their gun• it home." y tale roup adde<I. "Most of' our youngsters' goals He slid the party WU origiDated by are ve.ry pure -but how they go fe11dents of the Laguna Canyon. area. SANTA CRUZ (UPI) -A bill which about achieving them is twisted all out "We're specialists in partying," he said. would regulate coastal development has or shape. This renects the existence McGann said sheriff's deputies had received the support of the state advisory of parental Jove as far as the goals summoned help because "noboc:ly wanted commission on marine and coastal are concerned but Jack of discipline to leave." 1'We were hep to the fire resources. in the approach to those goa.ls is painfully hazard," he sald . "Next time we'll bring The bill, proposed by Assemblyman evident." our own·fire equipment.'' Peter Wilson (R·San Dlego ). would set Earlier in his talk, Hicks recalled After lawmen arrived in force a up a new California CQastal zone and confrontations he has had with campus caravan · or cars made a dusty exodus conservation and developme.nt com-radicals, including a panel situation along the rutted dirt road to the party mission, with six zoning boards to work stacked 4 to I against him. What the site. with local governments. district attorney learned was that the GG School Blaze Gets Oose Look Garden' Grove firemen were t.oday sif- ting the ashes of a $300,000 fire which destroyed the library of Bolsa Grande High School early Saturday morning. Fire department ... spokesmen said they were almost , certain the costly blaze was of incendiary origin. The fire was spotted about 2 a.m. by a California Highway Patrol olficer. A( · that time flame11 were shootlng thr0ugh the roof .or the one story struc· ture wflich serwd as a library and bookstore for the school. . It tQok nine Garden Grove fire depart. tneut unlts two hours to control the blase. Included in, the loss were books, equi~t and fwnltu(e. Royal Family Home .LONDON (UPI) -Queen Elizabeth 1T, her husband Prince Philip and daughter Princess Anne returned today te ' a warm and sunny Britain from a two-month 40,000.mlle tour of Australia and Ne,v zealand. Ma11or Declares ' The bill would also direct that a master radicals fall on their face when state ocean area plan be created, plus penetr<iting questions are asked. a plan for shoreline zoning with control Hicks asked what connection there of land areas roughly 100 yards away might be between the issue of free from the high tide mark. speech and academic freedom and the ''It's now or never," Commissioner violence and property destruction by the John E. ROOb of San P'rancl8CO said. racijcal$. He drew this incomprehensible "Hearb:Cs start Mly ;]3· on the bills respon!e from ·a member Of the 'New before the legislaturt, and this is our Left: final chance to comment." "WhY should we care when there are The six zones are the Santa Cruz-unpaved roads in Texas?" Monterey counties, the northern coast, Hicks said the respondent was serious San Francisco Bay, central coast, and sincere, but he didn 't understand Southern California, sand border (Sart that he was not above the law, that Diego) coastal ~gions. laws should apply equally to all. Dow Jones Acquires 12 Papers in Merger NEW YORK (AP) -Dow Jones & C:O., I11c. and ottaway Newspapers-Radio, Inc. announced today a merger plan in which Dow Jones will acquire the nine daily and three Sunday newspapers published by Ottaway. In a joint announcement, the com- panies said the merger would be ac- complished through an exchange of about 914,000 shares of Dow Jones common stock for all outstanding capital stock of the Ottaway Co. The companies said the transaction has a ,value of $36 .5 million: Hicks also recalled occasions when campus militants, in the name of "free spefch," shouted down every sentence he uttered before he completed it - and kept others from hearing a dJssenting view . These youngsters, too, Hicks said, 1'have the notion that the Jaw somehow doe! not apply to them. They feel they are above the law as it is applied to everyone off campus." The.district attorney told the Rotarians that Law Day on May 1 was proclaimed . by President Dwight D. Eisenhower ()n purpose because May Day h a d historically been a Communist show or armed might., La1v Day in the frte v.;.erld now rem ind s us tha t V.'e are 11 g"1/ernment of laY.'S, not men, in contrast to the Conununists, Hicks said . ~cave Blast Police Idea The poqlbilt\f of blowing up or think the Clvt! •Ollld ever be blown otherwise seaUnc nft caves in the hills up but, ht added, "MY reaction 15 Ui•t. behind Laiuna aeach occupied by some measures should be Uiken to ·pre-- translfnt hippies was fin:t ''tossed out" vent the htalth and fire heurds that by a Laguna ~ach police ofllcer. Mayor 'Richard Goldberg said today. 11re created because of the J)eople livln& "I rrrst heard about I~ at a pre~leclion in the caves. ooUee in a h®'e up ori tha hUI wbttt "l'iri p1r\Jcularl1 oonc'f:tp1i;t. about the people were colnplalnin& about lUppt~s danger Of fire now that tb1 t!ry seuon Uvlng In tht Ctves and crt1tlrig 11 fire --i• approaching. One apfi'k \IP there could and health huard" OoldlJerl said. "A · stt off a fire that could 'eridangtr 111 pol1ce ofllcer 1t ibat mettln& 11kt the the hornet on the hills.'' ~ police department hid tven ·considered Goldlfer& ,saJd '10 didn't ~· know just blowin& up the caves. It wu aometblng wbat p'hould be done. that WU lolStd out aJoni with I lo!, "niey've' talked obOut bfcrflng lbem of othtt ldeu. •• • • • up;· ftaling them ofC {n iome way. Goldberg said he personally dld not spraylng them with 1ome sort of -- ,· substance ••• I just 'know It's a bad situation from the standpclnt of heall.h and.fire hazard." The new mayor. said he realized that ecologlns "have a good' point" in wanting to preserve the caves and added, "t under s tand there are some archaeologlcal fi nds to made up there too,' and this Is fine, but somelhing must be done to-get the people out of th.ere. "I 'know. there are some people who th ink it's all right to let the hJpples live in the caves, but we also have to think or the people In the houses up there whose ~omllS •Would be en· danst!red iJ there should be a bad fire." • ( Food Provider -Ocean Fo·reseeh .As Top Re~ource The ocean& and the youUl 11!.IJdylng ecology and environment may prove to be among America's most valuable resources. Thia was the teoor of a talk Saturday bf Charles H. Meacham, Comm1111oner or Fish and Wildlife for the Interior Department, Sataroay as he heJped dedicate the Marine Science Institute (MS!) at Dana Point Harbor. The MSI dedication of a future facility was part of three-day Ocean Expo '70 that began Friday. It cepiCred on study of and preservatian ot1ffe environment. Fro1n Page 1 CAMBODIA • • • must be de~troyed . ';It's her~and we're in the heart of it," a u.S. commander said. But there was no sign of COSVN itself in . the fourth day of the Fishhook offensive. Daniel said more than 90 American tanks and armored personnel carriers raced along Highway 7 under orders from the Jlth Armored Cavalry Regi- ment squadron commander, Lt. Col. Grial Brookshire, not to fire unless fired UJX>n . "We're doing what an army unit is supposed to do," Brookshire sald. "We're breaking deep into enemy territory and blocking their major routes. We 've got a disorganized enemy. He isn't fighting because he doeso 't know what he is doing." Brookshire said his men hoped to un- cover more supply complexes in deep thrusts at first light Tuesday. He said about 500 "structures" were seen and that they probably held munitions Gad other war materiel. In the Parrot's Beak, hundreds 0£ South Vietnamese armered vehicles 4_rove into Communist base camps on the sixth day of an offensive in which American forces were not directly in· volved on the ground with the exception of about 40 military advisers . U.S. air and artillery support wos behind the Parrot's Beak foray but it was mainly a South Vietnamese -6how. and Saigon reports said it was showing good results. Five thousand more South Vietnamese troops moved into the southern part of the Parrot's Beak over the weekend. Madame Molotov Dies MOSCOW {AP) -Potina Zhem- chuzhina Molotov, wife Of longtime Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov and the woman who put rouge and lipstick on the faces of Soviet women; died Friday of canct!r in a M05Cow hospital, Russian informants reported today. Keepi1ag Cool Meacham said it Is conceivable In 50 or 100 years that the land masses of the globe will be us~ up by mankind and his recreation. He said man may become dependent on the sea for his food. Meacham said the ocean produces three quarters of the globe's oxygen and,. said in 1969 Americans alone con· sumed 5.4 blllioo J)Ol.lnds of food taken from the sea. Speaking of deWcatioo to conservation as a way of life, Meacham said he had every hope that the collct!rned youth will become the savior of an environment that in the past has been treated carelessly. Octanography, he said, was born dur- ing and since World W-ar 11 and its ranks of experts are as yet thin. The success of marine science will depend on th! quality of pei'sonnel in its ranks, the speaker said. Meacham said MSI is a giant step in that direction with "the most pro- gressive curriculum of its type that I have observed in America." He offered the help of himself and his staff ln · \\'orking on the curriculum. ' Meacham presented a blue and white f!ag to the institute as its pennant. There was a model of the physical facilities lo be constructed to house MSt a~ P..i.i:t __Qf ttie. exhlbj_~ hQ~d_in tents at the harbor. Laguna Woman Enters Campaign For Utt's .Seat l\1aggie Meggs of 320 Moss Street, Laguna Beach, filed a nomination petition before the deadline Friday in the special 35th District June 2 election to fill the unexpired term of the late Rep. James B. Utt. Also filing Friday was Thomas· B. Lenhart, Democrat, of Santa Ana. The two late filings brings to seven the number of candidates competing for the term which wHI expire next January J. All except l\1rs. ~teggs, a Laguna housewife, are also candidates in the regular June 2 primary election. in addition to Lenhart, 'they include State Senator John G. Schmltz or Tustin. John Ratterree of Santa Ana, William Wilcoxen . of Laguna Beach. and John A. Steiger of Oceanside, all Republicans and Democrat David Hartman oJ' Santa Ana. Under the procedure of the special primary, il no one candidate receives more than fifty percent of the total votes cast, the top Republican and Democrat will participate in a runoff vote J une 30. Regetta, year-old pet racoon of Darrell Allen, 12, cools off in \vheel· barrow at Allen home, 2569 EJden Ave.,'.Costa Mesa. Darrell, a stu- dent at Harper School. found Regetta When the racoon was just a baby last July near the Salton Sea. Darrell was on a camping trip al the Hme. • , Stanford Students Protest STANFORD (UPI) -The largest disruption of operations in Stanford University history broke out today. Hun· dreds of students and faculty members went on strike in protest against U.S. action in Cambodia. Simmering disrontent and violence caused by a small band or radicals during recent weeks g a v e way to massive protest action which was generally peaceful. Whole departments, including the school of law, voted to discontinue classes. Others held antiwar seminars instead of their regular courses. A survey at mid-morninii: showed at least 1. 700 of the university's nearly 11,000 students were participating in the strike. Administrative operations we re brou,iht to a near Slandstill by students who blocked entrances to many buildings, turning seCretaries and administrators av.•ay. A traffic "stop'' SiJtn wa s uprooted and posted in front of the main entrance to Encina Hall, the admini stration build ing, which only a few employes were able to enter. \ ~ Last week police were used to clear an entrance to the building, but today few campus police were in sight. University President Kenneth Pitzer pleaded for moderation in the protest and protection of the rights of those students who wantl!d to allend to their learning. • 2-Co1mty Chase . ' DARK-SPAC ES SHOW RED SANCTUARIES IN CAMBODIA Janitor Foils Robbery Of Cycle Rider ~f Buena Park, Store Ends in Crackup A JS.year-old motorcycle rider led police of two cities on a two-count y high speed chase Sunday which ended when he was catapulted from his cycle in La Mirada in Los Angeles County. "It was a miracle he didn't kill himsel f and a score of others." said Fullerton police offi cer Kenneth Crawley, who started the chase when he noticed that the youth's motorcycle did not have a 1970 license tag. During the nine mile chase at speeds up to 100 mi)es an hour. five Fullerton and four Buena Park police unit! pursued the flee.ln_s youngster. The chase ended on a dirt road in La Mirada after the motorcyclist had cut across a dirt field , through con· struction barricades and over a five-foot embankment. He suffered only cuts and bruises in the crash. He was charged y,·ith reckless driving ·and attempting to avoid arrest and lodged in juvenile hall . The youth told police he fled the officer because. "J didn't want to have my motorcycle taken away from me." He doesn't have it toda y. NY Bombing Suspects Ente1· Guilty Pleas NEW YORK (AP) -Samue1 J . 1'-1elville and two other defe11dants plead· eel guilty ill federal court today to plot- A $40,000 holdup of a Buena Park the 7 p.m. closing time. They rounded department store was foi led Sunday night up six employes but overlooked janitor \Yhen a Spanish-speaking janitor slipped Manuel Pena, 22. outside and got a woman to call police. Officers said Pena, who doesn't speak 1'wo suspected gwimen surrendered to English. ran into the store pii.Jking lot officers after holding six K -~ art \\'here he saw Mrs. Al Garcia, wife employes hostage for. almost 90 minutes of one of the hosta ges, waiting. in the v.•hile police surrounded the store at car for her husband. • Lincoln Avenue and Valley View Street. In Spanish, Peria told her what wa~ Arrested were Harold F. Garr. 42. happening and she ran to a nearby and Ronald L. Corley, 37, both of West market and telephoned police. Covina. Eleven Buena Park policeme n were Officers charge the pair were pushing reinforced by patrol unit! from Cy press a shopping cart loaded with the loot and La Palma and by Orange County towanl the fl'tlnt exit of the store when sheriff's deputies. police cars arrived. l'he: store parking lot became an anned Police said the holdup men evidently camp during the tense 90 minutes. A slipped into the store and hid just before crowd of about 400 curious people gathered on the perimeter as the drama ;\lien to Issue Bay Swap Speech Orange County Supervisor Alton E. Allen of Laguna Beach has called a press conference for 9 a.m. Tuesday at which time he will mali:e a "startling statement" on the Upper.Newport. Bay land exchange, according to one of his aides. unfolded. Police Chief Dudley Gourley led a 5quad of shotgun-armed officers into the building where the two holdup men had thei r hostages cornered in the ad- ministrative offices. The chief communicated with the ban· dits by loud speilker and telephone and eventually talked them into surrendering. During tilt 90 minutes, Corley called hls wife in West Covina and threatened to kill himself. She evidently talked him out of it and he surrendered his gun to one of the hostages. I MOflday, Mq 4, 1970 'H O~ILY PILOT 3 Kosygin Assails U.S. Reje~ts Geneva Me~t on Indochina · .. I • • MOSCOW (UPI) -!Prtmler Alexei N.Kalylla 1oday'ttjoclecl a new Geneva Conference on Jlilpchlna and said the Soviet Union "caps on all ·Uii,e peop_les of the world~ ·to 1lop the a.ggresmon In Cambodia." • He accuSed tbe UnHed .States of a "crude vk¥aUoa .. j ot the. G en e v a agreemtrito In Indochina .and ol lryln/l 1o draw Southeast Asia i•to tb· di.ilitary blocs. "These are imperialist .. dUfeSSive aim& ali<O lo tbe lnleresll of the people llld lilerdOH lllej'.~ ineYltibly doom«! to rauure,1•·JM1 aaid. Speakinl ,''I' the rlnt Moacow , news conference 'he h~s htld ainct he sue· ceeded Nikita S. Khr111hchev In 1914 be 11id~ "Now la :_90t the ·time for confeitnces, It ls the time for. act1oft1" "Now the. Soviet eovemment call• on all the peoples of the world to• 1top the agcr•sslon In Cambodia." . Kosygin ·~ in a sovernment guest hou5e In the Lenin Hilla on the edge of Moscow. "For Wasbingt.on to explain the .actlon In Indochina WP-deoi&n<d lo ..... the ' -Citizen's-Right to Reject 'Dirty Advertising' Upheld WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme C.Ourt today upheld a law which allows a per80a to bar advertisln'g from his mailbo~ if he decides it Is too sexy. The law was challenged by 14 mail order houses, book publishers ud others, who claimed it .Jnterferes with their right to Irie communicatioo through the man. The-vote· of the eigbt-man~l was unanlmoos with OUef Justjte Warren .. E. Bura:er speaking for the majority. Burger said for the court : "In eUect, Congress has erected a wall -or more accurately permits a cltlu:n to erect a wall -that no adverUser may penetrate without his acqulesenct. The cootinuing operative effect of a mailing ban once imposed present.s no con· slitulional obstacles." In other actions, the court: -Upheld by a 7·1 vole a New York State tax exemption on church-owned property that is used for religious purposes. The la\v had been challenged by a lawyer y,·ho owned a Slaten Island property which was taxed $5.24 a,year. -Ruled that a defendant who pleads guilty in court "voluntarily aad In· telligently" cannot later try to upset his conviction on growids that his action was uncoasUtuUonally coerced. The 5-3 decision in three cases meanl lhe court reruRd to· broaden its ruling that lhe Lindbergh kJdnaplng law was defective because the death penalty could -~ · fm. posed Ofllrto-a·delendant who u~nt ~ trial by jury. . The law ' on wiwanted mall autborlzes any addrusee to take steps to ltOp "pandering advertisf!menll" wblcb he believes to be. "erotically aroustna or sexually provocative.'' He can ask the post ofrice lo order the finn to take his name off the malling list. The firm can get a post office hearing if it wishes. In the event of rioncompllance, the postmaster general may ask the attorney general for a C<lUrt order to stop the malling. The mail order houM:s told the court deletions cost $5 a name because the lists arc not alphabetical . Rioting Trigge1·s Gm1f ire On Ol1io Campus; 4 l\.illed KENT, Ohio (AP) -Four persons \rc re killed ind al least 12 others wound· ed by g u n f i r e as Ohio National Guardsmen broke up an unauthorized rally on the Kent Stale University cam· pus, Monday. !See Protest Roundup. Page 4). The \vounded were taken to Robinson l\.1emorial Hospltal in R8venna. Tile h05pita\ reported it had four persons cxinfirmed dead. Witnesses said the shooti ng came after guardsmen moved in with tear gas to disperse a rock-throwing crowd of 400 to 500 students, in the Commons area near Taylor Hall. Doug Moore , a student photographer, said he saw guardsmen shooti11g into the air. Some 800 used bayonets and tear ·gas to break up demoMtratlons Sunday night in 1he third straight nlght of antiwar protests. Sixty.two persons, mostly students, were arested. Two young pe$le were hospitalized aod eight other persons treated ror less serious injuries. Offlclals said at least one student Y.•as injured in the back by a bayonet and one Guardsman was hurt · ~y a rock. Police said two girls were arrested car· rylng knives and orie youth was arrested Y.'ith a rifle and bandoller of ammunition. An estimated 1,200 dem~trators were driven back to Kent State's campus after marching lnlo town la defiance of a city curfew and an emergency ban on outdoor meetings in Kent and on lhe campus. lives or American aoldlen -that is 1t.rana., logJc," Ko.tiln aald, rtad1n1 from notes. before televilJon carueras. He z.,'4,/tfle-..,Amertcan action "ls a crude vJOiiOon of International law, and as auch it should be denounced." He said that "If tbe U.S. gov~nt really wants to aave the live1 of hundreds of American soldJen then thttt Is a simple solqtion : Do not 5eDd American · soldiers to Laoa, Vietnam and Cam· bodia." Speaking sternfy. he said the United States was expand.Jn& the war in Iridochina where its "main 1oal ir to suppress prop'eulve regimes .and subject them lo American interests." He ' tbe Unlled Stales o1 Cir· ryina . OU "barbarous bomblnp" and 1ettlni up tratloa campo. · "Who ga e the United Stales the r!iht to be the e ol what Is pd and what Is ba for other peoples? Who gave it-the. rfabt to be an international genda nne? "Nobody a ave them this right." He warned uthe result of the invasion of Amtricao troops (Into Cambodla) can cause further complications In the iii· temaUonal situation." Noting what he termed a discrepancy between the WQrds and the deeds of President Nixon, he said, "The govern- ment of the United States In fact i1 strengthening even more it! aUJ'tSSlve militarist course." He said ''the people of lndoch1na have the right to be masters in their own home. "The expansion of A m e r I ca n. aggression in Southeaat Asia will meet a re.solute rebuff from the side o( tbe people of Vietnam and Cambodla and all peace-loving people. "The Soviet government will draw the respective conclusions from such actlooa of the United States government," Kosygin warned, ending his U.mln ute statement and accepting questions from the assembled correspondents. Asked whether the Russians would reassess tbeir positloa in the Strategic Anns Limitation Talks (SALT) in Vienna in view of the new situation, Kosygin rtplied, "President Nixon first of all should have thought over h!J actions before he slarted the invasion of Cam· bodi " a. Kosygin made it clear he oppoHd reconvening of the Geneva conventiOn on Indochina. He said that "now that the mililary action is under way, it is neceuary to stop the aggressor. It mu.st be dont by all sta~. · "Now is the Ume not for conferences ; lt is the timt for act.ion. '"Ibe Sovi~Jl~v~ ""'· ctlb on all · lhe peGl?le& of the world lo stop the ll!ll"Slion ii! Camboclia." Protesters Scuffle · Near U.S. Embassy AUCKLAND. New 7.ealand (AP) ~ Fifty demoMtrators invaded the U.S. Consulate today, smeared the U.S. aeal and an American flag with red paint and hwia·a Nail flag. • ting to blow up government buildings with dynamite bombs last fall. He has been a staunch supporter over the years of the land trade with the Irvine Company which wouJd result in the trahsfer ol. 157 acres of county tidelands .property for 450 acre! of Irvine Company land in the area. Police were to question tilt suspects today on two other K-Mart holdups in the Les Angeles area in recent weeks. Both or them toot place on Swiday nights and $75,000 in loot was taken in one of them. Auµ>oriti es were reported holding a man who carried news credentials and a iun. bu l it was not known immediately what. if any, role he had played in the shooting. An order to force them back to the campus came after demonstrators bea:an presenting new demands to Guard Of· ficers- The demomtraton were ·protesting U.S. military action in Vietnam and Cambodia. MOit of. them left when asked to do 110 by police and Consul Joaepb Roland. But 14. were arrested when they refused to leave, and three otbu1 1 wer11 arrested in scuffles outside the office. ' El Rancho has the hottest price SUPERIOR ••• BEEF • in town! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Four ounCIS eadt ••• big enough for safu!action! Hcnt 'c1n a! they come ••• enjoy a. fiPsta this week! Enchiladas ...................... ~ ........... 39 ~ Taco Sauce· ................................ 19~ Van de Kam.p's •• 1"Bee!, ChC'c."l', C'.1:r?>t'nl 7¥:! oz. -Ro~nrita ••• all the zest you ,,·ant! .•.. 7 oz. Chili and Beans ....................... 39~ Refried Beans ............................ 29¢ Hormel's, •. heat i\nd serve! 1 ~1/2 oz. can. r.osarita •.. easy to serve, great to eat! ••• No. 2',t Compl,ete tlie ltfcxican. menu 1vith finrr prod1lcC.' Fresh Green Onions . . ....................... ~.~··· ............. . Garden goodneM you·d expect'from Et Rancho! Snappy flavor to t1nhance ao many diahes! All invil4ti°" to ttrVe home niadc chili.' Ground · Beef for Chili ......................... ~~ ............ 69~ El Rancho quality beef ••• frMh ground '.'chunky" atyle to make richer, mi atier ChiH I Mt'fllt 71M:rta ar 1 caaier u;hctt 1101' bigi" flt El Rancho! Young Beef Liver ... : ... ~ ...... 69~. 1'endt>r , .• mild flavored ••. because it's selected with you in mind ! \){hy not liver and onioru this \veek? Sliced Bacon .. :. . . . ................... 89~ El Rancho's ••• thick@r !llt'(.'S •• o.J'Anch 1tyle ! Braising Ribs ............................ 59~ Hearty b<ef foodne ss ••• 'erve with noodles! I J, 1.fake it a Mexican meal ..• :salute our Southern neigh. hors as they celebrate "Cin· co de Mayo'' Pricta in. effect Mon., Tuea ., lVed., ~la.11 4, 5, 6. No aalea to ~nlcra. \ ) ARCADIA: SUllltl 1nd"llunliniton Dr. (El Rancho c.nter) PASADENA: ilo Wost co1011do Blvd • . sount PASADENA: frtmont and·Huntinitcn Dr. HUNTINGTON BfACll: W11M1.1nd Al,Onqain (lloorclw•lk Cen~r) NEWPORT BEACH: 2717 Newpart Blvd. ond 2555:Eutblu n Dr. (tulbluH riu.,. Cea!M) , . ~ I • • -041LV PILOT Mon01, MQ' 4, 19m I Senate Panel: ~Indochina Presidential War' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Th• Stnate Foreign Rel11lonti Committee aceu1ed lhe Nixon administration loday of a takeover o( the war and treaty po"·ers of Congrus. It said the exe<:uti\'c braoch \\'iS con· ducting a "constitutionally unauthorlltd, prtsldenUaJ wir in Indochina." The committee made the chara:e• · rn a report to the Senate recommtndlng repeal of the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin resolu. tlon which authOrized the President to take IU!CtlS&TY steps to repeal Com· munilt •wesslon in Soulheut Asia. Although the Nixon admlnlstralio11 is not ri:lying on the Tonkin resolution In a bid to end rowdyism at Harrogate, England's late night film shows, theater manager Btn· ton 5.y111111Pn1-h<!> de~r~ that al! men attending the shows must be accompanied by women. • Denitl P. l•rtoli, 52, of Chjcago, a1 ~uthorlty for its actions in Vietnam and el!ewhere ln IDdochina, the com· mittee sald repeal of the cootroversial grant of power would "clear the air oJ a l~acy o! confusion and llleglU· ffiBC)'." • "It wou ld remain then for Conartss to determine how the constitutional vacuum ahould be filled," the re-port said. "UnUI It doet. or until peace Is made, the execU:tJVe will be conducu.ng a con· sUtuUonally unauthortud, presidential war in Indochina." · The committee sharply criticized Pr.es1dent Ni:lon'a decision to !!end U.S. troops Into combat ln Cambodia, It declared: "Thti conunllment without the consent or knowledge..,of Conarw or at I e a s t 11,Q'.lo American soJdiers to fight in C1n1. bodla ... evldeOCE:s a convlctton by tne executive that It Is at liberty to tanor1 the national C()mmltment! resolution and to tsKe over both the war and treaty pov.·ers of the Congress w h e n congressional authority in these areu becomes inconvenient.'' The commitroents resolution. Jecally nonbindin.1 barrtd the use of t r o op s abroad wlipout cona:reMlonal consent. The report wu issued as the com- faces a charge of polluting the air. Bartoli was arrested in his North Side ap8rtment Ttlur-sday as he threw hundreds of pieces of paper from his window. The pieces of pa- per were·records of horse bets. po- lice said. Bartoli was charged with being the keoper of bets and viola!· ing the city's air pollution ordin- ance. CONSl!RVATIVES TRIUMPH IN TEXAS Btnt1tn (left) Wins ; Yarborough &Mt•n • Tht Paulsboro. N.J., Borough Council is considtri11g an ordi· nance that would prohibit a polictman from getting drunk -off the job as well a$ on . Pub· Y arhorougl1 Loss in Texas Raises Republican Hopes • Uc Safety Director John D. .l · Bunichelli explained that a policeman is on call 24 hour3 a da.y -and !hould be in shape to go to work. _, !'>~~ ,. •r 1 .. ,. F'or1n. studying }arm shoula be lhr raption f or t.his scene at Churc/11/, fJowns. Louisville, Ky .. which hoste rl the Ke ntucky Derby Sa turday_ Claudia Hall. 22. Kent, Ohio, is re· tiiewing of the fitlri of horse! and 1ock.ey.s which ran i n the 96th ctasslc race . • Firemon in S~ellord, England, 1.ook an hour Tuesday to free 3- year-old Mlchatl Wl11on'1 finger after il got stuck in the bell of his toy telephone. ' DALLAS (UPI) -The defeat or liberal U.S. 5e'11. Ralph \\'. Yarborough will give Ttxas a more conservative delega- tion in Washington nexl year and brightens Republican hopes of capturing the state's second Senate seat. Yarborough's defeat by Hou s Ion millionaire Lloyd M. Bentsen Jr. in Saturday"s Democratic primary puts Bentsen in the November general election again.st another Houston millionaire. U.S. Rep. Georee Bu.sh (R·Tex.). Republicans pri vately had hoped for t.he ouster ol Yarborough, 66, 5ince rt likely will reopen the old liberal-con · ~ervative ~plit among Trx1s Democrats and perhaps t1rive seine I i be r a 1 s dlsr:ontented 11•l\h Bent.sen into the GOP ranks. "I couldn't be happier." Bush s<i id Su,1day after his easy win over Dr Robert lo-1orris of Plano in the GOP primary. "I couldn 't be more elated . Nor could l be more confident abou· 11•inning In Novemb<'r ."' r-.1orris indical.ed his loss lo Bush part! \ras due to Repub!icani voting in I! • !)emocra~ie primary. "They "'ere rlrawn as by a po'll1cr: \ ac uum cleaner into the Democratic p: ty to vote for Bentstn, or rather agair Yarborough." he said Su11day. The errtire Republican hierarcy v. '!lated over U1e election results. Tht> 11 as a universal feeling among th<' tllat Bush, who lost to Yarborough i the 1964 elections by 300,000 votes. cou ' more ea sily v.·in over Bentsen. The GOP doubtless ly will pl;iy up th 1 i be r " J. c onservalive fuss amo11; Democrats and will make serious efforts to woo as many of the liberals as lhey can. But despite their slightly brighter prospree~, Bus~ still will go into lhe Cooler Weather general election .scrap with Be.itsen as the unck>rdos. · Bentsen .,.,ill cont inue to enjoy and profit from the ful support of former Gov. John P. Connally, one of the sla te's shrev.·est poli ticians and a master organizer and money ra iser. . ' Spock Arrested In Peace Display Ne ar l 'apital \VASHINGTON <UPll -Dr. Benjamln Spock, arrested with 74 o t h e r rfemonstrators kneeling in prayer across fom the \Vhile House to protest tM:ala· lion of the Vietnam ""ar. was free lodey ;iflcr forfeiting $~ collateral. The protest Sunday by about 150 per~ons was in the form of a religious service in Lafayette Park, directly acrrnis !'ennsylvania Avenue from the White louse. U.S. park po 1 i c" said the ·moll.!ilrators, though ptaccful, had fail· J lo obtain a permit. Ora:anizers of the protest, which ln· uded clergy and laymen concerned ·'IOUt. the '\'ar in Vietnam and the ·llowship of reconcilia tion, said they ad applied for the permil Sunday. Police 11d a 15-day advance notice was re· uired. Others arrested included the Rev. John ~ennelt, president of Union ThcolOllcal Sc1ninary and his "'He: ~::in1 Brown and David •lawk, leaders of Ule: Vietnam r.1oratorium Committee: the Rev. r-.1alcolm Boyd, author of ·'Are You Run· ning \V i th ·Me. Jesus?", and Rabbi Balfour Bric kner. • ID Sight Southland Experiences Record-breaking Heat lOS ANGELE~ "NO VIC IJ'fllY - Mo,111 ft!r Mondt~ bvl 1""' lot •nd low t lovdll .ieio• tOA" Lo.,. tlovdl Mt...0.Y """'1 tnd l uttd•v m~rn+n• M· <omlnt "'"Iv 1unnv Tun .,•• tl!tr- .,_,, C.ooltr dl'f". Hlth MOndlJ I~. l>O!NT COJ'fCl!"PTION TO MEt1(,1.J'f 90 llD£1t -l •t M v•rl1b1t "'ll\d1 "l1M •"" """'"" i'>ollfl ~°"'""' wr1!1•IY I to It kNh !~ t!!r•r>oe"I Men,,v '"" t utMl't' l"t•l~•lnt "'V~t •"<f ~r,,. ...,. (1ou•1 """ • .., ..,t ,..,.,! l\tt"f' 11111dlt.>t ·~ 1f!r•r.oen1 Coo1rr 11411'1. IOli:Tll;EMf SOUTHEll:N tlEYAOA - MQlrtr 111r wllll v11t1J" hit~ cioua, ..,,,.,.,.., 'tWldlr. COflfl~ ""' 01J1fY wllld1 Tllttiffr 1ltt•flOOll 1-111"~ M.,,,. cltr IS M n. C.OA~TAL. ANO INTE llMECl ,1.lt V .. l~EY• -M01!1v ''" wllll IO"'t "I"' CIOl.Nls '~"°""" Tuna4, 11111 ..... CI0\111'1 ll'MI fol ltN M-•J lllt~I 11tf Tu&Mltr -"'"'· CllOftr d•1'1. Hltl\1 Morldl,. TS le to. ~OUTHlllN CAl..IFORNljl, NOUIJ T•tN All:ll\i '-Moll!V Ul• ... !!~ YI •· \ob!• h!tl\ clouft _,,,,...,,,., TUt \Cll Y, i;.u.,.., wlfldl t llf COlll' f w tc11 r Hotl'i\ _,,,,v 6J le 11. INTll!IOlt A"IO OEIEllf ll(j.!QNS -~1' ltl• wflll -""" ti-• ~ TIHIMll't' Hltlll MO!Mit• ~ I~ t0 ~' Wt!~l. Gvtl't' .. ,,.,, tnd "'°' .,n, 11 w,,,.. """' ""'''°" T11t1 M•. ,_ ~lehl )llNllY '"I foi:KMI •l\""""'I IO(llY ffl()l'(j ... : D!IO ftt<~ 1!• • clilllll MlllltUI ''·"· 1u"6t"t t i , t WllJOll n 7'. Pll'"dt t W..lf. ""''' ,, .. ,, ,,1111 .... ,_ ..... ·1 ,.IVllW .,ISSIWtATHIRllJlt •Uf01(C4ST TO 1:GIA.M. (IT t·f ·10 ,,.,, .. '°"' SHOWill1 ' , .. , ... te- l•• ''''\'<"~' ~/.' --i'---·~·~","_'_"_' -\. fAll co.,Cal Thtlrt Wiii bt Ii.to! •l1lt.lt Wind• f'lltll! •PW 111.,ftlM 1teur1 "'"' IM COii,! bttoftllllt wttlt•IJ I .. II ~fl(t'• ·~ li>t •l!tr-1\l ION1' tflfll T~tl<ff•, wll~ -clM• tnti l11t f'llt t!t 1"11 1111r MDrnlnt '"· ltmHftl11r•1 ''°"' ""' Ortnn CHI! "IH r111t1 '""" U It n wl'lllt l"ltnd IM tlflt'I wJll M SI i. 11. W4ltt '""" "'""'' h " '"''"' 11.S. Summar11 Callfart1i• H•t ll ltw l"~c. ,.l....,ut .-.ut " • I A~cllt•••• ·" • . At11n11 " " '" &•ktrl!ltld • " 8l1ma•Ck " " 8Dllt ,, • l'.r>!ltl" " • ·" ••own•••'I~ " " (hlttta " " T ' c 1 .. ,1 .. ,,.11 .. • C>t1 ~I~) " " Dtll'ell " • l"trt WOl'lll " • ...... .. " ~.i .... " " Ho;'Olulu M " l(~n••• C•tv " ,. L•• v .... , " " lOl • ....,1~1 .. • MIU •'! " " Mlnnr1~1H• • " " Ntw 0"M"' " " " Ntw Yt1• " " .M ,. ... ,~ "'''"' • ' Otklt,_, " • O•.lt'-"'t tlW n " ....... " • "''"" , ... 1 .. ,. .. • "•}t .. , •• n " •'-'• n ~ "1"'11¥"'" ~ ~ "'""""" " " lll••lf tiff n • ... """ " " ·-" " $tcr1-10 • " Stlt ltlo• (fl¥ n ,, s-n O"'o " " s~" l"•1"<;1<n n " w111~ " " """" .... " " Tht •mt l " .. mttt.ee met to dlacuu a White House to sit down with 1he Pre1ldent for •n move to tum tlMi aroup·a plan for a Intimate dlacusslot1 -lhe commlttet's prtvate meetln1 with the Pres.ident Into flnt wlth a chief execuOve In 61 YW1. a large aathtrinl ol $0 members of But Nixon last week rtsponded by ConartS!. Inviting the Armed Servlcu ComnUttees Some member• of the commillee in· from both houses o1. Congress to a Tur:.a- dicattd they would boycott v.·hlJe others day breakfaal, and both forel1n1relatlons nld they would attend. committees to a S p.m. cocktail ho u r "He's the only Presldenl we have chit-chat that same day. Some members and the country is at war," Sen. Albert or Fu1brlght's panel contend the gather- Gore ([).Ttnn.), said. ''l ahall be there.'' ing will be so unwieldy they wlll be But Senate Democratic Leader Mike reduced to listening quietly while Nil:Oll M&Nfield or Montana said be would and liis generals point to maps and not ao. charts. The chairman of the Senate pant!, Debate on the new phases of Jhe tltii \\'eek In Ute form of a move to repeal tl'le 19&4 Gulr or Tonkin rtl!Olution -the vehicle which authorlz:ed w1Hmlted ac tion to repel Communlilit agiftSlloa in Vietnam and elsev.·here in IOOochlna. Some members believe repeal would bl almost meaningless since Nixon has not used the resolu lion as 11 basis for current acLivities In the war. In the House, continued debate was expected on three amendments to lht '20.2 billion millt.ary aulhorizatlon bill for majort ~:eapons systems. Two or lht amendment$ seek to restrict Cambodiart- type involvements, while the third seeks lo sanction them . J. William Fulbright (0.Ark.), v.•anted war ¥i'as likely lo continue in the Senate *** *** ~ ** Students Plan Anti-Nixon Strikes By THE ASSOC IATED PRESS ' Campus newsp1pers across the country pJ1nned to call today for a nationwide student strike to protest American military acUorui in Cambodia and the rectnt bombin1 of North Vietnam. Strikes already have been declared at Princeton , the University o f Pennsylvania , Sarah Lawrence and Bryn 1"1awr, the: strike plans were r~ported under way at Notre Dame:, Brandeis Un.ivtnlty and Stanford . A national strike committee o f dele1ate11 from the campuses 11/as being convened for a meeting at George • \ ) Washington University tonight to coordinate policy. The New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, also working toward a national student strike, called for a massive rally in Washington Satur· day to demand immediate withdrav;a\ of U.S. troops from SOutheast Asia. The common slrlke editorial scheduled ror publication today in s t u d e n t newspapers was drawn up Sunday al Colum bia University by editors of 11 major Eastern colleges. Six were present and others parUcipated by telephone. • Eureka!; .-~r t "lllC rich~ Thal bi. ont "ilh lhr ntm' '" c1n r rrm,mber. •. .i1 rb~· can·l )OU tl'mtmb"r abool ii'." Yeah. Ho,.'"" gonna find ii! .. ). The editorial accuses President Nixon or ignoring "the constitution al prerog~tives of ·Congress" by sendin1 troops into Cambodia. Nixon. the editor" \\'role, "has revealed the sham or his policy or Vielnamization." The editorial says "a massive, un· prectdented display of dissent is re:· quired." Drafting the edllorial v.·ere editon from Columbia, Cornell, Ruta:ers, Bryn Ma·wr , Sarah Lawrence and U!e Unlver11i· ty or Pennsylvania. Endorsements quick· l.v came from Harvard, Princetoo. Dartmouth, Brown and Haverford. l h huh. And Otey sta1 open cxlra hours, too. Skould1'1Ntoe11111(. They bt•t oft5cts . all o~er tht piece. •I The name you can't remember. The bank you can't for&et. Huntlng1011 l11ch 8899 Acl,ullt Avt 961·337 7 San Cl1mtnl1 Hun11~1on l11ch 1711} Be1ch Slvct !47°9681 e.,,, ,.,,, ~30 East 111n St. 642·1660 1001 South Er Cam1110 Reil •9.?·8090 l•n Juan C1pl1tr1no J\911 C1m1no C1p1iLr1no •9J..1t•1 ( e...,,,,, •12S 8111 Rd 126-001 1 $1n11 Ana 902 Norll'I Main SJ:S·•Jal 4 Dan• Po11tt 2•~11 La l"ltrt 49&·119J \ T.<'":";•-;"·"""""'""'""' ............ .,..~ ... ..--,.~~~ ... ...,, ............................................................................................ ""' .................... "'"""' ..................... ~-~·,._._ • • "( ' .. • • . ' JODEAN HASTINGS, 642-4321 Ml!Ml.h', Mtr .. Int M ·-U Near Year's End Party Keyed • To Husbands Husbands and friends will be honored when Golden Key of Hunt· ington Beach concludes a busy and successful season Saturday, May 9. Mrs. Robert Mackie is serving as chairman of an 8 p.m. buffet and social which w•ll take place in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray· · mond Morehouse Election of officj!:rs wiU be the first item of bus.Lneis o,n the agenda when..:the-.gr'oup gathers -at 10 a.m. Tuesday.,. May 12. in· the_ home of Mrs. James Franklin,· hospitality chairman. Presiding at the election will be Mrs. James Hughes. Officers will be insta.Ued in Jdne to officially cone.Jude the groui>.,s season of activities 'although committees ·wm· remain-busy throughout the summer arranging the annual fall fashion show and holiday. bazaar. · Golden Key is one of many Orange County grouPJ working for the support. of the Child Guidance Center which offers low.Jee treat· ment for emotionally disturbed children throughout the county. The center will benefit when ·the Huntington Beach organiiation joins other. groups at the City Festival taking place Saturday. May 23,! on the site of the proposed new civic center near the high school. In addition to providing information about the service& avail· able at the clinic, Golden Key members will staff a booth selling hot. dogs and punch. ' ' Members also are collecting ii.onations of saleable merchandise. for their thrift shop and furnishings for the new center offices in tbe St. Joseph complex. Orange. Adult and children's furniture, toys, books, pictures and -other decorations are needed for the center, and area residents with contri- butions are invited to contact Mrs-. Hughes, 847-4676. '· ... '-· j . • .:"".r ·he or sweet? ·Huntington Beach High School students (left to tight) Judy Rosenthal, Chris Geiger and Chris Kasparek ex- amine the sweet and sour things in life for a pickle booth which will be spOnsored by Las Ayudantes, Hulitington Beach Auxiliary of the Family Service Association, dur-· ing the city's first festival taking place Saturday. May 23, at Mafn Street and Mansion Avenue. The sale of pickles or candy kisses will benefit the area through the work of the new association office. Politics Never Dull . By JODEAN HASTINGS Of llM O•llY 'liltt Si.It Although some mayor's \\'ives may find their lives growing a little hectic with the ad- j ditional -activities required, this is not the case with Nola Just. "It isn't hectic because Ed himself isn't hectic -be takes things in his stride," ex- plains the tanned, blue-eyed mother of three daughters including Laura and Alison , \vho attend Harper School , and Diane (Mrs. Roy) Mohr, who lives in Canoga Park. She and her husband have known each other all their lives. Nola's aunt was a friend of Ed's family in Indianapolis and after they grew up. both liked to roller skate so thry started dating. They will celebrate their 26th wedding anniversary in July. Politics is ne ver dull , claims Fountain Valley's first lady whose husband wa s re- elected after already serving as the city's mayoi for six months. "There aJways is an underlying current ..... PARENTS VISITING This campaign \Va s particularly excitinE:'. tor the Justs becau.o;e sharing it with them were Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Just, Ed's par- ents who were visiting from St. Petersburg, Fla., on their first trip to Southern California. Ed also was in the process of opening his own business, so the family found-they were shuffUng business problems and campaifl!ning with treks to Disneyland, Knott's Berry Farm and other major Southland attractions. the-scenes activities. She helped with bro- chures and frequently served as Ed's sound- ing ho.a.rd. Following his election the house w~s so crowded with weU-wlshers she discov· ered that even as first lady and hostess 1he couldn't get in her own kitchen. "If Ed's pleased. I'm pleased ." she des- cribed her feelings after he was elected may· or. TEMPTATION ... Even though she finds that their civic in- volvement doesn't interfere too much with their home life, she confided that after the rigors of the campaign she did struggle with a wifely temptation to "take the phone off the hook and let Ed catch a nap." Both .Ju sts are enthusiastic gardeners al- though Ed 's specialty -roses -require too much pampering for Nola. If she could (ind enough time she \vould like to paint, and she enjoys bowlinl? and s\\•imming which help her keep even with the highly-caloric dinner cir· cuit. Nola loves to cook and has an extensive collection of cookbooks. Mexican food is her downfall, but fortunately her husband's favor· ite is steak. . ('Ed's no cook -be probaply would just live on cheese and crackers," she maintains. Nola tries to keep her clot.bes sinipJ"e, and · select outfits she can dress up or doWn with a choice of accessories.· While '1le feels mini- skirts certainly aren't for eV.,l~f!:. she doesn't feel that midi and. maii length! ever will gain favor again. · ,. ~ •• . • •• • •' .. -'.-: .. : : . . .·, ' . HOME FOR THE CHILDREN -Mrs. Ed Just. wife of Fountain Valley's mayor, admir~s a handsome caterpillar crt:ated by Laura, a kindergartener, while Alison, second -grader, waits for mother to fix ber Br-cap 'boiln f'llng ,off fo meeting. Mrs: Just tries !0°-e her-"~edule IO that she •alwlysis at home W!ien lhe·younpltrs arri:Ve from:'-scllool •. r'f ' ' ' "His parents really enjoyed the cam· paign," Nola said. "Ed is the oldest of ei ght children (the only one in politics) and put lilmself through school, so his parents ·are very proud of him." Nola confined her campaigning to behind· \Vith the opening of ber~ fiusblnd •s man- agement consult.ant business, Nola's role may no~ be obvious .but -just as during the cam-p~1 gn -she w1 U be there -ke.ePing, home a nice place to be for the family. ' ' <::S" ., .. ' . ' .. • " College Soa Goes t~ P~f, Ccin't R~ad 'Keep Off GraSs' I DEAR ANN LANDERS: My '°11 who Is a coUege fl'f:llhrnm doesn't know it but, learned, by acc:idenl. that he not only uses marljuana but. ls selling the stuff to his clawnates. Yesterday I discovered he has iOO'oduced his ywnge:r ANN LA N DERS ~ riidef who observed that 90me very bl!ight . people enjoy lt WI! an un- ckntatement, to say the least. And this ..b only part ol the story. Are you aware \h&t. one. or this country's most diitlnpisbed Amerlcant also enjoyed brother to It. U my husband knew about thil be · lnthll " ~ .. will \aY& IO set would kill the kid. I am so torn lip · wt. • I can't eat or sleep. Please tell me \Vhat to 00. -FRANTIC MOTHER DEAR rtlOTHER: You aeed two things -taformatl• ud eourage. Ltam frtm a lawyer tbe peuldfl for poatenlll and aelllnc martj•au la yoar state. Thea 1pull: .10 yoar IOll (Uae puberl calmly aad flnnly. No hysterin. Espllln wb1t he Is ltttlllg himself 111 for U he 11 u.,iit. Let ltirn know there will be no pot 11 your boutt 11d U M U he 1a11, "Tbe law 11 11 •J 11de. I'm a ml.nor and I don't hive &e &et out," tell ldm: "U YCMI Wiil tt ttt leehnlcal, I cu 1et t.edmlc:ll ..._ U I cata yoa 1molll1 pot LI u.11 ...... I will hint )'OI over k llM: )nede aaUtor1Ue1." If It becomes aece:s•U"Y· mah pod Ott lhreat. TH• aptak .. ~. bnthr ud expl•lll tbe daqen of pol. l':lctWICt Mm ta tall-tt J"IU'·f..O,. peep ahowt:! Would you believe Oliver --I tit " •. KllMI nhi .... YOI Wts*ll HOimes? You can prlnl thi s •1 .without fear of being sued by his ~'t NJ liiw tM tllie ·~ brotber relaUves because it is a matter of record. Is. ··U •lie la•"""'°' llh 111C1a ocbool,. ·l,ook it up anyplace. -THE OLD be ..... tliol -j9w Mp ...... , HISTORIAN ..., ~Mn .....,. COllltlm wllt " DEA.fl OLD HISTORIAN: 1 ' T II e a file j& Ml .... W .. ,.., •ar re_.." 11y1 aotlda1 about peep shows,. -n4 tt 111 '".._.. wM Dvt tt face It 11 1 well bclw• fact, Mwever. tNt ~ pe 111i1 ... 1t•1 ... tf ~ nalbttt. the dJ1Uapllllled SMpreme Coon Justice •CCIJ'ed 1 regular tt•t at the Gayety Tlwaler la W11bhl,..., O.C. And Juat to keep the record 1tralJbt, D1d1 bur- DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm enjoying your nmnln1 batUe on porno1raphy. The leaque in thott day1 showed Jes1 thaa cu nc1w be attn 1l uy toda foutlla, or oa any bus. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a 15--year- old girl who has Md it with my grandmother. She lives in Albuquerque. Grandma cllp.!I your columns out of the TrH>une and malls them to me. I've told her a thousand times we get your oolumn here In the Santa Fe New Mex- 1 lean so she doesn't have to bother. • Whenever you print a column •~t a teenage girl who ls pregnant Grandma circles it with pencil. Lately she has been sending all yuur columns about pot and the big H. I got one yesterday . f am not sleeping with anybody and I have no plans to. I've tried pot a coople Ume.s and it dots not!Una: ~ !"•· st....., ' llulf is• !0< Idiot.. I~ never make t¥t scene. Tell GrandnW to stop 1endlng i:ne your colunins. She"i. getting on my nerves. -ONE 'I'OCf MANY i DEAR GRAND~IA: Slvt your 1Wn,_f l'm 1Ure yoa mun we:U. but your ~ pt"Oaclo 11 pol,.. 10 kldt -so - Ille "•I. . • • • " What is French kissin1 ? ls It wronc Who llhoold set lhe necldni I~ the boy or the 11rl? can ·• "' weddinc s~ceed? Read Ann · booklet, "Teenaa:e Se1' -Tift W ' to CGol JL" Send SO cent.I In coin a long, self-addrt:ssed, Stamped envel°*- ln care of the DAILY PILOT. ~ ,,. ,_., • ' .• . . 'r ' , ' r " "I' • ,. Association Frames Show for Mother's Day Y.our • Horoscope Tomorrow Gemini: Stress Versatility TUESDAY MAY 5 By SYDNEY OMARR More crime• of violence oc- cur chuinl dte Full Moon thaa at any other time of the montb-cbeck your I o c 1 I police departme.al. ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19): New approach to financial prospects iJ a necessity. There is pressure and challenge. You may find that some or your possessions are in need of renovation. Keep up to date. TAURUS (April :!&-May 20): New moon in your sign ac· cents personality, lnJUaUve and ambition . Acce p t respoMibility. Cwld include overtime assignment. Your special efforts will p a y dividends. · GEMINI (May 21-June 20): What occurs behind the scenes may become privileged in- fonnation for you. Stress Movie Enthusiasts library Books Films Newport Beach Public Library has an· nounced a new addition to its ever-expanding list o( services -a new collection o! Bmm films. versatility. 1.1ove witb the tide. Remember one who rnay be temporari ly hanWcapped. CANCER (JUfle 21-July 22): Accent on how ta achieve aspirations. W e I c o m e o~ portunlty to meet people. lngrailate yoorself with in- dividual who has big ideas. You can come up with in- formation of value. LEO (July %3-Aug. 22): New opportuniUes are available. You could be surpri11e d because older individual ad· vacates modern procedure. Be cooperative. Concentrate on professional approach to task at hand. VIRGO (AUii. 23.&.pt. 22): Spotliibt · oo journeys, cor· respondence, closing of com· munication gaps. Child or lov- ed one in 'your age bracket demands attention. Be steps rt<juired for ,greatu security. Stru.s is on how/you develop techniques, mat• safety device.s. suck close to base of operations. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You are acUw:, ew:pend much energy and could have reunion with close relative. Travel seems to be h!Jh on agenda. Avoid confus:lon by checking c!irection.s. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you .are a masne'lc individual, fond of investlg~ting and I! i e c i n I together puzzle pieces. Your curiosity is great and you are seldom saUsfled rih halfway me&SUTes. A unique rela· tionship gets on different foo~. The past makes way for adjustment to n e w circumstances. gracious, giving. Make effort rn To,,,:~ <:".:.i ~!'· 1u~, to;ve1~ 10 keep domestic harmony. 0m1rr'• booli111 ... tcA1 H11111 1or Me~ u111 Worntll." stnd blrllld1t1 LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct, 22): 1nd 50 cH111 to ~rr ...,,,.,~,.. r---with the mysten"ouS SPCrelo, IM DAILY ,ILOT. 9i• 32'41, "-AllK."l:ln Grand Ctnlrl l $t1tlol!. NIW Yol'k, or hidden is evident. Dig deep ;:="=.v=·="=''='·=======:..; for infonna tion. Reject the superficial. If persistent, y-4"1u cxiuld show solid profit. STARS .A.JI types of art work will be on exhibit when the Fountain Valley Arts Association sponsors its annual Mother's Day exhibit between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. in .the Village Center, Talbert Avenue and M~gnolia Street. Frarriing plans for the Saturday, May 9 ex- hibit are (left to right) Mrs. James Merrill, Mrs. William Dunn, president, and Mrs. Joseph Giesing. For all home movie enthusiasts with 8mm projectors, the library is 111aking avail- able rums in black and white and color. Films may be checked out on a three-day basis. The collection includes historical and sport documentaries, travelogues, biograph· ies and excerpts from Hollywood clasiics. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Syd111y Om1rr 11 0111 ef ftie wo rld'1 9r1•t •1lrol1g1r1, Hi1 colufftn i1 1111 of th1 DAILY PILOTS 9r1at f1•fut11. Lie low; do more listening than la11r.ing. Accent on bow much you le arn , i m pr essi on~ lj;ii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iii~ :.Last Days ~ Discussed ~ f~ -Funerals Ind WillJ: Axe You s Prepared? will be the topic 1.s •t a forum !lpOll90fed by the ,...: ('ounlain Valley W om an' .s .~Club. t~ The four-part Weclnffday ~ dbcussion se ri~ will begin al ~ t :45 a.m. May 6, in the com-~ munity center. .fi .All interested women in ~ rOuntaio VaJley are invited ~ fill' attend the ses:sM>ns and ~ learn details relating to an ~ aspect of life t\•eryone en-~ Counters. Mrs. Kenneth Wells ~ Is diainnan. ~ Speakers will include John § Duncan, v.·ho 'tll'iil address ~ t.Qose attending next Wed· ? ~y's program on Estate Hawaii Wedding Trip Selected by Newlyweds Selecting Hawaii fOI'. their honeymoon [Were the formtr Brtdget Elizabeth Cummiogs and Dr. Robert C. Starken-- burg, both of Corona de! Mar. The Rev. David Di Profio conducted the afternoon single .a. ring ceremonies in Christ Church by the Sea, Newport Beach. The bride, daughter o( 1.1r. and Mrs. Clyde C. Cummings of Temple City, asked her sister Sheilah Cummings to be lhe maid of honor. Attending the son o( 1.1r. aod Mrs. Gilbert Sarkenburg tJ( Temple City, was his father as best , man and Ross and,. Philip Starkenburg, h i .s brothers. Scott Cummings, the bride's nephew was the ring bearer. MRS . STARKENBURG CdM Home Nursery Welcomes Parents An opportwiity to oboerve youngsten in actioo will be Films are available at Mariners Library on a first come first served basis. ., Mesa Nursery School Staging Open House provided parents and in· Preschool children and thrir the Orange County Council of terested area residents when parents are fnvtted to an open Parents Participation Nursery Huntington Beadl Community house at HUI Top Nursery Schools. Nursery School hosts an open School Jn Costa Mesa on :r-.1rs. Sara Wallace, pro- house in the First Methodist Wednesday, May 6, at 9 a.m. fessional teacher. runs the Church. The school is licensed by school. The program is geared E~pecially welcome between the State Department of Social to help childmt gain in· 9 and 11 a.m. Wednesday and \Yeliare and is a member of dependence, to express Thursday, May 6 and 7, wil l themselves through art and be parents whose youngsters to develop happy relationships are beti,•:ecn the ages of J and Speaker Named with other youngsters. 5 interested in the parent· Included in the d a i I y participation n u r s e r Y pro-Bell Gardens Community schedule are indoor table ac· gram. Center director. the Rev. Ray tivities and crafts, music, Fathers will be guesl.s o[ Heer will keynote St. Andrew's story times, indoor-outdoor honor between 10 and 11 a.m. Women's Fellowship Spring free play, dramatics and car- Saturday, May 9. Add itional Brunch. ing for pets. Fields trips to information regarding the pro-The session will begin at the fire a&tion, zoo, bakery grams may be obtained by 10 a.m. Wednesday, May 6, and ·tide pools are planned. calling Mrs. Dennis Landers, in (he church's fellowship hall. AdditioDal information may you make on public. Mate or business ~r shoutg .be pennilled to take initiative. J & J UPHOLSTERY ... ,, .. ,, OUALITV, 1irr.o•m. S••VICI, caAl'f SM.ulSHI,. WI ACC•'1' CHALL•HO•I WI LIK E o•AUTll'UI. PUl.NITUl.I 642-5876 '4W051 SAGI'MARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Finish projects. Get busy on chores which have been neglected. Diet, prdper pacing a r e especially im-1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;~ portant. Be moderate in basic h habits. Avoid extremes. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): New moon could shine on .. romantic eve'lling for you. Throw off past burdens. Begin anew. You have earned right to happJness. There is no need for guilt feelings. Come alive. AQUARIUS (Jan. 26-Feb. 18): You gain new insight to MIMOIY LANI HAQOI CINTll FOR MOTHER'S DAY FINEST SELECTION OP PHOTO FRAMES I• OrMt• C•1111ty • Wall & EaHI Types • '"'"' L'r-.... ,-1 .. . t. 1.,.., .. . • Alie re•dy·M•de p1inh, oil1, 1h .. fr1m11 for The THINKER ~ FRAME SHOP r lll L 17tll St., C.... M .. Plaming .and Tax , Oo May U, there will be a di.9cussion ! and review of his talk, and ' oa May 20 Decatur Dilday of-Dilday Bros. Funeral Direc· Tile former Miss CummiDg11 attended P.asadena C i I y College. S36-4897, or -l!.1rs. Ben Katz, The center receives finan· be obtained from Mr 1. "''"' "" l1hind lnt1rnation1I ~963-":'.::2~7~80~·~~~~~~~_.:•~i~al~~~-d~fro~m~st:·~And~re~w~··:·~~T~hom~as~P~""~"~'~a1~833~·~2834~.~~·='"'=="='~"="~'=v~·='==,,,;;;;==,,!!.~~~·~·~··~·~··~H~·~.,~·~~~ is affiliated with Delta Tau 1- ~s will speak on funeral re· qUiremenb. Dr. St atkenburg, an orthodontist in F o u n t a i n VaUey, was a student at the University of California, Sant<1; Barbara and uc·s Medical School in San Francisco. l1e Delta, Delta Sigma Delta, American Association o l Orthodonlists and the Orange County Dental Society. • ~On Mly 27 all memberlf ~ and guests will meet at Dil6ay's chapel for a tour of The newlyweds are making thei r home in CorO'l'la del Mar. tbe facility. .. . · . . . BEAUTY SAVINGS! loo• 1m••f ill I n1t11ri n• f•thio"•bl. 1prin9 1iyl1! Go 1h11d -P1mper youro1lf, but 1tlll 1tr1t,h your bud91!. SHAMPOO· SET HAIRCUT HI STYLE MON.; TUES., WID. 52.45 ......•. 51 .50 . . LA.Tiit WllK '2.95 •2.00 SHAMPOO-SET ...• , .... . $2.95 $2.00 $3.95 HAIRCUT .............. . Ill WMk ::~:~:;n!~~.~h~T.i.PERM .$ 5 ~o~pr.t. '15" WONDER CURL PERM ."ti~t •• 59.95 Crownfng Glory BEAUTY SALONS Appoin:m.entJ ,,,,./come buJ not. always ~1ary : OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAY CttOWNING GLOR .. 267 -I . I 7th ST., COSTA MESA ~N~!ll 541·9919 . ' / I --~~~~~~~--OPEN EVENINGS CROWNING GLORY (t.,,....tr C•~riu .c.lff.,...J SOUTH COAST PLAZA "-" "-"~' .. *'- PHONE 546-7186 I 'Tell :111 the dftlll li.e you want lo weer, and ft'U ten you how many Yilitil it will •lie llDd 1wuanleo in wridn1 that )'OU •ill reec:h )'OW' pl. Tn fact. • •bloJutely positiW! are we tbs& JOU •ill obtain )'OtJI' ob}eclive, thlt n stated iB our ,uan1.nt«, "II will even let yw haw FREE OF CHARGE, uy and •ll furthot ,mu. until .)'Oii l"lllC:h your aoel. 'Thi! time it Dkt. tor .-eh pn90n lo act\iew her pl ~ ,..,,., howeNr WE GUARANTEE RESULTS beNt)ODL . ___ lJJ_oM. ~'-C..J -NEWPORT BEACH ...... Wpst --......... Qlfl ••• ae ....... CtOrerllla 11.~-1 FIGIJBE CONDIOL SALONS NkT H. ur. N •......,.... -...._ • llllnl ~ • ...._ ALSO IN A11••IM, ~nf1t•, C...Slt9w, De,,..,, OIMtffle,, lAtneH, t.. Y .. os. &..i.t llMc .. , ~" ...... N. H.ltfw ... , O...rl .. , ........ 01 .... .S.,• ....... s.t. lerMN. IHfoH, ,... • • 430 PACIFIC COAST HWY. . 642-3630 (2 Blocks Eut of Balboa Jlay Club) 1911•, ,.,, ... , •• ,Wtltnief. '• 1840 W. 17th ST~EET S0-9457 SANTA ANA (CJ C:opyright .J9.7Q G1oria Marshall Mgt. Co. Inc. • • .. • F~1111'8i11 Valle,-: E-OlflON VOL. 63, NO. 106, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAG ES -• .. ·• 1es ee , ~eadline Today Teachers Study New Salary Offer By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI ot tM Delly Pli.t Slaff Teachers of the Huntington Beach Union High School Di.strict today are pondering a new salary offer made by the board oC trustees. The propo.sal, which includes a $7 ,293 Heat Brings Big Cro wd To Beaches A bot sun brought the crowds to Hun- tington Beach's 81h miles of strands at the weekend but a cool !ea and low surf kept them out of trouble. City lifeguards were kept working feverilhly with rescues, first aid cases and lost children, but there were no &erious mishaps. The story was the same for the state lifeguards who watch over Huntington State fjll'k and Boba Chica Beach. "It was almollt like fourth of. July out ttae<;"' l.if.,....U ._ •ilor Knut Skjonberg said thesi morning." "I have never seen ao many on the Bolsa Qllcai ..._ beach •nd it was atmost u bad at Huntington State Park." "Fortunately the surf was very light and we had no trouble hand.ling the crowds. It was like a big Jake out there." SkjonbeTg estimated the Bolsa Chica crowd at 20,000 and lhe Huntington State Park tot.al at 40,000. The lifeguards were kept busiest with lost children. 'They had more than 50 o{ them. As usual, the crowd was even bigger on the mile-long municipal beach. City lifeguard Captain D o u g 1 a I D'N'na.11 had 121,000 visitors and logged 111 rescues, high for the time oC year, over the weekend. The crowd was as,ooo on Sunday with Q rescues. The air' temperature was 78 degrees at its highest but the water temperature wu a chilly 57 degrees with the surf v8!?.'.ing from one to three feet . • tt's a good job the water wasn't wanner or we would have had a lot Jl)(re to do," Capt. D'Ama11 said. nte lifeguard said the high number of rescues was because there were many inshore boles. "Thi.a occurs when the &ea bot.tom in unequal," he said. "A person can be walking along and then suddenly find blmself out of his depth. This situation Is almost as bad as a riptide for us." to $14,586 pay range, was delivered into !heir hands Friday. It represents the answer to a teacher-set deadllnt to end negotiations by today. A decision on the ol'!er Is tchedu!ed for 3:45 p.m. TUl!sday as the teachers meet in general ses.1ion in the Edison High School gymnasiwn. Carl ManemaM, president of the District Educators AssociatioD (DEA) Which represents the teachers in wage negotiations, sa.id earller the purpose of the session will be to "eitller ratify an agreement or assess the aituat ion for possible alternatives." Last year, when negotiations reached an impasse, tbe teachers participated in a work slowdown and one--day walkout, the first in Orange County history. In five negotiating sessions between board representatives and members of the DEA negotiating council, the teachers have held to a $7,500 to $15,577 salary range. 1bere are still differences in tenns of fririge benefits, sabbatical leave pay, clan size, aummer workshop funds and IU--·pay, ~·aaid. DEA representatives have pripoled that. pmnissive tax override funds .lit livtOii to 'aOcare' dell!al ... .,...., life insurance, increaaed paid supervision and optical care. The board bu o(fered an additional $150 per employe for these benefits, bringing the tota l up to $5&9. The trustees have also rejected a de-- mand to increase aabbatical leave pay from SO percent of a teacher's s a l a r y to 75 percent until an evaluati~ shows whether it would be worth it. In class siu, the DEA has recom- mended a 27 to 1 student teacher rati9, based otr actual classroom attendance. The trustees, while not accepting the DEA proposal, did agree t-ct a review of the method by which class size is detennined. Both sides have riacbed an bnpasse on a DEA proposal which wou1d aUocaie ooe half of one percent of the district budget for curriculum revision and deve}opmeflt throogh summer worbhops. Trustee representaUves have termed the demand "too limiting" and suggested that each school and department define its cuni.culwn revision in terms of higjlest need. , Paid period substi.tutioo Is anolher bone of contention with the teachen proposing a flat $10 per hour for substitution work. The trustees, on the other hand, have offered to "develop guidelines to best meet the respective needs of each school." Culture to Get Attention .. With Valley Observance CultlD'e will have its week In Fountain Valley May 1%-17. A c:hildl<n's production of the Wlzard of Oz will start tbe heart of culture week ticking on May U at Fulton School. 1bt women's division of the chamber of commerce has initiated the city's first 'try at a week-long display of talent and exhibits by schools, clubs and residents. On Y 13, music and. ar1 fetqvals are uled at Bushard, Cox, Founlaln Valley, , Nleblaa and Monroe elementary llChoota. Fountain Valley library will - a boot di!ICllDion and an u:hJbit of liqulil em~ In the community cent•-are-1Vltllble -the same day. Newland School will diaplay an .,..y project and stodenu at McDowell Sd>ool w111 .. 1ebrate pioneer day. A pc:oductloo of "The Cniclble" wlil RUirt May 14 at Fountain Valley High School and nm three days. A apeaktr on It.amp collecting wtil appear, at the community cent.er on May 14. Travel films and a prwchool sl<lry hour at the library will be featured that day. In .the evening, residents may attend a performance by a Gmnan band and hear apcaken from Ille AFS ltudents abroad 'prOIJ'am. Art alld mlllllc lesUnlt will alao take I I place May 14 at Arevalos, Gisler, Lamli and Tamura Schools. A wider range o{ actlviUes will be offered Friday, May IS, with a children's ballet performance and madrigal singers at Ute commWlity center and the opening production of "Out of the Frying Pan" that night and Saturday at Los Amigos High Sd>ool. Travel films will also be shown at the library and Wardlow School will put on a dance festival. On Saturd8iy, May 11, a Full llChedule d eve:nl! are p1~ at the community center. There will be flower. hobby and art lhowa from 10 1.01. ,lo 5 p.m. JunlOI' orpru..tiona and 1unJor community tlieBter #Ul iJao dhplly their Wll'el. A brklge t.otttnamtnt will 1tart at I p.m., Salm<lay, followed by the first Mayor's Inaugural Ball at 1:30 p.m. in the cOmmunlty center. Prkt o( Uckel.I to tbe bell ls 110 per couple. Sunday, May If, la tbe last day or scheduled activities for Cultural Week. From noon to s p.m., repeat.I of Saturday'• exhlbtt.s will be shown and througboot Ille day Ja-. Mexican, and tap dances will be featur«S. • At noon the public ii invited to tnJoy a "pioneer pltnlc" in the clvJc ccnttr 111rklng lot at join • bus tour of the dty. ' DAILY l'ILOT Sltff ll'llttt OFF TO MOBILE Jr. Mi11 C•ndklete Martyn Beach Beauty ~onda Ma11yn . To Seek TitlE: By TERRY• COVILLE or .. D8ftY ,,... !-" lllil-ftiiiiiilo~a ~~ ~ BeaCh lam.ii(W;oatl-1 Jllnlcr Miss p...-,,..~~ .... tholr miDdl -CID I befttllul YOlll!f 1811 from ' tbis city capture' first· for the second straight year? Rhoda Martyn, a blonde senior from Marina High School, left Saturday to attempt just that. She bas already wqn the Ca.Jifprnia crown held by her predecessor Jackie Benington, the reigning Junior Mia! of America, also from Huntington Beach and Malina Htgh School. Miss Martyn is currently 1 n Wa.hlngtoo, D.C., witll-the 49 other state Junior Misses, all on a White &!.lie tour. Tonight they fly to Mobile, Ala., where the Junior Miss Pagffnt will be staged. ' When they arrive in Mobile, the ~rls will be given several days to prep&re for tile May S.1! anest. 'Ibey will also tour ltOR'le of the scenic sites in Mobile. Rhonda, who has been . a loQg-Ume · friend or Jack.it 's, Will . enter her first ~ationa.I competitkri ~widay nig~. with more preliminary judging next Monday night. · The Junior Miss finals will be televised Wednesday, May J3, Meanwhile, back home in Huntington Beach, Ule Martyn family is busy laying out an intricate set of travel plans. "I'm going to join Rhonda in Mobile on Saturday. Her eight-year-old brother Rick will go with me," Mrs. Kenneth Martyn, said this morning. "Her graodlatber, Srdney Cooper, is driving .down .from Detroit on Saturday, then my busbarld and R.hondl.'1 Bister, Lynda, 19,' will IU.ve for Mobile Tuesday, May'l2/' Mn. Ma:rtyn added. ' Mrs. Martyn ..zaid Rhonda . Yf&I having a great Ume in Washington. "She!called us last night and tord .us· how 'Wonderful it Is thert.'' Mental Retarded Vi~ in Olympics More than 100 med\allfi ··retarded youngste,., tool:.p¥t'ln. F"'f!>lil!i V•liey'• fint "Speclal Olymp1cs"1 5aturday at Fountain Valley High Scbliol: · Members of the sponserinf Fountain Va!~ Jaycees called the track and fte!d ~Uon:..."•_1tem.-..:· 1ue.. ceu." . -' r-• . r • All the wort was worth. tt •. Thiy Wert! ~ally a' gat!ful ·bunch o(, kkls," Mrs. Chris Sclu!eldtf, w)lole • IOilbond helpec;I organiie the event, ,Ufd this mom- lni· Mentally retarded youths r r om Fairview State Hoopltal, Costa Meu, Hunllngton Beach Unloo • 11181> School, Ocean VJew, Foontaln Valley and Him· Uogtoo Beach City school d!llltlctl partlclpated. All U-wha toot part In s.turdily'I event! are ell&ible for the ,Orance coUiity "Specltl 01)'111J>lcs," May ·23 In Oarden Grove. · ' ... - MONDAY .~y ~~ 1970' ~ ~ ~ . '· Pair Held lnBigges·t Pot Raid Two men, char&ed wlUI possession of marijuana for Alt, are in custody today in Newport Beach folm'ing their a1Tests Saturday during which Police claim to have confiscated 7$0 pounds of the illegal weed. Narcotlcl Investigator ·Leo Konk•I· said the 'haul was the largait in the history or Newport Beach.· • If sold wholesale, the imPoUnded nar· .cotlc would be worth about $50,oilo. he said.· If sold by the lid (one ounce), Kon· · kel ~aid the marijuana would be worth 1125,000. A1Tested were Gregory Lynn Tucker, 21, of Laktwood and David Glenn Cun- nison, 22, of Cardlf. Watch Commander Earnest Laurin said he was making a routine check or the atta when he spotted the suSpecLt in lhe alley at 21& Lugonla St. Officer Michael McEveny who was called to the scene said the pair were taken into custody when a huge pile ol large bags full oC marijuana was found in ~ir van. . _ " • • 'Quit griping! We're withdrawing from Vietnam, aren't .we?' • Valley Seeking More Space For City Work The staff at Fountain Valley city hall ii looking for D'Kft elbow room. City Manager Jamet Neal Is ready to ask the city council to approve a $4,000 contract with Barry and ADOciates of Los Angeles for a space utiliutk>n study of city b.111. The officer said he saw tht. hap wben he went to make an insj)ecUen of ~ v~~le, whkh WIS alle&~Y i\. ~·' .,,, ~1.11£ ~- Wll f. °lft,::.:: .nf?illlliiit~'Qt p«Jndl. ~waa found in the aara&• at 211 Lugoala SI. "They may find U1 more elbow room by rearranging' olf~ll wJthln cUy MU· or te1llog , ua to up&!lCI Ille building., ~~,!.; p}ajp.t~. • ... -"":•'""'I ' lnvt!ltigaUon .in the cast is continuins. he uid, and more arrests are expected today or Tuesday. "We ~t the marijuana came from Mexico," he added. Beach Council Plans Action On Billhoards H]llltlngtoo Beacll may give · the state • nudge 10 bielp tht city remove highway billbouds. At tonight's meeting city councilmen will consider a motion asking the state Bi.vision of Highways to remove the billboards from Ila~ property in the city. . The · billboards, are along ·C-0 a s t Highway ' aod lo\l(er Beach Boulevard which the · stale owna as freeway right of way. A city sign ordinance banning the billboard11 recently became effective aft.er a five-year amortization period but the boards have nol been removed. The outdoor advertising companles have Indicated that they plan to fight the ordinance in the courts. Tbe ......n w1n· _.. tbe <GOtloct at tta I, .... meet1111.•'llleadl!11 . • Hollywood said the opace.-Ose ·1tudy is needed prlmarJly to find more ltorage rpom for machines and old records. "We're also thinking about microfilm for the storage of a lot of our old records." "Our own state has· been· looking at the problem of erowdin1 for about six months, but before we offer ideas to the council we'd llke to have a pro- fessional ·opinion on what to do. We're not architects," Hollywood added. He listed public works, buJkilng and plannlng department.. as being the most cramped. "We also need space for vault storage, a conference room and ptrbaps microfllm equipment." "Once the space study 1.s complete we plan ·to hire an architect and expand city hall to its full growth thli fiscal year," Neal explained. City hall will then be ready to handl~ Fountain Valley affairs when the city reachel i~ full projected population or 70,000 in ,the next few years. SriH:K MARKET NEW'-YORK (AP) -·The stock marktt resumed its steep decline 1thls afternoon · after str1ngthening-at midday in tJle Wake of Soviet Premier Alexei N.· Kasyg.in's statement concerning ·u .s. involvement In Cambodia. (See quotaUons, Pages ~ 21). /_. Beach.Builders Feeling National Hoztsi~g Slump By ALAN DIRKIN -. Of t11t D•llr ,118t Sl8tf Home builders in Huntington Beach are feeling the housing slump. Bul1dln1 permits Jssued by the city for the first four mo11ths of the year show a drop of more than $$ mHlion in valuation over the first ' four months of 1960, Blilldlns dk..tor Jack Cleveland said this rnofnirig, "There's no doubt that the slump has reached here, but you cu never ·ieu, things might pick up for the rtst ol ~}tar.~· Clevelllld upjalnld wbat ,developers . ~ ~Ing lb CO\l.lter the ab«taie of llnllldnt. . , "TJ\ej are trY!n1 to-)irHell house• lnmad ·of bolldli!a them air at once and then sellill& them. Jusi 11 many tracts are belng developed but fe.11t·er hoole1 m bellli built oa them. "Wh•t a developer will do ls lllat he will 11'.!t up the mode~ IOd Ille• tzy Ill · tieK the Iola willl the buyer llllpuladna which model he wants. The builders are 'IW'ed ol pulling up a lot of \!Om•• : and . ftndlnc tl\eY con't dlspos:e of tbem." Cleveland WI tbe 1ltualloii wis simply ' • I • due to feweT • prospectJve home buyers qualifying !or a mortgage. "In some cases J've heard that the developer• ·are having to pay IO percent intereSt for their fUAds. At those rates, you ctonli want homes alt Ung empty." · ';I'lle •building permll.I show · that the valuation for ! first four months o[ 197o ,.as no, 37,l'n. With lhe pennit valuation In • 'J anuaty·Aprtl· period of 1969 being 125,313,230. Cleveland remained optJmisUc on the fl\lllre. "lr·llllad<cllne contbmet,·lt may give ·u1 a , bruthin1 SP.tll IQ. ~ can . better ' p)ao for tJie liiltux of people HunUnaton Beach .Js 11ttlng .. 11'• won't have to AUt out tod.1111 fires foday." Real <Jtate agents are not let!lllJI a almnp. ' Mn. Evelyn Wllco>, secre1lry of the HunllnBton Btacb-Foontaln Valley Board .of Realtors, commented, "OUr buslneu la extnmely sood, both In the number or listingl and salts. We'n! ahead of Jut y .. r llthough that la partly du• to an Increase in our membenhlp. ,; Jolrl .. l\'.lljlox added .,"Wl!h fewer~· being bulli, people have lo ~ homes , lllat.ar_e alnadjo CODSt&:;id<d.''. .. -·.-------. TEN CENTS Task Force Routs Foe In CaJnbodja SAIGON (UPI) -Scores or U.s : tanks ntmbled across the Fishhook of Cam- bodia h-fonday and American comman- ders said their 15,000.man allied task Corte was "in the heart" of the head- quarters area where the Communista run thelr Vie1!1am war strateiY. The head- quarters itself remained undetected. P'ive thousand more South Vietnamese troops were committed to a related of. tensive into the Pa1TOt's Beak reP>n to Ille soulll, bringing to 30 aoo Ille n~ber ~ men invoJved in the twin thrusts aimed at destroying North Viet· namese and Viet Cong sanctuaries Jn Camh?dia. They included 8,000 Gis. Military sources said at least three m~re major forays into CambodLI were bemg planned. Communiques described the Fishhook snd Parrot's Beak offensives as Ngbly succe~ful with 1,952 North Vietnamese an? Viet Cong reported killed and 359 pnson.ers taken and 250 tons or food, munitions and medical supplies seized. U.S. losses wue placed at 12 killed a~d 46 wounded and those for South Vietnamese units at 151 killed and 560 wounded. As the ameo task. forces knifed dee~ tnto. Cambodia, dispatches from the capital, Phnom Penh, sai4 Cambodian commanders rushed reinforeementa to the vJllage of Kok! Thom where field •O[>Ol'la· ~ ' mtJor ' betUe !'IV be lbaplng up apinsl Communlal' i;.... entrenched on the western bank CIC the MekO!ll Rlvtr. Ko~ Thom Js 30 miles sOutbeatt of Phnom Penh and about so mllet from the Parrot's Beak front. Phnom Penh dispatches said "hundreds'' of Cl.l'(I· bodlan tribesmen, trained and paid by the U.S. Special Forces, had been flown from bases in Soulh V$etnam to beef up the 40,000-man Cambodian army , ~y nightfall today American inMred units had pushed at least 15 miles from the South Vietnamese border on m•ay 7. 'Ibe route Is a paved road that had beet used lo haul Communist war tup. plies through Cambodia into South V1et.-nam. The Fishhoo~orce waa looking far the Communists central office for South Vietnam -COSVN -the Hanoi head- quarters which President Nil'cm bu Wd (See CAMBODIA, Page I) Count y Approves Bulkhead Repair The repl~,cement of ro tting' biiikheads Of! the Sunset ~each Canal in cooper8'fon with pr<!:perty owners In the area bas been approved by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The project, long debated, wtll - the county an estimated '23,400 to be provided from Road Department lunda. The county f.SSijDlts reapomiblllty for bulkheads at street and alley eoc1a only. . Doct Muters loc., • SUM« Beach rmn has offered to. replace Ille bulkheadlog at 1111.50. per llnell rooL Previously. residents of tht area had· a~te~pted to form .~an improvement d~trict to carry out Ille ptoject, but dropped the plan <when cost estimates came in at $250 per lineal foot. Orange Coast Fo~ w~~ is in store ,for coastal dwelle.rs Tuesday With temperatures dipping to ibe 15 level along tbe beach and 1etUinf 1t 75 rurther lnlad. .INSmE TODAY Borrowtn ara fetCtng tha tfght •r•m•u pinch ... the 11>1<1ll loan is aU but a 'thing of &he pcit. Pcqe 2Z. · IMlll!t u ........ . =::::. "' v~ '""" " c,.....,. ,, DNtlt *tlen 11 ......... , .... ........ lfllflMt " ""'"" »ti -M --""-" 11 ....... " • '' % DAILY PILDT H t. li~;:-Boys ; .::.. •• • .-a Playing Ball In s ·Are as ' •t ' 'JI'.! )kn than t,000 boys are playln,c Little .,l ~a,Ue B'a$eball this summer In Hun. · lington . Beach and FOWltain Valley ia -.five different territories. .. . With such a high interest in local :Ltea0.. the DAILY· PILOT IOOoy oilers t' the first in periodic listings of team ~"Standings. Slruldings of major divisioaa ·:in Fountain .valley, Huntington Valley, Ocean View, Robinwood and See.view .... :: :leagi.tts will be listed. ~;, .Major di\'islon teams are comprised . . ·~ of 1'>e boys who are selected each year ~ tO c:ompete iK a series of all-star games ·\· ~adirig to the Little Lea rue Wotld strles. ,,,. . · · .. Thefe are hundreds '?f boys •lso .r pl;eying ball in divisiw other Uum ma· ;r~r. , DAILY l'ILOT lt1H "'""' .fr .'· Wlth tome leagues twdpg setn. action (~:)or tw"o weeks and others for only .one LAGUNA PARTYGOERS GRUNT AND GRDAN AS ·THEY BEAT RETREAT UP RUTTED RDAD Outdoor SofrM on Top of the World Ends In Cloud of.Dust to Music of Sirens wee.I<, bere is Ille.DAILY PIUn'S l!Jt ·'or ~bigs tl!toolh llaturda;: ,t-··· ~~ ~ .. iii :::::p· '~::thy',. ·-: • -itUNTINctT'ON VALLIY LIAOUI · · W L T ~r~,.. . . ,, o r ·--1~·1'" : : 1 Bov Arrested ;,~~~.s:IAlf VllW AMIJ:ICAlf LIA~~.1 ·~ ! a. i·r=~. . · 1 f J Orange County Sherifl's deputies. r. ~.· · j g pollee and highway patrolmen routed • •. 1 I about 100 young people from an outdoor _ r:.kx , · ; , party complete with two bands in a =-~= oc;1NC v1•w~ NATIOHAL L1.a.1ua w! ~ ! ;:~~ ~~to&!Mas~~;~st of Laguna's '11J'W,,:,,::.~ , 1 1 8r Laguna Beach police called to assi!t ~ sherlff's deputies arrested James Andrew •·~.:Slip · -1 i Sowa. 19, of Anaheim on charges of · _ttS!ilrNWOOo Lu.our · marijuapa, possession. .~~:S wl 'i.· T 1 ,I A sheriff's depufy". at the scene said Wr1'1i. so.c the property was ' leased by Redwood ;,~1' '::. Stables and said officers had been called ·" r 1,,.11 because of the fire hazard invo!Ved. _,, ti • SIA YllW LIAGUI w L T First reporls made to Laguna police ; ,._ r•.,.. l g ! were of 80 or 90 persons said to be : :. INl~I· 1 ' in .the_nude. ;: '"i... I l i Police and highway patrol kicked on their si.rfns en route up Park Avenue ~Pizza Benefit ;Boosts Athlete , ,.MQl'a. than $'150 .wu raised at .a. pizza · f)irty" fa.it Tuesday · ni&ht for injured · . Edison lUjb School athlete Sam _Fuga. '.: m p;dison Booster . ~Ub raised . .the lnone"Y with .tbe· heli) ot $bikey's P,Uta Parlor, 19300 Beach Blvd., HunUngton Beach, which held a benefit night for Sam. Fanu1y sizie pizzas· were sold 'l less than nonnal from 6-9:30 p.m., at Shai:ey's. Arrangeme1ts for the aped.al night and doaations were made by -club member& with Frank Colley, ~Wner of Sbak.ey's. _ :.;_ ·Th6 money will go in!o a fund to ~'Ip pay _hospi~ expemes for Fuga who was paralyzed in,·· varsity football .~atne last fall whep._he suffered a broken ~k. ;y alley, J Cs Subject {)f _Fair Injw-y Suit The father of an eight·year-qld. boy who allegedly sulfen,d serious Injuries in a carnival accident· has sued the Fountain Valley.Junior Chamber of Com- merce and t:arnlvaJ operatOri fer $36,000. L. Arthur WOmer Jr., 9791 Peacock Circle, Fountain Valley, holds the • Jaycees aDd California Amusement Enterpriae3 responsible for injuries suf· fered by David Kevin W.omer on June 16, 1968. The .Superior Court actiOn in- dicates that the boy fell while visiting the Jaycee.sponsored caroivaJ. DAILY PILOT oaMof: COAST PUlt..ISHtNG COMPAN'( •obtrt N. W11d Prulclen! -Putin.,_. ·J1ck R. Curi1y Ylct I'm:~"' ~nd GeMrtl M""HI' Edi!OI' · , Tho11111 A.. Mu•p~i~1 M1~1q_l"9 £dolor A!b1.+ W. 111,, ..,,_i.1e Ea!!1>< H•ltti•tl•• hecll Offi11 I 7t7!i lttch loultw1rd M1111~t Adcl•111: r.o. l•t 7to, t26<t Othr Offi'" Sunday afternoon as many Lagunans came out to see what was happening. .The party area reached over a nearly hgpass•ble dirt road was a mlle or, more from Top or the World. A member of the routed party, "Tall" John McGann, 22, of UJ4 Fairywood Walk, said the · ~. h~lf;. ~ _pµt toge~er . on the @Ur QC the moment. "We were trying to find some place to have a boogie," McGaM told a reporter. "We'd like to have the police if they 'd leave their guns at home." He s8id the party was originated by re1idenls of · the Laguna Canyon area. "We're specialists in partying," he said. McGaM said sheriff's deputies had swnmoned help because "nobody wanted to leave." "We were hep to the fire hazard," he said. "Next time wt'll bring our own fire equipment." · After lawmen arrived in force a caravan -or cars made a dusty exodus alon·g the rutted dirt road to the party site. GG School Blaze Gets Oose ~k Garden Grove firemen were today !iif· ting the aaties of a $300,000 fire which destroyed the library of Bolsa Grande High School early Saturday morning. Fire department spokesmen said they were almost certain the costly blaze was oI incendiary origin . The fire was spotted about 2 a.m. by a California Highway Patrol officer. At that time·· flames were shooting throueh the roof of the one story struc- ture which served as a library atld bookstore tor the !Choo!. It took nine Garden Grove fire depart- ment units two hours to control the bla~. lncliided in the loss-were books, equipment an(fumll~. Royal Family Home LONDON (UPI) -Queen Elizabeth JI htr husband Prince Ph ii I p and d~ugbter Princess Anl'le returned today to a warm and suhny Britain frftm a two-month 40,000.mlle tour of AU!tralla and New Zealand . Mayor Declares Missing Discipline Cause Of Delinquency, Says ~A · By ALBERT W. BATES Of "" Dlllr "''-' 11111 Parental Jove is as important and omnipresent a.s ever but what has been mi.s!ing is the vital iniredient of discipline. 'I'h,is w,s the euence of Orange County Di.strict Attorney Cecil Hicks' analysis of what bi!· gone wrong with a younger generation resorting to drugs and violence as he addressed members ol Huntingt.Qn Beach Rotary Club Frlday. Hicks recalled growing up in Los Angel~s during the Great Depression or the early 1930s. "Life was simpler then," he said "There was a feel.Ing of unity, for ever)'one was in. the same boat." '"Next came World '\Var II aiid "aiain we were joined together as a nation in sell-denial in behalf of a survival cause," Hicks continued. "Then, af«:r World War JI, we produced a 'ji!Uon' babi~s. the ones who are in college now. "Most of us parents said we wanted Bill Support~d By State Group SANTA CRUZ (UPI) - A bill which would rtgulate coastal development has reeeived the sUpport of the state advisory commission on marine and coastal resources. The bill, prapooed by A""mblym•n Peter Wilson (R-San Diego), wou1d set up a new California ~stal zone and con.!ervation and development com· mission, with six zoning board! to work with local governments. The bill would also direct that a master slate ocean area plan be created, plus a plan for shoreline zoning with control of land areas roughly 100 yards away from the high tide mark. "It's now or never," Commissioner John E. Robb of San Frand.sco said. "Hearings itart May 13 ·on the 'bills before the legislature, and thi:s is our final chance to comment." The six zones are the Santa Cruz· Monterey counties. the northern coast, San Francisco Bay. central coast, Southern Cal\fcrnia, sand border (San Diego) coastal regions. Dow J on es Ac quir es 12 Papers in Mer ger NEW YORK (AP) -Do\v Jones & Co., Inc. and Ottaway Newspapers-Radi_o, Inc. announced today a merger plan in which Dow Jones will acquire the nine daily and three Sunday newspapers publlshtd by Otlaway. In a joint annoUJtCement, the com- paniea said the merger would be ac· compli.Sbed through an exchange of abou't 914 000 ahares of Dow Jones common st~k for all outstanding capital stock of the Ottaway Co. The companies said the transaCUoo has-a value of $36.5 million. to give our children the creature com- forts we couldn't have in the Depression or World War II. So we gave thent cars we couldn't ·afford ear1ier, and a whole series of labor·saving appliances which eliminated the chores which were part of their parents' early di!Cipline." In the midst of. all these Parent-bestow- ed creature comforts, Hicks said, along came Dr. Benjamin Spock saying, "You've got to love a child." We parents agreed ·but we left out· another vital element, disciplh1e, Hicks s·aid. "None of us, parents or children, can d~veJop without discipline," H i c ks asserted. "We can't run a business or an office of any kind without lt. Lacking ..iiscipline, employes would disintegral~ and so would the business. "I thiqk of It in terms of a boxing ring, with ropes around the four sides. Dro? the ropes and someone falls off, on ·his face. So it is with children'!!! lives if they don't know where the struc- ture is, the ropes are." The district attorney added that no free society can exist without di~ipllne -and the best kind is self discipline which sets an eumple for children . ••our c h i l dren don't know how to change direction,•• he added. "Most of our youngsters' goals are very pure -but how they gc> about achieving them is twisted all out of shape. This reflects the existence of parental love as far as the goals are concerned but lack of discipline in the approach to those goals is painfully evident." Earlier in his talk, Hicks recalled confrontations he has had with campus radicals, including a panel situation stacked 4 to 1 against him. What the district attorney learned was that the radicals fall on illeir face when penetrating questions are asked. Hicks asked What connection there might be between the issue of free s~ and academic freedom and the violence and property destruction by the radicals, He drew Uii' j~mprehensible response from a member of the New Left: "Wl'ly should we care when there are unpaved roads in Texas?" Hicks said the respondent was serious and sincere, but he didn't understand that he was not above the law, that Jaws should apply equally to all. Hicks also recalled occasions when campus militants, in the name of "free speech," shouted do¥:n every sentence he uttered before he completed it - and kept others from hearing a dissenting view. These youngsters. too, Hicks said, "have the notion that the law somehow does not apply to 'them. They feel they are above the law as it is applied to everyone off campus." The district attorney told the Rotarians that Law Day on May 1 was proclaimed by President Dwight D .. ~Lsenhower on purpose because May Day h a d historically been a Communist show of armed might. Law Day ln 1he free world now reminds us that we are a government of> laws, not men. in contrast to the Communists, Hicks said. Lt9UM ltadl· m FOR\! .., ....... .,. C0111 Mn.: Di Wu! llY l!rtet trl.tW"6d.,l t"""' 7111 Wnl lllllOI la!l .... I•• lat1 ~11 : JOJ NOi'!-El C.~lrw> 1: .. 1 -cave Blast Police Idea The poalblUty of blowing up or otherwise 1ea1lng off cavu in the hills behind La111111a Beach OC<Uplod by trans!qlt hlppies wu first "tossed out'' by a'Lacuna Beach police officer,' Mayor lllchard Goldberg said today. '''1 Urat heard about it at a pre~lection coffet ln a houle up on lhe hill where people ·were Corii.plainln& iboul hippie~ llvtng In the c•ves and. creating & fire and he11th hatard." Goldberg aald. "A pollc6 'b(ficet 1t 1ha' meeting 1ald the _ police depaftmtnt had even considered blowJng up the caves. 1\-was somethtllg that Was Ussed out a1png with a lot . or other ideas.'" Goldbtr1 said he J>U!O"ally did not think the caves ' would ever be blown up but, be added, "My reacUon Is that some measures should be ·~lten to pre- vent' the health and fire hazards that are created because of the people livlne ln ihe cayes. "l"rtl particularly concerned . about the danger of fire now that the dry seaeon Is approaching. One spark up· there could stt oil ·a Ure that coukt endanger 111 the hornet On the hills." Goldberg Nid ho dldn, kROW ju>t whal should ~ done. ''They've taik<d about blowing them up, seaUng them off in some way, &pr11tna them with some sort of 1ubstance ••• J just "know lt's a bad situation from the standpoint or ~ealth and lire hazard." The new mayor sald he realized that ecologists "have a good point" in wanting - to preserve the caves aod added, "I understand there 11re some archaeological finds to made up there too. 11nd this is fine. but mnnething mu11t be done to get t~ people out of there. "l know there are some Pt'Oplc who think it's all right to lt't the hippies live In the caves, but we alro have to think ~of the people Jn the houaei up there whose homes would be en- dangertd 11 there should be a bad fire.'' IJ ---,--- Food Provider .. Ocean Foreseen ·As Top Resource The oceans and the youth studying ecology and environment may prove to be among America's most 11alu4ble resources. This was the tenor of a talk Saturday by Charles H. Meacham, Commissioner of Fish and Wildlife for the Interior Department, Saturday as he helped dedicate the lifarine Science Jnstitute (MS!) at Dana Point Harbor. The MSJ dedication of a future facility was part of three-day Ocean Expo '70 that began Friday. It centered on study of and preservation of the environment. f'r'o111 Page 1 CAl\lBODIA ••• must be C:lestroyed. "It's here and we're in the heart of it," a U.S. commander said. But there was no sign of COSVN itself in the fourth day of the Fishhook offensive. Daniel said more lhan 90 American tanks and armored personnel carri~rs raced along Highway 7 unde.r orders from lb4! lUb Annored Cavalry Re gi- ment squaaron commander, Lt. Col. -Grial Brookshire, not to Hre unless fired upon. "We're doing what an anny unit i~ supposed to do," Brookshire said. "We're breaking deep into enemy territory and blocking" their major routes. We've got a disorganized enemy. He isn't fighting because he doesn't know what he is doing." Brook.shlre said his men hoped to un- cover more · supply complexes in deep thrusts at first light Tuesday. He said about 500 "structures" v.·ere seen and that they probably held munitions ~nd other war materiel. In the Parrot's Beak, hundreds or Sou lh Vietnamese armored vehicles drove into Communist base camps on the sixth day or an offensive in which American fc>rces were not directly in- volved· on the ground with the excepUon of about 40 military advisers. U.S. air and artillery support was behind the Parrot's Beak foray but it was mainly a. South Vietnamese sbow, and Saigon reports said it was showing good results. Five thousand more South Vietnamese troops moved into the southern part of the Parrot's Beak over the w~k~nd. Madame Molotov Dies JitOSCOW (AP) -Polina Zhem- chuzhina Molotov, wife Of longtime Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov and the woman who put rouge and lipstick on the faces of Soviet women, died Friday of cancer in a Moscow hospital, Russian infonnants reported today. K eepi119 Cool Meacham said It ls conceivable In 50 or 100 year5 that the land masses of the globe will be used up by mankind and his recreation. He said man may become dependent on the sea for his food. 1t1eacham said the ocean produces three quarters of the globe's oiygen and said in 1989 Americans alone con· sumed 5.4 billi1111 pounds or foOci taken from the sea. Speaking of dedication to conservation as a way of life, tiieacham said he had every hope that the conct?rned youtll \vill become the savior of an environment that in the past has been treated carelessly. Oceanography, be said, was born dur- ing and since World War II and its ranks of experts are as yet thin. The success of marine science will depend on th! quality of personnel in its.fanks, the speaker said. Meacham said MSI is a giant step in that direction with "the most prir gressive curriculwn of its tYP' that 1 have observed In America." He offered the help of himself and his staff in \\'orking on the curriculum. tilea cham presented a blue and while flag to the· institute as its pennant. There \\'as a model of the physical facilities to be constructed to house MSI as part of the exhibits housed in tents at the harbor. La g una Woman Ente1·s Campaign For Utt's Seat J\1aggie ti1eggs of 320 fl.1oss Street. Laguna Beach, filed a nomination petition before the deadline Friday in the special 35th District J une 2 election to fill the unexpired term of the late Rep. James B. Utt. Also fi ling Friday was Thomas B. Lenhart, Democrat. of Santa Ana. The two late filings brings to seven the number of candidates competiitg for the term which will expire next January l. . All except Mrs. Meggs, a Laguna housewife, are also candidates in the regular June 2 primary election. Jn addition to Lenhart, they include State Senator John G. Schmitz of Tustin, John Ratterree of Santa Ana, William Wilcoxen of Laguna Beach. and John A. Steiger of Oceanside, all Republicans and Democrat David Hartman of Santa Ana. Under the procedure of the special primary, if no one candidate receives more than fifty percent of the total votes cast, the top Republican and Democrat will participate in a runoff vote June 30. OAllY, JlllOT S!ttr Jllltlt Regetta, year-old pet racoon of Darrell Allen, 12. cools of! in \vheel· barrow at Allen home, 2569 Elden Ave., Costa l\1esa. Darrell, a Stu· dent at Harper School, found Regetta when the racoon was just a baby last July near tbe Salton Sea. Darrell wa s on a camping trip at the time. I .. • e: • . . . . . . : t•,.~·-ftaal .,,_ .... --·--.. • -r • --' -. -.. ---. IJ.Y •.. Smeu ·"' • • 1' v_o~L~.6~3_,N_·o_.~1-~~··~l-SEC~Tl_o_N_s._J_2_PA~G-E~S~~--=··---~~~-O~RA~NG-'-.E_·~-·-~·UNTY_:-r'·-·CA_·~u_FO_R_N_~A-~~-1~~-:--;...._M_o_N_o_~~:.~:~_,.,fr-~-::~.1•_1~01..__~~~~~~~~~~ ......, • i 1 -'·'Yi ~ TEN CENTS .. • ' .... -. • • I ' '.: • -·· l ·CS ID: . I ·.e. ' •. ' \ . Task· ~Qr.ce 1 .' ,. ~ J· • \ .t •. "".:..• -' ~ f .... T R~utsJ~~·· ~~ . ~ . ' . . ' . . ' ' ' .... In;CambOdia SAIG ON 'CUP!) -ScOru of ·U.S. tanks ruptbled acrOS!: the F~ of Cam- bodla Monday apd , A;merican cqmman-- ders said their 15,000-man allied task force wu "in the Deart"1 of-the ht» quarters area where-ttte Com.munis.ts nm their Vietnam war strategy. 1lle head- quarters Jtself .remained undetected. Five thousand more South V~mese troops ·Were committed to a related of- fensive into tht Parmt's Beak region to . the south, bringjng to 30,000 the nwnber of inen tovolved In the twin .thrusts aimed at destroyjng Nor\h Viet· namese and Viet Cong sanctuaries in Cambodia. 'nley JncJuded 1,000 Gls. • • KILLED IN TRAFFIC ·ACCIDENT NEAR OCEANSIDE Military .sources said at least three more major forays into Cambodia were N•"fport's Thomas L. Grimshaw <!•ft), Ro:btrt J, Wrighton being planned. · · Tivo Newport Youths Die Jn -Oceanside Accident · Communiques descn"bed the Fishhook and Parrot's Beak offensives ·•s highly successful with l .• sai North Vietnamese and Viet Cong reported killed and 3S9 prisoners '-*en and 150 ·. tons of food, munitions and medical supplies seized. U.S. losses were placed at ll killed _ and 46 wounded and those for South Vietnamese units at 151 killed and Silt Wounded. DAILY ,ILOT Stiff ,..;... WHEN OF.FICER MIKE McEVENEY SAID 'GRASS,' HE DID"!'T MEAN L'IWN CLIPPINGS In Ntwport'Buch, Mare Then 700 Pounds of Merlju1n1 1n Garbage. C'•n Llntrs 8iggest N ~port Raid. , Co.unc:Jm~n M~t Two Newpcrt Beach youth! were kpled Sunday in. a car crash near Oce anside thal allo-Wt~la Angelea women seriously lolur<d. Robert J. Wrfibtoo, IO, of 7U.AmiP, Way. the driver of the ·car, was pro- nounced dead at Camp Pendl-hospital following the 1 p.m. •ccident. 1bomas. Lee <lrtmshaw, :ro. of 400 Signal Road, was deed on arrivil at· Oceanside Col_n4 munity Hospital Injured in the single car crash were Karen Belinda OstrokJkl, 20, and Kathy COOiey, 19, both of Bell 3)ld Manya ll<t'kekoff, 19, of Cudahy. . Calilornia Highway Patrolmen said the car ,was northbound on Interstate 5 ap- proximately one-ha1r m,Ue south of the Orange County line when ror no apparent reasori. it veered into the bmn' at the roadside. The. vehicle was catapulted into the air· oo impact with the railing and rolled abrut 75 !eet down the embankment before coming to rest on·its left side. A· pa.5Slhg-cali&nia Anny Natkmal Guard convqy saw the vehicle leave the road arid rushed to the victims' -aid. First u Robert F. DarUels, a pbysi--. cian "with the 540Ui Medical Battalion from 1.oog Beach, administered 17 aid until ambulances arrived. CHP officers said Wrighton was taken to the Camp Pendleton hosplta~ in_ a heUcOpter in an effort to get him · llll.- medl&te medical attention. ·. . nie youths, who were ·close friends We.re. returning from-Ensenada where ~ had tieen attending Cinco Qe Mayo telllvllles. Bollt w ... 19111 gradaatµ· of N,;,.p.rt 'Harbor High School and both ....... former' members of Tallismen Hl-Y Club.i · Funeral' services will be held ·Tuesday al a p.m. at, P>clfk: vr ... Cllapel for Wrightan. Services for GrimshjlW ·have -l!chedulrd !or Wednealay~3 p.m. . . . 115,000 Flock .. To Newport Surf On Hot Sunday ... Driven by an inlaft$1 heat wave, 115,009 pel'IOOll !kicked to Newport's beaches SUnday. . Parldpg SJlOls and C>P<n patches or •an<I on ,which to spre8d a towel became precious commodiUes. • . It lai Wily. the largest beach· crowd • , .. , ml ..... ol. 1i1e ' l>lilest OocOrdl' 'to A.iunt Marine l>lnctor 1w.n· J..-n; . - 11lf .tun"lelJ'eCI le8 1oera nun.tbered only 1Ugl!ll1 ~· Saturday when· lbe crowd. wP esUmated at 15,llOO. Remarkably; llfegurds didn't make a single retCUe the ~re weekend. The s~ri w1s flat and harmless and the water cold enough to di9Courage swim- mers. The coast wealhcr was balmy -a bigh of 68 Saturdly and 72 SUnday. But the sun shOne Uke a furnace on com- munltie:1 inland. Santa Ana on SundaJ rec<lrOed tl! high for the : year -99 (See BEACH, Pase I) As the arneo task toroes knifed deeper Into Cembodla, .dispatches from . the al St. Andrew 's Presbyterian Church. capital •. PJm<m Pf!llll.:•aaid· C11iO>dfan A m'"'ber -of the · Naval ResCoeryll e~ ~ 1199· , ,1'.., Gtjmsball'.U..ted Or-Coal.I . !J• 4~ following his .~ from blgh · r~ ·pi<! a ~: Ule:v-r · ~~He was a hlgb acbool leUennan · ~ ... •..i .. ,...""~'--~ for .bri)'eari Jn tnek. · ....... ,,..._... _ _..... Ot:dia He -ls sUr.1~ed by hls parents, 11-tr. Mepq ~ver. and Mn. Jack Grimshaw, sisters, Linda Koti 'Alom Is Ill. miles soutMast of and Marie; and btvlher Stephen, all Phnom Penh and about IO miles from of Newport Bea<;h, and i. grandi;nother the Panwt's Beat. troat Pbnam Penh Mrs. Fay Sandlin of Laguna Beach. <lillPaldles aaid "~" of 'Cam· 1be Grimshaw family has suggested bodian tribesmen , .trained· and paid by that tbose wlshiri_g to make memorial thl! U1.S. Spectal Fortes, hid been flown cortributions cootiibute to World Vision, from bases 1n South: Vietnam to 1beef P.O. Box o, Pasadena. up tbe' 40,000.man Cambodian army. Wrighton was also a high ~I atl)lete By nightfall today .American armoi:ed who participated .ift and lettered in 4olf 1unh.elt•SohB<luth Vjiushedletnam~l~: !~:"Y and wrestling. He was named qutstand1ng au Harbor ·High golfer during his senior (Set CAMBODIA, Pip Z) ylar. Hi! also· attended OCC where he was named Pirate of the Year irrgolf. · Wrighton is ~ved by bis rootber, Mrs. Rita Wrighton ·of NeWport Beach; a father , ~ Wrighton; a brother William G. Wrighton, and a ~ister Mary Kathleen, both of Costa. Mesa: paternal grandparents, Mr. and MrS .. William H. Wrighton 'of· San Gabriel, and matemal grandparents, Mr .. and Mrs. George F. Brillllart of Loog Beach. The Wrighton family suggest tho,se wishing to make .emoriaf ci>ntribuUons, please contrib.ute" to the Carl Harvey School for Orthopedk:ally Handicapped Children, Santa Ana, or to the Justin Ogata Fund, In care o[ tflt.•DA1LY PlLQT,' Coota Mellii. Details Erron~ous On Newport .. Accident A newt account last· Wedne.sday· ifteor- rectly charaeteriied an accident April 26 involving two cars at MacArthur Boule· var-d and San Joaquin Hilll Road. Correctly, according to police accounts, a vehicle occupied by-Mr. and Mrs. ·Emil ' OraSt, 516 S. Bay. Frorit., Balboa lslaPd struck from behind another auto driven by Mrs. Eva Moore, 322 Heliotrope Ave,., Corona de! ,Mar. The Moore vehicle, po- lice report, was stopped at the lntersec- t ipn at th·e. time-. the Daily Pilot regrets the oriiinal error. · . ·'. ., With Free Us ~:o. ,:, , ', · '~ Newnoti:-Youths. . Causes Sought In: l\fan's Death OraJ;gt: County,Coron_u'a depuUes said today they, have not.e&tablished, tli;e cause cf death or the yet unidentified body ""that washed ashore 'in Newport Baach one week ago. InVesUgators said they are faced with several hardships in the case as the body was found without a head or limbs and had been in the water about three months. · Remains were identified as. belonging tO a middle aged man who stood between five feet seven inches and fi ve feet nine lnche!! tall and weighed between 200 and .230 pounds. • ff"'"l 11\I~ • 1 1 tf~~~~' ~ "' ,;,t\ : '.,r .-' :-. ,M -t •• r I. r .. ;I •-1 • ,7 l. ! Three Newport Beacb city councilmen II aold wholesale, tho Impounded nar·. met.WI.th ei•" ·-."'" __ _., •• •rm' cotlc would· be worth about $111,000, he ... ,,...~ ••r•-• sa1d., U sold by die lid (orie Ounc:tJ, ·~,;-.. Us" in a private dbcus.s.lon Saturday, kel sftd • the marijuana. wotild. be Mworth · Ci:>uncJlma'n HOward' ROgm, 1t whose $125,000. home the meeting ·was· held, said vlewt1 A~ were· Grel«Y L)'nn Tuder, were freely dl!eussed-and au parties 21, oC LaJrewood and David Glenn Cun· agreed the ses"sidn was •'we l l nison, ZZ, of ClrdJf. wdlihwhile." Watch Commander Eames't Leurln said he was making a rouUne check Councilman Donald Mcinnis sald the of the area when he 11potted "the ·suspects youths, incfudirt'g two girls, lndk:at!d in the alley at 218 Lilgonia St'. as they were going out the' door they Officer Michael McEveny who was had been treated courteously and had. called to the' !Cene sail;I the pair were , ~me hope this type d dialogue wilt taken Into cuatody when a huge pUe Jea<i to better understanding. of large bags full oC marijuana was It was Jert that the "Free Us" group found Jd their Tan. would coot.act Rogers.jf they felt another The officer, s~kJ .,ht, .saw the l)ags meeting would be productive. when be wenf to rhaite· an hispeetjon None of tbe "Free Us" representatives of the vettlcie, which' was allegedly ii-could be rea~ fer comment today. legally parked. The counctlmen said the session went Konkel sajd . 540 PG4flds or the drug 2~% hours and got somewhat on a fint v.•as found in the van and another 190 name basis-. 'The three councllmen, / pounds wa.s found in the garage at Rogers, Mcinnis and Richard Croul, 218 Lugonia St. dropped by the weekly "Free Us" picNc Investigation in the cue is continuing, at Balboa Pier Park on Sunday but he said, and more arrests are expected did not get into further dillcussiom. today or Tuelday. Only about 75 persons were present "We auspect the marijuana came from at the Sunday picnic, the smallest crowd Mexico," be added. since the weekly gatherings began a month ·ago. . Bay Club TQwer Alterftate ·Plans • I ' . Set io'r' .$tudy • • 'l. { ' Alternative. propo63.Is. for Balboa Bay Club apa'rlment towt.n will be t,ll'.plained to Cliff .HaVen residents Wednesday night. ' · Richard . Ste\:ens, Bay , Club executive vice pres'ident, will present design con~ . cep'ts of a' sin1li tower 220-feet tall, two towers' 125-feet tall and three towers SM'eet tall, at the Mannual meeting o! CIUf Have11 CommurUty AMoclation. The BAy Club'-11 proposing lo build the · new apartments on the east end - of \he.property. The Jon1 buildin1 massed qp;:'to •the JO.f~ zoned hel!hl limit op1 tne •West eikl of \ the J>r'OP'.U'lY was . built.otter Cliff"'""' ~ldent•protesled plana for 1411 towera. . The talk Saturday covered essentlally the same ground as at the City Cwncll meeUng the first oC the-week, the O'Jutl- cllmen said. Dlscussloinraa-alleged police harassment,~ against long-haired youtll! In houttac and jobs, making availablt fae:lllUes far youth con- certs •. and tt?e court charges ~ga.qist tJlC 10 arrested al the "tree. Us" pj,cnic- rally two \\1?eks agq. · . . ~1clmis said there w9rt. oo .specific suggestions brought forth counctlmen might act on; lalk was ln a 1eneral vein. · .Orange . Coast • Weatlier . ' Foggy weather 11 in rtcn 1 for Jeoastal dwellers T\lesday. Wlth • temperatures dipping to the es '.level aloog the beach and set um, . at 75 further inland. Cliff Kattn Is •the bluff area looking· d~er . \b<'lfY· Clqb Iowan! Lido •· r ~ bUslMsl"tnfftirla: wtll-te-at· I ~ p.\11., fbll ... tni ,, :ro· p.11). C:Offi!e, In the mu\t!Purpose room at En.Jin Scl>ool. A new board .of directon of lbe corn- munl\y aaoclallon will be elected. .. INSmE TODAY Borrowe11 art -fetli»g ·&Ja• tight nioneu pinch 111 the ~ll loan is aU but a thing of tM pa.it. Page 22 • STOCK ltJAJIKE'J' . . Ir • ' . . . "' .... . ._ . . NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe stock market reswn<d Ill steep decline this afjernoQI\ after slltncthenlng at-midday In lhe ,wake. of · Soviet. Premier Altxtt N~ Kuy&ln'• st~tement .concerning q.s .. Jnvolve'me.nl in cambOdla. (See quotaUons, PaBet »,- 21). ""' " " " • 11 ,.,, :. '"', ·: j t o-1 '1 1', OAIL'l"',t\.0T"S9"t,_.. WEEKEND TEMPERATURES Rl;!'A\"llJ~;i?;oo c11!>wo .. c!Juilts! AT 1119 'cci)l\)NA ·• ·~. ·~e ~tire Newport Shor·~":-, f R~·~. C~·-M9~ r~~'d w-,·.~~ I :, . ' " " . " • • • r r~ " c •• 0 0 0 ! DAILY PILOT N 1'roJ11 _ Page 1 cAMBODIA ••• • T. 'tbe. ~'-ls a pav!!!d road~#11l.b11ct1< been u!ed to haul Communist war su~ plits through Cambodl• Into South VJet- ll'im. - 'Ibo l'1llJhook for<e WU J..-i.g lot the Communlsfs' ctnlral ofOce for South Vietnam -COSVN -the Hanoi head. quarters wll.ich President Nixon has said ~; must be deStroyed. ,._ .. J:t's here and we·re iq the heart '·er it," a U.S. commander said. But . there \\.'3S no sign of COSVN ftsell In "' th!! fourth day of. the Flshhook offensive. Daniel said more than 90 Ame.rican tanks and armored personnel carriers · t aced along Highway 7 under orders , -from the llth Armored Cavalry Hi:,.. <1TJent squadron cGmmander, l.t. Col. . 'Grial Brookshire, not to fire unless fired :11pon; · "We're doing what an army unit 11 ."-supposed to do," Brookshire said ... We're ; breaking' deep into enemy tertjtory and [.tlloc)tiog uteir major routes. We've got : .a diwganiaed enemy. He isn't fig.bUng • bttauSe he doesn't know what he ls ·doin&.'' . . . ··-.. Broobhire said tus. men hoped to un- . cover ..more supply eomple1es in •dttp .• ·lllrwla at first light Tueaday. He said :.about. 509 . "structures" were seen and •. ~t> ~y 'probablr held munitions and ; other ·Wat· materie . · .. ; 11-. Ii" ~ 1!10 · Jn the ·Parrot's Beak,· hundreds of South Vietnamese armored vehicles ·drove Into Cmnmuni.st base camps on DES . · DAILY 'ILOT l"lltt. •r \. .. l'nM PITE LAllOE CllOWDS, GlllL FINDS SPACE TO llOM,P WITH HEii DOG NEAii NEWPORT PIER : ,the sixth day of in offensive in which ~American forces were: not directly in.. volved on the ground with the e1cepUon .. of about 40 milltuy adviaers. :... U.S. air and artillery supPoft was ~· behilld the Parrot's Beak foray but it ~~was ·malii.Jy a South Vietnamese show, • ~ Saigon repoi1.s said it was showing loiid rtsullo. Five thousand more South .!\'letnlmese ... troops moved into the ::.ioUtbena par\ of the Parrot's Beak over -the Weekend. ~,. ... . ' . :siluth Killed .:iO-ossirig Road .. -·· . : : : A: 8'11 Gardens youth wu struck and -.. kmed. b7 a car earl)' SUnday morning in Huntington Beach IS he WU croSsing . 1'Jdnc Coast HJchWaY . toward BoJsa .,.. Chica State Beach. :·. Frank ·A. Zalenski, 20, was hit by ~.a car driven by Darwin J. AfcArthur, :is. Garden Grove, at 12:10 a.m. and died in Huntington lntercommunity .. J-Iospital at 1 :40 a.m. Two unidentified . ,-oxnpanions were grazed, but not injured, _by McArthur's car, police said. ._: Tile a~cident is still UJlder investigation :by pqlice. Zalenski. was not held. Y>unty Air , Plan 'Given Extension Extension or the interim review period on the Ralph M. Parsons Company report on Phase 11 of Orange County's Master Plan of Air Transportation hu ]!een granted by lhe Board of Supervisors. · Newport Beach. Utrougµ then Mayqr ,Doreen 11-!arshall had requested that the ,ieview. period_ be extended from 21 to 30 days. Missing Discipline Cause -Of-Delinquency, 'Says DA By ALllERT W. BATES Ot ... 0.llJ l'lltl ..... Parental love ls: u important and omnipre~nt as ever but what has been missing is t.he vital Jngredient of dlocipllne. Thls wu the essence of Orange County District Attorney Cecil Hicks' anaJy1is of what has gone wn>ng with a younger generation re.sorting to drug_s a11d violence as he addressed members of Huntington Beach Rotary Club Friday. Hicks recalled growing up in Lox Angeles during the Great Depression of the taflY 1930s. "Life w_as simpler. then," he said 1'There wa s a feeling of unity, for everyone was in the same boat." "Next came Wocld War II and again we were joined . together as a nation in self-dental in -behaJC of a sunrival cause," Hicks coritinued. "Then. after World War JI, we produced a 'jil\ion' .bfb~ th~ ~ Y(ho are in , college now. "Most ol us parent! said we wanted to ·give our cblldrein the creature com· forts we couldn't have in the Depress!On GG School Blaze Gets Close Look Garden Grove firemen were today sif· ting the ashes of a $300,000 fire which destroyed the library of Bolsa Grande High School early Saturday morning. or World War JI. So we gave tbem cars we couldn't afford earUer, and a whole arles: of labor-uving appliancts whidJ ellminated the chores which were part of their parents' early dlscipllne." In the mldst of all these parent-bestow. ed creature comforts, Hicks said, along came Dr. Benjamin Spock saying, "You've 11ot to love a child." We parents agreed but we left out another vital element, dlsclpline, Hlcka salcJ. "None of us, parents or children, can d?velop without discipline," Hick s asserted. "We can't run a business or ~~ ~Ui~ of any kind without it. Lacking u1SC1pline, employes would dlsintegrate, and so would the business. . "I think of it in terms of a boxil1g nng, with ropes around the four side.5 . Dro;> the rapes and 30meone falls off, on 'his face. So it is with children's Uves it they don't know where the struc· ture is, the ropes are." The district attorney added that no free society can tl:iSt without discipline -and the !?est kind is self discipline which sets an uample for children. ••our children don't know how to change d irection,'' he added. "Most of our youngsters' goals are very pure -but how they go about achieving them Is twisted all out of shape. This reflects the ei:istence of parent.al love as far as the goals are concerned but lack of discipline in the approach to those goals is painfully evident." F ro111 Page 1 BEAffi 0 •• degrees -and Lo! Angeles with a high of 94 set an all time r~cord £or the date. Raymond Johnson, dispalcher for the Orange County Harbor Depart.ment, said there was plenty of boat traffic on the weekend. "The good weather brings them out." Auto traffic provided the usual motorists ' mbery. Pacific Coast Highway was bumper-to.bumper through the mid· die of town and the Peninsula was clog· ged. "We only had 30 accidents this w~kend," Traffic Investigator Tony Villa remarked facetiou sly. Fifteen tp 20 he said Is normal. None of the ac- cidents caused serious injury; all were of the fender.bender variety, most resulth1g from impatience. Jacobsen said he couldn't say· what the largest beach crowd ever was but the throng Sunday ranked right with the largest. "It gels so big and that's it (for estimating purposes)," he said. "If it gels a.ny .bigger you wouldn't even know the difference. We 'go by how we can tlrive through it (in lifeguard Jeeps). Sundar we couldl;!'t ~rl\!e." City lifeguards still are using their off.season force of 17 lifeguards and coonting on mobility. SummertUne, when every tower ls manned, there wiU be 85 lifeguards on duty. Ja<.'Obsen wanted to say thank goodness they didn't get into a heavy rescue situation. "The Cold water was the only thing that saved us." he said. Water was a chilly 53 degrees, tern· peratures more typical of February or March. Food Provider Ocean Foreseen As _ To·P"'Resource The oceans and the youth studying ecology and environment may prove to be among America's most valuable resources. This was the tenor of a talk Saturday by Charles ll Afeacbam, CommiSdoner of Fish and Wildlife for the Interior Department, Saturday as he helped dedicate the Marine Science InsUtute (MS!) at Dana Point Harbor. The 11-151 dedication of a future facility was part of three-day Ocean Expo '70 dtat began Friday. It centered on study oC and preservation of the envlrorunent. Meacham said i t ls conceivable in 50 or 100 years that the land masses of the globe will be used up by mankind and his recreation. He said man may become dependent on the sea for his food . Meacham said the ocean produces three quarters of the globe's oxygen and said in 1969 Americans alone con· sumed S.4 billion pounds of food taken from the sea. Speaking of dedication to conservaUon as a way of life, Meacham said he had every hope that the coocerned youth will become the savior of an environnienl that in Uie past has been treated carelessly . Oceanography, he said, was born dur· ing . anit sinee World War -11 and its ranks of erperts are as yet thin. T'ne success of marine science will depe nd on lh) quality of personnel in its ranks, the speaker said. Laguna Woman Enters Campaign For Utt's Seat Maggie A-teggs of 320 Moss Street, Laguna Beach, filed a nomination petition before the deadline Friday in the special 3Wl District June 2 election to fill the unexpired term of the late Rep. J ames B. Utt Also filing Friday was Thomas B . Lenhart, Democrat, of Santa Ana. The two late filings brings to seven the number of candidates compeling for the term wh ich will expire next January I. All except Mrs. lttegi.s, a_ Laguna housewife, . are also candi#atei; in the regular June 2 primary election. In addition to Lenhart, they include State Senator John G. Schmitz of Tustin, John Ratterree of Santa Ana, William Wilcoxen of Laguna Beach. and John A. Steiger of Oceanside, all Republicans and Democrat David Hartman of Santa ~na. Under the procedure of the special primary, if no one candidate receives more than fifty percent of the total votes cast, the top Republica n and Democrat will participate in a runoff vote June 30. r.teacham said MS! is a giant step In that direction with "the most pro- gressive curriculun1 or ' its type that I have observed in America." ije offered the help of himself and his staf! in working on the curriculum. Meacham p~sented a blue and white nag to the institute as its pennant. There w111s a model of the physical faclllties to' be constructed to house MSI as part of the exhibits housed in tents at lhe harbor. Police 'Crash' Hilltop Party; Boy A rrested • Orange County Sheriff's deputies. police and highway p1trolmen routed about 100 young people from an outdoor party complete with two bands in a brushy hilltop area northeast of Laguna 's Top of The World Sunday. Laguna Beach police called to assist sheriff's deputies arrested James Andrew -Sow~! 19, of Anaheim on charges of marijuana possession. A sheriff's deputy at the scene said the property was leased by Redwood Stables and sald officers had been called because of the tire hazard involved. First reports made to Laguna police were or 80 or 90 persons said to be in the nude. Police and highway patrol kicked on their sirens en route up Park Avenue Sunday afternoon as many Lagunans came out to see what was happening. The party a_rea reached over a nearly Impassable dirt road was a mile or more from Top of the 'Vorld. A member ol the ro uted party, "Tall" John McGann, 22, of 1214 Fairywood Walk . said the party had been put together on the spur of the moment. "\Ve ~'ere trying to find some plac~ lo have a boogie," t\-1cGann told a reporter. •·we 'd like to have the police if they'd leave their guns at horn~." He said the party was originaled by residents of the Laguna Canyon area. "We're specialists in partying," he said. Plam1el's Weigh Request for Pal'li A requ~st of Harbor View Hills residents for a city recreation leader at Buffalo Hills Park will be considered Tuesday night by the Newport Beach Parks. Beaches and Recreation Com· mission. A pelilion asking for the recreation leader was signed by J38 residents. The _Parsons company plans to present ~eir final report to the supervisors on ~.21. Double Left Tum Pocket ·co1npleted Fire dej>artment spokesmen said they were almost certain the costly blaze was of incendlary oiigin. The fire wa.s spotted about 2 a.m. by a California Hilbway Patrol offlcu. J\l that time flames were shooting through the roof of the one story itruc· ture which served as a library and bookstore for the sc!Jool. Earlier in his talk. Hicks recalled confrontations he has had wilh campus radicals, including a panel situation stacked 4 to 1 against him. What the district attomcy learned was that the radicals fall on their face when penetrating questions are asked. Hicks asked what connection there might be between the issue of free spe«h and academic freedom and the violence and property destrucUon by the radicals, He drew this incomprehensible response from a member at the New Left: Newport Residents Get Sanitation Panel Posts Calvin Stev.·art, director of parks and recreation, said the city a year ago 1noved ·away from having recreation leaders conduct a daily afternoon pro- gram al seven city parks and playgrounds. Instead, sport leaders are provided during sport seasons in numbers detennined by Uie sign-up. Stewart said Buffalo Hills Park ha!' a baseball program that began two weeks ago and is receiving the same sort of recreation leadershlp as other city parks. Recently completed iDStallatlon of a double left turn pocket eastbound on Pacific CQa1t Highway at Jamboret Road cost $11,105, The city !Jf Ne~rt Beach has ac- cepted the work and will pay conlractor Patco Cormructlon of Corona del Mar half the bill from ga·soune tax funds . The othe\" half or the bill will be paid by the ~t.e Division of Highwaxs. "Pacific Coast Highway is a state highway. ' DAILY PILOT C•ANtfE COAST l'UILISHING COMl"ANY Rob•ri N. w,.d l"ruide11I 1nd l"ullllsMr Jtc~ R. Cvtley lk.,.. •• 1C •• ~;1 EO••O' i~om•• A. Mvr,.h:ftt T~o,..•• Fo•lv~• N("PMI !l•ldl Clly E<1l!Of' N~tt t-cll Oftlc• J?ll Wed lelbot lovl1wtrd M1l!i~I Aclcl11it: P.O. lor 1171, •26•J Ofhr Otfkel ~ ,,,_.: l» Wal • .., Strwt ~ llvcfil; m F-1 ,,.,._ t4ll"11'1nt!M •..01 11t7J kKJ1 l .... !wvlnl 1.-i ~tll .JDS Hor-Ill £1 c..nw. .... • It took nine Garden Grove fire dep1rt· ment units two hours: to control the blaze. locluded in the loss were books, equipment and furniture . Smut Committee Said Fraudulent SALT LAKE CrrY (UPI! -A Nixon appoiDtee to the Federal Commission on Pornography says the .president'• smut committee is a financlal fraud. Cliarles: Keating, CinclnnaU attorney and the only one oi the 17 ,JDembers to be appointed . by Prosldent Nixon, sald Sunday, "I think it (the presidmtUal commiS;S.ion on o b s c e n i t y and pornography) is a frivolous waste of taxpayer funds , •. and stupid.." Keating added that the commission ls oontrolled by members .of the American Civil Liberties Union, which "has no re11l interest ln controlling pornography." Jtlayor Dee'fares "Why should we care when there are unpaved roads in Texas?" Hicks said the respondent was serious and sincere , but he didn't understand that he v.·as not above the law, that laws should apply equally to all. Hicks also recalled occasions when campus militants, in the name of "free speech," shouted down every sentence he uttered before he completed it - and kept others from hearing a dissenting view. These youngsters, too, Hicks said, "have the notion that the law somehow does not 1pply to them. They feel they are above the law as it is applied to everyone off campus." 1be district attornex told the RotariaM that Law D1y on May t-wu proclaimed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower on purpose because May D1y h a d historically been a Communist show 0£ armed ml1ht. Law Day in the free world now reminds us that we are a government of l•ws, not men, in contrast to the Conununlst.s, Hicks said. Repre;entatJves of Newport Beach resl· dents on the Orange County sanitation districts have been appointed by new Mayor Ed Hirth. Councilman Lindsley Parsons 'vas re- appointed chairman of Sanitation District 5 which takes in most of the city. Hirth. by virtue of being TNYor, auto- matlc:ally Is on I.he District S board along with Parsons as "'Ii as the sole city representat.ive on District II and 7 boards. But when Hirth doesn't make the meet· tnp alternates will take hi! spot. Hirth named Richard Croul as alternate for District 5, Donald Mcinnis u alternate for District 6 and Howard Rogers as al· temate for District 7. District 7 takes in the Industrial area near Orange County Airport, D~trict I east of Upper Newport Bay and north of Pacific Coast Highway, and District S the rest of the city. The Sanitation Districts handle sew· age diSPo!al and the boards are the gov. emlng bodies. The function is Indepen- dent of city and county government, but Cave Blast Police Idea The PoHtbUlty or blowln& up or othtrwist seallng off c:aves in the hllla behind Laguna Beach occupied by transient hJppies was first ''tossed out" by a Laguna Be1c:h police officer, Mayor Jtichard Goldberg said tod11y. "I first heard about it 11t a prMlec\lon coff«' in a house up on the hUI '!Vhert people were c:ompllinina •bout hipp ies living in the cavts and cre1dn, 1 fire and health haz.atd," ~dber& said. "A pollct oflicer at that metliOI NW 1he police dtpartmtnt h1d evt11 confidtred blowtnr up the caves. ft was aorrit&hlng that w-11 tOPed out aJons with 1 lot of other idt!iu." Goldbe!i said ht!! personally did not ( think the ca•es would ever be blown up but, he added, "My naotk>n II mat some mealW'e1 should be tahn to pre- vent the healt.h •nd fire haianh: th1t are created bec•U!t or the pt0ple living ln the caves. "I'm partlcul11ly concerned about the danger of fire now that the dry season Is approaching. One spark up there could set off a flre th1t could endanaer 111 the bomM on the hills ." Goldberg 1ald he dldn•t know just what should be done. "They've talked •bout blowing them up . sealing IM:m off in some way. 1praying them with aome sort of ' ru-... I Jull knoW lt'1 a bad sltuaUon from the standpolnt of health and fire hlunl." The new mayot uid he' rtallzed 1hal ecologiS1s "have a good point" in wanting to pre~rve the caves and added, "r understand the.ct art some archaeol ogical finds to made up lhere too, and this • Js fine, but somttblng must be done to 1et tilt people out or there. "J know there 1re some people who think It's All right to let tht. hippies live in t~ caves. but we a.lso have to think of lhe ptQPle In the houM:s up lhere whose homes would be en.. dangered If there should be a bad fire." • ------------ each board Is made up of a member of the County Board of Supervisors and two city councilmen from the respective areas. Bur11~d Oui · The Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission meet s at 7:30 p.m. in the City Council chambers at city hall. Fireman cools charred remains of ~'hal \vas once garage apartlnent at 227 Agate Ave., Balboa Island. Fire of undetermined origin gut· ted. the buiJding owned by . Robert Landis early Sunday afternoon. Building was vacant at the time and no one was injured. Damage \Vas esUmated by llremen at $7,000. Cause of the blaie is stiU under in- vestigation. l I I ' I ' . . - --·-- " ' --· • ... ' •BEA ANDERSON, Editor ,.......,_.....,. 4 \'19 N r_. IS Funds Blossom Through Ball . Spring fiowers will blossom Saturday, May 9, to provide a backdrop for the second annual Fantasy Ball of Mano Con Amor Auxiliary of Child· ren's·Home SOciety. · Members and guests will gravitate to the Ne\\'porter lnn for a cock· tail hour at 7 p.m . to be followed by dinner and dancing f·rom 8 until 1 a.m. to the music o! the Bernie Perrv Orchestra. The black-tie-optional affair will raise funds for the voluntary adop- tion age ncy which has placed more than 32,000 children since its inception in 1891. ' Mano Con Amor Auxil.i.ary is .made up of residents of lhe Uniy_ersity _ , Park, Turtle Rock and UCl areas. . -CHS iS 'licensed· by the State Department of Social WeUare and ac· credited by the Child Welfare League of America. It has 22 offices ii:t all parts of California. ·· P~S IN BLOOM -·An explosion of spring flowers will !illthe. Newporler Inn Saturday, May, 9, when Mano Cort Amor Auxiliary of Children's ·Home Society hosts its second Fantesy Ball, a bene- fit for the adoption agency .wbich ·serves patents .and children of ,all nices and clhed.s. Gatbering-the lirst spring blossoms for the decor are (left to right) Mrs. WoodbQrn Gailey and Mrs'. Richard .Havchol. Spearheading arrang~ments for the Fantasy Ball Is Mr_s. Peter Bt:r· wick, chairman, and assisting her are the Mmes. Woodburn Gailey, co-chair· man; Fr«\tmln Rose. prizes; John Campbell, entertainment; Errol Payne, invitations •and reservations; ·Jay· Martin, programs; Michael Hazzard, dec- orations, and Thad Montgomery, publicity. ' N·ew Mayor Finds a Loyal Fan ~ ' /: By JO OLSON Of r1M CNllY Pllrl Stolt "I'm excited over it and pleased." Speaking wa s Mrs. Edgar F. Hirth. wife of Newpor.t .,Beach's new mayor, who was comment- oiL •her husband's victory. : Her goal now is to do everyt@i.ng, she .,can (to help_ her .husband in . 4is ,..new role.-·· · 1 ·"'.'A quiet, modest woman, Mrs·. I:Prt!i most likely. will"go about doing just that in her'unassuming way.· Her modeStY hides a mountain.of ac.hievemerrts, for she bas given of her time to mariy ·org8niza- READY TO HELP Mrs. Edg•r F. Hirth tions in the Harbor Area including Assistance Leag:ue of Ne\vport Beach, Auxiliary of Hoag Me~ morial Hospital, Presbyterian, AJpha Chi Omega A1umnae Chapter, Panhellenic of Newport Harbo:r and the Beacon Bay Committee ·of . the Orange · Cci'unty Philh·armonic Society. . : ·She is a sustaining member·of,Cbildre1'.'.!1..-:1-1ome . SQCiety, a member of the Women's Division of the - . ·-:Newpb'rt IJarbor Chamber of Commerce and Tro- ja'n League of Orange County. · ·she and her husband-are .Fine ·Arts Patrons of the Newport Harbor Art Museum and belong to the YMCA, Irvine Coast Country Club, Shark Is- land Yacht Club and attend the Community Church Congregational in Cqrona de! Mar. TIMI! FOR GOLF With all of these activities w'bich she loves, she still finds time to play three-par golf with her hus- band, walk, read and enjoy the commanding view 'of the Back Bay from th.eir condominium liome in the Bluffs. •· Mrs. Hirth, a brown-eyed bruneite wbo stands 5'5" tall, probably wUI be enterteinlng a bit more now that her husband is head of the Newport Beach city government, but probably will continue to give her sma11, enjoyable parties. She bas chosen a gold and whiLe color scheme for their convenient home, which has a mixed' de-- cor utilizing old and new. ·uer husband's study is the only contrast to the gold and white, utilizing cork paneling and greens and yellows. The couple, who have been Newport Beach residents for 19 years. like the city because of its small size and its proximity t6 the water and boats. Mrs. Hirth attended the University of Southern California, Where she met her husband, and pur· sued a liberal arts course. Her daughter. Mrs. Paul Morris, who lives in Virginia, and son Ted of Tus· tin both are graduates of USC . FOND GRANDPARE NTS A very irp.portant person in their life is their granddaughter, Lianne, 5, who is the Moqises' dauhter. "We wish they could be closer," Mrs. lYrth Smiles. • , The new mayor and his wife like to travel and have visited Hirth'& brother, Hugh in Zurich Switz.. erland several times, combining their visit with trips around Europe to Germa·ny, Italy and oth"er countries. Last summer they traveled to the· South Pacific, visiting Tahiti, Bora Bora and Hawaii. '1'h9u,gh another long tr~p may have to wait a couple of years for the Hirths, they'll have plenty to do to fill their time in the meantime. And however busy she may be Mrs. Hirth most likely will always find time to lend her husband a helping hand. · I / -~ Fiesta Mus ic Signals Start of Fet ivities • } posito's orchestra \Vill round out the fien8. atmos ;~ phere. Adding a further festive note, past aux.ilia presidents 'viii be hongred. Ready for the party to·,. begin are (left to right) Senor l>aul J. Bergdah1::f Senora James Davies and Senora Bergdahl. ~:::?: A Mexican Fiesta de Angeles will swing into action Friday, 'Ma y 8, in the Ne,vporter Inn under sponsor· ship of Our Lady Qu~en of Angels School Auxiliary. beginning at 7 p.m. wi th a social hour. Dinner 'viii follow at 8:30 and dancing to the music o! Mike Es· ... . •r "' . " College Son Goe00 Pot, C·an't Read 'Keep 0ff Gr~s·s'· ~ DEAR ANN LANDERS: MY. "°" who is a colleae frdman doesn't know it bot I leomed, by l<Cldent. thal he not only uses marijuina but is selling me ,wu-to his clu,ynates. Yesterday I dltcovered he· has introduced tus _younger brother to it. U my husbarid knew .about this he wookl t:lll the kid. l am so tom up I can't eat or sleep. Please tell me what to do. -FRANTIC MOTHER f>EAR ~fOTHER: You need twt tilings -Information and COGnJe. Learn from a lawyer the. peultle1 for poNHSIDI and selling marijuana la your s&aie. Thea 1peak to your IOI (the pu.IHr) calmly and Urmly. No hysterics. Explain "'hat he 11 lettfag ldm1elf la for tf he 111 cau1bt. Let him know the.rt wtll be no pot la your boute ud If be ' h•bll .. .-.. ..... w ..... lo .. , oat If be aay1, ''The law 11 0. my side. I'm a miaor ud I *-''t laave to 1et out," tdl bJm : uu )'Ml wnt to set lttbnlcal, I caa pt -!cal •· U f c:atcb you 1moldn1 prft la &Ms ..._ I will tum yoa over t. Cite javealle av.Oaar:lttes. '' If II -.. _,.,., mke 1CHM1 the tbrtat. Tlle:n 1pe1k to bis brotbe.r ud e1plllD the duatrs tf pot.; --- Eacourqe ~ to talk to yeur family doctir or to J eebool autbortly. Veu • doa't uy hw1'I• file )'OU.Iller brother II. II .. la VI yet lo hip a<bool, be aware tlaal mOlt jator lllP 1ebotl1 ' MW Uvt ~· coUntelen wbo dt a nae job. Al!• poc1 ·l~t 1o 7""• dtar -ud -. all tUlen wbo have lo l•Ct llll1 problem. It'• nt of Ille roqbest. DEAR ANN LAND&RS: I'm enjoying yoor runnlna batUe.on pornoeraphy, The reader who observed that some very bright ~le enjoy it was an un- derstatement. to say lhe least. And this is only .part. oC the story. Are you aware lhJtt one of this country's most dfst.iogulshed Americans also enjoyed peep !hows? Would you believe Ollver Wendell Holmes? You can print this without fear of being sued by his rtlatives because it is a matter of record. Look t\ up anyplace. -THE OLD HISTORIAN DEAR OLD HISTORIAN : " T b e rtCOCd" says aolhln1 aboat peep shows. It iJ • •·ell known fact, however, dlal lbe disttnptshed Supr11me Coart Justb: Ottttpied a rep1ar 1e1t at lbt Gayety Theater In W11bln1ton, D.C. And just to keep the rte0rd 1tr ... l, Did, bur· ' luqae · la tbo&e days showed Jess tU1 cu· now be see• at any soda fountain, or oa ~y btfl. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a 15-year· old iirl who has hid It wtth my iflndmother. She lives In Albuquerque. Grandma clips your columns oot or the Tribune and malls them to me. I've told her a thousand times we ge t your col umn here In the Santa Fe New Mei:- lcan so she doesn't have to bother. Whenever you print a column about a teenage girl who is pregnant Grandma circles it wUh pencil. Lately she has been sending all your columns About pot an'd the big H. f 1ot Ont yesterd1y. J am not sleepina with anybody and J have no plans lo. I've tried pot a couple limes and it does nothina me. Stronger stuff is ror idiots. MVtT mate· IU1 ~oe. Tell Gr to stOp-aending me y(,ur columru. S getting on my nerves. -ONE T MANY '~ -DEAR GRANDMA ' Save y-slul~ f'm sure yOu meu wtll, bat your ffl. proacb 11 poison IO kith -so ~ the hlnl. ·~ . . . ..~ What is French kissin&? Is it .,,ron&'f Who Rbould oel Ille ntcklnfl limit( ·~ lb< boJ or lhe 1lrlt Can a ~ weddlnc succeed? Read Ann ~ bool<lel, "Teenaae Su ~ Tep I to Cool It." Send Ill cents In· coin · · 111 long, self•ddrultd, llllft9H'tov' tn care ol the DAILY Pnm. " ~ ·~ , '"" ., •• ~rt \ . 'I . I Association Frames Show f or Mother's · Day . '. ' .. . Y Gur Horoscope· 'Tomorrow ' ' • . -·Gemini ~ Stress Versatility TUESDAY " MAY 5 By SYDNEY OMARR Mon crime• tf vlole1ee tc· cur during tbt hU Moon tbaa at uy other time of_ the JDOatb-cbeck )'OIU' I o c a I poUce department. ARIES (March 11-April 19)' New a'ppl'Oach to financiaJ prospects is a necessity. There is pressure and challenge. You .. may find that some of your J>O!Mlsiom are in need of renovaUon. Keep up to date. TAURUS (April 26-May 20): New moon in your sign ac· cents personality, initiaUve and ambition. A c c e p l responsibility. Could irx:Jude overtime assignment. Your special efforts wW pa y dividends. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): What occurs behind the scenes may become privileged in- formation for you. stress Movie Enthusiasts library Books Films Newport Beach Public Library has an- nounced a new addition to its ever-expanding list of services -a new collection 'Of 8rnm films . . versatility. MQYe with the tide. steps required for sruf.er Reinember one who niay be securify' .. StreN ts on bow you temporarily handica~. de~lop technlques, matt CANCER (JUlle 2H11ly 21)· saf~y devi«.S. Slick close to Aceent on how to achieve base ol operaUorus. aspirations. Welcome op-PISCES (Feb. It-Marth 20): portunity to meet people. You art active, 6pend much Ingratiate yourself with in· energy and could have reunion dividual who has big ideas. with close relative. Travel You can come up with in-seemt to be high on agend1 . formation of vaJue. Avoid confusion by checking LEO (July 23--Aug. 22): New d!,redioru. opportunities are available. IF TODAY · IS , YOU.R. You could be surprised BIRTHDAY ·you ~~ a because older individual ad· magnetic individual, food of vocates modem procedure. Be invutigating and p i e c i n 1 cooperative. Concentrate on together puzzle pi~. Your professional approach to laSk curiosity is great and you are at hand. seldom satisfied: wYh bllfway VIRGO (Aue. 23--Se:pt. 22): measures. A unique rela- Spot.light on journeys, cor-tionship gets 'on different re.spc;ncl:nce. closint: of com· fOot.ing. 1be put makes way mwucation gaps. Child or lov-· for adjusbnent to n e w ed one in your. age bracket circumstaoces. demands attention. Be gracious, giving. Make effort 1~T~~ O:~ ~~:. ~,::~ ""!•~ to keep domestic harinony. 0m1rr'1 bookllt; "Stem •II"''-_tv Mtn tnd Womtfl." Strid &1111'111 ... UBRA (Sept. 23--0ct. 22): '""' 511 C9flt1 to Om•rr Astro1.,t' r--'th S11ere!1, tM DAILY PILOT,.. fl.ex """'"""'n Wl the mysterious Gr1nc1 c ... rr11 s1111D11. ,... orti. or hidden it evident. Dig deep;:::"::·'::· '::"::'"======:;;; for information. Reject th e superficial. If persistent, you could show solid profit. STARS All. types o! art work will be on exhibit when the Street. Framing plans !or the Saturday, M~y 9 ex- Ft'>untain Valley~ Association sponsors its annual bib.it are (le.ft to right) Mrs. James Merrill, Mrs. For all home movie enthusiasts with · 8mm projectors. the library is making avail~ able flims in black and white and color. Films may be checked out on a three-day b8sis. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)' Lie low ; do ~ore listening than talking. Accent on bow much you learn, impression you make on public. Mate or business partner should be permitted to take initiative. Svclri,y Orn1rr ts ""' ef tfri• warld'1 1Jf11t 1ttTolot•"· Hi1 •alu111ri i1 011•. ef th, DAILY PILOT'S tr•at f1atur••· Mother's Day exhibit between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. in William Dunn, president, and Mrs. Joseph Giesing. the Village Center, Talbert Avenue and M~gnolia The collection includes historical and · sport documentaries, travelogues, biograph- ies and excerpts from Hollywood classics. : .Last Days ~ .Discussed :· Hawaii Wedding Trip Selected by Newlyweds Funerals and Wilh: Are You Prepared? will be the topi c ·~ • fonun sponsored by the totllWD Valley Woman • s Clim. The four-part Wednesday -aeri<s will begin at t :"ts a.m. May I, in tile com- riuinlly ct.Ur. All interested women in r9untain Valley are invited to. attend the sessions and leam detail! relating to an upect of life everyone en- "!'Jlllell. Mn. Kenn<th Weill . :11 dloirman. Selecting Hawaii for 'th.eir honeymoon . ~ere the forrer Bridget. Elizabeth Cummings and Dr. Robert c. s~~-' burg, both of Corona del Mar. The Rev. Davi d Di Profio ·conducted the afternoon single ring ceremonies in ChriSt Church by the Se.a. Newport Beach. 'The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde C. Cummings or Temple City, asked her sister Sheilah Cummings to be the maid of honor. Attending the son (Jf Mr • and Mrs. Gilbert Sarkenburg of Tempre City, wu his.father.. as best. man and Roes and .Philip · Starkeoburg, li:i s ' . Speaker1 will include John : tllOncao, wlto will addms ·t!iooe atta.ding next Wed- .. M.say'• program M Eat.ate brothers. · Scott Cwnminjis, the bride's MRS. STARKENBURG laming and Tu:. On May 131 '. there will bt a discussion lrid review of his talk, and OJI May 20 Decatur Dilday ct'Dilday Bros. Fwteral Dlrec· nephew wu the ring bearer. CdM Home The former Miss Cummings attended PaSldena C i t y Colli!ge. wiJJ speak IXI funeral fe- qdirements. On May rt all members iiid guesJs will meet at Dilday'1 chapel for a tour of Dr. Sta r ke n burg, an <1rthodontist in F o u n t a i n Valley, was a student at the University of California, Santa Barbara and UC's Medical SehQol Jn San Francisco. He the facility. · • ' . " BEAUTY SAVINGS! l•ak 11111•t ifl • fl1H•ti11t f1thio"•\.I• 1pri119 1tyle! Go 1h1•tl -P1mp1• you•11!f, but still 1h1t~h yo~• b11cl9et. SHAMPOO-SET ..... . MON .. TUii .. WED. LAT IJI: WEIK 52.45 HAIRCUT ································ '1.50 12.95 12.00 HI STYLE SHAMPOO-SET ......... . HAIRCUT .. ' .......... . $2 .95 $2.00 $3.95 FAMOUS BUDGET PERM $5~~ploto Not for Tinted or Bleached Hair 51500 WONDER CURL PERM &H~~I,, '9.95 Crowiifng Glory BEAUTY SALONS OPE N EVENINGS l SUNDAY CROWNING. GLOR 267 .E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA PHONE silU?lf OPEN EV EN INGS CROWNING GLORY I l'*nwi'I c.,ri&e C.lffwtill SOUT H COAST PLAZA Lt_., a...tf-Nut te It-. PHONE 54'-1196 ' Nursery Welcomes Parents · Films are available at Mariners Library on a fint come first served basis. Mesa Nursery School Staging Open House '"Tell U& the me. aitt )'till wutt to ,._N r, and we'll tell you how P"DY visit.a it will take and ruaranl.ee in writ.inf ~t you will l'ftlr.h YoQr pl), In 4C&. l!O absolutely pcllitive a"' we tbiit yon will obtain your objcdive, that •• llated ln flW" guorantee, M will e!W11 Jet you have FREE OP CHARGE, arJ7'mid all further 'ri&its, until 3'D'l TNcb your 10ld. The time il uJu .. for todl penon to •rlllevo her pl 1n1Y .,..,,, baweYR WE C:UARANTEE RESULTS ... .....,.... J & J UPHOLSTHY ' Ml'ANU O\IALITY', ll!tl!_lllf'/'1 SlltVICI, CU,.TSMAMIMlr. WE ACClrT CMAU.IMl lS ' WI' LllCI' llAUTll'UL l'UltMfTUlll SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21)' Finish projecls. Gel busy on chores which have been neglected. Diet; proper '42·5876 pacing a r e especially im-1';::::;;;~~;;;::;;;~~;;;~ port.ant. Be moderate in basicl~ habits. Avoid extremes. CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan. 19 ): New moon eould shine on romantic evening for you. Throw off past burdens. Begin anew. You have earned right to happiness. There is no need for guilt feelings. Come alive. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2()..feb. 18): Yoo gain new insight to POR MOTHER'S DAY FINEST SELECTION Of PHOTO FRAMES 111 Or•11t• Co1wty • Wall & Easel Types • Wlrlt• Lmpst ,... •......., nn ••• cza ....._II Cltlffmi• a101t•'. FIG1JBE OO:NrBOL SALONS U l.f H. UT. N' .......... .._. DPma aa IMITll l:llAlll W NEWPORT BEACH 43 0 PACIFIC COAST HWY. 642-3630 12 Bloc~s East or 'pal~ Bay Club) 1840 W. -17th STREET .51$,9457 SANTA ANA ALSO IN A••h•l111, Ce•l11•, CrHtkw, Dew11..,, Gl•1Hl•i.. t..lewffd, la v..... Lo.. ...... Ntwp•n leoch, N. H•llywffd, 0Aterie, POM1dt111., Sa ~·· Sot• A"-Sntti ....... lllM.H, J.,. 1ne. Te~•. Whlftltr. (cf Copyriglt t 1910 Clor'io Marshall Mgt. Co . Inc. .. ~ 1 ff . vod iJ, NO. I~, J SECTIONS, 32.PAGES I ----. ' -. . .. • 1es .e OAIL.'f PILOT lt•H 1""'9 WHEN OFFICER MIKE McEVE.NEY SAID 'GRASS,' HE DIDN'T MEAN LAWN CLIPPINGS In Newport Buch, More 1Than 700 Pounds of Marijuana in G1rb1ge Can 'Liners \ e .. R<litfs Foe· ~-,,. ··1-:{ ' . . '.... ' In Cambodia SAIGON (UPI) -Scores ol U.S. tanks rumbled across the Fishhook ol Can1- bodia Monday Md American comman. ders said their 15,00G-man allied task force was "lo the heart" of the head· quarters are...-wbere the Conununist! run - their -Vietnam war strategy. The head· quarters itseU femalned undetected. Five thousand more South Vietnamese tr.oOps were committed to a related er. fensive into the Parrot~s ·Beak region to the s<iuth, bringing to . 30,000 the Jlumber. cf men involved in the twin thrtlsts aimed· at .destroying N0rth Viet· name• and· ~viet Cane sanctuaries in Cambo;dia. 'Ml~y im::luded 8,000 Gls. Military . sources said at least three more major forays · into. Cambodia were being pianoed. Ccmmunlques l:l.escnlled the Fishhook a?d Parrct's Beak 9ffensive1 as highly successful with 1,952 North Vietnamese ind Viet Cong repcrted killed and 359 prisoners taken and 250 tons of food, munitions and medical supplies seized. U.S. losses were placed at tZ killed. and 46 WCWlded and those for South Vietnamese units at 151 killed and 560 woonded. Expanded Site ~ught in M~sa For Post Offic{! As the amea task forcet knifed deeper Into Cambodia, dispa~es . from the eapitai, Phnom Penh,• aid Ctmbodian it --=r.tr.:~tt Mid . ' m$r_btllle;!'l"Y be ,apinsl Cmm>uniit lroop• A new Costa Mesa Post Office site replacing the emting ooe at 17th Street and Orange Avenue is being sought and plans have already been drawn up, it was announced today. Convenience will be the key in selecting the 59,650-square-root site for the station, postal officials said. The new building will provide 13,139 JIPlare feet of interior space, with 1,100 /&quare feet of platform area and 41,780 5quare· feet for vehicular parking. 'Ibis will be roughly three times the aize .of the existing facility oo Orange Avenue at East 17th Street, according to the U.S. Post Office's San Francisco Regioo headquarters. The choice of site will be assigned to the succesSul bidder, who will buy the Jand, build the facility to federal specification and lease it back to tile Post llffice De!>arlm<mt. This method will keep it on local tu rolls. British Blighty , Club F oiinder, ., McRorie, Dies . . . . ~ William R: Mciiorie, Coe:ta Mesa resi- dent w00 WU the founder ./lf 1be United 1\ll!cdom Club and tbe llrtt!ah Blighty Club ii ci.d al the age ol 79. Mr. il\cllorie, who live\! al.'3' w. 18th SL-<lled'Seiuroay at Hoag Hospital. ·He-'Wn the .originator ol tbe United KJil&dom Clilb, which -,boasts 4,000 nfemlien nationwide. Bodi · 'the United KfJiPm Club and the British Bligbty Club were formed for Conner-tesident.s of of the BritiBh 18Ies Who bavelf:ome to lhe U.S. ., ' .. . Two men., charged with posseoion of marijuana for sale, are in custody today in Newport aeacb following their arrests Saturday during which police claim to have confiscated 730 pounds of the illegal weed . Narcotics investigator Leo Konkel said the haul was the largest in the history of Newpott: Beach. H sold ""1holesale, the impaunded nar- cotic would be worth about ~.ooo, he Mesa Apartment ' Project Starts Construction Construction is under way en a $7.7 million apartment comptu adjacent to -the Hal'b« Shol>J)ing Center in Costa Mesa, complete with running brooks. golf, tennis, pool and other facilities. Ground has been broken for the '5(l6-unlt project l>y Fa.it' H811>or Company on 17 acres cf land bounded the center en the south and Fair Drive en the north. Ccmplf!Uon is tentatively scheduled for late 1970, according to spokesmen for Ring Brothers Inc., a subsidiary cf Mcncgram Industries and S h e r Enterprises. 'lbti'. project will Include a tw~story recreational building, with a health club, billiard and cai:~ ~rooms, plu.s a com- munity room ana facUlties for club meetings. ~~ J!<oides IWimming pools, ~ layout will feature fCtll' tennis COUl'tl, aDd a l"'Wng git<o, ; • Mesa Kiwanians • . . Plan· Breakf i1$t · McRorii Jeaves bis wife1 ~ of the family home; two aons, J<>iri ol Newport Beicb and William of cOeta~ Mesa ; a.. ~. Archie of'Scotiand; two mtm,, ·A tradltloO ,dltlng bifk Iii pre-dl"1oo<i Mattie Cr90S and Kate, Lochea~ bolb of ' wtU be MWll<d May ~ when the G>sta Scolland, and four grandclllldren. ,..... Kiwanis Club lltllgoa its 20th Annual Mr. McRorie waa i. lif~~ember P8ricate ~Ml. . ol the 0.-,_Wllllhaw, $.cOlliail Ma. Klwaoiaos will 8"t aoolher belly'b!Jst<r -Loci ... Funer@l .....ic..•wlkh Will -the cltlaeory beglmlng al ·7 am. lie beld w-ay, I p.ni.' at-!lie Bell -and 1'111111inC-:untll= .1 OO!lfr.ll ... ~ay· OlopeI will 'be CIOl!dliCled bY .llartiAlte of.die lll1gbia1 • liolt. · mtl!llMnol.lllt Selfldl!( MaOoalc Lodge.•, 11c:keti may be ','flom club ------'-----·--meenben Ind lhll year'• ine~aot will STMK JllAJIAET feoture blQer l!Vea'!IY prbes lhan ever -------·--· ---·-~· befure, . a color television &et and a NEw YOl!K (AP) -. on.. stoCk markel Schwim blcy<te. • resumed its a!etP decllnt thJs afternoon Ail adult ticket-holder will get the aft.er strengthefiing at midday in the wake • set aod a child will win the bicycle, of Soviet Prtmier AJexei N. Kasygin's wblle numerous other prizes Will also statemtnt concerning U.S. involvement be awarded. in Cambodia. (See quotations, Pages 20-The tradition began in 1951, when pan- 21). cakes were poured on the griddles frQm Declining lsaues lead advancts by mort a dipper instead of today's pitchers and thin 750 among stocltl traded on the New 1&U18ge went on the grjddle across the Yotk Stock i!xcharlge. street in the Ameri~ Leg.ion Hall. . ' I said. Ir sold'by the lid (one ounce), Kon· kel saJd the ,marijuana wouJd be worth $12.1,000. An'ested were Gregory Lynn Tucker, 21, of Lakewood and David Glenn CUn· nison, 22, o! Cardi/. Watch Commander Earnest Laurin sWd he was malting a roul.ine , check of the arta.when he spotted the suspecta in the alley at 218 Lugonla St. Offioet Michael MeEveny who w~s called \b the scene said the p!ir were taken fnto · custody when a huge pile 0£ l~ge bags full of marij4ana was found Jn their van. The. cCficer said. he saw' the bags wh~J he went to make an inspecticn of Jbe vehicle, which was allegedly ii· legaDy parked. Konkel said 540 pounds of the drug was found in the van and another 190 pounds was found in the gara&e at 218 Lugonia ·St. lnvesUgaticn in the case is continuing, he said, and more arrests are expected today or Tuesday. . "We suspect tbe marijuana came from Y..fexico," he added. Social Security Boost Approved WASHINGTON (AP) -A five percent raise in Social. Security benefits next ye1'f has been :approved tent.ativeJy by ti\e 'Hoose Ways and M~ans Committee, sources said Monda}.. · ~ reported agreement rtn\Ovts one cf tl)e final uncertainties tn.a '(OlflpJieated welfare.Social Security ref<M1u bill the conunitkie hopes to fin1st1 withtn· days fer House action this mont:h. '1lio lnci-eaie wiluld 'be financed by increasing to $9,000 the wage bise on wtikh the payrol.I tax' is levied: ·nus Means that next year any waa:e. earner m.Ptng mere-than· $7;800 would pay hipr Scciaj -Security taxes tba~ uoder ex~ng law. 1.here alsq will be some · increase in pi;vroll taxes for everyone, regardless q~«mgresslooal action, because .cf an ~ikimatic rate .)ncrease alr.eady , m the . . DOw Jones ·Acquires . ' l2 Papers • in. Merger .-NEW YORK (AP) -Dow J ..... "· Co., Inc. and Ottaway Newspapers.Radle, Inc. announced today a· tnera:er plan in which Dow Jones will acquire the nine dally and three Sunday t1eW1paper1 published l>y Ottaway. • In a joint alJ'lOUncement, the com· panles said the merger would be ac. compllsbed t.brougb an exchange 0£ aboµt 914,000 shares ol Dow Jone• C<lhmon 1tock ror ell cut!tanc:Ung cap1tel •tock er the Ottaway Co. "t •. ____ t_ __ ~---· ..... -----------~--~---~-.-......,.__.__.._ . , •"" lbe wettero bulk ol the M ...... River. Ko~ TIM»n is 30 miles southeast of Phnom Penh and abcut. 50 mil.es frcm the Parrot's Beak frcnt. Phnom Penh <ijr.patche"s aaid "hundreds" cf Cam- bodian tribe!ll}en, trained and paid by the U.S •. Special Forces, had been flcwn from.' ba~ in South Vietnam to beef up the 40,000.man cambodian anny. By nlgbUall today American annored uni&a bad puibed at I~ 15 -miles from the South Vietnamese border en Highway 7. -The rou~ ia: a paved road that had been usei:f ·to haul Communist war sup- plies lhrougb Cambodia inlli South Viet· nam. The ·Fishhook force was looking ,for the Gcnuitunists' central office.for South Vietnanl -COSVN -tbe Hanoi head· quarters which President Nixon has said must be destroyed. "It's here and we're in the heart er it,'' a U.S. commander said. But there was no sign of COSVN itself in the fourth day of the Fishhook offensive. Daniel said more than 90 American tanks and anncred perscnnel carriers raced along Highway 7 under orders from the lllh Armored Cavalry Regi- ment squadron commander, ·Lt. Col. Grlal Brookshire, not ta fire unless fired upon. ,.. .. ''We're. doing what an army unit 111 supposed to do," Brookthire said. "We're breaking deep into enemy territory and blocking \heir major routes. We've got a discrganized enemy. He isn 't fighting be<!ause be Ocesn't knew what he is doing." ' Brookshire said his men hoped to un- cover mere supply complexes in deep lhrusts at first light Tuesday. He said about' SOO "structures" were seen and that they. probably ·held munUlcns and other )far materiel. In the . P.arrot's But,, hundreds of South. Vietnamese anncred vehicles drove into Communist base camps on (See CAMBODIA, Page 2) I ~ grijingl We're with,dratiling from · Vietnitm, · cireil 't uie ?' ~· -~ .. Keeping <:ool • • Today'•~I ~ • N.Y. Steeks -.. -. • TEN CENTS Regelta, year-oldlpet.racoon of Darrell Allen, 12, cools off m>wheel· barroW at Allen· ~'i'Dle 28;69 El.den :AVe., Costa Mesa. Darrell. ·a ~~ dent af Harper .SChool. ,foul!d Regetta,when the racoon was just a baby last July near the Salton Sea. D~rre11·was <ID a catnpibg trip . at the .time. , . .. . ' '' • • I 115,000 Flee Heat \W ave, Flock to Ne,vport. Be.ach Driven by an inland beat wave, 115,000 persons flocked to Newport's beaches Surulay. . . ' . ' . ' Parking spots and open patches or sand on which to spread' a towel became precious comm~l~s. It was easily the largest beach crowd Cl( the year .and ''one of the · biggest eve:-," acCT1rdinl: ~ to Assistant Marine Safety Director Kendall Jaccbsen. . The sun-seared aa g•s · nunlbertd o,nl1 . slightly . ieSS . sa·turda)• :When. the crowd was. estima1-td' at ·as_,ooo. , . . . · · Rerilarkably. lileiuatds dl.dri't tnake 8 s1~&1e ·rescue. tJt-t ·~e· W.eeteoG:.:.The , si.:ri was flat , and Jwmfesa aml 'the water CT1ld enough to di!CotitaBe swlm- roers.. .. . . The coast weather was. balmy· -a reccrde.d ·its high .fer thi year -99 degre~s -~d Los ApgileS with a high er 94 set an all time iecord for the date. · Raymond Jchmcn, dtspatcher for the Or~ge.Ccu_nty Harbor Depa:rtinent, said there was plenty ·cf bOat' tfaffic OA the weekend. "The good weather· brings tllem out." • ·Auto trafric, JN:O:vi~. ~ usual motorists' mlsery."1,'aclfic Cout Highway "(as bumper·to:bllm~ 'througb' the l!lid· die cf town and the Peninsula was clog· ged. • l "We only ·had ' 30 accidents this weekend," Traffic fn~e9tig1tor Tony (See BEACH, Poe< !) · high er 68 Saturday ,and 72 Sunday, But ._ Oran"e lhe sun shone llKe a furnace on com-e munitiea inland. Santa Ana en· Sunday Police Seeking Rape Susp~t . • I ' ' ' Costa MA!sa police lodJY are. ,..!ling · • su-1 ln . the il\mdW' """"1>a''.rape . and robbqy of a lf!,y'!lf-o!!I Costa Mesa . ......... . InvestJgators said the viCUm· and· her companion, a. Los Ange.let m'°' ~~ted that they had· returned• f:rpm a date age! had just walked the baby~ltter home When they were accosted by a man wUh a~knife. · . · · The U&allant uec1. ~p her -pinion and then assaulted ,the woman, aetordlng to police reporis. Police said the ougpect then tied up the w'"an and took about . 146 bl.cash fl<lln;tbe polr.bef ... l!ffing her west side apartm.tnt. 11te vicUm's YQUDC Im Wit. unharmed durinc tht bour·l<q·tnddeot, poll<~llid. • . Foggy weather .js ln . store for coastal dwellers Tuesday; with temperatures diP.ping to the 86 level along the beach and settUns 1 at 75· further inland. • INlilDE -TeDAY · BOrrowers are · fetlb\fi · tlR tighe money pinch u-tM ·mltlt 1 ZOan u alt but a tning o/ ,u..1-. past. Page 22. , · • ' . ,• I ci • ,, 1· '' j ..., ....... , '·..; . " ·-,._;-·..:i -~ -=,~···-=·=~---~~.-.-==-------~-~ -.~- 2 DAILY PILOT C • M~yor Says . . ~ve Blast· r.~lice. i~~a . ' . -ri • 'Ille JIOSSil>i~ly o! blowing up or tlhtrwi!e sealing off caves in the hills Wind ·.Laguna Beach occupied by transient hippies was fil'lt "tossed ·out'' by a La:guna Beach police officer, Mayor Rtcbard 'Goldbttr:&aid today. · · : "l flrat heart!' abQut lt at a pre-elect.Ion '8ftffee in a house Up on the hill. where J'eOPle were complaining -about hippies living in the caves and creating a fire Pd health hazard," Goldberg said. ';A J:Olice . offictr at that meeting said the ~ce department had even considered ~wing up the eaves. It was something that was tossed out along with a lot ototht1 ~.", ,.·Qold~rg nld he personally did not thittk the caves would ever be blown •J> but, he odded; "My reaction la that p11e measures sbould be· taken to ·pre- lfll\ the. heallh and llr'e !wards· that 8 ·created. because of the people living In the caves. , • .. . , "I'm particularly ooncemed aboUt the donpi:.~( ·Im now that the dry seuon It apjroaching. One spark up there COUid at oil a, fire .that iCOUkl endanger all the homes on the hllb.''· · .. ' . --• , • CAILY •ll.OT'f'IM ... llJ'L .. •h¥ .. DESPITE LARGE CROWDS, GIRL· l'INDS SPACE TO ROMP WITH HER DOG NEAR NEWPOllT PIER ";.:Goldberg said he didn't know just tdlat should be done. . «'"l!ley've Wked abOul \!owl' g ''" .... Ung .-them or! ln •some • ""'"'"""thmf wilh ·-of subs1ance .•• I jual !<J!ow 41' hid -UIG .from. the 'Slandpolnt 0 tallh -..:1flre bazerd~" 'lbe ·new mayor 1aid he realized that ~ 0have a good point" Jn wanting tt;preltrve the caves and added, !"I fH d e r'.:t t: a h d tbert are some MaeologlcaF !illdil w mide up there Missing Discipline Cause Of Delinquency, Says DA and this ts · .flM; but · somelhing ~t be ~Olle ·I<> -get -th< people out «!the'<· . . ·"t · knQW there 1;fe IOJ;De people whO tlilnk tt!s all right to let the hippies lh ut the · caves;. but we also . hive lo. thlnk of lli; people ln the houses ~ there:. Whole Homes would be mo ~e'!id u:-. sbould'be a bad fire.• .... . By.ALBERT W. BATES Of fM llaltJ ,lltf II.it Parental· Jove iS as important and Om:ntprtsent as ever but what has been miising ti the vital lngredlent ol diacJpllne. .. 'lb.ls was the essence of Orange County District Attorney c.ecil llicks' analysis of what has gone wrong'with a younger generation resorUng to drugs and vioMnce as be addressed members of . KILLED .IN TRAFFIC ACCIDENT NEAR OCEANSIDE • .: · Ne~~rt's Thomas L. Grim1h•w (left ), Robert J. Wrighton Two N.ewport .. Youths Die . ,. In Oceanside Accident Two Newpcrt Beach · youths were killed Sunday in a car crash near Oceamide that also left three Los Angeles woinen seriowdy l;tjured . · Robert J; Wright°'!, 20, o( 741 Amigos DAllY PllOT OllAHGf: COAST PUll.l~HlNG COM,.ANY •. Robert N. Wttd Pru 'lllcnl tr><I ,.ubtls.h•• .J1,l JI:. Cu1t1y V'co• .. mkltrll ond ~ti Mll'lllW' n.0111•• K,,,a Coll• Mn • Offlc• )JO W11I l oy S+.eot / ,w.,;i;,., Addoou i P.O. lor I s•o. •2•1• OtW Offlc .. Nt'WP&rl htth: :nu Wttl ltlbo1·I011ltYt •d 1.1giu 81.c~: m Foml A....,u, Wll"tl"'tlll llttd>: llllJ lttcll l:111l...-1rd ,.., C*""'lt: Jill N01'1h El Ctmlo\o llHI OAll,.Y f}LOT, wlltl w'hktl It cDmllflld ftilto Nt~ It """'"""' dtllf t~ lvol· .. _, ... ~,.,, tdll-fol' 1. .......... ,"' II~ •j.-:; •. C.lt M.... Hlll\llftt! ... tffdl 8l'fll '"' Vthf, '""" wllh two '"loM' ... leM. Ot•"Vf to._,, ,.~11:1>11 .... ' Compfl<'IY ... ifll!119 Oltft" l •t •I 11\1 WHI ltl-lflooO., NtWWI lttclo. tr.cl Ull Whl ltf Str.tt. COltf .Mt.-. T...,. ... (714) ••2·•J21 Way, the driver oi the car, was pro- noonc~ de~d at Camp Pendleton hospital following the 1 p.m. accident.· 'J'hoi:nas Lee Grimshaw, 20, ol 400 Signal Road . was dead on arrival at Oceanside Com· nlUnity Hospit~I. . Injured in the Single car crash were Karen Belinda Ostrokski, 20, and Kathy Cooley, 19, both of Bell and Manya Berk'ekoffJ 19, Of Cudahy. CaIUOrnia Highway. Patrolm~n said 'the car. was northbound on l nterstate 5 ap- proximately Qr"ie-hall mile south of the Qr811ge County line whe n for no apparent reason, it veered into the berm at the roadside. · The vehicle was catapulted Into· the afr on impact with the railing and rolled about 75 feet down the embankment before coming to rest on its left side. A passing California Anny "National Guard convoy saw the vehicle leave the road and rushed to the viclims' aid . First Lt. Robert F. Daniels, a physi· cian with the 540th Medical Battalion from Long Beach. administered first aid until ambulances arrived. CHP officers said Wrighton was taKen to the camp Pendleton hospllal in a helicopter in an effort to get him im· mediate medical atten,U~. . . The youths. who were close friends were returning from Eruienada where they had been attending Cinco de Mayo rdtivltJes. Both were 1967 graduates of Newport Harbor High Schocil and both were fonner members of Ta!Usmen Hl·Y Club. . Huntington Bea<)i Rolary Club Friday. Hicks recalled growing up in Los Angeles duting the Great Depression of the early 1930s. "Life was simpler then," he said ''There was a feeling of unity, for everyone waS' In lhe same boat." ''Next came World War IJ and again we were joined together as a nation Jn self-denial in behalf of a survival cause," Hick.o:. continued. "Then, after World War JI, we produced a 'jillion' babies, the ones wbo are in college now. "Most of us parents said we wanted lo give our children the creature co~ forts we couldn't have m the Depression or World War II. So we gave them cars we couldn't afford earlier, and a whole series of labor-saving appliances which .eliminated the chores which were part of their parents' early discipline." Jn the mllllt of all these parent-bestow· ed creature comforts, Hicks' :!laid, along came Dr. Benjamin Spock saying, "You've got to love a child." We parents agreed but we left out another vital element, discipline, Hieb said. "None of us, parents or children, can develop without discipline," H i c k s asserted. "We can't run a business or an offjce of any kind without it. LackJng .Uiscipline, employes would disintegrate, and so would the buslne.ss. "I think of it in terms of a boxing ring, with ropes around the four sides. Oro;> the ropes and someone falls off, on his face. So it is. with children's lives ii they don't ·know where the struc- ture is, the ropes are." The district attorney added that no free society can exist without discipline -and the best kind is self discipline which sets an example for children. ''O u r chi ld ren don't know how to change direction.'' he added. "Most of our youngsters' goals are very pure -but how they go about achieving them· is twisted all out of shape. This reflects the existence of parental love as far as the goals are concerned but Jack of discipline in the approach to those goals is painfully evident." Earlier in his talk. Hicks reealled confrontations he has bad with campus radicals, including a panel situation stacked 4 to 1 against him. What the district attorney learned was that the radicals fall on their face when penetrating questions are asKed. HicKs asked what connection there might be between the issue of free speech and academic freedom and the violence and property destruction by the radicals. He drew this incomprehensible reS'{Xlnse from a member of the New Len, "Why should we care when there are unpaved roads in Texas?" Hkks said the respondent was serious and sincere, but he didn't understand thal he was not above the law, that laws should apply equally to all. Hicks also reca11ed occasions when campus militants, In the name of "free speech," shouted down every seri~ence he uttered before he completed it - and kept others from hearing a dissenting view. These youngsters, tvo, Hicks said. "have the not.Ion that the law somehow does not apply to them. They feel they are above the law as it is applied to everyone off campus." The district attorney told the Rotarians that Law Day oo May 1 was proclaimed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower on pul"f>Ose . because May D~ _ h a d historically been a Communist show bf anned might Llw Day In the free world · now reminds us that we are a governmtnt of laW1, not men, Jn contrast to the communists. Hieb aald. From From Page l BEACll ... VIila remarked facetiously, Fifteen to 20 he. said is normal. Nooe of the ac· cident.a caused serious injury; all were oC the fender-bender variety, mos t resulting from impatience. Jaeobsen s;Jd he couldn't .say what the largest beach crowd ever wu but the throng Sunday ranked right with the largest. "It gets so big and thtt's it (for estimating purpes);" be said. "If it gets;any bJgger ·you wouldn't even know the djf~erence. We go by how we can drive through it (In lifeguard Jeeps). Sul-we ·couldn't drlve. '~ · Y IUegu&rds · s\ill &re using their of ~n force of 17 lifeguards and cotJnting on moblllty. Summertime, when every tower is manned, there will be 6.5 lifeguards on duty. Jacobsen wanted to say thank goodness they dldn 't get into a heavy rescue siluation. ..The cold water was the only thing that saved us," be said. Water was a chilly 53 degrees, tem- peratures more typical or February or J\1arch. • Police 'Crash' Laguna Party; Scatter Youth Orange County Sheriffs deputies, police and highway palrolmen routed about 100 young people from an outdoor party complete with two bands in a brushy hilltop area not-tbeast of Laguna's Top of The World Sunday. Laguna Beach police called to assist sheriff's deputies arrested James Andrew Sowa, 19, of Anaheim on charges of marijuana possession. A sheriff's deputy at the Scene said the properly was leased by Redwood Stables and said officers had been cilled because of the fi re hazard involved. First reports made· to Laguna pollee were of 80 or 90 persons said to be in the nude. Police ' and highway patrol kicked on their sirens en route up ParK Avenue Sunday afternoon as many Lagunans came out to see what was happenlng. The party area reached over a nearly impassable dirt road was a mile or more from Top of the World. A member of the rout~ party, "Tall" John McGann, 22, of 121(: Fairywood Walk, said the party had been put together on the spur or the moment. "We were trying to find some place to have a boogie," McGann told a reporter. "We'd llke to have the police If they'd leave their gans at home." He said the party · was originated by residents of the Laguna Canyon area. "We're specialists in partylng~" he"'}~· GG School Blaze Gets Close Look • Garden Grove firemen were today slf~ ting the ashes of a $300,000 !ire which destroyed the library of Balsa Grande High School early Sr.turday morning. Fire department spokesmen said they were almost certain the costly' bfaie was of incendiary origin . The nre was spotted about 2 11.m. by a California Highway Patrol officer. At that time flames were shooting through .the roof of the one story struc· ture 1'1hlch served as a library •and 'book.o!ore for the school. It took nine Garden Grove fire depart- ment units two hours to control the blaze. Included in the loss were boob. equipment Mid furniture . Page 1 c1 .. idft"etl ..i .. rtlll"t t42·1•71 Ctlll"~"'' lf1t. 0'9* C:ffll P~!lot!IPll c.n. .... ~,. "' """"' ""''-" ltlolt!l9'-. •110ti.1 fl'lt1W ' • tdwtnl-k ..... r.. _., 1H ,~Ill wit"°"' t.ll'(ltt -· Funer11l servictl will be 1'1e1d Tuetday at 8 p.m. at 'Pacific View Chapel for Wrighton . Strvlcts for Grimshaw have been scheduled for Wedne!lday, S p.m. at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. CA MBODIA OFFENS IVE • • • "'"''°" • ~w•• ·-· kaon111 ci.k _, ... ,..,. II fl"""'°" •1rt11 •114 Qtt. .. ·~~. (111/IOl'"l'. ""*'+,iloll • ., cirri. UM """""'I llV ..Wt ff.JD -1~1~1 lfllllW'f ...,_.,,., .......... """lllJ'. ), . .•. " ( A mtmber o( the Naval Reserve, Grimshaw attended Orahgt Coast Collf:ge following his graduation from high schOOI. He was a high achoo! let.Urman tor four years in track. the sixth day of NJ offensi\·e in which ' . American forces were not ditteUy In· \·olved on lhe ground with the exception of about 40 roilitlf1. advlsen. _ ) U.S. air and arllllery supJ)Ort wns behind thl" Parrot's Beak foray but It was mainly a South Vietnamese show. and Saigon reports said lt was showing good , .. u1i.. Food Provider . ·ocean Foreseen As To·p Resource The oceans and the youth studying ecology and environment may prove to be among America'a most valuable resources. \ , l This was the tenor of a talk Salurday by Charles H. Meacham, Comml¥iontr of Fish and Wildlife for the Int.erior Department, Salurday as he hell*! dedicate the Marine Science Institute (.fi.fSJ) at Dana Point Harbor. The MSI dedication of a future facility was part of three-day Ocean Expo '70 that began Friday. It centered on stupy of and preservation of the environmenb Lagunan Seeks James Utt's Congress Seat Maggie Meggs of 320 Moss Street, Laguna Beach, filed a nomination petition before the deadline Friday in the special 3Mh District June Z election to fill the une1plred term of lhe late Rep. James B. Utt. Also filing Friday was Thomas B. Lenhart, Democrat, of Santa Ana. The two late filings brings to ~even the number of candJdates competing for the tenn whicb will expire next January I .. All except, Mrs. Megs, a Laguna housewUe, are also candidates Jn the regular June 2 primary electlon. In . addition to Lenhart, they Include State Senator John G. Schmitz of Tustin, John Ratterree of Santa Ana, Wllllam Wilcoxen of Laguna Beach, and John A. Steiger of Oceanside, all Repu blicans and Democrat David Hartman or Santa Ana. Under the procedure of the special primary, ii no one canQidate receives more than fifty percent of the total votes cast. the top Republican and Democrat will participate in a runoff vote June 30. Bay Club Tower Alternate Plans Set for Study Alternative proposals for "Balboa Bay Club apartment towers will be explained to Cliff Haven i:esidents Wednesday night. ' ' Richard Stevens, Bay Club executive vice president, will present d~lgn con~ cepts ol a sJngle tower mfeet tall, two towers 125-feet tall and three towers BS.feet tall, at the annual meeting of Cliff Haven Communlty Association. The Bay Club is prop05ing to build the new apartment,, on th~ east end of the property. Ttie long building massed up , .to the 50-feet zoned height limit on the west end of the property was built after Cliff Haven residents protested plans for tall towers. Cliff Haven is the bluff area looking down over the Bay Club.' toward Lido Channel. The busines.5 meeting will be at 8 p.m., following 7:30 p.m. coffee, in the mult.ipurpose room at Ensign School. A new board of directors of the com- munity association will be elected. I, Bt1rned Out Meacham said It Is conceivable ln 50 or JOO , years that the land masses of the globe\ will be used '\IP by mankind a~d hls, reclution. He said riian 'may become dependent on the sea for his food. Meac1lam said the ocean produces three q\14(ten of the globe's oxygen and said 1n 1189 Americw alone C1>n· sumed 5.4 billion pounds of food 'taken from the sea. Speaking of dedJcation to conservation as a way of life, Mear;bam said he ~d every hope that the concerned youth will become I.be savior or an environmenl that in the past has been treated carelessly. Oceanography, he said, was born dur· Ing and since World War II aiid il'> ranks of experts are as yet um. Tbe success ot fnariae science will depend on thJ quality of personnel in its ranks, the speaker said. Meach1M said MSl ls a giant step in th&l dlrection with "~most pro. gressive curriculum of l type that I have observed in America. He offered the help of him.self ·and -·s staff in working on the curriculum. Meacham presented a blue and white flag to the institute as its pennant. There was a model ot the physical facilities to be.ronstructed to houte MSl as part of the exhibits hOU!ed iii tents at the harbor. Councilmen Meet With 'Free Us' Newport Youths Three Newport ilffeh city COWlCilmt1I met with eight youths representina "·Free Us" in a private discussion Saturday. Councilman Howard Rogers, at whose home the meeting was held,· said views were freely discussed and all partie.s, agreed the session \\'.as ' 'w e 11 worthwhile." Councilman Donald Mcinnis said the yooths, including two girls, indicated as they were going out the door they had been treated courteously and ha,d some hope this type of cUalogue will lead to better understanding. It was left that the "Free Us" group would contact Rogers if they felt another meeting would be productive. · None of the "Free Us" rep~sentatives could be reached for comment today. The councilmen said the session went 21h hours and got somewhat on a first· name basis. The three councilmen, Rogers, Mcinnis and Richard Croul, dropped by the weekly "Free Us" picnic at Balboa Pier Park on Sunday but did not get into further discussions. Only abou t 75 persons were present at the Sunday picnic, the smallest crowd since the weekly gatherings began a month ago. . The talk Saturday covered essentially the same ground as at the City C(IUncil meeting the first of the weeK, the coun- cilmen said. Discussion was about alleged police harassment, discrimination against lo'lg-hair~ youths in housing and jobs, making available facilities for youth con· certs, and the court charges against tiie 10 arrested at the "Free Us" picnic· rally two weeks ago. Mclrrnis said there Y•ere no specific suggestions brought forth councilmen might act on ; talk was in a general vein. Fireman cools charred remains of what was once ga~age apartment at 227 Agate Ave .. Balboa Island. Fire of und etermined origi n &ut~ ted the building owned by Robert Landis early Sunday afternoon. Building was vacant at the time ,and no one was Injured. Damage was estimated by firemen at i1,000. Cause ol the blaze is still under in- vestigation. J ' 4 a .. .¥~ 3 0 2 5 ¥. if;: 4 9 ,• .... ; . . Saddlehaek • VOL 63, NO.· 106, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAG~S ' • . - • . --~ 1es • • M~11or. D~'elares · ,, . . Blasting · Caves ' Idea of · Police ~ possibiljty of blowing up or otherwise . sealing otr caves in the hill~ behind LagJJna Beach occ11picd. by transient hippies was first. "tOSSfd out'.' by a Laguna Beach.J>Olice officer, Mayor Richan! Goldberg said today. "I ,fJrst heJU"d IJ>qut ,it at a pre-election coffee in a house up on the bill wher~ people were complaµting about ·hippies living in the caves and creating a fire and health hazard," ·Goldberg , said. "A police officer. at that · meeting sa.id the police department had even considered * * * Police 'Crash' Hilltop Party; Boy A rresfed • .. Orange Cowiy Sbe.rlff's deputies. police and highway patrolmen routed about 100 young people from· an Outi!odr party complete with two bands in a brushy hilltop area northeast of Laguna's Top of The· World Sunday. . Laguna ~aclt ~ called to assiri sheriH's deputies an.Red James Andrew Sowa, 19, of Anaheim on charges oi marijuana possession. A sheriff'• deputy at the scent said the property was leased by Redwood Stables and said of!icers had been called because of the fire haz.ard involved. First reports made to Laguna police were of 80 or 90 persons said to be 1n the nude. Police and highway patrol kicked on their si rens en route up Park Avenue Sunday afternoon as many Lagunans came out.to see what was happening. · The party area reached over a nearly impassable dirt road was a mile or more from Top of the World. A member Or the routed party, "Tall'' John McGann , 22. of 1214 ·Fairwood Walk, said the· party had been put together on the 1pur or the moment. · "We were trying to find some place to have a boogie," McGann told a reporter. "We'd like to have the police iI they'd leave their guns at home." He said the party was origlnated by residents of the Laguna Canyon area. "We're specialists in partying," he said. McGann said sheriff's deputies had 11ummoned help because "nobcxty ..yanted to leave." "We were hep to the fir e hazard," he said. ''Next time we'll bring our own fire equipment." After lawmen arrived in force a ,:aravan of cars made a du sty exodus along the rutted dirt road to the party site. blowing up the ·caves. lt 'was ·something that was tossed out along wllh a lot of other ideas." Goldberg said he personally did not think the caves would ever be blo1vn • up but, be added, "My reaCtion is that some measures should be taken to pre- vent the bealth and fire ha:z.ards that ·are created because of. the people living in the caYes. "I'm Ji'lrllcularly concerned about the danger of fire now that the dry season is approaching. One spar:k up there could set off a fire that could endanger all the homes on the bills." Goldberg said he didn 't know just what should be done. "They'v~ talked about blowing them up, sealing them off In some way, spraying them with some sort of substance •.. I just know it's a bad situation from th~ standpoint of health and fire hazard." Tbe new mayor said he realized that ecologists "have a good point" in wanting to presetjYe the caves and added, "I understand there are some archaeological finds to made up there too, and this is fili!'. but 3Cl1Jlething must be done to get the people out of there., ' · "·I know there are 10me People -who think W• au rlgbl to 1e1 llie hippie< liv.e 1n the · cavu, but we "abb hive to think of the people in the bru.ses up there. whose homes would be en- dingered !!'there ollould be a bid fire." Rape Rap Given To Clemente Man Edwin Lee Sommers of San Clemente was sentenced today to three to IS years in state prison for the rape and kidnap ul a Dana Point woman. Superior Court Judge J. E. T. "Ned" Rutter den.ied a mot.ion for a new trial and a subsequent motion which would h"ave! Perniitted ·a · review ·of Sommers' senence . alter six months with lhe com· ment : "I have a particularly black spot in my heart for rapists. "Rapists can ch~nge the personality of their victims and they can damage the fabric of the affected community," Judge Rutter added. "It will be a long time before any woman in that area .dares go out for a walk at night." Sommers, 19, of 26612Y.i Mission St., interrupted his 2Q-year-0Jd victim's walk last Dec. 22 and forced her to accompany him to his apartment where she was beaten aOO raped. San Clemente police arrested him later that night in a coffee shop alter his vict.lm persuaded an employe to call officers. ' ORANGE COUNTY, :('..J..l.jf()RNIA I MONDAY, MAY~. 1970 • •• . ID . e . . DAil Y ,rLOT I t.ff ,..,_ DESPITE PRESENCE OF SKEPTIC, LISA BUNNELL, I, WHEELS HER 'eOAT''IN lllKE PARADE ' Rioting Trigger.s Gunfire 0. 01..:!. v ; ' . Jt.~ !:ll~' ,, .n · .ni!:~!l~~.1.~'" ~ KENT, Ohio (AP) -Four persoos were kUled ind at Je8st·u others Wound- ed by g u n f i r e • as Ohio National Guardsmen broke ·up an unauthorUed rally on the Kent State University cam- pus Monday. (See. Protest Roundup, Page 4). The wounded were taken ·to R~inson Memorial Hospital in Ravel'Ula. The hospital reported it had four persons confirmed dead. · Witnesses said the shoo~g came alter guardsmen moved in with tear gas to disperse a rock-throwing crowd of 400 to 500 students, in ·the Commons area near Taylor~Hall · DOug Moore, ·a· student photographer, said he saw guardsmen shooti11g into the air. _ . Authorities were repart.ed holding a man who carried news credentials and STOCK. MARKET NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market resumed its steep decline ·thls afternoon after strengthening at midday in the wake of Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kasygin's statement concerning U.S. involvement in Cambodia. (See quotations, Pages ~ 21 ). . Declining issues lead advances by more than 750 among stocks traded on the New York Stock Exchange. . ' a gun, bUt It wu not tnowa immediately wha~ ii IJIY, role he had played in the.-.g. Some IXI used bayonets and tear gas to break up demORStrat.iom Sunday njght in the third .tralght night of _antiWar protests. Sixty-two persons, mosUy studenta:, were arested. Two young people were hospitalized and eight olher Persons treated !Qr leu seriow: Injuries. ' Officials said at least one student was injured in, the back by a ba)'onet and oae .Guardsman was bw1 by 1 a rock. Police said two gi:fls were arrested car· eying knives and one youth was arrested with a rlne and baridolier of ammunition. An eStimated 1,200 demonstrators were driven back to Kent State's campus after marching . into town ia. defiance of a ·City curfew and an emergency ban on outdoor meetings in Kent and on the campus. Demonstrators took control of a Kent lntersecUon for about an hour and stu- dent leaders triejf to negotiate w i I h Guard officers for a peaceful return to the ~mpus. Tiley were told they would not ·be arrested if they returned to their dormitories.· ' An order to force them back to the campus came after demonstrators began presenting aew demands to Guard of• ficers- Laguna Art Work Taken From Shop Three paintings and more than a dozen unique ceramic bowls, hanging plant hoJders, lam p bases and wall plaques by Laguna· artist Edmond Ronsky were · ~tolen Situfday nigtit from the artlst.'1 studio-workshop, 1524 S. Coast Highway, police· ttpOrt. . Value of the mlssing items is estimated at 11,439. · ' P:olice said burglars apparently entered a diSplay robm ·through an unlocktd . door. from . an -adjacent · shop : and aystematicaUy removed· the art· works, selecting ~ largest and most impressive pieces from the display. ,/ ·Biggest Weekend On Laguna Sands Laguna Bf;ach llfquarcb reported the biggest weekend of the year to date with crowds numbering 16,500 on Satur· clay and 18,200 Sunclay. Air tem)>ti-ature was a comfortable 75 degrees both days, water wu a cool 62 and the IWf wu low. Four peraons were rescued. QUEEN FOR A YEAR Vi1jo~1 K1tfiy..J1nkin1 Crowds Turn, Out For Cinco Fiesta In Mission Viejo 1t coul(I have been a Mexlca?I' market place wilh ita: brighUy color:ed atalls and strolllitg mariachis. Bright Dowers clustered behind' ·adobe · walls, festively dressed senors Ind senoras ·peeped out from a booth-with II. ·giant ·~rero · for a toof and one a!gn advertised 0 perros calienles" and "rnucbo Coca Cola frio. ". · But Instead of MexicO City ·the place was Mission Viejo High School and the event, the. third., annual Cinco. de .Mayo celebration. · . Sponsored bf ' the sc1'ool'1 parent · teacher'orgarUzaUon; Ute event tncltiled · just abou.t e~ry communltr. organlzatiqn in Mission ViejQ." ,There · were lS decorated booths ff.atUriilg ga_mes, food or souvenirs at the Sunday' ~moOn event. · Crown~ to reign over this aJld .all Minion Viejo activities thJs coming ,ear was JCalhy Jenkins, 16-year~ld dauitrter of Mt. and Mrs. Howard 'F.1Jenkins 25M2 Adriaf!a ·St., Mllsion-Viejo. Sh~ was crowned by last year'a: queen, Penny NldlOls. ' Princesses in the court were .'Pat'tl Opp, JeQny . Robl.!on, Linda $horl and Penny Schaetfer. . LAGUNA PARTYGOERS GRUNT ANO GROAN AS THEY BEAT RETREAT UP RUTfEO ROAD • Outdoor SolrM on Top of tht World Endo In Cloud of Oust lo M••lc of .Sir- · On SUnday a boat capsized off Diver's Cove but the occupants swam ashore wilbout lnjwy. A speclal . event for the younger member• of the communJty was the decorated bike cootest'. Winnen In the best overall citeaory were Usa Bunnell, first for a masted ahlp; Lynn Vaughn, ...,.nd, and Kent and l!rad Collln1, third. Winner& tn the most original cate1ory (SH FIES'.tA, Pase I) I •• -s •• • ------..... _ , --'~ Teday'• I . ' ' ' . Task Force Routs Foe In Cambodia SAIGON (UPI) -Scores or U.S. ta,,Jt, rumbled across the Fishhook of Cam- bodia ~Ionday and American · tom.man. ders said their. 15,000..man aIDed task force was ''in the heart" of the head- quarters area where the Communists run their· Vietnam war strategy The-head- quarters ii.veil r.maJned undetect.d Five thousand more South Vietn~eee t~s w.ere committed to a related · of~ fensive Into the Parrot's Beal!: region to the south, bringing to 30,000 the nwnber ~f men l!J.volved In the twm thrusts auned at destroying North Viet· namese . and Viet Cong sanctu~ JI ~"'*"· They included a,ooo m1• tary sources• said at least three more major forays into Cambodia were being planned. Comm1D1ique1 described the Fishhook and Parrot's Beak offensives u hf&hJy auccemut w1th t,952 North V~e and Viet Cong -tilled •nd 'jg prl.!o~s taUn and 2'6 ion,· o1· food, munitions and medical oupp11es oebed U.S. 1°""' 'w•re placed at It tJlled and 46 wounded and u-for &iuth Vu:tname!J! units at 151 tilled and• seo Wounded, , As the •lheo tut ,._.knifed cteePor Into Cambodio, dlspatcber . fral4I 1he Capital, Phnom Penh, lllJd cambodian commanders rushed reidOreeme&Q W ~ village of Kokl Tliom wlieie fteld repo~ laid a major. battle · may be o!>apinc up •1alnat CllDmlllllst troops ~ ... the ..... tetwlluk ·o1 !be 'Ri\1et, ' ~n.om .. • mn.-.. r t:1t or J'bol>n . Penh •od •boat It -Inion 1he Pamt's Beat front. Pima Penh dispatches said "hundredo" vi Cam- bodian tribesmen. trained W poJd by 1he U.S. Special Forces, had been flown from bases in Sooth Vlelnam to beef up the 40,000-mM Cambodian army By nighUa!I loday American .,,;,.,...; units had pushed at 'least 15 m1lea froin the South VJbtnamese border on mgbway 7. The route ls a paved road that bad been used to haul Commwllst war sup- plies through Cambodi.R into South Viet-nam. The Fishhook force was looking for the Communists' central office for South Vietnam -COSVN -the Hanoi head-qu~rs which Pnsldent Nlioo bas said must be destroyed. · -· -· ~ "It's here and wt're in the bear t of .a," a U.S. ccmmander iakt. But there was no sign of C06VN Uatlf in the fourth d~y of 1he F-of!euaive. Daniel said more than IO American tanks and annored peraonne:l carriers raced ak>ng Highway 7 under ordtrs from the 11th Armored Cavalry Regi- ment squadron commander Lt. Col Gria1 Broobbire, not to fire ~ess firtd upon. . "We're doing what an army .mtt is suppo~ to do," BroobhJre said. "We're breaking deep Into enemy territory ud blocking their m•jor nMa. We've &ot a disorganized enemy. He im!l fighthtg because he doesn 't know what he ia doing ." Brook.Shin said his men \loped lo Ill\. cover more IUpply c:omplaea in deep thrusts at first light Tuelclay. He said about' 500 "structures" were teen and that tbey probably held inunltlont and other war materiel. IJ\ the Parrot's B~at,. himcir.ds o1 South Vietname4e armored vehicles . (See CAMllODIA, Pap I) Oraa1e WNdiel' · Foggy . weather Ja in ltore for CO!"tal dwelitr1 Tuadoy, With temperatures dipping lo the es 1 .. e1 along the -and lett1ing al .75. further' Inland, · INSIDE TODAY Borrowtf'I ore /Hlftto thr flghl ""'"'V plnch as the ....U , loo~ ii :ail buc a thing' of~ the J><llL Page 22. e.tti.t 14 ..... 11 ("""""' . ......... .... ... Cllecll .. U. 1 °""'9' c...,,. II ClalcHIM 11-a ..,._ ...,.. • (lfllla " .... Dali c,....,. 11 tlldt _,.... •n 0.-......... M T....... Jf • ....,.. ~ • ~ 11 ............ 1t........ • ,...... ..,, ..... .... ts --11 ._.. ,.... ... ,1 ·-~ II ~ ...... ... -.. ., • .. ..-. ····· ... . . ·- . . ' .J . I ' I I - . -- -. --=----- I DAllY l'ILOT SC Fffd Provider Ocean Foreseen ' As ·Tqp Resource 1be oceans apd the youth 5'.udying ecology arid env\l'Qlment may prove to 'be • among America's most valuable . reaources. This was the tenor of a µJk Saturday by . Char ... H. Mmbam, Comm!NIOllU o( Fish and Wildlife for the lnterior Department, Saturday u he helped dedicate the Marine Bdtnce lnSUUM (MS!) at Dana Point ~-:._. The MSI dedication of a future faCijity was part of. three-day Ocean Expo '70 that began Friday. It centertd on stlidy of and preservation ot the environment.\ Meacham aaid it la conceJvable ut &o or 100 yea.rs that the land masses , of the globe will be used up b'y mankind ' and his rttreation. He said man may become dependent on the sea for his lood. Meacham said the ocel!l products three quarters of the globe's oxygen and said in 1969 Americans alone con· sumed 5.f billion pounds of food taken from the sea. Speakin1 of dedicauon to comerv.,uon as a way of life, Meacham said he had every hope that the C1'.lncemed youth will ~ the savior of an environment that in the past ha& been treated carelessly. Oceanography, he said, wu born dur- ing and since W()rld War II anQ its ranks of experts are as yet thin. 'l1le success of marine science will depend on th~ qualitv of pert0n0el in its ranks, l!le' ·speaker :&id: ~ Meacbam said MS! !.! a giant •tep in that dlreetion with "the most prcr From POfle l FIESTA ..• were Steve G1m1, first for a black bull; Kevin Kirchner, aeeond, and Bernie Esposito, third. Placing ln the most decora.Uve category were IJsa and Steven Schuyler, first for a bee chasing a flower ; Colleen Devine, serond, and Pal and Kerry Amsbry, third. Competing with the Me:a:ican at. roosphere was that of a "band battle" with winners being BWldy Field, fJrlti the BF 0 , seeqnd, and Cherokee third. Booths, looking like llanl cacll, som- breros and lltUe Alamos competed In a decorating contest. 'nie winners were lb< Ramblie &gu.,, first; Deane women'• club, second, and the Mission Viejo Girl Scout., third. During opening ceremonies a copy of a ttate LecU:Iature reaohrtion recognizing Cinco de Mayo as a holiday was ~ to PTO chairman Cliff Boe!uoer by M]q Ellubeth Pedrotti, dlltrtct secretary to state Senator John Sdunlu (R.IJ'ulltn). Culture fans were treated to a special outdoor art show and to a band concert featuring the MlMlon Viejo llljh Scbool band. There wa.s also a special enchUada dinner, a variety ahow and at the end «veryone got Into the act for a parade. GG School Blaze Gets Oose Look Garden Grove firemen were today sif- ting the ashes of a $300,000 fire which destroyed the library of Bolsa Grande High School early Saturday morning. Fire department 1pakumen said they were almost certain the cosUy blaie wu of incendiary origin. The fire was spotted about 2 a.m. by a California Highway Patrol offictr. At that time flames · were shooting throujh the roof of the one !lory struc- ture whJch served as a library and bookstore for the school. It took nine Garden Grove flre depart- ment units two hours to control the blaze. Included in the loss were books, equipment and furniture. DAILY PILOT NnpM I• ... i..,. ..... dl c .... M .. H111t1 .......... .. nt9'1 Y6y s.c,..... erel&l.ve currlculum. ot it& type that 1 have observed ln America." He offered the help of himself and his staff in working on the currlcuhun . Meacham presented a blue and white flag to the insUtute as Its pennant. 'l'ber.e was ·• model ol th• phystcal factl1Ue11 to ·be constructed to house MSI u pa!t o( Ille eihlbll1 hooted In tents .. the harbor. Viejo Man's Kin Survives f ragic Flight '· 'l\e b~r. of a Mission Viejo man hu ;teen lde!!Ufled u the aole known survitor of a U.S. air trq:edy that toot tfae lives of six · fellow crewmen on a fll&ht over Laos last week. Mn. Jeck Fleldll of 281161 Curl!lo Drive. 'Minion Viejo, said' her husband rt()livtd word Sunday that his brother, Slaff Sal. Eugene Fields, 28, of Altmagordo, N.M. wu the man reported at rescued after the flrst AC 130 gun:shlp wa1-11hot~down-by enemy -ll"OUDd-fire wtiile on a misskll over the Ho Chi Minh Trail a wei!k ago. SlI: crtwmen were killed and four are lilted as . milling. Fields, who auf. fered bums on the face and both hinds, parachuted from the crippled plane and was picked up by aearc:h planes four hours later. After treabnent in Japan, he b en route · to a bospltal In El Puo, Mrs. Field! llld. Fields, an Air Force gwmer, went to Vlt!tnam last year and recently came home on a brief leave to visit his wife and three am.all sons In New Me;Jco. Laguna Woman Enters Campaign For Utt's Seat Maggie Meags of 320 Moss Street, Laguna-1:Seach, filed a nominaUon petition before the deadline Priday in the special 3W\ Dlatrict June 2 election to fill the unexpired term of the late Rep. James B. Utt. Also fillng Friday was Thomas B. Lenhart, Democr1t, of Santa Ana. Tb~ two 'late fllinp brings to seven the nwnber of candidates competing for the tenn which will expire next January J. . All except Mrs. Meggs, a Laguna housewife, are also candidates ln the re1Ular June 2 primary elecllon. In addillon to Lenhart, they include Slate Senator John G. Sdunlt. ol Tu.Un, . John Ratterree· of Santa Ana, Wllllam WUco:a:en of Laguna Beach, and John A. Steiger oI Oceanside, all Republicans and Democrat David Hartman of Santa Ana. · Under the procedure of the special primary, if no one candidate receives more than fifty percent of the total votes cast, the top Republican and Democrat will participate In a runoff vote June 30. NY Bombing Suspects Enter Guilty Pleas NEW YORK (AP) -Samuel J . Melville and two other defet1danls plead· ed guilty Ii federal court today t.o plot. Ung to blow up government buildings with dynamite bombs last fall. Melville pleaded gtillty tO three counts including conspiracy and one count charging tum with a bom~4ig at the ·Federal Office Bulldlag here. Je:ne L. Alpert and John D. Hughey llt both pleaded guilty to the char1e of con· spiracy. Aliso Draws Crowd Revamped strand at Aliso Beach in South Laguna attracted plenty ol beachgoers during long, hot weekend. County beach will be site of new, recrea· tional pier in the near future as ffforts to upgrade the area, just south Of Treasure Island Trailer Park continue. Citizen's Right to Reject 'Dirty Advertising' Upheld WAStf.INGTON (UPI) -The Supreme guilty in court 11voluntarily and in· Court today upheld a law which allows telligenUy" cannot later tty to upset a persoLto. _bar_adv.erilllllg fr_ont.J1i_s his convicUon on grounds: that his action Jnallbox Jf he decides It is too se:ry. ...,.a.-uncorist!tuttonaJly-c~rctd:-Ttte 5-3 The law was challenged by 14 mail decision in three" cases meant the court order houses, book publiahers and others, nfused to broaden its ruling that the who claimed it interferes with their lJndbergh kldnaping law , wU def~ive i t1 thro b th because the death penalty could be un-rlaht to free commun ca on ag · e posed only to a defendant who underweat mall. trlit by Jllry. · 'I'He vote of the eight-man court was The law on unwanted mail author izes unanimous with Chief Justice Warren I th j I any addressee to take steps to stop E. Burger speaking or e ma 01 ty. "pabdering advertisements" which he · Burger said for the court: "In effect, believes to be "erotlcally arousing or Congress has erected a wall -ur more .sexually provocative." accurately permits a cltiien to erect He can ask the post office to order a wall -that no advertiser may h flrin _ penetrate without his acquiesence. The t e · to take his name off the mailing f 'llit. The firm can get a pogt office coaUnuing operative e feet of a mailing hftrtng if it wishes. In the event of ban once Imposed presents no con-11 atitutional obstacles." noncomp ance, the postmaster general may ask the attorney general for a In other actions, the court: court order to stop the mailing. -Upheld by a 7·1 vote a New York The mall order houses told the court State I.ax exemption on church-owned deletions cost $5 a name because the property that is used for religious lists are not alphabetical. purposes. The law had been challenged by a lawyer who owned a Staten Island property which was taxed $5:24 a year. -Ruled that a derendant who pleads Pair Arrested On Drug C1iarges l1i San Clemente San Clemente police arrested. iwo persons on drug charges during the weekend and said they would seek com- plaints today from the district attorney. ChrlsUne Hardy, 23, of San Bernardino was arrested on charges of possessihg marijuana and possesslng dangerous drugs . Detectives sald a patroling ()fficer who found her asleep in a van discovered the small quantity of drugs, LSD, seconal and marijuana, tn the glove compartment as she was looking for the vehicle registration. -The van was parked at 1412 Mirador. In a Saturday night arrest, David Lawren<:e COieman, 20, of 218 A Avenida SeM'a was booked on charges or marl· juana possession. Police said he was seen handing a package to a youth after coming out of a liquor store. An officer suspecting that it might be liquor checked and found a small quan tity of marijuana. a detective said . The arrest was on El Camino Real near Granada. Sugge~tion Valuable LONDON (AP) -The British publishers, Jonathan Cape Ltd ., will pay former French Deputy Prime Minister Jacques Soustelle "a substaritlal sum" for suggesting in a book that he plotted to assasslnate Gen. Charles de Gaulle, a London court was told today. Newpo11 Police . Seize 730 Pounds In Big Pot Raid Two men, charged with possession of marijuana for sale, are in custody today in Newport Beach following their arrests Saturday during Which police claim to have confiscated 730 pounds of the Illegal weed. Narcotics investigator Leo Konkel said the haul was the largest in the history of Newport Beach. lf sold wholesale, the impounded nar· cot.le would be worth about $50,000. he said. If sold by the lid (one ounce), Kon- kel said the marijuana would be worth $125.000. Arrested were Gregory Lynn Tucker, 21 , of Lakewood and David GleM Cun· nison, 22, of Cardi!. Watch Commander Earnest Laurin said he was making a routine check of the area when he spotted the suspects in the alley at 218 Lugonia St. Officer Michael McEveny who v.·as called to the scene said the pair were taken into custody when a huge pile of large bags full of marijuana was found in their van. The officer said he saw the begs when he went t.o make an inspection of the vehicle, which was allegedly ii· legally parked. Konkel said 540 pounds of the drug was found In the van and another 190 pounds was found in the garage at 218 Lugonia St. Investigation in the case is continu ing, he said, and more arreats are expected today or Tuesday. "We suspect the marijuana came from Mexico," he added. Trustees Face Private Scliool Busing Dile1nma Capistrano Unified School District trustt*!s will be asked to approve a new policy covering the transportaUon or private and parochial school students at torught's 7:30 o'clock meeUng i'i.1 Serra Schoo l, Capislrano Beach. The policy was pre;>ared by Sam Chicas, assiltant superintendent for business services. He contacted 133 California school districts and 13 repUed that they do provide tran.!portation for private and parochial students on a apace avalJable procedure. · The new policy for the Capistrano district )itates that transportation shall be granted to ch ildren attendlng private or parochial schools within the district providing there is space available and no additional cost to the district. The policy will be subj·eci to review each year. The non·publ c students will be tr ansported according t.o seat availa'nillty based on the number of buses currently available in the district. No changes will be made in routes and when r-equests exceed availability the non-public sch(IOI will determine which of its students shall be transported. The new policy also propOSes that the admin istrative staff ol the district will prepare an agreement with the private or parochial schools establiihlng rules of behavior, stops, and schedWe. Di.scipline for the extra students wil1 be provided by their own schools or transportation.will be denied. In other business the trustees will be asked to establish a remedial reading program for summer school and will consider a request for ronstruct.lon <lf a · seron d l!ntrance to the grounds oC Palisades School in Capistrano Beach. Allen to -Issue Bay Swap Speech lliange County Supervisor Alton E. Allen of Laguna Beach has called a press conference for 9 a.m. Tuesday at which time he will make a "startling statement" on the Upper Newport Bay land exchange, according to one of his aides . No further information was available today on the possible content of Allen's statement. He has been a staunch supporter over the years of the land trade with the lrvine Company which would result In the transfer of 1S7 acres of county tidelands property {OT" 400 acres of lrvine Company land in the area. Royal Family Home LONDON (UPI) -Queen Elizabeth II. her husband Prince P hi Ii p .and daughter Princess Anne returned today to a warm and sunny Britain from a two-month 40,000.mlle tour of Australia and New Zealand. li:o\i1rt N, Wtt4 "'""'"' •rid l'Vetlllw J•elr I. C1.,f1v Vitt l't11!ottll Mil 01ftt<l1 l•ltMOV 1ho,.,.11 ICtt"il Edl!Of' Tho"'•• A. Mur,111~1 M-01nt EdllOf' DA Hicks: More Discip~ine Needed I Ritlltrof P. Ntll S0.,,1111 Otl!IM (-It Edit« """" Co1t1 M..-1 lJO Wu! l1y Str"I NtWJ*I .. tdl: ml W..I ltliloot ftfflfYI .. L.,..,.. lft(ll: m 'o'"t ,-..,,~.,. MllllllllOllMo ltttft: 11Ut l t"h l~l••••~ 1611 C~: .JIU N"111 II C.1111N llH1 By ALBERT W. BATES Of •• 0.11)' l"lltl '''" P1reiltal love ts as Important and .omnlpnsent as ever but what h111 been mJ.uln( ii the vital ingredient of dlllclpliee. 'Ibis was the essence of Orange County District Attorney Cecil lllcks' analysis of what haa gone wrong with a younger generation resorUng to drugs and violence 11 be addressed members <lf Hllfillifllbn Belch Rotary Club Friday. Hieb recalled growing up In Loll Angeles during the Great Depression ol the early 1930s. "Life wu almpler then," he said "There was a fecUna: of unity, for everyOne was lo the same boat." "Next came World War tt and again we were Joined tosetht r as a nation in self-den ial In bthalf ol a aurvlv11 cause," }Uc.kl continued. ""nlen. after Woti'J War 11, we produced a 'Jllllon' babies, the ones who are Jn college "°"· •·t.tost of ut pattnts II.id we wanted r to alve our children the creature com· forts we couldn't have in the Depression or World War II. So v.'e gave them cars we couldn't al ford earlier, and a whole series of labo!">-savtng appliances which eliminated the chores which' were part of thei r parents' early discipline.'' In the midst of all these parenl·bestow· ed creature comforts, Hicks said, .alopg came Dr. Benjamin Spock saying, "You've got to lovt a ch\ld.11 We parents a("eed but we left out another vital element, discipline, Hicks said. 1•None of 111. parents or children , can d!velop without discipline," H i c ks asserted. "We can't run a buslnes~ or an o(Jlce of any kind without it. Lacking UlsclpllM. employes woold disin tegrate. .and !IO would the buslneS!I. "l th.Ink of It In terms of 1 boxing rtni, with ropes around the four sides. Oro;> the ropes and someone falls off, on his face. So it Is with children's Jives tf they don't know where the :struc- ture Is, the ropes llre.'' The district attorney 1dded that no free society can exist without discipline -and the best klnd ja sell disclpl.lne which sets an example.for chlldren. ''Our children don't know bow to chahge dlrectlon ,1' be added. "Mott of our youngsters' goals are very pure -but how they go a~}lt achieving them i1 twlated all out of ttiape. This rtflecta the existence of Mfenlal Jovi as far as the goals are 'CObcemed but lack of dlsclpUne In tho approach to thooe pis Is painfully evident." Earlier In his lalk, Hieb rec•lied conlrontaUona he has had wtt.'1 campus rldlcals, including a paoel situation mcked I to I agalnsj him. Whal the dlltrkt attorney learned was that the radicals fall on thelr face v.·hen penetratlnf que1tln111 are asked . Hieb aaked what connection there might be between the Issue Of lree speech and acadeJnlc freedon1 and the violence and property destructl(ln by lhe radicals. He drew this Incomprehensible rtsponsc from a mtmbe:r ot the New ' ' Left : "Why should we care wbtn thtre ire unpaved roads in -Te:a:as?" Hicks said the fespondent Wu serious and sincere, but he didn't t1ndentand that he wu not above the law, that laws should apply equally to alt. Hick.! also recalled occaalOD.1 when campus militants, In the name ol "/rte speech," Mooted dOwn every aentll!llOe he uttered before he cori>Jileted It - and_kept others from beadq: ._ dlli•0 Un1 view. · 'ntese-younasters, too, Htclts Mid, Hhave the notion that the law aamthow does not •pply to the'1'. nity fttl they are above the law u It 1s applied 1o everyone off Camput.'' The district aUOJ11<y told 1111 Rollrllns that Law Day on May 1 wu proclalmed by President Dw1.1ht D. Eitenhower on purpose because May DAy h a d hlstorlcallY been a Communl1t show of armed n1lght. I.aw Day In the free \\·orld now ren1inds us lhat we are a governm ent of laws, no\ men, In contrast io the Commun1Jta1 WW aald. ) U.S. Combat Role Scored , By l{osygin MOSCOW (UPI) -Premier Alexei N. Kosy1ln loday rejected a new Geneva Confertnct: oo Indochina and said the Soviet Union "calls on all the peoples or the world to stop the agaresslon in Cambodia." He ac~ the UnJted States of a 1'crude vlolatlon" of the G en e v a agrnementa in Indochina and of trying to draw Southeul .Ula lnlo Its military bloc.. "These are imperialist, aggressive aims alien to the interests of the people and therefore they are Inevitably doomed to failure ," he !aid. Speaking al the flrst Moscow news conference he has held since he sue· ceeded Nikita S. Khrushchev in 1914 he sakt: "Now is not the time ·for conferences, it is the time for action." "Now the Soviet government caUs on all the peoplu of . the world to stop the aggression in CambOdla." Kosygin spoke in a go\femment guest house fn the Lenin Hills on the edge of Moscow. "For Washington to explain the actlon in Indochina was de!igned to save the Jives of American sold.Jen -that is strange logic,'' Kosygin said, reading from notes before television cameras. He said the American action "is a crude violation of international law, and a1 such it should be denounced." He said that "If the U.S. government rea]ly wants to save the lives of hundreds of American soldiers then there is 1 simple solution : Do not send American soldlers to Laos, Vietnam and cam. bodla." Speaking sternly, he said the United States was expanding the war in Indochina where its "main goal is to suppress progressive regimes and subject them to American Interest,,." He accused the United States of car· rylng out "barbarous bombings" and setting up concentration camps. "Who gave the United Stales the right to be the judge of what is good and what is bad for other peoples? Who gave it the right to be an international gendanne? "Nobody gave them this tight." He warned "the result of the invasion of American troops (into Cambodia) can cause-further complications in the in- ternational situation ." Noting what he tenned a discrepancy between the Wnrds and the deeds <l[ President Nlxon, he said,· "The govern- ment of the United States in fact is strtngthening even more its aggressive mllitarist course." He said ''the people of Indochina have the right to be maste'l"s in their own home . "The expans ion of A m er 1 c a n aggression in Southeast Asia will meet a re11<>lute rebuff from the side of the people of Vietnam. and Cambodia and all peace-loving people . "The Soviet governnient will draw the respective conclusloos from such acUons of the United States government," Kosygin warned, ending his 12-minute statement and accepting questions from the auembled correspondents. Aaked whether the Russians would reassess their position in the Strategic Arms Ltmitatlon Talks (SALT) in Vienna in view of the new situation, Kosygin replied, "President Nixon first of all should have thought over hls actions before he started lhe invasion of Cam• bodia." Kosygin made it clear he oppoeed reconvening ()( the Geneva convention on Indochina. He said that "now thal the mWtary action is under way, it is necessary to stop the aggressor. It must be done by all states. ''Now is the Ume not for conferences; it iii the time for action. "The Soviet government now calls <ln all the pe<>ples of the world to stop the aggression in Cambodia." 'Quit ·iripitt1! We're withdrawing from Vietnam, arsn't we?'i drov.e into Communirt base camp1 on the slxth day of an offensive in whlch American forces were not directly in- volved on the around wUh the exctption ol about 40 ml!lury edvisen. U.S. air and artillery 1upport was behind the Parrot's Btak forl)' but ii wa1 mainly a South Vletnam11e show. and Sala:on reporlJ: said it was show ing ti:ood result!. F'lve thousand"mort South Vletname•e troops nloved into the southern part of the Parrot'& Beak over the wecltend. LQgUna ~aeJt •. • EDITION • •I.) --_ '* . . . VOL. 63, N0.· 106, 3·SECTIONS, 32 i>AGtS ORAN6E COUNTY CAUff)RNIA MONDAY, MAY :f, 1970 , .. • i • -1es ee ·. Mayor Declare; ' ~lasti11;g ·~aves ' I • • I~dea of Police The pa.sgibilily of blowing up or otherwise. Jeallng orr caves in the hills behind cliguna Beach occupied by transient bl.ppies was first "tossed out" by a Laguna Beach police officer, Mayor Richard G<>\dberg !aid today. "I first hep.rd about it at a pre-election coffee in a house up on the hill where people were complaining aboul hippies living in the caves and creating a fire and health h~rd," Goldberg said. "A police officer at that meeting said the police department had even considered * * * Police · 'Crash' ---Hilltop Party; blowing up the caves. lt was something that was tossed out along with a lot of Other ideas.'' Goldberg said he personally did not think the caves would ever be blown up but, lie added, "My reaction Is that some measures should be ta~en to pre- vent the health and fire hazards that are created because or the people Jiving in the caves. "I'm particularly concerned about the danger of fire now that the dry season is approaching. One spark Up there could set off a fire that could endanger all the homes on the hHls." Goldberg said he didn't know just what should be done. • Ill e • DAIL'!" PILOT tl•fl' PheJt Bov Arrested "They've talked about blowing them up, sealing them off in some way, spraying them with some sort of substance ... I just know il's a bad situation from the standpoint of h!alth and fire hazard." The new ..rna)Klr said he rea\i~ that ecologists "have a good point" in wanting to preserve the caves and added, "l understand there are some archaeologicit) finds to made up there too, and this is fine, but something must be ~ to get the people out a1 lh'f•· I DESPITE PRESENCE OF SKEPTIC, LISA BUNNELL, I, WHEELS HER 'BOAT' IN BIKE PARADE • Orange County Sberiff's depuUes, police and highway l\iltrolmen routed about 100 young people from an outdoor party complete with two bands in a brushy blltlllp ar<E~ cf La1111111'• Top of 'lbe World &.maa,,, _ · Laguna Beach police ~lled to issist ~· deputies arrested ~ames:And.NW So:w.a. 19, of Anaheim °'\ charges of m'arljuana possession. , A sheriff's deputy at the scene said the propeity w., t~ased I>). Redwood Sta'bfes and said ofElcers bad ~n called btfause or the fire hazard~ involved. Fjrst reports made to Laguna police weie of 80 or 90 persons said to be in the nude. . Pj)lice and highway patrol kiCked· on their slref)S en route up Park 'Avenue Sunday , aftemoOn as . many J..aaunans came out to &ee w.hat·was happening. The party area reached over a dearly lmpassabJe dirt road was a ~ or more fr:om T()J> of ·the World. A member of the routtd P:irty, "Tall" John McGann, 2!, of 12lf-Ilairwood Walk, sakl ·the party had been put together on \he spur of the. moment.. ·"We were trying to find some place to have a boogie ," McGann told a reporter. "We'd like to have the pof\ce if they'd leave thejr guns at home." He :uid the party was originated by reskteflls of the Laguna CanyOJI area. "We're.specialists in partying," he sakl. McGann said sheriff's deruties had sb.rnmoned help because "nobody wanted to leave." "We we're hep to the fire hazard," he said. "Next time we'll bring our own fire equipment." Arter lawmen arrived in force a cara.V8n of cars made a dusty exodus along the rutted dirt road to the party 1ite. "I kmw ttiei'e are some people who think It'<. ;i rig bl to let ttoe hippt ... live in the c1vts, but we also have tG think o~the pieople In the houses up ·there bo!le homes would be en- dangered if ere should be a bad fire ." Rape Rap Given To Clemenle Man F..dwin u.e Sommers of San Clemente was seritenced today to three to 15 years in state prison for the rape and kidnap of a Dana Point woman, Superior""Court Judge J. E.T. "Ned" ~tter detµed a motion for ,a new trial and a subsequent m<>Oon which would haVe permitted a review 'of Sdrnmers' senence after six months with the com· ment: "I have -a particularly black spot in my heart for rapists. "Rapists can change the personality of their victims and they can damage t.be £a bric of lhe affected community,'' JUdge Rutter added. "It will be a long .time before any woman in that area dares go out for a walk at night." Sommers, 19, of 266121h Mission St., interrupted his 20-year~ld victim's walk last Dec. 22 and forced her to accompany him to his apartment where she was beaten aJJd raped. San Clemente police arrested him later thal night in a coffee shop after his victim persuaded an employe to call officers. Rioting Triggers Gunfire . o~ o@<i 03illpu~; 4 l{ill~fl · KENT, Ohio (AP) -Four persons a gun, but It was not known immediately were killed and at Jf:ast 12 others wound-what, it any, role he had played in ed by gunfire. as Ohio National the shooting. Guatdsmen broke up an unauthorized Some 800 used bayonets and tear gas rally on the Kent St.ate . University cam-to break up demonstrations Sunday night pus Monday. (See Protest Roundup, Page in the third straight night of antiwar 4). protests. The wounded were taken to Robinson Sixty-two persons, mostly students, Memorial Hospital in Ravenna. The were arested. Two young people were hospital' reported it had four persons hospitalized and eight other persons confirmed dead. treated !or less serious injuries. Wii~ said the shooting came ·after Officials said at least one student was guardsmen moved in with tear gas to inju~ ind the back by a bayonit and disperse a rock-throwing crowd of 400 one uar sman :was hurt by a rock. lo 500 tud ts · the Commons area Police s~ld two girls were arrested car· s en • m rylng knives and one youth was arrested near Taylor Hall. with a rifle and bandolier of ammunition ~ug Moote, a stuge{lt. photo~ra~~.r. --An estimated 1,200 demonstrators wcr~ said .he saw guardSmen shooting intU-drf~ to Kent State's campus the arr. . . . ~ ~ .• __ -· . ~fl!.r ,_marching~ into (O}Vfl in defial)Ce Authorities ~ere ttp{iffed OOl.dlng a oC a city curJeW and an emergency man who carried news credentials and ban on outdoor' meetings in Kent and on the campus. NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market resumed its steep declin~ thls afternoon after strengthening at midaay in the wake of Soviet Premier Alexei N. ,Kasygin 's statement concerning U.S. involvement in Cambodia. (See quotations, Pages 26- 21 J. Declining issues lead advances by more than 750 among stocks traded on the New York Stock Exchange. OllULY ,!LOT llllfl f'Mtl Demonstrators took control of a Ke11t Intersection for about an hour and stu- denl leaders tried to negotiate w i t h Guard officers for a peaceful return to the campus. They were told , they would not be arrested if they returned to the:t dormitories. An order to force th em back to the campus came after demonstrators began presenting 11ew demands to Guard of· !leers. .Laguna ;\rt Work .Taken From Shop Thrte paintings and more than a dozen unique ceramic bowla, hanging plant holders, lamp bases . and wall plaques by Laguna artist Edmond Ronsky ·were stolen · Saturday night from 1the artist's studio-workshop, 1524 ·s. Coast Highway, police report. Value of the missing items Is estimated at lt.139. Police said burglars apparently entered a display room . through an unlock~ doqr from an adjacent shop and systematically removed the art works, selecting the lafgest and most impressive pieces from the display. Biggest · Weekend On. Laguna Sands , Laguna Bepoh lll'1!1W'dl r~ed the biggest weekend « the year to date with crowd.! numbering 11,500 on Satur· day and 18,200 Sunday. Air temperature was a comfortable 75 degrees both days, water wu a cool 62 and the -.r1 w11" low. Four perms were rescued. l.AG.UNA P~RTYGOERS GRUNT·l,NO GRDl,N AS THEY BEAT RETREAT UP RUTTED ROAD Outd .. 1 Sohw on Top of th~ World Inds In Cloud of Oust to Mw•I< of Siron• On Sunday a boet capsized o(( Oiver'a Cove but the occupants swam ashore without Injury. • I . l " ~------~ . --~--~---·~~-----------·---------------·-·. --- r \ , QUEEN FOR A YEAR Vi1jo'1 k•thv ·J1nkln1 Crowds Turn Out For. Cinco Fiesta In Mission Viejo . . . . It couJd have ·been, a Mexican market place wlih fts ' brighUy coloi-ed' stalls .and ~!Jing mariachil. · Bright flowers clustered behind adobe walls, festively dressed smors and senoras peeped out from a booth ltith a giant JOmbrent ·for a roof and one sign , adverU!ed "perros calitntes'' anct "mucho'Coca· Cola frlo. •;__ But instead bf Mexico City the place was Mission Viejo ffigh School and t~e event, t~e thir~ annual Cinco de Mayo celebration. ' Sponsored by the · school's parent teacher organization, ·the event included just about every community organliaUon in Mission Viejo. There were 35 decorated booths felturln'g games. ,food or souvenirs at the Sunday ·afternoon, event. Crowned to reign ·over this. and all Minion Viejo activities thlJ comlng year was Kathy Jenkins, 18-year~ld daushter of Mr . .and· Mrs. HoWaf'd FJ Jinklh!I. 25562 Adriana SI., Mission 'Viejo"., She was crowned by last year'a que'eni ~ Nichols. · Prln~ In lhe court weri Palll Opp, Jenny RobJ;on, Linda Shor! and Penny Sdlae!fer. ' A special event for the younger memJ>en-of the communtt7 w the decorated bike contest. Winnen in the best ovtrall ~ltegory were Lisa Bunnell, first for a muted ahlp ; Lynn Vaughn, oecond, and Kent and Brad Cotllns, thin!. Winners in' 1the most original ca~soi'Y (Sff FIESTA, Pip I) r , )" • Today's Fmal ·---. . -'N.Y. Stoelu TEN CENTS Task Force Routs Foe In Cambodia SAIGON (UPI} -&ores or U.S. tanks rumbled across the Fishhook of Cam- bo<Ua Monday and American comman- ders said their 15,00l).man allied task force was "in the heart" of the head. Q~ area whert the Communists nm lhell' Vietnam war strategy 1be head-qu~s itself remained undetected Five thousand more South Vletna~ese t~ ".ere committed Jo a related of. fens1ve Into the Parrots Beat region to the south, bringing to 30 000 the number of men involved in the twin thrusts aimed at destroying North Viet- namese . and Viet Cong sanctuaries .ia Cambocha. They included a ooo Gls Mllita'>'. sources said ~t least. three m?re ma10r forays into Cambodia were bemg planned. Communiques described the Fl!hhook and Parrot's Beak offensives as highly successful with J ,952 North Vietnamese a~ Viet Cong reported kllled and 351 pn~ners taken and 250 tons of food mun1Uons and medical supplies set:ed ' U.S. losses wtre placed at 11 kllied a~d 46 Wounded and those for South Vietnamese wtils at 151 killed and 560 wounded. As the an1eo task forces knifed deeper into Cambodia, dispatches from the capital, Phnom Penh, &akl Cambodian comm.anders nfsbed reinfOl'Ce!DeUI tG the villq• or Kaid Tboon Wli<io ·lltld report,, Aid a ~ balllt •...,. be al>il'lnl -"P •1atnoo-Commun1st truops :.~ "'1 the W'!lero bank cf Iba ., River. Jjik! Thom Is IO miles soulhtaat or ~ Penh and about 50 mllet from ~ Parrot's Be.ai: froJJt. Phnom Penh dispatches Sa.id "hundreds" of Cam· bodian tribesmen, trained and paid by the U.S. Special Forces. had been fiown from bases in South Vietnam to beef up the 40,000..man Cambodian anny ~y nightfall today American amiored units had pushed at least 15 mJles from the Soutb Vietnamese border en Highway 7. The route is a paved road that had hf:en used ~ haul Communist war sup. plies through Cambodia Into South Viet-nam. ' The Fishhook force was looking for the Communists' central office for South Vietnam -CQSVN -the Hanoi head- quarters which President Nixon has said must be destroyed, "lt'.a here and we're In the hear l of it," a U.S. commander said. But there was no sign of COSVN itself in the fourth day of the Fiahhoot offensive Daniel said . more than 90 Amertcan tanks and ann9l'Cd personnel carriers ract:d alopg Highway 7 under orders from the 11th ·Annored Cavalry Regi· ment squadron commander, Lt Col Grial Brookshire, not to lire unleai fired upon. "We're doing what an army unit is supposed to do," Broobhire sakl. "We're breaking deep into enemy territory and bloc.king their major routca. We've got a disorganized enemy. He ian1t flgh~na: because he doesn.,t know what he b doing." Brookshire said his men hoped to un-- covcr more supply ~pines in deep thru!M at first light Tuesday. He.said about 500 "structures" were seeri arid that they probabtr lield munitions and other war materie • • In· the Parrot's Beak, hundreds of South Vietnamese armored vehicles (See CAMBODIA, Pa&e 2) Oran(e <:oaat Weatlier Foggy weather Is In store 'ror coastal dwellers Tuesday, with temperatures dipping to the as level along the beach .and settling at 75 further inland. · INSmE TODAY Borrowers arr ftelhlQ Ute tight mo11<~ pinch .. th< l!Mll locn ia -oll bvi a thing o/ tltt pa;r. Page 22. \ " • ' ""' n n " • " ..... " .. " -" --.. <WNW CllMfY 1t ........ ..,.., . ,_ "'n tlMll ...... -.ti T............ 21 ......... " w-• .......... IJ .............. ,, --.. • I' • J DAILY PILOI SC ~,.q,, .., 4, 1'70 Food Prov ider .. Ocean Foreseen ' ·As Top ll.esour ce • • Tho ocuna and lhe youth studying ecolOfY and envi1"9'lmeDt may prove to be among America's most valuable resources. Tl\is was the tenor of a talk Saturday by Charles ll Meacham, Commiaaioner ol Ft.sh and Wlldll!e tor the Interior D!partment. Saturday as he helped dedicate the Marine Scleoce Institute (MSJ) It Dana Point Harbor. The MSI dedication of a future facfilty was part of tllreMay Ocean Expo '70 that began Friday. It centered OD study of and preservalicm of the ~nvirOJlJl)tDl. M~-.said it ,Ja .conceival}le irl IO or 100 yeata that the land masses of the gioGe ·Will be used up by mankfnd and his" recreation. He said man .may become dependent on the sea for his food. Meacham said the ocean produces three quarters o( the globe's oxygen and said in 1989 Americans alone con· sumed 5.4 billion pounds of food taken from the Sea. - Speaking of dedicaUon to conservation as a way of lite, Meacham said he had every hope that the concerned youth will become the savior of an environment thlt in the past bas been treated carelessly. Oceanography, he said, was born-dur- tng and since World War II and its tanb of experts are as yet thin. The succes~ of ~~~ence will_ depend on th~ quality of personnel in its ranks, the speaker Wd. Meacham said MSI is a giant step in tb&t direction with "the most pr~ E'rom Pqe 1 FIESTA .•. were Steve Garu, first for a black bull; Kevin Klrchner, second, and Bernie Esposjto, third. Placing in the most decorative category were usa and Steven Schuyler, first for a bee chasing a flower; Colleen Devine, second, and Pat and Kerry Amsbry, third.. . Competing with the Mexican at- moe:ptiere was that of a "band battle'' with winners being Bundy Field, first; ·the B F 0, second, and Cherokee third. Booths, looking Uke giant cacti, som· breros and little Alamos competed in ·a decorating contest. 'n'le winners were 'lbe Ramblin Rogues, first; Deane women's club, second, and the Mission Viftio Girl Scoots. third. - During opening ceremonies a <:Gpy or a state Legiilature rts0lution reCognizing Cinco de-Mayo as a JioUday was preeented 1o PTO cbairman Cliff Boehmer by Miss Elizabeth Pedrotti, dlstrlcl aocrel.vy lo stale Senator John Schmitz (R'l'ustin). Culture fans were treated to a special out.door art show and to a band concert featuring the Mission Viejo High SChool band. There waa also a special enchilada dinner. a variety show and at the end everyone got into the act for a parade. GG School Blaze Gets Oose Look Garden Grove firemen were today sif· ting the ashes of a $300,000 fire which destroyed the library of Bolsa Grande High School early Saturday morning. Fire departm!Ult spoke!men spid they were almost Certain the costly blaze wu ol lnCtndiirj origin. The ftfe Was spotted· ahl?ut ·; a.m. by a California liigtn.(ll)' .Palrdl officer. At that time. flames were shooting through the roof &f the one Story struc- ture Which served as a library and bookstore for the schoOl.. · Jt took nine Garden Grove fire depart· ment units two hours to coritrol the blaze. Included in the Joss were books, equlpqient and furniture. DAllY PllOT ".-,.rt l••h Hntl..,._ &Mell "-"'" '"ell ,..,.,.r,i .... .., C•• M"• S. Cl&•llt~ OllANG£ COo\.JT l"Ulll.IJH1M0 C0"111"\~Y gres.s.ive curriculum of it.s type that I have observed ln America." He offered the help of himself and his staff in working on the curriculum. Meacham presented a blue and white flag to .the institute as its pennant. There was ' a model of the physical facilitlel to be constructed to house MSI as part of the elhibilS housed Jn tents al lhe harbor. J'..iejo Man 's Ki n Survives Tragic Flig ht The brother of a Mls$ion Viejo man has been identified as the sole known survivor of a U.S. air tragedy that toot the lives of six fellow crewmen oo a flight over Laos last week. Mrs. Jack Fields of 23986 Carrillo Drive, MissiOn Viejo, said her husband received v;ord Sunday that his brother, staff Sgt. Eugene Fields. 28, of Alamagordo, N.M. was the man reported as-rescued afterUMrfirst-AC 130 gunship was shot down by enemy ground fire while on a mission over the Ho Chi Minh Trail a week ago. Six crewmen were killed and four are listed as missing.' Fields, who suf. fered bums on the face and both hands, parachuted from the crippled plane and was picked up by s~ch planes four hours later. After treatment lo Japan, he is en route to a hospital in El Paso, Mrs. Fields said. Fields, an Air Force ~er, went to Vietnam 'last year and fecenUy came home on a brief leave to visit hi.3 wife and three small sons in New Mex.lco. La g una Woman Enters Campaign For Utt's Seat Mal&ie Me"' of 320 Moss Street, Laguna Beach, filed a nomination petition ,belore the deadline Friday In the spetial 3Stb District June 2 election to iii! the une:xplred term of the late Rep. James B. Ult. Also filing Friday was Thomas B. Lenhart, Democrat, of Santa Ana. The twG late filings brings to seven the number of candldates competing for the term which wiU expire next January I. All except Mrs. Meggs, a Laguna housewite, are also candidates in the regular JUne 2 primary elect.Ion. Jn addition to Lenhart, they include Stale Senator John G. Schmitz of Tusltn. John Ratterree of Santa Ana, William Wilcoi:en of Laguna Beach, and John A. Steiger of Oceanside, all Republicans and Democrat David Hartman of Santa Ana. Under the procedure of the specisl primary, if no one candidate receives more, thAI) fifty percent of the total ' votes cast, the top R~ubllcan and Democrat will participate in a runoff vote June 30. NY Bombing Suspects Ente1· Guilty P leas NEW YORK (AP) -Samuel J. Melville and two other defendants plead- ed guilty in federal court today t~ ~lot· ting to blow up government butldmgs with dyn~mite bombs last f;ll l. Melville pleaded guilty to three counts \ncludlng conspiracy and one count charging him with a bombjng at the Federal Office Bulldi11.g here. Jane L. Alpert and John D. Hughey 111 both pleaded guilty to the charge of con· spiracy. DAil Y l"l\.OT S!tff l'~t_.- Aliso Draws Crowd Revamped strand at Aliso Beach in South Laguna attracted plenty of beachgoers during long, hot weekend. County beach will be site of new, recrea· tional pier .. in the near future as effort s to. upgrade the area, just sotrlh of T~easure Island Trailer Park continue. Citizen's Right to Reject 'Dirty Advertising' Upheld Tr ustees Face Priva te Sc liool B using Dile1n ma WASHINGTON (UP!) -The Supreme Court today upheld a law which allows a persOn to bar advertising: fro,m his mailbox if be decides it is too sexy. The law was challenged by 14 mail order houses, book publishers and others, who claimed it interferes with their right to free communicaUon through the maU. The vote or the eight-man court was unanimous with Chief Justice Wmen E. Burger speakin& for the majority. Burger said for the court : ''In effect, Congress has erected a wall -or more accurately permits a citizen to erect a wall -that no advertiser may penetrate without bis acquiesence. The contlnuinJ operatlve effect of a ll)ailing ban once imposed presents no con- stitutional obstacles." In other actions, the court : -Upheld by~ a 7·1 vote a New York State tax exeinplion on church-0wned property lhat is used for religious purposes. The Jaw had been challenged by a lawyer wh9 owned a Staten Island property which was taxed $5.24 a year. -Ruled that a defendant who pleads Pair Arrested On Drug Charges Iii San Clemente San Clemente police arrested two persons on drug charges during the weekend and said they would seek com· plaints today from the district attorney. Christine Hardy, 23, of San Bernardino was arrested on charges of possessing marijuana and poose&sing dangerous drugs. Detectives said a palrollng officer who found her asleep In a van discovered the small quantity or drugs, LSD, seconal and marijuana, in the glove compartment as she was looking for the vehicle registration. The van was parked at 1412 Mirador. In a Saturday night arrest, David Lawrence Coleman, 20, of 218 A Avenida Serra was booked on charges of mari- juana possession. Police said he was seen handing a package to a youth after coming out of a liquor store. An officer suspecting that it might be liquor checked and found a small quantity of marijuana, a det~tive said. The arrest was on El Camino Real near Granada. Suggestion Va luable LONDON (APJ -The British publishers, Jonathan Cape Ltd., will pay former French Deputy Prime Minister Jacques Soustelle "a substantial sum" for suggesting in a book that he plotted to. assassinate Gen. Charles de Gaulle, a London court was told today. guilty In court Hvoluntarlly and ln- te!9gently'' ~~t J a_ter try to upset ..._ his conviction on grounds that bis action was unconstitutionally coerced. The 5-3 decision In three cases meant the court refused to broaden its ruling that the Lindbergh kJdnaping law was defective because the death penalty could be im- posed only to a defendant who underwent trial by jury. The law on unwanted mail authorizes any addressee to take steps to stop "pandering advertisements" which he believes to be "eroUcally aroualng or sexually provocaUve." He can ask the post office to order the firm to take hi.s name cff the mailing 1ist. The firm can get a post office hearing if lt wishes . In the event of noncompliance, the postmaster ge11eral may ask the attorney general for a court order to stop the mailing. The mail order houses told the court deletions cost $5 a name because the lists are not alphabetical. Newport Police Se~e 730 Pounds In Big Pot Raid Two men, charged with possession of marijuana for sale, are in custOOy today in Newport Beach following their arrests Saturday during which police claim to have confiscated 730 pounds of lhe illegal weed. Narcotics investigator Leo Konkel said the haul was the largest in the history of Newport Beach. Tf sold wholesale, the impounded nar- cotlc would be worth abowt $50,000, he said. If sold by the lid (one ounce), Kon· kel said the marijuana would be worth $125,000. Arrested were Gregory LyM Tucker, 21, of Lakewood and David Glenn Cun- nison, 22, of Card.if. Wst.ch. Commander Earnest LaW'in said he was making a roLJti.ne check or the area when he spotted the suspects in the alley at 218 Lugonia St. Officer Michael McEveny who was called to the scene said the pair were taken into custody when a huge pile of large bags full of marijuana was found in their vsn. The officer said he saw the bags when be went to make an inspection of the vehicle, whlch was allegedly il· legally parked. Konkel said 540 pounds of the drug ""as found in the van and another 190 pounds was found in the garage at 218 Lugonia St. Capistrano Unified School District trustees will be asked to approve a new policy covefing the transportation of private and psrochial school students at tonight's 7:30 o'clock meeting in Serra School, Capistrano Beach . The policy was pre'.)ared by Sam Chicas, assistant superintendent for business servicei. He contacted 133 California school districts and lS replied that they .do provide transportation for private and parochial students on a 1pace available procedure. The new palicy for the Capistrano district states that transportation shall be granted to dllldren attending private or parochial schools within the district providing there is space available and no additional cost to the <tj.strlct. The policy will be subject to review each year. The non-public students will be transported according to seat availability based on the number ol buses currently available in the district. No changes will be made in routes and when requests exceed availability the non-public school will determine which of its students shall be transported. The new policy also Jlroposes that the administrative staff ol the diitrict will prepare an agreement with the private or parochlal schools establishing rules of behavior, stops, and schedule. Discipline for the extra students will be provided by their own schools or transportation will be denied. In other business the trustees will be asked to establish a remedial reading program for summer school and will consider a request for construction or a second entrance to the grounds of Palisades School in Capistrano Beach. Allen to Issue Bay Swap Speech Orange County Supervisor Alton E. AJlen or Laguna Beach has called ! press conference for 9 a.m. Tuesday at which time he will make a ''startling 'statement" on the Upper Newport Bay land exchange, according to omf of his aides. No further information was available today on the possible content ot Allen'& statement. He has been a staunch supporter over the years of the land trade with the Irvine Company which would result in the transfer of 157 acres of county tidelands property for 400 acres of Irvine Company land in the area. ' Royal Fan1il y flome LONDON (UPI) -Queeil Ellzabelh 11, her husband Prince P fi i Ii p and Investigation in the case is continuing. he said, and more arrests are expected Wday or Tuesday. "We suspect the marijuana came from fl.fexico," he added. · daughter Princess Anne relunted today to a wann and sunny Britain from a two-month 40,000.mile tour of Australia and New Zealand. Robert N, Wo.d ll'~lkl"'I en4 ll'!Jbtlil!"" J1di: R. C111lev Ykt 1",.1lot<1I Ol'IOlll '"'-•1 Ml......, tho1111J K1ov!I (dllO(" Thom1J A. Murphifte M•"'llllO EGllor DA Hic~s: More Discipline Needed Rid""' '· Nill :5outh OrtnH C.Uftly Edllor Offk" co111 r.111-1: m w,i1 ,,,. s1 .... 1 ,...,.,.1 ••1c~: nu w111 111111oo1 eour...,,,. 1,..1....,,. •n<~• m f'o•M• ,...,..,.,. M~llllflt<I IHc~: 1111J lltl(~ IN1tv1tll 1M C.leffttntt : ..,, Nomt El (Ofl'/nf 11 .. 1 /, By ALBERT W. BATES Ot "" 01111 1'1111 lttlf Partrital love is as important and omnipresent as ever but what has been nil.sslng is the vital in&redient of discipline. This was the eSSt."l'lce of Orange County DI.strict Attorney Cecil }licks' analysis of what has gone wrong with a younger generation resorting to drugs and violence as be addressed members or Huntington Beach Rotary Club Friday. Hkks recalled growing up in Los An8eles during the Gr~t Depression of the early t930R. "Lile was simpler then,'' he said .'-'There· wa1 a feeling · oC unity, for everyo~ was In tbe same. boat." '1Next came Wotld War II and again we wdre jolned together as a nation in scU~enial in bf.half of a survival caust," Hlck5 continued. "Then. after WorJJ \\'ar JI:-we produced a 'jillion' babies, the ooes who art ln college no\f. "~fost of us parents aald we \l'anted \ to give our chlldrl'tl the creature com- forts we couldn't have in the Depresslon or World War II. So we gave them cars we couldn't afford earlier. and a whole series of labor-saving appliances yihlch eliminated the chores which "'ere part of their parents' early discipline.'' In the midst of all these parent·bestow· ed creature comforts. Hicks said, along came Or. Benjamin Spock saying. "You've got to loVl? a child.'' We parents agreed but we left out another vital element, dl.sclpline, Hicks said. 1'Nonc or us, parents or children, c.an dt.velop without dbdptine,'' Hi c ks asserted. "We can'l run a business or an· ofl1ce of any kind wllhout it. Lacking UJscipllne, tmplayes would dlsintagrate, and so would the business. "I think o( it In term& or a boxing ring. with ropes around the four sides. Oro;> the ropes and someone falls off. on his fa ct. So it ls with children's lives ll lhty don't know where the struc- ture is, 1he ropes art ,'' The district attorney added that no fru society can extst without dltcipllne Left: -and the best kind Js ~If disclpllne "Why should we care -there are wh'ch ··•· I f chtld unpaved roads in Te.ut?"A IM;~ an examp e or ren. Hicks said the resP<mdent wu aerloua ••Our chi 1 d re n don't, know and sincere, but he didn't ·underltand ho1v to change d i r e c t I o n , • ' he that he was not above the Jaw, that added. "Most of our youngsters' goals laws shollld apply equally to all. are very pw'e -but how they go Hicks also recalled occuJons when .about achievfng them Is twisted aJI out campus m.Jlltantl, in the name1of 11frte or shape. This reflects the existtince speech," shouted down every tent~ of parental love as far as the goals he uttered before he ~pleted It - are ·concerned but lack of disclpli'ne and kept othct, frofn heitlni a disaei:iJlnt in the approach to those goals is painfully view . evident." These youngst.ers, too, Hieb llld, Earlier in his talk, Hicks recalled "have the notion tbat the Jaw aomtbow con!ronullons he has had with c ampus doe• not apply lo them. They !tel they radlc1IS1 ' Including a panel sltuatloo are above the law as ft ls appUtd macked 4· to I ·ageinst··him:· What the··,. to·everyone ·off·campue:l.t. --···· district 1tlomey learntd was that the nie district 1ttomey told the Rotarians radicals fall on their fact whtn that Law Day en M.11 1 wu proclaimed penetrating questions are asked. by President Dwl11ht D. Eisenhower on Hieb asked what connection 4here purpose becauge May Day h a d mlgh l be bel"'een the-issue of free historically been a Commu~ist show of sl)ffCb and academic freedom and the nr med might Law Day in th<? free violenefl and property destru ction b)' th<? world nQ\\' reminds us that :we are n ra dicals. J{c drl!w th\1 lncomprthcn5lbl<? govcrn1ntnl of 1aW1, not men, •n contrast response from a member of the New to the COmmunitll, Hicks taid. , U.S. Combat ' Role Scored . .. By ~o~ygin MOSCOW (UPI) -Premier Alexel N. Koaygln today rejected a new Geneva Coftference on Indochina and said tho Soviet Union "calls on all the peoples cf the world to stop the aggrtssion in CambQdla." )le accused lhe United States of a ··~e violation" of I.he 0 en e \' a atreements in Indochina and of trying to draw Southeast Asia into Jla military blOC9. :'These are imperialist, aggressive aim s· alien to the interests of the people and therefore they are inevitably doomed to-lallure," he said. Speaking at the first Moscow ntws ~erence he has held since ~e auc· ceided Nikita S. Khrusbcbev In JIM he said: "Now is not the time for conferences, it is the time for acliGn." "Now the Soviet government calls on all the peoples of the world to stop Ule ag.gresalon in Cambodia." Kosygin spoke in a government guest ~ house in the Lenin Hills on the edge of MOSCO\\'. "For Washington to ~xplain the action in Indochina was designed to save the li ves of American soldiers -that is strange logic," Kosygin said, reading from notes before television cameras, He said the American actJon "is a crude violation of international law, and as such it should be denounced ." He said that "If -Uie U.S. government really wants to save the lives of hundreds or American soldiers then there is a simple solution: Do not sJnd: American soldiers to Laos, Vietnam and Cam- bodi " a. Spesking sternly, he said the United States was expanding the war in Indochina where its "main goal is to suppreas progressive regimes and subje<:t them to American interests." He accused the United States of car- rying out "barbarous bombings" and setting up concentration camps. "Who gave the United Slates the right to be the judge of what is good and wh~t is bad for other peoples? Who gave it the right to be an international gendanne? "Nobody gave them th is right." He warned "the re sult of the invasion of American troops (into Cambodia).can cause further tomplications in the in- ternationa l situation.'' Noting what he termed a discrepancy between the words and the deeds of President Nixon, he said, "The govern. ment of the United States in fact is strengthening even more ils aggressive militarist course." He said "the people of Indochina have the right to be masters in their owo. home. "The expansion <>f A m e r i c a n aggression in Southeast Asia wlll mtet a resolute rebuff from the side of the 1 people of Vietnam and Cambodia and all peace-loving people. "The Soviet government will draw the respecUve conclusions from such actions of the United States government,'" Kosygin warned, ending his 12-minute statement and accepting que!tions from the assembled correspondents. Asked whether the Russians would rea~ their position in the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) in Vienna in view of the new situation, Kosygin rep~led, "President Nixon first of all should have thought over his actions before he started the invasion of Cam· bodia." Kosygin made it clear he opposed reconvening of the Geneva convention on, Indochina. Me said that ''now that the military action is under way, it is necttsary to stop the aggressor. Jt must be done by all states. "Now is the time not for conferences; It is the time for actioo. "The Soviet government now calls on all the peoples of the w.orld to stop the aggression In Cambodia." 'Quit griping! We're withdrawing from Vietnam, aren 't we?' I f'ro"• Page l CAMBODIA • •• ~ve into Communlat base cam.pa Oll the slrth day of an offenstve In which ·American forces were net directly In· volved· on Ill<· ground-wttlnlt, ••«i>Uon of about 40 military 1dvisen. U:S. atr and artillery auppart wa." behind the Parrot's Beak foray but It was mainly a South Vietnamese shpw. and Saigon reports bid II was · showing good results. Five lhousand more South Vietnamese troops moved into the 1oulhern part of the Parrot's Be11k ovrr the weekend. .:·,.;•-•••a• .... , DAILY PILOT DAILT l'ILOT l llfl' ........ LYNN TAYLOR, 13, WATCHES THURSTON 'S 'BIG AL ' CHURN OUT DAILY <:LASS SCHEDUL ES CHRIS HARE, TARA BRANSON, KUR T SUTTER (FROM LEFT) LOOK, LISTEN, READ AT TOP OF WORLD Lag11na Council Facing Sign Iss ues Tonight 'Big Al' R.ules Laguna Scheduling People's Week Program Opens At lJ C Irvine Thursto1i School's 4,70 S tudents Depend on Computer By BARBARA KRElBICH Laguna Beach planning cornmissioners 0 • llN o.11Y ""1 .. , "•11 \viii tackle a lengthy agenda, moslly There were "ski bums" <1nd ''surf relating lo sign ordinance problems, at bums" and now there are "computer bums,·· but the latter is by no means their 7:XI o"clock session tonight. a derogatory term. Starting with a continued seaind public It relers ~~rs whose fascination hearing on amendments to the ordinance, for the wonders of the computer brings they will !lo on to consider va riance them l-0 school early. keeps then1 late, appli~calions for a long lisl of signs. and even finds them hanging arodnd on Saturdays, just to delve into the ·ric Toe fi1arket s al 885 Glenneyre mysteries of these elec tronic marvels. St. and 1390 N. Coast H1 gh\vay are asking At Laguna's Thurston ln termedi<itc permission'-to replace their existing pclc School, th e marve l is "Big Al... an signs with identical versions of the signs 18~ I620 computer residing in a specia l In smaller diniensons, to comply with room of its own adjacent to the ad-ministration officBS. the ordinance. but still exceeding the With multi-colored lights flashing and lhret-square·fool limit for the face of typewriter keys clacking, .. Big Al" clat- the identi fying clock. ters away, preparing daily schedules The Mob i I Oil Corpora tion \\'ants for 470 students, referring students up permission to ~lain a nooconfonning and do\•1n in study levels, according to their diagnostic tests, and generally pole sign at its station. 1793 S. Coast keeping Thurston's complex "daily de- Highway, until June 15, when the station mand scheduling'' in shape. v>ill be closed. Official custodian of the computer The Fleur de Lls Bar, 14&0 s. Coast room is scheduling coordinator Marjorie Highway , seeks to resolve a sign problem Randall, who gave .. Big Al"' his name. Rut Thurston's young ··computer bun1s·• created by unusual roof construction and are frequent visitors, dropping in at Boat Canyon merchants wiil hear a any hour from 7:30 a.m. to long after review of their overall ,sign program. J regul ar school hours lo study the com- Other sign items concern tbe PoU.ery pu~Pica'.J is 13-year-old Lynn Taylor \\'ho Shack 's p;;.rking lot sij:n. the Laguna koows how to "clear" the computer's Federal time and temperature sign. memory, key punch the cards that feed "'hich will be handled as a public s~rvice it information and i.s studying pro- sign , and a real estate off1:lce tgn at gramrning, along with half a dozen high 671 N. Coast Highway. school students who come over on \\!rapping up the sign ile will be Saturdays. Next year, programming in- a progress report on the sign enforce-struction for 20 stUdents is planned. mcnt program. At the moment, Lynn is trying to Two rezone requests also relate to computeri1.c the billing for his newspaper signing; the Shoals request for rezoning route. of a single lot will receive a second "Big Al" .is worth $28,000 and would public hearing; Geoffrey Riker's con~ aist industry a $2,000 monthly rental ditional use permit request far a small fee, biJt the school ge~ a special educa- planned residential development, con-. tional rental rate of $600 a mor1th. tinuid from the last meeting, will be Since the computer saves the salary up for further consideration and Mr. cost of an estimated II additional clerks and l\1rs. Edward Martinez will seek in processing iRformation , "Al" is permissioo to serve beer and wine at regarded as a bargain. the ir coffee shop, 853 Laguna Can)'On \ But, though the aimputer is In some Road . ways the epitome of mechanization. its func tion in the school is a very hun1an one. Thanks to "Al," every studenl al Thurston is able to work at ~~s O'A'JI level in each of t-js classes every day, profiting from something approaching the "individual instruction" long regard- ed as a prime goal ill education. There isn't any <Xlmputer al Top of the World Elementary School, but here loo, mechanical and electronic device s help youngsters progress in their studies on an individual basis. The tool§ in Top of the \Vorkl's reading, n1ath and science "'labs" are slide pro- jeclcrs, film strip viewers, t a p c recorders and earphones. Lab work is the mocjern version of, the old-style, teacher-directed "drill." In their labs, the youngsters practice the skills they have been taught in sn1all. 10- stu<lent St:minars. Their exercises in the lab are further bolstered by quiet "s~udy" periods. Many of the devices used in the labs can be operated by the students lemsel\'es, which gives the whole thing an added fascination. Al one table, math problems are flash- ed onto a screen by a student operating a slide projector, ·whi le youngsters wrile their answ ers on a work sheet. At another. a reading class gels a three.way exercise by watching a film strip that illustrates a story, reading lhe won:ls underneath the picture and hearing the \vords through earphones plugged into a tape recorder. A science lab group listens to taped instructions as ii proceeds step-by-step lhrough an experiment discussed earlier in a se1ninar. The teacher su~rvising the lab watches over her floCk and hastens to help youngsters individually when pro- blc1ns arise. Docs all this ni cc ha n i z at ion r!ehumanize edu cation? Quite the contrary , says Top of the \',"<'r!cl principa l Al llaven. .. 111 a .'itandard school." he explains, "ihC child spends almost all its time <is onC' of a group Q( 30 students wilh one tcilchcr. Mis closest contact with the 1cath<'r probably comes io a reading c\:1ss Y.l'err· the class is broken down into groups of 10, one gn:iup y,·orking Folk Guita1· Begi1·i11ers Classes Set for Laguna with the teacher, while the other 20 are kept quiet with 'busy work.' "At Top ci the World, every youngster spends 36 percent of hi! Ume each week with a teacher in a small group of IO. These. seminar sessions are follow- ed by the lab drills, where the youngsters again work in small groups around tables. They are doing constructive work, not just killing time untll the tea- cher has lime for them." The system also make~ better use of teacher time, says Haven. "The average classroom teacher,'" he explains. "'spends 50 percent of her time acUvely reaching and the other 50 percent passively "'atching while the class does 'seat work .' Here the teachers are freed to spend 80 percent of their time actively teaching small groups. The large lab groups and quiet study groups can be effectively supervised by one or two teachers at a time." New installation in the math resource center al 1'1guna Be~ch High School is a \Vang Calculator. already popular "·ith students for its ability to produce lightning checks o' complex math assi11nmcnls. The calculator ha! a central computer block and five keyboards with lighted panels thal instantly na!h answers to problems in addition, subtraction , multiplication. square root, . loga'rlttnns and all manner of comple1 mathematical operations. A week of panel discussions, leclurts. films, skits, mariachi music and an art show are scheduled for UC Irvine's La Semana de la Rata (The People's \Veek) wh ich opens Tuesday. Sponsored by Movlmlento Estudlanlil Chicanos de Atzlan (MECHA), the flve- day observance will open on Cinco de Mayo. Themes for subsequent days will be "education and the Chicano," "The Chicano Movement," "The D e I a n o Strike" and "The Chicano and the Con1- munity ." Speakers will include Dr. CarlG\ Cortez, professor of history at UC Riverside, and Dr. Julian N a v a , member of the Los Angeles Board of Education. Events scheduled fo r La Semana de la Rau include : ' Tuesday, May S -"Cinco de Mayo" Gateway Plata: Mariachi music, 11 :30 a.m.-noon, Talk by Dr. Carlos Cortei , professor of history, UC Riverside, noon-I p.m. Villa Folklorico, 1-2 p.m. Sttond Door Commons: art ahow. Wednesday, May 6 -"Education and the Chicano" Tllird Door Commons: film, "Education of the Mexican-American," 11 Lm.-noon. Gateway Plata: talk by Dr. Sultan Nava, member of Los Angeles Board of EducaUoa, noon-1 p.m. L os Reveladotes, theater group, 1-3 p.m. IM Pllylfcal Seientt:I: panel dlscu.wkm 9n "Educat~ in Orange County." 4-6 Protes ters Scuffle P·~ursday, May 1 -"Chicano Move- ment Day" The Lagu,na Beach Recreation Depart· studcn!s. Each student is to furnish his Nea r· l J .S. EmbaSsy Third floor Common•: films, "It ment will sponsor a series of classes own Spanish-type guitar. Depends on the Color of Gius You're in beginning folk guitar beginning Ma.v AUCKLAND, New Zealand (AP) Looking Through" and "'C h 1 c an o Prc·registration is necessary and will . 20. director George Fowler announced Fifty demonstrators inv1ded ~ U.S. fiforatorium,., IO a.m.-noon. Panel dis. today. be accepted daily between 8 a.m. and Consulate today, smeared tbe U.S. seal cusslon by rtpresentatlves from the Four classes wll be held on Wed· noon and l p.m. and 5 p.m. at the and an Am erican flag with red paint Chicano communlty, noon-2 p.m. ncsdays for young people and adults,' Hl'(.•rcation Building. and hung a Nazi nag. IOf Phy1lcaJ Sciences: films,. S.7 p.m. in the new Recreation Building at I75 Instructor Libbey Thornton , who has The demonstrators were protesting Friday, May 1 -"The Delano"Sbike" N. Coast Highway. formerly the Boys' taught music at Santa Barbara and in U.S. military actton in Vietnam and Ga&eway Plau; Huelga Fair, 11 a.m.-4 Club building. Laguna Beach says the classes will leach Cambodia. Most ol them left when asked p.m. Talks by Joe Serda, Los Angeles, Youth classes will be at 3 and ~ beginners how to tune the guil.ar. develop to do so by poUce and Coruul Joseph boycott cooqlinator, United F a rm p.m .. adult classes at 7 and 8 p.m. a sense of pitch. rhy thm and hannony, Roland. But 14 were arreated when they Workers Organizing Committee, and Registration fee is $5 for the six.week do basic slrums and plucks and ac-refused to leave, and three others were Father Coffield, Our Lady of Guadalupe coorse and classes are limited to 20 company singing with chords. arrested in scuffles outside the office. Church, nooo-1 p.m. ~-'-..:.__:_cc_~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~--'-~~~~~ El Rancho has the hottest price SUPERIOR ••• BEEF. • lll town! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • -}'our ounces each ••• big enough for satisf;iction ! 1\cat 'ctn as they come ••• enjoy a fiesta thi!i \\"\'f"k l Taco Sauce . .... .. . . . .............. 19~ r.o..:arita ... all the zest rou ,,·i:.nt! .••. 7 oz. Enchiladas .................................. 39 c Van de Kamp's.,, Beef, Clu.'~=-r. Chicken! 71(: oz. Refried Beans ......................... 29¢ Rosarita ••• ea.sy to serve, great to eat! ••• N'o. 211:? Chili and Beans ....................... 39~ Hormel's • , , heat and serve~ 15V2 oz. can. Cotnplet~ the ~fe:cica.n. menrt t(;ilh finer prod1~cel Fresh · Green Onions ., .......................... :~.0~~~ ............... .. Garden goodness you'd expect from El 'Rancho 1 Si:iappy flavor to enho\ncc so ma'hy dishes ! 5c An invitation to 1crt:r. ltonic tnade chili.' Ground Beef for Chili .~ ....................... F_R~~ .......... 69~ El Rancho quaJity beef-••• fre&h groun(J"'"i::hubky'' style to make richer, meatier chill I - ' Mtntt pla:1t&-ar~ eater lu ken voirbtgi" at Et Ra.nc1i.o! Young · Beef Liver .. ~ .... ~~~ ...... 69~ Tt:nder ••• mild flavored,,. becftuse it's aelectcd '"ith you in mind ! \Vhy not li ver a nd onions this 'Vetk? Sliced Bacon ............................. 89~ f~I Rancho'$ ••• thic!;cr slices ••• ranch st.yle I Braising Ribs .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. . 59~ Hearty i>Qef goodness ••• ~f"r\·e ,,·i th noodles ! P1·ice1 in efftct ~ton., Tittl ., lYtd., Ma.11 ..&, S, 6. No-talte to dtt&Ur1. " ARCADIA: SU...lJftd Halinjfoo Dr, (!l lbnclio Cl n1tr) PASADEllA: 320 WnJ ColO<ldo BM • . SOUTH PASADEllA:- rremon1 1nd·HunUn1ton Dr. HUNTINGTON BEACH: W1rner ind Alzanquin (801rdw1lk Center) NEWPORT BEACH: - 2721 NewpOfl Bl•~ '"' 2555 E11tblutt Or, (Elslblufl r.11111 C.nter) • J ' -------• , '• _,, M&1 4, 191" Senate Panel: 'Indochina Presidential War' WAS!UllGTON' (UPI) -The Stn1te Forelp Rtlattona Committee 1e<:111ed the Nixon adrntnlstratJon today ol a takeo¥'r or t&e war and ltt•ty po.,.,·ers ., Cooirtla. IL uld the executive branch "''" oon-duclinl a "constltutlonally un1utborlltd, pre~denUal war In Indochina." The committee made lbe chtirje& in a N!Port to the Senate recommendhti n:peal of the 1984 Gulf of Tonkin resolu - tion whlcb authorized the President to like neceasary steps to repel\ Com- munllt qgression in Southtaa:t Asia. Although I.ht Nixon admlnistraU011 Is not relying on the Tonkin resolution In a bid to end rowdyl.6m at llarrog8te, England's late nte:ht film shows, theater manager Ben-- ton Symmons bas decreed that all men attending the shows must be accompanied by women. • Danie l P. &artoll , 52, of Chicago, N authorlty for Its «llona In Vietnam and elsewhere ln J.nctocbtn1, the et>m· mitlce &aid ,.peat of the ""'troYOrsJal gr1nl Of poYl'tr "'OU)d "clear the l if of a ltpcy of confusion and ili•11U· m•cr." •·J woukl r~aln then for Conires1 to determine how the constitutional vacuum ahould be filled ," the report 11ld. "Until It doto, or until peace ~ made, the executive will . be conduclina • con- r;Utution1lly un•uthorind, presldenUal war in Ihdochin1 ." nit commJttee 1h1rply critlclZtd Pruldtat Ni1on'1 decllk>n to send U.S. troope Into combat in C1mbodi1. It declared : "The commitment without the consent or knowltdae o( Con&n11 of •t ~ e a 1 t 1,000 Amtrlcan soldtua to fllht In c.m· bod11 .•• evidences a convlctlon by the ex~Uve t.bat it II at llbtrty to l&nore the n•lioo1l commltmenta resolution •l'Ki to t1ke over both the Wll' and treaty powers of the Conen:o w h e n eongtt11lon1l 1uthor1ty in thelt areas become' Inconvenient." The cammitmcnts reaoluUon, lt1tlly nonbindlna. b1md the use of tr o o.p • abro1d \\'Jthout congres$Jonal con1ent. The report was i1'ued as the com- faces a charge of pOlluting the air. Bartoli was arrested in his North Side apartment-Thursday as he threw hundreds of pieces of paper from his window. The pieces of pa- per were records of horse bets, po- lice said. Bartoli \Vas charged with being the keeper of bets and violet· ing the city's air pollution ordin- ance. CONS!RVATIVES TRIUMPH IN TEXAS ltnt..n·(t.ft) Wint; Y1rboreu9h hef•n Y arhorough Los s i.t1 Texas • liY!;:i;;;;=·-:;;;= ., The Pa ul3boro. N.J., Borough ~ Council i3 cansidering on ordi- nance that wouLd prohibit a 1 policeman _ from getting drunk r" ---0/f the job as well a.s on . Pub- Raises Republica11 Hope s lic Sofety Di rector John D. {'1 Bunichelli explained that a 1 policeman fs on call 24 hour.t a ', day -a11d should be in shape i. to go to work. \ l • u;:~· For11\ 1tudyi1lg form should be tl1c raption. for tl1i$ $Cene at Cllurchil; (lown3. Louf1ville, Ky .• whicl~ ho1ted lhc Ke11t-ucky Derby Sat11rday Claudia Hall. 22, Kent, Ohio, i3 re· uie1vi11g of the f it.Id of hor3e.! and jockeys which ran in tile 96th cla..s.!ic race. • l"iremen in Shelford, England. look an hour Tuesday to free 3- year-old Mlch1el Wll111n11 finaer after it got stuck in the bell of his toy telephone. DALLAS (UPI) -The defrat of librral U.S. Sen. R1lph \Y . Yarborough will give Texas a mort conservative delega- tion in Washlngton next year and brighten! Republica n hopes of capturing the state's second Senate seat Yarborough 's defeat by Hou s lo n millionaire Lloyd M. Dent.sen Jr. in Saturday's Democratic primary puls Bentsen In the Novtnlber general election agaiMt anoUler Houston millionaire . U.S. Rep. Gtorge Bush (R-Tex .). Republiealll!i privately had hoped for tJ1e oosttr of Yarborough, 66. since it likely will reopen the old liberal~n­ servative split among Texas Democrats and perhaps drive 8<11ne Ii be r a l s disconttnted with BenUen into the GOP ranks. "I couldn'~ be happitr," Bush said Su,1day af~r his easy v.·in o\'er Dr . Robert ~forris of Plano in the GOP primary. "I coulcli,.l be n1ore elat.ecl . i\:o r could I be mort confident abou: 11innlng in Novtmber." l\lorris'ind.icaled his loss to Bush partl was due to Republicans voling ih t! !Jcrnocratie primary. "They were drawn as by a pov.·er! racuum cleantr into the Dtmocr1tic p: ty to vote for Bentstn, or r'ather agair \'arber-Ott~." he said SLrnday. The eni'ir'i---Republican hierarcy 11 -::lated over the ele ction re sults. Thr: 11·as a universal feeling among th<'t that . Bush. \\'ho lost to Yarborough i the 1964 elections by 300,000 \'Otes, cou· more ea sily \\'in ove r Bentsen. 'fht GOP doobl\essly will play up th t l b er a J. e onservaUve fuss amonr Democrats and will make serious efforts to woo as many of the liberal1 as they can. But despilt their slightly brighter prospects, Bush 1till will co into Ute Cooler Weather ge11eral tlecLion scrap with Be-ntien as -the undtrdog. Bentsen will contlnue lo enjoy and profit from the ful support of former Gol'. John P. Connally, one of the statt's !hrcwcsl politiC'ians and a master nrganizcr and money raise r. Spock A rrested In P eace Display Ne ar Capital \VASHINGTON (UPI) -Dr. 8enjamln Spock, arrested with 74 o l her demonstrators kneeling in prayer across fom lhe Whitt Houst to protest escala- tion of the Vietnam war. wa s free today .:fter forfeiting $25 collateral. The protest Sunday by about 150 persons was in the fonn of a religious servlct in lAfayette Park, dirtctly across Pennsylvania Avenue from the White louse. u:S. park po Ii c e said "the ~1nonstralors, though peaceful. had fall· I to obli.in a pumlt. _ Organizers of the protest, which ln- uded clergy and laymen concerned Joul the war in Vietnam and the !llowship of reconciliati on, said they ad applied for the permit Sunday. Police .iid a J:>.day ad\•anct notice v.·as rc- uired. Others arrested included the ~v. John ~cnneu. presi dent of Union Theolo1\cal !'.ien1in11ry and his v.·ifc: Sam Brown and David Hall·k, leaders of the Vietnam ~foratorium Committee: the Re Y • l\1alcolm Boyd, author of "Are You Rlli1- ning \Vith l\tc. Jesus?", and Rabbi Ba lfour Brickner. • Ill Sight Sou thla nd Exper~nces R ecord·breaki1tg Heat 'I O!lllperalur"• l 05 ANGELE~ •NO Vl(INIT'!' - MMlll' f1lr /~ ....... b,,rl lo<"f f~ I M '°"' Cloucll t lo<o9 cot••. Lo ... (IOUf l MO<><f•I' "''M •nd Tu•1<1•v mo•"ln~ 119- cernlntl PIMIY •u""" T"•Vl~Y tflt•• noen. Coolt• d~11. HI~" MG"lllV 'IS. POIN't CONCE PTION TO MEJIC.,l.'l !ORC>f"lt -Li~llt Vl"•b•~ "'Ind• nltl\1 11'\Cf morn1"'1 i'!o'J•1 ""'"""in• wtl lf•IV I h> II •"IC!! •~ •'"'""""' Mondi" '"" T\ltMllV. l"><''~"n~ nl~ht •nd mG<'l'll"9 I""' r•!l'•OI 1n1 IO'I but '""'I 1111'1' 111n)fttn "' ~·•tt<!CIOnl Ceo~• .... EXl'llfME 50UTHf l'IN NEVADA - Me.&111' f1lr w11r1 vt .. tb•• "''" cloudt W.1'1111'9'1 'T\;ff&Y. (o<oll"""' "01 Gu•I~ w!l>dt T'UtldlY tl!f"'00011, Hl9t11 MM• d"' u lo ., COASTAL. ANO 1!1Te l MIOIATIE V.t.Ll•YS -Mo111v l4lr wltt. tom• 111111 c1WOI llua..itlo '"''"'" bu! low tloudt 11111 109 lt!t /,IOl'{jfy "''"' ..... Tllftdn' '"°'"I .... (~rr dtYI, Hlthl Mondt• 1S '° s. SOU THl!!ltN (M.l~O"N IA MOU N 'FAIN AltlEAS -Mo1!1Y !1.r wttt> VI •• i..1111 /lltlo (~ lllro\1911 Tut~Y. Gintv wlnft t.W c.olt!' Tvt:1<111,, Hittto ""°"°"" 6l ,. , ... tNTt!IUOll: ANO OES!"ll1 ll (C.IOllS -Mcttll'I' i.lr wllll ...,.. h1;11 CI0\111' Ill...,... TUCM!1r, Ht9'ot M-1• llO 11 9Q ,,._.., 'l'llleV•. G111t'I' .. ,,.... 1'1d "'ll -.,jij 10 'll'l ml l'IOftll WllOll TUii '" -"~' W~lllCI lor~11 :1·~'.'""""~.i: "11..!~• ; to"2v ''E/l''~~ t1 .a. '· :.;;"'ft-n. ,, 1M 8. JUft fl di fl·l1, Ptlm '°''~ I Coe\ • s1•,•••c•nt \;:--.["-t-~,,!:;------1- COfUt.al Tl\io!'I 111111 M lltiM Ylrlt Dlt winch 11lt M •~ mOfRI"' llour1 1lo11t 1"9 CMll ~lflt Mlt .. rlf I .. II klllllt In 1"-t'11!~J. ft!!•' ""' 1~,,01.,, wllll tofl'lt c:IMM!t 11\111 itlt nltht t PICI 1trlt .....,I'll,.. ftt. Ttm"'1111rn t 1611t lllt Of-• (M11 wlll rtntt i,.... ~ to H wtlllt lfllel\lll tl'lt r.ftff •llt ... n to U. Wlltr '""' "rtll1rt 11 ff 4"'"'· S1aa, "'"""· Tiu• TUliOA'r l"lnl It• I OD t .fl'I .• 11 1"11'11 hlth 10 '''·""· ),t SKoM lo"' J:)I 1.m, I I ~tMCI "'~" t t:M ~ .... 1 l Su11 lt11et~·Ol t m.lll1 1:19n,,... MMrl lll ltft ,,Ott,/fl. lilt l:0.1.m. Htw MtH '''" Ofr, '"" L11I Olr Mtf J Ml'I' 1~ Mt Y 11 M11 !I Callfor11la Albwut!'OUI ""'"or••• All1nt1 111~tr1lltld lhml'C~ Soi\• ;io1to11 8 •0'll'n1v1111 (h1Ct90 (lftCIMeH Oii MolM• 0t11111t ~trt Worth ,._ lltltft t M-'111• l(t nM1 (ltv l t l Vtt•1 l"' ...... flfl Mlll'l'IT Ml11t111,oll~ N..,. Orlft nl NtwYoot "'""' l'lt llt Otk!tM Olll1/'lol'M Cll'r ..... ,,1,,.. ''""' .... '''° ""'" '",,_,, 1'1111"" ... h ,.,,,, ...... •••"en., • .., l l\lff ... kCr1,..fflhl !~!I L•_, Cl" ~·" 0 1101 Sin l'rt'l(litt St•lflt SllOl\l~I T~rM•I Hit~ Lt'll' l'rtt.: ,~ 4, I .n l' ~t ~I 1.20 • " " " " " .. • .. " " " .. " ,, .. " • " ... n " " " .. ., ., ~ " " " n • " " " " " " .. " ~ • " " • " • • " " " " " " " " .. " " • " • .. " ~ ~ " • • " " " " " " .. • ·" ' mJttet met to dl&eus.s a \\'hlte House move to tum the group's plen for a pr1v1te metUng with the Presldtnt into a larae 11lherln1 of 50 members of COngress. Some members o1 the co mmittee In· dicated they v.·ould boycott while others s1Jd they would 1ttend. "He's th• only President we have and the country is at war." Sen. Albert Gore {0.Tttm.), 11ld. ••J shall be there." But Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mwfield of Montana said he would not 10. The chairman ol the Senate panel, J. William Fulbrlaht (0.Ark.l, wonted to Jlt down with the Prt1ldent for 1n inUmlle dilCllllloo -,th< cotnmille<'o tint wtth a chief uecuUve in 81 ytara. But Nixon lut w~ tt1panded by tnvlttna the Armed Strvkes Commitlffa rrom both houses ol Congrua to 1 'l'ua- day br•aklut, and both fortlgn nlaUOns c:ommltlffs to a I p.m. cockl1il b o u r chit.chat t.h1t same day. Some members of Fulbright's panel contend the aathtr- lng will be 10 unwieldy lhey will be reduced to listening quJeUy while Nixon and his aenerals point to maps and chart.I. Debate on the new pha5CS of the war wa.s likely to continue In the Senate lhia .,Vetk In the fonn of 1 move to repe1l the 1964 Gulf or Tonkin re10lutlon -the vehicle whicll 1utho(l1td unUmlled action to repel Communla:t 1gg:rt61lon in Vietnam and elsewhere in Indochina. Some members believe repeal would be almost meanlngleas since Nixon ha1 not used !ht re1aluUon aa a ba.sls for cvrrent aeUvllits in \.ht war. In the House, continued debate "''as expected on three W'endrnttnts to the "20.2 billion military authorl•aUon bill for majort weapons sy1tema. TWo ot the ame ndments seek to rtstrlct Cambodian- type invOlvements, while the third Heks to &anction thern. * * * * * * u u * Students Plan Anti-Nixon Strikes By THE A8110CIATED PRESS Campus new1papers ac.ros1 the country planned to call ttx!ay for a nationwide gtudent slrike to prot est American military actions in Cambodia and !he recent bombing of North Vietnam. Slrikes already have been declared al Princeton . the University of Pennsyfvanla, Sarah Lawrence and Bryn Mawr, the strike plans were reported under way at Notre Da me, Brandeis University and Stanford. A national !iilrike conuniltee of deleg1tes from the campuses was being conYened for a meeting 1t Gti0r$1;e • I / WaMiincton Unlverslty tonight to coordina te policy . The N1w Moblllzation Committee to End the Y.•ar in Vietnam, also ll'Orking to ward a national studen t strike, called for a massive rally in "'ashington Satur- day to demand immediale withd rawal of U.S. •troops from Southeast AJia. The common strike editorial 11chrduletl for publication today in 5 I u d e n t newspapers was drawn up Sunday al Coh1mbia University by tditors of 1 I major Eastern coJleges. Six were pre5ent and others plrticlpated by telephone. Eureka!; Art11t rich~ , That bi' Dflt 111ilh lht nanic )'OU ct n I rtmembtr. .... 1 ti~ c1n'1 you rtmembtr aboul it'.' ''eah. l.tt'~ 10 open our accoo nl. Ho• we gonna find ii! The editorial accu1e1 Pre1ident Nixon of ignoring "the _con1tit ut t o·nal prtrogatlves or Congress" by sending troops into C11mbodia . Nixon, the editor., wrote, "has revealed the sham of his policy of Vletnamiiation." The editorial says "a massive. un· precC'dented display of dissent is re· qulr~." Drafting the editorial wtre editors fron1 Columbia, Corntll, Rutcera, Bryn ~fa\vr. Sarah Lawrence and the Unlversi· ty of Pennsylvania. Endorstm1ntl!l qukk· l.v came' from Harvard, Princeton, Dartmouth. Brown and Haverford . •I Okay, but •lilth ~11k? Shouldn't ht l&e h.,C. l hey llate oMtt5 •II o•tr lttt pit er. . ) The name you can't remember. The bank you can't forget. • I Hunllnglon 811ch 6699 l.d1mi ,..,~ 96Z·3J 77 !1n C11m1nt1 HLH!llnglon •••ch 11122 Beach Blvd. 647·9681 Coelt M••• ::030 E1st 11111 Sr. 6<12'·1660 1001 Soulh Er Camino ~t.al 492·80l>O S4n Juen Ca11111rano 31171 Camino C1pi1lr1no <193-114 I Cr1u111 •12~B~ll Ad 826·001 1 Sertl1 An1 90Z No11n M.iin 835·83&J f Dina "oln! 2•6711.11 Plitt <196·1 29l Tu1lln 1 3300 Newpo/I ,..,,. 54~·9090 .--------------------------------.... -------------------------·-·---· . • y • • ., er ' ' . . .. ,..,. .. _.,,,._._ "· A ~. • -.. __., -. -..--....... t San Cle111ente • C~pistrano EDITION VOL. 63, NO. I 06, 3 SECTIONS. 32 PA6Es OR:ANGE co\JmY,, CALIFORNIA MONDAY. MAY 4, 1970 ' . . ee Mayor Declares · .. ' . • B1asting Caves: __ Idea o·f ·Police The possibility of blowing up or othernise sealing off' caves in the hills behind Laguna Beach occupied by transient hi ppies was first .. tossed out" by a Laguna Beach police officer, Mayor Richard Goldberg said today. "I first heard about it at a pre-election coffee in a house up on the hill where people were .complaining a!>Qut tµppies living in t.he caves and creating a fire .and heal lb hazard," Gola berg said. "A police officer at that meeting sai,<f the police department had even considered * * * Police 'Crash' blowing up the caves •. It was something that was tossed out along with a lot of other ideas." Goldberg saiij he Per sorta fly did-not think the caves would ever be blown up bµt, he added, "My rea.ctlon is that some measures sbould be taken to pre-- vent the health and !ire· hazards that are created because o! the people living in the caves. "I'm particularly concerned about the danger of !ire now that the dry season is approaching. One spark up there could set -Off a fire that could endanger all the homes on the hills." Goldberg said he didn 't know just what shou1d be done. • ·1n e .. OAll Y ,llOT Iliff P'lleMI Hilltop Party; Boy Arrested "They've talked about blowing them up, sealing them off in some way, spraying them with some sort of substance ... I just know it's· a bad situation from the standpoint of health and fire hazard." The oew mayor said be realized that ecologists "have a good point" in wanting to preserve the caves and added, "I understand there are · some DESPITE PRESENCE OF SKEPTIC, LtSA BUl(J,jELL, I, WHEELS HER 'BOAT' IN BIKE PARADE • Orange COunty Sherill's deputi~. police and highway patrolmen routed about 100 yOung ~le from an outdoor party complete With two bands in a brushy hilltop_~a-~_ of 1t8~a·s Top of T~e World Suilday. • Laguna Beactl•)llllb ca~ ~ mat sheriff's Cleputles arrested Sames ~ Sowa, 19, of Al)aheipt on charges or marijuana J>QiSSeSSion. · archaeelogical finds to made up there too, and this is rme, but something must be doOe to' get the people Out of there. . ~' ~1· bnW ·u.lfit •. IOmt people who think it's all rljjll. to let tile hippies live in th:e caves, but we •lso hive to t!dnk ii the ~ in tile - lip there -.mo.. hom<i would be ... dangered if there should be • bad fire..'' Rioting. Triggers Gunfire On 'Oljf(j caIDpus~4'·KiBM A sheriffs deputy at the scene said the property was leased by Redwood Stables and said officers had been called because or the fire hazard involved. First reports made to Laguna police were of 80 or 90 persons said to be in the nude. , , Police and highway patrol kicked on their sirens en route up Park Aven~e Sunday afternoon as· ;nany Lagunans cJme out to see what was happening. The party area reached over a nearly Impassable dirt road wu a mile or more from Top of the World. A ~ber or the routed party, ''Tall" John'McGlnn. 22, cf 1214 Fairwood Walk, Said the party had been put together on tbr spur of the mcment. "We were trying to find some plac:'" to have a boogie," McGann told • reporter. "We'd like lo have the polic if they'd leave their guns at home." He said the party was orlglnated by residents cf the Laguna Canyon area. "We're specialists in partying," he said. McGann said-sheriff's deputies had summcned help because "nobody wanted to leave." "We were hep to the fire hazard," he said. "Next time we'll bring our cwn fire equipment." After lawmen arrived ln force a caravan of cars made a dusty exodus along the rutted dirt road to the party site. Rape Rap Given To Clemente Man Edwin Lee Sommera ol San Clemebte was sentenced today to ttree to 15 years· in state prison for the rape and kidnap of a Dana Point woinan. Silperior Court Judge J. E. T. "Ned" RutterJ ,denied a motion for a new trial -and-.... subsequent in06on which would ba-ve pt!rmitted a re.flew -Of Sommeis' senence after siz months with the con'!· ment : "i have a particularly black spot :n ID)' heart !or rapists. KENT, Ohio (AP) -Four persons were killed and at ieut1121othtrl wound- ed by g u n ! i r e :as Ohio National Guardsmen broke up an unaulhorit.ed rally on the Kent Sta,te University cam- pus Mooday. (See Protest Roundup, Page 4). The wounded were . taken to Robinson Memorial Hospital in Ravenu. ~ hospitll-reported K. bad four persons C<Jllfinned dead. Witnesses·said the-shooti.ng came after guardsmen moved'. in ,with tear ps tb ~ a •roct1-ttmmg croWd ol ·400 to soo ttoderi&, m \be Commons 1re .. near Taylor Hall Doug M .. e, a ~Hint photogrlpt\er, ~aid he saw guardsmen shootblg ' into he air. Authorities were reported holdmg a nian Who canted news credentials and "Rapists can d\ange the personaUty of their victims and they can damage lhe fabric o( the affected communlty," Judge Rutter added . "It will be a long time before any womiin in that area dares go out for a walk at night." NEW YOJtK (AP )>-The stock market , resumed its steep. d!f!Cline UUs .afternoon . Sommers, 19, of 26612 -h !di.~i~n St., after strengthening at.mi~day in the wake interrupted his 20-year-old vtchm 1 walk ....... of Soyiet Premier Alexei N. Ka~gin's last Dec. 22 and forced her to accompany Statement concerning U.S. involvement him to his apartment where she was in Cambodia. (See qudtatlons, Pages 20- beaten and raped. San Clemente police 21 ). arrested him later that nigflt in a coffee Declining issues lead advances by more shop. after his victim persuaded an thin 750 among stocks traded on the New employe to call officers. York Stock Exchange. LAGUNA PARTYGOERS GRUNT .AtlD GROAN AS THEY BEAT RETREAT UP RUTTED ROAD OutdoOr Sol-on T"I' of tho World 11.ndt'hl Cloud of Ouat to""'°'' of Siron• • I gull, but ft WU not,tpo"" ~l<!ly what, H any, role he had played .in the.li¥>ollng. . Some ·a Wied bayonets and tear gas to .break up den:;toasl(aUons Sunday night '111, the third J:tratgbt n!ght of ' .Dthfar prbl<!sta. slXty-two persons,, rnosuy students:. were aruted. Two .young people were 'ho!jiltattud and · eliflt other penblls treated for Jess serjous lnJ.uries. Officlals said at least one student was lnj~d in. the back by a bayonet and 01te Guardsman was hurt ·by a , rock. .Police said twO girls were UTested car· rytng knives. and one Y9Uth was' arnsted with a riDe and bandoifer of ammunition. An estimated 1,200 demonstrators were driven back to Kent State's campus after marching into town iii defiance of a city curfew and an emergency ban on outdoor meetings in Kent and on the campus. Demonstrators took control cf a Keftt intersection ' for about an hour and stu- dent Ie'aders trie~ to nego~late w i t h Guai:d officers 'for · a peaceful return to · the caniptis. They : were told they would not be arrested if they returned lo their dormitories. An order to force them back to.irthe campus came alter demonstrators began Presenting aew demanclii to Guard of· fioers. Laguna Art Work .Taken From Shop .. Tbree painting& and more Uian a dozen unique. ceramic bowls, hanging plant holden. lamp -bases· iand wall plaques 'by ~--·11:<1m0nd Ronskl'...,.. stolen. SaturdaY -nilhtr from• the artist's !tudlo-WorkShoj>, 1524' S. CoaSt Hiihway, police report. Val,ue of the missing items is estimated at $1,439. Police said burglars apparently entered a display room through an un!ocked door from an adjacent shop and systematically removed the art works, s~l~ng the largest and most impressive pieces. fr<>m the display. ·Biggest ,Weekend . 611 LfJ:guna Sands Laguna Bladl lliquards reported the biggat .,.mod of the year to date wUll ~ .numblrtng 11,500 on Satlll'· day and 18,IOO S.ndo)'. Air temperature was a comfortable 75 degrees bod\ day11 water was a cool Q and the IUl'f was low. Four peraons were retcued. On Sunday 1 boot ca)>Siz<d off Diver's cave but the occupanll ... .,. ashore wlthcnit ilJUI')' •. QUEEN FOR A YEAR Vi1jo'1 Kathy Jenkins Cro·wds Turn Out For Cinco. Fiesta In Mission Viejo It could have bten 1 Muican -market place . wilb ill brichUy colored 11a1Js and atrolling mariathjs, Bright flowers clustered behind adobe walls, festively dressed senorJ and senoras peeped out from a booth wJth a -giant ~mbrero ·for a roof and-one sJi11< ll!vertlled. "perroo caljenlea" and "muchO Coca Cola frlo.", But instead· Of MexicO City lhe plaCe was Mluion Viejo High School and the event, the ~lrd annual Cinco de Mayo celebration. Sponsored by the school's parent teacher organlzaUon, the event Included just about every conununlty organJiaUon in Mission Viejo. 'nlere were 35 decorated booths featuring games, food or souvenirs at the Sunday · afternoon event. Crowned to reign 1 over this ·and ah ·Minion Viejo acUvlOi!I this ·~g yellr was Kathy•Jenkina, IS-year~ daughter ol Mr. and 'Mn. H<*:lll'd ·in. 'Jentim, 2$i5Z Adriana' St., Mlsalon Vi$., She wu crowned by last year's queen,·Penny ·Nichols. . Princesses In the court wtre aW Opp, Jeniiy Robison, Unda Shbrt 8nd Pen•Y SchaeUer. A special event for the younger members of the community wu the decorated bike conleal. Winnen In the best overall category wttt Lila Bunnell, Ont fOf a muted lblp; Lynn Vaughn, M<Olld, and Kent and Brad COiiins, third. Winners in· tbe -t ori1lnal <tl<!lO<)' (llff FIESTA, P~p I) -· - l TEN CENTS Task F9rce Routs Foe In Cambodia SAIGON (UPI) -Scores of U.S. tanks rumbled across the Fishhook of Cam- bodia Monday and American comman. ders said their lS,000..man allied task: force was "In th& ·heart" of the head- quarters area where the Communistt run .ll!cir-Vlemam-w.,.-strlttgyc-'"1e-lleado quarters itself remained uodetected. Five thousand more South Vietnamese 1roop9 were committed to a related of .. feoaive into the Parrot's Beat region to die south, bringing to 30,000 the number of men involved. in the twin thrusts aimed at destroying NorUt Viet- namese and Viet Cong sanctuaries in Cambodia. They lincluded a ooo Cl.I Military sources said ;t least· three m?re major forays into Cambodia were bemg planned. CommunJques described the Fishhook and Parrot's Beak offensives as highly successful with 1,952 North Vietnamese and Viet Coog reported killed and S59 pn~~rs taken and 250 tons ot food, mlln1tions and medical supplies Seized U.S. losset were placed at 12 kiJied a~ 46 Wounded and those for South Vietnamese units at 151 tilled and 5flO WOW>ded. As the all1ea task forces lmiJed deeper into Cambodia, dispaldles from the capital, Phnom P•nh, said Cambodian conunandera rushed relriorcemeRa; to the village of Koki 'lllOQI wbere · lleld r~ said a ~jor battle !UY" be ~ up agalnal C<rim.. *;opp• --.. Ille ....... -"tile Mekong Ri,ver. • • Kok! 'lbom ,ii· lO mu.. -" PbDoni -Penh IOll about It inllea •lftim the Parrot's IIW lnmL Phnom Penh ~tches sald "hundreds" of earn .. bodlan tribesmen, trained and pOI bf the U.S. SJ>e<:ial Forces, had been fiawn • from bases '" South Vietnam to beef up the 40,000..man Cambodian army. By nightfall today American armored units bad pushed at least 15 mllea from the South Vietnamese border on ffl&hway 1. The route is a paved road that had been u.!ed to haul Communist war eup. plies through Cambodia Into &utll Viet-nam. The Fishhook farce was Jookinr for the Commumru• central office frr SOuth Vietnam -COSVN -tile Hllkll boact- quarters which President Nizon bu aaid must be destroyed. "It's here and we're in the bear t cf it," a U.S. commander Mid. But there was no sign of COSVN itlelf in the fourth day of the Fishhook offenatve Daniel said more than to Americaft tanks and armored pel'IODMI carriers raced aloog Highway 7 under orders from tl1e Jtth Armored C.valry 11q1. ment squadron commander, Ll Cot Grial Brookshirt, not to Dre urueu· tired upoo. "We'te doing what u army unit Is supposed to do," Broobblre said. "We're breaking deep into enemy. territory and blocking their major mutes. We've got a disorganized enemy. He lln't flgbtin¥ because he doesn't know what he IS doing." Brookshire said his men !toped to un- cover more supply' c<aplexes in deep thrusts at first light Tuesday. He uild ••bout 500 "structures'' were lffll aed that they probably held muriltlona Ind oU'ier war materiel • In the ~arrot's Beak, hundreds of South Vietnamue. armored vehicles [See CAMBODIA, PO,. II Oraage Foggy weather la in 1tore for coastal dwellers Tuesday, with temperatures dipping to the es level alcng tbe beach and aetUini at 75 further inland. JNsmr-TODAY Bottowu.• -..!Jr-t. 111.ling Uu ttpht ''""'<II pinch "' thr imall loan ft aU bKt a thhl{I of th1 pa.il Papa 2!1. _z DAILY PIL~T SC MondlJ, 11'1 4, 1970 . FfHHi Provide•· Ocean Foreseen As To·p Resource 'llll ocuna ud Ille yooth ltudyln1 ecoloey and environment may prove k> be among America's most valuable ·raources. • Tt,is was Utt tenor of a talk Saturday by ·Clllria H. llU<lham, Commi.Iooer ol F\111 ud Wlldlif• for the Interior Deporlmont, S&turday u he helped <1ecuc1te Ille Marine Science iolijtute (M$1) at Dina Point llarl>or. 11\e MSI dedication of a future facility WU part of three-day Ocean E1po '70 that began Friday. It centered on study of •nd. preservation ol. the environment. M~ aa.J.d It 11 conceJvable in IO or 100. yeart that the land masses Of the globe will be used· up by mankind and his ~realion. He said man may ~ dependent on the sea for hi.I foOd. ~ Meacham laid ~ ocean prodtM;es three quarters of the gklbe'a oxygen and saJd ln 1969 Americans alone con-......r u billion pow>dJ of food tilen llunlhe .... ~ ol dtdl..UOll to ......... u .. as a way of life, Meacham aaid he hid every hope that the concerned youth wW beoorne the savior of an environment !hit In Ille past has been treated car1lessly. Oceanography, be said, wu born dur· Ina: and since World War II and iLs rankJ ol. experts are u yet thin. The su.cceaa _ol..Jnarine.Jcle_nc_e will .de?.f!nd on thl quality of personnel in its ranks, t.be speaker aaid. Meacham said MSl is a giant step la that direction with "the most pr(). f'ro• PQfle J FIESTA .•. were Steve Gana, first for a black bull; Kevin Kirchner, atcond, and Bernie . EaposUo, third. Placing in the most decorative category were Lisa and Steven Schuyler, first for a bee chasing a flower; COileen Devine, second, and Pat and Kerry Amsbry, thlro . Compelin1 with the Me:z k:an at- mOlpbere was that of a "band battle" With winners being Bundy Field, flnt; tht B F D. second, ind Cherokee third. Booths, looking, like giant cacti, som- breros and Utue.,:Alamos competed in a decorating contest. The wlnnen were The Ramblln Rogues, flnt; Deane women's club, second, and the Mls.slon Viejo Girl Sooull, thlnl. llur!nf',opailni aertrOQlljes I Cf(JY, of a 1t1ieLeg:1Jtatufe m-Oful(on ricognlztitg Clnco de Mayo as a .holiday was pruented to PTO dWrman Cliff Ml>ilter b)' Mbi 'Elfzibeth 'Ptdnitu, dlllrlct .....tary to stale Senator John Sclunlll (R.IJ'ustin). Culture f&ru1 were treated to a special outdoor art show and to a band concert featuring the "Mission Viejo High School band. There was also a special enchilada dinner, a variety show and at the end everyone got into the act for a parade. . GG School Blaze Gets Oose Look Garden Grove firemen were today sif- ting th"e ashes of a $300,000 fire which destroyed tht: library of Bolsa Grande Hllh School early Saturday moming. Fire department spakesmen said they were almost cetaln the cosUy blaze was of lncendiary'origjn. 'l1le fire was spotted about 2 a.m. by a California H11hway Patrol <>fficer. At that Ume flames were shooting through the roof of the one l!ltory struc- ture which served as a library and ~ . boobtore for the school, I --~ It took nine Garden G·rove lire depart- ' ment units two houn to control the blue. Included in the loss were books, equipment and furniture . DAILY PILOT N.-.,.rt le•• L ..... left• ...... _ H•lltl ......... .......... , .. ..,. ... ~ .. (lltAHGE CO.UT PUllLISHINO COMP.&N'( Robert N. We.4 grwive clifr1culum of its type that I have observed In America." He offered the help of himself and his staff in working on the curriculun1. Meacham presented a blue at)d white flac io the ~U.tute as Its pennant'. 1'ter-e._ _ wu a model or 1he physical facilltla to be conMlcted to house MS! as part of tbe elhlblts houlied In tents • at the bubor. Viejo MQ.n's Kin Survives Tragic Flight The brother of a Ml!!kln Viejo man has been identified as tbe sole known survlvor of a U.S. air lragedy that look the lives of six fellow crewmen on a OJ1ht over Laos last week. Mrs. Jack Fields of 23986 Carrillo Drive, M.i.aslon Viejo, said her husband received word Sunday lhal his brother, Sttff Sgt. Euteoe Fields, 28, of Alama1ordo, N.M. was tha man reported as rescued after the first AC 130 gun!lhip was shot down by enemy ground iire while on a mlssloo over the Ho Chi Minh Trail a week ago. Six crewmen were killed and four are listed as mlssin1. Fields, who auf. fertd. burm on the face and both bancU:, parachuted from the crippled plane and was picked up by search planes four hours lat.er. After treatment in Japan, be is en J'Ollte to a bospllll in El Paso, Mrs. Field! said. FJeldJ, an Air Force gunner, went to Vietnam last year and recently came home on a brief leave to visit his wife and three amall SOM in New Me:zlco. Laguna Woman Enters Campaign For Utt's Seat Maaie Megia of 320 Moss Street, LagUna 8Hch1 filed a nomlnaUon petition before the deadline Friday in the special 36th Dllt:rlc;l J'une 2 election to fW tbe unexpired term of the late Rep. James B. Ult. Also ftling Friday was Thomas B. Lenhart, ~at, of Santa Ana. Tbe two late filings brin1s to seven the number of candidates competing for the tenn wblch will expire next Jmuary I. All except Mrs. Meggs, a ~na housewife, are also candidates in the regular June 2 primary election. ln addJUon to Lenhart, they include Stale Senator John G. Sdunlti ol Tustln, John Ratter'rtt of Santa Ana, William Wilco:zen of Laguna Beach, and John A. Steiger <>f Oceanside, all Republicans and Democrat David Hartman of Santa Ana. Under the procedure of the special primary, if no one candidate receives more than fifty percent of the total votes cast, the top Republican and Democrat will participate in a runoff vote June 30. N-Y Bombing Suspects Enter Guilty Pleas NEW YORK (AP) -Samuel J, Melville aud two other defe•dants plead· ed guilty In federal court today to plOt· ting to blow up government buildings with dynamite bombs last fall . .Melville pleaded guilty to three counts including conspiracy end one count charging him with a bombing at. the 'Federal Office Buikl\rig here. J&De L. Alpert and John D. Hu1hey Ill both pleaded guilty to the charge of con· apiracy. " J( • \ .. ,. ,. " ''f •• DAILY Pl\.OT Stiff l"MI• Aliso Draws Crowd Revamped strand at Aliso Beach In South Laguna attracted plen\y of beachgoers during long, hot weekend. County beach will be site of new, recrea· tional pier in the near future as efforts to. upgrade the area, just south o! Treasure Island Trailer Park continue. Citizen's Right to Reject 'Dirty Advertising' Upheld WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme guilty In court "voluntarily and in· Court today upheld a law wblcb allows teMJg_!ntly" ~annot 1,!ter try t;.o up!et a peraoll to bar advertising from his his ~nvlcUon on grounds that his acUon mailbox If he decides it is too se:zy. was. unconsUtuttonally C1>erced. The 5-3 Th I as challenged by' l4 mail decision in three cases meant the court e aw w the refused to broaden Its ruling that the order houses, book _pu~lshers a~d o rs, 1Jndber1h kldnaplng Jaw was defective who claimed it tnleiferes wtth their because the death penalty could be im· right to free communication through the posed only to a defendant who tmderweat mall. s trial by jury. ,..,. The vote of the eight-man court wa The law on uawanted mall authorizes unanimous with Clllef JusU~ Warren any addressee to take steps to stop E. Burger s~aldng for the ~~,ority. "pandering advertisements" which be Burger satd for the court. In effect, believes to be "erOt.lcally arousing or C.Ongres.s has ~ted a wall -or more sexually provocaUve." accurately perrruts a citizen to erect He can ask the post office to order a wall -that ~ advertiser may the arm to take his name off the mailing penetrate without his acqule.sence. The list. The firm can get a post office con1lnulng operative effect of a malling hearing if it wiahes. In the event of ban once imposed presenb no corr noncomplianct the postmaster general 11Ututlonal obs~cles." . may ask the' at torney general for a Jn other actions, the court. court order to s1op.the mailing. -Upheld. by a ~·l vote a New York Tht mail order houses told the court State tu exemption on churc~v.:ned deletions cost $5 a name because the. property that 1s used for rehg1ous lists are not alphabetical. purposes. The law had been challenged by a lawyer who owned a Staten Island property which was taxed $5.24 a yea r. -Ruled that a defendant who pleads Pair Arrested On Drug Charges ' In San Clemente San Clemente police arrested two persons on drug charges during the weekend and said they would seek com· plaints today from the district attomey. Christine Hardy, 23, of San Bernardino was arrested on charges: of possessing marijuana and possessing dangerous drugs. Detectives said a patroltng officer who found her asleep in a van discovered the small quantity of drugs, I.SD, seconal and marijuana, in the glove compartment as she was looking for the vehicle registr11lion. The van ·was parked at 1412 Mirador. In a Saturday night arrest, David Lawrence Coleman, 211, of 218 A Avenida Serra was booked on charges of mari· juana possession. Police said he was seen handing a package to a youth after coming out of a liquor store. An officer suspecting that It might be liquor checked and found a small quantity of marijuana, a detective said. The arrest was on El Camino Real near Granada. Suggestion Valuable LONOON (AP) -The Br i l is h publishers. Jona1han Cape Ltd., will pay former French Deputy Prime Minister Jacques Soustelle "a substantial sum" for suggesting ln a book that he plotted to assassinate Gen. Chlltles de Gaulle, a London court was told today. Newport Police Seize 730 Pounds· In Big Pot Raid Two men, charged with possession of marijuana far sale, are in custody today in Newport Beach following their arrests Saturday during which police claim to have confiscated 730 pounds of the illegal weed. Narcotics investigator Leo Konkel said the haul was the largest in the history of Newport Beach. If sold wholesale, the impounded nar- cotlc would be worth about $30,000, he uid. If sold by the lid (one ounce), Kon- kel said the marijuana wouJd be worth $125,000. Arrested were Gregory Lynn Tucker, 21, of Lakewood and David Glerm Cun· nison, 22, of Card.if. Wat.ch Commander Earnest Laurin said he was making a routine check of the area when he spotted the suspects in the alley at 218 Lugonia St. Officer Michael McEveny who u·as called to the scene said the pair were taken into custody when a huge pile of large bags full of marijuana was found in their van. The officer said he saw the bags when he went to make an inspec!Jon of the vehicle, which was allegedly iJ. legally parked. Konkel said 540 pounds of the drug was found in the van and another 190 pounds was .found in the garage at 2\R Lugonia St. lnvestigalion in the case is continuing, he said. and more arrests are expected today or Tuesday. "We suspect the marijuana came from Mell.co,'' he added. Trustees Face Private School Busing Dilemma Capislrano Unified School District trustees will be asked to approve a new Policy covering the transportation of private and paroChial school studen1s at -tonight's 7:30 o'clock meeting io Serra School, Capistrano Beach. The policy was Pfe?&red by Sam Chicas, assistant superintendent for buslne.5.! services. He contacted l" Callfomla school district.. and 13 replied that they do provide transportation for private and parochial student.a on a space available procedure. The new policy for the Capistrano district states that transportation shall be granted to children attend ln1 private or parochial schools within the district pi-Oviding there is space avaUable and no additional cost to the district. Tbe policy will be subj·ect 10 review each year. The non-publ c studenLs will be transported according to seat availability based on the number of buses currently available in the district. No changes will be made in routes and when requests exceed availability the non-public school will determine which of its students shall be transported. The new policy also propOses that the admlnistrative staff ot the district will prepare an agreement with the private or parochial schools establishing rules o{ behaviQI", stops, and schedule. Discipline for the extra students wlll be provided by their own schoo ls or transportation will be denied . Jn other business the trustees will be asked to establish a remedial reading pro&ram for summer school and will consider a request for con.strucUon of a second entrance lo the grounds of Pallsades School ill Capistrano Beach. Allen to Issue Bay Swap Speech Orange County Supervisor Alton E. Allen of Laguna Beach has called a press conference for 9 a.m. Tuesday at which time he will make a ''startling statement" on the Upper Newport Bay land exchange, according to one of his aides. No further information was avallable today on the possible content of Allen's statement He has been a staunch supporter over the years of the land trade with the Jrvlne Company which would rtsUlt in the transfer of 157 acres of county tidelands property for 450 acres <>f Irvine Company land in the area. .... Royal Family Home LONDON (UPI ) -Queen Elizabeth 11 her husband Prince P h 11 i p and diiugbter Princt!SS Anne ntumed today . to a warm and sunny Britaln from a two-month 40,000-mile tour of Au.stralla and New Zealand. Pru lcltftl ~ hltllirwf J 111r: l. Corley \l1tt Prw1:-orOll ~al M-.- llltoolflO I 1Ceowi1 EdlJof" Tlullfl•I A. Mur,hine Mon&Olflt (dllor DA Hicks: Mo·re Discipline Needed Ric).a•d '· Nill :i.o.,,111 O••"" C-tr f:dl1*t [l\!t Mf\t: JJt WUI 81y i!fttl N....,1 ltldl: :1111 W•• l•lllo• 1ov1rottlll L....,.t lt1c11: m ,,.°""' -'v..,utt MIMI""!"' it.tt~: 11115 lttcll l;xilt~trlll 1M C'-le: JO) Mtl111 El (t"'lf'lll ltHI By ALBERT W. BATES 01 tl!t Dlltr l'!ltl Sii" Parental love Is as Important and omnipresent as ever but what has b«n missing is the vital ingredienl of discipline. This was the esseoce of Orange County Dls\rkt Attorney Cecil Hicks' analysis of what has gone wrong will! a younger generaUon re90C'Ung to drugs and violtnet u be addressed members of Hunijngton Btoch Rotary Club Friday. mm recalled growtna up tn Los Angeles during the Gre&t Depresalon of the early 1930a .. "Ufe was simpler then.'' he said "There w111s a feeltng of unity, for everyone was Jn the same boat." "Next came World War IJ and 111aln we ""'ere Joined together as a nation Jn .self-denial In be.hall of a survival cau1e,·• lllcks continued. "Then. after \\'orlJ War II , we produced a 'jllllon' babies, the ooe.s who are in college now. "Most of us parenb said wt wanted , to give our children 1hc creature com· forts v.·e couldn 't have in the Depression or World War II. So we gave them cars we couldn't afford earlier, and a whole series of labor-saving appliances which eliminated the chores which were part of their parents' early discipline." In the midst o( all these parent-bes1ow· eel creature e<>mforts, Hicks said, along came Dr. Benjamin Spock aay!ng. "You've got to love a chUd." We parents agreed but we left out .anouie.r vital element, d!lcipltne, mcu said. "None of us, parents or children, can develop without discipline," H I c ks asaert1d. "We can't run a business or an 'office of any klnd wlthOl.lt lt. L:tcldng ~lsclpllne , employes would dl1lnte1rate, and so would the bu!lnes1. "I think o( it In terms or 11 boxi-i1g rln1. ~·Ith ropu around the four sides. Dro:> the ropes and someone fall s off, on hl:I face. So it Is with children's Jives lf they don"t know "'here the .11truc- ture Is, UM! ropes are." 11'1e di strict attorney added that no free society can exist without ditelpline -and the best kind Is self dJsclplloe which Set.5 an example for children. ''Our children don't ~now how to change direction,'' he added. "MOflt or our youngsters' goals are very pure -but how they go about achievtng them is twisted all out of shape. This reOeda the exlstenct of parental love as far as the gOllJ are «ll'ICtrned but lick of ditclpUne in the approach to U-eoal• 1• palnlully evident" Earlier In his talk, Hlclca recalled confrontations he: has had with campUs radlcal1, includina: a panel 3ltuallon stacked 4 to I against him . What the dls\rlct attorney reamed ·was that the ndlcals fall on their face when penetraUna question• ire asked . Hicks asked whal conneellon there might be between lhe lll~UC' or rrN: speech and academic freedom and the violence and property d'strucLion by the radicals. He drew thts incomprehensible response Crom a member of the New Left: "Why should we care when there are unpaved roads in Teus1" Hicks said the respondent was serious and sincere, but he didn't understand that he was noC above tht law, that lawa should apply equally to all. Hlcks alto reca11ed occasions when campus nUUtantl, in the name of "lrte speech," shouted down · every sentence ht uttered before he _,pleted ft - and kept others from heiring 1 dlssenUna yjew. The,. yOUll(sten, too, Hiclca 11ld, "have the notkm that the law 10meh0\f does not apply to them. They feel they are above the law as it ii appUtd to everyone Ort campus." Th& district attorney told the Rotarians th.at Law Day on May I wu proclaimed by ?n!sldent Dwight D. El1ehhower on purpose bttau!e May Day h 1 d hls torlcally been ' Communist show o( anned 1nlghl Law Day In the frtti \\'Orld no"' reminds us that vt~ art 11: governmtnt of laws~'li>t inen, ln conlr11t to the Communists, llk:ks II.Id. c U.S. Combat Role Scored ByKosygb MOOCOW (UPI) -Premier Alexei N. Kosygin today rejected a new Geneva Confere~ on Indochina and said the Soviet Union "calls on all lhe peoples ot the world to stop the aJaression In Cambodia." He accuaed the United States of a "crude violation" ot the G en e v a aareementa in Indochina and of trying to drew Southeast AJ!a Into lt.s military blocs. ' "These are imperialist, aggressive aims alien to the interesLs of the people and therefore they are Inevitably doomed to failure," he said, Speaking at the first Moscow news conference he has held 1ince he sUC· ceeded Nikita S. Khrushchev in 1954 he said : "Now is not the Ume for conferences, it is the time for a¢.ion." "Now tha Soviet govenunent calls on all the peoples of Ute world to stop the aggreu.lon in Cambodia." Kosygin spoke in a gOvernment guest house in the .l,.enin HUis on the edge or Moscow. "For Washington to eJtplain the action Jn Indochina was deaigned to save ule lives of American soldiers -that is strange log ic," Kosygin said, reading from notes before television cameras. He said the American action "is a crvde violation of ln.ternational law' and as such it shoul<l be denounced ." He said thal "If the U.S. government really wants to save the lives of hundreds of American soldiers then there Is a simple solution: Do not send American soldiers to Laos, Vietnam and Cam· bodla." Speaking atemly, he said the United States was upanding the war in Indochina where its "main goal is to suppreu progrttslve regimes and subject them to American Interests." He accused the United States of car· rying out "barbarous bombings" and setting up co~tration camps. "Who 11ve the Ulllted States Ille r!gllt to be the judge of what ls good and what is bad for other peoples? Who gave It the right to be an International gendanne? "Nobody gave them this right." 1le \li'amed "the result of the invasion of American troops (Into Cambodia) can cause further complications in the in':" temational situation." Noting what be t.enned a discrepancy between the words and the deeds of President Nixon, li.e said, "The govern- ment of the United St.ates in fact is strengthening even more it.s aggressive mllltarist course." He sakt "the people of Indochina have the ri&bt to be masters in their o"·n horn•. "The expansion or A m e r I c a n aggression in Southeast Asia will meet a re!Olute rebuff from the side of the people ()( Vietnam and Cambodia and all peace-lovinr people. "The Soviet government will draw the Tt!!ltpectlve cooclusions from such actions of the United Stales government,'' Kosygin warned, ending his 12-minute s1at.ement and acceptin1 questions from the usembled correspondents. Asked whether the RU!Sians would rtlSleSS their pos!Uoo. in the Strategic Anns LimltaUon Talks (SALT) in Vienna in view or the new situation, Kosygin replied, "President Nixon first of all should. have thought over his actions before he started the Invasion of Cam· bodia." Kosygin made it clear he opposed reconvening oC the Geneva convention on Indochina. He said that "now that the military action I! under way, it is necessary to stop the aggressor. It must be done by all states. "Now is the time not for conferences; it ia the time for acUon. "The Soviet government now calls on all the peoples of the world to stop the aggression in Cambodia." -· - 'Quit griping! We're withdrawing from Vietnam, aren't we?' 1 dniv,e Into Commun!Jt hue campt on the alxth day or an olfen1lve tn which American foir<!U were not directly In· volved on the around with the ucepUon of about 40 military advisers. U.S. air and artillery suppart wa~ bthlnd thf Parrot's Beak for&y but It was malnly a South Vleto~me1e sho\\', and Sal1on reports said It was showi ng gOOd resull.S. Five thousand more Sou th Vietnamese troops moved Into the .southern part of the Parrot's Beak over lhtweekend. r------.._----------------------------------~~~~---~~---- • • • • • i DAILY PILOr ·Monday, M•J 4, 1970 LEGAL NOTICE Ll!OAL NOTJC& LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE P4im NOTiCI 01' TIUSTl"ll'S U.lll T.I. .... r1• ClllTil'!CATI OP IUllMISS Oft MilY 11, 1tN 11 11:00 o'clock A.M. 11 ,K:TITIOUS tlAMI l'tlt tro11t 1111t1~1 1obttV of StturliY Tiiie •' Area Servi~e News Coast Guard Petly OHictr TI1lrd Class David G. Hobsoa, husband of the former Mils LYM 0 . Sullivan of 1511 San Bernardino Place, Cos l • M.... ii atttnding the baalc Aircrew S u r v I v a I Equlp- meritman Sdx>ol at the Naval Air Technical TraininJ Center, Lakthur.st, N.J. son or Mrs. Keltti W • B(luase rman, 17352 Mill Circle,· l-IunUnaton Beach. has com- pleted b a s l c training at Lackland AFB , Tex. He has been •ssigned to Chanute AFB, Jll,, for training Jn aircraft malnten&nc.'t. Alrman li-1ajeski, a 11169 graduate or Airman rt-11ch 1 e I A. Huntington Beach High School WhJtebead, son of l.tr. and attended Golden West Jtmior f.tr.!l. James Whitehead of 202· "'Col~ege. His. father , Leo L. A Calafia, San Clemente, has MaJeskl, rt!ldes at 4811 Cen· completed basic training al tllla, Loa Angeles. AFB, Tei. He has betnJ assianed. to ~heppard AFB, 1 Tex., for tral.nl.n& In aircraft maintenance. Airman· Hall is a 19119 sraduate of Wtstmlnstu His!> School. ' Navy Lieu te nan tCOm- mander Joe L Htlla111,1 I husband or the fonnu Miss 11 Mary R. Lcllfl of Newport Beach, is servln& aboard tht ~:.J destroyer USS James C. • Owens at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Mari ne Private Fi.tit Class Dould M. Dl<U. of 1131 Al· bion Drive, H1J11tington Beach, is now serving at tht Marine Corps A.ir Station, Yuma, Ariz. Scout Show New Honors • Ne w honors are dl1pl1ytd wJth the colora of three .H~rbor Area Boy Scout Troop1 today, following • Del 1-far Di3trict CimPQrte ~ntly near Corona deJ Mar. A total or 274 Seoul! and their leaders participated In the three-day event on Irvine Company land overl0oklng the , .... Members of 24 troops com- peted in such sklll1 a 1 astronomy, nature , knot.s and la.!Jhlngs, c o m p a 1 a reading, signaling and flrst ald pro- cedures. Sc$1 utma st e r Eugene O'Rourke and boys of Troop 10~ Newport Beach, achieved first place honors in the di3trlct-wide Camporee. TM undttsl!lll«I do ttrlilY '"'"Y •rt COii· COl'!IHllY• US Nor!ll 8rMdw1v. In !111 Cl· •ll1dlnt I bu1lnn1 II 1$)1 E. Ell! iY of ltntt An1, $1111 of Cll!klml .. C1M1:nut. $1Ji\1 """'' c111totni... IHldtr ~ SECURITY TtTlE INSURANCE (()M.. w••,'!'loul••••"•'"••·~~. ~ :!, .. ~:~;;: l'ANY, 1 Cllf'8rtllol'!, .,. Tl\I'"* ullllt• ,. "" 1 '--II-. 0.ld of Tn.11 V!KUlttl In' MOZELLE 31 '°""'°"" of the0 fot llow....,. _.., .. L. SCOTT, 1 m1rr!ed •om1n, 11 h1r Mir ""'°" ,..,,_ In ull . ....., iltcat of i nd ,._,.,1i. proptrlv, rKordtd O(IObfr rttldenet ,,.., 11 llllloWI. 21 l'f' 11 dowmtnt r.o. ltlOO 111 "°"" Lackland . AFB, Tei:. He has been aS.!Jigned to Sheppard AFB. Tei., for training in the communications f i e 1 d • Ainnan Whitehead, a 1965 graduate ci San Clemente High School, received hi s BA degree in 1969 from California Slate College at Fullerton. Airman Richard L. M•jeskl, Alnnan E11ue R. Daner. son of Mr. and Mrs •. Elbert R. Dart er, J389l Pine St.. Weslm inster. ha s completed basi c training at Lackland AFB, Tex. He has been assigned to Sheppard AFB. Tex .. for tr1in i ng in metalworkinf. Airman Darter. graduated in 1966 r r 0 m Westminster High. Schoo.I and attended San Diego State College. N a v y Ho.spitalman Ap-J~~===~~~=~~;;~;~~~~~ prentice Dalt E. Hood, o! 3!90 Iowa St., COltl Mesa, was tt,,n graduated from the Hospit.al Troop 339, ~d by Scoul- master Ron Litke and Troop 473, led by Scoutmaster Robert Morton, both of Costa J1mn P. llrffY, 1$3.li D1llw••1 st .. t 1i2 161 of Olll 1 t I. d · "" Hunll"'larl ltld'I. C1lll. • -• (I -I •n Ltl!Ce A. Wtbblr, nt E. SY<l mort. offlct of !ht l.tcorMr If Or11199 CaunT\I, nrinte. c1111w .. 11. C11llornl1. bY rtt.on of Cllitulf In 111<1 Dittd Aorll 11, It~. NVmtnl or "8r1Drm tnat 001 obll,1llo111 JlmH "· '''"'" Hturtd fl!trtl:IY Inell/dint .M brttch or Ll~t A. Wtt.W,r. o.f1ult, not!« of Whlcl\ W11 <Kordl'd 111'-of C1lllornl1, Or1nt1 (lltlnlY: J111111rv 12, ltl'C. 11 document no. j !'3 111 O.. A.Jiii 17, 1'10, before 1111, 1 NoltN book fl ... "'' )II, of 11ld Olllclt l ~ubllc '" 11111 tor Mid Stitt. "'loDtltllY l.KOfCll, Wiii 11!3 ,, 1>11bllc 1Ud10!1 "'' -red Jlmft P. 11.-.dY 1na LlllCI A. Cllll. wl!llout w1rr111ty II ID lltlt, Wllllbtf k,_n fl me to ~ 11\1: "''°"' -Mllloti, t r 1ntumbrtn<:t1, Ille l11!•r111 wt>oat Nmt1 ••• Mlbscrlbtd to "" wlttoln QOllYIYICI "' 11141 Trllllff b1 ••Id Del'd "' lt11lrument •NI aanowlldll9CI tn.v u · Trvll In ••-rlv 1ltu1t• 111 11\1: Cou111Y of ~\ft.cl Ille um1. Ortntt, Slllt al C1llfaml1. do1crlbtd 11: (01',ICIAL SEAL1 RXHl&IT HA'" ,,_..._ K. Men.., l"AR CEL 3: Noi.rv Publlc<11ltor11\1 Loi 1 of Tr1ct Ul, In ""' ctuntv ol P•lnc!Oll otllc.t In Ort""•• sti le of (1tllornl1, 11 lllowll on Or1n11 CounlY 1 m11 lhtrltClf r.-:orded In 8oolo. t:I, MY Commlulon Ea1\r11 ,.1011 U 11\d io. Mhctll1neou1 M111. l"ubilJ!:.;" ~;1~~7: Cont 01!11 l'Hot. •IO>fds of 11111 Ort""t Ctunl1. _...,..II N, 11, MIY l. 11. lt/0 JU·l'C PARCEL 13 ; LEGAL NOTICE Tiii! PO•lio.. or Lot lO~ or Tri" No 300, In 1~1 cou"!Y ol Or1n11. stat• ol C1Jlfoml1, IS 11\oWn on • m11 tr1oreol IKO•clM In l ook t~. Pll~t 11 I nd 11. MIKt ill ...OUI M111, •Koros "' 11111 0<11111 CMintv. lltKrlbtd 11 lollows: P-Mt11 CllTtl'iCATI OP' SUSIHESS l'iC:TiTIOUS NAMI llttlnnl"" It tlle E111••1Y corner "' Tiii unair1l1Md Oo certltf ""' ire Lo! I of Tf1ct No. J06!. 11 IMwn "" 1 cend«ll"9 1 buolntH 1t •ll P1ul1rl"" m11 •Kordld In l ook t2, 1'11e1 \I 1na AvtnW, COlll Mn$. C1ilklr11l1, utldtr 11\1: 111, MIKeiltnltOlll MIPJ, rKor11t ol stld t ktlllaul tlrm namt fff HUNT'S GLASS lo Qr111111 Cou111'11 11\inc:t Soutll tc• 11' 3r' Mii.i.OR 1nd thtl 111d llfm II '°"'POMCI Et1! tlonll tllt 5oull\ftll1rly P<O- ef IN loUowlt'li OlfWl\I., w~ot9 n1rnt1 In lonelllon ol 1111 Norlll<!t•ttt l~ line of tull 11111 pl1cn ol rnkltnct 1r1 11 11141 Lot I, to !hi 5oulh•••~rlY line of tfllowl: 311\d flK•lbtd In I died lo Jot S.t v. WUlltm M. tl\G l.utto E. 0 1..,,.....,, Jr. IM wllt. r_.de<d A~U 1. 1952 111 ljJJI St1rb011d, Gtrdt" Gr I YI• lloair 2310. P .. 1 !40, Oltlcl1I Record•! C1lllol'n\1. l!ttln(I South Jf• ~ 21" W111 1lon1 llkl OINll Atr13 17. 11111. Soulll••1!trlv llnt to Ill• Soo./the111trlv w:m.,.. M. 0t111\0t!d -lon1111on c! "" Sclulnwe1lfrl"I' line ot Rutt'I IE. Dt.moind 11kt Lot S; tlllnct North W 11' JJ .. Sl•fl of C1ilh1r11!1, Or1n11 Co<int1 ; W11I 1lo111 111C ~1•1t1rtv ,,.. On April H, n70, beklrt mt, I HlltlN lontilloll to 1111 Sovl!lerl1 corMr ol ••lei P11bllc in Ind tor .. Id Stitt , flertontilY lot 11 llltnct Horth :tt• a • 2J" IEtlf U '""'"" Wmltm M, Dltmond 11111 I.viii lert 1o ,,,. "Jnr of bttlnnln1. E. Diamond k-lo "" ID tll 11M 1or lilt Jt11rto11 of PIYl"9 otoll•tllotu ,..,...,.., ...-"'""' 1r1 1ubsurllld to lllCUl'ICI 11y 111e1 Deed of Tru11. tl!ll within l111trum1111 11111 1cknawlcdtld Dtttd April lJ, ltN. llltl' OKUllld 1111 .. ml. !OFFICIAL SEAL\ SIECUfttTY TITLE Miry K. HenN li'ISUllA~CE COMP.I.NV HolltrY Publlc•Cl ilfo•"11 "'lnciH I Ofllc1 In Qflntt Covn!V I v c11r11 Lout11 CCorPQr1t1 Sti ll ,.,, Camml11IOll E~•l•K Nov. 24 1tn l'ubllslll'd Or11111 Cot•I DlllJ April 20. J7, ~v ., 11, 1110 Pllot, Pu~lli.llld Or-Cot1I Oilho Ptlot, Jl .. 10 Ai>'il XI, JJ tnd M1y •, IJl'C ..... 70 LEGAL NOTICE ,.tJJN Cl•Tl,ICATI! 01' &Ulltll!SI ,ICTlfiOUS NAM• ,.,.,. 111\Glrtllfled dots ctr1!1y ht It c.ond\ld)fli I bulk1111 ti 411 Ac9Cll , c-• Dtl Mir. C1ilfoml1. under tllt llcllllous firm "'"" of Glt.APHIC SIGH CO. 11111 tlltl .aid flm"I ~ ((Wl'llOle'd et "" flllt1Dwl111 _.... """'°'' ... _ Only One Flnil stocks In all homt fll ftlons. That's a big deal? It is In Oranqe Count)', Tht DAILY PILOT Is lht only dill)' MWS91Ptf' tha.l dellv· 1n Ult patOge. M tull Ind pltct ol f Kkltnee ii ll1;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii N.Jtow1: llobtrf P. Wtrmi"""°"' 41J AcK!.. C-n1 der 1tt11r, Ctllfor"nlt D1ttd Aiorll ''' ltl'C llollff"I P. W1rmintlo1t STATE Of CALil'OltNlA, OltAHGI!. COOHTY; On .Urll 2'' llHI, ~lo•"• "'°'' I Not1N Pub!lc 1.. 1na "'' 111d St•lt . -sontll"I' lllPlll'N l.~rt ~. W1r,,,. '"''°" known :u ,.... lo ~ 11>1 NrMn """'-' """' II subKtlblcl lo tl\t w1thln lt11tnlmli 1nd 1cknowllldol'd Ill ••tcllfld ''" 11me. COl'F'lt 1AL Sl!AL) Ml.., K. Mtnrf Not1rv P ublic . C.1!+1or"l1 Prlt\dtll Olllc• In Ort ntl Cel,ifllY NASA Awards Negro College GREENSBORO. N.C. (AP) -Two professors at the Ainnan 1'Ucltael A. Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe J. Hall, 13302 Ra inier Ci re It , Westminster, has completed bllic training .at Lackland Corps School at San Diego. U.S. Air Force Sergeant Stepben C. 1'ompta11, !Ol'I " Mr. and Mrs. Carmi N. Thompson of 13792 Malenda Drive, Tustin, is on duty with the Urd Strategic Wins at Andersen AFB, Guam. school of engineering at North 1jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Carolina A&T State University ha ve received what the school believes to be the £itst research grants to a predominantly Negro college from the National AeronJut:ics and Space Administration. Dr. Lewi.!! Dowdy, ·president or the school, said Monday the grants totaling $39,000 for resea rch on miniature circuits. digital systems and electro-chemical properties of oxides were a breakthrough for predominantly black in- stUutions or higbet learning. Expert Urges Space Flights WASHINGTON !AP ) -Dr. Harold C. Un!y, a Nobel Prize· winning scientist. s a ys mankind should go ahead with e.1ploratlon of the s o I a r system despite the near- tragedy of Apollo 13. "~1en might get marooned in space -or marooned on the moon itself," he said in an interview, "but we should push right en. Columbus lost a whole shipload of men, but that didn't stop exploration." ENROLL TODAY I MEN BODY BUILDING PHYSICAL FITNESS WEIGHT LOSS WEIGHT GAIN 6 ~~:s 520 LIMITED OFFER PROGRAM INCLUDES: e Hutff •••I e Wllllrt r .. 1 • S1i1• le•M e Swh11lltlat '""'" ., .... .... es. ... .... e Drtllif11 ....._ • ,.,..ii ..... c •• ,... A l'iOU•• SALON POI. WOMl:N e A tllALTN CLUI POlt MIN GAIOEN SQUARE HEALTH CLUB nu GARDEN GROVE ILYD. GARDEN GROVE SJ7°MIO My (ommlnlon £•11,..t w ..... ''· nn P"'°"tll'ltd Ort"" Cot1t Otl.... P ll91, .,.,II 17. ~1 l. JI, 1L JtlO 7n·l'I Newspapers: Number One LEGAL NOTICE P·Mftt ClllTIPiCAT• OP IUllNllL PiCTITiOUl NAMa Tht !Jndtrtltf'ed do (trll11 ll'ltY . I" l!Ollduc:llnt • bu1lnn1 II Ul E. 17th s t .. COl!I MHt , (tllfomll , llflll•r l~I lie· lltlautc l!rm l\lrnt of Flowt,, bY GtN 11141 ttlet ttld firm lr. com""1td ol tl'le hlllow. 1.., •tnon•. """'°" "•m•• In 1un ,,,., pit<•• ot rr1lden<• tit •• lo!lowi: John D. S.C.1111. 1!.0 C1h"""'' l !Wl ,0 Htil~W!IOd. C1I. G1•1 It. llOUll, 2760 C1~u1"'1 f lwd., H,.llvwood, (•I. ' Oiled ,.!).l'C John O. Sc1l1• G1rw 111.11-t lttli' ti C1llfornl1, Ort.,.t c....,ntv· On April 13, lt 10. btiu" m<t, I NllllN Pullilc In Ind klr 11ld St1te, llf<Mlnllly INMftd Johll o. Sc1le1 11\G Gt•Y 1.. H. loutl kncrwn to mt t,. be lllt ••r• Miii """'' "'""' ••• 1uhlcr!llld lo 1111 w!fl!ln lt\~m•"' 1na tcknowr m.i thtv t •tcuttd "'e Hint. Ol'l'ltlAL SIAL Willl1m M. Stl'lrfoldl. Not1rv Public Offlcl1I St1I Nor,.., 1"ubllc-C1lllorn•• Prln<:l1>1I Ottlce In Or1noe Covnlv MY (ornmlulofl E•~lrfJ Nov. n . ltn Pub!!lhlld o,.,,,. COl•t D1Hr Pllol A,,11 10. 11, ~V l. 11. 1'7D 710·111 LEGAL NOTICE (l!illTiPICAT• 01' JUUtllll l'ICTiTIOUI l'lillM NAM• &A• tUl CAI• NO. P·MJM T~t unde,llenH clou l\•...to1 eu !llV t111! tie It eOflduc:llnt 1 bulifltll lor 1111 m1rtitt!119 of 11111 jllrtU'!I01kln, t aodt In([ INYl<t1 II I ll lndlvldual t i 1S171 MK:kr"rlt, Lt"'nl Hltl1. Ctll'°'"nl1, undtr 1111 r!dllkoln ntl'P! n1rn1 ol IOEA MAlllT, IN(. Incl ll!tr' 11kt llrm II com. 90Hd ol tt\t lollO'fll"t Persoro. wfloll nt.rr1t In flt!I i ncl 111c1 ol rttlO.nce 11 11 toliowt. i.w11: O.~ICI It. T111ot. 11111 MirttNlt. l t t unt Mll31. C1Utor"l1. DAVID ll. TAYlOll Ot!ld April 7, 1110 COUNTY QF OlilANGE l H. STATI OF CAll,OltHIA ) Oft "'oril J. 1'70. MllY• m•, 1 Not1,.. Pullllc '" ~nd lor 11fd Cauntv elld s1111. P"'IOfllltf ••-rtd Otvld It. T11lor ~-le m1 to "' Int Nrton Wl!Olt "''"' !1 •*tr1"911 to !Jlt whl\I" ln1!r<•· rntnl. tnd ldlnowlecllJed to mt thll lie IUKUM'd '"'" um1. Wll~e11 mY hi nd llHI '"II, (OFFICIAL llALI PNYLLIS M. SAL Yl!!lt N1111rv Pllbll< • c1nrorn1• Ott"" C01111tv Mv Commt111on t:••lrtt Otc. 6. lt11 SAlY•lt a l lKKNUM, •ttn. l'l4 W•tcMll Drtot. '""°' JJ7 ~•-11.C.llfirlMttUI T1L UMM4 P11llllllltd Orltnli C11it Ot HY .,lflt, A.nl )O; ,7. Mtv 4, 11, ltN 71!·1' For Advertlsi111 In WEEKENDER • • • Phone 642·4321 ' In Advertising! Newspapers are the primary advertising medium 1949 (Millions of Dollars! 1989 TELEVISION ,, , .. , .. , .. , .. , .. , .. ,,"" MAGAZl~E,s .... ,.; ............... -:,__ ~'f!\;._----RAOIO .-_;Y • OUTDOOR ...................................... ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,, ................. . Total tdvertisin9 figures •r• in for 1'169 and, 11 tht chart 1bov1 shows, newspapers continue to be tht nation 's number one wl 11m1n. The on ly other medium showin9 tny dramatic growth in the chart is television end -did you nOt ice -the inert••• in newspaper advertising investments since TV Gtmt on tht scent is more than tht cur .. rent total television 1dv1rtisln9 vorume. shouldn't you "hire'' the n1tion's most power .. ful solosm1n?. You con 111..t tod1y by c1llln9 6'12-4321, tho • DAILY PILOT SPECIALLY·PRICED BOOKS FOR HER DAY-.MAY10 ~ :~1·' .... ... ..,.,_.-:-. . ,,,,. I ' ' ' u' :i ·;,. l \ .~-,.·~.~ • ........ I ... . ~&"· .. ~ ' ' ' \ / ·---.I) " : ' ' [] Oii ltll'\.EC'TlOIL 8f ..._ ........ lrllli _. cl .. ~lef. A ..., ... ....-lod: •io '* pr,.. wodd. ,..... • 9";l!i.. an., 1M C A wr OF JOT. By .._ W.,... a..t....-.0 ••-•• cl I ... b MCM, Meedol8s .... -"8dlcl -----....... • • 1111 ...... .w ..... ,., st U6. <Wr ..... 0 1'Cl'O .... IK'tQ.OPIDIA OF f"MlllOIL ..... WOJd bf'"L""'l-.°'~ .......,. ot ...... --~ c....r.o. -EQJIJll 1o Pf9llll& ..... 40 ........... P'lb. • 10.00. °""" 4.11 a WOOL smatnY. Br a. a. Tod. ~ ~ to ••aldwf .. wol. 9etudM "'1*cioltM, '-dMQI, *-SplCllll ..eb °" QWlll ..... JD...,.....,.,°"" 1.lt 0 DlllGM .. ~: n. C..... A~ te ....... oao:L .,. Y. M. EnHoott. 2« UluintiOl"ll. lndldltg 60 dl"-'tl ........ trl""-llon Clll tools, ll'IUlrla.la. 9'c. l"utt. 9' 7.IO.. Oftt'J' UI D POOD f"Oll THI 19llKHIL AlclPN of lmperW OW 9111 • ~ 4 tioNry 1111 C..... wWne. By JioM D. ken. Momtty ........ dH~ • l'IOI oflM bmd la MwrlcM Chlr\Ne mlolll,...._ Pllb. • 4..15. OltlJ 1.- 0 KAWAIIAN AND 'ACIPIC llOODt. A Cook 8oot of c.lkMy" Cultollle 1111d Aldpee. By k. B•un. Hraia.1191\. Swnoan, QtiMM, Jlf'• rs, KotMI\ Porwg-, Alip!MI dlana... Pub. c .c.oa. Only 1.11 0 TMI IO'l'IEM COOK900lt. hJu:1N111 l:o ZllOut Eltlfta. 8f 0.:... t1111 V• a.ncty .lcnH. O..r 350 ~ NiCi'*9 ~ ttom ..... to,....... Pub. mt 3.ts. Onty 1.4t a 1"I ff(W CALWORNIA COOKIOOK. By Q. a ....... ,.,.... ...... k) ~ lrino ancl iilltig lr019 v. ~ °""· MM'Y ....... ........ Clllltdoor coo+l/ng, etc. Aleo Mildc:ltl. ChlnNe, NmiftlM, "-!• ...... • •• IOO .. ill. Pub. Ill: 3.86. OnlJ 1.N C ACADIMY AW.MO&: A f'b:wlil Hiatory. 8r P. Mic:tlMt wtltl ._.,,. try DIWld 0 , Seiznlc:k. NNrtJ 300 IMOllOflbti Dboio9,,.aitf1..., ll'ICIUded In• tOini frOll'I llM. Pub. et 7.116. Only &.It 0 19'CTCLO,EOI~ Of' ,AltmtfG. Edited by Bernard S. ,.,_,._ 1- lllmtritlons. °"" 200 1111 NI color. WIU*l-QIMI Pllntel'9' blog,.,..... ~ """" .. lllO\'i_ ..... Pvb . ., 12.05. Only ... 0 AM Af!ITllT AND THE roK By Ct~ BUI ~ • ....,. of "°"'9 John XXIM ind oreit iCVlplor, 01.cOl'llO Man1w ••• .eoount of • "'-6- .., bi)'ond IOiology. 13 11"1&. Pltb. 11 11.95. Ot'lty 1.- 0 ,AINTLNO AND DMWIMO. By A. Difriels. Art COl#M 1ar t'9dllllla .wl Mglfttlera ...ith 57 llluttr1liona. Pub. •I 2..50. Only 1.• O l'tCTOfllAL llOGlll»MT W awn..u OtCUNL II)' ... fWo. 0. 200 ~ In ... Is taodnllting •loty ol Dldaam -... ..,...,... worN Ill .nich bi ttv.d. Pllb. •l 7.N . O!lly UI C nt1 COIWL.ln'l ETaNNQI OP RllUIWeDT. llf L ~ L ...._ FOllllWOfd bf V•n Doftoirl., a.tl"OICfuGtion by F. ~ 0.-171 ....... ml' .... "' tlUbtect ...., .... r11•. °"" .... D YAM QOGH. l"troduetlo9 1'r A. M. H ..... otier. °'*M" L,..., o1 M MriN. C«ltaitlt 48 color pa--. I blact.•ltl ...... W ... -*"* .. ¥111 Govl'I'• tklMI)', ~ ....... °"" I.II 0 ntl WOM.D Of HOtWU. BJ J, CaMPbiL .._..., ...._ • .. tyPN fl ltoraet lhrouol'lout world preMrMd • mt. •-.:J'*1a, 1,. Mtwtrttkln•, 50 In colof. 11.d)ft"'. Only, ... 0 AltT NOUVEAU. fiftJ·four n:Qllrillli c:olor pWet d9ptc:t tis ...... dMC!tdn •IY1i U11t wu IUlllGMbk In Franc. • ... G601t °' ... 1 .. Cinlwfy. A be1uUtul book. OnlJ' I.II D UUGUM. The biNtlUM wl •::1ise•4 oo t of ....... '*'*' portr"' '°'.,,.._. ... 41 WI 001or --.,. 0.., a. D ltOY O'I GlllLt MAllD Foti IYDn' CMLD. !!1J C. C. n-, ._. tr-6 gDld9 "° .. partacC. ,... .... .,... -••• -......... llt"'"9-......aJIO. M . • UQ.. New ...... -U1 0 ~ Of' 8111Wf. lrtllt9"t 9Pho!M:• ............ ...... )Mil• Of Hl'tllg wlidom. Pub. at 3.75. only 1M a ,,.. WOM.0 0, TOYL By R. cum. Pk:toitlf ......, ..... , rs ttNi to lie pr ... nt. 250 pkt!#"' Pub. • •• CWI' UI 0 CHUM:HIU: Hll 'AIWTUtO&. fOf't'fJIOfd bf Lldf ep.,_.Q,_GlllL 71 ,,.... in color, •29 in monochl'OIM larftl a * d ,._... .._,fl ltlt ,,+w-nt tilt» Pub. 81 12.50. Only U1 DOllNI Of' NEW l"CLALLY PMCe 'm\8 POI IVIRYONE ILIE ON TOUI wr ... , Qt ........ lfllt ., ....,. °' ...... °" ... .. ..._ _____________ _ D CKICI: a. J'llr Mnllr C~"'lt or •••kAIMrl•~ Mf 1% Tu lftd 2~ far po1ta11/handllnf. 5 Fashion Island, Newport Beach 92660 (714) 644-004! or (714) 833·2200 SC 'Mond11, May 4, 1970 ': Containel· Small Loans-V anis.h Complete-New York Stock List NEW YORK IA' )· Motlffy'' t-lelit S.1111 -NI"' York $1o(t fi!u..ntf ''le.a. l._I .... l .. 0-(119 Co. Builds -. " In Irvin e B F l T . I M P. 1 MJr· r· ., v,-: iw !f• =·~ s:: 'r!:I"'" ill i11: '.ill :~ =-·~ orrowers ee ig i t oney inc t _,._ i::a •1:ll a:: 1r.; n~ n~;.•S:::,M':: •"l -iii::»•»• ... -·-,~ ''" ae ~ ~ E ' 1"111 1 J1 S1 .. ~.v.1111 .U 1' M'h tt• :rt\.l-111 Al>tQ.lt ..,., '" 1.. -.. Mii .411 t1li ~I ~I -11. GMllll pf1.11 I j1 Jl 11 :f Conta.lntr Corp. of America has begun construction on a new c a ; t o n manufacturing plant in th.e Irvine industrial C01nple.t, The new plant, one of si~ ConW.iner Cor p . facilities in 1he Los .t\ngelc.s nrea. ls !:chedulcd ror com- pletion in late 1970. The 200,000 square-root plant \viii contain highly-complex, hJgh-speed fabricating tquip- menl which will p r o d u c e finished pape rboard µ<1ckiging designed to protect a n d display a wide variety of con- ' sumer products manufactured In the Los Angeles area. The: -· planl will employ Dver 200 • people, General manager Frederlck fl1eyer said "Three out of four packages produced in the ne1v plant will be made from new paperboard that is composed or recycled, or r e u s e d , fib r es-such as the paperboard produced at Con- tainer Corp. mills in Los Angeles and Santa Clara. The packages that we manufac- ture, if collected and pro- cessed, can in turn be recycled again into new paperboard packaging.'' Cer !ro n Corp. 'f eUs E a1·nin gs Certron Corp. of Anaheim earned $531,047 or 20 centl per share iii the three mor.ths ended January 31, 1970. com- pared with $249,561 or 11 cen1$ per share in the first three months o( fiscal 1969. Sales in the most recent three months were $5.501,400 compared wilh $2,456,752 in the first quarter of 1969, ac- eordi ng to Edwin Gamson, president. F.Alrnings per share • for tbe most recent quarter inclu de 5 cents extraordtnary income. Kaiser Tells Earning Dip Kaiser Steel Corp. earnings In the first quarter of 1970 amounted to $4,327,000 on salu of $96,338,000, according to Jack J . Carlson, president. The net earnings represent 58 cents per common share after provision for dividends on the preferred stock. These results compare with first quarter 1969 earnings or $5,811,000 or 81 cents per share. with sales amounting to $97,594,000. Carlson Said the decline in earnings is large l y at- tributable to lower shipments or large diameter U.11e pipe, decrease in fabricated steel product sales and high prt>- portion of low profit exporl tonnage. S&L TeUs Loss Financial Federation, Inc .. a W Angeles-based savings and Joan holding C001pany, today reported a net loss of $173,000, or s cents per share, for the first quarter ended March 31, 1970. This compares with net earnings of $551.000, ot 11 ~nt.s per share, for the first three months of 1969. Per shares earnings are based .on 3,320,000 average ca p i ta I shares outstanding ror both periods. * HALLIDAY'S * Cltir cullrc1ion of Silk Necktl~ from Talbot L in Tht> Carmel Valley is madt: 10 our 01,·n <'Xecting SP<'Cifications. Each nt>c kti<' Is Individually hand-cut and ii; hand made. The sllks are import· f'd from England. SY.1tzl'rland and f rancr. 0ur t;r \f't"tion nni::r-s from a i'on!'CT\~· 1,1.,.. thrl!f' end onr'-ha.Jf inch \\'idth to a ful!i.'r, mol'C" stylish [our irich~. Srl<'C"I fron1 a broad thoi t·r of pat\rrn~ l\nd colorings 111 i;atisfy the most dis· t·rimlnaung 1nan. Talho1 t: Rcpp1>. Foulards and Tl'inlty T" i ll~ from $7.00 ~tEN 'S TRADITIONAL CLOTIDNG 171~ ' IRVINE AVE, NEWPORT 6EACH WESTCllFF PLAZA PH. 645 ·07t2 NEW YORK (UPI! -John S1nlth, executive, gol a jolt from his frltndly b • n \: nianage.r the other day -a call for more collattral on a ~$5.000 loan he has been carrying for three help pay 4luitlon ehlldren In colleges. years to for two Smith {not his ;ictual name l \\'as told he either had to cut the loan to '2,$00 or double the amount ol co 111 t era I because oT sinking stock market va luts. Bill Jones, a younger e1- ecuUve. also eot a shock. He took some stock certificates for gOOd listed shares to the bank and wanted to borrow $3,000 to start his oldest son through Yale. "So rry," said the bank manager, "\Ve're too strapped for funds to make small col· lateral k>aolS right now -we have to t::ike cart of our business customers.'' Jones (not his actual name) still doesn't know how he's go ing to raise money for that tuition. He borrowed on his lire insurance three years ago and his credit on unsecured personal loans and credit <.'ards will just take care of the monthly hOusehold bifls. his car pa yme,1t and other fixed expenses. The only \lo'ay to pul the boy into college y,•ill be to cut all other ex· penses lo the bone. Smith and Jones are typical victims of tight money con- ditions around the country - made doubly tight by the rapid collapse of the stock markei. "Small collateral loans aren"t just tight -they·re prac- tically non·existent." sa id Arthur Milton, a Ne\';• York monev doctor. Ba·,~ks \von't admit things are that bad Said James H. llarris. a senior vice president cir Chase t.-lanhallan -"In conform ance v,oilh the need lo fi g!u inflation, w' a re discouraging collateral loans tu rmance securitie s in- vestmenU, but we still make them to meet co nsumer needs." Another wcll·knawn personal financial adviser Jn New York, Dr. Israel Unterman, said that in most or the country, the man who walks in off the street today and asks for a loan h::is little or no ch:ince or gelling one no matter how good his collateral. O Id customers, he added, also get the fishy eye turndown. "The banks don 't need that kind of loan. it isn't profitable enough compared with the 70 Broker Gets Laguna Post Roberts, Scott & Co., Inc., members of the New York Stock Exchange. has an· nounced the appointment of Lee Austin Andrews as a reg i s le red representative assigned to lhe firm's ex· panded Laguna Beach office. And rews, 42, was graduated from UCLA in 1954 and later completed graduale \.\'Ork in economics al USC. lie has been actively engaged in the financial invcsllncnt f i e ) d since 1955 in various executive capacities with other me1nber firms in Corona de! ~1ar, Laguna Beach, and Pasadena. He and hi.'1 family live in Laguna Niguel. Active In community arfairs. Andrews served on the Vestry of St. A-fary 's Episcopal Church. Laguna Beach, and is a member or the Soulh Orange County Hospital Service Are'd. Advisdry Board. He is also past president of the Niguel llomeowners and Community Assn. P e r A nnum- Paid !Quarterly 0.. $10,000, _ • .,.... F.il p.;,j '"-'- ..... n.Mt. c...Efit ............. --..i ... ltl-!NoC ........ >edt-.... W...-... IA! 470 ••1111-• 11 ... t-,.1, ..., •• 1JI St•h St1••I -S1nt1 I•~ Jt).15 s ... ;." •...ii -o ••• ,, 1 lfl4 Sc.ti ..... ,. -Ct~••• , .. ~ 61 t I WJIJ,;,, ll•J, -l•t _.,..,, ... 110 ht'! IHI s. .. t-C.... M.M perceot they can tarn on tbtir porUollos to redeem the ~~1. 1v 1j1~ "•1~ 61~ -IUi ""' 1.m • »Mo lMo -u, Gtn Met .u.. s.t "i. "~ ~ -" ;\; "" r +tio luSvc t.Jt V .. 11~ + \1 G flAOI 19' s ' 11""• n n" +'"-tredlt C8rd bUSineSS and fat shartS, thJngs fell!)' Will get =JI t.-l; ~ ttn !:_ lftVJ.1 M6 l•lil l.f\11 -1 G MOI pf),1$ l J.lh w:i. Jfli +-l.t I d . ro gh ,, Ml MUii• .l't JJ I ;a 1 -1 Inv 1 ff ~ tnil '* _, ~PCM'! • 1"' 11~ JI~• tt -" fttUtftS 00 persona I'll Ul-U • AOdr~ IM lot W°' ll\4o J1 \\ \l YI~ l.l l r.~ ~'¢i fl.~ -~i Gl"utlUf 1M UI J!..-. 11 .. I!~ -"" stallment loan!." Already, Milton sald, things ~~n;.:~l' 140 2~ ~ yu J\11 =' l:t1 ~11'·.; ~ IJ':. 1"' »U = ~ g: ::rr;. !t ,,: .• J3~ J:: =i~ Naturally, this situation is are 50 bad that for lhe first ~~~,.1i~·1f,1. 111 S\• ~11....,.-_Vr ~l:l1111M t1j "ll" ;;"' ~~ +·~~,~~"'.: I!~;~ T~: tl~-~ f ' l ~J 10 ll t'1m••lnceWorJdWarllo[ficeA .. G•t .lb I 1"4 '"'" ''"'+'• "...,"' 'I\',~~"' U~-.. "!GY•IEI 1'.$2 1tl 'Mb 1' u·-· orc1ng _v,. e se many At.•k• 1n1,..1 " IN 1.i. 1•'.. -1\• ,,., ~ ,.. ..., g l2\.i -~ GT11e1 "'2.til ' ~• n " holdJnn• and to cul tbelr living rtnl.$ are falling In New York . .t.lbeftoe .11 w ir1~ >O!)t>l -" ltt Finr · 'll ., \S fj = GTetF .r1.1s l10 i1 11 1 + ·~ ~ I h d h I Albtrtw\1 .)f. ' th ... ,.. -... HA "'A . ... f1.\ 1•~· -H GTtl "91.)0 IJ.11 111, 11\!o 11\, -1\ costs. Summer camps for 11 t ar est are t e peop e .t.1~,......_, 1.10 ,., 11 ,,,, '"' -1~ ""~ 0,1 ass ,," ,,u. 4014 _ <;..,rime ·'° M h 10 '"' '' -~. children. the tou rist business In Wall Street. Commissions·~~~T'.J: U ~jl ~~ ~v..:.'.:" •j '1'a' '~"I~ 0lt ~,::1~&:~~'1.\~ 1~ ;~. ~111o1• ~~:-·, b 'I f I ' I "'"'' ..... I" I m •• •• • ·. • •I> "_ 1•,G1n•llr .10sl ?t ••& t1 f\lt-'0 and every 01 (!( semi· UXUry 0 SeCUr tiCS Sa esmen afC A/ll-OLud )Al '; ~ J?\lo :111'1 :.HI on oO. 1 !1 n,. -"1 GenulnPI .7! t) U \"1 26 ~'0 +1, b • I """ "' ~-· dow 50 per-t f m .... le1ll>CI "' 3 11 •OI~ J'l'l ,,.., -I ,. Alhl Ai tlo tO -'9 Gt PK ,IMlb •IS ""' ... \Ii U l(o -111 uslntss 1s ee .... 16 e Squeeic repo•\CU n .. ~, ro .t.11et Pw i.:n n 1••~ .~. 1t11 + ,, ~· . ~· ·~ -1·~ G1PK 1>11.6• uo 10 ,.. .• bard. 1968 on the average There .t.111.ich 1.20 )''' 10&io 1t1>"11!t11 ... 111 1! 21 • -'" Gerto.r 1.10 :io 1"'~ :k\o l•)\ -·" , · ,tdllCIAAnf ,40b Jt 'IV.I"""• ~\~ -1~ a ~ · 4' -'l G.l!vO 1.0k l~D t2 41 •l(lo _)lo ''"And ," said Milton. "ii pct>-have been several thousand ~'l~..i~~ ·.ll n if w· n :.1(? i'! I d ft1• -.I~ ~ttv Ell lO i ltt: ll'" 1t"::. \It pie start cashing w mutual 1ayorrs of .c1er1ca1 worker~. ~1 «l~t' .. 1·--: I,: y~ i•\11 u~ +·~ ~.,,.1,: U! 2ff • ':~-:i:g1tir.:;~ ~: ii.1 11,, 111\=~ shares in large amounts to and executives in some b1g~llis11,0 i!.i5v ~! rltt fYJ. 2l"'= 0 i.rl 1f E u-~G111e11~ 1.4 1JJ -™• ~· .il~+·• get money to pay bills, and Street firms have f.akea steepA1::r..P~.ioe I 11\4 ?1 l1 -om nvol1 .... li I\\ g~:.,~m=-c~ 1 ll wi fl"' H"=1:-! Al~ l°.!Ml ltt '"' 61 ~ _, -~ V. I• -2 Gi..i AIOen JOt '" ' '\' -\o the funds Lbtn have to unload pay cuU. ~lll" Jo_.. 5f fl:' ~J14 1 314 ..:-ll E•r,i· , 1~ !111, -"G"""• ..i1.u , J.OVr 30 50 :j AmlE'i 11111 »,OU ' mw ~ I 1\.11-••G!i!Mld OfJ 4 #Vr •1 .&SU ;. ,.,,,.,J:, ori.'° 3 lt Vr n"' :.:f . omw 0 1 , I ·~ l I -1io Gl&bti M1rl11 ltl ffl ..... tV.. -IV• Am Hess .01, u n 1... I,. -~~ I Sc P. ~ uu. -~ GlabeU11 ., 'IO 12\\ 11\.ti 1114 -11. ,t.rn e.~., ti nv, llN \ l4 -,,. omwt 1 3'\\ -1 Goodrlc:ll in no 2011 ?n'i 14\lo _ u. Money's Worth ~r~~l~r''° ~: ~ mt ~ :.: =-~~t~~:~1 .1J ~,#~4 ~~ ~1~:=:.~etr: ;~ )fJ ts>: av. n ~-1~ .t.!or>1Nfs l,10 xlOt lO~ lJlo :\3i\ + ~ ~ c1,: !f ! , ~ !~','~. ++;? Gr~a 1.S. 3' '''' U \1 li\\ -IVr Amlldol .zo 'I 2'1'-14 2P.0 -\'-~· afCI ~ U0 ~·· "'Gr1nby 1 • .0 v;· ~~ :: : ... .J~~ ,t.rn c..~ ·n l ""l Il1' i•l'I -l a..FDOCI f d U. • .., .:.:·iii, GrandU" ,Ill 34 2S\Ao 2•1'11 JIU -'• ~~'"ci3 ,;,l 15 if 11•• ff~i = :! onfd ,.i4" • ! to I . -3'1' G••'lllK St1 u 111,1 "" 1~ -·· A' .. • >.-' 1•·, '''• ii'-... _,.. .... onfrtlohl· •j 1, Slo u>oO -""~111ltnlle I l • 1 •) 1..,. 1 ' +"' "'" " "" ~· ...... ~ °" lf'ISll!ll ~ SI,\ S\1 -1lo ••"IW , so 1) .,., H'i-1: + 'l ,t.rn(r111H 'Ill 1J 1!I 1''• -..., anN•IG 1,~ t ,. 1+\t 2•1.-.! -1~ ••vOro 1:111 h 1\) -1~ ... ,~1111 ,·"° 211./o ,,~ "" -,.. on.• Powr ... 1,\. "\' ~ _ ~ 1 . :fl' 'IS lO ~· • 1, A(r>' Pl '·'~ >YI 611 "" ... -I MP"f 1>U fdO 11~ 60 60.., + \'> It.I r I, 't 1 ~ 2JZ •:: '• ArnCY•n 1,li UJ »'• l& 2•'~ -111 °"fAl•l il IC:.'4 ~~ IOIO -141 rNE et 1. ti ... v. 4'\' -l~t Managing Ti1ne A"I 0:,1111 ! 1l 1•1• l"~ "'•-lit an c111 :I. 41 u•; 6J'>.~ 6~ -l'i IN 11181.60 2, j ~ !'" l"' -'.',•, ADlstTtl ,10. " 2l'• ,,,~ J11,l, -t I Clll pf4 5 no ·~·;, •5''> •sv. -"' IN el!.'•~ "" 1• ,.,,.. OutlVe<I ?I •'I< ••,, •'1 -~. oM Cl"! .071 l 4 ••• •~ l'f. -~ I W I lnl 111 I ~ '"' j t -~. .,.t.0.....1 pf,&.11 ll 11 U U • on! co 1 I ~\O lS\) 35'4 -1\llo IWll nl! .to )i •l'r ~ ·1 AmE!Pw 1.,4 7"( ?!'~ !'ol'i '''~ ->.; 1 ~o ··1·50 ~ 43 .U\'I -WU11 Dll.11 4 11 " -i Am Enke l• 111 l ''• Jl'l JI''> -~ t n al9 .loll ! ' 41)1./t •1 . IW~tl'ltn ,50 4 ~h v.r, "= • .... ..., Exo Ind ~5 ''• tlo ''·• -l'I on MIO . &o 19 It I,,,. 17'h -1 rffr>Gnt .9' 7 Ii l'I \\ \ AElll""' pf.t.6 J100 62'' 61 62 -Vi ..,., 011 LSO )IJ 2•'\ 73•~ 11!.'1-I teo(lSh 1.10 6 14 " ~ =·,,; ,t.!";111ln5 .YI JI•• 17 16" lAVI -'\ ontOll Pl 2 ) l-1''1 3'1/t 3'111 ..•.. rtVf!Ollfld l 1,q' m"n f ··~--~·:t~'I Pays Business·es By SYLVIA PORTER The productivity of office workers, many economists believe, could b e c o me ma na ge·m en l's biggest headache in the 1970s. F'or a change, thoug~. the following interview w i t-h James H. Duncan, chairman or Wofac-company, a leading in l ernalionaJ management coosuttiiig firm, outlines some encour11ging aspects. PORTER: Isn't improving office productivity very dif- ficult? DUNCAN: Not al all. We have learned over the years that workers want to be pro- ductive rather tha n merely to put in time on the job. lt follows that the more prt>- ductive they are, the betler paid they are. Harry Van Arsdale Jr., president of the New York City Central Labor Council and treasurer of the lnterna· tional Brotherhood of Eltl c· lrical Wor~ers. has told his men, "You produce more and 1'11 gel you more." The strategy has worked, since his electrical workers' union has \\'elcomed new technoJogy. PORTER : Why is the prob- lem so serious then? DUNCAN : Since trus COUn· try for so many years was production oriented, we were able to develop and install various methods of measuring and conlrolling production. However, we tended to ignore the white.collar worker. Thus. today, some 80 to 85 percent of all production workers are subject to work standards. \\'hile this is true of only about 5 percent of all office workers. White-collar and s e r v i c e workers now form the fastest- growing economic group in terms of employment, yet shoW the slowest rate of in· crease in productivity. During the past two decades. while total man-hours worked in the U.S. rose 20 percent, service man-hours, including t h e white-collar group, increased 40 percent, but with no im· prove ment i11 real output per man·hour. PORTER: Whal does th is mean to the a v er a g e businessman? DUNCAN : Our studies show that at least 17 percent of the time the average businessma n's office employes are literally doing nothing ex· cept walking around or talk· ing. In addilion, there is an average loss ol 28 percent through p I a i ~ inefflciency. These figures, or course. do not include allowable time away from the job such as coffee brakes, lunches, vac;a.· lions. sick leave, etc. PORTER: Won't automation -computers. high.speed OOPY· ing machines. advanced of- fice Jystems -solve lhh prob- lem? DUNCAN : Not really, since these devi~s only increase the output of information. They have not Increased the valut of such data, nor the real produclivily of th c Mo11santo Earnings Up f..fonsanto Co. today repOrted a y.eartto-ye.ar i'i'ICrease of 6 percent in first.quarter sales and an 8 percent de<:reast In net income from optr.aLions. Consolidated sales for the period a mounted to $512.702,000 in 1970 and $484.283,000 in 1969. Net t,"" come from optrations lo the 1970 quarttr was $31,286,000, equlvaleot to primary earn· jngs of 00 ~ts a &hart.. Co1npa:able year-earUtr ID- come was $34,0?6,000 or 97 etnLs a share. Extraordinary lncomc. '>oosted 1969's first· quarter ne.t to $.'W, 735.000 or 99 ctn1s a share. AGnl11 on .1~ •15 U•i 16 16 -•o can1 !" 1 7 1!~ 75'./o 25'4 . , rolltr . 1111 Aml-IQ11t .10 '1 l)~, 111~ 1"·~ -•· con1 11 .n ,, n~'I 1t\.\ 1t\~ -c;, P r workers, nor have they reduc· A kom~ o1 7 1 ""' u1·, ••1'> + '' conwooci 1 to s !21'1 :nv. :nv. + · • "' .,. -1~ ,t. HOft'l.e I.SO 121 '°* 511'1 51\• -\t Control P&I& "°' .1:w. •1~ •1\'o -2 •pj Am HOIP ·'"' l~t 31\'I J5'o 3''1• -~o Caolo Vnll ·so !t 31 11> 3D'IJ J114 + i ~ xk°' ~~ ~ ::,:(! ed the number of workers Amtnvd 1.1~ )16 11'• , ...... !(~ -,',", Coo~rln l . .oo ll :n''I '.11'4 31'16 -1t1rc",. ,, E m +' • AMlt("IX 1 • .0 l:M 3S'I~ ll "'" -COOOO!~ TR 1 11 lS"' 1SVI UV. -I/, ol.70 ..., Office WOf"kef! stlJI must AMAm•K .. ~-"', o ->' 'o".c ','.',' ','., ,,_ CaaoT llfl ,J5 11 17 11 11 -"• ullSl•UI '.t6 ,.I l ~ li111t l ::•~ ~ ..., .... -., Co1>1I•""' 1.10 3 ll 31 ll -'"l 11 ISU al•.a:I flj 51"' .51'4 '4 -. " ··-. b I ,t.k••r;•• 1 10 A• ~"· JI 31 -~· C<HtPR9" JOb " 66'4 tJV. '3'h -3 u fWtnd Sit 7 1~ .... , opera u>C" mac ntry,.t.rnPhOlo .u llt 1i. 1>.i ,•,,. -,/!c°"""lsn 1.20 1 ii.. 1~11, 1~1•-" 1111w o11:so 5' !Zll Mil =, .. Alle~Ov .oee m 11•~ 61'• •-•cw;nhB .lSI 31 21 11'~ n~-1~, ufW ptJ,!' 'fo 40V. ~-'"~ evaluate the output and do ""' ~r' '.., 1' 1; . ., " 1:,1 )I ~orGw 1.soe " 111 'l!ln; 21111 , -sv. u11w 01s. s 1 •2 , _ '• lb. ·,i. .1 I 1 ~"'s...eif it0 ,16~ 21,; !'~ 171--,• oro11111n .n ~JI 11v. 11 "'" + 1i ulnon '"" I• o ,.,,. A-"'4 some 1ng Whu 1 . n mos ""'SoAtr .Ri ,6i .t:1\~ 31~ ,.,: +1•: c~:'Micfi""':io 11 1~;~ 11" 1\'..: +" -H-1-· cases, the basic problem re-:~~;d't·10 .t ~.i.. ~v. ~;· 1 cPc1n11110 1i1 J1'• l1 1, 31 '·•-'-Ma~kwai 1.111 1 JS"> 35'" 1w.-•, , Am$!cl ol•.1! J 91\"~ 119V• on 1 -1 ° Cr~n<I l.6Dtl I J~ 3~'• ~1'• -\')' ~·rn~r: I rs !l',i llli ~Jllo ~,\, =r-. mains the \Yorkers low prG-.t.m si •• n ·" tis 1n.. 1•·~ u•, :.1,, Crfdl!I• Fin ' 1 u,,, '~'• 11>0 H:mw;1 i" • ~ AS""'' 1.fll' ~· ,1 '"~ '"•-,cromPK~ .to l "l.o ,,,, 1111 -''IWmmP•D-I 1J.,. :: ,~:=~! ductivity ,t.mSua llf u J "' ,1~ ''• t,C•011Rl1tnd I •" 'Xl"'i "1"'·-~~1-1an1mn<1 10 ao 1o 111 J!"'-i~. • ,t.. TLT w!wl )Ml ''• •'• • -'l t:rowCol I.Oii 11' ll 1~1' 16'4 -1• H•ndl"'n '.o 35 JDf• _ .. PORTER : llow "an a ~~TJ,'.',", ..12.V,,•,.'"• ,•,•.',·, •\.-1 Cr""'n Cork l <I 1"• u1, '"~-~HulCll1•r 'n "XlllJ /V."•~-11 ._ ..,., , , _, 2• ,.:; . ., Crwnlel! ! io AO :tT4 JI Jl\o ->; H•l'IH (11 '-14 J.11 IJ\1 .!~' 1\l"o --1· • . ...... WWll.s .$6 16 t 'o t t ->,Ctn 7 1114.10 1100 S• 5' !• -ll>HanntM !JO 17 "1,• • W businessman attack this prob-,1.w o•ot 1,1< t10 H', J\•.., u•, -'• crs Corp "° • 1 P; 1p~ i11.:. -·~ H,,,_, I 1 11 ...,.. «t\O _ 1, AW ... 1111 l,'3 1100 n1, H.., ltl, -\'I Cudahy 611 1' 11'1 11 ,, -•1 H•rrls Int I 77 d~ 411o <191,r,, -~ Iem' Am-·"" 1• 1••~ 11 i1>t Cudh• a111s 1 111. 111. 110.:. -·~ tM•Kll c11 1 11 in.. ui.a 17'.:. -r ' Am~IPli .60a H 1'\lr. 1•~• u•11 -t~ Cutllt•n ?<\ l 14 U I• H1r1$Mn< .llO 'I jL.,11/ !' jl'lt -f'o O l lllJl"A.J'J pod f "! (It AMF Inc tO 10! :io 1' 1' -•, Cummln .IOb i JI lO 3': • HtrY Al l.:IO 17 ,.., 7 1 -1• ........... : r uc1v1y n AmlK .IO · 10 .. Jtlll ll"t-1•,(ll!lftDTllD .41 '1)1't 11 ll -•oH..wllEt 1.:n • ?Ito 2111 I"""_,.. only can be measured, but ~~ f~ ·:3:. 11g ::t1. !:\, .!:~ :.1~-: l~1'J.,~'J. i ~ jf• ~r· ~:.,.. ..! ~~ ~::~r11..:1t1 1 ,,1110uv. .~v.. i~ _:i!. . AmN• Coro 3U 21 1f't 1tl~-2v.curltr H 1.10 ll 71'1 ,11 .. ll\'l+t't ~CA.•.llCI .)fki 1( '"' ' !ti -"' 1t then also can be controlled Am••ec1 >.'° t ,,,,. 11:i.:. 31 .. -"'CYcloos 1.to ,, 1'\o "'• ,.,,. -~· :f. "' .10 ~1 ~ ll.,.. " --..o .. ,t.mtel .l7 • Hli ' t . .. Cv11nnM 1.'° JI !f S7 '1 -1\'i ~:1111 l;IJi:IJ ·? 1f ·11"' t1 +\lo if you have the proper in-.t."KOl\CI 1.to 1•1 21 2•1\ ,,...., -a. -D-,,,~, 1ur •• 30 1 ~ lO"o i -m Ancll 110C:k 1 21 29~ 1f''> 1'\11 "> H •'• < ·"" l I li r,..-~ ti. d di · 1· F Ancnn>N$~ l 11 16•• l.S~ 16 =>Ii Dtnll l~r .lSo U tl11 t i , Vil .... e r 1111 ·'° 11• ZO lfli> -1'0 Ctn Yes .an sc1p Ines. or .t.11c1 ciey 1.:io , 3.J'i 331•• n·~ q D•n• Cp 1.1s , ,,.., 201, 2n 11 _ t\ ~=~~:os '°' l 1114 U 1 -\; example, we go by a rule ..... ~~~.',',.,·",, 11 ts·• u •• 15·~-=\\oD•r1 1nc1 .XII> 1r. 3J :rJ', :rJ•.-n,Hffl'llll'fl ·c •• 21"151~ u1~113,,=.; I •• b "' t .t.PL'co•P ~~ ?t~ 1;~~ 1~~ =::: g0!1! 1rroc:~! ., ~~: ?~ ?~j, =3,~ ~~1 1~ ·~ • ''" ,1,. ,1, :t·· 0 u 1utn a .t 20 percent APL 111<1 06 4 15 h>~ 1 Jl~ -·~ IYCoCp 1.1' 11 1f'4 11~;\0. 1••< -'o Merct".-_ l U 'J i;"lll r,v. ~· 4-::1 . be h' d b AQu• C~em 101 !l'< 5~'~ 5311 -... Dlvlni-IUCI .SO lOS ?t'~ 111.o -~! Hefl~Fcl .1.10 11615 '4t> ""' _ \ savings can ac 1eve y •R• s~c '' 19'1 ,, . ., ti ~& -1'' D•~tnPL l.60 •16 1••• 13·~ tt!/:i -t Heublein .!Ml 100 :it>\ ,,,,. :JN. -'\Ii Arcat~N .C)t O! ,.., ,~ 16'.~ -\~ DPL alA l,15 v'10 50'7 so·· !O'IJ -'• wi .. Pee~ .XI »< 39V, 11·~ 311't -r.• applying special techniques to !~f,hfs~~ i:~ 1 ~ ~;: ~~ ~i. -loo g~r~e,,~0 1'.11 l~ ?~''t ii;: ?!., -+ '' ~1tt: .. ~:l~?"ii tt ~01,. JI~ l!i? t:: a Pre,1·ously unmeasured and, ','m''",,'.',',.~'2 1?6 ,"'• "' ••, _ ·-oe1 M~1e '10 •1 "'• 11•• :o .i. ,, 1-1ati.r1 1.10 M 1 .,, 1 ri; t ~ · " "" 'kl1 '~'I ?"• ?l ' Dtf'-•Alr .40 lll!t 31''• 1;•; 10 -'• """""'Wli .l'O 10 ltl'J '"• t'>\ '\~ t lid If. Tb \.t.rmcarn io .ia 11 711, Jn ,_,1Dete<: Int 3! 67"• 6 • 6••+•,~olfEl•ctrn 1s •~• 6'• 6u +· ... uncon ro e o ice. a Armr o '·" 1 S'l '!') 51, 1• Dinn Mio .60 11 1Ho l•l• l ••• -.-, 01111yln11 n m l?-11 lll'"t 11~-. -~• h . 1. -.rm•1Ct .IO ~II'''" 7.,, 7~•-_;~oennrll 1! .04 1! 11'. 10 10',-•,~opd: '·fl" U 4 1/o ~·~ O V,-~ means I at apprDX1mate Y One ArmCk 1111.15 v60 50 SO '0 -! 01nl11>IYlnl I 16 lf'o 1,1. lt h -~, Ho 1Y uo .;o I ~ lS'fJ u lll -I of every five people in an !;;:~~~" 1::: ,6 1r,, 1~:,· 1\~~ ., 8!~,Rc~' pl ~0 ~ ~j'· ;r • ir· =,:~ =E"~:i~1;E J! 111;~ 1n 1u~ ~~~ office could be used to better !~~o\~d,,Jo '1' "'• ,.,., Dtreca p1e '1 ~~·~ ,,., •t'•-'4 HD'lt 1n1t·.J6 ",,~~{;YU ~i:=~i' advantage. ·.~g11,,.,".· o .. 16~ ll~' ~ .... ~r· -1Vr g:~~~~"'i : i:~ 1Jo,, l~~, 1~~.-\O ~:::r c:i ~~r ,22,: •• l!it '111)'-' =:.. _, 11 101' '"• 10 0e1 Eo 1111.so 1 n ,. n + 11 Hf>ll(f '"" 80 ,, ,, .. PORTER b t AsSd DG 1 zo 36 lt•• ]II;, Jf"h -•• Dfl St"l ll 1'\\ 17'. 11.'. -~ Houe Mitt :..0 lOJ II~ :~: :m = -~= : Precistly w a Aud s1111 1·zo "' JQ;, lCI 30 _~.De~'"' .1• • ?s ''"' u , -L, Hou~llF 1.10 ,1 muno. 37i,.r. _ 1, do you do? AA;$.~~~~ i~~ 10.l 7'> 1,, 11, _ '• Dl•1Flnan .40 u 1~·~ "• ,., -" Hou1F •"·"° , 111 111 112 _2,7 DUNCAN ·. We obser"e work ,",',·,~,'.Ch~.-,', ~~:, 2ll'' 'lu .. ~1 -= :~ 8l::::'5:i~~~ :~ l~~: ~~ ~;: .!. ~ ~~~ P!'f~, : W? ;t •• ~ ;;1' • ""' ..,, 1110 51 50 SO 1' Ol1Sh Pf CJ 1 11 ~··· 7&h ->i l+Ou•llP 1.10 1)1 ...... it lli~o _ 1 h'b.,, and m I lly ee All Ric.II "' l •I •'Iii llU , ••• -11.'/ 01.s .., 0 1.XI ' u •i 1•'• lS -14 Hous!N.Gs .llO ) '"''• ... ...., ~·i'a _,~ I u ua agr 00 Allll(h pUID xtO •l'1 11\• •JI;="" Dkll"""" ... 100 12 1~·· 10'1> -1 ~1 Pfl,SO ' •5'' U\1 ,,,~ _f,, average times required for At1asc1>erri 1 3u 2iio 10•, :l'lllo-1 01e1111111 .. o111> 11 ,, 5'°"' 5''.I0 -2Vf M Joro" ·'"' s1 13"4 11v. 1:1>1-\1 'f' ta ks .. _.. . All•• Corp '' l''• l J ,, O!Glort1a .00 .. 16 1!"< u•. -14 H':'"'i' i~ Jt 11 11~. II . spec1 IC s SLIUJ as t\lp1ng All•Cr. l!f,SOk ?60 16 u u = ., IMrrDllm ·'° ll in-. 11 ... 11'.!o -"'Hu ~"11t1 . .! 1 n~. ,,..... 11\IJ -1 I . fl ATO II( ,Oft ~' t\'I I' I' "'0111111 P1!o1 13" Jt l9 -! ~ ·-1 11lo II 11 -fO a letter, competing a orm, A11•or• P1e, 11 10 •• : ,,:=,1 01uonco .ui. '11!1' 1si' 1s1~-~l:eii'&':si,'"1 11 7t n 1, ?V'+, forth W • h , AOJ1om111 Jr.cl 4 1 6•0 6>.:i _'.lo Olsney .:JOI> 212 11!''> 11', 11''• -t j" C•nl l 1' '4 11'-' lt,,. 1111 -•-. and SO • ora ten lS AV(O Ca 1.10 1~ 16 15"'0 15\\o -1 Dlt1$e11 1.'l'O 4 4'"• '571 ·~·~ + "• II Ctn p,j51) JI 2ttl ?•t~ 71lo -I• porti·oned out ,·0 , p e c ,. f ,. c •,~!a,,',",·".-74 ·~~ ltl'o lt'• -II\ Olverilnd ..¥ 11 11•0, 16~ 17.1~ _;;. 111 Pvwir ; ~ ;;f111 ~;-:. J,,ii = ~ •r ~ Joi 29\\o 71\o ,.,, _,,_. DlvrMl9 •~t II :IO>o It!• !'!Ill -1.i 11 Pw "'2 I! l200 '9' 7 ~ .. -l batches by supervisors who .... ~.", ·~.,-;'! " •~• 1•.. 11. -v. 0•~•P11tr .lCI '' 16'" J!("; 1111 ... " 111 ""' p17'04 lllO 11.t ,,,,., fl\, . ... "" I 41 •J d -11 DomtMln .IO lt so ' lll"t 51) +111 Imo Cp ,.,.;, lOI t\~ t t usually are given broadened ,t.von Po;t 2.10 3JJ 1n·~ 1u» 111 -1 oomF'ld .& u "• •'• ,,., -~ 1N,1. CP 1.40 1u 21,:. ,,,, .J ·_-.: respons1 Jt1es 1n conlro hng B Doric Co .:n ' 11 o u -11 1..ccum .Siie 11 1o tu ..,. _ 'bl!" . I ' Al!KOJ! .1lt ' 11'1 111, 111., _ ,, Dan~lle• ·'' 111 a u•, 1•'• -?'' lll(ome Caoll 3' lHo 1011 10..., _1\: - -Darr O!lvf• l 111• If I' -l' h>daln Hcl .60 !a 11>' 111 v,oork flow a·,1d perfor1nance. 8•bc~ w 1.i6 111 1to, 11•. 11·• _ u Dever co .10 's 411• ~ ((I _, 111C1plsPL , 50 ,. :ni,; ,1 • ;r ! ~ 81kr011T -~S IS ti·~ 17'·• 11'•-'•DowC~m l:60 1"<1 '"\ 1"0 •\••-1 lfldsltNll :ta 7 1 >~1 1 1:. 1111 +\lo PORTER: \Vhat \IOU are 8&11 GE 1.1'1 •l "'" ll>o 'll'l -... Oravec Pl.•O •IS "'• '~'· ,,,, -.,, 1"9e•Ra'ld l jd ·~· lt'' .. J 8a1G Of8•,30 11\0 "'" 61'• 64') -1 Or1ntllcl 1 10 6' '1"• :-~'• 16 -1 ll\lllld Pll.ll J 35 l!'i l•'• .. , .. doing, then, is forcing workers ea11QP11M .&o u 'l• ,,, '" loo or''" 1112 'o 1 ;1•. J''• "'" -"' !"l•nd su 1 a. ,5,., ''• ?st. _1 · be I ", .,,, 81ngP al2 4 11·1 :Ki>., :it•o-= 1, Orfs" cl 87 11 79il tt 1'"1 -·~ ""1ontCp ."3 '11 IOlo, 10\o IOG _ 1, to more aware o time . sangP p11.is i u •. 11i.• """ or,v•o1C1> lb 111 11•• 16 1• -•~ 111111<0 .1ob 16J B •n 15 uv. _" , Sok DI Cal 1 11'• )J'h llJ.o _ ~ Duk~Pw 1.111 lJ 141• 71 ,,., -~. tn~Plr C<>P la U M ~·• 59•; -?1'1 DUNCAN: Exactly. And lh1s Bank DI NV l 6• ~•'• •l'" .0\ 1:io Dun!o••CI 110 •• •! ••'> '''"' -v, lnrerca 1.10 3"' 1••~ 21b H •;, _ ~ . I I . , d .1 ]'I eank Tr l.8• S• 61•1 611 611 • -7 OUPlan .601 81 'IS n•, '" -1 · lllteklr5t l.IO )l 25 741, 7•\) _ ~. IS use u Jn one s a1 y 1 e earbOll 1.0lt n Jll• "''• l''~ -1.u. duPanr 1.1.M 1911 109·~ IDJ''o 10J1 , -l•'• 1eM 1.10 1111 1'4~• ?I 1 2311 _13,~ b Y II Sare! Cll .)5 t '3•, 43,~ '3" -, cluPont p14 SO 7 64'·1 u 6~\7 _ 117 tn!FalFr .SOb a 51\o » 15 _1,~ al ome too. OU actua y R&•lc 111( .10 11 ll'o 11"~ 1u' -.~ ~vPont p!J SO I !n", <n •o -1 lnl Har._ 1.IO 111 16•io 15Y. 25•; _ :r.. s 1 11f J so 1 o 1 JI • -'DYQ LI 1.u 50 1lh ?1\'o ?~ . lntl1PICI 1.1Je :00 14 P" IJ'rl I"" <,,'1"f ~lrge,,a,.P'e11n'•xtraantidme,tfhfercou11·~h• g:f~~ ~Qi i .11~ \~1~ 1H: \in -~i! g~o),_1::/1. lo !:m ~v. ~·~ ~v. ~ ~\ :,~',• ...... ~N.110 i7: ~!:; J: • !:1, ::1""'~ -u..... • 811hln ~12.SO • 1 41 ., AO -Dymotnd ·'" " II 10'• in" -1"" " ner 75 111'. 101~ 10... _ • planning _ by setting time s1uschLb ·'° 3' •s'• 4l 01~ :j~ DYn.Am ...io lO 111 1•• ll• -,,, !~I ~1~k•·i1_~ 2~r ~t:\lo !ii~ E1! '!:...i1 nd b , , ea.rrLab .JD Jl4 ?6'-o Jsl• '5'} -I -E-F-'"' "'" !JO Ill :14'< JJ\\ lll'll -Hi ]jmil.5 8 e S la J JS h Ing !o•vukC)g .SO l 10'• 10'11 10\'I -1i fltltPrll .10 7 1)'\0 ?l'O ?J'< _ '• lnll Reel!! 11 1r0 ii\ I V.+, "· dli f I k Be••lngs 1 J •11n •l\1 •111 -'• EIKO CP to ' 11 ... II ,. 1111 Sall 1,"3 ID ;I.I~+. 3"'1~ ~···· -' uca nes or as s. h•• Fd• l • 1111 :n 21 21 -1 E••' Air Lin 14,, _ ~~ 1111 Tl.T 1 os 32 ... R~~C:~'k 1. 5~~ n .. il:: Jl1•-'It e151 GF ,12r ~i~ ;!l\o ~~· .. 2• _,.r, lnr71.T l>IH I .... U,, ~\~ ;~·:.ra San Oemente Bank Ope11s IOOKMt ,7Sb lO ·~· >I •5V. -l'-E11r Vtlt 140 !l 1!~ 1~'\ it•; -11o ITT all t.50 > ~~,. tJ tJ ···- ' ll -ato E111Cadak ·,, 54J n•, 6t'o w,, Jh lntTl.T l>l'J l _,. I' •• elco f! JO .. , • Jt"' 16'• -11~ E1ta.oV1 1."11 llO l'/'IJ :n :n' = ... 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E1<>l11N•t !~d )1 ,,, "• l\O -'• tawal'L! t.t.O 6 1i\,. '' 24 _ ~ A San Clemente branch of e,'."mer,. ",M•• •,•,1 p , 1 1·~ -~, F1Paw1o1G 1 lM 1~·. 111, '''• -•· 1owaP1v l.36 )'1 :io 7il 10 .i." ., J>1 J\o l'~ -1-. &"llrt C~ 110 JI 71 •1 111"o '111 -'• loca Hc.i~ .M 15 25'• 211.< :M11o -lit c~urity pa cir i c National 1•,,'h ... ~S,!!., l.IO··· ... ,, , ••• 'l'' '& -:it F.llrt all . .00 '~ ,, ,1 ,, ITE Imp .60 11 2••· 14\o JI"• -'• ~ '" •• "" »h J '• ll''< -'• F.mtr Elec 1 11o11 u•o s-•4 -l'• Uf'IC cor~ :111 •j'o 'II ""' _,,, B k d r b • 81K~0Jc. 1.70 45 7llo lllV~ 10•~ -J1~ Fl'f'EI pf 8.90 1 Wi Wlol:io'• + , ITT Sv pf4.50 I lfJ 11S II! -.J an opene or us1ness Bl•l•Jcttn ... ' "'• 1••• 1''• t •• EmervAir 90 1 ~ •1•1 wo <fl'.'• -1'• -J.K . . 81111 L•vo 1 S 1l , 3J 1J '" Emll~r! 1 :!<> 1 J?'lo ,,.,, "'• -·~ -Friday al 115 N. El Camino Bloc~ 1-111 .36 t11 .. ,. *'• .. , -• ""moOl•I 11, s ?4''• 1.,., ,~ ... + 1) Jatk~~.t.11 .2• " 1·~ 1., a•, __ \, Blu' Rell 1,10 is » l•:i.:. u•; -'I> F'm""rc .to A 11•1 ''" '1'~ _ ~ Jac~A!t of ~o l 7 1 1 .,. ~ Real 91u8" ou.1s l 101 101 101 -1 "'nvlhMI~ .IO 101 "4• '°'" ,.,,~ _ v, Jll!g,.. .Jo ' 1•1 110 1,1 _"' · Sobt:ilt er•• •1 lo>' 10 \0 -~ Ene M Pit '' • uo 1,.. no +• Jantie11 .60!> '' 11•. 12~. "'' + .,_ The new branch will include 8,~,,,•~,.,c0.,,·:1 us 1~· 19•.; 19~ -~~ t'-"11111~ ev1 ·.1J ?e 111• 111; it _,., J•11&"F •.2et •1 lfi'n 1"• ,,,~ , · YI! 11,.• !t S'~ -!}• F.~ulG~• 1.~~ 10 ""'-Jn11 1~•; _ >.:. JaofnFd w! • 10',. 10•\ 101~ + \~ 'gbl d .1 9ond lo\CI .61 U 10 • 10 , lj • -~• FSB I...: 1 10 11 }I'< ,1 11,, + ,~ Ja11tn fnt.ille 1' "1'1\lo 11,., 11 a n1 epos1 ory, an escrow soo1<.Mtn 1.211 10 11•. 111o 1 ...., + v, '''"'' -, ,, .• ,, c ,,.. ,, Je1tnP1101 ~o ,0 16,, 1 ,,.~,, _. ;.• !lar<len ,,'XI •U 21'• 11 71VI + '• • ··""' ·• • ·• -J A •• 4>1 department and Sale de po'l•t 8oroV/ar I 1.S S9 21 11 11 1• -1'' E·~~lnl 1.'0 11 7Ho "'I 7'"• -1 1~ ,"'"~"' ,.., U 17~4 1111 11>; -•.t, · 9orm•ns .io 10l 13'1 12'-l 11!-o -v, Fthvl C" .I' 119 1~\~ u ;1•1 -''t :;~·~~DU 1.;~, 6 •I'• •0'• AO~O -•• I lllti ·d Rb 801 Edis 114 l6 l.5·~ J• J• -"> Fttoy! P'7.IO 11 n~ 31•; 11'• -1•• ~ · 11 1 26'i 15·; 1s11 -1'1. ac es. sa1 manager o · scur"• 1ni 1'1 u 14', "'~ _ '>'I ""vrolrld ·'"' 11 1614 1~·• 1~" -1i 111~~~1! ri•,•01 1 n•, n·~ 1111 -"'~" Col 8r1n!1Alr .50 JOO a>o I\• I'• -\-'I Fv1n•P ,6111) 1~2 l•\4 3:1•., .11•~ -1 ~ · 7 141~ Joi'• l4'. _ ._. ert a. 8rlOQ$! 2.olO• lt '1 ~1 ') 51'' .... 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'''• + ,.., · .1 6 9rown Co I• ''" ' l -l' l'im11V Fil' l lJ 1•'9 14'\ I•"• _ b Jo~ Ml9 1.IQ n '' lt•) lt', -) remain Open Unll p.m. 9w..Shlro .61 l 1) 17l~ l lo · ·· · F1n1'"1 Inc 16 lG ''• tl, -"o ICa1~r Al I x1:I l•\~ 34i, 31'> -~ Transact'·ons wi'll be accom-8!~.s,':" •. ~.so, ,1,s 1~:· fJ,, ~!a.=~ F1rw"' Fin 11 12'-'f 11•·· 1~1 • -•1 K,",' ,s1a11.11 ,, 11•~ 11•; ,,,, +114 !\,M., 1"' 21 •·' 20' 20" F1r1f\MI .lctb S1 '6.., u•, "'''' -1'• I.I om ,IQ 11 l•'l 1•1~ J•'•> U •-• b ·1 I p 0 Bo !!-'£Efo 1.':. 35 IJ' ~ 111~ 11~: : ' " !"AS tnll .01 l! lN lJ" • IJ ~ -·~ ,",,',"c ,',"• -,", ' !J :!' 5' -1 • P Sucu Y mat a . . X 8~ i= Pi.eo 2 1..., 111 1•0 -14 Ftoder1 .411 m '1111\t ,, .. , 16'' -'• · ' '°~ :I'll•\ '°"' -it1 5 CJ 6 8ud!let I~ 6.1 16 10~101\ 10 + Vr FtdMog T.tO U 21 7!~~ JJ>o -lo ~~n!j.['W'Ji' 1 l.i ll :lnVi ll'I'~ _ ... 308, an emente, 92 72, and fltttFora l.iO t~ ri:~ ~:z ~~ =11'> ~tdr: J1'r;, ~ l~ ~~: ~1~: +Vo KC Soulnd ', tlrr ~'1 ~ n =~,. by telephone at 492·9670, he l :,:,<,,•11!_ ..... ,·~ lJI •'• ''' '"" -"' FtdP1111c1 l t ,..,. 11•) 11·;, -1\' !8",_Gf ,'," 1 '114 11·~ ,1.•1 + i..: "· ,., .,.. :i. la'• ,.,._ "'"-•.. F P1p oil.II in :rr.1 "'~ n·,, ••• "'" .. . 6 1 70•\ 70'\ '°'I + ~ ' .. 'd Burl Ind I"° 1SI ll', J7''1 JH -~ F.c!SltflS ·'° xlf 70Vt lt•• 10'~ +·~ K•fY 111d 1' 101.i .... JO\ -.... ' Bu•lkor )Oe 41 JJV,JJ JI\. "-I.\ Fl'llDll>IS!r I N JS :J• lt'lo -•• IC111I 97d .:tO 55 >l\to "" mi._,, ... RurlNor ..i.u 19 P• 1''o 111 -"" ferro Cp 7' ' 17 16t; 11 -~• K.wttB .10b 1t lt>; ,,,,. 11'1> "~I Insurer Tells Gains eur""v "10 •11 11~ 17'• l1'~-"'°F1~c1 jci .. :io lt u•~-\~K•Y.s....llo .60 3t 1•t\ 1t1~ 1~11-• 8Ur'9hS 60 681 lltto 171'• 122lt -6 FleldciM j '41 "n 'Sh 71 ~~ -1 ICf'lblfr 1.ZO I 37 J1 l' + ... eu""U"" :10e •I !~'"' 1•1' Ulo -It f"lllrlll l,.t:1' • I H'4 ,~ }5 _" Kiiier Ind .so 16 1414 ,,,, 1• _ 1.,. -C-Fin FIHll!r1m SS 1Jllo 11'• 1)>1 -1 1Ctlk>11° 1.70 14 •l.1.4 41V. •1(\ _ ,,. • · Flr11tM 160 6t "" 3!'> •r.o -·~ll1M1n .ta '' 3!"1 ''Ii 3'1o-1 1: Clbol CD ·' • ,. l''' JI·~ Jti.lo -1>11 Fsl C~r1 int 112 ,,.. 3J h ' . -1''• l<'Mftmel .Ill ! 21''J 2' ,, -It• ~:11.~~~br n 1fl; 1fl~ 1t:;=::f1!Mhlt i,6'1 12 ~ 70, 10 -'~l(~nt'l(""'·/oD \11 "'I •l>l; tr t-ti.to' C1m11RL AS.a lO 19h 19\o ,,,1 t i\• FS!NCl!Y 7.•o Ul 6S •1•.• t••~ _ ~ ~FC~ D1 ''• ~~o Ct 7!11\ 1••11 111, -1'4'! ~•mPSP f ID :a ,,,. 1fV. 7"\o -"" Fs1N1151 .~. I 31'~ lll·• 3(1,, -l'o ,v u.i.! ,... , ,, 'I 21 --.1 d8rtw ."3• t ;,,, 1 -•~F!1chbcll .IO 11 111. 16'1 11 -'• trr..,.. .. 'G !< 16'' 7."~ 711~-l\l i dn Pie J :I'll I 5t'1 ~' 1 Ji'l -10 Fis/Ir F" ,!ri. 11 U 11 11 -·~ ICtrrM ~"·'° f 11V. Jj•~ U•,<, -t . ca,,.tlld 1.10 11 17>t "'• 1 1~• -I\ Fl&lltrScl 1• I lo ,,, •u-\, 4'. Caa C 8clc11 ., "'• 1S'1 1 17 -?•Ii Fl!mh''<I .!>O ' 1~" IC'• 10'• ., Per.~onal lHc in s uran ce ~!~~~tn, \·.~ ~~ ~r: ~t:: ~'..: .!~ ~1!"'~0't~~• ll 1!:~ ~;1• ;: • ='~ I d by 'lclr lit L'f c~r11tc~ 1 60 u 14•:. )]>, Jl'\ -1w Fl• G•1 .50 11 11''> 1' 11·~ ssue •~ opo an I c c1'<!trCP '.611 n lj'• :uto ,,.. -P'\ F•i Powlh ? &6 )!:' '1'1 A' -1~ Insurance Co. in the nrm's ",',',"w, .4111 •I I ~ llV. Ill.lo -1,1 Fii Sitt\ ' I ltll 19), c J • 11~1~'' ·~y -!~ Fh1orca .3•t J 6\11 2s~. 25~, _,, • Pacific Coast tcrritor\I lastcg',',f,~"•'·1·!! 1 "'' ••• 1•~ -n FllJOf arel 1., " •• -"· J " -31 1•'• ,:µ, 21 + ,,_ Fl., Tlotf .10 •30 1Ui 16'0 !•1'< -1 year amounted to $788.8.52,000. t',",,',,'·'° 111 ~"" ,fil '! _, rMt c111 1s .. o 1•·~ 1t1, -11 I C ~ l!s:~ I :Z 11:Z _t'U' ~:i":?IJ ·'° 1~ t 1\ {t1~ ::;., =',, "J ga n of $34.757,000 o":er lbe !e::c0:~1.~ie 11 11' tt •i-"3 Foot• c "° 21 101., ~ ..,~ _ "': previous year, according to •1t1111et;:P • ..' N U\.\o 's"Jl" -iv. fOOlt Min • 11 11 u -v. The ~11ow1111 11 • kn 111 '¥1'11boll u.,.· I P If• C fltn f.'""'·"" J ~\It ~l' l't -11 ForOMal 2,'° l'ICI ,,,,. IC'• 41 -.. lfl !flt llock ITWlrklt """r11. · the annua ac 1c oasl head ,-,"' .JO 11 21 " ~ _,,, ,D1 .... ~K1 .to -,, ,,n ,,,, ,,,, -11J. .s.111s ,1111,,, •rt u ...... ,.1,1 · I t>nt d'r I I'\ I"\ 1•1 -\.It M'IC oll.IO ~ .W )I~ Jll~ ,, """ • of ice repon released b y cen Hu<1 1.41 ' ~ "'"' n~ +. •t 001 WI\! .IO 11 ,1..,,, uv. _-. 1-Atsa •IT• or t111rn. (l.....A,t'lflu1t r11W • '1 Ir I'! • · 'de I Cenll!Lt 1 " lot ??to '1 '' -1~1 Git W'h · 111 1 151) l 1J -"' .iut lloc:t dlYldtflol. -Lll!Uldtll!ll ti.-.. ll' e opo 1 an s v1~ pres1 n c 1t1L1 '"''.st JlOO Mt Jt '' .. • ~ullor"l .ta ll2t f114 ii :12~ -~ Miid. o-otc~ or .. w 111 ,.,, ,11.(t'. J11mes E. Stretch. ~::tt_P,s~;'t '' 1,~ lf\'o tM -uf:r'"",,. . .o ·10 »...,ti ' ~-1 •tan t1¥1MIMll .....,,kl''''"''...:.·' In 'ddluon lo per°'O&J J>'fe CC~M. I!,~ 1\ '•' ~~ n:~ ?l~: 11~ =~ ... ~~I (,g I~ J., 7'~' ~ = ~~ .. -Ill .flicit Ollrl111 1'11. 1tll.ft.,..,: "" ~" ... 1•1 3' ,,,, n1. • •0 l"uout In ,,7! Uf I~ H II -t~ .._, ¥ttw Ol'I tt'i!lw!Rrol or t1141U'1"""J I n s u r a. n c e. •-.145,861 1·n ,c~~.~· .,1111 ~ 1.11, 31•. ll'• -•• -G-·~ dtiu. -a.ci.r .. or Hkl " 111.-.-""' •u 1' 19'~ lt"o 1''\ , 1,... ftlf'. 1'-De<IM'M Ill' .... ,.,,,.,,>! group hfe insurance was c.,.,,. 1 4Ctl •! 11•, 11'• 11~ -'• "~ '" i.se 11l ~ ff:? E'; -1 •!Oet: <11vldtftd or •Ht 110. t-Dec1•rt111 I ed I "' P If. Co c .. J.tfH ,llO u 1'l 1 .... 11~ -~. !~ f:, 01~ ~M ~ 1, jl 1 ''i.4 It !ltlll 11'!11 yur, an 1«"""'1111\>t Ion~ ssu n e ac 1c ast ter· CIHlll"A 'I:: '4 ,~~ 1c;, 11. -h .... ,,. ~1~ 1 1 ~ 1, = ., wttr1 c11y""""' ""'""'" n-Nl'll 10~·· r Ito r y, Vt b I ch includes~~~~ ,,.._ .• : ~,: tr'~ 1111'!:.... '• 1m Siio 1 JG '°'" ',". ~ . -1~ .,..,.,1<1 !hit r~r. ti...._ omtttH. • , C llf la N d At. c.._.s i :io it 11 '~" j'"' ... , '"'l 11/1.h 1f Jf' J\;, = ~ ta•reoi or no t(l;on l•ktn 11 1111 tilYIO~, 9. om ' tva a, 1zona, .. ,,.f'MfN;.·' J' ,. .. ,,.., I _,,, ..... 0 '•"° I II '• -q mtf'llllt. r-Dtc1.lrtcl ., Miii In 1tl'll ....... Utah Washington Oregon C11•ue""" 1 • •I '' ••~· "''I -•• ·~ft · 1,J11 T ~ n•, •• ,. _ •• "9Ct tt....,.M. •-P1111 111 dttk our•~· I ' , '"'""~lrft lfl ,, ,11, 1) ,,,,~ _•: lflot.k ,., t 11 I 1flll lf11 -'f lfJ'll, """"~(Ill!\ ......... Ol'I tll~n• ~ Idaho, Hawall. and ~font ana. Ch..,,.,HY '.,··• u s1•. »>. J' -'• .,.,...v i...., , •'• 1 1 -1, Ill' tt•111rtt111t!Ol'I ..... •-S•ta 111 ,,.1 .. P.ymen" lo pollc•hold•-,.~~~ • ..:. ,. ''• , •• ~1~ -,, ,,,,1111 Ctn 1• ,.,, u·. 14'• cio-c·.iltd .... -l':•41YldtM Y-l!NI! ...... 1 '" • ~ ·m.., ,., '''• 5!'o JI!, -•o tml11tn .56• Kl lOlt ~;: J.8'1 fltlMI •1111 "ltl In hilt, •4it-&.S><lllll~ and t>e-.ieflclarles In lb e ~~~111 If ':~,· •J:; ·~:~ _ '• l~Yt ~ ~ I~ ,.., 1,:; = ~~ Ollllon. •r-h r\ehl 11W-w111111ut w•r: · C It '"~ lj 1••• lJ~. 1j'• -"• ATr1n 1.0 .ff !j u•, ~ -JYI r1n1'1. --Wll'll w11T1nt., ,,,.._Wht~ Pacific Coast territory reach· c~l~11 ~ .. 1'14 l 1r , 11•, 1 ._ -'• f1' ••nc ~ 'i '' "'• 12·~ 0111t1buttd . ..i-w11 ... 11111tt. M-Nt.rt d 1249 ••• 600 d · Jh Chl,~e11f J '° 1''• j"1 '4'+ -1\ n(l!Ol1 ld 1 '• lli,'', J.!.!~ -I\ dlY cltlhltn. ¥1-ln blllkl'\lolq er toc.i ... t •"°"• ur1ng e r,.,111• f'Nw 11 1~1, ~·· '"" -•• ~I Y. '' l '' ll O'' -'\ er11<1I• or bl!11111 ~'"" ll!lOlr 1114 )l'ar, which WAJI An increase Of f~:'f.' .~r ,:: 'u:" ' f'' = ;; ,J''-. \l'Jr. ~; n•r; ''"" +l(t 81flknll!la< Act, ar IKVl'ltl .. "° •11tfl • I " I" -0, •• 1968 C11rl1ct1 ptt J t114 !'" ... " lffl .,...... "',' .. " .. -ffl t'Ol'IN~IM. f-FO"-ltl> '""' Mite! lt . .,.,, ,,,vw .., · (~-II ,)0 IJ lt 11 fl'I -no nlllrto ,,.. fl t t -~ .-ile'"I "uai111flell In. lflarket Syuabols ,---- s Monday, M11 C, 1970 SC ,. Monday's Closing Prices-"Complete New Y~rk Stock Exchange List DAILY PILOT JJ -.. ..... ..... u. a... ea.. Briefs KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Tran• World AlrlJMs nid it will build a 115 million pilot tratnlna cemtr at Kanus City lntem11»na1 AJrporl. 'Ille new fadltty I• ezp«ied 1o be completed In 1974 and will be financed under the KaMQ City revenue bond program. WASHING TON (UPI) The Air Force h1.3 awarded TexM Instruments tnc . a SU million {'()ntract for developing and producing p h 0 t 0 • i D• lorpretatioo equipment. CLEVELAND (UPI) Arlhur G. McKee tr Co. an- ll<Alh<ed ti will build a ''multi millton dcillar" pot food plont in Qklahoma ~ty for 'Ralait.oo Purina Co. ·' MILWAUKEE (UPI) Alll>Chalmers hu t. e e n aw1rded two NASA cont.Tada toUltng mr llOll,000 for the dtvelopmetjt of fuel cel1 power l)lr1t rrui. ' HAMILTON, Ont. '(UPI) Canadian Weatllllboul;e' Co. Ud. !aid tt wlll lat olf IOO ...ten II ooe GI Ill J>!anta htre fer one week sWung 1t18y ·15, di.le to "llU:ll\8'• 11lt.1 of major appliaoces. BARTl.ESYJLLE, O k I a , (UPI] -PhUllps ' P.V.leum Co. anr\owx:ed the' d1tc0vt1"1 of oil in I/I•. Nortti Sea. 'Illa com~any b operator at U. sit& for a four-eorn.paQy 1roup con>it~ng of P h 1111 p I , Petrofina, Petrcoord, a n 4 AGIP. 1.Z DAILY PILOT Mo....,, M11 4, !9lO ENSENADK RACE RESULTS • • • ( c.otljNod ln>ia Page II) NHYC. a.ASS C-Destiny II, John Hooteo, BCYC; (2) Alsuna, II, Alleo Puckel~ CYC; (3) Firtbrand. George W e s t • NHYC; (I) Ana Marla JI, Al Schollennan, BCYC; ( 5 f Juno m, -rt Jahn, eve. a.ASS D -(I) •The Odd Couple, Rooald Lee, DRYC ; (2) Bewitched. Norman Scott, LBYC; (3) "'quarius, John Holiday, LBYC; (4) Damoiselle, St.eve 0 e .s k y , CYC; (5) Balclutha, John Kinc>ld, CBYC. a.ASS E -(I) AuSJicious, ll<lbert Batcher, SWYC; (2) Volante, Mike Hirsh, BYC; (J) 'Ibe Great Pumpkin. Dick Lindsey, BYC; (4) Malahini, Jack Bootwicl<, BCYC; (5) BUtzen,.Mike Busch, SDYC. Pacific Handicap RaclJlg Fleet OVERALL -Mossback, Don Moss. BCYC. CLAM A -(I) Mossback, (2) Flame, Dick Ramage, LBYC ; (3) Adios Dos, C..rge Cooo, NHYC; (I) Visioo, Mitt StraUord, SDYC; (5) Sin Miedo, Jack.Phillips, LBYC. CLASS B -(lJ Vaya, Pete Ut.cbt, LBYC; (2) Teragram, F. L. Anderson, SI BYC; (3) Squarion, Harold Moorehead, KHYC; (4) Estrella del Mar, Howard Scroggins, Sl BYC; (5) Numnum II, Ray Booth, BYC. CLASS C -(I) Golden Hind, B y r o n Chamberlain, SSSC; (3) Bay Bee, Lee Thompson, LB Y C ; (5 ) lsoceles, Robert M u r p h y , ss.5C; (5) Skaal II, Tom Armslrong, CYC. CLASS D -(1) Sea Nymph, Jim Hobnooo, LAYC; (2) Gracie, Jobo Howell, BCYC; (3) Kiwi, Clarke Sumner, BYC; (4) Westwind, Richard !Jelden, CIYC; (5) Sangrita, John McGee, SI BYC. CLASS E -(I) Quissett, John Troeger, KHYC; (2) Quintessence, Addison SBJfYer, LA YC; (3) Sea Watch, Sidney Hactlll, LSF; (I) Connecticut Yankee, William Eisenberg, DRYC; (5) Inchclllfe, Crie & .Randleman. MBYC. MORF·A -(I) Sloopy, John Velthoel, AYC; (2) Retreat Neill led:-~ OC·EAN RACING WINNER -The Columbia-43 sloop Encore, owned by the "Balboa mafia", Fred MacDonald, Herbert Riley, Bill Lawhorn and Dick Blattennan, was the winner of the President of Mexico trophy for handicap winner in the Newport to Ensenada race, 11, Robert A. Smith, PMYC; ._ . t,i.;;;i>i (3) Valhalla, McFarland, Morel & Ball; (I) Serena, Phil BUSS FOR THE DONOR -Phyllis Baillie, wife of Doane NHYC; (5) Carronade, Jack Baillie,. owner of the 12-meter sloop News .. Barry & Klingensllllth, LBYC. Boy gratefully receives first-to-finish trophy from MORF-B -(I) DaunUess, John Payne, general chairman of the Newport to Tayior Holmquist, LBYC; (2) _E_n_s_en_a_d_a_r_a_c_e_. -------------I Windsoog, Walter Gleckler, -ABYC; (3) Ventolero, Bill Kitchens, SSSC; (4) Ama Verde, Dick Watkins, LBYC; (5) Volador, James Tullock, PMYC; First Columbia 50s Perpetual Tnlpllles PRESIDENT OF MEXICO (Ocean Racing Handicap Win~ ner) Encore. National Race Slated PRESIDENT OF THE U.S. (PHRF handicap w i n n e r ) -· . U.S. COAST GUARD (MORF overall w in n e r ) Sloopy. EMIGH MEMORIAL (Firsl MORF to finish) Dauntless. FIRST DIVIDED HULL YACHT -Rascal. FIRST PHRF KETCH - Milare JI, Paul Werner, DRYC. FIRST SCHOONER Teragran, F. L. Anderson , St BYC. . FIRST TRIMARAN 'Ibe first Columbia.SO na- tional champiooship "Tegatta is .scheduJed to get WK!er way July 19 lUlder the sponsorship of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. The three-day regatla will feature two races on Saturday, July 19, and one on Sunday: A feature match race - which Will have no bearing on the champiooship, i s scheduled on Friday, July 19, between skipper George Post of Oyster Bay, N.\'. -with an East Coast crew -and expected to participate in the regatta, including a crew from Great Lakes and the Pacific Northwest. Future plans call for holding the even-year championships on the West Coast and the regattas on years on the East Coast. National champion.WPS for the Columbia-26 Mark I will iilso be held at Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club on the same weekend. Approximately 20 entries are expected in lhis class. Magnificent Obsession. LAST Y ACllT TO FINISH -Nyad, l.aJTy Collins, MBYC. a yet to be determined Westtl0iii0iii0iii0iiiOiiiOiiiOiii0iii0i-.I Coast skipper and crew. About 15 Columbia-SOs are LEGAL NOjICE LEGAL NOTICE HOTICI O" "USLtC HIAJllNG$ NEWPOJIT ·MISA UfllFIEO SCHOOL •IFOJIE THI PLANNING OISTJllCT C:0MMl5SION OF THI CITY OF Notice lnvOln• Slds FOUNTAIN VALLIY NOTICE IS HEREIY glvtn !hit! on NOTICE IS HE~EIY GtVl':N ll!et !lit Wednadolv, ,,,,.~ u, 1'70, 11 J:lO p.m .. 80flrd of EdYcatlon cf the NewDDrt-M1 .. in '"" COll!lCll CNmblr, City Hill. lOl'OO Unllled' Sc,,.,..,! Ols!rlt1 or Or1no1 Co•mt'I', Slllll' Av.,111, Faunraln v11~v. c111tor-C1Ulorn11, wm rHe!vt 1eelld bld1 up to nlfi, IM Pllnnlnll ComrnlHlon wlll l>Glcl 11:00 A.M. on Ill• 1111'1 o.v ol Mav, 1'10 pvtillc Merlnlrl on .,,. fo!lowlrt111 1ppll· 1t Ille office of 11ld Sc:llot>l 011lrlct, to. uttont: Clled •I 1151 Pl1ctnll1 Avtnu., Co1t1 UI bM C~ nu A~llc111on sub-Mfia, Calllorn11, 11 whTct! time w1d bld1 mlttsd by PJIC COfl!Orl!lon for cl!a~ will be 1>11bllcly Ol>f!Md tnd rucl for: of -611 PT0twrly localed' on !hf WOJIO JIJIOCESSING CENTEJI llOUlllio911 1kl1 of w1rMr Ind 8111lwlrd At! bldi 1r1 lo be In 1ccarilanc1 with fl'l)m Al Genertl Agrlculh1r1I Dlstrlu Condl!lons, lns1ructlon1, ind S~Ulce· to R~ Hloh Otnllty M11!llpl1 i>wenino 11or1s wnlch are· now on 1111 In tile otrlc.e DllJnc:t or more rellrldl,,. d11!rlc!. of !he PurcNslng Agent ol "'1d SchoOI f>•tclsl Plfi11 11'7 111111 In C011lunc11on . WI"' ,.,. I~ l'IOlld ione d'll...... Ob!r!ct, US7 PllCtnh•. Avenut, Coste CU f'tKIM PIH itUJ Appllullon sub-Mew, C1llfoml1. tnlnW by T1<0 11111 IOI" int conitruc-Each bidder mYd 1ubm1I • bid dtDosll lion of 1 1111 food resl111rtnl on prop-In llie form of I cerllfftod or UJhl~ erty IOC•lm on l!>e northwnt 1kl1 etl cl>eck or 1 bid bCmd equal 10 flv1 11tr c1nt Lt Allrnfl» A-and 8r001chur1t 15~0! of ll!e 1mcvt1I of ll!e bid, n..o. $1,..t, P&v1bl1 to the order of IM NIWl>Orl-Mtw Thtff rM!terl ere bell'IQI pn1<;n1ed i:iur· Ufllfled Scl\ool Ol1ltld , A Ptrtorrnlft« ....... to Ille Plent1lng LIW$ of th• Sl•te Bond' m1v be fltQUlred 11 the dlKrs!lon el Olllfomle fGov't. coos. 65.000 .i S"'I.) of ff1.e Oi,trlct. Ill Ille lve<11 of t1llurt to eM tllt Founl1!n Veller MUJ1lclp&l Coot . .,.,,,, Into sue!! con1r1<t, 11\e: Pl'OCffd1 01 Tm. 11. The nn. d'l•ll09 will lnvolv1 ll!e thedt wlll be fortellld, or In can •11 eft'llf!d"*" to $«tlllne1 Olstrlct M1p o1 1 band. tl\t: full sum tllenot' wlll '9-S.10. TM lOll"" Code. llll'llng M1ps. be !orfeltl!<I to wlcl School Oldrld OI f>rtciM "*-...., Plol Pll111 ire on tlls Ill the Pl8n"ine eep.rt-.it Ind 1,1 0•1"9t County. nitllblt tor pUbtk lnspiKllOn Ind CJC· No bl6de-r mlY wf!Mr1w Ills bfd for •mlrlltloll. • "'lod of torty-llve 1~51 <Hn 1tttr tlltl Tllosl dtllrlnt to testify In 11..or or d1•e -.1 fa<' !!It 00tnlnO ll'ltl'IOf. "' bpposltlon lo lllfl• rl!QUISl1 Ind p,,,. l,,. llottd ol Edvc•llon of 11\1 Ntwt>Ort· p(ll.Jll will be otver1 111 ~rfun!!r 1o Me11 U"llled Sc:-1 D11lrlcl rewrve• ni. do 10. tt ,.,,..,,,_, lrlto..,...llon It c!alred, rl9M 10 relKI 1111 OI' 111 bl(l1, Ind nO! ~ ll'lfY tOrlllCt The P!1MJno Peper!. lleettlftlly t ccepl Ille loW1'1f bid, Ind to "*" et "2-2.ci~ •Piii rtler "" z-Clllnge waive '"' lnlo!'rM111r or lrr"ulerlt'I' In i21• _..., Pr1d 11 Pie" t1'1$3, e~Y bld re<ttvt'd. Pt.ANNING COMMIS510Jf' OF 011111 M•Y I, 1910 THE CITY OF NEWPORT-Ml'SA IJNtFtEO FOUNTAIN \'ALLEY SCHOOL DISTJllCT NED W. l"AR$0N5 of Otlnff '°""'ty· C1lllor111t Adlnll Pltnftlno Dlrtctor •nd av Dorottw H1rvey '""" s.r111ry to mt' Purdtol1lng APlfll f>lllWltnl CO!nmlslion 64--1100 ....,..., ,0rwn9t <Mat Otlly Pllol. Pvbl!sh9d Or-.. COl1! l).;l'f Jlllol MiY 4.-"11 -13$.10 MtV (, TI, 1f19 tlf.1t ·' HAUOR BASEBALL RE'GISTRATION 2nd, 3rd & 4th Graders. C.., lffl ......., wk Ml"" Nt•'-ntthtNtluJ lONl 1 4 LOCATION TeW!nkl• School Lincoln School JN .... •lM P.M. lrd f,Nd-4:41 P.M. ... I:• Jiff P.M. O•tr 4th, 1111 P.M. °' ht..-..VS ., ................... 111111 t'1e 11111'111 ....,., ... fMY "'lltlel' • ....., ..... .,.. ..,_ 1'1 .. A.M, Mii t i• l>.M., If Mlf" Mr ....... ~ I .. Qllltl1111, C..lit MIM. f''-91 '42>ftt2, n OMEGA !or a lite time ol prC?Ud po$M$$lon First watch on the moon Now you 100 can own thl• omega &pudmuler cllfoPl011rlph. 11·1 tf\8 NIM Wl\Cll wom by •11 ApOllo •1trona1111 In out•r •o•~•. Hewt duty 1t1l,.fut t!tel CIH, ffll!Qlto Ina IH•otl•l -················'111 Hethr H•11tl1ttt•• Sttoppl.. C1•ter C...., IMCh & ldl~ 2JOO H•rbor H1111ti119tn lr.d. c .. t.Mftll hcicll 145·f415 192·1101 o,.. M••·· Tll•n .. Fri. 'tfl t pm ac.u,....,k.rd··M•tfet' Ch•• SHOP SEARS 'SUNDAYS 12 Noon -.to 5 .P.M • Monday tbru Sa1arda1 • ,9:30 •• m. to 9:30 p.m. ALLSTATE PASSENGER TIRE GUARANTEE Guarantttd Againtt: All 1ire fa.il0tts from oormal n»d bazarJJ or defeCu in ro1t1crial or T10rkmanship. For How Loni: For the lift nf the original tread. '«'hat Sears -..·u1 Do: lo cxchanse for 1he titt, rtpl:m:e it, th.ar,11iD;;: the pro- por!ion of curreur .ellins price plus Federal Excise Tu th~1 rerresent.t ueul u!Cd. Repair oail pu~rutts u oochwge. Guarantl'ed A.a:aintl:Ttead wett-oot. For llow Lon•= The ownbcrof cnootbl spccifi~. What Sea" Will Do: In n change fot W tire, repl&Ct it,char1ing 1be CUI' rent seHing price pliu F~ ~-ise Ta Int the follofl'in& allO"-'Kc: ~lonth• Gaaraateed 18to24 7.0llxl5 40.95 32.95 2.85 6.50d6 31.95 25.95 2.61 7.00xl6 40.95 32.95 3.00 TUBELESS BLACKWALL 7.00x14 29.95 23.95 2.47 ~7 ro .•9 4v Pri~s Efittrivt Be,iinning T oU.y Tbru ·rues., l>tay 51b , Sears lll'e and Auto Center 40-Month Guarantee E78-14/7.3SXI4 Tubeless WhitewaU Plus 2.46 F.E.T.and OldT'are • Special inner sealer keeps tile air in. Clings to nails and other foreign objee!B and allows you to keep rolling ' ... Wider and deeper than mo•L non• belted tires ••• puts more rub- ber on the road for better li'a.,. tion in all kinds of weather • Allraclive double .. lripe while· walls Size ae, ... ~ Sol• , ........ r ........ f.l.T. '""' Pri<>o Tube-1~ Wh\lt!Wall E78-14/7.35xl4 '42.oo , l!.00 !!.46 F7S.l.a/7.7Sxl4 45.00 35.00 !!.56 r.78-14/8-2.5:.14 49.1)0 39.00 :!.75 H78-14/8.55xl' s~.oo , 40.00 :!.97 J78-14/8.85x l4 S.i.00 .C.00 :'IJ3 F78-15/7.7:;x15 45.00 35.00 :!.59 <;;g.J5}8.15:id 5 49.00 39.00 ::?.:u ll'8-l::i{R.45x15 52.00 40.00 J.OI J 7S. I 5f8.85x 15 54.00 42.00 3.41 f,78-1510.fWl/IJ.15"115 "1.00 45.00 3.!7 SAVE20%! Sears Express Mileage XLW Truck Tires Regular '29.95 95 6.iOxlS Tube-Type Bl1ekwollto Plao·2.40 F.E.T. • Six pfy rited nylon cord construction for strength and dependable service e 3-rib tread design. Wrap-around shouider for easy steering NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED ..,,,,. ,..., 1• , .. _ n1 .. u• " -., a .• 11 -•-• ..,11, -""'·''"' Ol(I WI M»J ·--u .. au -. --· "'''"' U-• r•tnl _ .. ., ••-w .. 1·1-m -11 lfM.•-l -.. W1ll eo-M ,..,,11, Oii t ·ffU _,_ ... 9·1"1 ••-.. ,.....,. ,.....,.,_.~..,.11w. -_,, --.. ""'"' ~--.1 .. nlt, u1 .. 111 .., .....,.-. ""9 llL too a.&•~,,.., hft .. 1 'a"'"" .. •,,,._ .. ..,~ •·• =•=• • ,_...., ... ,. ·-· -.. ·~l•! ......... --.. .. ....,, _. ..... .. ........ ..... " . ~ .............. -.. ,,_ ... '"' • ··~· -~~·~~~~~~~~--------------------------------......... Blakel~k : a 'Man Involved • R etired General Served Country, Helped Plan San Clemente • B7 l\ICllARD P. NALL ot a. Delly r'llll Stiff• A man who fought bandits on the. Mezlcan bo<der aJ1<l helped plan the logistics of the Okinawa U.vasion and too Bile.ill atoll atOfrllc tests gazes aL the sea now from his San Clemente home or putters bmily in the garden. Brig. Geo. David H. Blakeloek (USA· Ret) ls a man involved. He always h<is been, Whether it was p1arming a vast military ope.raUon for his country or a •ew city hall for his commwlity1 a precisl<* mind was at work. San Clemente in 1950 was a big change for a retiring geoeraL lt was a eileepy village where everyone met on Del Mar when they weut to pic.i: up their mall. It was this atmosphere the general and his wile had cJJO.sen. 'this &xi the pro~· imity to the sea. But it was also a time of pain for a ma.R who bad ended 39 years in the Army, June of 1960. One of bis .sons, Davld, was a lieutenap.t oC engineers with the First. C.avalry Division in Korea. lie was killed in a aorlhcrn advance in October of 19SO. KEPT BUSY It ~'as a time to keep busy for the general. Work lielped dull the paia. "Jt View Fro1n the Tot• ' Lone tourist looks out over Dana Harbor from view point at end o( Street of the Blue Lantern. Boats take r efuge in calm waters shelter· ed by cliffs, while wind whips puf-fy clouds and whitecaps outside the breakwater. Mm1ni ng Gets Board P ost James S. Manning of Dan a Poi nt, viC9 president of the planning and arcbltectural firm of William L. Pereira Associates, bas been elected to the board of directors of the Child Guida11ce Center ol Oiango C:OO.ty. Mannlng, wbo was closely involved la the development of UC Irvine, cur· rently ls directing extensi ve additions to St. Jude Hospital in Fullerton and Sf. Joseph's Hospital 11 Orange. Mrs. Manning Is active In the Coral Key, Sail Clemente auxiliary of the Child Guidanre Center, which has a satellite center ht San Clemente, and will be installed as president ot the auxiliary May 13. The guidance center Is located in Costa Mesa and also has satellite centers in Orange and Garden Grove. The facilities provide low fee diagnosis and treatment of emotionally d Is tu r bed children and adolescents. gave me an lnceoUve to carry on '1here be might have cmrled on," ' said Blakelock, born In lll:i and slancfulg 6 feet, 2 inches tall today, ;straight as an arrow. Appoinlment to the city pluning com- miSsion in 19$0 laUPCbed a second career. Appolatment to the counctl followed to 1951 with elecUon in 1952; election as mayor in 1954 and servicti la that pose until 1958. With a twlnk1e, Gen. Blakelock i>ays, "1 was elected oil in 1960." A civil engineer with a degree from Cornell UnJversity, Blakeloct looks on the Saa Clemente years as a time of accomplishment and plunlng for the inevitable growth ~t followed. . There was enlargement or the golf course to 19 homes: es.:pansion of an inadequate sewage system and rec.lama· tion Of the effluent to water the golt course offsettiJlg the tn1dequat.e water supply: development of plus and site acquisition for a new dty ball, and inauguration ot the city manager form of government. Fl.AlATED BONDS This was nailed down later by a non-. Aliso Beach Parking Bids Set May 15 Bids will be opened May lS lor the parking concession at the coonty 's Aliso Creek Beach ii South Laguna. Provisions of the proposal, as ouUlned by the county Real Property: Services Department, call for the beach parkiJ1g lots on either aide of Pacific Coast Highway to be open seven days a week from May 29 to Sept. 30 and weekeods and hoUdays onJy from Oct. 1 through Nov. 30, 'Parking fees are limited to I cents per car on weekday1 ZAd $1 on Saturdays, Swxlays and holidays. The bidder will have the optio" of a good and beverage concession at 55 per day. , It is estlmatefl that the county will gain $1.1,000 a year revenue from the concession. X-rays Offered In San Clem ente A mpbile chest X-ray truck open to the public will arrive May 7 al lhe Shorecliffs Shopping Center to offer chest X·rays under sponsorship of the San Clemente Junior Womu's Club. · The mobile unit will be open for two days. On Thursday the houn will be 2 to 8 p.m. Friday's schedule at the parking area near Market Basket will be from II a.m. to IS p.m. Each e1amiution will be interpreted by physicians who are chest disease specialist!:. Abnormalities such a s tubercu1osi.9, lung cancer or heart eolargeme1.ts will be spotted and reported. Everyone 15 years old and older Is eligible for the service for the $1.50 fee. Reports are inailed within two weeks. El Rancho has the hottest price in top;n! SUPERIOR ••• BEEF ••••••••••••••• profit corporatioa acting for lhe city to float the boads to build city bait In a leaw.{lack ag_reemept. Blakek>ck was and is ~ry of lhe corporation. "I am hoping to be able to survh•e to see the bonds fully retired and tho city the owner of the property,'' he said. The general's mililary career dales back to 1911 in Washington, D.C., where he enllsled in the National Guard while &till la hlgh school. Ordered to active - duty in 1916 when trouble broke out aJong the Mexican border, he \\'as sta· tiooed at Douglas, Ari%:' The calvary was PaP'.ollln& from San Diego to Brnwnsvllier Hb wile, Lula Ann, a musician, loved Dooglu. She bean! the buglar sound the call to arms wbe• It meant action for her husbaad. He slipped her a .45 automatic plstol and rode ofl in wool uniform into the desert beat where on one instance his patrol was ambushed by Mexican ban- dits. He was unscathed. Anny wives then rode the mule-d rawn ambulance to the commi~ary to shop for groceries, PACIFIC MISSION Ge.a. Blakelock stayed with horses until about January of 1942. He left for the South Pacific and World War II as a full colonel, establishing a base on the Island of Tonga Tahu as a supply point that helped protect the sea rou\c to-Auatr.Ua. Later be joined Admiral Chester Nimitz, commander and chief of the PacHic Fleet, as executive officer for the newly organized logistic section that laid vital plans for invasions or the island groups known as the Gilbert!'.i, hfarshalls and Marianas. General Blakelock later b e c a tn e logistic11 officer for the 10th Army pl;_111 - ning logistics for the conquest of Okinawa. 'rhis included the supply and activities of 300,000 to 400,000 troop<.; in a protracted operation lh al included blasling the Japanese elite frorn \11(• sawtooth ridges on the southern p<irl ol the island. "Supplying this force over 8.000 miles of ocean presentetl sonie d_ifricult problems." the general said with nice understatement. RESISTING ATIACK Although the Japanese 11·ere 1hrowu1g everything they had into the air, Blakelock credits the Navy for absorbing much of it by running interefcrcnce. "The fleet was steaming without slop for some 80 days and resisting attack constantly," he said . Okinawa was the last n1aJor or1erall oR of th~ war. Gen . ..Douglas h1acArthur was back in the Phillipines and Blakelock began working with MacArlhur's slatf on plans for invasion of lhe Japanese mainland using Oki11awa as the spring board . The atomic bomb put a hall to this. After the . war endt.'<I , Blakelock reported to Washinglo1t to join a joint military task force under Vice Adm. William Blandy that conducted the atomic bomb te.sts at Bikini. Ships were set up as targets around the island and iAst.rumentation placed aboard them to measure the effects of both air and undersea explosions. COMBAT P!LOI' While the general was servi•g on Okinawa, he was joined by his older son, John, who ls now a lull colonel In the Air Force, a combat pilot and y 001 ounces each , •• big enough f or satisfaction! l le~t '<'m u lh•Y. ~me •.. enjoy a fiesta thflf week f Enchiladas ........... .... . ....... 39¢ Taco Sauce ............................ 19¢ Yan de Kamp's ••• Beef, Chc1_'·l'. ('hi1:kcil ! 7 ~ oz. l!o::;arita ••• all the zest you want!.•., 7 oz. Chili and Beans ...... ... . .. ....... 39¢ Jronnel'•••• heat and serve! 1 5~ oi. can. Compz,.t1 'the ltferlran numt' tvilli f i11rr p1·od11rc! Fresh Green Onion s ........................ : ... ~~ .............. ~ .. 5' Garden goodness yon'd expect from El Rancho! SDAPl>l'. flnor fo onltl.nco 10 l2lallf. dishes! A1l invltatimt to 3ervt ho ntc mn4~ r.hili.' Groun d Beef fo r Chili ............. 1 •• ~ ... -... ~ ............ 6.9~ El Rancho ~nalltY, betf ••• !re!h ground "chunkY," at~l· to malt'• rich .. , meatier d!IU r • . 111ake Jt A J.fexic.-'l.n meal • , • salute our Southern neigh~ hors as they celebrate "Gin· co de Mayo" Monday, Mu 4,, 1970 s DAILY PILOT :r DAILY PILOT Stt11 P~o't AN OLD HORSE SOLDIER STANDS TALL IN SAN CL EMENT E Brig. Gen. David H. Blakelock {USA, Ret.) aeronauticol engineer '"ith .an T\tlT Uegree. Assigned for a ll1nc as chic[ or transporlation for Army field forces, Blakelock 's last co1nn1anrl was a~ co111- manding officer of C;1n1p Stonem:1n ;1t I'ittshurg, Calir. l>c:-p1le ht<.; milil;.iry :-.crvicc fron1 the i\tcidcan bori.Jrr to ll~~ bloodv war in !he l-'aci/1c, Bl<ikl·lock suffered his worsl inJUry u1 Sar1 Clt'n1cnle 1n rf'trnl yC"ars \1hrn 11 hllt· 11urk!r.g-out:-;1dc his cliffto['I ho111l' he ll•ll 60-fcct and broke his neck. Jl's a hit slirf now ::iftt>r physician.~ "put it 111 .i 1 ILC and put somf"' gon(I ~111e tlicrt•'' h11! ht• f11nel 1uns well, hi~ go.id hu.111nt and cticr~ intact. I [is 1110.,L n·1 l'n~ hobby ha~ her11 l1nt1 ~t·kt'cpu1~ :lnd cooking since his 1v1fc suHcre1I painfu l injury 1n a lri!Hi• ;"r-· c1d<"nl. ''She. sa}s I've become quite ;:i gou rntel coo k," he bcan1cd. AC'l"IVE llETlllEE Sinre rrtircmcnt he 's kept bu sy a<; a mentbcr nf the Orange County Jlcpubliran Cl•ntra l Committee. the Oran:;e County Coast 1\ssociation, lhe SURVEY SI-IOIVS l'ES. NO, WllA.T? i\1c~llN~V ILLE. Ore. !UPI) fh:irll'~ rilcKN·n of radio station Ki\IC:\l in this t•on11nunily of !l.750 has an- nounrcd results of a survey of rca c· tion Lo President Nixon's decision to send troops Jnlo Cambodia. Of 120 persons he talked to, he round 54 in favo r of the President's action and 42 aj':!ainst. Th~ remain ing 24 hadn 't heard abou t the J>residcnt's plan. . I ' ·• Orange Counlv f'h1lh1rmnnir Sori rhnirntan of llif' Inca ] S~•l1, lif'1l Al rr serv ice and as fJJ.•t f'lnstc r of th"' S, 1 Clemente t.1asonic l.iit' • • •~1: t ch:i m 1:i.1 of a grand lodr,c romm!l tr>~·. llonors ha\'c 1nclut!e, I th,· d.«tln~'l1l~ti(•d service n1cdnl fo r work u1 th ~ Olona1\ 1 campaign, n prt'sen1 ~r1~.1 fr,1.n Admiral Nimitz of lhc Legiori f'( t.t•·rit and a second Lc&ion of ).ll ril [(ir !ho Di~iJ,i atoll planning. Gen. Blakrlock S~\'" lo 1.1y !~'·i t h" choo:;c ~:in Clcn1•"11(' I ~ ··t~H· ~-·111f' r(·J~<'il IJick Nixon did" and I. .> iA·1 i Jll•.·~st• j "1!h the. ChOlr'l'. Of his 1nvoll'<'mt nt. lh" r 11•r1l :;;:iltf, •:1 felt Uncle ~ar-1 h 11' r 1 f l t .rl lo me lh.1t I ~l\1' l sn1nc:h •1, to th" {lO\'ernn1l'nl anfl it"s h· r·n a plcusu lo do thesr thinr s li •Hl ))ri·in"J In b II• peopl e 1n gCncraJ." Causes Sou •Yht t'J 1 11 Ma11'sDcatl1 Oran~r County Coronl'r's <f<-nuties sai I loday they have not est; blishl'd thl' c.:iu · of deaUJ of the yet un:drntifif":l bo-'v that washed ashore in f\e"·port Be;icn one "-'Ci:!k ago. lnvestigalors said thrv art! rncc~ 1vlth sc\'Cral hardships in !he r:i' · .1 i t : body was found wit hout a he id or Jir> and had been in lhe "•atcr cb:iut tl1r, e months. Remain'! v.•ere id cntifir>rl a" bc!on'1 "1-: fo a middle aged ma11 1vho stooJ bel11 cl11 five feel sevl'n inehr; ::nrl fi\ l~ !1·r•t nine inches tall and 11 \:i_, r~d bcl1\t1•11 200 and 230 pounds. Police said they nre c~. '1 :d11'! 1i'ln·r, l<'3ds in m;ssing per', ''> rl'ro• ·, h ·t have not come up 1v1Lh an i1!r" ;,·. To establish an identity, 1111• h<i!J" strur·· lure of.the body will huvc 1·1 b ~ c n1p.:i re.J with descriptions of n1is~ing pr>rs1Jn<;, Menu plana arc ea.sicr u:hen yott beqfn al El Rancho! Pricc6 i~i efff'r.t 1~!011 .• 1'11rs., ll'rd., May J, 5, fl. No &nlrB tll df'(lfr,·.~. ARCADIA: Sunte t ind Huntinzton Dr. (El Rancho C~n!or) PASADENA: You ng Beef Liver ....... ~ ...... 69~ Tendu.,.mild flu ... 01·ed ••• becuuse ft:s .selected \vllh you in mind! WhY, not liver and onions this \veek? Sliced Bacon .. . . . .. .. .. . . .. .. . .. ..... 89~ Braising Ribs ................. : ......... 59~ Jl eart7 beei goodness ••• aerve with noodles! El Rancho's ••• thick('r ~11ces .,, rgnch aty\e ! • 32a West Color1do Bl•d • . SOUTH PASADENA: rremonl an~·Huntington Or. HUNTJNGTON BEACH: W1rner ind Allonquln (Sou-411·•'~ ,,. NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 N<wport Blvd. and 2555 Elstblulf Dr. (E!!lblull v.1111• Cent11) I 1 ' • l ----------____,,..-----------------·------ 4 DAllY l!JLOT ' ... Senate Panel: 'Indocliilia Preside·ntial .War' WASHlNOTON (UPI) -'!1le Senate· Foreign Relations Committee acculiN the Nixon administration today of a takeover of the "'ar and treaty ~·ers of CongrHS. · It satd · tbf: e:xecullvc branch was con- ducting a ·~constitutionally unauthorized, presidential war ln Indochina.·• The oommitlee made the charges in a reP.Ort to the Sena te recommending repeal or the i964 Gulf of Tonkin resolu- tion W'hlch authorized the President to take ~sary steps to repeal Com· muni~l awcssion in Southeast Asia. AIUi>ugh 1he Nixon adminislratioa is not mly~ on the Tonk.in resolution .. r-~··· I ' ' .. ' ,. !.1N~·:roDAY'S NEWS ~ .il .. (o.. .-.l tCom•llM .-, HM '""' Plltf 5hllJ ln a bid to end ro,vdyism al }!arrogate, England's late nigh~ film sho,vs, theater manager Ben- ton Symmons has dec reed th at all men attending tbe shov.1s Jnust be accompanied by women. • Daniel P. Bartoli, 52, o[ Chicago, as authority for lt! actions ln Vietnam and elsewhere ln Indochina, the com- , mtttee "said repeal of the controversial granl of power would "clear the air of a legacy -of coofuslon and illegili· mac y." "It would remain then for Congress to determine bow the constitutional vacuwn should be filled ," the report said. "Vntil it dqes1 or until peace is made, the executive will be cooductJng a con- stitutionally Wl&Lltborized, presidential war in Indochina." The committee sharply crilicir.ed President Ni:Jon'a decision to send U.S. troops Into _combat In Cambo4la. ll declared: .. The commitment wtllllut tho ...... 1 or knowledge of Conirul of 1& .I ea 1 t 8,000 American ooldler1 lo l!gbl In Cam- bodia ••. Hidenca I oonvSetllln by the executive that it is at liberty to t&nore the na Uona.I commitmenla relOluUoo. and to take over both the war and treaty powers of the Coogrt111 w he n congressional authority ln these areu beromes inconvenlenL" The commitment.s ruolution, Je1aDy nonbinding, bamd the uae of. t r oop 1 abroad without congreulonal conaenl The report was issued u the com. faces a charge of polluting the air. Bartoli was arrested in his North Side apartment Th ursday as he threw hundreds of pieces of paper from his \Vindow. The pieces of pa· per we re records of horse bets, po. lice said. Bartoli 'vas charged with being tile ke1We.r .of bet& a nd violat· 1ng .the city's air pollution ordin· ance. CONSERVATIVES TRIUMPH IN TEXAS Bentsen (loft) Wins; Yubon.igh llNton • r.c; ~=::i ·-~~~· "~, The Pau lsboro. N.J., Borotlgh Council is c11nsidering an ordi· nnnce that 1Dould prohibit a Yarborough Loss in Texas Raises Republican Hopes r J policenian from getling drunk I -off the job as tcell as 011. Pub-1 lie Safety Director John D. 1 Burziclielli exploi11ed that a '• policeman fs 011 call 24 hours a • day -and should be in shape 1 to go to work. .·• . •• ...;; ~ .. ~ F11r"4 ~tlld!J1 l1!J form should be Ll1r •riptr1ni for this scene at Churchill f1ow11s. Lo uist·i/le, Ky .• which hosted 1i1e Kent11cky Derby Saturday. ('lourlin flal/, 22. Kent, Ohio, is r e· 1·ictci111J of t he jield tJ/ horses and ;1nrkc:1s which ra,1 111 the 96th classic 1 ~cc. • i:·irc1nen 1n Sheliord , England, took ;;i n hour Tuesday to free 3- veJr·ol d Michael Wil1on'1 _finger actcr Jt got stuck in the bell o( his 1oy telephone. DALLAS !UPI) -'!1le deleat of liberal U.S. Sen. Ralph W. Yart>oroogh will give Texas a more conservative delega· ti on in Washington next year and brightens Republican hopes o{ capturing the state's second Senate seat. Yarborough's defeat by Houston millionaire Lloyd 1>1. Bentsen Jr. in Saturday's Democratic primary puts Bentsen in the November general elect.ion against another Houston millionaire~ U.S. . Rep. George Bush (R-Tex.). Republicans privately had hoped for the ouster of Yarbor ough, 66. since it likely will reopen the old liberal-con· servative split among Texa s Democrats and perhaps drive s0me Ii be r a I s discontented with Bentsen int.o the GOP ranks:· "f couldn't be tiappier.'' Bush said Sunday after tiis easy win over Or. Robe rt 11orris of Plano in the GOP prim ary. "I couldn't be mor e elated. Ne>r could I be more confiMnt about \\'inning.jn November.'' ~!orris indicated his loss to Bush part\,•· v.·as due IQ Republicarui voting in th Democratic primary. "They were drawn as by a pov•erf vacuum cleaner into the Democratic pa ty to vote fe>r Bent.sen. ar rather again Yarborough," he said Sunday. The entire Republican hierarcy \1·1 elated over the election results. Ther \\'as a universal feeling among ther that Bush, "''ho lost to Yarborough i the 1964 elections by 300,000 votes, couh more easily win over Bentsen. 'l'he GOP doubtlessly will play up thr Ii b e r a 1-conservative fuss amang Democrats and will make serious efforts lo v.·oo as many af the liberals as they can. But despite their sUghUy bright-r pr~pects, Bush still will go into the Co oler Weather general elect.ion scrap with Bentlen as th< underdog. Bent.sen will continue to enjoy and profit from the ful support of fonne r Gov. John P. Connally, ooe of tht state.'s shrewesl politicians and a master organizer and money raiser. Spock Arrested In Peace Display Near Capital WASHINGTON (UP]) -Dr. Benjamin Spock, arrested with 74 o t h tr demonstrators kneeling in prayer across fom the White House to protest escala- tion of the Vietnam war, was free today after forleiting $25 collatera1. The protest Sunday by about ISO pers.J11.S was in ~ form of a religious 5ervice in Lafayette Part, directly across PeMS)'lvania A~ from the Wbttc HOllS<. U.S. park po II c e llld tho 'emomtralm, thou&h'peacelul, bad fall· d "' obtain • perm!~ Org..Uen ~I the proletl, whld! 11>- luded clergy and laymen conce~ bout the war in VletnatA and lht e\Jowship of reconciliati.on, said they iad applied for the permit Sunday, Police :ald a l~day advance notice was re. ;uired. Others arrested included the Re)'. John Bennett, president of Union 'lbeoloel.cal Seminary and hls wife : S.m Brown and David Hawk, leaders of U!e Vietn1m f\.1<i"atarium Committee ; the Rev. Malcolm Boyd, author of uAre You Run- ning With Me. Jesus?• 1 and Rabbi Balfour Brickner. • Ill Sight Southland E x periences Record-breaking Heat Temperntures LOS AN~ELES AND YICINI T'I' M"'511V !llr ""'nd•r bu! ~..,.,. 11!11 &r>d lrw tl-1 11lang c11•1I. lo,. clouds Mllr>ll•r nlgM end Tu•,d•• mornln9 oe-. •Of'l'•na o•r!IV sunnv l u••d•• •flt r- rl')!lfl. Coaler d•v•. Hlgl! Mondo • 8J. l'OINT CONCE l>T!ON TO MEXl(/lrl BO!;!PElt -L•<>M ••••Aelt Wl!'<h n•QM ~"<I "'~!'19 ho1"I M(o,,..•nQ Wt>'tr•1 1 •o 11 ~no!• In fll•rnOOn• ,,._., •n!f> lutt111y. tnoto•ln~ "'""' ... ~ "'O'""'"" row rlood1 •"~ 109 hi.I! ....,,,.. t·tl• ~unih•n• '" t1t~r"O')n1. (DOI"' 01v1. EXJRENIE !>OV TH[Rtl I/CV.I.DA - MA\tlY 1111 W•lfl v1•11~1• ""'" clou<:l1 tll,,,.,.i, T """-Y• (Ofllfll\lf(I ""''· C.u1IY wlr!OS T~r erttrnoon. l1hthl Moro. d" 15 Ml ''· COA•tAl ,j.110 lrllllMlOIATC VALLlYI ,,.el"" loir wllll - h!fl\ tleuOt '~""'"' T..eM11v .,._,, lo,. dalldl tlld IO<I ltl• M-Y nlfhl t-.1 1....wltV l'IO""lt>q, (oalv dtYl. Pt1Gn1 MenOtr 75 10 to. M)UtH!lllN C.Alll'Olt•i1-. MOUll• TAIN illltlEAi -MOt.tlv ftir wltll Ylf• lt~le "lell (lovd1 lhrovt!t '"""""· G\IJl'I' "'''*'"°cooler Juts.div. t-1/t"' ~IY U lo 1l. IN'TGltlOI ANO Ot \CltT lllE010NS -Mc.11'1' 1•1r w1!h ~"'' 1'•111 (Hlulll tllf'OUl!i'I TuttdlV. tl1~•1 11-Mll'Y IO 10 '° "'"""' ,..,1i.y1. (.~··~ wll'ldt 1"11 Mt 111."'' i.o w•rm "°''~ !'0•11(11'! luu- dtV. ~ hla!ll r.ii'n(!lf ~"~ j~'''''' "''"$ fQUV i"'lvdtd. lflfl'I 6f<fd> ~?l!: 1~''·~11~""~'2. ~~;o,,,ur1'l 111t1vw '1 t1.P, Pi1m JOfll'IO• llf;' Coastal Tloer• wm bt 1"111 "''"-'•!! •11w11 "''"" .tfld mor~h,. "°""' '*°"' '"' COOlll btcon'oln!I ,,..!t•tv I IO 11 -'IO'I In 11\t '".,,_' lDNv ......i •Tve.o.v, wlll\ -clol.lcl1 .,,. I.it n'9flf 1nd ....... '""'"'"' fol, ''"'""'"'™ t l-tr.. Ort"" to.11 .. 111 • .,... ·~ "' le 7f ..,." '"''"" tl'4 r1"91 will IN: " IO 11. W11tr ltm- Pfl'•hirl II Jt 11ttr1111. Sun, 1'Jnnn. Tides TUISOAY tJlr11 row •:IXI '·""· .1,1 ''"' llttP!. l0·111.m. l ,t iK°"" lo• ............ J Upm, 1 S $~ r.ittti 9:»11.rn. 11 $v~ IUMI. n1 .,rn. Stfl ':"' "'· MOOtl ltfWI J•°' • m. Stll l.Otl e rn. H-M.. il'l,..t Otr. 1'1111 lMf O!r M•r' MIY u M.v 11 ,...,., ,, &11: .... 11114 61t!'llll'CI: eoh• 5o!lofl 11._n1villt Clli<lto Clnc:lnl'lllf De1M9l~ DeflWJI Flrt WOl'ftll .. _ Htl .... H ....... klllUI CllV Lt1Y ... 1 l ,.A-1• Ml t l'll M~ll H-on.tf'll N•Yft Nortl'l Pltlft 0.llllnd Oll;ltllWM Clf'r ....... P•IM *""" .... " ..... ,_,,. t"llT'IOUtti!I '"''""' lll111f City ll:M lhlff ·-St t••-lo s111 L1111 er.., 5t n DI"° Stll ,~ll!CIK• '41ff!t SllOll't,.. Tl>trmtl , n " n M " It tJO .. .. .. " " " •? JO .11 n " n n T ... " n ... n • ,, ·n n " .. " " " " " .... " " " ., .Cl ,, M .ft ., n M . .. • • " n • • .. .. " " " . .. ~ H n " . " .. H 0 .. " n " " .. n " " n n " .. . mlU.. met lo dlacull . a ~ H--lo tit down with the Ptaldeol for an moYt to turn the crouP"'• .plan for a · intlmat.e dllcum:loa -the committee's private meeting -,Ith the P.rtoldent loll> lint with a cbkf eiec:uttre In 51 years. a large &•tberiag of liO members' ol But. Niuo ~ .)"eei reo!>Ollded by C<inveu. -Inviting the An""! Services CommJUees Some members of the committee lit-from bo!li boulel_af Cooiras lo a Tues- dlcated they would boytolt wbik -. day bmk!M~ aod bolh foreign relations a1d they would attend. ' :. Committeet to a. I p.m. cocktail b o u r "He's the only President we ha\le i:blt'i:hat that aame day. Some members and the country is at war," Sen. Albert 4 GI ,Fulbrlgbt'a puel contend the gather· Gore (().T<rul.J. said. "I aball be theri." ing. WU1 be '° unwieldy they wlll be But Senate Democratic ·Lader Mlle rtlduced to Ustening quleUy while Nixon Mansfield of Mootana .Wei be would aod bia pnerals point to maps and not 10. charta. The cbainna11 of the Senate panel. Debate on the new phases of the J. William Fulbright (D-Ark.)1 wanted war was likely to contJnue in the Senate t.bis week Ill the form of 1 move to repeal the 1964 Gulf of Tookln reaolution -the vehicle which authorized unllmlte.d action to repel Communisl aggres.slon in Vietnam and elsewhere in Indochina. Some members believe repeal would be almost meaningless since Nlxon h4S not used the resolution as a basis for current activities in the war. . In the 'House, continued debate was expected on three amendmenl5 to the $20.2 billion military authoriza.tion bill for majort weapons systems. Two or the amendments seek to restrict CambodlaR· type involvemenls, while the third seek.s to sanction them. *** *** *** Students Pinn Anti-Nixon Strikes By THE AS80cJATEo PRESS Campus oewspapen ~ U.. ~ planned to call loday for a nationWkie. student strike to protest American military actiooll in Cambodia and the ncent lonbln& of North Vietnam. Strikes already have been declattd at Princeton, the University . of Pennsylvania , Sarah Lawrence·and Bryn. Mawr. the strike plaM were reported under way at Notre Dame, Brandell University and St.anford. A national strike committee of delegat2s from the cam}Nses was being convened for a meeting at George • \ Wasblngton University tonight to coonlinate pollcy. '?be New Mobiliiation Committee to End the War, in Vietnam, also working toward a nalJonal student &trike, called for a massive rally in Wubington Satur· day . to demand immediate withdrawal of q.s. troops from Southeast Aaia. ''Ille <ommon hrike edllorlat scheduled for publicatioo today jn s t u d e n t newspapers was drawn up Sunday at Columbia University by editors or 11 major Eastern colleges. Six were present aJ1C1 olbera portlclpated by telephooe. The edilorial accuses President Nixon or ignoring "the constllulional prerogatives of C.Ongress " by sending troops into Cambodia. Nixon, the editors wrote, "has revealed the sham of his policy of Vietnamization." The editorial says "a ma,s.,ive, un· precedented display Of dissent is re· qulf'!?d." Drafting the editorial were editors from Columbia, Cornell, Rutgers, Bryn Mawr. Sarah Lawrence and the Univer1I· ty of Pennsylvania. Endorsement.! quick· ly came from Harvard, Princeton, Dartmouth, Brown and Haverford. Eureka! Tltt.t)i&C1Mn..t11t .... e ,..cu't Yemmkr. v .. ~. l.et'110 opte our atttiu11t. What else can't }09 reaember dolrt it? l,h !Jllh. And dtty sflf open extra hours, tOft. _, ...... i.e. ne,Ntt.omcis all °'er tlll: platt. 4 The name you can't remember. 'The bank you can't forget • • Himtr~IOl'I It.ch 8899 Ad11m1 Avti, 9e2·3377 S•n Cltmtnle -.. -17t22 Beith llU'td. 847"'611 1001 Soulh El Camino Rial 492-&090 eo.i.• ... 230 E•sl 17th S1. 642·1660 Cypr••• '4 1~.5 Ball Ad. 12$-0011 S1nl1 Ane 902 Nortl'I Main .....,., -·-24171 l.1 Pitt• 40 .. 1293 Tutllft 13300 Newport,.,,,., 544-9080 --·------------------~--;-... -• ---------•.•.• ------. -----. -•.• -;;-. "°'· .. ,...,,, Meter Maid MoWJi%ing -·· · · · -·· · ·· -· · · -· .' Monda1, May •. 1970 P0verty 'Revamp' Begins WASHINGTON (UPI) - The N I z on adminllttttlon boltn• '"" todoy ... .. lm-JIOlin& And perhapl lmr-!ble tuk -an attempt to C'Omo plelely revise most of the pernmenl't prorr&m1 in- tended to help the poor survive and pn»per. The job WU ul!igned to the adminl.ltraUon by a Re p ubllCllM!omlnated -servaUve· bloc in. the Stnate Finance Commtttet w h I c h • un<xpectedly balked Friday 1t aceeptln& PrtaJdent Nixon's "family wfstance plan," the keyst.one of h1s domestic weUare Pf08ram. It u an improvement over the present system. Provokin& the revolt wat the Senate committee's dJacovery that under the ad- mlnltt:raUon bU1 a poor family Uvtn& in public howing could be financially better off li the head of that famlly refused work. Committee memben said the bill 1ave welfare fam Wes an Incentive to stay on wellare, which t h e ad· ministration hopes to discourage. The asalanment w.uare Secretary Robert u. New Way Fo~nd Finch -to revise all eovem· H • l ~:.:!vew'~'!" ~~1ri: ~ To Stop air c>ss, rewardlna: kllene11 -I s G M H • formidable because he has no row ore air jurisdiction over such pro- gra._ms as public hOUJlnl, food HOUSTON, Tex-es -If But, tr you ue not aJrwAy stamps and the medicald pro-you don't 1uttep.from malo sJJCk bald. how can 1ou fM l1U'e gram of medical care for the pattern baldness! you ~an t::tJ!,&~::tf =• ~ needy. now stop your ha r loss ••• seem to •'nm tn )'OUf' fltnlly, and grow more hair. thll ii certainly no lll'ool o! tM For years "theY 1ald I cauae ot YOUft ha.fr Ion. couldn't be done." ))ut now a Marw other eondlt.fON CM nrm ot laboratory conault&ntl caute hair lou. No matter bu develo~ a treabnent fOf' which one 11 cauelna )"DUr hair' both men and women. that II loq,. tt 10U wait until YOCI are not only stopplq hair loss , • • .UCk baJd and )'our halP root5 but 11 reall.r,: growln1 haJr! are dn.4. yoq are bt')'Ol'ld. help. They don t even uk you to So. U )'OU 1dll have any ~k take their word tor ll The)' ln· hair on top ot )'OW' bud, ~d vlte you to try It for 3_2 di.ya would Ukt to atOp )'~ hair and see for )'OUl'lelf. IOU and l'fOW' more hlll' , •• Naturally, they would not of· now ia the time ~ do some· rer this opportunity unless the tbfn& about It bttGrt ll'1 too treatment work@d. R~ver, It iau. ta lmpoplble to help t"Vtt)'one. For more lnt'ormat!on, write All torce·s \ve re mobilized: in New Haven -including one meter maid -as C'onnecticut National Guardsmen deployed in the city for the second day of the May Day weekend. Today, however, calm returned to the downtown area. The majority of the protests were peaceful with action by splinter groups marring the orderly weekend. The commttt .. actioo plac- ed in jeopardy the future of the welfare reform program, which coold parantee every family willlnJ to wark or take job traJntnc an annual in- come of $1,600 to $3,920. The amounl would depend on ttate aid and peflOOI) ·-· It, would Md 14 rnWm. new welfare cUWa ·to the pruent. 10 mUHon, at a eoet estimtted by the admJnlstratlon at IU biWon mon a year but c hallenaed b)' 10me Republican.! u 100 percent un- derstated. Teamsters Vote Divided On Strike The great majority ol t.o<tch Lt.bonltocy Consultanta. Cases of excessive hair falJ tnc., and U they believe the treatment will. hietp you. they and baldness are the begin· will advbe )'ou flow )'ou can ning and more fqlly devel· take advantare ot this 32 day oped sta1,es of itl.ale pat· trial at • •peclal Introductory b I · d t mce with a money-baci..auar-t.ern a ness an canno ,ntff. Juat atnd them. the In· be helped. :ormaUon listed below. Adv. Israelis Kill Joined and Died '"------NO oaLIGATION COUPON'-------. To: loeach LaboratorY Con1uhant1, Inc.~ Box 66001, 3311 Well Mlin St. Houiton, TcllU 77006 ~ 21 Arabians · . I B. Cl New Physical Proves Fatal n 1g ash Supporters oC the reform concept took encourqement from recallbtf that the bW met U>e same IOrt of lnttlal unfriendly reception in: the House, ~hlch finally accepted J am 1ubmlttin1 the tollowln1 informaUo., with 1111 u11cftr.. standln1 that it will bt kept 1trictly confidential and that I am under no obli1ation whallOtver. J now have or hav• had th• foJlowln1 conditioaa: TEL AVIV (AP} -Israeli soldiers .killed 21 Arab guer- rillas Sunday night in a battle in the nortfiern JOrdan -vai1ey~ an Israeli military spokesman said today. It was the largest death toll in a ground action since the end of the 1967 war. The spokesman said there were no Israeli casualties in the fight. The guerrillas apparently in- filtrated from Jordan. They ran into an Israeli patrol near the paramilitary settlement ot Nahal Mehola, the spokesman said. WeapCllls, ammunition and sabot.age material were found at the site of the cla.9h, he added. A Jordanian spokesman in Amman said two Jorda.1ian civilians and five Rtaelis were killed or wounded Sunday in an artillery exchange at Wadi Elyabis, in the northern Jordan Valley. In another artillery duel in the valley's Kuraimah sector, there were no Jordanian casualties. The Israeli command also reported a 'number of shells were fired from Lebanon at two Israeli border settlements in northern Galilee. LAKE WORTH, Fla. (AP) MOTHERS' RINGS FROM KIRK JEWELERS· ORDER NOW! • "" ...... w .. M1111 ... , .... ~" EAOl Rl~G C.<N BE CUSTOMMADEFOR THE ENTIRE F AlllL Y! Theae riogs shewn here not only -repuent the very la~t!l ill superb iityling. but al90 adapt to the addition of new birthstones. Whether )'O\I. want one or ten. birthstones, ov jeftby dcputmenl ~· cwtom :;et any combmation of st.OMS yo& Delire. Thfl same idea is also availa· Me in bewtiful pins ct' your choice:, u i;ho .. n below. Pi~~lio111t&rt IOl>.~111. .~H~enillhk ilil •lute w~ l·lK!'Dli· !\n. Ml'! 1.1!-•T"ri!~ Op'" MH, lfMon., ffl. Tm f P·"'· .. - I , AT Do you havt d1ndtutl'?-1t it dry?.-Cir oily1c--- Does your forehead become oily or ircuy?c _____ _ Doe1 your scalp Itch? WhtftT·------ ffow lon1 hu your hair been thinnfn11·------- Do you 1till haw an1 weak hair °" _top of your hndT- Row lon1 is ltT 1 k"dryT 1 It oilyT·--- Attach any otller lnform11 ior1 you fnl m1y h hcfpful. NAM"---------------- ADDR:ES!'----~----~--~- CITY A ' Deperdabe and Smart Snwrt? Yoo bet! It takes )'OUftl tf'linkinr, alert and tiperienctd minds to properly serve -sovl!lc cuslomers lhese days. It takes peo· p1e who .,. flmili1r with an of the mious savin1s plans we ha'ie to offer you smart .,_.s-the tax dtductJ'ble retirement plans, the ceflificote ""°'"'111, the Guaranteed Rate Atcounls, Monthly Security Accounts. trust ICCOUnts and many, many more. Sure, we h"" them 111. We -this type of personnel-dependable, ready, willin1and1tways here to http you with your savings plan s-come in, con or write. Srnll'I Snwrs Save ond Earn 1! Newport Balboa Sure-we have lheH hip rites! '·~ .c.~~-•1 AA•~ ··-Ml~•-, .. ~--,_ ""•bock -'Ccount 5.13% 5% $25.00 ... ,. Bonus A"IM!nl 5.39% 5.25% $500.00 IOd&)IS Ou1r&Meed ll1te 5.92% 5.75% $1.000.00 HS d&Y' Aceount Gu.ranteed ll1t.. 6.18% 6% $5,000.00 2 ,...,. Acco.mt GU9raMeed 111~ 7.79% 7.50% $100,000.00 , ,., Account -.. ••• ..., ... ••• ..., Snlnp wtMra II tf11 ,... Nclt ntll art nallabtt. ,.,,_ 111•• -""' """'"' ,.1111..,. .,., ......,.. .... ._ _,""'. ac"'* • .. ,..._ ' ht1bfishod in 1936 •• NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION M1in Ollieo:3366 V11 li!lo. NewpC>rt Beach, California 92663• Phone 714/673-3130 Corona del Mar Offlcl: Flnanci4f Pf1za, 550 NewpC>rt Center Drive, Corona de! Mar, C.lifomia 92625 • Phone 714/644-1 461 , r • • • ,.. . ... I >-. - ... i ' . ,,.. ·- • ... -' ,1 ' . ·No Salt Cr.eek ·1lepeat • -Obviously not wanting any repel!Uon ol the-Sall er.et-Road beach access controversy, the. Orange Co.un- IY Board of Supervisors ·voled Ian week lo tighten pro- cedures Jor the disposi.l o1 surplU& real properties\ · - '!be '"tlghW>lng" may nol, In fact, change ewtlng. • proCeduns very much, but it slloUJd make a lot of people feel more comfortable abOut how such disp0sals will be handled in the future. · ·• The adopted resolution calls !or the t'OODIY plan- ning, real property services and p8fks departme~ts to study &uch surplus land and report to the supervisors. The principal objective is to make sure that land suitable for ~reational development. or other county neecU wW be retained. But in practice, most surplus land is in small parcels unsuited to such development. Nevertheless, having a fonnally-estabJisbed safe- l!\Wd against another Salt Creek error iS not a bad fdea. Still a Credibility Gap -' . • -r,o-lhi•, Ted Kennedy retort"ecL "The.;ruerene&-and: ,ultlmale !indipg o! tbe ;udge',s 'l'ejiort are nal justllled and l reject th em." , The issue is not now one of hut.her prosecution.-Th.e senator pleaded guilty last 1July Z5 1to a -misdemeaQ91' ~harge ·of leaving the scene of lhe "&ccident·witb.oul re-- porting it and re~eived . a· two-month swpended jail ~ sentenC~. · · . .. 1• • • • ' ' • . If }\e~v.:~re now .a4diijonalJy_ prosec,Ut_~J>ri the c!ia1ge suggested in Jud~ Boyle"s report, 1t woufd De for-a· trusdemeanor count known in Massachusetts as "driv~ ing to endanger." It carries an even Hghter sentence than the one Senator Kennedy received on the other charge. The genuinely serious court Edward Kennedy has faced and will continue to face is the court of public opinion -not a court of formal law. The senator's case •in thdt' Court of public opinion was greatly weakened from the outset wha~ instead of. forthrightly stating what happened at Dike<Bridge ~rid his lonF. delay in reporting the accident, lfe-a'ctepted inept ' public relations" advice from nume'.rOu!'-·coun· The tragic death of Mary Jo Kopechne al Dike selors. Bridge on Chappa~uiddick Island near Edgartown, 1-lis situation wnrsened when, some days later. he Mass. tut July continues to hang as a dark cloud over went on network television wi't.h a defense of his situa· the life and career of Sen. Edward M. "Ted'• Kennedy. tion which, to the perceptive viewer, left more questions Release last week of the 763-page transcript of the unanswered than were answefed. ' January inqum and the l.2.;>age report of_ District Judge Subsequen~y, sensing h!s ~I from the pinnac~e. of James A. Boyle failed to clear away public doubts about Kennedy chansma and having 1t confirme4 by op1n1on Senator Kennedy's version of events of the fatal night. polls, he took bimseU oul of the 1972 presidential race. On the contrary, the judge's report and K~y '«t --:~..P'1t since ,tbeo, w.ith ,1he ,,.~tr· Parts,~disanay reaction only added further doubt in 1he 'matter of Ill• . ' 1_1 .if9r .. ,9i1ck ¥:Je~di!f6'11ttl . ~-~~ ·veu t!"_ TeSlore his ! ' . . ,. I. ·"" \ -.-.-· ' .. ' .., .,, ... l . ' ' ' . . ' .,,,, • l _!. \ 'We'll make certain this ~ never become an environmental di.sasl2r. '. senator's credibility. ~ •..; :t. t ·, 'i ..( {;~t.r behiri~ .the fcene'j!iti ~ S . ate,,_ The judge. who conducled the lnquesl, dOil!iled " "The lhquest" 'testimony's'-publication, along with Kennedy's claim that tie _turned onto ·the "!"d )>~ ·~ . Judge Boyle's report, l.~sl y;ee~. and K~l!lledf• f"P '• Jl'liltake and found probable cause .to bciliev,e 1K~1 ·' · '' flbn,ftakeh togetller;~eem ;pr:iijjt,e)y to; reduce !11s credi· drove negligentJy and thereby contributed to ?i-fiss bility gap or help restore him to his former high level Koperhne's death by drowning. of public acceptance. Family's 'Household ~~tto~•ey' _ ~ .. _ _ . . .. "l/.1:lf~rg~ttable Kennedy Def en.ds Douglas -#onwnts Deficiencies of W.ASHIN~ -Sen. F.dwanl K~ . ··H··~ . :~·,,,··g'"''N>"W ··-·~ disregarding his conslitutional obligation Of a Lif'eiime nedy'1 precipitate defense of im-/ \ ":._,..:.., ; ' "'~~ i.:-~r~t f to keep his mouth shut. Our Universities ~ea""" JustketoWi!Litim·am tesO-'~ AJl~ldam,ith, ; "A STATEMENT IN th e Senate," .~ -• •.·· ~' •• 'i ~UWUDO~ in a .,_,. ~ ...... ! ' .. rl boCb men. ;~ caustically pointed out Griffin, "ques-.,. One of the phony and misleading tionlng the motives of House members Hal ·Boyle-statistics l have ,long meant to turn Tbt uftl'a·liberal peacenik jwilt has comes dangerously close to giving the · the spotlight on is · tfie recurrent refrain befft • clolo ~legal and political SiqUlarly, Douglas had 8 great., deal. ·appearance or prei"ud gmen t on the. . by pn·vate colleges and universities that -•~--J -u ~-K--"y Jo do with """""v" .Ke--~•·s i··-N_-ng '-' • · -·~ ---..., .. _.. "' 4...... UL 11"' ~ _..,.,,., , .. ~,_ ... .,.~ "~l?r_iis. I~. order for the Se~ate to ¥ · · . student tuitions and fees cover only a family for ..ne·35 · into the DemOcratic presidential ryace· 1n a position to carry out its solenm Unforgetta~Je moments of a lifetime: third to a half of the total cost of SiDl&dj~ lt wu no~ to Jnsiders in the lp'irig fl..~· ~•bad waQted responsibility under the_ Constitution, t' Paumg· a""'Har for 8 kiss at a church educating the sti.ldents. tlial I Jll.9tice ,._ Fortu ruthed hlm to run ~. EUgene McCaithy tors ~--•• J J ' "" ormtr """!!f' amowc:td. Wb!n the. l.B~ .D\J(le an sena ~JUUJU be particu ar Y a'lt'are )~al and ~lng later that you coold These figures are · true only If you to .. -.upport ot~Dc:idj;lu. 'Ibey Jong une:rpectedly ~ ~ I the N at tbis tim~ of the im??rlance, nor · haYe got a greater value for your money consider the total amount·.spent by the wwe dole frimdl ~ F.~ went . '. I ~n . ew only of keeping an open •mind. but also by buying four ·good cigars. college for all its multifarious activities, ""tbt s-Court--he.corilulted· llampohire ~· DougJaa .teiumed r r.i ai in r ~·bl;~-''•t m ts Doqs\u repeatedly. ' decldlng to ~hls prodding and' this 'time 04Bobby" ~h.ich rai~e gthe r~~;;~~ ia:rg Clipibing U:>e. Great Pyramid ne~r most of which have liUle to do with quit to a"*I impeldlment. --~ed fUm. 'ud ~ th · ~'"""C:::::-\ Jdsf l CairO ~nd feeling, as the dawn 11. genuine education or the needs of the . .. .; , . preJ g e case ~ . Jc lum~ted ·the desert, as if you were students. . . c ~ • ~ • Ammll tmldn, Doug1a bM lona: be AnER nil 1:.ATI'Ell'S:idt1tti:., .. Ted· Dooglas. · · ·' ~ .; 1 -Mfi. · ..... _ ,_.,,,._,, -1 "·-Id nd Our colleges and univer..uies are •;gan-tbt ·-1iltOnle cl -'.'I(' the House shollld ·~ote lo iJii!>'l"cli -,-. "~ ·-"."' ~ "~ wor -a ~" ~ known M ,. . y dy'' turped~MI Douglas fir ·coume] and Justite Douglas, then: the seilate,· ,Ufider ii·,. cpaid, by stre'td~Jn,K out ~r hand, touch tic custodial inst.ituti6ns. 'Ibey involve the Jtennedys. ,pi4ance. , , . . · . . the Cheek of Deity a wide Variety of .functkmi · besides .. """""-.,....~--'Jed "urlng·<c 511·11. the Chnstitution, has ;•'--tole and 981elim , _ --. t -~-nd ~·..... \,."W~ '1.1 111e wia ,........_, of tho5 e;n;umg -a many or these function8 Al A YOUNG MEMBER of the facu.lty • ~~~~Uiddict affair, and on r~pqnsibility to sit Br -judge and 1iurors ~,mg one e wi,ndow-paned exist far more rot the Sakl Of "the · of Yale Law Scb:lol, Douglas wn brought ftlated,lnatler!~ siilce then. Uast month, lo ihear the evidence . »Kl to ,det.ermlne envelopes rn:m . ~ Internal Revenue faculty, the adm.iniination, th4. parenf:il, to W8llbinclon by the late J~ Keo-nn..~ .. ·-.reportedlv advised "Teddy" to the guiJt or innocende of UJ.e accused. Serviee and f1nd,1ng an. une:rwted check th tr t s th I -nd " bl" .. -.. 1.-..a d. the famll and ~-Utat ...........-~ i -• sh-:;:. · from a favorite uncle: e us ee · e a umru a pu JC •-.q• 111::.U Y _,. · . • ~eetly revjve his presidential aspira· That s wuy each sena~ ~ realize · . . · . . , image" than· for the sake ol the students, time cbUman of the newly~ . tkii:& with attacks on the Nixon that it WQU]d ~ -a ,s'erious . t¥-each o( '_f'he disaprx>1nting fast taste of ly.ro ~who are , low man on • the academic S«ultita and Elthange ~kin. · 'AdrnlnlrdraUon's handling of t h e his obligation underr thJ!. Constltu\ion to , lhmgs yau d . always thou~t would be ~ totem pole. Several years later, Ooug1u ~ed tortun.•VMtoam problem and ddme.stic inwlve himself in Publk di~, or more wonderful -, caviar and him in that job thrwgb Kennedy'~,m. ~ polldes. .· , . . the merits or demerits :!Of the pc)Ssijile 'i'Otfttgf'aruite~;. • \ • NATIJRALLY, THESE fundicins and fluence wtth Pre.lfdel& Roosevelt. , 'lt ls signijicant that in tpe r6st few .-.iln~chment_ of a !up;eme ~ i!Jstice• Waiting ill darkness aOO~h(!aring the . ectivtties are terribly e~ive, ,ranging Years later, when John K~ weeks K~ has done a lOt ofta~ing .•• Certain restrairts are .imposed rimning £om.steps of som~·eager to from immense football stadia · to- became Presided and Robert Kem tn ~ 'Sena(e and at )diti~@l ~tinS;s upon. se:nators ~er . th!·~~tution in meet you. ;;' •• , 1 elaborate research facilities, from attorney pneral, both frequently ~alone these· fmes. Sources c,Jose ,to .runt ~ .. ·a sitt.tation such as this. publicity aqd promotion campaigns to su1tld Douglas on a wide range of prOO.:· · indicate there will be. mor~~ a(_.,~ ~CE GV"'FIN'S 1_::.,0n_;_inder, GOING TO SlJEEP on a hoWeboat proms and receptions and all kinds of I partl ta " .,..,.,. •r """'Q J."l'Cll hotel on the River Nile. • " Jrrel t hoo J th t J nd en'!'-, . , san ~ .. cas.. . . # Kennfdy has . ··btNio pUblicly silenl , evan p-a a perp ex a Jt wu at Douglas. urgmg that they 'Teddy s precipitate defense of _Doug. Priv~ly he. has .,tinued ·to -berate Waking up anywhere on-any 'Monday astonish European stuci?nts •(-and 1~ the -~ drive to ra~ das backfired fut and sUng{ngly 1n the the' strongly bipartisal move ui the House that is a ~liday. , teachers) wtien they come into contact fut "6 million in drugs and medical Senate anct elsefihere. . , tolbring about r..... ... 1_, impeadnne~. Watching a top155 »'1Tlaiden: in Ball with the American college scene. auppliel tht Cuban prisoners in the botch-\Senate Repubiean Whip Robert Griffin, LIUU&>-1 t climb a hill with a jar-of water on All this has absolutely nothing to do ed. and diautrws Bay of Pigs invasion Mich., strirply rebuked Kennedy for 1 :· "1 ~S. Allen her head, sinUous as a pant:fler. with getting or giving· an edu.cation; •ttaopl speaking out~·\Gf .tum and, in effect. ~l '.' and 3olm_f.·¥°ldsmlth Listening to Gen. Otttar . Nel~n and most of It. tn fact, interferes with Bradley, patient as a friendly . school the primary purpose of a school - teacher, brief a group of war cor· utiich is to instill a lifeloog love of respoJKlenU in Normandy. learning in the student. Instead, it ~ Getting a "Dear John" letter -from motes trlv~ality, false values, a deepeninf sense of unreality, and, in Bob Hutchin's immortal phrase, proviE\es +'nothing bul a sheepskin to cover the graduates' in- tellectual nakedness.'' I WOULD_ ESTIMATE -lhal about th• iiaiDe perceritage or i CCiDege's budget toes direcUy far education u~the pereen. tage of a government's.budget that goes Oirectly Wr governing. That is to say, much if not mo&!. oI it is drained clff in self-serving projects that keep the faculty or administration happy, or tend to ~!tract P!.OS~tive donors, or make the parenf:il ·ftel •,that their chlldren are being ke~ busy,(C{Uiet, amused, sanitary, and injected with higher earning powtr upon graduation. StepheD Leacock, dial wise and witty professor of "economics at McGill, once Said that if he were given a limited .sum tD sl&J'.l .up a college, he would ,begin with a "oommons room" where the stvdenu could talk and drink beer. Then, with a .little more money. he would build a sound library. Only then, iL .he had more money, would he put up classrooms. Beyond that, he would n .... ot go. Good talk, good books, and good teaching is what education is au .about ; and these altolether cost )es.'f than the massiv·e new buildings that are mere memorials to vanity, Power, Madness C~·njoln ' ' It ts told that Dean Swill, the greal muter cl the English sentence, was waJk1og Urough the ganf<n ol his DubLin residence when he spied an oak tree that needed attention. He turned to hia com- panion. and said : .l \I , .t\ · ~..-· ><r-·-· casl®at game of b~ilque with• his a college sweetheart who had promised to wait forever but ,soon decided "foteVer lasted too Jong. Having a red-haired girl in kin· dergarten stick ·out her tongue at you -and notking that it was heart shaped. Dr. !lafferty's Excesses "I lhall be like that tree. 1 sha11 die at the top." Whether Swift actually went mad al the end « whether be had MltJe disturbance cl ihe Inner ur which cauaed shuffling and lllllq, and diD)' spella. ts •til! • matter cl tome coajecture. But the un- qe holds, vt.vldly. IT 11 NOT ONLY men who go rottn at the lop, bul -1he affair• cl -...,.., loo-ll 11 bard to see bow the affairs oflll company con go 181affected U the -Idle-man lllJddenty.goes barking. Equally, 1111 bani to see-bow a coontry can be unaffected ff the leader of same aoa trmnd the bend. Yet we have had plenty of .loony 1 .. dm In J>lll«y. On the -. theJ ; f'.., faVtldte ni~. Clarissa >tvon. 1~1' ''-i.1.>.. M C b Woodrow Wilson,• and · his '!llQW'age. vt\a~""?' a e kePt eecret from the American·pUblic for ". .. . / sev'er&l years the fact that the Presdeint .._ "'....:-~.;t-· wa.S ~elable in the--White ·House.· Hi6 seem to have don~ prettOUS"'"..,,tt'le'-braJ" had been ·· terrttrly tn:tured -by damage, compared to what they might strftk!.s. Yet he was our ruler. have done. Perhaps Otis was explained by Nletz.sche when be said· OF THE.ROMAN emperors, apparently .. . ' . · . . . Ne('o\ Commodus. Caligula and Caracalla . In.sanity IS the ei.~ept1on in Jn· wette :-all nuts. Claudius was an alcoholic ~1vtduals •. In groups, ,parties, peoples and whO 'Prdered hundreds o( per s 0 n s tilnes, it 1s the rule. murdered. "Nothing," one of hi s Wlfi(rHER SOCIETY resists lunacy Jn bi0lf'8phers says, "gave him more joy it.I )faders, or welcomes it, there is no thah to see men thrown to the lions." dOllbt there has bten plenty of1t ar&ulMI :·· Nero had everythtn1 1 gohtg, (Qr him', in Some-months after UH: death .ot: fP.R.. \, the' loony depar4l!ent. His mother wanted was sitting in an of'fice in the 'lntertor to murder him .'· J4e murdered"her. He Departn1'0l in Washington. I w~. Wki~&_ •. poisooed his rival. Brltannicus .. He to a mart.who bad been appointed to his ca.st.rated a young m8n and then went job shortly befi>re Uit"J>re)ifdent•s' deatPI: ~ thriiugh a mock ·marriage with him;· He His appointment was "1&-0( those which exkuted his wife to marey ·another. bad to be signed by ~.Prtndeni. , • · whbm he .killed. b_y ~icking in the belly · .. ff$ reached into a .desk. drawer.-.and ,. whlle .pregnanL. );le wa~ q4_eer as a ~11Tee- .J)anded me lhe signea, ·framed IP'.' dollar bill. He killed. sa1d SeutonJus. pblnlp>ent. It told the ~e-sU>o>.'fi'?aS "Immoderately and indiscn1ninate1y; al .-------------,"' a shoctl~ one. 'The' ttitiattfe'-'Mlbblei:f -;; the slightest provar:aOonl 1 Etc .. etc. •. like ·a dhlnken cyclist. The man who uet us hope and pray that our pr~ent --W-w,nte, tt had a ravapd fteIIVOUs sy1!,em, • le~ers art nQ more peo,uUar than they _ lncludln& a .badly damaged brain. More. Beerfl. he~ wu J,i this condition when h& was elected riot his fourth term by a populace that hsod to be slightly deranged iUelf. • FROM THE DAYS when lhe king of Babylon, Nebuchadnezzar, went mad and toot to tHllng his children and eating grass. to the "black dol " of Winston Onnhlll, t.be conjunction of madness aDd PoWtr has been a common placr . etiurchlll, aceording to his ptroonal j>hyll<hm. stayed In powet'-IOf' IS-,ran • aft.tt amall strokes had so badly Injured bJJ br1in that he cl\et!-...1.tted"h< '-'"" (lead. He was voted out by the Br1Ush before he did too much harm. He s~t much ol the res! cl hil Ure In bed. his condllkln rongtng from sllglilly ga-ga Jo very; bJJ cbie! pl.....-. being Ill OC· Dear Glooun- Gus: W~d t:Cl's Aldrich feel more al east in lhe San F'ranc:iSCo i rea?·- Qrans:e County just doesn't ~m to be hi! Clip 'bf. t~a; f. ' ' ' -C. E. F. l~11 llllVl'tl rtolft<ll rtl dtl'tl' """' "" _.. .. ,o., "'"" .. ,,.. _..,....,. s.... nVf "' _,,.. " o ..... , 0... °'"' J'llM. Dr. ti lax Rafferty-, state ·1iu)>erintendent BEING IMPRESSED by the schizo.. of public · insfi'uction, threate~ . last pllrenic face of Field Marshal Herman \\•eek to stek the ,, ~.issel of any Goering . aL ..the Nuremberg ltia1s -Univt-tsily or California chancellor' who benevolent _Joeking as a Dukm . Ul!Cle permits members :or the:" Chicago 7 to in full view but satanic in profile. speak on campus ..fie said ~· wt>Ultl The paralyzing sight of a schoolmate take such action as' <tttex.Orfidoll'!.ember in a coffin. first of )lis cl~ to be of the UC Board .Of Regents. ~-., ' confined in moveless sil~t,. -t The state , superi11tendent 's stand-on Hearing the sound rl ~nity this matter, 'which unquestioRably . in· knocking on your doot but feetlng 'just volves cei1a1n guarantees in the First too darned 'b®ianly , latJ ~ ge up .~ Amendmept · to ' the Constitution, &oes and open it. ~ 1 , • ~ .: • .Somewhat JU(ther than Gov. Rtagan'a, Stealing a dime from your mother's Earlier, the latter had described the purse as a ."Chlld J8Rd .. guiltily l'lopif!& Chicago 7 as "lreaks in a sideshow," that hell woul8n'l-ylwn too soon. ', but ackJlowledged that the granting, or Taki~ 2!). egg, wann '° the hand, withholding, of pennission for their ap- from nest of a squawking ~Ii. pearances Could be a judgrneotel issue. .f' AiiJNG OF'F' a hoise you were trying to ride bareback. Being kicked by a cow, indignant because you tried to milk her from the wrong skte. Hurting yoor1unny bCllf: and 'ltonderi ng "'llY Uiey call .IUhat.-since you didn't exactly !~I llkt llughlng • . ' . "IT IS A DIFFICULT THING," he said, "lor 1-1n adminislrator .to know whether he could preclpUate violence by the a(:lion of denying them . . . or letting them'' speak. •11's a ·tough problem, he saJd. • . While Superintendent Rafferty's con· ' ' ;- ·.,,~ .,; ' Guest Editorial . , r . "'"" • • ...J. cern for campus peace, -and his iJVersion tD the excesses of lhe Chic aga 7"s messages -can be appreciated, he could' well be advocating some un· Constitutional excesses of his own. And a.n1i;ig from a public official, such ex· cesses can be particularly repreheuible. WE KNOW OF NO University of Californ ia chancellor who is not dedicated to campus peace, and to the prospects of free Inquiry and the uninhibited e1· change or ideas.. The judgment of these chancellors as to the .suitability of speakers at any given time, we believe, to be preferable to the punitive approach being proposed by Mr. Rafferty. Santa. .BarMn New•Prtss · Trytng to creep !IOUfldlessly Ue the ~irl to . bed lhe first Ume \n your !Uc YJ>U st!Yed ,out ~fter ni!<fniglll. _· . ~----~--------~Bu George---------------~ , ' Swting to 9arve the initials of your lov'tct one" on a ttte in \her front yard aDd being shouted Jt from. a window by htr IM!her: "Go away. you naughty !Htlc boy>" ' 1 . ~6--A JOB eh yalir own and bragging to Your rather, "Oh Dad, I'll never need Oelp from you a:g1'in" - and then hitting him up for two bucks • the-very next week. Lying in a ditch in Tunisia under bombardment and trying lo claw your way through the earth to China -or unywherc but there. The Vast v1C:tory of pinning your flnt diaper on your daughter without bene.fi~ al wllely belp. . Dear Coorgc :, Isn't it silly 'to cast all the: he.roe~ ln movks and TV as talL men? ~fy bof ·friend ls :short. Don't you agree tfiat short rhen are just as sexy as tall me~! -· ' SUE Dear Sue: -.~ .' 1 Frankt)', neither ·dOd"i whof°e lot for me -why don't you write .• to Deer' Abby or' Ann Landers~ They're shorl Yummy! . - Dear George: I've never written · a fan Jetter before bul f wanted ta ~ay your column made a long and borina hospital slay 11 lltUc ':brighter for me. M. D. CX-er M. O. · As long as Ulls Ill 1 serious day : ~ously, lhank you for that consld«afe note and I appreciite ll. ' . • CoNFfDENTIAL TO MUHAM· MED CLAY~ No, I think It's a beautiful name-for a girl -why would yOu --w;,nr to-chinge JO\lr name? Muhammed JOtJes w I I I &Imply m11ke yoo have ID· change your Social Security regl!ilraUon and all . '• linl dn's hut , .. !ht jg el .... ! ... say, off fl!• leod lake are ary, "'" ritty -1ited ould here ..... he hen, put oold and all 1 ... that l ' i h~ :ago 1ted, un· And ... ib1e. of a led ~els <X· . ., any able osed ,..., ·cHECKING .. •.UP• . . 150. New All-ports ' ·In East I 0 Years • • • '· .. Opium Bron~ht Down Major~s World SAIGON (UPl) -, MaJ. lmprilonmeDl at hard lattor1 ll'ebnwy. to ruinaUon," was the way member rourt of Ueutenant Delbert Fleener·bad dLantssal frwn tbe Atrli'orce. ~~t. l ,Jn#r1ed from Fletntr'1 clvWan attorney, Colonel! and full Cok>ntls. ''I everythlnc ....,.hr him. II< and larltllure cl all pay and Fl!tner'1 tes~._ wu the Geo11• Lltlmtr of Silt Lake aever lhougbl lllal dope would btld Ute bl.at.t 1ward for allow Ji1eener' fact -.a ' oome-h>lo11l3' 1lfe." valor the ·U.8.' Air rOr.t can !ftC<lo · 1• ""1ry. o1 1 · decor•t~ officer ilty, Utah, put IL __ , -•~ It 1~-of rtddeiled and Ills b a•~ '10 ~ ...r lnlolod by Fleener lllsbtelf he did nol , ~r aaid he succumbed -·--· qulYered slllhUy as he saluted L> tempatatlon and -pt<d heblncfhlm.1'-'ftarned the president 'cl the Gtntrll 1'11 colle•..., •nd ,...rlon lcnow opium was c:onlalned ln 13,500 In advance from a the job d fl)'lnl ,~iican CQur:ts-Martlal Board, but ithat he frequeatly· tervtd as the 20 bozts he S\lpped aboard Ollnese bus Ines s man ln VlPt around AJIL 1 ~ ' 'othtrwiae he dbpla~ no AmbasucW ~l'l1 ·wortb:-Air Foret plants from Baoa:f:ok and wa~ to rteelve On Sunday, the 41-ye'ar~ld emotion. -Bunker's persooa1 pUot. Thailand . to Saigon. He another $2,000 for delivering DAil V PILOT 7 •• , tlll -WATER mASTER p119t from lndlanapolls, Ind., "°')" Fleener had been ft was . the· story of • tetUfltd 1 he · thought the the boxes -some to Hong watched his world· coll1pse found ,Wlty Saturday of bachelor who Jl•d··• way with parcels contained c he c Ii: 1 , Kong and some to Saigon. • .,.,..a.ct c_,,.,. belorehlmlnatloycourtroom smuggllng.imootono-h1~L>n the ladla bl!! who devoted cub, bu>llleu ,•ft<ltipts and None or Ille t:r wit....,., TOILITTANK8ALL at Wton'• Tin Son·Nlllt Air of opium a,nd lllecal "lftt11" hlmstlt to the Air Forte and pomographtc f1lma and boob. presented by the proeecution ,,....,....,-...,...., Bue. American cw:rency in.to Viet.. his rtsiq C'lretr. • '"There'1 1 no one who has testified that Fleefter did, in ::..:-:~~~ •tt. M. BOYD LOVE 1No-w ~ Our 'nle veteran pilot heard nam '00 ·aeveral Air Force ••ant ~ lapse hts anymore-hatred for dope than fact, know what was in the 11t.AJ HAIDWAll stotis A. Ahoul two milff ••• Q. ~hlmoe~_u_ ... ~te.....i~-·-""~1'_·~~·~~-m~111'--1s_._"~'"'~1b-allu~-d~l"'~~btGOl.....:p&,c__111e~"""~1a~fil-•~down~~1-dld-','-'_Flten«~~""~d·_the~•~lp_~~-bo-•_es_.~~~~~~--'-~~~~~~~~~ "How mmzy-buffalo did the Love and War n wishe!! to make mention the fact that widows arc ·cularly handicapped ~mat of romance. Eve , says, wants them to married again, but nobocJY likts them to go out oa dates. Odd, but true. HOW A WIDOW can be expected to meet another matrimonial mae w t t h o u t allowing herseJf t.o be squired· about town by the candidates is not quite cleir. But public opinion wodld h~ve it that way, sadly enouch. OUr L. and W. P.,fan Is filing th.is matter under S o c i a I In- justices. ' IF YOUJt SUNBURN isn 't too serious, spray soda water on it. A medical rellow says that's somewhat aoothing •. Old .West bunters actually kill!" A. Will dle<k the total and report promptly. All I know at the momeot ls they knocted down about 60 million In TUas alone. HOLL YWOOO OBSERVERS say Paul Newman wears a bottle opener on a" chain ~ iu. neck the way you and I used to wear doctacs. .• G~E WA8111NjlTON rerused to shake bands with aitybody whlle he WIS Presi- dent. To do so was beneath the dignity of the office, he said ... CONSIDER 111JS, ApJ:>roximately 150 new jet airports have opened up in the United St.ates in the last 10 years. OPEN.QUESTION -Why is .it that tarce women wear out clothes twice as fast as do small women? . SO YOU KNOW all ebout the. Bible, do you? All righ!, . Hr"NOTISAI -P..1.a Yb e where in the Good Book is you ve seen a hypnotist put a reference to 700 le.ft.banded some citir.en into a trance • SUMMER SP·ECIALS OUTFIT YOUR .fAMtL Y AT LOW, LOW 'PRICES! men! .•. HOMEMADE pork and -. ~~d ~ and beam is another dish 1n a ngid ~ po!ll~1 ,..----------------------------·---------------------------..... that's never at its best .iti1til between the backs of two it's reheated, t'm told. · chairs. A most remarkable -feat, what; Not, at all, not rtfORE HISTORY -U you at· all. Almost any of us can are 28 years old, you were do that when wide awake:. It born in that year when these just looks difficult, that's all. entertalnera were the 10 big-Go ahead, try it: gest. box-office !tars: l. Abbott JN' REPLY to a client'! In. and Costello. 2. Clark Gable. ' G Coo • Ml i.. qui.ry about men c a 11 e d . ary per. . c-Y W Ile N G M Rooney. s. Bob Hope. t James a r, our ame ame an C 7 ,__ .... g •·t says Walters tend to be agney, • \J'C:Ut Au..ry. •at:. • f !lo who h ty Grable. 9. Greer Carson. easygoing c w~ m t e lo <--Tra Wh t girls fi!'ld m"s~ appealing . ~"' .. r cy. a, you ~A---th . If remembered every one .. or UC\4use ct ell' g e n . e them? Congratulations, old-natures . timer. Your questions and com· CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. "It Isn't real Swiss d>ttse unless it's made in Switzerland, right?" A. Such was once the case. Now, how.Iver, Swiss cheese can be Tn('flts ore welcomed and wiU be u.sed in CHECKING UP ID~n1t'r pouiblt. Ad· dre1s Utters to L. Af. Boyd, P.O. Boz 1815, Nnoport Beach, Calif., 92660, made anywhere, but only ;=========o=;I Make • Sharp Trade; Use Dimt-A·UnH Switurland cbeest is made in Swllztrland. • , Q. "Ho'v deeply do you tiave to drill fnL> the earth betore tt sets hot enough to boil water?" l\nnelJI ~So.Ro/A - COME IN TOMORROW! r ....... 1r .... Get our Scissor Wizard Haircut for i~st ... ~1.88 Sue Cory 'Festival' Wave lncludlng'cut, shampoo, and styling ... 1.95 W• tipeeioliJt "' fht CON of fothion wigs Ull Ypull l!INNIY CllAllOI CAllD.- NO·APPOINTMINT NICISIAIY • •VLLI•'?" °"911tlf•lf Ctlllflr w flllw) '" ..... w ,...., ..,.nn w '*"• ...ue e•A"e• ''Tiit C/tY'' '39>_, . I SPECIAL BUY 1 .. ., • ...,.-....i,..,,,,,..•....._..., ohifts l<w tho tffb' _, play doyd Wd,, '1rifon,. .._ . ...r -ioo .. -and ,..i,.-/c-. 3•IO 6', 2 lw '4 7 IO 1', 2 for '5 Far IOddlon _ ...... ojftylittlo ..,_end --!hot -.... riflo '°' tho;r - -Sol;ch, ,. ....... _,,_;., -_, -1,.t,· .. ... bloodo.S-1Tto4T. 21°' $3 ............ , ..... Infant'• cotton polo & short 1et f« be,. aod glrlt, llyled to ,..,...., •p~ .... , ••. eaty~arw,WM1Chinwa1fli­ obl~ · cottott. Pelot and shortti .,. full ~ait 94' '•ftn.t'•· 1p9CiflcatiOt11. Neot su-.r colen, Mo I • s;, .. l·i. "·~··' 1.22 SPECIAL BUYI A fon ... ti< 9'-of folH;a ffry ope<iolly priollf for..-... wordrOO. 9Cl'rings. Now sew up a wild array of styltli fO( i.-.. _..,. .._h, you IMIMe itl letter hunJ in for best selection. COiton,, nr....•· poi)•*•/Qlfkm, ...., MOre in prints and ploins, ~4/49' ......_ 2 yds. 11 P~/cotton Yotl• prit\h, ""''s-wide ............... 6ac·J1f· c~ ....,aott-t pt'inn, 35/36" 'fti.dt"., ••••••••••••••••• aac yt/. Girls' cotton scooter skirts Perfect for flipping arHacl tow" on the wa1..., au"'"'•' doysl .. Hft ,iii eaty care cotton -• l>t!t1"11Y tlolor.d lw · all ,..., t-lte prlnll. 1.,. h•r at laeit a couple I , .. u ...... 2 ter•3 .! . . . . . • . . . -· . . . • . . ' • .; ' . ' .. I r • m4m •, -----------.. , • • 8 DAii. V PILOT MondilY, MAy 11, 1Qi'O UROC Bacl(s Nixon iJI editator's School Cont1·acts Ordered Fall Injures Ride Worke1· GOP Group Supports Ca111bodia Move " ARCADIA (AP) A carnival worker who fract ured LOS ANGELES (AP) -lcr1ninated," Aaron said. and more textbooks," the his 1klttl and broke his neek Both sides in a strike. by bulf The lr 'k 11·• A ·1 13 un1'on "'id. attempting t.o halt a runaway I SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald Reagan, Sen. George Murphy and SOO members of the United Republicans or California (U RCX:) ha ve firm- ly committed thentselve.s to President Nixon's policies in Cambodia. Murphy said lntel'\·entiun tn Cambodia was n e c es s a r Y because ··it is all the same \l'Sr"' that is being fought in Vietnani. Reagan tuld 1 he con· scrvatil'l' COP organization th;it NiKon·s decision ";if. finned the principle thal v.·r do not take lightly writing nff a rev.· for 1he co'ilvcnienct· of the 1nany. "1'h1s is Lhe first time sincr t:ise nhov.·er that a President n1ade ii clear that ~urrcndt•r is not an alternative ;u·· t·eptabl'.' to th(' United Sl:itcs." hr added. CROC demonstrated its ap- prov:i\ of Nixon"s acti"on by adopting an ('!nergeney rcsolu· 1ion urging thr President '"to tcrn1inatc 1hc l\'ar in Vietnam as quickly iJS possible through rnilitary victory." The resolution also urged Conrgess to ··supporl Pres1· ficn t Nixon"s 1nove to shorten !he war bv destroying the cnen1y force.s in Cambodia ." The convention. iis exp~ctetl. UROC Vote Campaign Boisterous ~A:-J DIEGO (UPI) -The campaigning Jor the United Republicans o f Californ ia fUROC l endorsement f o r Secretary or State got a litlle 100 \·lgorous Sunday. Outgoing UROC Chainnan \lichael Van Horn became fed up \\'ith the floor fight for delegate votes and ordered the candidates and their zealous staffs from the fl oor to pre. \efll "ann twiSting.·• Van Hom's main gripe was 1\'ith the enthusiastic sup- port ers or the front-running r·oovcnlion candidates -Los ' ----.\ngeles School Board member . r. c. Chambers and Negro Los Angeles attorney James Flournoy. 2 Sailplanes Hit in Air; Pilots Die TEHACHAPI (:\Pl -A \"et.eran airline pilot and ;inother man were killed Sun- day when their sa np!anes col- lided in m11l-air five miles so1:1\h of this Kern County city. The gliders crashed on a inountain called Dill Hill about 2·30 pm. The bodies were recovered eight hours later. f-----" illcd \\·ece Ilobert lL Evans. 55. of Palos Verdes Peninsul<t and Eugene Olah, 39. f\1alibu. the sheriff's o!fice said. Evans \\'as a pilot for Trans \\lorld Airlines. I The gliders \Vere towed into the air by other aircrt1fl \Vhich reltased the1n at the 6.JOO.foot level after taking off fro1n the Holiday Soaring School, a spokesman (or Tehachipi Airport said. No one witnessed the col· lision although seve ral ~rsons saw the plunge of t he :iailplanes. a shcrHf's deputy said. t Adv1rlit1me101) .WANTED AMADOR H. CORONA endorsed Reftgan, Lt . Gov. Ed Reinecke and Murphy in th1• primary. No endorsement \\'a~ ntade for the office of con· troller. Incumbent Houston I. Flournoy is challenged in the June primary by Jan1es ,\. \Vare. a Los A n g e 1 l's businessntan. Deleg~l!~S also ado p I e <l 5 1 e, ca \.'U "'P!1 ride whkb contained a 6-year· the 25,000 teachers in Los by the United Teachefs of Aaron broke off J o 1 n t Id bo 1· led · la1'r resolutions: o Y was is Jn 1 Angeles public schools are Los Angeles, has focused on negoliatioru, orde1·ing Ci l y condition today.'by a hospital. -Urging Reagan to rep ace under orders today to present a call for more state aid tu school dis,trict negotiators and Billie Hoyt, 2t, or Holly-~ 11011ard Day as president of con•·ct propo· sa ls by Wed· . wood, fell 35 1-t •· '"e as-. ...,, boost teacher salaries and lnl· union officials to m e e t "'"' "" "'' the State Board of Education nesday. phalt Friday night trying to prove classroo1n conditions. scpara!ely with their sides. with "someone who represents The ultimatum was n\ade rescue Carleton Bainoff of "The UTLA continue:. to be Lyman Powell, s c h o o I s lhe ronservative governmen-Saturday by Benjamin Aaron, \Vhittier. The youth was res-t.al philosophy." strike mediator, who said he concerned primarily with bet· negotiator, said he and his cu ed by another man. Los Angeles School Board n1ember J. C. Chambers won the VROC endorsement for Secretary of State over Jan1es Flournoy. <1 Negro Lo s Angeles atiorney. on a vote ol 294-127 in a runoff election. Three Other cariQidates sought the endorsement. --Censoring niembers of the would take the two contract ter schools for children. clean staff would work ''24 hours Police said Hoyt w a ! United Teachers of Los i· • offers and draw up one of· buildings, more ample SUJ>-a day with time out for sleep" operating a ride called '"The Angeles (UTLA) who went on ,.." ., ... ___ ,,,. his own Thursday. "U they piles. smaller classes, more to present a revised contract Hammer" -when the ride strike against the school •• won't accept my proposal my nurses and counselors, a c:on1-ofJer ordered by Aaron , a la:w stopped, leaving the boom systeni . u s e f u I n es s will have pclitive salary schedule .. , profcs::.11r. perpendicular to the ground. -Calling for the imrned iaf'.' ________________________ :__ ____ .:_ _ __: ____ :__ __________ __:__::____:__:__: __ .::_ __ The endorsement for al· torney general \\lent to Slate Sen. John Harmer or Glendale over fo rmer welfare director Spencer \Villiams and S::!n. c.~eorge Deukmejian of Long Beach. impeachn1ent of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Williain 0. Douglas. -Con1 inc nd in g Senate leader Jack Schrade ( H-San Diego) for his •·t1cdica lcd and unselfish acls"' on behalf of California. -Urging President Nixon to lift economic sanctions against Rhodesia. Der11ocrats JTI ill Seek More School Dollars SACRA.IJE~O· <UPI) - Dem ocratic Assemblymen 1rere pledged to seek more money for California's schools tody as the legislature'~ lower house took up Gov. Rona ld Reagan·s $600 million laX revision program. Asse1nbly speaker Robert T. ~lonagan (R-Tracy) set Lhe plan, contained in a bill by assemblyman \V illiam T . Bagley (R-San Anselmo) for debate as a special order of business. Reagan and Republican SUJ>- por ters wantl'd the measure passed by both the Assembly and the Senate before the J t.r11c 2 election \l'hen Proposition 8, a rival property tax reduc· lion initiative, will be voled oo by Californians. Deih&Cttatic assemblymen were expected to try to tack on amendments to Bagh~y·s bill. Last week 36 of the lower house's 39 Democrats signed a letter to Reagan "implor- ing" him to take irnm~ate steps to pump more dollars into tbe state's vast school program. When the tax bill was·mov· Mg through· committe e , Democrats tried to amend it with more money for schools. Their efforts proved futile as -+Bagley, chaiJ"man 0(. the Revenue and Tixa'tioh. cijl,: mil lee, •said 'property tu rel~f wa s imperati_y_e to \'@rd off chaos threatened by the pro~ilion. He said school do llars should be takeri up as a separate issue. Mom,2Kids ' Die in Vista Brush Fire VISTA !AP) -A \vomal\' and her two children \Vere killed in a 1.700-acre bru sh fire in the San Marcos Hills; of ..£an Diego County. Thei r bodies' vocre fou nd Sunday f~fter firemen controlled the '()Jare. The woman's h u s b a n d • William Goheen, 26, of Vista told sheriff's deputies he left hls family in their pickup tru<:k while he aided the firefighting Saturday. The bo1fies of Maria (,oheen. 25, Roberto, 5, and Laurie . 3, were found 1.000 feet from the truck. The truck was not burned. A Father's Day is June 21 AL!I~~~"· ORDER THIS WEEK! • .l Father's D~Y delivery is d I still guaro ntee . I ~ Large, lovely 11x14 Father's Day Portrait that says "We love you!" only . 5 88 Yes, .• o magnificent 11 x1 4 Solon Por!roil ... (more !hon half th• $ize of this newspaper pg9e) of you ond both your children ond the family pell A worri'I and wonderful gift for Dod on Fother'J Doy that . ' Save i 1'.95 on Penncrest• four temJierature gen dryer tl•g. l 69,95, NOW ~158 • Settings for popular fabrics • 1'-0 minute timer• Interior light• Porcelain finish top and c;irum •Ten minute cool down• Safety sta rt switch• Easy access li nt filter • Adjustable signal sentry • Whiff, coppertone, or harvesl gold ... colo~costs no more at Penneys! PENNCREST® . WASHER FOR SERVICE ON THESE PRODUC TS. CALL YOUR PENNEY SERVICE TECHNICIAN • SALE! Pri~es effe<tive thru Saturday Save 21.95 on Penncrest• 6 program automatic washer R•I· 209.95, NOW • • Fu11·medium·low water level settings.. • Six program wash selections • All over porcela in finish• Safety lid switch with tub broke • Safety cut-off for un• balanced loads• Rotary switch controls •White, coppertone or avocado ••• Color costs no more ot Penneys'I Save 11.95 on Penncrest' 4 temperature electric dryer R•g. 139.95, NOW • Settings for popular fabrics including permanent prell; fluff dry setting for ~pecio l articles• Automatic dewrinkling • Automatic signal sentry• White, cop· pertone, avocado or harvest gold • colorcostt no more at Penneys! USE PfNNEYS TlMf PAYMENT P\AN Jf T llm "'11nted by my many kHp1 on saying "We lo\oe you" all year long! Com• friends. I am no"· In my · d d c . h own bfl.rbl•r iohop. Joc(ttc-d at rn now on 1ove ., ..on rememl1fl"r you con c oro• 1791 Newport ll•d., 11cr~!I II.---'-'-"-'-'•-•-"-'~'-"-· ---------------i! tht' street from Gntnl't Su,.. l'iu11 In Cmlla Mt'l(ll. Phone !S-18-031 L Comt' 11nd _!!,.,. n1r. I n1'1"d yoor hl'ad In mY . b1.1sin1•n. Th•nk you, Amador H. C•t•t1• O••l'l'fl•it (tt!'~ ll'l4I ,_., 111....ia ·~l,lfOIW;iM)ft Cl'MH ,,.., ,.,. 1n .n 11 QllA/roQf "IMf CllV'" •.n !C'I MEWl'Oll:T l lACll ~t-~IM ht'"" ,,,, tffi01 •• ,, ?Ji) BURBANK CANOGA PARK CA RLSBAD COLLEGE GROVE CHULA VISTA DOWNEY FULLERTON GRANADA HILLS HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON PARK LAKEWOOD LONG BEACH LOS ALTOS MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH I NORTH HOLLYWOOD ORANGE "T HE CITY" SAN FERNANDO SANTA ANA TORRANC E VAN NUYS VENTURA WESTCHESTER ----------.-·---- Mondaf, M1t 4, 1970.I DAILY 'ILOT 8 AHi MA logic Fall Enrollment . ~ Turnaways Record at Colleges WASHINGTON (UPI) -These studenta haw three tem. Of the 3S univtnltles o( mticlpated reJectjons, for betn fon.-td to cut jhe size c:ent In the f\.Udwest where,---------- -~-~--~••• -ed t&..tl-.. Mvert1,......r More than 87,000 ~.,,_ J)OUible aJtemiaUve1. 'Ibey '"'t"""''6 tit"'"' re, .... _, both re15dent and ouklf·sllte ol lb: treahmlo claA by more there have been large tuition1 _________ _ ouaHfied studmts will be .can seek IKknbsion to another 11 were ln tbe South, 10 h1 applicant.a, were z year-old than 1:-0 to 9,040 because increases for out.of-state refuse admis•lon by t.be na-pubUc institution tn thlt llate the Midwest, t ln the Federal City Colltge in the ot inf,lfficient housing and students. AppHcaUon., in &he Now Many Wear tion's major slate universities if there is ooe, they can try Northeast I.Del 4 in the West. Diltrie& ot Columbia, 1fhlch clan~ space along with rALS£ TEETH this fall, pn.'lUllily because private ttchools or they can 11»1 Uriveratty d Puerto Rico plans to turn away 11,000 I f1culty ahortage.. South rose by 1.7 ~rcent and rfll , there is no room f......ahem, a battle for the limited space also reported thlt It· an-students of which 95 perc:enl Rutgers University In New in the West by ~·6 per~nt. With Llttle Worry survey showed Saturday in state ihveralUes outside . ticlpated a abort.age of space. will be Washington residents, Jersey portrayed only a The university w1tb the 1)o Y0\11' tai.. ~h a1u1or t.11.d This rejection rate. up near-their slate. 1 Of the 17 achoob: upertlng and PeM State University, "sllghlly lesa dlln)al picture.'' greatest increase in a~ ·:::~ .ZOU1a b1 ~n::, -=: ly 75 percent from last yur, In the latter two cases, they t0 nject Jn.ltate appUcants, which expects to deny ad-the survey llid,..Jtutaen eJ· plications -29.t percent -~t _. ,.~ Deotur. Ad: w1·11 be lbe bi"ha.al ever the _ _._._ .. 1........... . s11· w•-In ·~ N-~•-ast, ~--._. -l"I lMl'I•• "'"°an on )'OIUr Dta\11 . ...; &"......,., • are CICl-....w to pay ·~ tui· ~.. w11e Ulllll'll mis~ to 10,400 students -pecta to re,_. S.-qua u ed y,·as City University of New t0oUM PA81'UTB tioJP rout d•a- NaUonal Association of St.ate tton fees and likely to incur five in the South, four in the 7,400 of them at.ate readents. appllcazQ Jncludlnc 2,eoo New York which initiated a ntw !.UZ'·~~~rnttwma~ Universities and Land Grant other added co.sts, auch u Midwest and ooe in the West. p lw Je......, rtadeU. °' WMI d "' Colleges reported in issuing enn State "one of the '""J open adml.sal!>ns policy this ::n,.,;w,~, .. :I.i, 'fu~o.ao h transportatJon home and back 'lbe University of Puerto Rico most crltJcal admissions prob· AppUcanta for admlsaion ln· year. It eipect.a to Increase tw. \hat a'.,. -.it11.1 to -.i1.1:1. t e survey. during vaca~. was the 17th. }ems Jn the country," ac-creased by U.4 percent in its freshman clas& by 11 .441, :::,..z:irUl91:~· .. ~t The SW'vey • covering h of N · J • suU d --two u n I v • r 11· t 1 e • ~·-•· "· It h th No~--~ ~1 b I •• 5 •··· •-the 101 state universities and o singe regK>n ert 11n: 1.vtwi1& .... \Oii!: survey~ a:s e 11.11"*"t u;1S year, u or"°· percent, to.accomm~ --oou-- lalid grant colleges which _moet~~from~~the~en~rn~l'."me~nt~pr<lb-~:__'repon;n~~· ~g_::lbe:::_:hl~lfleal~~llU'."m'."be':"...r ~2t'.::,4~11~a'.!'.ppli<ations~· ~· ~~bu~<:...'.h~.,'._~actua~~Uy~dec:<~'.'.'.e1~11d::'..".:by~l:,::.3'...pe~r-~d~a~J.e~lbe~m~1er'."•~.,.~· ----'========== bek>ng to tbe association, U.. Navy Hoping To Help Out Sailor's Life dlceJ.ed that at least 35 member schools will have to run away applicants they would ~t if they had more classroom!, housing a n d facultY,. or i[ they were not operating w I t h enrollment \\' AS HI NGTON lUPI') -quotas for out· of -s tate The Navy has disclosed plans 51::(5~ the proopective co1- to soften the sailor's work lege freshmen rejected will day and make his. military be seeking admission to a ciuar~rs more comforta ble university outside their horn~ with a $1.7 billion program state. At the University of of new housing, schools, clubs Vermolll, for example, 4,300 out-of-state applicants will be and chapels. vyi\1g for 670 _v a can c i es Navy Secretary John 1-1.' permitted under that school's Chafee and Adm. Thom as ll. quota. r..1oorer, chief of· naval opera-But 17 universiUes predicted lions, said both programs they will have to degy en- were designed to reverse a trance to a total of ·more growing tendency among both th 30 000 elig.bl horn I.al ofticers and enlisted men to an ' 1 e e-s e choose civilian life over re.,_•_PP_lica_· -""'-·------! enlistment. Testifying before a Senate appropriations subcommittee, Chafee requested $157 million for a 1971 start on the Navy housing program. The figure compares with $530 million re- quested by the Department of Housing and U r b a n Development (HUD) for new civilian housing. Chafee said $88 million would be used to build $3,500 family housing units, and $70 milllion for bachelor housing, schools, (Jubs and chapels. Moorer, testifying before the committee, said b u d g e t restrictions had' forced the Navy to spread its forces thin and work its men loo hard . .. It is urgent -that the te1n po of operations be eased, sea duty n1adc more at· Ir.active. and a greater degree i of stability restored 10 our entire force s tru ct u r e,'' Fl·1oorcr said. He did not elaborate on plans to ease the \vork tem po. Both men cited the Nav)r's inability to keep trained men in service. Chafee said the percentage of Navy pilots staying in service dropped from 60 f'IC'rccnt in 1966 to :11 percent last year and will he an eslimated 26 percent thi" year. "Surface line officer reten. lion has remained at a LTi ti cally low rate, fluctuating between 14 and 19 percent, 1vilh no improvement in sip:ht," he said. ~ ... J'l<el .... ,,.,.,,....ecbecp1·"'C ofoar--I 19<h md &Ida llo.t. ~llt"1ir Paints 'W~ SdqJdie Salllt °"" •••••• ••Gwlllatbll liaol:ID-i . ....• ,... Bills Piling Up'? use our money! At Morris Plan ""'d lil<8 tO help'°" wllh loft. over bins, home Of car repajls, 1nlY9I « Kfaool expenses. That's what Morris Plan monll¥ ii fo r. On approval you can borrow from $100 to $5,000, or more, and have )'OOl' lllOl10J the cloy you apply. Paymenls ooi...-lo 11 _. income. When you need money tor ""' good -. see Morris Plan. We like to maim loans. Morris Plan 673-3700 Newport Beach-3700 Newport Boulevard MOTHERS' DAY SALE! 15%"0FF OU_R _E_NTJRE 1 STOCK OF FA·SHION MANOR CHINA! PRICES EfffCTM THRU SATURDAY ' L.l.DY ELEGANT SOUTUDE CHARGE fTI VINEYARD ANGELIQUE HEIRLOOM SUZANN! ARABESQUE ETERNAL ltOSE Th9 A.-. h'MllJC9M tfWia Is.,.,.., ~ in qctcility ••• delicme yet dlllnlbJe •• • ltOW ovol1oble ot • fabutovs 15% Nduetion. The patterns ro• from on .1...,... plarinun11 citdti °' traditional wheat oncl Mof delign to coloriul floroh. S.lect your fo.ori'I• partem today! .59 PC. SET: 11 tups, 11 KllK(!rs, 8 bread o nd but1er pfote, 8 soled plates, 8 dinner plalt-s, 8 fruit/dH~ert dishes, 1 sugar with COYer, 1 creamer, l chop plote, 1 ,olod bowl. 91 PC. SET: 18 CUf», 12 MJuc•rs, 12 b~ and butle r plote-s, 12 io!ad plotes, 12 dinner pfotn, 12 soup/cereal bowls, 12 fruit/d.uert dishes, 1 sug ar with COYer, 1 ''~"'•'• 1 '"'all plott•r. I lo19t plane•, l op•n "•getabl• di,!.. 1 grcvy bocrt.~ 1 ~It \tabor. Av•ilable in S9 Pc. 4"ntl 91 Pc. Seti lotly lle9ant, An9elique, Heirloom, Suzanne 59 PC. SET REG. «.98 •........... NOW 37.97 98 PC. SET REG. 79.98 •......•.... NOW 67.97 Solltutle, Vlneyartf, Pinffele, New •••• 59 PC. SET REG. 37.98 ••••••••.••• NOW31.97 98 PC. SET REG. 69.98 ••••••....•• NOW 59.47 Awell•"I• In St Pc. Sets O•ly l- REG. 37.98 ..................... NOW 31.97 ''elude . ......-1 REG. 44. 98 ••••••••••••••••••••• NOW 37.97 AraH111ue, lten1•I loM, l91li1h lace, Marltoe, v ....... REG. 49.98 ••••••••••••.....•••• NOW 42A7 Chflton, lrantley, Champlain REG. 59.98 ..................... NOW 50.97 Menette, Lcrvra .~1., ..... ,.. , "' REG. 69.98 ••••••••••••••••••••• NOW 59.47 PINEDALE NEW ROSE ~RELUDE ENGLISH !ACE MARLTON CHltTON NOW! THESE VAlUES AT ANY ONE OF THESE PENNEY STORES! I BJIANTlEY CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD LAKEWOOD. MONTCLAIR lEA FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH DOWNEY NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY" VENTURA LAURA SHOP SUNDAY, TOO 12 to ·s P.M.! ' " • • -• • • • • ! • • : ' ! ' l -i . ' '~ " . ' . i -d .. I • t • l J I ,1 Jt, ~LY PIUIT -· ...... 1'70 For. rrhe Record Fishing for Books De•tlt 1\'otlee• llDWll turti: ,._,_ .,_, IMI ... l!l'lnt lllllHo ("'1• -· ..... ""'' o.i. ol ... , ,.,,., I ltlrvl ... W ,..,_._ Mt. Ind M"- (IMIY .,_,,, 1111.,, ,......,, Wltlllt• .. ,_ 0.•,._.I, Gr.....,, C~ ANfli, 1-..h AldrN ,,_,,, ...,.,...., JOM Twrr1 ,,.,,..,....., Mr, ..J Mrt. Miio ~ '*"-'-"'· , ... ,. ,.,,./ ,.. ... ""' .... ~,, Mr1. Ellflke Sl111• '"" M.,,, s.1" w,_1.,, -...,...._ vnc-.. end '''"''· s .. vll11, W...,......,, I:•""'· \to'nlcllH '"'""" ,,,,.,.,_,,, PKlflc \'....., ..,._, .. , ,,,I'll, Wn•ttlff CNM4 Mwl11> .,.,. ~ 0 1"9<1 .... , .. 11••• , ..... \llctot ,.,,1 ... •t• w. •·1-91"4 .. .. _ _.. ._,,, 0.!1 ., """" -'· '""'Plftill' b¥ Wiit, SIM!Ulr ~t..-, ... lr'lc1 IN!k. l.M ........_ l'rhrelol' Mnkft ltl a.111 Cnl1 ,,,,_ "'9rtl!MYo ttAleMT '°""' W, "-"""'· o.t. tlf •lfl. Mn 7. """""-aw wtt.. """" C.l..,1 ~l1M, ._..... ~ .. ,_...,, ' AM. °"" ~ ltl Ml. (....,,. O!Mllc Cl'lwdl. _..,., .MCI!. ,_.....,,., G«lf "'-,,..., , ..... I I...,, lt!ll (Ol11 IMu lrMfl~ry, Ol•H • ,,,. MOil' .. ..., J. Hot-f, Lt. Cal., USMC 111.i UOI W .. f'lo.c:1, CIUI Met1. 0111 ol .. ,lfl, ...... M lt, iun!NH Ir( -·· llolllr/'tt _. .. ,._,, pl "'--' IH<lll 01,.lol, Gf IM ......,., dowtlil'-"• L1ur1 Hoer, Colli ........ I ft"'-', Wltll1m I'. How, Df lt- hllllll/ °'°""'"' Wlllllm ,-. HMY II, llf t-. e........... s..nlc.. -· held ""'°'"' •.clllc vi.w Cfllpt(, wlfll ,,.. W....... 11 fl, ltlll«r9M "•llofwll c.r... ........ hint l-. 1'-..llf' -" -trlbu!ICIM .. ""' HMrf P'llM _. ~ )Oei.t'(, 'Ki'lll"'" ~"'· Olr«tor .. ICU•Nl:L 'falk Scheduled On Electronics l'.ctn1 '· Kumnil. ,,._. st. And••w• IRVINE -Dr. Char'·s H. Or'l¥1• hll '-<JI. 0.t. of C1111h, "'-Y 1. HI '11rv1...., .,. ,_..,,11r, ''" .. LoC• GD!!, Towne1, winner ol the Nobel Ill ,_, 101to P'l'Mk J .. Gt t1Mo111111!r1, 111i..iu ,,,. t11 ... 1r11111d111t1 ...... ,,,... Prize hi physk& to 1964, will .,, tolllv. MOndlv. '''° PM, 11111 speak on "Reflect.iont on g,.,,.i, 11111 CGlll Mfll Mof'lw.ry, 01-nc:tor.. Quantum Electronics,"' at 8 wmi.m "· Mc~~11:;:. "· vt t)f w. p.m. Tuetdly ln tht UC Irvine 1"" ''·· co.11 M-. '""'1"" "" ,..1._, Town ~. 1'bt lecture b mcCormicL LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY • 494·9415 • #Ar .......... Hw:Lorl1. (Mii Mt"' IWI open to the -~I'-. S1rYl'!.f n. Elltir1 S111Ht C.11t Ar•• --. Ja11r1," 111 ... _. 11Hc111 w11111 ..... 1_....:. ___ ~,....:..::~~.:;_ ___ _::::======================='I o1 Cllll M-1 ~. Arcrt ... If k'afo;I .....,, -1ltt'"' Mr1. Mett11 Ctwl 11111 .... ,, ~ balll If kotllrid. S..Vkft, Wedrllld1'1, t '"" •111 ,,.,...,..,.,. C,_.., w!"' 5'Ml1.W Mtoonlc lldvl 111\clltllll. 1t1• il...-W.l" Mort111ry, DlrKll,.._ ..... If. ,_,.. I. ,. .... ,., ,,..,_ ''~ ~ ,_ 0.11 al OM11'1,. A.rll 1111. l11r.hr .. W 'Wtfl, ldl!tl. '-kn WWI ~ i. -· M!/11$f, PKll'le VllW' (ri-1, flt' WmMtt, P~ vi.. ~· ,.,,.., Olrtd• W P1clflc VIM .....,.,.., SMITM ';,"°"' L l m!tri. nu ll W1tlrblml ltd., o.w ....... D1t1 Df dlittll. IM'I f, f\INl11 ... a,y "'"" L1<1rl4 E. •mlt1o1 -. Mier.I'! G. 1!1'111111 molllw ... lldl'tY l!l'llllU two "'"°"""" 1tldll'111 \,..,,,,, ..-111m11n V•f. l1y1 Donlld YMttr• c:ii.-tr1, New Yorlr . ).lrliee. TIMl!Ml', l """' PKltlc Yllw < 111P11 • ..,..,.....,,, ••Hit V• Mfm..,. l•I P11'111. Dll'lf•• lw Plllltl( VIN Mw- .,~, T•ALL• M .... 11 M11 Tr1lle. taol #ol•lr't It~ Lot A"'811-. OIN II ... Ill. Mff I, 1111" ¥1\lld W .on, ,l\ltlll It. ~Kin-. LM """'"' M 111U9flltr1, M,._ '•lrkl• T, MeOowlll. c.,,--1 Nin. Lucfl1• M.9 .. tin. COit• Mft•1 11'14 foiJI 1r1111kf\lldl'1n. ""'lc:I&. Tl/lldll'I, II NA. W1-1Y CM• •'· flirfM-M-111 '""' wllll It..,, '""""" ._ affklltlM. fllta CMll Miil Morlv11"1'. Olrldon. W•tOMTON lllllb9r'I Jollll Wrttl11111, All N, It 1•1·71. Afllllol w1r ... ~ IMdl. lvrVl'llCI tlY rnol'flll", M ..... ltlll Wrllhton1 f111'lolf', llllblr1 G. Wrlll'llloN lll'OlllW, Wllt .. m C. Wri1Mon1 -11•'-• ,,,_,., IUll!llln. llllfl .! ' ••• -P1"'"'9i lr.....,11'11.. IW. •1111 Mr.. wmllnl ti. WrllMoni. IM Gta.. rll-11 """'"'I ,,lnOPe,..., Ml, 11111 "'1't. ~ P, lrlllMrt. I.AM tlldl. -Ill ..,...kit. Tlllldl'/•' t*M. P~ t•t Yllw °""'· '""!llr lllHWll n-WIMlnl 11 fNll.1 -1" ~ IOI-• """'rlbutl ti lhl (•" "'""" •t hOOI tor Oftl-olc.lltr H1Mlk11Nd l _lllldr1ifl. ·-· """'' ... Jvoll!I °"'' •. .,1111, to111 ~ 1/1 ... Dllll• Piiat. f'•tllll VllW M01'11111"1'· Dlntlon. o•IMIM.t.W , _. lH G.rllnllltiW, 4 '""'' tllff, ... _... ~ AM •• ~ lit' ... .-. .. ""· 1!111 ,,.,.., .i.a °"'"""'"' l lt ...... l lrlde ..... MMil1 ......... lol9pli· .., GrlmU-, 111 If N-1 ltHdll ,,..,. 1-1 1r~!ll1r" M"-r:1J l1ridtl11, l.llllN INc;I!., lot,.;lct .. WIClftlldlYo I ,.M, "· ~"",..... Pr1111yt.n.n cnurcfl, .. _.. lltlth. , .... 11., __ ,, t!>oo• Wltlll .... lo m1•1 """"rltl tonlr11Wlkln~, l'IHll ('Ontrllll/11 11 Worl4 \l'l•lon. P.O. ._ 0. Pl........_ P1t!l!I Vllw MOftu.lry, D\rKlort. • ~UCKLE 6 SON ' WeolcWI M°""lr)' C'I E. 17111 st., C.lo M.,. -• BALTZ MOimJAlll!S C<noo de! Mor OR a.MR C.lo M.,. MI f.ZGI • 11E1.1. llROADWAT MOR'l\IAllY 111 BawclwaJ, c.ta M• uwm • lllLDAYllllOftlBllS BadqtoaVolle)' M-.,. 1'1111--. ........ ludl ... 7171 • PACIJl1C VIEW MEMORIAL PAM ~·M­--~Dme N...,.n -'Colllc• -• PmP'AMILY COLONIAL nJNllRAL ~ --Aft. Wee• ' ' .as • -~-·1~a-MOaUilY '--•1111 S. O.zr 0 1 ... 111 • SMl'l'I§' lllOR'l1IAllT .,_ ... 7 ....... - I ~~j~~4surg~ry or ·Just an asp1r1n? There's !!2 gyesswork at Penneys Auto Diagnostic Center. Either there is or there isn't something wrong with your car ••• and we'll find out scientifically! ·. •v•u PA•IC • "VltTtlt•rOlf tl.-.CM In ... lhln ... hour, ... put ,..., tllr llltough ....... al aci- --(211 al.._ to ... _ ......... ..,.._,, pt~l&!iC •Klwtm of pollnllal -&wing. Engtna. -,._ ....... Eloct-1 and ~-luoland­ •Y•t1m1. E1p1rt anatyala of _,itllng ..... llel<lllglJI> 10 llllplpe. You watch the results com. • eut on an .ieetronlc typew11111. : A oklllod d'-1cton - : -1111 '-' wllh '°"'",.. • Wlol\ 111'11 glvo you ., - al ony -.swy N1J01tt. You'll ·ti. able to take Clt'9 of 1m111 PftlOlen• now, blb'w they de-*"'Into big.,.......,.-... big-. And, I'°"....,,;,.,..,. will ..... the ......... qulc:tfy, Ill> cunuty. eaonomle..,_ ""*'• --Pl"""·-~-If,.."""'·,.. -toke.,. fWpOft .,,..... JOU nu. ,.._,Gair 9.88 Pretty rn1111•1DMbtt""llllfor a cloclor, 8-dlp. ,, enneysAuto Diagnostic Center 1'1SdlntllcTroublllhoohn SHOP.SUNDAY TOO 'l2 to 5 P.M.! OOWNIT NIW"O•t l lAC" L'VllllTOll Tiii CltJ, O•AN•t , ...... ~·-......... fttoRD .... ,,, I .. County Nam~ .12 Mental Health Board Set SANTA ANA -The Orange pedialrl<s de~ and a tal Health Adv1sot7 Boor4 County Board ol SuperviJors membtr of the state task and Tom Corbin. medical has appointed 12 penons to force wbictl devised the new center admlntstrative anat,s. a new Mental Retardation p r q gr a m ; Mrs. Ruth Parents-Rkbard \Veei.s ol Program· Board. Gormsen, Laguna B e a c h Balboa, John Gordon ol Brea .. 'Jbe board members balked medical social worker, and and Carlos Solis o( Santa Ana. at the a~ originally Lawrence Schram, CounilY Recommended by the CHP A when 1 h e c$mprehc~ive Education Department. \ for appointment by t b e Health PlaMing Association General Public-Dr. John Governor are Raymond Braey (CHPA) suggested that only Philp, county health officer. of 1'ustin, county Department two county o(ficia.ls be named ,.1rs. Rosemary Saylor, South of Social Welfare; Edward c. to the new group-and in a 1 __ Laguna,.;;,_._chainnan __ · __ •_I ~'be~M_•_•_· _Wnd~_•_l_Cor_o_n_a_c1e1 __ A_1ar_. _ ~voting capacity. !'1111 hlltk •I .... _ll"lislfneilloll Block Print Lecture Set The Una! selection lncludesJ,.----------------- three county offieials, who will have voting r1 ght.s, and nine other persons representing the medical profession, t b e general public and parents of mentally retarded children. HITCHCOCK ,, I AX ('tll l It . I tlR A w rYey a1D011:; tlocl.ontibowed LB~ o! t he docl.ors :reporting eit.her use 1';.e.para.tW.. 11'9 tbemselv-es or ru::ominenJ it for t hcir f:im.ilies. f.i<lsu;:>11 of hemorrhoids catr.ll'd by inll:.immatioo and infection. 1i ah!olubricatcfttobe!p proUd tho inflamed, irritated wr!aee :uea. and helpii make bowel move- ment... Je,;s painful. There'1 no Qlhi:r !orinula for hemorrhoiiis like Prc-purati<.o11 lL Ointmcn~ P r,..paration II ;j\'rH prompt, tPm~r.n·y relief in many casPs f f"t)ln pa~it.ching of ti~aes a11d actuan1 heolp11 shrink 11..rol!en ®GP · 14 p\."f l'()'t N0~~!~.:!4 3SMl*llG~AtWllH to MONTHS 100'lfo NU:/WAJIC£ f ............ c-.lft ,_ fGl'..a ~ ~ ~ IQm: • rGMIG'.J ~ ~-.. ~ °" ~ bi~ lire:.J lllf.llld al ..... tmad f//I llclf!el: taillftl, b -~led .... \hr ...-e Jltillllll ..... Gt 19Mltt, I J0W tiJe fails dlrriC 13' c-Olllilll: ,....., •""' I • llS ...i • w11t. at .,.. oplKJa, R.'pllM' ,_ tire. « ........ ~ • the ~ pm:dla prk:e, jacW. i1r11: aciplklb£e fedlnl lltbe T=-.. torMtl Ole pwtlla5e uf I ,_. i.. Wr 1lill all&:. 100% d flt origkd ~ piite, irr&lldlilil "IOPlk_,., redtf111 b&.ie ~. ~ t11e .JOO% atlow3llc:e penoiL l b1Jf!Nf9er, wt •ill ..._ !o0% « 2SS d "" or~I ~..r ~ .....,,., ~ ~ [d;ii: l.-., ~ "" pmci'#V' el •.. ""~· fSte dlrilt bl:bl). ......... ,..,_ ........... .......... ,.wc~~~~~~~~~1 ~ .. tu ~ --period ).to--fto'~ ~~period J ).t!ln;xdb-, 25% ~ penJd 3).JJ..-.; ltt .. Ufe~ 'all! ~ Wv _, ror...t • uie "~'°' illdic;lbs. lrt r....-.-. ,_. tile~ be'~ I ~ _, _, OIC tt>- •• W ilurnd. aic O we ...... • llliwe blsed ~ ........ ,_... Jlfic:e. ....., ""*"* hderll r..m ~ .._,. .. ,,_...Ill•-tiN. WI t1i1 ..,_ K dsilt: .. tis:.C .... " ....... __. llllf" .. sl*'d 90llClas af ~· 1~ ...-.. 111 lllll ..... 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Orig. ,.., ,_ G78-1.f('825-14) I e1270"511 1111260 GJS.15(81S.l'l. :r1.A5 240 .. .• DRIVl IN,, ,CHARGIO! STARTS MONDAY 1"2-3 LUBE SERVICE 5.88* ·-al -ail ""'-' l&t Penneys Auto Center do it o r this volUoe pnce. ~r11ice in. (_ludes o chonge of oil (up 10 .5 qts. of fo1emost.: Heovy Oury Motor Oil) , new oil filter ,,. ... u,. job • ••st A"'erica" ~rt .... ,,,.1 , .. ...., -~~ ---BUENA PAii!:' CANOGA PAIUC CARLS&AO CHULA VISTA DOWNE Y ~U llER.TON HUNTINGTON BE:ACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH ORAHGf "'THE CJTY" VENTURA 'O µii ................. ....,... • TV DAILY t MONDAY ... , . Edfttt'1 Note: 111111 flH 11 JIM pl.,oft1 (bl· twllll L.A. Ut1n 11111 lkw Ytrt lakb) wltt be 1irtd tonf111t llr m.J,, Q.. 1.. ....wi111 tti• btlt· ef • ..,.. Mria C11t1tlnu11 tlllt '"· n .. fl M 1111t1\lllted. 1:5s m c.•• .. 11,..-. 1:00 om UYiJtl"• cc> 1301 111) t•rol C111nnl111 cunts u hllf ol ti. world's richest couple, 1M 11 1 tonner chl141 lttr MW It the U.N. 0 MIWM: C.. (t) (30) Llny lty. den hOlb. Glorl• Swinson, Huell O'Bri1n, Selmt Ol•moad, Donlld O'Connor, Shirl., Jontt •nd Mtl Torm• 1uat. m T• Ttll IJlt TruUI (C) (!O) Em w...w ,,_ (C) (60) &>Pt..,_ .. (30) 1:05 GS Aqal T1 .. htlnts (2S) ' MoncUy, May •. 1970 'Estahlishmente1·s' Get Established Br tltYRAAt BOftDEKS Grant,, an artists' manager, LAS' VEGAS, Nev. {UIJl l eboreographer Howard Parker ,:Tea yoUng men a.iM.l "'omen, and musical director D'Ameill 'w'ho say "v"e don't agree \\'ilh Pershing, who had made a everything ~ Establ!st\ment daring promise to provide a , ~oes but we'll1never be caught singing group for Andy Grif. inarchln~ around a f"h ho h rourthouie," have .added 8 it w t en was readying a show ror Las Vegas. new dimension to thal much· Th h d t ablded a~ of .\nlJtical life. ey a wo wee.ks to put ""'"'"' "" the group together and they DAILY PILOT ; I NOW SHOWIN• "FANTASIA'• ,....,. .. ._..._,, CINt.l>O;\lf. ~c:f!'-~ . ........ . .. .... ' .. . ., ~ .. IJ 91)) """' .... (C) (30) (R) !tiny dtcides to 1111U L«y's Hf1 tisitf by hirln1 1notblr _,,.. tary (W111d1 Cl•rll) to mbt Mr, but Luer thinks slit's due to bt rtplKed. 'Rainbotv' Last Song For Judy In fart, the JO -rive young did _ welding 10 musical in· men and ftve young women dlvldoaHsl!, soloists, into a -h i'V t adopted the name, clloral whole. "The EstablishO'!ent." f o r·.;===========.11 their singing and dancing actlJ 1:00 • 11c """ (C) (50) Jerry Oun~. am H•11t1t,.an~MJ <c1 1JO> e Ca ,.. r., Tllbl (C) (30) Wlnk M1rtind1l1 hosts. P111tlis1J 111 Rid 8utto111, Stu Gilllam i nd M11111 AmU1rd1m. 0 We Cny T\MtN (30) 1111 Unreltntin1 sq." l•• Aytts l\lttb.. Dick l'ftell is holt. O @(}J.l!!lAIC-""'" (Cl "'.l Hit-WiM i. .lullkl" (Id· wenture) '65 -Antllony Qui1111, James r.oburn, Ula ktdma. fivt t~ildttn •re apturtd by plr1tts ind toOll 11e temirizinr the plrttes "1!h their mlclt11p pr1nb. m Dnld '"" .. CC> <901 By WILLIAM D. LAFFLER NEW YORK (UPI) -Those Vfilo were close to Judy Garland said she became emo- tionally involved whenever She sang "Over the Rainbow." The song of hope by E. Oscar Wintaer Three Academy Awards went to lhe 1952 n1oviC' "Moulin Rouge," the tragic story of the life and loves of Toulause Lautrec, starring Jose Fcrerr and Colette Marchand. It'll be shO\\'D tonight at 7:30 on Channel 9's Million DoUar Movie. that critics say is the botlest en tertainment attraction since the Fifth Dimension. It disdains hard rock , acid rock, even thundering jive popular llJllong young people to creal.e a "new sound" !hat Larry A:leredfth. a former Marine· who is the tender of the group. said "we hope will l effectively bridging the IN•AGIMINT D su O'Clld Mtw1t: <tl ..,..,., Cu111 II T1111" (west1m) '62-Jim Mitd!u111, A111 Ladd, 1odJ Mccrea Cllilt Willa, 6111 Conw17. Three youn1 mtn I nd 1 airl lithl 1mon1 tllem.lvu wflile r1cln1 111insll Apicha fl c.apture 111ld from 1 Confadtrat1 p1tnil. 8 Dick Y111 Dytt (30) m n1 Fllnbtotin 1ci (JOJ m St.Ir Trek (C) (60) m The l lr ¥•11ey (t) (60) Y. Harburg and Harold Allen --------------------- be acceptable to all ages - 1 EXCLUSIVI OU.NGE COUNTY gener8tjpn gap." '-l•TION ... L C[N[l'tl.L COQPO,ll'•TIOl\J Ar''";"" "" i.., v,.,,.I f Oco•X'" -SOUTH.. COAST @(])UC Ewtnint Ntws (C) (JO) '1 .~·r· NIW? (t) (JO) "Skiina Ql Ci) CIS Jltw1 (C) (30) t!l Allltdl (30) GI!) D C..Hllta (~0) (ii) lkWI ht tbt Round (CJ (60) Jack Whitt, Alex Drtifr, Glori• Gntr, Patti &ebe. €?)El Sllll• dt M111riti0 C1rc11 (C) "" CE UlfeHtt tn Mil11I {C) (30) was J udy's first number in ''The Wizard of Oz" and it remained a part of her 9:00 6 ~ (j) M•r!Mrrr ltf.D. (C) throughout her life. (30) (RJ Sim ind his eompanioPs arrive in P1!m Sprlnp !or 1 dasert So it must have bee'll an ~1c.1ion. act of fate that made "Over B @@ m•oc--, th 0 •• bo " J d · I cq "lid ll•i.~ (dramt·mllliul) e i ... m w u y s ast '6Z-El\'is l'nsley. Glr Youn1, Loi• song. It cmed her engage- Alb!.irht, Joan Bl~.!!.. An oAil ment at a London night spot bet'omes • profmionll boler. 0 ftotf'lfit FIN (t) (60) To"' early in 1961 and only shortly l :JO D llNIC ""'*'nk• (C) (60) Mirtin ind JIU C.rt.t stir. thereafter Judy was dead. l!I S"" Alie. sa.. (C) (90) Anni m Na Jonal (60) .,-ht Con-Her husband used a tape M1rll Atb1, M1rlene V1r Plancll, se1Y1tive Viewpoint." A Plllll dis· recorder from his table to Pamtl1 M1son and London Lte cuuion which fNturtt MlltOll fried· preserve her songs in this 111est. min. Willl1m Rusher, M. Sllntoll perform These t 0 Tiii I•• I•• (C) (30) Jim Ew1n1 and RumU Kirt anet:. apes MKKrtll holts. l'•mtl• Muon, Phil mi.1....a ... -" (!.... form Judy's last album, ford ind MlJnl Hina 1nswer the w:.r •Ki "Judy, London, 1969" (June quution, "'How Much of-•-Lonei t :lOBQIOO Dlril llJ (CJ (JO) (Rl S. 1000). Ar1 Your em, De Wolfe 111tsts 11 ttl• man· The sound reproduction is m.,,. fnoritl Mtrtillt (30) arer of th• tltdric comP111Y w11o not as tint u In the conlines Ql) (l) hny M••~ (60) Ills 111 1r111m1nt wltfl Dorla ovw ol a studio but this is an @ CIJ H11nU11·lrinkley (CJ {JO) whether or not She's Plld htr blll. asset. Judy is caught in a fD DOUT On C.rapus (Cl (30) 0 Ntn (C) (30) Baxttr W11d. relaxed and witty mood as "lZ,000 ftet: Hl1h ind Ri1ina:." .l m News (C) (30) Biii .lohns. she banters with the cabaret film follows tht 1 .. mbly i nd EE Revilla Mulct! (30) di ·••~ · I h fll1hl of the Astnius rodet built au tnce •u•...,"l• JO ns er on "For Me and My Gal." ~! Unive,nlly ol Redl•nd1 tn1ineet· 10:00 fJ 9 (I) Clrol 111r111tt SM (C) """-album i'ncludes two ;::! IJ)stu :._11 (60) (R) Ludllt 8111 and Gtorp • ·~ ~ ,.,. Muttltrt (30) Cartin 1ueit. songs recorded by Judy for 11J Netidlre 34 (C) (60) 0 m ,..., (C) (60) the first time -"I Belong ~----te.Wll-tatrt-lhpcnt fC) (36 (t)-(tOIT)-----'"''c..JLondon" and "Ju..t__in· Jack Utlllm. Q)Twln O'Ctd: ·HiP (60) Time." And .. there is an all Dl111t U Vlfdtd (30) t]J Fiiiq Une (C) (60) Wiiiiam r. uninhibited rendition of ''San Buckl!Y. 'Th• N1tion1I Rnln on Francisco." 7:00 II CIS Effnln1 Nns (CJ (30) W11ttr Cronkitt. 0 WM1'1 111J Liftt? (C) {30) m I U.. LllC)' (30) CD 1Ht t111 Ood: CC> (30) the Firinr Line." Guatt inellldt But the last number, "Over Time Mi1uin1 W1shinston corr•· the Rainbow," is an ex· soondent L C11yt0n DuBoit tnd tltw Voit limn book millftr John perience. ~fany years had Leonard. passed since Judy first sang t1J Rabi (30) it in "The Wizard ol Oz." Cantor's Daughters Carry On Tradition g littering Strip. the Esta blishment underscored its ~AZA TM..,,_ \"ersatility and range by in· Lroducing their interpretation of "Aquar ius" and "People WHlcloyl: 7:JD·IO:OO Got to Be Pree." then break· 5•'· •11d Sii.: 12:JO·J:OO 5:J0°l:OO.IO:JO ing into .. Born Free ·· and l:r~~~~~~~~~~~ ., By P.IARY C.UtPBELL NEW YORK (AP) -II he had to, Eddie Cantor, the old ~yed comic, would sum up the ingredient! o l theatrical 81JCC'e$: "Make it enlertalning. Don't bore them lo death." With this in mind, the two youngest of the late com- edian's five daugbterl, ha\•e put together an ofr.Broadway show which they hope meeu their father's principle. It is about a crocodile - "Lyle" -who r~es from show busines~ and goes lo live with a human family. The play, full of songs meant to be sung and a book wholesome e n o u g b for grandmas· and grandkids. is being~_uced by~arilyn · Cantor Bali: er, wfffi a »Core by Janet Cantor Gari. Says Mrs. Gari, wbo studied classical music: "One or the ti songs is Daddy's . kind of fast-moving song. I, wrote it with bim in mind." One is rock, in~ by her 1noving on to "Cry," the song ---- 18-year-Old son who also writes that Johnny Ra y m ad e n1usic. "Hc"s 'given me lhe tamous. a n d finally resu r. freedom I never had. He recting a \Vorld War t song, breaks all the rules. He never "'When Joh nny Comes worries about how he's going Warching Home Again." and to get back into the key he giving' il a modem sound. started in; he doesn't care "The Establishment may if he· does. mean different things to dif· "But I have the old-fashion· ferenl people." ~1eredith said, ed idea that songs are meant '"but to us it is jus t a name to be sung. It 's a very singy for the group. \\'e admit we show." first used ii as an attcntion·1 Mrs. Gari, who also has getter and it stuck. a daughter, 14. was neve r .. H<>wever. 'A'C don't agree enthralled with show business. \l'ith those yo ung people whol lier only perfonning was a contend that everything people1 summer or · stoCk before she over 30 think and say ls was married. wrong. Mrs. Baker was the most .. We may not agree with show business struck or the everything but, ' gosh , that Cantor daughters. She. pro-doesn 't mean anyth ing. The re duced a show some limr ago are \\'ays to disagree without and was a singer-comedienne tearing things apart. wc·re for 17-years before she '!''as_ nat .hippies or speed freaks 1 married. and we·re to:> busy doing ourj Cantor died in 1964 al age O\\'n thing the best way we 71. two yea rs after the death can to join son1c of these of his 11•ifc Ida . who he often misguided factions.'' I mentioned in his songs and Meredith. 6 feel 3. 1801 comedy routines. pounds, atended junior college I TlOiNICOLOA' ·4Pa.Al.MOuNT Ji!Ctl.11'1 Mrs. Baker got the idea In his home to11•n of (!Jc @ Cl)llhMay-., (C) (2 hr) IO:JOO@(})GENN !Cl(JO)"Blad:r-----------------,,,,.,----, "SIJlflflr on lh1 Run." Hen!)' Ml)'tlt in DO:ie." WJ11itn1 H. LI•· for making an off·BroadWay. Bakersfield, Calif .. then the family musical out of "Lyle" University of California at when she read books about Riverside. Calif., where he l the crocodile to. her daughter. majored in music with a pre· 7, and son, 4. and enjoyed med n1inor. He intended to them as mut'h as they did. study medicine '!''hen music ALSO -~r Ll1e Ml111elll Fondl, Anni Bnt1r. rt11Ce trrtll'rinn MIJYQf Charla W o•·st of Year "Th• Sterile Cuckoo" Evt. Show St•rts 7 p.M. Coat. Set ... SYll. ,,.,.. 2 PLUS llST ACTllS5 WINNER: I 'lhe:PrUne"' I 'MiM!je.n"Brodie l~s.mtbj s ......... 111&. .ftUftllf. l!llfll'l IGI I • • ••ACH •i.: . T •LLla • • I HUNTINGTON •••CH ..... 7·••o• ' 2nd Record Week An epic drama. of adventure and exploration! lfD DCBUT Upq (30) '1he Stones Of Amlens." Flnt in this I0-111rt win of studiu of tome of the forcu !hit h1v1 lnlluenceil tile de· vtlopmtnt end sh1pe of Western Ew1rt, the only blKll to d!splac. • white m110r In Mialaippi durlnr the p1st century. m ""''11 (301 cM11z.11on. 11:00 6 5 00 m "'•' <CJ Fondas Share Top 'Honors' The sisters' reminiscences ca ught his Interest. I'-=----,== of Cantor home life is warni . 'The Establishment '"' as ''Ttle five of us were al\vays organized in 19611 by Leo nard --·-1 llC.M '"'"'"' STANlrt llUl~ICll NOOUCTIOM ~,P.J.~f :al~~ ~(})Tnilh •r C..uqu1ntt1 (C) O ID@m".., (C) m Ctur'1 World (C) (30) a:> Slmpl11111nlt M1ril (55) GJ Titat Cirl (C) (30) I I 7:.JO I) Qf) (j) G11111n1M1 (C) (60) (R)I '1ht Dml's Ol/l:post." .l 1~n& of seasoned ieneRades punue Mar1J11tl Dillon. Roberl Llnsinr tnd Jonathan Lippe l\)ISI. 0 a;, M1 World tnd W1lot1111 to II (C) (30) (R) ''Seit in th1 Bed· IJ Ho11r 1f Powtr o @m m• ... ct> 0 John WIJT!t Weff.: (C) Hllffd Alie(' (dr1m1) '55-Jl>hn Wayne, L1ur.n Bacall. m Movie: "Mil Kinil tf w ...... (drama) 'SI-Robert Mitchum, Jt111 Russell, Vincent Price. m Ke S1id, Sile Set• (C) fI) World P'rm (C) (R) 1oom." Henry Mo11an pl1y1 • writer . to whom c1rtoonlst Jchn Monrcelll:lS @(I)Cintn1a Se,tntten turns whtn ht h11 sul troub1t. Brtty Keen 1uuts. 11:30 6 5 (j) Merv Crifll1 (C) 0 @(I) aJ II T1trs 1 Thirf (C) 0 @ @ m lollnllJ' C.11111 (C) (60) (Rl "The Old Who C1me in fJ m Oidl tarett (C) from th• ~Y-" Else lanchester ruests 11 • v1ru1 British •rent who Is lo help A! recover 1 micro- dot. ID Movit: '1Mt Stapeo1dl Well" (western) '57-Jim D"is. 0 Million $ Mowil: (C) "Moulin 12:00 B Community lullltin lo11d (C) Rtllllt" (drama) '52-.loH fe rre1, Col1tt1 M11ch1nd. Zs1 Z11 Gabor. SIO!J b111d on the Ille, loves end dlustsrs of Toulo~se L1ut1ec. m Tmll tr Coftwq111RC1t (C) (30) 1:00 II Mowie: (C) "Clllra:e ti 1111 L•n· ctr1" (drama) '54-P•ul11t1 God· dud. Jean-Pierre Aumont. OfJNtn (C) ID P.-ry M1so11 (60) m frt11d1 Chtf {30) ''Veit tor Kin1." el Cr11.1 d1 Arnor (30) m Action Th1atrr. ''lht Wkktd City." Mari1 Montez, Je1n-Pler11 'I Ai.rmont. Lilli P1lmer. 2:l0 £J N1w1/Ciw1 U1 This D1y (C) TUESDAY DAYTIME MOVIES 1:30 D "Younr ind WN!!n(' (comedy) '12-Wll!llm Holden, SuMn Hay. ward, M1rth1 Drl1coll. .,.. U) "The M1~ IMicl1~ (ldvtnlure) ·ss-iack 1'1!11lte, 1:00 O "Tiii hHt" (dr1m1) •4g_ Dou111s f1irb1nks Jr., M1ri1 Mun· ltt. m "Dthft Wu" (dr1m1) '60- Pe1tr Baldwin, Chelo Alonio. t :lG O "Allpll With Dlrff fKa" (dr1-4:lD U (C) "'nllllHl11ht1t' (clr1m1) '15 m•l '38-Jlmts Cl&l'llJ, Pit O'Brlt11. -lloddJ Mt°""ll, Pmtoll Foti•. j For Top Sports Covetage Read the DAILY PILOT CAMBRIDGE, Mass (UPI) -Brother and sister Fonda -Peter and Jane -have captured top hon· ors as worst actor and actress of the year in Har· vard Lampoon selections. The humor magazine also released Jts li6t o! "Ten Worst Movies" -including "Easy Rider ," "Medium Cool," "Putney Swope," "Topaz." "Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice." "The Maltese Sippy," "True Grit," "John and Mary," "Hello Dolly," and "I.x1st Sum.mer." "We just Jumped them to~ether as \\•orst 10." said a Lampoon spokesman, 'because we couldn 't pick the worst.'' Miss Fonda won the Na talie Wood award for worst actress "for 'Spiri ts of the Dead' and for marrying Rof,er Vadim." Her brother was honored "for making Easy Rider' what it is." Mia Farrow was named worse supporting actress for her hole in "Secret Ceremony" while Denni s Hopper was selected worst supporting actor for hi s part in "Easy Rider." Other top awards: -Marquis de Sade Memorial Whip to Raquel Welch for "The Magic Chri stian'' for "a leather· and-chains performance which rivals Atilla the Hun." -OK Doc. Break the Arm Again Awa rd for ihe most flagrant case of mi scasting to Omar ShariJ "for his west·of·center title role in 'Che.' " -Please Don't Put Us Through DeMille Award for extravagances and blundering inefficiencies to ''Hello Dolly." -Arrested Development Oblation, always given to Jerry Lewis , again given to Jerry Lewis. -Do You Know the Way to San Jose? A\vard to i.autch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid " for its Bolivian scenes. -Most Unnecessary Contribution to the Ameri- can \Vay of Life Award to "The hippest people we kno"'. the cool and groovy stars of 'Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice'." -Or. Christian Barnard Award for the movie 1'which shows the worst job of cu tting, thi s year's badly manl{led aorta goes to Rowan and Martin's "Maltese Bipry." -Curse o the Living Corpse Award to r..tae West for her part in .. Myra Breck~nridge ." SUNDAY IS ?if HER'S DAY Brins, ~lother and the f1t11llJ 10 Knou·~ Btn-y Farm lor l!lot.ha-'1 Day. ~1., lOlh. llete"•lklnt ani *"' IM\11 eoeepted for th• Stuk Houte. C.U Atollf 11 (714) 522.fJll. going off In different dlrec·l;~~-~--~~----~Jll tions. but we had dinner at ll 6:30 at night. Daddy was in·I ~m sistent that v.•e had to all 1 @ be !'here at one time in one 1 l 0 plu~. He was always thcre1 as a man and a rather. He d;dn'I put being an '"''''la;ner first." The oldesl sister, ~iarjorie, who used to write com.ie1 material with her father, also is dead. Natalie and Edna live in California and are not 1 in show business. Mrs. Baker and M~. Gan· live in New York . P.1rs. Gari says. ''One thing l Daddy always ;told us l've l told to my kids sO often they leave the room. \\1hen they see il coming. When he v.•as a boy. deliv~ring for a' delicatessen, he used to go all !he way a~ross town to j deliver. He asked on e woman , why she deatt with that delicatessen when she had one 1 in her own neighbortlod. Shel said, 'because that one always gh•es me a little somet11ing 1 extra.' Daddy alway s tried to 1 give extra, and ·we believe in th.is very strongly." Mllll',OU llACll •• et I'• oft•• .. • •• !o~olo•• ll<lo hi• •• 0 1. l ·l lSG R :!00 C01~1 l{)l ... 15!•11 PAUL .IEWWf amr:=. ~!eANO THE~EKlD ~ ,,J.,2,0 surlR rAMAYISIOM·· Mrr~ 2905 East Coast Hwy. Corona dtl Mar IT'S HERE ! ONE OF THE BIG COMEDY DRAMAS OF THE YEAR "Jenny" with M•rl• nofllft Ala11 ,Ald• M•rln H•iley Ellrabttll Wll•o" V111ce11• Gordenla ALSO PLA.YIH~ ---- A vou119 l. takot • 111•tarlqd ~My seorch "Changes" HOW--IHDS TUl5DAY 9 Ac1demy Nomin1tions lHf\' ~HOOi HOll ... r . .,, OON'l IHfl"<' -111 Colar-Sl1Hi"9- • Jtne Fondt • Sus1nna York • Gig Young W.11111• lid S.,pport:119 Actor "ktt Plcr1ra •f "-Yeer" -N1tio"11 l o•rd of R•.,l ~w­ • '111·Plllff C•·Hlt e llOAtOI ............. CQt!A "''-' -)• .. J>OI __ .. _. ___ .. __ ..,,._ Nol~lng has been leh out ol "The Advenlurers .. \ .. Ji DAILY PILOT 3 Qil Coast r-:'Q_UE_E_N_IE ____ __:B~y...:.P.;,:h;;..il .:.:.'"::..:'e::..:rl.::an:.:.;d::..,I Are Me1·it ' State Report .Hits School Waste SACRAMENTO (UPI) -es 1 l mat e d disadvantaged million since 1965. teach reading.''· It cal led for kept." Despite Catllornia's $ 1 5 o ehlldren 3-5 years old. Oi.slriCts visited were "more emphasis on the 1 he state Department or Scholars million-a-year program to help l~ued in response to an Fresno Clty Unified, San leaching of rcacling" in Education should ''deve1op disadvantaged children, the order by the legislature for L'ranci'sco ul\l·"ed, Parainount teacher trar,iJng. unllurni procedures" for J'udg Star.e's ~-•· sllll suller r " • ..... -i ....... ~ an evaJuation of seven pro-[rom poorly trained and in-grams, th "progress report" Unified , Chico Unified, Calex-DATA LACKING ing student progress, it ~Id. Three Orange, Coast area high school seniors have been named by the National titerit Scholarship Corporati~ for scholarship awards, a~ding to Edward C. Snlilh, p e dent o( the merit program. competent teachers and in-was prepa ed by a tetim of ico Unified, Pittsburg ll said in some schobls lt 5aid the lack of student adequate student pro Ire s s five exper who visited seven Unified, and Del Paso Heights ';data is not 1naintained on reco rds and teacher training reports, accord Ing to school d' · around the in North Sacramento. • individuals 11dthin the slruc-hurl the reading improvement legislative analyst A. Alan state. A fi al report will be "We have found that many ture of a school frorn one programs fw the fit!l, second Post. prepared f presentation to of Californla's elementary grade level to anolher.:: Thus and third grades under the The legislature's chlef fiical the 1971 leg lature. gr ade teachers are not adc-\\·hlle a student shou ld begin Miller-Unruh Basic Reading W'mners were Benedick A. expert said: quately traioc'<i lo teach reading in the next grade Act of 1%5. "We have found many m. COST $150 ON reading." the document said. ~·here he left orr in the One problem in evatu11ting Fraass, Corona del ,._1ar: San· dra L. Genis, Costa ~iesa and Raymood. M. Reinhard, Hun- tington Beach. The 1970 merit scholars were selected from amone 15,000 students who became finalists in the merit program. Two types of me rit scholarships ~·ere awarded stances where teachers seem The programs cost $150 "This office r ec e I ve d previous grade. "in some programs, the report :;aJd, unequi pped, both ~n at titude million a year ai1d have cost numerous complaints from cases teachers do not k/'IQW wa:i a failure by school and in professional com-the stale and f e d e r a I teathers "'ho felt they had what lhat last level ~·as districts to keep records &nd peten~. to dea'I. with the daily governments nearly $SS 9. 9 been inadequately trained to because no r ecords were provide er10Ugh information •. atmosphere of crisis which1-'-------'----------..:..~_:_ _______________ _:__ ___ _::_ ____ _;_ rttis year. ~-S-4 · Th ~-/1 •• e National Merit $1000 (.2:3!~~~::::~~"!.!"""~''.::-=~""'::'.'.-:"::_· '-'.:.:.'~":' ~· :-~"~""::;:;•;;,..-;::·~~.J scholarship, a on e-t ime , nonrenewable a w a rd, pf<r. "It looks like every politician in the country is jump- viding a $1000 grant to the Ing on the 'Clean-up-the-environment.' bandwagon!"· schotamp winner. The se---------------------- cond type ol award is the confronts the clas s room teacher i n contemporary urba n school districts." "Compensatory! education programs are conducted in areas of extreme disadvantage a11d educational need and the ability of the instructional i;taff to relate effectively to such an environment is Crucial to their success or failure." sponsored four-year ti.1 e r i t 4&-PAGE REPORT Schdlarsilips which are pro-A c s l d vided by individual companies r t 011test ltte , '" a 40-page evaluation ol and organizations. m 0 st I y seven education pro g r a m s named for the organization. distributed lo newsmen Post B G WC H • also said: foTaass, a Corona del Mar y u11t•no·to·11 Th I f !I High School senior, received ., " .., ·., -e pract ce 0 a oting ,, u Federal compensatory educa· a merit scholarship from the t1on funds according to the CIT Foundation. Inc. for The t_•i\y of Huntington The conlei;l will be · open numbe rs of families 0 n engineering studies at Stan-Beach <ind Colden \V e st tn ;1!J professional painters al'ld ~lfare shorlcha'llges poor ford University. He is a Me ,,.• an ·Amer1··ans and be I th h. h hool College plan to sponsor a printni;1l,crs in California. " ,_ mem r o e 1g sc Chinese-Americans v.•ho ''do mar ..... :ng band symphorUc state-wide art contest. T\\'C \vork.s "'ill be accepted ... -..u • not tend to apply as readily band and a member of the More than $2,500 10 prize from each artist and all ac· fo r welfare." concert choir. money will be oHercd in the cepted entries will be ex--"We have found evidence He · has received the show. called "Peri;pective: Art hibitL'<i. cf major reading deficiencies American Chemical Society '70 .. which will be staged from Entry blank i; will be 3t the junior high school Award and is a Ca lifornia level," with eighth grade S h 1 t · F d · Sept. 13 through Sept. 25. :11 ailable alter ~lay 22 and c o a s 1 c e erat1on students in San Francisco sealbearer. Ent ries will be sought lrun1 L'lose interested should send reading at fourth and fifth The on 1 y area student tfl artists throughout the slate. a 6-cent stan1p along wilh grade levels. receive the National ~1erit The goal of the exhibition is their note of request lo -School d I s l r i ct book- $1000 Scholarship was Sandra to raise niore than $5,000 in "Pcrspci·llle. Ari ·70··. 24 keeping methods are ··jnade· Genis who will attend Slan!ord art scholarships fur /ugh quate lO properly measu re the U · f II 1 1-luntington Center. 1777 n1versity next a . a so ma-school and college stud entJ->. cost-effectiveness'' Of aid pro- joring in engineering. said :\1rs. Prim Kee v i I , Edinger i\ v e . . Huntington grams. She has been awarded the coordinator of the show. All Beach -The i;tate's preschool com- Southem California Edison the works will be displayed Deadline for entry is ex-pensatory programs are serv- Company Science Aw a rd. in the Huntington Center. f>ectcd to be 111 mid-July. ing less than half of lhe Bank ot America Sciencel------"-------'-------'-':'..'-----"-_:::::::__:::::::__::::::__:::_.::: I"'-:? .. ~~ SHOP SEARS SUNDAYS 12 Noon to 5 p M '1"'" ''" s •• ,,, .. • • 9JOAMto930P:'f1 $ Time ... Work and Space Sears ·Wash and Dry ·Your iaundry in Award, American Chemical Society Award and recently placed ttiird in the Orange County Academic Decathlon. She is on the math team at Estaocia Hi gh School and is senior class secretary and a member of the Tutor Corps. The third National ~1erit GET MOST* f OR YOUR MONEY ... Ken~ Ee Automatic UIAS \ ' n er: 1 Scholarship Corporation win- ner. Raymond Reinhard, is student body vice-president at Lakewood High School. He has bee n awarded the Elks' Most Valuable Student Award and is a member of the California Scholarship Federation and the Nation~! Honor Society as well as the school's chemistry team and speech and debate team. tlis scholarshi[l was pro- vided by tht Texaco Company \vho present awards to merit finalists who are sons and d aught t: r s nf Texaco employes. Nine at Mesa Seek Honors Nine ag riculture students al Costa Mesa High School have been named fina lists in farm· ing competiion sponsored by It: Fu ture F a r m e rs of America and Secu rity Pacific National Bank. The Costa Mesa students will compete individually v.·ith •• 69 other agriculture i;tudent s from Orange County i;chools t and the winners of the finals ,.. will be announced during an awards ba11quet Monday at I.he Grand Hotel in Anaheim. The Costa ~1esa students are Da vid Altheide. Claudia Gillam, Chris .J11cobsen, Rill lAlpis. Richard Malyas. Tom Olswang, Katrina Price, Jim Toering and Greg \Vulff. at KEYSTONE SAVINGS t Keystone always pays the most on ;nsured savings allowed by law, 1 Come in today ••. get the facts ••• select the savings plan for you. 5% • N" m,,,;,,,.,,,, d•po1it ,..q1J1r9d PASSBOOK -No "oric• '" w1thd••W • rhu i• our.,,.,., P••d•oo~ Acc..- 5%% o No,.,,,,;,,,,.,,, lt•l•rH:• ...,.,;~ PASSBOOK • R.-iui••I JO d•~• wdrrM ltO!~• to .,,1hd••W • l•"""9• ••• •d111<r•d ;r wi1fld••w11 ,,,.,,,,to H d•r• 5%% • Mm.mum b-1•..eo 11.IKJO CERTIFICATE , l.fm1m11m t•rm I .,.., Gu.-onfHd """"-' ri•ld J.12% • f""""f1' .,. •diun•d ;1 wifltdrow11 prior to,...,.,,.,, 6% • M1rumum 1111/0rtt:• 15,0CO CERTIFICATE • M1rum~m r.-m 1 ,....,,. G.,.,..,,,..., _., 110/d I, I.,. • f1tr11i11g1 .,.. -.1111.rHI if .,,.'fltd•.vtft ~to molur/lp 71h% • Mmm,um bo/011<• '106.000 CERTIFICATE , M'll1m11m IMM f poor, Guorontfff """""' 11•/d 1.11% • r.,,,,,,fl, --.1,., ... d ;, ,.,,,,,drown,,..;,,,.'",...,.,,;,, • FREE SAFE DIPOSIT BOX ~ "'•• 0.laO<O O! IJ«IO n ... o "G'"•d • ,':,'!,,,'. ~ lnlHtJI· CompounJttl Doilr .- • FREE MONTHLY HOROSCOPlS , •• , ... 4 ........... .., ~ • .., °'"" Acct1111l1 /11sw.J -, I• S20,000 KEY STONE SAVINGS AND lOAN ASSOCIATIO N Ro,...ld W, Co1pers, Pr•1idertl • Executive Office : WESTMINSTER • ANAHEIM Office 1 ~011 8e11,h 81•d. SSS N. Euclid 11e>1 to HG' Pertny Inn Phan•: 89].~491 opp. 8•oodwoy.Robiftton't Phont : 772·14~0 You Work Less You Save Money :11 tr~t~ ;:.;~-,. ~ ... ·j ,.,. IAundr~ 11 (''-""' l\.eeps things cleaner without effort, eliminates bath tub rings Soap and clothing last longer. l)l•perti Are CIMDer, Ask A)l()ut Sears Con ,•enicnt Credit Plans FREE Estimates! Phone Scars Today! [Sears] ...... -a-• S<>. Coas l Pla..a. 3333 Bristol St. Phone ;; 10-3333 ~ ' .. - ·' The Washer That Also Fully Dries ... And Takes Up Only Half The Space J u·l put in ~oilrJ •·l.,tlir•, t-r lt•4'1 1hr ''}I'''" \HU "311l ••lfl pu,h lh,. .Ii.ii. .. 0 J1lral r~lf J'l'r!U~llf'll\ pfl'•• f'lolhr• lh"~ 'ro: rl':trl y lo "-tilr .. hf'11 11 ni1 •1"1'·'• • \1;1ash _1\ND Jry clotJ1 es in one l!mooth. ea 11y operation Regular 8399.95 •Water 1 eve ~ a nd wash actiort adjust automatically lo l\o'ash load •Hot or w11r1n water wash • Auton1a1i c war1n water rin:;e •Options lo was h and dr)·, wash onJy or dry only • Easy-reach 101>-1nounted lint screen • <:onvenient Loacl-1\-Door folds d own into handy work.she lf • Eleclric Model 89:;1~) $ Seara Care Service protects the v1 lue of your l\enn1ore Au tomatic W,\SH· 'N DRU:R. We service: wh<11 "''t fif ll ~·herever you live or n1ovr in lhe U.S .. i\. Ask About Se ars Convenient Credit Plans I I I ! 'Sears~~!!!!!.~.~-!"!! .. ~.~·-!!!"' .• ~ .. ~.~ •• ~.~~~~.!!"!'~! .. ~ ..... '"'!,~!!!'~.~~-!!"!' •• ~,,~ ..... !.!.c!.~.u!!!'! •. ~ .. ~ ...... ,~-..... ~~!!"'.•.•~ ... • ... <.&1K1<1• .... ~-• •-•u.., 0-1-. co t.#11 ... .,.. & -o •11 •·1"' l'l<O Wf t.01ot _.,,.·to•lf ouu 1 ... ,_ <-,. o.uu,,. Ml'tl -..-,.. "''"' ~ Ol1•91M u 111• .... ., r.un -··-.. , . .,,, ....... ..,. ... UiA!'IJCO. to•"'•-·· • _,_ 00 11-tlll pnA""'4 H l•l11!, Ul•t 1•1 ........ --· too,H !I Wllll• 0<t l•H.,, -•• .,. ..... MtMt ..... t ~ a...M7 t 1JO A.M. M t1~0 ......... 1;1: "-M I ,,,._ "hflolfQIM! G-i.14 w f--....7 J..iii." •-1' "''"1 I I ----··---~------~ Seeing the 11' orld Joe S~ula of Corona del Mar gets a well rounded view of the ea:rth with his new World Book Globe, won ·for· submitting a question to the Ask Andy colwnn, published in the DAILY PILOT each Sat-urday. Hippo's Hap11y Alive in Bak ers fiel.d BAKERSFIELD (AP) -basis. Sam Potamus is alive and So while San1 e,nlertains well and hamming it up in Bakenlield's resident and a hippo-aized battitub pool In vlslling hippo watchers ....:. if Bakersfield. yawning, eating, sleeping and Sam, once the one _ ton splashing around can be called dreamboat ol. an adventurous, e n t e r t , a ~ m e n t -the visionary -but unemployed zoo)og1cal~iety' is attackinc -construction worker, has on two P'fX'ls. become a political pachyderm It Js'&eeking a sizeable dona- in search of a home. tioolof 18.nd for Sam to call Sam's saga began nearly six t\iS very-own. Pro(JTess in the months ago when Romie ,area has been abOut as slow Hochleutner of the Los as ahipi)oonahumidday. Angeles suburb of Norwalk, At the same time the society out 0£ work and low on funds, is pushing the county to create took one look at Sam during a zoo and, toward this aim, an animal auction and fell is trying to raise the $7,000 in love -to the tLlne of to $10,000 necessary for a $400. feasibility and planning study What be envisl_oned was a to show the practicality of wave of animsl lovers paying such an attr1ctioo. to see Sam. What he got was So Sam has become, lrr 2,000 pounds O{ hungry, directly, a political fund-raiser homeless hippo. Several days in this election year. The and several hundred dollars society is selling hippo calen- Jater, Hochleutner gave up. dars, badjes, dolls, decaJs and He 90td Sam to Bakersfield similar paraphernalia and is auto dealer John Barber last preparing to expand is cam- Novembez: for an undisclosed paign with billboards and price. Barber, in tum, donated newspaper advertisements. 'Thuh far, Sam has shown his sligblly used, low mileage, little interest in the goings on one-hippopower pet to the _ a most unhip thing for a Kern County 1.oological Socie-homeless hippo to do. ty -which has been looklng 1 ___________ 1 for a permanent home for him ever since. Sam's temporary quarters consist of three horse stalls, a spartan cement paol and a corral at Metro Park . The Kem County Parks and Recreation Department and Board of Supervisors have agreed to lease the fa cilities to the society for the rest of the year. The cost of Sam's room and board runs about $100 a month. But the County Supervisors and City Council have balked at going into the hippo business on a permanent Extra Money Plates OK'd SACRAMENTO (UPI ) - California car owners would be able to obtain personalized license plates for an extra $10 fee under a bill approved b y the S e n a t e Transportation Committee. The measure, authored by Sen. Milton Marks (R-San Francisco) and backed by Gov. Ronald Reagan, was sent to the tinance committee without opposition. Revenue produced by the fee would be deposited in the en- virorunent protection program fund created by the measure to finance envircnment preservation efforts. ; Sindair Paints & Wallcoverros it pn>Ud to annoura the CJptninJofour New CostaM?Sa STORE: Thursday, May 7th.. Vlllt our W1lltXIY9rfns ••1• •nd &H the l1rpst COlllCtllltl of orient.I textU ..... _... flocks. c:olorflll hllncf.Pftnt• •nd ..n~ \ltnylit In tM South Cont~ .ft) .SINCL.AIPl PAINTS _......_ • I See by T odaY' s Want Ads ,, This bc~l!I 1he !;)ulc'!: au. thentic antiques imported from llolland, browae, pick and purehue from a large collection of rnbst desir- able item&. e Put It around your own little world: 100 feet of redwood picket fencing 4 reet high for $40. e tl1af\ll' ~&t friend at tha t bar-b-cuc : Farher..,•are ro- tisfftle, 1>ew, at Sl5. .. Sears • I Monday, Ma,y 4, 1970 DAILY PILOT J.:J c-"'=' - - U1e Stars R evolvil1g Charge "'" 'Yht ··'ll/c1/i . i!r·r1 •' Choo•e Pattern or Stripes in Scars Fi ne PERMA-PRESP Slacks Sears Low Price 799 •Dacron• polyt~ler anll rayon lllend fo r neal- ·nfllil and cool comforl all day •Trim Ivy, cuffle~s ti.,.ting; in i;len rla:,t~. tat- ten alls and !tripes -IJ.\Clf "1.-1·0 IJ I OL•llW't( I. toTO ~Ill l •)tlt .......... '""'''"° '~IUN.11 ... \.11H, i.1 ... 111 • • On a Par with the Seaaon ... 100% Nylon GoH Jacket Sears Low Price • NyJon wul1-and·w•1r j1cket featuret 1tylish 1:adet collar and knit .1.ip front • Raglan t lffVf.11, knit cuff1. 1[11'1 poclr..tuc: t1:Nlen, blue, n•")' ind bron1e , -··· ... , .. ,.l ...... "letl I•,. 011.,,.•.!tri~. •:_w~~~~~~··-A;,.-..._...;.; .... .., • i , 1 I I ~ ---------------------------. -~- J <( DAILY PILOT Monday, MQ 1111, 1970 M~ssback, Encore, Capture 23rd Ensenada Laurels FIRST TIME WINNER -Don Moss, Bahia Corin- thian Yacht Club smiles broadly after accepting the President of the U.S. perpetual trophy as overall winner in the Pacific Han<licap Racing Fleet divis- ion of the Newport to Eensenada race. Moss' boat is the Jslander~37 sloop, Mossback. Ficker Tells Changes On Cup Boat Intrepid Intrepid, the 1967 America's Cup defender, will be virtually a new 12-meter when she goes into competition this summer against two other contenders for the right to again defend the famed yachting prize. The other two-u.meters will be the new Olin Stephens~ designed Valiant for George McCullough and a New York syndicate, and H e r i t a g e , designed and built by Charles Morgan of St. Petersburg, Fla. Bill Ficker. Newport Beach architect chosen skipper of the Intrepid , told the Newport Harb a r Yachtsmen's Lun- cheon group that Intrepid will have an entirely new deck layout and major underbody changes when she goes into competition in June. Ficker said the changes above and below decks were designed to make Intrepid several tiundred p o u n d s Jighter. Although the origina l Intrepid was designed by Stepsen, the changes are being designed by Britain Chance Jr. of 5.5 meter fame. When Stephens was com· missioned to design the new yacht for McCullough, it was decided that he could not give sufficient time to two boats, so Chanct was commissioned to design the changes. Ficker said another im- provement in Intrepid this year would be in her com- munications system between the after-iiuard in the cockpit and the below <leeks crew handling sheets and o t h e r gear. The helmsman's station has been moved about five feet forward and crew stations are being altered to provide better distribution of weight, Ficker said. Ficker said the Intrepid would be manned by a crew of 10 this year instead of 11. He added that Ile believed the other 12's would go to , the 10-man crews. Ficker said t h e im· provement in new boats ove r Intrepid this year w er e greater than that of Intrepid over existing yachts three years ago. That is the reason for the major redesign of lntrepid, he said. "It's come to the point," said Ficker, "that a tenUt of a knot faster speed is con- sidered almost a breakthrough." Other changes in Intrepid include the moving or the trim·tab rudder four feet forward , reduction of wetted surface by some 60 square feet, a rounded bottom on the keel to get the weight lower. Ficker's crew will have an average weight of 193 pounds per man and an average age of 23. Three of the crew are from the West Coast-George Twist and Jim Titus of Newport Beach, and Jon Andron of Santa Barbara. Intrepid is owned by a six- man syndicate headed by William Strawbridge of Philadelphia. Ficker said the budget to rebuild Intrepid was about the same for building a new boat. Asked what the budget was, he replied: "Enough to pay the bills." Congratulations to - ' • W. STEPHEN TOPALIAN Business and Estate Tax planning Specialist. MAN OF THE MONTH, March 1970 Steve earned this honor because of his outstandjng performance in all phases of production for the month. _we_congratulate him as well as his many clients who have chosen him to handle their financial programs. Steve received national recognition for being # 1 ln bis age ncy during a recent five week national sales cam- paign. Paul A.-Devlin, Agency ~fanager .Lou Rolando, District tlanager The Equltablt Lift Assurance Soci•ty of the United States· -Home Office: New York 550 Newport C•nttr Drive, Suitt 815 Newport Beach, Calif. Home Office: New York 64+2190 " ( , By ALMON LOCKABEY aNll119 llllW The dice weie ust in the great m a r i t i m e crapsboot known as the Newport to ~:;:'~~;~ ~e again By mid-day SMurday the "'stlCk man" had called out the following winners: Encore in Ocean Racing; Mossback i~ Pacific Handicap Racing Fleet; Sloopy i n Midgel Ocean Racing Fleet, and Magnificent Obesslon in the Ocean Racing Catamaran Association division. EDCOre is a new Cotumbla-43 sloop sailed by a four-man syndicate {facetiously known as the Balboa mafia) com- posed of Fred MacDonald, Newport Harbor Yacht Club; Herb Riley, Lido Isle Yacht Chill; Bill Lawhorn and Dick Blattennan, Balboa Yacht Club. Mossback is an Islander-37 sloop owned and sailed by Don Moss, Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. Despite the record 570 en- tries, this year's "roll" had the largest percentage of . ' "cr,pouta" h1 a number of yean. Tlliri~ llO!Htarters I ail- ed to &ta.}\on the table, and e5 Glhm tlil'l1" .. ~, .. ' and !ailed IO Ot\ISb. For tbe second coMeCUtive year the we1tber man· con-. trolled the ·toss. l\'b<'h.,. Ille players\. "passed" or icrapped out depended largely on where they were when : (I) the wind quit; (2) the wind came up again; (3) the wind quit again; (4) Ule wind came up again. Like last year, the weatherman pulled the curtain a few hours after the start, leaving the majority of lhe neet slatting liste$ly between San Onofre and Oceanside. It filled in again about noon Saturday aod gave the boys a much hoped for downwind sleigh-ride from the Coronados Island,, to within sight of the linl!h lint. ln Todos Santos Bay the wind died late in the afternoon Friday and then came back minutes later in the form of a brisk southerly. By Saturday vanity fair night charmers gifts of sheer delight Softly-flowing ny lon trico t ••• spill ing into dr ifts of enchanted brights and pale pastels. Shirt- wais t gown in Organ dy Pink with Dawn Pink or Twin kle Bl ue wi th Heaven Blue. 20.00 Scoop neck bodice gown lined with contrasting color. Dream Green , Torchlight, or Twinkle Blue . Sizes P,S,M,L. 20.00 Gown with drama tic "V" neck- line in Heaven Bl ue, Orga11dy Pink, Torchlight or White Grape 32-4 2. 11.0 0 Robes and Unaerie, all nloe stoie~. - ' t ' ; < : \ morning a uor•easter was howling· at 50 knots across the lini$h line at Ensenada . Despite the fluky weather conditions, the high-rollers in the form of first-to-finish were no surprise to anyone . ... Sea SmolCe, a 57.foo t catamaran was first across the finish line M 25.135 hours. -First single hull yacht to finish . wa&. Jack Baillie's J2· meter Newsboy in 27 .8825 hou\'s_ • The slowness of the race was attested by the report from race committee chairman George Yule that only 2.! yactJts had crossed the finish lj.ne at 7 p.m. Friday -some 30 hours after the start. By rnidnigtit only 166 boats had finished. There were rela~vely few mishaps in the race-., One 24- foot yacht was disma~ed oft the Coronados Isl~ ··early._ Friday, another lost a rudller, and a catamaran not officially entered in the race pitch-poled in heavy seas south of San Diego. A nor'easter that sprang up early saturday m o r n I n g gusted at 50 knots and caused a number of yacllls in the harbor to drag anchor. There was no serious damage reported. Following are the major trophy winneril: FIRST YACHT TO FINISH -Sea SmOke, 57-foot catamaran, Sea Scouts. FIRST SINGLE H UL L YACHT TO FINISH -News- Boy, 12·rneter, Jack. Baillie, BYC. Handicap standings CATAMARANS -(I) Magnificent Obsession, George Nedelman, P VY C. (2) Malama, Jack Swart, OCC; (3) Toru, Tom Sauter, SI BYC; (4) Im! Loa, Vic Stem, SI BYC; (5) Buccaneer, Bert Anderson, WY. OCEAN RACING CLASS A -(1) Attorante, Burke Sawyer, NHYC; (2) Dorothy 0, Ro b ert Beaudlamp, ,NllYC; ( 3) Brushfire, Gene Tr e p t e , SDYC: (4) Prelude, Jlln Linderman, BYC; (5) Rascal, Bill Wikon, SBYC. - CLASS B -(I) Encore, MacDonald, Riley , Lawhorn & Williams & Sumph, NHYC: Blallerman, NHYCIBYC; (2) (4) Ouirlsma, Ed Feo, ABYC; Escudero, Bill E f.f in g ,er, 15) Carina, Don Haskell. LBYC; (3) Inter me z to , (See ENSENADA, Page 2Z) BLANKETNGSPECIAL 9 9 ¢ REGULAR $2.00 .... _ ...... _ ...... Befort storing your bedding fo r summer ••• put them •w•r fresh, ~lean· and moth proofed. King si.zt only .99 .reg. 3100. Offer good thru M•y. CJMN CLEANERS t. I. AU Ill DRY #68 F•ihion Island, Newport Beach 1056 B•yside Drive, Newport Be•ch 644-2512 673-5385 ---' .. , l -' .. -- Mothe 1's Day '------' .Is Mot 10 I ' ' -.· 1 '. ltt;' • i '··I \"' " I ; ~ .: J • ~ ! 1 ' ' ' ·l ! l 1 I • 1 ; ' -- ' i i _. ~ ·' - ? ',. • -' -· ,; Newport # 1 fashion Island Newport Center • 644·2200 • Mon., Thurs., Fri. 10:00 till 9:30; Other Days 10:00 ti ll 5:30 " \ ' I I • BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 /i!IMlr, •r 4. tll't I ..... Ii Mini Concert 'Mr. Frog' In Chorus Be kind and tender to the Frog, And do -not call him names, As "Slimy -Skin" or "Pollywog" Or likewise "Ugly James" This partial vtrse from "A Child's Book of Beasts" by Jean Berger will be swtg by members of the Festi· val of Arts Chorale as papier mache animals dance for the entertainment of children. The presentation will be the chorale's first Mini Concert for Children. The chorale, undei the direction of Mrs. Frank In· terlandi, will stage an 11 a.m. productipn on Saturday, June 6, for Laguna Beach elementary school students. Dancers from the Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Com· pany will join the singing group in the Forum with a potpourri presentation of work from the group's reper- toire. Varied selections will include mini spots from Span- ish Evening, International Folk Songs and Fall Falk Concerts -in addition to the "Book of Beasts" selection 'vhich was presented by the chorale in last sumrrier's Festival on the Green during the Fe~tival of Arts. 'MR. FROG' HEADS FOR FORUM -Papier mache heads will enliven a mini conce rt to be pteEiented by the Festival of Arts Chorale in the. Forum on Saturday, June 6. Testing "Mr. Frog" is Michele Starmann assisted by (left to right) Mrs. Barrie Star· mann and Mrs. Paul Hance. The group also will sing selections from previous concerts given for the community. Professional Pro;ect World of Business Works for Scholars Laguna Beach Business and Professional Women , in addition to handling the everyd<ay world of business, direct muc.1i of their energy toY.'ard a scholarship program for deserving students. Through administration or monies from the Pomeroy-Peden Scholarship Fund. the club provides schol arships for a graduate who \Vii i continue her education along commercial Jines and for a you ng \vo man "'ho intends to enter colle~e. 'fhe fund was established in memory of the late Mmes. Rose Po1neroy and Laura Peden and is administered by a committee con1- prised of members of the club. Aeling in this capacity are the 1'11mes. Lee Allison. C. W. Petty and John A. Bumbera. They are assisted by Miss Roselma Messman, a faculty 1nember of Laguna Beach High School. In 1969. BPW made only one bequest wit h Miss Barbara Minne being awarded a scholarship. Mrs. Berl I.,ovel ady, as president, will lead the club for tbe 1970- 71 year. She will be assisted by Miss Irene McClure, first vice president; Mrs. Albert Cornelius, second vice president; Mrs. Elsie Johnson , treasurer : ll.1rs. J. E. Bethke, recording secretary, Bind Mrs. Lloyd Milne, correspondin g secret.,ry, The new board was installed in a recent dinner ceremony in th e Towers restaurant at which Miss Evelyn Whitlow, past state presi- dent. was guest speaker. Afiss Whitlow ha s been· appointed by President Nixon as member of a 13-woman task force organized to evaluate LOOK ING FORWARD TO JUNE -Business and Professional Women (left to right), Mrs. C. W. Petty · and Mrs. Lee Allison study scholarship awards with Miss Jan Fritsen, Laguna Beach High School , scholarship counselor. The group will present a- wards to two seniors during the annual awards as- sembly. \vomen's rights and responsibilities. · · Ne \veSt member of the cl ub is l\1rs. Frank A. Schaper. vice presi- dent and savings mana ge r of Laguna Federal Savings and Loan . College Son Goes to Pot, Ca n't Read 'Keep Off Gras s' DEAR ANN LANDERS: My JOU who is a college freshman doesn't know it bu( I learned, by accident, that he not only uses marijuana but }5 selling the stuff to rus clasmiates. Yesterday l diJcovered he has Introduced his younger brother to k. U my husband knew a ... t this be would kW the kid. 1 am so torn up 1 can't eat or sleep. Please tell me what ID do . -FRANTIC Mcm!ER DEAR Mcm!ER' y,. oeed t... lldlp -lafonnatao. •d cwrap. Lean ftOiD • lawyer Ille ,...iues for -•1 and ldtla& nwtjuu lo )'Ollr -· 1'ew 1pnlc ta 1-,.. (Ille puller] ca!m!J ud firmly. No •J*rlct. EEplain wllat .. 11 k!Ulol ldm"H lo for ff he 11 ...,Pl. Let lllm -Ille,. will be .. DOI lo )'Ollr ...... ad H .. --• ANN LANDERS ~ latilb H smoklnc be will have to get out If he says, "The law 11 on my side. Fm a minor and I don't bave to 1et ~tell Mm : "If )'GI wut to 1et teclmlcal, I can get technical too. U I catch you 1motmg pot ln tblt house I wlU ·turn you over tO the juvenile aatborlttes." U tt becomes neces!al')', make 1ood the threat. Tbell 1peat to hl1 brother ud explain Ute dangers of pot. " ' Encourage him io talk to your. ramily doctor or to a school authority. You doo'l say bow old the yeunger hn1lher Is. Jf be i1 not yet -in high school. be aware that most }antor blgb scbool1 now have trained eOUJ111elon who do a fine job. And good luck to you. dear -and to all otben who have to face lhls problem. It's one or the roughest. DEAR ANN LANDERS: l'm enjoying YOW: r~ng battle on pornography. The reader who obscr:ed ttlat some very bf"igtit people enjoy ·it was an un- derstatement, to say the least. And this ls only part or the story. Arc you aware lhat one of this country's most disllngu.ishecl Americans also enjoyed peep shows? Would you believe Oliver Wendell Holmes? You can print this without fear of being s11ed by his relaU ves because it is a matter of record. Look it up anyplace. -THE OLD HISTORIAN DEAR OLD lllSTORIAN: ''Tb e record" says nothing about peep shows. lt 11 a well known fact, however. that the distinguished Suprtme Coun Justice · occupied a regular seat at the Gafety 1heater In Washington, O.C. And just to keep the record straight, Dad, bur· lesque In those days showed Jess tbaa can now be seen 11l any soda founia.in, or oa any bus. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a 15-year· old girl who has had it with my grandmother. She lives in Albuquerque. Grandma clips your columns out of the Tribune and mails them to me. J'v e told her a thousand · times we get your column here jn the Santa Fe New Mex- ican so she doesn't have to bar.her. Whenever you prinl a column ..about a teenage girl who Is pregnant Grandma circlei it with pencil. Lately she has been sending all your columns about pot and the big H. t got one yesterday. l am not sleeping with anybody and I have no plans to. I've tried pat a couple Um.es and it does nothing tol • me. Stronger stuff is for idiots. T'll never qlake tbat scene. Tell Grandma to stop sending me your columns. She'• getting on my nerves. -ONE TOO MANY DEAR GRAND!'ilA: Save your stamps. I'm &Ure you mean well. but your &Po proacb It poison to kld1 -10 la kl the hint. • • What is French kissing? ls it wrong# Who should set the necking llmlls - the boy or the girl? Can a shotgun wedding succeed? Read Ann Landers' booklet, "Teenage Sex -Ten Way1 to Cool lt." Send 50 cents In coin nnd a long, self.addressed, stamped envelope in care of the DAILY PILOT. I ' i"""-""I"""--~~------...... -----------------------------·------- Association Frames Show for Mother's Day Your Horoscope Tomorrow Gemini: Stress Versatility TUESDAY 111a} find that some of your versatility, ~1ove with lhe Ude. steps required for greater MA y 5 possessions are in need or Remember ooe who may be security. Stress is on how you renovation. Keop up to date. temporarily handicapped. develop techniques, create By SYDNEY Or.tARR l'tlore crimes or violence OC· cur during the Full ~foon than at any otbtr Ume or the monlh-<:beck your I o c a I police department. ARIES (fl.larch 21-April 19): New approach to financial prospects is a necessity. There is presi;ure and challenge. You TAURUS l;'tpril 20-M_ay 20): CANCER (Jime 21-July 22): safety devices; Stick clO&e to New moon in your sign ac-Accent ·on how to achieve base of operations. cents pcr~~ality, initiative aspirations. we I c 0 me op-PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): and ~~~1Uon. Ac_ c e pl portunily to nteet people. You are active, expend m~ respo_ns1bihty •. Could .include lngra,Uate yourself with in-energy and <.-ould ~ave reuruon over~me ass1gnme~t. Your dlvldual who has big ideas. with clo.$e r~lauve. Tra~l spc_c1aJ eHorts will p ay You can come up with in-see1ns lO be high on agen~a. d1v1dends. formation Of value, Avoid contusion by checking GEi\1JNI (1'la~ 21-June 2U): LEO (July 23-A '2)· N direct.ions. Whal ocrors betund the scenes . . ug. : ew beco · ·i ed · opportun1lies are available. may . me pnvieg in-You. could be surprised formation for you. Stress because older individual ad- vocates modem procedure. Be 1.wperative. Concentrate on professional approach to task at hand. Movie Enthusiasts VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Spotlight on Journeys, cor- respondence, c:losing of com- municatioo gaps. Child or lov- IF TODAY lS YOUR BIRTHOA Y you are a magnetic individual, fond or investigating and pie c i n g IDgether puzzle pieces. Your <-uriosity is great and you are seldom satisfied with hallway measures. A unique rela- tionship gets on different footing. Tiie past makes way for adjustment to n e w circumstances. Library Books Films Newport Beach Public Library has an- nounced a new addition to its ever-expanding list o{ services -a new collection of 8mm films. , ed one in your age bracket demands att entio n. Be gracious. gi ving. t\.1ake effort '"'To~~';! ~~ w~~:, ·~~:, ')~d~ to keep domestic harmony. om~rr'$ 1>Do~i..1, "5t:<•tt HI"'' '°' Mtn ~Ml Wom~"·" Stn<:I blrlt!d1t1 LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22): ~Ml ~ c~ts •o Om1rr A•trOlol'I' C "(h S..,rtts, l~f DAIL V f'ILDT, BOii J2.(t, oncern WI the mysterious Gra"d ct"tral 51111on, Ntw v°'** or hidden is evident. Dig deep ;:::'::':;;· ;:;'~:::'::'·======::;;; for information. Reject t he .superficial. It pe rsiste nt, you could show solid pront. STARS All types of art work.. will be on exhibit when the Fountain Va11ey Arts Association sponsors its annual Mother's Day e~hibit between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. in ;the Village Center, Talbert Avenue and Magnolia Street. Framing plans for the Saturday, May 9 ex- hibit are (left to right) Mrs. James Merrill, .Mrs. \Villiam Dunn,· president, and ?vJrs. Joseph Giesing. For all home movie enthusiasts with 8mm projectors, the library is making avail- able flims in bla<ik and \vhite and color. Films may be checked out on a three-day basis. The collection includes historical and sport documentaries, travelogues. biograph· ies and excerpts from Hollywood classics. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Svdnev Om1rt i1 on• of th1 world'1 qr••• a1trolo91r1. Hi• eolurn~ i.I c"• of th1 DAILY PILOT'S 4r1al fe1tur11. Lie low: do more listening than ·falking. Accenl on ho\'1 much you learn, impresslonJ~~:;::::::~~~~:ii ... \' .... ... + ~ ' ~ La ii.l;rS ·. ·s ~ ,,~~I' ~ .. Q~s~u.ssed ~ ._.~1 . . • ~r "f'~' ~ ~ "' s:ataf • ~ Fountain"<, ley f; Club. · ' J: '!'he four.part Wednesda y ~ l\l'CU"'ioo sqi<!s will begin al i;-..tJ,45 a,-~·~~Y,,,a\iff ~e com· rll!l"itY"ceUtl!r. · · \ "' ' ~· Au '.~~:-~~ in ~ f'ounlaip vauey.~~~vited ~to a~tend>t ~.e· ~ and ~learn details relating to an ~ ~ of. life everyone en- :::~~.. Us. ~ Well' ~ i; ' . iii. ·~· ·'· \ 3-~+ ~ rS ·1'-in -John ~ Outicari; l:\l1)0 ress ~those a.t.:ling ( Wed- ··~ .. . -' ~ .,. \. Hawaii W~ddrf{9"'lf rip ·Selected by Newlyweds Selecting llawaii for lhei.r honeymoon were the former Bridget Elizabeth Cummings and Dr. Robert C. Starken- burg, both of Corona del Mar. The Rev. David Di Profio conducted the afternoon single · ring ceremonies in Christ Church by the Sea, Newport Beach. The bride, dau ghler o[ tir. and ~trs. Clyde C. Cummings of Temple City. asked her sister Sheilah Cummi'ngs to be the maid of honor. .<\Uending the son of Mr. and J\.trs. Gilbert Sarkenburg of Temple City, was his father :i ~ best man and R0ss and Philip Starkenburg, h i s brothers. Scoll j:ummings, the bride's nephew was the ring bearer. .. . MRS. STARKENBURG CdM Home ' Nursery Welcomes Parents An opportunity to observe youngsters in action will be provided parent<; and in- terested area residents when Films ar.e available at Mariners Library on a first come first served basis. Mesa Nursery School Staging Open House Preschool children and their parents are invited to an open the Orange County Counci l of Parents Participation Nursery Schools. Huritlnglon Beach Cornmunity house at llill Top NurserY Nursery School ho.s t:i: an open School in Cos ta Mesa 011 • Mrs. Sara Wallace, pro- house in the First Mclllodist Wednesday. May 6, at 9 a.m. fessiona l teacher, runs the Church. The school is lice nsed bv Especially welcome between Lhe State Department or Soci.il school. The program is geared 9 d II Ved Wcllacc a11d is a m•miber of lo help children gain in· an a.m. \ nesday and dependence, to e x pr ess Thursday, May 6 and ·1: "·Lii lhemsclves through art and be parents \\'hose youngsters to develop happy relationships are between the ages or 3 and Speaker Na med with other youngsters. 5 interested in the parent-Included in the d a i 1 y participation nu rs c r Y pro-Bell Gardens Community schedule are indoor table ac- gram_ Ceuter director. the Hcv. Ray tivities and crafts, music, f athers ~·ill be guests uf !!!'er will keynote St. Andrew's story time s, indoor-outdoor honor between 10 and 11 £n1 . \Vr1men·s fellowship Spring: free play. dramatics and car- Saturday. May 9. Additional Brunch. ing for pets. Fields trips to inrormation regarding the pro· The session will begin al the fire station, zoo, bakery gra ms may be obtained by Ht a.m. Wednesday, May 6, and tide pools are planned. t'alling i\irs. 1.lennis Landers, in the church's fellowship hall. Additional information may you make on public. Mate J & J UPHOLSTERY or business partner should be permitted to take initiative. SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. t'l· ME.I.NS! QUALITY, INTEQRITY, SERVICE, CR.l.l'TSM.l.HSHll". WE ACCEf'T CHALLENGES Dec. 21): Finish projects. Get WE Lll(.E IEAUTIFUL FUltNITUllR busy on chores which have been neglected. Diet, proper 642-5876 pacing are especially im-1':;;;:;;;;;;:;;:;;:::;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;~ 646-8058 porlanl. Be moderate in basicl' habits. Avoid extremes. CAPRJCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): New moon could shine nn romantic evening for you. 'J'hrow off past burdens. Begin anew. You have earned right 1.o happiness. There is no need for guilt feelings. Come alive. AQUARIUS (Jan. 26-Feb. 18 ): You gain new insight to MEMORY LANE H.1.11011: Ct:NTll FOR MOTHER'S DAY FINEST SELECTION o• PHOTO FRAMES In Oro~qe Co11nty • Wall & Easel Types • Pri~ed Fro,.. l•erpen•ive to Erpen1l'e • Al10 rft tdy·mad1 prinh, oih, etc. The THINKER ~ FRAME SHOP r lll L 17ttl Sr., c .... M .. ~ nesday's Program on V'sta tt" ~Planning apd Ti!.X. On May ~ \~'the~ ~ be a ~iscussion i a,o.i, I!"~· or · talk . and i(Ob(t ~ , 1, r' ()ilday The ronner Miss Cumming~ <tlte.nded Pasadena Ci Ly 536-4897, or t.lrs, Ben Katz, The center receives Jinan-be obtained from Mr 1, "'1" .,.., Beliind lnt1rnatio"•I i, , 963·2780. cial aid from St. Andrew's. Thomas Powers at 833-2634. DIKIMrM 111 ""'' • Pane•~• Hou11 it. affiliat1:);i with · rltita 1·au 1....:::::::::=.:_ _______ ~'.'..'.::'.'..'.'..::::'...:'.::..:::'.'..:.:'.:..:.:...._.:.:::::::::::'..::::'.::.:::.:'.::::'.:::_'.!::=======,,;=:::!!_~~~~~~~~~~~ \;.ofbil 'F •Direc-~ tor§ ' ak;~ ~ re- College. ' . ~lla,l ·· pc141 Slpi•'..,Delta. j qirire ntS: ~ ' ~-' ~ On 'liey. o:p, a·11',..11 bers ~and guests will meet al Dr. Starke nburg, an orthodontist m F o u n t a i n Va lley, was a student at the University of California, Santa Barbara and. UC's Medical School in San Francisco. lie AmcrtCll.!1 i Association 11 I Orthodof')ti£;1s and the erangc County Denial Society. £>1lday;s.c.tiai>t;IJ,9r a Wur or tf1' facili[y. The newlyweds are making t~eir home in ~cma dcl Mar. '" ' . . . I~, '· ' ,,, .· .. . I ,. ':to,. . -:~ .· ,~ 't!' J.I '• " BEAUTY SAVINGS! Loe~ 1rn1rt i" .. fl~illf f11hion•bl1 •P•in9 .+y!1! Go "'11ati....,.. p.,Tlp•• vou,.,H, biif •lill -tel~'" bud9~t. '~ I •·. SHAiAPOo-SET ·, • ,. •) • I MON .. TUES .• WED. LATtit WEEK ... HAIRCUT 52.45 51.50 '2.9S '2.00 HI STYLE $3.95 111 week SHAMPOO-SET HAIRCUT ..... .......... $2.95 $2.00 $5 ~o~plote FAMOU_S BUDGET PERM Not for Tinted or Bleached Hair 5 1500 WONDER CURL PERM ."~:,•,, '9.95 CrowDfngGlory BEAUTY SALONS OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAY .ROWN!NG GLOR . , . 267 E. 17th. ST., COSTA ME SA • . Pf.l~E 548·9919 1 OPEN EVENINGS CROWNING .GLORY lfar111Ml't C.,rlc1 C1lff•*I SOUTH COAST PLAZA la•"" ~•rt •• S..11 PHONE 546-7186 . I •"rrll 111; the d~ 11i1.c you want lo wenr, :ind we'll lr ll you how many vi~ita it will ta.kc r+nd jl;'URr.1ntoo in writing that you wiU rm.ch your smtl. Jn jµct, ltO ;ib>Qlu.Wly positive am we lhRl you will oblilin yqur OOjcl-tivc. that J:t!t st;ited in our f!UMll.111.t'C, -will '''~" le~ ;>o·ou hove FRE,E OP CHARGE, any 11.nd :ill furthrr visii~. until yon t'f'llCh your l'Qfll. 'Ilic tu1ir 1l ti1ke.; fn,. weh p !n;on 11> :1rh~r ht·r i;-on l ma_, vary. hawe\'er \Vt; GUARA.N1·t::E HJ::SULTI:i for l'vt'ryonr. Wtrfl's larat Ond ., Opefllri Ckai1 ••• QI tlcatJns fl Callforni1 11c'"'1 FIGURE CONTROL SALONS NllT .... IAT'. N • IMIUMlllUft, .. UtCAI onus ... -.uru tllUll WIU:llM ALSO IN 430 PACIFIC COAST HWY. 642-3630 Afl1llei P11, c.v1 ... c,..111-. D•WMY. Gi..4al•, lel!ewff4, L• ... .,., L111t le..:lt, N.-,.rt a..di. N. tt.11..,...4 0 ... ,1 .. Petsa4ewa, S.• Dl .. 1, Saft11 .I.Mt, IRt• .. ~. hllMMI, T1,.. ttn•. TanHCa, WltlrtlM. • (r) Copyrly~t 1970 C/orlo Mars/tall A.fgt. Co. Jnc. 12 Blocks East or Balboa Bey Clubl 1840 W. 17th STREET 50-94S7 SANTA ANA " ' __ , __ l I I • j '~ ~1arine Lance COrPoral Paul R. Coleman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Budd R. Coleman of 2510 23rd St., Newport Beach. is now serving with U'le Fifth Marine j.,_.xpeditionary Brigade, Fleet Marine Force, Camp Pendleton. Navy Chief Warrant Officer James B. Dunlap, of 617 St. James Place, Newport Beach, is undergoing re servist training with the First Naval Coilstructlon Regiment in the DeSoto National Forest near Gulfport, Miss. Marine Private First Cl8ss Robert L. Rhodea Ill, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eckley of 17091 Oak Lane, Huntington Beach, is now serving with the newly commissioned Station Opera- tions and Maint e nan ce Squadron at the Marine Corps Air Sation, Beaufort, S.C. Navy Petty Officer Second Class Richard H. Lltdeton, husband of the former Miss Janet M. May of 9 1 5 2 Crawford Circle, Huntington Beach, has arrived at Mare Island, Calif., 'aboard the n u ·c I e a r . powered guided missile cruiser USS Long Beach after duty with the Seventh Fleet off the coast of Vieb)am. Marine Sergeant Roy D. Nichols, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy A. Nichols of 2107 An- niversary Lane, Ne wpor t Beach, was promoted to his present rank while se rving with the Third Marine Aircraft Wing at the Marine Corps Air Station, Santa Ana. --·- Nayy Petty Officer First Class Clarence A. Steward, husband of Mrs. P e a r I Steward of Bay St.,· Costa Mesa. is undergoing reservist training with the First Naval Construction Regiment in the DeSoto National Forest near Gulfport, Miss. Coast Guard PeUy Officer Third Class Gerald A. Beard, son o( Mr. and Mrs. Del C. Beard of 2137 Ocean Blvd., Balboa, has returned to Panama City, Fla., aboard the U.S. · Coast Guard Cutter Dep(!ndable after two weeks in the area of the oil platform fire near New Orelans. Navyman Geoe Thompson . son of Mr. and Mrs. Everett L. Thompson of 2945 Royal · Palm Drive, Costa Mesa, has returned to Long Beach after a six-month deployment in the Western Pacific aboard the destroyer USS Alfred A. Cun- ningham. Navy Seaman Apprentice Dtll C. Stuvick, of 2441 Elden Ave., Costa Mesa, was on standby aboard the am- phibious assault ship USS Iwo Jima in the Pacific as part al the Apollo 13 Pacific recovery force. f\.1arine ·Corporal Harold A. Turner, hu~band of the former l\{iss Cheryl, S. \Vhite of 2028 Huntington Ave., Huntington Beach, hall ::irrived al t1are Island, Calif., aboard the n u c I e a'!"· powered guide 1nissilc cruiser USS Long Beach after duty. \Vilh the Seventh Fleet off the coas t of Vietnam. Airman Louis A. Kish, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis ?i.f. PFC Clois E. Po"'·ell, son of Mr. and Mrs, Clois Powell -Of 6972 Oxford Drive, llun· tington Beach, has b e e n selected for Soldit'.r of the Month for the Month ol Ma rch at Fitzsimons Gener a 1 Hospital, Denver, Colo. Navy Petty Officer Third Class Phillip J. English, son of Mr. and l\1rs. Joseph J. English of 1324 Belfast Ave., Costa Mesa, is serving aboard the guided missile destroyer USS John S. ?i.1cCain at Long Beach. l\1ari11e Se rgeant James B. Hutcherson, son of f.-lr. and Mrs. Charles J-1. Hutche rson of 633 Vista Bonita, Newport Beach, was promoted to his present rank while serving at the t1arine Corps Base, Camp Smedley D. Buller, Okinawa. Navy Petty Officer Third Class Stephen Grimshaw, son of Mr. and Mrs. J a ck Grimshaw of 400 Signal Road, Newport Beach, has returned to Long Beach, Calif .. folio1v- ing a seven-month deployment aboard the fleet oiler USS Cacapon in the We s tern Pacific. Navy Seaman Apprentice Joseph L. Savona, ::;on of l\1r. Charles SavO'lla of 8 7 5 2' Anchorage Drive, Huntington Beach, has returned to San Diego after six months in the Western Pacific aboard the demr-0yer tender USS Prairie. ...,Marine Lance Co r poral Richard L. Smith, of 2013 Federal, Costa Mesa, suc· cessfully passed the lligh Schoo I General Education Development Test, while serv- ing at the Kaneobe Marine Corps Air Station, Oahu, Hawaii. Marine Lance Corporal Ter· ranee D. Carter of Costa Mesa, is now aboard a Seventh Fleet ship as part of the Navy- Marine amphibious tea m off the Vietnam coast. His unit, Okinawa-based Battalion Lan- ding Team 3-9, incliidcs com· bat ready infantry. artillery, and support elements. GETS MEDAL -U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Richard J . Faylor (fight), son of Mrs. Neva C Taylor, 111 · Shorecliff Road, Corona del Mar, receives the brotize. star at Ent AFB, Colo from Maj. Gen. Robert W. Burns. Taylor was decorated for his meritorious service as deputy base commander of the 37111 Combat Support Group, Phu Cat AB Vietnam. ' . ~ 'i.j ' . _.: ' '>' ;P. ;fl, ·~,. ' •• . ' ' -. . • .. Navy Lieutenant Alvin R. A1.cClure, husband of the former Miss Barbara F. Showier -0£" Huntington Beach, is oow serving aboard the sub-· marine tender USS Proteus husband of Mrs. E v e I y n Whitehouse. of. Costa Mesa, is now serving at the · Marhie Corps Air Station, New River, J~ooville, N.C. , • homeported at Guam. Navy Petty Officer First Class Richard M. Chubb, son or l\1rs. Vesta c. Chubb of 1995 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa, ~'TOP YALU DISCOUNT IUPUMA•Knl MAY 4th THRU MAY 10th 'ROUND ST·EAK FULL" CUT-TENDER llEF RIB STEAKS PAN FRY OR IROIL CLUB STEAKS A.GED TO IROIL I-BONE STEAK PO RTERHOUSE •• , $1 .lt LI. BONELESS ROASTS WASTE FREE IEEF CHUCK SIRLOIN TIP ROAST BONELESS ROLLED & TIED BEEF STEW LEAN DICED CUIE$ • COSTA MESA AT 19th ST. and HARIOR BLVD. $ ,. ·19 HEAVY .. , ... . FRY·ERS · LB. w,,,,; , ..... • u, . USDA INSPECTED IUJ't PORTION-FARMER JOHN'$ It BONELESS ·YHAM LB. CENTER CUT 10Asr~ARME• JOHN'$ . ' . .. ~ ; ·r ,. -· :-PORK . ·. -i-...Ho~Ps -~' l:B. .. . ... SllLOIN.....:,AMILT PA~K .. PORK CHOPS LOIN CENTllCUT PORK CHOPS WA.Fil THIN . 11. BON.ELESS . · VROAST LB. PORK FOR THE ~Oll$$1Rlf ·.:FRESH . ··: f PICNICS:; 1,J. FARMER JQHN'$ PORK " • ] I '1:::1 . . _ .. ,,,,!"-: L. ·OIN . ·:t .HALF . LB. . FULL t lll HALF " ... CORNED BE·EF HAM . 9STEAKS . LB. • IONELI$$ .~EAKFAST ' , , ·CSPARE .. RIBS '~ M!ATY EASTIRN Riii IRISH IRA.ND . . . BEST FOODS MAYONNAISE Quart Jar Compare At 69c LIMIT 1 WITH COUPON 38' COVPM Y&lld Ml'f' 11-M•, 11 • NO SALES TO DEALbtS RUSSET . LARGE ID~HO . POT~TOEJ·~·.-': .. · 10 Lb. . . Cello tqg . · LIMIT 1 WIT~'°"'°" . .t ·. FARMER JOHN BACON . ·6. ·s~. LIMIT 1 WITH COUl'O.,. 1 Lb. Pkg. . Comj,are At itc r OOUl'ONPER F'AMii..V ' r COUPON PER AMILY • ,#j -· . LB; Lt; reolOSFM . .. . . "---·----· ' " .. I t " ~i ·~.r. .. ' heard it;~" Od .... . . .. ' ! . .. \ .-.. , .. ' . ' ·,, " ~ • l ' ·i· .... ~ ~J ... 1 .. .. . ' • ; ... . • • . • -. . • ! ' ' ' • • • • • • ' ' _, -~-~=.·--, -·-·--------------.. ----~-------c-·---.-. -. -.. ~---·-----·--.----l l --r ~--: ~ ..... . . -~ • ; Pair Choose E.vening . Mkhael Palrlt k Byrne of Santa Ana claimed Cristina ~ue Cormier as his bride dur- 11\g ceremonies In St'. MRS. M. P. BYRNE Moy Bride Rites Joachim's CathoU<: Church. Performing the double ring evening nuptials was the R.ev . Don Kribs. Parenti of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mn:. Leonard Coanier Jr. of Udo Isle and Mrs. William Louis Byrne of Dalla! and the late Mr. Byrne. The new Mrs. Byrne was attended by Mrs. Michael Estey, her sister as matron of honor : Miss Jane Cormier, her cousin; Mrs. Patricia Collins of Dallas, t h e benedk:t's sister. and MW fl.1aryellen Mc GI ass q n., bridesmaids. Cari Cormier, the bride's niece was Dower girL Jerry Mora was asked to stand as best man. Seating guests were Andrew Miles, Jack Sistek and Len Cormier JII, the brother of the bride. The bride ls a graduate or Newport Harbor High School and attended Mount St , 1t1ary's College in Los Angeles. Her husband attended Dallas schools. The newly marrieds are making their home in Slulta. Ana. Young . wild· new· and definitely fo r sheer fabrics only., ,.;• ., •• 1'e 'ihi :\t ~e gives you a mini -the double fl ounce &ffl<llI· 1!2!iiiC1ed edges are in bias of sell fabric. 70'230 :'Mls~r~s 8-16. Size 12 requires approxi- mately 5 fJ8 yarti of 45"' fabric for the midi and 3 718 yards of 4swifabric for the mini. . This precut.. preperforated custom Spadea Designer Pattern produces a better fit or money back. . Order 7~. give size, name. address and zip. EACH'patt . $2. ~d . Address SPADEA Box N Dept. CX·Ui, . lord,.jy. 08848. I '' I ' .. ,., ... Lego / · Sec-reta'iies Gavel E~change Due .. \ . 1t1rs. 'Ibeodoi:e C. llancj of L. Levasseur. record Ing Placenlla Will take flte gtyel :.ecretary: James E. Brad· when new ofueerl'! are ~ln-bury, corresponding stalled by the Orange County secretary; Sally 0 g u s h. Legal Secretaries As!oclatlon. treasurer, and Doris Kooker, 'J'hc 22nd annua l ctremony national representative. will take platt in the Charter Guest speaker for the 8 p.m. House, Anaheim Thursday. dinner hour Will be Jack A. May 7. beginning with a social Lemp, first vice president of hour at 7 p.m. lhe Stuart F. Cooper Co. An Installing offictr will be honorary member of Legal Mrs. Eula ~1ae Jett, ~nd"., Secretaries. Inc ., his topic will of Legal Secretaries.1•lit * be Sign cf the Times. will seat the Mmd. P~l; :r.trs. Bradbury is accepting Smilh, vice president)i ..., reservations at $31-2621. . .. Choraliers Will Sing The Laguna Beach }ligh School Choraliers under 1he dired.km of Jack Krefting will entertain the Patience Wright Chapter of the Oaughten or the American Re vo lu t i on tomorrow at noon in the Hotel Laguna, On the agenda is a report 0.1 the Continental Congress and elect.ion and in.stallat.ion of officer! by Mrs. Edgar Ax- tell. Hostes.1e1 will be the Mmes. Reynold Wiggiru, Fred Ros! and William Kennedy. .GOODllJR4~ • 211i S;enJ ........ HRl1RL-NoportC"'tor 6411154 Muralist Draws Art In Africa DAILY PILOT Peering ArounCI Luncheon, Party Honor Guests ~tORE n 1A.N JOO friends OPENING her New po r l In the El Adobe restaurant and relatives of newly married Beach home for a membership in Capistrano. of the conte!t was Western Girl, Inc. coffee of Chapman CotleRe Mrs. While and her husband A discussion of African art Atr. and Mrs. Thomas Fitch 'fown and Gown was Mrs. are traveling to Spain, Portu- will be presented by Mrs. Jo gathered at a cocktail party Kenneth Raefsnyder . second gal and France. Bride's Jewelry Dendel for members of the to wish them well and admire vice president uf the gl'cup. Laguna Beach branch of the their Pompeii i;tyle home MRS. NORA Carsey, ex-In the true wedding tradi- Amtrican A&sociation or which Mrs. Flt.ch \fecorated. MRS. WUIS White of ecu tlve secretary to W. R. tion, the bride wears the University Women tomorrow Both fonner San Fran. Balboa Island was surprised Mason of the Irvine Co., will • t ' 30 bridegroom's gtft to her as a : p.m. ciscans, Mrs. Filch Is the <luring a boo voyage 11111cheon not have an ordinary vacation I • The speaker, an ac-former Theresa Rossi and by members of the Fine Arts this year thanks to a Ictler she makes that march down complished muralist, teacher niece of Angelo J_ Rossi. Section of the Tuesday Club written by her boss who the aisle. I • and writer, will address the mayor of the bay city for or Newport Harbor. ~trs. de.scribed why Mrs. Carsey Diamond earrings, a di•· group in Fellowship Hall, 16 years. Fitch now is \\'hite is chairman. is the greatest secrelary. mond·pendanl or pjn that flash PATRICIA DUNGAN Summer Bride C o m m u D i t Y Presbyterian associated with Macna~lrvine Mrs. Robert Speed took care The letter won her a trip their message of love, allow Church. ,~Re~a~it~yCo~.i;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;d::;.~~e~d~e~lail~·~sfo~r~tlle;;;_par~~ty,_il~ori.i;tw~·oi.ii~~H~ono~lu~iu~.~S~po~IUO~riiiO~---ebr•id•••~;,;;;;c•o~-orm,_•'iiiOiiiO, Mrs. Dendel began herli --- career by formulating a crafts program in Appalachia. Whl.le working on a masters. degree at Columbia Uni versity, she became interested in the religioua aspect of Arrican art and later went to Africa where she lived on a rubber plan- CM Pair To Marry In June Judge and Mrs. Donald Dungan o{ Costa Mesa have aMounced the betrothal or their daughter, Patricia Lee Dungan to Michael James Keitnedy. Mis11 Dungan is an alumna ()[ Newport Harbor Hiib School and attended a busir<e!s school ill Santa Ana. Currently she ~~t¥ndifll"'1light school at Orilige Ccast'College. 1\er fianCt. IOJI of ?\lrs. Irene K~ cl Coit.I Mesa and the JJti Mr. ~eft· Ken· nedy, f.radua~d from F1ushing High School in New York City and is attending Jtight school at Golden West College and r~ullerton Junior Colle... ~·.11 .'11>•~. wtn oe lbarried Ju• 17.,,.Jn the F~ United ~ Church · i 1\ Costa Mesa."•·.... • tation. Women interested in in· formation on the meeting or membership maY phone Mrs. Donald Tanney, 830-HH4, or Mrs. William Kennedy, 499- 1635. Chapter Dines Out A dinner celebration In Reuben's rtstauraat w 111 follow in!lallation ()[ new of. fieers cf Fountain Valley's Gamma Alpha Nu Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi. Members will gather at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 6, in the home cf Mrs. Donald WaUon for the ceremonies. Taking office will be the Mmes. John Bower, president: Rex McDonald, extension of· ricer; Robert Ross, vice presi· <lent; Kenneth Sorenso n , Tops W • h recording secretary; Gary e1g Emery, correspo nd i n g d L;. secretary; David Persons, Foo ·;Sui.ij~c;t treuurer, and Jim McGrath. ·• council represent.aUve. Mrs. D:orolhy ~= j1" en c k , •==========.II otange County }ldme adviser, will 1peU: on Food attd _Your Weight to !Trembers ot TOPS Sea Sirens at 8 p.m. Wed· nesday, May 6. "Why do I qain weight? ..,, The public is invited lo hear Mrs. Wenti in Killybrooke Elementary School: C o s t a ~1~a. I nev er sit down .'t. to Pa1 '' ~ · m+~Wdt Wai1f Watchers TOPS Waist Watchers assernble every Thursday at 7 p.fl).. in Q(cle Ylew School, liljlllin(l!in Beac1i. ' '', Some t1lking, some llsttnlnt ind a progr1m that worb. '"' 2'111IRCICHUU-ClLL115·5505 " ' . ' .. ; ., ••• l • buffurns'. new -~ ~~ freneh curly cu t, " ,.. . rester perm and treatment Sptcialvolue)complele l7.50 Booncing wllh ear~ SQlppill? wilft sly le 011 Mother's DlY pena seect•i makes th• pe~ect gift. Includes RIStO' Pennt• ...,t ~avt, Resl0!0Tr•lment ar.I tho French Curly Cut.J,sk aboul M •1"ti1I gilt-letter. ~uiy SIUdit MotW'• Doy •• Mot 10 .... '-----'Buffums· Nt wJlorl • t F~1hio11 ltlt11d, Ne-..po•I C111ttr e 644·2 200 Mon., Th11r1., F1i, 10:00 fill 9;J0; Other D1yt 10;00 till l :JO DOUBLE VNITS OUBLE1 \NITS MACHINE WA SHABLE NO IRON 100% POLYESTER SOLID COLORS interesting surface weaves on this never rumple, pack and go dresswear fabric. v1lues. to $5.98 yd. 54'"/58" widths guar. wuhable •COTTON PATIO PRINTS perky, pretty florals • SEERSUCKER PRINTS 'N SOLIDS no iron cottons and cotton/polyster • PERMANENT PRESS PRINTS macbin wash colton/avril rayon • DAN RIVER DIMITY CHECKS no iron polyester/cotton 79c to 98c yd. v1lues ·. 35"/38" widths all guar. washable e BUTCHER WEAVES great textures for sports or dress. solid colors on rayons Reg. $1 .19 to $1 .59 v1lu1s . 45" wide guar. washable • • Waffle Pique Prints • Clipper Poplin Prints • Homespun Sport Pri nts • No-Iron Border Prints • Wispy Flocked Voiles yd. • V{oven Dotted Swiss Prints C"ool summer colors. many no·iron. machine washable fabrics Rog. $1.29 to $1.98 yord yd. 44'"/4~" widths fabulous bold. mod designs on polyester double-- knit. Machine wash -never iron. machine wash -little irnn Reg. $5.95 to $7.95 values. 44"/45" widths yd . METAL ZIPPERS 7'' and 9" lengths \Vhlle only Reg. 39c to 49c each • Each 10 SOUTH COAST PLAZA cottons and cotton/polyester blends. all are washable. • yd. PU RE FLAX LINENS • MATCHING PRINTS 'N SOLIDS Rog. $1.91 yd. voluo palletle designs 45" apd M" widths yd. MERCERIZED THREAD GIANT 225 YARD SPOOLS \\·hitc only z Spools• 3 5 Rig. 25c 11. HUNTINGTON CINTER COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON llACH Bristol 11 Sin Dieto Fr11w1y -.S•5·1586 Edinger 1t Be1ch loul1¥anl -lt7-t013 Open Monday thru Friday 10 'tll 9-S1turd1y 'tll '-Sunday 12·~. ·- "' '" .. " ~ .. .. " •• ,. ,. "' " .. ~ .. ... ' ,. .. )I; " ' ,, '" " .. WO " •• '" '" ' '" •• •• WO ... KO " ' ,. , ~· .. •>< "' • '"' '" , ' I "' ' '" •• '· -... ... "' ' , . , •• ,. ... " • •• "' ' ' " " ( ... •• •• r.: '"' 10 ' .. •• " "' .. •• " "' ,, " .. ~ •• .. 00 " ~ • " M "' " • • • 0 ,. • • " " • .. " • • • T • • CAIL Y PILOT Monday, May 4, 1970 --- LEGAL NOTICE I.EGA~ NOT!<% ...... LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE r ·Ut" HOTICI! 01' TIUSTEE'S SALlr T.L Ne. t\DI CEll.TIFICATE 01'" •US1Nl!SS On Ml'f 11, 191'0 ti 11:00 o'cloo;li A,M, t! FICTITIOUS N,\Ma 1M lrllfll tnlr111(e lol>~Y ot Secvrll• Tiiis TM undtrtl"'*' 00 cerUf'f 11\r/ ''' COii-ComNnf, !Ill Norin 8<1 .. MhWtY, In lht Cl- ., ... ulno • bu1U-. 11 IJl.I E. E•it tr of Sa11r1 ....... Stilt of C1llklrnla. Ctie•lnul, $1ont1 ,i,111, C.llforl'IJi, vnoHt The SECURITY TITLE tNSUAANCE COM-tlc:litlou1 tlrm Ml'Tl9 of AEll.0-SPACE PANY T -~· • Area Servi~e News COast Guard Petty Officer Third Class David G. BoblOll, husband of the former Miss Lynn D. Sullivan of 1588 S&n Bernardino Pl ace, C o s t a Mesa. is attending the baslc Altcrtw S u r v I v 1 I ~ulp­ mentman School at the N1val Air Tedlnlcal Training Center, Lakehur~. N.J , Ainnan l\l l ch•el A. son of Mrs. Keith W, AFB, Teir. He his bten Bauuennan, 17362 Mill Clrclc, asslifled to Sheppard AFB, 1 Jiuntlngton Beach, h•s com· Tex.. for trainln1 In 1lrcra!t pleted b a·s l c training at maintenance, Mnnan· Hall Is Lackland AFB, Tei. lie has • 19&9 g rad u 1 & e of been assigned 10 Chanute Westminster Hlib SdlooL l AFI B, ftlll., 'ntfor train~ in Navy L le u tenant Com·' a rcra ma1 enanee. turman mander Joe L ff• 11 • d I t Majeski, a 111&9 graduate or • husband or the former Mih ~I HUlltington Beocb High Sdlool Mary R. Long ol Nl"J>Ofl attended Golden We.st; Junior Beach, is strvihg aboard the ':.! College. His father, Leo I... dtalroyer USS J1rne1 C.1 Majesk.i, resides at 4811 Cen-Owens at Pearl H 1 r b or, Ulla, Los Angeles. Hawaii. ' Marine Private First Class Oon1ld M. Dietz, of 1131 Al· bion Drive, HuntinJ\On Btach, is now serving at the M1rtne Corps Air Station, Yuma, Ariz. Scout Show ~ New Honors New hoMrs are displayed Y.'ilh the colura of three }farbor Area Boy Scout Troop« today, following a Del Mar District Camporee recently near Corona del A1ar. A total of 214 Scouts and their leaders panlclpated in Ole three-day eveot on Irvine Company land overlookinl the .... A1embtrs of 24 troops oom· peted in such skill1 1 a. astronomy. nature. knot! and lashings, com p as .s reading, 'ignallng and first aid pro- cedure1. Scout m a,ler Euacne O'Rourke and boys of Troop 10, Newport Beach, achieved first pl1ce honors in the di.strict-wide Camporee. E O!NG PRODUCT$ end !ht! 11ld tlrm ' I COf1>Dr1tlon. I I rulltt u,,....r W L IHl'e:d of Ille loUowlng pt!"SOM tht Ott<! ol Trust t~l!'l:lllll'd bv MOZELLE ~r.ci:m n.,.,tl In tull 1nd plictl ,,j L. SCOTT, I mff•l.cl women, 11 h1r tall ·c1 1 11 follows· Ind 1eo1r11e l>r-rty, recorded Otlobfr •U• J~~:, 'P. Brady, ii:Ml Oil•wi•• st., 11, lMt 11 docvmonr no. 12llOO r,. boal< Hunllnt111n Btfch, Cillt. '112, Pit• 1•1. of OtflcJ1I Recerd1 111 Ille Llr>ee A Wt'bllel' 7Jf E svc1rnore, ottlce ot lht Re-::ordtr ol Or1"9t Countv. Whlkbead, son o( Mr. and Mrs. James Whitehead f)f 2Q2.. A Calafia, San Clemente, has completed basic training at Lacldand AFB, Tex. He has been assigned to Sheppard AFB, Tex., for training in the communications f I e I d • Ainnan Whitehead, a 1965 graduate <J. San Clemente High School, received his BA degree in 1969 from California State College at Fullerton. Ainnan R1chard L. Afaje1Jd, Airman Euge11e R. Daner, son of Mr, and Mrs. Elbert R. Darter, 13891 Pine St., Westminste"r, has completed basic training at Lackland AFB. Tex. He has been assigned to Sheppard AFB, Tex., for train ing in metalwork.inf. A.Inn an Darter, gradua_ted in 196& f r o m Westminster High School and altended San Diego St.ate College. N a v y Hospitalman Ap. prentice Dile E. Rood, of 3290 Iowa St., Cp.sta Mesa, was '.::::''':'====:::~~===:::=:"".:::::===~ graduated from tlle HospiLll :- Corps School at San Die10. Troop 339, led by Seoul· master Ron Litke and Troop 473, led by Scoutma1ter Robert Morton. both of Costa Qrinee, c.:tltomfi . ' , ' C11lt0<nl1, bY re1son of d.t1u1t In 1111! O•ted AorU 17, 1t1'0. PIYMtn! or performtflCI ol Cltllltllh;in• Jamn P. llrd'I" NCUrtd thereby iflCll.Kli"ll !'le breach o• Linet A. Wtbblr. dtf1u1t. nonce of """re~ w11 rKOrded Stilt of Cetltornl.I, Or111 .. Clllln!Y: J111u1rv 1~. 1t10. I S doocumtnl llD.. Sl"3 Ill On ... orll 17, 1910, before me, • NOltn' booll. tltl, Plllt 311. of H id OltlCll l l'ubllc In and tor 11ld $t111, pt•IOnilly Record1, will u ll 1t l>UbllC 1uctlon for •<>Ptared J~mes P. Br•dY 1r"ld L1nc1 "· Cl>h, wl!hout w1rr1111y 11 to rltle;, w!'bber kl"IOWll to mt to be 1111 i>erion• POHtHlon, or tncumbr1n~•· 1~t lntertll wholf ntmei 1re 1ub..crlbtd to the wltll\11 con••Yed to 11ld Tru1t~ bv 11ld Ottd ol lni!rume11t 1rod 1ckr10wltdted 1111., ex· Trvlil Jn l>r<H>trlY sl1111I~ In t~e Count• of ,.culed tt>e 1.1me. Orlntt, 5111e ol C1!1k>rnl1, dtKrl~ 1s: (OFFICIAL SE ... Ll e:XMl•IT "A" Marv k . Henrv PARCEL 1: Nottrv Publlc.C1lilor111t Loi 1 of Tr1u :11162, Jn th• coun!v ltf Prlttelp,il Ottlce ln Or1nee, 111tt ol c1111orn11, •• ,,,_n on Or1r111e Countv 1 mtp tMr"1f recorded I~ R-fl, MY Commlulon E•11ir~s Pivet lt Ind :IO, Mlscel11necu1 MIPJ, Nov, 7•. ltn , Publhhed orinve COIJI O•llW Pllol, recard1 of 11ld O•lflilt 0!!111,. April 10, 27, MIY ,, 11, 1910 11 .. 10 PARCEi. ll: Tl\11 p11rtk>n of Lot 105 o! Tr•cl No. LEGAL NOTICE :!CO, In lhe tountv ot Orenve, s!lte of C11ilornl1, 11 s.nown on 1 m1p lhereol '""°'"'"" !n !look 14. PIVtJ 11 ~nd 12, MIKtll1n-.1 Meps, record1 ol "Id Ort1191 COUfllY, de..:ribed 1s folio_,; ClaTIFICAT• o,-•USlNESS ,-ICTITIOUS NAME flNlftnlf!O et the EtllerlY gw-ner of Tiie undersklned de cerlltv the• i re Let I of Tr1ct No. :JOI!,, 11 11\oWn on 1 <11ndUClllll! • b<IJln••~ II lolf P1u11rll"IO mlP re.:ordtd ln flook '2. PtVfS lt Ind Avenue C°'ll Mesi, C1lllc•nl1, under Ille :IO, Mltctll1".au1 M4P!, record• ol 11ld jltlltlou~ tlrm "1me of HUNT'$ GI.ASS I< Orl 'll!I Counlv: !hence SouTll jO• 11' l1" MIRROR 1nd 111•1 said Urm 11 com1>1>1('d E11t llonll !ht Southet•1trf~ Pf'O- or tlll 1o1lowl119 person•, wl'IG"!f ntmes In IOnOf!lon ol IM Nortlle1ntrlv ll>lf of 1,,11 ind """' of residence 1re 11 ••kl Let I, to the Southe11t1r1v line '' I 11ow1· lal!d cltKrlbtd lft I deed to J"" Se1y, 0 wui11m H. •nd RUTll E. Olemond, Jr. lno wlte, recotdl!d Acrll 7, lt57 In tSlll St1rt1o1rd, Garden G r a 11 I ' Book 2310, Pl'9e 140. OH!cl1! Records; c1111ornt1. 11'rff>te Sollt'l J9' ~ 21" Wnl •Ion!! "Id Dlled Aprll 17, 1t10. Southe11ttrlY line lo the-Sou1t1t11lerll' Wllll1m H. Oi1mond P'"Olon1111Lon ~ the Sou!llwe1!eriY !lne of R111h E. Ol1mond u;d Lof I : tl>ence North .so• 11' 31" 11111 of C1llfornl1. Orar1111 Cot1nty: w11r i lonv ia!d Sou!llf!11terlv pro- On A1>rl1 17. lt10, beh>ri: mt, ' Nol•rv lon••llon to !tit Soulfltrlv coriwr of ,,kl Publlt ln "'" to• ••Id St1!t, per1<i,..1!Y Lor I: tlltnc:• North 19• 4 ' 2l" E111 U .,....ired Wllll•m H. Ol1mond incl Ruth lttl to 11\t PO!M of belllnnln•. E. 011morid known to me-to be 11\t for tht ..uri>o1t of 111vl1111 011uv1t1CH1J tle!".IOlll whose names 1rP 1ublcrllltd to JKUrtd by slid Oeed of TruJI. tht wlthln l"1lrumenl incl 1clr.1111Wledted Diltd April !l, 1970. thev ... ecull!d t11t Yme, !OFFICIAL SEALl ~rv K. Hfllrv Noll rv Pubilc.C11lfornl1 Ptlndi>oll Oltkt In Orange Count• My Commluloll E•Plr•• No~. 1'' 191' l>ilot, SECURITY T ITL E INSURANCE COMPANY BY ChrlJ Loukts !Cor-•t• Still Publllhtd Or1ntt COl•I 0 111>' "llOI, "ubl11hed Ortnvt CN•I 0 111, .A~rl! to, 11, MtY •. 11. 1910 116.-10 APrll :IO, ,7 1nd MIV •• 19111· LEGAL NOTICE p.nou CEaTll'lCATE 01' •U,1NESS l'tCTITIOUS NAMI! T~ undersl11ned c!M1 ttrlily he h tona1.1ct1r111 1 t>u5lnt•• 11 'll Auci•, (Ot'Otll Del Mir, C1illor11l1, undt!r !ht llctlt!Olll firm n1me al GRAPHIC SIGN CO. i nd th1t Yld flrm I• com1>1>1fd et Ill• lcllowlnv Pt"tiOll "'""'" ntmt Only One Flnal stocks In all home tditions. That's a big deal'.' It Is In Oranqe County. Tiie DAILY PILOT Is lite only daily newspaper t~t deli~· ers the package. 1~ full ind place of resl!ltnte Is ••1:iiii~~~~ii follows: llol!trl ~. W1rml1111ton, •11 Ac1tl1, Corona del Mir, Ca!iforTill Dtttd A1>r!1 24, lt10 Robert P. Wt•mlntrl~ll STATE OF CALIFORNIA, OllANGE COUNTY; On April 1'· 1910, be-lorf' ""' • tlo!1rv Public in Incl for i1td 51111, -.10111liY 1r>Pt1rt'll lloberl P. W1 rm- lntton kf'lllWll le mt ID bor IM "'"°" wllOH '""" Is 1ub1crlbed to ll1t wllhl11 lnll"'mtt trod l ck'll!Wled911f tlti lllllCUfld The"'""'· !OFFICIAL SEALt Mlrv K. Htr1rv Not1rv Public • C1\1tornll Princ;!HI Ol1k1 In Or1nve Counrv NASA Awards Negro College GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) -Two profes.wrs at the school of engineering at North Carolina A&T St.ate University have received what the school believes to be the first research g rant s to a predominantly Negro college from the National Aeronauti cs and Space Administration. Dr. Lewis Dowdy, president o! the sdlool, said Monda y the grants totaling $39,000 for research on miniat u re circuits, digital systems and electro-chemical properties of oxides were a breaktbrough for predominanily black in- otilutioM of higher learning. Expert Urges Space Flights WASHINGTON (AP) -Dr. Harold C. Urey, a Nobel Prize- winning scientist, s ay s mankind should go ahead with exp!oralion of the s o I a r system despite tbe near· tragedy of Apollo 13. ••Men might get marooned in space -or marooned on the moon itself," he said in an interview, "but we should push" right on. Columbus lost a wbole shipload of men, but that didn't stop exploration." Ainnan l'tolichacl A. Hall. son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe J. Hall, 13.102 Rainier Circ l e, Westminster, has completed basic training at Laci.land U.S. Air Force Sergeant Stephen C. TbomJllOI, son of !\lr. and Mrs. Carmi N. Thompson of 13792 M•ltnda Drive, Tustin, is on duty with the 43rd strategic· Wing at Andersen AFB, Guam. ENROLL TODAY MEN BODY BUILDING PHYSICAL FITNESS WEIGHT LOSS WEIGHT GAIN 6 ~~:$ 520 LIMITED OFFER PROGRAM INCLUDES: • HeMN •·el e WMrl PMI • S•• lMlll • sw1 ... 1 .. Ltt1••• ·--·--. .,.... .... ., ... .,_....,_. . c.~ A P"IOUll:• SALON P"Oll WOM•M • A "'~LTM nu• P"Oll M•M GARDEN SQUARE HEAL TH CLUB 95'2 GAlDIN GROVE II.VD. GARDEN GIOVE 517·5410 M, Commlulon Exol"' Nov. 1•, 1tn PUlo'llhlCI Ort1r1111 CHll DtllY P ilol, A11•ll 21, M1v '·JI, 11, 1'10 715--111 Newspape1•s: Number One LEGAL NOTICE ....... Cl'll:TIFICATE 01'" •USIM•ll, 1'1CTITIOUS MAME T~• 11ndllnl11>td do ctrtlfy !Mv 11'"1 conduc!I"' 1 bl.nines• at Ill E, 11Th St .• Cost1 MJw, C1llloml1, under !hi lie. tlllous llrm "'"""of Flowtrs ti• Gtrv •rod t~1t 11ld firm Is comoofed of !he h>llow· lnt 11tr111>111, Whoff n1mn In fY!I •ncl Pllt tt ol re11dence 1r1 11 follo..i; Jolin o. Sc.lies, ~ Ct hutntl 91\ld., Holl•wood. Ctl. G1ry R. Bouel, 2?611 C1llu-• •lvd., tfo!lywood, Cal. 0•1ed •·l~JQ Jolin D. Sti lt, Gtr¥ 11:, ti-I Sith! of C1111orn11, o""'' Counll'· on Aoru ll, 1910, borfcre ""• 1 Not1rv J>ubllc In •"II tor .. 10 s11t1, Ptri.on111y •-red Jot111 o. Sc111s '"" G•rv 111:. H. Bo11<111 know11 lo ..... 10 bl !ht P*r· '°"' whole 111l'!'lft art tubKrltled to tllt within lnJffum1111 1nd KllNrw1.c!Q9d fhty l~KUltd Ille Ul'M. Ol'FICIAL SEAL Wllll1m M. Schmid!, Not1rv Public. ottlclll Se11 N.,i1rv Putlllc.C1ll!0<nlt PtlflCle>ll Ollkt In Orangt Countv My Ccmmlulon E~~ires Nov. H, 1t12 P~bllshed Orange Cat•I 0.11• Pllol APrll 10, 77, MIY 4, 11, 1910 710·10 LEGAL NOTICE ceaTIFICATE 01' I USI NESS FICTITIOUI FIRM NAME •A• 201 CAtE NO. l'·MPM Th1 11ndtrslgned do~1 httebv (~r!llv li't1t lie Is condud!"9 1 buJ!nt11 for lht" mtrkll1"9 of 11111 promotion, 11-1 1nd 1ervlc1• •• an h1dl11ldu1I 1! 75171 M1ck1n1J1, La<w,.. Hll!J, C1lllo"n11, ul'lder the fltlttlou, flrm "'"" of lOEA MAaT, INC. 11'111 th~t Slid llrm 11 cmT>- -f'd of flll tollowlnlr Hflll>ll· whose ........ In lull •IMI Piie• ., rnl!HllH It •• follow•. to-wll, O.vld R. Ttvtof, "111 Mtck11Vlt, L1gune H!lll, C1!1fornl1. OAVIO R. lA'l'"l.0 11 Daito A11rl! 7, 1t70 COU~lY OF Oii.ANGE l u . .SlAll OF CALIFORNIA l Oft Aorll 7, 1970, bt'klre me, I Nct1rv PubOc Jn Ind let 11\d Counlt" at'ld 5!111. -llY IPPNrtd 01111<1 II. 11YIOr k MIWll lo ""' to bl! 1'111 "-''°"' wtlott '"'"' I\ 1ubKrlbed lo flll w:1~1n l"'tru· -nt, 1nd ICkN>WttO!ltd •o ,.,. lhll ht l~KUted !ht 1111'11, WUne11 mv htJICI 1rod tftl. (0,IFICIAL SEALI P"HYLLIS M. 5i1LYER Not1rv Pub!lc • Celflfl.rftll Or•~•~ County Mv Commlulon Ex11l•e OK. 6. !971 tALYlll: • •UCICMUM. I.In,. 2tU WMkMH Drf•t, Suitt "' """-' •-.c~. Ctllfentll t2''9 Ttl. 1-......- ttutlllslltd Or111.. Co111! 0.11• Pltol. J,prll XI, 27, M11 •, 11. It/Cl 711·1' For Advertising In WEEKENDER • • • Phone 642·4321 _, In Advertising! Newspapers are the primary advertising medium 1949 (Millions of Dollars) 1969 TElEVISJON , .... .... .... .... .... ...... ,, MAGAZINES ""' ......................... .. ~~;;._ ....... -..,,11, .. Rroio- ··; ... -OUTDOOR ...... """'"'"'"""'""''''''''''''''''''"''"'"'"'""'""'"'"'' Total aC:lvertising figures ar1 in for 1969 ind, es the chart above shows, newspepet1 continue to be the nation's number one salesm1n. The only other medium showing 1ny dramatic 9rowth in the chart is television and -did you notice -the incr11s1 in newspaper advertising investments since TV c1m• on the seen·, is more than fhe cur· rent total television advertising volume. Shouldn't you "hire" th1 n1tion1s most power• lul salesmen? You ten start tod•y by calling 642-4321, the DAILY PILOT , SPECIALLY-PRICED BOOKS FOR HER DAY-MAY10 0 °" "!F\.ECTION. Br Hell"' t-01.,.1, lrlt laOT o! tM lhNtel. A ... l ... fMJ'llllg klok )n1o Mr pil•• wofflt. Pllb. •I S':SIS, Ontr 1.llO ~ a A.,,,. OF JO'L By tt.lieo ....,,.._ e.1""""° co19etkm'ol ........ I : ·~ ~-.-c1td ~ lrOCll .. lo' .• -,,.. ac:ae... F'llb. • -l.95. ~ ..... a iCIUWa. 19C"PCl.OPEDtA w FJ m111 • Foo• •' bf .a. · ......,.°',...... a..t --.Gnieim 9ld Emit to~ 1025- ...._ Cl la ,.. cow. P9b. • to.00. OfttJ' .... a WOOL smCHERT. er o. a. Tod. eo.p.t1 guide to •lllllfuidiwf I ... 900I. litel9clet tableclolhe, ~Mc. SpKlel MC!ioo Ol'1 ~ 1 w101k. 20 UM1nulona. Only 1.00 0 DDtQN ... EMBROIDQT: Thi er..6-~ 1o H•lftlWD14c. I Bf Y. U. Ell68oott. 244 ~ lnc:ilildlng 60 clflet• ~ ~ c. tools, _......etc.. PMb. • 1.so. °"" aM C POOD FOR 1ME E9DO& RlclpM d ~ a.in. _,. 1 dioo 4 bonl9y ol ~~Bf John D • .c.,... Moetty ~ dllic.a.. not~ found Si AnM!iOlil QllMllr ,..._,, • ._ PW ... 4.95. Otlf7 1.M 0 MAWAftAtl AND li'ACIFK: FOOOa. A Coot Book ot ClflMrJ' CUSkllNI and AKIP9L By K. 811on1. H1walien. 5.lmOWt, CNrte•, .....,..__ KONen. POftugUllM,. ffflp9iio dilhel. Pwb. at <1.00. OnlJ' 1.H 0 ntl 90YBIM COOICllOOf(. Achent•w 9n ZMtllll E6IQ. &,. ~ thM v.n GvndJ ..... 0-360 m.glrlatiti9 NdPM .-glag Ire.....,. to~ Pvb.. • 3.115. OnlJ 1At a TMI lttW CALFOl"M COO«aoo«:. By a. G..W-. Fnom _... to~ llrino Md ••ling tl"Olll 11"19 ~ -· Meny ... ..,o liWoftt.. 011t6oor toOklog, ek:.. Alto Me•ican, ChineMr, Anneni.n, RUiii• ~ • •• 500 ill; ell. Pub. at 3.115, Only 1.JI 0 ACADEMY AWAJIDI: A lltciofllll Hbtory. &, p, ~ with .,...,,,.. bf Dl¥kl O. Selznick. Ne•rlJ 300 rnemcnble ~, ..... fJ ...._. lnokitded llt ..... lrOlll llm. Pub. Ill 7 .95. Onty ,... O lllCYCL.OPU:U. Oii PAUrTWIQ.. Edl9d by Bemmd S. ..,__ 10C9 l.....,..tlons. ows 200 Ill w eoklf. Includes ore•t .,..,_,.. ~ '6Ctltllielit •rms. ~. Pub. at 12.95. oru, .... O Alt! AlllTIIT AND THf ..aK. By CAaud9 8111 Pepper. Story d POC19 John XXIM Mid G,.•l eculptor, Gl1como MllnlU •• ' •ccounl of • ~ .tllp MyOfJCf Ideology. 83 llkl1. Pub, •I 11.llS. Only 1.11:1 O PAINTING AND DRAWTNCl. Br A. Dlniels, Alt CCMM kit ,,.._ and beg._,S ..ith 57 illullfaUonl. Pub. It 2.50. °'lfJ 1.4' 0 l"tCTOlllLAL llOG~ Ofl CHAM.ES DtCUNI. BJ M.. Fido. 0--• 200 i11Ullr1ti0rll In "°"' ~Ing MOf)' of DicUm end .. Yldariaa -1111 ti which he I~ Pwb. .t 7.M. Ot!IJ' U1 0 lMI COllPUTE ITCHIMOI M ftbWWtDT. 1tJ I. and S.. H.nie. f otWord by Vm Dongtn. !Mroductlon by F. o.u.a, ""'-" 37$ ~ anllllOICI bf wbiect IMIQfr. l~Xll'". Onty 4.11 D •AN GOGH. int~ l:r7' A M. I... let.I. ColOW Lltltary Of /WC ..,..,.. CollllliM41 cob" ...... w..1 ........ .-... Md ... ~' "" .. Gogh'• llttlnR1. ...... IUlt. °"" J.tl a THE WORLD OF HORIEL By J. c~ ~ ~ -... \ i,,,.. al )10qe1 lttroughoUt world ~-in '9xt, ......, t7• IHu•ntk>nli, 50 in c:otor, 11d¥4"'. Otll)' 1.N a ART NOUYEAU. f'lflY·lour e•qWNi• ~ $• depict 9tie arriqt.-r d9cotattv. 1tyle that w• tlilhklnltll9 .. ~ M IM c;loM of .. 19'a I Clntw)'. A bt.iiM bOok. On1J 1M 0 OAUGUNC. n. t:..llM IDd f11Klfl1•1 of .. ~ • ....... portr., '°"' ,,, ........... OOkW" ...... Osllr 2M a IOY Oii , ... 'Mllll '°" mlltY CHLO. a, c. c. ~ ...... tratff guldil '° h ~ -for )'our b9bf' ••. will --~ orrifld, '""""'9. Pub. • 2.ao. *• Mtllloft. onfr 1• 0 WtlDOM OF OISMN. BrUU1n1 ~ 11nC11 ...... 001111i1it ...... of IMng wltdofn. Pllb. II 3.75, Only 1M 0 TMI WOlllD OF TOYS. By R. Culff. ~ MilotY hm 1111 R , U.. ID the pre .. nt. 250 pkhff'9._ Pllb . .t l.116. OftJy UI • a CHUftCHILL: HIS PAINTINOI. FolW'Ofd by LMlr Sptnoet~ n IPI-* In color, A29 In monocllrol!'lfl tomr 1 klltd ol ~ <Mtfy ., 1111• ,,1¥.te Hie. Pub. 9t l:Z.SO, Only 4M DOUJtl Of NEW IPICIAUl' N1Ce nna '°" nDYOlfE 11.H ON Y°'-9. Girl UIT ~ -19111 ...... locllrJf °' ..... n.11• """''--~~~~~-~~~~~~~~ CITY~~~~~~~• CJ..._. CJ Cll<CIC o..,... llnllr'Cl!lff• ·., ... Umllf ...... -5" T111m1 2se for p01b11t/h1ndl""- 5 fasllion Island, Newpart But h 92660 (714)644-0041 or (71 4) 833·2200 -IJJ!l!!l'!'l!ll!!!'!!"9""!P.I!.,.._. ____________________________ -·· --.. r I ! I ' ' • , ' ' • I • ,, t •· • : : • l I . - --'2~0,,__DA_l_lY~Pl-lD_T~~~~S Containel' Co. Builds Spiall Loans Vanish Borrowers Feel Tight Money Pincli • In Irvine Container Corp. CJf America has btgun construction on a new c a r t o n manuf11cturlng, plant in the Irvine 1ndustriaf complex. The ne\Y pl11nt, one or six Container Co r p. facilities in the Los Angeles area, is scheduled !or con1· pletion in I.ale 1970. The 200,000 square--foot pla nt will contain highly-complPx , high-speed fabricating equip- ment "'hich will prodLJC'e finished paperboard packaging designed to protect J n d di splay a wide variety of con· suiner products manuracturcd in the Los Angeles arc;i. Thf' plant will employ over 200 pi..'Ople. General manager Fr ederick fl.1eyer said ··Three out of four packages produced in the new plant will be made from Ill'\\' paperboard th<1t is con1poscd of recycled, or reu se d. fi br e s-s uch a s t he paperboard produced al Con- tainer Corp. mills in Los Angeles and Santa Clara. The packages , lhat we manufac- tu re. if collected and pro- cessed, can in turn be recycled again into new paperboard packaging." Cc r!ron Corp. Te II s Earnin as e Ccrtron Corp. of Anaheim c<irne d $538,047 or 20 ~nlS per share in the three months l'nded January 31, 1970, com· pared "'ilh $249,561 or II cents per share in the rirst three months of fisc al 1969. Sales in the most recent three months "·ere $5,SOJ.400 L"ompared \.\'ith $2,456.732 in lhe first quarter of 1969, ac- l'urding to Edwin Garn.son, president. Earnings per share for the most recent quarter include 5 cenls extraordf.1ary income. Kaiser Tells Earning Dip Kaiser Steel Corp. earnings in the first quarter of 1970 <11nounted to $4,327,000 on sales of $96,338,000. according to Jack J , Carlson, president. The net earnings represent 58 ('enlS per CQm mon share after provision for divide nds on the preferred stock. These results compare with first quarter 1969 earnings of $5,811,000 or 81 cents per share with sales amounting to $97.$94,000. Carlson said the decline in earnings is largely at· tributable to lower shipments of large diameter line pipe, decrease in fabricated .steel product sales and high pro- po'rtion of low profit export tonnage. S&L Tells Loss Financial Federation. Inc .. a Los Angeles-based savings and Joan holding compaoy, today reported a net loss of $173,000. or 5 cents per share, for the first quarter ended ~1arch 31. J970. · This coinpares with net earnings of Si>J.000, or 17 cents per share, for the first three months or 1969. ,Per shares earnings are based on 3,320,000 average' c a p i t a I shares outstanding for both periods. * HALLIDAY'S * • n11r r Ol!<'{'1ion of Silk Nccklil's from '/'albol\ in Tin• Carn1t'l Va l!C'y is made t o our 01\ n f'xtl c1 u1i; sprcirica tions. J·:ath n•'ck 1ir i~ ind1vid11:illy hand·l'11 t ll!ld i~ hnnd n1adC' Thr silks ii r r impor t+ ··d frorn En;:lond, S\villC'rland and }'r;1n('t>, (l11r :.1·lt•1·l1u11 131\C:•·s fr()1n a ennsf'rva- 11\r ll11't'•' nnd 1Jn••-hall Hll"h 11idth I" a lullcr, tnvr<' s1yl1~h f<>ur inchr-:o. St•l1•1·1 1r111ll I\ ht·oad thnn·r or pal\<'l'n~ it11d ro!0r1 n;:~ ••J ~:111:dy ll1e nio.~l db- ~T1n11t1n!i11;: 111:111. T •1hull r:•'Pl"· foulard~ and Trinily 'J\1 ills from $7 .00 MEN'S TRADmONAL CLOTHING 17th & tRVINE AVE. NEWPORT BEACH WESTCLIFF PLAZA PH. 64!.-07'2 NEW YORK I UPI) -John S1nith, executive , got a jolt lrom his fr iendly b • n k manager the other day -a c.1111 for more collateral on a ~~.000 Joun he has betn carrying Jor three years to help pay tuition for two children in colleges. Smith (not his actual name) was told he either had to cut the loan to $2,500 or double the amount ot ·co 11 ate r al because of sinking stock market values. Bill Jooes, a younger ex· t:eulive. also got a shock. He took some stock certificates for good listed shares to the bank and wanted to borrow $3 ,000 to ·start his oldest son through Yale. "Sorry," sa id the bank manager, "We're too strapped fo r funds to make small col- lateral looos right now - "'e have to take care oC oor business customers." Jones (not his actual name) still doesn't know how he's going to raise money ror that tuition. He borrowed on his life insurance three years ago and his credit on unsecured personal loans and credit cards will just take care of the monthly household bills, his car payment and other fi:1:ed expenses. ·n1e only way to put the boy into CQUege "'ill be to cut aU other ex· penses lo the bone. Smith and Jones are typical victi ms of tight money con- ditions around the countr, - made doubly tight by the rapid collapse of the stock market . "Small collateral loans aren't just tight -they're prac- tically non-existent,., s a i d Arthur Milton, a New York money doctor. Ba,1k!I won't admit things are that bad. Said J ames H. Harris, a se.Hor vice pr'esident of Chase Manhattan -"In conformance with the need to figh1 inflation . we are discouraging collateral loans te,, finance sec ur ities in-- vestments. but "'e still make them to meet consumer rieeds.'' Another well-koown personal financial adviser iri New York, Dr. Israel Unterman, said that in most of the country, the 1nan who walks in off the street today and asks for a loan has little or no chance of getting Oile no matter how good Ills collateral. O Id customers, he added. also get the fishy eye turndown. "The banks don't need th at kind of Joan. it isn't prorilable enough compared with the 70 Broker Gets Laguna Post Roberts, Scott & ,Co., ln c .• members or the New York Stock Exchange, ha s an- nounced the appoinlmeot or Lee Austin Andrews as a r e g is le red representative assigned to the !inn's ex- panded Laguna Beach office. Andre\\'S, 42, was gradua ted from UCLA in 1954 and later completed graduate work in economics at USC. He has been actively engaged in the financia l investment f i e I d .since 1955 in various executive capacities with other member finns in Corona del ~·lar, Laguna Beach, and Pasadena. He and his family live in Laguna Niguel. Active in community aHairs, Andrews served on the Vestry of St. Mary's Episcopal Church, Laguna Beach, and is a member or tile South Orange County Hospital Service Area Advisory Board . He is also past president of the Niguel llomeowne~ and Community Assn. Per Annu m- Paid , Quarterly • 0.., $20~000. <MM·.,..r, F.11 PM ~­ ._..+ l'liirift c ..... ific:•t•5 ... -. .. he ld t• MMwity~ i..ee.-........ ~ ,.,. ~ ~,,.... ... ,.,,,! <JALIFOBNL4. 1'BRJ.17~ <1 70 «-S..t_. -"•le Alte 72 1 St•te Stt..t-S..-+• t11'1.,1 l <M6 S.Ykr1 Ro.H -0111.rtl 219]4 St.fiH..Oor~ -C1fto91 r.,~ •l 11 w11,1r.:,. 11 • .t. -l•• ... ,,..i.1 t 10 f11t 111~ $lr•1I -C.1!1 M.11 percent they can earn on credit card bwlness and fat returns on perJOnal mid In- stallment '°""'· .. Naturally1 this situation is farting people to sell many holdings and to cut their living cost... Summer camps for children, the tourist business and every other semi·IUIUry business 'i.s reeling the squeeze hard. "And," said l\1ilton, "il peo- ple st.art cashing iii mutual shares in large amounts to get money to pay bills, and the funds then have to unload lheir porj.folios to redeem the shares. thinga really will let rough." Already, Milton said, things are so bad that for the first Ume since Wotld War II office rents are falling in New York. Hit hardest are the people in Wall Street. Commissioos of securities salesmen are reported down SO percent from 1968 on the average. There have been several thousand layoffs of clerical workus, and executives in JOme big Street !inns have taken steep pay cuts. Money's Worth Managing Time Pays Businesses By SYLVIA PORTER The produoUvity of office workers, many economist! believe, could b e c o me manager;nent 's blgge,st headaMe in the 1970s. For a dlange, though, the following Interview w i t h James H. Duncan, chairinan of Wofac Company, a leading i n t ernational management consultin*" firm, outlines some encouraging aspects. PORTER: Isn't improvMg office producti vity very dif- ficult'! DUNCAN: Not at all. \Ve have learned over the years that workers want to be pro- ductive rather than merely to put in time on the job. It follows that the more pro- ductive they are, the better paid they are. Harry Van Arsdale Jr., president of the New York City Central Labor Council and treasurer ol the Interna- tional Brotherhood of Elec- trical Workers , has told hi! men, "You produce more and I'll get you more." The strategy has worked, sioce hi..s electrical workers' union has welcomed new technology. PORTER : Why is the prob- lem so serious then? DUNCAN : Since this coun· try for so many years was production oriented, we were able to deve)op and irvitall various methods of measuring and controlling production. However, we tended to ignore the white-collar worker. Thus, today, some 80 to 85 percent or all production workers are subject to work standards, while this is true of only aboul 5 perce.1t of all office workers. White-ct1Uar and s e r v i c e workers now form the fastest· growing economic group in terms of employment, yet show the slowest rate of in· crease in productivity. During the past two decades. while total man-hoors worked in the U.S. rose 20 percent , service man-hours, including I h e white<Ollar group, increased 40 percent, but v.ith no im- provement i'11 real output per man-hour. PORTER : What doe s this mean to the average businessman? DUNCAN: Our studies show that at least 17 percent o[ the time the average businessman 's cffice employes are literally doing nothing ex· cept walking around or talk- ing. In addition, there is an average loss ol 2S percent through p I al n Mefficiency. These figures, of course, do nol include allowable time away frc.m the job such as cof fee brakes, lur.ches, vaca- tions, sick leave, tic. PORTER: Won'\ automation -computers, high-speed copy- ing machines, advanc.ed of· fice systems -solve this prob- lem? DUNCAN: Nol i'eally, since these devices only ircrease the output of information. They have not Increased the value of such data, nor the real produdlvity of t h e Monsanto Earnings Up Monsanto Co. today reported a year-to-yea r increase of 6 percent in first-quarter sales and an I percent decrease in net income .from operations. Consolidated sales lor the period amounted to $512.702.000 in 1970 and $484,238,000 In 1969. Net tn· come from operaUons In the 1970 quart.er wu $31,286,000, equivalent to primary earn- ings ol 90 cent.a 1 shal't'I. Compa>'able year-earlier ln- comt w11s $$4,0'7t,OOO or 97 ctnt! a share. Extraordlnar1 lnconM! '>oo.sted 1969's first· quarter net to $34 ,735,000 or 99 cents 1 share • workers, nor have they reduc- ed the number of workers. Office workers still must operate the machinery, evaluate' the output and do something with it. ln most cases, the basic problem re- mains the worker's low pro- ductivity. . PORTER: How can a businessman attack this prob- lem? · DUNCAN: Productivity not only can be measured, but it then also can be cootrolled if you have the proper in- ceotives and disciplines. For example. we go by a rule ol thumb that a 20 percent savings can be achieved by applying special techniques to a previously unmeasured and llheontroUed office. T h a t means that aP.JiOXimately one ol eVery fi ve people in an office could be used to better advantage. PORTER: Precisely \\'hal do you do? DUNCAN :Weobservewock habits and mutually agree on average times required for specific tasks such as typing a letttr, completing a fonn, and so forth , Work then is portioned out in s pe cific batches by superviS<>MI who usually are given broadened responsibilities in controlling work now and performance. PORTER: What you are doing, then, is forcing workers to be more aware of "time"? DUNCAN : Exactly. And this is useful in one's daily life al home too. You actually can create extra lime through self-discipline and effective planning -by setting time limits and establishing deadlines for tasks. Sa11 Oemente Bank Opens A San Clemente branch or Security Paci f i c National Bank opened for business Friday at 115 N. El Camino Real. The new branch will include a night deposi tory, an escrow dePartment and 5afe deposit facilities, said manager Rob- ert Cota. Banking hours will be (rom 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily, except Fridays when the branch will remain open until 6 p.m . Transactions will be accom· plished by mail at P. 0 . Box 308, San Clemente, 92672, and by telephone al 492·9670, he said. Insurer -Tells Gains Per!ional lire In s urance issued by Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. in the firm 's Pacific Coast territory last year amounted to $788,652,000. a gain of $34 ,757,000 over the previous year, according to the annual Piacllic Cout. head office report released b y Metropolltan's vice president James E. Str!tch. Jn addillon to personal life I n .s u r a 11 c e, $200.145,868 ln group life insurance w a s issued in the Pacific Coast ter· rltory , which Jncludes CaliCornla, Nev1da,, Arizona, Utah, Washington, 0 re a: o n , Idaho, HawBil, and t.1ontana. Payment.I to policyholders and balefidaries In l h e Plcitic Coast ttrtitory reath· ed $249,434 ,600 during the year, which was an Increase of $~1144,800 over 1968. Finance Briefs NEW YORK (UPI) Genenii Instrument Corp. an- nounced Jt has developed a protoly)M ol new equipment that will permit tw~way com· municatlon between CATV systems a n d subscribers. Robert H. Beissenger, head of General Instrume.1t'1 Jer- rold subsidiary, said tt soon will be possible to transmit letters, facsimile newspapers and data processing com- munications service via CATV sy5tems. SAN LEANDRO, C a l I f . (UPI) -Physics IntematlonaJ Co. has obtained a $5 .95 million contract from the defeMe atomic SUPPort agency to build the world's most powerful flash X-ray machine. The 30-ttl.llion watt machine will be used at White Oak, Md., in testing to determine the survival capability of military equipment in a nuclear environment. ELKHART, Ind. CUPI) Miles Laboratories, Inc., will increa9e output of citric acid 50 perrent here in a new plant to be In operation by 1972. Miles produces citric acid in the United States, Mexico and Israel. Pt1ELROSE, Mass. (UPI) - Color-Sonics Division of Na- tional Radio Co. h a s negotiated a long-tenn con- tract to supply audio-visual multi-stle<:t machines t o C o nsumer Communications Systems Corp. The initial order is for $1 million. The m lJ I t i . select audi~visual machines are used primarily in retail stores as a point-of. purchase advertising device. SHERMAN OAKS, Calif. {UPI) -Informatics, Inc., has obtained a $5 million su~ plement to an existing order from the National Atronaut.ics &: Space Admintstration to continue operation of NASA's scientific and technical in- formation unit at College Park, Md . MILWAUKEE (UPI) Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Co .. has fonned a subsidiary, All is-C halmers Power Systems, Inc., to re~nter the gas and steam turbine business. Kraftwerlt Union of Gennany will be A 11 i s - Chalmers' partner in the ven· ture. This will make the third American producer of large steam and gas turbines for the electric utility industry. NEW YORK (UPI) -RCA Corp. announced it h a s developed a low cost collision avoidance system for aircraft to be used on planes as small as crop dusters or by large commercial and m i I i t a r y aircraft. The method, expected to cost as little as $500 to $1,000 per aircraft is being sub- mitted to the Federal Aviation Administration for testing and RCA hopes to have it in opera- tion by mid-1973. It is basically a sys tem by which aircraft emit radio signals automatically warning each other when their courses verge on collision. NEW YORK (UPI ) Kraftco Corp. has agreed to sell the Manor House coffee line and the business of the former \Y. F. McLaughlin & Co. Lo \Vm. 8. Reily & Co., New Orleans coffee merchants . Kraftco said the Manor House line h a s basically a regional market and -does not fit into Kraftco's national marketing program for its other food products. ?\.fanor House coffee has been sold in the Midwest since lSSZ. DALLAS (UP!) -Atlantic Richfield Co. said it is using a ne\l system of seismic on- shore aod offshore exploration that contains the explosions in a metal cylinder and thereby averts fish kills And olher destruction. The exploration method, called dinoseis, is carried out from an air cushion vehicle. Therefore, it can be used onshore without scarring tun- dra or creating o t h e r disturbances. The first tests are being made al Cherry Po.jnt near Bellingham, Wash., whlch is close to Pacific Hovercrart, Ud.'s plant at Vancouver, B. C •• •NEW YORK IUPI) Cowles Communications. Inc .• announced it will cut the circulaUon rale base or Look 'magazine to 6.5 million from 7.$7 million ertectivt with the Oct. 6, il!sue. This will cut the cmt or a four-<:<ilor page lo $48,500 from "5.500. The black and while page rate will drop to $32,350 from $37 ,IXXI. Look wlll try to c~n· centrate its ~lrculatlon In Wt top 60 metropoUWI areas. •' ) Who Reads tlie Star& . For tlie Stars? .A ' It's Sydney Omarr - And now this articulc!!te writer who has been called the ''astrologe r's astrologer" reads the stars for you. Sydney Omorr, longtime personal astrologer to many of Hollywood's ond the literary world's m~t famous stars, is a DA ILY PILOT columnist. Omarr's record for accu racy of predictions based on astrological artelysis is amozing. Whether you read astrolog ical forecasts for fun or os a seriou s student of stor-gezing, you 'll enioy Sydney Omorr's deity column in the .. DAILY PILOT • j . :: ~: ; ~ ' ' : ' ' : . . : . . . . ·: . ' ' ; • I ' ' ~ ' ~ ;. • : ) .; ' ' ,. ', . ' . . ,. " " " " .. " . . . . . • ' . . . ~ . . ; i ~ • . • ; i • • • '· • Almost Reads Newspape rs deliver m2:s1 11 J cove ra ge of ALL occupation gro ups _each week day OCCUPATION OF HOUSEHOLD HEAD Professiona ls Managers Clerical, Sales Craftsmen Othe r Manua l Farmers 88% 91 85 80 71 70 Source: Opinion Research Corpol'ltion Newspapers reach, in-de pth, into a!! occup ation CJr Ovps cvrry day, as this graph indi- cates. But what should bo even more intare st ing io c:<lvcrfi5 ors is the ~i9h precentage of management, professio nal and 0{~1 cr hig h-s c1lary-c.1 1 n:n q types who read a newspa· per every day. They make mere mon (""y, +rave! morro, l:-11y r"O re, set the standards for others to follow. If you want to play "Foli o·" t:-r Lr ,.i .. ,,-· advertise in some oth er medium: if you want to lead the leader, p ut ·1our ric.~·1<;0 '"here he'll read it .•. with us, the newspaper. ~ ------• Newspapers Take Your Message Whe .. e The Money Is Newspaper readership increases with income Under $3,000 89% Souree:OpinionResea~hCorporltion Almost nine out of I 0 affluent Americans-those who earn $I 0,000 or more en~ually -read at least One newspaper. And more than half of those who earn even less than $3,000 also read newspapers. And the more money the reader of your ad has to spend, the more likely he is to see the message in a newspaper. If you've got something to tell somebody (or sell somebody), start with us, the news po per. DAILY PILOT Newspapers: Numhe1• One In Advertising! Newspapers are the primary advertising medium ' 1949 (Mill ions of Dollars} < 1969 TnEYISIDN , .. .. .... .... .... .... .... ,,, MAGAZINES ;" ,, ... , ...... , ; ............... --~~ ....... --arr.a Rroio .-;»• .. OUTDOOR ........................... "'""'"""'""""""""'""""""""" Total advertising figures are .in for '1969 and, as the chart above shows,· newspapers continue to be the nation's number one salesman. The only other medium showin9 any 'dramatic growth in the chart is television and -did you notice -'the increase in newspape r advertising investments since TV came on the scene · is mortt than the cur .. rent total television advertising volume. Shouldn't you "hire" the nation's most power~ . ful salesman? You con start today_ by colling 642-4321, tho · DAILY PILOT \. . ' • [ti DAILY PILOT Mond._,, Mv 4, 1970 ENSENADA RACE RESULTS • • • ( Conlllno<d lrooa Page HI ~YC. CLASS c -Destiny n. John Hooten, BCYC; (2) Alsuna, II, Allen Pud<et~ CYC; (!) Firebrand, George W e s I , NHYC; (4) Ana Maria JI, Al Schollennan, BCYC: '5 ) Jaano Ill, Robert Jahn. eve. CLASS D -0 ) The Odd Couple, Ronald Lee, DRYC: (2) Bewitched, Noman Scott, LBYC; (3) Aquarius, John Hol iday, LBYC; (4 ) Damoiselle, Steve D e s k y , CYC; (5) Balclutha, John Klocald, CBYC. ~ E -(I) Auspicious, Rober\ Baldler, SWYC; (2) Volante, Mike Hirsh, BYC: (3) 1be Great Pumpkin, Dick Lindsey, BYC; (4) Malahini, Jack Bo6twick, BCYC: (5) Blitzen, Mike Busch, SDYC. PacUlc Handicap Ra.cl.rig Flett OVERALL -M06Sback, Don Moss, BcYC. CLASS A -(I I Mossback, (2) Flame, Dick Ramage, LBYC ; (3) Adi.as Dos, George Coon, NHYC; (4) VJSioo, Milt Stratlonl, SDYC; (5) Sin Miedo, Jaclt Pllillipo, LBYC. CLASS B -(1) Vaya, Pete Utectit, LBYC; (2) Teragram, F. L. Anderson, SI BYC; (3) Squarion. Harold Moorehead, KHYC; (4) Estrella deJ Mar, Howanl Scroggms, SI BYC; (5) Numwm II, Ray Booth, BYC. CLASS C -(I) Golden Hind, B y r on Chamberlain; SSSC; (3) Bay Bee, Lee Thompson, 1. BY C ; (5) tsocel~, Roberl M u r p h y , SSSC; (5) Skaal JI, Tom Annstrong, CYC. CLASS D -(!) S.a Nymph, Jim Hokanson, LAYC: (2) Gracie, John Howell, BCYC; (3) Klwi, Clarke Sumner, BYC; (4) Westwind, Richan! Belden, CIYC: (5) Sangrita, John McGee, SI BYC. CLASS E -(I) Qul<sett, John Troeger, KHYC; (2) Quintessence, Addison Sawyer, LAYC; (3) Sea Watch, Sidney Hachtl, LSF : {4) Connecticut Yankee, William Eisenberg, DRYC; (S) Indiclilfe, Crie & Randleman. MBYC. ,, ...... _,,""' OCEAN RACING WINNER -The Columbia-13 sloop Encore, owned by the ••Balboa mafia", Fred MacDonald, Herbert Riley, Bill Lawhorn and Dick Blatterman, was the winner of the President of Mexico· trophy for handicap winner in the Newport to Ensenada race. MORF·A-(1) Sloopy, John Velthoen, AYC: (2) Retreat 11. Robert A. Smith, P1'.fYC; (3) Valhalla, McFarland, Morel & Ball; (!)Serena, Phil BU~S FOR THE ·DONOR ~ Phyllis Baillie, wile o! Doane NHYC; (5) carronade, J ack Baillie, owner of the 12-meter sloop News. Barry & Klingensmith, LBYC. Boy gratefully. receives first-to-finish trophy from MORF·B -(I) Dawltless, John Payne~ general chairman oC the Newport to Taylor Holmquist, LBYC: 12) __ E_n_s_e_n_ad_a_r_a_ce_. ____ ·-----------I Wiodaong, Walter Gleckler, ABYC: (J) Ventolero, Bill Kitchens, SSSC: (4) Arna Verde, Dick Watkins, LBYC; (5) Volador, James Tullock, PMYC. Perpetual Trophies PRESIDENT OF MEXICO (Ocean Racing Handicap Win- First Colu1nbict 50s National Race Slated ner) Encore. PRESIDENT OF THE U.S. (PHRF handicap w i n n e r ) M""1>ack. U.S. COAST GUARD (MORF oYerall w i n n e r ) Sloopy. EMIGH 1t1E~f0RIAL (First 1t10RF to finish) Dauntless. FIRST DIVIDED HULi. YACHT -Rascal. FIRST PHRF KETCH - Milare 11, Paul Werner, DRYC. FDIST SCHOONER 'feragran, F. L. Anderson, SI BYC. FIRST TRIMARAN 'The fi rst Columbla-50 na- tiona l champiooship regatta· is scheduled to get under way July 19 underthe·sponsorshlp of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. The three-day regatta will feature two races on Saturday, July 19, and ooe on Sunday. A feoture match race - \vhich will have no bearing on the championship, Is scheduled on Friday, July 19, between skipper George Post of Oyster Bay, N.Y. -with an East Coast crew -and expected to participate in the ngatta, including a crew from Great.Lakes and the Pacific Northwest. Future plans call for holding the even-year championships on the West Coast and the regattas o n years on the East Coast. National championshiPS for the Columbia-26 Mark 1 will also be held at Ba h i a Corinthian Yacht Club on the same weekend. Approximately 20 entries are e1pected in this class. 1i1agnificent Obsession. LAST YACHT TO FTNISH -Nyad, Larry Co lli ns, a yet to be determined Westl~----------:1 Coast skipper and crew. MBYC. About 15 Columbia-sos are LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE HARBOR BASEBALL REGISTRATION 2nd, 3rd & 4th Graders , ... Itel .,...,. ..... MlllM ,.. ... """'""'"' LOCATIO!t TaWlnkl• Sehool Lincoln School W ••• •:te p.M. I~ .,...._.=41 P.M, 4tl ••••• J:H P.M. ONr 4tlll, 1:11 P.M ... Scrt11rll.ys " a dllM 1111M1t Ml .,.,,.... ••i. 1111 .. •••· "' Ny ,...,,.,. -..._.., ~ MNM11 lttM A,M. l!IOll l<M P.M., Bl IUr- -..... " Otrl«. WI .--.,Ill\. ee.t1 ~. ,.._., 6'tAIJ'2. 0 OMEGA tor a liletime ol proud possession First watch on the moon Naw yov 100 e1111 own 11111 OIHo• s-11mnt1r elltclllOQl'IPh. II'• lh• ....,, w11C11 wom bf 111 Apollo ulran•lll• lrl CMlf' IPICe, .... ., duty 1l1i11leu 1lHI ic.e, lllllt,._ 11111 btac:.19' .............. ,.$185 " .... ' !hoppl119 Ce11ter IH<• & ldlittet" 2J00 HarbM ll•d. H•11tff19'•• Cotto Miff lffch 141-9415 ltJ.1101 Ol"fl M•11., T1111rs., '"· 'tll t prn .... U.!Mrlc_,., •• ,. .. tef Cllart• . . . . SllOP SEARS Monday 1h"' Sarordoy '9:$0 .-.ra. to 9:SO ..... ALLSTATE PASSENGER TIRE GUARANTEE Cu11rantt:ed A1aiaat: All tire failures froai nonnal road haiarJs or defeCtt in m&ferial or workmanship. J.'or How Lona: For the lifenf the original [read. Whal &!ar. Will Do: In n-ch,nge for 1he 1ire. reJllarc ii, charging tht-~ pon1on of current selling price plus Fcdcn.I Eui•c Tu 1h:u rcprocnu ~ad u~J. Repair nail p11nc1u11r:S ;,t( no cbwgc. ,;uaran1eed A1alnat:Tre:ad-:u-011t. }'or I low Lona: The nombttof months specified. What Sear. Will Do: In ndw1p:c for chc tire, repla fr,ch:ar_gini; 1bc cur· ttnt :iclli11& price plus f~ ~c_ise Tu. le• &he follotl'Mlg aliatro·an.:c; ~lontbtGoanioteed Al.lnl"·ane. J810:!•1 IO'f. 2710 lr.J ·HI PricM Efterctivl" Bc11inningTodq Thr~ T w:t.,AbJ )<ft, Sears Tire and Auto Center 40-Month Guarantee Regular '42 Trade-In Priee E78-14/7.35Xl4 Tnbele .. Whitewall Plus 2.46 F.E.T. and OldTite •Special inner sealer keeps th& air in. Clings to nai1A and other" foreign objects and allows you to keep rolling ' •Wider and deeper 1hao mo•l non• belted tire• ••• puls more rub- ber on the road for better tn.,. lion in all kinds of weather • Attraclive double .. tripe white• "'alls Slze ....... .... ......... .......... F.LT. ·-, .... 1'llb.o,l"ll'I Whi~wall !:78-14/7.fu;J4 4'.00 ~,00 ~ .. t";8.I4/7.7Sx14 4.5.00 35.00 :!.S6 C.7&.14/8-25x14 49.00 39.00 us TI7S.14/8.SSxl4 52.00 40.00. '2.Q7 JiS.14/S.&5x14 ~.4.00 42.00 :\.1 3 t-'7S.15/7.75x l5 4.'i.00 35.00 :!.$') C7S.IS/8.1Sx 15 41J.OO 39.00 2.81 H7S.IS/8.45:i:l5 5!!.00 40.00 ~.01 ,liS.IS/S.SSi.:15 5'.00 42.00 JAi I, 78-1 S/9.00f9. J5:o; 15 61LOO 4:'>.00 "-" SAVE20%! Sears Express Mileage XLW Truck Tires Regular '29.95 95 6.70x1S I Tube·Type Black...U.. Pluo 2.40 F.E.T. 6.50x l6 31.95 25.95 2.61 7.0()xl6 40.95 32.95 3.00 TUBELESS BLACKWALL • Six ply rated nylon cord c:onstroction far strength and dependable service • 3-rib tread design. Wrap-around shoulder for easy steering -NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED Scars _, ... ,._,ti_ ·-·-" -·-• ... •11 ~·--• -..uao1--•-n •-·•-• ... •u -• •UO, • a.1m -·-,.. ..._, .,._ ...... ,,_ tUU,.,.lllClli.unt~ ......... _,, -.. MUI •·-·Ml.Ult, 111-*I" ... ., Hltfm -. ... S-, t;U AJI!, N .. ~ P,M., ~•1 I .t M-ti t ,.,.. "ktf.,_,litll 0,,...... ,,, ,._....,. ....-· _ ...... 11 .. -WI ..,,II ............ ,_., ......... --Mt• 1011'11. _,, • -11 -----___ .,,. ~-.. --__ ,. ....... ----· I t I r j ' J MOl"lday, Mq 4, 1970 DAILY PILOT Z.:I Lakers, Knicks Duel .Tonight for S~r-ies Lead Nickl,aus Tops Palmer .. No~ All Goes Badly Fo·r Golf Winner DALLAS (AP) -Jack Nicklaus lost the popularity contest and the call from Washingion was a wrong number, but he pocketed the 19,000 diffettnee Sunday in a dramatic, sudden.death Byron Nelson golf classic vict~ over the man called athlete of the d·e cad e, Arnold Palmer. "When I found out they wanted Amie," said Nicklaus who answered t b e Washington call fir.ft , "l just went back .out to the green and picked up the championship trophy.'• . Nicklaus got a $20,i;iot first prize check and the trophy from a:olf great Ne!9on himself after a classic 37-bole head-to- head confrontation w:lth Palmer, 10 years his senior. A tap-in birdie putt on the first extra hole gave Jack the Bomber his first ever sudden-death win over old nemesis Angels Face Former Mates; Return Home Tt'll seem strange when Rick Reichardt and Aurelio Rodriguez dig in at the plate at Anaheim Stadium starting Tues· day nighL They'll be digging in against the California Angels. Two of Washington's newest Senators will be visiting the. Angels' camp for the first time since the trade that brooght slugging third baseman Ken McMullen to California. The deal has helped both clubs. Mclttullen has ripped a homer and knock· eel in four runs in the five games since he switched unifonns. Rodriguei and Reichardt, under Senators manager Ted Williams, have begun to show they can &wing potent bats as well. The Angels won two of three games In Washington, dropped two of tfiree in New York and split a pair in Booton before Sunday's road trip finale against the Red Soi: was rained out. California -and the rest of the American League -took today off. Tuesday night's contest opens a nine- game homestand against the same clubs they just visited. Sunday's rainout prevented the Angels from keeping pace with Minnesota in the battle for suprematy" in the American League West. Osteen Breezes and good friend, Palmer, wbo woo fl~400. Tbem came tbe call fr(llll Wasblngton. It was Vice President Spiro Agnew on the line. Agnew wanted to speak to golfing buddy Palmer. "[ had played golf with him recenUy and be wanted to talk abb\rt today's round," Palmer said. "'1bere wasn 't any slight to Jack intended." The mild-mannered Nicklaus wasn 't milled. He bad played all day with a crowd of some 15,000 following his threesome, most yelling and applauding for Palmer. "It was like Tei:as and Ohio State playing football in Texas," Nicklaus laughed. "There are damn few Buckeyes down here." 1be crowd was estimated at more th.an 40,000 and about a third dogged the heels of golf's blggeM names. They jostled, shoved and yelled. "Arnie came to me on the sixth green of the second round and said, 'l think it's getting out of hand.' "NicklatlS said . "But you are going to have that anytime you play with Arnold. Arnie is a very popular fellow. l don't mind the people yelling and rooting just as Jong as they doo't get rude." Nicklaus, who got a line-0f..slght drop In the rough because or a television tower obstruction on No. 18, said one fan yelled "Awww" when the ruling was made. ·•1 told him I was sorry," Nick1aus said. "I really shouldn't have taken the drop, I guess. 1 might have made a .. par. I .. Nicklaus bogied the last ho e, m1ss1ng a 21-1ooter by inches as Palmer knotted it wilb par. But Nicklaus made up for it on the Par 5, 555-yard No. 15 with a prime-time national television audience looklng on. He blasted a tremendous drive over the corner of a lake. And be whistled a brassie 267-yards pin high in the right frog hair. Nicklaus got down in two, Palmer took par and It was over. FIMI ICOl".r.. •nd money wlnnlno& S\lnd&y '" l:..~tOll N ~o&ll d•11lc: 6l~d4 • 'r.1~ "~ u.:n ..._ • °"' sfO:".:t,i\.-,,, i -~ tt•l'ldv Wolff. kl.f6Q m·7~Jt u O.n SlUs, Uifj ff-1· r:r~ Bl:;,; M'°so It t 1:. -t H1rolcl Hellflln11.'..'!,:!00 147-l We Slodll0!1 N.i-1 • ~ 1 .'!:::\!~~ .... ,,. ~ m ...., -S1900 Blll M1~11. sf.llOI:) 7 · OOll J1nuerv, SLl'OO a· -~ > llobbv Grwnwoocl, l1.l'OO .--Howl1~oflnson. S1.3CICI • R. H. lklf;, 11,300 1+ "'" """· '""' -.. ,_ ~~\ ~~ji,llolllO 1 ·' "':: ~!r. r:: '"11 .. ,,:7Mt-2u JOl\n sch1ee, "" ~rS::::.~I.~ ~f:'v~"M!i~':i SfU .,.7._,,_:;o.:g; Dodgers at New York; Lamba,st Expos, 15-1 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Claude Osteen, the Los Angeles Dodgers' tough.luck left- hander, e0uldn't quite believe it when tie suddenly found himself with a Jol-0 lead. "I'll tell you this," he said after the Dodgers blasted Montreal 1&-1 Sunday, ''it certainly takes the pressure off. And it's sure great to get aome runs for a change." Osteen, who Jost his first three starts while his teammates failed to !Core a run for hlm in 22 Innings, now has won three in a row. "I knew it was my day after that lint inning," he laughed, referring to a tany play that not only killed off a potential Montreal rally but wound up a double play. It was the start for a long day for the Expos tmo contributed three errors, three wild pitdies. nine walks and numerous other miscues to tbe Dodgers' biggest day of the seuoo. Bill Grabarkewtti led tbe Dodgers' 16-hit attack with five runs batted in on two doubles, a single and a bases-load· ed walk. "That play in the first inn!n~ was the turning point," e.1pl alned Dodger manager Walter Alston. "That's the kind of thing that's hard to bounce back from ." . Von J06hua, who replaced Willie Davis In the lln<up Friday nlgllt and got a base hit, Collected ttlrte more hill Sun-- day and ICOl'td tbrff runs. "I'm not going to take him out or the lineup the way he's hitting," said Alston as he started to map plans for the Dodgers' six-game road trip which starts Tue3day in New York. The Dodgers will face Nolan Ryan, Tom Seaver and Jim McAndrew in the three games at Shea Stadium. Sandy Vance, Don Sutton and Alan Foster are the Dodgers' starters. The Dodgers won six or 10 games on their homestand including two of three against New York. MONTREAL LOI ANGELES 1D rlll'*'I 1D r llra.! Hllll'l,ll 4010Josllva,d JllO Brll'ld,lb l tlO Wltls,1J 4 220 S11uto, rl 2 0 I 0 Ll'l.tNr1, Jll 1 0 0 0 H~n, lb 1 0 2 1 Sud1k l1, c j 0 1 I P1illll1>1,cf 4t201Cosco,n 411 2 1t1rwm.n, c 4 t I W.0.Ylll, cl I I I 0 Sutlle<~ 2b • I O W.P1rk..-, 10 ! I 1 I F11tly,1b 111 _.t,111 2110 Slnlllrnayer, p I I 0 Cr1Wford, If 1 1 I 0 Uboy, Jb 2 0 0 Gr1b'rl!e..,l1!,lll • I l J Wine, ll J 0 • S!r-••· 211 • I , 1 Sparl'!lil, p 0 0 I 0.!Mn, p 1 1 I I Sl1ehle, pti o 0 O G1b!'lel1G11, pl'! 1 0 0 O lltn!<o,11 100 P1n1,p too t McGlnl'I, P 0 0 I H,Reed, p 0 I 0 aa u..,, 11 l 1 1 B~lt ~If hM~ ~Hl•TI MontrHI 000 000 010 -I LOI Angtl" Ill JU 2111 -lJ E -Retiko, WIM, F-llllllPI. OP -M!l!llrt~I I, Los Ana.its 1, LOB -Monrr•I I, Los Ang1l111 t , 28 -S..O.kl1, G .. blr1>;1w1t1 J, PhllllP1. 18 -Moo.-t, SB -W'!llt, ICDKO. 11• " ••••• 10 Rrio (l..1-J) 2•1/J 4 4 4 J 0 1 McGll'lfl l/JJJJ J H.Rffd 122220 Sll"Ofll'!lilyV 1111 11 Sptrrna 2 4JJ11 0.IMn fW,W) I f 1 1 I 2 p-l ••• ,, HllP -by H, R• fOll-). WP -McGlnn, H. Reid, Strohmekl«. Time -J:JJ. AlfencNrM;1 -16,111. ~ti-• BLANKET FINISH -UCLA 880 ace Paul Williams (right} barely survives three onrush ing competitors to take first plac.e against USC Saturday. Pushing ................ -.. the former Huntington Beach High star are (from left ) Bob Langston, Scott Chisam and Curtis Jories. DAILY PILOT Ptt.r.. •Y Gi.M W~lt.- HAPPY MOMENT -Paul Williams talks with his mother moments after winning the 880 in Saturday's dual track meet at the Colisewn. The UCLA sopho- more helped even an old grudge with USC by cal>" turing the event. Slight by Trojans Backfires Williams' Victor y Part of Personal Grudg e Paul Williams of HunUngton Beach, a young man oDce deeply disa'.pPointed when he was slighted by the university he had always wanted to attend, reaped special satisfaction when he scored five of UCLA's 100 points against that l!Chool Saturday in a dual track meet at the Coliseum. Williams told this column his feeling.a moments after winning the most hotly contested race of an equally sizzling Saturday artemoon. "I always wanted to go to USC and after the CIF meet ( 1968) they offered me a scholarship. Then· after the st.ate meet (when Paul had one of his less spectacular days and sUll placed fourth) they withdrew the oUtt. "But when they f~ out I was going to UCLA, they tried to offer tt again. However I stuck with UCLA and I'm glad I did -in fact I was glad as a freshman (1969). Williams ran his second slowest time of the year Saturday -1 :52.6 -but he fought off the ntrt three 880 finishers, " ---"--WHITE WASH ""'------ who were within three-tenths of a second ol his winnlng time . .the trick, 105-26, ln 1921. Stanford did it once, too. 1~11 slammer in 1908. bagging a Despite the 100-54 victory, Bush was not gloating. However, he was happy to disprore a statement he attributed to a Trojan assistant coach who su~ posedly claimed UCLA wasn't a good enough passing team to win the 440 relay. The Bruins came up with precision baton exchanges and streaked l-0 a 39.6. Bush called that and his team's surprise 1·2 finish Jn the mile the lift UCLA needed alter SC had ·threatened upset early in the going by taking 1·2 in the shot. r • Haywood at Anaheim "I wanted -to run lii:e i felt -and I guess I did, l lost my concentratioo about 330 yards out and was starting to thlnk abo\rt the heat. He also confided that his most satls· fying team win over USC was in 1967 when the underdog Bruins put together a great team effort to upset the Cardina l and Cold. '"11tls team has more po~ than any I've coached but I've had to work harder with It (If.hours a day, he estimates) than any other squad." "Deaver ls mighty tough," Los Angeles St.a rs co a c b Bill Sharman said diplomatically. "They whipped u1 nine out of 12 Umes during the season - but then 30 had Dallas.•• The Stars play the third game of the American Basketball AssoclaUon 1emifinal playoffs tonight agaiMt Denver and Us super star Spencer Haywood at the Alahelm Convention Center. Each club hu won one. The tcene shirts to Long Beach fof same .No. ; on Tueaday •lghl ,,,. sun. who ha • bad lo play without brilliant rookie Willie Wise for much ol tbt playoUs, wlll apparenUy heve to do without hhn the rest of the way. Wise, a M rorward from Drake, was the club 's scorina: and reboundlng"ieader in the Los Angeles drive to 1 playoU • berth. The team woa 17 of its final 13 games to make the postleason actlon by one game. BuL tbe Stan said Wise appears to have a bone spur In his ankle. It hobbled him during the Dallas series and will require surgery, sidelining him for the remainder of tbe playoffs. "Too, I guess I wu too psycbed up -the personal grudge, you know. "Jim Bush (UCLA coach) is I i kt a father to us -he really gets concerned U any o(us has a problem," the 20-year· old former Huntington HJgh whiz says. Bush, formerly a resident of Newport Shores, ls now iJ l'n hls dual meet series with the Trojans and he became the first coach to chalk up 100 points against a USC team 1in<:e Cal &.urned Asked how he e~ to fare In the June NCAA meet, Bush says ''I won 't pr;~ct anythlng. but we'll be tough." He also says his personal dope sheet gave UCLA a 91-63 triumph Siturday. Incldcntally, Bush loses only a handful or talent from thls year's squad - which means the Bruins will be tough to deel wllh in 1971. Reed's Knees Big Worry For New York NEW YORK (API -Wilt Cham· berlaln'• knees and Jerry we,t's thumb? Forset it, m&11, the New York Knicks could have a bigger problem. While most people have been talking about Los Angeles' crippled stars, New . York's Willis Reed could have the most disabling injury as the teams meet to- night in game No. Sol the National Bas- ketball Association 's title playoffs. Reed's knees have been hurting more than has been publiciied -and they almost kept him out of last Friday's 121-115 ovenime loss to the Lakers which lied the best-Of-seven game series at 2-2. "f can only prescribe medication , whirlpool and sonic treatment at this stage," a team doctor said Sunday. On TV Tonight Channel 5 , 5:30 "We'll just have to wait and see how it works out tomorrow." Reed missed practice Sunday and wWte both knees were bothering the Knlcks' indestructible center, the right knee ap- peared to be the more tender of ttae two. He rieeded heat treatment just before Friday's game in Los Angeles' Forum and probably would not have made it if the game wasn't he ld up 10 minutes for national television. "The two days off may help me,•• he said Friday nlght •arter having a sulr per night·wlth 23 points and 12 rebounds. He's been averaging 29.6 points and 17.5 ceromS' in the playoffs. The painful knees are jwit another chapter in the injury-plagued playoffs for Reed, the Knicks' walking medical dictionary. He threw a :.care Into the New York camp earlier when he hurt his left shoulder, hls sbootlng ann. Reed has alsG been playing with two taped fingers on his left hand, injured earlier this year. New York isn't the same team without him. The NBA 's most valuable player Ii.as been the bulwark or the Knicks' charge toward their first title in history. Los Angeles, which hasn't won since moving to the West Coast from Mln-- ne apolis, is having no small ,problems either with Chamberlain. In fact, it's miraculous that he'll be playing in Madison Square Garden at all tonight -considering that he missed 70 games of the regular season after knee surgery. Chamberlain rehabilitated himself In time to lead the Lakers into the finals, but it's obvious he iso 't playing at full capacity . The big guy has trouble moving laterally and isn't taking many shots from outside. But it's his rebounding ability the Lakers have b e e n counting on - and getting..... . West jammed the thumb on his left band last Wednesday in the third game. There was some concern in Los Angele! over his ability to play Friday, but he came up with 37 points that broke the Knick&' back. Derby Victor Going Mter Triple Crown LOUISVILLE, Ky. CAP) -The Ken· tucky Derby cup wl\I join those mounted animal heads in the trophy room of big-.game hunter Robert E. Lehma1U1. thanks to Dust Commander, who shot down 16 othe r 3-year-olds and the Odds by winning America's premier horse race. , Now Dust Commander, trained by 31· year-0ld Don Combs and ridden by Mike Manganello. is expected to gG hunting for more of racing's big prit.es -the Preakness, the Belmont Stakes, other Jegs on the triple crown. After Dust C.Ommander's smashing five-length victory oYer Raymond M. Curtis' favored ?tty Dad George In the 96th Derby at Churchill Downs, Lehmann said that he plan11ed to send the Bold Commander coll arter the Preakness and the Belmont. No 3-year-old has won the Derby, Preakness and Belmont since Calumet Farm's Citation in 1948. Dust commander, who Lehmann said he purchased as "a cheap $6,500 yearli•g to go with our expensive ones," was not nomillated for the Preakness or Belmont and will havl to be sup- plemented at $10,000 for the former and $5,000 for the latter. Lehmann was following his hobby - big game hunting -and not the progres.s of Dust Commander whea the colt won the Blue Crass Stakes at Keeneland nine days before the Derby. That win al~rted Lehmann that he might have a shot at the Derby and so be retW11ed from India, but not Willi about noon Saturday: About five hours and 40 minutes later, he watched Manganello shoot Oust Com· man<ler through on !he r;ill for bi& victory and a Derby record first prf~e : of $1.28,000 from a record purse or ' 1111,300. I Dust Commander ran the l ~·,.mJl~s in 1:03 2/5 on a good track for his convlnclng triumph over My Bad George, wtth Mrs. Ethel D. Jacobs' ll\gh Echelon third. ' Jf DAILY PILOT OCC DUO BAGS CIRCUIT CROW.IV Oranac Coast College's La urie Cun· nlngham and Jlm Ogle teamed to wJn tbe doubles crowa in Saturday'a Soutb Coast Conference tennis meet at )r1t. San AntonJo College. The OCC duo ulpped s.nny DeC!Uf and George Hill of San Diego Jn the :;eimfinals, 7-5. &-2, then defeated Bob Oppeltz and Mark Whitehead of San Diego Mesa, M, 6-J for the tiUe. DeGroff defeated Cwmingham for the 1inglet crown. M , '"3. 'l'btre was no team title in the meet. Bue Leaper Barnett 1st hi Spike£ est George Barnett-captured the triple jump title to highlight Orange Coast College entries in the South Coast Conference track and field meet at Ba1boa Stadium in San Diego Saturday. Barnell had a top effort of 4$-9 in the event to finish four and a half inches ahead of bis aearest competitor. He will now enter the Southern California prelims Wednesday, May 13 j n Bakersfield. ML San Antonio, as e:ipected, won the clttuit Utle with 14.11AI pollts while San Diego Mesa finished second with 107. Orange Coast was 1ut with 14*· The only other point.getter for coac'h Jim Mcllwain's Orange Coast College team was Kurt Clemens, who plactd fourth in the javelin with a toil of 188 feet. . The event was woh by Bill Joots of San Diego Mesa ( 21U). ~ft. Sa• Antonio only. WOI four Of Uie 17 events, cap~ the team titl• v.·ith seoonds and thitds. The Mountles p1aceG~ond through fifth in the 120 high hurdlh. Only double winners in the meet were Saa Diego's Roger Jones and BUI Jen. 11ings. Jones won the 120 bJ&hs in a wind-aided IU and !he bigb jump In 6-6. Jenninp took the 100 in I .I and lhe 220 in 21.6. Nen outing for Oruge Coast College will be the West Coast Relays in Frtsno Friday and Saturday. «0 rtl•Y -I. Mt. Sin AnlllnlD, "2.2; 1, l•" Oleqo Mtu, •2.l; :t. Santt Nif. ~.f; ~. C9'rllol, ,.t;~. I' Ut rton, ~\ !~.1 .. s.\(1,' •:l ; 'l_ ~.!'rl.,. 'l~~·1fi12' G~Tfr.11° :la.J; i. M 1W, A~J, 4;11.li'°i. 'itf'rd ~~~A: ~hl·.~[es cMi \Ac..t°"'f• ,ls.~. Y1f::d.; '"f· SA ., ~1; 4; fltM if.It. SACl. 14.t s. !ill !Ml. 'I(), l•.t, 41(1 -I Rlto (Ml 5.AC J, •.21 '· ftl'lfl'l ll , !~O Mow >. .... / '· Cl•vllOC>I IS•n OJIQC), ... 1,. • ~_., !50 """'l, "'..51 i . Cotl!n IS.O n • AM. '°.O. 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J~ !ftn D\IQC}, t!I 1. 1S;':' 01~'ir1~.!i tWs ~to blJ-::l". ,r,rt~ f'orl!r 15111 0 1-) · tnd Tl>Om11 (SO M~t J. •·•; 1. Porl!r 15.!n OlfQoJ, .... Pol! VII/II -1. Chl1>1tMn IC•rrll•l, l~M· 7. Torrl•nnl tfullrui•1, 14.0; 3j $1mi-Ol'I ll'u It J, 1•.0: 1. And11t1111" Stni. """ , l ... J_ 5. Tll ' llk~ards (Mt. SA l Incl Perrott (Ml, SA ), . Lona Jum~ -I. Hlll {Ml. SAC), tl-11 T. ,.ur~ll (Ml, SACl 72-41,(,; 3. A~ (1'111/er!onl. 7'·1; I, £""en (Sin 01eqoJ, t2-V.; S. Allen <S•n Ole110l 21·11''1. TrlDI~ luma -1, 81rntll (OrlnQ• Cot1t), U.f ; ~ Stinson tMI $AC\, .S-IV,; t. L.oftOll IS.n b'MIOJ, •HI; 4, HIM 1M . SAC), .... lOY.1 1-$. lllcl>Wr1 1so Mtt11l. u.4'~. ~1><11 1>11! -1 Harrowbv (Sl11to AMJ. 52.f>.:.; ' Hoc~ln IFull~rto~l. S1·U "lo ; l. \•ln'fl:_Vn fS1n OitQOJ. SI~: •. Por<der !Mt. MC . »"'41 l . kMert (Fulltr1°"). "'·10\4. 011t111 -I. Mlll'lloomtr/' CCerrll11), 1~!: 1. ~<•"99• (Ml. SACI, 157·•"'1; l . JohftlOn (Ctrrltalll, 1~ .. 1; I l!ocw!'ll (SD MHI), 10 ·10; J, EllClll IC•rr11111\. 111·1. Fifll! ~tm 1corln1 -M! Sin A"tonlo I.a•.~; ''" Oieooo Mnt 107, &11~ 01-lo!, C•rr"-71, fwlltr~ ti, Slnll Ml 4. Orl ntl C..1t 1•\.t, Pirate, UCI Crews Shine In Regatta Orange Coa8t College's crew, winning: three of the four races it entered, cap- tltt'ed the Newport Regatta and the Palmer Cup for high point total. The races were held Saturday in North Lido Channel. . The Pirates of C<lach Dave Grant won the frosh eight , lroch four aad junior varsity ra ces, while UC Irvine was the '1o·inner of tbe varsity event. The UC! shell topped Loyola and UC Sa nta Barbara In the varalty eight·man race with a I: IO clocking. Loyola was timed in 6:11, one fu.IJ lloat length behind. Santa Barbara was third. Irvine jumped into the lead at the outset of the race and held it throughout the 2,000 met.er course. In the jdrlior varsity event, OCC was JU\ easy two boat length winner in 8:24. UCJ finished second in 6:38 while UCSB \\'as third in 8:&7 and a second Sa nta Barbara boat was fourth in 7:07. In the frosh four race, Orange Coast nnlshed in front wltb a Ume of 7:29. tJCI was seoood In 7:41. The Pirates nipped LOyola by ...,..te•th of a second In the: froah tight event. OCC was limed In 6:27.0 and Loyola clocked 8:27.J. UCSB wa1 third aod lJCI ploced fourt~. In the vara.lty four event, l.4yola won wlth a lime ol 7:3f with OOC' placing r;ccond in 7:35.fi. Next ap~arancl! for both OCC and UCI is the: Western Sprints cham· pioo.ship5 at Long Beach lttarlne Slldium, May 1~16. • • -- -----. -----·-· ~--.....---~----.... ---___....------..___...------------,----------------· ----- Mond11, M11 4, 1970 • .... IJ OtHlofl •IMr Read11 to Spike Toshi Toyota (3) of the Chart Hou se goes high off the floor to spike the ball during a re<enf volleyball match with' the Balboa Bay Club. Seen for the losers are John Alstrom (left) and Bill Gtiebenaw. The two clubs vie this week at the nationals in Hawaii. Sports In Brief Leonard Breaks Limit; Mesa Wrestling Opens INDIANAPOLIS -Joe Leonard ol San JOSt! set the highest track time this yeer -162.279 miles per boor -Sunday in practice [or lhe 500-mlle f\.1emoria\ Day race at the Indianapolis 1tlotor Speedway. Leonard 's lap was slightly over the 160-mile·per-hour speed set by chief steward Harlan Feng I e r , but knowled gea ble observers said there wa s little likelihood the veteran , \\'ho drove a turbo-charged Ford.powered machi ne, would be admonished. SatW"day Otrls Amon or New Zealand turned a lap at 159.15 ~fPH in passing his 150 mph driving test. • Championshi p wrestling begins tonight at 8:30 011 a regular weekly basis at Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. In the main event Freddie Bla~ie teams with rough Karl Heisinger to go against Rocky (Soul Man) Johnson and Bavarian No. 2. The bout is set for two out of three falls wlth a one hour time limit. Germany's Karl Von Brock meet s Wood y Farmer in the semi-main event. Bavarian No. 1 meets Art Mahalik and Pepper Pi1artin takes on The Oregon Lumberjack in the opening even t. Ringside prices are $2.50. Oenerlll Admisa\on ls $2 and children unde r 12 years of age are $1 wllh ad ults. The box office v.•as open at 3 and reservations can be made by calling Kl S-1131. • ST. LOUIS -If a 6·1 hockey gaJ1l(l can have a turning point, then the shat of ~ton's Fred Stanfield thal cr:IJ]lcd into goalie JacqlM!S Pl1t1te's mask in the early stagl"S <Jf the second period Sunday was the turning point in the fi rst game of the Stanley Cup flnnl round between the Bruins and SL Louis. Plante, the 41·year-old veteran. ,ank slowly 10 the ice. much like a rlgttte:r who bas just abwrbed a knockou~ punch. "He was out cold," s•id St. Louis trainer Tom \VOOdcock . "I think il's a concussion.·• \Vhen Plante left at :i :~; of lhl" second period. the score was tied at I·!. Seventy. ni ne seconds later, Johnny Bucyk scored the second of his three goals and the Bruins were ahead for keeps. • DES ~10I NES, Iowa -Cal Drummond. ~. a former major league baseball um- pire. who helped call the 1966 World Series. died here early Sunday after collapsing while of fic iating in an American Associalion game . An autopsy revealed Drummond died of a cerebral hemorrhage in an area near to where be was hit by a foul tip in 1969. ..• Drummond y,·as calling a game between the Oaks and the Oklahoma City 89ers' when he went to the ben~h in the seventh inning saying he was di:r.zy . Four hours later he died. • LOUISVILLE -Fred Lewis scored seven of Indiana·s last ntne poinl.ll from the free throw line Sunday to help Indiana beat Kentucky 114-110 and take a 2·1 Jead in the American Basketball Association's Eastern Division final playoff series. • LOUISVILLE -Jockey Hector Pilar reinalns in satisfactory condition in a Louisville hospital. Doctors who originally feared he might have fractured two vertabrae •hen ht fell from floly Land in Saturday'• Ken- tucky Derby now say onl y one vertebra(' in the lum bar region is fractured . There are no immediate plans to operate. Doctors said Sunday he will remain in the hospital for three, weeks then he confin ('d to a back brace for four to six mon ths. • ATLANTA -Chicago Cubs man11er Leo Duroche r was fined t200 and susprndcd for one day for making an obscene ge$t\Jrc at an umpire in Saturday night's game «illh lilt Atlanta Bnves. Durocher w3s thrown out of the game' in the sixth innina by Urst base umpire Tony Vincent. Durocher. c1ngcred beca use he thou1ht -Vincent should h11ve made a strike c111I. turn er! on his wny back to the dugout and made the gesture. • Swiin Title to LA Valley; Pirates, _Rustlers lmpre~s llY CRAIG llllDT 1t ........... ..., It W"'lkl takt u hour to ttU of all ~ thrills In 8alurday •• final day of tbe liato junior ~ nr!nunlnl and dlv!J>i c:hlmploolltlpo at Or1111< COISI Colleie. ll•ri are tbe hishl!ihll: (I) LA Valley won the ltate title, endlog Foolhlll't el&b!-)'etr domln1tlon. (2) A vlcCory !or OCC'1 Cbrla Gunmon In the mo bu1terQr. (3) A •1UJ>rlllnC·wtn by Goklen wura 400 free "'"Y tetm. (4) A J1rooi tbitd place fln!sh by Golden Wee! In the final acor!ns. (I) A national .._.i In the mo breattltrote by Dave Mayetawa of EI Camino. /I) A second place flnlth by Gold<n Wiii's Don !Jppoldt In the 2 0 o bac-e. Valley totaled 211 2/3 poln1' to win • the team lllle, aettlna • ..cond (Rlcll WU.00) om! the il>lrd (Sonny Gooalclt) In the U.-,,,.1u diving compelltlon, a first In tile !00 free (Allen Pinson) and a third in the 100 free tftay. Ganunoo'1 ~ictory in the D fly was the 'first state event woo by an, OCC .swimmer u.Qdar COKh Jaet FullWn's guldanct. Gammoa clocked $2.4, just seven-ttnths of a second off the national mark. The Golden West relay team was near· Jy unbelievable. It won an e v e n t Jt wasn't supposed to Jn 3:14.1 j u 1 t three·tenths of a second off Lhe naUonal record. The RusUer legs included a 49.0 by Greg F_elnberg, 49.1 by Kris Swenson, 47.1 by Keith Donald""' and 47.t by Llppoklt. Uppoldt and Fullerton's Byron Reiden- baugh matched stroke for stroke in the Stevens Wins 3 Events Gauchos Finish Third In Desert Circuit Meet saddleback College, behind • super petformm:e by long d!Btance ertllt Bob Stevens, flnllhed third in Saturday's Deeert Conference track and fleUI finals at Vlctcr Valley Colleii!. Mira Colla won the meet with 128 point.I, followed by Imperial Valley with Ill and Saddleback (1111). Stevens captured three events, winning the 1111 (2:01.2), mile (4:33.4) and two mile (IO :OJ.1), He will enter the half mlle Ollly In the Southern C.llfornla prellms at Bakersfield May 13. Saddleback'I Paul Cox wu a double winner, potting vtctcries lit' the javeUn (!7!-4) and the d!SCUI (142-5). Both marks were achieved In Friday's prelims. Accordinj to Saddleback coach Don Guyer the Gauchos could move up to 8eCOlld place In the firlal ttam sCoring, pending review of the rums of the 120 high hurdles. In that event, the Gaucho6' John Williama wu awarded fifth, but could move up to third after the review. That would give Saddleback second place. Regardless, Williama wlll enter both the 120 high hurdles and the 440 in· tennedJates In the So Cal meet. He finished third in the intermediates in 58.7. The Gauctx.' John Dauss placed third in the mile (4:47.1) and teammate Glenn Underwood wa.s second in the high jwnp (6-4) and both will enter the Southern California meet. 200 back , before ltlt latter ]>lilied away In tbe final 50 1ard1. Jloldenball&h'• winning time •""' 1:$8.1 while Llp-t::!. clocbd 2<91. l, Both wen llleUme Mayekawa's mark of 2:11.3 in the prellms of the 200 bre&lltro}e wiped oul his own record · o( 2!1l:f' set two weeks ago. He swam 2:12.a in the finals. Other area highlights included Fein· berg's thlrd place finish In the 200 back (2:02.7), Andy Erickson's (0CC) filth place in the 100 free {U.l), Bruce Johnston 's COCCI llfth In the ~ breast (2:22.0), Swenson'! fourth in the 100 lly ($3.5) ~Qd OCC's ofurth In the too free relay (3: 15.7). Crucial Games Coming Up; 'Anteaters Sweep Twin Bill Dave WolJos , act of the UC Irvine pltchlng staff, has enjoyed his longest rest from game action since early 11ason -seven full days . Wollos (12--0 ) will start one of the most important games of the season for coach Gary Adams' Anteater s Tues- day afternoon at San Diego State College with game time at 2: 30. San Diego State was the third foe of the 1970 campaign for the Anteaters and it won a 12-3 brawl. Then the two teams battled to a +4, six inning deadlock in the nightcap. called by darkness. Wollos pitched the six innings for Irvine in the second game and since that Ume has posted 12 straight wins. The Anteaters won a pair from UC San Diego Saturday in the Border City to bring tile season record to an im· pressive 30-~2 mark with six games remaining -all on the road . Dennis Nicholson was the winner of an 11-1 verdict in the opener and Bob Barlow potted a 5-1 triwnph in the nightca p. Both games were !even hmlngg with the hmlers going the dlsUnce. Tom Spence hit his thlrd home run Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Bal Um ore Detroit Booton Washington New York Cleveland Minnesota An1tl1 Otlldand Chicago Kansas City Milwaukee East Division W L 14 8 13 8 12 9 12 11 13 IJ 9 12 Wt1& Dt\'l1loa 14 7 14 a JI 13 9 IS 8 14 s 19 ,.,....,., ,. .. " .. NfW YOl'tl .. ~. Mllw1ul! .. ,_, Cltv•llnd 6, 1t•n ... Cl,., J Dtl,.!t .. Citic ... I Mln11tlllf• l, •1ttlMCll'9 t 01-1'1"" ).t, W11l)IMIM 1 .. A"'tll •I lo110n. r•ln 'TW9Y'I 6 1111tt No ••~ l.(l>toclu!W. T11111i.1•1 0•-Ntw Yofll II <Mtklllfld, nfthl W&"11111torl It MM't. nlehl Bottori 11 Mttw~, 1111!1!1 ci. .... 111111 '' c111u'°' nllllf Ml"""°ft •I Ott ... lt, nllhl KIJ\MI Cltv It l•lt1mert. 11ltht Pct. .630 .119 .571 .522 .520 .429 .M7 .131 .4113 ,jOI .3'4 .208 GB ,. • 11·:, 2\·l 21! •" ,, \; 41~ 5~1;! ~"' 1011 NATIONAL LEAGUE Ea1t Divi1lon w L Pct. GB Chica\,° !3 7 .650 New ork 12 JI .522 Philadelphia 12 JI .522 Pittsburgh II 11 .500 SI. Louis: 10 10 .500 Montreal a 15 .286 West Dlvl1lon Cincinnati 19 6 . 760 Dodpr1 12 1 t .522 6 Atlanta 12 It .m 6 Sin Francisco 12 14 .462 7 ~~ Houston 10 15 .400 9 San Dlego 9 IS .380 10 l<llltff't "'"""' PhlltdtlPhl• •lJ. Si n Fr1ncl1(0 ,.._ ht ••mt Tl !nnlntl c 1..ctnn111 11, P!tt1b\lrei. 1 $9n Dllto w, NIW YOfk ).J, h r '''"' 10 lnn1;.e1 Dl41•n u . Mtn•rttl T SI. LOl/11 f·li H•utllln f.I CMt•'• ti Atl fni., rlln Teft1'1 Glint• PIUl-llllf"On (Wllkft (l-1) •I At11n11 (N1111 2.11, nloM If. Louit (TON1't ~.2) •t ClndflNll !Nolf!\ .f-ftl, nlfM Otk -(J1'*lnt 2-l) •t Hou1tan IBoultll 1·1}, nllht on1r .. ma Klltdllltd. DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR ILYD., COSTA MESA Strvlca and Parts for All Imported Cart Modern 8 ... y Shop for All C1r1 646·9303 ' Orange Coun ty's Largest and Most Moclern Toyota and Volvo Deller of the campaign to put the Anteattn ahead in the fourth inning of the OJ>et>er. He is now tied with Rocky Craig for the tearn lead in th.is department. other extra base hits by Irvine in the twinbill were all doubles by Bobby Farrar, Jim Gl'eenway and Nicholson. l"lllST GAME UC lrrlr11 1111 UC Sin Ditti fll F1rr1r. !I Sy~or•, lb Cr1ig. <f 51191'1C•, 1b Sttl<I, rl Hf nttfl, IS GtttnWI~, l~ 5hollnt, c NichOl$On, p Tclfl1 uc lr¥ln• ••r lll'lll '''"''' J O I 1 MeCoomlls. ll·P 2 0 O I •0 001u111,,rf·lf JO to l J o o IU!ltr, cl l O I o l 11 2 Plttm•~.c lftO O (211 Harmtn,lb JOJO l 0 2 I Shlon. lb 3 l 1 O l ll l Parker.11 1 110 I 0 I 0 Y1~ol1, 2~ 2 O O D •ll l Joneo,p.11 20 00 12 !1 1 ' To111s 2J 1 ~ o 5cort Dy lnnln91 ' . ' OOOSll (-U I 1 UC Si n Dlevo 001 0000 -l'l Sll!CDNO OAME UC lnlM OJ UC S•11 01 .. 1 !It ••rlll'lll ID,lll'tol F1rr1r, If J 1 1 0 McCocmb1, IS J 0 I O $ykota,Jb JIODBv•n.r! JOOO Cr•I;, cf l 1 I I Rlllfr, cl l O l o PltlNr•, 1D J 0 l I Pl!lmtn, r l I l I S.1k1, rf l D 0 D Hormtn, JD J 0 l I S~n1kl, rf l 0 1 0 Shln11, lb 1 O I I Han1Hl, 11 l 1 0 1 P1rk1r, p J o o o Gr_,w1v: 20 J O l 1 YtkO!•, JD 2 o o o Al'ld..-lOn, t 4 0 I 0 JoM.1, rt J O I O B•rlOw,p 1010 • Tllt l1 lt J I ' T"1l1 ,. ' ' Sn,. Dy l1111k191 UC trvlnt UC S•n Olttc ' .. 200 010 2 -S t o llOOU00-1 t l DEAN LEWIS APalL S,ICIALS [!llOIMIOl[)IAJI COROLLA 1970 $1813 +T .. a u •. All 0... M 11 tMk M11Tk ll-Hll11 PIO•,_ YM c,.i..n-c.,... v LVO 1970 DEMO SAVE $570 142 2 8r., r14i•, ho•tor, •·•P•••· 1s,,, e 474 I UllE> CAR IPICIAL tfff TOYOTA C•rell1 c,._ ' Rtdlt, htti.r, l>10Hd. Chttlt ll'llt prl< .. (JUN~) $12" • ... • I . ' • l ' • ' ' I • ' I . ) Loop Spike Prelims Set Tuesday All four area high schoo1 leagues Tuesday will begin the eUmlnation process w h i c h eventually lead.ct to tbe CIF and State traCt and field championships for some com- petitors. The Irvine Le:lg-uc trials at Sa.Ma Ana College and the Crestview preJims at E I Modena each get under way at 3 p.m. A 2 p.m. starting time is on tap for Su:-..;oi, prelims at Anaheim's Western High and Angelus trials at St. Paul High in Santa Fe Springs. All txcept the Crestview get· together will lee.d into league championship deciders Friday. The Crestview title was already decided during the duaJ meet seasc:--1 wiih Oran,ge e1nerging ch<tinpion. The sole purpose of the Crestview prelims and finals will be to select represen- tatives for CIF competition. Among t h !: outstanding varsity perfonners expected to advance past the Crestview qualifieatioo s are two miler Dave White (9;03) and miler Mickey Woolley (4:20.S) p El Modena plu~ the Orange discus duo of Mike Evans (170. 10) and Len Ostrum (169-Blh:). They're Broncos Now Several area aces figure prominently in the Crestview meet, including ·Laguna half miler Dave Hustwick (1;54.3) and a formidable S a n Clemente aggregation headed by sprinter Rick Geddes ( 10.0, 22.8), hurdler &h Blacker (14.7, 19.7) and distanceman Brad Winton (1;58.6, 4:23.8), Three Orange County JC transfers are expected to be in the Cal Poly, Pomona lineup this fall. Poly assistant coach Don Lent. former Magnolia High , Anaheim nientor, holds blocking dwnmy while Steve Purdue, ex-Orange Coast, takes a shot. Tom Berquist, ex-Golden West, and Todd Sveslosky, ex-Cypress, look on. Marina Sprint Whiz New Ar.ea Pacesetter Tar Bees Near Title Irvine hostilities at Santa Ana C.Ollege will spotlight. a fe rocious team batUe amoog Fountain Valley, Santa Ma Valley and delending cham- pion Loara. Only one new individual leader emerged during the last two weeks on the DAILY PILOT list of Orange Coast area prep track a:i1d field bests. The new pacesetter i s Marina's Joe Ventimiglia, \\'ho took over the 220 leadership from Fountain Valley's Phil M-ais with a commendable 21 .8. Mass has recorded a 22.4 best. Mater Dei Lightweights Make CIF Arigelus League prelims at St. Paul High School Tuesday afternoon (2) are next on the agenda for coach M a r k Wiehardt's Mater Dei track and field rontingent after undergoing Bee and Cee CJF qualifying efforts at Bishop Amat High Saturday. The Monarchs appear to be on solid footing in the Cee 660 for competition in the CIF prelim at \Vestminster High Saturday, May 16. Leacling Mater Dei is freshman Jim Poettgen, who turned in his best-ever time with a 1:30.9 to lead a 1·2 finish for the Monarchs at Bishop Amat. Mate Bill Sundali pushed him to the mark with a 1:31.7. And, Mater Dei picked up both qualifiers in the Cee high jump from the Angelus League meet with D o u g Martin taking first with a 5-10 effort. Monarch Chuck Hanahan was second with f>..9. Martin will be Mater Dei's big threat in CIF Cee action, having a 6--0 leap to his credit this year. In the Bees, steve Fritz was the only winner for Mater Dei, taking the long jump with • 20-4 leap. Mate Dick Davis placed se- ~nd in the 660 with a 1':29.7 while the 880 relay team 1 finished second with a 1:34.0 clocking. The quartet was composed « Rod Frilot, Rocky Simpson, Fritz and Tim McKeoo. Three previous leaders have enhanced !heir standing on the l ist with improved performances (Iver the past f(lrtnight. Fountain Valley's mile relay quart.et or Dan Shaw, Carl Hardin. Maas and Steve Chris- tiano did not win at the recent ML San Antonio Relays, but the Baron foursome blasted to its best mark of the season at 3:23.0. Prior to Mt. SAC, Fountain V aJley had a top mark oC 3,23,2, Huntington Beach bumped Newport out of third on the mile relay chart with a 3:26.0 victory over the Tars Thurs- day in a dual meet at Newport. Two weeks ago junior Garth \Vise of Huntington was the long jump leader at 22--0. But, last week Wise sailed 22·71iz to move out even further from nmnerup Rick Martin (Fountain Valley), who has gone 21-101/,. T-.tk )4-floll 100 -Dave Lat"I' (M••in1l, 9.1, t.7w; Phil M.ll•s (Founllln valley ), 9.1; 01ve Jollnwn (Es•anc:l1J, Dare! Slood !NeWPOrl Harbor), 10.0, t.lw; Rick Gtddes ~Sin Clemen!e), 10.0. 170 -JDt! Ven1lml11ll• (M1rln1), 21.1; Pllll Mias (l'ountalfl V•llevl, 72.4; Dare Johnson (Estencl•I, 22.5, 72.lw. ~ -Stew cnrliti.no fFounllln V1ll1y), '9,0; Brad McK•n<le fS1n Clement..), Sll.4; ~I• Ro o er s (NeWPOrf Harbor), 50.S 880 -01\tl! Hu1lwldl; {L .. llN 8e11di). 1:S4.l; Sh!ve Cllrlsfltno (l'ou,.. fllln Valley), l :ll,t; Nido: ll11$e ((DION del MtrJ, 1:5'.0. Miii WarM Ak1Ylm• (Weslfl'lfn&ter), Ja.ct McQuown CH~,.. tlnsiton Beer;riJ, 4:20.6; Tim Funk Loara's talented ·s print Newport Harbor High's Bee corps, bolstered by juniors tennis rontinge nt is drawing Steve Elkins (9.7, 20.Bw) and a bead on Saturday's quarter Jim Beyers (9.6w, 21.6), is and semifinals CIF team bat-expected to pick up the Sax-ons' title chances. tie at Santa Ana High, seekiug its first-ever title in the Bee Meanwhile, Fountain Valley elJissification. will rely heavily on .ironma:o . The Tars, 1969 cee cham-Steve Clll'istiano 49.0, 1:55.6), pions, advanced a pair of hall miler Carl Hard.in (2 :02) singles players and a doubles and miler Tim Funk (4:23.7). team to the quarterfinals after The bulk of SA Valley's title first, seccind and third-round hopes rest on tbe shouJden action Saturday at Santa Ana, of clirrtinutive (>7) hurdler-long jumper Ke•th Denson. Saddleback. Santa Ana Valley and Santa Ana College. Over in the Sunset Joop, Leading Newport are singles Powerful Santa Aiia i s standouts Bob Ogle atJd Tim substantially favored to top O"RieJly along with t h e the Qualifiers with Newport doubles team of D.a v e also expected to make a Eastman and Kirn Perino. strong team showing. Other area Bees to survive 11"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiooii.iiiiiiiiiiil Saturday's tests were Foun- tain Valley singles players Steve Miller and Jim Krawczyk. In Cee competition. Estan- cia's Steve Mallott advanced to the quarterfinals along with Doug Rosener of Newport Harbor and the doubles team of Kirk Mader and Todd Donaldsoo of Newport. JC Baseball SOUTH COAST COHl'IUllNCE (fiMI) w C~llo1 11 L Ga ' San DlellO ll Mt. Sin Al'lll'>nlo 10 S¥1 Diego Mes• I~ F11l(ertQ11 r Or•nw C09SI J Saoll Ana ] S.lurd1y•1 Sc- ' • • " " " • ' ' " " " Sa" DI"° Meta •·7, Sanft An• l--2' Slfl Diego 16-10, Fullerton 0'6 DESEltT CONl'•1tl!NCI. (111191) ~ SAFECO INSURANCE e BUSINESS e HOME· e AUTO e BOAT (Foun!aln V•llerl, 4:U.7; Brlld Winton W L GI C5•n Clemenle), 4:23.8. Mt. Sin J1c!nto 12 • e LIFE Two mue -Don Ol1to n Sadal~ck 11 s 1 (Weslmlnderl, 9::12.2; Dave L<><:kman Victor V1tlev 11 5 I B b p I (Marina), 9:42.0; Sllvt 'II• r I• lm1>erl1I Vatlt"I' II S 1 0 a ey (Wnlmlnstar), 9:~.?. Mir• Cosl1 •9 1 3 110 HH -8ob lll•cker (S.fl Dll:lert • • 4 and Atsociat11 Cl.mente), 14,7l Garlfl Wls.e (liu,.. 81rslow t 10 llngtoo 8t1cn), 1•.I; Rich Wood (lflYOM 1 11 7 INSUR/I. ~.CE fEllancia), 14.9. 9 lllO lH -Rid'I Wood (E1!•ncl•l• Palo VH'dl 0 lt 11 19.l ; Dan Ame1 (Weslmlnsler), Cr1111 S.tunl..,.'I Sc.rtl Ph DI.In I OP (Westmlnstefl. 8Db Bltdle' P•lo Virrde tor lei led two times lo one 642.ti500 (S.n (:lemenle), 19.7; Cl•ve Dunlap S.Odlebld 474 E. 17th St, tCoroio• oel Mar), '°.o. Mr. San Jacinto w, Detttrt !·11 A«I relav -Founl•ln V•lltY, 43.71 lmP1rlll Vllle'f l·JO, Mir• COfl• 0-7 COSTA MESA NllWPDll Harbor, M1rlnii, '3.t. (lftY-S.1, 8'r1!ow ).JI ___ 1==========~11 Mlle rtlav-Fountaln v111w, l:7J.OJ Victor V•llw, bye Morini, 3~.61 Hunllnll'IOn 8t1cl\, -------'-- 3:16,0. H J-'-" H•Yl!ll IHtwliorl H1rborl, 6-J; J0<1 Morchlorlelfl (Cosll Mtl...,l, ._.; Tonr B•~ken fEstancl1L .. l. LJ -Girth Wise IHunllnvton flNdll, '1·7•t.; Rkk M•rfln (l'ounl•ln Valley), 21·10'4; Glen Sll"l'eMOn 1we1tmlr11ter), 21.::i. SALESMEN PV -C10J9 Nof!'lur• IEst1ncl•l, lJ.6; T.,..ry P1.,.!MOn IFouftl•ln Vlllev). lJ.2; Sll!Ve O'H1rt IMorfM), Tonv Hottm1n fS1n Clemllt'lte), l:M, SP -M1rk Sk!YeM (l'ftwoorl H1rbol'l, ""6~; Br.cl 8ordeft ICost1 M1w), """"' Tarry Albrll lon IN--1 H~rtlo!'J, 54-1.,.,, CIT -Skip RI....,. (C.-ct.I M•r), 111..0V.; T.., L"l'lkloft (Fotvnl•ln V•I""'), 15'-I; ICtvln B•rMlf fC-1 del M1rJ, 152-4, STILL SEEKING A CAREER INSTEAD OF A JOB AN OPPORTUNITY TO AnliND A CAREER SEMINAR DELTA SUPER QUALITY Tires Cost Less Col'l'lpl•f• Lin• oJ Filaf9l•11 B•lt•d Tir•i Av•i-l•bl• rm .. Stort Cit 521.tS , .. F.l.T. CMllll"lltMIV• fr•iflfllt •lllf ""' 1""41•-l•ll .. ''"'""""' ,.... ...... s.o..., c•v""' r.., " '"' d'"") "' • ,,..~ nill!J ...... ,, .....,,.. i..11 d-lty 111 Orallfll C:-. !f.-....... """"-' .,....-tullltltl """' f•ll ......... u-y.oH •N ,Hfflc C9"1 INclt b~ iriemhr ··~ SNdlbrW;itn ..,!tr I ....... '""' Fib•ttl•u Wid• Ov•l1 -S11p•t PttMi11m - Rtdi,I -Sporh -S.nd llv99y - & •II Si1•1 Trv~k Titt1 BERG'S DEL TA TIRES 141 E. 17th St •• Costa Mesa . 645-2010 l ankAmttic11'd IOptt0tlte lobt lit loy) Matter Cli1r1• 1001 WIST17th, SANTA ANA -141·6904 ,., ftfltl'lllHitnl It .......... llf9' ....... . -., ....... "' ,,...i .. . Ttlal HMM.tltl ""9nlnt II -· ~ Ml' • Mitlc liiittultY ., llft: I ... .- -. Monday, May 4, 1970 DAILY Pl~OT 25 ·.·:.:. Sea rs Batterv Guarantee · Fr('(> repluct!ment within 90 days fl'r pur<"h<lSC if batttr.· pro\'t'$ dtfectivc. Aller 90 da.vs, we replace the b;iltery. if drf('{"\i\'e, and chall!e you ottly for th e period or ownership. based on the tl.'gular price less lrade·in at the time of return. proraleti over number of n\Onths of gu;irantee. Sears High Voltage Battery Regular $23.99 Trade-In Price ' 42-Month Guarantee 99 SAVE $7! Fits 90'7o of all American-Made 12-Volt System Cars. With Trade· In Nos . 4303-431%-4395-4374-4366-4 353-4390 Regular $169.95 E:tpert InstallaLion .\\·ailabl1' $13-9 Mode15717 • F.:ister cool-do\\'n time for"ri~hl .. now" comfort • Hi gh C.J\1.1''· for ~realer air circuJa .. tion • Sleek design has safety padded her.el ., Sears Standard Mufflers Scars Lo,,·. LO\V Price! 79~ • Don·t gamble your li fe \vilh a lcak.v n111f • lier • The deadly. odorle~s gas fron1 a wo rn out 1nuffler is even more Janeerou;.: during v.•hcn you drive v.·ith windov.•s r·!os<•d . ~T i;t;:r ·'~~ ,_ ,~ ~-----....... -... . . .. ' --~. gJ 1J@m 1·1 I All EATHER IOW-JO Save48'7o All WEATHER lOW·JO MOTOR OIL TOR OIL Regular 49~ Qt. Can JOW-30 M . 0·1 All Wealher OtOr I Kee~your engine runnini:: ~Lrong all year Jong 3 Qt.99~ Cans • • MounLo; under dash boa rd • Fit~ most American cars Super Spark Plugs Re~ula r 59< Each 47t Auto Tune-up Kit Include~: Points Rotor Conden.o;cr J97 Prices Effective Today thru Tuesday 5/5/70 ... ___ ... _,,,_ ·-····.... __ ...... .. ·-·· .. -· --···-"'-" -·-·-....... . -........... ,..... --.. ...... .._ .... , .• ...... --.... --.. _ .. ,..... . . .._ ................ .. _,.,.... ___ ,, ............ , .... _.,1t-•ttA. ~ .... ___ , _ _, ... , •• __ .... , .. .... ... ..... . .. ...... " .... .. . ........ --..... ·-· -·" .. ., .. -----·-........ _ .......... . ......... '" .. '"'--........ I .. ' 26 DAIL V PICOT DICK 'MACY ... ---I TMINK Ml!OIC.AL MEH WILL. TE.Ll ¥0U nfAT INTO EVeRV CASE (.i()l!!'.'J A &IT OF SECRET INGREDIENT. TUMBLEWEEDS . YOU l'llDMIS&P YOU \'.'OULV! MUTT AND JEFF W 14EN A!SEY 5PE IJ<'.Ei:? f..Sl(S Sf>.M PRI VEi<:'. FOR LE6-'l .A.VYIC.E Ji:E6"ROIN6 APOPflON, HE IS '5111P$U5Et1 TO l EA.RN THAT TM!: UUltl IS ).LFVJl'i LIVIMG A.T 5PEMCE~ F,t.IMS ! [fil I\ . I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I ACROSS 48 Outstanding l litUt ntr( S lnd,f1n 1te t:i:pa nst 10 Comm uui· Citl1on· Informal lt Half: • thing: Prtl1w 15 Havi ng tilt san·~ c IJinis 16 Declari> 17 Dollar bill~ 18 E,crss1vely t nergtt1c 20 Pac1iosl: 2 WOid~ 22 Followtd 23 Maple genus 24 Euro11e ~n capital 25 Fruit 28 Enraged J2 liquor 33 Item of bar furniture 35 Rive r of Euro pe 36 Enc001pu sN :3 8 ~Toopy cond1 l1on underfoot AO Rebukt .oil Of sound waves -43 Pl umbing ittm AS Timt prtiod "10 lnlroduc tor~ parts I 2 l , .. 11 ·~ .. ,, "' " •• ,. .. .. • -' n .. " ' Slang 50 Roman ro<td Sl Mao's oickoal!'e 52 Persisttril attacks 55 Certain ropes on I Shi() S'J lodeormlence o! thoui;il11 bl Tabl ew ar e 11em b2 Farm wor ker bJ Kilns 1>• Outside : P1efix bS KfOO or shelter b~ Chirp ing no lf b7 Harvest DOWN JO The3tric~I Pt<fOfmances 11 Bad 12 Chess playe r's probl em 13 Was in debt 19 St. Louis team: Informal I Canlnt 21 Cards 2 Siberian 24 l ightl'SI river lumber 3 Or the USA: 25 Embraer A.bbr. 2• Hearsay 4 Un fortunate 27 Ainmonia atrident compound ~ lodges Jn 28 Htaths objtction 29 Ei:pQs and b 0111a n Br•vt s, e.g. 7 Insist )0 Hardtn : Var. em11ha tic111y )I Shut out 8 Vfhlcl e )~Having 9 Hi9hly txisted ple;isfd IGnger 5/4/70 37 No l lackadai- sical 39 Kind or gasoline: 2 words 42 lil Ofe , attracliYe ••Fastener •1 Catherine It was on e •9 Kind or pitch 51 Soft plastic mixture 52 Calt'odar abbrevialion 5) Arrow po ison 54 Jacket 55 Climb 56 Plt'asing S7 Thi s: Sp. ; 58 Busine ss e-stablishment bO Unprocessed • • I" " " " ... " " . " " . )I ~ 1• • '!I ~~u• " " " ' -. --., .. .. .. ' Dill• .. -II I " ~ -'"t~ .. ~ '"" " . ----·-------- ----------~-----~-----------------·-----.~-~--·--------.-. ~-----------~. ~-... .. . . . .· . PERKINS ly Chester Gould TMAT .. OU. ~lllT IN<iRaDllNT, l!H, TIMICVP ly Tom K. Ryan YOU W'EU. YA SEEJJILHE ... U!LIR HAVfN'T, I CAN ~"f PEFENP MYSEl.F, iHANKYOU! ly Al Smith ly Horold Le Doux I'll 6ET MIM, SA.II\! ME'S 50 CUTE! &UT, PLEASE .• WMEtl HE USES SOME OF TME WO«l'S ME ""6 .. PONT 5C.Ql£) >flM~ MISS PEACH Ll'L AINER SALLY BANANAS GORDO TµE-SF'AR5e ~XICAN Tilf:'ilR~ Pt.ANNIN& THE Sf.IAM Mf7J..t: f'OR ~·· CINCO OE FORCES LlNDErz 10E-Nt:;RAL I&~ ZARAGOZA,• .Ml.·" FIESTA.! w ILL MAYE rr OLlT °fJfT~ ... MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS :! lllliOTE A Le1'fER'fO 1'~ EDITt>K' ABOUT lfie WAV' IJEI06PAl"ERS ).u.Ow 1fie 60/!:RIJMEWi" 10 COIJ11i'.Q.. AIJD W- ~-o:; 00.llf"ED ~D. • '!1W:>lllEM1llJ I.JO UIJC!:l?fAllJ TEl<'MS1 iHA-r 1\.lf. 'AV'E$.AGfI. ;;oe• w.s I.JO voice., Al.JO "JW.r F~EEDOM O'""IHE. ~SS IS. A 815\JOI<& ! By John Miles " . . " " By Men -.ANO AS WE MAKE" OUR' WAY Tl-«O~M SCMOOL, WE Wll.t.. FIND T~AT WE Ml.l'T ATTEND itEGULA~LY, WE /llUST DO OU!<: SHARE. Of THE WOl<K, AND WE ll\IJ5T llCHA'JE NICELY 1. .. .. • ~TEVE ROPER lf1tHWICEILE HAS lllNIOI. Y DiNl!O ANY IW7tl/T TO HAVE FRAWl<tE ~HIT~- / ... · PEANUTS TOWAltPS ONE ANOTHElt .,, m;; SEf.~ A $£.\.C::iO: ~R!E"S IN TIE >IEJG.lilCAAXI) crc001.~ ... I 'M Ant.AID Wl'RE Of:AL~~ V'111'M ONE C:iF T MOSE" ~OMPl.U.SJV£ TYPES .• , f·Y ly Saunders and Overgard !IE\IBI ~ .. o, Mil MAACECLE! WE\L HAVE TO ASJ< -,cu TO COME DOWN TO HEADQUARTE~S WITM U~/ ly Charles M. Schull THf nlANGI .WOIU) .. ly Al Capp I By Charles lanottl ly Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson F~ ~l/SFIY!!Ot>Y GOIN' up "TO .LOOK ATiH' CONDITION Of HIS FAVORIT5 L.lla! AN!:> _ __, 5AYIN~ 'E<:HIC!!" S-4 By Roqer Bollen ... -...... ._ .... ... IHE\I ~!IT"ED IT! MR. M . .::::U::;:;M::__ ___ ___ " " r: ' lj !I I • • --~~~~~~~~~~~~ .... ~""'"".,,""'""'""'"'" ... """" ................................................................... ,... ........................................ ":"'""."" ... '•.T~"-,"""·"",.,. .... '""~'.:'<,~ r.rona•y, Miy 4, 1970 DAILY PILOT H . .:;O:;;ll:;;S:.;;E;:S..:'..:0;.;.R;.S:;;A;::L:.;;E:...ll-'H;.:;O:.;U::.:S;;:E;:;S..;.F..;.0;.:;R:.;SA=L:.:E;.._HOU=:.;S:.;;l!:.;;S..:'..:O..:R;..:SA=L;;.E_ll"H"'O;:.U:;;.;Sl:;.;S;..F;..O;;.;R.;...;;SA;.;L:;;.;E::.....;.;H..:0.;;.US:;.;E::.:S;..F;_O:..;R.;_;:;SA;.;;L::.:E::..... I :.;H..:O.:.U;_SE:;S:..:FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE RENTALS 1;Gat~;·;~;·•;l;;;;;::.=::>;;;;;;1;000;;;1;G;;; .... ;:;':·:';;;;;;;;;;;l:llGO::Gen;;;';'•;l;;;;;;;;;1;000;;1;G;•;,,.;';•;l::;;;;::;::::1:oao;;;o.~ .. =·~·=·';;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;DllC;;11 ~N~·~-~ .. ::.rt:...::a..::::::ch::...~1=200= ~·ct.I Mer H°"'" FumlohM Huntlnthln BNch 1400 OlAllCH COUNTY'S LARGEST 2629 HARBOR . -. BOULEVARD 546-8640 0,..1 ... 1 ... tll 1:30 3 Bedroom Mesa Verde $22,300 This la a real fixer up-- per In a $26.000 nei17h· borhood, but the 1n- gredlenfs are all there. 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, built-in kitchen· forced air heating - large yard • see it and saye. 3 Bedroom Doll House - $117. Total Pml Yi Acre Country Living 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths-$18,950 $100 total down pay- ment to non-vet& That melll'lll anybody. Newly painted inside. Built-in kitchen. Washer a n d dryer included. This one won't last. Mesa Verde raer Upper This is a real 11ieepe.r lo- cated in the best Costa Mesa area. 3 bedrooms, 2 bat.hl!I. Bulltins. Bring your paint brush and s&ve yourself some mon- ey. Full price $22,300. Pink up ,the phone and call. Fixer Upper On Lots of Land Located ln tht Back Bay atta or Newport Beach on J1'i of an acre. Featuring 2 hone cor- rals, enclosed I a n a i overlooking beautirul r;wtmmirig pooL The 2000 aquarf! ft. 3 bed· room residence nttds nalnt and elbow grease, but what a price. Own· er win nn~ce at 7.5%. Oall todQ'. OIANGI COUNTY'S LAlHST 2629 HARBOR BOULEVARD 546-8640 o,.. .... 1 ... Ill l :JO 1250 LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS 0no o .. ~P~x~E•ww"• :'c,A! ~~~·.~: 320 Uon NORD ocoan """'· 2 BR. " 3 BR Quollty dot•il<d. tMtootly , .. i; with hun. )'nl. ·Pt.Os 1-BR. pealin&:. ~'nter thru lush gar. 4 BEDROOMll ~r llont1l1 ~ S Minutes To BNch • WE HAVE e Flum th1' ohiny brlght •how. piece with ioads Of room. Over 1S different parqU(!t entry. b~ht kitch-LAGUNA BEACH I.: bu.th r\wsl rm. I.:ooks new. d1·n • iMdy ~ tnvltlng, 2 C.ood l'tntal t.rea. $51.!IOO. Pati(ll:, HU£e Uv. r1n_ w/ PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES NO\¥ RidUCfd to $175,ooo. Xlnt torm• en with bUllt-ins, carptts & SUMMER RENTALS drapes, Priced tG sell with By wHk or month CUSTOM 4 TO 7 BEDROOM HOMES 6 Beautllul unlls. 6 Car garages f< ul)ltty FROM $115,000 TO $500,DllC room, with 80 ft. fronting on excellent •wim- grtat oc.:a.n view, 3 BR., fonnal din, mt., bar. Pliv. ~ach prlv~I. Outstanding at 165.000. tJ7S.>JOO VA or FHA tenrui avallabJe MISSION REALTY to buy. $24.950 r u L L • 494-0731 • PRIME BUILDING LOTS ming beach. Units are newly furnished. PRICE, -:-"""-,,-'""=-=-WE SELL A HOME A """' Om, Irvl"" 'I'm'. EVERY JI MINUTES ll Br. l BJ. Avail. June FROM $35,000 TO $175,000 BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR THE BLUFFs 3 !ldnn, 3 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 133 Dov•r Dr., Sult• 3, Newport Bti•ch 642""620 ~th, fPllt-level, on B•Y &. Be•ch Rlty, Inc. BACHELOR PARTY i 24th on. Boyd Rlty 6'J5.-5930 Walker & Lee oupi .... Furn. H1s ll~m::~o::;••;•;•~D~r~.,~S~u~lte~3~,~N~.B~. ~~~64~2"'6~~2~0!!1:~;;:~~~~~:~~;;.;:=~!!!~~~;1 gree n\I e It. Cu s to n1 Generel 1000 G aL.. 1000 docotated A lmn\aeulate. I-•nu L..arge kifchen •• ., n' 9 0 0. 1000 General 1000 ~aft 6 pm wttkdays Swinging pad tor the young at heart. 2-Sty, liv, rm. & 2 Rae.Hora BR. 2 Ba. Let Income unit '1m Edinger pay billll: $51,SOO 842-44J5 54().5140 $90 ~ Util pd. 1 Br. nr. OCMn. Avai+-o.40w, AcUvt . Bkr. 534-6980 11;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;. SElr THESE The DKorator DON'T MISS BLUFFS A STOUT HOME Harbor Ughh Just I -ft Exqu~il• 3 .... 21> ... wet Hol p~~Auoc. RARE OPPORTUNITY :sxJ H 61".>-4.:\92 4 Bedrm, 2 bath. A.Wumt S"' RENTALS Houses Unfurnished On COUNTRY CLUB_ BEER In mlnd that this is a cus- tom Mme. Golfers & execu- tives this will cure what ALE'S you, some LUCKY family will HOP in their car and see this BLUE RIBBON custom. Enjoy HIGH LIFE tit for prince RAINIER. Don't PASSI' this one up. Full price $76,500. (Our on. ice is full ot HAMM'S that write ads like this! I. Reallors 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 545-9491 Open 'ti! 9 P~1 CONDOMINIUMS & Neighboring .,.. bar, dbl ovens, automatic Homes After completing the carJM!li, water softener. By Owner • Ocean Views 3 Jg, bdrm'a/3~; baths, for-Cliffheven-Bay View: maI dining Janiily room Dual custom Mme w1lh with firepla.~ and wet bar, breathtakifw: vie~. l Bed- Sweeping view from gour. rm.,. den & . dinmg room, met kitcnen. Subject to ex-Feehng of pnvacy: beau~ isling 6~0 loan. Asking fully maintw~-New car- $79 500 pets, drapes, fine "'llllpaper, ' · Call for a.pp't, lo see. custom drapes and shutters -$45,000, Ph, Sf4.0985. and now tne owners ha~ bttn trtlfliferred East Jl's BLUFFS GEM, J mm a c , custom decor. 3 br. 3 ba, just like ~w, really roomy 00 i rttnbell. $ 3 7, 9 o o, and elegant. 4 larie bed-644--0575 aft 6 pm rooms, 2 balhl, huge family room aod separate dining *BLUFFS -Choice com. al't!a and mastl'r suite. New-view k>t 3 Br. 2 Ba. 1 kw! port Beach addn'ss · and a walled patio, cus. extras pool si~ yard. Sprinklers Save $$ • $31.9fi0. 644-4265. e Just Reduced front and rear, garage door Assume SV:a.•J. LCNn Colesworthy & Co. REALTOR Newport Beach Otrice lD28 Bayside Dri11e 6754930 Cozy a: secluded with View opener. By appointment. Custom l Br + Pool. Lanai, o( Bay & Ocean. 2 Bedrms., • $56.IXXI_ 1'l'plc. $46,500. 548--0355. den, with aheltered patio & garden, $39,SOO. REALTY !Ga; w..,_ 0• .. NB ._. Colesworthy 642..1200 """ & co. REALTOR Nev.'Jl()rl Beach Office 1028 Bayliidt' Drive 6754930 Newport H•lghta 1210 BY 0\\'NER. 3 Br & den, 2 Ba, CJ'Plli. drps, newly rt'<lec ., fl'rK:ed back)td \\'/access boat or trlr. See lo apprec. $24,500, U1 Tustin 1123 BAYCREST 4 BR Cu1tom Built Home Will · lrad('. Large beaut. yard, Secluded St. 548-07l3. Dover Shores 1227 *BAY-MOUNTAINS* Scenic pvt. location. Nearly F.. Coe.st · wy, ' G.I. loan & $153 per mo. OPEN DAILY 2·5 pays all or klw dn. & owner 221 HAZEL DR. will help finance. Newly dec- F.njoy the IUJ'f at Lltlle Cor. orated inlide It. out. Only ona trom thil cusl bull! $27,900. Mme. The Real Estate M•rt DON v. FRANKLIN I 147-1531 · REALTOR • • 673-2222 • Tragedy Strikes Muat ~ l year oJd 3 Bedtm, Lido Isle •1351 l ·l4 Ba, 11 x 17 encloled pa- Generel 3000 $175 Compl. mlec l br, r/o, re!rig, nu w/w & dlll:l. Chldm ok. Active, Bkr. ,,...,., 1185 • 3 BR, 2 BA, nrw epts, bhnu, ram. ""elcomed. Blue Beacon, 645-0111 Bkr. Coste Mes• 3100 DECORA--T-O_R_'_S__ tlo. Deix custom drps, CI1Jls. HOME Anyone m~ take ~.r ex.ist. DUPLEX, E4ide, 2 BR, IW! ing VA 1%-"' loan, $239 TO-yard w/trlr a c c e a l!. Beautifully done. 5 Bdrms. 111.1 monthly, No qrnillfy•·og. Family rm. Xlnt street to BRASHEAR REAL 'TY Stove/Re! incl. $ I f 5. &treet f5 n. lot. 847-8507 Eves: &4Ul4271 _'1'-...,_7l_n_._673-~7-865---~ $118,SOO ... ..,..,..,..,..,..,.., ... , 1suo -1 BR Duplex. J.'rplc, LIDQ REAL TY INC . DELUXE DUPLEX 'to'O, rer,;g, lov<ly yant, 3337 Vla Lido 673-7300 Blue Beacon, 645-0lll Bkr. LOTS OF LIGHT ~EN SUN l-5 /IMMAC. 3 BR. hse, bltn8, In !his contemp. 3 Br, & Sth ST., H.B. crpls, drps, nr schls. $l90 , 1nv, den home. 2% Ba. BRAND NEW lJ BR, 1•2 BR. n10. 548-3351 or 6'-9-134. Jo~ireplaces, carpet'g & drap. New bltlna ln kitchen, All ~ es, built-ins, l lh blk lo I EASTSIDE • Lrg I BR .. tills for $69,500! beach! $45,500. privat' house, gar., $121 . Walker Rlty. 67S-5200 548-"80. 3366 Via Lido, NB Open Sun. LJNOBORG CO. EASTSIDE . 2 Br, -1. bcaru 036.Z, _19_ .... HOME +'STUDIO clgs, priv patio, adulta only. ~tatter BR. w/Roman bath ::!'~~~!!!!~[!!!""'""'I $152. 642-8520 + 2 BR's .l 2 baths! Artists ~~~~\0 To=us: 4~B~R-.~,~ .. ~.-h-om-,-,-w~l~ll studio. Just reduced to • lease/option. Owner/agt. '1\l SOO BR. 2~i ba. Din. rm. All • 1· o· h •· 21' 675-8800 4~1990 Ews e ec. Ill Wlhu . ,, car gar. "&Al..TOlt CoftetN·MAftTI'5) 171i-1112 Fully cpt'd, .i draped. t,ow... I $225 • l BR. Condo. 2 ly patio, &.crifice • $25.900. BA. Shag C'T'J)IS. Drps, bltns. Low int. Owner 968-1669. Jmmed. Occup. 546-6194. BAYFRONT PIER & SLIP Handsome home ¥.ith 5 BR. :i ba., on Orll' of the (i>w Bayside Dr. fee ( oot. leruic I lots -taxes only $1G'.I per year. 53 Ft. waterlmn\ with sandy beach. $179.~. new "Old World" Contem-F I I V II 1410 bo I nd 1355 oun • n • •Y pornry, spacious w/atrium 811 a Is• $145 -2 BR Home. R/0, fncd yrd !or chlldttn. pr. Blue Beacon, 645-0lll Bkr. & rourt. s B"• "'""""•bl<. ==B;;.Y.;.;,.cO;;.W;.;Nc.E-R--NEW-5"/o DN.! 5000 sq ft, 4~ Ba, hi~ilings, Newport B•ach 3200 Freshly painted and a pleas- E11enings C.all 531-S570 ure to M'e-ELECJ'RIC Total Payment $145 BUILT-IN kitchen INCLUD- Per Month ING di5hwashl!r, USED RE'al sharp 3 bedroom, 2 bath BRICK FIREPLACE, 2 home. f'rt"shly painted, GI balhs, \V/\Y carpeting, drap- loan of $15,800 at 5~ % an. es. Neal le need yard [or the nual interest You can't beat kida and handy to schools 833-0700 644-2430 OCEAN VIEW Jn exclusive Camro Shores Lovely view home r:xqui&itely landSC'apcd, vlith 2 BedroorJlll 2 Bath.-t Fonn&l view dining room Family rooin oper11 Onto lovely yard $14,::00 4 car gar., accommodates Live Rent Free. lge groups, Furn. opt. Price Custon1 4 Br, 3 ha houte w/2 lowered to $169.000. OwrM!!' br l bll apt, Wet bar, frpl c. 548-7249. Xln't financin&:. 2'll Coral '""=======o:=o:===:=l~A;.;v;.;'·;.;ITT;.;>;.;~~1~6-·---~ Irvine 1231 Huntington Beech 1400 BONUS ROOM OWNER ANXIOUS plus J hr and 2 ha for only 5V4 G.I. LOAN! I 1Sl1.000. 18 x 30 Bo Nus You can buy this drenm cot. ROOM can bf. a donn, a lage subject to the existing game room, a den. an ottice. 5% GI loen and only $134 or a huge Pr1allter BR. Ifs per rnomh. 4 Large bed- d1ffercnt. room11. 2 baths, nRE- • Red Hill Realty PLACE . built-ins, and 1pac. Univ, Park Ct'nter, Irvine ious patio and BBQ for aum- Call Anytimt ~ n1er partic!!, all on LARGE I ~!'!!'l'~~~~~~~~I 0W~S~0~L A HOME Coron• del Mar 1250 EVE RY 31 MINUTES II! Service porch. Double and shopping. Seller will pay VIEW Garage, Forced air heat. points for your new VA or Walker & Lee Realtol'!I 7682 F.dingcr 842-4455 5"10-5140 CompJetely fenced. Sprink-FHA loan. See it NO\V! FR0~1. •.. lers. C&rpets and dnpes WE SELL A HOME SAN CLEMENTE ISLAND througMut. Family room. EVERY 31 MINUTES TO. , •. SIGNAL HILL Let us show it to you!! GI w lk r & Lee ":::::::::::::::=~==::::c t TO ..•. MT. BALDY or FHA terms available. a e • 4 Bedrooma, large family WE SELL A HOME Realtor Newport Heights room. oveniized garage with EVERY 31 MINUTES 21'.Ml WestcliU Dr. Cuscom built 3 BR, 2 BA well lighted work area, W lk & L ho1111', huge .living room ON a er ee 0...,n ~:i~ PM with stone firepl&.Ct' + din-One ot Ealttblurf'S IQW.liest ,,:, \;;;iiO;ii;;~..,.., ...... ~ii;;;, I ing room. Bltns, erpts, drps, pride or ownership atieets. 2190 Harbor ~11:ct~ at Adams LOOK TWICE!! dble gar., 2 patioli. A_RE_A_L_,~-.-TE-RS l &: 4 BR. Cu.slam homes ready for occupancy. Loaded wl extras! l''rom Sll.200. Deal w/ builder & save! Cor. Las Flores A; Pheasant A'tt, CaU 537-0385. Legune Hiiis 1700 LE1SU RE W or 1 d Con- dominiun1. Beaut. garden Villa ready late ?i1ay. 2 BR, l BA. Special low price. 837-3937 TO\VNHOUSE; :1 BR, 2~, BA. frplc, patio, pool, 2 car gar, all bltna, crp!Jl. drps. Lse STIS mo. 87l-88U or 642--2491 evt1 or wknd&. RENTALS-Poo l side or B.aytront. 2 & 3 BR apl.s & hi,•nhse. l2SO up. A;t, 64G--0732 $17j BAYSIDE Village No: 8L 2 Br. 2 Ba. Carpet&, stove, refti&. Ad u t •a Condominium 1950 613-6798. --------1 ,~=--=--c-~--3 BR. 2~i baa, farn. rm. 4 BR, 1~ Ba. Stove, refr1g, W&llher/dryr. PooJ ~·reek lacil. Call 546--9529. Duplexes for S.le 1975 CdM, 2 houses, garden, ls.\,000. 11000 down. Bkr 675-6044, 64.2-8223 RENTALS Houses Fuml1hed 2 ~!cs. Ureal k>c. $29l Mo. Jean Sm ith Realtor 64&325.'> FOR Lease: New Northblu!f Condominium. l BR, 2% Ba 1'l50. Nr school, mkt Pool, tf'nnis els. Owner 644-4834 • 2 BR. New paint, crpta, drps, re!rig avail. Nr, beach. yr. rnd $225. 557-MOO Generel 2000 l BR. 2~ ba. town borne. -~-------Swimmi11.1 pool. $300 month $110 -uUI p a J d. Cozy HaJ Pinchln Realtor 675-4392 Bachelor apl nr Frwy. --&Uve, Bkr. 534-6980. . Nsweort Helghfa · 3210 $130 • UTIL pd, 1 BR duplex. NEW 2 Br, 2 Ba, lam, bltn&, Avail now. Nr. ocean. ref. $715. Acu~. Bkr. 534-'980 21.l 459-1400 collect. 545-0465 Open 'tit 9 PM TWO HOMES EXCLUSNE BUILDERS ATTENTION I INVESTORS ATTENTION I Both in exclusive Broadmoor/ F.XCLUSIVE Harbor View Hills. Both 4 ONLY $47.950 $190 PER MO. P.l.T.I. $2500 moves You in, Thia IO\"ely 3 Sedrm. 2 bath home has a large kite.hen with blln range/oven, coi;y Jiving rm with W'OOd burn- ing fireplaCP, w/w carpets, drps, a dble garage, 11.nd is ftnced and landscaped, ' $1l5-. 2 BR Triplex, avail I =========== I now, kid.! & pets welcomed. Irvine Terr1ce 3245 Just listed for $21,500 each, tv.'O lots presently zoned R-2. 128' i.~rontage, could obtain variance to R.-4. Terrific 10- ca!ion for walking to down- town Costa Mesa, Pre!K'nt income $260. per mo, Owner will carry 2nd. BR .• 2~ ba. Both w/lamily 673-8550 rms •• both w/formal din. 186() Newport Blvd., C.M. rms. -both w/views • both CALL 646-3!28 Eves. 548-6169 under $10,IXXI. ~Th~e~P'"os'"s~ib~l:O•'"D~r•'"•'"m'""' I 833-0700 644-2430 'O '!'HE REAL 0-E~'l'ATERS ' FOftEEKENDS 961-4471 ( :.J 54M10J l=·='"=·""=·=B=ola=.=-===· ::t::! $21,950 Rentals to Sh•rt 2005 eCLOSE TO BEACH• EMPLOYED lady wishes to J Bedrm. family rm, 1 % share 2 bedroom Costa bath!. Ii.replace. New paint Mesa apartment with same. inside &: out. Boat door, lge One child OK. 557-9796 after patio, assume low intere1t. t :o'o0p=.m=. =--~-~ Vacant . SECI''Y Wants: girl over 21 BRASHEAR REAL TY 1o """ apt, Ioq, Jo E. 847-8007 Eves: 642-0421 18th, No. 4, C.M. i.tt 6 BEAUT. l.c'r. l Br. J Ba. 180 De2J'ee Ott-8.n view. Yr1y. lse. $500 Mo. Ai\. 6'JS.-5930 Coron• del Mar 3250 LARGE 3 Br, 2 Ba, South of hwy, Avail MS¥ 1st $325 mo. lease. 675-3595 * SUBURBIA. 2 Bednn + ram. Like new cond. A..,,_ sume kiw int loan, $20,IXXJ * LA BONNIE VIE. Prime ~!!fl; Joe • frplc & compl crt1td. A» Will trade. submit. SZ!.900 • I.TT CO.. FHA VA Ivan Welts' new 4 Bedrm, 3 BA , + pwd r rm home, Dov- er Shores. Panelled fam rm w/[rplc & wet bar, sunken )iv rm. Lge kitc hen w/brkfll l area. Secluded swi m pool in walled-in garden. Make your dream come true! Roy J . \Yard Realtor 14.10 Galaxy Dr. 646J550. Open Daily. or for everyday Living, thio; ]-Bdrm. + small conv. den. Immaculate! Many SW'Prisc features. Lot zoned for an- other unit. Priced in low $30'11. MORGAN REALTY :Wll E_ Coast Hwy., CdM 613-6642 675-0459 Honeymoon Cott•g• PM $16,500 Full e rlce WORKING girl wishes to tdral for a starter home !or .whare. Bay Vitow apt. wi!h newlywed!!, Why pay rent aame. $50 monthly. 615--4399 when you can OWN your or 673--4651 Huntington Beech 3400 2 BR Condo. Crpts, drps, bltrn!, rerrig, wahr/dryer. P atio. Pool. Adullll. (7141 962-6828, (2131 373-33211. *CAPE HUNTINGTON. 2 or 1093 Baker, C.M. 546-5440 l Bedrm, spoUess l!l?nd· t :::i:=i:=i:=i:=i:=i:=i:=i:=CJ Sperkllng 3 ~drm EAST· 4 BR EASTSIDE May lease/option. $26,995 1 i SIDE home with new <:rpts. ean """" UNDA ISLE • .,,,. 1re;h1y paiotro '"''"' Assum" rnA loan on thl"I PANORAMIC VIEW sharp Eastside home, Large 2001 Bayside Dr. Beaut. comer lot interior recenlly shake roof l·sty. 3 Br. 4 ba. ttdeeorat~. Total pymnts ~terfront home, xlnt swi~ own. W&J1her, dryer and re-·w~~ANT=o--, -..,-,~king~. -.. ~.,~,-lo-,~,,.,.­ frigerator are included, be· Balboa Island born* with lleve it or not, and only 5 same. m2383 anytime. years old. Call now befor.. ROOMMATE (strairht) to J t'!! gone. LOW DOWN FHA NEW LISTING CAMEO SHORES Exceptional view from th is lovely 3 BR. 3 Ba., formal d in, rm. home, with guesl BR. I: sep, fam. rm. Beaut pool area. $89.500. 833-11700 644-2430 Beautiful 5 bedroom home with dining room: 4% baths. One of the several fine hom· es & lots that we have avail. abfe on Linda Isle. $150,(XK) MACNAB-IRVINE Realty Company &. out. Firm price $23,950. Call 545-3424:. <7141 642-1235 LEASE OPTION !<ll Dow" Dri•~. S"i" 1'0 11141 61S-:1210 OR SALE 1060 Bfl.yi!lde Drl~, Suite m Sharp. newly painted, 3 ~- r-.c\vport Beach room, 2 bath home. Island "'::::::::::::::=: -:=::=:=:==::J kitchen, le.rge: family room. $206 mo. Allking ming beach. Newly redceor. $27 950 llo.'IOO SHOWN BY APPT. term!! available. share 3 BR 2 BA, yearly • Bill Grundy, Reeltor PERRON 642-1771 8l3 Dover Or., N.B. 642-4620 WE SELL A HOME Nowport Boh. -1458 LIDO SANDS . 3 Bedroom1 2 Baths, built-ins $26.500 George Willi•mson REALTOR 673-4350 645-1564 Eves. EVERY 31 MINUTES , BR. ' ... ""i lam. rm. Walker & Lee JUNE 1o Nov. FUrn. "'""' 2 ftplc's. pool. Blt from No pell °" c hi Id re n . 2100 pr1v. bch In ShOtt Clill!!. Realtors A --" ref 5~.-,.:, loon, Will take back 7682 F.clinger p~ ..... ~ erencet only "A" ~140 M2-4.C5S S200 mo. 2146 c.ontae. CM Irr 2nd. ~.500. 838-1345 ,,...,.., ='==''=o--=="====-==============c 12 BR.. pr., -petio, Quiet tropical setting 1or adultt. 1 blk ahops. i185. 5"-0C52. 2000 1100 s~~}l-J&t.~s· • iii 55' covered patio with briclc EXCEi.LENT BBQ tor o"ldoor pl•uure. Coal• Mes• Balbo• l1lancf 2355 Easy care yard. 129,500. Price, Term:;;, Location, Flonr 546-23.13 GORGF.OUS <I br. 1900'. Elec Plan. Hurry on. spacious 5 kit. din/lam. 3 tiled ba. "* Th~ Puzile with the Built-In Choci.le Bedrm. 2 Bath with shake Lush crpt, pat, lnclscpc, rm roof. h~rdwood nncN'll. bit. for boat S32,!00. ~76 -0 =~""""~ :: ins. $32,150. No down VA or TNH . 3 br. 21' ba.. all eJtt, law iO fonri four ti,.i. wcwds. CHARMING 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. 3n Amethyst. Summer $250 per week Sept. yearly Jeue $350 per mo. R.etponsibl~ quiet family (714) 799-4856. low down FtlA. Owner mov-pool. af'Pl Incl . a~me MESA VERDE log "''' • mwt "'"' Call Bock B•y Vl•w Home 5%'1' '°'"· '"'·""· o"'. r 1UDSI P I 1248 COLORADO LN. 54Q-ll51 for aJI details. Heri. F'abulowt $0 .. view of pro. 549-2037 1, ·.1 I' I I I tagc Real Estate. pGeed UC J. J'OWft'« coun;e . . _ _ _ _ $30, 950 -:::::=:==:=:=:=::I mou11ta~· ~ the univoer: INDUS. 2 hr hm, ~tet . ri«t10 Summer R•nt•lt 2910 FHhlon•ble Bluffo 3 BR. 2 bath Townfiowte. Avail., Furn., Junt lst to Sept lat. $150 Per Month. IMMEDIATE occupancy. 2 Br. 11,~ Ba. $225 mo. 84:z....4.156 or 847~992 3 BR, twnhse, elec wshr I dryr I refr I stove, Crpt•. drps, pool fac. $11!0. 962-4167 Laguna Beach 3705 4 BR, 2 Ba, l )'l'IJ old, b'UUI· Ins, carpcia, drapes. $295. 8J3.<!192 RENTALS Aptt. Fuml1Md General 4000 REMARKABLY UNBELIEVABLY EXTRAORDINARILY BEAcmFUL Val D'iaere Gerden Apta Putting iJ"en, waterfall It stream, ftOWttS ever)'\Vhen!, 45' poo!, rec. room, billiards, BBQ'a, Sauna, tum.-unfum, l & 2 Br, alJIO SlnelN lrom Sll5, See lt! 2:!00 Panona Rd .. 642-8610. Bcl~n Har- bor 4 Newport . 2 Blk N. 191 h RENT FURNITURE Immaculate 4 Br, 18mily " sity, Lo'wefll price' 4 l flUJI· & fru it IN'C!I. $28,95Cl. }'rank I susoe I room, 2 fireplaces. carpeted, It's Poot Tlmtl Uy rm in EutbluU. Marsl\all Really. 675-4Eill0. 1-T-T-..,......,,....t J{ draper &-shUners. Covered In Meaa Verde • lovely bi& I I I I' pntio, built·iM, lovely land-• Bednn +detached tamlly &s.-saeo M••• Del Mer 1105 _ sea.ping with dwarf troit room A: dioirc.rm. il •rk· ._. ..... ~-Assume 5%% VA or linii pool. Only 101:' down. GERE.ALU BBIAC. 4 Br, erpta, dzi>I, I COSlT 11 mw VA or F1lA ok. Asking $46,900, ,._ .. ...,... ldeal I a n d s ca p I n c 4 • A MW' father wo.s tokf ht'd Owoer 546-4399 ~ 545110 • ...,, ........ 843 Somra. C.M. • I I I I"'' bocome th• lolhor of l-Int. G.I. L .. n ---$28,500 MoH Verde 1110 •lp~lt. Ho IX<lolmod, '1 luo! f~ l Rooms h'Om i19.95 Month to mooth R<otal• WIM. Selection 1009io PlJRO{ASE OPTION 24 hr. Odlvcry 2414 Vista Del Orn Cuwtom Furnlttn Renlal •. di-~-~-.,_ -·-'"'""l " .... loan, ,,,_ NEW HOUSE L-,_,..,...,...,._ .... -1-... ,_,_ ... ~~ -! 1l<drm, 2 ..... blm ..... OU£GEREALTY Assum• 51/4% I HOPctlfl I"'"'' bolt..o mr-· ,.t • """"· ~·--· ~--.. , r I : I' I' I ~ ---~. crpti, dJ'PA. IMkt-$2 950 Mii, huae tam_ rm., 2 tin-· J;' BY OWNER _ _ _ _ bJ t.lllno 111 ._ ~...., roof etc. $28.167. "11th au11m. 4, places, built-in11. Plll'k like 3 DR-, 2 BA. 'tnutSferT'Cd. ¥0W......, trow*"' HD. Wow. IL~ G.l_ tot.n. Qulek ~ • BDRM.~FAMILY RM. y11.rd. M0.1720 $33.!DJ. A1111ume F11A 8~ e f'llNT Nl.MM:RfO LfTTfRS IN I' $Cs&\on1 OWNl:R DESPERATE TARBELL 295S Herbor Joan . 3321 C&litornla St. THESE SQUARES _ WellJ.oMcCardlt, Rltrs. BcautJtul hOmc, pride of own. 2 DBL. GARAGESI ,,"'~'=·6608,_·_,....,,,..-.,...,~-,.,, A. UNSCtAMllf ABOVE Uff(IS I 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M_ enhlp. 23 ft. llvinc nn., fire-lmmac. t br + Wn,, ftrl!-COZY A: CleAn ( BR .• 1a• ., TO GET ANSWI' - 548-1'129 644.-0684 Evts. visce. buJ11.1~. M0-1721 place, cul-dwac. $33.!SOO. ba. ~4,700. 346-TJOB. Prine. rrrrr1 I I I I I I Newport Beach M4-Ul3 51'1 W, 19th, CM, ~1 LOVELY LJOO SA NO S 1568WLlna>ln,Anhm'n4-2800 HOME l blk l-0 bd>! Bdrm 2 IR • 2 IA L. ______ _.. __ Wh_t_1e_Ei_""'4~-"1ST_. __ . TARBELL 2955 Herbor VA-TUA. A(t. G'l!54M9. _o_oJy'--'-oJ-,._"-'---- 2 Ba Pool July SDJ wk Pum-UnfUm. mt.Jn• lnc1ud- Aui $230 wk. 5105 8l'U<.'ll inll tlls hw11.,her &: rcf'Mg. Alr Crncenl. M&-&404 Newport corid. Dining nn. Swimmln1 Bch. pool, Pool tablit. Only S IPll f/ DELUXE ll 8R. Apl , In t1l1npltx_ Nr. Dtsnf!)'land. 611 5-9115, i375 rno. 20.\8 Sprqut!, t.lgr, Apt t. \Vf!1lclilf aft.A. 64i-&214 ~. 1 ~ I l I ~ I j I • ,-·-···-------·-··-----~--·~---~··~--------------------------------·- .. I' , : D.111.V PILOT ""'dif, M11 4, 1~70 ~ -ttEl(fALS RENTALS J RENTALS RENTAi.$ R E NTALS ' 1 •.--*--.. *--*--·*--• llEAL l!STAT! BUSINESS •nd FINANCIAL l-'-'Apll,=;...;P_;v.;.m...;l;.;.sltod;;.:.-.,-J Ai>f., Fiimlsltod:;:...._ Apt1. Unfum~-Apia. Unfumlthetl Apll. Unfumlthetl 0-r•I -Newport leoch 4200 Costa MH• 5100 'Co1t1 Mo.. 5100 HunllnvtGft luch 5400 " 1t G1n1r•I ·=--~- Commwcliil 60IS Bu1lnes1 Opportunlti11 Single "Adults ,, ' t.Uxury lin&l•,..'1 • 2 bed· room ~tli. lumis:h· ed and untumtshed, wiU1 complete privacy aM Jand.. S • A2~· country dub atJnos. pOO:o . 1"c)udio& $750,000 \Wrth o~ recreaUonal facll· itiea diaigned an..;, operated I just !or 5in&'1' people. . Rents From $145 to $300 Imtnt'diate Oceupancy f\fo. to f.Io. Lea.re Avail. ANAHEIM . 277 So. BrookhUNt (1 blk. So. of Lincoln)" tn4l 772-4500 Newport IN;<h GRAND OPENING ' IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Luxury gardeii apartment. oUerlng complete prl\-acy, beautiful landscaping I: unparalleled recrtatlonal facilities in a country dub atmosphere. Now leasing in Newpo~t Beath. ?.·lodels open 10 am to 8 pm Rents from n35-$310 ' Furnished or unfurnished Elegant Living , .. Jner.rimac :woods Lu1h .. lend1~apin9 wfi 35' Pine fre111 1parldin9 wat1rfall1, 'bubbling 1tream1 & 11r1n1 ponds ma ke ~1rrimec Woods the.place to live. Th eso 1. & 2 BR, 2 BA, furn. or unfurn. apts feature a1r-cond, s1lf.cl1anin9 ovens, beam ceilings di11lwash1rs, priv. gar•g• w/1tora91, 1l1vo1tors: toa• therapeutic :pool, swim po.ol, BBQ's, s aunii s & e lovely clubhouse w/1ocial a ctiviti1s. Adults ple111. From $145-$2 10. ON BEACH! . e SINGLES FRCM $140 e J Bk 1%, BA l'ROM $22$ e 2 BR 2 h J"ROtd S260 • 3 BR 2 BA 1!RCM l3Q) ~--· heated pooMaun&.tennia rec room-ocean. vtews- patlow.mple parkln£, Security ....... .!'URN. al*> Avail. HUN..-iNGTON PACIFIC 7ll OCEAN AVE .. H.B. (llf). $!6.l<ST >.,, • Whoddy1 Wint? Whaddya Got? SPICIAI: CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Spod1I Rite .-S'Unn-5 tlmM-5 budn --ltut.11 -AD MUtT INCLUDE J-WW f9ll ...., lrt ...... ~et rllU want ti '""" NEAR Hu-·-· u-~r. ""'YOU• .,.._. •lllllr "*"" •~ lne:• ., edwrtt.11\e. ..... .,....,.. ~ ..... """ '-NOTMIHCJ felt SALe -tltAOSS ONl'l'I Triplexes. Quiet U,a. Lrg To Jtl1ce Your Trecfer'a Par1diM M 1 & 3 BR. 111-0 & up. Peu, PHONE 642-567t MARINA ID N~rt Beo._ch, Prime loc. Ji'ee ~ $3lS.OOO Exel. Ktacaa.rd, R.E. Ml ·2-2222. children ok. (2'13) 59Z-2623, $1 000 FJbregla.s Dune B H <n4) 8f6..3559 , . U&~ ave commercial Size wa. * * * * '* * Moneu to LOln '32Q &Y. stret:t Jegal, big tires, ter softener, used l year, New 3800 sq ft. • $383 • ---- CHEZ ORO Apts. 8234. Atlan-inany extru. Trade for late Gem top, tra.nsporta~n Ne..,.,.,..rt Beach "A"J~ 1 t JD l ta New ].z.3.. BR. priv. model VW or ?? Capo Sch car. \Vant used camper or .. ..,.... vi-'ftH S ' oa n garages. Pool. U .ti I l t y 1 ~4'6-55,.-''-12"".~-----VW. 6424424 lots 6 IOO Oakwood rooms. % Acre Country Estate 3 l!t REAL ESTATE con-Lowest lnterEd Available 536-8038 or 53&.2'127 Br, 2 ba, 18x36' pool, hOrs-tracts (2) $U50 prili balance -2nd TD l a 5100 Newport Beach 5200 G d HUNTINGTON Bay C.Ondo. es OK or units in rear. Paymeoti $300 quarterly , CdM • 0 n GARDEN GROVE ar en FAIRWAY • NOW RENTING • Adults. 3 BR. \Vshr/dryr, $20,000 eqWty. Want iOC.Ome final Apr ·n Trade late 11»-l6; B1k. Beach, 2 adJ. R-1 . Terms based on ' ity " ; ~.. moo Chapman A\'e. Beaut. new 2 Br, 2 bath units ~~185. 536-2 212 , property or ? Call 531-7636. del car/truck ?? 67S.1D47. ~ an Inc. hse, Agt, 642•2171 :°>Odil 1 (I blh IV. Santa Ana Fwy.) Apartments VILLA APTS w/qual, <P1'. & drps. Plan-Newport Beach Full Family '65 Dodgo 6 cyl, Honky-tonk ~ Serving HarbOI' area 21 ,, .. 1 !'1 ( 714 ) 6J6.J030 , ned for privacy plus outside NEW 1 ijR.-blk to beach. Tennis Club Membership. piano w/1luor. keys. Tape Vl~V Lot R·l Laguna Beach Sattler Mortgage Co. ;1700 16th Street liv. areas, pool &: rec, facil. $130. Prl patio • QUIET? WiU 1rade fo'r motorcycle or recorders & \\'alkie-talkies, s~ ~-. ft., paved .1~et, 336 E 17th Street NEWPORT BEAie-H Private patio, pool .. ind.iv. Dbl. garages. Jn the heart Gar, single adllll, couple. land. $700 value, lrade tor what have you.,., all util. me. xlnt bldg. &le. ~=--·------t ! "" 7!4: 642•8170 ~ laundry lac. ot Npt, Bch. w/easy acceia 3Yl A 14th. 5.16-1319, 613-1784. Call 546-0357 ~6':::5-0077~~,-,-~=-·~·l=O=nl'=y"'$9500==· ;642--0='l.18:;·==I ANNOUNCEMENTS "( 880 IR.VINE AVE. Near Orange-Co, A,irpor1 & 10 shopping, beach, h'YS. 7 BR apt ,.,.,......ts dra-s Want small remote -ntrol ·1~1 and NOTICES IRVINE AND 16th U ·• ~..-' ,,.. ' ... v ave 1967 Jet"p FC-170 4 Acree 6200 --·----- 1 ~'. (TI 4 ) 645-0550 BACHELOR, 1 & 2 BR. <or CL Adults only. $250 lo $300. · dish"•asher, across from TV. \Vill exehange $300 \vheel drive P.U. $750 Val--~e Found (Free Ads ) 6400 I .. ~.-) ~ d BOYD REAL TY MUrdy park. $145 mo. equity in 1!4 acres near ue. \I/ant wide bed P .U. 2~~ Ac:res by~.-.,, Utllilies- i-l .·~s wuui.u • ...... ts, rps, patio, 20122 Santa Ana A"• 64•14· 17 67'5930 °'0 <•17 ~' S · · Bal v"" FOUN l G • So·..._ Bay Club pool, ·bltns. $14D-$1BS. ~ · .... ~ O'tl>"'"v.> c-';;'m pnogs. . payable or van . near running water & Gou DL N , ,sweet, urn Seacll.ff Manor Apts, 1525 t.fgr, r.trs .. Bruce S45-38!M 2 BR. N ~ W · paint, crps, 2 BR. $155 w/ 1 ·yr lease l15 mo. 536-ll31 494-0386 after 6 PM Course. $950 dn. $14,900. ~ovablt', med-sz, needs lov- Apartmltnts Placentia,,~N~Bo..____ drp.s, relrig avo.il, Nr. beach. $150. Patio, pool. 1~) ba. '83 Rambler Conv 6. OD WJU. TRADE lO irrigated l21J) 782-2727 lll~ home. would 1 _o v e =-Vacant & Clean )T rnd. $725. no pell! 557·8400 81Bl Garfield. 962-8994 ooor shift for travel trlr acres in Hemet w/3 rentals ch1ld1-en 10 play w 1th. HOLIDAY PLAZA MESA MOTEL _ _,___ IDINT~GTQN Bay Condo. boat & motor on trtr,·P.u'.. for Orange County Jncoine Resort Property 6205 Healthy & happy, 54$-4572 ! OEWXE, Spacious 1 Bdrm *LOW WEEKLY RA'I'rn * Spacious 3 Bedrm, 2 bath Newport Heights 5210 Adults. 3 BR:-WShr}-dryr. car auto-trans camper. $450 p1'0perty BLACK_L~·hlte mutt? .par;t I 1· •· :ta~ed a~.$l!p1!'~: ~~~~ ~~· maid seivice. =~s~~tb ~P~~~7t·:Piri!; $160-Triplex. 2 BR, 2 BA, Pool. $1!5. 536-2712, 67:>-6806 ;a1:;tstrd~::Yd;:.z-: __ c.u_._m_o_962_·_256_I -I B~~:!d. !o~~~l4 ~~~ :;: =~a ~ell-~e f~ to;:!·:· No chlldren -no pets. 646-9681 havin& your own home! Call . ~riv. P6~io~708gu,,blw5 • """'· ;S;•;;•';;•;;;An;;;•;;;;;;;;:;;5;6;;20; I zoned lot, clear. Val. $40M. List it here -in Orange ~~ kit. l& baths. lBlln, c,"::."".c"',=,.::':.· ------1965 Pomona. C.M. ER •-r '"la"·. "'"''<l rp.s. ,....., at .,,. \Vhat 0-0 -u ha·-•• trad 1 um c eaner sys em,1~FOUND CHATEAU LA POINTE e \VABINTBEY RREENTALTALSY e w "" ....., ..........._ =~--==-====°'=""'= ...., acres, equity Si:JM. Trade .·v • ., .... e crptg, drps, ne\v Rock . blac_k poodle, in. Newport Shores 5220 VILLA MARSE-Ill ES for boat/R.E, Ddiing Rlty, Couoty'1 1arJrffi read trad· Maple dln'g set, new living ]Uted on Jrv1ae Ave, about Lovely 2 Br FW'n Apt. Pool •&12-3850e EL CORDOVA • BRAND NEW 714/ 686-7161. lDi post -air.I make a deal. rm furn. trost-tree re frig., 8 mos old. 54~1389. l, ~~~naAd~~1 no pets.LAR '~~G~E-l:_Bdnn;,:;:.=.,..:..::..,~O<e-an. ~t:lnd 1 ne; ~e~ apts, gpac-2 BR, 7 BA Duplex nr ocean SPACIOUS 'A * * * * * dshwti.r, selJ-cleani,ng oven. BLK. short hair dog, Jge . '. ' -~-~::.·_:_·;_:_,· ---1 $150 nv>yearly, Students ious, r, .swimming v.·fw crptg, drp5, bltns: 1 & 2 Bdrm. Ae_ti. J!J!!!!'!!!!!!!!!i!!'!J!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!l~!!!!!~!!!!!J!!!'!'!~~!!!!!!i!I House less than 2 yrs_ old. male, youtig, nr La Paz Rd. ~ ' •. U'g ~ction of Apls. OK. 673-8088.. ::'u!1::~· i~~;::: $185-Yrly lse. 218 Cedar Adult living REAL ES rATE. RF.At ESTA1'E-ldved In t,wk!!ds onll°'.. Sell \Veil behaved, Eve, 495-0262 tJt! ~~~c!'7n~M~ $~~-ON BAY -Near-Lido. 1 them at 'lJJ77 Charle, ma.nag-Furn. &. Unfum. General General for conside,!"<lbly lesS-thail BLACK & white Bunn,y, BR. private patio. $185. Eart Bluff 5242 DlshW-uhtt. Color coordlnat-. cost at 145,000. Call 114: C.Orona del Mar area. . !\."' mooring avail. 673-6450. ~6-~f. & Louise Sellers, PRESTIGE LOCATION ed appliancH .. plush lhag .Rent.tis Wanted 5990 Income P roperty 6000 540-lS6 7 wkdys. Owner. 673·0935 CLEAN l & 2 BR. l..rg kit, BA YFRONT For lease, deluxe 1888 sq. ft. carpet -. choice of 2 color R E W ted 6240 HALF grown part German ( f--$6-N-IG_H_T_l._U_P_ Adults. m peU. $135-$150. 4 BR, 21ii BA apt. Frplc, scbeme.s • 2 baUus -stall M.D. family 'vantll 2 or 3 E-SIDE 3 Br + 2 Apls.J--· -·--·-·-----Shepherd female. Vie. ! $JO WEEK .. Up 2'121 E. l6thSt., 646-1801. 2 BR, 2 BA Luxury Apts. drapes, crpts, wet bar, pri ~be doo_n::... mirrored• ,_,.,.:,_ 1 ~~· Br -home Newpt Hgts or $27,QOO..assume I;\_~ Joan. Responsible Party Harbor-High Sehl. 6'2-32TT Cost.1 Mesa 4100 2 BR. fl]:>lc, pool, prden PriOJ. terrace, elevators, sub. balconies, dbl gar oU kitchen :: .. 1n ki.~t'cbe:"':"~id;; be&ch area 1-3 Y1 lease or !~· ~1~7Q mo. Ownerfbkr. Wants to Buy · LARGE, honey colored pup. ~ ~10 &. 1 BEDROOMS type. $195, no lease req'd. terranean pk'g, All elec, dsbwhr, dbl oven. Pool. Conv ...... may buy andfor option. 21 .=~::==:~'=:::======:ol liouse or income property Call & tdentify. 642-2869 TV &: Kitchenettes incl. 543-9974 or 6.f4--0504. Pool. soft water, docks. 3121 to !ihop'g Schhl A recreation. bat -huge private feDced school children, dog. P.O. On or near water ~ Linens & maid ser avail f .:;========= I \V. Coast Hwy, Newport. Only $3SO mo. patio • plush Iaiitlscaptng • 2.~'<0~:!~ Napa, Cal. (W7J Business Rental 6060 For low down paymt lost 6401 :· Children& & pet section Coron.1 del MAr 4250 1642. -~221!2:::!'.C-,,----~~-I 835 Amigos Way, .NB 'brick Bar-B-Q's. taree heat· "=~..."C::,------from Owne r ~.. 376 NEWPORT BLVD. 12-BR u tur N 1 d :r.1 Jct d 865 A · ed pools & Janat. COUPLE wisheis ro · rent C II 6 •. 541-9755 --------- 1 · n n. ewy ec. gr, ne oor migos, 3101 .So. Bristol St. clean room w/kit. priv. or HILLGREN SQUARE a : 7S.1575 LOST: Ladies gold •:. SPAC. Attrac. Pool. Ulil Pd. BAc,:HEµ>R apt, all util :~csrp~dt~ ;!~~ 5fi~~ TOWNHOUSE -New lrg. (',i Ml. N. of So. O>a.-:t Plaza) housekeeping room, Mr. 2 stores avail. f~.· immed. BUSINESS anCS \\Tistwatch, vie Sea Shanty Garden Llvint. l Br. $145 paid, '65 mo. li'rl-3315, 317 . • . -. 2 BR, 2~ Baths, frplc, encl Santa An.1 .Fretman 642-4498, Box lease in one or city's busiest FINANCIAL or Reuben E. Lee, NB. &: up, adullli, no pets, 2 Larkspur, CdM. ' ~.:~= F~u::i~n :.ay OE~ gar. patio. 6~5033 PHONE: 5574200 .Pl.05, Daily Pilot shopping centers. App, 850 • Re~:ard! 536-7579 or ' • ' FURN bach. apt. female on· \Vil.son). Wil60n Gardens 2 BR. trplc. Attess to pool. "'"""""""'"""""""""' -"'=-'==~==== sq. ft. ea. Business 644-2066 eves . : ~~ !~~·t ~t~ ;~~: Jy, S95. utl paid, no cooking. Apts. ' Adull3. $200 mo. 548--6477 or CAN'T BE BEAT Rooms for Rent 5995 250 E .• 17th St., Costa 1\Tesa Opportunities 6300 SIAl\IESE female, red collar. 1 Ave & 740 \V, 18th St., 675-8815 l·B~R=-AN=D~· -,.,-w---,-XCJ~-,-;,-g-l 644-5516 Call l\lr. Bram (213) OL 1·27(0 * CAf.IERA SHOP Pri Vlc. Seavie1v & Poinsettia, ' CM 1 BR. Blk Oc:e~Bay. tl'pl, CHE --N · ~e CdM. 4 Unhappy children. . !," . ..,ii;;;· iOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOi..., Br, beam ceilgs, ihg crptg, Corona del Mer 5250 Single :Story ERFUL Room I:. bath Office Rentel ewport Beach shopping No questions asked Reward 1 • patio, lndry. 1 adult. no panl'g, !rplc, priv patio, overlooking ocean $70/wk. 6010 center. Est. 5 ~ • xlnt Call 673-3452 · · Furnished Apts. pet. $155 yrly. 673-7629 pool, rec, • bid;:, s a,n d Soulh Sea Atmosphere Nicely decorated quiet bldg, income, $6000 + inventory =~-'--ccc.c· -~-- Vil LA POMONA $95 Bachelor. Refrig & hot voUeybaJI crt. Adults, no sundeck&kltchenpriv.1289 DELUXE 1·2 or 3 rm. suite* AUTOl\fATIC LAUNDR0:GER .. SHEP. femal~~ • ' • . ' ' : . ' ! from $140. pla~. lncludes util'.s. Nr. pets. $140. 387 w. Bay. -2 Bedroom 2 Baths S. Coast Hwy, Laguna nr. Orange County Airport ~fAT, Fully equip. min bl~/~ver, 8 mos. old Vic ADULTS ONlY, NO PETS. Bch. Call 673-1963 646-0013, 673-7629 ,a."'?-~_ ea.,,.i. & Drape• Beach. <M-0017 & !.-vine Industri al ''"'' In""°'""" High Fau·v"w & S, D. -way. ALL MODERN AMENlTIES :::;;::::======= BRAND New _ Exciting 2 • ~· , LARGE -Clean. Priv. Ba, Complex. Carpel, drapes, traffic Joe. Sll,5001=546-=.,54..c83c,------- 1760 Pomona. Costa Mesa Balbo.I 4300 Br, beam ceilgs, shg crplg, Air Conditioned Close tD bch. Respectable music, air-conditioning & *OPERATING LAUNDRY, RWD! Sm. brn. shl·haired \V. of Nwpt. betw 17th &: 18th I----------pan'lg, priv patio, pool, rec, ON TEN ACRES Privale Patios mature . gent. $70 mo. janitorial seivice. Available Husband/wile business • dachshund.terrier, ma I e, i BAYFRONT: 1 BR It Lrg bldg, sand volleyball crl l le 2 BR. Furo le Unfum 962-4033-aft5. Maylst. high income. Health fore: ''S-kash t '•. 545-5698 ; 2 BEDROOMS. Spac i ous BacbelQl'. J\lature Adult.8. Adults, no pets. $lGS. 387 Fireplaces I prlv, patios I Jleated Pool $l5 PER wk up ,vfkitchen BOB PETTIT. Realtor es sale. $10,900 Paularino & Baker. '. •• rooms. New· 1 u r n·I tu re, S750 & $225. 507 E. Balboa '::V.o;B;::ae<y::. ;646-0073;;,;:::;~'"":::::':::'29::... Pools. Tennis • ContDt'l BIWt., $30 wk up a.pis, $6 per • 83.1-00.01 • * TACO SI. High volume, GOLD earrings Vic Harbor ' l Carpet. Brick isnack bar. BI A ':"-ACTtvE 2 'BR 1 , 900 ~1~ Ll.Jle, CdM 6'4-26ll Plenty of la\11n night & up. Motel, 548-9755 fan~s.tic Ioc. lttin, down to &: Adams. C.M. 'Reward, lt Beau'tiful' kitchen. Children vd. 6'13-Q!80• Realtor • •n. • crp s, .;<~Mj"ji~ii!if!hur~nr!ii. °"jj~"!!Hii!wy~)l I Modern Offices qoaldied buyer. $16,000 Sentimental valu. 540-0077 1:-small pets welcome. 351 1 BR, util pd. $125 mo. drps. Pvt patio. Nice ~ Carport & St!)rage COLLEGE or working girl. $75 single. $175 2 rm suite. * L~CH STAND, Easy op.. aft 6. - •... • • < I ' -~ . ' Victoria. Apt No. 1 Adults, no pets. 310 E. neighborliood. $1'15. 2 7 71 SUPER PAD! Plush, cozy 1-IJDDEN VILLAGE Bal, Isle. Kit. & 1V rm. Air cond. Sect'y service, erahon _ waterfront Joc . .J~.-=~~~----* WEEKLY ·'* Balboa Blvd., Balboa. Pomona Ave. 962-5721 1or l BR apt nr beach, Crpts, GARDEN APTS incl. $55 mo. 6T:>-3613. parking, eentrally located. 0111ner will train G 0 0 d LOsr Male Basset. 9 mo's Lovely apt, Bachelor!: or --app\. frple., balcony, stv I reir. :zsoo South Salta LARGE rm in Mesa Verde So. Calif 1st Nat. Bk. Bldg. terms. ' $-1950 ~ =3wbite, Reward! cpls. Furnishings compl. t -L_ido_l_s_le ____ 4_3_51 HARBOR GREENS $700 mo. util pd. 673-196.l Santa Ana * 546-1525 home, priv bath. patio, 230 E. 17th Street Call 545-8424 -"'==-""=·-~~--I Kitchenettes. $35 wk-payis 1 BR. Util paid, Garage. GARDEN &: SI'UDlO APTS * l Bdrm unfurn apt. noo Semi·priv. entr. 545-0138 Costa Mesa 642.1485 GIRL'S Stingray bike. Pur- all. 998 El Camino Dr. 1 adult. No pets. $I7a mo, Bach. I, 7, 3 BR's. from $110. mo. Call btwn 9 am4 l lag~ Beech 5705 * ROOM for rent, ~liable DESK SPACE pie w/white basket • 546-()451 yearly. 673--0837 eves. 1700 Peterson Way, C.1'1. pm, ~40 -~-non·d'rinking man. Sl!i wk. Rewan:I! S7S.5525 SPAC. ·2 Br, w/w c-·~. l-'=";==:::=:=::::==54~""3,,.c~'":.....-~-----~=========I ./ OCEAN v 1 E \V. Lrg. 64.&-6010 222 Forest Avenue LOST: Shephen! &. part ,,..., = BalbN 5300 Bachelor, 1 & 2 BR apts. Colr f maJ G -•- newly painted. l\tod. furn. Huntington Beach 4400 BEAUT. 3 Br, 71,; Ba studio. Furn ntur c c1rp PRIVATE room &. bath, en· Laguna 1Beach ie, e e. ray """'r. bkar, walk to stores. I child Bltns, new crtps. drps & bltns,0r;1atios~· ::~·kin~ tr, patio, $65 mo. 'IM-9466 AfIICliaAtoNDY SUPPLY Vie. l&h St .. C.M. S4!J..6215 o . No pets. $134 . 50. J'!EW l BR·blk to ~ach, 1>8.int. Absolute bargain! UNFURN.-BALBOA distance to town. 100 Oill l~,--*754~>'-24"86:,...::C.::·'.::'·-.*-549-3643. 646-5961 $150. Pri patio • QUIET! Sl8D. 998 El Camino Dr. Ne\v, Lower duplex, 2 BR, 2 * OFFICE SUITE ROUTE Par1onals 6405 Gar, single adlts,' couplo. b N Drive, Lag. Bch. Empt Man-Sleeping Rm. F I .......... l Id al 2 BR, 2 Ba, sunken living ~2 54&-0451 a. & den. ear ocean. $15 \\'k. In Quiet Horne. or ~ase "uw sq, I. e (No selling involved) T G J · p,) A 14th, 536-1319, 673-1784 .;:..;;....:.=~~----$350 Month 1 or 2 BR for rent or lse, 548--0!11. Costa Mesa location, downtown Laguna E.xcellent income for few om GWft8, r. room. frpl, balcony, no sml 2 B • BARGAIN • B Be h Real 1 w/w eptg, drps, OCf:an view, .,,,=~-='--"'""'"''""--Beach C td · nd Sell children $180 mo. Avail May R. Adults only. UUl pd. Beaut. 2 Br, 1~~ ba Studio ay & ac ty nc. FuRN. Room for rent. . ' rp ' ~tr -co · hours weekly work. (Days 8 ·t~. 1255 Baker. :>10--0896 BeauL . Quiet. $200. 17616 apt. Bltn.s. new crpts, drps. 9Jt Dover Dr., Suite 126 NB undergrnd pkg, close to very bi ho 1 . Janitor. Utll. Priv dual rest. and Everungs). Refilling and New & used ears & trucks eves & wknds. Cameron. 84U12l locked gate for security, 998 645-2000 Eves. 646-6001 nice beach. 494-9633 or re f gS7s tp ~~f· GII'l nn fac, 494-9481 collecting money from coin at Connell Chevrolet CUTE I BR. NeY.·ly pa;nt-'. · ;;E';lojCf,amjjjh>0fi'Pr.C.f'54fi.-04"i;'i5l~iR I ~~~~~~~~ 494-7447 l\fr. Brach. pre · mo. • DESK SPACE operated dispensers in Qr. 2828 Harbor, C.M. 546-1200 . = l.~ouna 'Belch 4705 Huntington Beach 5400 REAL. ESTATE PRIVATE ROOM w/bath. angc Co. and sunounding The preceeding wu a paid Attrac. furn. WaJk to 1-=cc...:..__;..;.;:_ __ _;_;.;; * DELUXE 1 & 2 BR G Private Entrance. H.B. Call 117 875 Beach Blvd, area. we establish route. salemnan .survival advertise. Harbor Shpg center. Adults, 1 BR Apt; also sleeping rms. Garden Apts. Bit-ins, prlv . ATJ'R.AC, 2 BR. Sl35. All eX-1.....c:.e::n;;e:.:•::.•:..I _____ 962-8578. t N .,,. 50 "' . -=====,;::=== rluntington Be•ch {Handles name brand candy,_m"'•-·..,· -..,,~-=---() pet!., .., ... • .... 9-3643. Utll pd. Free TV & radio. · patio, heated pool, frplc. tras. Now avail. Kids ok. Rentalt Wanted 5990 ---u nd b) $1 ,~ ~a961 2200 So. Coast Hwy. Adults. Sl4S mo. 546-5163 17401-A Keelson Ln, H.B. Motels, Trailer 642-4371, Ext 276 a snac • 62S.OO cash Single-Widowed-Divorced $30 PER WK. & UP Bachelor or Single apts, La-2 BR, l Y.s B.a Studio. Crplg, 1::'"8-~1;:510~,:...";:.;.7·;.;;744;:.'::.· ~~= RENTAL SERVICE Courts 5997 CORONA DEL MAR ~~· ~~ ~~· * MEN * Bachelor & 1 BR, htd pool, guna Sch. Low Wee.kfy Rat-Cl.rps, bllins. $175 mo. Mgr. 2 BDRM. Apt. ca.,,et.s, built-Frff to landlords Deluxe office spact'. 2 Rins. send name, ad~ and Eyeryone's looking for the maid ttNltt, Kitchens &: ea. From $28 wk. 494-72Lll J39..A Cabrillo. 54~803 or ins, garage, no pets. can Blue Beacon, 64.5-0183 Of I \VEEKLY rates. SEA Ground fir. Priv bath. New pho~ number to MULTI· nght one, We have a way· 1V avail, 450 Victoria (Nr. RENTALS 84&-3648 96'l-8578. e LANDLORDS e LARK :Pi!OTEL, 2301 crpl Park'g. Viii pd. $135 SI'ATE DIST., mC,.1681 W. so call us & tq:in to live.t Harbor). Apts. UnfumilhM. LG 2 Br, crptJ;: drps, ForDailyPUotWantAds FREE.RENTAL SERVICE Newport:Blvd,Costahteaa. mo, 0\vner. 673-6757 Broadway Anaheim Cali-S4?.£i668 TURN. Apts. &chelors $US . ...:c:i;c:.::,~c::.;:::.:,::=.:~-carport, pool, child ok. 2214 f;D,;lal=64>'6711==='°'=R=E;;;SU;:L;TS:;,...!,:=~B;;ro;ke=:r::5.14=-6982===· === OFFICE OR STORE fornla 9'J802 Cn4) 77i.soso. 24 hr. recording l BR's, $170 -$130. 213.l General 5000 ~Col=-.',,-""=.-·-'6'-'G-00=-'""----Income Property 6000 15 x 35' or 30 x 35• -A LCOHOLlCS Anonymous 'Elden .A-ve., CM . .se. Mgr. srtJDIO 7 Br, crpts, drps,5 -,•;;•;;.l::.•.;A=n•;;_ ___ :.56::20::.li.:S.:•:;•l;.:•:...;.A:.n::•c.,.. __ _:S.:62:;0 ---------oU st pking & util furn CLEANERS &. shirt laundry Phone 542-nt7 or write to Apt. 6· VEND.OME . pool, \Vorking couple pref. OCEA Newport & Bay Center, Ci\t pick up station • room for P.O. Box 1273 Costa Mesa. SUS CASITAS No children. 2-13. 646--0496. N VIEW 2052 Newport Blvd 646-1252 small ~lant, Ideal for hus-UP TIGHT? Need someone: rum. l BR AptA. Adults ./?:JEW 1 ~ 2 SR, $150 & SlW. DUPLEX • $41, 950 EXEC olc suite -1100 sq, ft. b~d/wile team, $7$0 Full to talk to? Dial·A·Friend, only. no pe1s. 7110 Newport ~~~~! Util incl. Quality CUSTOM BUil.T for ,erpts/drps, 444 Npt Blvd. price, G~a $13,00D. 847-1293. no recording Blvd. Of. 642-9786 SECTIONS AVAJLA.BLE 2<Q. Avocado * 646-0979 year.! ~ pride ot owner!:hip, Call aft 7 pm wk il y s ~ S.Cl-5810 -• BACHELOR . ApL S67.50 l CloM to thoppfne, P•rk NE\Y Dix 1 & 2 Br. Shg crpt, Unusually spacious 3 bed-67&-4644 1111rcil'ltrn1theltltl Tutoring 6490 le 2 BR. Trlri. $90 & up. * Spacloua a Br's, 2 na drps, bltns, immed. llCcp. room owoet's unit wlth de-Best location In CdM ~'N~U 'I'.EAOIER Will T IJ tor 548-9517 or 642-1265. l33 E. * 2 Bedrooml From $150. 540-1973, 545-2371 luxe kitchen and LARGE 800 to 1400 sq, ft Deluxe QU. • Retarded Children. Also, All 16th St., CM. *Swim Pool. Put/crten * LRG 2 &: !l BR., 7 Baths, dining rooin. Equelly spa.c. ice Spaces. Avail Immed. COIN LAUNDIUES Highschool Subjects, Cal I ./ 1 BR new beaut furn . * Frpl, tncUv/)Jldry tac'll frple, . bltns ......... 1,, d ...... s. ious 7 bedroom unit. Great Phone Owner. 642.9950 Eves 536-4747 Mo. to mo.' Adolts. only: 1145 Anaheim Ave. ....... .,. OCEAN VIEW trom each Frigidaire . · .. 2\ll) Elden.""""""""'· OOSTA MESA 642-2824 Encl gar .. paHo. 546-l0'4 m 'U 'IMng room. Mmlmum main. DESK SPACE From !6500 .. $.17,500 SERVICE DIRECTORY 3 BDRM. 2 bath apt. bull!· r A I ' II tenance yard, PLASI'Ek in. 305 No. El Cimino Re•I • Buena Park . Fullerton . Baby 'tt• 1 BR. C'l'pta. gar, Prlv. yard. -ins, cpts, drps. $160. 2515 ' ac..,,;4f-,.fhur . illaa' terior and lOU OWN the San Clemente Cypress • Westminster • - 11 ing 6550 Also, Bachelor Apt. 174 Costa Meg 5100 Orange Ave.. 673-0053 ' land! ·S!>OO down will ban-49'J-4420 Jluntington Beach e Garden LICENSED CHILD ,.._....,!,. Mont~ Vititt., C.?it. A di Grove e Tu ti e •-t ~ 2 Bit. Apt. Bltn l'tlllg!!, W/w ..A1'4"11U1t.b Cl FOR rent offices or stores s n -.n a -Newport Heights 1 BR. ape Gu & wa"r • MARTINlfjlUE • ""'" garb. d;•pl. No "'"· WE SELL A HOME.,. 1'() E . 17th SL, CM. $85 ~ •. ~M= • Ana. 5l3-ti04G · pd. SW mo. No children, Peri<·Llke Surroundings 1145. "6-21'!. Spnirh StyU. Lu~rrry EVERY 31 MINUTE• • op. M6-8181 CALL CHARUE a. 525-7'!3 BABYSITnNG .my bome, 00 pet&. 545-5991 C.M. DELUXE 1·2 .ft-3 BR APl'S. 2 BR :unturn, a_pt., patio & 1 tt J L'roiowu Walk.er & lee NO. C.M. ~omce, nice. Prof. Lindberr Sehl area. Expel' -I• BAOIELOR Apt, furn, ALSO FURN. BAOIELOR huilt-ins. 2G58 Orange Ave., . AiM.'Ond, cpts, dJ)s. S79 ea. * DANA POI NT * mother. Fenced )'d. 646-6669 C'rptt, d:rp:e:. SUO mo. 1Dcl. Prv pl'ttiOS e Htd Pools C..M. 'wwlthell •"' lJJa/ttnllUW ~ Westclltt Dr. 64&-4833; all 5, 547-4757 Restaurant -Money maker! BABYSITTING utiL ~ Nr ~hop'a: e Adulta only ~LG;c::~=-"7""=---~ A,_,, ttehl• -· · $12.000 Year -Only f.1.000 M-· .. A 1 ,1 My home. ln7 Santa Ana Avt., Cf\f . 3 Br, 2 Ba, cpts, dps, Qu.Ji1,. Sh•1 Cv,._JJl'.rl r-11.iA$ 646-11.u. $150 MO. !MXI ICf ft, air coCndM., Owner "ill carry. Seata 40 ~l:;_m=e .... ~:.·~~<! !.."! qe $90 INO. util. Small apt Mer U3 bltns, nr CXX:, W8.lk-6hpg. Open ,tu· 9:00 'Pft.l 2.120 Npt. Blvd., , Bet:r & beer take-out lie '"" \..llU .... ,,...,,.,,..,,, nr •. J5tb ·~ N~ Sin&le Apt . • MG-5542 chldrn ok. $179. 557-6151 ExckU.. l11tllrior a-.,. USE YOUR MS-.2616 THE HUNTSMAN 496-iisa BABYSlmNG • good rates adult.~~ Vil A MESA APTS. NR, new 2 er, l". BA,-... 1'4'11r-b. ,..,.,,,..ta... · refs m 50 per •h!ld by 2 BR. Prl ;os ... ,. l"rl..-. 1"'Jc •"' a-'~-STOCK GREAT food & malt .shop · · ' !_BIL ~ Jdtal for v patio, ~Id pool. drps, stove, dshv.T, gar, --.r Industrial ope-"·-tor ·-'• •· r'-ht wk. Fenced yd, 5'3-2437 bacbdor, pool, adult. 1!193 2 car ~ncl'd rar. Children 766 \\'. \Vilson, &12-79M ,.u, C-'i•i•_. ... -uun _, "' ..., OiOd ClJurch. SUS. 5"'9633 welcome, no ptll plell$t! 2 BR APT le·-·• yd t~l R E11Jo1 r_, Oir9' ''rhi•• Sr. Property 60IO bpertyl · UCI Campus. Good l··n· .. s'""v·,:. feWnced Yd~. $1~ mo. n9 w. Wll~n. · 11 .... ......, · · ,, c, ,,.,. rooJ.-C.olw T A,.....tt• us neu now -fantastic .. 5 ... """~ .... an!E'r • 1 BR. ClttJ\. lttn.c. Ftsrn. 6'2ol25l. crpt, drpg. SO mo. Ca.II ·NotlO Rtntlng-Frorn $140 .\&Down Payment on thMe 9 l -N-EW--B-ldg--ll-OOO---n-· -1 growth. $500l cln. Contact p ... ,.. .. ale. 346-0839 ~~fa~-N~ ""'m-..aor li\fMACULATE 2 BR duplex. 837--0789 Ju rv.,..,,. •/ ...... c.... ,,.. ~luxe Garden ApnrtmtnfA. sale: 01' le~. For J~o.111 or Dan. 833-2470 BCosABYt si;rrm, G my home ~~ -"'"'J"""' ~ $49,ro) E(fuity, Out of town r"~·~c B a ,,. esa ·-D Blt·lnnw.n1ndrl.nf". Drps:. ""'••w•• us. Oppor. 4 .... "'a.. 11.Y ot new cpts. Gt.nr.. f'enced Newport Beach 5200 1000 JP'. MocArtltw RflkL • owner anxious. ilanftt ittalty yr mt'dJum aized re5t&unnl night. Ftnced yd. 647-Sm yd. Gardener &: "'·v.tl'r pd .••. --------l 61fd E•d •I Bn.tol 546-2.lll 6'1G-T171 _ Jn N.B. that mutt be sold Bi\BYSITTJNG my homt:. Newport leodl 4200 Ad11lu, no pets. S14S mo \'EAP.1.Y. 3 BR. 2 BA, un-Smata .4no 54()-8491 642-WGO duetoloSl'IOfmQ:J'.lOMdown So. r.oast Plaza IU'f!ll Call DELUXE t Br. Wntdilt ioc. -+ ft<:witY ~It. Avail tu crp1 d d hwh I S Y 0 U R A 1J I N C.U Gale Pike • 61-6373 for • 5-IM87G . l Pool ~ bltJ11. Adu!Ca $215. -~-'""..:..,~"~"~"~!-lXl6=-;,;;._-.•h~~--I alrn~let. ~atin':it\r~ cJi CLASSIFIED? Somrone will 11.ppt to see. l.s Your Ad 1n • mo-no lit. 6UQ1.f \~ E~ta! an 6 pm. GU-Ql:U. be lookina for it, Dial &U-1'HE QUICKER YOU CALL, dwlf>eda? Someone ...,;1 ~ 1..;;:.:...::....::::..:.=,:::;;__..:;·r __ .:.:::::..:::::==--::.:...:..=::::..:::::..:::::: ___ -,_.----=~---------......;·:.o· 1.Whl::.:::Je::..::ele:•""":=:":::..' :;Dt:;:mH:::;::::-ll:;:ne: I 5i678 n ,IE QUICKER YOU SEU looJdnc tor u. Dial ~18 ------------------------------·---- --.. : :-.::.--~ ' • i.10AGif, Ml)' 4, 1970 IAllY PILOT SERVICE DI RECTORY S!RVIC ! DIRECTORY SiRVICE DIRECTORY JO~ .. EMPLOYMENT I JOllS" EMPLOYM!NT ~ .. EMPLOYMENT j JOBS .. EMPLOY MINT I JOiS " iMPLO YM!Hl J6iS i 1Mii400YMIN I Brick, Mo...,ry, Ou donlng 6'IO Pointing, Jobo--Mon, Wom. 7100 Joli o Mon, W-. 7100 Jobi Mon. w...,. 7100 Join Mon, w.,.. 7100 Jo!M ~. Wom. 7100 Jolp .-. Wom. 71~ of<: UH Poporhonglng ~ -• • - JAP~ Gardenlna -1 4 BUILD, Remodel, repair Sezvice, Neat work, Cleanup NEED a Painter? Interior ' COASTAL . Brick, block, concrete , yd. maint. 96B-Ul3 • txtbriol'. Experlcnood. AIRPORTER carpentry, oo Job too llll&ll. LAWN MOWING SERVICE ,.,.-' THE INN HOTEL LET us DO Uc:. Contr 96U9l5 Neat, . depe:nd..ble, -RETIRED Palnter: "' ~ Check Here able, ·Free est. .lf6.0055 exper. l{nt I: boM&t. Non AGENCY C.rpontorlnt 6590 J AP ANES£ Gardener aerv· c1r1nnr. can 53Ml!Ol . 18700 MacArthur Blvd. YOUR Jn& F. Valley, K. Bdt. Cotta * PA'idt PLASTEruNG . . CARPENTRY Meu. Npt Sch. &U-036 All types. Fl'efl estim&tta 540-6055 Newport Beach ' MINOR REPAIRS. No Job JAPANESE Gardener. 30 )Tl a.ll540-Q2!! ' SELECTIY~ ~FARCll Too Stnall. Cabimt in pr-exp. Compl. yd serv. with the (Oppo1ite Ora nge C ounty Airport) 1,p1 6: o I b e r cabm9ta. Comml. Reliable. 64.M389 Plumbing -~75, U no answer '8&~ e SECRET ARIAL . -at M&>m IL o. Gener•I S.rVka1 1612 PLUMBING, alterations • -,~. following ,, • Andenon ~. Special on waW' e OfPI CE , 15 _NOW INTERVIEWING ALL QUALITY Woodcr&ft, ""' HANDYMAN hll'I & disposala: 6t6J286 Job Kings! e CLERICAL portlol 1111 of IUl' joh ~n'I constr. le carpentry. General Home Repair anytime. HOTEL AND RESTAURANT ovolloble. Free: COMUltation le: quote. • G'IS-00 * · e $ALE$ Cali Ken S600U, 541-4235 PLUMBING REPAIR PERSONNEL Ha uling 6730 No job too small e ADMINISTRATIV E CARPENTRY-Cabineta..Jtoom ·=· Add., .Patios. it.l'J3 aUe job. AMBITIOUS Callege boy baa e TECHNICAL Secy ...... ·'"° Mike 673-ll66 Ir 646-2576. truck: will haul, move. Ex-Romodollng l Fee Paid' GEN, ........ per, de-p. 83J..0075 for free Repair 6940 --·-------· . add., cab. FEMALE Solt1/0ul1ldo Jobi Men, Wom. 7100 Joba Men, Wom. 7100 Jobt---Mln, Worn. 7100 Top i. ... 1 Job Formica, paneling, marlltt. .... ,,. !or Iha .. Anytbing! Dick, 673-4459. MOVING, garage clean-up ROOM AD8moNs. L. T. Put that_ electrlc/etectronlc WOfBn w/much exp. Xlnt: knowledge to work ou~ ' * CUSTODIANS-Perm, for REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS & lite hauling:. Reuonable. Construction. Family co. recenUy moved to Oranp * CABINETS. Any 1ize job Free estimates. 645-1602, roonu, single or 2 story. Rocopt/Typlst the ofc. Hi income potentlal. COOKS qualified who enjoy Coonty. $6CO). Call Pit. challE!nglng \\"Ork. Lal-ge, 25 )Tl aper: 5'M113 YARD/ Gar. Cleanup. Estimates, plans, layout +: Lite to heii exp. in new aput:mentt complex, . Remove trees, ivy, trub. financing. Call M7-15ll. all areas. to $500 S1l1s Rip • Newport Beach. Top wages, C1m1nt, Concrete '600 ' Grade, backhoe, 962-8745 * IF you need remodeling, per mo. E>q>. aalesman w/collqe Broiler· Grill xlnt trlnp benefits, ins., Mon-or Slorl $650 + OONCRETE, all types. Free HAULING $10 A LOAD painting, or repairs, Call deiree for nationally known NEW med, vacaUo)\. \Vritie: Box estimate. Sawing, bttaklng, Clean up. Tree Serv. Gt!n. Dick 642-1797 G irl Fri~ line ot products. Many m . to open ~1-.M8 The Dally Pilot. \Vork Di&btl in new atorft hauling&. sklploAdlng. Pruning 646-2528, su.a:M3 Roofing Payroll exp. per ..,,,. + <ar + expenses COLO!lY KITCHEN DELIVERY Man/Warehouse • opentnc IOOll. Rest&urant er Service & quality. 548-8668 6950 + bonuses. Estbl'd ...... man, Salary basM on abU . fut food exp. Xlnt Mun llAULING &. Clean-up, mo. up. RESTAURANT Bob Trees removed. Reasonable. $8400. c.atl Pat. iUes &-exper .. Xln't Ins. & c&rrrns & Downspouts pol<otill. EXPERT cement work. Free estimate. 545-1742 Install~ Reuonable San PBX Oper ator 3211 Hafbor Blvd., Cost1 Miu other benefits, Pref. age 21 . Patios, walks, brick & block -Xr ay TKh. Regl1t1red (at San Diego FrHw1y) 45. Contact Univers1ty Office '. Houncl11ning 6735 Clemente 'Tl4: 492-3706 Out fron~al on busy F.qulpinent, C.M. 646-8981. -wall1. 35 yn:. exp. Yancey. ---board. I mo. up. A reaJly xlnt opty. Close Credit Mgr Trne ~ 642-1403 Tile, Ceramic 6974 loc . .Start at USO. Call Helen. DENTAL A5.S'T Front de&k BAY & Beach Janitorial --·-·-·--only. Mwit have eXper. as CEMENT Work: \Valles & Carpe1', windows. fioon, Housewives Job........Mln, Wom. 7100 Jobs Mon,Wom. 7100 2 )Tl coUqe, married, 1&1-1 patloa. whatever you need etc. Re• & Comtnc'l , * Vi!n1C!, The Tl.le Man * Return to work • use Mgmnt Trainee recept. In dental office · ~·· draft exempt. MQ ;, concrete the price I• 646-1401 Cu&t. work. Imtall &: repairs. Start down till! road lo &ue-Beach area, 840-3540 8 am · rHocate. Rai.e •l t e r rig-ht! Call Bob 642-9187 aft 5. No job too tmall. Pluter old skills. $2. p<r hr. A«i. BROWN & Sharp Man, Set 9 pm, . ttu w/a blue chip co. $5700. CONCRETE w."Ork all types. Dependable lady to do house-patio. Leaking shower up. Call Helen. 100°/. F r•• No Charge Up &: Operate. Exper re-DENTAL ASSISTANT, over ttalnlog. work. Prefer 1 day wk. repair. Rtteplionillt, _typing , ••• $350 quired. 101.s.H E. Chestnut. 25. oial 5\11'1ety office e:ii: Sawing, breaking, hauling, Steady. can M2-55.19. M'l-1957/M&D206 Accls Picy, bonus & ••• , $-450 S.A. Skiploading: Lie. Service & Secr1t arl1s L09ol Secy •"· f\.fuat lak• & ..... Quality. 842--1010 WINDO\V \VASHING Jr. to Exec. all a reas. Payroll, bonu., & •• , , •• $450 BOAT CARPENTER . X-Ray1. 548-7719 Order Dook $56! COMMERCIAL . HOME TOPSOIL 69n $450 to !650 per mo • Average SH &. typln1. File Girl, lype ... , U'i0-$37S E."<p'd. Large custom con-* CONCRETE Work. Call Pete -492-1201 Overtime ii desired. Good OH Ice llostcM ••• o $330-$368 structlon. Top wage1 . *DRIVERS* Good exp. Pl"""'· mall Licensed. Patios I drvwys, Mesa Cleaning Service TOPSOIL. Nitrogen fortilied Attny has · too much work -. .. .. .. .. .. .. $450-$550 WILLARD BOAT WORKS No Experience orden, kardu:. etc. Philllp.s Cement. . redYIOOd add~ 837. 7000 or for ofc. $435 to &tart. Call Carpets, windows, noon, etc. • Receptionist Acx:t CPA •••.••• , $15-S17.000 1300 Logan Ave., C.M. • ,....,,. 4!&4!i32. Dental or medical Gloria. Coniroller .•••.••• , • $15,000 Necessary! Res. & Commc'I. 548-4111 Bkkpr F/C to $650 DECORATIVE CONCRETE JOE''S CLEAN 5ERV. exp. $425 up. Putth. Const'n to •• $13,IXXI DRIVES-WALKS.PATIOS TrH Service 6980 Clerk/Typist R.E. Com'l -leases, sa]ary "Exciting & stimulali.q(" um lloat have clean Calilomla M£DICAt-• 64Ufill We do Everything: •• Res, • Good typing, desire to learn C. E'5-projecls •. lo $15.IXXI is what thia co'& 5eCY SA)'•. -..-. A!>P(y • -~ Com. Free Est. S4s.3l26 TREE SERVICE All types Grandma We placed her there tut "'k YEU.OW CAB CO. MORE Concrete patio for Lise & Ins. Free Estimates Experienced toy & advance in growing: co. Civil Draft5men, Jr's & now !hey \\'8nl a bkkpr. 1BC E. 16th st. Int. Trno Siert mt leu money. Arfutlc settin&: HOUSECLEANING 64>-55114 s a I e s. Salary open Star1 $375; call Gloria. We are proud to represent ColfO Meal & finishing. &H--OG87 Exp, Heu. Rel, 638-2354 Superior Agency 64Z-TI41 Jns. trne Start $3911 Typ< DOE. lhls tinie firm • they are CEMENT WORK, m job too TREES, Hedges, trim, cut, Hostess 1857 Harbor. Costa Mesa 11table, pay top ,bents, & !hi! FRY Cook, exper or trainees 50. WW ... ..i.. alter Small, reasonable. Free Ir oning 6755 1tumps, removed, hauled. 30 Busy restaurant ~ds at. Ancient Mariner \1'orklng condS:. &l"e v er. y W/llOme restaurant exptr . traloln&- Eslim. H. Stuflick SQ..8615 IRONING In my home, $1 )Tl exp. Fully ins. 642-4030 tractive ""· Bea<h atta, pleasant. Call 1'.fiss Pat, Above avg pay. In 11 DECORATIVE CONCRETE Hr. Dressmaking & allera· Upholstery 6990 Start $303. Call Sally. -NEEDS -557-&122. Abigail Abbot Per-benefll!I. Apply Denny's, . DRIVES-WALKS.PATIO lions. ;,G-7641 •DAY • sonnel Agency, 230 W. War • 12924 Beach Blvd. G. G. LVN m.oo Shift .....,,, CZYKOSKI'S Custom. Uphol MALE & Cashier/Saleslady ner, Suite 211, Santa Ana. FULL llm•PART time Janitorial 6790 European Craftsmanship Plush dteil shop needs "·ell DISHWASHER BOY~ 10 °14 loll. Have Calif. Uc. Child Care, 100% fui! 642-1454 rroomed, reliable person. carrter """"' Opell Thl1 compin(i need• Licensed 6610 CLEAR Vu I\.1aintenance. \Ve 1831 Newport Blvd., C.M. FEMALE Starr $303. Caµ Sally. APPLY IN PERSON *" Ion OD) fu I !Imo CHILD Care my home, day.s do evecything! Specializing JOBS & EMPLOYMENT 2607 W. COAST HWY. Lquna Beach. So. Lquna •nd olx (6) port Med. Transcriber S50I or nit~. 2 thru 5 yrs. No. ir apt cleanup, Free est, 24 -G irl F rld&y/Secy NEWPORT BEACH DAD...Y Pll.OT t i me men. Jobi C.M. area. f>49--0040 hr &erv. 646-2698 Job Wanted, Men 7000 Unskilled Gal w/smarts & &ense of 'Asst. Credit Mgr. 642-4371 mus~ be filled thla "'°""'"" lapwleda• o! 6620 ~~ca ping 6110 ll YRS. Exp. a& skipper, hipno1· needed by bo5I in lo $10,000 por yr ** BUSBOYS ** Wffk. Top wag11 medical terms. , Contr•ctors Full maint. coi.lntry atmosphere atudlo. Xlnt bents & opty 1or man w( (Day9 Orey) :•Id.• ..... 00 Additions * Remodelini NEW Lawns , re-1eeding, power/sail Know W. Coast Trainees Average typine, but able to desire to sutteed. The Fisherman Restaurant C LL MON. & TUES. . Fred H. Gerwick, Lie. Complete lawn care, Clean very well. 675--0445 elt f. spell. $500. Call Gloria. JASON BEST 317 Pac. Cout Hwy, 774-7251 TrelO.., Stort $350. 67><041 * 549-2170 up by job or month. Free Employment Agency l-lunt, Beach Gol Friday $400 estimates. For iolo call Job W•nted, $1.75 per hr up Bkkpr F/C 2201' So, M&ln. Santa Ana CAR -.W~SH HELP FEE NEGO Run 10 key, type uc;, lttrn C-arpet Cleaning 6625 X97-2417 or 846-0932. Women 7020 Plwih new ofc, terrific benb 9264 \V. Katella, Anaheim Penn. PoslUon. Many open-Somt typing_ Dealing w/pu~ lnl. & machine bkkpg. &: holidays alter 90 daya . 546-MlO or 821-12>1 ~. 3 Locations Orange Co. lie. Other ftt ' rn jobs. Moving & Stor-ae 6840 MA.TIJRE woman, emplo~ Very congenial co-workers . ~ ~ ·BABYSITTER. Ille 2950 Harbor Blvd., C.M. JASON B ST LOCAL &. long disL movifli'.. niles 3:30-11 will give tender Needed immed. $600. Call housework. 5:30 am -3:30 CHILD CARE: Nttd loving Employment Agency QI -~ " Reas. storage. Frett Est. loving daytime care to your Gloria. pm, 2 9Cboo1 children. $30 lady to care for 6 mo old 23'.17 So. Main, Santa Ana • SILK SCllEBI • CARPET elderly or child, tor room 831-0401, O.K. Van &. ol board & small wage, MALE wk, nr 5 Points, H.B. girl Ir: 4 yr old boy, light 9264 W, KaleUa, Anaheim STEAM CLEANED Storage. Permanent. No weekend!. Ex•c. Secy 847-4984 housework S.7 Mon-Fri, 9-5 MG-5410 or 821-1220 ,... Pald . lOc SQ. FT. 64S.2466 Top quaJtty hoes tor top BABYSrrrER, llve-in, need-Sat, Need11 own transp. $250 Al!o carpet installation P•intlng, EXP 19 yr old student at Skilled quaJlty .secy. Poi.se, charm, ed immed. 2 children. Call mo. MUST be dependable &: Gen'I Office to $375 646-5971 P•perh•nging 6l50 Castillejo Girls Sch Palo clau. Age no factor. Good eve-. 646-0852' C.M. pennanent. 494-5834 Pleasant phone voice, Good MlM or Wode proH DISCOUNT Carpet aeanen. Alto wants summtt position skills in SH le typlne. Local BABYSITl'ER for int. Yng "'CLERICAL/OFFICE w/tieures. Ab!Uty to type. Expert-Late.st Equip. used. CUSTOM Painting . '"The E xp. G raphic Phot:f. corp. will _pay tee.• isr;o. 18 ti.50 Exterior-Interior Specialist" taking ""' ol children. Call Gloria. chi ov 18. Reliable, Lte *Cluk .......... $419 Polley Typist $350 Credit cards $6. Rm.646-1234 Live • in, travel anywhere. All the wabolhru. S -hakpg. 5 da wk, my hm ' Residential • Com.."J1ettial. Order dept. Accuracy Important. Co, will HOME &: APT Cleanin& 548-7888 ary open E . on bcb N.B. rn-6261. *Compular Opr . $500 BY DWIOND No ;job too large or too S•le1 Rep. train. . small Lie. Bond. Ins. \Yon't AIDES -tor convale&cence, Mohawk •1101 Hind Tobie Opro 18 $1 187 21st St., Colla Mesa be underbid! s.16-3679 elderly care or family care. F/C Bkkpr Nat'l leader in the pUbllshl~ Ba11kers *Steno .......... $375 66-1317 Free est. ..,....,. ..... penona_ble, Cr fflt Interviewer $J40 *PAINTING INT Ir. EXT. Homemaken. 547~ Profit & loss thru energelic service/salesman --Liie typing, will train sharp Xlnt co. movtnc to new plant. REMARC Service&. 3 room.s Avera:. l 1ty $260. 2 sty t rial. $550 p er m o. up . for estbl'd terr. Best bents *Secretory ...... $550 1al.. in Or. County. $Zl.50. Full guaran. Credit $350. incl all material & Job-n, Wom. 7100 ever! $1200 + car allow + Front OffiCfl /~ card& OK. 847-WIS, 646-llU preparation. $18. per rm + Exp. S ign Painters comm + yrly bonus. Call ALL DEPARTMENTS SERVICE CENTER Cl1rk Typlot/ Recopl -Employment Agency Carpet Laying & paint. Local refs. Call Jack abilities All phases. $200. wk. Pal CENTINELA BANK $375 Cutter Opr. $3. Min 894-3895 or 837~ 500 Newport Center Dr., NB Varied dutle1. ReSMir 6626 I \VILL pain! a 3 ~ aolimiteo up. Account•nt F /C Suite 200 By appt. 6444981 Fee PaJd' * EXPERT CARPET house tor $150, incl trim, ageociY Exp. Dr1ftsm•n Are )'OU the r a r e brttd • OPENING SOON * Clierlcal Mgmnt Trol"" $450 Operate 30'' OIAU.ENGE Installation & Repair stucco, labor & material. ot cat that would llke tD Military complete, High machlnr. No job too small, 646-5971 Call Gt!ne 557-1:143 Printed circuit """' w/a mod, isingln' lnt1rvl1wl~ay 9th, RUTH RYAN AGENCY school srad. CARPET LAYING INT &: EXT. Painting. Free Sec retary boards. Sal. open groupT If you know pegboard 9-12 A.M. on ~~· SPECIALIZING est.s. Loe ...... Neat • Dist. Jl.1gr. aeeking very at· DOE. dbl entry &: can .handle pro- .3333 West Coast Hw ... IN Sol11 $450 Up C.A. PAGE "2-217TO tractive. ·Very gbarp grl W/ Honest, Call Chuck 645--0809 ductk>n schedule!, )'.OU're It! omCE PERSONNEL Art bkgrd. Inspector To $2.25 6665 or Jtm 548--0405 good skill~ .. Exp. Tool & Dy• Man Great benf11 + few Newport Beach 1793 Newport Blvd,. CM Floors METICULOUS PAINT E x p . in prototype headaches. $7200. Call Pat. 646-4854 Public Rolatlon1 , Open Exp'd printed circuit "°"" Escrow Officer 11931 Be~~~!lti~~vd" HD tabrlcatlon. CAR!'ET VINYL Tit.E EXP. DOCKS-houses, lnt-ext. 1'1u~t have thorough know· tooling. Able to work (213) 678-3261 . Free to travel. Career opty. Free e1timate Uc. Contr. INS. col. students. 61">5812 ledge FHA loans, Savinp up to $900 per mo. Secretary 1042' W. 17th St., S.A. INDEPENDENT 54M'62 51&-4478 EXTER. Avg l Story $250. 2 i&: loan exp. helpful. Wlllowly,' pobed, talented BARMAID, attr., bikini, top take-charge penon wanted 547-6481 PERSONNEL AGENCY Wolden $3.64 Min. Garden1ni 6680 Story $350. Comp! w/v,:ood Exp. Multi-11th Opr now for extremely difficult pay. Apply Sa.MY La..ssy, 1116 Orange Ave, Suite c paint. Inte.r. Rm't $25 paint Secretary Exp. 1850 &/or press. job. Work for V.P. Start $SO(!. 2001 Harbor, C.M . .f!{M900 C.M, "2-00'26, 54>-0979 Exp'd lf)4!ld ot structun1. incl. Roy -841-1358 f,fature lady w/outgoing per. Salary open DOE. .... NEW Lawn•, re-seeding. Call Gklria. CLERK TYPIST Muoi be-Complete lawn care. dean INTER or Ext PAINTING. sonality, good &kills:, able lo * BEAUTICIAN, ftit busy, Gon'I Office $500 + up by job or month. Free IMMED. SERVICE. Local meet public. Exp. Pl11tic F•bricator L09ol S.cy popular priced C.M. salon. Marketing O.pt. FEE NEGO estlmate'.s. y., iolo call ref. FREE e&t. 5#-162'7 Polk chloride. ,3. up Paid vie, No clientele Dlvtrsltled dutle11. Othtr fee 897-2417 or 846--0932 PAlNTING-lnt. & Ext. Dictaphone S!tCY Well krx>wn attny wants am· req'.d. New grad welcttme. Accurate typist. 60 wPTn FOUlldry 18 $S.7S DO • . blttou1, lkllled pl, Start AO..jobe. LAWN Maintenance. Once a Highest Quality. Lowest \Vill train good typist to UllC !550. cau Sally. Call the Manager. M&-9919 electric typewriter, One JASON BEST Exp. -.. IO'ladllir, woek geooral up-keep Prjces. Fully exp. Ins. John dlctaphone, Gt!n'I ofc. exp. ** BROILER COOK year e:ii:perience. EmploymVJt A~ncy lawns, floW1!r beds, shrubs. 673-ll66 BookkHpor CaR Personnel Dept. 2207 So,..Main, Santa Ana Call anytime belont 9 pm. PAINTING .. Ext-Int. 18 yn. 11USH HOPKINS EXPERIENCED. Perm. 5 or 9~ w. Katella, Anaheim 54fH678 a.sit for Tim exper, Ins. Lie_, Free Ht. 488 E. 17t}i, Suite 224 C.M. Growtrw Inveatrrrent co. 6 day week • nl(ht 1htlt. Jn-(7 I o4j 494-940 I 546-5410 or 821-12>1 Trol-, Meehl{M Shop AL'S ~ .. Lawn Accoult Ceilingl. 548-S32S. 642-1470 wants 9harp; career minded quliO ti<Cll Allf.5-,.M. Olrl Pridoy To V. P. •lalntenanC<. ~ JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ..,.... "'"" !500. can SallJo. -for appointment V.P. otrector or 1'ranchWne $2. por hr • ' ln:!uatrlal • ft'Pdenti&L Men, Wom. 7100 A·P.EX The F lv• Crowns fCJr Nat'l concem. S.H. not Some exp. -. wmi. ·~· Jobs Men, Wom. 7100 Jobi 'L'l"l Secy Restaurant 'IELONIC req'd but must be ~ne AL'S Land;caplng. Tree Attnf teedl J1sht arm. Good 3801 E, Pilclfic Coe.st Hwy. Industries qualified to arrange confi· RemovaJ. Yard Remodelln&:. typ ... , SH not -. Eager Corona del Mar No ph. cal!. derrtlal appt's w/perspect!ve Haul truh, Clean-ups, A s1embl1rs Employment to 1e&m new ayriem & able BRANCH Laguna Beacli busJneu!'nfn tor V .P, to in· Repair sprnkln. 673.1166 to take ~lbWty, $600 tervlew. SELECTIVE ROTOTILLING Burroughs Corp. 11tart. C¥J Gloiia. MANAGER Equal opportunity employer MUST BE New I a w n s, land&eaptnz, Agency Rocopllonlot/Socy Will aceept f-,.,, ~ars bank· e Ptnonable Shrub.s IE trees remowd. Stat. b1>'91, work on cha.rta lnr experience. Call Ann, COMPANION I Houakttper, e Well Groomed SEARCff fiee est. s.&S--11(2 New Commercial Computer P lant -645-27'70 Wettclltf Penonnel mahft woman, expel"., ll'<T-e Attractive • '"'""" ... ·lie '°' $490. A~ncy. 20U Wmcliff Dr., e Atq.'tn meet oi conveiw LANDSCAPING MISSION VIEJO "7'1IJJ EASY WAY Call Gloria. N.B. "'- New lawns, rotolilllnc . call 116-7316 wltb top business men, . Shrubs & trees removed. .(Uk UI wbJ)~ Receptionist COUPLE wanted ·1or Prtfer Ap 25-35, wtth au.r-EMPLOYMENT AGENCY Free et!. 5'&-1742 His openings for Gt.moor llpol tor rlshl pt. NOW'S THE Janitorial work, pert Ume, .meed Wary or $400 per CLEAN-UP SPECTALIST ASSEMBLERS . Some exp. nte. Start $l50. ew•. lifuat be txp'd. Ap-mo. + perctntage of busl· Mowing, edgfna:, odd jobs. 1873 HARBOR call Salty, prox. $400 mo. Call collect ne• 1eneral!d that' 1hould 2120 5o. Me in Reuonable. 543-69511 TIME FOR tml 681-7920 -... 9 br1na ava. income rtom $600 Exp. Japanese lllDlillcape, at our new plant Jn Mission Viejo, CallL NCR Opor•tor am-5:30 pm to $800 per mo. BLVD. Call Mr. M,yn> 642-9411) S.nlo Ano cleanup, maintenance. Some e:rpertence pre(erred. Major hoopllll ....& exp. COUPLE tor janitor work, For Interview Mack 14i-Mt2 < Wi block So. ar 19th) pl on bUllng m&.dUne. SWt QUICK CASH e"I)' d only. Good pq '- n~rs Gant.nlog ~ lawn ~pl.1.8 a.m. -4 :~.m. •l $450. Call Sally. ""'"""" f'OndfUons, call GIRL ·wanted, Shop Work, 557-6055 maintenance., Res. '-com-on y through clay dter l pin. 5'3-8393 inter!ttlna I: different. e.rt •O'MfER riEE AND FEE ' A Cftfta backgrouM helpful, mttdal * 540-4831 THROUGH A EMPLOYMENT OFFICE COSTA .MESA. JOBS AVAILABLE •COSMETICIAN-Drue Illa muat bt neat, w11lln& to * ALLEN 8rils. Gardening, Experience only work ·I: )tam, APP1J 1639 I (Alfo fee polltlofts), " J CU'e about )'OUt yard! 2S725 Jeronimo Road 548-6155 ·-· ~a Aw., C.M, llt . - Do you, U IO call Ml}-J7'i9 Mls1ion Vle~o, Calif. DAILY PILOT AM-12noon. JOHNSON 'S GARDE.NlNG l le).32 2 DAILY PILOT OIME·A· II OTEL• INSPECTRESS W• have 2 on.l'\it County . Yard care. Clean-ups, Prun-Equal opportunily employer 548-3426 2790 Harbor Blvd. UNES. You can uae them <Fem&le) Very ple-.~nt Offices to aerYt )l1JUo. . tni. pJa.nunr .• 96)-3)35 WANT AD ' THE 51.ffl NEVUt sETS on Malet Female Co\Jo ~· for Just l)Cnntc1 a dQ'. Dtal worklnc condlfions In ttnt cla.q hoftl. Call 644-11'00 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! DAILY Pn.DT WA?n" ADS! Elct 575 ' - ~ -~ " .. r I I I • _ .. ' l I '· I j D,llLV PILOT M"1d'7, M11 4, 1970 ~•a IMPLO'i'Ml!NT JOiS I EMPLOYMENT JOBs & EMl'LOYMENT JOll & IMl'LqYMINT JOBS & IMPLOYMINT MIRCHANCISI FOR MIRCHANDISI POR MIRCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE POR 1;.....,:;;=;:..::=;..;::;~=-..;..;_..;;..;.-"---:--= , --SA~E ANO TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE l",,111 .. ..,. Wom. 7100Jobo -Wom. 7100 Jobs Mon. Worn. 7100 Jo• Mon, W-. 7100 Jobi Mon, Wom. 7100 I::--'-:-----= .,__ ff .., ., Furniture 10QO FurnltvN IOOO Furniture 8000 P:umlture toOO ' .~ MANAGEMENT CANDIDATES NEEDED! * SERVICE STATION A'tr. iiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:;:::::=:::=f.::;,::;~;;;;;;;;;;;;; ;,..~ ~~ ",,:!.i~~ PUBLIC NOTICE ntftt appeu1rw man. Tep • THE USED • All Brand N•w Furniture r••urned from Model .. ! •:Rec:9U&e ()/. cantlnue:! srowth and expa.n1lon ..w a.N! 1.t,rolnlng )'.OWi& people with tu·o y~rs of college, I nr equlv&lent ,.xperlence, for maMgement of our ·nru: tt.!it&urantg,, Join lht1 management ttam ! wages, bonus plan & profit Home1, decoretor canc•ll•tions •nd di1pl•y tfudios. 1'1u1ng. Ondu reoonttruL.. Sptinlsh A Mediterr•nt•n Furniture tion, wm re-ope_n May 81JL FURNITURE FACTORY 9 Pc Meditt Bedroom 1uite, reg. $349, now $188.00 \Vri~ or call R.13' Catty. . 6or?•ous Spanish Cu1tbm 1ofa w/metchg love •••t ' . l ~. C•rHr development programs Include: l1 + Extt-ptlonal Advancement Opportunltir.a , .... Financial Gro"•th l Formal 'Clusroom Training Prognlm , .,. On·Thf'·Job Managemen1 Experlenct ; .,.. ltleaJ \Vo1·king-Conditions ' Complete benefit progr•m Includes: : * Profit S!)arlng Plan 1 * Paid Vacations : • M!d:lcal-Surgical Plan : * Ufe Jmurance ' 83.1 DOVER DRIVE NEWPORT BEACll 642-J870 Dear Prospective Applicants: Gf-5857, 604 S. Coftat Hwy. \. Choice of beaut f•bric1, reg. $419.95 now $225.00 l.a.IUnt Beach, C&li1. " ... " S • 75 oo SERVICE Sta. Pwnp hi. !:.'~..::::..·-: :::,':;-:::;.-::: prlc: =~ s:Ud1 ~.~jE~7T~~,: ... , .. Cc;fi;;·r~bi~;·:::= .. i I a:oo AiesmM. Exp'd pref'd. Tall Decor Table Lamps, re9. 49.95 now •.•. $ 11.00 OveT ):). 2801 E. r.out ltwy wltoletolef Spanish Heng. Swa:? Limps, reg. 49.95 now$ 22.50 at Goldenrod, Corona de! Mar. 67S-0533 J ROOMS~ living room-Dinette & Bedroom, J Rooms of org•ous Spenish Furniture SERVICE Statiolf Attendlllll, $160. Green sofe &: chair.sleeper $49.50. Blue (w•s r•g. $12951 Sacrif1ce! $4251 t1rm1 full le part time. Apply fn sofe & chair $59.10. 4 Spani1h sof•• · & love R D FURNn"URE 1eafs·was $30 I, now $129 per set. I gold sofa 1844 N Bl d I penon Airport Tex.am, 4678 &: c hair,· was $279, now $119. Sin9le or double ewport v • (•t Harbor) Cost• Mei• On Y Campus Dr., rts. & 035 $l • •o h Every Night 'tll 9-Wecf., Set. & Sun. 'til 6 mattrei1 springs, wes • , now .....ii eac • SEWING Machi~ Operator, 2 red & green gold Spanish 1of1s I love teets, experienced, Apply 715 S. wai $348, now $169. I high bec k gold velvet Pianos & Org•ns 1130 Miscellaneous I Our next tnlinin' class v.•lll begin In May. To share • this lntett1Ung and profitable career Pie••• be •pprised thtt we ~r• in the bu1iness of p'rionnel adlv1ty which includ•t m1ny 1re•s In efftc- five personntl pl1cement, In feet, •t the risk of being Immodest, the steff et the Newport Personnel Center I which includes th• Ntwport Person- nel Agency, the Newpor+ Temportry Division, Executive Seerch, Vocation- 11 Counseling, Brushup Cours•1 for •h• "rusty" 9al1, & lots of TLCIJI in- clude1 meny fine profes1ion1I peo- ple who •r• truly Per1onn1I Special- ists. i4:!~wyll.s~ Beach, chair, $79. I high b•ck green velvet chair $St. 12 f•. Admirel white refrigerator, left hind SHAMPOO Girl, licensed door, like new $1 Ot. Sig selection tebles & Conte-.. ~ubiom hinging l•mp1, $3.95 to $2t.f5. Heavy black HAMMOND, Stein1\tay, Yam. aha. New & used pianos of most makes. Best buys in So. Calif. at Schmidt Music Co. 1907 N. Main, Santa Ana '36 FORD wishbone front. end, completely re bu 11 t . with wheels $75. Almost like new convertibJe llO!a sleeper $15. Twin rebuilt carbs for C.Orvair $10. 4 x 8 window casement complete with win. ' ! apply In ptrton l :lO 11.m. t• S p.m. Spanish bedroom set, $l>OO.now $lit. l ight SMALL Co. W/great tiiti'.ire o•k bedroom set, $139. Welnut bedroom s•'*' FAR WEST SERVICES, INC. Our fees at• modest even •hou9h our TLC is freely 9 iven. We reelly do c•t• •bout Heh applicant ind every on• of our fine employers. Com• s•• us at your· earliest oppor· tunity. but furnishir>g! Yott wouldn 't from $7t to $9t. I •vocado bedroom set $1lf. bel.leve needs some pl/time Overstuffed chairs $9. 1672 Reynolds, Sant• Ana, Callf. (714) S40-9892 Snack Shops Reuben's Reuben E. Lee Isadore's The Whaler Coco's An PQUa.I opportunity employer -----obs-Men, Wom. 7100 Job..._..n, Wom. 7100 nl!WpOlt •• pornonnai agency Cordi illy, help. Must type wril, make good coll~. 2-3 hrs day May lhN June llW!ft'a..!ine to full time with any luck at all. Call Roo or Dan (n4l 546-3640. 1185 Harbor llwcl., at lfth St., C0>ta MllG e 549.9457 HAMMOND SPINET 7219 ,... _. dow S5. !)46. • U!o'lng East. Beautiful Ham· mond spinet organ • like ROCK HOUNDS.FREE new • dark cherry. model Polishing unit & tumbler. " L. and bench $850.00, May· Complete new rock 1hop. Open: \Veekdays 9-5:30, Saturdays 9.51 Closed Sunda.ys arrange terms. Come in & regiater !or draw. WAITRESSES l . 1IS.A Joann St., C.t.r. 6<1:>.-0865 iug. Open 1days10 am-6 pm. CAR HOSTESSES SAVE 8101 &laa Ave. M or part tim@. Attractive l\Udway Clty • O!l7·l970 HOSTESSES Nora W. Hoffman •nd The Staff Newport Personnel Center wilh happy •• .,... THE JOBS .. EMPLOYMENT HUNDREDS DANISH ~'°"''"· .,. IL -Furniture 8000 MALE . Telephone !l&les.Fire ct') .. DOVER D"'"'• ZOO, E. Cea.Ill Hwy, at Scnool .. lnstructlon 7600 On New Conn Ornans li-.;•111.I, Beige couch with deal. Paid daiJ.y. Pbooe Mr. •NEwroRT nEACH McArthur Newpt Bch. 1----------All Models• curved end, r eversi ble CAY or NIGHT 18 l"EARS OR OLDER APPLY IN PERSON t IMMEDIATELY * ; Reuben E. Lee lSl E. COAST H\VY, • NEWPORT ij.EACl:l Ryan 836-436'1 642-3870 •WAITRESS. Part time. 20 ---------WAREHOUSE FULL GOULDS SANTA ANA cushions, good condition S50, Malnt. Mechanic to 30 hrs a wk. Over 25. ITS YOUR MOVE Sofa's, Chaira, Bdrm's. Your 7045 N l\1aln 547-0681 double bed with Walnut · Apply in pe-· F w Chaice • $69. Sofa's It Lov-e. ---;;,. =-=-=-'==---bookcase headboard. New Gel'IC:ral AIA ... Office M~ ....... • • IV• ·-ha . E••land•• ·-· u-· mal· ~ ~ I==== 00 "ORTH 2302 u_...._ seat, Kng Si Bdrm's Your ..... ving a .... n.cu .... tenance le upkeop. Also, W L\.. ' ........ uu1 AIRLINE & TRAVEL Wh I of S I Bl d C ., Chm.,..1139. Re-~ •• '"""" 0 I O · O e--.,,.., & box 'P"""'· (lall minor -~..1.;-· maint j:.:_::.::.....:_::.::::_:=:..:...:.:.:i-.;;•:w;·UT·"R•Wi'_ij;ro~;;xp:; ·~ ~---and ~. l••~h) ~ ---"~-........... co,. washer!, dryers, $39. Guar· on "'°'"""' e>rrans. U<.'J' .. 0 , 5vuu. umu .. u.•m Mechanical background ---------**WAITRESS (Food) Exp'd anteed! Sacrifice Housefulls You better come on down! $65, 833-1350. P"''-Apply In"""'°"· Arm. Nuning Sales Mil• .1qu.,.. Goll C..... INDUSTRY CAREERS F>om >:.tat.,, " Mod<! WARD'S BAWWJN SI'UDIO alite, lac., ll8 E. 16th St, •54>37416• Hornell, Terms! 1Bl9 Newport, C.M. 642-MM * AUCTION * C.M. LVN .. 6:30 am .. 3 pm, MUTUAL FUND WANT TO EARN IN YOUR Repossession Center Open Every Nile :U you will sell or bQY, .f.fATIJRE COllple to manage 2 days per wk. Relief SALES SPARE TIME? BE A e OPERATIONS AGENT 547-57'21 le Sunday Afternoon z,ive Wilxly a try 20-30 un!ts, H.B. Adult bldg, med. nurse. FREDRIC'S w I G ' ER y • TICKET SALES 619 E. 4th St., S.A. Awuctlons Friday 7! 30 p.m. no pets. Rent plus. 846-3927 Exp, Hcenaed Mutual Fund GIRL. WRlTE P.O. BOX e RESERVATIONS BARGAINS! Blonde twin Radio ~200 indy's Auction Barn * MEOIANIC<las& "A" BATH AIDE .. I AM .. Sal@amen (2) for one of the 30, LAKES or FOUR • AlR FREIGHT-CARGO bdnn set comp w/cbe1t, r·sc--R-A_M ___ E-'--s ~Newport, CM ~ llcellSe', own tools. Penn. 1 PM. 4 days per wk. hfghef;t producinc areas in SEASONS, CROWN POINT, • COMMUNICATIONS 2 nite tbls ;ISO. Sofa. bed •L T. Behind Tony'& Bldr. Mat'L -itton Jorr e1pon11 ib l@ Will tr•in. So.Calif.LeisureWortd,We IND.46307 e TRAVELAGENT · •25 · ~· *""'' 't hen ==~=-~-~~ .. · carpeting ...., a rm. PlAPO knee machine Sf" man. Top wa.ge11, bonus plan ?,IMean 1 1 adw we ~al· WOMEN, 18 a.Jld over. Pa.rt Rattan din. tbl, 6 chn, ;98. ANSWERS good condition $30. Electric & profll sharing. Under NURSES AIDE .. 11 ore e s "-potenti time. Good working cond'a. Airline Schools Pecific 2 Rattan lounge chn; ;30 recorlStruction. Will re-open 7 30 Exp'd than we can handle". 0Ur45 Apply 32S N. Broadway guitar & <15 watt amplifier It OU SEKEEPER/Child pm-: am. • Id ~cifi· •---t • 610 E. 17th, Santa Ana ea. Work be-nch $.;, rlropl@u.f Sl 'd So S . $15. 2 fishing rods &: reels, . May 8th. Write or call Ray I ... yr, 0 ... c v.llUI mem. Rm. 410, S.A. from 4.g PM .CA .. 6S96 tbl 120. """" !bl 110. Pie-Ufli -use -to1c -care, infant Llve-ln. Good ...,__ AnA ~-i ~· S Coa" pre err • ber firms olti••" located•·•-~==~==~~--p l CENSUS best oiler. Sea-auit with . ........"'y '13'r"JOJ ..,,,,.. """ .... YOUNG MEN (61 ==:--:::::-:.0:::-:0=-c;:::;::I tures & lampe $2 ea 319 onc 10 -pay. Perm. Hunt. Harbour. Hwy, i..agw. Beach, 'Calif. PARK LICO the heart of Leis~ World SPEED reading class starts Marguerite, Apt A. ·Cd.'1 A new father was !old he'd ~~;_-very good $15. 214.S ~9648· led CONVALESCENT when the buainesa is being 20 ,. Id Tues, May 25th. 7 tO 9 May -4, 5 & S. Ju~t become the ~ather of ......., .. .,nt WB)', N.B. H!iKPRS EmpJ,yr paya fee Men wan done. Our biJbly qualified to 25, tn. work as ie. pm. Increase your speed tnplets. He excla1mec1, •·1 LADIES diamond dinner G~ Allen Byland Agency CUSTODIAN HOSPITAL clients will not generally do rep. for nat L concern. Re-('O 111 prehen1 ion &: en-HOUSEFUL O! new JnO<fel just can't believe my CEN. ring, set with 1%. karat 1(13.B E. 16th, S.A. M7-0395 tmmed. opening for reliable busine1111 with finna outside gpomlble and have an au~o. joy1nent. Tustin Reading hOme furnltutt. Reg. $683. SUS." center diamond, 2 diamonds HOUSEKEEPER man with previous lndW1tria1 (714} 642-2410 Leisure World. Top produe No ~p. ~· Prefer to train. CC'ntcr. 130 H St. Tw;tin, now $197, SM-4417 Gr =:======== -1.i karat on t'&Ch zide. For Com'al~ Hosp. fuD jaiiltorial experience. Xlnt.. NURSE ArDES-Day llhi ft. el'!f 0rll¥. We art perticularly For inlerview call T1.1e~. & S.W-4400. "637=~~-,--,..,--,--~,,1 Television 8205 BriJlianl cul Sacrifice! Rep. "A" .. uw:: v.'Orw ..... condi"'-~pay ~~ A p interested in men with man. Wed. 9 an:i·7 pm. Phone: COMP. w&nut bedrm. Dbl "-'--------ly tD Box P360, Daily Pilot. time. ~ .... '& ...... _,I!>"""' ....... ..,..... ....... ~. pp: ~ Mr Goodwin TV S Co J • HOUSEKEEPER or helper and a:ll frin1e benefita: incl. nel Dept. Hoag Hosp. NB. agerial ability " ambition. • · Theatrical 7900 bed, 2 atttl exec. deska, ~reo nso e, Danish F'OR Sale: 1-"amily mern- profit &baring, ,..,,, IT Call Mr, Wright • 0 .,., A miac. office tum. Muat &dL Mod. Packard Bell. Call bership l'O Newport Beach fOI' widower, can morninp CaJil T~t....tioft ~!...IA;-VI.I.Ice emparary (714) U0.1515 5f4-0594 ~661 54().9974 Or 644...Q!504 847-5810 Aft 6. -847->129 u~ -· * Mohawk •1101 Opr. YOUNG M 18-25 ho want ACTING Tonn~ club by indh•dual, :n:> Briggs Ave., c.M. * T 1 t SALESLADY. curtain, en w . 8' Sofa never used, quilted HI F " & SI Contact ?\lrs. Ru11ell . INCOlt1E TOO SM ALL ? 546-4461) yps I dn!.pery & gifu. Udoff's to l.l'Bl'll a tnlde i~ the Doyouwanttobeafulltime Ilont..I, acotchguarded $l2S. • 1 ereo 8210 ~0-!620 A 1111ider full err -n...i. time * Stenos H Fumlohino. mov>ng & ................. bus1neu. k' p-•, .... v.--•.. Do "' ~· * M~~ANI"'" duty for ome So u-•<>&· \\.'or rng '"" _............. M•tch. Jove1e al 175. SONY HP , •0 • STEREO WEST Rawieigh Home Service ""'nta. Good, ..... , ... e • .._ Part time & 1'emp. Positiom Cout pJ...... · Need 15-20 men. Tf ln--you have the self discipline 776--0.l92. """ ERN G 0 UR. M ET P~ Many earn $3 b::lurty RIV 5 ~ n. SERVICE CENTER ..-;,-;;;;:--..,,:--;~=o:-::.,..1 terested, call betw 8:30 am to liubject yourself to a rig· '='"========! System. w/duaJ turntable, F OODS can help you fill ~ up. Opening i n Aexp'd. Bman. ~ ~· ~ Employment Afency SALES: Join QUE EN'S & 4:30 pm. 545--7159 id British training roune le Off;ce Furniture IOIO d~k/F. l\~. ff>kn"""', ~w ~~~ ~lo ""'call e;6~ aasvc. For qpmram Beach or pp: rowns .:>n•;:: -.. 500 Newport C.enter Dr., NB WAY 'S higbelt paid fa.slrlon'.J-=========-the artistic humility to ac· "~ ., -r '"' ...... u;u ;~,, "li9. ......~. pear, Marby. Write, Rawlelgh, l ii9"liiiiEii.iiCoaiiii~ii"iiHii..,.,;ii;'iiNii.Bii.iiiiiio suite 200 By appl 644-4981 counselors. Recetve to $500 Schoo:s-lnstructfon 7600 cept minor roles until the USED ateel detks $39.50 • .-•,,"'-"'21196-;;=:::-==-cc-:c-c ~ T, I0105 Orange Ave. J' PERSONNEL ire. wardrobe, No. invest. h-J.ining period is complete'!' Posture chairs $12.50 & up 6 IT. Walnut console stereo. REDWOOD FENCING Gate, cal, 90280• m 6 CLERK No colll'Cting. No c!ellv.1---------Ir ao THE LONDON LA· e Used 2 & 4 drawer filing Nearly ne w $1100. Private 4' Picket, .never in dirt, like ITO • 968-6219 or 536-1257. Discover • Great New GUNA ACT o R s WORK. cabinets e Used wood desb party. Call: 828-8.116 nc1v 100', f/0. 673-4843, 1300 *JAN R with exp. tAA ve· C Will Hand'-All F•-tg of ~SA"'LE=""' 0-=-=•-"'E=~=-•.-;Full='°erl C rH Wt'lh Tho h I \V Bl •"•-Squ "-II r-·-· iJiJ :A. ic ......... ~~-v•..... "L<W • r SHOP might be able to e P 1\-icMahan Bro1 Desk Inc. . a boa Bl vd, N.B. '""', .~ ..:::::,,_,,__ ...........,.... n--......... 1 Ofc Admlnl..... Bru•h -o•-. n~ a ~. · M' II 8600 ~o.w....-..-0:: • ...,,.,.,. ,., ...,. .,.._ wa you, No previous experience 1800 Newport Blvd. ISCt eneous '61) CAD Engine $85. '60 I Agency for tion including non exempt guaranteed to start. Call AIRLINES necessary,·no age barrier. Costa l\1esa * 642-8450 ORCEf! NOW Volvo eng. $75. 410..WlOO Jenitor $390 Jnl•rvlewin"'. Ap~x. 5 .,...., ~ • ., 5745 •1 •-ot !hi ,,..1 ... , .• , ' C G' I ..... ,....., ~·-.....,... "eni..,.,.rs 5 .. "" FO 0 Singer power machine "75. o-.sh!lt, 5 dey wk. Prefer ereer 1r s ........... ,·n ,.---·• otc + will l •-pt·' A I' llOO R M THE RS DAY 'f ..,., ~_.. ,.,....,.,,..., SALES LADY. Must be A: natural for YoU"• -ple gi;oup on Y .....,. acce = PP 1ances Call &l:>-152J ~ man, Mgmt Trefnee to $800 typing tt<J. S.ll. prefured. ,,_...,..nable &: ~ sewer ... .,..y upan a satisfactory personal ---------Mothers ring.. with childn!ns I JASON BEST Mu .. •-abl• to wock wt'" ...... ~ ~...... · who want excitement plus! birthstones. Beaut. custom CARPET Left from Comm'L E.xec. 9eC)' bkgrd. Must have ""' "" Virginia's Slrlp &: Stttch, Interview with the director. MOVING must sell, upright ~'Employment Agcnc)" ..........,ted or f!Stbl'd an &W'I'. out clo6e supervision, 3334 E ,.._..., CdM TickSt ti~l agent! A,f: R~!': Call 494-4404 for appt. freezer, '68 G.E. 14 cu. ft. made rings, necklaces & col3n99tracls, d$1.98Dr, t~·88, thag -So M · Sa l A v....-·-·.............. • a on age n · e.....,.... e•,...;n ..... set with 0 ..... 1 •• TU· . sq. y. a ..... s r-~t ....,.. . a1n, nu na slze ofc. Seive in managuia1 For lnlorvl1w MERCHANDISE FOR trost free xlnt cond $200 -·--e.~ .-_..,.. ~w. Kat.ella, J\nahcim Savings &: Loan tions! Ramp or travel agent! N Tn •cE SEARS window I~ 24,; bies, acruamarines, sappbir. 17206 Beach Blvd., H.B. ~lD or 821·1220 or supervisory capacity, Cei'I Mrs. Edwards MANAGEMENT We'll train you fDr these SALE A D "'-"' thennostatica.lly controlled es, jade, etc. for the SPEC 842-5114: Secretary 546-2551 * TRAINEE and mart, day or nile. We like new $20. 847-8383 IAL MOTHER.. Lapidary ** \VELDING TANKS &: * KEYPUNCH to Sales Mgr. ·& salesmen. * Dynamic Savinp and Loan include placement aallt· Furniture 8000 equip., rough ,.,, cut 6tones, TORCHES $100. * U.. OPERA TOR Maintain llllles r ec l!I rd 1, PHYSICIAN, med. family Association 11 seeking col· anct. \VROUGHT IRON SO. COASI' KIRBY tools for the rockbound, all PORSCHE ROLL BAR, 'Jiil" c;ustomer contact by phone. practice, seeks front office: lege graduates for their Going-East. Unu:rual wrought has eredit TD'11 It demo jewcil'y ma.king suppli@s, NEVER USED $40. 6f6...52l6 Minimum one year keypunch ~ ......... Secy/R ... pt Good typist, IBM Exec. Lite SH, phonK. 1irl on or ~ July ]. management training pro. Est. 21 Yts. Approved for iron breakfast tabJe, round, models of new '70 Kirby gold, silver. findings, tools NEW HUFFY 24" GIRIS Only experienced or wi.lling gram, Veterans, Eligible institution with clear plate-glass top OM!lics, P25% oU. · Famcl. & cu ling supplies. 8 1 Cy CL F. • S py D ER to compleh! med. assist. This position often chal· under the ledera.lly insured warm't H: 536-7521/ Open Tues thru Sat. 9-6 school. Resume with photo. tenging and ~ ca· student loan program, and four matching chain:. 5th St/ H.B. Sunday lo.4 closed Mon. lofODEL, $40. COLLINS RADIO P .T. F /C Bkkpr 6 hrs a day, S days a Box Ml" D ll Pilot . $9'.i.OO. 7J.B.A J oann St., C.M. 642-1724 EVENINGS · a Y reer to the right person. &t:H>SG.'> LADY Kenmor@ au1o FIVE l\f GEMS & :·19700 Jamboree Rd. ~ Newport Beach Ell!lllt opportunity employer LARGE Land Development cG in S'n, 0ran&e Co. are11: h&s an immcd. opening for art engineering contract &d· mtnislrator. Applicant should have an engineering &: engineeting purchasing blilrnd. Pooition o I f e rs c.1\1.1.lerige and future tar the ria'ht person. Send N!Sutne to:Box M·'767 Daily Pflot * LADfES * 18-Q), 11how sARAH COVENTRY Spring &:, all seuon jewelry. A!)solulely no lnvest'mt. We tr:ain. S31..fl631 or 962-5988 L.AbIES Be Independent W'ork own hrs. doing in-- t~teslir1:; work. Call 96S-S64l .. k. PRODUCTION. Exper. nee. CFemalel1 Dependable. Jirs: 'f:3()-4PM, Browning Mtg. tor a n interior designer. op grooming. Clerk Typist G!n'I ofc bkgr. In sl· ing & different pe of bU11lne.s..'I.. Must able to work ahif , 8..S or 3-12. Girl riday St.al typing, gen'l oic. Diversified. Srntlll Co. Fila Cl•rk H. S. 11:rad. No e.xp. At lea.at 18 yrs l!lld. Girl Frid•y 1 i;i:lrl ofC'. An lnttretf in flying would lx help- ful. Gen'I otc bkgr, Sharp. Girl Fridlty Warehouse exp. R:ood. t girl ofc. Typing. Divers!· tied.• Nr. Or. Co. Airport • Inventory Control Electronic exp a 0 0 d. Phonn, typing. 410 W. Coul Hwy. Co. 1919 Placentia. C.M. 54&-lln R•al Estate L•nd Investment Now In Orange County For The Fir1t Tim• The U.S. Land Plan J\1anagen with or wilhoul their own aales staff urgent. ly needed tor the following areaa: e Santa Ana • Costa. ?-leu. e Hunt. Sch, e Newport BeaCh e Garden Grove • Qranae • Buena Park • Fullerton e Norv.'&lk e La- guna. Beach. Full training provided by our faculty a( the U.S. Land De. velopment College Ot Land Jnvettment Counseling, Claasu Begin Sat., May 9, 1970 Enrollment limited to educa!. ed 11ucoesdul licensed rra.1 estate aaln.men & women who wlsh '" eam .•• $25,000 to $50,000 (a year or n1ore) f""!'!'!'~!!!!!"'l"'."'!~!!!!!~~ I _!!!!\!'"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' J a.tanagement Exper Helpful MAN to U&ilt l\tgr., local Nursing Apply Today 710 No, Euclid appli&nee .we. Must be REGISTERED NURSI (Suite U4l Anehelm. Newport Beech 646-:1939 neal apl)Urina. Call I AM J.C . .C.C.U. REAL ESTATE SALESMAN to 10 AM only: 4~1'83 Expanding unit. ~nc wa,nted experienced. AcHw lilNAGEMENT OPP OR. opportunitiu, «intliulnc ed-stablished office. choltt Full or pt time. Car nrc, Z ucation pl"OIJ'U'll. Contad location. Adwrtil!.in&, PMk· bP wk. -......W penonm1 .so. c.out Com-ifW, refma11. Call o:illttt .., MA Io s . Penn, tor munUy Hosp. 31872 Coast fOr apopintment. 492-lil45. q a a 1 f f I e d who fll,Joy llwy, So. l..qwla C7l4) 499-RN's-ICU, All shifts avail. ~ weft. large, llll Ext 356 X!nt worklnr cond'&. Con. nt# apartmentl complex. NURSES tact Dir. or Nuning C.i.'4. Nnpo'1 Beach. 'I'Qp wqe1, Private duty .. eW'I')' t>,,r Memorial Ho5p. 642-7734 xlnt frlnee btntflts, lns., nurse. all 1hltts. LetcouUe SAILS nwd. vacation. "'rtte: Box Nunn R f. 11str1 • 3SI $400 to $3,lm. No u.Jes eip. M..641 Tbt J>dy .Ptlot HOIJ)ital Rd.. N t: w Po r t neede<i to take ordeMJ I * MAIDS * Experienced. Beach, &U...9!& Pb o tt e cover ltads tor 1rtwid'a tiYtr 71. Apply Bea Bnnm's a.nyttnw. Jn I er.,. t ••In I fUteli:t telling home o. MolorHottl.Jl106S.o-t-hours: ll Un to 4 PIO. ~rel.lier. Jt Aril11 I lk ~ H")', Srulll l.qwM Monday thnl Ffidi.y. banaoo.1, lit buncbei, lor MALLIE'~ NURS~ Uw-ln. S400. 6 .-, SI03.~. whh 100~ flna.nc- Bt..t;, 6 wti Stkm hu GPtn-,...k. NO fee. Rtl'• req'd. clng. C.11: 897-1986 or q; tor HalNtJIWI: w11h LtlCOOlie Nlll'lel Regi5tcy !HT-1100, betw@en 12 k 7 10m1. follnwlng. Sala17 ptu.s ~ pm. eocam & paid qceOon. TH!l IUN NEYER SETS on 1 'm""'r.'". "Qu"1"CK£="R"'v"o'"u'"CA=U:.T Call Mi-3446 ~Af:_Y Pl1Dl' WANT ADS! rnr; OutacER YOU SELL Call -Alrllne Schools Pacific washfr. like new $150. AlSQ LAPIDARY SUPPLY ** PHOTOS oil painted, Mr. Henaley (213) S61-5n.3 610 E. 17th, Santa Ana l\iUsr Sell hou9ehold furn. olcter model Kenmort', xlnt Rear of College Center expert co.lors, life-like mlor. S~retary/M•rketlnn .543-6596 Some new&. beautitul, some con rt $40. &17-8115 or Shopping Center .Presetves & Enlwlce1. 8xID CS ~· oldies but eoodie1. Some old 5-16-867Z 27";>() Harbor Blvd., ll·A • $4. 962-0665. POLY OPTJ ' 1'!e ~ llC· Cottage Art Shoppe & beat-up. 64&-43.'lZ HAVE Moved must sell: 12 Costa l\iesa * 549-2039 REVERSffiLE bik:ini11 by C. turer of the ~natma: dee. Art lessons, land It 5eascap. i\.10VrNG everything mu6t Custa ad • D arattve .~i&'..hta, POL! O~· es, signs &: truck lettering. go. Dinette set. Bdrm Suite. cu. ff. HOTPOrNT upright PArPO knee machine, 54 m m e .,1 • Try our TIC.AL.S 1S loca. ted m the Emma Blankinsh,·p & Joy-freezer. gd. cone!. S85. inch, good condition $30. ico"=m0cpl=""·~536-"6"" __ l "'"'_-,-I I ..... Early American Stereo, etc. G7'"'"7 E hv1ne lndu.str1a.I comp ex. Sisler 690 \V 19th IAt Po-!";67..ggJS ;r-J.N lectrlc guitar missing VARDEMAN surfboard . This secretar~ ope~ing is mona') 642•1si!i or 8J6..&tS5, KEN Mo RE w a ah 1 n g strings & 45 watt amp. $15. 9'7", Wood tail block. Fiber for our marketing director.1---------STAR moving to Continent. machine, used 6 mo, xlnt Bolt action 22 excellent $.1.5. skeg. $20. 54&-0573 aft 5 PM Secretarial idtUls must be MASTER ARTIST will teach l~ou11eful ot be a U Ii f u I cond, $100. Knitting mach. 20 gauge shotgun good con-ORIENTAL _RUGS top-noteh. S.H. 100+, typing painting. Apply tn penon de cora tor l u miture. $.l5. 962-ZIJJ di lion $15. Call 548-4987 :Various sittS. Must sell 60+. Musi be intelligent. per. 2912 W. Cea.st Hwy, Space 548-0362. after 3:30. 2145 Bayport 673-582::Z sonable, neat and able to No.3.Newpor1Beach. JOBS& EMPLOYMENT NO.ff:G~ gas drye r . Way Newport Beach grow with a creative, rap-I~==='======:.!.::.:'..::::~.:::.:::..::.::..:.::=:.:.;. I Frig1dau'I' elect . dryer, both "''°'• =;;-c;;-,,-;==::;:-BALBOA Bay Club mem· idl)' Srowing company, Sal. Schools-Instruction 7600Schoals·ln1truction 7600 xlnt cond. $a.l ea. M7-8ll5 FARBERWARE Rolisserie, bership for sale al diseount. ,;::::=::::::::::::::::.::::::::::=::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::==;I or ~72 new $15. 19" port. TV, good Wee kdays f213J 87~1~"". e:ry and be:netlts att excel. --' .,,.. Su ~-· - USED A I. TV ' ""'"' ...,, n....,....u mixer, lent. PP 1ances &. s, chrome wfstainless , 1 1 F1RM·Line-er excellent oon- APPLY all guaranteed. Dunlap'J, bowl, new ;35. So prano &ax: dition SSO. Me. Verde area. POLY OPTICS, INC. 1815 Newport, C.1\1'. 548-7788 ophone, new $150. Sony 4 •• ~'""~""""1827c---70-,--,..,~~ lBl:i E. CARNEGIE AVE. G E Retrig. 5' Hjgh. port TV, new $90. Call INT'l. Royal Danish SterlirJi: SANTA ANA Good shape, J yrs old. ~7174. Sllverw1.re. Ten 9 pc. place 546-2250 SSO 61>7096 --D=RA-;-PE=R=Y-,S-;-AL,.-;;E--1 1etting1 $800. 644-7160 S.Cret•ry to $600 GAS range $25, p1 refrlg. Fabric~ from ;t.98 & UP. G"u"rr=AR~A7m=pl"-too'"· -.~,.,,~-mol~o I Exciting opty, You will worll: SLi 319 Marguerite, Apt A, 72" Mlnimwtl length. labor $«!. Kent pick-ur> $15, in lovely new olc. In Irvine CdM. lt1ay 4:, 5 &. 6.. incl. Lrg selection of Stingray bike $10. 644--0498. e.rea for a \\Ondel'ful boss. fabrics. F'rtt est. Master HA o The co, ls eltbl'd & stable. Sewing Machlnet 1120 Charge & Bank Amer. Ca.rd. of~~.;,~ di~~:= Youn ~111 be a poll. w/ln-Get the whole story ft>day :. . 6 M0--9112 a ~'--t,_..,,ph, 64&. ~""" f. ll ·-~ ty • · ---l I 0 ,..._ SINGER Auto ::r.ig-211g, . I"'" v,..y """"" 1n e ..... ,e "' 1n...,...,. now ..• rom range ""'unty's own ni-. old. No alla•h nc•d-" FOR Sale • Family l\Iem-Send resume or call Miss world fernous Innkeepers 1nstl1u1s "" ~ "'"' FTRE cxtingul11her $45. Cash Elizabeth, 557-6122 Abigail lntemationel. Leam lh8 fest for zig-zag, bu tton holes, bershlp, ll'Vint' Col.st Coun. drawer & sale Ill.Ip dispenser Abbot Pereonnel A .. e ....... , 230 streamllnod modem way lhst designs etc. Guar. $37 ca11h fr>; Club. can be purchased $35. Sf&-4l96 05 • .._ maktl Triple I oiads prized and or small payrnenta.. 526-Qil6 by 6% note, it q11al ili1.'d. W. Warner, Suite 2ll, Santa well-paid throug nout the gient -==="='======I Ca.II 545-2337 ll) am-a pm . Ana U.S. motel Industry. -. Musical FOR MOTHER'S DAY Secretary $500 Instruments 1125 Pair Olamor'CI can1n;.,. 113 ~-~-~---\VM!Clltf Pf'nonnel Al'ent)', LUDWIG snart drum. It al.And Pfl.tt)', 549--067~ 'm43 Westclltf Dr., N..S. An)'Dnt •f tfl)' ~jlMllldfq Zildjlan IS'' cymb<l.I &: DIAMOND Ruig. Jadi('s, f·ll &t5.7T70. rtti1el'llfllt eps) 1111 .. -co11p-. ~land. Gooct ~ndtUon $S0 14 Karat dinmonct5 set in 1h1&tt ~=~'6'£'Jt ~ for both. 546-0373 att 5 PP.f platinum. Priv. pty. $250 . S.cretary0Glrl Friday ll'HONI: SOPRANO Saxopbon@, new. 673--8300. ~~ =. = 776·5802 111111~;,.d:~1110,:~10:•~c~ For Quick Sale -FUil price, LA•T.n;;IES;;.--;:H;::u::m:;;a:;ni;:c-,Dy<=na""rH tl'inary girt F'riday. R.laid JNNJCBB.PE1tS mSTITUTE JNTERN'ATIONAL $150. Call ~74· white booUI 6tiN. Nt'.'w this fl ,, ynr, Best offer! 6r;H39!J quail ctuons incl ap~ar-jorv1.,0Noll'•NTl'oM'f'•c1>100~1 P ianos & Organs ll30 aft6 nit ance tc a atl'IM' ot humor. 1717 Seattr. BNeltll 1r1t.· Ari11telia. C1 1if .. t 2104: Prefer 2J~. $000 mo start. p PIANOS & ORGANS N;;;EWru;PO;;;;;,R;;T><s.>=ac°'h,..-,T;-;::,::;:nis Jte1Jy ruume In confidera, StM Mt frN CarHr informilioft NE\Y & USED Oub f1mlly mernbenhip. P,O. BM l54'7, N.B. 92863. e Yamaha P1aooc OrpJ\I Quick &ale· btst offer. 17131 Secy/Legal Trnee $450 Name ••••••••••••••.•••.•••• Age • • • : ~= ~ ;;~;;1;<-=;;n;;IJT:;,,~s"'ti!;::c"'=.,.-,k=its. ExcltJna: Oft\J' to start In legal • Kohler k Campbell Hook I Nf't>rllc, 13064-A fitl6. Vuy pleuam law Addrt11 ••• •• • .... • • • • ........... • • .. • COAST MUSIC c n I blk s c G nfct., good M,nt•. Call Mia PO 0 en IJ')'. · • • ElltalJelh, 507-6122, Abigail ZI NE\V RT & HARB R Blvd. Abbot Ptnonnel Aaenc:v. %IJ Oty • • • • • • • · • • '' • ' ' ' ' · · ' P ·' • · '• · • COl!t.a ~lc!1'41 * &e:z.~n SlLVER. Mink stole $1000 w. Wl!'Dtr, SUifa m. Stnt1 Open l().fi Fii lG..9 Sun ~ retafl You makt oUer. Call Amt, Phone -......... • •. · ........ · · · · · · · · · W'hlte 'f.lrphanixr 5'W-8867. Misc. Want~ 1610 * PRIVATE puty want& i:oo<l uM'd 12'dl' carpri; gold, a\.'QC8do, or be~. 645-1791 FREE TO YOU 6 mo. olct f emale. \\!eima.nu'lf'r/Whtppet m\x. HealUl.Y. rrttndly. nda ll'lvin& home wflgt yard, E~. Sf0..9238 (It 646-7816 5/1 4 SNO\V white ldt1erui, 1 m1111X. !lGUml. l /S KITI'ENS. S wlu, need ioort home. 549--2306 5/.f FREE klu~ns, white l?'tY & bl1ck. 846-5377 H.B. ~4 .. ,.. .. ,,.~~~~~~~~~~""""'""""'"""""" .. ""' .. ""'.,. .. ""',.. ........ .,.,.,.. .. ,.. ....... ..,..,.., .... .,...,..,..,.,.., .. 111'.,.'""0l!! .... ,....., ... """""""'9~:1"'"'!'"''"",..""'!!"''""l""~·--.,rr·"T"--•> r.~ _F_R_E_E-TO ___ y_o_u_ PETS Ind LIVESTOCK TRANSPORTATION Doti• 1125 Mobll1_ Hom11 '200 ------- TRANSPORTATION Tr•ller, Tr1vtl TRANSPORTATION 95:15 Imported Aulo1 MU !:11ne Buggies TRANSPORTATION 9600 imported Au!M HOO Imported Autos WE little ldtttlll have k:tltl---------PORSCHE TOYOTA * Ntiwport. Herta.or * TEA.RY lr 1967 comp. 1elt· '70 DUNE Buqy. Show car, /,,fewremaln.lnamobllehome oorit'd, Sips 6. Vtry clean top, mqs, '69 enahie. C.11!----------... -·----- JAGUAR our mlttfns & now must # SUJ<Y pupple1, AKC, sire tlnd • aood home We .,. champ, Come 5ee-make of· 2 bl.k w/wht pe.w• A collart. fer! 64&-3Ml I ors ttaer A 1 put Blue •"•,---n=ACHSH==T.u~N=o-... -,.~k~•. R11Ulan an.y. H1ebrkn . AKC ~Iii. ttda I: blackl, ''""'' In one of CalU. '• w• ltll75. 5'1>-11123 "''" • ln-!Thl after 6 JA,,.UAR at erowtnr resort antu. wknd• .., MOBILE HOMES ====== Imported A-9600 HEAQ9UARTERS are on dllplt,.y, lheae home• Tr•llers, Utility MSi .=:;..;.._.;.;:...=..;..-""'-; 1nJC1 only authortred JAGUAR '63 PORSCHE:, whit•, 1~. '67 FASTIACK Elec. •unroof, Pl\f radio, IT191'YJOITl6J Black beauty. 4 1pd., Wini : : new tlm, exhauat, clutcb. J.nt Xlnt ruMlns cond. Small •• 5'&-81t2 aft 6 pm 5/2 after 5 pm: ~ ... fully ... .,.,.. 1t orlcu ALFA ROMEO ''a1" 1n "" '"""' Harbor Xlnt cond. $2000. Call Mr. M•rk II Wi-1 d Will ,,R.. ""'-• · ~In. day• 8 35·151 4 ; •-· own, ...... nee ~···" • · F 0 UN DJ.. IN G , IWfft. SILKY Terrien • AKC lovabl•, med • .u, needs Joy. cham,p •tock. am.all. be.11l Ing home, WOWd love COi.la. Stud avaU. 648-73!5 r:hlllftn to Pl&¥ wt th . I WHITE Toy Poodle Stlld Health)' 4 happy . Service ARC )'OU won't want to pasa up! TR.A.tLER Font box 4x7' AniL ••• ~· -·n. HI Lux Plckvps pstty, OOHS371 dlr. c.u : · _,...,. ... Lend CrvlMrt Phll •fter UI AM H).SU'O cir ~ : EXAMPLE: heavy $45. •55 Ford fmt axle '64 Alpha Romeo Sprint New New 20x44 w/awnlflil, skirt, It: whli $U 837-3868. trans, radW t1ru, Otch, etc. $9180 complete incl. tax I.:::========-I brk.s. 49'-ll?O alt 4 Coniplei. SALES SERVICE PARTS Poolo PORSCHE '64 "C" AM/nt:. W•gent 49'-1029. • • · New Cont'l tires, c:hrm DEAN LEWIS • & lie. Many ready for JJd. TNcks 9500 whb, ""· clutoh. Cr"t VW Van 'le, 'IM ·-· c:smp. • -1-H bo C.M •••9303 er unit, work done on hns, i =· Prlv. pt)' • ..-. -•r r. · '"',,,.. complete new bra.kt Jyttem , 545-4572 5/6 • 841-1116 NEED good Mmes for 2 FEMALE pOodle AKC X· lov. ~ ft. lonr hair land ~ backJr'OU,nd. cab, 1 wh!tt/ltl'l.Y mrkp, s moe. ~-Pb. 557""83& M!:DIATE OCCUPANCY! AUSTIN HEALEY GREENLEAF PARK 1----~~--1--~-~--·I An adult private club GMC TRUCKS 1965 SPRITE, looks aOOd. runs eood. '900. ~ after 5 or \\<tekends. BUICK ~~=~~~I BIT T MAXEY • ""''· Good cond, !800. : '67 PORSCHE 912, 5 spd. LW 5.10-1708 Btwn !I pm A: t pm , 1 blk/wllt: A 3 "'°'· kit-AFGHAN PUPS AKC tens. l blk, 1 ttrer, 1 ca.I. ' 5'8-4813 5/2 11 Wka, Ttmu:, ~ Sl&mese 2 yr old apt,yed LAB. RET. Pupt. AKC Sealpolnt. N@eda qUlet home, Show-Fitld Cbampt-Pels Beautiful, aftecUonatr, talk-Blood I: black. S'1S-8T1I 175() Whittitr Avt' .• CO.ta Ml!I& Pb, n4/$42.1350 Take Harbor Blvd. to llth St., then wt1l to WbltUtr Av11. JOMJCRA, INC. Here mw. Immedl&te Delivery Southern ~ Cowrt1'• m'1 Authottted GMC Dealer UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE AUSTIN AMERICA lN COSTA MESA 234 E. 17th Street Sl8-Tl6S AUSTIN AMERICA KARMANN GHIA All Xtru. Citrus Yelll:)W fX f w/blk Inter. Call 544--0Tt6 lflnlVIUI IAJ ·~e~2 ~=ii:~~:: '62 PORSCHE, beaut shape, • ~-/*-,._ _ ... , ................ -to ap,..... AM /FM, 11111 llACH ILVD. "" ""· ~· ~u·,.~·~•. chnn rms. 6-0-1982 Hunt. Beech M7-155J Many 1Ctra•. $3350. 497·1588. I ml N, o1 OJt..t Hwy, on Bd; '69 SQUARE back, racfial'i, AM/flt1. &!per clean. SUBARU ati.ve. Hates amaU chlldftn Cocker Spanlelt $25 A: dop, 847-7450, • 847-&f.25 • BAY HARIOR Mollille Home Siles ALL NEW '70 MODELS NOW ON DISPLAY 20' Wkle1 u low u $5995 12' Wkles to 34' \Vlde• Park Spaces Available 1425 s.Rr St., Costa Mesa J850 Harbor Blvd. do.ta Mesa 540-5640 '61 Karmann Ghia, reblt ena. 1--------- 1969 TOYOTA Corolla Station 15,000 mi's. Make oficr. wAgon, like new. 9G8-40'lG 67s-.5038 or 846-4748 after 6 2 Lovable )'OW!& Iona haired DALMATIANS female cats, 1 all white ti-AKC, Ch. stk .• 642.1937 ger striped, 1 blk & white" Cockepoos, Terripoos 3 adonble lone ha.Ired klt-& Peekapoo1. 847.&125 lehl. M&-Oi13 1130 3 KITI'ENS Sl.unMe mother, Hor1t1 !? father. Utter tn.lned, -------- extn!rnely healthy, Mll fed. * Beaut. 3 yn. Chestnut condition 5 wkl old, all w/blue e}'tt. Mare. Excellent 56-0722, 515 $475. 7141646-2661 LABRADOR / G e rm an PINTO Gelding, 8 yn, wry Shepherd, male, 3~ tno1. .:iund. Gentle. $775. C.&11 Miniature shepherd, female, 642--'550 "' block Eut of Harbor Blvd. '58 Chevy 6 Pickup, 8' bed, runs good. $350. Call 548--8115 after G '64 RANCH.ERO. Need 1 fender work. OK otherwise. Make otter. Call ~1732. Costa f.1esa 1114) 54G-9470 Recrt•t'n Vehicles 9515 BEACH. VIEW PARK near Huntin&ton BMcb 8'"35' Expando 8xl.5 ICl'Ol'ned Potth 2 Br, family pet park Spaee rent US. $l9fiO 1969 CHEVROLET CUSTOM CAMPER ~t 2 r llliJ u r1 .il111pn11~, !!od W. Couc HwJ., N.B. &rl-9405 541).11$4 Authorized MG Oea.ler IMW BMW'S #1 A.M.S. M:Z..3939 TUrbohydramat1c tranmnll-DEALER IN New clutch. Very clean. $750. Call 673-!!008 aft 6. MERCEDES BENZ OrJ'l9e Cou"t y ~ L,1r9est Selt'~tron NE>w 8. U ~erl Merlf'd('S BF>nr J im Slemons Imps. VV "11er & M,1 1" <;1 '"'"l.1 An ,1 546 4114 MG 7 mo. 6'5-D 511 1AP '=P~ALOO-==SA-Ge~ld~i-,.-.-w=.n· 9 MONTH old black and trained, gentle but spirited. brown puppy, lows children $325. 6'1'~ 9225 ""' -" a hick yanl. T'°'RAHS==p"o"R"T"'A"T=ol"'O"'N,--BlcytlH 64~ 5/4 _..;... _____ _ 1ton, 350 enetne, power steer. Ins. •plit rtms. "''"" duty CALIFORNIA AND ""' wtth OPEN ROAD ll\I 01:.ANGE COUNTY'S ft. selr contained camper. MG SU.. Servic..!, Parts Immediate OeUve:y, All Models NEW HUFFY 24" GIRLS LOVABLE yr old Brindle ~· & Y•chts 9000 BICYCLE. S PY DER FUll both fadtlo.. includlna LARGEST m&le Doxie mix, hlbrkn, 19' THOMPSON Lap Stnke MODEL. $40. loves children, needs good Cabin, sleeps 2. Depth 642-1724 EVENINGS. Mower, aleeps 6, bu every l9TO's Immed. Delivery J2rtuport · Jl11 1ports home w/fenced yard . tinder, fluJh toil.et, ~-12 gal 633-6594 5/4 gas tank!, tandem trailer, Adorabe mix breed pups, 6 'm motor. $750 or take over wk!, male & females Pretty $54.06 per mo/~:1542. &: lovable. Need gd "homes. 24' GLASTRON 1967 Carlt>- 546--7002. bean. 160 HP mere. crui&er. Cape.city 10. Lots of extras. 7 Lovable mix~ breed pup-XJnt cond. ~fust sacrifice. pies, need iood bome1, Belt ow:r $4,495. Ca 11 fenced yard, male or 644--28'76. female. 5'8-MU 514 '59 TWIN Screw Express J'REE klttena, adorable call.. Crul11tt. Chris cratt 28', co, black. black &: white. Sacrifice. 540-5656 days. Male It female. Pis c a 11 Eves 675-4159. 644-0688 514 24' T Cruiser. Beauti ful 2 Beautiful Joni-haired kit· throughout, 2 hrs on new 145 ttna, 1 black k sUvtr. l Interceptor, Srul5 black &: whik. 7 wkl *644-1368* Mln1 Bikes 9275 possible feature )'OU "'Ollld z New & used· tn Stock want. Cost originally-S8WJ, T&M MOTORS Now Only $5599 8081 Garden Grov• Bl , G.G. Bona""' m HP. Ex"'"" UNIVERSITY "3+2'J84 Ope" Sumay 890-5551 condition. ~100. Cail OLDSMOBILE '69 BMW 2.002 Su":':°°f, Ff.1 ~:oow. ODUt llwy&.:~u BJ0.3138 after 5 1tereo, red, lo m1 s. Prlv. Autbarlzed lfG Doal f.tlNl-BIKE. Cat 400X HP.4 ~=;;;,~-==bo~·~·~1·~· ~Col;;,;1&;,;;M~•sa: 1~P~ty~. cgall~6~75~5-8839~~;===1·~'f!}!!~~~~·if.'~ good coocl. Alt 3 p.m. 540-3881 '69 f.1CB, 2700 mi's radials, 5f.8..-0341 DATSUN radio tonneau. Yellow, blk Motorcycle1 9300 SUZUKI 1'i 4ERE C•mpers 9520 uphol. Eves. ~2468 OPEL -re--SACRIFICE! '68 Opel Kadett LS. Xln't cond. Best olr "Leader in The r.tar.h Cltlc1 " lfl.ke1. 6.f4...5289. ZIMMERMAN * '70 SUBARU Here Now . Immediate Oellvuy e !Ml MPH Capability e .SS Miles Per Gallon e Beautiful St)>llllg '69 VW, xlnt cond., radiO, '69 TOYOTA Corona 4 Dr. wht walls, must .ell immed. Auto.; 18,000 ~fl. Clean. $1600. 675--1570 $15!15. 6f4..2300 Att. 7 PM 1 '1"oos~"v".w"'.-w1..,,.,th-Po=-nc-,..ha VOLKSWAGEN Tut Drive Today At Kustom Moton U5 Baker, CM 540-5915 0 Concours Winner • SPECIAL· BLACK PAINT, STRIPING Ir. LA.CE e VINYL TOP I DEOC LID O ANSENS e SEMPERITS e GAUG~ e SH A.KY JAKE'S SHOW CAR . $2650. ON DISPLAY AT TOYOTA TOYOTA BIG JAMES LTO International Motorlna Acceuories SAVINGS ~Old N•wport Blvd., CM • 68 VW Sqbck:, new tires, radk>. Xlnt Cond. $1600. Call Now 49'-5677 --m.~vw=~eu-•. -.. ~HP=­ S400 ON ALL NEW 1970 CORONAS M~5233 1968 WHITE VW Bug. 3.1,000 ml. Like new! High back aeall. $1450. 56-M37 e II TO CHOOH PROM • ALL MODIU e ALL COLOlS e ALL llf)UIPMENT IXIECUTIVI OEMO'I BIGGER SAVINGS '67 VW Sqbk. Clean. Low AT ml. New Ure1, brks I: bait. Be1t otter. 6(2..8655 '66 VW SWltoof, new clutch. XJn"I cond. $950. Call • enaJne, chrome wheelt,p eent tune.up. 536-4285 ~ '62 vw $550 or make offer. Good cond. Muat sell 67S-6374 1964 VW Camper, fully equip. Xtru. Sharp! $1475. CaD ..... 005. '66 y.w. deluxe camper,~, cond. cabaM 1 n c I u de d, 51.!KIO. ~ • VOLVO ---·----145-WAGONS 114 -SEDANS VOLVO Now in atoclc! Immediate Dellverr llOOE Sport Cov,_ DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646.Bq Antiques, Cl•••lcs 961 1927 Chevrolet $850 * &f2.0S74 * • ' ·: EXAMPLI: 1970 4 DOOR S!DAN ,,54,os-..,98<5=·~=~~=,-I Autos W•ntecl •66 VW, CLEAN. Lo Ml'1. -·- 9700 :i 4 speed, radio, w twalh, heater, CONOie. Ser. • 207584 . Mu1t sell, Make otftr. IMPORTS WANTED 962-1782 Oranae Counties TOP$ BUYER '66 vw Bus. Radio, 7 mu. MAXEY TOYOTA ' 548-3842, 5/5 FOR sale: l~' Birch Craft 2 DARLING kltte111, 6 wkl outbtd 4DHP; trailer, lona old female, male, and short range tank, bait tank, com· JAMES LTD. SELF.CONTAINED Caltlper. Holiday 1969. Mono-chemical toilet. Shower, lavatory, hot waler renerator, 4 burner llOVe, oven, furna ce refrleera.lOr, le:as &: elec- tric), 28 gal water storage tank. Llghts are Ul.ttery, gu &: electric. 10' refuse dump hose for se\\-er con- nection. Self-contained gu tank, crK\\'l·through boot, 1leeps 4. White/brown trim enamel. TRUCK: 19 ti 9 GMC, % T. 8 cyl. Cullom camper model, 1~· bed. Alt cone!. P/S..P/B. R /It. Tinted wlndlh.ield, spare riip. tire &: tube, mounted, auto. tran.. Brl&:ht yellow, with tallp.te ,1r; back 1Jau for truck & front window for camper. $6500. KI 5-3869 aft 5 PM 2145 HARBOR BLVD, . ...._,,...c.P....:0....:RS.:.c...;C....:H.E=-541M410 '. --:D=-o=T"'D=-A=TS~u=N,-PO . '58 s 1000. H.T. ronvt. WAS $2241.75 NOW $1890.88 puaenaer. 51350. l88Bl Beach Blvd. ~=~•~962-_3'02 __ *_,-,., I R. Beach. Ph. &47.&'155 '65 VW bui, aunroof, xlnt Am-Fm. Reblt eng. New cond, chrome wbeela, tuned WE PAY TOP DOLLAR tailed manx mother . pa.gs. $500. Call 642-4480 642-4148 5/5 WANTED! 1S8·1 NE>wport , CM. 647 Ol'l40 BILL MAXEY FORTOPUSEDCARS 1967 PORSCHE 912 exhaust. $995. 499-n.f4 If )'OU1' car 1s extra cleaD, ,. OPEN DAILY inter. l\1ust sell. 548-1842 AND SUNDAYS All Xltas. 28,COO ft1i'i; ' 0 y 0 ' A '89 vw Squartback . Re UI tin!. -. . RANGER STATION for 10 lo 14 ft aluminum boat. backyard fwt, for kids Reuonablt pri~. 6n.9029 1S835 Beach Blvd. 54123. * 499-1462 Under W&n'8.nty. POOLE BUICK partially a ssembled. 17'Chrisa-attlnbrd. 64'-5&59 5/4 lmmac, Just Like New? '68 HODAKA 100, expansion c hamber, bot head, fiberglass tank &: seat. Completely set up for dirt. Xlnt cond. $198. 557-7315 1-lWltington Beach CLASSIFIED! Somrone. will 11111 IU.CH ILYO. __ lc..:llOO __ Cu_h._646-_700_7_ U4 E, 17th St. 842-nBl or ~ be looking for lL Dial 642-HUNTl~~7~~5 llACH 11IE QUICKER YOU C~ <mta Mesa 541-~ '65 DATSUN l·""='======:.....:S3,:M:;l.,:S=::·:;of:;S:•:n:D~lo~g=o=Fw>=.!;THE:;;;:.;Q:U=:ICKER=:=:Y;:O:;U,;SE::;:ll:_'_sD;:laJO;&U-l671::=:;;:;;;:'°':;;;,;RESGL:;,::;::TS:::,'.t · •:. BEAUT. black male Persian, $.1500. Call 673-3755 alter@d, 1 yr, shots. Ideal pet krr single lady. S•llboet1 9010 '54 HARLEY DAVIDSON, 45 cu in. Ba.!!kel. Chrm Sprin- ger front end. $300/ofr, 646-29T! Big Sedan. 4 lpd, rebuilt New Cars 9800 New Cars '9IOONew C1r1 9100,..tw Cars~ 9IOO ~ · enaiJ:>e,. Good nmning cond.i. 4~1586 5/5 2 COCK. A. POOi ? puppies, Immediate Delivery s weeks. 494-5887 alter 6. e 26' SOLINGS e 208 Canyon Acres Dr., New hi-floor .......... $4695 Laiuna Beach 514 Uaed, 3 ..U. •••••••••• $3995 3 Bl.AOC kittens, 2 gray, e 22' TEMPEST e 2 striped, need good homE!ll. • ......... $3500 543-1926. 5/5 Pacific Yacht Sale$ 673-1570 FREE German Shepherd CORONADO 2a Full Race- pUPll, 8 wlu. 646-6289 aJt 6 Cruise Gear, ndlo, Sllp pm, 5/5 Avail. Call • 833-0815. 5 RABBr.I'S & 1 chicken, 17' SLOOP, fibergla 11; m c:Qe. 904 Arbor St .. C.M. sleeps 2, trailer, $1700. 548-3657. 5/5 "* 546-1114 • FREE kittens, 2 blk &: wht. OfINESE JUNK, 30 ft. l blk. 1 striped. AU Jong-Good cond. Best oUer haired. 545-2969 5/7 (213) ~ 1970 HONDA SL-300 Motosport. lfiOO miles. Xlnt cond. CUstom extras S650. Steve 545-2647 KAWASAKI Bushwhacker 175, brand ne\V, less than 20 miles. Sac. $475. 962-4981. TRIUMPH '67 Bonneville very good cone!. SOcc Suruld good cond . 962-4356 aft 4 '67 TRIUMPlI Bonnevtlle, wry clean. l\1ake oHer. 549-~24 1963 HONDA S 00. big bore, 94 CC. Dirt bike. $125. 893-'961 KI1TENS, free. After 6 pm. 16' CHRYSLER Sailboat It 60-2140 5/1 trailer, xlnt condition. $1000 •ts' l\10NTESSA 250 cc La PART Persian male kitten, or best offer. ~1337. Croue $400. ~ 5 wkt old. 897--6937 511 SABOT And all equipment . ff Auto Service FREE KITTENS, call after Sl40.00 or be5t 0 er· & P•rts 6. 642-2570 5/4 &t&-&111, 5-7, eves. FREE 8 k . d T . LIDO 14-COMPLETE • • w m~e emer Good CondJtion. $650 pUppies, 492-1513 5/4 675-61EO 6T>l325 Evn MALE Guinea Pigs &1:0='======= Hamp1ters. 494-1332 a1t 5. Power Cruisers 9020 SI< SAMOYAN -Collie, 6 mo's. Be1ut. 43' Matthews Loves children, 847-5802 5/4 $44,000. 894-4094 9400 '67 FALCON WINDOW VAN Aulomatic, big 6. dlr. Lo\v miles. Will take trade or flnal'.ce private party. (YLT 665). 494-9773, 54&4052. CUTE Kittens, 6 wkl old.I.========= H.B. area. 536--0136 5i4 Speed-Ski Buts 9020 Tr•iler, Tr•v•I 9425 KITTENS, 6 wkt. old, black 6, G"· A al Ill h w/whltt'. 548-6842 5/4 1 .....,par V O?, P ==-~-~===! Evlnrude w/Amencan trlr. FRtt puppies. 549-2577 5/f like new. many xtru. ALPINE 675-3216 VACATION '57 GMC, 1 ton, 4 wheel dr, 10~' camper. Bufmle refrlg, stove w/oven. lOO pl. au cap. 35 water, hydramatic trans, poMr lak&-Otf winch &: more. $2.600. 548--0072 or see at Mesa Ullion, Newport Blvd at Fairview CAMPER: '64 Ford Van w/ stanc.l up exteMion Ir. all bit-in equip, Ice box, 1tovc, toilets, etc. $Ull. ·54S--51.1B eves. '69 VOLKS "Adventure" Camper, 18,500 mi 9 mo. old. Load~ w/xtra1. 644-6272. tlon. Full price $686 01' take small down. (NCC2J8) dlr, L.B. Call Phil after 10 am 540-3100 or 494-1029. 1968 Datsun-owner left town. 4 Dr. Xlnt cond. $1250. 547"1820 ENGLISH FORD All New Engllilh Ford.I In Our Big Stock llow Al FACTOR": INVOICE! . Posittwly No Added Dealer Charges? Cbooto From Sedam, Sta Wgns, GT'• .At Our Cost While Overstocks wt. Theodore ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 642.()010 '68 SUNDIAL VW camper. Hai it all! Rt?lrig, AM/Ff.'. rnd, tape deck, side tent $2850 oc best offer, 646-8236 8' Full cab-over camper, fac t, dlacontinued model. Complete. $895. 869 West I ~~~~~~~!!!!!: 131' "· c"" "'"'· FERRARI CAMPER $350. Good cone!. I----·----- Sips 2., closets, lee box, FERRARI Iii.I % T PU. ~20-W Nirwport Imports Ltd. Qr.. Lq&t VW Camper, fully equip. ance County'• OQl)' autbor- Xtras. Sharp! $1475. C&ll lzed dealer. !145-4965. SALES-SERVICE-PARTS '60 DIVCO Van Walk-in. alOO W. Coatt Hwy, Newport Stach Equipt tor camping, ?.take 142.9405 540.1764 Oiler. f67~ Au~riled Fmarl OeaJer PITS 1nd LIVESTOCK SKI Boat 11· fi-lau. ,,.,,_ TRAVEL CENTER Pets. Gtfter•I uoo ~i·~nkn " Out. suoo. I Excel •• Golden F•lcon _____ Fl_.._A_T ___ _ . 54 · Olympia -Alpln1 '67 FIAT 850 1963 VW Camper, xlnt cond . Eng reblt. relrlg, stove I: heater. 499-3618, 548-9236 ~"OR Sale PET chickens, ·---A"•che .. WhMI Camper Dune Buggies 9525 ducks, geese, cages&. fertile Bo•t Slip Mooring 902' Wld t -"-----2 Door Coupe, lamp white ex. eps manx cat. 54()..2333 or s atgeit most com-'68 Slreet Buagy. Radical terlor w/wine Interior. 4 1pd. ' TRADE 22' slip Bal Isl tor ~~~r RV vehlclt shopplna new design. Corvatr eng. $1086 full price or am1/J Cits U20 occu . wknd Ule ol boat. 8362 Garden G---mvd CG auto trans. 51195. f98-2!i00. doW!l. CVVP033l dlr. Call Will · t o •--t •••• • •· y 'd Phil after 10 am, 540-3100 or PERSIAN KITTENS. Loving main . :_an pwr ....,.. 534-6686 .., our " in o ur lft l Mother' 0 only. 67J....747a eve1 &: claullieds? Someone will be 494-1029. I . or s • Y · wk,nds. Coled Sat. Open Sunday looking for It Dial 6f2.5678 SOCK rr TO 'Ef..1! Cap11trano area. 496-5539 ========'='=========:...!.=====:::;;:::;;:::;;= SEALPOINT Siamese 711' SAILBO~T slip, side tie Female 7 wee.kl old $20, $2 foot. M4~:· Call"'4402 BWEPOINT Siamese kitten $15. 89'1-5451 Moorlni .,,.125• Sloop S'500 • 673-3&33 1115 Alrcrofl 9100 "SPECIALIZING IN QUALITY" BRAND NEW 1970 BUICK 2 Door Coupe. Autom•tic tr•nsmission, co nce•led r•dio •nfenna, f ib re 9la1 belted tire1, p•dd•d d•1h, 1eet btlt1, h•ckup lite1, du•I spe•d •lectric wipers. lmmtdl•f• dtlfv. ery. 43l270Z600154. .ANOTHIR SHl,MENT NOW Hfllll OPEL GT'S • SEE OUR FULL SELECTION! VISIT OUR VOLUME OPEL SALES CENTER DRASTIC DISCOUNTS ON NEW '69 JAGUARS FIVE TO CHOOS! FROMI CHEVY SPECIALS PERSONALIZED •AUTOMOBILES• ''I IMPALA 4 DOOl HARDTOP $1486 YI •119111•, 11110,,,•flc:, 11di•, h11t•r, pow1r 1l11ri11g, f•ctory •ir c:o11dltlo11· 1119. lWJH2011 'H IUICK GS 400 va. automatic, r11.dlo, heater, power steering, facto!'}' a.Ir. IRRW775J THUNOERBIRD LANDAU Full power. factory air, only 14, 700 locally driven miles. Sold I: Serviced Locally. CVTP948) '68 PONTIAC LE MANS VB, aulomatiC', radio, heater, power liteerlng, vin)'I roof. J owner. 13.000 milrs. (\VIC254) 'H FIRHIRD 400 Still under factory \VarTanty. 4 S[IC'l'fl, radio, heater, 1XJ1vf'r slf't'ring, vinyl top. Very low mlleaRe, Local 1 owner gem. IVTt.518) '68 DODG! RT Coupe. V-8, automatic, radio, htater, power steering, factory air, vinyl top. Absolutely gor· J{f!0\.11 local doctor's car. 13,&IO mlle11. IY08122) ''I IMPALA SPOIT COUPI $1886 YI 11111i111, •vlo1t1•tlc, r•dio, h•1t1r, power ll•1rl111., f1ctery 111 c:enditien· ' 1119, ¥i11yl 100 . IWJMlltl ''1 IMPALA SUPll SPOIT $1295' YI •119!11e, 111tometh:, 11dio, he1f1r, pow•r d••rl11f, b11ck•t 101h, ($J•7lll '64 FORD GALAXll 500 2 d.r. H.T. V8, auto., r•dlo, heater, power 1tttr:ln1, air con- dJUoning. COZB92:5) '65 MIRCURY Parklane 4 Dr. H.T. Power steering, brakes, wl.ndows, seat1. Factory air. (REP427) SUP'ER SPICIAL 1969 V.W. IUG '61 PONTIAC GTO $2395 va. automatic, radio, heater, f>(1Wer 1tttrlng, power braket, la.ctory air, low mllt•1e. I ownezi. IOOll.1.Y ownM car. Immeculate. !WXt519J 4 1p1•.f, r1.llo, he1l•t, •"ly t ,000 rnil•1. Cl•111 11 1 p!11, IXTUtJI. REDUCED TO POOLE ___ ... _____ _. BUICK IN COSTA MESA 234 E. 17th St. AUT'HO!tlllO IUICK..0,IL· JAGUAJl IALU and llRVICI 141-7765 .. . , . ' . .. • ~ 1. ' , I .. .. ' . . ,• .. . . ' . ' • . , •' .. • • ' .. • . : ~ ,. ' -· ' ,. . ' .. ~. : ' . • ' . ' . . ' " • I : ... : . ... .. ' • • 1 , '· \ r • . • ' • . . . . . • DAILY flLDT -· Mill' 4; 1970 '. ;rRAJISPORTATION . TRANSPORTATIC)fj 0 !RANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATioli' TRANSPOltTAJ l(!N TRANSPOltTATtON TRAN.SPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ~ ~ WOft!M mo Md Caro ,,., u...i c... 99DD UMCI c... 99DD Uood c... ,9900 _IJ;dc.--;.· I 9900 U1ad c... 99DD Ultd Cars 9900 u;;;c-;.-;:;-' . 9900 '.-WI PAY TOP CADIUAC FORD MERCURl MUSTANG MUSTANG PLYMOUTH PONTIAC PONTIAC ·· CASH CONNELL '· CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. CHEVROLET '.66 CHEV WAGON 1===Co"4"=""'M"'""="""=12Xl==IBel Air. 6 pas.wnger. dlr. Air conditioning, Must sell. Will ; ~In 9800 finance private party. (Qy. : OLDSMOBILE ":'~;'~;"vY 7 · . 1970 OLDSMOBILE 98 2 door sedan. Loaded, dlr. ' TOWN SEDAN full price $200. (Klll952) , Factory a i r conditioning, Call 494-9773, 546-4052, .automatic, radio (re a r '65 OiEV. Impala 2 dr. V-8, speaker), heater, power auto p/s rad stereo tape • ~leering, power disc brak~s, spotless 'conc:1: $1!XKI. eall ·•heel covers, remote mll'· 644-2700 ror, tinted glass, w-s-w.* o:c • .,c:.. "'~~--,~-,--.•• Serial No 384690MZ76391. '-""v. mpa a, ...... $. 4694 oond, low mi'" ""w b'an.. Fantastic cond. Best ,ollr. 675-6828. UNIVERSITY 1"'5 Chev II Nova, 4 dr, OLDSMOBILE R&H, good tires, good cond. '35() Harbor Bl Costa Mesa Best offer. 548-5896 Sat & ' OPEN 7 DAYS., 540-9640 Sun, wkdays aft S 1"'=======-l '62 Chevy lmpa]a 2 dr hrdtop, Auto Le•sing 9810 R&H, PIS, P/B, clean, good I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.j cond. f150 or best otter. J• -~ 64G-8163 FORD AUTHORIZED LEASING SYSTEM 1964 IMPALA, 45,000 mi, America's largest leasing good clean cond., new tires. system for fin.'l.nce or net 673-4962 lea.sing of all type can: and'l.,·56~CHEVY=~v~ .. ~.-,-,---oll~ trucks. g a u g e s, mags. $325.00. e Immediate delivery from 646-00M after 5 pm. over 300 can and trucks •62 CHEVY SS. 327 • Competitive rates • p/s, • New car dealeI'fib..ip service p/b, r~h. new titts. $GI. e Full "trade!n" value for ,_,,.._~'°~"~-~-- your present car '&I Malibu station wagon. e All popular makes avail· Clean, good tires, power · able steering. f195. 968-7322 ~ 'Sor Complete DetallJ Call 54 CHEV. 6 cyl. auto, 2 Malcom Reid dr. Sl25 ct' ~t oiler. Ask Leasing Manager for Bob. 549-1690 Theodore ROBINS FORD , 2060 Harbor IDvd. 1966 NOVA, 6 cylinder, stick, R&H SlOO down & take over pmnts. 545-7910 Q)lrta Mesa 642-0010 '66 MAIJBU, brand nu tires, f""'~~~~"""~"I chrome rims, Good Cond! ..... LEASE ..... . mi. 962-51!10, 96U94s. 1!(10 Ford V8 F-100 Pickup '69 Nov• S.S. 350. 'w/camper, air, pi s, auto ~ * 546-0388 trans, 3900 ml. S109 per mo. SOUTH COAST . CAR LEASING CORVAIR ·~ W. Cst Hwy, NB. 645-2182 1965 CORVAIR Monza. 34,000 -miles, New paint. Xlnt Used Cars 9900 cond. cau aft S. 642-0962. days 545--9475 • EASY CREDIT • j='.";C~O~R~VE~i~IE~ We finlllk.-e anyone who is Married Divorced New resident in CaliL 'Bankruptcy .Because We CaJTY Our Own Contracts No Turn Downs O.A.C. All Your Transportation , N- SELLING a 1967 Fastback Corvette, 1 cwner, under wan-anty, must sell-moving. Call aft 5:30, 675-2054. '64 Corvette Futback. 4 spd, air, 32,000 mi,_ Pvt. $2425. 646-7800 COUGAR CARS FROM $99 COUGAR '69 ·:Blue Chip Auto Sales With ""· radio, 350 c" in .... Good cond. Call alt 5:30, ·2145 S Harbor Costa l\1esa 644-1961. Willing to make '540-4392 ' &12--9700 deal. .~=~=~~-* FLEET SALE * '68 XR 7, Xln't Cond. Lo f10) 1970 Custom Imps.las mi's, fm stereo, $2100. 843 . Loaded .............. $2975 Sooora Rd .. C.M. (1) 1970 Ford Jl,fustang 1967 COUGAR, fUlo, air, _ IAaded ........... ,., $27W delux inter, vinyl top. 37,000 *Sl'>-5480 mt sum. 645-2627 !=======::: (5) 1970 COUGARS, loaded, low mileage. $3000 eacb. * 635-5480 * -·----'·======= UICK Skylark, '66, 4. <lrl· BUICK hdtp, r/h. pis. fact air. DODGE $1295. Call 67l-9'l66. , _______ _ -----• '68 DODGE RT convert. 440 CADILLAC magnum, torque Dile, p/s, p/b, discs on front, R&H, '66 c D v·n 1 O\\'Jler. xJnt cond. Must pe. e I e ~<'II, new ear on crdcr. this car to believe it, $2400. 4~2 mint cond. Power & ~ir, SACRIFICE. '69 Dodge West. b!Ue coi:ai b.lack, 1?atch1ng Sprt, gold w/wht. landau leather 1ntenoi: & vmyl top, m;,f, auto trans. R&H. p/b,. ~ce~t. low mileage. needs p/s, below b I u e book. 'nOthing. Blue Book says 5464320 i3100. Buy it Jor $2700. Can """"""~· ==---. arrange financing -Private * '5& DODGE \Vagon -runs "Party 537·'1780. good, VS, Rad & heater. '''Cad Sedan De Ville ~£ir'lden Pl. C · M ' " For Immediate Sale lo.=--c==-=--- ALL or PARTS 68 DODGE Charger, vin. Call after 5 P.M, 542-3131 top. Xlnt Cond. Sacrifice, must sell. 557...&33, 54&-57'5 •a; C&dlllac Sedan DeVllle, fUll ....... ale, """ now OLDSMOBILE tires. lmmac. cot'ld. Blk vin. 1 _______ _ tap. Priv. owner. $220(l, Call -· 1970 OLDS SPORT CPE . $2498 '69 Cad El Dorado, 6,000 ini't· Exceptional Con d . Every access. Air. days. 54&-1394 eve's. $77.69 MON'Ilil.Y PAYMENT EL DORADO, only 9500 $299 ll the total down pay. ml, fact alr. vinyl .roof, lthr ment f77.G9 is the tota1 :Qphol., full pwr, stereo, monthly pa,yl'l')tnt including $5250. Pvt ply. 645-C797 taxes, license and. all carry. l:;io<;=~M,"=,..-;;~ I Ing charges on appl'O'llal of Ca.Jail, full pwr, ale, Bank cttdit for 36 months. ·xtra clean, top meeh cond. Or, if you would prefer to New car on order. Will ao. pay cub.~ full cuh'price ctpt lo book $1700. 49:H539 15 only $2667.90 inoluding all '69 CAD C.D.V. 7,IXXI mi's, taxes and 1970 lic.'ense trans. air etc. ;519'.I. nsoo down. fer, Nothing more to pay. noG MO. 5%. Pr:IV ply. Defet'ftd p8.yment prioe i.!I 837..Sl55 $3095.84 Including all ~· '6S CDV, fact alt. Lo ml. ing charges, taxes and 1970 All pwr. Rea.I nice car $1795. license transfer. CalJ 6*-35lJ after 6 PM ANNUAL PERCENTAGE '&!ELDORAOO,tullyequip. ltATE IS ONLY U ~ $.Sii>. UNIVERSITY Call 642-0000 OLDSMOBILE 1967 CADILLAC Sedan De 2850 Harbor Bl., Colla Mer.a 'f1lle sb,arp! Private party. OPEN 1 DAYS 1lJ Via Udo Sood. 67>-3678 CAU. S.0.9640 ( 9900 Used Cars P·RICED FOR Ml. CLYDI JOHNSON BARGAINS IN EVERY-CORNER MUSCLE CARS! We have a good selec· tion of Cougar Elimina· tors, Montego Cyclones & Marauders, all equipped for the Cat that likes to Scat! $100 OVER F~CTORY INVOICE PRICED FOR ACTION l MARK Ill Look over • our , nice se· lection of Mark Ill's as well as several slightly used ones-the finest car made in America. DRIVE ONE TODAY! BUY ONE TODAY! LINCOLNS Priced for Action '69 LINCOLNS Low A1 $4875 XSR 580 '67 LINCOLNS Low A1 $2$00 TTN 020 '66 LINCOLNS Low A1 $1900 SUN 059 '65 LINCOLNS Low A1 $1475 TFC 969 LOOK over our fine selection of quality Lin• coins! Many sold & serviced by us! • COUGARS We have a large selection of Cougars 91 modell. XR 7's & convertibles with prices you'U, like. "The good ole days are back again! · : NEW 1970 COUGAR with whit• side w•ll tires, power steering, pow· er dise ltrekes, deluxe wheel covers, etc. ~o. OF9,IH517834 ' Ph11 Tu & LiuflM PRICED FOR ACTION! HERE NOW! The Sexiest European THE CAPRI IMPORTS Priced for Action '68 TOYOTA Corona Cpa. $1595 WIG 718 . . '68 KARMA'NN GHIA $1895 XJL 241 '68 VW Sqvare Back $1695 WIE 821 '67 OPEL $1495 WAE 083 '67 CORTINA $1195 VTP 055 I MR. DICI JOHNSON BARGAINS IN EVERY CORNER We have coupes , sedans, & lots of gorgeous wagons at the "good old days " prices. Come in & see why Mcntego is the best intermed .. iate buy in America. . NEW 1970 MONTEGO 2 dr. hardtop. V8, front power d isi: brakes. Equip. with d eluxe wheel covers, white side wall tires, power steering, AM radio. No. OHOIF5693 99 PRICED FOR ACTIOl\I ! WAGONS '68 MERCURY ~01i>:.:'.k $2995 WID 101 '68 MONTEGO Mercvry $2195 NID 985 '67 FORD Country $2295 Sedan UGJ 449 '66 FORD Country $2095 Squire BRY 623 '65 FALCOH $ 995 PEN 622 MISCELLANEOUS Priced ·for Action '67 CYCLONE GT $1795 UOG 450 '69 TORINO Convt. $2195 YSR 231 l69 MONTEGO MX 4-Dr. $2695 YWR 098 '66 MUSTANG Coupe $1395 sux 908 '67 MONTEREY Cpa. $159 5 ucc 092 LOOK over our fine selection of quality . Mercurys! Many sold & serviced by us! NOW IS THE BEST TIME IN TEN YEARS .TO BUY A LINCOLN-MERCURY PRODUCT ' J'OllDSOD+SOD lL 0 00 ©@ IL 00 © ® 00 ii' 0 00 ~ 00 ii' & IL • ~ & Im IB JIIl[ • ~ ~ Im © [1!J !mW • ©@[1!]@& Im COSTA MESA 2626 Harbor Blvd. 1 Mile South of San Diego Freeway 540-5630 642-0981 540·5635 rnREE GENERATIONS IN THE AVTOJllOBILE BVSINESS TH! OLDUT UTABLISHED "FACTORY DIRrcr· LINCOLN·MEICURY DEA LEI IN ORANGE COUNTY I • ------~ --------- '·9'00 .. " 7